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                  <text>ACROSS

Pregnant wife fears she's
lost husband's attention
DEAR ABBY: My fifth
wedding anniversary is coming soon. I was looking forward to it until last night. I
took my children to visit their
daddy at his office. He is usually happy to see us. We found
him eatmg his dinner in the
company's break room.
· We were enjoying a pleasant conversation when suddenly a female co-worker
burst in and began telling a
story.
Thi·s
woman,
"Carmen," is very voluptuous
and extroverted. My husband
started laughing like crazy at
Carmen's funny story - which
I didn't find amusing at all.
But it didn' t bother me until
my husband came home from
work and we started getting
ready for bed. He began
repeating this "funny" story
he heard at work. When I told
him I was there when Carmen
told it, he looked surprised
and said, "You were?"
Abby, I was crushed! I had
been in that break room for 15
minutes before Carmen came
in, and my husband had forgotten all about our visit. I am
trying not to let it bother me,
but I am 7 1/2 months pregnant and beginning to believe
my husband no longer cares
for me. What should I do? FEELING BIG AND BRO·
KENHEARTED
.
DEAR FEELING BIG

and uncle who live a couple
of hours away. While I was
sitting at the1r computer emailins some friends, I couldn't res1st the temptation, so I
pulled up an e-mail Mother
had sent to my aunt. In it,
Mom wrote that she "can't
take it any longer" and finally
talked to a divorce lawyer.
ADVICE
She plans to file for divorce as
soon as my brother gfaduates
AND BROKENHEARTED: from high school. She doesn't
First of all, remember that want us kids to know because
pregnancy is only temporary, my brother needs to keep his
and that many people think . grades up so he can get into a
there is nothing more beauti- good college, and she knows
ful than a pregnant woman. the news would upset us.
However, somehow you are
But that wasn't the worst
feeling threatened. Carmen part. Mom went on to say she
may be bombastic, but if your had confessed to our priest
husband wanted' to share her that she's been having an
funny story with you, you affair with a co-worker! Mom
should not be threatened by reads your column every day,
one instance of short-term so please give us some good
memory loss.
advice. If she reads this letter
DEAR ABBY: I am 15 and and your reply, maybe it
in tears as I write this. My would help her reconsider
parents met in college and what she's doing. - HOPmarried when Mom got preg- lNG TO SAVE MY PAR·
nant with my older brother. ENTS' MARRIAGE IN
They recently celebrated their GEORGIA
17th anniversary. Lately, it
DEAR
HOPING'S
seems all Mom and Dad do is MOTHER: If this scenario
argue. My father's job seems strangely familiar to
requires him to work long you, please know that your
hours and travel a lot, so plans· are no longer a secret
things have been especially and are causing great stress to
.
stressful.
your daughter.
Last weekend, my brother
Before you make any lifeand I went to visit our aunt altering decisions, end the

Dear

Abby

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

Friends and contacts you've
developed over time may
prove to be very important to
you in the year ahead. It will
be these associates who will
tiring you the most success,
both socially and commercially.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Today's ideas aren't
apt to be as ingenious as those
you conceived yesterday. especially where your work is
·concerned. Don't be overawed by what you accomplished previously.
.
ARIES (March 21-Apnl
19) - Making a loan or borrowing something of value
from a friend could tum out to
be an unpleasant experience
today. In either situation, you
will be inviting potential complications.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - Trying to juggle a
number of delicate proJects at
one time today could prove
disastrous. You' II have far

better results in doing a
proper job by attempting less.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Proceed cautiously and
methodically today when attempting to put into action a
plan that has yet to prove itself. There's a good chance a
number of revisions will be
necessary.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Set dcfmite limits on
your spending objectives and
don't exceed them-- no matter how good the bargains are.
Putting yourself in debt could
have frightening effects on
you later.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Clarify your objectives today
or else you could waste a lot
of time and effort trying to
achieve something that will
neither further your cause nor
advance your personal interests.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Be very discriminatmg today as to whom you go to for
favors. Choosing the wrong
person will not only meet
with refusal, but this mdivid-

boundaries
1 Bolted
53 Car front
5 Downpour 55 Neither
good nor
10 Coasted
along
bad
56 Shout ol
12 Forests
glee
near
57 Dawdle
tundra a
58 Mrs. Truman
13 More
meddle-

affair and start marriage counseling with your husband. It
wouldn't hurt to begin family
counseling as well.

(Dear Abby is wrinen by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.)

Do You Feel the
Need to Read?

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

DOWN

some

14 Esteems
15 Growing
medium
16 Bond
r&amp;Jing
18 "Gosh!"
19 Damper
23 Fallen tree
26 Part of a
sock
27 Enemy of
Desdemona
30 Warrior

woman
32 Rut
34 Pin type
35 Demure

36 Not bogus
37 Stein filler
38 Harley, to

some

39 Guides
42 Big bird

45 Lounge
46 Very thin

model

1 Ice sheet

50 CENTS • Vol. 5 J , No . 140

2 Sax-playing
40 Gance or

number

manutcript
4 Actrass

20 "Becket"

actor
21 One of two
22 -avis
23 Varnish
Ingredient
24 General
-Bradley
25 Pastime
28 Knife
wound
29 Prefix lor
pod
31 Strong
fervor
33 Toga-party
dell very
35 Priests
37 Computer
language

Ruby-

5 - Paulo,

Brazil
6 Jewelry
Item
7 Beside
oneself
8 Weight
deduction
9 Latin I
verb
10 Economic
Ind.
11 Chinese
festival
sight
12 Bangkok
native
17 Birthday

Ferrera
41 Purloin
42 Waxed
cheese
43 Note
44 Allen
spacecraft?
47 High
mountains
48 Cousteau's
islands
49 Lawyer's
charge
51 Umbrage
52 Voice vote
54 Corduroy
ridge

e,
H,

®

w,@
..AVERAGE
.... GAME 160.170

1stDOWN

.=..,!L_

2nd DOWN

•

-

57

3rd DOWN

• 20

4th DOWN

• 88

JUDD'S TOTAL

-250

CIC to build at
industrial park
BY BRIAN

J,

REED

Staff writer
POMEROY - The Meigs
County
Community
Corporation
Improvement
plans to construct a 30,000
square-foot building at the
East Meigs Industrial Site to
market to a potential industry.
During their regular meeting Thursday, Meigs County
commissioners approved a
resolution supporting the nonprofit CIC's efforts to obtain
funding for the new building.
Economic
Development
Director Perry Varnadoe said
Thursday the building is
expected to cost $1 million to
'construct. It will be financed
thr9ugh local CIC funds, and
a 75-percent match from the
Ohio
Department
of
Development, in the form of a
combined grant and loan
package.

BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer

Answer
to
previous

AVERAGE GAME 190-200

by

Word

JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2-to 7·1efter word from thlleUe,_ on each yar&lt;lir.e.
Add polnl! to each word or 1ener Ulllng scoring dlrtcUons arll~l 5even-latlef
woros get a 60-point borus. All words can be totJ'ld In webster's New World

Scrim•
mage·

....

JUDO'S SOLunON TOMORROW

c - OOc:tionaoy.

S£il~,t1's

REAI.I.V 110
I)I~Fet191T

1\lAIIIJ,Il;I'CI\\IIG

TV \'11'114

vou

MOW CO
WH~T~

AND

fnNE5~ contMITIIIENn
Wt1ERE t~ 'fOUR '«lit&lt;, INVES\ED~
HOIII AAE 'fOil GIVING- BACK 1l) 11tE COIMIUNI't'l?
t.OHRT~ '«lUR PAIXIDE5T AGHIEVEII1€JJT O~ThtO€ tAll!!.~?
ttA~~ 'IOU R~FINANc.ED?
tilUl DO ~OU HOPE 1ll BE ~tlt\t!6REO '?

Varnadoe said the building,
referred to as a "speculative"
building, will be constructed
with no specific tenant in
mind, but would be used as a
marketing tool to encourage a
small industrial firm or other
potential employer to locate at
the park.
The industrial park now has
one
tenant,
We-Can
Fabricators.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
presided at the meeting in the
absence of President Jeff
Thornton.
Commissioners
also opened sealed bids from
potential buyers of collateral
items repossessed through the
county's
micro-enterprise
loan program. The bids will
be reviewed by the program's
administrator, Jean TrusselL
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport and Clerk Gloria
Kloes also attended the meetmg.

'101.111.

WH'I DOII'T 61Rl!:.
ASK, "WIIA'T'~
'lOUR SUN

POMEROY - Governor
Taft's budget axe has fallen,
and Meigs County schoof districts .ha.v.e_ been cut deep.
Each distrit:t'!s superintendent
plans to deal with the cuts in
the best way possible, but it
will not be easy.
Meigs Local school district
faces more than $109,000 cut
from its budget. The cuts
were based on a per-pupil
spending formula which is
why Meigs Local lost more
than double what the
Southern Local or Eastern
Local did. The more students
a district has, the greater the
amount .of funding lost while
the amount cut per student
stays the same.
Superintendent
Bill
Buckley said the cuts are final
and tbat the district will have
to do what it can to make ends
meet. He said there would be
no lay"offs or program losses.
The district has four months
or until June 30 to absorb the
state's cuts. The primary budget items that the district
spends its money on are
salaries, benefits and utilities
which are not options that can
be easily cut. Buckley said
finding other items to cut
would be difficult.
"We'lljust have to eat these

cuts," he said. "We'll make a
major effort to live within our
budget."
The district will have to
take another serious look at
its budget so that it can try to
absorb as much of this blow
as pPssible...
" ·
x ..
The state requires }llat each
school district maintain a
rainy-day fund which can
only be used for emergency
situations such as a school
roof collapsing. Buckley said
if it is legally possible to dip
into the rainy-day fund.
which holds more than
$100,000, the district would
do so.
Southern Local school district will have to absorb more
than $39,000 in cuts.
Superintendent Bob Grueser
said the district is already
operating under a deficit of
approximately $700,0QO.
. "We are extremely distressed about these budget
cuts," he said. "We are
already operating in the red
and have had to borrow just to
keep up. This will just add
more to our deficit."
Grneser explained that the
district is already operating a
very tight ship and that the
cuts would be hard to absorb.
He said it will cause the district to reevaluate spending
plans for next year.

Pl•se see Bud1et. AS

Index
~
,..
~

I WONDER IF
IT'S POSSIBLE TO
BE IN LOVE WITH
TWO DIFFERENT
61RL5 AT THE
SAME TIME ..

~ ~p"' ·~''""'

=.:.l

MRS 'SH I PUL.~KI , I 't'\
lo.ORKINC. ON THE NEXT
t!&gt;~UE Of .. CLA"&gt;~R00!'1
CHII.TIERS; II.Nl&gt; .

~

&lt;» 83&gt;

o

I' wr1.L.
ee
II\ITEI'.VIEWEt&gt; FOR
10\Jfl. G0$~1P (OI,.UI'(N!

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

News editor
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Village Council has taken
steps to secure additional
funding to expand boat docks
near the levy along the Ohio
River and install handicapped
ramps from the river to the
parking lots at both the east
and west ends.
Earlier this week, council
passed a resolution to apply
for additional money from
the Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR) for completion of the $1.2 million

project. John Musser, village
grants coordi nator, was
authorized to proceed with
the paperwork.
Musser said Friday that the
application, which must be
filed by April I, will be for
$900,000, the same amount
which the village applied for
in April 2002.
While no action has been
taken on last April's application, Musser explained the
village cannot afford to wait
to see if funding is granted on
that application before filing
another one because the 2003
filing deadline will have

UwARf.

&lt;

GUARD
DOG

~

=:

'""

-

0..

I REMEM6Eil
ONCE WilEN l MAD
TWO COOK.IES .. A
CHOCOLATE CHIP
AND A PEANUT
6UTTER .. AND I
LOVEO TIIEM 60TH .

BY BRIAN ·'

REED

Staff writer
' l

PO~ROY Get your
. money out, and make sure
t)l~ty'll' p),enty of ~old milk in
lhe' refrigeratpr. Girl Scput
. CI&gt;Okit'is lJ!l:ve .• arrived · 'n
· Meigs Count}'. ,

..

A2

82,4-5
B6
B6
A4
A3,5
AS
Bl-3
A2

Alhley Runyon, 3rd

p..te,

Pomeroy Elementary

Cheryl King, cookie chairman for the Big Bend Service
Unit, said 20,000 boxes of
cookies were sold by local
scouts. Those cookies were
delivered to Pomeroy Village
Hall Thursday.
The big seller this year is
444 boxes of Thin Mints,
with Samoas running a close

J. REED

TUPPERS PLAINS - Less
than a month ilf'ter calling for
volunteers to serve, Meigs
County Common Pleas Judge
Fred W. Crow ill has appointed a new board for the troubled
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District.
The five-member board consists of two former members
whose terms expired and a
third who had resigned her
position.

The sewer district has been
without a governing board or a
billing clerk since January,
when the terms of two remaining board members elljlired.
Jeff Collier, Lorettt\, Collier
and Wayne Dunlap were elected to positions on the board
late last year. The Colliers
opted not to serve on the board
once they were elected, and
Dunlap resigned shortly after
assuming his position.
Two other board positions-;
formerly held by Gail Parsons,
.who resigned, and Jan Parker,

YOU'VE 1'11SQuafe.O ME.

TOO M-.NY TtMES!

11\e

-·- ·-

------ -----

.'

second. For those who
weren' t visited by a Girl
Scout, or tllose who wish to
stock up with extra boxes, the
scouts plan several booth
sales, beginning Saturday at
Produce
in
Mitch's
Middleport.
Sales will be conducted
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

·Saturday and Sunday at WalMart Supercenter in Mason,
W.Va., from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
. March 15 and 16 at
Vaughan's
Supermarket,
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. March
22 at TNT Pit Stop in Chester
and Vaughan's Supermarket,
and from II a.m. to 3 p.m. on
March 22 at Wai-Mart.

TP sewer board approves personnel movements
Staff writer

2 Sectlans - 12 hps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Scout cookies arrive in area

BY BRIAN

C 2001 Ohio Velley Publishing Co.

-

money, $1 00,000 to $150,000
would finish the lower side
extension of docks and be
enough to construct the handicapped ramp up to Main
Street on the west end.
He said he wasn't encouraged by their response and
decided the village should ·
moye ahead on the 2003
application.
Last fall, the first phase of
the project was completed
with a $328,000 ODNR
grant, which provided funding for installation of 360 feet
of boat docking below the
amphitheater.

Lori Patterson, Phyllis Deem and Cheryl King, above,
are pictured with the 1, 716 cases of cookies delivered
Thursday. (Brian J. Reed photos)

- ..

...

passed and Pomeroy then
will have to wait until 2004 to
make another application.
"We can 't take that
chance," he said.
Musser said he was recently told by ODNR that it
would be 90 days before the
awards would be made on the
2002 applications. He also
said ODNR officials told him
that they like to wai,t to see
how facilities are used before
putting more money in a project.
He said that he went back
to ODNR and told them that
while $900,000 is a lot of

.cookie. time

: : I ,.,.,_, 0. '-----"

Q
..:I
.:.l
lo.

my•l•ilyt•nllro ..l.rt•m

Pomeroy seeks more
boat dock funding

;z;

=

www

Budget axe falls
on Meigs County
school districts

ual could describe your needs about what you attempt to
market. It will prove very unto others in unflattering ways.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) wise if you try to sell people
- It's good to be hopeful and · on something that you don't
optimistic about something totally believe in yourself.
you want, but, unless it is reCAPRICORN (Dec. 22alistic, you could be assuming Jan. 19) - Depending upon
things instead of facing the the wrong person today could
realities of the situations.
leave you suffering a loss due
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. to this person's carelessness,
22) - Should you have to ineptitude or lack of experideal with someone today who ence.
has made promises to you in
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
the past that she or he never
kept, be sure to keep this per- 19) - Make every effort to
son's track record in mind finish what you stan today. If
and deal with things accord- you leave things hanging fire,
hoping to get to them later,
ingly.
.
they
are apt to remain undone.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - Be careful today
fl 2003 Unllt&lt;l Flllure Syndbl•. Inc.

FRIDAY, MARCH 7 , 200"J

Simpson

3 Fixes a

Whether your favorite
subject is math or music,
science or social studies,
you'll find something
interesting in the
newspaper. In fact, the
paper is such a reliable
source for the information
you want, you can even use
it as a homework and
school research tool.

\\'ORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK

•

50 Fix, II

Astrograph
Friday, March 7, 2003 ·

Elstem takes dlstrid round, 81

Thursday, March 6, 2003

www.mydallysentinel.com

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.,

who was removed from the
board, were also vacant.
In a journal entry filed
Thursday, Crow, appointed
Loretta Murphy, a past secretary/treasurer of the board, to a
three-year term, and Charles
Calaway, whose term expired
in January, to a one-year term.
Also appointed were Gail
Parsons, Karen Lodwick and
Mark Boyd. Parsons was
appointed to a one-year tenn,
and Lodwick and Boyd to tw(}year terms.
At a hearing called by Crow

in February, Murphy said she
had continued to oversee maintenance problems at the district
operations, although her term
expired in January. No bills
have been sent to customers
since the board dissolved last
month, although the district is
in debt to several governmental
funding agencies for system
construction.
At last month's hearing,
Crow said he preferred to consider volunteers for appoint- .
ment who had no past relationship to the district's board .

�PageA2

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar

Ohio weathcn
Saturday, March 8

Public meetings

County Pomona Grange 46
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Star
Wednesday, March 12
. Grange hall located north of
POMEROY
Meigs Salem Center. Inspection will
County Board of Health, 5 be held. Star Grange will
p.m. in the conference room serve refreshments.
of the department.
Saturday, March 8
RUTLAND -Cub Scout
Pinewood Derby for boys in
Mason, Gallia and Meigs
Counties, Rutland Civic
Thursday, March 6
TUPPERS PLAINS - Center. Registration at
Tuppers Plains Auxiliary Post 10:30 a .m., car judging at
11 a.m., and race at 11 :30.
5093, 7 p.m. at the hall.
Races, food and Chinese
CHESTER Chester auction. Public invited.
Shade Historical Society, 7
POMEROY Modern
p.m Thursday, Chester
Coiurthouse. Final plans to Woodmen potluck dinner,
be made for the annual din- 5:30 p.m. Saturday at the
ner and dance on March 14. hall. Camp to furnish meat,
rolls, drink and table serFriday, March 7
vice. Those attending to
SALEM CENTER - Meigs take a covered dish.

·

Clubs and
Organizations

ol Columbus 128'158' I

0 ~--~-~~·

Sunny P1. COO!y

COOiy

Showers T·•ormo

Rain

Aunies

Snow

Ice

·It will be warmer on Saturday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
cloudy with a chance of
A southerly flow of air rain showers. Lows 37 to
has returned to the area. 42. Chance of rain 50 perThis will bring warmer cent.
EXTENDED FORECAST:
temperatures today with
highs expected in the mid
Sunday ... Partly cloudy.
mid 50s. Skies will be part- Highs in the mid 40s.
ly cloudy tonight with lows · Sunday
night. .. Mostly
in the 30s. Saturday will be clear. Lows · in the upper
partly cloudy with highs in 20s.
the 50s to lower 60s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy.
Early this morning, high A chance of light snow or
pressure was over the rain from early afternoon
northeast part of the U.S., on. Highs in the mid 40s.
· with a ridge across the
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy
region. The high will con- with a chance of light snow
tinue to move east today. or rain. Lows 30 to 35 and
Another cold front will highs in the mid 40s.
move through the area
Wednesday...A chance of
· Saturday night.
snow or rain showers in the
WEATHER FORECAST:
morning, otherwise partly
Tonight ... Mostly clear. cloudy. Lows 30 to 35 and
Lows in the mid 30s. Calm highs in the mid 40s.
winds.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy. · A slight chance of showers
Highs 65 to 68. Southwest durin$ the night. Lows in
the m1d 30s and highs in the
winds 10 to 15 mph.
Saturday night ... Mostly mid 40s.

ADAY ON WALL STREET
March 6, 2003
:'.

10,000

Dow

9.000

Jones

'

8,000

.. .

7,673.99
Pet change
from pw.;ous:

-1.31

DEC

JAN

High
Low
7,m.42 7,659.09

FEB

MAR

7,000

Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

1,600

Nasdaq•

1,400

1,302.89
Pet. change
from pw.;ous: .0.88

DEC

JAN
Low

High
1,312.61 1,299.81

FEB

MAR

Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

1,000

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500

900
800

from preV«lus

.0.93

JAN

High

Low

Record high: 1,527.46

819.85

March 24, 2000

. 829.65

FEB

700'

DEC

MAR

Support Groups

AUTOMOTIVE

I

Norris Northup Dodge.

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

REAL ESTATE
Homestead Bend Reality

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com

Homestead Realty

www.homesteadrealtyl.com

BUSINESS TRAINING
Gallipolis Career College

COMMUNITY

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com
City of Point Pleasant

MEDICAL
Holzer Clinic

www.pointpleasantwv.org

www.holzerclinic.com

Mason County Chamber of Commerce

www.masoncountychamber.org
Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org
NEWSPAPERS
.

ENTERTAINMENT
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Charter Communications

www.mydailytribune.com

www.charter.com

The Daily Sentinel
AGRIClJl TURE

www.mydailysentinel.com

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jlmsfarmequipment.com

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydallyregister.com

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

Reports from officers and
committee members on the
mother-daughter banquet
and missionary giving were
presented.
It was decided that the
scrapbook material will be
hm~dled by several members
who will meet at the church
to do the work. Dates will be
announced.
Devotions were read by
Mrujorie Davis titled "Heart
Gifts" by Helen Steiner Rice
and Charlotte VanMeter read
"Seven Things God Hates"
and "Description of Love."
Prayer for refreshments
served by Charlotte Van
Meter and Mmjorie Davis
was given by Carolyn
Nicholson.

1,000

March 6, 2003

822.10
Pet. mange

POMEROY - Sunshine
bags were prepared for college students and a few
shutins at the recent meeting
of the Lydia Council of the
Bradford Church of Christ
held in the activity building.
Becky Amberger updated
members on the food drive,
and noted that there be a list
of food needed for the pantry
each Sunday in the church
bulletin. She also suggested
doing a check of the pantry
and the expiration dates
every six months. Food WS$
delivered to the Homeless
Shelter in Pomeroy.
Several spring events were
discussed including the
annual mother-daugher banquet the Ladies for Christ
convention being beld in
Hilliard this weekend, and
the Ladies Day rally to take
place on April S at the
Glouster Church.
Yearbooks were given to
members along with a copy
of the new prayer chain
which will be inserted in bul·
letins on Sundays. Several
members shared some of the
prayer priises from the journals given them at the
January meeting.
. Prayer requests were
taken and Sherry Shamblin
lead in prayer. A handout
was given to members on .
"l.eaming to Pray in God's

Other events

Saturday, March 8
MIDDLEPORT- DAV 53,
GALLIPOLIS - Holzar
6 p.m. dinner; 7 p.m. meeting. Medical Center's second
annual spring ethic symposiPOMEROY Meigs ium, 8:30 a.m. to 11:45 a.m .
County Republican Party,
7:30 p.m. Meigs County in the hospital's Education
C o u r t h o u s e . and Conference Center.
Topics include "Informed
Consent",
"Ethical
Consideration in Amish
Healthcare" and "Symptoms
Tuesday, March 11
POMEROY - Childhood in Palliative Care: lt;s Enough
immunization Clinic, 9 to 11 to Make You Sick." To register
a.m., 1 to 3 p.m. at the Meigs for the free symposium, call
County Health Department. 740-446-5057.

