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•

Meigs High National
· Honor Society
inductees, A3

Party N S~ operis, 'As

"
at

.
lne
~

e

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-~

.)o &lt;'I ·. ;\; IS • \'ol. .)-J . No. 1.) ~

Jo'IUDAY; ,\J'KII .

Cash ~onations, materials for jail renQvation near $5,000

SPORTS
• Marauders rally to down
. Southern. See Page 81

J.

Beegle acknowledged a .also have matlc contrihut i\lllS . Shelby. as the Depanment of
donation : ~ · from
Beegle said he is continuing Rehabilitation and Cori·ection s
Downing -C hild s-Mu ll en- to complete paperwork and has recommended.
.· POMEROY .- Individual s Musser Insurance, $ 100 from plan repairs in preparation for
Beegle said upcoming
and organizati ons have co n ~ . the Fraternal Order of Eagles a state inspection by. the state repair projects including the
tributed $4,600 toward the Aerie 2 171 Auxiliary, mid jail commiss ion. in hopes of i nstallati on of .a privacy wall ·
re novation of the M eigs $50 from Devere and Bonnie aga ih housing short-term in the jail's shower area. dinCounty Jail, and have donat- White of Racine, the latest ·inmates in the local jail. He stallati on of new electric
ed time and materi al s to the . cas h contributions made for said. he is also working on the locks on tha jail's perimiter
project, · Sheriff
Robert the renovation of the jaiL development of a jail policy doors. constru ction of a book Beegle told Meigs County C hurch groups. · veteran s and . procedure manual. based ing area and visi tor's booth.
Commissioners Thursday.
organizations. and indi vidual s on one fron~ the Ci ty of and minor elec tri ca l work .
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

$500

Using Dowers to
·remember loved ones

.

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OBITUARIES '
·Page AS
• Edith M. Barton, 86 ·
• Jack L. Boyd, 67
• Warren Faulk, 18 • Delbert Patterson, 91
'

""" · m~dail~"' "'"" ' ' • " '"

1. :!00.)

.

INSIDE
• Family Medicine.
See Page A2
• Mason County man
r~lls century of
memories. See Page A3
• ·Memorial service .
scheduled: See Page .AS
• A Hunger For More.
.See Page A6
• Area hospital plans major
addition. See Page AS .

Beth Sergeatjphoto

Michelle Stahl takes pride in decorating her grandparents' graves
at Rocksprings Cemetery and has begun Tears of Memories
(TOM), an organization that donates flower mangements used
for grave decoration to those who cannot aff01 d th$1. Stahl uses
new -artificial flowers and recycles discarded arrangements,
vases and baskets into. refurbishec;l arrangements.

.

BY BRIAN

WEATHER

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - United Fund for
· Meigs County distributed the balance
of $12,000 in 2005 allocations to
charitable organizations servin·g the
community at its annual meeting on
Thursday.

.Please see Jail. AS

Southern High
looking.for new
band director

BY BETH SERGENT

BY Bmt SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

by the dea th of l'er best
friend's infant son and how
it was difficult to find the
. J=:OMEROY - Now that money for the baby 's funeral
spring is sprung, !lowers are let alone any !l ower arrangebegin.ning to bloom and ments.
Stahl
made an
artificial ones are be ginning arrangement for ·the baby
to decorate the graves of and is currentl y wo rkin g on .
loved ones, but not all the a wreath . .
graves.
Stahl uses her own money
When Michelle Stahl dec- to buy new artificial flowers
orates her grandmother · and also recycles old ones to
Mattie 's grave she points donate to people in need.
out surrounding headstone s · " I believe fl owers bring
that have not been touched happiness,"
Stahl
said.
or decorated in · years and . "A nybody can come to me,
wonders what happened to no matter the reason to put a
the tradition of grave deco- !lower on a loved one's
ration.
grave."
•
"A lot of people weren't
She hopes to get volunraised that grave decoration teers for her organi zation or
is an important thing to do," donations of old foam , flowStahl said, '.' 1 was raised that ers, vases or ba skets that
it was an 'important thing to would otherwi se be thrown
do that. "
away. These materials can be
Stahl recently began Tears recycl ed into a gesture
of Memories (TOM) which · meant to remember a person .
is an organization . that Donations of new artificial
donates !lower arrangements flowers will also be appreciused for grave decoration to ated.
families that ·cannot afford
If anyone is interested in
them.
• TOM, they may 'call Stahl at
Stahl says ·she was moved 992-72 15.

.

United Fund distributes 2005 allocations at annual meeting
.

Beegle said a loca l man has
volunteered to complete the
e l e~.: t rical wurl-. . and Gheen
Industrial Painting has agreed
to construct th ~ shower wall.
At their regular meetiAg yes.
terday. commissioners also
acknowledged the donation of
mitterals
from
PDK
Construction Co., for repair to

Treasurer Tom Dooley and 2005 '
Campaign ·
Chairman
James
Mourning distribute~ third and
fourth-quarter checks to repre sentatives of the Riverbend Arts Council,
Meigs · County . Museum
and
Historical Society, Serenity House,

RACIN E Besides the
defeat of dual bus routing, the
recent, regular meeting of.the
Southern Local School Board
consisted of . the resignation
of Southern )-ligh School
Band Director, Ben Hagar,
effective at the end of the .
school year.
Superintendent Bob Grueser
said he is currently taking and
reviewing applications 'in
order to fill the position.
- The board also approved
the following motions:
• Resolution requesting solve ncy assistance funds be
released.
• Approved permanent
appropriations by fu nd level.
• The payment of mileage
. in lieu of transportation to
Kim Sellers. mother of D.J.
Sellers, effective March I, at
a rate of 25 cents per mile,
and payment of mileage in
lieu of tran sportati on to Carla
Hopton , mother of Carla
Turner, effecti ve March 2 1, at
a rate of ~5 ceftts per mile for .
the after.noon route only due

Please see Southem, AS.

'

BANK AWARDS PRIZEs·

Please see Fund, AS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS - 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds

A3

Comics

Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith • Values
Movies
l\lASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather .

Charlene Hoetllch/plloto

A6-7

As ·. \

Brian J. Reed/photo

88

United Fund for Meigs County 2005 Campaign Chairman James Mourning and
Treasurer Tom Dooley,. far left, presented 2005 final allocation checks to Vicky Baer
As and Brittany r&lt;i \ilson of the Meigs County Humane Society, Diana Coates of the
8 Section Meigs County Council on Aging RSVP /Seniors in Schools program, Hilda Stotts,
UFMC president and Serenity House director; Mary Wise of Riverbend Arts Council,
AS · Tom Reed of Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency, Rev.. Keith Rader of God's NET
© 2005 ohio Valley Publishing eo.
and Meigs County Cooperative Parish.. and Teresa Stewart of Holzer Hospice.

As part of the Farmers Bank 100th anniv~rsary celebration , a 10()-prize giveaway was held with the drawing .of winners taking place Thursday afternoon.
Ninety of the prizes were donated by area merchants with 10, including the
grand prize of ~ four-&lt;Jay all expense paid trip to CanclJI')( Mexico ~ing ·provided by Farmers Bank. Winner of the grand prize listed on the board as "22"
was Wanda Rizer of Pomeroy. From the · thousands of entries Paul RE!ed
pulled out Rizer's name for the big win as Mark Groves, executive vice pres, ldent, Mary Beth Preston of the Pomeroy Bank, ·a,nd Missy Mayes of the
·
Gallipolis Bank look on.

Holzer Medical Center solutes Gollio County's Third Annual

.SK Walk for Autism
SGturday; Jlprfl· 2 • II. AM
(Registration - 10 AM • Speakers - 10:45' AM)

Gallipolis City Parle
Autism is a disorder of the brain that affecis as many as 1 out ol every 250 births and
i.s the foslest-growing developmental di~b(lity. (Autism Society ol Amenco) •

Show your support! Everyone invited! $5.00 1'89istratiordee.
·
T·Shirts - S12.00
.

HOPE Intervention at

Far more information,
or

call

Me Growot

·"Healthcare.in Your
·· Own Barkyard"
· www.holzer.org ·

446-6187.

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Page A2

MMUNilY

The Daily ;;entinel

Fa1nily Medicine

Community C~lendar ..
~

.

POMEROY .
Meigs E. Burke , Racine. $25 . proba- plates: Travis H. Childress, Mary J. Francis, Middleport,
mone b:heLI medicatiorb are Coun t\· Court Judge Steve n L. "tion .. speeding, $750, 180 Pomeroy, $30 and costs. s~at $70. 180 days in jail. suspendbei ng "'e J io le"en hot Stnr") ·rece ml y pr~xe"ed the days in jail. 160 suspended, belt violation, $20 and costs. ed, probati on, drug abus.e;
tlJ,he,. All are showing 'ome rotiL111 in~ case"
probation. DUI: Charles E. failure to control.
·
~arvin K. Gardner, Vmton,
Furid- M. Aboukamar. Cade. Middleport. $ 115 .40, •, . Rebecca A. Clendenin. $20 and costs, failure. to conpmm ise. hut not in ewryone.
One tha t has see n some sue- Athen,. 550 ami costs. speed- 30 days· in jail. suspended, Ravenswoo&lt;t, W.Va., 530 and trot :
Mansa A. . Gray,
ce" is n~n l afaxi ne (Effexo r). rn!!:
Paul N.
Ad ams. probation.
pass ing · bad · costs, speeding : Donald R. Pomeroy. 51 00 and costs. 30
Thi, medicati on is c!a,s ified B;\rbours,·ille. W.Va .. $50 and checks: Fa ith A. Cade. Conley, Logan. $50 and costs, days in jail. suspended, probaa' a 'elec·tive 'erotnn in reup- c·osb. speeding: William G:• Middle porl. $119.98. 30 days speeding.: ~onya M ..Connolly. tion . nl) operator 's license;
take in hi bit n· 1 ~--"'~i ,. ' '0 \1 Ahdmon. Rut land. $30 and in_jail, suspended. probation, Mason. wya.. $ 30 and costs. p ti s D . Guthri e, Alb~n7- $50
I"" e heard uf SSRJ", · ' · L"os ts. ,cat belt violati on: passing bad checks.
seat belt v10latton: Heather J. and costs. 30 days in Jatl, su sa trea tmc·nt for depre"ion. :"&gt;1i&lt;: hael W. Appel. Rutland.
Frank E. Camelin. Vinton, Coy. Colutt!bus. $30 and pended . probation . di sorderly
· ·: Wh y t he·~ IJelp '\' rne women no .ass ured clear di stance : $70. 30 days in· jajl, suspend- costs, speedmg: Donald C. conduc t: Ro oer V. Hager, .
.(' itil tlll'll\&gt;pau,al 'ymptom&gt; Gten n S. Austin . Miami, Fla .. ed, probation, use/possessi0n - Davi s, Dublin, $30 and cosrs Hurricane, W.va., $5\J -and
Que, liu n: Af0 lhllr~ ;rny " &gt;till not umk r." o6o. Other $50 and costs. speeding; Glen dru g _para_p_herna, $200, 30 spe~ding ; Timothy N. Deem, cost_s. sn.:eding: Richard W.
new · m ~dicatiolh Alr . . uppk·~ dru~' in thi' l'i;"s are also
•
L. Beachy. Applec reek..5"·' 0 d ays rn Jat1, 23 suspen de d, R acrne . . $30
. an d co sts·'. seat Hanin g,~' Albany. $30 ancj ' ···
rn en t' that ;rrc "' .Iilah it- . fur hdng "udi~d: t h~.'l' iill'iude and c:osts, seat bel t violation : probation, DWI and or drugs belt \IOltron , Tammy . S. costs. speeding.
the
. hot.
llrs hc, 1 \lf pw·ox~t i lllc' iPa.xill and sertra- . Doni van
P.
Beeler, of abuse, . probatton , dnvrng· D1llard, Galhpohs •. $30 and
Billy J. Jones. Reedsville,
m ennp a use·~ I Jnn't \\'ant to linc' IZo loftl. ~ n ~lder blond · Reedsvi ll e. 550 and costs. under susp/revoc ; probatiOn. costs, seat belt vtolauon : Bntt $SO and costs. speeding ;
take horm nne,. hu t I
prc·» ure . mcur&lt;:, tt ron . cal led ~firearms/motor ve hicle; Stacy vto-startlng/backmg: Dav1d S. Dodson, MJddlepon, $30 . Dawn M. Jones, Rac ine, $30
su meth ing to help me ge t ~ ldomet•.' d b~ bem~ m v~str- J. Bishop. Middleport . $30, M. Cam(). Racme, $ 150, 30 and costs, speedtng : Mr c~ael and costs. speeding; James E.
throu gh thi s.
,_,rted as ts the clomd1 ne p.1tch . . seat b~lt violation: Jason A. ~ays in Jatl. sp$pended, proba- D. Dorst, !=haun~ey, $50 and Kennedy. Pomeroy. S 00 and
Answer: Vasomotor symp- - used fo r hlood press ure ,rs Bo uohan. Lima. $30 and non. reckless operatton •. $50, costs, speedmg. Troy . A. costs 30days in jail. s 1uspendtoms or ' me nop;ruse - hot " 'ell as ' mok&gt;n g cessat1on. cost;. speeding: Sherri e D. probauo , fmlure to .control: · Eltck; Thornvtile: $200 and .. d ' robation · no driver
lbshe\ - atfec l abo ut 85 These dnr lfs are all w mmon- Branham. Pomeroy. $50 and Larry E.11 Carle, Bahtomore, costs, 30 days tn Jatl , 27 susP
Ch '. t 'h
perce nl nf all wo men in what tr pr~sntbcd , rn ed&gt;catmn s: L"Os ts. speedin g.
$30 and costs, . .speeding ; pended, drivin g . under . ~cen~e\ C I n~ op ;;0 1d
· doct or's i: all rhe
pe rr- blll lim . doesn 1 mean your
C hri s A. Brown. Pomeroy, B-rando(J
R. · Carpenter, susp/revo·c ; Matthew S. · 'rn. re • 0 ~m. us. · an
rn enopausal period. T h&gt;s i.' ph?srcwn .should n ecessan ly $200 and costs. 60 days in Middlep9rt, $30 and costs, Evans, Portland, $30 . and cost~.. : peedmg . . Roger S.
th e phase bef&lt;, re m e n ~ pau 'e pr esc rr lle the~ll ~~~ you. .
. jail , 50 days suspended. pro- seat belt .violation ; Steven R. costs, seat belt vrolallqnr : Kupolsch, Elllart, Ind ., $325 ,
actually takes pl ace . when - He nr she · &gt;til need 10 bat ion. driving under fra susp: C hapell, Pomeroy, $200 and Christina
M. · Feldhaus, specdtng: Kathy Lambert,
ovarian hormone producti on rev re i\' your personal medical · Matthe w
T.
Brown, costs, 30 days in jail, 27 sus- Cincmnati , $20 and costs, dts- Dexter. $50 and costs, 30 days
is d ec linin ~ and ll uctu at in!!. hiS tory and yo ur curr~ nt Middleport. $70. 30 days in · pended. probation, driving play plates/valid st.rcker: . r.n pll, suspended, Jlrobatton,
causing a host of sy mpto ms. sy mptom pattern be fore jail. suspe nded. pro bation, un&lt;fer fra susp, $70. pr?ba- Ashley R. Fraley: Galhpohs. contnbutmg to delmquency
It usuall y occ urs three or fou r deci din g if an y or them disorderly cond uct: N icholas " tion . use of unauthonzed $20 and costs, tmted glas~ : of chtld.
years ba ore menopause. but shoul d be tried as a tieatment
can stan as earl y as I0 w 15 for you r menopa usal sy mpyears pri or to menopause . . to ms.
A' ' tnall study hcts rece ntl y
· Whe neve r the vasomotor
been
clone using an witih1stasymptoms of perimeno pause
called
cetirizine ·
begin: they typically last for m1ne
several years. The &gt;y mptoms lZyrtec) tn decrease vasomousuaily cons·isl of flu sh ing lor sy mptoms. It has yie lded
and an unexpected feel ing of some promi sing result s. but
warmth or heat )hat moves up more research will be needed
toward th e head, frequent ly be fore •most physicians will
associated with sweating. feel comfonable using this
While generall y only lasting med icati on t(Jr the treatment
a few minutes. such hnt !lash- of hot fl as hes.
es can cause significant sleep
Herbal
and
over-the . depri vation if they occ ur fre- co unt er product s like vitamin
que ntl y duririg the night.
B. VItamin E, evening primHot tlashes al so can be rose oil. and certain soy p~o­
associated with palpitations teins rimy have some benefit .
and dizzin ess. For many in some women . However, I
women . Llsing est roge n' sup- caution yo u hot to try any
pleme nlation to lessen these suppleme nt to treat yoursel f
evenb is not an option . The without tirst having an ingood ne.ws is -that the re is dcptll di sc ussion wilh your
ongoing rese-arch into non- phys ician.
hormonal treatment s. Here ·
are a few tips that you can try_ Family Medici11e® is a
on your own and a couple ot weekly ·colunm. To submit
thing' you may want to dis- quesli[Jns, write to Martha A,
cuss with your phys ician.·
Simpso11, D.O. , M.B.A. , at
Specializing in:
· Earl y research found that Ohio {}niversity College of
·t1 Bankruptcy
· exei·c ise lessened hQt tlas.hes. Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
but' some more recent Stlldics Box II 0, Athens, Ohio
provide ev idence th at thi s 45701, or via e-mail to readtl Charge OWs
ma y not . be true. Some erque .! lions @j"amilJ!Iiledi446-9800
t1 And MORE!!
wome.n )1ave found th at prac- cinenews.org. Medic()? injotticing yo~a. as well as various . motion in tlris colwnn il" proAPPIV Todav ... Drive Todav!
forms ot medit~ion.
can be vided as an edu·cational ser,,.
quite help f ul.
vice mrly. It does 1101 replace
Caffeine , alcohol. nicotine the jr~dgmenl of your personand spicy fo od can make hot at physician, who should be
Diane McVey
fla shes wo rse . .You should relied 011 to diag11ose a11d
M.A., C C C-A
avoid . these thi n~s. Niaci n. recommend treatment . J~r
Owm:r &amp; Audlolugisl
vi ta min B-3 . should also · he any medical conditions. Past
Oxygen
For Your Home Or
avo ided - . it can cause tlu.sl1- . coi1111111s are available online
Thr Lmjr CoiiiP&lt;!Il) .,-ith
BIG Sen•ict
Business!
in g eve n in those who a re not at
www.familymedicinePRESCRIPTION
menopau sal. Some nnn-hor- new.~ . org.
Always on High Speed

Doctor may
have nonhormone
(reatment for
hot flashes

Friday, April t ,

Friday, April1, 2005

MEIGS (OUN1Y COURT &lt;NEWS
~

Pagt.• ·\:~

The Daily Sent~nel

rn,,,.

"f."J

f· •

'

Public meetings

training room . The public is , will be held at 7:30 p.m. at
invited to attend .
the temple .
. ·
Thursday, April 7
MIDDLEPORT
Saturday, Apnl 2
POMEROY
_ Publi c Middleport
Community
PORTLAND .
The , meeting on ODOT Statewide Association will rneet at 8: 30
Lebanon Township Trustees Transportation Improveme nt a'.m. at the Peoples Bank .
Will meet at . 7 : ~0 p.m. al the Program allowing publi c
. MASON.
W.Va.
townshtp bmldtng.
review and comment on four -· Stewart-Johnso n
VFW
REE~SVILLE - Olive year listing of federal and Ladi es Auxilia ry of Mbso n
Township Trustees, 7 p.m ., state-funded tran sportatio n will meet at 6 p.m. for food
Ohve Townshrp gara¥e,
projects, 7 to 6 p.m., Meigs followed by a mecti"ng.' New
Monday, April 4
County Courthouse.
officers will be e lected.
LETART - · The Letart
Township Trustees will meet
at 5 p.m. at the office building,
Tuesday, April 5
.RUTLAND ~ Rutland
· Saturday, April2
Village Council will meet at 6
Saturday, April 2
. MIDD~EPORT - A spe. p.m. in Council chambers in·
SYRACUSE
_
The . ctal servtce w11l be held ·at 7
the Civic Center. P..egularly 'Pomeroy United Methodi st· p.m; Saturday at th_e Hobson
schedilkd meetings will be Men's Gro11 p will meet at the Chnstmn Fellow shrp Church
held on the first. Tuesday of Park Shelter on East Main at Hobson. The serv1ce wtlt
each month from now on . .
Street (State Route 124) at 9 be a part of World M1ss1on
ALFRED
- Orange a.m. for adopt-a-highway Outreach M1nt stnes and a
Township Trustees· regular cleanup.
donatton wtll. be taken to go
meeting, 7:30 p.m., home· of
Monday, April4
toward building a church . in
the clerk, Osie Follrod. ·
· RACINE
-Annual MalaWI, Afnca. Smgrng .Will
Wednesday, April 6
inspection of Racine Chapter be Earthen Vessels, Together
HARRISONVILLE
· 134, Order 6f Eastern Star, · for Chri st, and Proclaim.
Scipio Township Trustees 7:30 p.m . Meml:iers to bring
DANVILLE
- The
will meet at 6JO p.m. at sandwiches or salads.
Danvtlle Church of Chnst
Pageville Town HalL
Tuesday, AprilS
begin s summer weekend
POMEROY - The Meigs
MIDDLEPORT
meetings at 7 p.m. and at 6
County 911 committee will Middlep.ort Lodge 363 , p.m. Sunday with Brother
meet at 6:30p.m. at the EMS F&amp;AM, business meeting Denver Hill.

Clubs and
organizations .

.Church events ·

MEIGS HIGH NATION~ -~­
HONOR SOCIErY INDUCfEES

'''
•••

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

2 005

Veterans injured in combat
deserve gratitude and,thanks
DEAR ABBY: We live in
bei ng roman tic ;_jnJ pa ........ i.OI\the Tampa Bay area, where
me. ·Is there am hope"' two VA .. hos pitals are locatSTARVE D FO R -\FFECe d. Man y members of .the
TIO N II\ BIRM ING HAM
military ha ve return ed from
DEA R STARVING There
Iraq an d Afghan istan with
i&gt;
hope. but \lnly if yo ur
Dear
me ntal and physical probboyfriend is 1\" il.)ing to ge t the
Abby
lems. In our community, we
coun ~e l i n g he ~ay-.. he. needS .
encounter the se ve terans
As it stands. vou r need' do .
every day.
no t 3j~pea r to b~ high on his
Two weeks ago, we were in
list or priori ti es. Bccau&lt;e it
a t·ast-f"ood .. restaur ant and
verbali zed apprecia tion for does not appeaT tl1at a mar~
without
physical
saw a young man on crutches it"' Some decisions are bett er riage
expression'
would
he
satisfywith two shiny metal pros- · left to the heart than to th e
thetics on each arm below the head _ and whether or not tn ]ng for yo u. it may be th at
elbow. The following· week. reach ou t in a case like thi' ·'' vou and he arc desti ned to be
we were wal king duwn the one of them . 1 say. go fo r it. It ihe dearest of fri ends - but
street and ahead of us was &lt;:uuld give a deserving yOlmg Jlo t mates. If he tru ly care' as
another yo ung man. Thi s one person a tremend ous boost.
much about you as you care
·DEAR ABBY: 1 am in a for him . he owes it to you tp ·•
had .shiny prosthetics on both
leg s below th e hips and was rel ation &gt;hip. with a guy who leve l with you .
·
walking with a cane.
does not like 10 kiss. We act
DEAR ABB Y: What do
My husband and I wanted like an old married couple . yo u think of a husband and .
to approach and spC &lt;lk to He's not affec ti onate or dau ghter pi cking out carpet
the se youn g men, but we held romant ic in an y way at all. for our J.i v in~ room while I
back. We weren 't s ure how He'll hold my hand in pub lic. was out ot' to wn'.' Not only
they
would accept a but that 's it. rm wondering if that. they picked a co lor I
stranger's attention to th em.
it's bec ause of depnission. He don' t like. I ~m very hu n and
We, as a country. made ' loves to work. but 1 think it's di sappointed 7 not t o menmany mistakes when our vet- to coYer his depression.
tion angry ' - DO NNA IN
erans returned from Vietnarn .
He tell s me every day that OHIO
Many of these wound ed he love s me. and 1ve never
DEAR DONNA : I don't
young· veterans will · be fi ght. We actu ally get along blame you for feelin g angry.
returning to .their homes and very well . Are some men just As woman of the house·. the
communi.ties now and in the not ·affe ctionate'' I wotlld choice of c arpe t sfiould have
near future. I fe el the like to be . but 1 know he's. been dec1ded bet\vee n · you ·
t&lt;i'nerican people need some Hpt that type. My parents are · and you r hu s ~and . l ·":ouldn 't
guidance on how to handle not affectionate P.eop te·. and blame you rt you refu sed to
this situation . Can you help they have been toge ther for accept deli very and m stallation .
us? - ·PATRICIA AND 38 years.
BILL, SEMINOLE. FLA .
My boyfriend has told m
e Dear Abby is written by
DEAR PATRICIA AND that he knows th ere is some- Abigail Van Buren, also
BI.LL: Put yourselves, for thiryg wrong with him and known as Jea11/1e Phillips,
just a moment, in the position , .that he needs counseling and was. found ed by lrer ·
of the young men you have about hi s behavior. We have a motlrer, Pauline Phillips.
Dear Abby
at
encountered. Would it not be lot in common and see eac h · Write
meaningful to you if some- other every day, so -we are · www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
one saw what you had sacri- definitely serious. We lairgh Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
ficed in the line of duty. and and click in ways other than 90069.
·
.

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Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

:

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"Pface: f~ ~ f? Thrmg0 t~ JP~'~

•

$9.99

v Divorce

304-675-4340

~ Pre~cription
E
t~r

OXYGEN

Time out for tips
cal ori es as regular ones. If
you buy a Wrap or SUbmarine sandwich, split it .with
Don' t let fai r and carni val a friend .
time ru in a healthy di et. Be · Order salads with low-fat
se nsible dur ing fest ivi ties or nonfat d ress in ~ on the
when se lec ting food s . for sitlc . · Items with . creamy
meal s · and. snacks. Constder ' dressings like col e slaw,
food s th at have man y .drl - potuto sa lad or macaroni
fere nt vitamins and mineral s salad ha ve more fat than
with very little fat, sugar. salads prepared with a.
• sodium or calories. such as vinaigrette dressing.
fruit s ;md v€getahles. Fruit
Pi zza can be· a good
cups. fre sh fruits, g rilled choice · when it comes to
sandwiches with ' lettuce, fair food . Choose a thin
tomato and onion, or salads cru st · (preferabl y · whole
with grilled chicken are all · wheat) with lots of vegetagood choices. ~
bl es gree n peppers,
Avoid the traditional "'car- mu shrooms and oni ons.
nival " foods. Dee p-fr ied Don't orde r it with pe pperfoods such as elephant ears. oni, ham. sa usage or bacon .
fre nc ~ fri es . . corn clogs and Not onl y do they contain a
funnel cakes are high in fat, lot of fat, but they are also
but don ' t suppl y any nutri- very high in sodium . .
erits. Sugary snack s and
Si nce th e fair may offer
drink s like · cotton cand y di fferent types of food that
and reg ular pop are also we don' t see too often , we
loaded with calories. Even · may be te mpted to try th em
though caramel apples. hot" all. Be care ful that yo u
· flldge · sundaes and mi lk- doi1" t eat you r way around
shake;, have , nu tritious food 1 the mid,.ay and not even
as their l]ase. lhev are still realiLe it. Strive to eat th e
ve ry high in ' fat ;nd sugar. ,arne amou nt nf food ynu
• Bc·ware of &lt;:hic ken and wou ld if you had a .sitfish sand'' l._hes that 'uu nd down meal at home.
One trick that can he lp ,
healthy. Order them gri lled.
not · breade d. battered or you cut back on fa i~. food
fr ied. Onl v '"e mo stard. is to brin g your own sandreli ; h, ketchup or cocktail wic hes. salads . and fres h
sauce as their "condi men ts. fruit, and vege table' from
Specia l 'auL"e,. rnayonn ai,e, home to eat. Remember io
and tartar ,auce add fat and keep them chilled on ice,
unwanted c· a lnr i~s.
though. unti l mea lti me.
Limit the rmtn1n sile'.
By .careful planning and a
Don't bu) jumho .or 'upcr· littk di,L"ipline. you can
·.&gt;iLed 'andwiL"h~' and meals. avoid ga ining weigh ! during
The larger hamburgers and the fa ir. It may take some
cheeseburger' can add twice · will·power: but yo ur health
the · amount of fat. salt and wi ll be nefi t becau'e of it.
BY BECKY 8AER

•

HOLZER

THE AREA'S ONLY
AUTHORIZED ·
HELlOS PROVIDER.

M;IGS COUNTY EXTENSION . EDUCATOR

I

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3084 Stale Route 160

Woodland Center Comp~x
(Acroaa fro m Holzer Medical Ceriter)
Gallipolis, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS

-435'/, Second Avfnue
l Acros~

fro m Posl Office)

Open Mon. -

. 8:30.5pm

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www.kasplat.com

615-4498

74~46-8500 "'

328 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

Powell's
FOODFAI
700 East Main Street

&amp; MEDI CAL EQUIPMENT

Pomeroy, Ohio

HELlOS

740-992 ~ 5252

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PHARMACY
Open M-F 9am-6plll

sat ·9om-I pm
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an
important
role
in
· NFIELDS@lMYOAI~YREGISTER . COM
Bumgarner's life, he is quick
to point out that there has
POINT ·PLEASANT been much more · life in hi s
I 00 years. He spent the .
Although his birth certificate
might prove that he's almost
majority of his younger years
100
years -old,
Oris
working on the family farm,
which' has been in his family
Bumgarner's sense of humor
and quick wit certainly would
. for four generations. When
lead people to think otherwise.
' farming was not enough to
Practical
jokes? , He ' s ·
keep him busy, and after his
children had graduated from
played · them. Funny comments? He's made them. And
high school, Bumgarner started driving school buses in ·
wisecracks? Well, let's just
.say he rarely holds back what
Mason County, which he did
he's realty thinking.
until he retired in 1970.
· But that hasn ' t kept
"Farming and the school
, Bumgarner from earning the
buses ·were some of the most
Oris Bum.;amer
important parts of my life,"
friendship of almost everyone
• Bumgarner ·said . "I realty
he has encountered in his 100
·years of lifec And although Church in New Haven, church enjoyed the kids."
·.
Enjoying "the kids and enjoysome people might credit his hils been one of the mo st
personality and sens.e of important things in hi s life . · ing his life and the people in it
humor as the reasons he is so , "I'm proud of the church ,'.' obviously have been contributwelt-liked, Bumgarner credits ~umgarner said, apding tha t ing · factors to · keeping
tbe .community and the peopt"e m . the 87 years stnce he Bumgarner going strong for so
who live here.
became .a member at age 13 . . long. His family will host a
"We realty do· live in an he has held every office. And birthday "c elebration for him .
honest, good cbmmunity," even now, ~!though h1s health from 2-4 p,m . Sunday at Union
Bumgarner said. "I wouldn't- prevents h1m from attendtng United Methodist Church.
have wanted any better peo- weeki~ servtces, he satd he
pte in our community_ I've . sltll thmks h1ghly of the 3Dalways had great friends."
member congre!lalto~ .
.
D!!nisl!...
Bumgarner 's journey to And they thmk ht~_hly of
making friends began April 6, · htm: In 200 I, after the_com- .
Mtty fot th!! .
1905, when he was born in plet10~. of the _fellowshtp h~ll
Mason County. Three weeks · at Umon Umted Me!ho~tst
way VI!
tater, hi s mother took him to a Church, · the cong_regauon
ded1cated
hand·ll!d out
eh urCh Se.rvice , . and he said
.
B
,the add1t1on mthat since that first encounter
umgarner s name.
·
tnaniagl! and
with Union United Methodist
Although church has played

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Toll Free 877-669-0007

Gallipolis. OH 45631

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rht

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Iivl!g haVI!

