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                  <text>Page 86. '• The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.~om

Woman fears her job depends
on getting her bosses dates

ACROSS

8 S&amp;L

protector
12 Gazpacho
13-Nabokov
novel
14 Divine
archer
15 Kind
of stick !&amp;"Tender pod
17 Stray dog
tB Tough

i

Dear

Abby

.DEAR
CONFUSED
TEENAGER: I'm sure it's
lonely. living in new surroundings. However, it's a mistake
to depend solely on one person
for your happiness. (It's also a
heavy responsibility to lay on
another person.)
It's time to find a sport, a
hobby or some other interest to
fill your time. I am sure you' II
hear from your girlfriend eventually, but do not get angry
with her or make her feel
guilty, or you'lllose hoc.
DEAR ABBY: My secon'd
husband, "Randy," and I have
four children between us -- my
two, ages 14 and 15, and his
daughter, "Katy," 5, and our
son, 'Timmy," 2. ·
Recently, I asked Randy if,
for my own personal keepsake,
we could have a professional
portrait taken ·of him and the
three children I bore. He
adamantly refused, saying
Katy would feel left out.
We have a fairly recent picture in our family room with
Katy in it. Timmy, however, is
not in the photo because he has
autism and refused to have his
picture taken that day.
Randy and fhave been ~u­
ing over this, and it's making
me resentful toward him and
my stepdau,ghter. (Katy doesn't live w1th us, but visits
every other weekend.)

from

48 Fixes a .
squeak
50 Large lot
51 Ms.
Thurman
52 Rocky
ledge
53 Sweater
material
54 Always,
to Poe
55 Superman
alias

Do you think I am selfish to
· want a picture • with just my
husband and MY three children? -- MAD STEPMOM
IN BEAUMONT, TEXAS
questions
DEAR MAD STEPMOM:. 20 Fidel's country
I'm not sure I'd call it selfish.
·21
-Lanka
However, it woull\ be enorDOWN
mously insensitive to the feel- 22 Cone bearer
23
Not
ings of the little girl who lives
1 Sixth sense
deserved
apart and gets to be with her 26 Rented
2 Fly thefather and siblings only every 29 Suds
3 Scl·li award
4 Pouched
other weekend. Look at it from 30 Hubbub
(hyph.)
animal
the child'g perspective, and
5
Island off
31
Slicker
you'll see your husband is
Naples
33 Ottawa prov.
right.
34 Units
6 Sappho's
Dear Abby is written by
of work
verse
Abigail Van Buren, also known 35 Tie up
7Moo
companion
as Jeanne Phillips, and was 36 Deadeye
Annie8 Thlg\t
founded by her mother.
38 Old VCRs
bones
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear 39WNW
9 Beat badly
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
opposite
10 Tiny speck
or P. 0 . Box 69440, Los
Angeles; CA 90069.

·.
50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 186
11 Okla. time ·34 11 not
35 Foundation
19 Before
37 Gist
20 Ta-ta in
38 Marsh
Turin
40 Evergreen
22 G-men
41
Puerto23 E.T.'s
transport
42 Space
preceder
24 Mama's
43 Knight's
warning
wile
(hyph.)
44 Ireland
25 Floppy
45 Spiritedcontents
ness
26 Sluggish
46 Grad27 Radiate
-school
28 Elcar 9!
._ major
"Ma~
47 Tint
Gyver"
30 Willow or 49·· Noncom
. birch
32 LP

you'll keep your friendships.
. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)Don'l expect immediate acknowledgement for a job you
do for another today and you
won't be disappoinled. You
will be compensated by this
perso n in larger measure in
due lime.
.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22}
- Spending funds lhat ha-

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

Your financial wherewithal
can be improved apprecialively in the year ahead. The
ways and means lo do so will
be provided by those very
persons

who

vou

have

knocked yoursci( out to be
helpful to in the past.
TAURUS (April 20-May
· 70) - The easiesl jobs at
work today might be snapped
wp by others, leaving you with
all the unpleasant ones to contend with. This will not go
unnoticed by the powers that
be, and you'll be duly rewarded.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- If you keep everybody cooperating with one another,
gossip or idle chatter meant to
disarm others won't gain any
legs. Without harmony the
project could collapse.
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- Don't break any plans
, you've made wilh friends today in order to take advantage
of what others are trying to
convince you would be more
fun . Keep your promises and

ven't come in ye1 on some-

thing frivolous today will be
regreued when what comes
ialer has 10 go to paymg for
these past acuons.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Showing appreciation will
mean a 101 to lhose who assist
you today. Don't step oul of
characlcr and forgel to be as
graleful as -you should 10
1hose who stand by your side.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22} - The very persons you
expect to be there for you today won't be anywhere
around when you need them.
However, keep doing your
best and a least expected
sour.ce will fill in where
needed.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21) - A situation that

1\1t:l&lt;.'t.' 'D "'
FLY I'N MY

has thus far not been working
out too well has a chance lo
improve today so ion~ as you
don ' t get overly· anx.1ous and
start sou nding off about
things . Give it a bi1 more
time.

·

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19} - A worldly objective for which you'll be striving today can be'fulfilled, but
you must show patience and
understanding or you could
alienate the very persons who
can &amp;rant your wish ~
AI.!UARms (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Treat others kindly to:
day. but don't act against your
best interests just to placate a

. Students can
learn a lot from
the newspaper about the
· world
in which they live. And
now is the
perfect time to bring
newspapers into the
Ia r

~

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by JUDD HAMBRICK

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News editor
POMEROY - There 's
no better time for "Cruisin'-Down the Years" than now.
After all, the students at
the Salisbury Elementary
School are counting .down
the days until the aged
school is closed for good
and productions aboard the

DtO SHE ~EE,., ,p.)~lOUS?
PRHENOI~ 1t) RE H~PP'-1?
OIOO"T HERE"~ LOOK.
A UTfL£ T1"-€D ~

5AD? pz,r~5\RAT(O ?~ ·
~~ULD 1 ~A VE :.AID
som~n&lt;IN&amp;' COULO I H"'E
F\'HD It ~ I r.OUU:li'H ·
~LEEP A WI~K ·!~

l'ltm\E R" ~ {)II"{ ,....~
BEMnfUL .. . BUT \oiHEN WE
REAtL' •EED THE LOVeD
o•E5 frATH.EREC AROU&gt;lD
I~ o• MaTHER'S oliC.HT.

elementary schools in the
Meigs Local District to the
spacious new building
located near Rutland .
For now, however, the
emphasis is on the final
S.S.
voyage · of the
Salisbury. The show is a
tribute to us ongmator in
the I 970s, the talented John

·Please see Salisbury, s

'

-&lt;
rll

EMS calls
in the paper a
thing of the past
BY J. MILES
Stall writer

lAYTON

POMEROY
If you're
ho spitalized,
don't
be
offended or hurt because
your minister doesn't visit
right away. . .
'
A new federal law concerning privacy may be the
reason for hi s absence.
The
federal
Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability
Act
(HlPAA) enacted in April
has changed the way many
medi cal age ncies and facilities dispense information .
The new privacy law is
the result of increasing public concern about the u se

and disclosure of health and
other information as technology makes access to all
type s of personal records
much easier.
Without a ·patient's or a
family member's authorization, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
is no longer allowed to
relca~e the names of people
it has tran sported or cared
for. In the past, the EtvfS has
released the names of
patients for publication in
newsp;~pers .

The Rev. Jack Noble of
the Trinity Church said it
was easier to visit hospitalized pari shioners before the
new policy.
He re~ently attempted to
visit a parishione~ at Holzer
Medical
Center
in
Gallipolis . Noble only knew
the person by a nickname
instead of her given name

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PAST IT" , Yo::'U l(.t.JQv..f"
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apartments were flooded.
Those
families
will
remain at the motel indefinit e ly, according to the
apartment complex manager, and have received
food vouchers from th e
American
Red
Cross.
Three families evacuated
from the apartmen t com plex are now sta yi ng with
re latives .
The Federal Emergency
Management Agency is
expected to arrive in th e

county later to assess flash
flood damage.
AEP blame s high winds
over the weekend for
downin g tree limbs and
power line s, leaving nearly 29,000 customers without e lectri city at the
hei g ht of the storm on
Sunday.
According to AEP's latest es~i mate s, 4,000 custOiner s throughout central
and southern Ohio remain
without electricity.

that was listed on hospital
records . Because he did not
the woman's first name, he
was not going to be allowed
to visit her.
"We sometimes get too
private," he said.
How ever, Noble was
allowed to see the woman
because · she had previously
given the hospital permission to publicly relea se her
status as a patient.
Before the new law, Noble
said a clergyman could walk
up to a ho spital ' s desk and
look through a Rolodex or
other log to find parishioners who were patients.
Now, patients must waive
certain
confidentiality
requirements allowing a
hospital to release their
names to any visitor.
If a person does not give
consent, even a wife or

Please see Law, s

3
7-9
10
10

4
5
5 .
6-7
~-

iCl 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Sarah Thomas, 4th 1r•de

Pqmeroy E-ory

Inside
• Southern Science
·Day, See page 2
• Time Out'for Tips,
See page2
• Meigs County Girl
Scout diary, See
page 3
• Court news, See
page 3

-

After.years
of re-building,
53 players strong
BY CARRIE ANN WooD

Stall writer
RACINE - Hard work to
rebuild the band program
paid off Monday night as 53
students were recognized at
the Southern High School
band bang uet.
The banquet began in the .
Charles
W.
Hayman ·
Memorial Gymnasjum with
a welcome by band booster
president, Kim Romi~e.
Jeanette Oldaker, mu~ic
instruc tor, led the invocation.
Guest
speaker
was
Margaret Foster Cleek, a
Southern alumni and a member of the first marching
band. Cleek talked about the
band staning in 1947 under
the - direction of Bernard
Krinke.
She held up old issues of
the school newspaper, "The
Echo" and read from the old
ISSUeS.

Cleek talked about a fund
she started in memory of
Mary Bradford Carson .
Carson was also an original
band member and a good
friend of Cleek 's. After
Carson passed away sever..U
years ago and Cleek learned
of Sou them's band program
twiddling, she wanted to
support the band and remem-

Jeanette Oldaker places a senior medallion around the
neck of Kenny McKnight as Brimdon Sturgeon, back, and
David Gloeckner watch. (Ca rrie Ann Wood)
ber a friend. The.fund will be that never leaves you."
She urged current tiand
used to support band activi members
to keep playing
ties.
school. "It keeps
after
high
"We were proud." Cleek
said of the original band
Please see Band, s
members. "It is something

•

•
1·\LRC:,. t\ I-II:.L, JU\C.~--,
eor-~c II' ~ w :, 11
"J'\:' &amp;G 1 (..01•\E;

Surgical .w eight loss with
a personal touch .

CN . :O, IT N&lt;D e&amp;. 1

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'

Mult&gt;erry Avenue in Pomeroy, seen here at its intersection with
Union Avenue, was hardest hit by weekend flash flooding.
Inland flood waters have receded, and the Ohio River crested
on Monday. .(Debora Kennedy)

~

~

WE HAVE WlfH U!l
fHI5 MORNIT'IGo THE

~

•

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Weather

~

----

" NEW KIND OF

0

-

1 Sections- 10 Pllps

Sports

""z:

INVENT

y

Mootly ounny, HI: 701, ·Low: 401

Index.

BEFORE THE 6AME WAS

. POMEROY - The Ohio
River at Racine· crested
Monday at 34.2 feet ,
according to Larry C irc le,
Lockmaster at Racine
Locks and Dam .
Meanwhile, American
Electric Power rep orted
I 3~ customers in the
Pomeroy "service area sti ll
without electricity as of
late Tuesday afternoon,
the re sult of high winds
accompanying heavy rains
over the weekend.
The late st ri se in the
river coincided with fla sh
flooding
throughout
Meigs_ and- surro unding
co untie s over Mother' s
Day weekend, and while
the waters from fl as h
floodin g have receded in
the Mulberry and Union
avenue a reas of Pomeroy
since rising Sunday, 'r esidents of a Pomeroy apartment co mpl ex remain out
of their home s.
Following
flooding
Saturday, the result of
nearly four inches of rain[all in three hours. 31 re sidents of the Colonial Park
apartment complex on
Mulberry Avenue were
evacuated to t.he Meig s
Motel when 14 newly-ren'
ovated
basement-Ie·"vel

.

'I

'(OU"RE THE
MANAGER .. SA'(
SOMETHING
PROFOUND.

REED

A matter of:privacy:
Southern band members
New law Pl'9tects. patients honored at banquet

fURN ITU~E

I Lli'JED ~EE•K• CI\TII'i
~€&amp;1!RDA' . BUT I ~rJT
Tl&gt; BEO WITH ~ WHOlE
NEW LI~T Of WO~~IE '· ..

"S.S. Salisbury" will be
hi story.
The showboat-themed
mu sical
produced
by
Sharon Hawley will be presented at 7 p.m. Thursday
and I p.m. Friday i~ the
gymnasium.
It will be the last show
for Salisbury students who
will be moving along with
hundreds more from the six

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

fOR All'T 01" PATIO

)

J.

Stall writer

Days at S~lisbury recalled
in musical production

some financial renegotiations

\\t't!

SoUP

Some residents
remain without
electricity

.

·need to take place firsl. Unless the discord is removed,
the goals will not be auained.

\Jtoll.., FMI~ ~-.. rnc.

R
S

Flood danger passing

The final journey on the S.S. Salisbury will take place Thursday and Friday at the Salisbury
· school. Ben Jacks, center standing, is interlocutor for the minstrel portion of the show
and endmen. left to right are Darby Gilmore, Scott Kennedy, Ben Jacks, Colby Hayes, and
Jacot&gt; 9unn, standing, and Shawn Hawley and Joey Blackston, front. (Charlene Hoeflich)

sorehead. You know how 10
do whal needs doing without
making any enemies.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20} -You won't chalk up
any points today with a friend
if you keep reminding this
person how much you have
done for him or her and how
little she or he has done for
you. Don't dwell in this
realm.
ARIES · (March 21-April
19) - In order for a collective effort 10 succeed loday,

, w-.mydailysentinel.com
'

The Newspaper
Has Class •••

WORD SCRIMMAGE- SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
· e

TUESDAY, MAY 13, 2003

successors

Astrograph
TuesdAy. May 13, 2003

Coming Thursday: Places to go, Things to do

40 Food llsh
41 Scarce
43 Diploma
46 Mortgage,
e.g.
47 Suffered

1 Canyon
comeback
5 Male swan

'

DEAR ABBY: I have a
problem at my workplace. My
two bosses are single men in
their early 30s. I am the only
female working at the company. Somehow, it has become
"my duty" to find single
women for them to date. This
has been going on for several
months, and they are unhappy
ADVICE
because none of the ladies I
· have set them up with have
worked out.
supply them with women. If
Yesterday, I was given a bad you're fired. · provide that
performance review, and I mfortnation to the labor board.
know it's because thcr women I Your employers are blackmailhave introduced them to have ing you, and their behavior is
rejected them.
contemptible.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 16Abby, how can I get them to
separate their personal desires year-old male currently living
from my office responsibili- in a boys' home. I' II be here
ties? I've tried telling them I for the next few months .
cannot be their personal dating Here's my problem: I tend to
service any longer, but that fall in love easily. During the
makes my office situation three months I've been here,
worse. The truth is, I'm run- my girlfriend, "Tracy," wrote
ning out of girlfriends to intro- me twice a day. I thought for
duce them to, and the JOb s1tu- sure we were in love. But I
ation in New York City doesn '~aven't received a letter from
allow me to quit. -- SICK OF her in more than a week!
BEING CUPID IN MAN- . Her excuse is she's busy
HATIAN
with school and a part-time job
DEAR SICK OF BEING -- plus, it's track season and
CUPID: You were well-inten- she's on the team. I understand
tioned in trying to fix your all that, but I'm still worried. I
bosses up, but solicitation and told Tracy how I feel but still
procurement were not in your haven't gotten a letter back.
JOb description. Document as What should I do now? -best you can the times and CONFUSED TEENAGER
places when you were asked to IN THE MIDWEST

Monday, May 12, 20031

I

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.

'

ToLL FREE (866) 821-4541 www.ccWL.INFo

�..
I
•
.

I

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather

• i Columbua l46'170' I

Southern Elementary sixth graders (Left to right) Jenny
Hunnell, Merri Collins and Katie Guinther show how a little
water in champagne and wine glasses can create different
musical notes. This liquid xylophone was quite a hit at Science
Fun Day last Friday. (J. Miles Layton)

'

: o •••~••~•

Time Out for Tips

More showers coming

Use folkways ~o promote tourism

Rai1

Sllowels T•lolms

Rurries

Srow

Ice

Wednesday ... Mostly
sunny. Highs m the lower
70s. West winds 5 to 10
mph.
W e d n. e s d a y
night.. .Becoming
mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers ... Mainly after midnight.
Lows in the · mid 50s.
Ch&lt;1nce of rain 40 percent.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday' night. .. Mostly
cloudy wi.t h &lt;1' cha.nce of
showers. Lows in the lower
50s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday ... A chance of ·
showers in the morning, oth~
erwise partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 60s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

An area of high pressure
c,entered
along
the
Mississippi River began to
liqild over the region from
the southwest, causing skies
clear
after
dark.
~emperatures at 5 a.m. were
in the middle 50s.
; The high will continue to
tmild over the region today.
Skies will be partly to mostly sunny. High temperatures
today will be near 70.
Partly cloudy skies are
e'll:pected tonight with lows
from the upper 30s to middle 40s. Clouds will be on
the increase .from west to
east Wednesday night as an
area of low pressure
approaches from the northwest. Highs will be in the
EXTENDED FORECAST .
lower 70s.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy.
There will be a chance of
showers both Wednesday Lows in the lower 50s and
1\ight and Thursday. Highs highs in the lower 70s.
Sunday... Partly cloud;Y.
Thursday are expected tq be
Lows near 50 and highs m
mainly iri the 60s.
the lower 70s:
: • WIATHIR FORECAST
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
: :ronight ... Mostly cleai.
hl)ws in the mid 40s. West Lows in the lower ·sos and
highs in the mid 70s.
winds 5 to 10 mph.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
tO.OOO

May 12,2003

Dow
.Jones
8,728.73

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+1.42

The term "folkways" refers
to how a group of ~ople live
their lives. Individuals who
live in the same area, have the
same religion or ethnic background, are related, work in
the same occupation or are
about the same age .and gender make up a folk group.
Within their cultural circle
they share traditions, knowledge, patterns of speech,
music, games, crafts, architecture, arts and beliefs. They
have a "consciousness of
kind" that is passed down
informally from one generation to another that is unique
to their lifestyle .
In the past folklorists studied traditional culture to help
preserve the history and ways
of an area. They were afraid
the distinctive customs, folk
art and folk songs of a particular group of people were
disappeanng; therefore, if
they studied the ways of that
people they could help keep
their culture alive.
Today folklorists look upon
. their work more as a way to
help understand a culture,
based U_Pon that culture's
"expresswns of traditions."
They have determined that all
areas of the country have

common and familiar to
them, can become fascinating
and attractive to others.
Tourism and community
development professionals
can use folklorists' insight
about cu ltural practices and
promote them as tourist
attractions. This can result in
building and sustaining comExtension munity and economic development.
unusu al folkways that are
Could this cultural promoindicative of their particular tion make an economic
region. Folklorists do not just impact on an area? Yes, it
historically recount how a can. Residents may !JOt realgroup lived. They explain ize that their "ordinary, everyhow a group "lives."
day ways" can draw people
Because of this uniqueness, into a . community.
It is
outsiders want to actually important · to remember that
experience how those people while tourists are experienclive. They want to do the ing the local lifestyle, they
things they do. They want to will be spending money on
see the things they see. They lodging, meals, attractions,
want to feel like the locals. In gasoline,-groceries, crafts and
other words, they want to souvenirs.
become a "part" of the comWhat can communities do
to capitalize ori this curiosity
munity for a little while.
Folklorists provide the about their cultural differresearch that can not only ences?
Chambers of
encourage awareness and Commerce,
Visitors'
appreciation for one's her- Bureaus, ·businesses, agenitage, but it can also help cies, civic groups, churches
instill ~ride and involvement · and. individuals can help supin ones community. Their port the local economy by
findings allow local residents providing wa~s in which
to see how things that are travelers can 'live" and do

Becky
Baer

FEB

High
' 8,743.47

MAR

Low
8,589.44

APR

MAY

-high: ,

7,000
.7~2.98

Jon. 14. 2000

Public
meetings
Tuesday, May 13

Wedn11day, May 14

lng on Rocksprings Road .

