<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7018" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7018?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T11:30:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17421">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/af54e1073cbafd88345ef2ac8ba18aba.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a8ddfbcd1d38017c71c6a11becd4b9af</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22991">
                  <text>, ...... The Dlllly Stntlnttl

MondaY. Aprll22, 2002

www.mydllllpentlnel.com

•

,U,LEYOOP

IIUDDK

3=.
·S
"~
• t:illiOII*' ==~
~~~ .t:rJ.,

PNIU.IP
ALI)II\

AC~..
, ........

-·........
•

....

hltl

•

~

•

A il f

\Yilll

••
f:NT

NOHll

at Fail Jet

I?Chemroom
II Mink vr
DOWN
ennlna
10 AI~
I ZIDDtd by
21 lteln ftlltl 2 COIIHn'e

V:"~~~~~••' Well
Ell1\

lll&gt;i . . . . ..
hu ...
Mp111

II Mild DltW

I;~:. :

o,&gt;onlrt•l.. d' ••

30 Houttny,

Other side
Last wel!k, we
looked at openins
leads. This week, let's
move to the other
~ide of the table and
. , study some trick-one
' problems faced by the
thirtl hand.
l; i~t. the most bask
ogtccment: Suppose
!lartl1ct leads a fourth·
hil!he!t dub two, and
dummy has .three low
dubs. Third hand
dubs.
holds Q·J-3
Whkh club should he
piny?
There Is o11ly nne
right nnswct: the jack,
, Wh~u l!olng third
hnnd hil!h, eontrlbut1 ing the highest end
· yet played to the
trick, put up the bottum of Ct[Ulll cards,
Why? Suppose partnet has the king and
declarer takes the jack
with the ace, · It
shouldn't be beyond
the most soporific tif
l'artncrs to work out
tiMt third hand hu
the dub queen. Un·
hm playing a deceptive gnule, why
would declarer win
. the ja~k with the ilce
If he could have won
the trick with the
queen?
Th~t l!n 't the end
of the defense, though
-- as In this deal.
. South had A tot1gh
dedslon ~ner his part•
ner's tWo • sp~de raise ..
He knew (rom West'l
double that the opposiNg high ~ards
would be b2dly
pl:h:ed, but South felt
&lt;
he had too mu(h to 1
.

Rt Stumble

horne

c=_:-"

a.a.
5 tlprawl
!I ~ t Oldllhoma
U lro vr ala
town
$4 Palntlnt•
7 'foptllaloi:.
n 0n1- • Componr
" lllllty
ltrtok
3? ,Oitllght
t IDitt
,_ llitlt
10 ltml piltll
12 Valolillc
rock .

40 Ll' a-.t

41 .,DI,r···

41 LIYtr wllll

U HIYII .

holt•

H .:.
·
ipumenta

44 Vtrllly
41 Stint alta

Nlllf

41 l'liyw!IQIIt

pert

Sl Unlatch, to
• bird
52 Good, In

tnack
24 Whirlpool
locllt

Whit's inside

42 Grev or
-lerna
U - - up to
II TV'I Grtfl\n
Dnt'l Hrl

t? Vellty
Ill llrthrlght

It l~ velley
MOU
31 Mollaule 50 "lltn• -"

aemDit

33

31 LIHit

awaltoW

DIJon

. 31 Mond.cl

3t -Lenke
31 !'lying

oontrecttotl It Plpt IIHing
4t Pula
20 8r11h
aholca
aongatar

.tVe £.0$ T $0
MtJGt4 F01tf$T
.t CAN'T eveN
1&gt;0 A

~&gt;eGeNT
GoMr-ove~t.

formation

Wilhelm loves OSU, tl

Deaths

.THE BORN LOSER
"i'~\ !-~Ill, BIZU'\'1J$!

'

,.1-l"f\i \»,.'( ~~ ti' 7

i&gt;\t1YOU C£H.~

• &amp;U..Pl

pol!.

r

•

1~...---~~.....w

Ann M. Mills, 64 ·
Detllll.. AJ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll C1mpa1

J ,

I

XY

HZJDLfll
X'J

NI.LJN

WHRXLHV,

ILLO

C T H' Y

w

UZ NV

XN

W V.I.

0 XI L

DZV

0 XI L

-

Trade Center
display

~~~tlnndo nih:;~rhl~~

•

.

I I r ~I r~4 :1 N:~,i ve~h~o~~~lrat

t~~~ coac~

1
•,..-l"o"
··
..:

r I' ·. I'

6

.,

ahnr

'Birthday
April 2:1, zuo2
lht nlJIIIty to wurk ill dm~
proximity with people •ml
' ru~nl.ty,

~ till I!UIInt.-ln :t Hfotig Aeme of

illdcpclltlcl1« will be a gin to
~. tro'"""d Iii till' y~ar ohtod.
It'll put you way nbov• uth·
rt!J.

. 'UtUIWS (AI&gt;rll 20-M•y
20) ... ~ lrrou g\low ynur f!IIO "
tlont a11t (cclilt@' to overrule
yuur lo14k otnU corhtau11 ll!lllr,

h

CA ll

rcilcct 1•oorly

Image yuu

~·mr~y

u11

th&lt;

m lilet!do.

u,c your htHnl, ntH your ~n ..
oltlvill"' TryiiiK to p•tch up •
brukc11 rotilnll«l thr Aotru•
Ornph Milt&lt; hm•krr co1i help
you llll~&lt;lt•toud wlm to ,jo to
ll'"kt th c rolnt!M;hll' work.
Moil 12.78 to Mate &gt;maker,
r/o thb 11rwopoprr, 1'.0 , llox
IH~,

.Murray Hill Sutlun,

New York, NV

1111~6 .

c;I!MINI (M••Y ~1 -Julle 20)
p&lt;u~lr

uu your
11110tr wlt•l ho or 1he dutlll't
like wllilll•k• rur 111 1wkword
•• i'mltli1K

r·

time with tvcryune In 1ttcm•
tlonre. DDII't rut Adamprr 011

Y&lt;lllt lll;tl&lt;,

CANCI:. Il Otlltc 21-July
22) •• tnuk u11 tht brl~ht !Ide
ui thin~~ ;ud MUArd opnlt11t
t~w.lctl ttc' ttt ukc yuundf '"''

)

ll(e too ~·rluu•ly . lr you count
you/ blc,.lug,, you'll hiVr!

nnu·h w cht't!r •bout.
Lllo 0uly ll-Aug. 22) ••
lhve • ,Joilulte ngure in mind
•• to ltow IIIlich you're oblr to
•p~11d ~dor•

Koluy out oud
palnthtK tit• town nd. If

Dec. 21) •• Try to aovrrn
your behavior ou &lt;hat you
don't tuffie 11nyone'1 (cathen.

Index

oerloua compllcatluri
"rheo, talk thlnyo out · and •
apulot;ltu fur any lndil(retlon
on your part.
CAI'IliCOllN (l)ec. 22- '
J•n. IY) •• Should orrloul
!( •

you 1re ienslbla 1 you tan h1Veo

complii!Ations cauard by ·ah

• aood tim• whhout going

overr""'"" on your part de·
velop1 otrolyhten thlntp out by
oollnd rmonlna. Your mi...J
It IIIII apmtlve, ,0 Ulo it, ~ .
AQUARIUS Uon . 2U· frb .

broke.

VII~OO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- You may h1ve to •tari 111
ovrr If you gt~about what you
hope to occumplioh in a haphu;rd """""'· You can fi!llth
hi il thn..,(y n1anner I( you•re
nlfthodical•nd nrdorly. .
UUI\A (St\!t. 23·0ct. 23) •
J)oll't ptt•Judgr peopl.' you

19) -- Uusine11 involvententl
wit~ lriend1 1hould be mlctly ;

avoided, lt'o 1 crltlnl area
where If either you or your

rnl•take. You could b• po11lna

poll ha"dle thlriJll poorly, On·
ger pointing. could en~ue.
PISCES (feb. 20-Marth 20)
•• Hoed your own coun1ol,
eopccially anythina that lin to ,

lome•

do with a clme partner or ..

nte•t fur cfie Ant tiH1e, I! lt
could turn out to be • ~l•m

on • rrlotiunohlp with

one 11reat.
SCOI\1'10 (Oet. 24-Nov.
22) .. An rrronioUI reaction
to 1 finandai n1attet Could

Colt you a pretty p&lt;nny. 1r
you
c;n

Aei

t~rn

thla devrloplna. you
thlna• back around

wltl1 oom• lntriiiJrnt thlllklnl,

SAOITTAI\IUS !Nov . 23•

CLEANING UP- Approximately 60 people, Including memb.ers

of youth groups and concerned citizens, showed up to help
clean parts of Leading Creek and Little Leading Creek Satur·
d•3Y rnornlng, Some youngsters shown here also picked up lit·
ter along Leading Creek Road near Middleport This year's
Stream Sweep coincided with .Earth Day, which was observed
Monday. (Submitted)·
.sponds to the 32nd annual lunch and a Stream Sweep
Earth Day, whi ch was tee-shirt.
observed Monday. Partici·
This year, volunteers filled
pants included Girl Scouts, the Rutland Township dump
4-H members, Boy Scouts, truck with garbage, a slightly
and just concerned citizens, smaller haul than last yeat. ·
Freeman uid .
.
"I'd' be happy if we Yl:l'1Jt, .
In retum for thefi' labor, all out and couldn't find any litvolunteers received a free ter to pick up," Freeman said.

your mltr. Oou't let utheu
inlluC!ru:r you or cau1e you to

brhavr badly.

111\1£5 (March 21 -Aprill9)
.. - lf you treat co.workers 111
fru!1id1 md eqmal1 instead of

•

MIDDLEPORT

Middleport Council .
approves projects
BY BRI~N J.

IN HONOR OR MEMORY - Individualized luminaries will light
up the night on May 4 at the Relay for Life to be held at Easl·

ern High School to raise money for the 'American Cancer Soc~
ety, Here, Sue Lightfoot, seated, and Jo Ann Crisp walt for customers at their post In the Farmers Bank lobby. (Charlene Hoeflich)
a circle, are filled with cat litter, later recycled, and the candles are placed imide.
It is a way relati,ves and
friends have of paying tribute
to loved ones while supporting an organization which
continues the work to find a
cure for cancer.
"As the luminaries light up
the night, it is so painfully
clear ' why we are here and

why we . need to continue to ·
raise money," said Sue Lightfoot, luminary chairman, a!
she encouraged participation
in the project to "light the way
to a cure."
Last year, 332 local victims
of cancer were remembered
with luminaries.
The Relay for life brings

. MIDDLEPORT -'- Middleport Village Council
approved Sl9,000 in aerial photography and mapping and ·
authorized bidding for the painting and refurbishment of
the MiU Street water tank during their regular meeting on ·
Monday evening.
.
Jay Shutt of Aoyd Browne Associates, the village's engineering firm, reported on the recommendations of the
Board of Public Affairs, which met yesterday afternoon.
Shutt and the BPA have planned the water tank repair for
several months, and last night, council passed an emergency
measure authorizing the solicitation for bids for the project.
Shutt, on behalf of the BPA, asked council to permit
Mayor Sandy lannareUi to enter into a contract with the
low bidder, but Councilman Bob Robinson proposed, and
council accepted, an amendment to Shutt's proposed mea·
sure, requiring council to act before a contract is awarded.'
Robinson said he felt the firumce commAtee, of which he
is a member, should be permitte~ to review any proposals
and that lannarelli should not be given "a blank check" .to
spend on the project.
.Shutt said last night passing the measure on an emergency
·basis was required if the project is to be completed by the
end of ihe summer.
Councilrrun Roger Manley voiced his opposition of the
: emergency nature of the action, and Councilnun Bob
Pooler voted against it.

...........elly.AJ

'

•
.'

PIIIM . . . PraJ•tt.. A3

Need Exlaa Help?
Taking care of a loved one, or need personal care for yourself?
Does housework have you down? FeE!Iing overwhelmed? let us
helpl A professional, private·duly home care agency, we offer
personal care, homemaking and respite services i~ your home.

Holser lxt• a Care
(7401 446·9560
or toll free (8001 920·8860

merely pmom with whom
you labor, It will rnakr a huge
dlffcrrncr In how they true
you in rrtum.

REED

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Lottetles

I I I I I I

•'

POMEROY - A rash of rock-throwing incidents on
Fisher Street has prompted a local woman to seek action
from Pomeroy Village Council.
Pomeroy resident Arlene Hevner met with council Monday night to discus&lt; the possibility of installing a street light
on Fisher Street, .which, she said, would deter area youth
from throwing chunks of blacktop and rocks on homes and ·
vehicles along the avenue.
· ·
Using sc~eral pieces of blacktop as a visual aid, Hevner,
who lives on Fisher Street, explained to council that the
installation of a street light would "greatly discourage" the
rock-throwing incidents, which has resulted in the damage
of sr:veral homes and automobiles.
Hevner said the area is usually "pitch black" during the
night time and, despite routine police patrols, the rockthrowing situation still exists,
Council deemed the installation of a street light on Fish·
cr Street as "important and necessary" and decided to
increase police patrols of the area while a search for a new
street light gets underway.
In other matters, after hearing numerous complaints
about the recent issue of Gharter Communications dropping its cable discount' with seniors in the village, Councilman Larry Wehrung informed council that he is currently ·
contacting other cable companies to see if they are interested in providing cable service to residents within the com"
munity.
'
Council also:
• agreed to hire Priscilla Riddle as a part-time dispatcher,
Gene Chaney as a part-time patrolman, and Heather Wise
as a part·time call-in dispatcher; aU for the Pomeroy Police
Department;
• approved · the purchase of four new H-rated tires for a
police cruiser at a cost of$229;
• scheduled Pomeroy's dean-up week for May 13-17,
Leaves, garbage, etc. will be hauled from the premises, however, Jircs, lumber, batteries, and similar items will not be
taken away;
• transferred SS,OOO front the ·General Fund to the Street
Fund.

Relay for Life
May 3•at EHS

GN I
ha
would work better,)
explained that It Wll I time mix·
. Hlaand
team
1tarted
at nine
Sout h won ·Bast •1 j ac k ,.~~====:.:~up
&lt;~'clock
the game
started
at
with the a(e and eonR E5 N0 p
tlnued with the spade l-..,.,i'-r-o
;;,.;o...;
·c~mpllle tho ahucklo quotod
8
jack, 1\eading the po- ~._..~1__.1_.~.1 .,~I_._.J.I--1
bv fllitng In tht mlui~g warda
sition . well, Wen vou dtvtlc~ lrOtn IIIP No. 3 bolow.
went In with his ace, • PIINI NUMBERED l!fi!RS IN
ca!lted the club king, ·
IHES! SQy,t,m
and continued with a
UNSCtAMBL! .t.aovt mnu
low ' club to But's
TO O!T ANSWU
queen; Then East acSCIWA-LRS ANSWIII
curately shifted to the
hem nine, giving the
Fusion ·Round· Hitch • JQrkln ~DECISION
The elgn hanging behind the boss's desk read: "A
defender! livt:i tricks:
Real Executive Is Somaone Who Can Take Aa Long As
one spade, two hearts
1
She Wtnte To , To M•ke A Snap DECISION.''
Atld tWO clubs.

141 SAIO loll ONI.V SAW ~&gt;!Ell
FOR A SECOND. BUT FOil Tlol!
lt&amp;ST OF loi151.1FI NOT A
MONTiol WENT IV WloiiN
loiE OICIN'T TMINI( OF lol!ll ...

BY TONY M. lEAcH
TLEACH@&gt;MYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM

Candle lighting
honors
•
cancer surv1vors

I I . I1 li ..1
.

RUTLAND - "You can be
· on~ of those people that just
talk about the environment, or
you can actually d11 something
·
about it."
That's according to Jim
Freeman, watershed coordinator for the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District.
"These people wanted to do
something about it," he added.
What "these . people" did
was
spend ·part of Saturday
High: 70s, Low: 40s
morning cleaning litter from
D...III,A2
in and around Leading Creek
and Little Leading Creek in
the second Leading Creek
Stream Sweep held at Rutland Fireman's Park .
Approximately 60 people
attended this year's event,
which was sponsored by the
Meigs SWCD in partnership
with the Rutland Township
Board · of Trustees, Meigs
GALLIPOLIS A
Recycling and Litter Control
3,000 piece 3-D puzzle
depicti,l li the .•. Wqrld "and !1-utlan.d.~Y!lluqteer Fire
..
Trade Center twin tow- · Department.
The event roughly correers and surrounding ,
New York City area is
currently on display in
th~ Ohio Valley Bank
main office lobby.
·
The
pu~zle
titled
"New York, New York"
was assembled by Lee
•
Martin of Gallipolis in
1999
and
therefore
shows the area as it originally stood before the
tragic events of September 11.
·
The exhibit may be
viewed by the public
between the hours of 9
IY CHAIILINI HOIFUCH
a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday
HOEF"ICOMYOAI"YSENTINE".COM
through Friday, through·
POMEROY - Candles
out April.
lighted in honor of cancer survivors and in memory of thole
who have lost their battle with
cancer is always a highlight of
the Mei(!! County Relay for
OHIO
Life, an annual fund-raiser of
Pick l: 1·2·9
the Mei(!! County Unit of the
Pick 4: 3-5-4·9
American
Cancer Society.
luckey• 5: 3·24·26-33·37
The ceremony will take
Pick 3 n!l!tt: 3-2-3 ·
Pick 4 nljht: 0-1·5·2
place at dusk on May 3 during
the 18-hour event at Eastern
W.VA.
High SchooL
D•I!Y 3: 9· 1-7
Again this year, personalized
D•I!Y 4: 9·5c2·8
·
C.tli :zs: 2·5-9-16·20·24
lumin'aries are being prepared
with computer generated clip
art at the Farmers Bank and
may be ordered there for a S5
donation. They will. also be
I Wan- 10,....
~vailable at Eastern the night
Calendar
·
5 of the relay right up until the
start of the ceremony.
Classifieds
7-9
Plain white sacks are indi·
Comia
10
Dear Abby
5 · vidualized, and decorated in
colorful designs to depict the
Editorials
4
person being remembered
Movies
3
thtpugh
his or h~r hob~y. proObituaries '
·3
fession , service, or kindness in
Sports
6·7
Weather
2 a community. The sacks,
arranged for the ceremony in
$ lOOl Ohio Volio)o Publlaliln1 Co.

-

.

FROM STAFf REPORTS

branch hosts

XV,'

IXVRKLP

1 .
_

Leading
Creek ·
Stream·
Sweep a
success

Gallipolis ova

X

WH DiG. R T

.

Resident
seeks relief
from rascals

Weather

·

Ctltb!lty Otp~tr cryptogram• ore orUtlld lrom Qualallonl by lemoua
people, poll end pre11nt. Eio~ totttr In tht ~P~tr 1\ondalor anothor"
Todly's clul; fi rtqUJif P

I IA r RIL II . I

West gueS!ed well
to lead the dub two. ·
(One could compose .
a layout in which the

f

Orion R. Nelson, 85
Harold N. Hudnell, 65

.

·poMEROY

47 Mlklll
knol

or

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Hometown News,.per

lit Aillal
Mlillrllle

aOlllet

It I

•• tl

·Melp County's

VIMitOII

1tmt

II Collt1

6!(J~IIIt

liHll\

17 Yvll'

II Wllltl
110maattt

• K' It

~"

-

14 llutttr'l

A. q J

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

110 11Im

13VriwM

MONTY IM by Jill! Mttldlclt_ _ _....,

Indians .snap losing skid, 6

NIA CroiiWOrd PuUle

MEDICAL CENTER
'
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org
•

., •.

"

�The Dilly Sentinel • P1ge A 3

www.mvdlllyuntlntl.com

The Daily Sentinel

Coleman appeals.racisiin
.daim to Supreme Court ·

Ohio weather.
WtdneeciiY, April U

I Monlfleld lsr111• I o

•.

6 .

o-.a•,• ••••
a.,

f'I. Cioody

Cloody

-

T•,_

A11n

Flu....

