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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

.

Ducks one win away from Stanley Cup
·

BY IRA PoDELl.
AP

·

SPORTS WRITER

OITAWA
Andy
McDonald bailed out Chris
. Pronger and set up Southern
California for a playoff party
like never before.
The Anaheim Ducks are
within a win of their lirst
Stanley Cup championship.
McDonald scored two
goals in the second period,
then shook free of hard-hitting Chris Neil and assisted
on Dustin Penner\ winner in
the third, giving Anaheim a 32 victory over the Ottawa
Senators on Monday night.
The Ducks will carry a 3-1
series advantage back home
to Anaheim. where they are
7-0 in clinching games.
including 3-0 this year. But
this one ts different, and it all
became possible because of
the Ducks' first road win in
the finals in six .chances over
two series.
Anahei m is 5-0 in the finals
on home ice and can secure
Southern California 's first
Stanley Cup title as early as
Wednesday night.
Anaheim got it done
despite a ·miserable first period 111 which it was outshot 132 without Pronger, a Norris
Trophy finalist who served a
one-game suspension foi an
elbow to the he;~d of Ottawa's
Dean McAmmond in Game 3
on Saturday.
Ducks general manager
Brian Burke was incensed
Sunday that Pronger was suspended while Neil wasn't,
claiming the only difference
was McAmmond was injured
and McDonald wasn 't when
Neil charged and landed a
high, hard hit in Game 3.
This time, Neil missed the
Ducks forward and instead
crashed himself into the
boards. That was enough to
allow McDonald to get the
puck up ice to Teemu
Selanne.
Skating alongside Penner,
with only Senators defenseman Anton Volchenkov back,
Selanne moved .the puck
across to Penner for a shot
that beat Ray Emery 4:07 into
the third to snap a 2-2 tie. .
Dany Heatley had his best

Tuesday, June 5, 2007 ·

www.mydailysentlnel.com

.

game of the finals, scoring his onds left.
first goal of the series to get
Alfredsson,. playing in hi s
Ottawa even 2-2 wtth 2 mm- 98th consecutive playoff conutes left in the second period. test with the Senators, scored
Heatley struggled along with for the second straight game
linemates Daniel Alfredsson · atier being blanked twice in
and. Jason Spezza, who had Anaheim. Unlike Saturday,
been shut down through three when he had to wait out a
games.
video replay to see if his first
Alfredsson netted his sec- final s goal would stand
ond of the series with less because it went in off his
than a second left in the first · skate, there was no doubt
period .to stake Ottawa to a 1- . about this one - his NHL0 lead.
.
leading 12th of the playoffs.
Spezza, who went pomtless
The Ducks.had only themin consecutive games for the selves to blame by taking
first 'time since Octobe~, four penalties in the period
earned an asstst on Heatley s and handing three power
seventh of the playoffs. That plays to the Senators. The
restored excitement to a ner- last a goaltender interference
vous arena ~at might've seen call' against Ryan Getzlaf,
the Senators last home game was questionable as Emery
of the best season m team hts- appeared to embellish his fall
tory. Ottawa managed onl)l to the ice.
four shots in the ~econd penEmery, who made 18
od - to Anahe!m s 13 - and saves, didn't have much else
three were taken by Heatley. to. do in the opening period,
Jean-Sebasl!en Gtguere, facing his first shot nearly 12
the playoffs MVP m 2003 minutes 'in and seeing only
when the Ducks lost Game 7 one more the rest of the way.
of the finals at New Jersey,
It all changed in the second
stopped 21 shots mall. That period.
was enough to gtve Anahetm
Anaheim enjoyed the only
Its 12th one-goal wm of the two power olays of the frame,
postseason, tymg the NHL but couldn't take advantage.
mark.
,
Instead, the Ducks scored
Alfredsson, 0 ttawa s cap- twice at even strength and
tam, was the last-second hero held a 13-4 edge in shots.
m the first penod, but turned
,
. . . .
into the villai'n in the final
McDonald lied tt mtdway
moments of the second. He through the. penod, then
inexplicably fired a shot from notched hts mnt~ of the playcenter ice nght at defenseman offs exactly a mmute later for
Scott Niedermayer, the a 2-llead.
.
Ducks' captain.
The first c~e when he
The usually mild-mannered took a pass m front from
Niedermayer, a· three-time Todd Marchant, who had
Cup champion in his days . curled behmd the net, .and,
with New Jersey, angrily sent a shot that got past
engaged Alfredsson. It defenseman
AndreJ
caused a tension-filled serum Meszaros,
Emery,
and
. that only led to matching Spezza, who came behmd
minor penalties to start the ·Emery to guard the goal Ime
third. Giguere and Emery, as the netminder moved up in
known to · drop his gloves, the crease.
spoke as they crossed paths
~cDonald gav~ the Duc~s '
on their way off the ice.
thetr frrst lead wtth a scml!lQuite a different period latmg effort. He cut n~ht
than the tirst when the between the mcles, fakmg
Senators domin~ted play.
Volchenkov down to .the ice,
Just as it seemed the Ducks ghdlmg across tn front of
would survive the penalty- Emery and backhanding a
filled anp offensively · chal- shot between his pads.
lenged · frame unscathed,
He nearly had a third goal
Alfredsson one-timed a pass earlier in the period, but his
from Peter Schaefer past shot rang right off the post
Giguere with only 0.3 sec- behind Emery.

Hamilton, ·Coffey returning to
Reds f rom. Tr•lp e-A LOUISVI
.• •11e
1
CINCINNATI (AP) Outfielder Josh Hamilton
and reliever Todd Coffey
will be recalled from TripleA Louisvi lle for · the
Cincinnati Reds' game
Tuesday in St.. Louis. the
club said Monday.
To make room for them,
the Reds sent right-hj!nder
Brad Salmon and outfielder

Notebook

handed
down and
that
he
wants to
become
the NFL's
"Man of
the Year,'·
tbe player
honor ed
for being

it s best citizen.
There was no statement
from the league other than
the short announcement 'of
the suspe nsion . It said
Goodell would review
John so n's status before
Oct. I to determine whether
to reduce hi s suspension by
two gam.es.
Last December. police
raided the 300-pound
defensive tackle 's suburban
Chicago home and found
six unregistered firearms
- a violation of hi s probation on an earlier gun
charge.
.
That charge stemmed
fromjohn~on's 2005 arrest
after a Chicago nightclub
valet
reported
seei ng
Johnson with a handgun in
his SUV. He subsequently
pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge.
Two days after the raid,
Willie B. Posey, Johnson 's
bodyguard who had been
arrested after th~ raid, was
shot and killed in an earlymorning fight while he and

Johnson were at a Chicago
.ni ghtclub.
Johnson was suspe nded
by the Bears for one game
for being at ihe club. He
played with the team in the
Super Bowl.
In March, John son began
hi s jail term for violating
hi s probation. Last month,
he pleaded gu ilty to a misdemeanor weapons charge
as part of a deal with prosecutors that kept him from
serving more time in jail.
He was ordered to serve 45
days, which he was able to
serve concurrently with the
sentence for violating his
probation.
met
with
John son
Goodell for 90 minutes in
New York on May 18.
" I fee l like whatever
sanction he imposes, I' m
man enough to take it and ·[
know that once I get back
on the field, that chapter of
my life is closed and I can
move on with a sense of
closure," Johnson said after
the meeting.
He called the commi~­
sioner "a fair man" and
added: "One day I want to
be the face of the league for
guys who have COIJ1e
throu gh adversity, · came
through it and ultiinately
became the Man of the Year
in the NFL. That would be
a tremendous ending to the
story."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,)II

( ' FN I'S • \'ul. ;;h , C'liu.

SPORTS
• LeBron ready for first
finals. See Page 81

..

'

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Betty Codner
· • Clarence Lawrence

'

WEATHER.
· H11aring
l!mtecllifl;
''
' ":,'
~ '
,,&gt;i '

, .STIHL Hand Tools fS!IrtingJt:J
·' :t

,.

~..;t\!ilnli·c:hain ftling Kit

$15.95
;{

t1US :

Details on Page A6

'

' Alw•rs WHr /I(Dttelirt ,,.,., a

-•-••dtd ;, ,_i~~~tn~aion nw1111l, ~ ~ ~ ( ftJ

INDEX
2 SECfiONS- 12. PAGES

~I

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Chester

Pomeroy

Calendars

A3

Baum Lumber Inc.
46384 State Route 248
740-985-3301
www.baumlumber.com

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
740-992-5500
Open 7 Days a we.ek

Classifieds

B2-4

Are you

BY BRIAN

J.

Smith testified that Harkins
was under the influence of
alcohol when he fired I0
rounds at a mobile home
owned by Dean Pullins and
located on Ohio 248.
Smith said Harkins later
told him he did not intend to
injure anyone, but only
wanted to scare the occupants of the trailer. Harkins
is charged with two counts
of felonious assault and a
count of discharge of a
firearm. A misdemeanor

REED

BREEO@MVDAILVSENTINELCOM

harge of using a weapon
while intoxicated was dismissed Thursday.
According to Smith,
Harkins admitted to firing
the rounds at the trailer
because he believed his 'girlfriend and Pullins were having an affair. There were
two women in the mobile
ho1J1e with Pullins at the
time Harkins allegedly fired
upon it - Penny Cochran
and Lisa Robson. Neither
was identified as Harkins'

girlfriend during last week's
preliminary hearing.
Harkins had called the
sheriff's department earlier
in the evemng of May 23,
reporting an altercation . at
the Pullins home. Smith said
Harkins told him he returned
later to the Pullins home and
fired shots from outside until
fire waS returned. Smith continned evidence that shots
had been ftred from inside
the mobile home, too.
One of the shots allegedly

fired by Harkins injured
Cochran, who was treated
and released for a leg wound
and a 'Superficial head injury.
Harkins was released
from the Meigs County Jail
on May May 29, after posting a tO-percent cash paymenr on bond set at $75,000
by County Court Judge
Steven L. Story. Harkins'
bond was reduced to
$25.000, with 10 percent
cash allowed, after the preliminary hearing.

BY BETH SERGENT

STI HL Quickstop«&gt; chllin brake :
'

Shooting case bound over to grand jury

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

~ ...,,"'· '

~

\1'\\\\.lll)!luil)'entind.cum

21111"'

Racine considers
new.sexual
predator law

• Scooter Libby
sentenced to 2 1/2
years in CIA leak case.
See Page A2
• Shade High School
alumni hold reunion.
See Page A3
• Barnhart graduates.
See Page A3
• Pomeroy Mayors
Court. See Page A6
• Family Medicine.
See Page AS

Lightw&amp;ight hDJllllOWIIIIf Sf't,td; ·

\\'1-.J),FSD \\, .Jl ' :-.11·: h,

:.!!;)

POMEROY - The case
of a Long Bottom man
accused of firing shots at a
mobile home and injuring a
woman has been bound
over' to the Meigs County
Grand Jury.
John M. Harkins, 46 •.
Bigley
Ridge
Road,
appeared at a preliminary
hearing Thursday in Meigs
County Court. Deputy Adam

INSIDE

'

Virginia Tech to
reopen building, As

home runs in six rehab
appearances with the Bats.
Coffey began the season
with the Reds .and was 1-1
with a 4.94 ERA in 26 relief
appearances before he was
optioned to Louisville on
May 24. He did not allow a
run in six appearances for
the Bats, strikin g out nine in
5 2-3 innings. ·

Dewayne Wise to Louisville·.
· Hamilton was the National
League's rookie of the
month in April. He has been
on the disabled list since
May 22 after a bout with
gastroenteritis that Oared up
during a series in Cleveland ..
He was hitting .261 with
eight home runs and 18 RBl s
then. and hit .333 with four

Tank Johnson suspended for 8 games
NEW YORK (AP) Tank Johnson of the
Chicago Bears was suspended by the NF:L for the
first eight games of the
2007 regular season for
violating the league''s new
personal conduct policy.
The defensive . tackle
recently served a two:
month jail stint on a proba, fion violation on gun"related charges.
He's the third player suspended by commissioner
Roger Goodell in little
more than a month for offfield behavior. In April ,
Goodell
suspended
Tennessee Titans defensi ve
back Adam "Pacman"
Jones for the entire 2007
season and Cincinnati
Bengals wide receiver
Chris Henry for eight
games. Jones is appealing
his suspension. ·
Goodell said Johnson 's
suspension
could , be
reduced to six games if he
has no further involvement
with law enforcement and
undergoes counseling.
.
Johnson stands to J.ose
$255,000, based on his
salary for next season of
$510,000, if the suspension
lasts the entire eight games.
meeting· with
After
Goodell upon his release
last month, John so n said he
was rt;ady to accept whatever punishment Goodell

R&amp;JFood
Shop opens, A3

Comi~

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries

Sports
Weather

B Section

A6

© :ZOO? Ohio Valley Publl!ihlng 0&gt;.

RACINE - Racine Village Council
discussed adopting a new amendment to
it's municipal code to prevent convicted
sexual predators from being within
I ,000 feet of village owned parks or
playgrounds.
Racine Police Marshal Curtis Jones is
researching the amendment which must
then go to the village solicitor for
review. If approved by the solicitor, the .
amendment gdes to council and requires
three readings and a vote before it could
go into law 30 days after the final vote.
Jones informed council there is
already a law in the Ohio Municipal
Code that prevents convicted sexual
predators from being within I ,000 feet .
of a school.
Jones is also researching an amendmen.! to the village's municipal code in
regard to all,terrain vehicles, or fourwheelers and any nuisance · ordinances
· which may pertain to the vehicles being
operated on village streets. Resident
Maryann Shoults asked if there was any
nuisance ordnance concerning ATV's in
town when it comes to the issue of noise
and dust. which there is not.
"The law does'n 't work necessarily like
you think it should," Mayor J. Scott Hill
said to council. ·
·
Shoults said a juvenile in the village
rides an ATV near her property, stirring
up so much dust she can't hang her laundry out to dry and her husband can't wash
cars because of the nuisance it poses.
"For me it's the dust and noise, but it
is a safety issue too when you talk about
them being on the roadway," Shoults
said of the issues she had with the ATV.
Jones said he has given a warning to
· the juvenile involved in Shoults complaint and his parent could also face
fines. However, there is more than one
person riding the ATVs in the village in
what some consider a "careless" manner.
Councilman Gary Willford said he had
witnessed this "careless" operation himself in the village.
Hill reported the contractors at the .
water treatment plant need to finish the
gates as well as some plumbing and
hopes everything will be done i11 another
two months though' the plant is already
online and serving residents. Hill said
the new plant removes manganese
before going t~consumers though the
added pressure· has caused old manganese in the line to be knocked loose
and appear in the water when the consumer uses it. The added pressure has
also caused some old lines to break and
made it difficult to accurately calculate a ·
normal percent loss. Last month the
plant sold 4 million gallons of'Water and
sold two million .
"All the testing is in line with where
we're supposed to be and the percent
loss has come down· from where it was
before," Hill said.
Jones reported he would be on vacation June 17,24 and at National Guard
training Aug. 29-Sept. 16 but during
both absences Kevin Dugan would take
over as interim mars~al.
Jones also reported if there was a vehicle sitting in a yard with expired tags, it's
the same as having no tag and that property owner could face citations.
Currently there is a list of 18 prope.rties
for these types of violations which will
shortly be served in writing about the
citations.
.
Jones is also searching for a dunking
tank for the Fourth of July festivities.
All members of council were present
for the meeting. Council will meet in
recessed session at 7 p.m., on June 18 at
the Racine Municipal Building.
J

~-

'

_,

Charlene Hoelllchfphotos

Recognized for 20, 15 and 10 years of volunteer service through ttie RSVP program were from the left, seat·
ed, Juanita Roush, Betty Sayre, and Polly Curtis, 20 years; Don Young, and Lee Young, 15 years; and stand- ·
ing, Carol Hall, Charles Mclain, Alice Wolfe, B~u~e ~ay, Joan May, and Frankie Hunnel, 10 years.
. _ , ..

RSVP volunteers honored at luncheon
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HDEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Recognition of
the 164 Retired Senior Volunteers
who over the past year have
donated 26,668 hours of their
time doing· volunteer work in 47
different locatiOI)S highlighted
the . 34th annual volunteer luncheon •at the Senior Citizens
Center Tuesday.
Diana Coates, RSVP ·director,
commended the volunteers for
their work, and recognized those
with 25, 20, 15, and I0 years with
certificates. Special. recognition
went to Polly Eichinger, who will
observe her 93rd birthday on June
22,for25 years.
Twenty year volun\eers recognized were Polly Curtis, Juanita
Roush, Betty Sayre, and lsabelle
Wolfe, and IS year volunteers
honored were Blondena Rai.oer,
Don Young , and Lee Young.
Thirteen volunteers were recognized for 10 years of service and
included Norma Custer, Carol
Hall, Dee Hysell, Bruce May,
Charles McLain, Mary Powell,
Alice Wolfe, Carolyn · Grueser,
Frankie Hunnel , Harold Hysell,
Joan May, Leah Ord and Jean
Wright.
Coates spoke of the impact
which hours worked .by volunteers have on local organizations
and mentioned several including
The Meigs Cooperative Parish ·
where last year 29 volunteers
.gave 6,925 hours to the operation, the Senior Center where
5,440 hours were given by 92
·volunteers, the Chester historical
Society where 2, 765 hours were

Special recognition for her work as a volunteer over the past 25 years
was given to Polly Eichinger of Pomeroy at Tuesday's volunteer luncheon. Here Diana Coates, RSVP director, presents her with a plaque .
worked by 13 volunteers, and the
Syracuse Community Center
where I0 volunteers donate
I ,643 hours.
A fiesta theme was carried out
in the decorations on the walls,
hanging from the ceiflng, and
adorning the tables. Coates noted
that Fred Lugo and the RSVP
members in Austin, Texas provided the decorations.
Several of those attending spoke

in appreciation of volunteers
working in their respective programs. Kathy McDaniel, day care
coordinator, presented gifts to
Jean Thomas, Marilyn Powell ,
Barb Gheen, and Gladys
Cumings, regular volunteers in
the daycare program for those
with memory loss; Courtney Sim
spoke on behalf of those who
Please see RSVP, AS

Association begins fireworks fund driv~
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED&lt;ii&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Efforts to
raise funds for July 4 fireworks
are now underway in Middleport,
and members of the Middleport
Community Association discussed the fund drive at Tuesday's
monthly meeting.
The association has a month to
raise $3,000 in donations for the
fireworks display, Association
President Brenda Phalin said. The
total cost of the display is $5,000.
. Phalin said the association will
concentrate on mailing fundrais.
ing letters to members and area

_______

•

businesses. Members also dis. cussed drawings, concession
sales on July 4 and other possible means for raising the necessary funds.
The .fireworks display will conclude a day-long Independence
Day celebration, beginning with
the unveiling of a downtown
mural series, and including a coin
show, storytelling program,
gospel sing and parade. Ti)e River
City Players have booked Phil
Dirt &amp; the Dozers for a free concert at the Middleport. football
field. The fireworks -will follow
the concert.
Mary Brewer, parade chair-

man, . is seeking entries for the
parade . Those interested are to
report to .the municipal parkin·g
lot next to Family Dollar at 5:30
p_.m. Awards will be presented to
best pet unit, best walking unit, ·
best float and best decorated
bicycle entry.
.
Treasurer Dick Owen reported
an account balance of $6,242,
$1,684.40 of which represents
funds remaining from a grant for
the downtown mural series.
.Phalin reported ' the latest
membership roster includes 61
members.
'
The next meeting will be held
July 3.

..

�'

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

Fonner White House aide Scooter Libby
sentenced to. 2 1/2 years in CIA leak case

Bv SAEED AL-NAHDY

PETE YOST

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRrrER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

Happy·
.father's Day

(Your Name)

Maine governor fulfills a promise for ·a lifetime
fishing license to lost boy _;_,_ 68 years later
BY GLENN ADAMS
ASSOCIA1ED PRESS WRITER

AUGUSTA, Maine - A
governor's promise to a 12year-old Boy Scout who
was lost in the northern
Maine wilderness for more
than a week was fulfilled on
Tuesday - nearly seven
decades later.
Donn, Fendler got lost on
July IT. 1939, while hiking
with family on Mount
Katahdin. The search for the
boy drew national media

•·

attention.
· '.·
·· ~1\1cGowan told Gov. John
After Fendler safely walked Baldacci, who decided to
·out of the woods by following make good on the promise.
a stream and telephone line to
Baldacci welcomed the
a sporting camp, then-Gov. gray-haired Fendler and preLewis Barrows invited him to sented hi~ with the lifetime
Augusta and promised him a fishing license. McGowan
lifetime fishing license.
paid interest on the old debt
But the license never with a decorative canoe padmaterialized
until die autographed by Baldacci.
Tuesday afternoon.
Fendler, a retired Army
Fendler mentioned the lieutenant colonel, was
promise
to
Maine taken slightly abac~ by the
Conservation Commissioner attention, saying he was
· Patrick McGowan when the "just a dumb kid who got
two met . last summer. lost in the woods."