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Literary Club will
meet Wednesday, May 14 at
1 P.M. at the Pomeroy
Library. Following a catered
Tuesday, May 13
lunch, Ida Diehl will review
RACINE
"Parent 'Harry Potter" books by J. K.
Volunteer · and Heritage Rowling.
Nighf' will be observed from
Thursday, May 15
6 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
POMEROY
Meigs
Southern Elementary. The County Retired Teachers
fifth grade class will be pre- Association, noon luncheon
senting
"Granny at Trinity church room on
Remembers" and the sixth Second St. Luncheon to be
grade
class
will
do followed by a speaker,
"Mountains Are. a Feeling." Nichola Pickens Moretti,
Kindergarten through sixth Southeastern
Ohio
grade will have displays set
up from their Right to Read
Week projects.

Clubs and
Organizations

Becky Baer is an agent
with the Meis_s County
Extension Office with
Family and Consumer
Sci en c e sIC om m unit y
Development.

Local Stocks

Reader ServiCes

DuPonl- 43.64
· Premier- 9.90
AEP-25.69
Federal Mogul- .20
Rodcwell- 22.74
Arch Coal - 2t .30
USB- 22.40
Rod&lt;y Boots - 8.66
Akzo - 24.:i1
RD Shell ~ 44.54
PcmTech/SBC- 23.67 Gannett- 76.00
General Eleclric- 28.97 Sears- 28.10
Ashland Inc. - 30.94
GKNLY - 3.65
' Wai-Man -56.70
Plr&amp;T -16.5t
Harley D8l&lt;idson- 44.t2 Wendy's- 30.t7
Bank One- 37.90
Kroger- t4.52
·
WorthiQgton- t4.45
Bl.l- t2.56
Ltd. - t4.50
Daily stock reports are
Bob Evans - 25.99
NSC2t
.70
the
4 p.m. closing
Ellrgwarner- 59.38
Oak H~ F1n811Cia1-24.66 quotes of the previous .
dhamplon - 2.8t
day's transactions. prdCharming Shops- 4.90 OVB - 22.52
vided by Smith Partners
d;ty Holding- 29.55 BBT - 333.45
Peoples- 24.2t
. at Advest Inc. of
Q:11- 22.50
Pepsico - 43.68
Gallipolis.
00-16.57
I"

train
club holds contest
..

':ATHENS
- A photo contfi&gt;t, open to the public, will
tie held from I 0 a.m. until 2
~.!Jl.
Saturday at the
University Mall in Athens.
; . The contest is sponsored
li)l The Railroad Model and
!:Jjstorical
Society
of
Southeastern Ohio, Inc.
: :There will be several age
cinegories with awarded to be
rit11de in all classes. Photos
cil!l be of a railroad building,
qir, track, steam and diesel
16Comotives, or anything rail-

road related. All photo sizes,
framed or unframed, black
and white, or color, are weicome.
Photo classes are black and
white, color, and oldies. The
oldies class is to consist of
photos acquired over the
years. Entries are $1 per
photo and all photos, except
the oldies, must have been
taken by the owner.
Eor more information, q.ll
740-594-4026.

_.:________'

cusPs 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published
every
afternoon,
Our main concern in all stories Is to be Monday lhrough Friday. ttt Court
accurate. If you knoW of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
slory. call the newsroom at (740) 992· poslage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associaled Press
and
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Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Ouf'maln number Is
Poatmaater: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
tions to The Daily Sentinel, ttt
Department extensions are:
court Street. Pomeroy. Ohio
45769.
Correction Polley

News
Edllor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. t2
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.'

Coordinator of Bicentennial
activities, discussing upcoming events for the year.
Reservations,
99.2-3214.
Guests welcome.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us. .
'

POMEROY -· The Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct childhood immunizations clinics from 9 to 11
a .m. and 1 to 3 p.m. Take
-children's shot records.
Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian. \
·

~

David C. Andrews
.July 10, 1981-May 5, 1880

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you ·

throughout time. ·
Always in our hearts,
lohn and Mona Andrews and

''

: family

,

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are selected, your ~
carrier will win dinner
for two at
fiiAJ

pJP.t,.

Pizza Hut
compliments of
Pizza Hut

address and phone number. '

l.) Include your carrier's name, your route nuniber

or subscriber number.
3.) In !10 words or Jess, tell us why we should choose
your c.arrler.
Mall your entries to: Paul6arker
Qalllpolls Dally Tribune
626 Third Avenue
OaHlpolls, OH 4~1

'

~-:--------,--..:.__-----~-·-------------..;:.._--t•' - •-

www.pointpleasantwv.org

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Mason County Cha.mber of Commerce
4

www.masoncountychamber.org
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

BUSINESS TRAINJNG

www.meigscountyohio.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

ENTERTAINMENT

Precious Memories

www.photosonchina.com

Charter Communications

www.charter.com

AGRICULTURE

WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS
Herbalife lndf!pendent Distributor

BlueStarr Network

www.bluestarr.net

Jim's Farm Equipment

.

www.j!msfarmequipmenLcom
HOME IMPROVEMENT
· Quality Window Systems, Inc.

.

iNww.qualitywindowsystems.com

MAKE YOUR BUSINEss· A HIT!!

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Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in our

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Please publish my Iribute in the special Memorial Page on Friday. May 23.

State

Point Pleasant Register

www.holzerclinic.com

·www.herbsndieLcom

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL.,WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED (I per.on per picture per ad)
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DEADLINE: THURSDAY, 415~ Noon

Cit)'

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Holzer Clinic

heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery Slill inspire us all, and !he memory of your
smi le 1111s us wilh joy and laughter.
7. Though oul of sigh!. you' ll forever be in my heart and mind.
8. Thedays may come and go, bullhe limes we shared will always remain .
9. May Ihe ligh1 of peace shine on your face for Clcmily.
10. May Gqd 's angels guide you and protect you lhroughout time. .
I I. You were a lighl in our life!hat bumsforever in our heans.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all lime.
I 3. You are in our !hough~ and prayers from morning lo night and from
yeano year.
14. We send !his message wilh a loving kiss for elemal rest and happiness.
15. May the Lord bless you with Hisgraces and warm. loving hean.
·

Phone num\JI'r

• The Daily Sentinel

www.holxer.org

will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we shared were sweet I long to sec you again in God's

Address

www.mydailytribune.com

Holzer Medical Center

His hand.
4. Thank you for !he wonderful days we shared 1ogc1her. My prayers

NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

MEDICAL

'
Name of deceased-----------.,.--------::
y~----1.) Send uayourname,

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

accompany your tribule.
I . We hold you mour llloughL\ and memories forever.
2. May God cradle you in His ilJlTlS, now and forever.
J Forever missed, never forgotten. May God hold you in the palm of

Monday, May 12-13

Nominate them for

City of Point Pleasant

Gallipolis Career College ·
If you wish, select one of the following FREE verses below to

Other events

·"'

Norris Northup Dodge

www.tumpikeflm.com

On Friday, May 23, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
·forgotten. They will be similar to the sample IJelow:

:Newspaper ·~.
~

•

POMEROY
Cases
resolved in. the Meigs
County Court of Judge Steve
Story between April 15 and
April 23 are as follows:
Robert S. Harri~ . Long •
Bottom. failure to control,
$100 and costs; John A.
Williams. Racine, expired
operator's license, $100 and
costs; Jennie . L. Adams,
Canal Winchester, traftic
cant dev/signs; $20 and
costs; Janice M. Baker,
Reedsville, tinted glass, '$20
and costs: W. Barker,
ParkersbLirg, W Va., speeding, $30 and costs;
Tiffany L. Bill, Murion,
speeding, $50 and costs;
David E. Bills, New Port,
seatbeJt, $30 and costs;
Robe1t
E.
Bishop,
Middleport. equipment misuse, $20 and costs ; Steven C.
Boso, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
seatbelt-passenger, $20 and
costs; Patrick L. Bumgarner,
Columbus, seatbelt $30 and
costs; Marianne R. Carsey,
Middleport, stop sign, $20
and costs; Zacharia C. Casto,
Ravenswood, W.Va. speed.;;
ing, $30 and costs; Sean ~~
Condren, Charlotte, N.C. ,
speeding, $50 and costs;
Marcy
R.
Cr"ig,
Middleport, parking on '
highway. $20 and costs; ·
Peggy Cutter, Fishers, Ind.; ·
speeding, $30 and costs! ·
Timothy
J.
Deruyter~:
Annapolis, .Md., $3q amt
costs; Justm T. Diddle,
Racine, tinted glass, $20 and .
costs;
· :·
Leigh C. Dooley, Iii, ;
Olmstead, speeding, $30 anq .
costs; Max. A. Eichinger,
Racine, speeding, $30 311d.
costs: Carol S. Evans, ·
Athens, speeding, $30 and ·
costs: Alicia M. · Fiffe; .
Newark, seatbelt, $30 and.
costs; Richard S. Frame;
Athens, seatbelt, $30 and·
costs; Timothy P Gallagher, .
Hur.ricane, W.Va., speeding; ·
$30 and costs.

COMMUNITY

AUTOMOTIVE

Do You Just
Your Sentinel

l '

The Daily Sentinel

Court News

Southern Daisy
MaKayla Findley earned Girl Fick, Kristin Fick. Lindsey ·A movie was shown about eat- Roll this past nin weeks:
Troop 1292
Spons. Games and Sports, Putman, Jessie .Sampson, and ing healthy which completed the Hannah
Cleek,
Jordao
The troop went to the Just for Puppets-Dolls-Play, and Stitch Rachael Markworth.
Try-It, Eat Right, Stay Healthy Anderson, Chelsea Smallwood,
Girls Health Day and had an Together. Martina .Anns· earned
Reedsville Junior
for the above girls. Paige Cleek Nikki
Lawson,
Hailey
award celebration. Membe!l Girl Sports and Game and
Troop 1042
narrated the movie and talked to Ebersbach, Amber Hockman,
watched a "Veggie Tales•· movie Sports. Haley Linkous and
Members have just finished the girls about proper nutrition. J ~nnifer Payne, and Joyce
and ate snacks. The girls Miranda Hawley both earned Fun and Fit and Highway to . Connie Taylor, assisted by her Romines.
·
received the patches they earned Girl Sports.
Health badges and now we are daughter Cayla Taylor, played
Hannah Cleek, Christian
in a decorated gift bag. On April
Girls also received patches for busy working on the Fil&gt;t Aid games to complete the Playing Woods, Jennifer Payne, Stacy
19, the troop went to visit the going to Friendship Festival in patch. We are creating our own Around the World Try-It.
Macomber, Hailey Ebersbach,
Brownie Troop 1120 at the March, Health Day patch, and '' personal first aid bo/(es.
The Fly-Up Ceremony is Amber Hockman, and Chelsea
~cine Library to learn more Zink the Zebra patch that goes
We are busy planning some scheduled for June 8th from I to Davis attended the Just 4 Girls
about Brownie Girl Scouts. · · along with the Diamond pate~. outings and fun stuff to .do. 3 at the Trinity Church Bethany Health Day. They earned their ·
Hanisonville Brownie
Ashley Deem got her prize Jor Anyone who is
Building. The girls will have a Stress for Less Badge. The troop
Troop 5222
learning the GS Law this week.
intrested in the Reedsville area tea for their mothers at this time is currently working on their
The trooP has been working At the last meeting Hannah King we meet from 6 to 7:30 p.m. , which will comRlete their "Women and . Girls Health
on Hobbies, Healthy Habits, earned hers. The rest of the girls Monday evenings at the Manners Try-It.
Booklet" for Black Diamond
Animals, and Colors and are working h:ird to learn the Reedsville Church of Christ.
The next meeting will be on Council patch. The troop is also·
Shapes. A ceremony is planned Law.
., Pomeroy Brownie
May 13 at Pomeroy Elementary working on Food Power. The
for May 23.
•
The following girls went to
Troop 1271
· School at the regular time.
troop watched a video about the
Southem Brownie
"Fun in the FootHills:; Brittany
Six girls from Pomeroy
Middleport Junior
food pyramid, food labels, and
Troop 1120
Cogar, Ashley Deem, Tara and Brownie Troop 1271 attended
Troop 1276
healthy eating.
The troop went to the Health Sarah Eakins. MaKayla Findley. the Just 4 Girls Health Day at the
The troop welcomed three
Hailey Ebers bach attended
Fair in Middleport. Attending Hannah King, Natalie Michael, Middleport Church of Life 1ransfers this month: Kerri King's Island. Girl Scout Day
were: Brittany Cogar, Ashley and
Shawnella Patterson. Family Life Center on April 5 VanReeth, Johnna Lydic, and She met her cousin, Caroline
Deem, Sarah and Tara Eakins, Drivers were Cheryl King anq and worked on the Healthy Samantha Pridemore. Amber Dill from Dayton, who is a
MaKayla Findley, and Hannah Shirley Cogar. Alisa Findley Habits, Eat Right, Stay Healthy Ebersbach also rejoined the Brownie in the Dayton council.
King. They learned about good went as a helper.
and My Body Try-It~. It was a troop.
. ·
· Amber Ebersbach also attended.
health habits and the dangers of
Girls earned "Space Explorer" very successful and informative
The troop has been working
Several sixth graders are
drugs and alcohol. They earned and "Sound of Music." They event and was enjoyed by all on "In the Zone: Living Drug working on their Bridging for .
the Council's Health Patch.
also earned parts of "Listening to who attended.
Free" booklet which is a part of Cadettes with sister troop 120K ,
On April 19, the troop had a the Past" by going to Robbins
At the regular troop meeting the work for The Sign of the They met with Cadette Troop
regular troop meeting at Racine Crossing and learning about how on April 8, Becky Baer of the World. They are working on the 1208 and are planning on doing
Library. For this meeting the their ancestors lived back in the Meigs County Extension Office Model Citizen badge. Irene Dill, the Daisy Tea as part of the
Southern Daisies' came to work early 1800's. They enjoyed a presented a program on healthy originally from Canada, visited required steps for bridging.
on their Bridging patch and train ride and visiting Burger · !Oods using the Food Pyramid to the troop and told the group
A May ceremony is being
helped with the opening and King to eal and play in the play demonstrate the types and about her growing up and living . planned. The troop is also going
closing of the meeting. The troop area.
amounl~ of food that you should in Canada. She became a United to COSI in May.
The troop
had a World Association Pin cerEastern Brownie Troop
eat to stay healthy.
States citizen last year in which it meets from 4:30 to 6 p.m., every
emony and a Court of Award
Members are now meeting at
Amanda Grant was a guest at took her two years to complete. other Monday at the Middleport
ceremony.
the old church on Riebel Road in the meeting.
She also had many souvenirs Church of Christ.
The Daisies got the petals they -Chester. The girls worked on the
As a Comunity Service pro- and money from the country.
Cadette Troop 1208
had earned for the last few Black Diamond Coal Try-It and ject, the girls decided to send a
The troop recently had a sleep
During the month of March,
months. Brittany Cogar, Ashley learned about Earth Day. On package containing Girl Scout over. Reggie Robinson came to Ericka Cogar and Chalsie
Deem, Sarah and Tara Eakins, April25,the girls took a field trip Cookies and other needed items talk to the group about living Manley have worked and earned
Hannah King, Shawnella to the Chester Courthouse where to John Hill, son of one of the drug free. The troop worked on a their "Computers in Every Day
Patterson, Natalie Michael, and Pat Holter told them of its histo- leaders fanner Girl Scouts. John scrapbook that they are prepar- Life" IPP and "The Play's The
Chelsea Holter earned the fol- ry and showed them the museum is presenily serving in Iraq with ing to send to the USS Carl Thing.".
lowing try-its: Around the items. Then they went to the the Marines.
Vincent ship deployed in the
Chalsie Manley attended
World, Sports and Games, Girl .cemetery to make tombstone
Refreshments were served 'by" Pacific. Every girl had her own King's Island Girl Scout Day~
Sports, Her Story, and Safety rubbings and concluded the day Carly Taylor and Olivia Cleek.
page filled with good wishes to with her family.
Sense.
with a picnic and games in the
Due to softball practice on the the ship crew and told a little
The troop is currently working
Sarah and Thra Eakins also Commons.
regular meeting night, the sec" about herself. This was a great on bridging requirements with
earned the Sounds of Music and
Each of the following girls ond monthly meeting was held community service project for the sixth graders of Junior troop
Art to Wear. Hannah King also who attended earned the on April 26 at the Pomeroy the girls and a requirement for 1276. A Court of Awards is
earned Science Wonders, Earth "Listening to the Past" Try-It: Library. Attending were Ashley The Sign of the World. The girls being planned for. May.
is .My Home, . and All in the Katie J(eUer, Niki Gilbride, Sam Ashford, Carly Taylor, Olivia created their own jewelry and a
Jessanne Steinmetz became a
Family. Shawnella Patterson Cline, Danielle Cline, Paige Cleek, Maggie Smith, Caitlyn friendship bracelet.
,
member !lf the troop. She attendalso earned Puppets-Dolls-Play, Cline, Molly Dunlap, Chelsey Will, Sydney Walker, Danielle
Little gifts were handed out to ed the overnight "In the Zone" at
Math Fun, and Sounds of Music. Curtis, Aliyah Gantt, Kendra Walker and a guest, Sara Klein. the girls getting on the Honor Hocking College.

Community Calendar

POMEROY · - . Meigs
County
Board
of
Elections, 8 :30 a.m .,
board office.
SYRACUSE ...!.. Racine
Board of Public Affairs will
meet at 1 p.m . at the
Council Chambers at the
Racine Village Municipal
. Building.
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees 7 p.m .
at the town hall.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township trustees, 6:30
p.m. at the township build-

\

things the way the locals do.
They can share their tradilions with visitors by sponsoring cultural festivals,
activities,
recreational
reunions, concerts, exhibits
and museum displays. Each
of these venues can highlight
pieces of everyday life that
1s common to the area.
Tourism offices and
Convention and Visitors
Bureaus can disseminate
travel brochures and materials that emphasize how
tourists can experience the
everyday life of the folks in
that community.
The Calendar of Events
letting travelers know
when cultural activities
will be happening , can be
posted on the tourism website and given as a companion piece for the Vi'sitors'
Guide. 'All members of the
community can use their
folkways to promote themselves and their region.
Why not take a(!,vantage of
them?

