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'
Pllge o.J • 6anN~IIiatt·6tllli1ttl

~y • Middleport • ~lllpolla, Ohio • Point Pltallnt,

WV

Recllegs vldorfous; Junior injured, 6

••

ank staff

Blair to visit

Larr~

Nelson,right, and Norma Nelson Crow, background,
ofthe CrawforCI Country Style store, stock the store with
T·shlrts marking the visit of British Prime Minister Tony
Blair In Crawford, Texas. President Bush will host Blair on
his ranch In this small _Texas town for a weekend
retreat.(AP)

have several needs und concerns in common (for example, children, new home, college
education, retirement
fromPipD1
planning). To address those
Based on this strategy, a con- concerns, an asset allocation
servative pOrtfolio would plan that emphasizes stocks
generally contain more. IS often recommended
bonds and cash than stocks. because they historically
A more aggressive portfolio have provided superior
· might contain a higher per· returns over time.
centage of stocks.
· At the other end of the
Since . diversification of spectrum are investors who
assets Is generally recog- are close to or who have
nized as a reliable way to entered into retirement. Their
reduce and manage risk in a gOlli mi~ht include providing
. portfolio, the mix of assets in enough mcome to maintain a
your allocation model should lifestyle, or growth of their
reflect your pr:eferred level of capital to ensure that they do
risk. Considerations such as not outlive their assets. For
current spending ·require- these investors, an above
ments, tax implications und average holding in bonds
inflation-adjusted return may may be recommended.
also be addressed through the
Obviously, there are !luideasset allocation process.
lines. When implementmg as
Asset allocation is tle~tible asset allocation strategy, the
und revolves around personal various percentages allocatneeds. However, profession- ed to stocks, bonds and cash
al financial adv1sors have should be assessed on a per~enerally .
found
that sonal basis und reassessed
mvestors at various age lev- annually. Be sure · to check
els tend to be best served by with your financial advispr
adopting allocation models regularly on your best allocathat address the needs of lion strategy.
their "life-cycle phase." In
(Jay Caldwell is a certified
most cases, the lon~er your financial planner at Rayinvestment time hon.zon, the . mond James Financial Sermore aggressive your invest- vices, 441 Second Ave., Galmen! sl!ategy mi~ht be.
lipolis, 446-2125 or 1-BOOFor exaniple, mvestors in 487-2125, member NASD
their 30a llild 40s tend to and SIPC.)

.Jay

,II

POMEROY - Michael
R. Lieving of New Haven,
W.Va., has joined the staff
of Farmers Bunk and Savings Co. os executive vice
president.
Lieving has 27 years ·or
banking
experience.
including work in other
Pomeroy financial institutions. He comes to F~~rmcrs
Bank from City Nationol
Bonk in Mason, W.Va. For
se vcral years, he worked as
bruncH manager of City
Loon and Savings in
Pomeroy, and as regional
president of City Nationol
Bank of West Virt!i nia.
Farmers Bank President
and CEO Paul M. Reed
announced .
Lieving's
appointment in anticipa. tion of the opening of a

Dairy
ft01nPapD1
evening. Young calves are
fed first before the rest of the
herd und then Cottrill, who
has a degree from Virginia
Tech in dairy science. does
uny doctoring that needs to

!&gt;e

do~e, ~ncluding artifici~l

msemmauon. Manure 1s
scraped from the IO\ every
day and used on the fields as
fertilizer.
The farm raises com, beans
and wheat that are used as
feed, with any e~tcess being
sold on the local mnrket.
"It's every day and there is
never a break," Cottrill
added. ''The key to everything as far as I'm concerned
is tfie help. If you've got
good labor, things go so
much better." •
Cottrill ships his milk
through a co-op and is cur- ·
rently getting $13.80 for 100
pounds (rou~hly 12 gallons)
of milk. Dunng peak production, the farm will ship out
1,000 gallons of milk per

bank
branch in
Mason,
W.Va.
later this
year,
at
which
time Lieving will
serve as

:f:~:rs

Bank of West Virginia. ·
"We're pleased that Mike
has decided to ioin the
~
k
team at Farmers 8 an
because of his commitment
to the community bank
~hilosophy," Reed said.
'He will be mindful of the
importance of that community commitment as he
runs .our new West Virginia
division. That's important

·to all of our customers."
Plea ant Valier Hospital
"With my years of bank· Health Foundation and the
ing exjlerience, l have Point Pleasant Lions Club
come to understand how ·and New Haven Rotary
important it is to provide Club.
our customers with 11
He 1111d his wife, Holly,
hometown, personal level ..hove two children. Merrily
of service," Lieving said. Broy and her husband,
"That personal attention Lance Broy, M.D., a resi·
helps Farmers Bank stand dent in family medicine at
~pllrt from the !~~~~banks Grant Medical Center, ·.
10 .~e commumt~\
.
huve two children, Elli 1111d
Today, ~eciSions m Kuty and live in Reynolds·
many banks m our area are burg
being made further and fur· . "' · 1. L" .
d h"
ther away from the cus·
." es ey tevmg ~n ,IS
. tomer, und people in this w1fe! · Amanda, . h.ve . tn
community deserve bel· Le~1sburg, W.Va., w~ere
ter," Lieving said.
he 1s a second-year med.1ca.I
.~. t at '"
In addition to his work as s1uaen
ncs t Vi rgm1a
a community banker, he is Sch!)_ol. . of Osteop.athic
Md
A
d
active in the community,
e 1cme. man a •s. 1111
having served os an officer ICU nurse at Allegheny
in St. Paul Lutheran Regional Hospital in Low
Church, the Mason County Moor, Va.
Chamber of Commerce and
Lieving is now on the job
Development Authority, at Farmers Bank's main
the Board of Trustees of office in Pomeroy, and can
Pleasant Valley Hospital, be reached at 992-2136.

day.
"Last year we were getting
$18 to $19," Cottrill said
about the market. "It dropped
$3 in one month."
When the milk market was
clll'baryl on the plant leaves
strictly domestic, Cottrill ·
or contact insecticide like
said it was a lot easier to
Malathion or Dursbnn. For
judge what prices would be.
further information ask for
fnwn~pD1
Now, with it being un interfact sheet 2022, "Eastern
national market, it's not QS
easy to gauge or project earn- '!'unually remove the . te~t­ Thnt Caterpillar," nvoilable
ings.
· hke strucrures by hund whtle from our office by calling
992-6696.
"You had a better feel they are small.
(Hal Knee11 is Meigs Coun·
when it was a domestic marFor those needing to usc ty ~ Extensio11 agem for agri·
ket," Cottrill said. "It's insecticides as control mea- culwre
and
110tural
become a world-wide market sures, now is the time to restmn:es, .Ohio State U11i·
now."
spray Bt's .(kurstaki form) or versify.)
September through January are the four big months,
with things wpering off in the
weeks.
late summer months. Warm
As you can see, the
weather slows the production
employment outlook for.
of milk, but then IS the time
.
indtviduals without a college
from~pD1
for other work to be done on
degree or some sort of
the farm.
those who want or like to advanced training is bleak. '
Hay production starts May work with their hands. These
(Luanne Rase Bowman Is
I and the fields are P.lanted in · Include electronics, wood- vice president for financial
the middle of Apnl. Hay is working, plunt maintenance, and administrative affairs at
cut every 30 to 35. days.
and drafting und design, just Rio Grande Commun.lty Col"It gives you something to to name a few. We will lege, P.O. Box 326, Rio
do all summer," Cottrill said review what these programs · Grande, Ohio 45674, phone
with a laugh.
have to offer in the coming 245-7236.)

Kneen

Bowman

•

a1

Mllpeo..tfs

Hupp named riation's best agent
Pomeroy ·man

earns award

Eestem sweeps Wehema. I

Marlene Minor, 85
. Ellen L Nutter, 76

I)OMER.OV Roeky
Hupp of 1\nnemy has betn
recognited ns the number on~
agtnt nMionally lOr United
Finandnl Services mr 200 I.
·UFS is Q subsidiary of Monutuenrnl Life lnsurnnct Co.,
specilllilinf! in insurnnte products for individuals and busi-

neues, produeis for retirement rience in serving Meigs
and 40 lK rollo~~ers, annuities, County and the surrounding
Medicm supplemcllts, hul.l- areas.
vidulll a11d group m.Uor medie.ll, burilll a11d linal e:&gt;&lt;pense
NATION'S TOP - Rocky
platu, diS&lt;~bility, dentul, catl«!r,
Hupp, right, has been
and aeddeut iusumnce. Monnamed th&amp; nation's
umentill Lite lnsur.lnt&lt;' Co.
number one agent .for
1\nd United Finandnl Services
United Ananclel Services
home offices are both oosed in
lor 2001. Monumental ·
Bllltimore, Md., part of the
L.lfe lnsurllnce Co. brllnch
Aegt~n Corp., it1 business since
rnenager Dave Harness
'1858.
mede lha presentation.
Hupp has 22 ~ars of tN:pe(Brien J. Reed)

Clinic

Dttiiiii.AI

ELEOION 2002

Halleck addresses
social issues during
visit to .Pomeroy

treats
80

Weather

pets

High: 70s, Low: 40s
· Dttlllla; A:a

Moose Loclp
senior dance
cancelld
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va . The senior
dan ce
planned
for
tonight at the Point
Pleasant Moose Lod11e
has been cAnceled. No
date has been set .for
reschedulinl! the event.

Recorder's
office dosld
'lhursday
POME!l..OY - The
Meigs .
County
recorder's offi.ce will be
closed Thursday, so that
the staff can att~nd a
dimict meeting. Regu lar hours will be
~esumed on Friday.

OHIO

Pick J: 1·1·4
Pick 4: 9·9-ti·:Z
Sllptl1.otlo: :z.7·8-11·32·38
Kicker: :z.s-:z-o-9-2
Pick J nlaht: 4·l· 7
•
Pick 4 nlald: 3-5·8·1
W.VA.
Deily J: 6-9-0
oelly 4: 1·8-7-3
P\1'Mft~IU: 15-ltl-22;30-35 (20)

Index
I 111:1111 • 11,.,..

calender
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

5
7·9

10
5
4
3
3
6-7

2
Cl 2002 Ohio v.llly Pulolllhlnt co.

VOlunteer vets,
students staff
weekend event
lv liliAN J. RaD

BR!!DOMYDAII.YSENTINEI..COM

POMEROY - Otl!anil•
en estimAte th~t at leMt 80
dogs and cats were spayed
and
t\eurered at an
Appalachian Project spay AIJ..VOLUNTIIR .:.. Volunteer ~eterlnerlana and students llneel
and neuter clinic in up at half a dozen surAery tables during the weekend's spay
l'omeroy over the weekend. end neuter ollnlo, coordinated by humane organizations and a
The clinic wns coordinat· teem of vet/~olunteere. (Brian J. Reed)
ed by the Great Lahs
Regional . Office of the
Humane Society of the
United States. Remote
Area Medi cal, a volunteer
corps of veterinarians, and
representatives of variom
humane
orsanizations
whi ch have formally orgn·
nixed under the name
Southeastern Ohio Human
Organizations, auiued.
The auembly line-uyle
clinic at the termer Jlantida
location al!o gave veteri·
nary studerHI an opportu·
nity to mil up their sleevu
for hands- on veterinar.y
experience,
performing
physical ex~1111 nnd surgeries, monitoring ane!thelia, and caring for animal!
in recovery. Local veu,
includinl! Dave Krawsczyn,
who volunteered during
.
.
the clinic, ace uked to pro·
NIXTI
Another
MelliS
County
family
pet
undergoea
i previde follow-up care in case
operetl~e procedure prior to being iterlllzed. Over SO dogs aM
of an emerl!cncy following cata
wera traated end eent home over the twO&lt;Iay ollnlo at the
the 1Ur11ery.
former Pemlda location In Pomeroy, end their ownera were
Many loc al volunteer! ur11ed to contlooe Important ~eterlnary care. (Brian J. Reed)
from the Meigl Co unty
Humane Society abo aui1t- were 1ent home with leas h- care," said Meigs Co unty
ed at the clink, and church e1, co ll3rl and pet carr ien, Humane Society President
members and other volun· a1 needed, and urged cu Alden Waitt. "When pel!
teers provided food for cont inue a good relation- leave, havin11 be~n .steril·
ized, treated for external
thole working at the dinic. 1hip with a loca l vet.
Pets who were seen dur- · ·"The goal is not only to and i ntern~! para&amp;itcs, and
ing the two-day event were hdp prevent pet overpopu- vaccinotcd, owner&amp; ~an
cholen from linandally- lation , b!Jt to mah pet look furward to lorrg~r life
needy families in Meig1 own en aware of the impor- for their pet, aud pet! will
County, and after care wa1 tance of ongoing v-eterinary be healthier, and n1uch
emphuiztd. All ownen care and more human e pet happier."

POMilROV - Soda! Security, job creation and gun
~tllltrol are an1ong the national issues Mike Halleck will
address in his carllpaign for Congress.
Halleck, a Republkan from Columbiana County, vis.ited
Po1neroy or1 a campaign stop last week, lllceting community leaders and elected officials. He is one of two R.epubiiCaiH who !eek their party's nomination for the new Sixth
Distrkt seat in the U.S. House.
Three Derhocrats, including the
incumbetu,Ted Strickland, are also candidtltcs, and Strickland ·was the subject of
111Uch of Halleck's canipaigning In Meigs
County last week.
Halleck has attilcked Strickland's vtltes
on Social Security matters, including his
''
against placing the Social Security
trust fund into a se~ure account, and his.
Hllltck
voting against a re•olution which would
have prevented Con!!ress from using
Soda! Security fullds for any other purposes.
"Strickland's dl!ttkt rates dead last nf the entire Ohio
Congresdonal delegation and in the bottom third in the
.emire coulltry in median household income," Halleck said.
"Why? Simply put, he has no economic plan to create a
good secure job base and when he fails, he blames everyone else, including the President, for his own poor performance.
"(Strickland) voted against the President 74 percent of
the tirne and it's no wonder Southern Ohio docs not get
the attention i.t deserves ."
.
Halleck said he proposes new coal technology to put.
rniners back to work ,
On the subject of gun control, "Mike Halleck will not
concede the gun iMue to Ted Strickland or anyone else,"
Halleck said. "I have been for guns and our Constitutional
right to carry them all my life, not just for political expediency."
·
..
"Concealed carry is not a bad thing for iaw-abidin!! citizcll!. After all, the bad guys have them concealed anyway."

Postal Service gears
for reorganization
FROM STAFF REPORTS

I'OMf.ROY - Faced with declining mail volume and ~
sluggish economy, the U.S. Postal . Service recently held
high -levelmcetingr~ with senior postal officials to discu" th10
propused transformation plan creating a new busines~
111odcl for the postal service, preserve universal mail deliv~
ery and strengthen the mail •ystenr.
'
.
"1 met with ·the ·postmaster generrl priot to th~
announcc111cnt of the transformation plal1," said Barbara A:
Pmmon, postal service dimict manager for the Columbu;
district, covering cerJtral, ealtern and southea.~tern Ohio.
''In the short term, it will give u• the flexibility to keep
com down and to better serve our customers in the
Colum.bu!· di!trkt;' Patterson added, "In the long term,.
we'll work under a new ~sine•! mo,dcl, which will secure
.......... usPS,J

Apri is Notional

Occupational Therapy Month
"Skills for the Job of Living"
Holzer Mec/icql Center salutes our

Occupational Therapllll

M ED I C A L C EN T ER

Discover the Holzer Difference

For more information about lheropiet at Holur Medical Center. please coli Holur Medical
· 11wopy Center ot (7'40) 44•·•121 In Gollipoli1 or (7'40) ttt;2104 in Pomeroy,
or Holur Mtclicol Center's Inpatient Rehob Unit ot (7' 40t 44•·107'0•

www.bolzer.org

•

I

-·

�..

•
"

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Pagef

Tuelday, April I

ol Colurnbuoi54'M1 ' I

Inc.

Rain tonight, Tuesday
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The r:ain will continue in the Mid-Ohio Valley on Tuesday as
a cold front sweeps across the region.
Behind the front will be cooler, drier air.
For the rest of the work week, the valley wiU see ncar-normal temperatures of 60 degrees for highs and 39 degrees for
lows, the National Weother Service said.
No rain is in "the extended forecast.
.
Weather Forecast
Tonight... Breezy and mild.~ 30 percent .chonce of showers
after midnight. Lows in the upper 50s. South winds around 15
mph.
.
Tuesday... Showers likely with a chance of thunderstorms.
Highs 65 to 70. West winds around 15 mph. Chance of rain 70
percent.
Tuesday night ... Cloudy with a chance of showers
early... Then partial clearing. Lows in the mid 40s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 60s.
Wednesday night ... Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 40s.
Extended Forecast
Thursday... Mostly clear and warm. Highs ill the lower 70s.
Friday.,.Partly cloudy and warm. Lows in the 'lower 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Saturday... i'artly cloudy and continued warm. A chance of
showers from early afternoon on. Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the mid 70s.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Still warm .
Lows in the lower 50s and highs in the lower 70s.

Pro-Israel rally draws
Palestinian protesters
BLUE ASH (AP) - About
100 pro-Palestinian demonstrators an.d a larger contingent of
supporters of Israel traded
taunts at a Stand with Israel
Now rally in this Cincinnati
suburb.
There were no arrests, but
police reported breaking • up
several arguments at the Sunday rally organized by the
Jewish Federation of Cincinnati.
"At this painful moment in
history; it is clear to all that
terrorism is the enemy," said
Rabbi Michael Zedek, of the
Jewish Federation.
"It is vital that people of
good will join in solidarity
against that end and with our
friends. Israel is family for
many of us, a friend for all of

us."
Rep. Steve Chabot, ROhio, vice chairman of the
House International Relations Committee's Subcommittee on the Middle East
and South Asia, addressed the
crowd.
"Am I optimistic about the
peace process?" Chabot said.
"Yes and no. Peac.e will never
come until the terrorist infrastructure is eliminated."
Several hundred people
attended the rally. Demonstrators filled a city block . at a
similar rally in New York City
in support oflsrael in its military offensive in the West
Bank. Others drew thousands
of people in Los Angeles,
Boston, Miami and Crawford,
Texas ..

