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Page B8 •

www .mydailysentinelcom

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Apri17,

2oos

Education
secretary
.
pronnses states common
sense help - but only
forsome,A2

.Randa,·Reds·do it to·Mets again
Bv Jo&gt;E lUI'
Associated Press

that he could still walk the
':I'm going to use it' tonight
Given a reprieve. Randa
streets without qeing recog : for sure." Randolph said. lay- singled to left on the next
nized after his dramattc ing it back on his desk. pitch for a 2-0 lead.
homer.
"Hopefully I'll light it up
T~e Reds loaded the bases
CINCINNATI If Joe
Judging from the reaction later. That would be nice. "
with two outs again in the
· no ctgar.
·
1t reste d ·m rourt h. Gl avme
· went 0--? on
Randa
. . l:eeps this. up.
h' they of 2-1 ..'0
' I f ans. t hat's about to
Agam.
won t JUSt recogmze tm on change.
the same spot on his desk Griffey, then threw a pitch
qncinnati's streets. They'll
They demanded a curtain after the game. untouched. that Meriwether who
name one after him.
call and chanted his name Randolph sounded unfazed. · worked his first World Series
The Reds: anonymous new- after Randa's second career
"Some' of the tougher losses last year- decided was just
comer kept the drama conung sliun off Mike De{ean put the are the ones that are really outside. Again. Glavine ·
Wednesd~y. hit~ing a ~a~e&gt;- Reds up 9-3 in the eighth. H!= close,.. Randolph said. "I dropped his head in disaplo.aded smgle ~nd a .Prand · also had a bases-loaded single think the opening · day loss pointment. ·
slam that set up a 9-5 ~ tctory in the ftrst. off Tom Glavine was tougher."
·
And once aga in, he gave lip
over the New York Mets and that got things rolling.
·
Grif1ey
'
Glavine is 25-12 against the a hit on the nex t pttch.
had the fan s thanting hi s
"He's a solid hitter. but 1 Reds. his second-highest vic- singled to right for two more
name .
don't think you expect him to · tory tota~· ag ainst any team . runs. part 'of hi s three-hit
"That's
special.... said hit two homers and have all Control problems and two game.' ean Casey then sinRanda, who has never hit the RBis he has." said borderline call s led to his rare gled up the middle for a 5-2
more than 16 homers in a sea- Glavine. who lasted only 3 2- Cincinnati meltdown.
lead.
The left-hander -threw 37
Randa 's slam in the eighth
son. "Being a new guy. I'm 3 innings . "He 's not a guy you
just trying to make a name for look at anq equate a lot of pitches in the first. helping the left him with a career, high six
myself. You don 't. expect to power with."
Reds load the bases with two RBi s, drew a curtain call and
The Reds won the first two outs. He got ahead of Randa polished it off. He also made .
do it by hitting lwo home
runs. It's been special." .
· games of the series by getting 0-2 in the count. then jerked two hit-stealing plays in the
·The Mets aren't going to pas1 thr~e-time Cy Young his head in disappointment third. He dived to his left to
forget him anytime soon .
winner Pedro Martinez and whe11 plate umpire Chuck snag Kazuo Matsui 's liner,
. ;::anda hit the Reds · .first two-time winner Glavine ·- a Meriwether called the next then made . a backhand catch
game-ending homer in an feat the Mets cenainly didn ' t pitch just off the inside comer. on Carlos Beltran's sinking
· opening day game 0 expect.
.
Glavine had staned walking liner.
·
Monday, a solo , shot ol
First-year . manager Willie off the field. thinking it was
Left-hander Eric Milton got
Braden Looper for a 7-6 w~n . ' Randolph had a large cigar strike three.
the win in his Cincinnati
"I think we all did after that debut. going 5 2-3 innings in
The fan who got.th_e b~ll waiting on hi s .desk before
don~ted II 10 the team ' Hall Wednesday' s game. a gift one. including Joe." Glavine a typical perfonnance. Doug
of Fame.
.
.
from Mike Piazza in anticipa- said. "You get in the position Mientkiewicz and David
AP photo
Fame was .a httle sl?wer 10 tion of his first ~in. Rando!Bb where you've got to make Wright homered off Milton,
catch up wnh Randa. who picked it up and briefly stuck another pitch. I needed to fol- who gave up an NL-leading · Cincinnati Reds' Joe Randa hits a grand slam off New YorK
carne over from Kansas Cny 11 between his lips without low up with another good 43 of them last season in Mets pitcher Mike De Jean in the eighth inning Wednesday iri
as a free agent and marveled lighting up.
pitch, and. didn't."
Philadelphia.
Cincinnati.

"·

jfl. f

I '\ I._,'\ ,, J. .)-1 ' ' ' J(,~

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
'.

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subspribe today. ·
992-215S

Bv JoE

KAY

Associated Press
CINCINNATI
The latest
Cincinnati sports figure arrested for
drunken driving is . worried about
how the community is going to
react.
Red s utility player Ryan Freel
apologized seven times during a
Jour-minute off-the-cuff statement
Wednesday, a few hours after he
pleaded innocent to charges in a
northern I&lt;;entucky courtroom.
fan favorite last
Freel became
season for his grit and .hustle. He's
involved in several community projects, and is worried that his arrest
on Monday night will have a lasting
impact.
"That is my main concern at this
point," Freel said, talking to
reporters in the manager 's office
before a game against the New York
Mets.. "I have been accepted by the
cqmmunity and done numerous
(works) of community service here
in Cincinnati. · I just don't ·know if
I ' ll be looked at . the same.
Hopefully I will be looked at the
same.
"That is the mairt issue that I have
right now. It's nothing else."
Freel . 29, is the fifth Cincinnati
player or coach charged with drunk en driving in the last' seven months.
Bengals defensive end .Justin
Smith was arrested in suburban
Dayton . last October, and later
pleaded guilty. University of
Cincinnati basketball coach Bob
Huggins was l!rrested in suburban
Cincinnati · last June and pleaded
guilty.' Keith LeGree, one . of
Huggins' assistants. was arrested
last month.
·
Reds minor league pitcher Bubba
Nelson also was arrested in Florida
in February. He apologized to team mates and the organization,and w'as
enrolled in an employee assistance
program that provides help for drug
and ·alcohol problems.
Freel met with general manager
Dan O ' Brien, assistant Dean Taylor
.and manager Dave Miley.
" One thing that I have to say is I

a

·'

'

·· • Eagles soar back to beat
Alexander. See Page Bl

Transportation lmp mve ment m~nts an d th e rc-ali~nmen t
Four ureu' along Ohio t 0:-1
Program. The S'riP is a four- · of Ohio 1 ~-1 ne:1r the -Athen&gt; in Oli1c' arid Lebanon
year lis ting of :ill proposed Count) line .. where a &gt;l ip h &lt;~&gt; Tllllnship&gt; are scheduled for
POMEROY - The .Ohio federal und state trunsporta- torccd OD9T 10 cln&gt;e th e ' re-utignment to rcpatr landDepartment of Transportation tion projects.
route tll tratfl c.
slicb bla med on tlooJing .
has unveiled plans to reconThe publi c was invited to · · The_: propll&gt;ed. interc·hattge One portilin of the .protect in
figure the interchange of Ohio attend the open house and reco nh guratt on JUSt out side Lebanon To11n ship will cost
7 and U.S. 33 at Rockspnngs comment on ODOT' s pro- Pomerm.· v. ill be cb i _~ncd .to . th e stat··,
,· ttl •''
, .,,tl.tll ',tted
next year.
.
. po se d projec t ·list. ODOT improve safety in light of the $963,000. 11 hik the ·Oli1e
of
the To11 t~&gt; h i p porti on i&gt; expected
A contract for the .estunated has conducted similar me t- cornpleli un
·$3 .4 million project could be · ing s in four other Di strict 10 Ra1 ensWllOU Connec tor and to co,t S l J million . Th~' are
awarded as early as March. counties. ' .
the new portion of )J sched uled for work in 2Uil6.
2006. Stephanie Filson of · ODOT propose~ o1w 520 . between Darwin and Athens. • Othe r ma jor Me i"' Cu unt'
ODOT Di strict 10 sai'CI million 111 nearly two dy1.en Filson said. The design has projech ,uin ounced in the
Thursday. Ftl so n dt scussed hi ghwa y projec ts in Mei os not been \'ompleted. but the STIP11 ith price ta gs n!'~.t n1ilthe project at apublic nJeeting Couniy bet1\·een next ye~t'r contract co ul d be awa rded. as lion m more are:
· held t.n. ,conJ unct ton With and 200&lt;J . inclu(,(ing p:tving early as ne xt l\1arl'i). or as lat.e'
• A "miijot re -a lignmen t" of
ODOT s
Statewtde proJects . bridge replace- as June. ~007. .
Ohio 12-1 at the Ath ethi:O•Icig'
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAI~YSENTINELCOM

.
.
Cotninissioners encourage
,

,.....
'

last December as a free agent from
K:.ansas City. Fans don't know him
in public - not even after the first
game-ending opening day homer in
Reds history.
·
''No one's recognized me," Randa
said Wednesday. "It's been fun. It's
a · good baseball town. People
remember things here from years
ago. But I haven't got a free meal
yet from anybody. so we'll see how
that works ."
·
·:
The last time a player hit a game;
ending homer with a new team was
1985, when Gary Carter did it for
the Mets. Randa 's homer completed
the Reds' biggest opening-day
comeback sirice 1932.
•

BY BRIAN J. REED

Page AS
• Gary Bowman, 61

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Public input
g~thered at a town hall meeting on issues affecting the
growing population of senior
citizens will be shared with
the Bu sh Administration at an
• Pope's testament
· upcoming White
Hou se
suggests he thought about Conference on Aging. ·
The meeting, one of four
resigning, orders .his
planned in the Area _8 Agency
papers burned.
on Aging region. is designed
tp gather public input on serSee Page A2
• Meigs County Girl Scout vices needed by the growing
aging population.
Diary. See Page A3
·
Joetta Layne of the area
• Law You Can Use.
agency met . with Meigs
County
Commissioners on
See Page AS
Thursday tp publicize the

know they weren' t happy, obviously," Freel said. "This has happened
twice. And I didn ' t want this by any
means to be a dfstraction to this
team , especially coming off ·a great
win.''
The Reds beat the Mets 7-6 in the
season opener on Monday afternoon. Freel was arrested later that
MAKING UP GROUND: The
night iii the northern Kentucky com- Reds' ope'ning' day payroll of $59. 7.
munity of Bellevue ,- across the Ohio million ranks 19th out of 30 major
River from Cincinnati.
league teams, continuing an up-andFree! was charged with operating down trend.
Cincinnati had the NL's seconda motor vehicle under the influence
o.f alcohol. careless driving and hav- highest payroll in 1995, the last yeat
ing an open container in a motor it made the playoffs. The Reds
vehicle. He pleaded innocent stayed among the league leaders iri
Wednesday at his arraignment.
spending for the next few years;
A pretrial hearing is scheduled for ranking eighth in 1997 with a pay ~ '.
May 10. Freel remains available. to roll of $46.2 million.
·
play while the case is heard in court .
The Reds started rebuilding and
Freel said his attorney advised . slashed the payroll to $21.9 million
him not to discuss details of the in 1998, falling to " 7th overall:
case. In a contrite tone, he said he They held their ground near the bot~
was sorry for what had happened.
tom for the next few years.
·
"l'm hoping you'll find room in· Cincinnati ranked 22nd in 1999
your heart to forgive what has hap- ($33.1 million), 2) st in. 2000 with ;
pened," he said : "I just want to reas- Ken Griffey Jr. aboard ($44 iniJ ;
sure you that this will never happen lion), 22nd in 2001 ($45.2 million)
again, that I'm deeply sorry for and 23rd in the final season at
what happened."
Cinergy Field ($45 million in 2002) :
Owner Carl Lindner increased the
RANlli\'S HR BALL iN HALL: payroll to $57 million for the firsl
Only one game into his Reds career, year at Great American Ball Park,
third baseman Joe Randa already moving the club up to 17th overall:
has an entry in the team's Hall of The front office fired general man;
·
ager Jim Bowden at midseason and
Fame. .
The ball that Randa . hit for a went on a moneysaving trading
game-ending homer on Monday has .~pree: .
,
.b een donated to the hall. A fan in t . Last, year. the payroll was slashed
the left-field ·seats caught it and to $43 million - 25th overall ---.;
handed it to 8-year-old Alec Holste and the Reds had their · fourtli ·
of suburban Amelia. His family straight losing st;ason. With fans
gave it to the hall for display.
disenchanted, Lindner restored the
Fame hasn ' t quite caught up with payroll to roughly where it was twd
Randa, who signed with the Reds years ago.

'

INSIDE

• Benefit concert set.
See Page AS
• Road closed.
See Page A5
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Church briefs.
See Page A6

'
J. lEAcH

POINT PLEASANT
The Pleasant Valley Hospital
Relations·
Community
Department was honored
with a bronze Telfy; a national award equivalent to an
Oscar. for their 60-second
television
production.
"Miracle." The commercial
was selected from thousands
of entries in the 26th Annual

WEATiiER

.

'

. of~pting.

meeting. to be he ld at.IO a.m .
on April 14 at the Middleport
Church of Christ Familv Life
Center. Represe ntati,·e; of a
number of service prm·iders
and state agencies. including
the American Associati&gt;lll for
Retired Persons and the Ohio
Department of Health. and
elected offici als are expected
to attend . The puhlic· is
encoura ~ed to att end th~ ·
meet in ~ :md ' hare their ideas.
Layne said.
"The focus of the meeting
is to get input from the public
'to determi ne •the neecls of th e
baby boomers who arc joining the aging population ...
Layne ·said . "That informa-

This week's sunny, warm weather ·
has ·given local residents a first
taste of the spring .to come. As
the temperatures rise, grass
becomes greener and leaves and
blooms appear on the trees,
almost e~eryone likes to spend
some time outside, whether
they're working in th'e yard, taking
a walk or just spending time with
friends and family in the sunshine. At Eastern Et'ementary
'School on Wedl)esday, junlor high
students took a brea~~(de''fhe
confi11es of the cta!ij_ro~~· · i:lnd
spent a part Of their lunch fioul' at
picnic tables on the school's front
lawn, studying arid visiting one
another. At the same time, it was
all work for Paul Flora, who spent
the afternOQn in Pomeroy, giving .
the county courthouse lawn Its
first cutting of the season.

Piease see Meeting. AS

Hospital's TV commercial
wins national award
BY AMY

Count 1· line :tt Hockingport.
,rated to cost ·56.5 million.
Constructiop is planned in fisml year 2006. which begins in
Jul y.. 2005 .
• Re surfac ing of a portion
· of Ohio li8,1 at the intersect'o
· 1009 . at a
1 n of· Us
... '3
_,_Incost of S 1 million. A portion
of li81 from near the intersection \lf Ohi\1 @92 is planned
f ~ 007
o; Pav 1 ~ g in 2008 of a portion of U.S. 33 . from the
be ginning of the new portion
at Darwin to the junction of
Ohio 833. at a cost of $1
million.
·

.r;m tagte

attendance at upcoming
meeting
on aging
.

OBITUARIES

Brian J. Reed/photoo

Telly Awards.
·'Miracl e" highlights four
Pleasant
Valley
former
Hospit al Caticer Center
patients. Gene Salem. Jeane
Fisher. C huck Denney and
Carol White, who regained
their lives after seriou' 'health
1ssues.
Founded in 1978. the Tel lv
Awards are the · premier
Please see Award, AS

INDEX
2 SEertONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

TEAMS BEING At·~EPTED FOR THE AN.NUAL PVH COED
All proceeds go to the Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation and
• saturday, June
• Banquet/ Auction

•

16 PAGES

A dry season for the London Pool
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A6-7

As
B8

As
B Section
AS

.

© 2005 Ohio VaU~· Publishing Co..

• Rain or shine -

SYRACGSE '-- With no
money for repairs. and no word
from the Federal Emegency
Management
Age ncy,
Syracuse Villl!ge Council
voted un animously. to close
the Lond0n Pool for the season
at its Thur&gt;tlay night meeting.
"We can't afford it and it\

Amy J. Leach , director of marketing and publ ic rel.ations at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. and AI Lawson. JD. FACHE. chief
executive .officer of the. non-profit healthcare facility, display
the bronze Telly which was presented to the Hospital' s
Community Relations Department. The Telly, a national award
equivalent to an Oscar,' as presented to PVH for its 60-second
television production. "Miracle." The commercial was selected
from thousands of entries in the 25th Annual Telly Awards.

not sa fe." Councilman Mike
VanMeter said about the pool
that sustait\ed damage during
the Januarv 2004 tlood. ·i
think people would rather
.have .police around than the
pool open."
"I hate· that it's come to this."
Counci lwoman
Donna
Peterson ,aid about the clmure.
Councilman Kenny Buckley.
who has bee n handling the

FEMA appeals process for the
pool. said that he recently submitted more paperwork. He
~aid that a FEMA spokesper'son had conft.pned receipt of,
tlie latest . paperwork submissions and that it had not been
reviewed as of yet.
"Don't give up on the pool
yet." Buckley said . " We're
Please see Pool; AS

Diabetes Support Group

• Must be 18or

The HMC Diabeles Support Group .will; meel

• PointPleasant
• Individual trophies

from

• Pick-upentrypacket

Sunday, April 10 . ,_
2:00pm - 4:00pm at the HMC French 500 Room .

For more informoh'on on these FREE progfams, or to register, call (740) 446-5080.

~ MEDICAL

CENTER

,.

Fibromyalgia Support Group

.... Make all checks """"
• For more infonnation please
'

"'"' · "l\dail~"·ntind .&lt; on 1

I I·CIIJ.\1. \PHil H. :too:;

New $Jmillion interchange included in.ODOT.Meigs projects

SPORTS

scalps Tribe Freel worried about role in the commu·nity·

CHICAGO (AP) - Paul
Konerko and Jennaine Dye
hit consecutive home runs otT
Bob Wickman as the Chicago
White Sox rallied with four
runs in the ninth inning
Wednesday to beat the
Cleveland Indians 4-3. ·
Kevil). Millwood pitched six
scoroless innings in his debut
for the Indians but was done '
in by Wickman (0-1), who
inherited a 3~0 ·lead from his first in the American
Arthur Rhodes and was trying League.·
to complete a five-hit shutout.
Last year, he went 9-6 w.ith
Wickman allowed hits to his a 4.85 ERA for Philadelphia,
first four batters over a span and the condition of his elbow
of just eight pitches, then was a concern to the Indians,
made an error.
who put special clauses in his
· Carl Everett took a strike, contract to reduce their risk.
then singled, and Konerko , Freddy Garcia, acquired by
homered on a 1-0 pitch . After Chicago from Seattle last seaswinging and missing the son, gave up two runs and
next pitch, Dye homered to five hits in six innings, struck
tie it 3-al).
out six and walked three. He ,
Aaron Roward took a ball, . threw 109 pitches.
Cleveland went ahead in
then doubled, and AJ ·
Pierzynski was intentionally .the second when Grady ·
walked.
·
Pinch-hitter Willie Harris' Sizemore singled and scored
bunt was misplayed by on a Ronnie Belliard double.
Wickman for an error that Garcia
walked
Victor
loaded the bases, and Juan Martinez in the third. took
Uribe flied to right as third on Ben Broussard's dou.
Rowand tagged up and scored ble and scored on a balk.
from third to win the game on
Cleveland's Aaron Boone,
playing in only his second
the sacrifice fly.
. Dainaso Marte ( 1-0) got the game after missing last sealast two outs in the top of the son because of a knee injury,
ninth for the win.
started inning-ending 5-4-3
Signed to a $7 million, one- double plays in the third and
year contract during the off- fourth innings.
season, Millwood allowed
Notes: The announced
four hits, struck out one and attendance was 10,520 and
walked two as his fastball the crowd looked even smallreached 94 mph. He was try· er. The teams drew 38.141 for
ing for his 99th career win, Monday's opener.

The Gracemert
to perfonn, A6

Middle,pprt • Pomeroy,_ Ohio

i.

_Chi~ago

.

'

This FREE support group is sponsorecl by the Arthritis Foundation ond Holzer Medical Center,.
'
TUesday, April12 • 5:30PM · 8:00PM • HMC Edu,cation &amp; Conference Center Room A •
'

.

Topics diKUssed wiHindude .. pain conrrol, exercise, rek.xo~ , fatigue, depression ond doctor/ potient relotion~ip

Any expcns..'S rela1od to injuries are lhc 50ic responsibility of~ player. Pleasant Valley Hospital. Inc. and its subsidiarie! will not be held responsible for any

For more infonnotion , or to register, coif Missi Ross ot (7401446-5121 or 1-8()()-816-5131.

'

'

.

''Hca lthcarc in )om
Dwn Bacl~ \'dl•l
••

www.holzer.org
,,

•

�.
.,

PageA2 ·

• WoRLn

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April 8,

.

.

Pope's testament suggests EDUCATION SECRErARY PROMISES STAlES
he thought about resigning,
COMMON ·sENSE HELP - BUT ONLY FOR SOME
orders his papers burned

MEIGS

BY BEN FELLER
his personal notes.
.
AP EDUCATION WRITER
ASSOCIAT ED PRESS WRITER
The pope made a Iandmark
trip to Poland in June \979 - '
:-.10 UN T VERNON. Va.
VATICAN CITY - . Pope his first trip tQ. ht &gt; homeland
Education · Secretary
John Paull!. we ighed down by since becoming pontiff Margaret Spelling~ came into
illness and ,age , con.sidered inspiring the Solidarity trade her job promising to deal
resigning as. he· turned RO in union mo~· ement and its resi~- with horror stories from
2000. according to hi s las t will tancc to the athei stic .:omm u- states ·about the No Child
and , testament pub\ is Qed nist government of the day.
Lefl Behind law. Now · state
Thursday. The pope also wro.te
The testament mentioned leaders say she appears to be
of tormented times for himself onl y two . living peorle: clcl il'ering on the promise and the church and left imtruc- · Dliwisl and the retired chief with a ~:atch.
tions for his notes to be rabbi of Rome. Eho Toaff.
Spellings
pledged
burned .
who welcomed him to the Thur~Ua v to take a more senTl\e document. ·written in city\ synagogue in 1n6 in a sible approach to .enforci ng
several entries over 2~ yem's. historic gesture of reconcilia- the law. startiHg with allowprovides extraordinary insight tion
between
Roman ing 1i1any more children with
into the 'pope's thinking in the . Catholics and Jews.
disabilities 10 be held to diftwilight of his life as he reflect- .The. pope n1ade severai fere nt &lt;tcadcmic standards.
ed &lt;\ bout death and hi s legacv. entries in hi s testament. stal1ing The flexibility isn't open to.
and as he prayed for the -'~nec- ·tlie' year after his electi on. in all .states. only to those that
essarystrenglh"tocontinuehis 1978. The tina\ entrv was .in prove they are committed to
mission._
.
.
.
2000. when \1e was in pain and Presi dent Bu sh' s education
"The tunes m wtJ~ch we hve su ffe rin ~ Parkinson's disease. law. mainly by raising test
are unutt~~ably diftlcult an~ ' He diect'Satun.lay at age 84.
SL'O r e~.
dtsturbed. he wrote 111 ]_9RO.
Each entry \\'Us wrilten in
"States that understand this
accord1ng to the ott1 ctal Polish during Lent. the period new \\ ~ ~y of doing things will
Vat1can translation I rom ofretlection before Easter.
be gr&lt;Jtified." Spellings told
AP Photo
Polish. "Thepathoftilechurch
In the final entry. 11e state s~: hnol chiefs and other
has al so become dJlticuU and appeared to consider steppi ng education leaders in\'ited to Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings speaks about the No Child Left Behind law during a
~en se ... bothl.or the lmthlul ;tside. "Now.intheyearduring hear her announcement.
meeting with_ the nation's state education ch iefs and other education leaders at George
and tor pasto.\s..
.
whi ch mv age reaches RO '
Washington's
estate in Mount Vernon. Va.
" It makes sense, plain and.
!, ..
John_ Pauls fun era l Fnda~ years. itis .nec~ss ary t oask if i t :; imple." she' said. ·'Others
.
On Capitol Hill. the· top
promtscd to be one of the 1s not the time to repeat the l oo~ing for loopholes to sim- to file a federal suit over the "school control -and support of
largest Western rchg1ous gath- words of tlie biblical Simeon. plj take the · federal fund s, law, Utah is poised t.o pass a · alternate testing · for more Republican . and Democrat on
the House education commitenngs ot modern tunes; co"- "~unc di111ittis.'' The refer- ignore the intent of the law bill giving priority to its own disabled students.
Hurrington said Utah luw- tee suid Spellings' upprouch
·duc!ed wtth the pomp ol an ence is to the passa~e. "Now and have minimal results to cducution gouls. und other
show
for
their
millions
of
states
are
clamoring
for
,
makers
are still likely to pass could .help quell controversy
anctent lttur¥~ and attended by Master vou may let 'vour serroyalty. poltttcal power . bro- \'ant go.''
·
·
a bill giving priority to their about the law. But in a joint
dollars in federal funds will change.
Spellings has shown she's own school goals unless fed- statement. Republican John
kers and multttudes of the
He reflected that he had been think otherwise and be disheard those concerns. said era\ officials approve Utah's Boehner of Ohio and
faithful.
. . .
saved from death. in a 1981 appointed."
Throngs ol ptlgnms - the assassination attempt "in a
Spellings arranged th e David Driscoll , education new request for more tlexi- Democrat George Miller of
California cautioned that the
hardiest of some 4 million who miraculous way," and said his gathering
111 bility.
at
George commtsstoner
law should . be enforced
flooded Rome - were reward- fate was even more · in the Washington "s
es.tate .· in MfashseacChusettsl anldChprefSIS.dent theThsetaterelaa,,tdionfeshd'epralbelet\avdeeerts1
.
ed for holding out after police hands of God.
"without favoritism."
Virginia as a symbolic o t
ounct o
te tate
Another author of the law,
closed off the line Wednesday
is important because it
"From thi s moment it reminder of a. meeting there S¢hool Officer~.
night waiting lo view John pelongs to Him all the more. I three years ago. when the
Sen.
Edward Ke nnedy, D"The chiefs · are very affects everything from
Paul's rem'ains in St. Peter\ hope He wi II help me to recog- state school chiefs celebr&amp;ted pleased." D~! scol,l said after teaching to testing, intluenc- &lt;M;t ss.. prai sed Spellings'
Basilica. In the- morning, the
intentions but said 'her
nize up to what point I must Bush"s new education law, the speech. Shes not back- in'g the daily . education of
barriers were lifted for more
agency
should set clear rules
continue this service," said the This time, they came to hear · mg_ oft . the standards . but millions of st udents. ·
not
reward some states
mourners as the numbers who
the new education secretary she ~ wtlltn!l to ltsten and
Connecticut
Attorney
testament.
said a personal
.11 . . farewell
The pope wrote the lengthy outline her prove-it-first provtde llex!?•ltty where 1t General Richard Blumenthal , and puni sh others.
h
d
2
. .
whose state plans to sue on
approac e mt ton since the addition to his testament three · terms for cooperation, first makes sense.
body went on . public view
On The Net
reported by The Asso.ciated }he Utah eduduon ~om- grounds the federal law is
Monday. The basilica's tower- days before he left for a his- · Press on Tuesday.
Educatio11
Departme111:
·
m~sstoner. PatH . Harr!neton. vastly underfunded, said
d
1 d toric trlp to the Holy Land, one
· b
hrrp ://11.,1 ·11 ·. ed. g01 ·!11CIb/
She will favor states that oa td she ,was encoura~ed by Spellings'
announcement
mg ronze oars were c ose of the most emotional of his
/a,di11g.jhtml
late Thursday.
. don't cha-llenge principal Spelltn~s respect for local does not fix that concern.
Pilgrims staked out posi- many trips as head of· the
tions with sleeping bags and Catholic Church. At the time, points of the law - yearly
hlankets just outside St. his health was noticeably .·in testing of st udents in reading
Peter's Square. getting as decline: his speech had begun and math in grades three to
closetheycouldtothesceneof to slur. and his walk was eight, and public reporting of
the funeral - . even . though unsteady because of a hip scores for all major groups
. they will see little ; more than operation. He had fallen the of students. She wants proof
lhe same images 011 giant tele- year before, requiring stitches that states are raising
achievement.
vision screens as could be seen in his leti temple.
And she's indin~d to work
elsewhere in the city.
In an - early entry, he
Rome groaned under the scratched in the margins that with state s that do even more
weight of visitors. Side streets he wanted to be buried "in the than the law requires. includwere dogged in a permanent bare earth, not a tomb." ing the yearly high school
pedestrian rush hour. mostly by Accordingly, John Paul will be testing that Bush wants . in
kids with backpacks. Tent camps · placed in the grottoes under St .. federal luw but Congress
hasn't endorsed.
sprang up to take the spillover Peter's Basilica.
Overall, Spellings is out to
from hotels. Hawkers jacked up
In 1982, tlie pope considered
prices of everything from bon led th~ poss ibility of a ftineral in garner support from state
waterto"papal trinkets.
his native Poland. Three years leaders who have grown re st-·
· "You really have to love the later, however, he left the site less over Bush 's education
pope to be willing to do thi&gt;," ofhi.s burial in the hands of the law, yet do it without eroding high expectations for all
·said Nathanael Valdenaire, a cardmals.
.
children.
young Frenchman who slept · The same entry worned
· State leaders contend the
on the pavement in a sleeping about th~ safety of the church
law
sets unreasonable and
bag alongside his sisters.
and of hts own country ·m the
As dignitaries poured into days before the fall of the com- rigid standards for many
children, Connecticut plans
the city, Rome's security agen- mumst regtme.
cies -· bolstered by NATO
surveillance aircraft high
WEST VIRGINIA JQBS FOUNDATION
overhead - · cranked up their
defenses against everything
from terrorism to unruly
crowds. .
Rome authorities planned to .
lock down the city. Starting
Thursday night, vehicle traftic
· was banned from the city cen'
.
. ter. Air space was closed, and
anti-aircraft batteries outside
town were on alert. Naval
ships patrolled both the
·Mediterranean coast and~ the
Tiber Rive~ near Vatican City,
the tiny sovereign city-state
encompassed by the Italian .
capital. ·.
. '
President Bush, along with
former presidents Bill Clinton
and Ge9rge H.W. Bush, knelt
and prayed at tbe side of the
pope's bier Wednesday night,
then paid a courtesy call
.
.
Thursday on Itali&amp;n Pre ~ident
Carro Azeglio Ciampi. They
planned dinner with Itali a n
Prime
Mini ster
Silvio
1. Top or Bottom Row .......... ..$100 10 Block of Nine Progress .. $1000
Berlusconi .
2. Six pack (w/free space) .... $150 11 . Double Bingo .................
The U.S . delegation was to
3. Regu1 ar Bingo..................... ..$100 12. Small Diamond ................. $100
be j'oined Friday by Prince
.'
Charle,. who postponed hi s
4. Regu 1ar B1ngo... :................. .:SIOO 13 L tt X
S .
5. COVERALL.......................... S1000
· e er ,................................ 200
own wedding by one day to
honor the pope; by .· U.N.
6. Regular Bingo.......................$100 14. Regular Bingo ....................$100
Secretary-General
Kofi
Annan; and by representatives .7. Postage Stamp ..................... SlOO 15. Outside 4 corners ............. $100
8. CrazyT....................................$200 16. Regular Bingo .................... $100 ·
· of more than 80 countries.
Jewi sh and Muslini . religious
9. Regular Bingo....................... $100 17. 4 Leaf Clover ................. ..SIOOO
(lit' I;... ltH)
leaders will be there. along
with Israel \ foreign mini ster
This weekS donation will go to the
and the head ' of the Arab
Mason County Tourism
League .
In a Man;h 147'1 entry to hi'
124liiGHLAND AVE.
PT PLEASANT, WV
testament. Joh n Paul said he
(Old Carol1na Lumber Building Across from CSX)
left no material prore ny it nd
asked that his longtime pri vate
secretary.
Archbish o p
Stanislaw DLiwi st. burn all

REEDSVILLE DAISY
TROOP 5206

Grace Adams earned the
blue P&lt;:tal by learning to be
· J:{onest and Fair. We found
eggs that the Cadette troop
had hidden, and made plans
to attend the Daisy/Brownie
Tea on April 2.
EASTERN DAISY
T.ROOP 1334

Scouts · attended Career
Day, and would like to tbank
Regina Reeu anu Paula
Woods for participating.
Thanks goes 0 ut to all the
other career providers.
MEIGS. BROWNIE AND .
DAISY TRQOP ·

On March 7th, the troop
met. We welcomed two new
girls, Shana Roush (brought
by Morg&lt;1n Russell) and
Taylor Maynard (brought by
Ariel Ellis). We worked on
and several completed the
Math Fun•and Cookie Try-its.
Attending Career Day and
earning the Career Try-it on
March 12 were Lauren Booth
and Tiffany Withrow.
We talked about · many
events and are planning to
go to Columbus Zoo for .a
day trip in April. We will
earn the Animals Try-it on
the day we go.
On March 21. we started
· working on Working It Out
Try-it and a take-home project for Healthy Habits Try-it.
This meeting, girls received
"Tooth Brushing." They are
· to bring this back for credit at
the next meeting. Cookie
money was turned in at this
meeting, too.
· Our next meeting will be.on

*

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*

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

NOW OPEN

The Daily
Subsc~

.