The Daily Sentinel_ ~oint ~leasant ieglstrr

dtifted apart.

992·2156 '

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Subscri,be today • 992-2155

70' Pine Street • Gallipolis

-·

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Mason County man recalls century ·of memories

I'

PERSONAL
OXYGEN SYSR"M

· www.foodfa irmk.com

• · Inducted into the Meigs National Honor Society Thursday morning we~e 18 high school students. They were, left to right, front, Samantha Cole, Meghan Leslie, Whitney Thoene, Autumn
Mclaughlin, Brittany Jacks, Jenny Bowles, and Natasha Wise; middle row, Travis Butcher. Tar~n
Lentes, Carita Gardner, Kayla McCarthy, and Jake Venoy; and back row, Josh Venoy, Nathan
Jeffers, Joshua Kennedy, Jacob Kennedy, Miranda Beha and Chris V~nReeth .

BY NICOLE FIELDS ·

~ysZ9!~

2605 Jackson Ave.
. Pt. Pleasant. WU

Sys te m

(7 40) 441-0202

•

CLINIC

HELiOS
Pt rsona l

Connection

Submitted photo

. .·

675·1333"

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PageA4

NIO

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The Daily Sentin~l

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Friday, Aprilt,

Friday, April

Obituaries

The lasting message of the resurrection
The man's

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel .com

••

•Charlene Hoeflich .
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall .make 110 law respecting a11
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exe.rcise tlrereof; or abridging the freedom .,
of speecl1, or of the press; Of the right of tire
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
· the Government for a redress ,of grievances. ·
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. April I. the 91 st day of 2005. There are 274
days left in the year. Thi s is April Fool's Day.
Today's Highlight in History : On April I, 1945, American
,
force s invaded Okinawa durin g World War II.
' On this date: In I R53, Cincinnati, Ohio, became the fir"
U.S. city to pay its firefighters a regular s:ilary.
In 1918, the Royal Air Force was established in Britain.
In ·1933, Nazi Germany began persecuting Jews with a boy cott of Jewish-owned businesses.
In 1946. tidal waves struck the Hawai ian islands. resulting
in more than 170 deaths.
~
In 1960, the fi rst ·Neather sa.tcll itc. TIR.OS-One, was
launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
In 1963, most pf New York City's daily newspapers resumed
publishing afler a setl lement was reached' in a ll4-day.strike.
.In 1970, President Nixon signed a measure banning cigarette advertising on radio and. television, to take e!Tect after
Jan. I. 1971.
In 1983, tens of thousands ot: anticnuclear demonstrators
linked arms in a 14-mile human chain SP&lt;!nning three defense
-installations in rural England.
·
In 1987. in his first major speech on the AIDS epidemic,
President Reagan told doctors in Philadelphia, " We've
declared AIDS public health ene my number one."
·
· · In 2003, American troops entered a hospital in Nasiriyah,
Iraq, and rescued Army Pvt.- )st Class Jessica Lynch, who'd
been held prisoner since her unit was ambushed on I'Vfarch 23.
Ten years ago: United Nations peacekeepers officially took
over from the U.S.-led multinati onal force in Haiti. With U.S.
Defense Secretary William Perry looking on, Ukraine began
the process . of dismantling its nuclear missiles. More than
1,500 mourners attended a vigil for Mexican-American singer·
Selena Quintanilla-Perez in Corpus Christi, Texas, where
she'd been shot to death the day before.
Five years ago: President Clinton, speaking at a fund-raiser
for his wife's Senate campaign, accused New York Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani ·of enlisting a "right-wing venom machine"
against Hillary Rodham Clinton. Michelle Kewan won her
third World Figure Skating title.
.
One year ago: President Bush signed into law new protections
for the unborn that for the first time made it a separate federal
crime to hanm a fetus during an assault on the mother. Michigan
won the ·NIT championship with a 62-55 victory over Rutgers.
Actress Cl\[Tie Snodgress died in Los Angeles at age 57.
.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Jane Powell is 77. Actress Grace ·
Lee Whi!ne~ is 75 : Actress Debbie Reynolds is 73. Countrysinger Jim Ed Brown is 71. Blues singer Eddie King is 67 ..
Actress Ali MacGraw is 61. R&amp;B ~ inger Rudolph Isley is 66.
Reggae singer Jimmy Cliff is 57. Jazz musician Gil S(.:ott·
Heron is 56 .. Rock musician Billy Currie (Uirravox) is 53..
Movie director Barry Sonnenfeld is 52. Country si nge r Woody
Lee is 37. Movie dire~tors Albert and Allen Hughes are 31
Tennis player Magdalena Maleeva is 30. Singer Bijou Phillips
is 25. Actor Sam Huntington is 23. Actor Josh Zuckerman is 20.
Thought for Today: ·'S i mi abuela tu viera ruedus seria un a
bicicleta." (If my grandmother had wheels. she'd be a bicycle.)- Spanish proverb.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welCome. They should
be less than 300 words. All Letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No uns·igned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not persmialities.

_The Daily Sentin~l Reader Services
Correction Polley

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(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon. Monday
accurate. tf you knOw of an error in a through Fr1day. 1~ 1 Court Street,
story, call the newsroom at (740} 9922156.

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extension$ ere:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed . EKI . 1.4
Reporter; BE;!th Sergent, Ext. 13

Pomeroy. Ohio. Second-class postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and tfle
Oh10 Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address conect1ons
to The Daily Sentinel, t 11 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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news q; mydailysentin el .com
Web:
wwW.mydailySfnllnel.com

for

~ot .

going to church was that all
e'ver heanl were stories
about the resurrection. or
cour~e. if you go to church
only on Ea~ter. yo u may heu r
. a sermon aboul the rt: stJJTc c·~

he

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

excu_~o.e

04,1Side Melps County
·13 Weeks ..... ... : . .. '53.55
26 Weeks . . . . . . . .
. .1 107. 10
52 Week s .
. ... '2 14.21

George
Plagenz

[ion. _.

But these days, even if you

go to chUI'ch on Easter in one
of the mainline clitm;hes
( Presbyte'rian . Methodi st.
Episcopal. etc.) there is no
assurance you will hear anything abut the resurrect ion.
except in an allegorical
sense .
• '' It is hjrd to find a robust
belief in the resurrection
nowada)'S in the mainline
churches," obseryes the Rev.
Fleming
R\ltledge.
an
Episcopa l ·r ector m Port
Chester, N.Y. "We hcai-' fruni
the pu lpit about ·a new season. new growth, new life._·
We hear words Iike renewal.
re~ival and rebll1h, but not

ties did not stan believing in
th e r~ s urrec tion becau se they
saw green grass corning up.
Something more than that
had to have happened. What
happened is that Jesus hims~ lf appeared , and he was
alive."

"Easter .is · not a day of
innocuous sentiments about
croc uses in blooni and
springtime in the heart. It is
a day of resurreciion - a
story punctuated by organ
fanfare and loud · trumpet
•
blasts ...
H thi s word ever gets out,
we may no· longer have
resurrection
"Seriously now:· she asks. ~mpt y seats in church on the
"would today's Easter . ser- Sunday arter Easter. We may
mons inspire yo u to come even have to put up extra
·
back to church the next chairs 1
Easter is many_thirigs to
Sltnday? Put yourself in the
place of the women who many people. But -to all
went to the· tomb on Easter Chri stians, it is their assurmorning. Maybe the !lowers ance that the "Highest" and
· were blooming.ahd the birds "Best" is a present reality in
were singing as the women · their live s: .
walkeu alung·. Do y~u think
If that dues not s~e m to be
0
our expenence of the
Ihey took comfort from that
"The women and the apos- moment , two of the Easter

BUTTON'?

wwW. mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • l'~ge As

Local Briefs
Girl Scout tea.party
set for Saturday ·

Edith M. Barton
.,

. The
Rev.
Leslie .
stories can hel p us.
Like rhc women who weiu Weatherhead, a noteU British
to the sepulc~er to find Jesus Methodist pastor, ,t old the
un Easter ·morning. we may story of the young wife
be lookin g in the wrong whose ·hasband· had. JllSt
pLt(:e . The women were died. She wa.s. sittirg on the
looking in the graveyard .hearth rug in front pf the
among the dead. That is llickeri~g fire in -the small
where we often look for t:ul-' cottage. The arm of an old
•fillment of our heart 's white-haired . worrian was
desires - - among things that around her shoulder.
T)le younger woman was
lead to a dead-end in terms
of happiness. Like ·the very resentful as she said to women in the Easter story. the minister who was- mere:
we are looking in the wrong "You talk about the love of
place.
Christ. I don't believe it. You
"He is not here," said the · talk about the everlasting
angel to the wonien at the arms of God. I don't believe ..
torltb . " He is risen. He.goeth it. My husband and I were so ·
before you into . Galilee. much in love with one
There ye shall see him. Go another and now he has been
quickly.'' And as they ran . . · taken awav."
·'Jesus came to meet them."
And the minister said to
Easter
ts
a ·Jiving her, "My dear, the love of
encounter wi th the highest Christ is within a foot of you
and best life can offer us. It - in your mother. And the
is in running and reaching everlasting arms you · don' t
toward th e highest and best believe in - why they are
that we realize our . heart's ro und you at this moment.
desire.
Whose do you think is the
That is the first clue the arm across your shoulder
. Easter siories g.ive us.
'now?"
The second is 'in the walk \ • Easter is -our assurance
of the disciples to Emmaus that the highest .imd IJest life
after the resurrection. The · has to offer is right now
J'isen Christ had joined them where w~ are, '~wai ting only
on the way but they didn 't to be recognized and
recogni ze him.
embraced."
· That often is our trouble .
(George Plagenz i s an
The hi ghest and best is in ordained minister and veter·
· our midst but we don 't rec- an newsman based · in
·ognize it.
Columbus, Ohio.)

WHERES
MY
'EASY

2005 ·

1,

&gt;

~005

)

." Th~ Daily Sentinei

•

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POMEROY - Edith M. Barton . Mulberry Avenue.
Pomeroy. passed aw:-'Y on. Thursuay. March 31 , 2005. at
Pleasant Valley Hosprtal. Po1111 Pleasant. W.Va. at the age ot
86. She is now walking with her Loru and Savior.
She was preceded in death by her pare nts. Steve and Mary
Bolin Eblin; husband. Ardith Barton: brothers. Henry, Ben
and Artie Eblin: sisters; Mary Ann, Shurrier and Louise West.
She was .a member of the Middleport Naz.itrene Church.
·
She was rhe loving mother or Robert E. (Patty) Barton.
Pomeror: Betty Reed, Middleport : and Judy A. Denny,
Rutland. arid was known as "Grandma Bllltuns" .to her grandchildren, Brenda (Keith) Phalin , Angie. Bass. Joe (Peggy)
Barton, Scott (Ranee) Barton, Bill Ne ut zling. Crystal (John)
Hood, Judy_Ste..wanJ:IaU , Deanna (Mark) WilliamS-and Brian
Denny. She was the great-grandmother of Zackery, Morgan ,
Alex and Andrew Barton. Dr. Rob (Marcy) Wyatt, Adam
(Brandy) Wyatt, Michael Wyatt. Tara Wyatt, Tyson Lee. Tyler
Stewart,. · Mt~ , Jordan, Dylan Bass, Jordan aud Ka sey
Wrlhams, Jet! and Todd Hood: and great-great-grandm other
of Olivia Wyatt, Madison Eskew. Brandon and Megan Hood.
. She is also survived by sisters. Myrtle Glover and Madelen.e
Pendleton: her caregiver, April Colburn, and special friends,
Pearlie Jewell, Terry Wyatt. Mick Seyler, · Dr. Steven Love,
Betty Conkle, Mindy Chancey and Aubree Lyons. She was a
beauttful lady and will be sadly 1nissed by all who knew her.
Services will be held at 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 2, 2005,
at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will.be Pastor
Allen Midcap of the Middleport Nazarene ~hurcli and Pastor
Mark Morrow of the Middlep011 First Baptist Church. Burial
will be in Rocksprings Cemetery in Pomeroy. Friends may call
on Friday, April I, from 6-to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
On-line condolences may -be sen t to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com
·

•

Jack L. Boyd
.

\

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Jack L. Boyd. 67 , who was a
retired ~ulesman in the cement business, died Saturday.- March
26, 2005. He is ~Hrviv ed by his wife of46 years. Carolyn Boyd.
Family services are being planned. Culley's Meadow Wood·
Funeral home, Timberlane Road Chapel (850-893 -4l)7) is
handing arrangements .
·
In-lieu of tlowers; memoria l contribution s may be made to
Big Bend Hospice, 1723 Mahan Center Blvd., Tallahassee,
Fla. 32308.
Jack served in the U.S. Air Force and lived in Tampa before
'
moving to Tallahassee in 1996.
Other survivors include a son, Mark L. Boyd of Tampa, Fla.:
a daughter, Dayle Holleger of Cairo. Ga.: a brother, Leighton
· Boyd of Biloxi, Miss.; two sisters . Dovie Wil son of Tennessee
and Bonnie Johnson of Ocala, Fla.: and three gr.andchildren:
Lindsey Hollegef,_ Connor Boyd and Bryce Boyd·.
He was {'receded in death by a siste r, Marjorie Robinson.

Delbert Patterson ,·-.

'

SYRACUSE - Meigs County Girl Scouts Daisy/Brownie
Tea , I to 3 p.m. , Saturday Syracuse Community Center. There
wtll be a pupt&gt;et show and the grrls will be earning the
Manners Try-it.
Attire is dress· up and girls attending should bring a purse
with items in it. Girls from kindergarten through third grade
are invited to itttcnd. Cost is $2.50 to~ J;ilg.istered girl scouts
and $12.50 Ior non-registered gi rl s. Piqancial assistance for
registrati on is available. Additional· information is available
from Jerrena Ebersbach at 992-7747, after 4 p.m. or Shi~ley
Cogar at 992-2668 .
.
·
.

Bikers plan run
POMEROY - Meigs County Bikers Association will
its 20th Anniversary Memorial Run on May 29 . Bikes will
leave the Pomeroy Parking Lot at I ··p.m. , and travel toward
...
Beth Sergent;photo
Albany, to Route 32 West, then Route'689. Signs will posted.
·
Pictu
red
from
left
are
store
manager
Rae
Lynn
Braley and
The cost is $10 per rider, and $5'per passenger. A party, bike
• ·
game s and camping wi·ll be held at Jordai1 's Campground on Raven Clamp itt
Laurel Road. lnformati~p is available by calling 669-4400,
·
669-5831, or 992-6288.
Beer, soft drinks and food will be available. A band will perform . and a hog roast, leather shop ·and tattoo artist will be se t
up at th e campgrounds.
POM EROY - Party N
Thi's weekend is ihe store' s
Stull' recently opened on 118 grand opening with pritcs to
East Main St. They sell a vari- be given away all day
ety of party needs includ ing Saturday.
•
Hours arc 9 a.m. to 9 p.m..
_RACINE - The Racine 'An1erican Legion Post 602 will plates, party lights. novelites.
Clas.
s
of
2005
accessories
.
Monday
through Sawrcl:ry.
have a public ham and turkey dinner Sunday at the hall.
party
necklaces,
hula
skirts.
and
12:30
p.m. to 6 p.m. on
Serving will begj n at I I a.m. Dinners will be $6 and• will
party masks,. graduat ion and Sunday ~. The phone number .
include iced tea or coffee and dessert.
wedding annoUncements . .
is 992-3200.

Party N Stuff open~

Dinner planned

Plan fish fry
·MIDDLEPORT - Middieport Volunteer Fire Department
will hold a fish fry from II a.m . to 2 p.m . on Saturday at the
tirehouse.
'
·.
. .·
. ·

.,

Offer evening·clinic
POMEROY- Meigs County Health Department will offer
evening clinic hours from 4 to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, and will
serve refreshments to commemorate The Week of the Young
Child.
.
.
Services .available will include childhood and adult immutiizations, .blood pressure and blood sugar scre.enings, WIC
consultations, pre-natal services, head lice screenings and
eradication education, environmental health appointments,
vital statistics and genealogy ,assistance, and answers to gen,
eral health-related questions.
Information is available by calling the department at 992-~
6626.

J aI"I

on the Ohio Audi tor of State .
The Balestra bid of $30.000
was the lowest of three brds
from Page_A1
received. Other hids were
re ce ived from Jones &amp;
Cochenour. of Lanca.ster, in the
the heating units in the jail. and amount of $59.250. and ·
four secretarial chairs from Charles E. Harris of Cleveland ,
. Mark and Judith Smedley of ·in the amount of $37 ,775.
Portland, which are now in use
Commissioners also:
in the sheriff's oflice.
• Denied an an imal damage
Other business · ·
claim fwm Michael AppeL
Commissioners approved a Rutland, based on reports from
bid from the accounting firro pog Warden Tim Lawrence.
of Balestra of Piketon to com• Approved .a bid for bituplete the 2005 audit of the minous materials for Apri l
county's _financial condition: from Asphalt Material s. Inc.
For the llrst ttme, the county
Commi ss ioners
Mick
will contract with a · private Davenport · and Jim ·sheets
auditing firrit to complete the anu~ C lerk Gloria Kloe s ~--~
annual audi,t, rather than rely attended th e· meeting.

GREAT BEND - Delbert Patterson , 91, of Great Bend,
passed away on Thursday, March 31, 2005, at Arcadia
lllursing Center in Coolville.
· He was b'orn Aug. 6 1913 , in Hemlock, W.Va. , son of the
POMEROY - Sheriff Robert E. Beegle is investigating the
late James B. " Bob" and Dessie M. Archer Patterson. He was
breaking
and entering of two churc-hes near Middleport.
a founding father of the Racine Gun Clttb, and a member of
ft..
Beegle
said the OJd Bethel Church and Silver Run Church;
the American Legion. He ).Vas in tt)e U.S. Army during World
· from ~age A1
~oth
on
lower
Ohio 7, were entered. Entry into .the Old Bethel
War If in the 5th Army with Gen. Mark Wayne Clark, serving
in Sicily, Naples and Rome, Italy. He was the recipient of Church was made through a rear door and nothing was report" to safety issues until the end
ed missing. An amplifier and approximately .$40 were stolen
three Bronze Stars .
·
of this school year.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Ann Boso, Portland, and sev- from the Sliver Run Church. Entry there was made through a
• To non-renew the contract
stairwell door.
eral nieces and nephews.
·
of Tom Weaver as the District
Besides his parents, he was preceded in 'death by hi s brothTechnology Coordinator for
ers: Ray, Rex, Herbert,Ted an·d Jim Patterson; and hi s sisters:
the 2005-05 school year'
Susie Leep, Pauline Evans, Adah Gorrell, Lucy Rexroat, and
• To approve the following
Azelline Smith.
POMEROY - Kindergarten registration and screening for classified substitute pending
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Stinday, April 3, 2005, at Meigs, Southern and Eastern Local Schools has been set. To
Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, W Va., with graveside be eligible for kindergarten . registration at Southern and
military services from 5 to 9 p.m. on Saturday.
Eastem children must be five years old on or before Sept. 30,
Friends may ca ll ftgm 5 to 9 p.m. on Saturday al the funer- . 2005. To be eligible for kindergarten registration at Meigs
al home, and my express con~olences to the family at children must be {ive years old on or before Aug .. I, 2005.
· roush I us2000@yahoo.com.
from Page A1
The registration schedules is as follows: April 7-8, for
•
Southern Local, call 949-4222 for more information; April 14-'
15· for Eastern Elementary, call 985-3 304 for more informa- Holzer Hospice, God 's NET.
tion: April I 9-22 for Meigs Primary, call 742-3000 for more Gallia/Mei-gs
Community
.
MASON, W.Va. -Warren Zachary "Zach" Faulk, 18, of information.
Action
Agency.
Mei gs
It is requested parents call or vjsit their appropriate schools . County Council on Aging
Mason, W.Va., died Wednesday March 30, 2005, from injuries
·
to arrange an appointment for kindergarten registration and RSVP and Seniors in Schools
received in an automobile· accident. .
He was born on Dec. 12, 1986 in Pt. Pleasant W.Va., son of times. Parents or guardians must bring th~ir child who is program , Meig s County
. · Brenda Faulk of Dexter and the late Clinton Randall Faulk. enrolling to registration . For safety measures parents are . Humljne Society, and Met )iS
Zach was an avid hunter and fisherman and a student in the asked to provide proper identification, proof of residel)cy, .and- ·County Cooperative Parish .
class or 2005 at Meigs High School. ,
any other applicable· information showing legal guardianship.
Funds for UFMC allocaBesides his mother, he is survived by his wife, Kristie
tions · come from privaic
· Maxwell Faulk of Mason: his unborn son, Zachary Faulk; a
donations. payroll deduction s
r - - - - - - - - - - , · and
brother, Clinton Tyler Faulk of Dexter: maternal grandmother,
agency fund-raisers .. The
Esther Black of Rutland, and paternal grandmother, Wanda M.
volunteer board operates
Faulk of Hartford, W.Va.; mother-in-law Melissa (Rod) King
.solely to generate funds · for
· of Mason: father-in-law, Rodney (Lisa) Max well of Colorado;
·participating agencies. and
numerous aunts, uncles and cousins.
distributes virtually all funds
Besides. his father, he .was preceded in death by his paternal
raised with little or no admin. grandfather, Clinton I. Faulk , and maternal grandfather,
istrative cost.
Warren D...Black.
United Fund President Hilda
Services will be at 2 p.m. on Sunday April 3, 2005, at Fisher
Stotts. recognized outgoing
MIDDLEPORT
A
Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Pastor Jamie Fortner officiatmembers of the UFMC board:
for
Robertmemorial
service
ing. Burial will follow in Rutland Cemetery. Friends may call
Bruce Fisher, Shawn· Amot_t, ·
at the funeral. home from I I a.m.' until the 2 p.m. service on Grayson Ashley,' who died on
Diana
Coates, Thelma Jeffers,
The Daily Senlinel
March 2, 2005, and :i celebraSunday.
·
Don Vaughan, Jr. and Robert
The family asks donations be thade to Peoples Bank in tion of .his life. will be held at
Robinson, and the board electSubsctibe·
t
oday
·
7
p.m
.
.
Saturday
at
the
Pomeroy for the benefit of his unborn son, Zachary Faulk.
!m-2155
· On-line co~dolences may be sent to www.fisherfuner4\- Middleport Church of Christ
Family bife Center on Main
homes.coin ·
Street in Middeport.

Church'B&amp;E's investigated

Southern

'

Kindergarten registration set

Fund

Warren IZach' Faulk

The battlefor the courts
A battle is about to open in
filibUsters useful - and .that
Washington that will knock
they will no doubt do so
such old staples as Iraq and
again in the future- but the
Social Security reform right
C,onstitution says that the
off the nation's front pages
Senate shall · "advise and
- or at least to positions
William
consent" on judicial nominawell below the fold. !'or
Rusher
tions, and nowhere says that
Preside nt Bush has renomi• - - - - . ,more than a simple majority
hated ' to various Circuit
. of the Senate can be required
Cmrrts of Appeal nine conto give that consent.
servative judges whom the.
All this is of tremendous
Democrats managed to enough to end a filibuster, importance because the
block in the last Congress b)' should make' it possible to courts are the last places in
threatening to filibuster the · find 51 votes to uphold a rul- the federal government
debates on their confirma- ing by the chair (which, be it where ·liberal judges can,
tion .
remembered, is occupied by and do, thwart the will of our
, In that Congress, the Vice President Cheney).
con!krvative president and
Republi cans had only 5 I
·The Democrats are warn- Congress. If President Bush
senators, wh(ch made the fil- ing that, if the Republicans is allowed to name conservibu ster threat real (since they go that route, they will raise : ative judges to the Circuit
would need 60 to end a fili- .unshirted Hell - holding up . Courts ·of Appeal and buster) .
Nor
could all Semite business by with- Heaven forbid! - to the
Republi cans even be sure of holding the unanimous con- Suprenie
Court,
the
holding all 5 I on a vote to sent required for routine Democrats will pe effectiveuphola a ruling by the chair motions, etc. The question is ly out of business as ·a politi'that filibustering · a judicial whether the Republican . cal influence in the United
·nominat-ion is- unconstitu- majority has the stomach to States.
tional. and tha t a simple insist upon its prt:rogative,
So both parties have an
majority would thus be sufti- as the majority party, ro have enormous amount riding .on
.cient for confirmation. its way in the Senate. The . the outcome of the judicial
Arizona Sen. John McCain. Democrats are hail in~ the nomination battles that lie
and
perhaps
other filibuster as a precious dead ahead, and neither can
Republicans, are uncomfort - instrument to prevent an afford to lose. Basically, the
able with the notion of inval- arrogant majQrity from rid· ball. is irt the Republicans'
idating filibu sters, reasoning ing roughshod over a deter- court: They can, as indicaied
that the GOP .itself may want mined minority - a last- above, have Vice President
lO use that weapon ~o meday. ditch protection, .as it wer¢, Cheney rule that it is uncon. But in this CongreS&gt; the for an endangered minority. stitutional to filibuster
Republicans have 55 sena- . Now it '$ true that both par- judicial pomination, and that
tors,. ·which
, even if not ties have, in the past, found a simple majority is· suffi.
,

a

cient to confirm the nominee . The Democ1ats can
appeal that-ruling- but just
51 Republicans, out of 55,
will be needed to uphold it.
Will the Democrats then
make good on their; threat t9
turn the Senate into a·pile of
ruins by obstructing all legislative action? They' would
be foolish to do so, because
the American people might
be amused by 'the spectacle
for a week or so, but they
would rapidly tire of it.
Seeing action blocked on all
sorts ' of. imponant bills,
,when all the Republicans ask
·, is a Sill,lple up-or-down vote
on confirmation, would soon
infuriate the public, and
rightly so.
.
Would the Republicans at
some future time rue the day
they barred the use of filibusters on ju(,licial nomina·
, lions? Perhaps, but it is hard
to imagine any future battle
more important than the one
they are going to wage this
spring and summer. If they
can't even confirm judges
when . they have a solid
majority, what's the p(&gt;int of
electing them at all?
(William Ru s l1er is a

Distinguished Fellow of. the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship Wid
·Pa,litical Philosophy.)
•

•

'

Memorial·
•
semce
.
schedUled

•

'

•

completion of all req uire ments of the po.sition: Aurori
Hoback, effective March I R. •
• To approve Eric Sc 11es
and Laura ·Elli s as substitute
teachers pending completion
or all requirements for the
position.
The meeting was called
into executive se~sio n twi&lt;.:e
to di sc uss personnel matters.
The next board meeti ng will
be at 7:30p.m. on'April 18.

.

'

ed Des Jeffers, Juli e Proctor.
Sue Maiwn and- Ch loris
McQuaid as new members, , .
Teresa Stewart of Hol zer
Hospice presented .inti;tnnati".Jl
about the agency and howil'ie
UFMC helps provide services
to families in Moigs County
through the h(')spice prograni.