BMw

lot

Dry, warmer on Wednesday

COLUMBUS (AP) - Lawyen for a i1 black.
convicted killer who clainu pro1ecuton · On Priday, the Ohio Suprtme Court
chose a racially biased jury 17 yean ago unanimoully ruled that Coleman'•
appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to reque11 came too late. It thould have
·· delay Alton Coleman's executlon,sched· been raised on the direct appeal of hit
uled for Priday.
conviction, rather than after hi• appeal•
"This is an important constitutional ran out, the court said.
que1tion and it should be reviewed in · Joe Case, a 1poke~man for Attorney
due course, not under the press of an Oeneral Betty Montgomery, said Mon·
impending execution,'' Dale Baich, one day that Montgomery · agree~ with the
of Coleman's attorneys, said in a state- Ohio Supreme Court that the raciam
·ment Monday.
appeal i• too late. Montgol'flery plant a
Coleman, 46, has accused pro~ecuton reapon~e to the latest filing, Case said.
of racitm during jury selection in his
Coleman'• lawyers have 1ued the
1985 trial for the beating death of Mar- Department of Rehabilitation and Cor'lene Walcen, 44, in the Cincinnati 1ub- rection over iu plan to have hit execuurb of Norwood, on July 13,1984.
cion at the Southern Ohio Correctional
Coleman's lawyers claimed that then- Facility in Luca1viUe ahown on a cloaed
Hamilton County Prosecutor Arthur circuit televi1ion in another room at the
Ney's team improperly removed nine of prison.
.
12 black jurors from the trial. Coleman
The Ohio Parole Board recommend-

•

ed Prlday that Oov. Bob Tlf1: deny
clemency to Coleman.
.
Dayt earUer, the board liltened to a
plea from Walten' hutband, Harry, wh11
aald justice had not been terved by le!· .
ting Coleman tit on death row for 17
yean.
'
Balch argued before the board th~t
Coleman ahould not be executed
becauae of hla upbringing. Balch aalp
Coleman wa1 born with a damaged
brain and wu further traumat.ized by
event• in hit childhood, including g~­
ing up with an abu1ive mother and
grandmother.
·
Coleman, of Waukegan, Ill., i1 sen~
cenced co die by injection for Marlene
Walters' death. He abo hal been convicted · of four murden that oc~urrcd in
1984 and also ha1 been sentenced to
death in Indiana and lllinoia.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It will be mostly dry and warmer across the area on Wednes-

day.
High .temperatures will be neu 70, the National Weather
Service said.
A dome of high pressure will provide mostly clear skies and
lows in the mid and upper 30! tonight.
Showers and possibly thunderstorms are forecast for Wednelday night with passage of a frontal system. Temperatures wiU fall
to the low 40s.
·Sunset tonight wiU be at 8:18, and sunrise on Wednesday is
at 6:41 a.m.
Weather forecalt
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Patchy frost developing coward•
mornit\g. Lows near 40. West winds around 5 mph becoming
southeast.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy and warmer. Highs ne:ir 70. South
winds around 10 mph.
Wednesday night ... Mostly cloudy with rain showen likely.
Lows near 50. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Extended foreca1t
Thursday. .. Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s.
. Thursday night... Mostly clear. LOws in the upper 30..
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs near 70.
.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy. A chance of 1howen and thunderstorms from early afternoon on. Lows in the mid 401 and highl
near 70.
·
·
Sunday... A chance of 1howen.during the day, otherwi~e partly cloudy. Low1 in the lower 50. and highs in the mid 601.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lowl in the mid 401and highs near
70.

..

State proposes revOking:
Buckeye E s pennits
end the problemt."
Ohio EPA willHowever,
Hini Lampton,
who live• about one mile
clamps down on from
the Croton farm in
County, believe• the
giant egg producer 1tatc 1hould
not force Buck'

Li~king

Jones taid he Wal taking
the action after the EPA di1.covered an unauthorized
dilcharge of ttormwater at
the company'• Croton facility and further fly problem•
in the companf• barm in
northwett Ohio.
Jonet alto propoted denying eight operatina permiu
the company hat applied for
to handle manure and water
u1ed co wath egg• at its

company of being retponti;
ble for a large fly outbreak
la1t fall near its operation•
i~ Croton aml ditcharging
·egg wath wate:r on Nov. 1~
in an unnamed tributary of
'JYmochtee Creek and Ca[roll Ditch near Marseillct. In March 2001, Buckeye
En aareed to pay Sl millio.n co the itate. and .

eye Egg out of bu1ine11,
COLUMBUS (AP) - even though he taid he wat
The ttate took an aggrettive "no 1upporcer of Anton
1tep to curb pollution Pohlm~nn."
blamed on Buckeye Egg · Local farmen profit from
Farm, beginning the proce11 the feed they ~ell to ·the
upgrade much o( it1 opera- ·
of revoking the c"mpany't . farm'• operaton, he nid.
facilitie~.
tiont
to tettle a lawtuit with
operating permill for three "I'm not ture it'1 a !JOOd
Earlier thil month, Lick- Ohio that accu1ed the com~
megafarm1.
idea to thut them down.
The ltate hat tried for ·They ought to set them to ins County Common Plea~ pany of dumpins dead
yean to get Buckeye Egg to clean it up," Lampton 1aid. Judge Gresory Pro1t fined chicltent in a field, poilu tin I
comply with Ohio's envi- "The problem with. Buck- Buclteye EJIJ $50,000 for creek• and cauting int'ettaronmental lawt. Neighbon eye Egg it they waited coo environmencal vlolatlont. tlon1 of filet, beetle• and
of the farms in Hardin, long.''
·
The motion accuted the other inaecu.
Lie kina and Wyandot coun- ,-·----------------------------~~
tiet have complained about 1
•
fly infettadont, foul odon
and polhated creek• c:auttd
by manure from the compa·
ny'• 15.5 million hen1.
On Monday, Ohio Envl- .
ronmtntal
Protection
WILBERFORCE (AP) - tchool.The unlvenity'unroU- Asency Director Chritto•
Gov. Bob Taft releated Central ment II mofl than 1,400 lfU• · pher Jon•• propo11d revok·
State Univenity from ttate 61- dents, up (rom I,000 five y.an ln1 Buckeye E11'• 15 watct•
cal ovenlsht on Monday, five aao but ttlll below lfl ptak o( wacer permltt n.,dtd co
yean after 1tatc otlklalt took 3,200 In 1992. ·
leaally ope race In Ohio, Th•
i
over the ~ehool'• finance• to New addlt!ont to the uni· company hat uncll May 22
prevent it from coUap~e.
venlty include the Stoke• to appeal.
Central State, Ohio'• only C.nm on AalnJ, which II
Bu,ktyt 1!11 It cht ttaet'l
public, hiltorically black unl· · dtvoced to the tllllly of pron- Jar1t1C •11 producer and
G#l/D~t U.tfd
venlty. II the only tehool In toloiY, and 1 new, JtM-btd produc.. .tj ptrcent o( the
•
Ohio that hal been under dormitory teheduled to open nation'• •IP• 2.6 billion Jut
THB LEOtiLAT.OA
ttace tbcal oveni!Jht, but the in Stpttmbtr.
year. It hat 125 barn• at the
at c.,ltol Hlllu
ttate hal only had that aurhor- Tat\ thanked tbt Central thr,. liett, ttace r"ordt
1111onf tht beat
ity tJnce 1997. Thar year, the Sta~:t olliciab altendln&amp; the ur- thow.
neweourNtln
Legltlature appnwed tl'endin&amp; emony for "fiahdnl die •hip:'
At jon11' .requell, con128 million over two yean to
"for Ohio to tucceed, we · Clmpt char111 alto Wlfl.
Amtrlca.
keep Central Swe opentiniJ. need • •crona Central Scace:' tlltd - (or ch• ninth dme
0,/fMqu/nl
The univenity is now on the pemor uid. "Central in •lx yeart - aaaintt Buckrtadm JINt THI
. "101id 6nancial ground," Taft State hat a unique role in eye E11 and owner Anton
JUDGE at CApitol
said Monday during a cere- ICMniJ the necdt of our udlan Pohlmann in Llckins Counmony on the ~ehool't campu1. areas, the ~:~eedt of our ty Common Pleat Court,
Hill a6out of 6 ratinf. A 0,/fMfl~UlN ranked Grand
A ~ce11t 1tate audit 1howed African-American ttudentl ]one~ tald if Buclteyt Eas
National in Aubum/Opelika ud c.mbrian Ridf• in
the · unlvenity, located about and the needt o( all Ohio:' . appealt, it could take up to
OrHIIvillt u AniOIIf tht Top 100
in America.
15 mile• eut o( Dayton, had a
~ uid that over the one year t'or the ttate to
13 million budget turplul, uid pate five yean, the .we lflldu· revolte the permitt.
A G"fDi~Nt nim.d
•
Andy AndreW., che univeni- ally relaxed llll ovenilbt But
"In the interim, Buckeye
d,. Trailu one of
ty'1 executive vice pmident of he uid lanpap remained in
neighbon thould not
the Top 60 Tripi in
adminil~tion and finance.
the ttatt budpt bill that have ·to live with the twarm
the world. A Come
"In 1997,thuchoollt00don .allowed Ohio to mnain in a of tlie1 and the threat of
OIW;D HATIC*M.
the brink of collaple. Some tupervilory po~ii!Dn. ·
contaminated
llreamt;'
.,. (o; youi'Nif why
AUWW.Iil~~
facilitin were llinually uninhab- Michael Whidield, a ltUdent Jonet uid.
FN~~umt Flyu J/1114- .
iuble, the fuunces
unac- member of the university'•
He abo asked Attorney
zim lilttd the Trailu
countable,.and fOJJie were call- board o( trwteef, called the Oeneral Montgomery "'to
one~theTop 10
ing fOr the univmity to clole;' tchool't releale from Jute punue legal action that may
Taft said. "Voo m now poiled wpervilion "exciting."
produce quicker retultt."
Tripa in the World!
to build ever hiiJher Jevek of "It a11irl!lf the 1tate IUpport
Montgomery taid tbe
academic excellence from a behind ouuchool," uidWhit.- would like to tee Pohlmann
foundaOon offizwlcialJtability:' field, 19, of Springfield. jailed on tke contempt
The sute Office of Budget "TMy've done a lot to tum cbargn Neither Pohlmann ·
and Management took aver thingJ around bml. A lot of nor William GlaH, Buclteye
the ~ehool't tinanut in 1997, ttudentt don't realize how EsJ't chief operating 'offiand a new administalion wa1 Jttong the tchool has cer, returned phone metinval~ after yean of tinan.::ial becpme."
uget ~eeking comment:
probleDU that included fundi SWdents did not IUIJI wrThe acciDn wat welcomed
rha.c
impropedy ~nt or priiCd at the state't d«iAon by Buclteye Egg neigbbon.
money uncollec~ from flll- and espl'ftled con1idence in
~~ hope it's Joing to be
denrs. Some .uu legUiatDn I'M school:t future.
berter becaute n01:hing lut
discum.i c!Oiing or merging "I'm not 1urprilrd by dw worked so ur," taid llouJla
the 113-yur-old tcbool. .aDd heullle Central Sure has Bear, who live~ abo!lt 1,500
state building impecron con- worked hard," uid Stephan · feet from Buckeye Egg'•
demned several ~ Julk, H.arwy, 20, a£ DeuDif.Hc uid megafarm in MarHillet in
Sin.ce 1997, ~ntt:al State be knew of the scbool"t paJt Wyandot Counry. "We've
. bas balanced iu budget, p.aid ti.n.ancial problen¥ when he got co tau somechinJ
debu, had clean audiu and enroUed but didn't let that ttronger than wh.at't bun
repaired buildingl at the deter him.
given co them,JO maybe thil ....._...;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....

Central State lifted
from fiscal watch

OUR REPORT CARD
FROM THE PROS IS IN •••
WE'RE WAITING ON YOUR INPUT.

eou....,

E"''

., ....,.

w=

.Callia co~ schools
reiterate safety
concerns to AEP

..

Orion Nelson
DEXTER - Orion Ray Nd~on, 85, Dexter, died 1Ue1day,
April 23, 2002, at OVerbrook Center in Middleport.
Arransemcnt! will be announced by Pl!her Punenl Home.

Ann Mills

IY ANDIIIW CAIITIII

AC"AT!R.MVD"lli"TRIIUNI.CDM

GALLIPOLIS ~ Gallia County Loc~l School! officials reaf-

SYRACUSE - · Ann M. Ankrum Milli, 64, Syracuse, di~d
Sunday, April 21, 2002, at Holzer Medical .Center.
She was born May It, 1937, in Colun1bus, d~ughtcr of the
late Charl~l P. and Anna Elitabeth Carrcr Ankru111 . She was a
teacher with Coshocton County H¢od Start.
Surviving ue her husband, Franklin Eugene "Gene" Mill~; a
10n and daughter-in-law, Fronklin E. Jr, and Debbie Mill! of
West Lafay~ttt; ~ daughter and soll-ln-law, Yvon11e a11d David
Dodd oC Coshocton, and Tiva N. and Grell· Royer of
Adanuvillc; a brother and liner-irt-law, deorge W. and Mildred
Ankrum of AdamsviUe; a brother-in-law, William R. Hy1ell of
Columbus; and sevt~ n grandchildren and three grcat grand.:hildrcn.
She was abo preceded in death by 1cvcral infant children; and
a brother, Charles ~Ankrum, Jr.
·
Scrvkel w!U be 1 p.111.Thumby in llwing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy, with ['a ator Ralph Johnson officiating. Burial will be
in Letart Palls Cemetery. friend! may call at the funeral home
front 6-8 p.m.WednC!Iday.

outreach dinner will be held
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
POMEROY - Unit! of United Methodist Church.
the Mcill" Emergency Service Serving will be from 4:30 to 6
answered three calls for assis- pi.m. A free baked steak dintance on Monday. Units ner will be served and the
responded as follows:
public is invited to attend.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:04 a.m., Ohio 338, Patsy
Laudermilt, rcfused.treatment . set
POMEROY '
TUPPERS PLAINS 3:03 p.m., Holly Lane, Paul Parent-teacher conferences
Eichinger, Holzer Medical will be held at Eastern EleCenter.
mentary School and Eastern
RUTLAND
High School on Thursday
2:46 p.m., Gibson Road, from 4-7 p.m. Parents should
John Dollison, O'Uiencss contact the respective school
Memorial Hospital.
in order to arrange an
appointment.

EMS n1ns

conferences

firmed their concern for the health and 1afety of ttudent! ac
River Valley High School and Ky.J!I!r Creek Middle ·School
during Monday't regular bu1ine11 meeting.
. The board of education met for the fir~t time publicly Mon'day Iince the announcement by American Electr.ic Power that
it hu reach.ed an agreement ln principle with the village of
Che1hire to purcha1e the tiny hamlet, which borden AEP's
C:•n.Jamet M. Oavin Power Plant. ·
·
' AEP oflicial1 1aid la1t week that the purcha1e of Chethire 11
not due to any health concerm about ernlssiont from the plant,
'AEP and village otlicialt agreed to a S20 million buyout.
To
' However, Gallia Local Schools otliciall stlU have doubts
~bout the ufety of the morc.than 800 1tudcnt1, faculty and 1taiT ·
· POMEROY _ The railTUPPERS PLAINS at RVHS and KCMS.
.
road crosoitlg on Lasl)er Road · School! in t?,e E~ster.n Local
' Interim Superintendent Charla Evans told board of educa·
will be dosed Wednesday and · School D1stnct w1ll diSnuss a~
cion memben that the tpolte with Oreg Mmey, plant manager
'rhur!day while the Norfolk 1:05 p.m. due to a teachers.
ac Oavln, and exprc11ed her fruttration that AEP did not advlle
and We~tern Railroad repairs mservice.
the dimict about the impending ~ale.
.
the crossing. Leading Creek
"I uid to Mr. MIIJCY, 'I am not willing to gamble with a
l'l.oad is the detour.
~hild'tlife, not one child'tlife, not 800 children'tlive•,'" Ilvana,
&amp;ald. "I have a rc•pon1ibility for ihe1e children and I take that
very terioutly."
POMEROY - Harold N. Hudnell. 65, Pomeroy, died SatEvant 11id the hat been contacted by major media outlet• urday, April 20, 2002, at the extended care unit of Veterans
MIDDLEPORT -.,- There
that have expre11ed interet! in comin11 to Oallia County.
Memoriml Ho1pital.
·
will
be a Prints and Graphics
"I've al10 fielded a number of inquiriea from numcrou1
H e w~~ born April 10, 1937, in Atheno Couney, oon of the
POMEROY - The aimu · badge event for all girls
· media outlettatking if they could come and look at our lt!lry late J~ck and Geraldine Stover Hudnell. He was a painter with
a! matching fund drive of the presently in third-sixth gr:ide
and tell our ttory,'' Evam ~aid,
Young'• I ndunrial.
·
"ABC World Newt Tonight out of New York contacted me
Surviving an: two sons, Harold Hudnell Jr. of Oklahoma, and Uurlinghnm Camp, Modern at the Middleport Church of
Christ on Saturday, from 10
. today, at weU at Chicago,'' the added , "They fed that i1 tome· Harold Hudnell II of Phoenix, Ariz.; three daughter!, Anita Woodm~n. i! unoer way.
Mildred
Zeigler a.m. to 5 p.m.
thing they want to do. I told them, at thi1 point, we arc rccep- Dawn Hudnell of Albany, and RoAnna 1bellc and Marcia Mcrz
~nt1oU11ccd
tod~y
tlw
the
live to anyone who wanu to tell our ttory, that our children · of Oklahoma; a brother and si!ler-in-law, Erncot and Shirley
Regimation is S4 for regisMeigs
Emergency
Medical
baticaUy have our voice."
Mitchell of Pomeroy; and 13 grandchild~en .
tered girl scout!; $11 fur nonService
will
be
the
benefiShe aaid the al1o plan• to contact the Ohio Depmmcnt of
He w~s ai1o preceded in death by h11 •wpf'athcr, Monroe
registered girls. Those attendEducation and the State School• Facilitiea Commi11ion about Mitchell: hi1 daughter, Melinda Edler; and hi1 si•tcr, Helen ciary of the money raised ing ate urged to bring a sack
locally and matched up to lunch. There will be snacks
the lituatlon.
HudneU.
·
Evant uid the Buckeye Environmental Network i1 investiTllere wiD be no funel'3i aervice. Amngcnwntl were handled $2,500 by the national Mod· provided.
ern Woodmen organization .
gating the reaulu of te1ting by monitoring device1 at RVHS, by Ewing Funeral Home. ·
Por more information, call
Donation• arc now being
Addaville Elementary School and Guiding Hand School/CallAll cards and donation! to help with elepenlc! are to be 1ent
Ilrenda Neutzling at 992co lndu1tric1.
to hi1 daughter, Anita Hudnell, 5566 State St.., Albany, Ohio taken and plans arc being 6679 . .
finalized for the traditional
. Evan11aid board memben indicated they would like co meet 45710.
With AEP official• Wednelday. AEP had not rc1ponded by - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Memorial Day finale, a·
11t1orgasbord at the hall il)
prelllime today.
prugram.
Uurlingham. Donation• may
Jannarelli 1aid village crews . be mailed to Zeigler . at
will loon begin. work to 42654 State Rou.tc 681,
POMEROY Meigs
replace a water line on South Pomeroy, Ohiu 45769
Second Avenue, n~ar Hamil- ·
High School junior parent!
The tank wiU be p~inted con Str~et, to increase water
meetin'g will take place 21 the
pretture
for
retldentl
in
the
intidc
and
out,
and
·
a
new
high school library at 7 p.m., ·
GALLIPOLIS - A program tignup hat begun for USDA
ar~a .
vented
roof
wiD
be
inttaUed.
not the county library. Plans '
Incentive payment~ to help ewe lamb producert •utTering
Shutt
reported
that
water·
alto
authorh:ed
Council
will be finalited for the prom
financial ·1om• due to current poor market condition!, taid
quality
tests
on
tell driUin(!ll
tpending
St9,ooo
in
Ohio
POMEROY - A ml10lon on May 4.
Larry Adanu, executive director of Ohlo't Farm Service
from
the
propolll:d
new
well
Water
t&gt;ewlopment
Author!.,
Agency.
· ·
· ·'
·
'
The LAmb MeatAdjuttmtntAIIittance Prog111m (LMAAP) !1 ty loatl fundt, already received lleld In Hobton are pending,
and that the new well appear~
noon on May 4.
A four-year program ttarted in 2000 to help ttabilize the lamb by the villafle, for aerial pho·
to
be
"wry
pr(.)ductill&lt;!.'
This is the sixth annual
market. To date, LMAAP hu provided more than S25 million tography and mapping. Shutt
According 10 Shutt, the
Relay for Life and the Cancer
01 uliltance. The pl'OJI'Im wiD now provide $26 million in uid hit firm hu relied on old, new
well is capable of pumpSociety's biggest fund-raiser
hmAipA1
l)lcentive paymentt to help producen increate the tupply of . unreliable Jtreet map• for the
ing .400 gallons per minute,
in Meigs County. Por inforengineering.
work
rcqulrud
of
4ome~tic lamb meat.
.
twice what either of the vil - together teams who work to mation on organizing reams
Applicadom are available at FSA office~ located in the USDA the viUage'1 water and ~~:wer lage'!
exitting well! are capa ~ raise money before the event or misting in· other woys to
tervice centen, locally, in the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural tyttem improvementl, retulting in unnemury eicpendi- ble of producing.
through various projec~ and make this year's fu.nd-raiser a·
Center, 11 1 Jacluon Pike in Gallipolit.
·
In other butin~st. lannarclli tponwnhipo, and then take mccess, residents may contact
: The incentive paymenu are available for two application peri· turet for che viUage.
· The new aerial map! wiiJ 1aid 1he and other .elected turn1 walking or rmming the Jo Ann Crisp, chairman, at
~.The tim application period (year 3) IIIII fromAug. l, 2001,
in the county, indud· track on the night of the 992- 2136 or 949-2365.
lllroush July 31, 2002. Applicatioru are due by Aug. 15, 2002. 1ive time in plannin" future official!
ing
ICVeral
mayan, pbn to event.
The goal set is to raise
The JeCOnd application period (year 4) runt from Aug. 1, 2002, project!, Shutt uid.
The loan fundi to be u~~ed mc~t with repretcntatiVcl of
It begins at 6 p.m. on May $20,000 for the Cancer Socitbroul!h]uly J1,2003,andapplicacloru are due by Aug, 15,2003.
Charter Communication• 3 with the cancer ;urvivoro' ety's research, education,
; To be eligible, Pl'Od!tcm mutt purcha~e or retain a ewe lamb for the nuppin11 have already about
the decision to remove walk, and a reception to cele- advocacy and patient ·service
~r expamion o(their theep herd from Aug. 1, 2001, through been approved and uc
WUNS·
l'V from the 1uca1 brate. life. Jt cuntinue• until program•.
. umpent fundi from the loan
~ly 31, 2003. Por informacion, contact. the Gania-Lawren"
farm Service Agency ollke at t-800-391-6638 or 446-.8687. u~~ed in la!t summer'&amp; lift Ita· cable lineup. A from letter to
Charter it being dittributcd in
tlon conltrucdon project.
Shutt taid the Bl'A will th~ village and those who
punue funding for a half mil- view the channel are asked to
lion-dollar Jtorm and sanitary tign it and ~~end it to the cable
tewtr project In the Oliver company.
Council alw: .
Street, Logan Street and
•
Approved the payment of
Broadway Street areat. The
repl"ement of an exitting blUt in the ·amount of
the University ofRio Grande/Rio Grande
ltorm !Cwer and ~:o nltructlon $24,441.78, with Manley votof a new unitary JI:Wer line ing in oppmition;
Community College/Crossroads Program
• Accepted the tnntfer of
on Oliver would eliminate a
encourages Meigs County yfiuth, ages 18 - 21, to
drainage probwm now plagu- ownenhip of a ca rryout
contact us in order w obtain information about
ing midenu in the neighbor· licen~e at Citgo, from Little
John'•,
Inc.,
to
United
l!nergy,
hood, Shutt laid.
enrolling in the Y.E.S. Program. Young adults
The replacement of the lnc., with R.obinwn and
receive $6. 15 an hour for up to 120 hours of paid
tt:orm
it 411Cpecttd to Manley votlng in oppotilion:
work e"perience. We assist you with assessing your
• Approved the hiring of
coat $279,000, and the unicareer interests, completing Employment/Career
tary tewer $281,000. Shutt Phona Smith u park and pool
•
uid l'loyd Browne AIIOCiatet man~gcr for the tumrner and
Planning Strategies, as well as pursuing your ·
it now punuing funding for unny V~11M ecer II a p~rt­
educational ·goals, such as earning your
. GED or .the
the project from the Ohio time mainten~nce worker for
initial paperwork to get enrolled in college. This
.Environmental Protection the ttreet ~nd recreatiou
Agency through a new lmn department..
,. Workforce Investment Act service is funded by the
USDOL through the Ohio DJPS and the Meigs
County Department of Job and Family Services.
us as*iat you in preparing for a better tomorrow!!
if

