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. . . . . J,Irnes2
- PHILADELPHIA · (AP) -.

After a weekend waltz against
Adanta, Philadelphia Phillies
manager Larry Bowa preferred to think about the
future, instead of the past.
The surprising Phillies finished off their first threegame sweep !lf the Braves at
Veterans Stadium in 24 years,
holding on for . a 3-2 win
Sunday.
On Aug. 31, 1977, Steve
Carlton outpitched Phil
Niekro 6-1 in a matchup of
future Hall of Famers as the
Phillies completed that previous sweep at · .the Vet. Bowa
was Philadelphia's shortstop
at the time .
Amaury Telemaco pitched ·
eight shutout innings, helping Phibdelphia hold first
place in the NL East with an
11-6 record. Bowa is in his
first season since replacing
Terry Francona.
The PhiUies, tied with the
Chicago Cubs for the most
losses .in the majors last year,
have not had a winning season since reaching the 1993
World Series.
Atlanta dropped into last
place in the East at 8-11. The
· Braves, who rallied for two
runs in the ninth, have scored
only 28 runs in their last 14
games.

Astras 4, cardinals ]
Richard Hidalgo's sacrifice
fly snapped an eighth-inning
tie, and Wade Miller struck
out a career-high 13 as Houston beat visiting St. Louis.
Cardinals rookie Albert
Pujols homered twice to
account for all three St. Louis
runs.

Padres 7, Dodcen 6,
111nnlnp
San Diego reliever jay
Witasick escaped a · basesloaded, no-out jam in the
bottom of the 1Oth inning,
then Bubba Trammell's RBI
double in the 11th helped the
Padres break a six-game losing streak.
· Jeff Reboulet hit a threerun homer off Padres relief
ace Trevor Hoffman ·to tie it
in the ninth at Dodger Stadium.
The Dodgers threatened to
win it in the lOth, but Witac
sick struck out Chad Kreuter,
pinch-hitter Tom Goodwin
and Reboulet.

Pirates 4, Cubs :J,

·sPORIS: Area diamond roundup, Bl

Davis connected for his
rhird career pinch-hit homer.
His previous one also came in
San Francisco, in 1989 for
Cincinnati at Candlestick
Park.
Brewers starter Jeff D'Amico, who has been slowed by a
mild groin strain, left in the
fifth with discomfort in his
upper right arm.

'

'

Rockies 2, D-backs 1
Pedro Astacio pitched eight
impressive innings and Colorado reliever Jose jimenez
shut down a ninth-inning
threat at Bank One Ballpa(k.
Astacio tjed a major league
record by hitting four batters.
He .gave up two singles in
eight-plus innings.
Down 2-0, Arizona loaded
· the bases with no outs in the
ninth . Jimenez took over and
got Reggie Sanders · to
ground ·into . a double play
and retired Steve Finley on a
grounder. .
\

Giants 6, Brewers 4
Pin ch-hitter Eric Davis
lined a three-run homer that
lifted San Franci§co at Pacific
Bell Park. Milwaukee left
fielder Devon White claimed
a fan interfered · with 'his
attempt to catch Davis' ball ,
to no avail.

Expos 6, Marlins 2
Monireal averted a fourgame sweep at Florida as
Vladimir Guerrero · had two
hits.
Guerrero drove in one run
and scored another. The
Expos are 2-5 o~ a seasonlong 13-game road trip.

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Chicago Cubl 4, Plttii&gt;Jigh 3

Sl. Louis 9, Houston 2
Milwaukee 6, San Fntnclsco 3
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Pllil-lphla 4. Atlanta 1
Arizona 10, Colorado 5

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lloltimo,. (lt•i1Qio1 D-2) at
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'

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Af1lhlim (SdiQtliiUU. . 1:•1) II
land (Colon 2-1), 7:05p.m.
Seoll1o (GIIIda 2.0) It N.Y.
~~ 2.()), 7:05p.m.
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Bay(l.cpoz2·1), 7:15p.m.
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Sol (IIIJehrte 1·2) •.8:05 p.m.

straight game the Royals have Baltimore won at Ta~npa
homered.
The Otioles won
blowing a three-run
O's
Rays I, with two outs in the
of the ninth .
Chad Poronto (1-0)
Delino DeShields hit an first career win.

111nnlnp

RBI single off Esteban Yan
(1-1) in the 11th inning as

10 Main Street
Uttletown

'

Women's League.
Mondays

Mixed League
Thursday
Twosomes

Senior Scramble
Every Friday
LNgue. s.glnnlng End of APril
'

'

'

Pine Hilla Golf Course

Pomeroy

2

1Greeting:

'

Quality .·
.

\

~

atyour~ce

r------------~----, · r~~---~~----~----~ .

I WHEEL ALIGNME~T II . TIRES .
I
. 2-whHI
4-whetl
. I
I Check end ldjull C1111ber end 101. Adtltlonlil*ll end I

We will meet or beat any compefitor's ·
advertised price on lhe same tire.

~--~-~~--~

$4995
I '

r--~--------~~~-~-,
I
SPRING . . I
I
MAINti!NANCI!I

~--------------------·-·--·-.
1To:
·

MIDDLHPORT - Fishing enthusi. asts will once again have access to Middleport's Ohio River levee.
Village Council approved fishing at
the facility during its regular meeting
Monday evening.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli said that she
and members of council have received
telephone calls about the village's policy prohibiting fishing at the docking
area from a number of senior citizens
and others for whom the levee area is

'Eight .

. to get along."
lannarelli said fishing will still be
prohibited from the dock itself, and
swimming in the levee area will still be
prohibited. Those who violate the regulations or those who initiaie problems
between fishermen and boaters will be
summoned to mayor's court.
In other business, council approved a
$19,805 casualty insurance policy
through Kinder Insurance Agency,
based on the recommendation of the
village's tax administrator and msurPIIIM . . . IAvee. AJ

Patsy

COMMUNITY MEE11NG - Melody Sands, community development specialist for the Corporation for Appalachian Development (COAD), spoke to a large group at Trinity Church
Monday about the results of a recent survey aimed at promoting economic developmental strategies for Pomeroy residents and businesses. (Tony M. Leach photo)

tribute

Urgent care

tops needs list
ElY TONY M. WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Four
adults and four juveniles
have been arrested · for
breaking and entering by
the
Pomeroy
Police
Department.
Police Chief Mark Proffitt said that Mike Landermilt, Gerald Armstrong,
Paul Flora, and Timothy,
Johnson, all of Pomeroy, ,
$''*'•Mtld '· fous J-nillr were ·
arrested Friday for break'ing into · a concession
stand near the · baseball
fields .o n Main Street.
' Proffitt said that the
, departnier)t ~ad received a
call from Kim Armstrong,
who · informed offic~rs
that four juveniles had
-"Always ... Patsy Cline; a mu~ical tribute to the late country singer,
shown up at her house
will be performed on Friday·at 7:30 p.m. ;rt the American Legion building in Middleport. Based
. on a true story, the musical tells the Cline story through the eyes of her friend, Louise Seger,
with several large trash
who provides a narrative around 25 of Cline's hit songs. Tickets for the performance are $10,
bags of assorted candies.
and can be purchased at Ohio River Bear Co., Peoples Banking and Trust Co. in Middleport,
Officers dispatched to
and Middleport Department Store.
the home questioned the
four . ju'Veniles,
who
immediately named Johnson as one of the participants in the theft. Johnson
was picked up , for questioning and later arrested
after
admitting
his
ElY MICIIELE CARTER
a honeycomb, Dennis said.
in.:Oivement in the crime.
OVP NEWS STAFF
Masqn Mayor George Nichols said the
Johhson alsb named
: ~01':;1, 'Y-Va. -The first phase of a river- '$25,000 project is being funded by a grant from
Laudermilt1 Flora and
barik erosion al:iatement project at Mason Park is · the Clyde W ·Benedum Foundation through the
Aims~g as accomplices
· un~· '
.
.
·
Great Kanawha RC&amp;D. AEP is also donating
durin&amp; questioning.
.
· AEP Mountaineer Plant is currently wot'liing approximately $7,500 to the project.
.
Stolen from the conces·to make 8;400 seabee blocks whi~h will line 200
Dennis said construction on the first phase is
'
'~
sion sttnd ~ a vast array
feet of tiJF blank along the boat launch, laid projected to begin on May 14 and should conof men:handise, including · ' \.~ Dennis,AEP environmental engineer:
tinue fur about a week.
candy, snacks, beverages
""'nae 50-pound, eight~inch thick blocks 1:are
The town is awaiting word on an $80,000
and
an
undisclosed
one square foot and are made of nearly .30 {fer- grant from the West Virginia Economic Devel· al,llount of cash, which
cent dy ash from the New Haven plant. rhe opment Authority; which would be used to
PI. .M He ProJect. AJ
blocks are hexagon-shaped and fit together like
: ,........ ll'llk·ln, A!

POMEROY - . A large
group of· concerned citizens
gathered Monday evening to
discuss the results of a survey
aimed at promoting economic developmental strategies for Pomeroy's residents
and businesses.
The forum, sponsored by
the Focus on the Future
Pomeroy Community Committee (FFPCC) and the
Corporation
for
Ohio
Appalachian Development
(COAD), was held inside a
me.e ting room at Trinity
Church and focused on the
result:; of a SUtVfY that was
initiated by the FFPCC in
March.
COAD is an Athens-based
non-profit organization serving rural, mostly Appalachi.an, coUnties in eastern and
southern Ohio. It is composed of 17 co'm munity
Action Agencies that serve a
30-county area.
COAD operates the Ohio
Rural Enterprise Project and
Projeci Good · START -

Small Town Assessment and
Readiness Techniques that assist communities in
their efforts to· keep and .
attract small businesses.
Melody Sands, community
development specialist for
COAD, led a group discussion pertaining to the survey
results and additional information obtiined from village
residents and the survey
committee.
The results of the survey
indicated that a 24-hour
urgent care facility and river ·
front restaurant topped the
list for items/services that
residents felt were most
needed in .Pomeroy.
The implementation of
boat docking facilities and
water craft rentals yielded
large numbers as well, considering Pomeroy's proximity
to the Ohio River.
Fire protection, senior citizen programs and police
protection were considered
the top community services.
while water quality, street
conditions ·and parks/recre-

PI...--Ust.AJ

PACKAGE

I

·

MOTORCRAFT

easT LUBE
r"'

. ·

'

.•.
..,.
~ Sentinel .

......

: 2•·-·•-12 ....

~ca.I~M~d·a~r

______~A5~

Lotteries
OH~

li1CIIIIalil&lt;ssil !ffiwed_s_ _ __..B..,2..;&gt;c·
.4 !lick :s: 7-5-3; Pick 4: 2-5-7-2
lltC~o11
rD111if;Ji'ii
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..., Edjtorjals .
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.
11
.oo~~SP~t~Ot~.rts
_______.._B1....3.._·.":4,..._6 Dellr :s: o-3·9 Dlllr 4: 2-().9.0
Weather

A2

DISCUSSINQ PROJECT- Mason Mayor George Nichols and members of Bend Area CARE listen as Kevin Dennis, AfP Moo1talneer
Plant environmental engineer, discusses the seabees riWrbank erosion abatement project at the tO'M'l park. From left are Chuck StSnley
of AEP and Bend Area CARE, Bill Hussell of ARE. Dennis, Bobby Roush
and Scott Simms of CARE, and NiChols. (Michele Carter photo)

Ba~k, names advisory board members

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publllhlng Co.

.I
· ...
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"''-"-.....,._.,....
1 and
• Service
lncludw up to 5 quart~ or Motorcrall
,_
_ _,.....,_,_._ 1
new Mqtorcrafl
011 fl~er .• Perform MuiU·P•Oint
1=cow::::.;;=.~:,::::::: a Vehicle lnapectlon • Chedc and fin nec·maJY
,..,...!T"-..,..~-l:io";,hoolo; co..- 1 I• Allin 29 nin.,. or leu • Dleeet vel!lc:lll rney
1 ...,.,._,.._hoilf_~~CO..onl--:og,tJ LRn..
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---~~~~~~• · •--

, '

. FROM STAFF ~EPORTS

GALLIPOLIS - Five Gallipolis businessmen have been named to a new Gallia .
County Advisoty Board at the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co.
Paul M. Reed, president of Farmers
Bank, said the board consists of Dr. Thomas
. A. Skinnert. DDS, Greg Smi.th of Smith
Buick-Ponpac, Gene Wood ofWaugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, Dr. Dan White-

ley and Bobby Kincaid of CliffSide Golf
Course
The advisory board' has been established,
Reed said, to allow for more public input
into the bank's presence ,in Gillia County.
"We&lt; hope that these businessmen can
help Farmers· Bank in iden'titying the ·concerns of the community's resident~. and
help us find ways in which the bank can
address those needs and better serve . the

Gallia County and Gallipolis communities," Reed said.
''Our Gallipolis branch is a direct result
of the bank's original advisory b&lt;;&gt;ard," ,
Reed said. "The need for an office in Gallipolis to. better serve our customers there
was one of the advisory .board's first priorities.
"It was an idea we had considered, but

PIMMHeBollrd,A3

...

.

. I

.

.

The Holzer Mediool Center Maternity and Family Center

·

·Mater_.ity SerVices

1------~----------------From:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

--·-·-·-·-------------'----Mall or Bring

the only easily accessibl.e fishing area in
Middleport.,
They asked that they be permitted to
fish rhere.
In the past, Iannarelli said, disputes
have arisen between.boatel'S and fishermen -particularly juvenile fishermen
-resulting in a "no fishing" sign being
installed at the dock.
"The levee is a good place · to , fi~h.
and for some people, it's the only place
to fish in Middleport," Iannarelli said .
"Let's try it .for a few months and see
what happens. But I expect everyone

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

·uesday and Wecjnet:lday
. 2 man team partners

! $2495 '4995' .p
Monday, Aprill3, 2001

NEWS STAFF

BY ToNY M. LEAcH

At Turnpike's
Service Dept.

Deadllae Is

~NTINEL

Riverbank erosion project kicks off

.

ABC Wtdgels

'

with
break-in

n

eJ/ey Bosses: .

to say thank
Keep up the good work!
Yourboss, ·
ed Williams

.

cha~ged

g ec.retarles ~ ay Is April· 25.

bouquet

'

BY BalAN J. REED

10, DeYII

Rancen
Athletics 2

To Annie Grey

www.mydaily\entineL&lt;Om

...es.AIIIIhlllno

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Show Your Thanks To Your Secretary
With A Thank You ACt In The April 25
Edition Of The Dally Sentinel.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

0

.m

--

'IWins

They keep you
organized,
they keep you
Informed, and
. they keep
things running,
soshow'em
how much
you care.

so &lt;ent~ • Aprol14. 1001 ·Vol 51, No l'l'i

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7 12 .3111
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8 13 .318
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Phltadatploia (Wolf 0·3) at San Diogo
Cleveland 5, Ootrolt 4, 11lnnlngs

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After dominating the AL
West for three weeks, the
Seattle Mariners.are streaking
into a couple of playoff
rematches.
"This team overall needs a
Aaron Sele pitched six
Rick Helling (1-3) struck
scoreless innings as the day · off," Anaheim · manager
Mariners extended the best Mike Sciascia said. 'These out eight in 6 2-3 innings for
start in franchise history by guys have been pounding . his first win of the season and
beating the Anaheim Angels their heads and trying too Ivan Rodriguez homered for
the third straight game.
5-0 Sunday for their eighth hard."
Rafael Palmeiro hit a
win in nine games.
ks
ed
After going ~5-4 to . open J
4, R Sox l, three-run homer for the
Rangers against Hudson (2the season agamst the1r W
2) , and Alex Rodriguez went
West rivals, the Mariners
3-for-4 with a walk to extend
head East to face the New
Paul O'Nelll and David
his hitting streak to 11 games.
York Yankees and Chicago . Justice· hit Jath-inni~g home
Whtte Sox - the teams they runs off Derek Lowe as New I
pl~yed,in last year's piayoffs. York overcame a pair of n ~DS
prl J
· Were pleased With how Manny Ramirez homers to
.
·
Y: k S di
.
Russell Brtnyan llrove m
we've started the season but
f,
·
j ' Th
hi
•
wan at an ee ta um.
it won't be getting anY. easiJason Varitek had given the . our rvns, 1m
ome t a
er"
·
. h two-run homer and Juan
3 2 I ea d mte
• manager Lou Piniella· R ed Soxasaid ·
. gl e Gonzalez had
10t h w1'th a b.ro ken-bat. s1n
· a solo . shot. as
The Mariners go to Yankee . o ffM anano
.
Rivera (! - I) , b ut .host
won Its Sixth
t · Cleveland
h
Stadium on Tuesday to play the Yankees came right .back s taWigil ·tc. d
h d. h
hi
New York for the first time off Lowe (t- 3).
o~ ero a t ree
ts
since losing the ALCS last
and scored three runs . as
, White Sox 2 every Indians starter got at
season. Seattle then goes to
4
Chicago for three games
least one of the Cleveland's
against the White Sox, the
'
season-high 19 hits.
team they swept in the first
David Ortiz hit a go-ahead
Dave Burba (2-1) improved
homer off Keith Foulke (0-2) to 7-1 in his last 11 starts.
round.
The Mariners swept the in the eighth and surprising
JIIJI 1
Angels ip a four-game series Minnesota won · its fifth Roya1S 5, 81
for the first time. It was their straight.
At 14-3, the Twins are off
first home sweep of any kind
Dan
Reichert
(2~1)
to their best start . ever. They allowed H.vo hits in eight-jllus
against Apaheim.
AI Martin, playing in place won for the 1Oth time in I 1 innings and Mark Quinn and
of Edgar Martinez, doubled games.
Mike Sweeney hit two-run
and homered and lchiro
The Twins completed theit homers for host Kansas City.
Suzuki had two hits for Seat- first three-game. sweep in
Quinn 'homered in the
tie,
Chicago since June 1985 at fo.urth off Esteban Loaiza (3"Before the game, I told the old Comiskey Park. Min- 1) and Sweeney connected in
Edgar Martinez that 1 .was nesota is 6-0 against the the eighth off Kelvim ·Escodefending AL Central chambar, ·the club- record 15th
going to be him today," Mar- .
· h'
.
.d "A~ 1 h. h h
p1ons t IS season.
ton sao . rter
It t e orne
.
. H ector. C arrasco (2 - O) won
run,! to ld h om! wanted to be, .
)' f d L T
H k'
on r~ oe fi~nh a roy aw ms
Edgar Martinez every day."
Ramon Ortiz (2-2) took got IS 1 t save.
the loss for the An~els, who
11,
lost for the eighth time in
none games.

.

w

_Tuesday

•

AROUND . THE DIAMOND

10 lnnlnp "'
Jason Kendall hit a two-run
homer in the bottom of the
't Oth, lifting Pittsburgh over
Chicago.
The Cubs took a- 3-2 lead
· in the top half on a home·run
by Gary. Matthews Jr. But
with one out in the bottom
half, pinch-hitter Kevin
Young singled and Kendall
followed with a fly ball down
the line.
Left fielder Rondell White
jumped at the 6-foot wall at
PNC Park, but the ball eluded him as fans grabbed the
souvemr.

•

'

'

The Daily Sentinel

..

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

lri Your Entry Form to the

Call (740) 446·5030 ~
()

Dally Sentinel

111 Court Streel,.Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
•

Ohio State to use rewards to track partygoers

Ohio weather
WednttdiiY, Aprtl25

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COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State
University plans to offer rewards to help
identify partygoers who thttw beer botdes, set lim and broke car windows last
weekend near campus.
Ohio State is asking people who took
· pictures or shot home video of the disturbance to turn the material over to the
university.
OSU has not determined the amount
of the rewards, but the money may be
provided by the Columbus Division of
Police's Crime Stoppers progtam, Bill
Hall, interim vice president for student
affairs, said Monday.
Two people, including one student,
were arrested, and three students were
cited for misdemeanor offenses for their
roles in the melee, Hall said.
Each could face probation, suspension
or dismissal from the. university when
they go before the judicial committee of
.the Office of Student Affairs, Hall said.
The parties that ended early Saturday
were the fourth disturbance in just more
than a year in 'the off-campus area but the

first since Ohio State trustees VOted bst
month to expand the stud{lit code of
conduct to include punishment for inappropriate behavior off campus.
" Wb2t I think it's time to say to people is it's totally inexcusable behavior;'
Hall said. "I'm appalled when I go
through the neighbOrhood and see people throw things of£ balconies, and the
trash."

Mayor Michael Coleman said the campus area disturbances are getting worse.
_ " It's just not acceptabl_e in the city of
Columbus;· Coleman said.
He _called on the students "to show
respect to the university, its reputation.
and to the city of Columbus and to
themselves, as ,,cU."
Starting -this weekend, city police, will
have increased visibi~ty .in the -campus
area, the mayor said.
· Police spokeswoman Sherry Jones said
a videotape of rioting that was shown on
television newscasts last weekend could
help identify offenders.
"It's definitely a ,great approach," she

said.
Jones said only two people were attested because there were not enough
cers to handle the ro\lldlly _2,000 pe&lt;lple
who attended parti~ ),0 c.,_ittend.n
Awnuc that spilled into the street.
. Jones did not know how many officers
were at the scene. They had to lite tear
gas and wooden projectiles to break up
the crowd.
"Our biggest priority at that point was
to disperse the crowd and gain conttol;'
she said. "It's absolutely impossible to
arrest everybody. Had we had more people, I guarantee you that there would
have been more arrests."
Kris Blausey. 22, of Oregon, was the
Ohio State student who was arrested. He
was charged with disobeying an officer's
signal, resisting arreSt and. misconduct at
an emergency.
Jones said Blausey drove his car into a
group of police officers as partygoers
cheered him on, and officers had to jump
out of the way to avoid beirig hit.

Chilly nighttime lows slated

nati in 1996. He joined the newspaper in 1977 as a reporter and
traught about his failed marriage when he snapped.
has
worked as an assistant city editor, editorial writer and nem
High in the mid 60s. Light and
BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
"He was going through a sttessful divorce;· she said. "He was
Scattered fiost was possible variable wind.
ll
suffering fiom fear of ab~ndonnient. Everyone said his actions editor.
Tuesday night as temperatures
Wednesday night.. .Partly that day were completely out of characrcr."
were predicted to dip into the cloudy. Low 33 to 3 7.
30s following passage of a cold
Extended forecast:
p~acess
COLUMBUS (AP) -A retired college president liom Minfront.
Thursday... Mosdy sunny
Temperatures on Wednes- during the day and starry skies
ATHENS (AP) -A !lew technology aimed at reducing sulfur nesota will be interim president of Capital University, the school
··
dioxide emissions from coal conld make Ohio a leade~ in export- said Monday.
day were expected to get no at night. High 70 to 75.
warmer than the mid 60s or
ing energy to other states, officials said Monday.
Paul J. Dovre, president of Concordia College in Moorhead,
Friday... Mostly dear,· Low
"Clean coal technology is the answer to America•s energy Minn.,for 24 years, will take over at Capital on May 2l.The cure
low-60s, then warm slowly the
in the mid 40s and high 73 to
problems," said Mike Carey, president of the Ohio Coal Associa- rent president Daniel Felicetti, is leaving to pursue other interests.
rest of the week.
77.
tion. "We don't have to rely on foreign sources for cpa!. We can
No rain was in the weather
Dovre, 66, gtaduated fiom Concordia in 1958 and joined the
Saturday... Partly
cloudy. help solve tl'ie energy problems of the nation:·
picture through the weekend.
faculty there in 1963. He retired in 1999. Capital said he will not
State and Ohio U nivemty officials broke ground Monday on be a candidate for Felicetti's permanent replacement at the
Sunset tonight will be at Low near 50 and high in the
an addition to the school's Lausche Power Plant that will produce 4,000-student school.
8: 19, and sunrise .on Wednes- upper 70s;
Sunday... Mostly dear. Low energy using the new technology through December 2002. Parts
day is at 6:40 a.m.
I
50s
and
high
in
in
the
lower
of the effort :llready are under way at the existing plant.
Weather forecast:
the
upper
70s.
It's the first test of the process in an operating plant, said Gary
Tonight... Mostly clear. Low
Monday. .. Partly cloudy and North, OU's vice president of administration and coordinator for
in the mid 30s. Light north
COLUMBUS (AP) - Families with children under 6 years
continued warm. Low in the the project.
wind.
old are eligible fot discounts on products and services .from busiWednesday. .. Mostly sunny. upper 50s and high 78 to 83.
nesses under a new state progtam announced Monday.
Ohio Kids Card, run by the Ohio Department ofHealth, was
&amp;11te1s
modeled aftertheDhio Department of Aging's Golden Buckeye
MEDINA (AP) - Mayor James Roberts on Monday denied Catd program, which offers discounts to senior citizens on ewrycharges that he used city workers to help him build a house.
thing fiom haircuts to bowling to groceries.
COLUMBUS {AP) - Ohio State University has closed its · Roberts, 60, ple;&lt;ded innocent in Medina County Common - "The state of Ohio is strongly committed to enabling evety
rese:m:h farms to the public because 'of fears about foot-and- Pleas .Coutt to three counts of theft in office.
·
child to succeed;' Gov. Bob Tali said. "Ohio Kic!s Catd will help
mouth'disease.
·
. Roberts said he asked a city employee to install,f~!11~- shelves families with ·young children and at the same time also ·help
Tlle virus is harmless to humans but makes hooved animili m a house that he had built last year. The mayor said tile employ- Ohio's businesses grow."
1
sick. It has ravaged British livestock and 'can be transmitted by dirt ee worked for several hou~ one day on his own 'time. Roberts
Parents can enroll their children in the program at any public
on clothes, shoes and vehicles.
said he was surprised to later learn the employee had entered the
libraty. The only requirement is that children are under age 6.
Suzanne Steel, director of communications for the College of time he spent on the. house as -time spent working for the city.
Food, Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, says the restricRoberts said he told the employee that was not permitted and
tions are a precaution against a visitor bringing the disease in offered a porch glider as payment.
·
from another counrry.
EATON (AP) - Ne2rly $3 million worth of marijuana- the
All OSU farm-animal operations are affected by the "no visisecond largest seizure in the history of the State Highway Patrol
.
tors" rule. Ohio State has rwo farms in the Columbus area and
CINCINNATI (AP) r- Paul Knue is stepping down as editor - was found among boxes of vegetables inside a semitrailer
one in Wooster in Wayne County in northeast Ohio. The farms
,
ofThe Cincinnati Post and will be replaced on May 1 by Mike stopped by troopers, the patrol said Monday.
are for breeding and research.
The marijuana was found Saturday after the truck was stopped
Philipps, a Post news executive since 1986.
on
eastbound lmerstate 70 in western Ohio for foUO\ving too
Knue; 53, first joined the Post in 1970. He became editor of
The Kentucky Post in 1979, editor ofThe Cincinnati Post four dose and lane v10laoons, the patrol said.
After a drug-sniffing dog alerted to the cargo, troopers searched
LONDON (AP) - A state corrections officer who was dri- years later and assumed the leadership of both newspapers in
the
veh1cle and found 19 cardboard boxes of marijuana among
ving a prison van that crashed in a snow squall in February; killing 1995. The E.W Scripps Co. owns both dailies.
.
Knue, a native of Lawrenceburg, Ind., will serve briefly a; a boxes of cucumbers and peppers, the patrol said.
a co-worker, has been convicted of vehicular manslaughter. .
Richard Lake, ~0, of Lebanon was found guilty of the requced consultant for the Scripps Co. before taking early retirement. - _ Te~ny 0. Chin, 42, of Jamaica, N.Y., and Anthony Miller, 38,
Philipps, 54, has been city editor ofThe Cincinnati Post since of M~am1, Fla., were charged with drug trafficking and possession
-. charge on Monday after entering a no-contest plea. He faces up
1989 and assumed the tide of assistant managing editor/Cincin- o~ cnm1nal tools, the patrol said. If convicted, _each faces up to
to 90 days in jail when sentenced on June 26.
.
rune years. m pnson.
•
Lake originally was charged with vehicular homicide in the
- ~ -- death of Wayne Mitchell, 54. Prosecutors said the vehicular
~ homicide charge was too hatd to prove.
~ Lake and Mitchell were transporting two prisoners from the
" -. Warren Correctional Institution in Lebanon to the Ohio State
~ Univenity Medical Center in Columbus. The van went out of. ·
: control on snow-covered lnterstate-71 and crashed into a bridge
~ pillar near Mount Sterling.

OU st.tt dean coal

Kids wiR aet state dismunt

Medina mapr

plea

OSU doSes off NSearch fanns

Pabol seizes S3 million In pot

anclnnatl editor leavlnl
,..

Guard convidad in fatal aash

Father
blames

county for ··

Makeshift

1

1iielhw lab shut down

ABERDEEN (AP) - Police raided a makeshift motel lab
whe_re methamphetamine was being manufactured and arrested
four Mississippi residents, police said.
Charges were pending against two men and two women who
were being held in the Brown County Detention Center. A 2~ar-old girl was in the custody of Brown County Children's
Services.
'
·
Police said they niad= the arrests Monday arthe Daniel Boone
Motor Inn on U.S. 52 after receiving a complaint about a strong
odor coming from a room.
·
"I pretty much knew after I smelled it that we had a meth lab;'
Police Officer Todd Bumbalough said. "The odor was tremendous. I think we kind of caught them off-gua_rd."
·

Falrbom man pleads to murder
XENIA (AP) - A man who fired random shots at a car has
pleaded guilty to murder in the Nov. 17 death of a 19-year-old
West Carrolton resident.
Bernard S. Washington, 20, of Fairborn, entered the guilty plea
Monday, one week•before he was to go on trial in Greene County Common Pleas Court.
Brandy Brinkman was fatally shot in th~ neck while riding in
her car \vith her boyfriend and two teen -age 'girls. The car was
hit by at least three bullets fiom a 9 111111 carbine that police said
Washington fired randomly from a nearby apartment balcony.
' Judge M. David Reid set sentencing for June I.

. Stabbar gets 9-year ~nee

•

••

l,

PAINESVILLE (AP) - A man was sentenced to nine years in
prison for stabbing his. former wife and then throwing her and
their 2-year-old baby from a car.
Donte Jones «o~s sentenced Monday in Lake County Common Pleas Court for the attempted murder of his then-wife,
Cuttina Carpenter Jones.
1
Defense lawyer, Carolyn Kucharski, said Dante Jones was dis~-

death of s_on
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
father of a 2-year-old boy who
died of a head injury received in
foster care after being removed
liom his home blame$ the
· Cuyahoga County Dep311ment
of Children and Family Ser-

vi&lt;;~hey took him liom a per-

fectly safe home a~d put'rum in
harm's way;• Rickie Wilder, 40,
said Monday.
The Cuyahoga County coroner on Monday ruled the death
of Devin Wilder a homicide.
The child was taken unconscious from his foster home to
Rainbow Babies and Children's
Hospital on Saturday and died
later in the day.
Coroner Elizabeth .Balraj said
the boy died of a head injuty ·
and from being shaken. She
revie\ved ·police and autopsy ·
reports Monday.
"It was a blunt object i1~ury
to the head, and there was shaking. It \~S an inflict&lt;!d injury,"
Balraj said.
Cleveland police Lt. Sharon
MacKay said Monday homicide
d~tectives were working the
case but no one had been
a_rrested, ·

•

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"Think Ahead For A Healthy Baby"

Please call our
II

Ro1J at Pe~lf
CHARLESTON, S.C.- Word 1w been =rived here of the
.,_ death of Robert]. Peclrey, 68, Charleston, formerly ofBuft"alo, N.Y.,
.- ' · who died Monday, March 26, 2001 .
••
• •· Surviving are his wife, Ve~ Norris Peckey, formerly of Racin'e;
.· ; and four som, two daughters and two stepchildren.
He \V:IS retired 6om the Buffalo Police Department, and relocated to South Carolina where he retired fiom tbe MUSC Police Pub. , lie Safety Division.
Services were held by the Nightingale Funeral Home in Buffalo
on March 30, 2001.
.,

..

· The juveniles, who are
facing th eft charges, were
detained for a btief period of
time and released to their
parents.
was used to purchase alcoLaudermilt was released
hoi, said Proffitt.
and Flotli,Johnson and ArmA majority of the remain- strong ·are currendy being
ing stdkm items were found held in custody until their
on the third floor of the old coutt appeat'llnce.
motel building on Spring
"I am very pleased with
Avenue:
the results of the theft invesLaudermilt and Armstrong tigation, which was handled
were chatged with con- by Sgt. Floyd Hickman, and
tributing to the delinquency patrolmen Joe Kirlfy Jr. and
of a minor and r~ceiving Terry Powell," said Proffitt.
stolen property while Flora "The professionalism disand Johnson were both · played by all. three officers
charged with breaking and allowed for a quick appreentering, which is a fifth hension of the suspects and
degree felony, contributing the obtainment of c(ucial
to the delinquency of a information ' that 'i{elped
minor and underage con- solve the case in a timely
sumption :
fashion."

'·
TUPPERS PLAINS - Myrtle Deal Craft, 92, Tuppers Plains,
, died Monday, April 23, 2001. at her residence.
·
.. ' Born Aug. 28, 1909 at Libetty, WVa .. she was the daughter of the
late Mitchell Deal and Anna Witt Deal.
• ' Surviving are three sons and daughte rs-in~law;. &lt;;:arl and Louise
": · Deal ofTownsend, G3., Paul and Margaret Deal of Carrollton. and
· - Ray and Carol Deal of Tuppers Plains; three daughters and two
• . sons-in-laws, Betty McCoy of Columbus, Carol and Bill Arnott of
Coolville, Mary Ann and James Torrence of Morrisville, Ind.; a sis,. . ter, Della Null of Red House,WVa.; a1id several grandchildren and
,. .. great-grandchildren.
flam PapAl
. . . She was also preceded in death by her husband, Charles Lewis
' Craft, a son, Charle-s Edward, and one grand•on, Christopher Allen,
ation opportunities ranked
a great-grandson, Michael Wilson; a half-brother, Irvin Deal; sisters,
-among the worst.
ley Null, Creasy Hamilton,Vada Santrock, Clm Higgenbottom, and
Sands said a large percenta brother, Haven Deal.
age of individuals who were
Services will be 3 n.m.Thursday, with burial in Meigs Memory
surveyed indi cated that a
_Gardens. Friends m:iy call at the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
\veekly farmer's market could
6om 2-4 and 6--8 p.m .Wednesday.
prove beneficial to the community, in lieu of Meigs
County's diverse agricultural
.... '·
industry arid craft making
.. " COOLVILLE- Kenneth Aoyd Creamer. 79, Coolville, died
- Tuesday,April24, 2001 in Camden-Clark Memonal Hospital, Park- businesses .
Increased efforts to broaden
, ersburg, WVa.
.
Born near Coolville on Dec: 16, 1921, he ·ms a son of the late tourism is considered a key
- .·' Benjamin and Mattie Reed Creamer. He was a.veteran of the U.S. factor when cont,mplating ·
future revenue.
·
-~- Army during World War II, having served in the Pacific Theater.
"Out _of 1,000 surveys dis: .·,- He was awarded the Purple Heart, Bronze Star and Good Con. ·_· duct medals. He was a member ofVFW Post 3478 in Coolville and tributed throughout the vil0
lage, over I 00 of them were
' · American Legion Post 0021 in Athens, and was retired from Ames
returned," said Mayor John
Co. of Parkersburg after 33 years of service.
Blaettnar. "Considering the
He was a United MethodiSt by faith.
Surviving are his wife, Georgia ~e Vineyard Creamer; two size and length of the surveys,
sons and daughters-in-law, David and Deborah Creamer of Tall:' .. I&gt;
madge, and Larry and Jan Creamer of Coolville; a daughter and sonin-law, Sandra and Darrell Thompson ofWilliamsburg; four grandsons and a great granddaughter; and a sister, Mildred Stedman of
; ...- Athens.
froni .... Al
' . He was also preceded in death by three brothers,James,John and
· • Hamer; five sisters, Bernice, Gladys, Goldie, Mi!fred and Margaret; complete 400 more feet of the
and an infant grandson, Larry Dale Thompson.
bank, bringing the total to 600
., :• , Services will be l p.m. Thursday in White Funeral Home,
feet, Nichols said.
·' .. , Coolville, with Rev. Helen Kline officiating. Burial will follow at
· · "Uslhg ·:the seabees on the
"1 1 ~· ' Ste\Vart Cemetery in Hockingpbrt. ·
bank will enable us to still use
the bank," Nichols said.
"Unlike stone, the 'seabee bank
;,, much safer. In three- to- five
Rockwell-43
Gannett- 64 1.
years, we'll be able to mow the
AEP....: 49~.
General -Electric- 47), Rocky Boota ...., 41,
Arch Coal- 33'&gt;
bank with a lawn mower or
AD Shell -57),
GKNLY -11
Akzo -, 44~.
weed eater."
Sears- 35'&gt;
Harlay Davidson
• .. AmTech/SBC - 39).
Shoney's -~.
43~.
Dennis said AEP's Moun·, ., Ashland Inc. -43
Wai-Mart - 52
Kmart-9'1,
' - AT&amp;T-22
L1ineer Pbnt has a bank of
Wendy's- 23\,
\ ... , Bank One- 37Jt•
- Kroger- 22
Worthington
11
seabees which was installed iri
Lands End - 29
Bob Evans - 18
Dally stock reports are
Ltd. -16
BorgWamer- 45
1997 _ Employees of the plant
the 4 f.m. closing

Ust

a I 0 percent return tells me
that there is a definite interest
in the future of our community."

lntonnaaon.

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Immunization week

General manager

.

Pleasant Valley ~
Obstetric.Department .
,

(~04)675-4340, Ext 1230
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L------;---------.~
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Ext. 12
E~t.

News

13

Ext. 14

or

\

Lodge to meet

Poetry reading

Levee
from

from

are

the

Power Team
Workers Party

Ohi~Newspaper Association .

PolltmatNr: Send address correctiOns to The Cally Sentinel, 111 Court.
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. ..

News Departments

•

HARRISONVILLE
Revival services will be held
at the Harriso nville Commumty Church on Fnday and
Saturday at 7 p.m. Barbara
Higginbotham ..Gibson of
Columbus w ill ' be th e guest
speaker. The church IS (ocated
on Ohio 684 , adjacent to th e
Scipio Township firehou se .
Pastor T heron Durham invites
-the public

Board

The main number is 992·2156.
DepMment extenllons are:

Be prepared.

Plan revival

LOCAL STOCKS

to be accurata. If you know of an
error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156 .

PI'HOIICIIIIDI

•

RUTLAND
Meigs
County Tuberculosis Clinic
will hold a free evening clinic
on Aptil30 from 4:30 to 6:30
p.m ., at the Rutland Fire
Depanment. Skin tests are
free of charge for ~eigs
County residents or anyone
employed within Meigs
County. Skin tests given on
this date will be read on M ay
2 from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m ,

"Evening of Poetry" tonight
at 7and welcomes all writers
and poets to attend.
. .
Pub~shed writer Judy Klare
will be this year's featured
poet. A reti~d professor of
psychology fiom Ohio University, KJare has published
more than 300· poems, two
chapbooks and received several poetry prizes and awardS.. •
"She really is something;•
said Meigs Center Director
Gina Pines. " April is National
Poetry Month, &lt;Oo the Meigs
Center will celebrate with
readings from our local write rs."
There will be readings from
such writers as Jack Hart,
Ca thy Lentes, Joyce R.lchardson, Amy Coon)bs, Joanne
Fo rd and Gina Pines. Addi' tio na! information about the
"Eve ning of Poetry" may be
obtained by c allin g the Meigs
Ce nter, 992-3383.

