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'

HOUSE OF THE WEEK·

iunba~ lime~ -&amp;enttnel

PageD6

Sunday,Aprilt8,2004

Redme~~m=
series
with • , Bt

AP HOUSE OF THE WEEK

ARe YOU 65 OR OLDER?

A new twist tq a venerable de~ign

'

If so, you qualify for a

By BRUCE A. NATHAN
For AP Newsleatures
rive through any neighborhood and you'll

D

lor
Discount*
on your home delivered subscription!

see a colonial home. Thrs eve r-popular
look is a desrgn constant.

Here. Plan APWB· 1541rves up to the
legacy. The exterior is traditional. as you

'

would expect. Tim intenor. however. rs modem
and updated. A two-Siory ~rous IrVIng room
looks to rh·e front yard, and a famrly room
pushes out just opposrte the ~rtch en . At the
reaf of tr.e first floor are two bedrooms One.
wrth a double en.try door. could·be a home
of!rce or readrng room .
The master surte takes up the entire upper
lloor. II has a large srttrng area. and coUld (at
tne owner's optron) overtook the lrvrng room
It has a big walk-In closet and a twin-entry
oath with twm smks

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
~I,,. t4,1

.t••t ' l '-'IS•\t)l

Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

-

COLONIAL TWIST. Many
would ~elcome this tradltloosl colonial style design
of modest proportions. The upper floor Is tully reserved for the master suite, a consideration
many empty·nesters will find appealing.

APWB 154 Deta1'ls

Designer Comments

·'This home 1s tr3dii1Qnal on "the e~enor w1th flex tble intenor configuration. The large masonry
chimney anchors the house and gfves a comfortable vertical scale while bookcase alcoves
on each side of the living room prov1de visual mterest. It's a good twist to old styling.·
.,_ Architectural style:
- Douglas Wells Colon1al
.,_Total sqlJare feet.
one level : 2,644
Estimated Cost of Construction
ie•cludes k:ln
II'- Main level: 1,828
Architectural Glossary
sq. h.
Northeast $255,000 · 5279.000
Water table - A large bOard at the bottom of .,. Upper levet: 816
Southeast $205. 000 · 5229.000
me siding and neJCt to the foundaTion.
sq . ft.
M1dwest
$216,000 · $240.000
Northwest 5230 000 · 5254,000
.,. Garage: two-car
Southwest 5220 ,000 · 5244.000
attached throlJgh

breezeway
•..

/.........

~

• Overall width; 66ft.
Overall depth: 65ft.

.., Recommended lot
size: 90ft. wi~e. 135

INSIDE
• Nine years after
Oklahoma City bombing,
families still searching
for co-conspirators
See PageA2
• :ruition keeps rising at
state's public universities
·See PageA6
• Dancing for dogs?
See PageA2

II'- Bedrooms: 3
II'- Baths: 2

.,_ LalJndry: lower
level

~aUipolhi

Jaatl!' Utrfbune
l9oittt tBlea,aut 1\.egi~ter ·
The Daily Sentinel

.., Exterior material:
concrete composition
lap siding, waterabl e
base

·

.,. Foundation: flJII
basement
.., 2 in. .: 6 in. stl.ld
exterior walls
.,_ Roof material·
asphalt shingles
• Attic: yes

j)unba~

ft. deep

mtme&amp; ~~enttnel

* Once you have signed up for the Senior Discount, your renewal notice will reflect your discount.
..., -···- -.--,

~...,, .,~

.

_

_

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

'

:Subscriber's Name ________________
, I

.. __j

• Address_'---------,------,-----,---: City/State/Zip----'---- - - - - - - - - - -

00.·
'

,..v __

House-\1',Week

Castro tri~les Reds past
Cubs, Bt

"'f"

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81~

te•tl l'lt~

SF

APWB-154

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Meigs issues first CCW permit
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BR&lt;&lt;OOMYDAILYS&lt;NTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
issued its first pennit to carry
a concealed weapon Friday, to
Pomeroy Attorney Charles
Knight.
The dej:ljlrtment began
accepting completed applications for permits a week ago,
and according to Deputy Rick
Patterson, who helps process
them, the wait time for the
issuance of a permit is not as
long as deputies had first
expected. Last week, Sheriff
Ralph Trussell imposed a
limit of 20 applications per
day, but Patterson said the
department has only received
about 30 completed applications to date.
Completed
applications
must include a photograph,
til,ing fee and a criminal and
psychological background
check. The results of those
background checks from the

Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification
and
Investigation have been ' com·
ing back to the county more
quickly than had been expecte~, resulting in shorter wait·
ing times for permits,
Patterson said .
T)le local sheriff's depart.
ment must approve or deny a
permit application within 45
days, but has longer to do so if
the applicant has lived in the
coYnty for less than five years.
· It is appropriate that
Knigh(s was the tirst Meigs
County application approved.
A defense attorney, Knight
has been an ac'tive arid outspo- ·
ken advocate for concealed
weapon legislation. He said
Friday he has supported the
idea for years, and is a member of the Ohio organization
which pushed for the new law.
"I am pleased the legislature
has enacted this legislation permitting the citizens to provide
for their own security and their
family's defense." Knight said.

"It has been a long struggle to
pass the law, and I appreciate
the hard work of Sen. John'
Carey and other local legislators to achieve thi s goal."
"We ·lmve long been aware
that individual s who mean us
ill will ignore the law and
possess weapon s illegally,'·
Knight said. "' It has only been
the law-ah iding ci tizens who
have been unprotecied. Now
with proper training and registration. this all changes."
"'Local business owners
will now be able to be secure
that they can protect their
own establishments and that
other honest residents will not
be unprotected against the
criminal element. ..
With a concealed carry permit, Ohioans are permined to
carry a concealed weapons in
public. but the law prohibits
them from many places.
including law enforcement
facilitie s. school safely zo nes.
hospital s. airports, churches ·
and liquor establishments.

Deputy Rick Patterson issues Meigs .County's first permit to
carry a concealed handgun to Pomeroy Attorney Charles
Knight. Knight has been a long-time supporter of the new state
legislation perm'itting conce aled weapons for permit holders.
(Brian J. Reed )

Action teams with
$prin.g plant exchange Rural
AmeriCorp to restore, preserve

•·Phone'--~-'-----------------

For a study plan of tl1is holJse , senct·ss to House of the Week, P.O. Box 1562, New York,
NY 101 16-1562, call (877)228-2954, or order online at APHouseoftheweek.com. Be sure
to include the !Jian nll mber. For downloadable study plans and construction blueprints of
HolJse of the Week · before April 2003 , see www . hous~oftheweek :com .

\l(t '\ 11\\

Mall or dro~ off this coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAI LYSE NT INEl. COM

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Bv J.

MILES lAYTON

JlAYTON@MYOAILY SENTINEL. CO M

ference in the county and perhaps in spire others to get
in vo lved... he sa id . "The
National Civil ian Communily
Corps is giv ing 18-24 year
olds from all over the co untry
an ouilet to do good work.
perhaps thi s group will
inspire a few others local! y to
get involved. volu nteer thei1
time. their muscle. and minds
and continue 10 work on local
community needs.··
Rural Action Forestry has
teamed up with all of these
mentioned organizations to
apply for t'wo National
Civ ilian Community Corps

RUTL AND - The enviPOMEROY - Take
iri s or ronment is ·getti ng: a helping
your pick hand in Meigs County thanks
daylilies , hardy pink to the combined cff&lt;)rts of the
geraniums or purple National Civilian Commun ity
Corps · and Rural 1\ ct ion
cornflowers.
Clumps of those groups. ·
Andrew Bashaw. Rural
plants an.d · more were Action. sa id these groups
at the sprin~ plant seek to addre" issue; of soil
exchange held last erosion and acid mine damweek at the Senior age through educatio n. volunCitizens Center by the teer recruitment and work
projects.
Ohio State Universily
'The purpose of &lt;~II this is
Extension
Master 10 help build the capacity of
Please see Restore, As
Gardeners and ihe I hose who want to make a difMeig s
County
Extensio.n Office.
It was a lime of
giving for those who
had , plants to share
and a time of taking
for many who didn't;
'
!II
a time for dedica ted
gardeners to share nol
only their knowledge
about growin g but for
passing along some of
their plants which
bring such heaul y In
the earth.
Table s . filled with
hundreds of plants
were emptied durin g
the
hour-long
· exchange as senior
citizens and others
se lected from among
the vast variety di splayed.
Tips on preparing
planting,
so il ·. fur
growi ng from seed,
and dividing bulbs
were given by several
Master Gardeners and
The 2004-05 prom ktng Je remy Yeauge r and queen Deana
Meigs Extension agent
Pullins were crowned JUSt s hortly before midntg ht Saturday at
Sara Hull gets some assistance on selecting plants from Master Hal Kn een during the
Southern
High School. Th is year's theme was '"When l"m With
Gardener Jan Cleek at the plant exchange held at the Senior plant exchange pro·
You.'" (J. Miles Layton )
Citizens Center. (Charlene Hoeflich )
gram.

·King and queen crowned

~"""EN l·

House For Sale
Good rental investment. Duplex, two rentals
or one large home, 30x40 heated pole build·
ing, new roof, siding, windows, very good
neighborhood, 1140 Second Ave. Gallipolis,
Ohio. Asking $124,900,
call Karen @740-645-2088.

INDEX
2 SECfiONS- 12 PAGES

One Of A Kind Estate

..

Newly remodeled cedar ranch with amazing
vista of the Ohio River Valley. Cathedral
ceilings of tongue-in-groove red cedar
throughout entire house. 4 bedroom 2/'n
bath. Just constructed guest cottage 75 feet
away from home. 40 foot swimming pool
between the two. 45 acres with 2 ponds.
Horse barn/pasture. Tennis Court, Security
systems in place. House shown by appoint·
ments only to SERIOUS INQUIRERS.
Call 446· 7803

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Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Sports

Bl

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co .

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• Designed for high school students • Technically challengfn~

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Courses offered: Heolthcare, Auto Service

iluckeytHills GalltUclldemy Jackson OakHIU h"Valt~ SouthGaUta vtntonCcu!ty Wlllston u.otRtoGranqe and Information Technology

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�•.
The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD
Dancing for dogs?

PageA2

Graduates
announced

BY JOSEPH B. FRAZIER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Jannie Coverdale. who lost her two grandsons in the 1995
Oklahoma City bombing, leaves the Oklahoma City federal
court house in this Oct. 8. 1999 file photo. For Jannie
Coverdale. the search for suspects in the 1995 Oklahoma City
bombing that kil led her two grandsons and 166 other people
did not end with the arrests of Timothy McVeigh and Terry
N1chols.(AP Photo/ J. Pat Carter)
·
. ·

Nine years after Oklahoma
City bombing, families still
searching for co-conspirators
BY TIM TALLEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

deaths of the other 160
victims and one victim 's
fetus . Prosecutors are secking the death penalty.
V.Z. Lawton. a retired
U.S.
Department
of
and
Urban
Housing
Development employee who
was knocked unconscious
in
the
bombing. said
Nichol&gt;' state jury will
probably hear more evJdcncc of a wider conspiracy . than jurors did at his
federal trial.
"There's more of it coming out down here than
ever came out in Denver."
Lawton said.
.

McALESTER. Okla:
For Jannie Coverdale. the
search for suspects in the
1995 Oklahoma City bombing . that killed her two
grandsons and 166 .other
people did not end with
the arrests of Timothy
and
Terry
McVeigh
Nichols.
Nine years after · the
deadly bombing, Coverdale
is among a resolute group
of survivors and members
of victims ' families that . is
still searching for the enigmalic suspect John Doe
• No. 2 and evidence nf a
wider bombing conspiracy.
Lawton and Coverdale
Coverdale and
others . arc among those who see
believe the state murder evidence of a Mideast con. trial of bombing conspirator nection.
Terry Nichols may be their
The day after the .bomblast chance to prove what mg. the FBI
released
.prosecutors argue is a leap sketches of two men drawn
of faith: that unknown oth- from · descriptions provided
ers were involved in the by employees at a Junction
plot to bomb the Oklahoma City. Kan.. body shop.
City federal building.
Authorities said the truck
"I want to get to the but- used
deliver
the
10
tom of it," Coverdale said. Oklahoma City bomb was
"I will never stop asking rented at the shop.
questions until I get some
One sketch. known as
answers, or until I'm
dead...
John Doe No. I. resembled
Earlier
this
month , McVeigh. The other, John
Coverdale sent a letter to Doe No . 2. depicted a
FBI
Director
Robert dark-haired. muscular man
Mueller ask ing that the with features that do not
investigation into the April · resemble Nichols.
Investigators
identified
19. 1995. bombing be
reopened,
citing
the the suspect as an Army
bureau's failure to share private who was at the
evidence of possible bomb- body shop about the same
ing coconspirators with top time and had nothing to do
bombing investigators. She with the bomb plot. But
said she has not received a Coverdale
and
others
reply.
believe the sketch resem"Who's going . to investi- bles a man of Middle
gate the investigators?" she Eastern desce nt.
said.
Nichols' defense attorneys
Lawton and 13 other surhave built a case around vivors and victims' relatives
documents and
witness filed a federal lawsuit in
accounts they say show 2002 against Iraq. claiming
other coconspirators helped Iraqi officials
provided
McVeigh in the plot to morJey and tramtng to
bomb the Oklahoma City McVeigh and Nichols. The
federal building and that lawsuit is pending.
Nichols' defense attorneys
Nichols was set up to take
the blame:
allege that dozens of wit"The evidence that the nesses saw a man resemdefense seeks to offer ... · bling John Doe No. 2 in
provides a viable explana- Kansas and Oklahoma in
tion why these persons are the week before the bombmore likely
than
Mr.
Nichols, a man without any mg.
,
history of violence. to have
In their motion, Nichols'
aided McVeigh in his plot," defense attorneys said they
according to a 90-page ha ve questioned potential
defense motion that seeks witnesses who can identify
other possible suspects,
dismissal of the case.
Judge Steven Taylor is including members of a
scheduled to take testimony gang of white supremacists
on
the
motion
when known as the Midwest
trial . resumes bank robbers.
Nichols'
Monday, the ninth anniverThey allege federal investigators have impeded their
sary of the bombing.
Nichols, 49, was convict- efforts to obtain informaed on federal counts of tion about the bank robbery
conspiracy and involuntary
manslaughter in Denver in gang and McVeigll's cou1997. He was sentenced to nection with Elohim City. a
life in prison fOr the aeaths white supremaci st .enclave
of
eight
federal
Jaw in northeastern Oklahoma.
State prosecutors have
enforcement ofticets in the
bombing of the Alfred P. repeatedly said defense
Murrah Federal Building.
attorneys have been given
In Oklahoma. Nichols all the information provided
faces 161 state counts of to them by federal authorifirst-degree murder for the ties.

PORTLAND. Ore. - The music swells
and Annie . Schlaff and her yellow Lab
Danny shp mto a lively cha-cha-cha.
Across the room. straight-faced trJiners
reveal the riner points of dancing wi.th dogs
to about 50 anentive owners here for the
second annual World Canine Freestyle
Org.aniLation.
Despite Danny's obvious talents, ·it's not
quite like waltzing or Brown-Eyes across
the Roseland Ballroom . · The canine
freestyle organization it a ''choreographed
..
mustcal program" of animal and owner - ·
a mixture of obedience. timing, music and
sometimes costumes.
11 has thousands of fans. and it 's growing . .
Groups started. independently of each ""' '~-''·'
other. in Englanu and Canada in 1989 and
spread to the United States and Japan.
Organizers figure there are some 9,000
auherents so far, maybe half of them in the
United States.
It is judged. there is a hierarchy. and
competition ca n be brisk.
Some · dogs have learned to raise their
paws in time to the music . "That's the goal
of everyone." said Judy Whipple. of
Rainier. Ore.
·
Top ·canine freestyle trainers c.an . command $~00 ·a day. $2.500 for a weekend
~orkshop. · Dogs who are· "highly rated'' by
JUdgmg panels carry considerable bragging
rights for their owners.
Patie Ventre. of Brooklyn. N.Y., launched
canine freesty le in the United States in
1999 anu recalls driving her dug, Dancer,
to ..Washington and havinob him
strut his
.
stult on the desk of an IRS agent to prove
the organization was for real.
The group has had nonprofit tax-free status ever since.
At the weekend meet in Oregon, some
dogs struggled with the freestyle moves,
while otl1ers were. in their way, bound for
glory.
Tug. u Pembroke Wel sh Corgie owned by
El len Perl son, of Petaluma, ·Calif., holds the
World Freestyle Dog-Exellence rating and
Js one of only a few of the breed to com- Elizabeth Felix, from Roy. Wash., drills her dog "Wesley" during a I'{Orkshop session to teach. dancing with your dog, in Portland, Ore. The workshop is part of
pete, Perlson says.
the second international conference of the World Canine Freestyl~ Organizatio n.
"Can you wave •. Tag'?" she asks.
(AP Photo/Greg Wahl-Stephens)
Tag doe~.

BUY, SEll, OR

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CHINESE

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NEW • UIIEII FARM AND

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Massey Ferguson • Farwohand
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New Idea • Rhino
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GALLIPOLIS
Gallipoli; Career College
,004 spnng
. quaner gradu~
ates .were: Mark Bowen,
assoct~te of applied business. t~ technical support
of
spec taltst,
associate
applied business in computer applications technology,
dtploma in junior accounting: Betty Collins, associate
of applied busin-ess in
accounting:
Natasha
of
Daniels,
associate
applied business in bu siness
administration; Toni a Davis,
associate of applied business ·in executi' e office
administration:
Denise
Gibeaut.
associate
of
applied business in accounimg.
Susan Goad. associate of
applied business in accounting: Brandy Johnson, associate of applied bu siness in
business
administration;
Rae Mash, associate of
applied busi ness in accounting : William Saxon. diploma in junior accounting:
Tonva Sinclair. associate of
appiied bu siness in medical
office administration; Jaime
. Supple. associate of applied
business iit technical support specialist. associate of
applied business in computer applications technology:
. and Traci Wright. associate
Of applied business in busi~ess administration.

Point Pleasant, WV

. Monday, April 19
SYRACUSE
The
Sutton Township Trustees
will meet in special session,
7 p.m. at Syracuse village
hall.
.
LETART
- Letan
Township trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the office
building.
·
RACINE
Racine
Village Council will meet in
recessed session at 7 p.m. in
council chambers.

Thursday, April 22
RACINE - The Racine
Water Board will meet at I0
a.m. at village hall council
chamber.
.
MIDDLEPORT The
Meigs
County
Health
Depanment is sponsoring a
parenting workshop for parents and daycare· providers
from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at
the Miiddleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
Admission is free . Breakfast
and lunch will be provided
along with daycare facilities.
Numerous door prizes will
be given during the day.
Register by call ing 992-6626.

Clubs and
organizations ·

Monday, April 19
ATHENS Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest
Group, 7 p.m. , Athens
County Extension Office. W.
Union St. Topic will be
Controlling Jnvasive or NonDesirable
Species
in
Woodland. Everyone inter. COLUMBUS
Jeremiah ested is welcome to attend.
Ryan Johns.on. Austin Tyler Information is available by
Lmle and . Jesse Clayton Little have been named to the calhng 593-8555.
honor roll at The Ohio State
University for the winter
quarter. earning grade point
· averages of at least 3.5 on a
4.0 grading scale.

On honor roll

Monday, April19, 2004

POMEROY - Fraternal
Order of Eagles Auxiliary
#2171 meets at 7:30 p.m. for
nomination of officets.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Right to Life meets
at 7 p.m. at Pomeroy Library.
with oratory contest followmg .
RACINE
- Southern
Band Boosters will meet in
regular session Monday. 7
p.m. at the high &gt;chool band
room. All band parents and
supporters invited.

DEAR ABBY: I was at a
dinner pany recently . .One of
the guests, who was totally
deaf, was completely ignored.
Not once did anyone attempt
to include him in the conversation. I don't know how he
stood it.
After dinner I talked to
him. He told me he is used to
being ignored ·by hearing
people at panies and hated
attending them. He was there
to please his wife, who is not
deaf.
Monday, April 26
He spoke well and was·
RACINE - The Southern good at lip-reading. Hd was
Band spring concert ' will be intelligent. knowledgeable .
held . Monday, April 26 at and has a good job. He told
Southern High School. The me he would bring a good
concert will feature music book to these gatherings if his
performed by grad.es · 4 wife didn 't think it'd be rude.
through 12 under direction of
Abby, how would you have
Band
Director Jeanette handled this' I' in going to
Oldaker. The public is invit- send your answer to every
person·
I
know.
ed to attend.
SHOCKED BY THE RUDENESS
DEAR SHOCKED: A gracious
hostess tries her best to
Monday, April 19
as.sure
that all ,of her guests
RACINE - The TB clinic
personn·el will be at the wtll have a good time and
Racine Fire Department from facilitates conversation.' If I
4:3.0 to 6:30 p.m. for skin had been the hostess, I would
testing. They will return 4:30 have spoken with the couple
to 6 p.m. on Wednesday, in advance and elicited some
interesting facts about the
April 21 , to read the tests.
man. Then I would have
shared them with the rest of
my guests. as well as the fact
that he could lip-read.
Monday, April 19
The .altemative would be to
POMEROY
Rose "casually'' mention that he is
Sisson will celebrate her 84th distantly related to Warren
birthday on April 19. Cards Buffett or Bill Gates, or that
may be sent to her at the
home of her son 'and daughter-in-law, 761 · Heise Park
Lane. Galion, Ohio 44833.
ATHENS - "WOUB"TV
has received both a winner
(silver) and a finalist
(bronze) award in the 25th
Annual Telly Awards.
Opening the Door West:
The ·Ohio Company of
Associates won in the
and "What Does It Take Most "Documentary TV or Cable
of All to Get to Heaven." Han Program" category. Produced
and Julie Campbell gave the by Shelburne Films and
secretary and treasurer's WOUB"TV, the two-hour
reports. Door Prize was won historical feature documentary takes an unprecedented
by Avis Harrison.
Sterrett and Han presented look at the critical role south the program which focused eastern Ohio played in the
on a prayer for the days of the U.S. government's first orgaweek. They did presentations nized expansion westward
for wash day, ironing day, following the American
mending day. cleaning day, Revolutionary War. The profir st
aired
on
shopping day, cooking day. gram
WOUB"TV on Thursday,
and The Lord 's Day.
Each member brought a
basket lunch and baskets
were exchanged among the
members, Edie Hubbard.
Blondena Rainer, Bernice
Theiss, Edna Knopp. Edith
Grimm, Hazel McKelvey,
Linda Russell. Mabel Brace,
Mildred Hart, Martha Lou
Beegle, Holly Stump, Lillian
Hayman, Ruth Simpson,
Evelyn
Foreman, . Lois
Sterrett. K,athryn Han. Denise
Holman. Melissa H,olman,
Betty Proffitt, Letha Proffitt,
Jo Lee, Julie Campbell, Janet
Theiss, Jackie White, Avis
Harrison and Julie Campbell.
Next meeting will be the
second Thursday in June .