Church events

nating parties and weddings in
the tri-county area. They also
Friday,
April 8
operate That Special Touch, a
LITTLE
HOCKING
fuJI · service floral shop at 340 Little Hockt'ng Church ·of
.
. ,
Second Ave., Galhpohs.
. Christ. U.S. · 50 and Ohio 7
SpeCial O~cas1ons offers south of Belp~e will have a
tents, tables. chatrs, \mens. clothing give-way 5 to 8 p.m.
Clothing for infants through
tableware and ·more .
. adults. Clothing is · for low"If you are too busy to han- ·income families and not for
die all the details. or just need · resale.
·
rental
items,
Special
LONG ' BOTTOM ·
h1
h 1 Hymn sing. 7-p.m ..' Faith Full
·
0
ccastons can e p you os. G_ospel Church. Delivered to
an · mttmate gathenng ot smg .
fnends or a grand and elegant
Sunday,.ApriiiO
affair to remember," the ownPOMEROY _ His Own. a
ers said . .

.

Owner
. and Operator: June (Maw) Ridenour
.

Located By Chester Landmark on St. Rt.7
Open 7 Days A Week

Good Food and Fast Service
Sunday: 9:00a.m ..- 6:00p.m.
Monday-Friday: 6:00a.m. - IO:OOp.m.
Saturday: 7:00 .- 10:00 p.m.

Sentin~l

·THANKS FOR HflPING US HElP OTHERS!

today • 992-2155-

Celebrate Natio11al Occupational Therapy Month: Apri/2005 t-o,.;.;••

.www.mydailysentlnel.com ·

This premier ~ublication will be brought to you by the ·
combined staffs of

With a caring staff that is committed to care and a team of
professionals trained in the latest occupational therapies. the
interest at Rocksprings Rehabilitatio n Center is easy to see...
we help those who need us.
In additi on to our dedicated staff, we maintain strong
.relationships with many supportive referra l profe"ional&gt; ·
a11d therapeutic specialists in our community. Working .
together. we are able to enhance the quality of patients' li\'e'
through
our co11ective talents ·and skilled training ...
we are \·ery proud of that.

If you owe Uncle Sam some more tax dollars
this year, you might want to consider buying
a tax deferred IRA .
;you can still 'd eposit up to $3,500.00 per
person, until 4-15--05, and deduct it from your
gross income. Thus reducing your tax
burden. Insurance IRA's are paying interest
at the rate o£ approximately 3'h percent.

446-2342
The Daily Sentinel ~oint ~leasant le~tster.
992·2156
675·1333

,

Public meetings

Proud to be apart of your life.

~allipolis iaHp ~riuunr.

(304) 675-3877

c

Community Calendar

.

Don't mi~~ out on ~aving your ~ugin~g in t~ig g~ecial ~u~lication... Call Toaay

".7iso'

along with Easter curds the altractive \\oman ut a congirls had made. Several boxes sume r prmlu~:ts shm\ . She
. \\Orks fur a company that
of girl scout cookies were "'Jlplies items to the store
also given. The next meeting \\here I \vork. She wasn't
is planned fo r April 4.
' wearing a rin~. and she
Dear
Abby
seemed intere,ted in nte. \0 I
de,·ided to as k her tO lunch.
REEDSVILLE
I had always heard that
JUNIOR
TROOP
.
women welcome !lowers. and
Hannah
Adams
and ~efer them to direct invitaSOUTHERN BROWNIE
Shawna Murphy -tinished the tion s because it ;illnws the·m . blow it so terrihlv wrong '? I'm
1 TROOP. 1120
Field Sports badge. We were to reply with a warn\. thank ' a caring. scnsiti \:e person and
yo u or refuse without putting don't understand 11 hv this ·
.
h
busy
delivering
cookies
and
Etg. teen girls attended the · ' the.n celebrated with a small anyone 0 11 the spot. So ·1 innoce nt 2esture gcn'erated
ordered a mixed bouquet with such ;t rep ly. _ EM BARMarch 7 meeting at · the ·
Syracuse Community Center Easter ·· Party and Hannah a card that carried a 'friend!) RASSED IN IOWA
DEAR EMBARRASSED: 1
· to make windsocks led by Adams helped the Cadettes ~ not romamic - message.
Terrie Houser, and lunch bag get
ready
for
the She ·· nner &gt;~eknmvJedged ' it. don't know who told \·ou tha t
but I re,·ei\·ed a brief.fax from women prefer flow e.rs to a
kites led by Lori Thei ss.' te Daisy/Brownie Tea.
he.r boss " tying thm I was oil· direct invitation. but the in forcomplete the second-half of.
base and th e !lowers were mation was incorrect. Franklv.
REEDSVILLE
the Movers Try-it started in
inapproprime. lie signed off the approach was a bi( over the
CADETTES 1254
February. Girls also got s~art­
with u directi\'CJllar l make no 1op and may ha\'e made the
ed on makin,g Easter .cards.
further contact.
·
woman ·uncomfortable. If she
led by Brandi Lyons, for
We had .a busy month getAbby. 1 w,·Js.· tll OI'ti' l'l'ed'. .W·'s·
· d'teate d that to her
· employer.
"
m
· Ro~kspring s residents. It was ling
r~ady
for
a it neceS'ary to embarrass me . he had' a legal obligation to
dectded an extra meeting the Daisy/Brownie tea party with a fax that evervone in step 111 011 her behalf.
following week would be which they were helping to the store cou ld have -react·) I However. his technique was
needed to complete cards and host. We were busy delivering don't know if.he took it upon heavy-handed. 1t would have
make candyfli
cookies and we also tinishecl himself to do this . or she been better had he talked to
Twelve · gi rs earned · the our recipe books to pass out asked him to do it for her. your employe r or hlllmin
Career Try-it while attending with our cookies. The recipe I'm not even sure wheth.er resources for your company
the Career Day Event, held at books went along with the she received the fl owers of'if and asked that p~rson to speak
d d
he intercepted them. All that to yo u privately about it.
the Middleport Life Center, C 00 k .
·tes
an
ough
badge
f·,tx
dJ'd· w ·,-t·•
.~· etls'ttrc "·•11 awkf I were you. I'd forget
.
h
t"
11
..
·
I_
March 12. The girls had fun
h
, '"ard
s 'ttu',ltt.Otl the 11e.xt tt'tlle at"lOtlt trymg
·
.
w
lo cu Itiva te a
and learned many new things w tc we tna Y hnl shed
Darc
i
B
.
isse
i\
and
Whitne)'
she
a11d
I
cros·s··
P•
'
tth
s
,
·
tt
u
1
1
· s111p
· \VI!· h
per sona re atJon
with the various job l)elds repPutman
sold
·
c
ookie
.
s
at'
show
or
dttl'
l.l1g
bu
s1
.
11ess
11
1
d
It
'
t
·
.
1e a _y. s no nece_ssar) l·'
resented this day. Thank you
Store
in.
Reedsville.
transactions.
"cross
them off your list ":
Reed's
aga[9 to all the presenters.
should
I
handle
our
jli.St
keep
any furth er coDIHCt
Jahnna
Lydic
attended
the
How
At the extra March 14
Engineering
ev,ent
in · next meeting'! Should I pre. with .her -strictl y . related to
meeting, 15 girls, led by Tina
Pittsburgh.
Pa.
We
hid
eggs.
tend it nev er happened'' business.
Roush, made Easter candy
for the Dai sy and Junior troop Should I cross them off our
DEAR ABBY: I work as a
suckers for Rocksprings resito celebrate Easter.
supplier li st to avoid further volunteer. helping re ccm
dents. A get well card was
contact''
Should I let her immigrants tlnd jobs. Se\'eral
We have changed our meetsigned for Bob Wingett, and a
know so that I can possibly m'onths. ago. a middle-uQed
thank-you card to Jane 1-jarris ings back to Mondays from 6 get another shot at it. or did I woman I' II call Maria was
of Dan 's in Pomeroy. for to 7:30 at ihe Reedsv ille
putting the girls naines and Church of Christ Anyone
troop number on T-shirts for wishing to attend. we would
us. Thank-yous were signed be happy to have you ..
for Brandi Lyons , Bobbi
Hill , and Anna White for ··
MEIGS CADETTE
playing a part iil prese ming at
'TROOP 1208
Southern Gospel group. wll ness minded luncheon :~1 12
. Career Day. Girls also finsi ng at 10:30 a.m. at the p.m. at the Wiidhorse Cafe.
ished up Easter cards arid
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist The guest speaker is Li"a
Ericka Cogar. Ashley
Thesday, April 12
baskets with parent assis- Romines, Kimi Swisher.
Church on Laurel Cliff Road. Jolli ck with the Small
POMEROY - The ' Meigs
tance.
Business . Deve lopment
Hailey Ebersbach, Autumn . County Board of Elections will
- Center at Ohio Universit\
' Eighteen girls attended the Ebersbach , and Lindsey
meet at 8:30a.m. in the oftice
and '-' ill discu ss what se,:March 21 meeting, working Houser attended Career Day at the Cou11house annex .
vices the ,·en te r provide s.
on the first half of the Colors and earned their "Dreams to . Wednesday, April 13
Sunday, April 10
and Shapes Try-it. Girls also
MIDDLEPORT The Seating is li m ned. call the .
POMEROY
- Meigs
Reality Award."
worked on learning a new · We have worked planning · County . Board of Health Gracemen of Barbours11 1' e. chamber at 992-5005 to make
re serv~1tion~ .
song, led by Cadette Lindsey
meets at 5 p.m., conference W. Va. ·will be singing at the
our
trip
and
are
having
severPOIVIEROY -· Childhood
Houser. Cookie chairmen
room at health department: Ash Street Church at the lmmuflization dinic. 9 \ll II
al
fund
raisers
to
earn
money
Patti Dunn and Tina Roush
112 E. Memorial Dl'ive.
· 10:30 a.m. · su·nday service. a.m., I to 3 p.m.. Meigs
The church is located at 3LJ8
collected deposit slips from for our trop to Niagara Falls .
County Health Department.
NY.
We
had
a
.
E
aster
candy
Ash St. Middleport.
parents to finish cookie sales.
Brin£ shot re.-ord s. medical
1
Thesday, April 12
On March 26, Rocksprings sale and that was a success
cards.
Childi·en must be
POMEROY - The Meigs
residents were visited by 12 On March 19th, several troop
.
accompan1ed
by a parent or
County
Chamber
of
Brownies, two ·Juniors, and members participated in a
Commerce will hold its busi: legal guardian·. S5, donat ion
many helpful siblings (broth- Cookie Booth Sale. Future
Salilrday, April 9
appreciated. but not required.
ers) and parents.Vanilla and fund misers include a cookie
RACINE · Return
cho~olate · bunny, ~hick, and bake sale on Saturday, Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
lamb, and egg suckers. as April 16. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., at Daughters of the American
Revolution will meet at I
well as jelly bean-filled pl&lt;\5- Powell's.
On May 14, we will have a· p.m. at the Racine Library.
tic eggs in styrofoam cup
Henry Burke of Marietta will
baskets were passed out, car wash at McDonald's.
be there to talk about the area
Underground Railroad activity study;

I

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Rocksprings

.

DOWNING cHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER INSURANCE
196 E. 54!cond 992-3181 Pomeroy ·

' .

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_. ·~·- - -· ~ . ·\ ·~· ....

-·-- .

'

2005

hired as a maid "ith a la'" r ~~
hotel dlJin . 7\1ol r i ~ 1 j.., ... tru~ ·
gling to learn En~li,h . ;IIlLI silL'
makes \ en little mon~\ . I
asked her i'f she tWcilcs -lips
from hote l ~uesh . and she
rep li ed by ~shD\\ in~ me a
small ~lass ja r con t a ini1i~
nickels un a penmc s.' Th cr~
were n·u dollar bi lk
,
Maria tnlcl me th at at'tc:r 1he
guests check out. her ,upor1 ,.
sor checks the rm1111 hdor,· .
she · does. and it ,, ;i"u med
that anv monies in deno min ations l&lt;irger than Slll&lt;lil c hange
are rcn1o\'ed before she·,
all owed to enter amJ prepa re
the room for the next gucst.
L trust that thi s kind of
beha,·ior is not common praL·tice. but from now on. when I
stay at a hotel. I'll either tip
the maid per,onally when I
'ee her in the hall, or lea \·e it
fm her a day he fore my de parture to en\ure t he proper per.
'on receives ruy gratuity. --'CAREFUL TIPPER IN THE
MIDWEST
DEAR CAREFUL: That's ·
a good idea and one worth
sharin g. I'm printing your
letter becau se many hotel
guest s "forget" how hard
hotel staff work for low pay.
an d somelimes le ave "lt· IlOUt
· ·In g Ihem ;1 r r~l 1 l 1 1t~
· . -\..; tO
giV
f
·
·
h
· ll: ·~~
\\ 1en. 1r1 i
ll l
...:~ t ,\Ji
t
·
1
·
a ll1c ~'' g t lllllllg o your .sta)
at a hotel.
.
near Abby is wrilll'll hy
t\bigail Va11 Burell, also
known as )ea1111e Plrillips, a11d
was founded b)' lrer motlrer,
Pauline Plri/lips. 1\i'ite Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com ·
or P.O. Box 69·1-10, Los
A11geles, C4 90069.

DEAR ABBY: I met an

April 4;. The troop meets 5:30
to 7 p.m. every other Monday
at the Middleport Church of ·
Christ. For more information.
please call Jerrena Ebersbach
at 992-7747.
.
We will have a CookieBooth and Bake Sale at the
Peoples Bank, on ~pril 9.

GALLIPOLIS ~ K&amp;L viding clients and their guests
Catering
and
Special with catered events for the past
·
Part y Ren tal s have seven years. ·pam an d .,..bdd
0 ccastons
•·
.come togethe~. to ~.hmv the · Casto are on hand every day
· commumty a taste of thetr . overseemg the operatmn.
.
. services. Both are locally
"We only use the highest
• owned and ope~ated in quality products and pride ourGallipolis,.
selves on a variet)' of fresh
A sampling of their busi- items .. we can offer and still
nesses' offerings will be pre- maintain a llavorftil value in
the Special. ~ach dish," the Castos said.
. sente~ at
• OccasiOns warehouse ~t 407 We are commttted to servmg
. Thtrd Ave., Galhpohs, on you a classy event beyond
: Saturday from 2 to4 p.m.
your expectations every time."
Thoseplanninganeventora . Special Occasions Party
wedding should not miss this Rentals is owned by Jim and
presentation, organizers said. Jerj Allie. Jeri Allie has 15
K&amp;L Catering has been pro- years of experience in coordi-

Real

'Friday, April 8,

'}

,)

Suitor gets thorny response after sending .flower bouquet

Businesses plan 'taste' of services for Saturday

*

NOW PLAYING ·EVERY
SATURDAY &amp;
TUESDAY NIGHT

COUN1Y GIRL Scour DIARY

POMEROY -Upcoming
Girl Scout events include: ·
• May 15 is the deadline for
"Granddaddy, Daddy &amp; I
Fishing Day." June 4. Duff's
Farms in Rutland. The cost is
$5 per girl. Bring a lunch and
enjoy the day. May 15 is also
the deadline for Art 'N " the
Park offered for girls I 1-17.
Earn yourArtistic Crafts IPA ,
, This event will be held on
June 4. Location will be
announced at a later date.
• On May 14, there will be
a Brownie Try-it Riot at the
Fellowship Church of the
Nazerene near Reedsville .
Girls will · discover the science world by completed
. three Try-its. Chairs are Tina
Sampson and Linda J&gt;utman.

BY ARTHUR MAX

*

END

The Daily Sentinel

2005

Pag ·

.·

REHABILITATION CENTER
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PomerO), Oh10 45764

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··..

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April~.

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydllilysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher ·

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
.

.

Congress shall make no law respecting atl
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom .·
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
'

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

•

Today is Friday. April 8. the 98th day of'2005. There arc 267
days left irr the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On AprilS. 1974. Hank Aaron
of the Atlanta Braves hit his 715th career home run in a game
against the Los Angeles Dodgers. breaking Babe Ruth's
record. The round·.tripper .was off pitcher AI Downing: .
On this date: In 1513. explorer Juan Ponce de Leon clanned
Florida for Spain .'
.
·
In 1935 , the Works Progress Admihisiration was approved
by Congress.
·
In 1946, the LenguG.of Nations assembled in Geneva for the
last time.
·
In 1952, President Truman seized' the steel industry to ave11
a nationwide strike.
·
In 1970, the Senate rejected President Nixon's nomination
of G. Harold Carswell to the U.S. Supreme Court. ·
In 1973, artist Pablo Picasso died at his home near Muugins,
France, at age 91.
In 1990, Ryan White. the teenage AIDS patient whose bat·
tie for acceptance gained national attention, died in
Indianapolis at age 18.
In 1994, Kurt Cobain, singer and guitarist for the grunge
band Nirvana, was found dead in Seattle from· an apparently
self-inflicted gunshot wound; he was 27.
Ten years ago: Former secretary of defense Robert S.
McNamara.' in an interview with AP Network News and
Newsweek · magazine · to promote his memoirs, called
America's Vietnam War policy ''terribly wrong.'· ·
Five years ago: The CentraJ· Jntelli ge nce · A~ency confirmed
that personnel actiOn ha.d been taken followmg the mtstaken
bombing of .the Chinese embassy during the NATO. war
against Yugoslavia; one employee was reportedly ftred.
•
Actress Claire Trevor died in Newport Beach. Calif.
One year ago: National security advi ser Condoleezza Rice
told the Sept. II commission "there was no si lver bullet': that
could have prevented the 200 I terrorist attacks. Iraq• msurgents released a ;ideotape of three Japanese captives, threatening to burn them alive if Japan did not withdraw Its troops
from Iraq, (The hostages were later released unharmed.) Fred
Olivi, who copiloted the plane that dropped the atomic bomb
on Nagasaki, died in Lemont, Ill., at age 82.
-Today's Birthdays: Former first lady Betty Ford is 87.
Comedian Shecky Greene is 79. Investigative reporter
Seymour Hersh is 68. Basketball Hall-of-Famer John
Havlicek is 65. Singer J.J. Jackson is 64. Songwriter-producer Leon Huff is 63. Actor Hywel Bennett is 61. Actor Stuart
· Pankin is 59. Rock musiCian Steve Howe (Yes). is 58. Rock·
musician 'Mel Schacher (Grand Funk Railroad) is .54. Elaseball
Hall-of-Farner Gary Carter is 51. Actor John Schneider is 4:5.
Rock musician lzzy Stradlin is 43. Singer Julian Lennon is 42.
Rock singer-musician Donita Sparks (L7) is 42. Rapper Biz
Markie is 41. Actres·s Robin Wright Penn is 39. Actress
Patricia Arquette is 3 7. Rock singer Crail~ Honeycutt
(Everything) is 35. Rock musician Darren Jes see is 34. Actor
Taran Noah Smith·is 21 ·. Actress Kirsten Storms is 21.
Thought for Today: "A highbrow is a person educated
.beyond his intelligence." - James Brande r Matthews ..
American author and educator ( 1852-1929).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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be less than ,300 words. All letters are subject to .
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing.issttes, not persomilities.

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Policy

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Web:

'www.mydatlysentinel .com

"Did )OU go out of bounds'"
"Yes." replied the player.
Th:tl was th:tt . The ball was
brought back to the 20·
)ard line.
w
Recalling
that
'tory. r
George
asked my&gt;.clf why such an
Plagenz
approach wou ldn 't work ·
who i~ blowing. th e wJV~tlc:
on a strin!..! of other alkgt:d.
with Perry .
user, of I he ilkgal : steroids.
I prepared two ques,tions
drugs that can enhance t~
with whi&lt;:h .J wou ld Gonfront
Reading that .2:ave me an him . Qo yo u throw a spitball
play~r·s pcrfnrman&lt;:e.
The qory uf Perry ·, 'Pit - tdeu. I 'h:~d ·r'emeinbered Ia pltch doctored with a
ball dre11 national attention readinQ a stl!!·v about Amos lubricant like saliva that
St~lgg
whose makes ·the ball do strange
in 197-.1 wtth the puhlica- A lonzC1
tinn of hi s "n)nfcssinnal" College uf the .Pilcific foot - things)'' Have you ever used
autobiography. "Me and ball team t" here he coac-hed . a foreign substance when
fr[&gt;m 1933 to ' 19~61 was · you throw the ball''
the Spitter."
playi ng a!1other college
Pen and notebook in hand,
Twn installments of the when a hut argument broke
bonk appeared in Sport out. One of Stagg's half- I set out to find Perry. The
· MagaLine .
backs haJ got of(~[ 40-yard interview appears in -the
""During a reception in the run down the sidel ines for a honk ri ght afte r the episode
White Hou se before the touchdown. The other ream . with Nixon:
· 1970 All Star Qame in however. claimed he had
"A messenger of the Lord
Washington t'' Perry wrote. stepped out of hounds on the once knocked on my dnor
' und popped the qu~estion that
"Commiss ioner
· Bowie 20-yard line. ·
Kuhn introduced the players.
The coach and players on was on everybody's mind.
one by one , to Presidenl the opposing team lit into the
"Rev. George R. Plagenz,
Richard Nixon. When he got referee but he wouldn ' t li s- · a former sports wri ter who
to me. the presfdent jabbed ten. Finally Stagg c[une over now is reli gion editor of the
his elbow in my ribs and to see what was the matter. Cleveland Press. stopped by
whispered. '·Gay lord. how He had a suggestion.
my apartment duri,ng the
do you do it''''
"Why don 't you ask my 1972 season.
"Mr. President." I said. player whether he went out
·" Gaylord.· he said. ' I
"there are some things you . of bounds?" . said Stagg. know you wouldn 't tell a lie
just &lt;:an.'t tell people for their "Thai .will sett le it. " Stagg to a preacher. Tell my _,read·
· own good."
nul only wa' Mr. ·Integrity ers you don 't throw the spitThe president roared and himself. he was able-to teach ter and they'll believe you.
said. "Gaylord. you'd make integrity to hi s players.
"I told him . ·J wouldn't lie
a good politician.··
So the player was asked. to you. Reverend, and I'd
Toda' it\ 'teroiib. Thiny
years ag•&gt; it wa' the &gt;.pitball.
The man in the hnt 'c:ll then
w:h Gaylord Perry. a pit&lt;:h.cr
for the Cle1· ~!Jnd lndiatb .
Today it' Jose CameL'O. a
former bi~ k,tgue player.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Friday, April 8, 2005

2005

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailys'e ntinel.com

Obituaries

Scandals can strike out integrity

The Daily Se~tinel

•

PageA4

LAW YOU CAN USE

Gary Bowman

New law changes protections for speciaJ education childre11 with behavior problei11s

Q.:Are disciplinary rules pended from sc·hool. Like
inlef'\ cnti&lt;lll
UTILE HOCKING -Gary Lee "Mousie" Bowman. 61. for children 11'ith special current law. The new law will bodily harm to another. even if "behavioral
the
child\
disability
cm"ed
the
p1an"
1 B IP 1. to 1111prove
of Little Hocking. died Thursday. April 7. 2005 . .at his resi- needs going 10 chcmge .'
allow "ten free days" of sus, behavior. Under the'e circum- ~ behavior. A' under current
dence.
A. : In Jul y 2005. the pension before educational &gt;lances. the child will not return la11:. parents need not wait for
He was born July 2: 1943. in Coolville, son of the late lndi v~ dua l s with Disabilities services must be provided.
to '&gt;chool but will continue lD cli,ctplinary a&lt;:tion w reque't
William Thaddeus and Dorothy Reed Brawley Bowman. He Education Improvement Act
Q.: Mr gmndchild. ll'ho recei1·e educational 'ervices m an FBA and a BIP for their
was formerly employed as a lruck supervisor for Lowe's anq of 2004 will lake effect. This has a mental illne.H. 11·as
an alternate setting.
cl1fld. The request can be
was a member of Grace Brethren Church in Coolville.
new law continues many cur- ordt red out of the school for
Also
for
all
studem'
with
through the EEP
He is survived by his wife of 37 years. Shirley Ann Jackson rent legal protections for spe- 45 days. Was thi.1· legal and disabi lities the scope of the made
proce'5 . whet1evcr the child
Bowman; a son, Gary Jr. and Bobbi Bowma~· of Long cial needs children, but also does the i1e1r /em &lt;if.fect this:'
manifestali.on
hearing
will
be
exh
ibtt' behaviors that interSottom;.a daughter, Julie and Jerry Led some of Crysta l River. giv.es schools more flexibility
A.: Under the current law. if narrower under the new law. fere with learning .
Fla.'; a gra ndd ~ughter. ~indsay Ledsome: two brothers, John to discipline them.
a child with a disability brings meaning that . IEP teams are
Q. · W/1ere ciln I jind our
and Mary Bowman and Harry· Bowman: four sisters: Carole
Q.: Will kid,1· ll'ith dimbili- drugs or weapons to school. not likely tu find that:mi,bc- more ahoutthe llfH' Imr :'
Lofty. Doris and Richard Sallee, Betty Ludwig and Bonnie ties •rho ha1•e been suspended . the school dis!rict can order havior is a manifestation of
A : For· 1i1ore. information.
and Don Buck; and several nieces· and nephews .
or e.1pel/ed have t}te right to ·him or her to a different educa- disability as lJI'ten as th~;~ · do go to the U.S. Departmen~ of
Services will be held at 1.1 a.m. on Saturday. April 9, 2005. recei\ e' educational services?
now. Generally. the new hiw Educatio'n Office of Special
tional settingl~ up to 45 day,.
at White-Schwarzel ·Funeral Home in Coolville with Rev.
A.: l'he hew law continue s The new law xpands .this to is less protective of ·the dis- Education and Rehabilitative
George Horner officiating. Burial will follow , a't Sand Hill the current rule that children include situ-uti ns where th~ abled child's right to remain Services
Web site
at
Cemetery in Long Bottom.
.
with disabilities are entitled &lt;:hild has caused "serious bodi· in school than c'urrent law. · www.ed.gov/about/offices/l is ·
Friends may call form 2 to 4·and 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday at the to receive educat ionaL ser- ly harm" to another person
Q.:Whm lwppms if' the IEP .t/osers. or to the Ohio
funeral home.
vices even if they are sus- while at school.
team decides tlwtthe child's dis· Department of Educati on's
Q.: Will schools be able to ability did not cmrs&lt;' the belwr- Web
site
at
suspend srudems. if their mis· . ior tlim got him im(&gt;tmuble:'
www.ode.state.oh .us/excepti
behavior 'is a result of their
A.: Under these &lt;:ir.:um- anal childreti!c-hirdren w.ith
disabilin .'
· stances. the suspension con· disabilitie s/.
Sec
also
A.: Sometimes depending on tinues. but the child must www.ni&lt;:llcy.nrg 1National
tfie circumstances. After the continue to receive educa- Dissemination Cen ter for
inay contact him at 992-3371.
"10 free days" have been used tionai services in the alterna- Children wilh Di,abtlitie')
children still will be entitled to tive 'Setting for any suspen- and www.cec.gR ed.orgAaw
POMEROY - Campers, boats, and all
a prompt "manifestation" hear· sian of more than 10 school res/doc/
(Council
for
other items stored at the fairgrounds are to be
ing - a speci&lt;!l meeting of the . days. Parents have the right J::xcertional Children).
removed on Saturday, April 23 from 9 to 10· POMEROY -Ohio Department of . group (including the parents) to request an expedi ted due
Lnw lou Can Use is a weeka.m .. Debbie Watson, secretary, Meigs County Transportation District 10 will close Ohio responsible for designing the process hearing if they dis- ly consumer legal illfrmuation
681 , two miles east of U.S. 33, for a culvert child's
Agricultural Society, announced today.
Individualized agree with the determination · coltmllr provided by tlw Ohio
replacement at 8 a.m. on April 12, until4 p.m. Education Program (IEP) - to that the child's disability did State Bar Association and the
' There is no detour posted.
review the connection between not cause. the behavior.
Qhio State Bar Foundation
the .child's dis11bility and the . Q.: What will stufl tl1 e This article wm· prepared by
misbehavior
school district from SIISfli'llll- Judith C. Saltvmm, mr attarPORTLAND
Dwight Icenhower will
The new law coniinltes the ins childrm ll'itlt di.w hihties uey with the Clevelaudfirm of
perform hi s Elvis Presley tribut.e show at 7
flickman . &amp; Lowder Co.,
p.m. Saturday at the Portland Community . SYRACUSE - The Syracuse ·volunteer · rule that the child goes back to Mer and m•er again:'
school
if
the
misbehavior
is
a
A.:
Under
the
new
law.
a·
n
y
L.P.A.
Arficles ap(Jeuring in
C:enrer (old P6rtland' school) . Tickets are $10. Fire Department is having a car wash from 12
Proceeds will benetit.the commu.nity center p.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday. April 9, at the !Ire manifestation of disability. child with a disability who is this colwmr are intended to
However, unlike current law, suspended for more than I0 provide broad, general irrforstation. Rain will cancel the event.
project. Food will be available.
the new law also allows for an days will receive a "function· matiou abolll the law. Before
exception to that rule in cases al behavioral assessment'' ,., applying this irrformationto a
where the child was disciplined (FBA), and observation and specific legal problem, readfor bringing drugs or a weapon analysis of beha-:iors. The ers are urged to seek advice
RACINE - The Friendship Circle of the to school, or causing serious FBA is used to de sign a from au attomey.
POMEROY -Meigs County Sheriff
'
Robert Beegle is seeking first-aid items for Cannel-Sutton United Methodist Church will
kits to be placed in his department's cruisers. serve a public chicken noodle dinner on April 1'6
'
Bandages, gloves, wraps and other supplies . from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Carine! building on Carmel
increasingly require services, twa· new trucks recently purare needed for I0 first-aid kit's. and any indi- Road, Racine. Donations will be accepted. Music
including home-delivered ~;hased for the Meigs County
vidual or organization wishing to donate items will be provided at 6 p.m. by The Uplifters.
meals, homemaker services .. Highway . Department. The
and other services destgned bid was referred to Engineer
from Page A1
to keep ·them home.
.
-Eugene Triplett for review.
sionals. All judges have .pre- have been · named a recipient tion will then be given to the
''State and federal fundmg · • Acknowledved donations
viously won a Telly award of a bronze Telly Award," Whit.e House in an effort to for the aging has either lev- • of $50 from Milton Varian.
and are invested in uphold- commented Amy J. Leach, preserve services that are eled off is decreas·ing, while . Syracuse, $290 from Forked
ing the historical standard of · director of marketing and already in place."
from Page A1
the needs, lor servtces has Run Spottsmen 's Club. $100
excellence the Telly repre- public relations. ''This is the
from Gerald Simpson of
Meigs County ranks 82nd mcreas~d, . Layne satd.
sents.
Judges
are
from
all
third
year
that
Pleasant
National
Day
of
Prayer
Racine and $ 100 from
awards honoring local ,
in the state in terms of poputhe
United
States,
Valley
Hospital
has
been
recregions
of
Commtsstoners
approv~d
a
Bernard and Opal Diddle of ·
regional and cable TV com. latiori 60 and older, but pro·
.
repre&gt;enting
large
and
small
ognized
and
lhat
is
quite
an
destgnatmg May 5 Racine toward jail renovamercials and programs, as
portionately ranks 17th in the resolution
as
the
National
Day of Prayer t' s
·
firms
including
advertising
accomplishment
considering
well as the finest video and
state -meaning only 16 in Meigs County, and autho- · 10,11 · · v . . . · . f
film productions. The Telly agencies, TV stations, pro- we do most of the work in- counties have a higher per- ·rizcd the local National Day of
Appro ed a transler o
Awards annually showcase duction houses and corporate house. The Telly is the most . centage of senior citize11s in Prayer Committee to conduct funds of. $1,998 f~om the .
coveted award in advertising the population, Layne said.
the best work of the most video depiutments.
a prayer meeting at the court- DARE line ttem . mto the
"We
are
extremely
proud
of
and
marketing."
'
respected advertising agen·
According to Layne, ·there house on May J, and ,1 county- salaries line item as requested
Alongside Pleasant Valley are
cies. production companies, our Community Relations
now
35
million wide observance on the court- by Sheri if Robert Beegle.
television stations, cable . Dcpartmert who consistently Hospital , other companies Americans over the age of house steps on May 5.
• Established new line
operators and corporate video develop campaigns that rival selected as distinguished 50. In 2040, that number is
Other business
items for EMS and Common
departments in the world. those of larger facilities and winners included AT&amp;T, expected to reach 75 million .
Commissioners
al
so:
Pleas Co.urt .
praised
AI . BET,
Charter
Media,
The Telly Awards are a wide- agencies,"
last
of
the
baby
boomers
.
The
•
Opened
a
bid
from
Ace
Present
were
ly-known and highly-respect- Lawson, JD, FACHE, chief Hallmark Channel and Harpo are now turning 40, and that Truck
Mick
Equipment
Co., Commissioners
ed national and international executive oftlcer of Pleasant Productions.
generation of Americans born Zaneville, in the amount of Davenport and Jim Sheet s
"Our 'Miracle' cl)mmereial right after World _War II will $43,3'90, for equipment for and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
compettlton and .receives Valley Hospital.
"They continuously go was a project .of the heart
more than I0,000 entries
annually from all 50 states aboye and beyond their because we worked closely
responsibilities to deliver with former cancer patients
and many foreign countries.
Each year, the judges con- campaigns that reflect the who never gave up believing
sist of a group of highly qual- heart and soul of the com- in themselves, our hospital ·
ified advertising, production munity."
·
and that one day they would
and 1(\ther creative profes"We fec'I truly honored to be healed," Leach concluded.

certainly like to answer your
question but that would
spoil the whole idea. You
understand .... ·
Well. I-guess I did understand. The " whole idea" he ·
was referring to was to keep
the opposing players in the
dark. Keep them guessing.
Is he throwing a ·spitter or
isn't he'' If they don ' t know
they won't be able to dig in
at the plate.
Nixon and I were on the
same page but ·neither of us
euot an answer
. to our questipn.
I was . right about one
thing, though . I knew Perry
wouldn 't li e to a man of the
cloth. I wasn't so sure about
the players who appeared
before Congress recently.
Were they corning clean
before the augu si ·(and
skeptical) lawmakers on ·
Capitol Hill ?
We used to think sports
built character. But if we
want our sons to develop
character today, having a
paper route wi II do more for
them than joining a Little
League team. And ·check
their dresser drawers for
steroids.
(George Ph1genz is an
ordained minister and ~·eter- ·
an newsman based in
Columbus, Ohio.)