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

SPRING VALlEY CINIMA7

446-4524 ',IOVIE HOTLI~E
FRI4/1/05 · THURS 4f7/05

Doll Otfiae Opens @ 6:30PM Nightly
6 12;30PM for Sat &amp; Sun Matinees

SIN CITY (R)

I •20 3•30 7:20 &amp; 9•30
BEAUT'~'

SHOP (PG1·3)
1·:15, 3:t5, 7:15 &amp; 9:15
GUESS WHO (PG13)
1:00, 3:00, 7:00 &amp; 9•00
MISS CONGENIALITY 2 (PG13
1:15,3:30,7:15 &amp; 9:30
RING TWO (PG13)
1 :1 0, 3:20, 7~ t 0 &amp; 9•20
ROBOTS(PG)
1•00, 3:00,7:00 &amp; 9:00
. PACIFER (PG13)
1 •20 , 3•20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20

We'reBack!
~

~Middleport Flower Shop
,

Has moved back

to its original •...,..""·~·· ....
(Beside Dairy Queen)

· \V1Lh Iustx•l Molu~y you can walk into H&amp;R ~l&lt;1c k \~' tlh ~/&lt;Air
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Same OWners...
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Pomeroy. OH

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Middleport, OH
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.............. f•illlt.IIM .. Oii!IIIUI"IIrllt ........ i l')" 1 w-·· ~ """..,,.....,._.., l _
i ... . h....W.I ua~•'"P - • T"b&lt;MM :p. IW')... h !- l l l . -rm .. !'lat! f&lt;&gt;~" t- •t!llli~uv ~. ­

- ~~~ - --· · '*"-,"''*~~1"'-- C,_J.-~ liU iUin!'-"""'-.... r•.

..

�\

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PageA6

·• VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

...

pe

Friday, April1,

He AsG:ended lnte
Het;~;ven ... But He
Will Come Again

2005

Apostolf~

Church Qf Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandt llnd Ward Rd , Pastor James
Mtll~:r, Sunday School • 10 30 am,
E\enmg · 7.30 p.m.
River Valley
Apo~tohc Worshtp Center, 873 S Jrd
A'e, Mtddlepon, Kl'\tn Konkle. Paswr
Sunday 10 30 am
V.edne sday. 7 00
p m . You th Fn 7'30 p.m
Emmanutl Apostolic Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd ofT New Ltma Rd. Rutland,
Sm tees Sun 10 00 am &amp; 7 3Q p.m. ,
Thurs 7 00 p m., Pastor Mart) R Hutto!)

Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of God
PO Box 467, Duddmg Lane, Mason.
W Va
Paswr Netl TeMant, Sunday
Semccs-, 10 00 am. and 7' p.m.

Baptist
Carpenter Baplisl Chur~:h
su.nday School - 910am: Pttachmg
Servtce 10 30am
Evenmg Servtee
7.00pm. Wednesday Bible Stpdy 7·00 pm.
lntcnm Preacher· Floyd Ross ·

Chtshll'l' Baptist Church
Pastor. Steve bule, Su nday School. 9 30
am. Mom mg Wors~tp I0 .'\0 am Sunday
evcnmg 6·30 pm Wednesda) 6 30pm

'

Hi.tpt' Baptist Church (Southern)
570 Grant St, MtddleJK111. Sunday school
- 9 30 ant. Worshtp - I l a m. and 6 p m ,~
Wednesday Sen•tcc · J p m
Rulla.nd first Baptist Cbun:h
Sunday Sc hool - 9· ~0 ~ m . Wo-nhtp .
10 45 am

Pome.my Fint Ra~ti!Cl
Pastor Jon Hrocke rt. E01st ~ am St .
Sund3y School - 9 30 a m . Worship .
10 ]0a m

First Soulhern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Ptke. Pastor E. Lamar
0' Br} ant Sunday Sc hool - 9 30 a m .
Worship · 8 15 am. 945 am &amp; 7 OOp m..
Wetlne~day S~rvires 7 00 p m
F1rst Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow, 6th and Palmer St ,
Midtlleport , Sunda} School · 9 15 a m ,
Worshi p · 10 15 a m . 700 pm,
WC(jncsday Serv1ce- 7 00 p m

Church Briefs Young female author boosts an

of
drought
and never
falls to
bear
fruit" (Psalm
177-8).
.God's Truth stands solio
in the shifting currents of
the ages, it transcends . the
fickle wisdom · of passing
generations, and it towers
above the temporary theqries
that man can concoct as he
tries to explain God away.
Are yo u looking for some
direction in life and joy for
the 'journey? Just remember .
that He who trusts in _the
Lord is nobody's fool.
(Thom Mollohan has
mi11is(ered i11 southem Ohio
the past 9·112 years and is
the pastor of Pathway
Community Church. f:le
a11d his !fife are the [Jilrtf!ls
of four children. He may be
reached by e-mail at pastor/hom @path waygallipo/is.com):

Racine First Rapti~t
Pastor R1 ck R\lie, Sunday School . 11.30
~-Wors hi p- 10.40 a.nL , 7.00_p m .
Wednesday Scl"\'tces- 7 00 p m

unfa·sh1"onabl e VIr. tue: chast"ty
I

Special missions service set
MIDDLEPORT - A special service will be held at '7
p.m. Saturday at the Hobson
Christian Fellowship Church
at Hobson.
The service will be a pari
of World Mission Outreach
Ministries arid a donation
will be taken to go toward
building a church tn
Malawi, Afnca. Singmg will
be Earthen Vessels, Together
for Christ and Proclaim . ·

Weekend services begin
DANVILLE
- The
Danville Church of Christ
begins summer weekend
meetings at 7 p.m. Saturday
and at 6 p.m. Sunday with
penver Hill preaching.

BY

RICHARD N. OSTLING
AP RELIGI ON WRITER

It's unfashionable and risks
ridi cule, and it 's tough to
rnamtain in the face of powerful cultural pressures,
But chastity remains a vital
biblical vinue, argues Lauren F.
Winner in her candid, common-·
sensical 21st-century manifesto,
"Real Sex : The Naked Truth
About Chastity" (Brazos Press).
' Winner admits that she, like
many young women today,
indulged . in premantal relations but gradually comprehended thetr sinfulness after ·
the Chri stian conversion
depicted in her wi nsome memmr, "Girl Meets God" (2002).
She salutes new hu sband
Gritr, "who had the foolhardy
temerity" ro date and then

marry a woman who was
writing a book about chastity.
: Chastity involves everything from faithfulness in marriage to avoidance of porno~- ·
raphy, but Winner's focus ts
premarital sex. (Chastity isn't
the same as celibacy, absten.
tion from sex as part of religious vocations ami vows.)
Despite liberal Christi1,1ns'
auempts to detine it away,
Wmner says limitln~ sex to
marriage is·an .esSIInttal aspect
of biblical teaching'(but doesn't-.
explore the same-sex marriage
dispute). "You shall not commit
adultery" is more ·explicit, ttut
Wmner believes the Jl{emarital
ban is also assumed throughout
Scripture, beginning with
G~nesis and with Adam and
Eve as sexual partners.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor John Swanson. Sund ay School .
lOam, Worsht p - ll a.m. 7 00 p m.
Wedne~a y Scn·,ces- 7· 00 r m

Mt. Union Baptist
Pas tor Dav td Wt sem,an . Sunday School9 45 a m.. En: nt ng - () 30 p m ,
Wedne~y Serv ices - 6 30p m
lk'lhlebtm Baptist Church
Great Bend , Route 124, Racme, OH ,
Pastor . Damel Mecea, Sunday School 9 30 am, Sunday Worshtp - 10·30 a m..
Wednesda y B1ble Study· 6 00 p m
Old Btthel Frte Will Baptlo;t Chun:b
2860 1 St Rt 7, Midd lepot't, Sunday
-Suhnnl- 10 u rn , Evcmng - 7,00 p.m..
ll!u rsday Servtccs - 7 00
Hillside Baptist (: hurch
St Rt. 143 JU St off Rt. 7. Pastor· Re\
James R Acree, Sr., Suriday Umfied
Sel'\i tCe, Worshtp · JO•30 am , 6 p m ,
Wednesday Serv1ces -7 p ll'l

'

Vl('lory Baptist Independent
N 2nd St. Middleport. Pas10r. James
E. Keesee, Wors h1 p · lOam, 7 P.m .
Wednesday ServtL"CS - 7 p m.

Strond Baptist Cburtb
Ra\tnswood WV. Sunda~ School 10 am• Mom1 ng .,.,orsh1p II &amp;m Evening. 7 pm.
Wednesday 1 p m

the

?[fear!

Do you ever feel that
something ts missing, even ·
when life seems to be going
well? Perhaps there is an
emptiness in your spirit ... a
hunger in your heart . h it
possible that a personal
relationship with God is missinc
from your life?
With God, a good life can be
1reat. You will see others in a
different
and
' more
compassionate liJht ... as one
soul looking at another. You
will find ' yourself. smiling for no
apparent reason other than
y,our , heart is filled to
overflowina: with the Holr
Spirit. You can feel immediate
satisfaction
in ., simpl~
encounters, like changing places
in the grocery ':i'tore ch'eckout .
line with the sh.opper who has
only one or two items.
We read in John 6:15 as the
Lord says .. .'' l am "the bread of
life. H~ who comes to me will
ne¥er be hungry . and he· who
believes in me will never be
thinty.••
Visit 1our lociill house of
wonhip this week. God invit~
you to feast at H is table. You
won't leave huncry.

g;.J..,,

'' 1 1

:./til) I

•

!\ l

,.

.

, ~7;"tt&lt;' fb1j \ ~' ~T.moif.y
0!':...';'
-u·: 'J

~"..:;/~.tnl.1!1
'] ~-,;f1KI.~!(
':] fl \

Young's Carpenter Service
26 years in local business

Roofing &amp; Building Work

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville , Ohio

Locmed less than 30

mtnulC~

from '

Athens. Pomeroy o r Parkersburg

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6215

1-740-667-3156

· "Still small enough 10 care"

Michael L. Crites
Director or Family &amp;
Commur-ity Services

Overbrook
Rehabilitation O:r.
·A Celebration of Life"

209 Third
Racine, OH

Queen
Braz•er

700 N. 2nd St.

.

'•'

I

Mrddleport1 OH

uardrail. Fence &amp;

74()-949-2210
"A Home Bank for .
' Home People"

Racine, OH

740-949-2217
Sizes available Sx t 0 to 10

X

20

If ye abide in Me, and My

4'1'.1 Richland Avenue, Ath•ns
740-594-6333
I -800-451-9806

Ble~ed are

the ppre
in heart; for they
· shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and il shall
be done unlo you.
.
John 15:7
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A: JACKSON BAILES, OD

S07 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769 ~.
(740) 992-3279

Toi'F""' 1-8'17-5113·2433

:Mi{{ie's 'Rgstaurant

Antiqu.ily Baptfst
Sunday School · 9:30 a m.. Wonhtp •
10.45 a.m , Sunday E'&gt;'en ang - 6:00 p m.,
Pasmr. Don Walker '

740-992-n13

29670 Bashan Rd.
, --..~.....-

6a m ~8 pm

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
llnme Cooked Meals &amp; DaiiJ Sptciols
Open 7 da ys a wee k

Hills Self Storage

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769-Q683

ML Moriah Baptist
Fou'rth &amp; Mam St , MtddJepon. Pa.~mr
Rev Gil ben Cratg. Jr, Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m , Worship - 10·45 a.m.

Hours

,At~IWC~f1here

~

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see 'God.
Matthew 5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
1'90 N S!""'nd St.

Mrddleport. OH

Railroad St, Mason, Sunday Sr.! houl- 10
a m., Worsh1 p . 11 a m • 6 p m,
Werlnesday Servtees • 1 p m.
Foral Run Baptist
P.mor . Anus Hurt, Sunda.y School • 10 ,
a.m , Worship - II a m

'3 33 Page Street
(74Q) 992·6472
Middleoort OH
Fax i740l992· 7406
Warm Fnt&gt;11dh

Dair1.1

.

Faith Baptist Chun:h

.'

Rutland Fm Will Raptis:*
Salem Sl., Pastor. Jam1e Fortner, Sunday
School - I 0 a.m . E\ening - 7 p m ,
Wrdnesday Ser.'1ces - 7 p m.

BUSINESS SERVICES

Tax

An Income
&amp;
Financial Senicts Firm
618 E. Matn Street• Pomeroy

(740) 992-7270

Sc•opr .re..~ 58ffld11Cf br Tile ,_m8frc~fl &amp;blfl ~
l(•••ta•·Wt&lt;b "'l ~.. SDilet'' Se 'V!Ces p 0 ao, IKlO!i Cnlll'!OftJIIS\II!If 'JA 229015

"Do not steal. Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; II

pm

Sa(rtd Htart CathoUc Chun:h
161 ~ulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898,
Pastor Rev. Walter, E Heinz, S a~ Con
-1 -15-~ 1~p m ~ \(ass· 5 3D p m, Sun
Con-M45-IJI"iam .. SunMm 930
am.DatlyMass 8~0am

1

Church of Christ
Hemlock Gron Chrislilln Chun:h
Mtna~e r LarrY Bro~ n, Wqrshtp ~9.30
~ a.m. Sunday School • 10·30 a.m , Btble
Srudy-7pm
Pomeroy Church ol Christ
212 W Matn St , M1 mster Anthony
Morns· Sunday School ~ 9:30 a.m ..
Worshtp- ID 30 a m , 6 p m, Wnlnesda)
Servtces · 7 p m.
Pomeroy W~t!lde Church ofCbrbl
33226 Ch tldre n's Home Rd. Sunda)
&amp;houl · II a.m .. Worship . lOa m , 6 p m,
Wednesdn) Sen.tces. 7 p m"
Middleport Church of Chris't
5th and Mam, Pastor AI Hanson, Youth
Mmtster. Jush Ulm. Sunda)' School . 9·30
a m , \\lo rship - 8· 15, 10 30 am., 7 pm,
Wednesday Sen 1ces - 7 p m
Keno Church ot'Christ
Wop,;h tp 9 .30 a m . Sunda} School 10 30 a.m , Pastor-Jeffrey Wall ace. I st and
3rd Sunday
Burwallow RldRe O.un:h ofChrbt
Pa stC!r. Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9 30

Congregational
l'rinlt) Church
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomero~. Pastor· Re,·
Jonathan 1Noble, \\-ors,htp 10 25 am.
Sunday School 9 I5 a.m.'-

Episcopal
GraCY Episc.:opal Chu rch
]26 E Main St , Pomeroy ~unday School
~ and-Hoi) Euchanst 11 .00 ~ . m .

Holiness
Communlt) Chull'b
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Street
Rutland. S unda~· Worshtp-1 0 00 am ,
Sunday Servtce-7 p.m.

Danville Holiness Chu n:h
31057 State Route 325 Langs \·ll e. Pastor
V!c lnr Rf'! ush Sunday sc hool- 9·30 am.
Sunday worship - 10.30 a m. &amp; 7 p m
Wedne&amp;day player service - 7 p m
'
Calvary Pilgrim Cha~l
Hamsonvll le Road. Pa.~t or· · Chtlrles
McKenzie. Sunday School 9 30 am,
Worshtp · II am, 7 00 p.m , Wetlne~ay
Sen:tce - 7 00 p m

Rose ol Sharon Holines.~ Chun-h
Leadtng Creek Rd. Rutl and. Pastor· Re'
Dt!wey King. Sundll} Slhool- 9 30 am
Sunillly " orshtp -7 p m Wednesday
prayer meetm g- 7 p.m

.

Ptne Gro'&gt;'c Bible Holiness Church
112 m1le off Rt. 325. Pastor Rev O'Dell
Manley. Su11day School
9:30 am.
Wo,sh1p - 10·30 am, 7·30 p m .
_ Wednesday Service - 7.30 p m

Tuppers Plains~. Paul
Pa5tor Janc . Bcantc Sundll\ School. 9
a m \\ o~h1p · 10 a m . Tue•da} Sen tee~
- 7 :mpm
Ct ntral Cluster
Asbu!" (S\racuse). Pastor Bob Robmson,
Sunday S~hool 9.-+S am. Worsh1p . 11
a.m W~dne&lt;.dny Ser.tces . 7 ~0 p m
Enterprise
Pao;;t or· Arland Kmg Sund&lt;l} Scho(J] •
10 31) a nt ., \\u1~h1p - 9 30 am Bibk
Stud~

Wed 7·tn

Pearl Cha~ l
Sunday School- 9 am , Worsh1p - 10 am .

l~lk'k

Springs
Pastor Ke11h Rader. Sunday School - 9 1~
a m , Wors hip • I 0 a m. Youth
Fe!lu\\ sh1p, Suntlay - 6 p 111

Tuppers P1aiD Church of Chrht
Instrumental, Wo r ~ htp Service - 9 am,
Commun tnn - 10 a.m , Sunda) Slhoo! lO· I Sa m , Youth -S 30pm Sunillly, Btble ·
Study Wednesda) 7 pm

' Hysell Run ~nllf!Unity Church
Pas10r Rev La IT)' Lemley, Sund.1y SC hool
· 9 JO a m , Worshtp - 1045 a m,, 7 p m ,
Thursday B1ble Stud) and Yout h . 7 p m

Uelh•n'
Pastor John Gtlmorc. Sunda\ )ic hfll\l- Ill
a m . \Vorshtp · :1 .am, \\. o:Jn.:~Ju)
S~:rvKcs IOllm
'

l.aurtl Cliff free- Mtthothst Church
Glenn Ro"'e. Sunday School .
9 30 a.m , Worsh1p . 10 30 a.m. and 0
p.m.. Wednesday Sen•ice . "7 00 p m •

Cannei-Sullon
Carmel &amp; Ba~h an Rd s' Ral' lnr. Ohio.
Pastor John Gtlmor.:. S und a~ Slht•l•l .
9 1.0 am \\ orshtp 10 -4~ a 111 • Ritolc
Study Wed 7 00 p m

Bradbuey Church of Christ
Mm1s1er Tom Runyon. 39.5.58 B n~tlb ur)
Road, ~-11d d l e pon , Sunday Sc hool - 9 30
om

Pa~tor

Latter-Day Saints

Wol'!'hip - 10 30 am

· Rutland Church or Christ
Sunday School - ~ 30 am Worshtp and
Communton- J0·30 a m , Bob J Werry,
Mumter
Bradford Churth of Christ
Corn et ot St. Rt . 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
Mmtstl'r Doug Shamhhn , Youth Mtmster:
Btll Amberger, Sunday Sc hool · 9 30 a.m.
Worshtp 8 00 am .. 10.30 a.m.. 7 00
p m ,W&lt;:dnesday Serv ices • 7'CIO p m
,Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Evangelist M1ke Moore , Sunday School 9 am, Worshap - 10 am , 6 30 p m.
Wednesdny Servaee!:- 7 p m

Reedsville Chun:h of Christ
Pastor: Ptuhp "Stunn. Sunday School 9 30
a.ffi .. 'worshtp Semce. 10.30 a.m.. B1ble
Smdy, WC(jnesday, 6·'0 pin
Dexter Church or Christ
Su'nday school 9·30 a m . Sunday worshtp
- 10 30a m

The Church or Jes us
of Latter· Day S1&amp;in1S
S1 R1 160 -146-6247 or 446-7 486
Sunday' School 10 .20-J t 'am, Reli ef
Soc•ely/Pn est huorJ JJ·OS 12 00 noon.
s"acr amen\ SerVICe 9 \0 I S a m .
Homemak ing meettng, l,st Thurs . 7 p m
Chri~t

Lutheran

Christian Union
Hanford Cbun:b ot Christ I•
Christian Unfoa
Hartford , W Va , Pastor·Davad Gree r,
Sunday School • 9 30 am , Wor!htp ~ 0 30 am ..
7 00 p m .. W~dnesday
Sen1ccs- 7·00 p m

Church of God
1\tl. Moriah Churdl ol God
Male Hall Rd ., Racme, Pastor James
Sauufield, Sunday School - 9:45 a f\1 ,
Evemng- 6 p m, Wednesday Services · 1

...

Eost Lelarl
Btl! Mlrshall Sund ay Sehoul .
9a m Wor~htp- 10 a. m . 1st Sunda)
every mf'lnth eu•ntn g service 7 ()(I p m
Wednesday - J p m

Our Saviour Luthenn Chun:h
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravens..,.ood.
W Va , Pastor David Rus•ell Su nday
School - 10.00 a m., Worshtp - I I a m

Coolville l lnlted Methodist Parish
Pas tor Hele n Klme Coolvtlle Ch urch
Mam &amp; FJI"th St .. Sunday s~- h lto l - 10
a m , Wonhtp - 9 a m . Tuesda} Scr.•Jces .
7p m.

Rus'Sell, Suntlay School and \Y.Qtship- 10
am Evening Scr'o'tces- 6•30 "p m .
Wednesday Serv1ccs • 6.30 p m

pm

'

Sl. Paul Lutheran Churc:h
Corner-Sycamore &amp; Sccontl St"·Pomcroy.
~u ntlay Schuo l - 9·45 11111 ., Worship - 11 a.m Pastor . James P Brady
Sat. 7 00 pm Contemporary Sen tcc ''

Graham Uniltd Methodist
Wors h1p • 9 30 a m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun) ..
7 30 p.m (3rd &amp; 4th Sun ),Wednesday
Servlel' - 7 30 p.m
Mt. Olive Umkd Methodist
Off 124 behmd Wilke svil le, P3.'&gt; 10r Rev
R&amp;.\ph Sptres, Sunday School · 9 JO am ,
Wors hip - 10.30 a m , 7 p m, Thursday
Setv1ces • 7 p m
Meigs Cooptradve Parkh
Northeast Cluster, Al fred, Pastor· Jane
Beattte, Sunday Sc hool · 9 30 a m..
Worsb1p -l l ,a m.630pm
Ch&lt;sttr
Pasror· Jane BeaUle , Worshtp - 9 a m .
Sunday School ·. 10 am
Thursday
Servtces • 7 p m

Helhel Church
• Tuwnslup R~ .. ~6~C. Sundu) Schuu l - 9
am Worsh ip - to' am Wednesduy
Se rv~ees · 10 a.m
Hot:kingport Chun:h
Grand Streel, Sunda y School - 9 30 am,
Worship - IO.JOa m.. Pastor Ptulilip Bell
ron:h Chbn:h
Co Rd Ol Sunday Sc hoql
Worsh1p • 10·30 a m

Pastor· Bob Rando lph . Worsh1p
a m Sunday School · 10 30 am

9.30

Sunday Schoo l • 9· 30 a m , Worsh1p 10.30 a.m.
Roeohvllle
Worsh1p • 9•30 a m , Sunday' School 10.30 am., First Sunday o{ Month· 7 00
p m. service

9 JO am .

Nazarene
Middlepor1 Church of tht Nazan~ne
Pasto"r Allen M1dc ap. Sunda) School ·
930 a m ,Wo rshtp · 10.30a m , 6 30 p.m .
Wedne sda} Scrvu,:es - 7 p m , Pa s tor.
Alleh M1dcap
Reednille Fellowship
Church of ,he Nazarene. Pastor· Ja nne
Pettit, Sunda) School • 9.30 am, Worship
10·45 am, 1 p nl. Wednesday Sem~es
-7pm
Syracuse Churrh of the Nazal't'ne
Pastor M1ke Ykms, Sunday Schoo l - 9 30
1
am . Worsbtp · 10.30 a.m.. 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Serv1ces- 7 p.m.
-1'
PQmtroy ('hurth of the Naurtnc
Pa~tor Jan L a;e nd ~r. Sunday School
9·30 am, Worshtp • 10 30 a m and 6
p.m, Wednesday Sen·tees· 7 p m
c

'

Cbester Cbul"(b ol the Saza~nc

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITTION CENTER

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

good works .. and glorify
IFather in heaven ."

36759 Rocksprings Rd . .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

992-3785
Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
INSURANCE
Insurance ~ords abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products +
what ye will, and it shall
,
~'nanc"'t
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
Servx:es
AGENCIES tnc.
992-5130' •
John 15:7
Pomeroy
Bill QulcUI ·

-

Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667·311 0

!J \ II

ANDf.RSO"
FUNERAL HO!ItF.

H.--

tm..,.- · ro 1n :rnt

1-

Nt• ~~~- wv

m.s

Ucttoool , .... Dl"""'

Caha~

Hiblr Church
Rtl Pa't111 , Kt.,
BIJ~b,Ulxl . SundJ~ Sl huol
9 ~(} am
Wm~htp
10 ~0- .1 m
1 .\0
pm
\\.:Jnt'•\.kt\ s~n l ~ O:- 1 ~ IJ pIll
Cu

Sthe r&lt;l\i llt' fnmm unil\ -'.postnhc
Chutx· h
'
P;t•t ur \\a~n~ R Je" d l SundLl' s".:r\l~e
fi 00 p lll \\t· ,JnC~lb~ · 6 I)() p m
R ~jou:ing
~(10

~nd

\

-\1~

Lifr Chun.·h
\lu.idkpl.1rt 1'11I11T

\I tko:
hJrC'IIlilll , Pa~t , o r
Etn~ntu~
LJ"renc. F or~m.m \\.nr ~h1p lOOOum
\\c.tn..-,.d." s, n ll t:• • 7 r m

Clifton fubernade Chlin.- h
('hftnf1 \\\a SunJa\ S~huol . Ill 3m .
\\ 0r•h1p - 7 Jl m . \\clin~-.da~ Scnt\',c · 7
p rn

Lirr \

ic t u r~ Ct' nt ~r

Ash Stml Chu(('h

~77' Gl'mgl' ~ (r,·(·k

Ro1J

St M t ddl.-p urt- P a~tor
SunJo~~
SlhOOI Y 30 ~ m, Ml'rmng Wor!&gt;hip
I0 30 am &amp; 0 ~0 pm W~dne~dny So:n 10:e
-6 '0'p m Youth Scr-u:e- 6 .\0 p m
Agapt l.irr Ctntrr
Fu11 G11s pd Churl h Pa~tnr. John &amp;
Pall} Wo~de : 60J Se,ond -\.,.: :O.Ias'm /7 J.
5017,Scntl~llmc Sund~• 10.'0am
Werlneo;r_\a\ J pm

Pl,h •r 811\ Suto:n.

Sund;t~ So:nt~&lt;·~.

A~h

&amp; 7 pm

Jm

Gaihpnh ~

OH

10
\\o.'dneMI.t' - 7 p111 &amp;

•
Full Gnspel Ch_urch
1lf thr Lhina Sa, lOr
Kt JJK -\nl iqtuty. Pa~ t or
Smurdi.i} :! ·()(1 p m

Jc ~se

,\-l,&gt;rns,

S~r•lll'$

o\bundant Grace R.•.. I.
9:!' S Thtrd St ~ hddlc po.•rt P~~tu r T~n:•J
Oa,•r,;, StlrH.Ia} oo:ntlC, ]() J m
Wedm• r.t: l ~) srn' l li't' 7 p 111

Su ltm Communit, Chun·h
nt \\ l' ~ t (ulumhl.t \\ Va nm Lt evtng
R1lilJ f-'a,tur Chark' Rr•us h I ~(}.1) 67~ ·
::sit Suoda} S..:hool 9 10 Jm Sunda)
~ ~··nm~ W l \ll ~ 7 00 pm Bthh Stud~
\\~ tlneM.Ia~ .en"'" 1 00 pm

hith Full Gospel Chu(('h
Long Bottom Pa•l&lt;lf "loe RecJ. SunJ.1\
School - Y 30 &lt;1 111 Wl&gt;l~lup 1,1 \{1 J m
and 7 p m . Wei.! nc~tla} 7 p m f-rttl ,t~ .
tclh.J" ~hlp ~.:f\ ll.C 7 p Ill

P ~~ t 1•r

Uarrison"ille ( 'ummu nlt~· Church
l'i"tnr Tho: rnn lJmham, Sum.l&lt;~\
.1 m .mJ ,. p m . Wl'tlnr~day - 7 pm

11'10~

Ra~k

Hobso n Chnstian Fello" sh1p Chu rc h
HcrM.hcl Whttc Sunda' Sd•uul1\1 \1111 Suntlay Church ser. kl' 6 '10 prn
WL·dn&lt;! :o.d~~ 7 pm
Rt-stnrat lon Christian Fello~s hlp
Hollpcr lo:uad Athen~. l';a~tor
Lmm..- Cui.it~o Sunda y W,ln;htp Ill ()(1 am.
w..-Jno:....ta~ 7 pm

\liddieport lummumt,· Chun:h
\ l nkll ~pnrl
Pa ~tor Sam
.\ntlcr-un. Su nJa., s~ho,•l Ill am ,
f\cm n¥ 7 ,\(J p m. . Wo:tln~sda\ SL'nlcc -

515 Pear l St.

Langsw-il!r Christian Churrh
Full Gospel. Pa~tor Mol'-en :0.1u~~l·r.
Sunday Schut1l 9 '0 .1111 \\ orsht p 10.10·
am · 7 [)() pm WeJnc-.Ja\ Sl'r\l'l' J 00
'
pm

.

...,_--;;;s:..,Fai!h-Valle,--Tabemade Cfiun-h
Ba ti e) Run Road Pas lnr Ro:'' Em mdl
Rawson, Su nda y bent ng 7 p m,
Thursda~ Sen tce 7 p m

Pentecostal

Syracuse 1\.hssmn
14 11 Bndgeman St, Syrac use Sunda y
Schuu l
10 u 111. EH!ntng
6 pIll .
Wednesday Scn·1cr- 7 p m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt 124. P stor Edse I Hart Sunda\'
s~h ool · 9 30 am Worsh1 p - IO·JO am.

Dyesville Co mmunit~ Church
Su nd a) School · 9·JO am, Worshtp 1030a.m,7p m

Mone Chapel Church
10 ~ m, Worsh1p
a.m., Wednc!VJ.ay Scr.,.u.-c · 1 p.m.
Su nday '' hool

Pt-ntt-ros tal ,\ssemhl y
St Rr 1 ~ -1 Ra~ml'. p;a,tc•r Wtlham
Hnhack-, Sunda) Sdli.JI. Jl - 10 ~ m ..
Evcn mg- 7 p m , Wedm:sliay Sen t ~t'~ - 7

pm

Presbyterian
S~racuse fa111t Umttd Pmb\lrfllln
Paswr Rohl.•n Cnw. Wo!"!'&gt;htp llum

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
PrescriptiOJ"!S
992-2955

II

Middltport PrYSb~tenlln
Pasmr· J am~s Sn~dl'r Worship. II am

Seventh-Day Adventist
Snenlh•Dil!' t\ d' entist
,\]u l ~crry Ht.~. Rd , Poml'ru;.. ' Pastor
B!.'n nen Lu..- kti.:&lt;;h S,,l urday s~r\ l l !.'S
Sahhat h SlhOOl - 2 p m , \\ ur~ htp .1 p m

MI. Olne Cummunity Church
Lav.rence Bu.;h, Sunday Sc hon] 9.30 a m.. Evenmg - 6 JO p m. \V~.-dn cdJ)
St:n·u."t: 7 p m.
.,

1\lt. Htrmon Umtt'd' Brethren
in Christ Church
Texas Commurltl~ '\Q-4 11 Wtdhllll Rd.
PaMur l?eter :0..1anmda le. Sunda~ Srho&lt;J I
9·ln am \\or,htp . JO·.'O am 7 00
p m , Wednesda\ Ser '' ll'c~ . J'QO p m
Yout h groo p me~u ng .:!nd &amp; ~ lh Sundays
1 pm

Full GO!ipel Lighthouse
.'3()..15 Htland Road Pomeroy. Pa~tor Ru;rt-lunter Sunday S~hnol - 10 am. p.cnmg
•7.30 p 111 , Tm:sday &amp; Thursda) · 7 :'\0

-

p.m

South Belhr l CCNnmunil} Church
S1her Rtdge Pa ~tur LmdJ Dame .... ood.
Sunda) School · 9 am Worship Sen I Cl'
10 am :.!nd and -4th Sunda)

Carleton Intud enomtnat1onal Church
K!IIK ~bu ry Road, Pasl\lr. Rubert Va n\:c,
Sunda~ School
9 30 a m . Wnrshtp
SenJCe 10 JO a m. E ~ emng Ser\ICL 6
pm

United Brethren

Eden Unltt'd Brethren In Christ
State Route 1 ~-1 Rc ed ~v tlk Sundav
S~ hool · II am, Sunli&lt;~y Wo r ~h1p · lU00
am &amp;: 7 00 p m V.c-dnc sJa~ Sa, lees
7 00 p m . \\ t'tli\L'•day Youth Sen leo.' .
7 00 p.m

cxtttent~ e~taw!t
.9/egtda'lly.

Frttdom Gospel Miuton
Bald Knob. on Co Rtl 31, Pa ~ t or Re-v,
Roger \\-tllfo rd: Sunday School - 9·30 am
Worshtp- 7 p m
\\bite's Chapel \\le'§leyan •
Coolvllll' Road, Pastor Rev Phtlltp
Rtdenour, Sunda) s~hool - 9 30 a.m ,
Worshtp l0 30 a m , Wedne~a)' Sen 1ce

Ler your lighr so shine before
men. that tlrfy may see ymtr

Father in heaven."
Marr!te" 5: 16

Me1gs County '!' Oldest Aon~t
352 East Marn
~
Pomeroy, Oh
•

W

"Lit u~ !Qnd yo•Jt fhooght~ with ~~ill eiln~"

74().992·2644

God so loved the world
he gave his O(ily ..
)begotten son ...
Joh11 3:16

Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure "So I strive always 'to keep
iff heart; for they · my conscience ·clear before
God and man."
shall see God.
Acts 24: 16
M~tthew 5.

Harriw nvilk Prtsbytt-rian Church
Pastor Rohen (ro\.1. Wnr~h1p 9 am

Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom. S und~y Sch!XJI • 9 30 a m ,
Worsh tp - 10 .J.5 .,-,m. 7 JO p m
Wednesday 7:30 p m

The can you destne, clost to home good works and glorifj· your

Matthew 5:1

White Funeral Home

7pm

Pnm..-ro' Pth

Bethel \\orsh\p Center
Chester S~h~Jol, Pa ~ tur Rub B.trbcr.
A )S istam Pa swr Karen Da\l s S u ndn~
Worshlp I 0 am. E.,.:n mg \\ &gt;Jr~h tp 6 pm.
Y&gt;Juth gruup 6 pm. Wedne&gt;da~ : POI\O:r m
Pra~ er and Rtt&gt;k Stud~ · 7 pm

Pa~ror

''

"Let your light so shine before l
me n, that they may see

-'.mazing Grace- l ommunit~ Church
Paslflr Wa\nc ])unl~p . St:ttr Rr 681
Tupper'! Pl!itn), Sun \\ or•h1p 10 am &amp;
0 .'0 pm Thur'i-d,n B1ble Stud~ 7 00 p.rn

Rl

7 30p m

"""" Boltom

Syi'KUSC Flnl Chlll'th ol Gocl 1
Apple and Second Sts., Pastor: Rev Davtd

Fn..ta~

~J~ tor

Racine
Pastor Pete Shaffe r, Sunday School • 10
a m . Worshtp - I I am WeJnesda) 7

Joppa

p.m

Other Churches

-..~~--- 7~m

Morning Star
Pasror JOluit tl mort!, Sunda~~Sch;;;l . 11 """
am, Worship· lU am

p.m

Rutlaod Cb- at God
Pastor: Ron Healh, Sunday Wonhip - 10
a.m , 6 p m , Wednesday Servtces - 7

Habit' l 'hun.h
I PJ~h l ! HrtJn \ ].!\
SundJ\ '~~honl 'J \!! J m \\ nr ,htr • l~l
p m \\eJn~·Ja., lltbk ~WI)' . " 1~1 r m
Fatth h llu"!thip &lt;..: ru.sudt&gt; fur Chml
Pa.,tor R~\ Franldm Oto:kcn., Sl'n!LC

Pastor

St. John Lutheran Churdl
Pme Grove, Worshtp - 9.00 a.m , Sunday
School - 10·00 a m Pastor James P
" Brady

United Methodist

Churth of Cbrisl
Intersectio n 7 ~tnd 124 W, E ~ angeh st
Dennis Sargem , Sund a} -Bible Study 9 30 a. m , Worship. 10 JO a m and 6 30
p m, Wednesday 81ble Stud y- 7 p m

Falr'lr~

Ld.lfl . \ \ \ I

~r~

Pomeroy
Pa5tor Bnan Dunham. Worshtp • 9 JO
am SundaySchool - 10 ' ~5a m.

Wesleyan Bible Holinw Chu rc h
75 Pearl St .. Middl eport Pastor R1ck
Bourne. Sunday School · 10 a m Worsh1p
-10 45 p.m . Sunday E\e 7.00 p.m,
Wednesday Servtce - 7 30 p m

\\'e tlnesday Sen.•1ces - 6 30 p m

r•n

prn

Mt ntrsl llle
Pas tur Buh Robmsun. Sunday School 9
am Worsh1p- 1[) am

Zion Chureb ur Chrl!Jt
Pomeroy, Harri sonville Rd (Rt 143)
Pastor Roger Watson, Sunday School 9 30 a.m . Wurs~tp - 10 30 am, 7 00
p m • Wed nesday Servtces - 7 p m

Wor ~ htp ·1 10.30 am. 6•30 p m,

Pastor Re\ Ht'~rt Grate. Sunda\ Schi'•CI
9 30 am . 'Aor~htp - II n m h p m
\l.e-dnesda\ Scn•~e s - 7 p m
Rutland ChutTh ofthr '11L11rrne
5untlil\ s~houl l) \{) J m \\nr~hlp .
10 1.0 3m
ti '0 p rn
\\o:Jno:,J.,.,
Ser. tees 7 p m

flat-...oods
Oasis Chnsttan fello-...shlp
Pastor Krt\tl Rader Suntla~ S"'hoQI- I IJ.-~--. -.: 0 n-{knomtnaU&lt;•naiTelio.l"stitp~
a rrf Worsh1p · II am
~leeung m lhe old -\mem•nn LL·g ton Hall
SuU!h Fourth -\1enue \ ltdtllepon
Pa)tur (hn ~ Ste1101rt 10 00 Jm Sunda.,
Fort"St Kun
Other meeungs 111 home s
Pa;;tor Bob Roh tnson, Sunda~ School. Ill
am . V. orsh tp -9a m
Commumtl of Chri!il
Purt]and Rac\nt" Rd Paqor Jun Prnlfttt.
He11th (1\ liddlr port ~
Sundn~ S ~ hool ·. 9 'U am. \\(&gt;rshtp .
Pastor Bnan Uunh am. Suntla~ Sehoul .
9)0am V. urshtp II OOurn
1OJO a m W~UH~·&gt;Ja; Sen t(:c ~ 7 00

Rutl•nd
R1ck Bourne. Sunday School ·
9 ~0 .a m . Worship • I0 30 a 1ll Thursd~y
Serv1ces · 7 p m
S11lem Cenlrr
PU!!Iur Wtlluun K. ~ l ur~ hull . SundJ\'
SdiUul- lO IS am. Wor!&gt;htp 9. 15 am.
Bthlc Stud) Monday 7·00 pm
Sno-....Yille
Sunday School 10 am. Wnn;htp 9 a 111

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740-992-6128
Local soUrce for trophies,
Ia ues 1-shirts and more

Church or God of Prophtt'y
OJ \\-lute Rd off St. Rt 160. Pastor PJ
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 a m .
Worship · II am, Wednesday Sen1cts- 7

Catholic

~25

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Fellowshio

We have been set apart as
Hi s people to be useful to
Him for every good work, as
we arc ta ugh t. for His honor
and glory. (Cf. II Tim- 2:21 )
He has equ ipped us for everv
task He has given us. and He
will cqutp US for whatever
work He may give us tomorrow. This' was true for the
disctples as we ll,