Concerts
and plays

Other events

Birthdays

At art institute

RACINE Plans for
entering a float in the RACO
LANGSVILLE - Eric D. Flower Festival Saturday
Montgomery earned a 3.7 were
made ·when the
grade point average for the Sonshine
Circle
met
winter quart~r at The Art · Thursday at the Bethany
In stitute of Pittsburgh. He is a Church .
third-year student majoring
The group also · decided to
in graphic design.
have a bake sale booth at the
He is the son of Larry and festival which will be held in
Linda
Montgomery
of Star Mill Park. Improvements
Langsville and lives in to the church entrance were
Pitt sburgh with his wife and also discussed with . final
children.
approval to come from the
church trustees . It was decided that gift cards will be sent
to members who are ill.
The annual mother-daughter
banquet will be held on May 6
and reservations are to be made
with Kathryn Hart by April 27.
Thank you cards were read
from Charles and Donna Idle.
J1m and Karen Werry, and Dan
and Donna Jean Smith.
Donations were received from
Martha Wolfe and Jim and
Karen Werry. Several cards of
encouragement were signed.
Lois Sterrett presided at the
meeting . She read scripture
from Colossians I : 16 and 2
Meigs • 992-2155
Timothy.4:4, and articles, "The
Seven Wonders of the World"

Keeping
Meigs
informed

Dear
Abby

he's connected in the motion
picture · business. But then
you'd probably have to hire
police protection to keep the
other guests from mobbing
him. (Only joking')
DEAR ABBY: My husband
"Rick's"
former
wife,
''Pearl," is determined to
spoil Father's Day for mv
husband. It happens everV
year. They have four grown
chtldren; the youngest is 28.
Pearl invites all of the children to her house for dinner
on Father's Day. She also
invites Rick's father. (Rick
and his father don't have tlhe
best relationship.)
I know she does it to hurt
Rick. There are 52 weeks in a
year, and she could invite
Rick's dad over on any of the
other 51 weekends. She is so
conniving that even a 4-yearold could see through her.
Rick and I never interfere
with her plans for Mother's
Day or any other holiday.
We can't make plans in
advance and outfox her
because she always issues the
invitation so far in advance.
Does she have a lack of class

or what? How can we get
around this?- FRUSTRATED IN WISCONSIN
DEAR
FRUSTRATED:
Discuss this situation with
Rick's father and the children . Tell the children their
father would love to have
them spend Father's Day with
him from now on. After all, it
is supposed to be HIS special
day. Say the same thing to
Rick's father. and it might be
a step in the right direction in
mending their relationship. If
they are unwilling to cooperate, the two of you should
make special plan&gt; of your ·
own on Father's Day.
DEAR ABBY: This question is very important to an
elderly friend of mine. and I
don' t have the answer.. Abby.
if you are born on Feb. 29.
what day do you celebrate on .
the years that are not leap
years' No one l'\'e asked
seems to know. - LCLA IN
LAKE CHARLES. LA .
DEAR LULA: There are
several ways to deal with i.t.
Celebrate the big day on Feb.
28 or March I - or if he or
she would prefer to age more
slowly, celebrate the birthday
only. every four years!
Dear Abb\' is 11rillen b,·
Abigail Van Buren. also
known as Jeanne Phillips.
and was founded !J\' her
mother, Paulin e Plii!lips.
Dear
Abbr
a1
Wrire
www.DearAbb\'.COIIl
PO.
Box 69440. LOs Angeles, CA
90069.

or

Two WOUB productions receive national Telly Awards

Sonshine Circle plans
spring activities

. Sunday
Times-Sentinel

675-1812 .

BY THE BEND
Community Calendar
Dinner conversation leaves
Public meetings
deaf guest out of the loop

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April19, 2004

.Thousands of enthusiasts try new tricks

P~geAa

Oct. 16, 2003. Executive producer for Opening the Door
West is Mark Brewer,
WOUB associate director for
telecommunications.
Moscow Circus: A Russian
Winter's Tale, produced/directed by Keith Newman, WOUB
.Senior
TV /Radio
producer/director, was a finalist
in the "Cultural TV or Cable .
Program" category. Originally
aired on Thursday, May 29,
2003. the program provides a
behind-the-scenes look at the
making of the world premiere
of the Moscow Circus' "A
Russian Winter's Tale" performance at Ohio University's
Templeton-Blackburn Alumni
Memorial Auditorium m
November 2002.

Established in 1978 "to
inspire, promote and support
creativity in the visual ans. "
the Telly Awards is the premier award honoring the
finest video and film productions as well as outstanding
local, regional, and cable TV
commercials and programs.
Each year. the Telly Awards
honors the best work .of the
most respected television stations. production companies.
advertising agencie,. cable
operators and corporate video
departments in the world.
Entries to the well-known
and highly respected national
and international competition
are received from all 50
states and five continents.

There will be a Special Edition
on Friday, May 14th
saluting · all
Meigs County Class of
l004graduating Seniors

773-5536
Mason, WV

~·;..-~i~~f.o

ArtFest 2004

umber
IS•••

"The Truth About Tobacco"

must cover every number on your card to win.

:....00:..-----,

Tl
F
L

'lf()U/1, eomp/ete
..11~

New Shoes
Arrivins Daily!

dJ~ KIPLING

Wltll new vehlde purchase.

SHOE CO.

See Tumplke for details.

"Shoes for the entire family"

r--r-1
"'
~MERCURY
HOURS:
Mon - Fri 9-7; Sat. 9-5

www. turnplkeflm.com

MASONFURNITURE i
COMPANY '

Rt.lBypass
Point Pteasont, WV

DILES

The Meigs County Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition
will host a gallery show featuring art designed by
Meigs County elementary and high school students.

The Daily Sentinel

I

Please join us for a viewing and awards ceremony:

Tuesday, April 20, 2004
6PM
Meigs County Public Library in ·
Pomeroy
(740) 441-3922 for more information
This event is made possible by a gran t from rhe
Ohio Tobacco Use Prevention'f1nd Control.Foundation.

304-773-5592
MaSOJn"'~V

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,:(·~~~w.~·f,

ATTENJ.ION
Parents, Grandparents, Aunts,
Uncles, Friends... you can
congratulate your graduate with
a personal ad of your own!!
Call Today!!
Deadline is Friday,
May 7th at s;oo p.m.

_All are lnvjted. Refreshments will be served!
Please call (740) 446-5940 or

•Qualitv • Selecrion • Service !

2nd Street

If your business is interested
in participating in this
Special Edition,
Call Brenda or Dave
at 992-2155

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(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

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Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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Congress shall make no law respecting an
_ establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
: free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
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 Monday. April 19. the II Oth day of 2004. There are
256 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 19, 1775, the American Revolt:tionary War began
with the battles of Lexington and Concord . .
On this date:
. In 1782; . the Netherlands recognized American indepen' dence.
In 1893. the Oscar Wi Ide play "A Woman of No
: Importance" opened at the Haymarket Theatre in London.
: In 1933, the United States went off the gold standard.
: In 1943, during World War II. tens of thousands of Jews li v: ing in the Warsaw Ghetto began a valiant but futile battle
, against Nazi forces.
: In 1945, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "Carousel"
: opened on Broadway.
In 1951, General Douglas MacArthur, relieved of his Far
: East command by President Truma,n, bid farewell to
: Congress. quoting a line from a ballad: "Old soldiers never
: die; they just fade away.''
. In 1982, astronauts Sally K. Ride and Guion S. Bluford Jr.
c·became the ·first woman and first African-American · to be ·
: tapped for U.S. space missions.
~
In 1989,47 sailors were killed when a gun turret exploded
· aboard the USS Iowa.
. In 1993, the 51-day siege at the Branch Davidian compound ·
near Waco, Texas, ended as tire destroyed the structure after
: federal agents began smashing their way in: dozens of people.
: including David Koresh. were killed.
; In 1995, ~ truck bomb destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah
; Federal Building in Oklahoma City. killing 168 people and
• injuring hundreds. Timothy McVeigh was later convicted of
: federal murder charges and executed.
; Ten years ago: A Lqs Angeles jury awarded $3.8 million to
' beaten motorist Rodney King. The Supreme Court outlawed
· the practice of excluding people from jUries because of their
._gender.
Five years ago: The Gerrnan parliament inaugurated its new
. home in the restored Reichs!ag in Berlin, its prewar capitaL
. The Supreme' Court ruled that a federal law aimed at limiting
e-mail smut did not violate free -speech rights. Joseph Chebet
of Kenya won the Boston Marathon, in two hours. nine min. utes, 52 seconds; Fatuma Roba of Ethiopia won the women's
race in two hours. 23 minutes, 25 seconds.
: One year ago: Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo won
. a new term iri an election denounced by opponents as fraudulent.
Thought for Today: "The crisis you have to worry about
most is the one you don't see coming."~ Mike Mansfield,
:American statesman ( 1903-200 I l.

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EDITOR
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and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
. The opinions expressed in the column above
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
. Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

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\

Monday, Aprilt9, 2oo 4

Victor Davis Hanson. author
of several books about war's
affect on civilization, says it
best in the current issue of City
Joumal. I paraphrase: Thanks
to George W. Bush. tile
Taliban are gone. So is
Saddam Hussein. Vasser
Arafat is isolated. restricted to
the wretched confines of his
Ramallah
compound.
American troops no longer
stake their lives guarding the
tenur kingdom of Saudi
Ambia, and Europeans finally
!eel a righteous American heat
over their cold accountings of
anti-Semitism and their
largesse to Islamic tenur organizations.
Thanks also to Bt.sh.
lslamofascist 'charities' have
been shuttered in this country.
AI Qaeda is in splinters around
the world desperately seeking
a new state-haven . In one of
the great diplomatic coups of
our time, Pakistan has· been
turned. as Hanson put it. from
·a de facto foe to a scrutinized
neutraL' Just this week. lndiJJ's
prime minister. Atal Behari
Vajpayee, publicly credited
the U.S.-led war in lmq with
pushing nuclear rivals India
and Pakistan to set about
resolving their dispute over
Kashmir. Bush has further
pressured Libya, · Iran and
Pakistan to come clean. on
nudear cheating; and where
the Middle East once feared
lntq's military, the president
has had reason lately to lament
its ineffectualness. Then
there's always the fact that he
has 'so far avoided another
September II - and promises

Restore

'

House media went apologyhunting. 'Two weeks ago.'
said CBS's John Roberts; ·a
former countertenurism official at the NSC. Richard
Clarke. offered an unequivoDiana
cal apology to the American
West
people for failing them prior to
9/ll .' (Never mind that the
grandstanding Clarke spent
the rest of his testimony attesting to his own grossly underthat he is not nearly done yet.' appreCiated infallibility.) ·Do
Whal next • Since he's on a you believe the Americm1 peoroll. maybe Bush could pre- ple deserve a similar apology
empt the White House media. from you. and would you be
There may be no WMD stock- prepared to . gi1·e them one·&gt;'
piled by the Washington press Moving on from . Sept. II.
corps, but that doesn't mean Time's John Dickerson wonthey aren't a threat to peace dered. 'After 9/11. what would
and freedom. Having aban- . your ··biggest mistake be'''
doned the pursuit of fact and NPR's Don Gonyea took a dit~
meaning to chase down a kind ferent tack: 'I ~uess I'd like to
of therd'peutic humiliation ~ k•1ow if you lee! in any way
therapeutic for them, humilia: that you've t;tiled as a commlttion for the president - the nicator. ·
White House media, with a
Apologies. mistakes. feel-·
couple of notable exceptions, ings and fai lings: Was this
revealed in this week's presi- sweep' week on Oprah. or
dential press conference a par- the \\ " tc House at war?
ticularly disturbing taste for While Bush quite effectively
pre&gt;identiJI blood. and a and even inspirationally set
patent antipathy for his the mission in Iraq and the
accomplishments. This blood- security of the United States
lust ·now borders on icky into the lamer context of the
obsession.
war on Islamic terrorism. the
'Do you feel a sense of per- · media tended -to their ~otcha
sonal
responsibility
for que$tions in hopes th&lt;ii they
September II th T asked The could lay hare. not illuminatNew York Times' . Elizabeth ing fact or meaning ~
.
their
Bumiller. 'You never admit a sorry
performat1ce elicited
mistake,· said NBC's David
Gregory. "Is that a fair criti- no new information - but
the diminishing fault
cism?' Were there 'any enurs rather
I
ines
of
and cheap
of judgment that you made' .emotion. doubt
Was the president
regarding 'those topics (Iraq sorry? Would he apologize''
and Sept. II) I brought up?'
Would the media get their
Again and again. the White trophy - one equally prized

from Page A1 .-

by John Kerry and AI
Jazeera·&gt;
No.· Bush described his
anger. his sadne" ;md his sickness O\'er 9/11. but reminded
the pack that ·the person
responsible for the attacks was
Osama bin Laden.· He emphasized the serious call to action
he strongly believes we must
heed.
Not tlie media; they want
that apology. preferably teary- ' u
moist. but anvthin!! to weaken
his moral and politkal stature.
Which expk1ins their lack of
journalistic fervor when it
'came to ~\tmcting an apology
from Bill \limon for anything
ever. from the multiple lies
(se~ with 'that' woman) to the
multiple sme;u; (Billy Dale.
Kathleen Willey. Juanita
Broaddrick 1: from the 199~
rout in Somalia. in which 18
ill-equipped marines lost their
lives in battle with AI Qaedatrained rebels. to the 2000
attack on the USS Cole - and
cverv infamou~ ;~ct in
between. The media elite
wmlted him to win. El·en now
this bunch won't train their
pop-apology-gun~ un Clinton.
despite the post-Y/11 revelations of his adminisll~Jtion's
seLuritv failinf!.'-1. or eH~n the
muftiple chances Clinton personally passed up to kill or
capture Osama hin Laden .
But they'll keep George
Bush in their crosshairs. They
don't want him to 1\'111 - and
it shows.
(Diana \H,st is u. cohmmisr

crews. the tir't of which is
into their 3rd of an 8 week
stay. The second will be
arriving in late May.
.
Bashaw said the tirst crew
has worked in Meigs County
lor three weeks and will be
heading up to the Little Cities·
of Black Diamonds region to
work with Rural Action
Forestry sustainable forestry
demonstration sites, Sunday
&lt;;re.ek Watershed Group and
tacl11t y Improvement with
the Glouster Village Council.
While in Meigs County the
crew has been working and
living at the R.ural Action
Research and Education
Center in Rutland. which
houses the National Center
for the Preservation of
Medicinal Herbs and the
· Appalachian Forest Resource
Center. Bashaw said they
have been working at "the
Center" to build its capacity
as a research and education
facility: improving the trail
network , bt1ilding bridges,
clearing research beds devoted to medicinal herbs, and
much more .
The second crew will continue -their work at the Center
and in addition work with the
Leading ·Creek Watershed
Group.
Working
with
Leading Creek will consist of
water quality monitoring to
determine the tributaries
most impacted by acid mine

for The \Vmfrillgltlll Tinws.
She can he co11tacr()d t·ia

. ODD...
THERE's NO

Did you know that in the
average U.S. home. the television is on 7 hours and 40
minutes pe~ day''
This
alarming statistic, reported in
a 2004 publication by Focus
on the Family, is one of the
main contributors to the
growing epide.mic of people
becoming overweight and
developing heart disease.
Fur this reason, April 19 - 25
has been declmed National
Turn Off the TV Week .
Every day a new mirdCle diet
appears. each with a "better"
plan on how to lose those
pesky pounds. How do we
know whal tmly works? In the
hattie. against the bulge, one
fundamental principal remains
true: To lose weight. ·we must
bum off more calories than we
takes in. Today's advances in
technology have made it more
difficult (and less appealing) to
burn otr the calories we take in;
watching television, 'working
with computers, playing video
games, and other technologies
have created a culture that
thrives on inactivity.
Cmdiovascular disease is
defined as any di sease pertaining to the heart or blood
vessels. and is the leading
cause of death in the United
States. Sedentary lifestyle s.
those characterized by inactivity. arc the most significant
contributing factor to obesity
and heart disease. America's
penchant for watching nearly

EXPLANATION
OJ: HOW
TO WIN.

No option for dying with dignity
Laurie Falco wants to die
soon. She isn't sure exactly
when, but soon. She under!ined the word on the sheet of
notebook paper on which she
answered my
questions
Joan
recently. Her writing is light
·
Ryan
and spidery, making it difficult
to read. But it is her only
means of communicating.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis,
ALS. has taken her voice, just
as it has taken her ability to hospice to get the medicaswallow food, to walk more tion."
But assisted suicide is illegal
than a few feet, to breathe on
in California, as it is in every
her own at night
She doesn't fear death. She state except Oregon. Falco
fears being trapped inside a cannot be prescribed a lethal
silent, useless shell tha,t was dose of medication to bring
once her body. She knows, no about her own death. She
matter what her church friends could order the medicine over
say, that lite can be worse than the Internet, but she woulddeath. Falco watched her need her children's help to do
mother descend into the S9· putting them at risk of
fog
of prosecution. She could lie to
tumultuous
Alzheimer's. slowly losing her her doctor about needing
·mind, her bowel control, her stronger sleeping pills, and
ability to tame her abusive lan- then hoard them until she has
enough, but she won't lie.
guage and violent outbursts.
So when she decides the
~I feel I have to make my
own way with Jehovah," she time is right - soon .~ she
wrote in her notebook will have to end her life by
starving because it is one of
Thursday moming.
Falco, 58, sat on the couch the few legal options open to
in her sunny Santa Rosa, her. We live in a 'ociety that
Calif., home, where she has understands the compassion in
lived for more than 30 years. ending a beloved pet's painful
She ran Laurie's Dog lite through lethal overdose,
Grooming out of this house. but still can't see why people
She and her four children kept should be afforded the same
a menagerie of pets - from loving option.
Hospice can give Falco
snakes to ponies to goaL~~ on
the sprawling property, Her enough morphine or barbituyoungest .daughter, 24-year- rates to keep her comfortable
old Mia, sat cross-legged on as she starves, but death can
the tloor by her feet, jumping take days. It will be serene. and
up to retrieve her mother's painless, though not as digniglasses from the bedroom tied and controlled as she
when Falco pointed at her would wish. lf Falco lived in
eyes. Mia and her 22;year-old Oregon, she could fill out a
brother, Mike, moved back ·request for physician-assisted
home over the winter to care death. Two doctors would verfor their mother, who has been ify her terminal status and her
battling the disease for 18 competency. Then she would
make a second written request
months.
'I prayed to Jehovah," Falco 15 dars after the ftrst, both
continued in her slow hand, signed by two witnesses.
Then at the time she chose,
'and came back with the idea
to get ahold of a doctor and in her own bed sunuunded by

her family and her two adoring
dogs, Falco could consume a
lethal dose of prescription
medicine . She would slip
away in 15 or 20 minutes.
Oregon voters passed the
Death with Dignity Act in
1994 ami again in 19&lt;J7. triumphing ove.r ihose who
warned of state-sanctioned
killings of vulnerable elders at
the h&lt;tnds of their heirs and of
severely disabled people
whose care· had become too
burdensome. But after nearly
seven years, Oregon has seen
none of the predicted abuses.
Still, U.S. Attorney General
John Ashcroft challenged the
law in 2001, lmilaterally
deciding it violated federal
policy ~ even though he has
no proble1)1 with allowing
states to decide for themsel-ves
whether to put criminals to
death. Ashcroft said any doctor who assisted in a patient's
death would be prosecute(!. A
U.S. district court ruled that
the attorney general didn't
have the authority to il;sue the
directive. Ashcroft then took
.the case to the Ninth Circuit
U.S . Court of Appeals, where
it has sat for almost a year.
'(If the Oregon law is struck
down), we lose the careful,
open discussion, the collegial
support, the state oversight,"
says Barbara Coombs Lee, the
president and CEO of
Compassion in Dying. a
national organization that provides counseling to terminally
ill people about end-of~life
choices. 'We lose the assurance that it's a safe and opeR
practice. We'd have to go back
underground, like every other
state."
Falco's children called
Compassion in Dying last
spring at their rnother's
reque;t. A Bay Area ca~ework­
er has been coumeli ng the
family in thinking through the
decision and consid~ring the
opt\ons.
NoL everyone is comfortable

ANDREW BRUMRELD

CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH
COORDINATOR
MEIGS CO. HEALTH DEP~RTMENT

THAT'S

with Falco's plan. Some say 'it
is shocking and not nurmal."
Mia said. 'But this is not a normal situation. The only thi1ig
that gives Mom relief is knowing she won't end her lile 011 a
respirator in a hospital bed.'
Falco listened as her daugh. ter spoke, then picked up the
pen again.
'If I hadn't heard &lt;~bout
Compassion (in Dying). I
would be crying because without this you have no hope." she
wrote ..
What' F&lt;~lco wants is11't
immoral or unreasonable .
People get to make chnic:cs in
everything from huw to "ive·
birth to whether to have a ~os­
mcticsurgeun slice them up in
the name of beauty. Falco simply wants the freedom to
decide for herself when her
life is no Iunger wonh living.
She want' her exit. unlike her
horrible disease, to be on her
own terms. She wams. as
much as possible, to make her
death a loving and powe1t'ul
experience for her and her
family instead of a li11gering,
wrent:hing disintegration. ·
' I think she'll decide the time
is right when she's ready to say
goodbye to her family," said '
her eldest daughler, Stacie
Lautrup, whom I reached by
phone in Sacramemo, where
&gt;he live&gt; with her husb&lt;~nd and
children. 'But at this point, I
can still think or lots of things
she can cackle ahnut. She still
loves heing around cvcrvbody."
"
Falco knows her family will
let her gu when she asks. She
won't ask today and probably
not tomorrow. But . m, she
wrote in ht:r notehool_ _
Thursday. soon. before ALS
takes aw;Jy everything hut her
beating hcan.
(Joan Rmn i~ " columnisT
Jfn· rile San Fmncisru
Chmnic:le. St•lld ('ommelll.'i tn
her in care .l d this newspaper ·
or send her ~-mail ar joanI)'U/1 @.\fc/mmicle.cuJy.)

drainage and other forms of
pollution, and leading watershed day camps for· Meigs
County youth educating them
on .the importance of healthy
streams in their daily lives.
··It will be a big help for us
at the Meigs Soil and W~ter
Conservation District to
determine the water quality
status of Leading Creek and
its tributaries." said Cynthia ·
Bauers, the Leading Creek
watershed coordinator for the
Meigs . Soil and Water
Conservaiion District.
Baers said there are plans
for a "watershed camp" of
sons which will educate middle-school age children during the summer about this
habitat.
"We hope that these camps
wi II provide a greater appreciation for all the organisms
that live in the streams and
the importance of 'the life
processes that go on there."
she said.
Bashaw said Meigs County
was the obvious choice for
this intervention.
"There . is the obvious and
often heard reason of the
socioeconomic condition of
the county," he said. "More
importantly Meigs County
has on one hand a rich natural heritage and on the other a
heavily impacted environment that affects the health of
the land and Meigs County
residents who depend on it.
The Center and the Leading
Creek Watershed Group are
both examples of positive
leadership in the County that
we would like to encourage. "

rv

eight hours of
daily, in
addition to time .ifpe nt utilizing other sedentary technologies, has resulted in a rapid
increase of people developing cardiovascular disease .
The time has come for the
Am,rican people to engage in
a lifestyle makeover; the epidemic of . obesity and heart
disease must come to an end.
The first step in the reduction
of these critical health issues
is to turn off the TV Once
the TV .has been turned off,
we must find some form of
activity in which to get
involved. Activities should
. be enjoyable, and something
that can be carried on
throughout life. The choice
of activity could be as simple
as walking the dog, or as
complex as yoga; the important thing to remember is that
it must be physically active.
Pace yourself; start slow and
work up to longer periods of
exertion. As everyone has
different physical limitations,
it is important to consult your
doctor before beginning an
·exercise routine.
The challt:nge has been
issued. Turn off the TV
and go be active' Though
April 19 -' 25 is the designated week for the challenge , l encourage you to
continue this increase in
physical active for the rest
of your life.
Small
increases in your ·activity
level can lead to big strides
in improving your health.