Project

Services·_

to receive

ainic set

Other topi cs addressed at
the meeting were preferences
C HESTER - Shade River
for various community develLodge 453 will have a special
opment projects; ideas that
meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m.
could help the comniunity
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Work will be in the EA
take advantage of the expect- Center of the University of qegree. There will be refresh_ed changes within the region, R io Grand&lt;! will present an ments.
namely the Athens- Darwin
project, the Ravenswood
Connector project, and the
found in the village 's Well
development of a new riverNo. 4 remains below the
front marina.
minimum detectable level.
Project ·
Good
"The drinking water in
Page AI
START,funded in the past by
Middleport is completely
the Appalachian Regional ance coordinator, Carol safe for drinking in accord
Commission through the Cantrell, who has worked with all EPA standard "'
Governor's
Office
of with colincil's insurance required tests," Duffield
Appalachia, is now funded by committee in evaluating said.
Duffi~ld added that the
the U.S. Department of Agri- two proposals. .
culture/Rural Development.
Council also approved a village's upcoming · sewer
More than 25 individuals tontract with Steven Gagn- system improvement project
er, an architectural engineer, is expected to begin in early
attended the meeting.
who will complete a best June, with completion in 92
use plan for Middleport's days.
naw mow the bank, which has three school buildings.
B&amp;L Cons'truction of
beeil revegatated over the_
The village has expressed Ashland, Ky., has been
an interest in assuming awarded the contract for the
seabees.
Nichols said he would like ownership '()f the buildings $1,013,117 project.
once , the Meigs Local
"There have been seven!
to .see the entire bank project
completed by the 2001 Bend School District's two new concerns regarding the proArea CARE Catfish Tourna- buildings are completed. ject's effect on the village,
!Oent, slated for jut)e 2. He Gagner's $10,000 conttact , street and ·other projects,"
will be paid using grant Duffield said. "But it should
added CARE will be adding
funds from · the Ohio be dear and understood that
concrete handicapped parking Department of Develop- this project impacts only
near the dock hopefully before . ment.
specific points around the
the tourney.
Councilman
Stephen village and is not a complete
The bank erosion abatement Houchins inquired about system replacement."
is another part of a park the barricade around the
"The projects will ·be
upgrade underway in Mason. Mark V building on the cor- completed before any stre'it
In t~riall, the town and Bend ner of North Second paving begins and will. not
Arei CARE worked together Avenue and Mill Street, and interfere with that project,"
to install a permanent_courtesy how long it will be in place. he added.
Iannarelli ·said she and a
Also present were Council
do ck at the levy.
members
Rae
GwiazOak Hill Financial
Champion - 2Y,
cotnnlittee of business O\Vllquotes
o
1he
previous
13).
Charming Shops- 5
dowsky, Roger Manley, Bob
ers and others interested in
day's transactions. pro·
OVB-25
City Holding - 8
of the Cincinnati College of pursuing a restoration of the Pooler, Bob Robinson and
vided by Smith Part·
BBT-- 35~
DuPont - 44
Kathy Scptt, Clerk Bryan
ners at Advest Inc. of
Peoples - 17 ·
Federal Mogul - 3),
Mortuary Science.
building, owned by Mr. and
Gallipolis.
USB- 21 ), '
. Premier- 7
He is a member of St. Peter's Mrs. Bennett Roush, met Swann , and Street SuperviPip AI
Episcopal Church, Gallipolis with Roush prior to the sor Kenny Madden .
Lions Club, Gallipolis Elks meeting to discuss the
only began to seriously consid- · Lodge and the Morning Dawn building's condition .
er when the advisaty boatd Masonic Lodge. He and his
lannarelli said the barrigot to work," he added.
wife Peggy reside in Gallipolis. cade was put in place
"It is that outsider's .prospecWhiteley, who is Gallia because roofing material
rive of the community and its County coroner, was a general, and other debris pose a safeneeds that we
looking for," thoracic and vascular surgeon ty hazard for pedestrians .on
Reed said.
with Holzer Clinic fiom 1973 the street.
In addition to identifying until 1998. He has served with
Roush has opted to purbank services and products, the numerous professional and sue repairs on his own,
boatd wil) also help the bank civic organizations. His non- - lannarelli said, but will be
associations given a only a short time to
apprised of community events professional
and projects with which the. include member and past pres- make the building safe for
bank can assist. 1
ident of the URG/RGCC passersby.
The group is expected to Board ofTrustees, president of
lannarelli said the buildmeet on a bimonthly or quar- the Ariel Boatd of Directors, ing, condemned by the vil·
and secretary of the Southern lage, also poses a· liability
I
·
.
d I
I b f ·"'
terIy b am.
Skinner, an oral surgeon, and A's Mo e A C u o G.Wpo- problem for the village.
Myron Duffield, president
Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets, left, and Mick Dav- his wife Glenda are the parents lis.
of
three
children,
Carolyn,
He
and
his
wife
Edna
reside
of the Board of Public
enport have signed a proclamation declaring this week NationBethany and Allen. He says in Gallipolis.
Affairs, presented a report to
al Infant Immunization Week. (Contributed photo)
In addition to its main office
council on the level of
busy with his son's participain Pomeroy and the branch in volatile organic compounds
tion in sports.
Kincaid holds an accounting Gallipolis, Farmers Bank also
_
Bl fi l l f\YIV:a) operates a branch &lt;:&gt;fficc . m
degree r__
uum ue e a 1 .. . • ~
PI _
State College and is a member . uppers 3105 '
(USPS 213-HO)
of the Professional GolfAssociOhlct Volley Publlohlng Co.
R~ader
Published every afternoon, Monday
ation of America. He is the
lhrough Frtday, 111 Court St..
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
executive director o( the
Correction Polley
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paid
at
Pomeroy.
Our main concern In all stories is
Southeastern Ohio Golf AssoMtmber: The Associated Press and

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ctarion.

Smith is general manager of
Smith Buick- Pontiac; and
holds a bachelor of science
degree in business administration from Ohio SL1te Universi- ·
-ty. H is · wife Karen owns the
Purple Turtle in Gallipolis, and
they arc the parenl' of three
children , Kelly, Chris and
Robert.
He is a member of Cliffsiqe
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Wood attended OSU and
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Tuesday, May 1 • 7:00P.M.
MIPDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
Family Life Center
'
This Is for EVERYONE
who helped make the Crusade
a great success.
If you helped In any way,
bring a dessert Item and
j91n us for an evening of
felloWship &amp; remembering.
· **Drinks &amp; t'ble service provided

�l

•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
•

Ohio State to use rewards to track partygoers

Ohio weather
WednttdiiY, Aprtl25

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COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State
University plans to offer rewards to help
identify partygoers who thttw beer botdes, set lim and broke car windows last
weekend near campus.
Ohio State is asking people who took
· pictures or shot home video of the disturbance to turn the material over to the
university.
OSU has not determined the amount
of the rewards, but the money may be
provided by the Columbus Division of
Police's Crime Stoppers progtam, Bill
Hall, interim vice president for student
affairs, said Monday.
Two people, including one student,
were arrested, and three students were
cited for misdemeanor offenses for their
roles in the melee, Hall said.
Each could face probation, suspension
or dismissal from the. university when
they go before the judicial committee of
.the Office of Student Affairs, Hall said.
The parties that ended early Saturday
were the fourth disturbance in just more
than a year in 'the off-campus area but the

first since Ohio State trustees VOted bst
month to expand the stud{lit code of
conduct to include punishment for inappropriate behavior off campus.
" Wb2t I think it's time to say to people is it's totally inexcusable behavior;'
Hall said. "I'm appalled when I go
through the neighbOrhood and see people throw things of£ balconies, and the
trash."

Mayor Michael Coleman said the campus area disturbances are getting worse.
_ " It's just not acceptabl_e in the city of
Columbus;· Coleman said.
He _called on the students "to show
respect to the university, its reputation.
and to the city of Columbus and to
themselves, as ,,cU."
Starting -this weekend, city police, will
have increased visibi~ty .in the -campus
area, the mayor said.
· Police spokeswoman Sherry Jones said
a videotape of rioting that was shown on
television newscasts last weekend could
help identify offenders.
"It's definitely a ,great approach," she

said.
Jones said only two people were attested because there were not enough
cers to handle the ro\lldlly _2,000 pe&lt;lple
who attended parti~ ),0 c.,_ittend.n
Awnuc that spilled into the street.
. Jones did not know how many officers
were at the scene. They had to lite tear
gas and wooden projectiles to break up
the crowd.
"Our biggest priority at that point was
to disperse the crowd and gain conttol;'
she said. "It's absolutely impossible to
arrest everybody. Had we had more people, I guarantee you that there would
have been more arrests."
Kris Blausey. 22, of Oregon, was the
Ohio State student who was arrested. He
was charged with disobeying an officer's
signal, resisting arreSt and. misconduct at
an emergency.
Jones said Blausey drove his car into a
group of police officers as partygoers
cheered him on, and officers had to jump
out of the way to avoid beirig hit.

Chilly nighttime lows slated

nati in 1996. He joined the newspaper in 1977 as a reporter and
traught about his failed marriage when he snapped.
has
worked as an assistant city editor, editorial writer and nem
High in the mid 60s. Light and
BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
"He was going through a sttessful divorce;· she said. "He was
Scattered fiost was possible variable wind.
ll
suffering fiom fear of ab~ndonnient. Everyone said his actions editor.
Tuesday night as temperatures
Wednesday night.. .Partly that day were completely out of characrcr."
were predicted to dip into the cloudy. Low 33 to 3 7.
30s following passage of a cold
Extended forecast:
p~acess
COLUMBUS (AP) -A retired college president liom Minfront.
Thursday... Mosdy sunny
Temperatures on Wednes- during the day and starry skies
ATHENS (AP) -A !lew technology aimed at reducing sulfur nesota will be interim president of Capital University, the school
··
dioxide emissions from coal conld make Ohio a leade~ in export- said Monday.
day were expected to get no at night. High 70 to 75.
warmer than the mid 60s or
ing energy to other states, officials said Monday.
Paul J. Dovre, president of Concordia College in Moorhead,
Friday... Mostly dear,· Low
"Clean coal technology is the answer to America•s energy Minn.,for 24 years, will take over at Capital on May 2l.The cure
low-60s, then warm slowly the
in the mid 40s and high 73 to
problems," said Mike Carey, president of the Ohio Coal Associa- rent president Daniel Felicetti, is leaving to pursue other interests.
rest of the week.
77.
tion. "We don't have to rely on foreign sources for cpa!. We can
No rain was in the weather
Dovre, 66, gtaduated fiom Concordia in 1958 and joined the
Saturday... Partly
cloudy. help solve tl'ie energy problems of the nation:·
picture through the weekend.
faculty there in 1963. He retired in 1999. Capital said he will not
State and Ohio U nivemty officials broke ground Monday on be a candidate for Felicetti's permanent replacement at the
Sunset tonight will be at Low near 50 and high in the
an addition to the school's Lausche Power Plant that will produce 4,000-student school.
8: 19, and sunrise .on Wednes- upper 70s;
Sunday... Mostly dear. Low energy using the new technology through December 2002. Parts
day is at 6:40 a.m.
I
50s
and
high
in
in
the
lower
of the effort :llready are under way at the existing plant.
Weather forecast:
the
upper
70s.
It's the first test of the process in an operating plant, said Gary
Tonight... Mostly clear. Low
Monday. .. Partly cloudy and North, OU's vice president of administration and coordinator for
in the mid 30s. Light north
COLUMBUS (AP) - Families with children under 6 years
continued warm. Low in the the project.
wind.
old are eligible fot discounts on products and services .from busiWednesday. .. Mostly sunny. upper 50s and high 78 to 83.
nesses under a new state progtam announced Monday.
Ohio Kids Card, run by the Ohio Department ofHealth, was
&amp;11te1s
modeled aftertheDhio Department of Aging's Golden Buckeye
MEDINA (AP) - Mayor James Roberts on Monday denied Catd program, which offers discounts to senior citizens on ewrycharges that he used city workers to help him build a house.
thing fiom haircuts to bowling to groceries.
COLUMBUS {AP) - Ohio State University has closed its · Roberts, 60, ple;&lt;ded innocent in Medina County Common - "The state of Ohio is strongly committed to enabling evety
rese:m:h farms to the public because 'of fears about foot-and- Pleas .Coutt to three counts of theft in office.
·
child to succeed;' Gov. Bob Tali said. "Ohio Kic!s Catd will help
mouth'disease.
·
. Roberts said he asked a city employee to install,f~!11~- shelves families with ·young children and at the same time also ·help
Tlle virus is harmless to humans but makes hooved animili m a house that he had built last year. The mayor said tile employ- Ohio's businesses grow."
1
sick. It has ravaged British livestock and 'can be transmitted by dirt ee worked for several hou~ one day on his own 'time. Roberts
Parents can enroll their children in the program at any public
on clothes, shoes and vehicles.
said he was surprised to later learn the employee had entered the
libraty. The only requirement is that children are under age 6.
Suzanne Steel, director of communications for the College of time he spent on the. house as -time spent working for the city.
Food, Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, says the restricRoberts said he told the employee that was not permitted and
tions are a precaution against a visitor bringing the disease in offered a porch glider as payment.
·
from another counrry.
EATON (AP) - Ne2rly $3 million worth of marijuana- the
All OSU farm-animal operations are affected by the "no visisecond largest seizure in the history of the State Highway Patrol
.
tors" rule. Ohio State has rwo farms in the Columbus area and
CINCINNATI (AP) r- Paul Knue is stepping down as editor - was found among boxes of vegetables inside a semitrailer
one in Wooster in Wayne County in northeast Ohio. The farms
,
ofThe Cincinnati Post and will be replaced on May 1 by Mike stopped by troopers, the patrol said Monday.
are for breeding and research.
The marijuana was found Saturday after the truck was stopped
Philipps, a Post news executive since 1986.
on
eastbound lmerstate 70 in western Ohio for foUO\ving too
Knue; 53, first joined the Post in 1970. He became editor of
The Kentucky Post in 1979, editor ofThe Cincinnati Post four dose and lane v10laoons, the patrol said.
After a drug-sniffing dog alerted to the cargo, troopers searched
LONDON (AP) - A state corrections officer who was dri- years later and assumed the leadership of both newspapers in
the
veh1cle and found 19 cardboard boxes of marijuana among
ving a prison van that crashed in a snow squall in February; killing 1995. The E.W Scripps Co. owns both dailies.
.
Knue, a native of Lawrenceburg, Ind., will serve briefly a; a boxes of cucumbers and peppers, the patrol said.
a co-worker, has been convicted of vehicular manslaughter. .
Richard Lake, ~0, of Lebanon was found guilty of the requced consultant for the Scripps Co. before taking early retirement. - _ Te~ny 0. Chin, 42, of Jamaica, N.Y., and Anthony Miller, 38,
Philipps, 54, has been city editor ofThe Cincinnati Post since of M~am1, Fla., were charged with drug trafficking and possession
-. charge on Monday after entering a no-contest plea. He faces up
1989 and assumed the tide of assistant managing editor/Cincin- o~ cnm1nal tools, the patrol said. If convicted, _each faces up to
to 90 days in jail when sentenced on June 26.
.
rune years. m pnson.
•
Lake originally was charged with vehicular homicide in the
- ~ -- death of Wayne Mitchell, 54. Prosecutors said the vehicular
~ homicide charge was too hatd to prove.
~ Lake and Mitchell were transporting two prisoners from the
" -. Warren Correctional Institution in Lebanon to the Ohio State
~ Univenity Medical Center in Columbus. The van went out of. ·
: control on snow-covered lnterstate-71 and crashed into a bridge
~ pillar near Mount Sterling.

OU st.tt dean coal

Kids wiR aet state dismunt

Medina mapr

plea

OSU doSes off NSearch fanns

Pabol seizes S3 million In pot

anclnnatl editor leavlnl
,..

Guard convidad in fatal aash

Father
blames

county for ··

Makeshift

1

1iielhw lab shut down

ABERDEEN (AP) - Police raided a makeshift motel lab
whe_re methamphetamine was being manufactured and arrested
four Mississippi residents, police said.
Charges were pending against two men and two women who
were being held in the Brown County Detention Center. A 2~ar-old girl was in the custody of Brown County Children's
Services.
'
·
Police said they niad= the arrests Monday arthe Daniel Boone
Motor Inn on U.S. 52 after receiving a complaint about a strong
odor coming from a room.
·
"I pretty much knew after I smelled it that we had a meth lab;'
Police Officer Todd Bumbalough said. "The odor was tremendous. I think we kind of caught them off-gua_rd."
·

Falrbom man pleads to murder
XENIA (AP) - A man who fired random shots at a car has
pleaded guilty to murder in the Nov. 17 death of a 19-year-old
West Carrolton resident.
Bernard S. Washington, 20, of Fairborn, entered the guilty plea
Monday, one week•before he was to go on trial in Greene County Common Pleas Court.
Brandy Brinkman was fatally shot in th~ neck while riding in
her car \vith her boyfriend and two teen -age 'girls. The car was
hit by at least three bullets fiom a 9 111111 carbine that police said
Washington fired randomly from a nearby apartment balcony.
' Judge M. David Reid set sentencing for June I.

. Stabbar gets 9-year ~nee

•

••

l,

PAINESVILLE (AP) - A man was sentenced to nine years in
prison for stabbing his. former wife and then throwing her and
their 2-year-old baby from a car.
Donte Jones «o~s sentenced Monday in Lake County Common Pleas Court for the attempted murder of his then-wife,
Cuttina Carpenter Jones.
1
Defense lawyer, Carolyn Kucharski, said Dante Jones was dis~-

death of s_on
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
father of a 2-year-old boy who
died of a head injury received in
foster care after being removed
liom his home blame$ the
· Cuyahoga County Dep311ment
of Children and Family Ser-

vi&lt;;~hey took him liom a per-

fectly safe home a~d put'rum in
harm's way;• Rickie Wilder, 40,
said Monday.
The Cuyahoga County coroner on Monday ruled the death
of Devin Wilder a homicide.
The child was taken unconscious from his foster home to
Rainbow Babies and Children's
Hospital on Saturday and died
later in the day.
Coroner Elizabeth .Balraj said
the boy died of a head injuty ·
and from being shaken. She
revie\ved ·police and autopsy ·
reports Monday.
"It was a blunt object i1~ury
to the head, and there was shaking. It \~S an inflict&lt;!d injury,"
Balraj said.
Cleveland police Lt. Sharon
MacKay said Monday homicide
d~tectives were working the
case but no one had been
a_rrested, ·

•

IS
·lA

. :1

r

re.

"Think Ahead For A Healthy Baby"

Please call our
II

Ro1J at Pe~lf
CHARLESTON, S.C.- Word 1w been =rived here of the
.,_ death of Robert]. Peclrey, 68, Charleston, formerly ofBuft"alo, N.Y.,
.- ' · who died Monday, March 26, 2001 .
••
• •· Surviving are his wife, Ve~ Norris Peckey, formerly of Racin'e;
.· ; and four som, two daughters and two stepchildren.
He \V:IS retired 6om the Buffalo Police Department, and relocated to South Carolina where he retired fiom tbe MUSC Police Pub. , lie Safety Division.
Services were held by the Nightingale Funeral Home in Buffalo
on March 30, 2001.
.,

..

· The juveniles, who are
facing th eft charges, were
detained for a btief period of
time and released to their
parents.
was used to purchase alcoLaudermilt was released
hoi, said Proffitt.
and Flotli,Johnson and ArmA majority of the remain- strong ·are currendy being
ing stdkm items were found held in custody until their
on the third floor of the old coutt appeat'llnce.
motel building on Spring
"I am very pleased with
Avenue:
the results of the theft invesLaudermilt and Armstrong tigation, which was handled
were chatged with con- by Sgt. Floyd Hickman, and
tributing to the delinquency patrolmen Joe Kirlfy Jr. and
of a minor and r~ceiving Terry Powell," said Proffitt.
stolen property while Flora "The professionalism disand Johnson were both · played by all. three officers
charged with breaking and allowed for a quick appreentering, which is a fifth hension of the suspects and
degree felony, contributing the obtainment of c(ucial
to the delinquency of a information ' that 'i{elped
minor and underage con- solve the case in a timely
sumption :
fashion."

'·
TUPPERS PLAINS - Myrtle Deal Craft, 92, Tuppers Plains,
, died Monday, April 23, 2001. at her residence.
·
.. ' Born Aug. 28, 1909 at Libetty, WVa .. she was the daughter of the
late Mitchell Deal and Anna Witt Deal.
• ' Surviving are three sons and daughte rs-in~law;. &lt;;:arl and Louise
": · Deal ofTownsend, G3., Paul and Margaret Deal of Carrollton. and
· - Ray and Carol Deal of Tuppers Plains; three daughters and two
• . sons-in-laws, Betty McCoy of Columbus, Carol and Bill Arnott of
Coolville, Mary Ann and James Torrence of Morrisville, Ind.; a sis,. . ter, Della Null of Red House,WVa.; a1id several grandchildren and
,. .. great-grandchildren.
flam PapAl
. . . She was also preceded in death by her husband, Charles Lewis
' Craft, a son, Charle-s Edward, and one grand•on, Christopher Allen,
ation opportunities ranked
a great-grandson, Michael Wilson; a half-brother, Irvin Deal; sisters,
-among the worst.
ley Null, Creasy Hamilton,Vada Santrock, Clm Higgenbottom, and
Sands said a large percenta brother, Haven Deal.
age of individuals who were
Services will be 3 n.m.Thursday, with burial in Meigs Memory
surveyed indi cated that a
_Gardens. Friends m:iy call at the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
\veekly farmer's market could
6om 2-4 and 6--8 p.m .Wednesday.
prove beneficial to the community, in lieu of Meigs
County's diverse agricultural
.... '·
industry arid craft making
.. " COOLVILLE- Kenneth Aoyd Creamer. 79, Coolville, died
- Tuesday,April24, 2001 in Camden-Clark Memonal Hospital, Park- businesses .
Increased efforts to broaden
, ersburg, WVa.
.
Born near Coolville on Dec: 16, 1921, he ·ms a son of the late tourism is considered a key
- .·' Benjamin and Mattie Reed Creamer. He was a.veteran of the U.S. factor when cont,mplating ·
future revenue.
·
-~- Army during World War II, having served in the Pacific Theater.
"Out _of 1,000 surveys dis: .·,- He was awarded the Purple Heart, Bronze Star and Good Con. ·_· duct medals. He was a member ofVFW Post 3478 in Coolville and tributed throughout the vil0
lage, over I 00 of them were
' · American Legion Post 0021 in Athens, and was retired from Ames
returned," said Mayor John
Co. of Parkersburg after 33 years of service.
Blaettnar. "Considering the
He was a United MethodiSt by faith.
Surviving are his wife, Georgia ~e Vineyard Creamer; two size and length of the surveys,
sons and daughters-in-law, David and Deborah Creamer of Tall:' .. I&gt;
madge, and Larry and Jan Creamer of Coolville; a daughter and sonin-law, Sandra and Darrell Thompson ofWilliamsburg; four grandsons and a great granddaughter; and a sister, Mildred Stedman of
; ...- Athens.
froni .... Al
' . He was also preceded in death by three brothers,James,John and
· • Hamer; five sisters, Bernice, Gladys, Goldie, Mi!fred and Margaret; complete 400 more feet of the
and an infant grandson, Larry Dale Thompson.
bank, bringing the total to 600
., :• , Services will be l p.m. Thursday in White Funeral Home,
feet, Nichols said.
·' .. , Coolville, with Rev. Helen Kline officiating. Burial will follow at
· · "Uslhg ·:the seabees on the
"1 1 ~· ' Ste\Vart Cemetery in Hockingpbrt. ·
bank will enable us to still use
the bank," Nichols said.
"Unlike stone, the 'seabee bank
;,, much safer. In three- to- five
Rockwell-43
Gannett- 64 1.
years, we'll be able to mow the
AEP....: 49~.
General -Electric- 47), Rocky Boota ...., 41,
Arch Coal- 33'&gt;
bank with a lawn mower or
AD Shell -57),
GKNLY -11
Akzo -, 44~.
weed eater."
Sears- 35'&gt;
Harlay Davidson
• .. AmTech/SBC - 39).
Shoney's -~.
43~.
Dennis said AEP's Moun·, ., Ashland Inc. -43
Wai-Mart - 52
Kmart-9'1,
' - AT&amp;T-22
L1ineer Pbnt has a bank of
Wendy's- 23\,
\ ... , Bank One- 37Jt•
- Kroger- 22
Worthington
11
seabees which was installed iri
Lands End - 29
Bob Evans - 18
Dally stock reports are
Ltd. -16
BorgWamer- 45
1997 _ Employees of the plant
the 4 f.m. closing

Ust

a I 0 percent return tells me
that there is a definite interest
in the future of our community."

lntonnaaon.

:r

.,,..
, .•
•
:; ., .

r, •

,.

Immunization week

General manager

.

Pleasant Valley ~
Obstetric.Department .
,

(~04)675-4340, Ext 1230
-

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

..

Ext. 12
E~t.

News

13

Ext. 14

or

\

Lodge to meet

Poetry reading

Levee
from

from

are

the

Power Team
Workers Party

Ohi~Newspaper Association .

PolltmatNr: Send address correctiOns to The Cally Sentinel, 111 Court.
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. ..

News Departments

•

HARRISONVILLE
Revival services will be held
at the Harriso nville Commumty Church on Fnday and
Saturday at 7 p.m. Barbara
Higginbotham ..Gibson of
Columbus w ill ' be th e guest
speaker. The church IS (ocated
on Ohio 684 , adjacent to th e
Scipio Township firehou se .
Pastor T heron Durham invites
-the public

Board

The main number is 992·2156.
DepMment extenllons are:

Be prepared.

Plan revival

LOCAL STOCKS

to be accurata. If you know of an
error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156 .

PI'HOIICIIIIDI

•

RUTLAND
Meigs
County Tuberculosis Clinic
will hold a free evening clinic
on Aptil30 from 4:30 to 6:30
p.m ., at the Rutland Fire
Depanment. Skin tests are
free of charge for ~eigs
County residents or anyone
employed within Meigs
County. Skin tests given on
this date will be read on M ay
2 from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m ,

"Evening of Poetry" tonight
at 7and welcomes all writers
and poets to attend.
. .
Pub~shed writer Judy Klare
will be this year's featured
poet. A reti~d professor of
psychology fiom Ohio University, KJare has published
more than 300· poems, two
chapbooks and received several poetry prizes and awardS.. •
"She really is something;•
said Meigs Center Director
Gina Pines. " April is National
Poetry Month, &lt;Oo the Meigs
Center will celebrate with
readings from our local write rs."
There will be readings from
such writers as Jack Hart,
Ca thy Lentes, Joyce R.lchardson, Amy Coon)bs, Joanne
Fo rd and Gina Pines. Addi' tio na! information about the
"Eve ning of Poetry" may be
obtained by c allin g the Meigs
Ce nter, 992-3383.

Project

Services·_

to receive

ainic set

Other topi cs addressed at
the meeting were preferences
C HESTER - Shade River
for various community develLodge 453 will have a special
opment projects; ideas that
meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m.
could help the comniunity
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Work will be in the EA
take advantage of the expect- Center of the University of qegree. There will be refresh_ed changes within the region, R io Grand&lt;! will present an ments.
namely the Athens- Darwin
project, the Ravenswood
Connector project, and the
found in the village 's Well
development of a new riverNo. 4 remains below the
front marina.
minimum detectable level.
Project ·
Good
"The drinking water in
Page AI
START,funded in the past by
Middleport is completely
the Appalachian Regional ance coordinator, Carol safe for drinking in accord
Commission through the Cantrell, who has worked with all EPA standard "'
Governor's
Office
of with colincil's insurance required tests," Duffield
Appalachia, is now funded by committee in evaluating said.
Duffi~ld added that the
the U.S. Department of Agri- two proposals. .
culture/Rural Development.
Council also approved a village's upcoming · sewer
More than 25 individuals tontract with Steven Gagn- system improvement project
er, an architectural engineer, is expected to begin in early
attended the meeting.
who will complete a best June, with completion in 92
use plan for Middleport's days.
naw mow the bank, which has three school buildings.
B&amp;L Cons'truction of
beeil revegatated over the_
The village has expressed Ashland, Ky., has been
an interest in assuming awarded the contract for the
seabees.
Nichols said he would like ownership '()f the buildings $1,013,117 project.
once , the Meigs Local
"There have been seven!
to .see the entire bank project
completed by the 2001 Bend School District's two new concerns regarding the proArea CARE Catfish Tourna- buildings are completed. ject's effect on the village,
!Oent, slated for jut)e 2. He Gagner's $10,000 conttact , street and ·other projects,"
will be paid using grant Duffield said. "But it should
added CARE will be adding
funds from · the Ohio be dear and understood that
concrete handicapped parking Department of Develop- this project impacts only
near the dock hopefully before . ment.
specific points around the
the tourney.
Councilman
Stephen village and is not a complete
The bank erosion abatement Houchins inquired about system replacement."
is another part of a park the barricade around the
"The projects will ·be
upgrade underway in Mason. Mark V building on the cor- completed before any stre'it
In t~riall, the town and Bend ner of North Second paving begins and will. not
Arei CARE worked together Avenue and Mill Street, and interfere with that project,"
to install a permanent_courtesy how long it will be in place. he added.
Iannarelli ·said she and a
Also present were Council
do ck at the levy.
members
Rae
GwiazOak Hill Financial
Champion - 2Y,
cotnnlittee of business O\Vllquotes
o
1he
previous
13).
Charming Shops- 5
dowsky, Roger Manley, Bob
ers and others interested in
day's transactions. pro·
OVB-25
City Holding - 8
of the Cincinnati College of pursuing a restoration of the Pooler, Bob Robinson and
vided by Smith Part·
BBT-- 35~
DuPont - 44
Kathy Scptt, Clerk Bryan
ners at Advest Inc. of
Peoples - 17 ·
Federal Mogul - 3),
Mortuary Science.
building, owned by Mr. and
Gallipolis.
USB- 21 ), '
. Premier- 7
He is a member of St. Peter's Mrs. Bennett Roush, met Swann , and Street SuperviPip AI
Episcopal Church, Gallipolis with Roush prior to the sor Kenny Madden .
Lions Club, Gallipolis Elks meeting to discuss the
only began to seriously consid- · Lodge and the Morning Dawn building's condition .
er when the advisaty boatd Masonic Lodge. He and his
lannarelli said the barrigot to work," he added.
wife Peggy reside in Gallipolis. cade was put in place
"It is that outsider's .prospecWhiteley, who is Gallia because roofing material
rive of the community and its County coroner, was a general, and other debris pose a safeneeds that we
looking for," thoracic and vascular surgeon ty hazard for pedestrians .on
Reed said.
with Holzer Clinic fiom 1973 the street.
In addition to identifying until 1998. He has served with
Roush has opted to purbank services and products, the numerous professional and sue repairs on his own,
boatd wil) also help the bank civic organizations. His non- - lannarelli said, but will be
associations given a only a short time to
apprised of community events professional
and projects with which the. include member and past pres- make the building safe for
bank can assist. 1
ident of the URG/RGCC passersby.
The group is expected to Board ofTrustees, president of
lannarelli said the buildmeet on a bimonthly or quar- the Ariel Boatd of Directors, ing, condemned by the vil·
and secretary of the Southern lage, also poses a· liability
I
·
.
d I
I b f ·"'
terIy b am.
Skinner, an oral surgeon, and A's Mo e A C u o G.Wpo- problem for the village.
Myron Duffield, president
Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets, left, and Mick Dav- his wife Glenda are the parents lis.
of
three
children,
Carolyn,
He
and
his
wife
Edna
reside
of the Board of Public
enport have signed a proclamation declaring this week NationBethany and Allen. He says in Gallipolis.
Affairs, presented a report to
al Infant Immunization Week. (Contributed photo)
In addition to its main office
council on the level of
busy with his son's participain Pomeroy and the branch in volatile organic compounds
tion in sports.
Kincaid holds an accounting Gallipolis, Farmers Bank also
_
Bl fi l l f\YIV:a) operates a branch &lt;:&gt;fficc . m
degree r__
uum ue e a 1 .. . • ~
PI _
State College and is a member . uppers 3105 '
(USPS 213-HO)
of the Professional GolfAssociOhlct Volley Publlohlng Co.
R~ader
Published every afternoon, Monday
ation of America. He is the
lhrough Frtday, 111 Court St..
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
executive director o( the
Correction Polley
postage
paid
at
Pomeroy.
Our main concern In all stories is
Southeastern Ohio Golf AssoMtmber: The Associated Press and

.The Daily Sentinel

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ctarion.

Smith is general manager of
Smith Buick- Pontiac; and
holds a bachelor of science
degree in business administration from Ohio SL1te Universi- ·
-ty. H is · wife Karen owns the
Purple Turtle in Gallipolis, and
they arc the parenl' of three
children , Kelly, Chris and
Robert.
He is a member of Cliffsiqe
Golf Co urse and , and form erly
coached rinky dink basketball
and T-ball.
Wood attended OSU and
' the
University . of Rio
Grande/ Rio Grande Community College, and is a graduate

Tuesday, May 1 • 7:00P.M.
MIPDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
Family Life Center
'
This Is for EVERYONE
who helped make the Crusade
a great success.
If you helped In any way,
bring a dessert Item and
j91n us for an evening of
felloWship &amp; remembering.
· **Drinks &amp; t'ble service provided

�..

Opinion

ihe Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

'

PageA4

_The_oail_Y_Se_ntin_e•
· ·--~BJ the Bend ·

Tu•••WJ· ~~~ :z-.:zool

DEAR ABBY: I am shockrd and
outraged by your reply to "Marne&lt;! to

Publisher

Abigail

-

Van
Buren

ShaWn Lewll

Mllneglng Editor

DlaM Kay Hill

Cha ..... Hoeflich
O...... IIIMger

Controller

.._. ..... _ _ _ _ TJo9_ .. ,... _ _ _ ... _

.,. •dJ«t»..,.., _,.,..,. JipttllllltlbtdMM . . . . . . . . ,', ;,, .....,.
, N• .................... hiMNIIW. ,..,. llttHIItlh U. , - llu*, _ , , , .
;,,.,,

,,,, ,.,. ..

. ,....,...,.. . _ . . . , , . . , . , . _ . . . . . . . . . . . &lt;OIUI. . . . . . , ...

r.,···p·.,c..

Ololill'oll9

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

NATIONAL VIEWS

Restoring felon voting rights
.
.,a·constructive step
so many more people being sent to prison, and consequendy
so many more trying to fit ipto society after their release, we
have to take a more constructive attitude toward ex-convicts.
That's why we support legislation pending in Tallahassee
that would restore the voting rights of ex-felons.
Senators want to require a five-year wait after completion of
a sentence before restoring voting rights to those who committed violent felonies. A nonviolent felon would have to wait
one year.
The House version calls for a one-year wait for everyone.
The differences need to be resolved.so this basic step toward
reintegrating Florida's estimated 500,000 ex-felons into full
citizenship can be taken. They forfeited that right when they
ct&gt;rnmitted a crime. They served their time, and face a difficult
time re-entering society without this constitutional stigma.
Voters would have to approve any change, if the Legislature
places it on the ballot, because the state Constitution denies exfelons the right to vote.
We strongly supported longer sentences and more prisons.
· That hard line has to be accompanied by constructive reba~
bilitation.

• The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C., on cloning

ltr.~mans: The United States, and the international community, '
aJ;e ill-prepared to deal with the charlatans and visionaries who
are .already taking advantage of the new technology of biological reproduction to promise the creation of human clones.
Their schemes must be stopped before they produce what
promises to be a chamber of horrors ....
The first successful clone, in 1997, was Dolly, a Scottish
sheep....
In an article in Science, Dolly team leader Ian Wilmut, a Yale
scientist, has passionately attacked the notibn that human
· clones can be readily reproduced without mishap ....
Wilmut described to a congressional hearing a failed experiment to clone a lamb. ...
·
• The same hearing heard testimony from two groups that are
mshing to produce the first cloned human ....
: Not surprisingly, a movement is already under way in Congress to close a gaping loophole in the law....
: Unfortunately, the cloning technique is relatively simple, and .
c:i.n be carried out anywhere in the world if local authorities
c~nsent. A new international compact against , cloning is
utgendy requited.
r

TO.DAY 'IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: :roday is Thesday, April 24, the 114th day of 2001. There are
251 days left in the year.
~ Today's Highlight in History:
: On April 24, 1BOO, Congress approved a bill establishing the
Lil&gt;tary of Congress.
: .On this date:
: In 1792, the national anthem of France, "La Marseillaise," .
Was composed by Capt. Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle.
: In 1898, Spain declared war on .the United States after .
rO)ecting America's ultimatum to withdraw from· Cuba.
. In 1915; the Ottoman Turkish Empire began the brutal mass
deportation of Armenians during World War I.
· In 1916, some 1,600 Irish nationalists launched the Easter
Rising by seizing several key sites in Dublin. (The uprising was
· put down by British forces several days later.)
'
In 1953, British statesman Winston Churchill was knighted
by Queen Elizabeth II.
.
.
In 1968, leftist students at Columbia University in New York
began a week-long occupation of several campus buildin~.
In 1970, the People's Republic Of Chirta launched its first
satellite, which repeatedly transmitted a soQg, "The East is
Red."
In 1980, the United States lauhched an abortive attempt to
tree the American hostages in Iran, a mission that resulted in
die deaths of eight U.S. servicemen.
; In 1986, Wallis, the Duchess of Windsor, for whom King
Edward VIII had given up the British throne, died in Paris at

.

.

; In 1990, the space shuttle Discovery blasted off from Cape
Canaveral, Fla., carrying the $1.5 billion Hubble Space Tele-'
scope.
: Ten years ago: A Kurdish rebel leader announced the guerrillas bad reached an agreement in principle with Iraqi PresidentSaddam Hussein to end the Kurds' two-week rebeUion.
five years ago: The main assembly of the Palestine Liberation Organization voted to revoke. clauses in its .charter that '
called for an an11ed struggle to destroy IsraeL Negotiators for
· Congre~ and the White House agreed on a permanent budget
1
for fiscal year 1996.
··
· •

.

, L.

