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W.dMIRY. lily 1 , -

Lady Eagles ranked ln.state softball poll, 81

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Melp County's

Hometown News,.per

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MEIGS ROYALTY

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Read the lead
All so:hookhildren
rdat~ to this
connncnt by Snmucl
John~un : "/\ man
ought to re~tl ju~t :Is
hi~ indinntion lends
him; (or · wh~t he
rcntls a~ n t'dsk will do
him little good."
One ·important .as~
p..,:t of tledarer-piAy
nt trick one is to rent!
the lc:"l -- to nnalyze
your 1&lt;-ft-hnnd opponent's opcnin!l salvo.
Evt•ry cnrtl tells n
story, espcdnlly urly
in the tlcnl . Of tounc,
remembering the bitltliill! nml huw that
mi11ht affect the inter"
pretntion of tht• lend is
important too. Wlut
would you do here?
Agnimt your four ~f&gt;:odc contract, West
lends the dub two:
liw, ace, three. Uack
wmc~ the dub·. nine.
How woqiJ you continue?
·
East wautcd to bid
his c.~ ~clll•nt club suit
u !ccond time, but
decided four clubs
was too adventurous.
If he had climbetl that
hit~h. South would
prolmbly have still bid
lour !putlcs, but four
dubs doublet! costs
1,1 00.
You start with 10
top trkks: six spades,
three hearts and the
club' king. However,
you had better presme that last winner.
Given Enst's ovcrcnlt,
Weu's club- two lend
lnll!t be a singleton.
(He would have led
high from a doubleton.) So, if you put
u~ the dub king at
tnck two, West is going to ruff, and thn't
will be your contract
down the drain. Jll!t
plny low. ·East will
pro bnbl Y lend " third
club . Jliny low ngnin,
allowing West to ruff
ti1•J1
tile
hl'gh•r
•
•
d u 111111 y.
Then,
though, you can win
West's return, draw
nll the tnm1p1, and
tn~e those I 0 winn~rs,
th~· cl1tb king stiU sitting nrely in your
hand.
De inclined to read
every lead, whether
you arc .declarer or a
defender.
,;~n

FRANK &amp; EARN EST

THE BORN LOSER
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ASIC 1-lER

AIIOUT~E

COOI&lt;1!5 ..

IWEDNESDAY

MAY 1 I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFliCHCI&gt;MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM
- A corttr~ct for installation

L.erkln young in Reds' win, 11

·Deaths
Ronald E. Hart, 87
Marion Porter, 83
Lawrence E. Hilldore, 78

Cut1mmn u•w1e -· cou}'led
with tl"· knowl~d~c yuu'vc

ocquirt..•d o\lcr tlml.'

you n lim.:t

t~,

b.:

~- mnkr1
rt!cknu~U

with in thr Y"'' ahrad. It con
be """ of your b&lt;•tt&lt;·r years for
111:\ltri.•l ;~rqui&lt;ltion.
TAU llUS (April 211-M,,y
211) •• What 11111k&lt;• you 10 ·cf-·
lhtivc i• tl1.1t y&lt;&gt;u tilkt• In·
volv~u1c1m 1crluu~lr, yet yuu
he )'hllo~t~;)hkA cunctm·
in~ their outcome'. Know

CJII

, \vlum.o ru look (or rvmanc:c

o11u y•n•.'ll find it. Tlu• AmuCr .. ph Matchmaker in•tontly
reveniA whid1 "ip:m Atr rum.mth·ally pl!'rfe:c.:t for you.
Mnif S2 .75 ru Matchmakrr,
c/u thil ncw&lt;pnprr, 1'.0 . llox
17~H. Murray Hill StAtion,
New York. NY fill% .
(:EMINI (Mny 21-June 20)
·- llr
111i11drJ. b··cnuse

"w•·

l'Uti.•nti~l fur.tmcC~AI "111101 thr&lt;&gt;u~h litu•tlonl

your Krc.mtc't

whort you short an lntorest
wilh .111\ltll&lt;f 1vlw b c~u•lly
rt•I'OIUihlo n&lt; ym•orlf.
CANCI!R Uun~ 21 -July
22) - Thi• i• ""' ~uio111 tu be

0114.1 n1'1hcu:r tl,,yJ whcrt!' you
1:11u,i c.:umlttrf in IH.'IIIK a' lun~r.

MHI PROM CANDIDATES - These Meigs High School students are candidates for king and
queen at the prom Saturday night. Announcement of royalty will be made at 11 p.m. In the gymnasium, which has been decorated In a green. white and btaok color scheme carrying out a
'Completely Lost In You" theme. Candidates for queen, from left, are Amber Haning, Kara
Musser, Ashley Burbridge, Carrie Abbott and Tara Wyatt, and for ktrig, Tyson Lee, Darrick Knapp,
Zach Glaze, front, and John Stanley and Josh Napper. back. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Dehllis, AJ

·.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

by·Lula Campoa

CMbllly Ciphtf GlliDIOIIII"" lrl CMIIO lfOm qucllliON by 111!10111
pocple, pool ond """"1. Eech ltbr In 1111 clpMr ollndlloi anC&gt;Ihlf.

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form four olmplo wordo.

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One Old timer to inolhar·. "T~""
~:;:~:;:~:;:.., point of living and remaining an
,...
optlmiet,lato be foolish enough lo
A N C 0 D E . believe the best II ••• to----.:
A Compltl1 til1 h kl 1
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by flllng
1
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quole
In lhec mloalnJI
word1
·you develop from IIIP No. 3 below..

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Dlhlils, A2

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:·Patrol checks
2-:_vehlde qash

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ICIIAM-LITI ANSWIII
Impede - Yield· /deal ·Voiced· DECADE
:
The famous football player had a logical explanation:
lor his poor showing for over ten years. "Wall," he smiled,!
"anyone can have an off DECADE."
:

•

•

•'

It ml~flt b• wl•• to tnkr the
lnltlntlvc nn,l mako• 1•lam thnt
h1cl1td~ nn l'lljn)•nblc compnniun.
LEO Ouly 23-A"M· 22) --

your 111\IU Llo'' lls1 out,
hL•tnmL' yllu'rc M(1i11g to he in
i1 IIIUI'L' lnduurluus 111cloiJ thnn
11

" ,.,ci,•l our. Tnkc advntllll~e
of lhh and nccnmplish some·
thing worthwhile.
VlllGO (Au~. 23-Sopt. 22)
•• Handled Jkillfully, buoint:JI
cnn be bf&lt;nd•d nicely with
pleasure. Arrnn~e sun1rthlnl!
Joclal with t•mona with
whom yott shllr.e n common
cununerclnl objrctivo.
. LIIJRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) • It's tin• to l1ovo ouuldc In·
mem, but •whcn duty calla,
put yoitr kith nnd kill nru.
Mnke them the mo&lt;t Important people In your titr.
SCOill110 (Ocr. 24-Nov.
22) ·- Your rrulc" nnturr
makes this nn cxtcll~nt dny 10
toke tart of errnud• ur tuudt
bases with nil those you've nr·
Kleetcd la~dy . The more
you're on the 1!0• the better
you'll like it.
SA(;ITTAIUUS (Nov. 2j.

•

••
••••
•••

l&gt;ec. 21) "· Thio io a sood dny •
fur you ro involve youqolf In :
fiunnclal or motrrlnf tuuta, b~- :
Cnli!C you p0!1C81 n sreat dco( ;
of cummun ICII!e whether •
you're b11ylng or !citing.
:
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·:
Jnn. 19) •• Tnk• total conlrul :
n( how

you Rpcnd ynur timr, :

b"'"""' being oblo to do whnt :

yo\1 want wlum yuu wnm wUI •

b~ of utmost imponnnctJ to :
you .
!

AQUAiliUS U111. 20-Peb. :
fY) -- If lclt tu your own de- •
vicos, there ue n number of ;
private concern! thAt cAn be·:
denlt with. You'll utilize your :
time well If you keep outtid- '
••
ers nt bay,
PISCES (Feb. 20·MArch 20) '
•• You'rr • hopeful realht
· wllu will be oblc to dul "'llh '
thlnp 11 you find thtlll. Thua,
you'll have a bettor than mual
chance to realize your wishes
And de1lres.
ARIES (March 21·Apr1119) .
... Ont

or )lOUr innov:alioiU

may gJ~rrtcr you untxp&lt;ct&lt;J
ro•o1111itlu11 fru111 a notable ,
pmo11. The opprtdulon w111 .
II lUll fl

lot,

Pick :s: 4·2·6
Pick 4: 5·1·3-3
Buckeye !1: 2·11·18·20-36
Pick J (nlpt): 3-2·5
Pick 4 (nljht): 1·9-1-5
W.VA.

Dai!Y J: 6-7-2
DallY 4: 2·2-9·5

Put..tr.l: 3-26-32-45-48 (6)

Index
2 leellon• • II ......

Calendar
Classlfleds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials

Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
'

A4
84·6
' 87
A4
A6
A3
A3
8 I;2,4
· A2

• o 2002 Ohio ~"'"" Publlthlns co.

POMEROY
of the sanitary
sewer system at the new elementary sc!u&gt;ol was awarded,
permanent appropriations for school operating expenses
were approved and several teachers for next year were hired
by the Mei~ Local Board of Education in Wcdm·sday's
meeting.
D. V. Weber was awarded a contract to construct a waste
water lift and pump station at the new elementary school at
a cost of $142,850. The system will .connect the school with
Rutlond's waste water facility.
·
1\vo construction change orders were approved. One was
for a $27,430 change by Wesam Construction at the new
Middle School, and the ocher for a change by A.J. Srockmeister for $28,069 at the new elementary school.
A revised permanent appropriations for the 21101-02 fiscal
year in the amount of $45,374,462 was approved by the
board, with Sup.erintendent William Buckley expbining the
amount includes new school construction costs.
Teachers hired included Morgan Bral!g as high school
chemistry teacher;Vicki Bragg as high school special educotiqn teacher; and Kristin Keiter as high school French
teacher.
~upplcmcntal contracts were awarded to Mike Kennedy,
head track coach; Ron Hill, assistant high school track
· coach; Jesse Vail, Middle School track coach; Don Dixon,
assistalll Middle School track coach; Dan Thomas, head
baseball coach; Jeremy Grimm. reserve baseball coach; J;m
Haddox, Middle School golf coach; Nathan Hansen, girls'
· softball coach;Jennifcr Jones, girls' reserve softball coach, and
Jeremy Grimm, boys' Middle School baseball coach. ·
Brinn Howard was approved as a volunteer to assist with
the girls' softball team; Ryan Williams as a substitute teacher

PIHH IH Mel~, AJ

·National Day of Prayer in Meigs County

Judge: Not all
kids drink

POMEROY The
Statt Hi11hway Patrol wa!
lnve!tigatinl! n . §erious
it~ttry accident on Wipple
Road near Five Points this
morninl!. ,
The ~ccident involved
tWO vehicles and unofficial
~ports had an occupant of
one of the vehicles ejected
after the collision. The crash
occurred around 6:30a.m.,
and troopers altd Mdl!s
EMS responded to the
scene.
Further details were
unavailable from the GnlliaMdg~ Post befo~ presstime
today.

OHIO

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: High: 60s, Low: 40s

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Man II naturt't 1011 mlltlltt.' • :'
W.s. Olllltn 'Man It tnt only creature that rtlu111 to bt what
ne Ia.' - Albtn Camua

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Thur«lny. Mny 2. 20112

School sewer
plant contrad
awarded

Parents who host parties bear
liability, crimina.lpenal[ies
.

.·~

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDCI&gt;MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

While today Is the National
Day of Prayer, local church
members are continuing a
week-long celebration of the
theme, "America United
Under God.' Joe Brockert of
Pomeroy, right, and his wife,
both members of the Sacred
Heart Church, are among
many local people who have
participated In a week·long
Bible reeding marathon on
the Pomeroy parking tot. The.
week's observance was
kicked off locally Sunday
afternoon, as mora then 150
people joined 111 a circle of
prayer, surrounding the his·
torlc Meigs County Courthouse ~ above, Prayers for
public officials and the
nation will be said during
· tOdey'l prayer service on the
courthouse eteps. Local pas·
tcra and laity, musk:lans and
local officials will participate ·
In the hour·lonasarvlca. to .
be&amp;ln at 11:30 a.m.

POMEROY -· "Kids may tell their parents that all
teenagers drink, but that's nut true." .
Meigs County Juvenile Judge Robert Buck said the criminal penalties, legal consequences and moral dilemmas posed
by providing alcohol and a place to drink it to their children
should be enoul!h to discourage the practice.
Buck said parents who host prom or graduation parties for
their teenagers should think twice before they all ow alcohol
to be served. Not only is it illegal , but it creates problems that
could outlast the prom or l!raduation event being celebrated.
It is. estimated that junior and senior high school students
drink a billion cans of beer a year, and the revelry of prom
and graduation seasons adds to the pressure to drink and the
availability of alcohol to underage drinkers.
Many parents and other adults host parties for their minor
children and their children's friends, many because they feel
it is safer than the alternative, and Buck said. because they are
convinced that drink.ing among teenagers is a common

t
•

occurrence.

"It happens, but it's not as common as mme parents are led
to believe;' 13uck said. "To a teenager with friends who
drink, it may seem that'everyone' doc• it. but everyone does-·
n 't."

"It's often a tactic that kids use to convince their parents
that drinking is acceptable behavior, or to convince their
paren~J to provide them with alcohol or a place to drink . In
the bit! picture, it's not true."
·. The legal comequences awaiting both teenagers who
drink and the adults who obtain alcohol for them are high .
For example, Uuck said, a juvenile IJUI charge carrie&lt;&gt; a
$250 fine plus cost~, a $400 license rcin5tatement fee, and a
one-year licerue suspension, not to mention the cmt of three

PlltH.-IIrDIII.AJ

.

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Sunday, M.ay 5, 2002
2:00 - 4:00 pm
HMC Edoca~on &amp;Conference Cenler
A celebt"ation for babie~ born in 2001 at Holzer Medical Cenler
For more
call
446·5030.
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•
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~·----

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.,

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PageA2

Ohio

The_ Daily Sentinel

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0 2002 AccuWeather, life.

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W. VA.

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1\min

Some clearing over the area
tonight · wiU allow .for some
patchy dense fog to develop by
mprn in g. Overnight lows are
expected to be in the 30s.
Mostly · sunny skies were
forecast for Friday as high
pressure builds in from the
west. Highs will range in the
60s, the National Weather
Service said.
A warmup was expected
over the weekend as the high
. moved off to the east. Highs
on Saturday and Sunday will
be in the 70s.
, A line of severe thunderstorms moved through Ohio's
midsection early today. The
weather service issued tornado
warnings for Franklin and
Fairfield counties when radar
indicated the development of
funnel clouds.
A weather service spotter
report~d a tornado touchdown near Baltimore in
Fairfield County, but the sheriff's department said there
were no reports of damage.
Ha!f.. inch hail was reported
in Pickerington.
By the time the fast-moving
storm reached Perry County it
had weaked and the storm

.."

~

..-.

lot

alerts were canceled.
The thunder.;torms downed
tree limbs and caused scattered
power outages, authorities
said.
Weather forecast:
· Tonight ... Becoming partly
cloudy. Lows 40 to 45.
North west winds 10 to 15
mph.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs
in the mid 60s. Northwest
winds 10 to 15 mph.
.
Friday night ... Mostly clear.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Saturday
night.. .Mostly
clear. Lows near 50.
' Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers during the
night. Highs in the mid 70s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
lower 50s and highs In the mid
70s.
Tuesday... A chance of showers and thut)derstorms during
CLEVELAND (AP) -The Ohio Lottery's Super Lotto Plus
the day, otherwise partly
jackpot
is growing to S14 million for the next drawing Saturday
cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s
night.
and highs in the upper 70s.
There were no Super Lotto Plus game tickets with the cor.Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s and highs rect combination for the $11 million drawing Wednesday night. ·
Super Lotto Plus sales totaled $2,550,276 and players shared
in the upper 70s.
$401,115.
There were 29 Super Lotto Plus tickets with f1ve of the numbers, and each is worth $1,500. There was one ticket with five
number.; plus the bonus ball, and it's worth $10,000.

Jackpot goes to $14 million .

Ohio State

begins to
tear down

Family remenabers pilot
WILLOUGHBY (AP) -The parents of an Air Force test
pilot missing after his F-15C Eagie jet fighter crashed in the
Gulf of Mexico left their Ohio home for Florida in hopes their
son survived.
Maj. james A. Duricy, stationed at Eglin Air Force Base in
Florida, was the pilot when his plane went down 60 miles south
of Panama City during a weapons-testing mission Tuery.
The Air Force and Coast Guard suspended search o rations
Wednesday.
·
Air Force officials said Duricy, formerly of Euditl, Ohio,
graduated from the Air Force Academy in 1989 and studied
astronautical engineering at George Washington University.

buildings

COLUMBUS (AP)
Greg Davis remember.; when
he scrawled his name on the
wall of the popular South
Heidelberg bar as did so many
of his Ohio State University
classmates in the '70s.
A few years ago, he .was
touched as he watched another :tlum show off his own
South 'Berg signature to his
son following a football game,
CLEVELAND (AP) - A federal grand jury has indicted a proud to have been part of
man who was arrested in March in an alleged plot to bomb a the uadition in a basement
locked-out AK Steel miU in Mansfield.
· Fr&lt;d Frigo, 50, of Mansfield, is charged with violation of fed- bar that since has changed
names numerous times.
era! explosives and counterfeiting laws, U.S. Attorney Emily
. Sweeney said Wednesday. The indictment alleges he made an
Still, Davis was happy to see
eight-inch bomb from shotgun shells and also made $13,000 in that bar .and surrounding
fake $20 dollar bills.
buildings begin to fall
He is beong held without bond.
Wednesday to a wrecking ball
He allegedly tried to solicit another person to help hiin with painted to look like a bucka plal)ned bombing. The counterfeit money and plates used to eye. Now a SO-year-old
malr.e it were seizrd.
· Columbus code enforcement
officer, Davis has watched the
south campu- area deteriorate
over the years.
KENT (AP) -A group opposed to the U.S. war on terrorThe run-down area at the
ism is planning a proteSt at Kent State University on Saturday edge of Ohio State, once
shortly after a commemoration of shootings that occurred there flourishing with bars and
May 4, 1970 during an anti-war protest.
rental housing. is being torn
Some students ~ould prefer the pwtesters stay away.
down as part of a three-year,
May 4 has come to symbolize "repression of dissent," said $100 million redevelopment
Kent State student Anders Brooks, an organizer of the anti-war project,
~ubbed . · the
on terrorism rally.
.
Univtrsity Gateway Center
He pointed oot_that the Kent Stite shootings occurred dur- and toured as the mam
ing a protest agiain•t the Vietnam War, and that he believes crit- entrance to campw.

.Autowolbr indicted

'

FROM STAFF IIDORl$
POMD.OY - In an -elron to promote that ~u day
~r mothers all o~r thtt counuy. ont lutky shop~r will
• ~~an opportunity to win a &amp;ift-llden "MothH-'\. Day B:u. bt, s:nsored by The Daily Sentinel and l2 M~gs County
d ann. .
.
.
e. ~or:;:~ WtWr buk.et is liUtd with more than
1700
l ck 111 o er's Day &amp;ifts, _and will be awuded to Ollto
u Y entry dnwn on May tO,
•
. The basbt contains a
phot_o fnmt fro'? O~c~
s:r ce ~d SuppMly.•dadlchOtce
o
aa rom
1
eport

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Jury ntles against Inmate

Serving You Since 1946 .
with Quality Prescription :.
Service at Competitive
Prices
We Honor most Third
Party Prescription Plans

Kenneth McCullough . A. Ph.
Charle s Riffle , R . Ph .

•

----=---~-------_..r.~---

111 . lo

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00 p .m .

~)un C lo s ~ ' &lt;l

PRE S CRIPTION PHONE 992 -2955
11 2 E. Ma in • Pomeroy, OH
O p t•tt Wt ~ t ~ klli&lt;Jil ts Till 9 • Friendly Service

Come On Over To Bob's•••

Choose from all your favorite bedding annuals
•All full Size Flats... No Economy Size Flat1"

u•

• PETUNIAS
• SALVIA
• ZINNIAS
"

PLANTS YOU NEEDI

,;."'" I,.,.IJI

..,...,.., • ,...,. r.n c'se • _., .,_, M.,..r

Creepino

atwlded Btthall)' Val~ ~ Chutdl
SuM\!I.ng m 1m wi~ ~ Cllllip H'~ ~ &amp;oo and ;ta,~
~ln-aw. ~ and ~ Hm of t*\\~ ~ '1\q)cbuafl.m and a '"P ~h-b UJa and 1\.onnit llo:llln ~~

PROCTORVIL.I.E - Marion Willi111n I'Qrwr, 1\3, Procror\11.11~, dilld Wcdnes&lt;by, May t, 2002, at 1»\;tn~m Cenoernl Hm~
pitul, Hurrit:11ne, W.'h.
.
·
Born May 6, 1918, ht \\Ia$ th&amp; SOli of th~t lal~ W&lt;llhlet
Porter and Zelia Nida. He Wll$ " 1'\"tir.-d m•chinist Iron: th11
lnco Pl,nt in HuntingtOn,-W..'h.
He il surviwd by two thughttn, Sat~draJ lhtlill' oi' Phoe!nlll:,
Aria., and Gnct Nadintt Werocu ofWiilst.on-Salem, N.C.; Q
st~pd&lt;lughter, Soru' Butther of Milton, W.Va.; lbur I!Rmkhildrttn, a stepgnmdsotl and two !tcp-gffilt-gt~\1\khiltlren; und
~~vera! nieces and nephews.
He \ViiS also preced~d in d~a.th by hi~ \vi~. Uunni~ U. l'ortl'r;
and brother, DonAld Shdly Pl&gt;rt~r. .
_
·
There will be no visitin11 hours. DuriAl willl&lt;lke pl~ce "t Salt
1\ock Ctmetery in Slllt 1\ock, W.Va. on Sunday,
Memorial contributi01is ni~y bu made to th~ Allitllimer\
AssociAtion, 91!1 N. MichiW~n Ave:., Suite 1000, ChicaiJO, Ill.
60611.
.
Arrangements are by Andt!non Funt'rnl Home, Ntw Hlvc:n,
W.'h.

a

Lawnnce E. Hllldcn

CENTltAL DISMTCH
I:19 •,m,, Dro\\llltll
#.'1.-.enut, l&gt;uUin Cullin$,
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l:S9 t ,l\l,, ~tt R-'.,
A~t P•~ H~ Mf:d-.
k:al Om\IIJ;
l:l* p.m., Rll\\~ R~
ltim ~tt. O'BI~11m
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RUTLAND

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two 'ltth"l~r&lt;-lnl'' h ,;
l\.10 1-\l.l ,,:h•~&lt;•l W~L

rh~ ~""'"'-Jill''

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l: HI p.m., HM Oinitt, . $3\ll Nd1 ""'' "'"'"'' I '" .1
~1\W&lt;' ""'' m..lc •1'1'"' ,ml I\&gt;
Willi:~m G~ HMC.
~ dt..~lbl~. the •l'l'lh ~~~~ '"'"'
~ th" dLLM Ill ~t.u:,I.ILLkl &lt;~f
.tl\ octiw mcmll\'t "' I \l l.
·
RAClNE - l.olt'ttl M , At:tl~ ll 11.
M&lt;~lt' i::~rmo~tl\111 , .m (,,,
Cood~, ll, Ap!lrtmoent l, I till
tlbt.~illl'&lt;i ilxlll\ tlw ~&gt;1.1d.uh ,, _
' .
.
li.lll\ St,, Racll\1\ \\~ d t.-d fur
roun~kln ~~ co~th h ..11 ln.::h
f~ilut\" to t:.'.;)lltrol b ' tl:~ tkl·
sd;~l,
·
li~·Mtlt\$ l\xit I)(' the St-Ate
Higlw:~y P.urul rullowing a ·
01\\'-el\r ~tt id~nt Th~~y on
O hio l l~.
Tloopl!rs ~~&lt;tid Good~ w~~

Voter deadline

\\~tboulld llteilt ~~~dnt ~t

II : ~S

~ .m. ~ h~n tl;~ c~r sltoe
dro\~ \Wilt oiT th\" rigln ~Moe

nean

I'OMtm.tw
l\k1.:•
uuntv l\&lt;.&gt;.11\1 ,,f Fhttnh,

of th~ ~d, and ~truck . 3 .:&lt;~nnot m~il ,:hwm··~ ll.IH''"
ditth, eul\ll!rt, utility pule, ~s 1.0 v.!tert1 .1iit•r Lh\&lt;lll till ,· 1111r
line m~rkoer ~nd rumthoer util- da}\
ity pl'lh.\
Th~ otlkr w;ll b~ ''P~II ''"
The ear sutrereJ dist~bling &amp;\tuN&lt;l)' if\ILII ll .1 :11 1111111
d.ttn&lt;~l!l!, tnmp&lt;ers Mid.
u om1 to l''"'r" .ll'l'h' .n1nn'
-•U:tl "llow \ \Itt' I'\ "' , .l,t tl~t'lr
lklllots in thr t~tll, ,.
Vo ~ rtl t' Jll .11"' \\ lh' 111 tlw
lltkiM otlkt' 1111 h•n.l,l\ .lu1
lt18 rt'gulo~r hnSLtt&lt;''' ·h, •i11' ·
CHBSTillt - A. p!lncake - Meil!'l Cuul•tr'-1 R,•puhh
bt\"3kfu!t to benefit th~ fund c~11 &lt;llltl l)cmocl\llh p1tllhlr\
for 1'\"&amp;torintl th~
he~ter clc~tluns \II HI b e heltl M,l\' "
Acad~my al:\)3unt to tht!
Chestu Courthmt~l' will bo.l
htld Otl Sutmd~y. M~y II. ~t
the buihlinl!.
SYli..M.:USE - 1\ nw~l ll tA
s~rvinl! wm b~ from ~ ~. m of tht• S ,r,ln tM' W.1t~1 lh 1,1t~l
· to II a.m. by the l:&gt;~ul!hters has ll~•·n ch.llll(t"-1 thnn Mon
of America, Council 323 M tlay to Muy U til 7:.\n \" I"
Chtster. Advnn~~ tkk~H nf\"
awil\lblo.l ln1m ~ny of th~
· lod~ memh~rtl or may b~
SALEM
ENTER
purdlMcd ut the door.
Salem 'lhw1"hlp l;:tt•hl'ilt·,
will . hold '' t'h kkr11 nondk
diiiiWI' Oil ·nlc~d .ll', lh1111 I I
JlOMEROY ..:. CPU lnr., a.m. mttil h l\.1 11, .1t thr \ ,,hom
Pnm~roy, Is the uppurent low _Thwnship l' n\· l k p,lrtll l&lt;'lll
bidder for new computer
equipment lor Meil!ll County
Court.
Mdi!S ounty ommi!l'OM EIUW
I "1'1'''''
sioners opetJed bids li"n' Pluhts-Chcstcr W.Ht'l l h•lll&lt; 1
tlmt' companle! ,lminl! n Ius lilted 11 ho il .~th'' '"\\ I'""'"
1'\"Cessed mectinl! on Wcdllcs- curlier lor ,·uslu1 m·r&lt; 111 I k d
duy.
tbrd Thwnship ''" I ~"' k
CPU's totnl bid W tl&amp; (nr sprhl~;t&lt; ll..ll.1d, Klllf('""' 1
$4 7, 70 l. Uitl&amp; \Wre nlso ll..ond, 11nd Conk lt n,\\1.
received from GUS of
Rvst1h1 tlf " &lt;illl lpk t.lkt' ll
Yotllll!lltown, In the amount T\tCIUliYllrt• t'tll t&lt;lll t•tt•d \,Itt•

Date change

Dln1_1er planned

The Daily Sentinel

HardY

. Re1der Services

JU,t $798

Comotlon Polley

---~

numiler II ...., •.
Dtpll1mi!UIIIfflllot• n:
.

