<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4463" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4463?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-29T14:54:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14390">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e26a8fb8e61d41a3d6bdd31b6ce861de.pdf</src>
      <authentication>fbf0844a168c2a36ba7bc2c6854c2a2e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="15491">
                  <text>•
Page B6- The Daily Sen.linel

www .mydajlysentinel .com

Wednesday, July 4, 2007.

Bush asks the nation to
show patience with Iraq, A2

Rhythm on River
continues with
Friday show, B6

•
Midd.lel,lort • Pomeroy, Ohio
.-,o ( I :\I 't • \ nl. ,) h . '\ o . .! : ~h

.ummer

SPORTS

own
Pontiac G·S
. 1111,1111'111
AIIIIIICII 11'11111

• GiantS squash Cincy.
SeePIQjiB1

Pontiac. 0·6

2007 GMC Acadia
HIPIII Tllltl

DIIUIII $4,010
Pl'lcl

AIII,IC

Page AS'
• Cha~otte Elberfeld, 79
• John A. Holsinger, 32
•·Gwinnie White, 93
• Theodore Zehm, 73

INSIDE
414,1.1 n, 1:1 Pllnr,,
Cl'llll, AC, Alii t ·

2At litis Prim

2007 GMC Canyon
MIIIP $14,120
lllck' 7218

2007 Chevy Sierra 314

2007 Chevy Aveo

GI'IWI:III
lflcll7241

AMIIMII:D, C1.- Wllllll
ltHII17107

-P$28~010

.......1,618

... 2007 Buick Lucerne

2007 Chevy Cobalt ·
AIII,AC
ltlcll7211

2007 Chevy Equinox 2007 Chevy Trailblazer
M8RP 821,181
1111111$1,000
DIICGIIIt $2,000
IIIII Pl'lc:l

V\,AII!tAir
6 • 81uCKI

2007 Chevy Impala
MIJIP $21,8101111111 $2,&amp;00

Sttl1falg Af

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT4l&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL. COM

for nearby neighbors. ·
it may be infringing on the voted against the extension. fines were recei ved in
Racine Police Marshal personal rights of those
· Harmon asked if th e Racine Mayor 's Court with
Curtis Jones said he bas responsible owners. Mayor annexation project was $ 1,32 1 going to the village
researched the ORC and J. Scott Hi II said one of the showing progress. Hill said and $40 going to the state.
spoken to representatives problems with this issue and at thi s time priorities. were
Hill also announced the
from thil village's insurance ' others s,imilar to it is the vil- focu sed on fini s hin ~ the Friends and Neighbors
agency and the Ohio lage.isn't zoned.
water treatment proje¢t as Food Pantry in the Raci ne
Municipal League about a
The . four wheeler discus- well as completing the year- Municipal Building will be
proven ordinance that may sion came about at the ly budget though he &amp;aid closed until July II due to
be good fit for the sit.ua- recent meetinj! of Racine annexation was definitely family matters cited by the
tion but there is none. As for Village Council which also still on that list of priorit \es. pantry 's organizers.
.
a noise ordinance, !:he vil- discussed a contract' exten- · Hill said at this time the yilUpon Hill's recommenda-'
la~e has an existing one but · sion with engineet;s Strand lage doesn'thave the fund - lion council also approved
wtthout a decibel meter &amp; Associates concerning the ing to go ahead and pay to advertising the Racme Fire
Jones cannot enforce it. new waler treatment plant. hire a surveyor to survey the Department's gun shoot
Jones said he could research Council voted to extend the land which Racine hopes to property
in
Lebanon
an or!linance adopted in contract thr9ugh June 30, annex: /
Township for sale. The
Cabell County, W.Va. con- allowing Clerk-Treasurer
Racme must have the sur- · property consists of seven ·
cerning four wheelers in Dave Spencer to pay exist- vey complete with the name acres and the asking price is
municipalities and possibly ing bills ,turned in for com- and addresses of landowners $1 ,000 per acre. Hill said if:
develop an ordinance out of pleted work by the contrac- to petition for annexation. 1f the property sells that
that though it would have to tor. This extension takes the 55 percent of those residents money will go to helping
go on the ballot and be contract total to $62,500 and agree with annexation it is mak\! fire tru ck payments. :
voted on by residents.
· was approved by the village then presented to the Meigs
All members of council
Some members of council solicitor to allow payment of County Commissioners for were present for the meet~
had misgivings about the existing
.. invoices. approval.
ing including Marshal
possible ordinance, feeling Councilman Ike Spencer
Hill reported .$1 ,361 in Jone s.

a

OBITUARIES

• ~vey WMe, 70 ·

Chevy Silverado 314

\\\'\\'\.m~tl~tii ~ M' lllmt· l.l·om

Racine discusses·'nl1isance' four wheelers
RACINE - Not everyone
who·owns (and rides) a four
wheeler is a. nuisance which
is the dilemma facing Racine
Council which is discussing
how to deal with those riders
which are a nuisance.
The Ohio Revised Code
· (ORC) states four wheelers
can be driven in a village as
long as they are not driven on
public streets. Council has
heard a nuisance complaint
about one juvenile individual
riding his f()ur wheelel"on his
property but in such a manner that it has created noise
and
dust
complaints.
Councilman Jim Harmon
said the young man has built
what amounts to a "race
track" in his yard and runs it
in a circle on the property,
creating the noise and dust

Two At JlK hicel

IIIIIIP h8,711
111111111$8,110

II II H"'l&gt; \\ . .Jl I) .) , :.!oo-

Alltl, AI:

• Man taken off death
row now eligibl~ for
parole. See Page A3
• Art programs
taking off at airports.
"' See Page A3
• Top cleric captured
in a burqa as 1,000
surrender to authorities
at besieged Pakistan
mosque. See Page AfJ
• River Recreation
Festival Schedule of
events. See Page 86
• 2007 Point Pleasant
Stemwheel Regatta
schedule. See Page B6
• ·Entertainment Briefs.
See Page 86
• Rutland's annual Ox
Roast set for Saturday.
See Page ·86
• 'Mountain Stage' to
pick regional winner.
See Page 86

Mural series unveiled in downtown Middleport
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT -The
people pictured in the first
of a series of downtown
murals unveiled Wednesday
could have a message for
Middleport today: "Carpe
diem! Sieze the day!"
Downtown Revitalization
Coordinator
Michael
Gerlach direCted attention
to people walking up North
Second Avenue in the. early
20th-century photograph,
the first of a· series of 180
square-foot postcard images
to be featured on the onceblank wall next to lngel's
Radio Shack. They could be
telling their 21st-century
counterparts to make the
community the best it can
be, Gerlach said.
The historic "Walking
into Middleport's Past"
mural series is tied into a
self-guided walking tour of
some of the historic sites in
the village, including the
Downing House, the site of
Coe's Opera House, several old hotel s, a keg factory
and the Rathburn House,
whose name sake operated
what later became the
nearby
Middleport
Department Store .

Please see Mural, AS

~f.

· ·~
. .

BY BETH SERGENT

J. Reed/photo

The first mural shows a view of North Second Avenue from Mill Street around the. turn of the 20th century.

Red, white and Racine
.

WEATHER '

B~an

Middleport parade

.

r------:

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - The Fourth
of July arrived in Racine
with a morning parade that
experienced a dra111atic start.
An antique police car
owned by Howard Mullen
whic!J has led the parade for
years stalled at the intersec'tion of Tyree Boulevard and
Elm Street. The car then
cau
ght on fire Sut luckil y
Details on Page A3
for Mullen, he was in a
parade with personnel from
th e
Racine ,
Bashan ,
Chester, Pomeroy, Syracuse
. and Rutl and Volunteer Fire
Department s.
2 SECTIONS - 12 PAGES
The fire was put out
Annie's Mailbox
A3 quickl y &lt;11nd as luck would
have it. a tow truck from
Calendars
A3 Riverside towing was also
in the parpde and towed the
Classifieds
83-4 car
away. ln all, the parade
Comics .
Bs was only delayed around 15
minu tes. No injuries were
Editorials
A4 reported .
After the parade awards
Obituaries
As were
give n to·. the fo llowin
g
parad
cipa nt s:
Places to go
86 ! Fl oats. fir est parti
pl ace , $100
Sports
B Section fro m Ho me Na ti ona l
Beth Sargent/ photo
Ban k. Ant iqu ity Bapti st The flag corps from the 2007·08, ed ition of the South ern
A3 Church: se cond place. $75 · Hi gh School Band shows off thei r pat riotic colors while th e
Weather
.
band plays "Stars and St ripes Forever."
Please see Racine, AS
© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co;

INDEX

.

/•

B1lan J. Reed/ photo

The Meigs Marauder Marching Band, led by Toney Dingess ,
played patriotic nu mbers in Middle port's July 4 parade .
Additional photos from 'Middl epor t' s parade are on page A6 .

�The Daily Sentinel

...

ACROSS THE. NATION

'

· Pa.geA2

Thursday, July 5.

'

Nation celebrates
independence with
parades, fireworks
NEW YORK,(AP) - Crowds braved rain to mark the
Founh of July holiday, cheering as the city's massive flTeworks display lit up the sky and for the first time seemed to
set the East River's ·surface aflame.
People sporting , ponchos and umbrellas stood along the
East River to see the Jellyfish, which resembles the underwater creature, and the Electric Rice Krispies, cra~)cling
metallic shells.
For the first time, the annual Macy's show featured
exploding shells aimed down, not up. The shells exploded
on the surface of the East River, remain illuminated for a
few seconds and then fade.
"Awesome!" exclaimed Ben Fedak, a Queens musician
taking in the show with his brother, before dazzling green
shells exploded above him. "This is the best fireworks
show that I've ever seen."
The 30-minute show was billed as the nation's biggest,
with 40,000 fireworks. Eight barges on the East River and
at the South Street Seaport set off an average of I ,300
shells per minute. ·
.
. The program featured musical performers as part of the
nationally televised broadcast, including Martina
McBride, Joss Stone and "American Idol" winner Jordin
·Sparks.
Organizers estimated about 3 million people withstood
the sogginess to turn out, about the same number as the
year before, while another 8 million watched on television.
The organizers had called their fireworks show "waterproof." Police.do not give crowd estimates.
In Philadelphia, the celebrations included a reading of the
Declaration of Independence at Independence Hall, and
descendants of those who signed the original document
were on hand for a symbolic ringing of the Liberty BelL
Storms did not stop the fireworks show.
The threat of storms, however, forced officials in several eastern Pennsylvania cities to postpone fireworks
shows. And dry weather curtailed some celebrations,
illcluding Breckenridge, Colo., where there was a high fire
dang,er.
·
The festivities and patriotic observances took place under
heightened security in the aftermath of the attempted car
bombings .in Britain.
. Hundreds of officers from about 20 law enforcement
agencies were on duty in Washington. The Mall was fenced .
off and visitors were required to pass through 19 security
checkpoints, which opened at I 0 a.m.
Severe weather brought a tornado warning to
Washington's suburbs,. prompting authorities to evacuate
the thousands of people gathered at the National Mall for
.
holiday .festivities. It reopened hours later.
Two fireworks crew members were injured when at least
two ·unexploded , shells went off on the ground. One had
severe but non-life threatening burns, and the other was
treated at the scene, authorities said,
SecUrity measures at the New York region's tunnels,
bridges and airports remained heightened following failed
a~ks oo Glasgow and London last week, an~no addi.tional precautions beyond those already in place were taken
for the boliday, said Marc LaVorgna, a spokesman for the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
In ·Massaclmsetts, 20 local, state and federal agencies ·
were assigned to help .police the annual Boston Pops concert and fireworks show. Car and boat traffic were banned
froin the area and security was tightened at mass transit stations.
·
About 1,000 people from around' the globe became U.S.
citizens 111 Walt Disney World, raising their right hands in
front of Cinderella's castle at the Magic Kingdom as the
oath was read by Emilio Gonzalez, head of U.S,
Citizenship and Immigration Services.
"I dreamed for this moment for 13 years, and finally this
is my last dream that I have," said Marta Hima, who came
from Colombia and now lives in Davenport, Fla.
More than 350 new citizens were sworn in at Phoenix,
"Now I feel like I .can be part of this community," sai\1
Alicia Gray of Gilbert, Ariz., who came to the United
Stales from Mexico in 1996 and brought her American husband, her children and in-laws. "I'm mofll a part of this
couolry now."
It was also a day to honor military service. The Army
boaored its millionth veteran at an American Legion post in
Pbiladelphia.
The recognition went to Bronze Star recipient Bill Beck
of Sr«lton, Pa.
· '"
~rd f3ther be honored with this than win a million ·dolJan in a lonery, because my wife would spend a million in
a couple of weeks and I'll have this for the rest of my lifetime .~ Bed said in a phone interview. ·

. '

Bv lUTHY MITcttDL
AND MARcY 5ueAJI

.[
I

Bv

DEB RIECHMANN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-===c:..:.=c:..:.==-

MARTINSBURG, W.Va.
- Burdened by sagging
polls 'and an unpopular war,
President Bush sought .a
friendly audience on the
Fourth of July to ~liver a
patriotic, gung-ho speech
about supporting U.S. troops
and sticking it out in Iraq.
He didn't have to go farjust 35-minute helicopter
ride from the White House
- to find an amiable audience at the Air National
Guard in West Virginia.
''Victory in this struggle
will require more patience,
more courage, and more sacrifice," Bush told the
guardsmen and their fami·
lies in a half-hour speech in
·a cavernous· aircraft maintenance han~ar at the 167th
Airlift Wing.
,
"If we were to quit Iraq
before the job is done, the
terrorists we are fighting
would not declare victory
and lay down their arms.
They would follow us here."
That line played well with
the crowd.
"Whether we should have
gone in or not is another matter, but we need to support our
troops," said Ronald Wayne
Tay[or, a retired colonel with
the !67th. ''There's no queslion about it we need to stay
and finish the job."
It was Bush's founh

a

Independence Day trip ' to
· West Virginia, a state he cru;ried in' the past two presidential elections. His frrst was to
Rip
. ley, W.Va. in 2002. .
Since the U.S.-Ied invasion of Iraq in 2003, the
president has struck similar
chord~ in his s~ches on the
nation's birtllday:
· ·
Lasi year in Fort Bragg,
N.C., where members ofdle
82nd Airborne · Division
greeted him with bellowing
chants of "Hoo-rah." Bush
said: . "This moment when
the terrorists are suffering
from the weight of successive blows is not the time to
call retreat."
That echoed his sp~ch on
July 4, 2005 in Morgantown,
W.Va., when he e.xclaillled:
"The proper response is not
retreat. It is courage." .
Just like this year, Bush
talked, on the Fourtl\ of July .
2004 in Charleston, W.Va.,
about fighting the battle
against extremists abroad
"so we do not have to face
them here at home."
And on July 4, 2003, a few
months after the war began,
Bush said at an Air Force
Base in Ohio, "'ftle United
States will not stand by and
wait for another attack or
trust in the restraint and good
intentions of evil men."
A small anti-,war demonstration was beginning in
Charleston as Bush defended his decision in January to

send 28,000 more U.S.
troops to Jjaq to tamp down
the violence and encourage
the Iraqis to reach political
agreements among Shiites,
Sunnis and Kurds.
The war, in its fifth year,
has claimed the Jives of
more than 3,580 U.S. military men and women. The
offensive in Baghdad and
areas to the north and south
has boosted American casuallies, although the number
of' bombings and shootinss
has fallen in the city m
recent days.
"It's a tough fight, hut I
wouldn't have asked those
troops to go into harm's way
if the fight was not essential
to the security of the United
States of America," Bush
said.
In Baghdad, the administration was trumpeting a ceremony in which 588 U.S.
troops marked the hpliday by
re-enlisting Wednesday, and
161 soldiers raised their right
hands to recite an oath making them American citizens. ·
However, difficulties continue in Iraq. Sunnis, Shiites
and Kurds said Wednesday
that they have not been able
to agree to a draft bill to regulate the country's oil industry - something U.S. officials hope will rally Sunni
support for the government
and reduce backing for
insurgents. The oil bill is a
top concern of Iraq's Sunni

minority, which is centered
in regions of the country
with little proven reserves
and fears that Shiites and
Kurds in the oil-rich south
and north will monopolize
profits from the induslry.
About 2,000 people, includin~ members of the !67th
Airlift Wing and their families
were invited to the event
Most of those asked about
Bush's decision to commute
the 2 1/2-year prison sentence of Vice President Dick
Cheney's former chief of
staff L Lewis "Scooter"
Libby didn't want to talk
about it. Those who did,
backed the president's decision.
,
"I think that Scooter Libby
did the right thing to take the
fall for everybody," said
David Anderson, a Vietnam
veteran who has a son in the
National Guard. "I think that
the president has a duty to
tell these people, 'Yeah, we
appreciate that and this is the
way it's going to go.'
"For God's sake, it's not
Watergate."
, After the speech, Bush
returned to the White House
to watch fireworks and celebrate his 61 st birthday on
Friday with friends and
members of his family,
including his twin daughters
and his parents, former
President George H.W. Bush
and former first lady Barbara
Bush.

In the Daily Sentinel

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

r----------------------,
I Baby's Name
1

I Simply send your baby's
I
I photograph along with the coupon

I
I
I Age

l Parents

toJhe left with your payment of
l $10,
and we'll do the rest.

•

I
I Address
1
· Phone

I
I
I

l . Address will not be published · l The Daily

Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here

L---------------------·
-.J.
Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box}29, 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission,

•

•

Sentinel
111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

20

•

Dear Annie: My parents
have been divorced for
nearly a decade, and both
have ·remarried. The problem is, eveq after all this
time, my mother is still mad
at my father and can't stand
to be around him.
My brother is getting
married soon,.,and my mother .(who still believes she
has the moral high ground)
is hoping my gnindmother
will seize the opportunity"to
give my dad a pie~e .o f her
mind. She told me she was
glad someone · "loved her
enough to take her side.'' I
tried to explain that we all
need to move on. Yes, my
father did some bad things
when they were married,
but I love both my parents.
Unfortunately, Mom makes
me feel like I can't love
them both at the same time.
I don't know what to do
about Mom anymore, and I
don't think it's right for my
brother to have to deaJ· with
her antics on his big day,
Any
suggestions 1
Enough Already
Dear Enough: It's a
shame your mother is still
so bitter that she will not

let go of her anger. It hurts
She pulled this again a
her more than anyone else. few months ago. We were at
·You do not have to suc- a part)' at a friend's house,
cumb to this kind of emo- and she completely snubbed
tional blackmaiL Your me when I saidhello. I got
mother's attempts to guilt upset and decided I wasn't
you into repudiating your going to play her game anyfather should be ignored. more. I did not call or e· When she !)ays unpleasant maiL Within a day, she was
things, smile with kindness going to all of our mutual
and pity, and reply, "I'm friends, telling them that I
sorry you feel that way." snubbed her!
Then walk away. When she
I let the gossip slide and
truly believes you will no &gt;Nent on with my life. I saw
longer respond to her rim- Marie at a wedding last
cor, she may stop subject- week, and she was friendly.
I responded out of politeing you to it.
Dear Annie: I've known ness. I sense she wants to
"Marie" for 10 "years, and renew our friendship, but,
most of the time we are Annie, we are not teenagers.
good friends. But every few We are grown women, and I
years, she pulls a stunt don't have the energy for
where she stops speaking to ·· such nonsense. Should I
me for no reason. I will e- give her one more chance?
mail and call her several -Tired of It
times and get no response.
Dear Tired: Marie is a
Then, when. I stop trying, drama queen, and it's
she will go to a mutual unlikely her behavior will
friend and say r must be change. She thrives on the
angry because I've stopped attention she gets from
talking to her. As if I started putting her friends through
i~. The mutual friend always the wringer. If you think
offers to call me, and then . she's worth it, you can
Marie acts relieved that we maintain a lesser friendship,
are still friends. When . I ignoring her juvenile posconfront her about · this turing and wruting until she
behavior, she denies she did comes· around. You don't
anything.at all. I then decide need to explain yourself to
to be the "bigger" person those mutual friends. They
and let it go.
will figure it out soon, if

•

they haven't already.
Dear Annie: I read .the
letter from "Tallahassee
Lassie," whose husband
admires attractive women
and she points them out for
him. I had to applaud the
maturity of the relationship.
The story reminded me of
another that I heard not too
long ago: A man and his
wife were at the beach when
a beautiful bombshell of a
woman walked by. After she
had passed, the wife
remarked sadly, "I'll never
have a body like that again."
The husband responded
wisely, "Neither wilf she."
You gotta love it! Happily
Married in
Grand Terrace, Calif.
Dear Happily Married:
We do!

Annie's MlJilbox is written by Kathy Mitcheil and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesnuzil'~box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find out more
about A·n nie 's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
I

Community Calendar

Bush asks the nationto show patience with Iraq

Public meetings

II

,..

'

Thursday, Julys,

Thursday, July 5
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury
Township
Trustees, regular meeting,
6:30p.m., town halL
Sunday, July 8
SYRACUSE - A Bob
Wingett · Appreciation Day
will be held at 2:30 p.m
Sunday · at the Syracuse
Center.
· Community
Refreshments
will
be
served. The public is invited.
Thesday, July 10
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees will
have a budget hearing at 7
p.m. at the town hall.

Clubs and
.organizations
Thursday, July 5
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 Auxiliary, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., at tile post.
CHESTER - ChesterShade
Historical
Association, 7 p.m. to finalize plans (or Chester Shade
Days and work on fall programming.