1

Locai·Briefs

Storage to be removed

Road closed

Benefit concert set

Setcar wash

Seeking supplies

THEON.ES I WORRY
ABOUT ARE THEFOOR

Dinner announced

Meeting

50ULS WITH CARS.

Award
...

Pool
from Page A1
•

VVhat did Sandy steal?
Sandy Berger was director
of · the National , Security
Center in the Clinton administration. an·d as such
President Clinto~ 's top
adviser on all national secuWilliam
rity matters. On Sept. 2.
Rusl)er
2003. in a secure reading
room at the National
Archives
building
m
·washtngton, Berger was
reviewing class ified docu- spec ified hi s socks) and
ments from the Clinton era, again. walked out of ihe
in his capacity as Clinton\ building with them.
At his own office later that
point man in providing rele·
vam materials to the inde· day, Berger cut three of the
pendent commission investi' copies into small pieces. Two
days later staff members at
gat(Iig the Sept. II attacks.
One such document was a the Archives took the matter
copy of · a White House up with him. He said the
"after-action" repo11 that he removals. were inadvel1ent,
himself had· commissioned, and returned the two remainwhile still National Security ing copies of the report, but
director. to assess the Clinton said nothing' about the three
administration's
perfor- he had dest roye,d.
mance in responding to the · Berger has trow pleaded
so-called ~nillerinium terror- gLJ.ilty to a misdemeanor
ist threat ·before New Year's charge in connection with .
2000. (I am relying 'through- the theft (removing class~­
out on reports from The New fied material from a gov·
York Times.) Berger put the · crnment archive). alid has
document in, his pocket and agreed ln pay a $10,000
walked out of the Natiomtl fine and give up his securi·
Archives with it.
ty clearance for three
E.xactly a month later. on years . The chatge also carOct. 2. 2003. in another vbit ries a maximum sentence
to the Archtve,, he stuffed of a year in jail. bui Berger
four copies of other versions · will be spared the jail time
of the same repo11 into his · if the court appro.ves his
clothes (some reports have plea bargain.

The burning·question here,
of cott rse, is what was in the
tl1ree documents that Berger·
destroyed. We can be sure
that Berger won 't-tell us, or
more precisely -that we will
neve,r know w\lether anything he chooses to say on
the subject is a lie. The documellts are irretrievably
gone, and Berger can carry
the secret of their contents to
. his grave.
But you can bet your bottom Uollar that they weren ' t .
Bill Clinton's secret recipes
for chicken a Ia king. In
fact .. as a practical matter,
there is only one thing they
could have been. given the
huge risk that Berger took
in stealing them froni the
National Archives and
destroying them.
Consider. All five . were
copies, or (as the Times puts
it at one point) "versions," of
a single document: an ·
assessment
of terrorist
threats produced during the
Clinton
administration.
These copies had presumably been distributed to various major figures in the
administration, and later collected and placed in the
Archives . ~hat .interested
Berger about five copies of
the
same
document? ·
Presumably, notes scribbled

•

still fighting it."
In a best case scenario, if
'council does receive the
FEMA funds this year for the
London Pool repair, a bidding process will have to
begin before the ae,tual work
can commence which would
translate into little to no
swimming season.
FEMA has agreed to pay
for two freezers that were
ruined during the September
2004 flood and used in the
pool 's concession area.
Buckley also reported that
$18,716 was received from
FEMA last week for other
damage done throughout the
village · (excluding
the
London Pool) · during the
September 2004 flood.
Council approved Article
· Five, Section One of the
Syracuse
Fire
Fighters
Association's by-laws which
states, ··Any member mov.ing
more than three miles outside
the coverage area will .be
dropped from the membership roll if the membershtp
· deems necessary."
Village
Clerk-Treasurer
Sharon Cottrill informed
council that the village had
received a bill for $750 from
the uccounting fum that had
prepared the tax exemption,
50 13-C form for the Syracuse
Rire Fighter's Association.
Members of council were.
unaware of the charge and
Cqnningham said he w~mld
call the accounting flflll Fnday
to see a copy of the ~greel)lent.
During the counctl meetmg

·

on them by the redpients.
And what could have
impelled him to destroy
three of the five copies, and
~eturn the other two? Surely,
that th'e note s on those three
copies made it all too clear
that somebody high up in the
Clinton administration had
perceive,ct a threat' very much
like what happened on Sept.
II. but then failed to do anything whatever about it.
For . whom would Berger
be willing to risk a jail sentence? For himself, no
doubt, and for President
Clinton, and that just about
wmpletes the li st.
So Sandy Berger may
belong on the roll of thos~ .
like Susan McDougall and
Webster Hubbell , who have
accei?ted criminal penalties
to protect Bill Clinton from
the truth. And what Clinton
failed to do to defend the
nation against terrorists may
join his lifetime medical
records (which the media
genero usly never d~mandecl)
among those interesting
things about Slick Willie that
the American people will
never be privileged .to know.
(William Rusher is a
Disting11ished Fellow of the
C/arelilollt Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.) •

'

it was decided to call an . their paychecks early for any
emergency meeting of the reason from now on as per
Syracuse Fire · Fighter's instructions from the Ohio,
Association to vote on paying Auditor of State's Office.
·
$500 out of the fire depart• Petersqn announced that
. ment's checking account to Syracuse 'would participate
complete the 50 IJ·.C process. along with Pomeroy· and
The motion was . passed by Middleport in the yellow tag
the association.
yard sal'e. events beginning in
The $500 fee will be paid May. Those, wishing to registo the Ohio State Treasurer's ter their yard sale and pick up
Office and will allow the their yellow flag may do so at
association to hold fund-rais- the TNT Pit Stop in Syracuse.
ers including their upcoming
• Council agreed to allow
Brian J. R8ed/ photo
basket bingo for which the . Dave Bass to use the lights on
Mason Wai-Mart has ·agreed the baseball field for evening Pastor Glenn Rowe reads a proclamation signed by Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets
to put up a $1,000 match with . baseball practices when need- and,Mick Davenp6rt, designating a National Day of Prayer on May 5.
the stipulation that 50 13-C ed but not after 10 p.m. --status be validated.
• Council agreed to allow
In an attempt to beautify TB tests to be given ·at the
the village for spring, council Syracuse Fire Dep.artment on
adopted a citizen's complaint April II.
.
servic.es request form which
Davis H. Elli.ott Company and the University of Rio Grande
All members of council
residents may pick up at the were present for the meeting.
and Rio Grande Communi~y College ·
police department in regard The next Syracuse Village
to community eyesores . Council meeting is at 7 p.m.
these eyesores can include ·on May 5 at village hall.
trash. unlicensed vehicles.
&lt;0- Paid Line Construction Training Program For Eligibl~ Individual
tall grass, weeds and tir~s .
&lt;• 25 Positions Currently Available .
Other polities adopted for
i
~
Consideration
For Job Placement Upon Completion Of Program
insurance pufPoses · were · a
FRI418/05 • THURS 4114105
Box O!ftco ()pont 0 6:30PM Nlghfly
park facility usage agreement
i
~ Possible 4 Day Work Week If Placed
· a 12:30PM for~ l Sun llatl,_
and internet and e-mail usage
I
~ Excellent Benefits And Pay If Placed
FEVER PITCH (PG130
· agreement for all village
+ Must Have Valid Driyers license ·
1:15 3:30 7·1 6 9:
·
employees.
+
6 Week Training located In Kentucky
SAHARA (PG13)
In other village business:
1: 10,3:10, 7:10 6 9:10
+ Relocation Not ~equired
• It was announced that the
L---·..-·-·-- _ _ .........
•
S
tN
CITY
(R)
Symcuse Water Board meet'· attempts .
The training-you.will receive both on the job and in the classroom
1:26: 3:30, 7:20 6 ·9:30
ing has been rescheduled for
to provide the univ~rsal skills "and knowledge to work in the
B,EAUTY SHOP (PG13)
Thursday. April 14,
1:15 3:15 6 7:15
POWER INDUSTRY ANYWHERE IN THE COUNTRY.
• Council approved a
GUESS WHO (PG13)
Program Orientation and selection will be held in Bob Evans Farms Hall a the University of Rio
motion to include street.
1.oo, 3:00, 7•00 6 9:00
puving in their Community
Grande. .A drug test will be administered on site, ~long wit~ a job specific .skills test. Failure to
MISS CONG_ENIA~ITY 2 (PG13
Development Block Grant
'lake or pass the drug or 'skills test may disqualily you from consideration. Must also be legally
9:30
application. .
.
eligible to work In the United States and you must have identification to.show such eligibility.
FliNG TWO (PG13)
• Mayor Eric Cunningham
Davis H. Elliott Compoiw is o Drug-Free workplace and an equol opportunity employer (MFHV)
informed co uncil. that the
9:00
For more information or to register call 7~0-245-7366
camera for the Syracuse
ROBD.TS (PG)
ONLY l5 PEOPLE WILL BE SELECTED TO PARTICIPATE lN THIS PROCRAM.' .
police cruiser had been
1:00, 3:00 &amp; 7:00
AS
LONC AS OUR NATION NEEDS ELEp-RICITY, OUR NATION NEEDS LINEME~.
installed.
PACtFER (PG13)
.
CALL TODAY!!!
·
• CunninghaJ)1 stated that
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
no employees were to get

LOOKING FOR AGREAT JOB?
Are Working Together To Change Lives!

I
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FAITH

The Daily Sentinel

"Out of the abundance of
the heart the mouth speak&gt;."
ou r Lord Jesus Christ taught.
"The gooJ person out of hi s
gooJ treas ure . brings forth
guod . and the evil person out
.of hi . , e\'il trcil . . ure bring'
forti (C\i l. " (Mt 12J.+-J5 i
. . Indeed . ho" many people
have been hun by words''
Hm\ man\ · hearts have been
hroken &lt;uid f.unilies ripped
apart h) a fia) lt&gt;ngue. "full
of deadly pois01f.".' (Jame s
J.X) How many friendsh1ps
have been destroved. churches ' Piit and · busine"es
bro w~ htto ruin bv one ill tem pered person qu-ick to " pour
out evil tllin £s· &gt;" (Proverbs
15.28)
~
In his epistle. St. Jame:, cautions iis to "be quick to hear.
slow to speak. slow to anger."
( 1.19 ) because the individual
who 1s co ntenllous. ami
speaks quickly ami without
much thought or regard for .
the feelings of others "is . a
fire .. a world of unrighteousness." Such a person "stains
the whole body (not only his
own body. but also families.
churches. businesses and
entire cominunities). setting·
on fire the ·~v holc course of
life." heing himself "set on
!Ire by hell.'' (James 3.6)
In his commentary on the
Book of James, R.C.H.
Lenski
comments.

Jonathan
Noble
'

"the tOtlcue does set fire to the
whole ro und of our being or
cxistc.nce. Note how some bit
of slander sets a who le village
·or a ·town afire. Or see what
vicious propaganda does in a
whole n;tlion or.. in many
nations. Internat ional hatreds
are thusfanned into wars.
Consider the ·.moral and the
spiritual field. Vicious moral
teaching. popular reli giou s
and doctrinal en·ors , rag·e ,Jike
vast conflagrations and leave
co untle ~s victims · in their
wake. The whole round of
existe ~ce is set ;1flame by th e
ev il tongue. The mouth can
breed horrifying consequences or a healing balm\ the
"soft ·answer'' that "turns
away wrath" and brings peace
in .,its wake. (Pr,overbs 15.1)
· Theolog ian and Christian
philosopher R. J. Rushdoony
wrote. "the tongue is a con- ·
trolling force for good and
evil. Its power is ve ry great."
We should beware of those
people who sow seeds.Qf dissention. who continually
complain. who nip at the
heel s of everything and

Friday, AprilS,

everyone go~d and are never
quite completely happy. The
dark clouds of strife, envy and
rancor always bring storms of
pam. suffering and unhappiness.
Ahnv~ all. our own prayer
'hould ·be that of St. Francis
of Assisi: Ltm.l. 'make me ag
itl&gt;!rument of your· peace.
Where there is hatred. let me
sow love: where there is
injury. pardon: where the.re is ·.
doubt. faith: where there is
de spair. hope: where there is
darkness. light: where there is
sadness. joy. Grant that I may
not so much seek .to be consoled as to console: to be
underst'ood. as to understand.
to be loved. as to love. For 11
is in giving that we receive; it
is in pardoning that we are
pardoned: \llld it is· .in dying
that we ·are born to eternal
life. Living out this prayer
and "bri nging forth good
from the good treasure'' of
our heart. we will be a ·blessing to our family and fJiends.
churches and businesses and

The fact th at time' of
upheaval have been visited on
the earth frequentl y during the
long story of the earth is small
consolation to those destined to
Pastor
live in the mid st of such "
Thom
upheavals. Nevertheless. such
Mollohan
seasons as these · come .
Furthermore:. they serve as the
proving grounds for what we
call faith. When the 1'e is none. in Him no matter what happens
we quake and shake with fear in the work!'"' Maybe what we
and angst a'nd tend to sink to the find we have isn' t a garden spot
lowest moral common denomi- so much as a weed patch.
nator.
For instance. when fac ing
Terrorist attacks and wars. pain and difficulty. do we allow
hurricanes and tsunamis. earth- those circumstances to become
quakes and volcanic emptions. justillcation.for choosing ·to do
famine and di sease. reflect the wrong ·&gt; Do yo u recall the
fragility of the world around us. Argentina factory worker riot ~
Perhaps this is underscored in Apri12003'l Or the L.A. nots
even more with th~ recent ejec- . in April 1992? Demonstrations
tions of presidents. antics of agamst IllJUStice and ~ppress10n
princes and the departure of the were not wrong m either case.
Pope into eternity.
What WAS wrong. howevec
It is in no way unreasonable was the reckless hurtmg ol
for you to wonder about how to mnocem people ,· and the
respond 10 the dynamic of tlu- explonat1on of the s1tumtOns to
communities.
• •.
idity in the world. Our circum- steal. People used thetr anger
(Meig~· County ministers:
stances are. frail. our plans 'dnd ove.r bemg ,v•ctumzed to ~lcYou are invited to submit ser- goals are brittle, and our hopes tmuze others. These are clear[y
monettes of an inspirational and dreams are like mists that extreme example s.. but m a
nature, 500 to 700 words, for
.
.
. not h.mgne ss more subtle way. we do the
this Friday page. They d1sappear mlO
.
wmds
of calamity same sons of things. if arid
should be typed and deliv- when the
·
when we rationalize doing
ered, or e-mailed to hoe- blast their way through life. · something wrong based on ·our
On the other hanJ, when ·the
jlicil@mydailysentinel.com.
circumstances.
All are subject to editing and proving ground of upheaval
Of course. most people most
should not deal with contro- finds the salt of genuine faith
of
the time really don 't intend
versial issues or specific being worked into the mix. not
church doctrine. We wa11t only are lives transfonned by any harm in their choices, even
your contributions.)
the presence of God within His when choosing selfishly. It's
just that when we fail to
people. but the whole of society
·
remember God:s expectations
is transformed as well! "What
for how we li ve or forget that
gives him such strength any- H'
&lt;
1s promises are meant ,or our
way?" might be asked of one ood
·
·g
as well as H1s glory, we
believer in a difficult situation.
"Why didn't she just take the . ,do the harm of unplugging our-

The Gracemen

Submlned photo
The Gracemen of Barboursville. W.Va. will be singing at the 10:30 a.m. service Sunday at the
Ash Street Church located at 398 Ash St. in Middleport.

Friday, April 8, 2005 ·

money and run? No one was.
watching," might be the observation of another.
Of course, the answer 1s
quite simple ... so simple that
our world likes to turns its
sophistiCated nose up at it. 'fhe
believer has· an "out-of~world­
ly" strength to draw from and
has an everlasting hope to stand
upon.
·• ... For l know Whom J have
believed, and am convinced
that He is able to guard what J
have entrusted to Him .for that
day." (2 Timot~y l: 12b NlV).
Troubles and llia)s, . anger
and anxieties, frustrations and
fears are the garden spots in
which we must .reap the harvest
of what we've really sown in
faith. "Do I REALLY believe
God's promises from His Word
for my life?" "Am l REALLY
convinced that He is able to
guard the investment of my life

www.mydai Jysentinel.com

2005

Ftllowship
Apostolic

,eh·es from 'abiding in a vital
relat io nsh ip with Christ and
will fall and fail when calamity
comes or tragedy &gt;trikes.
It doesn ·t have to be this way
though. God has made a way
for us·to start over when nature ··.
.barrel s down upon us with
unimaginable desrmction. He
has ,]Jade a way for our spirits
to remain strOn g though illness
may 5eep into our very bones
with fiery fmgers of pain. He
has made a way for His people
to muster up courage in the face
of oppression and injustice. He
has even made a way for His
people to embrace the hope that
th~y have in Christ Jesus when
their beloved Christian leaders
and heroes are called home to
heaven. Whatever the need, He
has n1ade·a way. And whatever
· we do. let us not neglect the
only sure hope th&lt;it we have ...
that of Christ Jesus!
"Do not be deceived, God is
not mvcked: for whatever a
man sows. this will he also
reap. For the one who sows to
his own flesh shall from the
flesh reap comtption, but the
one "'ho
" sows to the Spt'n't shall
from the Spirit reap eternal life ..
And Jet us not Jose heart ' in.
doin0P -good, for irl .due time we
shall reap if we do not grow
weary" (Galatians 6:7-9 NAS).
(Tlwm Mollohan has milristered in sou/hem 0/rio tire
pas/9-112 yean and is the pastor of Pathway Comm11nity
Church. He and his wi'e are
~·
tile paren(s
four children:
He may be reaclred by e-mail
at pastortlrom@patlrwaygallipolis.'com).

of

VanZandt and Ward Rd ., Pas10r Jamrs
~lll le {. Sunda~ School · 10 30 am ..
E\tnmg · 7.30 p m.

A[lrl•!Cllk Woi"Jhlp Center. 87J S 1r,J

Con -b -l~-9 · 15 a.m, Sun ~~.t~~. 9.30
a.m.. DaLly Ma ~s- S:J.O a.m.

Sunday.. HDO a.m. WcJn~sda~. 7 (JU
p m.. Youth Fd 7 ~0 p.m

Church of Christ

Apuslulic T~tbernarle Inc.
Ltrn1l Rd

Catholic

'

A\c. \1Jddkport. Ke\ tll 1\.ronkk. P.t,tor.

•~ mmanutl

Hemlock Grow Chrilltlan Chunh

itutlanJ.

Minister ·

ScmL&lt;'~ Sun tb 00 ;un. &amp; ] 30 p.ni ..
Thuf'l ..7:0Q p m. Pastor ~l:l.ny I{ Hunon

of Cqd

Srhool · Y JOam. Pr~a~o:hing
I 0:30am. '1: \"cmng
Set&gt; ro.:c

C hf'll hin Raptis! Lhurch
Pa~tur: Stc\·c Lt nlc. Sunda; SChoo l: ''):3 0

· 9:.'0 a.m .. Worship - II ;uTI and 6 p m.
WeJnc!O&lt;b y St-n rl't- . 7 p.m.
Rutland First Baplisl Church
Sunday S~o·hool
9.30 "nr. Wur~lrrp .

10;45 a.m.

Sun~ay

l&gt;anrllle Holiness Church

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Btarwallow Ridge Church of C hri~t

Pa ~lor : Bruo.: e Terry, Sunday SChool -9: ~0.
am.

Pine Gron Bible Holintss Church
1/:2 m rle off Rt . 325. P.1~tm : Re1 . O'Dell
\1anley. Sunday School · ?·JO am ..

Wllr~hip

Worship

·

10:30 a .m .. 6': 30 p.m.
Scn. re!!S • 6 311 p.m

p m..

You.~g·s Carpenter Service ·

'VTot.ald it noc be ideal

W

tf aw:h of 111 was
jayful and smiling each day~
Sinn we An impctf«-t
hamlliU lirin~ in an
impcrfec.t worlcl, .-hi~o, of

26 vears in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,.OH.
740-992-6215

cou"", i• not po*"iblc.
Howe'tff, hcrt i.J .a thoughc
1o

Sen kcs. 7, 00 p.m

Wnleyrm Riblt

am . Worshrp · 10:30 a.m , 7 00
Scmce\. 7 p m

Wedn e~&lt;J~

first Bapdsl C hurth
Mark .\1orrov. . 6th ~nd Palmer St .

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

be m ...tu~tlly
cncoura~d by ~ach othe!t'l
nuy

Sunday School· 9 · 15 a.m ..
· I 0·.15 a.m.. 7·00 p m.

to~

Jharc"

mtn~. ",

your

wi1h oCh~n .at your

IO&lt;al ~hu~h or t.yn"'SOsu~
this •c..-k? Cod will smile
upon

~u.

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1Ccl 'i
11:1·11

..

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nuur

Be

740-594-6JJJ

Mini ster: Tom Runyon. 395:'18 Bradbury
Road. Mi ddl ~ port. Sunday School . 9.30

p.m ..

740-949-2217
Sizes available Sx 1D to

10 x 20

1-800-45'1-9806

words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, alld it shall
be do11e u01to yo11.
}olm 15:7

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St .

Local source for trophies ,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

E'• angelt~t

•

Retd!lville Churt'h of Chri5t

··rre

am .. Worship Sance - IO:JU am .. B1blt
Study. Wedne sda~ . 6;.'0 p.m.

Sdmul · 10' lU l L. E\·cni ng - 7:00 p m..
ThuN.Iay Set&gt;'tccs. HXJ

Dexter Chun:b of Ghrist
9:30a.m.. Sunday worship

~ hoed

· JO:JO a.m .

St. ,Rt. 143 JUSt off RL 7. Pa s\Qr Rev.
lame~ R . Acrcc. Sr. Sunday l ' nrficd
Ser\tCl'. Wo rsh tp - 10 30 a.m .. 6 p.m..
Wcdncsd a~ Service!&gt; -7 p m

Dennis Sargent, Sunda~ Btble Study Worship IO,Oam and630

,..

·-

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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall. see God.
Matthew 5:8
'

MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy,Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279 .
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Hartford Churth of C hrist in
Christian Union
Hanfo rd. W.Va .. Pastor:Oavid Greer,
Sund~y School . Y· 30 a.m , Worshrp ·
10:30 a.m .. 7:00 p.m .. Wednesday

a.m . \1/ors hip - . I I a.m .. 6 p .m .
Wednesday Scn•ices • 7 p.m

Semces - 7.00 p.m

··omt Run Baptist

Church of God

Pasto r : Ari'us Hun. Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worshrp • II a.m .

or

~hie

Mt. Moriah B11plist

KEHLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An Income Tax &amp;
FiiiQnciQ/ Servic~s Firm
f)

18 E Main Street • Po meroy

(740)

"Do not steal. Do not'lie. Do not deceive one another.''
Leviticu s 19: II

Mt. Moriah Church God
!~ill Rd., Racine. Past or James

Saucrfi~ld.

Fourth &amp; Main Si . Middleport. Paslor
Rev. Gilbert Crai!J. lr:, Sunday School ·
9:30 11.m . Worship . 10 45 a.m.

Sundoy ,S(·hool· · 9:45 a.m .

E\ e nrng · 6 p.m . Wednesday Sen·ices. 7

Rurland Chul'fb or God
Pastor: Ron H e~th, Sunday Woqh1p - 10
a.m .. 6 p.m .• Wednesday Services - 7
p.m .
Syracuse First Cburcb of God
Apple and Second SlS , Pastor. Re\0. David
Ru sse ll. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m . E\·ening Servtces- 6 :30 p .m.,
WednesdaY Sen·kts · 6:30p.m.

K&amp; C JEWELERS

7270

Financial
·
Services
.
· .
AGENCIES Inc.

Bill Quickel

Laurel Clirr •·ree Methodist Churth
Glenn Rowr Su n da~ School ·

:;rJO \'

IU lO J m. \h·JrJL'' Ja\ Sen i C C~ . 7 no

L:.,_._ rcn,·.· f-or~o·man. \\ o ~h i p- I11 t~l Jtn

p.m

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Wof"!ihip Cenltr
Seho ul. l' tl~ hlr : Rol:&lt;

Cheq~ r

R eJoi c in~:: Lift'

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SUIJJ&lt;!~

Rarh ~r.

Clifton lal&gt;t"rnadt' Chun: h

Bt~k S tud~

C lilwn \\' \'.1 .. Sunda~ Srhtllll - 10 J rn.
\\,,r,tll p · 7 r m Wl·Jn~,J.r\ So.:ntl(.'. 7
p.m .

. 7 pm
:--;," Lire\ il· tur~ Center
K"Jd G ~Ji rf" • h,.OH

1 77 ~ Georgl·,cr~d

Pa~tur .
.1 Ill

Yuuth 7 p.n1.
Full Go&lt;;p4 Churrh
or tht.' Li' ing Sa~ ior

SL John Lutheran Chureh
Pmc GrOll', Worsh rp ·9:00a. m .. Sunday

Pll ~tor·

School · 10:00 3.m Pastor : Jumc s P. ·
Brady

pm

o.cJ 1 ttc . 7 p .111

We dne ~Ja~

Faith Full Gospl'l Church
Lu~g Bouorn . P~~lOi . Stc1~ Re~d. SunJa\
s~.·hllOl - &lt;J :3tJ a.m. \\or3h1p · &lt;J : ~u ;~ . m

Our Sa"iour Luthmm Chun-h

AND ERSON
FUNERAL HOME

tlll.a)lltS._•PO

losl7t
N,111 H••n. WV :!SUS

J.., H. Andmoo. l.knstd FIIDt'fW Dirmor
H&lt;m

fomllottPI f -

rtaanioa

Harrison,·ilk Communi!~· Ch ul'f'h
Pa~tur. . T heron Du rham. SunJ:t~ · 9:J(]
am . and I p.m .. Wctlncsda~ · i p.m.

!i.~65

R~stnrarion

Langs,ille Christian Churrh
1-' ul l Glhf"''l. f'a,l!,r· Rohcrt \lu' ~l·r.
Sund.t:&gt; S c hon]l,l _ ~o am. Wor~hip lU:.&lt;o

Faith

East Lttart
Sunday Sd10ol · .

Vallt~·

Talwrnadt C hun:h

Pentecostal
St

S}racuse Mission
l4 ij Brid gt:n'lan St . Syrac ust .

Presbyterian

IIAul Cnn1munit~· ChuiTh
Off Rt. 12.--1. Pustor: EJ ~cl Hart. Su n da~
School · ~ -10 a nr . \\-orsh ip · I0:30 am ,
7.]0 p.m

P&lt;:~s t or

D~·es,· ille Communi!}' Churt'h

P~~w r

Ruh.:n Cn111 \\'tlr,h•p ·

Pa ~tm

"iddleport Presb~terian
Jam,·, Sn~ Jcr Wn, ,h rp · 1 ~. .t rn.

Sunday St ht".ol · 9 · 10 a rn .
IOJO a.m ., 7 p.m.

S~· racuse Firs t t:niltd Pre-sh}lerian

\~ or ,hlp

Morse Chape l Churth
· 1U a m. Worship · II

Mtig"i Cooperafi\'t Parish
Northeasl Cluster, Alfred. PaMu r. Jane

9:30 a.m .. Worshrp · I 0: 30a.m.. 6:30pm ..
We.Jnesday Se r,·ices · 7 p ·m., Pastor·

Beatti e. Sunday s~· h oo l · 9 :JO a.m..
Wurship-11 a.m .6 .' 0p.m

Allen Midcap

Sunda)' S'hool • 10 a.m . . Tiuusda y
Serv1ce!l · 7 p m .

-1 p.m

.

Wednesday Sen·r:es · 7 p m

LonaBonom
Sunda f School • 9.30 a.m., Wo11ibip :
10:30 a.m. ·

Porn troy Cburth of the Nuartnt
Pastor: lllh Lavcndtr. Sunda} ·school ·

Rmlnlllt

9:30 a.m., Worsh1p · 10·30 a.m and 6
p.m.• Wednesday Stf"\·icr:s. 7 p.m .

Wo rship · 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School ·
10:30 a.Pt,. First Sunday of Month · 7:00

p.m. ser.iC'e

Chester Chun:-b of ..t NUKnne

.v. o~ rp-

7pm

am &amp; " :00 p m. \' cdn~·,Ja~ Scnr,·.:• ·
7 00 r m . Wednc,J~~ 't\ •uth Sen r~e .
7:00p.m.

C)/ttead E!AawA

!llegtdauy.

.

Whilt'1 Chapel Wesltyan
Caohilie R oad, PastOr: Rc:,·. Ph illip
Ridenour. Sunda~ School · 9 30 a.m .
U.'uffitip · 10 30 a.m .. Wednesday Sen 1ce

Let vor1r light so shine bej()re
mm. thar thev nwr see rour
The cart you dtstrvt, clost to homt good &gt;mrks and glorif\' rour
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Fatlier .in hea&gt;·etr."
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
Matthe•r 5:16
. 740-992-6606

&amp;noufftr's '
:fire &amp; &amp;alrt!'

··so I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before

Acts 24:16

RJ .

Fr'Hdom Gosp.l ~tission
Bald Kno b. on Co. Rd J 1. Pastor Re'
Rag~r Wiqford. Sunday School · 9 :30 a.m

ROCK~PRINGS
REHABILITTION CENTER

God and man."

\\~o.:]..h,~m

Eden lnited 8rt'thren in C hrist
Stn.te Route ~~~ - RecJ•\1~\c. Sunda~
S,:hOI.•l · 11 :un SunJJ~ \\ 0 r~htp , 10:00

p.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so !ol'ed the .world
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
lbe rw.rren son ...
·Prescriptions
Jolm3: /6
992-2955
Pomeroy

Blessed are the, pure
in. heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5.

Commu'nil~ .~6J l l

?p.m.

Carleton Interdenominational Chun:h
King~ b ur~ R1•ad. Pa ~ tor . Rullert \'arKe ,
Sunda) Scho ol . 9 :JQ am. Worshrp
Stnice 10:30 am .. E\.c-llmg SenKt: 6

.............._
· •nnm

Pa'lllr .

p.m .. WeJn..- ~da;. Ser\ II.'~\
7.00 p m.
Yo uth group "meeting ~nd &amp; 4th SunJ.t~,

10 a.m. 2nd and -lth Sunday

S}'I"'CUse Church ol lhe Sazarene
Pastor \1ile Adk..ins. Sunday School · 9 JO.
a.m. Worship
10: 30 a.m .. 6 p .m..

Joppa
Pas tor: Bob Randolph. \\oo rshi p · 9:30
a.m. Sunday School- 10 30 am .

P ~o&gt;lllL' n• ~.

H t', RJ

Pastor: Peter .\ lanindalc . SunJa~ S~h("l(•l­
l,l·JU a m . \\ or~h~ r. 10:.'111 Jill . 700

Siher Ridge- Pastor l tn d ~ Dam.:~ood.
Sunda~ S..-hoo l · 9 a.m.: Wu r~h ip St.'n ill'

Church of th e ~azaren( Pastor· Jam1e
Pettu. Sunda} Schopl- 9:30a.m.. Worship
. 10·45 am, 7 p m., Wed n.:sday Senrccs

Chtsltr.
Pa stOr: Jane Beattie. Worship . 9 a.m..

a. rn

in Christ Churrh
Tex..t'

Full Gospel Li~lhouse
Hiland R o~d. Pomero~. P~ t or : R o ~
J-fumer. Sunda~ School- 10 a.m .. E\emng
7. 10 p. m .. · Tu csda~ &amp; Thu m ttJy . 7 lU
p.m.

Ftllo~t·shlp

1;1

\11. llernwn Lnih·d Bn:threo

Church

Bu ~ h . Sunda~ S c h~•l

South Bethrl Cummunit~· Church

Reecls\"illt

Ch urdi

United Brethren

· ·
q '0 am .. Ewnmg · 6 :3,0 p m. Wednc:-JJ_I
Sen ice· 7 p.m .

Middlt~rt Church of the- Naza~nt
Pastor. Allt'n Mi dcap, Sunday Sc hool ·

.1111Jtr .1untral J;omt

Oli~e Communit~·

Lav. rcnl~'

Pn-sb~terian

Bcnnell Ludk'h Snturda~ Scn tee' :
s .•htMth Srhvol. ~pIll ·. \\'or'hlp. 3 r .m

Faith Gospel C hurth
Long Bottom. Sund11~ Sd1oo l • 4 ~0 a m .
Wors.hip
10 ·45 am .. 7 30 p. m..
Wednesday 7·10 p m

Pa~10r:

Wpr,hip - t I a rn .

Se\'f~nth-Oa~ .- \d,·cnlbt

~~5

· SeJ'\·ices · 7 p.m.

C'ro~A .

Seventh-Day Adventist

1\_lu lh.:rr~

Nazarene

Ralph Spires. Sunda} School , 9:30a.m .
Worship . 10 30 a.m ., 7 p.m .. Thursda }

•

a m.. WOO Elt!~day Sen icc - 7 p m.