usher Road
closed

Harold Hudnell

Matching fund
drive under way·

s=
· ucer

dlrts for lamb
aaalatlnce

dismiss

Badge event
planned

Prom meeting

Pro•ects

fram~pA1

tonight

Outreach dinner
planned

. Relay

LOCAL STOCKS

-•r

CONTACT US AT 992..0000
OR 992..0022
.
.
We are located at the University of Rio
Grande/Meigs Center

were

'·

Obituaries

LOCAL BRIEFS

Mallf•
C'tlullli'P'
C'

Mid.,.••
_.,.,...
............

To
OriiMWtb

•

•
•

Wilhelm Is OSU•
biggest

-"""·····...,.

See Page 6 in todays Sentinel

�•

:Th=e~D==ai~cy~S=e=n~tm~e~l~----------~·~:~11J~III~I~CJ~II~--------------2~~··~d~~~~~~~ge~··~~~·~
'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.1112·21541 • Fax: 7411-992·2157
www.mydllllyHntlnel.com

.

MUc..ME.

•

-.

Den Dlckaraon
Publisher
Diane Kay Hill
C!lnlroller

..

.'

IAIIIfl ltJ tltf tdl/llrllrc wtktJmll. Tlllythould lt1 /111 dtlltl J()(J wOI'tlt. AIIIIIUn
IJN •~IJ)ut 1t1 tdltin1 a11d mili t b1 t lfntd 1111d ltltl14dl IMidr111 and 11Upll0111 n~t~•IHr.

No ltlttlllntd IIIUN wUI bt pllbll1lltd, iAn"' t lwuld In llf Jood UJJU, tdllmllrrJ
,,,,, tlfJI fWI'IlHIQI//111.

"•

1'11• upJnu,., t:tP'"' "IIn th• c.,lumn btlow .,, tht COIIIflftMt o/1111 0/tl, MIU11
hbllt ltiiiJ

{ 'o. 'J

tditorlal bofud, unlut olhuwl! t twltd.

'.

NATIONAL VIEW

' ''

..

''

Pure greed motivates steep
price increases in gasoline
• The Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, Miss., on gas prices:
Gasoline prices at the pump are rocketing and the reasons are
obvious: pure polilical and financial profiteering.
.
President Bush, quizzed' last week about the zooming
prices, used the bpportunity to tout his energy plan and
blamed it on oil imports.
But the Bush/Cheney plan to focus on extracting more oil
from domestic sources such as Alaska's Arctic National
WildUti~ Refuge will have little effect on oil imports, accordin!! to a recent U.S. Energy Department report (although it
Will benefit U.S. oil company profits).
Coupled with the administration-backed refusal to raise gas
mileage standards for U.S. autos, there is little incentive to
reduce consumption of foreign oil either, except higher gas ·
prices, which also boost oil company profits. ·
So, what's·driving up the price'! According to Bush, it's due
to uncertainty in the Mideast. Yet,' says OPEC Secretary-general Ali Rodriguez, the Organization of Petroleum Exportin~
Countries has no plans now to increase or reduce crude ml
output because demand is so low! lf OPEC increases output,
he says, the market could collapse.
Only Iran and Iraq are making noises about limiting production, which alone cannot control the price.
Yet, world oil prices last week were at about $27.65 a barrel from a low of $16.70 a barrel on Nov. 19~ Analysts expect
prices at the pump to peak during Americans' peak summer
driving season beginning around Memorial Day. .
, The winner in this? U.S. oil companies. U.S. crude futures
.
have surged by 35 percent since Feb. I . ... .

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ~SSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, April 23, the !13th day of 2002. There
are 252 days left .in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
April 23, 1564, is believed to be the birthdate of English
poet and dramatist William Shakespeare; he died 52 years
later, also on April 23.
. ·
On this date:
·
ln 1348, King Edward Ill of England established the Order ·
of the Garter.
•
In 1789, President-elect Washington and his wife moved
into the first executive mansion, the Franklin House, in New
York.
In 1791 , the 15th president of the United States, James
Buchanan, was born in Franklin County, Pa.
In 1896, the Vitascope s,Ystem for projecting movies onto a
screen was demonstrated m New York Ci!}'.
In 1899, Russian-American aulhor Vlad1mir Nabokov was
born in St. Petersburg.
In 1940, about 200 people died in a dance hall fire in
Natchez, Miss.
In 1969, Sirhan Sirhan was sentenced to death for assassinating New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. (The sentence was
later reduced to life imprisonment.)
In 198~. the Coca-Cola Co. announced it was changing the
secret flavor formula for Coke (negative public reaction
forced the company to resume selling the ori$inal version).
In 1995, sportscaster Howard Cosell died m New York at
age 77.
.
• In 1998, James Earl Ray, who confessed to assassinating
the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968 and then insisted he'd
been framed, died at a Nashville hospital at age 70.
Ten years ago: Fighting erupted in the Bosnian capital of
Sarajevo just hours after the warring parties signed a truce
amid sniper fire. McDonald's opened its first fast-food restaurant in the Chinese capital of Beijing.
Five years ago: Doctors at the University of Southern
California announced that a child was born in late 1996 to a
63-year-old woman on hormone therapy. Golfer Fuzzy
Zoeller, again apologizing for racial comments·about Masters
winner Tiger Woods, withdrew from the Greater Greensboro
Chrysler Classic. The military confirmed that two pieces of
wreckage found on a snowy Rocky Mountain peak were from
the Air Force warplane that had vanisJ!ed on a training mission over Arizona.
One year ago; USS Greeneville Cmdr. Scott Waddle was
given a letter of reprimand as punishment for the submarine
collision that killei:l nine peopl4: aboard a Japanese fishing
vessel off Hawaii.
·
T&lt;Jday's Binhdays; Actress-turned-diplomat Shirley
Temple Black is 74. Actor Alan Oppenheimer is 72. Actor
David Birney is 63. Actor Lee ~ is 63. Actress Sandra
Dee is 60. Irish nationalist Bern tte Devlin McAliskey is
55. Actress Blair Brown is 54. Writer-director Paul Brickman
is 53. Actress Joyce DeWiu is 53. Actor James Russo is 49.
Actress Judy Davis is 47. Actress Jan Hooks is 4.5. Actress
Valerie Bertinelli is 42. Rock musician Gen is 38. U.S.
Olympic gold medal skier Donna Weinbrecht is 37. Actress
Melina Kanakaredes is 3.5. Rock musician Stan Frazier is 34.
Country musician Tim Womack (Sons of the Desert) is 34.
Thought for Today: "Once more unto the breach, dear
friends, once more." - From "Henry the Fifth," by William
Shakespeare (1564-1616).

'

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Democrats alive and kiCking
Like a Death Star in a "Star Wars"
movie, President Bush's once-impene·
trable protective energy shield seems to
be losmg power. So Democrats have
begun to attack, but they're far from
scoring a direct hit.
Bush's approval ratings are slipping
slightlY., and he's looking less than
invinctble in foreign policy, 119 a bevy
of would-be 2004 challengers fired one
fl!sillade itf'ter another at him at the
Florida Democratic Convention last
weekend.
.
The immediate audience loved it, but
Republicans are pretty convinced that
all the fireworks made little impact on
swing voters, though it may have
helped begin rousing the Democratic
· base to tum out in November.
What was strikin~ about the
Democratic contenders speeches was
the near-total absence of a positive
agenda or any new proposal for solving
an1 national problem.
The closest anyone came to a new
idea \\las Edwards, with a smlill suggestion that the federal government fund
efforts by local schools to make .community service a graduation requirement for students.
With Kerry taking the lead, the candidates did mention such needed goals as
paying down the national debt, lowermg class size inschools, putting more
police on the streets, covering the uninsured and givinj! a prescription drug
benefit to all semors.
. It is all familiar and wonhy, but the
wish list is costly and no one set any
priorities or explained how to pay for it.
Among the prospective 2004 contenders, only Vermont Gov. Howard
Dean has advocated scaling back
Bush's $1.6 trillion tax cut to finance
the programs he and the others advocate.
It may be unfair to ex~ wonky policy discussion at a political rally like the
one Florida put on. It was intended as a
competition in red meat-slinging and that is what it Was.
The candidates were all careful to

_The_o_aily_Se_ntin_ei_ _

••
•

'

but ·mission is unclear ·:
•

Morton

Kondracke
COLUMNIST

The main thrust of the Democratic.
auack, however, was doll,)estic, espe·r•
cially against the dramatic decline in·
the federal-budget surplus, Bush's tax·
cuts and his budget priorities.
Kerry declared of the Bush administration, "Not only are they racing back
to the voodoo economics of the 1980s;· ·
now they want to take money from·
Social Security and Medicare and give .
it to the wealthiest Americans."
, ·
Even though Bush has tried to paint ·
himself as a "compassionate conservative," Gore accusedhim ofJ'qrsuing "a :·
right-wing agenda" an · declared
"every time ... the little guy loses with: '
this crowd."
· By all accounts, Gore hel,Ped himself
. the most in Florida, recovenng from the:·
~mbarrassment of losing the 2000 elec- :·
lion.
But Republicans don't think the
Democrats made . much headway foi'
2002. Dowd said they came off as neg.;;
ative at .a time when the public wants.::
positive proposals.
·
;, 1:
He said Bush's popularity serves as a :
"break wall" against what otherwise.: ·
would be an off-year Democratic tide.&gt;
"We're at parity and that's gOOd," he.
said.
· :
A recent Democracy Corps poll indi· :
cated that Democrats have pulled ahead :
by 7 points in the generic :
Congressional ballot, but Republicans. :
sax their polling puts them 3 points up.:
'The mid-term is all about turnout,":
says Rep. Tom Davis (Va.), chairman oft
tl]e Nattonal Republican Congressional
Committee, acknowledging that attacks.
on Bush by Democratic candidates
might help stir activism in the party's:
:
base.
The Florida performance seems to:
show that the Democratic Party is alive
and fighting even if it has yet to say
exactly what it's fighting for.

preface their remarks by sayin~ . that
they stand "shoulder-to-shoulder with
Bush on fighting the war on terrorism
and backing U.S. troops in the field.
They defended what came after by
declaring that, as Gore put it, "patriotism doesn't mean keeping quiet."
Democratic National Committee
Chainnan Terry McAuliffe went further, charging that Bush and other
Republicans "!lave tried to use the war
as a partisan political prop, claiming
that we nc;:ed to elect more Refublicans
in order to defeat the forces o terror."
Indeed, Bush has forfeited the political protection of an above-it-all
wartime president by campaigning for
GOP candidates and indicating that he
could fight terror better with a GOPcontrolled Congress.
But a decline in Bush's popularity
ratings, a lull in the war on terror and
Bush's evident failure to bring about a
cease-fire in the Middle East also open
him to criticism.
Bush's approval ratings have fallen
from the htgh 80s to the low 70s, and
the polling coordinator for the
Republican National Committee,
Matthew Dowd, expects them to dip to
60 percent or below by November.
Kerry, Lieberman and Edwards took
shots at Bush's foreign policy, criticizing his late engagement in Mideast
diplomacy, his failure to be consistent
•
about terror in Afghanistan and Israel,
(Monon Kondracke is executive edi..
and his unwillingness to beef up allied tor of Roll Call, the newspaper ol
peacekeeping forees in Afghanistan.
Capitol Hill.)

DEAR. ABBY: You printed a letter from a girl asking how to stop
&amp;iting her fingernails. Although you
listed some helpful suggestions, I
would like to offer one that helped
me to finally stop at age 4S.
.
I sat down and tried to figure out
WHY I, kept biting my nails. I finally realized it was because I couldn't
stand the feeling of a rough nail
catching on the fabric of my clothing.
Now I keep emery boards from coarse to fine - beside 'my
favorite chair, in my purse, in my
glove comparunent and by the bed.
If I feel a "snag;' I immediately
smOQth the offending nail. It eliminates the "need" to bite. - FORMER
NERVOUS
NAILCHEWER, SANDY, ORE.
DEAR. FNNC: Thanks for the
tip. I was amazed at the number of

WASHINGTON TODAY

Bush spopularity in polls shows drift downward
alent of preparing for "a soft landing."
· Democrats are relieved at the
prospect of campl,ligning against the
party of a president with more typical
levels of public support. But they can.not be sure. how far he will slip and th2'
cannot count on a replay of his father s
collapse in 1991.
.
Democratic pollster Celinda Lake
said "it will be kind of liberating" once
Bush's approval ratinj! drops.
RNC spokesman J1m Dyke said the
memo was intended to let people know
in advance what the pany expects will
happen.

the pre-emptive warning was smart
politics, said political analyst Thomas
Mann of the Brookings Institution.
· "It's part .of the permanent campaign," Mann said. "It's partly a matter
of meeting or exceeding expectations."
Bush's hil!h poll ratings have reduced
criticism ofhim, Mann said. "I think it
helped make Democrats more cautious
abOut giving more voice to differ-

ences."

•

the war than the president's popularity, ·
said Bruce Reed, president of the cen-·
trist Democratic Leadership Council. ·
Democrats cannot count oil the kind'
of free fall in the polls experienced by .
Bush'sJather throughout 1991.
Former President . Bush's job·
approval was in the low 80s tluoogh the·
Persian Gulf War and gradually slipped·
throughout the year. Eight months biter,:
at the beginrung of September, he,
slipped below 70 percent and continued
to slip until his job approval was at 46 ,
percent in early January, with an ~uaJ._
number disapproving.
.;
But there are some very si8Jlificant
differences between the I991 and 2002.
By September 2001, Americans by '
almost a 2-to-1 margin disapproved of'
the elder Bush's handling of the economy - the most important issue that
year. People in 2002 approve of
President Bush's handling of the econ-omy by a 2- I margin and the war on
terrorism ranks in the polls as a top
issue along with the economy.
Any slippage in the polls will make ~
Democrats "much more willing to
come after" the presi~t, Democratic
comultant Paul Begala said.

But in Florida last weekend, potential
Democratic candidates for president
were openly critical of Bush administration policies, both domestic and in
the Middle East.
The Democratic reticence to speak (Will Lester · covers politics 4nd
out on differences has more to do with polling for The Associated Press.)

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
former nail-chewers who took pen
in hand to lend a hand. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Thanks to my
high school teacher, Mr. Elich, who
included some interesting lessons in
personal hygiene in his biology
class, I haven't chewed my .naifs fo~
nearly 30 years. One my he asked us
to scrape under our fingernails and
look at what we remOved under a
nucroscope.
The area under the nails can col-

Jive generations
· ather together at
· amily reunion
RACINE - five genera·tions gathered for an Easter
celebration and birthmy dinner at the home of David and
Ann Zidde in Racine.
A photo of the five generations was taken and the birth. my of Amber Dugan was eelebrated with cake and ice
cream.
Attending were Arnie
Dugan of Racine, Roberta
Swisher of New Haven, W.Va.,
Paul Maynard of Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Terri, Bruce and

lect some unhealthy "spec:imen~o."
Coming face-to-face with them wu
enough to malte me think lwice
about biting my naill. - PliTER.
BAYVIEW H.S. CLASS OF '15
DEAR PETER: You hit the nail
on the head.Yceh!
DEAR ABBY: I, too, was. a confirmed nail-biter. What finally
stopped me was a job I landed as a
teen-ager. I became an usher at the
Roxy Theater. The job required my
wearing an immaculate · uniform,
including white gloves. Soon a{ier I
landed the job, I noticed that I had
nice nails. The gloves were what did
it. I never bit my nails again. - S.S.
IN FLORIDA
DEAR S.S.: Your solution makes
sense. Out of sight, out of mind.
DEAR ABBY: I am a former
compulsive nail-biter. Finally, at age

24, I 'ftnt to a manicuril.t ancl had
acrylic nails applied over my bitten,
sore nail stubs. Ae:rylia. ~ impossible to bite, and I needed to dO' it
only once in older to break the
habit. Even now. at 46, 1 occasionally get that bitinc urg,e, and the only
~y I can curb it 1$ to go hack to the
manicurist. JANE, FORT
MIU..S.C.
DEAR JANE: I'm pleased it
worked for you, but some people
are ewn driven to chew fake nails.
Years ago. I wore poKelain nails, and
if the · \ltge became strong enough
- I'd bite them."Thank heawns
short nails ate now popular. It was
an expensive ltabit.
· DEAR ABBY: I sulfered shame
and guilt bec.ause I couldn't ltop
biting. Finally. when I was
my
30s, I asked my doctor if he could
suggest a cure. 10 my surprise, be

GOLDEN
ANNIVERSARY

MEIGS

TUESDAY
POMEROY- Meigs High School Junior Parents meeting will take place at the Meigs
County Library at 7 p.m. to .finalize the prom.
POMEROY - Meigs County 4-H Club Advi·
aory Committee meets 7 p.m., Meigs County
· Extension Office.
POMEROY- Yvonne Pearson of Pleasant
Valley Hospital will speak about lupus during
the Caring and Sharing Support Group meetIng 1 p.m. at the Meigs County Multipurpose
Senior Center.
·

Workmans celebrate 50 years
RUTLAND - T.K. and
Mildred Workman ofRutland
will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with an
FIVE GENERATIONS - Attending an Easter obser.vance at the open house reception on
Zirkle home In Racine were five generations of the Swisher Sunday, April 28.
The reception, hosted by
family. Left to tight, they are Roberta Swisher, great.greettheir
children, will be held at
.grandmother; Ann Zirkle, great grandmother; Debbie Maynard,
grandmother; and Jesse Maynard holding his daughter, Tll}'lor, . Carpenter Inn from 2 to 4
p.m.
who makes the fifth generation In the family. (Submitted)

They were married on
L&gt;pril 29, 1952 in Niles. They
have six sons: Bobby, David,
Jeff, Chris, Todd, and the late
Timmy Workman. They also
have five grandchildren and a
·great grandson, and four stepgrandchildren and 10 · step
great gi'lmdchildren.
·

More to meat' than lmeatsl the eye
There's more to the meat
group than "meats" the eye.
The meat group has numerous foods in it,.many of which
do not come from animals.
Chicken, turkey, beef, pork,
finfish (trout, perch, clams,
etc), game (venison, rabbit,
squirrel, etc.), dried beans,
lentils, K1'f beans, eggs, dried
peas, peanut butter and nuts
are all part of the meat group.
Why would some of these
foods which come from plants
be considered part of the meat
P,up? It is because they all
have a lot of protein. Protein
is the nutrient that builds,
repain and maintains muJCles
and body tissues. Protein will
supply energy to the body, if it
is needed.
Foods from the meat group
· also provide B Vitamins (thiamin, niacin, folate and 812),
iron and zinc. A disadvantage,
·.though, of animal protein is
~t it has a lot of fat, saturated fat and cholesterol.

my nail-bilin&amp; stopped for ROOdFOR.MiiR CHBWEJt. JtEilNE.
N.H.
DEAR FORMER CIIB"WEib
A ~y mentioned in the 1!177
lS$Ue of Dental Man~ent mapzinc. sent J.O me by Edwin T. Coleman. ·D.D.S.. of Knoxville, ~.•
stated that one· out of 12 adults is a
~~biter. It concluded that of ell of
the succmful cures that people m~y
use, the one common denonun•tor
is MOTIVATION. And with that
condusion, l agree.
(IWii.w Jllu'llips and Iter """"'"'
}Nnttt PltiiiJ'ps $1tarc 11M pmWII«Yf"
.4/lig&lt;Jil "'" &amp;-. Writ. DNr A.~ lit
~DNrAUy.toltl or P.O. Bolt
611440, Lu A.lts. CA 90069.)