Friday, 'July 6
Thesday, July 10
POMEROY - Partners . POMEROY Meigs
Chamber
of
in Care Carel!iver Support County
Group, noon m the confer- Commerce, business-mindence room of the Meigs . ed
luncheon,
noon,
Senior Center. Caregivers, Pomeroy Library, · Subway
family members, others of Pomeroy catering, Sen.
interested in Alzheimer's Joy Padgett speaking,
Disease are · welcome. RSVP 992-5005.
Refreshments. For more
TUPPERS PLAINS information call Kathy Eastern Music Boosters, 7
McDaniel, 992-2161.
p .m., hi~h school music
Sunday, July 8
room. Fau booth discussed.
POMEROY """' Modern
Thursday, July 12
Woodmen Camp 7230
CHES1ER- Shade River
annual picnic, 12:45 p.m. at Lodge 453, 7:15 p.m., with
tbe roadside Rest Stop U.S. annual award of scholarships.
Pomeroy. Monthly stated meet,ing foi33
north,
Hometown Hero to be lows. All Master Masons
announced. Take covered invited. Refreshments.
dish and/or dessert. All
tableware furnished by
Camp.
Monday, July 9
Saturday, June 7
SYRACUSE -·· Meigs
POMEROY - Annual
County Cancer Initiative, Blake reunion !2:30p.m,. at
covered dish dinner and the Zion church of christ,
membership drive, 6 p.m., Route 143. All relatives of
Riverview
Bed
and Edgar and Addie Reed
Breakfast Inn, RSVP, 992- Blake invited. Meal potluck
2311.
with ham and tableware
CHESTER
- Shade provided. Pictures to be
River Lodge 453 special taken. Pictures and genealo~
. meeting, 7 p.m., to confer gy items on display.
Entered Apprentice degree
Sunday, July 8
on one candidate. All
RACINE - The Theiss
Masons
invited. family reunion will be held
at the Star Mill Park in
Refreshments.

Reunions

Racine. Take a covered dish
and "pig in a poke" item.
Lunch is at I p.m.
POMEROY·. The annual Lovett reunion will be
held at I pi.m. at the Zion
Church of christ, Route 143.
All relatives of daniel and
Phoebe Lovett and Wiliam
and Mary Lovett are welcome. Surnames include
Lovett, Slacks, Bush, Boyd,
and Goldsberry. Potluck
dinner, ham and tableware
provided. Pictures will be
taken, photos and genealogy items displayed, silent
auction held.

LIMA (AP) - A man the principal player in the
taken off death row because kidnapping of Ryan Young
of an error in the wording of instead of the principal
his indictment is now eligi· player in his death. The
ble to be released on parole. error was corrected at trial.
Richard Joseph was senIn an appeal taken' to the
tenced to death in the kid- U.S. Supreme Court, state
napping and stabbing death officials argued that a federof the boyfriend of a young ,al appeals court was wrong
woman Joseph had dated.
in concluding that Ohio law
After being removed from required evidence that
death row, Joseph, 36, was Joseph was t~e one who
resentenced last month to killed the victim.
20 years to life in prison Young. a high ,school stu·
much of which he has dent, disappeared after he
already served. He becomes left his girlfriend's home on
eligible for parole after June 26, 1990. His body
serving two-thirds of that was found July 4, 1990, in a
sentence, said JoEilen gravel pit in Auglaize
Lyo!Js, a state prisons County in northwest Ohio
spokeswoman.
owned by Joseph's family.
He will have a parole
A parole board member
hearing July 25 at the Ohio and hearing officer will
State Penitentiary where he meet with Joseph and then
is being kept, L~ns said.
decide on parole. If parole is
"We will vehemently recommended it wi II be
oppose any parole," Allen passed to the chairman of
County Prosecutor Juergen the parole board who can
Waldi,ck said.
approve or reject it, Lyons.
U.S. District Judge Lesley said. Other options include.
Wells ove.rturned the death not releasing him or sending
sentence based on an error his case to the parole board;
in the wording of the indict- for a review by the majority
ment that said Joseph was of the board, Lyons said.

Local Weather
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the lower 80s.
West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent
' . Thursday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening .. .Then partly
cloudy with a slight chance
of showers and thunderstorms after midnight. Lows
in the lower 60s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Friday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 80s.
West winds 5 to 10 ·mph.
Friday night... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
50s. Northwest winds 5 to
10 mph.

Saturday and Saturday
night ... Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 80s. Lows around '

60.
Sunclay and Sunday
night ... Mostly clear. Hot.
Highs in the lower 90s.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Monday... Mostly sunny.
A chance of showers and ·
thunderstorms in the after·
noon. Hot with highs in the
lower 90s. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Monday niJ;Jht through
mght ... Mostly
Thesday
cloudy with a chtmce of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 60s. Highs
in the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 30 percent
Wednesday... Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 80s.

Church events
Friday, July 13
. MIDDLEPORT - First
Presbyterian
Church,
Middleirt, Bible School,
July 1 , to to 8 p.m. and
July 14, 9 a.m. to I p.m.

Birthdays
Saturday, July 7
POMEROY Harry
Lodwick will be· 80 years
old on July 7, Cards may be
sent to him and 37842 West
Shade Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Art programs taking otT at airports
Bv JAMES HANNAH ·

International Airport, dam- really developing an indusaged by Hurricane Katrina, try. We've convinced the
will begin displaying art powers that be that we'Je
A mesmerizing· amoeba- when renovations are com- cool," Eller said. "I have 2
like glass sculpture titled pleted
September. million passengers a year.
in
"Swell" that looks like an Pottery, paintings and There is no other museum
ocean
wave.
Colorful wall-wrap art of pelicans in Arizona that has that kind
images of pelicans, crabs and other local waterfowl of audience."
and other waterlife. Strands are on tap.
Indianapolis' new airpon,
of light-reflecting glass sus"For us, it's huge because scheduled to open in 2008,
pended from a cable that we lost so much identity will boast $3.9 million
creates a rainbow effect.
and culture due to the hurri- -.Worth of art, a far cry from
A visit to the art museum? cane,"
said Jeremiah the few pieces of art in the
Nope - a stroll through Gerald, air service develop- · existing airport.
the airport.
ment manager of the
. The new airport will feaMore and more airports Mississippi airport.
ture hand-blown glass
around the nation are using
Smaller airports are jump· murals etched with the poetart to boost tourism, polish ing on a bandwagon that ry of local , artists, an aviathe image of their host com- many larger airports have tion·themed sculpture with
munity and soothe. passen- been riding for years.
more than I 00 pieces of
. gers in what can be a stre~s­
About 300 pieces of art perforated metal and ·silver
can be seen at Atlanta's air- beaded chains, and bronzed
ful environment.
"You've got a captive port, including a large dis· vintage luggage that will
said
Greg play of stone sculptures serve as chairs and tables in
audience,"
Mamary, producer of spe- from Zimbabwe. In the bag- the baggage area.
cial projects for the gage area, giant lifelike ants
Ann Markusen, an econAmerican Association of appear to emerge from a omist at the University .of
Airport Executives. "It's hole in the· ceiling and crawl · Minnesota's
Humphrey
a Institute who studies the ·
just become a very trendy over the ductwork metaphor for the anthill-like effect of art on the econ 0 thing."
The Asheville Regional flurry of airport aCtivity.
my, said some communiThe Phoenix airport ties fail to use their airports
Airport in North Carolina
opened an art gallery June I boasts 500 pieces of art in to promote themselves.
featuring 47 paintings and 24 areas, a collection that Teeming pools of travelers
sculptures from local artists, has been steadily growing. of · all ages and origins
including the ocean-like The rental-car area boasts often have to spend consid"Swell." There alteady are the strands-ot~ light-reflect - erable time at the airports,
she said.
.Plans to expand the gal_lery. ing ·,glass anwork,'
"And there is incredible
Dayton
International . Lennee Eller, program
manager
of
the
Phoenix
·
wasted
space at airpons Airport in Ohio will begin
hanging paintings, display· Airport Museum, said many wall space arid pther kinds
ing. sculptures and possibly airports are just launching · of SI?ace," Markusen said.
Opening the gallery at the
staging musical perfor- art programs: She calls it the
"
artport"
phenomenon.
Asheville
airport gives local
mances this falL
' ~We're at the verge of artists a stage and provides
The
Gulfport -Biloxi
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

-

-·~

2007

Man taken otT death row
up hurting everyone . now eligible ,for parole

APpliOto

President Bush waves as he boards Marine One'at the White House, Wednesday, July 4 on way to visit West Virginia for
the Fourth of July.
·
·
·

PageA3 ·

ANNIE'S · MAJ,LBO,X

Moms bittemes~ ends

Hey Moms and Daqs, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...

1»a1Dy Edition
be published
Friday, July 27

BYTHEB·END

The -Dai],y Sentinel

2007

.

·~-

·--- - - - - - - · ----

~·----

. -·

-

~----

-··

a benefit to passengers as
they wait for flights.
"It gives them something
to do and exposes passengers who are coming or
going to that western North
Carolina culture," said airport spokeswoman Patti
MicheL
Karen Kuhn, 60, of
Fairfield, Ohio, likes art in
airports because it enhances
the sensation of traveling.
"The paintings and the
sculptures are usually of
local interest; that reinforces the destination feeling," sh~ said. "Airpons
should do more of it.''
·
Mamary said the terrorist
attacks of 9/11 that led to
tighter airport security,
checkpoint
lines
and
requirements that passengers arrive early for ·their
flights helped spur additional interest in airport art to
help create a calming environment. .
"I often hear that they
truly enjoy the relaxing benefits," Eller said. " It lessens
stress. "
Art can also pump additional life into an airport
.and even be a money maker.
Passengers picking up
their ba~s at Port Columbus
InternatiOnal · Airport in
Ohio now see ·a splashy
montage of artistically
arran,ged color photos
showmg off city attractions.
Advertising messages will
scroll among the photos.

H,iUal Ciearettes
$24.68 Carton,
'EvervdaY!

�The Daily Sentinel

...

ACROSS THE. NATION

'

· Pa.geA2

Thursday, July 5.

'

Nation celebrates
independence with
parades, fireworks
NEW YORK,(AP) - Crowds braved rain to mark the
Founh of July holiday, cheering as the city's massive flTeworks display lit up the sky and for the first time seemed to
set the East River's ·surface aflame.
People sporting , ponchos and umbrellas stood along the
East River to see the Jellyfish, which resembles the underwater creature, and the Electric Rice Krispies, cra~)cling
metallic shells.
For the first time, the annual Macy's show featured
exploding shells aimed down, not up. The shells exploded
on the surface of the East River, remain illuminated for a
few seconds and then fade.
"Awesome!" exclaimed Ben Fedak, a Queens musician
taking in the show with his brother, before dazzling green
shells exploded above him. "This is the best fireworks
show that I've ever seen."
The 30-minute show was billed as the nation's biggest,
with 40,000 fireworks. Eight barges on the East River and
at the South Street Seaport set off an average of I ,300
shells per minute. ·
.
. The program featured musical performers as part of the
nationally televised broadcast, including Martina
McBride, Joss Stone and "American Idol" winner Jordin
·Sparks.
Organizers estimated about 3 million people withstood
the sogginess to turn out, about the same number as the
year before, while another 8 million watched on television.
The organizers had called their fireworks show "waterproof." Police.do not give crowd estimates.
In Philadelphia, the celebrations included a reading of the
Declaration of Independence at Independence Hall, and
descendants of those who signed the original document
were on hand for a symbolic ringing of the Liberty BelL
Storms did not stop the fireworks show.
The threat of storms, however, forced officials in several eastern Pennsylvania cities to postpone fireworks
shows. And dry weather curtailed some celebrations,
illcluding Breckenridge, Colo., where there was a high fire
dang,er.
·
The festivities and patriotic observances took place under
heightened security in the aftermath of the attempted car
bombings .in Britain.
. Hundreds of officers from about 20 law enforcement
agencies were on duty in Washington. The Mall was fenced .
off and visitors were required to pass through 19 security
checkpoints, which opened at I 0 a.m.
Severe weather brought a tornado warning to
Washington's suburbs,. prompting authorities to evacuate
the thousands of people gathered at the National Mall for
.
holiday .festivities. It reopened hours later.
Two fireworks crew members were injured when at least
two ·unexploded , shells went off on the ground. One had
severe but non-life threatening burns, and the other was
treated at the scene, authorities said,
SecUrity measures at the New York region's tunnels,
bridges and airports remained heightened following failed
a~ks oo Glasgow and London last week, an~no addi.tional precautions beyond those already in place were taken
for the boliday, said Marc LaVorgna, a spokesman for the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
In ·Massaclmsetts, 20 local, state and federal agencies ·
were assigned to help .police the annual Boston Pops concert and fireworks show. Car and boat traffic were banned
froin the area and security was tightened at mass transit stations.
·
About 1,000 people from around' the globe became U.S.
citizens 111 Walt Disney World, raising their right hands in
front of Cinderella's castle at the Magic Kingdom as the
oath was read by Emilio Gonzalez, head of U.S,
Citizenship and Immigration Services.
"I dreamed for this moment for 13 years, and finally this
is my last dream that I have," said Marta Hima, who came
from Colombia and now lives in Davenport, Fla.
More than 350 new citizens were sworn in at Phoenix,
"Now I feel like I .can be part of this community," sai\1
Alicia Gray of Gilbert, Ariz., who came to the United
Stales from Mexico in 1996 and brought her American husband, her children and in-laws. "I'm mofll a part of this
couolry now."
It was also a day to honor military service. The Army
boaored its millionth veteran at an American Legion post in
Pbiladelphia.
The recognition went to Bronze Star recipient Bill Beck
of Sr«lton, Pa.
· '"
~rd f3ther be honored with this than win a million ·dolJan in a lonery, because my wife would spend a million in
a couple of weeks and I'll have this for the rest of my lifetime .~ Bed said in a phone interview. ·

. '

Bv lUTHY MITcttDL
AND MARcY 5ueAJI

.[
I

Bv

DEB RIECHMANN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-===c:..:.=c:..:.==-

MARTINSBURG, W.Va.
- Burdened by sagging
polls 'and an unpopular war,
President Bush sought .a
friendly audience on the
Fourth of July to ~liver a
patriotic, gung-ho speech
about supporting U.S. troops
and sticking it out in Iraq.
He didn't have to go farjust 35-minute helicopter
ride from the White House
- to find an amiable audience at the Air National
Guard in West Virginia.
''Victory in this struggle
will require more patience,
more courage, and more sacrifice," Bush told the
guardsmen and their fami·
lies in a half-hour speech in
·a cavernous· aircraft maintenance han~ar at the 167th
Airlift Wing.
,
"If we were to quit Iraq
before the job is done, the
terrorists we are fighting
would not declare victory
and lay down their arms.
They would follow us here."
That line played well with
the crowd.
"Whether we should have
gone in or not is another matter, but we need to support our
troops," said Ronald Wayne
Tay[or, a retired colonel with
the !67th. ''There's no queslion about it we need to stay
and finish the job."
It was Bush's founh

a

Independence Day trip ' to
· West Virginia, a state he cru;ried in' the past two presidential elections. His frrst was to
Rip
. ley, W.Va. in 2002. .
Since the U.S.-Ied invasion of Iraq in 2003, the
president has struck similar
chord~ in his s~ches on the
nation's birtllday:
· ·
Lasi year in Fort Bragg,
N.C., where members ofdle
82nd Airborne · Division
greeted him with bellowing
chants of "Hoo-rah." Bush
said: . "This moment when
the terrorists are suffering
from the weight of successive blows is not the time to
call retreat."
That echoed his sp~ch on
July 4, 2005 in Morgantown,
W.Va., when he e.xclaillled:
"The proper response is not
retreat. It is courage." .
Just like this year, Bush
talked, on the Fourtl\ of July .
2004 in Charleston, W.Va.,
about fighting the battle
against extremists abroad
"so we do not have to face
them here at home."
And on July 4, 2003, a few
months after the war began,
Bush said at an Air Force
Base in Ohio, "'ftle United
States will not stand by and
wait for another attack or
trust in the restraint and good
intentions of evil men."
A small anti-,war demonstration was beginning in
Charleston as Bush defended his decision in January to

send 28,000 more U.S.
troops to Jjaq to tamp down
the violence and encourage
the Iraqis to reach political
agreements among Shiites,
Sunnis and Kurds.
The war, in its fifth year,
has claimed the Jives of
more than 3,580 U.S. military men and women. The
offensive in Baghdad and
areas to the north and south
has boosted American casuallies, although the number
of' bombings and shootinss
has fallen in the city m
recent days.
"It's a tough fight, hut I
wouldn't have asked those
troops to go into harm's way
if the fight was not essential
to the security of the United
States of America," Bush
said.
In Baghdad, the administration was trumpeting a ceremony in which 588 U.S.
troops marked the hpliday by
re-enlisting Wednesday, and
161 soldiers raised their right
hands to recite an oath making them American citizens. ·
However, difficulties continue in Iraq. Sunnis, Shiites
and Kurds said Wednesday
that they have not been able
to agree to a draft bill to regulate the country's oil industry - something U.S. officials hope will rally Sunni
support for the government
and reduce backing for
insurgents. The oil bill is a
top concern of Iraq's Sunni

minority, which is centered
in regions of the country
with little proven reserves
and fears that Shiites and
Kurds in the oil-rich south
and north will monopolize
profits from the induslry.
About 2,000 people, includin~ members of the !67th
Airlift Wing and their families
were invited to the event
Most of those asked about
Bush's decision to commute
the 2 1/2-year prison sentence of Vice President Dick
Cheney's former chief of
staff L Lewis "Scooter"
Libby didn't want to talk
about it. Those who did,
backed the president's decision.
,
"I think that Scooter Libby
did the right thing to take the
fall for everybody," said
David Anderson, a Vietnam
veteran who has a son in the
National Guard. "I think that
the president has a duty to
tell these people, 'Yeah, we
appreciate that and this is the
way it's going to go.'
"For God's sake, it's not
Watergate."
, After the speech, Bush
returned to the White House
to watch fireworks and celebrate his 61 st birthday on
Friday with friends and
members of his family,
including his twin daughters
and his parents, former
President George H.W. Bush
and former first lady Barbara
Bush.

In the Daily Sentinel

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

r----------------------,
I Baby's Name
1

I Simply send your baby's
I
I photograph along with the coupon

I
I
I Age

l Parents

toJhe left with your payment of
l $10,
and we'll do the rest.

•

I
I Address
1
· Phone

I
I
I

l . Address will not be published · l The Daily

Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here

L---------------------·
-.J.
Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box}29, 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission,

•

•

Sentinel
111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

20

•

Dear Annie: My parents
have been divorced for
nearly a decade, and both
have ·remarried. The problem is, eveq after all this
time, my mother is still mad
at my father and can't stand
to be around him.
My brother is getting
married soon,.,and my mother .(who still believes she
has the moral high ground)
is hoping my gnindmother
will seize the opportunity"to
give my dad a pie~e .o f her
mind. She told me she was
glad someone · "loved her
enough to take her side.'' I
tried to explain that we all
need to move on. Yes, my
father did some bad things
when they were married,
but I love both my parents.
Unfortunately, Mom makes
me feel like I can't love
them both at the same time.
I don't know what to do
about Mom anymore, and I
don't think it's right for my
brother to have to deaJ· with
her antics on his big day,
Any
suggestions 1
Enough Already
Dear Enough: It's a
shame your mother is still
so bitter that she will not

let go of her anger. It hurts
She pulled this again a
her more than anyone else. few months ago. We were at
·You do not have to suc- a part)' at a friend's house,
cumb to this kind of emo- and she completely snubbed
tional blackmaiL Your me when I saidhello. I got
mother's attempts to guilt upset and decided I wasn't
you into repudiating your going to play her game anyfather should be ignored. more. I did not call or e· When she !)ays unpleasant maiL Within a day, she was
things, smile with kindness going to all of our mutual
and pity, and reply, "I'm friends, telling them that I
sorry you feel that way." snubbed her!
Then walk away. When she
I let the gossip slide and
truly believes you will no &gt;Nent on with my life. I saw
longer respond to her rim- Marie at a wedding last
cor, she may stop subject- week, and she was friendly.
I responded out of politeing you to it.
Dear Annie: I've known ness. I sense she wants to
"Marie" for 10 "years, and renew our friendship, but,
most of the time we are Annie, we are not teenagers.
good friends. But every few We are grown women, and I
years, she pulls a stunt don't have the energy for
where she stops speaking to ·· such nonsense. Should I
me for no reason. I will e- give her one more chance?
mail and call her several -Tired of It
times and get no response.
Dear Tired: Marie is a
Then, when. I stop trying, drama queen, and it's
she will go to a mutual unlikely her behavior will
friend and say r must be change. She thrives on the
angry because I've stopped attention she gets from
talking to her. As if I started putting her friends through
i~. The mutual friend always the wringer. If you think
offers to call me, and then . she's worth it, you can
Marie acts relieved that we maintain a lesser friendship,
are still friends. When . I ignoring her juvenile posconfront her about · this turing and wruting until she
behavior, she denies she did comes· around. You don't
anything.at all. I then decide need to explain yourself to
to be the "bigger" person those mutual friends. They
and let it go.
will figure it out soon, if

•

they haven't already.
Dear Annie: I read .the
letter from "Tallahassee
Lassie," whose husband
admires attractive women
and she points them out for
him. I had to applaud the
maturity of the relationship.
The story reminded me of
another that I heard not too
long ago: A man and his
wife were at the beach when
a beautiful bombshell of a
woman walked by. After she
had passed, the wife
remarked sadly, "I'll never
have a body like that again."
The husband responded
wisely, "Neither wilf she."
You gotta love it! Happily
Married in
Grand Terrace, Calif.
Dear Happily Married:
We do!

Annie's MlJilbox is written by Kathy Mitcheil and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesnuzil'~box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find out more
about A·n nie 's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
I

Community Calendar

Bush asks the nationto show patience with Iraq

Public meetings

II

,..

'

Thursday, Julys,

Thursday, July 5
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury
Township
Trustees, regular meeting,
6:30p.m., town halL
Sunday, July 8
SYRACUSE - A Bob
Wingett · Appreciation Day
will be held at 2:30 p.m
Sunday · at the Syracuse
Center.
· Community
Refreshments
will
be
served. The public is invited.
Thesday, July 10
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees will
have a budget hearing at 7
p.m. at the town hall.

Clubs and
.organizations
Thursday, July 5
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 Auxiliary, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., at tile post.
CHESTER - ChesterShade
Historical
Association, 7 p.m. to finalize plans (or Chester Shade
Days and work on fall programming.

