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, 1)11' • • The

I

Daily Sentinel

SPECIAL REPORT: CiALLIA REBUILDS, AS

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Appearing rNery Thursday in The Daily Sentinel

•

Barbershop Quartet
The Ariel Theater presents .a
Barbershop Quartet concert Saturday at
7:30 p.m. General admission tickets we
$10 and are available at Corbin-Snyder
and the Kalal Patch. For more infonnation contact Dr. Orr at (740) 446-1227 If no one answers please leave a message,

Whirs Inside

FALL OF THE MARK V

Dinner Theater
Variety Show
The Meigs Variety Show featurIng pop musfc from the SOs to the
millennium. by Meigs High School
music students will be held Friday
and Saturday, 7 p.m. 11ckets are $5
for adults, $3 for.students. For more
informati6n call (740) 992-2158.

Fur Peace Ranch
to have Concert
• · Cindy Cashdollar, ·Martin
Simpson and Del Ray will present a
concert at the Fur Peace Ranch, 8
p.m. Saturday in the Fur Peace
Station Concert Hall. For more informlltion or tickets call (740) 992-7595.

• POINT PLEASANT - The Point Pleasant High
School Drama Club will be conducting • dinner theater
Saturday. A spaghetti dinner wlU be setved at ~:30 p.m.
and at 7:30 the cast wll perform "Realster Here1 • comedy-murder-mystery. 11ckets are $10 for the alnner and
play and $5 for the play only. For more lnformatl.on, call
(304) 675-1350.
.

Dance
• SOU11iSIDE - Dance at ihe Southside Community
Center Saturday, 7 to 10 p.m., with Sounds of Blueanss. A
Good will offering will lle accepted at the door. Call Peg
Dowell at (304) 675-2049 for more information.

Poclf¥ lovers and book junkies can
satisfy the1r cravings at the 17th Annual
Spring Literary Festival to be held at
Ohio University, today and Friday, at
Irvine Auditorium on the West Green.
The festival features fiction writer Jim
Harrison; poets, Stephen Dunn and
Eleanor Wilner; and nonfiction writers,
Andrea Dworkin and Susan Griffin. For
more information and schedule, call
(740) 593-1886.

Commission heeds will of the people

Reds rewind to '99, II

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Deaths
Ora Hill, 90 ·
Mona Sorden 87
Clarence Hoo~~ 86
CiladY$ Webb,'es ·
Dorolhy McDaniel, 47

Poetry

DtttAtill.. AS

Veggietales
Live!
• Veggietales Live I May
II, 10 a.m., 1, 4and 7 p.m.,
on sale now, Palace Theatre
In Columbus. For more
Information call (614) 4699850.

"Circus Beckett" ·
The "Circus Beckett" will be presented by the Ohio University School of
Theater May IS-18 and 22-~S. F~;~r more
information contact the Oh1o Umverslty
School ofThcatcr at (740) 593-4800.

DOWN IHI GOD - The Mark V Building In downtown Middleport came tumbling down
Thursday. The exterior well of the century-old landmark began to visibly deteriorate following
Wednesday's heavy rains, and finally collapsed at 9:45 a.m. Crews Immediately began remov·
In&amp; dabrls from Inside the bulldlni end from North Second Avenue, which, along with Mill Street,
has been closed to traffic since Wednesday night. (Brian J. Reed)
·

Weather
Hlsh: 70s, Low: 40s

DtttAIIII, A2

Champions
on .Ice

Unempl~ment

• Champions on Ice
2002 Olympic Thur lnclud·
lng Sarah Hughes and
Michelle Kwan, May 14, 7
p.m. 11okets are $31-$66
and are available at the
Nationwide Arena In
Columbus. Call 1,800645-2657.

'Crimes of the heart'

dalms fall for
third week

70's Soul Jam .

"Crimes of the Heart", melodramatic comedy by the Players Theatre/Berean
Community Players. Pulitzer Prize winning comedy about demands, conflicts
and bonds of sisterhood. Program will be
held at Stuart's Opera House in
Nelsonville. For information call (740)
753-1924.

• The Ohio Theatre In '
Columbus presents the
'70s Soul Jam featuring
The Dells May IS, 8 p.m. '
11cket prices range from
$29.25-$34.50. p-or more
Information call (614) 4690939.

Fox Fake
Fest
Mother's Day Buffet

•
The
Polads
Amphitheater J)tesents the
Pox Fake Feat Sunday at 3
p.m. Doors open at 2 p.m.
11cket price is $10 or one
can char.&amp;e by phone by
calling (614) 431-3600 or
by golna online to
www.tlcketmaster.com.

Brass Ring Golf Club Mother's Day
Buffet. Reservations are welcome. The
Country Club is just off Ohio 328. For
mon: infonnation on this event call (740)
385-8966.

WASHINGTON (APl -.
New Qlahns for unemployment Insurance fell for· the
third straight week, suggesting . the economic
recovery Is motivating
companies to Jay off fewer
workers. But that doesn't
mean they will be In a rush
to hire.
For the week ending May
4, new claims dropped by a
seasonallY. adjusted II ,000
to 411,()()ij, the lowest level
since March 16, the Labor
Department
reported
Thursday. Claims fell by
5,000 and by 25,000 In the
prior \WO weeks.
The nation'&amp; unemployment rate jumped to 6 percent In April - the highest
in nearly elaht years - as
Jobseekers streamed back
lnto the market faster than
companies added new positions.

Academic Fair
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Middle School's Academic
Fair, held Thursday, was no
ordinlll')' scien~e fair.
Unique topice like "The
Life of Lucille ~Ba\1,"
"BilliardM''
and
"Cheerleadlna" were outlined
In colorfuf and wellresearched displays right
alongside the more conven·
tiona!
projects,
like
"Thrnadoes "
"Bridle
Deslan" and "Architecture.
Eiahth graders at the school
displayed more than 117 projects, with topics ransing
from American history, literature, mathematics, popular
music and motion pictures,
and, of course, science experiments.
Inspired no doubt by the
tragic events of Sept. II, pro·
jects examining the design of
the Pentagon and World Trade
Center were also on display.
Students have been work·
Ina on their protects since
January, and met fndlvidually
with judges to dlscuu their
flndinas Thursday. Anna
Hartenbach's project display

11

about the history of "The
Wizard of Oz" included a
"Dorothy . Gail" costume:
Blue ginaham dress and
sparkling ruby-colored shoes.
She is pictured discussing her
project wfth Cathy Lentes and
1\vlla Buckley, both judges of
the event. Her project was
later awarded rtrst place in the
Language Arts category.

Other winners included
Whi!ney Thoene, science,
"Does Color Stem-u-late
Plant Growth;" Joshua Venoy,
related arts, "The Life of Phil
Mickelson;" Travis Cundiff,
math, "What Angels Have to
Do with Pool, " and Tara Lee,
history, "The ·Underground
Railroad: The Path of
Freedom." (Brian J. Reed)

Ohio

Pick J: 4•3-7
Pick 4: 1-7-1·6

The aroup the Sln&amp;ln&amp; Echoee will appear at the 12th annual Bend Aree Goapll Jubilee May 1!5-19 at the
State Farm Museum arounda near Point Pleasant. (Submitted)
.

"Bye Bye Birdie"
F'ust Stage Theatre Co. presents the
musical at 8 p.m. May 10 in the new
Huntington High School auditorium.
The musical is afso offered at 8 p.m. May
17-18 and 2 p.m. May 11-12 and 18-19.
nciets are $8 and $6 for children age 12
and younger. They are availal,)le at the
door or from a cast member. All seating
is gel'leral admission. For mon: information on this event call (304) 529-1516.

Bend Area Gospel Jubilee
STAFF REPORT

POINT PLSASANT - The
12th annual Bend Area Gospel
Jubilee, touted as one of the
latgest and most excitin' gospel
sings in West Virginia,. 1s slated
for May IS through I9 and will
once again feature a full slate of
entertainment,
prayer
and

preaching.
The event will be conducted at
the State Farm Museum and will
feature more than 70 groups and
soloists, singing from an outdoor
open pavilion.
Some of the performers slated
to appear include Kevin Spencer
and Friends, Jody Brown lndian

. Family, Melody Trio, Sin11lna
Echoes, Haire family, J.B. and
Barbara Spencer, The Freemans,
The Browders and many, many
more. ·
.
The admission is free but love
offerinJS will be held daily. For
more mformation, call Evelyn
Roush at (304) 882-2049.

·~ 5: 8·21·31·34-36

Pick 4 nljht: 7·3·2·1

. R.e-enact:l:nent

W••t Vlrtlnli
Dai!Y J: 8·1·8

• 1790s Shawnee Villaae
re-enactment bealna at I I
a.m. May 11 at. the
Highlands Museum and
Discovery
Center;
Admission to the muieum
Is $3' and $2 for children,
senior• and students. Call
(606) 329-8888.

.,..~ 4:

cas" 21: 2·6-7-14-24·25
lnclu
· 2ledlaa•- .,,.,_
Classlfieds
B5·7

Friday, May 10
9PM - 2AM

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CHOICE lOCATION. ..

lJeach Party! · ·

3-9·6-0

Comics

f

Wavne's Place-

.

Pick J nltht: G-3-8

••
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXIII%%1IIIIIIIXIIII1liiiiiii \

.

Sales
hike is a
dead issue

l

Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

B8

A4

A6
A3
A3
81·5
A2

, 0 :IOOZ Olllo Vllitl' l'llblltllllll Co.

IMNG 1'011 CHIUIIIIN - Children at the Shrtnera Bum Center In Cincinnati will benefit from
a lift of $500 donated by the Fraternal Order of the Eagles 2171, Pomeroy. Bruce Teaford,

donation• chairman, rl&amp;ht, glv.. the oh~k to Shriner Walt Manley of Tuppers Plains. whose
retirement year• hiM! been dedicated to raising money for the hospital. He collects aluminum
cena end other "junk" he Hill to the Middleport Recyclln&amp; Center. Last year. the total came to
more than $!1,000. With Teaford and Manley are Shriner Dan Spurlock and Harry Davidson, vice
prealdent of tha Pomeroy Ea&amp;lea. (Charlene Hoeflloh)

OJ Mus~ • re«' Cover Charge
n
lttl
Pretty lklnl ont •t At Midnight

Featuring Kentucly Fried Chicken

(740) 992·5884

992-5432

DrM-11111 'I'IIJ"'

'

RACINE - The absence of an emergency squad in the
Racine area and ways to obtain one were discussed during
the recent meeting of Racine Village Council.
Council discussed the lack of an emergency sguad in the
village, as well as areas around Racine, and the lime delays
associated with Pomeroy's squad responding to calls.
After deliberating on the issue, council agreed to attend
an EMS trustee meeting on Wednesday in hopes of persuading the trustees to pface a paid squad unit in the village.
Council also approved the second reading of an ordinance that will establish pay dates for the village's hourly
employees, as well ~s providing for 26 pays. The ordl·
nance, if approved, Will also consolidate all salanes of officials and employees of the village.
In other matters, council discussed the status of the village's compactor truck and refuse service. All agr~ed that a
special meeting should be held on Monday to d1scuss the
pros/cons of purchasing a new or used compactor truck and
whether to haul debris to a landtill or the recycling center
at RockSP.rings.
Counctl also:
· • received word that the village's application for the .
Distressed Area Grant, which would have gone toward a
new water treatment plant project, was reJected;
.
• discussed the upcoming vi sit of Ohw Department of
Natural Resources (ODNR) repre sentatives and their
review of village FEMA regulations;
• approved checks from Scipio Township trustees for
payment of a fire truck and snow plow the township recent·
ly purchased from the village;
• accepted bids from Jim Reedy, Racine, and Mike Corns.
Ravenswood, W.Va., for a dump truck the village is selling,
and Dwight Hill for a flatbed truck.

When: My MOnday • Friday
nme: 3:00 pm • 4:00 pm
Where: HMC Inpatient Rehab Unit
d 6ln tbt For:ll one/ Figulw oF Slrolr. • UnclenlunclirJQ Cltonge• • How Slmlce AK.tH
Milb/1/ry oncl Dally IMfll • How SlloU IJI.clt ~. Cognition cmrJ Swallowing
,.,.,rJ•crJ Mon er...,, &lt;1/!d ~~«urrw~t Sltolt•'rt-tion
•
.
. ~ islnvlt.dl
.
,., ....ill ... I ..... tho ..., • ........ •+ d ....... Unit .. Hoi.. MoofUI c:.-, ...

For more information
Call the Daily Sentinel
992-2155

''~un

llllltlllttt t lltttt ttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
'

BY TONY M. WCH
TLEACHOMY DAILYSENTINEL.COM

l7!t lllpiHIMI RlltGb Unit or Hol:tM Medicol CM.Itlr /1 llpOrltoMg a S!iolte fc/ucar/on PITJflrum

'

,

Racine Council
pushes for EMS
unit in village

...., ......

ADVERTISE HERE!
Crow's Family Restaurant

POMEROY - Meigs County Commissioners will not
enact an additional sales tax for law enforcement purposes, and will not place the sales tax increase on the ballot
again in the falL
The commissioners' proposed half-percent tax hike
was rejected by voters in Tuesday's primary election, by
a 72-fercent margin . If passed, proceeds from the ·additiona tax would have been used to supplement the bud·
get of the county sherf1T and help operate the existing
coun!Y./'ail, now used as a five-day holding facility, or a
new JRI .
.
By law, commissioners can enact the sales tax without
voter approval, but Mick Davenport and Jim Sheets said
yesterday they will not consider the tax because of its
.resounding defeat in the primary.
"The issue went before the people and was dec;ided by
the people. The people spoke,' Davenport said. "We gave
the voters an opportunity to express their opinion about
the issue, and they did."
During their regular meeting on Thursday, the commissioners authorized Sheriff Ralph Trussell to pursue grant
· funding from the Ohio Department of Criminal Justice
Services for new radio equipment.
Trussell will seek $47,200 through OCJS and its
Homeland Security program, to be matched with $15,800
in local funding, for the purchase of a new base radio,
mobile units and portables.
The present radio system is 12 years old, accordins to .
Deputy Scott Trussell, who discussed the grant apphca·
tion yesterday, and individual units require frequent
replacement.
The new system will be compatible with SecureNet,
. which prevents the public from hearing secure conversa•. lions on the system.
·
Commissioners t1lso approved payment of bills in the
amount of $174, 192.44; approved appropriation of
$3.~00 into the budget of the Youth Serv1ces D1rector for
Juvenile Court; approved an appropriations adjustment
for the grants office in the amount of $304.5 L

I
~~ I

•

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MEDICAL CENTER
Discove1• the Holzer· Difference

www.holzer.org

446•8070

,

•

�PaceM .

the Daily Sentinel

....... 2102

Ohioans ask
for health care funding=

Ohio weather
Slltun18y, Mlly 11

•

l~~~n~- 141'112' I •

Actress Julia Roberts
mak~s plea
to lawmakers

~
•I CohMIIbuo @IM• I

W. VA.

0~--~ ~-·-·
s..
Pl Cloudy

Cloudy

'Agencies okay
Gavin
plume
•t• t•
I ·

•
•

•

s.nny

The Deily Sentinel • Page A 3

S11owtra T · -

R..

"""'"' .

Rain returns to area Saturday ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The respite from the rain will ~ s~ort in the region.
After a sunny day today, the ran~ w1ll return on Satu.rday ~d
continue through Sunday, the NatiOnal Weather Semce sa1d.
Temperatures will .fall into the 35-45 range early Saturday.
. Highs on Saturday will be 55-65 and warm to the 80s On
Sunday.·
.
·
.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:35. Sunrise on Satun!ay·IS at 6:20
a.m.
.
Weather forecast
Tonight... Mostly clear early, some increasing cloudiness
late. Lows in the mid 40s. Calm winds.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms from late morning on. Highs in the lower 70s. South
winds around I 0 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday night...Partly cloudy and mild. Lows in the upper
50s.
Extended foreeast
Sunday... Partly sunny and warm with a chance of sh~wers
and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 80s. Chance of ram 40
percent.
·
Sunday night... Becoming cloudy with a 30 percent chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper 50s.
Monday... Showers and thunderstorms likely during the day,
then mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Highs in the lower
70s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Cooler. Lows in the upper 40s and
hiidls in the lower 60s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy and warmer. Lows iii the upper
40s and highs in the lower 70s.
·
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Lows iii the lower 50s and highs
in the mid 70s.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Robert
Entwisle of North Canton spoke slowly
and stumbled over words as he asked a
congressional committee Thursday to
appropriate
more
money
for
. ·Alzheimer's research.
"I fight this disease every day." the
71-year-old said. "I have trouble talking
and ·sometimes I can't get the words in
my head to come out of my mouth." ·
Earlier at the hearing, I 0-year-old
Nathan Kouris of Berea, Ohio, sat in
front of lawmakers 'as a representative
from the Crohn's and Colitis
Foundation of America asked for more
money to fight inflammatory bowel dis·
ease.
Dozens of other citizens and advocacy group representatives, including
actress Julia Roberts, crowded a hearing
room to address lawmakers on the
House Appropriations subcommittee
responsible for public health Spending.
The subcommittee, chaired by Ohio
Rep. Ralph Regula, is charged with dol-

living with AlZheimer's disease. That
number is expected to grow to abQut
308,590 by 2025, the group said. . ·
The Alzheimer's Association is aslcing Con~s to set aside an additi01111l
$200 nullion for more research lll)d
clinical irials in the 2003 budget, which
starts Oct. I. Alzheimer's reseaich
received $598.9 million in funding. in
this year's budget.
.
·
Thursday's hearili~ marked Nath~'s
secrind trip to the nauon's capital to a$k .
lawmakers for funding.
.
Rodger DeRose, an advocate fof a
foundation workin11 to find a .cure for
Crohn's and ulcerauve colitis, told lawc
makers that Nathan is one of 1OO,&lt;IQO
children suffering fro"! the illness tb.at
affects the gastrointestinal tract. ~re
are 1 million patients nationwide, be
said.
.
"Crohn 's and ulcerative colitis are
seldom fatal, but they are P,hysically ~d
emotionally devastating,' DeRose sa,id.
He asked lawmakers to double funding to the National Institutes of Health
and increase money set aside to find· a
cure for the disease.
· (On the Net Alzheimer. 's
Association: www.alz.org; Crohn's Ql!d ·
Colitis Foundation: www.ccfa.org;
House
Appropriatio~s:
'www. house. gov/appropriations)

Number of welfare cases levels
out after 10-year decline

COLUMBUS (AP) The state's 10-year thinning
o( welfare rolls appears to
be over.
The number of people
receiving assistance 1s hovering around 200,000, compared with the all-time high
. of 748,717 in 1992 when
Ohio started some of the
welfare reforms that would
become law five years later.
That's likely as low as it
will get, Joel Potta, the
Ohio Department of Job and
Family Servicea' welfare
policy adminlatrator, aald
Thunday.
"At aome point we knew
we would hit some
plateau," he said. "We're
not aure how much lower
we can really go. There's
always going to be situation• where people need
assistance here."
President Bush is to visit
the state on Friday to talk
about his plans for updating
the 1996 federal welfare
reform law, which Congress
budget crisis.
must renew this year.
Those J'roposals would
He will stop at St.
have taxe the undistributed Stephen's
Community
income of Ohio-based trusts House before attending a
and eliminated the exemp· fund-raiser for the re-election on sales and use taxes on tion campaign of Gov. Bob
toll-free numbers.
Taft. ·
·
Banks oppose the former
The 83-year-old St.
tax, while call centers and Stephen's is a centerpiece
other companies that rely of the Linden neighborheavily on toll-free numbers . hood, one of the city's pooroppose the latter.
est and a recent target for
Only one proposal sur• redevelopment. It is one of
vived that budget process dozens of such facilities
raising $41 million by taxing across the state that partner
more financial institutions with counties to help people
that loan money or buy and move from welfare to work,
sell stocks.
said Mark Balson, coordiShortly after filling that nator for the Columbus
$1.5 billion deficit, Ohio Federation of Settlement
found itself in the red again Houses.
this spring as the full effect
Bush will be making his
of the recession and falling fourth visit to Ohio since
tax revenue hit home. ·
being elected. The trip is
Taft is backing a Senate part of a three-state swing
GOP plan that would triple to promote his domestic
Ohio's cigarette tal!. to help agendas, including welfare,
in Mid west states that are
balance the deficit.' ·
If lawmakers gave Taft a crucial to his expected 2004
bill with the cigarette tax and re-election campaign.
The state has cut its casethe targeted business tal!.es,
"He'd sign it," Taft spokes- load by 74 percent since
woman Mary Anne Sharkey 1992, mainly because of
programs implemented in
said Thursday.

·State may revive tar~eted
business taxes to ra1se money
COLUMBUS (AP) Lawmakers may debate
increasing certain buslneu
taxes as a way to raise money
to help erase a $1.2 billion
budget deficit.
The chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee said he
expects such taxes, proposed
unsuccessfully last year, to
be discussed next week when
GOP lawmakers try to
approve a budget deficit
plan.
"I'm willing to look at
everything · at this point,
excluding nothing," Sen. Jim
Carnes, a St. Clairsville
Republican, said Thursday.
Senate Republicans rejected slich taxes last fall. But
Carnes said the deficit situation has become graver as
revenue estimates continue
to drop.
· On Wednesday, the non·
partisan Legislative Service
Commission said the $1.2
billion deficit could grow
even worse, to as high as
$1.7 billion by the end of the
next fiscal year, which
begins July l.
Last week, the Office of
Budget and Management
~onfirmed that the state,
which estimated it would
have a $500 million deficit
br the end of June, actually
h1t that mark two months
ahead of time.
Gov.
Bob Taft, a
Republican, unsuccessfully
pushed to raise $465 million
with targeted business taxes
last year during a similar

ing out about $111 billion for education,
.medical research, workplace ·safety and
dozens of other areas.
· Entwisle said since being di~nosed
with Alzheimer's six years ago, b1s goal
has been to increase funding for
research because he doesn't want his
children or grandchildren to have the
disease.
"I am hoping that additional funding
for Alzheimer's research will put an end
to this terrible disease," he sa1d.
The Korean War veteran with degrees
froni Ohio State and Akron universities
worked as an electrical engineer designing motors for 37 years.
...I can no longer find my -shoes or tie
my shoes; My wife must drive me to the
doctor's office.~· he said.
Entwisle's wife, Alice, sat next to
him, helping him read his statement.
She said hearing her husband's difficulty speaking should help lawmakers
understand how much Alzheimer's disease can change a person's life.
"This is what it does to you," she said.
"And it could be you, me, anyone." .
According to the Alzheimer's
Association, more than 4 million peorle
are living with the disease and another
10 million are el!.pected to be diagnosed
with the illness by 2050.
In 2000, there were 212,515 Ohioans

the 1990s.
Ohio's version of the federal welfare reform law,
Ohio Works Pint, atartcd In
October 1997 and limlu
caah anhtancc to three
yean. Welfare roclplenu
still arc able to collect other
benefits, Including food
stampa, child care, job
training and health inaurance through Medicaid.
Since then, the number of
individuals on public assistance has dropped from
422,442 to 198,023 last
month. About $26.S million
is spent monthly on welfare
recipients.
The caseload has leveled
off over the past year. The
only major el!.ception was in
September when the number of individuals dropped
to 194,977, the lowest level
since 1967.
"We're not going to eliminate those cases any more
than we can eradicate
poverty," Potts said, noting
that there always will be
cases in which people lose
their jobs or can't work for
other reasons.
Many of the people who
remain on welfare are people who have the most diffi·
cult barriers to remove,
such as homelessness,
domestic · violence, drug
abuse, or multiple barriers
thiu prevent them from ~et­
ting and keeping a JOb,
Balson said.
·
His group's six social service agencies, . most of
which are religiously based,
partner with the Franklin
County Job and Family
Services Department to
help former welfare recipi·
ents become self-sufficient.

FREE Speech &amp; He

Tho public-private part·
nenhlp ty!Jifroa tho kfnd
that Bu1h a&lt;lvocatoa.
Tho alate and advocate•
for tho poor agree that wei·
faro reform In Ohio. and not
entirely the good economy
oftho late 19901, cauaed tho
drop In numbera.
However, some advocates
say the reform hun 't been
as succeuful as national
and state leaders claim.
·~The fact is, · many people
have moved into jolis, but
they're still very low paying
jobs," said Lynn Williams,
an organizer with the Ohio

Empowerment Coalition,
based in Cincinnati. "We
need· more education a'nd
job training so that people
can '-et into higher payuig
jobs. '
·
,
Caseload reductions can't
be the only measure Of
w¥,ther welfare reform . is
successful, said Alvin
Schorr, a professor emeritys
of family and child welfare
at Case Western Reser~e
Unlvonlty in Cleveland. :
"If you count as success
that people ahould hllve
more money to . II ve on,
Ohio hu not done vorl
well,'' he said. "in genera ,
people hero live on as little
aa they had when they were
getting welfare."
Not true, Potts nld.
Studies show thai tl\e
average family that has la'ft
the rolls now earns $1,41 0; a
month compared with' •a
maximum of $373 wh:en
they were collecting cdh
assistance, he said.
..

lerlllllll . . ··~~···
. . . lflcllnlclllr ...
PIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIBM

litre••••••••••• ••
,.

~UTUND ~~.~

mI lga I0n Pan

Gladys

Republicans

to meet

Clothing oHered

~c:y will distribute new
chtldren's clothing to income
eliaible ~rson
at the
Cheshire office on May 17
from 9 un. to 3 p.m.
Sandra
Edwards,
Emergency Services director,
urged households with chi!·
dren, which ore eligible under
the HEAP program auidelines to apply.
Ail clothing is new and
will be provtCied to fllmi•
lies in need ot no cost. This
clothing_ bas been donated

to the Gallin-Meigs CAA

through o regional pro·
grom called "Kids in
Distressful Situntion ,"
Edwards snid npplicants
will be required to fi II out a
~i mp!e npplicntion~ proyid·
mg mcome proo1. uttliiY
bin, birth dotes and Socilil
Security numbers or all
household members:' The
following income guide·
lines wilf opply: Allowublc
family income tor u on~
person
hou sehold IS
$13 ,290; two persons,
$17,910; three persons
$22,530; !bur persons
$27, I SO; live persons
$31, 770; six persons,
$36,390. llouscholds with
more thnt six members
should add 1m additional
$4,620 to the yearly
income. Additional infor·
matiot\ is uvuiiuble b.Y cull·
ing the Cheshire office ut
367-7341 or 992-6629 .

Results released
POMEROY - Results
of the Republican ond
Democratic
Cc ntrul
Committee rnces in Letart
Township
were:
Democratic, Duvid B.
Snyrc~o. 39; Republi can,
Don t~. Hill, 6l, Joyc~:

White, 68.

Ora E. Hill

·---------------------------LOCAL STOCKS

On•-

Charmlna llhopt - e
9tty Holding- 1e
pot-27.D6
·~-16.80

011&lt; HI FIW1CIII- 21 .eo
OVB-23.70
BBT-38.21
Peoplel- 27.26
PtPt~- 62.06

quotH ol lhl priYIOUI
day'1 traniiCIIonl, provided by Smith Parlntrt

at Adv11t

Inc.

of

Galllpolll.

f: The Daily Sentinel
:.
Reader Services
•
•'

:·

CorrHtlon Polley

• " Our main _ . , In IIIII!Grlelll
· lo blaocural8. II you knew ot an
• tri'Ot' In a ttory, C811thll-room

·; at (740) m-2188.
••
Tht main

number II 1*1·21156.

Dlplitment oxl8ntl0nl8rt:

Thieves Strike Letart
Falls Cemetery

: Cllrw'81 Nn-e-

&lt; .._

Thlev•• removed two tractor wind chlm•• from two

•
Othtlr
•• Advw11ttnt

gravesiOIMtlm. attar Aprll26, 2002.
1 • Fannall Wind ChiiM
1 • John Dftrt Wind Chima
A o.....wry '- • NCf8d pleA, end not• pi- for '*'ling.

Ext. 12

• ·. Cltoulllllon

'

$100 REWARD IF SOMEONE KNOWS THE
WHEREABOUTS OF THESE CHIMES

Publlel'llcl "'IIY 1nerncon, Monday
through Frldty, ll 1 Court . St.,

=

Pomeroy, .

Ohio.

gt p.tld ol

81cand·d111

Pomeroy.

.

lilr. Thl Alloclolld "'"' ond
the Ohio Newepaper AMocllllon.
P - r : 8tnd - ... cor~·
lion I to Thl oat( Stntlnel, l n Court.

,,..,.,or..-.-

Subacrlptlon rawa

oneoneone,.,..

· CIINIIItd Adt

Exl. 3
Ext.4
Ext.

e

To Hlld ......11

-Omydall)..,,tlo,..,oom

•

Notify the Pomeroy Sheutfrs Dep•rbnent

.

OntheW.a,

-.mydalytei f1lt tll.oom

..

Mona Sorden

Th1 Dally S1ntln11 ·
Suburli;J1 tQday • 992•21!6

OF YOUR LIFE.

Reds rewind to 1999.

.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR VOTES
In The Prlmarv Elecdon

12

Clarence Hook

110o1

Dally

Deaths

PROUD TO BE APART

LONG B&lt;;&gt;TTOM - Mona I. Sorden, 87, Long Bottol)l. · www.mydallyllnllnl/.com
died on Fr1day, May 10, 2002 at Overbrook Center m
·
MiddlepOrt.
·
·
See IWiy 011 81.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home.
The family requests that memorial contributions be made to
......................................................................... .
Alzheimer's Association, Mid-Ohio Valley Regional Office,
SOS Columbia Ave., Williamstown, W.Va. 26187, or to
Overbrook Center, 333 Page St., Middleport, Ohio 45760.

$8.70

110 e»nhl
~ no1 dlllrlng to poy thl
moy romll In odv"""" dlrtct to
Ext. 14 oarrlor
Thl Dlly Sonllnll. Crt&lt;IH Wll bt glvln
oarrlor IIICh No lllbl«iPPIIn b)'
HrvlcH
moH perm~!*~ In area• ..n.re homt
. oarrlor _..,.,, .....bit.

Eld. 13

''
••• or
•

(UII'I 211•1111)
Ohio VIlle)' Pulllllhlll(l Co.

at., Pomeroy, Olllo.&lt;!47eo:

Newt c.ax.;tu,.,,ta

:

POMEROY - Clarence Hook, 86, of Pomeroy, died on
Wednesday, May 8, 2002, at his residence.
.
He was born March 21, 1916, in Buchtel, son of the late
Edward and Sarah Jane Tittle Hook. He was a retired rubber
plant worker.
Surviving are two sons and a daughter-in-law, Lloyd and
Sue Hook of Kansas City, Mo., and Harold Hook of Pomeroy;
and 6ve grandchildren and several great grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death by his wife. Opal H. Hook;
and by 10 brothers and sisters.
·
·
Graveside services will be Saturday at I p.m. at Carleton
Cemetery in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Ronald Heath officiating.
There will be no calling hours.