Oak H~ Finarrial ~ 23.90

OVB-22.99
BBT -32.46
Peoples - 23.93
Pepsico - 37 65
Premier - 9.30

A car passes the Church of Holy Resurrection of Christ in
Lebanon, Pa., Dec. 12, 2002. The Rev. Filip Velisavljevic, the

former pastor of this Serbian Orthodox Church, is accused of
threatening to shoot the church council president during a dis·
pute over policy. (AP)
ing Holy Resurrection of
Christ two years ago because
he was dissatisfied with the
way services were conducted
at the Serbian Orthodox
church he attended near
Harrisburg.
In Lebanon, the church
council has resisted ideas
proposed by the newer members, such as establishing a
folkloric dancing group, he
said.
"The Serbian-Americans
have said that the church is
their church, so therefore
everyone else is a guest. But
the church belongs to everybody who believes in God,"
he said.
On Dec. 9, the day after
Pantelich was elected president, the priest asked

Graca nica for the Diocese of
America and Canada in
Grayslake, Ill. , released him
fro m the parish and appoi nted an interim priest.
"I can on ly say, God for·
give them, for they know not
what
they do,"
said
Veli savljev ic. paraphrasin g
the words of Christ on the
cross in the Gospel of Luke .
The diocese is conducting
its own in ves tigation to
determine whether the priest
can .remain with the church,
in which case he would be
assigned to another parish,
said the Rev. M ilorad Loncar.
a spokesman for the bishop.
As far as the diocese was
concerned, it was only fair to
relieve both Velisavljevic and
the council of their respective
duties pending the outcome
of the investigation. Loncar
said.
;,This incident that took
place hasn' t just come ou t of
nowhere. lt was the result of
problems thai the council has
had in the past." he said .
Upset by their ouster, the
former council sent a lette[ to
Longin on Feb. 6 threatening
to "terminate" the church's
association with the dioc~e.
but Loncar said !hal any such
decision must be approved
by members of the parish and
the diocese. ·
ln the meanlime, the diocese is looking for a new pastor and has faith that the
church members can resolve
their differences, Loncar
said.
"When people argue, especially in the church community, we pray to God that
things will be resolved and
that everything will go back
to normal," he said. "All the
people basically are good and
they love their church, and
the fact that there has been
some misunderstanding, )Ye
hope, will be overcome."

whether there would be any
policy changes, police said.
Pantelich said he told the
priest: "'The board is going
to run things now, not just the
priest."' And that is allegedly
when the priest made the
threat.
Velisavljevic, 54, has been
ordered to stand trial on
charges of simple assault,
unlawful restraint, reckless
endangerment and making
terroristic
threats.
He
remains free on $10,000 bail
as he awaits a trial date,
which has not been scheduled.
After the council relieved
On the Net:
him of hi~ pastoral duties
Dec. 23, Bishop Longin, the
Serbian Orthodox Church:
head of the Serbian Orthodox http://www..lerbianort!tudoxMetropolitanate of New churr:h.com/

The Daily Sentinel
(usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every afternoon,

Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an err~r in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Secondstory, call the newsroom at (740) 992· class postage paid at Pomeroy.

2156.

Nearly nine m·

n

women suffer from
heart disease.
/

Talk with your doctor about heart disease.
learn more about heart health under
O'Bieness' Health Resources at
www.obleness.org, or call (740) 592-9300.

mented on the. help they
received from neighbors
and friends .
.
Thelma Henderson has
returned home after visiting
her sister and other relatives
in Florida.
Martha, Joe and Will
Poole visited Sharon and
Gary Michael.

•

not regrettable when we
have to be in too much of a
rush through a meal, just to
re-involve ourselves in multitudinous activities?
What about it, my fellow
church attendees? Probably
no other people are more
prone to rush through a
good meal than those who
attend church.
The Bible refers often to
the eating of spiritual meals .
For example , Psalms 23
says that the Lord prepares
a table before us. Worship
services involve being fed
by the meat of the God's
Word, and feasting in the
fellowship of the Spirit.
In no uncertain terms, the
Lord has graciously labored
to set before His people a
great table from which to
spiritually feed our needy
souls. "Blessed are they
which do hunger and thirst
after righteousness, for they
shall be filled."
The only problem, is that
some see themselves as having so much to._do. They
anxiously gulp down the
spiritual grub to return to
pursuits considered more
nutritious
for
active
lifestyles.
Others rise to clear the.
table before the meal is
even over. Just watch. Little
league baseball season
approaches. Soon people
will start leavin~ worship
during the pastor s message
just so they can get the kias
to the ball field on time for
those Sunday aften.1oon
games.
If God's people would
stop having a rushed attitude during worship, or
about time spent in prayer
or Bible study, we would
discover that the best things
for life actually occur
around the table.
A little more time at the
table for a piece of that
chocolate cake sure would
have made a difference in
my day.

'·

Subscribe today.
992-2156

Reader Services

Rockwelt - 22.40
Rocky Boots - 6.40
AD Shell - 40.09
Sears- 19.30
Wai-Mart - 47.40
Wendy's - 24.28
Worthington - 13.14
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Sm~h Partners
al Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Alfred news and notes

Branch

LEBANON, Pa. (AP) The tiJiy Serbian Orthodox
church tucked away among a
block of aging row houses
usually attracts little notice in
this central Pennsylvania
town.
The arrest of the pastor has
exposed simmering tensions
among older, American-born
parishioners and younger,
European-born congregants
who · have joined more
recently.
The pastor, the Rev. Filip
Velisavljevic, is accused of
threatening to shoot the
incoming church council
president during a dispute
over policy. He says he's
innocent, but was released
from his church post Jan . 30.
After the confrontation, the
bishot? also dissolved the
council of lay leaders in early
February led by president
Frederick Pantelich, until a
church invesiigation into the
incident is completed.
The disputes concern relatively minor issues, such as
how social gatherings are
organized, but they have contributed to a rift within the
112-member Church of the
Holy Resurrection of Christ,
said Pantelich and Helen
Resanovich, the former
council vice president.
"There's a conflict every
time you turn around, and
we 're not used to that,"
Resanovich said.
The council and the priest
had gotten along well for the
first 13 of his 15 years in the
parish, council members say.
But over the last couple of
years, the younger newcomers convinced the priest to
support the changes they
wanted, the 68-year-old
Pantelich said.
"He (Velisavljevic) wanted
to run the show," Pantelich
said.
Momcilo Miljkovic, a
Serbian-born parishioner,
blames the tens10ns on the
unwillingness of the church's
American-born members to
accept the.ne'!Y!'r .ar.r.i V!lls.
Council members say
many of the imml$rants,
who have arrived 1n the
aftermath of war in
Yugoslavia, live In sur·
rounding counties and estimate tnat they constitute
about 25 percent of the con·
gregation.
Miljkovlc moved to central Pennsylvania in 1968, a
year after he immigrated to
America. He began attend-

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Correction Polley

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Gannett- 68.78 ,
General Electric- 23.95
GKNLY - 2.80
Harley Davidson - 35.95
Kmart- .12
Kroger- 12.99
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Ron

for only a $1 a day.

•Local Stocks

ALFRED - A soup dinner will be held following
Sunday services ht the
Alfred United Methodist.
The dinner was rescheduled
because of the snow and ice
storm which caused worship
services to be canceled for
two weeks. At last Sunday 's
service, members shared
thei r ex periences and com-

•

I got a little irritated with
my wife, Terry, one evening
this week.
She had fixed a great supper - one of my favorites.
Chicken potpie and biscuits
were the main items, and
she had also made a chocolate cake.
I was taking my time, particularly with the biscuits. I
like to enjoy my meals. But,
everyone else was in a hurry
to finish eating and get on
with other concerns. The
boys were done before I finished my first biscuit.
Eventually, Terry apparently got impatient with my
leisurely approach , and
started clearing the table
from around me and doing
the dishes.
She came over to me and
asked sharply, "You finished with that plate?"
Without saying anything,
I gave her the plate. I had
planned on putting a slab of
cake on it.
Later, while standing at
the refrigerator with the tea
pitcher, she asked, "You
want any more tea?''
"Well, yes, I wouldn't
mind having a little more."
The look she gave me made
me feel like that was not the
right answer.
When she was about finished with the first round of
dishes, she came over and
looked into the salad bowl,
which had just a little bit
left in it. I had intentions of
eating it.
But she picked up the
bowl and reached out with it
in m_y direction. "Are you
wanung to eat the rest of
this?"
That is when I got irritat·
ed. "Well, I was. But, no, go
ahead and take it! Get your
old dishes done!" With that,
I got up from the table and
left the kitchen.
Admittedly, we had things
to do. The boys had a
wrestling match at 6, and
we had to be at a revival
meeting by 7.
But, she had done so
much . for us with a good
supper. There was no need
to rush. Plenty of time ·was
still on hand to enjoy the
meal and clean up before
having to leave the comforts
of the house.
After all, there are positive benefits by not rushin~
through a good meaL Is 11

INTERNET DIRECTORY

AP

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· Charming Shops- 2.76
· ·City Holding- 28.53
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DG - 10.04
DuPont- 35.11

Friday, March 7, 2003

God's people are Dispute between pastor, laymen leaders,
too anxious to get divides Serbian Orthodox parish
.
up from the table!
'

Take child's shot records.
Must be accompanied by a
parent/guardian . Donations
accepted but no services
denied on inability to contribute.

INTERNET DIRECTORY

Will"

March 6, 2003

1,200
,

Projects
for others
planned

Monday, March 10
POMEROY Meigs
County /Ohio Bicentennial
CommiUee, 5 p.m. at the
Meigs Museum. Plans to be
discussed for Meigs County
Homecoming to be held May
10 at the fairgrounds.

Faith • Values

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 7, 2003

Page A3

Find out if you are
one of them.
_....1.
;r~
OhioHealth
·l~n.

This women 's heart health initiative is provided by O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
in collaboration with OhioHealth.

i

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Friday, March 7 2003

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

HIS

Den Dickerson

FIRST NOS'E.

Publisher

Bette Pearce

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

OUR VIEW

Cheers

,.

Racine's {Trash Man'
keeps us smiling in dour times
We offer a hearty cheer for "Trash Man," the Racine
garbage collector who is swee ping through the village
like a breath of fresh air. (No pun intended! )
Trash Man, aka Arthur Gray, goes about the traditionally unpleasant job of collecting refuse not only
with a smile on his face, but generating lots of smiles,
as well.
Villagers just never know what Gray -. er, Trash
M,an - will be wearing on collection day. A clown
suit. A band uniform. A dress.
All of us would do well to adopt Gray's wonderfully silly, positive attitude. Anyone who can have fun
collecting garbage and make '!.n entire village smile in
the process is, indeed. a special person and deserves .
special recognition.
·Keep us smiling, Trash Man!

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRE SS

Today is Friday, March 7, the 66th day of 2003. There
are 299 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History :
On March 7, 1876, Alexander Graham Bell received
patent for his telephone .
On this date :
In 1850, in a three-hour speech to the U.S. Senate,
Daniel Webster endorsed the Compromise of 1850 as a
means of preserving the Union.
In 1911 . the United States sent 20,000 troops to the
Mexican border as a precaution in the wake of the
Mexican Revolution .
In 1926, the first successful trans-Atlantic radio-telephone conversation took place, between New York and
London.
In 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered his troops to march into
the Rhineland, thereby breaking the Treaty of Versailles
and the Locarno Pact.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. forces crossed the
Rhine River at Remagen, Germany, using the damaged but
still usable Ludendorff Bridge.
In 1965, a march by civil rights demonstrators was broken up in Selma, Ala., by state troopers and a sheriff's
posse.
In 1975, the Senate revised its filibuster rule , allowing
60 senators to limit debate in most cases, instead of the
previously required two-thirds of senators present.
In 1981 , anti-government guerrillas in Colombia executed kidnapped American Bible translator Chester Allen
Bitterman, whom they accused of being a CIA agent.
In 1994, the Supreme Court ruled that parodies that poke
fun at an original work can be considered "fair use" that
doesn't require permission from the copyright holder.
In 1999, movie director Stanley Kubrick died in
Hertfordshire, England, at age 70.
Ten years ago: Authorities said David Koresh, the leader
of the Branch Davidians, was becoming irritable and had
rejected proposals to end a week-long standoff at his compound near Waco, Texas.
Five years ago: Secretary of State Madeleine Albright,
speaking in Rome, said the U.S. wouldn't tolerate any
more violence in Kosovo, which she blamed on Yugoslav
President Slobodan Milosevic.
One year ago: The Hou se passed, 417-to-3, a bill cutting
taxf&lt;S and extending unemployment benefits. By a razorthi n margin, voters in Ireland rejected a government plan
to further toughen the country's already strict anti-abortion laws.
Today 's Birthdays: Photographer Lord Snowdon is 73.
TV weatherman Willard Scott is 69 . Auto racer Janet
Guthrie is 65 . Actor Daniel J. Travanti is 63. Walt Disney
Co. chairman Michael Eisner is 61. Rock musician Chris
White (The Zombies) is 60. Actor John Heard is 57. Rock
singer Peter Wolf is 57. Rock musician Matthew Fisher .·
(Procol Harum ) is 57. Singer Peggy March is 55. Football
Hall-of-Farner Franco Harris is 53. Football Hall-ofFarner Lynn Swann is 51. Rhythm and blues si nger-musi cian Ernie Isley (The Isley Brothers) is 51. Actor Bryan
Cranston ("Malcolm in the Middle" ) is 47. Tennis Hall-ofFamer Ivan Lend! is 43. Actor Bill Brochtrup ("NYPD
Blue'' ) is 40. Singer-actress Taylor Dayne is 38. Rock
musician Randy Guss (Toad the Wet Sprocket) is 36.
Actress Rachel' Wei sz is 32. Rock singer Hugo Ferreira
(Tantric) is 29 . Actress Laura Prcpon ("That 70's Show")
is 23 .
Thought for Today: " If you're not feeling good about
you. what you're wearing outside doesn ' t mean a thing ."
- Leontyne Pri ce, American opera singer.

a

z

Don't let a thief destroy your credit
Did you know that every
time you use an ATM, pay a
bill, order an item online, or
throw away a credit card
selection, you are releasing
personal information that a
thief could use to steal your
"identity"?
Identity theft includes a
wide range of scams in which
thieves use personal information to assume your identity
in order to spend money.
Identity thieves can use your
Social Security number, a
credit card number or even a
discarded credit card solicitation to open accounts in your
name.
It's often weeks or even
months before a victim of
such a theft knows that it has
occurred, and it can take
much longer to unravel. the
tangled web of bogus charges
and transactions.
Identity theft often leaves
victims with damaged credit
ratings
and
endless
headaches . Because of the
nature of the crime, the burden is on the victim to trace
the path of the thief and separate bogus charges from real
ones. Nationally, there are

Ted

Strickland

over 700,000 victims of identity theft each year, and
according to the Federal
Trade Commission, Ohio is
I Oth am on~ the states in
numbers of tdentity theft victims.
· While it's impossible to
completely prevent identity
theft, there are some ihings
you can do to minimize your
chances of being ripped off.
• Check your credit rating
once a year. There are three
major credit reporting agencies who compile credit
information about you. If
your identity has been stolen,
one of the first indications
may be a credit report that
doesn't match your own
records.
Reports can be obtained by

calling Equifax at (800) 6851111, Experian at (888) 3973742) and/or Trans Union at
(800) 916-8800. Each report
costs a few dollars.
• Completely destroy preapproved credit offers that
you don't plan to use. They
can easily be used to open
new accounts in your name.
These offers can be blocked
by calling the three creditreporting agencies above and
asking them not to sell your
name to lenders.
• Pay attention to your
annual Social Security statement. If you are at least 25
and not yet receiving Social
Security, you'll automatically receive this statement each
year. If your earnings are
misstated on this report, it
could indicate that someone
is using your Social Security
number.
To request a statement, call
Social Security at (800) 7721213.
• Leave your Social
Security card at home except
when you are starting a job
and need it to show to your
employer. And if your state
generally uses your Social

Security number as your driver's license number, ask the
Department
of
Motor
Vehicles to use a different ,
number. Driving records are
public.
• If your monthly credit ~
card bill does not arrive, fol- ·
low up with the credit company. A common sc~m
involves a thief using a person's name and credit card ·
number to change the victim's billing address. Many
consumers don 't notice a ·
missing bill and unwittingly
give the thief additional time
to ruin their credit rating.
If you suspect you are a
victim of identity theft, the
Federal Trade Commission
suggests that you file a police '
report as well as contact both
your credit card companies
and the three credil'reporting
agencies. Further information can be . found at
www.consumer.gov/idtheft
and www.ssa.gov.
(U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, •
a Democrat from Lucasville,
represents Ohio's Sixth :
Congressional
District, ,
which includes Gallia and :
·
Meigs counties.)

France may have something else up its sleeve
Just one more thing about
France. Considering all the
analysis of the country 's
motives for trying to thwart a
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, one
gathers that France is out to
Diana
prove its "relevance"; that
West
French president Jacques
Chirac is "bent on securing
his place in history"; that
France wants ·to counterbalance American might by taking its rightful place at the evolved "beyond power" into
head of a united Europe. In a "world of laws and rules
other words, it seems that all
of France's histrionics _ and transnational negolia. tion" - assumes that tradiwhat was it foreign minister t'1011al t'
· f ..
" ·
Dominique de Villepin said,
no tons o power m
straight-faced, at "this temple Europe are increasinglyof the United Nations" about beside the point.
This notion suggests that
France always standing what we're witnessing in
"upright in the face of history France is a matter of, well,
before mankind"? - boil gall, both insupportable and
down to one big power grab. unsupported. But I'm nnt so
But where's the muscle? sure. France may have --,someWith Britain, Italy, Spain, thin~ besides vetoes and resDenmark, Hungary, the olut10ns up its sleeve, someCzech Republic, Poland, thing that trumps NATO and,
Portugal, Albania, Bulgaria, if necessary, the EU - or at
Croatia, Estonia, Latvia, least allows the French to
Macedonia,
Romania, think so. That "something" is
Slovakia and Slovenia - its deeply layered, binding
"New Europe" - jpining relationship with the ArabPresident Bush's "coalition Muslim world.
of the willing," you'd think
It seems that what helps
the old cheese stands alone make the French so cavalier
(except for Germany and about the Atlantic alliance is
Belgium). France, however, its place in a bona fide
doesn't share this impres- Mediterranean bloc. This
sion. So, what backs up · goes beyond the lucrative oil
Chirac s big talk? Robert concessions and weapons
Kagan, strategi st of the new contracts with Iraq we hear
book "Of 1 Paradise and about. It involves a complex
Power: America Vs. Europe relationship at every level -in the New World Order" economic, educational, reli(Knopf) might answer that gious, artistic, legal, demonothing does.
graphic - between France
His nifty theory on what and the Arab-Musiim world,
really separates the United a surprisingly overlooked
States and Europe - that the coll aboration that now
United States fully expects to includes the rest of the EU
exercise power in an anar- nations in what is officially
chic, Hobbesian world, while known as the Euro-Arab
Europeans believe they have Dialogue. '

Over roughly 30 years, this
Dialogue has led to a change
in European, and particularly
French, culture of a magnitude at first difficult to grasp.
The historian Bat Ye'or perhaps as great a prophet as
she is a path-breaking historian - pinpoints the origins of
this transformation in a stunning article, "European Fears
of the Gathering Jihad,"
(which can be found on
www.frontpagemag.com) . It
all began, she writes, with the
terms of a terrible bargain
struck between Europe,
largely at . France's instigation, and the Arab League
countries around the time of
the Arab oil embargo of
1973: oil and business markets for Europe in exchange
for anti-Israel policies for the
Arab world.
"The Europeans tried to
maintain the Dialogue on a
base of economic relations,
while the Arab countries tied
the oil and business markets
to the European alignment on
their anti-Israeli policies,"
she writes. "However, the
Dialogue was not restricted
to influencing European foreign policy against Israel and
detaching Europe from
America. It also aimed at
establishing ... a massive
Arab-Muslim presence (in
Europe) by the immigration
and settlement of millions of
Muslims." The goal? As
Ye'or sees . it, "to integrate
Europe and the Arab-Muslim
world into one political and
economic bloc, by mixing
populations (multiculturalism), weakening the Atlantic
solidarity, and isolating
America."
This sounds
like a
Dialogue worth listening to.
It helps explain the French

vision, as described in The
New York Times by former
Chirac
adviser
Pierre
Lellouche, of "Europe as a
bridge between the developing and developed world." It
indicates that continental
Europe is not the extent of
French designs. And it helps
explain why France is such a
"stability"-booster in the
neighborhood of Iraq and
other dictatorships: Any
changes war could bring to
Arab-Muslim regimes, from .
retooling to rebirth, could
also change the Dialogue which is not something
France wants to hear.
Such revelations should
also clue us in to another rea- ·
son the ex-communist protodemocracies of New Europe
are with the United States.
Because the Euro-Arab
Dialogue never extended to
Eastern Europe, Euro-Arab
ties don't exist there. (As
members of the Eastern Bloc,
these same countries once
toed a reflexively anti-U.S.,
anti-Israel line, but such
dogma has gone the way of
the U.S.S .R.) Absent this
special relationship, there
have been none of the major
influxes of Muslim immig~ants into these countries
that have transformed the
demograpl1ics of Old Europe.
The Israeli newspaper
Haaretz has mentioned some
of these same points in an
essay exploring why the
upsurge of violrnt anti- ..
Semitism that swept Western
Europe last year largely .
missed Eastern Europe.
Interesting to see what else :
they tell us.
(Dimw West is a columnist
for The 'Washington Times.
She can be contacted via
di anaww@ att global.rret.)

Friday, March 7, 2003

Obituaries

For the Record Bush ratchets up rhetoric

John E. Werry

Divorces,
dissolutions

POMEROY - John Earl
Werry, 73, of Pomeroy, died
Thursday, March 6, 2003, at
Camden-Clark
Memorial
Hospital in Parkersburg, West
Vuginia.
He was born September 30,
1929, in Meigs County, son of
the late Charles J. and Lucretia
Woodrum Werry.
He was a production superintendent in the maintenance
department at the Phillip S
Planl He was a member or:
Pomeroy United Methodist
Chun:h, a veteran of the U.S.
Amny, and a member of Drew
Webster Post No. 39, American
Legion of Pomeroy, and the
Loyal Order of Moose in
Ormand Beach, Aorida.
Surviving are his wife,
Margaret Bryant Werry of
Pomeroy; a son, Marie J. Werry
of Pomeroy; a daughter-in-law,
Rub&gt;' Jean Werry of Hollywood,
Aorida; a sister, Margaret Werry
Phelps of Ladylake, Aorida; a
brother, Paul C. Werry of
Ladylake, Aorida; a sister-inlaw, Mrs. Walter Werry of
Mason, West VIrginia; brothers'
in-law and sisters-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar R. Vale of
Zellwood Station, Aorida, and
the Rev. and Mrs. John A.
B.ryant of Punta Gorda, Aorida; .
and grandchildren, Melissa
Werry of Portsmouth, Candace
Werry of Hollywood, Aorida,
Brandon Werry of Fort Hood,
Texas, and Alicia Werry of
Pomeroy.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his son,
Jeffrey S. Werry; his sister,
Kathryn Werry; and brothers,
Harold, Albert and Walter
Werry.
Services will be II a.m.
Monday, March 10, 2003, at
Pomeroy United Methodist
Chun:h, with Pastor Rod
Brower officiating. Burial will
follow at Beech Grove
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 to 9
p.m. Sunday, March 9, 2003, at
the Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomero~rumthebodywill~in

state an hour prior to the service.
Memorial contributions may
be made to the Gideons
International, P.O. Box 88,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Deaths .
Zelma E. Grady
POMEROY - Zelma E.
Grady, 54, Pomeroy, died
Friday. March 7, 2003, at Holzer
Medical Center.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced · by · Cremeens
Funeral Home in Racine.

