<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7037" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7037?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T16:35:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17442">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/52eb280ed032344f4539e28792e1687f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c652edd8b42d6c616daf8829d4b02270</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23051">
                  <text>•

..

•

•

•

.

-.

•'
WWILhtj'l Mj II i .. wl.:om

ltJS Awl

.......

'

Jose canse~ calls it' quits, 81

NJ:A Crossword Puaal•

'

PKlLUP

ALDER

...

...-

• AJ •• t
•

J ,•

A~

• ' u.

-.
•

Qi4U

MllpCount(s

•'tn

•• tit

•At..l .. . t

.

W.O:IQ $

••

•n t

.....---~

...

Middleport •to
pursue pav1ng

\'dl ttMk: G.:il-'lo'bl

,.

--~
....
'tt\-'T

i6

........

•

....

""'

.......,. ....,.A

•

.FRANK &amp; EARNEST.

y/fltitiT ·''II · . I
GONT~OL

l -~ C.fNTE~

wttAT PO YOU 'A'-L A
/

IVC,fS'$FfJL OlfTf,)

c

'.4 6001&gt; .
fX·AMPLf
.
. ..

3
§~

li
~I

ii! ~~
&gt;'
~

,

l;::;:;::::;.:;;=====::.;==~!!!!!!!!!!!~!!:~:!~~~::~\i~~!~~v,~t!~S'~~S=-I~J~
BAKN t.:Y
LOWEEZVt T_,:..S1'E l~LSS'TEW
TeLI.. ME wHAT'S lwtiSSI~'