.

'

Meigs County Girl Scout Diary

~·ld !44'114' I •

Sumy Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Page3.'
.Thesday, May 13, 2003

'

'

'
Sixth graders at Sout~ern
Elementary demonstrate the
power of gravity by pushing a free flowing car clown an erector set Friday at Science Fun day. (J. Miles Layton)

Local News

The Daily sentinel

Th~sd~y, May 13, 2003

·•

Southern Science ·Day

Wednesday, May 14

..

Page2

Local News··

~

•

•

a day.

�'·

r

•

The Daily Sentinel
1

'

•
•
0 1n1on

Page _4

:fuesday, May 13, 2003

Tuesday, May 13, 2003 ·

Obituaries
Mary M.
llohnson

Th,e Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

; MARIEITA - Mary M.
fohnson, 85, of Mariena,
aied Monday, May \2, 2003
!II the Marietta Memorial
Qospital.
~ She was born Jan . I, 191 8
!I Meigs County a daughter
of . the late Charles and
Harriett Jones Ours . She was
a. member of the Bel pre
Church of Christ and was a
homemaker.
· She is survived by a son,
Roben Johnson and wife ,
Gwen, of Kings Mountain ,
N.C .; a daughter, Phyllis
Blazer and husband, Howard ,
of Belpre; a sister Gladys
peem of Middlepon; six
!randchildren:
Debbie
Reenabacker, Teresa Parsons,
Teresa White, Shad Johnson,
I.isa West, and Jennifer
Johnson; and nine great ·
grandchildren.
·
" In addition to her parents,
she was preceded in death by
b.e r husband, Ernest Johnson ,
!\fld son, Ronald Johnson.
, ServiCes will be at II a.m.
9,0 Thursday, May 15, 2003,
a~ the Leavitt Funeral Home
in Belpre with Evangelist
!ton Laughery officiating.
" Burial will follow at Sunset
Memory Gardens . ·
' Visitation will be from 6 to
9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Carl Esposito

Publisher

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

-

" '\70,..•,- 'THIN~ OF IT A,o; A,-~..._ C::.U'T FOR TH.'E

NATIONAL VIEW

What matters
lmporfance of keeping
Title IX strong
,

I .

.

.• Albuqu~rque Journal, on Title IX and female war
heroes:
Size doe so ' t matter. Neither does gender.
'These maxims have been proven in the three
decades since passage of Title IX , the law that forced
schools toward parity in athletic opportunity for
women athletes.
~The Women 's National Basketball Assoc iation just
drafted Jordan Adams - a University of New Mexico
fi'rst. Before Title IX , UNM had no "star" like Adams;
women played the game for love in tiny Carlisle Gym
-. with no chance to shoot for fame, schol;uship
ll10ney or a profes sional basketball career....
Before Title IX, few Americans, let alone women,
played soccer. Now, Mia Hamm is a hou sehold name
and girls ' soccer teams number in the thousands, a
number that likely will swell as a result of the exuberapt "Bend It Like Beckham," the current movie about
t'!l'o Engli sh girls who look to America for ··a national
league spot ....
-Now, a federal commission report on Title IX concludes that clear guidelines on the enforcement of this
important civil nghts law are needed to prevent the
cutting of men's programs, a disfavored prac tice for
which Title IX is needlessly blamed.
'Clarity of enforcement is key to keeping the law
strong. Too much good has come of this law to weaken It.
'

GUEST COLUMN

·TiVhats holding you back?
.Choosing to wear a safety
belt is a personal decision ,
but Ohio's safety belt compliance rate affects us all.
Those affected may be passengers in the car with you,
or other drivers on the road.
The m1ss1on of State
Highway Patrol and the
'What's holding you back?'
campaign is to ensure the
safety of all motorists on
Ohio's roadways .
:Last year, more than half
of all Ohioans who died on
our roadways in motor vehicle crashes were unbuckled.
While a safety belt may not
have prevented all of these
deaths, experts predict it
would have saved many.
A statewide safety belt
usage survey conducted by
• the governor's Highway
Safety Office revealed that
70.3 percent of Ohio's
motorists are buckling up.
While this is an increase of
6.1 percent from the previ ous year, it is still lo":'er in
comparison to . many states
tl):at have safety belt usage
rates of 80 percent or highef.•·
:Additionally, the age
·group with the lowest percentage of safety belt usage
iS: those aged 15 to 25. This
age group represents the
highest rates of injury in
traffic crashes over all age
groups. Wearing a safety
belt pn Ohio's roadways
cOuld save so many of these
precious lives .
·Adults who don 't buckle
up are sending children the
message that it is not import&lt;Jnt to wear a safety belt.
Children mode l adults'
behavior. Resea rch shows
tliat whe n a driver Js
• u)lbuckled, 70 percent of the
tiJne, children ridin g in the
vehicle will not be buckled
ei ther. For a child, a 30mile-per: hour crash is like
falling from a third story
window.
One fact remains: Wearing
a seat-belt saves lives and
reduces injury. According to
the
National
Traffic
Administration ,
wearing
yo'ur safely belt doubles
your chance of survivi ng a
cras h without serious injury.

Lt. Dick
Grau

Children who are in proper
child restraint seats .survive
90 percent of crashes.
With this in mind, I am
asking all Ohioans to buckle
up. In an effort to save lives
and reduce injuries, troopers
will increase safety belt
enforcement, the patrol
hopes to educate the publi c
about safety belt usage by
joining the national 'What' s
hoiding you back?' safety
belt campai gn.
During thi s year's campaign period , May 19-June
I , troopers have adopted a
zero tolerance policy on all,
safety belt violations. Any
driver who has an enforcement contact with the patrol
and is not wearing a safety
belt will be issued a citation.
· Society as a whole is
affected by safety belt
usage. Insurance and health
care costs are significantly
hi gher crash victims who
choo se not to wear a safety
belt. Health care providers
spend
valuable
and
resources carin g for patients
who could have prevented
or reduced their injuries
with a click of their safety
belt. In addition. price less
lives are lost.
The National Center for
Stati stics and Data finds that
man y of the motori sts
injured because they choose
not to · wear a safety belt
have insufficient insurance .
Taxpaye rs end up paying 85
percent of the health care
costs for patients being
treated. for . injuries as a
result of not buckling up.
If you ' re not wearing a
seat belt - what's holding
yo u back?
( Ll. Dick Grau is commander of the Gallia -Mei8S
Hi8hway Parrot Post. ) '

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''

~4::t-\-

"n''.INK. OF tT ....-; YFt.le-EN\?\IVE eC.OI""ON'\\C:~."

'

.Bennett should join Wolf's anti-gambling fight
After former Education
Secretary Bill Bennett comes
to terms with his own gambling problem, he should join
his fellow moralist Rep. Frank
Wolf (R-Va.) m trying to
reverse the spread of legalized
gambling in the nation.
Wolf is a.moralist in the best
sense of the word. He doesn't
just write and talk about morality -- or scold, as has been
Bennett's tendency. '
Wolf works for what's right.
He recently traveled to
Ethiopia to bring attention to a
raging new famine; he sponsored legislation to halt prison
rape; he tried to persuade the
Bush administmtion to protest
human rights abuses in China.
He has also traveled the world
on human rights inspection
missions.
For nearly a decade, Wolf
has been Congress' leading
anti-gambling crusader. It's
been an uphill struggle, as state
after state has become "addicted," as he puts it, to revenue
. raised by lotteries and casino
gambling.
In an interyiew, he refused to
comment on Bennett's newly
disclosed gambling problem.
"I don' t comment on people;·
even my opponent in an election," he said. "I like to talk
about the issues."
Bennett, author of numerous
books on moral topics -- the
1993 ''The Book of Virtues"
(Touchstone), on the inspirational side, the 1998 '"The
Death
of
Outrage"
(Touchstone) on the critical -was exposed this "{eek by
Newsweek
and
the
Washington Monthly as a
problem gambler.
As the two publications
reP.?rted, be may have lost $8
rrullion over several years,
sometimes $500,000 in a single visit to Las Vegas or
Atlantic City, mainly playing
slot machines or video poker.
Bennett disputed the total
size of his losses. At first, he

Morton
Kondracke

defended his gambling in terms
he would never apply to other
flaws -- such as adultery,
cohabitation and divorce in his
200 I book ''The Broken
Hearth: Reversing the Moral
Collapse of the American
Family" (Doubleday).
He said he didn' t see his
behavior as a moral issue and
that he was not breaking the
law or endangering his family\ finances by "betting the
milk money."
But..after a day in the headlines, he issued a terse statement repeating the fact that
he'd broken no laws, but
acknowledging, "I've gambled
too much. My gambling days
are over."
Assuming he means it, that 's
a good beginning. But Bennett
could do worse than to get
together with his friend Wolf
and sign up to join the anti·
gambling movement.
Various studies indicate that
there are somewhere between
1.5 · million and 5 million
"problem" or "pathological"
gamblers in the country.
Many do bet the milk money
and throw themselves and their
families into bankruptcy, losing their jobs and marriages.
One study estinnated that I0
percent of chronic gamblers
attempt suicide at some point.
Frank Fahrenkopf, president
of the American Gaming
Association, the casino lobby,
draws a distinction between
"destination gambling," which
he represents and says "is capital intensive and provides good
jobs," and "convenience gam-

· bling," like lotteries, that don't.
Indeed, I know personally
that my old hometown, Joliet,
Ill., has been transformed by
riverboat gambling revenue
from a near-dead shell into a
vibrant community with good
schools, low taxes and a rich
cultural life.
In general, though, Wolf says
that gambling. is a scourge.
"Look at Atlantic City," he
says. "It was in decay. They
sold gambling there as a way to
bring it back to life. Have you
been there? Two blocks off the
boardwalk. it's still decay. ·
"Economically, most good
companies don't locate where
there's gambling. You don't
find high-tech companies
g&lt;;-ing to Las Vegas or Atlantic
City.
"Wherever gambling goes,
you find increasing crime -either because some,body 's
embezzling or conunitting robberies to pay debts," Wolf said.
Hi s foremost objection is
that "gambling preys on the
poor. It exploits .them. It produces no tangible good for the
nation. If you spend $500 gambling, it's $500 you didn 't
spend on clothes for your children or fixing your car. It huns
the clothing store and the auto
mechanic."
This winter, Wolf aroused
the 1re of Republicans m
Maryland by testifying against
his friend Gov. Bob Ehrlich's
plan to introduce slot machines
at race tracks to help close the
state's budget deficit.
He did so, he said, "because
if there are slots in Mary land,
there will be great pressure to
bring gambling to Virginia."
The Maryland Legislature
rejected slots, but, Wolf said,
"the fight is far from over."
Maryland represents one victory
for Wolf's
side.
Massachusetts also rejected
slots this year, and TIIinois Gi;JV.
Rod Blagojevich (D) has
rejected calls for new casino
licenses.

Over the past 30 years, however, legalized gambling hils
boomed -- and, with it, the
political power of pro-gambling interests.
In the 1970s, casino gambling existed only in Nevada
and Atlantic City, and seven
states had lotteries. Now, casinos exist in 28 states, including
American-Indian reservations
in 23 stal!!s; arid 38 states and
Washington D.C: have lotteries~

From 1982 to 2001; the
amount bet in casinos has
jumped from $101 billion to·
$755 billion and lottery betting
has grown from $4 billion to
$58 billion.
. Internet gambling, ·.
a growmg menace, may
account for $2 billion.
Politically, total contributions from gambling interests
to federal · candidates have
grown from $1.5 million in
1992 to $14 million last year,
according to the Center for
Responsive Politics.
"When I first came 10
Congress in 1980." Wolf said,
"nobody wanted to be associated with gambling. Now, there's
a gambling caucus."
He admits, ''There is no antigambling caucus." Last year,
when he proposed ah amendment to study the effects of
American-Indian gambling on
nearby communities, it l&lt;i&amp;t
273-151.
A bill by former Rep. Tom
Coburn (R-Olda.), the former
University of Oklahoma foothal~ coach, to forbid betting on
college sports, which Wolf is
sponsoring, has yet to make it
out of conunittee.
"I wouldn't say we're losing.
I wouldn't say we' re winning,"
Wolf told me. "We'll win in the
end," But he needs the kind of
forceful help that Bennett
could provide. And it would
help Bennett, too.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper of Capitol HilL)

'

Bush can stop· Democratic filibustering
It 's doubtful the names
Miguel Estrada and Priscilla
Owen would be a part of any
lunch counter or barroom conversation. Senate Democratic
filibustering of these presidential nominees to federal circuit
judgeships is of little interest
outside of Washington, D.C. -·
even though the Democratic
power grab that these nomi•
nees are a part of is not authorized by the Constitution.
Many Americans hardly
know most, if any, of the
names of the federal district of
circuit judges in their areas.
Yet, the great majority of cases
h\!fore these judges, often
affecting the lives of many of
us, are decided in these lower
courts. The Supreme Coun
chooses to hear only a few
more than 70 cases a year.
In fact. how many citizens
know anything about how
extensive the Democrats '
obstruction of the confirmation
process is? For example: This
1s the ftrst time in American
history that circuit court judges
(a level just below the Supreme
Coun) have been filibustered.
The Constitution authorizes a
majority of Congress to
"adyise and consent" to the
president's choices, but these
filibusters are requiring 60
votes - more than a 51-49
majority - to· allow the entire
Senate to vote up or down on
the nominees.
It is up to the president to follow Thomas Jefferson 's
advice: "I know," ·Jefferson
said in an 1820 letter to
WiUian1 C. Jarvis, ''(there is)
no safe depositary of the ulti-

Nat
Hentoff

mate powers of sociery, but the
people themselves; and if we
think them not enlightened
enough to exercise their control
with wholesome discretion, the
remedy is not to take it from
them, but to infolJll their, discretion by education. This is
the •true corrective of abuses of
constitutional power."
Just a.~ a principal used to be
the head teacher m a school, so
a president - when he recognizes the national need to educate the people on an issue that
affects the entire country becomes the head teacher of
the United States. I am old
enough to remember how
elt'ective Fmnldin D. Roosevelt
was in that role. My family,
like many. others, never missed
one of his conversations with
us' on the radio.
Similarly, George W. Bush
can redeem the constitutional
confirmation process for federal judges by ·going on primetime television and challenging
the Senate's Democmtic leadership to show where ·in the
Constitution they fmd the right
to filibu ster these nominations.
The•president would do well
to also point to the times when
the
Senate
Judiciary

'

Committee itself - when
either
Republicans
or
Democrats are in the majority
- has refused to even hold
hearings, or to send nominees
to the floor, for votes by the
entire Senate. Anicle ll,
Section II of the Constitution
says clearly that the president
nominates "by and with the
Advice and Consent of the
Senate." Not the advice and
consent of the Senate Judiciary
Committee alone.
And m No. 76 of the
Federalist· Papers - a colleclion often cited by the Supreme
Court as a reliable road map to
the Constitution - Alexander
Hrunilton says plainly that the
"advice and consent" responsibility is to be exercised by "an
entire·branch of the legislature"
- not just by a single commit·
tee. H.amilton also warned
about ''the spirit of cabal and
intrigue". that can be attendant
on getting nominations confirmed.
A glaring current example of
intrigue under Senate rules but not the rule of the
Constitution - was the move
in March by the two
Democratic senators from
Michigan - Carl Levin and
Debbie Stabenow - to block
every Bush nominee to the federa! judiciary from Michigan,
including four circuit coun
selections. Under the "blue
slip" rule, a home state senator
can try to kill a nomination
and, now, these senators want
to do it wholesale.
'Jie president, on prime-time
televiston, should also challenge Democratic Senate

Minority Leader Tom Daschle,
who says of his party's blocking of Judge Pricilla Owen to a
circuit coun seat that "her
record is so e~gious ihat we
have no chmce but to ftlibuster."
The . core of
Democratic opposition to
Owen is her record on being
conscientious about the right of
parental consent to abortion by
teen-agers. But, in recent poUs,
the majority of Americans,
including Democrats, approve .
of parental consent. Are they
· being "egregious"?
Sen. Charles Schumer, a
leading member of the ·
Democratic posse, says he and
his colleagues filibuster out of
respect ''to .the sacredness of
the Constitution and what the

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REED

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MIDDLEPORT
Middlepon officials have
begun · targeting unsightl y
properties with tall gmss and
abandoned, unlicensed vehicles, according to Mayor
Sandy Iannarelli.
Iannarelli, at Monday's regular meeting of Middleport
Village Council, said she has
spent several days in the past
week trying to contact absentee land owners, including
banks, mortgage companies,
attorneys and realtors from
out of town. to enforce village
ordinances requiring grass be
cut and properties be maintained.
Now that spring has arrived,

cles in question, and that uw ners will be given a dl(adline to
repair or move their vehicles.
· lannarelli said vi l.lage crews
are trying to catch up on cutting grass on village property,
including in village cemeter'
ies, along the Ohio River
bank, and in the parks.

Other business
During their business meeting, council members:
• Approved payment of
bill s Ill the amount of
$17,529.88;
• Approved the mayor 's
repoJ\ of fees and fines collected· in April , in the amount
of $2,457.62;
• Met in executive session
to.di scuss the purcha&gt;e of real
estate and to discuss person. nel compensation.
Attending were Council
Linda Haley,
members
Stephen Houchins, Robert
Pooler, Robert Robinson and
Kathy Scott, and Fiscal
Officer Susie French .

For the Record
Incidents
r,eported

,.

· POMEROY
Meigs
County
Sheriff
Ralph
Trussell reponed the followirlg incidents as reponed 'to
his office:
. • Tonya
Rogers
of
Middlepon reponed someone had sliced the tire on her
Ford Ranger pickup while
parked at Good Times.
: • Beverly Vickers of
Pomeroy reponed her home
~roken into . Entry w.as
through a patio door.
· • Alben Proffitt of Racine
reported his mailbox vandalized.
• Scott Hill of Racine
. ttiponed · someone had dri ·
yen a car through his tomato
field, causing damage.
• • Ruth Smith of Racine
reported a 200 I Honda XR
4PO stolen from her re sidence .
· • Preston Cook of
Syracuse was arrested on a
bench warrant.
:. The department also
investigated three assault
complaints, five domestic
yiolence complaints, a vandalism complaint , one case
of filing a false police
report, three harrassment
calls, one case of criminal
trespassing, one neighbor
clispute, one mutual aid call
and five traffic accidents.
:: Trussell .said anyone with
information · about these
' ~~mplaints is asked to call
l,he depanment's anonymous
tip line, at 992-3502 .
••

Law

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fromPage1

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Qther family member may
4bt be given information
t oncerning the patient.
. The new law al so prevents The Daily Sentinel
{rom publishing EMS logs
~ in the past .
.. "We respect confidential1ty," said Gene Lyons ,
director of the Metgs
t:ounty EMS.
LPharmacies are al so
Affected.
and
Loshe
·. Swisher
ilharmacy has changed the
way it dispenses prescrip.
t~ons . Prescription holders

,,

Band officers awarded are front row from left to right, Kaylyn Spradling, Miranda McKelvey
and Jordan Pickens. Back row from left to right, Kenny McKnight, David Gloeckner and
Brandon Sturgeon. Shawn Barnhart not in attendance. (Carrie Ann Wood)

Band
from Page 1
you strong," she said.
C Ieek
recalled it
was not
easy for
the newlyformed
band to get
items it
needed. It
w
a s
through
Cleek
hafd work
that made
the band a reality.
"My parents sold sand and
gravel off our farm to buy my
instrument and my sister's."
she said.
The current band has gone
through years of rebuilding
and resurrection. All of the
·band uniforms had fallen into
disrepair. The b'!fld has not
h~orms.