I look forward to your continued
support in the general election
on Tuesday, November 5

Robert E. Buck
Probate/Juvenile Judge

·--.. .. .. .. ..

Ptld lot b)' 1111 oommttt.. to rHIIOt Robert 1. luok, Judie

-. -. -. _.

_,,,_,,,_,,

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

Scree DIS

• Thunday, May 14
• Thunday, May 23
Mason CoWlty Action Group PVNRC (Smul Hilt Rstut)
l.'oint Pleasant, WV
Point Pleasant,WV
(Hearing Screening• Only)
2 p.m. tO 4:30 p.m.
9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Walk-ins we/tome or you may call (304) 675-5250, Ext. 3502 tiJ make 11114ppointment.
·
AppointmentsiJre being mmie separl#ely IJt "The Midilleport Gini&amp;." Please U11l740-W1-4226 for thRt lo&amp;Mion.

EMS nans

POMEROY - Units of the
Meias EJneraency Service
••,. " ansWered II calls for assisRutland, died Wednesday, Ma~ 8, 2002, as the result of tance on Thursday. Units
injuries sustained in an automobile accident.
responded IS fOII\lWS:
She was born on February 8, 19SS. in Portsmouth; daughter
CENTRAL DJSPATQI
of Lorna Oark Seth of Pomeroy, and the late Herbert Fraiildin
8:30 a.m., North Third,
Cia~
Erwin. Holzer
, •
STAFF REPORT
The -.reement 11ddre~ses · Se~ was a 1973 ......tuate of Melos·High School and bad Medical Center;
·, ~ CHESHIRE. - Agreement changes m the plume from
•·..d
12:48· p.n1., HMC Clinic,
hilS been 'reached between Gavin's two 830-foot·high
beenf
Ri
workiGrdng
towari:l
an
accounting
earee
at
the University
___ .. .
o
o
rande.
.
·
Benjamin.
Upton. HMC;
American Electric Power and stac:ks. The same '""""an1sm
She was an active band mother with the Meigs High School
4:0S p.m., Ohio 143,
: the federal and state used in SCR systems to Band. She was employed for 12 years at McDOnald's in William Kennedy, HM ;
1Environmental Protection reduce nitrogen oxides pro- Pomeroy and was currently a manaaer.
S:49 p:m.. Middleport
·agencies . on .ABP's program duced • small increase in the
Besides her mother, she ts survivcll by her husbllnd, Dwaine Police Depanmell!, Donald
~ tO reduce sulfur aerosol emis- level of sulfur lriOAide, K. McDaniel of Rutland; a daughter, Nicole Mlirie McDaniel Grayco, HMC;
· sions from the Oen. James M. appearina as 11 bluish or of Rutland; two sisters and a brother-in-law, Kim Seth of
7:48 p.m.. MiddlepQrt
: Gavin Power Plant.
brown liue under cenain Rutland, and Lori llftd Rick Joy of Gallipolis; two brothers, Police Deportment, David
,. The agreement covers COOl- weather conditi~ns.
Alan Seth and his fiance, Marcia Cale, of Middlepon, and Milbym, HMC;
prehensivc testing, monitoring
Heydlauff sa1~ AEP has Brinle¥ Seth of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
8:33 p.m.. Villoge Mnnor,
and the~ schedule AEP WO!"ced closely w1th U.S. and
Servtces will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, May ll, 2eo2, Jonnie Johnson, O'Bh:ness
will use m mitigllting noxious Oh1o EPA to understand the at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Keith Memorial Hospitnl;
• einisslons &amp;om Gavin.
cau~ of~· haze and develop Rader officiating. Burial will follow at Rocksprinas
9:28 p.m., Rocksprings
' · The agreement "provides llrmtigau.on.plan.
· ·CemetCl')'. Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday, Rehabilitation C~ntcr, Lllrry
; for extensive IPOilitoring of AEP will !nstall three .sepa- May 10, 2002, from 6-9 p;m.. and on Saturday, May 11, 2002, Powell, HMC.
: II)Dbient air quality and fre. rate inlectton systems at from 10 a.m. until the time of services.
POMEROY
' q_uent testing of stack emis- about $? million on Gavin's
4:37
p.m..
Locust Street,
· s10ns at Gavin during the Unit 2. The systems will
Shawn R tuclitl~ HMC.
.
· 'Operation of the Unit 2 SCR inject water, magnesium
REEDSVILLE
M.
·beginning next month . and hydrol!.ide and calcium
10:13 p.m., Ohio 124,
• eontinuing through this sum- .hydrol!.ide at specific points
COOLVILLE - Gludys M. Webb1 85, of Coolville, died Edward Johnson. treutcd.
' mer," said Dale E. Heydlauff, along the combustion and Wednesday, · May 8, 2002, ut Selby General Hospital in
RUTLAND
AEP's senior vice president .emission control path to pro- Marieua. .
6:04
p.m.,
Diamond Street.
. Qf environmental affairs.
duce. the chemical chang~s
Born Nov. 18, 1916, in Hockingpon, she was a daughter of Timothy Wilson, HMC.
"' ·"This agreement allows us required to reduce sulfur In· .the late Levi H. Deeter and Nora Wires Deeter. She was a
TUPPERS l'l.AINS
'' to collect and share informa- ox1de levels.
homemaker, and was retired from the United Postal Service
9 p.m., David Mackworth,
lion on a timely basis ·as we · The systems will be com- . and Best Photo.
·
Camdon~Ciurk
Mernoriul
· deploy the full-scale mitiga· pleted 1n May. Flue gases
Survivors include three daughters, Linda tuid Larry Hospital.
~ tion systems and demonstrate from Unit 1 will bypass its Simmons, Donna and Larry Fore, ond Pam Russell; silt grand· their successful operation,'' SCR system during the May- children, Roger and Liz Fore, Tricia and Rynn Fore McCar,
. lie added.
September ozone sesson.
Michael Simmons, Eric Simmons, Ashley Russell und Jam1e
Heydlauff confirmed that Other elements of the Simmons; one grandson, D.J. Fore; her twin sister. Gertrude
the
recently-announced agreement will have AEP Ahon of Belpre; two sisters, Marjorie Scott of Belpre, and
acquisition of land in conduct:
Laura Parsons of Columbus.
POMEROY Meigs
Cheshire will not affect • Performance Of mass parBesides her parents, she was preceded in death by her hus- County Republicun Purty w11l
AEP's decision to move for- ticulate matter and sulfuric bond, L. Glendon Webb. in 1996; three brothers, Roy. Ernest meet Monduy. 7:30 p.m. m
ward with the planned mitiga- acid stack testing on Unit 2 and James Deeter; ond three sisters, Nona Biles. Lillian Thylor the
Meigs
County
tion program.
staning two weeks lifter the and Ada Bibbee.
Courthouse.
"It has always been our iiiten- SCR begins operations.
Services will be held 'at 2 p.m. on Snt1,1rday, May II, 2002,
tion to fix the problem." he said.· • Collection of ambient air at theW~ ite Funeral Home tn Coolville, with the Rev. Jomes
At no .time during the samples for sulfuric acid for F. Kinsler and the Rev. Dave Cqgar officiating. Burial will be
CHESHIRE - Oulliuplant's operation did mea- one hour, four times a !lay. in the Weatherby Cemetery in Coolville. Friends may cull at
the funeral home Friday, May I0, 2002, from 2·4 and 6-8 p.m. Mcias Community Action
sured air quality exceed any five days a week.
·
health-based standards or per· . • lnstalh,tlion ' and mainte·
missible exposure lin1its nance of a nitrogen oxide
established by federal or state ambient air monitor at a site
, regulations, Heydlauff said. ~proved by the agencies. . RACINE - Oro Ellzobeth Hill, 90, of Racine, died
· Emission levels were well The mQnitor will be or.rated Wednesday, May 8, 2002, in the Marietta Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center in Marietta.
' below those limits, he added. through at least Oct. 3 .
Born February 11, 1912•.in Racine, she was the duughter of
.r • AEP plans to use the prop·
• Assume responsibility for
the
late Orner and Ado McN11mee Cramlet.
erty to enhance the operations prov.iding various data repotts
She
was a homemaker, and a member of the Racine Baptist
! at Gavin.
outlined in the report .on
' On Monda:(! Ctl~shire weekly or semi-monthly Churcjl and the Bettha M. Sayre Missionary Booster Sunday .
School Class.
,,
',Village Solincl , agrfle~ .to schedules .
She married Albert ''Babe" Hill, Jr., on M11rch 10, 1928, in
I contact its attorney tO imti'ate
e Take addltionalshort•term
Pomeroy,
and he preceded her in !Ieath on July 12, 1984. Also
'' il\.eprocessofdismantlingvil· measures to mitigate sulfur
preceding
her In death was a son, Billy HHI Sr.; and two twin
. ·tage government. AEP antici- trioxide emissions any time
&lt;laughters,
Ellen and Helen Hill.
jlates the sale of the village the Gavin units do meet
Surviving are a daughter, Shelba Foster and her husband,
}Yill be completed this year.
applicable standards.
Waid, of Marietta; a son, Robert Hill and his wife, Etta Mae,
of Racine; a daughter-in-law, Ruth Ann Hill of Racine; a sis·
ter, Doris Wilt of Syracuse.
·
,.
Eleven grandchildren survive, Phillip Hill, Patrick Hill,
Roben Jay Hill, Cheryl Hupp, J.D. Poster, Eric Foster, Billy
.'
Hill1r., Pamela Trammell, Jeffrey Hill, Timothy Hill and
Christopher Hill.
~ !AEP - &lt;45.82
Flldtrll Mogul - .86
Premier - 8.26
UBB -23.80
Alllh Coal- 21.81
Rockwell ,.. 22.52
Thirteen great-grandchildren and five great-great grandchil·
Akzo-43.85
Gannttt-74.80 ·
Rocky Boota- e.es
dren also survive.
. ~mTtcWSBC- 31.35 Ginn E1t01r1o- 3UO RO Shtll- 54.15
Services win be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, May 11, 2002,
GI&lt;N~Y-6.15
: Alhllnd Inc. - 40.04
Blllrl - 62.45
7:00U110
in
the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine. Officiatina will be
AT&amp;T-13.76
Hlllt'i Deltllon- 82.84 WII•Mart- 54.99
MATINIII
IAT AIUN l100 a 1110
Kmart -1.17
the Rev. Dewayne Stutler. Interment will be in the Letart Falls
•, 8enk
40.85
Wtndy't
37.84
Kroger- 22.83
1. BLI-15.20
·. Cemetery. Friends may call from 2·4 p.m. and 6·8 p.m. on
Worthington- 16.42
• Bob Evant- 30.88
Landt End - 62.14
Dally tlcok reporll ,,.. Friday, May I0, 2002, at the funeral home.
BprgWamer- 83.01
Ltd. -20.06
Grandsons will be casketbearers.
the
·4 p.m. olotlng
I • Champion - 2.88
NSC -20.94

.PuPont- ole. iT

Importance 01

~

In recognition of Better Speech &amp; Hearing Month, Pleasant Valley HOspital will be offering
FREE speech and hearing screenings at these locations on the following dates and times:
• Thcsday, May 7
• Thursday, ,May 9
Ripley Senior Center The Middleport Clinic
Ripley, WV
Middleport, OH
(Hearing Screenin!Jl Only) l p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
10 a.m. to noon

Obituaries

•

LOCAL BRIEFS

I

••

Faces

Pleasant Valley Hospital knows the importance of familiar faces and
sunoundings when faced with an illness or chronic medical condition.

i
t

PLEASANT ..
VALLEY
•
HOSPITAL ·

'

PIIIIIMIIIIIJ PriVMI DUll Ho•e Clre provides: .

I

• Penoul' C•n
• Retplte C.n

!•
:

A.frreinititllm~.&amp;crlima~~~beptoJ 'rld.IDhdp

• Home11111ker Servka
• Private Duty Nul'ltll •

• Support Servlett • CompanloDihtp
• FacUlty Stamna • Sitter Servlte

·

PLEASANT
VALLEY

[L.:~:.:n: .i=·Je. :. ~on:. .':. .:{;:.:.~_:·.n,._!_d_~Wiey-•_at~-,_·__155__
111'111_2..
_1L_•_•_•_•_...,••_n._o_•_•_•~·-n_u_J_112,...__
-an_ur_
·II_&amp;_BJ_a_az_.a_I1_&amp;__H_o_s_P_IT
__
~__..._.
I•

'

•

�_The_n_auy_Se_ntin_·e_l_ _

___;a=., the

Bend

PageA4
,. .... . . , 11. Hl2

.

AS

._:The Daily Sentinel

an
•

•

ove
DEAR .\B8Y1 I am 43 and
deeply In love. For five years I have
been dttina a S7-yeu.Mid man I' II
tall Ray. When Ray enters a room, I
honestly feel my lieurt skip a beat.
Although we do not live together,
we share many or the same intel'llsts
Abby
and have lots of fun together.
My problem is that Ray has a
mean streak. If I complain, he has a
ADVICE
san:a tic lllswer or turns it around
and blames me. For example, I wns
di~~gnosed with cancer last rnll and tells me I am too "clingy." In our
· needed emergency SUfl!ery. The day five yelirs together, I have spent
after my surgery. Ray lei\ on a I0. _ severo! Christmases and most
day golf trip with his buddies. I felt Valentine Days alone, and' I sit
alone and abandoned. When 1 told around while he uakes numerous
him how I felt, he said my iiln~ss vacations with other people. Ru.l
couldn't have been thut serious tells me he loves me, but doesn t
woot to m11rry me: Dating is a combecause I survived.
Ray likes to be around his friends fortable lll'l'llngement for him.
and family but rarely Includes me.
He gave me a diamond "friend·
When l suggest that I'd like to be a ship ring" for my birthday. I am too
mon~ Important part of his life, he embarrassed to wear it. My family,

Dear

i

I

friebds - and I - expected an
engugement ring.
Do you think I am beii!K jerked
amuod? - OUT·OF.SORTS IN
OTf.\WA
DEAR OUT·OF·SORTS: You
bel I do - but you have alloWed it
to happen. The diamond ring (are
you sure it's genuine?) is a "payoff"
so you won't notice that you really
have neither a healthy relationship
nor someone you can count on 1
Bven if the stone Is genuine, the
man is a phon~. As soon as you lose
this loser. you II start to feel better.
Trust me.
·
DE.\R ABBY: My fiance and I
have a problem on our hands.
Saturday night we invited a couple
and the1r two kids over for dinner.
The husband/father works with my
fiance. ·
The kids (&amp;iris 11 and IS) were
upstairs watching TV In our bed·

room a good portion of !he evening,
while the adults wen: downstairs

coming about lldmitting it to their
parents if we call them on it.
Please tell us wbat to ~~
We arc veey upset. - Rl
OFF IN PLEA.S.\NTVILLE, N.Y.
DEAR RIPPED-OFF: . The
father of the t!s should be told by
yow' fiance a. t the missina items
and money. It may not be pieasant,
but it will be better for all concerned.
&amp;plain that unless the items are
returned, you will bave to make a
police report in order to be reim- ·
bursed ror the jewelry by your
insurance company. And if the
Items aren't rOrthcoming, that's
e1taclly what you should do.
.
(Paulint~ Phillips and ht~r daugh·
ter. Jt~annt~ Phillips, shal'f th« ps«udonym Abi11ail \bn Bu.-n. Writ•
Dear Abby al WWl'IDmrAbby.com
or P.O. Bo.x: 69440, LOJ Angt~lt~s, CA

visiting.
Last night I was about to run to
the market and asked my fiance for
some cash. He told me to take some
out of his wallet. I came back sar,ing, "Since you have only $5, I II
cash 1 check while I'm out." He
immediately replied that then:
should be at least $60 in then:.
Apparently three 20s . were
remoVed rrom his wallet, which had
been sitting on our dresser in the
bedroom the night the kids were
there. We also discovered a diamond ring and pair of earrings were
missing from my jewelry boll.
Since my fiance works closely
with the father of those girls. we're
not sun: if and how we should
approach him. We're afraid if one or
both or the kids wen: brazen enough
to take things, they won't be rorth- 90069.)

Rutland students view auto vari

f

,.

Bank promotes
student savlnp

I

•

RACINE - Peoples Bank
1ponaored the "Savina with
Mandy and Randy" program
In conjunction with the
"National Teach Children to
Save Day" recently at the
Racine Elementury School . .
The emphasis was on giv·
ina students a new curriculum
1upplement where they learn
vocabulary words relating to
~avlnas. practice coin identlfi·
cation, counting, adding and
aubtracting cents and dollars,
activity sheeu and savings
atrateaiea like completing
depoalt tickets for savings
accounta.
Student&amp; in the flfSt grade
cla11rooma of 1an Norris,
Deborah Harrll and Meg
Oulnther were involved in the
program with Jodie Stines, a
People• Bank associate,
•••i•tlna in the clauroom
inatructfon.
·
Each child was aiven a
bank compl\menu of the
employee• of the Pomeroy
Branch of Peoples Bank.
Other ~ehools panicipating
In the bank's proaram this
year were Nelaonville. and
Marietta. ·

Banq_uet
speaker
announced
MASON - Maj. Bob
Dewhurst, a retired U.S.
Army office~ and a 1969
graduate of Wahama High
School, will be the guest
speaker at the 2002 Wahama
Alumni Banquet to be held at
the hiah school cafeteria at 6
p.m. on May 2S.
Dewhurst will speak on
patriotism. During ~~~ mlll·
tury career, he served as a mil·
ltary police officer, criminal
investlgator, company com·
mander and training director,
was promoted ei11ht times and
recel ved over a dozen .com·
mendationa for meritorious
service.
.
His
accomplishments
Include leading specially
trained military unit responsl·
ble for protecting nuclear and
chemical testlna facilities
from terrorists threats.
In 1991, Dew hum was
named the U.S. Army
Military Police Center and
School Instructor of the Year
for hia role in developing and
implementing an lnternatlonal
law enforcement training proarum in suppon of Preslaent

Ronald Rea11an'a National
Drug ContrOl Strategy.
Today he serves as the
director of development with ·
Alabama Baptist Children •s
Homes
and
Family
Ministries, the state'a moat
comprehenlive child and
family service agency. He and
his wife So!lJa have been fos·
ter parents for 34 children and
have four children of their
own.
They
live
in
Blrminaham, Ala.

Sunday Tmes-Sentinef

Welpt loss club
IILIItl
COOLVILLE - TOPS OH
20 13 met recently at the
Coolville Elementary School.
There wu a tie for the
weekly best loser between
C\ndy Montie and Barbara
Ollchrlat. Certificates and
fruit balkets were presented
to them. The monthly best
loser trophy went to Joan
Cole. A short meeting was
followed by an auction.
At the club's May 7 meet·
ing, the program topic was
"The Exc~e Quiz.'' pre·
aented by
ra Tanner. Next
meeting will be held May 14
at 6:30 p.m., preceded by
wei&amp;h·ln.

Prep ·Softball: Eastern
wins sectional title

IN JIONOR Of N.\DONAL NURSES WEEK, OVERBROOK
NURSING AND bJL\BILlTA110N CENTER WOUlD liKE TO
RECOGNIZE AND THANK EACH Of OUR DEDICATED NURSES
fOR PROVIDING OUR RESIDENTS WITH lOVE,
. COMlJASSION, AND RESPECT. THE fOllOWING NURSES .
TRUlY BRING TO OVERBROOK THEIR HEARTS OF HEALING.
Charla Brown, RN, LNHA
Michel !e Oi lrnore, RN, DON
Sh'tl Foster, RN, ADON
Lisa Rowe, RN, Unit Munager
Mandl Robena, LPN, Restorative Nunc
Kristlc Madden, LPN, Staff Development
Diane Milliron, LPN, Medical Records
Dhronda Hoover, RN, MDS
Phylli1 May, RN
PauUne Hyman, RN
Cheryl Russell, RN
Kristina Finlaw, RN
An111~ Carl~ton, RN
Jenny Seth, RN
Diana Duhl, RN

u

Susie Drehcl, RN
Ray Kimes, RN
Danielle Caruthers, RN
Teri Rose, RN
Stephanie Derifield, LPN ·
Tonya Samar, LPN
Leslie Miller, LPN

Melina Tyree, LPN
Tiffany Lonas, LPN
Mellaia Smith, LPN
Jill Weaver, LPN
Trac:y Collins, LPN
Cindy Seymour, LPN
Hollie Bum11amcr, LPN
Amanda Clon~h. LPN .

333 Page Street • Middleport, Ohio • (740) 992·6472
'

'

.

to the lub1re·

BY M u•• lft•p•

'"!

DIGGING '"ROUGH
RuiiLI - Gallla County ~sldetlts
now be&amp;ln the process of ~bulldln&amp; their homes In the wake
of Wednesday• s tom ado that to~ throt.Ch the mldsac:tlon of
the county. (OVP STAFF)

:Red Cross swings .
.into disaster mode
BY K1111 DoTION
KDOTSON.MYOAILVTRIBUNE.COM

For complete details. eee today'e Sportleecdon

•

u~,look

.

BIDWELL - Before more rain clouds made their way
back to Gallia County Thursday, homeowners, volunteers,
and state and county highway department employees were
busy cleaning-up the aftermath of. Wednescfay's tornado
that tore a path through the Bidwell area just before 6 p.m.
. Late Thursday afternoon, phone calls to the Emergency
• Operations Center, located tn the basement of the Galli1
: County 911 building, went from "What happened?" to
• "What now?" and "How can I help?"
·
· Emergency Mana11.ement Agency volunteers were also
bombarded with calls from homeowners asking where
!hey can take what remains of the homes, barns and other
slebris . .
• Oallia County Commissioners' President Bill Davis said
: debris should be hauled to the Oallia County Landfill off
· of Ohio SS4 in Eno, where It will be weighed and llccept·
• ed free of charge.
"Current!~ we are trying to come up with some type of
·accountability process," he said. "We don't want just anybody dumping off thei.r stuff.
·
: "We are also looking at extended hour potential for the
~ictims," Davis added.
: Currently, tile landfill is open from 7 a.m. to .3 p.m ..
: Phones were also busy with calls from those w1shina to
:.donate items to help get -victims back on their. feet.
: "We havt had a fiood of calls from a lot of generous and
):oncemed ~ople willing to donate an array of different
, ihlt~~a." sa1d BMI&lt; apok:ea"rson Gwen Plsbcr. "But we
. ; 3ust don't have the space or the resources to store any type
· of donations, including tlothlna, appliances or cleaning
: supplies at this time."
:· Mariy Items that have already been donated have been
:=taken to the Oallia County Outreach Center or the Ray of
Jiope Outreach Center in Bidwell.
: "Right now we are just concerned about aeuing the vic·
. "'ims a roof over their heads tonight and making sure they
: 'have a place to go and their basic needs are met," she
·:added.
:: Local EMA Director C. Michael Null, and State
·Emergency Management Agency liaison Bob Clark were
.:Out doing damage assessments all day Thursday, gathering
·:preliminary cost estimates and apeakin11 with victims.
: • "Very few have actually called in to report damage,"
: Null said. "It is imperative that victims get In touch with
: .us and leav!l us the1r names, addresses, and a way to get a
hold of them."
• Emergency Medical Service Director Terry Reed had
· rescue boats, vehicles and personnel on standby after more
,; weather alerts were aiven for Oallla County, including
: another tornado watch. Fortunately, storms quickly pasaea
: over the county around 11:30 a.m., and weather remained
:. calm for the rest of the day.

With you

iriformed

.

MRIISSELL~VOA.ILYfRtiiUNE.COM

l!eepjng
Meigs

eounty

oun ,
"-victims
.assess
•

•
•

RUTLAND - Students
and staff ut Rutland
Elementary wel'll give a look
at various types or vehicles
brought in by al'lln businesses
In "Vehicle Day" program
held at last week.
Companies and drivers l'llp·
resented during the event
were: Red's Rollen Ouruge,
Tom Gannaway; Meigs
County Sheriff's Department,
Deputy Daniel Leonard; Ohio
State Highway Patrol, Jim
Hannon: Eblin's Trash
Service,
Henry Eblin;
Birchfield Funeral Home,
James B irchtleld.
Rutland Boule Gas, Ed and
Mark Griffin; American
Electric Power, Ray Andrews;
Edwin H. Davis and Sons,
Jake Gannaway; Army
National Guard, Josh Searles;
Rutland Fire Department,
Ralph Searle&amp;, Matt Methen)'
and Shawn Ratcliff; Rutland
Township Trustees, Joe Bolin!·
BMS, Herb Elliott and P11u
Patterson; Rutland Village,
David Davis.
The event was organized by
Donna Jenkins and Judy
Oannaway, teachers at the
1chool, and refreshments VIHICLIINIPICTIONI- Rutland Elementary students and ataff lnapeot e Rutland Bottle Gas
were provided by the Rutland truck and Red'a Rollen Gereae eeml tow·truck durlna \lehlole Day held at the Rl.ltlend
Elementary School. (Submitted)
PTO.

Meigs Notebook

Survivors

•
•'

OALLIPOLIS The
American Red Cross was
called into action followina
the devastating tornado that
r!Jiped through parts ofGallia
County Wednesday night.
"Just feedina people three
·meals a day is a challenae,"
said Sandy Shirey, executive
director of the Athens County
Red Cross Chapter.·
"We served around 200
meals last night, but on the
other hand, restaurants and
storea have been very ~ener·
ous. They've been cillhna ua
aaki:L!'gw they can help,"
. she
·
. "We also distributed 200
; ·breakfasts this morntna and
we ran out," added Ron
Paxton. volunteer coordinator
for Gallia County Red Croll.
lnterestlnaly
enou1h
an!l
quite timely_
14 Of:llia
Coun t"' volunteer• had JUII
com{lleted their disaster relief
trainlhg last week. Red Croll
abo has eiaht to 12 volun·
teen trained after the VInton
flood of 1997, . aa well u
many convnunity volunteers

who show up to lend a hand teers began doing family scr·
over the past 30 hours.
vice - interviewing clients
"Right now we're trylna to to determine what their needs
utilize anyone w_ho's saying arc and to figure out what
'What can I do?"' said they can do to help.
Paxton.
"For those that want to help
The Gallia County Red butcan'tcomeout physically,
Cross headquarters is current- we are acceptina contribu·
ly baaed at _New Life lions," said Paxton.
Lutheran Church. Wednesday "It always takes money to
evening, a shelter was estab· battle disasters," he added.
lished there where three .peo· '7hose contributions can be
pie stopped in for help, but mailed to Oallia County Red
ended up staying ovemiaht Cross, P.O.· Box 342
with family. ,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. The
"Servins those in need is Red Croas is a aift of the genwhat we do," said Paxton. crosity of the American peo"We'd love to help anyone pte."
.
that was affected by the storm "The 1helter will be open
or the workers helping."
through Thursday night just
Oallia County has 1 trailer in case someone needs." said
full of clean·up kiu coming Debbie Stevena, Logan-based
from the Red Cron In job director for thla disaster,
Athenl.
"Our emcraency response
"We're aoina to eventuallv vehicle will be here Thursday
go door to door atart1na th"as n1111ht wh'1ch w111 help us dia •
afternoon (Thuraday) doinJ · tribute food Friday," she
outreach," aaid Shiroy. "We added.
.
,
were out last niRht in . the People needing help or
!I'
affected areas lctttna people wantina to volunteer may call
know we had a 1helter open the shelter 740-446~4889 or
and were dlatributina food." the Gallla County Red Cross
Thunday afternoon, volun· al 740-446-8,,.5,

•

54888 S.R. 124
Portl1ncl, Ohio

• (740) 843·6571

�A

The Dan Sentinel

www.rnVdftlltyMnttnel.com

touches City moves forward with
beautification plans
in Letart

'

The Daily Sentinel
mc.wt~~--

1•na ~• •

The Deily Sentinel • Page A 7

, t.tlUlSJ

.......... ~...... ·-tolla

BY PAM WIWAMION

have them up in the ne11:t got so I'm aggressive. I
seven to ten days," .
have aggressive hospitality,
·POINT , PLEASANT, The city appropriated up and when the~ . leave,
W.Va, - Wt~h the Mas~n to $2,000 for the flower they've bou~ht a $600 basCounty ,Tounsm effort m basket beautification pro- ket and they re bappy with
ful~ swmg, . Ed Woom~r, · ject.
. it and come back.'
Pomt
Pleasant
C1ty Scott Williamson of the Speakers at the conferInspc:ct?', ~nnounced that Great Kanawha RC&amp;D and ence gave examples of
,'he Clly s dnv~ to put a btU- a fellow member of the many downtown areas 'that
board l.ront&lt;J!mg th~ area Mason . County Tourism revived ihemselves through
on,~· , 35 1s conung to . Committee reported on a promoting folk arts and
fruthon ,
•
h
ded · crafts both in stores and on
"We really got a deal on conoe17nce t ~ atten . m the Internet Some commu·
Ash V lie
ttIIed'
. C.
that •" "'oome
"'
r sat"d . ''They "B e'ld'I '
c
,
ilities., even reclaimed old
normally cha~e between Ecut mig ..
reattve industrial plants and turned
onom es.
,
$700 and $800 ut we were
them into community
able to secure it for $200 a The Y exp Iamed. how buildings.
month and he did this work ma~y areas that have Hilda Austin, Mason
(the billboard layout) free revived t~emselves &amp;fler County Area Chamber of
for us, and .then to ,PUt the ma{or b~smesses left town Commerce executive direcvinyl together, I th1nk it's by e~mg to rely on crafts · tor, told the committee that
$350 per billboard.''
a~~ native folk art 10 draw the Ohio River Sweep is ·
. Eight sponsors are need- ytsltors. and mon_ey back looking for a coordinator
ed to help fund the ten by . mto .th~tr commumty.
· for the Point Pleasant Area.
twelve foot illuminated Wllhamson stressed lhe Gene Holland of Village
photo display: two of which ' importance of . ~usiness Profile. a company that
have already stepped for- owner~ marntamrng an desi~ns and creates comward. Each sponsor will auracllve store and told munuy promotional materipay about $34 a month.
what one crafter, who sold al, explained that he is now
. The city is also.finalizing hand-woven Cherokee bas- workmg with the Gallia
the, hanging flower basket kels, .said when asked what County
Chamber
of
.projett. T\111 baskets of ,li.ve .sh~ dtd t~ ~tlract customers. Commerce to develop an
flowers wtll hung on utlhty
She sa1d I sweep my informational booklet for
poles along V!and Street in parking lot ·and my side- .their county .and provided
a~~ntown Pornt Pleasa~t" ~alk .and .1 h~ve ~n. aurae- examples of his work,
The bas.ket~ are m, trve !nterm.~, Wtll.'amson John Sang announced ·
Woomer satd, 'There are explarned. She satd they that the tentative date for
38, a~d we're geu!ng come i,n a~d .when the,Y see the Mid-Atlantic Resource,
Brown s market behmd how ntce 11 ts, they hnger, Conservation
and
Holzer Hospital to do the and they don't know they Development ~onference in
polling and we going to try want to buy anything I've 2003 from October 6-8.
~ydoilyro&amp;ister.com

1't fiNA W..aN•~At

M..._

'*- 'Oid:!lllllOTI

'*"""'-.""'"'·t11111 .