Mt.

Mt. Oli\·t United Methodist
OfT 124 bt:hind Wilkw •ille, Pa~tor . Re\

Rnben

·

Surw:la~ ~c h on!

lort"h Churt'h
Co Rd 63. Sund-ay So.:hool - 9.30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m .

10 a.m ..
7

Sen i Le~ .

p m.

Harrison\·i!le

Hockingport ChuNh
Grand Stree t. Sunda y School · 9 :JO .a .m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Pa, tor Ph!llrp Bell

Sef\'iCC · 1:30 p.m.

Rt

Hoback. Sunda~ · s,·hoo!
L\e nrng · 7 ·r m \h·Unt....t•~

Su n da~

6 p.m .

School · I 0 a m, E ve nmg
Wednesday Semcc • 7 p.m.

Hel ~n

Township Rd .. 46SC. Sunda~ Sc hool . 9
a.m. Worship · 10 a.m.. Wedni!'Mil~
SerYtces- 10 a.m.

Worship · 9 :~ 0 u.m. (1st&lt;% :!n d Sun] . .
7.30 p.m. 13rd &amp; 4th Sun) . Wedncsda~

Ptnlecostnl -\ sse mbl~·
12-l RJ.:me, P~~tor. William

ThurMiay Sen kt' · 7 p.m

R.acitw

8elhel Church

Graham United Methodisl

7-llll pm. \\'cdnc•LI &lt;•~ Sn\lll' / 00

&lt;101 ••

Bailey Run Rt•aJ. P&lt;~ ~hJr. Rc\· Emmell ·
R~\\ SO n. Sunda~
Even1ng 7 p m.

a.m . Wor:&gt;htP - 9 a.m.. Tuesilily Sen ice~·

Sat 7:00pm C ontcn)porJ.Iy Service

7 pm

pm

Kline. C no llillc Church.
M:tm &amp; F1fth• St.. Su nJ~y SdrU\.Jl • 10

Sunday Sch1Xll · 9 :4.5 am .. Worsh1p - 11
a Ill . P~Mo r: Jame~ P. Brady

Christian ·rello"ship

· Hwpt·r Ru~LI. Ath!.'lh . Pa,\ t1r
L.mml· C••a l, . Sun d. t ~ \\~&gt;r,h1p lfliiO .nil .

7 p rn.

ye abide in Me, and My
wards abide in you, ye shali
ask what ye will, and i1 shall
be done UIIIO you.
John 15:7
Llllil

\\ cJnc,J;,~

Pe te Shaflc r, Su nday School . 10

Sl. Paul Lulheran Churrb
Cumt-r S)~anK}rt: &amp; Second St ., Pomeroy.

'"n K''' , :IMI pm

10 am. SunJa~ Chur,:h "'["\ tl' '-' t1 ::o pm
7 prn

!elluv.ship !.(.'1"\ icc 7 r .rn

CoolvillJ: lnitt'd Methodist Pwrbh
P~ sto r

mg

Hobson C hristian Frllo~ s hip ,C hurch
PJ,Jt&gt;r llcr...hcl \~hue . Su nJJ~ S...hl,.. ll·

\1ar ~ha11

•

Lt~o'\

Hn.:11\. P11•l!\f Clr.ub Kou'h tJ0-1-) 67).
::!:~i'( Sun• t1; Sdi•l•l i ll · ~o am. Sur11t~:
el&lt;'l!Htg ,mkt' 'tJII pill. BiHII SILid_1

E1· ~nin~ . 7:3iJ p m . WcdnesJ a! Sen i.e .
7:30 p m.

am .. \\orship - II a.m. WL'dnc .';(by 7

Walnut and He nry Sts. Ravcn ~wood .
W.Va .. Pa~tor : Da \'r d Ru s~c ll, Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m.. \\&gt;orship · II a.m

,,f \\ e,t C tllumhtot. \\ .\ :J.(Jfll

,B:Jd;

575 Pearl St .. M jJ~It.:pun . P a~tor : Sam
Andcfson. Sunda~ Sl' hi1nl Ill am .

9a.m .. Worship - I 0 a.m.. 1st S_unday
t'\'t'r~ month ncning sen-icc 7.00 p.m.;
Wednesday . 7 p m .

Luttteran

Btll ~J.ue-n . Sunda~ Scr\lr~· \t J
r m \\c,]n(' 'l] , ,~ . 7 rIll ,1,:

1'1:. ..,

W~tl th.',Ja:O"

a.m .. Wohhl p - 10 a.m.

Sac,rament Sen tee .9-10:15 a.m .
Homemakmg mCc.'trng. ht Th u r ~. · "'p.m.

Sen i~o.:' · - p m

\Iiddie pori Community ChuiTh ·

Wed. 7.00 p m.

Pastor Bill

Church
-\\.:. \ltll llk pnrt. PJ• hw
h"1 r~·rnan
P...t&lt;~r
l.tn.. nlu~
~nd

Agapt Life ( 'eutt'r
'" Fuli-G thpel Chur~h--. Pa ~tur- J,,hn ,\.:

Morning Star
f'a,tor: John G1lmi,re. Sun da}' Sshool. II

992-6677

ite
Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

~~hl~hitll.

K

Cannei-Su11on
Carmel &amp; lJ.rshan Rd s. R~ r r ne. Oh10.
P~ st or · John Gi) more, Sunday St·hool ·
9 311 a m.• Worsh1p · ,J 0 -l5 a n:r . Brb lr

Pa~tor

L•
212 E. Main Street · · - - - - ·
•
'fill
Pomeroy
._L..... _

992-3785

Insurance
Products+

Wtllt.tut

p.m

Anliquit) Baptist
Sunday School • 9 · 30 a.m.• Worship ·
·10:45 a.m .. Sunday Evening · 6 :00 p.m ..
Pastor: Doll Walker

•

Thursday Btbh: Stud v ~nd r outh " 7 p.m. ·

p.m., Wednesday Btble Study- 7 p.m.

Christian Union

·

· f, 110 p m

. Communit~· or Chris1
P•lrtland- R.u: mc RJ .. P;Nm Jtm Pr,ltlill.
Sunda~ S.:hucll
9· ~U a m.. \\nr,hrp - ·

Abundanl Grace R.EI .
9:' S. llurd St. . MiJtlk'pot1 . Pao, t,&gt;r h-rl·,~
f):lll'
~~J nd. r~
\t:ni t·•·
]0 :r '111

. I0: I j a.m .• \\o'urship · 9 15 am ..
Bihlc Stud~ : Mnnday 7·00 pm

United Methodist

Chun:b of Christ
Jnt e r~ ectwn 7 and 1 ~ -1- w. E\an gdisl

Wc-dnl·~J,, ~

Salen1 Com muni!~ Chutt·h

9 .10 .1.rn ., Worship . 10 ~0 ~ . m . , Thursdl~
Scn'LCI!S. 7 rIll

Sno•.nille
Sunduy SchOOl· 10 am . Worshi p . 9 am

~nd

rm

Pall~ Wadt- 60~ Snt•nLI .·\l.t: ~b .. P n , 77'."017 . Senic,• tune: SunJ.l~ HUll J m
Wcdne-..1&lt;1\ 7 pm

Sunday · 6 p m

Mike Moore. Sunday School·

9 ,a.m , Worship · 10 a.m. 6:30 p m.
Wcdn.-:sday Sen tees· 7 p.m .

Old Bethel
Will Bapi:ist Churth
2!11'101 S1. Rt. 7, Mrddlt{'o rt . Sunday

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc.
Full line of

Kt:tth Radt:r , Sund~~ s,·hool. 9:15
Won hip · 10 .am . You th

Rutland
Pastor · Rrck Amirne . Sunda 1 Sc hool ·

P.J.~tor: Philip Stunn, Sunday School: 9:30

your light so shine befor,el
that they may see
works and glorify
IF'atl•e•in heaven."
Matthew

Pa ~!llr . \\&lt;t~n~o• R. Jl.'\h'l l. Su'ndo~~ S,•t"\t~o·c

fi· OO

- 6. '0 p.m. 'l"outh Sen i~·c- fi:' {J p.m

-10.45 p.m .. Su nda} EH· 7:00 P.m ..
S.:n rce · 7 30 p m

Sunday Sch ool !0:20-1 1 a .m . Reli ef
Soctct y/Prr esthoud 11.0~- 12 :00 noon.

Middleport, OH '

740-992-6128

Pa~tur :

Wednc o;da~

Min ister

Wcdnc..,day Billie Study. 6 00 p.m

SaJem St.. Pastor: Jamie f ortnc'r. Sunday
School · 10 a.m., Eve~ing • 7 p.m ,
Wednesday ~-ice s . 7 p.m:

StiJfr.!i\'ille Commu~it~ Apmtnli('
· C hurch

-~'h St. \l iddlepPrt - Pa .. ll•r .
Sund ~ 1
Srhuol · 9 :30 J.t11 .. · .\1 ormng '.l. u r\hrp ·
10 JO &lt;&gt;III . &amp; 6 .~0 pm. \\ 'l·Jrre~du~ S~n l,. ,.

S~hnnl

The Church of Jrsus

p.m., Wednesda y Servict:s · 7.00 p m

Great Bend , Rnu te 1~4. Racmc, OH.
Pusll.)r . D.miel !\.1c-=ea, Sund&lt;~y School ·
IJ:.~O a 111 . Sunda).' Wor ~hip . 10·30 am ,

740-992-7713

.'

Oa§iS l'hri~thln Fdlu~ ship .
I\••n -Ucnnm uutr ~lnal t ~111• 11 'h 1p'
\b: tlll)i m the 11ld \m em·an Legmn Hull
SwuLh h•LJrqh A1 ~nul!. ~ lrck.ll ero rt
P&lt;~• t0r Clu" Sl&lt;:v.Jn IO:t,!J &lt;~Ill SundJ:O
Other m~~·ttng&lt;. rn h••rll~•

Phtor Brra n Dunham . Worship · 9 · ~0

75 Pearl St .. M idJlepon. Pastor Rrck
Bourne. Sund&lt;~y Sch ool- 10 ;l m Warsh1p

9:JO a.m.. Worship.· 10:.'0 a .m.
,p.rn ·. Wcdncsduy Scmtc • 7:00 p m

Bil&gt;lr Chun:h

PrJ,e. Co. Rd , PJ ,tl•r Re' .
Bl o:id;\.\0\&gt;LI .' Sund~;. Sth1H1I . 1..J 111' ~ rn.
• Wur,hip
If) JO
J m.
7 .J(J. r·m .
WeJne,Uu: s,·n'i re · - .1.0 p m

6..10 rm .., Tin.n..U~1 ·Bll"-ll• Stull~ 7·0Q p m

Ash Strttl Churrh

J ·~~l(!r '·

Christ of Lall~r-Da) Saints
S1. Rt. •160. 446 -62-17 or 4-l6 -7 J 86.

Hickory Hills C hurch of Christ

Rutland Ff'fl' WID Baplist

Caln1.r~

PQmt:J I':

Pomeroy

am , .

C' lmrt•h

Rull1nd Chun:h of Christ

Bradfo rd C hurth of Chri~t

Mt. Uni on Baptist
Pa'sto'r . Da\'al Wi sema n. Sunday School-

Ope n 7 days a week

Grarr Communit.1 Church

P.t&lt;,lur \\'o~ ~n~Dunlap. State Rt 6~1.
Tupper ~ Platn.,. Sun \\ or,hrp· 10 am A:

~ra!('r.

Rock Springs

p.m..

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m . Worshrp and
Communit1rt · IO.JO a.m, Bob J. \\'1.'11).

Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Mimster: Doug ~hnmb1m. Youth Mrnr stcr:
Bill Amberger. Sunday St:hool ; 9:30a.m.
Worship - S:OO a .m.. 10·30 a.m . 7 00

Home Cooked Meals &amp; Dally SpecillL&lt;:

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Pearl Chaptl •

S~nday Schofl l · 9 a.m . WorShip . 10 a m

Latter-Day Saints

Vvorshrp · 10.30 a.m.

.WI.'dncsday ScrYices- 1:00 p.m.

"A Home Bank for
j-lome People·

Other Churches

Re • Fro~nJ..Irn D u. J,en~. Ser11~~
pm

Fn da~

Pa,lor . K.•rcn Du1r~ Sund.11
\\ur~ hip : 10 am. benlllg Wor~ hrp : h pm.
'Iouth gruup , 6 prrr. \1.-"t-Jno.:•Ja\ P\l ~A Cr 111

Pastor: John Gilmore. Sund:t;. Schon] - 10
am. Wor.,hip · Y a .rn. Wednesda~
Scf"\'il·es. 10 a.m.

Pas10r: John Swanson. Sunday School IOa. n, .. Worship · I Ia m.. 7:00 p.m.

.

Encouraged...
eo

499 Richland Avenue, Athens

9vfi[[ie 1s 'l{estaurant

llulh ws~

Pa~lur

A~·r•Wn t

Pastor: Re\ . Lai"T) Lemley: Sunday School
· - 9·.m am .. Wo~ h •p. 10:-'5 a m.. 7 p m ,

Br11dbury Church ol Christ

Sen u:e- 7:00 p.m.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

If ye abide ;, Me, and My

That We May

6 am ·13 p m

~

lnsuumemal. Worship Ser\ ice . 9 a.m ..
Communion
. · 10 a.m. Sunda.,.. School .

~iddlcport.

H ou r ~

\Yarm Frie1rd/y
AtmtHphe,.,-

Sl'h("){)] .

Btthan~·

10: I~ a.m.. Yo uth· :"i 30 pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wcdn e5day ,"] pm

Faith Baplisl Cburth
Railroad St., Maso n, Sunday So;hool · 10

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middleoort OH · Fax 1740&gt; 992 ·7406

Sunda~

Hysell Run Community Churrh

.

740-949-2210

' 29670 Bash an Rd.
Racine, OH

rou..

Won'• fO u

P(JffiCnly or ParkcrS;hurg

l-740·667-3156
"Still small e11ough to care"

Hills Self Storage

lona fo ~«"
tMI I m•y
impan to ~U SOMC spiritv.JII
gtf1 ro :u.n:-ngthen ~u. that

and

minutes from

Racine, OH

lftlinK" espcc:iatl)· hllppy.
perhaps. WC-CO~Id challtn~
oatKI¥a to s.han a unilt
wirlli S6rneou who hat,
t~oni. lr ia IN.Iy 10 •mik at a
chfttfvl JX'f'OR. bu1 how
muc~ g«alcr thr bk:»ing 10
cry 10 cheu' OftC' who i.s sad
or diKourag&lt;"d or cwn j"'t
angry ac the- world. Paul
wriu•6 in his lena to thtRomans a': II · I2 ...... For I

~un

Atl)en~.

.~0

209 Third

On thC' dayt we ..-rr

f.ai1h, both

Loc:ated Jess !han

.

poftdc-r...

ft.. 1har we

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio

Bot-. Rohim (lll.

Tuppni Plain ChuiTh of Christ

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration o{ Life"

Wednesdn~

IO:JO ;1,;11 1 7:~0
Sen'll'C · 1-J() p.m

p m . \\'edne~dJ~

a~ul 7 P:llr.. \l.,•drrt:~Ja~ · 7 p.m.. Fn da\

O'Bnant. Sunda~ School . 9:30a.m ..
Wor.hrp · K· l .'i a.m . 9·4.'i am &amp; H)(} p.m..

525 N 2ild St. Middlepon. Pastor: lame s
E. K~e~e . Worship . lOam. 7 p m ..

The sponsors·of this church page do so with pride in our community

·

Schop l · 9 ~ IJ J m. \~ or•hrp "'i.J()
r m . \\'edne'da~ Bt\lle Stull: - - m p m
Faith Ftllo~ ~ hip (rulilldt.' for l"hri!&gt;t

B~:thel

a.m. Sunday St·hool- 1U:1'i a.m

Sunda'
\l.or~h ip -1 p.m.. WedneMlay
prayer meeting- 7 p.m

9:~0

llillsidt Baptist Church

'(

P~ S \ •lr:

10.30 a.m.. Pa:.tor-Jeffrc y W&lt;~.llace. 1st and
]rd Sunday

\1J~

~un~:

Ser.1ce ~

.\liners~ille

a.nr , \\"ur ~ hip · 10 a.m.

Leadin11 Creek Rd .. Rutland . PaMor: Re\ .
De~Aey Kmg Sunday s.·hool- 9 ·30 am ..

Pomeroy. Harmonville Rd . tRt.HJI.
Pa~trw Roger Waban . Sunday ~chool ·

•' ir.it Southern Baptist
41/01 Pomcro) Pike. P:1stor· E. Lamar

6 30
Wcdnc !&gt;day Scrvkcs • 6:.\0p m.

.

' S~tlem Center

\'ictory Baplist lndtptndent

·j' .

pr&lt;Jyer $Crme. 7 p.m

Ketio Chun·h or Christ
Worshi p · 9:30 a .m.. Sunday School ..

Zion C hurch I'Jf Chflst

10·3 0 a.m.

9.45 u m.. EHnt ng

s~·houl

9 .10 a. rn .. \\'oT"ohi p - 11 :00 a.m.

7 p.m.. .

Ru,rJ . Pa~ lor : Charles
Harri;.llll\"ilk
McKe nlt e. Sunday School 9 :~ 0 am.
Wors h1p · II a.m .. 7 00 p.m.. Wt:dne...Uay
Sef"\·tce 7 t(i p.m

Y~O a m

·r

Hnth ~~lidd leport )
Pa:.tor: Brran Dunham . SunJa~

11057 State Route 31~. LanJ!:~'·II~. Pastor :
Vr ctor Roush, Sunday ,chool . 9:JO a.m..
Sunda~ \I.Or~h rp · 10 .10 a.nr . &amp;

1)1

htr\it'~ 8iblt&gt; C hunh
Letan. W ,\·a Rt l, PNvr Bru.m

Rutlarld Chur~h of the :'\azarent
Sunda) School 9.30 'I m . \\or,hrp .
I0 30 a m . 6 .~0
- pm

p

~

a.m. Wnr•ht p · 9 a.m

V.edne~lL~

Middltport Chun:h Of Christ
5th and Mcun, Pa~tO i " Al Hart~on . Yo01h
Mini &gt;ter. Jo•h Ulrn. SunJa) So.:huo l . 9:30
a.m .. Worship" R 15. 10:]0 a.m. 7 p m.

Sunday

LONG BOTTOM - Hymn sing, 7 p.m. , Faith Full Gospel
Church. Delivered. to sing.
·

Surlda~ \\ur\lur&gt;-- 10 00 a.m..
Sen·tcc -7 p 111

Firsl Baplist

Jon Bmd..ert. E~ ~~ M~m St. ,
Sunday Srhool . · '):.i ll tun , Wor,lup .

Bethlehem B11plisl Church

Hymn sing tonight

R utl~nd .

f"uT"\'!it Run '
Pastor Boh Rohm~,)n, Sunda~ s"chool · 10

Street.

Wednesd a~

l' a~tur

Si h·er Run Baptist

LITTLE HOCKJNG ~ Little Hocking Church of Christ,
U.S. 50 and Ohio 7 south of Belpre will have a clothing
give-way 5 to 8 p.m . Friday. Clothing for infants through
adults. 'Clothing is for low-income families and not for
resale.
••

Church
Tomek. ~l a m

Steve

Sc hool · II a.m .. Worshtp -. IOa.m . 6 p m.
Wcdn esda) Sen k r:' · 7 p.m .

Wc dn ~sday

·a.m. Worsht p - 10 ·40 a.m .. 7:00p.m ..
Wl·d nl.'sday Sen• ~ees ·7 :00pm

Clothing give-away

Pa~lM Kerth l{ :tder. Surrdu~ ~lhOO! · 10
a.rn. Worsbtp · II a.m.

Holiness

212 W Marn- St.. Mirm ter . Anthurr~ ·
Morris - Su nda y School - 9 :30 am ..

a.m.

CARPENTER- Revival services will be held at 6:30p.m.
each evening. April 21-23. at the Mt. Uriion Baptist Church
near Carpenter. The evangelist will be Pastor David Wiseman,
author of the recently rel eased book, "The Advent of the EndTime Church. What are the true and apostate churches?" On
Sunday. April 24, Day Spring will be in concert. For more
information &gt;all 740-742-2568.

Fl&amp;I'-''OOdS

Fdl uv.~ hip .

Racine First Baptist
PaStllf Rtck Rule Sunda~ School · 9.30

Revival planned

Episcopal
Gract Episcopal Churt'h
l26 E ~l ain St .. Pumeruy. Sunda~· S.:hool
lind HOI) Eu.:hiiml 11 /)(] :r rn

Rose of Sharon Holiness ~ huiTh

Hopt Baptist Churth (Soulhtrn l
570 Grant·St , Mr ddkport. Sunday M:hl)(J]

Wor ~ hrp

F.nterprise
Pn-tur .-\r litnd Krn~. Sunda;. ,School ·
10 .~0 a.m.. \\ urship - 9 .10 a.m Bihle
Stud&gt; \\ cd nn

Wednesday Sl·nice~ · 7 p.m .

am. Mnnung WoNhip IU·JO am. Sunday
c1 c nin ];! : 6 .10 pm Wcdnc~y 6:30pm

Pa~tur :

Sehoul 9 I~ J.m

.

Pa.Mor Re' Herbert Grate. SunJa~ S~· h0\11
. 9.30 a.m. Worshrp - II ~ - m. 6 p m.
Wednesda~ Ser\rce;, · ' r m

Amazln~

Cahary PilgMm Chapel

7:Q0pm. Wednc ~duy Bibl e Stud~ 7:00 pm.
lr11crim Prc3tht:r · A[jyJ Ros s

\l.tr:dne~a~

Sunda~

Pastor:

Pomtro)' Westside Churth of Chrisl
.\3226 Chr l dren·~ Ho me Rd .. Sund&lt;ty

Carpcnlrr Bapli~l Lhurch

Pomeru~

Trinity Chul't'h
Second &amp; Lynn, Pamcro). Pastor: Re1 .
Jonath'an \'oble. Wor;hrp 10:25 a.m.

Pomtro,· Churth of ChMst

Worsh ip- JU ·30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,
Sef""l•kes . 7 p.m.

Baptist
Sen kc:

Brov. n. Worsh ip . 9 30

Ctntral Clusler
Asbury t Syracu ~n Pa~tor: Bob Robinson.
Sunda~ School · 9·-15 am .. Wor5h1p . II
am .. \\ 'ednd.da~ Sen ICC ~- i :)O p.m.

Communit~·

P.O. Bl)~ -Hi7: Duddmg t~ll('. Mason.
W \ 'a. Pa,lPr :-.· dl T~·nnant. Sunda}
Senko$- 10:(1(1 a.m and 7 r rn

Sunda~

L ~rry

Tuppers Pialm S1. P1ul
P~stor: Jane Bea!lre . Sunda~ School -Q
am. \\or~h1p · 10 a.m.. Tu~ ~da~ Ser. tces
7 30 p.m.

Congregational

am Sunday s,·hool · 10 30 am .. B1bk
Study - 7 p.m

Assembly of God
Libert~ Assembl~

Churth of God Prophet'y
0 J. Whrte Rd . off St Rt. 160. Pastor P.J
Chapman, Sunda~ School . 10 a.m.'.
Worsh1p · 11 a m .. Wedn~sday Sen tee~ . 7
p.m .

Sacrtd Htarl Catholic Churt'h
161 ~ulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. 992-5898 . .
Pastor R~\· Wahn E. Heinz, Sat. Con.
-t..+~ - ~ :1 5~.m : \tass- 5 :30 p.m.1 Sun ,

Rhu \'Miley

L{)(lp Rd otT \'e..,

or

Setond Bapdst Church
Ravenswood, WV. Sunday School 10 am·
, !\.loming "'orship II am EYenin&amp;. 7 pm .
Wednl'sda}' 7 p m

Church of Jesu~ Christ Apostolic

v.·ednc~day

Church Briefs

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

WORSHIP. GOD THIS WEEK

A Hunger For M9re

' .

PASTOR · TRINITY
CONGREGTIONA.L CHURCH POMEROY

PageA6 ·

• VALUE

Beware the power of the·tongue
Bv JoNATHAN NOBLE

•

I

TO~

..........

(7 . .,.......,.

••••n ..n

!francis Florist

t

Meig s Count: ·s Oldest Rori"'t
352 East Main
~

~
I

Pomeroy, Oh

'let Ul: und

yO'II

liwxlght~

740-992-2644

W

wilh t!JI!Ciel

~11!·

740-992-6298

MY erace is sufficient
for thee:.for mY
streneth is made
Perfect ·in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9
Offic~

Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-6376

I

�-~

'

•

'

Page AS_

OHIO
.
.
.
Recycling managers plead for restoration of program funds:

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April 8, 2oo5"

.

.

Rep.
Tony
Core.
a
Republican
. from
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
Rushsylvania in west-central
Ohio. said he understands
COLUMBUS
the programs' importance.
Managers of Ohio\ recy· especially in rural areas.
cling programs pleaded
'"AI . the same time. I've
with lawmakers Thursday to alwavs , had cont:erns about
restore funding they have the . amoun t. of money stayproposed cuttin g (lr risk ing in Columbus for admi n:'
trash-fi lled ditches and lit- istration rather than going
tered roads.
out 10 ·the communi ti es,"
House Republicans want Core said.
to u~e a portion of the
The
Depa ~tme nt
of
state's $12 million recycling Natural Resources provides
and litter contro l program about $7 million annually
to keep up the state 's in grants\:' 10 125 groups
parks. They proposed the statewide to run curbside
idea after killing Gov. Bob · and drop-off recycl ing proTaft's plan to impose a grams. Another $2.2 millit)n
first-ever parking fee to goes to companies trying to
enter Ohio\ 74 state parks. expand · markets for recyRecycling managers from clables.
"
Delaware, Henry, Pickaway
The recyclin~ division has
and other counties appeared a $1.7 million annual paybefore .. the Hou se Finance roll and spends an addition. Committee to try to save &lt;II $1.1 million un opera- .
their
funding.
Several tions. including utilities and
argued that even small cuts vehicleS; spokesman Jim
could jeopardize their pro- Lynch said Thursday. · The
grams, which a I so receive division has 31 employees.
funding from county solid down from 41 in 1992.
waste districts.
Lynch said the department
"Who will educate the is committed to stretching
young people and the gen- . taxpayer dollars as far as
era! public about littering possible.
and reducing waste?" said
"Our division of recyding
Carol Hehr, recycling .. and is at ifs lowest staffing
litter prevention program level in the .past 13 years
manager in Monroe County and we ' re expecting ihat
in eastern Ohio . "Who will level to ·drop even further.
clean the litter off the in the month s ahead." he
roads?"
said.
Maintaining state parks is
House lawmakers hoped
important. as is keeping to have .a t'inal draft of
roads litter-free. said Jesse their version of the upcomCarter, spokesman for the ing ,two-year state budget.
Delaware General Health Friday. A... commit\ee \'Ote
District in central Ohio.
was plann.:ill for Sunday.
"With such a beautiful
system · of stine parks, it
On the Net
would seem a . major step
Departmenr of Nawral
backwards to allow · litter
Resources:
hltp:I!H·I\· II cdm: state. oh. us/
control progrmns in these
Ohio ·House:
areas to wither .away," he
lmp:/A, .,,·\\·Chouse. state.oh.us/
said.

.

.

.

.

ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
BY

.

Jesse Carter, a
spokesman for
Keep Delaware
County Beautiful,
stands in front of
r---..1 · one of the county's '
nine recycling
dropoff points ,
throughout the .
county Thursday in •
Powell. Catter
spoke IJefore the
Qhio House Finance ·
Committee on
Thursday and
.
requested that
funding for his and ·
other Ohio recyc li ng
programs be
restored.

.,

.
'.
.

.

AP Photo

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Cloudy morning. There
may be a brief . sprinkle.
Thmperatures wi II hold
steady around 54. Wipds
will be I0 to 15 MPH from
the northeast.
Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will
.rise from 58 el\fiY afternoon
to the high for the day of 66
at 3:00pm as they drop back
down to 64 later this afternoon. Winds will be 10 to
15 MPH from the northeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Mil/night)
Temperatures will diminish
from 62 early this evening to
53. Skies will be clear to
cloudy with 10 to 15 MPH

. AEP~34.46

Akzo- 45.64
.
Ashland Inc.- 68.50
AT&amp;T-19.14
BLI-11.30 .
Bob Evans- 21.60
BorgWarner- 49.81
Champion- 4.11
Channing Shops7.63
City Holding - 29.90
Col-46.66
DG-22.12
DuPont- 51-54
Federal Mogul - .34
USB-28.82
Gannett- 79-80
General Electric: 35.78
GKNLY-05
Harley Davidson 57.37 '
JPM....:34.80
Kroger- 15.98

...:-. '

•.

.=-uo

tJIYI zoos CHf.V'I

NEW 1QOS OIEY'

BRAND
COBALT 4DOCJR

4X4

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$15,550 .

e oual Front Air

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d
Air con lt\0
Stereo

2.2 Liter OOI'IGC Ea~g;;Mileage!

Eng•n•.

sags. re

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will drop
from 52 to today's low of 45
by 6:00am. Skies will range
from clear to partly cloudy
with 5 to I0 MPH winds
from the northeast

. .

MlfM

A

. %00SOE'N

-~ 4)(4 PI(KUP

$1&amp;,950*

Saturday, April 9
Morning (7 a.m.cNoon} · .
Temperatures · will nse
from 43 to 59 by late this
morning. Skie s will be ·
sunny to mostly' sunny with
5 to 10 MPH winds from the
east.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
· Temperatures will lii1ger at
64. Skies will be sunny with
5 MPH winds from the east.

Conditioning,
tomatK, IF
4 speed AU .
tnfo Center
onver
·
•

.A

•

Pepsico - 53.4~
Premier- 11.~3

Baseball

1

Alexand~r at Meigs, 5 p.m.

.

Eastern a1 Southern. 5 p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove. 5 p.m.
Softball
Alexander a:t Meigs, 5 p.m.
Eastern at SOuthern, 5 p.m .

Gallia h:adEimy at Pt. Pleasant 4:30p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5 p.m.

.

.

ducl'u two more runs in the
bottom of the fourth when
Rl'an Smith and Codv
G. c rI a c h
TUPPERS PLAINS -.
An epic baseball stru~~le "orcd after
between
Eastern ',~Jd r ea-ch inu"
Alexander never otfici'ally safely on
ended Thur&gt;cbv. '" both hits.
A I e x
Tri, Val lev Conference fnes
answer~d
,'
battled fOr nine inning~ to a
in
the
.
s
ixth
.:1-4 sta lemate.
Darkness and precipita- when Cory
tion forced the cunte't lo be B e a n
t:&lt;llled after nine inni 11~' and ~cored on
l' rror
Gerlach
the conclusion of the-game an
1
h
a
t
will be made up &lt;lt a- later
date .
· allowed Ryan Tho1nas · to
Jordan Myles scored in reach safely. Bean walked
third on RBI single by Zack LO get on and made th e ~cure
Hedrick to give the Spartans J-]
Gerlach sl'ored again in
(3-2. 3-2) a l·-0 edge. but
the Eagles (4-1. 3-11 sixth on · a Myers infield hit
responded in their ·half of that gave Eastern a 4-2 edge
the third when Chri s Myers headed into the seven th .
hit a long sacrifice tly that
Alexander rallied for two
scored Dustin Riggs to tie runs in the llnal frame of
the game at one.
regulation to tic the game at
The Green and White pro- four. where it remained
BY BRYAN WALTERS

Track
Gallia Academy, River . Valley at
Chesapeake. 4:30p.m.

bwait.ers@mydailytribune.com

Satuiday, Aprll 9
·
Baseball
Meigs at Gallia Academy (DH), noon
Southern at Hannan (DH) , noon
Oak Hill at South Gallla (DH). noon
.
• Sollball
.
Meigs at Gallia Academy (OH), noon
Point Pleasant. at Eastern, noon
SOuthern at Alexander Tournament
(DH): 1 p'.m .
SOuth Gat,lia at Green {DH), noon

PITTSBURGH (AP) Marco Battaglia signed a
one-year contract Thursday
with the Pittsburgh Steelers, .
who have sought a veteran
tight end to replace the
recently
released
Jay
Riemersma. ·.
Battaglia played in three .
games with Pittsburgh in
2002 after starting tight end
Mark Bruener had knee
surgery, but did not catch · a
pass. Battaglia, 32, did not
play in the NFL last season
and has • not · caught a pass
since the 200 I season with
Washington.
Battaglia has played 96
games in eight seasons with
the Bengals,
Redskins ,
Steelers ·and Panthers. catching 71 , passes for 660 yards
and two touchdowns. He was
" a second-round draft pick by
Cincinnati in 1996 ~ut was
released late in tht 2'101 season.
Riemersma wa;. cut Feb. 26
in a salary cap move after he
caught only I0 passes in two
seasons with Pittsburgh.
Riemersma signed with the
Steelers in 2003 during. their
brief transition to a passl)eavy offense after Tommy
Maddox became their starting quarterback.
Battaglia js expected to
make the minimum salary of
$540,000 for a player with
his service time .· He would
back up starter Jerame
Tuman if he makes the team.
though the Steelers ·might
also pick a tight end during
the April 23-24 draft.

. .I

.

Bryan Wa'lte.,sJph•oto

Eastern's Dustin Riggs'(9 ) makes a throw to first for a putout in
the ninth inning Thursday against Alexander. The Eagles and
Spartans played to a 9 -9 tie that will be fi ni shed at a later date.

.

.

