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Tony Muser.has ~n enough of the New York Yankees.
2
Loo Mglloo .. - . 1:35 p.lllr
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"E~ry time we pJaY the Yanke~. I get tired of compliments.n Diego
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ing them;' the Kansas City manager said Tuesday after watching
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against New.York this season. ·
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Coleman, subbing for Williams while rhe center fielder tends
to his ailing father in Puerto 1\ico, had dlree hits and drove in
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three ,runs.
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"This is an opportUnity," Coleman said. ''I'm keeping it warm
lll1Ungs.
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for Bernie until he gets back. We've got people h~re ro fill in."
. Schilling (2-0) defeated the Dodgen for ~he second time:·,
In other AL games, it was Boston 10, Baltimore I ;Toronto 3,
'lix days. He p~ti:h;d his )6th career shut90t in· epdin_g Ariza~
Tampa Bay 2; Chicag6 8, Clevelan!l 7; Minnesota 8, Detroit 2;
four-game losmg streak.
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Texas 7,Anaheim 5; and Seattle 5, Oakland 1.
'
"We were struggling;' he said. "!u important as a game Can
At Kansas City. Rarniro Mendoza (1-0) pitched a flawless
be seven games into the season, I thought this was a ptettf ~&gt;;
eighth inning and got the victory. Mendoza, activated from the
game."
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'Schilling threw 93 pitches, 73 for strikes. Brown · threW
disabled list eadier in the day, ·made his first appearance in the
majors since last July- he had surgery on his right shoulder
pitches, 65 for strikes. Brown made !tis first appeannce -{&gt;T
on. $tpt. 21.
the searon, having bee,i activated 6'0m the disabled list earlier jn
· After the 1homer by Coleman, Alfonso Soriano singled, Scott
the day. He'd been out ~cause of a strained right Achilles' tel):
Brosius hit an .RBI triple, a run-scored on one of catcher David
don. ·
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Ortiz's rwo errors in the itining, and David Justice hit an RBI
, "It would be nice to pitch this weD and si:ill win," he ~~ ·
single for his fourth hit. .
"~ut jt wasn't the ~ase. Curt &lt;fid a gre;~.t job: I wo.uld have ~~'
Mike Mussina wasted a 4-2 lead in the .sixth when Jermaine
!D be perfect aO:d I wasn't." ·
.
: ' ·.
Dye hit a three-run homer on an 0.:2 fastball.
An une~ned run in the fourth put Arizona ahead t-d. L')I!IS
"Kansas City is a good-hitting dub:! Mu5sina said. "You make
Gonzalez homered in the s~vent~.
·
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mistakes and sometimes you get away with them and some. "This was just an old-time baseball:~me;• Gonzalez Said:"It
timClS you don't."
.
·. probably was a
giame to watch, and 'it was a fun game tO play
Red Sox: 10, Orioles t
in:'
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In his first game since the second no-hitter of his career,
·Cubs 4, Expot' 2
··
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Hideo Nomo {2-0) allowed four hits in six innings at .fenway
· Sammy S~ homered again at 01)'111.pic Stadium, and Chii:4go stopped Montn!al's four-game winnin£'streakr' '
:·:
Park and got another two homers from Brian Daubach.
Daubach, who hpmered twice last Wednesday when ~omo
Sosa, who connected twice,a day earli.~~·.~t die 390tb ho~
stole the spotlight in his Red Sox debut, drove in five runs
run. He moved past Johnhy Bench and ned Gnig Nettles for
·'· '
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while leading Boston's 12-hit attack. Jason Varitek doubled
36th' place on the career list. · ' ·. ·
. twice, and Tim Wakefield pitched the final three innings for his
Sosa has four homers this 's.e'ason, all ih' the last four flays. :_:
first save.
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Keviri Tapani outpitch~d Tony Armas Jr. for the second tinie
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· Sidney Ponson (0-2) gave up eight·runs - six eamed - and
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six .hits in 3 1·3 innings.
'' ' · Phillie• 7, MarWal 6 •
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Blue Jays 3, Devil Rays 2
KEEP REACHIN' FOR THE BALL - Baltimore's Meivln Mora
Scott Rolen homered and hit a ~run double ro 1~.
.,~oie · (i;ruz, Jr. homered· in the LOth at Sk.yDome, sending leaps for a ball hit by Boston'!r Jason Varltek.
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, Philadelphia
Chieatp)s . · " · . ·
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Tampa •Bay to its seventh straight lo~ and givjng·Toronto its
.,
, R:qlen, wlio· liad bee~ ih ari O-for;s19 slump, and Dou£( ·
sixth win in seven games·this season. •
·
Glanville e.ach d~ in three runs. Jimmy Rollins' sacrifice fly.
·Tanyon Sturrze (0-1) pitched rwo hidess innings before Cruz
Gil Heredia (0-2), who lost to,..the Mariners last"\veek.'gave broke an• eighth~inning tie.
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conqected with one 'out for his third homer of the season.
~p tWo runs ,and six' hits six innings.
·
:rite Phillies, who haV:: 'J\ad losing'seasons.in 1J of the last 14
••Tony Batista also homered for the Blue Jays, who lead the AL · '
.
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years, won .t heir third in a row and improved to 6-2 under new
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manager Larry B'Ow..
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with 16.'
·Paul Quantrill (2-0) pi!Ched a scoreless lOth for the win.
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Astros 3,·Brewers 0 ' .: .
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Twins 8, Tigers ·2 ·, ·
,' . KoufaJC·vs. Marichal,Carlton vs. S~a~er. Gooden vs:' 1-lershis- ' Mil~u~e. lo~~ ,for the,,~rst , ti~.~ at !"fiJ!er rark ,w hen Chrif
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Tru\1y s t1u;ee-run 9om~r a.~ .~lie ~.n~ u~nmg !i[ted ,Housto~'.~:.
David Ortiz and-Brian Buchanan hit thtee-run. homers at.the er.
·Metrodome. The Twins, whose 116-home runs last year were . Think.of all the great NL duels 'in rec~nt ~to.ry. and now a~d . .'t-1fhe Btewe~s . wete. 3,:().. a~ · the new ~a)lpa~k ~ore r~nm~$
last, in 1he m'\iors .by 28, have hit 10 in seven games.
· cu•• rt Schilling vs. Kevin Bro~n to the list, · . .
,:/ .' ", mto Jose L~u, w~~ a~l?~~e.d t~. ~-?,,¥feam.~ ~gam.st ~ilwal!,t...
j:ric Milton (t-O) allowed' six hits in six innings, including
We s.aw rwo of the. best ·raght-handers of thetr era .locking ~e.. ·..
.
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Bobby Higginson's rwo~run homer in the third.
·
horns,:· Arizona manager Boo J:lrenly said aft.sr Sch~ng pitcjled . bma left after a lead~fi' smgle a~ the mnth. Reliever Bally·
Matt.l/erisho (0-1) gave up five runs in 4 1-3 innings, yield- the Daan'J.ondbacks past· Los Arlgeles 2 _0 Tu.t:sday rught.
.'· :Nagner stru~k o_ut the ~tde on 11 patche~.
. .•
· :::
ing six hits and a walk.
SchiUing gave up two hits and struck Ollt
Brown tossed a
Truby homered W1tn .•~ne out off' .Curtls Leskamc.
"§:'~
Rangers 7, Angels: S ,·
~hree-hitter and fanned eight.
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G1ants _111, P8dres 6
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Chad Curtis hit a two-run homer and Ruben Mateo doubled
Brown did not walk··anyone. Schilling never e;ven 'thtew thre~
Jeff Kc~t and .Ar~!io R:ios ~ac~ h~t two. home runs, a1ttf'
in three runs .as.TelCas won the Angels' home opener. ·
balls to a batter
, . ·
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· San Francasco spoiled.San Diego s home opener.
·
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. Darren, Oliver (2-0) beat Pat Rapp for the second time in a , No ~ore th;n four hitters went f~ .,~e" plate in an~ half"' ·' The Gia_nts are 4-0 against the Padre~ this seaso~.. . · . . :.~.
week despite allowing four runs and .12 hits in 5 ·2-3 innings. inning. No surprise, the game t~ok oply hour,- 55 minutes "71
Kent, the_ ,NL MVP, ho~ere~ for t~e thtrd tam~ tn sax &lt;by,s .
Tim Crabtree gave up a run-scoring double to Tim Salmon i,n the fastest ever at Blank Oaje Ballpark. • ..·""' ,
. ] and drove .~n fiVe runs. Ri~s IS conung back fr;om offieaso,n . ..
the ·ninth, then finished for his third save.
"th~t w;as vintage major leagu~ pitc,.~g ~t its finest f~?n'l ..r:constrlJCt1ve surgery on .his l~ft elbow. .
·.
. 11:,.
. Rapp (0-2) gave up seven runs, four hits and four walks. in both sides; l.os Angeles manager jim Tricy sa~d.
,
, .· The s:Do~t crowd ~f ~1,277 ~ve Tony Gwynn a long sran&lt;f,.
four-plus innings.
·
In other NL ·games, Chicago beat Montreal 4;. 2,
. ang ova~on m pregame mfr?duca?~ a~d cheered new!~ ele7~,
.
Mariners S, Athletics 1 .
downed Milwaukee 3-0, Philaqelphia defeated Florida 7-6
e~ Hall of ,Famer Da':e Wanfield ~u~ng. the ce~,monial 6nt
Edgar Martinez hit his first home .run o(the .season and John San Francisco beat San Diego 11~6.
·. ,
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P,1~h. •
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Halama (1-1) allowed one run and four hits in 6 1-3'innings at
Schilling allowed the• fewest jtlts ever for a
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pakland. Kazuhiro Sasaki got four outs for his fourth save.
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She said there is an average of ' Amot~g tlat ftiJturu
a JO22,000 hits yer _m_onth on the_ Peo- day tUI harmer Dfl the portal
·
PIes Bank Site gwmg Ioca1 bu saness- with
sNbscribm prcwidit~g tlae
es exposure.
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Among the features is a 30"day ad
11U llflfltn a- grapn a.
banner on the portal with subscribers providing the ad · banners that another flower garden has been
and graphics, while rhe bank pro- ad.d ed to the tour to be held on June
vides the link. The charge is $9.95 2 and 3.
per montli.
·
It is the garden , of Linda Bates.
Terri Haynes, president, reported Others opening their gardens for

srm

POMEROY - Members of the
Pomeroy . Merchants Association
beard about the new Peoples Sliopping Connection during itS Wednesday meeting at the. Peoples Bank.
. A11ison Thompson described the
connection as a powerful marketing
· tool through which consumers have
a direct )ink to the seller's web page.

the tour are Annie Chapman's be.fl·
and breakfast, along with the ho~
on Lijtcoln Hill, Linda and Gordon
Fisher, Dorothy Amberger and
Shirley Huston of Syracuse; Cirady
Rhonemous of Minersville; Bobbi
Karr of the Five Points area; Bob's
Market ar Mason,. Karen's Greenhouse and Lawn of Racine. and
Mitch Meadows of Middleport.
Plans calls for a luncheon on Sat-

to:

' reporters afterward.
by the knowledge he still had 'by

plenty left when he retired . "The only thing this siguals
from the Chicago Bulls after is that I'm ~Iring some exerthe 1997-98 season.
from Page 11
~ise," Jordan said at the time.
"Sure, it's fun to think about
"l didn't think he'd come it;• Jordan told th~ Post, "seeback when I first .heard the · ing where i am in terms of fittilk;' Pollio said. "But when ness and psyche. But look at
• f I •' I
,
,
·
Marao Lenuewc came back to the reality. of it. Where's the
tile Penguins, it stirred some- · test? Playing :iga!nst guys ·
·
thing in Michael."
recreationally at the health
Pollio's words were stun- club? I'm not even in position
rtin'g, given the business rela- to ' think' about, it. Right now,
tion~h'1p betWeen him and it's recreational to me if I'm
Jorllan.As the tCiam's,president not ca~able of playing at"that.
of 'basketball operations, Jor" · level, I wouldn't do it. I'm
Chec~ out·our
dan is answerable only to · nowhere near what would
Pollio.
have to be' ro even consider
'. ".
!!Jordan also -owns ·a small pIaymg.
.. .' . ,.
Lawn&amp;
· p1t~e~:of ~he WizardS, and 'he
The factors worklng ;~gainst.
Tools
~ould have to divest liis own- a Jordan 'comeback are ' his age
ership under NBA rules - it's doubtful he can still
_Shovels~~t!l~re,r'urmng, t9 the toiart. dominate' the game at 38 Rakes '~
Po'fuu ••nd otliel:S who ~ve and hi's"pre(c:ren.!e 'to live in
credeilct to the 'possibility of 3 Chicago. He would actually
•jQrda.n ~~lfback usually cite have to. start ~bowing up ·for
t~e .:ai~Meylden~e: Jor- the games if he were playing,
~"*61
..'with the"Wiz- abandoning his current rou~~ds and ~ a . D?issi?n that he tine of stayirrg with his family
}.Pt{l!;~ ll_~~ecre- and rupning the Wizards by
MASON, .
1.
~ tfti~ club; telep.hone. · ",.;
Jordan practiced with the
that he would · like to play . Wizards last week, wearing his
with Jordan in- Washington old No. 23. He rolleq his eyes
next season; artdjor~o's,shi!er in disbelief when the subject
competitiveness that i$ ' fue1Jed of a coineba.:k was broached

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supplies of ·

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W.VA.

MED1~4SSOCIATES GALLIPOLIS ·
PRACTICING AT THE MEDI'CAL PLAZA
· 936 stcite Route 160
t''
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, . · H't ~lllpoli~~- Ohlo/45631 ~~' : •t ... ~
. telephonEt: 740~446~96~~ ~ ·.
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Easter bunny

Cruiser
nears
·:road
·readiness

reason for - ·
-deficit

· funds (The . district received
$384,000 for FY01) are tw6
POMEROY - A letter significant factors," the letof response to the Ohio ter said.
Department of Ed11cation . "owever tfl'e major factor
on Meigs Local School Dis- is, and remains, as follows:
trict's projected deficit for Not knowing what the stare
fiscal year 2001-02, along funding is going to be. past
with the financial forecast FYOl,"· the lerrer added.
for the next five years, was
Salary increases, health
approved by the Meigs
care and retirement costs all
Local I;loard of Education at
enter into the deficit pic·Tuesday night's meeting ..
ture, according to the letter,
According to the letter,
one of the main reasons the although the S33 million
building project · with 20
district is projecting a
deficit is that the largest less classrooms could result
taxpayer, Southern Ohio in decreasing the deficit
· Coal Co., is scheduled to through a possible reduction in force in 2003.
cease business on 9ec. 31.
During the meeting,
"The loss of our largest
taxpayer coupled With the there was a lengthy discusBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BY TONY M. WCN
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RUTLAND · The
readiness of the Rutland
Poli.ce Department's riew
. cruiser was discussed during . Rutland Village
touncil's regular meeting.
: Rutland Police Chief ·
Jeffrey Miil~r informed
council members · that
~ork on ,the aepartment's .
pew ct uiser is nearly fin~ ·.,
tshed and that it should he ·
.• te~dy for servi~l! soon..
; Miller .said thai. ''evecy~
(hing
. nearly
· the

estimated · loss . of equity

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·A~ls~ M:.~., board certlft~ in' lntemai~Qedlcln,; ac~eptiog

new. p.tifnts;' prietlce limited to·~eart disease; Jlype'rtension, Hpid
al)nortbalitieS i (chole~terol abnormalities) and .anf ··'associated
diabetes~ Special intere-t In coniutlve &amp;eart taUure. ., ·:· · •· -· ·· ·
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Board approves
teacher contracts

cost
truck are, $4;.Qtl0 and fGi
the old arujser, $2,50() . . ,. ·
Bids for both vehicles
will be opened at the next
meeting.
In other matters, council approyed the purchase
.of two portable phones
after Mayor Richard Fetty.
suggested that a cell
phone and bag phone 'be
obtained by the village,
which, he said, would help
alleviate the problem of
contacting village officials
·throughout the day.
Members· of council
~igned il, letter that will .be '
sent to the Meigs Local
\ Board .of Education about
·adding •the .new SGhool to
the vill'age's sewer system.
· Council also:

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY ous

IndiVIduals 'Cirlvlng along f:lorth Second
. Middleport Wednesday morning were 'sur,
· prised to discover the Easter Bunny waving to passing motoris~ and pedestrians. The Easter
Bunny, a:k.a. Stacy Hawk, Fruth Pharmacy emplciyee, was making an appearance at the local
drug&amp;tore .to have pictures taken with area chiidr~ . .Proceeds from the pictures, which cost $2
each. a·re,'~jng donatel:l to the March of, Dimes:•trony M. Leach· photo)
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21edleni- lt Pqli

Calendar
c;la,ssifieds
Comjcs ·

Editorials ·,
0 b.uuanes .
I

sporg

' Wgther .

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B+6 Pld&amp; J: 6'7..8; Pldt 4: OrHsO •
BZ Suptra.o.l: 11s15s18-21s31~
M ICidlir. fi..6:6.2-4-9

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81-2.5.8

w.VA:

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C lOci Ohio Vtlloy Publislilns Co.
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E. Vallee, M.D. ~~rd
pulmonacy disease. . , · ·
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day closing on Tuesday, but weather
conditions have prevented th e work
from getting underway.
ODOT officials, with the Easter
weekend approaching, have decided that
the District 10 bridge ere~ must now
wait until Monday before closing the
bridge to motor traffic. PedeStrians will
still be peqnitted ro use the bridge
while it is closed . .

The temporary closure. could last as
long as three days as workers repair
three stringer support assemblies
between the West Virginia anchor span
and the suspended ·span.
The problem was discovered during
the annual in:'depth inspection of the
stru cture by URS Corp., Cincinnati.
The inspection started the .first week of

Please see Brldp, Al.

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Diagnostic C.rcllac
Services

and

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' ~lte ;x-~y,
Jatra~unds, stress testing, bOne density testina,
pulmonary function testing and extensive laboratory testi~g. ·

EKG;

POMEROY ,-· ' Motori1ts .. who
depend on , the Po~eroy-Mason bridge
for crossing the 0hio River will get a
few days' reprieve before rhe bridge ' is
closed (or tepairs.
,
The Ohio Departlllent q(Transporta~.
tion announced Wednesday that the
bridge will remain open upril ·Monday.
It was originally 1~heduled foe -a three-

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certi~'d ·in •in~ernal medicln~
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including r~newal'and nonrenewal of teacher contracts, were handled at a
nieeri9g of the Meigs Local
Board of Education Tuesday
night.
Effective with the 2001.02 school year, teach ers
hired on a one- year contract were James Bennett,
. C d D .d Ch d Kelly Satterfield, Stacie
J amce a y. ava
a - scarberry, r·am s·ampson an d
we II , R. usse II. Fl agg, J eremy . p · "
.
J an H ad.d ox, KeII'
am vogt.
G ramm,
H' d
fi
Hannon, Sharon Hawley,
are on ve-year conJanice Haynes, Joyce Hill, tracts were Tammy Chap•
Jason Jackson, Jennifer . man, Jom Jeffers. Krasta
Jon es, Lea Ann King, Nikki
Plerse see BCNird, A~

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Numern1atters, ·

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FROM ~TAFF REPORTS

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OHIO

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Lotteries
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person'nel

Lambert,
Teawana
McCaulla, Metra Peterson,
Sargent,
Mark
Kathy
Swann, Daniel Thomas, Jeff
Wayland and David Wilcoxen.
.
. Employed on three-year . .
contracts
were
Lorri
Barnes,
Grace
Chen, .
Nathan 'Hansen , R.obyn
Hawk, Ami Holden, Kent
Howell, Shannon Korn,
Christi Lisle, David R.amey,

··PoiD.eroy-Mason bridge closes Monday

tow:
v
·
Sentinel

•Balusa,ny Subijba~,'. M.D., imarlt eertifted in in~mat medlcme all'd
pulri.onary dis~a8e; accepting.~e.!' patients; "priu:tke' limlted to
chronic lun1 disease, asthma,
emphylema, bladt lung, asbestos!(~.
f
•t
~ .., lj

Please see Deficit. A:S

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. .

,:I'homas Price, .~.D. board certified In obstetrics_a~d ernecology;
accepting new patients; practh:e ll~lt~ ofQce cY,.~.;ology, yearly·
e~~m, _pelvJc exams; pap !ests, ancl:malt\mog~ms~ , .· ,, ; , ·' ,' ·

·Please -Tool, AJ .

Distrid targets

'.

. PIIIM 'M i CruiMr. Al

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urday to be served from 11 :30 a.m.
to I p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center at $4.50, and a chicken barbecue dinner at the Pomeroy Fire
Station on Sunday at $5.
Downtown plantings were dis- 1
cussed and · a work session was
announced for May 21 frolll 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. In me event of rain, it will

0

NMI...nal

· Jordan

lhu

:sPORTS: Reds fall to Buccos, .SHS tops Alumni, Bl

11,

·available qt the Charles E. Holzer, Jr., M.D. Surgery Center.
/

. ca11
. C74ol 446·5354 ·

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the HOlzer Difference.
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�•

•World

Page" Al

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12,2001

Telecast of McVeigh executio~ allowed
IICH.

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1110.

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t:;.~ Drier, cooler air coming
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

\

Drier, cooler air will spread
~cross the tri-county area
, 1. ·~onight
and Friday, the
National Weather Service 5aid.
· , ·.. Skies will be partly cloudy
riday but the showers could
.
turn on S~turday.
,
Lows tonight will be in the
:SOs, Highs on Friday will be in
he lower 70s.
,:t
·~ Cool, c:lamp weather will
ontinue fot the first part of
· :the next week, forecasters said.
, . ~ Sunset tonight will be at
•{ 8 :07, and sunrise on Friday is
.· . ~;It 6:57 a.m.
· 'li; '
Weather forecast:
{ . Tonight... Mosdy cloudy. A
';l:hance of showers aftet mid' \rught. Low in the lower 50s.
t ":f'.est wind 5 to 15 mph.
~hance of rain 30 perceJii.

~

Friday... A chance of showers in the morning, ome"rwise
partly cloudy. High · in the
lower 70s. Northwest wind 5
to lO mph. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Friday night.. .Mostly clear.
Low J;~ear 40.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Pardy
cloudy
with a chance of showers.
High in the upper 60s.
Sunday... A chance of showers during the day, omerwise
'partly cloudy. Low in the nud
40s and high in the upper 50s.
Mon4ay and Tuesday. .. Partly cloudy. Low in the lower
40s and high in the upper
_, 50s.
Wednesc:lay... Partly cloudy.
Low in the upper 30s and high
in the upper 50s.

.'·

WASHINGTON (AP) - Attorney
General John Ashcroft has decided to
allow a closed-cireuit telecast ofTimothy McVeigh's execution to be broadcast
to Oklahom&gt; City bombing survivors
and victims' families, a government official says.
Survivors and families will be able to
watch the telecast in Oklahoma City.
said the official, who spoke, on condition of anonymity Wednesday.
The decision fulfills me wishes of
some 250 victims and family members
who want to see McVeigh die. There are
only eight spots aVailable for victims'
witnesses at the federal · penitentiary in
Terre Haute, Ind., where McVeigh, 32, is
scheduled to receive a lethal injection
on May 16.
Ashcroft was expected to announce
·his decision at a news conference Thursday.
After meeting Tuesday with families
in Oklahoma City, Ashcroft said, "I'm
going to do what I can to accommodate
the needs of these famill"es."
It will be the first execution carried
out by the federal government since
1963.
/
Justice Departffient officials declined
. to comment.
Jim Cross, executive assistant at the

Terre Ha~ p~n. said he had not ism on U.S: soil- me April _19! 19~1•
received official word ihat ,the telecast bombing of the feder.tl building m
had been approved, adding ihat the Oklahoma City that killed 168 peop!.;.
prison h:is begun to· make preparations
McVeigh did 75 hours of intervie;'1!'s
in case the closed-circuit feed is wim two newspaper"reporters who have
allowed.
written a book, "American Terrorist: '
Jannie Coverdale, ~hose two grand- The book created a stir because in it
sons were killed in the attack, said she McVeigh appeared to sh~w no n:mor.lS.
would be "elated" with the decision.
"I understand what they felt in Okla''This is somethirig I've wanted to homa City. I have no sympathy for
watch;' Coverdale said. .
them," he told the authors.
-.
McVeigh, who has waived all appeals,
Ashcroft has said he doesn't want. to
has said he is not opposed ro a close.t- give McVeigh any " tools" to voice _his
circuit telecast and has suggested that his VIews.
··
execution should be televised nationally.
"There are obviously \Vays t!Rt we
In a letter to the Daily Oklahoman can implement mat minimize the abilinewspaper, McVeigh s;tid that, to . pro- ty of this com-ic ted terrorist, murderer,
vide equal access, · the government to make his points," said Ashcroft '\&gt;n
should " Hold a true public execution -. Tucosday.
.
·allow a public broadcast."
· McVeigh has turned down all media
Ash croft was also expected to address requests, Cross said .
. '·
1
the question of whether McVeigh
McVeigh's attorney, Nath;tn Chotiishould be allowed to do television and bers, said Wedn esday that M t Vei;:h
radio interviews during his final ·days. shows no sign of interest in a b st-·
NBC News, which first reported minute, appeal to stop o r de by his exeAshcroft's decision to allow the telecast, cntion.
said McVeigh would not be permitted
Justice Department officials said this
to give any further interviews for broad- week that McVeigh's last chance to ask
cast on radio or television.
(or a stay of execution w0tild be two
Media .outlets are clamoring to get hours before he is scheduled to die,
i,ntervie'-v,S with McVeigh, who faces when he will be allowed a final meetl ng
eX!)CUtion for me deadliest act of terror- ' witli his lawyers.
"'
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being evicted from an apartment complex for senior citizens
shot and killed three people tliere before com;nitting suic,i_de,
police said.
Shots were fired at the Congregational Tower at about 2:30
p,.m. Wednesday and officers were fired upon as they arrived
at.the scene, said police Sgt, David Eisenberg.
Officers found the bodies of a woman and a man inside the
building's lobby. Two other bodies were found on the upper
floors.
•
Eugene Molter, 68, was found with a gun in his \land ·~nd
an apparendy self-inflicted gunshoc wound, polke sajd,.
,
·
.
'"·r·

RAs look to.. unionize
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mree people were killed and more than 80 injured.
IJn one of the country's worst sports tragedies, thopsa nds of
fans who couldn't fit into Johann e'sburg's Ellis Park stadium
on Wednes4ay i)igltt hoved and broke through th e_ fen ce
around the fac~ity or cl,imbed over gates.
·
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'"'l
Not initially realizing the 'Seriousness of th e situation, affi,
cials didn 't c:ill otf the game until 10 minutes after ·the fif!t
body h~d been car&amp;d away, one fan said.
. l l".
"We thought s'o meone had fainted," said Abdul Patel , wli:o
spent 20 minuteJ .in th~ throng outside before he. ma~aged' ~o
get in. Later, he,s3:w ,at least 10 bodi,es bei,n g carrie,~.f nto the
• • '
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•field.
•!VI· ,
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Mil~ieVic suffers chest p~in

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.AMHERST, Mass. (AP) - Compl~ining ~\ley are underpaid, resident assistants at the U niversit}r of J14assachusetts are
trying to form a union in what is believed to ,be the nation's
first organizing attempt by undergraduate students.
'School administraton are trying to block· the move, which
follows successful union drives · among graduate researchers
and teaching assistan.ts across lhe Northea~t. ," .•. ·.
The university's 3~ resident assinants filed ,a J.lni~n election petition last week with the Massachusetts Labor Relations Commission, which will determine i( ~he· group is
legally eligible to form a union.
1;. •
.The United Auto Workers is supporting. the students.

l

soccer stampede kills 43
'

· BELGRADE, Yugosla\&lt;ia. (AP)- Under police guard, former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic underwent tests ·
in a hospital Thursday after being rushed from his' cell at Belgrade's Central Prison following co mplaints about che st
~

palOS.