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio's Bicentenni'.ll Bell program, which is a big hit with
counties and historical societies, has drawn criticism from
businesses who question how
the state aworded the program's S1. 7 million contract.
Cincinnati's.Verdin Co. was
awarded the contract in
August to cast 88 bronze bells
- one for each county - on
site to commemorate Ohio's
200th birthday next year.
The company made seven
bells last year and plans the
remaining 81 over the next
two years. The next scheduled
casting is April 12 in Manchester in southern Ohio.
,
The state S3ys the 160-year-old
company w:lS the only business
with the ·size, expertise and
employees necessary for the project, though some bell makers disagree.Venlin is charging the Ohio
Bicentennial
Corrunission
$19,-500 per bell.The commission
is funded by taxpayer dollars.
The program involves transporting a furnace, bronze
ingots, a mold, casting sand,
polishing equipment and other'
itenis and then '"sting the 250pound bells in two days. ·.
Verdin, with about 100
employees- in Cincinnati, has
four full-time employees
working on the Bicentennial
Bell program.
' "Verdin was thoroughly
resean:hed as far as their ability to
perform under the contract, and
they've been doing on outstanding job:' said Fred Stratmann, a
spokesman for the Ohio Bicentennial Conunission.
Stratmann said the state sent
e-mail inquiries to other bell
companies about the contract,
. which was not bid competitively. The commission is
under .the Ohio Historical
Society, whose guidelines recommend but do not
require - competitive bids.
Executives at two companies
say they would have been inter~
ested in the contract, . but they
never heard from the state.
"We never got a chance to
bid on it:' said David His&lt;)',
president of Hisey Bells in
Greenfield, about 50 . miles
southwest of Columbus. "I was
trying to contact the committee that was in charge of the
Bicentennial project - my calls
weren't retUrned."
Hisey, who learned of the
project through . word-ofmouth in the bell-making
community, said no bell maker
he spoke to had the chance to
· bid on the project.
While casting bells over two
days is not unheard of, doing it
on the road, away from a
foundry, is very unusual, said
Steve Robison, technical
director for the Des Plaines,
.lll.-based American Foundry
Association, a trade association
for the metal casting industry.
Although Verdin is known as

www.mydallyHntlnal.com

LOCAL BRIEFS

•

EMS log calls

Complaints
. loged

'

·tF I HAD A HAMMER - Swinging a golden sledgehammer, Gov. Bob Taft breaks open a cas~
containing the first Ohio 'Bicentennial Bell, Sept 9, 2001, in Marietta, Ohio. The Bicentennial Bell·
progra·m, which Is a big hit with counties and historical societies, has drawn criticism from busl,
nesses who question how the state awarded the program's $1.7 million contract. (AP)
•,
a bell maker, it did not cast
bells before winning the contract. Instead, it received bells
from a Dutch company, then
did the finishing work, including adding clappers, wooden
yokes and wheels the bells
swing on.
The company completed
the 66,000-pound Peace Bell
in Newport, Ky., the world's
largest free-swinging bell,
which was cast in Fr:ance for
the Millennium celebr:ations.
The contract should hove been

open to anyone who wanted to
apply, said Rep. Kerry Metzger, a
New Philadelphia Republican
who has criticiud the financial
operations of the Ohio Historical
Society.
· Stephen George, the Bicentennial Commission's executive ·
director, conceived the bell
program as a way for each
Ohio county to celebrate the
state's 200th birthday.
"It's very much in keeping
with the spirit of trying to
make sure even the smallest of

counties has a meaningful•
experience during this special ·
period," he said.
·
Historical societies ond muse•. •
urns like the concept, which •
allows counties to plan· Bicen- •
tennial events around the bell. ·
"The only controversy was •
where will we put it, who will
get it;' said Lucinda Frailly; :
education di.rector and special
events' coordinator at Canton's ·
National Fir,st Ladies Library ·
in Stark County. "Everybody
1
wants it in their town."

COLUMBUS {AP) - Old
Campus Partners bought
bars and apartments ~ and Papa joe's after it burned in
the memories that go along. 1996. The Travel Agency
With them· will begin tum- became Maxwell's and then
bling down soon along the closed later as did other bars.
southern edge of Ohio State In 2000, Campus Partners
..!&gt;ought the South Heidelberg
Univenity.
: Campus Partners for Com- building, where a half-dozen
!\\Unity Urban Redevelop- bottles of booze still ·stand
J\\Cnt began buying the build- behind the counter and bar
i~;~gs in 1996 with the idea of stools rest in an uneven row.
Some area apartments have
turning the area into three-,
four- and . five-story brick been vacant much longer,
ooildings that will house even as far back as 1968 when
restaurants, apartments and the counterculture was in full
Offices. It will be called the · swing, but before the anti-war
University Gateway Center.
. riots that · shook campus in
· Dottie Martin remembers 1970.
the South Heidelberg, a cav•
One apartment still is
ernlike basement institution, strewn with papers and trash,
in the decades before south including an electric bill dated
·campus becarl)e a beer-by- May 3, 1968.
the-bucket
undergraduate
John Mercer .was an Ohio
playground.
State student in the early
"We'd go and dance ·and 1950s and used to drink beer
have a good · time," Martin, at the South ~Berg. In the late
who occasionally stopped '50s, he moved back and
there with friends during the bought a house while his wife
more-genteel World War II was in graduate school.
He remembers the restauyears, told The Columbus Dispatch for a stgry Saturday. rants and variety, stationery
"With the ROTC on campus, and clothing stores in the area
there were a lot of fellos there along with Nicklaus Pharma~ all the· girls wouls:l go cy where "you'd see a little
there."
towheaded boy in the aisles"
before Jack Nickbus
·The area became rowdier in the mid-1970s. Patrons leav• gained fame as a golfer.
ing such bars · as the Travel
Campus Partners hoped to
Agency and later Papa joe's keep all, or at least the facades,
had to be reined in on side- of some buildings, said Terry
Vl[alks with curbside cables,
Foegler, .Campus Partners'
:"It was always hystedcally president. The problem is that
busy there," said Paul Horning new buildings will be set back
of Cincinnati, who worked at farther from the street than
the Travel Agency in autumn the existing ones so that there
1?77. "It was so crowded, you can be wider sidewalks and
couldn't move. You had to on-street parking.
fight your way through the
Still, replacing the old with
crowd to serve people. There the new leaves people such as
were a couple of big bounc- Horning sad.
eis, and sometimes they liter"You hate to see them tear
any threw people out. It was a down something that has that
crazy place."
much nostalgia," he said.

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6. Question l Answer Session.
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Meet the Construction Manager:
The Quandel Group, Inc. ·

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the bomb threat. After an
investigation, a student wu
charged
with writing a bomb
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service threat letter and was charJed
GALLIPOLIS- Mariana Minor, 85, Gallipolis, died Sunday, answered eight calls for assis- with inducing panic.
April 7, 2002 at Holzer Senior Care Center.
tance over the weekend. Units
She was born on Jan. 23, 1917 in Clay Township of Gallia responded as follows:
County, daughter of the late Jarvie and Mamie Craft BrumCENTRAL DISPATCH
field. She was a homemaker and a member of the Kingdom
Saturday, 2:48 a.m., Crew
Hall of Jehovah's Wimessess since 1933.
Road, Terri Hanley, Holzer
POMEROY .;,_The March
Surviving are a sister, Ora E. Stroup of Galion, and a brother Medical Center;·
2002 complaint log has been
and sister-in-law, James I. and Marguerite Br~mfield of New12:41 p.m., Eagle Ridge,
released by the Meigs County
port News, Va.; and several nieces and nephews.
Roy Parker, St. Joseph's HosSheriff.'s Department.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her hus- pital;
.
According to Sheriff Ralph
band,John M. Minor; and two brothers, Donald Brumfield and
3:58 p.m., Corn Hollow,
Trussell, the following comPaul Brumfield.
assisted by Rutland, Tammy
plaints were logged ·last
Services ·will ·be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, ~pril 9, 2002 at
Watkins, Pleasant Valley Hos- month: Domestics, 26; unruly
Cremeens Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis, with Speaker Joel pital;
juveniles, 5; protection order,
Davis officiating. Burial will follow at Mound Hill Cemetery.
6:45 p.m., HMC Clinic, 1; kidnapping, 1; child abuse,
Friends may call an hour prior to service:
Charles Boyles, PVH;
2; child stealing, 1; rape, 1;
Memorial contributions may be made to the Kingdom Hall
9:13p.m., Elm Street, Ruth total family offenses, 37; stolen
ofJehovah's Witnesses, c/o Joel Davis, 712 S.R. 588, Gallipolis, .
Hill.HMC;
vehicles, 4; hit/skip, 1; punuit,
Ohio 45631.
Sunday, 1:17 a.m., College . 1; road rage, 2; injury acciStreet, Phillip Weaver, PVH.
dents. 2; auto fire, 1; improper
RUTLAND
transport of a firearm, 1; total
HOCKINGPORT - Ellen L. Nutter, 76, Hockingport,
Saturday, 1:27 p.m., Happy vehicle related incidents, 12;
Hollow, Sam Williami, PVH;
forgery, 2; froud, 2; ·counterdied Sunday, April 7, 202 at her residence.
She was born June 4, 1925 in Grantsville, W.Va., daughter of · 7 :01 p.m., HMC Clinic, feit, 1; lo•t cell phones, 1;
mailbox llbmbs, 2; animals, 2;
the late Mellie Franklin and lnda Richards Parsons. She was a Cynthia Russell, HMC.
litter,
3, total, 13.
homemaker and attended Faith Chapel Church in Coolville.
Harassment, 3; aggrovated
Surviving are her husband, Robert Nutter; four daughters
menocing, 3; alcohol related,
and sons-in-law:. Donna Jean and Steve Roark, Sherlin and
3:
obstructing, 1; disorderly
Delbert Smith, Sheila and Dennis Sams, all of Hockingport;
conduct, 2; phone threats, 8;
Maxine and Bob Headley; a ,daughter, Patty Haning of HockPOMEROY - A juvenile vandalism. 4, criminal damag~
ingport; a sister and brother-in-law, Lucy and Brice Roberts of
has been charged with induc- ing, 5; civil disputes, 2;
. Hockingport; nine grandchildren; 15 great grandchildren; a
ing ponic after students at ' prowlers, 2; total, 33; (DOAs)
great-great gpndchild; and several nieces· and nephews..
·
Meigs High School were, ~ent House, 1; code-4, 1; suicide
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death . by three
home last Tuesday following a attempts, 3.
·
brothers: Ressie, Leo and Lynn Parsons; and three sisters: Irene
bomb threat, according to the
Number of prisoners held
Roberts, Alma Boggs, and Lorraine Parsons.
. Meigs
County
Sheriff's in Meigs County Jail in "
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday, April 10, 2002 at
Department.
March: 46.
White Funeral Home in Coolville with Rev. Wilbert Lowe
Sheriff
Ralph
Trussell
said
officiating. Burial will follow at. Stewart Cemetery in Hoc kinthot his office received a
port.
Friends may call at the funeral home ·on Tuesday fro~ 2 to 4 phone call from . officials at
Meigs High School last TuesTUPPERS PLAINS
and 6 to 8. p.m.
day who said two letters wete VFW Post 9053 will meet in
received that indicated a the hall at Tuppers Plains at 7
bomb was in the school and p.m. on Thursday. Officers
that it would explode at 12 will be nominated, and a meal
p.m..
will be served ar6:30 p.m.
The school was closed early
and the students were immediately transported home, said
Trussell. After a search of the
TUPPERS PLAINS building by deputies and Kindergarten regilstration in
· ,;chool officials, no bomb was the Eastern Local School Disfound.
trict will be held April 15 and
Trussell added on Thursday 16. Parents are asked to call
CLEVELAND (AP) -The Ohio Lottery's Super Lotto Plus the Sheriff's office was con- Eastern Elementary School at
jackpot is growing to $56 · million for the next drawing tacted . by the high school 985-3304 for an appointWednesday night. ·
concerning information on ment.
· There were no Super Lotto Plus game tickets with the correct com~ination for the $43 million drawing Saturday night..
marketplace. Under this ·plan,
Sales in Super Lotto Plus totaled $8,863,682 and players
thot legislation wiU change shared $1,466,035. Sales in the Kicker totaled $1,067,371 and
and the Columbus district
players shared $450,230. Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled $171,616
will be better .for it."
fromPIIge1
The plan also outlined
and players shared $46,947.
short-term, cost-cutting meaT.here were 164 Super Lotto Plus tickets .with five of the mail delivery for our future."
The
new
model,
called
a
sures.
The Postal Service has
numbers, and each is worth $1,500. There were three tickets
Comine.rcial
Government already cut 30,000 jobs
with five numbers plus the bonus ball, and each is worth
Enterprise (CGE), W9Uld.cre- nationwide and $2.5 billion
$10,000. The 8,887 Super Lotto Plus tickets with four of the ate a government-owned in ~osts over the past two
numbers a.re each worth $100 and' the 477 tickets with four entity, but one enjoying some years.
numbers and the bonus ball are worth $500.There were 12,567 of the operational and finanOver the next five yean,
Super Lotto Plus tickets with three numbers plus the bonus ball. cial flexibility found in the costs will be cut by $5 billion
more nationwide through job
In Kicker, one game ticket had all six numbers, and the private sector.
Under the CGE, the Postal attrition, outsourcing, plant
owner can claim the $100,000 top prize. The ·winning ticket
Service would set rates more consolidation, lifting the ·
was sold at Ohio .News in Mansfield.
predictobly, be oble to retain moratorium on post office
The eight Kicker tickets with the first five numbers are eJch earnings, work under private closings and other measures.
worth $5,000. The 113 with the first four numbers are each sector labor laws and, depend- In addition, the Postal Service
worth $1 ,OOO.The 1,016 with the firstthree digits are each worth ing on future legislation, will focus on developing new
$100 and the 9,563 with the first two numbers are each worth could even pay taxes or divi- "intelligent" moil product.! to
attract new business and betdends to the government.
$10.
The CGE model would be \er serve existing customers.
No Buckeye 5 game ticket had the right combination for the
"Mail volume is going
a structural transformotion
drawing Saturday, so no one can claim the Ohio Lottery game's
requiring · legislative acts of down nationwide and in our
top prize of'$100,000.
Congress. Proposed legislative region, while ·at the same time
There were 50 Buckeye 5 tickets with four of the numbers, changes would be the most 1. 7 million new addresses are
and each is worth $250. The I ,604 tickets showing three of the.· extensive since the Postal added every year, costing us
numbers are each worth $10, and the 18,407 tickets 'showing Reorganization Act of 1970, billions in lost revenue," said
two of the numbers are each worth $1 . The Ohio Lottery will which enabled the Postal Ser- Patterson. "We added over
pay out $722,386.50 to winners in Saturday night's Pick 3 vice to function effectively 20,000 new adoresses in the
until the end of the 20th cen- Columbus district last year
Numben daily game, which had sales of $1,002,066.
alone.
tury.
The Pick 3 Numbers day game winners' payout was
"But the Postal Service will
"We deliver to more than
$372,784 on sales of$565,308.50.
1.1 mil)ion addresses in this meet these challenges headIn the Pick 4 Numbers night game, players will share region, and pump over $400 on," she added. "Employees of
million into the local econo- the Columbus district will do
$233,000 and the sales for the game came to $379,432.
The Pick 4 day game winners' prizes total was $39;500, and my," Patterson said. "But the all they can to implement the
legislation we currently work necessary changes and get the
the lottery sold $191,649 worth .of tickets for tha.t drawing.
under doesn't· give us the Postal Service back on sound
Saturday'• numben
tools to survive in the current financial footing."
Super Lotto Plus: two, seven, eight, eleven, thirty-two, thirtyeight.
Bonus Ball: seventeen.
Kicker: two, five, rwo, zero, nine, two.
Buckeye Five: ten; twenty-one,' twenty-two, twenty-six, thirty-seven .
Night Pick 3 Numbers: four, two, seven .
Night Pick 4 Numbers: three, five, eight, one.
Doty Pick 3 Numb~rs: one, one, four.
Day Pick 4 Numbers: nine, nine, six, two.

Mariana Minor

e.

.,..DILl.,
.,.....,.
.,...., .,

The D•lly Sentinel• Page A3
I

Monday, April I, 20G2

Compari.ies want chance to bid on bells

Ohio weather

Monday, April 8, 2002

If

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:•

Eastem girls

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sweep IIWCif.
' White Ftlkons

t.

Ellen L Nutter

Bomb threat
suspect caught

VFWmeets

Lotto··now
at $56 million

Registration.set

USPS

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Coming Thursday in the Sentinel .•

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~

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•

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!• See Page 6 in today's Sentinel
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Mand!y, April a, 2002
'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Otilo
740-982-21118 • Fu: 7*1112-2157

t..,.,.,

Pages

_The_oa_ny_Sen_tin_ei_ _ _B;;;;;;;..¥.