'1?11 ~

2 Gallon Potted RoN BuiiMii
Non Patented Yorletln S1
Pottflltci(NewVarll ..t)

Gll•ll IMIIIJfF

Ext 12 ·
Ext 13

or

ext 14

S1

01111' ..,toM
............

TWO CCWVENifNT I nc•nnNS:

Ext.

Glt I II
Cit .,,,..

MI'IOn, WV (304) 77H121
. Moo-Sat I:OO.f:OO
Sunc!!y 12:00.f:OO

......

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

Galllpoll1, OH (740) 44&amp;-1711

IIWMt
• .,..

Mon-Sit.II:OG-7:00
Sunday 12:00.f:OO

~~-

..

...

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

• Empkrylltlnlln/onnallon on Sl4/f Ntmlng PoJitlcJIU
Tours Prtwldtd • Hors d'oeums Strwd • Free Valet Parldna
~.

, • .,........
•WIIILI
.

I'

, ...

'

. ..

Nursing GraduaL~;;:J
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital
from 4:00 untll6:00 pm
Tuesday, May 7
L.D. Carsner Auditorium
800 Garfield Avenue

NIWIO.. ll;wnle

Jacklon:f:m

~ Attention .

You are invited to attend a
nurse recruitment reception et

Our llllln OOIICIIm In Ill llol1lt It
'1o be -.nne. Hvou know of an
- I n I f!GIY, calf the ntWIIoam
II (740)812·2188.

--- - - -------------- -

peDIB and nlttl~ af~ ~lm l~ lSb,
H'~ \\'a!\ a~ oftM US.Atnl)' dllrif« ~\\':~tit Ht

LOCA(STOCKS

"Bob's ships plantS fresh from the oreenhouse
to their retaU stores every d~y!!"

c,,auft

Mart. Htt- a milled w-.

Meigs ·

For The Freshelt and Healthiest
Plants In the Area!

·AGERATUM
• DAHLIAS
• ALYSSUM
• GERANIUMS
• BEGONIAS
• LOBELIA
• MARIGOLDS
• CELOSIA
• FROM A TO Z•.• BOB'S HAS THE

the \!ott £ad u\11 hnnite .)u\4e •

. -&lt;If

-t)l.

~tt~~n all
~~
Uma r~ .11.'1 ~~ ,

Advisory lifted

Pharmacy
&lt;1

H~e-.Wr.~ll, t'),.,_U\~

~0'1 - Unia ~
1M :l~ ~ :stt~ M '"""" "'"'1\'t\ I t\•r
"'
...~ 41\\\\~ lh:.e tt~ 1\M- ~ Sttw11 l

Bids opened

SWISHt:K LUH51:
I! 00

RACINE - Ramld lad Hwt. ~l, ~ di&lt;td ~
April J9, :1.003. in tM ~ Atf.lifi M~ ~. D.1 :\01\,

Prom

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

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•

~ llt'l~&gt;\\tll~ \~1\'&lt;'1\,
m dw- .tb\l&lt;lnllt. :--- - 4 ·-,

HOLLAND. Mich . - Lllwrence E. HUidore, 78, Holland,
seniors have used alcohol, and Mieh., died Wednesday, May 1, 2002, at Holland Ho~pitul.
while about two-thirds of
Born Nov. 25, 1923, he Wll5theson of the lAte Thd and Anna
teenagers who drink report E. Galbreath Hilldore, and Wlls a 1!14ll!fllrluMe of ltnciuc Hil!h
that they can buy their own School.
..
.
•
ftem,..A1
beer or liquor, 39 percent of
He also attended Hope Collel!t' and wus a U.S. Army vettryean'' worth of high-risk lia· youth who say they have an ofWorld War II, where he served as a parntroop~r. ·
bility insurance.
attended a party where aleoHe wus a retired social servic~s director for the Stat~ of
For the adult charged with hol 1s served say parents and Michigtm and served as a county commissioner for Otlll\Vil
'ontributing to the dclin- other adults provided the County.
.
·
4!-'ency of a minor, a maxi- alcoholserwd.
He wus also prectded in dtath by a brother, llQul Hilldpre;
"}Urn sentence of six months
"Parents Who Host Lose and a brother-in-law, William McKelvey.
in prison and St,OOO in fines the Most" is the theme of 4
He is survived by his wife, Betty l'ucler Hllldore; tht\"~ &amp;ons
'tY.-aits.
. campaign developed by Ohio and daughters-in-law, Tom and Mary,l.my Druce and C heryl,
'; Some tS.year-old high Parents for Druft'Free Youth, Tim and Rhonda Hilldore; two dau11hters and som-in~law,
tchool students face stricter and is dedicated to reducing Lori and Bill Notier, Mary and Jay Peters; two sisters and one
.penaliies for alcohol-related underage drinking by also brother-in-law, Hazel McKelvry of Portland, and IJonna and
;ol!'enses, B!lck said, because reducing the number of Bob Dyer ofSymcuse; 15 grandchildt\"tl tmd a !!rent-grandson;
;v.j!Ue they are still under the "house partiei" hosted by and several nieces and nephc:ws.
:lesal drinking age, they are parents where alcohol is Services will be held at II a.m . Saturday at l)yuer Funeral
Eharged in Meigs County served.
Home it1 Holland, Mich. Friends may call or the funerAl home
Court as adults.
The campaign receives . on Friday' from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
The Center for Substance funding from the Ohio
Abuse Prevention ettimates Department of Alcohol and
positions to help with the tric;t Public l.ibrnry;
• Approvitt!l .1 r h.lttf\&lt;' 111 tlw
that 87 percent of high school Drug Addiction Services.
tr~nsitiun of stmlcnts from the
• Approving th~ sdmol rnl- date of un &lt;1\'l'nllftlH Ik id 11 q'
old school! itnp the n~w tntlar ft~r 2002-03 to u"rt for tO Anrtir~ li.1r tlw l'ullll'l'"
facilities.
te3chers on Au11. 26 and for Elelttctltllry fll1h j.\t',ll ll'l''
frolnPtpA1
Other bmine11 taken by 'the !tudenrs uu A1111· 27;
· • l)isculling construction of
for the remainder of the board included:
Pl'lmltr - 10.20
• A cc~ptilll! a $J 5,000 from a bulltlln(! at the high scholll
Ftdtral Moaul - .85
school year; David Ramey as
AEP-45.118
USB -2110
Aroh Coal- 21.46
Rooltwtll- 21.51
the
OhioRends Sununer . for use in sturin!! athletic
a tutor for a health handi.
GanntH-74.18
, ROOity Boolf -7.80
Akzo-43.18
capped student; and. Stanley Community Continu~tion equipment;
AmTtoiVSBC- 32.85 ca.-1 EltiOtrfo- 31.70 RD Shell- 5U5
GKNLY-4.78
Wanon, at a substitute custo- Gunt through tho Ohio
• Considerhll! n student
Mhland Inc. - 40.811
Selnt-15U2
Hlrlly DMIIan- 83.48 Wai-Mart- ee.eo
AT&amp;T- 13.811
Department
of
Education's
identification
~nrd program
dian.
llanlt One- 41' 18
l&lt;mllt - 1.25
Wendy'• .... 38.83 .
Resigning their positions Ohiol\ends Council Tor pro- . and cnllinl! for n llcmomtrnKrooer- 22.87
.IILI-15.88
Wtllfhlngton14.73
were
_nil! Willnmson, auto grams Pomeroy Elementary tion from Centt1ry Bmhms
l.lncll End- 51 .77
llob E111n1- 30.18
Ollly slook repollf 1r1
Llll.-11.81
llorgWimlr- 83.18
tht 4 p.m. oloalng mechanics instructor; Janet and the Mel~ Comny Qi1- Product!; .
NBC -21.40
Chlmplon - 2.17
Chlrmlng 8hopt- 8.48 Olk .. F1nnllll-20.78 quotes of lhl prtvloua Williamson, high school secdiY't tl'llntiiOllona, pro- retary; and David Wllcoxen,
OVB-23.70
CitY Holding - 18.08
vldfd by Sml!ll Partnere girls' vartity basketball coach.
BBT-38.81
Col-24.&amp;4 '
at Ad\lltt Inc. of Gal·
OG-15.70
PIOPIH - 21.25
The board approved creatllpolll,
Ptptloo - 52.12
DuPont - 44.83
ing another high tchool tei·
ence teachins potition to
addreu the state requirement
Cor a ·fourth year of science;
.- . .
and two rlemcntary guichlrtce