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:'There were . heut problems that necessitate\:! Ills tran!fefl.l
_to the qillitary hospital in Belgrade," said Milosevic's faw'yer,
Toma Fila. "It was nothing too dramati c."
·, ··
A
Fila's office said that the Belgrade hospital was expected"\o
make an anno unc.ement about Milosevic 's 'c ondition la t~r
'Fhursda.y. Ahead .of. that, Justice Minister Vladan .Batie of·Serbia, the dominant Yugoslav republic, said initial tests appe-ared
'
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to show nothing wrong.
·,' '
According 10 .Fila's associates, Milosevic first expe rien~'~d
chest pains Wedn~sday evening and was admitted to the hospital around midnight after an initial checkup· in the priso1\.
1

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JOHANNESBURG, South Afric~ (AP) So.bbing
women identified their rel~tives ·from among bodies lined up
on a soccer field early Thursday after a stamped( at a match
between · two of South A,frica's most popul~r teams. F&lt;,&gt;rty-

.•

~·Good

Blast not caused by bomb

. •. ••
, ,! WASHINGTON (AP) - .The blast and fire aboard a Thai
·:;Airways Boeing 737 Jast month apparently was caused by an
. ·exploding fuel tank, according to U.S. feqeral investigators.
· /'! A flight attendant was killed and the plane was destroyed in
'il the March 3 blasr.
. ~~ Investigators believe a similar problem caused TWA flight
to explode off the coast of New York in 1996, killing all
~ 230 aboard last year.
.
,'!J"i. The Thai Airways plane burst into flames minutes before
• : 'Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and 148 passengers
,\'!':"were about to board.
·
Wille only 13 perc.nt Of Americans rapolt ullnglalad delly, 47 percent
,
.-y .~MV lflioV their IHiy grHns three to ebt time• I* week.
·

~--~----,~--~---,'t'·--~~,--."'···~~~---~-~~---,,

Open Easter 10:00 am - t ·pm
Saturday&amp; SundayOnty

Easter Candy &amp; RUed Baskets
(Boxed Candy not included)'

1/2 Price

:;aoo

WQmen's
Co~oones.&amp; Gift
Sets

~\

¥.

·t.

''

City back in campalcn mode

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· ~'·. LOS ANGELES (AP) - The city's mayoral campaigns
"were back in full swing after voters split over the candidates
l,and sent the top two into a June runoff.
'''~ Former Assembly speaker ,Antonio Villaraigosa and City
'li~~Attorney James Hahn; both Democrats, wasted no time in
"seeking new endorsements Wednesday - particularly that of
, · . ~epublican Mayor Ri~hard Riordan.
·
· ., • Riordan, who is being forced out by term limits, had sup. · ·•j!Orted fellow Republican Steve Soboroff. He said he had
.1{\lecline to spiak with eitherVillaraigosa or Hahn "until I get
;?.my thoughts to settle."
· ·
. , ' , . The outcome of Tuesday's election signaled the growing
.11~~'power of Hispanics and organized l~b~r ;md was seen by
· ol;ne as,..oign that voters are more opttmts.tlc than when they
• ~eleetec( Riordan.
·

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.s6ooo ,Ma,..~.
•$4000 Nol•'•;.••
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Cassettes

4 dead

in shootinc incident

Billfold$.
Mens&amp; Womens

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NIIIM H6S dipwl "'uh~ftltliNft ,~totu.

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Pomeroy,Ohlo

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.Group to meet

Cmiser

Cleln•tl•

. Tool

·Bridge·

LOCAL STOCKS .

from

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:MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subsdibe today.
992-2156

The Daily Sentinel

.•

~ Reader S•rvlces
Cornotlon Polley
Our main c:onctm In allltorlts 11
. to be accurate. If you knOw ol .,
· error li~aiiOIY, call.lhe ne-oom
at (740) 992-2158:
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Newl Dlpllrtmentl .
The main· number II 992·2158.
Department tiCttnllona are:
Chnllt'll menog«
El(l. 12

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Mon- Fri*am· 9pm
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Other HrVIcM
Ext. 3

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To und e-m•ll
dlllyaentlneiOyahoo.com •

SI&amp;IOillri,~,IPm

·Open WeekniQhts 'Till 9 • Friendly Service.

•
••

•I

(UVI21,_)
Ohio Vllloy PUbllllllng Co.
Publlned every oftomoon, Monday
through F~day, 111 Coun St.,

Pomeroy.
r:•
paid ot

Qhlo. Sooond·elu•
Pomeroy.

mMn TM Auocllttd Prftl and
the Ohio ~par AoaocltiiOn.
Putmillar.; S.nd addf'lll correctlonf to Tht Dllty 8onllntl , 111 Coun.
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45761.

Subecrlptlon ret11 .

· ly otrrter or matar rou1e

OMWttl&lt;

one manit\

11M""'
DIOV

'

$2 .
$8.70
$104

t10 ctn11

SUbecrttiero not dtllnng to pay 111e
center ma~~In tdvtnco dlr~ to
The Ditty
. Credit Wttl 1&gt;1 gtven
ttoh Will&lt;. No oliboerlptlon ilY

ctctmall

Adwi11olng

I

CHULA VISTA, Calif. (AP) -· . An elderly man who was

from

LOCAL BRIEFS
Issued license

•

Prescription rn. lt2·2955
112 East Mclin 511'tet ':.

ft.

CJa Ja-.1..

: or

Charta Rlffte,L.R. Ph; . "

'Deficit

Board

·$ - ·g ,·
8

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' would put a police officer in
Carson Crow, Travis Abbott,
each of the county's school
Micah Otto, Troy Bauer,
districts.
Dale
Harrison,
Kellie
'
The fint three years would
PapAl
P F AI
Thomas, Dkarin Logan, Ron
be handled with grant
Logan, Mi e Kennedy, Rick
fl n _D
Johnson, Barb Mathews Blaettnar, Ron Hill, Jesse sian on Meigs Middle monies, the fourth year of
program
MIDDLEPORT . Clara Jarvis, 86, Middleport, died Crow, Lisa Miller, George Vail, . Don Dixo~. Dap ·School _. cheerleaders and the ·four-year
Wednctday. April 11, 2001 at Holzer Medical Center.
Nagielslti and Kevin Shep- Thomas, Jeremy Griinm, Jan unpaid bills with Ann Sisson, would be handled by the disShe was me daughter of me late Edger and Rose Blevins pard.
.
.
Haddox, Darin .• Logan and treasurer of the booster trict through another source,
Mowery, and was formerly employed at Kyger c~It Power
The board also approved a Nathan Hansen.
·
group, and Lucille Gheen, said Buckley.
Plant, Jim Rickman Bargainland and Laughlin's Restaurmt in five-year _c ontract pending
Also non-renewed were · both of whom have had
The superintendent said
Cheshire.
completion of certification the contracts of Mary Whan, daughters on the team.
. he views the proposal as
She was also a member of Middleport Community Church. requirements of the State Middle School cheerleader
The discussion centered " positive" . for the district.
She was also preceded ir;t death by ihree sisters, Irene Mow- Department of Education, . advisor; Ron Logan, athletic around the group's finances, The board voted to particicry, Dau:l Mobley and Lucille Drummond; and a granddaugh- National Institute for Auto- director;
and
John . an acco~nting for the money pate in the proposed proter,Jauie Wheaton.
· motive Service Excellence Krawsczyn, assistant high and activities of Mary Whan, gram if it' can be funded.
Surviving are her husband, ~arV:is; three sons anc\ and contingent upon suffi- school principal, part time.
cqeerleading a&lt;l,visor.
In other business, th.e
·daughien-in-law, Roy and Clarice Jarvis of Cheshire, jack and cient enrollment in the autoThe board also vored not
A request was made by the board approved:
"Lavoona Jarvis of Argile, Texas, and Herston and Sue Jarvis of motive program to support · to renew supplemental con- booster representatives for
• three overnigh~ field
New Carlisle; four daughters and two sons-in-law, Beatrice two teachers.
tracts for · extended services the board to pay an out- trips, one for the Meigs High
. Clark of New Carlisle, Betty and Bob Venable of Columbus,
Given continuing con- of Marjorie Blake, David standing bill for $1,716 to School PCCLA to the state
Evelyn and Winnie Dent, and Donna JarvisYeauger, all of Mid- tracts were Mary Brauer, Kucsma , Ron Logan, Kathy Cheer .Station ·and Tumbling convention, April 19 and 20;
• dleport; a brother, James Mowery of Chicago. IU.; and 14 David Deem, Michelle Fra- Reed, Tim Simpson, Gloria Center in Gallipolis.
one to MHS VICA for state
• grandchildren, 25 great-grandchildren and two great-great- zier, Jim Huff and Lester VanReeth and Carl Wolfe.
The board voted to pay
skills competition, April 27
grandchildren.
Manuc;l.
,
_
In non-certified positions, part of the hill, with $400 to
and 28, and the third for the
Services will be 1 p.m. friday at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home,
Mark Thomas was hued t~e board hired on coniinu- come from the boosters
MHS Science Club on May
Pomeroy. Officiating will be Rev. Sam Anderson. Burial will be on a two-year contract effec- ing contracts for next year fund, and beca use of the lack
in Gravel Hill Cemetery.. Friends may call at the funeral h~me tive July 1 as network and Gary ·M cKnight and Ron • of accountability on funds 2 and 3.
• payment of $1 ,650 to
computer technici~n; arid Wilson, bus drive,rs; Jackie raised and alleged mishanfirom 5- 9 p.m. to day.
Wendy
Halar to be distribDan Romuno as safe and Hoover and Coleen Whaley, dling of money, to turn the
drug free schools coo~dina- coo ks, Lonnie Taylor, custo- nutter over for investigation uted to 33 teachers for coltor on a one year contract di·a n;Jackie Justice, secretary; _ by the Meigs Co unty prose- lege credit reimbursement
from
the
Continuous
for the next school year and Phyllis]. Witherell, aide.
cutor.
'
pending approval of grant
Hired on two-year conPresented at the meeting Improvement I mplementaof Bedford Township .involved
funding.
tracts were Marci Hendricks, was a proposal from the tion Gr'!,nt Fund. . •
in pickipg up trash on town• accepted an S80,000
Given supplemental con- cook/cashier; john Davidson . Meigs County, Sheriff's
· POMEROY -A marriage ship roadsare asked to place tracts were Mike Chancey, and Mike Kauff, custodians, Office
for
a
School grant from the Interactive
license h'as been issued in meir trash bags at the side of. head foothill coach; Rick and Debbie Cundiff, aide.
· Resource Officer.
Video District Learning
me roads so ·ihat mey can be Blaettnar, Nat han Hansen
J,. Meigs County Probate. Court
The board agreed·to create
Buckley said that the sher- Project
through Ohio
to Charles Scott Burton, 25, picked up by me trustees ·on and Ron Hill, assistant varsi- four new positions all at iff's office plans to apply for I Si:hooiNet Commission for
Pomeroy,' and Michelle Dawn Apri130.
ty football coaches; Rick Meigs High School. They are a competitive grant -which the current school year.
Items not to be collected are Blaettnar, reserve football an English teacher imd a ·
.Folmer, 31, Pomei:IJY:
tires, batteries, refrigerators, and . coach; Don Dixon, Jesse Vail math tj!acher, to comply - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - air conditioners.
and Bryan Zirkle'; seventh with" state requirements to
• discussed annexation
and eighth grade football provide additional classes for
plans with Chuclc Knight,
o TUPPERS PLAINS --coa~hes; Carl Wolfe, boys ~ vocational students; another
village solicitor, and John
Tuppers Plains Baseball and
vanity basketball coach; is a building and property
Lentes.
from PapAl
MIDDLEPORT The Rick Ash, boys assistant var- maintenance ' teacher, which
Softball Association, fund raiser
Attend)ng the meeting, in
meeting. AU coaches and inter- Middleport Ministerial Ass.oci- sity basketball coach; Jeremy is a trades program to round
• approved the mayor's addition to Petty and Miller,
ested individuals encourage4 ation will hold community Grimm · and Jeff Wayland, out the vocational offerings; report, which included were Councilmen Tammy
tO attend, Monday, 8:15p.m. at Good Friday services at the boys Middle School basket- and the fourth is an assistant S2,044 collected from police Searles, Judy Denney, Martin
Ash Street Church, 7 p.m. Fri- ball coach; Mike Kennedy, principal's position.
m~ home of Patrick Carroll.
Andrew, Ralph Bales, Office
tickets for the monm;.
day. Rod Brower will be the c,.;ss country coach; John
Fnnding for the new posiManager
Amanda Ramage,
• commended Fetty's
guest speaker. There will be Krawsczyn golf coach; Rick tions will come from several welding 'class for repairing Patrolman Steve Williams
special music. Refreshments Ash, girls volleyball coach; sources,
Superintendent broken bleachers in -the gym; and Maintenance Supervisor
John
Sharp,
girls
Middle
William
Buckley
· said,
will
be
served.
POMEROY - Residents
• acknowledged · several David Davis.
School basketball coach;
including vocational monies. drain and street repairs
Mike Chancey, athletic
In other personnel "I!usi~ throughout the" village mat
tournament. Several youth facilities care; Eleanor McK- ness, the board approved:
need to be undertaken; '
• an unpaid ' !~ave of
activities are planned and elvey. _high school yearbook
• refuted· reeent -·eensus.
merchants were asked to advisor; Ron Drexler, Mid- absence of one year for edu- results 'and made plans to
ftomPapAI
donate for items co be given dle School yearbook advisor; _cational. purposes to_Rebec- begin a verification process
Linda Lear, Middle Scl)ool ca Cotterill effective the
as prizes. There was some
in or~er to identifY the cornewspaper advisor; Jennifer beginning of the 2001-02;
.be postponed for a week-.
rect number of people living
discussion on staging a craft
• resignations of Rebecca
Volunteers are needed to show in conjunction · with Jones, High School cheerMemorials should
in the village;
'
'leader advisor; Celia McCoy, Cotterill as high school yearhelp with the work. John
. • initiated efforts to, collect
the tournament. ' .
·last forever. So Rock
drama advisor and senior book advisor . and Mark
Musser noted that a truckHaynes reported on the class advisor; Kathy· Reed, Swann as co-head of . the delinquept_sewer bills;
load of mushroom dirt has .
of Ages guarantees it.
• began working on grants
sprinkling hose for the Student Council jdvisor; wrestling coach;
been brought in for use in
and see)cing donations of
. • hiring - of substitute.
Your family m&lt;morial should b&lt;
the planting areas. ·Karr WiU flower beds, and George Janice Cady, l:'fationa Honor
materials for shelter houses
Society
advisor;
Jim
teachers
for
the
remainder
of
Wright
noted
that
he
had
th&lt; most pennanent thing you
contact Bob's Market about
and a walking trail in RutOliphant,
quiz
team
advisor;
the
school
year,
Dustin
Ford
picked
up
the
Christmas
tree
&lt;Vel
buy. !lut only an Authoriud ·
plants, which he has volunland's park;
Toney
Dingess,
band
direcand
Wanda
Shuler;
Rock
of A~s M&lt;morialist can offer
teered to donate ·to the vil- silhouettes from the wc;lding
•
.
approved
May
3
as
tor; David Deem and Kent
. • granted a three-week
you complete assuranc:t that it 'Will
class of Meigs High School.
lage.
National Day of Prayer;
Howell,
assistant
band
direcmedical
leave
of
absence
to
b&lt; so. Th&lt; Ro&lt;k of Ages warranty is
The treasurer reported a
A repor\ . was given on
guarante&lt;s that your m&lt;morial
tor, part time S1,000; Cliff Debra Shuler;
,
plans for the Aug. 26 bass "balance ' of $2,945.55.
will remain b&lt;autilul fortm. That,
Kennedy, ' Mil&lt;e Wilfong,
• approved Denny R.
alter
all, is the way it should be.
guidance counselor; Jim Runyon as a volunteer assisHuff, librarian, and library tant baseball coach, effecti"e
supervisor.
immediately;
Head· teachers hired were
• hired Jennifer Cummins
Plge ·Al
Penny Ramsburg. Bradbury; as a substitute teacher for the
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· Gannett - 62),
Rockwell - 41 ~
AEP-,48).
Vicki Haley, Harrisonville; remainder of the school A-pril and is still unC!erway.
General Elecb1c - 43~ 'Socky Boo1s - 4
Arch Coal- 31'•
Theresa Carr, Middleport; year; and ' hired Carol Evans . · The ptoblem was not
AD Shell - 56l•
GKNLY-10l. ·
Akzo-~• .
Ann VanMatre, Pomeroy_; and Gloria VanReeth as deemed an emergency, but
Halley DavidsOn....:. 41 ~ Sears-34~
AmTeeh/SBC- 41 ),
Shoney's - \
Kmart -al.
Ashland Inc.- 40),
Marjorie Fetty, Rutland; tutors for health handi 2 ODOT and inspectors and
Wai·Mart - 50),
Kroger- 22
AT&amp;T-21l,
Rita Simons, Salem Center; capped student at a rate of engmeers for URS all
Wendl/e
- 23).
Landa
End
28~
Bank one ~ 3!i
Wor1hlngtcn10),
and Pam Crow, Salisbury.
$15 per hour, not to exceed agreed that repairs would be
Ltd.-16
Bob Evans-16l.
Dally stock reportS are
Oak . Hll Financial BorgWamer- 42~
Other
supplemental
confive hours per week.
nece"ssary sometime! during
. 13'1.
the 4 p.m. closing
Champion - 2~ .
tracts
went
to
·
Sharon
Birch,
the
year, so ODOT' decided
quotes of the previous
ptlarmlna Shops - 4l. OVB-24~
dal/e
trqac11ons,
proBBT-34\
City Hoking- al.
an additional 10 days, school
to take advantag~ of scaffoldvided by Smith Partnere
Peoples - pl. ·
federal Mogul- 3
nurse; and Sean Walton,
ing that URS already has in
at Advest Inc.
Premier "- Bl&lt;
USB-23
French teacher, and Carl
plac~. -· and, to make the
Wolfe, OWA occupation
repairs at once.
work adjustme m, " n oneyear contracts, teaching positions, pending completion ,9f
state requirements .
.'
Teaching contracts which
were not renewed this year
were those ofTe_rry Buckler,
Suzanne
Cammarata,
Michelle Gillilan, · Elizabeth
. Swatzel and· Mary Whan.
Also not renewed pending
posting c;&gt;f the positions were

Russell Stover Candy ·
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Gtllf•t.Jl. . ,_.._. ................ ~ . . . p ,

. ~oy, M.lddl1port, Ohio

•

.... Oh~1~:59

C.D's

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Reg._$10.99

.,,_

{ft Hila,.ATilT Wltrk11 ,..,, fliW 411 Sl9.9f ,_,""Y J

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Amity

New Releases in Music ·
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Theo.HySuiii ... •P8geA3 ·

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Price

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(~. .Texas eyes stop to executions

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -A state Senate panel has endorsed
)li plan to let voters decide whether to halt executions· for ~o
: ,years in Texas, the nation's most active death penalty state.
.;::, •. The Senate Criminal Justice Committee approved the pro. :(.posal ~ednesday by a 4-3 vote. If approved by a ~wo-thirds
~:ntajonty of both the Senate and House, the tesohltH&gt;n would
' 'put the issue before voters in November' as a p't oposed
· mendment to the state constitution.
·
If the pla'n is . approved, Texas' death tow would sit idle
• ''" ..'"' th~ state studies how it administers ;he death penalty..
The vpte Wedriesda}i" \Vas split along .parcy lines, w~th the
's fi:&gt;u{Delllocrat~ backing tht! resolution and its three
u.u••~••u opposing it. To gain approval in the full Senate,
proposal would n~ed several votes from Republicans,
f who hold a 16-15 majodty.

Mea/&amp;l _

-' ~ Aprtl12, 20D1

peIn ...... """"
1tl'llee IIIYllltblt.

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Mill~ .

13 WHkl
28 Wttkl .
52 \'IHU

$27.30
$&amp;3.82
$105.58

- - Molp County·
13 WHkl
$29.26
28 WHkl
158;~
62 WHkl
$109.72

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'the coaching contracts of

n;;J!J.~J'!J.f-..!~L!.!!!1 c!J~~!.!!L~~H

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PapA4

Opinion

TheDaily~l

'lll•nd.,. Afrl 12. HD1

.·~ _'I'he_oa_n}r_Sen_tin_eL_ ___..=;,.~·

The Daily Sentinel
I JUST SCORED

SOME REALLY 600D

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

COLOA\BIA

:11811enetloelllch
...... llanllgM'

Mlnlglng Editor

~Boyer

Adv

lHE PAIN.

Dllne K., Hill

Director

DEAR ABBY: My son, ~Brad,'; is
in first grade in a smaU private
school. When binhday time roUs
around, I always invite all the kids.
They all show up, but when it comes
to returning the invitation, some do
- but most don't. Brad is very hurt
when he is excluded from their partics. It seems to me that when you
acc,ept an invitation, you should 'reciprocate.
It's not a matter qf money, Abby;
the parents can afford to invite aU
the children. One parent told me she
lets her son decide whom to· invite
and she;._ stays out of it. Isn't this
teaching a .child that bad manners
are acceptable and getting along
with each other is ·not important?
My child has also wanted to exclude
a particular ·child\ I always say, "No
one likes being left out .~'
I ~ow I can't control what other

WHICH SHOUL.O
ALLE111ATE

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STUFF Ff«Nr1·

R. Shawn Lewfl

Controller

OUR VIEW

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With an agreement in hand for China to release the American surveillance plane crew, President Bush has survived his
first major foreign policy flap.
.
The outcome is satisfactory, although sorpe folks appear
upset with how the White House reached the agru~ .
They shouldn't be. The fears the situation could get out of
hand were real. Damage has been done and a repair job is in
order.
.
. Okay, we said we were "very sorry" about the collision
between the spy plane and a Chinese fighter jet that left the jet
pilot dead.
We have been "regretting" the incident for tjle past t'wo
weeks, but if you're going to get into semantics, being "very
· sorry" is about the same as being reg~As the Associated
Press pointed out, it's just short of an apology, but apparently it
was enough for Beijing.
We 'were in agreement with Secretary of State Colin PoweU
when he said last Sunday on "Face the Nation" that nothing
happened to prompt an apology. It was an·accident, and it was
unfortuJlllte, but both sides were apparently just doing their
jobs when \t happened. We were spying, sure; but who's to say
what the jet pilot was doing when the crash occured?
.
It wasn't a major military engagement, so we should be
relieved the incident didn't carry such importance, other than
a justifi~ble irritation at our people being detained. (Notice we
didn't say, '·'held hostage.")
.
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The . incident held more import for · the Chinese, whose
nationalism is becoming more apparent.That's why there was
an insistence on an apology. China's tesentment.~t being being
imposed upon by the West has been a feature of its political
. philosophy since Commodore Perry made his way there a century-and-a-half ago.
It's also been a roadblock to better relations between ourselves and the Chinese for just as long, despite all of our economic inroads with them.
Bearing that in mind, the administration had a difficult path
to chart in order to get our people released. The filet negotiations didn't stretch into months - remember the Pueblo? or longer is a tribute to swift diplomatic action. Saber-rattling
in this case would have onJy aggravated the situation.
. We don't subscribe to 1the theory that the president's sole
motivation was to smooth out business relations with China.
The point of the whole 'thing was to get our people back. (And
hopefuUy we'll have the plane returned, as well). Freedom now
looms for the crew, and China's doing so for "humanita~ian"
p\lrposes needs to be also recognized .

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House should.try to improve McCain-Feingold.

.... TODAY IN HISTORY
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Rather than either killing the Senatehurt by the loss of soft money - cspepassed campaign finance reform bill. t;&gt;r
cially relative to interest groups - but
pass'ing it intact, the House ought to try to
they will hardly'be eliminated.'
.improve it, especiaUy to help political parBoth Republicans and Democrats
ties. '"
believe that Democrats will suffer more
Potential devices for doing so include
fiom the loss of soft money.
permitting parties to coUect limited
.
And it's true - not to mention ironic
amounts of soft money for voter regist.rafor the supposed party of the average citition and get-out-the-vote activi!ies and
zen-'- that Democrats raise a greater percentage of their funds fiom big, unreproviding tax credits for smaU hardmotiey gifts.
stricted donors than Republicans do.
· RoU Call contributing writer Norma~ .
COLUMNIST
In 2000, Republic:m committees raised
Ornstein of the American Enterprise ·
$447 million in hard money··compared
Instit~lte also s~ggests creatin~ a "broa~ast may :not pass constitutional muster.
with .the Democrats' $270 million: The
bank - au arne that. b~ad~ast statio~ . Even if they do, critics such as Sen. two parties raised about equal amounts of
woul.d be reqwred to gtve parties for thetr Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., contend that such soft money: $240 million each.
candidates. .
..
. . ' intc!rest groups will mount even more vitBack in the days when Democrats ran
Weakerung of the political parties IS riollc ads prior to the 60-day deadline Congress, their candidates fur the House
perhaps t~e greatest P.oten~al dang~r than they do now .50 as to demonize and Senate were able to raise more hard
mherent m the McCam-Femgold bill adversaries while they can.
, money for their campaigns tl)an GOP
p~~d by the Senate - p~cularly tf t?e
According to the C3fl1paign Media .candidates did: In fact, in 2000, Dcmocra~ill.~ ~t on mdependent 1ssue advertts- Ana1Y,is- Group, interest groups spent tic Senate candidates raised slighdy more
mg ts s~ck down ~ the courts.
nearly $96 million on issue ads in .the than Republicans, and the election results
. McCam-Femgol~s ban on .soft money country's 1,300 major TV stations in show it.
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~ould cost t~e parties and the1r Congres- 2000. compared with the $163 million
So, in my opinion, McCain-Feingold is ·
s1onal camp:ugn commtttees roughly _40 spent by the parties.
neither the end of the world nor some.Under McCain-Feingold, the parry ads thing that can't be improved. A broadcast
percent of the1r reVenue, ?,:uch of ~hich
they curce~dy spend on Issue ads that ·would disappear while, presumably, the bank could bring down the cost of cambenefit the1r c~didates. :
special-interest ads would multiply.
paigns and give patties a boost.
lf~arnes c:m t mo~t 1ssue ads, but cor- . The Senate did help the· parties someSo could a separate hard-money limit
porattons, uruons .and mdependent groups what by doubling the limit on hard- for individual and PAC gifts to patties as
,Can, those ,spe~1al Interests WI!'. have ltlO]ley ~ontributions to candidates, who well as tO Candidates and a laX credit for
greater· relattve mfluence on politics - will have more resources to fight the smaU donatiohs to patties.
and on the office-holders they help ~lect. · onslaught from special interests. . .
The Senate adopted an amendment
B1g corporate al)d orga.ruzattonal . Lase yeat, candidate ads broadcast on permitting up to $10,000 in soft-mon~
~ono!'l wont be able .to con~nbute mil- the 1,300 stations cost $334 million, out- contributions to state parties for voter regli?~ m soft money to the parties, but they pacing both party and special-interest ads. istration and turnout activities. The House
Will be able to mount"the1r own ~d cam- , A b k
fi M C . F . ld
could taise that limit.
paigns to help their friends and hurt their h, s ac ers ·~ c am-. eldngo. ar~e,
Of course, neither Republicans nor
enerrues.
t ~two-party system survtve qmte ruce~ ...-Democrats much want' co improve
I1 ·the Democratic Party, McCain- ly m the pre-.soft~~oney era, ~hen cor- McCain-Feingold. Republicans mainly
· Feingold likely will enhance the poi.vJr·of po~te and umo~ ~tvmg to candidates and ~nt to find a way to kill it. Democrats
labor unions, tiiil'lawyeri and major fern- · p~es was prohibited.
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hope -· or say they .hope - . to pass the
inist and environmental groups.
In 1992, for tns~nce, the parttes col- Senate bill and keep it from a "killer con, The bill's Snowe-Jeffords section liinits lected J~st. $8~ million m soft money 3!1d fererice." A better bill is worth a try, ·
corporate and union "electioneering~' ads $422 million m hard dollars. House and though.
.within 60 days of elections, and the Sen- S~nate candidates collected another $617
ate passed an add-on ai:Ju!ndment limiting li.tillion in hard money that year.
(Morton Kondracke 4 executivt ' editor of
ads by ideological gro~ps; however,' these
The upshOt is that the parties ~ be Roll Call; the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Morton
I&lt;ondracke

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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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In 1934, "Tender Is the Night," by F. Scott Fitzgerald, was ·
first published.
· ·
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In 1945, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt died of a·
cerebral 'hemorrhage in Warm Springs, Ga., at age 63; he was
succeeded by Vice. President Harry S. Truman. ·
'
In 1955, the Salk vaccine against polio was decl~red safe and
effect,ive.
In 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first
man to~y in space, orbiting the earth once before making a
safe landing. ·
.
~ 1981, the. space shuttle Columbia blasted off from Cape
Canaveral on its first test flight.
, .• .·
In 1989, radical activist Abbie Hoffinan was round dead at
his home in New !iope, Pa., at age 52. ·
· In 1989, former midcUewelght boxing champion Sugar Ray
Robinson died in Culver City, Calif., at age 67,
' '
'In 1992, Eu·ro Disneyland opened in France.
- Ten years ago: Defense Secretary Dick Cheney announced
plans to close 31 m'ljor U.S. military bases, including Fort Ord
in California and Fort Dix in New Jersey. Kurdish rebels
reported the Iraqi army was attacking guerrillas in . northern
Iraq.
·
,l='ive years ago: President Clinton named U.S, Trade Representative Mickey Kantor' to succeed the late Ron Brown as
commerce secretary.