TUESDAY
RACINE- RACO, 6:30p.m:,
witft potluck dinner.

ers, lawmen, gamblers and oudaws, and
may just find your best friend there.
Again, "Thank you," Alden Waitt and the beautiful women, all of whom make
the west wild.
·
the MCHS.
Dear Editor: ·
Write to 100· Union Ave., Pomeroy,
Becky Peerey
Being aware of both the county and
New Marshfield Ohio 45769.
The Daily Sentinel's fervent 'efforts to
David Edwards
Pomeroy
discourage the use of tobacco products
by underage individuals, as well as otlters, I count myself among the confused
Dear Editor:
at die April 12th front page photo in the
The Single Action Shooting Society is
paper of the Easter Bunny posing beside
Dear Editor:
starting
a club in the area now. SASS is
a Marlboro sign.
.
When Coach Darin Logan's Mei~
A friend of Big Tobacco and an inter- what cowboy action shooting is all
J.
V.
girls basketball team defeated
about. But we are not just another
ested observer,
Alexander in. the season finale, they
Michael Grueser shooting organization.
SASS holds cooking contests, custom capped off a very successful season with
Pomeroy
contests, trivia contests, cookouts and all an 18.;-1 J;tcord, ,including going undetypes of dances, and many more non- feated in the Tri-Valley Conference.
shooting events all year around. Upon . The team played with tremendous
joining, a person can choose or create determination coming from behind to
Dear Editor:
the type of person they would like to· win several close games. The games
I would like to take this opportunity be.
were played before small crowds and the
to thank the M ei~ County Humane
They can choose to be an actual per- players who work as bard as anyorie trySociety (MCHS).
son, who lived in the old west, the type ing to balance a full schedule of games,
We have a Blue Heeler that was added of person they would like to be or cre- practice and school, ~ceive little · or no
to our "family" and she needed spayed. ate someone who is just all them. W;
cognitjon f~r their, efforts, with the
exception
of a couple or"lines ln. a
· Alden Waitt, vice president of the have cowboys and cowgirls, good guys
Humane Society, has been a big help. and bad guys, soldiers, native Americans, ·write- up or a single name in a box
The MCHS paid for the cost•of spaying; and anyone and everyone else. Each score.
which helped us· out a lot.
person must choose or create their own · So congratulations, ladies, on a fine
The Humane Society do es a lot more name - a name that will be theirs and season of championship basketball. Your
than just taking in cats and do~. Some- theirs alone.
accomplishments may have been wittimes the community is not aware of all
Clothing, shoes, boots, guns and nessed by few, but dese.Ve the applause
the extra help 'they do.
ammo and all else is available. Join the of many.
· If your looking for a great pet, please SASS and relive the old west as it once
James Soulsby
remember to stop by the shelter. You was, with heroes and villains, gun fightPomeroy

Confused

• News-Press, Fort Myers, Fla., on felon voting rights: With

~~-

LOCAL ~

OUR READERS' VIEWS

.

r

The ...,man who wrote that letter only recendy have' begun to talk.- what he _, doing. I left home at 18.
could have been describing my ex- ANONYMOUS MOM IN VIRSTD.L · HURTING IN
husband. He regarded every young GINIA
KNOXVIlLE, TENN.
nun who showed interest in our
DEAR STBL HURilNG: You
DEAR ANONYMOUS: I' m
adopted daughter as though he was a pleased that the lines of communica- were betnyed by two adults who . )
pervert. It made the young men so tion between you and your daughter were supposed to protect you. 1f you
uncomfortable they would no longer· are being mended. I hope her stepfa- haven't received counseling· tO lessen
come to our home. They would ask ther is being prosecuted to the full yoor pain, I urge you to do sO. Your

an Overprotector," whose. second
husband iru.isted her I 5-year-old
daughter give him "all the personal
details" of the dates she had with boys
- whether they held hands, kissed,
etc.
My two stepdaughters are now 20
our daughter to meet them at a
ADVICE
"
and 21. I, too, was probably "overprofriend's house. Talking to my husband
teCtive" during their teens. Yes, men
got me nowhere.
tend to remember how we acted with CARING STEPDAD IN COLOnce I asked him to talk to her
girls when woe were teen-agers - ORADO
abOut the "linesn boys use to convince
when our bodies overflowed with
DEAR CARII'ilG: I cenainly do a girl to have sex. He claimed never to
testosterone and not enough com- not believe .tlut all .protective stepfa- · have used any. I .asked him in front of
mon sense. That's one reason we are thers have sexual fanbSies 'about their our daughter, and it nude him
overprotective now. But you are . stepdaughters. However, in this case, uncomforuble.
wrong to imply that it is motivated by the stepfather's · interrogation was
You must have guessed by now excessive - and many readers agreed he was sexually abusing ber. I never
jealousy and sexual fantasy.
.
. Perhaps, like me, the man just loves \vith me. Read on:
suspected it. Our daught~r did no~
DEAR ABBY: You'll get nuny divulge what happened to her until
the girl as his own and fears that ntistakes she might make during her for- letters telling you dut you were she was grown. She thought I had
mative years could affect her future. wrong in your conm1ents about the known about it all alm1g and tol~rat­
You owe him and all of us "overpro- "overprotective" stepfather. But stick eo it.
·
tective" stepdads an apology. - A to }'&gt;Ur guns, Abby
We were estranged for years and

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R.

.

FRIDAY- Meigs County
Family and Children First
CouncH, Friday, 9:30 a.m. at
the Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services,
Middeport.

SASS forming here

Congratulations, ladies

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - WildwoOd Gardan Club, Wednesday noon
luncheon at the Syracuse Firehouse followed by a flower
painting class conducted by
Michelle Garrettson.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 8 p.m., home ol
Ella Osborne. Margaret Cauthorn's program on bottle gar·
dening.

Saying thanks

POMEROY- Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's

MONDAY
LETART- Lelarl Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at
the office building.
The Community Celendar
Is published as a free service to non-profit groups
·wishing to announce meet·
lngs and epeclal events.
The calendar Is not
designed to promote safas
or fund-raiser• of any type.
llama are prlnttld only ••
apace permit• a~ cannot be ·
guaranteed to be prlnttld a
apeclflc number of claya.

extent of the law. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I, too, was a stepdaughter. My father died before I was
born. My stepfather, like " Overprotector;• was overly concerned about
any boy I dated. He opened and read
my letters and insisted on knowing
every detail of my dates. He would ask
how I felt when kissed, and did I like
it. He became angry if I had a date
and didn't share all the details with

him.
It wasn 't long before he was ~xpos­
ing himself to me and touc hirig me in
inappropriate places. I was also 15. It
•ontinued for three years. My mother
did not believe me when I rold her

doctor can refer you to a qualified
therapist.
·
There are self-help groups for survivors of abuse and incest: Incest Survivors Anonymous, P.O. Box I 7245,
Long Beach, CA 90807-7245; and,
Survivors of Incest Anonyi)lOUS Inc.,
P.O. Box 190, Benson, MD 21 0 18,
9998. The Web address is www.siawso.org.
If you write for information, please
enclose a lopg. self-addressed, stamped
envelope (68 cents) for the reply. Survivors oflncest Anonymous requests a
$2 donation to cover cost of materials.
(Dear Abby is wri11c11 by Pmtli11r
P!Iillips a11d dau;:lrter Jcatluc Phillips.)

Elderly can lead ·long, productive lives
•

Aging is a very individu'ruized experience. It is a natural
process that begins at conception and continues throughout
' the life cycle. Because of
genetics, nutrition , medications, and physical and mental
health, everyone ages in a different way.
"
ADVICE
Too many times younger
people acquire niiscon~ep­
After retirement, older peotions about older pe&lt;?ple. They
stereotype their elders as inca- ple now have the time and
pable of continuing to be experience to devote to their
worthwhile citizens. This is an family, church, community
unfair · and narrow-minded and civic organizations in ways
attitude. In reality, older adults they previously were unable to
usually perform their work ·do. Local seniors volunteer
responsibilities just as well as t~ousands of hours ~ach year
yo11nger people. They tend to helping with health clinics and
have a lower turnover rate, less campaigns,
teaching
and
accidents, are mpre reliable, tutoring children, and assisting
·not as likely to miss work, and with community events. activities and programs.
have less job-related stress.
Sollje ,_ senior citizens may . Younger- people tend to
decide . ·.t o return to paid think that older adults have
employment after retiring. memory loss ·and are s'enile.
'Fhey may work part time in a The truth is that most people
field different from their earli- do not encounter forgetfulness
er employment, with the idea and confusion as they get
that they want to broaden older. Intelligence and memotheir skills, contribute to soci- ry changes occur in a c·o mplex
manner, not thr0ugh specific,
ety or to be with people.

Becky
Baer

designated steps. Just as chil- friends, social clubs and rclidren develop and mature at gious organizations.
different · rates, older people . The final misconception is
also experience · age-related that old age is always a nega-'··
changes over time. When tive experience. It is not uniC·.
impairments and deficiencies versally a bad time period in '
do happen, most older people life. It is, however, an individfind ways to compensate for uil experience that may b~'
the hindrance. Their intellect, perceived along a spectrum.
such as they verbal aptitude, Many older people view aging"'
may actually improve.
as a liberating experience -· '
Another fallacy concerning freedom from job and child '
older people is that they do care
responsibilities,
the
not adapt to change. ~esearch opportunity to try new thin~
has found that inf,lexibility is apd . the chance to develop '
more related to personality · personally. For some it may be"
characteristics than to age. a time of chronic illness, lack·
Older adults are subjected to of money and dis co urage~ ·
change through retirement, ment. Most people lie somewidowhood, illness, decreased where between the two endS ;.
income and unwanted moves. of the continuum.
·
Even though society and the
Mo5t adjust satisfactorily to
these life modifications.
mass media may look at peoc
One prevalent myth about pie in their 60s as entering '
the older population is that "old age;' most older people
they are isolated. Only 12 of live healthy, productive anif'
older people feel th'at Jon eli- fUlfilling lives for many yea.S '·
ness is a serious problem for following retirement.They can··
them. Ninety-five percent feel be a resource for enhancingr
that they have a sufficient cir- the personal and professional
de of friends to offer ample lives of those around them. ·
socialization. Most spend quite
(Becky Baer is a Meigs Cowr·
a bit of time with family, 'l' exteusiotr agem.)

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

Jayhue A. Stout
CHESHIRE - Marine Corps Reserve Pfc. Jayhue A.
Stout, a 1998 'gradtiate of River Valley High School,
Cheshire, Ohio, was recendy selected as the distinguished
graduate from the Marine Corps Basic Combat Engineer
Course at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C.
During the five-week course, Stout received idstructi&lt;?n in
the fundamentals of engineering support for combat units,
including the procedures for building and repairing bridges~
roads and field fortifications. Stout also learned the art of
demolition, land mine warfare and camouflage techniques.
Stout will accompany Marine Infantry forces to . builq ·
roads, set up camp and fortifY the livirig areas. ·
She is the daughter of Stephen and Pamela R . Stout.

Morton
Kondracke

Have a sodety news itePJ?
Mail it to: Sodety News;
111e Daily Sentinelr 111 Court Sl,
• · POmeroyr Ohio 45769

We want your photos!

a

'·

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
Post 9053, 7 p.m., election of
officers and special drawing.

TUPPERS PLAINS - · Navy Petty Officer 'third Class
Chad A. Wheeler recendy visited Dubrovnik, Croatia during
a six-month deployment to the Mediterranean Sea and Arabian Gulf while assigned to the guided missile destroyer
' U.S.S. Mitscher, home ported in Norfolk,Va .
Sailors from Mitscher painted the interior walls of a n~rs­
ing home and donated clothes, first aid and personal hygiene
suppli'es to a home ·for people \vith paralysis and mental
retardation. They also donated a sewing machine and a pallet of first aid supplies and personal hygiene items to the Sister for the Charity catholic boarding home for girls.

Bush needs to clarify his foreign policy thrust

"'

Fe.llowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
he Bradford Chu;ch of Christ.
Carolyn Nicholson will speak
on "Brown Bag Art: Zion
church will have devotions.

Chad A. Wheeler

KONDR.ACKE'S VIEW

When the China spy-plane drama is
wouldn't be present or "forward
over, President Bush needs to explain his
I
deployed"- to exert influence and keep
foreign policy because it's confusing peothe peace.
ple - allies, experts and adversaries As one former Clinton administration
and exposing him to tough criticism.
official ieminded me, it's common for exWhile China deserves blame for failing
governors to have rocky foreign policy
to release the crew of a US. surveillance
beginnin~. ln 1977,Jimmy ~arterwant­
plane - and Bush is seen so far as haned to pull U.S. forces out of South Korea,
dling the crisis well .- much of the rest .
but he was dissuaded. Ronald Reagan
of his foreign policy is causing widespread
mistakenly sent U.S. forces into the midconsternation.
dle ofLebanon's civil war. Clinton initialCOWMNIST
What one former top Clinton adminly planned to wage a trade war with .
istration official refets to as Bush's "sloppy
Japan.
start" in foreign policy could be attrib- give anti-missile destroyers to Taiwan.
An added factor, according to a former
uted simply to a new administration's
Policy on Iraq is also unclear, with top Clinton official, is that "the Bushies
growing pains, particulatly common Powell suggesting that economic sane- want to show they are bard-nosed realists
when a governor and foreig11 policy tions need to be eased while Pentagon - tough compared to what they regard
novice is at the helm.
officials argue for an effort to oust dicta- as the undisciplined, wooly-headed inletHowever, others see it as the product tor Saddam Hussein.
nationalists of the Clinton administration.
of a conflict between Cold War-minded
On another front, Rumsfeld has been But the effect of what they are doing is
or "unilateralist" ideologues at the Penta- justifiably cool toward Europe's establish- exactly the opposite ofwhat they intend:'
gon and pragmatists at the State Depart- ing its own defense force outside NATO, the official continued. "They are coming
ment, with Bush taking sides on an ad while Bush and Powell have praised the across as unilateralists - a word they hate .
hoc basis.
'
idea, reinforcing fears that the US. will · - and as arrogant toward other coun. ·
· some European securi- tries."
The rough spots are legion. For not part1c1pate
m
· This official also believes th~t "there's
instance, despite his campaign promise ty operations.
· that "help is on the way" for the military,
While changing his tune about an an enduring batde for th~ soui of ArneriBush failed ro inform Defense Secretary early pullout from the Balkans, Bush is can foreign policy" underway ber-'veen an
Donald Rumsfeld afier he decided not to leaving the crisil in Macedonia largely to ideolog'ical"Team Rumsfeld" at the PenEuropean leaders, who may not be able tagon, with Vice President Cheney as an
seek more Pentagon funding.
·
ally; and "Team Powell" at the State
Later, he undercut Secretary of State to setde thin~.
One thing that is clear is that the D~partrnen.t, with Powell in danger of
Colin Powell and South Korean President
administration
wants to move as fast as ·bemg Isolated as the voice of moderates
Kim Dae Jung by reversing Clinton's polnational missile-defense foreigners and. career diplomats.
\•
icy on negotiating with North Korea. possible with
Bush, this official said, is a "capUin-bf
And recendy, he shocked US. allies by system, but that objective has Europeans,
Russians,
Chinese
and
some
Democthe
ship who only occasionally visits the
renouncing the Kyoto agr~ement on
rats- convinced that the United StateS bridge," with the result being"an extraorglobal warming.
is
reverting to a Cold War mentality, or to dinary repudiation of America's internaBush's administration has been tough
tional role:· as exercised by Bush's own
on Russia, justifiably kicking 50 of its "fortress America" unilateralism.
Even
top
military
officials
at
the
Pentafather.
·
spies out of the United States and also
This evaluation is a harsh and undoubtsuggesting it might cut funds for the gon are said to be .worried that RumsNunn-Lugar program for dismantling feld's comprehensive defense review will edly partisan one of Bush'~ early f9reign
Russia's nuclear arsenal- a stance it then lead to deep reductions in ships, troops policy. But It w1U gain currency unless
•
and planes in favor of."smart" weapons Bush refutes if. by explaining clearly to
reversed.
Bush has described China as "a com- th~t can be fired at targets from long dis- the world what his "di~ncdy American" ·
foreign policy is aU about.
petitor," but there 's a chance it will soon tances.
become an adversary because of the plane
Under such a strategy, U.S. personnel · (Morton Ko11dra_cke is executive editor rif
incident - especially if Bush d ecides to would be out of harm's way, but .t hey Roll Call, the newspaper rif Capitol Hill)

EVENTS .

MILITARY NEWS

/

·'

Page A$Tu•••WJ.,Apllll4,1001 - '

,Stepdad difends his motives'in giving daughter third .degree

)

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·21511 • Fu: 992-2157

Chart.. w..Govey

)

~.'

I .

llle Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few
guidelines for submissions:
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focus and have good contrast Negatives also are accepted;
hOwever, please Include a print along w~h the negative.
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/

Conner Wolfe

Tums1
RACINE - Conner Wolfe
celebrated his first bir~day
March 6 · With , a party at his
home.
A Winnie · the Pooh theme
was carried out at the party
given by his parents, Joe and
BettyAnn Wolfe.
Attending were hi.s brothers,
Kody and 1hsten Wolfe, grandparents, Anna and WilSoll;lWolfe
and Joseph and Alberta Loftis.
Other guests were Amanda an.d
E!ryan Schwarze), Wendy, Brett,
Zac, and'JoeY. Beegle, Stephanrue and Danielle King. Sending
gifts were John Priddy, Wade,
Dawn, Cody and McKenna
Connolly, Joyce, Mike, DanieUe.
and Samantha · Cline, and
RuthAnn Boyer.

AWARD WINNERS - Racine Southern FFA members recently attended the District Ten Ban;·
quet. Receiving awards were, first row, Lori Sayre, Alan Moore, Cassie Cleland, T. J. Moore; sec, ·
ond row, Travis Hart, Jeremy Hill, Tyler Johnson. Not pictured is Josh Larson. (Submitted photo) ·

achiever in both contests.
In profidencies areas, Tyler
Johnson received an award for
placing first in nursery operations and forest management
He . also received an award fm
getting fourth place in the jol:
interview contesl.
Jeremy Hill received first in
diversified horticulture, 'ag
communications and floriculture.· Josh Larsen received · first
.place in ag sales and service.
RACINE - Several memTravis Hart received "'' o nd
bers of the Racin~ Southern in home improvement and TraFFA attended the recent Dis- . va nna Moore received fourth in
trice Ten Banquet at New Lex- specia ~ty animal and first place
in flori cul ture placement. Lori
ington High Sc hooL
During an awards ceremony, Sayre received first in fruit and
the chapter was .recognized for vegetable, accoummg, diversiplacing second in both the Co- fied crop, and forages . .
Op and Farm Business ManThe officers also attended an
age ment tests.
,
officer-training seminar taught
Lori Sayre . was the top by District 10 instru ctors, and

District 10 officers.
Attending were Lori Sayre,
president;TJ. Moore, vice-president; Alan Moore, treasurer;

the only investor in
the world.

FFA honored

I

Tyler Johnson, secretary; Amy
Wilson, reporter; Travis H art, ·
student advisor; Cassie Cleland,
assistant secretary.

For information about
our services (lJJd our
co,;unifment to put you first,
please.ConttJcl us today.

John C. Miller, CFP
Branch Manager

311 Fourth St.. Manetta, OH 45750

740-376-9186
800-726-8412

j

�..

Opinion

ihe Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

'

PageA4

_The_oail_Y_Se_ntin_e•
· ·--~BJ the Bend ·

Tu•••WJ· ~~~ :z-.:zool

DEAR ABBY: I am shockrd and
outraged by your reply to "Marne&lt;! to

Publisher

Abigail

-

Van
Buren

ShaWn Lewll

Mllneglng Editor

DlaM Kay Hill

Cha ..... Hoeflich
O...... IIIMger

Controller

.._. ..... _ _ _ _ TJo9_ .. ,... _ _ _ ... _

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NATIONAL VIEWS

Restoring felon voting rights
.
.,a·constructive step
so many more people being sent to prison, and consequendy
so many more trying to fit ipto society after their release, we
have to take a more constructive attitude toward ex-convicts.
That's why we support legislation pending in Tallahassee
that would restore the voting rights of ex-felons.
Senators want to require a five-year wait after completion of
a sentence before restoring voting rights to those who committed violent felonies. A nonviolent felon would have to wait
one year.
The House version calls for a one-year wait for everyone.
The differences need to be resolved.so this basic step toward
reintegrating Florida's estimated 500,000 ex-felons into full
citizenship can be taken. They forfeited that right when they
ct&gt;rnmitted a crime. They served their time, and face a difficult
time re-entering society without this constitutional stigma.
Voters would have to approve any change, if the Legislature
places it on the ballot, because the state Constitution denies exfelons the right to vote.
We strongly supported longer sentences and more prisons.
· That hard line has to be accompanied by constructive reba~
bilitation.

• The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C., on cloning

ltr.~mans: The United States, and the international community, '
aJ;e ill-prepared to deal with the charlatans and visionaries who
are .already taking advantage of the new technology of biological reproduction to promise the creation of human clones.
Their schemes must be stopped before they produce what
promises to be a chamber of horrors ....
The first successful clone, in 1997, was Dolly, a Scottish
sheep....
In an article in Science, Dolly team leader Ian Wilmut, a Yale
scientist, has passionately attacked the notibn that human
· clones can be readily reproduced without mishap ....
Wilmut described to a congressional hearing a failed experiment to clone a lamb. ...
·
• The same hearing heard testimony from two groups that are
mshing to produce the first cloned human ....
: Not surprisingly, a movement is already under way in Congress to close a gaping loophole in the law....
: Unfortunately, the cloning technique is relatively simple, and .
c:i.n be carried out anywhere in the world if local authorities
c~nsent. A new international compact against , cloning is
utgendy requited.
r

TO.DAY 'IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: :roday is Thesday, April 24, the 114th day of 2001. There are
251 days left in the year.
~ Today's Highlight in History:
: On April 24, 1BOO, Congress approved a bill establishing the
Lil&gt;tary of Congress.
: .On this date:
: In 1792, the national anthem of France, "La Marseillaise," .
Was composed by Capt. Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle.
: In 1898, Spain declared war on .the United States after .
rO)ecting America's ultimatum to withdraw from· Cuba.
. In 1915; the Ottoman Turkish Empire began the brutal mass
deportation of Armenians during World War I.
· In 1916, some 1,600 Irish nationalists launched the Easter
Rising by seizing several key sites in Dublin. (The uprising was
· put down by British forces several days later.)
'
In 1953, British statesman Winston Churchill was knighted
by Queen Elizabeth II.
.
.
In 1968, leftist students at Columbia University in New York
began a week-long occupation of several campus buildin~.
In 1970, the People's Republic Of Chirta launched its first
satellite, which repeatedly transmitted a soQg, "The East is
Red."
In 1980, the United States lauhched an abortive attempt to
tree the American hostages in Iran, a mission that resulted in
die deaths of eight U.S. servicemen.
; In 1986, Wallis, the Duchess of Windsor, for whom King
Edward VIII had given up the British throne, died in Paris at

.

.

; In 1990, the space shuttle Discovery blasted off from Cape
Canaveral, Fla., carrying the $1.5 billion Hubble Space Tele-'
scope.
: Ten years ago: A Kurdish rebel leader announced the guerrillas bad reached an agreement in principle with Iraqi PresidentSaddam Hussein to end the Kurds' two-week rebeUion.
five years ago: The main assembly of the Palestine Liberation Organization voted to revoke. clauses in its .charter that '
called for an an11ed struggle to destroy IsraeL Negotiators for
· Congre~ and the White House agreed on a permanent budget
1
for fiscal year 1996.
··
· •

.

, L.

TUESDAY
RACINE- RACO, 6:30p.m:,
witft potluck dinner.

ers, lawmen, gamblers and oudaws, and
may just find your best friend there.
Again, "Thank you," Alden Waitt and the beautiful women, all of whom make
the west wild.
·
the MCHS.
Dear Editor: ·
Write to 100· Union Ave., Pomeroy,
Becky Peerey
Being aware of both the county and
New Marshfield Ohio 45769.
The Daily Sentinel's fervent 'efforts to
David Edwards
Pomeroy
discourage the use of tobacco products
by underage individuals, as well as otlters, I count myself among the confused
Dear Editor:
at die April 12th front page photo in the
The Single Action Shooting Society is
paper of the Easter Bunny posing beside
Dear Editor:
starting
a club in the area now. SASS is
a Marlboro sign.
.
When Coach Darin Logan's Mei~
A friend of Big Tobacco and an inter- what cowboy action shooting is all
J.
V.
girls basketball team defeated
about. But we are not just another
ested observer,
Alexander in. the season finale, they
Michael Grueser shooting organization.
SASS holds cooking contests, custom capped off a very successful season with
Pomeroy
contests, trivia contests, cookouts and all an 18.;-1 J;tcord, ,including going undetypes of dances, and many more non- feated in the Tri-Valley Conference.
shooting events all year around. Upon . The team played with tremendous
joining, a person can choose or create determination coming from behind to
Dear Editor:
the type of person they would like to· win several close games. The games
I would like to take this opportunity be.
were played before small crowds and the
to thank the M ei~ County Humane
They can choose to be an actual per- players who work as bard as anyorie trySociety (MCHS).
son, who lived in the old west, the type ing to balance a full schedule of games,
We have a Blue Heeler that was added of person they would like to be or cre- practice and school, ~ceive little · or no
to our "family" and she needed spayed. ate someone who is just all them. W;
cognitjon f~r their, efforts, with the
exception
of a couple or"lines ln. a
· Alden Waitt, vice president of the have cowboys and cowgirls, good guys
Humane Society, has been a big help. and bad guys, soldiers, native Americans, ·write- up or a single name in a box
The MCHS paid for the cost•of spaying; and anyone and everyone else. Each score.
which helped us· out a lot.
person must choose or create their own · So congratulations, ladies, on a fine
The Humane Society do es a lot more name - a name that will be theirs and season of championship basketball. Your
than just taking in cats and do~. Some- theirs alone.
accomplishments may have been wittimes the community is not aware of all
Clothing, shoes, boots, guns and nessed by few, but dese.Ve the applause
the extra help 'they do.
ammo and all else is available. Join the of many.
· If your looking for a great pet, please SASS and relive the old west as it once
James Soulsby
remember to stop by the shelter. You was, with heroes and villains, gun fightPomeroy

Confused

• News-Press, Fort Myers, Fla., on felon voting rights: With

~~-

LOCAL ~

OUR READERS' VIEWS

.

r

The ...,man who wrote that letter only recendy have' begun to talk.- what he _, doing. I left home at 18.
could have been describing my ex- ANONYMOUS MOM IN VIRSTD.L · HURTING IN
husband. He regarded every young GINIA
KNOXVIlLE, TENN.
nun who showed interest in our
DEAR STBL HURilNG: You
DEAR ANONYMOUS: I' m
adopted daughter as though he was a pleased that the lines of communica- were betnyed by two adults who . )
pervert. It made the young men so tion between you and your daughter were supposed to protect you. 1f you
uncomfortable they would no longer· are being mended. I hope her stepfa- haven't received counseling· tO lessen
come to our home. They would ask ther is being prosecuted to the full yoor pain, I urge you to do sO. Your

an Overprotector," whose. second
husband iru.isted her I 5-year-old
daughter give him "all the personal
details" of the dates she had with boys
- whether they held hands, kissed,
etc.
My two stepdaughters are now 20
our daughter to meet them at a
ADVICE
"
and 21. I, too, was probably "overprofriend's house. Talking to my husband
teCtive" during their teens. Yes, men
got me nowhere.
tend to remember how we acted with CARING STEPDAD IN COLOnce I asked him to talk to her
girls when woe were teen-agers - ORADO
abOut the "linesn boys use to convince
when our bodies overflowed with
DEAR CARII'ilG: I cenainly do a girl to have sex. He claimed never to
testosterone and not enough com- not believe .tlut all .protective stepfa- · have used any. I .asked him in front of
mon sense. That's one reason we are thers have sexual fanbSies 'about their our daughter, and it nude him
overprotective now. But you are . stepdaughters. However, in this case, uncomforuble.
wrong to imply that it is motivated by the stepfather's · interrogation was
You must have guessed by now excessive - and many readers agreed he was sexually abusing ber. I never
jealousy and sexual fantasy.
.
. Perhaps, like me, the man just loves \vith me. Read on:
suspected it. Our daught~r did no~
DEAR ABBY: You'll get nuny divulge what happened to her until
the girl as his own and fears that ntistakes she might make during her for- letters telling you dut you were she was grown. She thought I had
mative years could affect her future. wrong in your conm1ents about the known about it all alm1g and tol~rat­
You owe him and all of us "overpro- "overprotective" stepfather. But stick eo it.
·
tective" stepdads an apology. - A to }'&gt;Ur guns, Abby
We were estranged for years and

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R.

.

FRIDAY- Meigs County
Family and Children First
CouncH, Friday, 9:30 a.m. at
the Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services,
Middeport.

SASS forming here

Congratulations, ladies

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - WildwoOd Gardan Club, Wednesday noon
luncheon at the Syracuse Firehouse followed by a flower
painting class conducted by
Michelle Garrettson.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 8 p.m., home ol
Ella Osborne. Margaret Cauthorn's program on bottle gar·
dening.

Saying thanks

POMEROY- Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's

MONDAY
LETART- Lelarl Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at
the office building.
The Community Celendar
Is published as a free service to non-profit groups
·wishing to announce meet·
lngs and epeclal events.
The calendar Is not
designed to promote safas
or fund-raiser• of any type.
llama are prlnttld only ••
apace permit• a~ cannot be ·
guaranteed to be prlnttld a
apeclflc number of claya.

extent of the law. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I, too, was a stepdaughter. My father died before I was
born. My stepfather, like " Overprotector;• was overly concerned about
any boy I dated. He opened and read
my letters and insisted on knowing
every detail of my dates. He would ask
how I felt when kissed, and did I like
it. He became angry if I had a date
and didn't share all the details with

him.
It wasn 't long before he was ~xpos­
ing himself to me and touc hirig me in
inappropriate places. I was also 15. It
•ontinued for three years. My mother
did not believe me when I rold her

doctor can refer you to a qualified
therapist.
·
There are self-help groups for survivors of abuse and incest: Incest Survivors Anonymous, P.O. Box I 7245,
Long Beach, CA 90807-7245; and,
Survivors of Incest Anonyi)lOUS Inc.,
P.O. Box 190, Benson, MD 21 0 18,
9998. The Web address is www.siawso.org.
If you write for information, please
enclose a lopg. self-addressed, stamped
envelope (68 cents) for the reply. Survivors oflncest Anonymous requests a
$2 donation to cover cost of materials.
(Dear Abby is wri11c11 by Pmtli11r
P!Iillips a11d dau;:lrter Jcatluc Phillips.)

Elderly can lead ·long, productive lives
•

Aging is a very individu'ruized experience. It is a natural
process that begins at conception and continues throughout
' the life cycle. Because of
genetics, nutrition , medications, and physical and mental
health, everyone ages in a different way.
"
ADVICE
Too many times younger
people acquire niiscon~ep­
After retirement, older peotions about older pe&lt;?ple. They
stereotype their elders as inca- ple now have the time and
pable of continuing to be experience to devote to their
worthwhile citizens. This is an family, church, community
unfair · and narrow-minded and civic organizations in ways
attitude. In reality, older adults they previously were unable to
usually perform their work ·do. Local seniors volunteer
responsibilities just as well as t~ousands of hours ~ach year
yo11nger people. They tend to helping with health clinics and
have a lower turnover rate, less campaigns,
teaching
and
accidents, are mpre reliable, tutoring children, and assisting
·not as likely to miss work, and with community events. activities and programs.
have less job-related stress.
Sollje ,_ senior citizens may . Younger- people tend to
decide . ·.t o return to paid think that older adults have
employment after retiring. memory loss ·and are s'enile.
'Fhey may work part time in a The truth is that most people
field different from their earli- do not encounter forgetfulness
er employment, with the idea and confusion as they get
that they want to broaden older. Intelligence and memotheir skills, contribute to soci- ry changes occur in a c·o mplex
manner, not thr0ugh specific,
ety or to be with people.

Becky
Baer

designated steps. Just as chil- friends, social clubs and rclidren develop and mature at gious organizations.
different · rates, older people . The final misconception is
also experience · age-related that old age is always a nega-'··
changes over time. When tive experience. It is not uniC·.
impairments and deficiencies versally a bad time period in '
do happen, most older people life. It is, however, an individfind ways to compensate for uil experience that may b~'
the hindrance. Their intellect, perceived along a spectrum.
such as they verbal aptitude, Many older people view aging"'
may actually improve.
as a liberating experience -· '
Another fallacy concerning freedom from job and child '
older people is that they do care
responsibilities,
the
not adapt to change. ~esearch opportunity to try new thin~
has found that inf,lexibility is apd . the chance to develop '
more related to personality · personally. For some it may be"
characteristics than to age. a time of chronic illness, lack·
Older adults are subjected to of money and dis co urage~ ·
change through retirement, ment. Most people lie somewidowhood, illness, decreased where between the two endS ;.
income and unwanted moves. of the continuum.
·
Even though society and the
Mo5t adjust satisfactorily to
these life modifications.
mass media may look at peoc
One prevalent myth about pie in their 60s as entering '
the older population is that "old age;' most older people
they are isolated. Only 12 of live healthy, productive anif'
older people feel th'at Jon eli- fUlfilling lives for many yea.S '·
ness is a serious problem for following retirement.They can··
them. Ninety-five percent feel be a resource for enhancingr
that they have a sufficient cir- the personal and professional
de of friends to offer ample lives of those around them. ·
socialization. Most spend quite
(Becky Baer is a Meigs Cowr·
a bit of time with family, 'l' exteusiotr agem.)

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

Jayhue A. Stout
CHESHIRE - Marine Corps Reserve Pfc. Jayhue A.
Stout, a 1998 'gradtiate of River Valley High School,
Cheshire, Ohio, was recendy selected as the distinguished
graduate from the Marine Corps Basic Combat Engineer
Course at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C.
During the five-week course, Stout received idstructi&lt;?n in
the fundamentals of engineering support for combat units,
including the procedures for building and repairing bridges~
roads and field fortifications. Stout also learned the art of
demolition, land mine warfare and camouflage techniques.
Stout will accompany Marine Infantry forces to . builq ·
roads, set up camp and fortifY the livirig areas. ·
She is the daughter of Stephen and Pamela R . Stout.

Morton
Kondracke

Have a sodety news itePJ?
Mail it to: Sodety News;
111e Daily Sentinelr 111 Court Sl,
• · POmeroyr Ohio 45769

We want your photos!

a

'·

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
Post 9053, 7 p.m., election of
officers and special drawing.

TUPPERS PLAINS - · Navy Petty Officer 'third Class
Chad A. Wheeler recendy visited Dubrovnik, Croatia during
a six-month deployment to the Mediterranean Sea and Arabian Gulf while assigned to the guided missile destroyer
' U.S.S. Mitscher, home ported in Norfolk,Va .
Sailors from Mitscher painted the interior walls of a n~rs­
ing home and donated clothes, first aid and personal hygiene
suppli'es to a home ·for people \vith paralysis and mental
retardation. They also donated a sewing machine and a pallet of first aid supplies and personal hygiene items to the Sister for the Charity catholic boarding home for girls.

Bush needs to clarify his foreign policy thrust

"'

Fe.llowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
he Bradford Chu;ch of Christ.
Carolyn Nicholson will speak
on "Brown Bag Art: Zion
church will have devotions.

Chad A. Wheeler

KONDR.ACKE'S VIEW

When the China spy-plane drama is
wouldn't be present or "forward
over, President Bush needs to explain his
I
deployed"- to exert influence and keep
foreign policy because it's confusing peothe peace.
ple - allies, experts and adversaries As one former Clinton administration
and exposing him to tough criticism.
official ieminded me, it's common for exWhile China deserves blame for failing
governors to have rocky foreign policy
to release the crew of a US. surveillance
beginnin~. ln 1977,Jimmy ~arterwant­
plane - and Bush is seen so far as haned to pull U.S. forces out of South Korea,
dling the crisis well .- much of the rest .
but he was dissuaded. Ronald Reagan
of his foreign policy is causing widespread
mistakenly sent U.S. forces into the midconsternation.
dle ofLebanon's civil war. Clinton initialCOWMNIST
What one former top Clinton adminly planned to wage a trade war with .
istration official refets to as Bush's "sloppy
Japan.
start" in foreign policy could be attrib- give anti-missile destroyers to Taiwan.
An added factor, according to a former
uted simply to a new administration's
Policy on Iraq is also unclear, with top Clinton official, is that "the Bushies
growing pains, particulatly common Powell suggesting that economic sane- want to show they are bard-nosed realists
when a governor and foreig11 policy tions need to be eased while Pentagon - tough compared to what they regard
novice is at the helm.
officials argue for an effort to oust dicta- as the undisciplined, wooly-headed inletHowever, others see it as the product tor Saddam Hussein.
nationalists of the Clinton administration.
of a conflict between Cold War-minded
On another front, Rumsfeld has been But the effect of what they are doing is
or "unilateralist" ideologues at the Penta- justifiably cool toward Europe's establish- exactly the opposite ofwhat they intend:'
gon and pragmatists at the State Depart- ing its own defense force outside NATO, the official continued. "They are coming
ment, with Bush taking sides on an ad while Bush and Powell have praised the across as unilateralists - a word they hate .
hoc basis.
'
idea, reinforcing fears that the US. will · - and as arrogant toward other coun. ·
· some European securi- tries."
The rough spots are legion. For not part1c1pate
m
· This official also believes th~t "there's
instance, despite his campaign promise ty operations.
· that "help is on the way" for the military,
While changing his tune about an an enduring batde for th~ soui of ArneriBush failed ro inform Defense Secretary early pullout from the Balkans, Bush is can foreign policy" underway ber-'veen an
Donald Rumsfeld afier he decided not to leaving the crisil in Macedonia largely to ideolog'ical"Team Rumsfeld" at the PenEuropean leaders, who may not be able tagon, with Vice President Cheney as an
seek more Pentagon funding.
·
ally; and "Team Powell" at the State
Later, he undercut Secretary of State to setde thin~.
One thing that is clear is that the D~partrnen.t, with Powell in danger of
Colin Powell and South Korean President
administration
wants to move as fast as ·bemg Isolated as the voice of moderates
Kim Dae Jung by reversing Clinton's polnational missile-defense foreigners and. career diplomats.
\•
icy on negotiating with North Korea. possible with
Bush, this official said, is a "capUin-bf
And recendy, he shocked US. allies by system, but that objective has Europeans,
Russians,
Chinese
and
some
Democthe
ship who only occasionally visits the
renouncing the Kyoto agr~ement on
rats- convinced that the United StateS bridge," with the result being"an extraorglobal warming.
is
reverting to a Cold War mentality, or to dinary repudiation of America's internaBush's administration has been tough
tional role:· as exercised by Bush's own
on Russia, justifiably kicking 50 of its "fortress America" unilateralism.
Even
top
military
officials
at
the
Pentafather.
·
spies out of the United States and also
This evaluation is a harsh and undoubtsuggesting it might cut funds for the gon are said to be .worried that RumsNunn-Lugar program for dismantling feld's comprehensive defense review will edly partisan one of Bush'~ early f9reign
Russia's nuclear arsenal- a stance it then lead to deep reductions in ships, troops policy. But It w1U gain currency unless
•
and planes in favor of."smart" weapons Bush refutes if. by explaining clearly to
reversed.
Bush has described China as "a com- th~t can be fired at targets from long dis- the world what his "di~ncdy American" ·
foreign policy is aU about.
petitor," but there 's a chance it will soon tances.
become an adversary because of the plane
Under such a strategy, U.S. personnel · (Morton Ko11dra_cke is executive editor rif
incident - especially if Bush d ecides to would be out of harm's way, but .t hey Roll Call, the newspaper rif Capitol Hill)

EVENTS .

MILITARY NEWS

/

·'

Page A$Tu•••WJ.,Apllll4,1001 - '

,Stepdad difends his motives'in giving daughter third .degree

)

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·21511 • Fu: 992-2157

Chart.. w..Govey

)

~.'

I .

llle Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few
guidelines for submissions:
• Color pllotographs are accepted, provided they are In
focus and have good contrast Negatives also are accepted;
hOwever, please Include a print along w~h the negative.
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however, please Include a print along with the negative.
· • Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are In
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reproduce well on newsprint
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/

Conner Wolfe

Tums1
RACINE - Conner Wolfe
celebrated his first bir~day
March 6 · With , a party at his
home.
A Winnie · the Pooh theme
was carried out at the party
given by his parents, Joe and
BettyAnn Wolfe.
Attending were hi.s brothers,
Kody and 1hsten Wolfe, grandparents, Anna and WilSoll;lWolfe
and Joseph and Alberta Loftis.
Other guests were Amanda an.d
E!ryan Schwarze), Wendy, Brett,
Zac, and'JoeY. Beegle, Stephanrue and Danielle King. Sending
gifts were John Priddy, Wade,
Dawn, Cody and McKenna
Connolly, Joyce, Mike, DanieUe.
and Samantha · Cline, and
RuthAnn Boyer.