OPEN.Monday thru Friday ,
8:00 am - 9:00 pm
Saturday 8 am - 5 pm
Sunday Closed

M o 11 I 11 II ,1 111 to() 00 p Ill

~~~~tJ ~&lt;"~Nh·n,

EMS.,_

Calunt~ w.v~.•~»ld Re~ ~ &lt;If~"' Midi.- tw;)
· sttp£otuandthtit\\'\~Dterut\\andhlll~ llflt}t"l@'&amp;t­
tom, and 0..\'id uld Thni Jilt._ of M~ th- i!Rtldch~, ll ~ndd\1\drten, 1\\'1) ~tdcllik~n ~nd
tw() ~t- ~ndchi~n; a bruthter uld iliter--itWt\\\
Robert uld lilli1t M11tt Hm of Racinte; 1\\'1) ~ P.at1y attd
JiU Will"- ofColumblu. and .,1\lyte M~tnutt af R\\eillt; ' '"' w""'
en! niete$ lltld nephem.
H~ w.u lll:lo p!e(:td~ in dHdt by his wit\-, Hlkb Allt'n .Hm;
• stepdaughtter, Olttti~ ~\!1; ll mr, Sbirlt)' lottnt Pyl~
and brothrm, Gilbtert Hut, Unl~y M. Hlart ""' Eldl\!d H\lrt,
Swliet$ wiU be l p.m. friday in Cm11~m funtnl Ht)lt~&lt;t,
Racine. with dtte.R~tv. Oi'~yne Stutlter offi~ting. 8111-ilal will
bt in the Browning Centettery at 1\lrtli~td, Friemh n~y e-~llllt
the funtral home &amp;om :1-S and 7-9 p.m. todii
M011111t'S DAY IIAIIliT _
Militllry Rft-'d" ~mH will ~ ronduet\'d by Ra in\' Pw
..........,"' ,..__,_
_ ,s .Mo... 60l ofthl' American L~ion.
,.,. .,..,, ~"1'""1
·ur

rom cqutuuons
.Fme Jewelry; a Jifl certi6. cate fro~ Judy "K~y's
, Restaurant, ~ Mom nna
f!'Om l'_lg~l Jewelry; a
paper\Yelg I orom Clark's
Jewelry Store; a wall han.lt'
mg f'?m Candy's Hobb1es
and Gtfts; an ice cream cake
gift certificate from Dairy tr's Day Blsket• wtll be
Queen; a lang Calendar awarded to one lucky patron
1 f;lrlwtn&amp; scheduled
from Hartwell House; an
American napkin and hold- f()r May 10. (Debbie Cll!)
·er from Weaving Stitches; a
candle from Hearn Aglow; a bracelet from K&amp;C Jewelry; 11
"Hannah" bear from Ohio River Bear Co.; a no~ pad gift
box set from Middleport flower Shop; a Vmkee candle
from Fruth Pharmac;y; a gift certi6cm from Shoe
Place/Locker 219; a gift certificate from Hart\ Kountry
Kitchen.
A Sift certificate from fox's Pizza; 1 bisque candle from
Candle Creations; a &amp;ift certificate from Nails by Pam and
• Mandy; a gift certificate from Court Street Grill; a choice
of pottery crock from Anderson's furniture; a candle from
Country Candle Shop; a framed picture from Sue'! Collectibles; a candle from By Hearth and Candlelight; Victo. ria's Secret cologne from Swisher ~ Lohse Drug Store; an
apple tea towel from The Fabric Shop; a gift certificate from
.A Cut Above; a tin bucket from Wicker Buwy; a Bible and
book from Rejoicing Life/Mid-Valley Christian School; a
gift certificate from Vaughan's Supermarket; a gift certificate
from Crow's Family Restaurant.
Entries will be taken through May 8 at participating merchants. No purchase is necessary.

MidwHe pleads guilty

Traficant asks for time

•

.

Teen stru.... killed by train

DUBLIN (AI') - Wendy's International Inc. said on
Wednesday thai first quarter profits were up 12 percent, helped
by a new line of salads and more stores.
, WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. James Traficant, who was
The" outpouring" of affection and added visits following the convicted last month offederal bribery and tax evasion charges,
Jan . 8 death of Wendy's founder Dave Thomas might have asked the House Ethics Committee on Wednesday for more
slightly increased sales that month, spokesman John Barker said.
The company said it made $43.4 million for the quarter that
ended March 31, compared with $38.7 million from the same
period a year ago. Sales were up 10 percent to $612 million
from $556 million.
Earnings per share were 39 cents, matching estimates of analysts surveyed by Thomson Financi:tl/First Call and 6 cents
above a year ago.

)

The Finance Committe heard tdiimony about the tax fot' more than R.ur
hours Wednesday.
Financial analysts, HoWilld fleeter and
Richard levin. who estimated tht- effect
of the so-cent cigarette !a..'l incre~ fOl'
.Tobacco-flee Ohio, an anti-smoki.ng
group. said the tax would earn Ohio .im
additional $.400 million a year.
,
Huston. 58. of Columbus, told lawmakers that her father, uncle and . a .
coiiSin died of smoking--related illnesses.
Huston smoked for 20 years ~re
quitting about 11 years ago. Shortly latttr.
doctors discovered lung cancer. She survived, but has a weakened immune syste;m, heart disease and breathing pro\llems.

•
icism of the U.S. military action in Afghanistan has been limit- time to prepare his statement of defense.
Traficant, D-Ohio, said he was given fewer than five busineM
ed.
·
days to respond to the committee's request for his defense. tie
~d his case is complex and he needs more time.
·,
'-1\,
A four-member ethics subcommittee was chosen last mon!h
SHELBY (AP) - A teen-age boy who police said often after the Ohio Democrat was found guilty of taking kickbaclts ·
walked home along railroad tracks was killed when he was from staff members and bribes and gifts from businessmen.
struck by a train early Thesday. ·
·
.
The panel is expected to review trial transcrijl!s and c.-videlife
CSX rail\vay worker.; found 17 -year-old Brandon Bays' body to see if House rules were violated. Its work is done in priVjlte
around 8:30 a.m. when they were doing track maintenance · and could not be ·commented on publicly, a spokesman said, :
work, company spokesman Adam HoUingsworth said.
",
Richland .County Coro.ner Stephen Banko said he concluded Bays was hit by a train. An autopsy is planned.
CINCINNATI (AP) - A federal court jury has rejecte~. a
"What we don't know is what was he doing there and when
civil lawsuit filed by a former Ohio prison inrilate Who alle~d
it happened," Banko said.
that corrections officers failed to keep her safe from attack . .
Traci Greene, who at that time was a man who dre ·sed lll)d
had the appearance of a woman, was sent to the Onio
MILLERSBURG (AP)- A midwife in the Amish commu- Reformatory for Women after being convicted of misuse . gf
nity of northeast Ohio pleaded guilty Wednesday to reduced credit cards in Toledo in the mid-1990s.
charges resulting from her giving a patient drugs to slow bleeding after a birth. .
Frieda M. Miller, 47, of Berlin, had been charged with .
felonies, practicing medicine without a license and possessing
and selling a dangerous drug. She could have received 3 1/2
years in prison if convicted.
·
On Wednesday, she pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor
charges of one count of attempted unauthorized practice of
medicine and two counts of pmsession of dangerous drugs.
Holmes County Common Pleas Judge Thomas D. White sentenced Miller to 360 days in jail, but he suspended the sentence
in favor of three years of probation. As a condition of her probation, Miller must develop and implement a protocol for midwives and high-risk pregnancies.

Wendy's income up 110fo

•

Without mtoririg that money. Wlilte

said~ will~ a Kbig tinw: 'no' vote:·

.,

Sunny skies will prevail Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jim Carnes. a St. Clairsville Republican.
"I feel this response is fair and balanced."
Senate President Richard Finan and
Gov. Bob Taft are pushing for quick passage of the budget bill to aUow the stat.e
to collect at least $26 million in revenue
from the new tax this fiscal year, which
'ends June 30.
.
At the moment, however, support for
the tax is weak. Five Republican senators
have said they won't vote for it.
A sixth, Ron Amstut2 ofWnoster, said
he'll support it only if lawmakers
approve an additio~ $200 million in
state spending reductiom. And Doug
White, the No. 2 Senate Republican and
a routhern Ohio tobacco farmer, said
he'll support it only if lawmakers restore
$32 million from a fund to help tobacco
farmers.

LOCAL BRI F

promOtion gets
.underway· ·

•

COLUMBUS (AP)- Rick Gummer
said a proposed tripling ofthe state's cigarette tax will hurt small businessmen
such as himself by reducing sales.
Marianne Huston said the tax could
save the state millions and help prevent
tragedies lite her own - the ex-smoker
estimates it costs ai least $60,000 a year
to address her smoking-related health
problems.
Both made their case to lawmakers on
Wednesday · as the GOP-controlled
Senate Finance Committee debated a
proposal to raise Ohio's per paclr. tax to
74 cents to help patch a $1.2 billion
budget deficit.
"None of us look forward to proceeding with this bill, but in this economic
downturn, we must address theJituation
ai hand," said Senate Finance Chairman

-

~other's Day

Offidals hear from supporters, opponents of cig~rette ~

Ohio weather

..

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•

SSl

Dear
Abby

1\ fii~l\d I'U ·~ M.... has llOO
u\&gt;ed ~ 1\t thO! ~
lUI\\-met, dloe 1\ml 'IMty, lmistiJ18 she

or'""

~ dod\es ~too\ a ·''"rd.
1\&amp;lt')\"~ •11 their hon\'t dur-.
tllg thO! win~t, had t-n ~tell
drunk. tte. Ma~ rs n&lt;IW UrgiJ18

ADVICE
shrugg!J18 oli' ~t n.bid ramblingi. I
(llan to u~ 'INdy tglill thi\ summet, but Madre Insists l am a 1001

me ~ li~ 'liud)l, e\"'tn tboogb tbe e..-er to U\1! her . n.
Mldg&lt;t ~d mouthtd the a-olf pro
"thlrd party" Milhbrot ha' not ~~~
t\\.'0
~ tao, \tyll\8 how incoma
.· a watd ~me •bout her. M:tdjre hal
lUtttt&lt;itd ill tMIIilltiiiJ tw() oth~t pettnt he 'Wa'- I !loW htu he hu
flmilies ~ l\~ ' lfudy. Tht isbnd is l been 6ml, I lssume thi\ gives
WI)' unlll ~:&lt;~mmunity, and Madg-e Ml~ l lttli~~J or poi.Wt, h;ut I .!eel
lOrfY fur her 'vietim\ - d1d I don't
it rulni~~J 'liud)&gt;'s livelihro•·xt

I 001\"t btlie\'\! what Mt¥ it want ~ be het next on~

Slyl!IJ and ~I P~"ured and b&lt;lth~
~ by h&lt;et ·attusations. So fu I am

PART·TIMii

l.Sl.AND l&gt;WELLmt

i.nd\1\1~ ·

·hld

tarnis es re ..utation
sticky siiUtlion? -

DBAk AD~ Wt M\'t • $\lft\•
lMt ~ C)(l en i1bl\d, Foot • nllm·
botf· tl )'OW\, Wt "'\"'t &lt;employed ..
~ - ·"'trody,";u ()\If~
be~, Sb&lt;t ~ • ta11t&amp;\tit jtlb •1\11 .
hG .._"' beet\ mO!w.tl\1. mi~

I want to help 'rrud)\ What would
)'Oil 'IIUt't I do toout this wry

DEAR
PART-TIM.H
. DWEU.ElllA\.'Oid Madge, She is a
troubled and vindicti\'\! bully. Help
1rudy to lind l lawyer who can put
a stl)p to this Wl'&gt;mto \ ~:haucter
a~nttioll before it completely
destroys her businen,
.
DnAil .l\88\'; We\&gt;'! ~n sent
an in\'itation to our nephew "Marshall's" high s.:hool graduation, Last
night We fuund out he won't be
graduating because he f~led a coua
pie of classes. Marshall's school
allows all seniors to "walk across the
stage" at the graduation ceremony,
e'\l'en though so1ne ofthem may not
be actually ~1\&gt;ing a dil'loma.
When I .ulred Marshall's mother,
my Sister, whether he should receil&gt;e
guduation gifts and ha11e a family
patty; she gave me a tlrm "no." His
grandmoth&lt;et is upset anrl insisu we

still have a graduation pmy with
l'resents, Pcnonally, I don't think
there should be a party with presents since Marshall is not really
graduating. Who knows if he will
. ever graduate? What are We celebrating - his high school failure?
What do you tltink? DISGUSTBD AUNT IN FLORIDA
DEAR DISGUSTED AUNT:
It's. too early to brand anyone a failure, Your nephew has only a few
credits to make up. If Grandm~
wants to give him a gift, she should
do so. However, since the young
man's mother has vetoed a parry,
her wishes should be respected,
· DEI.R ABBY: Please setde a
ditl'erence of opinion between my
wife and me.
My wife is a wonderful housekeeper, We have a dishwasher me. I claim that rinsing the dishes in
hot wuer and air-drying them is

preferable to wiping them with ·a
dish towel, which is 11sually damp
aft.et use ~nd therefore a soun:e of
bacteria.
We will abide by your decision.
-ROBERT IN ORLANDO
DEAR, ROBERT: It may be
that your wife - the perfect
housekeeper - !lnds the sight ()f
air-drying dishes. on the counter
objectionable. Ho-ver, I see nothing wrong with air-drying dishes
after they have been wash.ed. And
there are some elegant chrome bas- ·
ke1:1 for that purpose that are meant .
to be displayed. But once dry. the
dishes and . flatware should be
promptly put away.
(P.mlillt Phillips and htr daughter
Jea""' Phillips sl1are · the pset&lt;do~tyl!l
Abigail Vart Buren. Write Dear Abby a!
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. BQ~&lt;
69440, Los AH~Its, CA 90069.)

rot

or

BNwerblrth

CirldUides from
OhiO

S-.lal

NlIILId to honor
roll it OSU

by Gl Scouts

Rt. 62 N. - Faii'Qround Rd. - Pt. Pleasant

Season's 1st Festival
Steam &amp; Gas EnQine Show
Sat. May 4 &amp;Sun. May 5
Join us as we
experience a bit of

'y~steryear'
dining in our
Country Kitc,hen, visitilf.g our
Country Store, or enjoying
some homemade ice cream
while listening to great
entertainment Sat, and
Bluegrass and Gospel Sunday

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL
Subscribe today • 992~21 56

SAVE 20o/o - 40°/o

Name honor roll

0

Meigs County Court cases processed

.

Meigs Notebook
IIOttd that ·memben had Rrav.,ctyn, Natalie MoreHot dogs, chips, and drinks
$tf\ltd the bloodmobile in . h~ead, Scott Needs, Jeffrey will be provided. Information
April. Atttl.vities
the tom· Shank, Jennifer Shrimplin, is available by calling Jcrrena
POMEROY - Mayla and ina ytu .wttt discussed and Amy Smith, Sabrina Smith, Bbetibach at 992-7747.
Don Pudtttt oC -4 NottiftJh&amp;ll\ meeting bookltu wert pmtd Wesley Thoene, Joshua Will,
Volunteeu and assistants
Dtiw, Athtn$, announee the out. the birthdty of Frantel Jtssit a Wr\iht, and William from the area are needed at the
birth of a son, Ale)!; Logan,
Gaeglein wu obmved with t Youna, aU of Pomeroy.
Girls' Spotts Day on July 27
ootn April ll · at 0 'nleness
ca~,
Jody Hupp, Racine; Jessica from lO a.m. 10 t p.m. The
Memorial Ho~pital, Athens.
D~votions were R!wn by Bt~nnon, Stephanie Evans, Service Unit needs girls who
Mrs, Pue~tt is formerly
fry who ~ad "God's Bou· Joshua Kehl and Leah Sanders, partidnate in li.igh school or
Meigl Count)\
qu~t" and "Wh~n . Witlter .t.ll or Reedsville: Derrick
r
'TUrn~ to Spring.''
Bolin, Rml~nd; Mary Grueser, college sports as weD as coachThe projfl'int was given by Shade: and Robert Day and es to cover volleyball, basket•
F~tnees Gotgltin and indud- Shannon Slavin, both of Syta- ·ball, sol"tball, and . soccer,
POMiiROY - Stephanie ttl "The Great Slit Shalteup" euse.
sportsmanship, techniques, and
other events: Those interested
and Chulie Brewer, Jr. or by Dorothy Jtfftn; ''It\ Not
Pomeroy announee the birth Ju!t Salt" by Nancy Grutser;
in volunteering are asked to
of a daugh· "Cut Back on Processed
eaU Ebenbach.
ter, jasmine Footh" by Phyllis Skinner; and
Summer Sinle programs
will kick off on June 29 with a
Diana, bQrn "Dangtrolll Drup fur 1\!ople
on Aprill9 65 and Owr" by Fry.
ATHENS .._ Cleon Ptlltt of Stars and Stripes program;
at Pleaatnt jefftn had the contest and Pomeroy received a B.S. Girls Sports Oily on July 27,
Valley Hos- winnen were Nanty Grueser degrte at Ohio Univenity in and Bead l'un on Aug. 1. A
pitlll.
and BubaR Fry. May hostess Athens at the end of the win.r summer daycani.p with the
will be Nancy Orueser with ter quarter.
· theme, "Girl Scouts -- ProtecThe
lnfant
the proiflm tO ·be aJ,ven by
ton o( the Universe" will be
weighed
Fry and the contest ~onducted
SUII•r offered for girls five to t 7 at
five pound&amp;, by GoeaJeln.
pww
six ouneea. Rel'reslunenu were mwd •nntl~lanned Forked Run State Park July 12 .
·to 14. All girls, registered and
Puernal grandparents are by the hoateu.
Diana and Charlie Brewer, Sr.,
non-~gisten:d, are asked to ·
Pomeroy; and maternal grand·
attend the programs.
.
POMEl\.OY •• Sewral
Several troops in the area
partntl ll\l Lady and Ronald
Davis of Lebanon.
.
events are planned for May by have been busy this month.
Paterl\111 great~11rand.parentl
the Big Bend Girl Stout unit. Girl Scout cookies are avaU·
On May 9, a Dally Tea will able frotn several troops.
are Muy Kay Young o( COLUMBUS . _ Joshua
Pomeroy and. the late Vietor Craig Ervin and Macyt\ Ann be held Cor girls expected to Those interested can call
C. Youn~t, Sr.; and Doria irvin, both oC 1\.acine, and enter klndefll'lrden in the fall, .Ebers bach or April Smith at
Goodrich of Pomemy, and. the Miaty
Dawn
Sha!Ter, at 'Ihnlty Chun:h from 5 to 7 740· 992· 3483.
latt Slim Goodrich.
Reedsville, have been named pm. Questions may be directMaternllgrtal•flrandparentl 10 the honor roll at Ohio StAte ed to tina Sampson at 985are Pearl Scott of Middleport Unlwnlty in Columbus.
3471.
·
Those hooortd. recelwd 1
On May lil the service unit
and Pred Scott of l'omemy,
lnd the late Horaee and
will hold Its annual l'am.ily
Pauline Davia.
grade point awrage o( at lealt Pun event at Forked Run
3.5 and were enrolled for u
Mr. and Mrs. Bn:wer haw leut 12 cn:cUt houn.
Sttte Park from 10 a.m. to
chn:e other children, Jacob,
duk. fam.i)y Partnenhip and
r.an~~.• Joshua rwo, and Juiah,
apring regimation will abo
•
take plate. Ewry girl who
brings a friend who joins will
ATH!NS - The CoUowlng receive an item from the trea·
·
atudenu were named to the sure bOlt.
dean'a llat at Ohio Univenlty
Dinner starts at noon with
l'or · the· winter quarter: award&amp; for girls and adults to
POMEROY - Donations Nlcholu Avia, Jeffrey Cream- follow. Troops will sponsor
were made to the Carl•ton er, Michele Oeotge, jacob games 1ucl\ &lt;H three•legged
School, DAV and the Salvation Jacluon, 'lira Ollom and Jane races, water n:lays, and hulaArmy by the Roek Sprlnp Wllliama, all or Cqolville; hoop contests. Each family is
Better Health Club u a recent Orion Barrett, Lanpvllle; encouraaed to eom~ ant!
meeting held at the home o( Stacey Brewer, Chad Oodton, ei\Joy the day with ca~h oth~r•
Parked 1\.un offers boating,·
·
Je~alca Johnson, Warren
. Barbara fry.
tlahln;, and camping. Each
Thank · you no tea for burn, all oC MlddltpoH.
aJ,rl'a
(limlly ahould bring two
Tlma~t Biuell,joahut Btod·
temembrancel and donation•
were reeeived rrom E!mmli erick, Brandon Buckley, Holly pQtluck dishel, table service,
Or:ueaer, the Homeless Shelter DeLona, Chrratopher Dod· and lawn chain, and a fee of
and the MS Foundatiqn.lt wa• son, Maureen Heines, Andrea $3 per penon.

The Dally. Sentinel • Page A 5

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

I,

POMEROY Meigs nison, to Buckeye Rural ElecCounty Recorder Judy King tric Corp., right of way, Salem.
=endy reported the followWilliam Lehew, deceased, to
ing transfers of real estate: · Margaret Lehew, affidavit, VilParthenia L. Vance to !age of Pomeroy.
William J. Dye, Linda K. Dye,
Rhonda Sander., Michael
deed, Scipio.
Sanders, to David G. Pauley,
Joe C. Ritchie to Charles A. deed, Olive.
Ritchie, Sr., Kathy A. Ritchie,
Teresa L. Stewart, Lawrence
affidavit, Orange. .
W. Stewart, Larry W. Stewart,
H.D. Hively to Peggy Sue to Debra L. Abshire, deed,
'Storts, judgment entry, Scipio. Rutland.
· Peggy Diane Smith, l{arold
Lester Stewart, Amy J. StewEugene Smith, to Stephen F. art, Jennifer Jackson, to
·Baloy, Joyce C. Baloy, deed, Columbus Southern Power,
·Bedford.
·
.
. right of way, Orange.
. Gary E. White, Luz Eneida· David A. Davis, Shelby J.
·White, t~ Charlene Doczi, Davis, to Danny Wise, deed,
deed, Rutland.
Rutland.
· ·· Bruner Land Co., Inc. to
Jeffiey 0. Patterson, Te~sa
·Clarence R . Barnett, Carol L. Pattenon, to Michael Musser, deed, Rutland.
.. Ann Barnett, deed, Olive,
Nancy Kay VanMeter,
Bruner Land . C&lt;~o. Inc., to
· Micltael L. Moore, M~ Anne Nancy Kay Fisher, Kenneth
Fisher, to Michael R. VanMoore, deed, Olive.
. Robert ). Sedock, Jr., Joe- Meter, Kathi L. VanMeter,
·lene M. Sedock, to Nancy S. deed,Village of Syracuse.
Grueser, Nancy S. Grueser
Mathew Lyons, Randall
Trust Agreement, deed, Bed- Perry HaD, Trudy Marshall
ford.
Lyons, Truman Richard H;ill,
George Kalatta, deceased, to to James A. Sisson, Judith R.
June J. Kalatta, June ). Sayre, Sisson, deed, Village of
4ffidavit.
Pomeroy.
: Kenneth B. Young, Betty L.
Carol Mourning, James
Young, to Brenda M. Samp- Mourning, to Trudy Marshall
~n. Rick L. Sampson, deed, LyonJ, Truman Richard Hall,
Orange.
.
.
Perry Randolph HaD, deed,
; Helen E. BlackstonRevoca- Village of Pometoy.
~le Trust to Harold Blackston,
Lula Mae Circle, deceased,
Helen Blackston, affidavit.
to Donna R. Mutti, Harold W.
: Helen E. Blackston Revoca- Circle, Dorothy J. Harden,
ole Trust to Douglas W. Dixie A. Sayre, Carl ). Circle,
Beaver, 'Ihlcy D. Beaver, deed, certificate, Sutton.
Salisbury.
.
·
· Fulton Thompson 'Ihlctor,
Harold H. Blackston to Associated Fabricators, Inc., to
Douglas W. Blackston, 'Ihlcy Village of Pomeroy. deed, ViiD. Blackston, de~d, Salisbury. !age of Pomeroy,
: Ronald. E. Eddy II, Suzanne
Rick D. Lawson, Cheryl L.
B. Eddy, to J~mmi Gillilan, Lawson, t~ Thppen PlainsTara Gillilan, deed, Olive.
Chester Water District, right
·
Calvary Bible Church to of way, Orange.
Robert Sta~Jley, Misty D. StanElson R. Dailey, Wanda Dailey, deed, Village of Middle- ley, to TP-CWD, right of way.
port.
Lebanon.
Kelly ). Gwinn to Fin tar
Virgil M. Dill, Pamela J.
Bank, N.A., sheriff's deed,Vil- Dill, to TP-CWD, right of
bge of Pomeroy.
way, Sutton.
Rowena H. Vaughan, Leo
Carol A. Russell to Jonathan
Loring Vaughan -II, to Pamela Runyon, deed, Scipio.
G. Bentz, Timothy W. Bentz,
James D..Barrett, Virginia
deed,Village ofPor:neroy.
G. Barrett, Virginia 'G ..
James S. Rucker, Sr., Connie Hagy, Michael Hagy, to
Rucker, to Richard A. Cole- James D. Barrett, Virginia
man, Patsy J.-. Coleman, deed, G. Barrett, Virginia G.
Olive.
Hagy, Michael Hagy, deed.
Grace ). Abbott, Grace L.
James D. Barrett, Virginia
Abbott, Edgar A. Abbott, Jane G. Barrett, Virginia G.
Abbott, to Charles Wilson, Hagy, Michael Hagy, to
deed, Salisbury.
Scott M. Barrett, deed.
Harold H. Smith, Erma Mae
Betty Meldau, Michael
Smith, to Harold Eugene Meldau, to James Denner,
Smith, Robert Wayne Smith, Sr., deed, Letart.
· Wihria C.· Harris to
deed, Bedford.
Daphne G. Young to Merlin Robert S. Harris, Sr., TrenR . Swain, Sharon J. Swain, nia Harris, deed, Lebanon.
Kimberly M. Bodiker,
right of way, Olive.
Linda S. Weese, Don Carl Charles H.B. Bodiker, to
Weese, Jack Alan Weese, to Robert
B.
Warner,
Bob R.Weese, deed, Village of · Michelle L. warner, deed,
Syracuse.
Scipio.
Carl M. Gorby, deceased,
: Lela D. Hawk to Robert
Eugene Hawk, deed 1 Olive.
to Pauline L. Gorby, cerCaddie Dennison, F. C. Den- tificate, Salem.

POMEROY -A number
of cues 'were . recently
processed by Meigs County
Court Juda-: Stew:n L. Story.
Those
fined
:were:
Christopher C. Anthony,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
three days jail suspended,
one year probation, driving
un~er FRA suspension:
David L. Lawson, Pordand,
$850 and costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three, six
month license suspension,
one year probation, jail and
SSOO suspended upon completion of RTP School, driving under the influence,
SSO and costs, possession, $50
and costs, disorderly conduct; Benjamin W. Call,
Pomeroy, $30 and · costs,
speed,. $30 and costs, seat
belt; DavidW. Stover, Athens,
$20 and costs, failure to display; Michael W. Clark, Long
Bottom, $30 and costs, seat
belt; Brynda P. Faulk,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
speed; Lois A. Jenkins,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat
belt; Terry N. Waugh,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat
belt: Hden L. Gordon,Junction City, $30 and .costs,
speed; Jason A. Miller, Middleport, $30 and costs, seat
belt; Sa!Duel V. Wamsley,
Middleport, $30 and costs,
seat belt; Kasey M. Williams,
Middleport, $20 and costs,
seat belt; William A. Racer,
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, seat
belt; Bryan L. McColleun,
Athens, $30 and costs, seat
belt; Scott A. Affenberger,
· Parkersburg, W.Va., .$30 and
costs, seat belt; Kelly L. Watson, Rutland, $20 and costs,
failure to yield.
Michael J. lprea, Parma,
$30 and costs, speed; Dana
K. Warner, Columbus, $30
and costs, speed; Justin C.
Bezilla, Pittsburg, Pa., $30

and costs, speed; M:ujorie A. burg, $30 and costs, seat belt; restraining order, aggravated
Tharp. McConnelsville, $30 PaulWThaxton,Jr.,Racine, menacing; Betty L.Johnson,
and costs, speed; Terri M. $20 and costs, following too Middleport, $23 and costs,
Slater, Hurticane, W.Va., $30
and costs, speed; Sammy L.
Cook, Pataskala, $30 and
costs,
speed;
Alfredo
Quiralte, Waco, TeXJS, $30.
and costs, speed; Jonathan P.
Linberg, St. Louis, $30 and
costs, speed;Jeromee C. Calaway, Pomeroy, $30 and
costs, seat belt; Eugenia D.
Mathias, Mt. Pleasant, S.C.,
$50 and costs, speed; Deborahd S. Weber, Reedsville, $30
an costs, speed; Rhonda J.
Harmon, Huntington, W.Va.,
$30 and costs, speed; Jerry F.
Merica!, Columbus, S30 and
costs, speed; Mark D.
Kessinger,
· Huntington,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speed;
Violann Davis, Somerset,
$30 and costs, speed; Jef!Iey
A. Stohlmann, Lebanon, $30
and costs, speed; John D.
Sturgeon, Pomeroy, $30 and
costs, speed; Mark W. Watercutter, Troy. $30 and costs,
speed; Michael A. Brown,
Pomt Pleasant, W.Va., $30
and costs, speed, $30 and
costs, seat belt.
Brenda J. : Drummond,
Gallipolis, $30 and costs,
speed; Ronnie Billy, Fayet-~" N .C ., ••20 and cos ts ,
tc:vwe,
left of center; Harold E.
Richeson,Mt. Gilea, $30 and
costs, speed;gan·e R. Weber,
Racine, $30 an costs, speed;
Joseph E. F bes, Pinch,
W.Va., $30 an costs~ speed;
Linda M.Avery, Scott Depot,
W.Va., $50 and costs, speed;
Daniel E. Cornell, Crown
Ciry, $30 and costs, speed;
Joanne R. Lamp, Columbus,
$30 and costs, speed; Timothy M. Slater, Whitehall, $30
and costs, speed; Dawn M.
Yambur, Waterford, $30 and
costs, speed; Phillip A. Moon,
Shade, $30 and costs, speed;
David B. Culp, Reynqlds-

close; Rodney A. Stewart, speed; Randy R. Mills,
Coolville, $30 and costs, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, 10
speed; Betty L. Panons,Vien, days jail suspended to one,
na, W.Va., $20 and costs, fail- one year probation, restrainure to obey traffic device; ing order, domestic \'iolence.
Ralph O'Hair,Jr., Hamilton,
Evan M. Larimer, Albany,
$30 and costs, spee4: Christie $30 and costs, seat belt, $100
L. Lantz, Coolville, $30 and and costs, three days jail mscosts, speed; James D. Strick- pended, three yean probalin, The Plains, $30 and costs, tion, underagae consumpspeed; Paul M . McCalister, tion, $50 and costs, drug
Huntington, W.Va., $30 and paraphernalia;
Bobby
costs, speed; Rodney V. McConaha, Pomeroy, $25 ·
Blevins, Eubank, Ky., $30 and costs, speed; Amy M.
and costs, speed; John W. Tuttie, Racine. $50 and costs, Thornburg, Pomeroy, S41
possession, S30 and costs, seat and costs, speed; Ryan M.
belt, $100 and costs, three Powell, Pomeroy, $100 .and
days jail suspended, one year costs, 10 days jail suspended,
probation, give false infor- · two yean probation, restrainmation.
ing order, domestic violence;
Roger P. Hysell, Racine, Benjamin W. CaD, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs; reckless $100 and ct&gt;sts, three days jail
operation, $30 and costs, seat suspended, one year probabelt, $30 and costs, marked tion, no operaton license;
lanes; Trina D. Young, Ricky W. Sch~fer, Syracuse,
Racine, $30 and costs, seat 1200 and costs, 60 days jail
belt; Stacy Hawk, Middle- suspended to three, two years
port, costs !&gt;nly, 10 days jail probation, driving under sussuspended, one year . proba- pension; Jeremy K. McMil- ·
tion, r,estraining order, !ian, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., $850
domestic violence; James A. and costs, 10 days jail susMcDonald, Middleport, $25 pended to three, six month
and costs, disorderly con- license suspension, two· years
duct ; Glenn F.. y,oung, Jr., probation, J'ail and $500 susRacine, $20 and costs, seat pended upon completion of
belt; . Douglas Mowery, RTP School, driving under
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, dis- the influence, $25 and costs,
orderly conduct; JEremiah failure to yield, $30 and
M. Triplett, Gallipolis, $25 costs, seat belt; Kenneth
and costs, failure to stop at a Mitchell, Langsville, $1.000
stop sign; Charlene G. Lewis, and costs, 90 days jail susHuntington,W.Va., $200 and pended to 30, five year
costs, three days jail suspend- license suspension, five years
ed, one year probation, jail probation, driving under the
suspended upon proof of a influence, $200 and costs, 90
valid license, expired license, days jail suspended to 30, five
$30 and costs, seat belt; Tara years probation, driving
L. Hawley, Pomeroy, $30 and under suspension, $25 and
costs, seat belt; Elby. Nye, costs, marked lanes, $75 and
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six . costs, possession, $30 and
months jail suspended to 10 costs, drug paraphernalia,
days, two years probation, $30 and costs, seat belt.

Happy Anniversary To You •••
Happy Ann
To.You •••
,.

\

Donations made
by H111th Club

IUy-

I

'

'

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community Celender 11
publlelled 11 1 free Hrvloe
to non-profit groupe withlng to announoe meeting•
ani:lepeolelevtnll. The oelencllr II not deelgntd IQ
promote 11111 or tunckele•
trt of eny type. lteme ere
prtni8CI only u ep101
mlta end cannot be guahlnt.ec1 to be prlnltcl 1 •~*~flo
numbel'otdlye,

'*"'·

Cermti·Sutton
Unlied
.Methodlet Church, Carmel
building on Carmel Road,
RIOlne, Friday through Sun·
dey, 7:30 p.m. Norm Coli•
min, Richland Avenue
Church to · IPIIk. Special
muelo, "The Upllltera• on Frl·
daYJ talent night on Salurdly,
enCI thl "Larry Oeorge
Slngera• on Sundey. Nui'MI'y.

retr11hmenta and l'llllth
IOI'IInlnga lor entire family.

Thuredl~

.

POMEROY - Concert at
the Poplar Ridge Frat Will
Baptiat Church, Saturday,
8:30 p.m. "MoComaa Family"
and "Forgiven o4" to alng. John
Elawlck, putor, lnvltea public.

HARRISONVILLE - Haer·
rltonvllle Lodge &lt;411 F&amp; AM.
Ml" 2
' - Fourth Saturday 11 the tempt&amp;, 7:30
SYRACUb !. SyriOUII annuli Mtlal Oo\wlly Family p.m. Fltlreehmente.
Vlllege Council, Thuredey, Fun FHI, Slturdly, Middle·
.
' \
7:30 p.m.
pc1rt Chui'CII of Chrllt Femlly
PORTLAND
Lebanon
Life Center, 10 e.m. to 2 p.m.
l'rldaY, Mly J .
· Fr11 edmltllon, ohlldren'l Town•hlp Truateea, Saturday,
RACINE Revlvel, acllvltlet,
ent,rtalnment, 7 p.m. townahlp building.

~~~

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Opinion

The Daily Sentinel
•

PapA&amp;
...........,. M.y 2, 2002

.

www.mydallylentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing

~ tak1ng biger bite

Co.

Den Dlckeraon

-of family income

Publisher

Diane Kay Hill
ContrcUer

C~ne

Hoeflich
General Manager

four-year
institution
. Tuition at the nation's remained at 2 percent of
• public colleges and univer- income for the richest 20
sities took an ever-bigger percent offamilies.
Those families between
bite out of family income
between 1980 and 2000, the top and bottom income
outpacing financial aid and brackets saw tuition at state
state support, a . study schools take mpre of their
released Thursday says.
income,
though
the
Hardest hit were the increase wasn't as ,steep as it
poorest families, according was for the poorest America findings of The National cans, the study found.
In 1980,tuition ranged from
Center for Public Policy
and Higher Education, an 3 percent to 6 percent of
independent,
nonprofit income for the middle groups.
think tank in San jose, Calif. 1\vo decades later, tuition
The center promotes poli- took 5 percent to 11 percent
, cies that expand opportuni· · of income, the study found.
:·ties for higher education.
Similar patterns were
, In 1980, average tuition found when the study exam:· for one student at a four- ined tuition at much-less
; year state schooi' equaled 13 costly community eolleges.
Spercent of the median Rising prices still don't
1 income for a family in the deter most people from
; bottohl 20 percent of college. More than 65 per• income levels, the study cent of high school gra-du;; found. Twenty years later, .aces are going straight to
l tuition at such institutions college, according to latest
&gt;equaled 25 percent of federal figures.
$ income for such families.
Many students are barWhile others have report· rowing more,• working
ed about the steadily rising more while at school, seekcost of higher learning the ing less expensive campuses
report is the firstto examine and taking fewer . courses,
tuition relative to income, which can slow · progress
according to Patrick Callan, toward a diploma, Callan
said in an interview.
president of the center.
The study, which relied
If the trends continue "you
on various federal and state have to ask how much can
· statistics, focused on public families do before we start
. institutions since those are discouraging people:• he said.
the schools that roughly 80
The study also found the
percent of America's col- sharpest tuition increases
, lege students attend.
were imposed at public
. Not all income groups campuses when the econosaw tuition take more · of my was weakest. At the
their earnings.
same time, government
, The wealthies.t saw no efforts to le11en the finan- .
. change at all; between 1980 cial pain for students and
, and 2000, the cost of send- their families fell short, the
. ing a student to a public, study says.
•

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Utvrr 16 ••• ftiiJOI' tJU Wtko••·
llwiWIIH ,., ,..,. 300 wanb. A.U lfttln
.,.· ,,~1 to tdilllff Md MIUf H liflftd •lfd /lfC(tldf lldllnn Gftd Nlfp/IOiff """'"'·
No u1Ulf111d lclltn wUI N pt~biUIIN. Utltn 1llotdll br ill pod luU, addnuftrr

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hblhlll111 Ca.~ tdllorilrl botml, u11lts1 Dlhmt~lst lffllld.

OUR VIEW

Solutions needed now
to stem exodus of young
folk from area
A poll getting a lot of play in the area media finally lends
some credence to something we've known anecdotally for
years - that young people, especially in the 18-to-34-year
. range, aren't staying in West Virginia or southern Ohio to pursue a career.
The survey of around 400 Mountain State residents, conducted by Mason-Oilton· Polling &amp; Research during March
and coming to light this week, cttes numerous reasons for the
exodus, not the least of which is the challenge of making a living in what remains a depressed economy.
,·
Young people on the whole get a pretty good education in
an area blessed by the numerous colleges and universities in
our Ohio River towns. Once they get a degree in a speciaHzed
or even general area, such as business, they face a hmited job
market. That forces them to seek employment in the cittes,
where the opportunities are greater and the pay rates generally higher.
·
While some of these folks may welcome the change, there's
evidence that people will stay in the region if the same oppor.tunities are afforded to them. Some of them make a compro. mise- they reside here' but commute to good jobs elsewhere.
:others accept what's available for the privilege of keeping
:their families here and eliminating the cost of shuttling back ·
·and forth to another city to work. ·
.
No matter how you look at it, it's an undesirable situation
and offers more impetus for people to leave.
: If this poll and the public discussion it's generated, to be
;heard in the "Home for Good" program airing at 9 tonight on
•West Virginia Public Broadcastmg TV stations, is to have any
:value, it will lie in .what solutions are available, or even new
ideas to keep our best and brightest from fleeing to supposed• ly greel)er pastures.
: It's incumbent on us to make those opportunities a reality
· .for all people in our area. That's why we're anxious to hear
. ·about what can be done to preserve our local economy and
· way of life.
·
·
·: The time is past for simply noting there's a problem. We
: need
, to .do something to patch a growing hole in the fabric of
- our soctety.

'dlunday, May 2, 2002

Stu'!f: Tuition at
~ pub.l•c colleges .