Star Search thrills audience
Southern Elementary didn't have far to look for stars
last week in the Super Star
Search Competition.
The performers represented
the best entertainment the
elemeqtary school had to
offer. The performers were
Lindsey Teaford and Chelsea
Pape, Lindsey Buzzard, Katie
Barr, Junie Maynard and
Daniel Otto, Jacob Hoback . .
Dimitrous Lamm, Darien
Diddle and Lacey Hupp.
They were judged by several distinguished judges
including Larry Fisher. Joyce
Hill, Gerald Powell and
Dixie Sayre. The judges task
was not easy because they
had to pick among the champions who placed in the first
through third in their
prospective Star Search competitions earlier in the school
year.

The winners (pictured above from left to right) were Lacey
Hupp, Darien Diddle, Katie Barr, Lindsay Teaford and Chelsea
f&gt;ape. Superintendent Bob Grues~r will be treating these students to lunch at a local restaurant.

Eblens to
celebrate
anniversary

Church once attended by soldier
prays for his safe return
BY LISA CORNWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BATAVIA - Members of a
church where an Army
reservist taken hostage in Iraq
once attended youth services
prayed on Sunday for his safe
return.
About 900 people attended
two morning services at First
Baptist Church of Glen Este,
near where 20-year-old Pfc.
Keith M. Maupin grew up
about 20 miles east of
Cincinnati. Many wore yellow ribbons and wiped away
tears during the service.
"My Country 'Tis of Thee"
and •·America the Beautiful"
mixed with traditional church
hymns in the patriotic service, and members said the
Pledge of Allegiance along
with their prayers.
"We all must have hope great hope - that God will
deliver Matt Maupin and give
the family strength," Pastor
Brent Snook said. He referred .
to the soldiers in Iraq as heros People pray for Army Reservist Pfo. Keith "Matt' Maupin, during a morning service at the
and he prayed that God be First Baptist Church of Glen Este, near Batavia. Maupin has been missing since his conwith them and their families voy was attacked April 9 outside Baghdad. In footage first shown Friday on Arab TV, Maupin
Maupin . known as Man. did not oappear hurt but was surrounded by insurgents who offered to exchange him for
has been missing since his imprisoned Iraqis. (AP Photo/ David Kohl)
many people .:loser to God ...
convoy was attacked April 9 ed some youth activities at hooded terrori st_" he said.
outside Baghdad . In footage the church with friends when
Church .member Mary Allen, said Kresser. who wore a yelfirst shown Friday on Arab he was in his teens.
55, of Anwlia. s&lt;tid after the low ribbon on his lapel. "This
TV, Maupin did not appear
Snook\ sermon focused on service that she has been pray- is an opportunity for God to
hurt. but was surrounded by the Bible\ book of Job, about ing for Maupin and the other show his power. his grace
and his prol'ideJKC ."
insurgents who offered to a man who keeps his faith . soldiers in Iraq.
Maupin grew · up ju't outexchange him for imprisoned even though God tests him
"Prayer is the answer to
side
Batavia. a farming comIraqis.
with terrible ordeals.
everythi1ig." Allen said. "J
Maupin, who has been in
''No matter how big the don't know the Maupin rami- munity of ~.400 people. and
Iraq for two months, was the emergency, there is always ly. btJlmy heart goes out to gradmted in 200 I from Glen
first U.S. serviceman and sec- hope in Jesus Christ ," Sn'ook them , and I have no doubt Este Hi~h School. His brothond American confirmed kid- said. Some in the congrcga- that if it's the LnrJ\ wilL er_ Kent Micah Maupin. is a
napped in a recent string of lion responded, "Amen."
Matt· will be returned to them U.S. M;frine.
, Friends anJ family say
abductions.
His sermon referred often safely."
Maupin.
who attended classes
Photos of Maupin were to the SepL II terrorist
Lee
Kresser. 53, of
the
Univers it y
of
projected on a screen behind attacks.
Cincinnati, saiJ he hopes that at
Cincinnati
and
two
regional
the pulpit on Sunday. one in
"Now two and a half years somethin g good canl'ome out
uniform and one as a teenag- later it hits ever closer to of the events of the past campuse,. joined the Army
Reserve for tuition benefits
er. Snook said Maupin was home. as we have seen one of week.
and
out of a sense of duty.
"Times like this c:an hring
not a member hut had attend- our own held 'at gunpoint by a

commercial,
OBERLIN, Ohio (APJ ~ numerous
His discoveries made it pos- indu strial ;md military applisible to build everything cations.
Later this month, the 78from light but sturdy golf
clubs to heat-resistant space year-old Bacon will go Jo
Philadelphia to accept the
shuttle wings.
BLOOMINGDALE Benjamin
While. working in a Union International
Eugene and Mar~alice Eblen
in
Mechanical
Franklin
Medal
of Bloomdale wlll mark 50 Carbide lab in northeast Ohio
years of marriage with- an four decades ago. Roger Engineering at the Franklin
open house 5 to 9 p.m. Bacon subjected graphite to Institute Science Museum.
Albert ·Einstein, Alexander
Saturday at St. l\1ark's Life high heat and pressure, di sBell,
Thomas
Center, 3 15 South College covering stronger-than-steel Graham
Edison,
Stephen
Hawking,
St., Bowling Green.
microscopic "whiskers." He
The couple were married eventually discovered a · Jane Goodall and Ohio's
April II. 1954 at the home of process for making continu- Wright brothers have been
the bride's parents by the ous threads of carbon fiber, a some of the recipien_ts of
Rev. George Cre~shaw.
Franklin Medal since · the
Parents of the couple are high-strength material with
the late Duke and Mildred
Eblen and is also the grandson of the late Walter and
Minnie Eblen of Pomeroy.
Maryalice is the daughter of
the late Emerson and Minnie
Gooch.
They have four children ,
Beth Ann Snyder, June Otte,
Dean Eblen, and Luurel
Baden, seven grandchildren.
and two great-grandchildren.
Eblen was a barber in
Bowling Green for 25 years
and . also worked for B&amp;O
and CSX Railroads. His wife
retired from Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services after
23 years,.
The couple requests that
gifts be omitted.

awards began in 1824.
"If you turn a good scientist loo .s~. he'll come up with
something useful. once in a
while.'' said Bacon. who
grew up in Cleveland
Heights and now lives in
Oberlin. " I don't like it, to
sound like I did it all myself
~ there were so many people who helped."
The U.S. military began
using Bacon's discoveries in
the 1960s. Soon. reinforced
rocket nozzles, heat shields ·
for ballistic missiles, space
shuttle wings and aircraft

Fraternai .Order Of Eagles
Aerie 2171
Nomination of Officers
April

19~

2004

7:30pm

'

Lindsay Buzzard sings a tune
to please the crowd and the
judges in the Super Star
Search
Competition , at
Southern Elementary School.

Award for scientist behind super-strong carbon fibers

•

1

The Daily Sentinel • Page As
'

Turn Off the TV Week

t.Uanmru ·@ l'f)ri::.on.net. J

BY

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April19, 2004

Trophy-hunting with the media

www.mydallysentlnal.com

..
• •#

OPINION

Daily Sentinel.

The Daily Sentinel

,

PageA4

-.

.

. ···~

~

.......

,_ ·-· __

.....__,..,....._.._..-

brakes contained carbon enabled that to harpen ," said
tibers. which di&gt;sipatc heat. ·Brian Sullivan. a Villanova
"Every single aircraft that Uni\'crsity adjunct professor
flies today uses carbon fiber. specia lizing in. carbon tibers
and
Roger\
invention who nominated Bacon.

----

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

�'

The Daily Sentinel

•

• •
•

PageA6

OHIO

INSIDE

Monday, April19, 2004

Baseball scores and standings, Page B2
Lawton powers Tribe past Tigers, Page 86

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

•..

Tuition keeps rising at state's public universities
COLUMBUS (AP)
Rising teacher salaries coupled with shrinking state
funding are behind soaring
tuition rates at Ohio's public universities, officials say.
So
far
this
year.
University of · Cincinnati
and Central State University
have approved increases of
9.9 percent the maximum allowed under stak
law - while the University
of Toledo, Cleveland State

and Shawnee State have
proposed doing so.
. Miami
University
approved a hike of 8.5 percent, and Youngstown State,
an 8 percent increase. Ohio
University trustees released
a proposed 9 percent hike
on Friday.
James
Plummer.
Cincinnati ·s associate vice
president tor finance, said
increases are unavoidable as '
staff salaries and benetits

rise at the same time that
state funding shrinks.
"For the lirst time ever.
students paid more for the
cost of their education than
the state was paying us,"
PI ummer
said.
"We're
bringing in $162 mill ion
from tuition this year &lt;tnd
we're bringing .in $144 million from the state. We ' re
becoming more of a private
institution all the time ."
Shawnee State President

Rita Rice Morris said revCIJUC from a growing sludent body isn·t enough to'
pay for ~ the additional ·Staff
members that :lre needed.
tinmlcial aid and improved
technology.
Ohio State University is
ainong five ptihlic universities that expect to discuss
tuition increases by midMay.

Monday, April19, 2004

Prep schedule
Today's games
Baseball
AJVer Valley at Gallia Academy (2) , 4.30 p.m.
Metgs at Belpre . 5 p.m
Federal Hocktng at Ea stern . 5 p.m.
Miller at Southe rn , 5 p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Meigs a~ Belpre." 5 p m.
Federal Hocktng at Eastern , 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern , 5 p.m.

. Sunday Times-Sentinel subscribe tOday¥ (740) 992-2155
700 W. Main Street, Pomeroy 992·2891

Tennis
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy. 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday's games
Baseball
Gallia Academy at Meigs. 5 p.m.
Athens at River Valley. 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Southern. 5 p.m.
Softball
'South Gallia at Southern. 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Metgs. 5 p.m.
Athens at Rtver Valley, 5 p.m.
Ad·~na at Eastern. 5 p.m
Track and Field
Rive r Valley at Wheeli!rsburg Invitational
(Girls only)
South Gallia at Eastern Meet
Tennis
Marietta at Gallla Academy, 4:30p.m.

NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS

For All Positions
Monday, April 19
Mprning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It will he a hreety morn ing .
Ternpennures will rise frum
65 to 74 hy late this nwrn ing .
Skies will ran ge from mostl y
sunny to partly cloudy with
10 to 15 MPH wincb frum the
southwest.
Afternoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
A breezy and cloudy afternoon. Temperatures will hold
steady around 76 with toda) \
hi gh of 77 occurring around
3:00pm. Winds will be I 0 tll
15 MPH from the southwest.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It's going to be a cloudy
eve nin g. Temperatures will
linger· at 70. Winds will be 5
to \0 MPH from the southwest.
Overnight (I a.m.-6 a.m.)
It wi ll cominue to be

cloudy. Temperature' will
ho\er at 67 with today's low
of 65 occurring around
6:00am . Winds will be 10
MPH !'rom the southwest .·
Tuc~; day. April 20
1\lorning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It \ going to he a cloudy
morn ing. Temperatures will
remain around.63. Winds· will
be 5 MPH from the southwest
turning from the south as the
morni.ng. progre .. ses.
Afternorm (1 p.m.-6 p.m.)
It shou ld conlmue to be
cloudy. It will be dry. except
for a sprinkle or two.
Temperatures will stay near
68 . Winds will be I0 MPH
from the south tt1rning from
the south west as the lifternoon progresses.

Just 12, pool-playing girl
embarrasses older players
DAYTON , (AP) Not
Her father. Richard Lovely.
much taller than her JXl\1\ cue, suppuns her hobby. driving her
12-year-o\d Lizzy Lovely to weel;.night toummnents. He
makes grown men feel nervous. has kept close watch to make
Beating competitors twice her sure it docsn 't disrupt her studage is common forthe pint-siLed 1es.
pool prodigy who stays up late
·'Sometimes. we don't get
on school nights to play in home until 2 in the moming, but
weekly bilhanls toumaments if she wants to keep doing this.
around th~ mea.
she has to be bright-eyed and
On " recent Monday. she bushv-tailccl when I wake her
made an impression on her lor school in the moming:· he
opponent. 20-year-o ld Ricky explained. '·She .~so has to be
Mosley, during their match in· a anentive in cla\s and get good
tournament.
gmdcs. rvc talked to her guid"Cockiness. It 's in her eyes," ance counselor and they say she
he said. ''She doesn't say a thing. participates and she's getting
but the eyes tell you plenty:·
good report cards."
Mosley. who adri1itted to
Outside of billiards. Lizzy's
being nervous about the interests m·e typical of otl1er girls
prosj)ects of losing to the sixth- her age. She likes going to the
gmdcr, squeaked by with a vic- mall. Saturday dances at the
tory.
.
.
Washington
Township
Last June, she wa~ the only Recreation Center and sleepOhio girl in the Valley Natiomil overs with her girltiiends. Her .
Eight-ball Association's Junior bedroom is decorated with
Clas'sic
in · posters of dogs, cats and fashion
International
Mankato, . Minn. She linishcd models.
seventh and her Dayton team · Since showi ng a · knack for
was fifth of 64 entries.
pool on her home tab le •md joinNo one needs to tell Lizzy that ing a youth league. she's
she already immersed herself in the sport
she's good knows. ·
with the suppottof her father.
"Yeah, sometimes I guess I
"She's kind of li ving my
might be a linle cocky." she said. dream."' he said.

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P.O. Box 771
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Wednesday's games
Baseball
Marietta at Gallia Academy. 5 p.m
Fairland at River Valley, ~ p.m
Wahama at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Meigs. 5 p.m.
Southern at Wellston. 5 p.m.

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Logan
2-2
Marietta
1-2
Athens
t -3
Jackson
1-4
Gallia Academy
TVC
Ohio Division
Vinton County
5·1
Meigs
5-2
Belpre
2·3
Alexander
2-4
Wellston
2·4
Nelsonville-York
1-4
Hocking Division
Trimble
6·0
Eastern
6-1
Miller
2-3
Waterford
2-4
Federal Hocking 1-4
Southern
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Marietta
0-4
0-4
Logan .
TVC
Ohio Division
TVC
Meigs
7-0
Belpre
6-0
Alexander
3-3
Vinton County
3-3
Wellston
3-3
Nelsonville- Yor~ 2-3
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Trimble
6-1
Federal Hocking 4·2
Eastern
2-5
Waterford
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Softball
Wahama at South.Galtia, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Marietta. 5 p.m.
Fa1r,land at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Me1gs, 5 p.m.
Southern at Wellston . 5 p.m.
Tennis
Gallia Academy at Wheelersbufg. 4:30
pm
Track and Field
River Valley at Wheelersburg Invitational
(Boys only)

11 ·2
5-1
6-4

3o3
4-2
4-5

2-5
7-1
5-4
2-3

2-6

2·9

1-6

2-3

2-7
1-5

1-6

BY GARY CLARK

Sports Correspondent
MASON, W.Va. - . Chad Zerkle
stroked a pair of doubles and two singles in the opener and added another
two base knock in the nightcap to lead
the Wahama White Falcons to a split of
its Saturday aftemoon doubleheader
with visiting Eastern.
Wahama captured the first game by
an Il-l margtn as Dustin Vickers and
Kameron Sayre pitched . a three hitter
for the Bend Area diamond ' nine but
Eastern feasted on five WHS hurlers in

the nightcap to claim a 15-7 win and a • Branch. a .pair of singles by Smith and
split of the two game set.
a safety each off the bats of Anthony
. Zerkle paced a \3 hit offensive Mitchell, Kam Sayre. Brandon Fowler.
attack in the opening game with a per- Caleb Litchfield and Johnny Barton .
feet 4-4 day at the plate for WHS with Eastern managed just three hits Myers
Jeshua Branch and Jan Smith driving smacking a double with Durst and
in two runs apiece with a couple of Shaffer swauing two oot. back-.to- back
safeties. After trailing by a run after singles in the Eagle third inning.
one frame, Wahama exploded for
Vickers picked up the mound win for
seven. second inning tallies and never Wahama with Seme\sbcrgcr suffering
looked back in posting the Il-l tri- the pitching loss for the Eastern diaum·ph in a game that was halted after mond nine.
six due to the ten run rule.
The nightcap turned out to be someIn addition to Zerkle with two dou- what of a complete opposite of the
bles and two singles the WHS offense
Please see Eagles, B6
received a two base hit and a single by

drouQht
BY HANK KURZ, JR.

Associated Press
MARTINSVILLE. Va.
RustY Wallace left his doubts
- ;ind the competition at
Martin sville
. behind
Speedway.
Wallace ended an agoniz.ing
I 05-ral·e victory drought
Sunuay. holding off Bobby
Labonte in the Advance Auto
Pw1s 5(X) for his 55th Nextel
Cup' ictory.
"Finally~· · the -!7-ycar-o\d
Wallace said.
"I questioned myself a little
bit. I was like. ·Man. this
schedule is wem·ing me out
and these bad performances
·are wearin g nle out. I questioned a lot of things for a long
time during that dry spell. It
feeh good to tinally get back
in Victory Lane."
Wallace tuok command with
-!5 laps to go Sunday. and
made sure he didn't let it slip
awav.
··Once I got in the lead, I just
talked to myself. ·Get. smooth.
Hit your marks. Don "t sere~
up. Don·t give this thing
away,... Wallace said.
The race took more than five
hou rs to complete because of a
hole in the t;ack that appeared
just past the halfway pomt.
The delay came with 210
laps left when a hunk of concrete came lose in the third
turn. leaving a hole a foot long
and a foot wide.
Repairs took an hour and I 7
minutes. but when the mce
fi nail v restarted. a refreshed
Wallace started making his
move. He came out of the pits
third after a caution with 120
laps to go. passed teammate
Ryan Newman for second
with 55 laps to go and then ran
down Jimmie Johnson. who
was stm:k on ulder tires after
fa iling to pit with the lead.
Wallace passed Johnson
with 45 laps to go. pulled
away on a restcU1 I0 laps later
as the contenders behind him
fought for position. then held
o!T the charging Labonte after
he. too. broke free hom the
pack.
" I looked up and I saw
Bobby Labonte break loose.
too. and I thought. ·uh-oh. this
is going to he a dogfight
here:·· Wallace said.
11 "''"· with Wallace winnin~ hv just 0..5.18 seconds.
The\ fctory- his tirst since

Redmen split
series with Tiffin
STAFF REPORT

sports@.mydailylribune.com
RIO GRANDE - Every team has that one team they
always seem to struggle with. For the University of Rio
Grande Redmen baseball squad that team is the Tiflin
Dragons. After sweeping a doubleheader on Saturday
(7-6 and 7-0). the Redmen turn around and lose a double
dip to the Dragons on Sunday, 2-0 and I0-7. The losses
were the first -two of the season at home for the Redmen.
Rio Grande (3 1-14, 10-6 AMCS) could not solve
Tiffi n righthander Chris Johnson (4-6) in the first game. ·
Johnson was masterful in holding the Redmen to two
harmless singles. He walked only one and struck out II
bailers in a dominating performance.
Rio senior southpaw Tim Sutton deserved .a beuer fate
as he was the tough luck loser in the pitcher's duel.
Sutton (4-2) went the full seven innings, yielding only
two runs and five hits. He fanned four. walked two and
hit two batters (one of which scored).
··
Tiffin (15-24. 6-14 AMCS) scored single runs in the
third and fifth frames and the right arm of Johnson made
it stand up.
·
In game two. Tiffin jumped on freshman lefty Nate
Chau for seve n rurls and seven. hits, chasing him after
just 2/3 of an inning. Chau (3-3) retired the leadoff batter, walked Eric Serian and promptly allowed seven consecutive hits as the Dragons sent 10 batters to the plate
and for all intents and purposes put the game away at that .
point.
Rio picked away at the lead and cut the deficit to 7-3
in the bottom of the third when junior right fielder Brian
Slone plated Kris Schuler with an opposite lield double
and scored himself on a single from Charlie Kabealo .. ·
Tiftin would add three. critical insurance runs in the
fourth against sophomore right hander Dustin Gibbs.
Gibbs, who had been cruising for 2 1/3 innings, surrendered three runs and three hits in the fourth. Ryan
Rammel and Zak King added key RBI base hits in the
mmng. .
·
·
·
The Redmen would tack on two runs each in the bottom of the sixth and seventh, but it was not enough to
offset the early onslaught by the Dragons.
Slone ended the day 2-for-2 with two RBI and Kabealo
was 2-for-4 with a pair of runs knocked in.
Senior Jason Williams was impressive in relief for the
Rcdmen. The former Jackson High School standout
pitched three scoreless innings, allowing only three base
Rio Grande sophomore pitcher Dustin Gibbs throws a pitch
hits and striking out two.
Justin Billett (5-4), although not overly impressive, during game two of the Redmen's loss to Tiffin. Tiffin swept
the doubleheader Sunday to earn a split of the fou r-game
weekend series. (Brad Sherman)
Please see Redmen, B6

College Softball

Redwomen enjoy
successful weekend
· sporis@ mydailytribune.com

All spring sports coa~hes are
reminded to send 111 thetr game
or meet reports by II :30 p.m.
They ~an be faxed to 4463008
or
eOmailed
to
sports@ mydai lytribu ne.com .
You may also call them in at
446-2342 ext. 33 in Gallia
County, or 992-5287 in Meigs
County.
· They do need to be in by
II :30 p.m. to make it in the
next day's edition.

ends

College Baseball

STAFF REPORT

Coaches
reminder ·
i

11

9·2
8-1

NOTE!: Standings provided by
the Athens Messenger. Ohio
Valley Cohference .standings not
available.

·I

Eagles,·Falcons split doubleheader Wallace

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
softball team (23-9, 5-3
AMCS) stepped out of
conference play Sunday
afternoon at Stanley Evans
Field and won a pair of
games by downing Notre
Dame College (7- I9, 1-3
AMCN) by the scores of 72 and 8- 1.
In game one Rio got on
the scoring chart first in
inning one. Emily Cooper

got things going for the
Redwomen by leading off
with a single. She then .
stole second and later
crossed the plate on a single by Lauren McQuirt.
Krista Tucker also scored
on a sacrifice tly by Brandi
Jones.
. In the bottom of the third .
inning Krista Tucker start· ed with a double. She later
scored on a RBI single by
Jenny Olding. Olding
would later score on a RBI
walk by Abby Hardman.