AWARD WINNERS - Racine Southern FFA members recently attended the District Ten Ban;·
quet. Receiving awards were, first row, Lori Sayre, Alan Moore, Cassie Cleland, T. J. Moore; sec, ·
ond row, Travis Hart, Jeremy Hill, Tyler Johnson. Not pictured is Josh Larson. (Submitted photo) ·

achiever in both contests.
In profidencies areas, Tyler
Johnson received an award for
placing first in nursery operations and forest management
He . also received an award fm
getting fourth place in the jol:
interview contesl.
Jeremy Hill received first in
diversified horticulture, 'ag
communications and floriculture.· Josh Larsen received · first
.place in ag sales and service.
RACINE - Several memTravis Hart received "'' o nd
bers of the Racin~ Southern in home improvement and TraFFA attended the recent Dis- . va nna Moore received fourth in
trice Ten Banquet at New Lex- specia ~ty animal and first place
in flori cul ture placement. Lori
ington High Sc hooL
During an awards ceremony, Sayre received first in fruit and
the chapter was .recognized for vegetable, accoummg, diversiplacing second in both the Co- fied crop, and forages . .
Op and Farm Business ManThe officers also attended an
age ment tests.
,
officer-training seminar taught
Lori Sayre . was the top by District 10 instru ctors, and

District 10 officers.
Attending were Lori Sayre,
president;TJ. Moore, vice-president; Alan Moore, treasurer;

the only investor in
the world.

FFA honored

I

Tyler Johnson, secretary; Amy
Wilson, reporter; Travis H art, ·
student advisor; Cassie Cleland,
assistant secretary.

For information about
our services (lJJd our
co,;unifment to put you first,
please.ConttJcl us today.

John C. Miller, CFP
Branch Manager

311 Fourth St.. Manetta, OH 45750

740-376-9186
800-726-8412

j

�Business

The Daily Sentinel__
POMEROY - Werner Enterprises owner said operaror
Randy Reeves ~endy achiewd 1 million accident-iree mil~
while driving for the coq~pany. .
Werner Enterprises is a truclcloa,d
carrier of general commodities in
intersute and inrrasute commerce.
The company, headquartered in
Omaha, Neh , runs dry v.ms, flarbeds
and temperature controlled vehicles in
tqe 48 contiguous sutes, as well as
Canada and Mexico.
Reeves; who has been With Werner
for 12 years, offered several safety tips
for drivers.
" First, start off your day on a good
Reeves
foot, don't be aggressive. Make sure that
you're rested and feeling good. M ake
sure tlut your equipment is up to par, have a good idea where
you're going and watch out for other vehicles, pedestrians and
construction workers."

.Local phannacist installed
COLUMBUS - Tanura Grueser, R .Ph., Pomeroy, was
installed as trustee of the Ohio Pharmacists Association (OPA),
representing District 8, at its 123rd annual conference; held
April 6-8 in Columbus.
Grueser, a graduate of Ohio State University College of
Pharmacy, currently practices at Fruth Pharmacy in Middleport. She is a founding member and past secretary of the MidOhio Valley Pharmacists Association .and is currently a member
of the OSU Board· of Governors of the Pharmacy Alumni
Society.
The OPA, established in 1879, represents more than 4,000
pharmacists, pharmacy educators a·nd pharmacy students
throughout the state.

United Producers report
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market report from
Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday.
Feeder Cattle-Higher
275-415# St SII0-$116 Hf. $105-$110, 425-525# St. $95. $108 Hf. $90-$103 550-625# St. $85-$94 Hf $83-$90 650725# St. $82-$88 Hf $78-i84; 750-850# St. $75-$83 Hf$72$78.
Cows-Higher
Well Muscled/ Fleshed $45-$48; Medium/Lean $43-$46;
Thin/ Light $36-$40; Bulls S48-S53
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $800-$925; Bred Cows $550-$690; Baby
Calves $55-$300; Goats $10-$60.
Call the office at 446-9696.

,

' POMEROY Another
downtown Pomeroy office
space haS been 6lled by a local
independent
Insurance
agency.
Williams &amp; Associates,
which is owned by Judy
Williams, has moved to 122
East Main St. from irs former
location on Second Street.
The agency first opened for
business on Mechanic Street
with Erie Insurance as the
primary company in December 1991.
Current
employees of
Williams &amp; Associates include
Brandi Stewart, customer service representative; Jane Ann
Williams, licensed · P&amp;C and
Life and Health agent; and
Tuc~r Williams.
The
building
w hich
Williams &amp; Associates now
occupy is the only remaining
part of the original Mcig; Inn,
a . structure that formerly
housed Gilmore's Restaurant
and more recently Sweet
NEW LOCATION - Williams &amp; Associates. an independent insurance agency, has recently
Greeting; bakery.
Williams has been a licensed moved from Second Street to Main Street in Pomeroy. Pictured are, left •.Judy Williams, il'lsur·
ance agent, and Brandi Stewart, customer service representative.
•
insurance agent since ·( 983.

,•
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TuFsn\v's

HIGHLIGHTS
Ash Ks 10 In
WATERFORD - Striking out 10 Waterford batters,
Southern junior Matt Ash led
the TornadoeS ro a 5-3 TVC
win ovc:r the Wildcats Monday night.
: Additionally, Ash scored
what proved to be the winning run in a game that saw a
frustrated Tornado team
stnnd 13 runners on base.
Ash singled, ro lead off the
!mrlng, the¥ after stealing second, Bran
Pierce delivered an RBI si gle.
Later, Sour ern got an
insurance run hen with one
out, Dally Hill re
n an
error and, scored on a Joey
('Aanuel single to make the
score 5-0 at that point.
Miller threatened in the
seventh inning when Dan
Doebereiner doubled, Carney
wallted· and McCutcheon singled and later scored on an
error.
· After two strikeouts Ash got
the last batter to ground out
up the middle to end the
game.
Southern (10-~. TVC 8-3)
hitting was led by senior firstbaseman Matt Shain who was
3-4 with three singles.
Manuel singled, Brice Hill
. doubled and singled, Brandon
Pierce doubled, and Chad
Hubbard, Matt Ash; Brandon
Hill and Aaron Ohlinger each
singled.
'
Doebereiner
·and
McCutcheon each singled
and doubled, while Matt
Huck singled tWice.
Ash picked up the win with
10 strikeouts and two walks
with just one error behind ·
him. Josh Eichorn and]. Carney combined in t~e loss with
six strikeouts and three walks.
Southern is idle today and
plays host to Miller Wednesday.

.

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Ashland
17ie company, based across tl1e
Inc. on Monday reported increased earn- Ohio River from Cincinnati, had
ings for its second quarter that slightly
profits from colltinning opera- ·
beat analysts' expectations, led by a robust
performance fiom its relining operations. tions '?f $26 million, or 37 cet1ts
The company, based across the Ohio per share,Jor the quarter ended
River from Cincinnati, had profits from
Marcia 31, up from. $25 million,
continuing operations of $26 million, or
or 35 cents a share, last year.
37 cents per share, for the quarter ended
March 31, up fiom $25 million, or 35
'· cents a share, last year. Analysts surveyed ' Revenue for the quarter totaled $1.7
by Thomson Financial/First Call expect- billion , down from $1.8 billion a year
ago.
ed a profit of 36 cents per share.

i

.Union leaders say proposed
LTV Corp. cuts are too de'~P
will not be returned to viabil- '
ity and will once again have to
deal with permanent shutdown of the facility."
LTV, the nation's third
largest .
ste el
company,
announced this month that it
will close a mill at its C leveland Works and end about 900
jobs there by mid-June.
In a vid·e o n,1ailed to workers last week, LTV Chairman
William H . Bricker arid Chief
Operating Officer John D.
Turner warned th at the company would have to make
changes to recover financially.
But the video did ' not mention specifics.
•
Parton said union members
have a problem with Bricker
asking workers to make concessions af~er LTV recently
gave salary hikes ·and bonuses
to top company ofljcials.

•

Ashland's operations include road construction, specialty chemicals, lubricants,
car care products, chemical and plastics
distribution and transportation fuels .
Btands include Valvoline motor oils,
Eagle One . appearance products, Zerex
antifreeze and Pyroil performance products.
During the second quarter, Ashland
sold the remainder of its shares ,o f Arch
Coal stock for an after-tax gain of $33
million. Ashland said it used the income
to repay debt.

Disappointing earnings, downgrades
bring stock market lower Monday
NEW YORK (AP)
, Amid fresh reminders that
companies are still struggling
in a. weak economy, investors
took profits Monday, locking
in gains following the stock
nurket's two-week rally.
Among the · big decliners
were companies that released
disappointing earnings · and
acknowledged that the future
will be challenging, and companies that were downgraded
by brokerages. However, analysts had expected a pullback
after the Dow industrials and
Nasdaq co mposite index
ended last wee~ with tripledigit advances.
"Actually, it is healthy if the
market backs and fills, rather
than going up like there is no
tomorrow," said. Dan Ascani,
president and research director
at Global Market Stta.tegists in
Gainesville, Ga.
The Dow lost 47.62 to close

at 10,532.23. The blue chips investment firm said its first",
sacrificed a small portion of quarter profit dropped ~.5
the 452 points they picked up percent from last year. .
la.&lt;t week when several comCompaq Computer, which
panies posted better-than- · reported after the nurke,t
expected' earning; and th e closed that it missed earning;
Federal R eserve unexpectedly forecasts and warned the seccut interest rates for the fourth and-quarter will also be
time this year.
tough, fell 65' cents in extendThe Nasdaq composite ed trading. That compounded
index fell 104.09 to 2,059.32. its 86-cent loss in the regular
losing more than half of last session, where Compaq dosed
week's 201-point advanc e. at $20.65.
However, the index has gained
Analysts' downgrades also
strength recently, recovering weighed on tech stocks.
nearly 26 percent from its low
Software maker Oracle fell
close for the year of 1,638 .80, $2.60 to $17.15 after Lehman
reached April 4.
Brother reduced its rating on
The market's broadest the stock and warned of a
index, the Standard &amp; Poor's weak fourth quarter for· the
500, slipped 18.62 to close at company.
1,224.36.
, Semiconductor stocks fell
Companies with negative after Merrill Lynch down. earnings news traded lower graded many companies in th~
Monday.
sector, including PMC-Sierra
T. Rowe Price fell $1.59 to and
Intel.
PMC-Sierra
finish at $34.76 after the plunged $6.05 to $38.76.

D-11 toumey

di'IWS set

The Division II softball and
baseball sectional tournament
draw was held Su~day for the
upcoming tournaments.
In 'softball, there are four
teams in the division. Warren·
is the top seed, they will play
host to fourth seeded Gallia .
Academy on Wednesday, May
2. In the lower bracket, second-seeded River Valley will
play host to Meigs on
Wednesday, May 2.
The winner of the Warren
Local- GaUia Academy contest
will meet the winner of the
Riv~r Valley-Meigs game on
Wednesday, May 9, ·at a site to
be !letermined later.
In baseball Warren is the top
seed, and took a bye. Gallia
Academy · will play host to
River Valley on Tuesday, May
1, With the winner of that
game play.ing at W'lfren on
Friday, May 4.
In the bottom bracket,
Meigs drew the secon,d se~d
and will meet Vinton County
at Meigs on Friday, May 4.
The two bracket winners
. will meet for the championship on Friday, May I t , at a
site to be determined later. All
game times are 5 p.m.

In honor or National Volunteer Week, April 22nd • 28th,
Rocksprings Rehablllt~Sion Center we&gt;uld like to Thank the
many groups and Individuals who have dedicated their time
and services to our residents over the past year.
· ·
\

VFW, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist' Church, Linda Kozar,' Rev.
Alan Blackwood, Frank and Ida Martin, Garden of my' Heart
Holy Tabernacle, Jim Pelllgrlno, Ladles of the Lord, Out of the
Blue, Mt. Moriah Church of God, .and the many ichool
organizations, community groups, 4-H, boy and girl scctut.
brownie troupe, and friends and family who help make
holidays joyous for our residents. THANK YOUII

Dena Warren, Activity.Director and the staff at
Rockspri!'lgs Rehab Center

. Volunteers Change The World Ill

FuMelp ·

REHABILITATION
/

County 1pcwls
news to the · ·

36759 Rocksprings Road • Pomeroy, OH

(740) 992-6606

Dally Sildlnel
'

.

at tl2-l157

..

girls upend No. 2
Marauders in TVC action
BY DME HMRII ·

ROCK SPRINGS - Wellston scored
three runs in the bottom of the · second
inning. and behind the three-hit pitching of
Abby Thonus, nude it sund as the Lady
Rockets defeated No. 2 ~d Meigs 3-0 in
TVC softball action Monday.
It W3S a pitcher's dud between Thomas and
the Marauders Katie jeffi:rs, with Thomas
getting the upper hind.
Lewis led off the top of the second inning
for Wellston by reaching on a M eig5 error.
Ashley Robinett!: then followed with a run

scoring double to plate Lewis. Julie Huflinan
followed with· a single and two outS later
LeAnn Hatten singled to score Robinette
and Huffinan.
Twice the Marauders had runners as far as
third base, and twice as far as second, but the .
maroon and gold were unable to deJlt the
plate. In the seventh inning the Marauders
had runners on second and third with tWo
outs and the top of the order coming up. But
Thomas picked up a strike out to end the
game.

Pia an ... SofiiNIIL as

•

- - - ..

COMING RIGHT AT YOU - Katie Jeffers of Meigs lets fly with
·
the pitch against Wellston. (Dave Harris)

WellstoQ

•gs
BYDMIEHAIIIIIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS
Darrick Knapp outdueled
Tel Thacker to lead Meigs
to a 4c2 TVC win over
Wellston Monday.
Knapp scattered five hits
in the route going performance, the win is the second in a row for the
'
Marauders after losing five
games in a row. Meigs with
the win is 7-8 overall and
5-6 in the TVC.
· The Marauders spotted
the Golden Rockets a run
in the top of the first
inning. · Evan Johnson
wallted and stole second.
·He then scored on a
Marauder error.
Meigs, however, came
right back in the bottom of :
the inning to tie the game
at 1-all. Nick Dettwiller
led off the l;lottom half of
the inning with a walk.
Dettwiller stole second and
~ame Into score on John
Suilley double.
Meigs took a 2-) lead in
the bottom of the second
inning. . Adam Bullington
wallted and moved to second . on a passed ball.
Bullington then moved to
third on a come backer to
the mound and scored on a
fielders choice ground out.
The Golden Rockets
tied the game .in the top of
the third inning. Richard
Kisor doubled and scored
on a single off the bat of
Pete Essman for a 2-all
contest.

Eagles
batter
·Falcons
inTVC
BYScOTTWCII.FE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

.

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

OVER THE TOP - Darrick Knapp of Meigs threw a 5-hitter Monday as Meigs defeated Well·
ston 4-2 In TVC bas!lball action. (Dave Harris)

Bailey and Gibbs combine for no"'no
BY ScoTT WoLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

HEMLOCK - The pitching of
Eastern's Juli Bailey and Kayla Gibbs
combined for the Eagles second no- hitter of the year as they rolled to a 22-0
win over Miller in TVC sofiball.action.
. Eastern (11-1) is perfect in the league
at 10~0 with six games remaining.
.
"I thought we finally had a good hitring game," said Eastern h~ad coach
Pam Douthitt. "We were patient and
even though we drew some walks, we
had ,some timely hits. We have a busy
week ahead and play Federal Hocking
back-t o-b~ck and Trimble back- to-

back all in league action."
Eastern hitters were Kristen C hevatier with a single in a· perfect 1-for- 1
night. C hevalier was hit three times
with Miller pitches. Carrie Wiggins had
fwo singles, Sandy Powell had a triple,
Janet Calaway had two singles, Kass
Lodwick -had a single and double and
Nikki Phillips had i double.
·
Miller had no hits in a game that saw
·o nly five Miller batters reach base.
Juli Bailey and Kayla Gibbs ~ombined
for a no-hit shut-out. For Bailey it. was
her second such performance of the
year.· T he Eastern pitching combined
·

for five strikeouts and four walks ir a .
great, dominating effort. Jones started
out pitching for Miller, then Wright
came in for an inning, with Altier fin ishing off in relief Miller pitchin g combined for two strikeouts and 16 walks.
In the first inning, Eastern took a 3-0
lead when Chevalier singled, Carri e
Wiggins singled, then EHS pulled off
the double steal, and Sandy Powell .
walked. Kass Lodwick walked · to score
one run, then Wiggins stole home: Bailey walked to load the bases again, and
~ith two outs Tammy Bissell walked to

Please s• No-no, 83

. MILLER - An eight-run
sixth inning lifted Eastern to a
14-8 victory over Miller ·
Monday in TVC baseball
action. Cacy Faulk got the
win with relief fiom Brent
Buckley.
Eastern junior Chris Lyons
led the Eastern 16-hit attack
with a 4-for-5 night, a double
and scored
three Eastern
runs.
Ben
Holter came
alive to rip
three singles
in a 3-for-5
and
night
score
two
runs:
Lyons
Brent
Buckley was 3-for-4 with .
three singles and scored two
runs.
Jason Kimes was 3-for-4
and scored three runs. Jimmy
Putma~ singled, Cacy Faulk
singled and Bradley Brannon
singled.
Miller. was led by Ed Skitman with four singles, Randy
Nelson three singles, Bolyard
a doubl e and single Dennis
Keller a single, Matt Starner
two singles, and Jeremy Stoltz
two. singles.
Faulk fanned two batters
and walked four in picking up
th e win, . while Buckley
gained the save with one
mikeout and three walks, getting Eastern out of what ha4 ...
been a four-run sixth inning.
Bolyard kept Miller in the
game and went the distance
despite suffering the loss. He
fanned nine and walked eight.
Seven singles surrounded a
hit batter in Eastern's eightrun sixth inning.
Eastern hitters doing the
damage were Lyons, Holter,
Faulk, Brannon, Keble.r,
Kimes, and Buckley.
Buckley had three .RBI .1t
overall in a productive offensive effort, while Putman had
two RBI.
Eas.t ern {7-5, TVC 6-5)
goes 10 Wahama today.

Waterford edges Southem girls in TVC play
BY ScoTT WoLFI
OVP CORRESPONDENT

WATERFORD Scoring an unearned run in the
top ·of the eighth, inning,
Waterford defeated Southern
7-6 in eight innings Monday
night in TVC softball action.
Southern pitcher Rachel
Chapman pitched a four-hitter, yet suffered the loss as four
Southern errors p
o be
cosdy. One er r p t the tying

run on base and another two
allowed the winnin~uh to
cross.
Chapman fanned six nd
walked five. Four of those ve
walks came back to score
runs.
. Jaconda Smith was the
winning pitcher, sl:l'iking out
I 0 and walking six, while giving up 12 hits.
Tammy Fryar Jed Southern
with a 3-for-4 night with two

f&gt;

-

.. .

_....

\1\(ell~on

C1llf' CORRE5I'ONOENT

Ashland rep.ortS increase in 2nd quarter profits
'

Page81

......-r. April H. 20111

•

The Gallipolis Golden Corral has expanded Its offerings to guests. Additions include a hot bar
with space ·for up to 11 additional items and a custom cooking station offering steak sand·
, wiches, Reubens and grilled ham and cheese for lunch. The station offers chicken fajitas, stir
fry and teriyaki chicken at dinner. )lictured at the ribbon-cutting, from left, are ·Lorle Neal of the
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce, city councilwoman Celestine Skinner, city commission
President Dick Moore, Golden Corral Manager Michael Kelley, owner Shannon White, and Gal·
lla County comm issioners Bill Davis and Skip Meadows.
·

year in health care cost saving;
and $73.4 million in pension
cost saving;, The Plain ·Dealer
of Cleveland reported last
week. ·
Union offi cials expect . to
receive specifics about the
restructuring plan at a meeting, possibly this week.
An LTV spokesman would
no t discuss specifics of the
proposal, but said a plan 'must
be agreed on within two
weeks to ensure the company
ca n begin payi ng back on
schedule the $700 million it
borrowed after filing for bankruptcy protec't ion in December.
. The restructuring plan "is
not ah optional progra m," said
Mark Tomasch. "Unless we
implement a restructuring
plan and achieve all the obj ectives ·of the plan, the company

&amp;owns tteed b«&lt;cs, Page BJ
~ hold offAstros, ~ B6
:Reds nud hitters, Page B6 ·

.......,.April H. Jill

Williams &amp; Associates moves to Main St.

Golden Corral renovation

GARY, Ind. (AP) - The
nation's third-largest steel
company says it must cut costs
to survive, but union leaders
say the cuts LTV Corp. wants
them to bear are too deep.
"That's their position and
they said if they don't get all
the thing; they're asking for
they will probably close all the
doors," Jack Parton, director or'
District 7 for the United Steel
Workers of America, told The
Post-Tribune of Gary.
" My opinion is, they'll have
to close all the doors . They're
really asking us to tu rn our
backs on reti rees and pensions
and health care and wages, and
the answerto that is 'go ing 10
be no."
LTV wants to change its
labor contract to cut $261
milli on in annual cos ts,'
if/eluding nearly $95 million a

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A&amp;

'

.

doubles, Brigette Barnes had a in the sixth after Waterford
3-for-4 night and a double, had come fiom a 3-2 deficit
Rachel Chapman was 2-for-5 to take a 4-3 advantage.
with two doubles.
Southern came back with
Macyn Ervin was 2-for-3 two runs w hen Deana P\lllins
with two doubles. Deana an9,1(i;arolyn , Bentz singled,
Pullins singled .and Carolyn · then after two strikeouts,
· Rachel Chapman had a twoBentz doubled.
Waterford was led by Jen- ru n double.
nifer Baltzer 'w ith two singles,
A walk and two 1-3 bums
Alan Miller a double, and by Waterford tied the game at
5-S, then Southern went up
Smith a single.
Southern took a 5-4 lead 6-5 on a Fryar single and

Macyn Ervin double,
Leading 6-5 with two outs
in the seventh , Southern
walked two batters, Smith singled to load the bases, and a'n
error allowed the tying run to
· cross the plate.
That set the stage for one
unearned run in the eighth
that brought home Bauerbach
with the wiilning ·rurt, 7-6. ,
Southern hosts Wellston
Tuesday.

L.

�Business

The Daily Sentinel__
POMEROY - Werner Enterprises owner said operaror
Randy Reeves ~endy achiewd 1 million accident-iree mil~
while driving for the coq~pany. .
Werner Enterprises is a truclcloa,d
carrier of general commodities in
intersute and inrrasute commerce.
The company, headquartered in
Omaha, Neh , runs dry v.ms, flarbeds
and temperature controlled vehicles in
tqe 48 contiguous sutes, as well as
Canada and Mexico.
Reeves; who has been With Werner
for 12 years, offered several safety tips
for drivers.
" First, start off your day on a good
Reeves
foot, don't be aggressive. Make sure that
you're rested and feeling good. M ake
sure tlut your equipment is up to par, have a good idea where
you're going and watch out for other vehicles, pedestrians and
construction workers."

.Local phannacist installed
COLUMBUS - Tanura Grueser, R .Ph., Pomeroy, was
installed as trustee of the Ohio Pharmacists Association (OPA),
representing District 8, at its 123rd annual conference; held
April 6-8 in Columbus.
Grueser, a graduate of Ohio State University College of
Pharmacy, currently practices at Fruth Pharmacy in Middleport. She is a founding member and past secretary of the MidOhio Valley Pharmacists Association .and is currently a member
of the OSU Board· of Governors of the Pharmacy Alumni
Society.
The OPA, established in 1879, represents more than 4,000
pharmacists, pharmacy educators a·nd pharmacy students
throughout the state.

United Producers report
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market report from
Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday.
Feeder Cattle-Higher
275-415# St SII0-$116 Hf. $105-$110, 425-525# St. $95. $108 Hf. $90-$103 550-625# St. $85-$94 Hf $83-$90 650725# St. $82-$88 Hf $78-i84; 750-850# St. $75-$83 Hf$72$78.
Cows-Higher
Well Muscled/ Fleshed $45-$48; Medium/Lean $43-$46;
Thin/ Light $36-$40; Bulls S48-S53
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $800-$925; Bred Cows $550-$690; Baby
Calves $55-$300; Goats $10-$60.
Call the office at 446-9696.

,

' POMEROY Another
downtown Pomeroy office
space haS been 6lled by a local
independent
Insurance
agency.
Williams &amp; Associates,
which is owned by Judy
Williams, has moved to 122
East Main St. from irs former
location on Second Street.
The agency first opened for
business on Mechanic Street
with Erie Insurance as the
primary company in December 1991.
Current
employees of
Williams &amp; Associates include
Brandi Stewart, customer service representative; Jane Ann
Williams, licensed · P&amp;C and
Life and Health agent; and
Tuc~r Williams.
The
building
w hich
Williams &amp; Associates now
occupy is the only remaining
part of the original Mcig; Inn,
a . structure that formerly
housed Gilmore's Restaurant
and more recently Sweet
NEW LOCATION - Williams &amp; Associates. an independent insurance agency, has recently
Greeting; bakery.
Williams has been a licensed moved from Second Street to Main Street in Pomeroy. Pictured are, left •.Judy Williams, il'lsur·
ance agent, and Brandi Stewart, customer service representative.
•
insurance agent since ·( 983.

,•
---~

TuFsn\v's

HIGHLIGHTS
Ash Ks 10 In
WATERFORD - Striking out 10 Waterford batters,
Southern junior Matt Ash led
the TornadoeS ro a 5-3 TVC
win ovc:r the Wildcats Monday night.
: Additionally, Ash scored
what proved to be the winning run in a game that saw a
frustrated Tornado team
stnnd 13 runners on base.
Ash singled, ro lead off the
!mrlng, the¥ after stealing second, Bran
Pierce delivered an RBI si gle.
Later, Sour ern got an
insurance run hen with one
out, Dally Hill re
n an
error and, scored on a Joey
('Aanuel single to make the
score 5-0 at that point.
Miller threatened in the
seventh inning when Dan
Doebereiner doubled, Carney
wallted· and McCutcheon singled and later scored on an
error.
· After two strikeouts Ash got
the last batter to ground out
up the middle to end the
game.
Southern (10-~. TVC 8-3)
hitting was led by senior firstbaseman Matt Shain who was
3-4 with three singles.
Manuel singled, Brice Hill
. doubled and singled, Brandon
Pierce doubled, and Chad
Hubbard, Matt Ash; Brandon
Hill and Aaron Ohlinger each
singled.
'
Doebereiner
·and
McCutcheon each singled
and doubled, while Matt
Huck singled tWice.
Ash picked up the win with
10 strikeouts and two walks
with just one error behind ·
him. Josh Eichorn and]. Carney combined in t~e loss with
six strikeouts and three walks.
Southern is idle today and
plays host to Miller Wednesday.

.

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Ashland
17ie company, based across tl1e
Inc. on Monday reported increased earn- Ohio River from Cincinnati, had
ings for its second quarter that slightly
profits from colltinning opera- ·
beat analysts' expectations, led by a robust
performance fiom its relining operations. tions '?f $26 million, or 37 cet1ts
The company, based across the Ohio per share,Jor the quarter ended
River from Cincinnati, had profits from
Marcia 31, up from. $25 million,
continuing operations of $26 million, or
or 35 cents a share, last year.
37 cents per share, for the quarter ended
March 31, up fiom $25 million, or 35
'· cents a share, last year. Analysts surveyed ' Revenue for the quarter totaled $1.7
by Thomson Financial/First Call expect- billion , down from $1.8 billion a year
ago.
ed a profit of 36 cents per share.

i

.Union leaders say proposed
LTV Corp. cuts are too de'~P
will not be returned to viabil- '
ity and will once again have to
deal with permanent shutdown of the facility."
LTV, the nation's third
largest .
ste el
company,
announced this month that it
will close a mill at its C leveland Works and end about 900
jobs there by mid-June.
In a vid·e o n,1ailed to workers last week, LTV Chairman
William H . Bricker arid Chief
Operating Officer John D.
Turner warned th at the company would have to make
changes to recover financially.
But the video did ' not mention specifics.
•
Parton said union members
have a problem with Bricker
asking workers to make concessions af~er LTV recently
gave salary hikes ·and bonuses
to top company ofljcials.

•

Ashland's operations include road construction, specialty chemicals, lubricants,
car care products, chemical and plastics
distribution and transportation fuels .
Btands include Valvoline motor oils,
Eagle One . appearance products, Zerex
antifreeze and Pyroil performance products.
During the second quarter, Ashland
sold the remainder of its shares ,o f Arch
Coal stock for an after-tax gain of $33
million. Ashland said it used the income
to repay debt.

Disappointing earnings, downgrades
bring stock market lower Monday
NEW YORK (AP)
, Amid fresh reminders that
companies are still struggling
in a. weak economy, investors
took profits Monday, locking
in gains following the stock
nurket's two-week rally.
Among the · big decliners
were companies that released
disappointing earnings · and
acknowledged that the future
will be challenging, and companies that were downgraded
by brokerages. However, analysts had expected a pullback
after the Dow industrials and
Nasdaq co mposite index
ended last wee~ with tripledigit advances.
"Actually, it is healthy if the
market backs and fills, rather
than going up like there is no
tomorrow," said. Dan Ascani,
president and research director
at Global Market Stta.tegists in
Gainesville, Ga.
The Dow lost 47.62 to close

at 10,532.23. The blue chips investment firm said its first",
sacrificed a small portion of quarter profit dropped ~.5
the 452 points they picked up percent from last year. .
la.&lt;t week when several comCompaq Computer, which
panies posted better-than- · reported after the nurke,t
expected' earning; and th e closed that it missed earning;
Federal R eserve unexpectedly forecasts and warned the seccut interest rates for the fourth and-quarter will also be
time this year.
tough, fell 65' cents in extendThe Nasdaq composite ed trading. That compounded
index fell 104.09 to 2,059.32. its 86-cent loss in the regular
losing more than half of last session, where Compaq dosed
week's 201-point advanc e. at $20.65.
However, the index has gained
Analysts' downgrades also
strength recently, recovering weighed on tech stocks.
nearly 26 percent from its low
Software maker Oracle fell
close for the year of 1,638 .80, $2.60 to $17.15 after Lehman
reached April 4.
Brother reduced its rating on
The market's broadest the stock and warned of a
index, the Standard &amp; Poor's weak fourth quarter for· the
500, slipped 18.62 to close at company.
1,224.36.
, Semiconductor stocks fell
Companies with negative after Merrill Lynch down. earnings news traded lower graded many companies in th~
Monday.
sector, including PMC-Sierra
T. Rowe Price fell $1.59 to and
Intel.
PMC-Sierra
finish at $34.76 after the plunged $6.05 to $38.76.

D-11 toumey

di'IWS set

The Division II softball and
baseball sectional tournament
draw was held Su~day for the
upcoming tournaments.
In 'softball, there are four
teams in the division. Warren·
is the top seed, they will play
host to fourth seeded Gallia .
Academy on Wednesday, May
2. In the lower bracket, second-seeded River Valley will
play host to Meigs on
Wednesday, May 2.
The winner of the Warren
Local- GaUia Academy contest
will meet the winner of the
Riv~r Valley-Meigs game on
Wednesday, May 9, ·at a site to
be !letermined later.
In baseball Warren is the top
seed, and took a bye. Gallia
Academy · will play host to
River Valley on Tuesday, May
1, With the winner of that
game play.ing at W'lfren on
Friday, May 4.
In the bottom bracket,
Meigs drew the secon,d se~d
and will meet Vinton County
at Meigs on Friday, May 4.
The two bracket winners
. will meet for the championship on Friday, May I t , at a
site to be determined later. All
game times are 5 p.m.

In honor or National Volunteer Week, April 22nd • 28th,
Rocksprings Rehablllt~Sion Center we&gt;uld like to Thank the
many groups and Individuals who have dedicated their time
and services to our residents over the past year.
· ·
\

VFW, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist' Church, Linda Kozar,' Rev.
Alan Blackwood, Frank and Ida Martin, Garden of my' Heart
Holy Tabernacle, Jim Pelllgrlno, Ladles of the Lord, Out of the
Blue, Mt. Moriah Church of God, .and the many ichool
organizations, community groups, 4-H, boy and girl scctut.
brownie troupe, and friends and family who help make
holidays joyous for our residents. THANK YOUII

Dena Warren, Activity.Director and the staff at
Rockspri!'lgs Rehab Center

. Volunteers Change The World Ill

FuMelp ·

REHABILITATION
/

County 1pcwls
news to the · ·

36759 Rocksprings Road • Pomeroy, OH

(740) 992-6606

Dally Sildlnel
'

.

at tl2-l157

..

girls upend No. 2
Marauders in TVC action
BY DME HMRII ·

ROCK SPRINGS - Wellston scored
three runs in the bottom of the · second
inning. and behind the three-hit pitching of
Abby Thonus, nude it sund as the Lady
Rockets defeated No. 2 ~d Meigs 3-0 in
TVC softball action Monday.
It W3S a pitcher's dud between Thomas and
the Marauders Katie jeffi:rs, with Thomas
getting the upper hind.
Lewis led off the top of the second inning
for Wellston by reaching on a M eig5 error.
Ashley Robinett!: then followed with a run

scoring double to plate Lewis. Julie Huflinan
followed with· a single and two outS later
LeAnn Hatten singled to score Robinette
and Huffinan.
Twice the Marauders had runners as far as
third base, and twice as far as second, but the .
maroon and gold were unable to deJlt the
plate. In the seventh inning the Marauders
had runners on second and third with tWo
outs and the top of the order coming up. But
Thomas picked up a strike out to end the
game.

Pia an ... SofiiNIIL as

•

- - - ..

COMING RIGHT AT YOU - Katie Jeffers of Meigs lets fly with
·
the pitch against Wellston. (Dave Harris)

WellstoQ

•gs
BYDMIEHAIIIIIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS
Darrick Knapp outdueled
Tel Thacker to lead Meigs
to a 4c2 TVC win over
Wellston Monday.
Knapp scattered five hits
in the route going performance, the win is the second in a row for the
'
Marauders after losing five
games in a row. Meigs with
the win is 7-8 overall and
5-6 in the TVC.
· The Marauders spotted
the Golden Rockets a run
in the top of the first
inning. · Evan Johnson
wallted and stole second.
·He then scored on a
Marauder error.
Meigs, however, came
right back in the bottom of :
the inning to tie the game
at 1-all. Nick Dettwiller
led off the l;lottom half of
the inning with a walk.
Dettwiller stole second and
~ame Into score on John
Suilley double.
Meigs took a 2-) lead in
the bottom of the second
inning. . Adam Bullington
wallted and moved to second . on a passed ball.
Bullington then moved to
third on a come backer to
the mound and scored on a
fielders choice ground out.
The Golden Rockets
tied the game .in the top of
the third inning. Richard
Kisor doubled and scored
on a single off the bat of
Pete Essman for a 2-all
contest.

Eagles
batter
·Falcons
inTVC
BYScOTTWCII.FE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

.

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

OVER THE TOP - Darrick Knapp of Meigs threw a 5-hitter Monday as Meigs defeated Well·
ston 4-2 In TVC bas!lball action. (Dave Harris)

Bailey and Gibbs combine for no"'no
BY ScoTT WoLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

HEMLOCK - The pitching of
Eastern's Juli Bailey and Kayla Gibbs
combined for the Eagles second no- hitter of the year as they rolled to a 22-0
win over Miller in TVC sofiball.action.
. Eastern (11-1) is perfect in the league
at 10~0 with six games remaining.
.
"I thought we finally had a good hitring game," said Eastern h~ad coach
Pam Douthitt. "We were patient and
even though we drew some walks, we
had ,some timely hits. We have a busy
week ahead and play Federal Hocking
back-t o-b~ck and Trimble back- to-

back all in league action."
Eastern hitters were Kristen C hevatier with a single in a· perfect 1-for- 1
night. C hevalier was hit three times
with Miller pitches. Carrie Wiggins had
fwo singles, Sandy Powell had a triple,
Janet Calaway had two singles, Kass
Lodwick -had a single and double and
Nikki Phillips had i double.
·
Miller had no hits in a game that saw
·o nly five Miller batters reach base.
Juli Bailey and Kayla Gibbs ~ombined
for a no-hit shut-out. For Bailey it. was
her second such performance of the
year.· T he Eastern pitching combined
·

for five strikeouts and four walks ir a .
great, dominating effort. Jones started
out pitching for Miller, then Wright
came in for an inning, with Altier fin ishing off in relief Miller pitchin g combined for two strikeouts and 16 walks.
In the first inning, Eastern took a 3-0
lead when Chevalier singled, Carri e
Wiggins singled, then EHS pulled off
the double steal, and Sandy Powell .
walked. Kass Lodwick walked · to score
one run, then Wiggins stole home: Bailey walked to load the bases again, and
~ith two outs Tammy Bissell walked to

Please s• No-no, 83

. MILLER - An eight-run
sixth inning lifted Eastern to a
14-8 victory over Miller ·
Monday in TVC baseball
action. Cacy Faulk got the
win with relief fiom Brent
Buckley.
Eastern junior Chris Lyons
led the Eastern 16-hit attack
with a 4-for-5 night, a double
and scored
three Eastern
runs.
Ben
Holter came
alive to rip
three singles
in a 3-for-5
and
night
score
two
runs:
Lyons
Brent
Buckley was 3-for-4 with .
three singles and scored two
runs.
Jason Kimes was 3-for-4
and scored three runs. Jimmy
Putma~ singled, Cacy Faulk
singled and Bradley Brannon
singled.
Miller. was led by Ed Skitman with four singles, Randy
Nelson three singles, Bolyard
a doubl e and single Dennis
Keller a single, Matt Starner
two singles, and Jeremy Stoltz
two. singles.
Faulk fanned two batters
and walked four in picking up
th e win, . while Buckley
gained the save with one
mikeout and three walks, getting Eastern out of what ha4 ...
been a four-run sixth inning.
Bolyard kept Miller in the
game and went the distance
despite suffering the loss. He
fanned nine and walked eight.
Seven singles surrounded a
hit batter in Eastern's eightrun sixth inning.
Eastern hitters doing the
damage were Lyons, Holter,
Faulk, Brannon, Keble.r,
Kimes, and Buckley.
Buckley had three .RBI .1t
overall in a productive offensive effort, while Putman had
two RBI.
Eas.t ern {7-5, TVC 6-5)
goes 10 Wahama today.

Waterford edges Southem girls in TVC play
BY ScoTT WoLFI
OVP CORRESPONDENT

WATERFORD Scoring an unearned run in the
top ·of the eighth, inning,
Waterford defeated Southern
7-6 in eight innings Monday
night in TVC softball action.
Southern pitcher Rachel
Chapman pitched a four-hitter, yet suffered the loss as four
Southern errors p
o be
cosdy. One er r p t the tying

run on base and another two
allowed the winnin~uh to
cross.
Chapman fanned six nd
walked five. Four of those ve
walks came back to score
runs.
. Jaconda Smith was the
winning pitcher, sl:l'iking out
I 0 and walking six, while giving up 12 hits.
Tammy Fryar Jed Southern
with a 3-for-4 night with two

f&gt;

-

.. .

_....