•

Circle One: A, 1X3 Greeting ...$12.00

SHADE - . About 250 anniversary. Just before the
gsrahit ua tesdo f Sh ade H'd•gdh II cIas s mem be rds.answere d
c oo1 an guests atten e
ro 11 ca11, a recor mg of the
the recent alumni reunion Statler Brothers' son, "The
held
at
the
Shade Class of '57" was played.
Commumty Center..
Also. ~onored were the five
:Spec1al recogmuon was sumvmg members of the
g1ven .to the class of 1957 class of 1947, celebrating
celebrating its 50th year 60 years, along with Fred

Colburn of the class of 1934
· gradu· who was the earliest
ate attendmg.
"All Together Again" was
the theme of the evening
which began with a social
hour and opening remarks
by Verle Smith. president,
1he pledge to the !lag. and

R&amp;J Food Shop opens
~------------------~

The Pomeroy
Food Shop is
now under new
ownership and
has a new name ,
R&amp;J Food Shop.
The store was
purchased by
Ronnie (pictured)
and Jennifer
Spaun of
Pomeroy. The
store, located at
402 East Ma in
Street, is a con·
venient store and
gas station.
Spaun said he' s
been cleaning
the store inside
and out and
hopes to eventu·
ally install a
small deli. The
store's phone
number is 992-

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Apron strings bind
a little too tight
•

resources for recipes and
support: Boston University
Biology Department at
Dear Annie: My mother- www.bu.edu/aldolase and
Food
Intolerant
in-law is an extremely con- The
trolling person.· especially Consumer at www.foodinwhen it comes to my easy- tol.com. If our readers have
going husband, her only other suggestions, we 'I I
child. She will .cry and print them.
5552.
·throw tits when she doesn 't
Dear Annie: My husBeth Sercent/photo
see him or he doesn 't call band is a physician who
her for a few days. She works very late and often
dominates every conversa- does not arrive home until
tion, and I dread any time I after midnight. He · is
praised by patients for the
have to spend with her.
I have been with my hus- time he spends with them.
.band over I 0 years, and When he isn't working, he
. Sunday, June 10
Pickens of Reedsville will Church. Bring lawn chair.
just when I think · her plays golf. If I· suggest a
PORTLAND - Sonshine celebrate her 90th birthday
S!Jnday, June 10
. behavior is getting better, it movie, he will often fall
Circle
Family
Picnic
at
I
on
June
8
.
.
Cards
·may
be
POMEROY
- The Re v.
Thesday, June 12
gets worse. For example, · asleep in the theater.
p.m
.,
McKelvey
River
Allen
Midcap
will
be preachsent
to
her
at
Arcadia
POMEROY - Bedford
~ he called my husband to
I resent that he is not
Camp,
ham,
drinks,
paper
ing
at
the
Laurel
ClifT Free
Nursing
and
Rehabilitation
help her carry a turkey into more attentive to me or our Township Trustees regular products provided by host,
Methodist
Church,
10:30
Center.
East
Second
Street.
· her house after grocery nearly grown children. If I meeting, 7 p.m., town hall.
those attending bring cov- Coolville, Ohio·45723. ·
a.m.
and
6
p.m.
services.
s hopping. How did the comment that other doctors
ered dish, lawn chair.
Monday, June II
turkey get into her shop- manage to have a family
Tuesday, June 12
POINT
ROCK
ping cart and car trunk to life as well as give good
POMEROY Meigs
Vacation Bible School will
begin with?
care to their patients, our
County
Chamber
of
be held at the Point Rock
She also relies on him to daughter becomes irritated
l&lt;' riday, June 8
Commerce, business-mindChurch of the Nazarene
.help care fur her elderly and rigorously defends her
Thursday, June 7
LONG BOTTOM
located 11n route 689 near
ed
luncheon,
noon,
TUPPERS PLAINS mother. She thinks the bur- father. He also becomes
Pomeroy Library, speaker Gospel sing at Faith Full Wilkesville , 6 to 8:30 p.m.
:den should be split between angry if I find fault. I know Regular
meeting . of Shawn
June 11 -15. Theme will be
Mallett
from Gospel Church. 7 p.m.
Plains VFW Voinovich Center for Small
the two of them. (She has no he will not change, and I Tuppers
Saturday, June 9
"Tumbleweek
Gulch,
siblings.) When he doesn't wonder if he might have a Auxiliary, 7 p.m.·
DEXTER
Wi
ener
Where
God's
Love
Changes
Business : Development,
accommodate her, she. cries- narcissistic personality disCHESTER -The Chester Bun's Party Barn . catering, roast, 7 p.m. , Old Dexter Everything.''
and yells. I have remained order.
· Lauren in Shade Historical Society will . call 992"5005 to RSVP.
meet at 7p.m. at the Chester
calm through this, but I feel Cambridge, Mass,
Thursday, June 14
Courthouse.
Plans will be
as if I am going to explode.
Dear Lauren: This is a
CHESTER
- Shade
My entire family sees common complaint from discussed for the Chester- River Lodge #453 will hold
:how she behaves and agrees people whose spouses keep Shade Days in July.
its monthly stated meeting
Friday, June 8
with me. Tell me, Annie, is long hours. We think your
POMEROY
- Meigs at 7:30 p.m. All Master
·she going to .get worse as husband is a workaholic
Masons
invited.
she gets older? How will who defines himself by his County Chapter 74, PERl, Refreshments follow.
she act when we have chil-. job. He understands how to meets at I p.m. at Meigs
dren? I'm not going to be be a good doctor. and it County Multipurpose Senior
able to hide my true feel- · gives him a satisfaction that Center. Paula Eichinger to
ings much longer. I am he isn't sure how to get speak on ·"Home Heal411:
Friday, June 8
beginning to despise this from hi's fami ly. Don 't criti- · What to Do, Who is E,ligible
and
How
it
Works."
REEDSVILLE
- Lillian
woman. Any advice? cize him in front of your
Florida Wife
· children. Accept him .as he
Dear Florida: Some of is, and find other worthyour complaints are more while activities ·to occupy
justified than others. Mom your time. ·
.should not be yelling and
Annie's Mailbox is writcryi11g because Sonny Boy ten by Kathy Mitchell and
POMEROY
- Army net training, drill and ceredoe sn't call often enough. Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- National
IS
Guard
Pvt. mony, marching, ritle
:However;ilsking for help tors of the Ann Landers Joseph D. Barnhar.t has marksmanship. armed and
with Grandma is perfectly column. Please e-mail your graduated from basic com- unarmed combat, map readreasonable, and grocery que.1ti01ls to mmiesmail- bat training at Fort ing, field tactics, military
·store personnel often help box@comcast.net, or write Jackson, Columbia, S.C.
couftesy, military justice
.lift heavy ilems into shop- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
During the nine weeks of . system, basic first aid, foot
:prng carts and car trunks.
Box l/8190, Chicago, IL training, the soldier studied marches, and field training
. The problem is, you dis- 60611. To find out more the Army mission, history, exercises.
.
like her so · much , you about Annie's Mailbox, tradition and core values,
He is the son of Brenda
:.aren ' t inclined to cut her a11d read features by other physical
fitness,
and and Pete Barnhart of Rock
·:any slack. Try to find one Creators Syndicate writers received instruction and Si.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·thing about this woman to and cartoonists, visit the practice in basic combat Barnhart is a 2006 graduate
·admire, and focus on it. Creators Syndicate Web skills, military weapons , of Ohio Valley Christian
'Yes, it may get worse when page ,at www.creators.com. chemical warfare and bayo- School, Gallipolis, Ohio.
you have kids, but as long
.as your husband is supportive and puts you first, we
hope you can find a way to
cope wi\h her.
Dear Annie: My 8-year:old granddaughter was ju st
·:diagnosed wilh "fructose
::intolerance," and it's a
::nightmare trying to figure
.out what she ca n eat. A
·majority of foods have
"fructos e, sucrose or sorbital, and she can' t tolerate
·any of them. She can have
:·some vegetables, white
There are currently not enough foster or
:milk and meat. We did firid .
·a French bread she can eat,
adoptive homes in our county, Children are
but she can't have a cookbeing forced to go to homes outside our area,
.ie, pancake or piece of
leaving school, teachers, and friends behind.
fruit. Even ketchup and
:so me yogurts are full of
fructose.
Recipes and sources for
specialty foods are nonexis:tent. She's a very tiny child
·and extremely thin. I was
frkllv - Karaoke every other Friday
I1V~:~5~0&lt;; Mens
Draf\
hoping maybe one of your
Nighl -Pool tournamenl .
June 8th &amp; June 22nd
.................. ..
.readers would know of a
a pm - 50~ off all drinks 10pm- 2am · Saturdav _uve Bands
.:support ·
group.
IThLirlli!m'· Ladies Night W/DJ
Sunday- $1.00 Beer. $1 .25 Coronas
Michigan Grandmother ·
$1 .00 cover 9pm· 2am
Dear Michigan: You
Chtldtef1 's SeMces DVJsion
50&lt;; off all drinks · 1Opm· 2am
~0. B"' 191 • 175 Race Sn~l • Middleport, OH 45760
·might find useful ideas in
CR 7 A • Pomeroy, OH • 740-992-5787
cookbooks for diabetics.
www.992CAREMEIGS.com
:and here are . two on Iine
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

~

. prayer by Ron Chapman
The· Alexander FFA Alum 111:
prepared the dmner wh 1ch
was served by members of
the Alexander FFA. Richard
Bobo of North Dakota.
class of 1957, was recognized as hav ing traveled the
farthest.

Community Calendar .·
Public meetings

Clubs·and
organizations

Church events

Her

.life

being

torn

apart.

Happy
Father's Day

.

'

I

. I

Come Out To Good Times
And Enjoy 'The Sounds Of...

love

(Your Name)

B. 1X5 Greeting with Picture...$15:00

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'One subject per pi~ture

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Wednesay. June 13, 12:00 Noon.

•

h- Rachedl
WAoodLLolAfRNCE
acme
as earne
and
a Trustee Scholarship
M ·· p fi ·
A d 10
wt'f.
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~ 0~r
ount
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Wood IS the da~ghter of
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an recent)~ graduated from
Southern H1gh School. She
was a member of the marching and pep bands, pep club,
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Online and ·the National
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and Japanese.
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Wednesday, June 6,

Wood earns scholarships Shade High School alumni hold reunion

is a joirrnalism Web site with
98,000 members in 3,500
communities worldwide.
The AP began working with
NowPublic this year to
obtain citizen journalism
images and video for distributioh to news organizations.
"It was raining cats and
· dogs" and many city streets
were flooded, he said. The
deluge appeared to be over
but the winds were still
gusty and "pretty harsh,"
he said, adding that there
were no reports of serious
damage
He said many Omanis unaccustomed to cyclones
- were alarmed. "They
haven't had this kind of ·
fear before."
Gonu was expected to
skirt the region's biggest oil
installations but could disrupt shipping in the Straits
of Hormuz, causing a spike
in prices, oil analysts said.
Oil prices rose on
Monday but retreated
Tuesday. although the
storm we.ighed heavily on
the market.
"If the storm hits Iran, it's
a much bigger story than
Oman, given how much
bigger an oil producer Iran
is," said Antoine Haff of
FIMAT USA, a brokerage
unit of Societe Generale.
"At a minimum, it's likely
to affect tanker traffic and to
shut down some Omani oil
production as a precautionary measure."
Gonu, which means a bag
made of palm leaves in the
language of the Maldives, is
expected to hit the east
coast of Oman and head to
the Gulf of Oman,' according to AccuWeather.com
meteorologist
Donn
Washburn. The cyclone was . ·
expected to hit land in
southeastern Iran late
Wednesday
or
early
Thursday, Washburn said.

MUSCAT, Oman - A
WASHINGTON - Vice
powerful cyclone menaced
President Dick Cheney's
Oman's central coast with
former chief of staff was
strong winds and rain early
sentenced to 2 1/2 years in
Wednesday, after thousands
prison Tuesday for lying and
of residents fled to higher
obstructing the CIA leak
ground. Forecasters said the
investigation - the probe
Arabian
Peninsula's
that showed a White House
strongest storm in 60 years
obsessed with · criticism of
was on a course for southits decision to go to war.
ern Iran and the oil-rich
I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby,
Persian Gulf.
the highest-ranking White
Cyclone- force winds of
House official sentenced to
Gonu, which had been
prison since the Iran-Contra
churhing
northwest
affair, asked for leniency,
through the Indian Ocean,
but a federal judge said he
reached the Omani coast,
would not reward someone
buffeting the towns of Sur
who hindered.the investigaand Ra's al-Hadd. Civil
tion into the exposure of a
Defense said the storm
CIA operative. The operadumped heavy rains on the
tive's husband had accused
capital, Muscat, and surthe administration of twistrounding communities.
ing intelligence to justify
At 10 p.m. EDT, Cyclone
the Iraq war.
Gonu was centered just off
No date was set immedicentral Oman, about II 0
ately for Libby to report to
miles southeast of Muscat
prison.
and was traveling along the
"Mr. Libby failed to meet
coastline at about 9 mph,
the bar. For whatever reaaccording
to the U.S. milison, he got off course," said
tary's.
Joint
Typhoon
U.S. District Judge Reggie
Warning
Center.
B. Walton.
.
,
M~
The storm had weakened
Special
Prosecutor Former White House aide 1. Lewis ·scooter" Libby walks toward his car outside federal somewhat . during the day
Patrick Fitzgerald, who court in Washington Tuesday after he was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison for lying and but was still packing susspent years investigating obstructing the CIA leak investigation.
tained winds of 95 mph
the case, said, "We need to
with gusts of up to 115 mph
make the statement that the his conversations with times, he said the leak
Plame is also suing the and chulilling up ocean
truth matters ever so
much." He had asked for a reporters about CIAofficial investigation ·was a serious CIA for allegedly holding waves, pn!dicted to reach as
senten. ce of up to three Valerie Plame. Fitzgerald one and obstructing it up publication of her mem- high as 36 feet, Oman civil
·
oir, in which she wants to defense officials said.
years, while Libby had questioned' Bush and deserved a serious penalty.
"It's one thing if you discuss details about her 20Heavy
rains
pelted
asked for probation and no Cheney in a probe that
time in prison. .
became a symbol of the obstruct a petty larceny. It's year career at the intelli- Muscat early Wednesday,
Reacllon from the White administration's deepening another thing if you gence agency. CIA officials and streets were empty as
obstruct a murder investiga- say the material she wants most people stayed indoors,
House was still supportive problems.
blogger
Vijayali:umar
to publish is classified.
_ but somber.
"Mr. Libby was the poster tion," he said.
Narayanan
told
The
He
fined·
Libby
$250,000
Libby
left
court
to
shouts
President Bush, traveling child for all that has gone
Associated
Press
in
a
tele.
of
and·
placed
him
on
two
two
or
three
protesters
in Europe, said through a wrong in this terrible war,"
k
h h "~ 1
defense attorney Theodore years probation after his and a throng of reporters phone interview.
s~ esman I at e e t ter- Wells said. "He has fallen prison sentence expires. and photographers.
"Everyone is cocooned in
nble for the family," espeThere
is
.no
parole
in
the
"You
should
go
right
to
their
houses. ... Shops and
cially Libby's wife and chil- from public grace. It is a
federal system, but Libby jail!" a protester screamed.
businesses arF closed," said
dren. Libby and his wife, tragic fall, a tragic fall."
whom
Libby said nothing, step- Narayanan,
Harriet Grant. have. two
Cheney,
looking
to would be eligible for release
NowPublic.com
.
ping
into
a
car
and
being
reached
out
school-age children. a son Libby's
appeal, said, after two years.
Plame and her husband, driven away.
to in Oman. NowPublic.com
and a daughter.
"Speaking as friends, we
Cheney said he hoped his hope that our system will former Ambassador Joseph
former top aide would pre- return a final result consis- Wilson, applauded the senand,
though .
vail on appeal.
tent with what we know of tence,
Fitzgerald has said his
Libby did not apologize this fine man."
and has maintained his . Defense attorneys sought investigation is complete,
innocence.
to have the sentence they urged Libby to cooperet Everyone Know Your Dacl Is Someone
"It is respectfully my delayed until appeals run ate with authorities.
"As Mr. Fitzgerald has
hope that the court will con- out. A delay also would
Very Special With A Father's Day
said,·
a cloud remains over the
·sider, along with the jury give Bush more time to
verdict, my whole life," he consider calls from Libby's vice president," Wilson said.
Thank You Tribute .•.
It was Cheney who
said in .brief remarks in allies to pardon the longrevealed Plame's identity
court before the seniencing, time aide.
To Be Published In The Sunday 'I'lmes- Sentinel
his fii:st public statement
Walton said he saw no to Libby in June 2003 after
:about the case since his reason to put the sentence her husband began queson· Sunday, June 17th!
:indictment in 2005.
on hold but agreed to con- tioning the administration's
intelligence.
. A Republican stalwart, he sider it.· He scheduled a prewar
drew more than 150 leners hearing for a week from Several other official&amp; testified that they, too, di sof support from military Thursday. ·
:commanders and diplomats
Libby and Fitzgerald left cussed the CIA operative
·who praised his government court without· speaking to with Libby as Wilson 's
criticism mounted.
:service from the Cold War reporters:
Libby said he forgot those
:through the early days of
Among Libby's support·the Iraq war.
ing letter writers were. for- conversations and was sur- .
Among Libby's support- mer Defense S~cretary prised to learn about Plame
ing letter writers were for- · Donald H. . Rumsfeld; a month later from NBC
:mer Defense Secretary Marine Gen. Peter Pace, newsman Tim Russert.
·Donald
H.
Rumsfeld; chairman of the Joint Chiefs Russert, the government's
:Marine Gen. Peter Pace, of Staff ·and former star witness at trial, testified
chairman of the Joint Chiefs Secretary of State Henry the two men never discussed Plame. Fitzgerald
of Staff and former Secretary . Kissinger.
of State Henry Kissinger, as
Libby's attorneys noted said Libby concocted the
well as Securities and that Fitzgerald never Russert story to shield him
Exchange
Commission charged anyone with leak- from
prosecution
for
Chairman Christopher Cox, ing Plame 's identity, improperly handl.ing classia former longtime House including former Deputy fied information.
The trial also revealed
member from California.
Secretary of State Richard
Cox said he gave the · Armitage or White House how the White House
judge information
on political adviser Karl strategically leaked inforLibby 's pro bono work as a Rove, the original sources mation and used journalists·
private attorney, telling of the leak.
to make its case for war and
reporters that such letters
"No one was ever charged. defend itself from critiare common at the sentenc- Nobody
ever pleaded cism, often through the
ing phase. He said he wrote gui lty," attorney William cloak of anonymity.
as an individual and not in Jeffress said. "The governThough the trial is over,
his o.fficial capacity. "I pro- ment did not establish the the legal fight' over the leak
vided to the judge informa- . existence of an offense."
continues. Plame and Wilson
tion about Mr. Libby's pro
But Walton, a Bush nomi- are suing Libby, Cheney and
bono work at an earlier nee who served in the White other senior Bush adminispoint in his career."
House as deputy drug direc- tration officials, accusing
Lihby was cpnvicred in tor under Bush's father, said them of violating their privaMarch of perjury and public officials in particular cy rights. A judge is considobstruction of justice for had a duty to testify honest- ering whether to dismiss the ·
lying to investigators about ly. His voice raising at lawsuit.

PageA:3.

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Juile 6, 20o7

Thousands flee as powerful .
cyclone bears down on Persian
Gulf, unnerves oil markets

BY MATT APUZZO
AND

PageA2

POOBAH

Triple Threat

·Saturdav, June 9th

Frldav, J•a151h

********************
South Bound·
Saturdav. June 23rd ·

Call to offer your help, or your home.

992•CARE
.

•
•·

.. . ...

�'

OPINION·

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
Dan Goodrich
·Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. June 6, the I 57th day of 2007.
There are 208 day s left in the year.
Today·s Highlight in History :
·
On June 6, 1944, the "D-Day" invasion of Europe took
place during World War II as Allied forces stormed the
beaches of Normandy, France.
On this date: ·
In 1606, French dramatist Pierre Comeille was born in
Rouen.
In 1844. the Young Men 's Christian Association was
founded in London.
In 1918, the World War I Battle of Belleau Wood, which
resulted in a U.S . victory over the Germans, began in
France.
In 1925, Walter Percy Chrys ler founded the Chrysler
Corp.
In 1934, the Securities and Exc han ge Commission was
established.
In 1942, Ja,panese forces retreated in the World War II
Battle of Midway.
In 1966. black activist James Meredith was shot and
wounded as he walked along a Mississippi highway to
encourage black voter registration.
·
In 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy died at Good Samaritan
Hospital in Los Angeles, a day after ~e was shot by Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan.
In 1978, California voters overw helmingly approved
Proposition 13, a primary ballot initiative calling for major
cuts in property taxes.
In 1982, Israeli forces invaded Lehanon to drive
Palestine Liberation Organization fi ghters out of the country. (The Israelis withdrew in June 1985.)
Ti:n years ago: Timothy .Me Veigh's lawyer pleaded with
a jury to spare the life of the convicted Oklahoma City
bomber, holding up his dress uniform and portraying him
as a model soldier deeply disturbed by his government's
role in the di saster near Waco. Texas.
Five years ago: Stung by intelligence failures, President
Bush called on Congress in a nationally broadcast address
to remake the government with a t~rrorist-fighting
Department of Homeland Security. Israeli troops stormed
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's headquarters in response
to a Palestinian suicide attack that killed 17 Israelis on a
bus.
One year ago: Veterans Affairs Secretary Jim Nicholson
acknowledged a stolen computer contained personal data
on about 2.2. million active-duty military, Guard and
Reserve personnel - not just 50,000 as initially believed.
Iran and the United States had a rare moment of agreement,
using similar language to describe "positive steps" toward
an accord on a package of incentives aimed at rersuading
Tehran to suspend uranium enrichment. Sou musician
Billy Preston died in Scottsdale, Ariz. , at age 59.
Thought for Today: "You never find yourself until you
face the truth." - Pearl Bailey, American singer and
actress ( 1918-1990).