UiTAR'l', W. Va, - As
toom t¥ lhtoogh the~
tllle. ftmdy trucy felt the
~~\% of M~ Nalllre's
Ni)' when a tM\ldG ~
®wn ntlt tbeit home In
l..ietil\,

"There wa~ .a M by tiO

t~~ blli~ing here, a huge
"'!hutng, riP~ O\'tt there ai\d

W'l$ :a twoJCar ~~~."
h~meo~t B~nie Oilbert

th1s

N TIONAL VlE

&amp;'l\d,, s\anding ln her ya!d
pi)int)ng ttl wl\at is now piles
~,rubble. :~ were nine
tt trees 111 the back; yanl,
and .they told ~s there was
:smff of ours out m the middle
ohhe river on the island,"
lt Wll.s around ti p.m.
WedlleW•" wheh the tornado
strtlek Atthe time, Ollbelt's
mother, Patricill Hen\, was at
' lhe l.etart residence with her
seven· ,and nine·ruontb·old
gta.tllkhtld~en, alld 13·month
·. old 81elt•ifandchild;
At Holt.et Clinic in
Pomeroy, wltere · Gilbert
works. she and the l:llllet staff
memben were doing their
best to ~tee!) their l,)ltlents sat\~
after weather fufecasts pre·
dkltd the tornados to stri~ in
the Pomeroy area, It was then
thllt Ollbert's mother c111led

will Wilt ~JIIdUS 1 /tMrls dfW
mim:ls witlt~ utttion..buildu~
• . hrt...