With a phenomenal effort
from parents, the money has
been raised tor new unitorms.
The uniforms should anive
July 10.
"Strut your stult'," Cleek
told the students to do when
they get their new uniforms.
"Nothing made Jne •as proud
to strut around in my band
uniform."
"I can't wait until we put
them on," Oldaker said of the
uniforms before passing out
awards. ''I cannot thank people enough. You are. going to
see in the fall the culmination
of all this work with the high
school barid and its new uni-

forms."
Malinda Barnhart, Chelsea
Recognized in the elemen- Freeman; David Gloeckner,
tary band were Victoria Kyle Mees, Linda Eddy,
Freeman, Brooke Chadwell, Chance Collins, Sarah Eddy,
Zacharie Custer, Jordon Sarah El-Dabaja, Steven
Taylor, Kelsey Thrner, Jessica Loane, Michael Shouldis,
Shelton and Justin Kimes. Jeff Loane, Nathan. Cook,
Most improved player was Adam Phillips, Kenny
Brandon
awarded to Jessica Shelton McKnight,
Sturgeon,
Christopher
Moss,
with the best all around player
Ryan
Mess,
Wyatt
Musser,
was Zacharie Custer.
Intermediate fifth-grade Andrew Smeck and Jordan
band members recognized Pickens.
Officers honored were
were Bradley Coppick, Logan
Huddleston, Katie Woods, Kenny Me Knight, president;
Clayton
Findley,
Sean David Gkleckner, vice presiCoppick and Dustin Smeck. dent; Shawn Barnhart, secreThe most improved player tary ; Brandon Sturgeon,
Miranda
was Dustin Smeck. The best treasurer;
all around player went to McKelvey, eighth grade representative;
Kaylyn
Katie Woods.
Spradling,
se
venth
grade
Intermediate sixth-grade
representative;
and
Jordan
b;md members were Katie
Guinther, Merri Collins, Kyle Pickens, band liaison.
Band boosters noted for
Goode, Kevin Coppick. Dax
their
work. in raising funds
Holman, Eric Perry, Dustyn
for
the
uniforms were
Johnson, Rusty Carnahan,
Marvin Eddy. Nathan Moss, Romine, Mary Pickens, vice
Jordan Pickens," Brian Hunt president; Mary Freeman,
and Ronnie Wilson. Most treasurer; and Anita Musser,
improved was Ronnie Wilson secretary.
Oldaker and Romine were
with the best all around player, given
planters, hanging basKyle Goode.
kets, cards and standing ovaEarning a letter was sopho- tion s ~or their work with the
more Kyle Mees.
··
The band has not had band.
The. dinner was catered
seniors for two years, but by Vaughan 's and FCC LA
·juniors received medallions to members served. Floral
wear with their uniforms their arrangements on the tables
senior year. Honored were were donated by Sue 's
Kenny Me Knight, David Greenhouse. The flowers
Gloeckner, Shawn Barnhart were g1ven away as door
and Bmndon Sturgeon.
prizes.
High school and pep band
· awards went to · Shawn
Barnhart, Erin Wise, Adelle
Rice, Kaylyn Spradling,
Hannah Miller, Ashley
Weddle, Miranda McKelvey,

Bv MtWSSIA RussELL
Staff writer

officials were set to respond to
an explosion causing more than
I00 "causalities." Under the scenario, radiation was to be detected near the blast's crater, triggering a response from federal officials.
Over the next few days, a
number of ''patients" were to
show up at hospitals in the
Chicago area suffering from flulike symptoms. More cases were
to be reported across the nation
and
Vancouver,
British
Columbia. prompting the coordination of officials from the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
The distribution of stockpiled
antibiotics and mass care of
patients suffering from the biological agent are also scheduled·
during the drill.
For each drill, Null explained,
a minimum number of requirements listed by the Ohio
Emergency
Management
Agency must be met in order to
receive credit for the drill.
There are 14 requirements listed 'and each county can choose
three to five of those they will
meet that year, as long as they:
eventually meet them all.
,
This year~s drill is scheduled
to take place in Greenfield
Township, but a date is yet to t:Je:
set.
.
The state's deadline for CQU!lty drills is by the end of June, .
Null explained, so if no Ohio ·
Emergency
Management
Agency field representatives are •
available to critique a live drill, ·
the county can do a ' 'tabletop'' ~
drill that will involve the same ·
scenario and agencies, but in a:
confined setting.
The Greenfield· Township
exercise is set to involve the.
hijacking of a chemical tanker '
and subsequent hostage situa- ·
tion.
Local fire, law enforcement,
medical personnel, emergency
management and American Red.
Cross volunteers are to be
involved in the drill.

GALLIPOLIS - · As officials
in Seattle and Chicago dealt with
imaginary "diny bombs" and
fake biological agents during an .
extensive bioterrorism drill
Monday,
Gall ia
County
Emergency
Management
Director C. Michael Null and
Greenfield Township Fire
Department Chief James Bartels
went over paperwork for Gallia
County's own mock terrorist
attack.
Seattle and Chicago are currently participating in the most
extensive bioterrorism drill in
the nation· s history.
The five-day drill, which
began Monday, is aimed at testing the ability of local, state and
federal authorities to handle terrorist attacks. It is the first largescale counterterrorism exercise
since the Sept. II , 200 I, terrorist
attacks.
The exercises, which are
being sponsored by the
Department of Homeland
Security, will cost an estimated
$16 million and involve more
than 8,500 people from l 00 federal, state and local agencies, the
American Red Cross and the
Canadian government
Null joked that he doesn't
believe Gallia County's drill will
come close to the scale - or
cost - but the basics are the
same.
'"These drills are used not only
to train the emergency responders, but al,so the public and
other entities that are involved,"
Null said.
Months of thought and planning are put into these drills,
with the hopes of involving as
m1111y agencies and covering as
many bases as possible, Null
added.
'
In the national drill, the scenarios invglve two · separate
attacks - one nuclear, one biOlogical - by two cells of a terrorist group.
On Monday afternoon, Seattle

Salisbury

performing in local productions, as have Lisle and
Hawley.
The chorus lines will
!rom Page 1
include
hula · dancers,
Lisle, teacher and now retired Bethaney Ulbrich, Emalee
principal, and the participants Glass, Meranda Dickens, and ·
Victoria
Lawson,
and ;
in those early shows.
Many of the costumes worn Southern bells, Alaine Arnold.''
· then were found in storage and Breana · Hemsley, Stephanie
have been recycled for use in Lewis and Stephanie Smith. ·
Segments will include -.
this year's show. Most were
"Cruisin'
to the Caribbean"
made by Lisle's mother, Mary,
featuring
first , second and '
and parents of students.
Martha King, school secre- tl\ird grades; "Cruisin ' to the
tary, is organizing pictures of Countryside" by the second
third-graders,
and
former students in previous and
productions for a display in "Cruisin' to Disney" featuring
the gym, Mary and Roger Bmndon Foreman as Mickey
Gilmore are designing the Mouse and Sierra l:lill as '
stage and replica of the show- Milmie Mouse, and Jennifer ·
· ':
boat, and parents and volun- Payne as Cinderella.
There
will
also
be
a
salute
to ·
teers are assisting with cosMary Poppins, and an "Under
tumes and props.
the.
Sea" segment featuring ·
In keeping with the tradition
of a showboat production, six Brittany McKnight. ..
In a "Cruisin' to the '50s and ,
endmen and an interlocutor
will be featured in the minstrel Beyond", there will be salutes
to Shirley Temple, "Grease;' ·
portion of the show.
,
Choreography for the show, and Winnie the Pooh. The
. which will include a variety patriotic finale will feature a
part of song and dance, is song written by Roger and ,
being handled by Paulette Mary Gilmore, "One Country
·
Harrison who has long been America."

•

'
''ness ·

are now req11ired to sign an
electronic pad in order to
receive medi cation .
Charles Riffle, a ph armacist at Swi sher and 1Lo she,
said the new policy really
changes nothing beca use
pharmacists have had the
same high privacy standards in effect for yea rs.
"It went from a code of
ethics and ~nwritten things
you do ," he sa id. "Only
now they have it in law

_....._..

.

2003

form .n

When a person sign s the
electronic pad, the o nly
people who know abo ut the
transaction are the prescription· holder and the phar macist. ·
" It is just a n easier way to
do paperwork ," Riffle said.

WED 5114103 0 10:00 PM
THE MATRIX RE~OADED (R)

A Special Supplement to the
~allipolis )}ail!' ~ribuur
~oint ~leasant l\rgtstrr

The

All AGES , ALL TIMES $ 4 00

Sentinel
·.

•

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BY BRIAN J.
Staff writer

lannarelli said, grass on some
properties - many of them in
foreclos ure - has grown
excessively high.
"We ' re going to try to clean
up our village, and while
many people are trying to do
their part, many others are
not," lannarelli said. '"These
absentee landowners will be
contacted and cited to
Mayor's Court, just like anyone else, if these properties
are not properly maintained."
lannarelli said she is working closely with the police
department to eliminate
junked cars from village
streets and from private property.
"If they won't run, or if they
have flat tires, or expired tags,
and they're sitting on blocks
in someone's yard or on village streets, they will be
towed at the owner's
expense," lannarelli said.
lannarelli said the police
department is· now working
on tags to place on the vehi-

, MIDDLEPORT
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, will hold
election of officers at 7 p.m.
on Wednesday, May 28.

't' '

1

To target
tall grass,
abandoned cars

Post
meets
,.

Senate is all . about.". And the
zealous Schumer says he has
actually read the Federalist
Papers, and also preswnably,
the Constitution.
I do not believe that most
Americans would support fiJibustering of judicial nominees, .
whether done by Democrats or
Republicans, if they had the
constitutional facts - and if
they realized that this ideological crusade by the Democrats ·
could result in Supreme Court
decisions that would obstruct
parts of the Constitution.
"(he president should give ·
them those constitutional fiiC!S,
because Charles Schumer and ·
the other Democrats on the
Judiciary Conunittee do not.
(Nat Hentoff is a rwtion/JIIy .
renowned authority on the
First Amendment and the BiU
ofRights.)

'

·1annare.lli: Middleport Being prepared:
Officals
plan
mock
clean-up underway· terrorist attack

•.·

Local Brief

~

'

The Daily Sentmel • Page AS

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

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�Tuesday, May 13,' :2003

The Daily Sentinel

Jackson rejoins Lakers two days after angioplasty
Page 6 ·
Thesday, May 13, 2003

'

Directions to
Minfoi'd high
school .
MINFORD
Both
Eastern and Southern will
be venturing down the district tournament trail to
Minford High School for
District softball tournament
games thi s week.
Eastern plays Leesburg
Fai rfield in the first game
Wednesday at 4:30. while
Southern
play s
South
Webster, the defend'ing
District Champion at 4:30
Thursday.
With wins Eas tern and
Southern could meet in the
Di strict finals on May 22 at'
Minford .
Directio ns to Minford
from Pomeroy are to take
SR 7 to Route 35 North at
Gallipolis. Take US 35 to
Oak Hill just outside of Rio
Grande.
From Oa~ Hill fans
should continue Southwest
on Route 279 to Minford . Approximate travel time is
I hour and 45 inintues.
Fans tra velin g from
Athens should take the
Appalachian Highway, SR
32, to SR 139 South about
five miles west of Jackson.
If fans mi ss the first
Minford exit, they can take
the next one approximately
ten miles further due west.
Take SR 776 South to
Minford.

Former Browns ·LB Miller urged ·to retire
CLEVELAND (A P) Former Browns linebac ker
Ja m.ir Miller has bee n
adv ised to retire by a doc tor
who examined the free
agent 's surgicall y repaired
Achilles' te ndo n.
" He got a very discouraging
medi cal
report ."
Miller' s
ag ent ,
Le igh
Ste inberg, said Monday.
"The Achilles · injury is ve ry
serious. He 's seri ously considering retirement . and is
in the last stages of making
a decision."
Miller, who made the Pro
Bowl · afte r recordin g 13
sacks in 200 I, missed all of.
last season after rupturing
hi s Achilles' iD the Browns'

ex hi b it ion
opener,
Ste in be rg
said Miller
had · bee n
bothered by
so reness in

Miller

hi s hee l the
past
few
wee ks, a nd
he visi ted a
speciali st in
Los Ange les

on Friday.
" He has bee n Jnedicall y
advise d not to play foo tball." Steinberg said. " He
had been hoping it wo uld
improve . The last time he
pl ayed, he was a Pro
Bow ler. It's sort of sad."

Earlier
Monday.
the
Brow ns confirmed they had
wi tli'd raw n thei r one-year
cOI\trac t offer to Mill er.
Brow ns spokesman Todd
Stewart said the club
rescinded its $1.65 mi lli on
pac kage. leav ing the 29year-old player without an y
tea ms show ing interest in
him .
Stewart ·aid Bro wns president Carmen Poli cy sent a
lette r to Steinberg. late la st
wee k and informed him th at
the clu b could no t·\l(a it an y
longer for an answer about
the ir proposal.
"We never heard back,"
Stewart said .
Stei nberg said Mill er's

inj ury had made it diffi cult
to make an y dec isions or
plan ahead.
"One of the reasons we
were not ·a littl e more
agg ressive in negotiation s
with the Brow ns or Rave ns
was becau se we we re hoping it wo uld improve." he
sa id.
Ste inberg tias spoke n 'with
Mill e r about poss ibly pursuing a career in broadcasting
or in sport s representation.
'T ve talked to him about
po te ntiall y JOtnm g our
group," Steinberg said. "He
has been part of the leadership in the N FLPA ."
Miller made the Pro Bowl
after the 200 I season. when

Kidd 's buzzer beater
sends Celtics packing

he had 13 sacks. He was
released by the Browns in
February but had little luck
in the free-agency market.
He visited Tampa Bay and
Baltimore, and the Ravens
nearly signed . him before
removing a one-year offer
shortly after drafting defensive end Terrell Suggs in
last month 's draft.
Last week, Steinberg said
Miller wa s weighing his
options. The agent still was
hopeful Miller would have
better luck when free
agency resumes after June
I.
The Browns felt their

Please see Miller, 7

Miller beats
Eastem

Autopsy fails to
determine cause
·of·death

!.ake rs head coach Ph il Jackson speaks to the media after
r,D'ac tice Monday in El Segundo. Calif. Jackson rejoined the
Lakers on Monday. two days after undergomg a heart procedure. and wi ll trave l to San Antonio fo r Game 5 of their playoff
senes agai nst the Spurs. (AP)
·

TUPPERS PLAINS
Miller rolled by Eastern 9-6 in a
Division IV baseball sectional
championship game Monday
behind a five-run sixth inning
rally that eclipsed the early
Eastern lead. Reportedly the
victory is believed to be the first
sectional title in the sport for the
Falcons.
Miller, now 5-17 overall, will
advance to Wellston next
Tuesday to meet Tri-Valley
Conference foe Waterford in a
district semifinal matchup.
Waterford edged Trimble 1-0
in another sectional championship game Monday. The loss
dropped Eastern to 8-13 over. all.
The Falcons had nine hits led
by Chip Hook . and Nathan
Brown with two singles apiece.
Hook picked up two RBis.
Faulk had two of Eastern's four
hits, all of which were singles.
Miller had five of its niiie
hits, including a two-run single,
as pru:t of its sixth-inning outburst. The Falcons also had two
walks and there was one
Eastern error in the inning.
Miller held on to a 4-3 lead at
the time.
Eastern rallied with three
runs in the bottom of the sevenih but the rally by Coah Brian
Bowen's troops fell short and
the Eagles &lt;;ould get no closer.
Hurling a four hitter, striking
out s~ven and walking just
three batters, Miller pitcher
Jordan Doup went the distance
on the mound -to pick up the
win. Cacy Faulk suffered the
loss. Jon Owen also pitched for
Eastern.