MandiJ. April I. 2002 '

The ·Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

the Bend .
Abusive stfR ather exiled · rom burial plot ·

Plge A4 ..
I

•

••

DEAR ABBY: Our stepfather is
stiJl...Uve, but my family and I are
trying to decide where to bury him
when the time comes. When our
mother died lix yean ago. we purchased two burial plots so they
could be laid to rest next to each
other. We even had a headstone
engraved with both their names.
A few months ago, we discoVered
that our stepfather sexually abused
several of the children and grand. children when they were young. We
also. learned he never paid my
mother's funeral expenses.
Abby, we are torn between burying him with our mother, or
removing the present headstone
and replacing it with a single stone
with just her name on it. Most 9f us
:want him to be b!lried far away
from her. We can't help feeling he
married our mother to get to the
children. Please advise us on the

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
right thing to do. - ANGRY
DAUGHTER IN KANSAS
DEAR ANGRY DAUGHTER: Your feelings are understandable and justified. However,
under the circumstances, I cannot
understand why you feel any
responsibility for disposing of your
stepfather's body "when the time
comes." He's not a blood relative.
I have another suggestion: If you
a~~: his legal next of kin, donate his
body to science. That way in death

he can do something positive for
society.
DEAR ABBY: I am in my early
30s, and this summer I'm to be
married for the first time. My parents have been divorced for nuny
yean and are splitting' the cost of
the ~dding. My father has contributed S) 0;000. The cost is
expected to be higher. My mother
remarried I 5 rs ago, and she and
my stepfather ,Jn afford to pay the
balance.
The problem is I intensely dislike
my father's girlfriend, "Tess." They
have been together 10 years. I have
done everything I can think of to
get him to leave her.
Tess attends all the family holiday
parties. I won't go if I know she will
be there - therefore, MY holidays
are ruined! I did succeed once in
getti~g her "uninvited," but since
then nobody will listen to me ..Tcss

will have nothing to do with me
During a family gathering, I was
now. In fact, she looks right through catching up with two of my elderly
me as though hm invisible.
female cousins whom I hadn't seen
Abby, I do not want Tess to attend since my childho,od. The older of
my wedding and ruin my big day. I the two was in her 70s. She
have demanded that my father not remarked that sh.e had been married
bring her, but he will not hear of it. multiple .times and was now marHe says since he is paying $10,000, . ried to her younger sister's ex-hushe will invite whomever he wants. · band.
What can I do? How can I make , I a;ked if the mmiage had caused
this woman stay away! - SUM- any lmd fedlngs, and I still have to
MER. BRIDE ON A BUMMER chuckle at her answer: "No hard
DEAR SUMMER BRIDE: feelings - he's a good man, so we
You can't. Unless you welcome her decided to recycle himl" warmly, you may experience a MARY HEDENSKOG, NOR·
S10,000 shortfall. So sweeten up, WOOD, N.C.
grow up and accept reality. Your
DEAR MARY: Your cousin was
wedding can be the beginning of :i practical woman. "Waste not, want
many new relationships.
not."
DEAR ABB:Y: The letter from
(Patliiflt Pliil/lps a11d lw dattghttr,
"Big Sister Sue,'' whose· sister is }eamre Pltillips, sl1art tilt pstudo"Y'"
marrying the·ex-husband of anoth- Abigail w., Bttrc•r. Wrilt Dfar Abby at
er sister, reminded me of a similar www.DcarAbby.cona or RO. Bo:~r
situation in my family.
69440, Los A~tgeles, CA 90069.)

'

Keeping MalColm X~ papers
·public ben~ts new generations
• San Francisco Chronicle, on keeping .Malcolm X~·
paper.1· pr~blic: Whe~ Malcolm X was a~sas~inated on. Feb.
21, 1965, most Amencans had a freeze-dned 1mage of h1m as
a militant black nationalist and Muslim leader who udvocat- ·
ed separatism and armed self-defense.
.
But in the lust year of his life, the 39-year-old activist made
his tirst pilgrimage to Mecca, after which he disavowed the
anti-white rhetoric and racist teachings of the Nation of Islam,
and changed his name to El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz.
In a diary entry dated April 17, 1964, a humbled Malcolm
X described crowds at Mecca praying, "a~l colors, bowing in
unison," and wrote that he was "not consc1ous of color for the
first time in my life." Soon after, he wrote, "Out of the sudden darkness comes sudden life."
Historians have long wanted to understand the nature of this
profound conversion, cut short by his untimely death. But the
absence of his journals and letters has left a gaping hole in the
biography of one of this nation's most important African
American ci vii rights ucti vists and leaders.
·
.
Now, under mysterious circumstances, a rich trove of Malcolm X's notebooks, diaries, drafts of speeches, as well as his
personal Koran, have surfaced. The San Francisco auction
house of Butterfield had planned to sell the collection. but has
delayed any auction until legal issues are resolved. Schol!lfS,
as well as Malcolm X's relatives, are outraged that the col- .
lection might end up in private hands. Family members, who
have authenticated the papers, .have hired an attorney to stop
the sale; the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
is urgently seeking funds to buy the documents.
We all have much to team from a man who decided to judge
people by their intentions, rather than by the color of their
skin. Whatever happens, this collection must be placed in an
archive where it will be available to the public. ·

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, April 8, the 98th day of 2002. There are
267 days left in the year. .
· Today's Highlight in History:
On April 8, 1974, Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves hit his
715th career home run in a ~arne against the Los Angeles
Dodgers, breaking Babe Ruth s record.
On this date:
In 1513, explorer Juan Ponce de Leon claimed Florida for
Spain.
In 1935, the Works Progress Administration was approved
by Congress.
ln 1946, the Llague of Nations a~sembled in Geneva for the
last time. .
In 1950, ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky died in London.
In 1952, President Truman seized the steel industry to avert
a nationwide strike.
ln 1970, the Senate rejected President.Nixon's nomination
of G. Harold Carswell to the U.S. Supreme Court.
In 1973, artist Pablo Picasso died at his home near Mougins, France, at age 91.
.
In 1981, Gen. Omar N. Bradley died in New York at age 88.
In 1990, Ryan White, the teen-age ATDS patient whose battle for acceptance gained · national attention, died in Indianapolis at age 18.
In 1994, Kurt Cobain, singer and guitarist for the grunge
. band Nirvana; was found dead in Seattle from an apparently
· self-inflicted gunshot wound; he was 27. ·
Ten years agil: Tennis great Arthur Ashe announced at a
New York news conference that he had AIDS, saying he was
forced to go public because a newspaper had inquired about
his health. (Ashe died in February 1993 of AIDS-related
pneumonia at age 49.)
Five years ago: The space shuttle Columbia returned to
Earth, ending a mission cut three-quarters short by a defective
generator. The Vatican chose Archbishop Franc1s George of
Portland, Ore., to head the Archdiocese of Chicago, succeeding the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin. Singer-songwriter
Laura Nyro died in Danbury, Conn., at age 49.
.
One year ago: U.S. officials said President Bush was sending a letter to the wife of a missing Chinese fighter pilot as a
humanitarian gesture. (The pilot's plane had collided with a .
U.S. spy plane, forcing the spy plan~ to make an. emergenc.Y
landing in China.) Tiger Woods won the Masters for h1s
fow1h straight major title in a span of 294 days.
Today's Birthdays: Former first lady Betty Ford is 84.
Opera sin~er Franco Carelli is 79. Comedian Shecky Greene
is 76. Lyncist Fred Ebb is 69. Actor 'Klaus Lowitsch is 66.
Iovestlgative reporter Si:ymour Hersh is 65. Basketball Hallof-farner John Havlicek is 62. Singer J.l Jackson is 61.
Sins.~r Peggy Llnnon (The Lennon Sisters) is 6" Actor
HyWej, Bennett is 58. Actor Stuan Pankin is 56. Rock musician,SII!ve Howe (Yes) is 55. Actor John Schneider is 48. AllStar catcher Gary Carter is 48. Rock musician Izzy Stradlin is
40. Singer Julian Lennon is 39. Rock singer-mus1cian Donita
Sparks (L7) is 39, Rapper Biz Markie is 38. Actress Robin
Wright Penn is 36. Actress Patricia Arquette is 34.
I

..

Soda[ Security survivors ben~ts

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Palestinians musiflee ftom the cult·of martyrdom .
The most persistently accurate analyst of the minefields of the Middle
East has been Found Ajami, professor
at the John Hopkins School of
Advanced International Studies.
In the March 29 edition of The Wall
Street Journal, Ajami - who has also
been somewhat of a prophet - noted
that when Abdel-Basset Odeh, a young
man from the West Bank town of
Tulkarm, ignited the' "Passover massacre" in Netanya, "he walked straight
out of the culture .of incitement let loose
on the land."
This . has been Yasser Arafat's most
unforgivable crime· against Israelis,
Palestinians, and humanity. The
Passover bomber, and all others, says
Ajami, took part in the culture all
around them - "the glee that greets
those brutal deeds of terror, the cull that
rises among .the martyrs and their families."
Arafat glorifies these "holy manyrs,"
while hypocritically and ritualistically
"condemning" violence against innocent civilians. Yes, there is desperation
among Palestinians, especially among
some of the young. But, as Thomas
Friedman points out in the March 31
edition of The New York Times, "a lot
of other people in the world are desperate, yet they have not gone around
strapping dynamite to themselves:· ·
There are Palestinian nationalists
who are appalled at this poisonous cult
of martyrdom that has been inculcated
in people with very legitimate grievances; and they may realit.e, as Friedman writes, "a state brought about by
suicide bombers will forever be
deformed ." While these Palestinian
critics of suicide bombing seldom
speak out, one has. In a remarkable wticle, "Where We Went Wrong," in the

.

..

BUSINESS MIRROR

.

BY EUZAIITH CRU,.
SOCI~L SECURITY MANfiGER. ATHENS

February issue of The Progressive, whole world must see this Palestinian ' '
Hanan Ashwari, a prominent official of suicide strategy defeated."
.
the Palestinian Authority - and usual- 1 have written in support of an indely a ubiquitous defender of Arafat on pendent Palestinian state for ~ears, and
American television - wrote:
have often disagreed With Ariel"
"Why and when did we allow a few Sharon's strategic decisions, wishing· ,
from our midst to interpret Israeli mili- that Abba Eban was in charge. But·
· tury attacks on innocent Palestinian Sharon was right in his address to his '
lives as license to do the same to their nation on Dec. 31: "You cannot com·
civilians? ... Wheri and why did our promise with suicide bombers.'' To- '
elected (Palestinian) legislative council which foreign policy adviser, Dare· '
become .a political instrument for the Gold, added that Arufat, "~aving brain-··.
few, or a self-negating powerless body · washed an entire generation of younft .
for the many'/"
people to become suicide bombers, ' ·
She has not been talking like that like has committed not only a crime against• ·
that ever since, having apparently Israel, but against humanity. And •,
become an apparatchik once more, against Palestinians.
joining Arafat's other apologists, in and Arafat should be tried before the ·
out of the Mideast.
·
Israeli Supreme Court, in fully teleThey ignore that, as Fouad. Ajami . vised proceedings, and directly open to
emphasizes, "Yasser Arafat," IS "the the world press, includmg the Arab
fi$ure at the center of this cruel whirl- press, for this crime of terrorism. But
wmd," this cult of terror. "Blood is a ihat will not bring about an end to the
terrible affliction, w1d a national move- terror. Of course, there have to be negoment that succumbs to it~ intoxication tiatlons, during which Sharon must
will drown in it~ own radicalism."
realize - as many Israelis already do
But Professor Ajami underestimates - that there must be an end to the set·
how infectious this strategic decision to tlements, and to the daily humiliations
use suicide bombing to gain indepen- of the Palestinian people.
dence can be.
But if Arafat were truly dedicated to a
Thomas Friedman does Ree - if I, free and just Palestinian state, he would
though non-religious, can quote from relinquish power. As Friedman ·asks: •
The.Book of Revelation -- ''11le lake of "Have you ever heard Arafat talk about"
lire and sulfur," where "the false what sort of education system or econ-·
prophet" is, "when fire will come down . omy he would prefer, what sort of con-· 1
from heaven."
stitution he wants?" He has.knprisoned
. What Arafat ~as c,hosen as a ~ey ~alestlni~s for o~jecting to th.e corrup- · •
mstrument of hberat1on, says Fned· lion of his Palestmian Authonty. If the .
man, "threatens all civilization because Palestinians can liberate themselves·
if suicide bombing is allowed to work from Arafat, and the cult of martyrdom, .
in Israel, then like hijacking Wld air- they will be able to liberate themselves.
plane bombing, it will be copied and from Israel.
will eventually lead to a bomber (Nat Hento.ffls a nationally renowned .
strapPed with a nuclear device threaten- authority on the Flr.rt Amendment and. '
in~ entire nations. That is why the the Bill of Rights.)
:

':

Middle East tensions add to our economic utuertainty ·:

MEIGS

Probably everyone knows that Social
Security pays retirement benefits, but not
everyone is aware of the extent to which
it provides survivors benefits, too. When
someone has worked and paid into Social
Security, monthly benefiu can be paid to
certain family members when the worker dies. These include:
• Widows or widowers-full benefits at
· their full retirement age or reduced ben~flts as early as age 60. A disabled widow
or widower can get benefits at age 50.
• Widows or widowers, at any age, taking care of the deceased worker's children
under age 16 or disabled children who
get benefits.

• Unmarried children under age I 8 (or
up to age 19 if they are attending clemcntary or secondary school full tiine).
Children can get benefits at any age if
they were disabled before age 22 and
renuined disabled.
• Dependent parents age 62 or older.
• Survjving divon:ed spouses-if the
marriage lasted 10 yean or more. The former spouse, however, does not have to
meet the lengthof-marriage rule if she or
he' is caring for the worker's child who is
under age 16 or disabled and who is ~so
getting benefits on the worker's Social
Security record. The child must be the
worker's former spouse's natural or legally adopted child.

There is also a special one-time pay"
mcnt cif$255 that can be nude when you
die if you have enough work "credits."
This payment can be made only to your
spouse or minor children if they meet
certain requirements.
Although you probably haven't thought
about it, the fact· is, the value of the survivors insurance you have under Social
Security is probably worth more than the
value of any individual life insurance you
· may have. In today's dollars, that value is
worth $374,000 to an average survivor
family .consisting of a widow(er) and two
children.
So, as you can see, Social Security provides a package of protection for America's workers and their families.

Meigs County Notebook
COOLVILLE - New offi~ers were installed at a recent
meeting of the Coolville
TOPS #OH 2013 he.ld at
Coolville Elementary School.
Installed were
Barbara
Gilchrist leader; Pat Snedden
co-leader: Carol Beha, tre11urer; Annette . King, secretary;
and Mary Prank, weight
recorder.
Weigh-in for the group
~egins at 5:30 p.m., with the
meetings from 6:30 p.m. to
7:30 p.m.
The chap1er welcomed a
new member and had 28 in
attendance. The weekly best
loser award was presented to
Debbie Young. The monthly
' ..

best loser trophy went to pre- cumstances.
The homeless shelter in
sented to Annette Kirrg.
Pomeroy provides men in the
area a place to stay. A gift of
appreciation was presented to
the speaker by president, G:iy
Perrin.
Emolene Pratt gave devoPOMEROY
. Hilda tionals before the luncheon
served by members. of Trinity
Stotts, director . of Serenity Church in the Bethany BllildHouse in Gallipolis and the ing.
Meigt . County Hornelen A get-well card was signed
Shelter in pomeroy was guest for Martha Greenaway and a
speaker at a recent meeting of thank you card was read from
the Meigt County Retired Christy Dralce the recipient of
Teachers Association.
the annual scholarship.
She said that a.t Serenity Grace Weber, legislative
House women and children in cliairman, discuued the future
·abusive situations .are provided of health ca.re, benefiu provid·•helter, food and ' clothing. ed to Ohio's retired teachers
They are abo auilted in find- and noted that pension bencing employment so they can 6u were not jeopardized by
get out of their abu.sive cir- Enron Iones.

Tudlenhear
about less
·fortunate

She !,aid House Bill 151 still
in committee would improve
the retired teacher ratio on the
STR.S Ohio Board. It was
noted chat several officers and
members will attend the district conference of the Ohio
Retired Teacher Association at
Burr Oak Lodge on issues
concerning penaion beneliu
and change• in health coverage.
Rachael Downie wa1 honored recently in Columbus for
her significant contribution to
the youth of Ohio ac an Ohio
4-H Volunteer Conference.
Next meeting will be at
Trinity, AprU 20. John Milhoan of Gallipolis, president of
the OR.TA, will discuu iuuet
of interest to retired teachers.
Reservation• are to be nude
by calling 992-3214 . .

~

Bv EtLEIN Au PowiLL
NEW YORK- Deepening tensions
in the Middle East - and concerns
they could lead to reduced oil supplies
- are hitting the U.S. econom1 JUSt as
ifs recovering from .last year s recess1on.
The uncertainty is not what's needed
right now, economists say.
"Uncertainty is the bane of any longterm business commitment," said Donaid A. Norman, an economist at the
Manufacturers Alliance/MAP!, an
industry trade group in Arlington, Va.
"And there's a lot of uncertainty out
there right now - the continuing possibility of a terrorist attack. worries
about the Middle East, rising . oil
prices."
Ironically, he added, this all "raises
uncertainty about just how robust the
recovery will be."
Although most analysts expect economic growth io be weaker in the
April-June quarter than in the JanuaryMarch period, they alao see strong
growth m the second half' of the year
- barrin~ a catastrophe.
''There slots of fuel fos:the .takeoffof
the economy," said Tim 0' Neill, chief
economist at the Bank of Montreal in
Toronto, Ontario, and Harris Bank in
Chicago. "Interest rates are low, and
tax cuts and (federal) spending increases are providing more than enou*h fuel
for the economy going forward.
Crude oil prices have risen more than
35 percent in the past two months amid

fears that the Israeli-Palestinian con- compared with 0.~ percent in 20()1,
flict could spark a regional war and when the economy was in recession
disrupt oil supplies. Qif experts say the and further damaged by the Sept. 11
current market price of about $26.~0 a terror attacks on the World Trade Cen·
barrel includes a $3 to $5 "war premi- ter and the Pentagon.
urn" that likely will shrink if the Bush One good thing that could come
administration succeeds in its new ini- from the current dOse of uncertainty, he
tiative to end the fighting.
added, was "it could reduce market
O~Neill said he didn't eKpect the expectations of Federal Reserve tight~igher oil prices to have a major entng this year."
1mpact.
Futures markets suggest Wall Street
"This is a strong recovery in the eKpects the fed to raise interest rates
making, and one in which the higher about 1.5 percentage points.this year to
energy prices potential ... will fiave hold the recove7 in check, he DOled.
only a small, moderating influence," he · He believes an mcrease of 0.7~ of a
said. ''They certainly won't prevent it point is more likely.
and cause a return to a slowdOwn."
Norman of the Manufacturers
Even without the rising oil prices, the Alliance said there were growing indi•
current quarter was not expected to be cations that the industrial sector- the
as strong as the first.
first into recession and the hardest hit
"In the first quarter, we had a lot of - was beginnins to tum around.
things going right for us," said Mark "Up until recently, our executives
Vitner, an economist at Wachovia were very pessimistic," he said. "Now
Se~;urities in Charlotte, N.C. "Warm
feel that we've turned the ~weather helped spur home building ner.'
·
· and home purchases. Energy prices Still, he warned, recOvery will tab
were low, which put extra money in time.
·
people's pockets. And the early Easter "My take is that alven the excess
pulled some retail sales into the quar- (factory) capacity and the slow recov,
ter."
ery in capital spending, we're reboundln the second quarter, "we've got the ing but 11 hasn't really taken off yet,"
reverse." So econqmic growth could be Norman said. "I expect that to ~n
held down because oil prices are high- later this year, assuming we don t get
er, Americans are paying taxes instead an unpleasant surprise like the breakof collecting refunds, and' Easter is out of a Middle East war."