PageA4_
Wednesday, June 6,

2007,

There's no negotiating with Iran
It 's not 1979, and ' we're
not watching it every night
on television . But Iran. has
taken hostages again. Does
anyone care? The sounds ·
of near silence out of
Kathryn
Washington suggest, "not
Lopez
as much as we should."
. On May 8, the tyrannical
regime in Tehran formally
arrested a 67-year-old
grandmother,
Haleh from the Persian version of
Esfandiari. Not a sailor or Radio Free Europe/Radio
marine - like the 15 Brits Liberty. A fifth Am~rican
·Iran held hostage earlier is missing there : Robert A.
this spring - Esfandiari is Levinson, a former FBI
U.&amp;.,-Beltway-P,olicy agent. (You can imagi ne
a
wonk: She is director of what they think of him .)
the Middle East Program That a number of these
at the Woodrow Wilson Americans do not exactly
Center for International sound like likely members
Scholars .. She was forbid- of the vast-right-win?;:
den exit from the mul- Jewi sh-conspiracy to do·
lahcracy,. where she .had Zioni st
and
Ugly
been to visit her sick moth- American bidding mean s
er. At the airport, her pass- nothing to the terror
ports were taken, and she's regime · in Iran , which
spent 2007 under house thrives on "Death to
arrest- and is now in the America" and "Death to
helli sh Evin Prison . The Israel'7 propaganda.
The news of the Shakeri
regime says she 's a pawn
of the evil neocon Bush arrest came down from the
administration's · plot to 'State Department days
take over Iran.
after the Un.ited States held
' Esfandiari is not the only talks with Iran for the first
American recently taken time in 25 years. While I
hostage by I rim. Her don't have easy answers
·prison mate is another sup- ready for how to solve the
posed Americ.an spy: Kian problem that is a rruclear,
Tajbakhsh, a sociologist jihadist Iran, I also have
from the Open Society the hardest time squaring
Institute (a New York th,ese negotiations with
gro\}p
that
promotes . President GeorgtC W.
democracy). Iran has also Bush's brave and morall y
detained a peace activist clear insistence of "you' re
named Ali Shakeri and a either with us or against
journalist, Parnaz Azima, us." He named Iran as part

of an "ax is 'of evil,"
encouraging
terrori sm
against American citizens,
of the sort we saw when
jihadists killed some 3,000
Americans o.n our soil,
none too far fro") whe,re I
work and li ve.
As its humili ation of
Britain earlier thi s year
proved, Iran is clearly in
the mood to test how far it
can go - how much the
United Nations and th e ·
United States will let it get
away with . The answer
appears to be, pretty far. A
rec ent report from th e
Interna tion al
Atomic
Energy Agency tell s us
that over the co urse of a
year. Iran has go ne from
164 centrifuges to 1,3 12.
Maybe 8.000 by year 's
end ? Clearly, we have no
time to be messing around.
I' m all for diplomacy in
general - but with Iran?
The co uMtry fomentin g
violence again st our troops
and allies in Iraq? The
country that wa nts to wipe
Israel off the · map? The
cou ntry that answers our
diplomatic olive branches
with hostage-taking?
But we ' re in diplomatic
mode anyway. A diplomatic mode that - with the
.names Parnaz Azima,
Haleh Esfandiari, Ali
Shakeri, Tajbakhsh and
Robert Levinson on our
minds - should have all
Americans angry, nervous,
and praying that the Bush
administration is working

on something good they ' re
keeping close to the vest:
Praying that they are as
skeptical of Iran as they
should be. fraying that
they are wilhng to put in
pluce a ' debilitating sa nctions policy and send clear
signals of support to the
good men and women of
Iran who want another
kind of life there. free of
th e terrorists who run the
country.
Georcc W. Bush has had
hi ' g11•~l moments of leadership on Iran . A big
believer in the yearning of
all men and women for'
democracy, he 's sent signs
to the democracy act ivists
and di ss idents in Iran,
some of them being held in
the sa me Evin Pri son some
of our American compatriots are in ri ght now. But,
as far as we know, they are
.not getting the help they
need from us, the West..
The State Department presumably won't be as out- .
raged as it should be by the ·
abduction of American cit-'
izens because they care
about "engaging" those
who would rather talk
about "Death to America." ·
Something 's got to give . .
And it better be us making
them do the ·giving, one
way or another.
(Kathryn Lopez is th e
of National Review
Online (www.nationalre- ,
view. com). She can be con- ~
/acted ar klope z@ nation:
a/re view.com.)
·

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Obituaries
PORTLAND - Clarence Gilmore Lawrence, 77,
Portland, Ohio, went home to be with the Lord on Thesday,
June 5, 2007, at his residence surrounded by his family.
Clarenc~ was born on Dec. 8, 1929, in Long Bottom,
Ohio, son of the late James H. and Hattie (Hayman)
Lawrence. Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by
three brothers, Norman, ChaFies, and Howard Lawrence;
father-in-law, Ray Ward; mother-in-law, Margaret Donahue.
Clarence was a graduate of Racine High School Class of
1946. He worked at Ce ntury Aluminum, formerly Kaiser
Aluminum, for 30 years before retiring in 1990. He was a
fonner clerk uf Lebanon Township for 24 years and a former member of the Southern Local School 'Board. He was
a trustee of the Hazel Community Church'. He attended the
Carmel-S utton United Methodist Church.
He is survived by his loving wife of 56 years, Iva (Ward)
Lawrence; three sons: James Ray (Barbara) Lawrence, . of
Syracuse,Clarence Melvin (Patricia) Lawrence, of Portland,
Bryan Lee (Annie) Lawrence, of Portland; and one daughter
Brenda Sue (Carroll Joe) Johnson, of Portland, grandchildren,
Jeremy (April ) Lawrence, Jennifer Lawrence, Jason Lawrence,
MelOdy (James) McKay, Tyler (Tara Rose) Johnson, Adam
Johnson, Dustyn Johnson, Samantha Edwards, and
Christopher Edwards; two great granddaughters, Shauna Clark,
Kri sten McKay; one brother Joe Dale (Sheila) of Belpre.
Also surviving are brothers-in-law Frank (Ina) Ward, of
Kempner, Texas, John (Teresa) Ward, of East Liverpool,
Ohio; sisters-in-l&lt;lw Albina Stanley, of East Liverpool,
Ohio, Alice Osborne, of Long Beach, Calif., Linda (Kenny)
Cochran, of Wellsv ille, Ohio, Zona (Fred) Crabtree, of
Well sville. Ohio, Darlene (Jim) Curran, of East Liverpool,
Ohio; and several ni eces, nephews, friends and neighbors,
including a special little fri end, Austin Rose.
Funeral ~erv i ces will be at 2 p.m. Friday, June 8, 2007 a.t
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, Ohio with Pastor John
Gilmore officiating. Burial will follow at Browning
Cemetery, Portland. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 5 to 9 p.m. on Thursday, June 7, 2007.
Pallbearers will be Jeremy Lawrence, Jason Lawrence,
Tyler Johnson, Adam Johnson, Dustyn Johnson, and
Christopher Edwards.
,
...
Online condolences may be sent to the famtly by vtstttng
www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley
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Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks
Outside

13 Weeks
26Weeks
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'32.26
'64.20
1 127'. 11

Meigs County
'53.55
' 107.10
'214.21

Spring
smorgasbord

sale will go toward the pur- or without instirance coverchase of new banners for the age. Call 1-800-844-2654
high school gymnasium.
for more information.

Immunization
clinics

LONG BOTIOM
Long Bottom Community
Association will hold its
spring smorgasbord dinner
onSaturday, beginning at 5
p.m. at the Long Bottom
Community Building. A $6
donation for adults includes
everything.

Plan yard sale
TUPPERS PLAINS -·
Eastern Athletic Boosters
will hold a yard sale from 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. on June 30 and
July I . Donations are being
accepted and arran~ements
can be made for pi~kup by
calling Deedee Cross at 9853770 or Teresa Collins at
667-6630, Proceeds from the

TUPPERS PLAINS
The
Ohio
University
College of Osteopathic
Medicine
Childhood
Immunization Program, a
mobile health program, will
provide free routine immunizations for all area children from birth though 18
years of age, from 4:30p.m.
to 5:30 p.m. on June 25 at
the Coolspot. Routine childhood immunizations are
free of charge. Also offered,
a Hep A and HPV for VFC
eligible children. Bring
child's shot records. Service
available to all families with

Dinner set
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Men's Fellowship
dinner at New Hope Bible
Baptist Church, 6:30 p.m.,
. fellowship hall, June 19,
· covered dish dinner, devotions, fellowship.

ABLE sets
recognition
dinner

Meigs high School.
The awards program will
immediately follow the dinner sponsored by the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club and the ABLE program of the .Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center.
Students who have passed
the GED ·examination will
be honored and others will
be recognized for their work
toward that goal.

Vacation Bible
school

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. -New Hope Bible
POMEROY- The annu- B&amp;ptist Church, Son Force
al recognition of the Meigs Kids Vacation Bible School,
County
Adult
Basic classes for all ages including
Education (ABLE) program adults, music, crafts and a
will be held at 6 p.m. covered dish dinner beginMonday in the. cafeteria at ningat6:15p.m., June 10-14.

~ditor

Deaths
Betty Jane Codner
LONG BOTIOM -Betty Jane Codner· of Mesa, Ariz.,
formerly of Long Bottom, dted on Monday, June 4, 2007.
Her husband, Robert W. ,"Bob" Codner survives.
There was no funeral service.

IF THE
ELECTIONS

I'D BE

WERE

RELIEVED.

HELD
TODAY...

For the Record
AP photo

· Civil actions
POMEROY - An action demanding a write of mandamus was filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by
Robert L. Griffin, Reedsville, against Board of Chester
Township Trustees, demanding access to public records.
A lawsuit alleging personal injury was filed by Michael
Russell, Mason, W.Va., against James Robert Staats, Jr.,
Letart, W.Va., and others.
A civil judgment action was filed by Hudson &amp; Key~e.
Painesville, against Raelyn Basham Braley Clamp111,
Pomeroy, in the amount of $15,738.34.
An action for foreclosure was filed by Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy, against Charles Keith Pyles, Racine,
and others, alleging default on a mortgage agreement .in the
amounts of$29,081.68, $1,700.39, and $2,666.67.

Dissolutions
POMEROY - Dissolutions were granted in Meigs
County· Common Pleas Court to Anna M. Farley and
Robe1t S. Farley, Robert F. Lawson, Jr., and Tracy L.
Lawson, Michelle L. Hutton and Christopher M. Hutton,
Amy Jo McDonald and David Eugene McDonald, ·and
Brianna D. Acree and Gary L. Acree.
·

Divorce

Letters to the editor are we/cqme. They should be less
than 100 words. All/etters are subject ro editing, must be
signed, and inchule address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letter.~ should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizarions and individuals will not be accepted f or publication.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Local Briefs

Clarence G. Lawrence

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

www.mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY - An action for divorce was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court . by ~baron Jones, Rutland,
against James Jones, West Columb1a, W.Va.
.
A divorce was granted to Paris Hess from Tonya Hess.

Eating is for guests only
We were visiting friends a
few months ago, drinking
coffee in their kitchen,
catching up on all the gossip
when their college-age son
walked in,and slatted rooting
around in the fridge for
something to eat.
The kid knows his way
around the kitchen. · He's
been working in restaurants
for spending money since he
was a teenager. He pulls out
some eggs and a nice block
of Gruyere and starts making
himself an omelet.
His mother looks at him
and says, ''What do y,ou
think you're· doing? That's
the eating cheese." ·
We all kriew what She
meant, of course. That
cheese was for company. It
was for us, or people like us
who parachute in every year
or so, stay for a few days,
and leave. He was just famiIy the pre-wrapped,
processed cheese slices were
plenty 'good enough for him.
I knew how he. felt. Sue
just got back from buying
groceries for our dinner
guests tonight. She bought
all sorts of goodies -goodies that she would never buy
just ·for me. Are you an
absolute stranger? Here, try
the pate. It's imported. DOn't

der perfection."
"Exactly."
"I think I'll just have some
fruit and a salad." .
"You're in luck. There was
a sale on rotten, mealy
Jim
and those black
apples
Mullen
bananas you like."
"I don' t Iike the black
bananas. I like y&lt;;llow
bananas. Where did you get
know us from Adam? Have the idea I like black
another jumbo shrimp. Take bananas?"
this filet mignon home with
"If you'd stop whining and
you when you go, we're just eat, you 'd ie(lrn to like
going to throw it out if you them."
don't take it. I hope you like
So, the Smiths are coming
creme brulee, Sue made a lot
over for 'dinner •tonight. I
of it.
But .when there's no com- don't even know what their
· pany for dinner, I get end-of- · names are, really. We just
fridge, freezer-burned. what- met them once. For 10 minwas-on-sale leftovers. Sue utes. Maybe they ' re the
loves to pull stuff out of the Joneses. But they ' ll be eatfreezer that has expiration ing like ihe Rockefellers.
Tonight the Smith-Joneses
dates that say "Best when
used on or before June 25, . will be eating shrimp. The
1954." We had a TV dinner Smith-Joneses will be eating
the other day, and ttie picture an assortment of firie
on the box was. of a black- cheeses. The Smith-Joneses
and-white TV with a round will be enjoying a fine wine
in our most beautiful glassscreen.
. "Are you sure we should es. The Smith-Joneses will
be eating this? Haven't there be forking down roast pork
been a few power blackout-; and fancy haby vege tables
since 1954?''
on our finc ' t china. The
· "Cooking kills the germs.'' Smith-Joneses wi ll be wip"And as everyone knows, ing the corner of their
germs taste better when mouths with our nicest cloth
. they're cooked to juicy, ten- napkins. The·Smith-Joneses

will be eating homemade
raspberry sorbet with ho111emade whipped cream. ln::
short, the Smith-Joneses wilt' ~
be eating better than we ever::
do -except when companY: ·
comes.
Tomorrow, I go back to: .
using the ~at 's old bowl I . ·
inherited when Sue bought.. ·
him a new one.
·'
"What are you complain-· :
ing about? They say a eat's':
tongue is cleaner than a&lt;
human's," she said.
·
"No, they say a dog's::
tongue is cleaner than a: ;
human's. Cats lick their ...: :
well, that's not the point. We: :
have plenty of nice china,: :
why can't we use it every-:
day?"
•.
"You're kidding. right ?.:
Eat off the good china every:::
day. What next ? You want us:··
to sleep in the guest bed-: :
room ~ You want to dry your
hands on the guest towels?
You want to cat the eating
cheese~ Who· do you think
you are?"
(Jim Mullen is rl~e aurhor of
" I I Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Simple
Life " and "Baby's First
Tattoo. " You ca11 reach him at
jim_mul/en@mvway.tom.)

Students walk by VIrginia Tech 's Norris Hall Tuesday In Blacksburg Va. The bu ilding wil l be reopened for offices and laboratories, but It will never again be used for classrooms, the university announced Tuesday.

' Virginia Tech to reopen building where 30
people and gulunan died, minus classrooms
Bv SUE LINDSEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BLACKSBURG, Va.
The building where a gunman killed 30 people and
himself on the Vrrginia Tech
campus will be reopened for
offices and laboratories, but
it will never again be used
for classrooms, the university announced Tuesday.
Norris Hall will open
June I 8 for the engineering
science and mechanics and
civil and environmental
engineering departments.
They had been the primary
occurants of the building
Apri 16, when Seung-Hui
Cho killed 32 students and
faculty members . on the
Blacksburg campus. Two
victims were shot in a dormitory a few hours before
the rest were attacked inside
Norris Hall.
The second-floor classrooms in the three-story
stone · building where the
victims were gunned down
will remain closed.
Following the shootings,
dozens of faculty, students,
alumni and others contacted the school with suggestions for use of the building, ranging from using it
as classroom space to making it a memorial to knocking it down.
'
"After considering all
points of view that were
offered, I determined the
' best course of action to

enable the College of
Engineering to continue its
healing was to move forward with phased reuse of
the ·building," university
president Charles Steger
said in a news release.
"Erasing the building
would not erase what happened," said Virginia Tech
professor Bryan Cloyd, who
used to work in Norris and
whose daughter, Au,stin,
was killed there. "I think it
would be very difficult for
students to have their undivided attention on learning
in that building, and so converting it from classroom
space is necessary. But I'm
happy to hear that the university will have some other
productive use for it."
On Tuesday morning,
Cloyd visited the secondfloor classroom where his
daughter died. Since the
shooting, he said, it has
been repainted, the ceiling
has been replaced and there
are new floors.
The
College
of
Engineering was hit hardest in the attack, with II

students and three professors killed.
Norris contains sophisticated laboratories that cannot be moved and are essential to the engineering programs, officials said.
"We have literally. dozens
of graduate students whose
work is frozen in time and
unable to move on to jobs or
complete their research ,"
engineering deao Dick
Benson said in the news
release.
Accommodations will be
made for people who have a
difficult time re-entering the
building, Benson said.
"Personally, I don 't think
I would want to go into .
Norris at this time," said
Susan Bowers, who last
month got her master's
degree in civil engineering.
Officials said they will
post security guards in the
building and limit access to
employees, students and
engineering visitors to cut
down on sightseers.
A plan is being developed
to convert the building's
classrooms · to other uses.

The university plans to
begin a study this summer.
on the best long-term use of
the building.
The building. of local
gray limestone, is OJIC of
more than I 00 buildings .
on . Virginia Tech 's 2,600acre campus. It was named
for· Earl B. Norris, who
served as engineering dean .
for 24 years.
More than 24,000 signatures have been added to
an online petition to
rename the building after
Liviu Libresc u, an engineering and math professor
and Holocaust survivor
who was shot after he barricaded a classroom door
against Cho ·so students
could escape.

A~t;~
Wishful! Realities
June9

Catnp Melodramas:
Theatre Camp
June 11- July 7
Adnnce Registration Re:suiftd

The Ariel Players presents

"Steel Magnolias"
June 15 &amp; 16 at 8 pm
June 17 at 3 pm
The Arie1,Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH

COUPON
·
-----------~
·
EE HEARING TESTS .

1· · Will be aiven in MEIGS COUNTY by . · I
I ~·HEARING AID CENTER I .

1

Chllllene Hoetllch/photo

RSVP volunteer Gladys Cumings got into the spirit of the fiesta-

themed luncheon with a bright colored blouse and sombrero.
the Chamber ()f Commerce
commented on how much
that agency appreciates the
from Page A1
assistance.
Numerous door prizes
work with the Meigs donated by local businesses
County Health Department, were awarded following
and Michelle DoQovan of the dinner.

R.svp

.I

,,

ltlfWamer lnsuriiKt·
Jell Warner
113 w.2nd St.
Pameroy,OH 45769
(740) 992-5479
wametjltlflationwide.com

.D

Nationwide'
On Your Side

Auto ~ · Lh ~Mint!!

Dr. A. Jac.kson Bailes Offl_ce
507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH

1

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FRIDAY, June 8th • 9:00am-noon
I Call Toll Free 1-800-634-5265 for an immediate appolntment. l
1The t~te. will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Speclallal 1
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
I conversation Is lnvHed to have a FREE hearing test to see If I
1this problem csn be helped! Bring this coupon with you for 1
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I .UAW. ARMCO, ANDWALK-INS
All OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
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�'·

•

The Daily Sentinel
.

/

LOCAL • STATE

POMEROY - Pomeroy costs, three days jail, susMagistrate Linda Warner pended, three days DIP
recently processed the fol- school and 80 hours comlowing cases in Pomeroy munity service, failure to
control. $75 . and costs:
Mayor's Court:
Cases heard: Alexandra D. Alexander B. Varian, New
Courtney, Middleport, dri- Haven, W.Va., expired tag s.
ving under suspension, $200 $75 and costs; Larry G.
and costs, expired tags, $75, McWilliams,Athens, unsafe
$25 suspended and costs; ve hicle court costs only;
Stewart A. Morris, Pomeroy, Melissa Dickens. Rutland,
expired tags. $75 and costs. no operators license, $200
possession, $100 and costs, and costs; Ephriam V.
p&lt;issession of paraphernalia. Hredman, Pomeroy, marked
$100 and costs: Randall F.. lanes, $75 and costs; Jordan
Johns,
Long
Bottom .. L. Laudermiit, Wheeling,
expired tags, $75, $50 sus- W.Va., driving under S1JSpended .and costs: Jason E. . pension. $200 and costs: 30
Reeves, Albany, window days jail, suspended, voluntint, $50. $25 suspended and tary enrollment or commitcosts, expired tags. $75 , $25 ment to Health Recovery
suspended and costs; Brian Facility, leaving the scene
Sutherland, · Pomeroy, dri- of an accident, $275 and
ving under suspension, court costs, improper back$200, $50 suspended and ing, $75 and costs, OVI,
costs; Ira L. Warner, Albany, $700 and costs. three days
driving under suspension, jail, suspended, open COl\$200 and costs, fictitious tainer in a motor vehicle,
tags, $75 and costs; Trenton $100 and costs; William N.
L.
Schoonover, Point Lehew, Pomeroy, disorderly
Pleasant, W.Va., speed conduct, $100 and costs,
43/25 $43 and costs; Dana menacing threats, $200 and
R. Williams, Jr., Pomeroy, costs; Peggy Musser,
squealing tires, $75 and Middleport, window tint,
costs;
Ashton
Bush, $75, $25 suspended and
Pomeroy, squealing tires, costs; Kendra P. Cleland;
$75 and costs; Clair C. Pomeroy, failure to appear,
Reed, Caldwell, · speed $150 and costs; Matthew T.
Brown, Middleport, failure
41125, $41 and costs;
Shandi
A.
Bobb, to appear, $150 and costs;
Pomeroy, obstructing offi- Trenton
D.
Qualls,
cial business, $175 and Middleport, failure to comcosts, opep container in a ply, $150 and costs; Angela
motor vehicle, $100, and M. Ward, Pomeroy, possescosts; Mark 1. Dailey, sion of controled substance,
Pomeroy, OVI, $700 and $100 and costs, disorderly

_ by intoxication, $100 and $100 and costs; Christopher
costs; Kelly C. Caldwell, D. Jeffers,Pomeroy, disorRacine, failure to appear, derly conduct, $100 and
$150 and costs; Mike costs; Chris· F. Swiger,
Pierce, Pomeroy, persistant Portland. no operators, $100
disorderly, $140 and costs; and wsts; David L. Lynch,
Clay Russell, Middleport, Columbus, speed 42/25,
failure to appear, $150 and $42 and costs; Susan A.
· costs; .Matilda W. Clarke, Well, Shade, speed 40/25,
Pomeroy, failure to comply, $40 anll costs; Amanda J.
$150 and costs.
Miller, Middleport, speed
Bonds forfeited: Bonnie 41125, $41 and costs; Linda
Evans, Pomeroy, child J. Pleasants, Huntington,
saftey seat, $100 and costs; W.Va., speed 43/25, $43 and
Erica L. Smith, Pomeroy, costs; Michael A. Vanmatre
speed 37/25 $37 and costs: II. Letart. W.Va., expired
Nada Kopcznsky. Pomeroy, tags, $75 and costs; Bonnie
speed 42/25. $42 and costs; S. Donohue, Pomeroy. trafGlenda F. Richmond, fie control device, $75 and
Rutland, speed 42/25, $42, costs: Charles E. Lee,
and costs; Stephen M. Shade, speed 49/25, $49
Welch, Fleming, speed · and costs; Larry A. Lucas,
46/35, $36 and costs; Levi Athens, speed 45/25, $45
G. Clegg, Long Bottom, and costs; Sally A.
window tint, $50 and costs; Dqnaldson, Long Bottom,
Angela Hatfield, Wheeling, speed 39/25, $39 and i=Osts;
W.Va., speed 46/35, $36 and Albert E. Stewart, New
costs;
Roy
Boggs, Haven, W.Va., speed 41/25,
Middleport; leaving the $ 41 and costs; John W.
scene of an accident, $275 Shaw, Tiltonsville, possesand costs, expired tags, $75 sion of drug paraphernalia,
and costs, improper back- $100 and costs; Tara D.
ing, $75 and costs; Sandra Blankenship, Albany, speed
Clonch, Athens, speed 39/25, $39 and costs;
40/25, $40 and costs; Tony Tiffany N. Dean, Belpre,
R. Dugan, Pomeroy, speed . speed 42/25, $42 and costs;
40125, $40 and costs; Scott Mark
A.
Huntsman,
D. Williams, Vinton, speed Fleming, speed 51/35, $41
50/35, $40 . and costs; and costs; William 0.
Virginia H. Dodson, Point Abdella, Columbus, speed
Pleasant, W.Va., expired 44/25, $44 .and costs; Carrie
tags, $75 and costs; Randall R. Jones, Rutland, defective
F. Johns, Pomeroy, assured exhaust, $75 and costs;
. clear distance, $75 and Kenneth
R. .
Dayis,
costs;
Alan
Easter, Pomeroy, speed 46/25, $46
Pomeroy, child saftey seat; and costs.