WHO CA~

~

~~~;::==-~

· ~ORN~ ~1'0 ee

RECIP&amp; U

KOW CN-1 YOU Te:U.? .

"'-C.Tll'o\C:&gt; 000 \'OOI&gt;o-'&lt; !

•~
It

I

•

This week's theme,
loosely, i~ the h~ndling of trumps.
When shoultl you
draw trum~? The answer is enigmatic, like
the smile on the face
of the Mona Lisa .
There is one key
factor, ·though, which
is highliglated in thit
deal. You are in fuur

\

Owners to pay

off bank loan
to village
BY BluN J. RID

spades. West cash~s
three dt•b tricks, then

exits with a diamond
to itumnty's king.
How would yuu continuc?
North's two~ notrump response (un. less you use the Jacoby Forcing Raise)
shows a balanced 1315 points with, in
principle, no five-card
suit. South, with a
singleton and a
known eight- or
.
nine-card fit, goes for
CELEBRITY CIPHER
game in the m:ijor.
by Lula Campoa
Cottbdty Clphtr cryptogromo ,,. .,_tad trom quototlono by lomouo
·Regular reader$ will
poqllt, poolond pttunt. Eoch '-""r In the cipher olondelor onolhtr.
know that I am
Today's Clue: U equals 8
strongly again&amp;!' lc.ad.. .x . DXDZ NHYXG U Z B 0 8
ing the kin'S from
both an ace-kmg and
TKDYKN
xoc
TNA UOAHSNK
a king-&lt;JLieell holding. ·
Uridge is hard enough
TNA POZT
II AI'
KA xvv
without introducing
N I Y.'
UVXPZ
ZCTXDCJ
unnetcssary ambiguity. And leading an .
AQ
XOC
IIHVIZ XGCDZTJ
unsupported ace is
usually a bad choice.
CHC:VZI' YAADZ
Uut you might like to
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Shl'l llka a dlliCIIt lawn .:.
know that some pairs ·
Crouad with 1 Buick.' - Jack NlehoiiiOn on JMIICa Lange
lead specifically the
queen .front. ll; suit
headt!d by the ace,
king and queen. This
is a sensible idea.
Roorronge lotti11 of lho
four tcromblod wordt b.·
Since you have no
more side:su.it losers, low ro form four tlmplt wo1d1.
draw trumps as
F L rP U T
&lt;tuickly as possible. 1--,lr,.l..;;lrTf:..,l;.....;l~l.......j
With eight spades · . . . . . .
missing the queen, ~~~:;:~;:~.....1
you should plan to fil NS 0 y
ness e . Howe vcr,
rs- niir-tl-i
1 :;!·~
should you finesse ~~-;;:::~·::;:~·
now or cash the ace rfil'$t?
p· w A M· 1
.
Professor to pilot, "In my pro1f the missing spades
5
8
fesal 0 n lh t 1 dl
d· ·
are splitting 3-2, you
.
'"'.,1 .
'C"aThan ng woul only
':··:;~::;~~;:·:., ~arn a . e pilot grinned back,
will be all right if East ,.
'In my profession It Isn't a graded
has the queen. But if
A F E D E C . course. You either •••• or ..... "
West has a singleton
Complete tho chucklt quottd
spade, cashing the ace
. . . . .
by filling In the mining wordt
works when it is the
you dovelap from lltP No. 3 below. '
&amp; PRINT NUMBERED
a
queen and loses when
it is a low card. Since
i~L~ET~T~ER~S51~NiS;O~U~AR::E:;s~~~;::::;:=:;~~:!:::::!:~
West is four tilnes as
UNSCRAMBLE
I ·
I.:'
likely to have a low
IIN$W!R
.· . .
. or . .
.
spade than the queen,
SCIIAM·LITJ ANSWIItS
you should finesse
Heroic· Vying· Awful- Matrl~ • WITH YOU
,
Immediately.
·
"Don't try to stop me." yelled the teen. "I want to go ·
When the finesse
where ~h.era·s ~xcltement and where 1 can make real . ,
wins, re-enter the
money! I wont try to stop you." said the dad "But can
dummy wi1h a heart,
I go WITH YOU?'
·
'
fineue again, draw
trumps, and claim.

~SM ...

~

, , , . . . ($'

'
Dtt1lls,
AS ·

Weather
High: 70s, Low: 40s
Dttllls, A1

sheets to taik

I

I

?VI ..,,............,;....-, .. - - •

Thelma Hoy Collins, 84
John Nelson 81
Fred Edward Smith, 77
Betty Ward, 60
James Milliron, 51 .

POMEROY Jared
Sheets, M.D., board-certified in internal medicine
and pediatrics with River
Valley
Medicine and
Pediatrics at Parkersburg,
WNa., will present a 30minute program on obesity
focusing on chlordane, on
WTAP Parkersburg Sunday
at 7 a.m.
Sheets graduated from
Meigs High School and the
Ohlo State University
College of Medicine and
M~igs County is one of his
pnmary serv1ce areas.

I

KNOW ~AMEN I CAN
MA\f VO\IIl SVPPE!t.

Deaths

on obesity

I

TI-IEu'S NO HURII.V,
t 6UE55, BUT LIT ME

.

0

I1---ri-TI

' ..

Reds slam Brewers, 11

I

s

1:

I I I ..

I. I? 18 1 1 0
FORI .

11

I

I

Chif. . :

~.~-------...;

OHIO
Pick 5: 6·8·0
Pick 4: 2·4-2•5
luckeye 5: 4·7-12·17·22

Picks n!Pt: B-7·2

Pick 4 nljht: 2·6-6-5

D•I!Y S: 7·6-3
Dllty 4: 4-5·8·1

C.sli 21: 5·9-11·12·19·22

In

pun~1it1

that mny luave

previously moe whh (oiluro

or
rejettiom, you'll tind it much
ea~lcr to achieve success in the

ym nhcnd. Monly it will be
due tu thr determination you
exhibit.
ThUll US (April 20-May
20) •• llg•ln, with a liulo of.
(ott, you mnd a 1100d chance
o( adding to your motorial resources. lc won't ju!t happen,
howevrr: you'll havo to pul
your nri~d t!) the 1&lt;11k. Ttyins
to patch up a broken i'O·
monee? The Astro-Graph
Matclunoker can help you Uti·
dcntand what t" do to make
tho rolacionthip. work, Mall
12.75 tu Matchmakor, c/o thil
ncw•p•J•cr, 1'.0. Dox 1758,
Murroy Hill Station, New
York, NY 10156.
GEMINI (May 21•Junc 20)
•• You mlsln h•vo a clser by
the call concnnlns an enter·
prise or venture you've con•
colvod, so take tho lime 10
plan accordingly so that lc
doem'c exhaust you.
CANCER (June 21-July ·
22) ·- The key to your succns
will be predicated upon your

1
1

soldesmeu. The more you tlO
ouc of your way for othon,
the mucc lheylj_l back you up.
. LEO ijuly 2\oAug. 22) -·
Allert younelf more socially,
be&lt;au1o once you're 0111 in
the flow .of things, you could
link up wilh sonacone who
mishc cur.,. ouc to be one of
your bll!llest boosten.
VIRGO (Aug. 23.-Sepl. 22)
•• The rewards you've bun
anticipating could be forth·
comins. Even If ouuide
evenu ettablilh rho tlmelable,
hans In 1here, becaute 11'11 be
worth 11.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0&lt;t, 23) •
- Skill• and knowledge you've
developtd will be wolloerved.
Your expenlse will find a
number of positive appllu·
lions where the reward• can
be hiaJ!.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2•·Nov.
22) - One o( your busine11
dtolinp millht take ofT and
kcop you quito busy holdins
up your end. The ramifications may be greoror than you ·
fint'lhoullht.
·
SAGll"rARlUS (Nov, 23Dec, 21) •• A dole frlrnd
rmy be risht chere when you

nud him/her the mote. the.
two of you will handle you(
incerescs. more efTectivoly than
you could have dono on your
own.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) •• Don'c be afraid r.o:
incroas• the number of ambi"
lious objective• you plan for,'
bocauso rhoy won't boa you
down. lnnead, th,y'll se..Ve to
enhance your rate of pro]p'Ctl. ' ,
AQUARIUS Uan. 20-Fcb. "
19) •• Should you be asked to
1.1ke on the c.ck of handling a
social event, know aolna in '
Ihat you 'II do a good job with
it, which is somtthl~.f.!h.~so;
who asked llready knew,
' PISC.ES (Feb. 20-March 20) '
-· Before moving on to • new
endeavor or enterprbe, tine

Gnish whal you'vo already get
started. You'll be more efficienl when tho decks are
cleared.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
•• Keep lookln~ for chat·poslcion or job you ve betn hopIng to flnd. It II out there
wallins for you. Today nuy
be the day it could happon.

Index
'
ll lldiiR
•12 ,....
calendar
Classifleds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
83-5
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
81-3
A2

C 200l 0/Jia Volley Publiohlnf Co.

.

Council authorized Mayor
Sandy lannarelli to enter into a
loan with Peoples Bank, NA. to
pay the cost of the demolition and
cleanup. A proposed agreement
between the village and the
Platters, who own the building,
requires the Platters to pay principal and interest, directly to the
bank; secured by u lien on the
property, which is already subject
to a mortgage by Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
Some member.s of council, ·
PIHH IH M1iltc V, A:S

.

READING To HAwAII AND BAcK
Students at Bradbury
Elementary
School
enjoyed
a
"Hawaiian/Mexican"
celebration last week
after reading 4,085
books
in
the
· Accelerated · Reacter
(AR) program.
At the beginning of .
the year, the student
body decided they
. would
"read"
to
Honolulu. Books were
assigned points worth
so many trlp miles and
the reading began.
The students reached
Hawaii in February,
d~oided to read to
Mexico and then back
to Bradbur)l., . • · '
Their prize for rellching their goal was to
have
an
AR
"Haw a Han/Mexican"
celebration for an entire
day. It was there tha~
the top reading class
and the top five readers'
of each class were
announced and present·
ed awards.
Achieving the most
points through reading
books were from the
left, Chris Kimes, fifth
grade, 214 points:
Jennifer Fife, fifth
g_rade, 234 points; and
TYler Andrews, fourth
grade, 211 points.
(Tony M. Leach)

grant funds·
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT - The Village of Middleport
will pursue Community Development Bluck Grunt
formula funding for street paving projects. snid
Mayor Sundy lannarelli.
lnnnarelli received authorization from Village
Council to pursue an application for tlnancing for
the puving of North F1fth Avenue, und Fisher,
Olive, Maple, Hendley, Russell. Fuirview. Purk.
Page and Rutland streets.
The ~DBG formula pro~r~m is udminl~lered by
the ,Metgs County commiSSioners lind lunds are
available to Meigs County subdivisions for paving
projects, sewer and water projects, th.e purchuse of
emergency equipment and other infrustructure.
The village may apply for up to $35.000 through
the grunt program und gram awards wi II be
announced next month. Additionul funds will be
sought through the State Capitul Improvement
Program (Issue 2). If approved, additionul streets
will be included in summer puving plans, lunnurelli said.
..
lannarelli urged dog owners to keep their animals
leashed or penned in accordance with village ordi·
nances. A number of dog bites have been reponed
in the village, mostly from walkers in the village's
residential areas, hinnarelli said, several from
smnller pets. Citations will be issued for those who
do riot abide by the ordinances, lannurelli said.
Resident Mary Wise encouraged village officials
and residents to promote the community in a posi·
live way. especially toward members ol the
Cheshire community who may be interested in purchusi ng real estate.
She also urged council to consider "stricter" ordinances in order to ensure a sufc and attractive liV·
ing environment, ancl enforcement of those now i1i
place.
·
Councilman Bob Robinson said the ordinance
committee is now con~idering several ordinunces
to address concerns such us.Wise's, including revi·
sions to the villu41e's zoning regulations.
Council authorrzed an application for grunt fund·
ing through the Governor's Off'i~c of Appulachia
for $8,500. The funds, if approved, will be used to
proceed with design plans for the ~onvcrsion of
Middleport Elementary School illlo a municipal
building and holding fucility -type jail.
·
Council approved payment ol bills in the amount
of$24,222.52, with Mayor Sandy Jannarclli voting
"yes'' to break a tie vote. ( \ ILmcilmcn Stephen
Houchins, Roger Manley anil Robert Pooler voted
against the payment of the bi lis. following a discussion about bills for work clothing for street and
. other village workers.
·
Council also approved the mayor's report of fines
and fees collected in the amount of $4, 166.79.
· Council's next meetin~ will be held May 28 due
to the Memorial Day hohday. Present were Cuuncil
members Linda Haley, Stephen Houchins, Roger
Manley, Robert Pooler, Robert Rohinson and
Kathy Scott, and Clerk Susie French.

Mansfield is Eastem valedictorian, Brannon salutatorian .
62 to graduate

Sunday ·.
BY llltwl J. Ibm

W.VA.

•
Tuosdny, May 14, 2002

BREEDIPMYI».ILYSENTlNEl.COM
MIDDLEPORT- "This is the
only thing we can do."
Middleport Solicitor Linda
Warner met with Middleport
Viii~ Council during its regular
meeting Monday evening to dis. cuss an agreement between the

vill~e and Carl and Kny Plotter,
holding the Platters responsible
for a $48,000 bank loan for the
demolition of the Mark V build·
ing.
·
The loan will also include the
cost of liability insurance.
The two-story ·19th-century
building, which the village condemned a year ago, collapsed lust
week, leaving the village with a
safety problem, confusing traffic
detours and the ultimate responsibility for demolishing the remainder of the building, and another
adjacent to it.
·

SREEDOMYD-'ILYSENTINEL.COM
TUPPERS PLAINS
Sara
Mansfield and Bradley Brannon .will
address their classmates as valedictori·
an and salutatorian at Eastern High
School's commencement exercises
Sunday.
. Eastern High School Principal ~ck
Edwards announced Mansfield and
Brannon as the two top students of the
Class of 2002.
John Rice, president of the Eastern
Local Board of Education, will confer
diplomas to 62 seniors during the com·
mcncement
to be held in the
hi&amp;h school gymansium at 2 p.m.
Mansfield. is the daughter of Dr,
Wtlma ManBfseld of Pomeroy. She has
been an active scholar athlete. She
played varsity basketball and softball,
and was on the Tri· Valley Conference

prosram.

Second Team,
All-District
First Team and
All-Academie
TVC.
She has been
honored as a
Re g i o na I
Scholar, having received
the
Holzer
Science Award
and the Meigs
C011nty Academic Award.
Mansfield has also been active in the
marching and concert bands, and participate&lt;f in District 17 Honor Band. ·
She was a delegate to Buckeye Girls'
State, and recently was honored in
WSAZ-TV's Best of the Class program. She has been a member of
Student Council, served as National
Honor Sociel)' president, junior and
senior class v1ce president. and sophomore class ~sident.
She attends Sacred Heart Catholic
I

.........

Church, und Theresa Sharlene Baker, Jessica Lynn
plans to at· Bartels, Jessica Marie Bartimus,
tend
Ohio .Bnndr. Nicole Bentz, Tamara Diane
University as a Bisset , Nick Roscoe Blackburn Jr. , - ·
pre-law stu- Bradley Dean Brannon, Holly Nicole
dent.
Broderick, Jennifer Lee Buckley,
B~annon, son Tricia Lynn Congo; Darlene Joye
of Paul and Joy Connolly, Jeremy Michael Connolly,
Brannon,
is Tina Marie DeLaCruz, Jonathan Davtd
also an accom- Duffy. Erin Danielle Duvall-Gerard,
plished· athlete, Kayla Marie Gibbs, Randall J. Gibbs;
havi.ng played
Jennifer Dawn Goeglein, Ashley
loii!L:ivarsny basket· Alexis . Hager, Timothy Ryan
Bridle)' Bramon
ball, varsity Hawthorne, Tiffany Irene Hensley.
·
baseball and . Jacob Paul Holman. Ben Alan Holler,
varsity golf. He has received the All· Rachael Renee Hupp, Garrett Clayton
Acade~mc and A!11YC a~ards.
Kart'. Whitney Layne Karr, Tiffany Jo
H~ IS also vtce .pressdent of the Kidder. Holly Renee Landes, Alissa
Nat1on~l Honor Soctety, ~nd has bee~ Rose Larkins, Christopher Allen
recogmzed as a ~eg1onal Ment Lyons, Sara Ann Mansfield, Kamberly
Scholaf:. He ha~ rece1ved the State of Dawn Marcinko·
.
Ohio's j:Old and silver certificates for · Mary LeAnn~ Damian Marcinko,
academic achievement.
. Joshua Adam Marcum, Amanda
He attends St. Ambrose .Cathohc Nicole McKnight. Jawn Christopher
Church. He plans to study b1ology at Miller, Evan Matthew Needs, Ryan
Manetta College.
Patrick Nelson, Anthony J. Nutter,
Members of the graduating class are:
,..... - Eutem, AJ

We ell

May 12·18 is National Nursing Home Week.
Holzer Medical Center recognizes our
long-term care partners during their special week:

HGher Ienior Care
V.taran1 Meneorlal •ltletl N•nl.. C.at.r
•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer.org

�..

. . .. ..

..

,.

~e Daily Sentinel

.

2012

Businesses may be hit hard as state tries to balance budget

Ohio waather

r: *uh,.lllf11

COLUMBUS (AP) - With lime nm- liondnli discount proanm u PMt of the
~outiO~thestale'sSUbillioo ~ deficit p11n, said "Sen. Jay
bUdfel deficit. laWINikers were prepllling Hotttnaer of New.t. the No. 3 Senate
a pl111 lhlll could include several Jlddi. Republlc:an llld a Finance Committee
lionll taxes.
member.
Smokers llld businesses could be the .~ving that pro&amp;rll1l c:ould help
hlldesl hit as Senate Republicans debate s
the plan's pes•age ·in lhe Ohio
the plan to clo5c lhe hole, caused by the ouse, whii:h app:oved the prescription
recession and weak tax returns.
dru&amp; discount in June. The Senate has
The plu includes tripling Ohio's tax on refused 10 pass it so far, contemed about
eig~rtes, dclayi~ business tax breaks the cost to Pharmacists.
promised by Presulent Bush's federal
Further di$CUSSion of the budaet was
stimulus= lllld implementing a ex.pected Tuesday, with votes by the
series of
taxes on businesses.
Senate FiDIDCe Committee llld then the
Senate Republicus ~ also consider- fuU Senate both expected Wednesday.
ing a version of Gov. Bob Taft's prescrip- "At this point we have not removed

•

l •·ul41'm' l •

0

0

lives waited along the riverbank for any sign he might still be
alive Tuesday.
·
·
Trizza, 19, and Chad Schreibman; 18, both of Lyndhurst,
were rafting down the Chagrin about 4: 15 p.m. Sunday when
·their raft overturned at the small dam. The force of the rain·
swollen river sucked them under at the bottom of the dam, fire
officials said.
Schreibman's body was found about an hour later about four
miles downstream at Borac's Landin~ in Eastlake. He was pro·
nounced dead at Lake West Hospitalm Willoughby.

w.""

Sunny, warmer. on Wednesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunny skies and warmer
temperatures are predicted
for fhe area on Wednesday.
An approaching high pressure system will clear out the
clouds tonight, the National
Weather
Service
said.
Overnight temperatures likely will dip into the 40s.
On Wednesday, the mercury will reach the upper 60s
or low 70s, forecasters said.
Storm clouds building over
the Northern Plains will
reac h the region b1y .Iate
Thursday or early Friday,
bringing more rain and cooler temperatures, the NWS
·
'said.
Sunset tonight will be at
8:39, and sunrise on
Wednesday is at 6:16a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s. West

winds around 10 mph.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny
and warme:r. Highs in the mid
70s. Southwest winds around
10 mph.
Wednesday night .. .Mostly
clear. Lows m the lower 50s.
Extended forecast: ·
Thursday...Mostly sunny.
Highs in tl\e lower BOs.
Thursday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid SOs.
Friday ... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
mid 70s.
·
·
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers until mid·
night. Lows in the mid SOs
"' h' h i h
anu . IS s n I e 1ower 70s.
Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the mid SOs and
highs in the lower 70s.
Monday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s and
highs in the mid 70s.

I

One rafter still mlssln1
WILlOUGHBY (AP) - An empty raft churning in the
Chagrin River's froth beneath the Daniels Park dam was a
grim reminder of missing rafter Charlie Trizza.
Huddled beneath drenched blankets and makeshift raincoats
fashioned from garbage bags, about SO of his friends and rela·

IIIYthiJII from the table," flottin&amp;er said.
'"nne nWnben continue 10 ao south on

us."
While the official budget deflcit Sllllds

billion, M's budaet office has
said the acrual fiaure c;oukl be worse at
the conclusion ofthe fiscal yell' on June

at $1.2

30th.

Last week, the nonpattlsan Legislative
Service Commission said the two-year
deficit had worsened. to .SI.7 billion.
If lawmakers and 1Ift, a Republican,
approve a plan by June I, lncrolslng the
C1811eltC tax to 74 cents could raise about
$26 million this year and about $400 mil·
lion nex.t fiscal year.

Joe Concauo, Canton safetydirector, said the city must cut
$1.75 million from this year's bud1et and another $4 million
by late next year.
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
tint Mega Millions muldstate
Iotter)' dt'awing involving Ohio
is on for Friday.
A judge on Monday dertied a
request by church groups 10
defay the start of Iicht sales.
Tickets go on sale Wednesday
for the Friday drawing.
Church groups and anti-gambling activists have sued the
state over the state's decision to
join the multistale game. The
lawsuit IIIJIIel that the Ohio
ConatiMion pennits only a lottery run exclusively by Ohio
wiih no involvement by other
states.
. The groups had asked Judge
: Daniel Hogan of Franklin
• County Common Pleas Court
:_ to delay theJoltay until.the.ttiat
: on the lOttery's constitutionality
· was complete. Hogan is presid·
ing over ihe bench trial.
A final ruling is not expected
• for ieVeral weeks.
•

Gov. Bob Tlft and state lawmakers approved Ohio's partie·
!Dillion lri a muldatate game last
Oecember 10 help patCh a Sl.S
billion deficit. The state hopes
to ralse about $41 million a year
from muldstate lottery sales.
Lottery opponents, who say
state lotteties make ~ off
the !'001'· argue that addina i
mulastate game makes a bad
siluation wmse.
But supporte11 say the new
same is needed to make Ohio's
10t1cry profita more stable and
believe participation in the mul·
dstate game Will bring .home
some Of the $200 million 10
$2SO million Ohioans apen
yearly on out-of-siate loltaies.
Other states taking Part in the
Mega Million1 game are
Georgia, Illinois, Maryland,
Musilchuseus, Michigan, New
Jersey, New Yorlc and VJrginia
in the Big Oame.
Drawings in the SI game are

..litiS MllllnMI

thelma Hoy COllins ·

'

CANTON (AP) - Inky would not 80 quietly.
·
The 200-pound, potbellied pig resisted arrest and raced .
about in a 1\ouse even after bemg drugged with animal tranguil!zer, said Ron . Shcaks of the Stark County Humane
SOCiety.
The pig, three dogs and two cats were eventually removed .
Friday from Jud~ Funkhouser's house because of city code
· MENTOR (AP) - Police are looking for an Jl!SOnist who and health violauons, said Mark Adams, of the Canton City
caused $500,000 m damage MayS to 11 group of bndal and for· Health Department. One dog was euthanized.
.
. .
mul occasion stores.
Ms. Funkhouser must clean her house to avo1d cnmmnl
Traces of gasoline were found.
·
· charses.
Mentor Fire Chief Richard Harvey said, "We know the fire
was intentional, but .we're not going to speculate ,as to who
might have set it or why they did."
The fire at the Bridal Center WJIS first reponed at 10:01 p.m.
h s da b
b
h all d ·
k
d CINCINNATI (AP) - A line of playing cnrds based on
t at un Y Y a passer· y, w 0 c e JUSt OS 11 smo e an patriotic themes Is beins pitched to the U.S. Postal Service for
motion alarm was sounding inside the butlding.
sate in post offices.
Graphic designer Bev Kirk of New Richmond and photog- ·
rapher Kim D.M. Simmons of Sharonville began work on the
project in early 200 I to honor war veterans.
AKRON (AP~ - Felecia Michele Jones was described as _"Then Sept.! I happened, and we refocused it a bit," Kirk
the light of her amity's life. She died accidentally as her fam· said. "This IS somethtng else ... with different meanings."
ily attended a revival service at Chapel of Faith.
·
Face cards incorporate a selection of patriotic and war0 M th • D Ro M "
i
1 bl
th them~d stam_ps instead of .traditional images of kings, queens
n o er s ay, sa c vay was nconso a e over e
and J&amp;Cks. Shtteen images celebrate flags and government
death of her daughter Friday night.
·
Felecia, 18, had misplaced her house keys. She died while buildings, women in the military, the Statue of Liberty, veterattempting to climb through a window in the rear of her fami• ans of specific wars, veterans' organizations and memorials.
.
.
.
ly's home, said family friend nfflilly McKnight.
' .
She said Felecia had arrived home from her rcart-time job at
Hand-Craft Cleaners and had stacked several o d paint cans on
top of a wooden bench, then attempted to climb lnto an open DAYTON (AP) .... A man who shot a police officer two
wmdow.
·
years ago, leaving her paralyzed, has asked for a new trial.
Raham TwittY d~d not aet a fair trial in the shooting of
Officer Mary Beall because of the emotion shown to Beall's
testimony by MontJ!Oril~ County Common Pleas Judge
CA:NTON (AP) -The Rev. Ron Klingler likes to see police Barbara P. Oorman, Twitty s attorney argued Monday.
officers on bikes near his St. Iohn the Baptist Catholic Cllurch.
Dayton attorney Alan D. Gabel told the Ohio 2nd District
They often spend time with adults who eat lunch it the Court of Appeals there was no evidence to su~port two felo.
church on Thursdays.
nious assault conviction!l and noted that the tnal was packed
"They were always very visible," Klingler said.
with uniformed police oftlcers.
·
However, in the next few weeks, those six officers will trade Assistant ·Montgomery County Prosecutor Virainia M.
in their bikes for patrol cruisers due a scaled back community- Cooper araued that Twitty's trial was fair, and that testimony
pollcing program.
supported the charges and convictions.
.
-

Pollee hunt for anonlst

Clrds have patriotic themes

DIUa••-r
......... fo Und dIId

Men seeks new trial·

bl

canton cuts ke patrol

VINCENT - James Milliron, 51, Vinton, died Monday,
May 13, 2002 at Marietta Memorial Hospital.
Amngements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home.

MlDDLEPORr - Thelma Hoy Collins, 84, of Middleport, died
Sunday, May 12, 2002, in Plelsant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, West Virginia.
• She was born september 10. 1917, lnCwbon, West Virginia, the
dnURhter of the late Jack and VlrJtinia Scott Hoy.
·
. She was a former clerk at Ben Frantclln and ~ch's Dime Store.
· MIDDLEPORT - John M. Nelson, 81, Middleport, died She was an Avon represen111tive for several years.
· Saturday, May II, 2002, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A member of the Meigs County Senior Qrizen Center, she wos
He was born on July 22, 1920, son of the late Hurley and a member of Evangeline Chuprer of the Order of Eastern Star for
. Bliubeth Davis Nelson. He was a farmer and attended Salem ITIORl than SO years. She was aiSQ a member of the Ladies Aux.iliury
· : Center United Methodist Church.
of Feeney-Bennett Postl28 of the American Legion in Middleport
Surviving are a brother, Ernest W. ·Nelson of St. Cloud, Fla.,
She is survived by her husband, Ruben Collins of Middleport; a
and several nieces 1111d nephews.
si~ter, Libby Tultoh of Middleport; nnd a nephew, Stephen (PhyiUs)
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday In Ewing Funeral Otler of Unionville, Tennessee.
.
POIITLAND - Betty Louise Dailey WIIJ'd, 60, of Portland, died
Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev. William K. Marshall officint·
In addition to he'r parents, she was preceded in death by two sis· on Saturday, May II, 2002, ai her re.~idence.
ing. Burial will be in Nelsop Cemetery. Friends may call at the ters, ·Josephine and Mwie Hoy; a brother, Clyde Hoy; and a
She wus born September 9, 1941. in Portland, daughter of Icy
funeral home from 6-8 tolitght..
nephew, R.ichard "Rick"-Oiler Jr.
Congo Dailey of Portland, and the late.James Dailey.
She wos a homemaker and enjoyed gardening. She wos a mem- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · Services will be 11 a.m. on Thursda)', May 16, 2002, in Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport, with AI Hartson officiating. Burial ber of the Failh Full Gospel Church and choir. ·
Surviving, in addition to her Jl'to!her, are her husband of 41 years,
legal options, including fore· will be in Riverview Cemetery in Middleport. Friends may call at
the
funerul
home
on.
Wedn~y,
May
I
5,
2002,
from
S·8
p.m.
Jwn_es ''Gene:· wan,~ of Portland; two daughters, Kim (Rodney)
closure.
Eastern
Star
Serv1ces
wdl
be
conducted
in
the
funeml
horne
at
Wlute mtd Dtann (J1m) Davis. bo!h of Long Bottom; 11 son, Troy
[annarelli said demolition
7:30p.m.
Wednesday,
May
IS,
2002.
Ward of Portland; II grandchildren, Jamie,l11fany, Matthew and
work is expected to begin
ftomPipA1
Heather White, Becky, Garrison and Brittany Davis, and Adam,
. Thursday, and to be completed
Bntd, Cole and Dominick Ward; two great-grandsons, Zachary and
·
including Stephen Houchins early next week. .
Dylan Crealh.
lannarelli said the closing of
and Linila Haley, who serve
RAClNE - Fred Edward Smith, 77, of Racine, died Monday,
Also surviving are ·three sisters, Bwbua Coimolly and Patty
' on the finance committee as Nonh Second Avenue, Mill May 13, 2002.•.ot his residence, following an extended illness.
(Melvin)
Lawrence, both of Portland, and Maxine (Fred) Price of
· · chairman and member, res~· Street, and an alley leadin~ to
He
wos
born
June
7,
1924,
in
Suilllvan,
Indiana,
the
son
of
the
·Belpre;
a
brother, Melvin (Judee) Dailey of Long Bottom; a sister· · lively, discussed reservations the Peoples Bank dn ve· lute James Wiilillltl Smith and Myrtle Louise Sullivun Smith.
in-law,
Bonnie
Dailey of Pomeroy; several nieces and nephews;
about the loan and the agree· through facility, were neces· · He wM n U.S. Navy veteran ofWorld War ll. and was.a mem· and u very spttial aunt. Tessie Wells of Symcuse. ·
sury in order to ensure public
ment with the Platters.
ber of Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of the American Legion in
Besides her father, she was preceded in dea!h by her grandpar·
Warner · said the village safety, for both motorists and Middleport.
·
ents,
Ofa and Ester Dailey, and Dudley and Sara Congo; two broth·
would be ossured repayment pedestrians.
He
was
a
Central
Commiteeman,
a
farmer,
and
wos
retired
from·
J111t1es Jr. and Johnnie Dailey; two grandsons, J111t1eson Friend
of the loan before any clear Because of the . detours Phillip Sporn Plant. He wos a member of Racine United Methodist ers,
and
Jerod Davis; and two brolhers·in·law, Cliff Connolly and
tltle could be transferred in the along Race, Front arid Nonh Church.
·
·
·
.
Lawrence
Olusencwnp. ·
· ·
event tha1 the Platters would Fifth Avenue, a number of
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,
Ruth
Ann
Meadows
Smith
of
Racine;
Services
were
held
on
Thesday,
May
14,
2002
at
2
p.m.
at
Faith
· sell the property prior to the "fender benders" and prob· a son, J111t1es H. Smith of Rucine; u stepdaughter, Betty Wagner of Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom, with the Rev. Steve Reed
lems with tractor-trailers try·
· loan being repaid m full.
The Plains; a stepson and fiuncee, Donald C. Shaffer nnd Heather officiating. Burial will follow ut Browning Cemetery in
"It looks to me like we're ing to maneuver along the sec· Woods of ~acine; l,!tnndchildren, Jamie C. Smi!h of Racine, Joshua Portiand.Visitntion was held at !he church on Tuesday, May 14,
~oi ng to pay to tear this build· ondary streets have been A. Smith of Rucme, Ronald S. Wagner and fiuncee, Tabitha 2002, from 10 am. to 2 p.m.
'
mg. Clown and (Platters) will investlguted.
Stevens
of
Marietta,
Jennifer
(Rowe)
and
Tom
Cummins
of
.
Arrangements
are
under
tl1e
direction
of
Roush
Funeral Home in
The block is closed to dri- Racine, Donald W. Shaffer and fiancee, nffany Lonus of Racine, Ravenswood, West Vtrglnia.
pay the loan, but what assur·
ance will the village have that' vers and pedestrians, and is
the loan will be pafd, and what being closely patrolled by
steps will be available to us in police, lannarelli said.
V building on · the corner of
lannarelli said the Meigs
the event the loan is not paid,"
North Second Avenue and Mill
County
Highway
Department
Houchins said.
Street, it has become necessary
Warner explained that under has provided barricades und
POMEROY - Units of the
the terms of the proposed signage, " and , that Office Meigs Emergency Service will benefit the aiqxlrt.
Middleport Church of the to close streets in the ma,
Service
and
Supply
donated
agreement; the viiln~e would
answered four calls for JllisisNazarene will hold a gospel according to Police ChiefBruce
assume a position smular to additional signs marking off tance on Monday. Units
contest on May 19 at 6:30 p.m. Swift. The closing applies to all
that of a lender, with several the area.
responded JIS follows :
The Pine Ridge Boys will sing. vehicular and pedestrian l!'affic
until demolition is completed.
CENTRAL·DISPATCH
POMEROY Meigs Pastor Alan Midcnp invites the
Demolition is expected to be
8:42 u.m., Mulberry Avenue, County vendors who sell ciga· public. Refreshments will be
completed
sometime next
Nicole Rucker, Patricia Jean Edith B111ton, Pleosant Valley retres have been notified that served.
week, Swift said.
Shields, Rachael Dyunn HOSj)ital;
cigarette licenses are due for
Traffic routes in the alfected .
9:56
a.m
.,
.
Rocksprings
renewal for the 2002-03 year,
Smith, Tiffany Ann Spencer,
area
are marked with signs. .
Rehabilitation Center, Ethel according to Auditor Nancy
Michael Aaron Taylor, Stacie Rider,
from PllpA1
"We
realize .that the situation
O'Bieness Memorial Parker Cwnpbell.
Marie Watson, · Billie . Jo Hospital;
iA a large incotM:nience to the
Pursuant to Ohio Revised
Bradley
Ryan
Parker, Welsh, James A. Westjohn,
4:38 p.m., Hobart Street, Code Secdon 5743.15, those · POMEROY - The reRU]ar- public and to area bwineues but
the wety of the ~ubllc is a pri·
Nicholas Gregory Perrine, Thomasina White, Jonathan Curtis RfftJ.e.J..PVH.
engaging in the wholesale or ly ~cheduled meeting oi .the ority:•
Swif! said. We are asKing
Andrew
Will,
Derik
T
.
. Nancy Ann Pickens, Elaine
ruMER.OY
retail ,swe of clg~s must Metgs Local Boord ofEducai:!On that all tractor crailers avoid the
10:07 a.m., Pinetree Drive, have a license to do so. .todav has been chal)ged to May
, Elizabeth Putman, Jimmie Winebrenner, Francis Howard
area due to accessibility prob.
Ada
Congrove, treated.
Lee Putman Ill;
Wood Jr. Amanda Grace
LiceJUes may be ~based by 21, 1 p.m. in .the board office.
lenl5.
"
·.
Jeremy Lee Reed, Janet Yeager, Charles Ryan Young,
Mial- mail with the application which
Lelah Ridenour, Danielle Corey Reuben Young.
-·-••
has been mallei! to current ven·
MIDDLEPORT The don, or through Campbell's
office.
.'
nationally-known Haire Family
Cigarette licenses muse be
'
from Kenrucky will be singlns purchased before May 28.
POMEROY - Athens·
SYRACUSE
at
7
p.m.
Wednesday
at
the
Revenues
are
distributed
locally
Meigs
Educational Se.rvice Applications
Prtmt11- ·e.40
: AEP-45.18
Fldtl'lll Mogul - .85
for the 2002-03
HobsOn Christlan Fellowship · to townships, villages and the Center governin_g bo2rd will
Ull-24.05
: Arch Coat- 22.10
Aoclkwtll - 22.27
Carleton
Memorial
Church.
county.
hold a spec1al meeting Scholarships for higher
Oannttt- 75.38
• Alczo - 4UO
Aoclky 1oo11- e. 78
educa• • AmTICIIV81C - 32.05 o.nnt Ellolrto- 30.18 AD Shttt- eue
T1tC
office
is open from 8:30 Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the Meigs tion are available in the office of
OKNLY - 4.87 .
· • Alhland lno. - 31.75
Btara - 52
a.m. until 4 p.m.. Those with Local Conference Room 320, Sharon Cotterill, cledcltreasur·
: : Ar&amp;T-13.83
Hll1ly OMIIan- 52.30 Wlf.Mart- 55.04
questions can contact Campbell Pomeroy. Tiie purpose of the er, at Syracuse Municipal
: ; BankOnt-41.28 . Kma~-1.18
Wtndy't- 37.85
meeting is to d!Ku11 f.ac:ilities for Bulldina.
81!192-2698.
.·. IU - 14.11
Ktogtr - 22.86
Wortltlngton - 15.57
M' .... 1 p ·
h
.t.
the ESC. The meeting is open to
; • iloO &amp;VIlli - ll0.5e
Landi End- 81.73
Dill)' 110ok repo111 1 ,. . JCru~e 2ngto, w o .rec:enuy
June f9 is deadline forretlml.• I!OrgWimtr - 83.11
Ltd. - 20.81 .
the public.
lht 4 p.m. oloelng
ret:urned
&amp;orii
lnel,
will
apeak
ing
completed applications to
NSC-20.87
: . ctttmp~on - ue
qu0111 o1 lhe prevtoue at Abundant Grace ChuR:h in
Cotterill, secretary of the
:. : Cltlmtlng Shclpt - 7.82 OltkHI I'll aldol- 21.78
Clay't 1r111uctlont, pro- , Middleport on Wednnday at 7
OV8-24
, ' , City Holding - 1Ul
Carleton College Board of
iiilet
Ylded by Sml1h Pallnllrt p.m.
•
• Coi-25.80
IIT - 38.18
Trustees, . or Robert Winaett.
at Ad\1111 Inc. ol
PeopiH- 27.14
·: . D0 - 15.85
POMEROY - Applications
CHESTER Chester board president Legal residenll
Oalltpolll.
PIPIICO - e2.5e
::: OliPOIII - 45.85.
are now available for the home- Township Tru!ten will meet of Syracuse Village cat! qualify
•
stead real estate tax exemption, today at 7 p.m. at town hall.
for the scholarship awardS for a
_....,
according
to Auditor Nancy
:•• .~--------------------------------~
maximum of two yean.
LONO BOll OM - Fofked Parker Campbell.
·
•
• •
Run Sportsmen '1 Club wlll
The state-reimburaeO pro• •
••. •
hold itll annual Kids Fishing gram provides real estale tax
MIDDlEPORT - Due to
Derby
on
Sat:urday
from
9
a.m.
reductions
for
senior
citizens
the
collapse o£ the former Mark
, ....
•
untU noon at the Sportsmen's and the disabled .
Club pond.
In orderoto qualify, applicants
mlllt be at least 6S yeara old in

John Nelson

Betty Ward

Fred Edward Smith

EMSmns

held Tuesday and Friday at 11
p.m. In Atlanta. The Ohio
Lottery will continue holding its
daily midday and early evening
drawinga Monday through
Saturday.
Mega Millions players select
five numbers from 1to SO and a
second single number from 1
through 36. A player with all six
numbers drawn gets the top
prize, which staiU at SS million
and has gone as high u a U.S.
record $363 million in May
2000.
.
Ohio considered joining the
multlstate Powerball pme ·but
chose the Mega Millions, fqrmerly the Big Game, which
involves mid-sized and large
states, tw:ause of its ptospect of
bigger jackpots more frequently, the Ohio Lottery said.
Powerball has just one of the
nation's top 10 ll)edia markets,
Washington, D.C.

Spedal
meell.na set .

LOCAL STOCKS

.

The
Daily
Sentinel
. ..
Reader Services

Set ..Kllr
McARTHUR Vinton
County Pilocs and Boolten,
along with EAAChapter 1~.
will have a bean dinner and air· ['lane rides at the Vinton
County Air,pon Sunday at 11
. a.m. The d 1~ is $5 ~ person. and the auplnne rides are
$1 5.
An FM seminar will be held
atllOOI'I. For ~ intemtal in
leaininll to fly, iJIIJII\JCiorl will
"'
be avadable
to w wer qua-

.•
•

•
'•

Elll. 12

.

&amp;1. 13 •

• •

i at some

., •:

••

point averages of 3.S or better.
Christmon .uld the slnl&amp;·
&amp;ling economy has some
prospective studentt looking
at less expensive schools. And
he believes some parents
want their children to atlend
colle1e closer to home
beatult' of the'attacks in New
Yodc and Wuhington.
Wilberforce's traditional~
aae students who Jive 00 Cllll·
pus come from outside Ohio,
imd the univenity hll rec:ruiteel about 100 ltUdenll from
New YOlk and New Jersey in
the put two yean.
The NlliOoll Ata• · &amp;' n
for College Admission
CouDJelinJ reported Ju t

The Univenity of Dayton,
which has had strong demand
for spou in itt freshmen
classes the put two yean, hu
extended 6y two weeks ill
customary May I deadline for
110111e students to make their
choices and has tumed to iu
waiting liJt to try to fill out
the fall's enlerinJ clall, said
Chris Munoz, YICO president
for enrollment I'VD!avmentEven with those ~~tp~, the
private Catholic univerai~y
Will likely reach about t '700
incoming lllldentl, down 34
studqlts from last year,
Munoz said.
o.,.toa .... 7..... applications far the t.I1 dau, tecond
hijhest in the scbool'l hdtory.
And
the IIUOib« of campus
week cblt nearty 300 colle~
and univenitiet DatiOtlwide visits wu up sliJhtly &amp;Om
- most of them private - Lilt year, ldiWJy a sip that •
licants
a1rtady edniiUtd: 11x111t ooe- are still lookinJ for.qualified JOOd portion Of
Wj)l
diOote
the
dtinl &amp;ave hip JCtlool pde iipplic:ants far the fall term.

........

&amp;1. 14

Olfw aen!lcel

•

'

Eld. 3

Eld.4

•

ti~ ai....,..

IEid. 5

....

•' •'
''.

To Mnd HIUIII

-•IIIY~M~~~•IIoiiiAOilt

~Y ordi~l~! t:1

income of n01 more than
· $24,100 for tax year 2001 , and
own and occupy the home as
the principal place of residence
as Of Jan. I, 2002. A reparate
application. is available for
owners of . manufactured
homes.
L2!!.~::"11ine fo/ ~linJg the
'""'__, eJICIIIption 11 une 3.
"I encotll'l!ge anyone who
thinks they QUalify to mil
off~ or Calf.,"" IQim..S..U
~ sai
"at 992-26911, from 8::30 am.
until 4 o.m., Monday through

:rJ:

is located ejatw
miles ~-d' McArthur~ Friday.'~'
Ohio 93. Ouations may be
directed to Nick Rupert at 5965286 or 384-3469. All poceeds
P4IDDLEPORT

Plan aJIIC8t

On.,..,....,111111_
the Web
_.1111'

•

•

..:• ~------------------------~

'•

.'••

PLEASANT

•

VALLEY

•
•

e

:.::r
-

available

Plan ..._._,

enrollments

-----

Appkallons

·'lhtstees

•
••

DAYTON (AP) - Some
private Ohio universities are
expectinJ fewer incominJ
stUdents this fall, in part
becaute of the slu&amp;Jish economy and fallout from the
~. 11 terrorist attacks.·
- ·.ri'm &lt;:OIIC«&lt;Ied. but I' m not
alarmed," uld Ken.neth
Christmon, edmiuionl dimtor
for
Wilberforce
University.
The private, hisiDrically
blac:k tOudlwett Ohio sdlool
· lw received about 2,100
IIPPlicltionl for die tall term.
~ about 17 ~ from
Lilt year. So far, the llllivenity bls ~~~:«ptilld 8bouc 33J tor
fall, down sli&amp;ftdy from last
ye.- at dJiJ time. .
How~«. Cbriscmon uld
1
tcbool otlicialJ - pi
with the quality of tboJe

LOCAL BRIEFS

Eastem

...
.

•
•

Economy

and Gabriel C. and Sarah Shaffer of Pomeroy; and two ar-tJli'Bndchildren, Channler T. Cummins of Racine, and Alyssa Dawn
Shaffer of Rllcine.
He is also survived by a special niece, Marjorie Holter Duncan
of OUve Hill, kentucky.
ln addition 10 his ~nts, he wos prectded in death by a stepdaughter, Veleeta Gml' Shaffer Rowe; nnd a half-sister, Betty June
Srni!h Drumm.
Services wiU be 2 p.m. on .Thursday, May 16, 2002, in FiS!'et
·Funerul Home m Pumeroy, w1!h !he Rev. Bnan Harkness officiating. Burial will be in Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Wednesday, May 15, 2002, from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.

MarkV

city ·nabs pet pic

Judge: multistate lottery can proceed for now

•

'

PapAl

•

'

'.

john P. MeMu"J, MD will also be serpind the }atfmn County, WV tn•ea.

•

•

•

•

�...

•

•

'

.

•

•'

AS

The Daily Sentinel

•

or attentton

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-M·:nse • Fax: 740-MM157

-.myd811yMnttnel.com

·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dlc:kenon
Publllher

Dear

Abby

Ol•ne K•Y Hill .

Control let'

-·All-

.....,. •,..-., ~. ""' o~~..w._ ,.,; ,_ •
.,.,dJ«t•....,
rv• ..,....., ,.,..
,.NU"'"'u. .....w*"' u. ,..w ...,, ...,, •hla'
M4 ...,,., .,. ~~ • • ilfrl. . ...,.,~ • • -~~ ....,..

rrill ..,

l..tMtn

ll••n. ,..,lfi"'h'f*'lint)..

n, ........ Ufi"'SJ~ I• lt1

w/111•111

DEAR ABBY: 1 am 48 and dis·
abled. I ha'IC ne'ICI' had a binhclay
party, tee:ehed a Christmas present, or lltteaded a family wecldlna
or fllneral. Years aao, I overbelrd
my brother tell someone he had .
only thMO brothers and si ,ten. 1
am the fourth. It hurts to this day.
Sach ye.r, "in the st~lrit of
Cllristma.s," my family pu:b me
ADVICE
up to spend Christmas Day with
them. Koweyer, no one talks to me
-· not even ro wish me 11 "Merry - but this lsn't Uvlna. How tan 1
Christmu." My . nephews lnd man my ftmll:t_ ruliae that 1
niece$ hold up their c:llildren from cJ.j~- THE INVISIBLE
t1cross the !00~ to stare at me. I
DEAR INVISIBLE CHILD:
feol like I m tn a zoo.. When I I'm sorry you don't have the lovwrite to them, my letters •re Ina, supportive family thllt you
returned.
deserve. Rllther than trylna to
1 ':"" told that some babies die · "mllke" your f•mily realize that
at btrth. For some reason I lived you ue a human beina with needs

.
6tfuw fU't tiN NHUfftJIII.J l.f!t•r Oflitf \Wlt;J

,...,..., c.. ) ~,.,.., ... wu Ullt,..'iu ,.um~.

NATIONAL VIEW

• The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C., on
:Iraqi threats: Once again, Saddam Hussein is
challenging the defensive flights by United
States and British aircraft over "no-fly zones" in
Iraq. President Bush must act to prevent the Iraqi
di.ctator from moving out of his box. If Saddam
is not punished for attacks on air patrols, he may
try to repeat his past strikes against the Kurds in
the north and the Shiites in the south. ... •
The pattern of attacks is similar to the challenge
posed by Saddarn shortly after President Bush
took office in January last year, In response, the
president ordered a series of coordinated strikes
on air defense radars and other military targets in
and around Baghdad. The attacks had the effect
of reducing the threat to the pilots carrying out
the patrols, which have prevented Saddam from
moving against the Kurds in the north and dissuaded him from increasing repression of the
Shiites in the south. .. .
·
With Saddam on notice from President Bush
that the United States is determined to remove
~ fn?m power, preventive air patrols must be
mamtained to stop the Iraqi dictator from carry!"8 out pre-emptive strikes.
.
•
•
•

••

,

'•

TODAY IN HISTORY
•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

• Today is TUesday, May 14, the !34th day of 2002. There are
~31 days left in the year.
·
; Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Muy 14, 1948 (by the current-era calendar), the independent state of Israel was proclaimed in Tel Aviv.
• On this date:
·
·
: In 1643, Louis XIV becume King of France at age 4 upon
Jhe death of his father, Louis XIII.
• In 1804, the Lewis and Clark expedition to explore the
Louisiana Territory left St. Louis.
In 1904, the first Olympic games to be held in the United
States opened in St. Louis.
In 1942, Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait" was first performed, by the Cindnnati Symphony Orchestra.
: In 1942, the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps was estabJished.
.
.
.
; In 1955, representatives from eight Communist bloc coun·
tries, including the Soviet Union, signed the Warsaw Pact in
Poland.
• In 1973, the United States launched Skylab I, its fi~t
manned space station.
.
: In 1975, U.S. forces raided the Cambodian island of Koh
:rang and recaptured the American merchant ship Mayaguez. '
;ot.ll 40 crew members were released safely by Cambodia, but
some 40 U.S. servicemen were killed in the military operation.
· ·
.
;,,In 1980, President Caner inaugurdted the Department of
71ealth and Human Services.
.
• In 1998, singer-actor Prank Sinatra died at a Los Angeles
hospital at age 82. ·
: Thn years ago: Former Soviet President Mikhail S.
Oorbachev addressed members of the U.S. Congress, appealing to them to pass a bill aiding the people of the former
Soviet Union. Former football player Lyle Alzado died in
Portland, Ore., at age 43.
• Five years ·ago: Jurors at the Timothy McVeigh trial in
benver saw chilling black-and-white surveillance pictures of
• Ryder truck moving toward the Oklahoma Ctty federal
building mlniltes before a bomb blew the place apart.
One year a$o: The Supreme Court ruled 8-to-0 that there is
no exception m federal law for people to use marijuana to ease
lheir pam from cancer, AIDS or other illnesses. Promising to
be a "determined adversary" toward gun violence, President
:Bush announud plans to mobilize federal and local pro8ecu10f8 who would focus exclusively on gun-related crimes.
• T9&lt;Jay's Birthdays: Opera singer Patrice Munsel is 77. Sen.
Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., is 60. Rock singer-musician Jack
Bruce (Cream) is 59. Movie producer George Lucas is .58.
Actress Meg Foster is .54. Actress Season Hubley is .51. Rock
singer David Byrne is 50. Movie director Robert Zemeckis is
~. Actor Tim Roth is 41 . Rock sin6er Ian Astbury (The Cult)
js 40. RO&lt;:k musician Cecil De Ville ts 40. Rock musician Mike
fnez (Alice In Chains) is 36. Pabrice Morvan (ex-Milli
~anilliJ is 36. Actress · Cate Blanchett is 33. Singer Danny
:Wood (New Kids on the Block) is 33. Singer Natalie Appleton .
lAII Saints) is 29. Singer Shanice is 29.
·\
Thoufht for Today: "Dissent is not sacred; the riglil of dis·
!iept is.' - Thurman ,Arnold, American lawyer ( 1891-1969)

blame tor the thUd's tondltion.
What I tan 't 11ndentand '' how
parents and family ean tum lheir
batb on • ehild. We all need
.someone to love and ·care fur .us.
Abby, please urge your readen
to reaeh out to a family member
who Is In an Institution or aroup
setting. Yes, they m being fed,
housed and elothed, but they also
need cont1et with family and
friends. If it's not possible to visit,
si\11\d a letter or card and Include a
dollar bill - espec:hllly on blnh·
days and holidays. Cheek on the
vlsltlna hours, talk with st11ff
members to see what Interests,
activities or hobbits the resident
may h11w. Ask If he or she would
enJoy golna out to lunch or to a
shopping mall or G-rated moYie.
1.0

REEDSVILLE U.M. CHURCH

KONDRACKE' . VIEW

· Preventive air patrols aid
containment effort against Iraq

nat unlike their own ~- IOC)k
around you. You are probably
already a member of a "fimlly" ••
those people with whom you live,
worlt alld worshll! and who cue
about you. More of your needs can
be met by tancentratlna M your
l'elationsl\lps with them. ~ead on:
DEAR AllBY: 1 warlt In a state
htlllth care fllclllty for the dis·
llbled. Some are un•ble to do
much for themselves. Other$ have
excellent penon•l and soc:llll
skills. Many of them have no fam·
ily contact.
Years aao, parents were entouraaed to put children with develop·
mental disabilities Into an instltu·
tlon and forget about them. 1
understand why some parents may
feel guilty, wonderlna If they are

Maton

Kondnd&lt;e

. Democrnts look upon Medicure us n
key item in their 2002 campuign stmtcgy.
The more domestic issues such us heulth,
education, the environment und Suciul
Security thut dominutc dcbnte. they lig·
ure. the better otT they 111'11.
A tecent Democracy Corps poll
showed that voters trust Republicuns
more than Democrats on the economy
and tuxes, but they trust DemOCI'lltS more
than the GOP by a 23-point m11111in on
health, prescription drugs ~nd the environment.
I•
On Medicare, DemOCI'lltS 111'11 offerh111
not only u lower premium, but also 'no
deductible. Under ThomM' bill, seniors
with incomes above $15,000 would puy
the tirst $2.50 of their drull bills. ·
Under hls standard oovera11e plnn
(seniors would have a choice of seveml
coverage options), the government would
pay 80 percent of drull costs from $251 to
$1,000 and SO percent from $1 000 to
$2,000. But from $2,000 to SS,OOO,
seniors would have to pay their entire
bills. That's the "doughnut" thut
Democrats condemn.
Seniors "continue to pay premiums,
b t the d 't t
be fit " D hi
u
Y
on
'e
any
• beasc:dev·e
said last week. 'This gao ne
would
astating for most seniors.\• No gap in cov·
era11e exists in the Democratic plun. The
t
ld
II
bo ·
11ovemmen wou pay a costs u ve
~:~l&amp;L~ G~~~~~as plan und above
A Thomas aide said it isn't true thut
. seniors would 11et no )!eip If their drug
bills fell between $2,000 and $5,000.
They would get the benefit of lower drug
costs - 25 to 30 percent lower, he suid
'"":' achieved through group bW'!Iaining.
Republicans admit that Thomas plan
isn't ·~rfect," but claim "the petfect
shouldn't be the enemy of the 11oocl." it's
8 good argument th at shou ld work in aII
directions. Politicians should be Judged
on how hard they try to produce a drua
plan for seniors this year •• not on how
hard they work to create an election Issue. ·
(Morton Kondrackt Is executive editor of
Roll Call, tlw newspaper of Capiro/ Hill.)

GROUND

CAtlBNDAR

IROKINTrustees of
the Reedsl/llle
United
Methodist
Churot\
reeently broke
around for a
new fellowship hall. The
trustees are,
from lett to
rl&amp;ht, Chet
Buckley,
Ronnie Vance,
Grace Weber,
Diane Jones
and 01vid
Weber.
(Submitted)

JOYQUARIEI

Community Clltnlllr 11
publllhtcl II I fret ltNict
to nonoprotllgroupe wllhlng
to tnnounoa 1'11Mtlng1 1nd
lpeolalaVIIItl. Thllllllendar
II not dalllgnld to promotl
11111 or fllnlkll..,. ot •nv
type. ltlml1re prlnttd only
aa IPIOI ~ ltld Olin•
not bl IIIIII'IntMCI to bl
prlnttd a 11pe01t1o numblr of
dafl.

TUIIDAV

POMEROY - Ba~old
Townahip Truatoat, Tuaaday, 7
p.m. at th1 town hill.
POMEROY - Th1 · Molga
County Olnlllogicll Socilty,
Tuuday, s p.m. 11 th1 Molga
Muaeum.
MIDDLEPORT - Malga
County
Oh1mb1r . ol
Commorco monthly membarahip lunohaon, ovarbrook

I'

Ctm.r, noon, Dtn Olcktraon
of Ohio 'Iaiiey Publlahlng Co.
and Triah MCC:ullough of
Qallla/Milga
Community
Action Agency wlllapHk.

POMI:ROY - The Mtlgl
County Board of HH"h will
convene In apeclai .. aalon
Wildnoadly ·at 6 p.m. tn tht
conltrtnot room of tho Mtlga
County Hattlth Dopartmant.
WIDNIIDAV
The mooting waa oalltd by
POMEROY . Molga Gone J•ll•ra. pl'llldent.
County Hnlth Oopartmont,
childhood lmmunlntion clln· . IATURDAV
lc, Wadntaday1 0 to 11 a.m. AACINE - Tnt Malga
and 1 .to 3 p.m. Taka chlld'a C.ounty
· Ralirad flaahart,
ahot racold. Muat bl accom· noon Saturday,
Star Mlli Park,
plnltd by partnt or
Raclna,
potluck
plcnlo.
flaln or
guardian.
ahlna, •halter Ia lllllllbla.
MASON COUNTY - Tho Muatcal program by the
12th annual Band Aroa "Uplllltra."
Qoapal Jublloo will be hald
WilKESVILLE
, from Wadnaaday through
Wllktavlllt
Unlltd M.thodi•t
S~nday at the Waat Vlrvinla
Churoh,
pralaa
and WOI'II'IIII
Strata Farm Muaoum.
S1rvlc11 wlll ·blgln en aorvlco, Saturday. Family Itt•
Wadnaaday at e p.m., on lowahlp dinner at8 p.m: Pralu
Thuraday and Friday at 2:SQ ana worahlp aarvl011, at 7 p.m.
p.m., on S1turday at I1 a.m. Paator William Martl'tllllltWIItt
and on Sunday at1 :30 p.m. public.

I

We remember those who ha.ve pa.ased awa.y
a.nd are especially dear to us.
Wt wlll publlah 1 aptclai page devoted to thoa• who are gone but not lorgonen. Thty will bt
1lmllar to tht aampla below:
.
·
Nitti 0111

WASHINGTON TODAY

Pre-election polls' injluenee spurs debate over usage.
BY W1u. l.aTa
WASHINGTON - Polls play an
increasingly powerful role in the public's
perception of political campai~ns. People
disagree 'about whether that s a good
thing.
Critics say the high number of pre·
election polls distracts the public from
the campaign issues, limits the topics
candidates are willing to discuss and
shuts out some candidates who should be
taken seriously.
Defenders say there is a market for
polls, and they help the public follow
campaigns as well as keeping those races.
in perspective.
Pollsters and political scientists in
Washington gathered recently for a con·
ference on polls sponsored by the Gallup
Organization and the University of
Nebraska. The ~tings produced spirited debate on whether the understanding
of campaigns is helped by the growing
~ number of pre-election polls, especially
daily tracking polls on who is ahead.
'1be marketplace wants pre-election
polls," said Frank Newport, editor in
chief of the Gallup poll .."Editon and producers who are. responsible journalists
want polling and think it's important."
Newpon told the group that poll information provides a systematic way of
detennining how people feel about issues
and candidates, ili1d the public is curious
about the lindir.gs.
"That's because citizens like to compare and contrast their thoughts,"
Newport said. "People want to know
what the scorecar(j is." ·
In the 2000 presidential election, there
were plenty of scorecards to watch. More
than a half-dozen tracking polls were
released daily or weekiy on the progress

90069.)

ERGS

Seniors need a deal with Medicare, not open waifare
More than 90 ~rcent of Americun
seniors would pwttcipute in the presc:ription drug plan .· proposed by House
Republicuns, the Congressional Budget
Office (CBO) has found - a judgment
that ought to.give pause to Democrats.
The two parties last week unveiled
rival proposals, launching the 2002
Medicare wars in earnest. but the CBO
finding - still unofficial - should
encourage both sides to find common
ground.
·
·
lnstead of just dismissing the $350 bilCOLUMNIST
lion GOP plan as inadequate and underfunded, Democrats ought to give it seri·
ll
ous consideration as a. model, perhaps $1.6 tril on tux cut plan, which Thomas
enriching it to achieve even more uccep· championed and wants to muke pennatance.
· nent at a cost of perhaps $4 trillion over
Ways and Means Chairman Bill the nextdecade.
.
Thomas (R-Calif.) told me in an inter· And, they said that his prescription
view that the CBO had scored his pro- drug p,lan contains a fatui "doughnut" or
posal as likely to gain 93 percent accep- "hole ' that would require some seniors to
tance from seniors.
pay premiums but get no benefit in
C80 officials confinned that their pre· re!Jb. b b
th
al
.
liminary analysis shows that the Thomas
e ar s su~gest at a st emate IS
plan would come in at that level. though brewing. Prcscnption.druBS are the basis
an official judgment would awalt actual of modem medicine, ancl members of
introduction of a bill.
both parties a11ree tha~ lack of drug covThe CBO finding undercuts the chW'!Ic eragc under Medicare IS the problem they
made bu ~mocrats and their allies in the B
hear
most1 about
1 th
artlfrom their constituents.
i II d
1
AARP that Thomas' plan would be wide- . u • e wo P , es seem ,more TIC ne
ly rejected by seniors because it requires to exploit the Issue pollttcally than to
them to pay a $35 to $40 monthly premi- solve it.
urn if their income exceeds about . Thomas acknowledged to me that he
$15,000 a year.
·
hasn't consulted 1 Democrats in devising
AARP conducted a poll last year show- lt.
, .
ing that 69 percent of seniors would not
He said his legtslattve procedure is to
pay such a premium. A Senate "figure out what a conference agreement
Democratic phm favored by AARP calls would look like and pass it out ·of the
for a $25 premium.
House - primarily with Republican
.Instead of planning to iron out differ· votes, because Democrats don't want to
ences, the two parties seem intent on do anrcthing... .
making political points with their plans in
Pol owing this pattern, Republican~
order to appeal to seniors in tlie 2002 plan to push Thomas' Medicare bill
elections.
thro!Jgh the House before Memorial Day,
Thomas touted his proposal as repre- but 1t stands little chance in the Senate.
sentlng "a permanent new entitlement for Conceivably, a Democratic measure
seniors," deriding the Democratic alter· such as ,the Grahwn bill - or an alterna·
native as "a gimmick" because it e,;pires. tive bemg drafted by Senate Ml\)ority
Democrats countered that one ~or Leader Thomas Daschle (D-S.D.) ld
th s
reason money is tight is President Bus 's cou pass · e enate.

Please dM 't feel auilty if you
haven't made contact. Now Is the
time m reach out before it's too
lam.
We work hard to keep our resl·
dents happy, .but they need. warm
and loving relationships with their
families, .too. - I CARE IN .
ORAN,MO.
.
DEAR 1 CARE: You are a tom·
pMsionare caregiver, and you are
absolutely right - everyone
needs to know he or she is loved
eveey day of the year.
( l'rtulillt Phillips and her daugh·
rer J~11~ Pltll/lp$ shure the pseu·
dooy111 Abigail \i!11 Buren. Wrltt
qi!it,. Abby dl WW\1\0earAbby.colll
or P.O. Box 69440, Los An~elrs, CA

of the presidential cwnpaign as well as that examine why people feel as they do,
hundreds of campaign polls that were said Tom Rosentlel, director of the
released less often.
Project for Excellence in Journalism. If
Some say those polls do not necessari· polls are relied on too heavily, he suid,
ly provide a better understandinll of cam- then "all we are left with is citizens'
patgns, even if there is a public demand ·response to the pollsters' view ·of sO&lt;:i·
for them.
ety."
"Teen·agers have a demand for alcohol
Polls are very valuable at telling whut
and cigarettes," said Susan Herbst, a the public knows about key issues und
political scientist at Northwestern when the public begins to tune into those
University. who outlined 110me critical issues, said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, deun
views of polling during the Galluf scs- of the. Annenberg School for
sion. "People have a demand for at .sorts Communication at the University of
of things.'
Pe
1
Oth
"A set of very smwt, wnbltious men,
nnsy vania.
er poll questions cun
be less useful, she said.
.
built the polling industry and cultivated a ''The downside of f;lli~ is thnt it
demand
for· polls,''1she
H
P!ompts us· to treatun onn opinion us
· said.
1
er mam comp a nts about the effects tf it is informed opinion," she said. Some
of pre-election polls:
11
• They tend to dominate campaign cov- exwnples are pol1 s8 about the 2004 presferage and affect descriptions of how can- dential election taken this early.
·
didates are performing on the cwnpaign Such polls match President Bush, 11
trail. For example, if a candidate trailin~ popular wartime president, against a
in the polls stumbles climbing on a podt· Democrat who may or may not run fur
urn, that misstep is used as a metaphor for president, or match the 2000 Democratic
the cundidate's cwnpaign problems.
nominee AI Oore against a series of less• They tend to limit what issues candi· er known Democrats. Not surprisingly,
dates talk about on the cwnpaign trail Bus~ and Gore tend to dominate such
because IIOme issues are described ·as matchups.
more important. For example, presiden· But those who atudy politics ma~re­
tial candidates in 2000 talked mosdy fer a more detailed view of cwn gns
about domestic - not international - than the general public, said harlea
issues.
Franklin of the Univenity of WiiiCOIIsln• They tend to reinforce the political Madison, who attended the Gallup sea- .
strength of well-known candidates and . sions.
keeplesser known candida~ with pocen- "People who are very involVed in politially good ideas out of the mix.
tics grossly overestimate the public's
The debate at the polling sessions ap~tite for political ncw1," Franklin
touched on concerns of many who follow . satd. "Pblls do a Jood job of giving you a
politi~s and polling.
.
. . q~ick simplilicatlon of what the public ia
Heavy reliance on trackmg polls late tn thtnking.'
·
the campai'n focuses coverage on "the (Will Lester covers politics and pol/IllS
horse race,' and te~ to reduce the polls for The Associated Prell.)