'

MONDAY - SATURDAY 9 am - 8 pm
•

o

SUNDAY lpm - 7pm

1

422-0756

1

TOll FREE 1-800-822 -0417

Eagles soar back to beat Alexan.d~r

(9 Innings)
Alexander

001 00 1 200 -

48 1

Eastern
001 201 000 4 60
Joel Jordan, Mat1 Oemosky ~4), Jake
Hate (9) and Cory Bean. Ryan Smith. ,,
Corey Sh&lt;~lfer {7) and Terry Durst.

BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@mydailytribune.cotTJ

Red·s
.pound
Mets
•
aga1n

TUPPERS PLAINS You can keep a good team
down, but you can never
count a good team out.
Eastern rallied in three
separate innings on· their
final out to extend
Thursday's contest with
Alexander, the final e proving to be a charm as the
Eagles (3 -2, 3-2) claimed a
thrilling
come-frombehind 6-5 softball victory
in I0 innings.
The Lady Spartans (4-2,
4-1) never trailed in the
contest, 'but Brittany
Bissell's two-out si ngle ·in
the bottom of the. tenth
allowed Krista White to
score from second and
c·omplete the Green and
White's inspiring comeback.
The win also extends
Eastern's current winning
streak to three games. all
of which have occured in
the Tri-Valley Conference.
Afterward. EHS coach
Pam Douthitt was overwhelmed by the effort ·and
determination that her
team showed until the very
end.
"We battled back well.
and the bottom half of the
batting order really picked
it up tonight," she said.
"Sometimes they get down
because they are inex perienced, but tonight they got
the hits. This was just a
great team effort."
Sara Barrin ger and.
Cassie · Nutter combined
for three hits and a pair of
runs in the hottom half of
the order, with Nutter pro-

· Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press

FORT MILL. S.C. (AP) Robinson Cano hit two home
•
runs and Columbus held off a
'
late rally to beat Charlotte
Bryan WaHerslphoto
11-10 on Thursday night in
Eastern's Brittany Bissell drills the game-winning hit .against Alexander in the 10th inning
the International League
Thursday.
Bissell's single allowed Krista White to score for a 6-5! victory over the Sp~rtans.
Pleue
see
Solr.
81
opener for both teams. ·
·The Clippers sent II batters 10 the plate in the second.
scoring sev.en runs and at one
point ·hitting five doubles in a
row. Cano ended the scoring
. BY BUTCH COOPER
scoreless pair of hits each for the
After Southern jumped out
in the inning 'with a two-run
innin2 almost Tornadoes as Ritlle had a
bcooper@ mydailytribune.com to a 6-0 lead after foui
homer lrl give Columbus a 7in the books. triple in · th~ fourth and
innings.
River
Valley
pitcher
2 lead.
and
the rains Crouch had a double .
. CHESHIRE_ Going into Randall Sharrett. along with
Cano's second home run
steadly
pour- Marnhout also had a double .
the seventh inning Thursday. goocl defensive work':' held
was a solo shodn the top of
ing down. the
Eddy had a double and
River Valley had something Southern scorele~s for the
the eighth that gave the ·
dam
burst
on
;,cored
a run in the sixth for
it hadn't had all season ... fifth and sixth innin~s .
·
Clippers an 11-4 lead.
'
the
Raider~.
The Raiders then- put up
Riwr Valley (0-6). white·
hope.
The Knights rallied in the
By
the
middle.of
the
'e"After losing five-inning three runs in the sixth with
Pugh and Sharrett had the
bottom of the inning, sending
·enth. the Tornadoe;, on)v had Raiders mily other hits.
game
after
five-inning
game
the
help
of
three
~outhern
nine bailers to the plate and
thi s season, the Raiders only errors and an RBI smgle by four hit&gt;. but the · R~ ider'
Sharrett al'o pitched 6 213
scoring six runs.
committed
three
error;..
trailed
by
three
going
into
·
H.L.
Pugh
.
.
inning&gt;.
giving up 13 run's.
But Scott Proctor kept.
walked
a
pair
of
·Southern
.the
seventh.
.
In
the
top
of
the
seventh.
Charlot!e off the scoreboard
but onl) three were e;JrnecL
Southern. tholtgh, scored Brad Crouch led off with a batters and hit 1"0 more.
in the ninth to pick up the
That. along w·ith two-run "Jo"h Peck relieved him tn
nine runs in the seventh. all stngle. and an error put
save.
the 'eventh.
of which carne with two outs Butch Mamhout on . A ·ac 'ingle, _ by Ryan Chapman
Columbus starter ChienSouthern play s host to
ancj were unearned. as the · grounder by Patrick Johnson and Johnson ;,aw Southern
. Ming Wang got the win,
count~ -rival Eastern toclay.
Tornadoes went on to a 15-4 put runners on ·second and jump on top 15-3.
while Jon Adkins picked up
victory in high school base- third with only o·ne out. .
Chapman. who pitched a while River Valley travels to
the loss for the Knights.'
ball action .
.Sharrett then thm\.\· a wild ~omplete game for Sou t he ~n Coal Gro1e.
Brain Becker, Ben Davis
With the seventh inning pitch. but a goocl defemive (2-4 ) with three strikeouts
and Brian Anderson all hit
Southern 15, River Yllley ..
looming. the Raiders had play , by catcher Eric and allowed onlv ·three hit&gt;.
home nms for Charlotte.
Southern
211 200 9-t5113
good reason to believe they Caldwell and Sharrett got ·was 2-for-4 at th-e plate.
R1verValley 000 003 1-+- 4 'J 6
A:darns' blast came in his first
had a chance to pull off a Crouch out at the plate.
Derek Teaford. Wes Riffle CMapman anct Marnhoul; Sharren. P9Ck
at-bat ·in Triple-A.
'
possible win.
With another .Southern and Crouch 'also colle~ted a (7) anc C,ald\lieil

-----

Eastern 4, Alexander 4

if

~

.

-

'

' foxes, Tags, nllt Fees afrl_R~all induded in sal, pri&lt;t ol new uhidt listed where opplcallie.
"'On approved credit On *ted mo4tls. Not mponsillt lor typogrCJIIhkalwrOIS. ;
Prices good Apr~ 7fl ·~oa9J April! Oth.
·

until the game was called.
When ~ this game is
resumed. Jake Hale (AHS)
and Corey ShatTer (EHS)
wi II be on the mound for
each team . Alexander will
be at the plate .starting the
tup of the tenth .
Ryan Smith. the Eastern
starter: went six innings and
struck out eight ·in the no
decision . ·
Joel Jordan. who was
replacetl by Matt Demosky
in the fourth. fann ed four.
Demo sky 'recorded six
;rrikeouts · before being
replacetl by Hale in the
ninth .
· No time was announced
for the makeup at release
time . . ·

PREP SOFTBALL

Late surge l~fts Southern to easy win

·Proud to o~ apart of your life.
•

Unfinished business
for Spartan$, -Eastern

· · Today's games

Clippers.fend off
Charlotte, 11-10

Ltd. .;_ 2~.86
NSC-36'. 89
Oak Hill Financial 33.98 ..
OVB-33
BBT-39.17
Peoples~ 27.51

Subscribe today o 446-2342

PREP l3ASEL3ALL

PREP SCHEDULE

Steelers sign TE
Marco Battaglia

,, .

Bl

'•

Friday, April 8, 2005

SOFfBALL
Meigs· ·
3-1 3-1
Eastern
3-2 3-2
Southern
2-3 2-3

winds from the northeast.

Rockwell - 58.13 ·
Rocky Boots - 26.30
RD Shell- 61.47
SBC-23.84
Wat-rdart- 48.90
Wendy's- 39.30
Worthington -19.51
Dally stock reports ...._
are the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions,
provided by Smith
Partners at ·Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.
..

Redwomen split with Cedarville, Page 82
Steelers not worJied about draft, Page 83
Tribe scalps Chicago in eleven, Page B3
NBA roundup; Page 84
'

BASEBALL
Meigs
4-0 4-0
Eastern
4-1 3-1
Southern
2-4 2-4

Local StoCks
ACI-45.33

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Standings

.11990*
I .
Friday, Apri1 .8

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· 1

CINCINNATI Three
games into his rookie season
as the Mets manager, Willie
Randolph already has something in common with the
famous Casey Stengel.
They both started badly.
Aaron Haran~ allowed
only one single- in 6 1-3
inning&gt; · Thursday.
and
D'Angelo Jimenez had a
pinch two-run double off
Kazuhisa Ishii that sent the
Cincinnati Reds to a 6-1 victory and plunged New York
into its worst stan,.~ince 1964.
The Reds are 3-0 for the
first time since 1990. when
they won their first nine and
swept Oakland in the World
Series. The last time thev
swept the Mets at home wa"s
1995. also a noteworthy year
~ the last time Cincinnati
reached the playoffs. ·
Good omens all around.
"This is exactly how you
want it to be." said closer
Danny Graves. who got his
first save. -·we did what
we· re supposed to do. All
three games. we did everything right."
The Mets haven't stumbled
so badly at the stan since
they dropped their first four
games in 1964. Stengel's
third year managi ng a tledgling club that redefined losing . The Mets (!rapped their
first -ni~e gmnes in the inau£ural 1962 season. on their
\;·ay to a standard-setting 120
los;,es . They went 0-8 and
lost Ill a year later. By those
measures_ their 0-4 stan in
1964 was deemed an
impro,·ement.
Thi s one is . nothing but
trouble.
"I don't think anybody
coming out of spring training
expected. this," said Doug
Mientkiewic7 . who was 0for-4. "We.didn't play well."
The Mets grabbed offseason headlines with their hishpriced overhaul. commimng
S172 million to Pedro
Martinez and Carlos Beltran. ·
Their $105 million&lt;Jlayroll is
.

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PIHH see Reds. 81

�Page B2 • The
Daily
Sentinel
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Friday; f\pril-8,

· www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

Reds

over 6 2-3. innings. Wily Mo
Pena hit a so lo homer in the ·
second. and Jimenez\ double
from Page 81
sparked a three-run rally in
the
seventh.
RIO GRANDE - The o\·er ~e\'en innin2 ... . At the
Ishii
came to the Meh in a
Utiiwrsit\' of Rio G!·anue anJ pla~e. Fm deli,ercd two hit s
the NL's lar~est and rank s March ~() trade wtth the
c~Jar\'ille were finally able in fnur at -hat-.. inc ludin!2
third overall. trailing only the
Yankees and Red Sox .
Dodger&lt;. hoping to &gt;hake hi&gt;
to hook-up on the softball "hut tumcd out to be the
habit of worki'ng deep into
Lliam~Hld after endurini! a ~ame - \\ innini! run ,,·ith a
The bullpen blew a ninth- count&gt; and walkinQ a lot of
two-ruri -.ingle .
rainout on April 2.
inning lead in the season 'batte". He . walk-ed Ryan
The Lady Jacket s wllied
The two combatants took
opener. won by Joe Ra.nda's Freel and Felipe Lopez to
to, the fie\J on Thttrsday nine hit~ off Lotvc/ with Fox.
homer. Randa 'had a grand open the Reds fir~t. selling
afternoon . Th~y played to. a Ginger ~eithley· and Whitney
slam and · six RBl s as himself up for .familiar trousplit with Cedan·i\k winning Kirb\ collecting mo hits
Ci'ncinnati. won the second ble . .
·
game one 5-3 and Rio taking each~
game as well.
Kaz MatSlli. moved from
"They a\ ways say you want .
•he ni ght&lt;:ap 3-1.
Haning
•completed
the
shortstop
to second base this
'
., .
Cedarville ( 16-6. 8-2 i\MC to get to ~ood pitchers early
sweep
with
one
of
the
best
season.
let
Sean Casey's
.
tha t' s what they
South ) jLtmpcd on' Rio starter ·and
performances
of
his
career.
potential
double-p lay
Andrea Lotycz for five runs tG:darville) did to Lutyu ...
aljowing only th~ee walks grounder get throu gh him for
in the first two innings to said Rio Grande Head· Coach
and Ramon Castro s second- an error that let in a run . and
take a 5-0 lead. After the Da,·id Pyles. "She rea lly setinning single before lettint ..- Austin. Kearn s followed with
rough start. LutyC7 (5--l) set- tled dO\\;n after that... ·
the bullpen take over.
a sacrifice tly.
Cedarville gbt ihe jump on
lied down and held the Lady
.
··1
felt
like
I
could
~.hrow
Pena got into the lineup for
Jackets to 'only ii.·o hits ovtir Ri, &gt; Grande in the se.:ond
.my
pttch
m
any
count.
satd
the
first li me because managg. ame wit h a run in the firs1. t..._:-'--~....:~~"""';_;::
the fina l live innings.
Brad Sherman/photo
Harang , . who walked three er Dave Milev decided to rest
Ri o Grande ( I0-10. 3- 1 Fox su·uc·k again. doublin g Rio Gra nde's Brcnoi Jones scores the go-ahead run during
and struck out five.
Ken .Griffey" Jr.. who had
.AMC South) cut .the lead to home Ke ithle)· tu gi'e the the fourth inning of her team 's 3-1 win in game two of
Mets
failed
to
·get
an
surgery
to reattach hi s ri ght
The
5-2 in the hollom of the sec- Lady Jackets a 1-0 lead.
extracbase hit and lost even hamstring
las t August.
The Redwomcn did their Thursday's doubleheader. The R~dwomen sGoret;i all the ir
ond frame when j unior third
though
they
outhit
the
Reds
Pregame
ntin
left
the outfield
in
the
fourth
.
runs
sacker 1;3randi Jones smacked damage it) the fourth innin g
4-3.
Graves
ret
ired
Mike
wet.
'
a twu- run home. run wilh wi'th five stra ight hit s. chas':.
Pi azza on a tly ball with the
Pena led off the second
Jones was 2- for-2 with a
Amy Conn aboard . Conn was ing Cedarv ill e slat•ter · and Redwomen dow n over the
to
end
it,
one
of
inning
wit h a homer, the last
bases
loaded
3-for-3 in the game and later loser Allie Sm ith . Ju nim fi nitl 'three innings yie lding walk tu lead the Rio ol'fense .
several'
wasted
opportunities.
hit
tharlshii
allowed until the
The Redwomen. wit h the .
knoc·ked in the third run for shmtstop · Kristen Chevalier only two hit&gt; . She struck 'out
Piazza gave Randolph a seventh. The left-hander got
split, have now won fi ve of .
Rill Grande with a Jouble in led otl with a double. mol'ed · three and wa lked two .
large
vic tory cigar at the start · into a tlow after the homer.
to third on a singl e by Jones
Smith (6-2) lasted 3-plus their las t six games.
the _, ixth.
the
series. certai n he'd retiring the next II batters
of
Rio will tr ave l to the
Rio riQ.ht fielder Jennv and then 0 \d ing tripled otT innings gi,•ing up six hits
light up before he left town. and fannin ~&gt;t li ve straightdur. "Keystone State" on Friday
0\ding h;)d a solid day with;, rfhe top of the fence in rig ht and three earned runs.
lnstead , Randol ph had to ing that stretch.
Freshman Miranda Laws to tan gle wi th Seton H ill.
2-for-3 performance with a field to sco re both Che\'al ie r
" During the course _-o f the
pack
away the cigar - and
run scored and a stolen base. and J on~ to £ive Rio a ~- I was omstandi ng in win ning Game time is scheduled for
his team·s place in Mets his- game. I was able to bnng out
'
· her third straight gamt 3 p.m. The Redwomen will
Na ta lie Fox (9- 3) was dou- lead . ·
toryfor a trip to Atlanta.
the pitching style I wanted to
Fox rel ie , ed Smith at .th:11 Laws -1-1--1) we tit the dis- then return home to face
ble
trouble
for
the
"Well.
I
don't
make
too
show afte r the · trade to the
Redwomen. She tired a com- pumt anll was greeted by a tance scattering six hits and Pikeville College onSunday
much of anything," Randolph Mets," Ishii said through a
that will
plete game anti kept Rio otT run -scori nu sinule off the bill allowing on ly the first for .a doubleheader
.,
'said.
''It' s early in the season. . translator. .
begm at _ p.m.
balance. Sl'.a tlering six hits of Co nn ~ Fu.x . sllu t tile ~1111in g ntn .
. We got swept. We go to
Free l got a warm reception
Atlanta and try to change the from tlie fa ns during pregame ·
p~ce a little bit. I don 't get
introduc tions. Freel, playing
·.excited about a few games for the first time since hi s
either way. We've· go t a long drunken driving arrest on
way to go."
Monday nigh t. had an RBI
Harang topped Ishii . who single and two of the four
allowed only two costly hits walks off Ishii..

Redwomen split with Cedarvill:e
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Bryan Waiters/photo

Eastern second baseman Kelsey Holter, right, throws a fo rce out to first baseman Morgan Weber (22) during tHe seventh inning
of Thursday's contest with Alexander. Eastern won the game 6-5 in 10. innings.

Soar

VINYL FLOORING

95

· Per Sq. Yd

SALE ENDS APRIL 23RD

be the second out or · the earned runs while fanning Game time is slated for 5
. eight.
Neither
pitcher p.m.
inning.
White, who pitched all I0 allowed a walk.
Eastern 6, Alexander 5
Howard and Miner both
innings for Eastern. he.lped
from Page 81
(10 Innings)
·175 North 2nd Avenue
her own cause by doublino in scored in the third inning to ,Aie~eander 002 000 010 2 - . 5 10 2
Smith to tic the game at ifve. · give Al'exander a 2-0 lead. ' Eastern 000 000 210 3 ·-6114
Middleport, OH • 992·7028 .
vidi ng the first set of heroics . setti ng up the dramatic fin ish.
Miner ,and Ashley Hudnall. Krista
Ashley Hudnall had four Jamie
White and Casey SIT!ilh; WP- Wh iteJI LP
with two outs in the seventh .
Armes. Pran, Bissell and hits and scored twice for the ....., Miner.
Nuuer's triple allowed Barringe r each .had two h it~ Spartans. with Miner and
Eastern to tie the game at two in the game, while Smith, Howard adding three and two
when Barringer stored at the Whit~ and Nuner ro unded hits. respectively. Miner al so
end of regulation .
out the hits with one apiece. scored twice in the setback.
· Hannah
Prall scored
White had 12 strikeouts
[t was Alexander 's first
Eastern's first ·run 111 that and
allowed four earned runs loss . in the Tri- Valley
same inning followin g a sin- and Io·hits in picking up the Con ference.
.
gle by Brittany Bissell .
hard-fou ght wi n. whi le Miner
.Eastern travels ro Rac ine
The Red ·and Bl ack was saddled wtth the loss by today for a TVC Hocking
Weekl
· responded with a run in the giving up II hit s' and six showdown wi th Southern.
The Tuppers Plains-E:hester Water District will be flushing the balance of our
top of the eighth. as a one-out
lines this week. The following are the new locations, with roads and dates.
double by Howard gave
Alexander new life. Howard
came around ttf score in _the
Monday. April II :
.
.
next at-bat as Jamie Miner
Meigs County from the intersection of Pomeroy Pike &amp; Flatwoods Road to the
reac hed on error and gave the
Flatwoods Booster, Gold ridge area and Pageville. From McKenzie Tank tq
Spartans a 3-2 edge. ·
·
Stiversville and the Dorcas.Area. From the intersection of SR 68! and Co. Rd.
Jennifer Armes singled in
the Ea~tern half of the eighth.
50 to near Hockingport.
'then 'cored on a two-out si nTuesday. April 12:
gle by Pratt that tied the contest at three.
·
Meigs County: From the Flatwoods Booster to Carper Tank
Wonderful opportunities are ;Jvailable in Tom Peden Country.
Both teams struggled for
Athens County: Hockingport
offense in the ninth. but
We are expanding .our staff and need more sales people.
Alexander caught ·a big break
Wednesday. April 13:
.
No Experience is required, only a willingness to learn, work
in the top half of the tenth.
Meigs County: Carp: _r Tank to Gold Ridge Booster, and Burlingham.
as a team arid have a strong initia)ive.
Miner sin2led in Mcintosh.
Athens C~unty: Intersection of US 30 &amp; Brimstone Ridge to South Cannan Road.
who &gt;tarted-thc temh on sec• Excellent Pay and Bonus Plan • Great Benefits
. ond base by way of the rule
Thursday. April 14:
· ·Work At The #1 Dealership
book . Mi·ner's RBI gave
Athens .County: lntersection,of US 50 and South Cannan Road to Stringtown
Alexander a ~-3 leJd. Miner
Cail
Schedule
.An
Interview:
and Cannanville. US 50 to Past Photo Tank. Village of Stewart.
· on a thro~inue
later &gt;cured
.
error to gi\e the gue&gt;rs a twpFriday. April 15:
ntn cu,hion .
1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844
Nutter ' tal1ed on &gt;econd in
Meigs County: From the Tackerville MPRV to the Dorcas Booster.
Ea, tern ·' half of the tenth .
475 South Ch~,trch Street •, Ripley, WV 25271
M?s_t of the flushing will be done at night an~ some customers may
then ad va nced to third on
Ca'e' . Smith-, one.-nu t ,i n'-expenence.low pressure. Please be aware that water may be discolored for

·fngQI~ CatpQt

TUPPERS PLAINS- CHESTER WATER DISTRICT

Spring 2005 Flushing Schedule

..

TIRED OF JUST HAVING
AJOB? lOOKING FOR
A NIW CARIIR?

To
Tom Peden Country

'

'

gle. ·

A ·, acri fice tly ·.b) Armes
allowed Nu tter to 'Core and
cui the Alex:mder lead to
"' ithin one . It also prm·ed to

several miles around these locations. If the water is discolored for longer than
a few hours, please contact the office so we will be aware of the problems.
(740)985-3315
.
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w\vw,mydailysentineLcom

1l1c Dally Sentinvl • Page B;3

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Steelers aren't worried about Denver,~ North Dakota meet for .
one position goin'g into draft fourth time.in nation~l title game
BY ALAN ROBINSON
Associated Pr~ss · .

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Friday, April 8, 2oos

PITTSBURGH The
PittsburgH Steelers are probably more thankful than ever
that they drafted Ben
Roethlisberger nearly a , year
ago. It means there 's one
position they're not worried
about into the April .23-24
NFL d rat.
- ·
·
f .,
Good thing, too, given the
fact that this year's quarterback class is rated by NFL
scouts as one of the thinnest
in years. The draft does look
~-eep at running _back, offens1ve lme and defensive back,
• positions where the Steelers
may have interest.
The Steelers have been reiatively quiet since their AFC
championship game loss to
New England took the_gloss
off their best-ever IS-I regular season, .and that's no surprise . The main reason is that
they' re up against it salary
cap-wise, with little money to
invest in new players.
Except for signing former
49ers
receiver Cedrick
Wilson, about the only news
emanating from the Steelers'
offices in the last three
months has been the recent
labor negotiation s session
involving several key owners,
including Dan Rooney, NFL
commission~r-,Paul Tagliabue
and union chief Gene
Upshaw.
The other reason for the
Steelers' low profile is the
emphasis they have long put
· on the draft as their No. I
method for player procuremem. Coach Bill Cowher said
a 15-1 season didn't change
that, and winning the Super
Bowl wouldn't have, either.
"There's no question that if
you don't go that' route, you
may have a short run, but over
tb.e long range trying to build
· something consistently year
in and year out; it's going ·to
be tough," Cowher said. "Not
that you can't acquire players
in free agency and do other
things, but the foundation is
the draft."
Four starter$ were lost to
. free agency - wide receiver
. Plaxico Burress, linebacker
Kendrell
Bell ,
guard

.

'

Keydrick Vincent and tackle
Oliver Rpss - but all were at
positions· where the Steelers
are relatively deep. However,
their departures create openings that may need to be fi lled
later this mpnth .
·
For now. the Steelers' top
priorities in,clude:
-Defensive back: Perhaps
the Steelers' biggest surprise
was that they got nearly a full
season from veteran comerbacks Deshea Townsend and
Willie Williams, neither of
whom was lm NFL starter at
. this time two years ago. They
also have recent draft picks
Richard Colclough and Ike
Taylor to push them. But
unle ss one of those two forces
himsel f into the lineup, it
could be a huge gamble to go
into another year counting on
Williams to be a full- season
starter.
"Colclough can (start)/'
Cowher said. "We ' re goi ng to
look at both those gu ys
(Colc lough and Taylor).
They ' re going to play a lot
because of all the (extra:back)
packages. I want to see them
because they' re good young
players."
- Offensive line : Guard
Kendall Simmons returns
&amp;fter missing last season with
a knee injury and second-year
· right tackle Max Starks looks
ready to start . But losing
Vincent and Ross has weakened one of the Steelers ' positions of strength, and director
of football operations Kevin
Colbert is convinced that this
is one of the best-stocked
areas in the dtaft.
-Tight end : The Steelcrs
signed
ve teran
Marco ·
Battaglia on Thursday to back
up starter Jerame Tuman, but
Battaglia spent time with
them in 2002 without much of
an impact. If Virginia tight
end Heath Miller is available
when they make the 30th

o,·erall pick. the Steeler&gt;
could be tempted . However,
they would be using a valuable pick -even if it comes
very late in the lirst round for what effective ly is an
extra blocker. They could
decide they have greater
needs than that.
- Wide receiver: There's
depth here (four-time Pro
Bowl receiver Hines· Ward.
Ant waiui Randle El. Wilson ).
but they lack a big. rangy
downtield threat who forces
defenses to accou nt for him
on every down. Namely, a
guy li ke Burress. It could be
the Steelers · biggest need as
the draft approaches, and one
they could decide is worth
using a first-round pick to fil L
-Ou tside
linebacker:
James Harrison, another 2004
surprise, might get niore playing · time behind Joey Po.ner
and Clark · Haggans. Alonzo
Jackson, a second-round pick
in 2003, has done nothing in
two seasons and is a prime
ca ndidate to be cut during ·
traini ng camp. especiall y if
the Steelers draft someone to
push him out.

CHICAGO (AP) - A day Aaron Boone on a popout.
after Bob Wickman couldn't · Vizcaino (0-1) gave up a
close out a game for the two-run single to Martinez in
Cleveland Indians, Chicago
the I I th that
put Cleveland
xloser Shingo Takatsu was
ahead
7-5.
JUSt as bad.
Casey Blake, Coco Cri sp
Boone had an
RBI grounder,
and Ronnie Belliard hit ninthBlake hit a
inning homers , and the
run-scoring
Indians rallied from a five-run
single ·
and
deficit to beat the White Sox
11-5 behind Victor Martinez 's Grady Sizemore followed
with a two-run single.
two-run single in the lith.
'Our guys, tl\ey don 't let
"llhink they feel the same
way we did yesterday," said their guard down. they keep
Belliard, . who turned 30 going," Cleveland manager
Eric Wedge said. "It's a tribThursday.
Wickman allowed four runs ute to them, not just to tie it,
in the ninth Wednesday as the but to keep it going in extra
.White Sox rallied to win 4-3. innings, too."
·
Takatsu took over in .the ninth . A.J. Pierzynski hit his first
with a.S-2 lead Thursday.
home run .for the White Sox,
'T m sick to my stomach and Paul Konerko added a
right now, but there's nothing two-run single ·,to back
you carl do about it," Chicago Contreras, who allowed one
manager Ozzie Guillen said. . run and four hits in six
Chicago built a 5-0 lead by ipniitgs.
,
the fourth inning against
Chicago's Tadahito Iguchi
starter Cliff Lee but was had three hits and a sacrifice
by
Rafael fly for his first multihit game
stymied
Betancourt, David Riske, Bob and RBI in the major leagues.
Howry, Arthur Rhodes (1-0)
Scott Podsednik also drove
and Matt Miller, who com·. in a run for the White Sox.
.bined for 7 2"3 innings of Lee gave up five runs and
three-hit, shutout relief.
eight hits in 3 1-3 innings.
Crisp started the come\&gt;ack
Konerko's first-inning sinwith an RBI single in the fifth gle put Chicago ahead and
off Jose Contreras, ' and Pierzynski, who left San
Belliard had a sacrifice fly in · Francisco to sign with the
the seventh against Cliff White Sox as a free agent,
Politte. Blake's homer. lead- made it 3-0 with a solo homer
ing off tbe ninth cut .the in the second.
deficit to 5-l
Iguchi hit a sacrifice fly
. "It seems like your charices later ·in the inning and
are b1eak who;n he comes in, Podsednik's single in the
especially with a three-run fourth made it 5-0 ana chased
lead," Blake said.
'fakatsu then gave up two- Lee.
Notes: Iguchi also scored
out homers on . consecutive
his
first run .... Podsednik's
pi,ches to Crisp and Belliar~.
"Whenever I come m RBI was his first with the
against these guys. l.can tell -White Sox .... Takatsu had 19
they real! y want to hit off saves last year. He blew just
me.'-' Takatsu said through a one, against Cleveland on
Aug. 7.... Cleveland pitcher
translator.
C.C.
Sabathia was scheduled
After Takatsu walked
Travis Hafner and gave up a to !flake a a rehab . start at
. single to !lllartinez, Luis Double-A Akron on Thursday
Vizcaino relieved and retired night.
I

!

prised 10111e people bccau1e
nobody really expected us to
be in the fina l 2ame."
Denver
forward ' Je ff
Drummond said. "Thi s season. people kn ow all about
us. which 1has roadc m take a
little . bi r.' more of .a bu sin.essjike approach ...
Erik Fabian. who &gt;c o~ed
thre¢ goal s ·,all season. connected twice ;tnd Pari se
stopped 26 shot&gt; to lead
North Dakoia in the nightcap.
" V\':e were . joking in the
locker .room before the game
and I told them that since I
was injured for most of the
early part of the season that
I'm hitting my mid s e~ s on
stride right now." Fabian
said with a wide grin.
Travis Zajac added tWO
third-period scores. including a short-handed goal. and
Drew Stafford assi sted un
both for North Dakota (2514-5), which will . be "Di ng
for its eighth national ccham':
p_ionship.
"It's not often that you can
pl ay (or a championship. so

COLUMBUS - Demer
ha; played North Dakota
three times this season and
left the ice each time with a
Will.

Not · surprisi ngly. North
D akot a goal tende r Jordan
Parise ha' a diffe rent om. co me in mind when the
. teams square off Saturdav
for the national champ;'.
onship.
"We· re clue for some sort
-of succes s ... Parise said.
"Our guy s liave shown so
much. heart in from of me
and I can't _say enough about
everyone on the team:·
·
Fighting . Sioux
-The
clinched their berth against
the defending champion s
· with a · 4-2 win over
Minnesota . Denver rolled
over Co lorado College 6-2 in
the first semifinal at Ohio
State 's Value City.Arena.
Denver will be chasing its
seventh national title. but the
circumstances have changed
from 200-l.
"Last year when we clime

"e want to

mak ~ the m&lt;hl of
it and enju) \\hik \\c•'rc
here:· said Parise. "ho ran
hi' unbeaten &gt;trcak til I~
( 10-0-~ 1Minne&gt;Ota 128-1 ~ -I t maJc
it intere, ~ ting b~ -.. co rin t:
twi ce in a 90-scconJ span
mitlway throu gh the fitwl
period. cun ing the k.td to -12. But Parise · made se\ 0:1al
big stops the rest of the, "'")
and the Fiuhtin ~ Stoux
played kccpa\n;y '\, ith th e
puck. ·
"When North Dakota can
play with a lead. they' re that
much beller of a team ...
Minnesota coach Don Luci a
saiq "The). \1 box j Dll out
and play phy&gt;i,·a\...
.
It has been an incredible
ride for ·:&gt;Jorth Dakota and
first-ye ar
coac h
Dai'C
Hak sto\. The Fi g htin ~ Siuu\
fini shed a distant lifth in the
We&gt;tern Colleuiate Hot;kel
Assoetation duri.n~ the reQular season and fo[Jg \n th-eir
way into the Frot.en Four.
joining three other .:onference teanb - the firq 1ime
that's happen ed in the tou rnament' s 58-year hi~ton. .

.

'''
•••
HOLZER
CLINIC

• Hair Care II. Makeup
'Nail Ca re
• Facials II.. Waxing

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Specializing in:
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v' Divorce
v' Charge Offs

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v' And MORE!!

• Body Treatment

· Spa Packages
326 Second Avenue

· Hours : ·

Open M·F lOam-Close

Tribe scalps Chicago
in extra innings, 1.1-5

into thi"' game we \.\ 'ere ~uch
huge underdog~ and we ~ ur­

BY RUSTY MILLER
Assoc1ated Press

E•

Powell's
FOODFAIR

.,
'

MERCURY

446-9800

www.holzerclinic.com

Diane McVey

Broadband Wireless
Internet Access

M.A .. L1T-A
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16" 1

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PHARMACY

Store Hours:
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Pomeroy, Ohio ·
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Pt. Pleasant. WO

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Point Pleasant, WV

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435

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•

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Deli~ery

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with other offer-s. Limiled time

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'

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Gallipolis, OH

.

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OXYGEN

Prescnplion
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Gallipolis
. 446-2341

(AcfoM from Holnf ~ c.nt.r)

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Coo\,

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operat10r.1.
• Weighs just 3.6 lbs. I
• Req'uires no electricity or banenes.
• lasts up to 10 hour~ at a settin8 of 2.
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HOSPITAL

HEUOS • Easy to c.~rry.