Community Calendar Ia publlahed aa a ·
fr" service to non-profit groups wlahln' to
announce m"tlnge and epeclal evente. he
calendar le not daelgned to promote aalu
or fund·raleera of any type. lteme are print•
ed only •• apace permlte end cannot be
guarant"d to be printed a specific number
of daya.
..

Travis Hysell of Nitro, W.Va.;
Samantha Hysell, Roger
Smith,Jessica Hysell, and Greg
King, all of Pomeroy; Debbie
Maynard, Scott Chevalier,
Brenda. and Kyrie Swann, all
. of Middleport, and Jesse and
Taylor Maynard of Washington Court House.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Zirkle also
recently hosted a birthday
dinner for their daughter,
Terri. Cake and ice cream
were served following the
dinner and gifts and .cards
were presented to her.

Adults only need two to
three servings of meat each
day - the equivalent of which
is only five to seven ounces.
The problem is that many
Americans get much more
protein than is recommended.
For instance, a twelve-ounce
sreak provides more protein
than is needed for an entire
my. To help . visualize what a
three-ounce serving is, compare the amount of meat to a
deck of playing cards.
There are several things that
can be done to help you get
the. most nu.tritious protein
foods in . your diet. First,
choose foods from the meat
group that are low in fat, saturated Yat and cholesterol.
Select skinleu chicken, -fish ,
and lean cuu of beef and
pork. Read labels to deter·
mine the amount of saturated
fat and . cholesterol that are
found in a serving of the
meat.
Check the labels on fish
carefully, because fish can fool
you . SOme types may be low

in

talftd to me about ~
pulsive diwdet' and pmaiMd a
low dose of a very We druglaed by
people with OCD. In thfte weeks

CALENDAR

Mr. and Mra. T.K. Workman

BY BECKY BAER

BY WILL l.urER
WASHINGTON - After more than
seven months of soaring poll numbers,
President Bush's standing with the public is gradually returning to more nor·
mal levels.
If that trend continues, Democrats are
likel~ to grow more bold about challengmg the Bpsh administration on policy. Republicans may have to learn to
ljve without the updraft that has raised
the party's standing for months because
of a president with job approval in the
80 percent range.
The Republican National Committee
already has warned the party faithful to
soften t~ ~ effect.
Matti1"w Dowd, pollster for the
RNC, sent a memo out to fellow
Republicans reminding them the presidc:nt' s poll nu!fibers rould continue to
sbp. The presnlent's job approval was
at 90 pe,rcent soon after Sept. 1I but has
slipped recently to the mid-70s.
t5owd predicted the president's
"approval rating should return to a new
normal" - possibly in the 60s - by
the end of July if the historical pattern
proves true, which is hardly certain
given that the . attacks were different
from anything in U.S. history.
GOP consultant Scott Reed said
Dowd's memo was the political equiv-

'lm' tJ\fiU.ltP

•
••

· e'Tr.tr®wtftl'lWIIkftiW,.'Te•Uil..,., • ·

Ohio Valley Publlshln9 Co.

Cha.rlene Hoefl.lch
General Manager

--=-By the Belld

PapS

in fat, but high in cholesterol.
Catfish, flounder and other
kinds of finfish can have
smaller amounts of saturated
fat and cholesterol than meat
and poultry. However, shellfish, which is very low in saturated fat, has more cholesterol than finfish . Salmon,
mackerel and herring tend to
have quite a bit offat.
.
Another thing that can be
done to get nutrient-dense
protein foods, is to prepare
"meatless" meals several times
a week with protein plant
foods., Serve entrees that pods
that split on two sides when
ripe) . ·
Examples of legumes
inclu&lt;le: black-eyed peas, black
beans, garbanzo beans (chick
peas), great ~orthern beans,
hlllll beans, kidney beans or
lentils. Tofu or soybean.meatless protein food. As do all
legumes, it takes up the flavor
of the other ingr~dienu and
seasonings that are combined
with it. .
In addition to the protein