Please see Rio, B6

Please see Wallace, 16

Castro triples Reds past

C~bs

BY RtCK GANO
Associated Press

CHICAGO - Sammy Sosa homered twice
and passed Ernie Banks for the Chicago Cubs·
career record . But Greg Maddux lost a chance
to win when his bullpen couldn ' t hold the
lead.
On anot her windy and wacky day at
Wrigley Field. Adam Dunn hit two homers
and Juan Castro' s two-run triple in the lOth
inning sent the Cincinnati Reds to an II - I0
victory Sunday.
'
·
With the wind gusting out at 30 mph. the
teams combined for seven homer&gt;. and the
blustery ~onditions made popups and tly ba.l\s
an adventure.
Maddux gave up three homers over six
innings in his third start of the year. He was
denied hi s first Cubs victory since 1992 when C i ~cinnati Reds re liever Danny Graves (32) is
Dunn hit his second homer of the game - a congratulated by teammate Jason LaRue. left.
after the Reds' 11-10 vic tory ove r the Chicago
Please see Reds, B1
Cubs Sunday in Cl1icago. (APl

................
.
.
...........
.. ... .., .., .., .., .. ..... .., """ ...
Nikola Bicak, DPM
Podiatry

304-674·7289
1.

-

•
•
•
•
•
•

Fungal nails
Heel. spurs
Foot &amp; ankle pain
Hammer toes &amp; bunions
Diabetic foot care
Diabetic shoes &amp; inserts
•

•
•
•
•
•
•

Sprains &amp; strains
Corns &amp; calluses
Fractures
Orthotics
Skin diseases &amp; infection
Laser surgery for ingrown s &amp; warl s

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
I

�Monday, April 19, 2004

•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Monday, April19, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

t!tribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Major League Baseball
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32 0 4 0

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000 000 000 0
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CoJorado

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7 6 3 2
2 3122

3

1

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Umo res-Home JamliiS H~ F st Je ry
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T-226 A-16 842(50598)

Twms 8, Royals 3
Kansas Clly
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ab r hbl
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3 o o a Rvas2b 5222
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Reds
from Page 81
two-run shot oil Kent Mercker 10 the seventh
that put the Reds ahe,1d 9 8
Wnh the score lied at 9 Ryan Freel s10gled
off Joe Borowski ( I I ) 10 the lOth on a tly to
nght that Sosa lost m the sun Freel stole sec
ond Jav1er Valenun walk ed and Castro
tnpled olf the center f.eld wall
Todd Jones (I -0) pnched 2 I 3 1nnmgs for
the wm and 0dnny Graves earned h1 s s1xth
save, g1v10g up an unearned run 1n the I Oth
after Jason LaRue s passed ball on a th1rd
smke
The Cubs t1ed 1t ,11 9 m the Se\ enth on
Corey Patterson s RBI double oil Phil
Norton
Sosa's solo shot m the lirst pushed h1m past
Banks as the Cubs career leader wllh 51 3
homers Mmses Alou also connected for the
Cubs and m1ssed the cycle by a smgle
1
Sosa homered agam m the third He has 543
career homers and 64 multi homer games
Dunn hit a three-TU11 shot m the first off
Maddux, who also allowed homers to Freel

St Louis

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DP- Atlanta 4 LOB-F o da 5 Atlanta 10
2B-JEs1 ada {3f Hampton ( 1) 38--LCas I
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T-302 A-29829(50 091)

"'""

,,
,

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Reds 11, Cubs 10 (10)
Clnclnnat

Chicago

ab r hbi
DJmnz 2b 6 0 0 0
Gr! J d
Ei02 0
Casey tb 3 2 1 0
Dunnlf
5 225
Freel 3b 523 1
LaRuec 4 210
WPenarl 4 011
Vlent n p/1 0 1 0 0
Larkn ss 5 1 1 0
PW snp 2000
Kearns ph 1 t 1 2
JCaslo3b 20 1 2
Totala 43111311

ab r hbl
TWatk:r2b 5 I 2 2
CPttson c! 6 t 2 1
SSosalf 6222
A to u~
5231
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3 02 1
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Mdduxp 2 t 0 1
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T~;~tall
45101710

Cincinnati
300 202 200
2 - 11
Chicago
111 041 100 1 - ~0
LOB-C nc nna t 7 Ch cago 1 2B--Lar1&lt; n
( ) TWatker 2 (5), CPatterson 2 (41. Alou 151
ARam ez (8) 3S- WPe a [1) JCas o t )
Alou ( t) HR-Dunn 2 (1f F oo (t) Kea. ns
(2) SSosa 2 (4) Alou {6) SB- LB kn ( t )
G ffey Jr (1) Freel2 13) S-Maddu11 SFMontreal
300 000 100 4
Philadelphia
010 120 001 s AAamlrez
PH RERBBSO
No outs when w nn ng un sco recl
Clnclnnatr
DP-Montreal 1 P h ladelpn 11 2 LOB--Man
42 3 1 7 6
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0 0
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TJones W 1-0
2 13 2 0 0 0 0
Polanco (1)
0
,
Gaves S5
I I
I 0
IP H RERBBSO
Chicago
Montreal
6 87 7 25
Vargas
4 4 3 3 4 3 Maddux
2 , I
Mercke
3 22 2 00
0 4
fiawkns
1
23
1 0 0 0
Ayala
0 0 1 1
2
'
0 , I 1 0 0 Farnsworth
1 0 0 0 0
B ddle L.O
Bo rowskL1
1 2222
Philadelphia
Wolt
6 6 3 3 2 5 PNo ton pitched to 2 betters n the 71fl
HBP~ Maddux (LaRLIB by PW lson (Bako)
Co mer
1 2
1
WP- PW lson PB--LaRue 2
Worrell
1000 0
1 t O O D O Ump res-Home Mll&lt;e Ae ~ F rst Chuck
BWagne W O
Va g&lt;ils pndled to 1 balls n the 5th Biddle Me rwethe Secon d C B Budmor Third Enc

,,

""

a o

and Austm Kearns Maddux gave up e1ght
h1ts and seven runs
Trackmg balls to the outf1eld was difficult
Ken Gnttey Jr mi SJUdged Alou 's wmd-dn \en tly and 1t landed over h1s head tor a tnple
Ar,ums Ram1rez drove another ball over
Gllffey 's head tor a double to gl\e the Cubs
an 8-7 lead m the s1xth
Ch1cago s Todd W.1lker got a two run dou
ble m the htth when h1s h1gh tly lo nght
tooled W1l y Mo Pena and landed ove1 h1 s
head
F1eel homered to left lo g1ve the Reds ,1 4 3
lead m the fourth Pena s tnple made It 5-3
A lou homered lead1ng off lhe f1fth before
two smgles and a h1t batsman loaded the
bases Ch1cago tied tt agam on Maddux s
grounder Pena then tu~ned the wrong way
and m1 splayed Walker's h1 gh 11) as lhe Cubs
went ahead 7 5
But M.1ddux hn LaRue \\ tth .t pnch and
Kearn s who's been out of the lineup after
be1n g hn on the h.tnd wnh a pnc h last
Thursda) del1ve1ed h1 s first caree1 pmch h1t
homer to tie It at 7
Clncmnatr 's Paul Wilson b1ddmg tor a 3 0
stan gave up II hits - three homers - and
seve n ru11 S m 4 2 3 mnmgs

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Milwaukee
ab rhbl
Pdsdnk cf 4 1 t 0
Cunse!l ss 4 0 0 0
BC iarkH
3 0 11
Sprvey 2b 4 0 0 0
CMbay tb 3 0 0 0
H ~ms3b
2 0 0 a
Cpuano p
000
Kschnk ph
000
KGnt 3b 2 0 2 0
Gevert 30 20
Moelec 3000
Totals 30 1 6 1

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Totafa

! 13

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0

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653335
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San Fran

d 4 0 0
ByrnesH 51 2 0
EChavz 3tl 4 1 1 0
D~er!
51 20
Httbe g 1b 3 1 2

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ab r hb .
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AKndy2b 3 0 0 0

ab r hb1
5000
Kelty~
20 0
ECha\ Z3b 4 0 0 0
Dyerl
40
Karos tb 4 000
Duaz qdli 3 0 0
Cog~Jy ss 4 0 0 0
OMte c 4 020
Scuta o 2b 3 2
McMin pll 1 1 1
Totals 34 3 7 3 Total15

r hb

BATTING La Duca Los ll..ngeles 51 2
Bonds San F anc sco 500 H da go Hous
K ~elty ttl
5 1 1
ton 43 Dunn C nc nna 400 CW lson
Cosbyss 41
3
P t sbu gh 396 MG es Atlanta 396 JW I
DMie c 4
2
5cuaro 2b 4 0 2 0
sen P nsbu gh 39 B gg 8 Housto 391
Totals 38 713 7
RUNS- Bagwat Hous1on 1:.J PuJOis 5
Lou s 14 He l on Colo ado 14 Cabre a
Oakhlnd
100 012 300 7
flo da 12 H da go Houston 2 Rolen S
Anahe m
001
000 000 1 Lou s 12 LGonzalez A wna 2 B gg o
LOB-Oallland 10 Ana hem 8 28- Dye Houston 2
{4} , OM ller {2) Glaus (3) HR-Crosby (2) RBt- Ro en St Lou s 21 H da go Houston
Stl-Bwrnn (2) Eckstein 2 (2) Erstad (4)
19 Bonds San F a!'1c sea 16 Pujols St
SF-Kots1y &lt;:rosby
Lours
3 B ad ey Los Angeles 13
IP H R ER BB SO
ARam ez Ch cago 3 SoMson A zona 3
Oakland
RSande s S1 Lou !I 13 Bagl'le I Houston
Zto W 21
6 4 11
13 B ggo Housto
3
CHammondS1
3 t 0 0 0
HITS Lo Duca Los Ange es '22 H dalgo
Anaheim
Ho ston 22 CW lson P usbur gh 19
KEscobarL 0 1 523 7 4 4
7
MG es A1 an a 9 AAam el Ch cago 9
Weber
2 3 4 3321
Rolen S1 Lou s 19 JW lson P 1sbu gh 8
GreQQ
22 3 2 0 0
2
HBF'"..=..t,y CHammond (Eckste n~ by Zto (Eck Burroughs San D ego 18 Bagwell Houston
18 Bigg o Hous ton 18
sten l bylito (Erstacl
Umpres Home Jm Aeyno ds Frst Gar~ OOUBlES--ARam az Ch cago a SSosa
Ceders! om Seco 1d Andy Fletcher Th rd T nf' Ch cago B B ggto Houston e Edmond s S
Lou s 7 CW lsoo P ttsbu gh 6 He on Co
Welke
orado 6 Thome Pn ladelph a 6
T-300 ~3 41 (45 030)
TRIPLES- 0\N se A1tan 1a 2 Cora Los
Angeles 2 Jenk ns M wa kee 2 33 a e ad
Late Saturday

wtl t

Mariners 4 Rangers 1
Seattle
ab r h b
ab rhbl
MYong ss 3 2 0 tSuzukrf 4 0 t o
Blalock 3b 4 0
0
Oeudlb 4 000
AS ano2b 3 0 0 1 EMrtnzdh 3 0 0 0
Mench ll 4 0 0 BBoone 2b 4 0 0 0
Perry1b 4 0 0 0 Sp!t!ZIO 3b 4 2 2 0
EYong d/1 4000 Aulass 3111
1 1 00
N 11 r!
3000 Iba nez~
Lai dc
2 0 00 OO snc 301 3
300 0
Niva c!
2 0 0 0 Wnn ct
29 4 5 4
Totals 29 1 4 1 Totalt

Teua

0

Arizona

San Dingo
ab r h b
•b rhbl
SF nley c! 50 0 0 Brrlj'ls 3b 4 0 2 0
Kate2b
5 11 0 Lorene 2b 4 I 3 0
41 0 0
LGI'Illz ll 3 2 11 BGiesrf
SeKSOn b 5 2 3 Nev n 1b 4 0 1 1
Cifll onss 3 0 2 0 Bdlnan pr 0 1 0 0
5 123
Hnbrn3b 2000 Klesko ~
DB s ar! 40 0 Payton c! 3 2 2 0
Estlella c 4 1 t RaHdz c 4010
Sparks p 2 0 00 Greeness 4 0 2 t
00 0 t
Choate p 0 0 0 0 longph
2000
RAimrph
000 Ea1onp
Vlve rde p 0 0 0 0 RVazqz pl'1 1 0 0 o
Totata 34 5 8 5 Totala 35 613 6

Texas
100 000 000 1
Seanle
000 301 OOx 4
E- Lal d ( ) LOB-Texas 5 Sealtl!! 5 28-MYoung (5) Mench (5) Spez:o ( t ) OW son
(3} SB--ISuz uk (1) S-N var SF- ASo

'"'
TaMil

IP

H

RERBBSO

CLew s Lt1
5333 4 5
1 23 2
1 0
Mahay
1 13 0 0 0 0
Na son
Seanle
MoyerW1
8
3
1 2 5
1 1 0 0 0 0
Anzona
300 000 101 5 Guardado S 1
San Diego
000 101 004 6 Ump as-Home Ma k Ca lson F rst Ga y
Darling Second Bran Runge Th rd Bill Hohn
No outs when w nMlll run scored
DP- Amona 1 Stjn D ego 1 LOB- A lone T--'2:26 A- 38 925 (47 447
8 S a r~ Diego I 2 B-C~n ron (3) Payton (1)
Greene (2) fiR-LGonza ez {4) Sexson { 5 ~ Padres 3 D backs 2
Estalella (2 Klesko ( t CS--Cm ron (1 1
San Diego
Arlzone

HOME RUNS- Dunn C nc Ma1 7 Ao en
St Lou s 7 Bonds San Franc sea 7 Cab
era Flo da 6 Alou Ch ca go 6 Cho Flo
da 5 Pu ols St Lou 5 5 Se11sD A zona 5
STOLEN BASES- OR obe ts Los An ge es
9 Podsedn k M lwa kee 6 Womack S
Lou s 6 MG les Attanla 4 JJone s M n
neso a 4 Game on New Yo k 4 RSanoors
St Lou is 4
PITCHING (1 Decs ons)-45 a e l ed wth
I 000
STRIKEOUTs--Becket F o da 27 Wood
Ch cago 23 Penny For da 22 OPP. ez Lo5
A geles 22 RJohnson A ZOI a 21 Oswa
Houston 20 KWe s P ttsburgh 20
SAVES-G ave5 C nc '1 na 6 Be n 1e2
Flo de 6 Gagne Los Ange es 5 He gas
San Franc sea 5 Me5a P 11sbu gh 5 SWag
r.e Ph lade ph a 4 Chacon Colorado 3
Kolb M waukee 3 Smol z A lan a 3
aukee 3 Smol z At lanta 3

Thts Date In Baseball
Apr 119
1900 - The Ph !adelph a Ph H~e ~ beat !he
Bos pn B aves 19 17 n 10 nnngs to so a
ma o eag e ecord to mo91 ru ns sco ad b~
wo clubs on open ng day The B a~es sea ed
nne uns n he nm 11 nn ng o put the game
nto e•tra nn ngs
1920 - AI Sc11acnt who late became the
C owr P nee ol Ba5eba! was al bus no:5S
as he p 1CI1 ed he Senators to a 7 0 v eta y
ave the Pndadetph 11 Ath et cs

School will soon be out, but IT'S NOT TOO LATE to
salute your athlete from this past school year I
If your child is a
l I
"Star Athlete" ~, on\b -j.....
in your eyes, ~ S\
include them in ~ ....................
. 'VV\,,
this section!!
'

I

-

0. Oj-

-

*Football
*Golf
* Basketball
Gymnastics
Child's Name
*Baseball
*Tumbling
Ch1ld ol Parents Name
*Softball
Team Name
*Soccer
Message
*Track
*Karate
*Swimming
&amp; More!!
This special section will run on
Thursday, April 29th in The Daily Sentinel.
llurry, Deadline for entries is April 23, 2004!

*

Fill out the forn below and drop off or mad
(along w1th your payment and photo) to:
The Daily Sentinel "All-Stars", 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

------- -

Child's Name ----:""""--------,---__:_-~,....-"'-­
Parent's Name - - -- - - - -- - -- - - - - Town
Team Name ---~--------------Phone Number _ _________________________
Message (up to 10 words): _ _ _ _ __ __ _ __
_.,. ........

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

,.. ,.. ....... ,..,. ,.. ,,....,.,..,
t

.,. ,.~,..

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
•-------------O;;;,;..,rF;.;a-.x To (740) 446·3.oos-.___o_r_F_a_x_-r;_o..:.(7_4:.;;0:....l99.:.:.;:2..:·2:.;;1;:,.57:....,.,_
111

Offtee llo«r~

,...,,.. ~ -, ....... ,... ,...,.,.,... ,..., ......

- -.. -........ .. -.,...
...-

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

~.,r.1o-HEL-·rw_,\N_Iw_,.~llno

\ '\ '\01 \t I \II '\ I._

r

M C A G /Pt Pleasant Sr
Center 101 Secolid St PO
Bo11 12 Pt P!easanl WV Is
accepting se aled btds on a
pool table B ds close Aprrl
30th Opened May 3rd

GIVEAWAY

4 rose tra il ses 1 bath oom
ca btnet s nk (740)742 2932
Banney Rooster for g ve
awa y C all (740)441 Ot89
Free ktnens part Pers1an
very tame &amp; adorable Call

(740)44, 0833
Free Slurdy Mov1ng Boxes

(3041674 0121
Old Tra1ler to tear Oown &amp;
mov e out call (304 )675 5956

r
p74

Dally In-Column 1 00 p m
Monday-Friday for Inaertlon
ln Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column. 1 00 p.rn
For Sundaya Paper

All Dlepl•v 12 Noon 2
Buelne-as Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay 1 DO
Thur.day for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid•

POLICI!S Ohio Valley PutHiahln; rnerv" the right to edit rejecl or cancel any ad at anv tlma Errora must ba rllpQrt.ci oh the flrwt day of
Trlbune-S.ntlnei-Regl•ter will be raspontlbta for no mor• U\lln the coat of the spa~ca occupied by the error and only the Ur•t lnaertlon We
any lou ar exptnMthlt ruulta from th• publication or omlulon of an adYertlaem1nt eorr.ctlon will be made In the tlrSCIYIIIal::! .. ltditlon
are alwaya contldantlal • Currant rata card appt1•1 • All real Mtata adv.mHm•nt• era 1ub)ect to IM Fadet'a! Fair Houaln; Act of 1968
acoepta only help wantad lids meeting EOE standarda We will not
any advlrtl•ln;ln violation or th• law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
HEu&gt;WANilD

~.,t_•M•06; ;roli~ilsi l~l o: OMEli-,JI

lwrlghl@lc net

1-aiT~ND

DIETARY AIDE

Scentc Htll Nurstng Center
a Tandem Health Care
Faclltty s seekmg a part
t me D1etary Atde to join our
outstand ng
team
Expe 1ence 1n meal p repare
lton and food serv1ce pre
!erred

YARD S,u i··

PnMf Rm /l\1IDULE
.

2 Fam ly sale Apnl 22 23
24 Outlt pteces computer
desk recltner rocker must
ca 1ns truments good clean
c Qthes pots pans and
cl shes old rec ords mtsc
ttem s 22842 Bucklown Ad
Leta rt Fa s
7th Annual 6 M le Ye low
Fla g Yard Sale Frt Sat Apr I
~Oth &amp; May 1st O nly $5 to
s g n up! We adver t se for
you 1 Call 740 992 4055 or
740 992 3148

HF I I' WANI'ID
'ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS I"
W a nt to loo k you nger AND
earn Money? Let s talk th e
NEW AVO N call
M an !yn ~304)882 2645

AS SEEN ON T V
INSTRUCTION
L EA RN TO DRI VE
TRACTOR TRAILER
NE W PROGRAM
N o Exper ience N eed ed
P lac:ement Dept
F in a ne ng Ava li able
C D LJTra nlng

HP; @tandemheallhcare com

~

SFIDFIEOE

ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson P ke Galllpohs

m a restdenttal sentng The
1deal candtdate w II have a
minimum of an associates
degree tn soc1al
serv1ce
fteld and have expenence
work ng w th women and
ch ldren tn cr sis Candtdates
must be able to work w th
v1chms from vaned cultu al
and socto econom c back
grounds
must be able to
work tndependent ly and
matntatn
confldenUallty
Interested persons may
reply to Personnel PO Box
454 Galltpol s OH 45631

HEY DRJVIRS I' I

Lsarn to Drive
Traclot·Trailers

"We t am Men and Women
Full and Pert Trme Classes
Jab Placement
COL Tramng
F nanc ng Ava table

AS SEEN ON TV
ALLIANCE
Tractor Trailer Training
Ce nters Wythevt lle VA

1 Boo-334 1203
www allancetractortral!er oom
Legal secretary expenence
preferred Send resume lo
The Da1 y Sent nel PO Box
729-40 Pomeroy O h 45769
Mc Donalds of Rto G rand e
Ga Upolls and Pomt Pleasant
WV are now hiring Paid
vacation s
hOlidays and
Insurance avall ab!e F exlb!e
hours Stanlng above m nl
mum wage Apply w th In

Tractor Trailer
Trat n ln ~ Cente rs
Wythevtl!e VA
Call To Free

1 BOO 334 1203

25550

wv

app y

Super ntendent Vacam;y
Tne Eastern Loca Dtstr ct
50008 State Route 7
Reedsvtlle
Ohto
s
announcmg the rehrement
of
res gnat on
Superintendent Deryl E
Well effecttve Ju y 31 2004
The dlstrlc:t Is seak ng applt
cants from qual!ted md vtdu
als that ho!d a val d supenn
tendent certtfiCalell cense or
c:an prov1de proOf they have
the abUity to obta n such a
license Candtdates may
contact Mrs Ltsa M Rttchte
Treasurer at (740)667 3319
for an app ICation package
and addlliOnal Information
Deadl ne to submit appiiCa
lton matena s ts May 14
2004 The Eastern Local
School 0 strrcl ts an equal
opportumty employer

10

t81l
___

All sh fts hot meal fenced tn
yard
Lmk
accepted

(3041882 2766

2

bedroom
house
n
Pomeroy poss ble 1na.nclng
wl good c edt {740)698

7244
Georges Portable Sawmllt
don 1 haul your logs to the
mtU lUSt call 304--675 1957
Jtm s Carpentry and small
tandscaptng tal (740 )446

2506
Ro ot ng Sid ng po rches No
Job to small Free esttmates
20+ yrs exp Reasonable

(3041773 5028
2095

304 882

W II do l awn mow ng &amp;
weed e at ng n Hartford
New Haven &amp; Mason area

304 8821119

Today 1 800 781 1344

r

Oolllpollo CaNer Collage
(Caree rs Clote To Home)

TURNED DOWN ON

Call Todayl 740 448 4367
1 800 214.0452

SOCIAL S!CURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1 886 562 3345

_., gd poll.car"~ oom
Ace • dtted M•mbf' Aocrlldlttn g
Couool lorll'ldtpltnclfl'lt Collegn
lnd Schoott 12748.