Friday, 'July 6
Thesday, July 10
POMEROY - Partners . POMEROY Meigs
Chamber
of
in Care Carel!iver Support County
Group, noon m the confer- Commerce, business-mindence room of the Meigs . ed
luncheon,
noon,
Senior Center. Caregivers, Pomeroy Library, · Subway
family members, others of Pomeroy catering, Sen.
interested in Alzheimer's Joy Padgett speaking,
Disease are · welcome. RSVP 992-5005.
Refreshments. For more
TUPPERS PLAINS information call Kathy Eastern Music Boosters, 7
McDaniel, 992-2161.
p .m., hi~h school music
Sunday, July 8
room. Fau booth discussed.
POMEROY """' Modern
Thursday, July 12
Woodmen Camp 7230
CHES1ER- Shade River
annual picnic, 12:45 p.m. at Lodge 453, 7:15 p.m., with
tbe roadside Rest Stop U.S. annual award of scholarships.
Pomeroy. Monthly stated meet,ing foi33
north,
Hometown Hero to be lows. All Master Masons
announced. Take covered invited. Refreshments.
dish and/or dessert. All
tableware furnished by
Camp.
Monday, July 9
Saturday, June 7
SYRACUSE -·· Meigs
POMEROY - Annual
County Cancer Initiative, Blake reunion !2:30p.m,. at
covered dish dinner and the Zion church of christ,
membership drive, 6 p.m., Route 143. All relatives of
Riverview
Bed
and Edgar and Addie Reed
Breakfast Inn, RSVP, 992- Blake invited. Meal potluck
2311.
with ham and tableware
CHESTER
- Shade provided. Pictures to be
River Lodge 453 special taken. Pictures and genealo~
. meeting, 7 p.m., to confer gy items on display.
Entered Apprentice degree
Sunday, July 8
on one candidate. All
RACINE - The Theiss
Masons
invited. family reunion will be held
at the Star Mill Park in
Refreshments.

Reunions

Racine. Take a covered dish
and "pig in a poke" item.
Lunch is at I p.m.
POMEROY·. The annual Lovett reunion will be
held at I pi.m. at the Zion
Church of christ, Route 143.
All relatives of daniel and
Phoebe Lovett and Wiliam
and Mary Lovett are welcome. Surnames include
Lovett, Slacks, Bush, Boyd,
and Goldsberry. Potluck
dinner, ham and tableware
provided. Pictures will be
taken, photos and genealogy items displayed, silent
auction held.

LIMA (AP) - A man the principal player in the
taken off death row because kidnapping of Ryan Young
of an error in the wording of instead of the principal
his indictment is now eligi· player in his death. The
ble to be released on parole. error was corrected at trial.
Richard Joseph was senIn an appeal taken' to the
tenced to death in the kid- U.S. Supreme Court, state
napping and stabbing death officials argued that a federof the boyfriend of a young ,al appeals court was wrong
woman Joseph had dated.
in concluding that Ohio law
After being removed from required evidence that
death row, Joseph, 36, was Joseph was t~e one who
resentenced last month to killed the victim.
20 years to life in prison Young. a high ,school stu·
much of which he has dent, disappeared after he
already served. He becomes left his girlfriend's home on
eligible for parole after June 26, 1990. His body
serving two-thirds of that was found July 4, 1990, in a
sentence, said JoEilen gravel pit in Auglaize
Lyo!Js, a state prisons County in northwest Ohio
spokeswoman.
owned by Joseph's family.
He will have a parole
A parole board member
hearing July 25 at the Ohio and hearing officer will
State Penitentiary where he meet with Joseph and then
is being kept, L~ns said.
decide on parole. If parole is
"We will vehemently recommended it wi II be
oppose any parole," Allen passed to the chairman of
County Prosecutor Juergen the parole board who can
Waldi,ck said.
approve or reject it, Lyons.
U.S. District Judge Lesley said. Other options include.
Wells ove.rturned the death not releasing him or sending
sentence based on an error his case to the parole board;
in the wording of the indict- for a review by the majority
ment that said Joseph was of the board, Lyons said.

Local Weather
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the lower 80s.
West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent
' . Thursday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening .. .Then partly
cloudy with a slight chance
of showers and thunderstorms after midnight. Lows
in the lower 60s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Friday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 80s.
West winds 5 to 10 ·mph.
Friday night... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
50s. Northwest winds 5 to
10 mph.

Saturday and Saturday
night ... Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 80s. Lows around '

60.
Sunclay and Sunday
night ... Mostly clear. Hot.
Highs in the lower 90s.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Monday... Mostly sunny.
A chance of showers and ·
thunderstorms in the after·
noon. Hot with highs in the
lower 90s. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Monday niJ;Jht through
mght ... Mostly
Thesday
cloudy with a chtmce of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 60s. Highs
in the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 30 percent
Wednesday... Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 80s.

Church events
Friday, July 13
. MIDDLEPORT - First
Presbyterian
Church,
Middleirt, Bible School,
July 1 , to to 8 p.m. and
July 14, 9 a.m. to I p.m.

Birthdays
Saturday, July 7
POMEROY Harry
Lodwick will be· 80 years
old on July 7, Cards may be
sent to him and 37842 West
Shade Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Art programs taking otT at airports
Bv JAMES HANNAH ·

International Airport, dam- really developing an indusaged by Hurricane Katrina, try. We've convinced the
will begin displaying art powers that be that we'Je
A mesmerizing· amoeba- when renovations are com- cool," Eller said. "I have 2
like glass sculpture titled pleted
September. million passengers a year.
in
"Swell" that looks like an Pottery, paintings and There is no other museum
ocean
wave.
Colorful wall-wrap art of pelicans in Arizona that has that kind
images of pelicans, crabs and other local waterfowl of audience."
and other waterlife. Strands are on tap.
Indianapolis' new airpon,
of light-reflecting glass sus"For us, it's huge because scheduled to open in 2008,
pended from a cable that we lost so much identity will boast $3.9 million
creates a rainbow effect.
and culture due to the hurri- -.Worth of art, a far cry from
A visit to the art museum? cane,"
said Jeremiah the few pieces of art in the
Nope - a stroll through Gerald, air service develop- · existing airport.
the airport.
ment manager of the
. The new airport will feaMore and more airports Mississippi airport.
ture hand-blown glass
around the nation are using
Smaller airports are jump· murals etched with the poetart to boost tourism, polish ing on a bandwagon that ry of local , artists, an aviathe image of their host com- many larger airports have tion·themed sculpture with
munity and soothe. passen- been riding for years.
more than I 00 pieces of
. gers in what can be a stre~s­
About 300 pieces of art perforated metal and ·silver
can be seen at Atlanta's air- beaded chains, and bronzed
ful environment.
"You've got a captive port, including a large dis· vintage luggage that will
said
Greg play of stone sculptures serve as chairs and tables in
audience,"
Mamary, producer of spe- from Zimbabwe. In the bag- the baggage area.
cial projects for the gage area, giant lifelike ants
Ann Markusen, an econAmerican Association of appear to emerge from a omist at the University .of
Airport Executives. "It's hole in the· ceiling and crawl · Minnesota's
Humphrey
a Institute who studies the ·
just become a very trendy over the ductwork metaphor for the anthill-like effect of art on the econ 0 thing."
The Asheville Regional flurry of airport aCtivity.
my, said some communiThe Phoenix airport ties fail to use their airports
Airport in North Carolina
opened an art gallery June I boasts 500 pieces of art in to promote themselves.
featuring 47 paintings and 24 areas, a collection that Teeming pools of travelers
sculptures from local artists, has been steadily growing. of · all ages and origins
including the ocean-like The rental-car area boasts often have to spend consid"Swell." There alteady are the strands-ot~ light-reflect - erable time at the airports,
she said.
.Plans to expand the gal_lery. ing ·,glass anwork,'
"And there is incredible
Dayton
International . Lennee Eller, program
manager
of
the
Phoenix
·
wasted
space at airpons Airport in Ohio will begin
hanging paintings, display· Airport Museum, said many wall space arid pther kinds
ing. sculptures and possibly airports are just launching · of SI?ace," Markusen said.
Opening the gallery at the
staging musical perfor- art programs: She calls it the
"
artport"
phenomenon.
Asheville
airport gives local
mances this falL
' ~We're at the verge of artists a stage and provides
The
Gulfport -Biloxi
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

-

-·~

2007

Man taken otT death row
up hurting everyone . now eligible ,for parole

APpliOto

President Bush waves as he boards Marine One'at the White House, Wednesday, July 4 on way to visit West Virginia for
the Fourth of July.
·
·
·

PageA3 ·

ANNIE'S · MAJ,LBO,X

Moms bittemes~ ends

Hey Moms and Daqs, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...

1»a1Dy Edition
be published
Friday, July 27

BYTHEB·END

The -Dai],y Sentinel

2007

.

·~-

·--- - - - - - - · ----

~·----

. -·

-

~----

-··

a benefit to passengers as
they wait for flights.
"It gives them something
to do and exposes passengers who are coming or
going to that western North
Carolina culture," said airport spokeswoman Patti
MicheL
Karen Kuhn, 60, of
Fairfield, Ohio, likes art in
airports because it enhances
the sensation of traveling.
"The paintings and the
sculptures are usually of
local interest; that reinforces the destination feeling," sh~ said. "Airpons
should do more of it.''
·
Mamary said the terrorist
attacks of 9/11 that led to
tighter airport security,
checkpoint
lines
and
requirements that passengers arrive early for ·their
flights helped spur additional interest in airport art to
help create a calming environment. .
"I often hear that they
truly enjoy the relaxing benefits," Eller said. " It lessens
stress. "
Art can also pump additional life into an airport
.and even be a money maker.
Passengers picking up
their ba~s at Port Columbus
InternatiOnal · Airport in
Ohio now see ·a splashy
montage of artistically
arran,ged color photos
showmg off city attractions.
Advertising messages will
scroll among the photos.

H,iUal Ciearettes
$24.68 Carton,
'EvervdaY!

�Thursday,Julys,zoo7

The Daily Sentinel

-'

·OPINION

PageA4
Thurs~y,

Obituaries

July 5, 2007

ALL
BUSINESS:
Housing-market
data
mighf'
The Daily Sentinel
paint a better outlook than .reality warrants ·
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

cia! markets, caused dramat- data," said Peter Schiff, who vey represents about half of
ic tightening of lending stan- runs the investment firm all mortgage applications, but
dards and shaken consumer Euro Pacific Capital Inc. in Goldman says that subprime
Ohjo Valley Publishing Co.
NEW YORK - Here's a confidence - every bit of Darien, Conn.
is slightly underrepresented.
scary thought about the data is scrutinized for hints
Another report with some Le~rs who have gone out .of
Dan Goodrich
housing market: Things may of whether a recovery is near distortions is the Mortgage bus1ness - a regular occurbe far worse than what's or more trouble lies ahead. · Bankers Association's week- rence in today's markets, with
Publisher
already being revealed by
There certainly has been ly survey of mortgage appli- dozens of mortgage lenders
the
troubling
government
plenty
of bad news, but it cations, which has long been having imploded in recent
Charlene Hoeflich
,
and
industry
statistics.
might
not
even be giving a considered a reliable indica- months - migllt nuL be
General Manager-News Editor
At issue IS what gnes into full picture of how difficult tor for new and existing included in the sample. That ·
sales price data and what things really are.
home sales, and a gauge of could overstate its results.
does not. When those nuinFor
instance,
the housing activity in general.
The MBA acknowledges
bers ·are crunched, many of Commerce
Department • Over the last decade, the that its survey includes only
Congress shall make no law respecting an
the incentives that sellers are reported last week that the year-on-year change in the lenders offering mortgages
using to lure buyers median sales price of new MBA's "purchase applica- through retail branches, and .
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
including cash rebates homes fell 0.9 percent in May tions index" has shown a 76 that most lenders that have ·
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of aren't
being included. That from a year ago, after tum- percent correlation will) the gone out of business aren't
speech, or of the press; or the risht of the peo- suggests prices may be bling 10.9 percent in April.
year-on-year growth rate of in its sample because they
falling
faster
in
many
markets
But
those
numbers
don't
the
combined new and exist- were primarily sub prime ·
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
than is now beipg reported.
include the thousands of ing single-family home sales, lenders relying on mortgage
Government for a redress of grievances.
The same goes for how the dollars in lavish incentives lagged by one month, brokers. They also weren't
mortgage-application index- like plasma televisions, pool according to Goldman Sachs. included when applications
-The First Amendmenl to the U.S. 'Conslltutlori es don't account for the installation and closing costs
That mi~t not be holding were soaring a few years .
implosion of lenders. That that sellers are increasingly-'' true now, smce the index fails a~o, notes Jay Brinkmann,
could have the effect of using to woo buyers. Tliat to account for some of the tur- vtce president of. research
masking a slowdown in means a home selling for moil in the mortgage finance and economics at the
demand, which is why the $600,000 gets reported for business. The purchase appli- Washington-based MBA.
He also points out the sixToday is Thursday, July 5, the I 86th day of 2007. There housing market could be in that price even though all cations index is now showmg
for
rough
sailing
much
longer
those
extras
technically
are
a
9.5
percent
rise
for
June
·
week
to two-month lag time
are 179 day s left in the year.
·
reducing
the
net
sale
price.
·
than
most
anyone
anticipates.
from y~-ago levels.
. between a mortgage appliToday's Hi~hlight in History: On July 5, 1947, Larry
Not l01ig ago, the housing
Sales incentives at Lennar
For one, the MBA ~urvey cation filing and a home
Doby made hts debut with the Cleveland Indians, becommarket was leading the econ- Corp., one of the nation's refers to lll0r1ga~ . applica- closing means the jum~ in
ing ihe first black player in the American League.
omy's
growth. But the busi- biggest builders, averaged tions, not originalions, which May's applications m1ght .
On this date: In 1811, Venezuela became the first South
ness
has
slumped over the $43,700 a home in its fiscal legally bind borrowers to the not be reflected until the
American country to declare independence from Spain.
last
two
years
in many parts second quarter, · up from mortgage. That is not a prob- June home sales data are
In 1865, William Booth founded the Salvation Army in
of the country, with sales of $24,700 in the same ~uarter lem when lending standards reported in Jt~ly. "We have·.
London.
In 1940, du ~ing World War II, Britain and the Vichy gov- new .and exi,sting homes last _year. And it isn t just . are stable, but in times when to wait until then to see if ·
plungmg. The mortgage builders piling on the incen- ·lending standards are tight- there is really a decou- .
ernment in France broke utf diplomatic relations.
business
also is under intense tives - tt's spilling over to ening-· as they have been in piing," Brinkmann said.
In 1946, the bikini bathing suit, designed by Louis Reard,
stress
as
borrowers with the existing-home and fore- recent months- more app~­
How that plays out could
. made its debut during an outdoor fashion show at the
weak credit. increasingly closure market, too.
cations are reJected, and --tell much about the state o(
Molitor Pool in Paris.
"In effect, they ·are reduc- therefore, origmations go }lousing today, and whether ·
In 1954, Elvis Presley's first commercial recording ses- default on their home loans.
ing
the new sales price but down, according to the new ' the problems in that market ·:
Since
what
happens
in
sion took place · at Sun Records in Memphi~. Tenn.; the
that
is not showing up any- ·Goldman report.
housing
has
a
far-reaching
are a lot more troubling than :
song he recorded was "That's All Right (Mama)."
where
in
the
actual
sales
Another problem is the sur- appears on the surface.
In 1975, Arthur Ashe became the first black man to win effect - it has rattled finana Wimbledon singles title as he defeated Jimmy Connors.
In 1991, a worldwide financial scandal erupted as regulators in eight countries shut down the Bank of Credit and
Commerce International.
·'
Ten years ago: NASA scientists brainstormed to fix probMP'1141S
lems that left Mars Pathfinder's robot rover stuck aboard the
~i!NoSD
iCPf-1 1$ THE
lander. Cambodia's Second Prime Minister Hun Sen
DIRECT ~tiE To
HERE l THatl6HT
launched a bloody coup that toppled First Prime Minister
Norodom Rananddh. SixteeQ-year-old Martina Hingis
1l!E if"HoNE WAS
~P!
became the youngest Wimbledon singles champion this cen-·
$EJN6 0/ftRtury as she beat Jana Novotna, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 in the women's
. HVPEP!
finals. (Charlotte "Lottie" Dod won in 1887 at age 15.)
Five years ago: President Bush telephoned Afghan
President Hamid Karzai to express condolences for the
deaths of Afghan civilians killed in a U.S. bombing four
days earlier. (Forty-eight civilians were killed, according to
Afghan officials.) ,. Baseball Hall of Farner Ted Williams
died in Citrus County, Fla., at age 83.
One year ago: North Korea test-tired seven missiles into the
Sea of Japan, incl11ding at least one believed capable of reaching the U.S. mainland. Enron founder Kenneth Lay, who was
facing decades in prison for one of the most sprawling business frauds in U.S. history, died in Aspen, Colo., at age 64.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Katherine Helmond is 73.
Actress Shirley Knight is 71 . Singer-musician Robbie
Robertson is 64. Julie Nixon Eisenhower is 59. Rock star
Huey Lewis .is 57. Baseball pitcher Rich "Goose" Gossage
is 56. Singer-songwriter Marc Cohn is 48. Actress Edie
Falco ("The Sopranos") is 44. Actress Kathryn Erbe is 42.
Raprr RZA is 38. Rhythni-and-blues singer Joe is 34.
Roc musician Bengt Lagerberg (The Cardigans) is 34.
Actor Dale Godboldo is 32. Rapper Bizarre is 31. Rock
.singer Jason Wade (Lifehouse) is 27.
.
Thought for Today: "If a man does not keep pace with his
phony for concealing she'd And well be might, because
Years ago, I asked Betsey
companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drumfailed the D.C. bar exam, a Bernstein's .book documents
met. Let him step to the music which he hears, however mea- Wright, Bill Clinton's forrevelation he'd ·gleaaed no such claim. At issue is an
mer Arkansas chief-of-staff,
sured or far away." - Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862),
from her best-sellin~ auto- oft-reported fraudulent 1990
why she'd urged him not to
biography "Living Htstory." lawsuit brought by one. Larry
run for president in 1988.
During an NPR interview, Nichols, world-class crackpot
Contrary to a thousand
LETTERS TO THE
Gene
he called her inauthentic for and narrator of Falwell's
press reports, Wright denied
Lyons
concocting an
idyllic "Clinton Chronicles."
confronting Clinton with a
EDITOR
Fired by Clinton for mak"Father Knows Best" child"bimbo list." She had, howLetters to the editor are welcome. Th ey should be less ever, warned hi'in that the
hood although her father ing 652 long-distance calls
than 300 words. All lerters are subject 10 editing, must be country wasn't ready for a
beat her. From Hillary's . for the· Nicaraguan contras
signed, and indude , address and telephone number. No candidate like him.
book "It Takes a Village": at state expense, Nichols
unsigrzed letters will be published Letters should be in
"The guy represented gen- about Hillary Clinton's can- "My father, not one to spare retaliated with a pre-election
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of erational change," Wright didacy. Is the United States the rod ... (o)occasionally ... lawsuit naming five alleged
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· explained. "He was a baby ready to elect any woman, got carried away when dis- Clinton mistresses. It got
ed for publication.
boomer. He'd been on cam- much less her? Issues aside, ciplining us, yelling louder dismissed quickly for lack
pus during the Vietnam War. many fear her . nomination or using more physical pun- of evidence - none whatsoHe did not go to Vietnam. would set off a bizarre ishment, especially with my ever, in fact. Nichols recantHe had been on campuses national psychodrama end- brothers than I thought was ed and apologized publicly.
But not before Hillary, as
when birth control pills were ing with Democrats losing fair or necessary."
•
Who's
the
real
phony?
she'd
previously mentioned
first invented, and, quote, the most crucial (and
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
during
the famous 1992 "60
free sex, unquote, became a winnable) presidential elec- But w)lat really excites
Ohio Valley Publishing
big deal. He had a brother tion in Jiving memory. these jokers is the mysteri- Minutes" interview in which
Co.
Correction Polley
who
had gotten in trouble Others are simply sick of ous Clinton marriage. . her husband confessed causOur main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
with
drugs
.... He was attrac- her the way they're sick of Apparently, adultery was ing pain in his marriage, met
be accurate. If you know of a0 error th rough Friday. 11 1 Court Street,
live to women. There were a Paris Hilton and the media's unknown in Washington with two of the women "to
Pom eroy, Ohio.
Second*ctass
In a story, call the newsroom at (7 40) postage paid at Pomeroy.
before Monica Lewinsky. reassure them. They were
million rumors, and there prurient speculation.
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
were lots of people who
The press rollout of a Carl Travelin~ in Ireland recent- friends of ours. I felt terrible
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
would be willing to make Bernstein's highly publi- ly, my w1fe was told by sev- about what was happening
Postmaater: Send address correcallegations. I just knew there cized new book did little to eral women ~ow much they to them." Bernstein's book,
Our msln number·Is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
was no way we were going allay such , misgivings. admired Hillary for keeping uQlike his TV ·interviews,
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
to make that kind of genera- Indeed, the episode served her dignity and saving her appropriately describes the ·.
Department extensions are:
as
innocent
tiona! change in this country mainly to illustrate ·the marriage - concepts alien women
Subscription Rates
bystanders.
io
the
adolescent
mind
without
a
struggle."
decline
of
American
politiBy carrier or motor route
Writing in The New York
Three conclusions: First,
News
From 1992, the GOP cal journalism to tabloid
One month
'10.27
Times,
Irish-American
!here's
no depth these
smear machine made Wright standards. Fifteen years ago,
Editor: Cha~ene Hoellich, Ext 12 One year
'115.84
columnist
·
Maureen
Dowd
Washington
character assaslook like a prophet. They prominent Washington hostDally
50'
Roportor: B~an Reed , Ext. 14
Senior Cltl2en rates
accused . Clinton Qf every- esse,s. circulated .rumors the. likened Hillary to . the TV sins won't sink to. Ignore the
Reporter: Belh Sergeot, Ext 13.
One month
•f0.27
thing from .bank fraud to · new first lady was gay. Now mobster's wife Carmela op-ed psychoanalysts and
One year
'1 03.90
drug-smugghng, rape, even celebrity
journalist Soprano. On "Hardball," stick to the issues. Two, :
Advertising
Subscribers shoukl mm~ n advance
murder. I once asked the late Bernstein gets asked about it Chris Matthews compared remember that Bill Clinton
Outllde Saleo: Dave'Harris, Ext. 15 dlmcl 10 lno Dal~ Sentinel.· No sub·
Rev. Jerry Falwell, who ped- on national TV. Somewhat her to a hitman from "The won twice anyway. Three,
scription by mall permitted in areas
died the infamous "Clinton to his credit he said no. He Godfather." Wall Street don't kid yourself: Any
Outelde Sllee: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier aeNice is avaiiChronicles,"
if the . com- also parried 'a suggestion by Journal columnist Peggy Democratic nominee will get
CiaiiJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
able.
mandment agamst bearmg CNN's Paula Zahn that her Noonan says she 'has "to similar treatment. Hillary's ·
false witness was less impor- religious views are fake.
prove she has 1'\0rmal simply the front-runner.
Mall Subscription
General Manager
Inside Melga County
tant than the other nine. He
Otherwise, Bernstein's human warmth."
(Arkansas
DemocratCha~ene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
said no, then alibied that he tour promoting "A Woman
The apparent cause of this Gazette co lumnist Gene
26 Weeks
'64.20
.dtdn't. know whether the in Charge" was an utter dis- old-maidish swooning is Lyons is a national liwga52 Weeks
' 127.11
allegatiOns Ill the vtdeo were grace. For details, consult Bernstein's televised charge zille award winner and co- .
E·mall :
true or not. That 's actually a Bob Somerby at daily- that while she forgave Bill's author of "The Hunring of .~
newsOmyda\tYsantinel.com
Outside Meigs County
better answer than you'd get howler. com and Jamison infidelities, she ·:savaged" the rhe Presidelit" (St. Marrin's
'
13 Weeks
'53.55
from The Washington Post.
Foser at mediamatter's.org women. ChalJenged by PBS's Press, 2000). You can e, Web:
26 Weeks
'1 07.10
Today, many Democnits On the ' "Today" show, Charlie Rose to name a vic- mail Lyons at gene'
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydallysenlinel
.com
harbor
sim ilar misgivings Bernstein called Hillary a tim, he quickly backed down. lyons2@ sbcglobal.net.)
. '-.:;- - - ' - - - - - - -- - - -...-1
AP BUSINESS WRITER

••

TODAY IN HISTORY

Top cleric captured in a burqa as 1,000 surrender
to authorities at besieged Pakistan mosque
BY MUNIR AHMED
ASSOCIAT£D PRESS WRITER

DaveyWoHe

Mural

..