(N,\',~ Nt"«~ &lt;*~~~ "Ito; lllhl·

•round l:\lml)llil\' tuld Ills (ll.illd\'s , \)1'\lpit~ ;all~~~~ • .
PN-~I•~m Dli~IM.'\'1\lly \.'Ill~ 1\w ~ 11~1•w At~\lft ru~ ifl
~bull~h~ \'lll\1'-ftW~ Al~ll~ml~lllli,
·
.
. Th~AI s \1 ~~~ ~\'\'1'\\\11 l~lll:lll\1!1\1\11\' llu~l\ ·~ ~lloo t~l'
''llllti\111-00IMu~:· 001 II'~ Ill\' ~11111\h~ .1\1 11'&lt;1- ,,,
It"~'"''~"'"~ ~~~~~~~~~~""· m\1)1\wh'tl 11\e 11""'~
~~~
ltll~t~-..~lllltrilltl diiA'IIs 1111\1 1\~kh~t~llll ~lfi\1\'~kt~lly lt~\11~
lfi\'11\1 ~~~~~ til' \1 biiS\' 1\w \'1~1111\'~ wm ~ Ill\ l'l\\\~ l\1\\k,
~ m&lt;IJtw lmftlli1ltll' 1'\'hillldh~ will IIIII ~111\e Al))lltm go
ernn\\'1\\ 1\1 ~ l\lll\1\'~ hy 11 tfi\lllllonl\1 t'OOI\dl l~tler \Ills
~\It, 81.11 A!»lnmht\111 will ~~ \Ill Ill\' lfientll\ h ~"" 1111.1~1\'t
- tt11\1 m\'rl\:11 sll11\11d ~\'llllthl~ tlptlOrtunl~ tu l\l\100 ;at til\'
hend of tlllll Ust
'" l~llnnl~l\111 ' l\ ti'\IIIM\'s """ tlt\'ply 1001\\d lnll f~n~""
1.\d lnllds&lt;:nll\l ut' lribtl~, trihill ll'lid\'ts 111111 \'lllltl(lfds, ~1\\ of
wllmn hn\'"() 1'\'SUIII\'11 tlldr l'l't\tri~Mnl llt'lllll\~ 111111 l\llliw\'11
IM '1\lllbl\11 m l't\11\\' '" I""WCt, The 1111l~yh~ \\'UI'ts 11f 11
M~ttsllllll·llk\' 1'\'\.'llll~lru~lltlll pl1111 - 1'\1\111~, l'lltmnunl~tt·
lions. 11111lonnl . \'du~illloll t~n\1 M11hll ~nte s~~~1ns - ~\'t
'tM b\lsl WI\)' Ill i.'tiM\)111.1111~ i1 ~11111'\'11 llllllui\1\l \11~100 lllld ~~~~~
1~ ttudnl fllll~rt lhttll\~rel'\'d 1\'trurl~m,
Such " phm - whl~ t~l~o \\ltlllld ~tlw th\' Y11ll\'d Sll\~~ ;a
chl\111.-t \o ~lltll wilt~\ 1111~ ~~~ n lmdlllullill \Wtld ~11\\'r of
dru~t prodm~llo11, ~~~ m11ld~ t'ood·~:rop ~rl~uhu~ 11 1'\111111·
th\lly vl11bl nh~ml\11\t\1 lu ~p)i Rtld~ - will tilkt mot~ty.

WEST S VIEW
1

I

Plenty of evidence exists for hunters of massacres

"r

her Mel told her ahtllu the home in Evergreen Cemetery,
~litt weMher in Letart
where neighbors spent quite a
"MY mom tailed and ~id, bit o~ time Wednesday night
'The boose b attllna. the skY cleamna u~,
is blllCk, what do I do'1' Andl ''They sa1d, we'll never find
$tid, '*the kids, .get in my half of it," Gilbert laughed,
bedroom tnd get in the bad\· "It's somewhere between here
tub,'" Gilbert ~lied.
and Letart Falls in Ohio."
With the phone lines still Amazingly enoul!h, while
intact and ¢0mmunication Oiltllln's children"'s bikes,
possible. Gilbert later teamed scooters, baby pictUres, and
that a tomldo bad struck her other miscellaneous items
g~ lelving devastation, were recovered but some
"Mom saw the funnel things have vanished without
dood. She looked out and a ll'*:e, like a dusk to dawn
stid the $ky over here was light (complete with pole) and
black and was all funny look· a porch swing,
lqand she Slid It came down ~urveying the, damage,
ti) a little thing," Gilbert 01lben can sun laugh,
ell,plalntd, mAking a funnel remembering how she and her
s}!ipe with her hands, '"That's children had spent an entire
when she took the kids into day last week cleaning out the
the boose." ·
Nel.ghbors bad also report- g~,had a tmsh pile set out
ed seeing the funnel clOud to be taken to the dump, but
and flying debris and were now .I think it will al go,"
gulek to react once they Gilbert said. "We'll probably
learned that the twister had · find stuff for the next two or
touched down at Oilbert's three yean,"
·.
home.
When asked how she could
"ltveeybod..v In this cammu· maintain such an upbeat aliinlty, they sald, 'If you need tude in the face of such
something call,"' Gilbert said, destnJCtion, her answer was
''The~e was probably about 50 simple,
people here last night They "Whal's done is done. What
did a lot last night,"
are you going to do? It call all
MilCh of the debris ended be replaced,.my mom and my
up neltt door to Gilbert's kids, couldn't have," she said,

Inmates charged in
death at Mason Co. jail
Nibert, 4~, was found dead
In a cell '1\lesday morning at
3:25, The Pf"Ylous Sunday he
waa InvolVed In a jailhouse
~ht and told deputies Cox
hid attacked hlm.

Cax, Pearson
face first-degree
murder chatges

I

•

Lane restrictions now in effect on Ohio 32

Sunday evening Nibert was
taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital' where he was treated
and n~leased, An autopsy list·
ed the cause of his death as
Internal bleeding, .. . , .

WELLSTON - Traffic crews from Shelly and Sands
changes are now in effect for Incorporated are constructing
motorists traveling through left•tum lanes from east and
Jackson C9unty in conjunc- westbound Ohio 32 to
tlon with two separate pro· Burlington Road.
jects by the Ohio Department Also, Ohio 32 will be
of Transportation.
reduced to one lane in each
A traffic signal is now In direction at the intersection
operation at the intersection while the contractors comof Ohio 32, and Township plete the final phases of the
Road 261 (Burlington Road), project. The scheduled comsouth of Jackson, where ' pletion date for this project is

May 31.

In addition to these traffic
changes at Jackson, a tmffic
signal has been ,activated on
Ohio 32 at its intersection
with County Road 78, just
south of Wellston, and Ohio
327 between Wellston and
Ohio 32 has been closed in
conjunction with the interchange project at the routes' ·
intersection.
·

lv MMit HNIPJIIII
~~'IIII.COM

POINT PLBASANT, W. Vi
..- Two Maaon Cou~ali
lnl\\ltta lllvt b&lt;etft ch
. In
~ the May '? death of Uow

•

••

T

DAY lN Hl TORY
l't Till A$SOCIAlCO I'IIU

Thduy I~ Frlduy, Mi\Y I0, th~ I30th tillY nr 2001. Thil~ 111'\l
l:\!1 t111 s l~t\ In til~ y~ttr,
.
• TOOt~y's Hlt~hllaht h1 Hlsu:~ry~
·
• On Muy I 11169, l\ ~tOld~ll splk~ WIIS driven Ill
•Pfllllltn\hny, Uluh, murkln~t the romplelltlll t~r the t1rs1
tniiiSt:l)nllni!nlul rullroud lnlht Unhlld Slttl\l~,
Oil this dut~ :
In 1774, l.uuls XVIusl'lllldtd the throne t1f l'lrllil\lt,
In 177~. lithtm Alllln und his 01\\i.\1\ Mtllll\111111 lltly~ t:llp·
:tul'lld th Ul'hlsh· h~tld rortress 111 'fl~t~ndm~t~t, N.Y,
In 111(1!1, Union l'tln:es l:ilpiUI'\\d Ctllll\ldllrlllt P~~hliinl
· :Jefferson Dnvls In lrwlnvlllil, Ou.
In 11199, muvlt musktil stur ltl\\d Astl.\1~ w11~ lmrn In
Omuhu, Neb,
In 1924, J. Rll~tm' Huuver wus ~tlvl!n 1he job of ~Ill dl~c·
tor.
: In 19:\~,the Nutls stt~td nmsslvtl publh: book burning~ In
Oemmny.
• In 1940, British Primo Mlnlsltr N~vllle Chllmbtrhthl
. ' "
SAINTS AND SINNERS
reMianed, Ufld Whuoon Ch1u ·hill rtJrmed u new auvernment.
In 1968, prelim lnury Vlllhtnm pi!nlle lnlk~ bllt~iln In Purl8.
· In 1977, u~:tre~~ Joun Cruwfortl died In New York.
In 1994, thv stuu.1 of llllnuls eluJt:uted t:tlnvl!.lted ~erlul
•killer Jt:lhn Wuyne Oucy t~r th~ murders of M youn11 men
When ruy 5lst~r Willi 13 nr 14, I ~an
Benny'~ f11vorhe .:un be se.:n on the
. und btJys,
1'\lmem~r her ~ln~t up tu our mmher
dessert
tllrts 111 some or the nicer l'll5tliu·
: Tlln yean nau: AMll'lli\UUI Pierre Thutlt tried but fulled lt:l
lind l~menllng, 'MIII\111, I have nothlnil
rants,
Diners
m homesick for Chef
snliJI 11 wuywurtl sutelllte durlnt~ u 8pileewnlk uut8lde th11
to look furwam ttJ,"
Mom, who never heilfd of beef clltbon·
shuttle Endeuvt:lur (hllwtwer, three ustmnuuts 8ucee \led In
The whule world ttldiiY h! In thi\ ~11me
n11de, a5PIIl'III!UII al dente or pommes
,eupturlnl!lhe tntolsut·6 throe dnyK l11ter).
·
nit 115 my sl81\'t was. We hllve nothing ttl
frhes.
.
! !five years liJIO: Pre81dent Clinton ~111ned ·modest drua·
loo.k forw11rd to. Wo -:an 1111 put up with
Some ~ople lillY that the "l!ood uld
r11lny dnys when the fotce11s1 for to1lltlr.
. !flahtlnll und tr11de ugroe1nentM with turlbbll~tn ie11der8 hl
dnys" h just 11 nostalgh: snylnQ fur a
. row 18 sullny 8kles. But, when the
time that never was. They mny be
: BurbudoN. L.eblln0811 ur ull fulths WllllltJII\Iild Pope John Paul
elouds
rctum
lifter
the
r.1ln
1111d
the
wrong, however. There was a tlmei suys
·u on his flnt visit to th lr country, A powerfuleurthqunke
pi'O~J'tl)t
Ill
ftJr
llltli'O
or
the
l!llml!
nil
!antes
Collier In his book, "The R 11e of
In northeustern lrun elulmed ut leUMt 2,400 llye8,
wtek,
our
Kplrlts
dip.
Tlutt
Is
the
sltuu·
Seln~hness In America" (Oxford Press1
On year uao: The U.S. Hous or Rl:lpro8onlnllves voted to
COLUMNIST
tltlll we appelll' to be ln. ·
1991 ), when the 11n111t mbs8 or
'
, Withhold SOllie buuk U.N, tlue8 until the United tntaK WM
There may be sl11n5 uf nn r:onumle
Amerii:IIM lived In t1 su.:lul urder that
. rein~tuted on th U.N. C111nmls8hlll 11n Hum11n Rlahts, The
I'\'I:()Ver~ un the fill' horlton. but we will
wu predlct~ble, stable and basic11Uy
the
past
In
urtler
ttl
regoln
tlur
sanity.
:Justlee Deportment hundetl over thousunds t1f documents It
put off t:elebrntlnll until the n xt quar- Mll)'be we ttm bring It badt. Theteare decent
:auld Mhllllld huve been provldlld ltJ OkluhtJnln City bumber
ter's tlll'l\lna reports und unempltlymcnt slans
Although lonaln~t fllr that world
thnt thl8 IM whtu we tn•y be won't
ni!UI'I!8 Ill'\\ fn,
;Tirnothy Me~ lgh'M ntturncys; becuuMe
th blunder,
brfn~ II b~tciC, nostalgia cnn ~
llttempthtliiO do.
Atler
9111,
we
thout~ht
we
tould
look
mu~
th11n
ust ammantlc looldnll bt1ck·
McVel11h'M xeeutlon, Met f11r Muy 16, wns po8tponed ,
Mlltey
ls
81111\pllnu
the
Life
cereal
rorwlltd ltlli new er11 of civic tullelhcr- I!RRin Oil TV liomnteWIIII8
to "t e bly blind sounds" of the
Boolnaehuso hi~:uat:l us lh Mile ftJr liM 11 w hendquurters,
nntl ''He Wllrd
1940s.
ness.
But,
11s
n
people,
we
nre
aetllna
replnelna Scuttle . The Wmltl Wrestling Federullun
llklls ltl" Mr. Whipple Is Wlll'l\1111! his "Findlna ourselves not In the world
llltllner und more short-tempet'llil with 1.1ustomers
•.unnountlld It would fuld the upsturt X~t. fuotbullloiii!Ue,
not to squeet. the Charmln. we love 6u1 knowlna how deeply we
onlli\J\Other. A11urvoy KhllWK lhnt Iii most The ~nwnhill
1
Mli.Ytilll repalrm11n h11• hiK love ltl" RB¥5 novelbt John Cheever,
; Todu)"N Blrthtluys: SportM~IINter 1ttt Sunttnerulll8 ?2. TV
80 pen:ent Of UK feel lhnt II !liCk or feet up qaln W11lfln11
for cllstomer com· "there s klnilleil wllhln us the tl1nvh:·
:and rudlo pcrsonullty Oury OwenK Is 66. Rhylhn)•Ond·blues
resper:t 11nd r:ummun .:uurtesy 18 11 serl· plttlnts tlilll don't rome
ln.
:slnaor II nry flurnbrouah (Th Splnn· n) Is (14, Writer-pro•
tlon that W\1 will dh!e11ver the way to
ous problem In the United Stntes - unil
1\;
remind
us
how
yood
the
pustc:ould
tu It ln the rutul\\.''
duc:cr-dll'll~:tor Jim AbruhnmM Is ~~ . Slna r DOilu\1111\ Is ~6 .
It's aettlna worse.
be, we lite entlna fOOds thnt were our return
Bxampllls abound. Two women 1101 favorites ln the 1100&lt;1 oltl tlt1ys. On the If uur "drellll\ I behind us," as P,
Slnaer Dove Muson Is ~6 . Mhythm·und·blulls slnyer Ron
Scott fittgmld has his hero say In
Into
1111 nraument un· 11 8upermark t
Banks (The Ornmutlcs) Is 51 . Rm:k Minger Bono (U2) Is 42.
rucnu at 1111 up t:lllc Chlcn11o t'llillilllrant "The
Oat~by," the nn~wel' for us
ch
(!tout
line,
It
MOl
so
htttttlllhat
unc
: Pinywrl;ht Suzun· l.orl PurkM Is 39. Model Lindo
are ~ut:h 1940s and '508 cuisine M mny beOreal
to
turn
uround nnd recapture the
or th women went to her car. uut n stutl'etl Pl)p~r~ thicken put ple turkc~
:BvangeiiAtuiM 37. Roek musl~:lun Krist Novosclle (Nirvunu)
1
hummer uut of the trunk and 11mn~hed With lllllshcd ptitllttlllil, tlilpped oeef on dre11m. Whnt happened to the "l!ood old
:1 37. Rnpp r Youna MC Is 3~ . A~tor· rlk Pnlludlt1o Is 4.
DldyllU unu I C:OIItrlbute ttl their
her nnllll!onlst's heatlllglll.
'
ttJMl, 111entlunr, grilled diecse sand· day~"?
: Rhythm· nnd·blu ~ Nlnaur Ju~un· Dulyrlmpl (Soul For R\1111)
pt'lsslnu7
wa~ It lidmund Burke
Wom•cnMe s.:enurfo: P ople are wl~he~.
snllld
iln Wondtr Sread and snld noout(Whnt
I 22. inacr Ashley Poole (0r(.llllll) Is 17.
"11ood
rnen whu ilo ntlthlllll"7
nl'ruld that 8uh:ltlc bombers will mukc hn8h wit~ pun~hed ~111111 - ull wushed
Was he tnlkln~t nbout us?)
· • ThOUIJhl for Toduy : " rcmlv~ minds ulwuys htiYil be n
their wuy to this I.'Ountry.
down with o 1nllkshnke.
·
·
(CJtr&gt;'1/t II. PlaRtllz Is a columnl,!!for
,known to survive 1111)' klnu or bud trulnillll.'' - Amid Frcud, .
Well, If th~re Iii nothing I!Ot&gt;d to look
"ntl, "Jellu·O llllllln." liven J11ck Neii!SfJrJfJI!r fSntrrwlst MstJdcttlrm,) ···rorwnrtlto, mnybe we c:nn Tonk buck to
:AustriPn•born p~~~huuntlly~ t (I ~9~ · 19K2) , ·
·

o;

There is a need to return to (the good old days,

a..
IIJI

"~; ~

.

inmate Ralph Nibert Jr.
Shawn Colt alld Ttmotl\y
Pelnon flee m dearee murder, ~onapiraoy, ana cau•l!ll
. death at a correction facUlty
by an Inmate In euatody of thil
' liommlulo~r Of liOMCIIOIII.
They
were
arillaned

Thuradty.

·a

YOU'RE ONE STEP
CLOSER
TO YOUR DREAMS
All that atudylna and hlrd
work haa paid om
You're araduatlnaand
l'lld)' to embark on the next
Itt or your journey toward
IUI.'tffii, Wt know that you'll
•ehleve mii!I11P'fai thl.... ln
your lite and your career.
Congratulatlon1 Graduatul

The Dally Slntlnel

•1•

II

•
:

•
•Ill"
•••

:

•

:
•
':
';
a
:
•

,I

•

•
••
••

..

··- _

lnsldasu· atsPaaar

••
••

•

•

Happy

r'sDay

Oeorge
Plagenz

unaay~

May

12~

Happy

Happy

.Happy

Happy

Mother's

Mother's

Mother's

Mother's

Mother's

Day

Day
Sc·tt,.
.
&amp; ..t,.

.t.....
.&amp;• l/t4•~

....-··rut
~.u.

....

p.. ,,.~•. p.,u
~put.p..,.

,... ...., "· 'UU~.
t!ltc;e, d!.4 ~.
&amp;.~&amp;~

'
-~

Day

2002

~

·- -

Mother's

Happy
Day

eu

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"r

•

:••

·

Nlbert'i coualn, Mellsaa
Wolfe, and sister, Carol
. Pulkeraon, declined to ci)m·
. ment on the thlflllls, of which
, they s•ld they were not aware.
Mason County Sheriff Seott
Slrums said, ''l'm saddened
by the whole .Affair, but I'm
Slltlsfloo that we're coming to
ll etltleluslon Md that the p_eo·
pie n~sponslble , for Mr.
Nibert's il~ath m golna to
pay the price,"
· Simms has asked the West
· VIrginia State Police to .lnves•
tlgate thll case. That Invest!·
· gntlun Is on11olng,

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- - --

Day
~ ·7~
.4~.

~·fUJi

Day
1tc·~ 'K&lt;c~

.t~.

~-~4Hie
~
'U'e~~

llltl""""f!

�The Daily Sentinel
\ i""'"'ll
~ tl ,._ t'lwlllt "' 11
YlnZaodo IIIII Wanl Rd.
Putor: 1...., Millet
~ Sdtoul ·

( 1111~1 l ~.llltlll.tl

10: 30 Lm.

........., Oooldl .
S...'OIIIIIt.l.)'1&amp;-.,

Evulnl · '7:30 P·• ·

v...,

111...
Apolh)lit Wonh.ip Ctntef
l nl ""'" MWkpun
Kevla Konkle. Putot

- G r o.. ~Ciowdo

Sllllllly. IO u . •••16:00 p.m.
wedntldly, 7 : 30p. m .~ Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

Bible StlKI)' • 1 p.m.

-

m s.

lMry ......

~

21 1 W. Main St.
Minlacr: Anthony 1\otonis
Sunday S..·huol · 9:,\0 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.
Weanc5Wr.y Scrvk.'ts. 7 p.m.

Loop Rd on· New Urna Rd. R'ull.OO
Sun 10:00 a.m. '4: 1:30 p.m.
. Thurs. ) :OQ p.m.
Pa..- Marty ft. HullOO

Se~ ku:

·

Masoo, W.V..
Pastor: Neil 1\:nnanl
Sundt~ Sel'\'i~s- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Re~Y.

Rullond tlnt Baptl•l Chu~&lt;h

Wedue..~ ay Sen' icC$

Kt1110 Chufth ..t Christ
Wun hip • 9:30 1.ro.
Sunday 54,·1'1ool · 10:30 a.m.
PuS1Qr·JciT~ y Walhtec
Ist und 3ni Sunday

__

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:&lt;45

".m.

Pomeroy tlrtl Baptlot
East Main St.
Sundli)' School · 9:30 ll.m.
I O! ~ O a . m .

Ftrs• Southem Baptllt
41872 Pomcruy Pike
PIL'!Ior: E. l.J.un.o.r O'Bryam
.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 8: 13 a.m., 9:45 am &amp;. 7:00p.m.
Wednellday Service!t .. 7:00 p.m.
First BlpWt Cllurth

Pastor: Mark MOfT'Ow
6ih and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday S~o:huul · 9: I ~ 11.m
_ Worship - IO:I h .m.. 7:00p.m.
Wtdntnldly Service· 7:00p.m.
K•dne •·tnu U•pliei

Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday SchtMII . 9:30a.m.
Wor.thlp · !0:40 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wcdne!Kiay Scrvkes- 7:00p.m.
Silver Run B•plllt ·
Putnur: John SwunS&lt;Jn
Sunday School - IOo.m.
Wur»hlp - ll~a . m . , 7;00 p.m.
Wednesday ScrvlceM- 7:00p.m.

Mt. Union Raprllt
Plllitor : D11vkl Wilicmuo
Sunday SchOtl \·9 : 4~ u.m.
Evenina • 6:30 p.m.
W~dnelldny Services - 6:30p.m.
. Bedllehem hpll~t Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Roclnc, OH
Pll810r : Daniel Mecca
Sundll)l School · 9:30 a.m.
Sund11y Worship · 10:30 a.m. ·
Wedne!idny Bible Study - 6:00p.m.

Old Be1hd Froe WIIIBaptiJI Chu~&lt;h
l86lll St. Rt: 7, Middleport
. Sunda·y SchOO\ . 10 a.m.

EvcninM·7:00 p.m.
Thursday Servlc~ s - 7:00

fttarwaUow Rldp ChuKh ot Christ
Paslor:Teny Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wnl'llhip • 10::\0 !l.lll., 6:30 p.n1.
Wednesday Scrvlcu - 6:30 p.m.

Zion Churtlt of Christ
P&lt;1meroy, Hurri80nvlllc R\f. ~Rt.I4J)
Pu stor: Rover Wetson

Schon! - 9:30 1.m.
Wolllh lp • 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.n1.
Wet.lnesdny Sel'\'icrs ~ 7 p.m.
Sundu~

Tupptf'll Plain Cbun!h of Chrla1
lnatrumcntl\1 .
Worship Service • 9 11.m.
Com munion · IU u.m.
Sunday Sch(Mll - I 0: IS a.m.
Youth~ S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednc!I~IIY 7 Jltn
Bndbury ChuR"h or Chrb1
Ptt!ltor: Jim Eaton
39 5 ~R 8r11dhury Ruad, Midl.ilcp.1r1
Sunduy Schnol · 9:~0 a.m.
Wul'l'lhip • lO:JO II. Ill.

Ruthmd Churth or Chriat
Sund11)' School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • IO::W 11.m.. '7. p.m.

Brodlord Church of Chlill
Corner of St. R.t 124 &amp; Bm"bury Rd.
Minllltcr: Dou11 Shamblin
Youth Minl1ter: Bill Ambcracr
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 8:00 u.m.. IO: JO •.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7:00 p.ll'J .

RVIIIIJ,t:liat Mike Moore
Sunday Schnnl - 9·a.m.
Woohlr • 10 1,m., 6:30 p,m.
Wednesday Scl'\llcts · 7 p.m.

Lonpvllle Chrloti111,11Jpordi
Pa!'tor: Rohert MUIS.

P1111or; Rev. Jame1 R. A~o.:rcc . Sr.
Sunday Unified Service:
Wurahip - 10:30 11.m , 6 p.m.
Wedne!lday Servlcea-7 p.m.

School: IJ.:39 a.m.
Wnr11hlp Service: 10:30 11.m.
Dible Sludy, Wednu day, 6:30p.m.

VIew., llaptiJt lndopondent

Diller Church of Chrllt

Faith Bap1111 Chun!b
Rallro•" St., Ma10n
Sunday SchoOl - 10 a.m.
Wo11hlp • IJ a.m., 6 p:m.
Wc~csday Sen-ices- 7 p.m.

Chun:h o1 Chrllt

Anllqulty Baptllf
Sund11y SChool · 9;30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sutlday Evenina · 6:00p.m.

lnter~~eclion 7 and

Baptlot Chlll&lt;h
RavensWood, WV.
Putor: David w. M"''Cialn

I

Sunday S.huol\0 IIIII·
Momln&amp; worahip II am eveninJ - 7 pm
Wcdncldly 7 p.m.

Sondojo Sdlool · 9 Lm.
\\Oonhip · IOo.m.

w.dnosdlly Service · 7:110 p.m.
R•ofSha,.o-Qordl
t.eocllnt c...• Rd .. Rotlllld
Pulor: Re¥. Ocwcy Kina
Son&lt;Joy wonhlp ·1 p.m.

in mlleoiTRt. 32l
Putur: R.,, O'lltill Monley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 1.m.. 7:JO p.m.
w.dnelldly Service . 7:30p.m.

W01~yon

!iololoCtat"
Putor: Wllllom K. Maolholl
SoiMioy S&lt;hool · ID:15 ~m.
WoMlp·9:1lo.m.
Bible Study: MIH!day 7:00pm

Hy,.ll Run Holln• Chrell

s......u.

Rev. Mark Michaal
Sunday· School · 9:30a.m.
Worthlp . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
1bunNlay Bible Study lnd Youth · 7 p.m.

SoiMioy Sohool · 10 Lm.
Wonltlp. 9 a.m.

Uurel Cllll' Fret Mllithodlat Chureb
Rev. Lu Strand! and M)lrt L. Stnl'ldt

SuiMior S&lt;hool· 10 o.m.
Wonhlp • hm.
Con.I.SoiiH
Carmei6Baiii111Rtll.
R~~elne,Ohlo

St. Rt. \60, 446-6247 or 446-7&lt;1116

Mornlnalllr

PutcW: Dawayno Stutler

noon

SuiMioy S&lt;hool · 11 a.m.
Wonhlp · lOa.m.

Sa~:raniCniM ::~~~~l~:~~~
Hnmemoklnam

. Jloil Lollrl

114 W

( l11

i ~li: 111

Sunday

S~hool

- 10:00 a.m.

Coolw!Uo Vnllool M-IIParloll

PallOr: Helen Kline
CooMIIeChun:h
M~n A Plflh S1.
Sonday Sohool · 10 a.m.
Wonhlp. hm.
1\leoclly Se,loto • 7 p.m.

Sundor Sohool · 10:00 a.m.
W-lp - lla.m.
SL Poul Lulhtnn Cburoh
Comer Sycamore A Seeond St .. Pomeroy
Sunday S.hool · 9:45a.m.
W-lp , llo.m.

-Ch1rdl
Townahlp Rd., oi6IC
SuiMioy S.hool· 9 a.m.
WMM!p·lOa.m.
WtdnoodlySerlket · IOo.m.

o-..v..... _
a.m. (ld II: ln4Soo),
7:30p.m. (!Ill .t 4th Suo)
Wednesday Servl&lt;e • 7:30 p.m.
M~ Olive V n l l e d -

Of! ll4 behind Wllkcovllle
l'loror: ROY. Rolph Splm
Sunllly Sc:OOol· 9;30 a.m.
Wotlhlp . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

( 'I1111Th of ( .od

Thuroday Servloeo • 7 p.m.

Mt Morlllt Churdl ol God

Melp ~rallY• Parlllt

PuiOr: Mon Heath
·
Sunday Wor~hlp . 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
We"nclday Scn'k:CI ··7 p.m.

J.,.

SyrtcuM Flnl Chureh o( God
Apple and Secood SIJ,

Putor. Bllli Rondoll'll

Pu lor: Rev. David Rutt5ell
Sunday School and Wonhlp- 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; Sel'\'lcc»- 6:30p.m.
· Wcdnelday Service• · 6:30 p.m.

Wonhlp • ~:JO o.m.
Suntlly S.hool - 10:30 a.m.

Socnd U..rt Ca~ Cllorch

..

-.

••
'

51. Rl. 124. R"lnt
PaMor. Wllll111111oboek
&lt;Sontloy Sohool • 10 a.m.
Bvtnlna · 7p.m.
-ldlly S.rvloto • 1 p.m...

'

Clmps

l'lt ' ' ' " lt ' ll.lll
Syract111 FlriiiJttlltiiPrlllbyltrlan
Puwr: Bldo&lt; Robt:n Crow
'
Suntlty School · 10 a.m.
Worl!hlp • llo.m.
Horrll0ft¥Uit Prlllbyltrlon Chul'lh
Wnuhlp • 9 1.m.
Suntll)l Sohool · 9:45 a.m.
Mltldlapori Pl'lllbylorlln
S11nday S~:honl • 9 1.m.
Wonhlp • IOa,m.
~.-, ,\I IIIII 1).1\
'

I'

\!l\11111 ',
,

'

M- Clllpol Clltlreb
SuiMioy oohool • 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • II a.m.

,•

In Chrlal Chur&lt;h
Te•u Communlly 36411 Wlokltam Rd
Pa11on Rohen Sanden
SUII&lt;Ioy S.:hool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m,
Wedne""y lltrvk:lo • 7:00 p.m.

s~r Sdtopi · ~lO a.m.

Woriltlp • 10:!0 a.m., 6 p.Dt.
W......,.y krvk:l1 • 7 p.m.

- - c:-aollrCioo,..

Edon Unllool lnlltrtnln Clorltl

2 112 mlltolllllllt or RMdlvlllf
oo scata Roulll24
PUIOr: Rev. Rohe• Mottley
Sontltty Sohool · II o.m.
SuiMioyW....,Ip · IO:OOa.m. II: 7:110 ~m:
Wtdnetday Service!! · 7::JO p.m. :
Wcdne""y Yoolh S«vlot · 7:30p.m.

'

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••

t

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------------------------------------~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~-------·

=::::nHorne

Since 1858

9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio

:137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
214 E. M•ln

1112-5130
Pomeroy

'C!!!!!'

IWIIHIR&amp;

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Preterlptlonl

992·2955

Pomeroy

FLOWER
106 Bl.ITI1IN1lT AVE.
l'OMEioY, OR. 992·6454
'Fiowere for all OCC8Iions"

...............""'"
.-..-

'

••

RIO GRANDE - The
Unlversl~y of Ri~ Grande
men's basketball program
announces the dates for its
2002 Big Red Basketball
Camps.
Rio will host one·day var·
slty shootouts on June 8 and
14. The cost for the shootout
Is $120 per team. An lndlvld· ·
ual team camp runs from
June 9·13, featuring the only
trlple·ellmlnation tournament
In the country, known as
"The Triple." The cost for the
individual camp is $240.
Ajunior varsity and varsity
team camp will be held June
~ S-16. New this year Is a pro·
iram camp on June 17·19
and a junior high team camp
~Ill be held June 20-22.
The program camp Is
designed to keep the entire
program (freshmen-varsity)
toaether. Teams will go
through fundamental stations
and be given practice ses·
-ions Ill well as a double
elimination overtime tournament and a championship
tournament. The program
.camp and the junior high
~eam ·camp cost S170 per
player. The junior varsity and
varsity team camp co111 S110
per player.
Por moro lnfonnatlon on
the Big Red Buketball CamP
call (740) 245·7294 6r 1·800·
282·720 I e"t· 7294.
: Please make check or
money order payable to Bia .
Red Basketball Camp and
!nail to Ken French,
Univer1ity of Rio Orande
~asketball
office,
Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674.

Mauraude11 to

:ltre I. 61fetp

,,

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)
- Dan Devine, who led
Notre Dame to the 1977
national ch1111pionshlp and
also coached at Missouri
and in the NFL, died
=r'hursday. Ho was 77.
Devine, who was vllllfled
hi the 1993 film "Rudy,"
died In the Phoenix area, the
Uni versit~ of Missouri said.
Devine, a member of the
college football Hall of
Fame, wont 172-57-9 (.742)
over 22 seasons at Arizona ·
State, Missouri and Notre
Dame.
After leaving Missouri In
1970, he became coach a~:~d
general manager of ·the
Green Buy Packers, going
2S·27·4 from 1971·74.
· He took over ut Notre
Dame in 197S, replacing
Ara Parseghlan, and led tho
Irish to the national Iitie In
his third season.
Devine, who had been
sli:k for some time, under·
went quintuple · bypass
surgery lust February in
Mesu, Ariz., and had post·
surgery ·complications and
did not recover well, his
family said at the time.
His son, Dan Jr.• Is foot·
ball coach at Rock Bridge
High School in Columbia.
Devine's wife, Jounne, died
ln 2000.
·

Reclmento
holt balkltball

Mulben'y Hta. Rd., Pomttroy
Pu10t: Roy Lawlnokr
Saturday SeJ'\IICII!
Sobboth School · 2 p.m.

ML Ollft CollrttuniiJ Clourdl
Pucor..Ltwl'fnu Bu1h
Suncll111t:ltool • 9:30a.m;
Evtnlna · 7p.m.
Wednoday S«vl&lt;t · 7 p.m.
VoiWJollloa....Jt
Rl. 7 oo Potn~roy By·Puo
Putor: Jtov, Rohen E. Smllh, Sr.
Sundly ilt:ltool ·9:30a.m.
W-lp • 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednotdoy Servl" · 1 p.m.
ii'.U o.p.l I 'a' ......
3304l Hiland Rold. Pomeroy
Putor: IIDy H.n.
Sunday Soh&amp;&gt;~ · IO..m.
BVIIIIOJ 7:30p.m. '
1\teodly 11: Thttndly • 7:!0 p.m.

PulorMIIriMklnl

Suntlly S.hool · 9:30 o.m.
W-lp · 10:30o.m.

Chu,.h of God of,.,.....,
0.1 . Whllt Rd orrSt Rt. 1110 .

sr..... M....•
1411 lrld"m'" Sa.. Syro&lt;uto
Rev. Mike Thnmp1011,Paoor
Iunday S&lt;hooi · IO•m.
B•onlos· 6 p.m.
W - y Servlct · 1 p.m.
Hual c...,unlly Chun:h
Of!Rt. 124
Pao10r: Uttl Hon
luiMioy Soltool · 9:30a.m.
wo..hlp . 10:!0 •. m.•7:30p.m. .

rllllt Gtopll Ch11&lt;h
L.ot1J Bollom
SuiMior Soltool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • I0:4lo.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne ...y7:30p.m.

,.,._Cloud~

..__

l75 Peoll SC., Middleport
Pa-: !om 4ndo"""
.w~ Jo!IIMIIIO 1.11.
Bl't1!ina • 7:30 P·m'
Wedttooclly Strlloe • 7:30p.m.
fllllt Vlllay Toltol'llldo Chordl
BolloyRun RNd
PukJr: Rev, Bmmllt RIWIOil
SuiMioy Bvonlna 7 p.m.
· Thunday Servlct • 7 p.m.

-Cio•rdl
Co. Rd. 63
5untlly kltool ·9:30a.m.
Wonjllp • 10:30 a.nt

l'lltor:TemaWokleck
Suncll15&lt;hool · 9:!0 a.m.
W-lp . 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wodntod.ty S«vk:to • 7 p.m.
oflltl .._

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

MWdl1p grt CemmMII7 c••"h

Wldnelday hr¥101 • 7 p.m.

~ollht­

8attm COftlmunUJ Chiii"Ch •
~lovlnl Road, w.a Cc!lomblo, w.Yo.
Pa-or: Clydo p,,..u
Sonday S.hool ~: 10 am
Sunday avanlllJ aarvl!. . ft pn
Weclnoldlly oervlco 7 pm

•

- - r i Cburcll
OntatiSitMt
SuiMioy S.hool· IO..m.
Wonhlp • II o.m.
Wedoolday Servlota ·I p.m.

_,_,

CheRer
Pa,tor: lane Beaule
WDI'Ihlp • 9 a.m.
Sunday SChool · 10 a.m.
Thuraday Scn&gt;lcn - 7 p.m.

Rutlond Churdl oiGod

e•a•bllahed.

Hol'lttlonwlllt c-un111 Chu~
Putor. Tltoron Dut1tlm
Suncll1 • 9:30a.m. Uld 7 p.m.
~...., ·1~±11;

0,.- C
~aKy Chur&lt;h
SoiMioy Scllool • 9:30a.m.
Wollhlp • 10:30 o.m.. 7 p.m.

Mltltlllporl Cllurdloflltl 1'1l'loror:AIIenMldcop
SuiMioy kltool • 9:30 •m.
Wonhlp. l0!30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednolday Servlcct • 7 p.m.
P11tor: Allen Midcop

Suntlly S&lt;hool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp , II o.m., 6:30 p.m.

Gotl~ 'l'lmplt of ProiM
•
316M McQtllro Rtl. Pllmoroy, Oltlo ·
Putor: Wayno B1loolm
!
So,lceo: Thun. Nitta 7:00 11111
Now ehun:h No Sund•y 10rvlco

'

'\,1/,111 ' 111

Nonheall Clu1ter ~
Alrred
Pa1t01: hne Belltle

Hill Rd., Ra&lt;:lne
Pulor; Jamca Sat&amp;crficld
Sunday School · 9:4-' a.m.
Evcnln1 • 6 p.m.
Wednetday Ser"¥kea • 1 p.m.
Mil~

f

SuiMioy School · IO..m •..
Wnnhlp • II 1.m.
Wediii""Y 7 p.m.

W0!1~lp · 9: l0

ChriiUan U•lon
Hanford, W.Va.
Putor:Divld Oretr
Sunday School -'9:l0 a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
We d~&amp;day Service•· 7 : ~ p.m.

1

lllc:l•
P11tor. Brian Hukne11 "•·

Our Saviour ~ulhtru Churdl
Walnut and Hen~ Sll., RI\ICftiWood,
W.Va.
PaNtnr: David RuaMII

I uion

Hortlord Chur&lt;h ol Chrltllo

•

PUI!Jr: Brim Hlltne11
Sondojo Sohool :)0 ~.m.
WMM!p·hm.
Wedneodly · 7p.m.

Wonhl" · 9:110 a.m.

1'1111 Goopol Churdl of tiM UYinaSavlar
Rt.3!8. AnllqUI\1
P1111ar: J01110 M.Orril
So,leoo: Sllunloy 2:00p.m.

no--·r.lloWihlpl\llolalll'
Now ~lme Rd., Rullond
Plator: Rav. M11Jitlt J. Rohlnaon
Sorvlooo: Wodne~y. 7:30p.m.
51111111¥, 2:30p.m.

Pallor: Dawt)'IMI Stuller
Sunday Sc:hool· 9:JO a.mj
Wonhlp. 10:4la.m.
Bible Study Wod. 1:00 p.m.

••

Now ur. 'l'ktory elm O..qoo O..k Road. Oolllpoll•.t;IH
Puto&lt;: Bill Slaton
Sunday Sarvlcu • 10 1 ,111 . A: 7 p.1n. ...
Weclnooday • 7 p.m. o!t VO.th 7 p.m.

hllh filii 0-1 Cltllrdl
. LooJ BOitom
Puoor.SievtReed
SuiMioy Sohool · 9:30 o.m.
Wotllhlp . 9:30 1.m. 10d 7 p.n1.
Wodneldly • 7 p.m.
Friday · ltllowlhlp IOrVIoe 7 p.m.

Woclr.alday Servlco1 • 10 a.m.

Sunday Sch0oll0:20.11o.m.
·Reller Soclety/Pricathood 11:~ · 12:00

Cllllon '1\o- Cbll&lt;ll
Clln011, W.\'o. .
· Sondojo Sc:ltool · 10 a.m.
\\lln4llp · 7p.m,
Wetlnoldoy S.rvk:t • 7 p.m.

1123 S. Thllll St .. Mlddlaport
PallOr Threta Da¥11
Sunday aorvk:o, 10 a.m.
Weclno""Y torvloo. 1 p.m.

Wo11~lp

TheChurthof.Joouo
Chliot or Lalltr-Day Sal nit

~Servklu · 7p.m.

Alloo- GN&lt;t R.F. I.

"lhlnf
Putur: Dtwayne Stutler

We"nudtty Servl~e - 7:00 p.m.

\\lln4llp.l0:00am

""'"Lilt C..llr
"P\ili·OOipll Onnoh"
Puton John t. Patt1Wide
6113 Sooond Avo, MIIM
713-5017
Servl.,. tlftiD: Sundojo 10:30 1.m.
Wedneldoy 7 pm

s,,.,., ·

Sun&lt;Juy S&lt;hool · 9:30 o.m.
• I0 : ~0 a.m. and 6 p.m.

R....IILIItCiourtll
lOll N. Znd Avt.. Mltltlltjlort
Putof! Mike l'olomul
·•
Pa~101': BrnarilUI Llwnm~o'e Fotlman.

•

Rollutl

7!i Pe1nl St .. MhkJiepcwt
Pastor: Rov. Doua Cox
Sund1y Wor1hlp · V:JO p.m.. 7:30p.m.
WedneAday Service - 7:30p.m.

1'111&lt;1&lt;: 'Wlyoo R. Jt wtU
S•ncll1 Setvkloo . 10:00 o.m, t. 7:011 p.m.
Thoroday . 7:00p.m.

Mhdlll'too
47439 Reibel Rd., Che~er
Pulon: Rev. Muy llld llln&gt;ld Cook
Sundo)o Sorvloeo: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.nt
- , Servlcoo • 7 p.m.

SuiMioy Scltool · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 o.m.
ThlllldoJr
7 p.m.

llblo H - Chordl

SdwmWt C-··••M1 C~urd

-Otl-

-IJ!rlolo

-KellhR*
SundQScbool • 9: llo.m.
Wonhlp - IOa.m.
Yaulh l'tllowtlllp. Sondo)o • 6 p.m.

Ptne Grove Bible Hall- Ctlun:b

Cll""f- Clo_ , Plkt. Co. ld.
1'11100 .ROY; 811&lt;bOOtl
SYndQ S&lt;llool · 9:30 Lnt.
- l p 10;30 a.m.. 7::111 p.m.
~neoday ServlcG · 7:30p.m.

~-Cioodl

-RodllroWonhlp . 9:30a.m.
Sondojo S.hooi·IO:l5 a.m.

Wedneido.)' prayer mcctinJ· 1 p.m.

hlllt - ....... ~ ... Ciollal
Pu1&lt;!r. Rev. FIWHI Dlob111
S.rv~-.: frtda1, 'I p.tO.

/1.111 St .. llllddlopoll· Putoc OleM Rowt
Sllllday School • 10:110 •·••·
S•n&lt;111 Strlklo • 6:110 p.m.
w..Jnudo)o Serlit&gt;e • 7:110 p.m.

Sunday .chao\- 9:30a.m.

Worthlp: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wcdnc!lduy Bible Study · 7 p.m,

Rutlend F... Wlllloptlttl

-

_,

..... Cioapol

Sv.ndly School9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp • II l.m., 7:00 p.m.

Evanaellat Dcnnl• Sarpn1
Suntlly Bible Study · 9:30a.m.

Paator: Mark McCom~

Salem St.
Pas10r: Rev. Paul Ta)'lor
Sunclay School · I0 a.m.
l!venina - 7 p.m.
·Wedne•y Sel"\\lct• • 7 p.m.

\\\Jolhlp · IOo.m.

Hlllri• •"lll' Rood
PlY"-•: Chlrtca McKenlle

Few ..,.,. coad1
.,.n .11vlne ·
de1d1tn

Sllllllly S&lt;ltOOI • 9:30 u .
\\lln4llp • 7:00 ......
- , Blblt Stu¢f · 7:00p.m.

loiMIW.....,C..ttr
1\lppen Plaint ()nde School
,_,Robllad&gt;ol
/I.II!Mlllt Pulor: KIIOI\ Davlo
SllftdiJ Wonhlp: 10om
l'lmlly pnlte ..,.k:t: 6 pm
Yllolh-6pm
Wadnooday: ,._and l'ra)OI ' P''

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

c....., Pllaria Cllapol

--Nay

......... W.'t\.RLI

• ..., .rart~t

Eastern claims sectional
title,
3-0
..
.

.

.
b
a
11
ft
Prep 50
.

lv loon Woua

. hk&gt;ltw .... tlooftll

-p · IO:~o.m.
~- · 7:00p.IL

SUnday School · 9 a.m.

.HIGIHlGHIS

..._, .....

~s..o~

PWor:llli&lt;lllollllollll
SondQSohool • 9:30a.m.

MIMn...

PIIHIOr: Philip Slunn

Paator: Na1han Rnbinaon
Sunday AChool 9:30a.m.
Nonnan Will, •uperlnlll~nl
Sunday wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.

MI. Moriah Bapdll
Fourth &amp; Mai n St .. MhJdicpurt
Pattor: Re._, Ollhcrt Crai&amp;. Jr.
Sun~ay Sctwol · 9:30 a.m.
WMihip . ltl:45 a.m.

SWI&lt;Iay oohool · 9:JOa.m.

FRIDAY'S

"""" • • " l'ltllllpSYndQ S&lt;loool ·11:30 Ull.
Wonhlp . lll:lth....

Slrvkel· '7 p..m.

............_.d.

l'llltlr: Rob llroS.ndQ S&lt;hool · 9:30 .....
lll&gt;nlllp · II:OO..m.

Sund11y worship - 10:30 a.m." a. 7 p.m.
w~ pf.ycr ~m~k.'e . 7 p.m.

Sund~ay

!i2j N. lnd St. Middleport
Pa~to~ : James E!. Keeaee
Wor!!hip • IOa.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednct.d.i&amp;y 'Servlcea - 7 p.m.

Cg

Ilea~ (MIIIt,IT1)

Dao.W.IIoll- CIMIIdl

310.'17 Sta\o Rwla32..5, Lanf1'111e
........ Guy Joci.IOII

'
Ket4nllle Churc:h or Chrt1t

Forat Run B•pdlt
Putor : AriUI Hurt
Sunday SchOOl - 10 a.m.
Wo1'8hlp • II a.m.

·---

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

Su.nday Servict-7 p.m.

t,

s-,

SondQSchool ~ 10 Lftl.
Wunllip · 9Lm.

Sunday Scho.,l · !1!30 a.m.
Wun hip - IO;JO u. m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnu duy Scrvl~ f'f:'!lfn~.m.

St. Rt. 143 jUNt off Rt. 7

n.,.

CQQ!vlllt 11.&lt;1011

...1tl1111nta..tlllltN·rnr
-WIUianiJ\IItlo
~ SdlllOI ·IO:QQ LM.
lllonlloa-.. 111:4S a.m.
SoNl&lt;e • 0:30 P.•·

.

" - nt
PWor:ltoiiii.SIIftdoy School • lhm.
- . . - IILftl.

Plslor: Skive Tbnv:11:
Main Street, Rutlud
Sunday WORhip-IO:.OOa.m.

Hklcoll Hlllo Chur&lt;h ol Chrlol

HRiolde BopU1t Cbu"h

I

• 7 p.m.

"""""' • 9 ....

c-••• ..,~

Mlddkport Cll""'h of Cllrilt
5th.OO Main

lJ'Jl*

SIINiof School · 10 a.-.

lllliill t'"

' Worshi p ; IO..m., ~ p. m.
Wednesday SPJO'iccs • 1 p.m.

~ SdlllOI · 9:30 .....
-p · IO::IOLI0., 6;l0p.t~~.

en pella
-ltoliii-

SUftda: Sdlool IIIII
Holy E••:hari~ II :00 a.m.

l3226 Children's Homt' Rd.
Sunday S..iklQ.I ~ II a. m.

Sunday iichotll · 9:.\0 a.m.
W~lnih i p- 8:15 . 10:3() 1.m.. 7 p.nl.

I

JIIUCI BcrnaiJ. Rov. Klhrin FoiW

Youth Minister: Dill Fn.zicr

Hope Bapllot ChuJ&lt;h (Soutlltml
570 Gront St. Mlddlepon
Sunday Khool · !UOD..m.
Worship · II a.m. tand 6 p.m.
WcUnc:sduy Servk-e • 7 p.m.

~ t p.-.

ww.-.a.,.~w

J 't'Mrdl
316 B.lllain St .. """""'&gt;'

........,., Wtslal&lt;k Cluir&lt;h orchrlot
Llllorty 4-bly ofGtd
P.O. BOlt 467. 1Nddina Lanr

SI!otlor-. ll:lO ....

-lov. s-IW.IIOOJO

c.... 'I

.. ••.,.. ,.., ... H02

--1\ottf-

Sdoool!l: 15 ....

......a..tltMP'IJI -

~ Cloou&lt;il of Cllrtot

PlpB1

llOliMI GtllloiIIUIItaob.uoCo.Mll

-··~CIIi&amp;c-.llipi0:25Lm.

Worsbip · 9:30a.m.
Sundoy School · 10:30 a.m.

•··n"tl A....,a.Mr TahtrMrie lw.

Worship -

Rtdmen Hau:n in toumey. Paa• 82
:OiGIMrtd Ro&amp;mdup. Page B3
OVP tNCk honor rol~ Pa,t 1U

I

Ble11ed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.

Matthew 5:8
My 9race 11 JUfrk:lent for
thee; for my tlnt1'19lh 11
·made P.rfect In
weaknelt
11 Cor. 12:0

lpoiiiOI' toul ILIJ
POMEROY
- The
Marauder Three-on·Three
buketball toumament wlll be
held May 17 and 18 at Melga
Hiah School.
• The COli to enter a four·
man team it 525 dollar1. Play
.will take place in ~even age
bracketl with trophle1 for the
winnen of each bracket.
For more information, con·
tact Carl Wolfe at 992· 21 SS
or Rlclc Ash at 992-,960.

f,

UNT!Ntl. CORIIESPONDltiT

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
sopllomore Kass Lodwick delivered a
one-two punch to the Southern
Tornadoes Tblll'Sday nlaht as the
I Oth-rankod Ea tern Lady Baales
claimed
a
3·0
Sectional
Championship win at Eastern High
~ool. Lodwick pitched a comple!Cgame no-hitter and also slammed a
decisive home Nn In leadlna Eastern
to victory.
Eastern is now 16-3 and Southern
is 13-10 overall. The Eastern win
avenged a loss last woek to Southern.

Pltchina Is the na"me of the aame
and two of the IU'IIIl's flnest pltchen!
hooked up in a great battle Thursday.
Lodwick, of course was neW' perfect,
strlkina out four IUid walklna just two
In pltchlna the complete aame shut·
out. Southern mode aOQd contoct, but
the EHS defense excelled llnd mnde
some bla plays.
· •
Southern's "Rachel Chapman hurled
PCthaps her best game of the year.
thapmiUI did not walk a single batter
and gave up only four hits. while

Pam Douthitt's crew threatened In the
thlnl when with two out. Currie
Wlgains doubled .and Titl'C ny Bissell
striking out four. Both pitchers reached on an error. but Chnpmtm got
1natchetl moves like u strnteglc c:hess a pop-up to end the lnniJli. ·
mt~tch.
Southern's Detmu Pullins dew 11
When pitching lsn't the nnme or the lead-on· wftlk in the rounh. and then
game, defense Is the Mme of thu stole seeond, but wns leth tranded on
annltl. Both clubs had th11 defense three consecutive fly outs to center
early liS well. Then, the Southern field. &amp; stem's Al~ssu Holt-er got 11
defeinso folded. .
good beut on all of the hurd hits and
Both pitchers sat their respective hauled them In tor the outs.
opponents down In order over the · Chnpmun sut Eustem down 1 ·~·3
first two lnnlnas. Lodwick hud three In the l'ourth, but n came with somo
of her · strikeouts in the spnn und
·
·
Chupmnn hod two. Eastern Coach
PI•••• ... hlltlnl, 82

'BACK IN THE SUMMER OF

Cin

'99

success

reca Is three
summers ago
CINCINNATI (AP) - Junior's notlnthe lineup.
Hurdly unyone Is In the stands. A l!roup of up-and·
comers Is defying the smull-murkel odds und win·
· nl1111 gumes.
·
The Cinclnnuli Reds are working on a sequel. ·
Three yeurs uner they turned Into the National
Leugue's durllngs by muking un unexpect.ed .run ut ·
first plu~e. the Reds ure doing it
nl!uln - using the sume plot. no
less.
A one-month surye hus hol.stctl them Into tlM
pluce In the NL Central with u 3 1/2-(!ume lead.
their biggest sln~e they won the division 1~. 1995.
Thut wus the lust yeur they mude the pluyoUs.
They ulmost I!Otlhere In 1999, un enchunletl sen·
son thut ended wl.th u loss to the Mcts l.n the wild·
card pluyol'l' und hus become the reference poim for
this scuson's curly surp,rl~cs . ·
.
"It's udlll'crenl cust,' reliever Scott Sulllvun suld.
"A lot ot' pluyers huve come und sone. But II ~ ure
has·similarities."
The '99 teum won 96games with u core of young
players -· Mike Curneron. Pokey Reese. Dmhrl
Yuuny, Sean Casey. Auron Boone. Cameron went
to Senttle ut\er the sen son In the trude for Ken
Orif'fey Jr., und Reese und Young were dcultln thl.s
past offseason 10 keep the payroll down. ·
There were few expc~tutlons for u teum thutlost
96 yumes lust seuson und hud to cobble together
lourneymen und castoffs to 1nuke u rotutlon - just
like In '99.
So fur, It's working uguln.
·
A rotutlon that Includes Joey Humllton und Jo~e
Rijo hilA held Its own, und a secnnd wuve of new·
comers - Adum Dunn und Austin Kcurns - hus
Injected the su1ne youthful enthusiasm thut ~humc ·
terlzed the '99 teum.
"It's been more fun thun thul yeur wus," closer
Dunny Oruves .suld. "We didn't lldt u lot of wins
before the AII·Siu' brenk in '99. We're just huvlng
so much fun coming to the bullpurk.
!'The lust couple of yeurs. l.f you were supposed
to be here nt4 o clock, you were here ul 3: 4~. Now,
we're here ut 2'oclock. It's fun In here uguin."
Dunn and Keurns, the club's top two pros pe~ls 111
the turn of the century, huvc led the offense during
the surge into t1rsl plucc.
.
HAIIPY MOl- Member• of the Clnolnnatl Reda celebrate after wlnnlnl on apenlnl dey 2002. The
Dunn, who set an NL rook I.e record lor u month
Reds have continued to pley \VIII end er~ In ~lrat placa In the .National LtiiiUt Central Dlvlalon with
Pl1111 1H lllcl1, 1:1
e.20.13 record.

Reds

A hard rain~ agonna fall. • •
Sometime• you win ...rometlmea you
lose ... and sometime&amp;, It rain1.
And ralns... and ralna ... 1nd rains...
Por the paat week, with allthla rain
postponina aamea, I've found myself
aolng throuah the ume daily ritual,
which lncludcil pizza, root beer, televl·
tion and hour• and hou11 of staring at a
blank wall.
OK, 1 don't apend that much time
atarlna at the blaillc wall...jult a i!oupie
or hours a day.
'rhere have been loti of rain, tumina
what was suppose to be a busy weelc a1
HCtional gamea into one where time
aeems to dta&amp; on ...and on ...and on...
You get the picture, kind of like thl•
column...on...and on ...ancl on...
·
Anyhow, it &amp;ive• me a chance to ao
over 10me ocldi and endl.
Like the 30th annive11ary ofntle IX,
which is thlt year.
1use to detpiae ntle 12.( 11 an attack
on mon'1 athletics, but over the year1
have warmed up to it.
Still, when people ttart wanting to
cut from the football and men'a buket·
ball program1 at unlvenitles in order to
enfOI'Cf lt. then I .so back to my prevl·
0111 atanu on the 1ubject.
In a 1tory that can be found In thla
teetlon, 1 aroup at Title IX 1up_porte11
met and Metty much blamed (90tball
and men'i. buketblll for the lack or
equaJlty••
I've got 111ldea.
•
•

Butch
Cooper
THE BUTCH MEISTER
...,.......,
"
Why don't football und men's ba•·
ketball .teams from the NCAA Dlvi8ion
1 tchooll pull away from colleae athletIC department•, afong with the uthletic
booster• who ~Uit tupport football and
men'• baeket all proc~s, und, dethe
two teama comblnet,
me an 1n •
pendent alllletlc department.
They will take no money from !he
atudent actlvitlos feea. ln8tead, the)'
will keep...oh, letl say 92 percent of
what they make throusJl attendance,
athletic boolter8, and bOwl aame8 and
NCAA and NIT tournament appear·
ance1.
The other eight percent wlllao to the
tchoolt in order to be friendly neigh· .
bora.
·
With boo1ter1 help, the new athletic
departments will build tholr own 1tadi·
unu or arenaa, or buy the one• the
tchool1 already use.

, ....... , ... .,••:1

�..... 8 2 • TM Deity Stntl.,_l ·

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

. Friday, ...y 10, 2002

Redmen bounced from tourney
COLUMBUS- It Wt! two Jason Wheeler collected
and out fot the Rio Grande three ~its with a double llnd
!'uebrallteam drove an the lone Redrnen run,
In the 2002 storina Josh M~illen with a
N A. I A single.
·
Region IX McMillen, Gabc Devono,
·
Baseball lbumamcnt as the Brent Ewillg, Cory Marnard
~edrnen dropped 11 6·1 decl· and Fred IJrassfield al had
ston to · Mount Vernon base knocks for Rio Grande.
Nnarene in the loser's bruck·
Rio
Grande's
much
et elimination game on improved sensott ends with
Thursday llflemoon at Panther the defeat.
·
. Valley.
MVNC wns dllfented by
Rio Grande (28·26) sprnyed Sh~wnee State in the ninth
eight hitS around the bull hlmng of the first round
yafd, but II wasn't enough as . gnme.
MVNC (3S·l0} scored two in . REoMt-:N PLAtE FIVE PLAV·
the first and three mote in the
ERS ON At.L·AMC SQUAD
second otT Rio starter Jason CEDARVILLE ..._ What u
Williams (2·6} to take control difference a year makes. Last
of the aame.
.
seiiSon, the Rto Grunde base•
After the second mnlns the bull program slumpe4 to a 7·
game was an even affair.
47·I record and hnd only one

NAIA

Reds

"

fiChTIPipll
by hitting 12 homers last August,
has emerlled from an early slump
by hitting seven homers In the
last II 11ames. the 22·year-old
outfielder lends the team with 27
RBis.
. Kenrns was culled up for what
was supposed to be a brief intro·
duction to the majors ufter Casey
was hit In the head by a pitch
Aerll 13, suffering 11 concussion.
'I knew when I came it would
be for three or four d11ys," Keams
said. "The only thing I could do
was play and tty to chnnge some
minds."
Kenrns, who tums 22 later thls
month, hu played so well that
he's changed everyone's minds
- a .400 averaae In 18 aames
with three homers and fantastic
reviews.
•
"He doesn't chue pitches,"
snld manager Bob Boone, who
has moved Kenrns to the cleanup
spot in the order. "When he gets a
p1tch he's supposed to hit, he's
aot 11 real gOOd rip at it. Right
now, he's probably the most pro·
fesslonal hitter that I hnve,"
With Kearns in right field,
Dunn in left and Juan

player on the all-conference
team
(Derek
Adkins,
Honorable Mention}.
This season the Redmen
finished the year 28·26
advancing to the NAIA
Region IX Toumnmel)t und
pladng five players on the
American
Mideast
Conference sqUiul.
Senior lel'tfielder Josh
McMillen was tabbed first
team Ali· AMC.
The
Morgantown, W.Va. native
and former WVU standout
batted .3S 1 with 12 home inns
and S4 RBI.
Sophomore second baseman Gabe Devono and senior
backstop Jake Sperry was
named to the second team.
Devono, . a Clarksburg,
W.Va. nat1 ve and Salem

Encnrnncion enjoying 11 · resurgence iit center, the Reds hnve an
outfield producing runs. It wi II be
interestlna to see what happens
when Or!tTey reclaims his spot in
center In the next few weeks.
Griffey tore the patella tendon
In his rl(!ht knee on April 7, when
the Reds were stuck around .~00.
They went on their surge while
he rehabilitated the knee nnd
fumed over a television station's
unscietitltic poll that questioned
his importance in the lineup.
"The team's been playing well
. at home. Quys are having fun,"
Griffey said Wednesday. ''l don't
think 11nybodr should be negative
when you're tn fir,t place."
The biggest negative so foi has
bclln the attendance. First place
h11Sn 't translated into a full pi nell.
The Reds sold only 12,867
tickets for their game against
Milwaukee on ·Monday, their
smallest gate in I0 years.
Attendance Is · down · nearly
88,000 from last season, the
founh·blggest drop lntht NL.
After watching ihe Reds lose a
team-record S4 home games last
season, fans remain skeptical.
"I don 'I know if the fans realize
how important they are with sup·
port," Graves silld. "It's tough to
play in front of 10,000 fans
because you can hear the fans
booing you."

.

lntelllotiooal transfer led the
Redmen in runs scored with
49 He batted 401 with .23
RBI
·
·
~perry, an Ashland, Ky.
nauve and former Shawnee
~tate catcher led the Redrnen
tn home runs (14), RBI (S.5}
und battingaverallc (.414).
Sophomore pitcher Tim
Sutton ·and sophomore first
baseman/pitcher
Joson
Wheeler were selected as
h
bl
t'
onora e men 1011·
Sutton, a Wheelersbu~g
n~tive, (7·6) led the team tn
vtctories. Sutton also two
saves out of the .bullpen. .
Wheeler, a Mtnford nauve,
clubbed 12 home runs and
posted·a S-3 record on the hill.

In

Cooper
frona .... 11

reaions in

•

~e

the tale; whiCh

includes lrontoo, Por1srnoulh,

Fa1smouth West, etc....
•
South Oalliti. on the odldr

Royals come back to-lump Cleveland

hand, wasonlynlneboysa~

~ they will be self . tiom moving up to Division V.

Sllj)p0l11ve and spend whalever
the heck they Willi to spmc1.

Lets Ste ho\0 long the other
sportS will survive without
their money makers.
Sure. there • some excep-

lions, like the women's basket·

Meigs will remain in
Division m. while &amp;mn and
Southern sray put in Division
VI
• Finally, ·a team that wM
l'IIIIIOI'Cd to be added to the
Herd's schedule this year,
might pop up down the road.
It looks lilCely that the
Thundering Herd COllld be
planning o seric8 with Ohio
Swe...pedtaps a 2-f~ l which
would have ihe Buckeyes visit
Huntington. More taler.
·
Morshall WIIS thought to be u
PQSSible motchup for the
Buckeyes in this year's Pii!Sidri .
OIISSic in Columbus, but OSU
chose to play 'few Tech

·KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - This
was something new for the Kansas
City Royals - • come-from· behind
victory.
, ·M.ike Sweeney homered twice and
Ioe Randa hit a
tiebreaking single in
..
the eighth lnnina
Th11rsday night as the Royals rallied
from a three-run deficit for a S·3 vic·
lory over the Cleveland Indians.
.. Kansas City was 0-19 this season
when trailinllafter seven innings.
"Usually the Indians are cominl
b.• ck late on us to seal the victory,
Sweeney said. "Tonight we did our
part and reversed the roles a little bit."
· After going 1-7 on Kansas City's
road trip, Royals interim manager
John Mizerock won his home debut.
:"That was a thing of beauty, two
o,uts, nobody on anCI we score three
runs," Mizerock said. "That was long
~lVerdue. jt's the first multi run inning
we've ha in a while, and it came at a
J~eat time."
.
The last time the Royals scored
three or more runs in an inning was
May I.
·
Indians starter Bartolo Colon limited
Kansas City to five hits, but three
were homers. He left after Sweeney's
second homer tied it with two outs in
the eiahth.
·
'
"We know he's got power and can
t!e It," Cleveland manager Charlie

.
Tribe

ball teams at Thnnessee and
UConn, but for the most pan,
without football and men's
basketball to juice .money
from. Division I oollege athletic depanments would dwindle
down to recreation sports.
"Where is footbllll? Ther,
have been extremely quiet. '
~ Marilyn McNeil, athletic
directtJr at Monmonth. '1hat's
because ~·!"' getting more
thnn their lwr Share -at the instead.
·
table."
Ohio State officials eve~
No, it's because ·they have · said thai Marshall wasn't ev~n .
nothing to gain in all of this. on their 1list for the Pigsldrt
Why beat yourself up when Qusslc. · .
·.
you don't have to.
· With the team Marshall is
• With the upcoming hiJih expected to field this year, i't
school foc$111 season only seems to me that the might)'
lOS days away, there has been Buckeyes were afraid that tiC
a lol of talk about how the new old Marshall ml&amp;ht COil1C into
head coaches at Gallia the lxneshoe arKl take horne a
A~ademy and River Valley win over the mighty Bla TeD
will do.
Jl!OJ1111111·
For the Blue Devils, the
It would'.ve been a fun ~
addition of Portsmouth will to wlllcll.
mala: for a tough schedule.
Oh, well.
Meanwhile, ihe Raiders will
Somelimes you win ...some.
drop to Division IV after times you lose ... nnd somcspendina a short lime at the times, It rainS.
· ·
Division ill level. That puts
And rains ...nnd ralns ...nnd
them in one of the toughest rains...
••

Eastem ·
from Pip II
help. Sandy Powell reached on an error, then Janet
Calaway laid down a good bunt. · Southern Catcher
Katie Sayre made a great play, tiring to fimt for the
out, then Deana Pullins fired back across the dilllliOnd
to Brook Kiser for the out at third for a hulle doubleplay. Lodwick retired Southern in the top oT the fifth.
In the bottom half the fifth inning, Eastern again
threatened when Jessica Dillon reached on an error,
but after two were out Southern catcher Katie Sayre
gunned her down easily trying to steal second for the
Inning's last out.
Southern again WIIS handcuffed In order at the
hnnds of Lodwick in the sixth. In the bottom of the
sixth, the damage came. Tiffeny Bissell sinllled and
lldvnnced on a groUnd out by Jenny Arms. Sandy
Powell then reac~ed on an error and on the overthrow,
Bissell came home. After a force out that allowed
Calaway to reach, Lodwick hammered a two-run
home run over Holly Duffy's head and the outfield
fence in left.
Southern threatened In the seventh when Brlgette
Barnes reached on an en-or, nnd Katie Sayre wallcc:d
with no outs. Lodwick then settled down to get
Chapman on a fielder's choice. Chapman hit a hlird
drive in the hole at short and Suttdy Powell made a
malor lllBgUe play to get the out.
A slrikeout and pop out followed to secure the win
for the Eagles.
.
Eastem hitters were Lodwick with o home run,
Bissell a single, Wiggins a double, and Morgan
Weber, u slnafe.
·
Eastern pfays next In the District against a yet·
unnllllled opponent.
· .

Daily Sentinel

Manuel said. "We know he's hitting
.328. We're aware he can hurt us.
Colon aot a four-seam fastball riaht in
the middle of the plate."
Sweeney, who also hit a solo shot in
the sixth, bus four homers this season
and 10 multihomer games.
Carlos Beltran greeted reliever
Ricardo Rincon (0·1) with a sinsle
and stole second. Randa's single to
center off David Riske, the third. pitch·
er in the inning, scored Beltran. Neifi
Perez added an RBI single.
Jeff Suppan (3·4) allowed three runs
and seven hits in eight innings for the
win.
"It was a battle," Suppan said. "lt.
was tough for me early on, Identifying
what I had. The bottom line was trust·
ing niy stuff, just using what I had,
anCI going out there and pitchina."
Roberto Hernandez worked the
ninth for his second save after begin·
ning the season on the disabled list
witt! a rifht elbow strain.
·
Colon imiled the Royals to one hit,
Randa's double in the second, before
Sweeney homered with one out In the
sixth. The homer ended Colon's string
of 18 scoreless innings.
·
Suppan walked Riclty Gutierrez und
gave up o single to Matt Lawton In the
first. Ellis Burks, who missed eight
games with a strained right hamstrfng
before returninll Wednesday, doubled
down the right-field line with two outs

'

Sheffield feasts on his
latest former tea·m
•

; . BY, TME ASSOCIATED PRESS

;:oary

Sheffield has played
ni enough places that lie gets
ilo special satisfaction beating
:
·
his former
team.
Sheffield
homered for
the second
time in three
8 a m e s
against Los
Angeles, hit·
tina a three·
run homer
that carried

335 S. Church Str11t, Riplly, WV
Acro11 From Ripl•y High School

IEIIIEI IP Tl SUit •U11111 LIW lll.fi
1-IOG-885-3080 or

2.

NoTES: Indians LF Russell Branyan
was ejected in the first by plate umpire ,
Chris Guccione for ar~utng 11 culled
third strike. Branyon s career-high
streak of homering in three straight
games ended wfth the ejection.
Anderson replaced Branyon . ...
Gutierrez extended his hittina streak
to seven games .... Beltron, who stole
second in the ninth, has swiped 23
bases without being caught dating to
Aug. II, 2001.
.

RALLY SHOT - Cleveland's Ellis Burks
hits a two·run double a&amp;alnst the Royal$
In the first Inning Thursday. Matt Lawton
and Ricky Gutierrez scored on tha hit.

'

•••

.

to score Gutierrez and Lawton.
The Indians added n run in the sixth
when Burks, Travis Fryman and Brady
Anderson sin~led· to load the bases.
Einllr Diuz htt an R.BI aroundout to
make It 3·0.
A.J. Hinch hit a solo home run, his
first of the season, with two outs in the
seventh to trim the Indians' lead to 3·

372·2901

i.·

Bonde

S
NL
:

W:ave~lltt"t:

.

Francisco rallied for its sev·
enth stralsht win.
The Giants (22·11} are off
to their best start since 1973
and arc on their lonaest win·
ning streak since talting nine ·
straiaht last July 25 to Aug. 3.
Ryan Jensen (3·2} com·
blned with Felix Rodriguez
and Robb Nen on a four·hit·
ter. New York has lost a sea·
son·high five in a row,
Bonas hit a solo homer off
Pedro Astaclo (5·2) and was
later ejected in the eighth
innina for arguing a culled
~~~~g~ke by umpire Da" .'