~~~mp11111 ~our trlbult.
We ~ibid l'OU In our thouahlland m~mori11

a.M1~

......

David C, AndNWt
.lui~ to, ttlt ·Mar •· ttto

TO PERFORM- The Joy Quartet from Peneecole Chrletlen Colle&amp;e of Pen1ecoia. Fla. will pre·
aent a program of lnlplretlonal mualc on May 23at 7 p.m. at thl Flr.t Baptilt Church Recine
The Quartet Ia one of el&amp;nt travelln&amp; aroup1 repreaenttna the Colleae during the 'aummer
months. The enaembiet will hold eervicet In about 700 ohurchel end echooie throuahout thi
. United States and parte of Canada. Thereia no ldmllalon oharae1or the proarem. (Submitted)

Ma, God'a ~ela
Qulde you and
protect you
tbrouQhout time.

Garden club.makes summer plans
RUTLAND - Plans for Steam• provided wreath• for. America. There are about SO
Jlartlcipation in the Meiga the Cbamber of Commerce. varieties, according to Black
Count)' Pair flower show to Devotlona by Woodard who deacti bed them aa an
be held Aua. 12 and 15 uaing included scripture from Titus herb, and edible If no cheml·
a "Back to the Basics" theme artd Paalma. The arranaement c1l1 are uaed to grow them,
were made when the Rutland of the month waa a I)Ouquet and make beautiful table
Garden Club met recently at of lllaca and azallu. For roll arrangements.. They come aInthe home of Dorothy call membera brouaht a plant ale or doubl!i and either the
Woodard with Connie Black for exchange.
climbing or awarf variety. . '
u co-hoatess.
Apin thia year, the pro- The IHda are known for
The club will alao be gram book for the club their vitamin C and the leavea
exhibiting arrangement• at received a auperior r1t1ng. have a mild aplcy or peppery
the Meigs County'Expo, Sept. The travelina prize fuml1hed f11vor.
21 and 22. It was re~ ttiat by Marjorie Rfce waa won by Betty Lowery talked on per·
·Pauline Atkin• and Betty 1 Atkln1. Steams will fumiah almmOna, deacribina It u the
Lowery repreaented the club thoJuno prize.
"perfect tree for all aeaaona."
at the county board meetlna The prosram wu on planti· She aald It .originally came
•• well at the ~gional meet· na. Steama read "Por the
China and spoke of the
·Ina. Mrs. Atkma, a master Blrda" which pertained to from
two
~pea. "Hachlyia and the
&amp;ardenei', alao attended tho bird houaea and feedera,
'nowerahow It Cincinnati thia cleajled periOdically, and Kaki.
month.
placed In 111 area for Jood She uld it takea seven yean
It waa announced that the protection, alOnJ with a food for a peraimmon tree to
mature.
Ohlo State Garden Club con· and water aupply.
vention wlll be held at She laid that now it noatina Hint for the month waa
Wadawonh July lS-17.
IWOII 111d that the penon "plant pole beana next to aun·
. It waa noted that during the taklna aood care of tho birda flowera." The bean will
month, Betty Lowery took Ia rewarded with their beauty climb the lower part of the
aunflower and you will need
flowera to the church, Atkin• and 1008·
miated with table center· Black'a iopic wu on nutui'· no lJOlea.
piece• for the regional meet· tiuma whlcti are native tO the A aarden tour will be h6ld
mg, and Chelcie Comb&amp;· Andlea Mountalna In South at the May meetlna.
V

I

Alwt.rtln our hl&amp;rll,
lolln t.NI MOll&amp; ANtrewa and

family

lollowlna FREE ¥ei'IH below to

r""'''·

oradl1 you In Hllllml!, now1nd l~&gt;~tver.
! , Po111vor mlu.d, never rorgotlen, May Ood hold you In the polm ol
Hl1 h1nt1.
4. Think you lor the wonderful dayl\1111 •h•ll!d lo,ether. My prayer~
will brl with you until we mt"elagaln.
5, ~ d1~1 we ihlll!tllii~N 1wtel. I long lo .eo you again In Ood'a
hllYeniy glory,
~. Your eourtge and bravery !Ill! lnopll'r uo oil, ond tho memory or your
lmllo nu. uo·wllhjoy und !nughter.
1. 'l'houah oul u( 1igh1, you'll forever be In my heart 1nd mind.
8. 'l'ht d1~ m1y eome 1nd go, but the tlmeo we 1hall!d wlllalw1y1 ~tmaln.
9, M1y 1he llaht ol poKe 1hlne on your r.., lor eternity,
!0. May Ood'oanao!o au ide Y"" and pmlecl ynu thfllllahout time.
II , You were 11ightln our llrelhal bumo lo11ver In our heartt.
12. M1y Ooo'1 ar~euthln~ ovor ynu fur all lime.
13. You all! In our lhoughl• and prayen from momht&amp;lo nlaht and lmm
ymlo year.
14. Weeend thl! meuaae with alo•l•• klu for etema! 111111nd hiPlllnm.
15. Mly the Lonl ble11
with HI•
tnd worm,
heart,

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND f7,00 PER LISTING • fl21F PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop oiT to

The Dilly Sentinel
With Fondeat Metnorle•
111 Court St., Pomeroy, OU 45769
DEADLINEt FRIDAY, MAY 171 12 Noon

r------------------------------------

I

Name of

Piea!CI publl1h my tribute In the 1peclal Memory Paae on Friday. May 24.

~ceued

IRelatlon•hlp to me

·

.

· .

Number of ~~elected verse---

1D1teofblnh

Datcofpaninr'"-----il

I Print your n1111e here
1I Addre11

Phone number·_ _....;._ __

ICity
I

Slate _ _ _ _ Zlp---1
Make Chkk Payable tu THE DAILY SENTINEL

L--------------------------------·---

�... _. _ ....... ........

.... . . ... .

·,

P.,Y. AI • The O.lly Sentinel

•

·- ..... . -·..- .....................

,.. ...