BOSTON (AP) - Jason Ce ltics overcame ·a stxKidd had already played 53 point ·deficit , and Tony
minutes when he raised hi s Delk, who scored a career
arm and swi shed a 3-pointer playoff-high 23 points,
as the final buzzer sounded · stole the ball from Kidd
to end another brilliant per- with 3 seconds left and the
formance.
score tied 90-90.
Now imagine what he' ll
In the first overtime ,
do when he's rested .
which ended 97-all, they
The Detroit Pistons or erased a 3-point deficit and
Philadelphia 76ers are played the last 2:5 1 after
about to find out.
Antome Walker fouled out.
Kidd displayed his all- . But in the second overaround
magnificence ttme - without Walker and
Monday night_ 29 points. tnJured center Tony Battte
FORT WORTH, Texas
I 0 rebounds and eight - fatt gue took ove r. ~ew
(AP) - An autopsy failed
. assists - to lead the New Jersey outscored Bost_on I 3to determine the cause of
Jersey Nets to a 110-101 4 wtthK!dd sconng ltve.
death of Dallas Cowboys '
double-overtime
victory
So dtd he . .
_
running
back
Ennis
and
a
four-game
sweep
of
After
ma~tn
g
,
15-ot.-5,2
Haywood.
the Boston Celtics.
shots and totaltng 3 6 pmnts
Results of toxicology and
Now he , can relax and tn the ftrst three games.. he
tissue tests are expected in
the Pistons and 76ers was 8-for- 15 with 20 pomts.
watch
six-to-eight weeks, said
nrne rebounds imd seven
Linda Anderson, spokesman
p Iay a t Ieas t two more assists.
for the Tarrant County
game s to determine the
There was a poss ibility he ·
Nets ' opponent in the
· h1
1
·
Medical Examiner's Office.
Eastern
Conference
final
s.
mtg
not
p
ay
until
the
Haywood died Sunday at
NBA ruled Monday he did- ·
Medical
Center
of
The series, tied 2-2 , n' t deserve punishment for
Arlington . The 23-year-old ·· resumes Wednesday night confronting a fan during
player was taken to the hosin Detroit.
Game 3.
pital early Saturday after he
The Celtics must wait. The Nets were deterbegan vomiting in his sleep.
much longer after playing m.ined to fini sh the 'series in
He was placed on life suptheir best game of the Bo ston, where faris - · for
port, and his family chose to
Eastern Conference semifi'- the second strai ght playoff
remove him from life supnals with a · newfound series between the teams port on Sunday, the Fort
aggressiveness.
booed and taunted Kidd.
Worth
Star-Telegram
In
the
Western
The Nets led 50-49 at
reported .
Conference
semifinal s halftime and 7 1-69 after the
Haywood participated in
Tuesday, Sacramento is at third quarter as neither team Jason Kidd (5) shoots from three-point range over Boston
the Cowboys' three-day
Dallas, and the Los Angeles led by more than six to that
Celt ic~ J.R . Bremer. left, durfng the first half of their NBA
minicamp last week and . Lakers are at San Antonio .
playoff game Monday in Boston. (AP)
was expected to compete for
Both series are tied 2-2.
Please see Nets, 7
a roster spot at halfback. 1
In the fourth quarter, the
Haywood, an undrafted
free agent out of Iowa State,
was on the Cowhoys' .prac tice squad last season.
He led the team in rushing
in the preseason with 120
Bv Scon WOLFE
the area's top pitchers with three Waterford last week. Her speed
yards on 31 carries.
CINCINNATI (AP) Sports correspondent
no-hitters to her credit and less has also been valLtable on the
Ken Griffey Jr. is joining
than 20 walks on the ~n in Southem base paths in scoring
the Reds on a road trip
an
impressive
effort. runs.
thi s wee k
MINFORD Thursday Additionally, Chapman is a .357
Anchoring the hemt of the
as
he work s
evening the Racine-Southern hitter and this year has had a Southern interior defense is
hi
s
way
Lady Tornadoes, 17-4, invade great glove in fielding her posi- JUmor catcher Katie Say re.
qack from a
Minford High School for a dis- tion very well.
·,
Sayre calls the pitchs and is a
s
hould e r
trict semi-final tournament softBarnes provide great power great defensive catcher, but ha'i
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
injury
th at
ball game with the defending and a good batting eye as one of added some punch in 2003 with
- Montreal Expos pitcher
has
sidechampion South Webster Jeeps, the area's top hitters. Hill is a a .500 batting aver.tge.
·
Orlando Hernandez underlined him
10-9. The game is the first of a good bunter and plays some
Sophomore Brooke Kiser
Went surgery on his injured
since earl y
twi-light double header, begin- right field.
has played a great third base this
right shoulder.
Apri I.
ning at 4:30p.m.
The hero of the Sectional season, while winning several
Hernandez, on the disThe tea m
Coming off a 15-10 season tinals against Waterford, junior ' games outright with her bat.
abled list since spring trainwon'
t say
last year, Southern has ·put second baseman Deana Pullins Nursing a sore hand for seveml
ing, is expected to be out at
when
!he
Griffey
together. an impressive season has boosted her aver.tge to .367. games, Kiser is now hitting the
least three more months star ce nter
this year with a 17-4 mark, a She also has a great glove and ball with some authority and
though the Expos have not
fi eld er will return to the
Sectional Championship and a covers a lot of tenitory in the · started the game-winning secruled out a return this .sealin e up . a lth ough it is
run against Eastern for the top field.
tional
championship
rally.
son .
highl y unlikely he would
spot in the · Tri-Valley
One game saver in 2003 has
Another great · defensive
The arthroseopic · proceplay on th e ro ad trip.
Conference.
been in junior centerfielder m;.set is sophomore tirst basedure was performed by Dr.
Griffey, who separated
Southern has a veteran club Emily Hill. who has mad!! man Ashley Roush. Roush has
John Uritie to repair a small
hi
s ri ght shoulder while
led by three seniors, ace hurler catches to save games nearly made only three enurs in 21
tear in El Duque 's rotator
div ing for a ball , wa s
Rachel Chapman, who has every time out. Hill's golden games this season, tmd has a
cuff.
lookin g forw ard to flying
hurled all l 7 Southern wins,
The Expos said it went ' shortstop Brigene Barnes, and glove has earned her much great glove. She also provides
with the Reds on Monday
respect around the league as a some power at the plate.
well and Hernandez is
to
. St. Loui s to open the
utility fielder Jeri Hill.
top fielder. A diving catch 511ved .
expected to make a full
trip Tuesday ni ght.
Chapman has become one of two runs in Southern's win over
Please see Southern, 7
recovery. MINFORD - Both
"They' re lettin g me out

'EI Duque'
undergoes
shoulder surgery

MilE IIRTRUM

••n•••••••• E•••••

Card of

PUBLIC NOTICE
I'ROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF
t'IAME OF GWENDO~INE (GWEN) GRADY
TO CISSY WELCH.
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON CHANGE OF
NAME.
Applicant hereby
~ves

lew E1111111 Pllrlltl

.'

I.

notice to all

iaterested

persons

llhd to D.N.A. that the

applicant has filed an

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
In accordance with
the provisions of the
Internal
Revenue
Code, the annual
report of the Roger
Parker Long Memorial
Trust for the · period
ending December 31 ,

2002, has been prepared by Harold
Roger &amp; Delores Jean
Long, Trustees. The

llppllcallon
for annual report is avail·
Change of Name In· able for inspection by
fhe Probate Court of any citizen during
normal 'hours within
Meigs County, Ohio ,
lequesting
the 180 days from the
date of this notice at
Mange of name of
Gwe.ndoline (Gwen) the home of Harold
6rady to Cissy Welch. Roger &amp; Delores lean
Long. 581 4th Avenue,
Owendollne Grady
Middleport,
Ohio
39870 Union Avenue
45760. (740) 992-7415
~omeroy , Ohio 45769
(5) 13 1pd
(5) 13 pd
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Nets
from Page 6
poi nt.
Bosto n led Rl -76 with
5:59 left in tile fourth quarter
when Bailie le ft witll a
brui sed ri ght knee and didn ' t
ret urn.
Kenyon Martin . who finished with 22 point s. scored
all seve n of the Ne ts· points
in the first ove rtime. In the
seco nd . Ri chard Jeffe rso n
and Willi ams traded baskets
before Ke rry Ki ttles' 3po inter put New Jersey
ahead to stay. I02-99 wi th
.':56 left.
Ma rtin 's
lay up
and
Jeffe rson's free throw made
it I05-99. Will ia1i1s made
two free throws before Kidd
made_a p,air with 33 second s
re Jn aJnJn g.

when yo ur team is shoqting
25 percent. having a hard
time getting up and down
the court."' he said. referri ng
to · wha t h&lt;ippi:ned dur ing
mos t of the first half.
The Lakers trailed by as ,
ma ny as 16 points -in the sec'ond qu arter.
Jackson said he has a l way~
been aware of the importance of die t and exercise .
He said he wi II be able to
resume

exen: 1 ~ 1 1 ng ,

pres um -

ab ly wit h a · muc h higher
energy leve l. in a coup le
weeks.
Fo rward Robert Horry
said Jackson ''see med like
his old ch ippe r se lf. ·"
Team , spo kes man John
Black sa id Jackso n arrived
early at the Lakers· practice
faci lity Mond ay. met · with
his coaching 'staff and we nt
over video tape.
Jac kson missed three
ga mes because of a kidney
stone that was removed on
Feb. 24. Before that, he had
coac hed 1.249 regular-season and playoff ga mes wi.th out mi ssi ng any in nearly 13
seasons.

Southern

fired home to naiI the runner at used mainly in courtesy runner
the plate to r a clouble play- and pinch-hitting/pinch running
Southern won 4-3. At Ri ver roles. Her speed has factored
from Page 6
Valley, a Duffy- Pul li ns- Kiser into several S HS wins.
re lay nailed a nmner going to
Southem is coached by vet~
third.
eran coach ·s cott Wolfe. Wolfe
One of the big offensive said, '11tis has been a great seaOne of the greatest strengths
this season has been the punches Southern has had this son, but we arenft ready to quit
improvement of tl1e Soutl1em season is that of Ashlee Hill. just yet. We have lour regular
outfield-Emily Hill, and sopho- Hill swings a wicked bat. and season games left and hopefulmores Joanne· Picken s and tills in as designated hitter and ly that many tourn a men ~
Hoily Duffy.
plays some thiJtl base. Not only
Pickens has made several has Hill's .350 batting_avemge games. At the district level and
great defensive plays and has a won some games hit-wise, but beyond anything can happen
great arm . She has several her keen batting eye has put al)d our girls have proven they
can play with the best."
~ame- saving catches in the out- runners on the base paths.
\Volle is &lt;L&gt;sisted by thirdfi eld. She also packs some
The Lady Tomadoes also
punch at the plate as a blitzing have two great freshmen play- year assistant Rehecca Evans.
Wolfe
cited
hitting,
pull hiner with 12 extra base ers in Bethany Ri ffle and
hits, including a home run.
Kristiina Williams. Ritlle deliv- improved defense. and the
Holly Duffy has · added ered a pinch-hit triple to dri ve in great improvement of pitcher
defensive strength to the two runs against Waterford in Rachel Chaptmm as the keys to
Southem outfield. Two crucial the Sectional Championship this sea10n. 'This has been a
plays last week by Duffy sin- game. She swings a good bat team etlort. Everyone has congle-handedly stopped opposing and is developing into a great ttibuted to winning by going
rallies and factored into SHS pitcher.
. out and do ing the re job."
wins. Against Eastern, she
Willimns has great speed Southehi plays South Webster
caught a line shot in right and
and a good glove. and has been Thursday at 4:30 at Minford ..

Thanks

Friends are the
Flowers in the
garden of life
To say "thank you"
seems such a small
way to express the
feeling our family
has experienced the
past few weeks durIng the illness of our
beloved husband
and father. Your

prayers, cards, visits
and phon e calls have
not only been appre-

ciated but will be
treasured in our ·
memories . May God
truly bless each one
of you.

Jerry A. Powell
and family

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•

t Friday, May 16,2003

TROY BROWN

wh ic h

contrac t l1e signed in June
1999.
Jackson said he' ll make a
fi nal dec ision this summer
and wo uldn' t thi nk beyond
that any time soon.
Jackson said he told girl frien d Jean ie Buss. the
daug hter of Lakers owne r
Jerry Buss and the team 's
executi ve vice president nf
business operut iuns. nf his
pai n May 4 when the team·
!lew to Sa n Anton io for the
first two games of the series.
Jackson said she to ld the
tea m doctor, and that go t the
ba ll rolling.
"U nfor tu nat ely that's the
way it kind of goes· - · Iessing up and havi ng somebody
else start th e process ...
Jackson said.
He . said he told Buss his
·'angi na was killing me fo r a
week-and-a- half."
·
Jac ks on was exami ned
Fri day - before the Lukers
beat th e Spurs I I 0-95 in
Game 3. He said he made
the decis ion to coach "wi th
some medicat ion ."' adding it
was. a considerat ion to not
coach that ni ght..
Jackso n said hi s heart was
in great shape and hi s other
arteries we re cl ea r.
He
said
watc hin g
Sund ay's ga me was diffi cult.
"It 's hard to sit and watch

'

....

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

hi s dea l.

EL SEGUNDO. Cal if.
Jackson sai d he didn ' t
(APJ - · An upbeat Phil be li eve stress caused hi'
Jackson rejoined tf1e Los prob lem .
Ange les Lakers on Monday, . It was the firs t postseason
two days after undergoi ng a ga me Jac kson has missed in
heart proced &lt;• re. and he wi ll his 13-year career as an
coac h in Game 5 agains t tlie NBA head coach. His team;
San Anton io Spurs .
have won a record 25
'T 111 feeling goo'd, I fee l stra ight -.pl ayoff series and
like a new man , actu all y." nine championships. equ al- ,
Jackso n
tol d
repo rters ing .the . record of forme r
before the Lakcrs fl ew to Boston coach Red Auerbach .
San An tonio for Tuesday
He guided the Chi cago
night's game at SBC Cen ter. Bull s .to six champions hips
The Wes tern Con ference du rin g the 1990s and th e
best-o f-seven sem ifi nal rs · Lakers to titles in his three
tied 2-2.
full seasons so far as thei r
"We're back in the hu nt in coac h.
the pl ayo ffs wi th a tea m
The Lakers are attemptin g
that\ rej uvena ted . and I've to become the second team
got a new lease on life,"' in NBA history to win more
Jm;kson s~ i d, "The biggest than thre'e straight champi thing is movi ng fo rward onships. joining the Boston
frnm here. Yo u have th e Ce lti cs, who wo n eight
ene_1:gy. the reso lve. to move strai ght starting in 1959.
011.
Ass istant Jim Clea muns
Jackson
und e rwe nt an fill ed in fu r Jackso n on
angiopl a sty Sa turday to Sunday. Jackson said d ocopen hi s le ft anterior artery. tors had no rese rv ation s
whi ch '"" over 90 perce nt about hi s traveling to San
blocked . He was re lea.sed An toni o and rctuming to the
fro m Cen tinela Hos pital bench.
Med icti l Center on Sunday
Jackson. 57. said he had
mor nin g but wa tched the chest pain s for about a
Li1kers . ~ 99-95 vic tory over month befo re the procedure.
the Spurs on te lev ision.
His energy le vel had fall en
"I coul d have come bac k so low. he sa id. he was wonyeste rday." he said . '" I had dering about coaching nex t
an allerg ic reacti on to ant ibi- season. He has one year left
otics."
on the fi ve-year, $30 milli on

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Limit~d Number of Tickets Available'to General Public
t Silent auction with NFL merchand ise
• Riverside Golf Course
• Plavcr and coach auction
• 6:30p.m.- Dinner served approximately 7p.(n.
t ) IU·adult and S5 ch tldrc'~l undei 12 years of age
tAll persons playing in the Pleasant Va lley Hospital • Make all checks payable to "Bartn1m &amp; Brown Football Camp"
Coed Flag Football Tournament will rec:£ive a ticket t Purchase ticke ts at theWcllness Center or Riverside Gulf Course

go tia le

inc luded a ~1.5 milli on
sala ry in 2002 and $:1.9
from Page 6
m i l .l i~ n in 2003 . He furth er
de ma nded il sig. ni ng bonu s
i&gt;llcr tn Mill e r. whic h · of $ 10 million .
When the tea m halk ed at
inclu&lt;Jed a $1 milli on sign~ n g ho nus . and play in g lii s reques ts. Miller. still
Ince ntives that wo ul d have the on ly Cleveland playe r
tlo uhled th e vaille of the to make the Pro Bnwl
deal. was fair. The c luh is since 1999. tlirea tened a
puukd why he d id n: r contrac t holdout dur ing
accep t it.
tra ini ng cam p. He had
' Mill er. who played fi ve
sl; aso ns wi th Ar izo na. alrea dy rank led Browns
co ach Bu tc h Da viS by
~ig n ed wii h·the Browns as
;r free age nt befo.re their ski ppi ng mos t . or the
expans ion season in 1999. team 's ol"fseason workHe gnt qff tn a ~t ro n g ~t art, out s.
und the club dec ided to
The Brown' d id insert
redo hi s co nt ract and so me new ince nti ves into
exte nded it thro ugh th e
hi s 2002 co ntract. bu t his
2003 season.
~
Aft er he made 11 4 tac.k- season e nded when he ru ples during his Pro Bowl .lllred hi s Ac hi lles ' in a prega me . aga in st
&gt;easo n in 2001, Mill er seaso n
a:sked th e Brow n' to rene- Minnesota on Aug. I0.

of the dungeon," he said .
"At least, I'll be able to
do something."
Griffey ·was injured
Apri I 5 and placed on the
di sabled list two days
later. He was projected to
miss six-to-t 0 weeks. Six
weeks will ha.ve passed .
by Saturday.
· He has been taking batting practice and doing
exerctses under medical
supervision.
"He' s hitting painfree ," Cincinnati trainer
Mark Mann said. "He ' s
running. He' s able to
catch the ball with no
problem: Now it's just a
matter of building a little
more strength ."
Griffey ' s replacement,
Jose Guillen , has been
one of the Reds' hottest
hitters.
Guillen
has
played right field while
Au stin Kearns moved to
center.

FIRST-EVER COED FLAG FOOTBAll
BANQUET TO 'FEATURE NFl PLAYERS

Miller

I•

Southern to 'play South Webster Junior-joining Reds

SIICIII TIRtltlll 111111:

The Da ily Sentinel• Page 7

www.mydallysentinel.com

�www.mydailysentinel.com

\!tribune - Sentinel - 1\e

t~ter

CLASSIFIED

Buy or sell . Riverine AppendiK yearling filly, 2
Antiques, 1124 Easl Main thoroughbred ma res for
on SR 124 E. Pomet{y, 740. sale, (740)843·5 176
992·2526. Russ Moore.
AOHA DOC O'lena-Great
Pine Gray filly
AOHA Doc O'lana-Fr&amp;ckles
Playboy chestnut co", broke
to lead And tie (740)245·
2002 Polaris Sportsman 0425 or 740·645..() 153.

Mdp County, OH

500, 120 miles, adult ridden.
like new w/ matching front
bumper and warren wench
$5000.00 (740)245-0321
save 2.000 over buying
new.

Call&amp;. Co,.nty, OH

In One Week With U.s
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS.
PLU·s YOUR AD NOW. ONLINE
\ll;:rtbune
Sentinel

TO

Place

Your
Ad •••

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
. Call us at: (740) 446·2342
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribune.com

Offee 11o~~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD

i

ANNouNCD1ENTS

~~

tI

~M·od-i.H.om·.·H·.·a·lt·h~A·g·.·ncy·.

11116

HFJ..PW•mw

We want to LEASE tobacco
poundage . Call (740)245- Inc. seeking AN's to• t"o
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit 9160 or (740)245-5159.
Gallipolis, OH area. We offer
tor sale. Chester Township,
a competitive salary, beneMeigs County, send letters
I \11'1 en \II'\ I
fit s package, 401k, flex time,
of interest to : The Oaily
and sign on bonus Please
-..11{\ICI-..
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20,
send restJme to 430 Second
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
110
AventJe. Gallipolis, OH
45631 . Attn: Diana Harless.
.
IIELPWAN'ml
1
Clinical Manager.
THANK YOU
Our Yard Sate fund-raiser
A
Metabolism ---------------tor the Gallia Animal
Breakthrou!Jhl 1 lost 40 Need 5 ladies to sell Avon
Welfare League was a big
potJnds in 2 months. (740)446-3358
successl But we still have
Ephedra Free. 1·888 -546·
things to sell· bike, safety
Now hiring· A leading
helmets. gas dryer, monitor 7207
provider
to individuals with
and printer, Nintendo power
AddresseS wanted immedi· mental retardation and
bad, coHee table, all sizes
of clothing, and misc. items·. ately! No experience neces· developmental disabilities is
sary. Work at home. call looking tor help in Gallipolis.
So stop by 91 Garfield Ave.,
(405)447-6397
No experience necessary.
Gallipolis.
$6.35 per hour. Paid training
Attn: Work from home.
If you would like to join otJr
$500· $1500/mo. PT
team to help individuals
$.2000· $45001mo. FT
achi~ve their fuiiEist paten·
800·286·9748
tial, call (740)446-8t45 or
Male Rat Terrier, B mo.,
www.retire411.com
apply in person at Middleton
hOuse broken. good w/kids,
shots, to good home only, AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Estates. 8204 Carla Ori&gt;Je,
SelL Shirley Spears , 304· Gallipolis, OH. An Equal
740 949-2398
Opporh.Jnity
Employer
675·1429.
LiNrAND
FIWDN.
Caregiver for elderly couple .
FOUND
Nights through week. Days Now Hiring. McDonakls of
Found ln . Cheshire area: and nights Sat-Sun . Call Rio Grande, Gallipolis and
Adult male cat. neutered 30:4-675- 1953 from 7:00· Point Pleasant, WV- all shiftS
available. Paid vacations &amp;
and declawed . Owners Call 10:00 pm.

r

I

G~w.v

740-367·7776.