:'
:

:
,
'

,
·

,
•

manr

past

Still, Vitner expects the ec.onomy to (Eileen Alt Powell is a busln111
show growth of 3.5 percent for 2002 writer for The A.S~ockJted Prell.)

. .

l

•

, ,

The Meigs County Department ·of Job and FamUy
Services (DJFS), serving as the fiscal agent for the Meigs
County Family and Children First Council, is soliciting
proposals to Implement the county's Help Me Grow
program. The program is a collaborative of 'the st~te
Departmen~ of Health and Job and Family Services and
the local DJFSs. The program serves children from birth
through age 3 and their families•.Preference will be given
to the proposer which presents the most Integrated and
coordinated approach, Including the utilization of sub·
contracts, to serving this population.

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

:-.'59

A Proposers Conference will be held Thursday, April 11,
2002 at 10:00 A.M., In the 3rd Floor Conference Room of
· the Meigs County Department of Job and Family
Services, 175 Race Street, MiddlepOrt, Ohio. Additional
Information will be provided at the Proposers
· Conference and there wlll be a question/answer period.
Attendance at the Proposers Conference ls mandatory
and a condition· for a proposal to be accepted for .
evaluation. ·

,,

.....,
--···
--

CA.L EN.DAR
Community Calender 11
publlehed II a frH llrYICI
to non·proflt groupe with·
lng to ennounoe mHtlnge
end lptOIII IVtnte. The otl•
end1r 11 not d11lgned to
promote eelea or fund·rela·
ere of eny type. lteme ere
. prlntld only 11 epaoe permit• and cannot be guarentMd to be prlntlcl 1!1 1paoHio
number of dey1.

regular meeting, Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY .:.... Bedford
Township Trueteea, 7 p.m.
Tueeday at the townhall.
POMEROY- Melga Coun·

ty Health Department, child·

hoed Immunization clinic,
Tueaday, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to
3 p.m. Take ahot recorda, ohll·
dren must be accompanied
MONDAY ,
by parent/legal guardian . .
POMEROY- Maigl Coun· Check availability of vaoolne
ty Republican Party, Monday, before going by calling 992·
.
7:30 p.m. at the Melga Coun· 8628.
ty Courthouse.
RACINE - Spacial meet·
POMEROY - Revival, MI. lng of the Southern Local
Hermon U. B. Church, Wick· School Board of Education at
ham Road off Texas Road. the high echool, Tueaday 7
Special alnging April 11, Flay p.m. lor the purpoee of Inter·
and Deloree Cundiff; April 13, viewing candldatee tor the
Earthern Ve11ela. John euparlntendent'e job.
Elewlok evangelist.

.

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY- Melge Coun·
MIDDLEPORT - Middle·
ty/Ohlc Bloenten~al Commit· port Literary Club, 2 p.m.
tee meeting, Monday, 5 p.m. Wedneeday, home of Ida
at the Meigs Museum.
Diehl. Jeanne Bowen to
review Jane Austen by Carol
RUTLAND - Rutland VII· Shields.
lage Council will hold Its
meeting, Monday, 8:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Wid·
TUESDAY
owe' Fellowship, Friday, 10
a.m.
at the Golden Corral In
CHESTER Cheater
Township Board ol Truetees, Galllpollt for breaktaet buffet.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

. "Gj?~aetd fe {;t f?
~ ,, J&gt;•"

�Inside:

..

The Daily Sentinel

Monclllv, ADrtl e. aooa

Southern edges SoUth Gallia, 6-3 .Eastem tops·N·Y

Pap&amp;
M~,

Itt Icon WOIII
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
RAClN~ - Sou~hern fn:shmiln .Wes
BurroW1 ~~c~~ up ht! first varsity wm in
a gn:at Pltc 11118 efTort AI the Southern
~rnadoes roiled to a 6-3 non-league
wumrln~vebr Sohuithh GllhlHa ~~unbdUoy n!ght
" O)l$
The Qall'U!
Wll! I!
callscd oo 1....se ~ acuon f•
~-rkn~· ·A·r I e. ea!r y ons ICChount ~
Wl
~·· nd
""
s Xinmn
out ern
IS
now 3-0
t -0
thenil'.
Tri-Valle
Conferenet Hocking division,
y
.
South G~llia'took a2- 0 lead In the fim
Inning when Eddie Lamphier sln~led
•
,
II' •
Kevin Lamphrer llllllled, Jake Workm~n
singled, 1nd Dusty Halley had a 1-3
ground out for an RBI as the first four
bmen to start the 9ame, the sco~ 2-0.
BurroW1 then settle · down to n:ttre the
lidt, going on to strike out nine batten. ·

April I. 2002

'

HIGHLIGHTS
Pro Baseball
MLI
Sundly'a 0111111
National LIISIUI
Atlanta 5, N.Y. Mats 2, 14 Inn.
Cincinnati e. Montml5. 10 Inn.
Philadelphia 3, Florida 2. 11 Inn.
Arizona 2. Mllwnukee 0
Pittsburgh at Cubs, ppd.
Houslon 7, St. Louis 6, 12 Inn.
San Francisco 1o, San Diego 1
Los Angeles 6, Colorado 4
American League
· Minnesota 10. Toronto 6
N.Y. Yankee• 7, Tllmpa Bay 2 ·
B011on 4, Baltimore 1
Clavaland S, Detroit 1
Kanaas City 9, White Sox 2
Anaheim al Texas, ppd., rain
Oakland 6, Seattle 5

Pro Basketball
NBA
Bunday'a Oamaa
Philadelphia 89. Milwaukee 87
Toronto 94, Indiana 84
L.A. Laker&amp; 98; Mlaml88
Boinon 102, New Jeraey 90
Sacramento 118, New York 82
L.A. Cllppers97, Denver 75

·Rain postpones
Texas race
FOH.T WORTH. lcxa!
(AP) - A daylu11~ r:ai11 Soliday h&gt;r~•·d pmtpuncmcnt uf
the Satllsllll!(/lladiu Sha(k
51111 ut icx:1s Mowr Sp,·cdway.
NASC:AR .offld:lls 111adc
the t•all about 2 I/2 huurs
atlcr the s,·hcdulcd start. The
~llll·.111ilc r.tcc will ~ta rt Mun·
day .It tlllllll EDT.

Goosen wins at
BellSouth
DULUTH, Ga. (AP)
South Atri cau ll cticf Gm1sen
won fi&gt;r tilt' scwnd dme in iltl
Atncrkan tourna111ent, ovcrC lllnin~ a dimwl 't:trt to put
away l'hil Mickclm11 and
d:lin1 . ~ fottr•!trokc victory
uvcr Jc!per i'arncvik i11 the
UellSouth Cln!!k.
Ci uom1 dmcd wi1h a 2·
under-par 70 in difficult condition! m1 the TI'C ill Suwar·
lunf. fini1hinl! at 16-undcr
272.
i'ill'ncvik, wlw po!tcd 65
. early in the day fur a 276,
wa!n't cvc11 arnund when the
winner lini!l1cd.
Mkkcl!on appeared to be
(;«!O!cn't 111ain challcnl!er,
"arting the final ruund twu
1trukc1 back. The lcft-handcr
bricOy claimed the lead, only
to fi1dc to a 73 and wind up
live !hot• hchind.

Ill Unit, .
SchiDin1 still
do111lnant
MILWAUKEE (AI') - Thc
Milwaukee 11rcww struck
out a major leagu~:-rccord
I,399 tilllc! lan· !Caron, or
8.64 titnc! a game.
They've whiffed !ll! timet in
five garnet this !Caton for an
11.6 clip.
llut Milwaukee manager
Davey Lope! isn't troubled
over the plethora of pun··
choutl bccau•c 29 of them
cathe . ov~r the weekend
•gain•t Ariwm aut lt~ndy
Johncon and Curt ~hilling.
Schilling followed Johnron '1
12-mikcout performance
Saumlay night with a career·
bcte 17 mikcoutj Sunday a!
he tomd hit ~econd career
one-hitter in a 2-il 1Jiamond-back4 victory.
·
· Over th~ lir•t week of the
~atoll, Johnron and Schilling
have combined to get all four
of Art~om'• viccori~ while
walking tix. ttriking out 46
and 1urre~nd~ring one earned
run in 32 inning~ for a minu.tcule l!.lH ERA.

•••••

Who will be f~n enough to
malw the OVP Hon11r I~ oil?

•

The Dally Sentinel • PIQI A7

•

Pn·p /mscbtdl, softball, Awe 7

MoNriAv's

www,mydaiiYHntlnel.oom

Lady Eagles sweep pair
from Wahama~ 11-1, 10-0
IV DAN ADKINI

O~OKINSOMVOAILYREGIST ER .COM

MASON - The ti.•c lin~ of vir torr is nth•n
,1 short one. ns Coarh Sh.1wn lht&lt;h .111.1 tiH·
Lndy Fo~lcons ofW.ih:una iouud uut uvct' llw
weekend as they wiped tht• sl.ltt' with llw
I .tdy R&lt;·bcls of South Gall in &lt;HJ Fl'id,ty, but
turtll'd .out on tht• bott&lt;&gt;lll of the &lt;n&gt;l'l·hu.lrd
•11111inst tlw L11dy E,,~ll·&gt; of l:n&lt;l\'1'11 011 S.ttur-:
dlly.
· The Lady En!!ks. in n doublt· ~ h ca\kr :1t th t•
Mason ball field. rallit•d in the sixth iunin~ ilf
. tlw first !!Allie to wiu th nt one Il - l a11d
plnyt•d con!istcm ofl~n!t~ in tht• scmt1d, 1t.1i1-

inf( Ill ruus uul in five .umin~r~ to take that
~01111&lt;' 111-11. and uppin11 thdr n:wrd t\l 4- 1.
Tlw ·L.1dy Enl!k•s, Ohio Final Four 11nishcn
l.1&lt;t )1\'.lr. haw only lost thl'l'C !!•lines sl n~c the
llq;innin~ ofth~ ltiO J SC,\10 11 ,
. 111 tht• up,•m•r of tlw dnubk· h~.1d~r, the
scordmurd didn't S&lt;'C lllll&lt;'h ncrion until thu
top oftlw third in11i111! wht•li Eastern\; Samlnf
i'mw ll . who nottht•d 11 sin11l~ to lett 11dd :md
.ttlvam·cd to s&lt;:t.:ond .on ll wild throw, s~\ll'l:d
tl~t• t1rst run of tin· duy 011 1111 inl1dd hit by
Krist,\ Whit~·. Nikki l'hlllips follow~d thllt up

PI••• ... Pllr, 7 •

LAY IT DOWN -Eastern's Krista White .reaohes for the bunt
In Saturday's ctouble·header sweep of·Wehem.e. (Den Adklna)

Griffey will
·. miss 3-6 weeks
with bum knee ·

Jackson
drops .
Marauders
IV JIM IOULIIV
SENTINEL

COnRES~ONDENT

1\.0CK
.,. Sllll..INGS -

M~•g~ Maru1.1d~rs
thdr horn~ ba~cball

CINCINNATI (AI') The cuphnria oftl~&lt;• Red•'
C&lt;Jtne- frum -bchiml (,.~
win in 10 innint,;s over
Montreal
§ S111ulay wa~
overshadowed by the ucws that Kt·n
Griffey Jr.will miss ·nt least
3 to 6 weeks - ami perhaps the rest of tlw sc11son
- with 11 partial tear of his
pntella tct1don.
GrifTcy, who hit his first
homer of the seamn earlier
in the l!illne, sufTercd the
injury ir1 the !CV\Hith
innin!( while he was
involved in a rundown
along the third base litic.
He al.•o pminlly dislucatcd
his kneecap.
"H c heard a p()p," said
Dr. Tim Krctmhck, the
llcds medical director,
after cxaminin~ the rentlts
of an MRI test of Griffey's
knee. "His kneecap was r~a l
loo1e. That could've been
part uf the part of the pop.
Everything else in the knee
wa1 normal."
The All-StilT cetiter fielder, who WflM bothered clur·
ing spring training by ten·
dinitis in the !atnc knee,
was hurt 1hnrtly befiJTe he
was tagged by E~pos third
lmcman Chris Truby in
the ~cvcnth inning.

Th~

open~d

season by
hustilllo! the Jackson lmnmen
it1 a double !wader at Meii!K
Hit,;h Schnol 011 Snturt!Ay.
The lronmcn, coach~d by
fur111cr Marauder !tandout
Jamtl Writ,;ht, sw~pt the·
Mllrnuucrs 011 by winnh11! the
tim !;lillie 10-5 and defeating
the Mnroudcn by the score of
I.3-2 ill the niMhtcup.
Th~ M"ruuder~ now stand
ut 1- .3 on the youn!! 1~aso n.
Ja 'k~O tl jumped to nn early
lead in the lim g3111c as the
vi!itor! plntcd tw11 ru111 in the
tnp of the finr inning. Me\811
committed ten crror1 in the
J!nrnc with two eoming in the
Arst inninJ! thM led to both
Jackson rum.
The Marnudcr! w••nl down
in order in their half of the
Am and threatened in the
hmue holf of the second Q!
Jo!h Napper walked and
ndvanccd on a single by 13uzz
Fackler.
The M~rtwdcn were unable
· co push any runs ncmss and
wcllt co the third Inning un
the short end of n 2r0 score.
ji111111y Smith, who went the
distan ce ()11 the hill for Meil!ll,
t,;ot little help from his ficldcn
in the tOp uf the third inning
a! the: Ar~t two batters reached
nn Mciw errors. IJuchtclthcn
hclpeJ his own ca111e by
drilling a single thnt brought
bnth runtwrs home. Carter
OUCH -Cincinnati 's Ken Griffey Jr., middle, Is helped off the field by trainers Grea Lynn.
ripped a d«Juble lwtwccn two
lett.
Mark
Man
Sunday.
Griffey
suffered
e
pertlet
dislocation
of
his
rl&amp;ht
kneecap
end
a
,.........14.,7
strained the patella tendon In his rl&amp;ht tea durin&amp; a rundown play. (AP)
·
mlkeou11 by Sn1ith to give
the Ironmcn one on with two
out. Arthur chen ·· linglcd '
bringinl! Carter hor11c as the
vi.1itor1 took a 1\-0 lead after 2
1/2 inninl!!l of play.
Mci19 t,~ot on the board in
DETROIT (AP) - Cleveland lndi- ~rent for their cuntidcncc."
like this, 10 I wa1 thmwint.:thcm in1idc . ·the bottom of the fourth at
ant manager Charlie Manuel m~11cd in
Li"tlcamn.thc lndian1'1tartcn threw and otT the plate. I don't think my mttT
Fackler leu ofT with a double ·
spring traif1ing thitt he the fcwc1t innin~ in the American wa1 any better than u1ual, butlt-:ot a lot
tn right center. Zach Clan
tiecd~J
his mrtinK League. But thil ~~ar, the bullpen ha1
followc,l with a tinwe and a
pitchcn to get ofT to a only been needed for tJ i1111~n~ in 1ix of fly ball! to center field."
single off the bat o(Brandon
Tit.:cr! pitcher JrtTWcaver (0-1) only
quick 1tart.
i1-1111CI.
l~anuburg brought Fackler
allowed three rum in 7 2-:1 inninjf.l, but
He'! got more than he ima!(incd ,
horne. A pickoff at tim a
Sahllthia didu't allow a hit ttntill~an­
C.C. Sabathia nearly n~&gt;- hit the dall Sinmn'llcadotT !int,;l~ in th~ ciKhth. that wam't good CIHJU!!h til keep
gmund out and a strike out
IJctroitTigefl in a 5-1 win SUlu.lay, and
IJutroit front falling w o. (,,
ended the Meil!ll inning,
S~tnd:IY. Sabathia muck uut only tWO'
the lndiant narten arc 5· 0 to help
The
Tig~rJ m:ttchcd their bad !tart
The lromncn plated anuthCleveland (!l· I) meet Manuel'! rc&lt;Juc•t. in clj;ht innin19, J.(CttinK 11 out1 on fly fmnr 1')')2 bm arc 1ti lll c!~ than halfway
er
run in th~ tllp of the tilth at
. "I kept laying in the spring that the ball~ anJ pop-up~. which he attrihutud to the team rc:wrd ()( 0- 1.1 M in 1920.
a 1inglc by JJclay combined
fancr we could get the scartirig pit~hinK t«1 Conterica l'ark and tl111 42-degrec
with twv more fielding milSabathia retired the tim W batten
going, the better it would be," Mauucl weather.
&lt;llcl by the M~ra!-'den SIIVII
" It'! a bit! b;tllpark orr ;t c«&gt;ld day," he before Shane Hitltcr'l fourth -luning
e~plaincd . "I think our young KUYI arc
ltarting to feed otT each other, and that'! l~id . "Nu 1111~ Wallll II) hit one Ufl the walk. He aile) walked Yount! in the !cv·
Pltt11H1MIIp,7
filii or otT the end
the bat .em ,it day cnth.