740-992·2151• Fax: 740-H2·2157

15£4EL
OUR READERS' VIEWS
System ineffective
Dear Editor:
Congress established the Child
Support Enforcement Program in 1975
under Title 4(D) of the Social Security
Act to collect child support. The program's goals are to ensure that ;~II children are supported financially by both
parents and to reduce the number of
children receiving public assistance
(office of public support).
As I understand the rule§. under Ohio
Law, all child support must pass
through a local Child Support
Enforcement Agency. That would also
include individuals who are not on public assistance and who have not formally asked for any services.
··
If the Child Support program is a joint
effort of federal, state and local agen-

cies, then why can I not gef child support from an absent parent? I am currently living in Jackson. My child support coming from Sylvester, Ga., goes
through Meigs County. For many years
( 12) bad behavior has been allowed by
both ofthese states.
When dealing with Meigs Countr, last
week, I was informed that the 'case
worker" has been changed last
December. I asked why I was not told
this information. The reply was, "We
have thousands ·of cases. We do not
notify everyone every time a worker
changes."
Well then, whose name do I say to the
Meigs County CSEA voice recorded
telephone system if you do not tell me?
When a call is made to Sylvester, Ga.,
I am told, "Oh, Ohio gets mad when we
talk to you. You need to call your case

•

worker in Ohio."
Editor, I would like to know how
many other parents go months without
child support? Are there others who
have to beg for child support? Do our
lawmakers· _understand that they are
inadvertently giving consent for individuals to not pay?
Overdue child support (in-state or
out-of-state) is still overdue support. I
am ashamed by the outrageous behavior
of our child support system. Our tax
dollars support this agency that is negJi.
gent in performing ·its job properly. The
court system in Georgia pardons the
irresponsible behavior of these individuals, allowing them to pay only a small
portion of overdue monies.
Casandra Murray
Jackson

I

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PageA7

f

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

.The Daily 5E:ntinel

•

•f I II

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

New farm bill allows
•
expansion .in subsi 1es
WASHINGTON (AP)
Congress is putting final
touches on an election-year
farm bill that boosts agriculture spending by 70 percent,
increasing subsidies to the
grain and cotton farms that
long have dominated federal
programs while adding thousands of other producers to
the federal dole.
The bill marks the reversal
of the market-oriented policy
o( the 1996 Freedom to Farm
law that was supposed to
wean farmers from government subsidies.
Agriculture Secretary Ann
Veneman said Wednesday she
will recommend President
Bush sign the measure.
A·final House vote on the
bill was expected by midday
Thursday. A Senate vote was
po11ible in the afternoon.
The bill would authorize
S180 billion in spending over
the next 10 years, a $73.5 billion increase aVer existing
programs. The legislation provides new payments for
everything from milk and
lentils to honey and wool.
Also, there is an 80 percent
increase in land-conservation
programs that will benefit
livestock farms and fruit and
vegetable growers who have
historically received litde federa! cash.

On the Nat

"This bill addresses multiple the bill was "well-balanced,
needs in a. balanced way," said broad-based" and certain to
Daren Coppock, chief execu- pass.
tive of the National AssociaThe bill would pump biltion ofWheat Growers.
lions of do'llars into the
A critic of the bill, Rep. economies of Plains and
Ron Kind, 0-Wis., planned a Southern states that are critilast-ditch attempt to derail it. cal for Republicans. It has
He was proposing that con- · been praised by groups
gressional negotiators be including the National Milk
directed to set new limits on .Producers Federation, United
payments to big farms and use Fresh Fruit and Vegetable
the savings for conservation Association and the American
needs and other programs.
Farm Bureau Federation.
f;. similar proposal passed Last fall, the administration
the House · 265-1 58 last issued a 120-page policy
month but the vote was not statement, hailed by environ· bi,nding on the negotiators.
mentalists and other critics of
Under the bill, farms could farm programs, that said fedcontinue to receive some sub- eral progranu stimulate excess
sidies in unlimited amounts.
production, inflate land rents
"A lot of my colleagues and largely benefit a relatively
have come up to me express- small number of big farms.
ing a lot of dissatisfaction Economists say the rtew bill
with the final product," Kind does little to addreu those
said.
,
complaints.
Keith
Williams,
a · · Veneman's support for the
spokesman for the House bill is a. "complete flip-flop,"
Agriculture Committee, said said Ken Cook, president of

the Environmental Working
Group. "I salute her for _trying
last year, but .this is quite ~
stunning public defeat" at the
hands of the House Agriculture Committee chairman,
Rep. Larry Combest, RTexas.
Two comntittee members
who favored a more marketoriented policy, Republican
John I'loehner of Ohio and
Den:tocrat Cal Dooley of Cal- .
ifornia, .said .in a statenient
that the bill"represents a giant
leap backward in federal agriculture policy."
Environmentalists say the
$17 billion increase in spending on land-conservation
programs 'over 10 years was
inadequate, given that crop
subsidies also would grow
substantially under the bill.
. Animal-welfare
groups
lamented the rejection by
congnmional negotiators of
several Senate-passed provisions, including one that
would have set tougher standards for dog breeders. The
legislation also would exclude
small research animals iuch as
ms and mice from a federal
law that sets animal handling
standards. The bill would,
however, ban the interstate
shipment of fighting birds.

Ltldy Eagles Mnked
Jothln Ohio
See Page 81

. I

A CONSERVATIVE WOMAN'S
VIEW
.
.
.

Alcohol abuse responsible for thousands of deaths

•

TODAY lN HISTORY

Despite significantly higher public college students) reponed having certain alcohol control policies (proawareness of the problem of binge unprotected sex because they were hibiting kegs on campus, offering alcoBY TH~ ASSOCIATE.D PRESS
,
drinking, among American college stu- drinking or using drugs.
hol-free student housmg, banning alco• Today is Thursday, May 2, the 122nd day of2002. There are
While some findings from the 200 I hol ads from campus).
dents as well as the general public,
243 days left in the year.
Although research on effective prebinge drinking remains a serious prob- College Alcohol Survey were encourag~
. . Today's Highlight in History:
lem on the nation's college campuses. ing, others are cause for concern. For vention strategies is relatively ne~ and
- On May 2, 1863, Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall"
While the percenta~e of students report- example:
still incomplete at this stage, researche11
:Jackson was accidentally wounded by his own men at
ing that they abstam from alcohol has
The bad news:
for both studies agree that the problem
'Chancellorsville, Va.; he died eight days later.
·
• The percentage of students who is complex, since any number of enviincreased fairly significantly, the per:- On this date:
centage of students who engage in reported frequent binge drinking (3 or ronmental and personal factors can
In 1519, artist Leonardo da Vinci died at Cloux, France.
binge drinking (defined as the con- more binge drinking episodes in the influence students' decisions about
_ In 1670, the Hudson Bay Co. was chartered by England's
sumption of at least five drinks in a row past 2 weeks) increased, from 19.7r.r- drinking.
:: King Charles Il.
for men or four drinks in a row for cent in 1993 to 22.8 percent in 200 .
The College Alcohol Survey noted
: In 1890, the Oklahoma Territory was organized.
women during the previous two weeks)
• There was a stgnificant spike in that prevention efforts so far have tendIn 1932, Jack Benny's first radio show made its debut on the
has also increased, especially among binge drinking and frequent binge ed to focus on indiviQuals' perceptions
•· NBC Blue Network.
certain sub-groups of college students. drinking among women at all-women's about drinking and its consequences · In 1936, ''Peter and the Wolf," a symphonic tale for children · Such are the findings from the 2001 colleges during the same time period, personal consequences and legal conse·by Sergei Prokofiev, had its world premiere in Moscow.
installment of an ongoin~ study by the compared to a decrease among women quences, such as college sanctions for
: In 1945, the Soviet Union announced' the fall of Berlin, and
Harvard School of Pubhc Health, the at co-ed colleges. The rare of alcohol problem drinking. Both studies found
' the Allies announced (he surrender of Nazi troops in Italy and
College Alcohol Survey (CAS), the abstention also increased among that the most effecti've strategies have
· pans of Austria.
·
results of which ap~ared in an article in women co-eds but declined among stu- more ro do with changing the atmos; In 1957, Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, the controversial . the March 2002 edttion of the Journal of dents at all-women's colleges. The over- phere on campus that coatributes to
. Republican from Wisconsin, died at .Bethesda Naval Hospital
American College Health. The study all .percentages of binee drinkers at all- binge drinking.
surveys a representative national sam- women's colleges js sttll only about half
·in Maryland.
Researchers su_ggest such strategies as
·
pie
of
college
students
from
some
119
the
percentage
of
women
binge
drinkers
severely restrictmg the availability of
: In 1960, convicted sex offender and best-selling author
colleges (the number of colleges partie- at co-ed colleges, but the gap has nar- alcohol on campus, enforcing laws gov• Caryl Chessman was executed at San Quentin Prison in
ip~ng has varied over the years) about rowed considenibl y.
erning underage drinking and the pur•
. California.
.
their
own
drinking
patterns
and
those
of
•
CQllege
bi~
drinking
increased
chase of . alcohol, changing bouts at
-: In 1965, the "Early Bird" satellite was used to transmit teletheir fellow students. Previous surveys even while it
reased among high which alcohol sales are legal, even re- vision pictures across the Atlantic.
. were conducted in 1993, 1997 and school students. Normally, lower rates instituting Saturday classes.
· In 1972, after serving 48 years as head of the FBI, J. Edgar
1999.
of ltigh school drinking are associated
"Given such strong evidence of the
, - Hoover died in Washington at age 77.
The
coincidental
release
this
week
of
with
lower
rates
of
college
drinking.
harm caused by binge drinking - botb
--. Ten years ago: Los Angeles began to recover from rioting
another
study
'on
college
drinking
con,
The
good
news:
to the individual dl'itWir h,inuelf and ro
that had erupted in the wake of the Rodney King-taped beatducted
by
the
Boston
University
School
•
In
contrast
to
the
increase
in
binge
those around him - it is clear that col•. ing acquittals; about 2,800 National Guard troOps patrolled
Health
highlights
the
pressing
·
drinking,
researchers
noted
what
they
of
Public
lege
and university .authorities need to
• the city while 3,200 others stood by. Former House Ways and
need for attention tp the problem. The called a "polarization of drinldng do more to address thiJ problem." said
:Means Chairman Wilbur D. Mills died in Searcy, Ark., at ase
study, one of two dozen commissioned behavior," that has increased since Janice Shaw Crouse, senior Fellow of
·82..
I
by
the National Task Force on CQIIege 1993. For example. the number of stu- the Beverly LaHaye lutitute: Five years ago: President Clinton and congressional
Drinking, convened in 1998 by the dents who abstained from alcohol in the Concerned Women for America ·
-Republicans came to terms on a plan to balance the budget
National Advisory Council of the past )'ear has increased from 16.4 per"And students themselves aiJo have a
• over five years. A new national memorial honoring President
National
Institute
on
Alcohol
Abuse
Wid
cent
10 1993 to 19.3 percent in 2001.
responsibility
to exercise restr.Unt when
: Franklin D. Roosevelt was officially opened in Washington,
Alcobolism
(NIAAA)
of
the
National
•
Researchers
noted
a
decrease
in
it
conies
ro
im:sponsible
behavior of an
D.C. Tony Blair, whose new Labor Party crushed John
Institutes of Health, linked alcohol binge drinking among residents of fra- kinds. While socializing is an integral
•. Major's long-reigning CQnservatives in a national election,
abuse
to some 1,400 student deaths, ternity and sorority houses, which, in part of the college experience, it should
•· became at age 44 Britain's youngest prime minister in 185
500,0(10 injuri.es and 70,000 cases of the past, have been the site of some of not be aa:ompanied by underage (ille: years.
sexual assault or date rape each year.
the most e.u reme drinking behavior on gal) and binge drinking. oor should it be
, , One year ago: President Bush and Republican congressionIn addition, according to a study campus.
pursued at the expense of the health and
:- alleaders clinched a budget deal embracing most of the presreviewed in the Feb. IS, 2002, issue of • There has been a significant decline safety of the students and othen."
• ident's iax and spending golds. Germany inau~rated its new
tbe Dot.Comrnentary, some 25. percent in binge drinking among Hispanic and
(Alice Click o!Mount Alto u th4 sratt
Chancellery in Berlin alflid concerns the budding was too
of sexually active young adults between Native American students.
director of Concenud .Women for
: grandiose. Today's Birthdays: Rock singer Lou Gramm
the age of 18-24 (many of whom are
• Student support has increased for America.)
(foreigner) is 52. Actress Christine Baranski is 50. Actress
'Elizabeth Berridge is 40. Country singer Ty Herndon is 40.
•
;Actress Jenna Von Oy is 25.
111 Cctw'lk.. ~. OND
:a,w.Y!L
: Thought for Tbday: "Like ships, men founder time and
7-..:IIM
IDHTI-1111
1
again." - Henry Miller, American novelist (1891-1980).
;

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Locations
288 Race St

918 S. Third

-~-

543 N. SICOi'ld

35 Rlwtvllw Dr

83 RutJand St

1138 s. Seco;1CI . 424 Such St
680 S. Third
Dave DIIM Parle
810 P~~g~~ St
331 I. Third
508 s. Third
530 Laurel It
144 Covert Ln
482 s. Third

Pomet'oy Parking Lot • 3 ..,..
115 Kerr It
1113 W. Locust It
Hlah 81, Uncoln Hill
132 sun.ntut Ave
- 141 Butternut Ave

I

~

1109 s. Third
810 M-r: St
220 N.
lli'ld
278 S. Fifth
584 Uncoln It

340 E. Main St

•

755 Park Street 137C N. S1COi1CI
342 6th StrMI 340 Rutland St
10 Cott8ae Dr 4 P1ach Circle

72 s. Third
931 HyNH
398 A8h St ·
108 Parle St

Pomeroy Locations

f-L~. . _.~

i•

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.,

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.

.-

•\

118 Butternut Ave
Hartwwll HouN
Chapman Shoes
Weevlng Stitches

.,

~--

-----

55 1. laco.'1d

U18 Walnut StrMt

810

1

s. II eo.'1d

784 8. Third
The Wlc:ller Buggy
Acqulsltlona

1

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MiddlePOrt Dept 8toN
Office
lo
IJY
tt1aSltvlce
tt1 lo car-,

Locker219
•
Dan'•
The Ohio RIYw a:.. eo.

.--- -.. -----

POMEROY

•-11..-n

DROP US ALINE.

'

AY3&amp;4
IDDLEPORT · ·PO EROY

.'

•

..

-------------------------

..

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�•

Th Dail Sentinel

11

Lodwick no-hits Miller, wins 8-0
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l~loe 1\ht« sutfi:l'l:\l

thoe km.

lii.rstem hltm:~ """' 1\i'\Wll \\ith
1\\'\) 'II~"'
'''" .a doltllle, S-in~

l&gt;o•~tl th~ sin"'a,jl.11ct t~l.aw.av .a
~ittgloe, llldwkk .a
alld "'"~ sht"'~ b~ Oilkln. Phillips (affil'l.l " hot

:li""'"'·

and ~ sil~,
~rn ~ ro ffikr.al H~Kldng

bat with

1\\'\) .toobl~

l'tid.l~

.

Larkin young
a~ain in Cincy

2002 FlSO

.HS Softball Poll

#C0390

ol

.~ol:&amp;:.t~=
Aaeocll.ilon dvlelona. with fi"t-

VILLAGERS

SAVINGS UP TO

2002ZX2
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2, Pollnd Swnlnllry
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4, l.lmlllllllh (2)
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8, ~. Noi1I'IWtelem
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2001 Grand Marquis '"''"'
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2000 Ford Focus,.-so30

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Adam Grim, " sophomore
thrower for tile Univenity of
1\io Grande tnck team,
P.laccd in the discus at the
l'lmerican Mideau Confer·
ef.c~ championships held last
weekend.
::The Meigs High School
~lumnus heaved the discUI
116 feet to take eighth place.
He joined Rio teammates
Glenn Arnold and Landon
t:oate, who also placed (tim
ind third, respectively) in the
lliscus for the Redmen.

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sponsor toumey
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UNIROYAL, BF Goodridl. Mounting and balancing
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FORD MOTOR CO.
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.SPLASH GUARDS :

$1

. POMEROY
- The
Marauder Three-on-Three
basketball tournament will be
~ld May 17 and 18 ac Mei115
High Schon!.
for more information, contact Carl Wolfe at 992-2158
Rick Ash at 992-5960.

or

Jason Kldd

named aii·NBA

INCOLN
R E M I·E R
XPERIENCE
\

'

I

NEWYOIU&lt; (AP) -New
Jersey Nets guard Jason KJdd
became the franchise's lim AIIN BA 11Ciection, joining tirsttfme memben Kobe llryant
and Tracy McGrady. .
Shaquille O'Neal and Tim
Duncan cied a.• the top votegeum on the A11-NBA tint
team, chosen by 126 1por11
Writen and broadcasterJ in the
United Statft and CAnw.
I

LOS ANGtllliS (All) ~ · hncr up tht&lt; lllttMit· ~ml
Thl~ "'~~ tilt ll.trt}' L~rltln of ~tre~h\'\1 his right k~~; m 1\"t
uM.
th~ Mrt'&lt;' till n~w Rubt•N&gt;,
1 lmltt'\1 oo -4S il;.lllii'S last !I'll- wlm was u"· with the ~~i~lh
$1}1\ h«~u!c of lt\iurl~. L.\rkh1
"I l~1d thl.' rowt.1~ un the
hit hh li"t ~~11, ~lid th~ h-Ill WJ! hit With
home
nm a \wll'&lt;l ~ld&lt;'W\11\h kind of ~llin
·
sine.. litst june un it. It kind of tl.ttt\'\1 ro\\'.IN
&lt;11\d turned in ~ spt-ehl~ulllr ·mt• instt-•~&lt;1 1:11' htlundnl!.."
d~t\&lt;n~lw pia~ in ~ttp\ll)rt of. Larkin Mid. "It w·.1s j1"t one of
joey 1-bmllttm ;~~ the Cindn~ those thltii!'S whcrt· I was In the
lllltl 1\.l'tls bl'&lt;lt the LO-\ Angek·s ril(\11 pi,Kc .~t the ri11ht tim""
Dmlgt-n ~ -n Wt&gt;tlne~~tlay night. Hlllltllron (.l-1) is in th~
"U~rt}'\i ulldbplltt-tlly thl' ril!ht pla.:c at tl1c r~lt time,
·lender of this b!!ll dub," Hllmll· too. lhc rll!ht-h.mJt•r, whtl
mn llllid tlt' th~ ll · tin1c AU- hdpL'&lt;I Sail nl~!t" wh1 " ~"'"­
St~~r !htlrtstup nnd thl'\'e-thll~ n~nt in I'l\1~, h~s notk~..l sitn·
Ollld tilow wlunct.
. llarltics bt•t\wcn th,tt tc,un .md
Cmnlng nlf ~n April In this ou.-.
whkh ht•llllttl'\1 . PH with tiw
"Th.-t'c\i a lot of char~cter
1\.Uh 31\d I ~ sttikcmtl!l, latltht on tlu, team," S&lt;~ld H.unllron,
opened the 1!&lt;\ltiC by drlvilll! who llll\1\wd six hits owr 7 I·
Hldro Nomn~ 2-1 pitch tlWr J luulnl!'!. "The I!'IY! scr~p.
thl' ltfi..fltltJ rl'uce ttl end a 2- tht•y pl~y h:IN •ml 111'\lcr glw
fur--22 sllllll()- .
in."
It \Yll.l Lurklu\ llnt homer
Not this )'\'ar. Tht• Reds
· sln~t• lustjlltll' :11\.....: thtt-c tluys bt'lo\•111 Muy In 111':11 (\l;tct' (or
bclbt'c he Wcllt oil the dlsublctl the t\!'11t titllc sittn· I 'N-1 list tmtl ntlssetl th~ tlnul H!i thrlr llrst sc•snn in the NL
11'\lllt•s.
Cctar.tl Mtt•r shltiinl! frtllll the
"I'm just tryinl! to lind sonic NL West. They arc 14-r, ~h1cc
cunslstcncr In my upprutlth,' Kcu Uritft•y Jr. wus plact•d un
hit till' bul hurtl ntld hopcl\111y the DL with ;\ tllrll tcndntl lu
the results will be there," snltl hb rlt~;ht knee.
Lnrkln, who w1m nine Sllwr
1-l•mlltuu, who t&lt;llllc within
Slul!l.!"r llwnrtls ll! the lenglle\ tiw tlll!S uf his nr,t tlllltplctctop hitter :111\Unl! shortstups.
11•mc shutout i11 six yt·&lt;~rs, ·
I-lls
tl~th1slw
t~cm
CIIIIIC
In
struck
out seven lllid W&lt;IS &lt;lidcd
PAIIDON Ml- Cincinnati Reds' Barry Lerkln leeps over Los Angeles Dodgera catcher Paul
Lo Duca to accra a run from third base attar 11 wild pitch by Dodgers pitcher Hldeo Nomo dur- th~ btittt:llli · of the ~m. He
shurt• hopp~d C&lt;'!llr bturis'
Ing the sixth Inning W dneaday In Loa Anlleles. (AP)
,........ Llrkll\ •:a

.
ReelS

33
30
29
27

10, Thoinvlll8 Slw1dlro

'

·

w1n over LA.

...

COL~- Hilwa . .
pnl
Ohio hi!#~
achool all1a dl:llll ..,.,. In lht

2002 MERCURY

2001 Ford MustanQ 145040

.m- tht

hittrt.

,

Lady ·Marauders ·southem
ground Rockets
IV loon WOLPI

SENTINEL CORA!SPONDENT

The Lady Mnramlcr1 fiin·d bcttl·r thnn thclt· .11111k coull·
tcrparts as they topp,•tl the L3dy Ro•·kcll (•· l, impnwilll! tu
10-3 a!!ilill!tTVC tiles ,ulllll-7 ovcr,ill.
Uehintl 11 j!lltld !UJlJlllrlinl!! cn~r. Kmlc J~O&lt;•r; dmninnc~d
the ll.o ~k,·u with only. foUl' hn~,. Tllllll~r~ on bonnl thmu!lh
Aw hmllll'! via three MdW~IIIi scu~ ; .111d a tiu~o~lc by llTtJWJ1 ,
The Wdl!ltlll Lalli~! llllllltl!!Cd to pick tip 11 p:tir ,If !ci)I'CI
in the siJc to ovoid the shutnpt. With nm• fll111c, 1{ , C:n:111Cilll!
doubl~d up th~ mi,ldle nnd D. Crcll1cllliS fi&gt;llowcd with :1
base hit. Wnldrtln went dow11 via the mik&gt;'OIIt l'llllll' thcu
Patrick dnwc in the puir of run! with :1 lloublr twfi1rc till'
final out of the innillll· 111 .the final fra111c, th~ ll01:kc" were
retired in order.
·.
·u,c Mnrt1un and Clnld ;coTl·d twio.:e i11 fllltiii!C twn as
~ Jaynce Davis led olf with a sinwc. advanced tu scnmd on u
steal, JciTen walked and A;hkoy IJ11rbri&gt;l~c ripJ"'d ·'· doubh•
IICOrinl! Davis and JciT~r! but \l'ol! thc11 cut lluw11 1!111111! tn
third. A strikeout and ground ball cnd~d the hmilllol·
'Thmnas, the Wcll!toll hurler, Mired the tir;t two butter; in
frnmc thTilc btlt Nicki llutciM puutided Ollt a dnublc nnd
Mindy Chanc~oy's 1in!!lc !l'llt lm home. Chon~~'Y !tol~ !c~­
ond third ~nd cro1!Ctl the plat uiT a tm~ hit fmn1 navi1. Burbrid~JC walked to open the lhurth, 111 did Atkin Wurry.je!si. ca Dlactcnar 1inwecl :md Burbridge wa1 l!liL al thint. Foltuwing out lllllllbcr two, AllllttJ.I~ Petty dm1bl~d b\lt Wil! t.'Wn·
tu.'llly om at ch~ plate in an atlelnpr to ~tore.
The 1ixth 1aw a mill(lr thte:tt by the Marauder! ~~ the
n.'tult uf a hit batter a walk in between~ pair ofba!c hit1 and
a run which crossed the platl.l prinr to the third ouc but w.11
ruled invalid.
·
· Butcher led the MnmudcTI! at the plate pqunding uut a
double and two sintd~•. D.tvi• r.1ppcd chtec !lngltos, Kar.1
Mut!l:l' addcd.a pair nfb:nc hitll, anti Fctty,JdTcrl and Burbridge doubled •md both Chancey and Ulucun.1r !lnglcd.Jcffen I!'IVC up a cliJublc w K. Cremcan1 Mid I'Jtriek a11d ,, bJ!IC
hlt to 1), CTiltnc~ll!, !triklng out one but giving up no free
pa~~J~.'t,

Thomas, chc IOllinK pitc~r. &gt;truck OLtt six .md walkctl four.
~

pltrh, thl'll

w,., l.lurrows tt'llched on an l'ri\Jr

to l~t hullll' Arl1n, the &lt;tnrt• 11-0.