Commercial construction
company seeks qualified
floor installers, carpel layers
&amp; ca rpenters, must have
own tools,&amp; experience
Send resumes to CLA Box
555 825 3rd Ave Gallipolis
Oh10 ~.5631 .

holidays. Insurance available. Apply within.

0.0. Mcintyre Park District

will be accepting applica·
lions
lor ·t9mporary StJmmer
4
'I'AIIIJ SAU:help beginning May t2 -19,
Pot\IEROYIMIIlDLE
2003 . responsibilities would
include general park upkeep
RACO Sc holarship Yard ·cosmetologisl
needed and maintenanCfl. For appli·
Sale al Star Mill Park,.. fulL/part time pd. vacation, cation:~ and further informa·
Racine. May 15th. 9-4. May free CE hrs.Fantastic Sams tion , applicants should apply
16th, 9·2:30. Dlshes,. shoes, (740)446·7267
in person at the ·Raccoon
purses, bqoks, exercise
Creek
County
Park
eqUipment,
microwa..,es. D6sk Clerk Needed full time
(740)446-4612
small appliances. clothing and part time. Apply at
(including infants . toddlers . Budget Inn 260 Jackson Part time help, come In &amp;
1
·
) r
Pike, Gallipolis. No Phone
d
an
pus Sizes. mens. Calls Please
apply In per&amp;on 1146 2nd
glassware. drop in range &amp; ---------c---c---- Ave (740)446·238:8
hood, toys, Christmas deco· Help wantpd caring tor the
rations. wood door, gas elderly, Darst GrotJp Home,
WANTED: Part-time position
ran e, and lots ol misc.
now paying m1n1mum wage. available at a community
new shifts:.7am·3pm, 7am - group home for people with
WAN11'.D
5pm, 3pm · tlpm; 11pm· mental
mBuv
retardation
In
7am , ca ll 740·992·5023
Bidwell . Hours: 3:30-8:30pm
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Lab tech nician and phle· Thurs/Fri: 1· 10pm Sat/StJn.
Silver,
Gold Cams. botomisl r eeded fo r day ReqtJirements: High School
Proofsets. Diamonds. Gold shift only. Send resume to Diploma/GED. valid driver's
Rings,
U.S. Currency,· Athens Medical Lab. 400 E. license and good driving
record . Salary : $7 .00/hour.
M.T. S. Coin ShOp, 151 State, Athens Ohio 45701 .
Send resume to: Buckeye
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
Part-time help to w~d eat &amp; Community Services. P.O.
740.446·2842 .
use commercial mowers. Box 604 , Jackson . OH
Ratchet Type rail road Jack. must be 18 or older, ca ll 45640. Deadline: 5/16/03.
74Q-388·9073 if no answer (740)742 ·2803 leave mes· EqUal
OpporttJnity
sage &amp; number.
please leave message.
Employer.

11"

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......
'::)\.!.l t'-4U N\-- 'h r.-zr-o·
.

UM.I
ldlf•tl b.,. C1.AY I . PCUAH - - - - - - -

0

Reorroi'IQe letter.s of. th•
four scrambled words below to form four simple wqrdJ.

I

PETRUE

I I I I I

1

2

I

G E 8 N A,

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,-rL;;_:yEI.c;D::..,/,:.:.X.c;T,_I-II ~

Caught in a white Iie, granny
1. . . . . •. told the neighbors kid that a lie
.
r--:-::-::-:-:-:--,would spread quickly, but the truth
E v N A T 0
!would always · - - · --

If---,,-'sir"T,--,-,,.,...,,-,,--; 0
1 ·--L---L---L._.J.I-.....l.--1.

Complete

the chuc:kla quoted

by filling in rhe missing words
vou d•..,•lo, from stel) No. 3 bolow.

.:11 PRtNr NUMBERED LETTER S IN

&lt;;;~

THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOV E LETTERS
TQ GET ANSW ER

l\_egtster

Fat,
BLOCK
C(Jivings, and BOOST
You Have
Energy Uka
Never Experienced.
WEIGHT- LOSS
REVOLUTION
New product launch October
23, 2002 . Call . Tracy at
(7.0)441 · 1982
Central Cooling Systems, '
naw &amp; used . as low as
5850.00
installed
May
Special I (740)446·6308

. Vi~it us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675·1333
Fax us at: (304) 675·5234
E-mail us at:
class.ified@ mydailyreglster.com

Complete
set
of
Encyclopedia Britannica 24
voJ. , 2 indeK, 7 annuals. one
atlas, great cond ., dark Grey
w/ SiMlr inlay $500. 080
(740)245-0321

LIVELY'S AUTO SALES
20 Cars For Sa te. tram
$;350.00 to $1,600.00 1Open
M·F 9 to 5. Sat. 9 to 3,
Closed Sun. Call: 388·9303.

r

.~US~

Arab Quarter cross', Qray
mare. broke S·1000. breed· ~~-•-iiiiiitiiiiiiiiiio•.-1
ing slack CaH yearling $500 2002 Blue ' 4WD Dodge
,0c-8_0__
(7_4_0_l2_4_5._5_62_4_____ Dakota. 22 ,000 miles. Auto
Experienced horse enthusi· Loaded .
51 0 ,500 obo.
est to share riding tca1e of (740)256·1233.
my horse , I pay expenses - - - - - - - - call (740)441 •0184
2002 Ford F 150, ext cab.
- - ' - - - - - - - , - - - , - 4x4. CD player. p/w, p/1 , plm
Horses tor sate 8 Belgi8n auto .. 23.000 miles moon
Reg. Mares. 2-3-4 yrs old, roof - must sell ASAP
some we ll mated. Ph.-Even. $23 ,500 (740)379-2 755 or
740·886-n89
740·645·2526 .·
:P:-a-in-:t-qu_a_r:--r-:h-or_s_o_m_a_r_o--:
,
'----------------10
4
89 KW T600 400 Cummins
yrs old . gentle (740)38B· w/Jake. 90 Ravens Magnum ~======:i=~
0436
45ft wlside Kit &amp; 3 boxes &amp;
lca'I~--:-HA~Y~&amp;'::"'--1 equipment. S20,ooo . 740-!)~
GRAIN
709·0336

Trucking
HAULING:

r

r;i;:-;.;.;.~':""~:"'"'-.,

~~

Word Ads

Displav Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
· Monday-Friday for Insertion

In Next Day's Paper
~!~·~~~In-Column:

1:00 p.m.

For Sunday• Paper

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Bu&amp;lne&amp;s Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sunday•

I ~rmlo~-FOR":'H:"o-~""ALE:--.,

~:10==·=:1~;~~:~:£:·=~ ~.,t___A.i ~li li ili·~.-E.__.~I

Full Size Mattress Set New L - - - - - - - - ·
Pallen1 Service Technician In Plastic w/Worr. Sacc;fico
Delivery and set up of mad- $t19, Cell Phone 304-412· (3)FHA &amp; VA homes set u"p
ical equipment and o~~: ygen . 8098 or 304-552-1424.
for immediate possession .afl
will be driving the Gallipolis
within 15 min. of downtown
area. Both with Competiti'le
Gallipolis. Rates as low as
K' ng· Size Pillow li.op 6 % . (740 )445- 3218 ·
pay. paid holidays, 401k,
Mattress set. New still in
addihonal floating holidays. Plasto·c. Sale $299. Coil 1-3 •-drooms foreclosures
Insurance. Must have good
ut:l
driving record.
Phone 304·412·8098 or home hom $199 month 4%
Customer Service Rep.
304-552·1424.
down 30 years at 8 .5% APR
for listing ca ll 1·800-319Position requires an outgo·
ext.
3323
1709
ing, friendly, de1ail oriented Queen Pillow Top Mattress
person that' is capable of
set. New in plastic w!Warr. 2 or 3 br. home at 122 2nd
multitasking . Medical billing Will accept $199. Call pnone Ave. Gallipolis Oh. $89,000
304-4 12·8098 or 304·552· (740 )446 .4051
experience helpful but not
1424.
mandatory. Willing to train
the right person. Apply in
n~r--:"~----, 2.5 acres Addison Pike
180
WANTED
I Private seHing, trees, creek.
person or send resume to: 1
Sowmans Homecare 70
To Do
· 3 or 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,
• livmg
·
Pine Street. Gallipolis. OH
room, 1arge open
~ bl S
.II kitchen/dining, large family
45631
Georges rurta
e awm1 ·
Fax: 1·740-441 -3072
don't haul yotJr logs to the room/kitchen, laundry. 2 car
mill just call304 -675·1957. garage. large a"ic. porch,
$97,900. Call (740)367·
0667
SAL.ES POSITIONS OPEN Jim's Carpentry and small

1.79 Acres Lot Stoneybrook
Estates , Sand HUt Rood,
Point Ple~ sant. Land already
Cleared ,
Ready
tor
Conslr.uction. Public Wat er.
675·3524 or 1375-5440.
s enous
· 1nqumes
· · on1y.

••P•W-Arm&lt;:_.•:o_.ll176 MISCF.UANHliJS

Poaldona Available.

Hardware &amp; or building
materials. Part time &amp; Full
time positions available with
growing, succesful local
company. Send resume or
pic;k up apPlication At O'Dell
· •- 3rd &amp;
. True "va 1tJe Lumuo:~r,
Vine Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .

----c---:---Temporary 4H Program
Assistant· Enjoy working
with youth and adult 'IOitJn·
leers? Adult needed to
assis1 agent thi~ summer in
the designing. securing,
implementing and teaching
of 4H program at camp.
Cloverbud day camp, pre-

landscaping . 20 yrs experi- 2600 sq. ft. Home with
ence.
Free
estimate. breath taking 'liew, nesseted
(7 40)446·2500
on 12 acres wl out building
and pond . City school. 4468901 .
TLC Cleaning- we give your
hOme or oHice the tender 3 bedroom, 1 112 bath
lovin.g care it needs, .phone house on .113 acre, 1 car
(740)742·5327, cell 740· garage, full basement, CH &amp;
517·7833,
charge by the A, $69,500 call (740)992·
··
hour 9r JOb
13B5
---------------,Will do Odd jobS like mow.
paint. weed-eat call Bill or
Dave 304-882·3419 or 304·
773 · 6119

3 Br, 1 Ba, FIJI! unfinished
baseme.nl, new kitchen, new
windows, new vinyl , Evans
H~ighls area; $53,900.00,
{740)367·0299 or 709·0299.