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' RUSHER'S VIEW
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This is probably the first colwnn I have
But Woods ~ as .far as you, can get from
ever written .about sports, and it may well
being'a·braggart, and his killer instinct, such
be the last, NobQdy can be interested i'\
as it is, is merely thf by-product of the
everything, and I long ago learned that-·
necessity to leave · his opponents,
despite the great American tradition to the·.
metapl:torically speaking, . dead. Instead,
contrary- sports just aren't fOr me.
_Woods' petsQnality is chiuacterizeq.by an
Politics is my beat, and t~~ only thing in
intense, unremitting CQncentration. He
sports I give a hoOt a~u! is who gets to ·
simply does, with every stroke, the best he
throw out· tl1e first ball that opens the
possibly can. And his b~st is awesomely
major league baseball s~aso,n. . ·
good. One gets the impression that he
Even among sports, golf ranks low on
COLUMNIST
would play just as hard, and just as well, if
my list. r have occasionally thoqghc the
there were nobody else out tllere on the
1
might be something to be S:Ud for tennis,
~If course but Tiger.
in which graceful athl~tes exhaust theni- intere~t. And as he began knocking over
In short, h~ is- or at least he appe~ to
selves in a one-on-one combat that the records, one by one, I was amazed to be- a genumely modest youngAmer1can
requires not only phy,ic~ skill but what discover !tow much I careq whether he · male _with no hang-ups that he needs ·to
might be called a· spatial ili:teUi~nce 'th1t muld win .. the next big tournament. take out on the public, and one great
can bring ob.servers ~~ thj)ir \~t roar~ 1; P~ally, this past ~eekend, when he came tlesire:"t~ play tl_te be~~ golf that he possibly
approval or elicit no~ cltuc,k:les ,o've'i' 't fri:&gt;n~ behind to
th.e Augusta Ma:&gt;ters, I can - )lldeed,tf poss1ble, the best golf that
deftly-plad:d return.':f;Jut chasihg a sntiil'" felt.a joy 1had Simply never expertet)Ced anybody has ever played.
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white ball around a golf course, tA~cift· bjlfore.
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· .·
'• Oliver Wendell·Hohnes Jr., in defending
turns "(ith opponeQts who chase theirs, is
.~does T1ger W~ do ~ to me? I .- the practice of law as a career, once ~d
my idea of nothing to.do.As for baseball, I think It began when I noticed his response that "in the law as well as elsewhere, a man
will admit to a sort of negative. passion (to the adulation that was beginning to lap may ·wreak himself upon life, maY drink
a lifelong distaste for the New ;'{ork Yan- at htS.,feet: Or rather his lack of response. the bitter cup of heroism, may wear his
kees: I would root for the Moscow M!lles Many 8£~:at athletes are vainglorious brag- heart out after the urtattainable."That "elseagainst the Y~ees.
, gadocios - who can forget, or stomach, where" comprises many thing!~, including
. So Tiger Woods impinged on my con- Mohalnmed Ali's jnsistence that ''I'm the golf- as Tiger Woods has shown us.
1
sciousness only sloWly. The media;. ~ greatest"? Others - Ted Williacus, · f&lt;;&gt;r
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reporting · on theE'
chievements of. this 'example ·...,. are quiet demonstrations of . (William•Rusher is a Distinguished Fellow of
young man, ~nd
ly I ~l\d · r,t;l~ ·the killer it;i.stintt, p~laiming their perfec- ' tire C/~remont I~t!t~te for the Study of States·
responding wtth
at had ~o be aalled ~on . bY tlie1r steely silence.
manshtp and Political Pllilosophy.)

William
Rusher

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nel~bora welcome.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Widow'• Fel·
MASON, W.Va. - Riverside
lowahlp, Thullday, noon,
potluck dinner at ,the Middleport Ladlea' Golf Aasociatlon, sea··
Church of Christ. Eater dinner eon klckoft meeting, 12 noon,
so take a favorite covelld dlah. followed by pizza and nln•hole
scramble. Membership dues, . ·
Meat, drinks 1111d table service
furnished. Question&amp;, call Betty . $10. Mtmbera need not be
members of the Riverside GoH
GilkeY. 992·5666. ··
Course. New membera'wel·
come.
TUPPERS PLAINS Pauover Seder, with a cele·
RACINE - Return Jonathan.
bratlon of the Passover and
Meigs
Chapter DAR, 1 p.m.,
explanation of the Seder ser·
Racine
Library. John Milhoan,
vice, South Bethel New Testa·
state
vice
president of Retired
ment Church, 7 p.m.
Teachera Association jo speak
on education.
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
·
Poet 9063 to meet; 7 p.m.. at
y
the hall, whh nomination of offi· SUNDAY
PORTLAND - Community of
cera. Dinner at 6. ·
Christ Church, located on
· Lovett Road just off County
CHESTER - Shade River
Road 35, sunrise services at 8
L.odge No. 463, regular meet·
a.m., with breakfast to folow.
ing, 7:30p.m. Refreshments.
Easter egg hunt will follow
breakfast.
FRIDAY
.
DANVILLE - 'Beyond the
Crosa" presented by Penn VIew DORCAS - Bethlllly·Doreas
Bible Institute Chapel Choir, at United Methodist Church, East·
er sunrise service, 7 a.m.. ,
the Danville Holineas Church,
breakfast
follows at 8 a.m.
Friday, April 13, 7:30 p.m.

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HOBSON - Hobson Christian
Fellowship Church, Sunrise
.aervice, 7 a.m., Singing
EchOee, 10 a.m .. evening
revival service, 7 p.m., whh

RUTLAND - 15th annual
Good Friday all·niQht ppel
aing, 7 p.m., Rutland Freewill
Baplill Church.
·.
POMEROY- "Fun; Food 1111d
Fellowattlp." 6 to 10:30 p.m.,
.~
Friday and Saturdly 11 God'a
" NET.ln Pomeroy. Nutrltlonal
.:,. meail, video and computer
·•' · games, pool, board games
... i . available.

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POMEROY- Sunrlaa nrvli:e
and communion at Hysell Run
Hollnesa Church at e.a.m.,
Sunday achool, 9:30 a.m., worship, 10:30, and evening aer·
v. Ice, 7 p.m.
~ "--/....
CARPENTER - MI. Union
Baptiat Church aunriae aervlce,
6:52 a.m. Euter Sunday,
evening worahlp, 6:30 p.m.,
and Wednesday evening ~er·
vice, 1!:30 P·rll·
RUTLAND - "Lamb of God."
an Easter drama, Friday at 6:45. •
e_.m., and Sunday at 9:30 a.m., _
utland Church of the
Nazarene.
·
REEDSVILLE - Sunrise aer·
vice, ReedavUie Unhed
Methodist .Church, 7 a.m., with
breakfast to follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS - South
Bethel New Tellament Chu·rch,
Easter Sunday RIIIUI'ICiion
Day service, 7 a.m., wHh break·
fast to follow, regular Sunday .
service, 10:10 a,m. ..
TUPPERS PLAINS - North
Bethel United Methodist
Church, Euler .aervlca, 4 p.m.

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RUTLAND -"Lamb of God,"
Easter drama, 8:45 p.m., Rut·
land Church of the Nazarene. ·
TUPPERS PLAINS - Good .
Friday service, South Bethel
New Tllllament Church, 7 p.m.,
spacial pmentation, The
VIrus.•

with

Ju

Rev. Charil• Grlfl~h u apeaker.

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'lrwfl '
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112Court81

Pomeroy

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01111
- 9:00 MI.

ADAM SCIILENKER BAND
Sthlnlay, A~rll 14th

LONG BOTTOM - Good Frl·
day service; Long Bottom Un~·
tel Methodist Church, 7 p.m., 1
Rev. Norman Butler as speakar.

PHILLIP WALKER
Mon.ly Attll I 6th
1100 , •••

RUTLAND - Rutlarld Churt:h
"' • · of the NIZarene, 'Lamb of
,;,. . God," an Eatter dram.a, Friday
at6:45 p.m.

"

).-' , TUPPERS PLAINS- South
Bethel New Testament Church,
Good Fridar service, 7 p.m.,
.. whh
specla presentation, The

• Robert CI'IY Cilia Phillip
Wilker •one of the major
lnflUIIICH of 1111 ClfWI',•
• RolllngStont Mlglllnt

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Virus.

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$ATURDAY
BURLINGHAM- Burlingham
Modem Woodmen, potluck · ,
meal at hell, 6 p.m. Friende and,

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or

992-0727

r-o, Mort' lnfnrrn.II!Oil

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you 've wrine n. Cat lovers, listen up!

· Dear Abl1y is wriucu by Paulinr
Plrillips aud dauxlrtrr J eanne Plrillip&lt;.

MILITARY NEWS

LQC.AL 'HAPPEN-INGS

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.Thoughts on Tiger and a salute to excellence

Today's Highlight in History:
On Aprill2, 1861;the American Civil War began as Confederate forces fire4 oil Fort Sulnter in South Carolina. ·
On this date:
In 1606, England adopted as its flag the original version of
the Union Jack.
In 18(12, Union volunteers Jed by James ]. Andrews stole a
Confederate train near ·Marietta, Ga.; but were later caught.
This episode inspired the Buster Keaton comedy "The Gener-

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unaware of this plant's .toxicity to
cats, and my own veterinarian has it
listed as a safe pbnt.
The plant industry should label
toxic plants as such on the care bbels
SO · that pet owners won't lose a
beloved member· of their household
in such a· preventable way as we did ..
Your animal-loving readers should
write to their state representatives
and demand that these warnings be
made law.
. SUE VON
ESCHEN, ROCKFORD, MICH.
DEAR SUE: Please accept my
sympathy (or the loss of your pet.
Your letter is an important one,
because many experts are unaware of
the danger Easter lilies can pose to
felines. I called the l os Angeles poison control center to . confirm what

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is Thursday, April 12, the 102nd .day of 2001. There
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Dear

HyseU Run Holiness Church
DORCAS Bethany- at 6 a.m., Sunday school, 9:30
Reedsville UMC ..
Dorcas United Methodist a.m., worship, 10:30, and
·REEDSVILLE .- Sunrise
Church wiU hold Easter sun- evening service, 7 p.m.
service
wiU be held at
rise service at 7 a.m., with
Reedsville United Methodist
breakfast to follow at 8 a.m.
Lont Bottolil UMC Church 'at 7 a.m., with break..
Community of OlrtJt LONG BOTTOM - fast to follow. .
PORTLAND_ Commu- Good Friday service, 7 p.m.,
the Rev. Norman Butler as
. f Chris Ch h 1
Rutllnd H-7 8rtne
ruty o
t
urc .' ocat- .speaker.
ed on Lovett Road JUSt off
RUTLAND - "Lamb of .
. ,, County Road 35, sunrise serGod;' an Easter drama, Friday
., vices at 8 a.m., with breakfast Mount Union Baptist at 6:45 p.m., and Sunday at
·. to follow. Easter egg hunt will CARPENTER - Good 9:30.a.m.
follow breakfast.
Friday and Easter program.
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Also sunrise sert&gt;ice, 6:52
South Blthtl
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Hobson Ch.._n . a.in. Ealter Sunday, evening
TUPPERS PLAINS
HOBSON - Sunrise ser- worship, 6:30 p.m., and
Wednesday
evening
service,
Sputh Bethel New Testament ·
vice, 7 a.m., Singing Echoes,
6:30p.m.
Church', Good Friday service,
10 a.m., evening revival ser7 p.m., with special presenta' " vice, 7 p.m., with Rev. Char"The Virus:' Easter Sulllie Griffith as speaker.
North Bellael UMC tion,
'
day Resurrection Day serTUPPERS PLAINS ~ vice, 7 a.m., with breakfast to
ttysell Run Holiness.
North Bethel UMC will follow, regular Sunday ~er­
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POMEROY , - Sunrise have a special Easter service vice, 10:10 a.m.

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come Deti.veen you. So when he's
making love to you, he should
remOYe them fiom his neck and put
them in a place of respect - preferably out of your t2]lge of vision.That
should do the trick.
. DEAR ABBY: Last Easter, an
unfprtunate incident occurred in
our home. I would like to share it
ADVICE
with your readers so they won't suffer the heartbreak we did.
people do, but I · hope this letter
Lilce so many people, I bought an
reininds parenlli what it was like to
Easter lily for the holiday. My 6be a child. Life isn't always fair, but at
month-qld kitten chewed the ends
least we can teach our kids proper
off a couple of the leaves - and died
etiquette. - PERPLEXED IN
on Easter morning.
VIRGINIA
.
. A few days later, I learned from
DEAR PJ;RPLEXED: Eveib·
the poison control center that Easter
more important than teaching .chi!lilies a.e highly toxic to felines and
dren proper etiq1,1ette is teaching
cause acute renal failure that results
them empathy for other people. AROUND
in certain -death. They are not toxic
·Unless ,young peopl!' are taught
DEAR' SECOND: TeU · Gerald to dogs or humans.
·respect for the feelingS of others, aU you don't \vant his wife's ashes to
Several
vetcriilarians
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~UMC service and communion at on Sunday at 4 p.m.

KONDRACKp'S VIEW

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the etiquette lessons in the world are
wasted.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 73-yearold single' lady. I've been alone and
lonely for 14 yean, ever since my
husband died. I recently met a man,
"Gerald;' who is five yean younger
than me. His wife died a year ago.
Our chemistry is wonderful - he
seems to be the answer to. my ·
prayers.
So wh~t's my problem~ Gerald
wears a vial around his neck that
contains some of his wife's ashes.
While the thought is sweet and
touching, it malces me uncomfortable when he is making love to me.
He says he cares for m~. and I know
I care for him. How should I hancUe
chis?
SECOND TIME

LOCAL EASTE ·R SERVICES

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Quit carping about how·we
got our people back

'lhunay, Aidl2, 2101

Dne-way Party invitations hurt children 'sfeelings ·

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111 Court lt., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 112-2158 • Fa: 112·2157

Cherlea w. Govey

the Bend

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Harold Vreeland
CHESHIRE - Navy Petty
Officer First Class Harold E.
Vreeland is currently on a sixmonth deployment . to the
Western Pacific Ocean and
Arabian Gulf while asstgned to
the guided missile destroyer
U.S.S. Higgins, home ported in
San Diego, Calif.
. Vreeland's ship recendy participated in maritime interception operations, strictly enforcing the U.N. sanctions against
Iraq. While in the Gulf, sailors
boarded 76 vessels, inspected
5,568 containen and diverted
four vessels carrying .1 ,243
metric tons of prohibited oil.
V re~land is a ,1989 graduate
of Kyger Creek High School.

Frank Baldwin
GALLIPOLIS- Navy Petty
Officer Second Class Prank B.
.Baldwin is currently on a sixmonth deph&gt;yment to the
Mediterranean Sea and Arabian
Gulf while assigned to the aircraft carrier U.S. S. Harry S.

Trutitan, home ported in Norfolk,Va .
While on deployment, crew
members fiom Baldwin's ship
participated in damage control
olympics, a competition

designed to train the crew to
properly handle a crisis at sea.
Baldwin is a 1992 graduate of
Hurricane High SChool and
the son of Janet l. an~ lacy l.
Baldwin of Gallipolis.

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PumeiOJ. tlkldl1part. Ohio

Local Schools

hOnor rollS

third

J. ocal

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'l'IJifl!ill PLliNs - E 'I n McGcab,
W'allbuaJer, Gofde G!a4c 5: tf.. .. •• l'dt D I 'H
~~ Oflcjir:t . . annquac;ed 7: Brian Culor, Herbert MC:IIuyft; Buckley, AlexaDder ..........

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Grade 8: KeDnecb Amlbuy, Daek.
r
d» "All A" WI "AlB" Ba"m, Cody Dill, Katie Houie,
~ lolls for the thint am~~-s Bryan Minear, .Jainle Reel, Danen
~ Casey Smilh, ~
per\od.
.
~ E.ASTER.N ~AKY
~ber, and Kri$ta White.
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: Grade 4: Tina Drake, Altxi$ Hirul,

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Grade 4: Keith Aeiku, Zaclwy
Canon, Brittany Casto, Cbarles
Cook; Herbert Grate, Ca1ey Ibnnum, Matthew HoK.en, Ashley life,
Kaylee Milam, Jllyssa Newland,
Anthony Punnan.- Amber White,
Katie Wilfong.

~hael MooR. Kyl~ ~nt, Kadrn

np:Gnde 5:Ry:an Dann Davis,
Grate, Kelsey Holter, Kyle

~non, Moqpn
-.~g. Grade 6:

Werry, Nilciu
Jessica ~. Ryan
,_... Davis, Tyler Lee, Na~haniel

Nathan Carron, jadaua

Smith, expanded food and
ourrition educ~tion program
nutrition educator, of Ohio
Slate Ullluusiay a.nsWD iii
MeiJI COQnty, wtre Nrognized at the South District

Nutrition EducatOr\

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Fund

announced
siry

daughter,

of

Noa:e
Dame and
his graduate
work at tbe
OSU Dental School.
The couple
has lived in

MQ)ly, has a
d.;ntal prac-

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tice

• in

Lebanon.
Both
Riestenbergs are
members of
Christ the
K. R11 t• 'n rt King
Church and haw been actiw
in many local charities. Kathy
has served on the O'Bleneaa
Hqspital Board, .while James
has been actiw as a board
member of Ohio Uniwniry's
G~een
White, Childrm's
Services and serves on various
professional boards.

Athens 28
yean, whik

Dr.
Riestenhe!J has mainuined
and shared a dental practice
with Dr. Tim Lawlle and Dr.
Beth Welsh, one of the
Riesrenb.erJ's daughters.
.
KadJY has
tbe o&amp;ice
m••apr for more than 25
}'an at the faciliry while thrir

and

Pomeroy mayor's court cases settled
. POMEROY - A number.
of individuals fmfeited bonds
and otben "'-' fiaed court
~ecently by Magistrate L. S&lt;;ott
, PoweU in Pomeroy· mayor~s
1 court.
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Thole cOneiting ' bonda

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Milt KMM, ";:;:;.!~
tlallla.. IIIII: Dalla H.
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Griggs will
op,en
Mason fair

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Larry ll LM, Ollsllt, ... kupbpw

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Pomeroy, 188, trlllllc Hght. $81,
txphd llgl; JMy Portsl, Aac:N,
• . IPttCf. Atbcc. Elalky, Columbus, 110, ll*d.

OPt•n for Haeon
WMklncl
· Starting ~I 12th 8:00am·?
. • Llrge 111oTt.n.ar"of flowera, pl..,..,.,
window -·;'a'1\~
hintinG ........ AltO

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Subscribe todaj.
992·2156

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FARMEss BOK·Ioan!!
Briaa tW. ·advel'dMaea't lllto ranaen Baak .
ncl
·a
Loaa:. aet .25%
. off oit
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Briall Billings .
"W~ are excited abollt the
performers· we haV'e sch~d,. ulcd for the 2001. fair,"
Billings ~~id. "I think every- ,
one will enjoy the vafiety of
mu5ic planned!' ' .
Griggs is being halled as a
distinctively
passionate'
country newcomer.
"The passion is from. my
• life maybe," affirms the
,, sing~r of the rec~nt debut
•. smash "You Wort'' Ever Be
I" Lonely." ,,
· ''It's ff9m the spngs I've
"'lis~d~to and maybe frol\1
"'the ,cqp I ijhoen 't· gotten~
over yet," he said.
A native of Monroe, La.,
, Griggs was 10 wh~n his
1
father died and 18 when he
lost jUs brother. In the after. m:tth, he began playi~. guiur •nd nnging in the priva- • cy of hit bedroom, a tribute
of sorts ~b his late brother.·As
;time . . .s.ed, J,owever, his
perl'oril)a~es bfl:qrie more

bouf{l;il\ ~ ot~ ~nd'
its Jn~ emoliOnal pow~

ten.
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MORE LOCAL NEWS.:

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COMING, ~ ·· ~· V\MMI.mydailysentinel.com

MOREUMOOLKS.:

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992-2156

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CommunlutiDM

President

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The Daily

up
aDd
coming
stars who
will be featured
in
this year's
line-up,
s'aid · Fair
Board Vice

7

The Dail ·
Seritinef. NlwlhisYar
·MORE LOCAL NEwS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Urban ..yill perform AU,. 8
at 9 p.m., said Brian Billings,
· air vice presidt(lt.
"Keith Urban is another of
the up and coming Nashville
stan 'who will visit the fair
this year," Billing$ $aid. "His
nwsic will appeal to those of
it to thrir friend5, but ifjust
:all ages.n
Urban grew up in Aus- one would speak up and say
tndia with parents who JOYed 'I'd rather be home,' let's fact
Atne&lt;ican culture. He picked it, a lot of their friends are
up a guiur at age 6 and thiokin~ the ~ thing." ·
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kne\v at 7 that he would go I. A man's dedication to hiJ
AnEHDED MEETING
nulnliOn professionals attendmg t~e OhtP State Unwersity Exten,
to N:ashviUe to play country Wife or girlfriend comes out
s1on Nutrition E:ducator!i Recognition in Chillicothe recently; were Linda King, family nutrition
music. By 8, he was winning in the single "I Want To Bt
progr~m assistant, ViCI\i \\loqd~. Ac~ss Head Start, Sharon ·Smith,, expanded food and· nutr~
.,
country music Went sh~ Your Everything."
tion education program nutrition coordinator. Debbie Barnett, WIC, Becky Baer, County Exteo"I
think
when
mos~
and had steady work in a
sion Agent,1Tina Cotterill~ Head Start. Dortha ~lffle, WIC, and Betsy Herald Nicodemus, Meigs
women hear Keith's music;
band as a teenager.
County Health Departm.ant.
they
sa}~. 'That guy's sensitive
When he put together his
self-titled albllm for Capitol, and be gets it:' said PJ ,
Health Deparnneln and M,Dow~U. intcrinl assmant encc•.
Urban brought a knowledge Qlligley, prmdtnt of Capitol ·
jud)• Newman, field tepre:.
Becky Bacr, with , Meigs :llr~ctOt , Familt and Con•
of knowing what women Nashville.
County I:xtcn~wn . S¢.pdinJ ~Hill&lt;"r Scicnn·s: Dr. Mary Ker- S¢1ltative from Congressman1
want.
congratubtory l~trerr we~ $h~w. int rin1 pro!lram leader, 1ed Stnckland's office, was
}&gt; ,,
· On ''It's A Love Thing;' the
Carol ilrewer, ABLF., abd r.amily and Conmmcr Sci- also in ' attendance and COll"'
first single from the album,
Susie Casto, Jo~s and f:lthil~ ~nces: Dr. Juanita MiUer, gratlllated the nutrition eduUrban declares his intention .
ilxten$Jon speqiahst, limired &lt;:aton for their efforts,
Services.
to decline a night out with
Other guests included Ohio i!'CSour~e audiences and Donna
Nutrition Education prothe guys, so he can spend
State Univermy E.xtenstOn, Un;nvn. program coordinator, grams are available in Meig$
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rime with his girl.
state;
peroonnd
Joyce family and Consumer Sci~ .County for all residents.
"I wanted to say something for the guy who would
rather go home ro be with
•
his wife or girlfriend;' Urban
Subscribe
today
.
said. "Most guys won't admit

Grlgss i$
one . of the:.

.·,, v.telablll .

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

aram, .,._..,o.•·.,..,..,
.-.
Hennon, Dlllar,

bllt: ..... 111 cfc* 1, Pu;:u..oy,
117,
M. ...
l.ana
, A!IWidl
114, .,._
J•nyIIIII~
L
Jaclls, Jr., PIIIMroy, 117, ipHd;

'WalliToBeYourEftl}'thing'' aad "It's A Love
Thing" wiD 6U rhe air during
tht 2001 Masc)Q County Fair
wben Nashville ~ecording
artist Keith UJ!wi takes the

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - The 2001_ Mason
County Fair's star entertain~ent will O~!l on Aug. 1
Wfdl Ni's'hVi1Ie'"'~id!ng
artist Andy Griggs.
. ·

tndlon; .......
JUIS,110aps

Meip
Judy lWiiJ

FROM STAFF R&amp;ORIS

POINT · PLEASANT,
WVa.- Thr sounds'Ol"I

R«os-

rution Luncheon for their
eiiOrts to ~ local residents,
Kin¥ has beea woltiJig' WI~
nQtrition pr.pgrams m ~
County for right years, and ·
Smith has been with Extension for nine yean.
They work with various
.afiFDCic:s and groups in order
•ro hdp food sum~gibleents make the best use of
their food dollan, pwvtdc
Jlutritiou; meals for their famtliepnd stnre, food safely.
, These agencies irclude·
Head Start, Women, Infants
and Children (WIC). the
Health De artment Sen·10
C"
J : d Fa '1il S !'.mzens, 0 s 311
': Y ervtc~s, Carlet?n ~chool, A~ulr
Bastc and L•teracy Educa~on
(AB~E) and Graduatton,
Realtty and Dual Role Skills
(GRADS). •
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' Certificates of rtcognicion
were presented to each Qf the
educatoi,! Also attending Wni
· Meig. County were Vicki
Woods and Tina Cottetill
(rom Head Start, Debbie Babbitt and Dortha Riflle from
WIC, Be~y Herald Nicodemus from the , Mei~ County

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ATHENS - Dr. James and
Kathy Riestenbe!J aft&gt; serving
as co-c~ for the 2001
annual Fund Drive fo~
Appalachian Communiry Visiring ~urse Association.
Long-time supporters of
ACVNA, the Riesrenberp
have selected ~ulia Nehls,
Norm and Peggy Cohn,
Kathy Schumacher, arid Dave
Garrod as thrir team leaders
for the drive.
Penonal sOJiciutions begin
, in April.
·
Kathy originally !WI$ from
Lima, where she graduated
from St. Riu's School of
Nursing. James did hia u,ildefgraduate work at the Univer-

-

at Mason Co.

t.In4a Kid&amp; fai!II,Jy nutntioq

Cbfistopher
C ....IJ&gt;
Krle
Edwuds, Ashley ~ ~ pt I i r
R1yman. Casey Hul....ed, &amp;
; 1ha
jordan. Juold Kuhn, .M.riaha ..,_
~ Kara Osboroc, Ham sh Pact.
Nichnbs Scbuln, and H 1 a ....
fall
Grade 6: St.epbanie iaJrer, a.·n y
Bissell, Sarah Boston, S•m......
BIOWil, DaNdle CarroD. Kimbcdy
Castor, Kayla Collim, l.bee Davis,
Dane Eichiyr. Raven Erha: · .. ,

iivlags~coun~ Court cases processed

nutrition edua.tors recognized urban to

~ assistant, mel Sharon

Colfiat.

'The D111J Is hal• P I A7.

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That's a $80

.....,.n silrvlce
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7 112 Second Sti'Ht ~
004-713·575g

when ycu sign up .

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(or ,~elect AT&amp;'ll Wirefes~ Ctllltitg plan$ at $29.99 monthlyand
above, and a $40 IIUIIWn rebate with the purchase ofa
Noleia 5165 digital mufti,retwQr/e phone.
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mi...... moe•,.•

io.1000 fJM bight and weekence
II
for •
on A1~Tbigltt11 Advanr~ge or AT&amp;T Regional Advanttlge
:1'H'"''1·99 momhfy
and above.
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annual ~trltt, a can•

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"'bt wloh·for

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Tlllndlly, Apr112, 2CI01

Pomeroyt Ill ddll p.,...... Ohio

..... AI•The Dllly81nllnll

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'·Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

NL: MIUidux stymks Mets; Page B2
AL:Trpinkies aJge Tigers, Page 82
NBA: Pacers in, C,elts our, Page B8

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~ge .B1
1hunay. Apltl12, 2011

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. . l'HuRsnw's

.Southern softball.goes back to the future

JfiGI-illGHTS
Nlddauswlll

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HOLIDAY COLORING
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NfEST
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CONTEST RULES

FIRST PRIZE •••••••• •15.00
SECOND.PRIZE •••• •1 0.00
TH
PRIZE ••••••••• s5.00

1. Just' oolor
one or more
.
. pf the draWings on these pages, fi)) in the blanks a~d take
your entiy to the sponsoring store befo(e 5 p.m. April 21.
2. Entries will be judged in two differentcategories, ages 4-S.and 9-12.
3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like but can win only one prize.
4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

play Mt:worl1l .
DUBLIN (AP) - Jack
•Nicklaus, the founder and
host of the everit, was the first
player to accept an invitation·
to the 2001 Memonal tournament:
Nicklaus, winner of the
Memorial in 1977 and 1984,
has · won t 00 tournaments
around the world in his 38year career, including 81 official PGA and Senior PGA
Tour events.
The 26th Memorial will
take place froni May 31 to
June 3 at Muirfield Village
Golf Club in this Columbus
suburb.
Among other players to ·
accept invitations Wednesday
were former PGA Championship winner Davis Love Ill
and Joe Durant; Mark Calcavecchia, Brad Faxon and
Jim Furyk, all of whom are
among the top 10 money
winners on the tour this year.