. We . on ly have so much
111ne 111 .' hts ":orld .. Every
momrnt&lt;&gt; pr_ecwus and we
are called to a hfe, not only
of h~mble obedience, butproc
ducttve obed1ence as well
So make every mom,ent
count · for 'omething good.
Do not gtve up on something
too easi ly or toor quickly,
because life does. after all,
req uire an awful lot of perseverance.
_
On the other hand. choose
yo ur battles well and never
fi ght longer than u's worth
when otherwise you could be'
doing greater good el sewhe re. Remember, the Lord
ascended into heaven _ but
He wi ll return. What would
you· ha ve Him find you doing
if He should return in your
l'f
. ., A
d
. f
1
ettme · goo quesnon or
everyon~ who names the
Name of Chnst.

' The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

. www.mydailysentinel.com

WORSHIP GODTHIS WEEk

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•
that true happiness lies withinh . Bhecause we've been told
t at t e so 1uuons to all our
problelns can be found
«
in side ourselves. A sugaryJonathan
coated promtse. Very af&gt;pealBY JONATHAN NoBLE
ing isn't J[l
TRINITYCONGREGATIONAL
NOble
But the fact of the matter
CHURCH. POMEROY
is that if we IQok inward i·or
ctll the ·&lt;tnswers to lt''e's
The angels asked the same
'' questrans. we'll end up as empty quesuo~. the Lord asks us
as those who trust in only toda¥ Why do you stand is the Lord instructs us to do.
those things thaL thev can.. lookmg_ up toward heaven) we· should do and then we
prove emptrically ' Why do 1 lJo you not have other bust - can be certain of His promis- say th at &gt; Mainl y because ness to be. about " Has the es.
It ts not as thoug h Hi s
there is something terribly Lord not gtven you mstrucwtong with the hu_man heart. ttons.0 Has He not g i ve~ you promi ses are ever uncertain.
"The heart 1s decettful. above your marchmg orders' Oh They are more certarn than
a ll things and beyond ·cure. men, oh womet~, why do you stars in the nrght sky. But He
Wh o can understand it?" stand lookmg_ ,Thts Jesu s requires obedience. Moses
(Jeremiah 17:9).
WtH comeagam1 •
.
told the people of God, "See,
"Inner wisdom" that does
Jesus wtll come· agam as I am setting before you today
nOt frnd its source 111 God's surely as the sun will rise ;t blessing and a curse· the
Word is deadly, When trying tomorrow ... no. even. more ble-smg. if you obe y the
to make it thiJugh ltfe on c~rtamly.; and how V.: tll , He commandments of the Lord
o ur own. ·apart from God's fmd u~. Wtll He fmd us your God, whtch I command
leadership. wtsdom and pro- ~ccupy t~g our.se lves produc- you today, and the curse. if
vision, we ' ll always wander tt vely for Ht s honor and you do not obey the cominto self-destruction. .
glory_ and the advancement mandments '( Duet. II. 26-28)
"Cursed is the one who 9f Hts Kmgdom, or wtll He
And St. John teaches,. "The
trusts in man, who depends find us engag'ed only. in uur Father loves the. Son and has
o n fles h for his strength and own mterests,. ~c0htevt ng our gtven all thrn!!s mto hts hand.
Whoever belteves 111 the Son
whose heart turn s away from own goals m hie.
the LORD. He wtll be l!ke a
It was as tl the se two h as eternal ·ltfe, whoever
bush ih the ·waste lands· he angels said to the disciples. does not obey the Son. shall
will 'not see pro; perity -~hen "You are astounded at Hi s not see life. but the wrath of
it comes. He wtll dwe ll in glonous ascenston mto heav- God remains on hi m." (Joh n
the parched places of the en where He ~ill now return 3.3 5-36) The promises of
desert, in a salt land where to Hts father s nght hand , .God are sure but obedience
no one li ves" (Jerem iah where He wtll now retgn as is just as necessary.
(Meigs County m1msters:
17:5-6) .
.Kmg of kmgs ·and . Lord of
And sa th e' ange ls· ask, You are i11vited to submit
But tf we tllrn to God for lords, .... but do not forget the "Why are you standing and sermonettes of, an inspiraleadership, meani ng, fulfill- Lord,s mstructtons an~ keep looking ? Do you not have tiona/ nature, 500 to 700
ment, wisdom, love and sal- m mmd H1 s prom1 ses.
somethmg e lse ·to dq? Is words, for this Friday page.
vation we' ll find that it is
If He had told them ro there not producttve business They should be typed and
mdeed true where it is writ- camp out on some hillside, wtth which to occupy your- delivered, or e-mailed to
ten, "blessed is the ·man who then they should . have selves?" So the angels lweflich@mydailyse~~tinel. c
tru sts in the LORD, whose camped out on a htlls1de. If prompted them to stop gaz- om. All are subject to editing
confidence is in Him. He He had told the':! to return to ing at the sky but to go about and should not deal with
)'liil be like a tree planted by Gahlee , and watt, then they what the Lord had command- controversial issues or spe·
the water that sends out its should have returned to. ed.
·
cific church doctrine. We
roots by the stream. It does Gahlee to wan. Whatever i ~
And so 11 'is for us today. want your contributions.)
not fear when heat comes ; ---'-------~------,.---------------_:_-

i~s ~::v~~ ~~rr~~~a;; p~~~

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Friday, April1, 2005

Scripture:1cts 1:38

A Hunger For More
Htdden deep in ,;llle m\
precious wife there i' hiddei1
a n1erci less prankster just
·~·vanmg lO emerge ~111d unexOf
pectedly a"atl me .
Pastor
course, today betng Ap ril I st
Thorn
(a.k.a. "Apn l Fool's Da) ")
Mollohan
computer
ke1 board,
w·r,tpped in Sarakl · Wrap.
Cnsco-co,ered Cctr doot han dles, and green food colormg added to mv cereal mi lk
-~are all st ct;1ltnrd·-pmc~me 'i\t mean?'·. kt _mc exJ21atll_th?t
our .house . Our chtldren love ther~ arc t"o great errors
t ese dubious enterprises so tnto "hich we iend to fa ll.
Cclll abo expect whoopee The tn·-t i' that ·'see ing ts
cushtons to
strategically belicvl!l~..
"If I ca n't
placed throughout ou r home ob,ct 1·c "it. it must not be."
I enJoy our g.une of "G~t !tont~all v. in jt- presumpDa~" as I gingerly t ipt o~ tton. It turned ftom the obv ithroughout the pl.tce. hopin~ i&gt;U&gt; portenh o( a Divine
to avoid cctch lrttk trctp but l Creator dlld turned to nonknow that sooner or I.Her I' II thetstic theories
fa ll prey to one ot the rr
But "since the creation of
playful little !.tn dmmes 1. tn the wo rld God's in visi ble
Hi s eternal
turn. prete nd to be ,urprrsed quali ties
(so metimes I' m not prete nd- powe r and dr vine na~ure ing) and put on my best h;ne been clearly sed,
lo ngsuffering
exp ressr on . bctng understood from what
Then. when thev least sus- has been made. so that men
peel it (l ike. '"Y·· M.ty 1~th). arc. w rthout exctise. For
I beg in my camp;iig n of altlwugh they knew God.
retal iation rubber chickens they ncrther glonfied Him as
in the freezer. f.Jke fli es rn God not gave thanks to
ice cubes. etc
(alw.tvs Htm . but thet r th inkmg
harmless. mind you. •111d c il- becalne futi le and their fool cu lated to 1\'0T hu rt peo- tsh hc;u ts were darken~d''
pie's feeling' )
(R(Hn,tns I :20-2 1).
Historic.t! ly. &lt;\pri l FooLs
The · ult imate end of
D.ty ori ginated in Europe Na tura! rsm (the idea that
latgely as .t resu lt of some there i&gt; no God Who is
people's
re lu ctance
to Creator and Sustainer of all
change fro m the Jul ran to that ~&gt;I " pride 111 our own
. the Gregorian cale ndar at the ·intellect "' we choose to be
end of the 16th century and dtssatr sfted wtth the proofs
the ignoranc~ of many peo- that sun ound us in Creation
pie in re mote areas to the and a hardening of our
fact there even was a chan£e he:u ts agamst the truth of
bemg made In stead. of eel- God. "Thev are darke ned ir\
ebratin·g on J.tn . 1. they ee l- therr undet:standmg and sep'ebrated" the first of Apnl. aratcd from the hfe of God
These "Apn l Fools" became because of th e tgnorance
the targeh of deris ion and that is Ill them due · to th~
prank-pull ing. Some clueless harde nin g of thetr hearts"
souls ev.en had paper fi sh (Ephes iai1s 4: 18).
attached to thei r backs sug-'
Over the past few years,
gesting that they were "April Naturalism
has
been
Fi sh" (young and natve Qsh unmasked as a f~J!ure in
are eastlv caught). 1 woni:ler bringing the sense of satisif every' oeneration has its fac llon and fu lfil lment It
ow n vari&lt;Uio n of the "kick · once boasted it could supply.
me" note slapped on the Instead, when it became
backs ot the unsuspecting.
clem 11\at tt co_u ld do nothtne
Mean whtle. the wo rld for tlle -smrl ot the md1Vldua1
goes on playrng tts own (a nd co nsequently soctety
ga me of "Apnl Fool s" wn h overctll ). tt proved bankrupt
a much . more senous and and our culture went looklllg
darker set of repercussions elsewhere for mea.nmg . .
than sunply feel ing silly or
But mstea~ of returm ng
embarrassed. Whe reas the to God. we ve gone the
drum-beaters to r "mod- wrong way again. Not lookemtsm" sui! tour a mandate ing to our Creator Who
on believm o only what may make s Himself known to us
be seen anct" concretely docu- through His floly Law and
mented,
post-modernism the perso n of Jesus Chnst,
... panders to people today 'its we look mto another finite
wares of experiential rela- world, the inward world of
tivism.
our own human hearts. Why
Before anyo ne
says. do
we
loot..,, inward 0
" Huh ? What does that Becau se · we 've~en . told

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jt.noullrr'•
.1'i r·t &amp;6aftl!'

........."
nut m

740-992-6298

MY erace is
for thee: for m·y
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Setvice &amp; Supply
137-CN.2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

. 992-6376

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LOCAL

'The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Aprilt·, 2oos

· vated . it{ ~OOJ. adding 17 it\cluding bold. angular feanew rooms (for a total uf -U) tures and large expanses of
.and im:rcasi ng the depan- green glass.
HUNTINGTON . WVa ment's si.l:e from I.t .500
The North Patient Tower
Cabell
Huntington square feet to 30.000 squar~ will be built . on the north
Hospi'tal is moving forward feet.
side of the hospital's ca mpu s
with plans to begin construcThe sewnd l.l oor will on land currently occupied ·
tion this fall on a five- story. house a new 40-bed Post - by th e Cabeii -Huntinoton
187 ,500 square foot North Stlrgic·al N ur~ ing Unit: the Health Dcpaqinent. eThe
Patien.t Tower .that will thml tloor wtll house a 35- hospital has entered into an
replace many of the hospi ~ r
o . ·' o
m agreem~ nt with the health
tal 's acute .care beds and Ltbor/Delivery/Recovery depactment to purchas.e and
daub Ie - the-'--s ire---orrtr Onit: ·the fottrtfi lloor will remode l ·a building at 700
Emergency/Level' ll .Trauma house .a 20-bed Adult SeverHh Ave. for the health
Department.
Intensive Care Unit. a fou~- department. The health .
T'1F _project. which i' bed Cardiac Care Unit and a department is expected to
expected .
to
cost 16-bed
Critical
Care relocate by September 2005.
$84,102.000.
will
also Stepdown ·unit: and the fifth
Construction of the North
include ·the renovation of tloor wi ll house a 36-bed
69.000 square feet of sp4ce Neonatal Intensive Care P;nient Tower is expected to
curre~tly occupied by the Unit and a ·20-bed Medical begin in October of this
· u1111.
· . .
year. . with
completion
acute care beds targeted for Nurstng
.
The space vacated when expected in October 2007.
replacement.
.
"l\s Cabell Huntington those departments move to
Hospital approaches its 50th the North Patient Tower will
anniversary. it is clear we then be renovated to create
must invest in our facility to remodeled nursin~ units for
bring it in line with the latest Medical /S urgical ~ Nursing
advances in .modem medical and Mother/Baby Nursing ·
care and to better meet the and
remodeled
Burn
changing needs and expecta- Inten sive Care .. Pediatrics
tions of our patients and and Pediatric Intensi ve Care .
their families," said Brent A. units.
Mat:steller, president and
Additional space for neiv
chief executive ofticer.
family waiting areas m1d
"Medical care and tech- sleep rooms for on-call resinology have changed signif- dent physicians will also. be
icantly since we opened our provided. When the construcdoors in 1956,'' . he added. tion and renovation are com"Consequently, we must . pleted. the percentage of pri,
make significant changes to vate rooms at Cabell
embrace these new tech- Huntington Hospital will
nologies and to position increase from 47 percent to
Cabell Huntington Hospital about 90 percent and the
as the community's hospital number of staffed beds will
of choice for the next 50 increase from 268 to 303.
· years. The North Patient
The project is also
Tower project and the reno- designed to impro~c traft'ic
vation of the older portions tlow within the hospital and
of our facility will essential- to make the entire facility
ly create a brand new, state- more aesthetically pleasing
of-the,art hospital that is and accommodating to
better equipped to meet the patients, famili.es and visicurrent and future ri1edical tors.
need~ of our community and
The North Patient Tower
region.''
.
was designed by the archiThe first floor of the tectural firm Perkins and·
North Patient Tower will Will, of Atlanta, the same
house
an
expanded firm that designed the·
Emergency and Level II Edwards
Comprehensive
Trauma Department, lt will Can~.:er Center. which will
attach to the hospital's cur- open late this summer. Both
rent Emergency Department, facilities will share common
which was completely reno- architectural
elements,

·,

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Ltd. - 24.30
NSC - 3'7 .05
Oal\ Hill Ananclai33.66
OVB- 33.19
BBT - 39.08
Peoples - '26.50
Pepsico - 53.03
Premier -- 11.20
Rockwell - 56.64
Rocky Boots - 26.55
RD Shell.- .60.04
SBC - 23.69
Wai-Mart - ~-11
Wendy's -' 39,04
Worthington - 19.24
Dally stock reports are
thp 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's ,
transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.

.

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Monday.'• gemea •
a...~i•

Soltboll

Four to play in
WV/Ohio Prep ·
Hoops Classic
PARKERSBURG, WVa.
- · The fourth annual ' West
Virginia
versus · Ohio
Basketball Classic will take
place .on Friday, April 1, at
Parkersburg South High
School.
The two-game charity
event, which benefits the battle · against Cystic Fibrosis, .
features some of the best
~, boys and girls basketball
players from southeastern
Ohto and. West Virginia in a
clash of states.
This year, four Meigs
County seniors have been
selected to play -in the- contest.
·
Eastern's Adam Dillard
and Meigs ' Carl Wolfe have
been chosen to represent the
Ohio s~uad in the boys tournament, while · Eastern's
Morgan Weber and Jen
Hayman have been invited to
the girls contest.
Eastern
mentor Rick
Edwards will coach the Ohio
team in the girls' event.
· Wolfe, ·who averaged 14.1
points, 7.2 rebounds and
three assists per game, was
part of a Marauder team tl;tat
finished I0-12 this season,
while Dillard; who averaged
9.8 points, 2.3 assists and 1.8
steals per outing, was part of
the Eagles' 20-4 district
championship club.
Weber, the 2005 Ohio
Valley Publishing girls'
Player of the Year, averaged
19 points and 8.6 rebounds
this season for the Eagles,
· ,which finished l ~-8 on the
season. Hayman averaged
6.5 points and 5.6 boards for
Eastern.
The boys event will tip-off
at :woroximatejy 8 p.m., followrrig the girls' contest at 6
p.m. All proceeds go to the
Cystic. Fibrosis Foundation.

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i:.'":.. '14,151".

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WVU extends
Beilein's
contract to 2012
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• Taxes. Tags, nde Ftes !IXkl. lellalt inducted In salt prkt af nn vthldt llsltd.whtrtllplllabj.1
. •·an app1oved atdit. On 'selected models. lltt responslllt for typotrapllicalwron. .
· ·
l'rkes good April 1st .bough Aprl3rtL
=~
•

MONDAY -SATURDAY 9 am · 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm · 7pm • 422-0756 • TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417

-

noor .

Nelsomtlile·VOJk at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
SOuthern at Trimble, 5 p.m.

... _, ....

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waterford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 5 p.m .•

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Jackson at Me'ls (DH), nopn "
Symmes Valley at Southern (DH).

Nelspnville-York at Meigs, 5 p.m . .

Local Stocks
ACI - 43.01
·AEP - 34.06
Akzo- 45.98
Ashland Inc. - 67.47
AT&amp;T -18.75
BU - 12.0.2
Bob Evans- 23.45
BorgWarner ..-- 48.68
Champion - 4.10
Chl!rmlng Shops - 8.05
City Holding - 29.29
.
Col- 47.59
'(
DG - 21.9i
\
1DuPont - 51.24
Federal Mogul - .34
'
USB - 28.82
- ·
Ganne~ ..... 79.08
General Electric - 36.ot
GKNLY - 4.80
Harley Davidson - 57.76
JPM - 34.60
Kro&amp;er :.._. 16.03

Saturday'• gamee
Bueboll • '

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p.m.

Eastern at Wirt County (OH),l noon

'

Saturday, April 2
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a cloudy morning. Expect a couple of raindrops around the area.
Temperatures will fall from
48 early this morning to 42.
Winds will be 5 to 15 MPH
from the west turning frpm
the northwest as .the n19rning
progresses.
Aftemoon (1~6 p.m.)
It will be a breezy and
cloudy afternom1. There is a
good chance of some n1in.
Temperatures . will linger at
42. Winds will be 10 to 15
MPH from the northwesi
turning from the north as the
afternoon progresses.

Alexander at Eastern, 4:30p.m.
Nelsonville· York at Southern," 4:30

Softball
. .
Jacl&lt;son at Meigs (PH). noon · ·

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}~1'i{"" •

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Soltboll
Meigs at Miller, 4:30p.m.

renderi~g.

Constructi
on is
expected
to begin in.
October. -

8aHball

Meigs at Miller, 4:30p.m.
.
Alexander at Eastern, 4:30 p,m.
~11~~-1 Nelsonville· York at Soutben'l, _4:30
p.m·. .

artist's

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Friday, Aprilt, 2005 .

PRE P B A S E B A L L

i'ciday's games
.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) - Mountaineer basketball- fans praised West
Virginia University's decision to extend coach John
Beilein's contract by two
years Thursday, saying he's
turned the men's team around
in just three years.
"11tey say this team has no
stars but . in my opinion,
Coach Beilein is the star of
the team," said WVU senior
Mike Jones of Pittsburgh,
·: referring to the team's
ensemble performance in the
NCAA tournament. ·;He 's
brought them
together,
brought the fans together,
assembled the coaching staff.
He deserves all the credit."
Beilein, who' led WVU to
the Elite Eight and the·
.Moun!aineers' best showing
in more than four decades.
will remain in Morgantown
through the 20 i l- 12 season
under the new· contmct. His
base salary ·will be $700.000 '
a year. with. annual increases
of .$20,000, · school officials
said.
..
His previous .contract was
10 expire after the 2009-10 1
season.
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PREP SCHEDULE .

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-..-for a sprinkle or two. The
rainfall will fini sh around
I:OOam with total accumulations for this event near 0.11
inches. Temperatures will
hold steady around 49. Winds
will be 5 to I0 MPH from the
northeast 'turning from the
northwest as the overnight
progresses .

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

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announced.
plans to
build a
five-story
North
Patient

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Friday, April l
Mornir1g (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a cloudy morning. Temperatures will rise to
57 with today 's low of 44
occurring around 6:00am.
Winds will be 5 to I0 MPH
from the north turning from
the northeast a·s the momi ng
progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
lt should remain cloudy.
There is a slight chance of
rain. Temperatures will
remain around · 58 with
today's high of 59 occurring
around 2:00pm. Winds· will
be. 5 to 15 MPH from the
northeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midttight)
It will remain cloudy. Light
rain is forecasted. The rainfall
should begin around 8:00pm.
Rain should reach 0.08 inches
this evening. Temperatures
will stay near 53. Winds will
be 10 to 15 MPH from the
northeast.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.) .
It should continue to be
cloudy. It will be dry, except

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Cabell
_
Huntington·
Hnspital
officials

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NEWS@MYOAILYTRI80NE .COM

'

...
Bulls domlnale ·cavs"ln OT, Page B2
Clarett gets last shot, Page B2
OSU has questions this spring, !'age 83
Rio baseball falls to Alice Lloyd, Page 84

Area hospital plans majOr additiOn

STAFF REPORT

•

GOlden Rockets rally late to beat Eastern
The Gulden Rm:kets _(J
out ·two and two_hits for the Green ~nd walked~none in his perfor1-1) exploded fe r six runs .
£ivi-t1g up an White, while Walburn. mance.
· the final frame. half of wt\ich
unearned run Mahley and Tylec Gill each
The game was called' after
came @n a three-run homer
in the deci- · had two hits for the hosts.
the sixth due t\.l darkness.
by Jake Walburn that extendEastern returns home today
sio n: Cory . Myers had ~ two-run blast
Shaffer was m the fourth tor Eastern.
.
.
ed a 9' 8 edge into the final
handed the . Morris started the gamf for to host Alexander 1~1 a.nother
score .
Well ston' s Josh . Ewing
loss despite the guests. allowing three TVC contest. The lilt rs s latknocked in two in that pi ~­
not allowing earned · runs and three hits ell to start at 4:30p.m.
otal final at-bat with a single
an·' earned . over three innings of work.
that gave the hosts a one-run
run
three Morris struck out two and
Wellston 12, Eoo1ern 8161nnlnga)
··
Eastern 000 431
8 8 4
lead . Walburn fotlowed il:VO
· Myers
111ntngs . of Walked four.
Wellston 011 406
t2 ·9 6
, batter later with the shot that
w o r k .
Brandon Coon started for Matt Morris. Cory Shatter (4) and Ter.ry
served .as insurance for a Shaffer gave. up six hit s and a the Rockets and allowed four Durst. Brandon Coon, Gorey Mahley (6)
.Blue and Gold victory.
· w.alk wi)jle striking out three. earned runs an&lt;.! eight hits and Andrew Johnson .. WP ·- Mahley. LP
Shaffer. HA - 1: : Chris ~yers , fourth
Corey Mahley picked up
Joel Lynch , Chns Myers over five innings of work . He -inning.
one on: w
: Ja~e Walburn. sixth
the victory in relief. striking and Matt Morns each had had
. six ··.· strikeouts .and inning. ~o on

STAFF REPOR.L -----:-

sports@mydaitysentlnel.com
WELLSTON
The
Eastern baseball team suffeted its first loss of the sea.
. son Th ursday m a .shortened
.12-8 setback to Wellston in
Tri-Valley Conference play.
The Eagles ( 1-l. l-l) were
held scoreless for three
innin g.s. the n erupted for
eight runs over the final three
frame s to take an 8-6 advantage headed into the bottom
of the sixth, ·

.

.

Marauders rally _to

I

dow~ So~thern

BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com
ROCKSPRINGS
Meigs needed every second of daylight Thursday .
to pu II Ol!l a wild 8-7 ba ~e­
ball vi~.:tory oyer Southern
in Tri- Valley Conference
action.
The Marauders (2-0, 20) scored the winning run
in the bottom of the sixth
when
junior
Eric
Van Meter ~cored on . a
Butch Marnhout wtld
pitch ,. allowing the ho.sts to
complete an improbabl~ .
comeback after trailing 50
through
two-plus
innings .
Afterward, Meigs coach
Jeremy Grimm talked ,
about how his . squad displayed a great resiliancy in
the shortened contest.
"We came out a little
slow and Southern came
ready to play. l commend
Southern for their effort
tonight," said Grimm . "l
was real proud that the
kids never · quit and
showed a. never say die
attitude_,,
The.Tornadoes (0-2, 0-2)
struck · first when leadoff
hitter Derek · Teaford·
walked to star) the game,
then later scored on a pair
of Marauder errors for a l- .
0 advantage ip the top of ,
the tirst.
The Purple and Gold
extended its lead to 5-0 in
the third when Teaford,
Chris Tucker, Brad Grouch
· and Marnhout all scored. ·
The vis-itors mana~ed
those four markers On JUSt
one hit.
The Maroon and Gold
bounced back in the bot. tom half of the third when
Jeremy Blackston scored
on a double by Brandon
Grover.
Eddie Fife and Grover
Bryan Walters/photo
scored on the next at bar ·Meigs junior Eric VanMeter, right, touches home plate and is greeted by his teammates after
his two-run homer in the bottom of the fourth inning. VanMeter had .two hits a'nd later scored .
Please see Meigs, .B3
the game-winning run in·the Marau&lt;jers' 8·7 win over Southern Thursday. '
'·

M~igs

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailysentinel.com
WELLSTON . - .Wellston .
scored three runs in the
fourth inning to break _the tie,
en route to
its first softball victory,
6-3, at the
expense. of
visiting
East~rn. ·
L
i
z
Abdella and
Amber
Lambert had
Whlta
. two singles
apiece . for
the . Lady Rockets. who
improved to , l-2 and 1-l in
the .Tri-Valley Conference.
Holly Waldron added a triple.
Eastern remained winless
in. two chances. both overall
· and in the TVC.
Erin Sturgill, who allowed
five hits 'and struck· out six,
picked up the win. Her ,counterpart.
Krista
White,
absorbed the pitching loss.
The Lady Eagle hurler gave
up nine hits and recorded six
strikeouts.
No funher iriformatidn was
made available .
Eastern plays host to
Alexander 4:30 p.m. today.
Wellatori 6, Eastem 3

Eastern . 300

000 0 - 3 53

Wellston 0 0 3
300 X - 69 3
Kr1sta White and Casey Smith. Erin
Sturgill and Peggy Fleming. WP Sturgill. LP ~ Krista White

Erin
·

drops ·Squt~ern, 6-1

Bv Scon WoLFE
SJYorts correspondent
·ROCKSPRINGS
Breaking open a 1-1 game in
.the bottom of the fourth
inning, the Meigs Marauders
downed the Southern · Lady
Tornadoes 6-l" Thursday in
. Tri~ Valley Conference softball make-up game.
,Meigs (2-0) won its second
close game in as many nights,
while Southern ( l-l ) evened
its record with the loss ..
Through the first three
innings. the game developed
into ·a pitching dual between
Meigs' hurler Joey. Hani'ng
and Southern· s Brooke Kiser.
Haging had fanned three batters through the first three
innings and Kiser had struck
out five .
The Lady Tornadoes drew
ftrst blood when Li'nda Eddy
walked. Brooke Kiser sacri, ficed her to second, then Eddy
advanced to third on a passed
baiL Eddy then stormed home
Bryan -.r.lpholo on a l-3 ground out by freshMeigs' Whitney Smith lines a two-ruh single in· the bottom man Whitney Riffle. who
of the fourth inning. Smith's hit broke a 1-:J,. tie and cata- picked up the RBI , Southern
pulted the Marauders tp a 6-1 victory Thursday.
leading 1-0.
I

Eagles
fall -to
Wellston·

Meigs came back in the bot- but Meigs threatened again.
tom of the frame when Amber Ki ser and the Southern
Bunon walked to lead off the defense fought her way out of
frat)le, ·stole the bases loaded jam with a
second. and good pl~y at , hort by Ashley
advanced to Roush. Southern , however,
third on ~ . once again wept down· l-2-3,
Mella Wh an . making good contact. but gets a c r i f ice . ting caught otT-stride by a
Burton then gooll pitching effort ·from ·
rode home on Haning.
ar RBI single by Renee
Additionally,
Samantha
Bailey to tie the game at 1-l. Pierce made several good
. Southern threatened in the plays at shortstop, while
fourth wjth two walks by Haning helped lier cause with
.Bethany Riflle and Jordan a couple good defensive
Neigler, but both were left· snags up the middle that
stranded on three Southern robbed Southern hatters of
ground outs.
hits.
.
Three walks and s ingle~ by
Meigs added an insurance
Megan Garnes, Joey Hamng. run in the sixth inhing when
and a two-base error on Whan [Cached on an error and
B\lrton's ball sparked a four- . scored on an RBI single by
·run Meigs'. fourth inning. Megan Garnes. On the relay
Whitney Smith broke the l-1.. · horne Southern's Nikki Riffle
tie, scoring Samantha Cole ·made a great thrpw to catcher
from third. then Qurton's mis- Bonnie Allen to-nail a second
phiyed ball brought home two rui:mer out , at the plate, the
more , runs and a final run score 6-l. Southern went