HOME'&gt;
FUR SALE

0% Down payment posstbiB

and !tnanctng avallab e for
bad cred t o good c red t on
: - - - - - - til ts beautttul home 4 bed
Ca rpentry odd 10bs floor rooms 2 baths garage Th1s
mg s dtng roofmg remOde l Is your chance to own and
tng decks no JOb to btg or not rent You wdl not see
smalll
Ask
for
Matt eas er qual fymg requtre
(3041682 2978
304 377 ments You can buy this
home for about $450 00 to
4633
$500 00 a month Wtll not
lasl tong (740)949 2547
Day Care Open1ngs

TRAVEL U.S.A

1~.,.1 !0.....~-.;;;:oUCilON--._..~1

HoMES
FUR SALE

r

I~

I \ I I . ._ I \ I I

iO

All real estate advartlalng
In thla newapaper Ia
aubja&lt;:t to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makas H lll•gal to

Aero lol Reeucod
17 14

(304 }67o

Good Us ed Appl ances
Recond tone d
an d
Washe rs
2 BR t1rst f oor apanment Guaranteed
Ranges
and
with
smal l
yard
24 Dryers
Chtil ccthe
Road Aelngera tors Some start at
$395/month
uttllt es not $95 Skaggs Appliances 76
nduded Requtres 6 montlls V neSt (740)446 7398
ease and $395 security
deposit No pets Fo r appt1 Mollohan Carpet 202 C la rk
catton and to make an Chapel Road Poner Oh o
phone (740]446 7444 1 877 830
9162 Free Estimates Easy
1tnanc ng 90 days same as
3 rooms and bath upstatrs cash Vtsal Ma ste Car d
newly decorated Aefldep Onve a ttle save alot
reqwed No pets (740)446
Queen s1ze bed New Oak
1519
headboard like new bo l'i
BEAUTIFUL
APART sprtngs &amp; mattre ss $17 5
MENTS
AT
BUOGET (740)446 7398 after 5p m
appo ntment

(740)441 1108

AT

JACKSON (7401367 7686

Manor
and
Avers de
Apartments n Middleport

F'om $295 $444 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing
Opportu n t1es

discrimination

3 bedroom Muse m
Pomeroy $400 a mo $400
P!easant Valley Apar tment
depostt no pets (740)949
Are now takmg App lca110n s
7004
lor 2BR 3BA &amp; 4BR
are
taken
3Br House wtth detached 2 ApplicatiOns
ca r garage $400 month pus Monday thru Fr day frOm
depos t
rn
G lenwood 900 AM 4 PM Offtce s
Located at 1151 Evergreen
(304)743 8584
Ortve Pomt Ple asant WV
Furnished 1 bedroo m house Pnone No s (304 )675 5806
w th AJC No smokmg EHO
Appltcat ons be mg taken
Small House $275 00 a
For Sale House one &amp;1/4 (7401446 1759
month Call Nancy (304)675
acres 3000sqft 3br 2bh lr Atver
v1ew 3 bdrm
2
(304 )67 5 5540
dr tvr lsb (304 )773 5984 or baths basement and deck 4024
Homestead Real ty Broker
593 3702
All e ectrt c Located m
Pt Pleasan t WV
Ferry
WV
Great
Buys
03
new Ga lhpohs
Oakwood Modular Homes $700/m onth no pets By Ta ra
Townhouse
(740)446 3461
call tor detatls 740 446
Apartments Very Spac ous
2 Bedrooms 2 F oor s CA 1
3 bedroom 2 baths on 4 3 34tH or 740 446 1567
1/2 Bath Newly Carpeted
acres In the Counlry Seen c
Adult Po ol &amp; Baby Pool
VIBW
$75 000
Ca I
PatiG. Start $385/Mo No
(740]709 1, 66
1 Br Tra er tn Letar t Pets Lease Plus Security
Furnlslted all ut!ltl es patd
Depos t Aequ red
Days
$300 mont h $300 depos it 740 446 3481
Eve n ngs
Home fo r sale 116 Mabehne (304)882 2858
740 367 0502
3 bedroom 1 bath
Dr
basement ga rage d reel 1979 Bayv ew wtth expando Tw n R1ve rs Tow er s accept
access to htk ng &amp; b km g Must be moved $2 500 Cal tng appl callons to wa tt ng
tr a IS
$63 000
VIBW (7 401388 91 25
hst tor Hud subs1zed 1 br
photo/ nfo
online
at 2Br Mob le H ome all electnc ap artment c all 67 5 6679
3 bed room A fram e 2 bath www orbv c om Code 41504
part artyttu rn shed very nt ce EHO
laundryroom new roof std or call (301 )591 2488
no
pet s
$325mo nt h
SPAO:
&amp; waterline
large
ng
(304 )593 1939 leave mes
S67 000 1740)256 Hou se for Sale G ood rental sage (301)697 1341
FURRmf
Du p )ex
two
Investment
6928
rentals or one large home 3 bedroom mo b le home n
Aprox 13 000 SCI tt ocated
4 bedroom 3 bath Buckeye 30x40 heated po le bu t!d1ng M ddleport Deposit and ret on Eastern Ave Would be
Htl s Ad In ground pool 1 new root std ng w tndows e ences reqU1red No pets grea t fo r recrea110na1 use or
very good ne1gllbo rh o od (7401992 5856
acre (740)709-1 166
warehouse spac e Options
1140 Second Ave Galllpo l!s
acres
are lim itless C aU 740.245
Asktng $1 19 0 00 Mob le hom e for rent
OhtO
ar garage SA 554
5060 1 1am 5p m Monday
OBO
call Kara n 0 740 $375/ montll $ 375/deposlt
175 000 VIew photos/i n!
Frtday
Call 74 0 367 7762 or 740
645 2088
www orvb co
nllne
367 7272
• 32904 or call 74
Sandhill Road 3Br 1 Ba
Convententty locate d on
67 7619
1600/aqft Ranch on 6 acre N ice 2 and 3 bed room J ackson P1ke 1n Spnng
eve! lot Oak f loors 1st mobt e hOmes for rani Val ey area G reat tor sm all
60HIIda Dr 1 5bath 2BA hOuse
on
Right
past mct udes water sewe r &amp; bu s neuet
or
m ed c a l
utUity room !anced yard new
Ma rshall
Un i-ve rsity tras n no pets depoatt &amp; o ff1 c es Fu lly lm s hed &amp;
perch 8x16 outdoor b!dg 2 $103 000
(740) 949 113 1 $300 per month (740)992 newly carpeted Great loca
car ga rage (7.0)367 7188
PM
:2c16r7~"!"'--~~...- , uon 740 245 5060 11 am
after 5
.t. ., • .-..n:-.n"C'
5pm Monday Friday
8 room Ra ~ h fu ll bau
MOIIIU:FUR
~
0
ment 3 bedroom 2 5 bat;&lt;t
~
L~--~IDR:;,:~Rmr~:;,:,
Offic e spa ce downtown
2 5 acrea family room cov
PomerO',' approx 1800 sq
ered deck $99 900 No land
1968 mob ile home 12M60 1 and 2 bedroom apa rt ft street leve l near court
contrae11 (740)446 2196
mants furn1sh ed and unfu r M use $4150 mo (740)592
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaamentt for real
. .tate which lain
violation of th• law Our
readare are hereby
lnfornwd that all
dwellings advertlaed In
this newspapor are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

appt

tM~~~

r

ga,age

oo

"f!-?!!FS

I.

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51

ANTIQU£S

Buy
or
se I
R ver ne
Ntce one BR unfurn shed Anltques 1124 East Ma n
apartment Range &amp; refrlg
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
prov ded water &amp; garbage 992 2526
Russ M oore
patd Oepostt requtred Cal f owner
(740)446-4345 attar 6pm

Ntce two bedroom apart
2 bedroom house m ct ty ments Large rooms Fully
$500
month
secunty equtped k tchen Centra
depos t
&amp;
reterences heat ng / coo 1 1n g
requr red no pets (740)446 Washer/dryer
ho ok:u p
4053
(3041882 2523

preference llmlt.tlan or

"""""

..Q

(7401441 0194

Pets call (3041862 3652

$800 OBO Noodo moved

3 Bedroo m Brick Ranch 1

HO!l!it:S
FOR RENT

1 Br posstble 2 !ocated 1n
New Haven everythmg m
wa!kmg dtstance appltances
furntshed Iota! Electnc $300
month $300 depostl
No

advertlH any
preference limitation or
dh•crlmlnatlon baeed on
race, color rell;lon aaJr
familial status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any euch

r

L,r.10-•HoiOUSEHO~-~-LD-_.I

1601 ---.

2 bedroom apt St FU
past Holzer
$475 mo

PRICES

r.:~~=~;::::~

0 118

Wtll mow town yards In Pt
The Me1gs County C ou ncil Pleasant area Please call
on Agmg ts accephng app11 Adam Watson at (304)675
cattons/resu m e s
for
a 3795
Regtstered Nu rse for the
pos1tton
of
C l nrcat Wtll Pressu e Wash ho uses
Supervisor The successful mobi e homes metal butld
and gutters
Call
candtdate wttt be htgh~y lngs
organtzed self mottvated To (740]446 0151 ask lo' Ron
apply for th s pos1t on see or leave message
Darla Hawley Human
11 \ \ '\1 1\1
Re s o u r c es
D rector/Executtve Ass star:tt
IJusiNfx&lt;l
at th e Me gs Mu lttpurpose
0PI'OKI1JNfiY
Semor C en ter 11 2 East
Memor al Onve Pomeroy
Local Cand e Route Make
Oh An EOE
1OOk per year s1mp y restock
m store dtsp(ays No sell ng
A ccounts 1nventory tram
Publtcat on Sales Co h nng mg s upport and protected
18 Sha rp enthUSIBSitC
terrllory for S13 950 mvest
lnd vtduals to travel the US ment BBB 324 1014
Travel tratntng Lodgtng and
transportal on tu rn shed
Return Guaranteed Start

A VO N! All Areas l To Buy or
S a il
Shtrley Spea re 304
$15 44 $2 1 40/hr now hlr
875 1429
lng For appltc:ation And free
Fulltnme Cu stom er Support govern ment jo b Info ca I
Barn Removal
Cle rk Local B u slnest Se nd American Auoc of Labo r
R e sume to P O BoK 353 1 (913)599 6220 24 hrs Ali references &amp; fu(( lnsur
emp serv
Henderson 'NV 25106
ance Ca ll 304 373-()0 11

POSTAL JOBS

'f.~.Do--_.~1 r

l..

Res dentla
Treatment
Factlity youth worker Pay Assisted living opentng m
based on expertence Call my home Call {740)3BB

(740)379 9083 IO

ICl 2004 by N EA Inc

www comtcs com

l.ms&amp;
ACREAGE

r ~~

ESTATES 52 Westwood
16x80 sites avatlab!e S115 Drive from $344 to $442 T hom pson s Appli ance &amp;
per month 1ncludes water Walk to shop &amp; moves Call Repatr 675 7388 For sale
sewer &amp; trash (740)992 7 40 446 ~56B
automah c
Equal re co nd t oned
2167
washers &amp; dryers refr gera
Housmg Opportunity
tors
gas and elec tnc
63 acres for sale on CONVENIENTLY LOCAT ranges atr co ndtt oners and
Blessing
Ad
1 Letart EO &amp; AFFORDABLEl
wrtnger washe rs W II do
(304)882 2567
reparrs on major brands m
shop or at your home
You could 1sh your bad ands
and Increase property value
Used Furntture Store 130
toot Make rand nto lakes
Bulavtlle
Pt k:e
G rave
(7401388-8228
GraciOus ltvmg 1 and 2 bed Monuments (740)446 4782
room apartments at Vr! age Gall pohs OH Hrs 10 4 (M
1&lt;1 '\I \I "

't-1'1

SFIDFI EOE

Fax 740/446 2438
Ematl admm shn@
tandamhealthcare com

Now Accepting Resumes for
Management Pos{tlon n a
local
Convtn lance
Store/Gas Station Ples.ae
send Res umes to TC5 200
Ms.ln St Pt Pleasant

A LLIANCE

r

Ph 740/446 7150

He e 1s a great opportunity
to come grow wl1h us
Kuntzman Truck1ng an 80
year old Reg onal TruCkload
Mov mg Sa e Chestnut Rtdge Carner w Ill termmals tn
ac ross Ad from Church Alliance and Columbus Ohto
19th unit ? ne arly al must has opened a new lermtnal
m Ptketon Ohto Only hard
work1ng experienced dr v
WANTEil
ers w th a clean MVA and a
lUBUY
mm mum of two yea rs expe
nence need apply
Ab so lute Top D ol ar U S We have openmgs for
Stiver
Go ld
Co•ns
15 Company Drivers
Proo fsets D a m onds G old
15 Owner Operators
R n gs
US
C u rrency
For nfo cal! Ray
M T S Con Shop 151
1 866 436 1013
Second Avenue Gall pol s

740 446 2842
.. \11'10\\ll'\1
.., 1 1(\ It I "

_____ o

Proper ( cense of cerllftca
tion reqUired We ot1er pay
lor e,.;penence shtft d1fferen
perfect
attendanc e
!tal
mcentlve
sh ft pick up
bonus excellent workmg
env ronment
and
much
moret Please apply to

45769

YARD S.o\LE

Joyce (304)675 69 19
Ap I (3041882 3630

LPNs Full Time

We oiler a perfect atten
dance ncenttve sh ft dtffer
ent at an excellent work ng Attn Dtanna Thompson HR
env ronment and
much Seen c Htl s Nurstng Center
mo e Please apply to
311 Buckrtdge Road
Btdwell OH 45614
Ann Justtn Frum
Ph 740/446 7150
SceniC Hills Nursmg Center
Fa;.r 740/446 243B
311 Buckr dge Road
Ematl admm shn@
Btdwell OH 45614
tandemhealthcare com

HAOtandemhealthcare com

FoUND

Before you buy!
Does your dealer?
Move h s homes Do srte
preparatton
butld founda
tons Roll and set houses
Do heat ng and atr Have tn
M use serv ce people
nstall sepl1c systems
Do
e ectr cal/plumbtng
Do
dnveways If the answer to
any of these queshons s no
or tf they •sub contracr You
better see the oldest most
e11.per enced
dealer
m
Attlens County Stnce 1967
Coles Mobile Homes 15266
US 50 East Athens Ohto
45701 Where you get yo ur
mo neys worth"

Customer Servtce Pos tlons
PT and FT start at $19 45
per hour tram ng provided
Scentc H1lls Nurstng Cente r
Call Laura C 931 779 5000
a Tandem Health Care
Job 1362
Fac hty 1s seektng a select
lew to 10 n our outstandmg
team We currently seek

Fast grow)ng business
Cashiers
and cooks need2 lost dog s on S t At 850 &amp;
b ke 1ra I Bleck fema~e grey ed tor all shifts Full and
male
M n S c hnauze rs part time Send resume to
Dally Sentinel
PO Box
(7401245-9020
729 8
Pomeroy,
Ohio

~70

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
_r,~
Borders $3.00/per ad
1!
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

NURSES

C 1 Beer Carr y Out perm t
to s ale Chester Townsh p
Metgs County send letters
or nte e st to Til e Daly
Senttnel PO Box 729 20
Pomeroy Oh o 457 69

r

Oearltlru

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Deacrlptton 1 Include A Prlee • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addrets When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 D•vs

Items

o·

Nl Leaders

l\egister

Sentinel

Your Ad,

32 6 7 4-

Oakland
01 0 010 001
3•
Anaheim
a22 000 02• 6•
E EChavez (2f Mulder (1 DP-Oak and 1•
LOB--Qak and
Ana err 6 28- Scul a ~
(51 E:kste n (2 HA - McM lion 1 VG uel"'
e o (4 ) G aus {4 SB-E stad (3)
IP H R ER BB SO
Oakland
Mutder L1
75 4 2 2 5
Bradlo cl
1 2 2 2
An!lhem
Wash bun W'21
5 5 2 2 "3 5'"
Shed6
123 t Oa 1 2•
FRodr guez
1 3 0 0 0 0 4•
Perc vel
1
1 2
HBP- by Mulde JGu len) by Wa hbi.J IT
(Du azo)
Ump res-Han e T n Welke F s
Jm
Reynolds Second Ga y Cede s om Th d
Andy Fletche
T-2 49 A--43 487 (45 030)

t!tribune

To Place

Anah!lm

Ko tsa~ c

Ecksbn ss
t 1 0
E sadb
000
VGrerort
000
GAndsnc
0 2 t
Gaus3b 4 01 0
JG ien~
40 1a
Samoncfl 4 000
BMolnH 4 0 0 a
Hal e2b 4 00 0
Talala 32 1 5 1

Kots a~

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,0f:l0 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW

Angels 6 Athlettcs 3
Oakland

Anaheim
ab
2
3
4
3

Arizona
000 002
000 2
San Diego
300 000 00• 3•
E- H lenb and (2 DP - A zona
Sail&gt;
0 ego LOB- A zo n;1 5 Si'!n 0 ego 8 38AVazQuaz { l HR-Sex son (4 ) CSAVazQuez J)
IP H ~ERBBSO
Arlmna
6 2 3 3 5 7
Webb L
23 0 0 D 3 0
Choa e
13 0 0 0 0 0
Kopto~~e
1
0 0 0
V llarrMI
San 0 ego
V'd dt!S W 0
6 5 2 2
1
L neb nk
o a 0 0 o•
Otsuka
0 0 1 1•
HonmanS2
1 0 0 0 0 1
HBP-by WebO( Ne~ l WP- Webb
Un p es-Home G eg G bso n F s B uce
D e(:il.ma Secon d Gerry Oav s Thrd ar y
Pooc1no T~22 6 A--42261 42 44 5~

'

ab r hbr
omam2b 4 o 0
Snowb 52 20
Gssomcl 4 2 2 I
Bonds~
4 2 4 5
P12yns c 4 0 0
AHonzo 3b 3 0 0 0
Tucker~
2 00 0
Moh r1
000
Tomkop
000
NPeezss 4 0 2 0
Hmldspt
0 00
Felll r1
2 000
38 7 13 7 TOIIII&amp;
35. 612 6

abrhbi

6 2 3 6 2 2 45
0 0 0 0
13 0 0 0 0 1
0

o a o

'0

Athletics 7 Angels 1

Tens
020 000 000 2
Seattle
000 003 Oh 4
DP- Texas 1 Sea tte 2 LOB--Te11as 7 Seat
liB 6 HR BBoone {4} SpOZIO {1) Ibanez
(1) SB--De llucc (3) ISuzuk {2 )
IP H RERBBSO

2

0
4

1
0

O&amp;ktand

0

Seattle
ab r hb1
ab rhbl
Suzuk r1 40 3 0
MYong ss 4 0 2 2
4000
Bla ock 3b 3 0 00 Wnnel
ASrano 2b 4 0 1 0 EMrtnz dh 4 0 1 0
Flme dh 3 0 0 0 BBoone 2b 4 1 1 t
Dlucc ~
3010 Ole ud1b 4000
Monchrf 3 1 0 Spezo 3b 4 2 2 I
ba nez~
4 112
Nx cl
3 1 10
EYong ph
0 0 0 80/NISC 2000
Bra1asc
3 0 0 0 Bmq.st ss 3020
07054 1b 3 0 0 0
Po ry pfl
000
Totala 31 2 6 2 Totals 33 410 4

7
2

0
4

23

02
0
0

Lo1 Angalea
000 160 0()0 7
San Franc sea 100 103 100 6
DP-Los Ange es 3 San Franc sco 2 LOBLos Angeles 10 San F anc sea 6 28 lztur s
(1) ShG een 3) Be ftre 13) Weave (1
Snow (4) G ssom {4) Boncls (Sl HA- Bel! e
(4) JEncarnacon(2f Ross (\) 801' ds 2(71
CS-Du rham (1)
IP H RERBBSO
Los Angalel
Weaver W1 t
5 10 5 5 , 2
1 3 t
1 I 2 0
Sa chez
TMart n
23 I 0 0 0 0
Ore tort
I 0 0 0 0 0
Gagne S 5
I 0 0 0 1 3
San Franciaco
Tomlo,oLO t
4 23 11 7 7 2 2
Aardsma
1 3 1 00 2 2
Ctmst ansen
123 t 0 o 1 0
FRodr guez
3 0 0 0 0 0
Heges
1 00000
Weave p tch8d to 5 bane s n the 61~
HBP---by Chnst ansen (Co a) WP- Sa ncheL
Tomko.
Um p res--H ome Paul Schnebe F rs Ed
Monltigue Second Jerry LayM Th d terry
Meals.T--3 tB A---42 377 (41 584 )

Houston
ClemensW30
7 4
1 1 7
DM cel
~
0 0 0 I
Llclge
OOOQ2
Obermueller pttched to 3 batters n the 51h
Ump res--Home A ck Reed F st Ed
Rapuano Second T8d Ba rett Th d AHonso
Me QUeZ T 2 39 A-38 195 {40 9501

523

2
0
0

0

Dodgers 7 Giants 6

ab r hbl
Lane cl
41 20
AEvrttss 4 02 2
Bgwelllb 512 0
JKent2b 4 1 3
Hda tgart 4 o 1 o
B knYlH
40 3
Ensb g 3b 4"0 0 0
Asmus c 4 2 1
Clmens p 3 1 1
0Pm oph1 0 1 0
oge p
00 0 0
Totals 37 616 6

0

2
0
0

Loa Angela
ab r hbi
0Rbrt5 H 3 1 ~ 0
ztunsss 51 1 1
Brdley ct 4 0 0 0
ShGren b 322D
Beh e3b 5133
JEcrcnlf 5 1 22
Rosse
5111
Cora2b
4 0 10
Weaver p 3 0 1 0
Snchez p 1 0 0 0
D forp
0000

HOUIIOn

2

9

Oropesa W.2 1

'

Kob

523
13
13

abr h bl
ab r h b
o
SFntev ct 1000 Bghs3b.41
RAm 2b ~ 0 2 0 Lo eta 2b 3 1 0
Cnt onss 4 0 1 0 BG ie5rf 2 1 00
Nevn 1b 3 0 0 1
LGnll~ It
4 1 1 0
se,son 1b 4 I 1 2 Keskolt 200 1
400 0
Hnbn 3b ~ 000 Oedec
0 0 0
DBus ta r1 3 0 0 Payt on c
20 00
Mayna c 3000 L01g ct
Webb p
2000 Rl/azqz ss 3 0 0
Baega ph
000 \aldes p 2 0 00
26 3 3 2
Total s 32 2 6 2 Totals

Mantel pi!c:h8d to 4 batters n 1hrl 9th
HBP- bV Szummsl\ (H llen brand) by Choa 8
(NIWm) bV Szuminski IBaerga cy Spa ks
(Loretta) WP-V llarreal
Ump•es-Home B uoe 0 eckman F1st Ge
ry Oa'M Second La ry Pone no Thl d Greg
G bson T--304 A--41730!42445

Milwaukee
000 100 000 1
Houston
011 310 OOx 6
DP--M waukee 3 fiouston 2 LOB-M tweu
kee 3 HoU5 on 0 28-Podsedn k 3) Lane
2 (2} JKanl 2 (4) 38- AEve ett (1 ) Barkml!n
1) HA Ausmus (1)
IP H RER8BSO
Milwaukee
2 2
1 1
Capuano L t 2
295501
Obermue!le
2 1 0 0 1 1
JBennett
2 0 0 0 0

'"'

RERBBSO

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Ma~C~e~ ~~to_~e ~a1!Y ~"!'"~

TIME, 7pm 9pm
j!J.ACE. Metgs County Annex
next door to the Ex tcns10n Offi ce

CONTACT.
AI Dcllwtllcr 992

0

H

.7!1€€-@fr;.T~

TOPICS.
Vetennary Care

1

tP

Tlte d[;}a!Qq ~enf!ne(:

Owner s Works hop ~

Horse Nutrnwn

23

-·Gomoo

Florida

Choate
V lla ea
Vave de
Mantel L0.2
S.n Olego
Eaton
Szumnsk
WitasiCk

a

Astros 6 Brewers 1

ChiCIIQO
l oazaW3-0
9 2 o o
5
Tampa Bay
JeGoozalzL0 3 523 10 5 5 2 2
Ti eM I e
t 3
0 0 0 0 0
JoSosa
100000
Moss
200 0 0 1
WP-JeGonlalez
limp res--Home John H schbeck Rrst Wal~
Be I Socood Laz D az Th rd B I Welke
T-2 12 A-12072 {4 755)

"'"""'

SparKs

New YOfk
ab rhbi
abrl'lbl
TAdmn ct 6 1 20 MSisll ss 3 0 2 0
JW ~snss
sa20 Zele 3b
2 0 2
l&lt;endalf 5 2 3 1 I&lt;Garcart 4 01 0
Mndesf1 4130 Paus e 4000
S1monb 4 t t 0 Cmeroncl 4 0 0 0
CW sn t! 5232 Spnce1~ 4 1 o
HJI2b
41t1 McEwg2b 3 0 0 0
I 000
Grabow p ooao Seop
Stynes 3b 4 2 2 JPht ps1b 4 0 0 0
Cast to2b 1 a oo valent p11 , o o o
Totall 38 817 6 Totall 30 1 6 1

GRoberts
230010
JoFranco
1 3
1 0 0
Stanton
0 0 0 0 0
HBP-by Soo H I I WP- \I\Iheeler
Umplf8s---Home T m Tscttlda F rst Jeff Natson Second Marty Foste Th d Joe
Bonkman T-2 55 A-44 345 (57 405)

0
0

0

Koplow

P1rates B, Meta 1

Pttt.burgh
100 150 010 a
New Vork
000 010 000 1
DP - P flsburgn 2 New York 2 LOB-P fl sbu gh
Ne\\ York 6 28--Mondes (3)
S mon (2) Matsu (6) HA-CW lson (4)
SB-JW tson (3f 5-BenSOf'\ 4
IP H RERBBSO
Pittsburgh
Benson W2 0
7 6
1 2 5
G obow
1300020
Boehnnger
23 o o a o o
0 0 0 0 2
New York
Seo l 02
4 13 10 1 7 2 2

8 NV Met!. 1

3
1

Keshne

..........