'

)·

Amateur diagnosis

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentiner • Page As

The peaceful arrest of the captured when he tried to unclear. Ghazi said earlier
mosque's prayer leader, get away disguised as a Wednesday that "we will
Maulana Abdul Aziz, was a woman, wearing a full- continue to defend 'ourISLAMABAD, Pakistan coup for the government. length black burqa, and a selves."
- Security forces besieg- The firebrand Aziz has been female police officer tried to
Cheema said at least
ing a radical mosque in the a vociferous opponent of search him.
1,100 people surrendered
Pakistani capital captured Musharraf and threatened
The officer began shout- during the day, with some of
its top cleric Wednesday as ·suicide attacks to defend the ing "This is not a woman," the women in tears. All
he tried to sneail: out of the mosque. His thousands of the official said, prompting women and children will be
complex in a woman's male students have been at male officers to seize Aziz. granted amnesty, but males
burqa, and more than the forefront of anti-govern- ''The suspect later turned involved in killings and the
1,000 of his followers sur- ment and anti-U.S. rallies.
out to be the mosque's chief top mosque leaders will
rendered.
Tensions exploded into a cleric," the official said.
face , legal action, Deputy
But heavy . gunfire raged d'aylong battle Tuesday
An AP Television News Information Minister Tariq
into the night, and it was between security forces and cameraman saw plain- Azim said.
unclear if his .capture would ·militant students, some clothes police bundling the
Cheema claimed that "not
lead other hard-liners to heavily armed and masked. gmy-bearded cleric into the many more" people· were
give up the fight at the Officials said 16 people back of a .car, which sped left mside the mosque commosque.
died, including militants, away.
'jJiex.
Prt:sident Gen. Pervez security
officers
and
One who decided to give
Javed Iqbal Cheema, an
Musharraf deployed the bystanders. Mo~que leaders Interior Ministry official, up, 15-year-old Maryam
army to subdue the militants put the death toll among just said Aziz's wife, the princi- Qayyeum, said those who
pal of the mosque's reli- stayed in the seminary
holed up at LaJ Masjid, or . students at 20.
Red Mo~que, whose clerics
The government ordered gious school, was also "only want martyrdom."
"Tiley are happy," she
have boldly challepged the the militants. to lay down arrested.
government for months ., their arms and surrender by
"The entire operation will said. "They don 'I want to go
with. a drive to impoSe a Wednesday morning as it end in further success. and home."
Taliban-style version · of positioned armored vehicles we will be able to give you
Qayyeum said mosque
Islamic Jaw in IslaJV.ahad.
and helicopters around the and the nation more good leaders were not trying to
Several explosions were mosque . in a show of news," Deputy Interior stop students from giving
Iqbal up. But her mother, who had
Minister
Zafar
heard near the mosque early strength.
•
come to take her home, disThbrsday, but therr cause
A security official, who Warriach said.
wasn't Immediately clear. spoke on condition of
He said the whereabouts puted that "They are makringing the mosque . anonymity because he was of the mosque's deputy ing speeches. They )Vant to
LETART FALLS- Davey Delano Wolfe, 70, of the Letart Troops
pushed
far back not authorized to talk to leader, Abdul Rashid Ghazi, incite them," she said of the
Falls community of Racine, died Thesday, July 3, 2007, at his from thereporters
area.
journalists, said Aziz was who is Aziz's brother, was leaders.
residence, from complications of Alzheimer's Disease.
He was born Feb. 19, 1937, in Racine, son of the late
Manchester and Margurite Sarson Wolfe. He was a retired endloader operator for Martin Marietta aggregate, with 29 years of
'service. He loved hunting, especially coon hunting, and fishing.
He was a member of the Horny Buck Deer Club of Racine.
from PageA1
Surviving ate his wife of 48 years, Catherine Yvonna Durst
Wolfe; a son, Mark Wolfe of Racine; daughters, Cindy Wolfe
of Racine, and Janna Wolfe Aleshire and her husband, Jerry,
Gerlach led a kickoff
of Syracuse; grandsons, · Davey and Nathaniel Wolfe of guided tour, which 'is outRacine; brothers: George Wolf~ of Racine, Wilson Wolfe and lined in a brochure liow
his wife, Anna, of Racine, Tom Wolfe and his wife, Rose, of available at Downing
Lon~ Bottom, and Ray Wolfe of Rutland; sisters: Juanita House; King's Hardware,
Justis of Belpre, Dru Hart of New Haven, W.Va., Joan the Ohio River . Bear Co.,
Pickens and her husband, Bill, of Racine, an'd Sharon In gel's, and Mill Street
Meadows and her husband, Okey, of Pomeroy; brothers-in- Antiques, and frol')l a rack
law: Larry Durst (Julie Campbell) of Racine, Roger Durst of near the new mural.
Racine, and Rick (Mary) Durst of Racine, and Bob (Jenny)
The mural series and
Durst of St Paiish; sisters-iil-.law: Luda (John) Anderson of walking tour program was
Racine, and Virginia (John) Iafrate of Apopka, Fla.
funded by a p-ant through
Besides his parents he was preceded i!l death by a son, the AJ?palach13n Regional
R!!~~dy Wolfe; his mother-in-law l!:"d fathet-in-law:~Ralph Comrmssion' s Appalachian
and Mae Durst; and a nephew, Jumor Randolph.
Community
Learning
Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, JUly 8, 2007, at Project, with donations from
Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, W.Va., with burial iri local businesses. Three othLetart Falls Cemetery.
·
.
ers have been purchased, and
. Friends may visit the funeral home from S to 9 ·p.m. on will be rotllted every two
Saturday. Condolences may be sent to the Wolfe flimily at months·; ·or so. Donations
roush I us@yahoo.com.
· and sponsorships will be
sought for other murals.
The first mural was
unveiled by Tim King,
MIDDLEPORT - Gwinnie L. (Cottrell) White, born Oedach, and Jessica Ashley,
Sept. 10, 1913, in Fayette Co., W.Va., to parents, Colonel a .recent high school gra'duwho
wrote
the
Jerome and Maude Frances Fink Cottrell, went to be witli ate
Middleport Development
her Lord on July 3, 2007, at Overbrook Center.
She was raised in Winifrede (Kanawha Co.), W.Va. She Group to share her concern
moved to Middleport during WW II while her future hus- for the community's future.
Gerlach said the historic
band, Charley E. White, served in the Army, residing with
scenes
could be representahis family until his return. They were married on Dec. 15,
1943, in Middleport, Ohio, after he was discharged. tive of the Development
Following his death in 1982, she mov.ed froin her home in Group's efforts toward
downtown revitalization, a
Middleport to the Maples in Pomeroy. .
.
Gwinnie loved her Lord and, as long as she was able, was vision for restoring historic
a very active member of tire First Baptist· Church of buildings and makin~ the
Middleport. She loved her family very much, loved to downtown shopping district
cook, and enjoyed sharing with others. Until her last days, a destination for local shopshe was able to recite poetry from memory and sing songs pers and tourists interested m
the community's rich history.
that she had learned in school.
·
Among those attending
She is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Texanna
(Craig) Wehrung of Middleport, granddaughter, Amber the unveiling ceremony
Brian J. Reed/photO
Well and husband; Nick Eplion, great-grandsons, Derrick J. were State Rep. Jimmy
Metheney and Jaykob Eplion of Pomeroy, a sister, Jo Leah Stewart, R-Albany, and Michael Gerlach and Jessica Ashley assist Tim King in unveiling· the first of a series of historic murals to be placed in downtown Middleport.
·
·
Mullins of Winifrede, two step-grandchildren, Jeff Mayor Sandy Iannarelli.
Wehrung and Amy (Scott) Wallace, two step-great-grandsons, Harlan and Jonathan Wehrung all in Virginia, two sisters-in-law, Chloteal Cottrell and Geraldine Kincaid of
the
Racine
Area Racine Fire Department was no frog jump, enterChesapeake, W.Va., one brother-in-law, Rothe[ Stephenson
Community Organization where 725 halves of tainment or kids games at
of Litchfield, Ohio, and numerous nieces and nephews.
were
being the park.
with winners including: chicken
In addition to her husband arid parents, she was preceded
cooked
for
the
departSouthern
High
School
from PageA1
in death by a son-in-law, Howard Well, .a great-grandson,
Band, first place; Chester- ment's annual chicken
Thomas M. Parker II, twelve brothers and sisters, arid a
~·
\ . "t
from Racine Volunteer Shade Historical Society, barbecue.
.
special sister-in-law, Beulah White..
Q:
..'~
0
As of press time the firesecond
place;
Meigs
~
J.'l\
)&gt;o
"To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord." Fire Department, Sunshine County Republican Party, works were scheduled to
~
I
~
-i
\
-~
th
Services will be held at I p.m. Saturday, July 7, 2007, at the Circle, and third place, third place. Trophies for go off at I0 p.m. though
~ ·" .•.....
from
Racine
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with the Rev. Mark Marrow $50,
the threat of rain was linrERJfiR.\IIS~ ; .o\ffifE,TRf
Fire three places in individual gering. The Racine Park
officiating. Burial wiU follow m the Cherry Ridge Cemetery. Volunteer
and
two
places
horse
riders
Department, Ohio River ·
Friends may calJ one hour prior to the funeral service.
Beat the Heat!
for groups of horses and Board assisted the fire
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to: Holzer Producers. Awards of $50, riders ·were sponsored by department in collecting
Melodrama Performances &amp;
Hospice, I 00 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or The $30, $20 in the antique Libby Fisher and Kathryn $3,000 for this year's fireTheatre Tours July S, 6, &amp; 7
First Baptist Church of Middleport, 211 S. 6th Avenue tractors category were Hart with winners includ- works display.
Afternoons: I, Z &amp; 3 pm
sponsored by Forest Run
Middleport, Ohio 45760
$3 (;!!r (;!!I'SOn
There were no activities
ing:
Individuals,
Michelle
Pallbearers will be Craig Wehrung, Jeff Darst, Craig Ready Mix and included Lomas,
at
Star
Mill
Park
this
year
first
place;
Coming Soon!
first place, Took Salser,
Darst, Keith Darst, Joe Simms, Beecher Cooper.
for the Fourth of July with
Shannon
Brown,
second
Disney's
IOioDalmatlans Kids
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneml- John Deere; second place, .
several people complaining
Sinclair,
place;
LeDeana
Li•• Stage Production
Paul Marr, John Deere;
homes:com
to
local
officials
and
orgathird
place;
gfoup,
Silver
July 141 15,21 &amp; 22
third place, ' Dan Smith,
nizers. Unfortuna1ely, there
Spurs,
first
place;
The
ask
about
our Puppy Parties
Farmall. Awards of $50,
were
more
complaints
than
·
Beegles,
second
place.
$30, $20 in the antique
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
After the parade several volunteers to help with
cars category was spunGallipolis,
OH (740) 446-ARTS
events which is why there
I'
. sored by Star Mill Park people gathered at the
Board members with the
following winners: David
Hensler. first place with
DON'T MISS
Chevy;
Danny
MIDDLEPORT - John A. Holsinger. 32, Middleport, 1953
RUTLAND'S ANNUAL OX ROAST &amp; JULY 4th FESTIVITIES
Brown, second place with
died unexpectedly Tuesday, July 3, 2007, in Middleport .
1950
Pontiac;
Billy
Hill,
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the
SATURDAY JULY 7th, 2007
Jr., third place with Mack
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.
"Our Soldiers. Our Freedom·
Kids Games
Betistic Championship
Semi-truck. Awards of
Psrsde at 10 am
Rutland Church
Wrestling al 1 pm
$25, $15, $10 in the bicy Food
AI/
Day
of
the
Nazarene
cles category was spon. Including Rutland liire
From 2·?
Bingo st 1 pm
LONG BOITOM - Theodore Howard Zehm, 73, of sored by Dr. Mel Weese
Departments
Dunking Boolt!
4-5 pm Msrlllll Arls
Ravenswood. W.Va .. died Sunday, July I , 2007, at the and Dr. Doug and Tonja
Famous Roast Beef
Demonstration
• GRAND FINALE .
Hunter with winners
Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland.
FIREWORKS/
Bands
He was born Feb. 21, 1934, in Long Bottom. His wife, inCiudi'ng: Hannah at;~d
Come
Out
&amp;
Enjoy
"Requiem"
Breana Bailey, first place;
Augusta "Johnnie" Zehm, survives.
· ,r.
A Full Day of Great
2-4pm
Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. on Friday, July 6. 2007, at Madison and Marlee
Mu
sic
Food
And
Fun~~
· -.
•swamp Juece"
First United Pentecostal Church in Ravenswood. Burial Maynard, second place;
7· 11 pm
will be iD Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may visit the Rhiannon Maris, third
family from .2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. on 'l'hursday at place. Awards of $50. $30,
General &amp; Vendor Information Call740-742-2372 or 740-416-5991
$20 in the walking units
Roush Funeral Home in R;!Venswood.
Condolences may be expressed at roush Ius@yahoo.com. category was sponsored by •
POMEROY - Charlotte Gibbs · Coates Elberfeld, 79;
Pomeroy, passed away Wednesday, July 4, 2007, at the
Overbrook Rehabilitalion Center.
She was born Oct. 3, 1927, near Bradbury, t&lt;Jo the late
Roland and Meda Russell Gibbs. She was a retired beautician, member of the Preceptor Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, member of Order of Eastern Star, member of Saint
Pl\ul Lutheran Church, graduate of Middleport High School,
aitd charter member of the Best Mother in the World Club.
In l!ddition to her parents, she was preceded in death by.
her first·tiusband, Robert Coates, second husband, Robert
Elberfeld, son, Stephan Elberfeld, sisters, Kathryn Warner
and Teresa Swatzel, and brothers, "Dude" Gibbs, Pearson
Gibbs; Russ Gibbs and Joe Gibbs. ·
She is surviv~d by children, Sran (Jo Ann) Coates,
Canton, Ohio, Julie Dillon, Pomeroy, Allan (Nora)
Elberfeld, Tuppers Plains, Ohio; daughter-in-law, Beverly
Elberfeld, Gallipolis; grandchildren, Joshua Coates, Bobby
Coates, Andrea (Joel) Merrill, Rebecca (Jack) Hoge, and
Kate McCormick; great grandchildren, Samantha Swartz,
Jacob and Hannl!h McCormick and Meta Huge; (\lose family frien!l, Mae Williamson; several· nieces and nephews
·
·
and great nieces and nephews: . 1 ·
Services will .be held at II a.m. Saturday, July 7, 2007, at
the Saint Paul Lutheran Church in Pomeroy with Pastor Jolm
Jackson offi!!iating. Burial will follow at Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends ·may c.alJ from 2-4 and ~8 p.m. Friday,
July 6, 2007, at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.
On-line condolences may 'be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com. , ·
·

BY RACHEL BECK

www.mydailysentinel.com

Gwinnie L (COtbeiQ White

Racine

I!

I
!·
j

J
I

1.

'Ji'""

Deaths

,.

.

I

'I...

John A. Holsinger

Theodore Zehm

.

�Thursday,Julys,zoo7

The Daily Sentinel

-'

·OPINION

PageA4
Thurs~y,

Obituaries

July 5, 2007

ALL
BUSINESS:
Housing-market
data
mighf'
The Daily Sentinel
paint a better outlook than .reality warrants ·
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