Reflex sympathetic dystrophy - ,chronic, progressive pa{n

Bar owners mount effort to get
smoking back at their businesses
COLUMBUS (AP) Bar ow'ners are seeking an
exemption to the state's
smoking ban for some tavems, saying voters didn't
understand how restrictive
the ban would be and businesses are losing too many
smoking customers. · '
The proposal , would
allow smoking at bowling
alleys after 6 p.m., at bars
where no more than I0 percent of sales are food a:nd at
private clubs, such as
Veterans of Foreign .War
posts. A group of about 300
bar owners will try to take
the plan to lawmakers first
and then to voters on the
November ballot if rejected
in the Legislature.
Smoking is prohibited in
most indoor, public places
under the · ban approved
overwhelmingly by voters
last November. Voters also
rejected a competing consututional
amendment
.'

backed by a different group
of tavern owners and
liquor store operators that
would have excluded
restaurants and bars from
any smoking ban , by a
nearly 2-1 margin .
"Most people I talk to,
smokers and nonsmokers,
are confused about what
they voted on last time,"
said
Hermann
H.
Tegenkamp, a Cincinnati
bar owner backing the new
. attempt to exempt bars.
The ban is causing bars to
lose significant business,
. said Patrick Carroll, president of the Cincinnati-base4
Buckeye Liquor Permit
Holders Association.
"Too many places are losin g. too much money. · Some
are· on the verge of closing
their doors," he said.
His group gave the Ohio
attorney general a proposed
constitutional amendment
this week along with I ,417

signatures to begin a review.
If the language is
approved as factual, the
group must collect 140,000
signatures to force .the
Legislature to consider it.
About 400,000 signatures
would be needed to put the
issue on the ballot if ·lawmakers refuse.
The American Cancer
Society, whiCh spearheaded
the smoking bal) ballot
campaign, issued a statement Monday calling the
proposal a "slap in the face
for Ohio voters." Granting
exemptions . wbuid put
thousands of Ohio workers
at risk of the dangers of
second-hand smoke, the
group said.
In a separate court fight,
the state is defending an
exemption it~;~ranted private
clubs, appeahng a Franklin
County judge's ruling
against allowing smoking at
the clubs.

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel .

2007

Marshall names 7 to HOF, Page B2
Mayors make NBA Finals wager, Page B6

Today's Forecast · city/Region
Forecast toi Wednndly, June 6

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

High I Low temps

tvHCH

. · .~

Toledo•

7'l"t46"

Youngstown • ,

70' 141'
PA.

Wade believes
James is up
for NBA finals
BY liM REYNOLDS
f&gt;P SPORTS WRirER

lo.vton· .~
,.

76' t 48"

'
Cincinnati
• 80" 151 '

1

.,.,.

v .
v1'*1. •l!orblmouth.
79'14~·,
KY.

b

Cloudy

6
Cbxty
Paoly

02007

~ Thunder· ~

Flurries

~

Ice

Snow

• •• ••

7;-:;-T· ~ ~~·. :.::· ~
Showef8

~

Ra.n

a

*

Weelher unctergrOt.lld • AP

winds 5 to I0 mph.
Friday and. Friday
night••• Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper
80s. Lows in the lower 60s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday...Partly sunny.
Highs in the lowe~ 80s.
Saturday night through
Sunday
. night ••. Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s. Highs in the lower 80s.
Monday... Sunny. Highs
in the lower 80s.

Wednesday ••• Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper
70s. West winds around 5
mph.
Wednesday
night ...
Mostly clear. Lows in the
mid 50s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph.
. ·
Thursday... Mostly sunny.
Warmer with highs in the
lower 90s. South winds 10
to 15 mph.
Thursday night ... Partly
cloudy. Not as cool with
lows in the upper 60s. South

AEP (NYSE) -

46.114

Meigs and Gallia counties combine
for 16 on all-district .baseball teams
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

J Local Stocks

FAMILY MEDICINE
.off by a major trauma to a During the atrophic · sta'ge,
limb, for example, a broken the muscles get weak arid
leg. Often, however, as in stiff, the skin gets cool and
your husband's case, the .shiny and RSD may
injury cal) be quite mild. progress to another limb.
Other times no inJury can be
RSD can be difficult to
identified at all. . ·
diagnose, but it can someRSD is not only painful, times be treated successfulbut chronic and progres- ly. Non-steroidal antiinsive. It can occur at any flammatory drugs like
age but is most common aspirin and· ibuprofen can
between the ages of 40 and be effective for some peo60 years. Men and women ple in reducing the inflamsuffer from it in equal mation and pain. Muscle
numbers, and it has been relaxants, topical balms and
reported in children as physical therapy can also be
young as three.
beneficial.
RSD is fairly uncommon
In addition, antidepresin mild to moderate trauma, sants and anticonvulsants
affecting about one to two can be used to help with
percent of bone fracture suf- sleep difficulties caused by
ferers. However, with more RSD. Some people are
severe trauma, the likeli- helped by transcutaneous
hood
increases.
For electrical nerve stimulation,
instance, in people ·who are or TENS, units or nerve
paralyzed on one side, it has blocking injections.
been reported to occur · in
The prognosis for RSD
about 21 percent of cases.
var1es from person to perThe symptoms usually son. Some sufferers underprogress through three go spontaneous remission
stages: Acute, .dystrophic of their symptoms. Others,
and atrophic. The acute unfortunately, in spite of
stage starts within a few treatment have unremitting
months of the injury with pain and crippling, and
burning pain associated experience
meversible
with skin and nail changes, · changes.
color changes of the limb,
For such a complex disorswelling, and sensitivity.
der, it's important that the
In the dystrophic phase, treatment be individualized
the limb is swollen, cool to for each patient.
the touch, discolored and .
the muscles are beginning
Family' Medicine® is a
to wither. Osteoporosis can weekly column. To submit
begin in the area. This stage questions, write to Martha
occurs about three to six A. Simpso11, D.O., M.B.A.,
months after the injury. Ohio University College of

Wednesday, Jime 6,

Local Weather

POMEROY MAYORS COURT

Question: My husband
sprained his ankle a few
months ago. It should have
healed by now, but he continues to be bothered by it.
His doctor says he may
have something called
"RSD" and wants to send ·
him to another specialist.
What is RSD? What does
RSD stand for? What can be
done for it?
Answer: The initials
"RSD" stand for reflex
sympathetic
dystrophy.
You'll sometimes see the
word "syndrome" added to
the end of the name, making
it "RSDS." A newer- and
somewhat more descriptive
- term for this disorder is
complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) type I. ·
By whatever name, it's a
relatively "new" medical
condition. It was formally
identified a little over 20
years ago. This is an
uncommon disorder of
unknown cause that can
follow an injury. A part of
the nervous system malfunctions, and affected
nerves start to misfire ,
sending constant pain signals to the brain .
. A telltale sign is that the
pain is more severe than
would be expected for the
type of injury. RSD is not
psychological, but it can
lead to psychological problems when friends and doctors don 't take the complaints of pain seriously.
Sometimes the RSD -is set

PageA6

.

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ) -

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21.95
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Osteopathic Medicine, P.O. Akzo
Alhllllld Inc. (NYSE) - 61.83
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
Box 110, Athens, Ohio IIIC Lob (NYSE)- 31.01.
-26.211
45701, or Yia e·tnllil to - Ev.,. (NASDAQ) - 38.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.28
Peoplea (NASDAQ)- 27.23
readerquestions@jamily- Bor&amp;Wamer ( NYSE) - 84.01
. Pepsico (NYSE)- 67.82
Aluminum (NASDAQ) medicinellews.org. Medical Century
117.46
Premier (NASDAQ) -1.5.50 ·
information i11 this column Cham...... (NASDAQ)- 7.07
Rockwell (NYSE) - 68.66
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 15.41
is provided as an educa- Channing Shops (NASDAQ) 12.15
Royal Dutch Shall - 76.70
tional senice only. lt does City
HoldiOC (NASDAQ) ;- 38.07
s..,;, -.e (NASDAQ) -178.40
not rephzce the judgme11t of Collins (NYSE) - 70.02
W-art (NYSE) - 50.52
.
your personal physician, Dollar General ( NYSE) - 21.60
Wendy's (NYSE)- 40.12
Worthington (NYSEI- 20.98
who should be re~ed on to DuPont (NYSE) - 52.24
Dally ltoek reports are tho 4 p.m.
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.50
diag11ose and recomme11d Gannett (NYSE)- 59.54
ET ci..IOC quotes of t.....,t;ttons
treatment for any medical General Elect~c (NVSE)- 37.40 lor June 5, 2007, provided by
co11ditio11S. Past columiiS Ha~y.Oavldson (NYSE) - 81.43 Edward Jones ftnanclal adVIsors
Morgan (NYSE) - 51.22
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www.fa m i lym edic in e· Umlted Brandl (NYSE) - 26.60
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Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 57.97
01.74. Member SIPC.

MIAMI - A year ago,
LeBron James was one of
Dwyarie Wade's biggest
supporters during the NBA
playoffs.
·
Now Wade is returning
the favor.
Wade, MVP of the final s
last year with the Miami
Heat, is sure his close friend
can handle the pressure that
comes with
leading a
team into
t~e championship
round.
Jame s
and
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers
meet the
Wade

S

a

A total of 16 people from
Meigs and Gallia counties
were named to the 2007 AllSoutheast District baseball
team for their efforts this past
spri ng on the diamond.
Ryan Lemley was named
the Division IV North
Division Coach of the Year
after guiding Southern to its
first league championship in
a decade, not to mention a

berth in the Division IV
regional tournament.
Eleven of the 15 players
selected were named to the
first team. Seniors Austin
King of Gallia Academy and
Dave Poole from Meigs were
.selected to the Division I-ll
flfSt team from the South
Division, as were juniors
Cody Noble (GAHS) and
Austin Dunfee of Meigs.
Junior John Paul Finnicum
was also an honorable mention selection for the Blue

Div. 1-4 lists, B6
Devils.
River Valley had the lone
area selection in Division
III, as junior Devin Gibbs
was named to the first team
of the South Division.
Division IV had nine
players named to the North
Division team, including six
honored as first team selections.
Eastern had three first team

representatives m seniors
Derek Young and Cory
Shaffer, as well as junior Joel
Lynch .. Southem had a pair in
senior Patrick Johnson and
junior Ryan Chapman, while
South Gallia had one firstteamer in junior John Wells.
Southern senior Jake
Hunter was named to the second team, while South Gallia
had a pair of honorable mention nominees in senior
Steven Craig and junior
Micah CardwelL

n

Antonio
Spurs .in this year's finals,
starting Thursday night.
"He's one of the best
players in the world," Wade
said Tuesday. "There's not
much you have to say."
: Still, there's plenty of dialogue between the two stars.
Wade offered James some
counsel during this year's
Cleveland-Detroit series for
the East title. The Heat
played the Pistons the last
. ' two years for the conference
title,
splitting
those
matchups .
"It's been rumored out
there that I talked to him
throughout the Detroit
series a little bit, kind of
what he did for me last
year," Wade said. ·"I just
gave him some pointers
APpholo
from my point of view on Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James (23) is congratulated bt Damon Jones as Anderson Varejao, from Brazil, looks on dur·
what I'd seen and from ing the Cavaliers' 98-82 win in Game 6 of the NBA basketball Eastern Conference finals against the Detroit Pistons
playing Detroit before. He Saturday in Cleveland.
knows what to do.".
Wade was the undisputed
star of last season's NBA
finals, averaging 34.7 points
for the Heat in their sixBY ToM WITHERS
and something to live for
"My family understands responsibility. You've got a
game win over the Dallas
f&gt;P SPORTS WRITER
and have responsibility for, what's going on," he said. last name to hold up. I've got
Mavericks.
it's always a big step in any "We've sat dowri and talked a son and another son that
These days, though, Wade
CLEVELAND· As if the man's life. And that I'm a· and we know how important I've got to represent out
is thankful to simply be NBA finals weren't big part of the finals, something this is for me and how there. I don't want to make
walking without. pain . .
enough. LeBron Ja!l\es has I've always watched grow- important I am to my team- them look bad. I want to go
Three weeks removed another major event in his ing .up, it's something spe- mates. Savannah knows that out there and make them
from surgeries to repair his · life coming up.
cia!."
and she knows if there's an look good." .
left knee and left shoulder,
He has another son on the
Brinson is due to deliver opportunity I can be there, I
During tl]e playoffs, Jaines·
waysoon.
on
June
17,
when
the
will.
And
if
not,
I'm
going
to
has
stayed in close contact
Please see Wade. B6
Cleveland's All-Star for- Cavaliers are tentatively support my teammates. She with Miami's Dwyane Wade,
ward, enjoying the highest scheduled to host Game 5 in understands."
a clgse friend who recently
point of his professional Cleveland.
James, raised by a single welcomed his second child.
SPORTS BRIEFS
career, is also thrilled about
"Everyone knows me and
Will she make it?
mother, said fatherhood has
the upcoming birth of his
"No," James said with a changed him. After the Cavs LeBron are pretty tight,"
son with girlfriend smile. "I don't think so."
won the Eastern Conference Wade said. "The main thing
Sign-ups for Eagle' second
Savannah Brinson, who·had
If she goes into labor title on Saturday night, he for us outside of basketball is
Volleyball Camp the couple's first child, and the Cavaliers are still proudly carried his 2-year- making sure his fiancee and
LeBron James Jr., in 2004. in Texas, James may not old son around the floor of my wife are healthy. Going
"It's great," James said be able to get back to Ohio Quicken Loans Arena during through the process of havTUPPERS PLAINS ing a baby, I had mine and
The third an·nual Eastern Tuesday shortly before the in time for the birth. The the wild celebration.
"You know you're not just everything went great over
Eagle Volleyball Camp will Cavaliers left for San 22-year-old has discussed
be held for all girls in Antonio. "Any time you are that possibility with his out there playing for your- here and hopefully it's the
self," he said. "You've got same for him."
grades six through nine able to have another child loved ones.
from June II through June
13 at the, EHS Gymnasium
The camp will feature
fundamentals essential to
produce winning volleyball
ST. LOUIS (AP)- Pinch
and will be taught by curhitter So Taguchi singled
rent coaches and players, as
over a drawn-in outfield in
well as fcirmer players. The
the ninth inning for his seccamp will run between the
ond straight game-winning
times of I0 a.m. to noon.
hit, giving the St. Louis
All partiCipants will
Cardinals a 4-3 victory over
~eceive a camp t-shirt and a
the Cincinnati ·· Reds on
camp volleyball.
Tuesday night
: All checks should be
The Cardinals .won for the
tnade payable to Eastern
fifth time in six games withAthletic Boosters and
·out catcher Gary Bennett,
returned
to
Howie
who left in the second after
Caldwell, 40878 Old Seven
getting hit by an Aaron
Road, Reedsville, OH
Harang breaking ball. The
45772.
team described the injury as
Registrations may also be
a contusion to the back of
sent to Debbie Weber,
the skull.
49620 Hickory Hills Road,
Bennett took .over regular
Reedsville, OH 45772.
duties after Yadier Molina
broke 'his left wrist last
week. Bennett walked to
.
first alongside a team trainer
Co~AcrUs
befo(e heading to the clubhouse.
•OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
Juan Encarnacion home. -1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
red and David Eckstein had
three hits and an RBI for the
Fax - H 40·446·3008
Cartlinals.
Jason
E-mail- sports@mydallysentinel.com
Isringhausen (3-0) walked
Soons Staff
two and struck out two in
filrad Sherman, Sports Editor
the ninth against the Reds,
(740) 446·2342 , exl. 33
who stranded 15 runners and
bsherman@mydaitytribune.com
left seven on base in the last
three innings.
i.arry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. exl. 23
Aaron Miles drew a leadlcrum@mydailyregister.com
off walk in the ninth off
AP photo
Jared
Burton
(0-1 ),
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
Cincinnati
Reds
pitcher
Aaron
Harang,
rear,
covers
first
as
St.
Louis
Cardinals'
David.
Eckstein
advanced
on
a
sacrifice
and
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bwaltars@mydailytrib~ne . com
grounds out for the final out of the fourth lruiing of a baseball game Tuesday in St. Louis. · went to third on '·Jon

Oh, baby! LeBron ready for finals; son's arrival

Tickets for
Cavaliers·
going for
$14,999 .
BY THOMAS

J.

SHEERAN

ASSOCIAHO PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND - Buy a
used car, make a down payment on a house or sil courtside to see LeBron James in
the NBA finals? Asking
prices for premium seats are
reaching five figures as the
Cavaliers bring the chaJTipionship series to Cleveland
for the first time.
Maybe mortgage lender
Dan Gi Ibert can provide
financing to buy that
$40,200 four-pack oftickets
offered online to watch the
Gilbert-owned Cavaliers
against San Antonio.
Tickets to Cleveland's
home games- June 12 and
14 and, if needed, June 17
- at the Quicken Loans
Arena named for Gilbert's
business are a hot item,
even in this blue-collar city
with limited champagne
tastes.
The prices are too steep
for Shawnte Johnson, 30, of
nearby Euclid, who. had to
settle Tuesday with buying
four $24 Cavaliers T-sh1rts.
"I would love tickets,"
she said outside the arena.
"They're very expensive.
Can't afford it"
And what about the tickets offered for $14,999 on
the team's online ticket
reselling site?
"That's a mortgage and a
car note," Johnson said.
Johnson still has a.chance,
perhaps one in I00, for the
opportunity to buy tickets
for $30 to $80 each. She and
more than 20,000 others
have ent.ered the team's
online lottery for the chance
to buy tickets.
Team vice president Chad
Estis won't call the game a
sellout because of the several hundred tickets set aside
for the lottery and several
hundred more available as
an incentive to buy season
tickets for next year. Paying
a premium to fans willing to
sell looks like the best
chance to see the game in
the arena.
Nearly 1.000 tickets were
offered on the · club's
FiashSeats.com reselling

Please see Tickets. Bl

Cards rally ·past Reds

Tom Murr'1}',
Director, HeartWorks

, ... };&lt;,

"Your heart works as hard as you do!
O'Bleness' HeartWorks program for .cardiac and pulmonary
rehabilitation helps patients with heart or lung disease recover more
quic k!~ and improve their quality of life.

A customized care plan for

each patient helps reduce risk factors and slow down or reverse the
disease priJCess . Progress is carefully mtmitored through a program that
includes exercise as well as education; nutrition and stress management
counseling. Talk ro your doctor about heart services at O'Bleness and
the importance of rehabilitation in your treatment."

O'BLENESS

·w

M,emorial
.
' uOlp1

M alllll1t• of th• O'B!on..S Hoalth Systom

o·~ How~ Servlc•

A Heartbeat Away

- - - ..

Coutlangus' wild pitch.
Taguchi hit a 3-2 pitch over
the head of right fielder
Norris Hopper, two days
after homering in ihe IOth
inning at Houston.
Cardinals starter Todd ·
Wellemeyer battled control
problems in his second
career start, walking six in 3
2-3 innings. Wellemeyer
walked the· bases loaded to
start the fourth, then struck
out Ju~n Castro and Harang
- both on full counts after
falling behind - before
Hopper walked to force in a
run.
During that sequence,
Wellemeyer threw 36 pitches and Reds batters took .
only five swings.
Harang lasted six innings,
allowing three runs on seven
hits with seven strikeouts
and no walks. Harang also
walked none in his last outing, a complete-game victory at Houston.
Chris Duncan r~turned to
the Cardinals' lineup . after
missing six games with an
infected left knee and the
iefi fielder made a spectac- ·
ular juggling catch at the
wall to rob Adam Dunn of
extra bases and an' RBI to
end the first.

Please s.- Reds, Bl

~-----:--:-·---

/

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Bentley, Browns put off decision on surgery Marshall elects seven
BEREA (A P) - Browns
center LeCharles Bentley
has dec1ded agamst another
surgery on h1s mjured left
knee - for now
That doesn't mean he'll be
back on the field th1s seasen.
Bentley's agent Jonathan
Femsod sa1d a third operalion on his left patellar tendon that had been scheduled
for Tuesday was canceled

process that he 's healing up
enough to a pomt where he
can at least think about 11
(playmg),'' Savage said
Femsod declmed to comment on Bentley's chances
for a comeback
A two-li me Pro Bowl
selection m New Orleans,
Bentler s1gned a s1x-year.
$36 m1lllon free agent co ntract m March 2006 to play

~h a e ee over e nexl
ree lo fo~~ ~e;ks, generad
1 avage sm
~an,er
~~s. ay
It s p;obably a good s•gn
that he,_s not hav m~. the
surgery, Sa.vage sa1&lt;;1 . That
shows there s probably some
progress with h1s knee"
Savage sa1d he hasn't spoken to Bentley s1 nce before
the free agency penod stan·
ed m early March Bentley
has bee n rehabbmg 111
Ari zona and Columbus
"At least there 's a thought

full -contact
play
of
Cleveland's trammg camp
las t summer
Followmg sur~ery, he ~ol
a staph infectio n, wh1ch
caused funher damage to h1s
tendon
Bentley needed a second
dperatlon a month alter the
tlrst to clean out the mfect10n and fix the damage 11
caused to his tendon He was
hospnal1 zed for more than
one month at the Cleveland
Clmic.
,
"LeCharles 1s a umque Sit·

away, but getting him to
traming camp on time along
with quarterback Brady
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
Qumn and the Browns' sec(AP)
- Ex-Marshall quarond•round p1ck, cornerback
terback
Byron Leftwich IS
Enc Wnght, IS another~ssue.
among
seven
former Herd
The Brow ns have sent
athletes
elected
to the umverproposals to the1r draft p1cks
S
ity's
Hall
'Of
Fame.
and have met with represenLeflw1ch 1sn't expected to
tauves of top three p1cks.
attend
th1s year's mductlon
Savage smd
on
Oct
26 because of comCleveland had success last
mitments with the NFL's
11
Jacksonville Jaguars thar
return of veteran Ryan 13th overall p1ck. Of the weekend. He w1ll be mduclTucker from 1llness, and the first-round p1cks, Wimbley ed later
Leftwich fimshed sixth m
drafun g of Wtsconsm tackle was the second to reach a
the
Heisman Trophy votmg
Joe Thomas w1Lh the No. 3 deal.
in
2002,
desp1Le playing with
overall p1ck
Thi s year's negoliations
a
broken
bone m h1s leg He
"Overall , our depth on the co uld be trickier with
offens1ve line 1s probably Thomas selected so high and
better than it's been smce the Qumn, a No. 22 p1ck who
team came back m '99. It 's doesn't expect to paid hke
certaml y been a locus of one.
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
ours, obviOusly," Savage
"Thm viewpomt 1s gm ng (AP) - A West Virgima
sa1d "If LeCharles could to be there's a premmm with University football player
make a comeback, that adds the quarterback position," and a former player are faceven more ability to that Savage sa1d "There's gomg mg vanous charges after
group "
to be some natural argument weekend
arrests
10
Thomas could help nght bUill m to Lh1s negotiation." Morgantown.
Free safety Qumton
Andrews, 19, of M1am1 ,
Fla., was charged Saturday
morning w}th obstructing an
officer, Chief Deputy AI
threatening them with a gun. the NFL.
"Evidently, this was some · Thurman pleaded no con- Kisner with the Monongalia
Sheriff's
type of fany in the wee test to the drunken driving County
hours o the mormng," charge in February. Last Department said Tuesday.
Jackson S31d.
Fnday, a JUdge in Cincinnati Former Mountaineer runBecau se the allegations suspended aJl but six days of ning back Ja~on Gwaltney,
were not reported quickly a 90-day sentence and 20, of Morgantown, was
and police were unable to ordered Thurman to serve charged with underage conconduct an immediate inves- those six days at a treatment sumption of alcohol, speedligation, Jackson said, a center.
ing and failure to produce an
county magistrate will hear
Thurman can apply for operator's license.
testimony Friday to deter- reinstatement for next seaAccordmg to the cnminal
mme if anyone should be son, although earlier this · compla10t, Gwaltney was
charged
year coach Marvin Lewis
Messages seek10g com- refused to talk about whether pulled over after a deputy
ment were left with Odell Thurman still figured mto
Thurman's agent and with the team's plans

e~e~~~y ~ 111 con~~ue 1 ~ [~;e h~~ ~~;~~~;~~e~~~·fi~s~ ~~:r Le~~7; F~;d~~~n. ~~~ keaa~e~1o~ hW1m~feey~ac~~;

Tickets
from Page 81
site Tuesday, with prices of
$300 to $14,999. Est1s said
it was hard to estimate how
many might change hands
because some ticket holders
are ready to deal and others
want to make a killing.
Of course, the same is true
for buyers: One fan offered
to buy a ticket for a pretzelSized $2 ~ no otters
showed up m response atter
several hours online - and

full season following his
arrest on a drunken driving
charge
in
September.
Thurman is one of nine
Ci ncinnati players to be
arrested in the past year.
Two men flied a complaint
Sunday with police in
Monticello, Ga., southeast of
Atlanta, accusing Thurman
of assaulting them early
Sunday following an argument at a home, Jasper
.county Chief Magistrate
Ken Jackson said Tuesda~
The men accused Thurman s
brother, Willie Thurman, of
the high b1d was $2,000.
Est~s. who saw many
empty seats 10 the arena
when he JOmed the club SIX
years ago, srud the tlckelbuymg response from fans
matched the exc1tement of
four years ago when the
club landed the nghts to
James, who grew up 40
miles away m Akron.
The team 's online Hekel
reselling outlet can protect
fans from counterfeit uckets, somethmg one fan
learned lhe hard way.
Police Lt. Thomas Stacho
sa1d a fan who pa1d $375 for

was the M1d-American
Conference player of the
year that season.
Leftw1ch IS the MAC
leader 10 career yards
( II ,903 ), completions (939),
completion percentage ( 651)
and total offense ( 12,084)
Other athletes elected
10cluded football and baseball players Mike Bartrum,
Aaron Ferguson and M1ke
Kaufman. basketball stand out Rodney Holden; all Amencan defens1ve lmeman
B1ll y Lyon, and the late
Frank Huffman 10 football.