Ph !adelphia s Mon1rea •
Houston 6 Mlfwaul«le t
Color~ 8. St LOUIS 5
Oncimeti 11 ChiC&amp;!JO Cubs 10 (1 0)
S1111 Diego 6 Ar•zona 5
Los Anpel&amp;s 1 San FranciSCO 6

7

Toronto

SF--Long

""''

RERBB SO

G o6m
HentgenL O. ~

GB

3-3

Coop&amp; T-3 13 A-39 624 (39 345)

Wheeer

H

!&lt;anus C ty
010 200 000 3
Mlnnesate
011 024 OOr 8
E- Randa (2f Cudd~e ( ) G esnger (I)
OP- M nnesote 1 LO B--Kansas City 5 M n
I I
esc a 8 29-Ra da (4f ShStewa 13)
0 0 0
M entk ew cz 61 Cuddyer l2f JJones 2 (4)
0 0 0
2 t 1 1 C rspd
3 3 2 0 38---JJon~Js Ill fiR- Randa ( 0 A ~as (2)
SB- Bel an (3) Blanco (1) R~as (2)
flOEI 3b
4 1 10
JJones (4)
nfane 2b 3 1 1 0
IP H RERBBSO
34 912 9
Tot&amp;.. 37 711 1 Tatal1
Kenus Ctrv
513964 3 8
Dflro1t
000 003 310 7 May L Q-3
1
1 2332 2
Cleveland
101 303 Oh 9 camp
0 0 0 0 1
5--Vna (3) Munson (4) DP- Oe1 o 2 leskaniC
LOB-Detroit 4 CIBVBiand B 2B--ASancl1ez Mlnn.. ota
Gesnge
4 6 3 2
4
(1 ) CGullen (1) lr~fante (1) 1/zquel
21310002
THatner (4) C sp 2 (4) HR--CGu len 2) JRoaW2
12 3 0 0 0 0 3
C ~n a (3) Lawton 2 (4) 8 ous5a d ( f SB- Fultz
R ncon
0000 2
CGul en t) CS- n!ante 1
HBP-by
JRoa
(JGonza
ez)
IP H RERBBSO
Ump~res--Home Rob Orakv F rs F~eld n Cut
breth Second T m McCieiand Th rd Tony
Bnd m L 11
51387736
Randazzo T- 2 59 A 21 079 45 423)
23 2
1 1 0
13 1 0 0 1 0
Knous
1
1 1 0
DPatterson
2 3 0 0 0 00
JW•w
Tampa Bay
Chrcago
ClevUnd
abrhbi
ab r h b
ClettW2-0
5 3 6 3 3 0 6 WHars2b 51 2 l Crwlrd rt 3000
Cessend
1 4 3 3 1 2
Vl ent nss 4 2 2 1
4 00 0
BelllnCOUrt
1 2 3 1 t 1 0 2 Uribess
4 00 0
1 0 0 0 F~C~o; dh
R5ke S 1
1 0 0 0 0 0 MDfdzrj 4000 Huff 3b
3 0 0
HBP~ Bonde man (Lawton)
Thmasdh 2 01 1 JoCruz ri 3 0 0 0
Uml)l es-Homr1 Bruce F oemm ng F rst
clh
000 TMrtnz 1b 30 0
Mike W nters Secord Hunte Wende 5 edt Goad
GaL ee~
4010 Bum 2b
3 0 0 0
Th1d Tm T mmons
l&lt;ne ko tb 4 1 1 1 Hal e
3 0 0 0
T-301 A-19240!43368
Cede3b 4000
cf 3000
Rwandc 4020
Orioles 7, Blue Jays 0
Otlvoc
3 11 0
Tolala 36 510 4 TOlllla
29 0 2 0
Toronto
Battlmor~
ab r hbl
ab rhb•
101 111 000 5
Jl1nson r! 4 0 0 0 Chcago
BAb11s 2b 5 2 2 0
000 000 000 0
More 3b
4 tOO H ns~ 3b 4 000 Tampa Bay
LOS-Ch
cago
5
Tampa
Bay
3
2&amp;-WH!m
5
\/Wells ct 4 0 1 0
Tejada ss 5 t 4
3
Va
en
n
(4
Gal
ee
(4)
Rowand
2
(41
COigdodh 3 0 0 0
RPimo 1b 3 1 0
38-0 vo (1) HR-Valen1n (3) Konerko (2
JPhlps b 4000
.M..opz c 4 o 1
Gbbons r! 5 1 2 Ctnonolf 4 0 1 0 SB-WHa ns (3) Crawford (7)
IP H FIEABBSO
Segudh 3 1 20 Cashc
30 o
" 0 10
2000
20 10
40 0 0
20 0 0

W

IP

Bait mof1l
OuBoseW 1 2
BRyan

Lopez

WEST

W3

- ·-.....
24

Cinclooab (HiyneG D--1) a1 Chicago Clbs (Clement 1 1) 2:20 pm
Montreat (Ohlta 0.2) at N Y Mats (Yatn 0.1) 71 0 p rn
San Oieg:l (DWells 0 1) at Sen Fr&amp;nci$CO (JWihams 1 I ) 10 5 pm

7

Boston

a

Pit!~

" Y.Yanen (K BrcMn 3-0) at Boston {Nr~¥~0-1) 1 t 0511 m
-~l)etroll (Robertson 1-Q) at Clew!tand (0 AmiCo 1 t ) 05 p m

_v.,.

7

L3
L7

4..fi

AliM!a 3 Florida 2. 00)

NV"'*""'- 7 Boston 3

Yankees 7 Red Sox 3

w,- -,._,-- ,.

s-s

Sundliv'* AetUftl

Booton 5 NY 1WIIIees 2
Chicago Sox 4 Tampa Bay 1

~ (Rem\Qn

W3

51 ___
,.,
63
12

San 0~E0_ _ _,6c__,6c__~500!i!L- ~!~--~5'!5--"W!,'2'----!5"'-4 .. _ 1j!
Colorado
5
7
417 _ _L
4-.6
Wt
2 1
36
San F111nC19C0
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417
4
3-7
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333
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National League

ister

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MlSCELLANEOlS
MER.OIANDLiiiiE

I

1 114 Car et neerly fl awless
D am ond
So ta re
Engagem en t R ng stze 7
7 1 2 Plat1num setting $3 500

F

'm (304 1675 7252

4 Padded Pat o Cl1a r s
F rep ace
Elec/Mou nt
Mattre.ss/ B ol'ispr ngs
&amp;
Fr ame
Bathchat r &amp; 3
legged cane (304)67 5 6633
at1er Spm

D nntng roo m s u te tabl e 6
cha s &amp; hutch W1th gla ss
doors Very good co nd t1 on
Asktng 4650 00 C an be
seen at MCAG IPt Pleasant
Senror Center 10 1 Second

St
Estate Sa le 2 bookcases
F!el'i steel wall hug ec ner
wooden rock ng char Bx10
rug wl runne r roll away bed
2 large dresse rs 1 corduroy
h de e bed couch
1 99 7
Compac Persano Pent um II
w/ w ndow s 98
CD/ DVO
dr ve
pnnlerl tax
scan
make r
desk
&amp; ella r
(740)949 2607
740 992
385 6 (message)

JET
AE RATION MOTORS
Aepa red New &amp; Rebu 1 In
Stock C all Ron Evans 1

BOO 537 9528
Large capac ty
May tag
electr c dryer excellent con
d111on $ 125 00 (7 40)992
1, 21
MPE X Powe hOu se Ol ym p c
Steel We1ght Sel 45 Lb Bar
250 Lb We•ghls Curl Bar
Dumb Bell Ba We gilt Tree
Ad1ustab e Bench L ke New

$125 oo PMne (304)593
2301 (Leave Message)

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel !Jaams Ptpe Rebar
For
Concrete
Ang e
Ch ann el Fl at Bar Stee l
G rat ing
For
Dra ins
Drtvewav&amp; &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metal$ Open Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday &amp;
Fr day Sam 4 30pm Closed
Thu rs day
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday (740) 44 6-7300

lmmedlo1oly (740)441-o9a8 nlahed sec urity deposit 1756
it no anewe r leave message requtred no pttt 740-992
RIYII'IItll for Nnt flm lly Pollee seized property from
221 8
type 3 cemptltlt, ful t $10 001
2000 Oakwood Home 16ll84
3b r 2DI all electric central 1 BA complete k tchen hookup ne1r river 3 dock TV computers &amp; more to r
air Call lfttr B 30 pm A/C Ref &amp; dep No pet&amp; eltet no hookup C• ll more Into call 800 769 5953
ext P509
(740)H2 Bill
(740 1 4~6.0139
(304)456 2048

�•
_....

PageB4•

TheDai~ly~S~e~n~t~in;e;l_,~===================~==~·m~yd=a=i=ly~s~en~t~ine;;l;.c;o;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.-.-.M;o;n•d•ay~,-A•p•r•il•1•9,·2·0·0·4

Monday, A·pril19, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP
Sto\lelfrtdge

$100 Dairy

Washer/Dryer
$450,
Formai&amp;Weddlng
dress
.S1 00. Rockford Fosgale
"40051800W1 amplifier $250,
:12"Bandpass
Bo.w.$75
fA0)645·1269

Alpine-

vou·u ,----~---""71
oovRU.,ON_.
"""" $OM£
.
' K.NOW

Reglst~red

goalsDoe,

Buck

A.U. OUT TO G£T

emd

Wether Kids, call (740)98B-

tl1est $100.00.

r

~=

II{ \ \ ..,1'1110 \ I If 1'\

1

~H~~

Winters. Rio Grande, OH
Call 74 o-245 _512 ,.
$500I. Hondas ,

oiiiio:.;:;:..:;,;~~;....-..,

Jeeps, etc
'IMPOUNDS

i~~-------•
PETs

FOR SALE

Chevys,

I POLICE
Cars from

$500. For listings 1·800-719·
3001 e)(t 3901

------

Border Collie pups, $100.
$5001.Hondas,
740 3SB·t5.2Q.

Jeeps,

FRuns &amp;
L.,._.v_,EGOiliE:tiiAiiBOiLESiiii._.J

....,

etc

Syracuse, OH
Now Open

Thursday, April 22, 2004

6:30pm

Block. brick. sewer pipes. ro
windows, hntels, etc. Claude L~-------·

Middleport Am erican Legion
Middleport, Ohio
21 games lor $20.00
Drawing lor $100 Longaberger
Gift Certificate
Sponsored by Riverberld Arts
Council Advance Tickels
992-4197

_22_s_9~~~~~~
1989 Pon ti ac Bonneville.

FARM

~T

good

~-5

Last Thursday or
every mont.h
All pack $5.(MI
Brin~ lhis coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

Closed Sunday'

5 f "Rt:E

[.'o....•A•t•n•us•
·.__.J.i
SAu:
.

TRUCKS

r . .~u~~

Bucket Truck

[7401985-4180
After 6pm "\

4-WDs

Re sidential

Hill 's Self
Storage

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

29670 Bashan Road

Racine , Ohio

4577 1
740-949-2217

Slzn s~.x1 0'
to 10'x3Q',
Hours

7:00AM· 8:00PM
1/1411 mo pd

SIIAL l'l'

Will Mow

Roofing-SidingPainting-GuttersDecks-Etc.

740-992-5594
7 40-992-6!162

Yards

t:ONS1'1UJC'I'IftN

For Fast Courteous
Service. Free
Estimates
&amp; Affordable
Prices, Call.. .

Alberl Harmon by
Deed Volume 314,
Page 103 of the Malgs

accurate title search.
These premises were
appraised
at

East Second Streel,

South 87' 25' 56" Weal
a distance of 933.47
feet lo a point In lhe

feet wide easement
being reserv~ unto
the grantor, his hel.rs,
and/or assigns, forever. Said easement is
for the purposes of
running utilities · to
other parcels of land
on or near Township

Pomeroy,

centerline

of

Road No, 225. Said

Township Road No.
225 (Cross Road),
passing through two

eaaement runs In a
north-south direction
ilcrosa the west end
o1
the
above

NOTICE OF
' SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
Defendants

Pursuant to Order
of Sale entered In this
caose, I will offer for
sale at public auction
at the front steps of
the Courthouse, '100
Meigs

Counly, Otilo, on lho
14th day of May, 2004,
at 10-oo o'clock a.m.,
lhe
following
described real prop·
erty:
Sltualed In the
Slate of Ohio, Counly
of Meigs, Township of

Columbia, being In
the northeaal quarler
of Section 7, Range
15 West, Township 9
Norlh, of "Th~ Ohio
Company
Flrsl
Purchase", and baing
bounded
and
described as follows:
Commencing for rat~
erence at an Iron pin

: found cappad "J. T.
. Swart 7426" st the
· northeaat corner

at

Soctlon
7 (Noto:
Reference bearing on
the eaot line of the
north half of the
northuat quarler of
Section 7 uaed 11
South 00 dagreea 51'
~38"Weet.),

•thonco, with the 1111
line of Soctlon 7 and
lho weet line of 1 135
acre• tract 11 con·

veyod
to
Albert
Hermon by Deed
Volume 314, Pago 103
of the Melge Counly
Recordera

Office,

Soulh 00 'dog. 51 ' 39"
Will a dletance of
1,837.73 feel to e
marked otone found,
being the true Point
Of Beginning for thlo

'

County

Recorder's

Office, South 00' 10'
50" West a distance
522.00 feet to an iron
pin set; thence, leavIng the section line,

Iron pins aet at die·

lances of plua 821.47 · daacrlbod property
feel and plua 921.47 with tho weal line of
feet,
respectively; said easemonl being
thence, with the cen- the centerline of
terline of Township Township Road No.
Road No. 226, tho fOI· 225. Containing 0.508
lowing two courses;
acres, mor.e or less, of
(1)Norlh 11 " 38' 08" eaeement.
West a distance of
SUBJECT to anolher
50.()() feel wide ease·
187.38 feet to a polnl;
(2)thenca North 03" mant being rt~served
47' 02" Weal a dla- unto the grantOr, his
tance ol255.07 feet to heirs, and/or assigns,
a point In the center~
line lnteraecllon with ·.

Township Road No.
405 (Harmon Road);
thence, with the cantorllne of Townahlp
Road No. 405, North
02" 42' 42" Weol 1 dlt·
tanco of 48 .57 feel to
a point; thence, loavln9 tho rood, North
85 36' 00" Eolt I dll·
tance of ~.07 fHt to
lha
Polnl
of
Beginning, palling
through two Iron plnl
oot at dlotanceo of
plue 18.23 foot and
pluo 119.23 foot,
reapectlvaly, contain~

lng

11.278

acree,

mor1 or leas, out of

Parcel No. 03·007·
008.
SUBJECT lo Ill legal
rlght-of·weys, eaoe·
mente, reatrlctlana,
reeervatlona,
end

zoning regulallonl of

J

forever. Said ease'
ment Ia for the purposes of running utll·

Illes lo other parcels
of land on or near

Town·ahlp Road No.
405, Said euemenl
rune In • north-south
direction acroes the

weal end of tho above
&lt;Hecrlbod property
with the wolt line of
eeld euement baing
lhl centerline of
Townahlp ·Road No.
405. Contllnlng 0.057
ecree, more or leaa, o1
•••amant,

All Iron plna oat ara
1/2 x 30" rabar
capped and labeled
"CIIUI 6458 ".
The bearlnga In
thlt deacrlptlon are
for angle calculellona
only and are bated on
tha north line of the
norlhlltl quarter of
Section 7 ueed as an

ngf ~l!u r ...

· IF I WUZ HER, I
WOULDN'T BRAG 'BOUT
8EIN' A SNOOPIN'
TATTL.ETALE !!

Ulm

*"'

I...AtWtl am/ Garden Hquipnwlll i.'i our
btuine.\·.'~.

OON'\ '(OU \f\11-\K. '&lt;OV"'l

not our sitleli1lr

~ f\OULD CUT

Manning K. Roush

Owner

0

( DDI'\'1 SNN:.K. "'l
Tf\1',\ ~UCf\ I

t&gt;OWI'I

0!-\ '10\JIZ St-11\CK.It-IG 7

n Mon -Fri 9-5 Sal. 9-12

r/""""'7 YCAJ AA~E T~E RE.fRI- ""
GERI\\OR DOOR Ol'ttol, :0,0
Of TEt-1, \-.IE.\Xlt-I'H\[(D TO
ll~E. \f\E- 11\R CJ:li'IDI\ 10!-\cK
I

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals. perennials. vegetables,

shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
· roses, rhoaoaenarons, ana azaleas.

i

not be sold for less

T

Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

R cpla ~:cm~: nt

day of sole , balance
to be paid upon delivery of daad.
RALPH E. TRUSSELL
of
Meigs
Sheriff
Counly, Ohio
(4) 5, 12, 19, 26, (5) 3 '

YEAH , BUT
TO'I&gt;P.Y
I'VE GOT
A GOOD
LUC.k.

CHA!i!...M~

--,,-

QOoH~

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF
NAME OF JUDITH
. LYNN .BARTON TO
JUDITH LYNN HALL
Case No. 32100
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON CHANGE
OF
NAME
Applicant
hereby
gives nollce to all

IT
1\WA'(!

GOo'!&gt; LIJC:K
OiAI&lt;.Mr

WELL, TH!I.T

\T
:'(!

C~I'ING.ES

EI/EII.Y -

r

r~--M·OTO-·R·CV·C·'·Jo~.s...l M~:w~~

$75

WELL. FROM A DISTANCE
NEVER KNOW IT'S CMD60ARD

1-800-822-0417
Cht'vy, PontiaC'. Bukk . O lds

BETTY
l'M OFF TO
M.&lt;YoU
socc.eR PAAC.TICE. TAKING
1\\E

W.'?

&amp; Cu stom

-y-

NOPE, 1

CA~~ED

SAU.Y-

'loo'RIO
Al\IIAI'S

Slie.:5' PICKING GOI~ WllH
M~UP
SAU.V.
VIHENlSil
'(OIJR 11JflN
TO OF.I~E'?

VJ~Y"? SA~LY IS

HAPPY W

Dii-IVE

Ai'JD tM HAPPY "TV
LE.T !&lt;ER-

'

(304)675-4853 evenings

CA~I
740 3a8-8228.
CAMPERS &amp;

of Melge County, Ohio ·
requeetlr)g
the ...
1 neme o1 ....
chenge

MOTOR HOME'&gt;
,..;tiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiltt;pj

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Fleeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Rools,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchen&amp;, Drywall
&amp; More •
FREE ESTIMATES!

3369
... l lt\ 111 ..,

HOME
l!.tPROVEMEI'.TS
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran 'ee. l oca I re ferencea furnlshed. Established 1975,

740-742-341

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL
~ •ROOFING

Judith Lynn Barton to 1984 Scatty Camper 191t, Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446· I
Judith Lynn . Hill. Tha Sleeps 5, Stove, Furance, 0870, Rogers Basement I

9

hearing on tha appll· Beth/Shower, Frlg. In QOO(j Waterproofing.
cation will ba held on condition $3 ,000 (304)458·

lhe 181h day of May, al 1625
1:30 p.m . In tho
1993 26' Dutchman Travel
Probata Courl of
Trailer, Steeps 6, goocj conMeigs Counly.
dition, rutty sell contained,
Judith Lynn Barton
$4,900 (304)675·1501.
~8595 Bradbury Rd.
Middleport, Oh 45760
2001 20ft Sprinter 5th
(4) 18
WhHI Camper. One Slide
Out Excallent Condition

$15,500 Phono (304)1137·
3211

'

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

19B6 TRX70 four wheeler, 2002 Jayco. 29ft trailer warnew tires, seat, brakes, etc. ranty, setup on tot at Krodel
$1,200 call (740)367-743 3
Park (304)675-4230 days
1996 Banshee, drag b1ke to
much to list, $2.000 Call 35 ft. 5th Wheel, sleeps 6.
(740)367·7433.
Call (740)645-27291or more
information .
2002 Hart&amp;y Davidson 883A ~---~--=
Sportster. 1,050 miles, per· Gouger Model 276 EFS
f~cl
condition,
$7,000. 2002 Frith Wheel, excellent
(740)379·260 1.
condition $20,000 (304)682·

ADVERTISE
YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

diME
MIINTENMCE
.SEAMLESS
GUnER

*Free Estlmllll*

949-1405

sparingty

seeing

42 Drive&amp; the

panther

OpPQSit&amp;
47 Mooogram

3 Sleep-things?"
getaway
(decide
27 Robin or
car
later)
cardinal
43 Til~ USPS:
of hay
4 Attempts
28 Whichever
ha's one
29 Get-up-and- 5 Firm grip
30 Very small 44 Asian
go
6 Not at home 31 Antique
princes&amp;
30 Airfield
7 Till the soil 32 lyn~t or
45 Neatnlk
sight

8 Derrick

34 Very bright

9 OPEC

33 Utility bill
abbr.
35 Musical

37 Ordinance
vessel
38 Grass stalk 10 Incite

39 AAA or EEE 13 Supported
41 Rostrum

19 Honey

43 Bit k

maker
21 Currier' s

44 C-3PO and
R2-D2

combo
36 Proven

colleague

hr.
48 Sports or,.
51 ..__
Believer"

reliable

46 Pine gum
24 Part of GPA
49 Frothy brew 25 P,uppeteer

Tuesday, April 20, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
An amb1tlon you 've harbored could be realIZed 111 th e year ahead due to a couple cf
lr1ends who go m;t of 1he1r way to help you.
It's extremely important that you acknowledge and later recrprocate o n the1r good

!MAT DAILY
,UllLII

39 Deep
distress
40 Kind

53 Hirt and
Gore

of story

O qe:~ r~or~ ~.,

4·17

S©~4U~_;"'t.!f~·

W01n
CAM I·

tditod by CLAY l . '0UAN - - - - - - . , . .