cia! markets, caused dramat- data," said Peter Schiff, who vey represents about half of
ic tightening of lending stan- runs the investment firm all mortgage applications, but
dards and shaken consumer Euro Pacific Capital Inc. in Goldman says that subprime
Ohjo Valley Publishing Co.
NEW YORK - Here's a confidence - every bit of Darien, Conn.
is slightly underrepresented.
scary thought about the data is scrutinized for hints
Another report with some Le~rs who have gone out .of
Dan Goodrich
housing market: Things may of whether a recovery is near distortions is the Mortgage bus1ness - a regular occurbe far worse than what's or more trouble lies ahead. · Bankers Association's week- rence in today's markets, with
Publisher
already being revealed by
There certainly has been ly survey of mortgage appli- dozens of mortgage lenders
the
troubling
government
plenty
of bad news, but it cations, which has long been having imploded in recent
Charlene Hoeflich
,
and
industry
statistics.
might
not
even be giving a considered a reliable indica- months - migllt nuL be
General Manager-News Editor
At issue IS what gnes into full picture of how difficult tor for new and existing included in the sample. That ·
sales price data and what things really are.
home sales, and a gauge of could overstate its results.
does not. When those nuinFor
instance,
the housing activity in general.
The MBA acknowledges
bers ·are crunched, many of Commerce
Department • Over the last decade, the that its survey includes only
Congress shall make no law respecting an
the incentives that sellers are reported last week that the year-on-year change in the lenders offering mortgages
using to lure buyers median sales price of new MBA's "purchase applica- through retail branches, and .
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
including cash rebates homes fell 0.9 percent in May tions index" has shown a 76 that most lenders that have ·
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of aren't
being included. That from a year ago, after tum- percent correlation will) the gone out of business aren't
speech, or of the press; or the risht of the peo- suggests prices may be bling 10.9 percent in April.
year-on-year growth rate of in its sample because they
falling
faster
in
many
markets
But
those
numbers
don't
the
combined new and exist- were primarily sub prime ·
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
than is now beipg reported.
include the thousands of ing single-family home sales, lenders relying on mortgage
Government for a redress of grievances.
The same goes for how the dollars in lavish incentives lagged by one month, brokers. They also weren't
mortgage-application index- like plasma televisions, pool according to Goldman Sachs. included when applications
-The First Amendmenl to the U.S. 'Conslltutlori es don't account for the installation and closing costs
That mi~t not be holding were soaring a few years .
implosion of lenders. That that sellers are increasingly-'' true now, smce the index fails a~o, notes Jay Brinkmann,
could have the effect of using to woo buyers. Tliat to account for some of the tur- vtce president of. research
masking a slowdown in means a home selling for moil in the mortgage finance and economics at the
demand, which is why the $600,000 gets reported for business. The purchase appli- Washington-based MBA.
He also points out the sixToday is Thursday, July 5, the I 86th day of 2007. There housing market could be in that price even though all cations index is now showmg
for
rough
sailing
much
longer
those
extras
technically
are
a
9.5
percent
rise
for
June
·
week
to two-month lag time
are 179 day s left in the year.
·
reducing
the
net
sale
price.
·
than
most
anyone
anticipates.
from y~-ago levels.
. between a mortgage appliToday's Hi~hlight in History: On July 5, 1947, Larry
Not l01ig ago, the housing
Sales incentives at Lennar
For one, the MBA ~urvey cation filing and a home
Doby made hts debut with the Cleveland Indians, becommarket was leading the econ- Corp., one of the nation's refers to lll0r1ga~ . applica- closing means the jum~ in
ing ihe first black player in the American League.
omy's
growth. But the busi- biggest builders, averaged tions, not originalions, which May's applications m1ght .
On this date: In 1811, Venezuela became the first South
ness
has
slumped over the $43,700 a home in its fiscal legally bind borrowers to the not be reflected until the
American country to declare independence from Spain.
last
two
years
in many parts second quarter, · up from mortgage. That is not a prob- June home sales data are
In 1865, William Booth founded the Salvation Army in
of the country, with sales of $24,700 in the same ~uarter lem when lending standards reported in Jt~ly. "We have·.
London.
In 1940, du ~ing World War II, Britain and the Vichy gov- new .and exi,sting homes last _year. And it isn t just . are stable, but in times when to wait until then to see if ·
plungmg. The mortgage builders piling on the incen- ·lending standards are tight- there is really a decou- .
ernment in France broke utf diplomatic relations.
business
also is under intense tives - tt's spilling over to ening-· as they have been in piing," Brinkmann said.
In 1946, the bikini bathing suit, designed by Louis Reard,
stress
as
borrowers with the existing-home and fore- recent months- more app~­
How that plays out could
. made its debut during an outdoor fashion show at the
weak credit. increasingly closure market, too.
cations are reJected, and --tell much about the state o(
Molitor Pool in Paris.
"In effect, they ·are reduc- therefore, origmations go }lousing today, and whether ·
In 1954, Elvis Presley's first commercial recording ses- default on their home loans.
ing
the new sales price but down, according to the new ' the problems in that market ·:
Since
what
happens
in
sion took place · at Sun Records in Memphi~. Tenn.; the
that
is not showing up any- ·Goldman report.
housing
has
a
far-reaching
are a lot more troubling than :
song he recorded was "That's All Right (Mama)."
where
in
the
actual
sales
Another problem is the sur- appears on the surface.
In 1975, Arthur Ashe became the first black man to win effect - it has rattled finana Wimbledon singles title as he defeated Jimmy Connors.
In 1991, a worldwide financial scandal erupted as regulators in eight countries shut down the Bank of Credit and
Commerce International.
·'
Ten years ago: NASA scientists brainstormed to fix probMP'1141S
lems that left Mars Pathfinder's robot rover stuck aboard the
~i!NoSD
iCPf-1 1$ THE
lander. Cambodia's Second Prime Minister Hun Sen
DIRECT ~tiE To
HERE l THatl6HT
launched a bloody coup that toppled First Prime Minister
Norodom Rananddh. SixteeQ-year-old Martina Hingis
1l!E if"HoNE WAS
~P!
became the youngest Wimbledon singles champion this cen-·
$EJN6 0/ftRtury as she beat Jana Novotna, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 in the women's
. HVPEP!
finals. (Charlotte "Lottie" Dod won in 1887 at age 15.)
Five years ago: President Bush telephoned Afghan
President Hamid Karzai to express condolences for the
deaths of Afghan civilians killed in a U.S. bombing four
days earlier. (Forty-eight civilians were killed, according to
Afghan officials.) ,. Baseball Hall of Farner Ted Williams
died in Citrus County, Fla., at age 83.
One year ago: North Korea test-tired seven missiles into the
Sea of Japan, incl11ding at least one believed capable of reaching the U.S. mainland. Enron founder Kenneth Lay, who was
facing decades in prison for one of the most sprawling business frauds in U.S. history, died in Aspen, Colo., at age 64.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Katherine Helmond is 73.
Actress Shirley Knight is 71 . Singer-musician Robbie
Robertson is 64. Julie Nixon Eisenhower is 59. Rock star
Huey Lewis .is 57. Baseball pitcher Rich "Goose" Gossage
is 56. Singer-songwriter Marc Cohn is 48. Actress Edie
Falco ("The Sopranos") is 44. Actress Kathryn Erbe is 42.
Raprr RZA is 38. Rhythni-and-blues singer Joe is 34.
Roc musician Bengt Lagerberg (The Cardigans) is 34.
Actor Dale Godboldo is 32. Rapper Bizarre is 31. Rock
.singer Jason Wade (Lifehouse) is 27.
.
Thought for Today: "If a man does not keep pace with his
phony for concealing she'd And well be might, because
Years ago, I asked Betsey
companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drumfailed the D.C. bar exam, a Bernstein's .book documents
met. Let him step to the music which he hears, however mea- Wright, Bill Clinton's forrevelation he'd ·gleaaed no such claim. At issue is an
mer Arkansas chief-of-staff,
sured or far away." - Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862),
from her best-sellin~ auto- oft-reported fraudulent 1990
why she'd urged him not to
biography "Living Htstory." lawsuit brought by one. Larry
run for president in 1988.
During an NPR interview, Nichols, world-class crackpot
Contrary to a thousand
LETTERS TO THE
Gene
he called her inauthentic for and narrator of Falwell's
press reports, Wright denied
Lyons
concocting an
idyllic "Clinton Chronicles."
confronting Clinton with a
EDITOR
Fired by Clinton for mak"Father Knows Best" child"bimbo list." She had, howLetters to the editor are welcome. Th ey should be less ever, warned hi'in that the
hood although her father ing 652 long-distance calls
than 300 words. All lerters are subject 10 editing, must be country wasn't ready for a
beat her. From Hillary's . for the· Nicaraguan contras
signed, and indude , address and telephone number. No candidate like him.
book "It Takes a Village": at state expense, Nichols
unsigrzed letters will be published Letters should be in
"The guy represented gen- about Hillary Clinton's can- "My father, not one to spare retaliated with a pre-election
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of erational change," Wright didacy. Is the United States the rod ... (o)occasionally ... lawsuit naming five alleged
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· explained. "He was a baby ready to elect any woman, got carried away when dis- Clinton mistresses. It got
ed for publication.
boomer. He'd been on cam- much less her? Issues aside, ciplining us, yelling louder dismissed quickly for lack
pus during the Vietnam War. many fear her . nomination or using more physical pun- of evidence - none whatsoHe did not go to Vietnam. would set off a bizarre ishment, especially with my ever, in fact. Nichols recantHe had been on campuses national psychodrama end- brothers than I thought was ed and apologized publicly.
But not before Hillary, as
when birth control pills were ing with Democrats losing fair or necessary."
•
Who's
the
real
phony?
she'd
previously mentioned
first invented, and, quote, the most crucial (and
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
during
the famous 1992 "60
free sex, unquote, became a winnable) presidential elec- But w)lat really excites
Ohio Valley Publishing
big deal. He had a brother tion in Jiving memory. these jokers is the mysteri- Minutes" interview in which
Co.
Correction Polley
who
had gotten in trouble Others are simply sick of ous Clinton marriage. . her husband confessed causOur main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
with
drugs
.... He was attrac- her the way they're sick of Apparently, adultery was ing pain in his marriage, met
be accurate. If you know of a0 error th rough Friday. 11 1 Court Street,
live to women. There were a Paris Hilton and the media's unknown in Washington with two of the women "to
Pom eroy, Ohio.
Second*ctass
In a story, call the newsroom at (7 40) postage paid at Pomeroy.
before Monica Lewinsky. reassure them. They were
million rumors, and there prurient speculation.
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
were lots of people who
The press rollout of a Carl Travelin~ in Ireland recent- friends of ours. I felt terrible
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
would be willing to make Bernstein's highly publi- ly, my w1fe was told by sev- about what was happening
Postmaater: Send address correcallegations. I just knew there cized new book did little to eral women ~ow much they to them." Bernstein's book,
Our msln number·Is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
was no way we were going allay such , misgivings. admired Hillary for keeping uQlike his TV ·interviews,
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
to make that kind of genera- Indeed, the episode served her dignity and saving her appropriately describes the ·.
Department extensions are:
as
innocent
tiona! change in this country mainly to illustrate ·the marriage - concepts alien women
Subscription Rates
bystanders.
io
the
adolescent
mind
without
a
struggle."
decline
of
American
politiBy carrier or motor route
Writing in The New York
Three conclusions: First,
News
From 1992, the GOP cal journalism to tabloid
One month
'10.27
Times,
Irish-American
!here's
no depth these
smear machine made Wright standards. Fifteen years ago,
Editor: Cha~ene Hoellich, Ext 12 One year
'115.84
columnist
·
Maureen
Dowd
Washington
character assaslook like a prophet. They prominent Washington hostDally
50'
Roportor: B~an Reed , Ext. 14
Senior Cltl2en rates
accused . Clinton Qf every- esse,s. circulated .rumors the. likened Hillary to . the TV sins won't sink to. Ignore the
Reporter: Belh Sergeot, Ext 13.
One month
•f0.27
thing from .bank fraud to · new first lady was gay. Now mobster's wife Carmela op-ed psychoanalysts and
One year
'1 03.90
drug-smugghng, rape, even celebrity
journalist Soprano. On "Hardball," stick to the issues. Two, :
Advertising
Subscribers shoukl mm~ n advance
murder. I once asked the late Bernstein gets asked about it Chris Matthews compared remember that Bill Clinton
Outllde Saleo: Dave'Harris, Ext. 15 dlmcl 10 lno Dal~ Sentinel.· No sub·
Rev. Jerry Falwell, who ped- on national TV. Somewhat her to a hitman from "The won twice anyway. Three,
scription by mall permitted in areas
died the infamous "Clinton to his credit he said no. He Godfather." Wall Street don't kid yourself: Any
Outelde Sllee: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier aeNice is avaiiChronicles,"
if the . com- also parried 'a suggestion by Journal columnist Peggy Democratic nominee will get
CiaiiJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
able.
mandment agamst bearmg CNN's Paula Zahn that her Noonan says she 'has "to similar treatment. Hillary's ·
false witness was less impor- religious views are fake.
prove she has 1'\0rmal simply the front-runner.
Mall Subscription
General Manager
Inside Melga County
tant than the other nine. He
Otherwise, Bernstein's human warmth."
(Arkansas
DemocratCha~ene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
said no, then alibied that he tour promoting "A Woman
The apparent cause of this Gazette co lumnist Gene
26 Weeks
'64.20
.dtdn't. know whether the in Charge" was an utter dis- old-maidish swooning is Lyons is a national liwga52 Weeks
' 127.11
allegatiOns Ill the vtdeo were grace. For details, consult Bernstein's televised charge zille award winner and co- .
E·mall :
true or not. That 's actually a Bob Somerby at daily- that while she forgave Bill's author of "The Hunring of .~
newsOmyda\tYsantinel.com
Outside Meigs County
better answer than you'd get howler. com and Jamison infidelities, she ·:savaged" the rhe Presidelit" (St. Marrin's
'
13 Weeks
'53.55
from The Washington Post.
Foser at mediamatter's.org women. ChalJenged by PBS's Press, 2000). You can e, Web:
26 Weeks
'1 07.10
Today, many Democnits On the ' "Today" show, Charlie Rose to name a vic- mail Lyons at gene'
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydallysenlinel
.com
harbor
sim ilar misgivings Bernstein called Hillary a tim, he quickly backed down. lyons2@ sbcglobal.net.)
. '-.:;- - - ' - - - - - - -- - - -...-1
AP BUSINESS WRITER

••

TODAY IN HISTORY

Top cleric captured in a burqa as 1,000 surrender
to authorities at besieged Pakistan mosque
BY MUNIR AHMED
ASSOCIAT£D PRESS WRITER

DaveyWoHe

Mural

..

'

)·

Amateur diagnosis

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentiner • Page As

The peaceful arrest of the captured when he tried to unclear. Ghazi said earlier
mosque's prayer leader, get away disguised as a Wednesday that "we will
Maulana Abdul Aziz, was a woman, wearing a full- continue to defend 'ourISLAMABAD, Pakistan coup for the government. length black burqa, and a selves."
- Security forces besieg- The firebrand Aziz has been female police officer tried to
Cheema said at least
ing a radical mosque in the a vociferous opponent of search him.
1,100 people surrendered
Pakistani capital captured Musharraf and threatened
The officer began shout- during the day, with some of
its top cleric Wednesday as ·suicide attacks to defend the ing "This is not a woman," the women in tears. All
he tried to sneail: out of the mosque. His thousands of the official said, prompting women and children will be
complex in a woman's male students have been at male officers to seize Aziz. granted amnesty, but males
burqa, and more than the forefront of anti-govern- ''The suspect later turned involved in killings and the
1,000 of his followers sur- ment and anti-U.S. rallies.
out to be the mosque's chief top mosque leaders will
rendered.
Tensions exploded into a cleric," the official said.
face , legal action, Deputy
But heavy . gunfire raged d'aylong battle Tuesday
An AP Television News Information Minister Tariq
into the night, and it was between security forces and cameraman saw plain- Azim said.
unclear if his .capture would ·militant students, some clothes police bundling the
Cheema claimed that "not
lead other hard-liners to heavily armed and masked. gmy-bearded cleric into the many more" people· were
give up the fight at the Officials said 16 people back of a .car, which sped left mside the mosque commosque.
died, including militants, away.
'jJiex.
Prt:sident Gen. Pervez security
officers
and
One who decided to give
Javed Iqbal Cheema, an
Musharraf deployed the bystanders. Mo~que leaders Interior Ministry official, up, 15-year-old Maryam
army to subdue the militants put the death toll among just said Aziz's wife, the princi- Qayyeum, said those who
pal of the mosque's reli- stayed in the seminary
holed up at LaJ Masjid, or . students at 20.
Red Mo~que, whose clerics
The government ordered gious school, was also "only want martyrdom."
"Tiley are happy," she
have boldly challepged the the militants. to lay down arrested.
government for months ., their arms and surrender by
"The entire operation will said. "They don 'I want to go
with. a drive to impoSe a Wednesday morning as it end in further success. and home."
Taliban-style version · of positioned armored vehicles we will be able to give you
Qayyeum said mosque
Islamic Jaw in IslaJV.ahad.
and helicopters around the and the nation more good leaders were not trying to
Several explosions were mosque . in a show of news," Deputy Interior stop students from giving
Iqbal up. But her mother, who had
Minister
Zafar
heard near the mosque early strength.
•
come to take her home, disThbrsday, but therr cause
A security official, who Warriach said.
wasn't Immediately clear. spoke on condition of
He said the whereabouts puted that "They are makringing the mosque . anonymity because he was of the mosque's deputy ing speeches. They )Vant to
LETART FALLS- Davey Delano Wolfe, 70, of the Letart Troops
pushed
far back not authorized to talk to leader, Abdul Rashid Ghazi, incite them," she said of the
Falls community of Racine, died Thesday, July 3, 2007, at his from thereporters
area.
journalists, said Aziz was who is Aziz's brother, was leaders.
residence, from complications of Alzheimer's Disease.
He was born Feb. 19, 1937, in Racine, son of the late
Manchester and Margurite Sarson Wolfe. He was a retired endloader operator for Martin Marietta aggregate, with 29 years of
'service. He loved hunting, especially coon hunting, and fishing.
He was a member of the Horny Buck Deer Club of Racine.
from PageA1
Surviving ate his wife of 48 years, Catherine Yvonna Durst
Wolfe; a son, Mark Wolfe of Racine; daughters, Cindy Wolfe
of Racine, and Janna Wolfe Aleshire and her husband, Jerry,
Gerlach led a kickoff
of Syracuse; grandsons, · Davey and Nathaniel Wolfe of guided tour, which 'is outRacine; brothers: George Wolf~ of Racine, Wilson Wolfe and lined in a brochure liow
his wife, Anna, of Racine, Tom Wolfe and his wife, Rose, of available at Downing
Lon~ Bottom, and Ray Wolfe of Rutland; sisters: Juanita House; King's Hardware,
Justis of Belpre, Dru Hart of New Haven, W.Va., Joan the Ohio River . Bear Co.,
Pickens and her husband, Bill, of Racine, an'd Sharon In gel's, and Mill Street
Meadows and her husband, Okey, of Pomeroy; brothers-in- Antiques, and frol')l a rack
law: Larry Durst (Julie Campbell) of Racine, Roger Durst of near the new mural.
Racine, and Rick (Mary) Durst of Racine, and Bob (Jenny)
The mural series and
Durst of St Paiish; sisters-iil-.law: Luda (John) Anderson of walking tour program was
Racine, and Virginia (John) Iafrate of Apopka, Fla.
funded by a p-ant through
Besides his parents he was preceded i!l death by a son, the AJ?palach13n Regional
R!!~~dy Wolfe; his mother-in-law l!:"d fathet-in-law:~Ralph Comrmssion' s Appalachian
and Mae Durst; and a nephew, Jumor Randolph.
Community
Learning
Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, JUly 8, 2007, at Project, with donations from
Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, W.Va., with burial iri local businesses. Three othLetart Falls Cemetery.
·
.
ers have been purchased, and
. Friends may visit the funeral home from S to 9 ·p.m. on will be rotllted every two
Saturday. Condolences may be sent to the Wolfe flimily at months·; ·or so. Donations
roush I us@yahoo.com.
· and sponsorships will be
sought for other murals.
The first mural was
unveiled by Tim King,
MIDDLEPORT - Gwinnie L. (Cottrell) White, born Oedach, and Jessica Ashley,
Sept. 10, 1913, in Fayette Co., W.Va., to parents, Colonel a .recent high school gra'duwho
wrote
the
Jerome and Maude Frances Fink Cottrell, went to be witli ate
Middleport Development
her Lord on July 3, 2007, at Overbrook Center.
She was raised in Winifrede (Kanawha Co.), W.Va. She Group to share her concern
moved to Middleport during WW II while her future hus- for the community's future.
Gerlach said the historic
band, Charley E. White, served in the Army, residing with
scenes
could be representahis family until his return. They were married on Dec. 15,
1943, in Middleport, Ohio, after he was discharged. tive of the Development
Following his death in 1982, she mov.ed froin her home in Group's efforts toward
downtown revitalization, a
Middleport to the Maples in Pomeroy. .
.
Gwinnie loved her Lord and, as long as she was able, was vision for restoring historic
a very active member of tire First Baptist· Church of buildings and makin~ the
Middleport. She loved her family very much, loved to downtown shopping district
cook, and enjoyed sharing with others. Until her last days, a destination for local shopshe was able to recite poetry from memory and sing songs pers and tourists interested m
the community's rich history.
that she had learned in school.
·
Among those attending
She is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Texanna
(Craig) Wehrung of Middleport, granddaughter, Amber the unveiling ceremony
Brian J. Reed/photO
Well and husband; Nick Eplion, great-grandsons, Derrick J. were State Rep. Jimmy
Metheney and Jaykob Eplion of Pomeroy, a sister, Jo Leah Stewart, R-Albany, and Michael Gerlach and Jessica Ashley assist Tim King in unveiling· the first of a series of historic murals to be placed in downtown Middleport.
·
·
Mullins of Winifrede, two step-grandchildren, Jeff Mayor Sandy Iannarelli.
Wehrung and Amy (Scott) Wallace, two step-great-grandsons, Harlan and Jonathan Wehrung all in Virginia, two sisters-in-law, Chloteal Cottrell and Geraldine Kincaid of
the
Racine
Area Racine Fire Department was no frog jump, enterChesapeake, W.Va., one brother-in-law, Rothe[ Stephenson
Community Organization where 725 halves of tainment or kids games at
of Litchfield, Ohio, and numerous nieces and nephews.
were
being the park.
with winners including: chicken
In addition to her husband arid parents, she was preceded
cooked
for
the
departSouthern
High
School
from PageA1
in death by a son-in-law, Howard Well, .a great-grandson,
Band, first place; Chester- ment's annual chicken
Thomas M. Parker II, twelve brothers and sisters, arid a
~·
\ . "t
from Racine Volunteer Shade Historical Society, barbecue.
.
special sister-in-law, Beulah White..
Q:
..'~
0
As of press time the firesecond
place;
Meigs
~
J.'l\
)&gt;o
"To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord." Fire Department, Sunshine County Republican Party, works were scheduled to
~
I
~
-i
\
-~
th
Services will be held at I p.m. Saturday, July 7, 2007, at the Circle, and third place, third place. Trophies for go off at I0 p.m. though
~ ·" .•.....
from
Racine
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with the Rev. Mark Marrow $50,
the threat of rain was linrERJfiR.\IIS~ ; .o\ffifE,TRf
Fire three places in individual gering. The Racine Park
officiating. Burial wiU follow m the Cherry Ridge Cemetery. Volunteer
and
two
places
horse
riders
Department, Ohio River ·
Friends may calJ one hour prior to the funeral service.
Beat the Heat!
for groups of horses and Board assisted the fire
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to: Holzer Producers. Awards of $50, riders ·were sponsored by department in collecting
Melodrama Performances &amp;
Hospice, I 00 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or The $30, $20 in the antique Libby Fisher and Kathryn $3,000 for this year's fireTheatre Tours July S, 6, &amp; 7
First Baptist Church of Middleport, 211 S. 6th Avenue tractors category were Hart with winners includ- works display.
Afternoons: I, Z &amp; 3 pm
sponsored by Forest Run
Middleport, Ohio 45760
$3 (;!!r (;!!I'SOn
There were no activities
ing:
Individuals,
Michelle
Pallbearers will be Craig Wehrung, Jeff Darst, Craig Ready Mix and included Lomas,
at
Star
Mill
Park
this
year
first
place;
Coming Soon!
first place, Took Salser,
Darst, Keith Darst, Joe Simms, Beecher Cooper.
for the Fourth of July with
Shannon
Brown,
second
Disney's
IOioDalmatlans Kids
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneml- John Deere; second place, .
several people complaining
Sinclair,
place;
LeDeana
Li•• Stage Production
Paul Marr, John Deere;
homes:com
to
local
officials
and
orgathird
place;
gfoup,
Silver
July 141 15,21 &amp; 22
third place, ' Dan Smith,
nizers. Unfortuna1ely, there
Spurs,
first
place;
The
ask
about
our Puppy Parties
Farmall. Awards of $50,
were
more
complaints
than
·
Beegles,
second
place.
$30, $20 in the antique
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
After the parade several volunteers to help with
cars category was spunGallipolis,
OH (740) 446-ARTS
events which is why there
I'
. sored by Star Mill Park people gathered at the
Board members with the
following winners: David
Hensler. first place with
DON'T MISS
Chevy;
Danny
MIDDLEPORT - John A. Holsinger. 32, Middleport, 1953
RUTLAND'S ANNUAL OX ROAST &amp; JULY 4th FESTIVITIES
Brown, second place with
died unexpectedly Tuesday, July 3, 2007, in Middleport .
1950
Pontiac;
Billy
Hill,
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the
SATURDAY JULY 7th, 2007
Jr., third place with Mack
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.
"Our Soldiers. Our Freedom·
Kids Games
Betistic Championship
Semi-truck. Awards of
Psrsde at 10 am
Rutland Church
Wrestling al 1 pm
$25, $15, $10 in the bicy Food
AI/
Day
of
the
Nazarene
cles category was spon. Including Rutland liire
From 2·?
Bingo st 1 pm
LONG BOITOM - Theodore Howard Zehm, 73, of sored by Dr. Mel Weese
Departments
Dunking Boolt!
4-5 pm Msrlllll Arls
Ravenswood. W.Va .. died Sunday, July I , 2007, at the and Dr. Doug and Tonja
Famous Roast Beef
Demonstration
• GRAND FINALE .
Hunter with winners
Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland.
FIREWORKS/
Bands
He was born Feb. 21, 1934, in Long Bottom. His wife, inCiudi'ng: Hannah at;~d
Come
Out
&amp;
Enjoy
"Requiem"
Breana Bailey, first place;
Augusta "Johnnie" Zehm, survives.
· ,r.
A Full Day of Great
2-4pm
Funeral will be held at 2 p.m. on Friday, July 6. 2007, at Madison and Marlee
Mu
sic
Food
And
Fun~~
· -.
•swamp Juece"
First United Pentecostal Church in Ravenswood. Burial Maynard, second place;
7· 11 pm
will be iD Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may visit the Rhiannon Maris, third
family from .2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. on 'l'hursday at place. Awards of $50. $30,
General &amp; Vendor Information Call740-742-2372 or 740-416-5991
$20 in the walking units
Roush Funeral Home in R;!Venswood.
Condolences may be expressed at roush Ius@yahoo.com. category was sponsored by •
POMEROY - Charlotte Gibbs · Coates Elberfeld, 79;
Pomeroy, passed away Wednesday, July 4, 2007, at the
Overbrook Rehabilitalion Center.
She was born Oct. 3, 1927, near Bradbury, t&lt;Jo the late
Roland and Meda Russell Gibbs. She was a retired beautician, member of the Preceptor Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, member of Order of Eastern Star, member of Saint
Pl\ul Lutheran Church, graduate of Middleport High School,
aitd charter member of the Best Mother in the World Club.
In l!ddition to her parents, she was preceded in death by.
her first·tiusband, Robert Coates, second husband, Robert
Elberfeld, son, Stephan Elberfeld, sisters, Kathryn Warner
and Teresa Swatzel, and brothers, "Dude" Gibbs, Pearson
Gibbs; Russ Gibbs and Joe Gibbs. ·
She is surviv~d by children, Sran (Jo Ann) Coates,
Canton, Ohio, Julie Dillon, Pomeroy, Allan (Nora)
Elberfeld, Tuppers Plains, Ohio; daughter-in-law, Beverly
Elberfeld, Gallipolis; grandchildren, Joshua Coates, Bobby
Coates, Andrea (Joel) Merrill, Rebecca (Jack) Hoge, and
Kate McCormick; great grandchildren, Samantha Swartz,
Jacob and Hannl!h McCormick and Meta Huge; (\lose family frien!l, Mae Williamson; several· nieces and nephews
·
·
and great nieces and nephews: . 1 ·
Services will .be held at II a.m. Saturday, July 7, 2007, at
the Saint Paul Lutheran Church in Pomeroy with Pastor Jolm
Jackson offi!!iating. Burial will follow at Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends ·may c.alJ from 2-4 and ~8 p.m. Friday,
July 6, 2007, at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.
On-line condolences may 'be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com. , ·
·