Local Briefs
To meet
POMEROY- Meigs County
Boord ofEktion&lt;; will meet at 8:30
a.m. 1\rsday at the office.

POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court by Crystal Gale
Roush, Pomeroy, against
Jason Paige Roush, New
Haven , W.Va.
A divorce action has been
filed by Robert M. Bauer,
Coolville, against Carrie A.
Bauer, Middleport.

Marriage
licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued
in Meigs County Probate
Court to Joseph Robert
Shuler, 29, Cheshire, and
Regina Faye Taylor, 34,
Cheshire, and to Bengy J.
Rhoades, 28, and Angela
Marie Atkins, 25, both of
Middleport.

Civil cases
POMEROY - The following civil cases have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court:
• Personal injury lawsuits, relating to automobile accidents, have been
filed by Margaret J.
Robinson, Pomerov, and
others, against Melissa
Mullins, Pomeroy, and oth-ers; Don R. Hill, Racine,
and others, against Harry
W. Pickens Sr., Racine; and
Justin T. Diddle, Racine,
against Mary J. Armes,
Syracuse.
·
• A personal injury law. suit has been filed by
Benjamin
Upton,
Reedsville, against Black
Top Contracting, Inc.,
Nelsonville.
• Judgment actions have
been filed by the United
States
Department of
Agriculture,
Columbus,
against Tammy S. Hable,
Syracuse, and others, alleging default on a loan agreement in the amount of
$69,904.75;
MercedesBenz Credit Corp., Reno,
Nev.,
against
Terry
Beechleer, Pomeroy, alleging default on a loan agreement in the amount of
$44',195.77; Symgeta Seeds
Inc., against Alexander J.
Buckallew, Portland, alleging breech of contract and
default in the amount of
$266,926.99; Roscoe Mills,
Racine, against Michael
Warner, Racine, alleging
default on a lease agreement in the amount of
$4,250; Asset Acceptance,
Warren, Mich., against
Lauren Garfield, Shade,
alleging default on a consumer loan, in the amount
of $17,650.67.
A civil suit filed by Dale
L. Lawson, and others,
against Paul J. Riley, and
others, has been dismissed.

EMS runs

Classes
dismissed
1UPPFRS PLAINS- Easrem
Local SciXXJI Dislrid will dismiss
scOOol at I pm. Thesday ftr the

regional basJ&lt;r!IWI toumairent.

Plan sing
HARI'FORD, W.Va. -

A

gospel sing will be held at 6 p.m
Sanmlay,Ma!d!l5atthe0nm:hof
Quist in Ouistian Unioo, f:lartfool,

W.Va.
.
Singm will itdtxk Ray and
Deloo:s CuOOilf, ~ 4 Quist,
Jeny, Diare and Brian Frederid&lt;,
Sandra Wtse, Josie and Erica
Cremeans, Salvation, Blessed,
JoAnn Wellingtoo, and Called f&lt;r
Onist.

A love offering will be taken' to
benefit the Bend Area Gospel
Jubilee, to be held Mary 13-18 a! the
West Vnginia State Farm Museum
Ilia ftint Pleasall, W.Va.

against Saddam, promises
to rid Iraq of this 'cancer'
WASHINGTON (AP)- A ment that could determine the
somber outcome of the uphill battle
Pre sident by the United Stmcs and
Bush read- Britain to secure a favorable
ied
the council vote on a new resolunation for tion authorizing force against
war against Iraq.
Saddam
Bush opened the East Room
Hu ssei n, session with a statement more
hurling than 10 minutes long, in
some of his which he argued the need for
harshe st immediate confrontation with
invectives Saddam over the weapons of
Bush
yet at the mass destruction the United
Iraqi leader and promising to States says he has.
rid Ira9. of this "ca~cer" after
"Saddam Hussein is not disany mihtary campatgn.
arming. This is a fact," he
In a prime-time news con- said. "If the world fails to conference, Bush went directly to front the threat posed by the
the American people to make Iraqi regime, refusing to use
his case for confronting force even as a last resort, free
Saddam, and to reluctant nations
would
assume
members of the U.N. Security immense and unacceptable
Council who were meeting risks ."
Friday to discuss the next step
A subdued Bush, engaging
to take against Iraq.
in little of his characteristic
But the president also levity, answered nearly 40
issued multiple warnings to minutes of q.uestion s, all but
Saddam himself.
two of which focused on the
"Should we have to go in, steady march toward another,
our mission is very clear: dis- war in the Persian Gulf that
armament," Bush said. "In could begin within days.
order to disarm, it will mean Aware of polls showing sigregime change. I'm contident nificant
doubts . among
that we'll be able to achieve Americans and around the
that objective in a way that world, Bu sh said the upcomminimizes the Joss of life."
ing debate in New York was
Bush never has minced the "last phase or diplomacy"
words when it comes to that would last only days.
Saddam. But he stepped up
Bush also is considering a
the rhetoric during Thursday's
major
address next week to
nearly hourlong question-andexplain
the justification and
answer session, calling the
risks
of
military
conflict, aides
Iraqi leader "this cancer inside
said. The speech could
Iraq."
He also referred to "Saddam include a final warning to
and his group of killers" and Saddam, while urging journaldescribed the Iraqi regime as ists and humanitarian workers
to leave Iraq, they said .
"totalitarianism."
On Thursday, Bush steadWith about a quarter-milfastly
insisted he does not
lion U.S. forces now deployed
in the region arnund Iraq, and worry that the United States '
more on the way, Bush said he global stature would suffer if
hoped "as a result of the pres- it undertakes war without
sure that we have placed and U.N. backing or that his asserothers have placed" on tion that war would make
Saddam that he might leave Americans safer and the
world more peaceful might be
Iraq on his own.
"I hear a lot of talk from dif- wrong.
Critics, including millions
ferent nations around where
of
protesters at home and
Saddam Hussein might be
exiled," Bush said. "That abroad, Democratic lawmakers and key world leaders
would be fine with me."
If not, Bush left no doubt have said they fear just the
that the ultimate goal of a opposite.
"I believe this administraU .S.-led war would be the
tion's fixation on Saddam is
ouster of the Iraqi dictator.
''The risk of doin~ nothing, making the world more danthe risk of hopmg that gerous for Americans,. not
Saddam Hussein changes his less," said Sen. Edward
mind and becomes a gentle Kennedy, D-Mass. "By dissoul,. the risk that .somehow counting the real concerns of
thal inaction will ' make the our allies, we are squandering
world safer, is a risk I'm not the good will we received
willing to take for the after September II th and shatAmerican people," the presi- tering the coalition a~ainst
terrorism .... This bully m the
dent said,
Chief U.N. weapons inspec- schoolyard approach could
tor Hans Blix and his counter- inflame the . Middle East, sigpart, Mohamed EIBaradei, nificantly contributing to antiwere to report Friday on Iraq's American sentiment and crecooperation in eliminating liS ating a breeding ground for
banned weapons - an assess- more and more terrorists."

Budget
from PageA1

· constitutional obligation to
provide students with a qualIty education. Well said balancing the budget must be
more important to the governorthan the providing a solid
education for future generations of Ohioans.
Taft had planned to make a
2.5 percent cut to primary
and secondary funding: That
would have had a major
impact on many school districts which receive a high
percentage of their funding
from the state.
Meigs Local receives more
than 75 percent of its funding
from the state.
Buckley said if the governor had chosen to mandate a
2.5 percent cut to education,
it would have hurt the di strict
more than the current formu la.

POMEROY Meigs
County
Emergency
Eastern Local school disMedical Services respond- trict will lose more than
ed to the following calls $41,000 from the state.
Thursday:
Superintendent Deryl Well
CENTRAL DISPATCH estimates the district lost I
I :21 a.m., Ohio Route mill of funding.
1,24,
Diana
Landers,
"It's gonna be a real jugPleasant Valley J-!ospital.
gling
act," he said. "It's going
8:21 a.m., Th1rd Street,
hurt
us."
to
Zelma Grady, PVH.
Well said the costs of
8:48 a.m., Brownell
everything,
including fuel
Avenue, Rusty Meadows,
and
health
insurance, are
PVH.
9:30 a.m., Grant Street, going up, making it even
more difficult to absorb the
Frank Harold Fitch, PVH .
10:35 a.m., Nikita Louis, governor's cuts.
Well noted that the goverHolzer Medical Clipic,
nor
has a constitutional
Holzer Medical Center.
II: II
a.m.,
Audrey obligation to balance the
Bachus, Rock Springs state budget, but he also has a
Retirement Center, HMC.
8:14
p.m.,
Thomas
Shamblin, Rock Springs
Retirement Center, HMC.
II :05
p.m.,
Robert
We are prepared for your "Return"
Burris, Butternut Avenue,
PVH .

Income Tax by Dan Tax

...

SPRIII VII1EY
CIIEMil

Land Transfers
Raymond P. Mue ll er,
Ph yllis M. Muell er_ to
Raymond P. Muell er,
deeu, Rutland.
P0\1EROY
- Meip
Allen Wesl ey C lark .
County Record er Jud y decea sed.
to
Nathan
Kin g reponed the followin g transfers in real Brady.
Terr y
Brad y.
Daniel
Pu
skas,
Brian
estate:
Roscoe Mill s. Sandra J. Fulk, Rick y Brady, deed,
Mill s, to Anthony Land Salem.
Nathan Br ady. Terry
C o.. dee d . Ch ester.
Ro scoe Mill s. Sandra J. Brad y. Daniel Puskas.
Mills . 10 Anthony Land Brian Fulh , Ricky Bra dy.
·' d . 1"e t ar t .
to Darrell C lar k. deed.
C o .. I" td ., uee
Roscoe Mill s. Sandra J. Salem.
Mills , tu Gre g L. Mi lls ,
Eldon McCoy. Loretta
deed. Sutton.
McCoy, Mark McCoy.
Te rry L. Fetty. Carol L. Rebecca
McCoy.
to
Fetty. to Terry L. Fetty , Jo se ph R. Gilkey. Shelley
R..
Gilkey.
deed ,
deed. Salem.
Harold D.
Graham , Sali sbury.
Jan et K. Graham , tD
Bank
One. Ath e ns.
David Mango, afl'idavit, N . A . , t I1 J I1 SC· J111 •S . 1'.1I 1.IS.·
Scipio.
Faye M. Tillis. deed.
Robert E. Byer. Donna Village uf Pomeroy.
J. Byer, to Larry E. Byer,
Paul 0. Eichinger. Leah
Li sa Byer, deed, Village June Eichinger, Judith F.
of Middleport.
Eichinger.
Judith
A.
Bridgett S.
Pearce.
~
Rodney R. Pearce . to Eichinger. to Paul D.
Terry s. Ashburn , Terry · E1ch1nger , Leah Jun e
J.
D. Ashburn . deed.- Salem. E1ch1ng;er, Bonnie
Shirley Bumgardner to Kelly , Gerald
Kelly ,
Shirley
Bumgardner Judi th A . Eichi nger. deed,
Trust, affidavit.
Salisbury.
Patrick A.
Carroll.
David Bumgardner to
David A. Bum gardner Chr istina L. Carro ll to
Trust. affidavit.
Warren H. Calaway. deed.
Autozone. In c., to Slate Orange .
or Ohio Department of
Clair
LouiseTransportation , right of Glue se ncamp ,
Louise
way, Village of Pomeroy. Gluesencamp. deceased.
Gard Drilling Co. to to
Lawrei)Ce
R
Edlon McCoy, L9retta Gluesencamp, Lawrence
McCoy. Mark McCoy, R. Glue se nc-amp. affi·Rebecca McCoy, deed, davit.
Salisbury.
Lawrence
R.
Mary K. Grueser to Gluesencamp to Albert E.
Bend View, Ltd. , deed, Lawson ,
Susan
K.
Salisbury.
Lawson, deed , Lebanon .
Jo sep h
R.
Bailey,
Robert Lee Jacob s to
Louretta K. Bail ey to Ramona Compton. deed,
Edward Ru ssel l, Warren
Ca laway, Eddie Russell, Village of Pomeroy.
easement, Chester.
Ruth
E.
Palmer,
Sina Bailey, Rex Baifey, deceased, to Betty Lou
Joseph Rex Bailey, Sina Hemphill, deed, Salem.
May Bailey, to Eddie
Roscoe Mill s. Sandra ·J.
Ru sse ll , Jr., Warren H. Mill s, to Jarrod L. Hill,
Calaway, deed, Chester.
Leigh Hill , deed, Sutton.
Jay Hall, Jr. , Jay .Hall ,
Roscoe Mills, Sandra].
Jr. Trust, to Four Fed, Mills, to Jarrod L. Hill ,
Inc., deed, Village of Leigh Hill, deed, Sutton.
Syracuse.
Jarrod L. Hill , Leigh ·
David
M.
Tawney, Hill, to Wendy L. Shuler,
Linda S. Haycraft, Teresa deed , Sutton.
M. Danner, Lloyd E.
Jan A. Parker, Donna
Danner, DHT Venture s, Parker, to
Columbus
Ltd., to CM Subs, Inc ., Southern Power, right o·r
deed. Village of Pomeroy. way , Orange.
James E. Pape, Judy A.
Jodi Parker, Jeff Parker,
Pape, to Thomas I.
Barnhart,
Debora to Columbus Southern
Barnhart,
deed, Power, right of way.
Sutton/Village
of Orange.
Syracuse .
John W. Donaldson.
Vester Walker, Jr .. Reva Mary L. Donaldson, to
L. Walker, Reva Lucille Columbus
Southern
Walker,
to
Walker Powe r, right of way ,
Revocable Family Trust . Columbia.
affidavit.
Blaine
A.
Wells.
Family Geraldine E. We lls. to
Walk er
Revoc abl e
Trust
to Columbus
Southern
Donald
0.
Casey, · Pow er. right of way.
Rebe cca D. Casev, deed , Colum bia.
Charles N. I hie. Donna
Rutland .
John T. Grucscr, Juanita M. !hie, to Tupper&gt;
Water
P. Grueser, to Timothy Plains-Che ster
Bentz , Pamela Bentz, District. right of way .
Sutton.
deed, Rutland .
' Jeffrey
C.
Harri s.
Benjamin W. Rus se ll to
Deborah M. Harris, to · TP-CWD. right of way.
Gregory Lee Mills , deed, Orange.
Sutton .
Jim Edwards. Jolinda
Albert Proffitt to TPEdward s, to Lyle R. CWO. right of way .
Sinclair, Jo yce Sinc lair, Sunon.
deed. Bedford.
Sharon
R.
Wihon .
Violet Bailey. decea se d_ Howard Wi l'on , 1o TPto Harry S Bail ey, affi - CWO. ri ght t&gt;l 1\· ay.
dav it. Rutland.
Sutlon.
Jeff Davis, Jeffrey L.
Davis, Brenda Davis,
Brenda J. Davis. to Home
National Bank , sheriff's
deed , Sutton.

Transfers
posted .

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�Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 7, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page Bl
· Friday, March 7, 2003

Youth baseball
registration
IJ&gt;

If

you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette,

WINSTON CUP Sl f l i t S

What: Bass Pro Shops MBNA
500
Where: Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hampton, Ga. (1.54
miles), 325 laps/ 500.5
miles
When: Green flag drops at 1
p.m. Sunday
Last year's winner: Tony
Stewart
Track quallfylnC record: Geoffrey Bodine, Ford . 197.478
mph, Nov. 15, 1997
Race record: Dale Earnhardt,
Chevrolet , 163.633 mph,
Nov. 12, 1995
Moot recent race: Matt
Ken seth's se•Jenth career
victory- in Las Vegas Mo.._. tor Speedway's UAW-Daim•
lerChrysler 400 on Sunday

- had something in common with the other six. He
qualified deep in the pack. It
may have been a good omen
when his starting position
matched the number (171 on
his yellow-and-black Ford .
The 31-year-old driver from
Cambridge, Wis. , didn 't exactly pull this one out of a
hat. Although Kenseth never
took the lead until the
172nd of 267 laps, he
stretched his edge to an al·
most unheard-of 9.104 seconds when he took the
checkered flag and put the
rout to bed. DEl teamma~s
Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
Michael Waltrip finished second4!nd third, respectively.

BUSCH St:'llll:S

CHAI 1 SMAN I UUCk

What: Darlingtonraceway.com
200
Where: Darlington (S.C.)
"Raceway (1.366 miles). 147
laps/200.802 miles
When: 12:30 p.m. March 15
Laat year's winner: Jamie
McMurray
TI'IICk quallfylnli record: Ryan
Newman, Ford, 191.661
mph, March 10, 2001
Reco record: Mark Martin,
Ford, 151.751 mph , March
8, 1997
Moot recent race: Todd Bodine's spin late in the race
allowedWinston Cup regular
Joe Nemechek to win Saturday's Sam's Town 300 at
Las Vegas. Kevin Harvlck
finished second.

What: Craftsman 200
Where: Darlington (S.C.)
Raceway (1.366 miles), 147
laps/200.802 miles·
When: 4 p.m. March 14
Last year's winner: Ted Musgrave
Track quallfylnC record: Jason Leffler, Dodge, 163.703
mph, March 14, 2002
Race record: Ted Musgrave,
Dodge, 109.000 mph,
March 15, 2002
Moot recant raca: Ford driver
Rick Crawford won the season-opening Florida Dodge
Dealers 250 on Feb. 14 at
Daytona and holds a slight
edge in points over upstart
Travis Kvapil and veteran
Robert Pressley.

P.O.

Box 1893, Gastonia, NC

28053

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Youth League
will hold baseball registration
from noon to 3 p.m. March 8,
6 to 8 p.m. March 12, and
noon 3 p.m. on March 15, in
Middleport Village Council
chambers.
For information, contact
Dave Boyd at 992-3668.

Dunn, Stinnett
go deep in Reds
exhibition win

FEUD OF

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

TI~E

WEEK

v
MIKE SKINNER, WINSTON CuP SERIES

E

R

s

No KODAK MOMENT
.. Ken&amp;et/1 '~. .

r~~:~~:;~~~~

2000 years I
three
tied with scv·,~'!'"~~
each.
.,. Here's
haven't
been
last

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

..

9. Johnny Benson
10. Dale Jarrett
BusCH SERIES.

1.

a.

3.
4.
S.
8.
1.
8.
9.
10.

Kevin Harylck
David Green
Todd Bodine
Jamie McMurray
Jason Keller
Scott Wimmer
Ron Hornaday
Mike Bliss
Kerry Earnhardt
Kasey Kahne

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
1. Rick Crawford
2. Travis Kvapil
3. Robert Pressley
4. Bobby Hamilton
5. Andy Houston
5. Mike Wallace
7. Dennis Setzer
8. Terry Cook
9. Jon Wood
10. Brendan Gaughan

Skinner, McClure team desperately .trying to get back on track

M

·104
-107
484
. 55
-58

·80
. 92

. 93
. 99
-105

·119
· 127
185

·10
-15
-20
. 30
. 30

. 39
-42
- 43
. 46

ike Skinner was .rookie of the
year back in the old days,
when the honor didn't necessarily presage a hall-of-fame career.
Skinner, who actually made his first
Winston Cup start in 1986, was
Raybestos Rookie of the Year in 1997,
although he had only three top-10 finishes. That was two years before Tony
Stewart rewrote most of the modern
rookie records and won three races.
Every year since has seen at least one
rookie race winner.
Now 44, Skinner is still looking for
his first victory, although he finished
lOth in the series points standings in
1999. He is in his second year driving
for Morgan-McClure Motorsports of
Abingdon, Va. Larry McClure's team
switched from Chevrolet to Pontiac
this year.
"It's obvious that Larry McClure
and Morgan-McClure Motorsports
have tried in recent years to regain
what they had when they won races a
few years back," Skinner said. "With
the engineering staff at RCR, Hendrick Motorspor~s and Roush Racing
and Robert Yates -all of these big
teams - it's very, very tough to compete against that It's very hard to
keep up with the latest and greatest in
aero( dynamic) stuff.
"This business has turned into a people business," Skinner added, by "people" meaning a lot of them.
"We all have real similar parts and
pieces. The cars are all relatively
close together. The engines aren't that
far apart anymore. It's just about peo·
pie. Larry McClure has really
rethought a lot of that stuff, and the ·
sponsor (Kodak) said, 'Larry, what do
we need to get competitive again?' Obviously, we needed more money. We
needed people. Kodak has helped him
(McClure) monetarily. It's allowed him
to hire some people."
Tony Furr, formerly a crew chief
with several teams, is now MorganMcClure's competition director, and
Gary Grossenbacher is the chief engineer. They join holdover crew chief
Chris Carrier.
"I told Larry this is the best Christmas present a guy could have," Skinner said. "An opportunity to be competitive again."
The increasing complexity of racing
has aggravated the problems of singlecar operations such as McClure's.

u

Steve
Park

s

Dale Janet! vs. Steve Park:
Park's 10th-place finish at Las Vegas was marred by an accident he
caused on lap 132 that sent Jarrett's Ford into the turn-two waiL "I
got hit," said Jarrett "Unfortunately, it's some of the same people
who do it (every week) . It's just a
bad day."
lnolde Track'o Monte Dutton
etveo his take: Park apologized, but
that wasn't enough for Jarrett, who
fell from second to 10th in the
points standings as a result. 'I was
sitting there running my race and
working on the car, and you've got
people who don't know what they're
doing: Jarrett said.

WHO'S HOT
AND WHO'S NOT
WHO'S HOT? Roush drivers Matt
Kenseth and Jeff Burton took two of
the f~rst six positions.
WHO'S NOT? Roush drivers Kurt
Busch and Mark Martin took two of
the last six positions, and another,
Greg Biffle, failed to make the field .

FAN T I P S
1&gt; Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Out of the Shad-

ow of Greatness, by Mike Hembree
(Sports Publishing LLC . $39.95) is a
cut above most of the coffee-table
books that have flooded the market.
The text is well-written, if not e"tensive, and the co lor photography is
first-rate. The book also comes with
a CD-ROM with photos and original
music.
~ The Racetracks Book: A Journey
Around the Tracks Where Stock Cars
Roar (Sporting News Books,
$34.95), by Ma rk McCarter, Is a
look at 26 past and present tracks
steeped in the lore of NASCAR. Perhaps most interesting is the section
at the end of the book: "Gone, But
Not Forgotten." which reminisces
about long-ago races in places such
as the Nashville (Tenn.) Fairgrounds,
North Wilkesboro, N.C .. and Riverside, Calif.

Did you know?

John Clark/NASCAR This Week

Winston Cup veteran Mike Skinner has never won a Winston Cup race. He spent
five years drtvln&amp; for Richard Childress Racine, where he won rookie of the year
honors In 1997. last season, Skinner moved over to Morgan-McClure Motorsports.
"It used to be the driver and the

crew chief," Skinner said. "Now, you
have team managers and assistants
for this and that ... I don't really even
know all of the titles, but I don't care
what a man's title is. If we can get

about four or five of us to get our
heads together and make that car
work, then it's all good.
"That's what our goal is right now."
Contact Monte Dutton at tug50aoLcom.