Red

or

Pair

:T

°

"P::'::\11

JacksOn sweeps Meigs

Reels

,._ ......

ball~

•

'7

17

or

FIRI AWAY - Carr1e Abbott wlndt up to
deliver a pitch at Jackton on Saturday•

Dunfee but Ochsenbein was able to work
out of the jam holding Mei811 to just one
run in the Inning,
·
The lronmen blew the ]!Bille open in .the · IHIRIP'P'I-IAL! remtln open unlll7:30 pur~utnoe ol 1
froriiPIIII
fourth innin·~ by scoring three run~ . on
p.m. olttld dty.
Retolullon ol th1
~
h
fi"'h
lqutoredll
order
ollhil
lotrd
lotrd
ol Counly
ttic vi!iton a 7-llead. ·
th ree hltJ an added tour runs in t e " Corpor~tlon ol o l!leolton1 of M1tg1 Commlulonere
ollht
Jackson scortd three bl!J runs in the top
on just One hit. Meig~ managed only one Amtrlol, luooeealir County, Ohio.
Counly ol Mtlgt,
o( the sixth when Knittle bl111ted a three
hit after the second inning when Kyle In In Itrill lo Dtted Mtroh I, 2002 Pomeroy,Ohlo, plated
~1 dl h hi-'
h bi
lquloredh
John N.
thlt, on lht Ulh dey ol
run hollle run over the left field fence to
H~nna I Inl!'e
n I e t ru. Oc sen e 11 Wll! CorportUon ·of Ohio Chllrper~on
Ftbrutry, 2002, there
push the lead to 10-1. Smith then n:tl~
in contml :18 he held the Mal'lluders ln ve. lhtun Lembert, lUll D. Smith,
will be aubmllled to 1
check,
tltl.
.
Dlrtolor
volt ol the ptople or
three 1tr11lght batten to end the htn!ng.
Ocluenbein
picked
Ua
the
win
uning
Melgt
County
April
8,
18,
22
&amp;
21,
Uld tubdlvltlon el I
Meii!K scortd twice In it hlllf of the sixth
,Common Pie.. Ctu 2002
Prlmery I!L!CTION lo
when Fockler, Glue and RAIIUburs all sin(our Inning~. He allowe three hlu while No. OO·CV.028
~be held In lhe County
walking five and fanning two. TJ. MeDon- In pureutnoe of •n
Publlo Notice
ol Melge, Ohio, tllhe
gled with Fackler corning ~cro11 home
·'d I h d
l I
ll .
h
order 1.11ued from
regultr ·pilaU ot
plate on the Ramsburs hit. A Jacob Smith
w J P tc e &lt;)ne nn ng a owmg no iu common
P teu NOTICE OF I!LI!CTION voting therein, on the
single scored Glaze and the M~muden had
while fanning one Marauder.
. Court, within 1nd for
ON TAK LI!VY IN
7th dty ot Mey, 2002, .
Jmh
N~pper
took
the
lollll
for
Mel"'
QS
he
the
County
of
M1lge,
I!
XCIII
01'
THI!
TIN
the quttllon ofltvylng
cut the lead to I0-3. Bachtel worked out of
•
""
11111
of
Ohio,
on
MILL
LIMITATION
I lex, In 110111 of lhl
thejQm when)bmuy Smith hit into a 6eldwent 4 21 ~ inning~ ttllowinll Meven hits Novembtr 1, 2001,
Revletd Code,
ten mltl ltmlllllon, for
cr!s choice to end the inning.
while wnlklng six and fanning {&lt;)ur. Hann~n tnd to me dlrtoltd, 1 ltotlona 3101.11 (Q~, lht benefit ot Mtlgt
went l/31nn!ng giving up thn:e hlt11 whlle will Offtr lor 1111 et
1701.11, 1708.211
Counly Httllh Dlalrfcl
Mei81 concluded the scoring In the bot(annlng
one
and
hlttlnl!
two.batt·
e
-.
Publlo
Aucllon
on
NOTICI!
II
htrtby
for
lhl purpolt of
tom of the seventh without getting a hit in
"
M1y 11,1002 11 lhl given thll In Curr1111 bpenHt.
jacobSmlth,KyleH1111nanand1JougDill Mtlge
Counly pureuenoe of • Btld In being •
the inning. Doug DUJ Wlllked and josh
each sinsled for the Marauders.
Courthou11 111p1, Ruolutlon of the repllotmant of 1111 ol
Napper wu hit by A pitch. a Jackson ermr
lilt ltoond Yllltgt Council or the 1 mill( I~ 11 1 rttt not
r he Maraudel'l will try to get back on 100
led to both playen seorlnl!, but the Mara~d­
ltrtel, Pomeroy, Vllltge or Middleport, excttdlng 1 (cntl mltl
the winning path at they travel to Alexan- Ohio, 1t 10:00 1m or Ohio, p1111d on the tor eaoh Otlt dolftr or
en COl~d iltlf no closer,
..~t 1 ~
h S
tttd dly,
the ZOih dty qt f'ebruery, veluellon, whloh
der ton iI!''
Bachtel went six innin111 for Jackson i~
o .ace t e partans.
following lletlltlete, 2002, lh1i1 wilt be emounll to len c1nle
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - towl1;
IUbmltlld
10 IorVOII
Of .0.10~
IICh
lllutlld In the lht
people
etld
hundred fOr
dollilra
of
Cardiff went . two innings runs across in the bottom o(
Mel81 managed to score five Vllllgl of Mlddleport 1 IUbdiVIIIOn II I VIIUIIIOn tor IIVI (8~
County of Mtlg1 ·1na Prlmtry ELI!CTtON to yttrt.
allowing twO run1 while ran- the 1ccot1d when Riesel and run1 In their final at bat,Aman· 11111
or Ohloi 1nd be held In the Vlll1g1 The pollt tor 11ld
n!ng two and walking four bat- Downey WAlked, R!egelsc:ored da Jletty, Napper, Davis, Miran- bound 1 d
1 n d or Mlddl1r.on, Ohio, 11 tltctlon witt bt open
dllorlbed
11
lollowe:
lht regu 1r pltatl or 11 8:30 e·.m. end
. fromPipl
ten. Davis went four inninl!ll &lt;)n 9 ground out back to da Stewart and Renee Bailey
ltlng
~ol No. 13 In voting therein, on th1 . remtln open unlit 7:30
for Meigt~ ·and WAlked four Abbott and . with twO out!, all dn:w walks. Nikl Butch,·r lehen'l
Th 1r d 71h d1y of M1y, 2002, p.m. of ttld d1y.
~
mmn(! AI Mei111 committed while giving up thl\le hill . Hodl!e llntded lind Henry reached on an error and Ad dillon to the lht qunllon ol
order of lht loilrd ·
Vltl1g1 of Middleport, levying 1 tn, In . o l!l1ollon1 of Mtllll
severttl costly ermr1 and Jack- Mmt of the ell!ht, run1 given ciMrtd the bales with a triple Chancey and Kara Musser c&lt;)l- Meta•
County, Ohio. uc11a or the tin milt County, Ohio.
son collected two 1lngle1 Thm up by DaviA were due to Mei81 · giving Jackson a 4-1 lead alter leeted base hits in the inning. PPNt11o00274
llmllellon, for lht Deled Aprtt 4, 2002
Riegel flew out to centerfield erron.Jefl'en went two innin81 two innln111.
Napper, Chancey, Davis, ~OOIIed II 81 bentftl of Middleport John N. lhtl,
Ulllr
II rttt, Vlllllgl forthtr.urpoH Chllrpertcn
to end the inninl!. Snyder set aUowing one run on one hit
Jackson broke the 11ame Butcher and Stewart all scored C
Mlddlepor1, Ohio ol Fire Proltol on.
Alit D. lmllh,
wide open with seven rum in the inning for Meig~.
the Marauders down in order while fannlf11! o11e.
11710
l1ld 111 being 1 Director
in the fifth inning be(ore givUurbr!dge and Jeft'en had coming ln. One hit, th.ree
Chancey led Mell!ll with a ltld property h11 renewtl ot 2 mlllt 111 April I, 11, 22 I 21,
lpprtllld tl 1111 not IXCIIdtng 2 2002
Ing WilY to Amy Cardiff in the the only two Mei111 hltl !11 the . walk!, and fou~ more Me!111 homerun, li double and a sin· blln
*11,100.00
1nd (twol .mllll for eeoh - - - - - - ::
erron led to Jacluon bu!ldll!l! gle. N~wtr added two 1lngle1. Oinnol 1111 for 1111 on 1 do II tr o I
1ixth. Snyder allowed no runs game. ·
Public Notice
l.n the nightcap Meli!K came an 11 · 1 , lead after tht~e Fetty has a homerun, Jelferl a then IWO•thlrdt or vtlutllon, whloh _.;_;;=;..;.;.~,;;_­
and only one hit.
or tmounll to lwenly NOTtCI OF ILI!CTION
Katie jefl'er1 came on In out quickly 1corlng Chancey lnninJ!!I. Mell!ll l'our timet In triple, Davis a double and •PPrllllmenl,
a7,U7,00 . Thll oentt to.201 for tiOh
ONTAKLI!VYIN
relief of l)avit In the fifth doubled and •cored when the tlllh Inning, Jeft'en led oil' Musser a 1lngle.
Apprtllll It bllld hundred dolltrt of I!XCI!II OF THI! TEN
Butcher reached on an error. with a triple and scored on a
Abbott went 2 2/3 inning~ upon I YIIUII v·tlulllon for IIVI (I~ MILL LIMITATION
inning.
.
Of 1hll VIlli.
Rtvllld Codt,
.
allowing 3 hill while walkln11 lniPIOIIOn
Eric~ 01borne doubled to Meil!l pitcher Carrie Abbott wild pitch.
ptri ol lht prenll111 The pott1 tor ttld ltollone 3501.11 (Q~.
Davis doubled to leftfleld to three and fanning one. Jelfen lo which Aoc111 Wll . eleollon wilt be open
1701.11, 1701.211
lead ofT the sixth for Jacklon walked the fint batter and then
rtldtty
IVIIttble.
Tht
II
1:30
l.m.
tnd
NOTICI!
II hertby
finished
the
game
(or
Meig~
and scored on a ground out by retired the host! In order in the open the 1lxth for Mell!l but
1ppr1t11re 111ume rem11n open untll7:30 glvtn thll In
the Marauders let\ her stranded and aUowed three hlt1 with no r11pontlbllll~ for, p.m. ohtld dey.
Carditl' pU!hing the advant'lll!e bottom of the lint Inning.
" pureu•noe or 1
ordtr of the lotrd Rlieolullon of the
two strlkeoutl and one walk. lnd glvt no weight
Meilll could not mount atty AS the inning ended.
to 8-0 with one innin(! to play,
unk"own leg•t o lltollont ol Melgt Yllllfll Council or the
The lrnnladiet plated four Meigt~ committed nine costly to,
Snyder went five inninl!ll on off'en1e again1t Snyder in the
mtlllrt, lnoludlng, County, Ohio.
Yllltgt ol Rtclnl,
the t&lt;&gt;cond and went 1nore run1 in the home half of errol'!.
the mound for Jack8on, aUow- top
but not limited to, Dllld Mtroh I, 2002 Ohio, pttttd on tht
The 'Mar&lt;1uder1 will 110 to oonc11ltd or l1lenl John N. lhlt, 4th d1y of Februtry,
ing no runs and one hit while throe up and three down in the rhe 1ixth to 111ake it 17-5 headt~(j/or the Ch1lrpereon
2002, lhert will bt
Alexander on Monday night, dtltolt,
fanning five and walking two . inning. Jacluon pu1hed four Ing to the last inning.
prt11no1·of htrmlul 11111 D. lmhh,
tubmlllld to 1 volt of
or to•lo ohemlollt, Olr~clor
thl people or tlld
pollutantt, or 111111. April e, 11, 22 &amp; 21, eubdlvlalon 11 •
01 1111 ' Ten 2002
White, the Lady Ba.,les
Ttrmt (10
Prlm1ry I!LI!CTION to
" pitcher, posted lti"""
.,.,.. 'tO open u~ the bottom of the Percent
%~ dty or
bt held In tht Vlll1g1
the win with three ltrikeoutJ, while fourth inning w lie frethman N~ncy 1111
Public Notloa
of Rtolne, Ohio, lithe
Sayre, who stepped in the top of the 1ixth Brinker and Kylie Sayre were unsucccss- '•m•• M. loullby, NOTICE TO IIIDDI!III regullr P11011 01
· 1ng to tlllll
~ ' h out 1hc game, too k. the '•U 1 at b~~. letting t he sug~ "•or the tit'th
votlnglhtrtln,
thl
mn
1 •lhtrlff ol Mill•
FURNITUAI!
7th
dly ol M1y,on2002,
from Pip I
lou .
·
inning of play.
County, Ohio
PURCHAII FOR
the quellton of levying
1
'rn t h~ fiourt h tnnrng
' ' wtt
' h a I 1"
lli
"
h
b
kbfi
h
d
"'h
LdyEgl
J
t
tdth
'
MIIQSCOUNTYJOI
llll,lntxotttoftht
nwe to ~
Aner a s ort rea e ore t e secon
• e a
a e1 ump I ar e
etr Prenk J. v1nezllno, • PAMILY IIRVICII ten mill llmlllllon, for
field before ~eoring on A walk three tlots game beJ!Bn, the L.~dy Eaglet prowd the rally again In the lop of the fifth inning, Allorney
th• bentfll or Atolne
down the mscer.
efTectt. of their. late rally weren't yet done with Jenny Armel s.corlng on a single by 11120
Ul Vlntllt'HI, IUIII "rtotlvtd
lllltd by
bldt
will
be
Vlll1gt
for lht purpcl11
lh• Mt181 o1
currlflllxpt
White notched the third !Core for the with, at Lodwick, White and Yeager Morgan Weber. Weber Would then cross Clnolnn1u, Ohio County Boord of llld tn b:,~1 · 1
viti tort in the fifth after sening a cour- 11alled sin"''el ()Ut to open u" the scoring the plate on her own, followed by Pow- 41402
Comml.ttlontrt In rttpltotment or 1 t•• o1
. .
,
I
II'
r
thllr olllct loo1ttd
,.7 mllll 11 • rill not
tc1y trip to tim by Wahamu Nico e for the visitors. Janet Calaway a11d ell, Calaway and Lodwick at the vitidng 11125, 2002
In the Courthouee, excttdlng
1,7 mille for
Ohlinger and advancinj! on 10 tecond Phillips added t!nglel in the tceolld Lady Eaglet puthed the 1core 10 I 1- 1, 4 1! t, 2002
Second ltr11t, ttoh one doller ol
41711
,
d
b
'ld
'
I.
by
'
i
"
'
d
'
k
3
0
~
'
"'
h
i
h
d
'
Pomeroy,
I II ° ~· ...~,.
hi h
d
h
an t rr
ase1 on WI ~ pttc.,el
rnn ng u .. utern Jumpe to a qutc •
torcmg wa am~ to t t er score urmg
unlll 1:00 Ohio
p.m. on the :!o"u~
11 1
Ohlinger before cro11ing home plate on lead.At Wahama'1 time at the plate cam~. their turn at bat or sufTer the second lo11
Publlo Notice
211h dar of April otnll (to.17) for 11011 .
a single by Phillip!, bringing the ~eore up White fanned one player while two oth· of the day.
NOTICI 0 , !LI!CTION :~~tdn:;tt~h:~/:;: hundrtd dolltre or
to 3·0 in the bottom of the fifth .
en madr contact bur didn't advance.
And . letting the Lady Falconi score ON PROPO.ITION of 1ald loerd end vtlutllon for 11 •• (I~
The Lady Falcont made a short raUy In
The 'hird inning pmved deadly for wam '1 on th.,
e r.21tefl! agenda, at. White •·
..... c odt. ltcl., reed etoud for the Yllrt.
Thl poll• tor 1eld
·
·
v
.
"·
h
h
~
h
d
lk
d
~
d
·
i
K
h
p
k
b
r
a22.02;
111.01,
21,21;
purohtH
o1
1
10
t he fifth
1
when JUiltOr .... ra .,.yre am· Sayre, w o gave up· .our ill an wa e
tanne Jun or at ryn ar . er ·e.ore 112.01; 117.04, oe; lurnllure ror lhl e 11 on w111 ...
.,.. open
mered out 1!. triple to centerfield and · five other Eucern player! at f!attern took Ohlinger tqureted out her fourth single 70Ut, 3tj 721.14; Melge County Job 1 :m~~agpe~':'rieu ; :
then croued home plate on a tingle by advantage of the free trips to tcore thrte oC the day. Ohlinger wo~ld be left ltrand~ 74:!i,:~'i!1 ~~~reby :~~~r,~.'r/:~ for ;·m· otHid day.
junior MaUoryWcaver.
more runt, bringing the IC()h! up ro lJ..O. ed on bale, though, Sayre sent a thor to given thet
tn uld turniiUre mey be
orcltr oltht loerd ·
Heading into the. top of the tixth
Ohlinger m~dC! it co tlrtt on a thort . the inlield that wat caught, ending the Pur • u • no •
or obtillnld from th1 co!::;,'~~1! . ot Melgl
1 the Clork of Boord 01 Dllld Mlrch 11,2002
the Lady Ea"II'1el "OUred
it bunt and manfit
· d a •tul
to ll!cClnd, but ""1
~M. o(plau,r
.
lluolullon
l'nning, thou"",
II''
r
•
lo1rd of County
Mtlgt County
J h
N
1111
on with a total o( eight runt by Powell the Wahama o ente fellthort and left her
Wahama heads into action today with comm1111onare or the Commltllonert ·or 0~11 :',.1'1011· ·· • • ·
(2), KaJt Lodwick, White, AmandA Yea· ttranded at the Inning ended.
,
a road trip fo l'arkenburg Catholic with County ol Mtlga, Jtne ltnke or th1 11111 o.lmllll
· Ohli"foer lte"ped b~c~ to the mound vartity and reterve gamn ttarting at S
th~h4 1°11 ~::.7y""n~~~r:,: DirectOr
. '
Ser, Phlllipt, Tiffany BiueU, Carr!eW!a"
r
"
.
"'- •.~_, h L d p I
April
I,
glnt, In that bacch o£ tcoring wu a triple in the ourth inning. fannina two Lady p.m. On •ue ..... 7, t e a y a cons stay d1y ol '•brulry, 2002, during nor11111
2002 · 11, 22 ' at,
and PoweU, a double byW!a.
Eat.et and holdln11 back the Ea~cern on the road ,with varlity and ttttrve llltrt
will bt tubmltltd working
hou "· _ _ _....:.,_ _
""Lodwill
~r
•
totvottolthlpeopla
Mondty through
gl.nt, and tinglet by' Powell, White, o entc.
matchupt aga1ntt the Lady. Bbont of o1 Nld Melge Couilly Prlday.
Publlo Notice
PhiUipt.
White
f~nned
besinning
p.m.,
alto._ _ _ 111111
Comm1111ontre
_..:.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
___
_ _Wahama't
__,_ _ _Meredith
_ _ _ _Buft'alo
___
_ _ _at
_5_
__
to lit'rtm1ry
htld llaollon
In the Thl
ra11rv1
lha right to
Purtulnl
to
·
County ol Melg1, Ohio rtltat env end 111
a.otlon
121.22
oltht
Williamton
and
Danny
11
till
rtgullr
pltotl
bldt
and/or
1ao1p1
corretpondlna tOtter move the third lnnlnJ.
OhiO RtVIIId Code,
ol voting, ther11n on till btll bid for
•av-.
The Red1 led 4· 1 tl)rougll G•· wu immediately itilnounced.
Tuttdly, the 7th d•v thl · lnttnded the Melg1 County
ludgtl Commlttlon
Kremchek planned to have teVen inninat behind the tur- · After Scon Sullivan (1·0) ol Mty, 2002, the putpoM.
will matt 11 1:30 am
..J h d
I
h
J
CIUIIIIon
of
ona•hllf
othtr experu, Including noted vivalitt pitchin11 of Scott ,..tc e tcore eo tent ·, uon per01111 11111 and' UN Qlorll tclotl, Citric
on April 11, 2002, In .
the Audltot'l Ofllot
LaR,uuingled
oft'
Lloyd
(0-1)
ltM
fortht
pur(IOH
o1
M
11111
c
o
u
n
t
y
Ham.llcon,
who
ttranded
nine
orthopedic turseon Dr. Jamet
ol
tht Mllgt County
Commit•'-• · Courl/louN,
"(Odtfey) p!Jnud hll riaht Andrtwt oCBirmlnaham,Ala., . ba.erunnen in hil teven· ladin" off the bottom hal{. fiiiOVIDIHO
"
ADDITIONAL
fDot and twltud hit knee, and look 1t the MRI retultt,
Regie Taylor aacriflced, OINI"AL RIYINUI (4) I, 11, 21102
innin1 ttint.
Mtlgt County ludgtl
he tald be heard a pop,''
Hamilton, whOM ~rlfice LaRue advanced on Todd '011 C"IMINAI. AND 210
He taid hit initial plan it to
CollimliiiOft
. Kremchek taid.
Perktr
try to heal the Injury with ·tly gave the !Udt a 1-0 leadJn. Walker'• srounder, and Barry ~~~~-:~~~=~ICII ......,_Pu_b_ll_oN-ot-lca-- Ntnoy
Ctmpbtll, ltot'tllly
Ori&amp;y went down holdins rehabilitation, and that Orlft'ey the wcond, tcored their third 14rkln and Brady Clark wtrc AND fiAVINQ THI
hit knee and wu brleOy ttaned wotkouc. inunedlately run by tin]lli1111 and comlna all Intentionally W~lted, bringing ::::~~TION ~ ~=t.e.:v~IOH (4) I, 2002
attended to by C!ncinntll aft« return!ns from the MRt the wry around 6:om lint on up the lefi..ha11ded hjtdniJ IUCH UVY, for I IXCIU OfiTHI TIN
. medical pertonnel bel'ore tete,
l""lnit the llfli. OOII11nulng period Of MILL LIMITATION ·
Todd Walker'• founh-innlng Sean C•"""
- , .,..
llmt, btglnntng July I,
Rtvllld Codt,
limpJnsslnprly off' the field.
handed Uoyd, Cuey lined the 2001.
ltotlont H01.11 (Q~.
double.
Orifl'ey't
home
run,
a
tolo
He wat placed on the 15-day
Tlil pone I« aerd
1701.11, 1101.21
Montrtal cuM back. in the flrtt pitch up the middle £or eltotton
will be open NOTICI It hereby •
ditabled !Itt after the pme. No thot down the rlahl-fitld line,
11 • 110 t .m. tnd glun that In
pv~ the IUdt 1 2-0 lead in elgluh aphut reli.vtrl Scott · tht gam.-winning hit.