\1\(ell~on

C1llf' CORRE5I'ONOENT

Ashland rep.ortS increase in 2nd quarter profits
'

Page81

......-r. April H. 20111

•

The Gallipolis Golden Corral has expanded Its offerings to guests. Additions include a hot bar
with space ·for up to 11 additional items and a custom cooking station offering steak sand·
, wiches, Reubens and grilled ham and cheese for lunch. The station offers chicken fajitas, stir
fry and teriyaki chicken at dinner. )lictured at the ribbon-cutting, from left, are ·Lorle Neal of the
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce, city councilwoman Celestine Skinner, city commission
President Dick Moore, Golden Corral Manager Michael Kelley, owner Shannon White, and Gal·
lla County comm issioners Bill Davis and Skip Meadows.
·

year in health care cost saving;
and $73.4 million in pension
cost saving;, The Plain ·Dealer
of Cleveland reported last
week. ·
Union offi cials expect . to
receive specifics about the
restructuring plan at a meeting, possibly this week.
An LTV spokesman would
no t discuss specifics of the
proposal, but said a plan 'must
be agreed on within two
weeks to ensure the company
ca n begin payi ng back on
schedule the $700 million it
borrowed after filing for bankruptcy protec't ion in December.
. The restructuring plan "is
not ah optional progra m," said
Mark Tomasch. "Unless we
implement a restructuring
plan and achieve all the obj ectives ·of the plan, the company

&amp;owns tteed b«&lt;cs, Page BJ
~ hold offAstros, ~ B6
:Reds nud hitters, Page B6 ·

.......,.April H. Jill

Williams &amp; Associates moves to Main St.

Golden Corral renovation

GARY, Ind. (AP) - The
nation's third-largest steel
company says it must cut costs
to survive, but union leaders
say the cuts LTV Corp. wants
them to bear are too deep.
"That's their position and
they said if they don't get all
the thing; they're asking for
they will probably close all the
doors," Jack Parton, director or'
District 7 for the United Steel
Workers of America, told The
Post-Tribune of Gary.
" My opinion is, they'll have
to close all the doors . They're
really asking us to tu rn our
backs on reti rees and pensions
and health care and wages, and
the answerto that is 'go ing 10
be no."
LTV wants to change its
labor contract to cut $261
milli on in annual cos ts,'
if/eluding nearly $95 million a

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A&amp;

'

.

doubles, Brigette Barnes had a in the sixth after Waterford
3-for-4 night and a double, had come fiom a 3-2 deficit
Rachel Chapman was 2-for-5 to take a 4-3 advantage.
with two doubles.
Southern came back with
Macyn Ervin was 2-for-3 two runs w hen Deana P\lllins
with two doubles. Deana an9,1(i;arolyn , Bentz singled,
Pullins singled .and Carolyn · then after two strikeouts,
· Rachel Chapman had a twoBentz doubled.
Waterford was led by Jen- ru n double.
nifer Baltzer 'w ith two singles,
A walk and two 1-3 bums
Alan Miller a double, and by Waterford tied the game at
5-S, then Southern went up
Smith a single.
Southern took a 5-4 lead 6-5 on a Fryar single and

Macyn Ervin double,
Leading 6-5 with two outs
in the seventh , Southern
walked two batters, Smith singled to load the bases, and a'n
error allowed the tying run to
· cross the plate.
That set the stage for one
unearned run in the eighth
that brought home Bauerbach
with the wiilning ·rurt, 7-6. ,
Southern hosts Wellston
Tuesday.

L.

�.............. s

24, 2001
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projecls A m n mum of a
Bacholo(s Degroo wth
edge ol alcOI'&lt;&gt;I tObaCCO and
other dr.ugs Stcretllry Gallia
office " min mum ot (1) year
e•pertence in general secretarial
dutieS and e high scl1ool dtplomo
Must posses accurate skills In
Word and Excel programs
Must be dependable with good
telephone sk Is Send resume by
May 1 2001 to
FACTS
45
01 ve Ga llpols Ohio 45831 or
Fax (740)446-80,. EOE MIFIH

Auction

ATIENTION OWN A COMPUT
ER7 Mall order/E Commerce
$522+/week PT $1000 $4 0001
week FT Full Training Free
Booklet www createdreamllle com
(800)7!56-4908
ATTENTION
HOME

WORII

FRQM

Mal Ofdor/E-commorce bullnooo
S1 1500-$7 200 month PTIFT
Free lnlormatlon 1 500-924-0874
www Stri&gt;eToSUccood com
ATTENTION
WORK FROM
HOME
Mall orde E-commerce business
$1 500 S7 200 month PT FT
FroalnlormaUon I 900-824-0874
www StriYeToSucceed com

and Flea Markat
Alck Pearson Auct an Company
ful ume auct onaar compltlt
auction
lfJrVIce
licensed
tee Ohio &amp; West VIrgin a 304
773-5785 Or 304 773-5447
Rivera dt A.uct on Barn Sale
Ever~ Saturday Night at 6p m
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson
(740)2-989

10

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar U S Silver
Gold Co ne Proofseta 0 amends
Gold R ngs
U S Currency
M TS Coin Snop 151 Second
"vonuo Gall pols 740-448 2842
Wanted 10 buy Small uaed com
marclaloolo (304)675-1866

eMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

IIATIENTION II
lrnrnatlonal Company E•pand ng
Work From Homo or Office
$500 Q0.$8 000 00/mo PTIFT
Me I Ordorllnternet
Paid llllnlng/VIcollons
Clllt-800 2211-0317
ClshOnThoTibllt com
II ATIENTIONIII
lntemallona Company Expanding
Work From Marne or Off ce
$500 Q0.$8 000 00/mo PT/FT
Mall Order/Internet
Plld TralnlngNacations
Cell t-t00-211 8160
$1200 WEEKLY POSSIBLE Po
ce11 ng Inquiry Envelopes at
Homo Easy! No Exporlonoo t
IQ0.756 2027 x 539 (24 Hourt)
12 000 WEEKLY! Moiling 400
brochurlll Sallsract on Guar
entlldl Pollogo &amp; Supplloo pro
vldodl Rush Self Addrooaod
Stamped Envelopal GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 I 438 Start lmmld ato y

Bo 'lllur Own boos!
NtMtr 9-5 Again
Earn Up lo $500 $8000/MO
PTIFT
www CaahNowAndFo ovor com
CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
eX"ce ent Income Easy cams
processing Full tra nlng Home
PC equl od Call Phys clan &amp;
HealtMare Developments toll
tree I 8QO. 772 5933 '"' 2070
Cert fed Nurs ng Assistant Train
lng Class le scheduled tor May 7
25th tor 100 bed skllod lacllty
Seek ng candidates who are car
lng compassionate and want to
be a member or a g eat team
Class w be evening hours ror
high schools students 3P 11 P
Interested candidates shOuld ap
p y o Rocksprings Rehab Clnter
38759 Aockspnngs Road Pomer
oy Ohio 4!5769 contacts are
Sandy Bowen or Judy Hart Equal
Opportunity Emp aye encourag
ng workplace diVers ty
C ass A B COL Or ve s Good
Pay Benefits 401 K Vacation In
surance Home Evenings Call
(740)288-1483
COME DRIVE FLATBED FOR
USI Company &amp; Owner/Operator
OTR drive s for reg onal &amp; dedi
cated runs Cal 800 551 9057
Ext 140 B uco to Northern Oh o
ded catod run c1 Bob BOO 531
7725 Cla10 A COL roqu rod
EARN $25 000 $50 000 y Mad
cal Insurance Blllng Naodld lm
medlataly Home Computer Nlld
od FREE lntornot I BOO 291
4683 Dopll 108
EASY WORK G eat pay! Earn
1500 Plus a Week Assombllng
Products at Home No Experience
Nocesoery Ca To! Free t 800
267 3944 "38
Experienced Truck Mechanic
Needed 401 K Retirement Mod
cal Denta &amp; V alan Insurance
vacallon Pay Baaed On E:~~perl
onoo Cll(740)288-t483

Ful~11mo

And Part limo RN Posl
1 0"1 Ava I able AI Seen c HI 1
Nuroong Center Wo Oltor FlexitH
Schedul ng Great Benet t Pack
ago Compelitive, Wage&lt; Sloitl O;t
ftrtntial Wage Exper ence And
Attendance Bonuses Call TOday
For More Informal on About This
Great Opportun ty l Ask For
Rhonda Ho ste n At (740)448
7150
Qovernmenl Jobe 111 00
133 00 per hour potent al Pad
Training/Full Btlnerlts For mort
ntormation ca 1 1 888 674 9150
txt 3234
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! Work from home Mal or
cter/E Commerce $522+/Wetk PT
S1000 14000/wk FT 800 921
6538 www dream2blree com
Help war&lt;od caring tor lhO tldorly
Darst Group Home now pay ng
minimum wage new shifts 7am
3pm 7am-5pm 3pm-11pm 1tprn7am cai74D-992 5023
Home Health Agency Seek ng
~N s LPN s CNA s For Galla
Uason Counties Call Laura lisa
(740)441 tn9
Homeworkars Needed
S835 ~ prooooslng mai
Easy! No exporlon&lt;8 neodod
Cal t·IQ0.49Q.9450 24 hro.

PGT Is hl!N halbod dflvors Min
6 months OTR Experoonce Good
MVR No accidents Excellent
Pay and Bene! Is WE HAVE
FRElCllfT H!OQ.TEAIIPGT
Postal Jobs $41 323 00 yr Now
h ring No experience pa d tra1n
ng g eat benet ts call 1 days
8()()..429 3660 ' " J 365

Scenic Hills Is Now H r ng
STNA 1 And Certified Nurs ng
Assistants For All Shifts Wa Are
A Progressive Facil ty Who Ap
prec atea Our Staff You Have
Great Opportumlles At Scan c
Hills! Please Cal Rhonda HOisleln
At (740)446 7150 Today! Or
Stop By And F Jl Oul An ~pploca
lion
URGENTLY NEEDED plasma
donors earn $45 to S60 tor 2 or 3'
hours weekly Ca I Sera Tee 74Q592..fi651

Wanted Waitress Full ima Apply
In Person
Hoi day
Inn Of
Gallipolis Ohio
WORK FROM HOME
$500-11 500 Mo Port Time
$1 :200-$6 000 Mo Fu !Time
PAID VACATIONS
H!00-499-3019
140

Bualneaa
Training

INTERNATIONAL COMPANY
NEEDS HELP with Mall Order/E
Commorco 1500 $7000 mo P;T/
FT from home Full Train ng F ee
Booklet
920 924 8400
www AchlaveDreama com

Golllpotll C - r Cotlago
(C&amp;roora CloiB To Home)

Ca11Todayl740-448-4387
1 800-214-0452
Reg 19().05-12748

150

School•

Llconaod Practical Nuro" (LPN)
For ~ull And Part limo Work In A
Instruction
tt 4 Bod tntormldlato Clro Stoll
PARALEGAL
Facility An Extonolvo Btnttlt BLACKSTONE
STUDIES Home Study Ap
Pockogo 11 Avallebll For Full
proved Affordabfl comprehen
limo Employeoa Sl!ary Is Com
slve legal training alnce 1890
monourate With Exparlenco Contact Sandra Rattmlro DON At La- FREE Catalog 800 821 9228
wrIt PO Box 701449 Dollao TX
kin Hospital Lakin WV a!
75370 NA or h«p //www blackato(304)87~-oeeo E" 124 Monday
~awcom
lhru Friday 8am 4pm Lakin Hot
pita! II an EEO/M Empll)yor
EARN YOUR COLLEG~ DEGREE
LPTA and COTA lull limo/ Part
QUICKLY bacholoro Mastoro
time flexible houra benet 11 aval
Doctorate by correspondence
baotd upon P lor education and
able Cona sfeot PT/OT PAN
needed to guide rehab team l ' oohort ltudy course For FFIEE n
aerv ces 30 10 hours per week
formation ~ooklet phone CAM
Contact Bill 8111 Or Maureen BRIDGE STATE UNIVERSITY I
;800-:::,.;:;98:,:4;,:8:::3.:;18:;,.;._ _ _ _ __
Hanneooy at Arbors at Galllpoio
740
7112
(
)448"" EOE
180 Wantad To Do
Management Opportunity Caraet
B&amp;B ConBiructlon RoollnD SldlnD
Opportunity With Major Company
And Concr•te Inter or &amp; E•le or
Complell Tra nlng Program
Pointing AI Phaoos Of Homo Rt
Excellent Benetlta Call I 888
208 5028 For Confldontlal In- pairs For A Free Estimate Ca I
(304)675-n38 Attar 5:00pm

-

Mod eel Bill ng Asllotant neodld
lmmodlatolyl FTIPT Will ltaln Ex
cellon! Income PC roqulrod I
888-4411 9773"' 222
MEDICAL TR ... NSCRIPTIONIST
work on youf computer Guar
antnd employment Training/car
t llcet on (tree) Tartan Pub Inc
I 800-944-5595

Babysitting n my Home children
210 M F Bam 530pm cal
(740)388-8193
David a General Contractor•
Plumbing Electric Painting
Decks Mile WOrk All Homo Rt
palro lawn Core Call (740)2589373 Or Co I Phone 1 304 833
6265

Need 1o ledltl To Sell Avon
Earn 40% Call (740)448-3351
Needed Exper anced Crew tor
Setting and F n shlng Sectional
Housing Send Pricing lntormaUon
and exper ence to Southern
Homoa PO Box 829 Jackson
OH45840
NOW HIRING FOR
POINT PLEASANT OFFICE
EARN UPTO S10 00 AN HOUR
(Gulli- Salary)
Man and Woman Needed To Do
Telephone Oparator WOrk For
NATIONAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS
Homemakers work while
chid en In school
"IIAY AND EVENING SHIFT
AVAILABLE
'FUU ANO PART TIME
OPENINGS
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDEDTRAINING PROGRAM
COLLEGE &amp; H S STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply In Person At
303 Main 5111181
Point Pllollnt WV
Tuaoday Aprtl 24th
w.clnoodoy AprH 25th
Thurodoy April 21th
Friday APr!t 27th
3 OOpm llnlll8 OOpm ONI.Y
Ask For Ma W lis

Lawn Mow ng Service Free
Eollmatea Cal (740)258-9363
Lawn Mower And Small Engine
Repair FrH Pick up And Dollv
ery Within 10 Miles 21 Years
Exper once
Ca I Mike AI
(740)446-7604
Mount 8 Tree Serv ce The Trse
Protess onals
Bucket Truck
Service Top Trim ~emoval
Stump G lndlng Free Est mates
Fully lnsu ad Workers Camp
Bidwell Oh o Cal &amp; Save 1 80().
838 9568 (740)368 9848 Owner

Aiel&lt; Mount
Will Ca e For Bedlast Elderly
Female In My Home Dodrill a
(740)388-8193
Will Powerwash Houses Ti ailers
And AV s Contact Ron At
(740)448 0151 or 339 0950 II
No Answe Leave Message

Own a PC 1 Put t to Work! For a
!reo bookie! call 80Q-429 5853 or
visit ue onNne
www getpcworll com

$1 000 WEEKLYl Work al hOmo
precessing automat ve pam
phletsl No l)(pe lance Weekly
paychecks! Everyth ng suppled!
1 800 551 3175

Part time LPN Posit on Ayal able
At Scenic H Us Nu s ng Cente
You Can Get F ax ble Schedu ng
Groat Btnelts Compatltlve Wag
os Shift Ollterontlal wage Experience And Attendance Bonuses
Don t Pass Up A G eat Opper
tun ty To Begin Or Continue You
Exc Ung Nursing Carea I Cal
Rhonda Holsten At (740)448
7150Today
POSTAL JOBS to $18 35hr Hr
for 2001 pad training Fu I
No expar ence equlred
to I lroo 7am 7pm CST t 888
728 9083&gt;1705
POSTAL JOBS lo $I 8 35 h
WILDLIFE JOBS to $21 60 hr n
cludea Benet Is No Experience
Necessary Fo Application and
Exam Into cal I 100 992 7054
x208 M F 8 30-5 OOpm
PAN icensed physical lherap st
PAN occupat ana lherap st PAN
ce t f ad occupa ona the apy as
slst!lnt and PAN speech thera
p~t needed tor 100 bad sk ad
nu sing fac I ty E~~:ce ant prog es
s ve rehabllltallon department
both Inpatient and outpatient
services prov ded Interested
candidates should app y to ROCk
springs Rehabilitation Center
36759 Rocksp ngs Road Pomo
oy Ohio 45789 A !son Barnell
MPT Rehab Serv ces Director
7 40 992 6606 Equa Opportunity
Employer Encouraging Wo k
place 0 Vet'S ry
Sales Person
Fu ~Tlmt B..,.
f ta Retail Exper ence Preferred
App y At Lila style Furnlluro No
Phone Cans Apply In Pe son
856 Th rd Avenue Ga llpolls
Oho

oomoamongscom

114$-9008 -*'VI

Earn S90 000 YEARLY ropolr ng
NOT reptae ng long cracks n
Wlndshtelds Ftee v deo 1 800
826-8523 US/Canada www glasamechanix com

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES!
SO OR lOW DOWN ! TAX
REPO 5 &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT! FOR USTtNGI CALL I
800-501 11n"' 98t3

EARN your Collage Degree
QUICKLY Bachelor 1 Maater a
Doctorate by correspondence
Bosod Upon PrM&gt;r Education Ex
parlance and Study Course Free
Catalog Cambr dge State Unl
IIOflily (8001 964-8318 24 HilS

HOMES FROM $199 30/Mo 1
3BFI Repos/ Foreclosures tee
f% down For L stings/Payment
Detail$ 1 8Q0-71t-3001 x1185

E1c1 11n1 Opportun ty Vending
route No so ling 50K plus yr 4 6
hr weekly M1nlmum Investment
required 1 800-2J""51n 24m
MEDICAL BILLING Unllm tod In
come potent at No experience
necessary Free Information &amp;
CD ROM lnvo81mtnt from $2495
Financing available (800) 322
1139
EXT 0!50 www business atar

'""com
Sttrt A Trovtol Agency Rocllve
Tra ning Bustness Support Your
own Travel Website and Travel
Discounts/Perks Earn B g $$$
Nomina Startup Coati 1 888 8990901 or www EarnBucksFrom

Homo

com

Start Your Business Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Ava able AI Aflordable Rate
Spr ng Valley Plaza Call 740-446
0101
WORK FROM HOME! Earn
1500 S7 000/month PT/FT Full
Tra niJJQ Free Information Call
Nowl t-t00-290-8914
www attainurd eams com
230

Profenlonal

Service•
$ FREE CASH NOW$ from
-llhy lamlllel unloading m lllons
of do lara to he p minim ze their
taxe1 Wr te Immediately WIND
FALLS 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD
168 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
NIA 90010
ISS CREDIT CARD PROBLEMS7
FREE Debt Consolidation Cut
Payments Reduce Interest Non
Prollt 800 288 8331 Ext 15
-goldcooi!ICO com
S$1 NEED CASH?? WE pay
caah for remaining payments on
Proporly Sold! Mortgagee! Annul
ties Settlements! Immediate
Ouoteslll Nobody beats our pric
ea National Contract Buvtrt
(800) 490 0731 " ' 101 www na
ltonalcontroctbuyors oorn
CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Consolldatoon to S200 000 Bad/
No Cro~ll Credit Carda Mort
gages For Information 1 800
335-7612 ... 3822
CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
0 A C F om $2500 $125 000 9%
average rate One hOur approva
Call F C C S to ltroa 1 888 805
3379
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING I 888-81 t.Q902
Divorce Sl50
Bonk uptcy $195
Adoption $225
Not do-l yo..aew klt1
CALL I BOQ-303- 1170
FREE ntormationl
Bankruptcy nialn TN!1(Y
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to $500 Instantly by phonal t
877 EARLYPAY L ct 750005 1SI
ADVANCE FREEl

No Fees/Service Charges
In Naod ol F nanaal Assistance?
Please Cal Us Toll Free 1 866
8 t 3-8881 24hr

A SPECIAL OFFER Qually lor
f ee cqmpu er P oces8 med ca
cia ms f om home Free software
website a ma w th merct.ant ac
count S an Today! 866 575
HOME(4883) EXT:703
A+ M&amp;M MARS NESTLE Estab
!shod Vend ng Route W I ael by
5/7 01 Under $9K m nlmum n
vestment required EKes lent Pror
t Potent a F nance AvallabJe
Good Cred 1 To Free
(888)
27().2168
ABSOLUTE GOLD MIN Ell
No money down work 3 .thrs/
wk Earn $501&lt;/yr own ng 111lstlng
INTERNET buslneos Free lnlol
1 80Q-6:j6 4031
Convenltf'ICt
Stores Food
Serv ce Htgh Volume Fuel Great
locat ens In Gall polis Area
I 888-679 9801

Must see 1993 281170 double
wide f'!lwer ca pet gas furnace/
hOt water tank large front porch
needs moved appraised at
$69 000 lOlling tor $35 000 740
992 5722
Newly Constructed Single Story
t 800 Squ.,e Fool Homo 1o
M nutes Fr• Hospital Bidwell/
Portar Area Located On A Beau
tllul Private 1 112 Acre Lot 3
Bedroom 2 112 Baths Big Kitch
en w/Cuatom Oak Cabinets From
Smiths Cabinets DR LR w/Gas
Log Fireplace Front Porch &amp; 2 11
2 Car Garage Qua ty Consuuc
lion All Tha Way St35 000 Call
(740)44&amp;-45141rom B 5 M f Or
(740)448-3248 Mar 5pm
Flemolded 3 Bedroom Wood
Floor&amp; 1 112 Bath Baautllul
Fl eptaca 2 Car Garsga $73 000
(740)388-l!151
Two car garage/apartment In
M ddleport two bedrooms tull
bath LR kitchen "lh electric
range central air 740 985 3650
or 740 992 2795
320

All roaloatate advenlslng In
thll newspaper Is subject to
thO Fedora Fa! Housing 11ct
ot 1988 which makes !legal
to advert se any preference
Imitation or dlscrlm nat on
based on race color rei glon
ae)( famll al status or national
origin or any Intention 1o
make any such preference
llmlta!lon or dlscnmlnatlon

n

Mobile Homes
for Sala

99 mobile homo lor oale muat
san 14x70 three bedrooms two
bathl 740-849-3004 attar 5pm
1•x10 Soulhern Dream free De
livery lroe Se!up only S9995 t
888-928-3426
18 Wide Only $195 00 Por
Month 8 99% Fixed lnlereat Rato
W lh Air And
Underplnn ng
1 888-928-3428
1981 14Jx70 Adm ration Taller
For Sale Hat Island In Midd 1 Of
Kitchen With Stove Built In Can
tral Air &amp; Mo&amp;t Appl ances Go
Must Seal Very Low Price Call
Anytime And Ask For Tammy
(740)3811-'6914
1982 14x70 Fairmont Townhouse
2 bed oom 1 large bath w th heat
pump &amp; a/c S7 500 740 591
4043 or 740-992.0938
1993 3 Bedroom 2 Bath 14•70
Mobile Homo On Rented lot on
Sandh
Ad Does Not Need
Moved
New Carpel Neve
Smoked In 8xB Barn Building
Goes Bot_h Porches Wan Main
Ia ned Inside and out (304)675
7386 Monday Fr day 8 30 to
5 00 (304)875 6644 Alter 5 oo
and weekends
79 Ux70 $6500 0 yer Stove
Refrigerator New Ca pet Mus
Soo Must Move (740)446 2923
(304)674-0053

v

87 2 Bedroom Oakwood Ve
Nice On Rented La In Lesage
~rea (304)576-2842

97 Oakwood 3 BR 2 Bath Only
asking payoff price pease ca
(740)258-6997LOBVI Measage

Country llv ng Daub ewlde On 2
Wooded Acres $2500 &amp; Move
In (740)448-3570

REAL ESTATE
310 Homea for Sale
SO DOWN HOMES I GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1 800-338 0020 ' " 96 11
2 Slo,Y B ck Appro•lmately 3400
Square Feet 1 112 Acree Fu 1
Boatman! Booullul VIew 01 Rlv
er Waa $98 500 Reduced To
S89 500 By Appo ntmont 0 1y
(740)256-llt72
2 4 Bedroom Housa Fo S o In
ote
Bldwe
lncludea 2
(740)441-Q420

M&amp;M/MARS Eolabllshtd rout11
available M n mum lnvelltmanl
$4800 Annual potentia earnings
over $90K To F eo t 868 787
7712 :Mhrt

Handyman Specla tn Excelent
NolgilborhoOd Lorge Yard Good
Cond I on Won I Last 159 900
Makl Olteo' 1304)675 1818

Approximate y 5 Acres With 2
Bedroom Homo ~ocatod AI t 027
Gage Rd Patr 01 OH $30 000
Phone (740)448-0985

Ta a Townhoure Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA I 112 Bath Fully Car
peted Adulr Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Paho Starr $365/Mo No Pets
Lease Ptus Secur ty Deposit Rt
qulred Cays 1•0 446 3481
Evon ngs 740 387 0502 740
448-0101

Pr vale Property And New Dou
blewldo One Payment (304)736-

7295

s ngle Parent Program

Special
Flnancong Av~llabla (304)755
7191
Stock M-1 Cleartnoo- 111 2000
models must go. New home PlY
menta a5 low as $1 50 32 par
month and only $750 00 down
Cai74D-385-4387

Twin R-Towtll now accepting
~tiotWior1BR

HUD lublldilod opt tor eldorly
and disabled EOH (304)675
6679

wow

New Fleetwood Double
Wlda 2Bx90 4 BR Only 39 990 at
Fleltwood Homes of Proctorv Ia
Tal Fnte 1-888 585-0187

330

Farm• for

490

Beautitul I 1100 Sq Foot R..tored
2nd Floor Apartment In Hlslorlc
District Ideal For Protessional
Coupe All Mode n Amen ties 3
Bedroom• Spacious Llv ng 1 112
Baths Roar Deck HVAC $800/
mo Plus Utilities Secur ty And
Key Dt!pOstt No Pots References
Required (740)446 4425 Or
(740)448-3936

FARM FOR SALEII Wo Have
Moved And Are Selling Our
Farm 3 BodrOOm Homo Hat High
CO lings Oak 'l'rim "nd " lorgo
Kitchen Buildings Include A
Large Barn And Garage Excel
ienl LocatiOn!
Op!/011 f HouiO Barn Bulldlngo
Wllh 86 Acres For $129 900
Option 2 lncludoo Everything
In Option 1 plus Pasture Pond
And A Total 01 t 20 Acros Priced
~~ $189 900 Shown By Appoint
ment Only
Call E-venlnga
(740)381H)259
350 Lota

&amp;

r,1ERCHANDISE
510

Appl ancea
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relr
g ators Up To 90 Days Guar
antoodl We Soli New Maytag Appl ances French C ty Maytag
74().448-7795

80 Acres Developed Land In
M11on County Netural Spring
City Water A Creek At Tho Bot
tom Asking 150 000 Already
TimbO ld (304)897 5827

For Sale Recondlt onad waah
e &amp; drye s and efrlgarators
Thompsons Appl ance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675.7388

9 Acres Small Pond a-.112 Miles
Back Of New Haven On Union
Campground Road (304)882
2538

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refr gerato s
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 76
V ne Street Ca I 740 446 7398
18811-818.()128

Camp
Sites For Rent On Ka
nawha Fliver 8 miles from Point
Pleasant oloctriC only (304)8751722 (304)875-4144After5pm
Looking To Buy A Now Home?
Don 1 Have Land? Wa Do Hurry
Only tO lola Left 304-739 7295

New &amp; Used Furn lure
Naw 2 P ece l v ng oom Suites
S399 Buy Sell Trade

RENTALS

Used
Window
Un t
Air
Cond lloners 90 Day Guarantee
(740)886-7531 (740)886-0047

1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homos From $189/Mo 4% Down
30 Yaars at 8 5% APR For L II
tngs 80().319-3323 e" 1709
2 Bedroom House For Rent I"
Bidwell
Includes 2 Lots
(740)441-Q420
2 BA Log Houoa A/C No Pots
Available Juno tst $350/mo Do
posit Relorenee (740)448 7732
bet-n 4pm and 8pm
3 Bad oom Water &amp; Trash Paid
Stove Ref lgerator CiA S42S
Plus Deposit No Pots (740)3888371
Fou Room House 52 Olive
Street phone (740)448-3945
Pilot Program Renters Needed
304-7367295
Pome oy 3 bedroom $300 por
month $200 deposit HUD ap
proved also need references
74().742 2896
420

Mobile Homea
for Rent

121160 2 Bedr.pom All Electric
Across Ne ~sli aven Grade
Schoo $300 mo (304)882 2219
(304)882 2119
2 bed oom mobl e home or 600
sq ft office space Rlverpark M
nersv He $300 mo each reduced
rent tor handy person who can
mow the grass In the park 614
676 1661
2 bedroom mob e home n tral er
pa k on Fraley Or ve reference
deposit $250 mo 1 112 milo trom
Ho zer Hosp tal on old Route 35
trailer lot for ent same trailer
pa k $100/mo (304)675 5999
(3041675-2900
440

Aparbnenta
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurn shed security
depos I requ red no pels 740
992 2218
t Bedroom A~artment Retrigera
tor Range A/C Inc udod $289
Plus Deposit &amp; Reference HUD
Approved (740)441-1519

Factory Goo! 32x80 $tO 000 Dis
count only $1000 00 Down De
va y and setup paid by Facto y
I 1100-891 8777

t bedroom $200 per monlh 2
bedroom S250 plu~ depos t &amp;
utili I es 3rd Street Racine Oh
741).247-4292

Lot mode c earance save up to
$8 82!5 with any home check ua
our were dealing Coles Mobile
Homes US 50 East Alhlns Oh
Now 14 II wldo $499 dO!m..only
$199 par man ca I now 1.-d'oo
691-6777
Now 16 It w de S499 per mon
on y $270 per man call now 1
8Q0.89 I -6777
New 2001 Fleotwood 3 br 2
bath set up n The Country Mo
bl e Home Pa k ready to move n
$995 down $199 98 per month
740 992 2167

Houllhold
Goods

Acreage

1 Bedroom n Country Stove Flefr ge alor Water Trash No Pets
$275 Plus Deposll (74013888371

L mlted Or No Creel ? Govern
ment Bank F nance Only At Oak
wood In Barboursv le WV 304
738 3409

ForL1111

4 oom Downstairs Water pad
No Pets 91 Cedar St (740)3881100

530

•

Antlquea

Buy or sell Riverine Ant ques
tt 24 East Main on SR 124 E Po
me oy 740 992 2526 or 740 992
1539 Russ Moo e owner
540

Mlacellaneous
Merchandise

$0 DOWN HOMES
No Cred t OKI HUD VA
FHA Cal Ia !stings
1 800-501 1777 Ext 9818

$1 000 BACK 2 Ton A r Cond
oner 2 Ton Coil 1 l ne Set In
stalled $2 295 $ 000 Back
$1295 Net Price Free Estimates
Ca I For Quotes On Other S 211
f You Dan t Call Us We
Both lose! Mobi e Homes Our
Spec allly 1 740 446 6308 I 800
291 0098
18 HP Yardman Aldmg Lawn
Mowe looks GoOd Runs Good
$550 (740)388-9325

laaml Pope A- For COncntto
Angle Channel Flat Bar Steel
Grat ng For Drains Driveways &amp;
Walkways l&amp;L Scrap Metals
(740)448-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS A most everyone approved
w lh SO down! Low monthly pay
montsl 1 8Q0.8t 1 3478 OXl330

F..-

Nlco
Ulld
Cal
Anytime (740)448 1004 Qr
(740)448-8275
OTIS Forklift

Gas

Powered

Aepo Bldga due to flooding n
Mldwo&amp;t tadOry has (2) arch otyto
steel bldgs for mmedlate sa a
( t) 40x60 (st II cralld) cal Jo&amp;~
OIQ0.58t 5843
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
Tappan H Etllcttney 90% Gas
Furnaces Oil Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; A r Condition ng
Syetems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Hoatlng &amp; Cooling t
800 872 5987 www o.w cooM!on-

ASTHMA ALLERGY NEEDED
10 15 PEOPLE Who Des e
Immediate Rei et To Try Eva uate
A NEW CompaCI State OJ Tho
A t Home 0 Bus ness A r
Pur I ca ion System No Cost Or
Ob gat on Fee 3 Day Tr a! Me
Ross (304)675.3379
ATTENTION P om 0 ess Mor
Lee Coo Aube gina (L ght
Smokey La,onda) Pad $145
Worn Once S ze t 8 20 Sel For
$too Shoes sze 9 112 Same
Colo $20 (740)446-7553 ~
AUTOS FROM 1600 00
Pol co Impounds &amp; Repos
Toyoli15 Chevy s Jeeps!
pease ca I lor Listing$
t 800 451 0500 Ex! C9Bt7
Baby Bod Car Seat High Char
That You Can Make Into Table &amp;
Chal (3041675 2801

Computer&amp; WE FINANCE DEll
COMPUTERS! Even with less
than perfect cred I 1 800 477
9016 Codt AC11 www omesolu
tlon com

Apartment For Ren1 In Downtown
Go lpo Is Please Call (740)886
7174
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES !2 Westwood
Dr ve trom $297 to $383 Walk o
ahop &amp; movies Cs 740 448
2588 Equo Hous ng Opportun ty

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!
Manufacturer offers a two weak
supply of co ostomy o uroetomy
brand name producta w th one
s mp e phone call No obi gallons
Cal 800 755 7880

Christy s Family Living 33140
New Lima Rd Ruland Oh o 74Q.
742 7403 Apartment home and
t al er rentals Commercial atore
f ants aval abt&amp; fo lease Vacan
cies now

GET SEXY FOR SUMMER Lose
3-5 lbo WHk y Guaranlted On y
$19 951 COOS Credit Cards
Phonochoekl 1 BOO 258.Q989

Royal Oak Membership w th
Coast to Coast and children s
rights St 000 937 388-211 o
Sawmol S3 895 New SUper tum
bermate 2000 larger capacities
more options Mal'lufacturer or
sawmills edgers and sk dde 8
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Dr VI Buftalo NY 14225
FREE lnlo mal on 1 800 578
1363 EXT 200 U
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Claim Den eel? We Special ze n
Appea s and Hear ng&amp; FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Serv ces Inc Toll free 1 eaa
B3S 4052
Steel Bu ldings New Must Sen
40x80xt 2 waa $17 500 now
$10 971 50x100x16 was $31 500
now St9 990 70xt50x16 was
$59 990 now $42 990 80x200x16
was $94 500 now $59 990 1 800408-5126 I 80().408-5126
STEEL BUILDINGS New Pre on
glneered w/plans 30x50x 10 was
$12 500 now $6 990 50x80xt4
was $27 450 now $18 990
60x150xU was $52 750 now
$34 990 80x200x16 was $87 450
now $59 990 t 800-246-9640
STEEL BUILD NGS Urgent I
Must MoVe I 251130 30x40
45x80 Liquidation Pricing on In
stock s zes t 800-462 7930 •-48

Used "T ck e Me Elmo Excellent
Cond loon Make Oller! (740)4482205 or (740)446-9585 Ask Fo
v rglnla
Wale I ne Spocla 3 4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per tOO I 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100 A I Brass Com
pressiOn F tt ngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh"' 1 8Q0.537 9528
550

Building

I Softball
f1Dft1PIIpl1
f
I
E
MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Someone wtlh mach net)' to har
VIII

hal' on

stoaros Square Balel

ol Hoy For Sail (740)379-26311

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dlo
count Available Heritage Farm
(304)875-5724
TOI&gt;Icco Plugs For SOlo TN90 &amp;
NC3 Locelly Grown (740)245
5193
850

Grevely Rotary Culllvalor 511
tiona y Cultivator Rotary Plow
so ld Tractor Lug Tires On Rim &amp;
Asso ted Parts Cal (740)4410972 AHor 5pm

560

Pete for Sale

2 Female Toy Pqodlea 8 Weeks
3 Years 2 Male Toy Poodles 6
Weeks 4 112 Months (740)446
3398
AKC
Boston Terrier Pupp es
4 Fema es 2 Ma es Shots &amp;
Papers $250(740)446-0495
AKC Black Lab Female 6
Months Champ on B oodl nes
Lo,es Ch den $125 (740)256
6814
AKC Reg sle ed Male Chinese
Pug Puppy Shots Wormed
Tak ng Depoa IS To Hold $425 00
Accept Paymen s (740)388 9325

Thomas pitched a three htt
ter to ptek up the wm she
struck out two and walked
one Hatten wu the hmmg

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Tobacco Plants Order Now To
Guaronteo Eorty Spring Planllngo,
Inc ease Allotment• Mean Extra
Plants Thank "rou For Your Bull
neu Call D1nny Dewhurst
Leave Message (304)895 3740
Of (304)895-3789

D

570

Musical
Instruments

Acoustic
Guitar
$129 00
Acoustic
Electric
Guitar
$159 00 (740)245-9189

992-2156

92 Mustang GT 5 apeod 5 0 V
8 loaded many extras 80k milts
$8500 740-992-4017
1990 lincoln LSC Very Good
Condition New Transmlnton
(740)387-Q184
t 991 Dodge Stealth RT 1W n Tur
bo Komallu Red 300HP 5
Speed AWD AWS loaded
Super Sharp $7800 OBO
(740)44 t-QI35
1993 Sp rit Auto Air Red
1 2 000 Mles Very Clean $2100
OBO 1&gt;40)258-6877
1994 Chevy Camaro V-6 2 Door
81K TTops
Fu
Loaded
Excellent Condition $8 000
(304)675.2881

SSOO ID $900 par - I n
lllppert low .. lltlntnl

1998 Dodge lntrep dES Can
dyapple Red Loaded lealher
A loy Wheels Highway Mllu
$8200060 (740)441-Q135

CMh For Newep 1111 1r Cllpplftp
VurlolorUIII Wort. Form Homo
Wrlta CUPPINGS Box 5347
T~ Ml 4981111

1999 Ford Expedition loaded
Exce ent Condition (740)4466783

wwwiw:hWifiPCirtOIOI com

82 Chevy S 10 with 350 mo1or
new radiator alternator &amp; Holley
ca buretor $1 500 740 843 5358
afte 8pm

Melting Our Salta Brochureot

Fnoo Sufllllltt Pootagol
Starllrnmodlatolyt

88 Crown V ctoria Good Con
d lion Runs Good Call (740)3792196

-Opportunity!
For Free lntormotion
CIUTol FrH
1-8811-815-1835

90 Red Cavalier 2 0 4 Cyl nder
Exce lenl Body Needs Engine
Work $400 Suzuk 230 Ouad
Spa t Four Wheeler Runs Good
Needs Brake Work $800 F m
(740)258-1487
91 Plymouth Reliant $2000 91
Grand Am $1900 Both Have
M •• 92 Geo Met o 5
$700 F rm (304)697

95 Buick Regal Custom Loaded
New Struts Brakes Vary Clean
Exco ant Condition $5000 OBO
(7401441 9534
CARS $29/MONTHI POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY 24 MOS 019 9% FOR
LISTINGS! CALL I 800 941
8777 EXT C 9814
CARS FROM $500 Po ce lm
pounds &amp; tax seizures Hondas
Chevys Fords &amp; more For list
lnga Call Now 1 800 719 300 I
ext A010
Honda a From $5001 Pol co
lmpounda Ca 1 Now For l sl
t 80().319 3323 Exl A471

1995 Dodge
(740)448-8783

Ram

D esel

1999 Dakota Sport Truck 4WD
V B t 500 mllos robulll title
$13 000 (740)379-9047

68 Ford Plcloup
(740)379-2198

No

Rust

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

730

Vana

&amp;

4·WDs

86 Toyota Pick up 4x4 Greal
Cond ton New Tires CO Player
$3200 OBO (740)387-o883
89 Plymouth Voyager great con
d uon $5 ooo OBO 740 992
0514

750 Boata

&amp; Mofors

6 Foo A umlnum Bass Boa 40
HP Me cu y Mota Ti oiling Mo
tor Tra er &amp; AI Extras $2795
(740)379 27~

Motorcycles

1979 Harley Dav dson Lowrider
nice
2300 Mllea
$9000
(304)882 2099

SERV ICES

760

Auto Parte

&amp;

Accessories
4 36•1450 RIS
Rada
Groundhog Mounted On 15x10
A umimun Whee s 500 M as On
T es
$850
(740)643 2771
(7401534 2589
A 16 Goodyear AS on
I 898 Dodge Ram t 500 Aluminum
Stock Wheels $400 (740)643
2711 (740)534 2589