"

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MIIWIUICtl (
.
6·2 victory
MARLINS 1, PADRES 0
over
the Three Cuban defectors
•.
Dodaers on helped pitch a five-hitter,
: Jhursday night.
includlniJ rookie Hansel
k Sheffield was traded to the Izquierdo, who went five
t Braves ,in Ianuary after four innings for his first career vic·
t seasons in Los Angeles.
tory as Plorida won at home.
I "I've plared with other Izquierdo (1·0) was fol·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
team. Obviouslr you can't
:teams, too,' said Sheffield, lowed to the lfiOund b)' counThe
Tampa
Bay
Devil
Rays
tell them, 'Don t pay atten·
• who.is with his fifth team. "I tryman Michael Tejera,
could
use
a
rainout
or
a
day
lion to what's happening.' 1
:don't look at (Los AnJeles} Braden Looper and Cuban
off
anything
to
postpone
thought they played well and
: JlllY different. It was JUS! a Vladimir Nunez, who pitched
yet
another
defeat.
had u well-pitched game. But
~ver."
·
the ninth for his seventh save.
The
Devil
Rays
they
ran Into Du~ue, and that
: • Los Angeles, which took The Marlins extended their
.
dropped
their
14th
was the problem. '
.
• two of three at Turner Field, sewn-high winning streak to
straight
Thursduy
Orlando
Hernandez
(4·1)
: has no complaints about the four aames. They moved into
night, matching the lon$est pitched one-hit ball into the
:trade, either. Brian Jordan first place in the NL East, the
skid
hi the majors smce eighth inning to Improve to
• homered twice on Tuelday' latest a Plorida team has been
1988,
with a 3·1 loss to the 8-llifctime aguinst the Devil
: and OdaJis .Perez went eijlit in first place.
New
York
Yankees.
Rays, and Oiumbi and Derek
slrong inninas Wednesday,
Brian Tollberg (1·4)
"Honestly,
I'm
sick
of
Jeter
homered off Joe
s~owcasing two of the play· allowed seven hits and one
hearing
about
it,"
second
Kennedy
(1 ·3).
: crs who went from the Braves run in six innings.
baseman
Brent
Abernathy
Mariano Rivera finished
: tb the Dodgers.
8R£W£U 9, CUBS 4
said.
"We
go
Into
every
game
the
three-hitter for his 22Sth
: : "When you make a trade, Jose Hernandez hit a pair of
not
worrying
about
that.
We
career
· ~ave, passing Dave
: Y.QU are very hopeful that the two· run
homers .
and · so into every game ·trying to
Righetti for the franchise
l trade benefits lloth sides," Milwaukee used a six-run
win
a
baseball
game.
That's
record.
, toa Anaeles manager Jim sixth · Inning to end a nine·
what
we're
here
to
do.
And
The Devil Rays hove man·
Tracy sa1d. "When you give game road foslng streak. ·
until
that
last
out
is
made,
we
t u_p a great hitter, you don't fet Richie
Sexson
and
feelllke we can win.''
umes three
during
losing
u$ed
runstheir
or less
11
: peanuts in retul'l'l. We rc Hernandez hit two-run
Oive
them
credit
for
a
pos:
streak.
They've
been
: Pf9Ud of what we got.''
homers in the sixth off Jason
itive outlook, because the
' • (n other NLI.wnes, it was: Bere (l·S) and Hernandez
byTwins
the
Devil Rays haven't had much outscored
Yankees, Red73-33
Sox and
San Francisco , New York 3; added a two·run shot off Ron
luck. Nine· of the 14 losses - three of the AL's top
Blorida I, San Diego 0; Mahay in the ninth on a blua·
have been by one or two teams and the only clubs
· Philadelphia 3, Houaton 1; tery day at Wrigley Field.
runs, and they've taken a they've faced since the skid
• MilwauQe 9, Chicago 4; and Sammy Soaa hft bia major
lead
into the ninth inning began April 2.5.
: Montreal6, Colorado 5.
leasue-leadina 15th homer
four times.
RED SO" $, ATHLETICS 1
: . Sheffield had sone Jllore · off Ben Sheetl (3·3). It was
The
Baltimore
Orioles
' Jose Offerman and Shea
tban a month without homer· tbe 465th of hla career to tie
bejan
1988
by
aropplna
an
Hillenbrand
homered to lead
ipa before bittina two in thi~ him with Dave Winfield for
AL·rec:ord
21
contecutive
Botton to its ninth atrai1Jht
ames. He has l)een pla&amp;ued 2111 place.
.
aamea.
·
The
Chicaao
Cuba
win and a three-aame sweep
Hy a aore left wrist moat o1 tbe
PHn.uu 3, Arra01 1
also
lottl4
straiaht
1n
1997.
81
• .aeason but aeemt to be near· Randy Wolf (2-1) allowed
Tampa Bay Ia the first AL 8:~~ndLowe (S·O• .two
:111¥. fuil recovery.
·
two hilt In seven innina• and
team to lole 14in a row since aanie• removed from his no• • 'Sheff Ia fun to wau:h rilhl pinch·hltter
. Tomas Perez bit a
the Milwaukee Brewers. now hitter, won his fourth consecI rlow," Brav~ IIWIII!Cf Bobl!y two-run double in the seventh
hllhe NL, ln 1994.
uiive decision by allowina
Cox aaid. "He'• fn auc:h a to lead Philadelphia to it•
Hlt'a no fun," Yankeea one-run'ln elaht inninp.
aroove. He hill it 10 hard II 1lxth atrallht win.
MAI!INI!R8 8, BLVI! JA'II
manaaer Joe Torre said. "You
nsea like a aolt ball."
The Phllliea awept Houaton
ao
to
aleep
at
nlpt
as
a
man·
1, lliNNrNas
; : Vinny Cutilla and Chiwer at home for · tbe tint time
aaer tryina to fiaure out what Toronto rookie Corey
: Jonea &amp;lao homered for the since July 1985.
you can do to relax your
• Brave1, who · ended the Dave Mllcld (3-4) pve up
: Dodpn' five-pme winnlna three na111 in 6 1·3 inn!~.
' llreak on the road.
EXPOI 6, ROckJD 5, 12 "
Damian Mota (1-0) allowed
JNNI!IIOI
two runa in five lnnlnp to Jote Vieiro hit an RBI lingle
lam hla tlrat victory in hl1 off Rick White (0-4) in tbe
• 12tb bia leaaue pme.
12th innins u Montreal
I "Jt feelt areat. but I'm not ended ita seaaon-hish liX·
:. aoina to dwell on it 100 lona," p111e totina atreak. ·
• Mota llid. "I want to win With
the
Montreal
200-aomethina more, like Canadiena playina hOlt to
· another Jeft·liander in thia C.Oiina in an NHL playoff
' dubhouae," he addt4, gJanc.. same at Molton Centre, just
, ina toward Tom Glavine'l 13,183 were at Olympic
:' locker.
Stadium - the Ex~' amill·
: Andy Ashby (2-3) toOk the e1t crowd alnoe 3,037 tW.end·
:: Iota.
ed an 8·3 win over Colorado
:
Gwm 4, M£1'13
last Sept. 20.
Riverside Golf Club "'
~~ Barry Bond• hit career
Oraeme Uord (1·2) P,itched
:·bome nan No. 578, Pedro 1 2-3 innlnp lor the wm.
•·feliz hit hia firat 1ince last
·
;: ~ept. 7 and viaitina San

roittWNvtr 1•4)tt ~u (~ 111), 1:01 p.m.
CltlltiMd (lllllllhll WI It KlniH
City(=04), 1101 r·m·
lotion (P, IIIIo H) 1 8Htllt (Pfntlro
1-01,, 10:01 p.m,
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Ch -=o Whitt lOX ~right 3•1) It
Ani m (lotlotntWIII ..4), 10:01 p.m.
'llllonl~r!tr a;o) II Olklll\0 (Muldtr 111. 10: p.m.
lllurdl~'l Gamet
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Tlmp~

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W) II l&lt;lnMI City
101 p.m.
atrott (lp~tl&lt;al·3)1t 'IIIII (lurlll a;o),
1:01 p.m.
8oltlin (Oliver I •I) It 8tl«ll (HIIIml I·
~· t:Oip.m.
hi~ Whllt lo• (Gtrland 4· I I al
Ani
(Orll• 3-3), I 0:05 p.m.
~ltln 0.1 ),

'

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Devil Rays can't stop their slide

i

AL

i

• A~ CondiiiOnllltl • P - Door
• Almll......
Lookl
Wltll CuNIII • AHr lpoiler

Thurman (0- 1) walked six
butters in less thari two
innings, the iuKt forcing
home the winning run in the
II th to give Seatile a victory
at Safeco Field.
Mike Cameron walked on
a 3·2 pitch with the bases
loaded und two outs to end
Seattle's longest gume of the
season ut 4 hours, .50 min·
utes.
Seven Blue Jays pltcheu
walked 16 in all, u team
record.
The Mariners rallied for
three runs with two outs in
the ninth,und lchiro Suzuki's
RBI single off Kelvim
Escobur tied it at 7.

llANOitHs 4, Wtun: so~ 1
Pill·in starter · Joaquin
Benoit got his first cureer
win, and Hector Ortiz home·
red for the flnt time to leud
host Texas over Chica$o.
Rcplacl ng nn 1nj ured
18mael Valdes, Benoit ( 1·0)
allowed one run and four hits
in six innings. Hideki lrttbu
earned his efghth save.
.
ANOEI,N 71 TICRR!j 6
Troy Oluus hit u ~o-uhcud
double, and Anuhe1m con·
vcrted two throwing errors
by Detroit shortstop Shunc
Halter into .four unearned
runs for its J lth win in 13
games.
·

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'

RI'DEN 0 uR
SUp p L:Y ·
•If b
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d May .14•18
Wtu
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D"lf!
TO JLLN'If!~~
"Iii
Iii~~

The Store Wjl! Sogo Be Closjn1
Wt Nttd Anyone Who Hal
1
~
W ltl ~ 1
Equ pment I nat •• a "' .o •

Fixed, Or Hal IHn Flucl Alreadv,
,,
To Pick Up AI Soon AI Po11lble

STORE WILL .BE OPEN
Monday. May 20. 8AM·3PM
Tuesday. May 21 • Thyrsday. May 23,
8:30AM·1PM
. Friday 8AM·5PM
Will be closed May 25
Until Further Notice

:

Mary's Tee Time Grill

"' m

~

-~·&amp;;·~-~..a·&amp;~-41

nwtll YOU POll \'lAIII Of IUSIHUJ MfO MII'I'OIIf

Ridenour Supply
State Route 148 • (740) 985·3308

�Frklly, May 10,1001

..

P!l I • • Thil Dally a.nt!MI

Cowbells can't stop Kings

OVP Track &amp; Field

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DALLAS
(AP)
'11\oosancb of cowbells and II
couple r- of ankle injuries
weren't enooah to slow down
the Saavnento Kings,
Mike Bibby sand 29 pointS
IUid Doug C~ristie returned

NBA

·

from

o

~'kle~~ ~

14 of his 2&lt;1
pointS in the fourth qutll'ter as
Sacramento beat the Dallas
Mnvtrlcks 12S·II9 Thursduy
night.
The Kings. who lost sec:ond·
ieadlns sCOI'Ill' ~ia Stoiilkovlc
to a spmlned ankfe in die third
qu~ took li 2·1 lead in the
tiest•ot·seven
Western
Conl'erenc:e semifinals. Gwne
4 Is Saturday in Dallas.
"10 me the bigsest thins was
winning this game. We could·
n't so down l-1," said Kings
forward Chris Webber, who
finished with 31 points and IS
rebounds.
Along with Webber's inside
presence, Vlade Divac added
19 points and 13 rebounds to .
help the Kings add 11 little mus•
cle to the mntchup of the
.!~ague's two highest·scoring

tenms.
Michael Finley h11d 37 points
for Dallos1 • while Raef
LaFrcntz adaea 24 points and
13 rebounds.
.
The Kings rode Bibby's hot
shooting to u 15-polnt leud In
the first quarter, then leaned on
Christie who provided several
key baskets and solid defense .
during a 14·4 run midway
through the fourth quarter thut
gnve Sacramento 11 IOS-97 .
lead.
Bibby and Christie contlnu•
ally silenced the . capacity
crowd of · 20,265 In the
American Airlines Center,
many of whom cwne ill'llled
with cowbells, kazoos and var·
lous plastic noisemilkers distributed by the tenm.
"(Bibby) was unbelievable.
He mude big plays for us ull
night," Kings conch Rick
Adehnun su.ld. "I was worried
that he would run out of sus,
but thut's Mike. He's u competitor."

Ma vericl.:s owner Mark third quartet and also hid to be
Cuban encourt~~ed fans . to carritd off the court, Christie
bring all sorts of noisenlllkers returned with tess than a
in re8ponse to Sacmmento fans minute left in the qnarter.
clanging cowbell behind Chri tie didn '1 miss 1 shot,
Dalh1s' bench during the first going 6-~or-6 from both the
two gwnes of the series.
field and the ftee throw line,
Just before , Thun~day's H.is biggest 3-pointer followed
aame. ubout SOO cowbells one by Dallas' Steve Nash that
were distributed by a local had pulled the Mavericks withcompany to people sittina in in lll-107,
the sNIS bebind the King '
"Doua's so tough. I was worbenclt.
ried wlien he left," Webber
"I h11ve fun in sllootlons like sold. "Not many players have
thut," lillid Bibby, who wns S- his heart."
lor-S from 3·point runge. Dnllas' Dirk Nowitzki fin"Them being loud und row&lt;Jy lshed with 19 points on 6-for.
got me going.You can't play in IS shooting wUI the Mavericks
a better utmosphere."
were ju t 8·for-2S from 3-point
They were more worried range with Nash, who finished
about Christie, their top defen- with IS pointS, going 2-for-10.
slve plnyer, who sprained his . And as bad as the Mavericks
right unklc in the second qu~~r- were on the offen e. they were
ter and hnd to be cairied to the even worse on defense.
locker room. The team sold he They allowed the Kings to
would not return to the game. shoot 74 !lCICI!nt (14-of·19)
But when Stoiakovlc was from the field in the first quarinjured with S:® left In the teras the Kings went up 13-2.
111 " 11

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For3Months

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~ 0111iow- Fonii&lt;U,, Mi """,.. .., ,. i1oe Iiiii....,
f'I'IO!tU1t tt A!Mrica'• tbp so,~
w' ........ •ltd ~ 1otat
- · ..... Mliolllo, IQI{Iollll ...~ Mrjor ..... kuoi ....

f..,.,,.

u.............I.-J.

THIS COULD BE THE MOST IMPORTANT PHOTO

YOU EVER TAKE OF YOUR CHILD.

=

Saints fire GM Randy Mueller
NEW ORLEANS (AI') - Randy Mueller
went on 11 two·duy trip lllllllng New Orleunll
Saints sell!lon tickets. The last thing he expect·
ed when he returned was to be fired,
But owner Tom Benson hud decided that
Mueller, who took the Saints from a 3·13
record to the NFC West title and their only
Dlayoff victory two lleosons ago, was not hfs
kind of feneral manager. Benson has assumed
Mueller s duties .
"I'm more of a hunds·on owner," Benson
said. "I like to know what's .1101na on. In some
ca1es, decisions were made without me."
Mueller, the NFL Executive of the Year In
2000, denied that.
·
. "I thou&amp;ht we hud excellent communication," Mueller suld. "I never heard about any
problems. I thouaht everything wil8 excellent •.
1 came bBCk thinking we were on the right

truck for this year and things were looking up.
You cuh Imagine my su!'P.rlse."
Mueller said Benson s lawyers contacted
him lust week to dlscuu contract renewal.
"The discussions were always about extend·
lng the contruct," Mueller said,
But everythlna changed In a . meeting
Thunduy.
"He asked me to resign," Mueller said. "I
refused. I didn't wan! lo leave here. I had
hoped to make New Orle.uns my home for the
rest of my career. When I refused, he fired

me."

· ·

Benson uld he heard ubout too many thln~s
too late. One example, he said, was the team a
trude of runnlna back Ricky Williams to
Mluml this 8prlng,
"! was told about It after it was done,"
Benron said.

·tlfot~ ~{)Of !eafoorlBajet.
?~kJn­

BUFFET

.1.

QNIHtl OpiHlllfl
Q.Ufll HOUfll;

M - f l l 1fAiii;i'- • , , _ 11AM•10.101'M
...... 11AIHIIINI
.

~t:. f'~k1n- 11:

tflll.-•-• ~
tD IO"'pllll •

known 11 h•
Tlipp•n lltalnt·
Clleat•r
Wltet
Dlatrl~tt
Ottloa
IIPillialoll 11 tile
'"'·pp•ra
cwn•u•r llt•lnt
Wlltr
Dlatrlot
!the
"Owner"),
llr
iiiiiiOiid,
...,..,vtlle,
Ohio. 4l7tl unUI
a M ·
11 :00 "'
1001: ·11me
•
on Monday June, 3.
1001, •nd et 11111
uma, and pliot,
pllblloty opon.a and
rtld 1 to11a. aide mey

NCAA

,

..

• t.....,;;......;--ol

: IPICIAL GAL - Mulklnaum Colteae'• Mandy Carnea waltl

. on 11cond bell aptn1t Marllttl Colleae In NIW Concord tn
thtl tlte photo. Carnea hold• the NCAA Divtaion ltl record• for
homlf'l In a carear and HIIOn.

.

IOOOrdlnOI Willi
IIOUon 113.14 (C) of
lht Ohio ll•~lttd
Codt. Any IUOh lllllr
ot or1dll ehall be
rtvottbll only lllht
option of lht
btntfiOIItlf Owner.
Thl lmdunl of lhe
oertllllll ohtok,
Ollhlir'l ohtok or
lllttr 01 orldll thlll
bt lqulf to 1111 110)
perotnt of tht •ld
tnd the luaoHiful
lldder Will bt
rtqUirtd to IUbmll I
bond In 1111 form

oodl:m:

oodl

RESTAURANT

. "ifOTICI II lltrlby
·e,un 11111 on
;
, May 11,
10100 t.m., t
'
Mil Wfllllllielll
II Itt WHI ltOOIIlf
11tt11,
0111o.
11 lht ..ltnlltd
11::~ lot (ltftlfl
P
t IUIIII IIIIHIJ
Tlill'lnMrtllnlllllll
llvl"ff Contpeny, It
Hill for totll tilt
.,..,...,,
IVVMONTI
CAIILO
IGIWW11M0Vt111714
Till I'II-I lin~
ud . In IIIII
Comptny, Pomeroy,
Olllt, r..trYII lilt
rlglll to llld 11 IIIII
Hit, eiiCito wtllldtiW
1111 lllovl aolllllrll
11t1or II 1111. Punlltr,
TIIIP-•111111111111
11v1nge Comptny
,...,.. tilt '''"' u

::fl.