that legumes supply, they are
also noted for an abunmnce
of complex carbohydrates and
fiber, With little fat and no
cholesterol. One- half cup
c.ooked dry beans, peas and
lentils is equal to one ounce
of meat.
Vary your• menus by
exchanging egg dishes for the
main entree. Eggs can be prepared quickly, euily and fla.
vorfully. Use egg substitutes so
too much cholesterol won't

~~~~:e..ao~~~::~ ~F:O:a~

Eat nuts and peanut butter
in very small amounts. They
are protein packed, but also
have tots of fat . A few nuts
sprinkled on top of a ~ad,
casserole or dessert can provide protein and an interesting texture and flavor without
adding too much fat or too
many .calories.
(Bec~y 6~~n, Meigs County
Extension Agent, Family and
Consumer &amp;ienas!Communily
Devtlopmmt.)

in the Sentinel -

. . . .~ ft 1j)t

RACINE potluck.

RACO meets 6:30 p.m., for

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Literary Club
meets at 2 p.m. at the home of Gay Perrin.
Jeane Bowen will lead a discussion of "Ice
Bound" by Dr. Jerri Nielsen.
MIDDLEPORT - Wildwood Garden Club,
11:30 a.m. at Judy Kay's Restaurant.
POMEROY - Childhood Immunization Clln·
lc 9·11 a.m., 1·3 p.m. at Melga County He'llth
Dept. Children must be accompanied by parent or legal guardian and shot record must be
provided.
·

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW Post 9053, Tup·
pers Plains, will meet 7:30 p.m. at the post
home. Officers will be elected and a special
drawing will be held.
ATHEN~ Survivors of Suicide Support
Group, 7 p.m. Athena Church of Christ, 785
Weal Union ·St., Athena. For more Information
call 593-7414.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Meeting, Poplar Ridge Ridge
FWB Church, State Route 554, John Elswick,
speaker, Eternity of Point Pleasant to · alng,
6:30p.m.

'-------------:--------1
~--•••• CLY'OE. t tAW. - ·

II NO~ VAAT MY

IOYFIIllll II GI.TTIMG
FOJ NlllaTII~~Y...

••••llltfl

PLAN AHEAD NOWI

At'kUl abOUt

EXTENDED CARE
HEALTH INSURANCE!
DowNIHG CHILDI MULLIN MUMIII
IN-ANCI ADINCV
(~·3311
.

•

IAJ.l) AMD FA11

1HI!811 hDOn

I. • Pomeroy

'
'

Meigs County Merchants
have

Mother's Day
"all wrapped up"
you may be a wlnnerll
(Watch the paper for detalll)

..

�The D il ·Sentinel

•

•
Wahama
tames
'HoundsMASON - nryan Cromley ptovlded the o~ll!l\ll! 6~wurb with ~ hom~
run ami t\Vll 51111!1~ while llradiOid
.tiiatk obtained the h.lllllln del\\11~1\ll!ly
In pitching a nine strll®ut, Gluto-hltttt
&lt;1% the Wah.amt Whl'-'! M~m ouldl~­
taneed th.~ visit!~ Valley Fayettt ?ulln
an l:i~ning round !!*Me of the Rl\ll!t
\Ialiey ~l\tt~llte tout!Ulllellt Mottday
at Wah.a111a.
tiru11tle~ the White llal~ll%' $l!nlllt
Rnt M%elnan, I~ an ~ll!ht·hlt attack by
th.e llettd A-rea nine wli:h hb litst homli
run the 1prlng 111 addition to a pllir or
!ll\gii!S. Ryan H~ joined Ctotllley lt1
th.e offi!nsiw spotlight with. !WI} il"t!le!
whUt&gt; llrad 1\.llush, Ryan Mltth~ll. aild
Cabe lambert &lt;111o pltth~d hi with •
ill\gl~ aplecl' fur tMth tllwdtln
Spencer\ Masl:ill Ctlllllty lt}llad.
·
The victory wa~ the llth Clllllecutlw
triumph ibr the White ~alrot1s as the
local !line extend~ Its sprl11g !late to
\l· \ \Jtl th~ seastln. The will 5ellds
WHS itlto th.e division fittal! &lt;It 5 p.m.
tlll Friday ot St. Albam High School
lll!altlst 1-.tyettevillt\ Mldl,md Trail or
Ch&lt;~tlc!ttltl CathtJilc. The tolli\llatlort
alld t hamt'lon8hlp outitll!i are ~~hed­
ul~d ibr Saturday atiwmon In St.
Alban&amp;.
Clark btloited hi! IMutld re~ol.'ll to 3o tlll the ye~r durlll(! hi! l'tllltt ~lfig
perlbm\artte. The ~enior rll!ht-h.andcr
allo~d twu run&amp;whll~ 1tatterl11g ibur
hi~ In addition ttl elt~rtdlng his team
lellditll! itrlkeout ttJtlll to 42 u11 the
:200:2 calltpall!fi alter ranllitll! 11lt1e· G-reyhoulld hltteri tln the day•.
WHS jumped tlUt to a \ ·0 adwntage
lit the 8\\ctllld on illt~e!!lve !llll#el by
Crilfl\lcy ~nd MlteheU ~tid ~ !Aerlflee fly
by d~!ll!l't~ted hitter s~utt jllhtUtll\, Valley Clime baek ttl knot the etJiliU Ill the
tt;p h~lr of the third as Mlehael
Amitl'tlt\1! dt1~ed atld later eame aroutld
tltl a twtl om !ltllde by Alldrew Falbo.
The White Ftlfeotli !llllt'Ped the t • t
tie 111 the fourth af'ter &amp;etJrln~ \w6 times
m1 twu hiu. 1\.yAII Htld!Jil 1etl oil' the
lntllllS with A base hit bdbre promptly
!Wiplllg !etotld Atld third. Hod9e
&amp;~tJretl 611 Atlam RickArd~ grou11der to
!him be(.;re Cromley !JiiW Wah.ama a 3~
:led~ with his Om round tripper of the

t)r

INACTIVI- Ohio State's Matt Wilhelm (35) hilt beoomt} II chelll'lt}lldllt on the tldlllll'\1!8 llliCour~lnR 1'111 ltil!lm•
metes alter rtoonstructl\10 auraory on Jan. 11$. (AP File)

·Enforcer sl111s

mu~eardeal

•1nes

From

with Jackets

COLUMBUS (All) The Columhm lllu~ JndMs
si~n~ll left wini!Jody Shelley
to u multiyelir contruct on
Mnndny,
Sh,•llt•y, 2(•, had thr~&lt;' ~oul .~
and tht''''' .l'~i~u in 52 l!illll~s
last K&lt;'ason in •his rooki&lt;' y"ur
with tlw Ulu" J:tck.:ts, H~
also S&lt;'t 11 dub record with
20(1 P"nulty ntinutt's.
.
Tt:rms of th~ conm cr
Wt' r" 1101 11111\0\lllCCd,
Uct:1n1sc of his willh11!n&lt;'SI
10 111!1H, Shdlt•y b~CIIntt' II
fQvoritt• of th e Uluc Jnckcts'
ram. lly tlw end or the s ~a 1011, ht• was 11rt'ctcd by
chnnts of "Shel-leyl Slwlley I" ~vc ry tim c hu was
involvud in 11 skirmish on
th~ icc.
,
Shdlt•y led rhc tenm with
11 phu/ minus rnrin~ of plus1.
· Sln•llcy lflent the curly
part of the season with tht'
Ameri c :~n Hockey Lcnl!ltu's
Syrncmc Crun ch, then c11m0
up tO I COru his tim I!UIII
with th" team on Dt'c. 15
ugnlt111 Los Ang~les .

COLUMUUS (AP) - M~tt Wllhdtn - ~tMldinl! 6-fllot-~. wei11h·
ittl! 24~ (ltlllttd~ &lt;ltttllpt11'tilll! &lt;I t\VO•
tiny

1!1\lWth ul'
h~ard

-

hili .
lwwnw n
ch~rr·

lender &lt;It
Ohln Stlltc
· this ~prinl!,
Not till nctunl dw~rlcndrr, but just
Hkc th~ tmcs with th~ pmn-potm h ~
flnds hlms&lt;'lt' on rh~ shJ~lltt~s
~n cmlrltf!illl! rh~ 11u ~k~yu s.
· It's nhour th~ only wny' h ~ cattJl~l

Wilhelm has become
Buckeyes' biggest
cheerleader
rhrou~Jh !!Win~ pr.t ~tkc nntl fed Ilk~
h~\ still n pun ut' dw ream 111 lw
rdltlh&lt; Iron! .~ ll'llci'Y 011 hb rl~ht

llllklt'.

.· .
.
'' Ynu'~ like n dt~ erlcnticr," Wilhchn Sttitl. "You't'l' l!lvln~ ~uys lnspl"
r1ttlut1 .md P•ltS un the bnck. It's nll
yuu ~nu dtJ.''
W!lhdm !njm~li ,, t hl'tlttlc11lly
wc,lk ,111klu In Ohln Suuc's lm1 111
Suuth Curollun In tlw Oltlbn ~ k

Bowl 011 New Year~ 1)&lt;\y, He underwent l'llconmuetlw n1rgery on jan.
15 and, atl:cr weeks of hal.'ll wurk,
now Is uble to muw lferly althtJugh
he~ not yet rcndy to hit the flcld.
Wilhelm htt! ilrlii!!Jird bctousc llf
the chusm tlhtt c~l~t11 b~twee11 those
wlm play Mttl thust whtl dtm't tlll
uuy teMtt ,
''It'! hutil. It~ lml.'ll be~ausc yt;u
lt!St til~ tlllltUratlcrle," he 1uld. ''Out
ut' dl{ht, out or llllnd, l! !Oitl~thntl
th~ (rutile of tllllld thut !llti!C i:!UYI
tlli(;ht take."
Ohio Stlltc hend coach Jhn Trc!icl
!uld Wilhelm hu1 ctllllJlell!utcd (tlr

ltlrllll!·

PluH 111 Wilhelm, 7

PIHHIIIWIII1Ma,7

Indians snap .losing streak
in win over White Sox ·
CLllVflLANI) (All) - Uuck ~ ~ ehllly Jut!!hi tlUt tlt jam! to help the Indium get a win they
flldd, the Clc.vdu11d lmllnlll felt right llt 11lltl1c. rleAp~rutely 11~eded.
·
li..&lt;•turnllt~:~ lrutH li wlulc11 ftllld trip, th~ ludl·
''I tltJnl ml! wh~n It 11, a wlnl1 a w{n," lttdl·
nus ~uMincd bnseball'it lone llt1b~nten tca111 at an! tt1a11ager tharll~ Mauu~l. "'the !Ill~! yt;u
· home, snnppinl! n!IX•I!lltt1Clll!il11! !trenk Mlln• win itt April are the une1 yt;u tlllght nor need
dny lllt~ht wlrh rt 4·2 vltwry tiVCf the Chleni!O Itt s~ptember: •
.
White Stlx.
tlranyilll Will In the l!ntup aWI!Hit the Jell·
1\.uisell Brttt1yn11 uutl 'th1vl! J:lryman each hit . hand~d tluehrle beeau1e the lt1dTan1 di!8lgnated
tW!l•run hu111~r1 tll!' Murk Uuchrle (4· 1), 'fh~ Wll Cordettl for M!IMnftlent. NormaUy,
Indium lmprowd w 7·0 at the jak~ and avoltl· Col.'llem would play d8J.!In!t a lefty.
rd ltl!lhlt,~ ~cvcl\ itfitll!ht fur the Ar&amp;t tlt11c 1111cc "I WILl at the blliJpatk fm I 1/2 h!!un before
ICJ!J I.
I knew I W1U ln," 1ald tl1'1111yan, who wu In a S"Attytlmc yuu luic ilx h1 11 ttlW, there l110111c ftlr•3t !lump with 11 !trlket~ut8 bef6re hl!
1!611CWI there," 13raliYI111 !niJ. "All the l!liYI hom~r.
wunt w play IMt~r. 11ut muwth11~1 yt~ur oppo~
J'lrymat\ al•o hie a IWU•run h6mer off
11~111 b~1t0i yuu, and Wl11ctlmei you beat your- l.luchtlc, wh6 had l!&lt;lttlin m nvemge t~f nine
~~lr. I think there\ been A little tlf btlth !ll)lt\~ fUt1! uf !Upptitl Itt each !!t' hllllnt r!!ur !taft!,
on!'
He IIIJllWcd fu,ur runs md !even hlt8 In ltM!n
·
·
MAN 011 THI HOUR - Cleveland lndllnl ' Trevll Fryman II . Dany~ llucz pltch•ll 5 1· 3 ihuwut in11ln!!§ !11 l11nln~~&amp;.
conaretulllted by teammate• otter hlttlna a two,run home ~un !lw CIJitl and Clcwluml rclkovcr~ ltkal.'lltl ltln· "1\v!! bad plt~h~•:' Huehrle 8ald, "t'U t.llki! illl
off ChiOiliO White Sox pitcher Mark Buahrle In the fourth. (AP) Ctlll, !'nul
Shu~y Alld Bub Wltkmun
pitched outlnyllke thl! anr time."
.
.
.

Former Indian
Slim Dente
d•d•t71

MONTCLAIR, N.J. (AI&gt;)
- Sana Dlintu, who plnyod .
1hormop for five team! in
nine m :ijor ~ ~ ~l!u c !CAMOm
and wa1 n mcmb~r or C lev~­
lantl'!.l 'J54 American Leasu~
cham1lion1, lm died .
M.Cl. 11cnton, a !poke!·
wontan for Mountailuide
Ho5pital, laid f)cntc died
there Sunday. H~ was 79.
J)cntc came· to the major~
with the Dolton 1'-cd Sox in
194 7, then !pent a year with
the St. Loui1 llrowm. After
thrc~ ICAI Onl with the W~l h~
ington Scnaton and two
with the C hi c a~to White
Sox, he moved to the Indian!
lX)I.UMBUS (AI') -:- Ml~h c lle
Munoz &amp;ai d· her d ~d! iun tu leave
in 1954 ·and wa! a part-time
Muuuz,
a
IWU
·
timc
Ohio
A!wc
iutc~
W
A!
uillicult, but n ~Ce!!Ury.
player 011 the tca111 that won
1
l rt!~ M1. Ba1kctball at Ma1u n 1-liKh
"I didn 't ~~~ thlni!J t~ectilll! b~tcc r
111 WllllCI,
Srhuul, hal ~ rdd~d tu enroll at Ohiu (or me in the next three ycm, M1d
Hi1 major lcasuc career
State.
th11 t wa~u 't bllicl1 ou plal l"l! tim e,"
ended with the lndiam in
Munuz, a 6-fuut- 1 lbrward, 1hc tai•L "1'hc !tylc wam t reAlly the
1955. He had a career bat·
linjp vcragc of .2:~2.
1c_
. S&lt;ll1tCtltnc! you 've 1·1~~!I
:u, ..,H~lu~uc;cn:;ce~dt:!pi:'-la::n~~~eu:--iti::ra"::n~lfl~er:XCI=ru.~u:-;.1_:;b~3·1~t.:'":'-:r'r::'-'11;:.
1!nncn.tc
la!t
month.
At
a
frc!IHmn
I!Ut
iu
0
11
whitl
ttakc! you huppy. '
l)cnec lived In Wc:1t Cald- ·
Muuoz vl!itcd Cint innatl , Miami
well, N.J .. unJ b 1urvivrd by · 1he averaged 9JJ mlnutel, 3.7 puiut!
·
and
2.0
rebumnh
in
27
WitHe!.
Thuu
(
Ohio anJ Xavier bm cho1e Ohlu
hi&amp;wife, Marie, a daushter.
ll&lt;'!l&lt;'e went 2\1-~ and renchcd the Swc allcr 111ccti111! l~n wcrk.rud with
l1atrid a l'orccllo: J 1i81rr and
NC:AA Kemilinall.
new c!lach Jiltt f'luncr, who lett: Vat1·
chrec grandwm.

Former Ms. Basketball to transfer to OSU

'

'
.l1erbllt (ur the nu ~k~yc 8 ~f1:er thiJ · MlliH:II 1ald. "W11 think the wurld of
!cn1un .
hhu."
"Th ere were 11 1m 6f rcl1 16111 (or my
Mleh~ll t Mun6~ wiU h1vt to sit
clcd!lon.1'hcy jun h~d 11 1!66d mlx 6r 6Ut tJUt !UI!!n, but 1h~ will be able
acudemksnull bu1k~tbu ll , Mtu I reAlly 10 pradlce with the ttllltl ,
like cuuch Jlcm~r," Mun6z !ald.
"1 tht~uilht abt~ut th~t," 1he tald. 1,•
· Mttll !!Z'~ (ather, l'l'tl fldmball Half "With 1fttfn11 !!Ut, play~n elcher ~~~1
uf' PatM tackle Amhuny MuHuz, ltnu advantJige of It !If they get behind. ·
her muther, J:)~eiJ~r, mpporred her My J.!6al ior thl1 next ynr l! to get
decl!luu.
~
the m&lt;l!l !!Ut ui h. I'm gulny to Ule
•• Anth o11y and I w~Ht up and thl1 tJne year ttl g~1 that much betulkcJ w cuadt Jlou~r ·• J:' ed)ce ter.''

•

www.mydlltyMntlnel.com

URG track competes at Butler Invite
~'lmliEPOIITS

•

.

INDlANA.I:&gt;OUS, IN. ~ P...io
Surirtde junior "shly Robetts outdis·
'tan~ the field ill the women's discus,
taltillg first with a thtow o( 1-46 ~~ at
the Butler InVitational. P...oberts was
nearly four feet ahe•d of$econd place
Katy Craig ofOh.io $tate (142-l).
Ro\lem was 5th In the shot put (4l10) and 17th in the hammel' throw
(l jl) feet), .
Amanda Wolle l'ln a stto11g race in
th.e 5,1)()0-nleter run, finishil\g fifth
With a time o( 19~ -4 L ·
Other wumen's tesulti: Amy Kline,

Uth, in the hammer throw (148-0) and
14th in the discus (117 -0); Heather
Mace, 12th, in the 800-metei: run
(2:20.10); Lesley Roberts, Uth, in the
javelin (78 feet) and Esther Rafferty,
l4th, in the javelin (73 feet, 3 inches),
Oil the men's side, Scott Littrell posted the best perfonmnce finishing 1Oth
it1 the 5,000-meter run (15:39). Josh
Fogle was 22nd in the · event with a
time of I 6~27 . ·
Other Red men results: Jeremy Cron,
18th, in the javelin (126-0); Glenn
Arnold, 19th, in the hammer throw
(133-0) and 24th in the discus (I 15-0j;

Adam Grim, 24th, in the shot put (3-40) and 26th in the dilcus (113-0);Tim
McCoy, 25th, in the -400-meter dash
(53.20), Tim Sykes, 27th, in the 800 • ,.._
(2:00.-41) while Scott McNutt was WATERLOO COAL
33rd (2:03.60) and Jerrod Arms was CO. INC. OF P.O. lOX
Ul, JACKSON, OH
37th (2:06.69). in the event.
PH 740...1.
Rio's 4 x 400-meter relay team fin- Ul40
77I 7
HAI
ished (out of l3) with a time . of SUBMITTED
A
RENEWAL
3:38.81. .
APPLICATION FOil
Rio's men's and women's team will COAL MINE PEIIIIIT
head to the Empire State on Saturday .,._.. TO THE OHIO
OF NATURAL
to compete in the American Mideast DI!I'T.
RESOURCES, DIV. OF
Conference Meet at Houghton on Sat- MINI!IIAL
RESOURCES
urday.
.

:~-~-w~lo~N4~o~1t~lc~1=

COrdero .designated by Indians
- . ClllVEtAND . (AP) - Outfielder
DNil Cmdero, a tt\~ot dlsappointment
ofut.thll Cle~~elaild Indians the past th.ree
"!ea~tltl~, Was designated fur assignment
Mllnday.
1
Cordero was batting .222 (4-fot-18)
'with tlne RBI In silt games this season
'fur th.~ Illdians, wh.tl have been reluctant
to play the 30-year-old because of his
'lack or productiVity. He is in the fiMl
'year of a contract that will pay him $4
. million this season.
·
1
c· By de!l~atlllg him fot uslgnn\ent, the
Jnd1a11s ha~~e \0 days to trade, release or
~set1d Cordero ro the minora. .
t 10 take Coidero's roster spot, the ludirans purchased the colltrad of titst baseman Eatl Sll.yderfrom1'tlple-b- lhffalo.
Sllyder, 25, came to Cleveland in the

eight-player trade last December that
sent Roberto Alomar to the New York
Meti. Snyder was batting .250 with four
homet1 .ahd seven RBh in 16 games for
the Bisons.
Cordero was in his second stint with
the Indians. He signed with Cleveland as
a free agent in 1999 after playing for
Mont~al, Boston and Chicago.
Dutihg his two seasons With the Red
Sox, Cordero pleaded guilty to assaulting
his wife and received a 90-day suspended sentence. The couple is now
divorced, and Cordero has custody of
their two children.
The Pirates signed him as a free agent
In 1999 but traded him back to the .1ndians for outfielder Alex· Ramirez and
infielder Enrique Wilson just before the

trading deadline in 2000.
But Cordero never got it going upon
his return to Cleveland.
He broke his hand at the end of the
2000 season. Last year, Cordero batted
just .250 - his lowest average since
1993 - with one homer and 21 RBis
in 268 at-bats. During one stretch, he
went 86 at-bats without driving in a
run, .and . before hitting his homer on
May 16, he had gone 257 at-bats without one.