Bo ..·m(Jn f"a"'il_v

�•

Page B4

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April 8,

Nets move clos·er to fi·nal.playoff spot

W L

Pc1

41
37
37

547

34
37
311

29

f5

500
487

56 19

741

Wash•ngton

41

554

Orlando

35

40
t5 59
tt 63

CharloHe
Atlanta

Chtcago
Indi ana
Cleve land

M1twaukee

GB

GB
5
7
9
t9

x-San Antonto

WLPciGB
55 20
733

x-Dallas

51

Memphis

46 31
42 32

24

680 4

5112 J0~
.568 ~t2'1

New Orleans
18 56 .243 36Y~
Northweot Dlvlalon
W L f&gt;ct GB
5Q 24
676
x·Seattle
43 3t 581 7
Denver
40 35 533 tO~
M1nnesota
24 50 324 2tl
Portland

23 51 311 27
WLPctGB
57 t7 no
46 30 605 t 2
34 •2 447 24
33 42 440 24~

Utah

Paclltc Dlvlolon
y Phoenix
Sacramento
L A Cllppors
LA Lakers
Golden State

30 45

1

400 27 1

saymg James backed out of
promutmn dc.ds agreed' to 111
ea1 ly 200J
James was the No I overall
p1ck 111 the NBA draft that
year He disu s1gned " $90
mllhon deal wn h N1ke
Joe Marsh co-o" ner of
Mag1c Arts &amp; Entert,unment
111 AUiora. lent $100,000 to
Edd1e Jackson and James'
mothe1 111 200 1, when James
"'"' a studellt at St V!ncentSt M&lt;~ry Htg h School 111

Akro n.•1cco•dmg to the sutt
Jam es acknowledges the
loan, smd F1ed Nance James '
attorney .•md has offered to
repay ll wt th •nte1est But
M,lfsh h.1s ref used preVIous
otfe1s, tncludmg one made by
James agent bel01e the sun
w.1s flied , N,mce sa1d
In cou1t documents. Nance
contends th.!t J,unes met
M.11sh on ly once 01 tw1ce 111
200 1 ,md ,tny dJSCllSSIOllS Ill
200'1 .1bout a document.lfy or

other ctc,tls we1e bemeen
M&lt;1rsh dnd a tncnd uf
J.tckson's
Nance fl ied documents
Tuesday 111 Summtt County
Common Pleas Court statmg
that James· offe1 of $I 38,344
should s.ttJSiy all clatms 111
both i .IWSUII S
J,unes · mother. Glona
L1mes. and ·d&lt;1ckson deny
makmg .my pronmes to
Marsh .!bOllt deals wnh
LeB10n

Wsdnndliy's Games
Ch1cago 102 Orlando 101 , OT
Boston 103, M•lwaukee197
Memphis 104, Toronto 74
lnd~ana 98 Cleveland 77
Phlladelpnla 106. Chartone 103
Oeti'OII 105 Waah.ngton 03
Denver 94, New Orleans 83
San Antomo 91, L A Clippers 82
Mmnesota t 11, Utah 86
Golden Stole 104 Porllon&lt;J 102

Thuredey't Garnet

New York 98

Friday'• Gam••

Atlanta at Toronto, 1 p m
Detroit at Or1ancto 7 p m
Cleveland at Phtladetphlli 7 p m
Mlam1 ,at MemphiS 8 p m

Ulah ol Now Orleans 8 p m
ChiCago at New York, a p m
Wash1ngtoo at lnd1ana, 8 p m
Charlotte at Milwaukee 8 30 p m
Denver at Minnesota, 9 30 p m
Sac1amento at Po111and 10 p m
l A t akers at Seattle, 1C 30 p m
PhoeniX at Golden State, 10:30 p m

Saturday't GamN
Boston at New Jersey ~ p m
Minnesota dtt Atlanta, 7 p m
PMadelphla at WttshJnglon, 7 p m
Milwaukee at Cleveland 7 30 p m

Toronto at Chlcagp, 8 30 p m
Utah at Dallas 8 30 p m
Seattle at Denver, 9 p m
Houston at Phoenix 10 p m

SanAn1onlo a! LA CMpport t0;30 p m

'

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Tho
VIllage
of
Middleport w111 be
accepting bids for
Property and Liability
Insurance for the
municipality
of
Middleport Sealed
bids should be mto
the Mayor's office by
Aprtt 11 , 2005.
(4) 5, 6, 7 , 8

described as lottows,
bemg ten feet front
on Mulberry Street
adjolnong Lot No 166,
and extending back
el that wodlh about
lhlrly·flve feet, or far
enough to Include the
stone watt now butt!
across said lot at or
about that distance
from Mulberry Streel
And beong the same
property conveyed by
Fred Guth and Mtnnle
Guth, h1s w1fe, to
James A Slark by
deed dated January
19, 1920, recorded 1n
Book
120
Deed
Records of Me1gs
County, Ohio, at page
227 thereof
Parcel •t6·00136
and 16-00137
Current
Owner
Pamela G or Pamela
L Bentz, at al
Property at
124
Mulberry
Street ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PPt 16-00136 16·
00137
Prior
Deed

PubliC NotiCe
PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF SALE
Case
Numbe~
04CV089
Mortgage Electromc
Registration System ,
Plaintiff vs
Pamela G or Pamela
L
Bentz , et al ,
Delondanls
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of a~

order of sale to me
directed from satd
court In the above
entitled aclton, I will

expose to sale at
public auction on tho
front stops of the
Meigs
County
Courthouse
on
Friday, Aprtt 29, 2005
at 10:00 a.m of sa1d
dey, the following
deocrlbed real eatato
Situate
In
lhe
VIllage of Pomeroy In
tho County of Meigs
and the State of Ohio,
and bounded and
doocrtbed as follows,
viz.
Baing 35 feet In
width of that pert of
lot No. 166 adjommg
lot No. 165 and
extending back at
that
width
from
Mulberry Street to
Mochante Street
AIIO that part of
lot.
No
165

Reference

In

Zee

4&gt;rs

'I
I

~11012001

We L01e and
nt/SS \011 1

Mom &amp; Dad
Kef(, Mtchelle

Allt&lt;oll
~ -----

Memory

the appra•sed value
10% down on day of
sale, cash or cert1fied
check, balance due
on confirmation of
sate
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs Counly SheriH
Anorney lor PlatnltH
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
PO. Box 5480
Cincmnatl,
Oh10
45201-5480
120 East 41h Slreet,
81h Floor
C1nc1nnatl,
Oh1o
45202-4007
(513) 241-3100
(3) 25, (4)1, 8

· Public Nottce
PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF SALE
Case
Number
04CV151
A.D
JP
Morgan
Chase Bank, PlaonttH
vs
Pamela Bentz, et al ,
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Metgs County,

degrees east along
the line of said lot 100
feet; thence South 70
degrees east 50 feet,
thence
South 20
degrees west 100 feet
to the line of the

pursuance of an
order of sale to me
dlrecled from sa1d
court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
public auct1on on the
front steps of the
Me1gs
County
Courthouse
on
Friday, April 29, 2005
al 10 00 a.m of satd
day, lhe following
described real eslale
Slluate
in
lhe
VIllage of Pomeroy 1n
the County of Metgs
and lhe Stale of Ohio
Beg•nn•ng at the
southeast corner of
George Baker's lol on
Umon Avenue, run·
mng thence Nor-th 20
4n

on

line

of

Robert E Beegle
Metgs County Shenft
Attorney lor Ptamtlft
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
PO Box 5480
Cmcmnatl,
Oh1o
45201-5480
120 East 41h Street,
Slh Floor

said
avenue
north
70
degrees west 50 feet
frontmg on Union
Avenue by 100' feet
deep, being the same
property convoyed by
Volume 90, Page 127,
Me1gs County Deed
Records
Parcel ~16-Q0260

of

And
WESTERN
METHODIST
CHURCH
Its Unknown Heirs
and Assigns
Addresses Unknown

Case No.

OS-DR-

lhe appraised value

PROGRESSIVE
SCHOOL ASSOCIATION,

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help wanted

Cmcinnatl,

Ohio

45202-4007
(513) 241 -3100
(3) 25, (4)1' 8

Owner

Public Notice

Pamela Bentz, et al
Property at·
104
Umon
Avenue ,
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
pp-f 16-Q0260
Deed
Prior
Reference
Volume
90, Page 127
Appraised
at
$21,500
Terms of
Sate. Cannot be sold

THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
FOREST RUN BAPTIST CHURCH,
Plamtlffs

VS

forJess than 213rds of

beanng Case No. 05·
DR
Thts nottce wtll run
once each week for
s1x
successtve
weeks, lhe last publt·
cation being on the
13th day of May, 2005.
the Defendants will
have
twenty~eigl)t
days from the day of

last pubttcatton In
which to answer said
complaint.
Denlae L. Bunce
(0042121)
Attorney lor Plaintiffs
105 N. Second Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992-5730
(4) 8, 15, 22, 29 (5) 6,
13

.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

'

Joseph Moodispaugh
1113124 to 418/99
If tears could build a stauway
.And memor1es were a lane
We would walk nght up to Heaven
To bnng you home agam
No farewell words were spoken
No t1me to say goodbye
You were gone before we knew 11.
And only God knows why.
Our heans st1ll ache wrth sadness
And secret ~ears stillllow .
What 11 mejlnt to lose you
No one will ever know
We love and m1ss you very much
•••
Your w1fe &amp; chtld(en
•••

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Loving
Memor) of
Maxene HolTman
In

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit
healthcare facility, has a position
available for a full t1me Rad1olog•c
Technologist.
Applicant must meet the registry
reqwements by the ARRT. Applicant
must have a WV l1cense
Excellent salary, holidays, health
msurance smgle/fam1ly plan, dental,
life tnsurance, vacat1on, long-term
disability and retirement. Join our
family of professionals to be the
resource for community health
seJV!Ce needs

4/2/23 • 417/04
S1lent memories
Keep you near
Another year.
No longer m our
l1ves to share
But in our hearts
You 're always there
Uke Jalli11g leaves
The years sl1p by
But love and
memones w11l
n~ver d1e.
Sad!) m1~~ed hy
Husb~nd

Paul

Sons Stc\'e &amp; Terry
Daug:ht~~

Belh &amp;

Sue

S1ster Mancne
Grandchildren &amp;.
Greal Grundchddren

• Highly motivated individuals
• Courteous and well mannered
• Desire to earn an excellent income
while having fun!
• Best pay and benefits in the area
· ~rian Ross or Pat Hill in persdn:
195 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, OH
Monday thru Fnday 9 00 a m to 7 00 p m
Saturday 9 00 a m to 5 00

For more rnformat1on :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

I

~.t N != 0 ~. !I'

304;675-4340
AA/EOE

l40..u&amp;-9100 •1-10•212-5111

www pvalley org

I

· ---- - - -

Its Unknown Heirs
and AsSign s

LEGAL NOTICE
Defendants
Progressive School
Association, Western
Methodist
Church
and Wesleyan M E
Methodist
Church,
whose last known
address was 104 Kerr
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, are hereby
not1l1ed that on the
1sl day of Apnl, 2005,
that
Forest • Run
BaptiSt
Church,
Plam1iffs , f1led their
comptatnt to quiet
1111e to lhe real estate
described In the complaint and other relief
m
the
Court of
Common Pleas of
Me1gs County, Ohoo,

Current

In Memory

confirmatiOn

sale

Avenue; thence along

lhe

A&lt; hme unfolds

1

10% down on day of
sale, cash or certified
check, balance due

In Memory

In Memory
of Our
Father

vn~~n"""l
~ M::, s~~of ~
{gflr.it

at

len tess than 2/3rds of

Ohio

•••

In Memory

1

Volume

139, Page 767
Appraised

$18,000. Terms of
Sale: Cannot be sold

•

1

~--------J

Ram or Shme Frt·B Sal 9
t4 78 Green Valley D~tve
Wanted by semor wtdow Old glass anttques hnens
compamon sound mmd &amp; household ttems
, good
dnve r
phone

074

ANN(l(JNL"FliUNI~

YARD SAl

r-

Pmu:ROYIMnx&gt;u:

10

Hn.J• W""vm&gt;

APPALACHIAN
COMMUNITY
VISITING
NURSE
ASSOCIAT IO N

www.orvb.com

HOSPICE AND HEALTH

Home L1stmg&amp;
Ltst your home b~ call ng

SERVICES INC IS accept
tng appltea!IOns lor

t740)446 3620

'

'AN CASE MANGER One

V1ew pholos.ttnfo online

r

GIVEAWAY

..
'

One Part I me pos ·

Mobile Home
Park
If
In terested In Sellmg call

]304]675-3423

lf-r

old 1740)256 1199

(304)576 3030

8692

.

MERCURY

r
4648

675 1429

1740)992-0794

Ad (740)446·8t 05

(740)446·0381

COOL ]7 40)367 7999

r
r

SAI.E

~ARDSALE-

~

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Call1304!937·3410

..._..,;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l RN

Part T me to supervrse
2 Famtly 188 Oak Dnve nurstng servtces for lndtvtdu
Bam 2pm Saturday 419 als wtth developmental dts
Cnb mrsc baby ttems, ab1httes tn Jackson County
clothes\'- washer/dryer m1sc and surroundtng areas
Duttes
assessments self
Movtng Sale &amp; Ya!d Sale medteat1on programs MAR
Inside Brand name baby &amp; set uplmonttor ng stalf/fam1
mens clolhes
furnrture 1y tratn ng Pay based on
1535 Graham ·School Ad expenef'ICe
Please call
8am-5pm Fnday·Saturday

(304)373 10tt

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 's For Sale .
... ..... ....... . .. 725
Announcement
... .... ... . ..
030
Antiques
,. .
530
Apartments tor Rent ............................... 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ......
. ..... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Auto Repair..... ........ • ..... ...................... no
Autos lor Sate
710
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sate
750
Building Supplies .................... ............ 550
Business and Buildings .
.. 340
Business Opportunity ....
21 o
Business Training .. • .... ............ ...
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .. ... .
.. 790
Camping Equipment... ...................... ..... 780
Cards of Thanks ....'
.. .......
010
Child/Elderly Care .. .. ..
.. 190
Eteclrlcat/Rolrlgeratlon.............. .. ....... .840
Equlpmenllor Rent
480
Excavating ............. .
830
Farm Equipment..
. ... 610
Farms lor Re~t ..
..430
Farms lor Sale . ..... .. .......................... 330
For Lease ..
... 490
For Sale . ................ ....... . ....
585
For Sale or Trade ..
.. .........590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnished Rooms • ....... .....
. ...........450
General Hauling..
.. ....850
Giveaway.... .......... ... . ..
. ... . 040
Happy Ads. ...... ........... .....
.. .......050
Hay &amp; Grain
. ... . ..
. . ... 640
Help Wanted ....... . ...... ......
.... .. 110
Home Improvements.........
............810
Homos lor Sale .....
310
Household Goods.......................... ...... 510
Houses lor Rani ..... . ............................. 410
In Memoriam. • .... . . .... .....
.. .. 020
lnourance .................................. . .. . ..... • 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.... .
..... 660
Uvaolock............... ......... ....
. ........630
Loot and Found .......................................... 060
lata &amp; Acreage....
........,
......... 350
Mloceltaneouo ............... .....
.
..... 170
Mlocelteneouo Merchandise... .................540
Mobile Home Aepetr........ ...
. 860
Mobile Homeolor Aent........
. .... ...420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................. .. ...........320
Money to Loan .... . ..... .....
..... .. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 WhHI111..... . .........740
Musical tnotrumenta
......... 570
Peroonalo.............. .. • .... . .. .
... , .. 005
Pets lor Sale ..................., ........................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ...... ..... .
...........820
Pro!Holonat SeJVIces..
.. .. . 230
Aedlo, TV &amp; CB Repelr .~ ......................... 160
ANI Eatate Wantad .... ...... .
...........360
School• tnotructlon...............
............ t50
Sead , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Slluallono Wantad . • .... . ...... . .
-----w--- 120
Space lor Rent.......................
..... ...460
Sporting Goodo.. . ............................ 520
SUV'alor Sale...................
.. ..... 720
Truck11or Sale.......... ............. ... .......... . 715
Upholotery.. . . ..... ............... .. .. ........... 870
For Sale ...........................:.............. 730
Wanlttd to Buy ............................................ 090
Wanlttd to Buy- Farm Supplleo
.......... 620
Wentad To Do ...................,......
, ........ 180
Wenlttd to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Set.- Galllpollo..... ............. , ............ 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle.. .
... ... 074
Yard Sei.-Pt. Pleaunl... ........................... 076

www comtcs com

rr:::--------,
1110 lill.J' \\1:\Nil-J) 11'80

v-

•

To Do

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
PoSW19 Date Aprtl 4 2005

'

2085

(740)441-912a

Calll740)446·3358

dents and need great team
Paramedtcs
&amp;
E MT S
players to JOin us If you have
needed Apply at 1354
these quallftcp.tlons please
Jackson Ptke Galhpolts
apply
to
AOCkSPIIngs
Part ltme posrhon avatlable Aehabtlita11on Center 36759
Road
merchand1smg
greeltng Aockspnngs
cards &amp; related proctucts 1n Pomeroy Ohro 45769
local reta11 stores Prefer We also have Nurstng
mature mdtvtduals rnterest- ASSistant Classes begtnntng
ed tn working up to 20 hrs Apnl 21 2005 thru May 9
per week Call 1 8()()-543- 2005 If you en/OY elderly
4110 ask for temtory eX1 people alld want to become
2658 Amencan Greettng a member of our health care
team please stop by and ftll
CorporatiOn EOE
out an appl.catton
Permanent
housekeeper Extend1care
Health
needed· Ravenswood Bed &amp; Servrces Inc ts an equal
Breakfast 25 hrs a week opportuntty emp oyer
at
patd "Vacatton must be non:._ encourages
wor~place
smoker (304)532-6293
dM.Irsity M/F ON

I

lh

Trailer Technician

Gun,

3BR 1 1 2BA No Pels tn Usea Fum ture Store t 30
Haven 1304 )882 1107 Bulav1lle Ptke Appliances
matttesses
dressers
coucl'les
dtnenes
recliners
r\1'\KI'\ If. \'TS
grave monuments rn ucr
HIH RJ-~1
more
17-10) 446 4782
Gallipolis OH Hrs 11 3 (M
&amp; 2 bedroom apartrnepts
S\ We buy used •ur'ntture
on
B eech
Slree1
tn
Mtddlepon furn1shed ut It·
t es patd depostl &amp; tefer
'&lt;11(}1
ences rf.!qutred no pet s
(7401992:0165
Buy
or sell A vertne
1 and 2 bedroom apart Ant tques 1124 Eas t Matn
ments !u rnt~h ed and '"ntur on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
nt sheo
secur1ty d~pos tl 992 2526
Russ Moore
requt red no pets 740 992 owner

t .-\

1883 or (740)645-4458
'

Wtll do Engme Change
Eng1ne Repatrs and other
Automott'le
work
ASE
Cert1hed Call (740)44 1
1306 or (740)645 1794-cell