-

Dinner Buffet $7.95
4100tM..ICICifM

1·866·BLUEOVAL

blutOVtl.foldv.,lclle.com
..

(304) 67J•4'J77

Muon WV - • 319 VIand su'Nt, Pt. .,....~ wv
DINE IN OR TAKE OUT

.

Upper River Road
Galli,Polu, OH

,W VOII CMIIM stlfi(JIID llmD
OVer so Item luffet • Ct1b Up • Pried lr ltNm~ Shrimp

'(740) 446-9800
~----

,_roy,

rtjlot lilY or tfl lila 1001, IIU ll .. n
llitlmllltcl,
llrtlllrttl lly Hlrtlct
T h•
1llo u ltlfll 6 DtloNI.IHn

cllitorllltll otlllttrtl
will Ill ltfd "11 fl.
Wlllrt It", Willi no
IIII"'HHCI tr lmplltd
WltfiiiiV (llvtno
or
I UrI h tr
lnformttltn, If 1M In
lpjllfrlln!lnl to
lnlptol ,.lllltrtf,
ptlor to ••It dill
oontut Ill till
IIICIIilllllllllltW1 ••
(l)l,t, tUTC

P

l'uMD Noa.

Lilli, Trullttl.
Tlii llllluef rtpiHI It
IV 111010
for
lnapt~olltn

lly

110

an~

tflfilll 11111'1111 1101'11111

htuni wltllln
ilyt
11'1111 1111 ctoto 01 IIIII

netlttlllltelltmtof
Hlrtlll IIOitr I
"'''"' Jtlft Llnl,
10111iort 4tfl Avt~M,
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In 1001,._ wllll
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,...., l.oriiMifiM!rtll
Trull lor ttJt fii'IOCI IIMTAI'IOH TO 110
mctlrlf OtNIIINr 11,
,

CourihOUtl In
Pomtroy,
MIIIII
Couniy. Ohio, on till
31tt dty of May, 3002,
11 10:00' t.m., tht
following londe ond
tentm1n11, lotlltd 11
41 ltlvlrvlfw Dr.,
Middleport, OH
41710, A aompttlt
leg•l dllorlpllon of
tht rttl 01tt1t 11 11
followt:
Tilt fOIIOWI ng
d11orlbld r111 ""'"'
11tu1tt In lllltbury
TownahiP1• In tht
111111111 of Mlddil""'rl
ltollon ••· Town 1

~:''\'l:'r!" W:v1!.~ ~:~t~~· c"o1:n~; ~~
COdt rn oonJ~notlon . Mtllt 1nd 11111 of
!!'!"
..!'!~~lion of dttorllild
Ohio, bounded 1nd
..,. ........ _.
11 followll

ltoh propoul
mueteonlltn lilt lull
n~~~~t 01 lflt Pli'IY or
~ttllll lulimltflng
~:umen: 1 n,,l
Hrtont lnllrllllef
!llertln. lloli bidder
mutt
tulimll
nleflnot of Itt
uptrllnOII on
pro)HII 01 tlmlltr
llaf IIIli oempllllly,
The Ownir lnllnlla
IIIII IIIII l'rOjiOI 110
IOPIIfllllOCI no llllr
lllln 1111 llml f!l'kid
.. NtiOI'IIIInNtloll
4 01 lht IIIIICI1rd
Porm of AW.....,t
lttwtt11 OWner end
ConiPIGior on 1111
1..11 of I IUflllllllll

::J

CHINESE

lfiiiMV,IIfllfi1J .

- - .1

ellllaanlr_...
IIIVOIVed wll~ tht
pnjlct •hell 10 1M
Oltlnl JWMIIt•bt•,
lleO OhM! SHMIHIII,
I'IIIIIIFI... , IIFIII...
IIIII ltlllor In lh•
1mp1om•ntetton ol
their
•rotut.
hmMtlcl 'etttl u••
raqulr•monta ••
tpecltiMI
In tMIIon
1u.on or 1111 (01110)
..-vteltl
10
11111 pro~ c
01
atotlon
113. It 1111
the (Ohio)
rtvte•d
DIIIIMi oblllnMI
trom •nv ot 1111•
0111011
01 111
..
·t
... per men 1 o 1
IICimlnl"n•tlve
:/::ally,
aontrtctor
oomplltlloo wltll 1111
equel •mploym•nt
~e:!':::'tt 0101110
Admlnlat,.ttve Code
6
Ch I ..11;.:auuV:
Ill
ao=:r
1
Ol'dtr· 01 1171, •na
Qovernor'a lnoutlv.
Order 14·1 ehlil bt
'1~='·,. mu•t
oompty . wllh the
oprlnVIIIIng we,rb,.IIIHO
w
tmpronmentt In
Melge count• ••

(AP) - It Nan Payne. "She's · very
COL.~••BUS
v...
· was evident that Mandy relued at the plate and she's
' Carnes was diffe'rent from the very confident. She knows
*';
othet kids Whlit pitch Srn:
"·'S lOOking 10r
~
· ,
plaYJns ball and even If It's not the pitch
even
.... fi when she wants she's able to do
'the chance to swlna
•neawav.
rst aot somethi""
... with it. She is a
"It was unbellevable,'1 her very hard hitter to pitch
mother, Dina, said by tole- around, which is why most
phone on Thursday. "She had :~':t ~ntly have Just ~um:d'l~'~van:
·just finished tee liall and her
10 lht publlo ~lng
· coach said he'd ~itch one to Carnes has 11 .613 on-base · 11 lh• •bow illkiNII.
, her. She hit 11 50 hard back at pertentaae and draws a walk A llr•·•la Mt•tlng
him thllt It let\ a big welt on about once In every aht 1tbats. will u
held
1I,
-"·rs
10
aAhe
WltlnMclliY,
MIW
Wh
it
hIs leg. And she was only 6."
en P ... ..,
""' r, aooa et "'' Dtetrlot
Carnes haslet\ her mark on she seldtim malo;es a mistake. 1111tlottt 10:00Ul
. the record book as well as her She led the · Ohio Til• wotll oavwod
coaches. The iunior Hrst base· Conference with 62 RBls; no ~~~~::~,.c:,':::~~!
·man for de(endina national one else has more th.an 39. otan ut~~~ntton tncl
·champion . Muskinaum · She sebree! S2 runs: second- rthablllt•llon ot tht
College, located about an best was 39, And her battlna :r.',:'::~ ,~~~=
hour east of Columbus, has averaae wu 61 points hlsher
slammed 23 home Nns this h
h
I h Dtetrlot olllat, The
.
t an t e Nnner-up n t e proltot wllllnanlllt •
·season and 4S for her career. 1
s. no
1 t
•
:Both are Division Ill records. e~~~t of power hitters have eddlllo~~:'!ett':, ~~\:r~~:.~:lnt1 ~~
All of which has surprised that curse of being slow on modtllo•Uane tnd Commero•, Dl~leton
her fnmily as much as any- the bases, ~ut she's one of our ••lettng
lmpro"'""'''
"'' at LIDOr ana worktr
otttaa.10 Tht
lttety • w111 and
H
ld
I
one. er o er s ster, younaer best base-runners and. one of proJtol will tnotudt Hau1.
.
brother, father and motl\er
...8t thletes" Newbe
atNOtu,.l, ·
Tht lnglne•r'•
are.n't particularly athletic or our "" a
'·
rry meohaniOII,
lallmll• tar thle
even Interested In sports. Yet said.
lleotrla•l, plumbing, proleot 11 1110,000.00
M d h
...
Carnes hit 10 home runs as • n a
HvAt 1'11pper 1 Plttn•an y as a1ways ....en a a freshman. She tc:r,ped that aompon.,tt.
Chnttr
W•ter
prodigy.
.
lid Dooumtntl Dlatrlol ,.1m 11 lht
"I've just always hit the with 121ast yeann was cho- lnaludt the lid rlaht 10 wal 1 1
ball," safd Carnes, a soft•S!IO- sen flrst•team All·America · llequlr•mtnta and lntormttllltva ;~
ken p~slcnl education mlijor for the second year In a row. Cantrtat Daaumenta lrrttlfllrlttot.
111 bid TUpper•
~
She has alreadv' su~used (IIIII
lllolude plane,
,rom 111rton, W"
.• a.
ehnt•,
. Chitter Plalna·
water
. Donna Newberry has won that two-year total th s sea- epaottr ..uana, tnd Dtatrlot r11ervta til•
more than 600 games in her son, breaklna the Division lU •nr edd•nde) 01n b1 light tort loot any or
22/ears as Muskingum's record of 22 set by Michelle 011 etn•d tram M•l ell blda or io lnortt..
hea coach. She first saw the Carlson of the Colleae of ~=~:rnn!~~.. ~~o. 6~: :~:'l:~:·~roru~~~
left·hahded first baseman New Jersey in 199~.
1rook11dge llvd., anct/or twtrd the bid
after she transferred In from
Carnes' 4S homen in 149 Wlltorvllfa,
Ohio to the lownt
1 wllh 1 non· rnponelvt and
a1
1
b
h
4IDt
Merc,vhurst · (Pa. ) Colle"e
· • . games so s .one etter t an retundtble p1yment reeponalbl• bidder.
Newl)erry knew Cwnes could Carlson's career mark set in on7e.oo per lit.
ly order of th•
hit, but what has transpired 206 gwnes.
Chtokt ahould be TUpper• Plain•·
has stunned the veteran
Th
art 1 c
made fllllflblt to Mol c hnter
w•ter
coach. .
e scary p
s, ames Comp•ntll, Ina. lid Dlttrlol aoard of
.,1 never dre•-ed she'd be .feels she's aettlng a lot better. Cooum•nll maytteo Dlrtotore 10011111 11
.....
In addition to pumping up her bl revl•wed at Codge 11111 1ar 10 !toad
WI good as she Is," Newberry home run totals she has hit corpor•uon,
lllldtvlllt, Ohio,
.said. ''The thin a that seP.arates
•
'
MaGrtw·HIII
41772Jihta lth dey ol
·her from a lot of good hitters .524 this year - 50 points Information ltP'VIOII April a002.
that makes her 8 ~reat hitter Is hlaher than her career averase Comp~ny 1111 Dublin (I) 1 10 20 2002
coming Into the season.
!toed Cotumbueil
, , ,
that she can hit a all out any"Now I'm stronaer. I'm Ohio 41115, M• .- - - - - place It's pitched. Jr it's down
compan101, Ina. Ill
Public Ntiltoo
: ll!ld awav she'll drive It over much more disciplined," said Llnoaln Park Drive,
· the left~fleld fence. If It's Carnes, who someday hopes lull• I ' New IN Till COMMON
down and in, she'll drive it to be a high school coach ancl ~=:~n~~~~~ ~~':0:! PLIAI COUIIT OP'
MIIQI COUNTY,
over the riaht·fleld fence. She athletic director.
Ptalna.Chlttar W•ttr
OHIO
can hit a lllgh pitch, she can
Her parents, her coaches Dletrlol 11111 ltr 30
: hit a low pitch.
and her friends pushed her to Ito ad ltlldlvllle,
CAll NO.
41772.
01 CV 173
· "I've never seen a hitter try out •.or anatl ona I team b.ut Ohio,
leah
aldder 11
: who was able to lilt pitches Carnes said she's not sure required to turnlah HOMI NATIONAL
. with authority no matter abe's good enouah. She snld with ttt •ubmllllon lANK, PLAINTII'I'
·VI·
· where they're thrown."
she hasn't put much thought :IJh~.:c\'~1~:~:~~-=
IIOIIIIT
'·
Carnes Isn't stocky nor Is Into playing pro softball, leourllll
· tn
IIIIQMANAKA
she slim. Unlike many lona· either.
aooord1nu with ltOIIIIT
IIIIQMAN,
. ball threats, she is ~atienl at
For now, however, there Is ~T3~0~ 1~,::d• 8~~~~
IT AL
: the plate and doesn t have a little doubt she Isn't being lid
uourlly
' bla, looplna swing. Her challenged In Division 111.
furnlthtd In land NOTICI o' IALI
: power comes from her ability
"I have a lot of confl· torm (aid Gu•ra~t"
to tum on a pitch and got the dence," she said during ;~~or~~~~;~n=~~ or~r ~~':1. ~feu:~
bmel of the bat over the plate ~reparation for thh week's provldMI In leoti an out ot th• Common
' in a hurry.
•
ivi•lon Ul reslona·J tourna- 11U7.1 olthl OhiO Pllll Court ot MIIDI
: ."She's a very •man hitter,"
•
11-latd Code) mutt Count•, Ohio, In the
: said Capital Unl~erslty coach ment. "I know I'm aolna to bt'leau.a by, luretv 0111 'or the Home
hitthe next pitch they throw." camp1nv
or N1t1on•1 link,
Corpor•Uon ilaenald Pltlnlllf, ve. llobtirt 1'.
In tlit 111111 of Ohio to II!Gmtn tkt llobtn
provldl llld aurtty. aergman, tt 11.,
Tho•• alddtra lhal Dlftndente, upon 1
eleal to tubmll bid Judgment thertln
gullt'lnly In tho rorm rendered, blln, C111
of 1 oanlfltd aheak, No. 0 1 ·CV· 72 In
o11hllt''l oheok or uld Court, the
lttltr of artdlt lherllf of Mtl~l

1\unptke
Ford e May 11th e 10100 a.m. to 3•00 p.m.
-

111JOAM-4100PM

16 Gander LaM, Vnlt II

flimllhllll til ....
,IUI,tllll Ud

.

Lunch Bu.f1et $5.25

(304) 773-5331

=Muskies' Cames:
·always a slugger

...lee! 11c1e will M
ru•t~tod. · tor

m\u•;: 'rh;~~~~r; ~=~'or ~:~~-t ~h~
lltvtHCI Code end In · front ·door of lht

.On May 11 1 20021 from l0100 a.m. to 3100 p.m., Turnpike
of Gallipoli•, your Blue Oval Certified Ford Dealer; u
honing Commitment to Kida, a free Child Safety event.
!Jarentl of the flnt lSO c.hildren wlll reuive a free
(Omplimentary lD kit. Children'• photo• will be taken
free of c:lwae. The Muon County SherUJ'1 Department
wiD be u•ildns in thu tervice.
Come on in and bring the lddJ. Jwt to be 1ale.

The DallY sentinel• Page a 5

www.mydellyaenttnel.com

JltfOI.

lloh llddlr m ull
lnturt tlltl Ill
ompiDY,.• •nd
IPJIIIUnil lOr
MlpfaYJMill .,, nOI
.. ll,..miMIOII ..-n11
DtoiUII Of . r111,
ootor, rtllfiOn, Mil,
nalltntl orlfln,
llllndiOip, •n-try,
or ....

..,., 1.01 No 17 01
lllv•'r•l•w
lullctlvltlon In 1111
111111111 of MlddltJIOrl,
~:1 ••,:::~JU" 1r~
llolum• 4, 1'111 at,
Mllfl County 1'111
lltoordt.
• lltttrenu Dttef·
llolunMi 11, 11111 .U1I
Moftt County Offtofl
flltoordt.
Alfdllor'l Peru I
No.s 1MOaOUOO
T Ill
1 b0 n
dttorftlld rtll 1111111
It told •11 It"
wttliOid wttl'tfiiiH or
HllvtPIINitl.
I'IIOPIIITY
ADOitllls
U
llfnrvftw Dr.,
Mld&amp;IIIJIIit, OH .wTIO
IIIAL
II TATI
AI'PIIAIIID AT!
MO.ooo.oo. Tilt ro11
IIIIIOoannotliUOid
for 1111 then lwo•
lllfrllt lilt .,.,elttd
Wllul.
TIIIMI 011 IALI:
1"" down oer of
1111, ••••net on
a.tiYtf\1 of CINd.

·Ao,..

Ioiii aubltll 10
au • 1111 llllf 11101 1111111
"orutd tOOl rt•l
ALL IHIIt"l''a
lALII OlliiiATI
UNDIII
THI
DOCTIIIMI Oil
CAYIAT IMI'TOR.
I'IIOai'ICTtVI
PURCHAIIIII Alii
UIU:JID TO CHICK
FOR LIIMI IN THI
fiUaLtC ltiCOIIDa
OP MIIQI COUNTY,
OHIO. THI MIIGa·
COUNTY IHIIIIIll'
MAKII
NO
GUAIIANTII AI TO
THI ITATUI 01'
TtTLI PIIIOR IALI,
Douet•• w, Llltlt,
Altomoy lor llltlnlln

• • ,., ..... _

......._

Will

com-nee on lhtl
tiale. 1ft the ... or
wour follure to
- Of otllerwiM
reopond
11
NqueetM ·by lhl
Olllo Rllltl ol Civil
Proaecture, J~ment
lly dlfoull w I be
-d•recl tgllnel you
lor the roller
ll•mtndtd In tilt
Camp~ttnt.
Dilled IIIIo ISih clliy
1111 April, 2002.
Marlene Harrleon,
Cttrk ot Court•
SUIMI'i'TI!D:
L. &amp;coli Powell
(10013100) Altornty
fillr Pltlnlllt

l'l H.{S) 3, 10

4) 11, It, 2002
10,17,14,1002 ·
!1)3,

Pubtlo Notlot

-

elf ltiGIIII, County of
Melli end Stole e1
01110, IO"Mit:
. . .'""'"'
It of
till1
ftOI'ttl111t
oorMf

1M llndad lly
P'.D. Wolf, DlciMMCI,
to MelindA Doblline;
th•nae eoot On•
Hundltd Nlnellen
(111) teet; lheftoe
lOUth II righl anglo,
Sixlylwo (Ill IHI;
th1nc1 -~ II right
Ont(11t)
Hundi'ld
NlnttHn
IHI;
thlnce North It 1111111
angle, lllty·IWo (Ill
'"' 10 ihl pllat ill
blalnnlng.
tiARCIL NUMIIIt.
111-00374.000
.
PROI'IIITY
ADDIIIS8: 701 Meln
Str111 Raolne, OH
1187711
Permenenl parcel
-

'"II"'

number:

111-00~74.00

·

Properly add,..a:
Moln .$irlll,
Alcllll, Ohto un1
l'rlor lnotrument
rtlortnce: VOIUIM
73, pagoltl
Apprelltd 11:
$27,000.00
TI!IIMS OF $At..l:
To IMi eold lot no leu
than two-thlrde olthl
lppl'lliltd VIIUI. Thl
purchntr(t) ehall
depoeil U,ooo.oo
wlih thti thorllt lithe
lim• olelid uia.
In purtutnce ol an llalph E• . Truaaell,
Allll Order ol Stll Sh1rlft
dlrtoltd to me from FRANK
l
••td oourt, In iht WOOLDIIIDGI! CO.,
lbovt aniHiod ocllon, L.P.A., D.L. Maino, Jr.
I will ollor lor ule 11 tnd Lturtnce I.
pullliO IUOilon II ihl Landon, AHorntyl .
dao1 at the Malo• for
Plelntlll, 800
County Courthaull,
Pomeroy, Ohio on South Petri 811'1111
Tllurtdly, MIY 30, II Columbue, Ohio
10:30 o.m. I he 43208; Tete: 114•221·
IOIIOWing duorlbtd t812.
,
8!1Uittd In the VIllage (4) 21, (5) 3, 10, 17,24

IN THI COMMON.
PLIA8 COUIIT OP'
MI!G8 COUNTY,
OHIO
DOMIITIC
· lti!LATtONI
O!C!SION
NOTICIIY
"UILICATION
CliO No. OI•DitoQ1 I
· ..VIALY ltAI
11011,
PLAINTtl'fl,
•VII•
ltALPH IDWAIID
11011, Jlt.,
DI,INDANT.

7111

,.., ......

You ere hereby
noilll•d thli you hlvt
bttn named 1
Oetendent In the
ullon tnlllltd
levarly 1111 Ao11,
Plllntlll, va. lttlph

HIPPY Ad

Help Want•d

WANTED:

pe•lilon available In Mtlp County, 1!
hn/wk Mll\l(fh. Dudes lnoludo leothlna
l'art·dn~e

HIPPY Ad

rommunHy and permnal 11k.IU11 lu an lndldduMI
wlih n1eniol. r•tordoilon. Kequlrtmenl8! llll!h
sthoul dlplomiiiOED, valid drlnr'a UceMf, ihrto ·
year11 JJood drlvtn1 experience und adequut~
autumuhllr lnrnir11nce t:u\'erllle. $7.00/hr. Send
te!IUnte. to1

Still Handsome
after 50 years/

Happy
Btrthaay,

Buckeye Community Services
P.o. Box 604
J uckson, OH 4S640
Deadline for applicants: S/13102
~UII

OpponunUJ tmploytr

Mike

LawsonI

Love, Family
and Friends

Pleasant Valley Hospital
l'lcasdnl 'Vullcy Nur~lna and Reh~thllhallon Center Is 11
dynamic LA.mg-tcrrri car~ rociUty that pro~ll.lca
Intermediate and Aklllcd care necd.t 1o re.tldtnts.
Come juln our health care organlutlon where we
pro~ ide

eJCcellcnce in tare.

POSITONS 1\VAILABLI!i

RN • Port limo and l'or lllom

LPN · Full limo, Part limo, ond Per Diem
Head Stan Open Enrollment
SIGN UP NOW FOR NEXT FALL!
GALLIA COUNTY
MAY 13 WOODLAND SITE
1Oam·2pm &amp; 4-Spm
MAY 14 .CLAY SITE
1Oam·2pm &amp; 4·6pm

MEIGS COUNTY
MAY 14HILAND ROAO
Slle 1Oam·Spm
MAY 16 GINGERBREAD HOUSE
10am·8pm
Please bring your Ohlld'a:

• Shot recorda
• Curren112 monlh Income
Information
• Social Security card•
• Medical oard /lnaurance
Information

Eagles Aerie 2171
Prim·e Rib Oii·mer
Saturday 6· 7
Members &amp; Gu11t1 Only
Sat. May 11 8:30
. Quality Furniture Plul
Lldl11 Ault VFW 1&amp;053
TuDDirl Plaine

Eage1 Atrll 2171
Ghollrlder Bind
Fri. &amp; Sat.

8·12
Mamert &amp; Gue111 Only

ON

RATB WILL, DB DASBD

BXI'BMIBNCB

Btnonutncludti

$3,000 •lan on boauo for Full lime l.lte...., Num•
t'leil ochedullna (lncludlna U hour •hllil)

Shll'i dlflmntlol
Wlltkond po!illiuiM
'lrohlln&amp; PI'Oflrom lor new araduot.,
lloollh lmurance •lntll&lt;ll'omily pion
Ai'PLY IN PBRSON OR CALL
A. . . Cl... nd, DON
(304) t75·!236

AAIEOI!

Business Services
Advertise

In this

space
for
•so per.
month

Your
Concrete
Connection LTD
Quaihy Concre1o
fi nl1hln11 and morel

(877·3U·70ll) ·

Call for mort
lnfol/rtt tstlmart
WV0312~6

RESIDENTIAl. &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
HI·EMclency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

f!!~Z.'llllrrm::::r.1.

• l'rer! A II Vur 11itrt WMrrt~ntlt•

• rr.. lllMii•l 'l'horm.,.ill

• Yrtt IU \'tHr tonlllr~W'r
Worton11 (In Htll'&lt;i M••lrlo

YHI\f. YJt'I'IMA'I'YJI•IitiC:f.
• liHnk

ln••n~ory

l'ln•nclnM 1\ulloble

• Prk11 'In Fil Ali lliJrl~

Sat. Night
Music by Country Grata
For Membere &amp; Gueets

�www.mydllllplntlnel.com

MACK•s

Shlldt Rim- AG Senke
"AIIftd In Senke"

Pocket KAMe

3SS37 Sl. Rt. 1 Nonh • l'omenly, OH 4.5720
• Guidon Bow 16.000 Twine ...................$18.65
• Goldell Bow 9,000Twinc .....................$16.95
• 20,000 Plos1ic Baltfl'wlno ...................$15.75
• Thp 0.... Pututa wilh Sulfur
u~ ...............................,........,.......$120 per 1011
liquon&lt; 12 .......................................$5.00150 Ills.

&amp; Coi!Ktlblll

•Aeut
the

(304) 675-13a3
ftur Ad, Qtrihune(740)446-2342 Sentinel (740) 992-2156 1\tgtjltf
Or Fu To(*) 87W2M

TOday...

·,

or Fu To (740) 441 sooa

·

Or Fu To (740) 112-2157.

VeQetabll Fiala ...
10" Hanging Baskets '1.10
'MMI AI$Ortmenl of Htlbs, Annuals,
· Pwtnniala In 4'.poq lor

Mon Sat 1Q.4

·

117 E.llld St •
~y.OH '

t?tflftce~~

(740)812-5808

Monday thru Friday

P/1
'COiliACIOIS. lilt

8:00 a ·.rn. to 5:00p.m.

AciM,Ohlo4S771

740185-3141
miKlmJILIKIIUKK
\\'\!11 \ ! I \ I I \ I -.

r ~
~·

P~o~~~t~~:.!eon"""~'

r

ANNoi1N&lt;»

l"a HELP W.oow .
116
11 '

Huge Fonlaottc Yon!/ Mov·
lng Salt. Toolo, Fumllutt,
Fan. Plclutta, Umbrella Po·
110 Stl, f.nllqull, Llnona,
much morol Frldoy, S.tur·
a.y, Moy t 0.11 . Dont mtu
lhlo onol Roull 1 south.
Crown Clly COfl). Rain Can·
celo.

:Moonlight Eoc-t. Full
'oonrtaiomalooncl'-ltto·
:-nd
~ ~- •u lo
dll\1111. Wo oloo do Blrll&gt;
a.y. Prlvlto 1nc1 lllcholo&lt;
Pafttto.
epm.
etm.
1740)318·1n8.
"""'
? S
.... , Wll1 lOft moiling
()NO olnalooloniQhl, 01111 toll
lrH 1·100·158·2823 txl
1'

W

Y4Rll
SALK·
GAIJJJ~liJS

"""

~ ~ho

11

116

~ WAN'Itill

1

r

~=·.
..,;,."::,~L . 1 riB

f.VON I "'" A.._atlb Buy
Athono•Molga EdU&lt;I·· ;,....,. Wlllttcl- 13 or akl\'UMIID DOWN ON
Salt,
$pNII. 304· llonal Ctnltt lo 01, dNa ocnon, no CDL. IOCIAL KCUIIITV /lilt
e75·1429.
Mtklno 1 Spocill Eaucollon good ailvlno ttCOrll holltll No FM u - we Wlnl

Shl~oy

Comrnunlly '-ellen lo OMit·
lng an lnllko Spoc:latlll 10
work wilt\ Emorgoncy Programa. EliCIIIonl ll0r'l'4'"lor
ona organizational oklllo,
oblllly to clell with pllraont
Yard Silo. 47 Wtolwood ot varlouo - l c
·Or., Joonno'o Kul a Kurl boOkgrouncla. VIII&lt;! Orfvllo
and Tho Nuee'a. S.turdly llcenoo,
alploma
11111/0a, 8:00-3:00,
or oqulvoltnl. Rooumo witt&gt;
Yard, Plonll, &amp; Peronnlelo
" 00
°•- ~ ......- ~.
I · May 1t · • ' om· BOlD N. 51111 Routo 1,
S11
5:00pm, Forrnor O'dtll'o Chtlhltt, OhiO
by
btlllncl 5113/02, GMCMioEOE .