came home on &lt;!'perfect bunt down in order after a lead-off
from Melia Whan, whose sac- ,infield hit by Bethany Riffle .
Haning picked up the win
ritice brought home Burton
from third, the score 5-l.
with five strikeouts and lhree
Southern went down l-2-3
in the top of ~e fifthjnning.
Please see Drops, U

.

·'

�.

'•

-

•

Pag.: B~
• The DailY. Sentinel
'

'
www
.mydailysentinel.com

•

'

1

AP photo

Chicago Bulls' Othella Harnngton, back. fouls Clevland Cavaliers' Drew Gooden during the first
quarter Thu rsday in Chicago.
•

Bulls dominate Cavs in OT

'
CHICAGO ( AP) - LeBroh . their head down. But they put
James· ~ame- ry ing :1-pointer. at it down for a second and
the . end of regulation could picked it right back up and a
have crushed the Chicago light goes o'tf. That wus someBulls.
thmg all last year we couldn 't
·
Instead. iJ made them more Uo."
determined to keep their win- . Eddy Curry. the team's leading scorer. remained in ·
. nmg st rcak i muct.
. "G_ping in th!_huddle we Charlotte tor treatment of ail
were not de moralized. We irregu lar heartbeat that prewere ready to pl ay more. As a vented him fro m playing
matter of fact they were angry Wednesday night as well.' But
about it. We just'came right out Chandler and Davis, who
am! took control right away," played· 48 n1inutes. at age 36,
Chicago coach Scott Skiles took up the slack.
said.
..
" ! think he will be fine and
That the Bulls did, opening we miss him." Davis &gt;aid. "We
ovenime with an 11-0 run to wer~ goi ng in sayi ng. ' We
defeat James and
the don t have Eddy. we have .10
Clevel,md Cavaliers 1.02-90 mak,e up tiJr all he hrings to
Thursday night for \heir eighth this team."'
·
·
strai¥ht victory. The winning
streaK is Chicaoo 's longest of
WOLVES 105, LAKERS 96
the season and extended the
LOS ANGELES (AP) Bulls' lead over Cleveland in Kevin Garnett had 23 points,
the East to 2 1/2 games . .
12 rebounds and six assists,
"We are on a roll here . We and six teammates ·scored in
are four gari1es out of first. We double
figures as the
want to COJitinue to move up," Tirnherwolves gaitled thetr
Skilcli said.
.
.
fifth straight victory. matchTyson Chandler scored live ing
a season-hi gh.
·
of his 15 points in overt ime
won
15
·
The
Timberwolves
and h~d . 14 re bound s. Ben
of
their
tirst
23
games.
lost
22
Gordon scored 21 and had a
career- hi~h eight assists. while of their next 35. and now have
Antonio ' Davis added 17 won 10 of their last 14.
, Never before have the
points. four in overtime.
Drew Gooden scored 27 teams that met in the conferpoints and had I 2 rebounds for ·ence fina ls one seaso;1 failed
the Cavaliers. and James miLled .to make tl1e playoffs the next.
26 on 1.0-of-28 shouting but the Timbcrwolves. (3.8-34 )
against the. tough. defctisc of and Lakers 03-3 8) are both
rookie Andres N octoni . .
, in jeopardy of missing out.
"It seemed thev wanted it
Kobe Bryant had 26 points
more as a home gaine. ilnd they for the Lakers, who have lost'.
.
outhattled u' lor loose balls nine of 10.
and tini shed the plays down
the stretch.'' Gooden said. ·
P~ CERS 114, HF.il'l' 108
James missed all three of his
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) shots· in ovenime when the Stephen Ja&lt;:kson forced overCavaliers 1vere outscored 14-2 time by making a 3-pointer
and didn't manage a tield goal. with 0 .~ seconds left. then put
Chandler convened a three- the Pacers ahead- [or good on
point play with 2.8 seconds left another ~tk1 :5-lrtimaining
m regulation after a splendid ~o lead Indiana to a 114-108
p~ss from Gordon to put the vi~tory Thursday night over the
Bulls up H8-gs ·m regulation . Mtamt Heat.
But .after a timeout . . James
It was the third str.iight over. curled to ~~t the inhounds P""· time game between the teams.
and when the Bulls didn' t f!iul ·and fndiarm extended it; winhim, he took one dribble ;md ning streak over the Heat to 12 ·
let tl y with his J-poi nter lrom 111 a row.
the le ft ;ide Of the an:.
Jackson fi ni shed with 29
"I got a good screen t'rom my points. while R eugi~ Miller had
big guys:" James saiu. " I knew 31 point&gt; and 1.f assbts Millet
I had ·2.8 , econds to go. so I shot 11 -tor-18 from the lield
just took my time and · let .it · and made all eight uf hi' free
ride...
throws fur 'lnaiana. which
In overtime. Davis and· Kirk defeated the Heat 106-100 111
Hinrich hit jumpers. Chandler Miami on Jan. 21 and '93-9 1 at
convened another · three-poiIll home Feb. 2:1 .
play. Davis hit two more trom
Fior Miami. Dwayne , Wade
the line and Nocioni ' ank a scored 37 points. Damon Jones
'jumper to cap. the 11 -0 spun.
had 27 and Shaquille O'Neal
"LeBron IHl' that bt~ 'hot 2-l. 0 1\'eal. who grabbed 13
and "e re,pond .... Den i~ saiLI. rebound,. did not &gt;&lt;:ore in ovcr"You got young gu)s on the time after tallying }0 points in
fluor and you ~cc them put the fou11h quaner.

.

NBA Standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvl&amp;ion

.

W

Boston
38
Philadelphia
35
New Jersey
34
NewVork
29
Toronto '
29
1
SoulhGalt
W
y-Miami
54
Washington .
Orlando
Charlotle
Atlanta

l

Pet

33 .53P
36 .493
38 .472
41 .414
42 .408
Division
l Pet
19 .740

40· 30 .511
34
15

GB
3
4',
8 '·~

9

GB

.· Friday, April

I

t;

Oet ro i~

W
44

l Pet
27 .620

Chicago
Cleveland
Indiana
Milwaukee

40
37 ·
37
27

31
33.
34
44

GB

44

28 .611

39

31 .557 ' 13',

W

l . Pel
22 .690
39 ' 31 .5&amp;7

49

Denver

Minnesota
Portland
Utah

38

9\
36'~

GB
91,

34 .528

, ''

24 46 .343
22 49 .310
Paf:Hic Dlv!slon

24',
27

WLPctGB
y-Phoonlx

54

17 .761

SacramentO .

44

29 .603

11

LA , Lakers
LA Clippers

33
32
26

3il .465

21

40 .444
45 .366

22/,

Golden State

BY JOE KAY
Associated Press

42

Southwest Olvlelon •
W L Pet ,GB
x-San Antonio" 53 ~ 8 .746
Dallas
48 23 .676 5

!-Seattle

. , MONTGO:viERY. W. V~ .­
The LJnivmit} or Rio Grande
softt)all team rol letl to a pair or
shutout 1 ictorie' ol'e r We"
Virginia Tech on Wednc,day

aftc mO\)n. Rio won the li rst
·gam'e I ~-0 and captured game
two by a 13-0 SCO{e.
Rio Gr,tntk t7 -9) banged out
12 hit' in the game one triumph. Miranua Caw&gt;. Jenny
Oluing. and Michele Dettwillcr
all had two hits each for the
Redwomen. Laws and lenny
-.
•

28

x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division

Wedn8aday'l Games
Washington 102, Atlanta 99
Dli:llas 112. Boston 100
Orlando 108, Toronto 96
Chicago 102, Charlolle 99
Detroit 99, Sacramento 82
New Jersey 95, L.A. Clippers 78
Golden State 113, Milwaukee ,, 09
San Antonio 89 . Seattle 76
'~'
Denver 109, Utah 98
Houston 100. Portland 84
Phoenix 116, Philadelphia 87

Thursday's Games

SARASOTA, Fla. -Joe Randa found his
calling by accideAt.
He had. a good glove and strong arm at
Kettle-Moraine High School in Wisconsin.
· The pitching staff did not.
.
·
So, he wound up playing third base, snatching all the hard-hit balls that came his way.
There were plenty, and it was good training
' for his life's work.
· ."1 played . there since high school," Randa
said. "The reason I played there was because
our high school pitchers were so slow, the '
majority of balls were going there rather than
to short."
·
Randa developed into one of the most reli. able lielders at one oLbaseball's hottest spots;
setting franchise fieldi.ng records during a sixyear stay with the Kansas City ·Royal s. His .
miw job is to help solidify a Cincinnati Reds
infield that needed a lot' of help.
The .Reds haven't had a dependable third
baseman since they traded Aaron Boone 10
the Yankees midway through the 2003· season. Former first-round pick Brandon Larson
couldn't stay healthy. prom~ting the Reds to
use five: players at the position last season ..
They combined for 31 errors. ·
With no third baseman ready in the farm
system. the Reds tried to move outfielder
Austin Kearns to the position over the winter.
The e~periment didn't work out very welt, so
they .went in search of someone with credent~~ .

lndiaJla 114, M1ami 108, OT
Chicago 102, Cleveland 90, OT

•

Someone like Randa.
He set a Royals record for fielding by a
third baseman in 2002, making 97.2 percent
of his chances with only lO errors. A year
later, he led all major league third basemen,
comrilitting only seven errors while making
98 percent of the plays.
" I'm not your typical power guy at a power
position," said Randa, who has' never hit mon:
than 16 homers in a season. "So I have. to
make up for it in. ·other areas, whether it's
defense or clutch hitting or gettin~ on base or
other ways to make up for not hittmg 25 to 30

Minnesota 105. LA Lakers 96

Friday's Gamea
Toron!o at Char1one, 7 p.m .
Dallas at Philpdelphia, 7 p.m .
Washington at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Boston at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Sa cramento at Cleveland. B.p.m.
New Jersey at New York. B p.m .
L.A. ClipperS at Detroit. 8 p.m.
Memphrs at Milwaukee. 8:30p.m.
New Orleans at Houston, 8 :30p.m.
Golden State at Utah, 9 p.m.

Minnesota at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
San Anton io at Denvef, , 0:30 p.m.

Po.rtland at Seanle. 10:30 p.m . .
Saturday's Games
Orlando at 'New Jersey, 7:30p.m. ·
Miami
New Orleans, 8 p.m.
Charlotte at Chicago, 8 :30p.m.
L.A. Lakers at S~n Antonio,' 8:30p.m.
Denv,er at Po rtl&lt;~; nd, 10 p.m.

at

Sunday's Games
Indiana at Washington. 1 p.m.
Philadelphia at Boston. 1 p.m.
New York at Milwaukee, 2 p.m
Dallas at Cleveland. 3:30 p,m.
Minnesota at Sacramento. 3:30p.m.
Detroit.at Toronto, 6 p.m.
l.A. CliPpers at A tlanta, 6 p.m.
Seattle at Golden State, 6 p.m.
L.~. Laker~ at Memphis, 8 p.m . ·
PhOenix at Houston. 8:30 p;m.

Phillips scored three runs each.
The Redwomen blew the
game open in the third inning
when they .plated eight runs and
~nt I I barters to the plate.
Junior· pitcher Andrea Lotycz
&gt;napped a personal two-game
losing skid, goin~ the full live
innings and yieldmg only three
j

B :~

··

O~U has several questi~ns to answer during spring workouts
Bv RusTY Mtli.ER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS (A~ - A t~m
with 18 of its 22 starting position
players back doesn ' t figure to
have a whole lot of mysteries .
Yet· Ohio State sti ll has to so11
through arid answer several questions during its month of spring
practjces, which got under way on
· Thursday.
·
Here' s a who ' s who on the
Bucke-yes,' focal points-!~ading up
: Ito and long after the annual spting
game on April 23:
Who's the quarterback?
With Troy Smith ruled out of
the . season-opener on Sept. 3
against Miami (Ohio) for taking
money from a boo ster, Ju stin
Zwick reclaims the starting job
wrth Todd Boeckman the backup.
· "Those will be the guys who
we' II prepare·- being the people
·you ' re 'going to count on in game
one," coach Jim Tressel said.
Smith, however, is working out
. with the ieam and will be doing

__
_
everything the o.t her quarterbacks
are doing up to ihe Miami game.
After that, the Buckeyes have th.e
luxury of having two experienced
juniors at the position , with
Boeckman still an unknown quan ' tity after spe nding the la st two
years around the , program but
never seemg game actwn.
For now, Smith is in t·he background although no one believes
that he will be once ttie seaso n
gets going in earnest.
"Yo u have to· have a beginning
point," Tressel said. After t·hat, he

called the race for the job . "an into the mercu ri al Ginn\ hand ;
open competi.tion between people more often. Th e B'uckeye' took
wi'th more experience. " '
otT last year at prc.:isely the sam e
Who replaces Mike Nugenl?
time that Ginn bil'uan a remarkJosh Huston. who had the place- able freshman campaign by leadkicking job briefly three years ago ing the nation with 'four! punt
before Nugent claimed it for returns for touchdow ns.
·
·good, has graduated and will be
'Ginn ran the ball just 13 times
enrolled in graduate school · this · (for 113 yards . and two touchfall .' He has appealed to the down s). had. 25 catche s (for 359
NCAA .for another .yellrof eligi- yards and two scores). 15 punt
bility and expects to ·hear back reoturn s (for 3~4 yards) 'and two
within ' a short time.
.
_kickoff return s 1-10 more yards).
·" We'-re optimi sti C--based ·on-'ln other wocil-s~fie got the -ball
precedents." T(essel said, of ·only 55 tiine s la st season and st ill
Hu sto n's chances for another scored eight times.
year.
Ohio State will' find a way to get
Regardless of who doe s the him the ball more - putting him
placements, it ' ll be extremely dif- in the slot or in the backfield, and
ficult to replace the ultra-depend- also returning kickoffs - in addiable Nugent, who,was the nation 's tion to hi s usual load of receptions
be st kicker for the· past three and punt return s. Tre ssel said he's
years.
open-minded
about opening
Wluil is Ted Ginn Jr.'s role?
thing s up.
· Ohio State sent its offensive
··we'd like 10 be very explocoaches to LSU, Oklahoma and sive." he said. "The ·more .probArkansas to tap tho se staffs for !ems yo u can give defenses .. . you
idea s. One of those ideas, natural- know, I'd prefer to hilve every
ly. would be how to get the ISall · sc heme that there is , to be able to

attack a .de t'en'e in 'oman\.- difkr-

ent

wa~

....

Who's at iailb&gt;\ck?
For it kam 11 ith '" much tale nt
and depth . i.i has to be tro ub ling
that tit• Budeye' arc ;o th in and
so unpro\'en at suc h un important

spot.
Sophomore Antonio Pittm:tn.
who ran fur Jg I ·yard; and a
tOtlchdowt1 · a yea r ago. ha ; . the
edge thi ., ' Piin g . He·, battling
Erik Haw. who wa' an atclaimed
recruit a- .vear --tH!O
before beine
...
.... ...
redshirted. Only une recruit
(Freddie Lenix ) ha s a tailhack
'' \!. and is 4nlikel y to ste p in
pedigre
a s the contro.v ersial Maurice
Claren Llid three · years itgo as a
fre sh-man .
Not onl y do the Bu cke yes have
few players at the position. but
none of the candidates have
shown th ey ,·an wit h; tand a se ason takin g the bumps a'nd grinds
that come with bein g an everySaturday bat:k in the Bi g Ten .
"T he y're goi ng to have to be
warriors back there:· Tressel said.

.,

hom~rs .

"I think pitching and defense win championships. Defense could be the difference in
how this team goes."
Besides upgrading the rotation and bullpen,
the Reds brought in i{anda and shortstop Rich
Aurilia, who takes over for the relired Barry
Larkin, to improve thejnfield defense.
·Randa, a .286 career hitter with Pittsburgh,
Detroit and Kansas City, also has been a boost
to the' lineup, hitting J5J in spring training.
l;le went 15-for-30· in his last l_l games with

,

•

Cincinnati Reds' Joe Randa follows through
on a sixth-inning . double off New York
. Yankees' Carl Pavano in spring training
action Wednesday in Sarasota, Fla. Randa
developed into one of the most reliable fielders at one of baseball's hottest spots, setting franchise fielding records during a sixyear stay with the Kansas City Royals.
four homers. ·
Hi s'two-&lt;:louble game against the Yankees
on Wednesday got the admiration of manager
Joe Torre. Randa also had a pair of hits
against them a week. earlier.
"It's pretty clear he can hit a fastball," Torre
said. "If we .learned anything this spring, we
. Jeamed that."
Randa's job in the offense will be to get on ··
base for Ken~riffey Jr., Adam Dunn or__
Kearns lo drive him in. Or, to drive-them in
with a single or double .
"Offensively we match up with anybody,"
Randa said. "When facing a (tough pitcher),
we've got our work cut out for us. You've got
to win the 3-2, 4-2 games. You're going to
have a 'lot of games where we score 7 or 8
runs, but it's the 3-2 games you have to win."
He chose the Reds after considering his
options and deciding he would be a good fit
on a, promising· team. His main goal this
spring was nor to prove himself, but to introduce himself
"I just wanted to get adapted here aod tit
in," he said. ''I feel like I'm there now. I feel
I've been accepted by my teammates, and
that's the most impo11ant thing. I feel really
happy where I am."

'

hits, Lotyc-L (4-3) fanned three
and did not walk a batter.
Game two was much th'e
same. Rio collected 10 hits en
route to the 13-0 rout. The
Redwomen scored a run in
'every 'inning, including live in
the second and four more in the
.lifth.
.
1'

Kristen Chevalier pac¢ the
Redwomen offense with a 3for-3 day with a dpuble lll)d
three runs scored; Freshman
Jessica Ross and senior Amy
Conn added two hits each.
Laws (2-4) picked up the win
going the distance with a onehit shutout. Laws fanned six

•

and walked two.
Rio will begin the American
Mideast Cllnference Soutli
Division po11ion of the sched· .
11_le on Saturday when
Cedarville invades ' Stanley
Evans Field for a doubleheader.
Game time is ·set for 1 p.riJ.
I

•

•

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern's Brooke Kiser, above, swings at a pitch during Thursday's contest at Meigs. The
La.dy Tornadoes suffered a 6-1 setback at Rocksprings.

AP photo

Redwom·en roll in d9ublet:leader s~eep of West Virginia·Tech
STAFF REPORT
$POR1S@MYDAtLYSENTI~~L . C0'.l

• Page

'.

.563 4
.529 " 6'1
.521 • 7
.360 '~ 17

New Orlear:~s
16 54 .229
Northweet OMelon

Ohio State Football

ThcDaily S: ·n tin~l

Randa plugs one of
Reds' biggest holeS

12',,

WESTERN CONFERENC~

Houston
Memphis

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

CORTLAND (AP)
attended" Clarclt's workout
Sen sing his performance at
Maurice Claret! (an like a near hi s hometown · of the NFL combine could have
man chasing one last chance. Warren .
pushed him out of the April
.. The former Ohio State star
''He · looks good.'' said 23,2~ druft. Clarett set up
who unsucce ssfully cha l- Browns offensive coordina- Thursday 's tryo.ut. It was
lenged -the NFL's minimum- to r.Mauri~&lt;,e Carthon. declin- supposed to have been at hi s
ag.e requirement worked out mg ftrrther comment.
.
ford1er high school' s track in
Thursday for NFL scouts.
Despite being two pounds w~rreo bm high wind s
improving his time in the heavier at 236 pounds. forced the show i·ndoors to
criti cal 40-yarcf dash.
Clarett looked more defined the nearby soccer-atena.
completed
more
than ,·Jt 'the NF'"'· cotnbine .-=
Clare11
'
·
"'e
Cl arett 's
recprd.settin g
than an hour's wo11h of drills wore a gray sleeveless Under ru shing ana 4coring lperforon a turf indoor soccer field Armour shirt and a pair of mances as', an Ohio State
and said afterward that he black shorts for his running freshman in 2002 led the
. ' wa&amp; most pleased with the drills then went shirtless for
improvement of his 40 tinic. some receiving drills.
Buckeyes to thei r first
"I was just tryin g-to give
Clarett bared his teeth dur- national championship in 34
the coaches what they want- ing his tirst40-yard dash and years. He was suspended the.
ed," Claret! said. "They quickly e~haled air at the next season for lying to
wanted a faster 40, so I end of h1s second run before NCAA and university inve sworked on .the 40 more than slamming to a stop against a ti gators .and never played
anything."
. .
wall of the soccer field .
. another college game.
Bengals running backs
He then lost ·hi s . lawsuit
A month after being blown
away by the competition at coach Jim Anderson ran seeking early admission to
the NFL combine
in Clarett throu gh a series of the pro di·aft.
lndianapoli ~. Clareft was drills and at one point barked . Ohio
State
e~cluded
clocked at .between 4.67 and at him to do a shuttle drill Claret! from participating in
4.68. according to his agents. · co,;rectly.
"pro day'' workouts with his
He. ·. worked
hard," former . teammates earlier
That was an improvement
over his times' .of 4.72 and Anderson said. .
thi s month. Clarett alienated
smiled . an(! · hiinself with allegations that
4.82 at the combine. where . Clareu
Claret! was so slow arnong appeared relieved alter the administrators· and · coaches
backs he wasn ' t even in the w?.rkout was over. . .
. broke NC~A · rules by
top five fastest.
I was wheeztng a little btl . . . ,
.
, .
'' I ihink it might get him at the end, but overall I think arran~mg perks ,for players . .
Clarett doesn t thmk. NFL
back into the draft," agent I did good," Ciar·eH said.
Ste'(e H jldman said. of the . His lawyer, David Kenner, team s should look at htm as
workout.
· .
.
· said Clarelt was in better &lt;i guy with character issues·.
Scouts and coaches repre- shape after spending the last · "I never had any off the
senting eight NFL teams - month focusing on fast- tield problems, it was more
Baltimore,
Cleveland, twitch muscle training with NCAA regulation probCi·ncinnati,
Indianapolis. LaDainian
Tomlinson's lems," he said. " I never beat
Miami. · New
Engla&gt;nd, trainer instead of weight lift- somebody up or got arrestPittsburgh and St. Louis - ii1g.
· ·
ed."

37 .4791 9
55 .214 37',

11 60 .155
Central Division

'

Friday, April .l, 2005 -

Clarett gets last shot
to impress NFL scouts
.

NBA Roundup

/

t

'

Bryan Walters/photo

Patrick Johnson, above, delivers a pitch Thursday during Southern's baseball game with Meigs.
The To.rnadoes lost 8-7 in six innings.
-

Meigs

Tucker were stranded at third Southern returns home today
and second when the inning . to host Nelsonville- York.·
ended, leading to YanMeter's Both games are slated for
heroics in the bottom of the 4:30p.m. start.
from Page 81
six.th.
·
VanMI!ter finished the
Meigs 8, Southern 7 (6lnnlngo)
when Tyler Wayland singled
Southern 104
002 753
2
for
4
with
evening
going
to pull JI..IHS 'to within 5-3.
Meigs
004
211 8 10 5
Brie Cullums followe4, by two RBis . and two runs
Patrick Johnson. Butch
singling in Wayland for a 5-4 scored, while·Wayland went Mamhout '(5) and Butch
score.
2' for 3 with a run scored and .Marnhmit, Derek Teaford ·(5).
Meigs continued its good two runs batted in for Meigs. Dave Poole, Eric Bumem (3),
fortunes in the next inning
Teaford scored twice for Eric Collums (6) and Eddie
when
Eric
VanMeter
. launched a two-iun shot of the 'Does, while Tucker went Fife, Chuck Davis (5). WPCullums. LP - Marohout.
the left field fence. tq·give the 2 for 4 and scored a run .
Meigs- heads to Corning HR - M: VanMeter, fourth
hosts a 6-5 edge .
Southet:n managed to ~et today to take Miller, .while inning, one on.
the tying run to third wtth
two outs in the top of · the
fifth, }~.' Marnhout safely.
cro~); plate following a
.passed.ffiilton a third sirike to
Jake Hunter.
However, · Meigs ·successfully completed the. third out
at fust on a bang-bang play
that disallowed the tying run
and allowed the hosts to keep
Wonderful opportunities are available in To~ Peden CountrY,
its 6-5 advantage.
We are expanding our staff and reed more sales people.
"I thought Mike (Davis)
~o Experience is required, only a willingness to learn, work
111ade an absolute great play
as a team and 'have a strong initi.ative.
in stretching out for that ball
' at ftrst. That just got the.team
• Excellent Pay and Bonus Plan • Great Benefits .
. absolutely excited .to play
· . baseball,"
commented
• Wo~ At The #1 Dealership
·
Grimm. ·
Call To Schedule An Interview:
Cullums added an insurance run in the fifth when he .
scored from third on a passed
ball. Cullums run. gave MHS
1-800-822..(!417. 372·2844
•
a 7-5 edge headed into ~he
475 ~uth Church Street
• Ripley, Ym'25271
.
~ixth inning.
· As twilight started to fall
· o'n the day, Southern managed to tte the contest at
. seven when Patrick Johnson
and Jordan Pierce· came
around to sco~. Teaford lUid

TIRED Of JUST HAVING

- A JOB? LOOKING FOR
A NEW CARIER?

Tom Peden Country

''

Drops
from Page 81 ·
w.alks i!l hurling the one-run,
three hit game. Southern's
Kiser. suffered the loss with
fi.ve strike outs and six
walks, while giving up four
•

hits. Bethany Riffle came·on Brooke Ki se r, Nicki Tucker.
in relief, giving up one and Bethany Riftle.
'Unearned run on two bits.
Southcm
hosts.
· ·Meigs hitting was led by · Nelsonville - York Frid tty.
Megan Garnes with a cjouble while Meigs goes to Miller.
and two . singles, while
6, Southern 1
Whan, Cole, and . Hani ng Souther n Meigs
001 000 0 13 2
each singled. Whan also had MBIQS . 00 I 401 X · - 660
WP-Ja;ey Haning and Cass1 Whan
two sacri fices and an RBI.
LP-Brooke Kiser, Bethany Riffl e 6rh. and
South.ern hitters were · Bonnie Alle r.~.

Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
Spring 2005 flushing Schedule
Week I
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District will be flushing lines beginning Sunday, April 3
·at 11:00 p.m. through Friday, April 8. Since it will take two weeks to cpmplete there will
be another list in next Friday's paper. Listed below are locations for this week.

Monday, April 4:

. ·

Athens County: County Road 48 and New England area. Meigs County, Longbottom to
Riebel Road on SR 248 and CR 28 to twq miles nc;~rth 61 Bashan. Long Bottom,
Rive/view, Bigley &amp; Mt. Olive, Curtis Hollow, #9 Road and Osborne Road. SR 681 Booster
to 'Reedsville:
·
·
· ·
Tuesday, April 5: .
.
Meigs County; From the intersection of Success Road .and Rt. 7 to the fire hydrants in
Tuppers Plains. Rt. 7 to the Water Office. The Water Office to lhe end of Silver Ridge.
Athens County; From Stewart through ~ilvert, Broadwell, and Haga Ridge.
Wednesday,.April 6;
.
.
,
Meigs County; From the intersection of Riebel Road and SR 248 to Cheste'r. Chester to
F'tve Points, Athens County; US 50 from Vanilerhoof to River Rd.

Thursday. April 7:

_

.

.

Meigs County: From the Bashan .Booster to Bashan. From Bashan to Tacketville. From
Five Points to Crew Road- includes Royal Oak Reser!, . Wipple Road, Crow Sub'-Division,
Golf Course Hill, Forest Run Road off Route 7 to Block Plant. Eagle Ridge off SR 7, Sand
Ridge, Pine Grove. Road, Vinegar Street, Roy Jones Road, Amberger Road, Morning Star
Road, . Court Street, Salser Road, Foresl Run ·Road, 'r'ost Road, Minersville Hill, and
Welchtowri.·Meigs &amp; Athens County: Tuppers Plains ·out Vanderhoof Rd to US 50

Friday, April 8: .

.

.

Athens Cou.nty: River Road off US 50 through Guysvill,e, Meigs County: Rt. 7 around
Tuppers Plains, TP to Alfred and searwallow, TP to 681 Booster,; Arbaugh Addition, and
TP to Coolville.
- '
Most of the flushing will be done a! night and some customers may experience low
pressure. Please. be aware that the water may be discolored for several miles around
these locations. If the water is discolored for longer than a few _bours, please contact the
office so we will. be aware of lhe problem at 740-985-331 5.

�•

'

Page B4 • 1he Dili.ly SL'11tmd

Friday, April

·www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Friday, April 1, 2005

:I., 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

NFL to s·eek .
u.pgraded stero~d
testing
standard
.

College Baseball

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

{!tribune Sentinel' - J&amp;n .....
CLASSIFIED

'

'

'

Kathy Musser/pholo

R1o Grande's Kev1n Sato d1ves back to f1rst base during a pick-off attempt Thursday dunng the Redmen's extra mnmgs I•Y s

Red-:nen lose to Alice Lloyd
reached on a throwmg error by
Freshman Chris Bro\\n d1d
SPORTS@MYDAILYREG ISTER COM
R1s shortstop· Matt Martm . an outstanding JOb m relief.
Whittaker would end up scar- keepmg the Redmen m the
mg o n a base h1t by Eagle game. 1\rown slammed the
RIO GRANDE - The catcher Mart Toney givmg the door on the ALC offense. givUniversity of Rio Grande VISIIors a one-run lead that 1ng up only qne walk m 3 '2t3
Redmen
team , ranked they would not rehnqwsh.
.
· baseball
N 1 .., ~
1nnmgs.
1
24th m the atest A A •0 P - 5 Timmy Taylor (2-0) pitched
Senior center fielde1 Scott
Poll , dropped a 6-5 extra
·
tour mmne"S of shutout rehef tu Peterman led the Redmen
mning dec1sion to '!Siting
Ll
d
c
II
euet
the wui for Alice Lloyd attack w1th a 2-for-5 dav. at the
·
oy
o ege on
Ahce
pla\e . He also scored two mns.
Thursday afternoon at Robert (14-1
Evans fteld.
Freshman . Kenta Sato Nate Chau was also 2-fol-5
Rio .Grande.( L6-R)_f;uled to.•J lbsorbed loss lor the Redmen. with a mn scored Sato. who
come up v..ith the timely hits Sato "now 0-2 on the season. began the game at third 6ase.
needed to wm the game and
Rio starter Brent Watterson and junior catcher J01 ge
played shoddy defense. com- could not avoid the big mnmg - Morales had two hits each for
mitting five errQrs. The final as the Eagles reached h1m for the Redmen. Morales scoted_