....._. . . .. ..... .
~

. www.mydlllly1811tlnel.com

Theaday, May 14, 2002

RACINE - Members of Wilson, Tim Cogar, Richard
the Racine-Southern FFA Murphey and JoWl Bentz.
Chapter were recently rec:ogRich'ard Murphey particinized for their efforts over the paled in the Production Job
'Past school year.
Interview
while
Maria
Green hand Degrees were Schaefer was involved in the
presented to John Bentz, Nic Ag-Science Job Interview.
Nottingham,
. Richard
The following teams were
Mu~hy,
Willie Morris, . also recognized: Ag-engiJackte Gloyd, &lt;;ody L~ng! neering members were Tyler
Adam McDamel, Ntkkt .kJhnson, Ian Wise and Joe
Riffie, Billie Jo Rizer_. Aaron Adkins; Co-op team members
Sellers, Frank Shambhn, Matt . were Joe Adkins, Lori Sayre,
Strong, Derek Teaford and Amy Wilson, and lllll Wise;
James Werry.
.
the farm business manageChapter FFA degrees were men! team members were
presented to Cassie Cleland, Amy Wilson, Lori Sayre, T.J.
Ttm Cogar, Adam Lee, Kenny Moore, and Jeremy Hill; the
McKmght, Rtchard Murphy, grain merchandising team
Nt~ . Nottmgham,
Joey was Tyler Johnson, Maria
Phtlhps. Mana Scha~fer, Tom Schaefer, T.J. Moore, and Tim

RACINE - Several Racine-Southern FFA Chapter
members were honored for their participation in skills
contests and proficiency awards at the recent annual
District 10 FFA Banquet.
First places in the district proficiency contests went to
Lori Sayre, accounting, agri-entrepreneurship, diversified
crop production and v~etable production; Amy Wilson,
agncultural sales; and "lyler Johnson, nursery operations,
and forest management. Sayre took a second place in forage production.
In the s~~ls contest, Ti~ Cogm: took third place in grain
merchandismg; Amy Wilson, third place, farm bustness
management; Joe Adkins, first place, agricultural engi·neering; Maria Schaefer, second place~ ag-science .job
interview~ T.J. Moore, second place, extempollllleous
speaking; Lori Sayre, second place, prepared speaking.
The chapter received fourth place in ag-engineerinj!.
second place in grain merchandising, second place m
farm business management, second place in cooperative
education, and fourth place in urban soil judging.
Prior to the banquet, an officers' training session was
given by the state and district FFA officers for the 200203 chapter officers.
·
. The Racine-Southern FFA's 2001·02 officer team

••

1iJFsoAY'S

HIGHUGHIS
•
•

.Sectional pme
set for today .

••
'
•

•
•
•

•

includes: Alan Moore, president; Tim Cogar, vice president; Cassie Clellllld, secretary; John Bentz, treasurer; •
Maria Schaefer, reporter; Travis Hart, sentinel;· Adam ,
Lee, student advisor.
·

°

ETIREMENTSALE- OFFMUST·END!

Time Ia running out.. Everything has been specially priced lor Immediate public dlapoaall Ab110lutely nothing will be left that the
broom won't awaepl Savings are spectacular... You can aeve up to 85% no ruaonable ofter will be reluaedl Famoua.name brands
like England, Lane, RCA, Maytag, Baaaett, Berkllne, Albeny, and many others., lanteaUc aevlnga. This Ia your once Ia a lifetime
chance to buy quality furniture "at your own price~l Bring your trucka and trailers... eJCira change lor delivery.
·

Y NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED!

SAVE UP TO ••.

tional baseball tournament
game between Meigs and
Gallia Academy has been
rescheduled for S p.m. today
at · Memorial Field in
Gallipolis.
The winner will play either
· Athens or Warren for the sectional title Friday.

' 'Ea~Herd'

SENTINEl CORRESPONDENT

ROCK · SPRINGS - Play was
halted after two complete inrungs at
Vinton . County High School due to
unfavorable playing conditions with
the Vilri!lgs and Marauders dead·
locked at one each. Resuming the
contest last Satwday at home, the
Maroon and Gold eeked out a 4-2 win
in ten additional frames.
Meigs scored first as, with two
away, Brandon Ramsburg singled,
John Stanley walked and Buzz
Fackler hit safely, plating Ramsblllj!.
Vinton matched the Marauders wtth
consecutive singles .·from Josh · Cecil
Wld Josh Rucker plus two free passes.

Deadline May 17
HUNTlNGTON, W.Va.Marshall football fans hoping
to . take advantage of the
" Early Herd" discount on
2002 season tickets have until
this Friday, May 17, to act.
Under the "Early .Herd"
special sideline tickets are
available for $125, a 13% discount, or $19 savings over
single game ticket prices. End
zone tickets are available for
$100, a 17% discount, or $20
savings over single game
tickets.
Family plan tickets are
available for $280 end zone
and $324 sideline (four ticket
per game) at discounts of 30
and 44%. That is a $200-252
savings over the purchase of
single game tickets. Early
Herd discounts are also avail·
able for Marshall University
faculty and staff, who have
. . the option of using payroll
deduction.
.
These "Early Herd" rates
are only be available through
the close of business on May
17, this includes all mailed in
orders postmarked by the
17th. After that date, season
ticket· package~ will return to
regular prices.
. For the 2002 season, however, re~ular season ticket
prices will still provide Herd
fans with a discount. over ~e
cost of buying tickets on a
game-by-game basis.
Herd fans planning . to
renew their seats · from last
year should have received a
package of information in the
mail with all the details on
their Big Green pril&gt;rity
points, renewal deadlines,
Virginia Tech game ticket
orderform and parking.
Marshall fans who did not
have season tickets in 200 I
but who are interested in taking advantage of this "Early
Herd" sjjcial should call the
Marsha I Athletic Ticket
Office at 1-800-THE-HERD
or 696-HERD for and ask for
information· on season tickets.

·Ben1als ·sip
sixth-round pick

.