Since 1990, NASCAR has outgrown all other pro sports by leaps
and bounds. In terms of attendance,
the sport has seen a 91 percent in·
crease in that time. Compare that
with the rate of the NHL (45.8), Major League Baseball(28.4), NBA
(28.7) and NFL (7 .1).
Television ratings for NASCAR
have risen every year since 1993,
the only pro sport which can make
that claim - compare that with the
World Senes, which has posted low-·
er ratings each year for the last six
years. NASCAR's fan base is more
than 40 percent female - surveys
have shown that 52 percent of tela"
vision viewers are women, while
nearly 60 percent of those attending races are men . This is why
some of the main advertisers Include marketing giants like Procter
&amp; Gamb le.

&lt; •

NOW AT

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT'-

7000
Tractors

Seti1!!S

] ISO Eastern Ave. (St. Rt. 7) • Gallipolis, OH
Z-FORCE
0 Tum Rider

(740) 446·9777 • (740) 446·1484

Eastern 67, Thimble 64

'•

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Adam Dunn and Kelly
Stinnett homered Thursday to
lead the Cincinnati Reds to a
7-6 victory over the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
Aramis Ramirez homered
twice for Pittsburgh, and Rob
Mackowiak also went deep.
Brian Giles was 0-for-3.
Ken Griffey Jr., Austin
Kearns, Sean Casey and
Demel! Stenson each added a
double as the Reds jlOt 12
hits. Griffey scored tw1ce and
drove in a run. Casey had two
RBis.
Cincinnati shortstop Barry
Larkin, hit on the right elbow
by a pitch Tuesday, was
scratched from the starting
lineup because the elbow was
still sore. The Reds said team
physician Timothy Knimchek
ex.amined Larkin and found
nothing more than bruises.
· Larkin is expected to play
Friday.

crown

Reds, Royals
complete
four-player deal

Rio eight headed
to NAIA national
track meet
RIO GRANDE - Eight members of the
University of Rio Grande track and field
squad are in Johnson City, Tenn., to compete
in the NAIA National Indoor Track and Field
Meet.
Ashly Roberts of Ewington returns to the
national meet for the fourth straight season.
She will compete in both the shot put and the
weight throw on the women's side.
Roberts set a new record in the weight
throw with a qualifying effort of 51 feet. 41,
inches. In the shot put. she qualified with an .
effort of 40 feet, 4), inches.
Matt Boyles of Tuppers Plains will compete in the 3,000-meter run and the 3,000meter race walk. He recorded a qualifying
time of 8:52.82 in the 3,000-meter run and
timed out at 12:07.64 in the race walk.
Boyles will be joined by Jim Robinson,
Scott Littrell and Tim Sykes in the race walk.
Robinson registered a qualifying time of
12:48.54, Sykes' time was 15:21.44 and
Littrell recorded a time of 16:38.99.
Boyles and Robinson spent last weekend ia
Boston competing at the U.S. Track and Field
Championships in the 5,000-meter race walk.
Glenn Arnold will be competing in the
men's weight throw. He posted a measure~
ment of 53 feet, 101. inches to qualify for the
meet.
Kristin Barnett is making her second
straight appearance at the NAIA Meet in the
3,000-meter race walk. Barnett will be joined
by freshman Billie Robinson.
Barnett qualified for the meet with a time
of 17:49.46 and Robinson's time was
18:10.99.
The NAJA Meet began Thursday a! the
Memorial Center and .runs through the week•
end.

BY SCOTT WoLFE

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) The Cincinnati Reds obtained
two pitchers from the Kansas
City Royals on Thursday in
ex.change for two minor leaguers.
The Reds obtained righthander Jeff Austin, who
appeared in I 0 games for the
Royals last season, and leftbander Brian Shackelford,
who spent last season with
Double-A Wichita after being
converted from an outfielder
to a pitcher.
The Royals
received
infielder Damaso Espino and
outfielder Alan Moye. Espino
spent most of last season with
the Rookie · Gulf Coast
League Reds, batting .332
.with 32 RBI in 58 games.
Moye hit .261 with five home
runs and 22 RBI in 43 games
at Billings, another rookie
league team.
The Royals originally
selected Austin in the first
round of the June 1998 freeagent draft Last season, he
went 4-0 with a 3.27 ERA
and four saves in 37 relief
appearances for Triple-A
Omaha. He had no record and
a 4.91 ERA for the Royals.
Shackelford went 3-1 with
a 3.51 ERA in 22 appearances for Wichita.

Former Dayton
player sentenced
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
former Dayton basketball
player has pleaded guilty to a
charge stemming from his
claim that he was abducted by
a gunman before managing to
escape.
Sammy Smith, 21, of suburban Westerville, pleaded
guilty on Tuesday in Franklin
County Municipal Court to a
charge of providing false
information to mislead a public official. He was sentenced
to 40 hours of community service and ordered to serve one
year of probation, according
to the city prosecutor's office.
He was fined $150.
Smith was reported missing
after failing to attend classes
or two basketball practices
Oct. 17. The following night
he flagged down a patrolman
in Lake Worth, Texas, telling
him he had been abducted and
forced to drive at gunpoint
until his escape.
The FBI and the Dayton
police department investigated the alleged abduction and
determined it never happened.

Grubb. Grubb returned the pass and Cozart penetratStaff wrner
ed with the stop-and-pop jumper, drilling it with 19
seconds left in the game for a 65-64 EHS lead.
. .
.
. .
. ·~FJ!kins came back with a counter attack; drov~
. ATHENS - Claumng thCJr second d1stnct cham· •.Seli!Je and got a five footer off only to have 1t
p10nsh1p m the past f~ur . years, the Eastern Eagles rejected by Dill. Grubb was fouled with 7.9 seconds
(16-6) of Coach How1e Ca).&lt;lwell posted a drlJ!llali- left, where he calmly went to the line and drilled both
cally-orchestrated 67-~~.ie\~ ~~er the Tnmble, ~e'lldJ ;tijl.'the bonus for the 67-66 tally and the win.
Tom~ats Thursday mjlhtfii the D1v1ston IV Southeast Jenkins missed a trey from the corner and Fouts
D1stnct Champtonshlp game.
rebounded but missed to end the game.
~astern_ is now it) ·the S~eet 16 as the tour_nament, " "Our freshman (Nathan Cozart) played outstandtra'! contmues. WI~ Ohio s top four teams m each ing," Caldwell said. "He had an unreal game. Robbie
reg10n compeung for I! State playoff be_rth:
(Cross) did a heck of a job off the bench. The seniors .
Ea~te~, who has fimsh~ as e1ther Dtstnct champs gave us great leadership. Although he still was unable
orDistnctrunner-upeach_ofthelastfouryears, now to get in the game, I looked down to the end of the
adyances to t~e Re~10nal Semtfm~l at !he bench and saw Jason (Kimes) cheering his heart out,
Fatrgrounds Cohseum Ill Columbus .thts ~onung and Brandon Werry did a great job for us especially
Tue~day, ~arch II for a 6:15 meeting With the in the fust half. After halftime, it was kinda funny, we
Whtteoak Ttgers.
.
, . were all just sort of waiting for Brent Buckley to
"We ha~~ been here four consecuttv~ years, satd come over and say, 'All right boys, let's get it done.'
Caldwell. A lot of teams would have g1ven up when He did and the team responded."
they were down 14. but _these kids. never qUit. They
Nathan Cozart led Eastern with a game-high 24
were bound an~ detenmned .to bnng home a gold points on eight field goals and a 5-7 night at the line.
medal rather a stlver one. Thts IS a real shot for our Cozart hit a crucial three and had a steal and lay-in
program. This club has a lo~. of youth so there has to · that helped propel the Eastern comeback. Nathan
be bn_g~ter days sll~l ahead.
.
.
Grubb added 12 points, while Alex Simpson netted
TraihnJ! 64-60 wtth 1:19 left m the game, Nathan 15 and also had a key three and lay-in m the EHS
Grubb dnlled an unguarded three off a screen to pull comback while Cody Dill canned 12 and Robbie
Eastern to within one. Trimble chose t() run down the Cross fo~r.
'
clock and r~n it down to :37 before Justt~ Jenkins was
Other Eagles contributing were Brent Buckley,
sent to _the hne for a one-and-one, but mtssed the first Eastern's vocal spiritual leader, who grabbed five
one. D1ll grabbed the rebound and ex.1ted the ball to
Cozart who dribble penetrated and dipped off to
Please see Eastern. 11

Indoor track &amp; field

Couch unsure if
he's Browns' starter
BEREA (AP) - Tun Couch still doesn't
know if the Cleveland Browns are his team or
Kelly Holcomb's.
Couch said Thursday that he met earlier this
week with Browns coach Butch Davis to discuss the club's recent salary-cap purge as well
as the quarterback's uncertam future in
Cleveland.
But while Couch may have hoped to hear he
was the Browns' starter, Davis didn't tell him
that.
"He didn't say that in those ex.act words,"'
Couch said. "He just told me, 'Continue to do
what you've been doing. Come here and work
hard and do the right things.' He didn't get too
much into all of it."
Couch's starting job has been in jeopardy
since Holcomb passed for 429 yards 111 the
AFC playoffs against Pittsburgh. Couch had to
sit out Cleveland's fust postseason game since
1994 after breaking his leg in the regular"season finale.
Davis fueled speculation that Couch would
be replaced by first hinting that there would be
Please see Couch. 11

Thomas alright with
Rio's early matchup
BY MARK WILLIAMS

Special to the Sentinel
RIO GRANDE - Wednesday,
March 12 marks the beginning of
the 12th Annual NAIA Division
II Men's Basketball National
Tournament at the Keeter
Gymnasium in Point Lookout,
Mo.
The University of Rio Grande
Redmen will be a part of the
opening game when they face
No. II Seed Warner Southern
(Fla.) at 8:30a.m. Central time.
Although the opening game
was not the ideal game the
Redmen wanted, they know that
the R1mnin' Royals will face the
same challenge.
Rio also knows that, despite the
early start time, in order to
advance they must take care of
business.
"As far as the game time, it's
obviously not one that we would
have preferred," said Rio Grande
Head Coach Earl Thomas. "But,
both teams have to deal with it
and the nice thing about it, we're
going to sell our guys on, we'll

just have that
much more time
to rest up after
the first round
game and won't
have to play until
4 p.m. (CST) on
Fnday."
Warner
Southern (22-8)
poses
some
Tho~as
potential problems for Rio
Grande (22-13) . The Runnin'
Royals have size in the paint and
on the perimeter.
"They'll go about 6-11 (Mike
Taber) in the post, and he
changes a lot of things inside ,"
Thomas said. "Their 6-10 kid
(Mats Olsson) is one of the leading 3-point shooters in the country.''
Taber averages 2. 1 blocks per
game and Olsson is connectmg
on 39 percent of his attempts
from beyond the arc . Potnt
lluard Travis James is distributlll§ 9.9 assists per game.
'They' ve got good size and
good athleticism on the perimeter, they're going to go 6-3 , 6-4,

6-4 and all good athletes."
"They're really big and they' re
talented,"
said
Thomas.
"They're averaging about 90
points a game." Thomas also
said the~ shoot about 25 or 26
three-pmnters a game.
"They really like to push the
ball up and down the floor,"
Thomas added. "It'll be again, a
game where there will be con·
trasting styles."
Cedarville is the likely comparison to what Warner Southern
will throw at the Redmen.
"I think they're very similar to
Cedarville except they're bigger," Thomas satd. "Their style
of play is similar.'' Warner
Southern beat the Yellow
Jackets, 80-79 on New Year's
Eve. Cedarville was up about 20
at one point and Warner Southern
started draining some threes' and
.came back and won the game."
Thomas offers the keys to the
game for the Redmen.
"We ' re obviously going to
have to try to get the game in our
tempo and once again be very,

Please see Thomas, 11

Rio Grande head coach Earl Thomas is emotionally spent after the Redmen defeated
Shawnee State in the Amerjcan Mideast
Conference championship game. The Redmen
will face Warner Southern (Fla .) in the first
round of the NAIA National Tournament
Wednesday in Point Lookout, Mo. (Andrew
Carter)

�Page 82 • The

Daily Sentinel

E~stern
from Page 81
rebounds and had a good
defensive post game; and
Brandon Werry, who gave
Coach Caldwell some quality
minutes.
R.J . Andrews led the
Tomcats with 17 points, Noah
Barrell added 16, A.J. Jenldns
had 16, Bruce Foul~ I 0 and
Zach Walton five.
Eastern was miserably cold
in the first half as Trimble
raced to an ll-4 lead, behind a
Jenkins drive and a three
pointer. The Eastern hot shots
had numerous balls roll in and
out of the rim, while in many
cases Trimble was able to
secure the rebound. Trimble
out rebounded Eastern 35-28,
much of which occurred in the
first half.
Eastern did rally, however,
in the first quarter with a
Cody Dill jumper and Nathan
Grubb driver to cut the score
at periodfs end to 11-9.
Applying a full court press,
Eastern forced a · couple
Trimble turnovers, an d
Eastern finally broke the ice
on the rim.
Cozart had a great floor
game all evening long, but his
shots like his teammates fell
off the mark. He did not waiver as this was just a warm-up
for the second half. Nathan
Grubb was also a key factor
throughout the game, but
indeed every Eagle came
through in the clutch.
Trimble had a small run at
the end of the second period.
Jenkins spearheaded the
auack, but was also doing a
good job looldng in to Bruce
Fouts and Zach Walton. Both
scored well inside, but a Noah
Barrett jumper and ensuing
three-pointer at the buzzer
~ave Coach Howie Caldwell a
JUmp start toward the locker
room at the half. Trimble led
31-22.
"At halftime we told them
(Eastern team) that we needed
to play with more poise and .
character. They responded
and took better care of the ball

Friday, March 7, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

and most of all did not quit," EHS up (;Q-58 at the 3:30
said Caldwell .
mark, then Jenkins hit a pair
In the third quarter, Eastern of free throws to tie the score
fell behind 39-25. Several 60-60 at the 3:41 mark.
Eastern misses and bad pa~ses Eastern missed in the transiinto the passing lane resulted tion and a sporadic, twisting
in two steals and Trimble lay- lay-up by Jenkins put Trimble
ins and then Jenkins hit a up by two, 62-60.
three. Eastern quickly called
After another Eastern miss,
time out and its troops Jenkins hit a baseline jumper
responded to the rally call at the 2: I 5 mark for a 64-60
from field general Caldwell.
Trimble lead. Tliat set the
Eastern went on a victory stage for Grubbis monumenmarch out of the time out hud- tal three pointer to cut the
dle. Simpson and Cozart each deficit to one (1:19 left), and
duped threes and added a pair then later Cozartls game-winof two-pointers, while Dill ning bucket.
drilled a sliort jumper from
outside the right block and
Robert Cross had a put back.
Cross, Dill, and Buckley had
key rebounds in the stint.
Eastern had eleven unanswered points for a 39-36 tally
from Page 81
at the 2: 14 mark of the third
frame before Trimble again
scored.
very solid defensivel7 in
Trailing 41-38, Eastern tied order to give us a shot.'
the score on a Cozart three
Tlie Redmen enter the
pointer" 41-41 but R.J. tournament having won five
Andrews came back to re¥ain straight games after a rugged
the lead for Trimble. A parr of American
Mideast
steals turned into lay-ups by Conference season and an
Simpson and Cozart allowed even tougher conference
Eastern to keep pace after tournament.
Fouts liit a post jumper and
"I think going througli all
Barrett hit a pair of free those wars helps us a little
throws for a 47-45 Trimble bit," Thomas said.
lead. Barrett tlien canned a
Rio Grande will have
shot at the buzzer for a 49-45 experience on its' side with
seniors Jerry Barlow, Chris
lead after three rounds.
Simpson and Cozart hit Ballenger and Randar Luts
goals to tie the score at the havin~ been integral parts of
6:40 mark, 49-49. Trimble the Fmal Four team of two
called time and went directly years ago.
Barlow is averaging 15.9
inside to Fouts, who scored
points
and 7.5 rebounds per
from the pivot 51-49. Dill hit
game.
Ballenger is postmg
a baseline jumper and and
12.4
points
and 6.8 boards
Cross a put in as Eastern
grabbed a 53-5! advantage. and Luts scores 8.6 points
Simpson hit a three for a 56- and grabs 2.8 boards per
contest.
51 EHS lead.
The experience of this trio
Eastern pulled the ball and
had a chance to put the game will provtde a calming influaway after Andrews· htt an ence.
"They know how to liandle
inside follow-up jumper.
it
and what tliey have to do
Simpson came back with a
spiraling, twisting driver for a
58-53 EHS lead.
Eastern didn't take care of
the ball this time around and
turned it over allowing
from Page 81
Trimble to go on a 5-0 run to
tie the game 58-58 at the 4:07
mark. Grubb had a steal and an open competition in training
scored off the fast break to put camp, and then saying he

Thomas

Couch

Eastern hit 27-60 overall,
hitting 6-20 threes, 21-45
twos, and 7-10 at the line.
Eastern had 28 rebounds
(Cross 7, Grubb 6, Dill 5,
Buckley 5); three blocks (Dill
3); I I turnovers; six a~sists
(Simpson 3); and 19 fouls.
Trimble hit 3-13 threeis, 2452 twois and was 7-8 at the
line. Trimble had 35 rebounds
(Fouts 9, Barrett 7, Jenkins 6);
1.0 steals (Andrews 5); 10
turnovers; three assists, and
16 fouls.
Eastern will now play in the
regional at 6: 15 p.m. Thesday.

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Champs
Fellowship
Apostoffc
Church of Jesus Christ Apostolk

VanZandt and Ward Rd .. Pastor: James
Miller. Sunday School • 10 :30 a.m.,

Evening - 7:30 p.m.

River Valley
Aposlolic Worship Cenler, 873 S. 3rd

Ave ., Middleport, Kevin Konkle, Pastor,
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.,
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.: Youlh Fri . 7:30

p.m.
Emmanuel Aposlollc: l'llberuclt Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m .,
Thurs. 7:00p.m., Pastor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God
for the days leading up to the
(tourney)," Thomas said.
"It's not going to be anything that's going to be a
shock to those guys.
The Eastern Junior High School seventh-grade recently
'.'1 think those three guys . claimed the Southern Seventh Grade Tournament cham pi·
will be a reaJ calming influ- onshlp with a 62-33 win over Southern . Eastern had defeated .
ence."
Marietta Black and Meigs to advance to the finals. The MVP of
A win by the Redmen in the tournament was Dalton Jenkins of Eastern. Front row, from
the first round could poten- left, Chris Colwell, Kyle Gordon, Dalton Jenkins, Nathan
tially pit Rio against No. 6 Carroll , and Josh Collins. Back row, from left, Kyle Edwards.
seed Siena Heights, a team Daniel Buckley, Zack Newell, Kyle Rawson and Shane Milhoan .
Rio Grande beat 105-102 in Coaches are Matt Bissell and Tim Baum . Not pictured Justin
double overtime early in the Bissell.
season, in round two.
Rio Grande is 1-5 against
teams in this year's tournament,
defeating
Siena
Heights and losing to
Virginia-Wise, Cedarville ·
{twice), Saint Vincent and
Starting in his place was
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Huntington .
Allen Iverson scored 36 Tyrone Hill, who signed with
Warner Southern sports a points as the Philadelphia the 76ers just prior to the
3-1 record versus tourna- 76ers overpowered the game against the Kings.
ment teams, defeating Portland Trail Blazers 88-60
After Rasheed Wallace
Cedarville and going 2-1 Thursday night.
pulled the Blazers within 45The Sixers led by as many . 44 with 6:47 left in the tliird
against Flagler (Fla.).
Rio Grande is making its as 32 points as they snapped a quarter, Portland did not
seventh appearance in the three-game losing streak to score for the rest of the periNAJA Tournament and has a Portland.
Philadelphia was without od, missing I 0 straight
record of 6-6. Five of those
previous tourney appear- forward Kenny Thomas, who attempts from the floor.
Wallace led the Blazers
ances were at the NAlA sprained his right ankle early
in a I 07-99 loss to with 17 points and nine
Division I level.
Sacramento on Monday. rebounds.

76ers defeat Blazers

would name his starter before
camp opened.
Davis, appearing at the
Cleveland Auto Show with
Couch, conftrmed he met with
both of his QBs this week, but
didn't divulge any details.
HELP WANTED

IN MEMORY

"Becky"
One year ago

IN MEMORY

In Memory

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

IN MEMORY

In the memories
that we share .

Love. Morn

IN MEMORY

In Memory of

"Our Friend"

In Memory

Mardi 7, 2003

We cannot beHeve

Though your gone,
your very m~~eh
missed, and thtrt
lsn ~a day gone by
tluJt your not
thought of.
Your bill /rllnd
Joy Moor

that It bao been a

"Bee- Bee"
You will always
be our angel, We
love you and miss
you every day.

P.W. &amp; L. H.

f

B•cky Ackerman

Becky Acbrman

IN MEMORY

Local office of regional bank seeks qualified individual for the position of Customer
Service Rep (teller). Essential skills include
excellent communication customer service,
and cross-selling abilities. Must.be able to
effectively manage cash drawer and process and balance various types of
transactions.
If you are a fle)(ible team-player who
likes a challenge, send letter of application
and resume via email to careers@pebo.com
or mail to:
Human Resources Dept. MPCSR
P. 0. Box 738
Marieua, OH 45750.
Competitive wages and benefit package.
Equal Opportunity Employer

yur Iince you wen
taken from ua. We
think or you and
what
happened
everyday and we
will never foi'Jet.
We He Ufe dltfer·
endy now and ruJ.
lze how pndou1

everyday Ia. .We
min your smile, tbe

kind

word•

you

had for everyone
and aU the tun we
had.
We miss you,

Love,
Channing and

Charlo

thla
organization's
programs or actlvl·
Ilea.
The pereon reapon·
alblt for coordinating
lhla organization'•
nondlacrlmlnatlon
compliance eflorta Ia
Phillip I. Millar, V. P.
Admlnlatratlve
Servlcea. Any tndlvld·
ual, or apeclltc ctaaa
of Individuate, who
fHI that thla organlzl·
tlon haa aub,ected
them to dlacr mlna·
tlon may obtain furthll
Information
about the atltuae and
regulatlone
llated
above from and /or
lila a written com·
plaint with thla organlotion;
or
the
Baoratary,
U.B.
Dapertmtnt
of
Agriculture,
Waahtngton,
o.c·.
20210;
or
the
Admlnlllrator, Rural
Ulllltlaa
Servlcea,
D.C.
Waahlngton,
20280.
Complaint•
mutt be llled within
180 dayl Iller thl
alleged dlacrlmlna·
tlon. Confldantltllty
will bll maintained to
the extend poaalblt.
March 7, 2003

Racine First Baptkt
Pastor: Rick Rule, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Worsh ip - 10:40 a.m_.. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
Sllve.- Run 811ptist
Pwaor: John Swa nson, Sunday School !Oa.m .• Wonhip - II a.m ., 7:00 p .m.
,Wednesday Services- 7~00 p.m.
Mt. Union Baptllt
Pastor : David Wiseman, Sunday School9:45 a.m., Evening • 6 :30 p .m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

•

MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN
or
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST

O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
has a full-time o~ning with rotating shifts
in !he Laboratory. We offer a competitive
salary and excellent benefit package.
For more information contact:
O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
55 Hospital Drive
Athens, Ohio 4570 I
(740) 592-9227

www.obleness.org

Hillside Baptist Chun:h
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7; Pastor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr., Sunday Unified
Service, Worsh ip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Vlc:tol')' Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James
E. Keesee, Worsh ip - IOa.m., 7 p.m. ,
Wednesday Sel'\lices • 7 p.m.