P ck up Topper Fiberglau &amp;
&lt;ruck
Tool
Cho81
$850
(304)875 4721 or (304)875 4249
790

Campera

19501 &amp; 1980 8 45 33 RPM
Flecords
OJ Store
Stock
Collocl ons (937)875-2930 Alto
e00pm
830

Llveatock

1e year old Qua ter horae with
bridle and oadd e
$500
(740)441 9513

Hoppes &amp; Lucaa Sa e 12 Fr day
llprll 27 7 30pm S~arp Fayette
eounty Falrg ounds YES! YES!
YES! There Will Be 40 Head Big
Enough For Ga I a County Fair
lnolu~ ng Litter Matos To The
$1000 Gu II And $500 Guilt
Chtck Our Updated Website
wwwwchocom

1992 P ymouth Voyagar Loa dad
Excolenl Cond ton $2800 Firm
1740)245--5948 Aller 5pm
1894 Dodge Grand Caravan ES
White LO$ded Quad Sealing 7
Passon go Lo18 Than 75 000
Milos On Engine And Tranamls
sian Taw ng Package Sha P
$6400 OBO (740)441-Q135
1995 Fo d Ranger XLT 4xA ~/C
CD Player Standard Shill Excol
ont Condit on 79 000 M es Price
Negotablt (304)875 7974

1995 19 Foot Onker Co Fo
Mora Details (304)e75 1298 o
(304)875 5770

1988 Ma ard 21 motor home low
mileage very good condition
$9 000 741l-992 5983ovon ng&amp;
t 995 A egro 31 Foot Class A
MotorhOme Low M Its Loaded
(740)448 1352
35 ft Coachman Gooseneck
Camper E~cel en Cond lion
$7SOO (740)448-8783

Ad

Hom

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERP~ODFING

uncond 1onal lletlme gua antee
local refa ences fu nlshed Ea
lablshed 1975 Ca 24 Hrs 1740)
446 0870 1 BOO 287 0576 Rag
e s Waterproof ng

a

Improvements
C&amp;C General Home Main
tenance Paint ng vlny s ding
carpentry doors w ndowa baths
mobl e home epa and mo e For
free est mate call Chel 740 992
6323
Dodson Bu ders
Your camp ete home emode lng
epa r &amp; ma ntenanca contracto
Pa nt ng vlny s d ng decks
baths kitchens e ect ca p umb
ng many other services to su 1
your needs No !Ob to b g or smal
30 years experience Free estl
mates 740 698 6783 740 591
1384

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

L vlngston s Basement Water
Proofing a basement epa s
done free 11 mates I fetlme
gua antae 14yrs on job e:~~perl
once (304)895.3887

110 Help

&amp;

Motor Homea
Wanted to Buy

&amp;

Pa am no Pop up Camper Steeps
6 Furnace Rei gerator AI Con
d 1one Asking $2900 (740)368
6029
•

92 Chevy Conve sian Can V 8
Burgundy
Low
Mileage
(740)448-0094 Call After 8pm
740

Campera

Motor Homes

3&lt;115

820

790

for Sale

Budgat Priced Tranemlaalona
AI Types Access To O-ver
10 000 Transm as on&amp; Transfer
Cases 740 245 5877 Ce 339

lnternatiQI!al Cllb Cadet Lawn
Mowe 14"'t)nan Engine H_ydro
statiC Drive 421nch Cun ng Deck
tt7 Hours Llka Now $1750
(740)379-2853

,,

at the plate w1th a pau of smgles Kayre DaviS added a SID
gle
Me1gs wuh the loss drops to
9-6 overall and 6-5 m the
TVC Me1gs will travel to
Alexander for a make-up
game on Tuesda)l before trow
ehng to Belpre on Wednesday

Subscnbe today

s

TRANSPORTATION

Pekapoo T ny Ma e 7 weeks
S 150
shots and wormed
(740)256-6814

~98 18x80 Mob e Home V ny

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Aepa red New &amp; Rtbu II In Stock
Can Ron Evans 1 800-537 9528

scar for Wellston gmng three
for-three w1th two RBI
Robmette added her double
and Julie Huffman added a
smgle
Jeffers was the han:! luck
loser for Me1gs, Kaue scattered five hJts and struck out
three Kara Musser led Meogs

93 Ford Tempo Auto And Power
E'e yth ng $2700 OBO Call
(740)446-4479

Goata 1 2 Boer Does &amp; Bucks
8 12 Weeks Old St26 Each
1740)258-1724

~

Grain

Supplies

tndspondont Horba lo Dlatr butor
Call Fo Product Or Opportun ty
(740)44 I 1982

d'"d''"

Hay &amp;

Used Wheelcha
Good Con
dillon $175 00 (740)446 2205 o
(740)446-9585 Ask For VIrgin a

New double wide 3 br 2 ba
$998 oo down only $295 pe
mon ca now 1 8QO..EI91 6777

2h80 3 Or 4 Bod oom Only t
$345 00 Par Month 8 99% F xed
In erest Rate 1 888 928 3426

640

~ough Cut Lumber and Mu ch
Bulk Load&amp; Call alter 7 OOpm
(740)446-6783

G ubb s Plano- Tuning a Aopllll
Prob ems? Need Tuned? Col Tht
Plano D 741).448-4525

1st Time Home eJyers Program
Spec al Finane ng Av&amp;llfble
(304)7S5-556e

1330

125 Yahama Breeze $1 500
(740)448-8783

EZPETRX COM Save up 10 50%
on ALL pet medlcat ons and au~
pile&amp; Inc udlng Hoartga d lntor
ceptor Frontline morel! FREE
SHIPP NG 0 de online www ez
pe!Rx com 1 900-844 1427

d ng Sh ng od Roo! Central AI
athedral Cell ng Through Out
Three Bedroom .2 Full Baths
Must Move
Ca After Spm
(740)448-8308

s
s

HORIESHOEtNG
Farrier Freet Queen

rung for Bailey, G1bbs spnnted home to nuke It a 9-0
game
Eastern went on an offen
uve explooon sconng three
runs m the third, four m the
fourth and SIX m the fifth
Eastern goes to Federal
Hocking toda)l then die
Lancers come to Eastern
Wednesda)l

nott

1995 A Automat c Frick Sawmll
Computerized HMC Debarker &amp;
Mortark Ch p Pack w 11 separare
Ca I after 7 OOpm (740)448-8783
50 Yards Forrest G een Carpet &amp;
Pad Blue Recliner Two Lawn
Mowers
One
Weadeate
(740)388-8997

H

Horses for Sate 1 Morga" 4
Minlolurol. (740)446-6713

NEW AND USED STEEL Stool

$1200(740~579

Salt

D vorced Must Sel Large Fleet
wood Doub e Wide 5000 Equ ty
has been lorlelled TOll FREE
1 888 565 0167

"''j

Th s new1poper
not
kno.,ngly accept
advenisemants for reat estate
wh ch is In -vlo allan of the
law Our readers are hereby
lnrormed that al dwellings
advenlsed n th s newspaper
a e available on an equal
opponunlty baa •

Nu tra ler &amp; lot tor salt uptown
Mlddlaport groattocaaon 14x70
740-992 2888

410 HOUIII for Rent

AMAZING Little o No Cred I
Needed Specla Government F
nanclng (304)755-S885

GLOBAL MED CAL TRAN
SCRIPTION Train at Home tor
Medical Transcription Aasls
ranee w th Job Placement upon
suc~esslul Comp at on Excelent
tneomo Potonllal t 877415 5337
www med ca trans net 1 888 74!5
8284

'

Mldd oport groy stone 3-4 bod
rooma largo will&lt; In ctooets largo
oat ., kitchen 2 balhroomo argo
LR lormal DR pint panolld doni
bedroom tull unfmishad base
mtnt ateam heat 1 tuated on 3
v llage lots one car garage new
s dewalka new roof large front
porch deck small outbuilding
qu et street lined basketball
court/ parking area w 11 consider
all reasonable offe s 740 992
7398

w

Bualnen

A IlEAL CASH MAKERII
SO Downll
Candy VENDING route
Nets $48 000+ FREE lnlo
Tol Free 1 877 494 8695

HUO Homes Payments Based
On Income lim tod Tlmo Hurry!
(740)448-3384

Absolutely Must Sell Brand New
3 BR/ 2 Bath Doublew de
lh
Del very Set up A C &amp; Skirting
F om $287/ Month Only 0 Oak
wood Galllpo Is (740)446-3093

Opportunity

INOTICE!
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SHING CO
ecommend&amp; that you do bus
ness w tn paop e you know and
NOT lo send money through the
mall unt I you have nvestigated
the offering

Homes for Salt

EARN $500 $900 por woek In
your balhmbe &amp; slippers Low In
vestment 1 800 272 0193 awe

FINANCIAL
210

310

April only $12 000 080 Now
Haven thrH ~ms one and
112 balhl t.rgo lamlly room woth
fireplace two ear attached ga
rage 304 882 1075 days 740

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI1
No Fee Un I&amp;S We Win
1 888 582 3345

OWN A COMPUTER? Put It to
work! 125 $75/hr PT/FT Fret on
lne catalog at www earnagrt:tal n
comecomorcalt 800-770..1984

Part T me CNAI LPN tor n Home
Care Fema e Patent Send Re
sumo to CLA 516 c/o Gallipolis
Dally Tribune 825 Third Avo
Go !polls Ololo 4583 1

Buainen
Opportunity

Rl&gt;er Bond Plact Now Attopllng
App leateons for 1 Bedroom Hud
Subs ded Apa rtment for Efderty
and Disabled EOH (304)882
3121 Of (304)8B2 3274

Huge Inventory Dlaoount Prieto
On VInyl Skl rting Doora Wind
ows Anchors Water Halters
Plumbing &amp; Electrlcet P.arto Fur
naces &amp; Heat Pumpa Bennetts
Mobile Homo Supply 7 40-446
9418 WWWOM/I)-

No-no

l

4 H And FFA Clull Pigs Hamp
York &amp; Duroc Cron (740)388
9033

p1tch and Wtggms adVJnc:ed.
WJggtns then advanced to
score on two passed balls
PaweD hit a tnple Calaway
ftcwnPIIp81
walked Powell and Calaway
both stole home and Lod
nuke the score 3-0
KriSten Chevalier led off wtck lud a double Bailey
the E:astern second when she reached on an error A=da
Yeager had a sacnfice fly to
W2S hit by a p1tch stole second, and Wtggtru had a bunt score Lodwtck Then Kr1sten
smgle to advance Chevalier Chevalier W2S hit by another
Chevalier scored on a wild pttch and wtth Gtbbs run-

ROW PRYinG S7JHR TO STftRTI
That's right...We have upped our wage
after training to $7/hour for
fundralalng work· no experience
needed I
If you lutve worked for us In the past and would
I
like to set up another Interview, we welcome you to
do so 401K/Medlcai/Dentai/Pald vacations form
employees. Don't walt!
These positions wiD nu up quickly!

t 995 Ford W ndstar ClL Van
Teal Blue 39 ooo mites Loaded
Excelent Condit on Garage Kept
V 8 Front Whot 0 Iva $8500
(740)992-8 50

Call the number listed below to set up your
personal interview today!

2000 Chevy Tracko 4WD Rod
Auto A C 4 Door 4 Cyl For
Payoll or Takeover Paymenll
(740)448--4479

Civic Development Group/Millennium Teii!HIYion

1-888-974-J OBS

�.............. s

24, 2001
Apn'nanta
tor Rant

440

New Haven one bedroom fur
n shed apanment ttas washer
and dryer no Pill deposit &amp; ref
"'""'" 740-992.0165
Now Taking Applications 35
Well 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenta Includes Warer
Sawaue Trash $350/ Mo 740

446-0008

110

210

S917 15 WEEKLY! Proconlng
HUDIFHA Morlg891 Aolunds No
E•perlonco Roquorld For FREE
InformatiOn Call 1 800-SOt-6832
... 1300
ACCESS lO A COMPUTER?
Put H to worlll 125/hr $75/hr FT/
PT FREE Into 800-871 8045 ...
801

"""-com

'WORK FROM HOME
S500-S1500 per mo PIT
S200Q.S8000 permo FIT
No--Ttainlng provldod
1 1100-3114-&lt;1930

•oudll m

to

ciWigl due Ill

005

Personlll

Booutllul
G rlsll
Exclt ngll
Pullionatell Talk To em Ll&gt;ell
I 900-329 8 t 30 E" 7339 S399
Per Minute Must Be 18 Yeara
8arv u (81 9)8&lt;45-11434
FREE SEARCH!
-SINGLES com
LIFE FOCUS CAREER RELA
TIONSHIPS Fooling loll? Sond
LSA.SE to Individual Oynamlcs
P 0 Fox 7597 North Port Fl
34287
Moot Now People Tho Fun Woy
Todayll 1 900 329 8850 Ext
1218 S2 99 Por Mlnuto Serv U
(819)U5 8434
START DATING TONIGHT!
Have fun rnHting tllg ble 1 ngles
In your area Call For More nlor
motion 1 800 ROMANCE oxt
9735
Stan diUng ton~htl Ploy tho Ohio
Doting Gomo Call toll lrH I BOO
romance ext 1821
TALKlO GIRL&amp; UVEI
JUBTCAU
t-90Qo329-81 30 E&gt;l 7173
13 98 Po Minute Mull Bo 18
.,_,,. Slrv-u (81'9)8&lt;45 8434
30

Announcement•
NewToVouThrl~~

9 W..t Stimson Atl&gt;lnB
740-592 1842
Qual ty clothing and household
Items $1 00 bag sale every
Thurlday Monday thru Saturdoy
9 1)0.8 00
Reward lor anyone return ng 1
JonHrtd 2054 chalnaaw stolen
lrom 43430 Pomoroy Plko 740
992 9017

40

Glvuwey

Adorable puppies 6 weeks old
Shepard mix Weaned II st ahols
and wormed
P ease call
(740)258-9302
Pa tta Gallpone Dally Tr bunt
Olltce Locelld At 825 Th d Avo
nuo Galllpo s Pick Up At Tho
Roar Of Tho Building First Coma
First 8arvo No Phono Cillo

80

MISSING From Indian C ook
Got Brown Boxer Black Face
Please Return No QuestiOM
Alkld (740)245-5747

Yard Sale
Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity
Aprl 28th &amp; 27th rain or shine 94 comforter Chr stmaa tree en
cyclopedias scanner draper as
Rlggocrsot above Ea&amp;tern

80

k"""'"

An Ohoo 011 Company noodo
mature pereon now In Gall polls
area Flegardltll of txper ence
write MM Rood P 0 Box 898
Day1on OH45401
Aro you loOking tor lhO opportunl
ty to lo n a winning loam ond be
como part o1 a flit growing hHIIh
care industry? Scenic Hila Nurs
lng Center 11 olftrlng Nuroa Aldo
Train ng ciiiMI monthly It Is a
75 hour couru laotlng tor 1 t
days Monday (hrough Friday
8 3010 430 Tho is tlrH COUIH
and • great opportun tyl Tho no"
claso wll begin May 7th Stop by
today lor an app lcatlon or con
tact Stephanie Kemper lnstruc
tor at (740)448-7150
Are You Looking For A New
Start For Debt Consol dation
Call t 888 440 3348 Toll Froo
24Hrs Voyager Bualneaa A.aso
clatu
Are you warm car ng and com
passiOnate? II ao you aro parfoct
tor our team Overbrook Center Ia
look ng tor STNAI LPN I and
RNa to provide quality care for
our realdents Come join the
Overl&gt;rook Family For more lnlor
matlon ploaoe contact Krlotlo
Madden at 740 992 8472 or stop
by 333 Page Street to I I out an
application E 0 E
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cralts
Toys Jewelry wood Sewing
l\lplng Great Payl CALL t 800
795-0380 Extf 201 (24hrs)
ATIENTIONI
Work from home
Mall order Internet
$800-$8000 por month PTIFT
W litre n t 8Q0.885-0242
www generatewea thalhome com

Loat and Found

LOST Family Crib M atakenly
Donated To Outreach Center
0 March 111 If :VOu Have
lnlo P 1111 Call (740)448 8392
Rowlrdll

70

An alcohol end othor drug
counseling/ prevent1on agency
locotod In Gallla and Jackoon
COuntllo 11 -lng an ambitious
Individual to 1111 the tollowmg
pooitiOnl
Prevention Educator Thla
peraon will work with an age
groups 1n both commuml es
Raoponalbllltiea
Include Coer
dlnation ol Drug FrH Commun ty
Coalttion Awareness act v1t ••
Education Programs Tram ng
Programs and Development and
Implementation of new grant
projecls A m n mum of a
Bacholo(s Degroo wth
edge ol alcOI'&lt;&gt;I tObaCCO and
other dr.ugs Stcretllry Gallia
office " min mum ot (1) year
e•pertence in general secretarial
dutieS and e high scl1ool dtplomo
Must posses accurate skills In
Word and Excel programs
Must be dependable with good
telephone sk Is Send resume by
May 1 2001 to
FACTS
45
01 ve Ga llpols Ohio 45831 or
Fax (740)446-80,. EOE MIFIH

Auction

ATIENTION OWN A COMPUT
ER7 Mall order/E Commerce
$522+/week PT $1000 $4 0001
week FT Full Training Free
Booklet www createdreamllle com
(800)7!56-4908
ATTENTION
HOME

WORII

FRQM

Mal Ofdor/E-commorce bullnooo
S1 1500-$7 200 month PTIFT
Free lnlormatlon 1 500-924-0874
www Stri&gt;eToSUccood com
ATTENTION
WORK FROM
HOME
Mall orde E-commerce business
$1 500 S7 200 month PT FT
FroalnlormaUon I 900-824-0874
www StriYeToSucceed com

and Flea Markat
Alck Pearson Auct an Company
ful ume auct onaar compltlt
auction
lfJrVIce
licensed
tee Ohio &amp; West VIrgin a 304
773-5785 Or 304 773-5447
Rivera dt A.uct on Barn Sale
Ever~ Saturday Night at 6p m
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson
(740)2-989

10

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar U S Silver
Gold Co ne Proofseta 0 amends
Gold R ngs
U S Currency
M TS Coin Snop 151 Second
"vonuo Gall pols 740-448 2842
Wanted 10 buy Small uaed com
marclaloolo (304)675-1866

eMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

IIATIENTION II
lrnrnatlonal Company E•pand ng
Work From Homo or Office
$500 Q0.$8 000 00/mo PTIFT
Me I Ordorllnternet
Paid llllnlng/VIcollons
Clllt-800 2211-0317
ClshOnThoTibllt com
II ATIENTIONIII
lntemallona Company Expanding
Work From Marne or Off ce
$500 Q0.$8 000 00/mo PT/FT
Mall Order/Internet
Plld TralnlngNacations
Cell t-t00-211 8160
$1200 WEEKLY POSSIBLE Po
ce11 ng Inquiry Envelopes at
Homo Easy! No Exporlonoo t
IQ0.756 2027 x 539 (24 Hourt)
12 000 WEEKLY! Moiling 400
brochurlll Sallsract on Guar
entlldl Pollogo &amp; Supplloo pro
vldodl Rush Self Addrooaod
Stamped Envelopal GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 I 438 Start lmmld ato y

Bo 'lllur Own boos!
NtMtr 9-5 Again
Earn Up lo $500 $8000/MO
PTIFT
www CaahNowAndFo ovor com
CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
eX"ce ent Income Easy cams
processing Full tra nlng Home
PC equl od Call Phys clan &amp;
HealtMare Developments toll
tree I 8QO. 772 5933 '"' 2070
Cert fed Nurs ng Assistant Train
lng Class le scheduled tor May 7
25th tor 100 bed skllod lacllty
Seek ng candidates who are car
lng compassionate and want to
be a member or a g eat team
Class w be evening hours ror
high schools students 3P 11 P
Interested candidates shOuld ap
p y o Rocksprings Rehab Clnter
38759 Aockspnngs Road Pomer
oy Ohio 4!5769 contacts are
Sandy Bowen or Judy Hart Equal
Opportunity Emp aye encourag
ng workplace diVers ty
C ass A B COL Or ve s Good
Pay Benefits 401 K Vacation In
surance Home Evenings Call
(740)288-1483
COME DRIVE FLATBED FOR
USI Company &amp; Owner/Operator
OTR drive s for reg onal &amp; dedi
cated runs Cal 800 551 9057
Ext 140 B uco to Northern Oh o
ded catod run c1 Bob BOO 531
7725 Cla10 A COL roqu rod
EARN $25 000 $50 000 y Mad
cal Insurance Blllng Naodld lm
medlataly Home Computer Nlld
od FREE lntornot I BOO 291
4683 Dopll 108
EASY WORK G eat pay! Earn
1500 Plus a Week Assombllng
Products at Home No Experience
Nocesoery Ca To! Free t 800
267 3944 "38
Experienced Truck Mechanic
Needed 401 K Retirement Mod
cal Denta &amp; V alan Insurance
vacallon Pay Baaed On E:~~perl
onoo Cll(740)288-t483

Ful~11mo

And Part limo RN Posl
1 0"1 Ava I able AI Seen c HI 1
Nuroong Center Wo Oltor FlexitH
Schedul ng Great Benet t Pack
ago Compelitive, Wage&lt; Sloitl O;t
ftrtntial Wage Exper ence And
Attendance Bonuses Call TOday
For More Informal on About This
Great Opportun ty l Ask For
Rhonda Ho ste n At (740)448
7150
Qovernmenl Jobe 111 00
133 00 per hour potent al Pad
Training/Full Btlnerlts For mort
ntormation ca 1 1 888 674 9150
txt 3234
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! Work from home Mal or
cter/E Commerce $522+/Wetk PT
S1000 14000/wk FT 800 921
6538 www dream2blree com
Help war&lt;od caring tor lhO tldorly
Darst Group Home now pay ng
minimum wage new shifts 7am
3pm 7am-5pm 3pm-11pm 1tprn7am cai74D-992 5023
Home Health Agency Seek ng
~N s LPN s CNA s For Galla
Uason Counties Call Laura lisa
(740)441 tn9
Homeworkars Needed
S835 ~ prooooslng mai
Easy! No exporlon&lt;8 neodod
Cal t·IQ0.49Q.9450 24 hro.

PGT Is hl!N halbod dflvors Min
6 months OTR Experoonce Good
MVR No accidents Excellent
Pay and Bene! Is WE HAVE
FRElCllfT H!OQ.TEAIIPGT
Postal Jobs $41 323 00 yr Now
h ring No experience pa d tra1n
ng g eat benet ts call 1 days
8()()..429 3660 ' " J 365

Scenic Hills Is Now H r ng
STNA 1 And Certified Nurs ng
Assistants For All Shifts Wa Are
A Progressive Facil ty Who Ap
prec atea Our Staff You Have
Great Opportumlles At Scan c
Hills! Please Cal Rhonda HOisleln
At (740)446 7150 Today! Or
Stop By And F Jl Oul An ~pploca
lion
URGENTLY NEEDED plasma
donors earn $45 to S60 tor 2 or 3'
hours weekly Ca I Sera Tee 74Q592..fi651

Wanted Waitress Full ima Apply
In Person
Hoi day
Inn Of
Gallipolis Ohio
WORK FROM HOME
$500-11 500 Mo Port Time
$1 :200-$6 000 Mo Fu !Time
PAID VACATIONS
H!00-499-3019
140

Bualneaa
Training

INTERNATIONAL COMPANY
NEEDS HELP with Mall Order/E
Commorco 1500 $7000 mo P;T/
FT from home Full Train ng F ee
Booklet
920 924 8400
www AchlaveDreama com

Golllpotll C - r Cotlago
(C&amp;roora CloiB To Home)

Ca11Todayl740-448-4387
1 800-214-0452
Reg 19().05-12748

150

School•

Llconaod Practical Nuro" (LPN)
For ~ull And Part limo Work In A
Instruction
tt 4 Bod tntormldlato Clro Stoll
PARALEGAL
Facility An Extonolvo Btnttlt BLACKSTONE
STUDIES Home Study Ap
Pockogo 11 Avallebll For Full
proved Affordabfl comprehen
limo Employeoa Sl!ary Is Com
slve legal training alnce 1890
monourate With Exparlenco Contact Sandra Rattmlro DON At La- FREE Catalog 800 821 9228
wrIt PO Box 701449 Dollao TX
kin Hospital Lakin WV a!
75370 NA or h«p //www blackato(304)87~-oeeo E" 124 Monday
~awcom
lhru Friday 8am 4pm Lakin Hot
pita! II an EEO/M Empll)yor
EARN YOUR COLLEG~ DEGREE
LPTA and COTA lull limo/ Part
QUICKLY bacholoro Mastoro
time flexible houra benet 11 aval
Doctorate by correspondence
baotd upon P lor education and
able Cona sfeot PT/OT PAN
needed to guide rehab team l ' oohort ltudy course For FFIEE n
aerv ces 30 10 hours per week
formation ~ooklet phone CAM
Contact Bill 8111 Or Maureen BRIDGE STATE UNIVERSITY I
;800-:::,.;:;98:,:4;,:8:::3.:;18:;,.;._ _ _ _ __
Hanneooy at Arbors at Galllpoio
740
7112
(
)448"" EOE
180 Wantad To Do
Management Opportunity Caraet
B&amp;B ConBiructlon RoollnD SldlnD
Opportunity With Major Company
And Concr•te Inter or &amp; E•le or
Complell Tra nlng Program
Pointing AI Phaoos Of Homo Rt
Excellent Benetlta Call I 888
208 5028 For Confldontlal In- pairs For A Free Estimate Ca I
(304)675-n38 Attar 5:00pm

-

Mod eel Bill ng Asllotant neodld
lmmodlatolyl FTIPT Will ltaln Ex
cellon! Income PC roqulrod I
888-4411 9773"' 222
MEDICAL TR ... NSCRIPTIONIST
work on youf computer Guar
antnd employment Training/car
t llcet on (tree) Tartan Pub Inc
I 800-944-5595

Babysitting n my Home children
210 M F Bam 530pm cal
(740)388-8193
David a General Contractor•
Plumbing Electric Painting
Decks Mile WOrk All Homo Rt
palro lawn Core Call (740)2589373 Or Co I Phone 1 304 833
6265

Need 1o ledltl To Sell Avon
Earn 40% Call (740)448-3351
Needed Exper anced Crew tor
Setting and F n shlng Sectional
Housing Send Pricing lntormaUon
and exper ence to Southern
Homoa PO Box 829 Jackson
OH45840
NOW HIRING FOR
POINT PLEASANT OFFICE
EARN UPTO S10 00 AN HOUR
(Gulli- Salary)
Man and Woman Needed To Do
Telephone Oparator WOrk For
NATIONAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS
Homemakers work while
chid en In school
"IIAY AND EVENING SHIFT
AVAILABLE
'FUU ANO PART TIME
OPENINGS
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDEDTRAINING PROGRAM
COLLEGE &amp; H S STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply In Person At
303 Main 5111181
Point Pllollnt WV
Tuaoday Aprtl 24th
w.clnoodoy AprH 25th
Thurodoy April 21th
Friday APr!t 27th
3 OOpm llnlll8 OOpm ONI.Y
Ask For Ma W lis

Lawn Mow ng Service Free
Eollmatea Cal (740)258-9363
Lawn Mower And Small Engine
Repair FrH Pick up And Dollv
ery Within 10 Miles 21 Years
Exper once
Ca I Mike AI
(740)446-7604
Mount 8 Tree Serv ce The Trse
Protess onals
Bucket Truck
Service Top Trim ~emoval
Stump G lndlng Free Est mates
Fully lnsu ad Workers Camp
Bidwell Oh o Cal &amp; Save 1 80().
838 9568 (740)368 9848 Owner

Aiel&lt; Mount
Will Ca e For Bedlast Elderly
Female In My Home Dodrill a
(740)388-8193
Will Powerwash Houses Ti ailers
And AV s Contact Ron At
(740)448 0151 or 339 0950 II
No Answe Leave Message

Own a PC 1 Put t to Work! For a
!reo bookie! call 80Q-429 5853 or
visit ue onNne
www getpcworll com

$1 000 WEEKLYl Work al hOmo
precessing automat ve pam
phletsl No l)(pe lance Weekly
paychecks! Everyth ng suppled!
1 800 551 3175

Part time LPN Posit on Ayal able
At Scenic H Us Nu s ng Cente
You Can Get F ax ble Schedu ng
Groat Btnelts Compatltlve Wag
os Shift Ollterontlal wage Experience And Attendance Bonuses
Don t Pass Up A G eat Opper
tun ty To Begin Or Continue You
Exc Ung Nursing Carea I Cal
Rhonda Holsten At (740)448
7150Today
POSTAL JOBS to $18 35hr Hr
for 2001 pad training Fu I
No expar ence equlred
to I lroo 7am 7pm CST t 888
728 9083&gt;1705
POSTAL JOBS lo $I 8 35 h
WILDLIFE JOBS to $21 60 hr n
cludea Benet Is No Experience
Necessary Fo Application and
Exam Into cal I 100 992 7054
x208 M F 8 30-5 OOpm
PAN icensed physical lherap st
PAN occupat ana lherap st PAN
ce t f ad occupa ona the apy as
slst!lnt and PAN speech thera
p~t needed tor 100 bad sk ad
nu sing fac I ty E~~:ce ant prog es
s ve rehabllltallon department
both Inpatient and outpatient
services prov ded Interested
candidates should app y to ROCk
springs Rehabilitation Center
36759 Rocksp ngs Road Pomo
oy Ohio 45789 A !son Barnell
MPT Rehab Serv ces Director
7 40 992 6606 Equa Opportunity
Employer Encouraging Wo k
place 0 Vet'S ry
Sales Person
Fu ~Tlmt B..,.
f ta Retail Exper ence Preferred
App y At Lila style Furnlluro No
Phone Cans Apply In Pe son
856 Th rd Avenue Ga llpolls
Oho

oomoamongscom

114$-9008 -*'VI

Earn S90 000 YEARLY ropolr ng
NOT reptae ng long cracks n
Wlndshtelds Ftee v deo 1 800
826-8523 US/Canada www glasamechanix com

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES!
SO OR lOW DOWN ! TAX
REPO 5 &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT! FOR USTtNGI CALL I
800-501 11n"' 98t3

EARN your Collage Degree
QUICKLY Bachelor 1 Maater a
Doctorate by correspondence
Bosod Upon PrM&gt;r Education Ex
parlance and Study Course Free
Catalog Cambr dge State Unl
IIOflily (8001 964-8318 24 HilS

HOMES FROM $199 30/Mo 1
3BFI Repos/ Foreclosures tee
f% down For L stings/Payment
Detail$ 1 8Q0-71t-3001 x1185

E1c1 11n1 Opportun ty Vending
route No so ling 50K plus yr 4 6
hr weekly M1nlmum Investment
required 1 800-2J""51n 24m
MEDICAL BILLING Unllm tod In
come potent at No experience
necessary Free Information &amp;
CD ROM lnvo81mtnt from $2495
Financing available (800) 322
1139
EXT 0!50 www business atar

'""com
Sttrt A Trovtol Agency Rocllve
Tra ning Bustness Support Your
own Travel Website and Travel
Discounts/Perks Earn B g $$$
Nomina Startup Coati 1 888 8990901 or www EarnBucksFrom

Homo

com

Start Your Business Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Ava able AI Aflordable Rate
Spr ng Valley Plaza Call 740-446
0101
WORK FROM HOME! Earn
1500 S7 000/month PT/FT Full
Tra niJJQ Free Information Call
Nowl t-t00-290-8914
www attainurd eams com
230

Profenlonal

Service•
$ FREE CASH NOW$ from
-llhy lamlllel unloading m lllons
of do lara to he p minim ze their
taxe1 Wr te Immediately WIND
FALLS 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD
168 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
NIA 90010
ISS CREDIT CARD PROBLEMS7
FREE Debt Consolidation Cut
Payments Reduce Interest Non
Prollt 800 288 8331 Ext 15
-goldcooi!ICO com
S$1 NEED CASH?? WE pay
caah for remaining payments on
Proporly Sold! Mortgagee! Annul
ties Settlements! Immediate
Ouoteslll Nobody beats our pric
ea National Contract Buvtrt
(800) 490 0731 " ' 101 www na
ltonalcontroctbuyors oorn
CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Consolldatoon to S200 000 Bad/
No Cro~ll Credit Carda Mort
gages For Information 1 800
335-7612 ... 3822
CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
0 A C F om $2500 $125 000 9%
average rate One hOur approva
Call F C C S to ltroa 1 888 805
3379
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING I 888-81 t.Q902
Divorce Sl50
Bonk uptcy $195
Adoption $225
Not do-l yo..aew klt1
CALL I BOQ-303- 1170
FREE ntormationl
Bankruptcy nialn TN!1(Y
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to $500 Instantly by phonal t
877 EARLYPAY L ct 750005 1SI
ADVANCE FREEl

No Fees/Service Charges
In Naod ol F nanaal Assistance?
Please Cal Us Toll Free 1 866
8 t 3-8881 24hr

A SPECIAL OFFER Qually lor
f ee cqmpu er P oces8 med ca
cia ms f om home Free software
website a ma w th merct.ant ac
count S an Today! 866 575
HOME(4883) EXT:703
A+ M&amp;M MARS NESTLE Estab
!shod Vend ng Route W I ael by
5/7 01 Under $9K m nlmum n
vestment required EKes lent Pror
t Potent a F nance AvallabJe
Good Cred 1 To Free
(888)
27().2168
ABSOLUTE GOLD MIN Ell
No money down work 3 .thrs/
wk Earn $501&lt;/yr own ng 111lstlng
INTERNET buslneos Free lnlol
1 80Q-6:j6 4031
Convenltf'ICt
Stores Food
Serv ce Htgh Volume Fuel Great
locat ens In Gall polis Area
I 888-679 9801

Must see 1993 281170 double
wide f'!lwer ca pet gas furnace/
hOt water tank large front porch
needs moved appraised at
$69 000 lOlling tor $35 000 740
992 5722
Newly Constructed Single Story
t 800 Squ.,e Fool Homo 1o
M nutes Fr• Hospital Bidwell/
Portar Area Located On A Beau
tllul Private 1 112 Acre Lot 3
Bedroom 2 112 Baths Big Kitch
en w/Cuatom Oak Cabinets From
Smiths Cabinets DR LR w/Gas
Log Fireplace Front Porch &amp; 2 11
2 Car Garage Qua ty Consuuc
lion All Tha Way St35 000 Call
(740)44&amp;-45141rom B 5 M f Or
(740)448-3248 Mar 5pm
Flemolded 3 Bedroom Wood
Floor&amp; 1 112 Bath Baautllul
Fl eptaca 2 Car Garsga $73 000
(740)388-l!151
Two car garage/apartment In
M ddleport two bedrooms tull
bath LR kitchen "lh electric
range central air 740 985 3650
or 740 992 2795
320

All roaloatate advenlslng In
thll newspaper Is subject to
thO Fedora Fa! Housing 11ct
ot 1988 which makes !legal
to advert se any preference
Imitation or dlscrlm nat on
based on race color rei glon
ae)( famll al status or national
origin or any Intention 1o
make any such preference
llmlta!lon or dlscnmlnatlon

n

Mobile Homes
for Sala

99 mobile homo lor oale muat
san 14x70 three bedrooms two
bathl 740-849-3004 attar 5pm
1•x10 Soulhern Dream free De
livery lroe Se!up only S9995 t
888-928-3426
18 Wide Only $195 00 Por
Month 8 99% Fixed lnlereat Rato
W lh Air And
Underplnn ng
1 888-928-3428
1981 14Jx70 Adm ration Taller
For Sale Hat Island In Midd 1 Of
Kitchen With Stove Built In Can
tral Air &amp; Mo&amp;t Appl ances Go
Must Seal Very Low Price Call
Anytime And Ask For Tammy
(740)3811-'6914
1982 14x70 Fairmont Townhouse
2 bed oom 1 large bath w th heat
pump &amp; a/c S7 500 740 591
4043 or 740-992.0938
1993 3 Bedroom 2 Bath 14•70
Mobile Homo On Rented lot on
Sandh
Ad Does Not Need
Moved
New Carpel Neve
Smoked In 8xB Barn Building
Goes Bot_h Porches Wan Main
Ia ned Inside and out (304)675
7386 Monday Fr day 8 30 to
5 00 (304)875 6644 Alter 5 oo
and weekends
79 Ux70 $6500 0 yer Stove
Refrigerator New Ca pet Mus
Soo Must Move (740)446 2923
(304)674-0053

v

87 2 Bedroom Oakwood Ve
Nice On Rented La In Lesage
~rea (304)576-2842

97 Oakwood 3 BR 2 Bath Only
asking payoff price pease ca
(740)258-6997LOBVI Measage

Country llv ng Daub ewlde On 2
Wooded Acres $2500 &amp; Move
In (740)448-3570

REAL ESTATE
310 Homea for Sale
SO DOWN HOMES I GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1 800-338 0020 ' " 96 11
2 Slo,Y B ck Appro•lmately 3400
Square Feet 1 112 Acree Fu 1
Boatman! Booullul VIew 01 Rlv
er Waa $98 500 Reduced To
S89 500 By Appo ntmont 0 1y
(740)256-llt72
2 4 Bedroom Housa Fo S o In
ote
Bldwe
lncludea 2
(740)441-Q420

M&amp;M/MARS Eolabllshtd rout11
available M n mum lnvelltmanl
$4800 Annual potentia earnings
over $90K To F eo t 868 787
7712 :Mhrt

Handyman Specla tn Excelent
NolgilborhoOd Lorge Yard Good
Cond I on Won I Last 159 900
Makl Olteo' 1304)675 1818

Approximate y 5 Acres With 2
Bedroom Homo ~ocatod AI t 027
Gage Rd Patr 01 OH $30 000
Phone (740)448-0985

Ta a Townhoure Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA I 112 Bath Fully Car
peted Adulr Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Paho Starr $365/Mo No Pets
Lease Ptus Secur ty Deposit Rt
qulred Cays 1•0 446 3481
Evon ngs 740 387 0502 740
448-0101

Pr vale Property And New Dou
blewldo One Payment (304)736-

7295

s ngle Parent Program

Special
Flnancong Av~llabla (304)755
7191
Stock M-1 Cleartnoo- 111 2000
models must go. New home PlY
menta a5 low as $1 50 32 par
month and only $750 00 down
Cai74D-385-4387

Twin R-Towtll now accepting
~tiotWior1BR

HUD lublldilod opt tor eldorly
and disabled EOH (304)675
6679

wow

New Fleetwood Double
Wlda 2Bx90 4 BR Only 39 990 at
Fleltwood Homes of Proctorv Ia
Tal Fnte 1-888 585-0187

330

Farm• for

490

Beautitul I 1100 Sq Foot R..tored
2nd Floor Apartment In Hlslorlc
District Ideal For Protessional
Coupe All Mode n Amen ties 3
Bedroom• Spacious Llv ng 1 112
Baths Roar Deck HVAC $800/
mo Plus Utilities Secur ty And
Key Dt!pOstt No Pots References
Required (740)446 4425 Or
(740)448-3936

FARM FOR SALEII Wo Have
Moved And Are Selling Our
Farm 3 BodrOOm Homo Hat High
CO lings Oak 'l'rim "nd " lorgo
Kitchen Buildings Include A
Large Barn And Garage Excel
ienl LocatiOn!
Op!/011 f HouiO Barn Bulldlngo
Wllh 86 Acres For $129 900
Option 2 lncludoo Everything
In Option 1 plus Pasture Pond
And A Total 01 t 20 Acros Priced
~~ $189 900 Shown By Appoint
ment Only
Call E-venlnga
(740)381H)259
350 Lota