BY RACHEL BECK

www.mydailysentinel.com

Gwinnie L (COtbeiQ White

Racine

I!

I
!·
j

J
I

1.

'Ji'""

Deaths

,.

.

I

'I...

John A. Holsinger

Theodore Zehm

.

�.,
I

The Daily Sentinel

FoURm OF JULY'PARADES·

PageA6
Thursday, July 5, 2007

Bl ·

.The Daily Sentinel

Inside
ML8 Standfugs, Page 82
Wimbledon news, Page 82

•
Thursday, July 5, 2007

l.ocAL ScHEDULE
andt-9&gt;
_
_
_ _college
POJ.oEAOY
- A_
scheWie
ol upoornng

ieama from Gala and ~ ooootlet.
Todg'tMml
Legl~m Ba.aball
Gallia at Logan~ 6 p.m.
·

Putin secures Sochi_victory in vote for 2014 Olympics
BY

STEPHEN WILSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

GUATEMALA CITY Vladimir Putin pulled off for
.
Legion Bauball
Pickerington al Meigs (DH), 1 p.m.
Russia what Tony Blair did
for Britain in the latest
Mgnday Jytv I
Olympic
vote.
Llglon B•-•11
Meigs at CtlHiicothe, 6 p.m .
Backed by the Ru ssian
president's personal lobbymg. charisma and governSPORTS BRIEFS
ment support, the Black Sea
resort of Sochi was elected
Wednesday as the host city
of the 20 I 4 Winter Games.
Sochi defeated the South
. . Korean city of Pyeongchang
by four votes in the final
MIDDLEPORT - The round of a secret ballot by
Big Bend Youth Football the International Olympic
League is having sign·UJ?S Committee, taking .. the
for any child who will be 111 Winter Games to Ru ssia for
grades 3-6 this coming the first time.
school year.
The result was a personal
Regular sign-ups will be triumph for "the captain,"
held .at the Middleport who put his international
Stadium on Saturdays (July prestige on the line by com14th, 21st and 28th) from I0 ing to Guatemala to lobby
a.m. till I p.m.
IOC members and lead
Parents need to be with Sochi's final formal presen. Ple11e see Olympics, 12
the child as fitting for tation.
equipment will be done at
the time of sign-ups.
Football camp will begin on
Monday, July 30 and the
one-time membership fee
will be $25.
The league will honor its
early sign-up fee reductions ..
Parents may take advantage
by mailing in the child's
name, grade, school attending; age, address and phone
number, along with $15 to
P.O. Box 212. Middleport,
Ohid.45760.
There will also be an early
sign-up held at the ~utland
Celebration on Safurday,
July 7, where the league
will have its dunking booth
set up. Sign-ups being
mailed must be post marked
by July 5.
.
For more information
contact Roger Thompson Jlt
740-992-0351, or Dave
Jenkins at 304-674-5178.
'undp'tqami

BBYFt sign-ups
for 2007 sea$0:0
Brian J. Raedfphota

Kids on ·deckeck&gt;ut bicycles, tricycles and four-wheelers
were a popular part of Middleport's July 4 parade.

·

Beth Sergent/photo

Wow, that's a lot of pink! Players from the Racine Pink Panthers give a little shout out to Racine parade goers, and sorhe
candy.
·
•
•
.

Feeney-Bennett Post

irt8n J, IIHd/Phala

128, American · ·

Michael Bartrum and his family were grand marshals of .
Middleport's Ju·ly 4 parade, and rode In a new truck prcvlded by Mark Porter GM Super Center. ·

Legion, conducted a :
flag ceremony, while ·
Katie Reed of
•
Middleport sang "The
Star-Spangled
· Banner" following the
July 4 parade.
Brian J. Raedfphata

Beth Satgontlphoto

Members of the Sonshine Circle have the best seat in the
house for watching the parade in Racine. The float took second place in the parade.

This 1956 Ford
Fairlane, representing Economy
Auto Sales, was
one of several
vintage cars in
Middleport's
parade on
Wednesday
evening.
Brian J . Reed/photo

\

Bath SergenVphoto

•

·Health First Care Center is moving to
the Castrop Center- Suite 200 in
the O'Bleness Medical Park.
'

Come to our Open ·House!
Thursday, )uly 19 - 5:00-6:30 p.m.
Our heathcare professionals specialize in family practice and internal inedicine.
'

'

.

HEALTH FIRST
CARE CENTER

An affili•te .of the

•

•

O'BLENESS ,._
HEALTH SYSTEM

(740) 594#7979

www. mydailysentinel.com

BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

American wins hot dog
title over 6-time champ

Once the contest ended,
the runner-up suffered a
reversal -competitive. eatHARRISONVILLE
,
NEW
YORK
In
a
guting-speak
for barfing,, A co-ed softball tournabusting
showdown
that
leading
to
a
deduction from
ment has been scheduled
hi
s
final
total.
Kobayashi
combined
drama,
daring
and
for Saturday, August 4,
wilh
63
HDBs
(hot
indigestion,
Joey
Chestnut
finished
and Sunday, August 5 at
emerged Wednesday as the dogs and buns eaten) in his
the H\i'rri s'on 1·ille ball
world's hot dog eating best performance ever.
fields. .
champion, knocking off sixCompetitors receive credit
The two-day tournament
time
.
winner
Takeru
for
anything in their mouths
DETROIT
(AP)
has a $100 entry fee per
a
record
-setat
the
12-minute mark, proKobayashi
in
team. All proceeds will go Brandon Inge drove in a ling yet repul~ive triumph .
vided they can swallow it.
towards the Harrisonville pair of runs and Kenny
Chestnut, the great red.
"Obviously, the las t bit
anoth~r strong
Rogers
made
Youth League. Deadline to
in
the
exited
his mouth C(Uite drawhite
and'
blue
hope
start after shoulder surgery,
register is Monday, July as the Detroit Tigers beat annual Fourth of July com- matically," said R1ch Shea
30.
the
International
the Cleveland Indians 6-4 petition, broke hi s own o!'
For more information on Wednesday ni ght to snap world record by inhaling 66 Federation of Competitive
please contact Sarah al their six-game winning hot dog s in 12 minutes - a Eating. Kobayashi's gastric
staggering one every 10.9 distress was the only sour
740-992-0351 or Regina slreak.
at 740-698-2804
Rogers (3-0) allowed two seconds before a screaming note in the tube-sleak tussle.
which ~ired nationally on
runs - one earned - on crowd in Coney Island.
"If
I
needed
to
eat
another
ESPN.
seven hits, walking three
Kobayashi' s previous besl
and striking out three:&gt; in 5 1- one right now, I could," the
CoNTACT US
3 innings. He has won all 23-year-old Californian said was 53 1/2 in lhe competi three starts and has a 1.04 after receiving th e mus1ard tion lhat dates back 'to 1916.
OVP $care Line (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
ERA since coming off the yellow .bell emblematic of The all-time record befOre
1· 7 40-446-2342 ext. 33
hot dog eating supremacy.
Wednesday 's remarkabl e
disabled list June 22.
Kobay
ashi.
the
Japanese
contest
was Che stnut's 59
Rogers
and
four
relievers
Fax - 1 ·7 40~446·3006
eating
machine,
recently
had
112.
set
jusllast
month in the
got pleoty of help from their
E-mail - sports@mydailysentinel.com
Phoenix
suburb
of Tempe .
a
wisdom
tooth
extracted
defense with ln ge, Carlos
$1&gt;0rlo.lilAtl
The 1wo gaslric gladiators
Guillen and Marcus Thames and received chiropractic
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor . all
making · run-saving treatment due to a sore pw. quickly dista.nced th em(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
plays.
·
But the wmner of every · selves from the rest of the 17
bsherman@ mydallytrlbune.com
Todd Jones pilched a per- Nathan's hot dog competi- competitors ,
processing
fect ninth for his 21st save I ion from 200 I to 2006 more beef than a slaughterLarry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
in 25 chances .'
showed ilo ill effects as he hou se within the fir~f· few
Ierum@ mydailyregister.com
Detroit look an early 2-0 slayed with Chestnut frank- minutes. The two had each
lead on RBI singles by for-frank until the very end
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
of the 12-minute co mpeti(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
Please see Dog. Bl
Please see Indians, B:l • tion.
bwalters@ myda1lyt ribune.com
BY LARRY McSHANE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tigers edge
Oeveland

The Antiquity Junior Rre Department unwinds after the
Racine parade by unloading their super soaker water guns.

mug or mduse pad.

AP photo

Russian fans celebrate after learning that the city of Sochi beat PyeongChang, South
Korea. to be the host city of the 2014 Winter Olympics during the 119th Session of the
International Olympic Committee, IOC, in Guatemala City Wednesday.
·
·

rounded the bases after hit~
ling No. 75 I on Tuesda)i
night.
:
Barry
On Wednesday, a 26-yearCINCINNATI Bonds watched from the old rookie look Bonds' spot
dugout as his rookie till-in in left field and measured
made a little history.
up. Lewis had three hits,
San Francisco's Fred including a fourth-inning
Lewis hit another grand grand slam off Matt Belisle
slam that slumping starter (5-6).
Matt Cain turned into a
No one missed the irony.
· long-awaited
win
on
"We were joking around
Wednesday, 9-5 over the on the bench," Lewis said.
Cincinnati Reds.
"The · trainer was like,
With Bonds ~etting a 'C'mon, Barry.' And I was
break in his pursUit of Hank like, 'Oh, yeah. I am Barry
Aaron 's home run record, today. I'm playing lcfl
his rep~~ement got a chance field."'
to cracll the record book.
Lewis didn't hit a home r
Lewis became the first San . during a September call-up
Francisco rookie to hit two 'last · year. Two of his three
grand slams in a season.
homers this year are grand
''I'm speechless," Lewis slams. a hint of what might
said, with a look of wonder be ahead for a player just
HYL holding men's
on his face. " I was very getting started.
emotional
at that poir\t in
"He's got a lot of tools to
softball tourney
time."
work with," said Rich
Bonds got ·the day off fol- Aurilia, who also hil one of
HARRISONVILLE
lowin~ a ni~ht game, leav- the Giants' four homers.
The
4th
annual
ing h1m wtth 75 I career "He's still learning baseball.
Harrisonville
Men's .
homers four shy of 1 don ' t lhink he's developed
Softball Tournament will
Aaron's mark. He's expect- his power yet. It's nic e that
be held on Saturday, July
ed to play in the final game he came up with the big hit
28, and Sunday, July 29 at
of the series Thursday, then today."
the Harrisonville ball
perhaps all three in Sl. Louis
No one appreciated it
fields.
before the All-Star break.
more than Cain (3-9), who
The two-day tournament
Only 24,092 fans attended got his first win since May
has a $100 entry fee, per
the holiday game, showing a 13. The ri$ht-hander has
lack of enthusiasm for been the G1ants' hard-luck
team and all teams are
Bonds' cha~e of a revered pitcher - the bullpen had
welcome. All proceeds
record. · Fans booed and blown three leads for him,
will go toward s the
derided
Bonds as a cheater and the offense had scored
AP photo
Harrisonville
Youth
references
to baseball 's
League. Deadline to regis- Cincinnati Reds pitcher Matt Belisle walks off the field at the end of the fourth inning of a
...¢. while he
Please see Squash, Bl
steroid
scandal
ter is Monday, July'23.
baseball game against the San Francisco Giants Wednesday in Cincinnati.
For more information
please contact Sarah at
740-992-035 i or Regina
at 740-698 -2804.

HYL holding co-ed
softball tourney

Frame that newspaper
photo or print It on a

"Putin being here was
very important," said French
JOC member and former ski
champion
Jean -Claude
Killy. " He worked very hard
at it. He was nice. He spoke
French - he never speaks
French. He spoke English
- he never speaks English.
"The Putin charisma can
explain four votes."
The Austrian resort of
Salzburg was eliminated in
the first round, unable to
compete with the political
and economic might of its
Russian and Korean rivals.
Pyeongchang led the first
round with 36 votes; fol·lowed by Sochi with 34 and
Salzburg with 25 . Soc hi
picked up 17 votes in the
second round to secure the
victory.
"The captain of our team
today raised our team to a
completely different level ,"
Russia!)
sports
chief
Vyacheslav Fetisov said of

www.OblenessHealthSystem.org

•

I

AP photo

Joey Chesnut of San Jose , Calif, drapes himself with the
flag after winning Nathan's Famous Fourth of July Hot Dog
Eating Contest Wednesday in Coney Is land in the Brooklyn
Borough of New York. Chestnut broke his own world record
by eating 66 hot dogs and dethroning defen'ding champ
Takeru Kobayash i who finished second with 63 hot dogs .

�.,
I

The Daily Sentinel

FoURm OF JULY'PARADES·

PageA6
Thursday, July 5, 2007

Bl ·

.The Daily Sentinel

Inside
ML8 Standfugs, Page 82
Wimbledon news, Page 82

•
Thursday, July 5, 2007

l.ocAL ScHEDULE
andt-9&gt;
_
_
_ _college
POJ.oEAOY
- A_
scheWie
ol upoornng

ieama from Gala and ~ ooootlet.
Todg'tMml
Legl~m Ba.aball
Gallia at Logan~ 6 p.m.
·

Putin secures Sochi_victory in vote for 2014 Olympics
BY

STEPHEN WILSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

GUATEMALA CITY Vladimir Putin pulled off for
.
Legion Bauball
Pickerington al Meigs (DH), 1 p.m.
Russia what Tony Blair did
for Britain in the latest
Mgnday Jytv I
Olympic
vote.
Llglon B•-•11
Meigs at CtlHiicothe, 6 p.m .
Backed by the Ru ssian
president's personal lobbymg. charisma and governSPORTS BRIEFS
ment support, the Black Sea
resort of Sochi was elected
Wednesday as the host city
of the 20 I 4 Winter Games.
Sochi defeated the South
. . Korean city of Pyeongchang
by four votes in the final
MIDDLEPORT - The round of a secret ballot by
Big Bend Youth Football the International Olympic
League is having sign·UJ?S Committee, taking .. the
for any child who will be 111 Winter Games to Ru ssia for
grades 3-6 this coming the first time.
school year.
The result was a personal
Regular sign-ups will be triumph for "the captain,"
held .at the Middleport who put his international
Stadium on Saturdays (July prestige on the line by com14th, 21st and 28th) from I0 ing to Guatemala to lobby
a.m. till I p.m.
IOC members and lead
Parents need to be with Sochi's final formal presen. Ple11e see Olympics, 12
the child as fitting for tation.
equipment will be done at
the time of sign-ups.
Football camp will begin on
Monday, July 30 and the
one-time membership fee
will be $25.
The league will honor its
early sign-up fee reductions ..
Parents may take advantage
by mailing in the child's
name, grade, school attending; age, address and phone
number, along with $15 to
P.O. Box 212. Middleport,
Ohid.45760.
There will also be an early
sign-up held at the ~utland
Celebration on Safurday,
July 7, where the league
will have its dunking booth
set up. Sign-ups being
mailed must be post marked
by July 5.
.
For more information
contact Roger Thompson Jlt
740-992-0351, or Dave
Jenkins at 304-674-5178.
'undp'tqami

BBYFt sign-ups
for 2007 sea$0:0
Brian J. Raedfphota

Kids on ·deckeck&gt;ut bicycles, tricycles and four-wheelers
were a popular part of Middleport's July 4 parade.

·

Beth Sergent/photo

Wow, that's a lot of pink! Players from the Racine Pink Panthers give a little shout out to Racine parade goers, and sorhe
candy.
·
•
•
.

Feeney-Bennett Post

irt8n J, IIHd/Phala

128, American · ·

Michael Bartrum and his family were grand marshals of .
Middleport's Ju·ly 4 parade, and rode In a new truck prcvlded by Mark Porter GM Super Center. ·

Legion, conducted a :
flag ceremony, while ·
Katie Reed of
•
Middleport sang "The
Star-Spangled
· Banner" following the
July 4 parade.
Brian J. Raedfphata

Beth Satgontlphoto

Members of the Sonshine Circle have the best seat in the
house for watching the parade in Racine. The float took second place in the parade.

This 1956 Ford
Fairlane, representing Economy
Auto Sales, was
one of several
vintage cars in
Middleport's
parade on
Wednesday
evening.
Brian J . Reed/photo

\

Bath SergenVphoto

•

·Health First Care Center is moving to
the Castrop Center- Suite 200 in
the O'Bleness Medical Park.
'

Come to our Open ·House!
Thursday, )uly 19 - 5:00-6:30 p.m.
Our heathcare professionals specialize in family practice and internal inedicine.
'

'

.

HEALTH FIRST
CARE CENTER

An affili•te .of the

•

•

O'BLENESS ,._
HEALTH SYSTEM

(740) 594#7979

www. mydailysentinel.com

BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

American wins hot dog
title over 6-time champ

Once the contest ended,
the runner-up suffered a
reversal -competitive. eatHARRISONVILLE
,
NEW
YORK
In
a
guting-speak
for barfing,, A co-ed softball tournabusting
showdown
that
leading
to
a
deduction from
ment has been scheduled
hi
s
final
total.
Kobayashi
combined
drama,
daring
and
for Saturday, August 4,
wilh
63
HDBs
(hot
indigestion,
Joey
Chestnut
finished
and Sunday, August 5 at
emerged Wednesday as the dogs and buns eaten) in his
the H\i'rri s'on 1·ille ball
world's hot dog eating best performance ever.
fields. .
champion, knocking off sixCompetitors receive credit
The two-day tournament
time
.
winner
Takeru
for
anything in their mouths
DETROIT
(AP)
has a $100 entry fee per
a
record
-setat
the
12-minute mark, proKobayashi
in
team. All proceeds will go Brandon Inge drove in a ling yet repul~ive triumph .
vided they can swallow it.
towards the Harrisonville pair of runs and Kenny
Chestnut, the great red.
"Obviously, the las t bit
anoth~r strong
Rogers
made
Youth League. Deadline to
in
the
exited
his mouth C(Uite drawhite
and'
blue
hope
start after shoulder surgery,
register is Monday, July as the Detroit Tigers beat annual Fourth of July com- matically," said R1ch Shea
30.
the
International
the Cleveland Indians 6-4 petition, broke hi s own o!'
For more information on Wednesday ni ght to snap world record by inhaling 66 Federation of Competitive
please contact Sarah al their six-game winning hot dog s in 12 minutes - a Eating. Kobayashi's gastric
staggering one every 10.9 distress was the only sour
740-992-0351 or Regina slreak.
at 740-698-2804
Rogers (3-0) allowed two seconds before a screaming note in the tube-sleak tussle.
which ~ired nationally on
runs - one earned - on crowd in Coney Island.
"If
I
needed
to
eat
another
ESPN.
seven hits, walking three
Kobayashi' s previous besl
and striking out three:&gt; in 5 1- one right now, I could," the
CoNTACT US
3 innings. He has won all 23-year-old Californian said was 53 1/2 in lhe competi three starts and has a 1.04 after receiving th e mus1ard tion lhat dates back 'to 1916.
OVP $care Line (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
ERA since coming off the yellow .bell emblematic of The all-time record befOre
1· 7 40-446-2342 ext. 33
hot dog eating supremacy.
Wednesday 's remarkabl e
disabled list June 22.
Kobay
ashi.
the
Japanese
contest
was Che stnut's 59
Rogers
and
four
relievers
Fax - 1 ·7 40~446·3006
eating
machine,
recently
had
112.
set
jusllast
month in the
got pleoty of help from their
E-mail - sports@mydailysentinel.com
Phoenix
suburb
of Tempe .
a
wisdom
tooth
extracted
defense with ln ge, Carlos
$1&gt;0rlo.lilAtl
The 1wo gaslric gladiators
Guillen and Marcus Thames and received chiropractic
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor . all
making · run-saving treatment due to a sore pw. quickly dista.nced th em(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
plays.
·
But the wmner of every · selves from the rest of the 17
bsherman@ mydallytrlbune.com
Todd Jones pilched a per- Nathan's hot dog competi- competitors ,
processing
fect ninth for his 21st save I ion from 200 I to 2006 more beef than a slaughterLarry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
in 25 chances .'
showed ilo ill effects as he hou se within the fir~f· few
Ierum@ mydailyregister.com
Detroit look an early 2-0 slayed with Chestnut frank- minutes. The two had each
lead on RBI singles by for-frank until the very end
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
of the 12-minute co mpeti(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
Please see Dog. Bl
Please see Indians, B:l • tion.
bwalters@ myda1lyt ribune.com
BY LARRY McSHANE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tigers edge
Oeveland

The Antiquity Junior Rre Department unwinds after the
Racine parade by unloading their super soaker water guns.

mug or mduse pad.