Cordero came to spring training this
season in great shape, h6ping to show
the Indians that he could still be a factor.
He got a pinch-hit single in Sunday's
loss at Minnesota, but it was one of the
few times in the last three years that
Cordero delivered.

Wahama

the other scatltpering home when Clark
ground out to second.
Wahama dosed. out the sctlring with
atlother two run frome in the sixth as
Cromley singled followed by a w•lk to
Mitchell, Cromley raced home on a
pinch-hit iingle by Gabe Lambert with
Mitchell later completing the circuit
when Jared Long grounded out to short.
l'albo was J?illned with the pitching
loss .for the Greyhounds in addition to
collecting two of the Valley base hits on
the night. Jones and Armstrong added

RBI singles for the visitors in the losing
cause.
White Falcon diamond coach Gordon
Spencer scrambled for an opponent prior
to its Friday conference tourney date and
will take his Bend Area team to Gauley
Bridge on Thursday before resuming
conference tournament action.
"W~ didn't want to wait until Friday to
play again so we were able to reschedule
a game with Gauley Bridge on Thursday
befure continuing with .the league playoffs;' Spencer said.

'·
r.

fnnn,.l

' The t3reyhtlunds dosed the gap to one
.run in the fifth as Palbtl slnl!ied and stdle
ae~ond prior
sctlrlng tln a safety by
Rocky Jones. WHS an!wel'ed In the bot' rom half of the inning when Ryan
·, Rous)l reached base on a walk folltlwed
by a single by Brad Roush. One run
1
scored on a Valley throwing error with

to

'

things mentally," Th!!cl aaid.
"He· knows our olfcme better
than !onte of tlur offensive play-

from PI• I

en.''

•.hll UW:tlVity by 8tlldylfillltlore
,!11m 11t11i 11'!tting to know hls
;l:ellltufiates better.
· "He lw tried to ·gloss over
,that separation fium the group,"
, Tressel said, "You kind of get
ileflltllted when ~u're not out
.thelll with them by ~ultlngltl
·eJttfil tltrte ilnd ef!Oft in the
·other :1.1'1!48. Tltat wl1i pay off fbr
•hlm as well!'
Besides feeling 118 lf hei an
·oullider at p111ctke, Wilhelm
otlao strui!Kies With the thoullht
he couldlle lt!slilg hi! llntbacker
spot to Fred Pagat Jr. who lw
!tepped Itt and had a st!Ud

. Wilhelm has tried to b~
phllorophlcal ab6ut the injury
·olhd learn 6ottt what he believes
wlll toost likely be a minot
ltnpediment in his college
career.
· "It's jwt' a bump in the road.
.You've got to overcome It:' he
said. "It~ just like anything ebe
In life.Beyond the game offootball, problems are going to happelllilld }Ull're going to have to
overcome them. I've done my
best to dtl that."

On Saturday, May
4, 2002 al 10:00 a.m.
the Hotne National
lank will ollar lor
eale II publlo auction
on the bank parking
IO·I the following
VIIIICIIII:
1111 Chevrolet
Metro VIN
2CIM112221WI727447
1"3 Mercury VIN
2MIPMHlU P1H440

31
bll made to lna,.ol
1181 Chevrolet I· to any ol the above
vehlolll prior to tha
Pickup VIN
1GCIII1414K22t4253 uta by · oalltng
The llrme ol .ate George Lewrenoe 11
7&lt;10-112·8333.
INIOIIh,
The Home National
lank r11arv11 the llnoerely,
right to reJect any or H 0 ME NATIONAL
Ill bldl or lo remove lANK
lilY unlllrom the uta
. 11 any 11me.
14) 23, 28, 30, 2002
Arrengama11t1 may !Ito

gtuund after two Yl!ah as a
starter;
. "Obviously, JJreddie~ itt there
t:akin[!llll the reps, which li great
fur hint. Artd gUys ate gett!llg
colf!Cortable with hltrt whell
"l'm .hl;t ttVltig to ~~ back out
tltt the lleld, whleh li lurd,"Wll·
helm !illd.
.
1
The ~elllor fMm Lolllin tries
1to cottttlbute by attending
meetin3!, llt:ting in wlth the
L~MC!wl lind watchlny vraclieea
~ the pt\!ti llOit with them.
• "l'th iUte lt'l dllllcult fur him
Any ct&gt;rili'Cdtdl' ~ lltd he\ a
•compedt'dt - \WiliS _to pt bet-

ter u aplAyer:• def'etUive coordl-

' fiAWr MArk Dilntolllo lAid. "At
that llnebaddng 1'05llion, they
I Wiltlt 10 be )elldefl, !'ttl MUI't! he1
&amp;trul!llllnll' Uttll! bit with tlut!'
H~.

''1 'n:l!~~~el tald Wilhelm lw
· remairied lmol~~ed with the

tant ~n thotlsfl he's not In

1

0

the huddle.
"He ltts

stlft!d

llll

top cl

AI'FIDAvrT 1'011

IERVICI

BY PUILICATION
CONSECO FINANCE
IEIIVICING COIIP
llrl GREEN TREE
FINANCIAL
SERVICING

COFtPOIIATION
Plllntlll

vs.

DIANE MILLIRON,
alai.
Delendlnt
THE STATE OF OHIO

...

SUMMIT COUNTY:
Adem L. Groll,
baing ltrtt dullf
eworn, depoe•• 1nd
that he lo the
ettorney
tor
CONSECO FINANCE
SERVICING CORP., In
the above entitled
action
lor
forectoeure, monev
rellal end Judgllllnt,
that. 11rvlca of
eummont cennot bll .
made upon the
delendtnt(l), DIANE
MILLIRON 1nd JOHN
DOE,
Unknown
Spoua.a, II any, ol
DIANE MILLIRON
whoee teat known
tddre.11 Ia: 55 South
Third, Apt. 14,
Middleport,
OH
45710, that the
preeant tddreoe ol
11ld datandanl(o) Ia
unknown and cannot
with reuoneble
diligence
be
tiCirtllnld; That the
lollowlng eflorta were
meillto IICirtaln
the tddreoa of lha
cllllendenl (a):
Silrch of Court

••Y•

Docum1nt1,
Tatophone
Directorial, OPirltor
Aulalenca
end
Certllled
end
Ruldence
Mall
S.nilcl returned.
That lhla Clll It
one
c&gt;f
tho ..
mtnllonad In Section
2703 . 14 ol the
Ftavlaed Code or
Ohio ..
Adem L. Grooa •
00055312
BWOFtN
TO
IEFOIII ME, and
IUbiCrlbld In my
pre-lhl•
d8yol 2002.
Notary Publlo lor the
Slltao!Ohlo
(4) •• 15, 23, 30,2002
(5) 7, 14, 2002

BUSINESS IS GREAT
and we need to add a used car &amp; truck
sales prolesslonatlo handle the volume

WE OFFER
S~LARY

&amp; COMMISSION

MEDICAL INSURANCE I A QAEAT INVENTORY

(740) 592·2497

992·2155
0

No watk-Ins please

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS
SUPERSTORE
93 Columbus Road, Alhens, OH 45701

Public Notice

GOOD WliiJU.Y INCOMI
MolitnO OUt htHII1liniNtl

F... 81Jpp(IH, Pootagol
&amp;to~

,...,..,..lily!

reduce payments up
to 50%, lower interest.
Nonprofit, licensed,
bonded.

titnoine Oppol1tmttyl
Fdr Frtt lnlatmltiOI\,
CiiiTotl FNt:
t -ii00-3!7•1t 70
(2.t hro,)

OaHWllltl said it'i

.doW!'

special seroice
to all our
customers.

IN THE COUFtT OF

CAll Nc:l. 01CII1st

Chuck or Jerry at

ttot u lfWllhelm~ eouftibuliotu
1itt the plllt hAw been futg!!ttc!ll.

.Aib!r till, he won the F,~li!eason
IIWUd ail the auekeyet best line- •
-baek.=r after lltilih!ng third un
,die teaiJlln taddei with 63;
: "~plAyed a lot: of football
tut w ~ year:' 0aftt01116 lAid.
"1-Je'l very ltWOlved In our
.:1lftHiinlJI. He't a veiy teR!bml
pbylir. f'm hoping he lwn\ !ott
1gtOund. just Uke .verybody.
dtm~ thinp thac p~ ttet'd
to lmplove onllld lte~ 1101 abh!
tv ~ on ·thllll! lhlnll' right

"EXTRA"

OHIO

WE REQUIRE

. M

I

The
Daily Sentinel
provides

CO"I'ON ttL1111
111101 COUNTY,

·

CLEAN, HONEST SELF STARTERS, NO
EXPERIENCE NECESS~RY, COMPLETE
TRAINING PROGRAM
FOR A CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW, CONT~CT

8prl1~
·'
W . elm worries thilt he
could~ ·e moved into the baek·

.

dlt-•
w..tIouth
111
!Ht;
th.nn
4a-114deDI"HH w..t
UO IMI; tliel- w..t
111 teet; thence
8ou1h UO 1Mt to the
piiH ol beginning,
oontllnlng
l .tt
IC-, m- or .....
hoepllng
end
Nllrvlng thefetrom,
1 certeln parcel
containing :57 of en
ICNI In the North Plrt
thereol, which waa
conveyW to Manning
D. Wlllltw, by deed
MANAGEMENT. THE cllotld June 1, 1152,
PERMIT AREA IS rel1lrllld to which ' t
LOCATED IN MEIGS hereby made, The
COUNTY, SALISBURY lo~~tolng bei!IS ,_rt
TWP., LOTS 312, 315 of lht reel eoteta
I 311 (T·t·N; R·t3· conveyed by deed
W),
ON
THE recorded In Deod
PIIOPEIITIES OF look 114, P8ge 805
WATEIIL'OO COAL end Died Book 13,
CO., INC., AND Page 131 ol the
CHESAPEAKE &amp; Malgo County I&gt;Hd
OHIO RAILWAY CO. Reconlt.
AND
J.• W ,
The Petitioner
COUGHENOUR; THE further lillgll t~8l
PERMIT CONTAINS by re•oon ol deleutt
12.8 ACRES AN,D IS oflhl Delwncllonl(a) In
LOCATED ON T~E the payment ol 1
CHESHIRE 7·112 promtuory nota,
MINUTE
USGS according to Ita
QUADRANGLE MAP, tenor, the cor\dlttono
APPIIOX. t.3 MILES ol • concurrent
NORTHEAST OF mortgage dlldglven
CHESHIRE. THE to
11cure
the
RENEWAL
payment of aeld nota
APPLICATION WILL tnd conveying the
ALLOW WATERLOO premloao deacrlbld,
Co •L co tNC TO have bean broken,
CONTINU'E
THE and the 11ma haa
MINING OPERATIONS blcomt lblolull.
D·Oiti•FOR UP TO
The Pellltoner
FIVE YEARS PAST praya the! the
THE EXPIRATION Detendanl(l) named
DATE OF AUGUST above be required to
24, 2002. THE en1wer and 111 up
APPLICATION IS ON their lntareet In aold
FILE AT THE MEIGS rut 111111 or be
COUNTY
lorever barred from
RECORDER'S
llllrllng the 11m1,
OFFICE,
MEIGS lor lor•ctoeure of
COUNTY
oald mortgage, the
COURTHOUSE,
merehalllng ol 1ny
'POMEROY,
OHIO Ilene, and lha aala of
45711. • WRITTEN aald real aet8ta, end
COMMENTS
OR the proc..da ol 11td
REQUESTS FOil AN fila applied to the
INFORMAL
pay man I
of
CONFERENCE MAY Pltlllo111r'1 Ctetm In
IE SENT TO THE DIV. the proper order of
OF
MINERAL . Ill priority, lnd lor
RESOURCES
ouoh other· and
MANAGEMENT, 1855 further relief . 11 II
FOUNTAIN SQUARE Juolendaqullebta.
COURT, BLDG. H·3,
THE
COLUMBUS,
OH DEFENDANT(&amp;)
43224
WITHIN NAMED ABOVE ARE
THIRTY DAYS OF REQUIRED
TO
THI LAST DATE OF ANSWER · ON OR
PUBLICATION
OF I!FOFtl THE 11 DAY
THIS NOTICE.
OF JUNE, 2002.
IY: REIMER lo
(4) 15, 23, 2002
LOIIIEII CO., L.P.A.
21c
CONSECO FINANCE
. . . - - - - - - - . SERVICING CORP.
ADAM L. GIIOBS,
Attorney 11 Lew .
Attorney lor Pletnllll•
Pallllonar
P.O.IoxH8
Twtntburg, OH 44017
(330) 425-420t

Adlrertlllln·ll· Thll

t' not

rwpon1lble

oonltlnl: ...... fMI " "

DIANE MILLIRON
and JOHN DOE,
Unknown lpou11, t I
eny,
ol
DIANE
MILLIRON WhOII 1111 '
plica ol realdlnce 11
known aa 55 Iouth
Third, Apt. 14,
Middleport,
OH
45780, but who••
preoanl ptaoa of
r•tldence
11
unknown wilt take •
notloa that on
November a, 2001 o
2:10 p.m., CONIICO
FINANCE SERVICING
CORP., lka GREEN
TIIEI! FINANCIAL
81RVICING
COFtPOIIATION !lied
Ill Compllllnt In Cell
No. 01.CY·111 In lhl
Court ol Common
Pllll MeiDl County,
Ohio lllllgfngthat the
Delendlnl(l), DIANE
MILLIRON end JOHN
DOE,
Unknown
Spouae, II 1ny, o't
DIANE MILLIRON
hiW or cllltm to have
an tnta- In the rea~
aatale d•ocrlbed
belOw:
lltuated In the
Town I hlp
of
llllllbury, County of
Melga and State of
Ohio: lllng In
lallobury Tawnahlp
end • pert ot FI'IICIIon
2, Town 2, Flange 13
of
the
Ohio
ComJ1111y'e Purche..
end bllgtnnlnt 101
1111 Nor1h ol the
louthwellt corner c&gt;l
Fraction 2; thence
. . .t tUI fll1;
thence North U
degr.. o Will 580
- ; l!J"- North 40

Dwight Icenhower as ...

ELVIS! II
Friday, April 26, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs Middle School
Auditorium
. Admission $5.00
Advance tickets available trom any
Pomeroy Elementary FIHh Grade
Student or al Pomeroy Elementary.
All pr.,_o wiR go loword lt\0 Pomoroy
Elomenl.ory Flf1h Gtade Spring Flold Trip.

2 Avg.

Rooms Cleaned
$29.99 ea. rm.

Captain Steamer Carpet Cleaner

Toll Free1·888·338·7847

33' Diameter
E!druded Aluminum Pool
starting

5995.00
992-5724

WHI Moln SlrHI•

..

�www.mydllllylientlnel.com

..
Tht Dilly Sentinel• Page A I

tEtibune - Sentinel -

In one week With us

REACH OVER .285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Sunset Home
Construction

l\egister
(304) 675-1333

Bryen RHVII
New Home1, Room Addlllona,
Oerege1, Pole Bulldlnge, Roote,
Siding, Decke, Kitchen•, Drywell
&amp; More

h-~llrk

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

Display Ads

Word Ads
DillY Jn•Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mondl'f·Frldl't' for tntertlon
tn Nut Dey 's Peper
ln·Column: 1:00 p.m .
SUI'IdiYI Ptptr

All Ol&amp;play: u Noon ;z
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sundty Dlsplav: 1 :QO
Tl'lursdey ror Sundtyl

FREE.ESTIMATES I

Private Porty Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commerclol Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animo is
Or Garage/Yard Soles • Limit 3 Per Person
Mill To: Ohio \IIIIey Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH ~5631

Includes Free Yard Sale Slgn.llll!
up To 1s words, 3 oavs
~&amp;
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Business Services
TJl tc the PAIN
) Ut ct PAINTING'

~ 0No ~ P\IIIR11141\ti'Mil'¥M tM HIM to . . . NtMt. or IIMII eny .. It My ...... lrt'Ofl fftUit M Np01'11C1 01'1 tM thl dly
- - -....... n
RlpaaaMIII .... no....,. tMn tt. . . . Df tt. . . . . _.. 4 ;t by ... MIOI' Mel only ................. w.
~
or.....- .... I'IJIUIIahmtM~N-ItDatlanorOMII&amp;Ia :ofM&amp;.. att.... :IC:IL Col1101lonwMIMtMettk1tMftm_.....tllltNDn.
' IN ..._. oonftcllftttlt. • Clln'tftt rMrt
AN 1'111 lltMI MVII'U......,.tt
to tht FtctWM ..., ttout1ft1 Alt of 1....
• .,. .... _
Wowtll
oiiiOO ...

•!..:! ....

• St1rt Your Ad&amp; Wltl't A keyword • Include Camplttt
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrev1ttlons
• Includ• Pl'lone Number And Addttll When Needed
• Ad&amp; Sl'lould -Run 7 Cays

I

terti_..., •

rL.------,.1
-.... II"' lfW&gt;W~ lr" -w- Ir· -w- 1 '; r t"
\\'\tll 'q I \ II \ I"

L•·' !lit'

r

I

r

Ohio vat111 Sink II now acc.ptlng applioallono tor lhl
poolllon of Flit CIOrkl Scann!ng Cllfk 11 our OVB Annox In Golllpollo. Appllca·
Ilona should po11111 lho
following quolllloo:
'Oololl Ononlld
'Basic COmputer Sklllo
,
Abilityfill10CIOOUrlllnll
alphlblllzo ond
Wo otter 1
rout '".' pooklgo'r.:udlng ~I·K
rellremanl and cor~~r ld·
voncomont
lnloroslod persons ohould
compltlt 1 lOll appllcaiiOn
Wllloh can bl oDIIInod, ti
any ova locollon. Applloa·
Ilona should bl rtlumect blfort 4130/02.
·
EOE

Iii ' "'

I&lt;

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down

1/.12~

High&amp; Dry

Self-Storage

740·949·2217
Slzea 5'x10'
to 10'x30' ·

I

j

Deulers

loOo St. Rt. 7 So11tli

Coolville, OH 45723

740·667-0363

Hours

Advertise in
this space for
'100 per
· month

rate

55

namt l

JONES' .

Tree Service

• Top • lllmOYGI • Trim
. • Stump &amp;rlndlng

• llucket Truck

No.

r
:

I

i

r

(?.J,=·

c

f

mir·~~·~;;;~;;-,

~-&amp;75·3488

7~.~!'" (t:~~~

( ~) 58-t ol9

HEATING

"One Price.

. COOLINO
AEFAIQEAATION

Anytime,
All the Time."

COMMERCIAL/
AEBIDENTIAL

PlUMBING
ELECTAICAL
APPLIANCES
RESTAUIIANT
EQUIPMENT

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
35537 SL Rt. 7 Norlh • Pomeroy, OH 45720
4-H feed for lombo, hoas. Sleets, chickentond
rabbll1.
'
Seed Po1a1oeo
Onion Sell
Pull Line of Bulk Ourden Seedo
Ponlllzor Speelflcully Doolaned for Oardtn Cropt
New Penlllzer Buaale•
I buulol have been poucrn lolled to meet
Aaronomy Alwcladon St•ndurdo

J,D, CONSTRUCTION

~-

Now Home• &amp; Remodeling
"Speclallzlna In Loa Homoo
&amp; Rubber Rouro"
Oaraa••· Pule Bulldlna•· Concrete
' Ruur• "'Sltlltta
Commorolul &amp; lleoldentlal
~

lill\
11/:o.
Ill Ill
lfl'j
A
IIJ.IIi
(740) tt2·39H7
'ltl'·~
A z..nor &amp; Operator, John Deun T~N · •

lll!!J 'I!!J

LIME.;.

tiUIIQIQrlvy

ftet ~""'f.!

Advertl11

In this
STONE
· Delivered l
.space
lprtld 111.00
per ton 1 to 10
tone, limited
tor
INI 0111 for
dttlhe, Cell:
·•so per
(740) 881·2173
. Or le1ve n1me
month
1nd number

&amp;blaoulte

Cally Lunoh
Speolall

......

-r.

tD Yr. Ports &amp;
L1borW.rronty

SERVICE

!1]!11

Sit.

I

Brylnt Equip,

~ft~ft~~f.t

Oonnoly Orlvt
Plaint, OH
Alta IIJVIng

I

&amp; Cooling

24·HR.

Froo Ettlmllll

lill\

°

1740

HEN0RIX
Heat!~g

"

Local 843·5264
~~~~~;·~ Supplement; Life Insurance;
II
and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Retirement,
&amp; 401K Rollovers;
Major Medical