Current, former WVU player arrested

Suspended Bengals LB Thurm~n accused of assault
CINCINNATI (AP) Suspended Bengals hoebacker Odell Thurman has
been accused of kicking and
hitting two men m h1s
Georgia hometown dunng
the weekend. He has not
been charged with a cnme,
but a mag1strate will hear
testimony Friday to determme 1f charges should be
filed.
The NFL suspended
Thurman for the first four
games of 2006 after he
skipped a drug test The suspension was extended to a

two tickets called police to
compla10 that the tickets
turned out to be fake s for a
nonexistent seating section.
Undercover officers contacted the seller about buymg tickets and arrested the
man, Stacho said
Amazing Tickets Inc. m
suburban Beachwood has
sold courtside t1ckets at
$10,000. President Mark
Klang srud he has fielded
calls from as far away as
New York and Washington,
D.C., and said high-end
tickets for the games in both
c1lles sell 10 the same price

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e ister

to athletic Hall of Fame

uauon . He's a hometown
guy. He got a big contract
and 11 ended m one day,"
Savage said. "He's a umque
·player and talent too"
Even
m
Bentley' s
absence, Savage likes where
the Browns otfens1ve line
stands following the free
agent s1gmn gs of Enc
Stembach
and .
Seth
McKmney. the re-s1gnmg of

range - $2,000, $3,000 or
more.
The San Francisco-based
StubHub.com ticket reseller
has found fans willing to
pay more for Cleveland
tickets - probably because
it's the team's first championship series - and said the
series is one of the top items
among the 20,000 events
listed on its site.
':Jt's certainly one of the
hollest sports events, far
and away hotter than the
NHL final s," sa1d Sean
Pate, StubHub 's public
relatio ns director.

Reds

fromPageBl
Jim Edmonds' RBI dou·
ble otT the center field wall
put the Cardinals ahead in
the first and Eckstein's single made it 2-0 in the second. Hopper's bases-loaded
walk and Tyler Johnson's
bases-loaded wild pitch
allowed the Reds to tie it 10
the fourth without a hlt
Encarnacion's
th1rd
homer of the season, all in
the last six games, put the
Cardinals ahead 3-2 m the
s1xth. The Reds Lied 11 again

clocked h1m travelmg 36
mph 10 a 25 mph zone.
Andrews alleged ly came
out of a nearby apanment to
check on his fnend and
1gnored the req uests of
another officer to back away
from the veh1cle. When that
officer followed Andrews
into the apartment to
retrieve Andrews' Jdentificatwn, the suspect cursed at
h1m and tw1ce tned to shut
the door on h1m, the arrest
report stated
WVU
coach
Rich
Rodriguez declined to comment Monday, saymg he
hadn ' t yet spoken to
Andrews . Sports mform atton director Shelly Poe also
declined to comment
Phone
numbers for
Andrews and Gwallney
could be located.
in the seventh when
Brandon Phillips tripled
with one out and scored on
Dunn's broken-bat single.
The Reds stranded five
runners in the seventh and
eighth
agamst
Ry an
Frankhn.
Notes: Ken Griffey Jr ,
who d1dn 't stan for the first
time since late Apnl, is 4for-25 during a seven-game
tnp with two RBi s. . .
Eckstem is 15-for-33 ( 455)
during an e1ght-game hittmg streak w1th two
homers. . Josh Ham1lton
was 1-for-4 w1th a double
and walk m h1s f1rst start
since being sidelined by
gaslroententis on May 22

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

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Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Village of Pomeroy
daalraa to aatl certain
,..1 eal8te located on
Butternut Avenue tn
Pom1roy Vtll1g1. Th1
property lor ute II
beat daecrtbad tn 1
Wlrranty cited record·
ad In Volume f5 pegaa
N7 I 511. The other
property lor aalt It
bell diBcrlbed In I
quH-clatm daad recordad In Volume 282 page
388.
Staled btda ehall be
accepted unlit t2:00
pm on Monday, July 8,
2001. All bide should
be -lad and clearly
marked Real Estate
ltd on the outatdl of
the envelope and aubmilled to the Vtttaga
Clerk, 320 East Main
StrHI, Pomeroy, OH

45769.
(5} 30, (6} 6, t3, 20 (7} 5

Public Notice
SherHI Sales Case
Number 06CV172
Benetlclat Ohio, Inc.,
Ptalnllll Vs.
Owen E. Wts~man et
al, Defendants
Court or
Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance ol an
OJder or sate to me
directed from said
court In the above entitted action, I wilt
expose to sate at pubttc auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Court House
on F1iday June 29,
2007, altO a.m. of said
day,
the
following
described real estate:
Sltueled In the County
of Meigs, In the State of
Oh1o and In the Vttlage
of Rutland :
Being the west pert of
Lot Number 7 In the
Fallon Addnlon to the
VIllage of Rutland and
consisting of approxlmately 28 acre.
Current Owner: Owen
E. Wiseman
Property at: 134 Long
Street
Rutland, OH 45775
PPf 12.()()387.000
Prior Deed relerenceo:
Volume 9t, Page 825
Apprataed
at
$50,000.00
Tarmt of Stlt: Cannot
bt aold lor lea~ than
213rda oftha apprataad
value. Tan percent
down on day ol atti,
cath
or
certified
check, balance due on
contlrmatlon of tala.
The
appraisal
did
Include an Interior
aumlnallon of the
houaa.
Robart
E.
Beegle,
Matg1 County Shariff
Attorney
lor
the
Platn1tff
Stephan D. Mttaa
tB W, Monument Ave.
Dayton, OH 45402
837-481-1900
(5} 23, 30 (6) 6

Public Notice
Sheriff Sales case
Number 06CVt69
Wells Fargo Bank NA,
PlatntHI vs
Cindy J. Crabtree,
el.al., Defendants
court of common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sate to me
directed from said
court In the above ent~
tied action, 1 witt
expose. to sale at publie auction on the front
steps ol the Metga
County Court House
on Friday June 29,
2007, altO a.m. ol aatd
day
the
following
des~rlbed real estate :
Situated In the townahtp
of
Columbia,
county of Meigs and
State ol Ohio:
PARCEL t · Located In
section 18 ·and starting
In the center of Road
No T·2 on the north
line of Section t8 satd
north line also being
the north tine between
Meigs end Athena
county ; thence south
along the center of
road 376.30 feet to the
place of beginning:
thence south three
hundred ninety (390)
feet to an Iron ptn;
lhance weal olx hundred lilly (850} fHI to
' an Iron ptn: thence
north lour hundred
tourtaan and alx ttntht
(4t4.8) IHt 10 an Iron
ptn; thence south 87'
818t atx hundred
lilly end live Ianthe
(850.5) IHt to the place
ol beginning, conl81n·
lng tlx acre, IliON or
tna.
SAVE AND EXCEPT
one eight of ell gH, otl,
and mineral rlghla to
bt divided equally
among the following
hatra : Marla Perry,
Batto Tom
ionnla
Parry, Eletl
Price,
wanda SmHh, Nella
WoodNm and Maude
Woodrum
REFERENCE DEEDS:
Volume 219, Page 7t5,

eo·

volume 229, Page 30t

of the Meigs County
Deed Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING 2.00
acres, more or tess as
conveyed by Rolland
K. Crabtree and Beulah
M. Crabtree to Donald
William Crabtree and
Barbara Jo. Crabtree
by deed dated June 4
t973 and recorded In
volume, page, of the
Meigs County Deed
llecorda.
ALSO
EXCEPTING
2.4048 acres, more or
less from the above
described parcel No. t
and
conveyed
to
Charles E. Cadle and
Fey M. Cadle by dead
recorded In volume
201, 1111111 007, Meigs
County Deed Records.
Subject to all leaBH,
easements, and rights
of way ol record.
REFERENCE
DEED:
Volume 255, Page 3t7
Meigs County Deed
Reconls.
Auditor's Parcel NO:
05-00132-000
PARCEL 2: The follow·
tng real eatete altuatad
In the County of Melga,
In the State of Ohio
end tn the Township of
Columbia,
bounded
and clelcrlbed aa lot·
Iowa:
Located
tn
Sllctlon 18, Columbia
Townahip and beginnlng In the center of
Road No. T-2 on the
north lne of BlctiOn
No. 18, Hid north Una
alao being the tina
bllwHn Meigs and
Athena County; lhartoa
aouth
378.30 IHI,
along the canter of
llld rold; thtllca north
87 dtg, 50' -.at 780
IHt; iltanca north 5
dtg. Hat 348.H IHt to
the eald north tina;
thence Hll7ft.111Ht
along the said ltna to
the pllct of beginning,
oonl8tninp 8.1 acrat,
Except at lllgat rtghl8
of way,
EXCEPTING
0.882
acres, mora or laa1
from
lhe
allova
clelcrlbad Parcel 2 11
convayad to 1 Danny
Rey Cottrell and Vonda

Page
293,
Meigs
County
Official
Records .
ALSO
EXCEPTING
3.737 acres, more or
tess from the above
described Parcel 2 as
conveyed to Danny
Ray Cottrell and Vonda
Lee
Cottrell
and
recorded In Volume
268, Page 679, Meigs
County Deed record.
Subject to all teases,
eaeements and right of
way of record.
REFERENCE
DEED
Volume 255, page 3t7,
Meigs County Deed
Records.
PARCEL
NO:
05·
00t33.00
Parcel No.: 05'00t32·
000 &amp; 05-00t3-000
Known
As:
42955
LeMaater Rd., Albany,
OH 457t0
Current Owner: Cindy
J. Crabtree
Property at: 42955
LeMaster Rd.
Albeny, OH 457t0
PPt 05-00t32.000
OS.Ot33.000
Prior deed references:
Volume 255, Page 317
Appraised
at
$90,000.00
Terms of Sale· Cannot
be eotd lor tea than
213rdl oflhlt appretsad
value. Ten percent
down on day of aale,
cash
or
cenllltd
check, balance dut on
confirmation ofaata.
The
appralul
dtd
Include an Interior
examination of the
houH.
Flobart
E.
BHgll,
Metge County Sheriff
Attorney
tor
the
Plaintiff
Lerner Bampaon I
Flolhluae
P.O. lox 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45201·
5410
513-241·3100
(I} 23,30 (8) 8
-------

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*

------Public Notice
_ __;_ _..:.__:_:_
NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
The personal property
end contents olthelotlowing storage units
wilt be auctioned lor
sale to satisfy the tten
of Hartwell Storage,
The sale wilt be held 11
the Hartwell Stor&amp;ll'
lactltty, A4055 Laurel
Clt!l Rd., Pomeroy,
Ohio on June 2t, 2007
at 6:00 p.m.
Unlt1137
Kelty Miller
P.O. Box 884
New Haven,
25265
UniU59
Kelty Miller
P.O. Box 884
New Haven, WV 25265
Unttl72
Kelty Mtlter
P.O. Box 884
New Haven, Wll 25265
UniU76
Kelly Millar
P.O. Box 884
Naw Haven, WV25255
(8} 6, 13

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
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wv

•alUpolis JBallp ~ribune
tlolnt ~leasant 1\.egister
The Daily Sentinel
6unbap 1Jtmes -6entinel

Public Notice
The
Ohto
School
Bantltla Cooperative
Annual Mtttlng wHI be
held Monday, June 11,
2007, at noon, at tht
Zlneevtlle Holldey Inn,
4148
Eut
Pika,
Zlnaevllla, Ohto 43701.
(8) 8

~---····--········-------·······

Subscriber's Name _______
Address----.,..--- - - - - -

rir.itt;rJU.:mil

City/State/Zip - - - - - - Phone,_ _ ___,_ _ - ' - - - - -

Public Notice
•

The Carleton Memorial
Scholarahtp appttce·
tiona are available lor
any legal reeldant of

Lee
Cottrell
and the
VIllage
of
recorded In Volume 49, Syracuae. Raatdenta

I

can pick up an application
from
Joyce
Sisson, College Road
or from Gordon Fisher
at t402 Dusky Street.
Applications are due
back by June 24, 2007.
(6)6,8
'

i

Malt or drop off thta coupon along

1

whh a copy of your photo tD to

I Ohio Valley Publllhlng P.O . Box 468, Galllpolta, OH 45631

L~~~~~~~

I

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\\\01 \t I \11 ,,..,

r

r::~:::;:~
r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARD SALE

ANNoUN&lt;EMFNIS

~

1

1110

YARDSALE·
Haner Reumon Will be held L--GiiiiiAJLiiililiii'OLiiili6.....
Sunday 6/ 10 at the home of '
Jerry &amp; Clara Haner Lower 617-6/8 9a m·5pm 1 1/2
Rtver Ad 12 m ?
mtles from Holzer on St At
160 Furn household toys
GIVFAWAY
baby, chtidren aduHclothes
(4) Bwk old ktnens avatlable
for adoptton to lovtng
homes, 3F 1M vacctnated
&amp; wormed All lttter tratned
very lovtng (740)441-1100
3 BlaCk kittens to gtveaway
Call (740)256 1070
Female OOg 2yrs Old mtKe'd
bree d good wtth ktds,
preferaDiy to someone 1n
country (740)446- 7685
Gtveaway 5 adorable kittens 3 orange 1 black 1
black &amp;caltco Very playful 7
weeks old 740-742·2954

1-\o~.

~------~

0

Commumty Yard Sale, June
8 &amp; 9 Starts at )unchon of
SA 325 &amp; SA 141 on SA
141 , watch lor Signs, several
multt-famtly sates chamsaw
carVIngs, glassware clothtng much more s-?
.:...::__ __ _ _ __
Ftrst Time sale June 8, 9am
6pm 521 4th Ave,
Galltpolts
_ ..:__ _ _ _ __
Fn 6/8 8 5 Rt 7 Addtson
bestde G&amp;G Market Men
womens chtldrens clothes,
wardrobe ltnens household

0
0

"·•

~

~;w:w:w::co:m:l~c:s:c:o:m~:.::=====::-©~2~0=07==N:E:A:,:'":c:..

Spnng
ley 554AllJays1zes
lly
Yard Val
Sale
Dr
clothmg mfant adult Large ...,- - - - - - - .
7
Y\RD SALE
va"e1Y ol 11ems 9 5
'
•
--1&gt;1. 1'!.1
,:.\SANr
Thts
newapape
Garage Sale 2 112 mtles ........lioiiiiiiiiiiiiii.rl
ccepta only hel
East of Porter on 554 June
anted ada meetln
Huge Yatd Sa le Powe r
[A'~T&lt;Nil
71h, Bth &amp; 91h
OE standards
Washer Comtorters some
FOUND
Garage Sale 4 famtl y Furn ttre lots of mce stuff
&gt;We will not knowing
ThUfs·Sat
June 7th , 8th &amp; June 6,i&amp;8th at Dtck
Slolen or lost (6) diamond
y accept any adver
9th
9
5
Ratn
or Shtne 84 I Lanter s Box 71 Jtm Htll Ad
nngs Wtll tdenttfy when
laement tn vlclatlo
called lor reward 446 4379 Shoestrtng Rtdge , down At .,,..._ _ _ _ _....,
1the law.
7 to Clipper mtll follow
or 339-1884
WANTED
stgns Assorted tnfant &amp; chtl ~.,_ _...
m_BiiUY;,._pl
drens clothes toys furnt·
lure excellent condtllon Absolute Top Dollar US
4x4's For Sate .................................... ....... 725
prtced cheap household fur· Stiver and Gold Cams
Announcement .. .
. . .. .. ...........030
nllure whole house atr con Proofsets, Go ld Rtngs Pre
dtt1oner new scrapbooktng, 1935
Antiques .................................................. 530
US
Currency
75% off 10 gal ftsh tank Solltatre Diamonds· M T S
Apartments lor Rent ........... . ....... ............. 440
with ftsh everythmg you can Corn S h o~, 151 Second
Auction and Flee Market ..................... 080
lhtnk of but the kttchen stnk Averue, Galltpolts 740 446·
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................... 760
Kev1n Dennts (740)446- 2842
Auto Repair.
• ... 770
2847
Autos lor Sale ...... ............. ........ ...... ........ 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ...... ........... ............ 750
Huge annual yard sale June Wanted Record Album col
Building Supplies .................................... 550
9th , 1686 lincoln Pt ~e lectton looktng for rock pop
Bus1ness and Bultdings ............................. 340
..,ens womens toddler gtrls and maybe some others no
.. • 210
BUSineSS Opportunity. ...... ... .....
clothes htgh chatr, toys, country or classtcal please
Business Training ... ............ .......... ........... t40
games, movtcs crafts, lots (7 40)645 0299
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ......................... 790
more 1niltke new condttton
Camping Equipment ................................. 780
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
P(lced to sell Ram cance ls
Cerda of Thanks ........................................ OtO
unit! lollowmg Saturday
"illn 1t I '
ChltdJEtderty Care .. . ...... ..
.. .... . ... t90
;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
June 8·9 1st house on
Etectrlcat/Relrlgeratlon ....... ..................... 840
Georges Creek Rd off At 7 110 HE!PWANTI:IJ
Equipment lor Rent. .......................... ..... ..480
Couch, Plays tatton 2, mtsc 1
Excavating ................................................ 830
t.,_______.t

t

r

-- ------ -·

MOVING SALE' 6930 SA 7
South Gallipolis Sam-?
Saturday June 9th Sofas
Loveseat coffee table end
tables
bookshelves
women s clothes lots of
mtsc

1

YARIJ S&lt;i.E·

11110

~------....,

1110

.

IIEIJ' WAN1EO

..