Marauders top Vinton County, 4-2
BY JIM Sol•uv

~~~.J.O.S~th.Mm C~ar; U~anwilj~gi~ L------~---~------------~--------------~
John Bentz; the rural soil juding team was T.J. Moore,
Tyler Johnson, Alari Moore,
and Adam Lee.
·
Proficiency awards were
'v t L · s
!!1 ~n
on ayre, accountmg, Tyler ~ohnso~, . forest
manal!.e~ent, Lon Sayre,
dtverstfted cr?p; . Tyler
Johnson, nursery. _Lo~ Say~e,
forage production.. Ttm
Cogar, lawn care; .Lon_ Sayre,
vepetable prod~cllo~. Amy
Wtlson, ag-sales, .Lon Sayre,
ag-entrepreneurshtp.
Class awards were prese~t­
ed to Adam I:ee and Tim
Cogar, electnctty; John
Bentz, ~ian Moore and ~rank
Shambhn, small ~ngmes;
Tyler Johnson, Lon ~ayre,
T.J. Moore, and Amy Wtlson,
ag-technology;
Derek
Teaford, Ni~ Riffle, Jaclcie
Gloyd, agncultural sclenc~;
Ada!JI McJ?a~lel, ~ana
Schaefer, Btlh Jo Rtzer,
Aaron Sellers, and James •·
W,erry, a~-ed woodworki~g;
Ntc Nottmgham, J.O. Smith
and Matt Smith, ag-ed welding.
··
Honary Chapter FFA
Degree reci,Pients were Drew
Williams, Juri Essex and Bob
· Simpson.

• ..... . . , 14. 2112
.

•
•

Smtt~, Matt . Thomas and team was Lori Sayre, Joe .
Ro~bte Weddle.
Adkins, Richard Murphy and

Ttm Cogar received the
Star Greenhand Award and
T.J. Moore recetved the Star
Chapter FFA Degree.
Recogmzed at the local
level, but presented . at the
state level were State D~ree
recipients Joe Adkins, ler
Johnson, and Travis art.
Lori Sayre was designated as
Star District State in production while T.J. Moore was
presented the .Star. District
State in agribusiness.
Tyler Johnson was presented with the Travis Adl\mS
Achievement Award, Amy
Wilson with the Leadership
Award, and Tim Cogar, Adam
Lee, Lori Sayre, Aaron
\Sellers, 'tYler Johnson, T.J.
tl;roore, Maria Schaefer, and
Amy Wilson with the scholarship award
Career ~velopment events
allow students to demonstrate
what they learned by doing.
T.J. Moore was recognized
for her extemporaneous
speech and Lori Sayre, prepared speaking. Members of
the Parliamentary Procedure
Team, which placed gold at
District 10 competitions,
were Lori Sayre, Tyler
Johnson, Alan Moore, Maria
Schaefer, T.J. Moore, Amy

Page81

.GALUPOUS - 1be sec-

AWARD WINNERS · - Racine-Southern FFA members
received several District 10 FFA awards. Pictured, from
left, first row, T.J, Moore, Amy Wilson, John Bentz, Lori
Sayre and Marla SChaefer; second row, Travis Hart, Alan
Moore, Tyler Johnson, Tim Cogar and Cassie .Cleland.
(Contributed)

The Daily Sentinel

Baseball .rmmdup, Page 82
Kings beat Mavs in OT, Page 83

FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA

FFA members Radne-So
FFA
recognized for wins distrid contests
achievement

lnslcte:

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Jose Rijo
believes he can only get better.
Rijo celebrated his 37th birthday
by throwing five scoreless innings,
and rookie Austin Keams homered
and drove in . three runs us the
Cincinnati Reds defeated the
Milwaukee Brewc;rs 5-0 Monday
ni§ht.
.
'One thing that really helps is that
you believe in yourself," Rijo said.
"You don't give the hitters as much
credit as they think they have."
Rijo looked much better than he
did last Wendesday against the
Brewers when he 11ave up five runs
in 3 1-3 innings, hts shortest outing
of the season.
On Monday night, he allowed
three hits, striking ou~ one wllile
walking four. His walks got him in
trouble in the second and fifth, and a
single by Jeffrey Hammonds and u
double by Richie Sexon In the third
had runners in scoring position, but
each time he worked out of the jam.
"I thought he was losin$ it, but
somehow he workeq out of 11," Reds
manager Bob Boone said. "It's pretty
much typical of what he's thrown for
us."
He carried a 4-0 lead through five
innings and then turned it over to
three relievers to preserve the
shutout.
·
·
. "Pitching is not throwing 120
pitches lllld make 120 great pitches,"
he said. "It's just throw the 10 pitches or five pitches in key situations
where you need to. And that's whai
I'm domg right now."
Rijo (3-l) made his fifth start and
18th appearance since his return to
baseball on Aug. 17, 200 l. He had
'five surgeries on his right elbow in a
&amp;pan of six years away froin the
~ame before throwinjl two scoreless
. tnnings of relief agamst Milwaukee
last season. ,

'
,...........
,u

Other thllll ·a mild threat in the helped the Mllntuders to seal the win.
fourth from the Meigs nine, action Doug, Dill llllcf Fackler doubled llUd
was minimal until the sixth when, singled. Ramsburg contributc:d three
once more. each team generated a run hits. Jacob Smith llUd Kyle Hllllnan
each. The Vikings failed to take each had a pair of :a.les with Jimmy
advantage of an opportunity to take Smith and Stanley
each.
the lead in the seventh as hey loaded Vinton was limited to JUSt five hits,
the bases but were stymied by the a double from Luc:ik.nnd singles from
Meigs defense. ·
Cecil. Ruckel. Brwak and Qary.
Marauder hurlers put the Vikes
In game . two, Freshmen Eric
down in order through the final four Cullums and Brandon Faclder han·
innin$s·
died the mound duties liS the
· Metgs was held in check umil Marauders racked up a 94 victory in
Jimmy Smith gained fii'St on a one-out 11 contest shortened to five innings by
base on balls in the twelfth. Ramsburg mutual agreement.
lllld Stllllley followed with a base · 1\velve Marauders went to the plate
knock. This action, combined with u in the second frnme. Juoob Smith
fielder's choice and a passed ball, rapped a single between walks to
•

·"'one

John Stunley und Z.lcl! Glu.e, An
error at short put Derrick Knupp on
fir.;.t. Duve Mt'Ciure sin~led lillltiwed
by u sacriliee l'rom Jtmmy Smith.
Buzz Fackler ~lashed u double.
Bnmdoo Rwns~ l'OOtributed 11 sacrifice. Cullum~ htt sufely. Stanley
received t1 !iet.'Ond buse on bulls and
J111.'0b Smith drilled u double before
the Vikings put out the fire. finding
themselves down 0-7,
Vinton responded with " sli~ht mlly
in the third, With u sin!,lle oil the but
(If J. Jones, a walk to Shude Huntley,
Josh Cecil's double nnd u Meiss error,
cutting the delicit to four (3-7).

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

TWIN KILLIN'....., Cincinnati Reds shortstop. Barry Larkin, right, turns the double play getting 1)1111waukee Brewers' Ron
Belllard, left, at second and Jeffrey Hammonds at first In the fifth Inning Monday.' (AP)

~lNClNNATI

HONORED STUDENT - Bill Nease, president of Home
National Bank, presents Lori Sayre with a savings bond for her
achievement In ot:ltalnlng the Star District State In production.
(Contributed)

ALL
PURCHASES
MUST
BE
•
REMOVED FROM PREMISES-CASH OR CREDIT I

(AP)- The
Cincinnati
Bengals on
Monday signed ·free safety
Mar~uand
Manuel, the
team s sixth-round selection
in the April draft, to a threeyear contract.
Terms were not disclosed.
Manuel was a three-year
starter for the University of
Florida. He had 308 tackles,
six interceptions and eight
sacks in 46 games during his
college career.
The Bengals have four
l!nsigned draft choices
remaining. Tight end Matt
Schobel, a third-round selection from Texas Christian,
agreed on Friday 10 terms of
a four-year contract. Schobel
said he ex~ted to sign the
contract thts week.
.

&lt; •

Canseco retires, 38 homers shy of 500
bat. Injuries just
CHICAGO (AP) - Jose Canseco
took the important
was as brash as he was bash.
part of his career
The former AL MVP, known as
from him." .
much for his over-the-top antics as
Oh, but what a
his awesome talent, retired Monday.
career it was. From
Hampered by injuries in recent
the time the A's
years, he leaves 38 homers shy of the
called him up in
500 mark he'd hoped ro reach to bol1985, · he hit home
ster his Hall of f'ame chances.
runs
in bunches. He
"I thought he was the most com·
and Mark McGwire
plete athlete I've ever managed,"
CanHCo
were
Oakland's
said Tony La Russa, Canseco's man"Bash
Brothers"
ager with the Oakland Athletics.
"This guy really could run and, when way before the Bay area even heard
he was concentrating, play defense. of the Giambis.
The 37 -year-old Canseco finished
And he loved to take the tough at-

22nd on the career list with 462
home runs. He was the first to hil 40
homers and steal 40 bases in a season, and he's one of only nine players in history with 400 home runs
and 200 stolen bases.
A C!lreer .266 hitter; he finishes
with I ,407 RBis and 200 stolen
bases in I ,887 games with Oakland,
Texas, Boston, Toronto, Tampa Bay,
the New York Yankees and the White
Sox.
His numbers would be even more
gaudy i~ not for the injuries. Ca~seco
spent ttme on the dtsabled hst 111
seven of his last 10 .seasons, mostly

with back probleim.
• Cut by Montreal in spring !raining,
he signed u minor league contruct
with the Chica~o White Sox M April
18. He wus hilling .172 . with five
homers and nine RBis in IS games at
Triple-A Charlotte when he culled it
quits, say in~ he wanted to spend
more time with his daughter.
"Jose felt thai because or personal
reasons and a strong desire on his
pan to spend more quality time with .
his young daughter, it was time to
announce his rctircn:ten.t," Alan Nero,
Canseco's agent, said m a statement
released by the White Sox.

FREE Ill Dogs To Flag
AWARD RICIPIINT- Jo1n Wolfe, rl&amp;ht. representing Peoples
Btlnk, preMnts t.J. Moore with a savings bond for ot:ltalnlng
the Star District State In agribusiness. (Contributed)

N2NDAVJ;

Meigs ~'s ~Drown news somte!

The Daily Sentinel
Sub1Ciib.e today • 992·21.56

The

In recogntion of National Hospital Week, Pleasant Valley Hospital will be offering
FllEE hot dogs from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. to all flag football fans who come to watch the
annual tournament on Saturday, May 18, 2002 (while suppli# /RJt).
Set-up lawn chairs and cheer for friends, family, your physician or nurse. Games begin
at 8 a.m, at Ordnance Fields and continue throughout the day.
Also present will be WBYG "Big Country" 99 and WYVK-K92 "The Frog" with

dUnces to win t·sbirts and other great prizes! •

•
·-

----

-

·

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�· The Daily ~tinel
•

.

'

The Dilly Sentinel•

NBA P·LAYOFFS ·

=

Twins e e·

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Kings beat Mavs in OT to advance to Westem finals

.".
--- ...." .." -..
.....
:out Roya s .... . .•
. .." .•...
"",
1'72 .......
IIIIUIP

....
.......

liU

I

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)'The celebration at An:o Arena was
joyous and deafening. It was also
MUted by the Sacramento Kings'
,conviction that • they're &amp;ood
enough to celebrate a whole lot
more this spring.
Chris Webber and Mike Bibby
~eb scored 23 .points Monday
night as the Kings advanced to the
Western Conference finals for the
· fin~t time since 1981, beating the
Dallas Mavericks 114-101 to win
, the best-of-seven series in five

11 U JID
1011 .11111

ll&amp;

ll .,

o.tllt Dll t

.w

1

o'

uo.,

. KANSAS OTY, M6. (AP)
tNM\ ansfl ·
- ·No 01\0 would say the
ritl Ut.Jmes.
a111 ·
Minnesoa Twins are lucky
to be in fint place. No team jtut "J lO O&amp;leltolttt if,
with this 111111)' iqjuries by 'J'Mftt~ utlm..r JO• c.u
the midclle of M'1 could be
1

a ., .•

SH...

It tO .QII

... ' "

,• . • l

Oft

,. ... •

l~a1

li •

· -...mmt

the six.th 1\lrln to spend time
on the disabled
list,
. came
bltlt
Monday and
drove in the
tiebreatina
nm with an eia,hth·innina
double in a 3-2 v1ctory o~
Kansas City in the only aune
in !heAL.
But stanina pitcher Brad
Radke pulled a aroin MUSCle
throwina a pitch to Mark
Quinn in the second innina
and fiaures he 'II miss at least
one stan.
"You wonder if someone's
tryina to slaf the new manqer around, fin~t-year man·
aaer Ron Gardenhire said. ·
ltadlte, who had aiven up
lust one hit in his two
Innings, said he missed one
stan with a similar 11\Jury
four years aao.
"Our team's cun~ed with
11\luries," Radke said. "We
can just tey to overtOme It,
There's noihi~ ·you can say
about injuries.'
Radke did not come out for
the third · innlna, throwina
just 19 pitches.
·
"J hurt it on the second
pitch to (Mark) Quinn," he
said. "It hurt like hell. And
the two or three pitches after
that, it felt ll~e hell.
Hopefully, it won't take too
11ona to get back. Just have to
ao day-by-day.
"For once this year, I'm
startlna to feel like I'm
· where I want to be. Then.
aomethl~ like this happens.
Hopefullj, this won't set me
· baclc: too lona. It's not a fun
thing."
·
· Ortiz, who had missed 18
aames following suraery to
remove a bone chip inllls left
knee, was l·for-4. After
Jason Grimsley (1·2) walked

,.

.»1
-~"

·~

•II II
" .ut
,lllQ

tl II .W

.t411 •h•t ittjttries. "

~aUlllll!_
· h'Ritter DaYI'd n..:
uoul,

AL

a..

QhWI:iil

OiaUuG

Doua M.ientkiewita in the

'Quake shakes Pac Bell, game goes on
BY lHl A!isotl.\ltD l'llm

When an ~uake shoot San
Flanclsco in 1989, tile 'Mlrld Series ~
postpOned for 10 days. This one didn t
even delay 1M
While Ute stlnds at Plltiflc Bell Park
rumbled Mondly nlaht, Chbloer Jones
and most of il\e players
~"t-AI1•1~ notl~ chill
....twas u"'
in MY bones," Jones
said.
The Atlanta sluger
was blttina In the n1ilth
IMina when the ~ualfo hit. rattlina
alass panes in the front of the ~ bolt.
But Pf'1 continued and I\'I()R\OI\ts later the
Braves rallied from two . runs down
~nst Robb Nen to d~ it. .
The Giants won 7-6 in the llth when
Chris Hammond (1·2) walked Jeff Ken.t
wl~-~~l loaded. Du B •-·
""'' .....,.c sco rnanaaer sty a...... a
hittlna coach for the Grants In [98!1 when·
that ~ullke rattled Candlestick Park,
wasn't surprised there was little reaction
from players or the 36,331 fans.
''TileY. were either too ex.clted or too
cold to feel it." Baker stid.
In other NL aarnes,lt was: Arizona 11,
Pltts~h 0; LOs A~es 3, New York 2
In 13 IMinas; St. lAuls 3, Chlcaao 0;
Houaton 17,"Philadelphia 3LC1nclnnati51
Milwaukee 0; Coloriilo 1. r·1orlda 3; ana
San Dieao 7, Montreal 3.
.
Barry Bonds hit his 580th home run to
move within three of Mark McGwlre for
fifth place on the career list, and the
Giants won for the ninth time In 11
aarnes. Tim Wonell (3.()) 101 the victory.
On Oct. 17, 1989, aboUt a half-hour

aame.

NL

Roundup

No surgery planned on
Ramirets broken finger

f •• '

,...
'"'··

elahih, Onia doubled off the

will in riaht~ler for what
proved to be the wlnnlna Nn.
"The knee didn't botbirme
atall," be lllid. "It feels fine.
When I \Will on the DL and
had to st'1 home and just
watch .the aames on TV, h
was really fhlstrttina. But h
just madli me work liuder to
. I badt."
ae
. ·
.
J.C. Romero (3.0) Ditched
2 2-3 iMinp of one-bit relief
for the victory that ()Ill ,the
Twins ahead of the 'Royals
241-240 In the all~tlrne
series.
Eddie Guardado worked a
oerfect ninth for his lequeleadina 13th save In 13
Of)portunities.
The loss dropped the
Royals to 0.7 In one-run
aames.
"I knew that stat ~~~~ Into
the aune. About the sbtth
lnnlna, I told someone we're
0-6 so It's about time we won
a one-run a arne;" Royals
Interim manaaer John
Miaerock uld.. "It didn't
happen. This early in the
year, I'd say It's a colncl·
denee."
The Royals, aolng for their
fln~t four-aune wln streak
since last Aua. 9-12, scored
In the fourtli when Carlos
Beltran came home on Mark
Quinn's fielder's choice
arounder.
The TwillS made It 1·1 In
the fifth on Criatian
Guzman's RBI slnale. The
Royals went ahead 2·1 In the
bottom half on Guaman's
throwing error from short·
st~.
.
Brian Buchanan hit a tyina
homer with two outs In the
Twins' slltth, chasina starter
Jeremy Allfeldt.

BOSTON (AP)- Manny Ramirez doesn't and 2000, played just 2laames afterunderao·
need surae!'Y on the broken finaer that will Ina wrist suraery on Openlna Day. Varltek
sideline him at least four weeks liut the 11\lury played only S1 aames 6ecause of a broken
IWili be monitored . to see If the fracture elbOw. And shoulder problems limited three·
spreads.
time Cy Youna award winner Pedro Manlnez
The detennlnatlon was rnade after the Reel to seven wins and 18 aames.
.
Sox outfielder, 11\lured in Seattle on Salurdal' Now the Red Sox must ao on without anoth·
niaht in a headflnt slide into home, had a cr er InJured star. Ramirez Is battlna .372 with
acan Monday at Saint Elizabeth's Hospital in nine nomen and 35 RBia, but they won their
Bl)ston. Ramirez, the AL's battlna leader, ftntaame without him. 10-4 Sunday nlaht In
plans to get a second opinion TUesday in Seattle to end their road trip at 8·2.
Miami from Dr. John Urive,
·
· Henderson went 2-for-5 with two runs and
Dr. Bill Morgan, the. Red Sox team. phyal· an RBt as. the leadoff hitter and left fielder.
cian, doesn't believe suraery Is needed ·now
Ramirez was hurt in the second innina of
on the left index finger, Boston interim gener· Saturday night's 3-1 loss when he tried to
al manaaer Mike Port said Monday.
score frOm tint on Shea Hillenbrand'&amp; double.
"However, Dr. Moraan advised it will be Third base cotch Mike Cubbaae waved him
important for Manny to be monitored careful· home, but he jammed his left hand Into catch·
ly II there Ia still the pollibiiit~:t the frac· er Dan Wilaon's shin auard,
ture could further 'tnlarate.'"
·said in a The Red Sox were off Monday then play
atatement.
Oakland, Seattle, the Chicaao Wlilte SoK and
M~an recommended that Ramirez's fin· the New York Yankeea at home.
aer be placed in a splint. He stuck with the
"Manny is the man. He's our superstar," said
oriainaf estimate of 4-to-6 weeka on the side· Brian Daubach, who batted · fourth in
Unea.
·
Ramirez's place Sunday. "But we've had a lot
The injury leavea the team with baseball's of other auya swlnain~ the · bat well, too.
beat record without ita cleanup hitter aoina Nomar'a 1\eaithy. Jason a healthy. We're still
Into a touah 13-aune home stand and alvea atrona."
.
Rickey Henderson what he had been clamor·
The Red Sox. have scored atleaat I0 runs In
ina for, more playln~ Umc. He will take over seven of their 34 aamea. Their solid pltchin~
for Ramirez In left treld.
·
could keep carry them without Ramirez 1
"[ never wanted Minny to aet hurt bec:au111 otrenslve production.
·
Martinez II s-o and Derek Lowe, I fonner
he's a bia jlan of this club," uid Henderson,
battlna .260 in 16 aamea. "But once he .aot Aii·Star cl01er, Ia 5·1 with a 2.15 BRA, aecond
· hurt, r aot to step In and l.ike his place. The .in the AL.
moat important thin&amp; Ia we have to continue
''Manny will be a bill hole In any team,"
playina U' I team."
. . Mlttinez laid ''but we lilve to 10 forward and
. Ram1tu Ia ex~ted to be placect'on the dil· . leave Manny behind for a little while and conabled llat before Tueaday nlal)t'a aame aaalnat tlnue to ~ 10 pick up the team however we
Olkland. 8011011 did not say wfio would ftll can. We hive &amp;Ood enooah talent to condnue
hla roateriJI!IC.
to win ballaamea wlthoufManny."
The Red Sox are 25·9 and lead the ~on Hla absence may help the Yankees, who trail
with a .303 bAUlnJ avmae. So they liave the Red Sox by t1iree aamea1n the AL But.
J'lent}' of hlttera, lncludin&amp; Nomar "We've aoc a aood bem:h," Varitek uld.
Oarc~ and 1uon Varitek. Both were ''Not that you can repl.ce Manny. You can't.
sidelined moat or lalt aeuon with 11\luriu
Juat like we couldn't replace Nomar, but we've
Gan:iaparra. the AL baulna leader In 1999 1101 to aurvive without him."

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

•

Subscribe today.
992-2156

games.

1M-.

lWIM'P•••----

•
I

.

lass in their fin~t meetina slnte accusalions of sign-stealing last week at Wrigley
Field.
In Morris' previous start, be gave up a
home run to sammy Sosa, prompting the
Cardinals to claim the Cu6s slugger Rot ·
27.
·
help on pitch location from his coacheS.
However, roost of the players dldn 't This time, Sosa was held to a sblgle In
find out about thl$ earlhqulkli until after fuur at·ba~ an4 there were no apparent
the_game.
·
signs of anunos1ty between the teams.
"Really? No kidding?'' Giants Infielder
ASTROS 17, Pmu 11\'8 3
Damon Minor Slid when he heard the Oeoff Blum had Ufte doubles and a
news. "I missed MY chance. That would careeJ'hiah five RBls as host Houston set
have been MY first one, too."
iielson IIlah$ fur runs 111\d 'hits (20) withDIAMONDIAacs 11, PntATIS 0
out hitting lilY horne runs.
eun Schillilla (8· 1) sttutk out 11 In The AstrOS seorect elaht times In t'!e
seven shutout innings to become the rli'St elahth Inning, promptfng Philadelphia
emht·Lame winner in the malors and lllii\&amp;Rel' Larry Bowa to brlng .in third
Luls Oonllllu drove In lOur'
as baseman 'lbmls ~re1to pitch.
ArliOIIl ruined Krls Benson's tetum to
, ROCKIES 7, MARLINS 3
the mound at PNC Park.
.
.
Denny Statlt ( l.Q) elln\e. up from the
The · Diamondbacks hit just about tnlnors to pltt:h six. shutOUt 1Mlngs In his
everything Denson (0·1) threw In his Colorado debut, and pinch-hitter Greg
lona-&amp;wafted start since missing last sea.· NortOn had arand slam as the Rockies
son for recOI\struclive elbow Sur&amp;efY. won their seventh s~ht at Coon~ Field.
Benson was on a 95-pltth llmlt1buf fell
Flori~ lost slugger Cliff Floyd with a
20 pitches short after yleldlna nme runs, bruised naht knee. .
·
seven earned, on 10 hits in 3 2·3 Innings.
PADRES 7, ExPos 3
Tho start was delayed by rain for 2 Mark Kotsay had four hits, Including a
hoUn~ · 7 minutes.
home Nn, and Ray Lankford drove in
DODGERS 3. Mm :a, 13 INNING'I
three runs to double his season total for
Pinch·hltter Jeff Reboulet singled in 1M host San Dleao.
.
wlnnlna nm with two oota In the bottom The Padres won their sec:oncl strablht
of the 13th.
. ·
· aarne without sluuer Phil Nevin, wllo
The Mets, who playe4 their second &amp;as a sprah\ed left-elbow. They chased
stralaht 13·1nnlna aame:Jmve lmt eight Bxpos starter Carl Pavano (2·5) in a four~
of nrne to slip back 10 .Sw. .
nm second Inning, handing hiM his third
CARDINALS 31 Ctlls 0
· · &amp;traiahtlOis. ·
·
Matt Morris (6·2) pitched a !bur-hitter Brett Thmko (3·2) overcame a two-run
to beat Kerry Wood (4·3) ns St. Louis sent homer by Lee Stevens and a solo shot by
vlaltlria Chicago to Its fifth consecutive Orlando Cabrera,
before the scheduled start of Oame 3 of
the \\\lrld Series betwttn the Giants and
Oakland Athletics, an w_thqualte roc:bld
Candlestick Park and left cntekt In the
~. 1'1le W\dium was evaeuated llNI
the World Series did not resume until Ott.

.

nms

a

_ To _W om It May Concern:
On December 21, 2001, at approximately 10:10AM, my hau1e bumad to the
pound, and my lift chenpcl drastically. I hatl no doth•, no pl11ee to live, and
peraonallttma colltctttl over the y1ata were tla1troyed. That 11 whtn ·tht flnt
community of Malp County atepptd fonHrcl. In the ptrlod of epproxlm1ttly 2
monthe, th~ complttely built 1 hou11 thlt 11 ttllly rtmarklbla.
.
I hiCI clothta. towela, and all thlnp nutlid to continue from day to day. 1
hiCI 1 place to llvt, but, moat of all, I h1d frl1nda who htlptd mt In a time of
nttd.
I would llkt to thank all tht paoplt of tht community, tht ptopla of Mtlp
County and 111 aurrounclln1 countlta, and 111yona who 11ld a prayer or 11111 a
do111t1on.
·
I will forever bt lndtbttcl to you.

.Sincerely,
Howle Clldwall
~

..

~

~

.. ..

~

~

~

·' Howie CaldweU and FamUJI wish to, ,. , , .. "' .
thank everyone who helped rebuild his home.

• 6 Weeks • Start To Finish •
Dave Weber • Ohio V1Uey

Webtr COIIIItuctlllll

Bob V1lt1 • Pmltlon Poured

· Contrate WaUl ·
Brletn Morrison • P·B

Contracton

Newberry Sportlna Good•
W~hiUHr of Columbu1
Boll BIIMII• Bob Bl1Hll
Callllructlon
Olen Bt.tll· BIIHU Bulldtn
Dwlpl Bltitll• D.R. BIINII
Collllructlon
Ketchum'• Oentrtl Ston
Dtnnl• Lona· Lona
COIIIIructlon
Gent AdlllM • Adi&amp;IRI
Dr,wall .
Subwt)' ol PomlfO)'
Bud V!Dtyard

PauiVI~Ird

Dtnll)' Nutter
IJ), VtnPIII

Jennlrer McBride and
Hlah School Chnrluden
Sheeyl RouJh
NllttJ B1rker
Jayne Colll111
Jtnlct HI)'RII . .
Mley (ijUqrlno
Aclaill Wolrt
Rob Barber

·Tro~ Gutbrlt ·
Mlldrtd Clli!Wtll

DIIBI Budlley
Dove Whitt

Grtnl Newland

J•y ~nolda

Die DH CI'OIIII

Debbie Chtv.Utr
Abblt Chtnller

Janice Haylltll
· 111lp Wtrey
llyWerey
JoyceWirey
Ch1d Nel10n
Mltll Caldwell
Dteyl Wtll

DooPaolt ·

BobWhite

Ro7 1M Ball~
Normtn McCtln
MlkePon

.&amp;arb POI'I

Jim CbadiNII
Cbld7 Chadwell
HoraetKirr
BWBuckltr
Nlaluellltr . ·

Jim Buckley .

Carolyn Bueklt)'

banltitUe

Brtnt Buckley
Charlie Wtblir

kevin KIIIOII

Crill Vta0)'

Mike HIJIIIID
~Lift

fl:t!oimtr

lrtndon luekler

MlcliM 'hllor
Manta 'rl;lar
Bl'llldaVIJIOY

JtnntY CMio

'Dimll Hawlharllt

RI)'ICarr

1111~110'/

K1117 Mlrclnko
hullr•. Dl¥1 lhrdmln
Doa ltoblup
LtaltrG.-t

DIIIIINIIIon
Klthy SlmJNOn
Dtbble Wtbtr

..

Mlktlalldtn
MlktMoort

Joa~t.

Allnlmm

.

'o::c:

Atron lcbllllkel
llaltMcGratb

~nv-j

Llinflr l.foJIC
Mlktl.ritl
Bob Boat

Clartne~ Atbtrton

lfiiJ Mllltoln

AIIJICII VanPelt

. . .. . ..

Jon Grubb
Rand)'alddle

~

Thanklarllin lo '"'"'"' who 1uppllld IDtlu, maltrillh,food,
and who'IMml may lult11 b"n omllttd. Your lclndn111 Gild
work wUI n1111r bt o o1t1n.

•••ill••lliluud

,._I 3

At the final butter, the Kings had
, a group hug1 while team owner
Gavin Maloor jumped and danced
with the team's cheerleaden~ on the
• court as the crowd cheered deliriously.
Moments later, however, the
chant of "Beat L.A.I" reverberated,
The Kings will play the winner of
the semifinal between Los Ang_eles
and San Antonio, and Sacram!nto
expects nothing less than a show: down with Shaq and Kobe.
· "I don't want to get caught up

thinking _ about this win," said to the NBA's best re•ular-season
Webber, in a conference final for record with a convinctnjl victory
the fin~t lime in his nine seasons. · over a Mavericks team w1th plenty
"Hopefully· we have a longer road of offensive firepower.
ahead. It feels good right now, but ''They were a better team than we
we still have more work to do.
were," Mavericks coach Don
"Four yean~ ago, we came togeth· Nelson said. "I'm really rooting for
er with the goal to win a champi- them ~ause I love the style of
onship. We've stuck with it,"
basketball the)' play, Can they beat
The two-time defending NBA the Lakelll or San Antonio? I don'.t
champion Laken~ lead their series know, but I sure hope so, because.if
· 3·1, with GameS Tuesday night at they can do it, maybe we can too,
Staples Center. Also Tuesday, someday."
·
Boston will attempt to close out In front of a crowd that seemed
Detroit in Game S of their Eastern louder than the Mavericks' cus·
Conference semifinal. New Jen~ey tomized team plane, the Kings 4ot
can finish Charlotte in Game S· on the last of three straight victones
Wednesday night.
despite the absence of second-leadUnless the' Laken~-Spun~ series is ing scorer Peja Stojakovic. He hasextended to the limit, an all- n't played since the third quarter of
California conference final will Game 3 because of a sprained ankle,
begin at Arco this weekend, ·
Webber also limped to the locker
· Fill-in starter HedO' Turkoglu had room in the third quarter after
20 points for the Kings, who aver- spraining his left ankle, missing
aged more than 114 points in this several minutes , But no -distraction
thoroughly entertaining series.
in this series seemed to bother the
The Kings closed a pla:toff series Kings- not the health of their All·
at home for the first ume since Stars, not the cowbell chorus
1964. They also backed up their run behind their bench in Dallas. not

even the Mavs' high-octane
offense.
After all, the Kings have been
pla:ting this style for four seasons
ilurmg the most exciting· time in
f~cliise history - and ihe payoff
finally has arrived.
"We didn't let anything distract
us, and that's hard in a series like
this," uld Bibby, who celebrnted
l:ois 24th birthday. "We got a lot of
toti vation from Stl.lff that some
peopfe thouKht we couldn't do."
All-Star D1rk Nowitzki recovered
from his series-long struggles with
32 points and .12 rebounds, and
Michael Finley hnd 26 points for
the Mavs,
"It's good to go through this
process . so they'lf learn from it,"
Nelson said.
.
Turkoglu, thrust into Stojakovic's
starting spot, finally solved his .
shooting struggles with several big
baskets in the second half. Bibby,
who became an offensive force tn
the series, clearly outplayed Steve
Na~h. who had 12 potnts and nine
asststs.

·Dwight Clark leaving· Browns

NBA PllyOfls
cotiiiiM~ . . . .

(Is 1 an)

t•t•

~ ...y11 .
.
New Je!My 88, Cha~ 78, New
.!Mty IMdl ..n.. 3:1
Botton 90, Del!olt 78. Bollan leldl

aen..s:1

L.A. Lakera 87, San Anlonlo 115, L.A.
Llktrt H&lt;l " " " 3· t
lloncllly, May 13
Sacramento 114, Delta• 101.
Sacramento wlna aartaa 4·1
'lbclly.. Oarnaa
Botton at Dt1rolt, 8 p.m.
San Antonio al L.A. Lake11, 10:30 p.m.
Weclnaalll~. May 11
Charlotte at New Jartey, 8 p.m.
Th~~May11
.
Detroit at Botton, 7 or 8 p.m., n aery
LA. Lakera at San AntoniO, t or t:SO
p.m., If MCIIMry
l'rlday, Ma~ 17
New J-y at Clillrlotta, 8 p.m., If _.
IIMry

S.turdlly,May11
San Antonio at LA, Laklrt, TeA. n_.
....ry

Sunclly, MIY 1t
Charlo«e al New Jeraay, 'IliA, U aery
Boalcn al Delroll, TBA, If naceuary

'nut H.luhltt• ""''" ·

J'11hll~ \n tl~1'' h• ~""1"1"'''· 1
IM t• ,·n•II .IU ~t lutu

\tuar I

BEREA (AP)- Dwight Clark left the Couch.
said.
· Cleveland Browns following three sea· Couch was surprised to hear of Clark's
Davis said Monday he 'hud a good
sons as their director of football opera· de~ure,
·
working relationship with Clark.
lions, making room for head coach Butch •I'm sad to see him go," Couch said at
"We always had a good dialogue and a
Davis to take greater a Browns banbet Monday night. "He nice exchange of ideas," Davis said, "I

DIANE MIC.LIRON THI!
1ha abov1 entitled
and JOHN DOl!, DI!I'ENDANT(8)
action
. lor
Unknown SpOUH, I I NAMED AIOV! ARE foraaloiUre, monay
any, of DIANI REQUIRID TO Nltef and )utltfment,
MfLLIIION wh- 1111 ANSWER ON 011 .thai urvfot of
place of r.. tclenca Ia IIFORE THI 11 DAY tummone annot bt
known ae II Iouth OP JUNE, 1002.
mada upan the
Third, Apt, 14, IV: RI!IMEII l •tendant(e), DIANI
Middleport, OH LOIIIEII CO., L.P.A. MILLIIION anel JOHN .
said on Monday.
er grateful to him for whut he did for me." surprised and disappointed to learn that he 41780,
but who11 CON8ECO FINANCI DOl, Unknewn
·
Clark Is best
Policy snid that nfler working with is leaving,"
·
·
8pou11, ·11 'lny, of
prtllnt plua of SIIIVIC!NO CORP.
·
· known for making Davis through last season and this year's · Policy said Clark would not be replaced realdtnoa
!1 ADAM L. 011088, DIANI 'MfLLIIIION
whoa• latt known