17

Tribe

,.............,,,

the CVI!tting. White then fanned
four of the next six batters to
win the shut-out. She fanned 13
and did not walk a single batter,
in hurling the one hitter.
Ashley Hager,AmandaVeage~
Janet Calaway, Till"any Hensle;
·
T111"any
Spencer Kayla G1·bbs,'
Nikki Phillips Carrie Wimdm
· ' Sandy Powell,
= '
Ka.l! LodWICk,
Tiffeny Bissel!, Krista White,
Alysia Holter, and Mnrgun
Weber aU contribllted.J:met Cal·
·d
··
·
away came the btg bat wtth a
2-for-3 ttight and with a double
and single, and Nikki Phillips
had two singles.

Sweep

Indians off to 5-l start, sweep Tigers

route,
S?Jydcr retired three ttraight Maraudcn in
the third inning. Snyder continued 111 thur
dowu the Mei~ ufTl!lliiL' •• the Maraudcn
went down in the tctp 11f the fiJurth alicr Athk'Y BurbridJ.IC &lt;.ollc&lt;.tcd the tir&lt;t Md19 hit of
the ganw,
.
.
jack&lt;loti plated 1i" rum in the botttlll1 of the

'4.

Itt loon woi.n

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
EAST MEIGS - lkhind
great pitching and keen batting
l!)'e!, the EMtern Lady Eagles
tolled to a 15-0 shut-out win
over the Nelsonville-York
Buc keyes Fr1'day ru'..11..~ tat Lll&gt;tem
r-...
Hillh ~hool. EMtem jj now 21 both overdll
· ~·" and m
' tIle IeaKue.
Freshman hurler Krista White
pitched a perfect ~llle for three
inninS'I, nriklng outthe first nine
ba
h f: d Tl
1
tters s e ace . 1e tent 1 ,
however, Nels~nvillcis Blair,
ripped a single to right 6eld for
the Duckl!)'e!, their only hit of

pickln!J up the win. He allowed three runs
on eigl1t hia while striking out !bur and
Wlllk!ng two. Smith went all seven innings
f'or Mel~!~ llllowing el11ht hill Canning f&lt;)Uf
and WAlking two.
Fa~kler led the MaNudel'l! at the plate
going 3-f'or-4 with ~ double and two 1111gle~~. Glue went 2-for-3 with two singles
and RallUburg went 2-for-4 with two single~~ and knocking in two runs.Jacob Stnith
and Doug DUI each added .· single for the
Mamuden.
The ~econd .contest o( the day wm called
·after the lm11111en built a 13-21ead a!ler five
lnnini!K. Jacklon scored twke in the fit'!t
!nnlnll and four timesln die second.
The Mamuden wel\l able to k¢ep it dose
In the early golns W! they pushed 011e run
llcrossln each of the Bnt twO lnnlnl!l. Dous
Dill singled in the Snt for Mel81 and scored
when Paekler n:ached on an error at lint
b1111e. Meil!l looked to have something
going In the second Inning when lunu·
burg, Cmey Dunfee and Chris Smith all
drew walk! t&lt;) !tArt the inning. A single oft'
the bat of eenterlielder Jacob Stnlth !Cored

.Meigs

Reds win, but Junior out

BY JIM lloul.oY .
8EHTINEI. CORRESPONDENT
JACKSON - The Mci~ M~raudcr l()ftball team traveled to JacktOn Saurrday w face
the lronbdiet in a non-league double hcaJcr.
The Marauders came out vn the !hem end o(
an H-2 ~eore in the Jay't tim jldtne and lel\t
the nightcap by a 17- 10 count.
TI1c lint WJiliC looked to he a pttdwn dud
early •t Jaynec D•vi• for Mcr14• .ond c;a,.,dy
Snyder fi1r )&lt;lck•on each brl!czed thrn'ul!h (lw
fir11 two inninW'. Each hurler .•lluwc.J unc
ba~e runner in the tim inninl! vr.1 the h:o«: 1111

1

d

. Southern went down l-2-3 to SGHS and ICOrtd 01\ two SHS drron. R~HI!Ver
hurler )like Workman, but in the second· Curt Crouch struck out the side (or the
frAme SHS Clill\• to Ji(e. Bl'llndon Pierce innlngls rhn:e ou11 to save the game.
drtw ll ~~~dotr walk, Joe CortteU singled,
Southern bitten wen: Ash with a triple
Dally Hill !'l'liched on an errnr that and d&lt;)uble, Dally Hill a double, and sin~
brought homea run,the11 twO runHame @lei by Wet 11urroW.,'JY HUI,Joe Cornell,
. home on Ohlin~rls 6·3.ground out ond and Joe Manuel.
· Manue I, DurroW1, -an d 'T\,
South 0 all! a hitters Wi!h! KevIn Laman er!Dr. Joe
•1
Hill srngled with Manuel co mini! home rhier With twtl singles ~nd a walk, Eddie
nn
"1'1
"rror
in ce~ ter, th e scon: .,.
• 2 ampnhi er a s.Ine-e,
~r Cl ary a sIngIe, an d
v
•
•
S~uthern.
• .. .
Jake Whit~man a single.
·
lnh the thi~ , \lining, Southern got
Burrnws went. four innings and
anoti elrrundw en Mhatt Ash lehd o~lwith, Crouch hurled two in postinl! the win.
a tr p e an · eanle o111e w en r erce They cotnblned f&lt;)r 12 strikeouts and just
n:ached 011 an error the seo .· 5 2 Th
lk
hll
i. i h
Thrnadoes added ~~~other ~ th · fl"he two wa 1' w e scatter 1\g 1 x ill.
when Ash double and came home ~n 1
~=~~:.an, de!plte 4 I!Ood eff'ort, suffered
3 groundout by Cornell.
Southern hosts Alexander In a 'Ttl-ValSOHS plated a run in the sixth inning ley Conference match Friday.
when Zach Clary singled, stole a base

•

"

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

---- ---

�.

..

.

t:

atribune - Sentinel -

t'a .~~ I
We Cover
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Canl

l\egt,ter
(304) 675-1333
875-5234

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW I.Q. WRITE

A!1

!Q.

Successfu l Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\\\111 \ f I \II ' \ I \

Oil IV ln •Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monder · 'rldtV 'or Jnurtlon
In Next Oty't Paptr
Sunday l n•Column : 1:00 p.m.
1
flor Sundays Peper

The Dally sentinel • P1ge A9
(

Mmoacmn

I

11117 Honda Civic, 2 DR 2000 YllnOhl TT·R 128, 2000 Wlnn Mo10t Homo.
~,::io~ ~,;. Ec~' Exoottont Ccndlt~ $17~ 1.000 mlloo. coat ovor
llll&gt;d .. LoOdlcl, Ntw ,',:· OBO. (7411)2!1H257
- 180,000. SoU lor S3S.OOO
(7411)258-88311. Lot_.. Moo: 200t KR~R. Bougnt Ntw· duo to lolling hoohh. 7411- ~~~~~~~"I

==

I~llQf:;:-.-:7""--:-~--:-- ~~~~~1.11k';~~S8~
t..--iiiiii-_.1 ! m

Hondo Civic EK.
.llltok, 111.1100. Auto, Exoot- · brlctl, - r p1poa, 1ont Condition, Now Tlreo,
woldowo, llnlola, oto. Cttuc!e CIIIIM Control, Power WinWlntlfl, Rio 01ondo, OH dowl. Sun100t, CD F'loyor,
•t;:oii74C)o245·5121 .
Cllt (7411)3111·0525
'
pro
-.,
~-Muotoro Convtrtlble,
&gt;t
JUI'lMLE
- ''''"'"IlOilo P1ayor, 30,000
~------_.1 mltot. 115,500. (740)«1•
••
·
'0.Full lioodod St.. Btmor&lt;l .:..:'58=:3:---~
'PuPD!te, 8 moloo, 1 ltmalo. 79 Corvlttl Co"fl'', 1-top,
lt&amp;O uch, Both t&gt;lrtnta on 54,000 ml11, Auto, 12,800
' p•emlooa. Call (740)258- firm. (7411)370-22ll2
,tll52ollli 8pm.
94 OOdxo S~lrlt. 92 ,000
1
;lctorobll AKC Goidtn Re- m 101· 1'· Ill, Cruloe,
!flevor
P~pteo. Vet $1000 080. (7411)2115-1233
. ·~hecklld. (7 )370-2831
04 Nl-n MaJdmo. LOOdod.
•• .,0 Roo. Bltok Lob pup- lop condition. (304)875:;M tor 1111 ,good hunll 8132 (304)875-1644 or
. , _ , . vo1oo moll 44~
•1103 01 ooll 304-875-4409 11112 Ponlloo Sunblrtl OOOd
OOndltlon coii7411·04D-3087
•Beautiful Ftmall Botton effor
'Ttrtlor Puppy. 8 WHkl old.
.(740)2M·1007
· 1993 Eaoon LK wagon,
St 350. t 988 Mercury,
MtscAL
SHOO. 15 112 11 Boot
INsrRlJMI!IIli'S
85HP. 88 Trailer, stooo:
~
(740)388-91108 .
•, Sevorol
•
Str lng lnotrumenta, 1994 Cavalier RS. Runo
, ~mplltlor, PA Syotomo and Good. (304)878·2351 attar
•Muoio
Equipment "' goner· 8 pm ·
lat.
(7411)248·9189
'
1914 Corvette, 18,800 oc-

I7411)~·271M

11 H.O. Sponotor 1200,
Bltok, 16.000 mlleo, Lola o1
Ctvomo, Duet Soot, Sluy
Bar, Wlndol\lold, FOIWII&lt;l
Controto, E•collont COndl·
18500.
PhOno

I

'""-..go.
epn;,

I

t:

I \ In I._, , 1'1'1 II._,

1972 Oluomootor t8h Run-

r'o

(7411)245-IIIS

HOME

.

IMI'IW

Independent

.

11111 Wot~ron 25 112ft. 112
miiENI'S
Dletrlbutor
Cobin, Sttopo 8. Stovo.
Sink, 4S4 onglno, 218HP, All typoo of m11onry brick,
(740)387-08SO, 17401307• block &amp; otono 20 y11 .
12n.
·
rlenco. tree aollmote,
in 32 days.
(304)n3-11550
Motor BOlt I Traitor with 1
100%
70 h.p. Evouo engine.
IAIEM!NT
(304)875-4877 . .
WAT!APAOOFINO
natural/Guaranteed
AI!J'O I&gt;
&amp;
Uncondltlonol lllotlmo guar·
. ACt;.'I;NiORI&amp;'!
r'ARTS
on
teo. Locol
reloronota1075.
fUr·
nlthtd.
Eotobllohod
•
•
~
• Coli 24 liro (740) 448·
,.......,........._· - 4 Nearly New Tlrea. SF 0870 • Rogort. a.
-••mont L----oi.QIWIIiolillol
Goodrldo Pt8517SR , 14". Waterproofing.

1Lost 27lb ·

••PI-

i

I

740 992 7036

.

==-=-=C6C Gonoral Homo 1.1afnte-

Lotdtd, S8a95. 1988 Chor·
.k••• 4x4. $2405. 1007 s10, 82K, 14895. 1885 8·10,
13805. 1994 S-10, $3495.
Othoro In otock. COOK MO.
TORI. (740)448·0103
1184 Toyota noo truck,
VB, IUIO, A/C, 1 ownor,
$1,300; 1992 Toyota Plloo,
ounrool, AIC; CD, $2,300;
1987 Corallo, 4 door, auto,
AIC, 11,4110; 19M Corolla,
4 door, outo, AIC, low mlloo,
112,4110. 7411·288-G012
1885 Cadillac Eldorado
53,000 mlleo. Groon, Taupo

ehepo.
Hog brand
"'isii:"i~I04ili e:· 72'f~t. Nloo
"
.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _.
Oilcl 7' King K ttlr E 1
• C d u · xct'
ltnt
on hton. $ 450.
(740)245·0370
Ford 5030 Tractor, 82 H.P.,
48~ lOili nro .. 4 nyd., toroo
wotghttd llrtl, llborglau
canopy, 7310 Ford End
loader with 811. bUOl&lt;ot.

7 38

CraniOIICftl ,

renexolol)', M)lofasclal

r

lll"'·-::...,~,..~"1

11178 Trotwood 2211. Fully
Boll Contained. Complotaly
Remodetod,
$2000.
(7401307•0488
20 n. Chltoou Travel Trail·
or, oett-oontelnod, olean,
muot ott to approolott.
12,880.00 OBO. 740·1112·
3394, 740·742-3020

Cettif1c11es Available
SJ()-4&amp;j minure.t
$4~ . 75 minu1e..1

i

LM!srocK

Eu:cnuCAJJ

""
..,_,.111GIIIIi\110N , 1

Allldonllol or oommo.Cial
wlnng, now etrvloo or ,..
f&gt;llrt. MlltarLiotnotdoloctr~lon . Ridenour Eltclrlcol,
WV000308, 304-675·1788.

Delivered &amp;
Spread $15.00
per ton, 8 to 10
tone, limited
area, call lor
detalle. Cell:

Clll relieve a deblorortlnancial oblisationund

111111Je a fair dialributlon of USIII.IIIIIOIIJ .
crecliton. A penon JOiaa tluouah bankruptcy

·

-~•

lnG 0011: to rooponllt&gt;o per·
ten w/paoturo weter &amp;
born. 7411·7o12-20t4 .
1 yr old ·Nallllno Do"koy
Jick. Clontfe 1400 080.
Coneldor T1ode· Form
Equlpmont or Sporting
Goode.
Alter
5pm.
(740)441-1013
2 two-yoor-old AOHA rogtoterod appendix gotdlnge.
OrHn broke. Ono Paloml·
no, ono Bay. Aoklng
112,1500.00 IIOh. 74C)oll438178

=

Front Wrtcktd '93 Ponlloc
Grand Am 1or Pano, 1100.
'87
Sulek
LoSabro
Wrooktd, 1100. (7411)307·
01157
.;;. -~~~-.,

r

"112

I

'l'ltUCKS

FOR SAu!