An E)(cellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Martlyn 304·SB2 2645

I 675 1429

Desk Clerk needed at
Budget Inn 260 Jackson
Ptke Lookmg for a person
who IS motivated great
communt cahon sktlls and a
postttve attttud e Please
apply wlthtn
_:.:..:..__ _ _ _ _ _
Otrect Care Staff
Mtddleton Estates ts now
htnng dtrect care staff You
wtll be part of a team that
provides servrces to tndiVIcl·
uals wtth mental retardatiOn
and developmental dtsa.btll·
ttes Must have valtd dn~Jers
license and h1gh sdlool
dtploma or GEO We provtde on the JOO tratntng It
you 'NOuld ll~e to ta~e
advantag e of thts opportunt1Y youmayapplyat6204
Carla Dnve Monday thru
Frtday 8 00 4 00 An Equal
Opportuntly Employer
Doctors offiCe needmg part
ltme X ray tech call 304675· 1637 or come by tn person to 3009 Jackson Ave Pt

I

2 lamtly Garage sate June
7th &amp; 8th Morntngstar Ex1t
off 33 Court Street Road
Watch for Stgnst

Call Allie @ Ext 6647

5 Famtly Yard Sale June 8th
&amp; 9th Rutland past Elem
St2eS 14 gtriS

800-248-nas

1 - - ::
P"""'
rl-m--:e i n- c-. - - I
CARPORT Sate Frt June
WW-N pnmetnc com
8, Tyree BI'Jd Aac1ne l ots
$300 HIRING BONUS!
of stuff
1..-~----•

Ratner Garage Tackervttle
Ad Thurs Frt Sat , lawn
mower anltQues col lectables furntture,gtassw lmens
Yard Sale 41190 Laurel Cltff
Road Pomeroy, Ohto June
7 8 &amp; 9., Mtldred Hudson

I '16
1

YARIJ SALF.-

Pr. I'LFASANf

Plus much morel
t Up to 58 50/hour
t Weekly boruses
t Weekly pay
t Patd Holidays vacattons
and tratntng
t Full beneftts
+ Professtonal work
atmosphe re

CaiiTodeyt
1·877-463-6247 ext
230t

Echomg
Mea dows
AeStdenttat €enter IS now
accepttng apphcaltons lor a
part ltme LPN tor weekends
and eventng shtfls apply 10
person at 319 West UOion
Street
Athen s,
Ohto
requtred
References
Applicants must pass prescreentng
employment
mctudtng but not ltmtted to
drug screen and crtmtnal
backgroond checl&lt;s
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

Ambrosta Machtne Inc
Avg Pay $20/hr or
Btg Garage Sale Thur /Frt 1 Po tnt Pleasant WV (304 )$57K annually
67
5
1722
(304)675
1723
mtle out Sandhill Ad tots of
Including Federal Benefit~
fax
Machtntst
5
years
or
everythmg
and OT Patd Tratntng,
mOI"e expenence $8 S12 per
Vacations FT/PT
Giant Rummage Sale tots of hOur
1 800 584 _1775 Ext 118923
E~Jeryttltng Sacred Hea rt On Hand Shop Foreman
USWA
• Catholtc Church Hall 2222 Mach1ne Shop &amp; Fabncat10n
Jackson Ave, Pt Pleasant knowledge 10 years or mOI"e Help wanted at Darst Adult
Thursday Fnday Saturday experience $12 $15 per Group Home some lifting
9am·3pm
hOur
7 5 sh•ft 740·992·5023

- - - - ----·

The State of Wyomtng offers
you the ~tnd of lifestyle other
peqJie only dream About
western hospttality frt endly
folks, tons of outdoor recre
ational acttvtltes and best of
all, no state tncome taxt
Come JOtn the Wyomtng
Department of Correcltonsl
We're Now Htrmg
Correcttons Professtonatst
Start tng salary
$2S 600/year

The WDOC otters a great
beneftiS package mcludtng
employer paid 20 year law
enforcement re1trement plan
FEMA lollow up, hold publ•c and a health pac~age that
meettngs to educate publtc tS 85°k employer patd
Part-ttme 20 hours a week.
no beneftts Need Htgh S Qualtfted appltcants must be
School Diploma or equiVa- 18+ years old &amp; a U S cttt·
zen A senes of pre-employ·
lent have map readtng
e)(penence and kno..vledge ment evalu atJons wtll be
of computers and ~Ja rto u s conducted to asstst tn place
computer programs ablelo mont dectstons tncludmg a
use GIS must hold a valtd phystcal fitness test please
dr t~Jers liCense Phystcal
come dressed accordtngly
work may be needed Must and plan on 4 to 5 hours to
be regtstered wtth SCOTI complete regtstratton and
(www scott ohto gov) sys
teSttn g process
tern Sub011t resume w1th
co~Je r letter to
Ftnd out addtltonaltnforma
Ohio Dept of Jobs and
tlon at
Famtly Serwces 848 Thtrd 877 WOOC-JOB (877 936
A'Je, Gall1po1ts OH 4563 1
2562) or e-ma11
We are an Equal
recrulter@wdoc state wy ys
Opportunity Employer
EOEJADA Employer
New Saton opemnQ 514
Matn St Pt Pleasant July Truck Ortvers COL Class A
2nd Hatr Stylist &amp; Natl Tech ReqUired mmtmum of 5
needed 304-675 6144 or years drtvtng exp 2 yrs
304·593 6570
Flatbed Expenence Must
have good drtvtng record
Now Hmng parl-ltme post· Earn up to $2 000 wee~ly
11ons lor floral desrgner at For
apphcalton
Call
Pomeroy Flower Shop (304)722 2184
304 342
expenence
preferred 5742 M F 8 30am 4pm
please brtng resume &amp; refer

P.!'-"""!~"!""~-· ences to 106 Bunernut Ave , Wanted Dtrect Supervtston
Dnvers· Co &amp; lnd Coni
Pomeroy, Ohto between emplOyees to oversee male
sam 4pm Mon ·Frt
youth tn a staff secure rest
Reeler, Flatbed,
Professtonal Fundrat sers denttal envtronment Must
Tanker- OTR
needed Part/Full ttme 3 pass phystcat
tratntng
requtremen t Pay based on
1--=,--,-,..,-,-,-=--- · 1 shtfts datly 7 days a wee~ o:-;pertB~ce Call (740 )379
WE HAVE
$9 hr after patd trammg + 9083 between 9·3 Mon Frt
FREIGHT
Benel•ls Conlact us loday' ..,,..._ _ _ _ __
1"888 "974 JOBS or
Blue Cross Insurance
1150
ScHOOlS
Dayton Orientation
www 188897410bscom
I NSTRllCilON

l'o\IEROl'IMIDDU:

Garage sale Bradley Rd
across from Radm stat1on
Wed after 1 PM , Thurs &amp;
Frt starttng at 9 AM

Har WM'fEll

FlOodplain Admlnlstrl!tor
for Gallla County
Wtl! enforce the j)f{)lltStons
of local floodplatn regula
AVONt All Areas! To B1ty or !tons, coordtnate map matn
Sell Shtrley Spears 304•
tenance a ct t~Jttt es and

FIMIDN
-----

W1lh s- R usse tt -McDade
Corner of 3rd and Grape
St Fn 6/8 &amp; Sat 6/9 9 5 Ram
or Shtne

~'4

I~.,___
r&amp;J ~.~..~'l .[)·(~._ _.~l..,r.~o--f~.::.s.~.LE _.~
..