A liw ru11 thirtll11nhll! pruW1ttl•rrunl swrctl two h1 tlw fuurth .u1tl mie
vid••d Sllttth~l'll th,• lltnr~ltl of vh:ttwy It nc~d· ~uch In 'thl• dxth aut! ~cvcllth. ·
l'd lu flmtilll( 1111 H-4 Tri•V&lt;IIicy Cot1ft·TI·Ilc~ . Smtthcrn hitter• WCI\' Jmtill Allt•Jo with " si ll·
1-lorkilll! Divhlo11 vkwry uv~r Watcrfol'll Hie, llrulldoll l'icrt:e a slnl!lc, D~tlly Hill &lt;I sinl!lc,
Wt• dne~thty llil!h!,
and A;trtJII Ohlitll!l't u &lt;llll!lc.
Cuurh Snl!t Wkkliu,•'! ctt-w took nu e11rly
Wntcrlbrtl h itt~rs were IJ&lt;II1 Ducbcrcillcr
j . O lc.td i11 tht: tlm lnnilll! on ~tlcadufl'wnlk to
Hrkc Hill, :1 siicrilke hum by Jmcln Allc11, th~n with 11 tri~lc, IJavld Jom•• a •inl!lc• "rhu ll lol&lt; 11
~ith two vllt, 1Jrul1lioll Jlicr.:c, Curt Crou~h. ;IuKic, Woiurll!ht twn !ill~b. 1111tl W:ll-(llcr,
ltACINil -

Bv JIM lowlY
SENTINE" CORRESPONDENT

Waterford

lally 1-lillaiii'Cnchcd 011 11 ilcldcr'! choic~ .
"1'hc11 A,ll'ull Ohlitt~&lt;'f hud 11 twt~-ruu slnl!lc t'ttr
tlw .\-0 tully.
.
111 the third, Southern went 1111 J:I. (J whctt
. Allc11 it'd 110' with 11 Mint;lc, Matt A1h waN hit
·with n J'itt'h, ,u1d i'icrc~ ~htl!fcd. D111ly Hill h11ll
11 tWll•I'UII i\)11l!lc. OhlinJ!er Wll! hit with a
II IIlii

Cullnlnghalll , tllttl McCutchcu11 l'nch sln~o~les.
Allcu Wa&lt; the wlt111h1 ~ tllt~hcr with r.:lid'
th1111 A1h .The co111bincd tulim scvcu a11d wnlk
one. llaker sutli:rctl the lm&lt; with unc strlk•· and
six mlkctlUt!.
Snuthcrn !,IUC! to ~crlcTIII 1-!o.:killl! 1111
lhuntluy ai1d Mlll,•r llrld11y.
I'

Bengals fill hole with Frerotte
the tCIIIII upc!U lti 111illiC;IIIlp cmcrlnl! hi• 11i111h NFL !ell·
CINCINNATI (AI') ih&lt;· Cindn11111i
llcnt~ah 11t i'nulllrown Stnuiunt. Train· mn. He !tarrc,t hi• pro cur~er
•ii!' IC!i ilw II~CIH LJU,Irt~rba~k 11111 calltp opc111 July 2(• In with W.i!hil11!1l111, Inter plitycd
(1u• ~r,•rottc Gcurl!ctuwn, Ky.
for IJctrult n11d lw 11nrwd i11

Nfl

til 11 onc-yrar
Wlltf.ICt

. wc.hll•!lilly
alter prulllhinl! hl111 he will be
!(iWil th~ ~h.111c~ LU Clllll]lCC~
f(, th ~ No. 1 job with
lmlduvcr !tmcr Jun Kltna .
"every pl.tyer w~ tnkr tO
tr.Jinlll!l t'illlip will be ccunpct·
1111! ""'I the best pl~y~r1 will
play," llcn~o~al! wuch IJick
LcB~.~~ •.lid. "jolll will be Nu.
I. yc•, but l'Wryhmly i• itt .1
con1pl:titlon."
The lloll~ll! ~~ 11 cct flr~rtltlc
to b.: on hand l'rilt1y when

C':untrnct tcrn1s weren't disdu!cd; Vrcruttc'! at~;cJlt, Mat•
Vh1 l1~111111f, Llid 1101 rctUrll Q
1elcpho11c 111c!!ai!C left for
11ell1llll' oc hi! L.m Anl!cl~;
uAicc.
Oth~r qilamrback! 1111 the
Uelll!!ll!' Ttl!tcr ate Akill S111lth •.
whu Is ~~clwerilli,l from a
~evcrc h"lllitril1g war !Uil'crcd
lr1 IJcccmber, b"ckup Swtt
Coviiii!IOil a11d rouklc free
RI!Cilt C1avi11 Hnff'n1an .
Frcnmc, 30, ~ui a backup
la•t !CA!UI1 tn Dc1wcr qunrtcrbJck llrim Griese. l'rcrotLc [,

(ol Nf'L I!•Une!, l11dmll!'l! twu
post-!ca"'u ~o~umc• .
Ht• Wal dl&lt;l.ICII fhr the 1'1 o
lliJwl after the I'J1)(, '&lt;'llsnll
with Wll!hln~wn , Whl•ll he
pa•1cd tor 11 curccr- hl~h ~,45:1
yanl&gt;,
l11 211110, hi! tlr.t !Cl\!011 with
IJcr1vcr, l'rcruttc !Ct n l3n;mcm
renlrd wlrl1 462 pnMhlt~; y.ltlh
a~.ti1m SJil IJicgu lltid tied the
tc.1111 rccurol for ll111chdoWt1
pa!!C! with five ir1 the •:1111c
I!AIIic. He 1tnrtctl in six ~&lt;1111cl
for the lltollCO! iu 20\HI.

�P•u 81•1M D•tw ,..,.,...

into awful
The Indians nine batters.
~pt sinh~, 1nd ro did a~ndana at
Brad fullmu tripled and scored on a
Jarobs Field. ·
sacrifice tly by Bengie Molina to put
jutod W.ashbutn pitch~ 6~-hit ball the Angels ahead t -0 in the sec-ond
for st"om innings as thoe Anaheim An~l inning. Indians anter fielder Milton
won tlu~ir lixth urai.ght W~noesd~y Bradley \\13$ hurt while trying to catch
ni,ght with a 7-2 vicrory FIJlhner~ drive.
o~r Cle~land.
Bradley lea~ against the padded
Just one night att,r a wall in right-cent.er and just miss~
~1-2 loss M A1uheim -the llldians' catching the ball, which ricocheted off'
worst e~r in the nine-~u ·history of the wall and left a bruise neat his left
Jacobs Field - Cleveland dtopped. its eye. He was replaced by Brady Ander·
fourth in a row and (ell to 2-13 follow- son.
ing an 11-1 sttrt.
Einar Diat tied it at 2 with his second
· The Indiam made three errors and homer leading off' the thitd inning.
lost ome pla}'et to llljury when a ball
A double e'rror by Indians second
boun~ olf the outfield wall and hit basemall Ri.:ky Gutierrez helped Anahim in the e}'e. They ha~ b... en heim to a three-run fourth . inning
outsro~ .-s-t 0 in losing tive in a row against Ryan Drese (2-3). Gutiertez
at home.
booted a grounder hit by Garret AnderThe ctowd of 23,536 beat the previ- son, then threw wildly, sending ~derous low
23,760 on April 9 against son to second base.
'
Mhmerota.
Tim Salmon fOllowed with an RBI
Duin Entad dtove in two runs for single and · scored on a double by
Anaheim.
l'ullmer. Adam Kennedy added an RBI
Washburn (3-2) won his third str.tight
single later in the inning (or a 4-l lead.
start. "11le lett·h.tnder allowed two runs
Cleveland loaded the bases with none
and struck out three, retiring his last
out in the iifth, but scored just once, on
CLEVEU;NO (AP) -

Tribe

or

252 Upper

River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

a ucri6ce fly by Omar Vizquel to make
it 4-2.
A.naheillt added another unearned
run in the seventh, helped by a throwing error by left fielder Russell Branyao.
With Kennedy on iirst, David Eckstein lifted a foul fly that llranyan
caught easily. He then threw the ball all
the way into the An~ls' dugout some
250 feet away, sendihg Kennedy t&lt;&gt;
third, where he scored on a single liy
Erstad.
The Angels added two in the ninth
when David Riske walked Erstad wi~h
the bases loaded, and Troy Glaus hit :a
sacrifice fly.
.
Notea: The An~ls have won six 4)(
eight in Cleveland after going 1-9 over
the previous I 0 games.... An~erson h!s
hit safely and scored a run in 14 of his
last 16 games, raising his average
.t58 .to .3\8, ... Wa.shburn became tqe
13th Angels starter to work into t~e
seventh inning in the last 17 games. {..
Cleveland fell to 1"12 when scorirjg
three runs or less.

CPU

Home runs disappeared in
April, along with managers
and fans.
Reversing the power boom
o( recent }'eats, major league
baseball
experienced
a
brownout in the first moilth of
!he se.tson, with home · runs
dropping t 8.4 pertent, from
l.J-4 per game to 1.91.
Just two }'ears ago, lrueb.all's
bashers set an April record
with an average of 2.54
homei'S per game, acrording to
· the EUu Sports llureau, the
sport's stat!stltiati.
"The ball's not juiced,"
RostQil's Nomar Gartiapatra
&amp;~~id MltMtically.
BasehaU~ powtr surge twO
)lean II.Qo sent top offieials
scrambling to commission scientific rests, which showed the
ball hadn't changed significantly.
"Maybe homers are down
because it hilS been cooler,"
Cleveland's EUls Burks said
Wednesday. "It rould be the
wtather. Or it could juu be
lmebllll. There are a lot of

things you can~ explain in this
game."
It's not . just batters ·Who
think home runs drop with
the temperature
"It seems like it's been colder this season," Sail Francisco
pitcher Kirk Rueter said.
"TI.at might have something
to do with it."
Sandy Alderson, executive
vice president of baseball
operations in the commissioner~ office, thinks enforcement
of the proper strike tone, as it's
ddlned In the rule book, may
be a (actor.
"We are seeing the low
.pitch caUed more consistently
as a strike, as it should be," hi!
said. "If pitchers are . going
there more frequently, it may
be more difficult to lift the ball
and ~t it out of the ballpark. I
certainly don~ think it ·has
anything to do with the baUs
or other equipment, the bats.!'
April's biggest disappearallce
illvolved managers, with a
record four tealtlll - Col·
orado, Detroit, Kanm City

and Milwaukee - .:hanging
dugout bosses. In addition,
a~ra~ attendance dropped
S.S percent, from 27,750 to
26,217, with 20 of the 30
teams showing losses.
On the field, scoring
dropped - but a lot less
steeply than home runs. There
was an avera~ of 9.25 tuns
per game, down 4,7 percent
from the 9.61 through the first
month last year. And the major
league
batting
average
dropped only slightly, from
.260 to .258.
Boston outfielde.r Johlltly
Damon likes the trend of
fewer homers .

bombs Marauders. 11·4
Itt JIM lol•uy

secuti~~e

SENT1N£l COORESI'ONOENT
Wellston's Golden l~ockea

posted scores in every imiing,
except the lint, enroute to an
11 -4 vktory owr the Mal'lluders
h1 Q lfi Voill~y Conference con. te'!t.
The win pushes Welllton to
9-2 in league play and 15-4
overall. Meil!l is currently at 8-IO
~nd 7.f) inside the league with
three TVC con!na remaining.
With two gone in the opening inning, Doug Dill, Mmud·
er moundslnan, singled to lett
but was picked otT first by
1\oeket hurler Josh Mootl. Well·
ston gelletate(1 no •olli!nse in
their hillf of the inning~ aJ Dill
~~at the1t1 down in order.
The M~tauders broke into the
Storing colu11m i11 inning two
when, with one out, Drnndon
Rnnuburl! Wlllked and the
Rockets committed four con-

fielding errors. beh
Gllze ripped one to left that w.1.1
ml~pla)'\!d, putting runnen on
second Mid thini. Chris Smith
got aboard by way of the s~nd
error 11., did Jimmy .Smith and
Der.rick Knapp, loading the
bases and it seemed Meigl might
mck up a biiJ inning. The threat
was cut short as Moon got the
llext b&lt;ltter to pop to short llll.d
an alert play by the Roeket
ca11:her caught Knapp leaning
tow.lrd SKOnd,tlalling him with
M act:UNt~ throw to first.
Wellston retllllated With four
runs in their IWf of the seeond
with Andy Parsons drawing a
base on balls to lead oft', 1\lchie
Kiror slammed a twO run homer
to lelt fullowed by two outa.
llmd Palm, Wellston DH, dou·
bled to leA:, Aaron )elFers oonged
a single then Morgan Johmon
sent both runners home with a

shot down the left filed line
btlbre the 6nlll om wa!l record·
td.
Meil!l came oock to knot the
store in the top of the third
when, with two out John Stanley ri.lled ·a double to left center
and R.anubu'i WIIS sal'e as the
result of the 6ft:h Rockel error as
Stanley KOred. Olaze doubled,
KOring Ranuburg. llll.d it Wid a
new game, but llot fur long. A
pair of free pa!!I!S put Phillip
Ctilbttee and Paoo.u on and
both ildwneed on ~ p.wed ball.
Kl!or went · down 1-3 pllting
Cnbttee, Ryrut Collins \Wiked
llll.d Palm' ~nd hit of the
evening accounted fur the second run of the !fame.
· Mei&amp;' mounted no offense in
the final frames as Moon and his
teammate; took control allowing only three base runner;.The
Rockets continued their

Chester

WOIJII

SEN1'1NEL.CORRESP0NOENT

llACINE
- Waterford
blew open a wry clme game in
th~ seventh inning with eight
runs to claim a 9-0 shutout
victory over the Southern Thr·
nadon Wednesday night in TriValley Conference Hocking
Divi!lon action at Star Mill
(&gt;ark.
Southern is now 9· 8 overall
and Is 6-6 In the league.
· The game was a competitive
battle for iix inning~ . lloth
elub1 played very Wll!l, howev·
er, Waterford's 6tst run wa.1 the
result of a Southern error. With

Larkin

ftomPipB1

•

by three double pi")'J as he
unproved to 9-2 ag:Un!t the
Dtxlgers.

one out in the second Inning,
Uethany Huck singled and
advanced on an error, then a 14 grouudout adwncel:l Huck,
Kristin Hill then reached on all
error that would have ended
the inning, but the run scored
for a 1..0 WHS lead.
For the next four innin&amp;'•
pitcher Rachel Chapman and
the Tornadoes SAt the league
leaden down in order 1-2-3.
Chapman had a 1trikeout, one
'per inning in the streak, but
then thin!!! wtnt South for
Southern.
Southern threatened In the

61\h and sixth, having two runs
aboard on a Nicki Thcker walk
and an Emily Hill siugle, but
three Tornadoes took a caU
third strike and Southern failed
to get actoss a run.
The error bug then hit
Southern in the seventh. Five
errors and timely Waterford
hittin11 pu~hed across eight
une~rned ruru.
Southern hitters wtri! IUtii!
.Sayrt a single,Ashlee Hill A slngle, and .Enilly Hill a single.
Southern goe1 to Federal
Hocking Thursday and Miller
Friday.

Nomo (2-4) allowed four
rum ~nd !bur hill over eight
innlnfP, Mid struck out 10, yet
ag~~in he received scant support.
Nomo bas receiVI:d I0 rum of
backup in his six swm ..._ three
of which have multed in
shutout lol8el. The Dudgen

already •ha\'1! been blanked a
major league-leading five times
-just three fewer dun last ye;~r.
G!llt!n represented the tying
run with the bAld loaded in the
eighth, but grounded Gabe
White~ 3-lslider meekly to 6nt
base.

•

...

E.fMII jmostllognetnet
www.porlomlonc:eupglldol.com

985·3308

Under the lights .

lf1wy won't chqe Roush's

THIS WEEK'S ACTION ON THE TRACKS

~tiw approach to life

-=

BY AL LliVINii

c. 3001 COX News Service

Ponllac·Excitement 400
Wherw: Ricllmond lntematlcnal Raceway:

hntull, caur.

J

ack Roush's wlcewaa- ftml medica·
tlon, breoklna with emotion but expreoslni
1P"'tltude fur beina alive
•
'l1le mUIII...,. Wlnalotl Cup owner hilld a oon·
Clll il'om his Blrml.,....m hnopital bed
S&amp;lunii!JI&amp; after neady dylna In a

"It's definitely a bett~r
game. There~ a little mote
strategy,"he sat'd. .
iI
Strikeouts \Vere down 6 petcent, from 13.61 per game '!':'
12.84, and walks increased 1j8
percent, from 6.78 to 6. 90. :
The average time of a nilleinning game was 2 hours, ~
minutes, exactly the same ~s
the first month of last seaso6.
It was 2:59 ' in the first weejk
but dropped to 2:51 in t~e
fourth week.
~
"I think we're seeing so e ·
modest ·· improvement ther ,
whkh is what we're looki1B
for," Alderson said. .
,

.;ruh nearTro~ Ala

p•

.·

WINSTON CUP

Ricllmond, Va. ·

· Whln: Saturday, 7:30 p.m. EDt
.-

.

An ultra·llsht airplane he was !lying as pan of
a OOth birthday celebrallon clipped a power line
and feU Into a lake. Roush waa roeeuecl by a nearby malden~ ex-Marine Larry Hicks. who pulled
Routh !!om beneath 8 ft!et of wa~tr and mlved

BUSCH SERIES
I
I R-: Hardee's 250
I Where: Ricllmond International Raceway;
Ricllmond, Va.
1 Whirl: Friday, 7:40 p.m EDt

Roush suftllred a cloeed head inllll'll collapsod
IW\1 and multiple ftactureo of hla left ley. He
stW IIStee airplane illel when he coughe.
Docton aald only about one penon In II would
haw survived the ...,!dent. ·
He oald be hllll very lillie reoolloollon of the
.aooldenl bul knowa he Is luck~
"l...,..lf there hadn~ bee~ this Improbable
Bill or CireumSllmOM·- they said )'OU heve to be
Juat on time tn h... an accident and you haw to
be llliTOIUICied with the rll!ht people and the
rll!ht clrcumsbmces to survive It, and I certainly
bod that 1101n1! fur me," Roush said.
"My problem wa~ whether .It was airplane-or!·
ented or whether It was pllot..rlented I can't be
sure, but my problem was thai I wao do ina 10111&amp;thlnl! thai I was unfamlllar with and that I didn't
reasonably..- the risk of."
Roush said plw to tJy 1111n "as aoon aa
they'lllet me. AB """'as they tell me my lolls
OK. •· Roush l'aoo8 month&amp; or rohabilltatlon and ·
will be In a wheelchalr, off hll damqod I"'J.
He aald he 'MIIl't chanp hll approoch lo IIIII.
"I won't pull bock and I won'tbe IIIIJIIeu 0011&gt;
petltlve and I won't be leoo than I can be every
dey d my )Jfo." Roush uld. "I'll do IMII')'Ih)fll I
can In aU tlie oreaa and opportun,ltioo that are in
il'ont of me. That's where I stand:"
•

d l - : 300 miles, 400 laps

8UICh . - record: Dale Jarren. t04.928 mpl1,
Sept. 8, 1995.
·
BIIICh q.,.llfylng record: Matt Kan..,th, 125.780
mph, May 3, 2001.
Dellndlng champion: Jimmy Spencer
Storyline: Jimmy Spene.ra IIW88p o1 both Busch
races at Richmond lasl year Is ille firal dme since
handling; getting In and out of the comers well lsi 1993 (Marl&lt; Martin) and illlrd overall (Harry Gant.
lmpor1anl.
1991).

I
Dlltlnct: .7Si!tlles
I
lllnldng: 14 d~Veoa banking In rums, 8
d4greu 11'01« straight. 2 degrees on bac:l&lt;strelch ..l
c.r.ndlng chlmplon: Tony Stawart
Storyllnt: The key to ~nnlng at RICI1mond Ia I
Shope: 0va1

. 1: '•

I

.

.n·

llltlhlill: .lllnM Jahflllon'l Ylcllory ~ 11t1t1 him to flftlltn the polnfa eta'ldlngi.

·•
wtn

Wlntton Cup: Ponllac
Excltme11t 400, saturday 7:00

j&gt;m. EPT on FX.

Come ... Rob Llwaon,
Ktvln Hudaon, tnd Jr. Wilton

GamNe ;, the pits yields
'lliaoryfor Jimmie Johnson

-------

••
•
••
••
•

1

•
J
•

For More lnformadon CaR (740) 667-3161

Member

4, flllndy ~.1,217.

a. KM\ny Woil-. 1,100.
8. Grog lllfllo, 1,146.
1. Slaey Compton 1,141 .
8. Mllco Mddi;;.;Nii,, 1, t 14.

o. Jett o.-.-r;titi3.

tO. 8oolt Wlmmtr, 1,0ol0.
t 1. 1!obby Hamilton Jr., 1,036.
til.~~. 883.
t3. Jtiii'UM1, 1178.
14. Jallnny - · 014.
t5. Tim -.1134.
t8.1bny -.1101.
17. Lany ~ 001.
11. Hri - J r., 178.
10. 8hant · 877.

ffilke Bing, Owner
Randy Bing,
·Technician
Jim Bing,
Technician

end," Rudel said. ''We couldn't get the front to
turn. I wish we could have maybe made a little
chassls acUustment to go with the tires,

13. Dolo JorrtH, 11123.
14. Word Bunon. 1,115,
15. Torry Labonte, 1,089.
18. M1Ctlaol WaHrlo, 1,061 .
17. DIYt BIIMII, i ,044.
18. =Nowmon, 1,031 .
18. R CIIVen, 1,028.
20.
LaDonlo, 1,019.
21. Jlm::;rnoor, tlOO.
·22. K~
, IVO.
23.JMmv ~. 975.
24. Jell G.-. oro.
25. Ellloh

a-. 825

28. Jerry Nldoau, 88.4.
21. !WrY Earnl1ltill, 151.
22. Aellfon L-. 828.
23. Cuoy Maaro, 818.
24. Jimmy ~c 7110.
25. LvndonAmldc_.l47,
28. 1'odd Bodlnt, 121.
27. ~In GNbll. 811.
28. Jifl Burton, 1122.
20.1ilt6( Khby, 810.
oo. Ron Homo&lt;~~)'. 678.
31. Cl1ld Chl1fln, 15441.
32. ~
483.
33. Jot~ 428.
34. - - Moll,-·
38. Otn1lal Cope, 181.
3 8 . - - . 384.
37.1ilt6f - . . 341.
31. Cltait uta.. 312.
38. ~Kaltnt, 001 .
40. Thp, 201.

.=•

7 40-992-1998
7 40-667-6133

Riggs wins Busch race
Scott Nlggs, drlvlny the No. lO ~'ord, won
Satun:Jay's Busch Series Auto Club 300. Jeff
Green, In the No. 21 Chevrolot. was 11e00nd,
and Stacy COmpton, In the No. 59 Chevy, WOS
third.
Jack Sprague maintains hls lead In the
point standlnp, 32 points ahead of Jaaon

Keller.

27. Johnny Benson, 881.

28. MI ... Skinner, 870.
29. Bobby Hamlhon, 845.
30. Rol&gt;by GordOn, 832.
31 . ~In Harvld&lt;, 829.
32. Bratt BOOine. 751 .
33. KM1 Sohra&lt;ltr. 720.
34. John Andrettl, 717.
35. Hut Strid&lt;lln, 7t 5.
38. Slaey Compton, 710.
37. CuOv Atwooa, 878.
38. Bucicahot Joneo, 6511.
39. ~nny WaMaco, 563.
40. Joe Nomoollei&lt;. .53!i·

--~--~-------------------------·-------·-lutOH tllllll
·
20. MtcNol ~ eee.
1N1Ck •MeiTIUIDINGI
2. JMori l&lt;oilir, 1,302.

Auto Sules)

nothlniJ when we hltve a car Ihal runs like

DoniMy irPect in aash
By AL LEVINE

3. 8oot1 Fllggo, 1,2&gt;411.

(Beside Goodwin's

thl&amp;' ..

DRIVER STANDINGS

Stop in and visit with olir branch manager, lollfl
officer and tellers. Have some refreshments, and tell
us wh~t we can do to make your banking experience
work better for you. Fanners Bank wants all of our
customers to know just how much we appreciate
their business and their loyalty to us through the
years. Fanners Bank should be your bank for life,
not just because ~e're in yo~r neighbor~ood, but
because we proVIde the scrvtce and quahty, yQu •ve
come to count on since 19041

Rudel a.fast closer

radio when I'm having a day ltke tllal and tell
Hobort IYaleol. 'He~ I'll drive lor ·

s-rt.

.,..__
t, Jac1&lt; Soraaut. 1,334. · .

engine's temperature.

Bing's
Auto
Repair

lte&amp;Ql owner!

Joe Qlbbllllolng: It WU
• drM&lt;Iul day Sunday for
Glllbl drl'ltl'l Bdibv Labonte,
who ftnlolled 341h, and Tony
who tlnllhed 29th.
Equipment r.liu111 piAguod
both 1Nm1 during 1111 lfler.
ITIWART
noon. a-n wu1110 Cllecl
for epeedlug on pit read ll1d •~••n•neclth pua1I'II'GUgll pnlly.

-rt

..

because It was just pushing too much.
"Any time you finish Jn the top Ovc, it's
good. That was a blast. I usually call in on the

WHO'S NOT

Wllllltlll CUI'
ITANDINIM .
1, Sttrii!'Q Marlin, 1!515.
2. Kurt BuiOh, 1,37•.
a. Mttt KM\MI11, 1.383.
• · RuttyWII'-, 1,35-4.
5. Jimmie Joh,_, 1,352.
e. Marl&lt; Mlttin. 1,202.
1. Jell Gordon. 1,203.
8. F1tcicy Fludd, ~11 278.
8. Doll eamnoumJr., 1,233.
to. Tonv
1 214.
I 1. Bill ~lloh, 1,17ii.
t 2. Jell Burton, 1, 178. '

$

and our car just got pushing [on 1the front

Yaung gune: lllere appe.a11 to be a cNng. lng 011111 guard In Wlnlton Cup • young dr1·
Yllt'i Klirt 8Uicl1, Man Kanedl and Jimmie
Johnaon each occupies alj!OIIn lhe lop live of
1111 polnll standlnga.
•

.Dale Earnhardt
ftspbltt Car 1964

Ricky Rudd, in the No. 28 Fonl, also come
from the back of the field, 37th, for a great nn.
Ish, thin!. That moved him ft'om loth to ell!hth
tn points.
"We took t'm two tires on that last pit stop,

WHO'SHOT .

•
•

1st

From a 39th-plal.'l! sturt. Bill Elliott came out
of the pack Sunday to grab the lead with 14
lllPS to go by not pitting under the last caution.
He eventually flnishOO fourth, his best flnlsh
of the season and his ftrst top-five In the No. 9
Dodge.
"We elected not to come In at the end
because we nooded track position," Elliott
said. "The only gamble that we had was to stay
out. We were either going to finish slxth or
seventh if we came tn and put on tires. we got
an opportunity to do better, and we came away
fintshlngfourth."
At. one point, Elliott figured he'd never fin·.
ish the race because a piece of paper ROt ·,
caught on the nose of hl'i car, ralslnji! the

Mlcl1igln lnternalklnll ~ .·

(740) 992·1400

Rutland Bottle Gas)
Main Street,
Rutland, Ohio
740-742-2289
1"800-837-8217

Bllott's gamble

Junt ' - Poolno 500,
POoono Raceway
Junt 11 - SiriUI Satellite flldo ..00,

540 Oenert1 Hartinger,
Mldcl.rt, Ohio

Fontana, Calif.
ale Earnhardt Jt left California

a

I

Bllldl: Hardee's i(iO; ~ 1
p.m. EDT 011 FX.
craftaman Truck: Mlllourl·

. 992-5432

Speedway on crutches Sunday after a
hard ooUislon with the Turn~ wall.llo
was tnlaled lor bruised rtg~~~
Eernhanlt hit the wnll
about 130 mph on lap 228
after collidinll wlth the No.
29 Chevrolot of Kavln
Harv1ck.
"I popped a left rear tire,
and the next thing I knew I
got into Junior," Harvlck
said.
Harvlck's car appeared to
voor down toward the apron
aa llarnhardt'o No. BChevy
. was.attempUilll to pa.,. him on thelnslde.
Earnhardt was runnlng 28th at the time and.
finished 36th, dropping ft'om Mh tn Winston
Cup points to ninth. Harvlck finished SSth.

laM's Motor Speedway
111y It - ccce.¢ola 6()9,
laM's Motor Speedway
Junt 2- MBNA Platinum 400,
D&lt;Mir International Speedway

Here at Fanners Bank·we want to show our cus·
tamers how much we we. On Friday, May 3rd our
Tuppers Plains location will be holding Customer
Appreciation Day.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

ByALLEVINE
c.~ COx News Service

illy 11 -The Wlnaton,

At the Tuppers Plains Location.