''The Catch" while a player with the San draft, Clark "acknowled~ed this coach's and neither would Keith Kidd, the unknown wllf lake Attorney tt Law
lor Pfalntfii- addra11 11: II lolllll
Francisco 49ets. He had been with the ability and said 'Look, I m not going to Browns pro pen~onnel director since nollca thll on Attornay
Third, · Apt. 14,
Novambar·2, 2001 t Petltfoner .
Browns since 1999, when they returned to let my e~o get in the way."'
1999, who also has left.
Middleport, OH
2:10 p.m., CONBICO P.O.IoK ...
. the NFL as an expansion team.
He srud one·of Clarks strengths is that Clark, 44, joined the Browns in FINANCI SERVICING 'IW!neburg, OH 44017 41710, lhlt lhl
pr..tnl addrell of
Browns president Clitmen Policy, in "when he sees what you can do, and he November 1999 after spending 19 sea- CORP,, lka GillEN (330) 425-4101
11ld
dalandtlnl(•) 11 ·
TRII!
FINANCIAL
Houston at the NFL meetings, said Clark realizes that you're better than him at sons with the 49ers, nine as a player. He 81!RVICfNG
unknown
and 01nnot
IN
THE
COURT
0'
·: left the Browns to pun~ue other goals in doing some of the things that he may was a member of five Super Bowl win- CORPORATION Iliad COMMON PLEAI - wl11i rettonlbla
. football, not because he lost a power have the ultimate responsibility to do, ners with San Francisco and is best !11 Campfafnt In C11e
dfllganoa
ba .
MEIGS COUNTY,
aaoert.afnacl; 11t1t the
strul!gle with Cleveland second-year he's ~oing to do what's best for the remembered for catching Joe Montana's No, 01·CV·1St In the
OHIO
following 111ort.a roacb Butch Davis.
team, . ·
TO pass in the 1981 NFC championship Court of Common
Pleaa Malgt County, CA81! NO, 01 CV1St mldllo 1-"!n
"You'd have to consider this u joint Clark declined to comment.
game to beat the Dallas Cowboys, .
the addrall ol lha
Ohio tlfatlng lhal the
decision," PoliW said. "He wants to try With Clark's depwture, Davis takes full
Clark had been brought to Cleveland by Deltndanl(a), DIANI
dalandanl (1):
AFFIDAVIT FOil
search ol Court
something else.'
control of the Browns roster, though his Policy, whom he worked with in San MILLIRON and JOHN
ll!ltVfCE
Dooumenta,
DOl, Unknown IV PUBLICATION
Clark ov~rsaw the Browns draft choic' · title will not change, Policy said,
Francisco.
Telephone
If tny, ot
es during lis three years with the team,
"We're going to have the coach giving Clark had control of the Browns' foot- 8pou11,
OIANI MtLLIIION CONII!CO fiNANCE Dtreotorlaa, Operator
. ' Several players Clark selected have the greatest degree of .input as to where ball operations for two years before Davis have ar claim to have IIRVICINO CORP Autetanu and
Cerlflfad
1nd
.. become 6uilding blocks for the (earn's we're going and who we're selecting replaced Chris Palmer as Cleveland's tn fnteNII fn tha Nat lkl GRII!N Tlll!l
Raafdenoe Mill
tattle dalorfbad
FINANCIAL
future, including starting quarterback Tim when.it comes to pro personnel," Policy cooch before last season.
larvloe Nlurned.
below:
IIIIVICING
_ _ _ _;.....:....,_ _ __.:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~--------------~------ lltutlld In the
Thl1 thf1 Gill II
CORPORATION
·
· · Townthlp
of ·
ona of thou
Plllnlffl
mantfoned.fn 8101f0n ·
hopper than. caught Sullivan who has 11 mild rotator cuff Encarnacion reached when laflabury, county of
Cabrera misplayed a sacrifice Marge and 11111 of
VI,
strain in his right shoulder,
2703.14 of the
just above the right elbow.
Ohfo: lefng In DIANI!MILLIRON,
Ravflld Code of
"When Neusebauer went bunt.
"I think I'll be fine,"
Ohio.
Sean
Casey
back
in
the
Balfe
bury
Townahfp
at
af,
Sullivan said. "I just lost some down, we were in trouble,"
.
' afte
, , and 1 p.n of PI'ICifon
Deflndenl
.
ftom,.p81
strength in my forearm and Brewers manager . Jei'T)I starting 1meup
r m1ssmg 2, Town 2, R1nga 13 THI! BTATI 0, OHIO Adtm L. Oro11 •
•
three games with a strained of the Ohfo
a1.
00011312
Royster said,
hand strength,"
Barry Larkin had three hits myJose
right
hamstring
hit
.
an
RBI
Company't
Purchlit
SUMMIT
COUNTY:
Cabrera said he couldn't
Cabrera (1-4) made llll
'
and beginning 301
SWORN
TO
and scored three runs as emergency
believe it when bullpen coach singIe.
start
for
,
.
lilt
North.
ol
tha
IIPOIII
Ml,
and
Cincinnati ended the Brewen~' Milwaukee, the first of his Bill · Castro told h1m to gel
Keams h1t a two-run homer, Bouthwetl oorn" of Adam L. Oro11, eublcrfbed fn my
three-game winning.streak.
his
fifth of the season, in the Frao11on 2; thanct baing 11r1t duly PNNnoelhll
career. The right· ready 15 minutes before the
. "Jose Rijo shut us down,'' four-year
fifth.
After Cabrera walked l!ut 1211 feel; aworn, dapo1e1 1nd dayof aaot.
.
reliever made 167 start of the same.
Brewers manager Jerry handed
the
next
batter Takahito thenoe North 33 alya lhat ha 11 tht
Larkin led off the game with
appearances before
,
•
dagr111 Will 110 tllornay
for Notary Publlo for till
Royster said after Milwaukee relief
a bloop slnsle and Juan · Nomura reheved. ·
IHI; tlllnce North 40 CONBECO I'INANCI! IIIII of OhiO
starting
for
Nick
Neugebauer,
was shut out for the third time
dagreaa Will 122 IIRVICINQ CORP., In
this season, "We swung at a
IH1; thence Iouth
43•1/4 diiii'HI Wilt
lot of bad pitches. He kept us
320
IHii thence We11
off-balance pretty good."
US lael; thence
Reliever Jim Brower began
South 320 fHI to the
the sixth with a 4-0 lead.
pf1c1 of beginning,
'
containing
1.11
Brower, who has not allowed
aoraa,
more
or
fell.
a run in his last four games,
hoeplfng tnd
pitched two scoreless innings
l'lllrvfng therefrom,
and struck out five,
I Ctrllfn pii'Cif
oontllnlng ,87 of 1n
Reds right·handed reliever
1cre
In till No..U. part
Scott Sulfivan took over to
1htraol, whloh w11
start the eighth, but had to
convayed to Mllnnfng
D. Webetar, by daacl
. leave the game three battm
dated June 1, 1112,
, , .; , later. wh~l\ S¢~tson hit a one·
referRed to which 1r
.
2 Avg. Size Rooms Cleaned
her~by mada. The
foregoing baing part
$29.99 ea. rm.
----------------~
of
tha
retl
11t111
Captain Steamer Carpet Cletnll'
tupplltt provkledl Aut~
aonvaytd by d11d
Toll Free1·88B·338·7847
,IAdcjretted Stamped Envotopot 1
reaord1d In Deed
look 184, Page 101
4, P.O. llox 1438. AniiOc~.
0000 WIIKLV INCOME
1nd Daed look 13o
P1g1 131 of the
MtiNng Our Slltt l!roehurtlf
reduce payments up
Melge
County Deed
FIH Suppfltl, POI'-gtl
to
SO%,
lower
interest.
lleoordl.
A pair of base hits plus an
S'-rt tmmodlltotyt
Help W•ntod
Thl Pllftfontr
Nonprofit, licensed, ·
error enabled the Viklnas to
Clonulnt Opportunity!
lurthar 1111111 t.hat
add one more run l.n the
For 'r" Information,
by re11on ol •fault
bonded ..
olthl
Dlltndlnl(tlln
Coli Toll Froo:
upper fourth.
·
Bed
the
p1yment
of 1
1·fl00.357
·1170
·
(8%
ovoroaroll)
Melas posted two unearned
promf11ory
nota,
LOAN80.A.O
: runs in their half of the lnnlna ·
www.amerlx.
ICOOrdfng tO ill .
Pttl lltulltl TOII·frH
• as, with the Rrst two batten
ttnor, till contlfllona
1·11N01·:137t
ol 1 oonourrant
' down, Stanley waa hit by a
IIIUNIICU~ID LOANINI
mor11• dltd ginn
pitch, free paue1 were
111/PtrtOntV~
Pleasant Valley Hospital
to
uoure the
led Crodlt OKI
accorded Jacob Smith and
payment ol 11fd noll
lltrt•UPI • CO.IfOnort OK
and oonvtylng thl Pleuant Valley Nu11lna ond llehabllhadoa C..llr ill
Zach Glaze around a Viklna
t·31
H53&lt;:1o150
preml- datorfbad, ·
• error before the side wa1
~ynamlc Lona·renn care flciHty that pro•dlo
www.taltot1uncllng •..,.,
h1va
b11n broken,
• retired.
lntmnedltteand 1kllled""" -dt to retldoallt.
1nd the 11m1 hll
: A potential threat was cut
Come join our heolth oat orpnlzodm wbln "'
baooma 1baolutt.
provide o... lltncoltl oare.
: . short in the Viklna fifth on a The Pltftfonar
preyt th1t the
·.: play seldom seen In today'a
Dalandlnl(a) 1111m1d
POStTONS AVAILAIILEt
· aame. Manln led · off with
lbOVI bt r,quii'ICIIO ·
liN
· Part Umo and Ptr DiiiD
; : base on ball• then Josh Cecil
lniWir lnd Ill liP
LPN
•
Fulllfnw,
Part time, and P• OS.
: .. 1ingled puttlns two aboard.
tlllfr lntar11t In 11fd
ra11 111111 or bl
• Ruckel lteppeil to the plate,
A COMPUTEf! PUT IT WOAK .
RATI! WILL DB BASI!D ON BXPBRIINCII
forever
btrrad from
: arounded to Detrick Knapp,
IU1Wf75 por hour. I'T/FT 1·IQO:IH.fNI14
IIHrtfng
1hl
llml,
. who taaaed ~econd, fired to
Bmdllt ln&lt;ludat
lor lorecfoiUrl ot
-out wobtltt
· · Stanley at ftrst for out num11fd mortglge, lha f%,000 lllp on bonul lor Full Unw Llot••• " mlrlhllffng of 1ny
: ber IWO, Stanley rifled the
JIIa tchoduU.. (llldudltlt lZ 1t1ttr .......)
Ilene,
tnd tha life of
Shill dllf.,..llal
·
: bail to Ramabura · nailing
eald
real
eallll
1nd
1
w-...pu'M
· Martin at the plate, complettill pr0Mec11 01 ufd
...._..~+afW-·'1 tile
ing the triple play ltld sealing .
life tppfled 10 lhl
HMIIIIMiniNIIaf I' .,..., ,._
p1ymant
of
the win.
Pe1ftl0Mr'l Cfafm In
: The double victory closes
APPLY IN PERSON OR CALL
the proper order of
• out reJuiar seaaon competi·
111 priority, 1nd for
o\npla CltiiM, DON
tlon iivlna the Maroon and
IUC h Othtr tnd
&lt;*&gt;"I·JUf
further renal H 11
Gold diamond men an 11-10
AMIOB
jUI1 lnd equfltbll.
record,
.

NFL

~rsJ'~n~~ \'h~o~rue~ ~~~edm::·c~:ve~~S~rorn:n~~~af~re~~ :~::ri~~ ili~u~oo~ :~~~.gs~,e~=~

Reds

.
.

Meigs
,.• ,....1,

I

·--t.o m

•

•

�,.•• 14. The Dally Sentinel

www.mydllllytantlntl.com

~v. May 14,2002

· CLASSIFIED

AR

In One

MACK'S

With Us RUCH OVIR •as,OOO PROSPECTS

Poctt.t Knlvea
&amp; ColltetlbiH

PLUIDUR AD

Your

•A CUt Abo1r.i

~egi~er

Ad, tltribune(740)446·2342 Sentinel (740)' 992·2156
Or Fu To (740) 448 3001

I Today•••

Or Fax To (304) 17S-5234

. Or FIX Ttl (740) 1112-2157

Moq.~~Y

(740) 882-5908

thr.u Friday

Includes
Up To
Over 1 .5
Ads

·

5:00 p.m.

\ \ \ t i l \ ! I \1 1 \ I "

r

1116

~

lltuW.oom

11118

IIANKINO
Aatlalllnt lronch 11_.
Moonlight EIICOfll. Full "'
malt and tamale u· ·
- - nd •·
~ Growt 1.............1 bl •
-~•
_........
I
ng . ....,....~,
n,
lnd Pi01allllo.111and Con I· lllllull·llmt o•- QlliiC&gt;I'Iu·
don"-!. WI alto do Blrlh· nlty In our Mc"'thur Olllee
dill Pllwlll and liiOhllor lor al~ontfQIIk: ""'
Pa(7.'!'!!.. apm.
811'1\. ~!~""· Ao
olonl Bronch
-,_.tm.
-nagar rou willoulot with
..,.,..--,....,...--- o&lt;trall oporalklno of 1M
Wily ... ~, Sllrt muting l&gt;rtnch. ,.,._ oullttnalng
Ohio olnalollanlght, coli toll c u - -·and tocuo
lrtl 1·IOII-718-11823 "" on rttall aiNicH lncludkng
1821 .
mortgego ond conoumor
lolnuo wollu ntw dopDrl·

ftwoWANI1lll

Gram o"alopment
llpo&lt;lllllat
Bochtlof'l dtgrtt In publiC
admlnlalrriHion, ......., and
p1
.,.....,
ArmlnQ.'-I!h, Q010!1Iology, or rtlated llold, with two
)'Mrt ..,.,_In WOI'Iolng
witngrantll&gt;~maa•.oiOI&gt;

mont, ,.,._, OR, 5+
yt~aro -rtoncoln auccoulul grant writing ,..
qulted; abiiiiY to _ . . ,
ond """"'I&lt;&gt;P grant-'""
nltlet. Primary rtapOntiblllly
ltiOrtiHrchond~

11"6

algnlllcant oxparlonct In
A
blnk,
crtdll unkln, cr o1nor
1
J.~ 01 1[1".;
.llnanolal lnolllull"" . lo II•
..,_"~~..;;;,--;, \'" 17 Col."~ qulrod. Excollont oornptn•
. rt ""'
oollon ond bonollto, lnolud·
ftnd =out
rDU~
B~· lng health lnluronot ond
~-• an
IIH. • 4011K) . Plnaa aond 10·
74 · _ _ _ aumt to: Olk Hill llnkl,
""";.;..,;,~;.;..;,;;,..._
.:.
C·l Boor Corry Out pormlt Ann: Human Rooourotl,
lor .... Chtatar Townahlp PO Box 1188, Jl&lt;&gt;klon, 0H
Mtlgo CoUnty, Hnd lono~ - 0. EOE. M/F/ON
ol lnltroll lo: Tho Dolly
sontlnll, PO Booc 728·20,
Fomttoy, Ohkl48711.
N.
R OtWI 111
1 -ronco
oy
nw
net be rtoponolblo lor any
dlbll other than my own •
05·03.02

rJ:.•

.: you

r

=·

GIVEAWAY ·

I

1.1!11
. ------·

•
4 yoor old Sholly, Noutortd,
All Sholl to dalt. 'lb gOod
noma In CCuntry. 17ol0)•4e·
8881
FrH killona; 3/Whllt,
1/0IICk, Mlgar, 1 yallow.
Oca, ltmllt, pari Chow.
7~1t2·728&amp;

t

o.,alt Yard Sole Laftcvart:
Shoo II YlrG Hie priOH.

A.U• lndu11rl11, Alblny +

Alhono.

7ol0·888·8200

www.rtulllndultrlta.org

.

RACO 8ohol1r1hlpo Yard
ltll, Star Mill Par!o, AooiM,
May 18 •IIC 4:00, Ml)' 17 •
0 to a:30. LAwn mowtrt,
bod, ruga, llnona, gllll·
'MII'I1 dtt!'\11, Plnl, Cloth·
lng, thota, purtn, Iota cl

'

JIWtlry,

Avon,

furniture,·

booka, ccllocllbloo, mloo.
Tlllnka lor your oupport.
l!llhrYn Hon 848·28lle, Ann
Zlrklt IM8·2031

:.t__%.-.a.uv.__..l

WI have
lmmedl1t1
full-time
CUitOmlr
eervlce poeltlon
opening• In our
main office.
8UCCIIIfUI
appllcantl muat
be people
oriented, injoy
ualng th1
phone,
computer
llttrltl, 1nd
enjoy working
With numbere.
Poeltlon otf111
all comp1ny
btnenta
Including
health and llfl
lnaur1nce, 401 k,
paid vacation,
lnd pereonll
d1ye. For
employment
conaldtratlon,

: -uta Top Dollar: u.a.
8flvtr, Geld Oolnt, Proof•
Hll, DlamOnda, Gokl
Alngo,
u.s . Ourroncy,.
M.'[l. Coin !lhop, 1!1 lite·
ond Aftnuo, Golllpollo, 740-

'

I \ 11 ' 1 11\'dl ' I
,J II\ I t I ,

'-------,.1

:1116 Hllu&gt;W.oom

I '. .

~

Otptndlblt, RIIOQntiOII
· Sifter In ""' noma Iller
II N:T NOWII Wcro from achool 1 "lummtr Wllk·
noma, PTM lrH
dovo. TorliAddlaon . aroo.
to800-2U•2HI
(7401317,7112
-.dOriiWOrrylltrleh.ntt
Domlne'a now liking appll·
ATTIN710NIII
OIIIOnl lor mlnlglmtnl
le 'lbur Own loll.
and Nit driVtrt, QaiiiOQIIa
M·~ff
and Pornercv locltlono onlv.
121.•111./hr. Pottntlol Apply In poraon.
No lxporllnOI N-ry
Mlall Ordtr
D,.IYIII, ""' 1.01c1
Call Tell Frn
Hllnlllnttlonll ·
Rumpkl hll grown 10 Ill•
1·188·•71.0ASH
oomt ""' 01 tilt natlon'a
llr...at prlvalt provldtrl of
,...., Cart Olvore Wliie ..,.~• .
nHd ex·
ld ....... I lhtrlfi!IUIIc porltnaed dtdloeted p.oo
lollor • • glvtr, you will 1111 pit and o~rronlly hlvt on
r l l - 130-148 .I ,CIIY opportunity IYIIIobla lor 1
lor tilt 0111 ol 1 ohlld In 11.., IMd .,1..,,
rourhOmt, yauwlll raotlvt
mll11ge rtlmburHmtnt &amp; The poriOn we nlra will
pold rttpllt. Trltlnlnga oro uloly -ate • truotr to
beginning In Juno. Far aompltto 1 """• aom•
mort Info 111ft OAIII Thora· llftt* NQ"IIItllkMiupoutlo Folllt CW Nttwolle, liOn end maintain bctlAltltny. otMo. Tell,,.., 1• ltnt o u . - NMOI, At171·32e-18N
qulrtmtnll lnctuelt • Clltl
Lillie
1 COL, It 11t11t 21 yatrt o1
DIIII'rt~=~ "':::.~~~ ege, end heve 1 oiHn
l'traonntl ond lrac Miano driving rt0ord (8pt1 or ltlo
tQimtnt ' F l - hOurt with no OUI'o or ouopan•
with
'
olono) lor 1111 1.011 '2 yoaro.
Oomt'"tJ~
~ Mual alaa Ill tlltl lo 1111
lilt Qolllpoll u/:
7511111300-100 llmtla oer.
r..-.1
I
,.
'
-•
w1 ofltr en noolltnt oom·
AVON! All /loruol To lw "' ponullon lnd bontiHa pro11111. llltirtty lpHrt, ao4Including mtdlcol ,
078-t4ilt
r. ~ Vltlllon and
'
ptntiOn.
In poroon toIliAD COOK NIIDID
dlr:
.
.
IIUIJIIIICt- ltrvlott
Thlt opon1ng It lor.., thor· I'IHtl - · Ollt..H 1111
,_, potltfOn. Expo- 21AWI.onelld
Prtfarrld. Wt Art 1 70 btd Wt41oton, Clllo1H12
Iongo ttrm COlt nurolna 111EDE
cllltY. n )'Ou art Quol~ltd
at '
Atllluront now
CENTER
AI ,::~: 3:::"""'• lull Of
. IIIlO Co1on11t llfiVt
lion ~I ~-•·· ,Uf.,~~
llldMI Ohio
........ ~ ... •
415814
bol-n
t :30am
I
~Equal Cpponunlty Em· 10:oo.m, Morldl!lltlru 811.....,~
urcley.
•

-let.

,

w.

:1'1111Yt
=."

X:,';;.

~N~~

~e·a

fll'lPOOOitlor grant-Ill·

~

~:: ~r:~

rib

room, lamllv room and
loi!CIIon wllllloll 01 cablnell
ond 0\IIF\I, - 1
olr, otntral hNI, • bed·
roomr, 1·112 batho, lull

Cuotom Bulldor 'lllklng ordoll Ill&lt; Naw to be
buln. 1200-ll200 eq n. WI II•
nanot. Call (7ol0)448-3!70:
Fof atle by · cmy 4
bedroom. i bllh, - r Mil·
aon Walmlrt, 11~1 Iron!
porch, $80'1. 304·773·5788.
In MI..,, WJ. 3·br. HouH,
R·oulbulldlnga 1·10•8011.
mobile hOmt. 1 alnglt oar
gtrtge ·hUgt Eve~rotn
lrtll &amp; privacy. on
80M200tl. Lot with acctta
., Noh· end of lot. 1 lot on
Rl 33. Prlcld $88,000. call
ahor 7pm. (304)882·33!18
MlddlopOrl, Oh 1II Avonut,
rtmoeltild, 3 bedroom, Rlvtrvltw with diCk. 740.1182·

11403.

Ntwtr Horna atoo Sq. Fl.
3br.. IIIIa .. living _,, din·
lng room, lomlly - · &amp; 2
car Qlrtgtl. MaldDWbrook
Add. l1a8,000. (30ol)e7•·
::48::,77,:______
NICI3 b.clroom houat. R•
rna&lt;ltlorl. Ntw oldlng &amp; ..,.
pal. Nlot lot 11 3!0 S. •th,
Mlddloport. Woo 13.2.100.
Now 12a,000.. 'ouplax •
23e. MlddltPO&lt;I. New roof
&amp; carpal. Could II._ In ""'
a~ and rtnt ether. Wll
I•!,OOO. Now $3!,0QO.
01111 ota·U03 or IIOa·2780 ·
Pertlllly RlmDCIIIId homt,
a Bedroom 1 Both Full
Boaomont, Lorge uninach·
ld a OO'J:"~· 127 Klnt·
- Or. t•• "'
•••s
-·
~ ~

Millo and Female Eaccrta
ond Doncoro Wtnted. •·M·
""
ouo
lnqulroa
Only.
17oi01318·17GI.
IIIDICAL IILLINQ
No nportonco noctlltry,
Will Troln. Computer rtqulrld. Grtollnoomtlll
1-800·1ol0·1107, Otpt.118

~

Mollru; lfoM&amp;s
FOR SAL£

I

14•70 u-. New Oldtr Per·
acn OWnocl. 17./0)21111·1378
IIIIWitrl 81m·2ptn Mcn-Frl
_ __;__..:;.,_.,.·..:...:,_.,.·
1888 O• ...on 14x70 abr. 2
'"''e xctllent Oondl·
1u11 bllha.
lion.
Htal'
pump, On rantld
let In Mlckllot~rl.
~30ol)e7 e.
•• 3•• 3 or (30•• e•s.
• 878
IIIOD Skyllna l~x 7 0. 2 bodroom, vr,..1 aldl~. ahlnglt
c."'
""
,
11 Ktrtna 740-38II:

=a.

. .

I

11181 I 4x80 Notrl I I nc1t1
NICCO
mobllt hOmt ~ ::IOrt
Till .- . r 01 ~lmlly
ol lond In Point Pluatnl 3
br a balh oanlrtl air lftxl
FOITIII I'AI!INTI
1,;;, poroh ext-' rch
NIIDID
IOxta mti..l bulldlngpoSpiH
rail ltnct Movln oul ol
WO"~ - · 11"'10 htlp 1
~·••
lg
ohlldin'ri'i'ld?''l'bu'll rtOIIvt
llllt. 1""",.7!•74al
up to 11081.00 monthly ,..
Country he.,.. nlot loto
lrnburtlmtntlor oooh ohlld
IOOIIed ., Rl :13 1111woan
plooa In your homo •• well,
PomaFOI'IAihtna. 0111 740r~·~Jr:~~~~~~ ~lpo
1102·218710r Clltllll.
I
I
' Maylltg 21 ou. n. rtlriQtra•
0llkl rta••·nt
·~ -·ta
Cl&lt;lvtrnrntnt
AWtllll•
tor,
TwoNlw,
mcntha.
old• .._,
""' · •N
bla. No CrtdlllLoana
No Probltml
uald,
17!0
Prlot
lind
bo
NHomaa · Onl•
1!!0 1740""'2 ••1 1
ID
DUll ut becoming
""
,.
1 ~:-·~-:,..-.-..;_.;,;;..__
aloltor portnlcall:
I_ you
,(740)448·3003.
MollOhan Carpal, :zoa Clark
ICatrlna AdMina
Homt lfrvlelt Worklr With
!.All Model uHd te•SO on
ChiPII Road Porttr Ohio
(7ol0liii-4Ha or
luokM Community ltrv·
rtnled lot. utt rnodllltlllll
17•0)«e·7#1 1·117-130:
1.flHO.PIQC9
lcH. W. -~ llllry plua
will oonllldlr 1,.dl on 480 tat Avo, __ 1 lA, 0112. ,,.. llltmataa, llay
NHd ..._,. to ..,. for btntfHo 1nd 1 dilly room
anything ol equol valuo U8=ua Uti&amp; dim• nnanclng, 10 dirt atme u
my mother In Chnhlrt, and bolrd rale. rou prov~ JU
HelMa
130oi)0711-3188
1111
· 17ol0)118-4!31 • ctoh. VIII/ Matlor Card.
lam·2pm wnktndt only, 1 homo, gulellnoo and
FOil 8.u.l
(304
-4831 ·
D~v.· •· Mnla alot
7ol0 31J7o030a
lrllndlh!P 1n 1 flmlll' llmotUlll- 1888 1lx80 PIHI·
'
•
llhtrt. fll(tulrao lht ability
wcocl motllle home 3 bod· Apartment AVIIIablt Now. ' Solid Oao Troatle 'lltblt with
Now Hiring. KU Cattrlng lo teooh ptrtcnal living 118 South Paro Drlvo a room, I full b1lh~l lxl Alvtrhnd Plloo, New HI· . 2 1 - (QIIrtdl, 8 chllrt,
FOOd Prep ~ larvlng. Vlrf· olrllla and 1 ocmmMmant to &amp;tory, Willi blatmtnl, front PO!Otl, 128,800. 7«~-741· von, WJ now ~lng Ill- Huloh With mirror IMiOk t.
lbll HCiirt. 8tnd ~HUrlll tho growth and dovelop· porch, rear bl•ltvtl daak, ila47
PIIOIIIcno lor HUD·aubol• IIOhla llkl ni'N oondlllon.
to: ~~ Harman Ad, GaiiiP. mtn1 o1 an lndlvlduol wllh lbovt
ground
IXIOI .
dlltd. 1 bedroom apart• 11100. (7ol0)218·127!
olla OH 4111131
-n••i -·~allon H ln1er (304)1711-114!
NIW 2002 3 br/2blh. Only mant. Utlllllll lnclt- Coli '
'
.
oO'n'iiOt Ohriaty II , •
lilt clown tnd only (304)181·3121 Apartmant
Otlloa Work In Pomoroy, 800·S3I·2302. tqull ~ 2 BA. wlllh lull baatmtnl, aaou~ par month. Call ovollablo JUNE 1, 2002 for
AN'nQva
PhoM/ItllliTtl-· OQriUnlty lmpioyor.
ntw holt nglcoollng, now Nikki 740-388· 7e71 .
quolllltd oonlorldltoblod • ~
·
,
viOl
Work.PYIVPirl
Qfl &amp; walor 11-. unllnlah·
ptroon.
.
Tlmt/Fiexlblt lohld. Ptr·
BUIINDII .
ed upolllra, large - · dllh
IIAUT.,UL
Buy D&lt; 1111. Alvt~na Anti·
llciFD&lt;'illudtnta.WMITrtln
TiwN1NG
Wllhor.l47,000. 1304)t711- 11S Acrt Farm, laoutlful
I"AIIT· Qutl, 11a4 ~~~ Mlln on
1•1188•874-JOIIS
2toa
Qanlly ROlling Hilla, 18 :r.'!l'J:KDQIOITN "'
...~ SA 1U I . l'olntrov, 740G
· 3
IIOI-28at. Ruaa MOO&lt;t,
11 2 Acrtl Tlllabla, Tlmbtl worth
•
•~..KI1n,.•"811001CLH
.,;
O.lllpOIIt
CMtor
Colr.,t
~~r:;~cn
l'lou
2000
fhoullnd.
Farm
11
7:::!1
~
~
tllwood
W~lvtto
owner.
1·.. &lt;Ceruro Clelt To ~~
112 1 1
dlvldtd by Dodnfl Rd, Rural
' •~
for .hontat, nordwcrMing, Call ToCIIYI 740-oi4H31J'1, 3 bedrOOm, a llllh brlok Wotar Line olrt~dY OVIlla· ahop I movr... Call 740Rtlloilll ptcple. Compotl:
1·110il·21olo0412,
ranch on 1.8 flat ICrtl. ""'· Lalo 01 Flood ,rontage. ~·8·2188 . Equal Houolngo
tiVt WagH ond llarlllo In
JII:•II0-05•127~1,
,_r carptl and lllrwt. lull Oht lmprcvld lulkllng lito Opponunlly.
were,
otntiVtt. Apply wHhln.
bmmtnt I pertlllly hnltfl. With lnlllllld pond, Circular Crown Clly· 1 lldroom mort.
ITATI TIITID NUMINO
M•cru.ANF.OtJ8 · ed), ,.,. ~anon, a oor ~f:t'L s:ruo !Jtttm. New
Plllnl,
Carpal:
M1ric:Eu.AN1!oo
AIIIITANTI PIIDIO
•
• {llroge, Jilt
1bovo New FN d so':oiO,IO =~ •300/mo. 1200 atourlly do. Mr.ilawag
•
Hlvii1304·!82-3117
!"
·
pon. (7o10)al58·1248
II )'Ou lrt 1 IIIIo T - a• a br. Mabile Homo~ Ill&lt;
Rd., Vlnlon, Ohio, OH Stilt
Nurtlng Alllallnl ·looking ront, from New ht· 3 bldroom, a Dfl·l oar II• Routt · 180. ApproiHd Fumlohld 3 roomo &amp; blth, 2! Campular Gamu
ror part•tlma •mpiOYmtnf. - gradl aohocl ~·182· ltDnocl ger•r.·
t41,000, Aoklng 1135,000. Cltln. No Pill, Atltrtnot Dlac• oondlllon, 110
... - · n opening for rou 1107
lry otttlng, ... nlo
~oUI lnqulraa Only. &amp;
dtOQtlf
reqylrld. IIOh. Phone 1740)448·2318
we.,. • 70 bid ~ongolarm
·
tra8,000. 740- ~502-2Gole "'17ol01"74· (740)4411-1!18 ·
..,. nurtlng loolllty dtdlcll·
WAHI'Ia&gt;
Furnlahtcl EH~I•nor All
ld 10 quolffy Dirt lor our
To Do
3 b.c!room, 1r1 Mlddlopor1,
UtHIIIll Plld. Shirt '81th,: Mllnl bCOII lnd - ··
r -.
•
• colt '!'om Anderton thor
11!0/mo ere IIOoncl """ aomt nloty 1011, tO 112
PIHH apply In,.,.., 1111!pm (7ol0)1102·33oll
New Doublt Wldt on 1 (740)&lt;I43845
'. lnd 11, 110 lo 13!. LRI
1Watr1 me hourt oii;QOam. All Mllklt LAw,. Mowora
'
'
Acrt. 10 mlnulll lrorn 1101Eo-.128. 2 Air ConCIIIIon4:00pm Mondt)ltntu Frtell)l lnd ~ PowttF Equip- :1M HouH with LR. KltcJio p1111. 4 bad/ 2 8oth wnh 1 ll'l, lkMI lltlrlgorlllor. trt,
lnd 178. 13041773It:
mtnt Alptlrtc!,:_:!'~Pickup an &amp; lelll. NfW lldlnQ, Win' lwlmrnlng pool. Conolruc· Wuher/DI'Yfl'
Hcok·Up 8183
HolztdlonlorCaroCtnlo&lt; and dtllvtrl .........,, Otll !IOwa lnd roof. On oomtr lion oornpltlt In 3 · 1281/mo (140i441•1811 ' NIW AND U11D ITIIL
310 Colonial Dr. .
Mlkt (7ol0)448-7104.
let In Utnllrvllt. (7ol0$ Call 1740)&lt;1433141o quaM·
.
'
Slttt Bltmt Plpt Flllllf
8fdwelf, Ohio ~15814
Will do LA
·- 1271
1)'.
2 bod"'""', 2 otory lpl~· For Oonortlt ' Anglt Ohl""
M Equal Opportunity Emwn mowing ,
TON V
mont lor rtnl In lyrtolllt, n11 f'lll Ia '11o01 'Grotlna
P"'Y«
F,; Dralno,'' DriVtwero 1
URGENTLY
NIEDID• Autly.
pt.-dy rtnltcf, ltrlouo lno IVIIIIbla. (7ol0)440.3211.
w1tor ~tr &amp; lrtah W~•:.·~lcr:r!...~'
plllmt , Hm
tO Wll ~-..- ··•
quktt Only, (7401U8 .!01. W IO (7oi0):17H1 11
' Ill
~,-~..:..:..•-:=:
1.._.....,
lor I or 3
~·-· w-, - ·
I
_,
WtdnHdllv ' F.-••
hourt - l y . Cll Ito 1J1t lrollore, lnd - ·· Cell Kf~ Dr!W, l&lt;lnau- "Hd hOmao Ill&lt; under alA, Juat ptot HoiJtr HOI- 4:30pm. OioHd ThiiiiCII~.
Ploltlll Servlat, 7oiO·H2· 441-423e otll Ill&lt; AOII or 01· Nlot 3 btclroom, """'' 12,000, 011 1-IOQ.!37· ~31 pllal "" 1110. Folrl)' Now.
&amp;
Sunday.
11e11 .
!tiM mt oog4.
ntrtl; 0111 711Q.II02·2ol03. lor Into.
1410/mo. (7401«1.011M.
{7ol0)
7300

r

I

r

ni.d

eo-••

.:=

ow

1,..,

1383

I

liM

:;.=·
I·

I"

:~m.rJ:. ":!': ~"J~ ,~N.J:~~':,I~

no

=mo = =:.,
~

~:e...·~~ 1J:

Stturl':'l

'

.,

'--1
'

2 oo. Calzono ATA 18
11'101 roolunounlrood OIH
with oeolara: 1 ••· Anvil
ATA 11 tpoct raokmount
FOld With Ollltrt; I
ea. ,........, 701 R Storao
rtckmcunt mlw; I 11. PH·
'WI IQ.II? rtckmounl· 27·
bond equ1111or. Phono
1304)878·1370 a!lor 1:00
P.M.

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

f&lt;lrboard VK7 Rolond, a
Gorman Vlolono a Show·
bud llaclrlo Bltll Guitar
lnd lpacllll.llng In Siring
lnatrumanr
Ropalr.
17oiOIUII-81 111

r

I

'

-·c

hms&amp;
VIQITABLI!S

..__otiiiiiiiiiiiil._pl
,_,.,.,. (N"""' ~atlon)

...,.....,._ ,....,... ~
argenlc QIOWI! &amp; ttowara.
WPaiOICUhHon,7~:
ol
8,.
1

r:t:.a;rv

"='=,._....,...--

:-:llii=·

HO"IQIIOWH ITIIAW·
IIRIIIII. C111r1t1 MoKiron
Parm 111111 CanlonaN Rd
17ol0)448 IM42
.,
'

,:"'C

no

sao "" ......

,

I

I

8

-p;.;.~:;;;;:.;;;;;;,;,._"'

I \1' 'I , I I 'I I II .,
, I I\ I

I I It h

1111,_-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

rib

FAIIM

EouiPMl!:NT

..__oiiliiiiiii--.,1
r

ICing Cufttr Flnloh Mow·
or. 2 bt111. 1800. (30o4)87!·
aaoz
::::-:-:=~-:--_.:,.·~.1. M.F/110 Traotor Live
· 2 allOt Clutch . Fin·
lolling , _ ,, Plewa, diiC.
Etc. J&amp;500.

fJ~al":u

·7

Cellular

WRITESEL
Roofing. Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
Free Estimates

949-1405 ~

Plains, OH
CALL 667:6329

Hill 's
Self Storage
29870 Bashan Road

1891 Ford 'lllurua GL,
LOidld wllh ccllona. CIHn.
11,000 mlloa. $2000 080.
1740)44 1-1083 '
1992 Cadillac STS, Looded,
Good .Condlllon. s•.4oo.
(740)245·8007

Authoriz:td A~nt

992-5479

740..742-3411

Jeff Warner Ins.

to 10'x30'

1884 Pontiac Sun~lrd, 3.1
VB, Runl Good. $1000 . . _~-----. 1740)•48·0858 alter 5:00. -

Hours

C1rd of T111nkl

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

ol/tMII

Makes Ttttctor &amp;.
Equipment Parts

All

NtwHOmtl
Garagtl

Factory Authorized

Complete .

Case·IH Parts
Dealers
I000 Sr. Rl. 7Sautlt.
Coo/vi/It, OH 45713

Remodtllng

Stop • ComiP!Irtl
FREE ESTIMATES

740-667-0363

740.882·1671

1~.,,.~-,, 1~ . ll1tpp

In,_

l;o\ I S'l

\ I id d

"'I'

Ill (. (

I h i" I:' ~ hO

Local 843-SZ64
740·949·2217 Medicare Supplement;
Life Insurance;

Size• IS'x10'

FREE ESTIMATES!

.DIPGYIII
.Pllltl

Racine, OH 45771

. 181111 Dcdgt Noon, 2.0, s - - - - - - - lptld, 48.000 mlllt. Now
Paint Job. t3100. (7401448· ..,,..._ _ _ __
7428 or 17•0)44e-231 a.
11188 Malibu. !3K, S871!.
1817 S· 10, 5aK, $1015.
I wish to thank
1987 Trano•Am, Rad, T·
those who sent
Tope, com~etaly O,rlglnal,
'87K, $321!. 15 other qulll!y
get well cards,
'cara from $1115 . COOK
MOTQRI. (740)4olll.01 03 · . also flowers and

Sunset Home
·Construction
BrylnRMvtl
. New HomH, Room Addltlon1,
O•ragea, Pole Bulldlnga, Roofl,
Siding, 'Deckl, Kltchtna, Dryw111 ·
&amp;MOfl

HOWARDL

986·366e

Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mort111t; Mlljor Medical
..
• Nursln11 Home
---

JiJL..

East Sial~ Slreet Phone (740)593·667
Alhens, Ohio
"

11-~~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Krls
Kanleckl
UCENSKD MASIAOE

I0

THIUIAPIST
Bxpcrtence
In:

•

33795 Hillrul R&amp;
Jlolflti'01&gt; Ohio

740-992-5232

Thank You

•

2001 Cavalier Z·24, 81101&lt;,
LOidld, Pcwtr Ewrythlng,
5.000 m1111. Mull Sea.
$8895 .00 080. (7.0).41.
15&lt;17

a•

Nloaan Moxie, goacl
ccnd. loaded 110,000 mlloa
$8000. 30H76.0 132

:.·r

sympathy cards
for the funeral
of my husband,
Wilkie Holman •.
Sadly missed by
wife and family.

Delivered
&amp; Spread

Llcen11d It ·1n1urtd
He1lth Probleme?
· Want Mort Ltlaurt Time?
Tired of Mowing?
Not A Spring Chicken?
LIMITED OPENINGS

Now Open
11 1.m. • 8 p.m.
Monday thru I $15.00 ptr ton
8·10 tone
Slturd•y
llmlttd aritl
Clolld Sunday

I

Alsoaervlng

sauaage gravy
&amp; biscuits

Dally Lunch

1

1oo West main St•

J

Pomeroy

· Speclala

(740)

(740) 992-1536

IU.I_,

Luve name a No.

992·0008

TROCKS
1'011 SALI!

~

.~ 1111ir~~~ t~J;rt
1/A

t 8110 Nlaaan Ma•lma Ldtd·
ad, Now . Sloroo, Sunrocl.
Good Oondlllon. $3200.
(0801 (30&gt;1)578-2342

1194 QMC Sla"a Truck, lull
olzo. orow cab. dually. In ••·
collonl oondlllon, eoll 7•0·
512-4310
1184 Toyoll Plok"p. AulD,
Air, AMIFM, .CD. Vory
Clton. Run~ Looka Grttl,
$3000. {740)4•8·8S07
1117 Ocdgt Full Silt V·8,
Automollo. Short Whaal
aoaa. sto.ooo. (304)875·
, 112
1998 Dodge D-350, Dlooel,
4WD, eap., AlUminum 1111
bid, q"ld Olb, prlol&lt;ioiO
1111. excollant Condll~n .
17~0)1188·5101 avenlngo,
2000 Ohovrclot pick up.
Rod, LS, Aulo, V· B, AC, 8
' 112 loot olepaldl btd. largo
- t d buCIIII -11. Ga·
"'" k8pt, like new. 8,000
mlloa . $18.000, (30•1875·
3783

1888 JHp Grond ClllrokH
Llmlltd. ~~4. Like new con·
dillon. &lt;try oloan . 84,000
n;loe. CO, CI ...Ut, Powor
Ewrythlng, Loather. 11,800.
(304)773·8103 .
.
99 Ford E•plorler loodld,
top oond. 70,000 mllta
112,000. 004·878.0132

e.

M&lt;m&gt;RCYaJll ,

740-882·7699
(NO SUNDAY CALL~

992·2155

1801 Honda AmtriOin Olaa·
110 lpeclal Edition. 1100
CC with lldclltbllll" &amp; IDit
or txtrll· 4800 mlloo,
l!OOO. (740)a•I.0313
1188 2110 Yamah414- ·
or. In IICieQt I 111
~"'' · H11 been run for
lbout 1 ho"'· mao.
17ol0)2411-0313
81 Honda 08 780. New
Tlrtl, Runo &amp; Laol&lt;l Good.
aaoo
mlloo.
(7oiO)oll48•1308

,,!00,

tor
25 per month '
I

..

T,rle the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI
L··IIW' j.-. ,1 ,,.,.

y··~l

Pomeroy f~gles
. 11060 2171
fuery Tltursdeg
6 SUndBy .
Doors Open 4:38

farty birds start

6:30
Proaresslve top line .
Tbursdeys

Proaresslve
Couerell on SunNgs

(740) 591•2173

WOLFE
Hcatinq &amp; Coolinq
24 Hr. Emergency Servl~e

Licensed • Insured
Thermal ZonetM eqUipment

• Tonneue Conr
• Ven.. IIOr • Bua
!Shlleld 11c Full Line

(10 yr. part. &amp; labor Wlrranty)

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
Hl·EMclency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

f!!l'.fi'..!J

lmrr=:. Colr•n1an

• Ym 5 A AYtlr l'•rt WMrrtnliotl
• Frat 1)1~1111 'l'lltrt11011JII
• 1'1'1!1 Ill Yur C:ompmroor
. Worntnlylln lltiHI Mudola
.'KKE •:s'l'llll.\1'1'.8 • IIUIIF. lonnlory
• Bonk l'lnanr:lnR A¥Oilablt

• PrietA To fit AU IMirttll

Service 111 Brands
Financing Available

Olher A~~-rlel

(740)949 - 1521

11· 111 ) 'I' I~ •,11n

I I

Drlvewaya, Patios,
Parking/play Araaa,
Sidewalks, Floors 1---- 21 VMrii!XptrltnDI
,,.. letiiMttl

'
I

'

Ill

I.E.
....
ALL TVNI OffM*IGIIR W
I~IOK. ILOCK A -

11111+c+l+'.l

IQI

IOYIAIIIDflf

rrr.1: Eslnnau:s

FAEE ESTIMATa

r~Hhlhlm++

(304)nwaao

71111 !1!17 !ll:rH

'

1:)

HERBALIFE
lndependenl
Dlttrlliutor

1 Lost 27 lb.
in 32 days.
100%
naturaVGuaranteed

740.992·7038
I,

~

(740) 991·3987
IlL~
Owner &amp; Opern10r, John Deon TFN

Or leave name
and number

garage sale
· ad~

11181 Honda 80XR, J?OO.
17~0) ......81!1 ,.... ,.,.

Roofs &amp; Sidlns ,
Comntcrclal &amp; R""identlol

Dlllvel'ld I
Spread $111.00
per ton 8 to 10
tone, l1m1t1d
areal call for
dltlla. Ctll:

1

Classlfle~

The
Daily
Sentinel

LIME·
STONE

l.n this space •

Unload a
cluster
of clubs I
You'll break
par every
lime you
place a
Sentinel

.