..__ _ _ _ __,
'
1988 F-150 E•ttndtd Cob,
2 y - old Whlta Chfckone 8 opood, Ro- Hitch &amp;
10( Nle .. 50 I pltct.
TOIJPir, Vory Good Condl·
.1-7&lt;40-888-31168
lion. 13500. (740)307-7830
2 yr. old white !tying hone
flOe a plect.
19110 Ford
opprox
.,._;....;
_ _740·988-3056
_ _ _ _ 85.000
mlltlFISO,
on 11188
381 ,.
20 yr. old Quarter Maro, wry
good
condl!lon,
Btook with White Socko, 13.1100..00. 7411·1112·31115
Groat oi-H Horoe. Woll 1993 F-150 Auto Runo
trained/ monnerod. Shott, Oood HI '" ' 12300
Wormtd, Tnmmtd. Alter
' "'~h mlloo,
SOm.
11500
080. 080. (740),56-8257
(740)4-41·1013
111114 Ford FI~XLT, 302Ft
•.t.
F
I
a/1,
pw/pl, om/lm cue., tiH,
0 ood -4· H and F,-, 8 ' crUIH.
kln'lb«r ..... Ck1th lnPtge. Hamp, Yor11 and Pet· ter1or, moiChlro tlborgloot
ralio CroMbftd. (7411)388• toppor bod mot ttnttd win~· (7411)388.0178 alter dowo, du.tox,..uot, ohromo
8.00pm
Whortfo, 50,000 mlln, Ex·
TlvH yillr old golden pony cellent condhlon, 17,800.00
etalllon. Groot pot, but no1 080. 74C)o948-2131
.
broken lo ride. . Mklng 22' Boll Truck No EroinO
1425.00. 74C)o742;3033
Oood tor swage. 11200:
Wonlod to buy for roooona· (740}44-2351
. ble pnoo. Toll HorN, 18 89 Sllvortdo 1/2 Ton, 8ft
hondo or · Prtterobly Bod with flnor tnd toot box.
Olldlro. (7411)2454189
305 ·Auto. trtnomltolon,
Whn. e yr, old tomato Limo CruiH, AJC,
15500.
w/3- old boby Lomo. (740)248-5040
Spott.d tomoto Oon~coy e
V.w~&amp;
Yll ald. 304-e7U230
•
~WDs

=.:..------

VAJIOSAur..
CAUJl'CJUS
Yard Soft, 5th. 8th.}lh II
Statt Routt 141, tO.o mlf11
out 141 on ht.

AUCI'ION ANil

· Fur.A MAIIKY.r
Auotlon Otollfl Wholflllt.
Every Tultdey epm. Truckfl)j(jo of Now &amp; Ultd lllmo
from Stveral Stalet. Sttllro
to 1111 Public &amp; Dtetoro.
One Pftee, Dozone, &amp; Caot
Loft. No Ouloro Uctnot
Requlrtd, PrcctorviNe Ohio
Plea Maril;•t. Jutt aoro11
Hunflngton, WV 3tlli StrHI
tllklge. Clary Bowon. Auco
IIOnotr. (740)888-22115.

r

%~

Abtoluft Top Dollar: U.S.
14tvlt', GokJ COinl, Proof·
Hla . Olarnondl, Ool&lt;!
Rlnoe.
u.s. Currency.·
M.T;S. Coin ShOo, 151 SOCond ,w.,.,., Clofllpoflt, 7411-

448-2842.

Rloclnt Bank IIOCk ~ per
llhoro, need . up· to I00
oherH, (740)1112-7500
I , II' I f I ) \I I , I
I II\ I I I ,

;z

1

AUI08 · · u..e
i'--•••oaiiiiSiALI!iiiioo..,..·
1::;, seoo Ut•,
j

~1W,

i 174 Chivy NOYI, 3~.
40,000 Ollgil1ll mltoa, ont
- · runs good, tour good
or trode:
. tON Orlnd Am, nlco bod!',
good tlrH, enolno ntodt
~~00 or lradt.
_ __.,___ _ _ _
1171 ~. Whill with
- ,.., · -· 380 AutO.
1'500. (740)3tl 0408

"'"• tuoo.oo

Ford Eoonolfno Von,
Hew
MuM Mil
0110. 17411)«1·

tll88 JHp Orand W

t w-llon
condition ..

min!
C304)882·22Ai
1008 S·IO Sluer wlln
48,000 ""'"' 1.8 P~.
112 .~. (74ll)3f15.«10t
tOOl Unooln Navigator,
loodlcl, wllh T.V. oyottm,
ttldng 130,000.00. 7~
112·22011
4.0,

tH1 OoCitiO . . _ Block. ;2000;;=~D;cdiaoo;iitai'P.Pe;,;;.,;;'lgll';;

8 - I.. illuno lltd' LooU Van. LOldtd. 21.000
.,....,
Cool
f30 000
GrNl
. ..500. (740)3U- -,...,: 81ft
fOr -82t.OOO.'dul
a-. .
10 Mlllng htlllh, 7411-7~­
'"' , _ l'lftOird ,.,. :;;;*:;:~;:,--...,...-:--~~
~1.ic1Gk11
~ •~.• : tl Ponllac Tranoport 3.1
.. IIUU'00 ' "-"- 7_.. 7~2 AUIDrMiia »NAtA =· stla
2211-lp.m.
81t, II~.;..,, hlglt - :
. 1112 Colwloo, ,,.., 010; ...,
cNP'ndlflll,
IHI 110 Di0kU11 II ,1100 IUOO.OO. 740-Hll·2982 .
010; 011 7oi0-tt24114f Ill• f7 'TDI'OII- tit/ till, 1 ·

fl*d 4,.., muc~~ -

t1t p.m.

-

"QIIa"'" Hom•

.

740-667-0363
•••

,.,."'" "'••

992 1101

G&amp;R
CARPENTER
SERVICE Sanitation
• Room Adcllttont &amp;

Aomodollng
• NIW Olrlgll
• Eloctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting~· Gutloro

• Vinyl II lng • Palnllng
• Patio and Porch Decks

'

V.

Frae EsUmaies
C.

YOUNG Ill

992-6215
l';'V:,~·.c::

33561 Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy,·Ohio
.
. 45769
• Service You
Can Count on•
Owner
Gene Arms

992-3~7~,,.

TFN

Hill's Self
Storage

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL

29670 Baehan Roa~
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·848·2211

Roofing· Home
Maintenance·
Gutters· Down
Spout

CL4SSIFIEDS!

Free Estimates
949-1405 T~N

Free Eslnnates
11&lt;11111:t•! !1 Sl • Mnhth:IIIJ/1

140-992-9158

HUNTER SAFTY l.iUIUM::O
at Forked
Sportsman

Run ·
Club
Friday, April .19th 6 pm-1 0 pm

f@.~?~~~ft~ MACK'S
J,D. CONSTRUCTION
1/nt,.

fj\ilj

Advertise lfl:+.
In this space lll.i•r
for ·
'25 per month

Sat. 9 am· 5 pm

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
~~specializing l.n !..All Homes

· &amp; Rubber Roofo"
~
Gara(let, Pole Buildln(ll, Cottcrete
Roofs &amp; Sidina
Commercial &amp; Resldenrla)
-.

f·l l ia·

&lt;740) 992-3987
Owner &amp; Operalor,.John Dean

2 Avg. Size Rooms Cleaned

$29.99 ea. rm.
Captain Steamer Carpet Cleaner

Toll Free1·688-338-7847

WtndcJJI6
8ldng
.111 I d
l3ta1d names you CM
ltUSI.

Cettalt II Sd; Simld:ltl

Foee

Business Services

driveways, ponds
(Insured)
Free Estimates

740-892-3985

t::. =-.o~~ r

=· :,,-:,rOIM-::: :..,
.=

..i:,f Cut Abo.ve

4riilriDt the Rut•

~J'1~7tu

auoo.

110.
!
110- -top. WinciIIMMonltCoM.IIIII11M ll!ifld, Hlacift, Durilp llld,
·CGndlllon, 100,000 mttoe, lilt - · . . -. (7&gt;10)378-

N.OOO llml. (740)24H017

tiM ICM!rnl' -

2111

Day, evening, .
andwHkend
care available

992~6975

or email@
wany10chgcriba.cam

P/1
CONTRAOORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

740·985-3948

CDNCREIE/BLOCIVBRICK
• Footers, Walls, Stcp1 •
Flut Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Crete:
Frt:e Es1imu1e1
ScrYina Ohio and W.V,

wv H031712

Advertise
"25 per month

Pomeroy, OH

(740) 992·5908

Shade River AG Sel'l'lce
"Ahead In Sel'\'lce"
35537 SL RL 7 North • Pomomy, 011 4!720
• 4-H feed for lumhs. hogs, stccra, chickentund
rabhils.
• Seed Potatoes
• Onion Sets
• Pull Line of Bulk Garden Seed•

e;/1
882·2343

• Fcnilizcr SpeciOcally Designed for Gorden Crops
• New Fenilizcr Buaaics .
• All busaies have been pallcrn le~ ted 10 meet
·Agronomy AsllOCialion Slandard1

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

TFN

Bry1n Reeve•
New HomH, Room Addltlone,

• Replacemen1
Windows • Roofing

Garagee, Pole Bulldlnge, Roofe,
Siding, Decks, Kltchene, Drywall
&amp;More

&lt;GMMIIOA!. aooii!SIDiliiiAl

BUitDfRS Int.

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7699

on

740-742-3411

~~
High&amp; Dry

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
. MANUFACTURED HOUSING
fii·Efficlency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

'!!!1'!!'1!1 IIITflffl::M.

( olemon6
----

~-

• 1',... 5 A R v.. r l'ort W•rronllto ~~·
• I'm IJI~II.. Thornwt~IJII
.
• Vm let
C:Mtpreuar
Worronty lin Htllct M&lt;Hiole
JIIIJo:l( I'.H'I'IMI\1'1'.~ •IUII;V. ln•onlllry
• B•n~ Jllhn&lt;inK Afollob!e
• Prlca Tn Fltl\11 81111..11

y,.,

SeD-Storage
Mirror
Deakr
IJ~~~:.~vlDirect
1nc,,..

HENDRIX
Hutlna 4c Coollns
Elll- 14-HR.
SERVICE ·
.

"'ne Prlu.
Anytime.
AU the Time."

33795 Hilmul RJ.
, . , , ()b;,

10 Yr. 1'1111

Lallor"-IIYI
PLUMIING
II.ICTiiiCAI.

740-992·

Rep(llcement Window1
Uvrrmrl

Loc:al..,.5264
Supplmwnt; Lllelnlurance;
IIICI Final E•pe-; Caneer &amp;

ll.etlrtment.

A 48JK lloUoven;
~Medial

COIIt!*l 1*0, Dull ~

-.a.ooo-.-

Now accepting
children

Houre:
Mon·Sat 10-4
217 E. 2nd St ..

fiELDS
PLUMBING
•Ritldenllal

WI'ITLE ONES

for

ttL!'

..05 5th Slr"t
New Hav•n, WV

WERRY'S

&amp; Collectible•

I

1171 M Hortoy 01\ldoo •
..,..Colt~
tto,oOo 1~,.,.,.;
4:00pmor-1ta 11 7~7.,: 2811
IH7 'ord . _ LX 4dr. =~=-='"=""":~:""':
tHI CR 121, l...ttont
Wflldowtldoor LooQ. Nr ~. (74CJ)441o4211

(740) 992·3194
992·6635
'------"m

In this space

.
001111. 17100. t04-t71-2231
1H1 l&lt;loi~t~"'•nottt!/1
.....
~ 11 ve,
MIJ(&amp;TQJI

41

(10'x10' 610'1120')

BISSELL

Sunset Home
Construction

FREE ESTIMATES!

(Syracuse, Ohio)
Bulldozms,
Trockhoc/Backhoe,
land clearing, Septic
lank. dllChlng, walcr
lines, site work.
basements/footers,

97 .Beech St.
middleport, OH

Pocket Knlvee

TFN

~IM~tf;i i:Jt~
WILLIAMS · .
EXCAVATION

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

YOUNG'S

Mnkes Tractor
Equipment Plll'ls
Fuctory Authorized
Case-!H PW'ts
Deniers

SIIOJl THE

98 Mercury Cougar, toodld,
rod, VB outornatto, 71,000
mlle1, 'lllty ahlrp car, Ilk·
lng 18,000.00. 740·882·
2052
&amp;
:7::=:F~or-:d--::Ex-p:-1or-or-,- 4:-,74,
Ltathor Interior, 88.000
~1111, 113,000. (740)448•

:~::=:~-:--:-:::-::-::-­

k

_ .. . . . . . .

.may tetlin •-ww~n property, nown II
"'J
"exempt" property, for hla or her pcnonll U&amp;e.
lmpro~tmtnls"
Thla may include 1 car, a hou~e, clothes. an&lt;l
c.....,tu.. Prtcto
di
Now H..,. • RoaM&gt;dolloll
householdJOOda. You should . rectany
ltocnna·R-AdciiUono
quelliona ~eaardina banlcr\lptcy to an attorney
Sldlna • Pot• ......
before pro&lt;leedina. Por information resardins
llo&lt;IIJ. Goroaos
B
WVI.!lftt
· In
tcy ~tacl:
(740) 992·2753
' Wlmk, Attorney
(7'A) 59~ .....
A'"-·
17lllll
,..~
....,..
•
L--:......:...
__________
-J r...;._...;__ _ _-J

1000 Sr. Rr. 7 South
•
'Coolville,
OH 45723
(740) 591·2173
Or leave name
and number

992-5479

..

BANKBUPTCX

SAVE TniEAND

I

1 mare horN; 21 mo. geld-

. Authorized Agent

7~9115.J345

equlpmtnt niiYtr ralntd on. Lllth•r Interior, Sunroot,
Kept lnoklo. $19,000 FIRM. N- Tl
110 000