George's Portable Sawmtll 3bd
GALLIPOLIS
now selltng Tomatoe Stakes Foreclosure!
Buy for
call 304 675 1957
$50 9001 Only ~04/mo 5%
~------­ dn 20yrs @ 8% For ltsttngs
lawn mowtng Rates by the call BOO 559-4109 xF254
JOb not the hour Call Paul ~-----_____:
_@
_ (c_
30_4c_)6_75_,_;2_9_
40_ _ _
Attention'
Local company offertng "NO
lawn Care ServiCe Mowing
&amp; Tnmmtng Call (740 )441 DOWN PAYMEN T~ p10
grams tor you to buy your
1333 or 1740)645 •0546
home tnstead of renting
Professtonally
Clean, ' 100% ftnanctng
Ofl tce/ Housecleanmg • Less than per1ect credtt
References (304)675-2208 accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
~~~~---., Mortgage
Locators
(740)367·0000

Start Your Career Out Westt

1-touse 1n Mtddleport to tear
down or move mu st take all
(740 )992 6849
Fn·SunJune610 Mulltfam-

Farm Equipment ................. ............. , ....... 61 0
Farms lor Rent... .. ... ...... .. .. • . ........ 430
Farms lor Sate ......... ................................. 330
For Leese ........................... ............... ..... 490
For Sale ...................................... , ..... ... .... 585
For Sate or Trade ....................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..... • ....... ....... 580
Furnished Rooms ........... ......... ................ ..450
General Hauling.... ..................... .. • . . .....850
Giveaway .............. . .................... ....... ........040
Happy Ads ............ . .................. ................ 050
Hay &amp; Grain ............................................... 640
Help Wanted ....................................... ....... 110
Home Improvements.... .• .. .... • ...
. . 810
Homes lor Sale ............................. ............. 31 0
Household Goods ..... ................................ 510
Houses lor Rent. ..... .................................. 410
In Memoriam ........... ................................ 020
Insurance .. .
. . . • . .. . t30
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment .......... ....... .....660
Livestock . ............. ................................ 630
Lost end Found ......................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............... .......... ..............350
Miscellaneous. . .. . .
. . • . . . . ... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise................ , .. 540
Mobile Home Repair........ .. ....... .. .
. .. 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ..............................420
Mobile Homes for Sate ....... ................... ... 320
Money to Loan ... .. ................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .................. .... 740
Muslcalln~trumenls .. ...... ... .. .. . . . .
570
Personals .................................................. 005
Pels lor Sale ............ .. ............................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating . .............................. 820
Professional Services ............................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair.. • • ..
.
... t60
Real Estate Wanted ................................... &lt;.350
Schools Instruction ........... ......................... t50
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ........ ....... ............ 650
Situations Wanted .. .............. ...................... t20
Space tor Rent. .. • .. ....... . ...................... 460
Sporting Goods ..........................................520
SUV'a lor Sale.... ..... ...... ., ...... .. .......... 720
Trucks lor Sate ........................................... 7t5
Upholstery ................... ............................. . 870
vans For Sate..................... ......... ............... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ..... ...... 620
Wanted To Do .. ............ ........................... .... t80
Wanted to Rent.......... ................. .. ...
.. .. 470
Yard Sale- Galtlpotla ............. ................ ....... 072
Vard Sllle-Pomeroy1Mtddla ..... .................... 074
Vard Sate-Pt. Ptaaaant ................... .......... 076

IIF.LP WAI'mll

Soctal servtce speCialtst
needed
tn
Athens
Educatton or background tn
women s studtes famtty
studtes or some type of
soc1al servtce required preventtonltnterventton expert·
ence preferred FIT temp-toperm Monday-Frtday occa
stonal
weekend
wo~k
$ 10/hour plus OenefltS If
htred perm For detatls on
thiS and many other JobS tn
Southeastern Ohto go to
www careerconnechons tnfo
To apply, e-matl resume to
JObs@careerconneocttons t
nlo or call 1740)594-4941
No fees EOE

'5\li~ ioo S~rriv~ 'fo S~'f
001 A112.A\)If16N~~ M~\JS~ I~AP
~~ I ii-IINIC- S)-l~'s 'fR)'INC, lo '
ft&gt;~\) YoU 1'ol'111:&gt; Pol~T Yt&gt;U
t:::l\1'1'1 C.oflll'G: ovT oF /11~

618 &amp; 619 9am ? Cralts
lmens ladtes clothmg John
Deere GX335 lawn Tractor
934 Jackson Ptke

Pupptes 1 Blonde&amp;Whtte
1
1
ben1
type
female,
Brown/Biack!Whtte female
3 mon old 304 675 3795
leave message

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
.fw~
.1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
E!
Graphics 504 for small
S1.00 for large

POLICIES Oklo Valley PubU1k lng reMI'YII Ike rlgkt to edit, reject, Of cancel any ad at any time Error• must be reportecl on the fnt day of
Trlbune-Sentlnai·Regl•t• will be reeponalble lOt no more then the coet of the apace occu pl~ by the error and onlr the 11retlnaertlon We 1h1U not
any loll or expenH thet r11ulta !rom the publication or omi11lon of an edvertillmtmt Correction w•ll be mede In the flr•t avaUable eclltion • Bo•
are always conrldantlal •Current rete card appUe1 • AU real eatata advertl~ements are eubject to the Federal Fair Housing Act ol1966 • This "'"'P'IM•I
accepts only help wanted ad1 mMtlng EOE atandarda We will not
1
In violation or the law

• Start Your Ad s With A Keyword • Include Complete

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

CLASSIFIED INDEX

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE:ts
hereby
given that on Saturday,
June 9 , 2007 at tO:OO
a.m., a public sale will
be held at 211 W.
Second St., Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company Is selling lor
cash In hand or certlfled chock the lottowlng collateral :
t998 Dodge Dakota
tB7GG22X4WS576056
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reserves the right to
bid at this sale, and to
withdrew the above
collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves tha
right to refoctany or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
" as Is-where is", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
warranty
given.
For further Informs·
lion, or lor an appointment to Inspect collet·
era!, prior to sate date
contact Cyndle, Ken, or
Randy &amp;1992-2136.
(8} 5, 6, 7

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Roofers Metal rooltng std· "--oiiioiiiiiioii.iiii-•
tng and EPOM Top pay and Galltpolls Career College
beneftts 724·229-8020
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today t 740 446·4367
Scentc Htlls Nurstng Center
1 BOO 21 4-0452
ts currently acceptmg applt·
www galt !XIItscareercolage com
cattons lor a Untt Manager Accrad ted t.Jember Accredttn~:~
Appltcanls must possess a Counc•l lc• tndoperodent Coltege6
current AN hcen:;e m the and St hoot ~ 12NI3
state of Ohm Long-term - - - - - - - - ca te expenence ts requtred Overbrook Center local
Applicants must possess ed CI333
Page
51
excellent commum catton M1ddleport Ohto ts pleased
sktll and the abtltty to tunc- to announce we wtll be holdlion as an effectiVe health· mg an STNA class sched·
care team member For uted lor June 11 22 Hours
more mformatton or to wtll be BAM 430PM and hit
sc hedule an tnlervtew out an appltcalton Full Ttme
please contact Dtanna Ftlch posrtlons available to those
Human Resource s at 740 _ quahfte d mdtvtd ual s com
EOE
plating the class Appttcants
446 7150
- - -- - - - - must
be
dependabl e
Very dependable lemale(s) (Anenctance ts a must) team
to care for two dtsabled players wtlh pos.tttve alit·
females m New Haven WV tudes to JOin us tn provtdtng
Valtd
driVer's
license outstandtng, qualtly care to
requtred Home heaHh care our restdents If you have
expenence a pluS 5 days 8 any questtons contact Hollte
week 12 hour shtflsftlextbt!ty Bumgamer, LPN, Staff
to change schedule as D evelopment
needed
Ltve-tn arrange Coordtnat or @740 992
ments posstbte as part of 6472 Overnrook Center ts
oompensalton Must start an E 0 E and a parttetpant
on June 11 Please call 304- of the drug free workplace
program
882-271 1

oN OTt CEo
OHIO VALLE Y PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do busrness 'NIIh
people yo u know and
NOT to send money
through the matt unhl you
have 1nvesttgated the
offenng

r

All real estate adllert lslng

m thla newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Houatng Ac t of 1968

which makes tl tllegalto
adverttse 'any
preference, ltmttation or
dtscrlmlnatton based on
race, color, rellgton, sex

MoNFI'

IDLOAN

familial status or nattonal
ongln , o r any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or

discrimination '
Borrow Smar t Contact
the Ohm Dtvtslon of
Ftnanctal
tnstttutton s
Offtce of Cons.umet
Atfatrs BEFORE you refl
nancc your home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or tnsurance Call the
Offtce of Consumer
AHatrs toll tree at 1·866
278-0003 to learn tf the
mortgage
oroke r or
lender
IS
properly
ltcensed (Thts ts a public
servtce announcement
from the Ohto Valley
Pubhshtng Company)

This newapaper wUI not
knowing ly accept
advertisements for real

estate which Is tn
violation of the law Our

readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advenised In
thts newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity tlasea

For Sale or land
Contract 3 Bedroom 2
Bath 1 acre tn country
Oak Htll &amp; Jackson,
$600/mo wtth down pay·
men\ I ·800 951 2060

For sale/land contract 3 BA
house m Galltpolts, WID
f'RUI'FS'iiONAt
connectton $1500 down
Smvu:s
$400/mo Also 1 BR 10
Galltpohs
S750
down
Mobt te Home set up servtc $200/mo Call Wayne 404
es, wtndows doors steps &amp; 456 3802 for tnformatton
suppl"s
(304)391 5863
locateg tn Nttro
HUO HOMESt 4bd only
- - - - -- - - $155/mo 3bd $181 /mo
TURNED DOWN ON
More 1 4bd homes avail
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? able S ~o dn 20 yrs @ 8%
No Fee Unless We Wmt
For ltslmgs 1 800-559-41 09
1 888·582·3345
X F144
Il l It I 'I Ill
Mtntature farm Untbu tlt
home on 4 acres on SA
~·o
H OMI-...'i
160 3BR 1BA Peach es
'--..;,fllllR-S,o;\lli
.lio· ,.1 bernes, grapes Swtmmtng
pool New apphances Wood
(4) 3 Bedroom Homes tn
burne r $88 000 740 388
Rodney V1nage 11 $57 900 0815
land Contract a possibthty,
payments wt ll be about the New 3 Bedroom 21 /2 bath
same as rent (740)446· by Dutlder 2 car garage
4543
Dasement Good locatt on
- - - - - -- and schools Green Twp
0 Down even wtth less than • 446 9966
perlect cred•l IS avatlable on J!l!:::.;,;~-~--~
thts 3 bedroom 1 bath
1\-IORll..E HOMJ.)";
home Comer tot fireplace
t""t&gt;R SAlE
modern kttchen )acuzzt tub
Payment around $550 per 002001 Skyline 28x64 1600
month 740 367 7t29
sq It
Must be mo~Jed
Great shape only $45 000
213 BR 1 Bath pool on B 5
acres Close to town As~tng 304 593·0582

I

$145 000 740 645 3333

1994 Oakwood l4x70 new
3 bedroom home m condtlton 740 446 4782
Pomeroy Rtver vtew OH
2007 Clayton
marn road $20 000 1· 740·
5BRI3BA
2000 Sq Ft
992·2593
Starling at S33 00/sp ft t
:! BA 1 BA on about 11 NO DOWN PAYMENT
acres tn Green Twp Jackson
to qualtfted buyers
Ptke
Galltpohs School
The Home Show
Dtstnct Gas heat 446 7525
Ashland, KY
3 BA 1BA large Famtly
888· 928·3426
Room frtdge WID large - - - - - - lot Close to Holzer Call
2007 Doublewtdc
441 5826 or 446·9664
3BR 2BA
Delivered &amp; Set $39 999
3 or 4 BR 1 bath garage
The Home Show
basement covered porch
Ashland Ky
back dad&lt;. new central heat
Toll free 888 928·3426
anjj AC unit ntce landscap
tng fenced m back yard
Great used 2005 3 bedroom
new appliances recently
16):80 wtth vmyllshmgle
remodeled
bathroom
Must sell Only $25 995 With
Aslung $75000 New Haven
de1tve ry can (740 )385-4367
Wv 304 882 3773
Beaultlui-Mtddleport hom et
3BA 2BA full basement
Many NEW features!l Must
see lhts onet 740·416 1548

New 3 Bedroom homes !rom
$214 36 per month Includes
many upgrades deltvery &amp;
set·up (740)385·2434

�We~nesday, June

Wednesday, June 6, 2007
ALLEYOOP

6, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
NEA Crossword Puzzle

·BRIDGE
Nice used 3 bedroom home Trailer lot for rent in countrY. Gracioua living. 1 and 2bedvinyl/shingle. Will help with t /4 mile from. Rio Grande. room apartments at Village
delivery. 740-385-4367
5200/month 140-388-8803 Manor
and
Riverside
Older Trailer 3br. 1ba , ,.,.,,__ _ _ _ _.., Apartments in Middleport.
$3 ,000 w/a.ddition , $2 .500
without appliances included
740-446·7983 after 6pm

APARHIENI'S

L.,._.,;lilliiiR,jjRI:Nriiiii;.,_.l
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments

OWNER FINANCING
Nice 312 singlewtdes ·
From $1',800 down
paymen1
Scon i7401 626· 27 50

for Rent Meigs, County. In
town. No Pets. Deposit
Required. {740)992-5174 a
(740)441 ·0110.

r

Lars &amp;

10.66 acres, 1594 Northup
Ad.1nGreenTwp. GalliaCo..
24x48 barn. recent survey.
no restrictions. beautiful
houselocation. allutilitieson .

New Holland 479 Hayblnerecently reconditioned, Field
ready w!Hyd. Swing, $2500:
Int. 3-16 Plows w/ 0011ers,

From $0-$592. Call 740-

Canceted Orders.- 3left.

spring trip, good points,

992·~064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Equal
Opportunity Empl0j1!r

25'K36'K4-4' No Aeasonalje
Offer Refused! Call Todayl

1 and 2 bedroom apart· Middleport, North 4th Ave., 2
ments, furnished and unfur· br. furnished apartment,

deposit &amp; references, no NEW AND USED STEEL
pels. {740)992·0165
Sleet Beams, Pipo Rebar
Modern 1 SA Apt. Call 44 &amp;- For
Concrete ,
Angle .
Channel.
Flat
Bar,
Steel
3736
G
F
0 rains.
rating
or
New
2BR
apartments . 0
&amp;
lkw
L&amp;L
riveways
a ays.
Washer/dryer
hookup, Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesda y, Wed ne sday &amp;
www spr~ng-valley-proper1t~ .com stovelretrigeratof irduded.
Also, units on SA 160. Pets Friday, Bam-4:30pm . Closed
1 Bedroom Apt. very private Wefcome! (740)441 -0 194
d
&amp;
Thursday,
atur ay
all utili ties included. ptus New Haven. 2 br. furnished unday· (740)''"7300
_,_
Satellite TV 8 OVD recorder
_ _
apartment . references &amp; - - - - - - - 304 674 0042
:.:_~.:_:::...::__ _ _ _ deposi1, no pets. (74{))992- Pole
Barns 30x40~~:10'
1 BR tmlurn1shed apt 0165
Delill9red &amp; Erected $8,595
Range. fridge, garage and .:..:..:.::...__ __ _ _ _ plus
Sales Tax: Call

-= - - -- - -

w

5 acre lots for sale in Gatha
Co. Morgan Twp. Morgan
Lane. Septic permits for last
years specs. Possible land
conttact. some restrictions.

s

s

site , $79 .900. (9371362· air. 136 1st A'e Aeat. 740·
4775 , (937)605-3581
446·2561
_ __ _ _ _ _ _
4 Acres 1ocated off Kemper 1 or 2 bedroom Ap t 1n p 1.
Holl ow Rd . Already has Pleasant. Utilities paid. No
water/elec. SeclUded area .
740·368·6228

Hl66·352-D469
--'-...,-----JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepaited. New &amp; Rebuih In
Stock. Call Ron Ewns. 1•
800- 537 •9528·

Middleport. Bee&lt;:h St. , 2 br.
furnished apartment, Wlities
paid. deposit &amp; reterences,
no pets. (740)992·0165

msned. ana houses in
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE Pomeroy and Middleport ,
Program SO Down, If you secunty deposit required, no
own land or use Fam1ly pets. 740-992-2218.
Land We own the Ba nk your ::..:..c:...._:_:_____
1 and 2 Bedroom Apts, WID
App roved 606-474-6380
hookups, Gall (740)441 0194 or (740 )339 _0362 _

ACREAGI:

HUGE SAYINGS
ON ARCH STEEL
IUtLDING$-

Pacleacespat,nntg Vapapllel·,cay,A
,·opntssforno2w
·
3 or 4 BR apts. (3041675·
5806 AppiK:ations can be
received at 1151 Evergreen
0
Pt PI WV
Pets 304-675-8B72
-~----25550
.
1600 Square feet , beautiful,
.
ur,~tumished. two bedroom
apt. 2nd floor. LA , DR. 11 /2 Tara
Townhouse
baths. downtown Gallipolis, Apartments. Very Spacious.
ideal for prole ss•onal couple. 2 Bedrooms. C/A, 1 1/2
References tequired, no Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby

(937)7 18-1471 www.nation·
widepolebarnS.com
- - - -- -- Ae1rigerated unit,
· 8'x14 •
U\Ri ,
will fit on truck runs off
'
diesel or 3ph electric, cools
or heezes, $2,000, wilt take
118de in's· guns, hOuse trail·
er. lawn tractor or truck of
equal or tes~ value . Call
evenings, (740)388--BQJ4

e (, ' '

i

PElS

$400. (740)245·5096
New Taylor Wet( 15' Heavy
Duty Bat wing wl Dual
Wheel, chain guards, hyd
cyls. SS.95. Jim's Farm
EqujJmenl, 74Q.446-97n

r

99 GMC Sonoma 4x4,
142000
mites,
asking
$5200. 740·256-1498 Of
740-339-0969

r

SUVs

.
2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo, 2 wd., 25,000 mi,
410, iluto, all options. nice
$13 500, 740 ~9-2732

i

I&lt;I \ I \ I -.

HOUSFS

JORRENr
$155/mof Buy 4bd HUO
home! 5'% dn, 20yrs @ B%.
For Listings 800·559-4109
Kl709

c

FOR SALE

4 Horses 2 Quarter Mares &amp;
1 Hy &amp; 1 Stud Colt t/2 99 Plymouth Voyager, Ice
OJarter &amp; 112 Morgan 304 _ cold air. new tires. runs

882 _3750

L.,.-ili i i ili i--,..1

.
Commerc•al
building MFor
Rent• 1800 square feet, off
street parkilg . Great location! 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Rent $375/mo.
Call wayne (404)456-3802

A HIDDEN TREASURE! Prime commeJCial spaoe for
Laurel
Commons rent at Springvalley Plaza.
Apar1ments. Largest in the Call645-2192.
area! Beautifully JOnovated
WANJlD
throughout including brand
ro

r

I

tFuorte~~~~yr304
. okf5756-lud21m74ilia·

_099_3_
. - --

For Sale 2003 Yamaha 660
Full blood
Boer Grizzly 4 Wheelet $4 ,500
Goats
for ragisteted
breeding stock
exc oond. 304-675-6531 or
Does &amp; Budts $300 &amp; up 304-67 4-5708
304-675·4316
,~-~~~-..,
tv n~ ·~:SMAU:~~
- - - - - -- JJUA
v•~
Rag. Angus Bulls 101 sale.
HollybrOOf( Farm. 740-245·
5984
. 2000 Crest Spon 22 Ft. ponHAY &amp;
tooo 2000 Mercll'y motor 40
GRAIN
1 HP. 740-992·4-422

r

·------,..1
RENr

c

I

r'o

Ellm View
Apartments

large 4 bedroom house in
Pomeroy, very clean, newly
•2&amp;.3 bedroom apartments
remodeled. new cabinets.
•Central
heat &amp; AJC
new carpel, (740)949-2303
•Washer/dryer hookup
Taking applications for 3BR •reliant pays electric
remode led house. No pets. . (304)882·3017
$400/mo. $300/dep. 446 ·
3617

2 Br, 2 Bath 14x70 trailer in
Gracious Living t and 2
Rio.a ·rande. 740.446-2422
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from 327 10
3 bedroom mobile home in
$592. 740-992·5064. Equal
counlly. {740)256·6574.
Housing Opportunity. This
Located in Point Pleasant ins1itution is an Equal
and Gallipolis Ferry. Call 0ppor tunlty Provider and
'
675·3423
Eflllloyer.

s

I

J
Check Our Large
Inventory Of
New &amp; Used Vehicles
smithsuperstore.com
HOSPICE GRIEF
SUPPORT GROUP
Thursday, June 7

6:00pm
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care in Gallipolis
Bring yoUf favorite potluck dish I

For more informalion, call
(740) 446-5054 or toll-free at

1-800·500-4850.

'

r10

MlscEuANoous
MERCHANDISE

I

-

r

I

CAMI'F.Rs&amp;
MOIUR HOM!S

30 Yrs . Exp. Ins.
Owner Ronn ie Jones
F·rcc Esllmates
·

East E.i-J.d
Storage
Nye Ave
Pomeroy• OH
5x10, 6x10, 10x10,
10x24
h
I
e on y storage
•
"th• h
DOlts WI 10 t e

t

Motocross Race
Sat 619107 6:00 pm
Mason Go. Fairgrounds
Rt. 62 N Pt. Pleasant, WV
3:30 pm) 675·5463

3.
FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Remodeling, Room
Additions
Contractor

Free Estimates

740-367·0536

r=~:=~::;;;:;~~~~====n

Years Experience

BARNEY

--

THEY DIDN'T SlN

2002 Springdale 5th wheel
Camper 26ft, has 1 Slide out
Sleeps 6-8 asking $1o,opo if
Interested call 304-6756336 after 7pm

r·

-.1 II\ I c I "

I'

1984 Ford Ft50, 6 cyl.. 4 1:'1!1'"'"_":'!'_ _ __,
spd standard, runs good,
HoME
decent body &amp; tires, SB 50 as
lMPRoVEMFNIS •
is OBO (740)441-Q217

riO

BASEMENT
1999 GMC Sonoma truck, 4
cylindar, 5 speed, $ 3700 ,
WATERPROOFING
{740)992 _2217
Unconditional lifetime guar~-'------- antee. Local references fur200 1 Ch evy S-10 Stepslde, nished. Established 1975.
Sspd AC ntt
co
,
. 1 , ru1se,
, Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446Alum Whee ls, Tonneau 0870, Rogers Basement
55K, $5400, (740)379·2748 Waterproofing .
'

MY PARALLEL

UN NEASE
ARGUMENT!!

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Stanl~y Tree-

YOUNG'S

Trimming
&amp; Removal

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Work

'Experienced

V.C YOUNG Ill

Call Gary Stanley @

992621'

740-742-2293
Please leave messa

· Wise Concrete
All types of concrete
Owner· Rick Wi se

740-992-5929
740-416,1698
15 y~ . Exp. Free Es1immcs

ADVERTISE
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

rr~~-IT WP01'1\EOOl.?
ll\IKC. we; fVo..l&gt;
t\LL REI&gt;.tl !

~"'n~t. c.1~ 5TmE-D "'l)I,,Nf..

WV036725

References Availabl~!

CLU~

p, I"' r , 0111"
e

ROIERT
IISSEH
CIISTIICTIII
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling ·

'

) (1'-,.

I

~ l )'''

,

$35AScoop
· T·Post 6R. $3.2~

BIG NATE
Hbw C.OME

1 / S:'-

NOVELS, MRS.

C.l.E'I'.WIC.Kt ~

_ \S~ I

we Deliver To You!

FARM

• Home Oxygen .
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Hellos System

0'%. Financing· 36 Mos.
available now on John

Deere Z Trak Zero Turns &amp;
99 S2.50ea. 100-t $3.00ea, 5.99% Fixed Rate on John
250+ $4.009a . THE BAT- Deere Gatora Carmichael
TEAY TERMINAL 1-600· Equipment(740)446-2412.
796-6797
96 Ford~ 55HP, 200 hrs,
29 ' ~cargomateB enclosed 2446 &lt;lT loader/ bucket·
trailer for sale, has living canopy, new farm trailer,
quarters with Air Cond./ $18,900/all (740)379-2748

PEANUTS

~ ........,..:"t~'~1"'9"3....:•·

. I-lEV, CAARLES, VOUR
006 IS OVER HERE
RUNNING SACK AND
FORTI-I T).{ROUGI-I OUR
WADING POOl. ..

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine.Street • Gallipolis

446-0007

OBO

Financing on New Massey
Ferguson &amp; New Holland
- - - - - - - - TractQrs
as
low
6x12 enclosed black trailer, 0%. W.A.C. Jim's Farm
$1500; 5~10 utility trailer, Equipment, 740-446-97n
$400 ; SKI 0 utility trailer,
Kiefer Built- Valley-Bison$SOO . (614 1595 · 7773 or
and
livestock
_1_·8_oo_-7_9_8·_46_8_6_- : - - Horse
TrailersLoadmaxEntertainment
, Cehter
Gooseneck, Duinps, &amp;
w/glassware doors, nice,
Utility· Aluma Aluminum
lights up $120. Full size bed
lnllloro· B&amp;W Gooseneck
w/mattress &amp; box spri1gs,
Hitches·
Trailer
Parts . .
good cond. $150 304-675· Carmichael
Trailers.
2208
(740)446-2412

SUNSHINE CLUB .
v.EU, HIS IXiTOR ::AID
· H~ fW&gt; TO GU INIJOWED
11-J ~IJG ~HIS
H&amp;:/&gt;J..T/'\ ..

/

,.,

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI
Help Wanted

,.

GARFIELD

Manley's
Recycling

Help Wanted

1'WO OF 1'H051S "FAf6" W!:RIS
OUT OF L.INIS, FISLLA/

IU.ISt •lllllllllft.DI 45JID
. 740-182-3114

... IIIAIIIV-fl'llll¥9:81 06:81111
. hllll'llllt.M•12:11111

Phlebotomist

PIYIII&amp; TOP PIICES fUll

Ple~sant

Valley Hospital
is currenlly accepting resumes
for per diem phlebotomists.
Poslitions are needed for
· early a.m. blood draws in
Long Tenn Care facilities.
Coverage area includes Jackson
and Gallia counties in Ohio.
Excellent hourly pay, ori call
pay and mileage reimbursement.

56 Ni~hltime
notse

18 Hawaii' s
Mauna21 Evaporates

poelically
27 Windup

28RU11H01ked
cab
compol8l'
31

One-.
dme

32 LlriCh onto
33 Houeehokl
cholw
36te,ln

Segovia
37

UPS unlls

38 CommR

blues

1 Scale notes
2 DJ gear
3 Author o1
" The Gold
Bug"
4 Famous
canal
5 Hides a
message
6 Mouse
~ages
7 EXClusively
8 Boot liner
9 Turldsh ofli.
cial

10 Meditation

18 Boarding
house
guest
19 Familiar
threal (2

wcls.)

20 Monastery
heeds
llhoul
22 Ainations 47 HOI dme In
23 Deal with
OUibec
24 Spain and 48 Windy Clly,
Portugal
bi'Mllly
25 Ann's pal
50 Gt'IIICII or
28 Make taboo
Bravo
30 Ma.
51 Do the
Thurman
wrong

·hi••

IRII••C.S·IIIIIIII•WIIIIII

IIIIIWUC e..tn
.......... In!

ICIIII« Clrl'llt PriCISI

GRIZZWELLS

Briars

35

52 Ruralldclr.

al1endance
Of no value

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Llis Campos

East has all lour missing clubs, you must
..... wi1h the nine from the board. Theft
you can underplay your three, relaining
the lead on the board to
with
the QUMl.ln this WWf, you pick up Easl's
holdi~ and can still relum to the board.
wi1h a spade to casllthe last club.

Astro;.

Graph
-&lt;arthdlr:

c.tolriyQP.--sn.-tJom-by"""'"- ,.._._
£a:n- olheclt'.- - " ' """"·
Tocl!)lscb!: I flqtJOis B

" LP GALFIIGOFZK DZII OWT PZRKV
GLTIIFYGK ZK OWT IGOOHTDFTHA FX
RKTUYTHHTA. "

EIITX . AJFVWO A.

TFXTKWZJTII
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ wil kill strong

'Poverty is a felalivel~ mild disease... bul
and weak souls alike . · Kurt.Vonnegut

r::~::' S~lt4{llA-~~~s·
IIIIH lty ClAY l
0 four
AIGmiiiOt l.lttn ol lflt
scrambled words be.

11010
UMI

H)IWl

low ro In four lmplt

~.

A good ally you've developed who has
alwayS been in the position to help you
advance your objectives but was never
asked to do so night do 10 anyway with
unsollctted assistance that will be invaluable to you.
GEMINI (May. 21·June 20) - That
career obJective you've been trying to
actlleve ·can be accomplished by using
your mind - not muscles and clout. The
race will go to the brl~est ard not the
brash.
CANCER {June 21.Ju~ 22) -II you lind
that people with whom you'r8 associated
seem to be mora appreciative of your
Ideas than usuai, tl'U be because your
thoughts will be good ones and right on
tafget.
LED (Ju~ 23-Aug. 221- A financial mat·
ter about which you've been quite concerned will be taking a tum tor the better,
owng mostly to the way you handle the
matter. But It may still take a bit of time to
settle.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - At least liS·
len to a friend's advice because, after
mulling It over In your mind, you are apt
to discover what he or she suggested
was actually sage counsel.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0Ct. 23) - Progress
can be made where your career Is con·
earned 11 you'll give It the seriOus consld·
· erauon It needS. Don't rush In without
thinking things through and you will dO
quite well.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Mutual
benefits can be aerived from a dtscusskm with one who shlli-es the 118m&amp; Interests In a matter as you do. Each will have
valuable Information that, when put
together, will make sense.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -You
have a ramart&gt;;able ability lor being able
to think things through and to transform
outmoded Idees or things Into some)hlng
more functioned and useful. Put It to
work.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - The
reason you've been denied some lntorma1ion you're seeking Is because you
haven 't yet asked the right questions of
the right people. Seek and you'll find
what you're looking lor.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - If you
put your mind to 11, ypu should be able to
make an Improvement In your financial
position. It mav not be mammoth._but It
could make things a lot easier and more
secure for you
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man;:h 20) - Some
kind of social OUII$1 could prove to be a
pleasurable experience for you . It you
have nothing on the agenda. drum
something up yourself but put a limit on
the number of participants .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19)- Important
lnforiTIItlon you've been trying to get
your hlndt on could come to you rrom a
rather unlikely eource. The pereon wtM be
somt~nt with whom you hive nothing In
common.
TAURUS {Aptll 20·Moy 20) - Nowo
)'OU'VI bHn hoping IO rtetiVI II llktly to
arrlvt, 1nd It oould bt better than you
thought. It'll rtllll to oon11thlng new In
wh~h you'tt ln&gt;Oivtd that'll be worth
waiting tor..

"1
0

I believe my stubbonmess.has
itshclpfitl features. I will
.------.....,
" always knqwwhat ( will be
thinking._.....

"'1

O
L.....J'--J.....J.-1-..1..-J

Compleie tha

you

develop

quoted

in !Ita m;Siino words
from ~•P No, 3 btlow.

8 l ETiERSNVMSER€0
SQUARES
PR INT

IN

SCI.AAWDS ANSWERS
Fetish - Eight - G11!1 - !Wigle - ENGAGE in IT
"Thinking." mused the not so sman fellow, "is the hardest work
there is, which is probably why so few people ENGAGE in IL"

ARLO &amp;JANIS

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
cloHuman Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant , WV 25550
Fax to: 304-675-6975 or apply
online at www.pvalley.ora
. AAIEOE

..

chuckle

bv ltllino

SOUP TO NUTZ

\

thins

34 Not in

practice
12

40 Worll with
oils
41 Jean Auel
heroine
43 Celts, to
Romans
45 Actress
Mldellne46 Bleacher

13 Have the

DOWN

By llomlce- Ooot

ROMI\NC.E

" l&lt;t t lu·, 1t· 1
~ -lO

55~-1

Thure.dtly, Juoe 7, 2001

YOU ALWAYS
I'.EAI&gt; TtiO~E

Ri ver
Ag Service

Stop &amp; Compare

You l1aVe live top lricl&lt;s: llvee spades,
· one &lt;iall1ond and one clJb. Four more
clubs wilsee you home. But jus! in case

e

or

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and
Showmasler Show
Feeds
Shad e

J40-99.2-1m

one c:ltn)

conmue

Mushroom Composl

Wide Voriety

54 Souvenir

Tlte modem tournament ptayer woul&lt;l
intervene wi1h that West hand, probably
making a two-spade weak jump overcall .
Of course, according to the t-_the