AP photo

Russian fans celebrate after learning that the city of Sochi beat PyeongChang, South
Korea. to be the host city of the 2014 Winter Olympics during the 119th Session of the
International Olympic Committee, IOC, in Guatemala City Wednesday.
·
·

rounded the bases after hit~
ling No. 75 I on Tuesda)i
night.
:
Barry
On Wednesday, a 26-yearCINCINNATI Bonds watched from the old rookie look Bonds' spot
dugout as his rookie till-in in left field and measured
made a little history.
up. Lewis had three hits,
San Francisco's Fred including a fourth-inning
Lewis hit another grand grand slam off Matt Belisle
slam that slumping starter (5-6).
Matt Cain turned into a
No one missed the irony.
· long-awaited
win
on
"We were joking around
Wednesday, 9-5 over the on the bench," Lewis said.
Cincinnati Reds.
"The · trainer was like,
With Bonds ~etting a 'C'mon, Barry.' And I was
break in his pursUit of Hank like, 'Oh, yeah. I am Barry
Aaron 's home run record, today. I'm playing lcfl
his rep~~ement got a chance field."'
to cracll the record book.
Lewis didn't hit a home r
Lewis became the first San . during a September call-up
Francisco rookie to hit two 'last · year. Two of his three
grand slams in a season.
homers this year are grand
''I'm speechless," Lewis slams. a hint of what might
said, with a look of wonder be ahead for a player just
HYL holding men's
on his face. " I was very getting started.
emotional
at that poir\t in
"He's got a lot of tools to
softball tourney
time."
work with," said Rich
Bonds got ·the day off fol- Aurilia, who also hil one of
HARRISONVILLE
lowin~ a ni~ht game, leav- the Giants' four homers.
The
4th
annual
ing h1m wtth 75 I career "He's still learning baseball.
Harrisonville
Men's .
homers four shy of 1 don ' t lhink he's developed
Softball Tournament will
Aaron's mark. He's expect- his power yet. It's nic e that
be held on Saturday, July
ed to play in the final game he came up with the big hit
28, and Sunday, July 29 at
of the series Thursday, then today."
the Harrisonville ball
perhaps all three in Sl. Louis
No one appreciated it
fields.
before the All-Star break.
more than Cain (3-9), who
The two-day tournament
Only 24,092 fans attended got his first win since May
has a $100 entry fee, per
the holiday game, showing a 13. The ri$ht-hander has
lack of enthusiasm for been the G1ants' hard-luck
team and all teams are
Bonds' cha~e of a revered pitcher - the bullpen had
welcome. All proceeds
record. · Fans booed and blown three leads for him,
will go toward s the
derided
Bonds as a cheater and the offense had scored
AP photo
Harrisonville
Youth
references
to baseball 's
League. Deadline to regis- Cincinnati Reds pitcher Matt Belisle walks off the field at the end of the fourth inning of a
...¢. while he
Please see Squash, Bl
steroid
scandal
ter is Monday, July'23.
baseball game against the San Francisco Giants Wednesday in Cincinnati.
For more information
please contact Sarah at
740-992-035 i or Regina
at 740-698 -2804.

HYL holding co-ed
softball tourney

Frame that newspaper
photo or print It on a

"Putin being here was
very important," said French
JOC member and former ski
champion
Jean -Claude
Killy. " He worked very hard
at it. He was nice. He spoke
French - he never speaks
French. He spoke English
- he never speaks English.
"The Putin charisma can
explain four votes."
The Austrian resort of
Salzburg was eliminated in
the first round, unable to
compete with the political
and economic might of its
Russian and Korean rivals.
Pyeongchang led the first
round with 36 votes; fol·lowed by Sochi with 34 and
Salzburg with 25 . Soc hi
picked up 17 votes in the
second round to secure the
victory.
"The captain of our team
today raised our team to a
completely different level ,"
Russia!)
sports
chief
Vyacheslav Fetisov said of

www.OblenessHealthSystem.org

•

I

AP photo

Joey Chesnut of San Jose , Calif, drapes himself with the
flag after winning Nathan's Famous Fourth of July Hot Dog
Eating Contest Wednesday in Coney Is land in the Brooklyn
Borough of New York. Chestnut broke his own world record
by eating 66 hot dogs and dethroning defen'ding champ
Takeru Kobayash i who finished second with 63 hot dogs .

�Page 82 • The paily Sentinel

MLB

.

. www.mydailysentinel.com

BY HOWARD FENDRICH

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Amoricon~

Eall Dlvlllan

GB

Pet

B~

52 31

627-

Toron10

41 43

.488 11 }.

New YorW:
39
Baltimore
37
Tampa Bay 33
COntrol

42

4a1 12

46

.446 15

50

.396

19

Dlvlolon

WL

PctGB

Cleveland

51 33

.607 -

Detroit
M1nnesota

48 34
43 4()

585 2
518 7',

CIIIC&amp;go
Kansas City

36 45
36 49

.424 15'1,

W L

51

Pet

Los Angeles

33
46 35
43 41
36 48

607 .568 3'it

.444 13~

-Divtok&gt;n

seame
Oakland

Texas

GB

.512 8

429 15

Wedneld8V''• Games
Boston 7, Tan"(&gt;ll Bay 5
Mimesota 6, N.Y Yankees 2
Toronto 10, Oakland 3
Detroit s. Clewland 4
BattifOOfe 9, Chicago White Sox 6

Seattte 4, Kansas City 0
TeM&amp; 4, L.A. Angels 2
·

11\unday's Gamoo

Minnesota (Slowey

3-0l

Yankees (lgawa 2·2). 1·05 pm

at N.Y.

Cleweland (Sabathla 12-2) at Oetroil

(Verlander 9·3), 105 pm

Tampa Ba~ (Howell 1-2) at Bo&amp;ton
( - H 11·2), 7.05 p.m.
Baltimore (Burres 4-2) at Chicago
White Sox (Danks 4-6), 8.11 p.m.
LA AngelS (ESCObar 9-3) at Texas
(Tejeda 5-7). 8 35 p.m
Seattle (Bat1sta 8..S) at Oakland

(Geud1n 7-3), 10.05 p m.

Frktay'a GlmH
Minnesota at ChicagoJNhfte 8&lt;»1, 2.05

p.m.• 1st game
Bo810n at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
L.A. Angela at N.Y
.Yankees, 7.05 pm
Cklveland at Toronto, 7·07 p.m
Tampa Bay at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.

ChiCago White SOx. 8 11
p.m , 2nd game
Balt1more at Texas, 8 35 pm
Seattle at OaktanCI, 10 05 p.m
Minnesota at

New Y
ork
Atlanta

Natianatl.Ngue
Ell! Division
WL PCIGB

Phlladelptua

46 36
43 41

561 512 4

-63

506 -6'1.

Florida

45
34 50

464 8
405 13
central Dlvlalan
WL PctGB
-'8 36
571 Mitwalikee
Chk;ago
42 41 506 5l.
38 43
469 8'~r
St LOUIS
Plllsburgh
37 47 .440 11
37 48 435 Il k
Houston
Clnc1nnat1
32 52 381 16
Weat Dlvlalon
WL PCIGB
San Diego 47 35 573 Los Angeles 48 36 571 Ar1zona
47 39 547 2
Colorado
41 43 488 7
San Francisco 36 46 439 11
Washington

39

42

Thursday, July 5, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Williams ~ters at Wimbledon: VentJs rises, Serena falls

PRo BASEBALL
WL

11nirsday, July 5 , 2007

WIMBLEDON , England .
- Venus Williams giggled
and hopped on her toes
Wednesday, looking more
like a kid who just won her
first match than a veteran
who just beat Maria
Sharapova in a showdown of
Grand Slam champions at
Wimbl~on ' s Centre Court.
Up in the players' guest
father
box,
Williams'
jumped for joy, too, thrusting his arms in the air
repeatedly.
Two hours later, the set·
ting and the family were the
same, yet the mood was fm:
more subdued. Younger sister Serena shuffled off to the
locker room, having lost to
APphoto
No. I Justine Henin in the Justine Hen in reacts 'as she wins a point on her way to
'JUarterfinals at a second defeating Serena Williams, in their Women 's Singles match
consecutive major.
on the Centre Court at Wimbledon Wednesday.
What could have been
another wonderful day for Serena sajd Wednesday: nap during a rain delay.
"After that," Bartoli said,
the Williams clan at the All "She played a very highEngland Club was only half quality game·. I thought she "I was feeling much better."
Henin acknowledged she
so:
After
three-time played probably soll)e of h~r
best
tennis."
still
has "a lot of work to
Wimbledon champion Venus
Adventurous .tennis, as do," and Serena would
overwhelmed Sharapova 61, 6-3, two-time Wimbledon well, especially late. Trailing ·agree. Asked whether she
champion Serena couldn't 15-30 while serving in the thought she lost to the evenovercome her own l;'oor final game, Henin won a 10- tual champion, Serena said:
heallh or a detenmned stroke rally with a drop shot. "The eventual Wimbledon
Henin in a 6-4, 3-6, 6-3 She serve-and-volleyed on champion I saw playing in
her first match point, though the fourth round today, deft·
defeat.
that
didn't work. It ended nitely."
"I wasn 't even sure if I
That, of course, would be
was going to go out and when Serena sent a backhand
long.
Venus,
who was pretty close
play," said Serena, who
Despite acknowledging to flawless against 2004
played with tape on her left
calf and left thumb, both that she battled nerves late, champion Sharapova.
She averaged 115 mph on
injured in her dramatic Henin moved two victories
away
from
her
first
first
serves and reached 126
fourth-round
victory
Monday. "l'f I'd have been Wimbled'n title, which mph. She won . 33 of 42
healthy, I think I would have would complete a career points' on her serve and only
Grand Slam .
once was taken to deuce.
won, 100 percent."
Henin next meets No. 18 She compiled a 9-3 advanManaging to be slightly
more gracious than after los· Marion Bartoli, who reached tage on points that lasted at
ing to Henin at the French her first Grand Slam semifi- least I 0 strokes.
"You've got to give' her
Open - "All she had to do nal by coming back to beat
was show up," was the post- No. 31 Michaella Krajicek credit," the second-seeded
match assessment then · 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 l)fter taking a Sharapova said. "Her aver·

age first serve was 115, and
somemendon' tdothat."
They played all of three
points Tuesday at 800-seat
Court 3 before the founh·
round match was suspepded
because of rain. They
resumed at 13,000-plus
Centre Court on Wednesday,
then had to deal with a rain
delay of nearly two hours
that came in the middle of an
epic game at 1-1 in the second set.
Sharapova was serving,
and the game featured 13
deuces and seven break
points, filled with h!ghp1tched grunts and h1ghpo~ered groundstrokes. The
shrieks, so loud at bot~ ends
of the court, drew smckers
from spectators.
Eventually,
Sharapo ~a
held agam for a 3·2 l~ad m
the set, but she wouldn t wm
another game.
Even thoujlh there were
shower~ on e~ght of the tournament ~ mne days, all
seven smg}es matches on
Wednesdays sc~edu~e were
completed, making 1\ more
hkely that the. men s and
women's titles will be decided on time.
Second -see de d
Ra fael
Nadal finally wrapped up a
victory over No. 28 Robin
Soderling in a third-round
match that was supposed to
start Saturday. No. 4 Novak
Djokovic also reached the
fourth round, while No. 3
Andy Roddick and No. 12
Richard Gasquet set up a
quarterfinal meeting.
For Venus, it was a masterful performance against a
tough competitor. Give!) that
Venus owns five major titles,
that shouldn't be surprising
at all. Given that she was
two points' from defeat
against 59th-ranked Alia
Kudryavtseva in the first

round and was down 5·3 in
the final set against .?1 stranked Ak.iku Mori gami in
the third; it was surprising.
"Well, th at happens.
That's tennis. That's life.':
said Venus, who meets No. 5
' Svetlana Kuznetsova in the
quarterfinals. "What mattered is that I got throujlh it.
It built character:·
She has plenty of that
nowadays, at 27 and a pro
since 1994. Injuries have
kept her off court in recent
years, a reason she's ranked
3 1st and faced Sharapova so
early.
"In my whole life, I' ve
been a' big-match player,"
Venus said. " II wasn't the
ideal draw for her."
The Will iqms' father,
Richard, is rarely shy about
expressing an opinion and
had plenty to offer after
watching Venus win.
"I think she can be a
champion until she's 34, 1
really do," he said. "I'll tell
you something else I
believe: 1 don ' t think you 've
seen the best of Venus.''
A h
h
ht
he
not er
t ou~
shared: He d1dn t wa~t
Serena to play Henm
b
fh . . .
e:;ause 0 er IDJ_uncs. .
. If ~.erena was m h~r ~ght
mmd, R1chard Wtlhams
said, ."she'd ~o home."
A httle wh1le later, she was
headed that way. Done m
smgles, she Withdrew from
doubles, wh~re the Sisters
'Yere ~ompetmg for the first
ume smce 2003.
Henin 's coach , Carlos
Rodriguez, said it was tough
for the Belgian to figure out
how to approach a match
against an opponent whose
fitness was in question.
"I wasn't really focu sed on
what did happen on the other
side of the net," Henin said.

tlerlbune- Sentinel - l\e lster
CLASSIFIED
Gallla

In One Week·With Us
classified@~~~!l~ribune. com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Register
(304) 675-1333
Now you can have borders and graphics
-..,...
added to your classlfted ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large ,_,

M9nday thru Friday

:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOW I0 WRUE Aft A0
Should Include These Jtems
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*
OhloVIIIey
Publilhlng miMI

1111 rtslhliD ldlt,
fljocl or ..,...t ony
Ill atony-.
Errors

Mull

Rooc&gt;rtoct on 1111

ft

,

ANNouNa!MtNrs

~r= t

.,.

advwtlalng

Slarl!eyOinbox com

lllbuno-Sonltnot

PRAY

..,l·.·o-Hru&gt;-·W·ANnll--.,111"0 Hru&gt;WANnll

AN's and LPN's.
Applications must possess a
current license In the S1ate
of Oh1o. Potential applicants
should contact Diana
Harless. OON al (740)446·
7150 EOE

"

A BATH

cANB!ii A

-

I
· - - - - - · 794-1950

Truck Driver wfth Class

wI;;I).FtltJ

INI\-\t
~ANtiS

home,

]\

OF

Cl\1~1:&gt;.

Pyrenees, 1· 9ma c&gt;d, 1·

Squash

Wednnday'a Gamn

away from the grounds
crew while it covered the
field.
With no baseball to worry
about, Bopds got to spend
some time with an old pal.
As part of a team function, the Reds and their fam·
ilies played on the field
before the game . Bonds
went out in his gray uniform
pants and a black Giants Tshirt and sought out Griffey.
The two have felt a kin·
ship
throughout
their
careers. Both had famous
fathers who took them into
clubhouses when they co11ld
barely walk. Bonds played
mentor to Griffey when
Junior was just gettmg start·
ed on his career.
The bond was evident.
Bonds shared a belly
laugh with Griffey and his

wife, and playfully hoisted
Juninr.'s 5-year~old son in
his ~~- It was a special
moment"· for th~: twO OUt·
fielders,~ who , will have
another one next week in
San Francisco, when they
start side-by-side in the AllStar game.
Once they got done
socializing, one of them got
down to business.
After Bonds hit a two-run
homer in the series opener
on Friday night, he declared
that he was up. 1·0 in their
head·to-liead c~mpetition.
A day later, Griffey matched
his RBis with a less-dramatic swing - a two-run single
that put the Reds up 3-0 in
the third.
Griffey remained at 585
career homers, one behind
Frank Robinson for sixth on

the career list.
Notes: The Giants put
left-handed
reliever
Jonathan Sanchez on the
15-day DL with strained
muscles in his side.
Sanchez felt sqre when he
warmed up Saturday and
hadn 't pitched since. RHP
Scott Atchison was called
up fro'm Triple-A Fresno to
take his place. ... Aurilia
made his first start since he
returned from a stint on the
DL with a sore neck .. .. SS
Omar Vizquel committed
his fifth error of the season.
... The Reds have given up
five grand slams this sea-son . ... The Reds haven't
won a series since they took
two
of
thre e
from
Cleveland · at
Great
American Ball Park from
June 8- 10.

Kobayashi for six years. so
it's about time · it came
home," said Chestnut, hold·
ing an American flas ·in his
anns. "I knew going mto this
contest that Kobayashi was
going to give 100 percent."

slicing liner into the leftfield corner, but Thames
made a diving catch.
Ryan Garko then hit a
from Page 81
ball to deep right-center
that would have easily
Guillen in the first and lnge scored Hafner, but the ball
in the second. Casey Brake bounced over the II 1/2made it 2-1 with a run-scor- foot fence for a fluke
ing groundout in the third, ground-rule double. Hafner
but the lpdians saw a poten· was stopped at third , and
tial rally snuffed out in the . after a fist-pump of relief,
next inning by great defense Rogers letired Franklin
and bad luck.
Gutierrez to end the inning.
Travis Hafner walked
Detroit took advantage,
with one out and Jason scoring three runs in the
Michaels followed with a bottom of the fourth to go

up 5-1.
With one out and runners
on the corners, lnge bunted
the ball to the right side for
a
perfectly
executed
squeeze.
Granderson
followed
with an RBI double to
make it 4-1 , and he scored
when Gu't ierrez couldn't
come up with a diving
catch on Polanco 's liner
down the right-field line.
Cleveland got a run back
in the fifth on Victor
Martinez's RBI double, but
Guillen stopped another

run with a backhanded stop
of Hafner's smash up the
middle . The Indian s got
into the defensive act in the
bottom of the inning when
Jhonny' Peralta dove to turn
Ivan Rodriguez's hard
grounder into a 6-4-3·double play.
Hafner made it 5-4 with a
two-run homer off Macay
McBride in the seventh, but
Guillen and Rodri gue z hit
back-to-back tripl es to
restore the two-run advantage in the bottom of the
mnmg.

board
member Sergei
Bubka, a Ukrainian won a
pole vault gold medal for
the Soviet Union at the
1988 Seoul Olympics. "He
did a fantastic presentation
- his speeches, his communication with people
these last few days. They
were very impressed about
his personality, his intelli"
gence. I think this final
touch made the difference."
U.S. member Jim Easton
also said' Putin might have
swung the decisive votes including by making his
presentation in English,
breaking with his practice
of speaking in Russian.
"I think people were sur·
prise~; I was surprised he
came out and spoke in
English," Easton said. "It's
those little things that some·
times switch some people
who are on the line over.
This reminds me. of the
Tony Blair scenario."
Rogge also spoke of the
importance of Putin 's backing.
"This is very reassuring
for
the
International
Olympic Committee," he
said. "It guarantees us the

support of the public
authorities of the country....
Today a successful bid is a
b1d that entail s the whole
country and population."
Sochi bid chief Dmitry
Che rny shenko called the
vtctory a "key TJIOment in
Russian history."
" You have decided to play
a maj or role in Ru ss1a's
future. The games will help
Ru ssia 's transitiOn as a
young democracy," h~ said.
Zhukuv said the decision
was a reward fur th e
"largest winter country in
the world," where winter
spons is "part uf our soul
and heritage.''
·
"The whole of Russia will
be celebl'atmg these days,"
he said . "We understand lots
of (work) is waiting for us
once more."
Putin 's government has
pledged $1 2 billion to
develop Sochi into a worldclass winter sports complex
linking the. palm- hned
Blac k Sea coast - the socalled "Russian Rivi era" to th e. soarin g Caucas us
mountams nearby.
Putin praised Sochi 's nat·
ural settmg, saying, "On the

the
22nd
of Europe with world-class announc1ng
venues already in place; and Olympic Winter Games in
Pyeonjlchang, offering the 2014 are awarded to the city
potential for peace and rec· of Sochi."
onciliation on the divided
Many of the winning del Korean peninsula and pro· egation headed across the
moting winter sports in street to Ru ss ia House,
Asia.
where they waved the
It's the second time in a Ru ssian fla g, pl ayed the
row that Py~ongchang has national anthem and celelost by a h:l'ldful of votes brated on a specially conafter leading in the first structed ice rink.
round . The Koreans lost 56In Sochi, cheers erupted
53 to Vancou ver, Bntish from the crowd of more
Columbia, for th e 20 I 0 than 15,000 that had gathOlympics four years ago.
ered for a pop conce rt and
This time, ninety-seven the announ cement m a mam
IOC members were eli gible squ are.
•
to vote m the first round,
"We did it all toi!bther. We
wiih 95 casting valid bal· wo n,"
the l:oncert 's
lots Members from bidding 'announcer said fro m the
countnes are ineligible to stage as fi reworks !las hed
vote as long as their cities
remain in contention. With and boomed in the sky.
Salzbur!l out, I 00 delegates · People hu g~ed and waved
were ehgible ·in the second their hands m the air. Some
round, with 98 casting valid appeared to ha ve tears in
their eyes.
votes.
''It is great. I've never
The Russian delegation
erupted in cheers, j umped to been so happy in my li fe,"
thetr feet and hugged each said Marina Matveyeva, 23,
other after Rogge opened a who works in a bank. "II
sealed envelope and read mean s that Ru ss ia has
the
words :
"The re ache.d the level of Europe,
Intern ational
Olympic and we can be proud of our
Committee has the honor of country.' ,

fromPageBl

Washington 6, Chtcago Cubs 0
San Francisco 9, Cincinnati 5
Philadelphia 8, Houston 3
Pittsburgh 5, Milwaukee 3
St lOUIS5, Arizona 4
Thundoy'o Gomn