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. CINCINNATI (AP) Defensive lineman Kevin
Henry signed a three-year
·contract Wednesday with the
Cincinnati Bengals, reuniting
him with his former coaeh in
fittsb~tgh.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;

VALLEY LUMBER

.

-··

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

· RIDENOUR SUPPLY

..:., MIDD~ORT, OHIO

,' CHESTER, OHIO

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., Henry1 32, was the Steelers'
fqutib_.tound draft pic,k in .
199), Betigals . coach ' Dicit'"
LeBeau was the Steelers'
defensive ~oordinator m
1995-96.
He ~d agre~d to terms late
last week, but didn't sign the
contract uritil, Wednesday.
Henry had 44 tackles last sea'son - nintb! on the Stee)ers
. '
- and no sacks.
Hency is the ' second freeagent. •. defensive lineman
signed by_the Bengals. They ·
also , signed tackle Tony
Williams from Minnesota on
March 6/
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. CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- The·lnaker of the seat belt
used in Dale Earnhardt's · car
says a new medical report
exonerates his company in
the racing great's death. ·
Bill Simpson, founder and
chairman of Simpson Performance Products, said the
medical report proved what
he knew all along - that a
broken seat ·belt did not cause
&amp;nhardt's fatal injuries.
: Simpson learned Tuesday .
that a court-appointed medi.cal examiner who · studied
J;!arnh~rdt's, autopsy photos
fouflJ tha~ the sevep-time
Winston Cup ohampion .was
ltilled ·Feb.1:18 ·when his )lead
whipped violendy forward
when his car hit a wall going
150 mph cin the final lap of ·
the Daytona 500.
.

Neme._
· - - - - - - - - Age._·_ __

N l m t · - - - - - ' - - - - - - - Age_ _ ___

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nlllnc

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) An r&lt;ICAA subcommittee
denied texas Tech's appeal of a
rule that limits basketball
coa~h Bob Knight to recruitfive'!' scho~nhip •. players
year.
Knight will have nb more
i~n nine scholarship players
on his te:llll. nex~ season, one
fess tHan Tech played with
d).lring its worst year of three
years of NCAA sanctions that
· be~u in .t998.
· · .
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0.
Southern came back with two runs
in · the first when freshman Deana
Pullins singled and Rachel Chapman
walked.
The duo pulled off the double steal
and Pullins stole home. .
Katie Sayre then delivered a two-

out sin~e off here sister Kim Sayre to
knock home Southern's second run,
4-2.
Southern's
Rachel
Chapman
pitched two great innings to retire the
Alumni.
Southern scored one run in the
third when •Chapman hit a one-out
single, stole second, and came home
on an RBI single by Macyn Ervin, 43.
The Alumni went up 5-3 when
Kim lhle walked, stole second and
third with another head-first slide,
then scored on an RBI single by

Plei11111Salllhtnl.ll

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Pirates rally to beat Redlegs

3-year deal
wlll1 Bengals
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into third base.
'
With two outs, Crystal Turley and
Laren R.iflle walked to load the bases,
then .on a pick off play at third;
Hunter scored.
Kim Sayre ' had an infield single,
then an ensuing overthrow allowed
two runs home, and Ashli Davis
reached on an error to score Sayre, 4-

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Henry sips
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RACINE - Some of the best Kim Sayre, Ashli Davis, Heather Dai•
names in Southern softball history. ley, Stacy Lyons, Keri Caldwell, Kim
came to town Wednesday night for a lhle, and Becky Adkins Winebrenner.
big showdown· between the Alumni
Goach Scott Wolfe of the Tornadoes
and Southc;rrl High School team.
said, "I appreciate the fact that our
The Alumni gave the high schoolers alumni came out to help us tonight.
an early scare, but the Tornadoes came They play with a lot of heart, and a lot
back to claim a 14-8 win.
of enthusiasm. That same spirit made
Southern 6tars represen~ng clubs · them champions in their day. .
With a little practice they wbuld
from t 980 to 2000 were present for
the game forming a team that had have made it very tough on us. They
three regional berths under its belt, are great competitors'." ·
·
and many. many sectional titles.
1\he Alumni t~k a 4-0 lead in the
Alumni players included Tonya first' when Tonya Hunter singled and
SAlser Hunter, Melanie Weese, Tammy · showed that her club was serious,
Smith Chapman, Crystal Hill Turley, stealing second and then stealing third
Jenhy Cumntins, Laren Wolfe Riffie, with a Pete Rose style head-first slide
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PITISBURGH (AP) -- If Ramirez, leaving runners on
John Riedling thought he was first and second.
wild, he should have stayed
Pokey Reese hit a line drive
around for the ninth inning.
that left fielder Brian Giles
The
Cincinnati"' Reds hesitated on momentarily
couldn't score after putting before running down with a
runners on first and third with sliding catch.
· none out in the ninth
It was the first night game in
Wednesday night and the PNC Park and the Pirates are
Pittsburgh Pirates rallied from still getting accustomed to
three runs down fo.r a 6-5 vic- how the ball reacts off the bat,
tory, their first in PNC Park. . but Giles said he wasn't
"That got crazy," Pittsburgh fooled. ·
manager Lloyd McClendon
"He took a full swing and
said. "That ninth inning. was hit it on the end and it started
no fun."
dying," he said. "I could slide
·It was even worse in the on it because it's not going to
opposing dugout, where the bounce that far even if I don't
Reds couldn't figure out how come up with it." '
Riedliqg lost his control while
Mike Williams th~n s.t ruck
ill{hrowing .three wild pitches to out Jason LaRue for the final .
help the Pirates go ahead with out and his second save aS the
. two runs in . th e' seventh Pirates finally won in their
I' inning.
new b•llftark. They lost 8-2 to
'·1 " T his was a.,.
• · ~ •ai
· d c·mcmn
"~ n 11··•on Mon day after
toug·h one,
Cincinnati's Sean Casey, who dropping two exhibition
lost a home run by inches in games to the Mets to close
the sixth when his long drive spring training.
struck a metal railing guarding
Jose Silva (1-0) pitched two
the right-field stands. "We scoreless innings for the viccoshould have won that game. ry.
We've got to find ways to win
"The good thing is we've
been in every gafne and we
these kinds of games."
Casey doubled to start the didn;t give up on this one after
" ninth for his seventh hit in being down three runs," Giles
rwo games and was lifted for said.
pinch-runner Donnie Sadfer.
The. R eds, off to their usual
Aaron Boone then lined a sin- slow start with a 3-6 record,
gle to center, but Sadler got a. jumped on Pirates starter
late break and held at third.
Jimmy Anderson for a 3-0
"I thought he should have lead in the first aided by rookscored," Rec4 manager Bob ie shortstop Jack Wilson's
Boone sai d. "I thought he · throwing error.
should have read the ball betThe Pirates came back on
ter. That was a mistake."
John Vand~r Wal's solo home
Sadler then broke for the run in the th.ird off Elmer
plate on pinch-hitter Michael Dessens - Pittsburgh's first
SAFE AT SECOND - Pittsburgh's Kevin Young slides safely Into second base as Rokey Tucker's grounder to third and
was thrown out by Aramis
PIHII I l l Rids, 88
Reese of Cincinnati waits for the ball. (AP-) .

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K-C Raceway opens season with a. bang
.

BY ScOTT Wou:E

STARS champion Steve francis length lead by the time he ran down
OVP CORRESPONDENT
aboard a Dodge 'Intrepid R/T by a the rear of the field on lap nine. Lap
CHILLICOTHE
, Donni~ ·scaiu .5 seconds.
12 saw the race's first caution wave as
M\Sran of Dresden,captured the
Mike Balzano, the 1989 and 1990 Shaver pounded the frontchute wall
Renegade STARS Racing Series STARS 'titleist, brought his Chevrolet nearly flipping his mount before slidsanctioned "Spring 50" at K-C Race- Monte Carlo home third followed by ing to a stop. The damage was severe
way last Saturday, pocketing the · Jackie Boggs in Pontiac Grand Pri,x. enough to force Shaver from the race.
$8,0oo top prize.
.
Rounding out the tor, ten finisher1i · · Moran again opened ·up a large lead
The four-time .STARS champion were Rick Aukland, 19th starting on the restart and by lap 21 again was
led from start to finish collecting his Billy Drake, outside pole sitter Matt .working his thtough the rear of the
71st STARS feature ~vent win in a Miller, Rick Eckert and Rod Conley. field. At the halfway ·mark Moran
brand new car that was compieted just
Moran quickly showed his muscle · enjoyed a healthy. lead with R.J. Conhours before the competition got · when the green flag fell powering ley now second .followed Francis,
underway. .
into the leaa from his pole starting Balzano and defending Renegade
Driving a Chevrolet Monte Carlo, position trailed by Miller, Steve • STARS. Racing Series champjon
Moran dominated the early stages of Shaver, R .J. Conley and Eckert. C hub frank in fifth. Sixth thhetgh
the event ~nd then held off three-time Moran opened ul' a nearly ten car tenth were Boggs, Miller, Eckert, Auk-

a

land and 24th starting Bart Hartman.
Lap 27 saw Frank and tne lapped
car of ~uss Frohnapfel tangle on the
frontchute with frank slamming the
outside wall to bring 'out the the ~ec­
ond slowdown period of the race.
Like Shaver, the damage to Frank's car
was too much forcing him to retire
from the race.
Before another lap could be completed the caution waved again as
Frohnapfel and Brian Ruhlman got
together. Two more laps were completed before the ,Yellow waved again
for a multiple car pile-\lp in turn

Pleue 111 K·C, BS

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Youngest of the Woods making dad proud
.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
makes Eddie's eyes light up
Eddie Wood has ·been like no Other,
· around racing all his life as
"I remember the first race
one of the namesakes of the he ever won;' Wool said of
famed Wood Brothers. He's his son, Jon. "It was at Daysee~ ~ virtual Who's Who of. ·ton a on Fourth ofJuly weekracang greats don the family end, and it was a Big Wheel
colors and hit the track.
race, a charity thing."
But while drivers like 'I~efore the race,Wood won•
Daviq Pearson, Neil Bonhe~t, dered ,if his 7-year-old son
' Bale Jarre~ and Call) Yarbor- was ready to t:ace on the plasough have put the No. 21 car tic tricycle. ,
in Victqry Lane, a new racer , ''The kids we(e all lined up,

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·and he had ' his feet oh the · becan1e at 19 one of the.
ground," Wood continued, youngest drivers ever to race
smiling blissfully. "All the in the Craftsman Truck
other kids had them up on Series, qualifying a Billy
the pedals. I wondered 'Why Ballew-owned ford 31st in
is he doing that? He's not the field ~espite a miss in the
even· ready to race.' But, they motor.
dropped the flag, he did the
Efforts to get the problem
Fred flintstone deal, got out · fixed on race day failed, but
about six feet on them and Wood got the truck as high as
was gone/'
15th on the tight, .526-mile
Last weekend at Mar- track and avoided trouble
tinsville Speefiway, Jon Wood until a problem with the rear
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end forced him to park it. He
finished 31st.
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For Wood Brothers Racing,
it was the first time a family
member had been at the
wheel in a major race sine~
Glen Wood, Eddie's father and'ihe man who helped starr the
team in 1953, drove in the
1964 season. .
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With 97 career victories --

Pluse 111 NASCAR, 85

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Daily Sentinel

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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

during the regUlar season on
artificial turf, made it 3-0 in
the filth on Tavarez's run-scor- ·
ing bunt and Young's RBI single. Joe Girardi had a runscoring single' in the sixth.
Jeff Fassero pitched a perfect
ninth for his fourth save.

I On a sloppy night, Greg
,~Maddux was nearly p~rfect.
\ Maddux combined with a
i-;Pair of relievers on a one-hit'· ter, leading the Atlanta Braves
~· to a 2-0 victory over the New
i."'York Mets on Wednesday
j ;Uight. .
.
• 1j_ "It was cold and \vet out
,sr.there. I thought it was a great
")tight to pitch . It was tough to
~it," Maddux said after throw. ng seven innings in the rain.
Pinch-runner Calvip Mur.' New York had only one ray scored on Pedro Feliz's
&gt;.runner against Maddux, Mike ninth-inning sacrifice Oy, and
, Remlinger and John Rocker: visiting San Francisco beat San
' l)'rodd Zeile lined a single Diego for the seventh straight
t;about a foot beyond second nme.
~
, . ·aseman Quilvio Veras' glove · Eric Davis back after miss~
~...~.vith one out in the second. . ing four ga~es-with a twisted
"When he hit it, I thought I lei knee, drew a leadoff walk
_d ~.chance to ~atch it,"Veras off Trevor Hoffman (0-1) in
, d. ~ut he hit It hard, ~?d It the ninth and was replaced by
as gomg away from me.
Murray.
Rafael _Furcal's RBI double
Murray toqk second Oil"
n the th1rd gave Maddux and Benito Santiago's sacrifice
he Braves all the offense they 'bunt and took third on ' a ·
eeded. Chipper. Jones' 21st bizarre play, when Hallinan
.care~r homer agamst the M~ts · bounced a pitch in the dirt
rov1d~d an msurance run m and the ball stuck in catcher
'l he seventh.
Wiki Gonzalez's chest protec-'
:• . , Rick Reed (1-1) lost despite tot.
•
fol.!r-hitter.
Aaron Fultz (1-0) alloWed
one hit in the eighth, and
Robb Nen got his second ·

't

cardinals 3,
Roddes1

Mark McGwire ended an Or-1 2 season-opening slump
ith an opposite-field home
n,. his 55 5th, off Pedro Asta' io {1-1) at St~ Louis.
Matt Morris {1-1) won his
first game as .a starter since
· September 1998, allowing one
·,run and six hits in seven
·'innings. Dave Veres struck out
two batters for hidirst save.
St. Louis has won fiye
aight since going 0-3 during
season-opening series at
olorado, and the Rockies
ave lost five in a roy;.

Dodgers 11,

·amondbacks 5
• \ 1.

·~ Gary

Sheffield homered
~ twice, and Eric Karros also
: ~ ~omered before a crpwd of
~5.974, the smallest in Bank
,,,......... Ballpark history.
'
Phil Hiatt added his first
}':'flOrller for the Dodgers, who
;co:red rwo runs in each of the
three innings against
Anderson (0-2) before
)Jo•wing the game open with
m
fourth. Arizona has
five of six.
Dimen _Qreifott - (1-1)
four runs - two
!, earned~ and three· hits in six
.l innings.
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5
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Cindmot
HouAon 7, . .
J +11 15
SL lOUII3, C&lt;*ndo 1
lliO Angllolll, ~ 5
San Froncioc:o z.,s.n Diogo 1

3112
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3
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TUoldey'o Oomea
San Francisco 11, San Dlegoe
Chlcogo Cuba 4, Montrul2
Ph!ladolphil 7, Flor1do 8
Houaton 3, ~.'!waukee 0
Mmna2, LOI~O

Wodnndoy'a Oomee
Florida at Philadotphla, ppc:t., roln

Alllma 2, N.Y. Meta 0 1

Chlcogo Cuba 4, Montreal 2

manoon 1-0), I :IO•.m.

co tl-0), 2:05 p.m.

- ~ ·~'dBMillre•&lt;2rso&gt; ~

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wa e
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ree-hitter atid struck out 12,
,
d visiting Houston won its
\
fth straight over Milwaukee.
·' •.: Houston got home run~
',Wz.om Jeff Bagwell and Lance
·'¥~'Berkman, who set a career~ .high with four hits in five at. ·;bats.
,. Ben

J

Julian Tavarez (2-0) allo\y.:d
hits in seven inning~ at
and Eric Young had
RB!s in the fina1 regularpea110n '!neeting between the
, .
. Young's sacrifice Ay off
Thurman (1-1)- in· the
opened the scoring.
:hicag:o, playing its last game
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3 .825

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Seollkl a, oakland o
Anaheim 7, To- 2

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Anllh8irn
Texas

(Vazquez Hl), 7:05 p.m.
Clncinnotl (FOfllllldal 1·1) at N.Y.Meta
( T - Q-1),1:10 p.m.
PNIIdo1plill (Wolft)-1) atAIIMta (GIIYine
G-1), 7;35 p.m.
San Francisco (Ruoter 1-0) at Mllwaukoe
(Wrlglt 1·1t, 8:01!,p.m.
Hooston {llallonfleld 0.1) II St Loulo (Kilo
1-1). 8:1()oj).m.
Arlzona (Johnl&lt;in 1•1) II Cotorl&lt;lo
(Bohanon 1-1), e,:D6 p.m.
Los Angeln (Potlo 2-0) 11 San Diego

Pet.

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Dotroit
Kansas City .

(Bore 1-0), 3:20p.m.

OB

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•'
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Fridoy•o O.moo

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N.Y. Yankees 9, Ka.._. City 5
Cl'olcago WMo So• 8, Cleveland 7
Texas 7, Anaheim 5
Seattle 5. Oakland t

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N.Y. Yankees 8. Kansas Oily 5

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Twins 12,
11prs 1

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L Dill JltNIL 1.2311
tiMtlr! HMW:k. 1,097I. Jllffbdon,1,113
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pulmonary function tesUnaand extensive laboratory testing.
..

t.J 0111111, 411

• NASCAR Thll Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 dttvers heldtnc intb lt'lla weekend's race. Last
week's rankin&amp; Is In perenth!"•·

- . ....... ... l n Aleo- .,.._ .. -

f~OM lA~ I W~fK

Featuring·
Kentucky
Fried Chlckan
228MelnSt.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

Jarrott'a 27th, """''"' him
past 1960s atllr Fred

Lorenzen Into NASCAR'I Ill·
time top 20.
Jarrett never won •
Winston Cup rece until he
was nearly 35.
Lorenan Wll berely over
30 when he conected the
last ot his 26 victories In

There milht be a quiz.

Jarrett stande alone at
preaent. In a stock cer .
toctna world belnJinvodod
Ill ....,. upon ,..... of youn&amp;

1967.

rock 'n ' rollers, Jarretl has

OIIAmMAN TIIIJCII

become the lone reliable
link to the pest.
In tact, fueled almost by
J11~tt alone, the peat Is
klcklnt the Pepsi Genet· .

ollon't butt.

T~o

44-yeor-old

Janett't victory In Sundey't

Vl!llnla 500 Wll his third In
the 111t tour weeks, ttfvint
notleeJor the umptHnlh
time that NASCAR has little

need for .a tenlort toUr.

MertlnavHie ·SpeedWay had
bton one ol the low worlds
to have remained
unconquered by Jarrett.
I
he nor his father,
champion

MIINI:.
a 1' ._
See us for Your Sliht•
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour ...
Suppl.y ·
St. At. 248
Chester 985·3308

nlmlltn.naa ever won on
poper-cuposhapecl,
,528-mllo speodbowl.
Overall, the victory was

r..t.ndl,.. cllamplan: Jack

NoUIIIe: This brand-new

track Is D-shaped and paved
In concrete .... Previously,
BGN races in this area were
held ·at the Nashville
Falrtrounds.
CRAFTSMAN TIHICK

Wli.tt: Ram Toucn 250

""

. . - . "After ol4ht recto, the dlotonco - n Jorrett
and !JOrdon and the reot of thoaa who ,..,. olljiO&lt;tod to
be contenders ll extrefdlnary. It could be thllt others
- llko, fOf lnatonco, StOYt Pork or Sterllni Marlin - will
omerao, but arnona the parenntat contondoro, only Ruoty
Wlllace lo anywhere don, and Wll'- Is olrtldy2~8 '
polnto out or nrot. Tony
lo 3e4 points behind,
rel.-lnl champion Bob!&gt;~ l.ll&gt;Onta 430 out of flrot, Mork
Martin lo 489 bt~lnd ond Jeff BUrton Ia 531 out. Unltol
tho wildly lmprol&gt;lblo ocouro, I.II&gt;Onta, Mortln onll
·
Burton ere already too far behind to catch up."

-art

moh, May 7, 200Q
NIUble: omae Rams
have won all four races this

'"'
•~• 111
ana
Rloltmond,
ond-he·then
WlnltOn eiJ.&amp;tar rece et

Lowo'l Motor Spoedwoy.
He h8tn't.$tft alnce, but

try to deal with h the beSt
way I can. I think about him
all the tlnfe. tt seems 11~
there are iood day1 and
bed days. Juat when you

think you're feetlns better
ebout It, arid ft seems to be
1easen1nc each day, ~U hit
• bump In the road, and
you'H lptl"}d HY8rll deyl

where ~u can't think about
nothtn&amp; tlst. I don't know
now tona tnat'll be, but It's
not sUch 1 bad thin&amp;. I
think aboUt him olton."

_,.._1111
.,.. ••u

loreolntlo-/Of'

yeut "It's aomethlnl that
would really take me o IO"I1
tlmt to explain . The~ I
lobk at racln&amp; and Jhe way I
feel about racina, iQin&amp; to
the track on weekends, the ,
wey I think about It, the
way I prepare myulf for
each reca ... It's totally
different now then It wae .

befOre. Some or the

··tt realty aurprlsed me. You
walk out on pit road, alld
that's when you reei!Je how
many people are payfn&amp;
attention and how many.
people know what's going
on .... Ttle fans' in th~
grend!tands really Jive me
a positive reaction. It's cool
to st8 that. It really pumps
you up and Clves you a
&amp;ood reellna. It makes you
want to &amp;Iva them some-

mof'a. There are thlri&amp;s I
dldn 't really think 1would
appreciate. I appreciate
now. I raced for three years
In the Busch Series and
the Winston Cup Series .
and th~ majority of my
enjoyment was hqw proud
my tether got and to see
him nappy atter a win , and
things Ilk' that ... the~'re
not th·4!re no mOre:

Two Wln1ton Cup t11m1 have
tired rte\11 crew c~ it the pMI week.
Frc" On~vu, who once dirtcted
Ron Homldly 10 • Cra~n Truck
S.rlet c:hampionthlp. i1 Hornadayi
&lt;:rcw chief •aain, at least on an
Interim basis. tinct Philippe Lo9ezll
~arture

Jim Lon1 has r.p'-:.d Tim Brew·
er u crew chief of Mike W•ll•cc ..
F..-d.
WHtRE IT ALL IICANt II
w11 11 a Cnftam1n Truck race. at
Martinnille Spetdwl)l ~ Rich·
af'd C"ildrtiS first SIIT!t'd paylnj
auention to Kevin ltlr\liCk. who

,

.

•

liv~.t.

Wei;&gt; site, where they can be
exposed to team owners,
sponsors and motorsports
media throughout the professional racing community
and the world. Tille ·orlver
Scouting· report launched_
April 2. For more Information,
10 to the company's Web site
(www.bodydynamlotr.c:ln&amp;.
CIMII) .

.

ston Ciolfi~~ Busch aertn
"I made a rew mrwct that he
thouaht were preuy KUtsy," remerit,
bel'l, Harvick. "M01tly I Wal beat·
ing' up on anothC!r driver, I wun 't
1boolilli1 for il, but it turned hi• hrad
in my direction. for tHat. Martlnsville will alwayt he !pccili. I
didn't know it fot a while, but my
life CO"l'letely c:hanacd - for the
better - 111hat race."
filled."

·

X

VIRGINIA IS FOR

MAR~

TIN9VILLE LOVERS: Another
of the commonwealth, Rock·
brldae Bathl lllliYtt Ric:k Mail, n:c:alied his fint visit to Martin1villc.
··1 i'oraot e~c.actly what haPilCned.
If the llonl short-ti'ICk) nett was

rae..-

••

.d

out orw~tevcr, Mut u1 .
We were comma bRck home ~nd
we . stopped orr mt MardtlliVtlie
Speedw1y. It wa s in the 4~~Ytime,
and I remember pulling up 10 the
founh-lum aate. .
.., rtmember peering our at !he
rac:etrnk and looking down the
Sl1'11iaJltaway. I told the guy• (oo his
crew) th1t. if I could e\le r once run
1hit rac:etm&lt;:k, my life ~~t'O\Jid be ful ·

X

KUPITCLF.AN:JohnnyBen·
. son, who nme to Mart in1vil le
ranked third in the points standinas.
entered "tht Virjinla 500 with 1 cer·
ta.ln trtpidatlon.
The tiny track i~ 11 little m11gh for
f:Kn~ on i IUIC,

.

• ••

,

.

.

k h

.

' martms vt11 c: IS a tree t mt 18
hard on brakes. and it 'a 1 place
where it is hard to pas5;' Benson
511id

··You someti[Tlrt ha\le to bUm p
· pe ople out of the way, ~~ ~ people
are alway s bum~ing ~nd hlrtln&amp; you ,
E\·erybody. gom11 mto the ra ce.
feels like he"s got to hit or wreck
somebody to get by them, atld thnl is
what th~:)· d ~ s.o that t~ke_s so•~1e. of
the fun out of tl. I don tltke huung
or .wre~kin11 penple . That "5 not
rac:mg.
.
"Sotne I\I)'S lake II to the point
they !1.11~, 'Well ••cv~rybo:"f e~c.peds
10 iCI htt,IO I·Wiil juSI htllht !Ti and
act them out of the wgy." If yo\l"vc
got i jlood car thcK. then, 1 th tnlt
you c~n get to 1he front without hit·
ting people." "

\

. .

-

'992-2155
•

•

Racine
Mower
Clinic

- I

Open Mon·Frl 9-5:30
Set. 9-1

(740) 949·2804
Corner of VIne &amp; 6th

'~~~'eee~

&amp;
..
. .''
...,....

Hartinger Parkway

Middleport, Ohio
45670
740·9924443

'1 hu.. factor In
Jlfrttt'l lllree Meeftt

'

.. '

605 General

•thaspeedofDale
larNtt'a pit orew ,:!vee
him confttt.net Uutt he
pit
An . ., out of the
•
f..t~r than ot,..r
competitors, lncl the
ttem, led bJ ClrtW chief
Todd Parrott, hn been

Ted Dexter

wlcto~,.,

Home: 740·992·5260
· Dwight Hoilaker
Home: 740·985·3709

"My.plt c..w ••kel
IVIf)' prMII 1 !lttle
lfta of 1 11mbla •

Jlrrttt uld lftl; bll
Martlnl'llllt vlatory. "I

-\lie •
Y •·'' Ul
10M IHWif tftlt other
t....,. don't have."

Place Your Business's Ad here
Cal·l The ~ Dai'y Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or· Debbie
Call
.
.

'

7)e4t~

.'

'

.•.

Ski DIY Centll'r. N.Y.

ally managed motors ports

·c

•

.

• BodyOynamlcsRa·ctng.com.
based In Oemer, N.C.1 has
created an on line "Driver
Scouting- Service for vp-and·
coming profe ss i on~~ I racers.
Th is service will offe r talenteP drivers acros s the coun·
try the opportvn lty to be
showcased on a profession-

IHJMINW

~.•med

'

.'•

Fan Tips

'9L6t '£
:v66t .,

.

I

'

Two Winston Cup teams make crew chief chang~s · XCIEWOF1IIid
,

......
.....
~·

••••• •••••••

'ILaakl:lda,...... .

, .,,~

Dont'-Y Flnrh

Sod Slorlt!s /oiJch '"a"Y
Thunlujor wrifllfg• .

, I I Ill• I I I I I

,

'.
.,

Dear NA.SCAR This Week,
I' m writing about Dale Eam·
hardt'a death . The people who arc
true raeina fan. would not frlame
Sterling Marlin . It's ju1t part ~f
ra~ing . Dale would not have felt
· this way. I'm an avid Dale Earn·
hli'dt fan and have been for Yflll.
People arc 10 ~rucU I think &lt;lod
for lakina Dale so h.e didn't have
be like a friend or mine. He
ihjurcd hi1 brain 1tem and can 't
walk or talk ... jusaa veaetable in a
wheelchair. No ran would want
Dale to be 1h11 way. He Wl!l The
Man in my book.

•

were hu~e tQ me a :;ear
•&amp;Q c:1on't really matter· no

1. wnen did Jeff Green make his Winston
Cup.debut?
2. How many bonus po ints does a driver receive for
leadlna at least one lap In a Wi nston Cup race?
3. What year was the curre nt Winston Cup point!!
syst$ffllntroduced?

nowdrivt'lf'orCiuldres~mtheWtn·

.t'

'
•"

AROUND IHE GARAGE

ly M.mt Dutton
NASCAR Th ll week

,&gt; ' I

X

thin&amp; to make tho,IJl lau4Jl
and atve them aomethlna to
cheer about.

aapectl about racln&amp; that

11C frolll ,_.,

Ulo'allot-

ahead In the &amp;tand lf1s.
· • NCIIo Todd Bodine was
last at MartinsVIlle and
hila I)Hn 32nd or worse
In four atr'el&amp;ht races.