spade Jl"n 1s not strong er&lt;&gt;&lt;91, and one
is 11QI "tpp06ed to have lour cards in an
Unbid majOr. On top of Jhal, the VUinera·
bility Is lllfavoratj8_Bulthe m.t.p. rarely
cares about such niceties.
North's three-spade rebid sltcrNed spade
val1181 arid- partner to bid to SOUih dill not ikBitaVing only a bullive clti!s was a long wwt
off. (Nola lhalliva dtbl (ajfs hera wthe.
- . . begin wi1h three rour&lt;ls ·of
hearts, wltfch ~ them two hearts arid

Roofing &amp; GuH.,.
Vlnyt Siding &amp; P•lntlng
Patio and Porch Decks

* Insured

Pass
Pass
Pas•

clistanl

53 Goddess of
wisdom •

lon heart,

a

' R ea1onable Rates

East

Moooe ldn
46 Kick back
49 Less

16 Menagerie

29 "La Mer"

North

Wr.,

44

17 Carry on a
trade

aqulller

name

Z•

Pass

••..-ton
a-ge

Out"' style

42 Hoop lite
43 Actnttts-

no-lrump . with something in hearts.

Room Additions
Remodeling
·
New Garages
EJectricel &amp; Plumbing

'Prompt and Quality

3.

15

Vocal

39~181.

40

Whenever we know !hat we do not have
a major-sun fit, we think no-trump even when we have uncovered an SKeel·
klnt minor-sun malch. Occasionally this
is poor for our score, going down in three
no-trump when live (or aiKI) of the mino&lt;
was maldng. Muclt, moc1t 111Clfe otten,
lhoujjl, we wil be (1etler ott il three notrump.
In this deaf, you reach three no-trump.
Wast leeds the spade Ja&lt;;l&lt; to dummy's
queen. How would you plan the plOy?

740·367-Q544

David Lewis
740-992·6971

Hill 's Self
Storage

Pass
Pass
Pass

1S~

14

26 Suo,

We just love
that no-trump

0 rywa l'r'·

.:.:;::.:==::::1

92 Fleetwood Wilderness,
fully contained. All working
conditioo . M:.l heaV st&lt;Ne/
fridge/ microwave. Naw
queen size man. ~eeps 6.
Asking $6500. 740·286·
8729or 740-418-Q832

.c..,
......

23 What's·-·

Opening lead: • J

Electric, Plumbing,

(740) 742-2690

West

3 NT

r:-:-=-:--'-=--:---,
26

South
• 6 3

South
It

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,

Local

K tO 9
K 8 7 6

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Pomeroy P.O.

s For Old Auto Batteries 1•

Heating,
$4 ,300
(7401388·8803

70 Pine Street • Gallipo li s
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669·0007

jurisd,iction of the
'-~.,.,~-=,-..J

t
•

9 K 4
O AQ632
• A J 10 3

I..___

Must Sell · Ai_r Stream
Camper mint cond. 31FT,
fully self contained $4,000
1999 Cofvene COUpe, bOth firm 304·882·2196 cell 304·
tops, auto, 59,000 mi, all 674·3920
options, very nice, $19,000,
(740)949 2 732
Prime River Lots for Rent-• _ _ _ _ _ BeaU11ful Beach--Plenty of
;__:__
99 Buick Regal GS, 1 owner, Shade--For into. Call 740·
garage kept, 142,000 miles, 992·5782.
new tires, Good Condition, .:..:..:c.c:...=-.,--- $5,500 304-882·II02
Private ·camp Site with Boat
;;:~.;..;;~.;;;;.;.;.;;;;......, Dock on Kanawha Ai~er
5
between 6 Mile &amp; 10 Mile.
TRUCKS
FOR " •• ~
304-675·57•4
""""''

c .

1-800-950-3359

·-

• 8 7 5

.&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

For Sale: Crownvelch plants, Large selection of Rolary
(740)245·9322
Auners 4' thru 15'. Jim's
Honda XR 50; Brush Guard, ·s Farm Equipment. 740.
Stainless Steel, Fhs 02·05 448'9m
F250 or F350. (740)448· - - - - - - 6741 . (740)3J9-0004
New 72' Finishing Mowers
$999. UmHed amoon1 avai\.
able at this prlce. Also, 4', 5',
&amp; 6' .tillers. 4' s1arting at
$750.
Jim 's
Farm
Equipment. 740·446·97n

I

..

r

Alrroi

7~367 _02661

I

·------,..1 j.

AKC
Registered
FORSAIE
p•ppies,yellow labs
1st Lw-llliliiiiiliiiiiiiiiii--"
shots,wormed,born April13,
$300-M,350-F, 965-4 138
10 to 15 small cars for ·sale.
Cavaliers, Escorts, Neon~
AKC Boston Terrier Pupa. 7 .etc. Gas Sa,.rs! 740·4461\l&lt;s old, both mala. Pamnta 7278
on prem. wi1h pedigree, vet - - - - - - - dlkd, shots, wormed.
_ 1965 Chevetle Malibu, 20 ,
740
hard· top, V8 , Duel exhaust ,
·368·9325
power steering, crager ss
AKC Reg. Boston Terrier chrome rims, all original.
pups. 7 1\i&lt;s old. Shots arid Drives and runs great,
wormed. $250. Call 740· needs restored . 740·441 ·
388-8743
4704
.::..:.:.___ _ _ _ _-:AKC Reg . Weimaraners ; 1997 Saturn Sll-4 dooi,
Solid silver, 008 04126107, one owner,tair cond.,no ale,
(M)$400.(F)$450. Daposit of high mileaga. $1200.00
$tOO will hold the pup of OBO (740)992·2947

Discount

---

•

Ir

3 Br house for rent. 2nd Ave.
new kitchen and bath .
your choice till ready to
Gallipois. 0311 446·2422
Slart.tng at $405 · a11 todayl· LANDOWNERS-NEED leave litt9r. Parents present.
3 bt. in Rutland, $400 par ,(,304~),::27~3:,:·334~4_ _ _ _ EXTRA FARM INCOME? Call anytime, {7401339·
month
plus
depost·l 2935, leave message if no
.
' Apa.rtment for rent , 1-2 We have responsible sports· answer. ·
(740)992·0064
:..:..:.=.:....:.~---- Bdrm., remodeled, new car- men looking to lease hunting
pet, stove &amp; frig ., water, property in this area. Appletlead
Chihuahua
Attention!
Local company offering ~No sewer, trash pd. Middleport. Midwest Trophy leases Inc. Puppies, 6 to 7 wks old.
DOWN PAYMENT' pro· $425.00. No pets. Ref. (304)532·6015 oi 1·800· Paper tlllined. $100. 379·
grams for you to buy your required. 740·643·5264.
696·1073
2422
home instead of renting.
Chocolate Lab puppias. I st
Beautiful Apts. at Joclcoon
E
W
• 100% financing
atatas, 52
. estwood
shot &amp; wormed. Ready to
• Less than pertect credit Dri,e, from $365 to $560.
HOUSEHOUl
go $150 Call 740 992 "227
aocepted
740 ·446·2568.
Equal
Gooos
.
. .., ,
• Payme_nt could be the Housing Opportunity. This
CKC Female Westies, 1st
same as rent.
instit ution is an EQual Mollohan Furniture. Great shots, wormed, vet checked,
Mortgage
Locators. Opportunity Provider and • selection for a Great price. $400 . 740-368-9453
{740)367-0000
Employer.
Drive a lillie, save a lot! 202 CKC Lhaso Apso puppies
For Sale or land
Clean quiet spacious IBA, Clark Chapel Rd. Bidwell , $300. Will be ready 6119107,
Contract: 3 Bedroom . 2
stove!lrig, country setting, OH. (740)388-0173
8· wks, shots &amp; wormed.
Bath. 1 acre in counlru,
K
7
•
no pets/smoking, Hrstllast Remodeling? Compl ete set Parents on premises . C C
Oak Hill &amp; Jackson,
of · kitchen cabinets, sink, Chihuahua pups $250 will
mo+dep $350 992·3543
$600/mo with down pay-_
be ream• 6128107 . 6 wks.
CONYENIENT~Y LOCAT· kitchen range (like new), Shots &amp;"!rormed. Parents on
ment. 1-800-951-2060
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
wall oven. countellop, $750;
·
Sliding glass doot wrth new premises. Cal 446-2432
apartments,
HUD HOMES! 4bd only Townhouse
I \I&lt;\ I . _, I 1'1'1 II ..,
$155/mo., 3bd $181/mo., and/or small houses FOR blinds, $100; Gun cabinet,
RENT.
Call
_
like
new,
$175;
2
maple
bar
,\ I I\ I " I ! II I\
More 1-4bd homes avail17401441 11 11
able . 5% dn , 20 yrs @ 8%. lor application &amp; information. chairs, $40, 1 full size oak ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
bed with springs &amp; mattress,
Fot listings 1·800·559·4109
$15o. call 17401441·8299
~
.EQuiPMENT
'Ft44.

Gririding • Buckel
Truck
Full insured
Sen·~·to r c ·t1t. zen
•

• .7 s z
• J 4
• Q9H 2
West
East
• J1096S4
• 72
9 A863
• Q J 10 9

~··tneM•

• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stump

BoreGoats, I OO%fullblood 2000 Harlev .Davidson Wide
Reg. Billy; also percentage Glide, 22.000 miles, excelBily, (740)367-nSS
tent condition . $10,000..
-'C.:..-'------ (740)992-1909 or (740)591-

-----~--

FORo~~
L--oilliiii"'iili""ii.'_.J
~

I

.AKQ

I

I

great. $2900 0 80 . Must

- - - - - - - - sea. 740 44Hl058
"';~~;;:.:;;::::;::::.,._ _,
7 Young Angus Bulls. t;CI M~Cl'~ ~~
v•V1\. LLr..Y
Excellent Breeding. Top
WHF.fl....ERS
4
Per1ormance,
Priced ,
A e a s o n a b 1y .
www.slaterunangus .coril , 0 1 Dyna Superglide. $9000
(7'"286- 3
446-1414or709-1202
~1
5 95

! 1\n:KI

RENTALS SALES
SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
I

I

male_;nl)' It:! pound S900
AC,starter,doorS,hood,fmeach. Shots &amp; vel checked Jo.tders,engine.7 40. 992. 4259.
895-3926
~P,;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ceii740.!J63.0584

SPACE

NOI'III

V~

l..tvmucK

1 llomory

11 Chtdc

L,--oiiliiiiiiiiiii._.l

,

Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing apptica1ions lor waiting
list for Hud·sws~ed, 1· br,
apartment.tor
the
elderly/diSabled call 675·
6679 . Equal
Housing
Opportunity
~·;,;;~!""'--""""'

Alder

FOR SALE

Call between 7pm and 9pm pels, security deposit, $600 . Pool, P:alio, Stan $425/Mo.
FOR S" r
...iiiiii~iii-rl Livestock Feed, shelled cOrn
AAuro~PARlS&amp;
Of leave message 740-669- per month. Call 44 6-44 25 or No Pets, Lease Plus ..__
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0143
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Secur~y Daposij Required,
Adolllbk 7 wt:ek uld AKC $5.20/59 lb. &amp; horse crunch
View of City and River from 2 BA, Newly Carpeted. ,17_:4.::01c::36:.:7...:·7.:.
0:::86:.:·_ _ _ Yorkie Puppies, I female, 2 $7 .22150 lb., &amp; more. g1-92 G9o Metro Parts alt.
Mason County. 7-17 ac, see Freshly painted. Walk1ng
pies on LandAndFarm.com 'distance to UAG. Private
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$400lmo, 1614)595·7773 or
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2B A. trash/ water, stove/
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5 to 30 acres botderlng (740)446· 7620, (740)709·
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9519, (740)441·9872
Galtla, Jackson or Lawrence -::.~c..:.::.:.:.:.:.::~-Co. 419.288 .3937
·
-

ACROSS

Phillip

I·

�Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

B~wen not daunted by task of guarding James Skyline.and Ohio Valley to
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - In ttis more
than W years in the league, San
Antonio's Bruce Bowen has seen plenty
of impressive players and breakout performances - most of them just a few
inches from his face.
. So when his matchup with LeBron
James of the Cleveland Cavaliers is
biUed as the top confrontation to watch·
in the upcoming NBA finah, Bowen is
neither.fazed nor impressed.
'The No. I assignment in the leaguery"
Bowen repeated back when asked about
guarding James. "That's your opinion,
that's your OI?inion. :.. There's a lot of
other scorers. an this league, too."
The Spurs· Bowen, who turns 36 on
June 14, has been voted to the NBA AllDefensive team the last seven years and
was selected for the first team the last
four. He:s been runner-up for Defensive
Player of the Year the last three seasons.
Th~ 6-foot-7, 200-pound Bowen will
likely get much of the time against the 68, 240-pound James, who scored a
career playoff high 48 points in Game 5
of the Eastern Conference finals against
Detroit.
AP photo
Since then, James's offensive prowess Utah Jazz forward Paul Millsap , left, and San Antonio Spurs forward Bruce Bowen
has dominated most talk about the struggle for a rebound in the second quarter of their Western Conference playoff
fmals. But Bowen isn't necessarily buy- basketball game on Tuesday in San Antonio.
ing into it, especially not when the finals
am or what I do," Bowen said.
kneed Nash in the groin area during
start Thursday in San Antonio.
Some of those opinions have been ·Game 3. Nash said Bowen told him the
"I think . Michael Jordan's 60-something points in Boston was incredible. unfavorable. During this season's play- move was unintentional, but the foul
Now do I think it got this much media offs, Phoenix's Amare Stoudemire sa1d originally called on the play was later
coverage 1 No. Did it deserve it? You Bowen purposely kicked him on the up~ded to a "flagrant foul I."
' Bruce is a nice guy, a good lluy.
could say it did," Bowen said. "Magic court during Game 2. Bowen said he
Johnson, his rookie year in the NBA. the "did clip him, but to kick him, that was- Despite what everyone says, Bruce IS a
llreat individual," Michael Finley said.
show he put on in Philly. That is huge. n't the mtention at all."
Bowen was part of another mini-con- 'He's not ... a dirty player; none of those
But it goes to show you that if you're not
playing anymore, it's, 'OK, well, we 're troversy in the same series after he things. He's a competitor."
looking for the next best thing. '
r---:--:-:--.,..,...-....-------:------:--.....-...,;..~-:-.-:o~
"I thank it was impressive what he did,
• ' ·~ ·
· ·
· '
'
' ·
and going through my mind, it's nothing, because I' m not there, I'm not a
. '•·
·
· • . ·. •
•.
Detroit Piston, I'm just watching the
CLEVELAND (AP) - . Mayor
and. a· caie· of . Great "'~!!~&lt;&gt;•.
game as an avid fan," Bowen added.
Jackson ,vs, M,ayor,~iJbqger does- Rn•wina . to.'s ; Burning ~ver
But don't get Bowen wrong. It's not as
.have the same nng asJ..eBron ·
·' c ,

Clevelanc{, San Antonio mayor$ wager on.NBA f'mals

if "It's
he hasn't
takenofnotice
of James'
a matter
him being
their.skills.
foun- J!UI~es vs.
dation, their go-to guy, and he's going to
do that night-in and night-out, and it's
important for us to come with our hard
hats and be ready to play," Bowen said.
Bowen is used to the position he'll be
in for the next 'couple weeks. As a
defender who doesn 't always put up the
big numbers of Spurs teammates Tim
Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu
Ginobili, Bowen is often seen as the
antagonist to favorites like Steve Nash
and Allen Iverson.
Or James.
"Everyone has an opinion. And I can't
allow other's opinions to affect who I w=:::.::......:......;...-...!i:E::!::

Wade
from PageBl
Wade said he expects a
smooth recovery from both
procedures, yet still isn't
sure if he 'II be ready for
training camp in October.
He . began rehabbing the
knee two weeks ago and
. starts shoulder exercises
next week.
"I'm a hard worker. I
know I' m going · to do
everything that they tell me
to do to get back to the
point I need to be back to,"
Wade said. "I was never
worried about that. That
comes with the territory of
playing · sports. You're
going to have to have
surgery to get yourself
back."
Grueling hours of rehab
represents something much
different from the excitement he and the Heat had
this time last year on their
march to an NBA crown.
This year, Wade is mere-

ly an interested finals
observer. But he has high
hopes for 2008, telling season-ticket holders Tuesday
that the Heat will be "new
and improved ... and refocused" next season.
Wade took some time to
decide
which procedures to
·
have; he originally wasn't
sure if he needed the shoulder surgery after rehabbing
the joint for six weeks following the dislocation in
February. Ultimately, he
said getting the shoulder
and knee done at once was
the most logical move.
, ''I'm glad I got both of
them ·out of the way and
got the!I\ done, so I'm on a
faster pace to recovery,"
Wade said.
He was bedridden for
. five days after the surgery,
barely able to move. He
can now drive and walk,
and ' is getting around without much difficulty.
"No crutches for me,"
said Wade, who averaged
27.4 points in 51 regularseason games this season
for 'the Heat, who were

· t·'.,.,..
S ::..i,s~~·.~ ~~~~:~.,·}~~~;~~~~~~'J;~~·n:.&lt;..••'·

Tyler Wynn
Austin King
Tyrus Coyan
David Poole
Cory Kriechbaum
J.C. Manahan
Garren Proctor
Daniel Wagner
Justin Wahl
Michael Malesick
Cody Noble
Ryan Robertson

Andy Grillo

Chris Dent
Austin Dunfee
Corey Hooper
Tyler Nelson
Derek Seymour

Firat Team
Warren
Gellia Academy
Jackson
Meigs
Marietta

Aocl&lt; Hill
Warren
Warren
logan
Athens
Gallia Academy
Waverly
VInton County
Marietta
Meigs

SGaosiitam

Warren
Logan
Vinton County

Honorable Mention
Etha Bonnette
Warren
Aron Mcintire
Marietta
John Paul Finnicum
Gallia Academy

Devin Gibbs

Trenton Moore

Sr
Sr
Jr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Jr
Sr
Jr
·sr
Fr
Sr
Jr

Coming to

Skyline Speedway
Friday, Jone 8, Warm-ups 6, Racing 7:30
Plus Late Models a~ Full Race Program
Sprint Cars at Ohio Valley June 9

swept in the first round by
Chicago. "I'm tdugherthan
that."
It's already been a busy
offseason for Wade, with
the surgeries and last
week's birth of his second son, Zion. James and
his fiancee are also
expecting a second ·son
shortly, and Wade and
James have spoken often
about the imporiance of
fatherhood to them.
They entered the league
together in the 2003 draft,
· James at No. I, Wade at
· No. 5. A · friendship was
formed
quickly,
and
although Wade didn't
come out and say he was
openly
reoting
for
Cleveland to win · this
year's title, he clearly
wants to see James fare ·
well.
"He knows how to handle everything," Wade
said. "He knows how to
handle the pressure people
put on him. He's done it.
In four years, he's in the
finals. No one would have
projected that."

Firat Team
Kersten Harris
Taylor Dean
Nathan Ratliff
Chris Barnett
Chad Miller
Robert Stagbarner
Luke lester
Kylon Crabtree
Zach Haislop
John Harcha

Chesapeake

Coal Grove
Eastern Brown
Fairland
t,onton

ynchburg Clay
Minford ,.
Norjhwest
Oak Hill
Portsmouth

f!iver Valley
South Point
Lucasville Valley
Wheelersburg
Wheelersburg
Wheelersburg

Oak Hill

Chuck Gregory
Sean Childers
Stephen Taylor

Lucasville Valley
Minford
Portsmouth

John Walker

Portsmouth

Tyler Thackston

Phil Martin

Alex Johnson·
Dustin Cook

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
Very Special With' A Father's Day
Thank You Tribute ...
To Be Published In The Sunday Times- Sentinel

On Sunday, June 17th!

Jr
Jr
Fr
Sr
Sr
Jr

"'

Rob Barnen
Patrick Johnson
Der9k Young
Blake Fouts
John Wells
Kyle Prater

Happy
.Father's Day

Love

Falnand

(Your Name)

Eastern Brown
Coal Grove
Wheelersburg

Ryan Chapman
Joel Lynch
Cory Shaffer
Clay Dennew!z
Jake Hunter
Ryan Eyre
Steven Craig
Micah Cardwell
Logan Clar1&lt;

Whlleoak

Southern
Eastern
Trimble
Soulh Gallla
Southeastern

Soulhem

Eastern
Ea.stem

SKQfldiUm
Southeastern
Southern
Southeastem

Hgngmlllll MlllliQO

Soulh Gallia
Soulh Gallia

Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Jr
Jr
Jr
Sr'
Jr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Jr

Southeastern
..
Coach of the Year - Ryan Lemley, SOutham

·

\\\\\\ . lll~dnh"'l'llhud . t·llllt

'·

State releases funds for Racine Boat/Ramp

SPORTS
• Finals begin tonight.
SeePage 81

BY BETH SERGENT

esERGENTrwMYDAILYSENTINELCDM
RACINE - Yesterday
the state Controlling Board
approved the release of
more than $525,000 to help
cover
the
excavation
process and also support onsite observation services
during the construction of
. the Racine Boat Ramp.
Archeologists with EMH
&amp; T of Columbus have been
excavating the site for the
past month and have roughly

1

another two and a half weeks
until their work will be complete. Alan Stone Company
of Cutler was chosen to
complete the project with a
bid price of $2.3 million.
The project was initially
thoufht to cost between $1.5
and 2 million.
The Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, which
owns the property, anticipates work to begin on the
ramp this summer, .continue
. through the fall and be open
to the public i.n 2008. The

boat ramp project•. which
beg~m an 1999, 1s sa1d to be
s1m1lar. an configuration and
s1ze to the_ KH Butler facility m Galha County. It Will
mclude a f~u( lane ramp
mt~. the nver, restroom
fac1llll~s, hghtmg, hand1cap
access1ble ramps and parkmgS spaces.
p d
enator 1oy a gett (RCoshocton)
made the
announcement
of the
$525,000 being n!Ieased
yesterday.
"Southeast Ohio is rich in .

history that dates back hun- . balance between preserving
dreds of years, and we must our history and making sure
work to preserve thes e that local communities can
important artifacts not only attract growth and jobs."
tor the _education of future
The project was slowed
generations but to mamtam by the discovery of differthe Identity of our region," ent Native American artiPadg~tt said. "However, in facts found on site which is
the Interest of economic past Star Mill Park east on
growth, we also want to Ohio 124. The enti;e faciliensure that 1mportant devel- t
.
't
·
d
opment projects go for- Y WI 11 Sl on aroun 10
ward. This project should acres downstream from
act as a model for future YeTilhowbus~ C reekh. . .
projects as tQ how . we
IS 101t1a1 arc eo1ogtcal
should work to achieve a
Please see Ramp, A5

Relay'tea.ms bank more than $40,000
BY BETH SERGENT

BSER(iENT@MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

OBITUARIES
:Page AS
:• Ruth A Ellis, 88

INSIDE
.. • PPSEO announces
~ plans to relocate
.this summer:·
' See Page AS
• Meigs County
Court news.
See Page A8
• TOPS honors
losers. See Page AB
• Riverfront Park
to host Christian
rock concert.
See Page 83

POMEROY- Last night
teams for this year's Meigs
County Relay For Life
banked $40,700 in the fight
against cancer.
During what's known as
"bank night," team membe~s turned in money they'd
collected up to date but will
continue to do fundraising
up until and during Relay
· which begins at S p.m.
tomorrow at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds. Last
year's net total for Relay ·
was $38,000.
·
''The teanis really worked
hard," JoAnn Crisp ot.t~~
Relay committee said.
·
Courtney Sim, Relay
recruitment ·chairperson
added this year's Relay
boasts a record J1umber of
teams at 26, up from 19 for
last year's event.
Friday's schedule of events
for Relay is as follows: 5
p.m., survivors registration, 6
p.m., welcome, opening cer. emony, flag raising by
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, salute to the American
Flag with National Anthem
performed by Karen Griffith,
introduction of Parade of
Survi\&lt;ors,
Parade
of

Happy .
Father's Day

MIDDLEPORT
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
. Valley
Regional
Development District has
filed a second pre-application for downtown revitalization funds on behalf of
the Village of Middleport.
. Buckeye Hills has been
working for the past several
weeks with the Middleport
Development Group to
finalize the second preapplication, to ensure that
Beth Sorgont(photo
last night, Cheri Jodon (foregroundr of Wend~' s Garden Sensations turned in her team money all necessary documentation
is provided. The Middleport
to Farmers Bank associate Chasity Martin while Ann Engle of the Home National Bank turned Community
Association is
in her team's money to Farmers Bank associate Lisa Venoy during "Relay Bank Night."
the applicant for the grant.
A hrst attempt at securing .
Caregivers, Parade·of Teams; 8:45 p.m., Sounds of Praise "Candle of Hope;" lap in revitalization funding was
6:30. p.n;t, survivors recep- with Cfenson Pratt and silence; 10 p.m., Forgiven unsuccessful. Last spring,
tion and recognition of spon- group; at dusk, lurninary ser- Again with Roger Watson, the
Meigs
County
sors; 6:45 p.m., Debbie and vice with Tammy Taylor, Jeff McElroy, Scott Warner; · Community Improvement
Friends; 7:45 p.m., Rivers soloist, Mike Bartrum, II p.m., Midnight Madness Corporation applied for the
Blend Quartet with Gerald ·Speaker, Racine United with music, games and more. funds on Middleport's
Powell, Gerald Kelly, Mike Methodist Church Signirig . Saturday's schedule of behalf, .but the application
Edelmann, Vinton Rankin; Team; prayer; lighting of
Please see Relay, AS
Please see Proposal, AS
'

Meigs graduate ·
Gary Nakamoto
sponsored a trip to
Washington, D. C.
for a Close Up Civic
Education program
for six students.
From the left are
Nakamoto, Shantay
Garnes, Travis
Abbott, (teacher),
Jessica Holl iday, Tea
McCaulla, (teacher),
Zach Schwab,
Morgan lentes,
Amber Hockman,
and Chad Bonnett.

(Your Father's
Name)

Love
(Your Name)

INDEX
2 SECI10NS- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A2

(;alendars

A2

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Editorials

A4

9bituaries

. As

Places to go

Sports

B3

B Section

----------~-------------------------Circle
One: A. 1X3 Greeting ...$12.00 B. 1XS Greeting with Plcture...$15.00'

Weather

Father's Name_ _ _ _ _-'---~-------------

© 200?0hio Valley Publish~ Co.

Second
application
filed for
revitalization
proposal
· BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detatto on Paeo A2

tliitDQrJbll MIDIIQD

F!retTgm

'llll ' PSI)\\
Jll NI '• ~; •-'H
.,. ~~1
'~
'
•'

;;on ::\IS•\'ol.)h.:\o.:!th
·

Ohio.124 reopens alar accident

Soulh Poinl

Division IV
. NORTH DIVI.SION

. Pomeroy High ·
School class of 1954
celebrates, As

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

WFATIIER

(Your Father'
Name)

Second Teem

Anlhony Ross

STEWART Skyline
Speedway in Stewart, Ottio
and Ottio Val)ey Speedway ~n
nearby Lubeck, vlest Vrrgtrua
will team up for a 410 outlaw
sprint car double header tttis
June 8-9 weekend at the .two
Mid-Ohio Valley dirt tracks.
In addition, both tracks will be
running full programs in Late
Models and their other regular
divisions. Friday's Skyline
feature will pay $1 ,200 to win
and at Ohio Valley the race
will pay $1,500 to win, $200
to start.
The Sprint cars will make
their return to the 3/8 mile,
semi-high banks of Skyline
Speedway for the ftrst time
smce tjle 1997 season when
· then-owner Lou Hubbard
· tried to renew sprint car racing
in the area with two years of
regular racing.
In the 1960's and 1970's
Skyline Speedway was the
hotbed of open wheel racing
int he Midwest with such stars
as Larry Dickson, Larry
"Boom Boom" Cannon,
Bubby Jones, Sheldon Kinser,
Don
Nordhorn,
Jan
Opperman and Jack Hewitt
passed throuldl victory lane on
their way to lndy 500 fame.
Some of the more infamous
names battling at the sl?fedway enroute to NatiOnal
Sprint Car fame were J.D.
Leas, Mack Clingan, Steve
Ungar, Gus Linder and Wayne
McGuire. McGuire's nephew
Josh McGuire won the
MACS series show at Skyline .
two weeks ago.
Many of the top outlaw drivers from the Midwest are

expected to be on hand for the
big money this weekend.
Additionally, many local drivers will be competing in the
late model and stock car
ranks.
Skyline's new owner-promoter Brent Steele has made
marked improvements at the
facility, and if successful with
the sprints expresses an interest to continue future two-day
excursions with Ohio Valley.
Meanwhile,
Wayne
McPeek has made' similar
improvements at Ohio Valley
Speedway and has begun
once-a-month Sprint car specials at his speedplant. Tim
Hunter won the last race in
May.
The Skyline Speedway is a
3/8 mile, high-banked, red
clay oval, located just 4.1
miles off of State Route 50
and .32 on Athens County
Road 53/Bethany Ridge
Road. For more information
abput the speedway visit
www.skylinespeedway.net or
call the race day phone 740662-4111; or 740-707-3 197.
(At press time, there was
some speculation that one
support division may not run
at Skyline. Please call before
making the trip.)
Ottio Valley speedway . is
located south of Parkersburg,
W.Va. on WV Rt. 68 south of
Lubeck at the intersection of
WV Rt. 68 and Wadesville
Road.
For further information
please call promoter Wayne
McPeek at (304 )489-187 I.
(740)989-0019, or (304) 861-.
0299(track)
Visit the Ohio Valley wellsite at www.ohiovalleyspeedway.com
·

Coach of the Year- MIChael Estep, Wheelersburg

Coach of the Year- Jeff Bradford, Warren

Division III
S.OUTH DIVISION

Ryan Turner
Jordan Russe ll
Adam Wamsley
·Aaron Hooper
Jan Hall

BY Seem WOlFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

0-u:Uo-w- Sprinls

2007 ALL-SOU'IliEAST DISI'Ricr BASEBALL TEAM
Division 1-11
SOUTH DIVISION

Rutland.girl
honored as top
cookie seller, As

double up for two-day weekend

Submltt&amp;d photo

Students travel to Washington, D.C.
During the seven day stay in
Washington, D.C., students toured
many sites, including Capitol Hill,
POMEROY - Six Meigs High Arlington Cemetery, Library of
School sophomores traveled to Congress, the Smithsonian, and the
Washington D.C . to participate in the Holocaust Museum. Students also
Close Up Civic Education Program. visited the Jefferson Memorial,
The program allows students to Korean War and Vietnam Veterans,
examine the citizen 's role in govern- and World War II Memorials.
ment, see the democratic. proc~ ss
While touring Capitol Hill, stufirst hand, and visit and study the
history of significant landmarks in dents met with Ohio Representative
United States history.
Please see Students, AS ·
STAFF REPORT

NEWSri!MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Beth Sergentfplloto

A section of Ohio 124 has reopened after a traffic accident where a
pedestrian was struck yesterday ·morning. Witnesses said the victim was
part of the work crew with the United States Army Corps of Engineers
which is stabilizing the river·bank at Minersville. The victim was treated by
emergency personnel from Meigs EMS and transported by helicopter to a
trauma center in Huntington, W.Va. No other details on the accident or victim 's condition were available at press time. The Ohio State Highway
Patrol is investigating the incident and work was temporarily halted at the
site for the rest of the day.
\ '

YourNam~s) --------'---------------_:_--------------Address--,-------------------------------..,....------City/State/Zip
Phone____-=---------Send Coupon and Payment to: .The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

" All Ads Must Be Pre-Paid "

'One subject per picture

-------------------------------------Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tribute Is
Wednesay. June 13. 12 :00 Noon.

,9

r.f -·---

•

________.......__________ _____
...._

•

~___,__._~~--'---~~~-- -- - --~-.

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