- miscue cost the Redmen the four runs an.d f1ve hits m the Charlie Kabealo with a base
game.
fifth inning 1t'o iake a 5-3 lead hit in the fourth uming to give
With two outs and the score Watte rson went 4 2/3 inning~ . the Redmen a 3-1 lead at the
knotted at 5-5 in the lop of on the day surrendering II hits time.
II th mning Allee Lloyd left and tive runs w1th five strikeAlice Lloyd's table s~ tters.
fielder Dernck Whittaker outs.
Matt Fraz1er and Rpnni e
STAFF REPORT.

n

Johnson caused p'roblems for
R1o Grande all afternoon
FmZier was 2-for-6 and
Johnson netted three hits and a
stolen base. Both players also
scored a run a piece.
Jeff Robbins added two hits.
including a two-run smgle m
the fifth to tie the 2ame at 3-3.
Whittaker talhed "an RBI hit
and Toney drove in two runs.
including the game winner.
ALC starter Joey Hager surv"ed- early control problems
to last seven 1nnings scattenng
II hits · Hager gave up live
ru1.- &lt;foul ,•arned) wh1le fannmg three and '.l alking four.
Rio Grande will 11&lt;''I Myers
L ni versity thiS weekend for a
JHir
of
doubleheao·ers.
S:tturday's fi 1' 'game·begins at
I p. m at Evans Field .

NEW YORK (API - The c1es . And a recent CBS News
NFL and its players d1scuss report sa1d three Carolina
change' in the drug pohcy Panthers players had steroid
every May. There could be a prescnpuons fi lled by a
major proposal for them to South Carolina doctor now
· talk about thi Syear.
·
under invesugat1on by 'federThe .NFL wants to upgrade
al
authoritieS.
its stermd testmg program
That doctor. Dr. James
and get 11 back to the level set
by-the-IOC
~which mcentl)l- Shortt~an-alt ernativ~p~acti­
upgraded its testing after new tiomir, said 111 Wedne sday's
equipment became .ava1 lable. _ editions of The Charlotte
Also, NFL spokesman Observer that he prescribes
Greg A1ello said the leag ue
seeks to add another testing steroids only in Low doses
lab and would hke to test for and , monitors patients to
human ~row th hormone ensure their steroid level s are
\l'llhin "their upper limit of
whe n th£is feasible .
··we have always adhered riormal. "
..
to the standard set by the
'·People come to me often
International
OlympiC because they 're worn down,
Co mminee," A1ello s31 d.
"Smcc the IOC has made its they' re exhausted, or somestand;u·ds tougher. this was thmg has 'happened to them
'done to stay in hne with it." and they haven 't recovered
Under the old st311dard. a fully.'' Shant said.
ratio above 6-1 of testos"60 Minutes Wednesday"
terone to ep ne sto ~aerone, reponed that Panthers punter
another natural hormone , Todd Sauerbruri and center
was deemed to be a failed
test. The new ratio adopted Jeff Mitchell and former
, by the World Ant1-Doping offensive , lineman Todd
Agency is 4- 1, one that the Steussu; filled testosterone
NFL proposes to implement. cream prescriptiOns writtt;n
The most hkely natural ratio by Shortt during the · 2003
of testosterone to epitestos- season, when the team went
terone in humans is I : I.
to the Super Bowl.
Any change in the NFL's
In add11lon to the cream,
policy
would
require which is banned by the NFL,
appro~ a! by the NFL Players
Associat1on. No date for a Sauerbrun also obtained
meenng w1th the players has syringes and the injectable
• been set, and Gene Upshaw'; stermd Stanozolol, which is
'
the union's executive direc- banned by the league
tor. did not return phone calls
The Panthers have satd
from The. Associated Press they are cooperating with
on Wednesday. Upsh·aw, a law enforcement and the
staunch advocate of more
stringe nt stero1d testing. is NFL in their investigation of
Shortt's connection to the
vacationing in Hawaii
Pro football clamp&lt;;d down team.
Last week, New Orleans
on steroids more ' than a
decade ago For the last 15_ Samts coach Jim Haslett
years, the NFL has had one acknowledged using sterotds
of the toughest stero id-te&gt;t- as a player in the early 1980s,
mg programs in sports, w1th a time when steroid use was
random testing, and with sus- ran1pant in ltle league. He
pe-nsions for a first-time failure. During that period, there told two newspapers that
many P1tt sburgh Steelers
have been44 suspensions.
Major league baseball has used steroids in the late ' 70s,
come under Congresstonal then apologized for those
~c rullny for its . steroid poh- remarks.

'

described as follows,
being ten feet front
on Mulberry Street
adjo1nmg Lot No. 166,
and extending back at
that width about thirty-five feet, or far
enough to include the
stone wall now built
across said lot at or
about that distance
from Mulberry Street.
And being the same
property c~nveyed by
Fred Guth and Minnie
Guth , his wile, to
James R. Stark " by
deed dated January
19, 1920. recorded In
Book
120
Deed
Records of Meigs
County, Ohio, at page
227 thereof.
Parcel "6·00136
and 16-00137
Current
Owner:
Public Notice
Pamela G or Pamela
PUBLIC NOTICE
L. Bentz, et al.
SHERIFF SALE
Properly at:
124
Case
Number
Mulberry
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
04CV089 '
Mortgage Electronic
PPt 16-00136, 16Registration System, ' 00137
Plaintiff vs
•
Prior
Deed
Pamela. G or Pame.la .Reference : Volume
L. Bentz, at al.,
139, Page 767
O.fendlnta
.
Appraised
at
C'"'~urt of Common
$18,000 . Terms of
Pleae, Meigs County,
Sale : Cannot be sold
Ohio.
lor less than 213rds of
In pursuance of an
the appraised value
order of sale to me 1II% down on day of
directed from said
sale, cash or certified
court In the above check. balance due
enlltlitd action, I will
on confirmalion of
exPose toJsale at pub- sale.
lic oucllpn on tho
Robert E. Beegle,
front Steps of the
Meigs County Sheriff
Anorney lor Plaintiff
Meigs · ·
County
Courthouse
on Lerner. Sampson &amp;
Friday, April 29, 2005
Rothfuss
ot 10:00 a.m. of said
P.O. Box 5480
day, tho following
Cincinnati ,
Ohio
45201 -5480
described real estate:
Situate
In
lha
120 East 41h Stroal,
Village of Pomeroy In
8th Floor
Clrlcinnati,
Ohio
the County of Meigs
and the Slota of Ohio,
45202-4007
(513) 241 ·3100
and bounded and
(3) 25, (4)1. 8
described as foUows,

Pamela Bentz, et al
Properly at:
104
Union
Avenue.t
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PPt 16-0D260
Prior
• Deed
Reference:
Volume
90, Poge127
• Appraised
at
$21 ,500. Term• of
5alo: Cannot be aotd
lor less than 213rdo of
the oppraleed value:
1 0% down on dey of
sale, cooh or certified
ch~ck, balance due
on confirmation of

vtz:
P~btlc Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF SALE
Case
Number
04CV151
A.D.
JP
Morgan
Chase Bank, Plaintiff
VI

t.••

Pamela Bentz, et al.,
Defendants
Court ol Common
Pleas,. Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to ·me
directed from said
court in the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale al public auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs
' Counly
Courthouse
on
Friday, April 29, 2005
at 10 00 a.m. of said
day, the following
described real estate:
Situate
In
the
Village of Pomeroy In
the County of Meigs
and the State of Ohio
Beginning at the
southeast corner of
George "Baker's lot on
Umon Avenue, runntngt~ence North 20
degreeS east along
tho line of said lot 100
feet; thence South 70
de9rees ·east SO teet~
thence South
20
degrees west too feet
to the line of the
Avenue; thence along
the line of aatd
avenue.
north
70
degrees west 50 feet
fronting on UnlotT
Avenue by 100 feet
deep, being the same
property convoyed by
Volume 90, Page 127,
Meigs County Deed
Records.
Parcel ,16-00260'
Current
OwDer:

The Chester Fire
Department will offer
for 118eled bids a 1976
Ford F700 E, Fire
Truck, Serial Number
F70EVB6~190.
Wtlh
71 DO miles, equipped
with Champion 750
gallon
per
min.
pump ., 650 gallon
water tank, 2 booster
reels electric rewind.
wm · accept sealed
bids 1111 April 13, 2005,
at which time will be
opened..
·
Reserved right to
accept or reject any
bid.
For Information con·
tact 740-985-4246 or
740-985-3505
(3) 13, 25,(4) 1, 10

Boln; 35 feet 1n
wtdth of that part of
Lot Ne&gt; 166 adJoining
Lot No. , 165 •nd
extending back at
that
width
from
Mulberry Street to
Mechanic Street.
Also that part of
Lot.
No.
165

Vour Hll(.hl

Your Ad,: (740) 446-2342 (740) 992~2156
can Today•••
Or Fax To
992-2157
.

Ofpee lro~&amp;&gt;

M ·onday thru Friday
8:00 a.rn. · to 5:00 p. _rn.

r

•••••
Robert

e: Beegle,

Meigs County 'Sheriff
Attorney tor Plolnllfl
Lerner, Sampsort- &amp;
Rothlusa

Public Notic;e
PUBLIC NOTICE ·
NOTICE: is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, April 2,
2005 at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
held at 211 W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company 1s selling
lor cash In hand or
certified chock the
following collateral:
1994 Redman Mobile
Home
BH
SPE1246394
The Farmers Bonk
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale . Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reserves
the right to reject any
or all bids submlned.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold "as Is·
where Is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty given. The
collateral must be
'moved !rom properly.
For further lnfmmation,
or for an
appointment
, to
inspect
collateral ,
prior to asle date contact Diane Rector or
Randy Hays 'at 992•
2t36.
(3) 30, 31 (4) 1

r

985·3985

.;:__

I

'

Rac1ne American Legion Post 602
HAM &amp; TURKEY DINNER
Sunday, April 3rd 11 :00 am • ??
$6 .00 Includes
teed Tea or Coffee and Dessert
Everyone Welcome

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, April 3rd
Meeting and Match

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, April 2,
2005, at 10:00 am, a
public sale will ' be
held at 211 W. Second

.. -

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All You re ln stde/Outstde
Needs We're the Ones for
You Can Karen or Dave at
740·985·3633, Busmesse s
Res t dent ta l l home s
Contra cts ,
Anyt tme
Anyplace
Clean
All
Powerwashlng Remodeling
ate.
No Job Is To Dtrlylll

Yard Sale Apnl 1 &amp; 2 , 9·5
Centenary Tv
JOggmg
treadmtll beddtng m1sc

Amencan Esk1mo Spttz .
while, not good Wtth ktds
housebroken female. 6 yrs
old. (740)742· 1080

3pn'1 Corne r of SA 160 and Communt ty Center ti"lstde
Buck Atdge Ad Ra m or
and outs tde set tJP fo r $5

Yard Sale Apnl 2nd

Shine.

'

Marke t

YARD SAI.E~
Fr ee pupp tes Adorable and
l'oMF.ROl'/MIDDLE
healthy 6 wks old Mother·
Collie/Boxer
Falher •
Siberian
Husky
Call Apnl 1st &amp; 2nd Ketlh Ftlch s Absolute Top Dollar US
restdence . 55599 AI 124. Silver and Go ld COins.
(740)256· 6817
Po rtland. Ohto.
Bam-? Prootsets, Gold A•ngs, U S
Benefits Relay for Ufen
Cu rrency.·M T S Com Shop.
151
'3econd
Avenue
Btg 3 family ga rage sa le Gallipolis 740 446 2842
Gray and black stnped Mo'lday &amp; Tuesday Ram or
formally Jo's Gtfl Older used school band
Tabby, 1emale cal Lost In shme
Trumpets,
Cheshtre area (7401256· Shop 3202 S A 124 tnstruments ,
Sy racuse. Oh1o
lad tes Saxophones, Trombones
1961
dresses chtldren·s shoes etc Older Ntnlendo games
LOST· LadleS Bulova Watch what nols, dtshes com· Large lots only (740)388·
.
Reward Call (304)675·2052 !oiler s, toys &amp; 1tems too 8692

.I

(740) 446-8051
\j Kan-auga, OH
GIANT YARD SALE
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Fellowship Halt Basement
New Haven, WV .
Sat., April 2, 2005 10:00 • 2:00
Food - Drinks - Popcom

Classifieds!

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

5 Acres wtth a 1 bedroom
f1xer-up house ct ty wat er
cable. lrash ptck·up access
LOQal ed In country back of
West Co lombia S24 ODD
Ha s been app ra •sed &amp; sur·
veyed (304)773 5 103

50 ac re fa rm 'J,i tlt1ht&gt; u s~ a11d
barn
$62 500
Call
(7 40)256·6005

11

Lakin Hospital 1s Cllrrently sagFe"'!!'-~~--.,
CHillliELflERLl
taktng B•ds for the foiiQwtng
CARE
POst ttons
Chaplatn
Telepnone Matnl enance lor
Help Wanted
Panasomc Dtg1tal Busmess Care for the elderly 1n my
Svstems Copter Machtne
II
Th e Gallta County Board of Mamtenance--for- Sharp
MRJOD ts cu rrently accept·
mg applications tor the tal· Concentrators
502060, Rental laboratory
of Q)(ygen
lowmg full ttme pos1t1on 1n Servtces. X· Ray Serv1ces,
the
Gallco
Workshop Dental
Servtces
Habthlat1on Spectahst II
Psycl'10 1ogtcal Consultation
Bulldtng for Lease Galltpoh s
Servtces. Refuse ServiCes
Ideal for
Mmn·pum
quahh catlons· Contract Penod to run July Ferry Area
Bacnelor Deg ree (Spec1al 1 2005 to June 30 2006 Restau ranV Etc {304)675·
For lnformaiiOn and Btd 7538
EducatiOn prefetred)

•,.1-.0---...;--....,~~ 110
HEl.Jl WA.t'\TfD ~.
Appalachtan Ttre IS lookmg
for a Sale Assoctate Send
R esume to PO Box 327 PI
Pleasant , WV 25550 or
S lop by our loca11on @ 426
Vtand St Pt Pleas for a
Application
AVONI All Areas l To Buy or
Sell
Shtrley Spears, 304·
675-1429

Christian hea\1)' metal Duo
11eeds drummer and bass
player 11 you are a young
Chrlsttan mustaan and lOok·
numerous to mentton
WANTED GRE EN ELEM
Male tan Pug
lost in
mg to JOin a band , call
SCHOOL DISTRICT LANO
R•ver Valley
Bashan-M ornmg Star area lndoot sale·
(740)441- 1236
ask
for
l would hk&amp; to purchase 20
803 S
Racme
Answers to Toby Worship Center
Josepn
or more acres to butld a smReward
Call (7 40)949- Thtrd. Mtddleport March 3 t
gle tam tly home I would also Dnver Wan ted 1 year exp
Apnl
1s1.
2nd.
10
00·4
00
3088
cons tder 20 or more acres Tra cto r Trailer. Home most
w11t1 hauselbUIIdmgs on the nights $500-$700 a week.
property Please call Mike Call (7ao):i78·6400
[740)441 -0501

•

te 2005 by

www.ccmtcs com

Souths td e

Saturda A nl 2nd

4 bedroom 1 112 bath gas
neat ale so1t wat er s ys1e ~
tully furnished hnancth g
ava tlable
$65 000
call
Gutd o (740) 992·2529 or
740·992·365..0

Attent1on 1
Local company offenng "NO
QOWN PAYMENT . pro
grams tor you to buy your
Mike Pope
home tnstead of rentmg
Roofmg Stdmg Porc hes
• 100% ft nanctng
Decks. PhOne (140)388·
• less than perfect c rec:l lt
8329
acce pted
Weekend Tree Servtce Tnm • Payment co llld be l he
&amp; Remov al Call (740)256· same as rent
Mor tgage
Loc ators
~ 883 or (740)645-4458
(7 40}992· 732 I
Wtll do house cleanmg Call
(740)446·9302 leave mes·

AucnoN ANI&gt;
fu:AMARKET

Sam· Flea

HlN[S

Georges Portable Sawmtll
don't haul your logs to the
mtll )ust ca ll 304· 675·1 957

Family Yard Hartford
Comm 8UIIdmg Apnl 2nd 8·
? • Plus stze clothe s Toys ,
M1crowaves
Glassware.
lots
hlore t
FurnlllJre
eiWare, Fl Bulbs

AKC Yellow lab Good wtth
Chll dren Phone (740)985
9829 To good home

'

FUR !i,\IJ

lwnght~tc . net

74

All other Appliances
10% off pi us free O,llvery

1

Thur•dey f'or Sunday•- - ·- - - -

5
Movtng Sa'te Furn t1ure and
m•sc househOld tte ms 9am·
? (740)441 ·0292 4/ 1/05 un111
e~erythmg IS sold

•

:"

• All ada must be prepaid•

Pr.

Ohro Contact Jack at (740)

675-5234

Now you con hove borders and graphics
opded to your classified ads
s~
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Bu•lne•• Days Prior To
Publlc .. t:lon
sunday Dl•play : 1. : 00

---~:::::::::~

Spring 3 Day Sale
Fri, Sat &amp; Sun
Washers ........... as tow as $297
Dryers .... ......... as low as $297
Refrigerator~ ..... .. as tow as $347
Dishwashers ....... as low as $247
Electnc Ranges, ... as low as $277

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

'On

ELLIOTT'S
APPLIANCE

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

Dally l:n-Colurnn: 1 · 00 p . rn . •
Monday-Friday for J:n•ertlon
In N.,xt Day•• Paper
Sunday J:n-Cohnnn: 1:00 p.m .
For sundays Paper
I

r

in

Public Notice

FouND

CLASSIFIED INDEX

St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Is selling
for cash
hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
2003 Jayco Travel
Trailer 305 BHS Eagle
IUJCJ02R331L90192
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reserves
the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold " as Iswhere Is", with no
expressed or Implied
.warranty g.iven. The
· collateral must be
moved from properly. l
~ For further intormation, or tor an
appointment
to
Inspect
eollateral,
prior to sale date con·
'tact Diane Rector or
Randy Hays al 9922136.
·
(3)30, 31, (4) 1

4

LffiiMIJ

Display Ads

Or Fax To

. MI$SinQ black &amp; white Neighborhood garage sale.
fe male
Boarde r Collte Fnd~:W &amp; Saturday, April 1st
Co tn Show OH·KAN Co tn answers to MollY &amp; brown &amp; &amp; 2nd Bam ? ram or shtne
Club
Sunday. Apnt .. IO . while Collte mtx male clo thmg, an l tques. glass·
2005
Hours 9am-4pm , answers to Billy Last seen wa re Fen to n. old OfOCks &amp;
Holiday Inn AT 7 NOflh , on Mor ntng Star Road JUQ S gun s &amp; kntves Si lver
GalhpoJts Ohto
(740)949·2188
dollars Red Ryder 88 gun.
old Vt clrola old walnut roll·
I wtU not be responstble for
top desk. old oa k dresser
any other debts bl!t my own :
ol d ptctures &amp; comtcbooks
ndtng mower , lour 16' Jeep
Stdney V Watson
ttres. old hallseat lots more.
Needed lovmg and caring
approximately 5 mtles nortn
foster parents Please con·
YARI&gt; SALE·
of Po meroy on St Rt 7 turl1
tact Transtt.ons for Youth at
GALliJlOUS
at Metgs Memory Garden
(740 )985-4349
1/4 mtle, (740)992-7599
'tstate Sal e Lots of fU'IW
Wanled Co unlry Bano to Items added 25 35°•o off all
76
yARD SALEplay for Squ are Dance one 6 mtles below Galltpolls St
Saturday ntght a month at Rt 7 3/31 4/1 4 12. 9·5 Call
Pu:.-\SAI'IT
VFW tn Tupper s Plains (740)446·12111010

Ki g ht tu Yt..n.11· IJuo r .

P.O. Box~80
Cincinnati ,
Ohio
45201-5480
120 East 4th Stroat;
8th Floor
Cincinnati ,
Olilo
45202-4'007
(513) 241·3100
(3) 25. (4)1. 8

_______ -

__,__

l~o.;ll -.-.: rL"d

ANNOUNO~\IFNn;

rI

Word Ads

3J.tegt~ter ~ C~~S~G~A~!
(304) 675•1333 ' •
VISA .

___

l•ublh.· Nutlc'"N lu N..,..,.. N IJ'IIPoc• . l
Knu-.

Sentinel

- t[rtbune-c--

To Place-

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD .NOW

r::~~~~~J

Duttes Inclu de Enrollee
Intake evaluattonslassess·
ments developing and sup·
porting mdtV tdua1 programs
'" behavtor management,
vocational , self-help, soctal·
tzatton, etc wh 11e momtonng
and documenhng progress
Coordt nate servtees wtlh
other agenctes

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Drtvers Needed: ~ ­
Apphcaltons
can
be
I \11'1 ()\ \11\ I
Announcement .... ,..,.... ,,,,,,,, •. ,..................... 030
COL Dnverswtlhng to dnve
oblamed at tne Galli a
...,, I~\ H I ...,
Antiques .................... ........................... .... 530
for local re ady ·m t ;~~. compa·
County Board ol MR/00
Apartments lor Rent... .............................. 440
ny Expenence IS preferred
located at 8323 North State
Auction and Flea Market. ....................... .... .OBO
110
but nol necessary Dnver
Route 7, Ch eshtre, OhiO
HEI .P WAI'm])
Auto Pa,rts &amp; Accessories ............ .............. 760
must be wtllmg to do pre·
1'
45620
Auto Repair .............. ............. .... .................. 770
maintenance on tr ucks &amp;
Autos lor Sale...................... ....................710
e qlllpme nt, yard work &amp;
Deadline for applytng April
100 Workers Needed
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
ot her miscellaneous chores 15,2005
Assemb le crafts.
Building Supplies ....................................... 550
Expertence operatmg equtp·
wood 1tems
Business and Buildings ........................... 340
ment &amp; eid:ra sktlls such as The Galha County Board oj
Materials provu:led
Business Opportunlty ................................. 210
weldmg a plus
To $480/wk
MRIDD is an Equal
Business Training ................................... .... 140
Call
(304)937·3410
Free mtormatton pkg 24 hr
Opportumty Employe r
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ....................... .... 790
801·428·4649
Expenenced medtcal offtce
Camping Equipment. .........................- ...... 780
He lp wanted· Darst Adult
worker, bttlmg, ctencal and
Cards o!Thanks ..............................:....... .... 010
A11 Excellent way to earn
Group Home
(740)992 recep!IO
mst
dultes
leav..:l
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
money The New Avon
5023
message for John (740 1388·
ElectrlcaVRelrigerallon.................. ..........840
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
8086
Equipment for Rent.. ................................... 480
HOLZER SENIOR
APPALACHIAN
Excavating ................................................... 830
Fostercare
G1vers
Needed
CARE C~NTER
COM MUNI TY
VISITING
Farm Equipment......................................... &amp;! 0
NURSE
ASSOCIATIO N Become a The rapeutiC care
Farms lor Rent... ........................................430
HOSPICE AND HEALTH g tver. you w1H be retmbursed It you are a person who valFarms lor Sele ................... ................ .......... 330
SERVICES , INC IS accept· $30·$45 a day for the care ol ues maktng a d tfference m
For Lease .................................................... 490
a chtld tri your home the lives ol others and enjoy
mg apphcat tons for
For Sale .......................... ,.,_ ....................... 5B5
Tratnmg begms m Apnl , for work1ng wtth a ded1catedl
For Sale or Trade ........................................ 590
tnfo call
Casts ca nng team you may be a
"AN CASEMANGEA One more
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ....................................580
TherapeutiC
Fostercare
, candtd lale for one of the tal·
day posttton w1lh on·ca ll
Furnished Rooms ...................................... ..450 · responslbt ltttes
One Albany, Oh Toll Free 1--877· lowtng select postliOns
General Hauling ........................... ...............850
evemng position One year 325· 1558
Glveaway ...................................................... 040
'RN
recent clintcal expertence or
Help Wanted
Happy Ada.............................................. ,... .. oso
' LPN
pat1ent
care
requtred
Counter Sale s Local electn·
Hay &amp; Groin................................................. 640
(Aevt
sap waQe scale fo'
E)(cellent preceptor program
cal dtslrtbutor Send resume
Help Wanted .................................................ItO
nurstngl
1or noviCe homecare nurses lo
llome Improvements...:....................... ......810
'State Tested N ursmg
HR Department
Homes lor Sale ........................................... 310
Ass•tant
"PHYSICAL THERAP IST•
PO Bo)( 6668
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
'Dietary Aide
One full·ttm6 pos1t10n One
Hunttngton , WV 25704
Houses tor Rant ........ ,........................ :.....•.. 410
'HousekeeptnQ
year preferred In home care
or lax Ill 304·697·8115
In Meinorlam ........................, .... ,.................. 020
or rehab back~round
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Kelly Home c.,. Services If yoll like workmg 1n long·
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
' OCCU PATIONAL THERA A Fortune, 500 Company, term healthcare and would
Uveatock......................................................630
PIST One Part-t•me post· has tmme:d tate opel")1ngs lor like to become a part of the
Loat and F011nd ........................................... 060 , 11on
e)(pertenced Home Health ~Holzer OtHerenca' please
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................350
Atdes and CNA s MuSt be call (740)446-5001 and talk
Miscellaneous .............................................. 170
'HOSPICE CLINICAL reltable , htgh·quallty care· to Phyllis Cantrell Dtrector
Miscellaneous Merchandlse.......................540
DIAECTO.R This IS a full· gtvers. prefer8bly ~ilh an of Nurstng or Greta Plants .
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
ttme posttion responsible to r avatlable automobtle and D tetary Ma na~er or come
Mobile Homos lor Rent.. .............................420
mentormg, leadtng and proof of Insurance If you see us at
Mobile Homeo for Sale ................................ 320
dtrectlng all members of the enjoy working with the elder·
38o Colonial Drive
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Hosptce
1nterdtsc1pltnary ly or phystcally challenged
Bidwell, OH 45614
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................7,40
team
Mtn tmum of three you have what 11 takes tb
Musical Instruments ....... ............................ 570
years nome care nursm g wotk lor Kelly We offer flex·
Peraonals ..................................................... 005
expenen~e
reqwed 1ble schedules, very compet·
Pots lor Sale ................................................ 560
Aespons tb lhtles
tnclude. ttive pay, and aSSignments
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
managmg, Coordtnattng and throughout
Ma.son
&amp;
Proleoolonol Servlcu ................................. 230
dtrecllng cltent care acttV'I· Putnam Counttes Weekday
(An equal opport\lhity employer)
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repilr ............................... 160
11es lor the Hosptee Team &amp; Weekend shifts currently
Real Eotatt Wanted ..................................... 3110
anP promolmg the Hosp100 eva tlable Came sea what
Schools tnstructton ... ,................................. 150 · Program to the community Kelly Home Care nas to
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer ............: ................. 650
offer can 1-866-755-5182
SlluaHons Wanted ....................................... 120
Flesumes may be lcued to Kelly SarviC8s •s an Equal
Spllco lor Ront ............................................. 460 · toBarbara Allen at 740..594Opportunity Employer
Home Health Care of SE
4078 • or
8 - ma11 ec:1 to _......:..:..__ _:__......:.......:._
Sporting Goode ........................................... 520
,pall an 0 acvna org
Calt local Plumbing and Heattng Oh.lo is currently nmn~
SUV'o for Sale..............................................720
Home Health Aides. com·
Trucks IO&lt; Sale : ........................................... 7~ 5 . 59-4·82-26 for more •nforma- Company tn need of a
wages,
call
t1on EOE
Plumber with a m1nlmum of pet1trve
Upholstery ................................................... B70
5 years experience Salary {740)662- 1222
Van• For Sale.........................
730
based ·on
ex.penence .
·
-r
Wanted to8uy ............................................. 090
lnt.rested applicants please _McClure's Restaurant now
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplleo .................. 620
send resume to Plumber hiring all locatiOns, full or
Domtno's now H1ring
Wonted To Do .............................................. 180
PO Bolt 122 Jacksoo. OH part-lime, pick up apploca·
Safe Drivers
Wanted to Rent.. ......................, ................... 470
'
bOn at locatiOn &amp; bnng back
•
45640
All Locattons
Yard S.te- Gslllpolls ....................................072
between
10 OOam
&amp;
Apply 1n person
Yard S.le-Pomeroy/Middlo ......................... 074
Need 1(} people tD sell Avon 11 OOam . Monday thru
(304)675-5858
Yard S.te.Pt. Pleasant................................ 076
Call (740)446-3358.
SaiUrday

"'

Forms Please contact Carol r--;:;~~rtl"I!O;--,
Staats at 304-675·0860 ext.
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
103 Monday·Fnday a·ooam- lNG
recommends tha
4 OOpm
ou do busmess With pea
- - - - - - - -Ia you know, and NOT
Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT's
end
money thr ough lh
nee ded APP IY a I 135 4
ali
unttl
you have 1nvest1
Plk
II
II
Jac ks on
e, Ga tpo s
ated the offerl11
Secretary needed must ~~~~~::::==~
ttave oomputer skt lls &amp; ~i
1
excellent commtJntcattons

,.,

co

~ 0NE\'

TOUHN

sktlls
Resume
by
Ap rl l·81hSend
to TSC28
do Potnt
Pleasant Reg 1ster 200 Matn
St p01 nt P leasan t, wv
25550
Sacllflly Offtcers needed tor
, a great org amzatton 111
Secuntas IS now hm11g for
tne Jackson OH area
Compeltt tve wages
um·
forms and lra1n1ng provtded
Please apply between the
hours ot 9am·3pm, Monday·
Fnday 6354 At 60 East
Su tle 4, Barboursvtlle WV
25504. For more tnlormarton
call
1· 866· 7 40-6082

EOEJM/F/DN
X·Aay Tech lor doctor's
offtce . 4 or 5 days per week ,
8 30·5 no weekends, hoh·
days or eventngs New grad·
uate s may apply Please
apply at Medical Plaza. 936
St Rt 1
Gallipolis or
phone (7 40)446·9620

eo

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 74()..446·4367,
, ·800·214-0452
www ga.lllpollacareercolloge com
Ac~nKllteel
Member Aocr&amp;dlllng
Couhctl for 1/ldeQtndenl CQIIIJQ8S
and Schooll 12748

4 cemetery plots R1v_ervtew

cemetery. lot liS Row 10

sec ·0

$625 tor -- all four.
{740)384-4187
.