rib

~~~tr:c~;~hase

Ot service

opmenl and monitoring pro11
"'ram and staff evaluations
and knoWiedMa
• of the local,
state and national aging net•
work. The positiof1 reqtJires
evening and weekend work
hours and out-of-co unty
travel
Interested persons should
request an application from
Darla Hawley, HR Director,
P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy, Oh
45769. Applications with a
re_stJme will be accepted
until
June
1.
2003
Appll·cations will be kept
confidential . An EOE .
Truck Drlvtra, Immediate
hire. class A COL required .
excellent pay. experience
required . Eatn up to $1,000
per wHk.Call 304·675·
4005

1

n

t

A11 -at
-rtlolng
'"' eatote ....
.......
In thf• newspaper Ia
•ub'-t to the Federal
.-

Fair Houalng Act of 1968
whlc~d:~~:.".. :~l to
preteranc:e, limitation or
dtacrlmlnatton based on
race, eotor, ntllglon, u~~:
tamlllil ttatua or netlonai
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
Thla newaJllaper will nD1
knowingly accept
advertiHmenta tor real
eatatewhlchialn
vlolaUon of the taw. Our
ruder• era htrl)by
Informed that all
dwelling• advertlnct In
this newapaper are
available on an equal
opportunity baa...
House &amp; 2 1/2 acres for sale
or rent on Ashton Upland
Road . 736-3404
----,---------,----House &amp; 2112 acres for sale
or rent on Ashton Upland
Ad.
.7 .
304 36 3404

-::::::--::-:::=--:--:-::-=--

r

batn. total electric wlheat·
pump, 2 porches. $9500,
(304) 773 5408
·
·
-::::::-:::--::--:--:--:---:
.
1980 Skyline trai ler heat
pump. 2 porches. storage
building . completely remod·
eled (740)256- 1876
2000 Clayton mobile nome,
3 bedroom, 2 baths on ren tad lot in Middleport, payoff,
(740)992· 1370, cell 591 8005

140·992·1611

740-985-1564

Stop &amp; Cpmpare

1-740-992-7007

OLD GLORY
AUCTION
SERVICES

*Spring*

I'JI:. ....
fPJ«'

"j

High&amp; Dry
Self·Storage

A.P,ed~~.,wrsart,mont.l

•

•.

''
Second Avenue Upstairs ,
No Pets, Gall ipolis. (740) ,
446-9523.

Pleasant Valley Apartmen t ·
Are now taking Applications ,..
for 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BA. , ..1
Applications
are taken '
Monday !hru Friday, lrom-'
9:00 A.M -4 P.M . Office Is ,
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant, WV ·
~hone No is (304)675·5806.
Home tn Country, 256·6574.
E.H.O
Mobile home for rent. no
pets, (740)992·5858
Townhouse •
:=:.::.2:..:cc.::.:.::.::_
_ _ Tara
Apartments. Very Spacious: Two bedroom mobile home 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA. 1 · ~
for rant. All electric . Spring 112 Bath , Newly Carpeted, ;
Valley area. $280/month,
Aduil Pool &amp; Baby Poo l, . .
deposit $250. (304)675 - Patio. Start $385/Ma. N o ·
2900 and (740)441 -6954.
Pets. Lease PltJs Security '·
Deposit Required, Days ·
FARMS ·
740·446·3481 ; Evenings.
IURRENT
74().367·0502.

40

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.

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Galllpolla Career Collage
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today I 740-446·4367.
1-BOQ..214-0452
www.galltpollscareercollege .com
Reg 1#90-05-12748

PC DOCTOR

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Compulers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

992-7953
591-7002
591-4641

wWw.wvpcdr.com
cdoctor@wv dr,.cam

204 Condor Street

Few kids for sate.
adults.
Proven
'ct..n1PI&lt;&gt;n Bloodlines. Gallia
County grown . (7~0)245·
0485 after 5pm.
2 purebred Longhorn young
bulla (740)~

1-800-822-0417
v·':j # l C hevy. Pontiac. Bu ick. Olds

Man

&amp; Custom Van

BISSEll
BUILDERS InC.
Ne~w

CANCER CHECK

Best Service at
the Best Price

Fin ally.. J\·1nncy p&lt;1 ili to XQ1! whe-n cancer
o.; trikcs. Yml d10osc the llmount up 10 $50,000!
Pa'.., in udcl ition to othe r i nsurance.
Yntlu!-c the money however you l ike.
Cancer wil l .mike w hen you !cast c1tpect it.
It " 'iiiiL·a vc you an!1 your fam ily financially
strup peU. CA~CER CHECK will be
th ere whe n you need it.
Cu ll nuw to reserve XQ.UI check . ,

Homes • Vinyl

iding • New Garages
• Replace ment

Window s • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Open Qnm ·~ I'TlJ

l·ro.: "''"""'"'· ,,.,. '" h,,.,,. r"'""l'

ROCKY Ht:PP INSURANCE

(740) 446-1812

HOX 189 MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760

l'&lt;~l l ~· hor .111 )''"' '"'""""'' u"''"'

740·992·7599

740-843-5264

S..r•.ral'llftol'

DURO· LAST
ROOFING

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Hill's Self
Storage

Flat Roof

Specialists·
Commercial and

·

&amp; FINANCIA I. SERVICES

1\ rk ,,. 11l•um IIU&gt;'

29670

Residential

Let me j o 1\ for ycu1

Bashan Road ·

on A/C

Racine, Ohio

Saves on Cooling .

45771

Metal and Mobile

as low as

740-949-22t 7

home roofs- No
Problem. 15- Year

E: Sl~t• 5'x10' ·

sgg/month"

' .to ~o·x3o•

Guarantee

992-7953
992-4641

"W.A.C.

11401
992-1385
YOUNG'S
SUE's GREENHOUSE CARPENTER
Meigs County's {argest selection of
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

992-7002

\114.' 1

mo

pd

o1

11nw

annuals. perennials. vegetables.
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhoaoaenarons,.ana azaleas.
COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pot of annuals 94~

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL
*ROOFING
*HOME

4" pot ol perennials $1.18(8uy6 gel t FREEl
Flat ol plants $S.60
o,., r ••,,
I Wo!tlk daylight
Hanging Baskels $6.60
oo •""
Mor 'ng Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

1-740·949·2115

MAINTENANCE
dEIMLESS
IUmR

FISHING PER BY
Racine

*Fnelltlmates*

949·1405

Auto: Bumper:-.
Gril le:-.
Radiators ~h f(lw.b &amp;
Si de ta nks
Ornkt'n tabs
Plustk ta nks &amp; B oxc~
T:1il l ightlcnsc:-.
M ild Steel

Pip,·

Stru,·ttll':.ti

Aluminum

·

Bra"~

Stkl... Mi ~;. Ti~. (;,,,,

Pr1)panc \\t:klilt ~
Plasmn. Ail An:. &amp;
,\ l 'C't)kn..: r.:U\! 1 11~ .

State C•r!(/inl• Portohl&lt;'

APWelding (740) 949-0901

Seamless Gul)er
Services

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
PorneiO)'. Ohio
2' Yallr!

Local

Henderson, WV

675-2457 or 448-2912

m

St:unl •. ,, St~·.:l WEL lNG
C:1&gt;t Iron

Pd 1 mo

SERVICE

• Roam Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• Vlnvt Siding A PalnUng
• Patio and Porch Decks

MYERS PAVING

Gun C lub

Prizes Awarded
Food , Beverages &amp;
Bait Provided
Sun ., May 1Bth
All Kids 1 7 &amp; Un der

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675-2457

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV Contractors Lie . #003506

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
[lO'xlO' 61D'x2D'J

(740) 992-3194

Rivcnnn•
Cafe
in Syracuse
1Formal\· \VIiillie\ :,)

Under new

owncfship

and new management.

COME JOIN US
7 Days A Week!
Morning

992-6635

• No Seams
• No l..e«ks

_,&gt;w

· 475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271
~w _

ATV ':; fe nders'

D.

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used

Lawn and Garden Equipment ;so ur
business, not our ~;ide/ine

~otorcyc ks fai rin g:-.

S500.

Free

992-2975

,\1 1 \ 1 -.. ltl~h

'4 Diesel 2000 $3000.00
tn1ernatlonat 454 wl loader
$4 ,000.
Ferguson 35 Deluxe $2500
245 Massey Ferguson
59.000.
Tiller rear tine O.C.S-715

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

Pomerny, Ohio

I \l\\ 1 '- t 1'1'1 II "

'

Top · Removal • Trim
- Stump Grinding
· Bucket Truck

Snapper

I

..

Tree Service

(304) 675·5282

9442

1995 Massey Ferguson 362 ,
-. 55 H.P., 755 hrs.. like new,
(740)985·3843

JONES'

SALES&amp; SERVICE

1

HOMEGROWN STRAWBERRIES starling Friday,
Charles McKean Farm and
William Ann Motel (740)446-

750 Easl 'talc Street l'honc (7~10)~i93-66·71l
AI hens. Ohio

~-

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

VEGETABLEll

/cHivRo,~T/

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Call 949-2734

F'Rurrs&amp;

LARRY SCHEY

We Make House C.a lls

Gravely

Campsite available
with full hookups

51l24

Burr-mill $2500., air cond .

&lt;

go. ... rhru ."-II 0.1

Septic Syslems,
Footers and
Concrete ,
Excavalion, Utilities,
Back hoe and
Dozer, Ponds.

June6-7

'Puppies , Jack Russe ll
Terrier, male &amp; female
$150.00 aach (740)245·

Troy Built horse tiller $1 ,000.

_,

orr~ r

at
Maplewood Lake
State Route 124
Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse, Ohio

Lab PtJppies. No papers.
Phone 740-446·2460 after
4,00 pm.

0
0

Laxity · Prowl- Knock- Fathom - INTO the POOL

740-992-5379

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

J

'

Chhcd Sunda •

Heather A. Fry J,.M.T.

$7.50 per
space

r

moJt im·urance

Get 2nd Free!

Sunset Home
Construction

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenence· Pain ting, vmyl
siding , carpentry, doors,
windows, baths, mobile
home repa1r and more. For
1986 Holiday Rambler free estimate call Chet, 740·
Imperial 33" Motor Home. 992·6323
Excellent Condition inside
and outside. Garage kept.
N[WSPAPERS
(740)256· 1243
Cover All The
1993 Wilderne ss Camper lor
Major Subjects I
sate. 675·5599

.4./.w 11ow at:ctptill~

Easter &amp; Mothers Day
Buy I Gift Certificate,

992·7953

1965 Travelo 2 Bedroom
Mobile Home. $6 .500 Nag.
Very Good Condition . (740)
388-0578.

992-5776
Syrac use Now Open
A ll Flats $6.95
mi.1 m matdr
lfJ in. I tinging h;hl-.,;.&gt;1-.
3&gt;5.95 &amp; :io9.lJ.C.
.12 111 . 1-hm!;mg Ba-.h'h
S II .tJ5
(lin . Pl'n:nnial ·. '$~ .2 "i .
.:+i n. rot' :;.l .llO- .1. 1.::.:!.'\
Kin &amp; 10 in. Clav ruh
&amp; o.:nmbin ali• mu•n- pl.r11\
a" M . .'iO &amp; ~7 ':l"i
O pen Mnn-Sa1 9-5

THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE

I

BASEMENT
WATEAPAOOFING
Unconditional tlletlme guar·
antee. Local relarencas fur·
Budg•l Prlcad
Tranemlaalona,
ALL nished . Established 1975.
typ••· 245·5877 or 643• Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproof ing.

HUBBAADS
GREENHOUSE

&gt;~Special*

992-9553
ot 742·0226

•

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Hour• 1().6 pm
·, Cloaed lklnd•y•

FLEA MARKET

s1

i

Nru1 Item ! Added H-hkl)l
)6198 Pra(h Fr,h RJ.
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45169

FREE ESTIMATES!
7 40·7 42-3411

Wanted to rent - Pasture in -:--:c-. , - - - - - '·
Cole 's Mobile Homes
Gallia Co. with good fences Twin Rivers Tower is accept- ·~
US 50 East. Athens, Ohio, &amp; wale( suppty.' Phone: Jim ing applications' tor waiting,45701 , 74Q-592·1972
Bau hman 740 256·6535. list tor Hud·subs1zed. 1· br.
apartment, call 675·6679: ~
Land Home Pa'ckages availEHO
I.
able. In your area, (740)446·

1 and 2 bedroom apart· Lor_..,.FOR_SPAioiRENriiiCEiil.
New 2003 Doublewide 3 BR ments. furnished and unfur·
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down ·nished. security Qeposit
Trailer space tor rent in
Haven. (304)882·2072
and &amp;295/ mo. 1-800·691 - required , no pets. 740.992·
I
excellet:~l loc:atlona all for Bulavnte Pike, 2 story, 3 br. , 6777.
'2218.
510,918 (800)234-1982
2 1/2 ba., iiv. room, dining,
fam .. &amp; game room. 2 car New 3brl2bth. Only $995 2 bedroom apartment, all
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
gar.. 3 car tJnanached, pool, down and only $t97.47 per utilities paid, itJrnished, $300
Control your hours! Increase 1
acre ·. $ 17 5,000.00 month . Call Harold, 740· deposit, $350 per mOnth,
385·7671 .
(740)992 -2274
1ncome! Full training . Free (740)446·8050.
For Sale: Recondllione cf"~
info.
(888)801· NeW home· 4 bedroom, 2 We have new sectional &amp;
2 br. apt. in Gallipolis
washers, dryers and ref rig · ~ •
1199 .www.yourhomaca- b.lh I''vlngroom
·
1 ·1 • song
· 1o WI·d e h ames as low as
$425.00 a mon. (740)441 · •
' ami'
era tors
Thomp sons.,
cre~e~r-;,;co.;..m~:":'......- - , room . dining . room den, $180 per month , 800-837- 1322
Appliance. 3407 Jackson :!
V
modern kitchen. 2 ca r 2338 .
'
MONEY
Apar tment Avao
·lablo Now. Avenue, (304)675·7388.
garage, hp, an electric. with· rr
TO LoAN
B·ou.:Yil"'~
~
Place ,
Naw
..___,.;tiiiiiiiiiooo_.!
in walking dlstan.ce Pomeroy
. AtvorBend
Golf Course. 3 acres.
AND BUIUJINGS • Haven, WV now accepting
Good U~ed Appliance~
DEBT CRISIS!
call
StJsan --appllcstlons tor HUD-subsl·
10 ,000 ,
Reconditioned
anD
Consolidation is the key to
1740 )985 •4291 ; work 740 . Rio Grande area , 2400 dized, 1 beq_room apart· Guaranteed .
Washer~, ,.
personal loans, mortgages, 446 _7267.
sq.tt .. Oflice/ Commercial ment. Utilit'ies lnciuded Call
Dryers,
Ranges,
and •
and other financial services.
Bu ilding for Ren t/ Lease . (3a.)882-312t Apartment Refrigerators, Some start at
Ava11abte up to $500,000
Home from $199/month. Plenty off parking. (74Q1245• available for qualified sen·
595 . Skaggs Appliances , 7e·
low Interest. CALl TOLL
foreclosure homes 4% 5747
'
lor/disabled person . EHO
Vine St., (740)446-7398
FREE: 1-Bn-436·6297
, down. 30 years ·at8 .5 % apr. Fii:li--":"~:"::--BEAU.TIFUL
APART· - - -- - - - - ~ ~,
4 li stings call800·319·3323
l.al'S &amp;
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark •
.- Kur rMIONAL
ext 1709
ACRE!t.GR
L~•••IISiiiERV;:;,;,:;ICES;;;o;.,_.J =-----c---c--------:: .._________,.. PRJCES AT JACKSON Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
Ranch style brick house, 5
E$TATES, 52 Westwood (740)446·7444 1· 877·830· .
1 acre building lois: 3&amp;112
TURNED DOWN ON
bdrms. 3 lull baths , 2-car
d
Drive from $297 to $383. 9162. Free Estimates, Easy "
·
acres. an 5 acres 1rae 1s
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? garage , finished basement, Green SChools. Great loca· Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call financing, 90 days same .as "
Equal cas h. Visa/ Master Card.
No Fee Unless We Winl
2 frplce, hardwood firs, lion. Rt588. (740)446-9966 740.4 46·2568.
Housing Opportunity.
(7~)992· 5189
1-888-582·3345
Drive- a- litlle save alot

r

·Complete
Remodeling

••

Cellular

A ,·ooril'ty of u mouflaK•
' tlmhinK and hu nfin 10
t quipmem

Every Thursday
Good quality straw. Volume
1
discount &amp; deii'lery avail·
ut 5:30p.m.
able. HeaiJY square bales . 1993 Chevy ConversiOn Van
Consignment Wed. &amp;
$2.85 per bate. (304)675· Wilh new wheelchai r lift .
Thurs. I Oum-Jpm .
5724
~
$9,000. (304)675-5921
N(Jw doing estate
Ill \'\'i'fHU \I If l'\
&amp;
household sale.~.
1995 Dodge Caravan V·6
Concession Stand S'X28'.
$1200.
(740)245-5812
Phone
Equipment Included
Will
Alfi'Ol
Pomeroy,
move with reason . Very
IURSALE
1996 Ford Bronco 4x4,
good condi1ion (7 40)379·
excellent condition , take pay
Auctioneer
2834 .
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS. off , (740)667·6577
Jim Taylor
chevys,
etcl
Craftsman lawn tractor 12 Hondas,
carsllrucks !rom $500. For 1997 Ford Aerosta r XLT.
hp, Briggs &amp; Stratlon engine,
IIi t'/;s IIa uli ug
listings 1·800-719-300 1 aKI 90 .000 mites, good cond.
38" cut. many new parts
$2750
.00
080
30
4·675·
ant!
good shape $450.00 firm 3901
5480
I '.'Xclf wr I; 11J.:
catl (740)441·9359 alter 1976 Honda 554· exc. con.
Craft , Basket and
6pm .
;: .,
.1,
' ' .\ ,! ;,,, ·' :,, ' ,\.
$800 . Must see to appreci· 1997 Plymouth Voyager Van
Antique Mall
$3200.
/ i '1o !. , " ' \, '·, io , '
le-::.:-77~3::·_55_9_7-=------::::: 1998 Chevy S·1 0 Blazer
Hewlett Packard computer, ~e-::
Grafters
Wanted
\, i'
\· '• '"
monitor, keyboard. mouse 1993 Chevy Camara Z2B. $5900.
,.~
I .. ' .
Grand Opening
speakers &amp; tower, hard drive Black, 379-2282,
1996 Ford ExplOrer $4200.
I ' .,,,I' If, .. ,,
May 1st
Is blown, all books with it -::::::-:------:----- 1994 Dodge P/U 4x4 $5500.
.'I ·
$100.00 (740}245.0'321
1993 Pontiac Grand am auto
202
East Main
1994 Nissan P/U 4x4 $3595. I • ·,'•·"• 1,, ,,
'"". I
$1200. (740)245·5812
Street
Downtown ,
1998 Ford Windstar Van
JET
I"'
"" I
Pomeroy
AERATION MOTORS
1994 Ctlevrolet Caprice, $3200.
"''''•
Repaired , New &amp; Rebu ilt tn Police Package, VB 350, All B&amp;D Auto Sales Hwy' 160 N
(7
40)
992-0003
I· IH I I· STI\1 \ IVS
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- Power, Automatic , Good (740)446-6865
Prime location with
!7-IUJ IJIJ2 - J-l711
800-537·9528.
Condition . $2,000. (740)
Sayre's Auto Sale s 2000
lots o f parkin
Punh: I'Cl~, Ohio
446-7029
Mercury Mountaineer. V-8 all
Little Tykes Race car bed, 1994 Chrysler. loaded, whee l drive, excellent condi twin size $70. SatJder enter· clean, low miles, must see, tion . 2002 Ford Escape XLT,
tainment center. $40. 446- (740)992-3394 weekdays, Loaded , 13;000 miles,
(740)742-3020 evenings &amp; (304)675·3354
4348
weekends.
NEW ANO USED STEEL
~
MOTORC.YCLF.S
Bryan Reeves
. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar 1995 Hyundai Scoope , runs
good
$600.00
(740)256·
For
Concrete ,
Angle ,
New Homes, Room Additions,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 6445
1974 Sportster 1000 CC
Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Garages,
Grating
For
Drains , 1995 Pontiac Sunfire. ·2· $5,000. obo. Drag pipes.
Driveways &amp; Wa lkways. L&amp;l door.
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
Runs Excellent. mag wheels. 2.5 gal. gas
Scrap Metals Open Monday, $1.900 obo. (740) 44t· tank. Runs good must selL
More
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 0584.
740·645·1469
' Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 1997 Toyota, Camry. L!E. 1997 Honda OR80R Rac ing
auto, AIC. loaded , 1 owner, Din blka. Very fast. $1200
Sunday. (740)446-7300
56 ,000
mile s.
$~ , 500 . abo. 304·675·3959
519-814
Office Fumllure
(304)882·3772
Brand
New
4-wheelers
.
50
New, scratch &amp; Dent
Save 70%. 1·800-527·4662 1998 Chevy Lumina 4 dr. cc $1299 ; 100cc $1599. Will
Pomeroy E•gles
General
trade for a great deal Call
Argonaut 519 Brldga Stre8!t. Blue $5495.00
BINGO 2171
Contracting
Guyandotte/Huntington. M!F 1998 CheiJY Monte Carlo 2 (304)675-1935
dr. ,loaded
$6495 .00
Every Thursday &amp;
New
P3 450 M·HZ windows 98 Riverview Motors 740·992· Honda 1994 Goldwing
Sunday
Aspe'ncade GL1500. cruise,
Construction,
OS cable modt~m ready ax 3490
15,000
miles.
excelstereo,
COR writer various software
Doors Open 4:30
Remodeling,
lent condition $9200.00.
Included $400.00 304· 773·
Early birds start
1999 Alero 4D 83K $4,495, 446·4395 or 446 -4084 .
Backhoe and
5958 ·exc. cond.
1996 Saturn Sspeed 90K
6:30 lsi Thursday
Dozer Work.
Whirlpool Washer $75 . GE $3,195, 18 others atartlng at
of every month
Dryer $65,
Both are $1,495. COOK MOTORS
Roofing.
AU pack $5.00
almond. (740)446·9066.
74o-448-0103
Bring
this coupon
1994 Sea-Pro Cuddy, 19ft.
BlllllliNG
6" great condition w/trailer.
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
SVm.IJ;s
3.0 Mer.·Cr.ulur ready to
GetS'FREE
use. $8,500. 740·44 1.,401
Block, brick, 11wtr pipea ,
windows, tlntels, etc. Claude
1998 17' Fisher bass boat,
.., I I~\ It I ..,
Wlntert, Alo Oranda, OH
60hp Mere, 72tt Evlnrude
Coll740·245·5121 .
trolling motor. very low hra.,
HOME
garage kept, like new.
IMPROVEI\fu'VI1&gt;
(740)742·2301 after Spm .

i

3384.

• New Homes

·Catages

.AlltEL

SI IIU'I.I IS

. Under New
Managagement

SHACK

GraciotJs living 1 and 2 bed· ~
room apartments at Village
12
I T
L ke
Manor
and
Riverside.'
1 acre ot, ycoon a on
Eagle Rd., city water, $8500, Apartments in Middleport. From $278·$348. Call 740·
(740)247·1 100
992·5064. Equal Housing
3 acres Ready to build. Opportunities.
Mason
$20,000.
Co.
(304)456-1916
Nice
Two
Bedroom ~
' BtJIIding lots close to Pt. Apartments, Large room s,
Pleasant at Meadow hills oH fully equiped kitchen. central 1
Sand hill Ad . (740)446·9340 heating/cooling , washer/
Dryer hookup. (304)882 ·"
or 304-675· 3000.
2523
For sale 45·50 acres possi·
ble home. phone (740)446Now Taking Applications- ·
8578
35
West
2 Bedroom ..
Lot tor sate in Racine, Townhouse
Apartments , "'
(740)992 -5658
Includes Water Sewage,
Trash, $350/Mo., 740·446· ,
Nice mobile home lots. quiet
0008.
cotJntry setting. $115 per
monln. Includes water. -::---:-c--c-c----sewer, trash, 740·332·2167 One Bedroom Apartment , ··
Kitchen, living Room, Ba1h .
Rio Grande area. 3 to 30 $275 pius S200 Deposit. ~.
acres lots, some restrictions, (740)367·7015 .
water &amp; . electric. (740)245·
'
c-----------c---~- ~
5747
One bedroom furnished ,
apartment in Pt. Pleasant
Very clean and nice . N O
Pets. Phone (304)675·1386 ...

I

!UUI\'

THE CRAFT

NEW HOUSE tor SALE
.Debbie Drive $129,000.00
3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
BeatJtilul River View Ideal
{740)245·9268.
Far 1 Or 2 People.
3 br. 1 bath, full baseman! ,
MOBmiLE
·R SHALEOME'i
References. Deposit, No
"'C R' I A d 8 .
I
Pet s. Foster Trailer Park,
,.., · IP ey oa · m1. ou
onRt. 2N. (304)675-4689or
740·441 -0161 .
----------(304 )675' 8838 · For Appt.
14x70, 3 bedroom. 1 112 Clean 2 bedroom Mobile

Will pressure wash homes,
trailers. decks. metal btJIIdd
C
ings an
gutters.
all
fair activities, fair activities, (740)446·015t ask for Ron
club meetings and volunteer or leave message.
3 br. home at 171 Lariat Dr.
meetings. Computer skills
Gallipolis OH .. app1. only
helpful in using &amp; creating - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
Will set for the elderly or dis· please· 74 0·44 6 • 9403 or
data bases. Needed May·
,
74
44
abled. Oay!Night
shift,
0· 6·7845or 1· 304 •67o.r
August. Varied work sched·
3216
ule. 4o hours per week. Full Monday-Frid ay. Call Jan ---·-,.-------~
job descriPtion and applica· 675-7792 Cell t -704·208· 3 year . old Brick Ranch .
• 2• 112 ac~es.
·
· ked up a1 7107
3.000+ sq.n..
t1on
may b e· p1c
Meigs County Extension
inground
pool, storage
0ffice
Mulberry
Hts.,
building, excellent neigt1bor·
Pomeroy, Oh 45769 from
BUSINOO
hood, (740)446·0149
8:30-4:30 pm. E.O.E.
OPPORnJNIT\1
3-Large Bedrooms 2·112
baths, large open kitchen
The Meigs County Council
INOTICE!
w/centet Island, large dining
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- area . Oversized garage,
on Aging Inc.. a 501 © (3) lNG CO. recommends that covered front porch, large
private nonprofit agency,. is you do-business with people rear deck, 16x32 lnground
seeking a leader lor the yotJ know. and NOT to send Pool, and 12ft deck surposition
of
Executive money through the mail until rounding pool area . 20x20
Director.
The
Council you have investigated the storage building at pool side
emplOys 40 plus lndi&gt;Jiduals offering .