. · 228 Main St. ·

races at Galeway lntomatlonal Raceway, a
venue that joined the "'rles In t 998.
·

Earnhardt hurts ankle
in aash with Harvick

A lOOK AHEAD

We're Your B~ for Cifesu

·

I

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

POST-RACE NOTES

ON THE TUBE

•

••
•

I Fl-: Missourl·llliflois Dodge Dealers Ram
I Tough 200
W'-: Gateway lnlernational Raceway, St.
1 Louis. Mo.
·
When: Sunday, 4 p.m EDT.
I Telllrlolon: ESPN
Dellndlng champion: Ted MusgraYe. Ram
I Tough
200.
.
1 Crefllman '!Nck l'lte record: Jack
Sprague, 113.726 mph, Aug. 19. 1999.
I Storyline: FoiJr &lt;lfferent driVers have won

hint

Included In aale)

Farmers Bank

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

I CRAFT!liMAN TRUCKS

EDTonESPN.

a.turdty
7AM•IPM
Cloud Sun

IIIII('
KFC

The Wllsloo Cup ci!WIII!lCM!S to Rict.mood, Vri.
wtior8 lhG drivers will compel&amp; SaiUmay night. Wa1Ctl
lor~ ~IHion to heat up tate ln'the race: the
1rac1&lt; otieiO better ~W· as temperaiUres COOl.

Winola llodae Doolen Ram
Touah liOO, Swtdly 4 p.m.

on!laught picking up two runs
in both the founh &lt;llld fifth .
inning &lt;llld a single ;coli! in the
lower sixth.
Dill .worked liw inning~ for
the Marauders giving up ten
hia, five walks fanning two,
Michael Davis, relieving in the ·
sixth, gave up a pair of hits, one
run and struck out one batter.
Dill knocked out two singles
with Stanley &lt;llld Glue chipping
ill with a double each

11 0 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135

992-6611

St. At. 248

fn+

Waterford·blows by Lady Tornadoes, 9·0
IV looTT

555 Park St
Middleport

Ridenour
Supply

Check U~ Out For
Brand Name Tires Including
Mastercraft &amp; Daytona!!
(mc•un1tlng a

Valley Lumber

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Baseball brownout: home runs down 18 percent
8Y M t.ssot1Al£D PRESS .

I lfi-OU 12

992-2825

1. "-rt Prt~~My, 481 .

2. To&lt;l MUograve, &gt;4111 .

3. DIVIG Starr, .ua.
4. Flld&lt; Cr!IW1ortj, 418.
5. MI... Bllu, 40-4•
e. Travlo Kvopll, 400.
7.. Brlan Flooe, 399.
8. Lanca Norldc, 385.
8. Donnla Setzer, 378.
10. Jon Wood, 372.
11. Juon Lalflor, 388.
12. Brandon Goughon. 385.
13. Juon Srnoll, 382.
14.1!ot&gt;byo-, 3ol.2.
16. Cor1oO c-oo. 331.
11. Lanoe Hoop«l332.
11. Mtlll c·::~:~
11. Aoncly Mal
'2114.
18. TorryOoolc, 201 .
20. BlliAII«, 27$.

c :m2 Cox New• Service

Fontana, caut.

eteran NASCAR car owner Junle
Jlonlavey. 78, sutl'ered two cracked ribs
on his rtl!ht olde and cracked his rll!ht
knoeqtp In an automobile crash Thunday
nll!ht on the way to his hotel near Fontana.
It was only the second crash he has been
ln. "In 19391 laid my A·Model Ford over on
Its side hanging corners," be said.
Oonlave)&lt; who owns tha No. w Ford. had
just landed at the airport In Rlvenolcle and
wu clrlv)fll team manager Juon Hedjelky to
tiiOir bolelln l'l&gt;rnona.
J:lonlney wu liven alllllnt fill' hlo Jmeo at
Kaiser Hoepllalln ~!ana.

V

·

..-TRACJ( PROFILE•IICIIIOND INI'ERM110IW.IIMEWW ·
Track: .75:mlle oval, 14 degrees banking
In tums, 8 degrees front straight, 2 ·
degrees on backstretch.
'
Where: Richmond, Va.
R-.: Pontiac Excitemenl 400. Saturday:
Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400, Sept. 7.
TraCie qualifying record: Jeff Gordon.
146.499 mpl1, May 15, 1999.
Track race rtCOid: Dale Jarrett, 109.047
mp11, Sapt. 6, 1997.
Dellndlng cMmplon: Tony Stewart
Gollldllls:nd 1 71•4· 100,531

DMt apt 111: Ocl. 12. 1M

BANKS

DoeHe the pi , tn: lllh4c:k cluall up two wlni In one..day

CONSTRUCTION
736 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-5009
Lorry W. 8auks,
Ow11er/Operator

Copyrtght 11002 COX Ntw1 tltrvloe. Oitt~butl&lt;l by Unl-1 Pruo Byndica1a. (800125U734. ' F O I - 1110- ol ilpttt 29, 2002.

•

FDIC

• I

.·

�•

p • • 4.•1lle Dl!lltJ .......

·Wrth dad's hel.p, son
· ed as a
ha.s blossom
. er for the BUCI\eyes
I.
hitt

·- . .~. . . .:=:::::

·

'

Ill

• ; .... llof 4, l'alfti!O¥- 0111o, n.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Th~ was never much question that tw. ot tCktlll-.. • , . , _ 11oM od
Nick Swisher was born to baseball.
pullllc ule will bo ::.-:;:-t!:~l..,ovo.:
His father, Stelle Swisher, a catcher for nine lta\OIIS widt the
Cubs, Cardinals and Paclm,is also his beu &amp;iencl
Help wanted
An affinity with the game seemed to follow Nick. One of his · ;=====~======:::;
·"''
0 .
. f"-'"- ··'
f
e~tiest =o ecnons IS o 1liWIIg ...eep at the age o 6 on the
bat rack during one of his dad\ games as a minor-league man- Veterans Memorial Skilled Nursing
ager in Waterloo, Iowa.
Center 11 3-tlme def1dency free
Tbe bond between fath~r and son remains strong. and is built
fi
on many things.Y~t basebaU always seetns to be at th~ founda- state suney adHty has immediate
·
openings for lhe following:
non.
"He's done things that in my life I someday hope to do,"
Nick said of his father. "He's been there and he\ done it all."
Rqbltftd NuneiLicenstcl
Now Nick is one of the best coUegiate playen in the counl'r::diell Nurst •
try. He's comfortable with who he is and what he feels he is
Flail timelpart time ftexible sc~ule.
destined to become.
And
the
Ohio
State
outfielder,
riding
a
17Reatsltftd NuneiLicenstcl
, '- has
mfo
game hitting stre.....,
always been co
rtable wallting in his
l'r::diell Nilrst father's spikes.
Full time midnight Supervisor
"The bi.,...t thing we have in common is our drive to be
...,-the best," Steve Swisher wd. "I'm really proud of what . he's
. Asf.aboutourn,wSola;.,Sctlle!
done to this point." . ·
....
Nick has made a name for himself at Ohio State, where he is
Contact Human R~urces at
second in the Big Ten in hitting with a .410 average. Not coin(740) 992·2104, txt. 3255
cidentaUy, the Buckeyes lead the conference by a game and a
half
·

Ohio State has bobbed in and out of the national ranltings all
season and is 25-13-1 coming into dte final month. of the season. Swisher, a 6-foot, 200-pound junior from Parkenburg,
W.Va., is one of the biggest reasons for that suc;c;ess.
After two glinering seasons with the Buckeyes - in which .
he baned .310 with 25 home runs and 104 RBis - he has
become a better hitter even though most pitchen try to keep ·
the baU away from him. .
. ·
"It's definitely hard to pitch to him now," teammate Christian Snavely said. "They go outside on him and he'D hit it to the
opposite field. If they come inside, he can drive the baD."
As with many things in a stubborn 21-year-old's life, it's
taken time to finally catch on. It has not been enough to teU
him what to do; he had to discover it on his own. His coaches
had been harping on him for more than two yean to go up the
aUey with the outside pitch.
·
Since coming around, he has been hitting at a .442 clip with
three homen and 13 RBis over his hitting srreak.
.
"Nick.started out trying to impreS1 the scouts because obviously he wants the opportunity to play pro basebaU," Ohio
State head coach Bob Todd said. "He felt the way to do that was
power, hitting home runs. We've sat and talked to him and
finally, the last month of the season, he's begun tp realize that
consistency and showing his athleticism is just as important."
He remains an ·enigma - a power-hitter in a relatively compact an.d lithe body, a cocky hitter with a hint of self-doubt, a
man still trying to shed his boyish ways.
Catcher Joe Wilkins remembers when Nick showed up on
campus on his recruiting visit.
.
"He brought pictures of aU his girlfriends;' Willtins said,
laughing at the thought. "And he was real loud. He was just
·happy to be here, excited to meet everybody. He wanted to fit
in right away. That's the kind of guy he is - real outgoing."
Nick denies the part about the pictures, but he pleads guilty
to being a guy who has seldom run away from a party or a joke.
"I love to have a good time," he ~aid. "I wear my heart on my
sleeve when I play. I'm a very emotional player. I'm learning to
take that and bring it down a notch. I'm leatning to yell and
scream when it's time and learning when to shut my mouth at
other times. When I'm out on the diamond, that's the best time
of my day."
Todd, a disciplinarian and old-school teacher and coach, concedes that he and his star player have clashed.
He first met Nick when they lived in the same neighborhood in suburban Columbus and Nick used to play with 1bdd's
daughter. Todd said in many ways Nick hasn't change a lot from
that playful sixth-grader who always wanted to be the center of
attention. ·
"Nick is a live wire," he said with a grin. "You just never
know what he's thin Icing and what's going to come out of his
mouth. He means well, but sometimes his mouth and his
actions can dig a hole for him."
His father wasn't exactly a shrinking violet, either. Steve was
a baseball All-American. at Ohio University and a first-round
draft choice by the Cubs in 1973. Just three yean later, he was
a National League All-Star. He went on to play nine years
before· beating around the bushes for almost that long hoping
to become a major-league manager.
' ·,
"Things didn't work out imd life goes on," said Steve, npw a
regional sales manager for an alull)inum company,
That maj&lt;;&gt;r-league dream lives on, however, in the son. Steve
attends as many games as he can, making the 90-mile drive
from Parkersburg to Columbus. He has been known tP pitch
batting practice, but he keeps his advice to himself. When .he
can't make it to games, he listens patiently to his ion on the
phone.
"That's an edge 1 have on a lot of people," Nick said. "They
can't say, 'Dad, what am I doing wrong?' He'D give me a CPUpie ofpPinters and the next -game I'll go PUt and get a couple
ofbase hia."
It has been 20 years since Steve played his last game in a
m~or-leaglle uniform. He's excited about what lies ahead for
his son, who may soon follow a similar path. After ·the seasPn,
· the two will sit down and discuss whether Nick wiD return for
his senior year or pursue that big-league dream,
"As far as talent and attitude about and toward the game, I
think goPd things are going to happen to Nick," Steve said.

Bengals terminate contract
of safety Darryl Williams
CINCINNATI (AP) The Cincinnati Bengals on
Wednesday terminated the
contract of free safety Darryl
, Williams, who was their
first-round draft pick in
1992.
•
Williams played with the
Ben gals from 1992 through
1995, then spent four years
with the Seattle Seahawks
befPr~ returning to Cincinnati in 2000.
W~Uiams played in 15

•

games last· year, but was a
starter in just one.
"Darryl has been a goPd
player in two tours here and
a solid, dependable guy tP
deal with.'' said Bengah
president Mike Brown, "We
value our assPciation with
him. But we're committed
to a group of young guys at
the safety pPtitiPn and they
all need practice time."

'

,

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now HIRinG

* new location*
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Hpply In pers.on after
3:30 pm

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It tui'NIIIIy -tptlnaJ
IIPJIIIettitlns ftlf '

Monday t:nru Frldey
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.

PART-TIME
ACTIVITIES
ASSISTANT.

S'JA,_,., 01"
QUAUI'ICATIONI

D.yiE~Ifta,
211-32 hours per

aoard Of·
01

Pubk A*liD
""
Vlt7ott ot SyiHI?aa,.
...... County, 01110,

Intend• to IOIHl •
civil · tntlft"' 1111
ooneultent
to
"l'NalftundafiM ..
,------·.... 1 ..- ..ftt the ..ld
Potlllntendlttdclt\a f:.t:oa:..:,U.ii:'ot I!Midm•velopllltlll
~:a lot 14; thence uel 111

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Orhxlti('I40)4'UOOI
....... 'l't"'fDdutQ.,.
_..;;;;..;..._,....____

R.thabllllatloft
Centtr

Tilt

tr (304) 675-1333
"R»Ur M. tlttihuttt(740)441-2342 Sentinel (740) 992·2158 ._tgiOr..Fu:
To (304) ITWU4