Fallh Baplisc Cbun:h
Railroad St .. Mason. Sunday School - 10

a.m., Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m .
Fote~t Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun, SuOOay School - I0
a.m.. \Vorship - I I a.m.

MI. Moriah Bapdst
Founh &amp; Main St., Middleport , Pastor:
Re.... Gilbert Craig, Jr., Sunday School·
9:30a.m., Worship · 10:45 a.m.

EOE
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m .. Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.,
Pastor: Mark McComas
Rutland FrH WUI Baptist
Salem St., Pastor: Re\', Paul Taylor,
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Evening - 7
p.m .. WednesdaY, Services · 7 p.m.

.BINGO
STATEMENT
OF
NONDISCRIMINATION
BUCKEYE RURAL
ELECTRIC COOPER·
ATIVE, INC., 4848
State
Route
325
South, P. o. Box 200,
Rio G111nde, OH 45874
Ia 'the recipient of
Federal
financial
allllllnCI from. lhl
Rural
· Utllltlea
Sarvlcaa (RUS), an
B1cky Ackerman
agency of the U.S.
1978-2002
of
Oepanmant
To become the
Agrlcullure, and Ia
aubfect to the provl·
perpetrator of
alana of Title VI of the
random acts of
Civil Rlghta Act of
kindness is to
1114, •• amanded;
become in some
&amp;action 104 of tha
Rehabilitation Act of
sense an angel.
1173, 11 amended;
for it means you
Age
the
have moved beyond Dlacrlmlnatlon Act of
1171, 11 amended;
the limits of your
end
the rulaa end reg·
daily human condi· ulatlona
or the U.B.
tion to touch winas Dtp~~nmtnt
of
Agriculture
which
with the divine.
~ Provldf that no per·
You did this,
ton. In the United
Becky with every- Stat.. on the bllala of
one you met. Your race, color, netlonal
origin, age or handl·
loving memories
111111 bll excluded
will never leave all C1J1
from panlclpltlon in,
the ones you
edmlaalon or accen
to, denied lhl bllntflta
touched.
of,
or othtrwlaa bt
in our hearts
aub)ected to dlacrlml·
Cundiffs &amp; Calls
nation under any of

Fll'!lt Baptiat Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow, 6th and Palmer Sl.,
Middleport, Sunday School- 9:1.5 a.m.,
Worship • 10:15 a.m .. 7:00 p.m. ,
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

HELP WANTED

One year ago today.

A heart of no compare.
A spi rit th at will
gluw forever.

FlrJt Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E. Lamar
O'Bryant, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 8:15a.m .. 9:4.5 am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Old Belllel Fre&lt; Will Boptist Chun:h

CLASSIFIEDS!

Your gentle touch.
Your tender care,
A s mile as bright as
sunshine .

Pomeroy Flnt BaptlJt
Pastor Jon Brockert, East Main St ..
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:30 a.m.

28601 Sl. Rt. 7. Middleport. Sunday
School · I 0 a.m., Evening - 7:00 p.m.,
Thunday Service5 • 7:00

of Becky

loday,

To me, forever.
Looking for
tomorrow.
Still Forever.
That day will
•
come,
There's no way to
deny;
And when it does
I will no longer cry.
For tomorrow is
forever,
and yesterday is
gone'
Love &amp; Miss ya,
Dad

Baptist
Hope B1ptbt Church (Southem)
570 Grant St., Midd!epon, Pastor: Rev.
David Bryan, Sunday school · 9:30a.m.,
Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.. Wednesday
Service - 7 p.m.
Rud1nd Flnt Bapdtt Churth
Sunday School • 9 :30 a .m., Worship •
10:45 a.m.

Bethlehem Baptist Churth
Great Be nd, Route 124, Racine, OH,
Pastor : Daniel Mecea, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Sunday Worship • 10:30 a.m .•
Wednesday Bible Study · 6 :00 p.m.

BANKING OPPORTUNITY

Shop the
Daily Sentinel Classifieds!

Liberty Alatmbly ol God

P.O. Box 467, Duddina Lane, Mason,
W.Va .. Pastor: Neil Tennant, Sunday
Services- 10~00 a. m. and 7 p.m.

March 8th 6:30 pm
1st pack $10.00
All packs after $5.00
Starburst $1,000
American Legion
Middleport
Meigs Co. Bikers
meetings 2nd Sunday at
10 am of ea. month.
Taking applications for
new members. Anyone
interested must attend
one of our meetings.
For info call

742-1513
HELP WANTED:
Construction Workers
General Laborers to skilled
workers. Local work
992-7953

•

Spaghetti Dinner
Saturday March 8, 2003
5:00 - 7:00 pm
Eagles Cub 2171

Pomeroy Westside Church of Christ
33226 Chi ldren's Home Rd .• Sund!lY
Schoo l - II a.m.. Wonhip • IOa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Homlot:k Gro•o Chrtotlon Chureb
Mlnlater: Larry Brown, Worddp • 9 :30

a.m.

Reed s~"ille t"ellowship
Churc h of" the Ntna rene. Pa ~ t or · TC rc~a
Waldeck , Su nday Schoo l . Y:.l O a.m ,
Worship- 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Wednesda y
Sc-1'\'ices - 7 p.m.

Middleport Cllurch of Cllrilt
5th and Main, Pastor: AI Hartson, Youth
Mini•ter: Bill Frazier, Sunday School 9;30 a.m., Worship- 8: 15, 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m., Wednesday Servicei • 7 p.m.

you lrt

Juet wtwre It the ._tlnatton? At tht and of Ita journey, thll pl1ytulllt1le 1tre1m could
haYI bKomf I mlglrty river. "But toiTHI tt'ljUI1111t1 .. l!l'elm,'' you NY·
A mighty rl~r II Crtllld from m1ny lltllt lt!'Hmt. With eech tolntng Utbutlry ,
m11nd1rlng ll,.tml beCDml pert or 1 mora powtrful force moving with purpo11
toward thelr'goel. That river might power home• or CAN)' goode lo 1nott. d"tlnlltlon.
Llkt the-llttlt 11rwm, IICh of Ul It e.peblt ot becoming part ot • more powerrut
Influence lor good, tor Qod 'e HouH It made up or many aout1 Jo ining to torm 1
1ptrttuet rtver which c1n flow through the community, lhl 11111, the ntUon, end
ultlmldely, the world. We r11d In John 7 :38 wherl our Lord dlcltr. ... . "HI who
Hllrlft In me, ae the 10rlp1ure h11 ntd, 'Out of hit 111art shall flow riven ot living

MillWork
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

992·3978
DIVII·Qulckll Ag1ncy Inc.

Mlzway Tavern

INSURANCE

Karaoke Weds. &amp; Fri.
Band Sat. March 8th
Rush Creek

Full line of

lnaurance
Producta +

Financial
ENCII!S Inc. Servicet

9·1

Bill Qulckll

882-4877

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667·3110

March 7th &amp; 8th

Pomeroy Eagles
Band Blue Jeans

•

S~ra('Use Church of the Nazarent
Pastor Mike Adkins, Sunday Sc hool - 9: 30
a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a .m., 6 p.m .,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church of the Nuarene
Pastor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9: 30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m ., Wednesday Ser•ices • 7 p.m.

Wllllf',"'

Won't you 1at God'• HouH be

Belrwallow Rld1e Churdl of Chritt

~our

dtlttnatton thlt s.bbath'l'

Pastor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Wonhip • 10 :30 a.m ., 6:30 p.m,
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43),
Pastor: Roger Watson, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m .. Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

1Uppen Plola Church ol Christ
Instrumental, Worship Service · 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m., s.,nday School 10: IS a.m., Youth- S:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Rutland, Sllnday Worship-10:00 a.m.,
Sunday Sel'\lice-7 p,m.

Worship - 9:30 a.m., Su nday School ·
10: 30 a.m., First Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. servic~

Danville Hollneu Churth
3 10S7 State Rout~ 32S. Langsvll~ . Pastor.
Gary Jackson, Sunday ~ehool • 9 :30a.m.,
Sunday wor1hip • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m .,
Wednesday prayer s~rvice- 7 p.m.

Tuppers Plain• Sl. Paul
Putor: Jane Beanie. Sunday School - 9
a.m., Worship · 10 a.m., Tuesday Sel'\lices
-7:30p.m.

Portllmd First Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: William Justis, Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m .,
Sunday Service - 6 :30p.m.

Centnl Cluster •
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Robinson.
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m., Worship ·. II
a.m., Wedne!lday Service~ · 7:30p.m.

Calvary Plla:rlm Chapel
Harri sonville Road, Pastor: Chillies
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship • 11 a.m., 7:00p.m .. Wednesday
Sendee· 7:00p.m.

or

Bradbury Cbun::b Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon, 39.558 Bradbury
Road, Middlepon, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.
Worship - I 0:30a.m.

Entr:rprise
Pastor: Arland King , Sunda y School - 10
a.m., Wor~;hip · 9 a.m .. Bible Study Wt..U.

Rose ot Sharon Hollness Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland, Pastor: Rev.

7: 30

Rutland Churth of Chri!Jt
Su nday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10;3 0 a.m., 7 p.m.

Dewey King, Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.,
worship -7 p.m.. Wedriesday
Sunday
prayer meeting- 7 p .m.

Flat"·oods
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worship · 11 a.m .

Bradford Cburth of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minister: Doug Shamblin. Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worsh ip . 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. : 7: 00
p.m., Wednesday Serv ices -7:00p.m.

l"ine Gro"e Blblt HoUness Churth
Jn mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunda y School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m .

•'omt Run
Pastor: Bub Robinson, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Hickory HIIL'I Church of Chrlit
- EvarJgelisl Mike Moore, Sunday St:hool •
9 a.m .• Worsh ip - 10 a.m .• 6:30 p.m.
WedneSday Services - 7 p.m.

Wesl£yaa Bible Holiness Churth
75 Pearl St .. Middleport. Pastor: Rev.
Doug .Cox, Sunday Worship • 9 :30 p.m .,
7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30 p.m

Reedsville Cllurch or Christ
Pastor: Philip Stunn, Sunday School: 9: 30
a.m., Wo~hip Ser~· ic e: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Churth
Rev. Mark Michael. Sunday School · 9:30
a.m.. Worship - 10:45 a. m.. 7 p.m ..
Thursday Rible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Dexter Church of Christ

Laurel Olft' Free Mdhodht Churth
Rev. Les Strandt and Myra L. Strandt,
Su nday SchOQI - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.,Wednesday Service
- 7:00p.m.

PMtor: Bill Eshe]man, Sunday school9:30
a.m ., No rman Will , ~ uperi ntendent.
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m.
Churtb of Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study ·
9:30a.m., Worship: 10:30 a,m. and 6:30
p.m., Wed~esday Bible Stu~ - 7 p.m.

Lutheran
StJohn Lutheran Church
Pine Grove, Worship · 9:00 a.m ., Surxlay
School· 10:00 a.m.

Church of God

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut ond Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va., Pastor: Da\'id Russell , Sunday
School· 10:00 a.m .• Worship · I I a.m .

ML Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine, Paslur: James
Sanerfield. Sunday School · 9: 45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m .• Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Chun:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St ., Pomeroy,
Sunday School - 9:45a.m .. Worship - II
a.m.

Rutland Churth or God
Pastor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p .m., Wednesday Sef\/ices - 7
p.m.

· United Methodist
Graham UnltfCI Methodist
Worship . 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun) . .
7:30 p.m. (3 rd &amp; 4th Sun ),Wednesd!ly
SeT'\' ice· 7:30p.m ,

Syracuse First Chun:h of God
Apple and Second Sts .. Pastor: Re\'. David
Russell, Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m.
Evening Services· 6:30 p.m ., Wednesday
Servictti- 6:30p.m.

Off l 24 behind Wilkesville, Postor: Rev.
Ralph Sp_ire~. Sunday School · 9:30a.m.,
Worship- 10:30 a .m.. 7 p.m., Thursday
Services· 7 p.m.
Meigs Cooperatlw P•rish
No nheast Cluster, Alfred , Pa sto r: l ane
Bealli~. Sunday School - 9 :30 a .m..
Worship - I t a.m .• 6:30p. m.

Congregational

Cht!lter
Pastor: Jane Beattie, Worship · 9 a.m.,
Sunday School • tO a.m . , Thwsday
Service&amp;· 7 p.m.

Episcopal
Grace Eplac:opal Church
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Rev. James
Bernacki. Rev. Katharin Poster, Sunday
School and Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph , Wor&amp;hip - 9 :30
a.m.
Sunday Scttool- 10:30 a.m.

Holiness

Lon1 Bottom
Sunday School • 9:30 a .m .. Worah~p •
10:30 1.m.

Commua.lty Chureh
Putor: Steve Tomek , Main Street.

Pomeroy

882-3785

Brogan·W•rner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Mlln
892·5130
Pomeroy

Since 1971

A•~e'l-4-o-•
';~.elf.4t ~~-•e

Pomeroy
P!lstor: Rod Brower, Worship . Y:3U a.m ..
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m .
Rock Springs
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9: 15
a.m .. Wors hip - tO a.m .. Youth
Fellowship. Sunday - 6 p .m.
Rutland
Su nday School - 9 :30 a.m ., Worship ·
10:30 a.m ., Thursday Servi ces· 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Mars hall. -Sunday
School · 10: 15 a.m .. Worship - 9: IS a.m..
Bible Study: Mon9ay 7:00pm
Snowville
Su nday Schoo l - 10 a.m., Worship · 9 a.m.
Bethany
Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler. Su nd ay School ·
10 a. m.. Worsh ip - 9 a.m.. Wedne sday
Services · 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sullon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rd s. Racine . Ohio ,
P..1stor; Dcwaync Stutkl", Su nday s~hool 9 :30a .m., Worship - 10:45 a.m. , Bibk·
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.
MomingStar
Pa stor: De wayne Stutler. Sunday School ·
II n.m ., Worship . 10 a.m.
East Letart
P.dstUf: Brian Harkness, Sunday Sc hvol 10 a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m., Wednesduy - I
p.m.
Racine
l'nstor: Hrian Harkness, Sunday Sc hool 10 a.m., Worship . II a.m., Wednesday 7
p.m.
Coolwtlle United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kl ine , Coo lville Church.
Main &amp; Fifth St.. Sunday Schoo l - 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m .. Tucsdny Services7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd.. 468C. Sunday School - 9
a.m. Worship . 10 a.m., Wedne sd ay
Services- 10 a.m.
Hotklna:port C_hurth
Grand Strtet. Sunday School · 10 a.m .,
Wor8hip . II a.m .. Wednesda~· Services 8p.m.
'forth Church

Other Churches
Community nt Chrisl
Porllnnd-R adne Rd .. Pastor: Mic hael
Duhl , Sunday School· 9:30a.m.. Wonhip
- 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Ser vices - 7:00
p.m.
· Bethel Worship Center
Chester Sch ool. Pa stor: Rob Barber.
A~sistant Pastor: Ka ren Davis. Sunday
Worship: 10 am, Evening Worship: 6 pm ,
Youth group 6 pm, Wednesday : Power in
Prayer , und Bible Study · 7 pm
Ash Street Church
Ash St. , Middleport" Pastor: Glenn Rowe,
Sunday Sc hoo ! - 9:30 a .m.. Morning
Worship - 10:30 a.m . &amp; 7 pm. Wednesday
Service . 7:00p.m .. Youth Service - 7:00
p.m.
Agapt Life Center
"Fu ll -Gospel C hurch", PasiOrs Joh n &amp;
Patly Wade, 603 St.-cood Ave. Ma~on, 7735017, Service tim e: Sunday 10: :\0 a .m..
Wednesday 7 pm
Abundant Grace R.F. I.
913 S. Third St. , Middleport, Pa~tor Tcre~a
Davis, Su nd ny s e rvi ce , 10 a .m ,
Wednesday scrv i ~;.-e , 7 p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bonom. Pastor: Ste\'e Reed, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m. Worsh ip - 9 :30 a .m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m .. Friday td low§h ip service 7 p.m.
The Belie,·ers' Fellowship Ministry
New Li me Rd .• Rutlaud, Pastor: Rev.
Margaret J. Ro bi nson . Ser\'ke s:
Wednesdily. 7:30p .m.. Sunday. 2:30 p.m.
Harrisonvlllt Community Churth
Pustor: The ron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday - I p m.

South Bethel Community Church
Silve r Ridge- Pastor Linda Da mewtllld ,
Sunday Sd1no l · 9 a.m.. Wunhip Ser\'icc
IOa .m.
Cerieton lnterdt'nominational Chun:tl
Kingsbu ry Road , PasttJr: Roben Vanl'c,
Su.lday Sehou l - 9:J \l a.m., Worship
Servi ce 10:30 a.m.. Eve nin g Service 6
p.m.
Freedom (lospel t\lis.o;lon
Hal d Knnl\_ 011 Co. IM 3 1. P;1~1&lt;w
Roger W1ll\urJ. Sund~y So.:h o•ll
Y:.\ 0

It,.,.

a m.
Wursh ip- 7 p.rn
Whlte'!i Chapel Wesleyan
Cool ville Road, Past or: Rev. Phillip
Ridenour, Sunday Sc hoo l · 9 :30 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a .m.. Wedn esda y Service
- 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible C hurch
Pa~ tor: Brian May.
Sundoy School · 9 :JO a.m.. Worshi p· 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study- 7:00p .m

Letart. W.Va. Rt. I.

Faith FeUowahlp Cruude for Christ
Pastor: Re v. Franklin Dicke n~ . Service:
Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Cu. Rd.. Pustor· Rev.
Blackwood, Sunday School - 9 :.m am ..
Woohip
HJ:JO
a.m..
7 :30 p.m..
Wednesds y Sen.' ice . 7:JO p.m.
Sth·ersvllle Community Churth
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell , Sunday S~rvi ces
- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p .m., Thursday - 7:00
p.m .
Rtjolclng Lift Church

SOO N. 2nd Ave., . Middleport, Pas1or:
Mike Foreman . Pastor: Emeritus
Llw rence Foreman. Worship · IO:OOam
Wednesd ay Services- 7 p.m .
Cllhon Tabernacle Churth
CliftOn. W.Va .. Sunday St·hool - 10 a.m ..
Worship - 7 p.m .. Wednesday Service - 7
p.m.

Nt'w Ufe VIctory Cenlu
3773 George s C reek Road, Galli poli s. OH
Pastur: Bill Staten , Sunduy Ser v i ce ~ - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp;
Yolllh 7 p.m.
Full Gosptl Chur&lt;.it of lite Lh·ing
Savior
Rt.338, Ant1quit y. Pastor: Jcs~e Morri s,
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.
S11lt'm Communi!)' Ch urch
Lie\'ing Rood, West Co lumbia. W.Va.,
Pastor: Ci)·de Ferrell, Sunday School 9 : ~0
am. Sunday even ing semce 6 pm.
Wedne~day service 7 pm
Hobson Christian •'ellowship Church
Pastor: Hl:!rschd White, Sun day Sch~l10 am. Sunda y Chll rl·h liervict!- 6:.l 0 pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Restoration Christian Fellowship
93fl5 Hooper Road, Athc:n~. PElstor:
Lonnie Coaa. Sundlty Wl)rsh ip 10:00 mJI,
Wednesday: 7 pm
Langsville C hrlstilm Church
Full Gospel, Paswr: Robert Mu ss~r,
Sunday School 9:30 ;~m, , Worship 10:10
am - 7:00 pm. Wednesday SerVice 7:QO
pm

Pentecostal

Middleport Cummunit)· Chun:h

:575 Pearl St., Middlepon , Pastor: Sam
Ander so n. Sunday School 10 a .m .,
Evening · 7:]0 p.m . , Wednesday Service ·
7:.l0 p.m.
Faith Valley 'IBbcmacle Church
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rc,·. Emmett
Raw~on, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.
SyracuS£ Mission
1411 Bridgeman St.. Syracuse, Rc\'. Mike
Thompson.Paslor, Sunday School - 10
a.m, Evening - 6 p m.. Wednesday Service
- 7 p.m.
Haot:el Cummunity Church
Grf Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Han , Sunday
Sc hool - 9: 30a.m .. Worship · 10:30 a .m ..
7:30p.m.
Uyesvillt Community Churrh
Sunday School . ·Y:30 a.m .. Wors hip IOJO t~.m .• 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Chun:h
Sunday school · 10 a.m ., Worshi p ·
a.m .. Wedne sday Service - 7 p.m.•

··

Pentecostal A11sembly
St. Rt. 124 , Racine, P&lt;t sto r: WiJJi;ijn
Hoback, Sund;~y School - 10 a.m.,
E\·en ing - 7 p.m .. Wednesda y Services .)
p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse First Unilt-d I'I'C'sbylerian
Pa~tur: Robc1t Crow. Wur~ h ip- II a.m.

Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Robert Crow. Worship · 9 a.m

Pt~s lor:

Middleport Presbyterian
Rober C row.. Worship - 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Snenth · DUJ Adl·emlst
Mulberry Hb . Rd .. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Law i n~ k y. S[lturdn~· Ser v i'-· c ~: Sal1bath
Schnol · 2 p.m .. Wor~ hi p • J p.m.

United Brethren
II

Failh Gospel Church
Long Bollum, Sunday School - 9 :.l0 11.111 .•
Worshi p - 10 :45 a. m .. I ]0 p.m ..
Wednc~ay 7 :30p.m .
Mt. Olive Communll~ Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School •
9 :30a.m., Evening- 6:30p.m., Wedneday
Service - 7 p.m.

Mt Hemwu Un ited Brt'thren
in Chri~l Chun·h
Texas Communi ty .~6411 Wickhi.lm Rd.
Pastor: Rnhc rt S:m&lt;k:r ~ . Sunday Sd1nu l 9: .1() u.m.. Worshi p · 10::- n a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wedne sday S!.! rvi ccs 7:00 r.111.
Eden United Hrethrtn in Christ
State Route 124. Rr cd~v ill c. Pa stor: Rev.
Bill Duty. Sunday Sc hoo! · II u.m.,
Sunda y Wonhip · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:UO p.m.
Wednesda y Sen· i c o: ~ • 7 :00 p.m .,
Wednesday Youth Sen · ice · 7 :00 p.m .

Full Goapel Llaftthoullt
3304~ Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Paslor. Roy

Hunter, Suriday School. 10 a.m.. Evc nina;
7:30 p.m., Tue•day &amp;: Thuuday • 7:30

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
PHARMACY
106 Btrm:RNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
POMEROY,OH 992·6454
Prescriptions
'Flowers for all occasions"
992·2955
Pomeroy

"So I strive always to keep
Let your light so shine before
mm, that they may see your my conscience clear before
174 Layne Street
good works and glorify your God and man."
........u.
(7 • . , . . . . . , .
Father in Heaven."
New Haven , WV 25265
Acts
24:16
James H. Anderson 304·882·8200
Matthew 5:16
Lloonsod Director Fax: 304·882-821 0

p.m.

Blessed are the pure Crow's Family Restaurant !/rturdS Florist
"FHturlng Kenluaky Fried [~ Mcig' Counly's Oldest Florist
i n heart,,fiOr th ey
Chicken"
~~352 Eaat Main
shall see God.
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy 11 ~ Pomeroy. Oh
Matthew 5 •8
'lot"' und "''" lhou(lot• •llh '"''''""'
992•5432
• '
740·8112·2844 740.882·8288

e. M1ln Strut

218 E. Second Pomeroy
740.882-3325
Marketing Pro_pcrty

Pearl Chapel
Sunduy School - 9 a.m .. Worship- 10 a.m.