~~~:;;:::~
ea tng mancta
lnsttlu!IOn approv tng Small
Business. Mortgage
Personal and Vehtcle
Loans Immediate
response
gtve us a cal l at
1·866·228·7063 ' Or applv
online at
www 1nva stm enttinanc1al o

r

DIRECTV
Free Equttment
Fr'ee Protess10nal
mstallat.on
player
Call 1-800· 523· 7556
call for Free HBO/Cmamax
&amp; ShOW time

Fr• DVO

To Do

Babystttlngl Very 3080
Reasonable Rates ' Ages 4
TURNED OOWN ON
and under Call Crystal SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
(740)44 1-9654 or (740)590No Fee Unless We Wtnl
2590
1-888·582-3345

0437

r··············'l....

Will do Engme Ctlange.
Engme Aepa1rs and other
Automotive
work
ASE
Certtfted Call (740)441 ·
1306 or (740)645-1794&lt;:ell

No down payment poss tble l
3 bedroom 2 bath, dtntng
room hvtng room wtf 1re·
place
newly re modeled
ktt chen attached 2 car
garage 28x32 pole barn all
appliances tncluded appro.o~
6 acres, $89 000 (740)742·
•
7200

Inventory Clearance New 4
bedroom
Home
$3 19 OO.'mon th
lnc tudes
AJ C Delive ry .an d Se t·up
Call Harold (740)385·9948
N allo nwtde avatlabtltty All
Aepos 1999--and older· half
prtce Wtll br1ng tn from out
of state to 1111 cus tomer
dem and 1st co m e 1 serve
t3q4)736·34 09

i

L&lt;ns&amp;
At:lU.::.A(,f-.

For Rent Tratler Lot No Pet.s
S100 Plus pcpostts Rousl
Ferre l Dr of Camp Con ley
Ad (304)675· 26 14
Lot for sale 41 'X1 07 Bea le
Land Ctendenm Dlstnct Lot
155 accordtng to tax deed
La rry Edwards • (7401742·
2535

Rf. \L

E.'" II.

lh '&gt;ll-ll

I BU'f HOMES
N eed lO sell your home
qut ckl~
because ol a
dtvo rce bankruptcy 10b
transfer or dea th Don 1 let
the bank forec lose and ruu1
yo ur 1 credt t Local person
buys hotJses Fas 1 clos1ng_s
All ca sh Jtm
(7 40 992·
6300 No calls after 9pm

IU· \I

\I.~

1

Free 4 rOom
hool(up Free HD B 1g Screen Jewelry BtJy Sel l GoTd.
Dtamonds.
Gemstones
TV, 800-263-2640
Aepa 1r. Appra tsals Gem
Testmg
Graduate
WANI'EIJ
Gemologist,
Jeweler
{740)645-6365 or (740)446·

(740)446·2506, (740)367 -

This newspaper wtll not
knowingly accept
advertuu!lmenls tor real
e,tale which 1s In
violat ion of tna law Our
readers art: hereb'y
tnformed that att
dwellings advertised m
Jnll MWIPIPtlf are
available on an equal
opportuntty bases

lnven lory Clearance ~ew 3
be droom
home
5239 00Jmonth
Includes
AJC Del! .. ery and Set-up ·
Ca ll Mtke (7 40)385·7671

No Down Payment PQSStble,
1900 square !r hoUse 3 ~~o
Hfll 1 $F.~
bedroom. 2 bath, lull base·
HIR RfYI'
ment, new heat pump sets
rrow Smart Contact lh
on 3 acr es SA 7, Eastern
3 bed room Condo wnn nwer
hiO DIVISIOn Of Ftnan cta
School Ot st rlc t. (740 )985·
vtew.
lull
b?sement.
Offtce
o
4321
Ferry
$700
mon•n ...
Gallipolis
onsumer
Alfatr
Racme Oh , 1 112 story cape Call [740144 6·3481
EFORE you reftnanc
cod farmhouse wldorme rs &amp;
our home or obtain a loan
EWARE of requf1lSIS to wrap around porc h. 4 bed· 4 rooms and batn 52 Olive
ny large advance pay , room. 3 bath, unfm1s ned Sl No pets S30d month
basement
st luated
on (740)44 6·3945
ents of lees or tnsur§lnCe
appro)( 3 a~ res. 24)(36 pole·
all
the
Ofltce
o
barn garage small ba rn
A.uenhon 1
onsumer Atfairs 10 11 Ire
wl1oft fenced area for hll€· local company otfer•ng NO
t 1·866·278·0003 to )ear
stock dog kennel , stocked DOWN PAYME NT" pro·
f the mortgage broker o
pond perennial llower beds grams tor you to blly you•
ender IS properly hce nsed
$175,000
fo r
! venmg · nome ms1ead of ren11ng
Thts tS a publiC serviC
appomtmen
t
(74(})985
· 100Q o Mancul g
nnouncement from tn
3327
• Less than perfecl cred1t
hto Valley Pubhshtn
accepted
om an )
--MOBILE HO\llS
· Payme'lt could be •h1
FURSM.E
same as rent
l'RolrliliiONAL
Mortgage
Sl11VICES
1979 Fa tr mont Claud ena (740)992·7321

DIRECT TV

Jtm's Carpentry
We do remodeling and most
any Unttmshed work, also
small
t ree
removal.

A\1real e!lilate advertising
In ttus newspaper Is
subject to lhe Federal
Fair Hou stng Act of 1968
wh1ch makes It Illegal t o
advertlae ·· an~
prelerenc:e , hm1tatlon or
dlscrlmlnaUon ~sed on
race , color, rehglon, sex
fam1hal atat118 or nat1onal
ongm, or a,ny lntentton lo
make any such
preference, hm ttalion or
discri mination '

For SAle
Clayton Stera
Double
W tde
28 x56
Modular Home B uyer must
move Home to lhe1r Site 3
bed roo ms MBA mth full
batn and 6 Soaker Tub 2
Ad I Bea Acorns o,-,wn full
balh Incl udes a ll uv grad e
Appli anc es.
atso
Refngerato r Washer •Gryer
tn Mud Room Lrvmg Room
has 45 Surroun d Sound TV
Sys tem wtth 6 Changer
CDIDVD Playe r 3 ton 3600
BTU Hem Pump P ~ t c ed at
$54 800 for tnforma 11on and
JteWtf1g call 13041675·7137
1f no' answer leave meso;age
wtlh narne and phone num·
ber

I{ I \I I "l \I I

r10

14x70 2 br . 1 oa 304· 675·
5954 or 304 -779·2353

N1ce coun try cabtn on 33
acres, references reqwred
2 Payments down 4 yea rs 25 mmu1e&amp; from Athens
(7 40 )698
felt on note (304 )736·3409 good ~UI'IMQ
7244
2001 Oakwo~ d 16x80 3
bedroom, 2 bath vtnyllshtn· Renovated farm house
gle applianc es, central heat Country setttng "stdwel'
&amp; au 516 .900 (304}633 · area 3BR ,1 8A S500mo
6536
$400/dep.ostt
( 7 40)446·
2002 ClaytOn 16x80 moOtle 011'8 01 1140)709·9069
1 Jme
Sh tn gled
rool·
How~
$2 5 99 9 C all (740)446
FUR Rl.."'lr
7817

ruo

For Sale • 1 979 Homene 2
w1cen1ra1 om
$3,495 00 Call {740) 385·
4367
b ed roo ~

2 oeQroom noo tte hOme 1r
Mtdo leport
aH
etecl! c
5375/montn ... depos tt No
th stde pets 1740 )99 2' 3 t 94

For Sale, 14X70 3 bed ·
2 bedroom mobtl e hOme
room . set ut:J m Country
Close to
town
Ca ll
Homes, $6,995 00 Move 1n
(740)256-6574
toda~ t Call (740)385 4367

IbiD~

,.Loa------·

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock TT1{'o(]e ls at pld prtces
FOR SALE
2005 models amvtng Now.
Co les
Mo b tle
Homes
15266 U S 50 East Athens
3 Bedroom 1 &amp; 112 bath, Qblo 45701 , (740)592·1 972.
new-windows &amp; roof ,located "Where You Get Your
12 Smtttl St Klngtown area Moneys Worth"
AIVBf·Vtew available No
"Mov tng Must Seil"
Down-Payment
$425 a 14;~~.70 Norns set up on lot
month (304)675· 2749
$10 ,900 (740)446·948o or

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

Moou.E

(740)446-3266

2 bedroom all etectnc '!ery
ntee 1n Clly no pe ts Phone
( 740)446-1 409 or (740)446·
2003
3BA 4 mtles tram Holzer
$350tmonth plus sec ur1 ty
depoSit and reterences No
( 740)379 ·2923 or
oets
{740}446·6865
Rem to ' Owra- 2B R Moblle
Home [304)675·2359

�.'

Page ~6 • The Daily -Sentinel

•

.'

Friday, April 1, 2005
Friday, April1, 2005
LIV!...,.IOCK

www.mydallysentir:~el.~om

The Daily Sentinel• Page B7

ALLEY OOP
~

t &amp;· 2. bedroom apartments
on
Beech
Street
1n
Middleport furnished. utlltties pa1d depos1 t &amp; references required. no pets,
(740199&lt;·0165
1 and 2 bedroom apartntshed. secunty depos11
requ1red, no pets. 740-9922218.
.

lngilfe Repair

2 bedroom apartment for
rer:~t. Aacme . OH. Depo s11
requ1red. no pets (740)992_5174, leave message.

~Llaundry
R .3 B R., study, 2 ba!hS,
are a. Refere nces
requ1red . security deposit.
no pets 5900 per mo.
(740)446-2 32 507(740)4464425.

'•

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
eUOGET
PRICES ~T . JACKSON
ESTATES, \ "-52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
· Walk to shop &amp; mo~1es. Call
740-446-2568 .
Equal
HOUSing 0ppor!UI1 11y.,
·CONVENIENTI,.V LOC AT~0 &amp; AFFOROABLEl
Town house
apartrn8nts.
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for application &amp; 1nformation

-.

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Complete smllll
·
repair

i-

·-------,.W

,ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
3

I ro

r ww
w

"-~--•GiiiiriRAI!iiN--,1 l_

iiiiiiii

Ettic1ency apt. $300 month
piiJS ut1hl1es.' No pets Ideal
fo r 1 or 2. people Call
p10
(740)446-431 3

Hous1:mJw
G&lt;X IIJS

SPA OtmET
Grand .Opening
New Localion
11 am-7pm Monday-Fnday
12pm-5pm SaturdaySunday
US.60
Cannonsburg-Ashland
(behind Mr. Galtl's}
_160§922·71 85

Furn1shed 2 &amp; 3 room apts
Clean. no pets. Reference &amp;. Kenmore: washer &amp; dryer.
depos1t
reqwred
Ca ll Large capacity. white . good
(7401446· 1519.
Call
concl1t1on, · $150.
---~--. (7401245-5469.
'
Grac1ous liv1ng 1 and 2 bed-·
room apartments at ,Village Ma)'!ag dryer. S95. Whirlpool
Manor
arid
R1vers1de washer. $95 ; Tappan gas
Apartments 1n Middleport. 'range , $150. GE refrigerator.
From ·$295-$444 Ccitl 740- $150. small freezer, $150,
·
992·5064 Equal HOUSing. lil&lt;e new side-by -stde relr1g-. .
Opportunil1t:!S

r

1999 Eddie Bauer Explorer
1000# bales. $7.00-$ 10.00 AWD, loaded, leather, 6 diSC
&amp; $15.00~ pick up ioad or co
change r,
s unroof,
good
hay, 92.000 m"es. $9.500 OBO.
semi-load,
(7401698-2765
j740)446-7777.
La rge AoiJnd Bales Mulch ' - - - - - - - - - - 2001 lincoln Navigator.
AWD, 5.4 VB, 3rd row seat-

Hay $3 Bale (304}882·2262

Tobacco Pl f:tnts for sale. Call ing , casse!le/C D-changer,
(740)446 -7843.
heated/coolttd-seats. low
mil es, e.xcellenl condition,
l'tii \ S,(,\IUII\14) 111 '
123.500.(7401453·5535.

B UILIJL'IG

Pomeroy,
RJ, 124

992-5682

~

•
i

25 Years
. Experience
.
'

David Lew1s

~

740-992-6971
Insured

45783

t A QJ
... J 4 3

Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

• Ele&lt;:trical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except
f1:1rnace work

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
~

l&gt;ON! T JCNOW If ~·M .
POLITICALtY /fiGtiT 0/f
ruT evelfYIOl&gt;Y

/ t.eF'r.

WV Ol672S

Pom:eroY. Ohio
25 Years Local E• rlence

Sunset Home
·Construction

~·

d.

Flowers &amp; Vegetahlc plants Flat -$6.95
10'' Hanging RaskL•ts -20 Vurictles

$5.95 . $7.95
Perennials 6''- 10" $2.95-$5.95
Polled Plants 4" • 12" $1.25.$12.95

4l•

~
~

~.

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Brian R ~eves
New Home Cons1ruc1ion. Remodeling.

Let me do it for youl

Nc~ Homes •

liNDA'S PAINTING

COMMEF.lCIAL and

RESIDENTIAL

Phone: 740· 742·3411

IRA Con~flll
, , . , , ClaD
tribr1te to your loved

'

2005
9:00A .M.

\!"IU I·
\HI\1 \11-\ I
CO\ II'\\'

Mason VFW

($25.00 NonRefundable Depo.isitl
Cal 740-992-9444
or Email per..· ~

39 728 SR I43
Po1nc roy. OH

. THE BORN LOSER

pt~E. (1&gt;,:-Jr.,u E.R.':l \-.1\LL I~WJ~\)1 ·

740·992-9922

"ffit e.N.L, \Rf&gt;..I"LING. e,'( Ot-IC
POl~I, Will\ IE.~ 5EC.OOt&gt;~ 10

WV, OH and all legal

740-992-7599

states must he 21.

I'Ll&gt;,'( I

I"' .

.. .

~

Wt ,I ~\E~Pi\1-\\S~

Fo!Z. ~1~-&lt;G ~ws oo 11-\E.

"-PRIL fOOlS' 1

Sf&gt;Oi\\~ Of\1\t FI!C:S\" ROOI\IO!'-

II-\t~~6v~-;s:n(l

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for Hud-subs1zed . 1- br.
apartment, cal l 675-6679
~HO

~ BIG NATE

Muxcnc HolTman
on your birthday
4/2/23 • 4nt04

New Anl ique Mall Openmg
Soon ott 177. &amp; US Rt 33 tn
Downtown
Ravenswood.
. WV. D.ealer.spaces available.
reasona ble charges for
Booths Don't m1ss this
Chance. lnformat1on . call
, Fred
(304)532-2710 or
(3041273·2746

away.
We mi.H you very

much

Sl. RL681 Darwin, OH
740-992- 70J3 or 740-992-5553

UKC Toy Rat Terrier piJppy.
Shots &amp; worm9d . $100 Call
(740 )256 ' 6824 ·

ROBERT

Memory

,April 1S t
In M emory o f

Beth &amp; Suo.

Ne1 a M . Grimm ,
1

Si ster Marv~: nt:
GrandchiliJn:n

In

&amp;

02 Honda 400 EX. Excellent
condition . rode little. SJ,OOO
neg: Call (740)?56·1526 01 1997 Coachman Catalina
Lite 24' foot; Front Bedroom,
(7~)645-&lt;1446 ..
many ·
e)Cira s
phone
(304)675-2039 $6,995 080

t)n ·her 90th birthday.
Happy Birthday •.

ATV used ver·y little with
newly painted trailer. SS.OOO
Trov built tiller. $400 Call

1998 30' fiflll wheel travel
trail'er, double slide, excellent condition, $13,900
phone: (740.W8· 93_19

I \l {\1 ' t i'l ' l l l '
,\ I I\ I ' 1t \t 1-.

BISSEll
CIIISTRicnON
· • New

Homes

·Garages

,

Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

"{ES. MAAM .. M'( D06 AND I
WANT TO TJ.IANK VOU FOR
ALLOWING ME 'TO 60 HOME
EAAL'I' VESTERDAY 8ECA!JSE ~E
WAS SITTING IN THE RAIN ..

IN FACT. HE WOULD LIKE

TO Tf.IANK 'f'OU IN PERSON ...

NO, TI-IAT'S ALL RIGHT... .
WE UNDERSTANP..
....---~,.-.-")

WE
DO?

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

871-2497
SUNSHINE CLUB

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots t Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

Help Wanted
, 11{\ (11 ,

PLEASANT VALLEY. HOSPITAL
RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit
healthcare facility, has a position
available for a part time Radiologic
Technologist .
Applicant . must meet the registry
requirements by the ARRT. Applicant
must have a WV license.
Excellent, sa lary, holidays, health
insurance single~family plao, dental,
life insurance, vacation, long-term
disability and retirement. Join our
family of · professionals to be the
r"esour·ce for community health
service needs.
For niore information :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resou rces
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675-4340
.
AAIEOE

.

3 AOHA registered quarter
horses. 1 sorrel gelding, 2
bay mares, 51500 ea. OBO.
(7401 985-4321

60 inches in stock. Ron
2003 H D. 883, 56.300: 1996 Evans Enterp~ise , Jackson,
Honda 300 4x4 . $2,500;
OH 11800)537-9528
1986
BMW
K1000RT.
$2.500. (740)245-5747.

H ill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
AS:cine , Ohio
4577t
740-949-2217"

2004 Harley Oavidsoo 1200
Custom Sportster. loaded.
$9,900oBo. 304-593-3542.
773-5182.

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

Contact: Kyle .
Oeel's Club Pigs
740-388-PtGS
(388-7447)

740-441-5460 cell

r

"

, GRIZZWELLS

'
1993 • Chevy 3500. Turbo
Diesel. Red Pickup, Dully.
Power Windows, Locks,
Locided
$8.000
firm
(304)593-5073 ·

97 CABO. Race ready, runs ·
gre~t. _must see to apprecJ.
ate. St .OOO. Galtipofis area.
cell (740)64!HJ873.

r

1995 Ford F-150 XLT. 8 h.
lloAlS &amp; ~I
bed. excellent cond1tron .
FOR SALE
Ask1ng $6.800 080. Call 1
(740t992· 1777.
1984 Fourw1nns boat, 20
loot.' Mercruiser. 70 hours.
&lt;Jaded Call {74&lt;11446-3200.

..

'I

SHOP
THE

"Taking Tht Sting Oril Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size
4 Wheel Drive
Tractor
.
'
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubo1a Engines

CLASSIAEDS!

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

'

BAUM LUMBER
•

~ " -- '-----------------------~--~--------~---------'---~~----~~------~--•

source
1 Duffer's
· goal
2 ~- - the
plcturel
3 Soy product
4 Hindu sage
5 Deep regret
6 Highway
cruiser
1 Revealed
8 Crocks
9 Furnllure
buy
1 2 Jheater

18- Was up
tor election
22 Toward
shelter
23 Ms.
- Ullmann
24 Geisha's

40

Enlists

again

(hyph.)
Beller
Gee whiz!
Gallivants
Flowerpot
accessory
spot
25 Blyth or
46 ln·111ghl
Sothern
feature
27 Pi1h helmet 48 Hammer
29 Mo.
target
expense
49 Deposns
31 Engineer's 50 Boxing
place
wins
32 Yale grad
54 Geological
33 Hl·1i
period

sound

41
42
43
45

records

39 Paranormal,
system
to some
1 3 Rental
41 Heron kin
option

35 Pines lor
37 Giving oH

fumes

Helen Rowland wrote , "Some women can
be fooled all of the lime, and all women
can be fooled sOme of ·the time, biJt the
same woman can 't be tooled by the same
man fn the same way more than half of
tile time ft
Everyone makes fool1sh btds or playS
oCcasionally, The human brain· isn' t per·
feet. But if - a big, big :-if~- - one th1nks
the rig ht thought at the riglll moment , one
will get almost all deals correct ,
What i s right in this deal? Against four
sPad9S', .west leads the heart a,ce . Wllat
should happen aft~r th at?,
South 's Pre-emptive opening bid promises a respec table seven-card su1t and 6·
10 high-card points. (One may be a little
West makes a takeout double, and North
raises to game. East is tempted to sacrifice {five of either red suit doubled costs
only 500), but maybe game is !Siting.
From the dummy, it sllould be obvious
tllat the defenderS need to win lour redsuit tricks. And here, East ·musl get the
defense off on tile right foot by making an
encou rag1ng attitude signal W1th lhe heart
10: This cannot be the start df an echo
with a doubleton (South won't have live
hearts); so West knows that it shows tile
he~rt queen - the honor touchmg the ·
ones that West prom1sed w1th hts lead
(the ace and king) . At tr ick two, We st
underleads the heart k1ng, putt1ng .East
on play for the crucial diamond shift
through South 's kmg,
Here is · a variation ·on. Helen ROWland'§
opinion: You can fool Alder people some
of the time, but you can't fool Alder peo·
pie all ot the time!

AstroGraph
-.r'lllrtholtl,y:

CELEBRITY CIPHER
·by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms ll!e creall!&lt;ltrom q'JO!at~s tJf lamolis people past jd p~es.er~t.

·

.

Eacn tenllf 1n the Cipher slands tor af'(lll\e!
Today's clue· D equals F

" Z TN

H

L T 0 P

EVRS

FVVM

0V

STFPO

A T .O 0 A W

DVVATIPYWII

.USRMWYBW:

XW

IT A A E

ZVZWYO. "

HO

T0 •I
OPW

PVSHBW

PREVIOUS SOLU TION - "Time is a river wilhout banks.' - Marc Chagall
could kill time without injuring eternity."- H.O...Thoreau
(c) 2005 by NEA. Inc . . 4-1

~As il yoo

'4).,. .( _ 1)'1::: ~C.&amp; · WOID
0\!::1 J;'QiJ \)'). ~ !:; &lt;{• &gt;::&gt; lAM I

TlllTDAILY d_~i:)

PVnLII

ldH•d by CLAY R. POLLAN------

0 lour
~e~;~ rronge le111n ci
1crombltd wt)rd~

.low to form lour simJ;~ie

I

th1
b&amp;·

worci3.

Before moving o.nto to fresh fields In
the yea r ahead which you would have
to ctea r and develop. first try to .reap a
har vest !rom the seeds you 've
already sown. You will be far luckier
with the yieldS from the old than the
now.
ARIES (March 21-April19)- Lots of
g1ve- a(ld·take is a must today when it
.3
I
eom&amp;s to dea.ttng with valued relationsli lj)S. lf ·you see things starting to get
1
t9nse, be lhe one who oHers the tlrst '
•concession .
TAURUS (April 2 0- May 20). __:_
Som6one you have been kind to In
the' past may for some reason unbe: Tl
'N El
I,·-_:
One
knownst to you deny helping you
his na
,.. .' 'L•h?·
,.. • !;,,..,,..
v r. r::: \'':rc
;• ..... ,m"'":O
. ... .., 11·;..c
,\..,
1
1
today. Don ' t ,~et angry and vow to hold
wres.ung ,.ar:~ •• ---- a grudge; th\\ re could btt a valid r&lt;aasoo .
GEMIN! (May 21-June 20) Be
careful today not to place needless
--i
Como lore . ''•. coo: &lt;It .'uct•d
demands
on
a
fr iendship .
Thoughtlessness co uld lea-...e a S&lt;:ar
.
_
.
.
.
.
by liL•r:Q m the mru1"; wc· cs
.__,_...__.__..._..._'-' you :ll!v•io~ frorn step Nc. : o, iow.
that would be difficult to heal.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22)- A situation may arise today that p its an outPRINT I~UM&amp;mo lEi!!iS
Sider against a fam ily member.
.
IN TH1Sii. SQ UA ~oS
·
Rememb&lt;ar before taking sides that
the hurt and Its ramifications inflicted
on a blood relative could tast a tiletime.
LEO (Juty 2 :3-Aug. 22) - vThere 's a
strong possibility th at s-ou may have to
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 3 , z 1 _, 5
OOal with someOne today who will be
quite difficult. If you let anger c l ~ ud
Genius · Youth· Spank· Hinder · STUD lNG
your judgment, you m1ght say th ings
M y neighbor came up wilh "the 1dea tna11he poor
you could never take back .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - Take
should gel the money that is spent STUDYING them .
steps today to curb any and aU
nonessential expendHures Debt you
incU r at this point in 1ime could get 041
ol hand.
, LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Be very
Al'l111..
careful whom you select as a panner
FOO\,.'.'
today, especially if your choica would ~;·
hurt the feelings of someone else. You i
could e nd up creating an enemy and
1
losing a close friend.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22 } Unless you have a I)OOd reason, such
as being ill, don't put your needs
ab9ve those of someone you prom- ised to b8 th\re tor today. It'll be considered an excesstve disregard tor
'
this person.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Try to be diseriminating aS to whom '
you aStiociate , wHh socially today. It
would be a mistake to involve yourself
w1th a group that has o,~ery little
respect for corwentlon·or what Is right. .
CAPRICORN' (()e..; . 22-Jan . 19} - In
order to gratify your persona! ambi tion s roday, you m1ght tread on the
toes or persons who woyldn 't use
these same tactics on you· if the posiOOns were reversed. Qon 't abuse any-

CTGiAN

I

o::

,,.