..

why I Wll I ran or hi l. For anyone
to find fault, or tend death threa11,
because of his fatal trash Is an(Diult
10 his memory. Tbotc idiots sho11kl
ao watt:h pmfeuiol\ll wreltlina and
lcavr Ul NASCAR fillS alone.
'
T . '
Cliff Rtfll
lttni•• Min•.

went on to win The

three wins In the pest fout
races end Ia 1:Z3 points .

..,,'

did , w/11 i11 1000. Bu1 1M puitrrs
df,lmpi0111Ji/p WQI Mill by h1t1iac
INI1&gt;er Bobby Lilbolttt.

Dear NASCA.R This Week.
Dale Earnhardt was alway• the
first to apolo&amp;ize if he wrecked
someone 1nd never bJdmouthcd
anyone who wrecked him. Th1t's

•11011 Dele Jarrttt has

C"
CD

.

'

~ 111:111111e .vo• lllftllt ' " ' Mlllfll·
cM•plolultip. wlrlclt f"Onl

X

Who'aNot

rc

....

fodw~Wr'J

l1ie polnto lllndlnp.
· Aa o ,_,., Elmhonlt Jr.
_, Wlnaton Cup rice1

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

~'

....

makes us ina !he wnc mruurcrnents
of! trunk scopes, arxl also the 11me
number of new IC. . that are now
required on the rooftOpt. The only
reason that "NASCA.R piKed Illest
diSidvaniiJCI on Jhe fon1J was aftti
thay won the pointa champio•uhip
for 2(Q) and IOI'ftC of l.hc Chevrolet
~ kcptfo"OI"Illlainina.
. _ ... lito..
Hllm'O"'a. Md• .

fll Fame- to move

n:

..

3

I am writina in rercu~Ke to the
unfair rule pl~etd oo the ~ th i•
}'Uf for the Knldyn~~ni~: disadYIJI·.
tage that gives the other mallet 1n
advantage . The rules should have all

,..., •20th to 111th pllloo In

all, roe II~. I think tt'll be a
lana, tone Ume before 1
feel like I felt before all
that happeriod. You 've lOt
to deol wltll Everybody
has 9!elr own little ~- I

-

St&gt;regue, Chevrolet. 113.726

Dtu NASCAR TI!i1 Week.

' -bothhlafltherand
IJ8ndrather •• members
· . of~ Notional
'Moloroporta Prna
Anoolatlon'o Stock Cor '

he did ...... to flnloh
bthlnd .Michell
Wltt~p In thlo yeor'l
Do!YIDM 500. Ho won hlo
tlltrd ooroor pole Morch 30
at Touo Molor Speedway.

•. ..

~

mpll, Aug. 19, 1999
RIIN NCOfd: Jack

Your1Um
lllllnr..O.Io I ;

lhethl~­

ef ,_, r.tlttr't •No. not at

This Ia no wer of words. Both drh.•ra are pntleman1y
and complimentary of Itch other. But thil II I ~lbnlnt
rtvelry, made mote1nten.. tJy th!l flctlPIIt the aeuo"n'l
r~autts to d8le uem to point to 1 twcHTlan raoe ·
-~ the two !Of tha Wlnoton CUp chlimplonahtp.

·

• •••••••••••

-'Y

-tlnl-tiaotoao

FtUO Of IHE WEfH

~

QuoorlnC
-Stacy
Comoton.
Ood&amp;e.
133.093

season .

Got._

-

tn l1ie afttrrno11i of hlo
flther'l tra(ltc ciHih, Dole
Elriihordt If. Ia
111e moot poputot G""-&lt; on
l1ie llllnaton Cup clft:utt. •
An 11thi&gt;loce flnloh In
111e Vlrl!nlo 500 •

MARTINSVILLE, Va. - .
Ua:Matew•: Klnnapolls,
HOw did tho Ood&amp;e Ram
N.C.
suddenly become so
Allo:2e.
dominant?
c---47
scott RIUs .... the
\ Jtartl, 3 poll&amp;, 2
Dod&amp;• Its fourtrt consecu.
vlctortel, o4 tot&gt;ftve
flntahel, 8 tot&gt;19t, more
""' vlctol)' In the Advance
Auto 118rts 250 at
then 14.5 million In
Martlnavme SpeedWay.
eomln&amp;l
Rtaa started on the outside
- · Start (Mey 30,
of the tront row and took
19tll, ot Chari-), polo
conttol ,, the latter alaaa~.
(Mey 28, 2000. at '
Rigs btoemo tho thkd
Cherlotta), win (Aprll2,
Dodte driver to win.
2000, lit TIWI
COl: No.8_,..,
Joe Ruttmln c.ptured the
· Chevrolet Manto Corio,
leuon-openln&amp; race 1t
Daytona, and Ted Muaareve
Ill Tor..a 60mhard1
won races In Homestead,
--TonyEul)'
. . ""feel ... ,.. ...
Flo .. and Bel«trineld, Colli.

-All,..._. - - p.toto

--=None

International Raceway,
MlldJson, 111. (1.25-mile
track), 160 laps/ 200 miles

·- 1 p.m.. May 6

PROFilE

~

--

race
Qu.IIIIJIIIC record: None

NASCAR 1'1111 WHk

1'ltlnla OIIIMI't Ilia llettol

MARTINSVILLE, Vo. Take notea, kiC:te, or 1111
Dole Jarrett lo&amp;oln&amp; to put
ell of you In detention.

«nc

.,...,._

lOP l fN

t. H 1t110tr W.lt- Mlltlftlllte beet oflt
10. 1-l Jefl . .rtan
. . . tho '""!t.•tlonl llllt

·Crow's
·Famlly
Restaurant

When: 1 p.m., Saturda~ .
Dl:f
ehMtplon: Arst

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Rlok cr.tonl. 543

•• (7) .." " ' . . , _.....,.7. (8) ..... H - k TMkltti ..... IIMw .._
8~ C·l llolllir HMtllton lloJ, ..... MoOIItlltn pointe

...

·Gerald I. Vallee, M.D. board certifted in intemal medicine and
'p~lmonary disease.
..,,
,.

....-.
....
.....-••o
...........

. . . . . ..,...,.170 ........... &amp;11
Jtffflwwti.BU

'

.

875

lterlltll- IIIII no Dodlo - ·
I. Ill Jo11n11J ._... ....,...,.., lite Mot l'llntleo

•m&gt;:

--a.., 1 5

John Flaherty hit a tiebrenking RBI double in the off
n.wrl I
Billy Koch (0-1) in the ninth
inning as visiting Tampa Bay
Alfonso Soriano arid Paul stopped a seven-game losing
O'Neill had three RBh apiece streak.
.as New York completed a
Tampa Bay closer Esteban
sweep of the six-game season Yan (1-0) pitched 1 2-3
series against host Kansas City. . innings for the win.
,

"*'·

.. IM1M P.'k.1,031

-~

L-Y1n....
1 8,

Scott

.. lluilrWIIIIrat, 1.(1(11

·936 State Route 160 ·
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .,
··telephone: 740..:.446-9620

.

--=======:-

1001 PO INl\ &gt;IANOINGS

I

MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF GALLIPOLIS
PRACTICING-ATTHEM£DICALPLAZA .

~

Fo•

1 p.m. • Saturday ;

1997
Dale Earnhanll
won the final race of his
Talladep 500
· career at Talladep, and he
Talladef,l (Ala .)
coUected tO of his 76 career
~--super~Pft~dwa'J (2.666-mlte
victories at the track. ...
tnick), 188 l•ps/501.288
Gordon won this race last
miles
year after starting 36th.
1 p.m.. April 22
D r r c o1t :oton: Jeff
- - NA'I'IOIIAI.
Gordon
WMt: Nashvfne 300
Qw. . .h.........:BIII
Elliott, ford, 212 .80\1 mph:
.....: Nashville
April 30, 1987
suporspeedway, Lebanon,
• - - = M a r k Martin, Tenn. 11.333&lt;nlle track). 225
ford, 188.354 mpii; Mey 10, lapS/299.925 miles

4. 14)

-

...

-=-=

All , _ . .,.,

1. · (1) Dah ...,_
2. (2) J e l l 3'\" (8) . _ -

White Sox7,
Indians 6

.

•

j~JiJ!i..).JjJ

~

3,

- Athletics o

•

.c"t:J

.'1

J

•

I
•

!

'!Uotdoy'aGomea
floston10,Battlmore1
Toronto 3, Tampa Bey 2, 10 lmlngs

•

•

r------..., I

I

Kansas City (Suzuki t-0) at Toronto (P,rrts 0·2), 4:05p.m.
1
N.Y. Yankees (Hernandez 0· 1) at BoS!qo
(Crawford ().()), 6:05 p.m.
1
'Tampa Bay (Lopez 1-1) at E!fltllmore 1
(Hentgen 0-0), 7:05 p.nt '•
Cleveland (Sabalhla H j) at Oetroi!
'
(Weaver H ), 7:05pJ!l.
,
Chicago WMo So• (BueMO0'1) at Mifl·
nesota (Redman o-I ~ 8:05 p.m. ·
1
Texas (Oa,.;s o- 1) at Oakland (Udlo ~).
· 10:05 p.m.
•
Seattle (Tomko 0-0) a! Ananolm (Sc:Moneweis
1 ~1 ) , 10:05 p.m. .
I
,
(
I

2
2 112

•

••

To- (Helling o-1) ot ...,._ (W!S&lt;&gt;1·
0). 10:05 p.m.
.
1

with no homers and two RDJohnson, ArilOna, i.4.
RBI
SAVE$-Urblna, M.Rntreal, :4;
s.
Fa~sero, . ChiC@99· 1!; Mesa,
Phlladelphta, 3; R.ockar, Atlanta,
NLL.eldet'S ·
2; BWagnar, HoustorC 2; N!!n,
BAITING-LWalker, Colorado, San Fraoeisco, 2; MkWiltianls,
Pittsburgh, 2; Shaw, os An!je·
.455; Lankford, St. Louis, .450; les, 2.
I
Polanco, St. Louis, .440; OWard,
Houston, .423; Brogna, Atlanta,
·AL r.:aade~
I
:23; ~arrj; Sa~ Oi~] .407;
.,
1
15
~~NS~FI~~ ~j~rida: 11 ; ·BATTING-T.Ciark,' ; Detrqit,
.519; EMal1inez, Sea!lle. .462;
eerkman, Houston, 1"~; Henon, Stewart,
Toronto, .45Z; J&lt;onerl{o,
, Colorado, 9; Vidro, Montreal, 9; Chicago, .444; Justice, Nllw
VGu811'8ro,. Montr~lll. 9; OJack· York, .412 ; Offerman, Bostdn,
son. San Otego, 9, TWal~er, Col· ,409; MRamirez, Boston, .407.1 .
. orado, 9; LWalker,_~?loratkl : 9. . ·RUN5-Stewart, Toronto, f3;
L RBI-c~ey, .C.I_
nclnoatl, . 12, - Lawton,
Minnesota,
f:o:
, LWalker, C~loradO, 1~[ ,HidaiiJo. . TMartinez, New York, 10; CGtJz.
H~uston, 11, ~Gont8_lei1;, An~ona: m8Jl, Min_nesota, ~; ~9£lelgado,
u.. LStevens_. 1\Aontrflal, 11, . Toronto,.g· O'Neill, New York, 9~ 6
P~JOIS, St. LOUIS, 10; ~eytn, San are lied wltti' 8 ;.
' , I
O!ego, 10; . FIQy"- Flori®. 10; · R'BI_:_P~nda New •York, ; :
P1azza, New Yol1&lt;. to. · ...
. cPitlgadorTor'onto, ~2; ·JGon .
HIT$-Vtdro, Montreal,_ 1_5, . lez, Cleveland,• 1.2~ ,. Quim,
-LWalker, Co)orado, . l5;_: ~1ggto1 Kansas CitY,.t·11( OGi\iz, M~· ·
Ho_uston, 14, 9asey, Cti)Ctnnati: nesota, 11; Daublich, Boston, e;
• 13, .oJa~n~ San ~. 13, T~lark, Detroit, 9; MRamjrdz.
save.
Larkin, Cmetnnall, t3; Bilrk'man, · Boston, .9; BBoone, Saattle, '9;
1
H~uston, 12;. Glanvi!le1 Phtladel· O'Neill, New York, 9.
phia, 12; Nevtn, San Otego, 1~.
HITS-Stewart, Toronto, 1b;
DO~BLE5-PWHson, Flonda, Quinn Kansas City 14· CBeltr;.!;
5: NaVIn, San Diego, 5; AGonza' .
. ' '
.1· '
ONE-HIT WONDER - Greg Maddux of Atlanta threw a '1-hlt lez, Florida, 4; QWard, Houston, Ka_nsas Ctly, 14· TCiark, Detr~'1:
shutout as the Braves best the_Mets WE!dl'lesday. (AP)
-4: Casey, Cincint')ati, &lt;I; VGuer- 1.4• Brostus, ~ew .Yor~ 14· J'f
·
,
rero Montreal 4· CJohnson ltce, New York, 14, Suzuki, Se~tMINNEAPOLIS (AP), '·
' ·
'· '
.
' Ue 13· Sonan9 New York 13. !
"
..,, · • · F.l~: 4;. Hammon~, &gt;Milw~- ; : j DOU~ES~Konei~o. 'clilichThe Mirineso~ Twins are
The three-time World Series
,11,
. . kee, 4, GUtierrez, Chtcago, 4.
go, 6; Velarde, Texas,· i\; Soria$.
where no one expected _them champions, who moved past
~
Mariners
.
_TRIPL~S:-OJackson_.
~an New Yot1&lt;, 5: ~rstad, Apjlheim, i4;
to be: first place in the AL Toronto into first place in the
Dteg?, 2, ,Vtna, St. Louts, 2, 13 Stewart 'Toronto 4· Perry
' Chi~l.
are lied w1th 1.
.•
-• •
· "~' .
AL East, are 28- '(&lt; against
Central.
. HOM~ RUNS-LGonzalez, go, 4, CEvereU, .Boston, ~·
Luis Rivas, Tom Prince and Kansas City since 19'17•)•
Arizona 6· Grudziel!lnek Los JAValentln, Chicago, 4.
,I
' :
'
. . TRIPi,.ES-CGuzmpn, MinCristian Guzman homered as
Todd Williams {1-0) allowed
Aaron Sele (2-0) allowed
51 Truby, ~ouston, 4, nesota,- 4; D,urham, C~icago , ~:
the Twins again showed sur- · 'one run and three hits in 2 2- four hits . In eight innings, Angeles,
Aoyd, Flonda, 4; Ptazza, New 15 re t' d 'th 1
· ·
•
prising power and swept the 3 innings, and Mariano Rivera sending host· 'Oakland to its York, 4; Lankford,_ St. Louis, 4;
HaOM~ RU~s.-:.auinn, Kans~s
SSosa, Ch1cago, 4, LWalker, Col· City 5. CDelgado' ;n ronto :,sDetroitTigers with a 12-t win got three outs for his second third consecu'tive loss. .
4
.
·
' _,
'1
•
'
save.
\
Wednesday t)ight.
Kazuhiro ' Sasaki finished ' orado
STOLEN BASES-EYoung, JGonzalez, •' Oleveliind, 15;
Bria~ Meadows {0-2) took with a perfe,ct ninth for his Chicago, 6; OJackson, San Oaubac~, Boston, 4, Glaus, A~:
"VJe 're tired of hearing that
loss.
the
we're mathematically elimimajor league-leading fifth save Diego 3· SPerez San Diego 2. helm . 4, Posada, New York, 14.
• '
•
• ' O'Netll New York 4 ·
!
nated on the first day of the
in five chances.
Polanco, St. Louis! 2; ABrown,
STo'LEN BASES~Knoblaudh
season," first baseman Doug
Mike Cameron hit a go Pittsburgh, 2; Belhard, Mtlwau- New York 4· Singleton Ch'caru-.'
.
. ~ee, 2; VGuerrero, Montreal, 2; .
' ' ·- .
' 1 'l-'
Mienrkiewicz said. "And we're
ahead grounder 10 the. e1ghth Abreu, Philadelphia, 2; Ochoa, 3, 13 are_tied wtth 2. ' .
:
tired of getting beat around'."
PI!CHI!'!G (2 Dectstons)-)1
off Jun Meclf (0-2), and Bret Cincinnati 2. Womack Arizona
.
d bl
' '
'
' are tted wtth 1.000.
:
The 'IWins (6-2), who ·have
.
STRIKEOUTS- PMartinez, ;
Boone hIt a two-run- &lt;J&gt;u e. 2.
outscored Detroit 43-15 in
Jose Valentin and Tony GrafAngels 7, Ra~gers 2
PITCHING (2 Decistons)- Boston, 22: Loaiza, Toronto, vg;
five wins this season, are two fanino homered as Chicago
Ramon Ortiz {2-0) allowed WMiller, Houston, 2·0, . 1.000, RPOrtiz, Anaheim, 17; Hudsdn,
., 11ea db e.ore
" holdi ng two runs an d fi1ve h'Its m
. 7 1- 3 1.62,
RROriiZ, San Franctsco, 2· 0 kl d 16 p
B It' I
games ahead of the Chicago. built a.10 1.000 2 19. Park LoS Ange· a an , i onson, a tmo 1e,
innings, and Benji Gil went 3- l~s 2. 0 ' 1' 000 300. Ta arez 16; CCarpenter, ,ror~nlo , 116;
White Sox. Minnesota hasn't _on at Comiskey Park.
.
.
. .
!
' · . • · • . v
' ,Nomo, Boston, 15.
:
finished over .500 since 1992.
White Sox starter Cal for-3 with a rwo-run homer Chicago, 2·0, 1.000, .73, Lloyd,
SAVES-Sasaki, ',Seattle, i5;
"I think they're a lot better Eldred- had to leave .the game and RBI double.
M&lt;i_ntreal, 2·0, 1.000, .00, Tapan•: Fotllke, Chicago, . 3; Crabtre:e.
Darin Erstad was 3-f&lt;or-5 Schilling,
Chtcago, Arizona,
2·0, 1-000,
.69, 1iexas,
'
3-• TBJ o~es, .Detrot·1, "'·
than people give them credit after two innings with pain in
2·0, 1.000,
i"•
for;· Detroit's Dean Palmer his surgically repaired right . with ~o doubles and three .S6· Maddux Atlanta 2•0 1 000 .Kqch, -Toronto,_2, MR1vera, New
RBis, and Troy Glaus hit a solo 00 '
'
' ' · ' York, 2; Perctval, Anahetm, f!;
said. "We're definitely glad to elbow.
Sean Lowe (1-0) allowed homer for Anaheim.
· STRIKEOUT$-WMiller,
Wickman. Cleveland, 2.
l
get out of here."
Joe Mays (2-0) allowed one ju~t one hit in three innings,
Ryan Glynn (0-2) took the Houston, 23; Schilling, Arizona,
1
and
Keith
Foulke
p1'tched
the
loss
Alex
Ro
'
dr
'
guez
went
022;
Aetacio,
Colorado,
16;
Wood,
,j
run •!!d four hits in eight
,·
1
·
·
Chicago,
14;
Vazquez,
Montreal,
·i
innings at the Metrodome. ninth (or hi~ third save. Dave . for-2 , dropping him to .242 14; :rapani, Chicago, 14;
:)
Mays has a 1.80 ERA in two Burba (0-1) gave up six runs
'
. season. '
starts thIS
and seven hits · in 3 2-3
The Twins, last in the majors innings.
in homers in 2000, have hit 13
.
.
in eight games. They have .five
multihomer games this year
I
'
.
and hit three for the first time ·
'
since June 30.
'
"We got it done with pitchBaltimore, last in the majors
ing and defense," manager with a .170 batting average
,
· '
, r
Tom Kelly said. "We got an entering the game, scored four
..
excellent pitching .job from runs in the first to win at
Thomas Price,- M.D. board certified in obstetrics ~fid gyr•ec·olq
Mays. It gave our players a Boston.
chance to do a little hitting
Reliever Willis Roberts (1accep~ing new patients; practic'e limited o~ce gynecology, vl'atrlv
and do a little rul!ning."
0) aUowed two hits in four
exam, pelvic -exams, pap tests, and mammograms.· . . 1
Rivas hit his first career shutout innings and struck out
'.
.
home run with two OUts in seven. With the bases loaded
'J
the third off Dave Mlicki (0-1) and two outs in the ninth,
Gene H. ~bels, M.D., board certifted in Internal medicine; ~tccepting
to tie it at 1. After back-co- Buddy Groom. came on and
new patients; practice limited to heart disease, hyp'erteitsion, 'Upld
back wallcs, David Ortiz hit a got Troy O'Leary to ground
two-run double off the right- out for his first save.
abnotmalltles (cholesterol abnormalities) and ",~Joy associated
.
.
field wall;
frank Castillo (0-1) gave up.
diabetes. 'Special Interest in collgestlve Heart failure:
Ortiz added an RBI aingle four runs and seven hits in 3
in a seven-run eighth inning, 2~3 inning~.
·
'
'
;
. l
'
'
.
giving him 10 lUlls in hi;' last
Bald
Subblah, M.D., board .certifted in Internal medicine and
four gamnJaaon Maxwell and
ptalmonary ·dtseaie; .acceptlna new patients;
Mientkiewicz each had two. practice ·limited to
chronic luna disease, asthma, emphysema, black lung, asbestosis.
run doubles in the inning.

Devil Rlys 4,
Blue Jays 3

cubs -4, Expos 2

e

Mlnnosoca

Frtdoy'oPittlbulgh (Anoyo 1-0) ot C1Ugo Cullo

Red Sox4

·~

-

T-lloy

DiOIP (Ealon 1-0),' 5:05 P·!!!.
Clncinnotl (Himilch Cl-1) oll'lttlbul!lh
(Oliva"'" Q-1), 7:05 p.tlt
.
(Bilrkett 1)-1) 11 N.V: Metl (RUICh
11-0), 7;10 p.m.
lliO Angeles (AttbY 1-0) a1.A!1&gt;&lt;q
(Reynoso o-1),11:85 p.m.

Orioles 5,

Astros 7,

w

:,

llaltlmoro5, - 4
~ Bay 4, Torol110 ~ \

ENIOivltlon

•
'
-Yorll
Toelly'aC&lt;*ndo p..,..... 1-0) .. St. louil (Her· T"""*'

' I

Chk:ago - · So• 7. Clowland 8

tlalla ... .._...

San FranciiCO (Ho-1-1) II San

1
1 112

4
4
6

(VMams 1·1), 10:05 p.m. -

-(Dolal 1-0)IIMIIaa -(D'AmiQB

.sse

San Fnonc:iiCl&gt;
Los Angeles
Arizona
~
San Diego

QB

8

~w 'L Pet

Detroit · ·

Giants2,
Padres 1,

.f

--.
---

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
s~pport of these"area
businesses who make
this page possible.

..'i:

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A

�Tlulclar. Aprll12,

2001

The O.lly Sentinel •

-

"IW1' FAIII -

-

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

~-for 1 lldiiOOflt Hud
Sub•- Al&gt;Orlftltnt lor Elderiy
lnd D l - EOH (30•1112
3121(lr (X'&lt;J I 3274

Tara Townhou1e Apattmtnll

••.t.

Al•au 11
ott •••, Loll a Found,

Ylnl ...... llld Wulld

TD Do A* ...... Paid

lnActvw-.

p •wrwemp;;

1

2:tiD p.m ... dly llllllrt
._ ec11z eo run.llunll8y a
Mandly .-an 2:00p.m
l'rldly
!fM!W!L M!P' r

, :GO p.m. ... dly llllllrt
11M ecllaiO run
11unc1ay a 11anc1ay ec1111an
1 00 p.m Friday.

2.,.

RfP""'EB DE!f! WE

WoN ....... to
Rill by 4 3D p m Saturday
aiiiOnday eclltlolr 4 3D

Thu...,

andflMMII'Ut

Rick Pea ton AuctiOrl Comp.ony
tull 1111'11 auct

1ucl10n

onur

1erv ce

eomplete

licensed

OhleY&amp; Wtst Vkginll 304713-5785 tlr 304-773-5447

Alva side flucllon Born Sale
Every Saturdoy Night ot8p m
Auctioneer A1ymond Johnson
(7401251 lltB

110

Wanted to Buy

FREE SEARCH!
wwwSINGLEScom
Gentleman Seek ng Wh te Fe
malt Over 50 Yeara For Walks
And F tndsh p Reply To 553
2nd Avenue Gallipolis Oh o
45831 Apartment403
I wMI not be eapon11Mt for debls
incurred by others tnan myself
lnclud ng metal &amp; physical ~tor
bill ~ J TaylOr

START DATING TONIGHT!
Have lun meeting elglb e s nglts
In your a ea Cal tor mo e nfor
mal on 1 800 AOMfiNCE ext
1736
Stert ctat ng tonight Play thO Oht0
Oat ng Game Call tal lree t 100
....,.,.,. "'" 1e2
TALK TO GIRL.&amp; LIVEI
JUSTCflll
1 900'329-8130 txt 7173

'

53 99 Pe M nule Must Be 18
\Uti Strv-u (et91645-M34
'lllung MerrM!d FomaM! looking for
young tamales as fr ends and
companJonah p and fun times
Reply at PO Box 621 Ke r OH

-·

30 Announcements

-To 'lbu Thrift~
9 West Stimlon All1tns
740-592 ! 842
Quality cloth ng and household
tams $1 00 bag sa a every
l'hu aday Monday th u Satu day
90().6 00

40

Giveaway

8 Month Old Light Brown Malo
112 lab 112 Chow (~)e75 5323
Cal After 4pm Please
7 Adorable Pupp as 6 Weeks
0 d Just In T me Fo Easer 1/2
Copper No•• Beegle t/2 Austra
nan Shepherd P ease Call
(*1895-3957
Free Map e firewood euy ac
ceu tor loading some needs
spiH 740 992 7104
Puppies Mixed App oxlmately 8
10-sOid (740)256-1621
Pupp es motlter 112 Slltpard 112
lab 740-865-4483
Rea estate wan ad I am forced
out ol my house for h ghway im
provement Looking fOr old farm
house n Meigs County with
aerttge call 740 787 !1303 740
992 9132
Tho VInton Ful Bapllal Gospel
Church located Behind Poll 01
f ca w II Be Helping Fam as In
Nttd Of Food On 4 • Ot Form
7am T 11 Bam We w 1 Also Be
Accept ng Perishable And Non
pe lshable And Monotery Dona
1ons From 9am Tnl Oam Happy
Easter
To Good Home Mother Golden
Retriovor Father B ack Lab Qood
Na u ad Beaut fu Pupp as Has
111 Shots And Wormod Ca I fin
ytiftlt (740)446-7234

80

Lost and Found

Lo1t blonde Pltbull Cheanlre
arta ears c opped anawer to
Buc~
StOO ewarll 740 367
7803
LOST In No thup Arta 7 Yea
Old Fomllo Beagle Tog I 873
Ftlm 1y Pet Please Call i74014487084 Or (740)448 3555 W th
Arrf lnlormatlon Thank 'lbul

70

Yard Sale
Galllpolle
I Vicinity

Friday &amp; Slturday 9 ? 1564
Buck Ridge Road
Friday April 13th Centenary
Clothu Baby Items Glauwa e
Crafts Toye Home nll~or Mise
Moving/ Garage Salt Fu n ture
Mf&amp;c Item Clothes 621 t/2 3rd
!lvanue Thuraday Friday SaM

doy8.