MI. Olive United Methodist

Church of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160. Pastor: P.J .
Chapman , Sunday School · 10 a.m ..
Worship - I I a.m., Wednesday Services -

Ql';eaforb ·
1\eal e~tate

Minernillt
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday Schoo l · 9
un ., Worship - 10 a.m.

The Church of Jesus
Christ or L~ttter-Day Salnli
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 4~6-7486, ....
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m ., Relief
Society/Priesthood · II :05- 12 :00 noon.
Sacrament Service 9- 10 : 15 a.m ..
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. · 7 p.m.

Hartford Chun.:b of Christ In
Chrbtl1n Union
Hartford, W.Va., Pasmr:David Greer,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship ·
10:30 a .m., 7:00 p .m., Wednesday
Service§· 7:00 p.m.

212

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower. Sunday School · 9 :30
a. m.. Worship · 11:00 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Christian Union

Chester Chun:h or the Nazarent
Plilltor: Rev. Herbert Grate, Sunday School
· 9 :30 a.m., Worship· II 11.m., 6 p.m.,
Wedne sday Sen•i ces - 7 p.m.
Rutland Churth of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Lou is S. Staub~. Sunday
School - 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m ..
6:30p.m., We:=dnesday Services · 7 p m.

ZJon Church of Cbrt1t

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

The Racine American Legion
602 will be having a
HAM &amp; TURKEY DINNER
March 9
11:00 ·?
The public Is welcome

come

coot, eiNr WIW bUbbiH o..- pebbln 1nd atonn. The m.,- ta nowtng towtrd ...w.ll,

Keno Church or Chrilt
Wonhlp · 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School •
10:30 a.m., Putor-Jetfrcy Wallace, Is( and
3td Sunday

Trinity Chun:h
Second &amp; L}·nn. Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jack Noble, Worship 10:25 a.m., Sunday
School 9: IS a.m .

Church of Christ

Slug Shoot
Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Sunday, March 9th

Sunday Sc hool - 9 :30 a.m. , Worship.
10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m., Wednesday Services·
7p.m .

Wedm::sday 7 p.m.

161 Mulben-y Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898,
Pastor. Rev. Walter E. Heinz . Sat. Con.
4 :4~-5 : 15p.ni.; Mass- 5:30 p.m., Sun.
Con . -8:45--9:1.5 a.m... Sun. Mau - 9 :30
a.m., Dail~y Man-8:30a.m.

Middlepor1 C hurch ur the N~al.ilrelll!
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunda y St·h oo! 9:30a.m., Worship · 10: 30 a .m.. 6:30 p.m .,
Wednes da y Str\'ices · 7 p.m ., Pas tor ;
Allen Midcap

Mom•

7 p.m.

SKml He1rt C11hollc Churtb

Nazarene

Pomeroy Churtb of Christ
2 12 W. Main St. , Mini ~ ter : Anthony

SMond Bapdsl Chun:b
Ravenswood, WV, Pastor: David W.
McClain, Sunda~ Sc hoo l 10 am - ,
Morning worship II am Even ing · 7 pm,

Catholic

Co. Rd. 63. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .
Wotship - lO:JO a.m.

'

Sunda)' School· 10:30 a.m., Bible Study 7p.m.

'

1

ionoulftr'j
:11 re &amp;: ioafet!'
TOLWUI
11111 UIHII

Mll arace Is sufficient
for thee: for mll
strenath Is made
Perfect In weakness.

It Cor.

12:~

Office Service &amp;Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

�Friday, March 7, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com
Aum;

~rtbune

FOR SAlE

- Sentinel - Re tster.

Utility Bam, 14x20, 6 foot CRESS GREENS, You cut 1987 Pontiac Fiero GT. Av· 98 Ford Taurus SE, loaded, 2000 Honda 300EX, riden
side walls, loft, sky tt., 2x6 $6 00 bushel, already cut tomatk trans. Engine rebuilt asktng $4000, 88 Jeep very little A must see,
floor, $2500 (740)286·9621 $12.00 bushel Charles with less than 20,000 miles Grand Wagoner loaded, $3500 Call (740)446-1469

CLASSIFIED

r

McKean Farm, 556 Cente- Good tires, Interior good, needs some work, $2200
nary Road, Gallipolis, OH body good $3,000 obo (740)245-0372

(740)446-9442

leave message

(304)458·2551

I \ I&lt;' I ...,l 1'1'1 II '
Income Tax Special- 1994
,, I I\ I ..., I ( H j,
Block brick, sewer pipes,
1988 Dodge Aam, 314 ton Mercury
Tracer.
4dr. 1997 Marada MX-1 Sport
windOws, lintels, etc Claude ~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 53,000 actual miles, 1988
1
1
Wtth
tfQ
135
5
WintePB, Rio Grande OH
FARM
Astra van , 99,000 actual $ 99 00, 992 Ford Probe, 17 '1 0'
Caii74G-245-5121 .
"'~--miles, (740)446-6464
2dr, $1995 00, 1990 Ford Mercrulser Loaded excel.a;r,;.;;;.;;.;;:~;;,;;.--,.. ~---::cj\!UZZ""~i:;:,;,:._,l
Taurus. 4dr , $t500 00, lent cOndition , garage kept
PETs
1990 Oldsmobtle, 3800 en· 1993 Chevy Cavalier, 2dr, used 11ery little Tra1ter has
c.:a •• ~
Wantad· farm tractor, under g1ne, auta, ps, p b, atr, good $299500 1951!4 Ford As- spare ttre mounted AU for
FOR o3J\U!.
80hp &amp; small bulldozer, any t!res, (740)992 . 2866
plre, 2dr, $2995.00, 1990 $7,000 Call (740)446-2444
condttion, 888·888· 11 5 1
Ford Tempo, $1695 00, anyt1me or leave a mes·
8 week old, female Red
1993
Chevy
Corsica
LT,
six
1995 Chevy Cavalier, 2dr, sage
Oashound, has all shots,
LIVJ:SJUCK
cylinder,
original
owner,
$3595.00,
RIVERVIEW MO.
..., I H\ II I...,
great w/ kids Includes kensales-rep work car, regular TORS , 2 blocks above
nel $t50.oo oeo 304-875- - McDonald&amp;, Pomeroy, Ohio,
maintalnce.
1

riO

i

r

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
''
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
m:rlbune
Sentinel

To

Place
Your

V1sit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-ma11 us at:
classlfled@mydallytrlbune.com

Ad •••

7558 or 304·593-2732

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

Offtee lloar~
Monday th ru Friday
8:00 a.ITI. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ••.

r

1m"=====;;, L,ln_o_IIELP
__~_ANIEl

_ _.JIIliO HELP WANIED

"I In I&lt; I"

ANNOUNCF.\1ENTS

1 IIO

C-1 Beer Carry Out permtt
for sa le Chester Townshtp
M~tgs Cou nty, send letters
at Interest to The Datly
Sentinel PO Box 729·20
Pomeroy Oh10 45769

.....
Addressers wanted tmmad•·
atelyl No expenence neces·
sary Work at home Call

(405)447·6397

r

Coolvi lle, Oh 45723

9500 or (740)446·0088

(740) 667-3156
EOE·MIFIHIDV
LOST· Mens Setko watc h,
Saturday, 3-1·03 Wai-Mart
parkmg lot Call Ro n or
leave message (740)448·
7885

ATI N Pomt Pleasant
Postal post ttons Clerks/car·
ners/sor1ers No exp re·
qutred Benefits For el(am
salary, and testi ng mformatton call (630)393-3032 Ext
LOST- M1n1ature Doberman. 782 8am·Spm 7 days
male mtssmg s1nce Feb
25th
Ewtnglon
area Avon
A
Reward Any Info , call
epresentatlves
_
wanted {740)446·3358
{740 )
388 8604
AVONt All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
Sh.rley Spears. 304YARDSALE
675-1429

t

Bates Bros Amusement
074
Co IS loaktng for en thuslaS·
YARil S~I£PoMERU\IMIIli)LE I1C tnd tvtduals Spnng/Sum·
mer 2003 must be 17 or
older and able to tra11el
Ntce clothmg $1 a bag
weekly pay hvmg facthttes,
compute r much more 307
Season End Bonus contact
Spnng Ave , Pome1oy, Sat
us al 740-266-2950
1 0-4
Bu sy Phys1c1an otftce has
lmmedtate open1ng for Cer·
Tuppers Plams St Paul ltflcd Medtcal Ass tstant and
U M Ch basement sa te Aecepttontst w/medtca l cad ·
March 7 9 7pm. March 8 tng expertence Fax resume
9-2pm clothmg dishes to (304)675·37 13 or matl to
~;,;;:::~:.:;:;::.,._...., JR12 200 Mam Street.
Po1nt Pleasant, WV 25550

Local Home Health Agency

':!~:t;~' S©Rc~tn~\.-~£~s·
::::
ldltool
CI.AY R. ,OilAN _.;__ _ _ __
~y

Q Rearrange

(Careers Clo se To Home)

Call Todayl 740-446·4367,
1-600·214-()452
'lf'fffl

gall•pollscareercotrege com

r.-:rR
~e;:g:.;#~9~
0-Q~
5·.;t;;,
27;,o4;;B;..,..

luii

WANIID
To Do

24hr Road Serv tce. Tow1ng
and Manne and Auto Repair Low Rates (304)675-

7634

H I S R I

All real eatatelldvertlalng

In thla newapaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertiH "any
preference, limitation or
dllce"lmlnatlon based on
rece, coJor, religion , Hll
familial atatua or national
origin, or any Intention to

I I I' I
A L R. U T I:;:
Our new netghbors were newI I 15 ~ lyweds . The lady was so roiTlan-

I .j• .

. . , ... t1c she took the headlights off her
r --::0-N-D_U_C_J_-, ~~t~b~~~~ :~~and replaced them
6
l
1G Cornplete the ~:Muckle quoted
.

-----~--Pomeroy, spacious, 3 bed·
room , 1 bath large lot
$22,500 D1scount for cash
(304)837·7507 (740)709-

tl0064!tP------"-t
MOBilE HOMES

•

FOR SALE ;

I

Georges Portable Sawmrll,
don t haul your logs to the
m111 JUSt call 304~675· 19 57
Will Babysit $m per krd per
day M-Sal Only (304)675·
1346
Wtll pressure wash homes,
trar lers, decks, metal build·
lngs and gutters
Call

(740)446·015t ask for Ron

lNG CO recommends that
you do business with peopte
you know, and NOT 10 send
money through the mall until
you have investigated the
orferlnq

r:

N-oyes. $150; AKC (M)

OBO

1994 16x80 Cadtllac by
Carolton, CIA v1nyl &amp; std·
mg shm gled root , Completely turntsh8d $22,000

(740)256·6543
2001 14x80 Oakwood, 3
BA, 2 bath , all appliances
tncluded We II make dqwn
payment, you take over
payments of $370 m onth , or

buy !or $22,000 (216)351 7086 or (216)257-1485
87 14x70 Tidewell 2 BR, 1·
112 bath , $6000 (740)367·
0632
Blowout sa le on all Smgle
Sect1on hOmes save thou·
san ds gOOd unttl February

29 (740)446 3093

FORRFNf

It

3 bedroom, 2 bath , doublewtde between TP and
Reedsvrlle , TP-C water,
Eastem Schools, Call 502 ·
943-0386
3br house lor rent Park
Dnve No Pets (304)675-

(740)446-3945

GooDs

j

___

~~;!~~ 1

oo

FORRFNf

(740)44 1-t236

GENERATOR Kohler Volt·
Beaut1ful R1ver Vtew Ideal
Good used 141(70, 3 bed·
Trailer space for rent In Mtd· age 120/240, ' phase 1
For 1 Or 2 People, Referenroom, 2 bath Only $7995
dleport, (740)992·5858
AMPS Nat Gas .f!9, LP
ces, Depostt, No Pets, Fos·
Includes delivery, Call Ntkki
Gas 35, standby ratmgs
\li iH II \\ PI ' I
ter Tratler Park 74Q-441 ·
740-385·9946
KW!KVG Nat Gas 7 0, Lp
01 8 1
8 5 Automatic Controller
(304)675·4014
Hobart Gas Welder &amp; tools,
$1700, Onan Pro 4000,
Generator, $ 1500 1985
Dodge Aries &amp; 1987 Grand
AM · motor bad, good parts,
make offer
Givea waySpeed Que an dryer, dish-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repatred New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1-

5 4 Acre , Route 776 near

thll l'lewapeper Ire
aYIIIIbte on In tqUII

Scioto Elememtary School,

opportunity baNe.

Jackson, OH
(740)266-9621

Ranch, new roof, In Bidwe ll
area, shown by appoint·
ment, {740)742·2062
_ _.:__.:___ _ _ __
Nice home for Sate or
Rent ,
avatlable
now

Reduced

Kelvlnator freezer, chest,
like new, no ruat, call

$23,000.

~
Room;
FORRENf
1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $ 199/Mo , 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8 5%

APR For Listings, 600·3t9Price 3323 Ext 1709

1 · Bedroom

Apartments

(740)992·2261, 38"H·28"D·
42"L, price $200
'

Starting at $269/mo, Wash·

New &amp; Used Heat Pumpser/ Dryer Hookup, Stove - - - . , - , - - - - - Gas Furnaces. Free Eetl·
and Refrigerator (740)441· Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark males (7~0)446-&amp;308

1519

Chapel Road, Porter Ohio NEW AND USED STEEL
1740 ) 446 " 7 ~ 44 1' 877-830 ' Steal Beams, Pipe Rebar
Apartment Available Now
9162 Free Estimates, Easy

RtverBend Place, New Ha- llnanclng , 90 days same as
ven , WV now accepting ap· cash Visa/ Master Card
pllcatlons for HUD-subsl · Drive- • little save alot
8
dized, 1 bedroom apartment Utlllttes Included Call
(304)682·3 121 Apartm enl Used Furniture Store, 130
available for qualified se· Bulaville Pike We sell mal·
tresses, dressers, couches ,
nlor/dlsabled parson EHO
appliances, bedroom suites,
Grave manuNow Taking Appllcatlons- recliners
35 West 2 Bedroom Town- ments (740)446-4782 Gal·
house Apartments. Includes llpolls, OH Wanted to buy·
Water
Sewage, Trash , good used couches, mat·
$350/Mo , 740·446-0008
tresses, dressers

For Concrete. Angle Chan·
nel, Ftat Bar, Steel Grating
For Drai ns Driveways &amp;

Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam·
4.30prn Closed Tliursday,
saturday
&amp;
Sunday
(740)446-7300
_.:___ _ _ _ _ __
Set of 35 Inch mud tires
Rims Included GOOd Tread

$250.

(304)675-3534

or

(304)674·0022

by filling In the mlntng worda

yov develop from Sfep No

.3

b.low.

Amos nllls

740.et2.0309

ll"3fiAMB LE l ETfERS TO
q1 AN SW[P

Yesterday's

II

Congratulations! You ha11e
won 2 free mov1e l!ckets to
the Spnng Valley 7 Galhpo·
hs Can the Sentinel tor detatls (740)992·2 155)

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

Octave - Knack - Which - Blazer - LIVE on NOW

After look1ng at hiS pay check one fellow s1ghed , "The
good old days are the days you looked forward to earnIng the salary you can't po$sible LIVE on NOW"

Quality lendmg for good or
bad cred•t We can help
busmess, personal, auto
and
debt consohdat1on

1·866·803·9185
prompts)

(follow

David's Home Repair
ElectriCity, Plumbrng, Parnt-

lng, We Do
(740)44 1·5707

All

II

High 8l. Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Htland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Bhertn Bile of Real
Eatlte Stele of Ohio,
Melga County
Jllfrey C. Harrla, 11
II., Plalntltll
VI
Dele Hill, akll Dale
Htll, Jr.
alul Dele W. Hill, Ill,
et al., Defendllnte
Cau No.: 01 cv 138
Pui'8Uant lo an Order
of Bile In tile abov•
entitled acllon, I will
offer lor aale at public
auction,
AT
THE
COURTHOUSE
STEPS, 102 EAST
SECOND
STREET,
POMEROY, OHIO, on
Tnureday, March 20,
2003, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following rul
eatate:
PARCEL ONE:
Situated In tile State
of Ohio, County of
Malga, Townahlp of
Lebanon, Township
TWo(2)North; Range
Eleven (11) Weal,
Section Thirty lour
(34) and a part of Lot
Number 1182, being
more
particularly
do1crlbed 11 fol·
lowa:Belng tile •urface only of the following:
Commencing at a
atone at tha north·
weal corner of Lot
1182; thance aaat
along the north Una
of uld lot, a distance
of 1100.60 feet to a
point where the north
line of aald lot Inter·
aech the center of
State Route No. 124;
thence leaving aald
north line along the
center of aald road,
Iouth 83 degree• 38
mlnutea eaat, a dla·
lance of 251.60 feetto
a point; thenca conllnulng along the can·
lor of aald road,
lOUth 81 degi'MI 45
minutes
a dla·
tance of 338.70 teet to
a point; thlnca conllnulng along the center' of a aid road,
lOuth 72 degi'MI 10
mlnutea -1. a dlatance of 125.00 feet to
a point; thenca con·
llnulng along the cen·
ter ol 11id road,
eouth 87 clegr•• 03
minutia - t . a dll·
IInce of 534.80 feet to
the place of begin·
nlng for the herein
ducrlbed tract of
land; thence continuIng along tile cenhr
of uld road, aouth 17
dlgreea 03 mlnutea
1111 a dlat1nc1 of
312.00 1111 to 1 point
on the aut line of the
80 acre tract of land
conveyed
from
Joahua and Sarah
Spanoer to Freel and
l!dna Wilcoxen ••
deacrlbed In Diad
Volume 120, Page 172
of the Died Recorda
ol Metga County,
Ohio; thenca south,
along uld Hat line a
dletanca of 104.20
IN! to 1 poet II lhl
aouth•at comer of
aald 80 acre tract;
thence walt, along
tile aouth line of uld
80 acre tract, a dl a-

lance of t1U51Nt to
I pool II the lOUth•
Hat corner of a 33.7
acre tract of land now
or formerly owned by
Ronald and Hlidll Hart
aa dlacrlbld In Died
Volume 216, Page 703
of
aald
Deed
Recorda;
thence
along Hart's 1111 line,
north 22 clegreea, 12
mlnutaa eeat, a dislinea of 276.80 teet to
1 post; thlnca contln·
ulng along Hart'a line,
north 48 clegreea, 45
mlnutea weal, a distance of 28.00 feet to
a point; thence leavIng Hart's line, north
34 dagraea, 38 mlnutaa, 30 uconda aul
a dlatanca of B28.38
!eel to tile placa of
beginning, containIng fourteen and thirhundredtha
teen
(14.13) acres, more or
leas.
Subject to ea...
menta ol all legal
highways and utili·
Ilea.
SAVE
AND
EXCEPT the coal
underlying
aald
premise&amp; and right to
mine the same.
Baing a part of the
uma premlua con·
vayed !rom Joahua
M. Spencer and Blrah
Spancar to Fred Dye
Wilcoxen and Edna
Faye Wilcoxen by
diad dated o-nber
22, 1919, and record·
ad December 29,
1919, In Died Volume
120, Page 172 of the
Deed Recorda of
Melga County, Ohio.
Tnla deacrlpllon
waa written Auguat
29, 1979, by William
C. Jewttt, R~t~latei'ICI
Surveyor No. 575B,
from exlatlng plata
and dlada and dOll
not rapreunt a field
aurvey.
EXCEPTING 3.00

lor 338.70 feet to 1
point; tllenoe contln·
ulna along center of
road S 72 cleg.- 10' E.
for 125 feet; thence
continuing along center of road S. ~ dlg03' E. for 534.80 IN!
to a polnl; the true
placa of beginning of
the herein dlecrlbld
parcelolland;lhlnca
continuing along the
center of State Route
1248. ~ cleg. 0.03' E
tor 180.0 feel; !hence
29 dig. - 00'
218,8 teet; thence
Weal
87.5
feet;
thence South for
291.7 teet: thence
Weal for 375.95 feet;
thence N. 34 dig •
35' 30" E. for 572.2
feet to the place of
beginning, contain·
lng 3.00 acrea, more
or 1111, according to
a aurvey of February
20, 1960, by Wealey
A. Buehl, reglatered
surveyor, Ohio No.
5965 aubleot lo all
eaeementa of legal
hlghwaya and utiliIlea.
Alao being a part of
the aame premlaea
conveyed by deed,
Volume 275, Page
885, Melga County
Died Recorda.
Subject to the
eaumenta of a111111a1
hlghwa'il and utili·
,.... Being a part of
the aame premlaes
conveyed
from
Joahua M. Spencer
and Sarah Spencer to
Fred Dye Wilcoxen
and
Edna
Faye
Wilcoxen by deed
dated December 22,
1818, and recorded
December 29, 1919 In
Died Volume 120,
Page 172 of tile Died
Recorda of Melga
County, Ohio.
Seve and except
the coal underlying
aald premlaea and
tile right to mlna the
ume.
Reference Deed:
Volume 11, Page 503
of tile Melga County
OftiCIII Recorda,
Thla deacrtptlon
tumlehed by WNiey
A. Buehl, Rlgllt11ntd
Surveyor.
Perce!
One
1ppral1ed
II
1221,000.00 end 01n·
not be eold lor Ilea
then two·thlrda of
that emount. Pei'CII
lncludea
all
ona
Improvement IXCIPI
tile green hollll.
Parcel
Two
appr111ed
11
end can·
not be aold lor 1111
than tWO•Ihlrdl of
thlt amount.
TIRMI OF SALE:
llch par011 ahall be
aold Hpalltaly, and,
at lhe conclualon of
HCh Hparlta Ull, I
third 1111 ahall be
conducted by the
Bherlll
with
the
beginning bid equel
lo the aum of the two
uparate ulea, It, but
only If, 1 bid Ia
recalved
by
lhl
Sheriff IX~Ing tile

aum of the IWO IIPI·
rate ulea, then the
property lhlll be IOid
to the bidder aubmltllng tile hlgheat bid.
It, on the other hand,
no bldl In exce11 of
llle aum of the bide
!rom the oeparate
ulea are received by
the Sherlll tor the
aale of bolh proper·
t111 together, then the
IUCCeaaful blddera
from the two eeparate
ahall
be
aalea
deemed the IUCC811·
lui blddlra.
Purchaaer of each
parcel
ahall
ba
required to depoalt
the sum of $3,000.00
for each parcel, or
$8,000.00 for both
pai'CIIa, In thelorm of
caah, certified check
or money ordlr al the
time of tale, balance
due wllen deed Ia
dlllvei'ICI.
Ralph E. Trusull,
Sheriff
James S. Huggins,
AHomey
(2) 28, (3) 7, 14

of Section 33, Town 3,
Range 11, said road
10 begin al the aaat
aide of aald d90 acra
lot and running In a
aouthaaaterly diraclion along a ridge to
lnteroact the county
road nur 1 home lor·
merly owned and
occupied by John
German.
PARCEL NO. 2:
Baing In Section 34,
Town 3, Range 11 ,
Ohio
Company's
Purclleu. Beginning
II lhe northeaal corner of the Southwest
Quarter of said sec·
lion; thence aouth on
lhe line between said
German and Park,
100 rods to a post;
thence Weal 14 rods
and 19 links 10 a post
on tile eaat bank of a
run; thence North 100
rods to a post; !hence
East 17 rods and 9
links to the place of
beginning, containIng 10 acres.
PARCEL NO. 3:
Beginning at the
northeael comer of
the
Northwest
Quarter of Section 33,
Town 3, Range 11,
Ohio
Company's
Purchase;
thence
Well 30 rods 10 a
stake; thence South
122 rods 10 a corner;
lhence Eaat 30 rods

"''•li

acres, more or la11,
conveyed to Ellla
UcMIIIMI and Phyllla
McMillan by d11d
dllted bch 24,1180,
and being recorded In
Volume 277, Page 778
of the Melga County
Died Recorda.
Reference DHd:
Volume 332, Page
528, Melga County
Dead Recorda.
PARCEL TWO:
Slluated In the
State of Ohio, Mltga
County,
Lebanon
Townalltp, T4•N, R•
11·W, Section 34 and
1 part of 180 Acre Lol
No. 1182 and being
further bounded and
dlecrtbld 11 loftowa :
Commencing 11 1
atone
11
lh•
NorthwHt corner of
Lot t112; tllenoa eaat
along north line of
uld lot • dlallnce of
1100.80 1111 to 1 point
where the north line
lntariiCII thl center
ol State Route 124;
thence elong the cen·
llr of uld roed S. 83
dig. • 3e"E a dlatanca
of 251.60 1•1 to 1
point; tllence contln·
ulng along canter of
road S, 81 dig- 45' E.