&amp;

r,1ERCHANDISE
510

Appl ancea
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relr
g ators Up To 90 Days Guar
antoodl We Soli New Maytag Appl ances French C ty Maytag
74().448-7795

80 Acres Developed Land In
M11on County Netural Spring
City Water A Creek At Tho Bot
tom Asking 150 000 Already
TimbO ld (304)897 5827

For Sale Recondlt onad waah
e &amp; drye s and efrlgarators
Thompsons Appl ance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675.7388

9 Acres Small Pond a-.112 Miles
Back Of New Haven On Union
Campground Road (304)882
2538

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refr gerato s
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 76
V ne Street Ca I 740 446 7398
18811-818.()128

Camp
Sites For Rent On Ka
nawha Fliver 8 miles from Point
Pleasant oloctriC only (304)8751722 (304)875-4144After5pm
Looking To Buy A Now Home?
Don 1 Have Land? Wa Do Hurry
Only tO lola Left 304-739 7295

New &amp; Used Furn lure
Naw 2 P ece l v ng oom Suites
S399 Buy Sell Trade

RENTALS

Used
Window
Un t
Air
Cond lloners 90 Day Guarantee
(740)886-7531 (740)886-0047

1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homos From $189/Mo 4% Down
30 Yaars at 8 5% APR For L II
tngs 80().319-3323 e" 1709
2 Bedroom House For Rent I"
Bidwell
Includes 2 Lots
(740)441-Q420
2 BA Log Houoa A/C No Pots
Available Juno tst $350/mo Do
posit Relorenee (740)448 7732
bet-n 4pm and 8pm
3 Bad oom Water &amp; Trash Paid
Stove Ref lgerator CiA S42S
Plus Deposit No Pots (740)3888371
Fou Room House 52 Olive
Street phone (740)448-3945
Pilot Program Renters Needed
304-7367295
Pome oy 3 bedroom $300 por
month $200 deposit HUD ap
proved also need references
74().742 2896
420

Mobile Homea
for Rent

121160 2 Bedr.pom All Electric
Across Ne ~sli aven Grade
Schoo $300 mo (304)882 2219
(304)882 2119
2 bed oom mobl e home or 600
sq ft office space Rlverpark M
nersv He $300 mo each reduced
rent tor handy person who can
mow the grass In the park 614
676 1661
2 bedroom mob e home n tral er
pa k on Fraley Or ve reference
deposit $250 mo 1 112 milo trom
Ho zer Hosp tal on old Route 35
trailer lot for ent same trailer
pa k $100/mo (304)675 5999
(3041675-2900
440

Aparbnenta
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurn shed security
depos I requ red no pels 740
992 2218
t Bedroom A~artment Retrigera
tor Range A/C Inc udod $289
Plus Deposit &amp; Reference HUD
Approved (740)441-1519

Factory Goo! 32x80 $tO 000 Dis
count only $1000 00 Down De
va y and setup paid by Facto y
I 1100-891 8777

t bedroom $200 per monlh 2
bedroom S250 plu~ depos t &amp;
utili I es 3rd Street Racine Oh
741).247-4292

Lot mode c earance save up to
$8 82!5 with any home check ua
our were dealing Coles Mobile
Homes US 50 East Alhlns Oh
Now 14 II wldo $499 dO!m..only
$199 par man ca I now 1.-d'oo
691-6777
Now 16 It w de S499 per mon
on y $270 per man call now 1
8Q0.89 I -6777
New 2001 Fleotwood 3 br 2
bath set up n The Country Mo
bl e Home Pa k ready to move n
$995 down $199 98 per month
740 992 2167

Houllhold
Goods

Acreage

1 Bedroom n Country Stove Flefr ge alor Water Trash No Pets
$275 Plus Deposll (74013888371

L mlted Or No Creel ? Govern
ment Bank F nance Only At Oak
wood In Barboursv le WV 304
738 3409

ForL1111

4 oom Downstairs Water pad
No Pets 91 Cedar St (740)3881100

530

•

Antlquea

Buy or sell Riverine Ant ques
tt 24 East Main on SR 124 E Po
me oy 740 992 2526 or 740 992
1539 Russ Moo e owner
540

Mlacellaneous
Merchandise

$0 DOWN HOMES
No Cred t OKI HUD VA
FHA Cal Ia !stings
1 800-501 1777 Ext 9818

$1 000 BACK 2 Ton A r Cond
oner 2 Ton Coil 1 l ne Set In
stalled $2 295 $ 000 Back
$1295 Net Price Free Estimates
Ca I For Quotes On Other S 211
f You Dan t Call Us We
Both lose! Mobi e Homes Our
Spec allly 1 740 446 6308 I 800
291 0098
18 HP Yardman Aldmg Lawn
Mowe looks GoOd Runs Good
$550 (740)388-9325

laaml Pope A- For COncntto
Angle Channel Flat Bar Steel
Grat ng For Drains Driveways &amp;
Walkways l&amp;L Scrap Metals
(740)448-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS A most everyone approved
w lh SO down! Low monthly pay
montsl 1 8Q0.8t 1 3478 OXl330

F..-

Nlco
Ulld
Cal
Anytime (740)448 1004 Qr
(740)448-8275
OTIS Forklift

Gas

Powered

Aepo Bldga due to flooding n
Mldwo&amp;t tadOry has (2) arch otyto
steel bldgs for mmedlate sa a
( t) 40x60 (st II cralld) cal Jo&amp;~
OIQ0.58t 5843
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
Tappan H Etllcttney 90% Gas
Furnaces Oil Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; A r Condition ng
Syetems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Hoatlng &amp; Cooling t
800 872 5987 www o.w cooM!on-

ASTHMA ALLERGY NEEDED
10 15 PEOPLE Who Des e
Immediate Rei et To Try Eva uate
A NEW CompaCI State OJ Tho
A t Home 0 Bus ness A r
Pur I ca ion System No Cost Or
Ob gat on Fee 3 Day Tr a! Me
Ross (304)675.3379
ATTENTION P om 0 ess Mor
Lee Coo Aube gina (L ght
Smokey La,onda) Pad $145
Worn Once S ze t 8 20 Sel For
$too Shoes sze 9 112 Same
Colo $20 (740)446-7553 ~
AUTOS FROM 1600 00
Pol co Impounds &amp; Repos
Toyoli15 Chevy s Jeeps!
pease ca I lor Listing$
t 800 451 0500 Ex! C9Bt7
Baby Bod Car Seat High Char
That You Can Make Into Table &amp;
Chal (3041675 2801

Computer&amp; WE FINANCE DEll
COMPUTERS! Even with less
than perfect cred I 1 800 477
9016 Codt AC11 www omesolu
tlon com

Apartment For Ren1 In Downtown
Go lpo Is Please Call (740)886
7174
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES !2 Westwood
Dr ve trom $297 to $383 Walk o
ahop &amp; movies Cs 740 448
2588 Equo Hous ng Opportun ty

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!
Manufacturer offers a two weak
supply of co ostomy o uroetomy
brand name producta w th one
s mp e phone call No obi gallons
Cal 800 755 7880

Christy s Family Living 33140
New Lima Rd Ruland Oh o 74Q.
742 7403 Apartment home and
t al er rentals Commercial atore
f ants aval abt&amp; fo lease Vacan
cies now

GET SEXY FOR SUMMER Lose
3-5 lbo WHk y Guaranlted On y
$19 951 COOS Credit Cards
Phonochoekl 1 BOO 258.Q989

Royal Oak Membership w th
Coast to Coast and children s
rights St 000 937 388-211 o
Sawmol S3 895 New SUper tum
bermate 2000 larger capacities
more options Mal'lufacturer or
sawmills edgers and sk dde 8
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Dr VI Buftalo NY 14225
FREE lnlo mal on 1 800 578
1363 EXT 200 U
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Claim Den eel? We Special ze n
Appea s and Hear ng&amp; FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Serv ces Inc Toll free 1 eaa
B3S 4052
Steel Bu ldings New Must Sen
40x80xt 2 waa $17 500 now
$10 971 50x100x16 was $31 500
now St9 990 70xt50x16 was
$59 990 now $42 990 80x200x16
was $94 500 now $59 990 1 800408-5126 I 80().408-5126
STEEL BUILDINGS New Pre on
glneered w/plans 30x50x 10 was
$12 500 now $6 990 50x80xt4
was $27 450 now $18 990
60x150xU was $52 750 now
$34 990 80x200x16 was $87 450
now $59 990 t 800-246-9640
STEEL BUILD NGS Urgent I
Must MoVe I 251130 30x40
45x80 Liquidation Pricing on In
stock s zes t 800-462 7930 •-48

Used "T ck e Me Elmo Excellent
Cond loon Make Oller! (740)4482205 or (740)446-9585 Ask Fo
v rglnla
Wale I ne Spocla 3 4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per tOO I 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100 A I Brass Com
pressiOn F tt ngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh"' 1 8Q0.537 9528
550

Building

I Softball
f1Dft1PIIpl1
f
I
E
MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Someone wtlh mach net)' to har
VIII

hal' on

stoaros Square Balel

ol Hoy For Sail (740)379-26311

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dlo
count Available Heritage Farm
(304)875-5724
TOI&gt;Icco Plugs For SOlo TN90 &amp;
NC3 Locelly Grown (740)245
5193
850

Grevely Rotary Culllvalor 511
tiona y Cultivator Rotary Plow
so ld Tractor Lug Tires On Rim &amp;
Asso ted Parts Cal (740)4410972 AHor 5pm

560

Pete for Sale

2 Female Toy Pqodlea 8 Weeks
3 Years 2 Male Toy Poodles 6
Weeks 4 112 Months (740)446
3398
AKC
Boston Terrier Pupp es
4 Fema es 2 Ma es Shots &amp;
Papers $250(740)446-0495
AKC Black Lab Female 6
Months Champ on B oodl nes
Lo,es Ch den $125 (740)256
6814
AKC Reg sle ed Male Chinese
Pug Puppy Shots Wormed
Tak ng Depoa IS To Hold $425 00
Accept Paymen s (740)388 9325

Thomas pitched a three htt
ter to ptek up the wm she
struck out two and walked
one Hatten wu the hmmg

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Tobacco Plants Order Now To
Guaronteo Eorty Spring Planllngo,
Inc ease Allotment• Mean Extra
Plants Thank "rou For Your Bull
neu Call D1nny Dewhurst
Leave Message (304)895 3740
Of (304)895-3789

D

570

Musical
Instruments

Acoustic
Guitar
$129 00
Acoustic
Electric
Guitar
$159 00 (740)245-9189

992-2156

92 Mustang GT 5 apeod 5 0 V
8 loaded many extras 80k milts
$8500 740-992-4017
1990 lincoln LSC Very Good
Condition New Transmlnton
(740)387-Q184
t 991 Dodge Stealth RT 1W n Tur
bo Komallu Red 300HP 5
Speed AWD AWS loaded
Super Sharp $7800 OBO
(740)44 t-QI35
1993 Sp rit Auto Air Red
1 2 000 Mles Very Clean $2100
OBO 1&gt;40)258-6877
1994 Chevy Camaro V-6 2 Door
81K TTops
Fu
Loaded
Excellent Condition $8 000
(304)675.2881

SSOO ID $900 par - I n
lllppert low .. lltlntnl

1998 Dodge lntrep dES Can
dyapple Red Loaded lealher
A loy Wheels Highway Mllu
$8200060 (740)441-Q135

CMh For Newep 1111 1r Cllpplftp
VurlolorUIII Wort. Form Homo
Wrlta CUPPINGS Box 5347
T~ Ml 4981111

1999 Ford Expedition loaded
Exce ent Condition (740)4466783

wwwiw:hWifiPCirtOIOI com

82 Chevy S 10 with 350 mo1or
new radiator alternator &amp; Holley
ca buretor $1 500 740 843 5358
afte 8pm

Melting Our Salta Brochureot

Fnoo Sufllllltt Pootagol
Starllrnmodlatolyt

88 Crown V ctoria Good Con
d lion Runs Good Call (740)3792196

-Opportunity!
For Free lntormotion
CIUTol FrH
1-8811-815-1835

90 Red Cavalier 2 0 4 Cyl nder
Exce lenl Body Needs Engine
Work $400 Suzuk 230 Ouad
Spa t Four Wheeler Runs Good
Needs Brake Work $800 F m
(740)258-1487
91 Plymouth Reliant $2000 91
Grand Am $1900 Both Have
M •• 92 Geo Met o 5
$700 F rm (304)697

95 Buick Regal Custom Loaded
New Struts Brakes Vary Clean
Exco ant Condition $5000 OBO
(7401441 9534
CARS $29/MONTHI POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY 24 MOS 019 9% FOR
LISTINGS! CALL I 800 941
8777 EXT C 9814
CARS FROM $500 Po ce lm
pounds &amp; tax seizures Hondas
Chevys Fords &amp; more For list
lnga Call Now 1 800 719 300 I
ext A010
Honda a From $5001 Pol co
lmpounda Ca 1 Now For l sl
t 80().319 3323 Exl A471

1995 Dodge
(740)448-8783

Ram

D esel

1999 Dakota Sport Truck 4WD
V B t 500 mllos robulll title
$13 000 (740)379-9047

68 Ford Plcloup
(740)379-2198

No

Rust

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

730

Vana

&amp;

4·WDs

86 Toyota Pick up 4x4 Greal
Cond ton New Tires CO Player
$3200 OBO (740)387-o883
89 Plymouth Voyager great con
d uon $5 ooo OBO 740 992
0514

750 Boata

&amp; Mofors

6 Foo A umlnum Bass Boa 40
HP Me cu y Mota Ti oiling Mo
tor Tra er &amp; AI Extras $2795
(740)379 27~

Motorcycles

1979 Harley Dav dson Lowrider
nice
2300 Mllea
$9000
(304)882 2099

SERV ICES

760

Auto Parte

&amp;

Accessories
4 36•1450 RIS
Rada
Groundhog Mounted On 15x10
A umimun Whee s 500 M as On
T es
$850
(740)643 2771
(7401534 2589
A 16 Goodyear AS on
I 898 Dodge Ram t 500 Aluminum
Stock Wheels $400 (740)643
2711 (740)534 2589

P ck up Topper Fiberglau &amp;
&lt;ruck
Tool
Cho81
$850
(304)875 4721 or (304)875 4249
790

Campera

19501 &amp; 1980 8 45 33 RPM
Flecords
OJ Store
Stock
Collocl ons (937)875-2930 Alto
e00pm
830

Llveatock

1e year old Qua ter horae with
bridle and oadd e
$500
(740)441 9513

Hoppes &amp; Lucaa Sa e 12 Fr day
llprll 27 7 30pm S~arp Fayette
eounty Falrg ounds YES! YES!
YES! There Will Be 40 Head Big
Enough For Ga I a County Fair
lnolu~ ng Litter Matos To The
$1000 Gu II And $500 Guilt
Chtck Our Updated Website
wwwwchocom

1992 P ymouth Voyagar Loa dad
Excolenl Cond ton $2800 Firm
1740)245--5948 Aller 5pm
1894 Dodge Grand Caravan ES
White LO$ded Quad Sealing 7
Passon go Lo18 Than 75 000
Milos On Engine And Tranamls
sian Taw ng Package Sha P
$6400 OBO (740)441-Q135
1995 Fo d Ranger XLT 4xA ~/C
CD Player Standard Shill Excol
ont Condit on 79 000 M es Price
Negotablt (304)875 7974

1995 19 Foot Onker Co Fo
Mora Details (304)e75 1298 o
(304)875 5770

1988 Ma ard 21 motor home low
mileage very good condition
$9 000 741l-992 5983ovon ng&amp;
t 995 A egro 31 Foot Class A
MotorhOme Low M Its Loaded
(740)448 1352
35 ft Coachman Gooseneck
Camper E~cel en Cond lion
$7SOO (740)448-8783

Ad

Hom

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERP~ODFING

uncond 1onal lletlme gua antee
local refa ences fu nlshed Ea
lablshed 1975 Ca 24 Hrs 1740)
446 0870 1 BOO 287 0576 Rag
e s Waterproof ng

a

Improvements
C&amp;C General Home Main
tenance Paint ng vlny s ding
carpentry doors w ndowa baths
mobl e home epa and mo e For
free est mate call Chel 740 992
6323
Dodson Bu ders
Your camp ete home emode lng
epa r &amp; ma ntenanca contracto
Pa nt ng vlny s d ng decks
baths kitchens e ect ca p umb
ng many other services to su 1
your needs No !Ob to b g or smal
30 years experience Free estl
mates 740 698 6783 740 591
1384

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

L vlngston s Basement Water
Proofing a basement epa s
done free 11 mates I fetlme
gua antae 14yrs on job e:~~perl
once (304)895.3887

110 Help

&amp;

Motor Homea
Wanted to Buy

&amp;

Pa am no Pop up Camper Steeps
6 Furnace Rei gerator AI Con
d 1one Asking $2900 (740)368
6029
•

92 Chevy Conve sian Can V 8
Burgundy
Low
Mileage
(740)448-0094 Call After 8pm
740

Campera

Motor Homes

3&lt;115

820

790

for Sale

Budgat Priced Tranemlaalona
AI Types Access To O-ver
10 000 Transm as on&amp; Transfer
Cases 740 245 5877 Ce 339

lnternatiQI!al Cllb Cadet Lawn
Mowe 14"'t)nan Engine H_ydro
statiC Drive 421nch Cun ng Deck
tt7 Hours Llka Now $1750
(740)379-2853

,,

at the plate w1th a pau of smgles Kayre DaviS added a SID
gle
Me1gs wuh the loss drops to
9-6 overall and 6-5 m the
TVC Me1gs will travel to
Alexander for a make-up
game on Tuesda)l before trow
ehng to Belpre on Wednesday

Subscnbe today

s

TRANSPORTATION

Pekapoo T ny Ma e 7 weeks
S 150
shots and wormed
(740)256-6814

~98 18x80 Mob e Home V ny

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Aepa red New &amp; Rtbu II In Stock
Can Ron Evans 1 800-537 9528

scar for Wellston gmng three
for-three w1th two RBI
Robmette added her double
and Julie Huffman added a
smgle
Jeffers was the han:! luck
loser for Me1gs, Kaue scattered five hJts and struck out
three Kara Musser led Meogs

93 Ford Tempo Auto And Power
E'e yth ng $2700 OBO Call
(740)446-4479

Goata 1 2 Boer Does &amp; Bucks
8 12 Weeks Old St26 Each
1740)258-1724

~

Grain

Supplies

tndspondont Horba lo Dlatr butor
Call Fo Product Or Opportun ty
(740)44 I 1982

d'"d''"

Hay &amp;

Used Wheelcha
Good Con
dillon $175 00 (740)446 2205 o
(740)446-9585 Ask For VIrgin a

New double wide 3 br 2 ba
$998 oo down only $295 pe
mon ca now 1 8QO..EI91 6777

2h80 3 Or 4 Bod oom Only t
$345 00 Par Month 8 99% F xed
In erest Rate 1 888 928 3426

640

~ough Cut Lumber and Mu ch
Bulk Load&amp; Call alter 7 OOpm
(740)446-6783

G ubb s Plano- Tuning a Aopllll
Prob ems? Need Tuned? Col Tht
Plano D 741).448-4525

1st Time Home eJyers Program
Spec al Finane ng Av&amp;llfble
(304)7S5-556e

1330

125 Yahama Breeze $1 500
(740)448-8783

EZPETRX COM Save up 10 50%
on ALL pet medlcat ons and au~
pile&amp; Inc udlng Hoartga d lntor
ceptor Frontline morel! FREE
SHIPP NG 0 de online www ez
pe!Rx com 1 900-844 1427

d ng Sh ng od Roo! Central AI
athedral Cell ng Through Out
Three Bedroom .2 Full Baths
Must Move
Ca After Spm
(740)448-8308

s
s

HORIESHOEtNG
Farrier Freet Queen

rung for Bailey, G1bbs spnnted home to nuke It a 9-0
game
Eastern went on an offen
uve explooon sconng three
runs m the third, four m the
fourth and SIX m the fifth
Eastern goes to Federal
Hocking toda)l then die
Lancers come to Eastern
Wednesda)l

nott

1995 A Automat c Frick Sawmll
Computerized HMC Debarker &amp;
Mortark Ch p Pack w 11 separare
Ca I after 7 OOpm (740)448-8783
50 Yards Forrest G een Carpet &amp;
Pad Blue Recliner Two Lawn
Mowers
One
Weadeate
(740)388-8997

H

Horses for Sate 1 Morga" 4
Minlolurol. (740)446-6713

NEW AND USED STEEL Stool

$1200(740~579

Salt

D vorced Must Sel Large Fleet
wood Doub e Wide 5000 Equ ty
has been lorlelled TOll FREE
1 888 565 0167

"''j

Th s new1poper
not
kno.,ngly accept
advenisemants for reat estate
wh ch is In -vlo allan of the
law Our readers are hereby
lnrormed that al dwellings
advenlsed n th s newspaper
a e available on an equal
opponunlty baa •

Nu tra ler &amp; lot tor salt uptown
Mlddlaport groattocaaon 14x70
740-992 2888

410 HOUIII for Rent

AMAZING Little o No Cred I
Needed Specla Government F
nanclng (304)755-S885

GLOBAL MED CAL TRAN
SCRIPTION Train at Home tor
Medical Transcription Aasls
ranee w th Job Placement upon
suc~esslul Comp at on Excelent
tneomo Potonllal t 877415 5337
www med ca trans net 1 888 74!5
8284

'

Mldd oport groy stone 3-4 bod
rooma largo will&lt; In ctooets largo
oat ., kitchen 2 balhroomo argo
LR lormal DR pint panolld doni
bedroom tull unfmishad base
mtnt ateam heat 1 tuated on 3
v llage lots one car garage new
s dewalka new roof large front
porch deck small outbuilding
qu et street lined basketball
court/ parking area w 11 consider
all reasonable offe s 740 992
7398

w

Bualnen

A IlEAL CASH MAKERII
SO Downll
Candy VENDING route
Nets $48 000+ FREE lnlo
Tol Free 1 877 494 8695

HUO Homes Payments Based
On Income lim tod Tlmo Hurry!
(740)448-3384

Absolutely Must Sell Brand New
3 BR/ 2 Bath Doublew de
lh
Del very Set up A C &amp; Skirting
F om $287/ Month Only 0 Oak
wood Galllpo Is (740)446-3093

Opportunity

INOTICE!
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SHING CO
ecommend&amp; that you do bus
ness w tn paop e you know and
NOT lo send money through the
mall unt I you have nvestigated
the offering

Homes for Salt

EARN $500 $900 por woek In
your balhmbe &amp; slippers Low In
vestment 1 800 272 0193 awe

FINANCIAL
210

310

April only $12 000 080 Now
Haven thrH ~ms one and
112 balhl t.rgo lamlly room woth
fireplace two ear attached ga
rage 304 882 1075 days 740

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI1
No Fee Un I&amp;S We Win
1 888 582 3345

OWN A COMPUTER? Put It to
work! 125 $75/hr PT/FT Fret on
lne catalog at www earnagrt:tal n
comecomorcalt 800-770..1984

Part T me CNAI LPN tor n Home
Care Fema e Patent Send Re
sumo to CLA 516 c/o Gallipolis
Dally Tribune 825 Third Avo
Go !polls Ololo 4583 1

Buainen
Opportunity

Rl&gt;er Bond Plact Now Attopllng
App leateons for 1 Bedroom Hud
Subs ded Apa rtment for Efderty
and Disabled EOH (304)882
3121 Of (304)8B2 3274

Huge Inventory Dlaoount Prieto
On VInyl Skl rting Doora Wind
ows Anchors Water Halters
Plumbing &amp; Electrlcet P.arto Fur
naces &amp; Heat Pumpa Bennetts
Mobile Homo Supply 7 40-446
9418 WWWOM/I)-

No-no

l

4 H And FFA Clull Pigs Hamp
York &amp; Duroc Cron (740)388
9033

p1tch and Wtggms adVJnc:ed.
WJggtns then advanced to
score on two passed balls
PaweD hit a tnple Calaway
ftcwnPIIp81
walked Powell and Calaway
both stole home and Lod
nuke the score 3-0
KriSten Chevalier led off wtck lud a double Bailey
the E:astern second when she reached on an error A=da
Yeager had a sacnfice fly to
W2S hit by a p1tch stole second, and Wtggtru had a bunt score Lodwtck Then Kr1sten
smgle to advance Chevalier Chevalier W2S hit by another
Chevalier scored on a wild pttch and wtth Gtbbs run-

ROW PRYinG S7JHR TO STftRTI
That's right...We have upped our wage
after training to $7/hour for
fundralalng work· no experience
needed I
If you lutve worked for us In the past and would
I
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�•
(

I

'

a ;

Pomeioy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crouword Puzzl•

n•lftll

UNDA'S

PA/NnNG

COITMCfl.

"Ta.b ... poilt""'

Con!plele Home
Repair

of~- IAl­

Remodeling
New Additions

®itforyoa•
Interior
FREE ESTliiiATES -

...,,...
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. 740-985-4180

'

..... al

flff fSJ~&amp;ilts

Rlt•IG Seatlc&amp;, Inc

...

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-

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WV301 I

Ohio 4S769

t I 4 I

a.

1000 St. Rt. 7Soufh
CooMIIe, OH .f6m

, ••u ....

Howardl.

JEST LIKE
YORE PAW

·Wrttesel

- • Gran! Sud •
1Dpooil 0 Fill Dirt

Plumbing

'We SstvlcBA/1 Makes"
Warner Heating &amp; Cooling, Inc.
Under new OWnershiP It Is now

Mukb

0

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949-1405
591-5011

992-3470

2/U

~

~S«Ma&amp;.

Serving cultomers 11 years

'Wt ~tam Valdll Praductl" • AI 0111111 Slack

Toll Frse1-86&amp;-913-6585

FRANK &amp;·EARNEST

GYM

.

a.n. a.....,... Fink. owner

.l CAL~ IT Tt4e
...... "AsT ~roN.AuT"

wOirkOVT···
COMPt,eTlt, Y
weiGtiT L I$.

ft

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if

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BLIND SPOT

New Romeo • VlnJI
Skll.. • New G.,...

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AU mtical blindt are
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High &amp; Dry
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RICIIII, Ohio
45771

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#QIIIA cletrrlfl9,

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992-1717

~~~....:!.=9.~~
"How much do I owe you so fir?"

CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Browns
can't -seem to tackle the
franchise running back
they want so badly.
During last weekend's
NFL draft, the Browns
picked one running back,
but preferred another.
They called the New
Orleans Saints about trading for Ricky Williams,
and hinted that free agent
Corey Dillon is still a possibility.
·
They know what they
wa nt, but so far, the
Browns have becm grabbing at air.
"We have a head coach
and an offensive coordinator that bo th coached
Rdgerri n James," said
Dwight Clark, Cleveland's
director of football operatio ns.· "That'S what we're
looking for and he's hard
to find."
Coac h Butch Davis
went into his first draft

with the Browns hoping
to find a feature back who
could play every down.
He was looking for a back
in the mold of James,
Indianapolis' versatile' back
who played for Davis at
Miami , to improve the
NFL's worst rushing
game.
The Browns considered
taking Mississippi's Deuce
McAllister with the No. 3
overall pick, but thought
Florida defens,ive tackle
Gera,rd Warren was a better value.
As McAllister began
sliding down the board he fell to New Orleans ·at
N o. 23 - the Browns
called St. Louis to see if
th ey could move up to
N o. 20 and·get McAllister,
bu t the askin g price was
too higl?.
" We'd have to pull a
Mike Ditka and give up
the rest of the drat\," Davis
said on Saturday.

month

P/8
!tact~.

Ohio 45771

Davis' words proved
740-985-3948
prophetic because on CONCRETF/BLOCK/BRICK
Sunday the Browns found • Footen, Walla, Step• •
themselves talking to the
Flat Work,
Saints,' who under Ditka Replacementa, • Walko
gave up all their picks in
oad Drtvu • Slencll
1999 to draft Williams,
Crete Free Eltlm•tea
about making· a trade for 5' "181 Oblo and W,\1,
,W\111031711 •
Wiilliams.
a.....-.;;.;..:..=~-..1
Davis found a running
back he liked in the third
round, selecting James
Jackson, Davis' top ru*er
at Miami the past two
~a~

.

l'm no t cocky," said
Jackson, Miami's third alltime leading rushe r. " I
know what I can do."
·ROBERT BISSEU
Errict Rhett , signed
before last season to be CONSTRUCTION
Cleveland's feature back, is •New Hom•
coming off a torn liga- • Geragea
ment that kept him out of
April's mini-camp. Sec- , • Complete
Remodeling
o nd-y,ear ba ck Tr~vi s
Prentice avera ge!il 3 yards Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESnMATE.
per carry lase season.
11

7~992-1671

'

,,

"

BIG NATE

ELm MECHA,NICAL CONTRACTORS

DON 'T THINK.

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WV 105176

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179 or 446·9800

•

Every Spring Tuna-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dltlly

- 'ILLtiL

See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REA~ DEAL-on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

Salee &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

Cellular

· Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
,

38 Actrell

IIIII

·
.

111111

:

_..try
24S....
•

...
'*'
12wda.)

or- .
:

42 nMIV~iii

22 Tllpel'l

28

auch.

Pllywftght

30Wine
cabinet

·~·

44 Sumlllld ..

:!r=. .

Ullh

llnlll

'

bolhlrl

Cow.-d
City In

poet
·v-.
C.llllllnl" .
IOI

52

M Un-

prodUCtive

53 lndlgnlllon

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campo•
Ct!ebtlly C""'r cryptOgrlml.,. Clllled trom quollllona by tamoua
poop!t, put and p&lt;uon~ Eacll!olllt'ln b cipher 111n&lt;t1 for anolhor.

Today's clue: A equals J

'KYDEWIUS

EK

IP·MFSTEJMP.'

STEJM

•

AYPN
' R 8

lAY '

UYSK

p y

IE D D

KYDEWIUS

__

late partner on his
trick -two duck, and for
not unethically hesitating to make sure
you knew exactly
what was happening .

fully sown in lhe past. This
time around, younetums will
make you happy with the
results.
_
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. The only thing that can
hamper you from realizing
your aims today is taking on a
bad attitude. Don'tlet anyone
tum your happy nature into ooe
of depressiol)l Taurus, treat
yourself to a birthday gift. _
Send for your Astro-Oraph predictions for the year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to AstroOmph, c/o this newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, ·.
New York, NY 10156. Be sure
to stale your Zodiac sign.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.. Self-sufficiency is the one
1thing you can depend on today.
When you start couniing on
someone who makes a lot of
promises but seldom follows
through, you can kiss results
good-by.
CANCER (June'2Huly 22)
.. Allbaugh you mighl put the
needs of others. above your
own today, unfortunately, asso-·
dates may not necessarily do

w

p y

SPAYZ

w

DYCS

K.JRYXSPRMBST

OTSSUYF.'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'You take the paycheck, you have to
take what else goes with It,' - Joe Torre. on working under
George Steinbrenner.
WOlD IAMI ·

1;~~~~~~~Tlfir!~:W~~)-:--l

E WS A S E

I I' I I I I' I
II I I I I
CH I T K

!

~

I I I I! 16 ~~
CRAFO ·T
1G;I
a
I I' I I I
T

I D0 T

·.

My son admired a '·cool' trouble
.· maker. I told him that his friend
must find it hard to remain 'cool'
while getting into so much · • · .:Complelo tho chuckle quOitld : ·
by flllin~ In the miSiin~ wards
you do~elop from llfep No. 3 below. :

8

-

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQU,..RES

SC~ETS

ANSVWEIS

Embryo· Milch· Putty · Verbal · HOBBY
are many jokes about accountants who mess
up their books . My brother says that accountants should
take up juggling as a ,HOBBY .
Ther~

·'

~-----------

'Birthd~ ·

same for -you. Don't have
fal se expectations and you
won'1be disappointed.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- So
long as you are willing to give
and take today, others will follow sui!. 'Should you gel self·
involved wilhoUI a lhoughl for
those with whom you're asso. ciating, you' II he let\ on your

someth'ing you've unsuccess-

sprlq

'

7 lioN

Next, have a look at
the North and East
hands in the diagram.
Defending
against
three no-trump, your
partner, West, leads the
club five: six, ace, two.
You return the club
nine: queen, four, seven. Declarer plays a
spade to dummy's
jack, then calls for the
diamond jack. Should
you rise, or duck7
Here are the most
common reasons to
play second hand high:
when you can see the
contract down; to split
honors; to cover the
last of touching honors; to kill a long suit,
particularly in an oth·
erwise entry less dum- ·
my; to conserve partner's entry; to stop
partner from being
endplayed; to prevent

Wednesday, April 25, 2001
Try o""e again in the year
ahead 10 reap a harvest from

Bring In !llllr repelr work
we'D get you going for

r.:

40 Strang 11111'1

,z:nlng

qijur

1-304-417$-7824
l.aoo-250.907'7
Residential Commerdol New C-anxtion
Solei Serrlce lnlllllatlon Sjioclal~Uilo Sheet Mllll j)uctwork
"TrrM" Solei A Senko For

GRAVEl.YTRACTOR

like

01118 till(
34 """
5 U111

I!LUll'

Licensed ud 1-.nd

:tel:! o?
pt

atolater
finesse ;
tryruffing
to deceive
declarer.
'tOI.J'I~E 1!\1 THE PL.A.Y,
you SI'DULtl P..T ~ST
Which
applies
BE · ASLE 'Tb SAY
~OWR.!
SOMET+IIf\1(',, R.I(;HT~
HELLO, here? Declarer is try·
ROI'IANTIC ing to look lij(e someTEN5!0N!
one about to take a
diamond finesse. But
you sholildn' t fall for
it. Partner has shown
you a five-card club
!:l..~::::::z:::z::L_..f::i,_____J: U_ _JL_:\B~~U suit, which is surely
headed liy the king. (If
PEANUTS
South has the club
king,
West's suit
· I JIJ5T TIUNK I !-lAVE A
WI-I AT
I ~AVE A
Wi-l'r' ARE 'f'OI:I ALWA'f'S SO
would be J-10-8-5-4,
KNACK FOR SEEING OTilER
ABOUT YOUR KNACK FOR
ANXIOUS TO CRtnCIZE ME ?
·
PEOPLE'S FAULTS ..
OWN
OVeRLOOKING when he would have
both led the jack, not
FAULTS?
TI-IEM ..
the_five, and signaled
with the jack at trick
two.) You can see the
contract down, so dash
~::;;~~~~l::.==j in with the diamond
~~~~~~~~~!:::..!!!
..:;;~::.....;_Jl!J.:.:~~;;~~~!~
ace,
then return your
'r
last club.
~--...1
·Finally, congratu·

r

- =·~-';;;:;:;:;~;;;::;:;;:;;:;;;~~
rL::=~~;:;:;;;:;:;::;.;::;;:;=:;~~

for$25 per :

CONTRAOORS, INC.

2

____

Advertise
In this space .

Brownies still searching'for
.franchise running -back

AI,_

&gt;r

Toll Free

0P DAIIAQIIQ

to 10'x 30'

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TERRY'S ENGINE
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33795 HiUJnd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

·=· :
12=
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ol!

11111.&amp;
Llcllltld • IIIIIINCI
,.,.,. • Jenttral •Thermlll Zona•

BISSELL

&amp;.A

.._

By Pmu.IP ALDER
Play second hand
low
Is a guide when
playing bridge
That has exceptions
-· Dino 0 . Fieni,
Sevell)a Park, Md.
It is well-known
that almost all the
time, the second hand
should play low .. and
do so in tempo. However, there are times
when second hand
should go high . How
many can you think

CHANalAlLI
YOUNa•U.N II

'

,.. &amp;llmltN

,._ aNt

31s-t

tilling

Play low

..""'"...

Dealm

,_ ••

35 ...... ,. .

10 Aclf.

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,PJ

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout

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Loc.l843-1214
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Mcdican: Supplement;
life lnsUI811Ce;
Burial and f inal Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mongage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home___,

~-mPuU

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".ilr1rii•'!JC r I 01 1 itJ 1 1 ;,)U

AU Maka 1'nlrtor &amp;:
Eqai..... PuU
Factory Alltllorbed

I S

t &amp; QI f

[3(1:. 1n•l

...,.

I[

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H 'k',' f1 Ht.pl; f,q I'!

DDIYIU

41

••••••••••s
'
• At I

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•

Ott 7...7'2-"'T

ACROSS

-..

" &amp; 11 1 1 4"

a1•

MONUMENW. UFE INSURAHa CO.

WANTED

AdVertiM
In thla space for $25 per .....~.
month

....

Garagell
WII'0282120

IMtM111111
Alllr6,.

Pr' t ~~­
aJSTOM SCIEIJI
PIIITIII&amp;

PHILLIP
AWI!R

'

own.

\IIROO (Aug. 23·Sept_. 22)
.. Try to play things by ear
today, keeping your plans
unstructurt:d, because you' ll'
be mort: able to now with
events as they unfold. Not to do ·
-• so could leave you feeling
unfulfilled,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·
· A few minor social complications might· require your
attention today, but unless you
cope with them speedily, things
could overflow into the
evening and ruin the entire day.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. The day as a whole
should be a productive one for
yoU doing projects both necessary and fun . Feel good about
jt instead of letting a depressed
person put you in a funk.
SAOnTARIUS (Nov. 23,
Dec. 2t) .. Your communjca-

tive skills are good today, so
long as you' re socializing with .
people. Unfortunately, howev·
er, impatience ,could be your
nemesis when it comes to deal·
ing with co-workers .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·lan.
19) .. Sti,ck to spending your
hard-earned money on neces-

silies and needs or 1he famil y
today. Letting your fri volous
whims get the upper hand will
tum out to be a wasteful exer·
. ci se .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) .. If you're in need or the
cooperation of anolher today,
slick strictly to the facts and ·
you' ll get it. If you attempt to
fabricate your claims, 'it'll be ·
another story.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mnreh 20)
.. Although your mind might
be on chores and the like early
in the day, by evening you
.could be in need of some company, so take time and make
plans while pals an: still rt:ach·
able.
ARIES (Marclt21 ·Aprill9)
.. You might stilt out all gung·
ho today, but if,You're not careful, you could slide into wasting valuable hou,.. on frivolous
endeavors. Be more discrlmi·
n'aling with your tilllll·

�•
(

I

'

a ;

Pomeioy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crouword Puzzl•

n•lftll

UNDA'S

PA/NnNG

COITMCfl.

"Ta.b ... poilt""'

Con!plele Home
Repair

of~- IAl­

Remodeling
New Additions

®itforyoa•
Interior
FREE ESTliiiATES -

...,,...
I

.,,

. 740-985-4180

'

..... al

flff fSJ~&amp;ilts

Rlt•IG Seatlc&amp;, Inc

...

3SS37 St Rt 7 N •

-

• J I J

WV301 I

Ohio 4S769

t I 4 I

a.

1000 St. Rt. 7Soufh
CooMIIe, OH .f6m

, ••u ....

Howardl.

JEST LIKE
YORE PAW

·Wrttesel

- • Gran! Sud •
1Dpooil 0 Fill Dirt

Plumbing

'We SstvlcBA/1 Makes"
Warner Heating &amp; Cooling, Inc.
Under new OWnershiP It Is now

Mukb

0

Bulldozer Semas

949-1405
591-5011

992-3470

2/U

~

~S«Ma&amp;.

Serving cultomers 11 years

'Wt ~tam Valdll Praductl" • AI 0111111 Slack

Toll Frse1-86&amp;-913-6585

FRANK &amp;·EARNEST

GYM

.

a.n. a.....,... Fink. owner

.l CAL~ IT Tt4e
...... "AsT ~roN.AuT"

wOirkOVT···
COMPt,eTlt, Y
weiGtiT L I$.

ft

N

8m

1

ii

!I
if

H...