~-

~=-rdC3) '!~~~·u.&lt;.~c~'!·
~5820

I =~:~~~ull&lt;llng

lbl.P WA!mD

Paron! Monlor. RtopDnllblllltto: Act 11 ollaiiiQII belweon fllltlnto
oi)O':)III
notdo cllllclron 01
-Iori
oncl &lt;llatrtot ~
..,. prov!dt lnlolmllllon ,.
,.,;. 1, ancl ouppon .....icto
10 pllttniO; o~nlzo and
conducl In·lor fill•
..,11 ond oduootoro. Outlo
tlcattono: Muot tle 1 Plttnl
or I chll&lt;l wllh I dlubllll'/
WhO lo tXpllntiiCid with,
and knowlodgeabtt tboul
apoclal ldUCIIIIon Arvtcoo·
good inltlpllroonol ortl'
ond ..~Hen ~mun'~·tlcn'
• •" "'-."
••1111 raq rod, tbltlly · to
work ovtn~o and -k·

bonolltto'lllltbtt.Pald"'"
Cllllon, Clll t-eoo-Mt-ess3
ExperloiiCOd Roollla 1 1.a
bOIOII · I.Mt hlvo
honcl •nd ITIIfiii'Oflllion.
~40)338-05111

(7'""-_,..,r~

Wyngote • Qolllpolle

.

lloiiii=I~W CNA
14 L - - ' - Living

=

·

or O.lllpollt hlo
IIIIIIObtt lor P"ff
I rill nurllng tu!attnto. Tho
qualllledariflllcantmuolb!t
YARI&gt; SAL&amp; ·
able to work oil ohltlo
PO~U:ROV/MIIlOU!
~It provi&lt;IH a tun ldn
..
8ee·8IID·a~7•.
Corpon Nlo· Longavllll, .,.
training In IItle ond ltdtrol you Itt ""~-~ In )Oinlno
ICily ono milo OUI Doxter
manclal.. ftOirdtnQ tho ld- OUt QIMI ttam or omptoy.
00
f.TTENTION: Palltnto ol Do. Road, 4 lamtty, anllquoa,
uetllon htnalcoDDtd chll·
Citnt Ablto. 1om not rotir· boll, lour whollor.
JnfoCision is proud dron and ootobliohod con· 10 IICN'IIflltla on
lng In tnt noxt tlvo yoaro.
loclo wltll O&gt;lollno -lal NO-.~-Aocopllng Now PolltniO· Oonolo Yord Silo Loftovoro:
to be n part of the
lducotlon lntoreOI groupll.
-··
Llmllod 10 Hoart Oloooot Shop al yord oalo prlcoo.
Gallipolis ·
S.lory: llaood on lttlnlng 11111
BusiNt.li5
. ,,.
ancltXflll-· Submit lot·
TRAINING
:coronory f.rtory Olaoo 10 : RoUot lncluotrtto. Albany •
.HNrt Folluro, Hyp~rtonal on, f.lhona.
740·888·8200
commumt,.
ttror lnt-llnd ttOUmo to
•ChOttllorol Probtomo, Any·
Jolin D. Cottanzo, Suparln;thing Aoloolalld with Cia·
A
l kl ,
11naont,
f.ohono·Molgo O.lllpoltt a- ColltQt
.bollo tncl Ani~OIQUitllon. Frlaoy, &amp; Saluraoy, Moy
rc you 00 ng oor ESC, 807 ~lohlond f.venue, CC.rttro CioN To Homo)
u career with a
Sullo MIOB, f.lhono, Ohio C.U r:l4o.448-4387,
·Our oftiCt oftoro on oht X· tOoh &amp; 11th, Weber lamllloo,
•Roy, EKG, Ullroaound ol SR 124• Rutland.
•8701 . f.ppHCIItlon dotd·
1
14·04e2,
lho Hurt, .Corotl&lt;la, Slr01o Loto ol nloo, Orand namt
strong, growing
llno: May 24, aooa, Tho
Rop tti0-05·12748.
. T
Toatlng, and Coronary Ar· boy Olby lhtngo
company?
AMESC 11 tn Equol Cppot• 116
3
tory Evaluation. a• Hour ctolhto
, j ,0Ole.:
Dl I U S
tunlly Emp1oyer/Provldtr.
ML'ICI!IJANWl.S 1
1
111 11111 10 1
10
Wlllth.lnp•ocucceslslons
T"o 'lhono·Mol~ e-...·. .
.
HOM&amp;&lt;l
:HIIlHrt Monllonng. 24 Hour May 10/tt, 8·4. Tum al goo
, 00&lt;1 Prouuro Monllorlrtg, olollon AI 7N IOCIIiod bo·
"
tlo" ~
,_
"
~'OR
SALE
1
5
•8 lrna EchO· EKG. Cornprt• ~wt~~n Choahlre &amp; Mlaalo·
no
orv~o onttr t 2· 2 br. Mobllt HOrntt lor
,
•htnllvt Lib Tttllng on port, Go 1 mile on storyo
-king two S.vott llahiV· tllll, acrooa trom Ntw hi·
•Sill. For At~Pofntmont Con· Run Ra.
Arc you looking fur ror HandlctPPid Toachoro. ven grldo ochool 304·882· 118 South Porli Orlvo 2
•ttcl Modlctl Pion, 938
career and not just S.ltry: llaood on lttlnlng 1101
Story, with blltmont, Iron!
•Stell Rou10 teo, Golllpollo, RACO Scholarohlpa Yord 8 .
tnd oxporltnco. Plttoo
poron, rttr bl·ltvtl aook
•Ohio 01 C740)448·G820
Silo, Slar Mill Park, Roolno,
B "job"?
oubmlllOitll or lnloreot, tt· Molhoro Day Plonl Salo .abov.t
ground
pool:
Moy 16 ·~ IO 4:00, May 17·
Dlal·Up Succetlll ...... ,.,......., copy or S.turdly only, Mt~ 11th 8· 1304)e7S·1145
C· 1 Boor Carry Oul pllrmll 8 to 2:30. l.awn moworo,
tranoc~pt ond current coni II· 5 Uncia Au IIIII CR 35 oul
·
,lor oolt, Chooltr Townohlp, Ilea. rugo, llntna, glllt•
With lnfoCislon Cllte to John 0. Coollnso, oi RIOint.
'
3 llldroom nome, p1ut t
' MoiQo Counly, ..... IOitoro Witt, althto, """'' Ololh·
Athono•
boclroorn hOmo both on ono
•ol fnllroll to: Tho DillY lng. ohoto, purooo, 1011 ol
Mtlgo ESC, 507 Rlohlancl
101 In Mlddloport, In good
f.vtnuo, Sullt "08. ' f.th•
condlllon, S58,1500.00, ....
•Sinllnel, PO Box 7ao.ao, lowolry, Avon, lurnlluro
booko, collocllblto, mloo:
tRII, OhiO 45101, f.ppliCII·
by appoinlmont. 740·882·
;Pornoroy, Ohio 457811.
8154
1
2
:I Clorenco
OoWIII will Thonko 10' 'our oupport.
All Mokoo Lown Moworo
, not be roaponalblo lor any ~:ry&amp; ~tn ~11- 2858 · Ann
Equel o~nun"" Emplo•· and O.ICIOOr Power Equip. 3 Bodroom on Roulo a,
g;~J;.:"' lhon my own • 1 4 ' 2
Counler/Saloo
or/Provtitr: .. ,
' mtnl Rtplll.-d. Frtt P~kup 1304)875-5332
Lcoal Auto Rocyolll looking
and aoNvery tvallablt. Coli 3 bodroom 2 bOih brick
I Stophon MIHhow S.. will
lor oxpllrttncod porocn wll~
Mlko (740)4441·1804
h
\ 8 II
1n/!,ni1'1:1i
not bo roapon1lblo lor ony
iiiii_.l otrong kncwlodgo or Cllr Full·tlmo Mtlntononoo
Cuttorn Bull&lt;llno &amp;
, doblo olhor lhan my own, Big Soli. t &amp;OO lo aooo flllrll. Minimum ot 2 rtiiO oon AI Twin Rivero ToMr ollng
F
tl
• boHrMnl I pllrtltlly Hnloh·
, 0!107/0a
llomo ~rlcod
tncl as oxptnonct. Mtnagemtnt, Noodld. Compollllvo Hourly Fully,lnau~'
.~";:~; od), ntw t~IICtt, a 011,
10
Now Onoano Ulp,
much' mort. Lolt 01 F;..
BtnoiMa lnclua. 401 K homo _,, ' noldo Coli
AI
tbO'Io Now
Counly group, July 2G·f.ug. Oluft. 118 MillOn R&lt;l. Camp otnd rnumo to: Ab,'o f.ulo
,tlcn, Ancl Ptld VICallcn 14o.1182•1118 or 1,j0, 441 • ven 304...a.3887
.
1411 tr 1 Ytat. Ftx Rtoumo 5514
3, lor mort lnlormallon cell Conlty.
Fri·SII.
8:00·3:00
Parto
PO
Box
'
1a3
Rio
•
a
bot"
a
Roln or Shl
'
To Alln: John Hunter At
.
• -room,
"• Olf It•
?40-584·2'108
no.
Gronclo, OH 41874. '
~14)a24·4738. No Phone Goorgoo Portebli Sowmlll, lochod gar~, 2 octt coun·
Yord oalo 2018 Jofforoon RESPITE
,
olio PtnN.
doni hsul your loao to tho try Hlllng, ~·~~P~o Porn·
GIWAWAV
Bl a S.t Mt 11 Clo h
CARE
miiiJuol oolf 304-tn-1857 troy lrtl, lo '"""' 1&gt;10T.;:,li, Fumltulo. ' 1 10• WORKER(S)
NEEDED:
aranl Dlvolapmont
' H2·104e
:-':-'::::.;~=;;_--- Woul&lt;l you bo willing 10 011,.
lptaltll11
Jlmt Ytrd WOrk lnd Ctr•
2 olloop=4to, 8 rabblto; YARD SALE Mty t0-11 ·12 lor 1n tnalvlauaiCI) wilh ISaohoiOt'l cltQrOO In
ptrllry. Wt do: Flowtr boX• For oolt by o-. oozy 4
''"to
homoo, calla!· . 104 N. 3rd. Slrtot. Maoon, IHrnlng llmlllltlono In your odplml~lltt~~",po!IOY tnd
II, mowing, Plln~ng, Call boclroom, 2 both, ,.., Mt·
tor 8l or lto¥1 mtougo. wv behind lmpllrill Tlra
own homt lor • ltw hOuro onn no,. t.:d'r't"'if.'r"ofo. 1740)448·280tl.
' IOn WtlmtN, lltQI rront
740·~·o·a882
.
ltoch monlll? High IChool Ill'· or ... ~! I wlhrklwo l.awn C.Ott
.
potllh, aeo't, 304·773·5188.
ANI1!IJ
· dtQrot ,.qulrod. II Int-I· yooro "PI•- NO n wo lllg
4loAroar
TO Buv
ld conoocl
Chtlo"'
Commtrclal
&amp; rotl&lt;lanllll,
II- boclroorn,
For ·a .lo by
Owner.IXCOiont
3 or 4
s old Shtl"',., Ntultrld, ~
. 831
2302 e
··oII 1·800·
~ "~
Cllnoodllnourod,
rMoontblo
I both,
ho holo 10 aalt. To good
E.
, quol pportunl· yoarl txporltr.Ctln iuc
rolto, rM oollmlloo upon conallton. Mlny new Itt·
';: In Counory. &lt;7401448• AbtoluiO Top Dollar: u.s . 'Y mployor.
Ctlllul grtnl wnllno •• ·
vloll304·Sl'll·4044
lutto, 1a2 Klneon Onvt.
88
;:;:.;:"-----Sllvor, Gold Colno, Proof· Rollll Saloo Cltrk, Full or QUirtd: tblllty 10 rootttllh
TOll to Bonom Clttrilng l740)448-t3t0 or (740)4•1·
Young kllltno, lroo lc • 1011, Olamondo, Gold Pan-olmt. Plck·UP oppllca· and atvtlop grftnl otlt)Onu· Strvloo, proltNIOnll, ...r. 4878.
1100&lt;1
homo, llllor trolnld. Ringo,
II Swlohor
Lohot IOio
ntllto.roHotllh
Prtm1ry oncl
reopontlblllly
?40·843·5218
M.T:S. CoinU.S.
Shop,Curroncy,.
1St Soc· lion
Pharmacy,
Mtln &amp; StrHt,
doYoiOp aon 1111' 0Hloo 01Mnlng 01 Houoo 4·oolo Mooon WV
ond f.vonuo, GaHipoUa, 740· Pomeroy, Ol)lo
lor gran! opportu·
t ·br. HouH, a-outbullarngol
•
.
l.ot!r AND
4441·2&amp;42.
nllltl ror oorvlca progrtmo:
•
t-toxsoll, mobllt homo. 1
1
13
FOtJND
RNI LPN · - lor Homo tttlot In kltntllyln ntodo.
•
olnglt Cllr goroge hugo tvor
Ctro In lht Clllllpolll Attl. rooour011 avollabP., lncl
grttn lrttt &amp; f)I'I•ICI'· on
,
FTIPT hOurt wllh btntllll. dol.awn Cora
•
80xaOOit. Lol wilh O&gt;ctU ol
• Pound: Malo Sablo/WI11to
PitoN 01111 Pllytllo 11 1·800· velop1 1111 plonolo moot
Looking lor qutllty work? oooh oncl on 1 lot orr Rt 33.
• Bhllllt In Pomorey trao.
aw.··~··
518·2273 or III4)784.Q080. !holt noodl Salary·
Ctlluo. Looking lor tiOppy Prlcld III,COO, 0111 tllor
to ldtntlly I fillY lorod.
~" ~ ITATI TIITID NUIIIINQ •••
- p1 ua' voce,,·on,
work? C.OII tho othor ""
'• Ctll
740-1182·1151
...,,_,
.,yo' 7prn ' (304)18a•33••
..
:
·
AUIITANTI NIIDID · olond~.
,
LlatrlCold tnd lnaurod. Rlv• Ntw 3 boclroom abo wllh
. Found· F-a•· Cookll' •b II ACT NOWII Work lrom
. ~ flllrtORIIIIoavt, holllh, tr lllto Lown Cart. 7&gt;10'
, ... ~
·~ h
PT/FT I boo
wontll,llfldvlttonlnturonco 882·18118
.
GttliROOMOni•II41Crot
Mix, Buff oolor, Approxl· omt,
roo , ~111. II you oro a Slllo Tlotld a•olltblt 4038 tlllromtnr
on Jtrrya Run. Roollor
motoly I · yoor old; 81010 1·800·a8i-20118
Nurolng Aoallltnl looking plan Oooallnt lor a""'ICII
lprlng llvlngt
C304)51tlo211S
Roulo
110,
Appro•lmatol•
t
www.aonlworryborlch.nal
lor
part·tlmo
omploymonl,
tlon
Juno
Homo
ttmoGIIIng
and
,..
,.,.
·
•·
'
h
1
11
-,..n Hou11 5/t 1/0a 1·oo
3• .......
m1~ . 1rom · Hoapllll.
wo avo on opon ng 1or you. rooumt tnd rotoronoo to·
l)llra, tooling, Ohlill link 4'00 s
' ' ·
1740)44t·Oa82
McOiuro'l Rtllluront now Wo are 0 70 bid IOng·llrm
Human RooouroM '
lonco,ouotorn Wood docko I ci · ~ring Ytlloy Ad,
1mt1!
.
•tt
tl ~ I ~
~au!noyoupllont
r-o "-""'"
callo? Oon'l
know WhlttiO tum? Coli &amp;

=~~&amp;Cr~,:.~

lf0al
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on'

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•~

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mwl,thnlgrpor"..'ioP~oOmRaa:olop~lo

I

rlot~------,.1

(;40)t8~~~~;b~~ 17 J)~~=:

I

litO Hm

~""'subm.lt

: rib
•
•
•

YARD SALE

•
r

YARD
SAulGAIJJI'OUS

I::::~.::. 3~:-~o;·.~::c~~ :r~~u~~~:~:~ ~:'':;
~:30om
~-OOpmn~~-'" ollhrui:OOoF""~·
I
--Y
"-Y
• lion lllooollon &amp; brtng bock
bolwoon
a
tO:OOem , Monday ltlru Sol·
uraoy.
fiiiCCO
Tht Powtr o1 ~omlly

flll&lt;ltrlll.
PIOOII opply In ,..... bo·

..,·..
HolztrStnlorC.roCtnttr
380 Colonltl Or.

~~~~;,:.1=0/02, ~OITIII PA~INTI ........
:W::urro~~~lly Em-

;
• ,,_ ,UM"Uit -·8 ·~ •
NIIDID
: oen PU...'~;In OrS'hino':""
- - - - - - - Would you llkolo holp
1
:
l'lotd on PII
, ohlla In -a7 You'll rooolve
211 upiOIIOIS.9()monthlyro• 11110•1/11 .
'urnlluro,
OIOtntl, TOOII, 'ToVI Vld· tmburttmtnt lor 11011 Child
: '' ~lt0,, ~~~:..,!."ry. :'.~~::~~=·J~v;'.'
• no .... -· ~·
Ino I ohll&lt;l II ou ... on
· Yard litO Thurlday May Ohlortaldintyondwauld
•
tncl i/r~c~ay MaY t0tl1 IIIIo
1111
: I :OOem 10 4:00Qm, ,._In oi ID tlncl OU\tbout blooming
' lhtho. 224 ,lrlt 1W0 Clllllpo I lotltr poront 0111:
otlo. Pttk on llrotf, Wllk
ICIIMI Mklnt

K~ntr

0

u~

,

~~~:i,":ndT~~::
t
'
oln·

=-

!Oyl,

=

~~~j., ~~ ~'t:',':f.

-~~. r• 10:
Houro. 8oncl '1toouma
1384 Htrmon Ra O.lllpo

gil oncl aoublo, oil tnd

111• cor

~~:'c"(;

RIO Granat, Cillo 45874
www•.iohongluo1.org
Equal Opportunity Emplayar

•

_

_

HIAD COOK NIID.D

=~l"'i~~:,,.:;:.,,~

0.:,."":'1~~;

310

t:'O:.:r~4l

11

.

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~=:~=.n~=~'"

M:

1 ·118-237-534~
1

Ii
~

Flat vmn\

~

R~l-nts, • Walks

ond bri'IOi • Slen&lt;il ·
Cltt•

ACIII!ACE
lOR RINf
-tiM hOuoo One - . . . l!llrtmlllt In
1011. a 111, 3 til or s · Pt ..,....,;; Fumllhocl
1.7mlltloutSRit8.C.I vtry cltln tncl ntct Nc)
oltor 8:00pm. C140)448· Pttl. " ' - C304)87&amp;-i388
1W
~;;;,.._ _ _ _ _ _ Small fll)t, 1\11 utft.
LOt tor Sa-. ~. a 111 111M plllri'*"Pt EleCIIIC. No
cltlrtll &amp;
tor Pt\1.
DtoCIIII 1-.
bulldl, a:.~-:: drlvewtly. quiTII!I. C304 75-1ile6
-~,,
1 - . avo-,
•·•1~ 1Wfn Rtvoro
. - · .......
,~•
·- '"'
""' •
13,H5. Cell
""'
tor
4514 from 8-5 or (740
:1248 lltor epm,
.
Mol"" Coun"' Rulllncl
~
..::....
.,,
-·
:,;;;IMt"lttv
.Jg: obttd E.H.O 304 75-841
lnglltoo.
·-·~ "
,~ .. ~ a .....,,......,
- SAI.&lt;S
.,__
andtxttttlkt ugt21ou• ~:::o"'"!-.1':..-"'" ~·--·---.;"""'•'~.,1
blo IQOt ttlriQIIIrttor wllh lot -o. ~·- on Ill'- ~
·
maklllnd doluxo alohLoo:J Cttek IIOIId CCIIII•· 18XIO llltl. 1100/mo. 740...""". Dnl'll48,1108.oo
atN187.
doltvor.a oncl otlup on your 03&amp;8 Aolotno •10 coo
lounclallcn,
, 1.:1. '- I \I '"&gt; ,

Rlll SALE
Capt Cod with ~~~ llWia
room, lomll)' room ana
-wllh-oiCIIblneto
ond ovona, QtntTIII
air, Qlnlral holt, 4 bid•
roorna, 1-111 bolhl, IIIII
bo-1. QllltiQt. on ont
lot wllh Wtlll
rnolflllllnta, IIIIIY Cllfi)IMd,
Ellttm
LOCIII
Settoolt,•·•.
on
R-•to 7 · ~·-·~·.
~-·~
tno 188,000.00. 740-"18·
4335
Cttorance
e.
S10
...veovor
,OOO.OO·fl!ll
= l o pt!CII, Now 3

.....:.'::=.._.-·~·

C7~0~:::

~~~~1&lt;1s.:=ar.:

~~~~~

~wil~lr,bont~h::rulonll..!,

Business Services

=

~

l'luratw~tor.-

~!-.a~t:rm!";~'J~:

Cole~::J~:"'"'
Athonl Ohio 48101

r··

~

141110 LIMo Now Ol&lt;llr Por·
oon Ownod, C1.ia):IS8-I 31e
bolwtlln llm·2pm Mon·Frl
'
'
t884 t4x70 Htmpohlro, a
Bodroomo, a loth I R•
rnoaotod. Coli to 'vlow,
C140)381-7H7

~f.~. ~~~1.

Oft Salt on IIIJ)!)illn- SkaQGO Appltnott. ?e
Vlnt St., (74014441·73111

r

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

~~~~.;,;.~;_-:-

ADpllinoea: RtoondlllonoG
Waolltro Dryero, Atnott
Rotrlgr..O,. Up lb 110 Do~
GUIIIntltdl Wo Sill Now
Mtytlg f.pptloncot Fttncll
Oily Maylag 140-44s.1na
'
·
Bltck Konmott Eloottlc l'lat
Sorvlca Stove. CIHn,
WOtko Gttlt. Alllho oldtto.
UQO, 174014441·81184
:::~~~:::::;::_
__
Olnotto tablo &amp; ohollo; Hidea•bod: 4 po. boclroorn oulle,
etll 740·082·1182 aftor

~ouutt

~

INO.TIC

HP
ofl,-gtt lur~ tg.
onclolod- porllh wtdou•
bit doole, •ltndaotpod, ttt'd
314 10"·
approM,
4
· .
.e38

't

=

l'ltncllotyle brick houoo, a
bdrmt, 3 lull bolho a...r
nhlohod boNmont,
trplot, htrdwooa nr1•
f40-lft·o118
Ronoh 1tyto home 3 Bod
, _ , t ond 112 'booho

r••

z

No.,,._,..._,:!,·

I

1

HOWARDL.
ROBERT BISSEU .DIPOYIII
WRITESEL
Plltl
CONSTRUaJON
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Roofing- Home •NiwHornla
Equipment Pans
Maintenance- •Gfiregn
Factory Authorized
• Complttl
Case·IHPans
Gutters- Down Remodlllng
~alers
Spout:
1()(}()
St.
Rt. 7 So11tlt
Stop &amp; Compare
Coo/villt, OH 45723 ,.'
FREE
ESTIMATES
Fl'lf Esflrriltu
740-667-0363
740-992-1671
1?N
1~,,·1,,

1{. ll11pp 111, .

I&gt;"' I S'l
\liddlq•ntl, ( llti" 1:'7hH

Lo&lt;:al 843·5264
Supplement! Life Insurance;
and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Retirement,
&amp; 401 K Rollovers;
M~or Medical ·

,.,{!/,.

r

I

Ntw/Uood Homto lot lilt. Al)lrlmont Avollttblt Now.
110011\COO dOwn p~ymtnlt ' l'llvtrltnd Ploct, Ntw HI•
IYiiltbiO. C140)448421 I.
"'l:r
Wo hlvo 1pproxlm11tly tO dl&amp;od, 1 btdrcom
UHd homtl lor undtr mtnl, Utlllltto lnctudtd Clll
12,COO,otlll·800·131-3238 (304)112·,21 AJllnmonl
lor lnlo.
IVtlltblo JUNI t' aooa lor
.quo1Hiod oonlor/alublod
rAM
porocn.
1
roll SAUl
IIAUTI,UL
APAIIT•
MINTI AT IUDOIT llfH.
113
ltaulllul 011 AT JACKIDN llo

~ott ~orm,

110 West llllln st.
I'Gmer8g

992·0008

Tired of Mowing?
Not ASpring Chicken?
LIMITED OPENINGS

(740) 992·1536

' (740) 742·7037
LHve namt " No.

lli:\.t/il:t..tfn\.tfn\M:o.M:-.M:o.
lll.t.~

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

A
lll•'•i

IEx'CluM,rilPre~ealer ·~
Fat·toTJ Dirltt

p

Commercial &amp; Residential

(740) 99l-398?
Owner &amp; Operator, John Deon

[II!~ lj!!.~

fJH!J til Uj tli~' !

Replatement Windows
"
American Uvrlnxl r-----''----. M e the PAIN
Patio Rooms
out of PAINTHJGI

LIME•
STONE

AIPIIIQUI (purplt pilliOn)
organlo grown &amp; llc-o.
Vl~ll'o Btrf)' Pt!Oh on AI.
124 1. ot Syrtcuoo, 740· r IIDN448
HOMIGI10WN IT~AW•
I 111111111. Chorioa Mot&lt;ton
Ftnll, 658 Ctnlonory Ra.
• (740)448•844a

IHe Jt111 Qrlncl Chtrok..
Umltod. 4x4, Lllot now oon·
dillon, very cl..n. 84,COO
mlltt. CD, C.O-•· Powtr
Everythll'.\' ltlthol. te.eoo.
1
I304)173- 03
.
I He ChiVy ItO Zll3 4x•.
51 ,COO mllte, IUIO, vortoo
V8, PW, PL, IU ,COO.OO,
140·88a·8871

Delivered &amp;
Spread $15.00
pfr ton, 8to 10

._...,_
Drt-•v•

UNI1 PIIOIIB

Or IIIVI neme ·
and number

I \14 \I ,I I T i l l --.

Advertise

Hcatinq &amp; Cooling

In thl1 apace

24 .,_,, Emer11em:y Service
Licensed
• Insured
•
Thermal ZoneTM equipment
(10 yr.

parte &amp; labor warranty)

•

_,_.11041

Nood oorno Extro CooM

3 -oom In Middleport

a..n your
own SUtlnHIIoa.
We wiN
rovl&lt;ll
ctll ~,Dm '•Ancltraon Iller'
wittthollnoncl:lltlollr: aprn,(f40lH2·3341.
you -a. Ctlll0CIIy.1,... 3111 Houto wllll' Ul, Kltoft.
822.ot38
en 1 Iaiii Ntw lldlng Wino
Your SUIInoot To.,.j root. On
,
con- \"hg ·Mtroorvllle. C740)aee/01•
ATTENTION INVESTORII
IIIII Aontolo For lolo. foAitro
prtttntly ronlod. hrlouo ,,.
qulrtt0ni)'.C740)448·4101.

~

ao.:"

·

Brond

111110 gllllng out olhtncl?
Nood 1 lttt lOin?

Ng!f'T:'F~=1·8B8·17a·&amp;a a
4

now -

-

oler-•''"" 1800 h
oq "
1 I ICrH on qulo! R&lt;l.,
3
2
00
IIR, lr2 Qlrtge, ~ CIIDlntlry, a 1/'l btth, IQ, k w~ p~ntry. Porter 51" 1·

wllh lntltllod pond, crrcurar
Dnvtwty, St~tlo lylltm,
EIOOtrto Strvtolng, COnortll
I'IV
30lC40
Dodrill
AO poO
VInton
ohio110
Oft ltllt
Aouto teo. Approlnd
1141,COO, Aololng 1131,COO.
lorlouo lnqulrta Only,
=612·2141 or 1740)47.;

Ntw
Point
Ct'P"I' - . wtth mtttroot. t yr.
1:100/mo,
ltOUfltll ~ Old, lulll In or-r and
potU. (740)2S8-124t
Dttk. (304)117H12t
Fumlllltd 3 rcom• I both HOt point lltotrto l'longt,
Cltan, No Ptlt,
1
aopooh
roqul.-d, "-;;;;;;·;;;;
· ;;:~'"~.......,;;~;:::
(740)448-1118
lncltt:ltn&lt;iont Harbolltt Oft.
Fumlohocl Effloloney, All
Clall
Procluct Or
U~IIIIM Pol&lt;l. Shlr' IIIIth, _,...,unrty, (740)441• 1M2
po111
LmB &amp;
f1101mo. 818 '-'d Avt.
Jl!T
ACRFAGB
(?40)448·:1841
AERATION MOTOAI
Grtclout rrvrno. 1 tnd a
Ntw I Robulll In
· Call Ron !•ono, t •
3 torto 33475 llal Plun bodroom l!llrlmonla ot VII·
R&lt;l orr'Ohto 124
miiO ' IIgo Minor and Rlvorol&lt;lo 1100-NHUI.
WHt of Roull 7; Wlltt &amp; ,\plrtmonto
In Ml&lt;ld10f1Drt.
:-::==--:--:-,.-,.
7 1341
7
ltt)IIC ok--•· In 110 1100 ~rom 12 ..
· Coli 40· Lo~r booktto ro
' ' 882•5084 Equal HOutlng """
'
1 _, '
oxcol3tnt 58
building J'lo, OppofluhiUoo.
Nit
5-4882
Ct3?) Ge.OZ
Mont boot
nd hoo
Toklng
tomo. Ill.; t!.o • ro
2 ~oil, 314 ooro HOh, 31 Witt a ltdroom Town- lncl 11, ItO 10
LHI
1
Sllert, 82UNrConcllt10nRd. (?40)448•1400
I310/Mo, ?40-~le·OO:.' ' :;~3sao lnd·I7S. 1304)113-

Bedllnen •Nerf Bar

.• Tonneue Cover
• VentviiOI' • Bua

jSh~!ld &amp; Full Line

Other AecHIOrlea

'

'

I I

I

'

(1· 10 1 1 ) 1 1:'

4

',n;)~)

L

~

Appliclot~nofp~·'WJitf~~:3J '~:: ~:~~ ~~~::: 0~,T~:,: ~:Apll;.n:m~ '¥~
aprn,
I

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,

Sidewalks, Floors
21 ytll'l l!xptrltnol
Fl'ltiiU"*(1011 fl'le)

877·353·7022

10 YIAIIt

llt-

PAI!I! I!ITIMATI!

(304) 773·8550

HERBALIFE

~or

lndependen\
Dl1tributor

::'rod,

U..

Quallt1 Concrete Work

ALL TVI'll MAIONIIY
1111011, II.OGK I 11111M

Roferonolll:g·~ (:=..~2~~~ryer

I

BIR602171
Euerv Thursday
&amp; SUndou
Doors Open 4:10
farlyltlrds start
&amp;:3D
Progressive lop u~
TbUrsH!IS
Progressive
Coueroll on SUndlys

lLUIIIIY
or

1200

~·

Pomeroy Eagles

(740) 742-8015

I

(740)949 - 1521

l}j Il l ti l.••:

connECTion, uc

Service all Brands
Fla1nclna Available

~·~

TFN ·

YOUR COnCRETE

WOlfE

,, I I \ I ', I I II f,

~~
=-ttr:.~:
bo..,moo 110 (140)&lt;Kill

J&lt;J 1t IC•I y•_ul

' (740) 591·2173

· ln1urld,
Pllllllllmlttt
740oll3•:1111 or

'25 per month .

1111;

tona, llmllld

llte-Wori!, Pondl,

for

le'

area call for
dltaha. Call: ·

I

it
1/f:t..

&amp;l:o..tfn\~-·"'

money lllrough""' moll until low Golllpollo off Rocooon blo. Lolo oll'lold ,roniiQIII, Oppoflunll)',
you hoYt lrivttltgolod tho C~~. 173,1500.
Call Ono llllproVOd lulldlnQ lltt Crown Oily• t llldloom Htevy Oul'/ ODII&lt;I Dlk lunk

ollttlng.

~

New Homes &amp; Romodcllng
"Spoclulizing In Log Homos
~.!.IJ
~
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
~
fj[i1j Garages, Polo Buildings, Concrele · .
Roofs &amp; Siding ·

'
?Oil
~or lila: Lown Mowtl In~~~- lnd Woltt Pump Aolc
Junl0t.(740)2M-1102 '
, 1
'

lil.tlJ fi\.!.!J M!!l IU!J IWJ II!••.

tiJ~•I

tr, 111500. 111t3 en 'c';
Truok Bod, 11500. IH8 111

'

33795 HU.IIi RJ.
Polllmy, Obit
74~992-5232

l!fh.

I

8221

Self-Storage

LICIAIId &amp; lneured
Health Problema?
Want More Leleure Time?