•u.ooo.oo

SHERIFF"&amp; SALE·
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 02·
CV-GM
FARM CREDIT SERVICES OF MIDAMERICA, FLCA, at

al

VI
ROBERT E. BURDINE, at al
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In ptl111uant to an
order of aale lo me
directed from uld
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expoae to aale at
public auction on the
alepa of the Melga
County Court Houu,
1 DO Eaat Second
Streel, Pomeroy, OH
45789, on April 17,
2003 11 10:00 o'clock
a.m. of ule day, the
following deacrlbed
reeleatate:
Situate
In
the
Townahlp
of
Lebanon, County ol
Melga and State ol
Ohio:
PARCEL
NO.
1:
B~t~lnnlng
11 the
eouthelat corner of
the
Southwut
Qulrllr of Section 34,
Town 3, Range 11,
Ohio
Company'•
Purahaae;
thence
North
111
rods;
tllenoe Wast 81 rode;
thine• South 111
Rode; thenoa E1at to
tile place of begin·
nlng, containing 10
1crea excepting 10
ICrll OUI Of lhl
northllll corner and
8 acrea out of the
northweat
cornar.
Alao, a p i - of land
20 feet wide lor the
purpoae ol 1 road or
outlet from the 10
acre lot formerly
owned
by
John

German,

dec1111d,

and 111uatact In the
IOUihWIII one-forth

Pomeroy Eagles

BING02171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
GetS FREE

The
Daily
Sentinel

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

740-992·5232

Buy $5.00 Bonanza

PUBLIC NOTICE

w.

TFN

1119

PUBLIC NOTICE

s.

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

~'R~

1999 Chevy 5-1 0, 4 cylln·

PUBLIC NOTICE

••t.

8Q0-537-9526

dwllllngl •dvartlted In

(740) 992·2222 or
(740) 446-101 8

Uncondtt1onai lifetime guarantee Local references fur·
mshed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Baseme nt
Waterproofing

PUBUC NOTICE

w.

washer (740)446-7556
Thle newepill)er wltt not
knowingly accapt
•dvartiHmenta for r. .l
..tate which le In
violation of the law. Our
ruder• are hereby
Informed th1t 111

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

j

~----•QUtS

t

back to work
For more tn format1on ,
call Gall1a Me oos
Commumty Aclton
Agency

1990 Ford Ranger XLT, C&amp;C General Home Mamte·
longbed, 2.3 liter, 4 cyl, bed- nence· Painting, vmyl s1dUner,
5
sp,
$1 ,0:00, 1ng, carpentry, doors, wtn·
(740)949-2249
dews, baths, mobrle hOme
repair and more For lree
estimate call Chet, 740-992-

with 181 Bhols &amp; wormed; Dam Is Champion Hill Lucy -1999--i-a-ur-ua_S_E_B_Iac...,...k-.-XI-, 2000 Dodge Dakota 4X4
Cl 108, $1050 (304)895- Tan leather lnt , loaded 1 sport, V-8, Magnum, 5Parents on premises. Beau·
apeed, A/C, Tonneau cover,
llful
puppies,
$300, 3808
owner 875"3e07 after Spm, bed mal, 84K miles, asking
(740)441 ·1289
Two
stud horses, both
gray, for $1000, nol blOke. 2001 Chevy Cavalier, 2 $13,500 OBO. Negotiable.
(740)258·8003. Call after door, aulomatk:, oveidrlve, Call 17~0)245·5347
AKC Female Psklngeae, B!&gt;m
CD player, apollor, Melalltc
$2SO (740)448·1000 leave
blue, 4 cylinder, 32mpg, 2001 Fold Ranger V-8 En·
mtsuge.
M,ooo mllaa, $8500 OBO
glne, S·IP tranamlsslon
- - - - - - - - tO,OOO miles. Brand New.
2002 Ponllac Clrand Am SE, $8,800. (304)875-335&lt;1
AKC Aeglalarad Baaean
2 doof, automatic, Monsoon
Hound
Pupa,
shots,
•teroo. eunroof, loaded
YANiwns&amp;
wormed , parents ~m pram·
aiSOO
POLICE IMPOUNDS! Melalllc green In color. CIT ~~---...
--~--.,1
lsea. (740)258-8887 $300 Hondaa, Chovya, etcl Carol appearance
package,
fomllaa, $250 males,
Trucks from $500.
For 31,000 mlloa, Mull aaal 1995 Mercury VIllager, 7
paaaenger Mini Van, A/C,
- - - - - - - - - llallnga 1.SOQ.7t9-3001 ext. $9600 (740)441 ·tM7
Power windows &amp; seat,
Female Ferret 8 mon old 3901
'91
Plymouth
Clrand
Voyog·
cruise,
1111, rear A/C and ra·
great w/ kids and other pets,
er,
f85K
mi.
Newer
3
3
modlo,
Excollenl
Condition
1987
buk:k
Century,
ona
lncludea cage &amp; suppllae
transmission (740)446-8857
$100. OBO 304-875-7558 owner, 4cy, auto, Excellent tor and
Condition. $1500 (304)675- $1250 OBO Ask for Juon.
or 304·593·2732
(304)674-4824
6325 8am-8pm,
.:_..:._______ 2001 Chevy Silverado Z71 ,
U
_K_C_R_e_g_
, -E-n-gllsh_C_oo_n 1987 Oodgs Van, $1800; 95 Pontiac Grand-Prix, 2 4x4, King Cab, 4-door,
Dog pups, 9wka old, $100. 1980 Chevy Cavalier, $7SO, dr , V·6, At, $3900. 304· leather, AIC, AT, PB, PW,
PL, $21 ,500 (740)288·9621
Each, (304)576-2505
(740)2$8·1102 Ask for Jr.
773-5098

llj

~Get Your Money's Worth"
at Coles Mobtle Homes, St
At 50 East of Athens Dehv·
ertes, set-ups, exca11at1ng
foundatiOns, sewage sys·
tern s, drrveways , healrng
and cooling along wrth parts
and seNtee You should ac·
capt nothmg less Smce
1967 we are Cole's Mob1le
Homes whe re you "Get
Your Moneys Worth"
(740)367-0632

FOR SAlE

Cellular

help getting

der, 5-speed, loaded, very 8323.
wash bay 1-740-446-4710 cylinder, keyless entry, clean $7000 (740)448· Custom Building &amp; Aemod·
eUng, Free Est1mates, tor A.ll
leather seats, CD, cassette, 2316
Your Home Repair and Aa·
AKC Chocolate Lab Boyal 8 Reg Artilus Bull Born 2·18· (740)448·9287
total, 8 weeks, vet checked 99 Sire lo 8on u Sando 596
modeling Needs, (740)992·

Gracious ltvmg 1 and 2
ANn
bedroom apartments at VII·
,J
lage Manor and Rl11erslde - Apartments •n M1ddleport. Buy or sell Aivenne Anti·
From $276-$346 Call 740- ques, 11 24 East Matn on
992· 5064 Eq1,.1al Housmg SA 124 E Pomeroy, 7402404 or (304)675-4655
Opportunities
992-2526 Russ Moore,
owner
4br House 1n New Haven
Everythmg wtthtn walktng North Fourth A11e , Middle - ~~~~----~
dtstance
$495
month port. 2 bedroom furnished
$350 Deposol (304 )882· apartment. deposrt &amp; reler- ____ !YIU("-1[-.!~..,r. •
ences, no pets, (740)992·
3652
0165
30 rnch Crosley Electric
Two houses for rent- 3 BR,
Range, $50 (740)446·2316
1 bath, mce, pnvate- $475, Pleasant Valley Apartment
3 BA, 1 bath , ft replace, Are now takmg ApplicatiOns Almost new pool table w/all
close to town- $550 Refer· for 28A, 3BA &amp; 48R., Appll - balls, 5 cue st1cks, cue storences and deposit reqwred caltons, are Wk,en Monday age stand $1;75. (~4)675Pl ease call Wiseman Real thru Friday, from 9 00 AM· _
4.;.,31...;9_ _ _ _ _ __
Esta1e at (740)446·3644
4 PM Off1ce ts Locate d at Baby trams, household
1151 E11ergreen 011ve Po•nt Items, furniture (304)675·
MOBILE HOMES
Pleasant, WV Phone No 1s
2801 _ _ _ _ __
FORRFNf
(304)675·5806 E H
=c.:_
B•g Stoker Coal Furnace,
2 bedroom mobile home Tara Townho use Apart· B1g Propane furnace with
$375 per month plus one ments Very Spacto s, 2 sJuct\.._work, $225 for both
month depostt , water, sewer Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, r (740)286·6522
and
garbage
tncluded, 1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted, BURN Fat, BLOCK Crav(740)949·2217 7am-10pm
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa- 1ngs, and BOOST Energy
tto, Start $3851Mo No Pets, L~e You Have Ne11er Ex2 bedroom tratle r on Ash
Lease Plus Security Deposit pertenced
Street across from balllteld
Required Days 740·446·
WEIGHT· LOSS
m Mtddleport, $300 per
3461. Evemngs 740·367REVOLUTION
month plus deposit, no pets 0502
New product launch Octo740-992·5073 or (740)992·
ber 23. 2002 Call Tracy at
5443
Twm R1vers Tower IS ac- (740)441-1962
2 BA, $245 month , mcludes ceptmg applications for Complete set ol Galha Co
water
$100
depOSit watl1ng ltsl for Hud·sub· mtlk bottles, also from
stzed, 1· br, apartment, call
(740)446·3617
Metgs &amp; Mason counttes, 40
675·6679 EHO
plus, wtll sell as set only
2 BR. 2 ba th $275/mo +
Call
after
9
pm.
SPACE
depos tt
&amp; 1references

r

You could be
for FREE

IMPRoVEMENTS

excellent (740)533-3670

preference, llmlteUon or
dlscrlmln1tk»n "

(740)256·6433

::~

SPORI1NG

L,-------,1
~

.ALLtB

eligible

HOME

(740)992-3490

j

(740)949·2700

Blue Merle Collie, 8 months, 5 hllf·Holoteln beef heifers
N-oyes, $150; (740)696- to calve March 2003, $600 1996 5·10 ex1ended cab,
each &amp; 1 registered Angus LS, 88k, one owner, $4395;
1085
bull, 2 yrs old, proven sire, 1995 Grand Am, 99k,
$1000, (740)949·2452 BVB· $2895, 1996 Contour, 109k,
AKC chocolate and yellow n~gs, 74()..949·2453 days
$2495, 14 olhero In stock,
lab puppies British heacta,
COOK MOTORS
(740)446-o103
heallh guaranteed. Born Boarding, Training, Condl·
2·5·03. $400 (304)372· tlonlng, Indoor and Outdoor
riding tacllltlee, trails and t998 Olda Cutlaaa GLS, 8
4642

2 bed room house m Rut- BEAUTIFUL
APART- 45 CoU Anaconda a• barrel
land. $300 per month, $200 MENTS AT BUDGET PRI· Excellent
Condition
depostt
references re· CES AT JACKSON ES· (304)875-5596 call after 5
qu~red. (740)992.0309
TATES, 52 Westwood Onve
from $297 to $363 Walk to Jug's JA Pt tchtng Mach1ne.
2, 3, and 4 Bedrooms unites shop &amp; movtes Call 740· Softbal l only and net
available PomeroyiMiddle- 446-2568 Equal Houstng $1250 (304)875-7362
portiRactne area. Immediate Opportumty
Remlnglon 30-06 Deer Rl!·
occ upancy Hud approved,
lie 700 Series Bdl bushnel
pets allowed no depostt opBeech St Mtddleport, 2 3x9 scope. $450. (304)675·
bon Lv Msg
bedroom fu rn1shed apart· 3534 or 1304)674·0022
1·800·340·8614
ment, ubllttes paid, depostt Wmchester Model 12, 16
3 bedroom house 1n Mtddle- &amp; references, no pets, GA , 30 ~ Full, Solid Rtb,
port. still a11allable. garage, (740)992·0t85
Ra re
Barrel
Length
large out butldmg, no pets,
$1,700 , Al so Reming ton
$375 plus deposot, 279 Furnished eff1ctency All utt l· Model 11, 5-s hot Automatic,
~;~:dway 51 , (740)992- tttes patd share bath, $135 16 GA , 32" Full $1 ,200, or
month , 919 2nd Avenue Both tor $2,700. 8olh guns

, :..:.:..:._______

1989 Clayton Westwmd
2BR, W/0 hookup range
refngerator &amp; electrrc fur·
nace Located on a re nted
lot a 641 La ke Dr, Rto
Grande 7 m1nutes walk to

campus $10,000
(6t4)2t4-5151

1r

APARIMENIS

make any auch

deck
Only $124,900
INOTICEt
(740)44t ·1312
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Must sell- 3 bedroom

I I I I I'

(740)985-4291 , work 740·
446-7267

Will trim trees and remove Debbie Drive, GatUpolls 3 Ohio River Property, 15
2
baths, acres MIL with approx
debris lrom Ice damage. bedrooms,
Reaaonable
rates . $129,000 Call (740)245· 1,000 Ft River Frontage
9288
Mason Co WV, ApproK 2
(740)446·7983
In lown- 3 8R, 2·1 12 bath, miles from New Haven
Homestead Bend Broker,
brick ranch, excellent condl·
tlon Quiet neighborhood,
lnground poet, new fence &amp;

UNOREN

.

Golllpolls Career Collage

FORRFNf

New home- 4 bedroom, 2
bath, hvtngroom , fam ily·
room, dtntng room den
mode m kitchen, 2 car ga·
rage, hp, all electnc, wtthm
walking dtstance Pomeroy
Golf Course, 3 acres ,
$1 18,000,
ca ll
Susan

Ir

TRAINING

or leave message

letters of the
four Kramb Jed words be·
lo w to form four simple word.s

•

FOR SALE

(740)441·6617

RUSIN~Ni

H&lt;JUSES

HOMES.

r

seek mg Certtlled Nurse
Atde s and Home Health
Atde s We slll tram Compet1t1ve wages Immediate
opentngs Most hours are
between 8-5, some week·
end and even1ng work
Full·t1me recept1on1sV sales/ reqUired Apply at 859 Thtrd
aff1ce ass tstant needed, Avenue m Gallipolis Family
Absolute Top Dollar U S good people Sk.III S baSIC Semor Care
Stiver Gold Co 1ns Proof· com puter sktlls Hourly rate
sets
Diamonds
Gold plus commlss1ons and bo- Ntted $$ For The Spnnq??
Rtngs
US Currency nuses Apply at The Image Local Company Now Hmng
M TS Cotn Shop 15 1 Sec Gallery, 11t0 Jackson Ptke Flexible Schedulrng , Posi and Avenue, Gallipolis 740 Gallipo lis , OH (740)446- tions Available lmmedtately,
7494
446·2642
1-688-974-JOBS

.

It

MONEY
TO LoAN

Second Chance F1nanctal
NURSES (RNa)
$47 00
p13r
hour, Looking for a Second
Jackson Metgs Treatment
Alternattves to Street Cnme Columbu s, OH All Units, Chance for borrowtng mon·
Program (TASC) One (1) FULL TIME (600)437-0346 ey or re·estabhsh1ng credtt
full·ltme posrt1on Compett·
We can help Good or bad
ttve salary and co unty em· Server, luii·Ume Appty 1n credtt accepted Call toll
ployee beneftts Bachelor's person at the Holrday Inn Free 1-866-576-4685 Follo w the prompts
degree 1n soctal work or Galllpolrs
eq utvalent education/ expe·
rrence Certified Chemtcal T he Mason County Com·
Dependency
Counselor m1sslon Is now accepting
(CCOC) or L1censed Soc1al applications lor the posltton
Worker (LSW ) preferred of Dog warden Application
TURNED DOWN ON
Valtd
dnver 's
license f orms can be obtamed In
R E SPO NSI81LIT1ES: the Mason County Commis- SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
Screenmg,
Assessment , Sion office on the ground
1·686·582·3345
Re ferral Case Manage· floor of the courthouse be·
I&lt;I \I I ..., I \I I
ment, Montton ng. and Ran· tween the hours of 8·30 and
dom Unnalys1s for court re· 4 30 Monday through Frt· ji;i;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
10
~
ferred substance· abusmg day
adu lts Send resumes to G· Applications will be accept- ..____
FOiiRiliiSiiALEiiil'--"
J-M TASC,
P0
Box ed th rough the end of the ---,
88 Gallipolis, OH 45631 day on Friday, March 7,
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
fax to (740)446·7894 2003
or
lor 1mmedtate po ssession
by March 14, 2003 EOEIAA The Mason County Comall wrlhrn 15 mtn of downEmployer
mtsston 1s an equal opportu- town Galhpohs Rates as
n ity employer and does not low as 6% (740)446-3218
Oomtnos Now Htnng all lo- discriminate due to race
cattons PI Pleasant, Galllp- sex, creed, relt g1on, or na- 3 Bedroom newly remodoils, &amp; Pomeroy Safe dnv· ttonal ongtn
eled, tn Mtddleport, ca ll Tom
ers, must be 18 Apply 111 John D Gerlach
Anderson alter 5 p m
Administrator
person at locat1ons
992·3346
-~------- Mason County CommissiOn
3 bedroom 1 bath, 2 stoty
F!T X-Ray Tech, stratght
home
m Pomeroy, 1 car gadays no weekends or hall· Trash hauler m ust have
days Appty m person at the COL license Knowledge of rage , fireplace, (740)992·
Medtcal Plaza. 936 State G aiha County area. Night 9492
Route 160 GaUrpolrs
,shift (740)388·9686
3 bedroom, tlath &amp; a half,
ltvrngroom ,
large
" Care givers Need· Truck Drivers Immediate krtthen/dmrng room,
Foster
utility
ed Become a therapeutic h1re. class A COL requtred,
room, attached garage,
foster care gtver You wtll be exce llent pay, expenence fenced back yard , one acre
Earn up to
Retmburse $30-$45 a day reqUired
land on SA 124 near new
lor the care of chtld rn your $1,000 per woek,Gall 304· schoot, Reduced , $50,000,
home. Training wnt begin 675-4005
(740)992·3911
January For more informaBEDROOM
HOME
tion call Casts Therapeuhc Wanted LPN or Med•cal Of- 4
Care gtvers Network, Alba· ftce Ass1stan t for Phystctan 4 bath Only $14,900 Wont
ny, Oh toll free 1-877·325· Offrce Must hav&amp; c urrent II· last! For listings call 1·800·
cense or cerbflcate, reltable 719·3001 Ext F144
1558
transportation and Bl(pen·
Beautiful 312 home 1n pn·
Great Opportumtyl Earn ence wllh computer skills
vale Charolats Lake on 3
No
weekends
or
holtdays
what you are worth workmg
acres m/t Many extras
!rom home Bonuses patd Fa )( resume to (304)675Must Seel (740)441-0381
all qualtfy Send SASEI Em- 7800 or matl to CLA 572
c/o
Gallipolis
Daily
Tnbune
ptre USA, 762 Cap Lane
Bnck Ranch 2 bedroom 2
P 0 Box 469, Gallipolis, bath garage on rtver, 5
Columbus, OH 43085
OH 4563 1
mtles south ol Gallipolis
Help wanted ca rmg for the
elderly, Darst Group Home
now paymg mm1mum wage
new shifts 7am·3pm, 7am·
5pm 3pm 11pm, 11pm7am call 740-992-5023

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallyreglster.com

POLICIES: Ohio V•llay Publlahlng .....rv•• the right to edit, relecot. or c~~ncel a ny ad at 11r1y time. Errore muat be reported on the flrat ctey of
I
Trlbun•S.ntlnef..Rqlater will 1M reaponalbla lor no mo... then the coat ol the apace occupied by the error end only the tire! lneertion. We ehlll not be
any ION or exptnn that r. .ulta from the publication or omi... lon of en •dvertlnment Conec:tlon wm be made In the flret evelleble edition. • Box "';;~':,:~~;~
ere arwe~e confidentlll. • Current rete c.rd eppUee. • All reel eallte edvertl ..mente ...., aubj-=1 to the Federel Felr Houelng Act of 19&amp;8. • Thll r
1ccept1 only help wanted eda meeting EOE 1tenderd1 We will not knowingly accept en~ advertlelng In violation of the law

IIF.LP'WANfEI&gt;
CASE MANAGER: Galloe·
I-~-------'

-------Are you mterested tn becoming a ded1cated ca re
I, Stacey Barker, w1l1 no g111er? SCen1c H1ll s Nurs1ng
longer be responstble for Center IS now accepting apany debts mcurred by my piiCattons for our Nurse s
husband
Charles
A Atde Class Start ing March
Barker, as of March 7 9th Thrs class ts free of
charge 1t ts and 11 day
2003
course held here at Scemc
Lu.oAND
Htlls Please apply tn person
FOUND
or can Otanna Thompson at
(740)446-7150 fo r more m·
FOUND
formation
In Camp Conley area Very .::c..:.:=.____~
sweet Golden Aetnever
ATI ENTION LPN 'S
(304)675·4339
Arcad ra Nurstng Center
Part-ttme posttlons ava rl able
on 3·11 and 11 ·7 sh1fts We
offer e)CceUent beneftts th at
Found Male S1benan Husky
tnclude Health Insurance,
1n Camp Conley area, gen·
401K, Lila Insurance. com·
tte , obedient dog Call
pehtlve wages plus shtft dtt·
(304)675 3524
ferenttal and opportun111es
for advancement If you
LOST- Sheppard Husky would lrke to JOin our team,
Mtx, looks hke a wolf , gray apply tn person between
and white- 2 coll ars one 9 00-4 00 or call Susan
red . one white Needs medl· Wmland, AN Drrector of
cal attentron Has tubes Nurs 1ng, at (740)667-3156
Arc ad 1a Nurs 1ng Center
shcktng out of her body
East Ma 1n Street
Very mello dog (740)388-

.

Sunday• Paper

I \11'111, \11 ' I

\ \ \ O l " I \11 '\I "

s soo.