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Moving sale Satu day Stollings
t1 dtnce Ntw liopa Rd
Chtster Fu nl1l.lrt exerc 1t
equipment same Home lnler o
looll Iota (\I garage llems much
more

Pt Plea11nt
&amp; VIcinity
Ap I 13th &amp; 141h F day &amp; Sawr
eta~ S.m 7 2228 l nco n Avo 0 11
Marbles Wade New &amp; Used
lloms Baked GOOds

EAR~

S25 000 TO S50 000 yr

Medical ln1uranc1 Bill ng Need

td lmmed 1tetwol Home Computer
Needed FREE tnte nat 1 sao
109

291~ Ooplf

-~7---

buskWI l'/llell16 com

fl.1f'l r1Y'.1UJT
',[RVICES

110

Penonala

·~95-9743

EARN WHilE YOU lEARN
Work from Home Full Ti aln ng
$500-$4500 PT/FT Frtt tntorma

.......... dueiO holkl.,.-

005

OrMra: Help wonted
Quality 0 t.e flway Inc Owner
Operator We need Dr vers wit"
314 tonl t ton Plek up Trucks to
pull R/V campera 5th wheel
bumJMr put a See the count V
and . . pail you dO .. cal

Absolute Top Dollo U S S lver
Gold Coinl PiOolsell Diamonds
Gold R nga U S Cur ency
M T S Coin Shop 151 SteoM

"Deaclll'* au~IO

ANNOUNCE1.1EN TS

no

Auction

10

HelpWanted

I!ATTENTKlNIH
lntomalional Company E,.,.ndong
Work From Homo"' Ohoce
$500 00-$6 000 00/mo PTIFT
MaliOrdonnltmtt

PalclllalninO"Jacations
Call 1 110().228-0311
wwwCUhOnlhoTiblt com
I ATTENTIONlH
International Conl&gt;a"' Expanding
Work From HOfnt C/1 Olfice
$!500 tl().Sfl 000 00/lna PTIFT
Mall Ordtrllnteme1
Pai!Traln ng/VIcaiiOns
Call 1-1100-548-0!122

52 000 WEEKlY! Moiling 400
brochures! Salistact on Gua
anlotd Postogo &amp; Suppllts prov dtdl Ru1h St I Addressed
Slamped Envelope GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
3701 I 438 Start lmmtdiatety
$529 WEEKLY mailing loners
from home Full o part time No
ence necessary Easy! Any
hou s Cal u S Digest 1 6 7
520-8071 24 hour rsc:orcf ng

••Pt

S987 ~5 WEEKLY! Process ng
HUO FHA Morlgage Refunds No
Exper ence Requl11d Fo FAEE
In ormat on Call 1 800 501 6832
!XI 1300

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Pu 1 o workl S25/hr $75/hr FT/
PT FREE Info 800 871 8045 el&lt;1
80 www lahorneb~ com

WORK FROM HOME
S500-S1!500pormo PIT
S2000-$8000 permo FIT
No expenence needed
Tlaln ng p ovldtd
1 80().394-4930
ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO Use
your compute $350 4850 wk
www rag&amp;2wealth com

ton (414) 290 6900 wwwhome
Experienced Truck Mechanic
Nlllded 40 11C Retirement Med
cal Dental &amp; VisiOn Insurance
vacat on Pty Based On Exper
once Col (7401284H463

Full! me AN Poa Uon flva obit
and Fulllftlt LPN 1'1&gt;1110n Avai
able At Seonoc Hils Nursl'l(l Center Great Insurance! lncent ve
Pay Offered Will Pay Fo Your
E•perlencal P ease Call Rhonda
Holste n For More Information Or
To Schtdu e An nte v ew
(740)446-7150

Goyernment Jobs $11 oo
$33 00 per hOur potenllal Paid
T aln ng Ful Benefits Fo more
nformatlon cat call 1 888 6'74
9150 ... 3234
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP Work from hOme Mal or
de IE Commerce $522+/woe~ PT
S1000 S•OOO/wk FT 800 921
8538 www dream2btree com
Halp wanted ca ong lo the elderly
Darot G oup Homo now paying
m n mum wage new sh Ita 7am
3pm 7am-5prn ~11pm 11pm7am cal740-992 5023
HICUBE EXPRESS NEEDS
Owner ()ptrators! H()(nt

'NO East Cots! NO TOUCh
Freight 75%
Drq&gt;!Hook No Uplronl COsiS
AceepUng Arrf \'ear Tractors!
1-800-200-2823
Hiring A 3 Sh HI FlexiCit Hours
lnsu ance Available
Pa d
Birthday And Ho days AppiYfAI
Rio Grande McDonald!

Lege Secretary needed tor Jack
son tow t rrn Exper ence not re
qufrtd but he plul Fax Resume•
IO (740)2116-2860

ATTENTION OWN A COMPUT
ER? Ma I order E Commo co
$~22• week PT $1000 $4 000
week FT fuli Tra n ng Free Book
let www c eated eamllfe com
BOO) 755 4806
ATTENTION WORK FROM
HOME me order E commerce
Businoss $ 500 S7 200 month
PT FT Free Info mat on 1 BOO
824 0874
....,.. StrivaToSuceeed com
AVONI A A easl To Buy or Sol
Sh r10y Spears 304-&amp;71&gt;1429
BlfiCKSTONE
PARAlEGAL
STUDIES Comp thonolvo allord
abto Home Study ega I tra n ng
s nee 1890 Free cata og 1 BOO
B26-)1228 PO BOX 701448 Da
las TX 75370 or hnp '"'- bltek
a onelawcom
CAREER OPPORTUNITY Earn
e•callent income Easy claims
p oceaa ng Fu 1 a nlng Home
PC requ ed Call PhySic an &amp;
Healthcare Oeva opments o
leo 1 80().772 5933 ... 2070
Ch ldcare Center Located In
Po nt P eaaant WV Teacher As
11tan1J I Fu T 1)1e &amp; 3 4 Po I
T ms HS Diploma Equlva ent
Mus( Be 18 Yean 0 d Exper
tnct Wlt.h Prllchool Ctu d en
Preferred Send Attume To
Child en s Village Mason Co
Vo Tech Rt2 4 B Point Pleasant
wv 25550 Or Fax 1304)523

HOmawo ke s Nooded
1835 IWioi&lt; y process ng mall
Easy! No expo anca ~dtd
Call 80().490 941i0 2(!\_rs

St.rt A Travel Agency Recerve
Tra n ng Bus ness Support You

own Travel WebS te and Travel
0 scounts Pe ks Earn B g $$$
Nom~nal Sta tup Cost 1 888-699
090 ~ o www EarnBucksF om

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oatllpolta ca- Colltflt
(Careers Close To Hamal
Call Todeyl 74().446 4361
I II00-21.r.o452
Rog f90.05-1214B

Schoola
lnslructlon

150

5 STAR
PROFESSIONfll
TRUCK DR VING SCHOOl now
offers a 14 day COL TRAINING
PROGRAM lmmod ate Open
ngs 136 000+ 1st year Non Ex
per anced 800 448 6669 Ex
pe tenced w COl 1 800 956
2353

BlACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Home Study Ap
p oved Aflo dab e comprel'len
s ve tegaltra nlng s nee 1890
FREE Catalog 800 826 9228
wrijo ~o Box 701 "9 Dallas TX
75370 NA or http 1/www blacksto-

netawcom

EARN 'jQUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICklY bachelors Masters
Doctorate b~ c:or espondence
based upon p o educat on a.nd
sl'lorl study course f9r FREE n
fo mallon bookie! phone CAM
BR OGE STATE UN IVERS TV

Dependable Man w I mow and
I m lawn Free Est mates
(:)IJ4)675 2105

::17,.::40::.;14,.::46:..:3=384:..:_-:---:-:-:-::Midd tPO t gray atone 3 • bed
rooms
largo
eat-ttl k - 2 balhrooma. largo
LR torma OA pint , . . . - dtrll
bedroom full unf n shed ball
ment sleam heat a tuated on 3

111gt-"'-

qu et t eet

1 ned basketbal

court/ parking area w II cons de
all reasonable offe 1 740 992
7396

WORK FROM HOME Earn
S1500 pll to $5000 1/
monthiiiCAll TOOfiY I 800-895
0219
o
www worlllroml'l o
me247.com

230

Professiooal
Services

$ FREE CASH NOWS lrom
weahtr,' tamll8s unJoad ng m lhon&amp;
of do Ia s to help min m ze the
taxes Write lmmed ate w NO
FAllS 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD
M88 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
NIA 90010

v

SSS N~ED CASH?? WE pay
cash tor ema nlng payments on
P ope ry So dl Mortgages! Annu
1 es Settlamentsl lmmed ate
Quotes!! NObOdy beats ou ptlc
es Nauonat Con ac Buye s
(800) •90 0731 ext tO I www na
tlonalcOntractbuyers com

Must Stt Beautiful 3 Bedroom 2
bath C A FR W th Flrep act 2
Lots New Roof Refrtgerato
Stove DW La ga 2 Car Gartge
B g Yard Largo Rooms loll 01
Extras Relocating Out Of State
$67 000 Cal (3041n:l·5391
Mus ael due to employment 3-4
bed oom home on 8 ac es
S32 !500 74().992 2786
Aemo ded 3 Bedroom Wood
F oo ' 1 112 Bath Beaut ful
~ roplaco 2 Ca Ga age S73 000
(7401381Hl151
Th ee bed oom new plumbing
etectr cal gas forced a haata
hot wate tank &amp; bathroom would
make good enta property no
land C()nt acts loCilted n Po
moroy S29 900 OBO 304 •as
4037 alto 5pm

Two ca garage/apartment 1n
Middleport two bad ooms rull
bath lR kitchen wllh electr c
range cen rat ai 740 985 3650
or 740-992 2795

320 Mobile Homes

800-~·6

Dav d s Genera Contractors
Plumb ng Elec:tr c Paint ng
Decks Mise Wo k AI Home Re
pairs Lawn Ca :e Call (740)256
9373 0 Ce Phone 1 304 633
6265

HUO Homu Payments Bastd
On Income Limited T me Hurryl

v age lott one car garage new
sidewalks new roof large f ont
porch deck sma outbu d ng

for Sale
CASH LOANS $2000 15000
Con so ldat on to $200 000 Bad
No Credit Cred Ca ds Mor
gages Fo nfo mat on
BOO
335-7612 ext 3622
CONSOLIDATE BILLS LOANS
OAC Fom $2500$125000 9%
Average a e One hou app oval
Ca I FCC S tol lreo 8BB 605
337§

DM&gt; ""~·so
Bankruptcy S 95
Adoption $225
Not dO-l you se~ k
CAll 1 800 263 0503
FREE nlo mat10n Bankruptcy nla
nTNIKY

14x70 Bayview New S nee 97 C/
A Wate Heaths Fu naca P ce
Incudes Stove Aefr ge ato
Po ch Shed &amp; Wooden Fence
$7200 Ca 13041875 3008 Beloro
3pm

14x70 Southern 0 eam free De
live y 1ree Setup on y $9995 ~
888 928 3426
1977 Came on Skyl na 12x50 2
bedroom good condit on at
Rae ne on w 1ow Lane $3 ooo
cal 740 420 7823 fo moe In
formation about it
1982 14x70 Fa rrnon' Townhouse
bed oom 1 large ba h w th heat
pump &amp; a c $7 500 740 591
4043 or 74().992-0938

~

1984 Mob le Home lor Safe 3 BR
1 1 2 Bath Call tOt' appo ntment
oa, me (740)446 3093 ask fo
Ju o 304)675 3290 late I!YIInlng

13 Acres Wilh Beaut lui Like
Vlow S Its sso 000 18 fie,..._
w tn Large lake Mobllt Home
With Add On S1t 500 GoUla
County On B tektop Road
(740)388-478
51181 Avallebla on

l'i&lt;.i--- 8PleA II I'll etectrJc

~101

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /S$17
No Fee Unless We Win
888 582 3345

Factory Goof 32xBO Sto 000 Dis
count only $1000 00 Down De
ve 1 and setup paid by Factory
1 600 69 6777

OTR d fvar nttdod fo owno OQ
e ator no east coast home wei
kends some through tl'le weak
no o len alton Apply today sta I
tomorrow Call 740-992 5384 wno
answer eave message
Part time D eta y Aide pos tl()n
ava able n 100 bed Sk ad Nus
ng Fao y Pos on equlres
rlex be hours a sh Its o nc ude
weekend hou a Except onat op
po tunlty o work with a wonderful
team ol ca lng ndlv dua a lnte
ested applicants should 8PR y In
person a Rockspr ngs Rehab I
tation Conte 36759 Rocksprtnga
Rd Pomeroy Oh o 45769 AU
Gina Weaver Cerllltd 0 eta y
Manage Equal Oppo tun ly Em
ptoye Encou ag ng Work Pace
0 "" ally
Postal Jobs $48 323 00 y Now
h r ng No eJCpe, ence pa d aln
lng great benet ts ca 7 days
80().429-3880 ext J 38!
POSTAl JOIS $48 500 Y Now
H ng No E•pe enoe Pad Tan
ng Great Benet 11 Call 800
218 187 el&lt;1 733
POSTAL JOBS to S18 35 h
W LOL FE JOBS to $21 60/hr n
eludes Benellta No Expa enea
Neceuary Fo Appllcat on and
Exam nlo ca I 1 800 992 7054
x208 M F 8 30-5 OOpm

FINANCIA L

210

Business
Opportunity

WORK AT HOME Earn 2K
per Yt4o:. aka phone o de 11 www o
w s un o ms com VERY EASY
Free In o 800.556 9935
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH NG CO
acommends lhat you do bus
ness w h peopW. you know and
NOT o send money throu~h the
ma un you have Invest gated
the otfe ng
1!. VEND NG GOLOMIN~ ACT
NOW Mach nes vend Ho shey
candy AND p epa d phone co ds
(25omn US) Ea n $800 lwky
Wo k 6-9 h s wk G eal lqeat ons
BOo-659 1775 lnv 1111 F " avo
A• M&amp;M MARS NESTLE Estab
1shed vend ng Route W 1 se by
412310 Unde $9K fT1 nlmum n
vestmen equl ed EK'ce ent Prof
t Potent at F .naf'lct Ava lab e
Good C &amp;d I To F ae
(88BI
27().2188

fiJI rea ella o advor111 ng In
this newspaper Is &amp;u!JitCIIo
1111 ~"' Fair Housing Act
1968\jhlch makes II !legal
advor111e any prafer.llmltation or dlscrlm nation
baaed on race color reltg on
sax tam Ia olalua or nati9nal
origin or any lntamloo to
make any such preference
Imitation or dlscrtrn nat on
This newspaper w1 1not
know ngly accept
advtlrt1saments for real estate
which Ia In viol at on of tho
law Our readera are he eby
nlonned lhalal dw~ ngs
advertised n this 1:18wspaper
are available on an equal

Very nice small 1 bedroom rur
nlshtd apt Upper Dupin 111 v.r
non 1M No pttll Non amokaral

RENTALS

1210 00 + Eleclric Reference•
1200 ~ 304-875-2851

410 Houses for Rant

480 SpKa for Rent

1 3 Bedrooms Foracloltd
Homes From S 1 - 4'!1o Down
30 Yea s at 8 5'!1o APR For lill
inga,II00-31!1·3323 Ext. 1709

Mobllt Homo Lot W II Toh
12'1 U 1 t81 Wldll S1Wmo
$100/dtp Need Referenc11
(740)44&amp;-0175

2 Btdroom $325/mo $150
Deposl No Pets (7401446 0050

Trallar lot lor rent In Mldd'-POrt
$12&amp;- 740-1192 3194

2 Bedroom House In Eu tkl For
Rent $300 Per Month $300 De
postt NO Pets Co I Aher 5 00 pm
(740)384-2560

410

310 Homea for Sale
SO DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CREOITI FOR l STINGS CALL
1 BOO 338-0G20 el&lt;1 9B 11

2 Bedroom Recenrly Remodlted
Sandhill Road Raft ence &amp; No
Pets 1*)675-3834

3 Bellroom House 1 Belh HUD
Approved $325 Ptr Month Do
posH Requ rtd 1*)675 88041 or
(304 )675 70 I&amp; ask tor Deua
3 b'droom 1 balh carport &amp;

shared pond $42! a month &amp;
s•25 deposit 330 32B 8883 or
74().992-62&lt;14

r,1EHC HMm iS F

510

3 bedroom M ddlepo I S350 ptr
month plus deposll wale sewer
1raSh lnclulled 7~.0175

3 BR 2 bath home enll lor $6001
mo and 3 BR t bath home rents
tor $550 mo Close to town Ref
erences and depos t required
W seman Real Estate Inc
(7401446-3644

For Sale Reconditioned wash
dryers and refrigerator•
Thompsons Appl ance 3401
Aw""' 13041e75-1388

Fou Room House 52 01 ve
Street phone (7401448-3945
P tat Program Ran ers Needed
304 736 7295

vacation Property My t 11 Beach
Condo 3 Bed oom 3 Bath
S eeps 8 Good Weeks Ava lablo
13041675-7783

420 Mobile Homes

WokFomHome$1200 ~ 1 500
mo PT 16000 SBOOO mo PT
W LL TRAIN FREE Aecor~sd
nlo 24 H s 888)791 9496
www succasscyc e com/d eam

Handyman Spoc a In G oat
No ghbo hood Go o~ Cond 1on
$75 000 Make Of1e (304 675
1816
EXTRA MONEY?? Wok I om
home a ound you schedule pa
me tu t me E•ce len Income
800 8 3 5694

New double w de 3 b 2 ba
$998 00 llown on y $295 pt
mon ca now 1..000.691 6n7

for Rent
14x70 two bed oom tolal elect lc
$300 a month pus $150 depos 1
no pets 7«t 742 2714
2 Bedroom AI Elect e T aile
$300 month No 1'811 (740)367
0611

Carpal

HOMES FROM $1,9 30 Mo 1
3BA Rapos Fo ree osu es teo
41}t. down Fo l sf ngs Payment
Deta s I 600 719 300 xl 85

Spring Sslo AI Skaggs Appllanc
eo Washer U5 0 yar S95 gao
Range $95 Relrlgerator $150
Washe 1 Oryar Sot S275 Chell
Freezer $175 A App ance
Guaranteed Skaggs Appliances
76 Vlnt Street (740)446-7398

New Mob le Home Fo Renl Nice
Clean 3 Bed ooms n Count 1J
With N ce Lawn And Outbu ld ng

Used
Window
Unit
fllr
Condit one~~ 90 Day Guaranlte
(740)8t6-7oa! (7401888 0047

(740125~574

520

Lola &amp; Acreage

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don Have land? We Do Hu ry
On ~ 10 Lo s left 304 738 7295

Sporting
Goods

Remington B70 20 Gauge I &amp;
Gouge 12 Gauge 12 Gauge
t-tag Savage 22~ with scope
(7401286-'8522

530

Antiquo

120 Pocket Watchos In Good
Condition And Wooden Books
For Sale Phone (7401446-1815
422 2nd Avenue Gall poHs

BEAUTIFUL fiPARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
D vo lrom $297 to $383 wa k to
shOp &amp; moves Call 740 441
2&amp;6B Equal Hous ng Opportunlly

-l£

(740~5

HOllE OWNEIII

Huge Inventory D &amp;count Prices
On Vinyl Skin ng Doors Wind
ows Ancho 1 Watar Heaters
Plumb ng &amp; Electrical Parts Fur
nacts &amp; Heal Pumps Bennttll
Moblla Home Supply 740 446
9418 wwworvb com'bennen
Mulch For Salt $10 00 A Pick Up
Load You Load $10 00 Sl Load
$15 00 (740)448 3566
NEW fiND UIEO STEEL Slool
Stoma Pipe Rebar FOf &lt;:onere a
Angle Channel F at Bar Stttl
Grat no For Ora ns Driveways &amp;
Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Meta 1
(740)446-7300
NEW BRAND NfiME COM PUT
ERS Alm()at everyone approved
w th SO downl Low monthly pay
mantsf 1 800-6t7 3476 ext 330

RESipEHTifll HOME OWNERS
Tappan HI Efllclency 90% Gao
Furnaces 0 I Furnaces 12 Seer
ljeat Pump &amp; A r Condition ng
Systems Free 8 Year. War anty
Bonnous Healing &amp; Coo ng I
800 872 5967 www oNI&gt;.eomlban

:.:ntn:::.~-:--~--:---:---1
Sawm H S3 89S New Super lum
bermato 2000 largo capac los
more opt ons Manufacturer of
aawmflls edge s and sklddo 1
NORWOOD INOUSTR ES 252
Sonw 1 Drive Buffalo, NV 14225
FREE Into mallon 1 BOO 57B
1363 EXT 200-U
SOCIAl SECURITY DISABIL TV
Cia m Denied? We Specla ze In
Appoall and tloarlngs FREE
CONSULTATION Bonelli Team
Services Inc To free 1 BBB
836-4052
Tanning Bed
Home Un 1
Repassed Take Over Paymen s
1 1100-248-9632
Water! no Sptelal 314 200 PSI
121 95 Per !00 1 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100 A I Brau Com
praulon Fln1rogs In Stodl
RON EVfiNI ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 80().537 952B

550

Building
Supplies

AKC Chocolate Lab Pupp es 6
Weeks Old Va y Friendly
(74013e7 0659 Or (740)339

0859

Delong s Groom ShOp Groom ng
A Dog Broads 740-441 1502

J1 000 lACK Ton A r Condition
or 2 Ton Col 1 Line Stl In
stalled $2 295 $1 000 Back
$129! Ntt Pr ct Froa Eallmalas
Ca I For Ouotoa On Other S za1
II You Don I Coli Ul Wt
Both LOlli
Hamel Our
Speciality ! 740 446 8308 800
291-00118

Mobi..

11 Flawh de Stock/ Horn tra er
(Bumper Pull) S1800 (3041773
5168 or (3041576-2147
2 Seta Of Horu Harntss Good
Condition (3041675-3284

Complete

Aa~try

540 Mlecellaneoua
No Crodtt OKI HUO VA
FHfl Cal lor lsllnga
t.80Q.5011777 Exlll818

Furnl1hed
·~~~i[~~~~Dt:p:O:I~It:R~o
l

Pete for Sale

Buy or It Rver ne Antiques
1124 Eut Main on SR t24 E Pomeroy 740 982 2528 o 741l-992
1539 Auas Moo e owner

SO DOWN HOMES

For rant one bedroom fu n ahtd
apl Jmtnt In M ddleport cal 740
992 5231

560

Rabb ts (New
Ze~lands S ~a tons) Hutch
u Feed Contalne B eed ng
Boxes
T anapo 1 Cages
(7401256-6647

Merchandlae

Norwetgn Ekhound Puppies Bo n
February 14 S75 oo Each 4
Min South of Rio G ande oH 325
on Wolf Run 1st hOuse on righ
Toy Pood -.a 5 Females 7
wttka 2 years 3 yoors a Me"
5 Wetks 4 5 months 2 5 yeara
(740~398

580

Frulla I
Vegetable•

ATTENTION Finoneial
Plannera AccountantaJtn•u ance
flgtnts/Home lmprovomenl Con
tracto 1 Mo tgago compeny has
developed procedure ro swbmlt
Hng loon• II you have the c ltnll
we w npay you 11 !he lOin ofllcerl
Iowa Rtp earned $3B4K/FIFIST
VRI 1-80().2!5-2200

N ce &amp; 2 bed oom apartments
equ pped k tchens A C ulllllas
Inc udtd ererence and depoalt
equ ed Phona 740 992 6981 al
ter 5pm

AUTOIFAOII -00

Pollet lmpololdll Atpo1l
ToyoiM. CheVY'&amp; .JHpe
PIMit Calf for l~U~I.
1 fl00.4ei-OIIOO Ext. CN1Z
Col)lputtra WE FINANCE DELL
COMPUTER&amp; Eve~ "th 1111
than ptrltcl c tdltl 1 BOO 417
9018 Code ACtS""" omeaotu
on com

G ac ous v ng and 2 bed oom
spa mente at VI age Manor and
A ve s de Apa tmen a; n Middle
po 1 From S278 S34B Cal 740
992 508-1 Equal Hous ng Oppo
tun es
New Haven one
n shed apa men
and d ye no ptts
e ences 741l-992 0

EZPI!TR~ COM Save up to 50%
on filL pot mtdlcetlona and oup
p lea Inc udlng Hta tgo d Inter
oep10r Frontlfnt more I FREE
SHIPP NG Ordtr on nt www Ez
ptiRx com 1 tO().Mol 1ola7

bed oom lu
has wuhe
deposit &amp; ref
65 j

Fo salt a umlnum l'laadacl'le
ack 3 door cabinet 18 deep
$1400 304-773-ee40

I

4-H find FFfl Clull l'igl. ....,_
lng Hogo For S4le Hay &amp;quart
And Aowld
(1.otM' rc33

a..

4 H Fetdt CaM Charolllo -

........., saso (30415Y52

50
"1l&gt;ungAngus
- Croat""'30- Char
30
Angus
lafs C 011 BrHd Cows 21 With
Calvn Sol~ flo Group Only
$1 ooo Each Col Afttr 7pm
(74012M-11113

HOIISEBHOEING
Certified
Earrler Fred Ouaon (740)258
1330
Shet and 1tud pony registered
$500 Jock donkay S400 2 112
yur old Bue~akln gelding
St 000 7-2786

840

Hay l Grain

Hay Fo Sat 45 Rounct Blltl
And 250 Square Batts Call
(7401•41 0115 or (7•01448
7843AIIer600pm
Someone with machine 'I 10 har
veil hey on slltlrts Squ,ara Boltl
"' Hay FOf Salt

Hay &amp; Bright Wlrt Tit Straw 'IW"
Round Delivery a Vo ume Die
count Available Heritage Farm
(3041875-5724

Ford 2000 Tractor With Fin sh ng
-S48001740~t5
Ford 2600 01011 -n actor 3000
0 tit •BOO Olese 1952 UN
(740)216-8522
T ootor T ro &amp; Rim
Good
Cond 1on Slzt 116x24 Cal
(304)77G-540e

620 Wantad to Buy
18501 &amp; 1960 e 45 33 RPM
Raeordl OJ Sto e Stock
Colltcl on1 (937)675-2930 A or
800pm

Bock Bumpt &amp; Brscos For \950
Oodgt 1 2 Ton P ek up (30•I8B5
3562
Wonltd Good I.Jaed Mobllt
Home In Tho so a 2 Or 3
Bedroom (740)448 0175 Or
13041875-5965

.....

unpoSSible to d1 sgmse but
also the eyes of a seasoned
rac mg veteran Edd1e sa1d Jon
has star quality
They \C got somethmg
you and I don t have or
they ve got somethmg russ
mg that you and I have he
sa1d of r:~cers I m not sure
wh1ch There s a gene m there
somewhere They re spectal
They re different
And Jon Edd1e md 1sn t
JUSt taking advantage of an
opportumty he never had but
gettmg a chance to develop
skills he never had etther
At 19 I know I dtdn t have
sense enough to dnve a race
car he satd I don t think I
had what It took that thing
I m talking about
On Monda~ Jack Roush
announced that he plans to
field as many as four truck
senes teams next year and
that one of them will have
Jon Woods name on the s1de
The b1gnme It seems could
be arnvmg any llme now

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

....... NASCAR
flam Pip Bl
. . II Fl

trMI

the first three by Glen
the Wood Brothers are
NASCAR royalty rankmg
second only to the Pettys m
success The team broke a VIC
tory drought extending to
1993 when Elliott Sadler won
10 Bmtol Tenn on March

(740~7843

Tobacco Plants Order Now To
Guarantee Elrty Spring Plantings
lncreaae Allotments Mean Extra
Plants Thank You For Your Bulin••• Call Danny Dewhurst
leave Meuage (30.)895 3740
Or (3041895-3789

25
And now Jon s develop
ment only adds to the recent
excitement for his father
Jon started his racmg'career
111. go-karts at age 12 and
worked hiS way up to the
Alhson Legacy Senes by
1998 the NASCAR Late
Model Stock divmon m 1999
and the Hooters ProCup
Ser1es m 2001 But he dtd
most of his racmg wh1le his
father was off working With
hiS Wmston Cup team
"He s m my world now Its
di~nt Eddie sa1d
And now Jon 1s hopmg- to

TRANSPOH!ATION

71 0 Autoa for Sale
SO DOWN CARS! POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS 1291
MO S 019 9% FOR LISTINGS
CAll 1 800 45t 0050 ext C
9612

c

l
8

1912 Chevalle completely re
stored to show car condition
57 000 actua miles 350 autOiall
red w black v ny top S15 000
740-949 2248

s

1 986 Mercury Grand Marquis

saoo OBO ca 1740-992.Q487

-5

1987 Honda Accord LX A r Con
d uon Power W ndows 73K New
Tires
AMIFM
Caaseue
(7401446-0498

I
f
I
f

1968 GMC SlE Fu I Slza loolltd
$2795 1993 Ca&gt;ale $2195 94
Gtand Am V 6 Auto S3895
196B Lumina $4995 COOK MD
TOllS, (7401446-0!03
1991 Grand Prix STE Good Mo
tor &amp; Transmlss on 1989 Chevy
Cos oa Runs Good Body Both
cars $500 (740138H289
1994 Goo Metro 2 Door 56 800
M es Excellent Cond lion S2200
(304)875-6746 or (304)88:! 2771

1997 OO&lt;Ige Neon 41 ooom fllr
Spoiler Fo LJghts Vent V sore
Forul G eon S5500 080
(740)256-+187
1997 Loaded Mercury Grand
Ma qua loCally 0wntc1 By Elderly
Man ve y C eon 63 200 Mlltl
(740)441!-40te

MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS
Subscnbe today • 992 2156

720 Truck• for Sale

750 Boats &amp; Motors

2000 S 10 Exlromt 4700 Miles
garage ktpt Black with 1 nted
w ndows 4 Cyl ndor 5 Spttd AI
T II Cruse CO K&amp;N S12 BOO
pa Uti trade o btll olltr
I*IG75-2714 (3041875-7016

and 1i ailer E•ce en Cond ton

89 Chevro et truck short wheel

bast 3 body II 33 Ires VB
motor 4 liP trans runs good
asking 13800 7~2•7 7100

2000 Ponlao G and A"L GT au
tomat c ram al V 6 ltd power
sun oof completely loaded
18 500 m las asking $17 500 no
got able 740 992 40 7

Red 2000 Mode
Rollover
E•t,nded Cab Ranger KLT
t 1 000 Milts CD P aye 4 Cyl n
lltr 5 Speed Salvegt T I e
(740)H6 4768
Or
$3300
(740)388 62!58

43

730 Vane I 4-WDI

86 lull s zt Blazer g ay new 350
4 bah ma n mo or AJC Detco mo
to 4 sp t ans runs good
sounlls good now rtl 3 I Sldt
winder 1 rea $2 000 740 247
7100

1887 Bronco II XLT 4WO $pori
Uti ty 2 Ooo S vor With B uo
St pes '3495 Looks And Runs
GOOd 5 Spetd 86 300 Milos
A C Tinted W ndOWI AM FM
Cantlie Tow Pockaga Rool
Rack
tbarl Sp uh Guards 1
Runn ng Boarlll (3041875 5864

87 Olds Cutlass c ara Broughm
4 Door Auto Till Cruise A C
Elecllc W ndows New Tlrta
ve y c ean Ins de &amp; Out
!20000 Miles S1500 OBO
(740)44t 1083

1887 Ford F 250 4x4 Rtbulh 68
Llle Bttn Pain oil N~e Whtt a
And Tirol N ct Truck $7800
(7.01388-9675

89 Chavy Corssno V 6 2 8 on
g no fluto 4 Ooo All tltctr c
1506 milts
Runs llood
1*)695-3739

DODGE
(740)24s-sen

ftAM

$2200

93 oo~ge ShadOw v 6 5 Spel&lt;l
Air Till Cru ae 100 000 M es
St800 oeo 174012!18-1233

99 \lranll Am OT whllt lody drl
vtn one owne 8 000 m u
loaded excellent cond lion Soli
fa pa1QH Call 740-H2 23f58 ohor
4 OOpm wttkdays anytlmt Wtt
kenlll Serious nqu 111 on~
CARS S20 MONTH! POLICE IM
POUNDS 6 REPOS HONDNS
CHEW 2• MOS 0188% FOR
LISTINGS CAll 1 !110 e•t
8777 EXT C 9B 4
CARS FROM $500 Pollet lm
pounds &amp; tax ulzur11 'Hondas
Chavys Fo do &amp; more For 111
inga Cal Now 1800;7193001
.... A0\0
VANCE I fiUTO IIIllS
1994 Chevy Lumfnl auto or
wh .. elton slltl p co S3 •85
1994 Dodge Dalcoll v-e Magnum 2 whet drive lliiO air red
nlct truck S3 280 740-8112 0002

for Sale
997 SeaOoo GTI 3 Sea Jel Sk
Read1 lor" SUmme *1682 3780
97 Fisher 18 P o Avenger Wal
!eye baas boat w40 hp Ma ne
Mo o Guida 1o ng moto a so
new 8 hp Mereu y Four St oke
Kicker and canopy S8 500 740
949 2246

780

Auto Parts &amp;

ACCIIIDrles
Budget Priced Trentmlulons
A Types Access To Ove
10 000 T ansm ss ons T anate
Caseo 740 2•5 5677 Col 339
31&amp;5

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

790

1984 Ford F 150 4x4 Wh te
W th Towing Package Exctlant
Cond tlon (30•1&amp;75 472t Dlyl
(304)675-424g Evenlngt
t 89&amp; Chevy Glod ator very good
condition loldtd $7500 firm
740 1192 3875
191&amp; Chevy HI Top von td &amp;
g 1y ou11 dt grey laathor nstllt
color TV CD cauene al'l'llfm a
altetrlc bed vocuum loll ol moo11
lei !59 000 M .. a»:CI tnt COI'l

dfl on SII 300 74().1192 2478

t 999 Jttp Chtro~tt Spor 2
DOOr 4x4 3&amp; 500 m os $!4&amp;00
17401379-2874 llttr !5pm

Motorcycle•

t888 Hl~ty Oovlson 1200 Cua
tom 8700 Mllto Loll of Chromo
Prict S!O 000 (740)3711-271!41
1898 Horlty W de Glldt 88CIO
Lam Atd Peorl 21100 Mill&amp; Ex
Ill $t7 500 (740)448-8124

ATV 8&amp; Vamoha 350 Big har
17.0)448-8!583
KIWIItkl KOX 80 2 St.... Rills
l)ood 1500 17.0)448-8124

7110 8oat1 • Motors
for Sale
16 Foot Aluminum Ball Boat
40HP Mereu y Tro ng Moto
Tro er I A Ex as $2795
17.0)3711-27041
11195 1611 Ma auda Bk Boa In
gt eat condll on w th 1 , 20 Horae
M1 c Cru It Engine Sk •• Lila
Jocketl ond other txtru can
(3041e75 8844 or (3041875-345!

SE RVI CES
'

810

810

Home
Improvements

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
unco,nd t ona fet me gus an ee
Local e a ences fu n shed Es
tablohell 1975 Ca 24 H s 17401
448 0870 1 ooo 2B7 0576 Rog
e sWae proo ng
A types of mason y b ck
&amp; s one F ee estimates
773 9550

l v ngston s Basemen Wale
P oot ng a basement epa s
done
ee est mates re ne
gua antee 4y s on job eJCper
once 3041B95 38B7

C&amp;C Gi!ne al Home Man
tenence Pa ntlng ~yl s d ng
ca pantry coos w ndows be hs
mob e home epa and mo e Fo
r ee est rna e cal Che 740 992
8323

E&amp;S Lawn Se v ce Des gn m
plementat on And Se v ce Ava
abeFo Sp ngCeanUp Fe t z
ng And Pant ng Fee Est rna es
Sa Is ac on Gus anteed G eg
M hoan (304)675 462B

z

740
98 Honda Civic Htlchbaek A r
""0.
$8900 (7&lt;10)446-9355

The Dally Sentmel

s

1999 Pont ac Grand Prix GT
Wh e 4 Door 24 000 Mleo Well
Taken Ca e 01 Cal (740)•••
0216 Or (7401591 7110

85 Buick Century Good Condl
toon 17401256-183

'lake the family banner from
the shop m Stuart Va to the
truck senes on a more regular
bam w1th Wmston Cup
dreams down the road
I thmk he s actually bvmg
hu dream through me Jon
sa1d of hts father He never
got to do 1t and by me dn
vmg tt s almost hke htm
domg 1t because he gets to be
a part of It
Eddie does hts best to put a
busmessman s face on the s1t
nation but the gleam m hts
eye and h1s excitement tell a
clifferent tale enurely
The truck debut was made
poss1ble by Ballew who made
the truck available and by
sponsor Mark Warner a m1l
lionaue busmessman from
northern Vugmu and the
DemocratiC canclidate for
governor m 2001
Wtth any luck and a spon
sor the Woods hope to make
It a regul~r thmg or at least
take a few more shots at the
senes this season
Wtth the pnde of a father

D

1994 Gao T acko Very Good
eond 1on B7 ooo m e1 Asking
$4500 Negollable Cal aher Spm
(740)446-8314

U

For sa a or t ada MF 1315 gas
tractor w h 2600 hourt exctlent
cond ton all !'ltw tlrea 5 1 2
l'ltavy duty bush hog rotary cu
ter good condition S400 3 pi
h lch d IC $250 741l-1192 7401

same lap nme but the top
p0$1tJOn was gJYen by rule to
Fr.mm as he had qualified
first Taking heat race wms
wei\' Franc1s l'nnk Moran
and Boggs Grabbmg the
Masterbllt R ace Can B
Mam events were Samm1e
Halcomb and Aaron Scott
while Moran copped the Isley
Racmg Cams dash
A wtcked crash dunng the
second heat race saw Barry
Bragdon destJ6Y hU car m a
wtld senes of flips off of turn
two Bragdon lost control m
turn two sendmg hU car off of
the banking to the outstde of
the track Bragdons car began
a nasty senes of SJde rolls and
end for end flips before com
mg to a stop Bragdon
emerged from the wreckage a
btt dazed and shaken but wal
othem 1se unmJnred

Tobacco Plants For Salo Coli

9442

FAflM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

K·C

,

Keepmg to the IOWSJde" of
the race track Moran was able
to keep hu car out m front as
' the laps wound down Wtth
two to go FranciS qwcldy
three With the race back changed bu line droppmg to
underway
Moran
agzm the m1ddle groove wbde
showed his muscle pulling Balzano went low FranciS
away fiom the leaden
pulled up to the back bumper
At the lap 35 mark the run
of Moran as they raced mto
down was Moran Francts tum three while Boggs shot
RJ Conley and Balzano underneath of Conley to grab
trailed by Aukland Boggs fourth Moran kept hU lme
Cln,.
M11ler Drake and Eckert on the final lap beanng FranDoug Dodd lost the handle m CIS off of turn four for the
turn two on lap 41 to brmg wtn
out the races last cannon
The $34 000 event drew 46
Moran did not have the dnven to the high banked
Ill L Fill,
advantag.: of lapped traffic 3/ 8ths mile ttack wtth Steve
seperanng him fiom his pur
FranCIS semng a new one lap
suers fur the restart Franm tl;'lck record dunng Carrera
worked the extreme outside Sbocks
Challenge
the
groove while Balzano used Clock nme tnals wtth hiS
the nuddle groove to chase qu1ck lap of 13 707 seconds
Steve Shaver also recorded the
down Moran

650 Seed I Fertilizer

HOMEGROWN AIPfiAAGUS
Cha •• 1 McKean Farm Cen
tonery Rood Gan pol 1. (740)448-

610 Farm Equipment

Spec a Of The Wsek Schull
2Bx4B Coun y K lehltn 2x8
Wafs L,uxury Ba h Delu•e c•r
pel Reduced To $34!995 F ench
c y Homes Inc Ga po s Oh o
(740)446 9340 Or 800 231
4467

350

Maytag Drye S100 Kenmore
Fretztr $225 AKC Bolton Ttrrl
or Puppies ROI!tl May 11~ $250

White Kenmore E ectr c Stove
$75 2 Almond GE Washers
$70 00 Each 2 Almond D yera
sao Each (740~9066

Apartments
for Rent

17401441..... 011 (71.111

Kitchen Appnances Retr gerator
and 110,.. K tchen tablt ond 4
Chllrl Ond oll\tr m IC (*1875.u33 Cal Bell 11n 5-lpm

Prom dress s za 7 8 light blue
spaghatt straps f Ued floor
length one s de match no sash
eltgant $75 OBO 740-1192-8879

Main S-t F..riture
l*le751422
515ManStroet PontPitlllnt

For Ronl 0 land Coni act 2
Bod oom Natura Gao Heal NC
On Ron ed lo n Gallpo s 1740)
446-1409

JET
fiER!mON MOTORS
Repolrwd I Rebultt In Stodl
CAl Ron Evans I 1100-537 91131

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waaher-a dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs App ancoa 7&amp;
Vlno St oet ca 740 44e 7398
1888-8 B.012B

lltl2 Clark
Chlpo Rd Porte OH F eo Estimates Elsy Finenclng or 90 days
same as cash VIsa Uas ercard
Aecopled (740)446 7444 or 1
877 B30-9162

Fu n shod 2 &amp; 3 Room flpa 1
Clean No PelS No $r110k

Fa m House Beaut fu y Ramo
de ad 2963 Squa e Foot 7 Ac
es Pond n g ound Poq Save al
Sa ns Ga age F u t Trees C ose
To Holzo
$2 s ooo (740)4484230

Htrlla It D slribUtor
Call For ProdUCt Or Opporlunlty
(7.0)+41 1882

Nice

Mollo~an

balh set up n The Coun y Mo
b e Home Pa k eady to move n
$995 down $199 98 per rnonlh
740 992 2167

Schu 1 0 spay sale Free Kawa
sak 4 Whee e W h The Pu
chase Of Sa acted Schult D spay
Hames F ench C ty ~omea
Ga pols Oh o (740)446-9340 0
I 800 231 4467

FORECLOSEp GOV T HOMES!
SO OH LOW DOWNI TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT FOR LISTING! C-'ILL 1
800 501 777e•l 9613

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
dono&amp; ean$45 oS601o 2o 3
hou s week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592 6651

2

•

ers

Maltress/ Box Springs Double
Sze Bed LkO N"" Bed Doublt
Size Dresser Cheat Walnut
Wood Cal (7401448 1272 Or
(740)446-6040

BOO

Schull 32x60 3 Bedroom W h
Pa en s Retreat Room 2•6
Wa s The mo W ndows Flee
Kawasak 4 Whet e w li Tti s
House F ench C ty Hames Gal
polo Oh o 7401446 9340 Or 1
BOO 23 4467

ATTENTION NTERNATIONAL
COMPANY NEEDS HELP
wleustomt + sa li ce manage
mont
$500 QO-S 1500 00 PT
$2000 00 $6000 FT
Ca 877 734 7515
EVERYONE S DREAM JOB

Home P oducts And
Ful t B uah Ava lable To 0 de
P oduc a AtQues Cata ogs Ca
(304)675 e903

Houaehokl
Goods

Applance•
Recond toned
Waslters Dryers Rongos Aolrl
gratora Up To 90 Days Guor
anlttdt We StU Now Mayt.g flp
pi aneos French City Maylag
740-44&amp;-n95

3 BR 1 Bath AI applanees In
eluded In n ce neighborhood
(34!41675-3290 late Mnlng

New 14 t w de $499 down on y

2 Bedroom Hause On G ear
Road Shown By Appo ntmont
bnly (304 675 3696

ARE YOU CONNECTED? NTER
NET USERS WANTED $25 $7!
HR PTIFT www BeBouF ee com

Stan ty

For Lease

Btlutllul1800 Sq Fttl 2nd Floor Apartrntnl In Hlator c
0 atrlcl Ideal For Profess anal
Coupla A 1 MOdern Amenllles 3
Bedrooms~Spaclolll living 1 112
Baths trear Otck HVAC $6001
mo Plus Ullllliol Steurlty And
Kay lloposlt No Pell RoltrtnCtl
Required (740l••e 4•25 Or
(7401446 3936

MUST SElL 3 Bod oom 2 Bath
Home No Old Cant act To As
sume Just A Rei abe Pa 1J To
Make MOnthly Psyment 1 888
9~8 9896

New 2001 Fleetwood 3 b

FREE Grant Monoy &amp; Govern
mont tundingl ECltiCatlOn -inO
Purchase or Repairs Bus n111
Sllrtup or E11911nllon 1-ntora,
Wrtttra Mllll r. Many Mort IN
FORMATION 1 800 242 0313

1~1

Lo model clearance save up to
$8 625 w tl'l any home check us
au we a de a ng Coles Mob le
Homes US so East A lltns Oh

$ 99 pe mon call now
691 6777

FREE CfiSHI StO 000 or mot
IIOI'Ib't In 511 _ . Of ltU Nell
tr
'"""" _....,
Frtt
In
formation
1·800·301
1147
WWW\IiliOIIq2000 com

Grullb 1 Plano- Tunong &amp; Rtpolr1
Plallltonl7 Tuntd? CAl T11&lt;1
Plano Dr 740 ue 4~

lrom Flolnl
Call
(3041&amp;75 1122 (304)175 4144
Atttr 5prn
onl~

1 and 2 bedroom apartmenls fur
n shed and unlurn shed security
llaposn aqu od no pots 740
992 2218

REAL ES TATE

ABSOLUTE GOLD M NE
SO Down
Candy VENDING oute
Nets $4B 000+ FREE lnlo To I
Free
I 677 494 8695 24h s

Sa es Pe son
Fu T me Bene
f IS Re a I Exper ence P ele ed
App y A L les y a Fu n u s No
Phone Cals App~ n Po son
856 Th d AYenua Ga po s
Ohio

FACTORY OVERSTOCK New
Double Wide On y S1 590 00
Down And $316 00 Per Month
Fee De"'o y
And
Seup
1 8118 928 3426

E:::::-::-:-:-:7:-:-::-::-:-:-:-;-

-~-eomcom

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Hoi day IN! Kanauga WI
Sel G ave Monuments And
Vallt (740)448-4762

DIVORCE Causes Custom o
de ed S nglew de Home To Be
come Ava lab e Save $$ Call 1
888 565 0187

c - (740)2SI-

O&gt;d40QII()(

Now &amp; Uaed Furniture
New 2 P ece Ltv ngroom Suites
$399 Buy Se I Trade

Needed Exper enced C ew to
Setting end F n shlng Sectional
Hous ng Send Prtelng nlorma on
and expe lance to Southe n
Homes PO Box 828 Jackson
OH45840

Ia lhcom

0 lve s needed passenge vans
part I me lui ma cal Fad Ba n
ey 74().594 058B

(2417)

Busin.s
Training

140

Mature baby a ne wanted in My
home Racme two children ages 5
&amp; 9 Some houukttplng and
COOking 740-949-2455

CHRISTIAN
HOME BASED
BUSINESS QUALITY PRO
DUCTS ESTABLISHED COMPA
NY EARN 50% COMMISSION
UP FRONT SEEKING ASSO
CIATES IN YOUR f\REA CALL
NOW FOR SPECIAL OFFER
(800) B39 2508 www legenasof

0 Iva )jot Fom ly? 0 lve Tan
deml Wt ofle an txcelent btnefh
peck•g• &amp; hOme mo't woekenlls
Call today o jo n ou w nnlng ra
g ona lla bed eoml Tandem
tonspo I Cop 800 SOl 9057
wwwandcom

Surroga es Needed lnte ested In

Becom ng A Sur ogare? You
Eggs w• Not Be Ustd II
Interested
Please Call
l216)320-m5

IF THERE S A WAV TO MAKE A
TON OF MONE Y ON THE IN
TERNET WOULD YOU WANT
TO KNOW ABOUT IT? CALL
AND LISTEN
800 22 I 9932

Kriner-

House Fo Sale 2 Beilroom 1
011
S150'Downpayment wAc Etsy Term Cal
lltvillet-100-333-419IO

ptltd fldult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pat o Start $385/Mo No Pots
Lean Plus S.Cur ty Deposit Reo
qu rtd Daya 1•0 441 3411
Evtnlngo 740 31Je0502 740

No Feas/Serv ce Charges
In Need o F nanc al Assistance?
Pleage Ca ll Us ToiH ee B66
613-8881 24h

2678

Class A COL D vo wanted 2
Yea a OTFI Exper enca Ca
(7401388 833 leavt Name &amp;
Number

Situations
Wanted

120

Busin.s
Opportunity

G ve p ano lessons at home Be
glnne s &amp; adulls a so each
chord ng &amp; transposing &amp;
rhylhms 740 992 5403

AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY
Work t om homa with no boas
V s t www dontwor ~berlch net o
Ca 1100-25!1-2998

ATTENTION!
Wo k om home Ma I o de In
te nat
PT $50().$1500 permo
FT $200().$8000 po mo.
W ll'l!ln 1 800-eBS-0242
www -111-athathomo com

r.,.

Oependab e and honest W II do
general house cleaning call
(740)256-1227

S2000-S5000/roo
www e-commblz ne

Appllcat ons lrt being ICCtPIId
to teguarda at LondOn Pool lor
h.e summer aeason 2001 Ma I or
d op off reaumt at ee ks once
S1racuse V llage Box 288 Syra
CUll b'/ May 1 2001

WORK F - HOllE
$500-$1 !500 Mo. Full
""10 VACAllONS
1 800-490-30t9

210

Wttldy!

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
Internet Ullf'S Wantad

fiNYDNE CAN DO ITI $251$711
Hfi.PT/FT Work II ho- 1e8Q().
31'-8481
......, Thlnldlitl)ollan com

Help wanted

Ve r SpaciOUI 2 Bedroom• 2
Floorl CA 1 112 a.t&gt; Fully C.

""' .... Quft
1a51

'011 IALL

a01111 Ill GAI.UA COUIITY

85

In Memory
Ia Memory of
ELSIE G CIRCLE

who departed this life
on Aprllll, 1987
Sadly mlued by
hu1band, Dou1 and
children, Unda, Sue and
Ltirry and lllmllletl
Immortality
t)o not &amp;taad at my fll'll•e
aad weep
I 1111 not there, I do not
llcep
I am a thousand winds
that blow
I am the diamond Klint•
on theiDOW
I am tile 1uallaht on the
ripened araln
I am the aentle autumn
rain

When you awake In the
momln1 1 bu1h
t am the swift uaftlnalna
rush
Of quiet blnll In clrclln1
lllaht
I am the soft sll,.. shine
at nlaht
Do not lllnd at my ara•e
and cry

I am not there I did not

die

110 Help Wanted
Unlveralty of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Crossroads
Program Ia accepting applications for
IJs' Youth Employment Services (YES)
Program Participating youth, ages
18·21 years, will receive $6 15 per
hour for up to 120 hours of paid work
experience at public and/or private
workeltes In Me!Q• County
YES participant• will rtcalvt comprthtntlve
IIISIImant umplaymant raedlncaa training and
tlllatanco to lind luiJ..tlmt permanent employment
aa palf of the overall work uxperltnct program
High achool ttudtnll collage atudanta and our of
work youth cro tncouregld to apply Appllcanta
mull bt Malgl County ratldanta agst 18 21 ycara
and mHt Workforce lnvcatmant Act eligibility
.requirement•
To apply vlalt the University of Rio
Grelide/Croeeroada omcu at 1110 Mill Streit
Middleport Ohio (office upllllra) or cell 1 8DIJ.282
7201 ext 7184 or H2e8420(1192 7004
This WIA ~trvlca Ia funded by the USDOL through
tht Ohio DJFS tnd the Malgt County Department of
Job and Femlty Sarvlc"
Unl,.ralty of Rio Qrondll/
Rio Grandt Community Collage
Equal Opportunity Employer

�.

Pllgl 8 I • The Dilly S1nlinel

----:)

·,,

Tmwaday, April12. 2001

_Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r

ALLEYOOP

•

REA Crossword Puzzle

8IUDOIII

aiiiiiAaOIS, II(.

740-985-3948

II lADE RIVER M. SEIMCE
•All II rlln • 111ce•

7 7 -.

• y~ Walh,Siepo •

-ll.ft ,_U 1 u-.r..~SUS/108
·21111111111'1 ..... r.l $6.15/50

of~- Lot­

-121 ......... "-lllll$5.611/50
SI.GIIIfC... .... IIIII,.t n$4.611/50

InteriOr

FREE ESTIIIATES

740 912-1871

..,., It lit. 7Nollll Pol-~. ONo 457111
(740) 8ll8-e577

740115 3831

2ll11••

l'illl..... _

Oltl II . . . , oltl ....
...... pert~

CUSTOM SCION
l'llllmiiG

........

f,

rt·,~;

H

f-'

Catll Cllu ck

r,1 r j jl1 j /

304 182-2220

I-IOH9H73S

~ ,

I

rl

0

I

()t,

J

~ JltJIJ

Local843-5214
Modicarc Supplement; Ufc Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
RetiJ:emeot,
Emergency Funds; Mongage;

..,,.

•.
·- .

HI'GIIM

l.JtU75-7124 • •.....250-,.,
Rill I tW Cua--a.l New C-..xtion
Sooleo Senla 11111811atlon
St 1 ·.u;,.loa Slooot Metal Ductw01k
· ~~W-It Senice fer
M

,

!(ENSINGTON
wt1IOOWI HEAT
IIIIIROII TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS TilE
SUIIIIEATIIIE HEAT
OUT AND WIITER
lliiE HEAT IN
BLOCKSOUTII.R
OF DAIIMJIHG
UllRAVIOLET RAYS

...! Mtip Counlls

wv 110517,

A&amp;D Alto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck larps, .
' Four wheeler seats,
amvertible &amp; vinyl tops,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc. ·

-

FACTOIIV DIRECT
PRICING

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

Mon-Fri 8:30 - 5:00 ·
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888

1·800-291-5600
• Pomero~!!
1'11!1! II HOM! E111111A1U • 'EIIINCI • _ . •

1·888-521-6916

All Makes 'Ihlel8r ..
Equlpmeol Parts
Facl«y Aulllorbed
c--JRPatu
•
Dalen
1Dtl0 SL Rl. 7 floulll.
~OHofll'm

7.1JJ4UI

rJ1

lfJj .

,.
......
••

740-915-4110

b"

Rooting • Home

llllntenanceGutflrl. Down
• Spout
Frwflllm*
948-1405
581-1011

~

-

• Gnftl SarMI •
1llploll• Jill Dirt

_.Mulcb

a•dcl•• Senlcta

.
Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FR!=E Slide Sharpening.
NfWII equlpm.nt arriving ,.Hy
or a RIAL DEAL on a -lawn trbKIIICI&lt;IOI::W,
lawn mover or weed trimmer. .

•-

. Ojczenasz,
·Haute, Ind .

BARNEY
YO'Rf A LAXY • ·
6000-FER-NOTHIN',
CARD-CHEATIN', ,---.£

..___ _
992--2-97_5___,~.....,.

THAT·· THAR 'S
NOTHlN' WRONG
I" •

II

11!MM Plumbing
Nl COildiiiOilllfl
'Wfl SeiVice AJI'It.fakes"
·
Warner Healing &amp; Cooling, Inc.
Under , _ ownet'Shlp II.Is now

~

, • .._...

•
'

Serving C&amp;lltollleN 11 yura
Genii a Slllrrle Fink. ow-

fiH

•

!li

i~ i
l!]
l~~
, wg~

Tol FI'H 1 888 913-85915
Ripley
3721110

Addlllonti '

._,....,......
..._,.,Q_
AemDdlllftl

·a

• -OIIriJIM

4-:

IIIII'

• VInyl Siding ' - . .
• Petlo and Pon:h J)!cU

Free Estimates

~

• Stulllp ~llldlng

........ Ohio

8U7LDIRIINC.
Public Nolicala Ne~rt!Niptl'l.

Your RJaht 10 Know, Delivered Rl~ to Your Door.

;: :

740·992·7599
{NO SUI!! DAY CAllS)

~:;r:t7d ~~::~r~

St. Rt. 7
lOx l0$40
10x20$60

April 14th, 12:00 noon

1/2 slug 2 shot
All Proceeds to Ron Jones

9053
meet April 12
Dinner at 6:00 Meet at 7:00
Nominations of officers
b_L.,.,.,..,....,...,.,

992-7704

1------Public Notice

· Public Notice

Open
Mon-Frl 9-5:30
Sat9-1

~40)

949-2804

DoubleHun9

'
Replacement

only to 11111e to be for not
angular '"' than ·two·thlrda
Windows
(2/3) the aforaaald
No. appralaacl VIIUI. Caah Welded Frame
~btd •• followa:
In hind on date lot Salh0·101 United
a.gtnnlng at en Iron
Ule.
pin ut on the
Inches
Said Ult II IUbjtcl 10
northwett ocoiner of
S
1
91.00
lnstotled
approval by the
the Marvin, Sr. 'and
Mary Murphy property Recorda
. C01111110n Plt11 Court,'
(Volume 243 Page 315 Bald real tatato waa Mllga County, Ohio..
Mtlga County Datd ' apprelaed at Forty•
Rtlph E. Tru..rl,
15SH2ncl
Recorda) and on tho Three· Thouaand and
· Shlrlfl
Middleport
Melg• County, Ohio
aaatiiMolthaCeriW. 00/100
Dollara
(4) 12, 11, 211
1
992-2772
111d Hattte Blltkam
eatci real

a.

J&amp;L

740-741-3411
FREE ESTIMATES!

·Complete Home
Repair
Remodeling
New Additions
Garages

fREE fSTimiiTES
OH 740-742-2211

1·166-299-4445

wv 31J4.112..28'14

Locally owned and operated by
JACK l UNDA PROVINCI
311583 SUmner Road
Pomeroy, &lt;;lhlo 45769

"SerVing Hundreds ofSatisfied
Customers For Over 22 'H:ars!"

140\.U WOULD 'r'OU LIKE TO
51-IARE M". TUNA SANDWICH 7•

1

.

will cash four tricks in
the suit. · ·
Lead a club to du mmy\ ac~. then finesse
the club jac~ through
East Here, at least one
overtrick &lt;accrues, and
:1 second is available
hy i:ashing all of yo ur
winn~r' and cndp laying West wit h th e

Toll Free

,SPECIIAL fiNANCE DEPJIRTMENI'
Bankruplcy? Credit Problems?