~-----

le:ten of the

fo ur scrol"''b led wcrds
low ~o. form lovr wc rd s

b~ ·

IM ;IB EL ~1

deed

TAURUS (Apn\ 20·May 20) - Beware of
~U.
tendencies today to do th1ngs Contra ry 10
your common sense or exerc1se tactiCS
you kn ow are beneath you wh en you
bel1eve your c hances of succeed1ng at ' '--'--"--'--..L-...1
something are slim
s
GEM INI IMay 21-Ju ne 20)- YOI.l cou ld be
y
a b1t too cuneus lor your own good today
~.,· &gt;
a nd inactver tenll v po ke your nos e mlo
places rt doesn 't belong Don·r letrt be sard
,
•
.
_
_
of you by assoc ales that you·re a busy-

T

GARFIELD
l HAP A PREAM
A60Uf FOOP
t.l

7J
7

~

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Raom Addltlan• &amp;
R•mod•llng
• New G•r•g••
• Elactrlc•l &amp; Plumbing
• Raoflng &amp; Gutter•
'VInyl Siding &amp; Paint In !I
• Palla •nd Porch Deck•
We do it allex:cept

furnactwork

V.C. YOUNG Ill
,992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

22 Vuu Locai 'EJ.pariance

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Gar;~ges
• Complete
Remodeling

740·992-1811
Stop &amp; Compare

~

~~

IJ'I
..t
~

GRIZZWELLS
~R.GI13tT M£ 1

.CO\JI.Dto\'T Kt£? A

~P"~'V
1 LO?f" !'(}.;~.

1\1E.

6(T.I

LI E0
15 15

I I

PEANUTS

per
month

I

(rarely)
24 Degrade
27 Bundle

I

New&amp; Used

for

•

Interested
pereona Windsh ield, rear ends,
thai the applicant hal Trans axles. $25 &amp; up;
flied an Application Motors &amp; bodies, $100 &amp; up.

for Change of Name
In the Probate Court

*

41 Gave

26 ··- -

Abba Eban , a f9rmer Israeli foreign mrnlster. satd, "It IS our exper1ence that politICal leaders do hot always mean the
oppos1te of wllat they say.M
Although bridge scribes do err. they
· never mtent1onally mean the oppos1te of
wllal they wr1te. However, at the table .
occas1onally one must do the opposite of
tile usual procedure to make or break a
contract
On lh1s deal, how WOtJid you try to bnng
home lour spades? West unde rstandably
leads the club king. Did West have a ·
more produCh\1€ opemng salvo?
Souih won w1th tile club ace . drew
trump s, and played a diamond to
dummy·s 10 . Unfortunately. East won
w1th til e Jack and returnecj a club.
Declarer . alter ruffing, !fled a second dlamono l1nesse. but East won wtth the k111g
and shltted to a lleart, We st took two
tncks 1n the suit to deleat th e contra ct
This meant that East d1dn ·t ask West why
he had fa ,led to fmd the k1lhng d1amOnd
open1ng lead.
Declarer was unlucky. but sometimes one
musl1gnore commoTJ techniQues like tak·
1ng l1 nesses and leadrng up to honOrs. At
by Luis Campos
trick four · South should have played th e
Cc cbf•:y G.phc •·,.o:09'~"'1~ a'c c1e~~o 'rt!IT qu~ta:11'~s:..,. tal'lo~~ pcop~~;" wst aro ~rcs.eo1
E~c~ lettol •n :~e Ctone· s:.tn ·JS tc· JMI'II"
heart king (or rack) from his hand!
Today s clue 0 equa1s ,g
West wi ns with the ace (or queen) and
Shilts to a diamond. but declarer calmly
"X
HZE
RHAA ,
OHXMP
RHAA .
finesses. East w1ns and returns a club
South ruffs and dr111es out the heart
ECZXV
AHAA
ZVC
YZCH
RHAA ·.
queen (or ace ). Then. when West leads a
second diamond . South can w1n with
OZB
" Gill
Gill "
lZVYXVX ,
dummy's ace and cash hrs two hear t wm·
ners. d1scard1ng dumm'y's last diamond.
Finally. a diamond ruff on the board will
Z U E H0
PH
C HE X 0 H C
UCI L
G I K X v ·M
deliver the key tr1ck to go w1th f1ve
spades. two hearts. one d1amond and
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - •John Wayne once adv1sed me, 'Talk low. talk. slow
one club.
and don 'I say too mtJch · I then went and made 'Sleuth .. - M1chael Ca1ne ·

~Ep

A

Dean Hill

space

0

...

Pass
Pass

-..'Birthday:

. HERE .. IF YOU WEAR THIS
CROWN, EVERYONE WILL THINK
'1'0UrRE KING OF Tf.IE JUNGLE ~

Advertise
in this
0
Look for the yellow flags!

· amount.
The lerms of sale are
10% cash in hand on

24
Pao.;:;

AstroGraph

Se8

740-992·7599

Friday-Saturday Apr 30 &amp; May I

than 213rds of that

Pd ~s

-Baird

2 Experiment
rooms

I I I j '•

•

O

w

2•

Ea~t

22 Uh-huh
23 Hardly -

(c)2004byNEA Inc

new survey of March

$11,000.00 and can-

16

~orth

letters

Fla. neighbor
DOWN
Spears
Complained 1 Softwood

U7

FREE ESTIMATES

Gallipolis, OH WV0102 12
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

6, 1986, subjectlo any
facts thai may be dlsclos.ed In a full and •

9 6 5

Wt~st

COMPARE THESE PRICES!!
4" pot of annuals 94¢
4" pot of perennials S1.18 Buy 5 or more for S1 . U\10a1

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

--0---

The above descrlp·

992-2975

New Home~ • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•

.

•

stats
Standing on

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.Pomt•rny, Ohio

BISSEll
BUILDERS IDC.

~!'!!'!!! Gibson 1~.'

lion prepared by
Roger w.
Claus,
Registered Surveyor
No. 6456, based on a

204 Condor Streel

TFN

Pumps &amp; Furnaces

• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranti es
,
• Huge Inventory
· .
• Vanguard Yentles s Fireplaces 'if~·.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Morning Star Road· C.Rd 30 • Racine,

740-992-1189
740-992-2902

H~al

GRAVELY TRACTOR

to dark! .

Dennis Boyd

• Free Estimales

'ET AL.

II

Snapper

Gravely

Open 7 days

• Super Hi Effici ency Equipmenr.,

tract as conveyed to

,.,_.,..1'1

· a week daylight

&amp; Manufactured Housing

Air Conditionc~s,

the

F•rno• 9y!dcat•. ~"' W&lt;:O'I &lt;I '

q '

(304) 273-5321

HEATING fl COOLING

assumed bearing of

~ ~ (~

Free Estimates

BENNETT'S

South 89" 54' 40"
East.

BARNEY

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime
740·985·3564

SUBJECT to lho rlghtof·way of Township
Road No. 225.
SUBJECT to lhe right·
of-way of Township
Road No. 405.
SUBJECT to the 100
year Flood Plain
realrlctlons, If appll•
cable.
SUBJECT to a 50.00

(7~11)59.1-6671

_e_;.,{..g~

HAULING:

KJ1 08

The opposite
of normal

(Bolore !pm
""'
t..ove Meu~) r .J.~·l, tlr:ot

Trucking

+

olo A

Ohio

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

LINDI1 PAINnNG

record.

Phon&lt;

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

ll'lr'!::""-~""""::~.....,
VANS&amp;

.

''

.

Soulh

16
17
18
20

i 6 3 2
K J i:!
"' 10 r. 'l
•

South
4!11 AKQJ JU

_ __.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

SLT package. loaded, many
recent updates . very clean,
garaged $9,500. (740)256 6936

R.B.

west line of a 25 acres

j 2
AQ
B~ 3
K Q .1 !l fl 5

WV Conlractors Lie. #003506

Athens.

Let me jo 1\ for your

740-992-5232

acres tract, and

t
•

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy,Ohio

Point of Beginning
continuing, with the
east line of Secllon 7,
the weal line of a 135

•

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

750 [,.,, St11le Street

Tree Service

52 Andes

55 Capijol
topper
and Holm
56 Radio part
12 Comic-strip 57 What
moppet
bar1enders
14 Sugarloal
check
locale
58 Naughty
15 Diamond
59 Sweater

1).1

Opening lead : ... K

99 Dodge 1'soo Ouad -Cab.

1 Borg

l::ast

~ 4

JONES'

50 Author
- Wiesel

5 Friday, e.g .
empire
8 Machine
54 Soccer goal

.

Wf"st

•

04 t9

Dealer: Soulh
Vu lnerable: Both

(Commercial arw:l Re,;idential)
Mowin~, Trimming. Tree Trimming. Aeration, Fertili1ation,
Sprayrng of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.

High&amp; Dry
SeH-Storage

said

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

LAWN CARE DIVISION

~'R~

description;
thence, from

6:30

(Comme1cial and Re ~i dent i.i l )
Mobile Homes, Houses, log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing ot
Equipment, Boats, Camper,s, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, paintinp: or-staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
·
Speci&lt;~l rates to Trucking and Dump Truckrng Companies.

1993 Dodge 3f4 ton
2000
Mercu ry
Sable
Cummins Diesel Emerald
· Vermeer roun d baler and Duratec. V6, 46K, loaded, 4 green e~~:cellent condition 19S5 Ford Ranger 4X4 V6, 5
Bush nag disk mower. Call door, immaculate, $7,000.
speed, $2.500 call after
$5500 (304)675-5324
(9371592-9294.
(740)245-5064
5 pm (304)675-3745

IN THE COURT CW
COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
BRUNER
LAND
COMPANY, INC.
·Pialnlllf
Caae No. 03-CV-o91
.,JOHN E. CHESSER,

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875-2457

POWER WASHING

·

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Country h1Qh mileage ru ns SLT club cab. Loaded. new
good $1,500 (304)675-1043 paint. pyt $135. Retails
$1 f.OOO . Sell for $6.400 .
1998 -Forcj Taurus SE, (740)446-1127.
ltJIIy/loaded power/moonroof . e disk CD. cost new

...•

Monday'Saturday

Porch Box es
Combination Pots
Perennial s
Spruce Trees
Shrubs
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Olli.ce: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883

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• 9 8 6 J
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Owner: Jeff Stethem

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April 22. 2004 9:00 am -2:30pm
Middleport Church of Christ
Family life Center Free Admission
Open to the Public Breakfast , Lunch
and Oa care Provided.

FOR
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condition
~--~iiiriiiiiii;;..r $900.00 (740)142-2166
93 Toyota Corolla . Clean, 89 Toyota Truck 2 WD run s
2001 Munay lawn mower. 21 1992 Plymouth Laser Turbo. good condi1ion, great gas good 51 ,100 (304)576-2 389
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Chevys,

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KESSEL'S PRODUCE
1973 Chev. Nova 1993
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Fresh Fruit and Vegetables both (304)675·6633 after 5
Open Thurs.-Fri-Sat. 1354 pm
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good, runs good, $650
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TO
IN

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exc:etlent condition $600.00
Jreadmi!I-Lifecycle Sears, Reg . Quarter horse. 2 yr old
~.6

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

111AT WA5 11-lE. $ECRET'

body.
CANCER (June
on help from a
show the proper
efforts on your

21-July 22) - II you rely
ln end today, be sure to
apprec1a\10n for your pal' s
behalf G1ve lh1s person
respec t and all the credit she or. he
deserves
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) - Do not be cowardly , abou l standing up lor 1mporlanl
r.ssues that alfect those who work at your
s1de Your failure to rake a hrm posrt1on will
be annoytng and conlustng .to your assOCIate s
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ~ There·s a
possibility that you could uncharachmsttcally be somewhat lazy today_Vou migh t
have to make an e~Ctra 'effort to force yourself to perform at your usual h1gh level
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - Be parncular - ·
lyon guard today wh en opera11ng 1n soc 1al
situanons, especially 11 sorneone 1s pres£mt
whom you know tram past 8)(P8f1Emce IS a
bit deceitful Don·t be taken 1n by th1s mdiVIdual
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You w1ll be
even tually hold accountable 101 any promISes you make to oth ers 1oUay. so be ca reful not to agree to do someth1ng you don't
plan lo do just to get someone otf your
back.
SAGITTARIUS {Nov 23-0tH: 2 1) Important tasks of a mental nAture should
be atl ended to as early 111 tilt~ day as possi~e. By afternoon , chances are you m1gt1r
no1 be able to muster up your full concen·
tralion.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - When tl
co mes to yow normal evt;~ryday . expenses,
you st'lould be able to n·la nag~ them as
p1udenlly as always today If you go out on
the town, t'lowever, 11'11 be anothe1 story fo r
you .
AQUARIUS IJ an
20-Feb
19) Conditions m general are relahvely favorable ro, you today. yet you could be
plagued w1th a great deal ot sell-doubt and
fall to take advantage of lhose th1ngs that
ser110 your best interests
PISCES (Feb, 20·Marcll 201 - Keep to
yourself anything told to you by a tnend
today who places his or her conf1donce 1n ·
you If !h1s md1vfdual wants olhers to know
what IS lold to you , your pal would broad·
cas t n
ARIE S (Mauch 21·Ap!ll 19\- Be kind and
generous ro the deserv1ng today. bul don 't
allow yoursell to be taken advantage of by 1
somdone who has a h1story ol ustng everybody and anybody to gel wh&lt;H she or ~le
wants

SOUP TO NUTZ

1°

I -

· '"T he trouble woth a microwave ." lhe mother mumbled
as she ran around the k1tchen,
,. is that the meal is ready before
I can gel the •• - ••••• I"
() (or~""olele r~e ('\!.lc~l e c: voted
b.- l.tl&gt;f\9 •n H1e l't! o \~1ng wo rd~

'-..l.-.L...l.-.1.-....J._J r:&gt;v de~e lcp frcm uep No 3 b e~ow

e

PR:."H NUMOE(ED
I
tETiE ~ S IN SQUARES

SCRAM -LETS ANSWERS

Dotmg · Ouesr - Yours · Rotten · USEC' to IT
"Your son has made good progress w1\h o;, s VIOlin ,"
the mus ic leacher told lhe parents . "Oh good ." s1ghed
the rather, '"I thought we had jusl gotlen USED lo ITI"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
TbDAY I~ T&gt;i~ IIOT'

DAY OF THE YEAR ...

~\

•))

Wllll 25b TO FDU..OW.'

'

l WOI.lD£.1( IF 1ll£.Y'I(e;
WILW.J&amp;. TO C.UA~AI.llU THAi.

'

~\
~(
''"' ..

. ).

~

'

I

I

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Lawton homers twice in
Indians' win over Tigers

Rio
from Page81

CLEVELAND (AP) - Matt Lawton bat away as Lawton rounded the bases.
got Cleveland off to a good &gt;tart and then had a couple of words for him as he
David Riske tinally finished off a win.
crossed home plate.
. Lawton . hit two homers. scored four
..The tir&gt;t pitch \\'as up and in and I got
runs and drove in four. and Riske eamed a linle excited:· Lawton said.·'] wanted to
the Indians' first save thi,; season in a CJ-7· · hit the next one out. When I did. I got
win Sunday over the Detroit Tigers.
more excited and threw the bat. It hit
Cleveland's bullpen entered last in the Pudge in the ttl&lt;l! and he was upset about
AL with a 6 ..69 ERA. three blown saves that. but he was cool about it. He said.
and 58 hits allowed in 40 I.J innin£&gt;.
·Don't let go of the bat. ...
"Riske was fantastic and ·Law.' had a
The next time up. Lawton wa' hit in the
great day:· Indians mana~er Eric Wed~e back by an 81 mph pitch from
said ...That's the Da\'id Ri.,ko: \\e kno\\ :·· Sonderman. La" ton took off for second
Carlos Guillen homered and had trlllr clll a ~-I pitch and scored as Omai- Vizquel
RBls for Detroit. which lo" &lt;·enter fielder lined it to right-center for a double and a 2Alex Sanchez to a strained left uroin in the 0 lead.
seventh inning.
In the sixth. reliever Steve Colyer's first
Sanchez ba~ely made it t&lt;&gt; second on an pitch sailed up and in to Lawton. who
RBI double ~ hopping the tina! 40 feet eventually walked after having to duck
on his right leg and fall in~ on th,· base. He away from yet another tight one.
was helped to his feet b' trainer, .. "ho
--when he hit me with the bat. I got a litassisted him to the duuout·.
tie bit mad. bu t I knew it wasn't on pur.. ! can't play tomorrow... Sanche;· .'aid. pose:· Rodriguez said. "I told him to
.. Hopefu ll y. I won't be out too man' throw it ,omewhere else.
days."
.. But we didn't throw at him. We wem
Lawton led off the lirst with his third inside with a ·breaking pitch.''
homer and hit a three-run 'hot in the
Lawton responded again in the founh.
Jounh - botli utl right -h;rnder Jeremy After Ronnie Belliard ~ot a broken-bat
Bondern1an ( 1-11.
,;ngle and Coco Crisp-drew a two-out
It was the si~!h muliihomer ~ame of w;tlk. Lawton hit a 2-0 pitch to right-cenLawton·s career and tir't ,;nee he hit two ter for his founh homer and a 5-0 lead.
against Cincinnati bst June 2X .
A two-run double by Guillen sparked
Cliff Lee 12-01 allowed three rtlll&gt; and the Ti£ers in the sixth. Guillen then stole
six hits in 5 1-.1 inning'. striking out six third mld scored on a bloop single to right
wit hout a waiL Riske. whu had blown two b) Rodrigue? to make it 5-J.
saves and entered with an ERA of 15. 75.
Ben Broussard opened the bottom half
pitched a perfect ninth.
·
with his tirst homer. Jodv Gerut later hit a
··] wanted to be &lt;lUI there:· Riske said. run-scoring single and Travis Hafner an
"When I'm stnr~gling - and hope(ully RBI double tor an 8-3 Indians lead.
I'm done" ith that 1\l&gt;rd - I want the ball.
.. If we could have held them at 5-3 we
I wanted to get it done:·
had a chance:· Tigers manager Alan
Lawl&lt;ln was determined. too.especially Trammell said ... How often can you keep
after the tiN pitc·h of the game backed coming back'!.
him utf the plate.
Guillen. who went 3-for-5. followed
He hit Bonderman·s· second pitch 427 Sanchez·s RBI double in the seventh with
feet and o,·er the wall in right-center. a two-run homer. and Carlos Pena hit his
Lawton stood and admired his work. then third homer in the eighth to make it 8-7.
. Bonderman allowed seven runs and
!lipped the bat backward - hitting Ivan
RodrigueL
eight hits in 5 1-3 innings. He struck out
The' Tigers catcher angrilv kicked the six and walked three . '

"

Redwomen sweep a pair
from Urbana
RIO GRANDE The University of Rio
Grande Redwomen softball team (21-9. 5-3
AMCS) got a pair of wins by beating Urbana (5-

3.

day's tirst encounter with Eastern
being th e big winner. The Eagles
broke loose from a 3-3 deadlock
with a· five run fourth inning
before the White Falcons dosed
back 10 within one followin~ a
four run fifth. The \isitors left no
doubt as to the outcome in the
sixth as seven Eagle baserunners
found their way horne for the 15-7
victory.
Eastern totaled 12 base hits in
notching the win with Durst driving in four runs with a double
and three singles. Myers added a
double and a si ngle with Riggs
also contributing a pair of singles
for the Eagles. Smith . smacked a
single, as did Shaffer. Morris. and
Young.
·
Wahama had seven safeties with
three of those going for extra
bases but it wasn't enough to halt
the Eastern bid at a doubleheader
split. Dustin Vickers was the orily
Falcon with a multiple hit game
with a pair of singles with Jeshua
Branch stroking &lt;t triple in addition to Anthony Mitchell and
Chad Zerkle with a double apiece.

Jan Smith and Brandon Fowler
collected singles in the second
game of the 'baseball outing for
Wahama.
Goeglien picked up the win for
Ea;tern with Smith garnering the
save.' Branch took the loss for
WHS with Luca&gt; Litchfield.
Brenton Clark. Jeremy Smith and
Brandon Hodge also seeing action
on the hill for the White Falcons.
The Falcons spring record
moved to 3-5 on the 2004 season
as vetera n Wahama coach Gordon
Spencer edges closer to his 500th
career victory at the Bend ' Area .
School. WHS is slated to visit
South Gallia on Wednesday and
play host to Calhoun County on
Friday before closing out the week
with a two game set at Wirt
County on Satu~day.
Game--1

Wahama.11 , Eastern t
Eastern
100 000
1 3 3
Wahama ' 071 003 11 13 2
V1ckers , Sayre (4) and Rite, Stafford (5)
Semeleberger. Shaffer (2} and Durst. , WP· V1ckers. LP - Semclsberger.
Game-2

Eastern 15, Wahama 7
Eastern
111 507 0
15 12 4
Wahama 111 040 0
7 7 2
Branch L Litchfield (4), Clark (6). Smith (6),
HoOge (7) ana Rlfe. Goeglien . Smith (5) and
Durst WP - Goeglien. LP - Branch . S Smith.
'

Red men
from Page 81
pitched well enough to get the win.
He allowed five runs in· 5 2/3
innings with five strikeouts and six
walks.
The losses ended a 16-game
home-winning streak for the
Rcdmen that dates back to. last season.
Rio Grande will look to regroup
as they step out of con ference on
April 22 to host Ohio Valley
College. The two squads squar~d
offApril6 in Parkersburg, WV, with
the Redmen winning 3- 1.