1!!!~-~----~tO

~

OPPoln1.JNrn'
~~~~::;;~
.,
os
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
recommen s a
do bu srness 'wt
1
e you ""ruw an
end money through th
•I until you have mvesti
ated the otfenn

NG Co

c.-..

d lh
1h
d NOT

bedroom 3 bath 4 5
cres 2 5 car garage
ackson OH $250 000 '
trm Code 2255 or call
740)286 4750

f~

Potnt Pleasant WV 4
edroom 1 bath Many
men Ires Code 2165 or
all (304 )675 4125

New AnltQue Mall Opentng
Soon 011 177 &amp; US At 33 rn
Downtown
Rawenswooa
WV Dealer spaces ava ilable
teas on able charges fo r
Booths Don t mtss th iS
2 bedroom apartment for Chance
lnforma 11on call
rent 5375 plus deposit lfltlt Fred (304 )532 ·2 71 0
or
t1es mc!uded
No Pets
allowed (740)992 2274

1 BR Aparlment
S350
Appltcat ons ava il able at
ERA Town &amp; Country Rea l
Estate
Broker
1911
Jefferson Blvd Pt Pleasant

(304)273 2746

24 32 3 stall Pole Barn For
s1orage
only
Pnvate
S200 mo on Rt 7 Gal\tpol1s
(740 )446 4782

For Sale 1979 Homette 2 BEAUTIFUL
bedroom
w1centra1
atr
$3 495 00 Call ~740) 385·

AERATION MOTORS
Aepatre d N ew &amp; Rebwlt In
Stock Cal! Ron Evans 1
800 537 9528

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
N o Fee U1tless We Win I
1 BSB 582 3345

IH\\1,1\11

Hmu,s

riO

fUR S.U.E

L.__.:,;_o;;;;__..,l

APART·

MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON

4367

ESTATES, 52 Weslwood
For Sate 14X70 3 bed- Dr ve from $344 to S442
room set up tn Counlry Wal~ to shop &amp; mov es Call
Equal
Homes SG 995 00 Move tn 740 446 2568
Opportuntty
Hous1ng
todayt Call (740)385·4367
Inventory Cleara nce New 3
bedroom
home
Includes
$239 00/month
AJC Deltvery and Set up
Call Mt~&lt;:e (740)385 7671

Inventory Clearance New 4
1 112 Story 2 Bedrooms
bedroom
Home
Bath
F~:JII Basement $319 DO/month
Includes
wf'Nork Bench Hardwood NC Deltvery and Set up
Floors New Healing &amp;
Call Harolo (740)385 9948
Oooltng 2614 L1ncoln Ave
(304 ) 675 4217
Movtng Mu st Sell
14x70 Noms set up on lot
or
2 story 7 room · house 4
bedroom 2 bath 2 porches (740)446 3266

$10 900 (740)446 9480

(1 closed tn) deck 2.13 acre
flat lot Heat pu mp R1ver
Valley
School
Otstrtct
Bulavtlle Ptke
$69 500

(614)320 0300

r

1740)339 0362 (740)388

(740)256 6005

00 17
For Rent Tratler lol No Pets
Attention!
$100 Plus Depostts Roush Tara
Tow nhouse
l ocal company offer ng NO Ferrel Dr of Camp Conley Apartments Very Spacrous
2 Bedrooms CIA 1 112
grams for you to buy your
Bath
AdUlt Pool &amp; Baby
home mstead of rentr ng
lb &gt;\L F.sr-\TF
Pool PallO Start $385/ Mo
• 100% llnanctng
WA.NTED
Pets
lease Plus
• Less than perlect credtl ..__ _ _ _~--_.1 No
Secur tty Depostt Aequtred
accepted
• Pay ment could ,be the Need to sell your home
same as rent
QUr£k.ly because of a
Mortgage
locators dlvd?ce
bankrup·cy )oo 100 MEMORIAL DRIVE
transfer or death Don 1 let EAST

DOWN PAYMENT" pro Ad (304)675 26 t4

j

I BUY HOMES

1740)446 3481
THE MAPLES

(740)992 7321

POMEROY 740 992 7022

G:t

All real estate edvertl-'ng
In this newepaper Ia
IUbject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which makee It t\legal to
adverttN any
prefer11nce, llmltal{on or
dlecrlmlnatlon based on
race color religion se•
familial statui or national
origin or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon '
Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advflrtlumenll for real
eatate which Is In
violation Of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• ad'llertlsed In
thll newapeper .,,
available on an equal
opportunity basel

the bank foreclose and rutn
Aestdenttal
your credit local person Subs d zed
buys hOuses Fast clostngs Hous ng for 50 years of age
and older Prlonty Gtven to
All cash J•m
Apphcants with income Bt
or below $10,900 00
Max1mum Income et1ect ve
021t 1/ 2005 lo r 1 person
$1815000
Must meet HU0/120218 crtFOR R£.'ir
terla for household composition
Managed by
2"bedroom home Eas1 Ma tn Stlverheels Incorporated A
Pomeroy $275 rent Realty Company EQual
depOSI1
Hou s1ng Opportuntt~

(7401992

iiiiiiiil
10

phone

51
5100
6215

t740)992

10 OlvtSIOfl of Rnane~a
Off1ce
o
Affair

Golllpollt c..- Collogt

tCaree11 c- To

t~214-o452
--~ltpc:Wcai-

Ac.credited
CoLn;'ll

Memo«

' u corn

~~

0

tw .. ...... ... • ColrlgM

E 0 E /Drug F&gt;ee

mer Atfa•rs toll fr

1t-866-278-0003 lo ...
1he

Workplace

rrortgage b&lt;t&gt;Mr
11 property lcensed

Asy &amp; Sons Complete Car
Cleamng Help Wanted Must DtRECT TV Free 4 room
have
Cnvers
Lrcenses

,_.., FreeHD!l'gScreoo
TV800-263-26&lt;10

tS IS a p\Jbltc S8fVIC
nouncement from th
hio Valley Publishln

SPA OunET
Grand Opentng
New Locatton
11 am 7pm Monday Frtday
12pm 5pm Saturday
Sunday
us 60
Cannonsburg Ashlano
(behtnd Mr Gatt1 s )

1606)922 7185

Two prom dresses s ze 3 5
both all sequtns shoes to
match one hunter green
one burgundy (740)992

7921
Used Stdmg 10 to 12
square &amp; wood tr m Old
mart&gt;les (740)256 648e
Whtr lpool washer S 100
Kenmore dryer S150 Gas
stove S50 (740)245 5946
atter 5pm
Wolff Tannmg Beds
Huge selecl ton
lmmedtate De livery
Ftnanctng
1 800 894 6997
(7401446 6579

EHO

(304)675-4874

t

St•Kr:

28A house on Paxton Ad
$350/mo plus utt ltttes &amp;
HJR REliT
depoSit Ktlchen appliances
and washe r/dryer provtded 20 acres of ground lor corn
accepted
soybeans or vegetables
2515
Locateo at Aacme corpora
3 bedroom Condo w th nver !ton ltm ts along n11er
VIeW
full
basement Please call 740-949-2306

Hud

(740)446

For Lease OH1ce or 1etatl
spaces 1n very good cond1
tton Downtown Gall polls
Approx 1600 sq tt each 1
or 2 baths Lease pnce
negotiable to encourage
new
bustness
Call

BLliJIIN{,
SLWII E.~
Block br ck sewer ptpes
wtndows 1ntels elc Claude
Wtnlers R to Grande OH
Can740 245 5121

r

PElS
EUR S-\l E

L~--------r'

5 week old pupp es 1 2 Reg
Boxer 112 Reg Golden
Aetr 1e11er
S75
Call
( 7 40)446 3413

(740)446-«2S oc (740!446· AKC Lab pups Cnocolate
3936
$250 Call (740!418 5522

iiO

HOl'SF.HOL.O

r M~~lfS I

.1740)446-7398

CKC Golden Aetrtever pup
ptes Ele\len weeks old Had
3n:l ShOIS &amp; wormed S200
each Ret rrever stud CKC 1
1 2 year old $300 (740 )388

8965
M1n1ature Dachshunds
Male black tan 2 Female
red F1rst shots Wormed
Reg 1stered Ready Aplll 23
TaK ng DepOStiS asl&lt;tng

S300 (304)593 3820

Pttt Bull pups, Wtl! be ready
on 4 9 05 Tak1ng depos ts
Call
(7 40 )388 8901
or

I
Now 3 Bedroom Home only
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
2
bedroom
all electnc very Chapel Road Flo rter Oh10
$198/month lndudes ale
deh\lery and set up 740- niCe 1n c•ty no pets Phone (740)446 7444 1 877 830·
9162 Free Estrmates Easy
ftnanctng 90 days same as
New 4 be&lt;lroom
2 bath
cash V1sa1 Maswr Card Baldwtn AcrosomtG P1anQ
home only $49 ,098 00 2" bad room t'leAt to Wa1Mar1 Orl\le a ltttle save alot
(740 )446 .1201 or (740 )446
Includes ale delrvery and d e. carport depos t &amp; ref
reqwed ~vatl April 16 Thompsons Appliance &amp; 2349
set Up 740-385-9948
Aepa 1r 675-7388 For sale
re cond !toned
autamatrc New hand cratted sem1 hoi·
No Down Payment Po$Sible 2br Tra1ler all ElectriC on
washers &amp; dryers relrtgera low oody Oscar Sch m1dt
1900 square h: house 3
tors
gas and electnc electnc double ptelf.up gu1tar
bedroom 2 bath full basement , new heat pOJmp sets 2br 141170 all Elecmc ranges a1r conditioners and sunburst I n1sh $150 New
on 3 acres SA 7 Eastern Central Arr/Heat Excellent wnnger wasne rs Wt ll do dnWI reverb 2 channel 30
$CflOOI OtStrlct (7 40)985 Condltton Water/Garbage repatrs on m4tot brands •n watts gurtar amp $110 'both
5250 1740)992 7465
shop (J( at your home
&lt;1321

(740)368 8596

385 9948

Home)
Call Today' 1•0 U6 4367,

Selltng outl lots ol great
stuff! Too ls a.r compressor
gas gnll cl net1e set stereo
ftsh tank
musl more
(740)446 2025 leave mes
sage

Twtn A tvers Tower ts accept
2 Bedroom Ref Depo-S it mg appliCations for watttng
Uttht1es No Pets call af1er list for Hud subs1zed 1 br
6 OOpm (304)674 6105 or apart ment call 675 6679

Galhpolts Ferry $700 r onth
- - - - - - - - - Calf (740)446-3481
Grandvtew Estates subdiVI _....:__:.___ _ _ __
4 rooms &amp; bath S300
s1on 1ust oH At 160-3 BA 1
month 52 . Olive St Ca ll
314
baths
remodeled
(740)446·3945
kitchen w/ Maytag buill ns
tam•lyroom wi bullt tn bar
Attention!
utlftty
room
with Local Company oftenng ~NO
washe r/dryer ~ updated wtn~ DOWN PAYMENT" pro
dows and doors fenced grams for you to buy your
backyard $132 500 0% home nstead ol rentrng
Down Shown by appotnt- • 100% fmanc ng
ment
Ptctures
at • Less lhan perlect cred t

385·9948

Pool pump &amp; sand hlter for
large pool used 3 weeks
Cost $300
sell S 175
(740)446 1127

HOliSI-.'

required (740)446 34t3

t740)445-9620

NEW AND USEO STEEL

ED AFFORDABLE'

SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models at old prtces
2005 models am"Vtng Now
Co les
Mobile
Homes
15266 US SO East Athens
Ohto 45701 (740)592 1972
New two bedroom apart
3 Bedroom
1 Bath
Where You Get Your
ment stove ret no pets
Remolded Full Basement
Moneys Worth~
S400/ mo
$425
dep
App ltances
1ncluded
(740)9924119
ask
tor
Outbutldtn g &amp; 24FT Poo l
Lms&amp;
Marge
188 Park Dnve (304)675
ACRI:AC,f
7460
One BR apaftment tn Sprmg
50 acre farm wrth house and Aprox 6 acres ln country 20 Va lley $290 per month plus
mm from town Waler &amp; depos 1 WID hookups
barn
$62 500
Call
eleetrc (740)441 5404

(740)367 7272

JET

Steel Beam s P1pe Rebar
Angle
For
Concroto
Channel Flat Bar Steel
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT •
Grat ng
For
Drams
&amp;
Dnveways &amp; Walkways l&amp;l
Townho use
apartmenls
Scrap ~ tals Open Monday
andfor small houses FOR
Tuesday
Wednesday &amp;
RENT Call (740}441 1111
Fnday Bam 4 30pm Closed
for appl catton &amp; mlormatton
Thursday
Salurday
&amp;
Furntshed 2 &amp; 3 roo m apts Sunday ( 740)446~7300
Clean no pets Reterence &amp;
depostl
reqwred
Call Orlando D sney' Beach area
(740)446 1519
7 days.6 mght s Patd $600
sacr l1ce
$249
Call
Grac ous hv•ng 1 and 2 bed
room apartments al VIllage
Manor
and
A verst de
Pole
j3arn
30x50x 10
Apartments 1n Middleport
56 795 mcludes Pamted
1
From 5295 $444 Cal 740
Metal St de r Free Delivery
992 5064 Equal Houstng
24x3211 10
$4 595
Opportunlttes
40x54!(12
S13995
Modern 1 bedroom api Call (937)599 7740 http r/ natton
1740)446-0390
wtdeoolebaros com

accepted
L---·GooffiliiiiiiiiO.--"
• Payment COOJid be the
same as rent
Maytag dryer S95 Wh rlpool
Mtll Creek Road Galhpolts Mortgage
loca1ors washe r $95 Tappan gas
Eltcellent
Condttton
&amp; 040)992-7321
range $150 GE refrrgerator
Locatton
BncM Front
$150 small freezer S150
w1thN tn yl Std1ng Storage Responstble couple to rent like new stde·by srde retng
Bldg
No land Contracts 2BR home t m1le !rom erator wtute $375 West1ng
Galllpohs off St At 588
After Spm (304}675 5038
House cordless sweeper
S400 a month $400 securtry
$75 ass orted cna rs $5
references
New 2 bedroom home only dePosrt
each
St72lmonth Includes a/c
Skaggs Appliances
delivery and set up 740.
76 VIne St Gallipolis

on11ne at

Mf RUH"""

S25 999 Call ]7401446

Call (740)446-8325

X-Ray Tech for doctors
offiCe 4 or 5 days per week,
8 30 5 no weekends haN
days or even1ngs New grad·
uate s may apply Please
apply at Medical Plaza 936
St At 160 Ga111polrs br

\IL-;cH '-"Hll s

Beautiful 2 story townhouse
ov er looking GalltpoJ s Ctty
1\loHu~
park Kttchen lamtly D A
HIRSALE
l A 3 B R study 2 baths
laundry area References
2002 Clayton 16x80 mobile reqwred securtty depos t
home
Shmgled
roof
no pets S900 per mo
{740)446 2325 or (740)44 6
7817
4425

www orvb com code •4505

ana Sc:rloolt 121-s

(304)675 7375

tor Detatls

I

The Untvers1ty of A1o
Grande tn'ltles appltcattons D H K
Cleamng &amp; Powerwashmg
for the pos1110n of part ttme let·Us-Help-You Clean-er·
Cheerleader coach
uplll No Matter What The
The Cheerleader Coach tS Job Is We Will Geter
10 coordinate all aspects ol Done tlt For
the program relattye tor All You re lnstde/O utslde
his/her program He/She Needs Were the Ones lor
You Call Karen or Dave at
shall be dtrectly responstble
740-985~3633 Bustnesses
to the Ath lettc Director of all
Restdent t allhomes
coachrng duttes The Head
Contracts
Anytime
Coach wtll repr esent lh e
Clean
All
Anyplace
Un1verstty of A10 Grande s
Powerwashtrtg Remodeling
miSSion and athlehc pro
etc
grams and be responstble
No Job Is To D1rty111
lor all aspects of the cheer
leadmg program tncludmg
the ~::onduct of da1ly prac
t1ces the superv1s1on and Georges Portable Sawmill
dtrectton of the team al pub don t haul your logs lo the
li e event the recrwtment m1ll JUS! call 304 675 1957
and retentton of team mem
All types
bers and tor matntatntng lawn care
Dependable
exper~enced
d sctpltne and sportsman
shtp Applican ts must have No 10b to small Call
(740)379 9297 Kara
s~1lls n manag ng budgets

SER\lO:S

t 800 523 7556

BabysttflngVery
Reasonable Rates Ages 4
and under Call Crystal
(740)441-9654 or (740)590·

PART·TIME
CHEERLEADER COACH 2590

PROHNilONAL

FREE Equptment &amp; Install
up lo 4 Rooms
call today for FREE
HBO Max &amp; Starz

B And M Cleantng Will
clean hOuses yard work
parntmg and odd JObS Call
740 985 3495 or 740 441
t 374

45640

F"" t6t41876-0985

Hot ~f11ol u

fUR Rl-."

Ho\IES

OIRECTV
FREE DVO PLAYER

Adult Care 1n your Home
Anyttme {304)675-6781

8329

Ematl' mfpKOg!!!!lcm!

2005 by NEA, Inc

It

WANITD

5023

Denver Fanmn
Maintenance Orrector
•2n L.Yman DrMt
Htlhard, OH 43026

/;A~

©

mot1vatmg and organlzmg
Lawn Care
students a wo r~ ng knowlHelp wanted Darst Adult edge of safe stunting tech Cut 1: Trim, Reasonable
Group Home
(740)992· ntques and prev ous expert- Flatu, Free Estlmales, ~ 1
ence as a coach and/or years experience , many
referencu (304)593-6894
Help
Wanted
General player tn cheerleadlng
labor Call (740)245-9559
AU applicants must submtl a
Mike Pope
Home Health Care of SEO s let1er Interest and resume Roofmg Sldtng Porches
accepting appltcaltons tor tnclud ng the names of three Decks Phone (740)398
Adm1ssron
Nurse references to Ms Phyllis
Compet1t1ve wages• wtth Mason SPHA Dtrector of
bene ltts call (740)662·1222 Human
Resources , Need e Break? Here IS you
UniVerSity of Rto Grande Opportuntiy to
go on
Local Plumbing and Heat ng
PO Box 500 Rto Grande Vacatton Need Man Dad or
Company tn need of a
DH 45674 Ema1l pma Handtcappeo loved One
Plumber wtth a mtnrmum of
son@ 110 edu lax 740·245· cared for
l have one
5 years expenence Salary
4909
Opentng for a Female Full
based
on
expenence
ttme Call (304)675-6183
Interested applicants please
EEOIAA Employer
send resume to Plumber
Wanted to do babysitting 1n
PO Box 122 Jackson OH
Unrversrty of Ato Grande and
Ato Grands Communi~ Collage my home Kerr OhiO area 5
mlllUi es to Holzer (740)446
McClure s Restaurant now ..,
htrtng all locattons full or - " - - - - - - - - part t me pick up appltca Rocksprings Aehabihtatmn
Wanted to do lawn Care
1on atlocat 1on &amp; bnng back ce nter IS looktng for dediCal ·
Mowtng &amp; tnmmtng B1g &amp;
between
1o ooam
&amp; ad compass1onate State
11 ooam
Monday
thru Tested Nurstng Assrstants small yards Call anyttme
Compet1trve wages health
Saturday
and dental benel1ts and
Need 10 people to setl Avon 401 K avatlable We take Weekend Tree Servtee Trtm
pnde tn our facility and res1 &amp; Removal Call (740)256

One of Ohro s leading motor
earner has an 1mmedtate
opentng tn our e11tremely
8Ctive growtng shop k&gt;l' a
.-Trailer Technrc•an The sue
cessful apphcant must have
a hrgh I~Nel of mechamcal
ap!Jiude and oe able to wort(
wtth drrvers Three and a half
day work week paid vaca
t10n personal days healttl
tnsurance pa1d holrdays
overtrme pay 401 K plan and
untlorms are among the
ma~ benefits of worktng at
Arctrc Express Inc ThiS
po:;ltlon IS open now and
you can begtn work rmmedi
ately Fax ema11 or •n person
apphcattons are welcome

10

2218

'OCCUPATIONAL TfiEAA
PIST
!ton

'H OSP ICE CLINICAL
DIRECTOR Thts ts a full
hme pos1t10n responsible for
Older used school ban d mentorlng
lead ng and
Trumpets
Free to Good Home p'~JPtes InStruments
dtrect1ng all members of the
Trombpnes
Male and Female wtll be Saxophones
Hosp1ce
tnter'diSCtpllnary
etc Older NtnteMo games
med1um
stze
dogs
Mlmmum ol three
large lots only (740)388 team
years home care nursrng
expenence
requ1red
Free to good home Plj.yful
I '11 11(1,\11 \I
Responstbthl es
tnclude
female Reg blac k lab
managmg coordtnatmg ancl
'-.I
U\
It
I
"'
Aprox 1 yr ollj (740)446
dtrecttng cftent care acttvl
2188 or (740)682 4105
I lles lor the Hosptce Team
HFLP Wl\~11]) , and promotmg the Hosprce
Gtve Away 2 female dDgs
Program lo the communtty
and 4 pupp tes Please call
74D-949 2306 for one or all
100 Workers Needed
Resumes may be taxed to
Assemble crafts
Barbara Alle n at 740 594·
wood tlems
4078
or
e mailed
to
Matenals provrded
ballen@acvna org
Call
To $480/wk
Otd you lose a patr of mens Free rnlorrn ahon pkg 24 hr 594 82.S for more tnformalton EOE
pants between Galltpolts &amp;
801 •4 28 ·461\Q
Cltpper Mtl ls? (740) 446
A growtng H VA C compariy AVON All Areast To Buy or
IS looktng for an all around
Shtrley Spears 304
Found 41515 small dog very person to do hea!lngfcool Sell
lrtendly
blue
collar tng The person must have 1
McDonald s parkmg lot year or more of expenencc Chnst1an heavy metal Duo
m rnstallat on and techntcal needs drummer and bass
Found Female black/blown Should be or w•ll be cert1 playe r If you are a young
lab m x wtth choker collar !ted Pay on expertence If Chnshan muslcran and look
on Bunce Rd or Bulavtlle mterested 1n be1ng the Best mg to JOin a band call
send resume to CLA Bo&gt;~ (740)441 1236
ask
for
548 c/o Galhpohs Trtbu ne Joseph
Gray and black si r pad PO Box 469 Gallipolis OH
Fostercare G vers Needed
Tabby female cat l ost In 45631
Become a Th erape utiC care
Chesh ~r e area (740)256
An Excellent way to earn gtver you wtll be re mbursed
1961
$30 $45 a day for the care of
money The New Avon
Lost on Aprtl 1st Gartreld Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
a child rn your home
Ave area Small female tr.Tralntn g beg1ns n Apnl lor
Drivers Needed
colored
Beagle
Call
more
1nlo
can
oal rs
CDL Drtvers wtlhng to drtve Therapeut•c
Fostercare
for local ready·mLx cornpa
Albany Oh Toll Free 1 877
Lost Blue Ttck Beagle ' Male ny E.~epenence ts preferred
325 1558
Bulavtlle
Addtson area
but nol necessary Drt'Jer
Chtld s pet answers lo
,
Help Wanted
must be wtlltng to do preCounter Sales local electn
mamtenance on trucks &amp;
ca l dlstrtbutor Send resume
equtpment yard work &amp;
other
miscellaneous
chores
to
YAR[)
HR Department
E;.:per1 ence opera!Lng equtp
PO Box 6668
ment &amp; extra sk tlls such as
.Huntington WV 25704
wele!tng a plus
or lax to 304 697 8 11 5
Free
puppies
Mother
Beagle All male 6 weeks

A!CE REDUCED
Redwood Cape Cod
orne 9 5 Acres 4
edroom 2 Batll 2 Car
arage Above Ground
ool B•clwell OH
locked Pond Code 914
r Ca ll (740)388 0410

"PHYSICAL THERAPIST

Currency M T S Co1n Shop
151
Second
Avenue
Galltpolts 740·446 2842

20 \ lomu Ho\ IL'

~Jew

Saturday Apnl 9th corner of day posthOn Wtth Ofl call
One
Com Show OH KAN Co n College llo Ash Streets responstbtliltes
even ng position One year
Club
Sunday Apnl 10 Syracuse washer/dryer fur
2005
Hours 9am 4pm mtura: household Items lots recent chmcal expenence or
pat1ent
care
req u red
Holiday Inn AT 7 North of mtsc
E11.cellent preceptor program
Galhpol s Ohto
for nO\'ICe homecare nurses
Reward for lntormatton
leadtng, to the-return o\
2004 Honda Forman 450 4 Absolute Top Dollar US One full l tme postllon One
YftBr preferred m home care
Whe~l D r1ve Taken Apnl 5th Sti ver and Gold Coins
hom Clifton WV (304 }773 Proolsets Gold Rtngs Ll S or rehab bacKground

S7t2

HmlEs
ruR Su.t

lwnght@tc net

l..________...!·

Dallas 104, San Antonio 68
Houston 114, LA takers 100

CLEVELAND (AP)
A
JUdge
already has
W1th the Cleveland Cavaliers
still in' content ion for an NBA
demed
a
motiOn
to
playoff spot, LeBron James
delay a tnal,
has made another offer to setscheduled for
tie a lawsuit sched uled tor
Apnl 26 In a
tnal dunng the playoffs later
co mp an10n
th1s month
suJt,
an
Jame s' attorney says the
Akron
busiCavs ' star has off ered
nessman
$138,344 to repay a loan
James
seeks
$I 5
made to Jame s' mother and a
mlll10n tor
man descnbed as a father breach of contract and fraud ,
-figure

PERsoNALS

GALU~~~

K(T &amp; CARLYLE

110

tiO

x-cllncl1ed playoff spot
y-cllnched diviSIOn
z clinched conference

New Jersey 110

r

YARD SAJ.I.·

r

Southw..t OMIIon •

Houston

f 12
~~--~~~~~L
\ \ \ I l l \ ( I \ II \ h

r

WESTERN CONFERENCE

James moves to settle suit before playoffs

FlED

·(740)949-20SO

t49

47 27 635
42 32 568
40 34 54t
38 36 5t4
28 46 378

DelfOit

·~

467
203

Central DlvleiOn
W l
Pel

~
)t

3:.

392 tn

z·M•am•

33

GB

405 101,1,

South. . st Dlvlalon
W L
Pet

I 04, SPURS 6H
DALLAS (AP) ~ Kenh V,m Horn scored I0 ot
hiS 17 pomts dunng the g~me-breakmg third quarter and the Mavencks av01ded .1 season sweep by
the T1m Duncan-less Spu rs. San Antonto 's most
lops1ded loss smce talhng to Se&lt;1tt le by 38 tn the
200 1 hnale
It also was the Mavs· b1ggest \lctory m&lt;~rgm over
AP pholo
the Spurs, topptng a 32 pomt w1n 111 J.muary 1989 New York Kn1cks Jamal Crawford, nght attempts to go up w1th a shot as he IS guarded by New Jersey
San Amomo, which has lost SIX stra•ght road Nets' Cl•fford Rob1nson rear. dunng the fourth quarter Thursday 111 East Ru therford . N J
ga mes smce theu two tune MVP was IllJUred, never
had a chance 111 th1s one The Spurs never led and mg Los Angeles w1th former Ltkers co"ch Phd Buss' lu xllly suite Jackson h.1dn ' t seen the Lakers
play 111 pe1son Since lc~st June. when he cpached
only had 11 t!ed at 2 They scored JUst 27 pmnts over . Jackson 111 attend,mce
the m1ddle two quarters shootmg JUSt 2- 16r-17 111
The Rockets snapped " three-~ame lostng stre.1k them Ill the NBA Fu1.1ls Sholt l) thereafter. the
the th1rd penod They tim shed 0-lor-12 on 3-pomt- and handed Los Angeles ''' filtti st1a1ght loss. and dects1on "''"made th.n he v, oulcln t return thiS seaers, the fmt ttme all season they tailed to hit one
13th m 14 games The Ltkers (13-42! are ass111ed of son
Brent Barry led San Antonio with 12 pomt&gt;
theu first los1ng 1ec:ord 'illce they went B -49 tltth e
C.tro•f Butler hud 2-+ po111t1 and 12 1ebounds, and
I 993-94 season Th1s year dnd thdt sedson are the Kobe Bry&lt;1nt retUined .!Iter sllllng out one game
only t1mes they've tailed to qualify tor the playotts with ,, bru iSed nght &gt;h111 had ~IS t1tt h 111ple-double
ROCKETS 114, LAKERS )()()
of the sedson wnh 19 pomts. I 0 rebounds and I0
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tr,tcy McGr.1dy had 27 SlllCC 1976
Jackson
watched
the
game
from
ov.ne1
Je1ry
d~SISlS
pmnts and seven assists. and Houston bedl slump-

1

otvtslon

30 44

New York

MAVERICKS

·.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

2004

NBA Standings
Boston
Phtladelphra
New Jersey
Toronto

EAST RUTHERFORD N J (AP)- LNm K1dd
had 28 pomts. 12 a"!Sts c~nd I0 rebOLmd&gt; tor h1&gt;
66th c.treer tnple double .•md the New Jersey Neh _
kept their sh m pl.•yotl hopes dh\e by be.nmg the
Kmcks II0-9R Thursday mght 111 .1 phys!c.!l game
that sent Ne" Yo1 k to 1ts se,M111-h1gh e1ghth
straight lo"
The w1n v,as the e1ghth 111 II g.unes lor the Nets
(37-19) .•u1d·'lt moved them \\ nhm " g.1me ol idle
Ph!l.!delpiHd (37-17) 111 the ucc for the lln.il playo ff
berth m the Easte1 n Con terence
New Je1sey h.1.., s1x g.une.., r~m.un1ng , two less
than the 76ers
The loss pt!Shed the Kmcks ( 29-45) to the bnnk
ot bemg ehmm.1ted I rom pl.!) ull contention A wu1
by Ph•ladelph.a Will or .tloss by the Kntcks Will end
the n11sery for the te.un
Vmce Carter .1dded 12 potnts tor the Nets, v.hose
27-pomt th1rd-qu.1rter le,td d" tndled fo 95-89 m•dway through the luunh qu.uter
Stephon M.trbury led Ne\\ York. sconng 21 ot ht&lt;
30 pomts 111 the second halt J.tnl.ll C1.twlord ddded
26.

www.mydailysentinel.com

(7401446 1409 oc (740)446·
2003

S450 mo (740)992 3961
STAT 87 (304)895-3561

paid 13041576-2999 '

'

I

'

�.

•

'

•

\

'

Page B6 • The Daily Sent·inel
10

F'RL n" &amp;
VH;f: nm.f:s

r

Anu;

m1&lt; S\1 ~.

KEissers Produce
Amtsn cheese &amp; lunch
meats. fresh frUit &amp; veg
Open Thurs Fr1 Sal ~ ~ m1!e
west o1 Holzer Hosp1tal on

..,I

'-IIR\1{1'

4x4

FoR SALE

~10

H a\IE

b 11'1&lt;0\'&amp;\ lEI''[);

93 Chevrolet Lum1na Euro 4
ooor, CD player. rLlnS good
Ask mg $500 (740)37J·
2930

Garage Sale- 339 Pearl .
Mlddle!J)Or l, Sat Apr1l 9
BASEMENT
Bam-? . b1g men's &amp; plus s1ze
WATERPROOFING
women 's clothing house·
hold m1sc . wheel barrow. Uncondlhonal lifetime guar·
aOtee Local references furJackson P1ke . ph. (740)446 - 93 Lmcoln Town Car 81 000 yard tools. some twn~ture ,
m1les Very n1ce 54 500
n1shed Established 1975
7787 740 339 2 3
Call 24 Hrs {740) 446·
1740)446-1759
~JO
V'-'--.;
I \H\I..,l 1'1'1 , • ..,
0870. Rogers Basement
·' 11\1·, 101 ~
97 Dodge Neon. 114 000
Waterproofing
m11es. runs and dr111es good.
great car S I 500 080 1993 Chevrolet Astn'l Van.
F~R\1
(740)256-1 233 or !740)256· good
cond1 t1on
pll,One
EQt 11'\ lf~\T
9031
(3041675-5077

.

I{\

10

H OME

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Auctton Saiurday Apnl 16.

IO.OOam
Over 50 Lawn Tractors
Gators/ATV's
OVER 30 FARM

.
-

TRACTORS

~--~-'

·--

.,

'

E-m ail
JV.IIl45769(!! yahw o..:Clm

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

2000 Ford WmdStar LX .
91 .000 m1les 2 sl1d1ng
doors. power w1ndows &amp;
crwse $6.300 [304)075·
4d14

40

f- Ca)j (7401"6·2342
Por Details

Auto &amp; Truck

Repair

MOlURl'\'O.E'V'. '
4 W IIEEI.EI&lt;.~

3 mil'es west of
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

04 Yamaha Rh1no after markef w[leels. speed·o-meter.
$6 800 Cal\ 17•01339-1620

•

www.orvb.com

I

A uto Listings.
L1st your auto by calh ng

3 AOHA registered quarter
hor:s:es. 1 sorrel gel d m ~ 2
bay mares. $1500 ea 080.

992-5682

1982 Honda 500 Tr1ke
Faring wf stereo system Dk
~lue · Evenings (740)256-

•u t:aar:n/1111

6870 $3 000

1985 ' GL1200
Wmg
Aspencade . blue. new t1res,
V1ew ptiotos/lnlo on line.
new prog1ess1ve front and
17401985-432 1
rear suspens1on CB radio,
!984 Ford F-150 XLT
33rd Annual Bentley Pig
I ·AM 1FM Cassette, lo ts 91
t,35'1W, AutomatiC, Runs
Sale. Friday . . Apnl 15th .
chrome, 88,000 m1les, ve ry
~ood Code A25 or &lt;:;all
7. 30pm Fayette County
good condition. $4 000.
(7401446·3620
Fa1rgrounds.
Washington
phone (740)54 1~0537
'
Court House. Roger Bentley.
1993 Ford Mustang LX, 4
1998 Buell SS Thumlerbolt
19371984-2398
I(Jcl Au toma1ic Runs
Harley Davidson eng1ne,
ood Code A26 or Call
4·H P1gs for Sale
very last sport bike, great
BegiM lafrowlng tt20/05 and 17401446-3620
shape, $5100 . (7401985·
still farrowmg . Pure bred
9857
Yorks
crossbreds . 1960 Willys Jeep Truck,
and

Reg Pam! and Reg Quarter
horses Also Halfllngers. Call
(740)446-3413 .'

HJR SAI.f:

PiQs. white

5395.

www slaterunfarm com

r

H AY&amp;

$4,300.17401441-9160

Tobacco Plants for sale Call 200 1 ChevY P/U, V·B
Steps1de. Rhino Bed Liner
(740)446·7843
w!lh/A R.E Bed Cover.
I \\1\ L\ (, \ IWI \, li)lll.
Clean &amp; Sharp, Garage Kept
For Sale Rid mg Lawn mow· $14,000 13041675-5041
ers (740)446-3505
2004 Silverado 1500. Z7 1,
Homelile weed eater runs 4W D. Loaded. still under
warran l y, 29,000 m1tes . ask·
good. used very lmte, $50
Craftsman
self -propelled '"9 $26,00013041675-4917
lawnmower. used 3 times.
84 Chevy S-10, 305 Motor
I H \ \SPOH: I\ IIC l\

AlJIOS

FOI&lt; SALE
$500! Honda's, ChevY's,
Jeep's
Eet
Pollee
Impounds' Cars from $500
lor hst1ngs 800·391·5227

EXT 3901
1969 Ford XL. Galaxy 390.
automatic power steenng
and brakes. AC . 1ntenor
excellent, Mechamcat excel·
len t . body good Needs
minor repair and pamt
$3,300 DO 080 17401696·

1373. 17401591-5888

lis lallp [ribune

$1.200 ·13041675-8643 LV

'

Mess

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
ClassiC, 10,000 m1les, bl ue.
excellent condition, $13.500,

~oint

remmlelin g

alummum, diesel

99 Honda Stla dow 750cc.
6,200 m 11es Excellent conditiOn, $4 ,000 (740) 446 _1948 .

• Kitchens • Baths
Racine., OH
740·247· 2162 or
740-416-3508
14 yrs. Expen cnce
d 1 mo

a

r

HOWARDl.

WR~~ft!n~af~NS

I

Commercial

. I All i)'peS of roofing:

$20.00 Double baskels. double bears-

Shmgle. Flat. M e1al I New or Repair
Seamless Gutter -

double winners!

Downspo ut - S1d1f"lg

Adv an ce ticket drawing

•frealstlmatau

Thursday, Apnl 14th 6 :00 pm
Middleport American Legion

949-1405.

r

American Legion Middleport

April 9th
6:30pm
110 People or more $1 ,000.00
· Coverall if not will pay
accordingly
Crank
It Up $2,500
I
.
Slarburst $1 ,100.00

. 2218

$6.900 13041937-2809

Of
wAG ICY

COUPLf

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

TISTS.
,.

..
' BARNEY
'~,

DON'T WORRY, U'L

'BOUT NOT

'0-TATER, I'LL TEACH
~,,..._ ...:;
YA EVER'THIN'
I KNOW !!

KNOWIN'
NOTHIN'

the PAIN ~~-cm•·~J.t·*·~~·
~
out of PAINTING! W."i"'' NOW OPB\1

~ Hubbard's Greenhouse

.
I

~

W
~

Sy1acuse, OH
740-992-5776

•

Flow~rs &amp; Vegetable plants Flut ·$6.95

10" Hanging Raskcts-20 Varieties
$5.95. $7.95
P&lt;r&lt;nnials 6". 10" $2.95. $5.95
Polled Planls 4". 12" $1.25. $1 2.95

•

12 1' Ferns $10.95

c&gt;n

~

..,..

!tf)_

m~;.;.:;~;~m
High and Dry

THE BORN LOSER
P" Tf.\E. I&gt;NS'..JtK. \~: ")15, e.ool'\"'

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work

p-Yt:-5-Tf.l( O.UEST\00 15:'\..JW&gt;o.\"'1 ~ I""Tf\l&gt;o.N~ TO t&gt;\ID!&gt;, t 5TI LL
~t'ID t&gt;OC5 ~ (;~.PLODit-.1~ ~ W/&gt;-\C.f-1 JOfl.t-INY CA~O~
:)fl.(E.P M/&gt;¥.€.7 '
,. E.'IE~ WE.Q(Joi\GI-1.\ "-nEK
Tfl.E t'IE.W'::&gt; !

BM !" Of-\, (~NI&lt;.C., Tl-\f. ~­
N\F\((t-\\,(1\~ YO\J ~\\J\1-\E.

!

H IE QUC:.STI0!-1?

~

~

u in the market

Storage

MANlEY'S-·
SElF STORAGE
.97 Beech ·street
Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
99l-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll

93 Columbus Rd.

Stop &amp; Compare

TwENTY .-!INUTES IN A
MEET\&gt;IC', WITH THI' RECENT LY

IMPORTS
Athens

OI VORCE.D

KEN DALL I

Whaley's Auto
Parts

St. Rt.68 1 Darwin. OH
740-992-701 3 or 740-992-5553

Restockin.g l~a.te Model Sa.h:a.ge
a.nd After· 1'flilrket Parts

PEANUTS

•

See Brent or' Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

YOU JUST
MAKE HIM FEEL

.OBLIGATED
TO STICK

AROUND ..

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

878-2457
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457

• Driveways t Tennis Cou.rts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads t Streets
WV

Cont~actors

SUNSHINE CLUB
DID 'rQJ

~THAT

I

Lie. #003506

20. Games for $20 .00
held by G.C: Starz Cheerleaders

Wf.Y

..JUS/ ~VMPW AGAD:Srr
11-IAT lVR~S aF &lt;ILL Ft\0\I-'&gt; 1

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley
740·742·2293

Y'£S, BUr 1 U\l[;{R$fM.lD
IT AL&lt;;D lV~S OfF
~€.MAK~

"

GARFIELD

April 11 , 2005
Pt. Pleasant Middle School

Gauge Stock 112 Gauge Slug
to Benefit Josh Glover &amp; Family

12

ADVERTISE

Sunday, April 1Oth
12 Noon
MIZWAY TAVERN
EUCHRE Tuesday
KARAOKE Wed &amp; Fri
Saturday

RUSH CREEK 9-1
Coin Show
Oh-Kan Coin· Club
Sunday, April 10,2005
9am - 4pm
HOLIDAY IN N
At. 7 North, Gallipolis, Ohio

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PEB MONTH
GRIZZWELLS

High cost
17-17- 17 ..
$265 lon (While Suppy Last)
• Mo re stable-form of Nitrogen
• Made with White PotaSh
Ius dus~ More consistent) •

• Inc\ udes secondary nutrien t sulfur
• 18 spreader buggies available for ose
• Airway pasture reoovatOrs and seeders
a~Jai lable

• licensed

to rent

agro n omist on

staff available for

con~lting.

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
Pomer(&gt;y, Ohio

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

Pass
Pass

3A
4 .,.

'"'

Pass
Pass

6

6 4ft

• Pass

¥ '

Db!

4•
5•

All pass

.-

Yeslerday, I mentioned the annual Mmd
Sporls Olymp1ad 1n England . n'rea tured a
dozen e.vents requiring mental gymnas1\Cs, mcllJ ding bn dge Surely th e most
p rodigious feat laSt year was by Ben
Pndmore, who ~el a new world record !or
remembermg a random string of zeros
and ones (b 1nary digits) How many do
you think he recalled ?
ThiS deal , wh1 ch occurred dunng the
2004 NEC Cup 111 Japan, sets a d!lferent
sort of reco rd First, look at the West
hand What wou ld ,you lead against SIX
spades doubled? T t:lerr, study the full
deal. How many tricks d1d South win?
Aher East opened two cl ubs (strong, arll·
licial and forcing) and South overcalled
two spades, Nor th deCi ded to slow-play It
by rais ing only to three spades He was
hop1 ng to be doubled at four or f1ve. But
after w e"srs raise to Sill: hearts. North sacrifiCed m slx spades.
Th1s was the w1 nmng dec1s1on, apparent·
ly losmg only 500 points when S IX hea rts
IS worth 980 - but ,wa1t F~rs l, We st made
the "expe rt" lead olthe diamond king He
exp ected to hold the trick and kno w !rom
the dummy what to do next Still , surely
East would cas h the club ace for one
down. But no- th1nk1ng that hiS partner
had the d1amond queen , tle saw no flurry
to do that. East ex1ted "satel y" w1th a
heart.
Not so safely Declarer threw a club !rom
hand, ruffed in the dummy, drew trumps,
and ran the diamo nds, discard ing h1s
rema1 ning clubs - plus 1,660.
Pndmore , after an hour studying the
seque nce, recalled more than 3,700

Saturday, April 9, 200!5
B'y Barn le e Bede Oeol
Goals w h1ch a re based on p ractical
foundaTions have excellent c hanc es
for s u ccese In t h e ye ar a head
HowEive r, patience is Ilia com panion