-we can Hetp'tt

• PROVIN
• DIPENDABL£

' Both Lolel
Call Ua Firat Or We

• STEADY

Ask For Mike Hindle

I

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos

·celebrity Qpher cryp~~&gt;g•am• ""' Ct88'*' fton'i ..,,.,• ...,.by I......,
pecpte, past and "'esent. Each 1e1tor in l1e cipher- ! o f -·
TocJays c/119: z equals Y

0 J R

AC

RNM

MN

u ~

VGPP

Y N H.

KHCIJO

J

JRX

-d•

l-L-O..LF3-T.L-1~.....~-o..J·,.

.

I'

fj

1 I I

_ .

UNSCRAMBlE A&amp;OV£ lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
SCJIAM.Lns ANSWIU

Truth - Squaw - Mascot - WATCH my STEP
daydreamer," my sister sighed . "I broke my foot
because I can't be expected to.WATCH my STEP.'
"I'm a

..

• j

hi&lt;l,ov. ;\proll 3, 2001
Ctr jJi i~\tliH g lllli.:n.'M~

to

~ tumhll!

hcruss this person. The
unplanned rnecting will . turn

l.() llt ...

oul qu11c successfully.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
B~ on your toes loday for
so me kind of happening thai
cmrld fu rther your career if

f11cnd us well.

fnnucncc.s thut' II govern you in

tile yc;1t uheud. Send for your
Aslr,o Graph predictions . by
mttlling ~2toAslro-Cl rDp h. c/o
!his ncW1puper, 1'.0 ; Bo• 1758,
Murl'lly II III SuHion, New·
Y&lt;llk, NY 10 156. Bo suro lo
Sl&lt;lle your Zudinc sign.
TAU RUS (Apt11 20-May
·21l) A pcM11 whu is In rhc r&gt;osllll\11 to du s\l wil l wkc o;t)f)·
1lntc1ive ;tt'ps on yotll' hchulf
t&lt;.-o,co;l 'u plnguinjj problem
""''' hdp you uualn u pcrsoual
nhtc•lrvc. II &lt;(mid huppcnoul
11f the hluc.
·
Cil:MINIIMuy 2 1-Junc 20)
y,,u'vt.: hc.t!n dym~ 10
~.: ould Ump 111 your Iup

AL;t\lli .U(.'I

1l HI~I,.'

'Your
'Birthday

wday wh&lt;n you accidentally ·

l ~• ~~ k - ltjr 1-&gt;lfljt~ ~urJ ~~ fncw

·

•

Opi~ te-

ro_t_"·_~~_'_r_ad_"_'.- - e!~.·
=~

____

II
I

o::

diamond, and West .

ARIES (March2 1-April 19)
· Somctlting in1ignilicant you've
given 11 great deal of mtendon.
10 wi ll lo;e its Ul&gt;pcnl today.
You'll rc•placc il with a project
lh,n '&gt;hul y worthy. Get u jump
~~~ l1fe by ·understanding the .

When it cbmes to sellin_g
your car, nothing goes
the distance · like the
ifieds!

•

I

I ,UKE IT BEiTER Wt1EN
TJ.lE'{ CUT THE CRUSTS OFF

n~:w

CLASSIFIEDS

box

•

I. I" I

PEANUTS

rnund yOur attention in lhe
y&lt;ar ahead. Not on ly" could you
'c hange your lifc;lyle because·
of it . hut you ' II develop many

WITH THE

' 11 the
.....,._

35 Actor
.IG I Jli•SCal.

tricks, includin g the I
T R E s c 1:~.'
diamond just won . The
Mynelghborwholovestogosextra trick is easil y'
_. _ .
stp once told me, "You can't beavailable from clubs. ~=~~::::~=~~-::-.., lieve everything you.hear but you
Yet you must make
R A H T H E lsure can-····· it."
sure that East doesn't
Is I 16 I I A ComPlete .... dtucltle qiiOied
get on play; otherwise.
_ _ _ . .
V by lilltn111 1n lhe no1oo1na -.a
he will re!llrn his last
you develop fr-..., NIL.f llelow.

J &amp; L SANITATION

&lt;Sfa:0:'·
140-985-4212
property
(Volume
238 rl:l:ll:J~~~~~~~~=::1
::~~
oo•:~at~~~:~
Wall377.211111 along
........- - - - - .

(Volume 101, Plgl 121
Mtlgt County Dttd tha Carl w. &amp; Hettie
Reoorde) and an Blllkam aaet line to a .
ealllem oorntr of the point In tha ...,t1r of
.toNftltiiiiOntd
Olive Townehlp Road
Murphy property; 288 . (Blake Road)
thanoa North 1 deg. peaalng an Iron pin
fJIO' 38" w..t 412.110 ' 101 tor . reference II
fMt along tha fence lo 343.84 feat; thence
an Iron pin Ill lfl the along the oentar of
t.noa by thla eurvey at Olive Twp. Rd. 2t8
tha northHat oornar 8outli 117 deg. 21' 117"
of .. ld · Murphy Eaat 30.03 feet ;
property and at a thence ·South o deg. I'
aouthern.: corner of II" Eall3711.81 fall to
llld Gorrell prcptrty: an Iron pin Ill by thla
!hence North 811 deg, aurver on lho north
811' 13" Wall Ill 11.20 lint o Marvin, Br. and
1110110 an Iron pin aet Mary Murphy paealng
by IIIIa aurvey on the an Iron pin aat lor
north tlclt of a 24" rattrencall32.011 fall;
maple trtt at the thence tlong · the
northw..t oorMr of Marvin, Sr. and
uld Mutphy property Murphy Murphy north
end at tha aouthwtet !Ina North 88 dtg. 58'
comer ol tha C.R. and 113" Eaat 30.00 leal to
Lorean K. Gorrell the point of beginning.
_ . t v (Volume 215,
Th1
abo v a
Page · 383 Mtlga deaorlptlon waa made
Cou nly
Deed In accordanoe with an
Recorda), jlllltlng 2" actual
1 urvey
Iron plpta Itt by IIIIa conducted by Eugene
eurvey II 154.55 feet Triplett RS 8788 on
and 308.10 f~tt; 10/111/81 , aearrnga 111
thanca South 0 deg. 8' 11 aumed and are

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Llle
• 1

PAWQ
CEAO
OAP..JT . ' bid of the fourth
uit in this type of aucVJHX . BGGKLGH
LGRHZ
til'ln
is artificial ,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Oreal eoltors do not discover nor
promising no length
.. pro&lt;luce great authors; great authors create ano produce great
in the suit It just tells
publishers.• - : John Farrar
·
'
partner tbat you have
no beuer bid to make,
that you have at least
game-go ing values,
and that you would
like partner to make a
Roarlange lenoro of "'•
further descriptive bid.
four lcromblod
beHere, with diamond low to form four olmplo words.
stoppers, South continues with two noCA p p Ay
2
tn1inp, and North raises to three.
· -

ElLEN'

~~
=~n~ C:~:V ~ ..::::::,
. , and/or Miry bounded
and

Murphy property
(Volume 243, Pege
315, Melga Counly
Dud
Recorda)
bounded
and
dtacrlbtd aa followa:
a.gtnnlng 111 tenet
-with an Iron pin
Ml btalde II by thla
IUIVIY, eald lance
. = n C:,:~~~..!

•ll&lt;plkemnt

1

trudl

21 ~.:.'r a
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HARTWELL
STORAGE.

Wla.clowo•Ro.
.Addldonl • Roollq
(OIIMfi(JAJ.IIIIill!ltiiiiiUl
FREE ESTIMATES

iN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
GEORGE P. MURPHY,
ETAL
Plllnllffa ·

18" Eoat 412.44 feet
along Murphy'l woat
llna and tha eaol 111111
of lhe Cart W. and
Hattla
Blllkam
property (Volume 238,
VI
Page 083 Me
JAMES·R. TAYLOR, · County o..d Reoonloo)l
ET AL .
to an Iron pin aot !Jy
.PefiRdanta
· thla aurvey; thence
CASE NO. DO-CV-o57 lalllllng Blllkam'a and
U:QAL NOTICE
Murphy'a line and
SHERIFF'S BALl OF paning through
REAL ESTATE
Murphy'a properly
AI Shariff of Melga South 811 deg. 58' 03"
County, Ohio, I hereby Eaat 824.71 feltiD the
oller lor Hie at 10:00 point of beginning,
A.M., on WtdneadiiY, paaalng 2" Iron plpee
MIY 30, 2001, A.D., on ett by thla eurvey 111
~ front attpa of the 303.48 lett and 524.71
Melga
County IMt, contelnlng 5.884
C:OurthouM, Pomeroy, acrea. Subject to ell
Ohio, the following teget aaNmento,
dMcrlbtd raal . - . :
together with the
Tha tddreaa of Hid following thirty loot
real . - . Ia 110105 TR wide rtght of way
1038, Coolvl,lo, Ohio. being a part of real
Beld· reel eatate Ia oetatt altuate In Olive
more fully daaorlbtd Townahlp, Malga
•lollowa:
County, State of Ohio
Tha following raal In Section 38,
ee\ate altuated In Townehlp 4, Range 11
OIMTownahlp, Melge of the Ohio Company
County, Billie of Ohio PurchaN, and being a
In Section 30, pol'llon of~ C.R. and
. rown-"'p 4, Rena• 11 L:ortan K. Gorrell
Of the Ohio Comjlllny ~roptrty (Volume 215,

. New Ho- • Vhlyl
Skllna• New Ganps

4U'apaacl

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• lueket Truc:k

BISSELL

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soo n accepted and
used fourth-suit forc-

Top • Rllllo¥al • Trim

!192-6215

2 Pill og
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"that pitiful cmtch."

Tr- Service .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

clwlat

11Pal1 ..
LA.
221t ' ' a

1 Twlypa

24 Tollogglo1
25 flylnv

hand. Partner' opens ·
one cl~b. you respond '
one heart, and partner
rebids "one spade.
Wh!lt would you do
now?
· · You have the values
for game, but which
game should you be
btdding?
You · don''t know.
Yet there is an assis,
tant a'vai !able. One of
the most valuable -but misused and misonden.tood -- bidding
tools is fourth-suit
forcing. It was invented many years 'lrgo by
Norman Squire, a
.Londoner who died jn
1991. It was prompt ly
called by the British
· expert Terence Ree .~e

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· he think~ the name

992-3470 - . .. ., . .

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Pomeroy

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'you'rt: swift enough to take
advanlagc of it . It'll be an

unusual dcve ldpmcnt.
LEO (J~Iy 23-Aug. 22) An
ussociution you make today has
L'X~cflc nl C han,;~S

ur

develop ~

tn~. into u full "'""'" friend ship . It is li~dy ' tu be !tooth
durable and advantageous tor
both of you.
·
VI ROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22)
You could suddenly ael thrust
into a si!Uation today 1hu1 hus
been . iniliutcd by another. It
will be a positive urrunacmcnt
thut could hove finunclul potcn·
tial.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c t. 23)
Through u &amp;roup ga'thcring
loduy, !here's u s1ron11 chance
you could meet someone who
will in1roduce you to on entire·
Jy new eire!• of friends who
will hove much to offer.
SCO RPI O (Oct. 24·Nov.
..22) Alt hough, as ulwnys, com-

.

I

pensation will be commensurate to perfortnllnce,. you'll be
up to lhe challenge today. A
bright, creative idea will fallen
your paycheck.
SAGITIARIU!l (Nov. 23·
De&lt;:. 21) You're on the Vlifie of
some exciting new changes
involvina your socialuclivilics
that will result in incrcusing •
your popularity, II could ull
begin today.
CAPRICORN !Dec, 22-Jan.
19) The uspcct••toduy will be
doing ull they cun 10 h~lp
improve ·your finunciul lot in
. life. Thl• could lnclud~ u 1ur·
prise 11Ift ~ou ' ll receive or un
unexpectea rul1e.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-l'eb.
19) An unproductive, unn!ull•·
lie dream you ' ve ~luna 10
could be on Its lalllle111 1oday.
Finally, it'll be replac:od by productive, posillve thouahtlthat
·cun curry ynu fur.
PISCES ll'cb. 2().March 20)
Cunlfully unuly~e your economic picture today, :bct:auiC
by dolna 10 you could unexpectedly discover a new way to
generate Income )IOU failed.to
recognize ~lcvious1y.
•

I
I

\ t

�.
Pw

uow• W11tp llfl. Ohio

Friday

Southern tops Eastern inJVC.baseball, B1

NBA
•

I

•
\

Plcers.in.

'

........ Nawapspw
0

BY litE •ssocwtD PRESS
The defelidiug Eastern
Conference champion lodiana Pacers barely made the
playoft' cut. The 16-time NBA
champion Boston Celtics
mWed the poKSeUOn for the
sixth stl)light year.
lndianll, which reached the
NBA Finals last seuon, outdueled Boston-in the r.ace for
.1.
Ia ·
me 6oal P yoff spot in the
conference Wednesday night.
The Pacers' 100-93 victory
over the New York Knich,
coupled with the Celtics' 10297 loss · to the Miami Hear,
propelled Indiana into the
Postseason
.. , . ·
_
. .
Its very rewuding seemg
t h e h ard worJc: t h ese guys put
•
· •• p c
h 1· h
1
~ho 11 ' ad e~I ~oac _fyisla
oi03S ~ . ts gran ng
and saosfying seemg a team
i.. his
Ii""
t
progress, stay toge th er
and develop as a team."
Boston, which has not made
the playoffS smce 1995, failed
to put together a strong
stretch run, losing .six of eight
games to fall out of conte?.tlo':'. .
!h~s IS the toughest one.
This is a game we had to
W:in," said Boston's ~aul
P1erce, who scored 41 pomts.
"A couple weeks ago, we gave
ourselves a chance."
Indiana, 5-1 in · the month
of April, thrived in the playoff
atmo·sphere of Wednesday
·night's game against the
Knicks, a matchup pitting the
last two Eastern Conference
champs.
Rewe Miller hit a seasonhigh seven 3-pointers for 24
points, and Indiana equaled a
team record with 14 3-pointers against the NBA's toprated defense.
"New Vorlc: is a team that
will give up an occasional 3,"
said Jalen .Rose, who led the
Pacers with ~5 points." form.
nately, we have the ultimate 3point shoo1er in the game."
Kurt Thomas had 22 points
and I 0 rebounds to lead the
Knicks. LatreU Sprewell and
Mark Jackson each had 15
points.

Plsluns
RapiDrs 87 .

, New Yodt' played without
·
Allllr
Allan Houston and Larry
~
Johmon, who missed their
•econd str.aight . game with.
•
injurie.. Just 47 seconds into
jerry Stackhouse scored 20
the .,.;,me, the Knich lost o f his
· 35 points in the fourth
Maron Can'-·,
· overuy, who bn,;....J
- -c- quarter as h ost D etrolt
his left hip and did not return. came a 17-point deficit and
In Boston, Alonzo Mourn- won for the sixth time in
ing scored 21 points .in 28
minute. - both seuon highs sevenWi hgame.th·
11
e Rap~rs'loss, Mil- and Anthony Mason added . waukee claimed the Central
23 points .for the Heat, who Division tide, the Bucb' first
had lirde sympathy for the division tide since 1915-86.
playoff-starved Celtics.
Corliss Willianuon added 23
"We're fightipg for some- points for Derroit, and Ben
thing, too;· Heat coach Pat WaUace had eight points and
' Riley said. " We're just as hun- '2 bo ds
h · · L.
.
re un ·
gry to care M•lwa,u...,e. So 11 • Vince Carter scored 22
isn't as though th.-v're
the pomts,
·
· Willi' ams had
-'
an dAIVIR
only ones fighting for some 15
·
d 11
·
L'
- · ' pomts an
assiSts ror
thing."
..
.
. Toronto, whil:h had its fourThe Heat, m thud place m game winning streak snapped
the conference, extended their
·
lead over New Yorlc: to two
games and closed within one
game of the second-place
Milwaukee Bucks.
Antoine Walker had 29 a~d
nine rebounds for the Celtics,
who are 2-5 in April.
"Obviously, our goal was to .
make the playoffs," Walker
said. "I'm very disappointed. I
felt we were good enough to
make the playoffi and we jllll
fell short."

, trona Pace 81

,
Jason Terry scored 38' points
and Nazr Mohammed added a
cueer-high 24 host Adanta .
took control with a 24-4 run
in the '- second half and
snapped a ~-game losing
streak.
Clarence
Weathenpoon
sc~d 22 points and Lamond
Murray added f9 for Cleveland.
"

a

Suns 111,
MaVettcb '106

Jason Kidd fell one· point t 1 pniCS.

short of a tnp
' le-double 6n-

The Sonics .,.,...,t their
ishing with nine pain~, 13 four-game ~-~ and
assisa and 12 ~unds for beat Golden ~ for the
Phoenix.
eighth copsecutift limf.
'tony Delle: scored 23 points,
Antawn .JamiloD scored 24
Rodney Ragen hJd 16 points ofhis 38 points in the tint baJC
and 10 reboundS, and Cliff for Golden State. Rookie Paul
Robinson added 15 points for McPherson 3dded 1 Qreefthe. Sum.
. high 26 poin~.
Michael Finley scored 34
I
&gt;
p~ints for_Dallas, which lost its
third str.ught. Juwan Howard
added 23 points, Dirk Nowitzki 19 and Steve Nash 18.

SanieS 107, '
Warrion 101

·
Gary Payton scored '32
Shawn Marion tied his
poipts
for Searde, whioh
career high witli 3S points as'
· Ph
·
· · th
·gh extended its home winning
h oemx \yon Its SIX str.u t nreak against Golden State to
orne .,.me
.,.. ·

conSider survey·
SENTNL NEWS srAfF

morning.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.·
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
•

nau;
!

••

'

'

.

•

season.

1 don't kno~ what . was
homer in. PNC Park- and going on," Bob .Boone said of
, trailed 5·4 when Riedling (0- Riedling, who felt tightness
1) came on in the seventh.
in his right arm while throwThree wild pitches by ing breaking balls. "He made ·
Riedling, singles by Giles and some good ·pitches, too. But
Ramirez, and Kevin Young's he came out of rhythm and
go-ahead RBI double later, started overthrowing."
the Pirates led 6-5. Riedling's
Notes: Casey, a Pittsburgh
second . wild pitch scored native who didn't hit well in
Giles from third with the Three Rivers Stadium, is 7tying run , ahead of Young's for-9 with six RBis in PNC
double.
Park. .. . Pirates rookie leftIt was the second time in bander Jde Beirne!, who beat
three seasons a Reds p.itcher Houston in his major league
has thrown three wild pitches .debut 'Sunday, pitched a
in an inning ~ Scott scoreless sixth. He is in the
Williamson also did it against buUpen now that the Pirates
Kansas City in 1999, With have signed Ramon Marnine wild pitches in nine tinez.
'1

been a witness t!l the
Christian faith of a community for more than 60
. .,ears.

.

.. I

•

for su._~ay

,.

BY AlmtoNr lkARHs
JOB SHADOW CORRESf'ONDEm

'

4to faith-· ·
..

•,

the niihl visi.b:Ie:·6~.r umc•

itp
oOhe 0hio
ing aqd
thousands.
; The · cross; a symbol of
life "through death, · has
~een located on ·the high
point · of Lincoln Hill
since 1940.
· ··
· It was the ·inspiration of
~he late Rev. • Ralph
Kuether, who came to
Pomeroy in the late 1930s
io pastor what is now
Trinity' Congregational ·
Church.
•
.
"An idealist, yet a v~ry
• practical man,- one with a
dream' .. , to. place a cross
on a, bib whicb .we)uld be
a witness to the Chrl~~
• f~ith '. 6£ a ' cbmmuniw.''
· 1(•,.·. liow t h e ,hit~ , Mae
; • (Yf~:~p, .a ~ongtiltle :lli~mper
·'
of • trini!JY
Churl:h·1
detl:rl.t!ed" t'be mlniste'r In
il papet she wrote 111any,
years ago ~bout the ~ross.

.

,, . . . _ .. . . , . . . . . . ~ 'I

•

\

--.

' Details, A2

La~akers
,,

Lotteries
OHIO .
Pldl S: ().3-4; Pick 4:4-7-6-4
IIIJ J15:~11·17·22·31

Objtuaries

spans .

·~
I'J-3.5 Dill, s; 6:1-1 o.~y 4: ~3-9-6
· A3

L

-A2

'

.

, , Passoverfeast to the school's.youngest stui:lents,
with much assistance from the school's other
teachers, led the service and explained the sym·
bolism relating to each of the Seder's elements.
At the heart of the Seder were the "four cups"
of the Passover: the Cup of Sanctification, representing God's deliverance of the Jews from the
Egyptians; the Cup of Judgment, re11resenting
the Jews' release under GOd's hand from slavery; the Cup of ·Redemption, and the Cup of
Praise.
The students also leamed that in the Christian
adaptation of the Seder, the grape juice, which
served jlS the Seder's wine, re.presents the blood
of Jesus; the parsley and lettuce on the plate
represented the hyssop used to paint the lamb's
blOod around the home's door frame, and the
marks ana piercings on the unleavened bread
the stri~ and piercings of Christ
"The message of Passover is really the root of.
Christianity; Asbeck said. (Brian J. Reed photo)

Lolr: . .

Weese.
Southern junior Carolyn
Bentz led 'olf the fourth with
;a single. Amy Lee walked, and
with one out Brigette Barnes
slammed a two-run double.
Pullins had an RBI single,
then stole home after a cou·
pie passed balls. . Ervin and
Sayre singled for the second
time. Emily , Hill walked to
load the·.• bases, and Bentz
slammed a two-run single to
give SHS a 9-5 lea'd.
Southern scored three runs
in the flftll on four walks·Kati
Cummins, Ervin, Sayre, Hill
and run scoring singles by
Pullins and Bames, 12-5.
. The Alugmi fought back
with five walks-Dailey, Cald~
well, Winej:Jrenner, Chapman,
) . Cuinmins:.and an ~I single by Riflle who ·also later

-

, d1~tty Asbeck, pictured . here serving the

' lflah:'J-.'

rnwli,.•••

!

MIDDLEPORT - With unleavened bread and
grap,e juice, parsley and salt water, students at
Mid-Valley Christian School in 'Middleport held a
Passover Seder on U!ursday, to· celebrate · a
Christian adaptation of the ancient Jewish holi-

'

-Southam

.

.,

Cross•
.remains
witness ·
'

P11111 ... SUney, AS

Annual
•hunt set

"SYMBOL -oF CHRIITJANI.
.tY - ,TJ;le lighted cross on
• .Uncoln Hill In Pomeroy h¥

.
'
stole home, 12·8.
Pullins and Chapman ·
reached on errors and scored ·
on J;:rvinis third sin-gle of the
night, 14-8.
Deana PuUins came on in
relief of Rachel Chapman to
pick up the save. Chapman
pitched a great game to pick
up the win, fanning three and
walking eleven while giving
up only four hits.
Pullins walked one and gave
up no hits in one and a third
. innings of work.
Kim Sayre, one of Southern's all-time le~ding hurlers,
sulfered the loss.
Alumni
hitters
were
Hunter, Weese, Riffie, and
Sayre.
\ .
Southern
itters .were
· Pullins (3-for-5), Ervin (3for-4), Bentz (2-for-2), Katie
Sayre (2-for-4), Chapman a
single and .Barnes (2-for-5).
Southern goes to Meigs
today.

.

the internet, so that the user can enter a pareel number,
or locate the property on an aerial photograph. and
acceos property infunnation fiom· the county auditor,
treasurer and recorder:'
The EMS or 911 system, if one is established in
Mei~ County, can also use the system to locate emer- .
gency patients, and to find directions.
The system would also allow access to flood plain
information, "'id Commissioner Jim Sheets.
No plan~ for the purchase of such a system are under
way, Davenport said. He ·added that the cost has been
estimated at $600,000.
·
However, he said, some of the worlc: to establish the

._·~ year in.Jemsalem'

Wizards 109
Elton Brand had 26 points
and 1 I rebounds as Chicago
ended a franchise·record 25game road losing streak.
The BuDs won on the road
for the first time since Dec. 13
and improved to 3-36 on the
road .this season.
Marcus Fizer scored 21
points, and Ron Arrest had 17
points a.nd a career-high nine
assists for the Bulls.
Rookie Courtney Alexander scored a car~r-high 28
points, and Richard Hamilton
added 25 points for the Wizards, who lost their . sixth
straight.

.

The conunissionen met recendy with Engineer .·lool\ed at those syStems: .
E~e Triplett reg;uding a Global 'InfOrmation Sys. Conunissioner Miele: J?avenport, who presided at
tern, which would provide public access to survey ThuOOa)''s meeting in the absence of President Jeff
information, aerial phntographs of aU properties in the Tliomton, the system would provide a wealth ofinforcounty, and ownership and tax information about the matiim, via computer, about Mei~ Cdunty properties.
propetti~.
.
.
" HopefuUy;' Davenport said, "real estate tide inforSimilai ¥fCliiS are now in place-elsewhere in Ohio, 0131ion, roads, utilities, flood plain data, soil types,
including Jackson County, and Meigs officials have addresses, dr:Unage basins, and so forth, can be put on

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uuWislul in Meigs CON'"J', C4lll 4lu
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. fNUimU, llfl4 UJ flU iireains.

POMEROY -An oudine of a new real estate survey program w.tS revieWed by the Meigs County Com.. missioners during their regular meCting on Thursday

m
&gt;

n.e .EMS ln'· It 1 qstmJr .i f.- is

BY Blwl J. 1111D

Bulls 113,

games, the Reds are easily on
pace to break their major
le.ague record of ' 96 set last

Reels

1.,
• .,
c:.v.lllrs 102

II

:100! Ohio Valloy ~i"l Co: .

MIDDLEPORT - After the Easter Bunny
visits local children on Easter Sunday. aU local
children are invited to visit the Easter Bunny at
General Hartinger Park in Middleport.
The Middleport Volunteer Fire Department
and the Ladies Auxiliary wiD hold their annual
children's Easter Egg Hunt on Sunday at 1 p.m.
This tradition was started in the 1950s by the
Middlepon/Pomeroy Rotary Club, and was
later adopted by tfie fire department and auxiliary. Prizes will be included in each pf the
2,400 plastic Easter egg;. This year. some of the
top prizes are·bicycles, cash and gift certificates·
,f.4l
busin~- ~
"
·
·
Lots of sod3 pop wiD :ii!d be included in the
array of prizes, as will 330 orrle"' of MeDon"
aid's ftench fries.
Membe"' of the Ladies Auxilary and the lire
department have been stuffing Easter egg; this ·
week, said Committee Chairman Bobby Johnson.
This year's committee meljlbers, in addition
to Johnson, are Don Geary, Kenny Gilkey,
Kenny Haning and Skip Johnson.
After the e~ are ~thered, all Ghildren are
invited to meet with the Easter bunny. All area
children are invited to participate. Children wiD
be divided into age c•tegoties.

CiiMiMiTii!i'MEMiia= Bobby Johnson, Doo

Geary, Kenny Gilkey and Kenny Hanir« are members of the Middleport \blunteer Are Department's amual Ellster egg hunt set for Sunday at
General Hartinger Pari&lt;. (Submitted phOto)

outline school-funding details

·l

COLI.;JMBUS (aP) - llcpublican law~ predicted ''l'hull&lt;day that schools
could. stop a5king voters for money year
after ~.ar if a n~ school-funding plan is
adopted.
,
"They could decide based on this to be
.out 'of the levy business to a much greater
degree than today;• said Sen.JelfJacobson of
Phillipsburg. "If 'they no longer pass any
more
they will have a !~vel of support

that will not erode."
Jacobson and Rep. Jon Peterson of
Delaware discussed details of a plan t~
spend an additional$1.4 billion on educa-,
tion over the next two years to meet a court
order to fix the way Ohio pays for schools. ·
Jacobson said the plan has tht support of
the Ohio House and Senate and Gov. Bob
Taft
"I think we can very sincerely s.tand up

today and go to the wurt and say, 'We have
done what you've said. We have identified
and agreed\vith the problems that need fixing, and we have fixed them,"' Jacobson
said.
Legislators and the governor have !;'ntil
June 15 to respond to the Ohio Supreme
Court's May ruling that the school-funding
!YStem-is ~nconstitutional because it relies
too much on local property taxes.

of Holzer Medical reenter
"
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

·· Skilled Nulling, Home Health Aides, Physical,
~upa~onol

and Speech Therapy.

Call (~40) 446·5301

1

Discover the Holzer Difference.

.'

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