Now Open
11 a.m.· 8 p.m.
Mond1y thru ' 111,00 ptr ton
8·10 tona
81turd1y
Clolld Sundly · llmllediNI

~~~;:. ~~~=- ~~~ ~':;.,lid, UOCUOO
1~n· 131500 (740)~~n Trootor,

r .,.

11-~~
High&amp; Dry

Dellv.ered
&amp; Spread

c

RtlrlgtriiOt, Uppllt Ina·
M!Sa!! I •NI!OUI
2nd
Avt.
.1400/mo,
MFJICHANDI!IE
1740)441o0184.
f.:~:::=:;;::....-:--:'::olea tot A••· t BPI, 4 Ton EIOOlrtc Hoot 'Pump,
128&amp;1mo. ~~ iiaee ...,_ Workt
Good.
1211.

740.742·3411

•

I

--~·-:-·

FREE ESTIMATES!

992·5479

7:00 AM • 8:00 P

~~~~d:ndu:~ :c,w~
~~·~· ~r::.~ily":..~~II 1740)448·3384 10 QUII~ (I:..=Jr~)llll•44131, e~40K~~S8-Ct218
,_ '
,.... obu~·nt oiOrogo •••••
" \Ifill untr Flnt·• ·~·

Cllll
·173-11034, 1111 lor
Ruoty,
Will
wUh houtM,
trolloro, ana clookl, Ctll
441 -4238 Ilk lor Ron Or
INVIMttllllf,

&amp;More

Hours

.XU~

a Btaroom, , 81th, Full
BtHmtnl, Lorge UnatllOh· Now Ooublo Wlao on t
od 2 011r gorogo, 1211&lt;1,.. Aero. tO mlnuloolrom hOI·
on Dr. C?40)44 l.Q40S
plllll. 4 bod/ a lith with
twlmmlno pool, Conolruo•
Rtr&lt;lh hOmo, • BR, 2 tlelh, lien oomplttt In 3 -110.

AuthorU:td Agtnt

Slzti S'x10'
to 1o•x30'

~~~".'t :'~:· 1 9oun~1,· rtfc!:::~::IJe

r

Sunset Home
Construction

Jeff Warner Ins.

wv 11031712

29870 llllhan Road
Racine, OH 45771

~

I·-·

\

ROIId • CR 30 • RICine,

BryanRHvea
New Ho~, Room Addltlona,
Garegea, Pole Bulldlnga, Root.,
Siding, Oeckl, Kltchena, Drywall

740.949·2217

1

11

;:1

aar:r.-

I

OftiY "" f«&lt;tl

.AU•EL
Cellular

S&lt;Nitll Oblo ond W.V.

Hill's
Self Storage

..__ _

4 bodroom hOuoolor t011t In
Roclno, good notghborllood,
o/o·hool pump, you fillY
tltotrlc &amp; rl, wt fill~ WI·
Itt, Hwtr
$100 :4::
:30:::·~-~--r.r month pluo
dopoo· :
1, (740)84~·1217
For Slit: Rooondlllonoo
woolloro, aryero tnd ..
oraforo, Thornpoono
•
10115 Clll)'ton 14•10 abr. a
MOBILE HOM&amp;'i
3407 Jtckoon ....
tul boths. Excollont Concll·
FOR Rf:Nr
. nuo, C304)075-1311.
:'in
0GOOd Ulod Applltnott, II•
2383 or (304)87HS78
18115 Norrl.o t4x71. 2 BA. a 100
onJilloWnod.htnd
G0uaran·
11
FUll Bath, ShOwtr, Lott or
"'
tto,
ryoro,
I085 Sky~~~ t~70, a bod· otblnato, CIA, Oook, Eltltl ::O'="'ot.~"'!t R ~1,:fot.'~loro,
room, vln,, o" ng, ohlngle NICII No Ptta Partially Fu~
••· ..air,
Coli Ktttnl ?40-385·
Vtno ''
0
'
P •
Y ::-;;:..;.;;..;.;::::-~-18111 14•&amp;0 Norrio lolonclor Schoola. (740)448·1082
Ktnmort Eltotrtc Range.
rnoblto home, o"r on octt 2 bodroolll moblto homt lor Clnn, Wortct Grttt. Lito
or loncl, In Point Ploaoont, 3 ttnt no polo 17401882, thon t
ola. 1100.
br,
a
both,
ctnlrlltlt,
18x8
saae
'
1740)448
.
Iron! potllh, axe boo~ poroh, .::;.;;;;__ _
. ---1Dxt2 mottl bull&lt;llng, Split 3 bldroom mobllo homt ~IOhon Ctrpot, a~ Clotk
tall lonoo. Moving oul or Clay Chopot 110111 "-It ~740ptl)4•~0l74a4,4Porttr, Ohio.
ollto. 1304)075-7429
R~ulrod HUD 1'~...,....ro
..~
..,.
I ·e11-t30·
·
•-· 182. Frtt Eotlmalto,
11 Eaoy
11
1887 t4x70 Mtnalon, HHI ~·
583)a58•87t8 or C 40)44t• flntnclng, 110 cloyo mo
Pump, Building, 38R, a fuM
Clloh. VIol/ Mllolor Card.
bllho.
Poyoff.
(740)245•
Drllll· l•llrtll oove tlot.
5481
.
~ Solid otk Trtotlt Ttblt with
Coun~ homtl, nklt lOll,
FOR Rf:Nr
aH lnv.. m
....
•ta), e ohalro,
~
•
•
•10011
on At 33 Clll140·
bolwttn t ana 2 boaroom lptrt· llghlo
lll!ln llko
wll now
mirror,oonaltlo.
bock n&amp;.
Pomtroy/Athtnl.
882·ate71or aallllo.
moniO, lumlohod tnd unlu~ 811500, C140)281·t27S .
nlohld, oocurll'/ dopotlt ,. Wttllnghouot &amp; R ,
&lt;lovommonl L.oan1 Avalla· QUirtll, no p11la, 740·fta. Frotl Fret Alrnoroa Ror:.
bfo, No Crodltl No Probloml 2218.
llOtl 175 tiOh Almon•
Now
Homoa
Only. t llldroom, l&lt;ltohon, lllllh, H01 'polnl Wllhot/Drylr
'
"
1740)448·30111.
Uvlng Room Nloo POllOI 811, t138. Whitt Mtytlg
Lito Modol uood texeo on ,.,.., 1740)MNDIS
~thor, sas. Othor ar;ott,
rontod lot. llle rnoclol omoll
..., ooch. Call tlltr ~.
OW will conoi&lt;IOr lroaa on t BR In RIO Grancla, t bloCk (740)44e·toee
tnylhlng ol tquol vtlut 101m COIItQt, UIINllto Paid.
C304)e78·3888
13711/mo. 1200 atpotll.
ANTlQvJ!s
10011
13
78
3
Lo· ••
•
~rcom 1740)888 e408
"'------·
•• mebllt
• hOMI
- 10001• 1 BR, Stovll RolrtgoraiOr.
Wlndoor
od In Mlcldlopon, Oh, In· Wtthtr/~1, Hook·Up, Buy or ooll. Rlvtrlne Anti•
oluaoo .
IP"IIt••tl, 128tlmo. I '""'l·t•t8,
quu, 1124 Eall Mlln on
s•t-oo 0 • 'N
..,,....
•
SA 124 E Porn~~
• •"""· · IY call 740·
8e
·'
' '~
882·5881 ook lor Shlron· a bodroom, a ttory aport·
I·Z82e. Ruot
tt,
tvenlng
ollor
S
740·882;
monl
lor
rant
In
SyroouH,
-:---,.--4141
aepo1H, 1330 por ;o
'
,1200
month ttnl, rtnt• lncluatt SUt'ISoltOIIbltl Oft lilt 'T"
Now 2002 3 brllblh. Only wlttr, oowtr 1 lttth, In Mlddlopon, Dolll, Qltt•

i

S\11--tet Stuff.............~....................... $3.99150 tbs
Sooll dty for bilms, pons, cqu. 4t niltfs
$10•.l0/bog
M&lt;lllon Sysoem Sa""' Pollet$ for stpticS and
wat~ softeners $4.

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I~1~

7'" ·... · .,.,......,.,.
Hou&lt;IIS
Cuotorn Bullclor 'laking ""
FOII.Ib'Nr
aaro lor Now Homoo to tle ~
•
bulft, 1:zao.aaoo oq ft. wo II· 1 • ·~
F
nance. Call (740)443410.
-""'""' orteloood
Homot From StH/Mo, 4~
Rtmcidolod Ranch Home. Down, 30 · YHtt 11 8 .5~
Thttt Bodroomo, Balh, f.PR . For Lllllngt, 800-318•a~ Kltohon ind Dinino 3323 Exo. t108.
Room, a Cor Gtrlllfl, . 2
otoroQIII Bulkllngo, Ruau&lt;od a BR, Gtlllpolla Artt.
Price. C740)4•e·8478
(7•0)a58·8102
MolltLE UAUL.., 13 BIR• Stolle, Rol., I~IR"~••·""' mont, Qortgt, &amp; gordtn,
~
., "" • SSSO. MOnth (304)071-4571

Momlftt

Fltt Eltlmatts

~rl=.cr=~ lpm,
:=:t~~~=.~
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~UILIIH.'f:1 ~~rwVI.:'&amp;'1 ::~: ~~Ti::~~m:~~~~·
=:a::~!'-"1: Grubb'l Plttno• Tuning.
3pm• t 1pm, 1I PM•
, ,_mtndl thlt I 00111 80 ltvOI lot In ntct
,.. lhouooncl. ~lrm II thop • movlel 0.11 740- l'ltplllre. Probltrno? lfood
0:.; 7om, Cll11740-lt2·1023. : =-~'):'~h:OJ: MIQhborhOOd. llx mlltt bt- ~~if: L~~,::di:".! 4441·21M. Equil Houalng ;~?
448 Clall
4825Tho Pllnc Dr.

ESC 101 Alohlond f.vtrl
Sullo ft08, Alhono,
41701. Appllcallon DNd•
lint: Frtcll)', Mty 24, 2002.
;!:.'!!,.AM ESC It 1n EQutl
_..,.,nunlly Employor/ProVidor.
Tnt ,_t.~na-Molga
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lduot·

ixpo~tMt, :!':;ttto~O..:!,~ ~~

tootl:'

a76·3733
w od 10
onl
do. WMkly
Clotntng or BI·Wttkly.
Htvo rofor01100111-.
(740)448-1 I37

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Locll Homo Htllth " now hiring lor lull·llmi AN,
Yltd lltt. it4e Jorry Strttt olio, OH •11031 .
'
Profor homo ho1lth -rf.
llturdoy 6·11·02. Moving
01100 but not - r y . Wt
hie. 8:001m• ~: OOpm
2!f"lot .~!~, 1n niTPomoroy,
hotr11 h oomplltlltvt wtgH,
..,.
coM~Work.Fuii/Ptn
•
tiHtr·
N 1t 1ntuttiiCt, triG 1
•lot
lrllnclt)l work llmoephort
: aorogo -i.i.IIIIJof/ , • Tlmt/FieMiblo Sohod. Ptr·
PttutlrqulttolFomllySO:
11 8 ltot ~or ltudtnlt. Will Trtln lor,
• 4. Lf,_, Alo Gttnclt.
Muiii·Hondloo
n1or C.ro, Inc, e88 Third
1 S.iory·
• C10tft1r1t1. Clllldf111t AdliR 1......74.JOB8
Toochlr
on Avo., Ollllpollt, OM or otncl
1
:
liz", flab)'' lltlflt: ,.,,
Hrlouo aboul
lrolnlng ' and
~
your ncl ,,."',:. SUOmH lttttr ol lnttrttt 10 on
appoilllmtnl • Clll
O.rogolllt lltu
Mlv rntnt -... 2
JoiW1 0. COIIWO, SUf)OIIn- 17401+41·13n Aloo hlrl
: ft.,, ~ Ooo-nii)'Croolc
. ..,_,
~~'"al;, R~~nt.:: P - C.ro Arcttt,
; lid., RICfucod l'rlooo. ll· You 01111 rnolll • Cftll~· Sullo 1101 Alhono OhtO ::'"';" -EOEry. Agtnoy
, dtoo ..fA, Mona XL, Tcdo Hell doy, knowing 11111 tho
lr n.
.
48701 . AaiPto.otlon ' dHd• ..-, lnlonl Clothing, Old wor10 you tro dol"'l riQhl line: Mly·2ol. 2002 Tho Malt lnd F_,. EOOOrll
' Qulltii1Q Ftomtt ond aupo ht11 In Gtllloollt, OH le AMESC fo ·ort Equol Oppor• IIICI Danoore Wanttd. 8tft.
• ptltt, Oionto, mfiO,
hotptna Arntrloan• ocrooa tuntty EmfiiOVII/~rovldll
ouo
lnqulrot
Or\"'
tho notion uphOld lho Con•
(?'")•••·
'''
~yiii.,OIIIIIy Ylfd hit. ltltullon,
URGENTLY
NEEDED· - -11ft.
-ood Dllvt torCH
plttml donorl
sao 10 MIDICAL lt~UNG
ttorn Domlnoo. l!llby ltull, II you WOUld like 10 rnokt I sao pllr - · :,m2 or 3
Clotlw, V•rlouo II- and "'".,_ willie rou work, houri wHkly. ·Ctll aro uto .Will Train, Cornputtr
: , '· lttlordly, Mly 1tlh, Dill
txt. Plooma S.rvlca, 740·582· aulrld. Grtollnoomtlll
2301.
5851.
1·.,.,·240·5181, Dtpt. Gill
,
• IIICimuctl mero,

• AJot.n. w.ns. s..ps •

Aroao~rro~,.,.r"&lt;l~lng ~.:::·
~~·...::~ ·=~· A=•· 1'lo.~..7r.~~' ~~8:,13do,;~ m:O~h. ~~~ ,(740)371-8111
::·. ~=~a~'=lt. ancl
F:!a URG PO BoM 500
~r· FrM Elllmll.. PtrtliiiV Remodtlld hOmo, Nlkkl740·385•717t.
2 IPI, 1 Ill lith. Stovll

Thlt aponlng It lor tn tlttf.
-·· ion e
.~,
noon !:7w.' · Xpllrtonoo
Tht Athtn•Mtl~ EdUOI• . =r· - ·
Itt I 70 bod
1
Ollloy. tf"'you
N-Cooralnolor. O.tiHo · plHMIPPiYinP"rtonll:
ottklrw: Mootor't DtQrM, HOLZER lENlOR CARl
SUporvltOrCtrtJIICIIllon,tncl
g::-:r"or~v
~,..., Pr•K or lpoolllla...
t
ClllrC.OrtltiCIIIIonwllltllt· M
ly duootlon or ""' Handl· piG)'
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01
e:ary:
r1tnot p - bmll ~ Holp wontld Cll~ng lor tho
ttr or ' llltllttl :Und
-.ty, Dlrtt GrouP Homo,

'=.r:t~~:::ind

lms &amp;

Ii

Sup~rlnlondonl,

Ra~

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IIOMFS

eo

aaddi~g&amp;

1Lost 27 lp.
in 32 days.
100%

natural/Guaranteed

1~

740..992·7038

,,

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�,.... a 1 • The Deity Sentlqet

flldlly, -

www.mydllly11 ttlt..a.com

AH.EYOOP

10. 2002

HI:A Croaaword Puaale
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future, Cl

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OponilllltM: • II

~rnest Henlingway
wrote in a letter to F.
· Scott Fitzgerald, "The
good pam of a book
may be only something a writer is lucky
enough to overh~ar
'. or it may be the
wreck of his whole ,.,
NAH U~
life -- and one is as
SAWEO·Ofl=
· good as the other."
RUNT~AlN'T
TMATBIGH
Many say that it is
better to be lucky
than good, but at the
bridge table and in
sporting arenas, . the
better one · plays, the
more favorable breaks
one seems to receive.
How would you
. rate six spades as a
:,~~.~P:;'L';"'A
cpntract on these
11 C';'£;-":II'I:':'::&amp;J~£;:
1;1":V7,£;:...,~·-::::i.:;o;,:;~i'"l · \j North-South
ro ~
, JP
I"JP, JPI'~'
hands?
~fSf~VEI&gt; FO~
•••
~ How would you plan
/
y./11-L
t4AVf
• the play after West
Vll&gt;eOTAPU
leads the diamond

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

11 """ dlr.
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BARNEY

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THE BORN LOSER

•

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P'"Mill.fF-~ 0\t-11('16

'""~o PROeLE.M.-

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tiiOWIDIII
··-·

•

• •

MAY10l

High: 80s, Low: 50s
Dlttall.. A2

Rio ceremony

today

qu;~~:e

spades is a
limit raise with 10-12.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
support points (highbyLulaCim~
card points plus shortCal abilly Clpl\er CtCtiiOIPIOO'ICIGii,.,.,. IN CtMIId 11om ctUO'I-111'age points) and four
people, ..... ond - ' · e.cn
tilt
or more trumps.
TodtY,CIUt:R~" S
:
South bids what he
thinks he can make.
'YDL'Y
INUL
I
ILINPIHL
Six SP.ades would be
XIGZ.,
PKJYYLI
ONHD
I
great tf dummy had
· three hearts, since deIIINPU,'
clarer's club lo1er
· could be discarded, As
IIIPU
ZNPDoiiYoiZ
oiZ
·it stands, though,
South needs to find
IILYYNPI . IIZOL
the spade king singleton (26 percent} or
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'When tytrylhlng 0011 rlghl, 1 mo- ,..
bile 11 a plecs of poetry that d.tnou with the joy of Ills. • the player with kingAlsxlftder Calder
·
·
doubleton of spades
holdin~ at most two
WOlD
1
clubs (36.5 percent).
lAM I
::~:t:~'
S~tl~lA-~t.~s·
This gives a combined _.;_.;__;......,.;; Hlto~ ~y CIAY R. 'OW.N
53 percent'cl!l\ll.ce, so
Reorrang• lettert cf th•
six spades is accept- 0 four ICromblsd words be,
l~w to form four slmplt words ..
. able.
,;
After winning with
CHORIE
the diamond ace,
2
South cashed the . II
spade ace, getting the
good news (no 3-0
GYV N I
break) and the bad
news (no singleton
king). He took . his
two heart trickt, led a
diamond to dummy' a·
king, ruffed the last
diamond, cashed the
club ace, and played a
club to dummy's
king. With the partial
elimination complete,
declarer gave West his
trump trick. And
South's luck was in:
West had to return a
red-colored card, perICIIAM-LITS ANSWERS
mitting declarer to
Cliche • Puffy - Tease • Jumble • FILMS
•.
ruff in the dummy
Famous comic's comment upon leaving the movie,, ·
and to discard his los·
theater." With today'a movles,if we took out all the bad
ing club.
. language, we'd go back to silent FILMS.'

-In

•

clphof-"" """"*·

RJO
GRANDE
Commencement exercises at
the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College are
Sunday at 2 p.m. on the college green.
.
Susan Tave-Zelman, SUPrrintendent of Ohio schools, is
the guest speaker.
In case of rain. exercises
will be moved to Lyne
Center.

Foundation
meeting

Monday

• SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. The Hambrick Heritage
Foundlitton will be ,;onQu&lt;;t~­
ing' l"lfle'!li'ng· on' MOnoay at
7:30 p.m. at the Hambrick
Church.
The group takes care of the
cemetery and church building
and invited all 1rustees and
the public to attend.

City announces

holiday doslnp
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Point Pleasant City
Hall, street, sewer, sanilation,
floodwBJI and water departments will be closed Tuesday,
May 14, for election day.
Residents whose garbage is
usually picked up on
Tuesday, should put it out on
Wednesday, May 15.

Food ..veaway
'dlunclay . .
KERR- A food.giveaway
Is set for Thursday, May 16 at
Living Water Church·, 839'
Kerr Road, starting at I0 a.m.
The giveaway is sponsored
by Ray of Hope. Plell.!le bring
l!Oxes.

•• •

·Index
• hdloal- ,~ ,....

.,

fl!f'n) ~~~neSoi! and &amp;llktlll
mlln!JilllllSoi! in New Hllven.
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. B1111mu S4id thttt he mt$
Recent PQyroll checks of invested SJ.S million in the
Highlanders Alloys LLC facility and he feels th11t
workers have beeri bounc- with 111 thin.l fwnlll:e firing
ins
and company owner Dr. uC on F 'da
all'
the
Boris BllDnai blames th'".. . p unl un profitable
y, m tilg one
·
cblem on the company's shouldn't be a problem.
"lkl, !~&amp;IIITnu
. 'su--'~-·•~--'- On April 16. 0&lt;:!¥. Bob
tN&lt;mi"""'
Wi81! wus in ·town for a ribing . and somehow they bon cuttin; ~o'elelllOny for
boUnced the checks," Bannw the plam and Bannai's part· .
said.
had an llmlllllt~· · R .,.
~
ment "We
with the
blink and 1i's ner ws et man s e on
the company's behtt f.
come to us by surprise,"
"Boris Bannai is the perBannai · then wenl on 10 son who invests. not in fncsay thut he is seeking u
·
· b ·
I:
· shorl-term loan from the tones. 001 m usmess, '""
government.
invests in people. and he's
"We're 1alklng 10 the gov- been doing so with hundred ·
emmenl about shon-lerm of fiUililics in South Afric11.
financing." Bannai said. . · in Poland. und be's dOing it
"There is no reason to '!'0"'1· ltxl11y, nlso, here in MilSon
I guarantee everything 18 County." Rcifmun said.
OK. We' re working to solve
"Way, way beyond all the
it and we have a full under- things that ·W'e due everystanding with employees."
body. from the governor and
One employee, wbo wished his otlice and lilt the people
loremuin anonymous. WIISII't uround who've helped 10
ISS understanding.
build this. I. would like to
"It's crap," he S4id. "They slop for n sec\lnd and suy
need 10 get their act together. thonk you tl}' one person. to
· I have bfils to puy just like he Boris for realizing this. but
(Bannai) does. I m not doing all this is impossible without
this work for nothing."
~ou people, Reifmun lidded.
"We will .~Y eve!'Y cent for 'This is not one mun 's
the cbec:ks, Bann111 ndded, . dream, this is not n one-mun
The company omploys operation, it's teamwork.''
140 workers and it's not . "We broughl $3.5 million
clear how many checks over nnd thut's whul we're
bounced. Highlanders is a working with," Bnnnui S4id.
privately owned limited "This plant cun generate
partnership and on affilinle enough money to be 11 sue·
of the Ubex partnership cess but we need shelter. We
group. The compan~ ow~ s don't-wont to starttl punic."
BB&amp;T otTiciuls wouldn't
· two manganese mmes m
Africa and plans to produce comment on the situu(ion.

Bv OM Hlllllllll

1lHt!IMESOM'IOM.VMG!Sl£R.COM

I' I I I

HAHAHAHA!

•1.25

Dt' la,M

.-

I I 1I I

PEANUTS

etdine

Mona I. Sorden. .87
Hazel Tavlor, 83
Sandra S. Burris, 55

Mr-:----;T:
...
'•,,

Of ALL. Ttlf
· tJAMfS .l
Mlf6fl&gt; vltlll-f
%. viA$ I 1'1

Siege at Fort
Rar.dolp:"., A7

Saturday, May 11 , 2002 '
become a benefactor through
You 'ould be extremely
your efforts. It pays to be
·fortunate in tho year ahoad
chivalrous.
with ·au of your arrangemenu.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -You may even poueu·the MiLady Luck, like the cavalry,
das touch that'll produce
mlaht make an appearan ce
benefits in materiAl ways.
just when you nred her. She
TAURUS (April 20-May
could be doubly fonunate for
20) -- If any light bulbs go off you if what you're involved in
in your head, be lllr&lt; to act
has something to do with
on them immediately •• this
your career.
'ould bo one of your better
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
days to conceive some bright
•• Information that you
ideas. Trying to pat(h up a
thought . was merely trivial
broken romance? The Astrocould prove to ·be very valu·
Graph Matchmaker can help
able for you.
you undersund what to do to
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
make tht relationship work.
- When other peoples'
Mail S2.75 to Matcltntaker, · changes play theruielves out~
c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
you could con1e to the reali·
1758, Murray Hill Station,
ution ihat you couldn't have
New York, NY 10156.
designed them better than if
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
you -had instigated them your-- Lucky you •• chances afe
self.
that you will derive some
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov.
benefits from a situation·
22) -· Listen to everyone's
where you may be simply an
thoughu and opinions, be·
onlooker innead of a panici·
cause th,ere is a gem hidden
among the chatter. You will
pator.
CANCER ijune 2t-July
t"ognlze it and know what
22) • An attempted auisun&lt;e
to do with it the moment you
for a trirnd could tum out in
hear it.
SAGITTARIUS ,{Nov. 23such a way that you ' ould also
\

Dec. 21) -- Don't be' afraid.to
team up with someone on a

proje.ct that has potential fi·
nancial rewards . Two braim

and four hands could double
your luck.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Romance could be
in the wind for your sign, so if
you're unattache~. get out
and socialize. Your chances of
finding a lover are beuer than •
usual.
AQUARIUS (Jan .. 20-Feb:
t9) - This is an ex,eUent day :
10 tackle that home project
you've been hoping to get to.
-1 _
Thintp s~ollld go lll1Qlllhly ··~ ,
you'll have it done in no time.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Your phone may be ringins off the hook with all your .
friends calling you to invite
you out. Get them all to·
gether if you can and paint
the town red. You'll have a
good time.
·ARIES (March 21-Aprill~)
•• This could be one of your
lucky days, so if you have
somethlna in the pot brewing.
try to bottle it up, especiAlly if
it has financial overtones.

calendars
Celebrations
Classifreds
Comies
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
'

Region
Sports
Weather

A8
C2,4

02·7
insert
Cl
A6
A4

A2
Bl-7
A2

o 2002 Ohio V•lltv Publlthln1 Co.

SBA help for
tornado victims . =~~~..St-;er:e.~~~
·
t•
appears Un I ey :~~:~~u~r:a.~:r ~~~·W:k!~
State of Ohio . ere a bit tat·
· tared. but still flyln&amp; hl&amp;h at

k. · I

storm. tMIIIIssla Russell)

.

Bv KIYIN Kau.Y

a

KKELLYOMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE -A disas·
ter declaratiol! involving
assistance from · the U.S.
Small
Business
Administration in the wake
of 1he Ma;,- 8 1omado that
struck Galha County apr.ears
unlikely because the cnteria
has not been met. .
That was the message
county lt:aders received
Fliday from Dale Shlpte;,-,
director of the Ohto
Emergency
Management
Agency, who also outlined
requirements for a disasler
deClaration by the governor.
Shipley said in a metno tD
Gallia EMA ~lor Mike
Null thitt the requuement' for
an SBA declaration - allow-.
ing. for low-interest loans to
rephlr dama¥e from natural
disasters - 1s a minimum of
PIIIHIIIIU.M

11me of need spurs torrent
of help for GaiDa stonn .·
Ne(~hbors

reach
out to neighbors

to change drastically
Bv BlltAN J. RnD
BREEDOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

BY K1111 D01'ION
. KDOTSONOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BIDWELL - When disaster hits a community steps
in to help their fellow neigh·
bors and friends in need.
That was the case seen
throughout Gallia County
Fridi!Y·
.
.
Just driving down Kerr
Road, County roads 75
(Adamsville)
and
41
(Denney), and Hemlock
Road south of Bidwell, you
would see the Red Cross
passing out meals and doing
family service, countr workers with .heavy equt~ment,
county pnsoners ptcklng up
debris, and plenty of family
members and their friends
giving a helping hand.
''The Red Cross has really
helped us out a lot," said
Robin Newman, whose
home was destroyed in the
twister.
"Every day they have
stopped by to brinjl us
breakfast, lunch and dmncr,
but it's so much more than
that,'' she added. ''They have
been here for us giving
moral support too. Today

Face of Middleport

'oN THI ICINI....;, The Red Cross uses Its Urban Relief

vehicle to deliver lunch, supplies and provide family service
to the Newman family, Pictured from left are Ollie BarryPaxton, Red cross volunteer, tomado victims Jason and
R'obln Newman·, and volunteer Mike Oavls, (Krls Ootson)
(Friday) they brought us
shovels, trash bags and cans,
brooms, water hoses baalcallv anything that could
help us.1'
'
''They said they will help
us ~et temporary power
too,' added her husband,
Jason.
And speaking of pitching
in - Jason works at the Bob
Evans Sausage Plant.

·

"The production room,
kill floor and night shift at
the Bob Evans Sausage
Plant where I work took up
money for us," said Jason.
"They're great."
"Yeah, and Wai-Mart said
they give us anything. we
needed as well as K-Mart,
Ohio Valley Bank gave $SO,
PI•HIIIIIIIp,M

MIDDLEPORT - The
landscape of downtown
Middleport will be changed
dramatically
\'lith · th~
planned demolition of the
landmark Mark V building at
the comer of North Second
Avenue and Mill Street, and
an adjacent building.
Mayor Sandy lunnarelli
said Friday the building,
which partially collapsed
under the weight of rain
water on Wednesday, will be
demolished soon - possibly
as early liS this week - along
with the building located
adjacent to it on Mill Street.
The Mark V, which dates to
the tum of the 20th centurr,
originally housed the Lewis &amp;.
eoe Dry &lt;Jood$ Co., and the
Coe's Opera House on the second floor.
For many years, it housed
the Mark V supermarket.
After years of neglect, the
building's roof collapsed,
and it was condemned a
year ago because it p(Jsed n
public safetr threat.
Jeffers E1\cavating of
Pome~ will perform the
demolition work. at village
expense,
according
to

St Anr,tsnl

.n.. Out with the Guys

Iunday, May 19 • 2:00 • 4:30 PM • HMC G I; I l!dt d 1&amp;CcMIIWIWitw &lt;Anllr
A .,.., .wnt for hoyt cnJ,., In our c:ommunily
Keynoll Specslcer: Grcsg White, Head Cooch
Mena Baslcetball at Marlhall Uniwrsily ·

lunnarelli, but owner Curl
Plulter w!U ultimutely be held
responsible for the ''Ost of
demolition and site reclllllllltion:
The buildin~ udjucent to
the Murk V wtll be demolished as a port of the project
because, Junnurelli suid, It
. wus deteriorating prior to
Wednesdn)"s coflnpse and
has been deemed dumuged
beyond repulr.
The collapse hus creuted
interruption of traffic on two
of Middleport's busiest
blocks, South Second und
Mill Street on 1he ''T." Traffic
is being detoured along Race
Street. Front Street and
South Third Avenue, creuting
a confusing maze for some
motorists and raking tral:lic
uway from sevcrul of the
busier re1ail shops.
"It's been a rcul mess," suid
Police Chief Bruce Swift,
"but traf11c will necessarily
be rerouted until the build·
ings cun be demolished and
the site can be cle1med up."
The area around the
building is closed to both
motorists und pedcstrinns.
"We understand it's un
inconvenience, but safety ·
mu st come first,'' Swift
said.

I'

MEDICAL

CENTE~

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•

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