ol wisdom, so be p repare d to take
m o re ti me th a n an ticipate d when
things ge t tnc kY.
AR IES (Marc h 2 1 · Ap nl
19) Cond ition s that a ffect your m atSrl al
security are abo ut to improv~ as of
today When the Indica tors start to
move to the plus side, takA adva mage
o f wh a t occurs.
IAUAUS (April 20- M ay 2 0) - Your
chances for success look exceptionally pro mls 1ng at th1s time re garding
ventu res you e ith e r Initiate o r p ersonall y ta ke control o f. You'll have the
opportunity lo use .your talents
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - You Will
function best today in an e nvironment
wh e re you will b e free from all mler·
ference from othe r s When ta c kling a
tediOUS or arduo u s task , be s ure to
seek o ut the necessary privacy.
CAN CER (June 2 1 ~J ul y 22) - Do all
that you can tod ay t o strength e n your
relations hips with Influentia l fne nds or
Those w ho can d o your career some
good T hese cO ntacts will be Important over Th e next few days
LEO (July 23-A ug 22) - Yo u 're now
m a b rief cycle w h e r e Importa nt goals
can be rea lized It 's Imperative !hal
you m a ke the r1g h t m oves 1n Implementing the Ini tial steps needed lor
success
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) - Keep all
ol your Involvements 1n their proper
pe rspective loday As long as you
approach rha tters in a practi cal, feas1-·
ble fash1 on , yo u r c h ances of th e
res ult s betnwwar d 1ng are good.
LIBRA
(SJJj t
23-0ct
23)
lnv&amp;stm ents or jo 1nt fi nancia l involvements could prove to be profit able to r
you at this lime. Ta ke a ha f'd look
tod ay a t any proposals brought to you
by a reliable, p roven , so~ rce
SCOR P IO (Oct 2 4 -N ov 22) Grve
your p ar tner your undivided ·attention
today it he or she h as soma s uggestions to oller which could affect your
mutua l interests W h at you r p artner
has to say could ~ substa n tial and
benefiCia l.
SAGITTAAIIJS (Nov 23·Dec &gt; 2 1) T hiS is Ei good day to attempt a task
that requires co ncentration a n d perSistence because interruptions will btl
at a minimum. Once you get s tarted ,
you s h ould be able to complete
things.
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - '
You r organization al a nd managena t
SkillS will be seek1n g outle ts of actNe
expresston today. N o one is apt to
mind because yqu' ll take charge so
smoothly ,,there won 't be anybody
who'd object.
AQ UARIUS pan 2Q-Feb. 19) - Be
hope ful regarding the outcome of
Hnportant events today, becau se aU
you have to do is adopt a pos1t1Ve aH1·
Tude and ITs effects wiU Influence yo u
Into making all The right moves
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - It
behooves you to be more of a good
listener today than a talker By
encou ragmg others to say what 1s on
their min ds, you can learn a lot and
ptek up much help fu l and benefiCial
information.

74 -

• New Homes

140-992-1611

2•
Pass

~&lt;lllrthdo.Y:

KUMOR HAS, IT, S IR, THAT
YoU SPENT TH E' LAST

CONSTRUCnON
• Complete
Remodeling

l!:ast

AstroGraph·

Phone
(740) 992·5232

Pomeroy, Ohio

~ orth

bmary digits.

I

1995 Jeep Wrangler, rebuilT
CAMPERS &amp;
automatiC transfer case
1\'IOTOR. HO\IES
new brakes. 3" body lift hard ___
•
top , $4,200. salvage tttle ,
(740)992 -2143
"03" 34' Jayco 5th wheel . 1·
12' sljde out like new. many
1999 Dodge Dakota VB . extras (740)339-0218
4~:4 loaded. dual e)(haust.
new t1res 79 000 miles 1997 Coachman Catalina
Good truck. { 740)37~·2860 . L1te 24' 1001 , Front Bedroom.
2000 Mercury Myst1que
many
extra!
phone
While • 4 door sedan. 200 1 Jeep Cherokee Sport 13041675-2039 $6,995 080
58 000
m1les.
S4 .600 4x4 pnce reduced. loaded
(740)446-1294 after Spm.
CD tow1ng package 54,000 1998 30' fifth wheel tt'B'.'el
m1tes $9,200-0BO 304-675· trailer, double slide, Bll:cef2001 M1tsub1Sh1 D1amante, 1314
l~nt condition . $13 ,9oo
14 000
miles
Blaclo:
phone 174016,98·9319
wll earher 1nter $13,700 2003 Dodge Duly, 4x4,
black. ~ door. 6 speed , 2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32',
13041895·3929
Cummms eng1ne. nert oars. 12' expando, sleeps 10,
2002 DodQe Ram 1500 SLT stainless bo&lt;:ty t!iOICI1i'lgs, ellcellent condit1ori . 516,800.
~ed 4 door. 360 automatiC d1amond plate tool bQI( &amp; (7401441 -1501
37 000 m11es $16 500 080 bed
s1des.
retractable
(740)2 56-1618 or /740)256· gooseneck ball
69 QOO 2004 Sunseeker 25 ft. Class
6200
miles·· S29,000 (740)256- C. motor home. loaded.
$45 000 (7401645,3230
9247 or (740)645-Ga70
93 8LI'!Ck Lesabre H1gnM1leage Good Dependable 86 Ford F250 4~4 . e~t cab 92 lnnsbruck Camper 35FT,
Car New T1res Brakes &amp; 8 ~oat bed htt gate VGC Stored 1ns1de
Excellent
Tune Up , St 400 1304)576- .$J 500 080 1740)J79· pond1t1o0 . Includes hitch
1999 Aed Pon!lac Grand~M GT, 2DR
V6-HO, PL,
PW.
Sunroof.
Auto.
AM/FMICD w/ equaliz~r &amp;
AC
Spo 11er
El(cenent
ConcJ1!10n
sr 111
under
Warranty 70 000 m 11es.
$6.500 (304 )882-3236 ·

Wmduw:-. • Roofing

• Garages

080, 1984 Monle
FoRSALJo:
ga•age
kep1
$12,500
oeo. Call L.---~;:o::;__,J l304l675-5041'
(7401446-0805 .
.,.,;;...;;.;;,;·,..;.._ _ _,.

Ca.lo ss. ss.soo

• Rc p lacem~nl

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Roud

BoATS &amp; l\1CYTORS

99 Dodge Dakota Club Cab.
SLT. Loaded V-8 . 4x4 Bedliner,
Runmng-8oards ,
Tonneau Cover. 95Kml.
$9,500 1;304)882-28, 5

Vmyl

New Gar,1gcs

All Yo ur Home

"Nn jtJh To Smail"

Phone (740)441 ·

6914

H 1 111l C~ •

Construction
• Siding • Windows
• Decks • Po rches
• Ceramic Tdc &amp;
Hardwood Floori ng
• Ga r.tgcs
• Roo m Ad~. • Roofing

L""'_..,;loiUiiRi.SII'Aili i L.E_,..I

(740)446-11865

New

S1dm g •

10x30

Im prove ment Needs

99 Kaw Bayou 220, Garage
kept. never 1n Mud $2,100
Exc. con (304)675-7345

ca rgo area Many new parts
Very de pe ndable $3,900
0 80 (7401379·2218.
1984 Fourwmns boat 20
loot. Mercrulser, 70 hours
94 Chevy 1 ton dump truck ,
loaded Call {740}446·3200.
$5,900, 96 Dodge 4x4 piCk·
up, $3,900. 95 Ford F150
1987 20' Pon toon boat with
4x4. $2 ,600, 99 GMC J immy
1996 t ra1ler &amp; 50hp Mere
Blazer, SS,BOO
motor, $3,500, (740)992·
B &amp; D Auto Sales

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

Sunset Home
Construction

BUILDERS IRC.

West

· Now Available' At'

B..\l ' l\1 Ll'\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

22

%&gt; 'H\W" A'it!

~

Drag along
Cherry
seeds
Ashen
Sum tolal
A Great
Lake

Foolnole

· (2 wds.)
Very,
In Yeracruz
Repait
.atear

Hibernate

DOWN

Narrow Inlet

tones
Tiara
Uh-huh
Fleecy
animals
With,
to Maurice
Catchall gp.
Deep black
Map dir.
Almost
Hand out
Pel rock or
mood ring
Untold,
to a poet

26
29
30
32
34
36
38
39
41
43
44

I

ANfSTt"t~­

BISSEll

Soutb

.From three to
two to one

AIOUT . It

IT'S

'.

Pomeroy, Ohio

SxlO, 10x10,
IOxiS, 10x20,

TD

53,500 (7,40)256-6640

16 toot

· MEGA .
STUI&gt;IO$

WI/ 036n5

-

leave messa e

extras. excelle nt condition,

91 GMC 1 ton Step Van ,

992-6215

I

etc••

A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

V.C. YOUNG 1U

':P6

free estimates
1740) 992-2979

9'7 Honda CB 750 Many

SU\'s
iL---FO-I&lt;IiS
iiA
Oillilio'--'

2383

.Jleasant l\egister

(304) 675-1333

cell 17401645-08 73

SS,OOO
8299

• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pai nting
• Pat1o,and Porch Decks
We do It all ell:cept
furnace work

(l;h

Cull B.D. Cons!.
for all )'our home
repair needs, roofing,
siding, a dd-ons ,

(740) 992-2155
"

1993- 22 5 It Chaparral
boat, 235hp MercrUiser
1988 Chevy Caprice- 4 door
eng, cuddy cabin , por tapottilt, cru1se, AIC. cassette
tl, stove: b1mm1 top, new
Great cond1t1on . $1 ,500
cockpit cover, rull boat cover
(740)245-,5946 after Spm
Eagle trai ler E~Cce tl ent conFord '852 Ton Dump Truck . dillOn (74Q)j79-2740.
1988 Olds Della 88 RoyOI,
Paver, Roller Must Sell
3800 rrotor Nice car Phone
$7 000 for al l (304)882-2196 2000 Sea Ray, BR 180 Sk1 &amp;
{740)446-0941 .
(304)377·8266
Pleasure Boat, 3 OL, Alpha·
1, POwer Steenng, AM/FM
1994 Camara Red 3.4 hter.
Cass .. Sw1m Ladder &amp; Deck.
$2.500. pnce neg (740)388
8901
81kln1Top, Full Boat Cover,
· Shore Lme Tra11er, New
Must
Sell
1994 white Thunderb ird , 2001 L 1ncoln Navig ator Condit1on .
loaded, excellent cond1!10n , AWO, 54 VB. 3rd row seal; (304}675-3354
VB.' $3.200 or best offer 1ng cassE)netCO-changer
(740)388-9875. ·
.. heated/cooled -seats, low 2002 St1ngray 20 f1 open
m1Jes. excell ent condillan , bow, Red' White, 5 liter V~
1997 Mustang Conlfertlble,
$23.500.(740)453-ss 35 .
. 8, Hustler trailer, Sli:Cellent
New Top, 4 new Tues Front
cond ., garage kept, pnce
end Alignment &amp; Sbcker. Air. 2003 Chevrolet Trailblazer new $24 000 sell $!5,700.
Cruise Tilt, Rower Windows EXT LT 4114 3rd lOW seatinQ call Troy ~rebS 304 -675·
&amp; Seats, Factory Stereo, loaded.
garage
kept 8828
CDfTape, V6. AutomatiC .. Excellent
cond1!10n
Excellent' Cond1t1011 85.000 $24 500 (740)446-7484 or 2003 Bayhner 18 112 FT
mlles(-304) 576·2383
Open Bow, 8 Passenger.
1740)"1-7411.
135HP. 4cyl. Mercruser, 37
1998
Dodge
Durango.
4X4
tlours 0 ( running time.

sa 000

.

87 Chevy, 2WD, runs good, Kt~we: sa kl Prairie 4•whee ler
$800 080. (740)379·9374 w1th trailer and carny cover.
ask lor Mike Ba1ley

• Roofing &amp; Guners

Porneruy . OH
740-992-9922
Mon-Su t IOAM-SPM
I \\ , \\,I,,,,,,, .. llh'l
I
lllllll \ II 11&lt;1111,
1 tjljl&lt;llllllll&lt;.lll' .1 1 1 1 1~
L1111i11,~, &gt;ll'&lt;lll&lt;.l'''

•

· ~10742

Opemng lead: ??

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbi ng

39728 SR143

(7401645 3230

97 CABO Race ready, runs
great, must see to appreCJ·
ate $1.000. Gallipolis area,

Tree Service

• Room Addition s &amp;

( '0\11'.\'\,

2004 883 Harley Dav1son.
black, 4,700 m1les, $7.500.

K' 3 2

AKQJflj2

Dealer· East

JONES'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

\CREE
\lll"l \IFVI'

K1000AT,

17401949·22 17

YOUNG'S

Let me do it for youl

o11e 's m emory.

-

•

•4o QJ6J

Ta~e

tribute to your loved

.

' El:lsl

Vulnerable : North-South

for a free estimate.

a lasting

J , !I 8 7 .J 4

9 B

740-667- 0700 1-888-HUPP234

740-992-7599

52.500 17401245-5747

t
olo

1~:::0

STOP T).IE

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare SI!P· • Cancer • Acc,ident

states musl be 21.
Let ru h elp )'Oil

773·5182

·I

Insured

IF loL-l.

T HE-N WKA.T WI L. L

FR IO~ ~ST IM ATE S

clwo ~e

2004 Harley Dav1dson 1200
1998 S-10 LS, 4 cyl 5 sp , 'Custom Sportster. loaded.
AC , P.S PS . 59,700 mil es $9.900 080, 304·593-3542,

2000 Chev ro le t-Silverado
GRAIN
1500 LS fully-optiOned.
4 )( 4 , bed l1ner .Ira lie r1 ng·
1000# bales. S7 00·$ 10 00 pkg .. Pewter ext ,Charcoal
&amp; $15.00. p1ck up load or 1nt. I OOk highway miles,
semi-foad
good
hay. syn 01t, below book S12.900
30.4 -773-6062
17•01698·2765

$120. 17401" 1-8299.

BMW

740-992-6971 ·

•

Wes t
• 4 2
¥ '!0!Jili4J

GuZ

son6@ vl'rizun. Nel
WV, OH and all legal

or Email per·

2003 H.D. 883. $6,300 1996
Honda 300 4x4. $2 ,500;
1986

Cl•••

Cai 7~0-992-9444

.

TRL\CKS

''

Brian Reeves
New Horne Conslruclion, Remodelin g,
Renovauons. Dec ks, G_nmges. Pole
Bv.l!&lt;lings, Ro?l\ Siding. Windows &amp; All
· ~ ' Other Resident ial Needs
Phone: 740·742-3411

200 1 Harley Road King. Teal
1n color, many extras, one
owner, ~xcellent con d1t1on,
29,000 m1les
$16,000.

Show
Cross.
born Feb 22. $100 each 1986 Chevy heavy 314 ton
(740)70 1-2897, 740-663pi u 350 eng1ne 30,000
42 13
mi les smce 1ebullt. auto.
. Yearltng Angus Bulls Mostly 4x4 . great work tr uck body
A I excellent bloodlines, rough $2 500, (740)992·
pnced reasonably Slate Run 2143
Fcvm. Jackson. (740)286·

lfriMim•

Solurday A pril . B,
2005
' 9:00A.M.
Mason VfW
$75.00 ($25.1111 N\lll·
Rdundable D£posi1)

17401446-0213.
15

23 Neutral

A 10 !Ill J

"' K 5

.41\!!...._.Tuppers Plains, OH
45783

25 Years Experience
David Lewis

04-0H-05

•

-'

FinanCial Services

25 Years Local EM nence

17401446 -3620

Pleese call (740)448 2002 ~~;~ms Good. New Parts
(740)541-7491
or
or · 1ew Online or Call
7401446-3620
.
'17401541-7470

• Q 10'

f\ orth

41800SR#7

' Ownet
32 11 9 We l s hto~· nRd .
Pmne m) . O hio -15769
Phon~: 7-lO-IJIJl-l-132

.

Hupp Insurance

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

James A Will Jr

(

Ca r m1chael~u1prnent

l

Complete small
engine repair

1994 Pont1ac Transport minivan Runs good, new 11res.
5700 (740)645•5319 leave
message.

WITH ,\ PHOT O)

between Gall1pohs and
Rio Grande on County
RoM 35

LIHS il ll'K

'

.

'

BALERSIRAKES,TEDOERS
(7&lt;01446-2412 M'dway

Bngln• R•p.U

Z3. ·gg

MER E

South
. KQJ765

Evans Enterpr1se. Jackson,
OH 1(800)537-9528

Jim'• SIIWI

45 Gum shoe's
finds
48 More

1 Hankering
4laundry
need
52
8 Wager
53
11 Sci-fl knight
12 Persuade
55
13 Gl mail drop 56
14 Two fives
57
for - 15 German
58
industrial .
region
59
16 Publicity
.Info
60
171ronor
calcium
61
19 Candy bar
2t Winery cask

6Q Inches m s10ck Ron

Must sale t984 Corvelle. 19 98 Astra van . 48 .000
350 engine (740 )992·6797 m11es. wheetcha1r hit . ac ,
cassette player. (740)742·
SEl l YO UR CAR
8512

N-EA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Culverts
plastic and metal. f'f inches-

3380

17• 01256:1352

The Daily Se n ti nel • Page B7

l\IPilOI't-:\IENI'S

1997 Ford Conversion Van ,
Spec1al
74 000 miles. el(cellent conEd111on . 22 000 miles dark
ditiOn new t1res 59 BOO,.
green. S19 999 (304 )41 2(740) 992·2945

BMW

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

161°

99 ChelfY Mahbu LS V6 4door
automat1c
~ully
loaded
CD. alu,m1n1:1m
wheels 65.0001o: $4 .795
\7401379-2748

Friday, April 8 , 2005

I&lt; I . . ,

LL--..;F,;O
;;;I&lt;-So;A;;;U;;;:_,..I

1100 gal liqUid manure
spreader 4 rvv Not1ll corn
pl'anter . 40' Ltt!le Gtant
Eleva10f JD Sem1 mount 3
14" plows, 1 rOw carousel
Holland Tran splarlter. Hyd
tobacco press wtth 3 boxes
1n !tne. APP 3000 tobacco
sttcks. New Holland grtnder
mtxer 2 112 ton. 10 Ford
Trasport d1sc: 3000 lb caHie
· scales new 4 young Angus
bulls.
toba cco
seeder

Friday; April 8, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Hairy
.
humanoid
2 Utopia
3 ·Excellent
grade
4 Black-eyed
5 Kind
of tradition
6 TUiklsh
. potentate

7 Xerxes ~
ruled here.
8 Rumsoaked
cake
9 Saga

10 Captured

37 Egad!

11
18
20
22

40 Spoke
hoarsely
42 Leaked
slowly
44 Folger's

Cram
Artifice
Zilch
Take a
chance
23 Fitness
center
24 Jockey's

Mrs.

u

45 Chowder
morsel

46 Ooozle
25 Allar end ' 47 Not pretty
26 Refute
48 Follow the
27 Days
recipe
\ before
49 Hepburn
28 Luncheonnickname
ette list
50 Verve
31 -and
51 Aont or bro.
woolly
54 Retiree's
33 Passing
kitty
brake

grade

35 Tearoom

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cl'llebt'lly C1pher ci}'Ptogrems ate c~eated from qUOia~oos hy lamoos paople pas1 and Pleserlt.
Each lener m the Clpiler slards lor af'IOIIler

Today's clue· WequBis M

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HAZ

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LK

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JTHUlHCY

MBElBU .

BI HC K

WBUWBTBXZ ."

SZEZU

TlAZ

SHZT

MHGBUX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Jusl as iron •usls Irom disuse, even so does
inaclion spoil the intellect " - Leonardo Oa Vinc1
tel 2005 by NEA, Inc. 4·8

IliA! DAllY
'UUIU

S©'RJ,l}A~LGr,~~·
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Eoi11d by CLAY I . POLlAN - ' - - ---'- -

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0 four

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scrambled words
low to form fou r words.
Rearrange

J(r,c II
. . ,-s_v_A_s_A___,I~:~

I.' li. I. I. -

...
"I learned one thing this va-

ca:ion,' my husband'slgh ed .

"The average traveler wants to
....,.,;R.:.....;T:...:V.,.;..E.:U;...T:..,...~~ go wnere there are no .. -.. - '.?'

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by !dl ino m the m~~~':l9 word1
yov o ev e lo~ !rom -''e~ No 3 beiow .

,:OR

SCRAM-liTS ANSWERS 4-7- o 5
Trough- Offor • Punce · G~1fty- FIGURE
Wh1le try1ng ,on dress.es 111 a 1c:ca1 de;&gt;artmenl store I
ove rheard one woman· mumble , "A g&lt;rdle is the Difference betweenfact and FIGURE "

ARLO &amp; JANIS
fHL WOAAlJ 1-1£'5 Wlfll
LOOKo /IU?Y FA/Ill LIA12 .'
~

~

~

!

SOUP TO NUTZ

;&amp;WV\~

~ i'~.-

"faking The Sting Oul Of
Hard Work!"

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tmctor
wi th 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubat'!- Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 C hester 985-3301

•

•
•

•

�•

'

•

88 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday, April 8, 2005

www.rflydailyse ntinel.com

LIVI~(;

ALONG THE'I,RlvER

House of the Week:
Rustic look for this cozy design, Dl

Appalacbian traditions alive in Meigs County, Cl

'

~

-

If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR Thi's Week. cjo The Gaston Gazette,

Aff Vme~ faslern

Ml
liliiiiiii1

,.,Ne=xt"'el"'·-qup=-=-._
~Auto
Ports 500,

~2:30p.m .. Sunday

O'j!eil!): 300,
:2 p.m., April16

· .Tndt Strles
Kroger 250:
1 p.m .. Saturday

,.

•

I&gt; Take that, NASCARI Owner

Richard Childress thought
NASCAR offi~lals were unduly
harsnln penalizing his team for
violations uncovered during
quall¥f1i}n Las Vegas, so driver
·Kevin
H.arvlck went out and won
...
at Bristol after starting at the
rear of tl1e field.
1&gt; Chi,!dress vowed during the. off·
se.aSlln that his team wou!d•recdvertrom a winless 2004 season. It was Richard Childress
• Racing's flrs't victory since ROb·
• by Gordon won at Watkins Glen,
N.Y., In August 2003, and it was
Harviok's first victory •inca he
won the Brickyard 400 the week
before Gordon's victory.
I&gt; t(yle Petty finished eighth, his
first top-10 finish since a Talladega race in April 2002. RookIe Travis Kvapil enjoyed the first
.top-10 finish of his career.
I&gt; No Cup race had been run with neJ.
· !her a Jack Roush- nor a Rick Hendrlc:k-oYmed car in the top five slnee
a race won by Tony Stewart 1n
watkins Glen, N.Y., on Aug. 11,
2002. Rick Hendrick Chevys and
Roush Rlrds had each won two of
the current seasons first four races.
~Jimmie

•

NE)(TEJ:;. CUP SERIES·.....................,~.

Race: Advance Auto Parts 500 HarviCk probably didn't have
Where :

Martmsvllle

('Va .)

the fastest car. Fo r once .

Hometown News
for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
.

EMM::tf.iY:I.J¥1 ;JI¥ft

'

Race: O'Reilly 300

Race: Kroger 250

Where: Texas Motor Speed·

Where: Martinsv il le (Va.)

Speedway {.526 mi). 500
laps/263 miles. ·•
When: Sunday. Apnl10
Last year's winner: Rusty
Wallace
Qualifying recor~: Ryan Newman. Dodge, 97.043 mph.
Oct. 22 . 2004.

take. ~omeho w, throYgh 14
ca ution !lags and cras hes
that sent a grand' total of 33
cars spinning, smoking, skid-

Race Record: Jeff Gordon,

ding and "s lammi ng against · Race Record: Mark Mar ti n,

Ohio \ 'all•·~ l'nhli,hin~ Co.

though, fortune smiled on way, Justm 11.5 m1. 1. 200 Speedway {.526 mi.). 250
Harv.ck. who took advantage · laps/ 300 miles.
laps/ 131.5 miles.
o( Rusty Wallace's m1sto r· When: Saturday. April16
When: Saturday. April9
tun e and Greg Biffle's mis-

Kenseth · .
Crawford ·
QualllylnC record: Jeff Qualifying record: Mike
Green. Chevro let.·193.483 Bliss. Ford, 94 275 mph,
. mph, April 5, 2002.
April16, 1999.
Ford, 127.417 mph , March ley. Dodge, 74.294 mph,
21.1999.
· April 17, 1999.

Last week~ The man who
won tt1e Food CitY 500 was

last week: Kevi n Ha~vlck Last race: Ron Hornaday, in
con ti nUed his dominance at' a Ch ~. . .ro l et , won t he World

the fende r.s sti ll relati vely lfltact. Th is time the most no-

'

• Eastern girls drop
Souther~. See Page B1

Race ReCord : Jimmy Hens-

Chevrolet, 82.223 mph, . each other, Harv1ck managed
Sept. 22 , 1996.
to bring his car home with

moved ,it to Monday. He beat

tea mmate Jeff . Burton by
0.159 seconds.

No. 32 TIDE

BOBBY HAMILTON JR.

s
u
s

Jimmie
Johnson

On lap 361 of the Food City 500."
Joh nson's Chevy tapped Burton's off
crash involving Burto n and Kurt

Busch. "It just seemed like it didn't'
have to happen ,"sa1d Burton. ·Jim·
mie 's a great driver, and I know h€·

know, I gave him a tre mendou s

amount of respect. He can't be doing
that, and Iwon't put up with it."

Week
~ Twenty-seven-year-oid Bobby Hamilton Jr. says his move up from the Busch Series to Nextel Cup has been part of a dream he's had to be
in the NASCAR record books with his dad, Bobby Sr.
·
·
Jol!i1 Clark/NASCAR This

of two Bristol races wa-s crash-

NASCAR This Week's Monte Dutton gives his take: "Burton's rigM.
Johnson.didn't do it on purpose, but
the lingering bad will Is understand·
able and there's another short-track
ra~e coming up n·ext."

run under caution, and a red

flag. for a 14-&lt;:ar pileup, delayed
the race for nearly 14 minutes.
!&gt;Next up is another "short-track
race."at the 'paper·clip·shaped
track In Martinsville, Va. NASCAR
defines "short tracks"as those of

WHO ' SHOT
•
AND WHO ' S NOT ··

10 Wbo's bot - Only Jimmie

Johnson has finished in the
•top 10 In all five races, and
he's been in the top five in
four of them. A fourth-place
·finish enabled Qale Earnhardt
Jr. to move up from 26th to
.17th in the poir\ts.
Ricky Rudd
finds himself 37th in the
points standings. Robby Gordon is 42nd.
'·

1&gt; W~o·a not -

Root, 88

• Cornie Jack Short, 79
• Judith R. Taylor, 64
• James A. Westfall, 78

INSIDE

Byrne51M'oduced "Ryan's
Racecar" coming to DVD

less than a mile, and there are

by' a different driver. . Harvick

Page AS
• John E. Beck, 47
• Edward-Collins, 70
·• Jalonda Mae 'Jennie'

•

Out of 500 laps, 115 were

joins Jeff Gordon. Greg Biffle .
Johnson and Carl Edwards.
I&gt; Dodge is still looking for its
first victory of the season. last
year a Dodge won for the first
time at Martinsville .

OBITUARIES

didn't do it on purpose. but, you

made a major fTlOVe l!P in tile

only three of tl1em- Bnstol, Mar·
tlnsvllle al'!d Richmond ~ left.
.;·Each race 9o iar has been won

Bv

spin that GUiminated in a head-on

lng sixth to maintain a re latively

·,

.Following in dad's.
shadow, Hamilton
•
Jr. starts Cup racing

the NASCAR record books with my Hamilton's first Cup appearance at
dad."
·
the track. As a Busch Series regular,
The elder Hamilton is a four-time he compeied at the Tennessee track
Cup race winner.
nine times, qualifying a career-b'est
Bristol Motor Speedway, site of fourth on March 27, 2004, and comlast week's Food City 500, would ing up with a sixth-place finish in a
have been a meaningful place for a race there on March 22, 2003.
Hamilton breakthrough, but.the secHamilton Jr. drives the No. 32 Tide
By Monte D141ton
ond-generation driver was one of Chevrolet for owner Cal Wells. The
NASCAR This Week
many caught up in crashes during a highlight of the current season was a ·
. typically untidy race at the .533-mile runner-up performance in qualifying
Bobby Hamilton Jr., the son of t'he track. He finished 39th after com- on March 20 at Atlant;~ Motor Speedreigning Craftsman Truck Series pleting 330 laps.
.- 1
way. An lith-place finish in Las Ve champion, is in his first full season
"I've got mixed emotions ab9ut . gas on March 13 matched Hamilton's
of Nextel Cup competition, but the Bristol," Hamilton said. "W)lat's frus- career best.
27-year-old Nashville, Tenn., native trating about the place is the fact
Wife Stephanie gave birth to the
has been making occasional appear- that, to pass, it usually involves hit- couple's first child, Haley, on Oct. 12,
ances in NASCAR's premier series ting someone. I'm not sure if a clean 2004.
·
since 2000.
pass even exists at Bristol. The track
The best season of. Hamilton's
"Honestly, I just want to win one of can tear up a Jot of cars. It's not un- Busch SeFies career was 2003, when
these things," he said. "I don't think usual for a crash to collect more than he won four times and finished
people realize just how (ough the just one car. Most of the time, four or . fourth in the points standings. He becompetition is in Cup. It's fierce. If I . five cars are taken out, so when I see gan racing at age 15 in the mini-modcan win a t;:up race, it doesn't matier smoke, I just hold my breath and ified division at Highland Rim
to me where it happens. I just want hope for the best. I know the fans Speedway near Ridgetop, Tenn.
to win. It's something I've been lov.e' the racing, but for me, Bristol is
dreaming about all my Ji.fe , and it mentally draining."
Contact Monte Dutton ·. at
would.be awesome to see my name in..
The most recent Bristo,l race was hmdutton50@aol.com.

.

'-~-

&amp; · Supply ·

Co.

·

"Ryan 's Racecar" is a DVD pro·
duced for children between the ages
of 2 and 8 by motorsports broadcast·
er Steve Byrnes. It's based o~ the career Of an actual driver. Ryan Zeck;
· and was shot at Hickory (N.C.) Motor
Speedway. Zeck, onginally from ~ure·
ka, Calif.. was the first recipient of
the Alan Kulwicki Scholarship at the
University of North Carol ina at Char-

· • For the record.
SeePageA2 ·
• Local briefs.
SeePageA3
·• Childs nominated for
healthcare worker award.
SeePage A&amp;

lotte, where he graduated in 1999.
The DVD can be ordered online at
www.ryansracecar.com.

Office. the device had a civilian.
time fu se protruding from lhc
top. It appears lhal the fuse was
lit. but prob llbly exlinguishcd
upon beg in thrown in10 tile yard
by lhe suspect or suspects.
The 731 st Ordinance Company
(EOD) from Wright Patterson Air
Force Base in Di1y1on was nol ilied. Soldiers of the EOD arrived
in Vinton and i nspec!ed I he device.
II was taken to the sheriff' s
firearm s range off of Shawnee
Lilne. where ·it was destroyed hy
with a C-4 plastic explosive, ·
"This is a very serious Il)atter
that warrants a full"and complete
investigation," said Sheriff David
Martin .
.
Anyone with information
about this case is asked to ca!.l
Perry at 446-4614, the sheriff's
tip line_at 44(j-ti555. or acce.ss the

sheriff's Web sil e at W)'lw.gal lias heriff.org, and follow the
links to do an on-line tip.
Moya sa id the incident . was
ve ry upsetting.
" I can't believe there are.human
beings tlial would do something
like lhat ," he said. " It didn 't hit ·
me unti l tlie Army came in and .
Please see Grenade, AS
Tlin Maloney/ photo

Ja ime Maya points to the spot in
his . yard in Vinton .where a suspected grenade lay for three
weeks before the sheriff's office
was ca lled. Bomb experts from
Wright Patterson Air Force Base
1n · Dayton were called in, safely
removed t he device, and took it
to the sheriff's firearms range,
where it was destroyed.

•

-WEATHER
Fans can choose

TalladeJIII'I Walk OIHine
Race fans will select this year'&amp;
mductees into Talladega Superspeedway's Walk of Fame. Since 1995, one

Rusty Wallace, Terry Labonte, Bobby
· Labonte, Tony Stewart, Jeff Burton,
Jimmie Johnson, Ryan Newman, Kurt
.Busch, Sterting Marlin, Matt Kenseth,
Shepherd, Michael Waltrip, Jeremy·
Mayfield, Joe Nemechek, Robby Gar~
don , Elliott Sadler and Greg Biffle.:
The inactive nominees are Herb
Thomas, Rex White, Jim Paschal ,
Jack Smith, Speedy Thompson and
Bill Rexford. To vote,·go to www.tal·
"!adegawalk.com and go to the 'voting,
booth."

nver
at Point

f"~"~Offi
J. '

McNEMAR

GALLIPOLIS -· . It 's
been a growing concern
for some time abQut the
condition
of
Gallia
Academy Junior High.
Gallia Academy Junior
High student Ashley
Spencer recently took it
-upon herself 10 take some
action and try to help out
he[ school and her peers.
She was home alone
from school on a sick day
'a few. months ago, watching the Oprah Show.
"I thought. ·maybe I
could write her and see if
she would respond to help
us out or do something for
· our school." she said.
An hour later, she had
prepared a letter for
Oprah, asking for help to
improve the condition of
the school for her and her
fellow students.
Please see Oprah, AS

BY KEVIN KEUY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

lan McNemarj photo

Gallia Ac;ademy Junior High student Ashley Spencer sits in her math classroom, a room that is
small, crowded and cramped for her and the other 24 stuaents in her class. Sne IS hoping that
her letter to Oprah will get her attention and draw attention locally to the school's poor condition.

Detatlo on Pace A&amp;

INDEX
4 SllCTJONS -

Around ToWn
Celebrations
Classifieds .
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Regional'

24 PAGES

A3
C4
D Section
insert

A4
As

A2
Sports
B Section
A6
Weather
© zoos Ohio von.,. Publlshlr~~~ eo.

POINT PLEASANT Local authorities have taken
the first step in trying to
identify a body found on the
Ohio River shoreline · at
Point Pleasant late Friday
afternoon.
The body was transported
to the West Virginia Medical
Examiner's . , office · in
Charleston shortly after it was
recovered, officers investigating the incidenl said.
The Point Pleasant Police ·
Depanment and the Mal\()n
County Delachment of the
West Virginia Slate Police.
were called at 5:12p.m. to an
area off the 2100 block of
North Main Street near the
Please see Boclj. AS

·ARC grant funds of $300,000 ·Localprie~t hopes
presented -to Racine officials or mz~~~?.E!ope
BY CHI,RLENE "HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·active and up to two inactive drivers·
are indu cted based on fans' votes.
Th is year's active nominees are

Ke'Jin Harvick, Ken. Schrader, Morga~

IAN

IMCNEMAR®MYDAI~YTRIBUNE.COM ..

. turn two, sending Burt9n's car into ·a.

comfortable 94-point edge in the
Nextel Cup .points standings. -•
1&gt; Third-place finisher Tony Stewart

1:!

Seventh grader asks Oprah for help Body ~ken

Jeff Burton
vs. Jimmie Johnaon .

keeping the streak alive. finish·

fill~.

E
R

Jeff
Burton

Johnson just missed

points standings, climbing fou r
spots from ·seventh to third. HarYick moved up from 11th to sixth.
1&gt; As is usually the case. the first

v

CHEVROLET

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYD~ ILYTRIBUNE . COM

· VINTON - Three week s ago,
Jaime Maya's son, Jordan. found
.a h~nd grenade in the front yard
of his house at 17572 Ohio 160,
about a mile north of Vinton.
Moya thought it was a toy, and
left .it lay there.
On Thursqay, he showed it to a
neighbor, who rec6gnized that it
was no loy.
"My neighbor said I'd better
call the sheriff, because .il was
real," Maya said .
. Upon inspection , deputie s
found what appeared to be an
M J&lt;-2 World War 11-era grenade.
coinmonly · referred · to as a
"pineapple ~renadc.'.'
According to Capt. John -Perry
of the Gallia County Sheriff's

the man who had themost to table of a barely finite num· Bristol by wmning the . Financial Group 200 at At·
prove. "We'd been 'beat ber of bad brea ks went to Sharpie 250 after rain la nta Motor Speedway.
down ' pretty fa r."said Kevi n Rusty Wallace, the nine-t ime
Harvick after winning for the B•istol winner who led 15 7
first t 1me 1n a Ne xtel Cup laps before fall1ng out of con·
raCe at Bristol Motor Speed· tention due to tire failure on
way. The VICtory wasn't easy. lap 293.

$1.50 • Vol. :~1) . No.

Vinton _man thought grenade was a toy

SPORTS

Last year's winner : Matt · last year's winner: Rick

l'omrm~ • Mid&lt;ll•·pm1 • ( ;alliJmlis • April tn , 2005

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE- "Thi s is an exciting day for Racine, something to
celebrate ," said· T.J . Justice,
director of the Governor's Office
of Appalachia F~day morning as
he presented a $300,000 ceremonial check to Mayor Scott Hill at
Racine Village Hall.
The funds came from the
Appalachian
Regional
CollU)lission (ARC) 10 be used·
on the village's estimated $1.78
million water treatment plant,
new tank and additional lines. ·
A total of $1.675 million has
been awarded ill grants to the
village for the project.
The sources include the ARC
Charlene Hoeftlch/photo
grant, plus $500,000 in federal
T.J.
Justice,
director
of
the
Governor's
Office
of
Appalachia,
presents
grant money secured by U.S.
Sens. Mike DeWine and George a ceremonial check for $300,000 to Racine Mayor Scott Hill, left, to
Voinovich; $500,000 in a be used toward the estimated $1 .78 million cost of water system
Community Development Block improvements in the village.
Grant; and $375,000 from Issue Authority.
and representatives which has
2. The balance of any money
Justice spoke of the work gone .into securing the money to
needed will come in the form of involved by village officials and
a loan to the village from the the cooperation among agencies improve the water system .
Ohio Water Development
Please see Aadne. Al

POMEROY - The pastor of Meigs County's
only Roman Catholic parish (]opes a black pope
wi II be elected to succeed·John Paul II.
The Rev. Walter Heinz, pastor of Sacred Heart Church. in
Pomeroy, said he hopes the
College of Cardinals will elec{
Cardinal Francis Arinzc,
Nigerian who is number four
in the Valican hierarchy.
Election of a black. pope will
recognize ttie burgeoning role
of African nations and other
Third World countries in the
church. Heinz said.
As · prefect
of . the
Congregation · for bivine
Worship and the Discipline p!
the Sacraments, Arinze has
lead responsibility for liturgicai
practice in the Roman Catholic
Church worldwide. Hailed b)!
many for his humble manner;
and sometimes described - u
"blunt," Arinze, 72, is consid~
erect very consell(ati ve in te~
of Church policy. He was con~

a

Please see Priest. AS

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•

.
,

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