""
....
' .
(304)878- 21102
(814)948·3307
(coli),
·Maooty Fergueon 302. 55 (7411)245-5488.
hp, 717 hr., llko new, 1818 Chryoter Concord, ·
118,800,(740)98~·3843
LOidtd, 93,000 mjlet,Pull Typo Lown Mower, E•· S21100 OBO. (740)256•1233
otlflnt tor Four Wheeler, 1978 EL camino 350
12HP, SO' out otoclrlo ltart. Borod 30 over ovorolzed
$7150 (740)388·8134 ltove com, ntlOtrt, • 7 ~ Holloy
meougo
Carb, Shill Kit and S6M
Time lor Froot Balding Pao- olapohlff, 13000. (7411)307·
lure and Hoy Fltldo.
;;:
02:.:3::..
19 - - - - - ATV Broodctet Seoderl, 12 t982 Dldl 98 runo 0000
~~~~·~~uoflty, Flto moot lookl good, $700. (304)07~
232
9 -,--,..,....,,.-.,--.,.-=
Jtm'o Farm Equipment tnc. .,.
::-:7
(740)~·2&gt;184
1983 Bu~k Skylar'&lt;, $300.
(740)448-3787

Jeff Warner Ins.

ond Yoa• Theropy Olfi

LIME- DEPOYIAO
STONE Ali PUtS &amp;

ntnct· Painting, vinyl old-

nd c•--••- 4
Rebuild Kilo, 7•0·24~·5877, aollmoto call Chtt, 740·992·
1 ~·
·~ 0 ra
·~·--· •4, Cell: 339-378~.
8323 .

• Ad• ShOI.IId Run 7 DIVI

Cellular

11111.10, Swtdltho Shiatsu,

;~:!.~~h ~:~~ ~~~~ 1'ir'-~--;;;;;;;; HERBALJFE•

!trior, garage kopt, show· 1740)338·0492
room COndition. None like II

Hand

Dttcrlpt lon • -lncludt A Price • AvOid At)brtvlaUont
• lncludt Phont Number And Addr111 Whe n N.. dtd

tOYaon&amp;parie,...
Spa&lt;:iollzintln: 0acp

--~-=-~
r-------""!'., r---------------,

around anywhere. Priced Budget Prlotd Tranaml• lng, carpentry, doort, wln·
"==~~ only at viewing. (304)875· otono All l'jpn, Aocaoa To dowo, blthl, mobile homo
•
5387
Over 10,000 TranamiiiJont, repair and more. For tree

• Start Your Adt With A l&lt;tvword • Include Compltta

LICENSED MASSAGE
TIIEilAPIST

Stop l Compare

tual mites, white with red In· Llretlme Warranty. S185.

,\ I 1\ I '. I ! H h

Krls
Kanledd

ROIERT IISSEU
(ONSTIUCJION

: : : ..... 87' Yollow·
atone Country Club, 33' ontv
15.100 mlln. A muot MO.
Too muc:h to llot. Only
u - u~
1 ,...., nvmR
$15,700. 17411, _ 8210
:,;..::.=.:..:;..=:.:.:=- 1 G l RV: 1008 Goldin Fttcon 31
••.n, mint condhlon. Stldo- out 1 Compltlt
LR, piQU!td oak """'"""
tnd kitchen floor. Soiling tor
Rtmodtllng
book VIIUI, $14,500. Call
(7411)258·1854
noaa. 1H4 model, fully FREE ESTIMATE$
oqulpptd, Forti Cha111o,
TA" .....,_
Twin Eladl. 110tpo e. OOOd
...,..~"'" 1871
ohapt. Yordman 42 lnch
7/WTI'N
cut, good ohape. Call L----.....:o=oOOil
(7411)387-7070

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AB Video
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�Pllge A10 • The C.lly Sentinel

Mondlly, Aprll8, 2002

www.mydlllly•nttnet.com

AU..EYOOP

UIDGII:
~r---

PHILLIP
· ALDiil

.

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L'rv\ f&gt;,FAA\D YOUR ROO'\

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~='.,. 1'11\\/E. TO E.'i.i~i'\1\E

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BIG NATE
t WII.OTE POWN lt.LL MY
FEii.LING,_ IN 8LI'ICIC.
"'ND WHIT E I THI!J
WI'IV, i&lt;.ELLY C.I'IN ltEI'ID
I'IND DlcOE!.T IT IN
HEll. 0\o/N TIME!

I!.N'T T M.O.T &amp;ETIEFI.
TH"'N H"'VIIo/Go $0ME
&amp;IGo, EMOT ION ...L
5CI.Mi! F'"'C.E·TO "··

--,,--

PEANUTS
WEt.L, MA'AM, l
Plt'N'T ~•ve AHV
~mWi PAPEir. ,,

SO 1 DID MV 1-lOMEWOir.K
ON A PAPEII. PLATE ..

:~t~:~ ds"o~~ht? ~~~

I MONDAY

a Hllbar
alg~t
a ,,.
rttldue

Whars Inside

eummor

44

:Ill KQI

Mte~lne

ptrll

,

State examination
to begin VU?dnesday
BY BRIAN J. RIID
BREEDCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

We allier
Hlsh: 60s, Low: 40s
......... 2

Wall Sbeet

CELEBRITY CIPHER

rebounds from
IBM scare

by Lula Campo•

CMbllly Clplltr crypiQGrlml lrt crllltd lrom quo!allont bV lln\0111
11101111. llllllncl pftatnl. EIC~ 111111 In th• clphllr Nndo lor 1no1hor,
TO!Uy'l Clul: R equalt U

!T

CRtO

LHVO

VAIZUTHV . • ,
Tl

OPW

-

NEW YORK (AP)
Wall Street shook off a profit

TZUVSO' HV'O

(HZWBTIHV

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MWIWJ
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.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'NIIure, not cantenl wllh denying
him the ability to l~lnk, hll endowtd ~1m with the iblllty Ia
W~ll.'. - A.E. flt)ljlmtn
.
.

11 1 1 •

YHPAUY DA 1~Y

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CLAY

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low to form four olmple wordo. w.

0 four
loorronao ltrlort of
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1 I· a I· I·

I had attended a neighbors
birthday party. At the buffet table
I .1 Ia · I
I heard one not so smart fellow
· · · ·
, say , ' Birthdays are good for you.
E B T S H E :~: ~~~~~~ ~~o have the most live
e
A Com~ltrt !ht chucklo quotod
. . . . . · 1 V bv filling In fho milling wordt
you dovolo~ f1om "'~ No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
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rec.:linn yuu don'c L' hoou~.
lhcy ;~rc liktly h _t tU i ll out tn
) 'nllf .u1V.1111

'Cf

llfllfS (M.orch 21-/\pril IV)

•• Uotfunnn~lc ly, lhtrr'o •
ch;m ·.~ yuu Lulllll t'ICJttfil' UC't
,, hit ·m urt \l rr•~ du111 uut:ll in
ftu,fl't ll11 lm·,,lvtuh.'•H• wich

''''"'"· IJ•m'l bluw tllltip 1&gt;111
T 1yin~ 1u I'·""'
"P ' l•ruk&lt;n IIIIIIJII&lt;:e! The

u( rr••1~&gt;11ion .

A•lfo-(:urh M .uduuakcr can
ltcl jl yuu
whAt to

"'"I'""'""

du w nutku thr r4:btion•hip
work . M.1il $~.75 w Mol&lt;h·
111•ker• .:lu ddt ncWif''f""·

l'.ll.

u,,

~ut1nn.

17;", M11rr•y Hill
Nrw York. NY

111151·.
T.'.UIWS (Arril 2li-M&lt;y
219 •• So111e utt"l"'•lrd ml•·
I.&lt;IUU1

nu"'ht

COUll! ftv ll1 pC'O•

r'•
who """lfy dun'l uk•
dt~ntmg l"ttitimu. lf1 .a m"lntnt.lry coudiriun for thum;

don'l ukc tt I"''""""Y·

&lt;OEMINI ("thy 21-June

21~

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thllll( ft~AHnJI1y 11III1CfUtll tff

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h•n•lt uf

HELPING
LAW ENFORCEMENT
..
\

Yeompn · Visor · Testy · Length ~ START stONE

"How old are you?" the little girl asked the old woman.
' I'm 98,' the old woman bragged. "Wr.Ni,' the little girl
gasped, "did you START at ONE?'
;

~n ut hllr.

SI•Y &lt;nul, b• p01icnr
will wurk lh&lt;ut·
~&lt;:fvro h•,k Into _you r .:~ ...
C AN C~ Il (JuH&lt; 21·Jul y .
22) •• llr fl rut If you find
yu11nulf ht•in!'· prcuurrd lnro
doi nM ~n n u:thitttc that yuu

on•l

t hi n~

k11(JW Wtll nut ~t.'rn yuu r bctt
imtrftcl. l}uu't ~u..-cumb.

LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) •• ff

Sumrone who •urt• b:ttkh1K
onion won'l til wr ll whll

POMEROY

Council handles
personnel issues

S/\C l fTAI~ f US (Nav. 23·

" "· 2 1) •

Thi•

""Y bo

the

1ioy II( rrekonlu~ wh•n thuoe
unft t1iohcd
you've IWt~t
m•dor lhc "' ~ brgln It&gt; 111p
yuu up. Ur rrrpored to •wr
wh:.t you' re doing :uu.l take

'"k'

c.are of them.

tou oclf-tc·rvmg, they will Jo

(:111'"-lCOilN (lloc. 22· :
~·" · 19) - ~l oon r•rtidr.~•ing
ltl competitive iot1al &lt;~C t vtun,
yuu 'II b. jml~ed morr by the
tp• unun•hlp yuu duplay

11p,

to

arhlevr YOiff objttdv• If 1hi•
haf'JJ4.'f11,

VII~CO (Au14- 23·S&lt;pt. 22)
•• II troublrn!~ktr y11u know

rould clrvrrly lncermjjOit you

•i&gt;WI con A&lt;Itn t i~l infi&gt;mlallun
h&lt; nr ohr It , lrylot~ ltf gtt •
fwld of. lle nrdul, oud watch
rva"ylhinl }'fm uy .
Li lli ~/\ (lltrt. 23-0tt. 23) .
• lJuntt let anyone couvin.:-e
you t h11t yuu •hould 1hare

yll!lr h•rd-&lt;"•m&lt;d "'"'"'Y wlt b
lllllf&lt;OIIf Whu WOJ phy"""Y
prt~HI.

but h••l'"' h•nd in

IH.Iiltti1C!nt.

I~&lt;

(Oct. 24-Nu•.
22) .... Vuu nuy hne a JVtilt
•••d co urr••• your llldcf't'lldence. 10 tt brhocwc• ycm
"' •void dk..toriol lyp••·
SC:OI~PI O

(

Pick 3: 8·5·2
Pick 4: 7-5-&lt;1-8
llucklyls: 2-14-17:30-35
Pick 5 dey: 5·2-6
Pick 4 dey: 1·8·3·8

FROM ST!off REPORTS

W.VA.
D8lly :S: 7·4·7

D•IIY 4: 9·3·1-4

C:Uii 25: 5·7-15-19-22-25

I lulloa • 10,....

l'cop1t nan tn thiuk you'rt
what thry u n to triJ' you
You fnay not hr ;~blr

OHIO

Index

you.

'

calendar
Classifieds
comics
Dear Abby
· Editorials
~es

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

.5

7-9

10 ·
5
·4
UQHT liAR DONATIO" - In a show of support for local law enforcement agencies, Bruce Fish·
3
er,
r.N~ner of Plsher Funeral Home In Pomeroy, recently donated two new pollee light bars to the
3
Mel&amp;a County Sherlfrs Department and one to the Middleport Pollee DeP.artment. The new llgl1t
6·7
bars
will replace the existing ones, .whlch were old and In need of repair. Pictured left to rlgl1t,
2
Deputy Dan Leonard, Bruce Fisher and Middleport Police Chief Bruce Swift. (Tony M. Leach)

th, II by lll'W WtJI )'UU rJ:~y
tht jjOIII&lt;. Win or full whh

/\QU/\1\ fUli (J•n. 211-F•b.
f 'J) - Obj&lt;cllvt• dut tuay br
hnporunt tu ynu uughr nur

River Cities Nurse On·Call·
1·8«»-462·5255

be' rqually w to other rnem·

brn uf your fanu1y. l)uot't'
111.3kCI' a iune 1f tln.•y Uou'r
th.uc your ~:nthu•iil,m .
l' l SCL~

(f-r.b. 2rt· M01&lt;h 20)

t'"' will ••.,ly

If you have health questions or concerns, call
River Cities Nurse On-Call and speak to a
specially trained RN.

f'(ll ~tlonM wuh 11ht1un .Jt1Y•

Jcnuw.Jt· alli umld uu.• rll yuur pa:llt'Jint and iuluranu::. Ut! care..
ltt~4iy

you mrL'r.

POMEROY - Personnel issues were addressed and
financial matters discussed during the regular meeting of
Pomeroy ViUage Council.
After meeting in a lengthy executive sessiun, council
agreed to discontinue the employment of Patrolman Andy
Myers with the Pomeroy Pulice Department.
Myers had just cumpleted his 6-month probationary
period with the department, according to Police Chief
·
. Mark .Proffitt.
In other matters, cuuncil alsu:
• agreed to hire ~atth eW Bradford ·as a part-time dispatcher with the pohce departm ent;
• agreed to place a marker honoring Dr. George Huntington near the Pomeroy Municipal Building as requested
by the Meigs Coun ty Historical Society;
• raised appropriationJ in the General Fund;
• transferred S6,000 from the General Fund to the Street
Fund;
• agreed tu transfer ·a liquur license trom L. J. Pomeroy
LLC to United Energy Incorpomed.

The Holzer Health Ho~ine is now...

v.aL.It.

•• lovtn dtou~h

MIDDLEPORT - The state of the village's financial
records is poor, Mayor Sandy lannarelli told members of
Middleport Village Cot~nc il at their regular meeting Monday evening, and a special audit
of the books will begin Wednesday.
&lt;;:ouncil approved · 2002
appropriations based on. a certification from the Meigs County
Budget Commission, totaling
$555,481.83 in general fund
·money, but agreed that some of
the appropriations, submitted
last year by former Clerk/ Treasurer Bryan Swann , will not
carry departments through the
year.
lannarelli and council members said last night that while
there is no reason to believe
funds are missin g from village
coffers, the Auditor of State
must review all records to determine the village's true fin ancial
condition .
Swann resigned late last year
and was replaced, first by
George Hoffman, who resigned
shortly after his appointment,
then
by
current
and
Clerk/ Treasurer, Susie French,
who says that great discrepan~
cies exist in the village's records.
The. cost of the audit is esti mated at S12,000,lannarelli said, which must be paid by the
village.
Council approved payment of bills in the amount of
$78,251.21, with lannarelli voting "yes" to break a tie.
Councilmen Stephen Houchins, Robert Pooler and Roger
Manley voted against paying the bills due tu the state of the
appropriations approved last night, Manley said. Linda
Haley, Bub R.obinson and Kathy Scott vuted in favor of the
payment.
In othe~ business, Council discus.ed th e possibility of hiring one o~ two part~tim e employees for the summ er to help
with grass cutting in cemeteries and parks, but tabled action
until the. next meeting.
lannarelli suggested that a truck route for trucks making

PIMH ... Vll..p, J

I

SCilAM.LITI ANSWIRS

•
'

UC'C'AJimt:11ly 14•t C\"Q nl t ru n
their cmmc in the Y''ar 1bead,

and revenue warning from
IBM Monday, bouncing
back from a sharp early drop
as investors regained their
confidence about a business
turnaround. Blue chips
declin.ed mode!lly while tech
shares managed a sulid gain.
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed down 22.56,
or
0.2
percent, at
10,249.08, recovering from
an earlier loss of 150.01.
The bulk of the Dow's
dedine was due tu IBM.
The broader market 6n·ished higher. The tech-dominated Nasdaq composite
index rose 15.84, or 0.9 per~
cent, to 1,785 .87, recovering
from alms o£36.19 earlier in
the day. Analys111 said buyers
attncted by lr.N~er prices for
N:~~daq issues accounted for
the .modest upturn.The N:u·
daq fell 1. 8 percent l:t!t
week, to a year~to-date lms
uf 9.2 percent.
· T he Standard &amp; Puor's
500 index advanced 2.56; or
0.2 percent, to 1.125.29,

LOCAL MODELl - Those cute talking babies In the commercial for a Parkersburg, W.Va.
restaurant are ' home grown .' Sharp Facemyer, (ight, son of Bill . and Cheryl Facemyer of
Pomeroy, and Halle Ann McBride, daughter of Mike end Jennfer McBride of Reedsville, are featured In an April commercial for the Point of View Restaurant on Parkersburg's WTAP-TV. Miss
McBride plays a birthday girl who wants to be taken' out to the restaurant for her celebration,
and Facemyer plays a kid "In the know' with all the specifics of a birthday promotion at the
restaurant. The children were ·chosen fw their photogenic nature and their expressive ability,
according to Scott Johnson of Pomeroy's Falcon Design and Marketing, which directed the ad
campaign, (Submitted)

~;;IN~T~H~E~SE~SQ~U~A~R~ES~~*~=\=:;=:=:;:;::=~~
-. -~~c.:~~~~~e.mreRs To 1 . 1 1 1

••

Tuc&gt;ol•y, Avril •r, 21N r2
h 111i~h r hchou•'c you cu

Hey, baby!

currenov 43 s~on-aiOI)I
at Monaltllr'l
wrltlr o. -

7 111111'1
bOttom

MIDDLEPORT

r-1~.;..;..

with his heart king,
he couldn't recuver.
·Try it 2nd Aee.

APRILS I

40 PLO

oppotlte 41 Coueteau'l
N Tlmt llmh
I l'luotl
31 Alttr ltpl.
mlddlt
n COifiOI'It8 1 Aahllltt'· 31 "- w~lal" "'""
atory
» Olill'd
Caut 111n 41 IOCMI
Ill• ''"
' 31 lnlov I ' 10 ltlllld
nov.l
13 "o-no
31 Mild
4&amp; Huron
:II AIIIIOII
•~rub
••~ltllve
nelgftbOr
••Ill
II Polyneeltn 31 lchool
11 P111t
41 luelnetl · ~ltnle
111lgnman1 53 OPe
!!II•·
21 lrnall brook 3a Toothpntl
···
~ Thi ltcir'a M lntlllll
type
:Ill ·olui\•111111

tht'lll.

At tilt' ICCOII.J t:~ulc,
North opened hh
hand . 1. do nut mind
light up&lt;·ning.o&lt;, how ~
ever, this collection
suffers trom one mnjur dmwbac.k: the rebid. It is nil, right if
parmer responds one
no-trump, two clubs
or two spades, but
whc11 South bid two
hcaru, North had no
guod call , his chosen
two spndcs su!A!csting
n six-card suit.
We!! led his fourthhighcll diamond,
South ducking his nee
in the lwpe of ruffing
his diamond loser in
the dummy . How~
ever, East accurately
shifted to the ace nnd
another heart. Dcclar~
cr'l only way to make
the contract now was
to play low from
h~nd , fi1ie u inl! Em
for the jack. Out who

lllue-

t7
It Ptiglll dll.

· M nst of the ti111c, I
rcndt bridge d ,tssc!,
l!iVillll studt:ll!! tlc,tb
on w hi ~ h to prn rtk~ ,
However, o.:.:usi on ,\lly I wntch IIH'm
_shutTic und pl11y . In
!tUne wnys, thi s is
more instnt&lt;·tivc fur
n1e uccuu•e I sec the
type! uf mistnk&lt;•s they
mukc . In Fcuru nry,
twu t:tblcs were in •tctiun, iltld th•·y t•ro du c~ ..t ci11ht wild
deals. This week, let's
louk nr six of them .
Th e re Wc1·e .fiv.c
wun1c11 ami three
IIICII pluying, but II! I
will be rutntin11 Jcnls,
nnd so player!' pO! i·
tious, I am 11oing to
me "he'' to' r~fc r m
cvcryouc.
~krc is d;· ~ l one . At
tltc first table, North
passed in !&lt;•c undpusi ~
tiun, ! 0 lln!t O~lCIICd
one din111n11d . .Then
Smllh produ ced n
te xtbook two- hc nrt
wcnk jmnp owrc3ll,
l.w ying the cuutract.
Tlt..:rc w~rc ~cvcrnl
route s ho111c, ilud
South liluud Oil&lt;' of

&amp;?.:1!. · C.OUI.m'i YOU t-\1\\/t""~

L1-\i\D TO et{OUrtE. i\ ""~

"IIIM!d,

14 llncl

Watching deals ·

THE BORN LOSER

. lhap llur

U

Drtlll

Wlllllml
1111Mr
out or-- u Employ
41 Vlltmln
3 CltruatrM H "- - doll
''"''"
4 Mid-i
tnd , .." 42 Mr.
oapltll
a7 Clpe Town
Mullllurgtr

21 HoiiiW

O,..nhoa "'~' • I

FRANK &amp; ~ARNEST

I l'tDDIIY
2 Pull'1 ribblt

clwetllrl

\'\tlm!rltbll) N't!Uiul-r
Writ Nlltlll bll
M~l
IA
Pi n

lltn

Hometown News,..,_r

lllomt

•tt QII•fl
;.

I .,

Melp County's

" ::'-10p .. lOok
'*''
DOWN

6 AJUI

lkwlll

14 Alllllllbr.
IICioMby
II Tan

It - - 01111 .., It IIIII

•u
t
Q"
IC

rll

,,a:-,., ~~=--

• K"' It '

w..o

...,.IIIIo 10 "'

~tUlt

ful.

dleck with
•

phylicion about medication dt\cerm.

I

I

DICAL CENTER
Discover the Hol1Jii/lllllierence

www.holzer.org

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