PIUSII\t Valley

.._. ...... _ o f

above W.ln~at end l'ounll
~~~~~~= 1011111
Strotle
e: . tho
. ., 1 aomor
ot
Public Notice
:ot no. 14; tlltnco
nonh olong the uet
SHI!M'I''$ SAL!
liM ol l"ourth Strott
IIIAL DTATE
(U ...... . - two ""
CA8I NUUUII
to 0 • •. . . _ ..t
01 CVGII
oncl poltl?tl wlttl tho
IJLaRI~ell• NootiiiMIIIMIII llno~ W.lnul Smot

:

U8 RMCH OVIR ns.aoo

c.

l'ellftete llonll SIIIIMOd Ill 1M CDI:ntv
end
Snlnt• of ...... :n 1M._..
Cclmplllf. .,._..,. ot 01110 · ond 1ft tho
01110,
the Wl'l'
lltht to- blcl ol thll
. . . of IMJIIIpaft.
Iota ..a
...., end to wlllodlww 14 end IS • 01lt!IMM'I
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CLASS I

·W ftk,

Orhxlti('I40)11N1S7

-

lncluctea l"ree V•rct S•l• Slgnt
Up To lS worc:la, !5 Deya

over

5 worao 20¢ Per word
Muat Be Prepeld

•

Fllf moo~ inl'omlatioo

PLEASANT

VALLEY
HOSPITAL

*'"' 'X::.:

::r:_":,';'!':::: ~===-tMd

olo811111r'llr...._
PSI Plolnlltt
tho toundetlon ot e olUr
rtllltd
""
lloftl well· tlltnct atrvlc... Thoat
Patrie.. llllllnnetllp, •lont oe111 ~ftclatlol'l · wlahlnt to eDDIY lit
Ill at
Dtt.ncllftli_,..INI
COUJIT Of' COUII!lf4

PLIAS

ol • tlont WIPP and Invited ,. ailbmlt •
"::1.:''
waPI aouth wrtttwn Statemeftt of
Quaf?PioatiOftt b" 11
to IM north noon; May 1, aooi, to

f?lty

MANLEYS
SELf STORACE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'X10' 610'1120'1
Walmart Plaza Mason, WV

(140) 992·3194
992·6635

Cash lnl

1

Unload a cluster of
· clubsl
You'll break par
every time you
place a Tribune
Classified garage
sale ad.

(877-353-7023)

Call for mort
lnfo/frlle esrimme .
WV031256

The Dally Sentinel

992-2155

Advertise
In this space
for

GUN SHOOl GUN SHOOT
Forked Run Forked Run
Sportsman Sportsman

25 per month

1

Sunday,
May 5th

7 pm

12noon

Advertise

In this
space

for

HOME DECORATING
OPEN HOUSE
Sat.May4
8am·5pm
Gloria Qller.

•so per
month

Sl. AI. 3251.angtvllle, OH 4~7417 '

740-742-2076

O'DELL LUMBER
White Alcoa Brentwood
VInyl Siding $39.99 sq.
634E. Main
992·5500

FOE AERIE 2171
Ia holding election of offic:ersl

Monday, May 6, 2002
7:30pm

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
HI-Efficiency Heat Pump8, Air

Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

'f!!r.lll!J

/:.rr==,,,

rm

•rn..• frH
5 &amp; MV••• l'orl Worronll" ~~~
IIIMPio? 'P'herno,.Jol
,. 11"-e Ut VrMr C:un111rP111nr
Worranty Un Helo'&lt;l M&lt;Niell
1· KI~ V. K~'I'IMA'IK~ • Ill rca-: lnvontury
•llonk Jlln•ndna /IYotlloble
• Prien 'J'n FIJ Aft lludaoJa

MAY 3-5
•7:30 PM
Carmei-Sutto(l UMC
Carmel Rd.
Rev. Norm Coleman, Speaker

Special Music
Friday- The Upllttara
Saturday- Church Talent
Sundav· Larry
Singers

"1!11'10*

WAMl!ll

To Do

I

m

~ l'otlabll Sawmill,

Gl·

Allltll Hiatt -ltl"'
In tftll RIIIIIPII* It

"""'"'to
,IIIII
HOutlftt....All- 011111
wltltl\ ~ lllttll to
ldvtfiiH"IIIy
.....,....,llmltlllon.,
-miMUon-on

ul.rt•
to lilt
,...,....,, rtlltlon. Mli.
miM lull ca 1104-1 •1157.
ltllllllll tlllua or ntt!Oftal
lnla~orl l•tarlor Painting otlflln, or any lnltiiiiOI\10
I•PII•IInclld. l'lalarencll,
"""any aUIII
Flt..anlblt FlaiM. ,,., ,.._,.not,
tlmllallon or
1a11m1111. (740)311-104 1
Cllterlmtnllllll."
Alk fOf Mlkl.
Tllll _ , . ... W!ll 1111
LMm care
Oammtrolll 1 ltlldtnllll, II·'
otniiCIIInaulld. IHIOntbla --tololltll
...... wltltl\ It 1ft
riiH, fH HIIMIIH upon
.-1011
OIU..Iaw. our
villi 1104-8~

·-"'ly"""'

_.,._,

lft-11111111
LMitl Ctrt
LOOking lor :l.;l!ty worl!? -~· ldvtflllld 1ft
Clll ul. LOOk Ia! aio!I9Y • th~ ,... .....~.,Itt
worit? Call tnt othar ~·
un bMM.
LlcettiiCI and lniUIId.
•
tr CIIIH Lawn cara, 140•

•:,:','"-'

Club

Friday,
May 3rd

~.

All Mlkll lAwn Mowtro
IIIII OYtdoOt _ , lqulpmanll'ltplllld. PIH P~ku~
IIIII Cltll~vtllabll. Cll
Mlkt (740
·?eo..

!\Ill•

· Club

Ill ~40.W•438 ,
I
t4-o4SR
tmil.

BISSELL

BUILDERS IIIC.

New Homes • VInyl
Sid ina • New Onaes
• Replacement
Wiadowt • Roofina
C*IICIAI. ... lfllllfiiiiAl
FREE ESTIMATES

740-t02·758t
(NO SUNDAY CAIJ.S)

=

......"'::!.:..·

·Advertise in
tl:l is space for
*100 per
month

Pllnoh hl&gt;ml, 4 BPI. 2 bath,
Ll'l,.lg. tamny room. MOdam

HHn kiiCIIIn, UIIHI)' 100111,
abund1nt 11oraga, Tran•
HP a oW.·gll lumaoo, lg.
lnctoatd book poroh wldou·
bll diCk. landsotlltd. aH'd

•

9:/,~B:i!&amp;ro• il/4

aero

Flinch Slyla .HOma Buill In

2000, PriOtd II I I04,1100,

• (740)441·8383

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Al.D£11

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31 w.ot 2 . . , . _ ._,. (140)U8 ...,

dloiMcl flY Docrtl Ad. -

UIDQII:

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._...uno._ a--...._ ••
_,._ULI MACK'S
~ ~ ~~ ~::. ·: ~. ===·~· ::".!!':! :!.:~,.:! =:a-...~-=
-

The Dally s.n""l• Pete. 7

• Th-.rtdlry, . .y 1,1002

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Al&gt;l- In Poll11 - . ~ lllil1lofl, ~740)146 ~115
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a Coltctlblea
• A "'"t .aDt~YeJ
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the RA!Ct"l

Syolom,. -

10 Dod!lll
011 SW.

poo1aCt

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401111 ·

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I MolTS Boiloy Run
Ad., oil OhloR
- ._!24, 112~~~
ol ~·• 7' Wlo~ •
11P1fC ll....ty In, SIUOO,
•-itnl bull&lt;ltno lilt,
(837)3118.()258

a loti, 314 aero tach,
Roady to build on. Nollh
(loltla E.atotoa On Thalli
Ad. (140}44&amp;:1400
80 A&lt;:'" Hendoroon, WI/.

on NIW lour lane with ~ty
water. $50,000. (~)545·
114it

51 acraa, Melga County,
good hunting and llohlng,
..., prl\lalt, mootly wood·
t&lt;i, own · on boll\ oi&lt;IH 0&lt;
• rota, rood lroMtago on 3
•of IJI'lpolty, 3BR, 2
Full Botlla, 1 112 llqry larm
with baaemtnt, vinyl
aiding, loll of c~ll and
otoiogo lj)ICll, control htlt
and Ml, dttachtd 2 car 01·
rago with attached ahoa,
• lrH 011, Mil wolor, HPHC,
2 atockt&lt;l pondo, mlnutoo

=

~~edR~un S~~ ~

(740)1l"a?t228"'·

'

·

.:_.:,.._--:c:----:7-

For Sal" 30 acrtl ol tarm·
land, aomo woode, pond.
Coli oftor t p.m. 7•0·99·
98U
• ~01 101 S.lo· AI&gt;P«&gt;•· a till
• 10181 cleared &amp; 10acty lor
' bulldl~g. gra. vel drlvtwoy,
""'"' I -lrlc avolloble,
Porter . area.
Aakll\n
Sl3 885 Otll (7401446~
4S14trom 8·5 or 1740)446·
3248 alltr llpm

u-~"',..1Q.4

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SIOOO.
217
E. 2nd OH
St •
...
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00.-3"12-23811.
'-roy,
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AIR CONOITIQNEAS. c- Whilo loylng """" t 112 'JI. (740) """2-"'908
Mamlnt. Stir Flold· CR
tra1 end (740}44&amp;: old lof ulo, 50t NCl\
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'7~11 ·9in't.t'')22
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Now.Homcs &amp; Remodellna

"Speclallzlna In Loa Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
Ooragoa, Polo Buildtnas, Concrete

•Ju! of P1UNTINGt
L•'l m• j,_, tllc i 'l"ul

UNII1 Pllmll

P~ANUTS

\f.l.!~

T'N '

v,Jt.IA.T

I.OOKIN6 FOR.

IS iHE JUR.'t' ASSEMI5L.Y ~OOM
ON iJ.IE SECOND FLOOR ...

Pamerev fillies ·

1 SORT OF WISH '(OV

I-IADN'T WORN T!.IAT OUTFii,,

.

'(OU 6Ei MORE RESPECT
IF THEV KNOW YOU SEilVED
J.IONORA8LY IN LIJORLO WAR I

&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Ellrtu birds start

' A J N N I' I . , , ,

Thllldlys

YOUR CODCRfT
CODDftriOD, llC
(140) 742-80111
Qlllllty Conem. Work

Driveways, Patlo1,
Parking/play Areu,
Sidewalks, Floors
21 ywre !Kperlenoe
Fretlltlmltle
(toll fret)

an-353-7022
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TII'VT.

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you drivt out the

h~ar(, you can win in
di1cnnl dummy's hcnrt lo1er on
the third club, Qnd
take th e ·vitnl ruiT in
the shorter trump
hand. At last you cnn
broa ch tru mp1 ntttl
will eventually crui!o
home .
·
h~nd,

&amp;:30
Protressl!lt tiP Une

su-.

Todly'S clute A equaft 8

first, round
of dubs.
If
S RT Y T .
m
you lia.t
better
win th~ lim trick in . ~
1 16 1
.
the dummy -- no 1~eOl·atl ltnnd low. Then
dub ac~ . And when
·West pl~ys 3 ! UCOttd

' 810002171
fuerg Tbursday

l'nlraslve .
Couereu on

Clpltor ctyptOQroma 118 o"'ott&lt;llrom quototlont by lomout

.

However, ·a clever
We st will duck the

ft~ft~f:t~~
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ptoplt, Pllllnd prtlllf\l. t!acn lltttr In tht clphtt allndllor onotntr.

'm ~xtrn w•rmcr.

&amp;

(740) 992-3987

by Lull C1mpo1

I

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

Owner 8t Operator, John Dean

CELEBRITY CIPHER

·::=:

~~fiftC~ft

111!11

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I I I I ' I I ! I ! ! . ! ! ! ! !I I I I I II I I ' I I I I II I I 11 &gt; : : : I l l !

Roofs &amp; Sldln11
Commercial &amp; Residential

I

IVJLLJV , '
, one dinnt&lt;1nd nnd two ·
dubs,
KAQ
AJNNI'I ' T
NDKOZNK
. If ynu win Irick onll
nnd phty 'n trum\'' E11st
CDVTII'DK
will win with 11u nee ·
nttd return u hc~rt,
PAI!VIOUS SOLUTION - 'Beaut~ cannot alogullt no; mutlo
mtll/ A pain undlagnollble but loll.' ~ Anne Morrow Llndbtrgh
comlcmning · you to
those four loser!.· ln stcnd, you nntst im ':~~:t~~' S@~(l"~t\.- ~ £~S•
mlltlintely nmck - - - - - - rol••• ~r eLAv a, POLL.oN _ ; , ._ _ __
clubs, which i!!t~b· ORtarronga · lallora of tho
Jishcs n discard for one
four ecrombltd worda ba·
of thtmltly's henrts . . low 10 form four alm~l• wordt
Then you cnn ruff
T A NB 0 I
your hcnrt loser itt the 1-..,--,...,"T'T,...,~"T--1
dummy, sinlllltnnt~·,
I I 11 12 1. ·
ously rctnoviul! on e ~:;~::;::;:;:=~'"'
los~r and , gt!neratiug 1· E N ·I C E . ,

Stoll dry for b•r,., pens, coaes, &amp;
trollers
$10,$0/baa
Monon System Suver Pellets for oepilca and
wulcr softeners $4.$0/boa
•

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A

the risht hnnd, winnin11 n trick imtud or
tluckinl! it, losin~ 11 .
trick imtcntl of Will•
nin11 it, ;mtl not unblot•kins. No doubt
you t ~n th'ittk of
1 some more. One of
those is relcvnut in
this dcnl. How would
you plnu the pl«y in
founpades?
North mnkes a limit
rnis~, !lmwitt[! I 0- 12
Sllllport points with at
ICitSl tour trumps,
..
Fim, when in n !uit
cmttrnct, count losers.
You nrc f.1 cc&lt;l with
tine in cnch suit , Now
check wltltt~l'!l. There

. nre only nin e: rmtr
spMies, two hum s,

Shade River AG Senlce
"Ahead In Service"
3~~37 St. Rt. 7 Nonh • Pomeroy, OH 45720

• Oo!den Bo.w 16.000 Twlno, , , ..., :.$18.65
• Oolden Bow 9,000Twlno, .. , ,.,, ,,$16.6S
• 20,000 Plastic Bator Twlne,,,, ... ,SIS.7S
• Top Dress Pas1ures whh Sulfur '
Urea,,,,,,,,,, .. ,,,, ,,.,, .. .,,$ 120 per ton
Equine 12 ................................. $5 .00150 lbs
Sweet Stuff.............................. $4.40/SQ- lbs.

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One sli~httv' ove!Wetght.cutte to
another: " ave you heard about

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. the now garlic diet? You don'ttose
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k lhl
r from
we 9 ' u you 00
nne

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• e PRINt NUMBERED
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LEn ERS IN soyARE§
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A UNSCA.a.MBLE lETTERS 1 1
.., FOA ANSWER
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SCRAM·LITS AN.SWIIIS ·

Knotty · Venom • Nymph • Deacon • YET to COME
One old ttmer to another: "The point of living and re·
matntng an optimist, Is to be foolish enough to be lieve
ths baatls YET to COME."·

•

22) ..... Wlu•n it rum Us to

Frida y, M:ry 3, 2VIJ2

Ill th e yc ~r nh .,~i , IOitleOI! C

'•

wh n think ! you rc tr rr lft c
miHht llL·cuttto n bcuera,·tur
who ' ll cl cv3to you to ttuw
h ~ trhu in yo ur ·cMocr. You .
wll li ve up tu th il pemm'a

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T AUil US (AI' ri l 211- M:t y
21)) • 1'h• frtt·t th.•t you're J
ulc:c p tt t U.lll will IH II-1111 1~e rour

hl1il)te! . Someu m· yuu wwnt co
hnt•ren '""Y be att lu tt ~ your
·IH.iluircm IUH.I 11 more m ~:IIHIIK ·

'

ft~ rdntiun1hl1• could dcvrl&lt;lll·

· &lt;.itt • Jttmp

m ml i n ~ th&lt;·

".n hfc by unJcr·

ruflu cnrc! tltot II
K&lt;JV&lt;rtl yuu In rh•• yrnr n l1 r~ d .
Se mi fu r your A•tro · Or• t•h

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~roJ inlom hy

111:ulins S2

to

A•&lt;ro - (lraph. ~/ 11 lh l&gt; II CW!•
l'"l'' ' · 1'.0. Box 17SK, Murray Htll St•tinot , New Yo t·k.
NY 1111 51•. Uo •uro t n alnto
your Zodiac •iK''·
CI!MINI (May 21-Juno 211)
,. Nu111&lt;rm11 J&gt;lcai.Utt tXI'trl·
o uce~ 111ay be 111 tlic offi nK lur

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vo ti&lt;"111"t"' c11 i mt:w ce ~UII I Ii' • ·
"'"""••"' t.:um~· uu t uf
tim a ntr tnu;.

21-July

..,

fJ tH., ;o

pic you llko, you'll uo Art u nlolih h tlfouu ce r, You 'll no t
ouly Jo w lt,r~ ', n~•c'i&lt;l ry, but
you 'll •tit! the cxtr.r .tdt
10u c h ~1 lhtlt bri t t~ &lt;pilrkk to
'

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LEO Uul y 23-Aug. 22) -·

CxJWCtllllmu.

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Complole tho &lt;hucklo quoted
by lt lling In tho rn lulng warda
you aovolop Irom atep No. 3 below.

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High CXGl Dry
Self sto•d,e

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AichtiiOM ·

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I. rF_RA_N_K_&amp;_E_A_R_N_._T':"------:::-::~:-::: :-~-~::-:~-:-::::---,
Of MY JOI&gt;Y

f(lllllo ,lliiil

Laonotrd 8' taiHd topl)lr,
BoA'IliroR". ~ :r.
fill 1087 or ntwor Ford
I HOMF.'
.
plok·up, oaklng '400.00
~
MPROVI!MI'Mli
oHaultno "'IIM•ton•
' and 2 bodfoom aport• boltna Tractor, 1100.
J=:FIIRM
080. 304-882·3448 .
1211 St.lrt StmiY with trail·
.
.
Bedllnei'I•Nerf Bar
• llttnlt. lurnlahlld and unlur• (7&gt;10)258•6818·
· or. Oaa &amp; Eloclrlo n'1010ra.
IAIIMINT
oGt-1 •land •Toptoll
• Tonneue Co~er
nltt&gt;od, ttouNiy dtQOtlt rt·
·
' l!
Floh Flndtrl, ato. It 300 In·
WATIIIPIIOO"NQ
8•
.,Ill Dirt !Muklh
QUiracl, no pall, 140•902· 3:8 X 10 drg ktnnalltnctl.
.
VANS"'
Vllled, Taking olltra. Uncondlllontl illtllmt guar·
•
Vent,IIOr • Bua
1 (740)245·0811
2211.
74°· 992•51 1
1987 Caltlnllmall0n11355
· · 4-WDs
anttt. ~ooal rtltrlncta tur·
!Shl4,ld
&amp; Full Line
· . . . .
. 5080 BTU A.C. 110voft. Tractor, 2 whHI dltltl, Low
nlaht&lt;l, Eltlbilthtd 1978.
Other
Aceeuorlet
· Fumtlhtd 3 roortOI &amp; bath, In Box, 100 Sattllltt Houra, ExotNonl Shopa, 1088 S·T Bllltr 4x4 In 1075 Chryotar outbo4rd 10 Call 24 Hra. (740) 446·
Oltan, No Patl, RlltrtnOt Dlah corrlplott. 1100,0 , (740)2411-11814 oftor IIPm
OOCI ndlll
5Hp
motor,
tlac.
elorl,
tiller
0870,
R011oro
Boatmen!
&amp;
~It
raqulrod. trade lor oun . 1304)675 •
j 354 1c:. 5 on . 1304187
W k arm&amp; romote cabltt, runo watorproctfng.
(140)448·1510 .
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For•·
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~'-HI
Tractor,
r pm. on ., · good, aolt or lrldt :104.
1 4
2
I I II 1
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875·2787 (lien 0 . Hallen
1
1
4800.
5000,
246
M.F.
C&amp;C
Gilntrll
Hornt
Malnll·
~ /rliJ) IJ J:• 1H~ 1 /
Furnlahtd Efflcltna•, All 8ft Porch Swing, 35' Storm (.7 '")2- ••22
1""3 F rd V E II ' 1 r•~ 2011 S
I P
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on,
xct
on
...
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unclu
aar
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ntnct·
Painting,
•I'""
lid·
UINIIIII Paid. lihlrt Both, Door, K010Hna Htlltr, Sal
~ ... 1
Mil
74
•·· '" h Joh
• "' 1 '
.1 •••
•~~ AVo, o1 ~·
~-• Cl uba, 4 Drower Fll• FOida- 2500 dtalll lraotar, "'""'lion,
Low P~x.tagt..
loon -1.
~ lilt
'P· jao~tll,
noon, •·~.
lng , oerpantry,
dooro, ~mt
win•
~~~~~~~
• • ..,w..,
.... mo. •'"
Pondl&lt;l Grand
E•oet- with
traitor,
btlhl, --••
"'
1740)448·3048
:~~~~~~ coutng Fan . =u~tJ:~~tY ttnt Condition, Low Mlltago. depth IInder. Etc. PMnt :;'~ir ancl ..;;.."':""F.;(,.,
Oraclouo living, I and 2
(740)388·8758
13041878·1838
allmota call Ct&gt;ot, 740&gt;882·
bt&lt;lroorn aportmtnll ol VII· DO Old 78 Rocorda, All 101 Kloll 4x4 dltMI 22 HP 4' 1805 Toyota, 4WO, Ext. USED BOATS
1323,
In ·t hiS Sp8CI
lege Mlndf lnd Rtvtrlklo 1125. Coli (740)11112-3452,. ~~.~-rHog.
f4IIOO. oab, 138,000 mlllt, good 1858 Boylintr, ''"· 4 crt.. :;su::p:::or
to
_
r
_
Ho
m
_
t_M~t
::ln
tt
·
for
~Mitnll In Ml(klleport, no o111wor, leavo111111oogo. t7-,..,.,. 084
--•ltlon •• 200 oo 1.10 Vol a It111 r~• • · ~rom $:178-1348. C.il 740'
~N
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or, """ .......... ,....,., Wt do all Ropal,. on
WhMo Form T;lctor, 70HP, 802·3085
or IIIII &amp; lkl, 1711, 4 c)'l, Homto, lnaldt ond · Out, 125 per month
OD2·50e•. Equll Houoln~ Lllllt TlkH alldt 110,. Exotlltnt
Condition. · ·
.
.
MoiCrul- &amp; troller. 1950 Carptnlry,
Plumbing,
1098 Chtvy S·IO Btazor 1&amp;11 Pilyllmt wllh 88HP Tronohlng, Dacko, Build·.__ _ _ _ __.
ORpouunllleo,
Or..m CUrlllna 110.. IIJut (140)370·0381
21A A!&gt;lrtmont 1 1/2 Bath Lampt flO., 8 pltot
. .
2dr., V&amp;, 4.31., 72K, ~odtd, Evlnr~dl &amp; 1rtlltr. \881
a. (740)441.0113
Ji!iiiiii:iiiii~
~ ... OliN:,.,, 011'- ' poVpan• •ro., (304)874·
~ I · 110,®. C!!!M!e~!l354
Ma•um 1711 With 70HP "iii""-~~~~...,
4iiJW ,..., ,,
~ • • IU. ooao
.
UYI!l'JJU\..a.
Foret &amp; Trailer 1D08 .,..,.. •
EI..EC'I'RICAIJ
(740)441-Qit&gt;l.
·
.
.
1098 Explortr XLT, 4x4. de 1111, 4 cyl., 'MorcruiHr &amp;
44t 112 4111 A.a. 1300/mo., NIW AND UIID ITIIL
,
::!'i'rtf'3'~;,ryt~: traitor. tm Moroda 2111.
RJt.JIJUilERA'J'ION
.f150doooll1 . lltovo, Atlrtg- SIHI a.ame, PIPI Rablr !IIIIi Mo!IU, 31'o0rH ~ant, 0.8-2221 • · · ·
Sport Cuddy V·8, Mtrorulotrator F"umifllld Wa!ar In F"' Coocrato, Anolt, Cilln· l.ot&lt;l, Drtttl:t.Aoom Tral~
or I trailer. rm Morodo Aoaldtnllol or oornmorcltl
ollldt&lt;l (7&gt;10~:80111
• nol, Flol Btr, SIHI Orating tr, Llkt . , &amp;4000. IHI ~ 1500 L.orornlo, 2111. V-1 MtiCrulttr &amp; tral~ . wlnng, naw Hrvlot 01 rt·
.liking
· '• '
For Dralnt, Drlvtwayo ·I (7&gt;10)387-7237·
4x4, Quid Cab, Lotdtd, tr. Ali bOIII lrt PRICED 111~1. t.tolltr LIOtnHd llfCo ·
&gt;4f11· 111 Avo.1 1 BA, WllkWIVI. Lll Sorap Mal•
118000. (740}44&amp;:2218
TO SE~L. J.8. Marlnt trtclon, Rldtnour Eloetrloll,
·• I , ~ .
12etmo, pfut t2e5 dam· Ill Opor'l ~y, Tllttdly, 4-H and FFA Club PIQt 101
'
(7i0)258-1150
W\/0003011, 304:875-1758,
OIQt dtOOIIf, C740)1H-41131 , w-.~ I friday, Btm- Oa1Ht 1. Molga tncl lolteon 2000 Doclgo Ram II paoBlln:l~~arn
(:104)11~131 .
4:30pm, Clotod Thuracloy, Countltl, (140)381·11033 ar ·eangor von,-. 21,000
ln.ll.
&amp;undl!y. (740)388-0171.
miiH, _, over 130.000
7300
1740
S.IUIIIUI3 )'Mt old Cloi&lt;ltn ,_(7.,;)7421
$:II,500,
Cll AT JAOKION
Old Puhlllllld Iron Bath Palomino tiud pony, not =--~~-~;';.;'-;::;-;:-.;­
TA~L~ V.....wood Dr1WI Tub, (304)878-31198
brolctniO rldt, Uklng 84!0, 17 Ford F· IIO, 4x4, V-I,
from_, 101313. Wolk 10
~ -·Hrou &amp; box (740)742·3033.
Auto, Air, Good Condltlan,
thOII
a
·
Cal
740'
"'
...
(740),258-1417
or (740)251Jo
44f•258f, fqutl Houllng
, 1100,00, 7~·1102· Polr plgo lor ule, (740f848· i22.
1
Clpjlotlll!litY.
7207
·
21101 or (1&gt;10) 1141-201
58 3.
3 point "'ldt, $:15. 1 pair
ii_,. IICiftold
ll&lt;llca, 850. Tllltr tor

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740 742 7037

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• . AN Ol..t BARN CAT ?1 vou s.A\'0
'VOU WUZ ~NNA_GNE ME
'fORE
L.lllrPl&amp;M'
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Rtmltk

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740.742-3411

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FREE ESTIMATES!

SIActmt

lllu bla, a
French pnlnter nnd
• ·poN, t~l , "The
world Is aivitl~tl into·
two r~ tcl!orics: f~H ­
UI'e~ nnd unknowns."
So much . for everyone!l)~da ren r~n .in
maka ble contrncts for
. " V&lt;lt'iciy or rcfi!lltlS.
Here is :t 1hort li~t:
mlt colmtin~ winners
~ntt los·c ", . not wino

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&amp; Spread

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Reev.l

c.IIOwt .

Fr~ n tis

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Delivered

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Authoriz.ed Agent

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Bry~n

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sunset Home
Construction

992-5479

Size•
tO 5

12)

. Failure to think

51 Un111 and
Gift

··" ~

Jeff Warner Ins.

Appllancu, 71 Vlno Sl, Hol111111 Ylolblt mlal humldl· ""(304:-::-'")87,-5·-::-252--::5:---:-:--:::::(740)446·7398
nor, 120: ceiling ian, $20; 11108PonllaoGrandAmSE, '----~;.;,;;-._oil '--------.-.
Ktnmore Black Flat HIYklt 11'01 'roatltr, $2; 20"xl2" V•O, Air, ~Oidld, 84,000
olectrtc range. Rlmo.ablo .,, pan, $20: bol lan, $3; mlltt, $0,000 011'1oko OW.r
grill. Sall.ofoanlng. 11200 (740)II02·2&amp;29
. Paymanta, (304)5l'e,.t70,
now, 1300 080. (740)448· lndtptndtnt Horbllllt Ola- 1H7 Ponlloo Orond lim,
61104
lrlbUtor, Coli For Product 01 SE. 4dr, tlr/oruiM. $4,875.
l"'.......rtunlly (740)441- 1H2 (-•)87" •or•
King Sire Wattr BoO, E•CII· ;:;
,.....,==;:.·..:,..~-- ~ •
29670 Beahan Road
lont Conclltlon, Bodoldt
JET
~tH::::7-:Sa--:l-um:-:s:-~,:-.:-5-:llptld:-:::-:;,
Stand. New W.ttr MaHrooo, . AERATION MOTDAS
AC, $3500. (740)370-27ee
Racine, OH 45771
• -··1843·5""'A
;;::,;.~:'"':'::-:·=:-:::::- Ntvor out ot aox, 1200. Rt~~~lracl, Ntw &amp; Aabullltn
740 949-2217
.....,..
...,..
MII08CO."ICLANO (740)440•1523
Stook. Coli Aon Evana, I· 11108 Kla Sporlago E~.
•
Sur.plement•1 Life 'Insurance;
Nlw on lfte Mtrlttl. Four
· aoo "37 ••28
4Wo, 34K mllao, loaded.
~
·1o acra' tracta aurroundlld Moiohan Calptt, 202 Clarl&lt;
·o ' "" ·
and F nal Ellpenses; CaMer &amp; ·
17401388-a145,
1
by Sillde ~lvor State Foroet Chapa! ~oad, Parlor, Ohio.
X
Retlrenient
and only mlnuloo from (740)448·7«4 1·877·830· . Saal 12HP Riding ~. 2001 Dodgo Stroluo RT, ,
10'X3 '
1
Foll&lt;td Run Stato Part&lt;. ldo· 0162. Frat Eatlmatoa. Eaay $200., Oroaloy llova $&amp;0, 40,000 mllea, 2 dr., toadt&lt;l,
&amp; 401K Roilovers;
fJ!I
11 lor lho ouldoota lovorl llnancing, 110 daya llmt •• M~rowava $10., ROH gMd· loothor aoota, aunrool, '
Hours ·
~~~:~:.~~M:~aj:or
Medical
Ill!
Alk tbout our Claaranoo caah. Vlael Maattr Card. or rookll. $25. (304)874· 110,000 OBO, (740)94~~
Stltl Call ua IOOIY lor Dnva- a-llttle.uva olot. . 0050
250111tor4:3Upm,
7:00AM ·8:00PM
'"II MAPI • DITAIL8, Ntof &amp; UHd lurnlturo IIOrt TWo Blcyolll, Vttry GOOCI 98 Honda Acoord LX TlwlnAni~""Y Land Company, below Holldity Inn, Kanau· Condltkln, Very Lntlt Utt. dowa, Polloh Aluminum I'PIIIIJII,.,I!lfll'r.'....l"'
~td.
1·•GO-IU..31S go, Uat&lt;l couchaa, mat· 18 IPHII Mountain BlkM, Alma, CD Playar, Now
- .alotand.oom
,,...., , d..aaa,., OE wooh· Hla a HtiW. (740)441-01178 Tlrta. suoo: (304)675er. Tappan gaa .range, ......_r Hood
2020
Ill ' I \1 '
SOnoOI but. Ooftlpolll, OhiO.
=-=-::::-::--:::-:::--:-:::: .................
;;:::;;;:=~ (740)448-4782
Wattrllno Spaclol: 3/4 200 TO BE SOLD AS IS. 1081
~
PSI $21 .00 Ptr 100; I' 200 . Mtrcury Tracor, 107,000
s~.
PSI $38.00 Pol tOO; All mlllt, - · Olulch, Aoklng
"""""' _
Brau Oomptaulon Flttlnga SIIOO. 11 lntorallltd oontlcl
...
In Stook,
Paul Borttor It Tht Oalllpo.
!'ION IYANI INTIII"'I. Ua Del~ Trlbuno, 825 Third
I ·3 Boljrooma ForocloUd Frtd Boar Yculh Bow, Ot· •• Jackaon, Ohio, 1-800- Avt., (lolllpolla, ·. Ohio S15.00 nar ton
MOmoo From 1199/Mo,, 4% mo, Draw 25, Wtl(ltll 45, 537·0528
·
45831. (740}44&amp;:2342
-,..
Down, 30 va .. ol 8.5% loll ol E~traa, UHd Only r
8·10 tone
AP~ . For Uallnga, 800·318.· Boaoon. Now Condition.
BVILDING
'I'RIJCKS
3323 Ext. 1708.
_
(7.0)448·888t
~
Slll'i'Wli
••
FUR SALE . ( m)lt1d •.re
2 Bodrcom Houtt 11 1018 Now Englond 12 GA. 3"
3rd AYI.
1 Bodroom Mag Sluggon LC. Smith 12 BIO&lt;lk, brick, Hwtr plpta, 1873 lntornollonal Slngla
MOUHI at . OtO &amp; 1012 3r!l (lA. Double (3041178•11!04 wlndowa, llnllil, Ito. CIIUdt Ax.t l Saml Convanllonal Leave name .. No.
Ave. AIIO lmall· Trailer,
Winter•! Alo Grandi, OH Ill), 2ap, ~tl, 200HP. 011·
10x30.
(7.0)441•0219
.o.-m~Call740-a411-8121.
tal, Auna01811. $11100. Call
l-r~~~lr.~~
• -" ' , • f\IV~
Saturday Leave Meuage. t:
7
, a .SR, aalllpollo Arao.
·
· (740)388-t&gt;tra
"~ MoroRCYL"LI!ll
740 258 670
1' IBR
) 1 • 112 ~ Bath Whitt Buy
or oell. Fllvtnna Anti: ·
·
p1 k
·
,
uoo 1124 Eaai Main on
1876 Chovy 1/Zion c ·up, .__ _ _ _ _ _,.
q '
·
on ra·
.
, Avt., 375/mo. Oopoall &amp; SR
124 E. Pomeroy, 740• 12 w1&lt; old molt
Rottwtlltr approx
bunt 35538,000
onglnt,mllta
1110 rabulh 1994 2 font Rod Cullom
Fn:c Eslmratcs
• Roloroncoa. (740)448·107Q 092·2626. ·RUII . Moora, pup, lull blootltd, 1150.00. 350 tranamloolon, uklng Soil Tall H11lty Oavlaon.
'
-kl
,. liOn 1
owner.
740·1192:8814
l1
400
oilo
304·882·
5xcolltnt
Condll~n.
Cuotom,
111111'1 Ill Sl • 1'111111111'111111
•• ng •PP~•
or a 1
·
' ·00
·
5Mt, WIIHI, ~owo~ng KU
. bedroom nome In Mlddlo- Suo'• Soltctabloa on tile "T" e RotiWtllor/Boxtr pupolta, 34411
.oia ol txtru, 114,000.
740 9!12-91:18
por1, t300 plua dopollland In Mlddlaport. Dalla, glaoa· call lor prtca. 740·241·20110 1883 Chivy 3/41on 80,000 (740)448·8413, (740)318·
mlleo, now Urea, dual ••· 1579,
IIIII"-:'~~~~...,
,.ltronoao, (740)1102·8154 .ware, Aloddln montoll, and
H
more. (740)982·0208
AKC Chow·CI'oOw Pupploo, illuat, ClrbUrtlor luna up.
Al!i'O PAlmi &amp;
MOIIOU: OM&amp;'i
·
8 WHica old. Callllltor 8pm l3 OOO. OBO 13041875. 1894·1200 Sportlttr 10,000 ~
Ac ·--r&amp;'l
FOR Roo
.
Wttkdll'll An~lmt Wttk· BIQ3
mllto cuatom l)llnt, forward ~
:cF.,.,.,.. •
•
IY.........U.ANI!Xllll
Ondl, (740!448-3188
controla, big lank, wind·
: f(X70 2 btdroomtotalt!IC·
MEIIcHAI\IIliSI!
AKC Aog. Ooldtn Rttrlovar 1858 810 Blaz01, 4.3,. V8, ohitld, Hddll baga, Loll ol 1891 Oodgo Englna &amp;
• trto 1300 00 a month &amp;
pupplll vii -kid ·1" auto, u~lng 11,400.00 Chroma. .
17800. Tranoml11lon , 3.3 , V:8 plua
• llllO.OO d~pooll. No pota. 18' Aluminum Covort&lt;l Tan· ahoto a' wormtd. roody 10 . 080. 304·812·3448
C304)875·8993
ott&gt;or hlfTII, 1740)381'i8ol5
, • 0111740•742:2714
. dam Excollont Condition. ~now 1125.00 ooch :104- 1889 OMC Sierra OT, 350, 1098 Yamaha Wo"ltr 350, ludpt Prlottl Tronamlo· ....- - - . . . . . , - - . ,
(740)378-8587
3•5841
5 apot&lt;l, ARE nma, toMouo Groll Shof'' $2500. tiona All Typoa, Aocoaa 1b
~= 2 ~~ 1 '~ 1~i 1 ~~7~~~ 1800 Tobacco Sticka. 2 'AKC Reglottracl Cl'oOoolatt oovor,
oharp, 114500 · 1740 )4 48•250
OYer 10,000 Tranamlaatona,
7
lord w,•~S~·2rl61J
baler Boxet, (304)878·7471 Lib Pupa, Atady May 8. 1 &gt;IO)S88·~7? tvtn ngo.
11199 Harlty oovlaon, 1200 RtbUIId Kilt, 740·245·15877.
~--::""::---:._'"7:".':"::""
Dow Clawa, Sholl, 5 F• 1880 Toyoi14K41ruck, naw Cuatom, $11000. (740)370· Otll: 338•3785·
2 &amp; G Bod room Mobile 18lt48 Above Ground P
001.
molt, 3 Malt. (140)441 • motor, liking 13,000 OBO, 2708 ,
'
.,IW C•M~"· .
Hollltl; Roleranott and 1 year old. Nttdo 1lnll, 0013
~ ··- " '
11~I Mlk
DtPOtli Roqulrtd. River 1260. 1304)882-31173
or t .
2000 Hailoiy Dovlaon 1200
MOTOR HOM~
DeiiVIrecl &amp;
· Valloy · Sohool OlttriCI. 2 lata, 4 po.. HIYt•O:Inec~. AKC roglotorod · .CO&lt;lktr IH5 GMC SONOMA lruok, cullom, 1150 mllot, Pttrt
Splelld
$111 OQ
(740)357 01132
Spanltl Puppllt 101 aalo to 80,000 milia, tloliitnt oon- Whitt, Extru, Aoklng
•
"th
.
•
•
120 ta.: batl\room .illottr, loving homtt only, V11 dltlon, $4,500.00 (740)t48· stt,500 ORO. (740)388· wh1005 t·~~ 411 · ~ •
per
ton
to
8
10
1
2btdroommobllehomolor 120:2 Ironing boarda, $2 Chockt&lt;loncllllll dooktd 1311.
8375.CaUallar7pm.
•·"s'1 0 t'
·
tonl 1 1lmlted
rihl no pill (740)882· oal: 50 po. punchbowl oot, and otowi rtmovt&lt;l.
t~n,
. II f
5158B
'
135: (740)1192•2529
For mo,. Information 0111 1HI Chtvy 314 ton, 4 2001 460 Foramen 4 WhMI•
1re11 Cl Or
(304)57a- 3128
whHI drlvt, Low Mlloa, l;x· er, OUtlaw u11., Greet con· 1098 Jeyco pop-up campar,
dltlll. Cell:
3 BoOroom. vou PlY dtpot· 2001 ~allwav Computtr
otlltnt COndition. (740)357· dillon. Call (740)441:&lt;15118 mttty txlrae, 13,9!10.00. (
.
)
It ond ulllitlll In Po~ar CD llurntr, camtra lndJ.ott
MU'JICAL
17237 '
.
. or (740)448•7311
740·1102-8014
.
740
591 • 2173
aru Call (740)381·8182
or 01tra. •aeo. oso.
• ·1Or te1ve n1me
' .
·
· (304)8711-7240 or (304)875KUMIINl'S
· 1gge GMC sonoma s~s 2001 vstar Cta111o 1100. 1090 5th whool Prowltr,
Nlot,
air oondl· 2232
l*lkagt, Air, Auto: Till, Cranbary/ Croom. Yamaha 2711, ~lkt NIW, Sltopo 6.
lr\d numblr
tlon,
Play·
Ktyboard YK7 Aoltnd, , 2 Crulaa, ~ong ll'ad, 52K wlndohlald atudded t1ddlo Sago (lroan
lnttrlor. Lii~ii~ii
. 1285, 2g,ooo BTU KtnmOit Air (lonnan Show bUd Electrto mlltt, o 1tglnol Owntr, bega, cobra long ahola 1740)778·8122, ,(740)352·
Dopooll. oondlltontr. $260. Hot point . Sltalt Guitar and Spacial, S7300. (740~448·4704 or Pl""l, 2220 mlloa, 17,000. oeo8.
Eltotrlo Rlngt., 41'150.) Rt·• Itt tn StOng lnatrumont At• (740)448·296
1 8:00, .
lr~ralor
(f40)448· 7627 ater
\ I U \ I( I \
1125 1304 875

.

,.~=~=
a,.'"'.,. _...... ,_..

47 1'1111 piftlt
41 a.ct . .
QGuren

•u

New Homea, Room Additions.
Gll'lgtl, Pole Building~, Aoofl,
Siding, -Deckl, Kltchent, Drywlll

21

r ..

QAU "NcwtMW