(740) 742·7037
Lllvt

(740) M7-3311
(800) 853-3110

&amp; Madill

11!!.DQ par tpn
8·10 ton•
limited 1re1 ·

",sc''

"

AIIMI~II

Delivered
&amp; Sprea~

I

750 Eas1 Stale Streel Phone (740)593-667
Alhens, Ohio
Wt 81rvlco

7:00AM • 1:00 PM

ar

r•o

Cusc·IH Parts

'

29870 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 45771

1

Fuclory Aulhorized

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
ESTIMATES

Spout
Free Estimates
949-1405 T~N

..,,

All Makes Trac10r &amp;
Equipment Parts

NewHomaa
Garegea
Complete

Hill's
Self Storage

l

7

ic tl kt \"U'

~

Cllmblr N -. Mull bl
Cepe Cod wilh largo living 7 IOrtl 2 t/2 milts OUI Crab Now Taking. ApplloollonsA
Qur up fo~~ ~
bl 1 d
b •• folio
room, family room ana Crnk Rd. For solo. 38 Will 2 Sl&lt;lroom Town- 11 Slm's
flo Armu
~rd~ra0 .~g oh~:;; '•up 0~ All rtallt- -lllnt kltchln with loll
Ol oablnill (7~)oltle·l377 If no onowor Aportmonll, lnoludts C.moullogo Sloro Ill no~
limo. Valid drlvt11 llconat,
In IIIII nowsppor II
and Cloubll 0'"""· oonlrtl IHve lniiiiQI.
· Wlltr
S.wage, Truh, 11184. 811111111 Hill. liN·
Tranoportallon 1 mull.
oullftOito 1100~~~;~\ 1;"~,h~, b~1j Clllrvltw EIIAIII. Rongif.o $380/Mo., 7~0-«e-oooa. 101 I lnttallallon. No ortdlt
Bllckbum Trn Servlot.. l'llr Hollllntl Aet tl t.. bl
frG!n 110,000 to $25,000. Twin Rivero To- 100 1 Olro required, By Slndy'
(7~1448-2~22
wllloll maliN n lllogalto
ac::'';.~':,.on :'~ For mort lnformollon call
lng applooiiOno for1P • ville, W\1 Poll Offlot:
IICIYinloo •ony
(7~0)387·7at8
o«or
(~)273-15088
1 ·~
IIi B
·
poa~to....O.IImiiiiiOn
or
mo nil·-· fully carpolort, 8
"'""""'
---~ 1 ~
Eallom Local SohGOII, on :OOpm.
I Dr. Hud Sulllldllld apt,Oil ClruDD'I Plano- Tunl\'1. I
"'-·
---~""-·-on
Routo 7 neor Chlltor. All&lt;· Lot tor Sal.. Appiol&lt;, 2 t/2 U111 ·pild 1Of •~•Y
.... I nd Rtpofrl, Prolllomo? old
'"""""""
root OOIOf rtlfGIOn 111
llmlli.lltMut 01 , . j - lng Sl8,000.00. 7'10-885• aoras otHrtd &amp; IMdy for
dll·
Tunld? Call Thl Plano Dr,
Golllpollo Corter Col; oriGin, ., 1ny lnltriiiOn 10 ~~=335~~---- building, grtvol drivoway, ablld E.H.O !~l87He78 7~"'525
(Cor~~reCioiiToHomo
moktonyouoh
Chlthlrtllookl;nowlo.lhl wolor &amp; tloolrlo available, Two Bldroom looatod on lndt~ndlnt Htrblllfo Dis•
Coli Today! 7ol0-448-438 '
,..,.,._ llmhtllon or time buyll Rtllrlng, moving Portor
orot.
Aal&lt;lng Chllllcothl ROid. 1375 por lrlbuiOr Coli For Product Or .
t·800·2t4·~52,
dlsotlmlnotiOn."
In May; willing lo ooll at lt3,8H, Coli (7~)ot~8· month plus ullllllot. Ono Opportunity. (7~)._t-t0811
R:S t90-05·t274B.
1t66,000, wol bllow _ ,1 45t41rom 8-5 01 (7~0)&lt;148· monlh ooourlty doposll rt.
Thlt-pltltlwlllnol
appraloal. Lovt this houH; 3241afior8pm.
qulrod. No ~II. (7~) .. 1·
JET
"
nAN111D
knowln81YID01Pt
lovo 1111 neighborhood,
.
t108
AERATION M~S :
.
To Do
. llllvortiHmonll for Nil Tako a lOOk lnslaolhll tour :'"t'a=:."l:O~: =~~t~
SPACE
R100
opoklrtdc,111NtRw &amp; EAebulltln
5
oolltt whloh It In
bedroom, throe bllh homt Syraoult vlclnlly wtlh utMit•
·
•
on vans, t'
All Makes Lawn Mowors vlalttlon of lhlllw. Our
wllh 11on of oxlroo, u well lot avallaDIO, (740)8~t· ~
FOR RIINI'
. 800•1137 ·'~8 ·
·
and Outdoor Power Equip.
-ore~
u In· ground pool all on t/2 2543
monl RIPIIrtd. Fr11 Pickup
1-n.... lhot oil
ltcludld ocro In Gr11n
t8X80 IIIII, . 100/mo. 7'10- Llrga Crolllr with MlffO!,
Overbrook Rthabllllallon and delivery avalablt Col!
dwolllngo-loodln
Sohoolo. (740)oltle·3tH
.8112·2187.
175 firm,
Pono- TV,
1 p
ConiOr, 333 Page Stroot, Mlkt (7~)oltle·7804
"'~,
F
a. 1 hou
1
c
~====;===~
t
•Hr
Old
G-t
• "' por...
Of ... o
oo n tmp
,
. · - Condh~·
.,.,,
Mlddfopon, Ohio It now ... Cullom BuMd!ng &amp; Rtmod·
ovolloblo on on tqUII
Conley, Rouoh• Ferrell rib
pii~~~;;~=;
$200 firm. (7~)2o46-08t0 '
CIPifng IPPIIoallons tor lhl tllng. Over 18·Yrt ox~rl·
nfty - . .
Ulna, t alory, 3 br. t bl. • 1•
· HOUIES
Melli &amp;IOragolllllldlng ext 1
following poolllon• tua limo onco. Frao oollmoloo.
llchllll goragocoll304-112·
POR RINT
can bl NOn 11 Kll( Hilt
3·11 thlft LPN and plrt•lif!ll Fully lnourtd. For all your
388! or 304-1112·8!_77_.--.
'-_.1 lot (~)e74·08eo
3·t 1 ond 11·7 ohl« LPNS. homo ropolr ntldo. C.ll
,...
t ·3 llorlroorno Foroototld
Anyone lnltrtolld, pluM 7~·tt2·ttt8 or 740·«t·
Homos From ltiiO/Mo., 4% Appuancot: · ~IOOriCI!IIOnld MTD t8 hp Garden Traolo~
llop by our lronl ofllco ond 85. t4
HoMEs .
Down 110 V..ro ., • I% Wolhoro, Dry41ro, llongoo, llllggl I Strallon twin t ~
fill oulan applloallon or qonPOR SAL£
APFI. ~or Llsllngs, 800·:it,. RalrlgrtiOro, Up To WI Dayo hp, o4f' cui, 3 yro Old, very
llot Krilllo Madden, Sllfl GIOrQH Ponablo Slwmlll,
·
•
Cluora..-1 We Sill New DO!III oondllloft, ooklna
3313 Etlt. t 708
O.velopmont al (740) UU2· doni haul 1011r logo 1o lht ·
1.21110 Mo11110 Homo •""
·
'
MIYIIO ·Appllonoos, Frtneh MOO. 740-t82.0757
6472 E.O.E.
m!fl Jull coil ~·515·t D57. 2· Dtdroom, large · gorogo,
..~~·~2~1o. ltiOC). Citan · 2Dr. Wothtr/Dryer City Maylag, 7&lt;10·4oi&amp;·77U5: Now 3 IOn Conlrtl Air Con·
4
tiiiOhld carport, book pi•
"' ~ ~
hGOiwP RoforonotiiO-• .....;;_..;_;;__ _ _..;.
Port limo poslllon lo oom· Llwn Core
llo, central ofr, on largo lovol
p'111
R dlllonor wlln 7t 000 ITU
75 5·•·
82 Ta C h nd B
pllll mollllo Insurance ox· Commorotal &amp; rosldonllal, II• 101 enown by oppolnlmom t878 14x70 Mobllo Home, h. No
' (~l8 ' t
cll~or. o;:r ~ondlll~~ c:ti ~~;~-· ltt60. (740)2111•
oms, blOOd &amp; urino colloo· Plnsld, lnturld, rtooontblo oni1, (7~)1182·tt88
Tolal .Eioolrlc, (740)2118- . t4x70 2 br. trollor, 1275.00 (7~)«t-oe28
.
.
•
liOns In Mason Co.Wv I roles, froo tsllmallt upon
·
8760 loavo mtiiiQI.
Pull lypo Low loy 3 oil,
1 mon. + dep, &amp; ulll. In Hort·
Molgo Co OH .. Mull have villi ~-578·~
3br. Home largo kllohon, llv·
lora wv ~-182·11110.
For Sale: Raoondlllonod EloOiriC lraktll, 20oa mod•
good phltbolomv 11&lt;1111, to
lng room, DR, Conlrtl Air, til4 t4x70 Sunenlno mowaenert, drytrt and
11. can bl 111n a1 1&lt;11(
rtoumo lo 304-78!·t864 or t:"wn Clro
Eltolrlo lum. 2tt 71h &amp;trill bllt homo on I tOOxiiO ~. 2 &amp; 3 Sl&lt;lroom Mobile troloro. Thompsono A • HIIIIOI. (~)874-08eo
r
moll lo poroonnlll P 0 Box ooklng for quollty work? Now Hoven $38 8011 groll OOndhlon, wllh aollll· Homoo. Rtforoncao and anct. 3407 Jookson ,..
McCiuro•o Aoo1ouron1 now 645 Dunbar W\125084.
Coli ue. LOoldng for sloppy (~)882·3772 or t~i882; anoooond ou~lldlng. ?40- Dopooll R-ulrld . . Fllvor nuo, (~) 57 a. 7388 .
NIW AND UIID ITUL I
h!nng all 3 locollons, full or
work? C.ll lhl o1hlr guys. 3752
002.()082 Mnlng, 740-002· v 1
·•
s
1 •··8
. . . . pon·llmo, pkll&lt; u~ ool)lloa· Part·llmt LPN noedld tor Llotnold 1nd lnourld. Rlv·
2888 doytlmt.
a lOy
ChOOI Dlslrlcl.
IH ,_,.,, PI~ Rlblr
7
7
Blrddog Found Around Now lion aiiOOollon &amp; nng back ICFIMR group homo. Coli or Cllloo Llwn C.ro. 7~· 4 uold homu tali. Musl 11185 Cl
Mobf H
( 40)38 -oe32
=t~=~:":~ar:! : ~.';"::,!~· :;"~~o~'\l'.,"'i
Hovon W\1 ( ~)388-1)8
bolwoon
9:30am
&amp; (740)oltle·4814 for mort In· 1182·t538
-1 (740)448·3570.
70 31~
II omo 2 bedroom mobllt homo for 11••. Woohoro, Dryars, For Drolno, Drt~wous
• ·
tO:OOam
l~x Rlmodlllld,
, -room,lt4,000.
Rtotnl· ron't no palo, (740)982 • Rangos,
~
•• ' Mtt'
urda
' Mondly thru 811· formallon.
Rogoro Llwn Slrvlcl. Will Bttullful 3 br., 2 t/2 bllh, 1y
ond Rtfrlgorelors, Walkways. L&amp;L Sorap
8888
Found: Cash !n St. P01oro
y.
Poroon 10 hllp older lid'; In do lawn work, t~mmlng, full bluma(ll, · 2 car go. (740)«8·t087
Some ltart al IH. Sl&lt;lggs' 111 Opon Monday, T-y,
Eplocopal Church Parking · URGENTLY
NEEDED Syracuso w!lh Shopping, polnllng, .planllng In Mooon rago, gaa fireplace, oonfral
2Dr. Mobile Homo rlghl Appllanets, 78 Vlno St., Wldntldoy l Fndly, Sam·
Lol during BlOOd dr!vo plooma donora aom $60 • Choroo, Modo, and cooking. County orn. (304)675-eO&amp;G tic, nowly romOOtlld, new CounlrY homll. ntot loll, ocroos Now Hlvtn Grado (7~)oltle·73H
4:30pm. Cloold Thurodly,
Thuroday,
April
18. 510 _, wook' fo 2 1 Groal OJliiOMunlly for nghl
range 6 rofrlgoralor lily, locolld on Rl 33 biiWOon Soh001 e200 d
II .300
Saturday
l
Sunday
(7~)&lt;148...547
nourl;..ookl• Call' BloO(Lif3 ~roon. (330)283·12._
lprlng ltvlnos
s!ll on 4.4t 1 aros, IOOalld Pomoroy/Aihons. Coli 740·
·
· opoo
· Mollohan Car~l, 202 Clark (7~)«&amp;-7300
.
·
PI
s ,.
•
Home remodeling and ro· tn Middleport $160 ooo 992·2t87 for dlllllo.
monlh.
Rtferoncto. Chl~l ROid, Portor, Ohio. ~~_;_:.;;;;~~~7
Mioslng: Schnauzer on aama trvlco, 740-5112· Reg!lllrllll NurH- Fun llmt polro, roofing, chain link Kent AmNn RHIIy 5 t 4:272 : ·
(304)882·tt0
(740)448-7444 t-177-13C· Pool Porlo for Solo after rt·
58 51
Mldlcallon.
Clay
Chapell
·
for
local
homl
haolln
ogon·
fonco,cuoiOm
wood
dtcks
&amp;
,
agonl
Shonnon
Fro·
Jull
galling
sllrtad?
1
II
Furnished
ono
Dodroom
8t6a,
Froo Etttmatoa, Easy movol. Slide, Diving Boord; ·
0287
1
Buml Run Road Aroo. Rw· Nlld ·
t
cy. Fun btnalll pocktgo In· fonooo, lnouronoo ropolro. 11 , 14-«0 OGOt
lime hOI'nlbu1tFI? No Crtd· IIIOiric hHI pump washer financing, to da11 Hme aa · Vacuum, Pool Pump, Ll~'
5 11111 0 1111 Avon. eluding hoallh and dtrolo! In· Chook our prloo before y,
ward. (740i258·13t8 or
)448-~
·
·
II? Cal (7~)448 3870 for &amp; dryer, no pllt, rtfortnooo cosh. Vlstl Matter C.rd. ors, Lld~or a Raile, tiO~
(7~)258·11182.
ouroneo, 401 k, and flral =uy. Fru Eollmoloo
more lnformollon
required, u~en &amp; Wllltr pold, Drfv• •· WHit HVI alot.
(740)oltle•Mt
b
Now Accopllng Pool Appl!· year vocallon. M·F 8:00·
75·3733
·
For lift hOuH In Now H• New 2002 14 wt•o onl• ront 1300Jiuo do-'1 &amp;
CIIK&gt;no for Admlgon COn· 4.30 doys. Pltooo oonloct
von -~-~~ 3 br tbl e7•• d
ndv
t'
,....
Whllt Whirlpool, Rolrigolo· PooiiO dick llddor for pool
YAJU&gt;SI.u:
ceooiOn M n
'
Pelt Sommer, t·800·~8t· Top lo Bottom Claonlng
'r.,-~
,
"
••'
own •
ony oltolrlc, (7 )t82-1882
tor, Frosl ~roo, 1100. AI· · or boll dock. foiO, phonJ
1
:=;;::~::;;:~ L!ftgua~s ror·t~.,;.~ 8334 10 oohtdulllnllrviiW Strvict, Profooolonll, rtol· l .27 ...... a dtckt 304- lt5t.42/monlh. 0111 1&lt;1 ..
AI'AKrMII'NI5
mond Whirlpool Eltctrlc (7~)oltle·23t8.
Munlc!pol Pool. ApplloaiiOnl or lind rooumo 10 P.O 1187 dtnllal, oHict oloonlng el 882·3585
no, 7~·388-757t
Stovt, e75. Almond Will· ::--===~~'":'C":
ii YARDSAumay bl picked up ollht Gal!lpol!o,Ohto48!31
(f~)tl~~~"!,;blo
Houu &amp; t4x70 Tralltr on Now .Doubllwtdo on t •!
PORRI!Nr
lnghOusoFrollrrHRofng· Soaro oloolronlc portable
I'Oila!RoYIMmoLE Munlolpol Bulkflng,% Aoc·
t
or
·tO+
aorao
Ollila
County.
acros.(7~)448-3314.
,
ond
a~rt···
~~·
~::'hi..\! ::.hl,:.~ · ~.:".!:.'·am~. ,Zo.:~
bl•room
131
2
Lw-liiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii:.,J
realion Doporlmonl, 518 AooplriiOrY Thtrllplot. Fuf!
Ownor will flnonoo w/ down
•
v
,...
· ••
·"'
~
~
,
Socond Avo., Galllpollo, Tlmo Poolllon. Ohio Ll· Wll brulh hog $3000 I hr poymonl &amp; Slgnod oontroct. No CrodiV llfd Crodlll til monll, fum-and unfur• each. Clll ohor 8pm , 11822
.
;
conoid RRTI CAT Mon· Dill ~-175·t?54 .
(7~)820...229 afllr 4:30pm Tlmt Homo buyort/ FAS nllhld, IIOUrll)l ~~ ro· (7~)448-11088
Shower Sliding. Olou
Mlddltport-Pomaroy's 51h OH. Ctrllllcollonund ·annuol 8·mlll long Vtllow ~rmlll art roqulrtd - .. day·
Friday
e·ooam·
.
Loont/ Govemmonl FHA qulrld, no pllt, 140.882·
Dooro, Flto eo lnoh Ballo
Flag Yard Solo. Moy 3 &amp; 4. , _...ry. O.adllno lor ,t.p. B:OOpm. Compftllfvo' WIQI, Will do bobyolnlng In my Houu for ~~~ In .Camp Loano . Avallobla. &lt;;all 22t8. .
. .
AMlQUU
Tub, Ul. Call (30&lt;1)488•
LooiC for lht yellow fO!gol pllolllono will bo April 30, Rlllromem Plan, Htallh ln· homo. Atly ohl~. Corllflld, Conley llouohl Ftrro!l Dr. (740)448-32t8.
tll87 1Ill 5
suraneo. Contact: ·sow- 15 .YUrt txptrlonco, 5 mJ.
. Over tO Ulld homol rlcld t llldroOm In Crown Cliy,
r pm
Col tor • mop ol IOCIIIonl 2002.
7
2
2
4055
Ohio Valley a.nk 1o now 10• m•n'o Homocalpoll'OH''
hospital. Lind homo . pookagos. ollrtlng 11 1485. c.tr·Hor· UIIO/mo.
Buy or ooll. Rlvortno AnU· llmlil 2 v.fiHI
1 uiRIIy lrolltr.
poplfng applloaiiOno for lhl 51 ·• 0811 1•
~t.
Lind/- Lind Improve· Old, 7~·385·11048,
t Sl&lt;lroom In Rio Grenell, t qUfl, 1124 Ealt Main on Now oearo 78 lnoh
poolllon ct Toller al our (740l448-7283
•
Will do Lawn mowing, monll In one low ~ymonl.
DIOOk from colloge. O'at, SA t24 E. ,Pomlrov. 740· It eo. (~)0 1·23t5
•
Polnl Plllllnl Office. App!l· RN HOUSE MANAGER
pointing, and olhar odd (obi Loon offlcort on hsnd 7 Want I new home? Own Eltolrlc, Woltr &amp; lrloh plld. 1182·2152e. Ruu Moore, llmlil Enttrtalhmonl Conlon
teo Floe Mort.
Clnll tllould PQIHtllha Ohio liconold reglllorllll cal ~·773-6034, uk for doyo I Willi. (7~)448· ~~:~=:•doiCtll 1371/mo. 1200 dopoelt. OWflll.
lt5. CII(304)488-t1187 ·ot•
Thurtda ·Sunde ~;"r~ fotlowl~ qualllllol:
nuroo for 100 bed Ruoty.
3083
homo IOCityt Tr.J'1::!: (7~)06t-8405
But't Slltollblos on tho"T" ltr flpm
,
mlltt ~on sralt A&lt;iull
, DeiiN Orllnilcl · skllll&lt;f nuro!ng focll!ly In Will prtuurt W1111 houooo, Now houto- tlnonclng ovoll· como
t llldroom Upltolro Aport• In Middlof)Orl, Oollt, (IIUI· Supor Nlnltndo wllh tO
teo (7~,._1-8833
Ablllly lo compult
"-rev. Ohio for 7-3111111. lrolloro and dooki Coli -10 quallllld bUVtro. 0%
men~ 720 Sloond A -. wore, Allddln monllle, and gomoo, HCJ, Exolllonl eon.
·
nurrOtrl
Faclllly hU • good ou~ «t ...a3e Uk for
O&lt; down. 1800 oq ·«. 2 112 Wt hsvo approxlmsltfy to Off ~lrolt Porl&lt;lng. Wlllr. moro. (740)002-0208
~Ilion, 0111 (30&lt;1)468·tt87
WAN111D
•Ablllly 10 work undtr hlolory and to -..g a aiel !Hve 1111111110•
blll1, 3 Bedrooms, ouo10m uHCI homos for under sowor,
Traoh
Paid. .
oflor 5pm
BliY
prosouro
lid, knowlodgotblt nuroo
cak trim &amp; cablntro 1111 U,OOO, 0111 t·~·3238 f3001mo, e300 dlpotll. Day
::::7.::7-::-~~~10
'SiolcCorr1&gt;ullrSII~o willloxporlonct In handling
flropfaco, llrga lcllcl1t'nlllln- torirlfo.
·
(740m~·:2t8, Evonlng
UHCI Cloll Clubl. C.llofiiJ
'Exoalfonl Communlclllon long ltrmcart ltiUII.I-·
Ina, 2 112 ctr ~go on 1
(7~
tOt
4pm (740)&lt;148.()4t7
Abooluto Top Dolllr. u.s.
Sklllo
ClndldAIH ShOUld..,. rt:
lkliiNmli
t/2 acroo. 111000. Porter
Jluiuo£sll .
Sllvor, Qofd Coins. Proot· wo oiler a gonorouo bone- ply 10: Roclclprlngs Rtnabl~
OPPoRruNrrv ·oroo. (7~)«8-45t 41111 11pm
AND Jlun.DINcs
t 5 Coun Stroot Vtry nk:o
WllnU1 Bathroom \lanlly I
HIO,
Dlamondo, Gold flllpocl&lt;tgolncludlng401-K IIAIIon Conler, 3875911ook·
or(740)oltle·3245ahsrllpm ~
• lportmtnl, 2 BR, t t/2 (4) 42' coiling fono wllh MldlclnoC.blntr, $25. Ctlf
1
2
ond cornr eelINOTICII
NIWfV R . . - 3 BR, 2 Commsrclol Building tor
:
: 1•
(30&lt;1)458-t tv7ohsr 8pm •
ond Avonuoo, Golllpollt. 7ol0- lnltrtllld . ~roont II\Ould Olrtolor Of Sllff Dlvalop- OHIO VAUEY PUBLISH• BA Llrgo Lhlng Aoom, Din- ~""1nf"" ~~bf~rtd:"' Slroll Parking. Ovtrlookt glue, $60 oooh. (7~)448· WalnU1 Gun Colllntr. Holds
448-284.2.
compltlo Job applloaiiOn mont 7~·m.e6011. Ellltf&gt; INQ CO. rteommsndt lhll fng Room, Llrgo Wllk·ln
or •;:,~ u ng. Par1&lt; and R~ No Pitt oae3
8 gu.,.. Locke for MOUrfl\l.
~:.;;;;~.,.-.,...--:--- whlcl1 con1 bo oblolnld oi dloaro Htallh SOrvlcos, Inc. you do buslnou w11t1 psop1o C!oltll. Now 001&lt; Coblntro
..., on .._r 81rill. tsefllmo, ptut ulllllloo, .,:
150. Coil (~)ot66·t1187 ol·
Aaclno sn. -1800 por any 0\/B loclllon. Applloa· loan Equll ()pportunlly Em- you koow, end NOT 1o lind In Kltohon. Fufl l ! a - Clfl ( 7~)2-t
potll and
rtftronott. Above ground pool, 24' :"';..!pm::r::~:-~~-:-ahsro, need up 10 too llonllhOUdl bl rotumocl.,.. ployer . lhol Enoourogoo money lhrouglh tho mall until wllh one car gorogo. t t/2 Offlot bulfdf 1 Mlddt (7~)of45.4928 ·
rotnl. CaM 740-m·258! Wlllltlno ~: 314 200
- . . . (7~)m•7M
foro 4130/Q2.
Wor1&lt;ploct Dfvorolly, MIF you hlvo lnvtlllgotllll lhl ..,... (74012&lt;16-11004
..... , 7 ~. 1 ~1
ahor 8 pm.
PSI S2t oo Ptr tOO· t' 200
ON
elf""""
,....
3Aportmanl.
""'"'' &amp;Newly
botlh. Dacorot·
Uptllfro AIR CONDITIONERS. Con· PSI e3~• ·00 por tOO;
'
·
"'"
..,.
and
IWO
oonftr""""
roomt,
All
EOE
I 11'1 I •'\ il
I
T
a
f
o
m·o
r
k
a
1
oro
ATIT·
MOl
Paypnono
ft.
740-m·24H
ld,
No
Pitt,
Wolor
plld,
lrlllnd
Window.
(740)448Filllngl
I II\ II I '
iftir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Ohio
wonlld .. Wor1&lt;
from Roulee Prfmo Loa's Oreol Nloa ~Lovll homo. ~
Downtown
Gafllpollt. 83081nd t.IOC).28t-oll08, liON
IHTIJIPttD 1f1uo WAM'FJ&gt;
Vlllil)' Bank II now OC• Jotorno .. Holp ut clfor psoplo llolum ·. Fr•
niMonbr. t bo., Polnl
(7~)388-1100
~ .,..._
...._m _,.
•·~-. II _...,.,
·~-. ~.
t ._.
:"
ctpllng appllolllono for 1100 dltcounll on lhlfr progrom
h lnlo· acio•110(). 2·3
FPlllelnl.
- ,_,,.
~34
70
24
poolllon of Trull Cltr1&lt; !n our Compultr, Prlnlor, 10,.:
r. ·
yord wllh now dock t cor • - •
101 Avo. t lA, ( )875-2801
'• 537.f828
.
Gallpotla Offloo. Appllctnto pllor)t and lnler nt1 Growing Buolnooo Nolde gorogo.
Now
- · t 1o1 lor rtnl ~·K 1211/mo=o Uti doni- ""'•~ ~--· t •
·
- l o a compultr? Elm IIIOufd tho follow· requlrocLMuot bl very po- Holpf Work from homo. (304)075-6073
Jotorno Park. (304)i74.aa50 ago • · (7~)118 453t, ~j.,~;-'~ 1, tf2o~
f480.ttl500 mon1111y part· lngqullllilt: .
flle .. ond have gonulno Moii-IE-Comonenlo Up P.orllofly home
(~
t,
Dro111r1, e20 tnd e30. " - - •
limo or 12000-t450o tutl- ,
'Dollll Orlonild .
..,._. for olhtrl, 159.00 lo 1882+ PT. 11000. a Sl&lt;lroom t 81111 Fuli 10 Grill luldlna IIIII Ill IIAUT.,UL
A•AIIT• (304)111-379
~
•
limo. www..,.,.,....,oom
EOICIIItrll """""""' oklllo ~ rtqUirod 10 rogilltr ~ FT. Frtl boo!&lt;• Largo U '
. lola
r,
~1111111
1.5(1().885.0180
'Excollon1Ttltpllono8kits phone 10 lhlllll Cllfsaro lot.
1·80CJ.428.0it8. l&lt;f2ctrOartQO
CtmpFfrowoodellol&lt;.ld,CIII wlncloW.,Nnioto-=.cliudO
on 'Dr HO.ooo ' (740).1.4t• (MIIge Ctv) j~ U tO II TATII. 82 w .· Drfvt T l D l+idroullot, Cl1eoilr, Wlntort, RIO Giandl, . OH
'Exotlltnt Cclmmunlclllon CI'III'Qid to ue ..DtpOolt ,. www.NtwFUiwi4U.oom
A\IONI Aff ArHII To 8uv or
SkillS
funded afllr 5 - . I f 1ft.
y
04al .,
' .
Acrtl Prfciod ~urn'
frcm 1tf7 10 1313, WIIIIO OH, 74CJ.tll.4314
0111 7'10-245-5t2t .
w
.
Shfrlty Spom, :104- . 'Af&gt;ltllyiO-1er111ort caU 1·800·720-~~
1oueooo~-1 --•- ~-·
..,..,48.
numbtrt
15088 lilt. avo ..... .,.,.
"'....
81)11 "' ~.......!.. 7
~.....
......._. .... 7ol0- C&lt;lmj)IIW Dtolc wllh Chair· .
•
*1\biNtyiO-..lnd l)llont ...-or 0111
2000, , _ a1 et~.eoo. - - · ·
.......
lqual Houllng 88 lnohlt tono. Drawers
~ ;
~
304-t78-7077 U1c lor
(7...,._t.ttt 110n1 111m 11ft IU IMn. Opjlorlun!ty.
Loot&lt;. ttOO. Ctll (~)488. 1,~--ti:;;;_;;:;;_.,J.
• · - - a.
Wt clftr a
Jt&gt;iNW ~·
•nldnollll-llllt-2·~ would
, _ good IIIMitlrlg ~umlohecl 3 _ . . &amp; both tiiG7- 8pm
..~..J.
- - •· -rtouo . lnqulrM - ·, , _
••t ~
.... tiOO"""' _... ~~No I'
• 11
AKC ~ P 41 11101'
Dnly (740)388-1781
·-. • .....
- ~
Drtok I+III/IIUdy Uf. - ..- .
-··
.... " '
Elootrlo Hotplol lied, I!Jcotl. • Old 0111 afllr'
'"""' .. ~ lnd - e e l 01'1 · - 2·tlf'lltll' -:JIOol.t7l.tiH
. '
dlpOIII
required. ltnl
for w...........- ·-- w::!:::'
Compullrt/lnlemtl IJMrl VII-~
Woufd1QU~IOwort&lt;MonC/' Goo
' •t
'
(7~)448'11tt
- -·
Phone "*ii~~;,·M
mc/PT, fll!tr- ·tl1outd
1\IIIHIO DOWN
Qr-.. IIYing. t and 1 (740)141 DtDt
,........
000 1'1111 1 :
F
·
·
Lfi'PNCIIIor, -.;10 roP/Thlfp In- IOCIALIICUIIITYIIIIf
Ml Vtrnon Avo-- of 1loull 7 l ~s~fOOr!l..,._ll VII- ~-- AKCCofllopupa, lmoe. olo
I2M : : '
~~~ dvlduil mull bl .,.,,;.,, NO,.~ we Wlnf nuo. c.it too4lt7•2140 OtPIIo ~~· tt4,too, fiOt Menqr lnd Aharsidt ~":'~.~!! ..;..,h a - . . M &amp; ~. S2IO 11.;
,.__.........,_...,.
llont tllould 001 ,., 1111 1 ""' willing to loam, lllf modvllt·
t.-.ee2·3345
""'"'doled tl&lt;OIIItnl
ng lilt, APII!mtnll In llkldllp~n.
740-tll aeao
AKC moll OI'HI'n """'·· 8
·~·-·
'
,... ad ttuo1 ~ _,. oot_...
• (N7)1M 02N
~-127H345. Ctlf 7ol0mo. •aoo: AKC mslo m
FIAI T1mo AN lor ~ : " "
~ orMed. - r..i. ,.,_.
J:.,room..:c,
JO woaclld porllol ttl•5084. lqual Houalng ~... Trt01, wllh the pur. tlloflft, tmo, 28fbl, tt 50;
ICI'IMA Q1r0UP hOrnt. Cell lion. Appflcalfont snoutd bo tatiOn. If fnlerllll&lt;l, Clfl
, Aoom, 2 C.r OIJ!f, I 10! ~ 114 Ill mil from ~
ohul of 21 -..., pine (7~)108-1011
llt4 for _ . fn. roturned btlort 4130/02,
g"J'ty
HoultoiMnlng.
· OIOfllll lulldfngo, IW.ul Ohio ~ Ill 1 (140)112· Modtm t lltdroom Apart- ~