DREENG

~ime: la"'e~l~: to

t"

I .

I"""-rl--r:!,:-r::-1: ....,.,--.--, 0 .
@

one.

4th Annual
OHIO VALLEY

Sat., April 2,
7:30pm

WMV.pvalley.ol~'

Culverts
plaslic and me181 . 6' 1nches·

Announcements

PIG SALE
Gallia County

MANP\GIEti' 'TO
eAr 'THe PIZZA BeFORe I'T ·
ARRIVeD

252 Upper Rjver Road • C•lli~is
740.44"6-0842 • 949-1155 Eveninp

HERE

WITH A PHOTO!

, Fairgrounds

'

C,OOU 50Me~

NORTHUP DOBIE

LIVESJOCk

DOWN

ARLO &amp;JANIS

WV Contractors Lie. #003506
) Help Wanted

19 Max oul
20 Oxygen

.
1.

PEANUTS

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

• • Complete

60 Worl&lt;er 's no.

1--J...
I"_._I.,..._._.1

Se~ Brem or Brian Whaley
1
M-Fri 8 :30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

Kessel 's Produce
Amish cheese &amp; lunch
MEKCIIANDISI:
meats, fresh fru it &amp; veg_
Open
ThiJrs. Fn, Sat. 1 m1le
6 fl . pool table. like new with
west of Holzer Hospital on
ace
Am1sh oak glider. like new. Jackson Pike. ph. (740}4467787- 740 339-2131
real nice. (740)446-2506.

med.

11 Uproar

L - . 1 . .

and Arter Markl'f Parts

FRliiTS &amp;
VEGETABLF.S
..__ _ _ _ _ __ ,

www

addresses

DAGR N

Restocking l.ate Model Sahage

· ML'K:EIJ"iNmus

Sadly mi ss'e d by

D augh1cr:-.

752

By Bernice Bede Oecl

Whaley•s Auto
P(\tt-s

and every
Hu st'land Pau l.
Son..,, S t e '' ~ &amp; T.?rry.

•

Saturd•y. April 2, 2005'

CARPAL TUNNEL

IMPORTS
Athens

93-Columbus Rd.
Bu y or . sell. R iverine
Antiques, 1124 6ast Ma1n
on SA '124 E. Pomeroy. 740992·2526 . Ru ss Moo re .
owner.

15 Hunter's
purcha se
16
!

The signal works,
no f9oling

G

Happy Ad

Time ha.'i passed su
slowly
Si!Jce JOI4 went

986 32 "

Happy April Fools' Day.

In Memory of

55 Beggar 's
cry
56 Tweel
. 57 Unduly
58 Flour-de· 59 Bigger I han

cousin

t

.

more freewheeling when nonvulnerable.)

for a free estimate. ·

son6@verizon. Net

FREE ESTIMATES

TO Tt41NIC
~·M r&gt;eFINtTeLY
OFF· G~NTe/f.

DIDJ"A HAVE A
GOOD GOL.F
GAME, DOC

Other R esidential Needs

$75.00

Window s • Roofing

se~MS

BARNEY

~el!oy alion s, Decks. Garages. Pole
Builqing:s. Roofs, S iding. Windows &amp; All
•

Saturday A pril. 23.

slamp

53 Luau music

.38 Matterhorn

V.C. YOUNG Ill ·
992-6215

52 Invoice

I 2t Thins out
. 23 Amounl
borrowed
• J u_~--1
.t K 5
26 Chic
28 King • 6
Saud
29 HelpDealer: South
wanted
Vulnerable: Both
abbr.
Sooth " \Vesl North "East
3D Do well
34 Upholslery
3•
Dhl.
4 to
All pass
chOice
36 .Be1ore,
Opening lead: ¥ A
· In combos

Tree Service.

• New Garages

tO

anchor
47 Sloppy
51 Gusto

grads
Physique ,
slangily
Earlier
Pesky plant
Valley
Ump' s

South
.
AJI09874

JONES' ·

• Room Addit ions &amp;
Remodeling

04 Ol-05

East
• 3
" ¥ Q I 0 9 4.

6 2

¥ A K B2

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP23'\

CARPENTER
SERVICE

740-9n-5776

Yiny I
Sidin g • New Garages
• Replacement

•

. Home • Auto • Life • Retirem~nt
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
. Medicar~ Sup. • Cancer • Accident

YOUNG'S

·~Hubbard's Gr~nhouse·~
~
Sy r ac u se. OH
QP.

BUILDERS InC.

Pleasant Valley 'Apartment
·Are now takmg Apphcat1ons
lor 2BR . 38R &amp; 48R .
Applicati ons
are . taken
Monday' thr iJ Fnclay, tram
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
Located at (t 5 1 Evergreen
Drive P01nt Pleasant. WV
Phone No. is (304)6755806. E.H.O

.

t~~.~

10
11
13
14

olo AKQt098
\Vest

Licensed in Ohio and WV

· NOW OPEN - .

BISSEll

One BA apartment in Sprmg
Valley $290 per month plus
deposit. WID hookuPl?·
(740)339 -0362. (7401388 ·
. 0017

I
North.
• K Q5
• 6 5
.• 7 4
J

41800 SR #7 .
Tuppers Plains, OH

:t:~·@.;;::~&amp;~t

New 1 bedroom apt Call
(740)446-3736

1 Indy araa

.1

Elegance

44 Melro RRs
46 Drop·

4 Almost .

•I

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial ·Services

~-~-cttttr•r~l-tW.~~·

M

Suw1.ws .

.£DVIS
CONCRETE
CDNS'fBUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Kef&gt;laoement

42

'

/

Lt .

mentS. furnished and untur-

Beautiful 2-story townhouse.
overlook ing Gallipolis CII'J
'
park. Ki tchen-fa mily, D R..

JET
3 reg black An9us 2 years 1999'Chevy 1 ton with 11 lt.
THE MAPLES
AERATION MOTORS
old. Cows $800 each Call utility . bed . AC, c ruise, 1111,
100 M~MORIAL DRIVE
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In' (740)367-7295.
350 gas, 5 speed trans.,
EAST
Stock Call Ron Evans. 169.000 miles·. E11cell ent conPOMEROY. 740-992-7022
4- H P1g s fo ; Sale
dition. ean (740)256-1526. or
Subs1d1Zed
ReSidential 800-537-9528.
Begin farro wing 1/20/05 and (740)645-0446 .
HOUSI!lQ for 5.0_ J'~~
still farrowing Pu re bred -~------­
and older Priority Given to
Large Indoor Sw1mmmg Yo rk s
and
crossbreds. 2000 CQe~ r ol~t-Silverado
Applicants with LfiCOme at
Por;&gt;l w1th all Accesswies Please call (7.40)448-2002 1500
fu lly-optioned.
or below $10,900.00
1nclud1ng Gas Heater/Cover o r
(740)541 -7491
or 4x4, bed II n er ,t r "' ite ringMa)(lmum Income effective
&amp; L1ner excellenl cond11ion (740}541 ·7470
pkg.,Pewter ext. ,Charcoal
02111 12005 tor 1 person
(304 1773·6000
in!.
, 100k highway miles.
S18. 150 00.
Hatching April 6th
syn.oll, below book $12,900.
Must meet HU0/1202/B cri- M-1 Garand 30-06 5725'
Black Australorps
304-77,3-6062
-teria for household com· I rm:
Model
29 .
Pullels$1 .60-each
position.· Manage9 by Smith &amp; Wesson 44 mag , Rhode Island Red Pullets 2004 FORD F-150 Lariat.
e~gine
S1lverheels Incorporated, A $525 f1rm . (740}992- 1529.
·
$1.50-each
Super
Crew,
10,000mi
Really Compa'ny
Equ al No Sunday ca ll s
Au stra White Pullets f
2yr/20,000mi warranty leH 1
James A Will Jr.
Housing Opportun1ty
$1 50-each·
~. loaded/extras.
$30.000.
NEW AND U.SED STEEL,
Bull Orphington Pullets 1J (304 )623-3500; (3 04/ 654 · .
Owner
..,.::--~~-----, S r e~ l Beams. Pipe Rebar
$1.60-each ·
· 193 18; (304)8136-1668.
SmcE
.
FOii RENT
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Now Taking Orders
J2 ll'J Wel.~ht~"· nRd .
Cha'nnel . Flat Ba r. Steel
2004 Silverado 1500, Z7 1,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(304)593-~073 .
Grat1ng
For
Drains,
4WD, Loaded, still under
Plume: 740-')92-2432
Bus1ness or Retail Space ·Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
warran ty, 29 .000 miles. ask· E-ma il
available oo·wntown Po1nt Scrap Metals Open M oncla1._~quarter horse. Palam1~2_, ,J _jog_S2_6_,_Q0_0_(30!l)6~ 5 -49t 7
Pleasant Cornei Four1fi ana Tuesday, Wednesday· &amp; years ol ~. ve ry genUe, g81d jw i11457t19~!100£0m
Mam St (304)675-:!788
Fnday Bam-4·30pm. Closed ing. $650. Cal l (740)2 56 - . 9;3 Ford P-U exlendpatJ, 8'
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 6824.
bed, XLT. loaded, 114,000
For Lease· Ottice 0,- retail·
miles. $2195 Reduced to
740 44 7300
) 6Regis\ered Bla ck . Angus $1 8;95 .00 .~ (740)992-1721
spaces m very good condi- Sunday. (
't1 ori. Downtown G~llipohs Orlando D1sney/Beach area. Bulls. 12 to 16 months
99, Dodge Dakota Club Cab
Appro)! 1600 sq ft. 9ach 1 7 days/6 n1ghts. Paid $600, (7401446-9856.
SLT. Loaded V-8, 4~~:4 , Bed·
sacrifice.
$249
.
.
Call
or 2 baths. LE!'ase pnce
Ru nrung-Boards,
Suffolk Ewes lor sa le Call liner.
negot1able lo encourage 16 141320·0300
(740}446-4836.
Tonneau Cover, 95Kmi.
new
business.
Cafl
·Pool pump &amp; sand filter. lor
so_o_(:_3_0_
4 I-'8-'
82-'·-'
28:.:~:.:5_ _
(740)446:44 25 Or (740)446- large pool. used 3 week$: Yearling Angus Bulls. Mostly cl9-'._
3936
A.l.
excellent
blood
lines,
Ford
852
Ton
Dump
Truck ,
miles west of
se II $ 175
Cos t $300
priced
reasonably.
Slate
Run
Paver.
Rol
ler'
M
ust
Sell
.
70
(7401446·1 127
WANIF.Il
0~
Farm . Jackson. (740)286· $7,000 for all (304)882-2196
"IU RENT
. ."rom uresses
5395.
.
(3041377-82t6
on State
2-ball gowns, 4-tormal.
sla teruHAnlarYm&amp;
.c·om
SUVs
~bsofutely
gorgeous,
·(4
L~k1ng 1~r a home or trailer
1ze 12, (2} size 11 11 2. Cal
to refltt 1n Gallipolis SchOol
Iter 5pm. (740)367-7054.
,!;UK SALE

~' 1\\E ~ JJ Hl6l.\J

ARE~A~~

·

t1EtP '"'TilE

~T
~
If

.

'"'1 '

" ..

AQUAR1US (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Keep
to yoyrself ideas about which you 're
enthralled when with someone today
wno atways throws cold water on
what you're doing. Th is ·person 's
responu· would dampen yoyr ardor_
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Some
holshot salesperson may see you as ·
an easy mark today ,and sadq!e you
with Inferior mercl)llndtse he or she
has'' been try~ to get rid of. Keep
your guard up and wallet closed.

SOUPTO NUTZ

•
0&gt;!105 . . .

- o . . .. ..u .... _ _ _

---

�•
88 • The Daily

S~ ntine l

•

www. mydarl yse ntinel.com

•

-

Friday, .-\pril I. 2005

.

·r'\LONC I'HE Rfv~R

REMEMBER TO SPRING FORWARD .
ONE HOUR AT 2 A.M. SUNDAY
'

-.
•

,

un a

.,.. If you have a question or a comment, write:
NASCAR This Week , C/o The Gaston
. Gazette. P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia. NC 28053

-

All about a child:
•
National observation focuses_
on need; development, Ct

•

·-

tm

.

:~~~=~~~-program, domin~- ·

}, !ld the B~sch Series 111ce ·at

· NasiWille S4perspeedw&lt;iy,
,_ 1&gt; )'low Impressive w.as Soren- _
; son's 'llctory? "I can't remember
'a(lY'time when ·a field got beat

BUSCH SERIES · "•

• ·CRAFTSMAN TRUCK --

Ra&lt;:e: Food City 500
Johnson and Ford's Greg Bif- Race: Sharpie Professional
Whel_e_;___BristoUiennJ.MotoUJe, winners of the p revious~250 ·
Speedway (-533 miles). 500 two r•ces, had turned the ~t- Where: 8ristoi•(Tenn.) Motor
laps/ 266.5 miles.
lanta Motor Speedway race Speedway (.533 miles). 250
When: Sunday, Apnl 3
into a private affatr. Then laps/133.25 miles.
Last year's winner: Kurt aldng came Edwards. who When: Saturday. April2
Busch.
had never won a Nextel Cu p Last year's winner: ~ ar t in
Qualifying record: Ryan New- race and conjpeted in only Truex Jr.
man. Dodge.. 128.709 mph. 17•. At the white flag. John- Qualifying record: Greg BitMarch 21. 2003.
son led by th ree car lengths. fie. Ford.' 127. 132 mph ,
Race record : Charlie Off turn two. Edwards had March 26, 2004.
Glotzbach .
~hevrolel.
halved the margin _In tur ns Race rei:ord: Harry Gant ,
101.074 mph, July 11.1971. three and four. M SQuee_zed Buick. 92.929 mph , April4 ,
Last week: Superman could- his Ford between Johnso n 1992.
n't have pl ucked the Golden and the wall . Between turn _ Last week: Reed Sorenson ,
Corral 500 fro m the brink _of four and th ~ fin ish line. Ed: tn a Dodge, won the Pepsi
disaster better than 'Carl Ed- wards pulled alongside. The 300 at Nashvi lle Superwards. who made up for bum ped ever so slightly. speedway._
three hours and 20 mtnutes Somehow Edwards got the
of tediumwith a dazzling fin- momen-tum and slid by. The '
ish 'thal will go down in htsto- margtn at the strip was .028

Race: Kroger 250
Where; Mar-tinsville- (Va .)
Speedway (.526 miles), 250
laps/131.5 miles.
When: Saturday, April 9

ry. 'Che,'lrolet driver JiiT)mie

,

Hometo\fll News for Gallia &amp;Meigs counties
Ohiu \ 'alit') l'uhJi,hin~; l'u.

l'ollll"I'U) •

• Reds need to stay
healthy to contend.
See Page 81

IN THE· -5-POTL::.IGHT"·-- · · -

course of ·racing, don't penalize

ihe team. If what happened was
out-and-out cheating, take the
win away.
1&gt; So much for new rules benefiting vete~n drivers. The wiriners
of the first four Nextel Cup races
are, by age, 33, 35, 29 and 25.
Of course, in this age, 25-35
may be the "veteran' class.
lit Kurt Busch is going tor four .
_straight victories in Bristol Motor Speedway's' spring race. He's
won' the August night race only
once.
·1&gt; Brlstof, of course, could be one
place where the veteran drivers
make a stand. Rusty Wallace
has won nine times there and IS
almost always a factor in the
outcome.
-1&gt; Sterling r.,larlin may have had
· the best observation about Bristol. He said it's like rac ing "jet
·planes in a gymnasium:

•
WIIHO SHOT
"'4\10 WHO 'S NOT

.,. Wllo'l bot - Reed Sorenson, all of 19 years old, won
lor the first time in the Busch

Series and dominated the
-ra~;e at Nashville Superspeed'!61/.. ... Carl Edwards is third in
the Nextel Cup points stand·
ings and also leads the Busch
Series race.

1&gt; Wllo-. 1111 - liE! teammates
Dale .~mhardt Jr. and MiChael
W&amp;ltrip are currently 28th and
2Ttll. respectNe~y. in the Ne&lt;l!ll

Cup points standings: ...

JP.fl Gooliln leads-ill w\nlling:;i
bllt he's current!)' 12tb In .
points after ftnisning_ 39th In
Mllllita.

No. 02

KELLY SunoN

COPAXONE CHEVROLET

'

'
•

Bv TIM MALONEY
'TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.C0!\'1

NASCAR

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Th is Week

Page AS
• Clara 'Jean' Bradford
• Betty Joan Carsey
• Icy Belle Dailey
• David L. 'Dave' Henry
• Brent Lee lester - • James David 'Jim'Long
• ~ass Sexton

vs. Dodge
--- F-our- Faces into the ·season ;-it seems that Dodge officia ls have
concerns with the nose for the new·
Charger, which was approved in cooperation with NASCAR officials last
year. Supposedly the Charger's nose . .
tends to s~ck up debris from the
track , leading to overheating, and
some drivers feel the car is a bit unstable in traffiC.'

a

-NASCAR Thlo Week"a Monte
"Don't expect
any_changes , at least not for now.
NASCAR's position is probably that it
gave Dodge what It wanted and now
Dodge has to live with it But if this
· goes on much longer; who knows
what will happen?" -Dutton elves his take:

LEGENDS AND LORE -

· lEa~.. first

wJn ca-

on first try at Bristol
The late. Dale Earnhardt won at
Bristol Motor Speedway in his very
fir~t' (then) Winston Cup race there,
on April 1, 1979. It was also the first
of Earnhardt's 76 C4p victories. He
was 28 years old and making his
16th start in NASCAR's premier div ~
sion. After starting ninth, he took th&amp;
lead for the first time on lap 139 (of
500) and led the final 126. Earnhardt's final margin; over Bobby Alli-

INSIDE
• Community comes
together for autism.
SeePageA2
• For the Record.
SeePageA2
• Gallia Local Briefs.
SeePageA2
· • Meigs Local. Briefs.
See' Page AS

WEATIIER

.•
;

~

Special to NASCAR This week

Kelly Sutton was·diagnosed with multiple scterosis at age 16. Now,
with the aid of the drug Copaxone, she's able to liYe a relali'lely
symptom-tree life and Is able to race in the ciaftsman Truck Series
"

.

INDEX
4

SECilONS - 24 PAGI'S

Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C4
Ciassifieds ,
· D Section
CQmics
insert
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
.As
Region
A2
Sports
B Section
Weather ·
A6
'

© 2005 Ohio Volley Publiohin&amp; Co.

GALLIPOLIS ~ In an
announcement
by
Alan
SIOckmeister, chainnan of the
Holzer Hospital Foundation,
and Thomas E, Tope,, president
and chief executive officer of .
Holzer Consolidaled Health
Systems. James R. Phillippe.
has been named president of
Holzer Medical Center. ·
Phillippe comes to HMC
after serving as the regional
vice president
of Quorum
H e. a I t h
Resources
LLC
in
Kalamazoo ,
Mich., since
1993, . super, vising
the
overall operation of 12 hos·pitals .
in
Michigan and lllinois.
Quorum is a hospital man:
agemem corporation that provides management, consulting, education and group purchasing benefits to over 200
hospitals nationwide.
BY BETH SERGENT :
Phillippe has been associated . ·
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
with Quorum since 1986,
beginning as chief executive
BY KEVIN KELLY
RUTLAND- \Vith spring having offi·
officer
at
. LakeView
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM
cially arrived, many people are itcjJing to
Communily Hospital Authority
. get outside and work in ~helr flower garVINTON ~
'
After several in Paw Paw, Mich., until 1993,
dens despite the possibility of frost.
when he was ~ppointed to
Ed and Ruth Durst, owners of Ed's years of planning and a full regional vice presidenL He also
'Greenhouses in Rutland-,suggest pansies, year of construction, Vinton has worked at health care facilviolas and dianthus as heany. colorful is ready 10 hook on to its new ities in Texas and Kentucky,
flowers that love"the cold but continue to $2.7 million sewage system.
holding the titles of ho5pital
In anticipation of -that financial manager and assistant
bloom.throughout the summer.
"My mother had pansies that bloomed move, vi)lage officials have administrator.
in snow," Mrs . Durst said, adding that issued' the following informaHis _experience -. includes
although it is hard to kill pansies, }Vater- tion as a primer to signing on establishing strategic jllld manwith the service.
ing them too much will do the trick.
agement plans. finances, physi·
1
As
of
April
I,
_
village
resi
The dead blooms of pansies' and
cian recruitment. internal operadianthus need to be pinched off or "dead- dents and property owners tions and qvaliry improvement.
- headed" so that they will continue io will have 90 days to connect
A native of Indiana, Phillippe
the
.
sewer.
Officials
onto
received
a bachelor of science
bloom. Violas. require less maintenance
stressed
that
non-compliance
_
degree in bu$iness administrafor those with less than a green thumb and
Ed's Greenhouse now has them in Meigs -will result in fines issued by tion from Butler University in
the Gallia County Health Indianapolis. lnd.; a master's
Marauder colors.
degree m health care adminis·
'
A little splash of fertilizer or .Miracle, l?epartment.
S.rpnl/phato
tration from Trinity University
The
initial
step
in
completGro
can
also
keep
the
flowers'
colors
Ruth Durst of Ed 's Greenhouses inspects Hats of
in San Antonio, Texas; and a
ing
the
connection
process
is
vibrant
and
blooming.
violas. a low-maintenance HOwer for spring that
to obtain a sewer permit form master's in business- ad minis~ the threat of frost has passed, Mrs.
grows well in cold weather and continues to bloom
throughout the summer.
·
Please see VInton. A1
Plose see HMC. A1
' Piftse see Gllrden. A1

-·
'

-- -- -- -

------ ~---------,-------

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

new sewer

son , was approximately three sec-

Aa.ntll e track for drivers :
botlt ,_., end Old
•
Atlanta Motor Speedway has seen:
a wide range of ages in its winners. :'
The youngest winner, Jell Gordon,
was 23 years, 7 months, 8 days old :
when he won a race at AMS on
March i2-. 1995. Morgan Shepherd ; ·
was 51 years. 4 months, 27 days oldwhen he won at the track on March '
20, 1993.

GALLIPOLIS - Rosetta
Adkins could only stand by
and watch Friday afternoon a~
her husband, Brian, and others scrambled to try to save
her home from a landslide.
The hill al;love the Adkins'
home at 659 Kriner Road
south of Gallipolis started
coming down · .Tuesday.
Having purchased tlie prefabricated home at the Home
Show in _ Barboursville,
WVa., the Adkins quickly
remembered a p,romise the
sellers had made.
"They said anytime - we
needed to move the house.
they would have axles for
us," Mrs. Adkins said.
Except for, it turns out, dur- ·
ing a dire emergency.
Even
though
they
explained their dire emergency, the company reportedly offered no help. To make
matters worse, nobody .else in
Tim Maloney(photo
the area had axles to fit under Rosetta and Brian Adkins watch as a tractor-trailer-sized tow truck is readied for an attempt to
pull their house clear of a landslide. They live at 659 Kriner Road, south of Gallipolis.
Please see Landslide• .Al

new leader
April25 ·

'Tips on starting a Vinton ready
spring flower garden to connect to

onds. Darrell Waltrip finished third.
Earnhardt went -on to be named
Rookie of the Year and won the firs{
- of his seven cham-pionships the fol:
lowing year.
•

·&amp;, Supply
Co. · .

'

II: 1~20-2005

Landslide threatens home on Kriner Road HMC gets

Sutton overcomes .multiple
sclerosis, female stereotypes .
HAMPTON, Ga. -It's not uncommon for young woman
blessed with the name Kelly to be dubbed "Kelly girL ...
If that moniker carries with it a certain connotation of "up
_ and at 'em," then there is no. woman more aptly nicknamed
than Kelly Sutton. At age 16, doctors diagnosed Sutton with
something called RRMS, which stands for "relapsing-remitting IIIUltiple sclerosis." It's not an ailment that would no'r·
mally allow one to race in the Craftsman Truck Series.
In i!l28, Sutton began ta~ing . a medication called Copax'
one. She had already begun racing, but the medication enabled her to advance in two ways. First of all, the medication itself greatly aided her ability to lead a productive life
in generaL Secondly, the fact that she became quite a success story led Copaxone to come on board as a sponsor for
her race cars, beginning in the Goody's Dash Series.
What better spokesperson could a product have than an
-embodiment of its benefits?
"!haven't had a relapse in over six years," said the driver of the No. 02 Copaxone Chevrolet.
A 17th-place finish in the season's opening race _at Daytona
was a career best for Sutton, Her truck ran with the lead
draft for most of the night, but a bad break- Sutton pitted
just before a caution flag- cost her a better showing.
Sutton says the support of other drivers in the series is
"ISO percent"
'
"Earning the respect of all the other drivers is very important to me," she added. "That would be true in any series. I don't know why or how, but I'm just one of the guys.
I'm a female and a mom, but when I put my helmet on, I'm
just a·driver. I ask the veterans for advice and help, and
they couldn't have been more cooperative.
"This is very difficult, very competitive. One !If our goals
is 10 make (the field for ) every race. Last year we had 'a lot
of DNFs ('did not finishl I hope this year we can complete
85to 90 percent of the laps, which we didn't do last y~ar.''
Sutton tries to work out three times a we~k with a per·sonal trainer. She said fatigue is the only issue related to
the disease that has an impact on her racing career.
"When I was diagnosed, my dream oftacing kind of went
downhill," said Sutton, now 33. "! didn't want to be around
racing, really, but I wasn't the kind ot kid who said, 'Dad, I
want to go racing. Let's go: I come from a modest home.
My dad worked his butt off to support our family. But when
my dad asked me, I said, 'Of course I do!
"As much as I wanted it, I didn't think--! should ask-him.
I.f Ijd had a lot of money, that ~ould've_ been something
else. Not having the money, I walled on him, and he helped
me 1o what I always wanted to do."

:-.:o . 1 t

ViCTOR L. SIMPSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

that bad/ said seco(ldillace finIsher Kenny Wallace. "It was

- merciless.... 1WIIS hoping the
kid would run O\ltof gas:
. 1&gt; Quote of the 1'!6~k comes from
,, the tl\ird-place· llhlsher, Shane
.i:-' "!mlel; who said of Sorenson:
" ' "He must be one l\8tk of a driv-II(, H~'s ~o smart If 1was 19, I'd
run over somebody." Hmiel, by
the Wily, is 24.
1&gt; NASCAR officials supposedly
don't h8\la any plans for holding
a Nextel Cup race in Nashville.
What a shame. It's a great fan
destination. In terms of what
the city offers the sport's fans, it
·may. be second only to Las ve:
gas.
1&gt;1\udos to the Stock Car Racing
Commission. which rescinded
--the suspensions handed down
to crew chiefs Chad Knaus and
Alan Gustafson ._ It's always refreshing when judges actually
use judgment-. 1&gt; NASCAR's method of penalizing
teams calls the sport's integrity
into question. If something happened to a car in the normal

:I' &gt;-

,
while one of them strummed a guitar.
"The angels welcome you ," Vatican TV said after
papal s pok esman Jo aquin
Navarro-Vall s
VATICAN CITY - John Paul II, who led the announced the death of the pope, who had for years
Roman Catholic Church for 26 years and helped suffered from Parkinson 's 11isease- and came down
topple communism in Europe while becoming the wilh fe ver and infections in recent weeks .
most-traveled pope. died :saturday night in hi s
A Mass was scheduled for St. Peter 's Square for
Vatican apartment after a . long public struggle 10:30 a.m. (4:30a.m. EDT) Suncflty.
.
against debilitating illness. He was 84. ·
·
Jn contrast to the church's ancient traditions,
"We all feel like otphan s this evening," Navarro-Valls announced the death in an e-mail to
Undersecretary of State Archbi shop Leonardo . journali sts: "The Holy Father died thi s evening at
Sandri told the crowd of 70,000 that had gathered 9:3 7 p.m. (2:37 p.m. EST) in· his private apart- ·
in SL Peter's Square below the pope's still-lighted menL" The spokesman said church officials were
apanment windo~ s .
fo llowing instructions that John Paul had wriuen
The assembled faithfu I fell into a stulmed silence for them on Feb. 22, 1996.
before some people broke out in applau se -c- an
"He was a m~rv elous man.--Now he's no longer
Italian traditiqn in which nioumers often clap for suffering," Concetta Sposato, a pilgrim who heard
imp&lt;irtant figures. Others ~ept.
the pope had died as she was on her way to St.
The ·crowd; which appeared to grow quickly, Peter's 10 pray, said tearfully. ,
·
recited the· rosary_ A person in the front held a
"My father died l ~ st· year. For me, it feels the
Polish flag in honor ofthe Polish-born pontiff.
. same." said Eli sabena Pomacalca. a 25'year-old
Prelate;, asked ihuse in the square 10 keep silent' Peruvian who lives in Rome.
so they might "accompany the pope in his first ' ''I'm Poli sh. For us, he was a father;'' said pilgrim
steps into heaven." . .
Beata Sowa.
Later. as bells tolled in mourning. a group of
young people sang. "Alleluia·, he will rise again,"
Please. see Pope. A5
-

·· FEUD OF-THE WEEK •

t

ol.

BY

of a second, perhaps a foot.

·

S l.!)tl, \

PQPE ]0~!.'1 PAUL

SPORTS

Last year's winner: Rick

·Crawford
Qualllylng record : Mike
Bliss . Ford , 94.275 mph ,
April 16, 1999.
Race record: Jimmy Hensley,
Dodge, 74,294 mph , April
17, 1999.
Last rae~ : Ron Hornaday. in
.a Chevrolet, won the World
Financial Group 200 at At·lanta Motor S~eedway.

~liddl&lt;-por·t • (;allipuli' • .\pril :1- :!lUI ,)

•

·"'

--.----

,

---"-

-

.

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'

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-

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