~~~J~i~~i

P/1

I

r'B

Rtclnt, 01~10 1

6 KQU;
'l lt'l

-

Col~ COM- l.l~ Henl, I 112
1:10 Cor adoplelt Cue' lnl. ~old. ~ cente I~
Anlwnna loa than I (140)1t85-311118
old. $100, (1&gt;10)388 t441 01
CON'IllCIOIS, INC.
Si¥.CE
(7401441·2'187
Aaclne, Ohio 45n1
FOR REM
Cub Codol gordon na.a
fOII.A•~&amp;u.l
17HP wftll42"
vo""'
741).S18J-3141
.....
. , lin $\~
18ltlt0 111M: StOOIIno. 740: _.., on ~1 ar, - ·
CONCIElE/IUXl/IIKI
1182-2167.
(740~1·
· 11118 FO!&lt;I Ranger, 44:~.. 5 •l'oooers, W.lls, Steps.•
Factory madt air tanka IIIMCI. $!3!50. lee4 Che&lt;ly
Flat Work,
about 4' long. ~lkt New. S·10 Ext: Cob, 4&gt;4, V-1,
Rcph~cem.:mls 1 • W•lks
1
Houii!How
Dart HeiiiOt&gt;arDOI In Cod· Auto, $&amp;800. 1982 "llwola
and Drives • Stencil
Gooos
mua.
p - 4Cyl., II!IMde &amp;nCtetc
Fold up Traadmllt, IIICIIne, 1004, $2100, (140)251-1012
F..e
Estlmotes
Applla,;,oa: Reconditklnt&lt;l ml'"trtit "'::tloj~: 11188 ~. 4x4, lluto,
lllollhllrs, D~ Rangn,
t u ·
Runt &amp; Drtvao Ortal. Scrvi,. Ottio md W,V.
Rolrlgralora, Up 1b 110 Dol"' ;.:;;;.-:::-:----:=-= Ntadl
Paint.
$4SO. ,_....;,:,;,-...;,;,;,;;.,.aj;lljj
wv 11031712
(lutrantetdl Wt Sail New (loll Clllbl: Wilton X31 C740}441·1083 ·
~
Maytag Appllancta, Froncto traila, Rant 1,3,5 wood, QOII :-::::-:::--::-:-:-:::-:::-::::; r-...._...~--,
Clly Ma~og. 740-446-7795. baQ, pull can, $150.110. IH2 FOld Muattno OT,
r:~:::::::-o::::::::::o:,
7.0.1102·7207
\IOI1tC) 1Upor CI\IIIQII', will\
OlnoHo toble &amp; cllai10; Hldlnew u,., and ctlrorM pon~
a·btd: 4 po. bodroorn aulte, OrotrJBurvoncly llo,.l 1011 whHia, CO playor, man~
call 740·992·1552 alter &amp;u-wlngbackchalr. Ex· oxlraa, aaklng 18,000.00.
4·30
conant COndition. $200, 740-0411-0219
· ·
(~)773:eo&amp;l
For Sola: Racondlllont&lt;l
, .
19t4 Covallar, a door,
wawri. dryers and 18lrig- (lrubb • Plano- funlng &amp; SliHS. 1985 Borotto,
oratora. Thomf)aona IIWfl· Rtpal18, Pn&gt;blomo? NMcl S21115. 19.110 Borttto OT,
anco .. 3401 Joc~aon Ava- Tunt&lt;l? CoM Tho Plano Dr. S1H5. · 1803 cavalier, 4
nuo, (304)e75-7388.
:,:740:44:::.:,;.:1:.;:4,::52:;:5_...,.....,..~ door, $1985, 1995 S·10,
Appl
Flo- · Htavy duly odluoloble 11aor $3485. COOK MDTOIIS.
~.:1~~~~ a.:~":oran· tack, 120: old polr !Ollar ~(7~40~144~8-o_r-:03-:--:::-::-:
l..d. W.lholl, Orylll, 55
fkl. tt " ~i :: =~ ~=· 11108 Chovv ~umlno, 89,000
Rlngtl, lncl Rllriglrt!OII,
•
X
• mllta, 3,I \1-t angina, Some II.. at $95. Sl&lt;aQOI $20: 1740)1102·2!1:19
Tlrao,
Aoklng $4000,

i

,_
....._
""".,__
,

''V"'lil

Wlde~toiH.a,Anl!lllll,

....,..._,

1Cf14*.(1~}44H)II$ E~

utll. pold 1of
dlo·
. ond
~ ·ACiliAGl! • Ul)ltoi,.
e .H.o l:I04lii'IHlt7&amp;
_
A~&gt;on"*&gt;t at t4
locuot St. SlOV&lt;I ancl RalitQ,
tttiiCraiolm oil AU L-, ~&lt;aiDr Fumlohod, $2ll0mlo.
would Maki good hUnting ~ iro:luclod, 1 ...,_
ClUb $100.000 ......._ wotot _..., 01 CCluplt, It 50
riQIIII :IOW~· t!\:19
~- (140)4488011 .

i""""1

Btd$1g &amp; Vegetable Fiala 't.IO
111 He-'- Baskel$ ....

o1

AI 1bp Soil, Fill Dill lof Chall Hill \\~
, Sertoua lnqulfM
.
Sale. Equipment A-. Cflon'4lian Hill EXT IIOCC
· (1~~ar(140147 • 1br. Hud&amp;-aedllll.ll DolO&lt;, _ , _, Tla- &amp; WLC Eclipoe,

: *.

• ._t ••u., ...

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

Your d runK mit h ynur .1b1lity

to tl\tnl c."oop4!rntivdy

.UHI

cf. .

fcc: ti vcly wit h p ~opl~· you're
in vui Y~ U

~nod

will

with . Mu rh

111 Uhl .ll

c uuH(utJl u(lt . .

VlllGO (Aus , 23 -Sc[H . 22)

SAC: I TT AiliU ~ (N ov. 23IJrr. 2 1) ., IJon't he rl'luc.,trl

to

''·' I'm'

yo ur thoushn to

:w yn ne imp nrt11 111 to yo u.
Y ~1u ' rl' cxcepliO IHtll y good in
ti ll: way yuu rUI I VIl'Y y otl r
thmkwg w mlt!.!r~ .
CAI'I1. 1CORN (IJct . 22·
Jn ll . I~) . You or !'c '" itnnglna•
tivt• "' ll &lt;r -· :utd buyer .,

lv ho &lt;nh •put bor~.llll! . Th io

tll nh• ynur proh•bili tlcl fu r
i't&lt;&gt;fit &lt;X&lt;&lt;illinnu ll y lt t ~h .
AQU AI1,I US 0&gt; t1. 20-Peb,

10

It') -- Pcrw u .t1111 il~llrt i~tn can
hc.''l dc.•tot:t lbl' !hat whH':h you
·ciiUilate. It Wtll become obvl·
""' to yun " tillt&lt; licks t:&gt; ll ·by
the IV.ty thmc 111 your pm ·
en i-t ·an• dtnwn to you.
. PI SCES (l·clJ. 20 Marth 20)
...... f.il';m nn rwn~nC'r , hecautt
rt Will be luod lor yo ur pry.

l11g alld bei ttK !CCII Will h•vc "

11 hc. Your 1Hra1 "hould m•

•• Sun1eth iiiK you do w~ ll &lt;nil
be Ulf tlcd i nlll n 111 tllll'Y-Ill ·lk"
tu g •idellu e. 1'hl! trt.ty be the
tunc wh cu it' ll bctm)l~ dL•Jr

you huw lo tlin about It~
LIUKA (Scp&lt;. 23-0ct. 23) •
.. Do not hide: ynur II Mht un•
dcr " bu11hel. Gtl out1JtlciSihn·
Qlld llli llt&lt;l&lt; 111 full " '"'"'' ~«·

u lu1ary cll'c&lt; l on yuur lltt•K•
and popul.mty. '
· SC::OKI'I ll (Od. 24·Nuv ,
. 22) •• Ettt&lt;tta rn mK nt Y"'"
1'1••• wrll rnnkr ynu the 11ar ul
tht ~ h ow. Vmit t(tOittouJ hot ~
pi" illy anJ the w.oy yuu hdll • ·
Jlc pruplc will corn you mudt

applau&gt;f,

~rc.11 Je.l u( luv•, 1111•
tl'nty and fleVnhon ,
Al( IES (Murdt 2t-April 19)
..:.. Jl ut · un that tpcctal o utO.t

duJc •

yuu'vo'i•tcu -.vms and

try

oo

luuk your br1t. Thtrt't a
IIWIIK d1:u1er you could encounter lllnttune

you'll be

mmt .JnJdum to impreu.

�Pta- II • The Dilly Sentinel

www.mydlllyeenttnll.com

Southern sweeps Feel Hock, 11

•

a1·

Mtlp CoUnty'l
~

Whllt'slnslcll

Two-car
National Day
of

Brigadoon
• · GaUia Academy

Hlan School Choirs are
busy pnctic:lna tor the
ev!lr PQPU!ar musi~~

Prayer

8naldo0n. Tile nu1s
will be May 3 and May
8

STAFF REI'ORT

Youth
Orchestra

7:30

Deaths
The Rev. Rod Brower, pastor ot the Pomeroy and Heath Unit·
ed Methodist Churches, led the openln&amp; prayer durin&amp;
Thursday's observance of the National Oay of Prayer, which
was held In front ot the Mel&amp;s County Courthouse. A larae
crowd aathered outeldil the court house to hear the lnspl·
rational words of ssveral local ministers, and 11 number of
hymn• were auna by Melli Hllh School students durin&amp; the
hour·lona service. (Tony M. l.eaoh)

· Lawrence Hllldore, 78
Ciuy Russell, 72 .
Carleton Drummer, 27

p.m.

Saturday at Ariel
Theatre In Oalllpo)is.
The Spring Showcase
, will feature the orc:hestra

Detalll, AS

under the direction of

Ariel
Resident
Compow and OVYO
music director, Scott
Michal.
.
The ~venln~'s PfO•
aram closes With "Stars
and Stripes Forever"
condll(ted by the winner
of the Mini Maestro for
a 'Moment.
1\ckets .e $~ and are

C

Hlah: 60sl Low: 40s
. . .,..•••• A2

a'lallab1e il the door. f'or

IVinton Co. I
Fesdval
a Wild Turkey
Festival to be held May
3-.5 In McArthut. For
inore Information call
(740) ~69-5033

H.lth board

Hocking

melll

'Irail Hike

POMEROY - MeigJ
County Board of Health
will meet May 9 at 5 p.m. in
the conference room of the
Meigs County Senior Cit!·
ze111 Center.

• Frontier .Trail Hike.
EXptm the hiiiOI'Y. pf
thO Hocldna HiU• with •
· walk back tbtoullh time
dramatized by COStUmed
Interpreters alone the

Ash Ca'le trail at
HockinJ Hills State
Park. The event will be
Saturday from IIQOI1 to 4
p.m. Por 1110re Information call (740) 38$-6841.

Ohio

Pick J: 1-4.0
Pick 4: 8-5·1·7
ludct¥1 5': 1+9·26-27
Pick J 4-Y: 8-1-o
Pick 4 NY: 3·2·5·5

Wilt Vlr~lnla

jHuntingtonl

~1:2."0-1

'

Classes

,.
.........
......
C.lendar

a Tri·Siate Ice Arena

.

ot1ei1J beainner Ice •Qt·

Ina · cl•ee•. ·Tuesday
evenlna cw.e. Include

Cluslfiedt
Comics

3· to ~-year-olda at~: 15
p.m., foUowod by qe 6
to teen enclldultt at 6: 15
p.m. For more I~
iion COfttllct . He)dl

Delr~

Editorials

Movie.

Obituaries

tkua director,

s~

Weather

Paw Taw Squn
DliiceCiibofl'en.'dlll.ll lei I Dill tom 7., 9
IICh'l\iaedly • the
fillII
Cbatch.

A4
85·7

88
A4
M

A3
A3

Bl-4

Al
• JI!Ol-lillllr .......... co.

(304) 69'7--4423.

l..etlons

.

DaiiV 4: 5·2-6·8
calli 25: 5-8-13-19·20-24

Skating

Charleston
Dllr.G111)
The ·(our-time Tony _ ·•w.tVoaprlaSy;...., 0
11..
Awinl-winn!ftl · BR*lwar IIDilll 11 11411 io!l • 8 p.m. 1 r
t•
n~8P..DLMayiS Mw+ft•' AllkW!m. 'IU PI - $11.10.
•
.
Municipll $22 :IJ, $32.80 _, $43.90. 1'hiiY lillY lit ....
Audltodum. Tk:btJ nnp ct 1 lD liha» bJ "I 1 (301) JG.OUID«
6om S~ 10 S4l. For more &amp;be aJab1 ol ?be -.me • d!l 11 Iir'
Information call (304) ~23- Audltailum llol Qllb, w" h 1• 1 • ~ bella
j7'J7.
p.m.
I

0

;

•

.

.

Local woman
cookoff finalist

Help Me Grow
contract continues
through.June 30

'

BY IRiAN J, RIID

BY CHAIILINI HOIII'UCH

BREEOOMYDAILY8EN'1'1N£L.COM

POMEROY Gallia·
Meigt Community Action
Agency will utume operation
. of Meig.• County "Help Me
Grow" program• previoutly
run by ACCESS.
Meip County commiuionen approved a two-month
contract with CAA during
their regular meeting on
Thursday, allowing for the IINIOit CITIZINI DAY - Su1en Oliver. exeoutl~e director of
continuation of Early Inter- the Melp County Council on A&amp;lna. joined the Melp County
vention, Welcome Home and oommlaalonera Thurlday In declarin&amp; May 21 .Ill Senior Cltl·
·zen• Oay In Melp County, to honor local unlor citizens anel
Early Start programs for qual- MCCoA atatf membert who prOVIde urvtcee to local unlort.
ifying umllies.
(Brian J. Riled)
ACCESS relinquithed the
memben who work with
program• at the end of March, intcrett in the contr.ICt.
.when the mental health
In other b\11inc:JJ, Davenport local tenior dtium.
commi11ioners
agen'}' ceated operation•.
· reported on the condition of The
reviewed
road
vacation
Through the family and Board President J~ofi'Thornton,
Children first. Council, who continue~ to rec011er frtnn reque111 from Sali1bury and
ACCESS offered the child- turjFiet in January and March. Olive townthip trutteet. S~l ·
hood intervention progranu
Davenport .aid Thornton i1bury trulteet regue1t that a
on itt own, and through 1ub- remain• hu1pitalized at St. portion of Heilr1f.in Road be
contracts with the Meip Mary'• Hotpital in Hunting· vacated, and Olive tru1tee1
County Health Department ton, W.Va.. and i1 awaiting that ·a portion of Hdney
and Carleron School.
admi11ion ro a rehabilitation R.oad be vacated.
Public hearingJ and view·
The · new .contract· wlth facility in Nebmka.
CAA, efl'eaive through June The
committionen ingt will be announced.
alto
CommiJJio ller!
30, will provide $63,945 for af'proved a . prodamation
terVicet. Whether the sub(;()n- declaring May 21 u Senior apr. roved payment of billt in
tracu through the health Cltiun1 Day m Meigt Coon- the amount of 1235,452;
approved
appropriation•
department and Board of ty.
totaling
Mental Retardation and • Sutan Oliver, executive .adjuttmentl
Developmental Diubilities director of the Meigt County $45,000 for county l!ngineer
wiU continue will be decided Council on Aging, pretented J!ugene Triplm; authorized
by CAA, according to Corn- the proclanution. The obter- the clo1ing of the MeigJ
mittioner Mick Davenport.
.vance it detigned to recog· County Courthou1e at noon
The AdltnJ.Meip fduqcion.- niu the 'ontributiom of rhe on May 7 for Sthe primary
al Service Cent« alto exprrued agen'}''t pardcipanu and tutl' election.

HOEFLICHCMYCAILYSENTINEL.COM

l'OMEil..OV - Gloria Herdman uf l'umeroy, with her
"Chicken Dandy Chili with GrcemldiciiiU! Cream," i&lt; omc
of the fimililt! in the Ninth Annual IJ:mdclion Mayfc•t .md
National IJandclion CookotT mking place thi1 weekend.
The cuokoff. hiKhliMht of the May Feu, will be itaged ;11 the
llrcitcnbach Wine Ccllar1 between Duwr aud Suw~rcr••c k
where dandelion wine will be fl1lWi11~ .oml fi"'d' made with
daudcliom will be the featured fiJUdl.
Fifteen finalim rcprc~enting Urah, Vir·
~inia,Wc1t Virj!inia. Midnwm. l'cnny&lt;lvania, Suuth C.uulina .md ( lhiu will vic li1r
the title of the "bc&lt;t danddam &lt;hd i11 the
country fiJr 2002."
lle1ide1 a 10rand prize ufS51HJ 111 ''"" .md
giff ccrcilicate&lt;. other prize• will 1nclt1Jc
1250, 111~1 and more wli ccrtiflc:ueo,
The Northern Ohiu Cunvivh1111 llf
Sluw FcH"l USA, a wuup dcdkawd w ere·
acing ~warcnc•c llf the ri.h d1wr1ity of tratt.rdmM
ditional cui•incl, will he rcprcwlltcd ltil the
program and the judginK panel at tltc ' ''ukufl'.
"Every year th~ competition !;CI wul!fwr.'' uy• Dr. l'ctl.'r
Gail, founder of th~ ~·vent and authllr of "1 he IJ;mddicm
Celebration: A Guide w an UnexpL'tted Cuioinc."
. The rcdpc1 are of two typ~"' - th11•c whkh arc traditiunal in their 1pedlic culture• and reprct~Cnt fiu11ily varianh, like
dandelion gravy, and theM which arc hij;hly creative ~nd
innovative.
·
The l)andelion MayFclt run1 from 1111011 u) (, p.m. wday
and from I) a.m. w 7 p.m. Saturday.
Herdman might be m-..ribed •• a cunw•t Junkie.
She'1 bec.'11 en"-'ring con"-'ill for ycu•.
Latt fall, the won the national M•rlhum Chill Cu"k"fl' •nd
reuived a 21J02 bright red p,,J ~~ ~1114"r, ca•h tAl pay the Ull4"&lt;,
and lixin'1 for a tail~tc party, Sincc. thcn •lle ha• won three
rooking related wntetu, an &lt;"Kay cllntl.'•t, 0111d w.'Verol •weep. Jtakn with prizet valucJ at &lt;JVCT Slo,I~HJ
She '"uld return w Mdg~ Counry ~U11d.y with a n~w adc.

Meigs Family Fun festival

.!

I

will finish out
f

'POMEROY - Meigs "
County Health Department
will conduct a childhood
immunization clinic on
May 7 from 1 to 7 p.m.
Child's shot records mutt
be provided. Children .
enrolling in kindergarten
who need a T.B. skin telt
should vilit before 4 p.m.,
when the TS Clinic clo1e1.

Drlllmncr wa, cjL•ctcd fttllll hi1.whkk. trouper; 1aid. 11.1er
was also taken to HMC f(&gt;r trcatll"'llt nfinjmks.
It was
fcmrth tmtlic fo1~11ity of th•· yL·ar iu M e i~~~ Conmy.
troopers said, and th e !\'Willi invcsti~lted by the p.ILI111 in Mcil!'l ·
this week. Cmmie L. ( iriKW~, 41, ltecd&lt;vilk·. dil•d i11 .1 cwo-car
cra1h at Success ;llld Number ~ roads lll',lr 'flipp•·rl l'l.iill&lt; ou
M"mlay.
In respumc w the r&lt;·ccnt rash uftr.rllk f.ltiilitk•&lt;,ln.np,•i'l will
he lncrcnsinK their presence in Mcif~S Cuunty, ~rid Lt. I ~ kh.1rd
E. ( lrau, cmnll1i111der nf the G-M l'mt.
·
"From this pnlllt fin'Ward there wiU he a zcm tolcl'illiLC ,;ll all
safety belt violatillllN, :111d mio:t cnfi~tce ul e lll will he takc11on nil
crash cnusinK violatinm - speed, impaired drivilll(, l:oilun• In
yield ar1d fiJIIowil11! ton doscly, to ll;Ull C.1 l~w.... (irau s.oid.
"We arc in tlw bu~inu~ Ill ~ave liw&lt;, and it would .IJlJ&gt;C.lf that
·we have not made thi• dear cnm1~h 111 1hc dtizcm lilt he post
area,'' he added. "We will drive thi• Ill'''"'~" home li·o111 thi•
· point forward."
·
·

tl,,.

ACGESs~·~contrac:t. -~:.:.

,._dlnlc

•

Thrkey

O.ce

I~Jmcroy.

MEIGS COMMISSIONERS

information, call 740446-2787.

Hlnley,

POMEROY - A Racilll' 111:111 di,•d ofinjlll·ies ,,lfr,•red i11 ,,
two-car a~ddcnt Thursday "'! l'ine (;lllVl' Ro.od , ll!lllh u(
Amb~r10er Road ne11r l'llln.-rtoy, th&lt;• ( ;a[li,o-Meil!" Pmt of the
S~1tc H il!hwny Patl\ll rcpnrl&lt;'ll.
Cnrleton .Drumllll'r, 27, w.IS mtnspmt &lt;·d tu Holzer M,·,knl
Ccnt••r f"llowin~o~ thL· (, a.IlL LTalh, whn&lt;' he w,11 l'"'ill' lilll'''d
d&lt;•nd, the patml1nill.
·
Truoperli !ailll&gt;rulllllll'r Will northhnund when IK· fi&gt;ilc·d Ill
navlw1te a wrve and the ~ill' he drove, a I'JHH Ni1~11 11 SL'IIlr,o,
dropped ofT the riKht sidL· uf the ron d.
·
Drummer nttempted to n'l!llin ~mllnll of the em·. whkh ·
cl\med the center line and wllidcd lwad-on with .IICI\lthhuuml
I~'J3 1'\lrltinc Grand l'rix driVl'n hy Edward 1: llacr. 32.

Reds lose marathon, II

• Tlte Ohio Valley
Youth
Orchestra
(OVYO) will present its
final conc:en of the seaat

Racine man

at

p.m.

Elementary
For more
contact
at (740)

son

crash ki.lls

I

0.,.

Look for the Holzar M.dicol Ctntw Communily Htold1 and
Weltn.u
at the Ftttival, along will HMC Oiubctea
Educolion, Home Hdh, &amp;Ira Core and Holpk.e. Non-fasting
c:holesttrol ond ~ scrt~ningt will be providtd at no c.oat.

o-pe...,.,,

lslrr•sr, Mar 4

··-·:2.c....,

........ a.tll
Ufe

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover t/w.Jfolzer Difference
•

www.holzer.org

..

'

.-

~

"

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