~)2~ i l'leg.
Dolm~iiPioPiilol
AI&lt;"
.
EOE
l288-tt3t
Prtoo. (7~,.....,..
eetO
•
'
rtlfnl, (7~)440380
set4
t1110. t304)137.mo;
DI!8!L MECHANIC
~
011 &amp; Qu/Conalruollon
Moonlight ESCOrts. · Full Company oooko full limo
"rvlct mete and ttmalees· Mochanlc for Dluel &amp; Hv·
cons and doncora. Prompt draullc Equipment Mual bl
lnd l'rofelllonol and Conti· able lo lroubll shool probdonllal. Wo olso do Blnh· lema, ~rtonn rnojor ropatro.
dey, Pnvolo ond 81chllor and gonorol malnltnonco.
Ponloo.
8pm·
Sam. Mull bo willing 10 rtiOCIII
(740)388·17118
10 lho Roont County arta
- - - - ·_ _ _ OUIIIflld ond tM~rlonold·
-Why wall? Slart mtollng lndl~duolo ohould oand m,
Ohio olngllo lonlghl, coli toll · oumo 10: PO Box 7~. Min·
froo 1·800·788o2823 , oXI ora1Wolls, W\12e1150.
1821 .
'
oomtnoa now laking oppll·
ANNol!NCil'di'.NTS collono tor monagomon1
,
and oato dnvtll, Galllpolla
. and Pomeroylocallono only.
Art you llrld ot 1ncoo hor· Apply In poroon.
ogng pnont calls? Don'l Ex~rioncld Fork llfi Opora·
know wlltro 10 tum? Call &amp; lor. COL 1 plus. Wtldlng &amp;
lind oul your opllon.o, Bron· Fabr!collon
Experlonco.
- Ctrllan &amp; AISOCiallo, I· Rtforoneto/Ex~rtonco rl•
aaa.ei0-2874.
qulrld.
(304)675·4005
Loavo
mosoa~
wllh onort
C·1 Bttr Corry Oul ~rmll dooonpllon ol quollfloollons.
lor oolt, Chaoltr Townlhlp, Local Aru.
Molgi Counly, Hnd ltlloro
·
of lnltrool 10: Thl Dally Hllp wanlld coring for lht
Slnllnol, PO Box 72S·20, tldoriy, Darat Group Jotorno,
Pomeroy, Ohio ol&amp;76t.
now PlYing minimum wago,
now shlfll: 7om·3pm, 7am·
Make Earth Day tvlry doyl 5pm, 3pm· II pm, t t pm·
·Donlltlo RoUHindullrtoo. 7am, call 740·1182·15023.
Sloroo In Alhlno ond Albl·
.
ny. 1·800-837-7800
Halp Womld· ..~rionel&lt;f
www.rouoolnduolrloo.org
carponltro and carponlora
helporo. Roqulromonlo· val·
id ~river's 11oon11, 10011,
GJVFAWAV
lransportallon &amp; rtferoncto.
~~-------'· Local work, good ~y.
Chrlollan's Conllrucllon,
~iVu~olyo Toar Down &amp; 1~3 Easltm Avo., Galllpo·
~
In Polnl Ploount. llo. Otflco houro 8·5 Mon.·
-=~:::--, Fri . (740)448·4!14

740-742-3411

Hom1

POI'IIti'O!I fiiOin
81080 2171

fufi'V Thursday

a SUndeu
Doort Open 4:30
. Early blrdlltlrt
&amp;:3D

Progrenlue top line
Thul'ldlus
Prot~reulue

Coverall on SUntlava

Ron

C

r

I

:.~:: Co!~ill;.,.,~r;:'S:;: ~=~

g,'lgg:57~':'~rla ';:'A"~:

I

'

~~· e:.V:.u~·::.:,~

.

'

.

kilo,!

I

I

*

t~':

!::*'J..::r AMJ/:' ~

tao.ocio

:;o

e.::..-.::s . _.,..
=-

:c'mJ{IOO
aZ;,==.:!:C

0\1';"

=

cwr'

=.

ON

01-. =..,...,':":. ~~=·C:'fu~
~1'.

l;;:!

Krls
Kanleckl

=

Condfllon.- -

( o/('fnon l'j

I Pluklng/pJ,av Areaa,

Independent.

•r...' •·ree
!" IIIMitol
HV•ur l'ort w.....tl.. ~'l'herntoot•t

Sidewalks. Floors
21 y11ra Erptrten01
FrH l!allmlln
(toll frH)

• Vrc•• Ill \'tor l:nnljlrc!IIJII&gt;r
W•rr•nl~ On Hlolret IWnclrlo
•'KI(V, •:N'J'IM.\'H:N• Ill ill F. Jnvcnlury

sn-353·7022 ·

• llonN Vlnon&lt;lnM r\volloblt
l'rktM To Fit Al~l~I_~

•

In 32 days.

1

Driveways, Patios,

I

I Lost 27 lb.

Advertise

100%'
naturai/Guaranceed

In this space

tor

740-992·7036
1

25 per month

I

WILLIAMS
EXCAVATION

: MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

.._..

Llcented I lneured
Hellth Problem•?
Went More Leleure Time?
. Tired of MoWing?
Not A Spring Chlcllen?
LIMITED OPENINGS

.:.:0

:00'1:..

•

r-H_E_R_B_A...L_I_F_E....I
Diltrlbutor

::::.:..CompraVANt

r·

..._

IQ•••llt) Conenlt "'··•

'!/!!'.tl!!J INTll:r.=t.1.

=r:r"~:'::C: ':::

.,...aeee.

=.f':~Lool~t

I '! 11 i I \ I It 1

:t..\!w.:':~

t.!.•-•

I

I II '

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
HI·EMdenc:y Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

(740) 992·1536

·------- -- -

,.

(Syracuae, Ohio)
Bulldozlna,
Trackhoe/Bw:khoe,
land tlearlna. Septlt
tank, dlu:hlna. water

.PLUMBING
405 5th Street
Ntw HIVID, WV

•Relldentlal

11net, Ji te work,
ba~ementllfootcn,

driveways, panda

(ln1ured)
Free E1tlmale1

740-H:Z-3815

'

�•
•

www.mycl!lt(MnUnel.com

Paae A 10 • The O.llv SenUnel

ALLEYOOP
'

PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

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

•

.._

-

• " '' .. •
•••nu

....

....

'

.

·na rand

u

so McCiurl ol

•• ~n • •

~

QJI

UlllgNI

dMply

. .. q

9AKJIH

•••

rnpc-

6 I I I

20 YICiilton
-

O..ler: South
V\llnti'IIIM: Ellt·WHt
IMHil Wttl Nt11i t;eM

22 l.lnlla gael
H

•• a• •• ....

••

·~

==

,

'

R;'

IJI42 -.llln~

tC;

• '' J

• '11

.......

$? .....

·=r··
., .....

J tl.
.Cll.ll
•

.girls g~ouncl Blue Anpls. 81

NIEA Craaaword Pu. . le

81UDGII

....

Pua Pill
Optnl......, • •
Pill

a.-1'11111

S3 llelrlc unit

'

M aecr dl
. S3
S6

pt:ducll

tlilcd.n··, .
~

7 TN*IIIidlf S3 . _
I Slllltll
Wflf

24 India
nalghbor

57-0111

13 ~
11 Bllenco

27 =Hing

M D11g0111 YI'P

11

(wtthcklw)

\What's Inside

111011111011 S3 I'IIIM
:II Lin

• Pool lac.
1D ·DIIteled

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

!_......
.

Ott, Ot4, ••• TttiS J((AIN CfL~ IS
V...-.:
((tAL~Y lJPSfT!
Tttf MUS'CLf Cf~L

-

Tttf filltL
AJ!.l&gt; Ttt'f

GOT

S'C~OLAitf~IP[ .

HUSI-I, LUI&lt;EY !!

I
J

J
J

J
l
'
~~·~~~~~--~~-U

THE BORN LOSER
....

""'l

[ ..liJ:)\ ~~ U~OCR~\~D
f\OW Tf\\~ Ff&gt;..IW~

... .

.

""'l

BE.llE:.IJE:. Mi., ['IJE ~ Tii'!:ilt'-Ko
\0 Tf\E. BE.':&gt;T Of"''(

/'.BIL.ITit::~i

f\N'I'ENE.D, C.I-ll E.F.,.

I
~

i

•
I

'aubl.tlr'tCt

r.l:' guM r, ::-IIIIIU

Sitting third hand,
3D Flit1111t"
DOWN
garQOYIM 42 L1t11t ldil
blrila
24 Comalock 43 ..... you hold Q-j-2 and
31 "I'Mnute" 1 Hound'e
LCMIIal.
44 Phcll 1ft
it's your turn. Yesterkid
t,.n
25 Give oil
44 Slucly herd
32 - W.....,_ 2 ColtOnllll
H arownlall- 47 - lu
day, we learned that if
..._
3 CEO
purple
41 ~
you will be going
34 SlnQif
dig,_
27 ICoolle
51
o.m- 4 -bocilt 28 FHCit.g
HMtly
high, you should put
35 Golf'•5 Point
rnolllle
up the jack; the botDlnltl
ICklltlve
2t "Sieler Act"
3S Long-acllve I DelenM
roln
tom of equal cards.
volceno
org.
st
Warier
However, what hap~~-m-,
pens if you cannot
win the trick, because
partner (or perhaps
second hand) has already played the ace
or king? What would
you do then?
If you think it
beneficial to tell partner about your·honor
sequence, drop the
queen, the top of the
touchers. This guarantees that you have ·
either the queen and
the jack (perhaps with
one or more lower
cards), or a singletol).
Now partner knows
..
~
that he may underlead
CELEBR,ITY CIPHER
at trick two and you
by Lula Campo•
.
will win the trick eiCtltbrlly Cipher e&gt;yplogromo '" c,..tod from quotatiolla by lamoue
people, pool ond prennt. Etch lonor In lilt cipher atanda lor onothtr.
ther by playing your
Toctay'S clue: E equals Y •
jack or by ruffing. (If
'lAO aLSLNO MH
RTS
it is ~ no-trump con·
tract, hope p·artner
'
MB
VIH.'
YA I 8
can read the position
correctly.)
·
KOYMR
OONRINU
This agreement
M H
SAO TRKE
'8 M F 0
aided the defense in
today's deal, which
ZNM8MZ YM8ATL8
occurred in London •
- appropriate on St.
IFDMIMTR.'
George's Day.
HIIOMADOZC
II TAR
When We$! over- 'My age II )Uit I number; It IHfl'\1
called, he was primarfitI Rkl II.' - 45-yHr•old pHoher
ily hoP.ing to make it
harder for the opposi·
tion to reach a spade
contract. However, .
despite the adverse 0 Jtorrange ltnori of the
ocromblod wordo bo·
vulnerability, it wasn't low four
to form four slm~la warda.
impossible that EastWest could win the
N0 C RA B
auction. South, .after htl"""'l-.;.l....;:.,..;....;,l;.,.z.:.....--1
1
receiving a single raise I.=;:~:;:~~·=~·- l
from his partner, took I"
an understandable
P E L P A
shot at game.
1-"TITi

planned
Annual Racine
Middleport
cele ration a fun
school

C"N'T FIND IT, DAD~
LOOI&lt;.$ \..IKE THAT
BALL'$ HI STORY!

Marauders fall to GA. 11

Orion Nelson, as
Ernest Young Sr., 72
Stella Sarson, 66

l

PRANUTS

APRIL23I .

West led the dub
ace, and East correctly
signaled with the
queen, promising the
jack (or a singleton).
West continued with
a low club, not the
king. After winning
with the j' ack, it was
the work of a moment {or East to shifi
to the diamond
queen. In another
moment, the defenden had the first four
.tricks. ·
Note that without
thie defense, declarer
has 10 major-suit
winnen.

Elstem schools
to dismiss
ealty on Frtclay

~=·;;::;;·~;;::;~·::::

I 1 1 1 1':::If.'.
I I'K WI EI II CI Ie

"'
Customer to butcher:"Do you
N E CH E
have a 151b. roasl?' Butcher: "No,
8
bull'll order one.' Customer:'That'a
~·:::·~·;:;~·~·:;:·:.,not necessary. Ijust lost 151bs. and
;_.
., wanted to see how much that
D
looked like In ••••••• •.. "
I
Complttt tho chuckle quoted ;
.L ...J.-.L.-.1..
. ...J.-.L._ J .
Oy flilln; In th1 mlulng words ;
you dtveloo from atop No. 3 bolow, ·

-- Acquiri~g somethins yo,u
want for cnher yourself or l

loved oue looks very encouraging. Once you are stimu·

Jared IO do SO, nothing Will
stand in your way.
CANC£ll (June 21-July
22) - Reopond to any inner
(eelini!J you mighr have about

State offers

COLUMBUS (AP) .The state said 'TUesday it is
providing bminesses a ,onetime workers' comp refund
of $600 million to help
. stimulate .the economy.
The Bureau of Workers'
Compensation w~ll give
· refunds in December
through .a one-time, 75 percent reduction in businesses' worken' comp premiums for the first half of next
fiscal year, which begins
July I.

Ohio
ICIIAM-LITS ANIWIU
Growth • Rival· Fling • Person • EIGHT
·
The high achool team had a very poor flrst half. The · .
coach explained that It was a time mix-up. Hie team ' . ·
started at nine o'clock and the game atarted at EIGHT ·:
'.

•

Wednnd.ty, April 24, 2002
An exciting year ahead
might be in 1tore (or you in
terms of your relationships
both work-wise and socially.
You'll be well accepted in
each and can go far.
.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) •• Your flnancw base can
be considerably strengthened
I( you make it a priority. Even
a previously unreachable luxury could be gratified. Tautul,
· creat yourself to a binhday
gift Send for your Amo·
· Graph prediction• for the year
ahead by mailing S2 and SASE
to. Allro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Do• 1758,
Murray Hill Station, New
York, NY 10156. De sure to
•!Ore your Zodiac sign.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

TUPPERS . PLAINS Schools in the . Eastern
Local School District will
dismiss at I :05 p.m. Friday
due to a teachen' inservic~.

one-time
refund ~

,.

a potentially auamao&amp;e personal goal. Even if you can't
explain " · it'll make sense to
you as it unfolds.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -·
There's a po11ibilicy that you
could meet aomeone who i•
potentially a good, close mociare. The strong appeal wiU
be obvious to both. ·
_ VIRGO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22)
• This may be rhe right time
to promote something thai
you ve been working on. The
liming could be excellent.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Although something mar
. occur that reau your flalth, 11
wiU demorutrare 10 you how
great your telf-a11urance b in
a&lt;:hievin1 detirable rnulu.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No)'.
22) ·- Should :li joint endeavor
require a bit more input than

was initially anticipated, you
mould be the one to ttep up
to the plate. You're capable of
hining a home n~n.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) ·- Becauoe each
pany involved in a partnenbip
situation hu solid contribu1

· t1om ro make, 1Ucces1 i1 tn the

offing.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. t 9) -- No one can do a
better job than you when it
comet to handling people in
hish places. You'D work ••·
ceptionally · well ,with rhe
powen that be.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19) - You've experienced a
ttrong rise in popularity lately
•• you could lind yourself in
· much demand socially, Capi·
talize on it while your liar ;,
aocendina. · .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
• It doetn't maner if you start
out dow or are rarins to p.
you . will end up beona
mongly focused and motivated. l.oor time can be made
up on thinp you've been put-

tins otT.

ARIES (March 21·April19)
··Although you're a lone ea. gle in your thinking moot o(
rhe time, ideas you develop
with a collaborator may be the
Qnea that are 2pt to be the
moor succellful. Be a team
player.

Pick J: 6·2·2
Pldl 4: 1·1·4-0
IU~ 5: 4·!H 1·23·32
Pick J c!aY: 5·8·5
Pick 4 d.y: 6-1·5·3 '

West Vll'llnll
Dai!Y :s: 9·H .

Index
U1di1•-I2PIIpl

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

I

'

BY llltAM J, Rm

RACINE - A parade of
floats featuring flOWil\'8, a v~ri~
ety of entllrtuinment. crowning of a que~n. kiddie games
and more will be included in
the all-day activit!e$ at the
ninth annual R.ACO Flower ·
Festival to be held at Star Mill
Park Saturday.
Kicking otT the event will be
the parJde at 10 a.m. Lineup
will be at the Pizza EKpress at
9: 15 and participants are
reminded that floats must .
include flowers to q11alify for
prize money. Prizes al\' SSO for .
first, $30 for second, and 120
for third.
The parade winm~rs will be FLOWIR FIITIVAL HOPII'UL&amp; ~ Five Southern Hl&amp;h School
announced and the Flower candidates prepare to contend for the title or queen durlnl
F~stival queen crowned in Racine's annual Flower Festival. Sponsored by the Racine Area
ceremoni~s to be held on the Community Organization (RACO), the festival will take place on
stage at noon.
Saturday at Star Mill Park. Those competing ara, from left, Car·
Queen candidates a1·e olyn Bentz, Kim McDaniel, Rachel MarehaU, Tfavanne Moore ,
Southern High S~hool stu· • an? .~ln.di!Y ~mlth. _(Tony M. Leach) .,, '!. ...
.,1
dents Carolyn Bentz, daughter
., •.,_.,.,.,
of Mrs . . Mary Nitz; Kim
McDaniel, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jackie McDaniel;
Rachel Mmhall, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Marshaii;Travanna Moore, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Moore; and
Lindsey Smith, dnughter of
Mr. and Mrs.James Smith.
Entertainment will begin at
11a.m. with the Rock- N·
Country Cloggers presenting
an hour-long show. Music by
the Racine United Methodist TO ENTERTAIN- "Mountain River" wllll)erform from 3 to 4:30
Church Choir with signing by p.m. Saturday at the RACO Flower Festival to be held at Star
the church team will be pre- Mill Park. In the vocel·lnstrumantal group are from the left, Greg
sented between noon and Hart who plays guitar, Joy Mason on the baas, Herb Mason on
the banjo, and Bob White, the mandolin. (Submitted)
12:30 p.m.
Country Grass, presenting a
variety of new and old coun- until the festival cnncludes at 6 WhiiL• there is no dtnr11c fhr
'm ftcn to set up hoorhs auy·
try, blues,. rock-a-billy and p.m.
Games will be cumluctcd by one intcrcst1•d is ask,•d ttl con·
bluegrass, will play from 12:30
to 2 p.m. at 'which time Mike the ltacine United Mcthndist met Jennifer Hoback, ')41).
Hemmelgarn, a juggling ven- Church yo11th group for the 21m. DurlnH the day there
triloquist, will have an hour's kJds st~rting at 11 :30 a.m .. ilnd will be drawill!(ll fi&gt;r pr.izcs
at 1 p.m. at kiddie tr:1ctor p11ll every half hour. Time is no
performance.
admissio11 charge nml parkiug
The Mountain River Blue will be held.
Plowen by the basket, pot or i1 fr1•e.
Grass Band will play from 3 to
l11 the event of rnin, the fcs·
flat
will be available at the
4:30 p.m. and Steve and .Bev·
crly Pottmeyer wi.ll take the park, and rcfre!lunenn and tival activities will be mnved
to Southern Hi~h School.
stage at 4:30 and entertain crafis will be for sale.

BREEDeMVOAI~YS£NT1NEL,COM

Mli)DLEI•ORT - The Vill&lt;tflt' of Mkkll~purt ~~ ~ !t~p
dt~\er ttl lln~lipi nll 1)1~11~ (Or th~ Cll11\\'l'i\iOn of Mi\ldl~port
El~lllt'llhiT Sd1nnl tn • t1l'W v iii~ holl.
Ma)'Or Santly 1&lt;111i'"'''lli sukl Mond.-y she h&lt;~s l't'tdwd &lt;1
pmpo~al frum tlw tnxhitrnuml tlrn1 nf Hm11~ &amp; Ki1111 ut'
t'&lt;llumbus tn pr..•pnl\' 11 mw !tml)' nt' hnw thr S}\&lt;ll'~ \'oil b1•
Ust•d liS ,\jail ~lid ht&gt;lll~ !ll Villlllt'' lltlkt•,,
The Villnlt" h•s t\'td\1\'tl ,, ~nllltlt i tlllt'llt thnn tlw Mdg.~
l.m·,ll Sdlutlll&gt;imkt th1· til\' tr11nst\•r uf the tht't'e Middlelion sd1ool f.lt'ililil•s - tlw Mdi(S Mldttlt• St•htllll , Mhtdl~·
port Ell'lllcntiii'Ylllld th&lt;' Ct'lltral Uuiklin~ - tl\lt&lt;' th~y al\'
VII I'll ted hy the district i11 tiwur uf m·w bttiltlin~~S II OW under
t tmstruniun ,
·
01'11!111111 plan. tl1r the cl~nwm.~ry bt1iltlin~, pt't'!l'llf~d tn
tht• villni!C a Y\)111' 11110 by An:hitt•t•t Stt•phcn Ot·~iit•r of Marl·
~tt&lt;l, ~ailed li&gt;r the cullstrnctltm 111' ll j11il f'ilrllity i11 tht• school
~ymn.1slum lll\'&lt;
1 lind vill11~~ ufli~t·s in om• nf the sd11ml'il
clos~room win~.
A•·~ul\lill~ tu l;umAr..·lli, ~tnt~ j&lt;lil imp~•·tnr~ hnw sll itl the
jui\must lw built US ll S~pllrllt~ llti&lt;IChllWIIt tO the buiklilll! rur

s~mrity purplis~s . Tlw n.~llmind&lt;·r uf th&lt;• builtlh1t,&lt;

will now
ustd thr pnlin• ot1k~s lllld oth~r villlll!\1 np~r.ltions.
lllnMrelli .~aid.
·
, 1'1\e Vill~c~ C\lllilllthi[C ~lid en~hll'~ril\~ firm, floyd
J~rown~ · AliSo illtt!, will 'e\'k [Cr11m tuntlinl! lor he $ij,.50tJ
feASibility study throu~h the Gtw~rnor~ Olllcc of
Appullldtill.
·
·
Uses .fill' the mlw1· twu IJUildhi~~S 111'1' still i11 the plnnllhll!
stu~u. The Mlddkpnrt I•luunilll! Cllllllllissioll, wurkinl!
.:JoscJy With II dtill'li!' l'tlllll11ittl'\\ plitiiS 10 l',\t;lbiish II 11011 •
pflllit I'Oundntinll (\) r.tiS\' tlllllls rm I'CIIllVIItiniiS llllll tu hdp
murkct th~ builditiW! .
1'h1' Cll llllllitt~ •· IH&amp;s dis,·ussl'd IIW'kl•titlt( the Middle
S~hool buiklil1~. Mi!(innlly Mlddkpu11 l-lil(h Schuol, us ll
highcr·l&lt;'llrnin~o~ ti1dlity 'or lill' k.ts•·d nilkt• ~pnl'c. Uses lor
tlw, C••mrul Uuildinl!, hccausl' of its ~~~~·, •Ire nun·c limitt·d. ,
Ckl(l11'r su~stcll thnt the hulldillt( b1• il'll'c d IIi st111'11~1' spu~r
been usc uf the hil,!h emf ni' brhtl!hll( th•· huiillin~ hit&lt;&gt; l't)de
und ADA complinn~c .
b~

AT THE CAR WASH

Donation for trip.

Dallj 4: 2·1·6-9 · ·
Cllli 25: 1·2·4-5·7·16.

calendar

Jail) village offices p.ltttmed
for building

I HOEFliOHtMYDAILYSENTlNEl.COM

Hiah: 60S, Low: 50s
. Debllll. A1

"""T",....,-,.,,,:-1

.

lv CttAilWII HOII'UCM

. htaiii,AS

l

~-...,

ITUESDAY

.

·--

L-.....h....:::::::t:::J..lJ •

New

IUCC I

...........

r-----4!

••

31 Tulc

.._.llnel

..

•

I

. AS
B3·S

86
AS
A4

A3
A3 ·
B1·3
A2

e 1001 Ohio vo~ter Publlthln1 co.

Punding for the Easter 11
Elementary eighth l(raden'
trip to Willian·1sburl(.Va .. May
1:\-15, got a hoo~t Tuc1day
from the Ohio Educatioual
Support Group. The OES
made a S1,000 donation
toward the rrip expenses.
Aeccptinl! the cer1'monial
check from Alisha Myers on
behalf of the clau wa1 jc11ica
Hupp, u Anl(ie Rig~~by,
teacher, Betty Holman, Terry
l)um and Adam Gonnicklc
look on. (Charlene Hoeflich)

'

.

UNDER NIW OWNIRIHIP - Courtney Butcher, ·left. dlreo·
tor of operation• for the Mel&amp;• County Chamber of Commerce , etanda with Randy Triplett, new owner or Hutton'•
Car Wash In Pomeroy. Triplett, who own• al~ olh r cer wath·
· 1n11 fllcllltlealn Parkerlbura. W.Va .. aeld the car Wath will be
completely remodeled with new 1oft bruahee. pumps, buQ. ble bru1he1. awnlnp, end paint job and will be open for
buelneu 24 hour• 11 day. (Submitted)
•

April 21·27 is

National Laundry ancl Linen
Week ·
and

Atl•lnlalrcltlve Profeaalonala
Week ·
Holzer Medical Center salute• both our Launclry ancl Unen-Department
and our Administradve Profe11ionals
thia
week.

•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discou£w the Holzer Differertce

www.bolzer.org

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="464">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9909">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22993">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22992">
              <text>April 23, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5417">
      <name>ankrum</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2370">
      <name>hudnell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="785">
      <name>mills</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="35">
      <name>nelson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