~~~f:tf.;'~~

FREE ESTIMATES

INI

IJ[~IJ
....

New Home! &amp; Remodeling
"Speclallzlna In Loa Homes

A
til IIi

, Windows • Roofing
COMMEICL\l ottd IESIDEllltAL

CASH

•

fi;t Ooragc§,~o~:=~~=::·~onc"'tc ~

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Ofll'nges
•·Replacemenl

· 1882 Hlllfll O...lton Low
Aldtr. Ovtr 15000 In oxlru,
Factor Candy· Appll Rid.
11,000 mllll.
Atklng
113,000. Would Con~dtr
883 Spcrtllar on trorlo.
(740)oll48.02, 3

aagt.

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

IJl•~l

:1982 Dcdga Ram 250.
· Loaad, Now Uree . $2800.
. (304)e75·11193

Wlnlld tO lluy. 8ft 3pt hl,loh
dlac. Alto Wlnltd 10 lfiH
to my larm In Galla eo.nty
lobacco quell (740!280·
1348
·

'

(740) 992-3194
992·6635

1888 Honao Accord, olr,
ounroot, $1,800.00. 740.

====---'

(10'110' 6 18'128')

St. Rt. 7 Tuppers

JlllartOn, Pl. PIHUOI or
coli Henry at 1~)07!·1433
ovonlnga.

• Walks

and Drives • Ston&lt;ll
Clete
Ft&lt;e Bstlmat•a
Scrvlna Ollloond w.v.

7Daysper~

niWir tim, aolld body with
llnled wtntlowl. S.. 112018

.

I

Flat 'M:wk,
Rtplo.ctn~&lt;nta.

Open 24 hours.

Cullo~a.

Morning Stir Raid • CR 30 • RICine, Ohio

• Fooltrt. Walla. Slop&amp; •

has openings, 15 yr.
axperlenoe, Ctrlllltd
In Meigs, Athena and
washington c:ountlea,

307 •bbl
(Broke Hnd Bolt), 3!0 'Ill'
llo (Bod), Stock Rims with

=

r ;. ___ - I

r

1884

Oftfy Ht _,.,

toMCllltlllOWIIICI

Connie's
· Child CARE

17~)7.:!·28Sa

10" Hinging Baskets '8.80
Wide Aaloltment o1 Herb&amp;, -'nnuala,
~In ... 1101!1 lor

740-88W848

'

111112 vw Robblt and parto,
Clll740.992·2191
1988 Plymolllh Rellanot,
4e.QOO a&lt;:IUII mllea, air, IU·
to, $1 ,500. 1997 HCnda
••4, low hours, $3.500.

~;·;;;·;,.:;;;~;=ru;.
IN TOWN A""RTMENT ll\dll)tl\dlrll - l i l t 0111·
FOR RENT. NewlY !llcOial· lllbulor, 0.11 Fof P~uct Or

j

. Call for mofll
irifo//rte estimalt

'01' 'llluroa SEL. L. .lhtr, 8
CO., Loadtd . (304)676·
3184 or (~)e74-3t30

=:;--

: : ~~:-.:.• ~~ Opporlunlly. (7oi0)441 - 1G82
room wllh llordwood 11oor1,
JET
control lllr. 'lou will be au~
AERATION MOTORS
priMCI now unuaually good Aapalrtd. Ntw 1 Rllluln In
lhla IIPiflmtnt1a lnd oon- SIOCk. Coli Ron E'rtl\1, 1.
v.nlont 10 tlllrylhlng In aoo.837-0521.
town. V.llnlll L. Smllh
(740)448 oe
------Longtbl~tr bolklll lor
Now 'lllklng Applk:allona- 1111 304.e'7!-48e2
3! Will a ltclroom Town·
houH Ajlarrmtnll lnciUCIII Toltl kllchon: Hind crolltd
Wtltr
sawagt, Trllh, ooblnola, r11dy lo llnl•h:
$SilO/Mo. 740-448 0008
bulll·ln black glooa lop
'
•
rtnoa, _ , I dlahwoahOf·
'IWin Rlvert Towor IDDIPI• llllhlelt IIHI link; atmooil
lng applloallono lor
rtlrlgarttor wllll ICI·mAklr;
Will 1111 IH "' lndl¥1dUOiiY.
1br. Hud Sublklllld apl.lll LIIYI mtlllgt 117.0.99:!·
ulll . Plkl lor lldtlty and ~31~1:-4~~-oblld E.H.od/~1 t75 .ee 78 Tralllr, 1e n. lllnalt ..-;;;:
OloHd wlbulh•fn cabinet, .
~a
IIQhtt, 11,100.00. Call 7401 _eta-&lt;13.=:;1.:,0_ _ _ __
FOR RIM
_
;~~;;;:::;
1100/mo. 740- ' ~~~ot~bo~~
llr\6
H
PSI $3!.00 Per ·100: All
OI1IIS
8rtH Ccmproulon Flttlngo
•'OR IbM
, In SIOQk.
liON IVANI INTEAPAia.
11 Joaklon, a•o. 1·BOO.
1 3 Bedroom1 F 10Hd
H;moo From 11.."~0 • , ·~
837-INiaB
Down, 30 voar:~;
;.:rd~=~~~::
APR. For Lllllnga; 800-311- 10% 011 Silo on 11 opptla,.
3323 Ext. 1701.
cta, Sklgga Applllnoao. 78 ·
a BR G1HI II1 A VIne St.. {740)44e•7388 . ~~~~~NG-,
'
PO
" '· :--::---::--~:--:17oiO)aee.e702
Appllanoeo; Raoondlllonocl
H
.
Walhfra.
Orytrt, Rangea.
1•IU!HUI. OMmi
RalriQl'IIOrt,
U:e_To, 10 Otl"'
~ n •• _
G
.~ 1
,. .._ _
'"" """'•
uarant811 New
Mltylog Appllencoa, Frtnoh Block, brlcll, HWOr · plpeo,
IIIII No"la 14• 72 a BR a City ~aylllg, 740-448-77Q5. wlndowl, Mntalo, olo. Claude
Full Both, Showtr: Lota.'ol BllckKtnmortEIIOiriCFIIIt W 1 n11 ~'7 ~~ R~.a, r,anda, OH
01 ~24~• 2 ,
Olblnllt, 0/A. DIOk. Extrt Sorvlr:t Slo&lt;t. Oltan. •
N~. No Pall. Partially Fur· Wcrko Groat. All lht utraa.
nlonoa· optional. Oounlry. 5200. (7ol0)&lt;148.e884
[
. __ -.,: -·
Cloaa to hoopllol, OilY -:"~~o.;,:.:=::...--~
SChcolo. (740)4411-1012
Ohlld Silt Rid RIOt Oar ..__ _ _ _ _ _,.!
Bad . Mollraaa, Comlortar
2 bedrccm mcbllo homo lor and
Curlelna,
t1 so. 2 puppta, 8 wka. ola. 11otr·
ronl, no poto, (740)88a· (1ol01441·0013
Wt II"'IBoxar m1x, 1rtt lo
::le;;,:!::.B-.---.--.--.-- For Silo: Racondlllonld good holM. 7ol0·247-2090.
3 bldroom mobllt homa, wolhtrt, dlytrt and rtf~· AKO R~llltrtd Choocl~lt
Cltr Ohapol Road, Dtpolllt trotoro. Thom,..,a
• LAb Pupa, RHdy Moy e.
Roqulr~ . HUD epprcvld. anco. 3407 Jookoon vt· Dtw Oltwo, Sholl, 5 Ft·
17ol012&amp;&amp;oe118 cr (7ol0)441· nul, 1304)8711-7318.
mola, 3 Malt. 1740)441 ·
0883
0013
.
Qood UHd Appllllnota, Rt•
·
.
APAII'IMIINI'S
oondlllontd and Guaran· COOktr Sponltl Puppllll
1'011 R£1'1'1'
tud. Woohoro, Dryoro, Blaclt/Whllt Porenta .,
~
, Rangta, and Rtlrlgorotort, Fromlaaa. Full Blooded.
Bomto lllrt II 101. Sklno 11110. 17ol0)4415-2888
1 ana 2 bedroom apart· Appllancta, 7e Vlnt 81 ..
mtnll, lurnllhlellnd unlur• (7ol0)448·7388
1
nlohiCI, HOUri"' dtOOIII rt'
qulred, no ~•• 140·88a· Konmoro EleoiMo Range.
221 I .
Clton, Wort&lt;o Grtll. i.AH . ::::~
thin , r•ar Old. 11 oo. 11
1 IR In
17ol0)448·888:4
1 ·

\ '\.., l 'tlltl \ l ltl\

WV031156

;;:.."
::::)256-1102
1101 Poet "" ..llld&lt;ion ....._ 1 •
,,.. 1\lnl~
Bldroom now A'rtllabl•.
C:.~m~~ Dr
Rtnt IIIMI t2401m0. LOW !:oi0~4 ~
_ _·
48~4!!!U!!I~_:_·""
tnd Modellll lncomt.
Equal Houolng Orlt&gt;ol1unlty. . Hot pOint Ellclrlo Ringe.
1740)44e·3:M•. 'rllOI 1· 11110 OQ Hot Point dryror ·
&amp;OQ.7f10.07!0.
11as'oo (304)117!·111111S •

a.ii%

I

j

~H~~·

alit,
'
I Lolo, 3/4 aero aaoh,
Rudy IO bulkl ""· Norlh
Gtllll Ellllll on Thlllaa
Rd. (7ol0)448-1400
'
lluulllul houta
lola, a 112, 3 IIi or ! ooroo.
1.7 milia out SR 111. Call
llltr 1:00pm. l740)4~e·
71188
LDI lor Slit- Apf&gt;rolc. 2 IIi
oaroo, Dltlrtd &amp; rtldy lor
building, gro&lt;tl d~&lt;twoy,
wolor &amp; ..,I rio avelable,
""""'
aroa .
Aaklng
$13,8a5, Call I7•0I44e·
4!14 from a.s "'1740 448·
3.2.U alltr 8pm.
Mtlga 00 1 R 1 d
un y,
utan
Townahlp. 48.3 ICIH, 111proodmattiY 113 ftallor buildlng IIIII. Rurtl Wlltr, Iliaclrlc, wllh R producing Qll
WOIIL LDOIIed "" povld
LHdlng Crtlk Rood 10011,.
IY Rood 31, a miiH ofl SR7.
140o88a·U47 D&lt; 740-3730388. Alklng $70,000.
Propoll)l Ill&lt; oola, New HI·
von, · - achool, a acm
D&lt; mort. 740-1181-3080

malnlllnocl. fullY oarpated,
Eaattrn Local SchOOia. .,
ROUII 7 -~ Ohtatar. "'k·
lng $88,000.00. 7•0.08!·
4335

II~

I

on.:: '"c;:~:.oa~lldlng

:C":":'Wi~~t~

I

m=·
j

r

Capo COCI with large 1MnQ

on

(m.JS3.'1022i

Gallil Mil. Eatatll. 4 1*1- • AI '1bll Soli, FMI Dirt Ill&lt;
room Apartmtllll Now Slit. E~t Rental,
Avella~ 10 F6mlllel who Don&lt;,
hoe, Boboat
qualify. Ront- on In- ~. , . _ Equlpm•nt.
...,., E'l'!"l Houolng ep. (7oi0)441-Cet0
portunlty (7ol0)4&lt;111-0151
'
AIR OONOITIONERS· CanGrocloua liVIng. 1 and a troland-. (7oi0)448Lors &amp;
b.clroorn "'"""'""" at VII- ~'.;,;30ll;:....;;•nd.,.:-1..;-==,-=:.::·~
ACREAGE
lage Nlanor and R - =
AjlariFMnll In Mldd'-1. Bolly 1-.. Rugs bt,
l'rom 1278-1346. Cal '740- Qlllu top and Iobin.
t · 3:M75 Bolllv Run 811-lloe4. Equal Houalng (304)87H80t
Rd., oil Ohio 124, 1/2 mi.. ~lite.
~. ~·~· , _ E
Wool of Roula 7, woter &amp;
""'-~· - - ·
F1Olllllc alrtldy In, 110,000, Honoyoucl&lt;lo Hllo Ajlarl· alltM and Witter Pump. Alk

Bedding &amp; v.gttlble Flatl 'UO

FIM:fne, Ohio 45771

!7 Beech St.
middleport, o"

a Stoly F'6nn HouQ, 101
ltrtl,
Peaturta, Htr
G"'"nd &amp; Tt&gt;baeeo au..
South O.llla Schoala. Loca-.danSiottRoutta18.
Call (740)HI-1385 or
l7ol0) 441 - .

·

=

:J

I:;

epm.