·
NtJmerous extras. Ultimate
and
receives
funding
country living. located on 4·
through grants. a local levy
112 acres . 3 miles from New
Th is exempt position admin·
isters all older adult pro·
grams and projects funded
through and for sponsored
by
the
MCCOA
Qua lifications include a
Bachelor's Degree with
experience
in
Administration, fiscal devet-

r

tFurn·•s•

WILSON'

740·992·5232

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

POLICIES: Ohio Valley P~o~bl'-hing reaervtt the right to edit, reject, Of cancel any ad at any time. Errors mutt be reported on the firal day o1 public:.tlon and
Tribune-Sentinei·Atglater will be reaponaible for no more than the coat of the space occupied by the arToi' and only the first ln~ertion. We shill not bt llable
any lose or expense that r11aults from the publication or omission ol an advertisement. Correction will be mltde In the first available edition. • Box number
1ft always confldtnUal. • CutTent rata card appllta. • All rtal atlate advertiMmtnts are subject to tht Federal Fair Housing .l.cl of 1968. • Thla n.,,.,.,.,..
accepta only help wanted 1da meeting EOE atandarda. We will not knowingly accept any 1dverlialng In viOlation ot the law.

~.,11.1D_H_u

' ROBERT
BISSEll
CDIISTRUCnOII

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

33795 Hiland Rd.
Ohio

Yesterday's SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS·

"There's water in the carburetor," the wife told her
husband. "You don't even know what a carburetor is."
the husband sighed . "Well,' she answered, 'I know I
drov e the ca r INTO the POOL "

·'

Visit us at. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallysentinel.com

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Oetcriptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlont
• Indude Phone Number And Addre11 When Needi!CI
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

BURN

85 Monte Carlo SS, rally
wheels. 80 Harley Davidson
1000cc Sportster. 675·7346

OII'!WI Uremred
/Jat·id Rli!Hit'.\' l( Nomw RhrJd('\

r

Office (7 40 985-3511
Home (740) 985-3622
/ •

"Tht! L 1LII c restaurant
" 'ith the bq; taste"

lmo

,..
'

--

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Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com
.

Teen virgin should reconsider
making prom date her 'first'
.DEAR
ABBY:
My
boyfriend "Ada111" and I are
high school seniors. We have
been serious for only three
· months, but we've been !:luting
for more than a year. He is sexually experienced, but I am not .
-- I'm still the "Big Y."
On prom night, I want Adam
to be my "first," but because I
have been disappointed in the
past, I don't want to be left
heartbroken. I love Adam with
all my heart-- he's all I want in
a guy. But I feel tom about
what to do. Should I go ahead
and "seize the day"? Or should
I make him wait? Please help!
•• TEEN GIRL IN THE
GAMBLING STATE
DEAR TEEN GIRL: Your
boyfriend may be a wonderful
person, but to lose your virginIty simply to celebrate pmm
mght is not a mature dec 1sion.
Sex carries with it responsibil ities - and can result in
unplanned "surprises," as the
following letter shows. Read

on:

DEAR ABBY: I was an A
student in high school and was
accepted into both Comell .and
Stanford. I had a brilliant
future in front of me on a silver
platter -- then I had a baby. I
did not get pregnant on purpose. I had my son because I
could not bring myself to get
an abortion or give up my
baby. It has not been an easy

•

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
road.
I married my baby 's father,
even though he was only one
month out of high school. and
I dropped out of my first year
of college. The first 10 years of
our marriage were spent struggling to make ends meet. He
worked. making $6.25 an hour
as a roofer's apprentice. I waited tables at night. sometimes
until 2 or 3 a.m .. then I would
get up at 6:30 a.m. to feed the
baby. There was no money to
go out with friends or for new
clothes, and we lived in a tiny
house in a bad neighborhood.
Lack of money caused most of
our marital problems.
Abby, as much as I loved my
son, . I also resented him
because all my' dreams were
put on permanent hold and I
had to live the way I did. I
spent days, weeks and months
cryin~ hours at a time in
despatr. This was not the life I
had envisioned. In the seven
years that followed, I had two

ACROSS

47

"Do - -

. say"
1 Terhune

collie
4 Blizzard

49
51

maker
54
8 Hare's hair 56
11 Fire
57

Complied,
Shaggy
flowers
Bean curd
Meadow
On a
rampage
Part of
HOMES
Buckeye
sch.
Hosp.
staHer
Composts
Midwest
st.

residue
Moon
sa
go!ldess
13 Margin
59
14 Plastic
-Bani!
60
15 Navaho
foes
61
16 Fan noise . 62
17 Storm
drains
18
·19' Dress
DOWN
bottom
20
21 Invitation
23
1 Far East
. ini1s.
land
24
22 Repute
2 "Lou
25 Wide ties
Grant" star 26
29 Inquire
3 Red Sea
31 Abyss
27
vessels
.34 Doctor's
4 Drinks
28
org.
noisily
35 Bottle
5 Weirdos
30
36 Competent 6 Individual
37 Help
7 Clean up
38 Styptic
8 R• monitor 31
32
39 Zilch
9 Snort of
40 Involve
disgust
10 Legal
. 33
42 Fast jets
44 Bean for
matter
sprouting 13 "Cope
35
12

more sons. My youngest was important point. It takes conthe only child I was emotional- sistency and emotional maturity prepared for.
_
ty to be an effective parent. If
I am now 32. My olde.st is the mother or father is still
12. and yes. I am still married emotionally immature, as
to my husband. People think well-intended as that person
we are the perfect family. but I may be. he or she does not
am not sure it was worth the have the tools to' be the parent
price we have paid. Our first that every child deserves.
two sons never quite had their
Dear Abby is written by
mom or dad during the years Abigail Van Buren, also known
when it counted most. Our as Jeanne Phillips, and was
marriage nearly crumbled. We founded by her mother.
both had affairs and verbally . Pauline Phillipl·. Write Dear
abused each other. It took Abby at www.. DewAbby.com
more than 100 hours of ex pen- or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
sive counseling to fix our fam- Angeles, CA 90069.
ily.
Children are the most precious blessings you can have.
and they deserve two parents
who are ready to treasure them
for their entire life -- not just
when you finally get your life
together 10 or 15 years down
the road.
I urge all young people reading this to GET AN EDUCATION - not just· in college,
but life experience as well .
Youth doesn't last forever. You
will no longer have a chance to
be young and free once you
have children. Don't try to beat
No matter what
the odds. The pain left in the
wake of your mistake land ~ direction you turn , t..;--t--+--t-squarely in your kids' laps.TELLING THE TRUTH IN yoQ can always find ! ho-t--t-TOLEDO
It In the
DEAR TELLING THE
classlfleds!
TRUTH: You have made an

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 187

Book" aunt
Steer
clear of ·'
USN rank
Snail - ·
Rebekah's ·
son
"Misery"

40
41
43
45
46
48

co·star.

Snake
shape
SuHuses
Chore
Chute
material
Heavy fliers
Ovid's
route

Ignore
49 Make a day
Mock
fanfare
50 Smear
(hyph.)
51 -do. mer
Dutch
52 Ballpark
airli!}e
. figure
Mo&lt;l'lflg - • 53 Wk ll~y
Japanese 55 Spanosh
sashes
· gold
Troubles,
to Hamlet
Esteem

you're handing out . instead of
examples. it'll be resented.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)Generally you ' re pretty qual-

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

There wi II be am pie material rewards for being nmbi -

ity oriented when it comes to

rious and industrious in the

making any purchases. but today due to impetuous ness you
might make a purchase lhat
isn ' t worth what it's wrapped

year ahead. You can accQm-

plish most anything for which
you're prepared if you're
willing to pay the price and
not loo~ for something for
·nothing.
. TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - If you need a favor
from a pal today. be up front
about what you want from
him or her. Being cagey or
disingenuous about what
you' re angling for can cause

ln .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-You may have lo take care
I hat you don't visibly place
your self-inlerests far above
the needs of others lodny .
You won'1 win any popularity
f.:Ontests.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- You could ha ve a .knack
for creating your own. problems toda y. Take the ume to
cons ider what the.· consequences or penalties .are apt to
be as a cesult of poor act1on.
SC )RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - If you don't know
what to do about a bad fi nancia! situation, you may be betler off doing nothing today or
you could end up putting
good money after bad.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - Don't expect to
achieve your career
goals lo.

resentment, not support.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-Usually you're pretty surefooted about yourself and
what you expect from your
efforts as to the outcome of
events. but today any optimism you display might be
just a facade .
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- It's one thing to offer
advice to others, but it's another thing to suggest that
which you wouldn't do yourself. H it's only blarney ·

day solely on the basis that
everybody lhinks you're a
neat guy or gal. The competition IS very keen and you're
going to have to compete
against the best.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) ~C hances are if you
have a hunch somethin~ in
which you're \nvolved 1sn' t
good for you, you probably
will be nght. Don. t. act in
ways contrary to what your
inner voice is telling you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - It's always good to be
optimistic. but never to depend solely on wishful thinking . especially if a crilicnl

'
situation
is involved . _Stay

with what you need to do
every step of the way .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - The smarlest thing you
can do today is not look for
anyone on the out~ide to bail
you out. This could be one of
those davs whCie evervbodv
is simply tied up with their
own .affmrs.

ARIES (March 21-April
Have some kind of
back-up system ready to gp if
you ntlempt 10 experiment
with new methods or materials today. Chances are you're
going to need to jump in
quickly and save the day.
19) -

2nd DOWN

•..ll!._

-

• 85

• 24

• 127
AVERAGE GAME 205-215

JUDD'S TOTAL

mag~ ·

""DOWN

0
0

AVERAGE GAME 170-180

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· lo 7-letter word hom the letters on each yardline.
AdO po~nls to eacn word or letter ustng sconng airectlons at rlght SEven-letter
words gel a 60-potnl bonus All WOrds can be lo\J'"td 1n Webster's New Wortd

College Dictionary.

325

Sentencing
in crack
cocaine
case
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW
otl 1003 Unled FelMI SylldiUII, tilt,

I· THO

IT'S 3LIST 1\\~11 I):J 6£1 .\ 1&lt;\CI&lt;.. Clt.l1
Of \IJ~TC\-1\t-\C:j YO\JR. liP QUNER

A third officer, Pomeroy
Patrolman Gene Chaney, also was
hospitalized as the result of transporting the subjects to jail.
' The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency. and local law
enforcement closed an investigation of the incident a week after the
· arrests were made, finding no clear
cause for the officers' illnesses.

Inside
• MSWCD poster winners, See page A3
• Local schools compete in Envirothon, See
page A3
• Pomeroy Alumni banquet, See page A6
Partly cloudy, HI:

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f O• A LUNCH OATE .. .
OR AN A&gt;Ttf1. • WORI&lt;.
COHEE

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Adam Oeorco, lith
Rutland Elementary

Index ·
AND IT 5AV5

2 Sections - 12 Pllaes

~ERE T~AT JOE

6ARA610LA IS
NOW IN THE

BASEBALL 1-lALL

OF

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Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies

A2
83-5
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86
86
A4
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Sports

81-2

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Team to look
at Mulberry
Avenue homes ·

POMEROY - Two of three
people arrested in March during a
dmg search resulti~g in the illness
of three police officers have been
sentenced to suspended prison
terms in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Lois A. Davis, 44, and Terry L. ·
Gilspie, 41 , both of Circleville,
admined to possession of crack
cocaine shortly after their arrests in
mid-March. They were sentenced
last week by Judge Fred W. Crow
Both Davis and Gilspie . were
sentenced to one year in prison,
and both sentences were suspended. Bqth were ordered to participate in the Meigs County
Community Corrections program
for five years, and received threeyear dri.ver's license suspensions.
Davis and Gilspie also were
ordered to• complete
500 hours of
t.,. •
commuruty servtce.
Meanwhile, Donald T. Francis,
33, Racine, the driver of the vehicle that wa~ searched, ha~ not yet
been sentenced.
The three were arrested on
March 9 after a traffic stop resulted in a search of Francis' vehicle.
Shortly after the search began, ·
Deputies Kevin Dugan and Adam .
Smith began experiencing respin!"
tory distress and other symptoms,
and were hospitalized at Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant,

BY BRIAN

The "Rev." Jordan Pickens said the sixth-grade class has practiced for more than three
weeks to prepare for the opening night of "Mountains Are A Feeling" which was _per·fo(med Tue~t;jay night at Southern Elementary. (J. Miles Layton)

VOlunteers honored
with song and dance
J. MILES
Staff writer
BY

lAYTON

RACINE - More than
144 volunteers who participated in a reading program
at
Southern
Elementary School were
honored for their contributions Tuesday night.
Recognition of ·the volunteers was a partpf activities that included a performance of the play

INVENTOR OF

TH (;

TAI"E. RE.C:OP:P!iR

REED

"Mountains
Are
A
Feeling," presented by
Southern sixth-grade students.
Volunteers of . all ages
helped with many projects
during the year including
two book fairs, a homemade teddy bear fundraiser
and the Ohio Right to Read
program. .•
"It was good to see older
folks participate," said
Mickey Kucsma, Southern
Elementary principal. "The

students learned a lot from
them."
Many volunteers took it
upon themselves to read to
children and teach them
about their Appalachian
heritage.
"The volunteers are
important to us," said
Kucsma. "There are more
·hands to do more things for
the kids."
As part of the evening's

Please see Song. As

POMEROY
lhe
Federal
Emergency
Management Agency has
arrived in Pomeroy to
assess damage from the
Mother's Day flood, which
caused damage to a number
of homes in the area of
Mulberry Avenue.
· Meigs
Emergency
Management
Director
Robert Byer s,aid he joined
an inspection team TIJ.esday
in visiting homes which
sustained water and mud
damage as the result of
Saturday's fla sh flooding
on Mulberry and Union
avenues and Wright Street.
"There 's a lot of damage
in that neighborhood," Byer
said . "A lot of basement
damage has been reported,
and there's been a lot of
damage to furnaces in the
area from water getting into
basements."
Byer said the county
highw ay department and
Engineer Eu~ene Triplett
are now worktng on as sessing damage to county infrasctructure,
includin g
bridges aqd cui verts.
Most of th at damage,
Byer said, occurred . on
&lt;;:ounty Road 7A, formerly
Ohio 7, between Pomeroy
and Five Points , where.

Harrisonville Elementary
to be sold at auction
Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH

News editor
POMEROY
The
Harrisonville
Elementary
School building and its contents when abandoned by the
Meigs Local School District
in June will be sold at public
auction to the highest bidder.
The Board of Education
made that decision at a meeting Tuesday night after again
listening to proposals from
Harold Graham and Les
Hayman.
Hayman wanted the building to use for a ministry and a
Bible college. Graham wan\'
ed it for private development
'and community use . Both had
been 10 previous meetings
and expressed their interest.
At last night's meeting,
Graham
again
offered
$20,000 for the building and
detailed his plans for its use .
He said the ups!airs would be
converted into apartments,
and the downstairs rooms
would be used for a discount
food store, a tutoring room
and library, an alumni center,
a senior center and fitness
center, and the gym for community use.
·
Robert Butcher, a Scipio
Township trustee, also was at

www.mydaily•entinei .&lt;Dm

the meeting to talk about' a
need for keeping the
Harrisonville ball fields for
use by community youth.
Meigs Commissioners Jim
Sheets and Mick Davenport
were there at the request of
the school board because an
earlier proposal had been to
sell the building for $1 to the
Commissioners who had
agreed to accept it for possible transfer or leasing to
Hayman .
Davenport explained that
according to an opinion from
the office of Ohio's attorney
general the commissioners
"cannot just give away property, but it has to go up for bid
or be le!lsed except when it is
being used for special purppses, like a senior center, hospital, or historical society." He
said the cummissioners are
still waiting for further clariti. cation on.how to handle property transferred 10 the county.
Superintendent William
Buckley stressed that the
board just wants to do what is
in the best interest of the district. He raised a question of
what would happen if the
building is sold for $1 to the
commissioners who lease it to
a group which falters. then it
reverts back to the commis-

sioners who might look to
selling
it.
"If the property is to be
sold then the proper entity to
sell it is the school district."
Buckley said. "And therein
enters a controversy," he
added.
He emphasized that he is
just looking to ·the interest of
the district, that the district
doesn't want to own the
building. He then suggested
that the best solution might be
to sell it.
At that time Hayman
agreed to withdraw his proposal contingent on the
preservation of the ball fields
for youth programs.
The board moved into
executive session and several
minutes later went back into
the regular meeting and voted
unanimously to divide the
property into two parcels. ·
T.he-- first parcel is to be
transferred to the Scipio
Township trustees for the
"continued use ·of the citizens
of Scipio Township and the
youth in particular" and is to
include a sewage easement
from the second parcel which
is the building and contents,
to be offered to the highest
bidder,

water traditionall)i
covers the
roadway at
D a r k
Hollow
during
flash flood
periods .. .
"I' m still
waiting to
Byer
hear back
from
the
county aboui the extent of
the damage to their infrastructure, but there has definitely been damage in that
area. "
Byer said he and a FEMA
representative met Tuesday
with homeowners in the
affeCted Mulberry Avenue
area , and with Pomeroy
Village Administrator John
Street
Anderson
and
Superintendent
Jack
Krautter, to begin assessing
the extent of property damage .
Meigs County received
four inche s of rain in three
hours on Saturday, resulting
in run-off water which
overflowed storm sewer
drains in the area.
At
Colonial
Park
Apartments on Mulberry
Avenue, members of 14
households were evacuated
to the Meigs Motel, where
they remained at presstime
today. Those basementapartment residents were
provided with food vouchers from the American Red
Cross, and will ' likely be
displaced for an indefinite
period of time, according to
a complex spokesman .

Merchants discuss
raiders invading
Pomeroy June 6
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor
POMEROY - To promote interest in the Civil
War . Reenactment of
Morgan's Raid, several
reenactors
in
full
Confederate costume on
horseback will invade
Pomeroy on June 6 for a
dry run practice for the
Sept. 4-6 stellar event.
Announcement of the
June practice was made at
Tuesday's meeting of the
Pomeroy
Merchant s
Association
at
City
National Bank.
While it was noted that
otily six reenactors including . Darrell Markejohn ,
reenactment leader. will
take part in the June ride,
about 200 will retrace the
route across Meigs County
taken by Morgan 's men in
September.
Karin John son reported
that the Raiders will enter
the vilrage at II a.m. June
6 and durin g an hour in
town will "rob and steal'·

from several business
places including Farmers
Bank, Chapman's Shoes;
the Fabric Shop, the Court
Street Grill and Williams
-Insurance .
Tentative plans include
having Main Street closed
while the reenactors perform . The publicity generated by the demonstration,
which will be televised, is
expected
to ·
create
statewide interest in the
ride , a legacy event of the
Ohio
Bicentennial
Commission's celebration
of the 200th birthday of
Ohio.
It was noted that letters
of invitation are being sent .
to Gov. Bob Taft.
Sample letters for the
public to send are available
from Johnson at Falcon
Design and Marketing .
As for Pomeroy's celebration on Sept. 6, Annie
Chapman reported that
plans are being completed
for a Victorian tea to be
held in the mini-park; and

•

Please see Merch•nts, AS ..

National Nursing
Ho111e

1-Af

WE HAVE WITH IJ~ iH£

J.

Staff writer

C:,~NfT~CJ

(,&gt;

.

FEMA arrives
to .assess
flood damage

Staff writer

W.Va.

&lt;411'1 DOWN

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2003

m.

·Astrograph
Wednesday. May 14, 2003

Coming Friday: Church news

Tuesday, May 13, 2003

I

May 11-17 is Notional Nursing Home Week.
Holzer Medical Center recognizes our long-term core partner,
Holzer Senior Care, during their special ...:.OOk, and congratulates
them on their third consecutive"Fiw-Siar" Rafing from Healthgrades, Inc.

..,

THI!J

N Ill\I I'.I'£
YOU "-IN11N6
fOR. ·t

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TEt.EVt~ION

.'

For more information about Holzer Senior Care Center,

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Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org ·

please call (740) 446-5001

-

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