--

'

II:

The CRAFTY,

BUitDIRI INC.

BLIND SPOT

New Romeo • VlnJI
Skll.. • New G.,...

(Factory Outlet)
AU mtical blindt are
made to order at our
louUoo
UPTO 70%0FF

• Replacement
Wllld'l'!t • Room
Additions • Ronftng
COMMEROAl and IISIDIIIIW.
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CAL.LS)

11-~~
High &amp; Dry
SelC-Storage

. • Vertical. • Wood
• Minio • Etc

1441Wrd Ave. Gallpels

Complete MobUe
Replllr on Lawn
Tnctors, Mowers,
11llers, Warranty
Repairs

740·992-5232

'446·4995

Pd1mo.

Hill'• Self
Stor•a•

IS.~H§IHGTOH
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KI!EP8 THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME Hp.T IN

29170 B11h1n ROlli
RICIIII, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217

Drlvtwaylr
#QIIIA cletrrlfl9,

HARTWELL
STORAGE

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
~IIV DIRECT
PRICIIIQ'

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

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

992-1717

~~~....:!.=9.~~
"How much do I owe you so fir?"

CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Browns
can't -seem to tackle the
franchise running back
they want so badly.
During last weekend's
NFL draft, the Browns
picked one running back,
but preferred another.
They called the New
Orleans Saints about trading for Ricky Williams,
and hinted that free agent
Corey Dillon is still a possibility.
·
They know what they
wa nt, but so far, the
Browns have becm grabbing at air.
"We have a head coach
and an offensive coordinator that bo th coached
Rdgerri n James," said
Dwight Clark, Cleveland's
director of football operatio ns.· "That'S what we're
looking for and he's hard
to find."
Coac h Butch Davis
went into his first draft

with the Browns hoping
to find a feature back who
could play every down.
He was looking for a back
in the mold of James,
Indianapolis' versatile' back
who played for Davis at
Miami , to improve the
NFL's worst rushing
game.
The Browns considered
taking Mississippi's Deuce
McAllister with the No. 3
overall pick, but thought
Florida defens,ive tackle
Gera,rd Warren was a better value.
As McAllister began
sliding down the board he fell to New Orleans ·at
N o. 23 - the Browns
called St. Louis to see if
th ey could move up to
N o. 20 and·get McAllister,
bu t the askin g price was
too higl?.
" We'd have to pull a
Mike Ditka and give up
the rest of the drat\," Davis
said on Saturday.

month

P/8
!tact~.

Ohio 45771

Davis' words proved
740-985-3948
prophetic because on CONCRETF/BLOCK/BRICK
Sunday the Browns found • Footen, Walla, Step• •
themselves talking to the
Flat Work,
Saints,' who under Ditka Replacementa, • Walko
gave up all their picks in
oad Drtvu • Slencll
1999 to draft Williams,
Crete Free Eltlm•tea
about making· a trade for 5' "181 Oblo and W,\1,
,W\111031711 •
Wiilliams.
a.....-.;;.;..:..=~-..1
Davis found a running
back he liked in the third
round, selecting James
Jackson, Davis' top ru*er
at Miami the past two
~a~

.

l'm no t cocky," said
Jackson, Miami's third alltime leading rushe r. " I
know what I can do."
·ROBERT BISSEU
Errict Rhett , signed
before last season to be CONSTRUCTION
Cleveland's feature back, is •New Hom•
coming off a torn liga- • Geragea
ment that kept him out of
April's mini-camp. Sec- , • Complete
Remodeling
o nd-y,ear ba ck Tr~vi s
Prentice avera ge!il 3 yards Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESnMATE.
per carry lase season.
11

7~992-1671

'

,,

"

BIG NATE

ELm MECHA,NICAL CONTRACTORS

DON 'T THINK.

fAt~!

TH/'.T's. .

I MEAN, IF

Gallla, ..._, Od Meip Countl•
WV 105176

Us &amp;tOr We Both Lose! .

Ask For Mike Hindle
179 or 446·9800

•

Every Spring Tuna-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dltlly

- 'ILLtiL

See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REA~ DEAL-on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

Salee &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

Cellular

· Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
,

38 Actrell

IIIII

·
.

111111

:

_..try
24S....
•

...
'*'
12wda.)

or- .
:

42 nMIV~iii

22 Tllpel'l

28

auch.

Pllywftght

30Wine
cabinet

·~·

44 Sumlllld ..

:!r=. .

Ullh

llnlll

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campo•
Ct!ebtlly C""'r cryptOgrlml.,. Clllled trom quollllona by tamoua
poop!t, put and p&lt;uon~ Eacll!olllt'ln b cipher 111n&lt;t1 for anolhor.

Today's clue: A equals J

'KYDEWIUS

EK

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STEJM

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KYDEWIUS

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late partner on his
trick -two duck, and for
not unethically hesitating to make sure
you knew exactly
what was happening .

fully sown in lhe past. This
time around, younetums will
make you happy with the
results.
_
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. The only thing that can
hamper you from realizing
your aims today is taking on a
bad attitude. Don'tlet anyone
tum your happy nature into ooe
of depressiol)l Taurus, treat
yourself to a birthday gift. _
Send for your Astro-Oraph predictions for the year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to AstroOmph, c/o this newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, ·.
New York, NY 10156. Be sure
to stale your Zodiac sign.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.. Self-sufficiency is the one
1thing you can depend on today.
When you start couniing on
someone who makes a lot of
promises but seldom follows
through, you can kiss results
good-by.
CANCER (June'2Huly 22)
.. Allbaugh you mighl put the
needs of others. above your
own today, unfortunately, asso-·
dates may not necessarily do

w

p y

SPAYZ

w

DYCS

K.JRYXSPRMBST

OTSSUYF.'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'You take the paycheck, you have to
take what else goes with It,' - Joe Torre. on working under
George Steinbrenner.
WOlD IAMI ·

1;~~~~~~~Tlfir!~:W~~)-:--l

E WS A S E

I I' I I I I' I
II I I I I
CH I T K

!

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I I I I! 16 ~~
CRAFO ·T
1G;I
a
I I' I I I
T

I D0 T

·.

My son admired a '·cool' trouble
.· maker. I told him that his friend
must find it hard to remain 'cool'
while getting into so much · • · .:Complelo tho chuckle quOitld : ·
by flllin~ In the miSiin~ wards
you do~elop from llfep No. 3 below. :

8

-

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQU,..RES

SC~ETS

ANSVWEIS

Embryo· Milch· Putty · Verbal · HOBBY
are many jokes about accountants who mess
up their books . My brother says that accountants should
take up juggling as a ,HOBBY .
Ther~

·'

~-----------

'Birthd~ ·

same for -you. Don't have
fal se expectations and you
won'1be disappointed.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- So
long as you are willing to give
and take today, others will follow sui!. 'Should you gel self·
involved wilhoUI a lhoughl for
those with whom you're asso. ciating, you' II he let\ on your

someth'ing you've unsuccess-

sprlq

'

7 lioN

Next, have a look at
the North and East
hands in the diagram.
Defending
against
three no-trump, your
partner, West, leads the
club five: six, ace, two.
You return the club
nine: queen, four, seven. Declarer plays a
spade to dummy's
jack, then calls for the
diamond jack. Should
you rise, or duck7
Here are the most
common reasons to
play second hand high:
when you can see the
contract down; to split
honors; to cover the
last of touching honors; to kill a long suit,
particularly in an oth·
erwise entry less dum- ·
my; to conserve partner's entry; to stop
partner from being
endplayed; to prevent

Wednesday, April 25, 2001
Try o""e again in the year
ahead 10 reap a harvest from

Bring In !llllr repelr work
we'D get you going for

r.:

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:tel:! o?
pt

atolater
finesse ;
tryruffing
to deceive
declarer.
'tOI.J'I~E 1!\1 THE PL.A.Y,
you SI'DULtl P..T ~ST
Which
applies
BE · ASLE 'Tb SAY
~OWR.!
SOMET+IIf\1(',, R.I(;HT~
HELLO, here? Declarer is try·
ROI'IANTIC ing to look lij(e someTEN5!0N!
one about to take a
diamond finesse. But
you sholildn' t fall for
it. Partner has shown
you a five-card club
!:l..~::::::z:::z::L_..f::i,_____J: U_ _JL_:\B~~U suit, which is surely
headed liy the king. (If
PEANUTS
South has the club
king,
West's suit
· I JIJ5T TIUNK I !-lAVE A
WI-I AT
I ~AVE A
Wi-l'r' ARE 'f'OI:I ALWA'f'S SO
would be J-10-8-5-4,
KNACK FOR SEEING OTilER
ABOUT YOUR KNACK FOR
ANXIOUS TO CRtnCIZE ME ?
·
PEOPLE'S FAULTS ..
OWN
OVeRLOOKING when he would have
both led the jack, not
FAULTS?
TI-IEM ..
the_five, and signaled
with the jack at trick
two.) You can see the
contract down, so dash
~::;;~~~~l::.==j in with the diamond
~~~~~~~~~!:::..!!!
..:;;~::.....;_Jl!J.:.:~~;;~~~!~
ace,
then return your
'r
last club.
~--...1
·Finally, congratu·

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Play second hand
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Is a guide when
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That has exceptions
-· Dino 0 . Fieni,
Sevell)a Park, Md.
It is well-known
that almost all the
time, the second hand
should play low .. and
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should go high . How
many can you think

CHANalAlLI
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\IIROO (Aug. 23·Sept_. 22)
.. Try to play things by ear
today, keeping your plans
unstructurt:d, because you' ll'
be mort: able to now with
events as they unfold. Not to do ·
-• so could leave you feeling
unfulfilled,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·
· A few minor social complications might· require your
attention today, but unless you
cope with them speedily, things
could overflow into the
evening and ruin the entire day.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. The day as a whole
should be a productive one for
yoU doing projects both necessary and fun . Feel good about
jt instead of letting a depressed
person put you in a funk.
SAOnTARIUS (Nov. 23,
Dec. 2t) .. Your communjca-

tive skills are good today, so
long as you' re socializing with .
people. Unfortunately, howev·
er, impatience ,could be your
nemesis when it comes to deal·
ing with co-workers .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·lan.
19) .. Sti,ck to spending your
hard-earned money on neces-

silies and needs or 1he famil y
today. Letting your fri volous
whims get the upper hand will
tum out to be a wasteful exer·
. ci se .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) .. If you're in need or the
cooperation of anolher today,
slick strictly to the facts and ·
you' ll get it. If you attempt to
fabricate your claims, 'it'll be ·
another story.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mnreh 20)
.. Although your mind might
be on chores and the like early
in the day, by evening you
.could be in need of some company, so take time and make
plans while pals an: still rt:ach·
able.
ARIES (Marclt21 ·Aprill9)
.. You might stilt out all gung·
ho today, but if,You're not careful, you could slide into wasting valuable hou,.. on frivolous
endeavors. Be more discrlmi·
n'aling with your tilllll·

�. ~

Page B6

The Da.ily Sentinel

I

errors, ·Rocker's

rough night

•

1\lesday. Aprlll4. 2001

&gt;

o.m.

~
Montreal

Allaru
~ew York
Florida

Eut
W
L
12
6
9 10
9 ,
8
10
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Chicago
12
6 .667
Houston
10
8 .556
. Cincinnati
9
9 .500
8 10 .444
Milwaukee
8 10 .444
St. Louis
7 10 .412
Pittsburgh
Wnl Dlvfolon
W
L Pet
7 .611
San Francisoo 11
Colotado
10
8 .556
10
9 .526
Los Angafes
9
10 .474
Arizona
7 12 .368
San Diego

IIDfidl'r'a
Atlanta 9, Houstan 7
Arizon.i 9, Florida 0
Ph~
San Qiego a·

Booton

Toronto
Now Vorl&lt;

'llloodoy'• -

Atlanta (Parez 1-2) at Houston
(Reynolds ().II. 8:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mats (Rusch Hl) at Milwaukee
jWtlght 2-21. 8:05p.m. ·
Montreal jVazquez 2-1) at St. Louis
CKIIO 2-21.-8:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Taponl 3~1 01 COiotado
CHamplOI\2.01, 9:05p.m.
Floti&lt;la (Ciamonl 1-11 Bl Arizona
!Batista 0.01. 9:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Wolf 001 at san Diego
(Williams 1-21. 10:05 p.m.
Pittst&gt;'Jrgh (OlivareS ().21 at LOS Ange·
les (Pafll2-ll, 10:10 p.ni.
.
Clnckulati {Brower 1.0) at San Frands.
' 10:15 p.m.
co (Hernandez
1-21.

Baltimore
Tlllll'" Say
.
MinneSCIO
Cleveland
Chicago
Kansas City
llelrolt
Seattle

13
12
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3 .824
3
6 .647·
11 .353
8
6
6 12 .333 ~112
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15
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10 10 ,500 5112
. 7 12 .368
8
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Melp County's

Teua (Dovil2•11. T"""*' (IHitoiOitt...
ilont
Nl); 7:05p.m. .. •
Milo- ( -· I-ll IC (CiaWI&lt;Md Hll. 7:05p.m.
- . . (Holllgin 0:21 ·11 Delralt·
(W-1-31. 7:05p.m.
' Anaheim ~SchoeMwlil 1·1) 11 C._.
tand (Colon 2·11. 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Garcia 2~1 ol N.Y. Yonl&lt;aol!
(Clemens 2.01. 7:05 p.m.
KanSIS Clly (IAndllWI 0·21111 TaSay (lopez 2-1), 1:15 p.m.
oakland (ZIIo 2-11 •• Chicago So• (Buetute 1·21. 8:05p.m.

'&gt;0 &lt;t·nh · Apnl 1',

-.-clly'·-

BY CHARLENII HOEFUCN

Texas
HOUSTON (AP) - Gold two-run double and Brian
Anlhelm
1
Glove ce11ter fielder Andruw Jordan's sacrifice fly off
Oakland
I 1/2
2112
Jones made two errors on one Octavia Dotel (1-2) .
Sunday't Glmn
41/2
play. Relief ace John Rocker
Glavine won his eighth
p.m.
NY. Yankees 4, Boston 3, 10 lmings
Wodnolday'a Gomeo
pitched a rough ninth inning. decision in a row overall
Cleveland 11 , Detroit 3
Atlanla at Houston, 8:05 p.m .
Sundliy'• Glm11
Baltimore 10, Tampa Bay 8, 11 Innings
N.Y. Mets at Milwaukee, 8:05p.m.
Montreal 6, Flonda 2
But the Atlanta Braves had against the Astros, improving
Kansas City 5, Toronto 1
Monlrealat St.louis. 8:10p.m. ,
N .Y. Mats 5, Clnclnnatlt
Tom Glavine pitching in to 14-10 against them in his
Minnesota 4, Chk:ago White sox 2
Chicago Cubs at.Colorado. 9:05p.m.
Pinsburgh 4, Chicago Cubs 3, 10
Te11as 11, Oakland 2
Houston, and that's · all they career. He left after 5 2-3 · Inning~
Floti&lt;la at Arizona, 9:35 p.m.
Seattle 5, Anaheim 0
Philadelphia at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.1
' fhiladelphla 3, AUan1a 2
·needed.
mmngs.
·P~tsbiJrgh at los Angelos, 10:10 p.m.
' San Francisco 6, Milwaukee 4
Glavine, who hasn 't lost in
Trailing 5-l. the Astros
Mond•y'l Gamet
Cincinnati at San Francisco. 10:15
San Diego 7, Los Angeles 6, 11 innings
No games scheduled
p.m.
ColOrado 2, Arizona 1
Houston since June 25, 1991 , scored three times in fifth.rakHouston 4 , St Louis 3
ran his win streak in the city to ing advantage of Andruw
nine Monday night, surviving Jones' misplays.
Jones' mjscues · and Rocker's
Chris Truby singled, and one
ArizOna. 17; SSosa, Chicago, .364; Olerud, Seattle, .364.
a three-run shot during ·a six- ASanders.
performance to · help ·the out later, Julio Lugo singled to • lead.
RUNS- Stewart. Toronto, 19; ARo·
17.
HIT$-Vidfo, Montreal, 26; Pujols, St. driguez. TekSS, 19; CDelgado, ToroniO, 17;
Braves beat the Astros 9-7.
center field.Jpnes bobbled the
"If you'd told me we could run fifth inning. ·
Louls;24; Berl«nan, Houston. 24; PWIIson, CEverett, Boston, 17; Lawton, Minnesota,
"Tommy was tough out ball for one error, then chased get seven runs off Glavine. I'd
· Ronda, 24; AJones, Atlanta, 24; LWalker, 16; O'NeiH, New Vorl&lt;. 16; QuiM, Kanoas
ColoradO, 24; Mueller, Chicago, 23; Cily, 15; Koskie, Mlnnesota •.15; JGonz.athere. It was tough out ·there down the . ball and made a have taken it," Astros manager
iez, Cleveland, 15; Galarraga, Texas, 15.
Grudzlelanek. Los Angeles. 23.
for both starters," Braves man~ throwing error that allm.,ted Larry Dierker said. "This was
RBI- MRamlrez, Boston, 21 ; ARo·
OOUBLES-loweu, Florida, 9; Nevin,
San Diego, 8; LStevens, Montreal, 8; PWil· driguoz. TekSs. 19; CDelgado. Tommo, 19;
ager Bobby Cox said.
Lugo to score on the play. not a typical Enron game.
son, Flolida, 7; CJohnson, Florida, 7; JGonzalez, Cleveland , 19; RPalmelro,
Glavine (2-1) lost his first Jones made only IM/O errors in There Weren't a lot of hard hit
Texas, 19; Quinn, Kansas Ctty, 18;
MtWIIIIams, AriZona, 7; 7 arelledwlt116.
TRIPLES----beabrera, Montreal, 2; Daubach, Boston,18; Oletud, Saatlle. 18.
eight career decisions at Hous- all of 2000.
balls out there."
Philadelphia manager Larry OJacksoo,
HIT5-SuztJkl, Sealti&amp;, 30; MRamlraz,
San Diego, 2; LCastillo, Florida.
ton. He's gone 9-0 in 11 starts
"Errors are a part of the
Truby hit his seventh homer Bowa won in his first game 2; Ochoa, Cinclnnall, 2; Vlna, St. LOttls, 2; Boston. 30; Stawar1, Totonlo, 26; Qttlnn,
Kansas City, 26; JaGiatN&gt;I, OOkland, 26;
St. louis, 2; 39 are tied with 1.
at the Astrodome and Enron game," Jones said. "I had 10 of the season off Mike Rem- against the team he guided in Lankford,
HOME RUNs-t.Gonzalez. Atlzona. 11 ; ARodtlguez, TekiS, 28; Btoalus, Now YOlk,
Field since then.
errors year before last and I linger in the eighth for the the late 1980s.
LWalker, Colorado, 9; RSandors, Arizona, 26; Knoblauch, New Yoric, 28.
DOUBlE5--Konerico, Chicago, 8;
8;
san Francisco, 8; Truby, Hous·
"He was · pretty good," was still one ·of the best out- Astros.
The Phillies, who swept ton,Bonds,
7: Sheflleld, Los Angeles, 7; 5 are Ued Greet. TekiS, 8; Soriano, New Yolk, 7;
EChlvez, oakland, 7; JaGiambl, oakland,
catcher Javy Lopez said. "The fielders in the National
Pinch-hitter Wes Helms Atlanta in a three-game series with6.
7; Sordlck, Baltimore, 7; JGonzalez, CIIMtSTOLEN
8ASE5--EYoung,
Chicago,
6;
game was a big lift for us. It League."
doubled home two more runs at home during the ·weekend, SPorez, San DiegO, 5; PWIIson, Aorlcla, 5; land, 7: Velarde, Texas, 7.
TRIPLE5-COuzman. Minnesota, 5;
was a nice break. We've been · Cox disagreed with the calls in the ninth, puairig Atlanta made the long .flight to San DJacl&lt;son; San Diego, 5; Rollins, Phlladal·
AKennody,
2; Dutltam, Chicago,
phla,
4;
VGuerrero.
Monlreal,
4;
LCastlllo,
ahead 9-5. Brad Ausmus hit a Diego and won behind home Aorida, 4; Glanville, Philadelphia, 4; Floyd, 2; CEveren,Anai\Oim,
struggling and we needed a on Jones.
Boston, 2; RSanchez, Kansu
Clly, 2; 32 are lied wilh 1.
· "Did they give him two two-run single in the bottom runs from Travis Lee and Scott Florida, 4.
·
break like this."
HOME RUN5-C0elgedo, ToroniO, 10;
PITCHING
(3
Decislons)-Bete,
ChicaIn other NL games, Arizona errors on that?" Cox asked. "I of the ninth off Rocker.
·
Rolen.
go, 3-o. 1.000. 3.32; Tapanl, Chicago, 3.0, Quinn, Kansas Clly, 8; llaubach, SoSlOn,
beat Florida 9-0 and Philadel- wouldn't even have given· him
~owa managed San Diego 1.000, .96; WMIIIer, Houston, 3 ~ 1 • .750, 7; JG&lt;lnzalez, Cle-nd, 7; O'Neil, Now
Now
2.35; Elari011, Houston, 3-1, .750, 5.09; Yofll, 7; GlatJO, Anaheim, 6;
phia defeated San Diego 5-3. one for the fielding. It' was a
from 1987 until he was fired RROtllz, San Francisco, 3-1, .750. 2.70; Yofll, 6; ARodriguez. TekSs, 6; MRamlrez.
· The Brav.es, swept in a tough play right at him and
on May 28, \988.after a .16-30 OFernandoz. Cincinnati, 3·1, .750, 4.84; Boston, 6.
STOLEN BASEB--Knoblauch, New
Astaclo, Colorado, 3-1 • .750, 1.93; Reed,
three-game series at Philadel- the throw was good, too. To
start.
New YOlk, 3-1, .750, 1.99; Cllovlne, Atian11, Yoric, 7; Cedeno. DotroH, 6; ClWIIIIomo.
Tampa Bay, 6; Curtis, Texu, 5; 7 are tied
3-1..750, 3.98.
phia during the weekend, held me, he doesn't get any errors
NL L-ra
STRIKEOUT5-RDJohnson, Arizona, with 4.
on at the end.
on that play."
Randy Johnson struck out
PITCHING (3 Doclslons)-Michalak,
49; WMIIIat, Houston, 40; SchHIIng, Aria-o. t.ooo. 1.82; M111011. MinnesoDown 9-5, the Astros scored
Jeff Bagwell had an RBI 10 in his 29th career shutout, . BATTING-Pujols: St. Louis. .375; . zona, 38; Wood, Chicago, G2; Astaclo, Col· Toronto,
LWalker. C\)loredo • .369; Aurilla, San Fran- oraclo. 29; Buil&lt;alt, Atlan11, 28; RROrtiZ. ta, 3-o, 1.000, 3.12; Radko, M - . 4twice with two outs in the double off Glavine in the first. and Reggie Sanders homered cisco, .361; Bettonan, Hou8lon, .353; Oarr. San Francisco, 24; Person, Phlladelphte, 0, 1.000. 2.2a; DOIIver, Tous. 4.0, 1.000,
· 5.24; Sole, Seolde, 3.0, 1.000, 2.25;
ninth inning off Rocker. With Dotel's wildness got him in again ~s Arizona beat Aorida San Diogo, .344; Holandswotlh, ColotBdo, 24; Patk, Los Angeles, 24. ·
.339; VanderWal. Plll&amp;llutgh, .333; Jllell,
SAVES-Fassero, Chicago, 9;· "'en, Moyer, Seallle, a.o. 1.000; 4.09; lollza,
runners on second and third, trouble in the second when he at Bank One Ballpark.
Artzona, .333.
San Francisco, 6: Shaw, Los Angeles, 6; Toronto, 3-1, .750, 2.81 ; Pettlttt, NewYoric,
RUN8-4..Gonzalez,
Arti:ona,
21:
Hel·
JJimenez,
Colorado, 5; Rocker, Atlanta. 5; 3-1, .750, 2.97.
Rocker retired pinch-hitter walked Quilvio Veras and
Johnson pitched a six-hitter ton, Colorado, 19; Floyd, Florida, 17; Bark· Graves, Cincinnati,
STRIKEOUTS-PMatllnez. Bollon, 44;
S; BWagner, Houston.
Tony Eusebio on a fly ball to -Giavine, setting up RBI singles and walked none in his second min, Houston, 16; TWalker, Coforado, 16; 5; Mesa, Philadelphia, 5.
Zlto, Oaldand, 31; Hudson,. OOklond, 26;
Loaiza, Toronto, 26; Colon, Ctei!Oiond,)5;
end it.
by Rafael Furcal and Andruw straight complete game.
Womack, Arizona, 16; ~umltz, Milwaukee,
AL Lellderl
CCarpenter. Toronto. 24; Helling, Taxao,
16; Bagwell, Hou&amp;lon, I ; Biggio, Hou&amp;lon,
The Braves, averaging only Jones.
24; Alopez, Tampa Bay, 24.
Sanders,
the
National 16; LWatker, Colorado, 16.
SAVE5-5asakl, Sealtle, 9; HIIWidns;
RBILGonzalez,
Arizona,
22;
BATTING-MRamlrez,
Boston,
.417;
2.79 runs through their first
Rico Brogna had a two-run League player of the week, LSievens, Montreal, 20: lWalker, Col- JaGiarnlll, Oakland, .413; DOtllz. Mlnneso- Minnesola.
5; Koch, Toronlo, 4; FoUI&lt;e,
19 games. topped that in the single off Jay Po"':'ell in the homered for the seventh time orado, 20; JHemandez, Milwaukee, 1B; ta, ,gag; Konefl(o, Chicago, .373; Stewart, Chicago, 4; Crablreo, TOkll, 4; TBJono&amp;,
first inning on Chipper Jones' seventh, giving Atlanta a 7-4 in six games. He connected for Lowell, Florida, 17; Bumltz, Milwaukee, 17; Toronto, .373; Mlentkiewicz, Minnesota. Detroft, 4; RMHemend 0z, Kanoas Clly, 4.

POMEROY Salem Center
Elementary School in the Meigs
Local School District will close -at
the end of this school year.
The Board of Education voted
last night to close the school after a
lengthy discussion. Principal Rusty
Bookman and several staff members
were at the meeting.

•

•I

The Reds were off Monday
prior to opening the road trip
Tuesday night in San Francisco.
On Sunday, the Reds were
one-for-five with runners in
scoring position. During the
past six games, they were
eight-for-56 (.142) with runners in scoring position.
In the meantime, they have
wasted good pitching. The
Reds' starting pitchers - the
No. 1 concern coming into
the season - posted a 2.49
earned fUn average during the
past seven games. The Reds
were 4-3 in those games.
"You go through periods
when you don't hit," Boone
said. "You go through periods
when you mash the ball and
you don't get ·go~itching.
"We're doing .some things

declining enrollment in the district,
there is adequate room in the Rutland building to accommodate the
extra classes, with no class to have
more than 20 students.
The new Meigs Local Elementary School to go under construction this summer will be completed
in 2003, and all elementary students
Will be moved into the new school.
rn other business , the board

approved the revised permanent
appropriations for the 2000-2001 .
fiscal year in the amount of
$29,480;353 .
In personnel matters, Ron
Logan's retirement and resignation
as a reacher at Meigs High School
was accepted; Ron Hill, David
Ramey and Marge Fetty were hired
as tutors for health handicapped

Phae ... S11.... AJ

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SENTINEL: NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - . Advertising for construction
bids on the new M eigs Local Elementary .
School along Ohio 124 near Rutland will
begin soon.
Meeting Tuesday night after visiting the
building site, the Board of Education passed a
·resolution authorizing the commencement of
bidding arid subsequent review of the bidS for
the elementary school, the estimated cost of
which is $10,138,926 .
r
Jeff Engram of the Quandel Gn;l\lpcth!: CQnstruction manageinent firm , ms~.~aard
members to review the project beA:IQ!l.;~~h!.'Y
voted to move forward on !the ·biddil);g pt:Qcess.'
Lastweek the board opened bids 'o'r}''t~;fi~~:
work and the apparent low bidd"t .was ·G eorge
I gel and Co. of Columbus. Engram said a meet-.
ing with !gel and Co. will be held· today to
review the bid which came in at $560,930, well

•

................ AJ

GUITAR ·
GIVE-AWAYCurtis
Spencer,
owner and proprietor of
Spencer
Music, continues work on a
custom-made
guitar built to
depict the geographical outline of Meigs
County. The 1
electric guitar"
will be given.
away during
the Pomeroy
Blues and Jazz
Society's Big
Bend Blues
Bash on July
28. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

events and food / drink vendors, said
Jackie Welker, president of PB&amp;Js.
~urtis $pencer, owner and proprietor of Spencer. Music, has been
~rking on the g11itar for several
weeks ;md said Tuesday the wood
used to create the body of the
·
fi
· · h.
·
mstrument came rom Wit m Me1gs
C
t)'
?.~
h·
·
ill
oever Wins t ." gmtar "':
have a permanent ptece of Metgs
C·ounty... sat'd Spencer. "Whether
I
.
h' b
'ful
you p ay gut~r or n~t, t ts eautt
InStrument IS defimtely one~of-a­
kind.
"The guitar will have an experiPIMH - Gulbir, AJ

·

·

Looking over construction
plans at the site of the new elementary school
on Ohio ·124 near. Rutland Tuesday night were
from the left, Wayne Davis and Randy
Humphreys, board members, M!;lrk E. Rhone'
mus. treasurer. Jeff Engram of Quandel, construction · management firm, Supt. William
Buckley, John Hood, Board president. and Scott
Walton and Roger Abbott, members.

VIEWING SITE -

.'
.

Hlp: 70s
Low: COS

Tocl.y'l

Sentinel
2 Sidlonl - 12 Pllpl

Call
992-2155

·~

lotteries

"

FROM STAFF REPORTS

~C~Qum.u:ic!toisL:-"-'----"B,.S Budtl~ 5: 14-22-30-36-37

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or

'Editorials
Objtuarjes
Sports
weather

M

A3 W.VA.

8!.3-4.6 .,...,' :S.: 0--7-4 Dilly 4: 3-3-9-8 . '

A2

C 2001

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

Qonors turn out for Bloodmobile visit

Details,A2

Jo&lt;Ca~~~lelilo~d~~~OL.r_ _ ____.,AS"" OHIO .
·
....clllla~sswifiLUe.,'d.,.s_ _ __..B,. 2=4..;x Pick :s: 1-4-3; Pick 4: 1·3-3·1

Dabble Call Ext. 16
'~I

ose.

00

Melg~ County FaiJ:llly_~ul) _f.!lJ!t.. i~LQ!Ml..blgJJWitl.genl!r~~ai event that cent~, 011 the f~mlly. It will be held
at Eastern Elemi!lfta~~.School ~!!:J'rday 10 f!;rr;\· to 2·p;~. There wiJ' be healt~' screl!l'\l~~. ~nd learning activIties·, as wen_.as a variety of· interactive games and entertainment &lt;;lurfr:tg the day. Here, some represents. tlves of the participating agencies ' look over the door prizes to be awarded during the day. They are, from
left, s~ated, Brenda Phalln, ' MargJe Skidmpre, Bonl'jle McFarland and Brenda turfman of ,Melgs County
Health Department programs; and standing, Suzy LeMay, ACCESS; VIcki Woods . ACCESS Head Start; Rhonda Dailey, ~·er.~ns Memorial Hospital; and Diana Jeffers, Holzer.Meigs Clinic. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

of

If Your Business'
Is Interested In
Participating In
This Special.Section;

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCN

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF · . '
~O~ROY - A custom-made
~~.tar ~~ the shape of Me1gs County. 1s bemg made for a ~ontest that
will help fund. Pomeroy s first ever
blues-rock festival:
.
The electnc gu1tar, wh1ch depicts
·h
·
h' a1
tl.
f
t e umque, geograp 1c ou me o
Meigs County, will be given away
during a drawing July 28 at the Big
B end Blues Bash Festl.val .
1· i n·val , sponThe two -daymuscres
sored by Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
Society, ~ feature a number
national apd regibnal folk, blues and
blues-rock performers. as well as a
large number of artisans, special

There will be a special edition
on Thursday,\May l7thsaluting
_o ur Meigs County Graduating
Seniors

·Meigs

•

.
•

•

decently. I'm satisfied with the
pitching," he said: "But we're
not anywhere near hitting on
all cylinders."
'
Griffey's injured hamstring
has limited him to periodic
duty as a pinch hitter. There is
no timetable on when he will
return to full-time duty.
Without him, the Reds are
suffering a major power shortage. They entered Sunday 12th
in the National League in
home runs and 11th in runs
batted in.
Shortstop· Barry Larkin isn't
overly concerned.
"We're very capable. When
we get whole again, we'll do
the things we're capable or:·
Larkin said.

third. Andy Parsons then msurance ron on another
ground one to the right of passed ball.
first baseman Eric Runyon.
Knapp scattered seven hits,
Runyon made the play, and .struck out seven and walked
hom Page II
the southpaw spun and threw four. Stanley led Meigs with a
Meigs took the lead for a strike to home to nail Crab- double and a ,single, Detgood in the bottom of the tree with what was to be the twiller added a pair of singles.
Thacker \vas · the hard luck
fourth inning with out the tying run: Knapp then struck
benefit of a base hit. Once out the next batter to end the loser for the Rockets. He gave
'again Bullington led off' the inning.
. up four hits, struck out eight
inning with a walk, and he • Meigs closed out the scor- · and walk four. Essman had a
stole second and third, and he ing in the top of the fifth pair of singles to lead Wellcam&lt; into score on a Skip inning. Nick D~ttwiller sin- stan, Crabtree and Kisor eac h
gled, but was later erased on a had doubles, and Parsons,]. B.
Dodson sacrifice fly.
The
Golden
Rockers run down play between ~hird King and Thacker each had ·
threatened in the top of. the and home. Matt Stewart single.
Meigs will play at Alexanfifth inning. Colin Crabtree. stru ck out, but reached when
doubled off the left field fen ce the baU eluded the qtcher. der today. The Marauders
to lead off the inning. Kisor Stewart moved the second on travel to Belpre on Wednesthen grounded unassisted to a walk to Runyon and stole · day. ,
first to move Crabtree the third . He then sco red the

'

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V\\1\-V~ 'Tl \(, 11 \- \+rl.'lltiCOfll

forbids on
school to
soon

· BY ToNY M. LEAcH
•

CINCINNATI (AP) The pitching has been sound,
but not having Ken Griffey Jr.
available hasn't helped the
Cincinnati Reds, who are 9-9
as they head West to start a
. road trip.
The Reds are suddenly
struggling at the plate after
having their five-game winning streak snapped last week.
Their 5- 1 defeat Sunday at the
hands of the New York Met&lt;
was Cincinnati's third loss in
the last four games .
After scoring eight runs in
the first three innings Friday
night, the Reds only managed
to score four runs during !he
next 23 innings. ·
"Mama said there'd be days
like these," manager Bob
Boone said. "She just didn't.
say this many."

.·-. .. (
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II

Guitar
fund· ue-rock

•

• •

l1

Mlrldlt·port • PUill"ruy
'\.;
,

i'-'·

Fun Fest·

POMEROY
It's
about lighting the path of
hope and a community
taking up the fight against
cancer.
The Meigs County
Relay for Life will be at
Eastern f:ligh School starting at 6 p.m. Friday and
continuing until noon Saturday.
The opening ceremony
·will feature the cancer survivors' victory lap around
the track marked by luminaries. The rest of the time
teams who have sought
donations prior to the relay
will walk the track lined
with votive canfiles nestled
in bags of kitty litter in a
sl,~ftQ.but.e, to,,~~e
w.OO.:llliv.~, ~.capcer. .
1{hmeH\ately following
the kickqff as ~he teams·
take up the relay, a recep~~

i'

,.,,,

Relay for
Life set
at Eastern

' ... Life, AJ
Jlllsnre
'

Reds struggling at plate
as they begin road trip

•,;

The closing was discussed last board voted unanimously to close
summer but because of parent con- the school. There were no objeccerns no action Was taken, but it tions from the principal or the staff
was specified at that time the mat- ·members attending.
ter would be revisited as a part of
The students .and the staff will be
the current t?udget process. ·
- ' transferred to the 'Rutland school
· Because of th~ declining enroll- where each grade will be divided
ment.- only 52 students would be into two classes. Another kinderreturning next year and the garten teacher will be hired, Super~
school's condition, along with uti!- intendent William Buckley said.
ity ahd maintenance costs, the
He said because of general

SENTINEl I&gt;IEWS STAFF

Po-.

REDS NOTEB.OOK

\n•l

Texas at Toronto. 7:05 p.m.

Min-ta alljostoo, 7:05p.m•
Anaheim al Clovo4Bnd, 7:05 p.m.
8altlmot'e at Delrolt, 7:05p.m.
Seattle at N.Y. Yonkees, 7:05p.m.
Kansas Clly at Tempo Bay, 7:15p.m.
oakland at Chicago White Sox, 8:05

D·backs 9,
Marlins 0

i

Jl!f' • -

Hometown- Newspaper

em

Phillies 5,'
Padres 3

.I

Wednesday

f

'

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Braves outlast
..

Astros desp!te

SPOilS: South~rn girls win; Eagles keep on rollin', 11

POMEROY, - Meigs County residents donated 55 units of blood during
the American Red Cross' Bloodmobile
visit last week at the Senior Citizens
Center. ·
Donors by cotnmunity were·
..
··
POMEROY - Pjul Marr, Thomas Hart, David
King, Cyndl King, G"ald Rought, Dennis Gilmore.
Jackie Hildebrand, li!~ll Ohlinger, Marvin Taylor,
Barbara Smith, ·Be1ty
Coughenour, Jacky
I

Coughenour, Mary Voss, Raymond Jewell, Janet
Peavley, Deborah Grueser, Roger . Gaul, .Ellis
Myers, Roben Ramsburg, Michael Taylor, Geoffrey
Wilson, Virgil Windon, Barbara Crow, Rhonda
Davis, Sampson Hall, George Harris, Jr .. Bethany
Cremeans, and Tyson Mugrage.
. RACINE ~ Evelyn Mugrage, Charles Mugrage.
Barbara Dugan, Shari Bobb, ·Sheila Theiss, Paula
· Bro!"n, Michele Sayre, Gary Walker, Randall
Arnold, EliZabeth Ayres . - Thoren , .Rtchard
Dugan, and Arthur Roush;
MIDDLEPORT - Jennifer Garey, Donna Hawley, William ·Cook, Robert Barton, Trlsh Garey,
Anna Browning, Michael Wilfong, Bonnie Smith,

Marcia King, Linda Haley, Elaine Ralston, and Erin
Ralslon ;
SYRACUSE - Darla Thomas.
LONG BOTTOM - Henry Bahr, Oris Smith.
Urban Graf, and Susie Karr;
RUTLAND - Marta Blackwood, Terry George, .
Jeremy Richmond, Robin Haning, Iva Sisson.
Robert Sisson, and Eric Mozingo;
REEDSVILLE - Carolyn Barton, Amy Davia
and Betsy Nicodemus;
•
PORTLAND - Michael Duhl;
COOLVILLE - Dove While and Robert White;

Pleese sM l_)onor, Al

•

Dave Harris • Ext. 15
Before May 5, 2001

Holzer Health Hotline

55
'

If you have heallh questions or concerns, call the Holzer Health Hotline ·
and speak to a specially,trained Holzer Medical Center R.N.

6 am
:t--:::::l

\1W \

-==eo.Jt
,,

2

Cllll,

7 clays • W.ek

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

Check '.Vith your physician about medication concerns.

•..

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