.,.e

ulollng oqulp- wotk' Otlltlll othtl guyo.
m.n1, aa well " providing
UotnHd and lnourtCI. 111""
aupport
lht dMIOpmtnl Of Clllll Ltwn Cart. 740lnd lntllllllllan 01 ntW PIOC· IJII·11530 . .
lick, ·
111 end uiiiiiY oontrol and
and poroonrollel&lt;t; htlllh, lnalrurntntation artltma.
Top ID Bottom Olnnlng
Mnlll,ondvlolanlnaurtnco
Sorvlot, ~1, rtol·
IYIIlblt, 4038 rollrtmtnt . IIIUW
Mnlllll, oHk:t cleaning at
pion. DHdiiM lor oppilol· With llmllld crnct~on, IIIIo
on
lllordlbltt
prloa.
lion II Junt 3, 11002. Submit lndl'llelull wiiiOOnduol main- (7oiO)IIN-ll87t D&lt; l7oiO)IJII·
rnumt lnd rtltrtnoaiO;
- - lnd trtlnlng 1&gt;11'
I :sit
Human Aatouro.e
talnl~ 1111 PLO ~
Wanlld lc do. Wttkly
1~~....
Art1D~~ Ag4ng
Clnnlng or BI·Wttloly.
F3.2 UFIG, PC)
!00
-~·1. Thlolrtlnl~ will Hlvt ltMrtncH H- ·
61o G
Ohio
-··
...
(740)44t•1137
n
randl,
41874
Dltatroom ond
E wwil.lahongew7.otg
hlnda-onapproacn. Cindl•
qual Oppo;lunlty EmpiC'IIf Clllt muat hl&lt;t -llvt
oommunlelllon at&lt;illlln.,.
OPPoimJNm'BIRNI!!Ii
OOULntt&lt;
Clllar to lntarliO!, wtlh both
•.1_81'!"
0011-to ntorQitr lOOking P nl PI"""""' lnd man·
lor uporltnold paraon with ~g~monl "" ltOhnloalla·
atrang .knowlldgt or cor auta. Thlalndlvlduol mull
INOTICII
·
porta. Minimum cl a )'Mrt be abla lo dlrtDtlht daly . OHIO VALLEV PUBLISH·
txptrlanco. Monogomant, llltotrlcal workload Of lilt
lNG CO. rt&lt;Ommonda 11111
Oommunloallon &amp; Compulor lllclrk:lllna. lndlviGuol mull rDU do buolntll wllh ~
lkHII I p(ua, Apply 11 or bl lbla to lrtln and Ia
rDU know and NOT 10 Hnd
Hnd rtaumt to: Ablo'l Auto 111111
~ lhfouontllt man until
Plrll; PO Box 113, File lilt llltolrlolanoln dilly lrou· you nove lnvtatlglted tho
QroNio, OH 41874.
bleahoollng 01 piinttctulp- clflrlng.
Dinlol Hyglortlll nMdtd In mont.
PFCQrtoolvi, PrtVtnllon 011 • lcl-tlonllllrporltnoe:
Natd aomt Extra Ouh?
tnlld prtOIIOII In Gal"poll• FIV. yurt IICI)IMtncaln an .Start yaur own lullneat toPert 11m1. Send ratumt to: lnduotl'lll pnlqtll DOnlrolt
day. Wa will pnNklt you
OLA 111111, CIQ Galllpolla Do~ IIIVfronm.nt (Including
wRh tho financial allllolanoa
iY Tribuna, 125 Third /lo&lt;t., PlOa) Ia ,.qulrtd. Mlnlmum
Calltoclly. I-eee·
Oailltolla, 0H 4111131 .
..rwo-.,..r laohnk:al dlgrtt In
·
.
tiiOirohlol uolng progrtm· -llrt 'itlur Bullntta To•
D~vtn wanltd- 23 or old· mtbltloglo conlroltara or · dar... PMmt Shopping Ctn·
" .· dru~ ICrttn, no OOL, l(tUI'rtlenllll muat. flo high llr Space /loVIIIablo /lol /lol·
good dr vlng rtcord, hoofth achecl diploma or QED Ia
lordobla A111. 2 Nloa Exoobon IIIII IVIIIIbll, paid VI• rtqUirtd. Alltn Brtdlfll .. ullvt OHion. Nowly A•
Clllon; call 1·10o.!31·e5~3. aqulptntnluportonoo lo ,.. moellltd. sgrln~ Vol~ Pill·
&gt;ilrdwaro Saito Citro . ~~':'li !"pl~ooontrolo"PPrl· 11' Call (74 )44 -3oll '
Sand RHumt to; CI.A 817
l'llotllJiiloNA
olo GoiMpollo Dolly Tribuna, WI olflr oornpotlllvt wagt
SliiMCES
82! Third Avo.. Qalllpcllo, PIOk• • lncllldlng mtdlcll
•
Oh 41q1
lind Mnlll blnallla, prt10~1lion plan paid -··1
TUIINIO DOWN ON
Halp
·-·
an IOCIAL IICUIIITY
/Uit
,_ wtnlld Olrl~
G ... lor lht a holldero, 'ponolon
plron,
·
INtr!y, 0 lrtl "'"P HOmt, oiOI (K) pion, ond prclh ""''"
No Fu Unloat Wt Win I
now poring minimum WIQI, lng plln Salary oommonau·
1·81111·!82·:13-48
ni'N ohlllt: 7om-3pm, 7am· Ill '
&amp;ptn, 3pm·11pm, 11pm•
71m, Clll7ol0·110a•!023.
Llw In Nlghl Clork lor
Maoon Molol. (304)77!·
eooo
.

'f

,ec:

arena ,_ 1Itt polltiiiOneq n..
1 IIi - • on quiet Rd .. 3
BR, a 112~:r· ook ~
1notry.at bal , lg. lollchon
wl pantry, Portor am.
S1 11,1100. (7ol0)448-4514 till
apm, l740144t·~.U anor

,

...

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

..

110etTtON AYAII.AILI
OUIIOIII ButldlnQ &amp;
INCIINIIIIINGI
llllng. Frta ntlmatu
CONTIIOI.ITICHNICIA.N Fully lnourod. For aH rour
holM ~ 1 , Call
.....,
·~
. .WaJbl 1
' ,
740-IIN·1111or 740-441 •
Tho Enttl&lt;lMrlna Conlrola
111114
~n Ia roiponelblo
Full - - ctoanlng
lor~dlrtellnQmaln.._ very llontat. Rt'-rtnoti
nanct on lnalrurnonllllan, . ..., _ Call 1740)3e7
P l O - cantrall, and
·
•
...,trlcal aqulprnonllo .,. 7808
aurt tnel tne aqultomontla
o.orou Portable Slwmlll
In
c10n1haul rour IOQI to
. , _ -~ng -Ilion. mill IIIII 0113o4-efii-1IS?.
~mutlwotkwllh
ma-1, tnglrMrlng, LI!Wn C14'1

roaouroto avelllblt, and do&lt;tloplng plana 10 111111
lhoal OHdl. s.lary:
toiO,OOO, plua ....lion,

Free · vard S•le Slgnl
15 Words, 3 Oeys
words 20¢ Per Word
Must ae Prep•ld

lr·. __Wii~iiDoiii wl ~,t.IO_,.;fOIIIil~iiiii&amp;LEii·lii-.,1 ~--

~WM'IlD

r ~IS I:~:~·••,~"~na"~: :~~~:.':,:.,~:,::: =-~:'!~~~
"'~------.,1

Mon Slit 1o-4
217 E. 2nd St.
. Po!Mroy. OH

t?difi';:,e #o~
a: oo e". m. to

th&amp; Dt~.c1t"l

(304) 675·1333·

_,_. __ _____..,..

"Ahead In Servke"
35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Ptomemy, OH 45720
16.000 l'winr: ................... $18.65
: ~:::~Bow
Bow 9,000 l'wine .....................$1M5
20,000 Plastic Baler l'wine ................... $1S.75
Dlcss Pasture$ with Sulfur

..

�tueaclay, May 14, 2002

www.myclallysentlnel.com

p • • • • The Dally Sentinel

UIDOI
PHILLIP
ALDER

IJ

-

ACROSS
1 I'Nftl tor
4 -Prowl

~" ~

~2&gt;.~.~'"r'~"""""
· *4.,.-,;
...
• 1( I U
9 AH

....,10

ITJ

•

I t I"
F.lll

,. Q 10 n
"'"'
,

,. J ' ~

9 I
• lfl u
• Kt1U

• Q 10.,
llo•t~

Wro~l

N(trlh

l'•u
P••'

t ¥

ran
Opcnlnlll!ad: • 5

M

......--uo

l
II

l'oit!'IJP'~

•__J'

-

E..t
Pu$
Ptll

22

DOWN
AIIIIOit 11va1

utlon

~ ~"W.:C:- ~ wrlttf Jono
aahen
31 Flrat•kl

111m
34 Murmur
-thlngly
35 Tarrier of
lllrndOm
3118Uioelllon
37 common

abbr.

3 Curan
4 Gnawing
11111m""'l
I Exiled
Roman
1)011

I lllllt!Y aize
7 Fr. ·tltle
a - de
guer,.

ha-

r, ~u!:=
abode
...

ShiCka
Poker
c.rda
NoljultLoony
Blubblr or
aut1

24
21
27
21
30

31
32
33
35

t Oondy
3a Pub. pro.. 10 HI·II buy a
cutort
13 Deadly oln
38 Final

40 On 1111'11

Hometown Newsp11per

ot-1he

'Manl Ull
ainglr

Prickly """

Melp County"s

11 Ca111v1n

43 Hlrd• DDda
4$
40

==="·

What's Inside

Alaokl
town
40 p.iol ol

Chamber
briefed on
newspaper
obJectives

ltlundlr
41 Cllolr voloe
10 Tllruah'o

. homa

51 NBA otllelal
52
Slclt
Skoah
53
Outar
Caleullll ~
nan~~y·
55 Lannon'•
Mtxlc.n
wlfl
dollar
Put on

.....

luord

40 prlng mo.
41 Not
wholeule

~-r-r-

BY TONV

n~h~thetl~m

::::

Reds win again, 6

':R~A=N~K!;&amp;~· :E;AtR~N~E~S~T~---------::;~---------l I· llut
often helpful thar
for isdeclarer.
In .

tl ,

j four

hearts, you,
fO/lT Of ·-· I
South, receive a spade
16 Ttlt
IT'S
~
'lead. How would you
~CONOMY
proceed?
T~tMILINCi.
When responder
ON T~~
!~· has only 6-9 points,
MOVf
~
he may bid a new suit
CELEBRITY CIPHER
ACiAIN1
at the one-level, or
by Lula Campoa
~
respond one noCelebrity Cipher cryptogram• are created rrom quotatlona by larnoul
peopla, poalon&lt;l prtHnt. E~oh Iotter In the clphor otan&lt;lalor anothar.
trump, or, as here,
Todsy's clue: A equals K
·
·
raise partner's suit -and this option takes
DVAPEF
L p
ZVAE'S
'Z L P E
priority. South ·sinells
•
THE BORN LOSER
L G R
...
'""
Z G S L
VVKFL
TMK
rc.&amp;, ~~Ll~, YOU!t PN~TIN(o ""' rBO\ Wf\Y m
Nfri&gt; TI'f.M TO:££ \tit: MllM!Ifll:.' a game, so h.e bids a
YOO W~N.6 YOUI!:
game.
DVAOEF
Cit-&lt; 11\e-. pf',1t-lii~C:&gt; 1
L p
Z V R
w.Dii'IC&gt;~~ TO
OMDPIT,
I~ IN~ eLY &lt;:.000 1
Firsr, evaluate losers
by looking at your 13
T1 r-1:.:::::..-D K A·
(. O. R
ZOSL
OBT
TMK
tards and taking dumli&gt;BPA ME
.my's honors into ac- .
CM
0 .0 ••
counr. Here, you
DMMBP
IKIVPT
have two in' diamonds
J
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'A rare human being who brought,
and two in clubs.
~
warmth and joy to all who knew him.' - Blake Edwards and
t
Next, count winners.
Julie Andrews on Dudley Moore
·
•
There
are
nine:
two
-.-wou
spades, six hearts and
GAMI
BIG NATE
,.;---,.------, one diam and. You
1/==:::::-----"""1!
must swallow a loser,
•
Rtc:mange l•ttera of the
A!i.TUR!
Wl-l't',
1
simultaneously gener- O four
· serombltd word• be·
NATE
1
ating your IOth trick.
low to form lour olmpl• word1 .
BEAT YOU
fl.,T CHESS,
Any time you have
I SEE!
INTAVY
more cards in a suit in
2
your hand than in the
I
dummy, think ruff it]
the dummy. · After
r
winning trick one,
RGP
~
conrinue with .the ace
•
llli:I:J.! U:..:....!ML---I...j..U and another diamond. · *
Let's
turns assume
a spade.EastIf rein I __,T.,-R..--U..,Q,;-A..--1·1..:.:;:
Awoman goes into a bank and
hand, ruff the dia· • ~~ 1 1 1
says to the lending officer,'l'd like
to lalk to you about a loan ."
I SAIO,IT
1.._ .__1...--L.-J...__,
L.IFE IN TJ.IE
mond
jack
with
dum"Great I' s;:~ys the banl&lt;er. "How
SOUNDS LIKE
\'ILLA&amp;E WAS
my's heart ace, draw
L UXSE p
muc h can you • - - • ..?"
.
A 6000
PEACEFUL. UNTIL
trumps;
and
claim.
·Jf
L-r--n--r-T""~M
REPORT
r
15 -1
16 AV Comploto
tno cnucklo QUO!Od
TUEVOLCANO
stuck in the dummy.
. . . . .
by filling in .tho milling wordo
play a trump to hand L-..J.......J'--.1...--L-J-...F you dovolop from srop No. 3 bolcw.
INTERII.III'T!""
and proceed similarly.
Yes, you can alford
to draw one round of
trumps, · but if you .
pull two, West can
SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS
defeat you by winninj; the second diaUplift- Noisy- Swamp· Deface- PASS or FAIL
Professor to pilot, "In my profession that landing would
mond trick with his
only earn a ·c· ." The pilot grinned back, "In my profes10 and returning his
sion it isn't a graded course. You either PASS or FAIL." ·
remaining trump to
kill the vital ruff.
•

Deaths

I

.r

Dale Riggleman, 61
James Milliron, 51
Details, 3

ERICAN PRIDE

"i

..

I

I I 1I I

I Iu I

I

ol

I

I

1-·

II

I

I

MAY 141

A

Weather
High: 80s, Low: 50s
Dttalls, 1

-Exped.wlndfall

~~~~~L-~r.~~~~~

!TUESDAY

'
(
'

MIDDLEPORT
Overpayment on principal
and interest on bonds
issued for a sewer project
will result in a $27,000
windfall forthe Middleport
Board of Public Affair~ and
the sewer fund.
An ongoing Sl'_tlcial audit
of the village s finances
revealed an ovel'l'ayment
toward bond retirement,
according to Clerk Susie
French.
A total of $149,598 on
principal of $105,000 plus
tnterest will result in a
refund payment of $27,300
for the sewer fund, French
said.

Lotteries
Ohio

Pick J: 2-4·6
Pick 4: 2-1-6-8
Buckayt 5: J-8-18·35·37
Pick J day: Q-4-9
Pick 4 cfay: 2·1·2·3

West Vindnla

Dai!Y J: 9·.,-4 .
DallY 4: 9·2-3·3
Calli 15: 6-8·11-13·22·25

•.

Wcdnc!day. May 15, 2002
It is likely that. the very peo-

ple, who have done f~von for

you previously w!ll ~C' the firsr

ones to do

10

ag;un m the year

ahead: This i• because you've
em lea red younelf to them.
TAURUS (April 2U.M•y
20) -- A d&lt;liJlestic concern
you've had looks as though it
could resolve iuelf in a m~n ~ ·

ner that will rlease .everyone
involved. lt' l come frotil a

lucky turn of eve11U.

T;~urus,

treat youmtf to a. birthday
gift. Send for your Astra·
Croph predictions for the year
.. ahead by mailing S2 and SASE
to Astro .Gra ph, c/o this
uew'l'"l'"'• t•.o. Dox 1758,
Murray Hill St•tion, · New
York, NY 10156. Ue sure to ·
. lt3CC

your l.odiac sign.

GEMINI (May 21-june 20)
-- Mentally visuali•e what
~· ou ho1'c to achieve and it
will have a better ch•nct of
m:nerializing. Using your
imagination in such a way will
enhane&lt; your Rotsibilities.
CANCER ijune 21-July
22) -- If you use your smans
to expand upon something
you're alrea!ly involved in,

M.

LEACH

TLEACHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

make it shorter."
Today, the &lt;rump
suit is shorter in the
dummy than in hand ..

~[;~~j •1

r

a

trelna
21 Big ....:. elephant

A few people pack
a lot into a· short life.
One example was
lllaise Pascal, a French
mathematician, philosopher, physicist,
and theologian who
lived exactly 39 years
and 2 months, · but ·
achieved much. He
was also ;. man-of-letters, and in one
wrote: "I have only
made .tlfis (letter)
longer because I have

1

58

otllelalt
IIO'Ihlld
17 RHOUndad 10 HOpa)et
11 ChiCagO
11 1Molal plua11

Shorter side

11

41 IIIICII

,. llallparlt

.. QJ

~;.:.:.Wi;rA:Qo~-r:;i'Y\::=::J

47 fl8la
Curved line

11 a.mllll
11 NoV.Uat
14 ICinlta' hit
Lavin
101111
12 ElltMe
sa rop abbr.
13 Coilaround 57 Tundra
14 TooiHt
. anlmata
15 RMIIo part sa Not pra

Otalcr. South
V'llnerflble: North -South

I

44 Pltchera'

0111·

.KQJitiS
t AJ 4
•

BARNEY

ftnM

41 lllr!el jlel'l

I Aaldn'

•• I

, Sftuth
t¥
' •

Meigs, Eastem compete at TVC meet. 1

NJ:A Cro ..word Puaale

regardin~

you could prpduce even larger .

sights

returns than you might have

of events is uthcr impressive
and will serve . to help you in·
~me big ways.

initially anticipotcd.
LEO guly 23-Aug. 22) -Instead of delegating .assignmenu or tasks to othen, handle the important ones your ...

t"tlf. You're not only more
knowledgeable, but l·uckier as
well .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- The compassion you show
to others becomes you. Placing the needs of othen before
your own cnhanc~ your image and wins you lots of gratitude and mpect .
.LIURJ\ (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - A motherly or fatherly figure. rould Jtir up some exdt-

ing· thinS' that will giv&lt; you
1omething big about winch to
be hopeful. You're lucky to
know such a penon.
SCORI'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Should an associate

who wants your position rhallenge you, don't get upoet or
Itt it intimidate you . Lady
Luck is on your side, not the
other penon's.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
~c. 21) --This could be one
of thole days whtn your in-

the out&lt;ome

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22jan. 19) -- Reopond to the
wants and needs of others be-

cause your most substantial
benefats are · likely to be g3r-

n&lt;red from the1e kinds of
situations. Dame Fortune
could have a hand in it ,

AQUARIUS ijan. 20-Feb. ·
t9) ·- Take time to sel&lt;ct a
good partner when taking on
a projtct that require! a joint
effort. The right partner will
double your luck .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
·- Continu&lt; to do the good
job you've been doing because .sotneone who h in .a
position to give your career a
shot in the ann will view you
favorably and may give you
t~at lucky break.
ARIES (March 21-April19)
-- You'll be much luckitr
hanging out with pals who are
near and dear to your hrart.
Th&lt; positivo · vibts you get
when you a&lt;e with them
dr.ws good thinp to you.

Index
lladlaa- 10 Pllpl

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies .
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

5

7·9

10
5
4
l

l

6·7
2

merican Pride Day kicked off a week's
worth of events m observance of
National Nursing Home Week at
Overbrook Center. The theme for Ihe week "s
celebration is" A Celebration of Seasons." Jack
Kane, WOWK-TV anchor and former
Middleport radio announcer, spoke at the open·
ing ceremony. He is pictured here with Meigs
County Commissioner Mick Davenport,
Marketing . Director Donald Vaughan and
Admini~tr!ltor_Qhwla ).:lrs&gt;.':Xn~ as pe speaks with
·Charles Searles and h1s w1re, 'Ehzabeth, a res!:"
dent at Overbrook. Davenport discussed the
progress on the counly's application for fund·
rng for a new community health center at 1--..:;:j\
Veterans Memorial Hospttal. Mayor Sandy
lannarelli, a member ·of the county's. hospi lal
commission, also spoke. The ceremony concluded with the launch of 125 red, wh1te and
blue balloons. Magic, Music and Dance,
Sentinel
Country Living and Young at Heart Days will
be observed for the remainder of I he week.

Meigs graduates seniors on May 24
POMEROY
Amber
Nicole Snowden has been
named valedictorian. and·
Kristy Dawn and Misty Sue
Puckett have been named co·~
salutatorians of the :Z002
Meigs High School graduating
class.
.
Announcement of Ihe top
· scholars in the class to graduate on May 24 at 8 p.m. was
made this week by Principal·
Dennis Eichinger.
Amber, who has a grade
point average of 4. is the
daughter of Jeffrey and
Carolyn Snowden of Rulland.
She will be attending Ohio
University, where she plans to
major in business with a prelaw concentration.
She is a National Merit
Commended Scbolar, recipient
of the Franklin B. Walter AllScbolasiic Award as the top
Meigs County student, a fivetime Meigs County Academic
Excellence honoree,' recipient
of the 2002 Holur Clinic Top
Student in Scien.ce award, Best
of the Class honoree of
WSAZ, the Ohio Academic
Scholarship winner, and recipient of Ohro University's full-

tuition presidential
scholars
scholarship.
At Meigs,
she is a
member of
Ihe Naiional
Honor
·~
Society, has
'
'I
I .'
-· been on stu·
dent council,
a class offi- ·
cer, a region·
al scholar, on
the
quiz
team, in the
French Club,
the marching, concert
and
pep
bands. the
Drama Club,
and
the
Medical
Career Club. She is affiliated
with the Bradford Church of
Christ. .
Kristy and Misty Puckett are
the twrn daughters of Sidney
and Linda Sue Puckett,
Langsville.
They plan to attend the
University of Rio Gtande to
ob1ain degrees in fine woodworking, and then open their

,w
··· ...

.'&amp; '

Toxicologists
establish ca
1
Safe level'

own furniture busi·
ness. Both
are members ·
of
the Nation·
al
Honor
Society and
involved in
community
1--..J service.
Snowden
The clas.s
' honorarians
are Jaeline Marie Allen,.
Joshua Blake Glaze. Nickolas
Adam McLaughlin, Monica
LeAnne Moon, Mindy Ann
O'Dell, Leslie Nicole Runyon,
Mary Beth Schullz and Tara
LeAnn Wyatt.
·
Other members of the sraduating class are Carne Jo
Abbott, Jonathan Andrew
Acree,
Chavonne Lynn
Barnett. Lana Ann Barrett,
Jo~hua David Taylor Bass,
Ryan Alan Bates, Bradley
Allen Baylor, James Anthony
Bearhs~ Nicole Dawn Black,
Sarah Ann Blankenship,
Brandon Russell
Bobb,
Garnett Ellen Bonecutter;
Nichola~ Preston Bowles,
Heather Marie Brooks, Erica
Renee
Bryan,
Danny

POMEROY - A team of tor.icologisis has eslablished
an interim safe level for ammonium pertluorooctanoate,
the chemical known as C8, which has been found in
three local water supplies.
· According to the Ohio Environmental Prolection
Agency, a CS Assessment Toxicology Team has· set an
: interim health protection level of I50 parts C8 per billion.
The team is made up of represenlatives of the U.S.
EPA, the West Virginia Department of EnvironmenUII
Protection, Center for Disease Control's Agency fo~
Toxic Subslances Disease Registry, E.l , DuPont de
Nemours &amp; Co .. aod the non-profit expert organization,
Toxicology Excelleoce in Risk Assessment.
C8 has been detected in the water supply of Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District and in the municipal water
supplies of Pomeroy and Syracuse, but at levels far
below the new safe level established by the CATI.
C8 is a detergent-like ,chemical used i.n Ihe manufac. ture of tluoropolymer resins and finishes. II has been
· used at DuPont's Washington Works Plant near
Parkersburg, W.Va., for more than SO Y.ears. Studies

PII;IM ... MHS,J

,........ ca.J

weal levels for below
new standard
BY

BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEOOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

1st"""'"""'

lime Out. wllh lhe Guys

Sunday, May 19 • 2:00 • .t:30 PM • HMC G S,

~

s, fd..

t

t

&amp; ea.•aa C..

A ,_;oo fiWflt lor &amp;a,.s ond M in our community
K.yr10ie Speaker: Greg White, Head Coach
Mens lloslretball ot Marshall Universily
SPECIAl. FEA1\JBE; NONfASTHj QP f$1DQL SQE!MfGS

I

FOR YOUNG MEN AGE$' 10 • 18+
!Must 1rav. parental ronllflf!t ;I under lB. I
All ages arn.alcll&lt;nel Mohn irwillldl Ores&amp; is casual. Refreslvnenls will buerwd.
more iliwmalion, cal

I

PIMM H. Chamber, :J

photos by
Brian I. Reed

BY CHARLINI HOEFLICH
HOEFliCHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT- "Our objective is to make each
paper an invaluable source of mformation for the reader. A high-quality, newsworthy publication is the main ·
. goal of Ohio Valley Publishing.'
Den Dickerson, publisher for
·
Ohio Valley Publishing, owned
by Community Newspaper
Holdings Inc. (CNHl), spoke to
chamber members about the
importance of community newspapers and what residents in the
tri-county urea can now expect
from the1r local newspaper.
Dickerson. who oversees the
publicalion of The Daily
Sentinel, Point Pleasant Register
and Gallipolis Dail~ Tribune,
began his speech . With a brief
history ofCNHl, followed bran
.
overv1ew of the daily operations
re9u1red to produce the three local newspapers. ·
'The process of creating a newspaper is an inieresiing
one.~· said Dickerson. "You co.uld liken ,it to a giganlic
relay race. Each team member has their own specific
part to contribute for the overall success of the finished
product.''
.'
"At first, each individual effort might seem insignificant, however, once combined, the big picture is cfearly
evident," he added.
·
Dickerson highlighted recent "noticeable im\)rovements" to all three papers, such as more iriformauon on
the. papers' we~sites, a new, easier to read typeface, a
weekly entertamment page, and more extensive coverage-of regional news.
Dickerson continued by saying several new projects
are currently in the works, including a new televrsion
viewers' gu1de, more exciiing contesls, and programs

~5679

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

'www.holzer.org

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="465">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9910">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23053">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23052">
              <text>May 14, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="10">
      <name>collins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1390">
      <name>dailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5421">
      <name>hilliron</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5422">
      <name>hoy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="35">
      <name>nelson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="201">
      <name>ward</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