Redmen take a pair
from Tiffin Saturday
RIO GRANDE- The University
of Rio Grande Redmen baseball
team kept pace with the upper echelon of ' !he American Mideast
Conference South Division winning
two games from visiting Tiffin on
Saturday. 7-6 and 7-0.
Rio Grande (31- 12, 10-4 AMCS)
twice came from behind to capture
the first game. The Redmen jumped
out to a 2-0 lead in the first inning

on a solo home run off the bat of
junior center fielder Scott Peterman
and an RBI knock by Marcus
Gool sby.
, Tiflin ( 13-24. 4-14 AMCS) took a
3-2 with three runs in the second
frame. The Dragons touched up Rio
starter Brent Watterson for four
straight hits after two batters were
retired. Justin Wagner scored ~yan .
Rammel with an opposite tield single to right and Mike Schmidt rattled the fence, scoring Mike Griffie
and Wagner with a double .
Senior shortstop Brent Ewing
clubbed his tirsr home run of the
· season · with a two-run shot in th e
home second to give Rio a 4-3 lead .
The score remai ned the same until
the sixth inning when Tiffin plated
three runs to lead 6-4. The Redmen
committed three errors contributing
to the Dragon rally. Wagner had the
big hit with a two-run double.
Rio would tie the score at 6-6 in
the bottom of the sixth when
Michael Branon reached on a twobase error with the bases loaded.
Goolsby then gave himself a special birthday gift, delivering a
game-winnin g single through. an
drawn-in infield in th e bottom of the
seventh to give the Redmen the
' thrilling win.
Goolsby went 2-for-4 with two
RBI , Peterman was 2-for-3 ,with two

runs scored. including the game
winner. Kris Schuler also . had two
hits with a walk and a run scored.
Chad Wolfe got the win in relief.
Wolfe (4-0) pitched two. innin~ s.
giving two hits with one strikeout
and two walks. Watterso n lasted
five inninc s. scattering nine hits and
yielding six run s (four earned).
Wagner led the Dragons with a 3for-4 Jay and three RBI.
Rio broke open a pitcher's duel in
game two on the strength of a fiverun lifth inning . Schu ler led the
inning off with a long home run to
right 'field. Ewing and freshman
Nate Chau added RBI singles in the
decisive inning and Charlie Kabealo
lifted a sacrifice tly that scored a
run.
Goolsby got the scoring started in
the home first inning , knocking
home .Schu ler with two outs . Chau
scored the other Rio run in the
fourth. after reaching base on an
error he later scored on a wild pitch
off Tiffin starter and loser Nate
Long (2-3)
· Kevin Hale got stronger as the
game went on and held the Dragons
to three harmless singles. Hale .(8-3)
went six innings of shutout baseball.
striking out six and walking three.
Junior southpaw Justin Ros s-Walker
closed out the game with a perfect
seventh.
·

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Wallace
from Page 81
April 29. 2001, at California
Speedway - was hi' seventh
at Martinsville and enabled
him to break a tie with Lee
Petty and take over sole pos. session of eighth on the career
victories Iist.
Labonte knew his odds of
winfjing weren't good with
Wallace ahead.
"Seriously. catching somebody here and passing them i.,
two different thin~s." Labonte
said. ''We had
great run
today and we wi ll take this.''
Dale Em·nhardt Jr. linishcd
third and Johnson was founh.
giving Chevrolet the next
three spots on. the grid behind
Wallace's Dodge.
.
" I just love this race track.''
Earnhardt said after his fifth
strai!lht top-live; finish on the
V1rgmta track. ·1 want to wrn
here so bad I can '1 stand il. ..
Earnhardt took the lead in
the season standing,. live
points ahead of Kurt Bu,ch
and 12 in front of defending
champion Mall Ken,eth ..
'
Johnson, ..u sittin~ duck ..
according to new clucf Chad
Knaus after ducking in like he
was going to pit whh-ttbmtt-1-&gt;5
laps to go. then staying nut
while aJJ· the leader; piltcd.
said he was surpri.scd to he lqft
alone .
"We reall y thouuht that

a

~orne more were goi rlg to "tay

the

N.fill~r~tht6him,Bt

•

at

.

Finally. Rio put some insurance runs on the
board with another two spot in the sixth. Annie
Tucker led off the inning with a single. She later
scored on a wild pitch. An. RBI single by Emily
Cooper scored the other run.
In game two Urbana got on the scoreboard first
on some fine hitting by Tiffany Trainer. That two
base hit set up .an RBI doubl~ by Abbra Massey
that scored Trainer. Following Massey's double
was Bobbie Jones with a RBI single plating
Massey.
In the bottom of second inning Rio put an eight
spot on The Lady Knights. Olding got thin gs started off with a walk. She ended up sct•ring on a wild
pitch. Jones. '~ho was on base. scored on an RBI
single by Annie Tucker. Tucker scored on a RBI
single by Cooper. !Vista Tucker had a RBI single
that scored Michele Dettwiller followed by an RBI
sacritice tlv from Lauren McQuin that scored
Che.valier. Not to be outdone was the stellar bat of
Jones who scorched an RBI single to &lt;&gt;core Cooper
and tinally Olding. Krista Tucker scored on an
RBI double by Conn.
In innings three and four Urbana put three more
on the boltrd thaoks to · a two-run hoti1e run by
Marissa Rose nberger and an RBI double that
brought home Katie Mallet. That is all the visitor&lt;;
could seem to get otT starting pitcher Stephanie
Broccolo who improved her record go to 9-6 on
the season.
The Redwomen were not done with the bats just
yet. They tacked on some more run s in the fifth
and sixth innings that would seal the \'ictory to get
two much needed wins to stay alive for the
American Mideast Conference playoffs. Jones was
the ditTerence in both games as she had the hot bat
going 6-for-7 from the plate and produced four
RBI on the day.

min·or and saw them coming
but we were having a discus_,ion on the radio and felt like it
wou ld be best to stay out.''
Newman emerged second
after taking just ri ght-side
tires. and Earnhardt was third
with Wallace 1ight behind him
on the restan.
.. It was ha,ically a mi,take,"
Knaus said.
The hole on the track. 2-tn-3
inches deep. hun Jeff Gord.on
more than anyone. Running
second behind Earn hardt and
with u car capable of winning, Gordon was forced to
make repeated pit stops for
repair; under ye llow and
dropped to 22nd in the field.
He rallied to finish sixth.
.. It was unfortunate the
racetrack came apart. I hear
they are going to repave it. I
gue-..~

we were just one race

earl \ ... Gordon said.
··(t definitely took away
anv chance we had of winnitig. but I gue» that is part
of it. You hate to have a race
,Jip away from you like
that."
Gordon Maned from the
pole far the third consecutive
race on the 0.526-mile oval
and was 'eeking hi' third consecuti 'e victory here.
Newman was fifth. abo in a
Dodge, followed by Gordon.
Jamie McMurmy. Kcnscth.
Sterling Marlin and Dale
Jarrett.
Tile race W&lt;h ,]owed II
.time' for 106 htl" hy &lt;:.tution.
rncluding tht: six laps before
and the II lap' after the
repair' to the trac~ wcrr made.

Unclaimed Vehicles To Be
Set Free in Gallipolis
Unclaimed Auction, repossessions, lease returns and other used vehicles to be let go
at ft~ck bottom prices; Five days only at Norris Northup Chrysler Dodge Jeep
By Todd MiChaels
Automotive Corrcspo nc.lcn l

GALL.IPOLIS, OH -A
unigue opportunity takes
place this week for consumers in the market for
cream of the crop used vehicles.
This Wcdnesd~y. April
21st through Sunday, Apri I
25th , Norris North~p
Chrys ler Dodge Jeep - in
cooperation with Fleet Liquidators of America - is
hosting what may be the
greatest five-day sale in the
history of Ohio . Over 173
unclaimed and other used
vehicles arc being offered
direct to the public at rock. bottom prices.
Mike Northup of Norris
Northup Chrysler Dodge
Jeep stated ... For those in
the market for a great used
car. th.is will certainly be
the best time to buy. For a
$59 down payment• plus
tax. title &amp; fees. then start
making payments. customers can get intu the quality

unclaimed or other used vehicle of their choice at absolute rock bottom prices.
This is a once-in-a-lifetime
ey.cn t , so adjust your
sChedule s and make room
for this five-day event."
While unclaimed andrepossessed vehicles arc
some of the most so ught
after vehicles in the usedcar marker today, th &lt;!y are
also the most difficult veh icles for the public to
come by. But, as Mr.
Northup said, "Thi s may
be the only time ·these vehicles will be offered to the
public. We have obtained
these vehicles with the intent of passing the great
savings on to the customer."
Almost every type of vehicle and price range wi II be
available, from luxury 4x4s
to basic transportation.
Many arc even still under
warranty.
"We've made it easy for
you. We'll mark the pay-

ments right on the windshield. Ju st pick your ve- ·
hicl c and pick your payment. You won't find a
faster, eas ier way ·to purchase a great pre-owned
car." stated Mr.-Northup.
Extra sa le s and finan ce
staff wil l be on hand to ass ure customers prompt ,
quality service and th e best
finance terms possible.
Mr. Northup said, "We'll
have over $3 million in financing available for thi s
event, so chances arc we

can arrange financing for
just about anyone who is
employed."
Trade-ins will be accepted. and customers
should bring thctr title or
payment book to expedite
delivery.
"The Ohio bargain-hunt·
ers dream come true happens this Wednesday
through Sunday at Norris
Northup Chrysler Dodge
Jeep. Every unclaimed,
fleet and other used vehicle

$59 DOWN*
UNCLAIMED
VEHICLE RELEASE
INFORMATION:
LOCATION:
Norris Northup
Chrysler Dodge ~eep
252 Upper River Rd.Gallipolis • (74) 446.0842

DAYS AND TIMES:
Wednesday, April21
. 9am -Bpm
Thursday, Aprll22
9am-Bpm
Friday, April 23
9am·Bpm
Saturday, April24 ·
9am-7pm
Sunday, April25
_Noon - 6pm
First-&lt;:orne, first served. No dealers wholesalers allowed.
is just $59 then starr making
payments. • Customers may
never sec savings like this
again," said Mr. Northup.
A ftcr the $59 Down Unclaimed Vehicle SuperSale ends
at 6:00p.m. on Sunday, April
25th , many of these vehicles
will be sent to auction. Any
questions can be dircc_tcd to
(740) 446-0842. Sec the box
above for more information.

•Au offers with approved credit. $59 plus tax, title &amp; fees. Additional down payment may be required for credit approval. ··E·xampte: 1999
Pontiac Grand Am . Sale Price $3174 . $79/mo for 48 mos. @ 10.0% APR. $59 down payment, for a total of $59 down plus tax. title and
fees. Total amount financed $3115 plus tax . Subject to credit approval &amp; lenders final approval. ©2003 G&amp;A Marketing, Inc. Unclaimed
vehicles refer to used vehicles currently wilhout a binding offer.

Appeals ·court blocks
Clarett from entering NFL
Draft this weekend, Bt

Southern girls cniSh

11. 1-5 AMCS) 6-1 and 10-5 Saturday afternoon at
Stanley Evans Field.
ln game one Rio got on the board tirst in the bottom of the third inning on a two out Jenny O!dm£
single that led to a two-run homerun by Brandt
Jones.
In inning five the Redwomen put two more on
the scoreboard. Krista Tucker led the inning off
with a walk and ended up scoring due to an RBI
double off the hot bat of Jones. Jone s later scored
on a delay steal before Amy Conn was tagged out.
In the top of the sixth inning Urbana got thmgs
going with a two out triple by Katie Mallet. She
ended up scoring on an RBI ;ingle by Bobbie
Jones to put the Lady Blue Knights on the board.
That run was all they could earn off staning pitcher Andrea Lotycz who improved her record to 12-

Middleport • Pomeroy., Ohio

Meig~

SPORTS
• Dillon traded to Pats.
.SeePageB1

BY

County unemployment rate stands at 16 percent

J. MtLES

Th~l\employmeht rdte in February gains in the past several m,onths .

lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - At 16 percent,
Meigs County has the second highest
unemployment rate in the state of
Ohio for March, beat out only by
Morgan County at 18.8 percent.
Ohio's rate fell slightly to match
the U.S. unemployment rate of 5. 7%.
but , according to the Ohio
Department of Jobs and Family
Services. only because frustrated job
seekers gave up looking for work.
Meanwhile. the majority of counties in Ohio remain well above the
statewide level. and nine counties
had unemployment rates above I0%.

for Metgs County was 17.5 percent.
Acconlin!\ to Meigs County Jobs and
F,amtly Services Director Mike Swtsher.
employmeAt !\~ were mamly m the
servtce sector, ~htle manufactunng
employment remained unchanged.
"Unemployment is declining. but
we sull have a double digit unemployment rate:.· he said ...1 think
when State Route 33 is lini shed: it
wtll allow for more development.·
Swisher said 50 percent of the
workforce in Meigs County commutes to neighboring counties for
work. While -Meigs County may
have a higher than average unemployment rate. neighboring counties
like Athens or Gallia have shown job

Perry Varnadoe. director of the
Meigs
County
Economic
Development Office. said the spike
m unemployment is a seasonal thing.
He also satd a bad_ state and national
economy has allected everything.
Despite this. recent construction projects could mean beuer and more
jobs in the future.
Varnadoe cited the spec building in
Tuppers Plains which cou ld anract
jobs to Mei gs County. Also. there are
a lot of construction projects in the
near future which Varnadoe said
include several commercial buildings.
Tentatively. there is a hotel planned
for construction at the site of the .old
Pomeroy Junior High and KFC -Long

John Sill-er, will be building a new
restaurant in the very near future.
While the unemployment numbers
are di\Couraging. they trul y do not
paint an accurate picture- of the
unemployment problems facing
Mt;jg&gt; County. Keith Rader. director
of the Meigs Cooperati,·e Parish.
said there are a ·number of people
who'e unemployment benetits haw
ended and they are not now considered pan of these labor statistics. He
said the number of people requesting
food from the parish has increased.
Rader said the parish ·distributed
food ba;ket' to more than 750 people
ion December. The · Parish provided
mote than 1-l!O adults. 8-52 children.
or 784 households with food last year.

New Powell's supermarket to open Mid-May
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEil@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Lo'ITERIES

from Page 81

111

In the top of the founh inning The Lady Blue
Falcons got on the board. Nicholette D'Ambrosia
scored on a delay steal and Amanda Stewart
crossed t~e plate on an error by Annie Tucker. That
is all Notre Dame could muster off starting pitcher
Andrea Lotycz who improved to 13-3 on the season
In the bottom of the tifth and· sixth innifg Rio
added some uisurance runs to seal the game one
\'ictory. In inning five Rio got a double off the bat
of Amy Conn. She was later replaced by Stephanie
Flowers .. who ended .up scoring on a RBI double
by Kristen Chevalier. In the sixth inning Krista
Tucker doubled and scored on a two base-hit bv
Olding. Olding then scored on a double by Conn to
put the game away for good.
In game two it was Rio once again scoring first. ·
Krista Tucker got a one out W;llk in the inning and
later scored on a wild pitch. Annie Tucker re&lt;!ched
on an error, which scored McQuin and Olding to
jump on top. 3-0.
In inning three Cnoper led off with a single. stole
second and the hot bat of Olding brought her
around with a single.
In the top of the fifth inning Notre Dame got on
the board as Becky Waldo scored on a wild pitch.
That would be the only run the Blue Falcons
.
would get in the game.
The Redwomen put up some insurance runs in
inning five as Krista Tucker &lt;&gt;tarted off with a walk
and was brought around once again by Olding.
Olding scored on a RBI double by Conn.
Hardman. who replaced Conn. and Annie Iucker
scored on a RBI double off the bat of Michele
Denwiller.
Stephanie Broccolo picked up the win to
· improve to I0-6.on the year and McQuirt came in
to pick up the save in three ·innings of relief work.
Rio now owns a six-game winning streak.
Next up for the Rio will be at Mount Vernon
Nazarene College on April 20. Game time is set
for 4:00 p.m.

'

Eagles

out." he 'aid. "I looked

Monday, Apri119. 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 5-9-3
Pick 4 day: 7-3-5-5
Pick 3 night: 2-4-8
Pick 4 night: 1-S-6-8
Buckeye 5: 16-18-24-3(}.34

West VIrginia
Dally 3: 2-7-7
Daily 4: 9-3-8-0
Cash 25: 3-6·14·22·23·24

INSIDE
• Time Out for Tips. See
Page A3
• Community briefs. See
Page A3
• Community calendar.
See Page A3

WEATHER

POMEROY
New
refrigerators and shelving
are in place and groceries
are going on shelves at the
former Kroger store in
Pomeroy • . as preparation
continues for the May opening of Powell's Foodfair.
The Powell family of
Pomeroy and Fooh Foods. Inc.,
Huntington, WVa., continue
renovation and stocking work
at the supi:rrnarkel location on
Ea&lt;;t Main St., in hopes of a
mid-May opening date, accon:ling to Tun Fonh, President of
Forth Foods, the wholesaler
which now supplies . Powell's
Super-Valu downtown. The
local grocers and Forth Foods
have tonned a pannership
allowing the move from the
9,000 square-foot store downtown to the 36,000 sql13TC-foot
store vacated in November by
the grocery giant Kroger.
The Pomeroy store will be
the eleventh Foodfair outlet,
Forth said, and will offer a
complete grocery line. a full
deli and other services,
including a pharmacy.
"We're now in the
process of recruiting a pharmacist," Forth said. "The
pharmacy may not be available to customers on opening day, but it will eventual ly be a part of our store."
The store's owners plan to
keep the same pricing structure - that is, the same retai I
prices ~ as in the current

J.

Bv BRt-N
REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Bob Haggy, a stocker at the new Powel l's Foodfa ir in Pomeroy, is one of the first of the
store's new employees to begin work. Haggy was a long-time Kroger employee, but when
the Pomeroy store closed , he was transferred to Marietta, a 100-mi te drive which he said
made it nearly impossible to continue working for the grocery chain . He wil l join 50 to 60
employees at the new Powell 's location. (Brian J. Reed)
store on Second Street, Fonh
Fonh said he has begun to app li cati ons. and we've_
said, but ·in a brighter and hire employees for the new . hired some stock people
more spacious sales space.
store. In . addition to the 20 and management personnel.
"Except for the interior sig- employees of the current but most of the hiring is still
nage, everything the customer Super-Valu store, another 30 to 10 come," Forth said .
sees here at the new Powell's 40 will be needed to fully staff "Those with particular job
store wjU be new," Fonh said. the bigger store. Lee Powell, ski lls who haven't yet
In addition to new case work manager of Powell's Super- applied are encouraged to
and shelving, the store will have Valu, said the store has received do so, but most of the hiring
will be done from applicanew flooring, new checkouts nearly 450 applications.
tions
already received."
and a newly-paved parldng lot
"We 've received plenty of

Fourth District Appeals candidates spend
thousands more than previously reported

Dotolla on Pace A6

BY

J. MtLES

LAYTON'

JLAYTON@MYDA ILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
:l SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A:3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A6

Editorials
Sports

B~

Weather

A6

© 2004 .Ohio Valley Publlohtnx Co.

POMEROY Follow
the money is more th an just
a slogan m politics or journalism.
Prior to the post primary
campaign expense re~ort
tiled April 9 at the Scmto
Board of Elections, it
appeared that Fred Crow III
had outspent his competi·
tion ,by a 10 to I margm in
the race against four other
Republican candidates for
the Fourth District Court of
Appeals. In Craw's pre-primary expense report tiled
Feb. ·19, he reported
$49,799 in expenditures.
Crow's
competition

Unclaimed funds
posted today

reported a fraction of this
including
the
winner,
Matthew Mcfarland .
Granted, the last few
weeks of any campaign are
usually the most expensive,
but every judicial candidate
. except Crow ·increased
spending nearly tenfold in
tile two weeks leading up to
the March 2 primary.
McFarland ·reponed -only
$5,610 in expenditures in
pre-primary expense report,
but his post campaign
expenditure report indtcates
that he spent an additional
$55,961 a total of
$61,571 which is the most
of any primary candidate
for this position. McFarland
loaned himself the bulk ·of

this money or $45, I00 after
the pre-primary expense
report was tiled. McFarland
has $21,425 in outstanding
debts to his campaign.
In a mere two weeks,
McFarland, a magistrate in
Scioto County, spent more
than $33,000 on mass mail"
ings
from
Strategic
Communications. He also
paid more than $21.188 to
the
Communication
Council who attempted . to
canvas votes from thousands of people via telephone. None of these
exp.:nditures were listed in
the pre-primary cam pai gn
expenditure report just a

Ple8SI SH Spend. A5

POMEROY - Does the
State of Ohio owe you money''
A Iist of .unclaimed funds
published in Tuesday's edition of The Daily Sentinel
inc ludes $193. 155.82. representing fund s in dormant
bank accounts. forgotten rent
and utility deposits. uncashed
checks and forgotten layaway
deposits - a ll belonging to
Meigs County residents.
In the past year. more than
$47.625 was turned over to
the Ohio Department of
Commerce's Division of
Unclaimed Funds. representing unclaimed funds for
Meigs Count y residents.
Those who find their name on
the list published today can
begin the process of claiming
their rnonev at the Division of
Unclaimed-Fu nds· website, at
www.com.state.oh .us. or by
submitting a claim co upon in
the newspaper advertisement.
When the divisiun receives
the coupon, a claim form will
be mailed. asking the
claimant for evidence supporting the claim.
..The
Di,·ision
of
Unclaimed Funds paid a
record $43.4 million last fiscal year to more than 36.000
current or former Ohioans:·
said Lt. Gov. Jennette
Bradley, director of the
Department of Commerce.
Thi s vear's unclaimed
fund s list for Meigs County
includes 2.005 accounts.

Slip necessitates full closure
of Ohio 124 near Antiquity ·
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MY DAI LYSENTI NEL. COM

POMEROY - State Route
124 (formerly State Rou te
338) in the Antiquity area
approximately 2.5 mi les east
of Racine. has been closed to
Ohio
all
traffic,
the
Department of Transportation
(ODOT)
District
I0
an nollnced Monday.
Stephanie Filson. ODOT
public information officer,
said that c Iasure of the road
was necessitated as the result
of a severe slip that has displaced pavement in the vicinity. The affected section of
roadway is 500 to 600 feet in
length, she reported.

··we have seen significant
rmwement at this location - a
drop of up to 18 inches in
some areas- and it continue s
to move,
said Filson .
"Mei gs County ODOT crews
were on site all weekend in
an effort to keep the road
open for motorists. At thi s
time. however. the department has decided to detour
traffic in order to protect the
safety of the traveling public."
The following detour is
posted for area motorists: the
new U.S : 33 (Ravenswood
Connector) to State Route
124 West.

Please see Slip, A5

\

Footprints to Footsteps
A special celebration lor molhers and lheir babies who
hove been delivered at l:folzer during 2003.
·
Sunday, April 25, 2004 • 2 PM • 4 PM
Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center

Gifts for Mom and Baby • Educational Information
Professional Photographer Available • Door Prizes • Refreshments

For more information, or to RSVP, please coli 1740) 446·5077 by April 2Jrd

Holzer Medical Center and Holzer Clinic

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holze1· Difference

www .holzer .org

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