""
Some adults Proven Cham· 1994 Corvette Coupe, whtt&amp;
Ltvely's Auto Sales, 15 cars
AKC (M) Shsltie, bttarVwh 8 pion Bloodlines Gal!la
montho, $150; AKC (F) Counly grown (740)245· with red leather. Loaded. for sate lrom $350· $2000
$t1 '000 (740)682-7512
Call (740)368·9303 M-F
brown Pornerianan, spayed, 0485 after 5pm .
from 9-5pm, Sat Q.3, closed
$200, AKC (M)(F) Pomerlanan, puppies, white sable, 4 yearling Angus Heifers, 1995 Monte Carlo, 118,000 Sunday This Is NOT a buy
$350 each; AKC (M) breedtng age, good quality miles , white , sunroof, Ieath· iihi!er;.•·;.:P
;;;a;:,Y,;;he;;;r,;;•,;;c;;;
ar.;lo
;;;t;..._,
blltan/Wh 10 months, Come, 304-882-2575
er,
power,
$3,600,
TRUCKS

Includes Free Yard Sale Slgnl
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
Monday- Friday for In•ftrtlon
Day•• Paper
undey In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

• Start Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addrt111 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day•

100% PUREBRED BOER (304"'75 •1928
GOATS Few kids for sale.

~egl~ter

Arevou
Laid on;»

_______.....;._

to a corner; thence
North 122 Rods to the
place of beginning,
conlalnlng 23 acres,

more

or

less.

Excepting 10 acres
heretofore sold lo
Orr on lhe south
and, and except a
right of ay heretolore
deeded to J.C. Ross
by the window and
helra
of
John

w.c.

German, deceased.
PARCEL NO. 4:
Beginning 30 rode
Weal of the northeasl
corner
of
the
Northweal Quarter of
Section 33, Town 3,
Range
11 ,
Ohio
Company'a

Purchaae;
thence
South 56 112 roda;
lhence Weal 29 rode
4 l • t to Harrlaon
Darat•a eaat line;
UMnCI North 58 1n
roda to thl north line
of
eald
section;
thence Elll ~9 rods 4
1111 to the place of
beginning containing
10 acrea, 58 aquara
rode, excepting 1
right of wey herelolore grantad to J .C,
Roaa.
PARCEL NO. 5;
Baing the E11t
ecr11
In
the
Northeaat Ouarllt' of
Section 34, Town 3,
Range
11 ,
Ohio
company', •
Purchau, aavlng and
uceptlng lherelrom
44 314 acrea hereto·
fora conveyed,
Being lhl 11me
rul estate d11crlbed
In deed from Pemela
Proffit, nka Pamela
Burdlna, and Robert
E. Burdine, her hua
bend, to Pamela
Burdine and Robert

eo

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

Tree Service

k

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675-5282
www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctorCwv cdr com

MANLEYS
HARTWELL
SELF STORAGE STORAGE
97 Beech St.
lOxlO
middleport, OH
10x20

110rx10r 610rx20']

' Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used

475 South Church st:
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417

740-992-1717

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

St Rt. 7 Coeglein Rd.

BISSEll

Best Service at
the Best Price

Pomeroy

BUILDERS me.

'W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
Van Dealer·

New Homes • Vmyl
Stding • New Garages
• Replacemenl
"Not mel

Wtndows • Roofing

My money 1s w1lh

COMMERCIAL and
Open &lt;lam Sp111

RESIDENTIAL

Fn:" &lt;&gt;lmlUic&gt; lrr&lt; 11 h"n c p ' ~" P

C•llu•l' •li)'''''"l'""'"""d'

FREE ESTIMATES

(740) 446-181 2

740-992-7599

Ad

740-985-3948
CONCRETE
BlOCK/BRICK

Hm ldmx m a 30 \ean

:-: !!i1• .s ~'lU 0'

l~outers
1

·~

· &lt; t9 1O'lC30'
., 11;!\.!,1
~'*&lt;¥ f(»f.)t
'

J:: :!&gt;'.;,

Hours

Over 16 years Expeuem:e
• Room Addtttons
• Kttt.: hen &amp; Bath
Remodel111g
• Repraccment Wmdows
• Porches • Decks • Garages
• S1dmg • Roofing
• Comp lete Reh&lt;Jb s

I

HOWARD l.
WRITESf£

I *ROOFING
I *HOME

!

I 949-1405

Emarl

out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for you'

liNDA'S PAINTING .

11401985-4180.
Affer 6pm

'~ .,. ..,,'{~':,

(Belore 6pm

~ ~.:

Leave Menao$_Je

"'

:,.Jt·

blades@zaplmk com

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIIISTRUCDON
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992·1671
Stop &amp; Compare

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Add itions &amp;
Aem odeltng
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Stdlng &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Oecks

Free Est1m a 1es

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
P0116TOY

G&amp;H Sanilalion

Free Esttmalc,.

740·991·1119

992-3114

PUBLIC NOTICE

SEAL IT CONSTRUCTION

E. Burdine, recorded
In Volume 318, Page
5B7, Dead Recorda of
Meigs County, Ohio,
PARCEL I.D, NOS,;
08·00021 ; 06·00022;
ANDOS·
06·00023 ;
00024
Said premises have
blln appralaed al
$110,000.00 and must
nol be aold for laaa
than lwo thlrda of
aald amaunt
Tltrma of Sale· 10
percenl down by
caah, certlllad check,
or bank chack (no
peraonal chacka will
be accepted) on the
day ol the sale wllh
thl balanca due upon
confirmation by lhe
Court and delivery of
the Doed .
Tho lull purchase
muat be paid wllhln
30 day a of the date of
the aale: olherwlaa
tho Purchaser ohall
be adjudged to be In
Contempt ol Court.

lu•ru.•m, \\ort /m '""' d

the PAIN

Ohro

22 Year Local

335618ailev Run R~.
Pomerov. DH 45769
"SetVice iOU can counl on··
Gene Arms

Fully Insured

Pole B.trn ~ Cont:I.:IC,
Eb..:tt u.:, Plumbm g

Ta~e

1/ 14/ 1 mo pd

MAINTENANCE
I *SEAMlESS
Custom
I GUTnR
Buildinfi
&amp; Remade ing 1.rree Esdmatau
740-397-9751

Foundd!ton

1\dll On!&lt;., Ne\1. Home-;,

(740) 992-3320

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Smce 1 97 ~
"u11lorm:d Scr. ro: rr"1 rder Fur

KainSoft

45771
740-949·2217

Heplacements,
Walks, and Dri1es.
Siencu Crete
IRIIISIIMATIS '""

Water Trcaunem Equipment
M t Vernon

Ractn e, Ohto

MillS
FAMilY
CONSTRUCnON

29670 Bashan Road

'looters,\\lalls,
SlOPS •Flat lllork,

THOMPSON'S
WATER

1

Hill's Self
Storage

Racine. Ohio 45711

.

Phone 843-5264 •

11\oJ/m,.lltlll

~rl11&lt;t'l'lt111\

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Flnonclal Services.
Box 189, Middleport, OH

Henderson, WV

871-2417 or 446-2912
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Roof1ng, S1d1ng ,
Patnllng , Etectncal,

Decks, Etc

Free Est1mates
992·1189 992·2902

PUBLIC NOTICE
Thla Sherlff'o aale
operated under the
Doclrlne of Csvaat
Emplor, tho Meigs
County Shariff makea
no auarantea

MYERS PAVING

aa to

statua of Title Prior to

oata,

Relph
Tru11111 ,
Sheriff
Melga County, Ohio
John E. Bowera (No.
0021415)
233
Norlh
Court
Slreet
Circleville,
Ohio
43113
(740) 477-1381
Attorney lor Farm
Credit Service• of
Mld·Amerlca. FLCA
(3)7 , 14, 21

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

l)uilding
Service
• Decks &amp; Porc hes
• Roo m Additions

• Rcx)fing
• V~nyl &amp; Wood
Stdtng
•Interior Remodelmg
Generul Carpentry W ork

Mike Marcum. Owner

740-985·4141

ROUSH'S

LAWN

CARE

LAWN
MOWING
CONTRACTS
$15 - $25 for

small yard

$35 per acre

'-------Call now to

schedule your

lawn care
service.
Insured

140·1149·1701
1·866·2BRIISH

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.........

www.mydailysentlnel.com

DEAR ABBY: A few
months ago, our beloved sonin-law, "Tom," died unexpectedly at only 39 years of age.
Our daughter and her three
children. all under 8, survive
him.
The ni ght Tom died. neighbors took car~ of our grandchildren. while others accom·
panied my daughter to the
hospital.
They
waited
ihroughout the night until we
arrived from out of state, hundreds of miles away.
The next day these wonderful people took their own children out of school to play
with our grandchildren.
Neighbors took days off work
to comfort and care for our
. daughter. They organized a
schedule of who would provide meals.
More than 15 families in the
· neighborhood helped with all
the small yet important details
before and after the funeral.
Photos of our son-in-law and
the family were enlarged,
framed and displayed in the
visitation room of the funeral
home - · along with handdrawn pictures and letters of
sympathy from the neighbors'
children and our grandchildren's classmates. Friends set
out journals for guests to
record their memories of Tom
and express their condo-

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
lences.
In the coffee room at the
funeral home, neighbors
arranged for baby sitters, toys,
food and beverages for the
many children in attendance.
After the memorial service,
these folks catered lunch at
our daughter's home.
Several neighbors opened
their homes to out-of-town
visitors. And to top it all off,
the family next door moved
out of their home to provide
extra room for family mem·
bers attending the funeral.
Now, months later, neighbors
are still taking our grandchildren on outings, checking on
our daughter, and bringing in
meals on occasion.
Never have I seen a neighborhood with so much
warmth and caring. In a day
and age when neighbors barely know each other, it is
inspiring - especially in a
metropolis like Chicago.

I know of no other column
with a wider audience than
yours, Abby. Please share this
experience with your readers
in the hope that they, too, will
make the effort to participate
in their neighborhoods and be
of service to others. - A
GRATEFUL MOTHER
DEAR
GRATEFUL
MOTHER: I offer my condolences for your loss. Being
of service to others is the
highest calling I know. In
these complicated economic
and political times, people
often narrow their focus . Your
daughter's neighbors are an
inspirational example of
brotherly love in action.
DEAR ABBY: I was
divorced three years ago and
am uncertain about what to do
with my wedding album. This
is on my mind because I'll be
remarrying this year, and I
have no desire to keep the
photos from my first marriage. My dilemma is that I
have two small children and
wonder if there would be any
benefit -or harm- in keeping the album for their sakes.
(Their dad is pretty much out
of the picture.) Thanks for any
light you can shed on this. BRIDE-TO-BE
IN
OMAHA
DEAR BRIDE-TO-BE:
Although that chapter of your

1

Forced

5 Pixie

43

Bates or
Arkin
12 Strait-laced
13 Damage
14 Bantu
language
15 Possess
16 Oeposed
Amin
17 TV actor
Ken18 Wearing
less
20 Swagger
22 Pit stop
Item
23 Nectar
gatherer
24 Tryst
keeper
27- out
.
(renege)
30 Caviar,
actually
31 Dress
bottom
8

life is now closed, it is still
very much a pan of your children's history. Put the albums
in storage for your children to
have later.
(Dear Abby is wrillen by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeann e Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Paulin e Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.)

,

~awn's

mother

44 "Ta-da! "
46 Join
49 Humorist
52 Gas In a

tube

56
57

58
59

Bv BERNICE BEDE 0soL
Noticeable improvements
are in store for you in the year
ahead where your personal
dealings with others are concerned. There will be a big in·
crease in both your ,·asuai relationships and your intimate
ones.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Measures can be taken
today to shore up an important friendship that has been a
irille shaky lately . Don't wait
for the other person to make
the overtures; initiate things
yourself.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - Your greatest jovs to·
day will come from helping
people you like. So, even if it
mconvemcnccs you. try to put
the concerns of those who are
important to you above your
own.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20)- It might be a good idea
to get in touch with a close
friend of yours whom you haven't talked to in quite some
time. The aspects indicate that
something fruitful will come

out of the exchange.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
-You might be the one who
is instrumental in bringing

something impomnt about today. To your credit. you ' ll acknowledge a pal who had little to do with it but can use a
boost.
'
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- A person with the right
connections may step in toclay
and help you accomplish
something you've been unable to do on your own . It'll
be someone who likes you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Because a concerted effort
will be required today to
achieve your objectives. be
persistent and tenacious once
you get things under way and
strive for excellence.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- A partnership arrangement
should work out very well for
everybody concerned. This is
especially true if there are a
number of people in on the
act other than you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- This is too good of a day
to ·waste your time on frivolous pursuits. Try to devote

your hours on activities that
are meaningful and can advance your interests both in
your career and in your fi.

ri.val
Sitcom
planet
To be, in
Montreal
Droplet
Lo-graphics
Feat

9
10
11

19

21

DOWN

24

Dashboard
· info
2 Middle
Easterner
3 Prima
32 Still
donna
4 Come forth
34 Bronze
component 5 Kuwaiti
leaders
35 Goose
6 Schoolboy
formation
7 Lawn game
37 Cartoon
Chihuahua 8 islands off
38 Gadget
. Portugal

nances.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
22)- Your biggest asset to·
day will be your willingness
and ability to get along with
people from all walks of life.
Opportunities could develop
for you from various social
situations.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -If you have anything that needs finalizing, do
it today while the aspects fa''or successful completions.
Mak)! a list of priorities and

start at the top. You'll be
amazed at what you accomplish. "
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) - Seek out situations toda¥ where you are the
one directmg and telling everybody what to do and how to
do it. There is no one beller
than you at managing group
affairs.
·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Follow your own insights today when it comes to
anything that has to do with
financial situations. What you
perceive is likely to be far
beller than suggestions offered by others.

1

25
26

27
28
29
33

Corker
Dismounted
Role for
Whoopi
Teacup
handle
Kind of
effort
A great
many
Llvy con·
temporary
Barn
topper
Roller
coaster cry
Bronte
heroine
JaneDregs
Miner's

need
35 Bottle
36 Andes
country
39 Hidden
40 Swindle
41 Curbed
43 Stam(basketball
shots)
44 Repulsive
45 Earthen jar
47 Gala
occasion
48 Long ago
49 Duck's foot
51 Pay dirt
s:r Beatty or
Sparks

0000000

-

previous

106

2nd DOWN

=

3rdDOWN

• 87

4th DOWN

= 19

JUDD'S TOTAL

AVERAGE GAME 191).200

to

=-l!L

2
odDOWN

0

0 99,29,9,S ,.o~.T~··

'o'
'OQ7

~~~~~~~

0

®®@@@@@
1st DOWN

+20Po•nts

AVERAGE GAME 140.150

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Word
Scrim·

~

lSI Down Total
+ 60 Po1nts

@@(9(9@@(9

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

OIAECTIONS: Make a :1- to 7-letter word !rom lhe letters on eactl yari;JIIne.
Add points 10 each word or tetter uSing scoring directions at right Seven-letter
words get a 60-pOint bOnus. All words can be tound in Webster's New World

mag~ ·

Col"'" Olc11ona,.
.,..,

298

l ·f"l3

JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW
C 2CI03lk1hlld FHiur• Syndlcale, 11'11::

I

i
I

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1
' . . 0

Ill(;

TO

.

A~t -

1

FLA'IORIN&amp;S, OV€RPROCE~~IN~, AND ALL
,------JIIl"'tUDO "MOU'-lTAIN
~ts. Bi.&lt;T I'M
H~DRATICI-1
WATCH IN(,
r.~ CALORIE~ ,

m

Gallia County

Jail usage
crowds
sheriff's
budget
M. LEACH
Staff writer

o
otDO_,.
l

ri\@,'\!.5'
ri&gt;@@
2 @2 tj(\
\::J
~

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

BY TONY

WORD®©®CD@@0@®.
0000000 .

Answer

cA~es

M~

GALLIPOLIS , Ohio -An
overcrowding problem at the
Gallia County jail is pulling a
slight strain on the sheriff's
office finances.
Gallia County Sheriff David
L. Martin has informed county commissioners of a recent
influx of prisoners in the jail.'
He added, however, the situation is not critical.
Martin said money from an
appropriated $60,000 line
item in the sheriff's office
yearly budget is being spent
"somewhat quicker 'than normal" due to an increase in the
number of in-county and outof county inmates.
"We have already spent
close to $23,000 of our allotted budget for the jail's operation," Martin said. "The cost
of housing these prisoners,
plus the costs associated with
transporting inmates to other
facilities, is starting to add

rn

~· ~--~~?~----~

z

•~

.";·

Ern

'zc:::"'
&lt;
""
~

~ANI&lt;
I,..OAN

IT'f T~UE: T~AT YOV C.AN
APPLY FO~ A t,OAN
OV~~ T~~ P~ONE,

•

we

e&gt;ePT.
~ !:======='·~~~
~

IUT
t,tt=E: TO
TUflN P~OPL~
DOwN IN

::c:

z

.

THAT'S A
~ITT~f

MORE

INFORMATION
THAN!

NfEPEP

Pli:DBMlLYNOL

nfl.SON.
.,.BUTI\W I Ll~Mlti&lt;.e. tTI""l

'"'l

ril

g
z

!

i

c:::

...0

I

-~

.... ,,..~~L___illlli.)lj:.LJ

· - - - - - - - - - ----

Pomeroy • Middleport • Callipolis • Point Pleasant • March 8, 2003

It costs the sheriff's office
around $65 per prisoner to
transport them to other facilities in other counties. The
increase of inmates, in addition to the everyday expenses
it takes to operate the jail,
such as food, laundry and
medical costs, have created
the "' Cllll'll,nt situation, he
explainea.
''This is. nothing to get
alarmed about. The commissioners are responsible for
operating the jail and this
report is just an update to
inform them of what's currently happening," he said.
He noted that not all of the
$23,000 is attributed to the
recent increase of prisoners.
"About $12,000 of that total
went toward paying several
bills from 2002."
Martin said he is currently
in the process of implementing a "pay for stay" plan,
which would require all
housed inmates to pay a set
price.
"! believe the 'pay for stay'
program would definitely
save the taxpayers some
money," Martin said. "We are
still in the process of studying
this plan and are currently in
discussions with legal experts
to see if it is truly viable."
If the plan is implemented,
the county would enter into a
contract with a collection
agency to legally process and
acquire the prisoners' fees, he
said.

2 Sedioni - 12 Pllges
Calendars
A'6
Classifieds
84-S
Comics
86
DearAbby
86
Editorials
A4
Local news
A3,S
Movies
AS
Obituaries
AS
Ohio•W.Va.
A2
Sports
81-3
Weather
A2
l:l 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

50 CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 28

Reaction to concealed weapon bill mixed
BY TONY M. LEACH

Staff writer
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - The future
of a proposed state law that would
allow certain residents to carry concealed weapons is leaving local law
enforcement officials with mixed
reactions.
The Ohio House of Representatives
recommended passage of yet another
version of House Billl2- a proposal that would allow Ohioans who pass
background checks and complete 12
hours of tratning to obtain licenses to
carry concealed weapons.
Gallia County Sheriff David L.
Martin said as long as people are
properly trained and certified, he sees
no problem with the bill.
"Bad guys are always going to have
guns, and I'm not worried about the

Brandeberry

good people of our
community
who
own a firearm .
''Today's crimes
have become more
violent and most
people in our county
know
that
deputies can't be
everywhere
at
once," he added. "I
believe we have a
right to protect our-

selves.
"I cannot stress enough that proper
training and certification is the key to
this important issue."
Even though Gallipolis Police
Chief Roger Brandeberry said he's
not personally opposed to the concealed weapons bill, he is against the
House's latest version and believes
the bill 's language needs to be

cleaned up.
The bill requires
written and physi cal training courses
for people who will
apply for a permit.
a
However,
requirement that all
applicants be fingerprinted is missin g.
Martin
Currently, those
caught
carrying
hidden firearms must convince a
prosecutor or judge that the weapon
was needed because of their job. An
example would be someone who carries a large sum of money, or perhaps
a person who has been threatened.
Last year, the House,approved the
bill after 17 hearings and mne months
of debate. The state Senate waited
until after the Nov. 5 election to act

Promoting reading

on it, finally passing its version in
December just before adjourning for
the session .
The result was a bill with changes
that the House would not accept and
the bill died when the session ended
at year's end.
The new version of the bill , if
approved by the House, will be presented to the Senate later lhis month.
"Personally, I'm not totally against
the bill, however, I am a member of
. the Ohio Association of Chiefs of
Police, and as an organization, we are
against the passage of this current
bill," said Brandeberry.
"The bill'.s language concerning
training issues, licensing mechanisms
and regulations, I feel, needs to be
d
be
" h dd d ''Th'
spe11e out tter, e a e ·
IS
version has not met my expectaPle11e see Bill, A5

Mason County

Speaker to address
tuition payment
BY DAN POLCYN

News editor
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. -The Mason County
GEAR UP program is bringing an informational speaker
to Point Pleasant to speak to
students about paying for
college in West Virginia.
Jamie Dickenson, finiancial aid coordinator with the
West Virginia treasurer's
office, will present information on the West Virginia
PROMISE scholarship and
other financial aid programs
at ''f parent workshQp fO be
·helD at 6 p.m. Monday 111 the
Point Pleasant High School
cafeteria,
The seminar is open for
parents of GEAR UP
(Gaining Early Awareness
and
Readiness
for
Undergraduate Programs)
students in the Mason
County schools. The program works with a goal of
using early intervention,
tutoring and mentoring as
vehicles to prepare middle
school-aged students to

up."

Index

!.'

nt

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties

54 "Vogue"
55

,

tm

-Rogers

50 Put on

Astrograph
Saturday. March 8. 2003

Track &amp; field: Rio's Matt Boyles wins NAIA title, 81

40 Summit
42 Water, to
Pierre

ACROSS

Neighbors respond
quickly to family tragedy

Friday, March 7, 2003

attend college.
.
Wanda Parsons, facilitator
with the Mason County pr~
gram, said tliat 71 percent - :
more than 900 students -of
seventh
through
ninth
graders in Mason County
voluntarily participate in th!:
program.
.
Participants and their pal'ents sign a compact which
states goals in areas such ail
behavior, grade-point aver:age, and attendance. .
.
The workshop counts
toward the parent participation requirement of the
GEAR UP compact.
Parsons ) llid .that the program works with the ~oal of
getting 75 percent of tts participants to participate in
some form of post -secondary
education.
The GEAR UP program
was started in Mason County
three years ago and is funded
by a federal grant. Mason is
one of eight counties in West
Virginia participating in the
program.
Information on the GEAR
UP program is available on-lin~
at www.geanap.KI2.wv.us.

Meigs County

Chaz Hudson and Shelby Fitchpatrlck, third-graders at Middleport Elementary School, are
always eKcited to see what "Kid Scoop" features will teach them each week. They are among
the hundreds of third-graders in the Saturday Times-Sentinel community who benefit from
Newspapers in Education. ·,{Bri&lt;!n J. Reed)

t

Area students to observe
Newspapers in Education Week
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff wriler
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio - Boys and girls in
third-grade classes throughout the Meigs,
Gallia and Mason areas are learning that
newspapers can answer a lot of questions and be a lot of furi to read.
Newspapers in Education Week is
observed the first week of March each year,
but students in area classrooms are pan of
special year-round program sponsored by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. and local businesses, with distribution of The Daily

a

Sentinel, Gallipolls Daily Tribune and Point
Pleasant Register to third graders in the
respective circulation areas each week.
"Kid Scoop" is a special full-page feature
included in each Monday's ' newspaper,
encouraging students to seek information
about a number of subjects in the pages of
their local newspaper.
Designed to foster a habit of newspaper
reading, the "Kid Scoop" feature focuses on
reading, math, science and heal\h skills. A
special local "Write On!" feature encourages
youngsters
.
. to try their hand at a creative writmg. exerctse.

Southern High School junior Kenny McKnight stands next to
"Pat," a mannequin wearing a new band uniform. McKnight,
who plays drums, has been looking forward to new uniforms
for five years. For the complete story, and more Meigs
County news, see Page A3. (J. Miles Layton )

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