Milwaukee (Sheets 10.3) at P1ttsburgh
{Gorzelannv 8-4), 12 35 p m.
Florida (Kim 3-4) at San Diego (Peavy
9·2), 3·35 pm
Chicago Cubs (Marshall 4·3) at
Washington (Bergmann 1-5), 7 05 pm
San Francisco (Morris 7-4) at
Cincinnati (Arroyo 2·9), 7 10 p m.
Arizona (Dav1s 5-9) at St. louis
(Wainwright 6·7), 7:15p.m
NY Mets (Ma1ne 9·4) at Houston
(Jennings 1·3). 805 p.m.
Atlanta (THudson 8-5) at l ADodgers
(Penny IQ-1 ). 10:10 p.m.
Frlday'a Gamn
ChicagoCubs at Pittsburgh, 7·05 p m
Milwaukee at Washmgton. 7:05 p.m
Arizona at Clnc1nnat1, 7 10 p m
N.Y. Mets at Houston. 8 05 p.m.
San Francisco at St Louis, 8:10p.m.
Philadelphia at ColorQdo, 9 05 pm
Atlanta at San Diego, 10:05 pm
Florida at l A Dodgers, 1o 40 pm

only three runs in his last 32
innings on the mound .
The Reds trailed 3-1
when Aurilia beat out an
infield single to .load the
bases and bring Lewis to the
plate.
"I felt something was
going to happen," said Cain,
who gave up four runs in 5
2-3 innings. "It was weird. I
just had a feeling, after
Aurilia got that infield hit, ·
like things were going to go
our way."
Ray Durham, Aurilia and
Mark Sweeney hit solo
homers for the Giants, who
sent the Reds to their first

Dog

Japan's long dominance of
the contest. The only previ·
ous non-Japanese winner
since 1996 was New:Jersey's
fromPageBl
Steve Keiner in 1999. Third
downed 60 hot dogs with 60 - place this y~ar went . to
seconds to go when another .Amencan, Patnck
Chestnut _ the veins on his Bertolett1 of Ch1cago, w1th
forehead extended - put
away the ~nal franks to end
Kobayashi s re1gn.
Kobayasht, through a
translator, prom1:~ed • to
return fo~ the 2008"'event.
The VIctory by the San
Jose, Calif., resident ended

loss in two · games under
interim manager · Pete
Mackanin. Sweeney's shot
in the ninth was his 15th
pinch-hit homer, tying Dave
Hansen for seventh on the
career list.
Mackanin got to experience a meltdown by a pllching staff that was one of the
reasons manager Jerry
Narron got fired on Sunday.
"You see potential, you
see good arm strength,"
Mackanin said. "You see
guys who are on the fence,
and you're waiting for
somebody to fall on the
right side, and they keep
falling on the wrong side."
A fast-moving storm
delayed the game for 51
minutes in the middle of the
eighth inning. Gusting wind
repeatedly blew the tarp

4~This title's been held by

Indians

2yrs l&gt;d. (740)245·5984,
(7401845·3083.
2 Kittens~ (M) 6wks, blk
(F)
IOWks, - FREE
SPAY/NEUTER call 304·
895-8854 MUST GO ASAP lost· red &amp;While beagle in
4 kittens 2· male, 2-lemale Morn1ng Star area, Reward,
to good home 304-675~ caH (740)94lf·2544
7906

obtain a loan. BEWARE

A

Hiring Bonusl

make calls you r~AL
believe in for many
Conservative Political M&amp;J Cleaning Service
Organizations
Business and Reslden!JB\,
licensed
In Ohio and W\1.
Plua we offer:
Cell 304·444-4&lt;i94
• Full-lime potltlon1
40 hrolwk
TURNED DOWN ON
• Up to $8.50/hr.+ -kly SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
bonus potenlll,l
No Fee Unless We Wml
• $300 Hiring Bonus
1-888·582-3345
• Complltt benefits
Iii \1 I "' ( \ \!
package
• Peld vecetloWholldaya
HOMI'l&gt;
• Fnondly, ptOieOIIOINII
I'ORSME
office envkonment
You could

r

YARD SALE
Dish Network Satellite Dish. ~::~~:;;==~

r

BOrrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Division ol
Fmandai Institution's
Of1ice of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or

of requests for any large
advance payments of
~!e~~YH~~~~ ~a:::~ tees or Insurance Call the
responsible, mature. Send Of11ce at Consumer
resume to Driver Resume, Affairs toll free at t-866PO Box 655 GallipoliS Oh 278-0003 to learn 11 the
45631
mortgage broke r or
lender IS properly
WI oHer Great
licensed (ThiS IS 8 publiC
Employment
serv1ce announcement
from the Oh1o Valley
Opportunlllos
Publishing Companv)
Plus 1$3110

DI\IIIC.IO~~ ~

both 112 Aust &amp; 112 Great

!:~~

:::::::::::
••NOTI£F.••

cations for

r

good

Ir

Scenic H1
ils Nursing Center
Is currently acceptmg appli·

&amp;

Dog,

Lost or Stolen:
740740 PRAY FOR Female Lhaso Apoo Sliver 111
THE USA @ 4 o'clock color, cut very short Lost
everyday until 7·4·07·4- 06/29/07 from Chatham
O'cloCk
Ave Reward given $500 lor
the return of her Please call
GIVEAWAY
446-2432 or 845-7280 or

2 dogs need

l•w

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

IWhite FemaleSmall Greglost
LOST DOG:

nu;:::l

conftCIItntlel. •Current r.tt Clrd tppiMII. • All rul Hiatt advtriiMmenta are IUbttcl to tl'll Ftdlf.l Fair Hauling Act of 1HI. • This ~
w.m.d lda!Mitlng EOE it.and.rdt. We wHl not knowingly .-ccept tny
In violation or tilt

Train1ng, near 3«1 Jwe, Gallipolis, Sun
NAA Cert.lnst. Bam. 07107 6/24 Answers to Katie,
MercEifville Fire Dept., -.rd Offered. (814)271·
(740)~514 . Email
5888

Conceal &amp; Carry

ol publlcllton
will

t

\\\11 1\1 1\1::-,1...,

t

POUCIES: Ohio V.lley Pub&amp;llhlng NMIY.. thl right to edl, ~or canot1 any 1d lit any time. !n'or1 mullt be repotW on h
TrlbuM-Sentlnti-R"StleWI' wfll bl rnponllfbll tor no morw then the coat at the ap~~ce occuptecl br 1M errOf tnd oniJ Itt. ftnt ln...-tlon.
I no1
tnV kiN Of uptnH tMl rMUitt from thl pubiiCIIIOI'I Of omftlton Olin adVII'IIHmMt. Cortectbl wttl bl madt In 1M tlrtt lfYtlllbtl .clition. • 80x

• StMt Your Ad. With A Keyword • Indude Compt.t.
DeKriptlon • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbrevi.Uon•
• Include Pllone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ada Should ltun 7 Davs

Suc:ceafuiAds

NEA, Inc.

www.comios.com

Mason County EMS Is
sccsptmg applications for
Medics and EMT's for more
Information cal! 675-6134

Must be able to take down.
Call448·7124
S
_,-~-~--, ~m:-----., ll'll!"_ _ _ _ _., - - - - - - vertlaementa ar
Kittenstogoodhome.
2F's,
~~~
YARDSAI..&amp; 11110 U"""nlll._~ 11116 u ..... w· . . un:on.
OverbrookCenteriSCurrenl·
ub)lcllolho Foctn
~ black and white, 1 long __
•
PoMEJtoylrtfmDLE
our n.-... .,.,
III!.U"
I'U'IIIlV
ly accepting applications for
olr Houolng Act o
h811ed 1100 740-445 2290
STATE TESJED Nurs1ng
ca '
2Fam1ly Yard Sale· Fri ·Sat
Assistants. Full Time and
968.
Netherland Dwart Rabbit to 9-4 01n1ng table, washer. Huge mov1ng sale Frl ,7·6
c... Coordinator
Job Title Towboat Diesel Part T1me positions avail·
good home. Bu~. very freezer. 1pr ant1que tables, one day only. ~met~lnQ f?r
f!:llblAD
Mechanic, m1n1mum 40 able. Interested applicants
This
nowopape
friendly. 74().794·0425
t~ble w/4 chairs:, chil~s 1 everyone. Don I m1ss th•s Family court is seeking hours a week, Monday can p1ck up an application or
cceptt only .,..
IIIB~~----"1 p1ece round plast1ctable and one 2 m1 S of TPia1ns on applicants fir a Family case through Fnday. wllllng to contact Hollie Bumgarner,
ntoct .... meelln
Lorr AND
seats, sand box, bicycles, A1 7=The Grates
CoordinatorpositiOfl. Duties wo~ overtime. some light LPN Staff Development
OE lllndlrds.
1 roll
coordmator .,74
~ 0 992
Call today for more
0 Down even With less than
Ioys, cha.In I'Ink 1encng,
FOUND
nn. Include administering the electrical abilities, on call
· ..,_ _ _ _ _ __.1. of plastic .fencing, Inside July 6 and 7 from 8.vv- case management system twice a month e)(penence 6472M·Faa-5p 81333Page mformalion about startll'lg pertect credit IS available on
door wtrrame, old table saw, 4·00PM Clothes, kmck· pre-trail meetings With IRI: required E)(~llent benefit St.. Middleport, Oh EOE &amp; a
a new career w1th
this 3 bedroom, 1 bath
FOUND brown Lab, Haven many great buys. At 7follow knacks and more 4n94 gants. reviewing files before package, 401 K avallabkt, partiCipant of the Drug-Free
lntoCislon.
home. Corner lot, f11eplace
Hetghts area, Free to Good 141 f~ 7miles (go past ns) SR.124 (Antlqulty,Oh)
court, pre·mediation screen· paid hoNdays, company pen- workplace Program
1-ln-483-6247
mOdern k1tchen. JSCUZZItub
Home 304-882-2849 or 304· tum nght at Pleasant H•ll July 6&amp;7 tovs Kids &amp; adult ing, preparing orders, etc. sian. paid vacation, Blue - - - -- - ext.2301
Payment around $550 per
882·2244
thennCiltatFalrfleld·Church clothes. B~ld Knob Must be Willing to travel. Cross/Blue Shield Medical, Overbrook Center located ...,,...._____., month 740-367-7129
then 11ght on Dogwood 379· St•versvllle Ad off Bash an Must be diSCreet Sind profes- Vision 1nclud&amp;d, Dental plan, 0 333 Page St., Middleport, 1150
~
3 or 4 bedroom house tor
CLASSIFIED INDEX
9211
Road.At The McMillan
sional in appearance an Bonuses. Please contact Oh1o •s pleased to announce
INsrRucnoN
sale 1n New Haven The
4x4'• For Sale ....... ............... ........................ 725
- - - - - - - - conduct Requires a four· Mike Gray at Campbell we w1ll be holding anSTNA Lo.""'!_____rl· bathroom 1s newly remod·
3 lam•ly ~ale Thur, Fri, Sat Ml11lon Trip Fund Rei... year l:ollege degree In legal Transportation Co~ny at Class scheduled tor July
elecl. covered front porch.
Announc:emont ............................................ 030
Antlquea ....................................................... 530
9am-6pm Just West of Fri. 6th &amp; Sat. 7th. 9am .·? studies, social worlc, man· 304-675·4545
Hours w111 be Bam-4:30pm If Glllllpolls C.rHJ College backdeck, garatw:o,fenced 1n
Stone Harbor on St.RT.588. Everything
1 d In 1on1 1ng (Careers Close To Home) beck yard. new •-central heat
Apartmenlllar Rent ................................... 440
excellent agement or other re1evant
you are 1n1erose
Auction end Fteo Marlcet............................. 080
oond
,lots
of
kid'
s
clothes,
fields
Must
pass
an
NCIC
John
Sing
Ford
Uncoln
our
fri
e
ndly
and
dedicated Call Today' ?40·446·4367, and air, new crown mold 1ng
862 Harrisburg Ad, off SA
Auto Porto I ACCIIIOrlll .......................... 760
Mercury
staff, please slop by our
1·B00·2t4·0452
and baseboards, new dish
850, July 6th &amp; 7th, Desk, toys &amp; books, coats &amp; background check. Equal
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
shoes,Holllster Jeans &amp; Opportunity Employer. Needs three 1nd1viduels front . off1ce Mon·Fri., 9am· ~ ~l lr pollacareerooleQe ecm washer and oven Asking
PallO
FurnitUre,
Bath
ceb•·
Autoolor Sote..............................................710
teen age g1rl dothing, Repty by letter of interest that are Interested in a 5pm and hi\ out an app11ca· Accredited Member Accre&lt;tillnO well below recent appraisal
net, mens, womens &amp; kids. other
Bolli 1 Motora tor Sate ............................. 750
king size bedding,small and resume 10
Judge careeras an Automotive 11on. Full time and pan time Courd lor l!ldeperodenl Coii!!IJ95 of BOk. Call 304.882.37-n
Rain
or
Shine.
-" '
"'' to those a!1d Schools 127 48
Building SUppllea .............................. ..........550
kitchen . appliances some OeiOI'iS
J
Nibert, ConsuI!ant We are r-~VVt~.lng
positions availcAnne
lor more details
luslrtell and Bulldtnga ............................. 340
new
,DOLLSI
,Household
MasorJJackson
Fam1
l
~
for
individuals
that
are
out
qualified
individuals
com· ~..,,...._____....., _c__-'-'--'-"---'---Add1
son:
234
Honeysuckle
8UsiMII Opportunlty .............. ...................210
WANTEn
13bd
GALLIPOLIS
Dr Wed 7/4 ·Sat 7fl 9·? 3 ltems,carseat, dress-up .On Court, 200 6th Street, Point go1ng, !elf mot1vated and plehnQ 1he class. Applicants 1180
Buslrtell Training ....................................... 140
Rt.7,1 mi S.of Chester,pink Pleasant, WV 25550 No professional. We have one must be dependable (allen· .
To Do
Foreclosure! Buy tor
Sections
of Iron fence
Campen I Homeo ........................... 780
signs,lots of parking.
phone calls please.
of the best compensation 1ctance 1
s a must) team play$50.900! Only $404/mo.. 5%
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Fri &amp; Sal. Garage Sale,
plans in the industry and a ers with positive anltudes to A·OK·Corrals &amp; Barns dn, 20yrs @ 8%. For hst1ngs
Carda ot Thonks .......................................... 01 0
Bis1da Holiday Inn. TV, Car Multi Fam11y yard sale ~ Fruth Inc Is seeking an
package that has jom us 1n prov1d1ng outstaOO. Metal Roolmg, Shmgles. call 800·559·4109 xF254
Chlld/Etdarly Care ....................................... 180 seat, Table, Kids and Adult 7 , Fri - Sat ,6&amp;7 - assoclatetoWork in the benefits
health
Insuran
ce, 401K lng, quality care to our resi· Concrete
Remodeling,
Attention!
Etectrlcai/Relrlger811on ...............................B40 Clothes, a Ht11e of everything 2007.Harrisonville men'sstuf warehouse Ouallf1ed candl· retuemertt, diSability
and
hie
dents
If
you
have
any
ques·
Decks
Pole
Barns,
Equtpmentlar Rent .. ................................... 480
!,women's
sluff. cookie dates must have a valid drlv· Insurance If you wantlo t1ons contacl Hollie Garages Free est1mates CaH local company oHenng"NO
&amp;caviling ................................................... 830
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
Fridav &amp; Saturday. End of iars,bikes,misc
ers license, be able to l1fl et ears an excellent living and Bumgarner LPfll. Staff 304·633-1230
Farm Equlprnent.......................................... 61 0
588 at Rodney, Lots of Nice
least
80ibs
on
a regular better yourself, conlacl Pat Development Coordinator - - - - - - - grams tor you to buy your
Forma tor Ront............................................. 430
e mslead of ren11ng
Clothes, What nots, No
WANTED
basis, have a high school
Hilt or Brian Ross
@740·992·6472 Overbrook Lawn mow1ng Rates by the hom
Fenno lor Sole ............................................. 330
• 100% f1na ncmg
Tools
TO BUY
diploma
or
equivalent.
and
Center is an E 0 E and a JOb, not the hou r, Free • less than perlecl credit
For L -..................................................... 480
; .. . , .. _
be able to tolerate extreme
part1c1pant ol the Drug Free Est•mates Call Paul @ accepled
For Sate ........................................................585
Jlily 5th, 6th 7th, 9am-6pm Absolute Top Dollar. U.S. temperatures. H interested
........
.
.
.
WorKplace
Program
(304)675-2940
For Sale or 11-......................................... 590
5 11'2 m11e Nonh of Hetzer's Silver and Gold Coins, please mml your resume to - - - - - - - · Pavment could be the
FruHo &amp; Vegebtbln .....................................580
on Rt 160, Gas Cook Stove, Proofsets. Gokl R1ngs, Pre- Fruth Corporate Office. Attn John Sing Ford uncafn
sam
e as rent
Lawn-Care
Serv1ce,
M
ow1ng
POSTOFFICENOW
Fumlahld Rooma .............................. ..........450
Weedeater on Wheels, G~rls 1935 us Currency, Human
Mortgage
locators
&amp; Trimm1
ng
Call
(740)441·
ResourcesMercury
·
HIRING
General Haullng ....................... ............. .......850
nlro6 brand clothing, much Solitaire Diamonds- M.TS. Warehouse Position, RR1 Has a position openfor an
(740)367·0000
1333 or (740)645-0546
Glveowoy .............................................. ........040
Avg Pav $20mror
more
Coin ' Shop, 151 Second Box332,PointPieasant,WV lwlomolve •rechniC.ian wel
tul·Middleport home•
Happy Ado .......... ..........................................oso
$57Kannually
~i chele 's Daycare now Beaut1
looking
I
n
diV
I
d
ua
are
an
lo'
Hey 1 Clraln ..................................., .............640
July 6·7. 4family al Rodney Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446· 25550 No phone calls th 1h
, ded
Including FederalBenefitS accopt• ng ages 18 mOOths 3 B ~. 2BA full basement 1
Help Wanted.................................................110
:.PI'-ea_:.se'-1-:::==== knowledge
a as aBbout
WSn roun
Commun~ Center First one 2842
automoand OT Pa1d Tra1nmg
to 13 yrs Hours Mon·Wed· t /2 car garage With a room
Home tmprovemento .... .. .............................81 0
I '11'1( 1\ \II'\ I
this year. Ou•lts, toys, furni·
GOOD
PAYING
CAREER
t1ve repair. Ford Motor
Vacallons·FTIPT
Fn., 6am·6pm lues &amp; Thurs. above. ManyNEW features"
HornH lor Sote ................,........................... 310
lure, clolhmg
'- ll./\ 111 'OPPORTUNITY· Local 011 Company tra1ning w11be
1·866·542-1531
Sam
to
5pm, Must see lhis onel 740·416·
Houaeltald Goodo ........ ............................... 510
an
d
Gas
C
o
mpany
looking
prov
ded
and
on
go
ng
U
SWA
A
ullan
d/H
amsonvllle
area 1548
1
1
15
HouOHior Ront .......................................... 410
Spring CleaningA S~lle. 1110 u- nW•~ 11ofillposltlOnolland manor We offer a competitive com- Public Health Nurse PosiiiOn call (740)698·0214 ask lor r---~----.,
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
acrose ' from ddavlle
n..u.r ll.lu~
Land Agent m SE OH and pensatlon plan and our benM1chele
~
lnouronca ........................................... .......... 130
School,
Sat
only
g.?.
Western
EV Ideal candidate efil paclcage Includes health at the Mason Coooty Health --__:_:.._______
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
.hb
Department for RegiStered Profess 1onally
Clean.
vard Sale 818 lsi A·~ Rear 100 WORKERS NEEDED Is a se If starter Wit SSIC insurance, 401K retirement, Nurse 0 eadl1ne 1ora p p~ea, Llv-k...................................... ................630
1
Off •ce/ Housec leani ng .
Loll and Faund ...........................................060
on Fn7/6·Sat 7n !rom 9am Assemble (;rafts, wood computer krlowledge, strong disability Insurance and lila 11on extended 10 July 10 Reasonable
Rates,
·5pm
•ems.~o $480/wk Materials communication and negotla· msurance 11 youare tired of A ... 1
Lola I Acreoge ............................................ 350
~;;;..~-~-...., or
~"VP 1
catron and 10b descnp- Re1erences (304)675·2208 All re~l estate advertising
Mlacellaneouo............................ ..................170
Free
Information
lio
n
skills who IS Willing to working torsomeone that Is lion may be obla~ned at 216,
pr&lt;Nided
4
In lhl• newaptper Is
Mlacelllneouo MerchandiN.......................540
n. ...~~v~~..:~.... pkg 2&lt;6Hr 801-428-4649
travel Within the regton not working fo r youor want 5thStreet EOE
Wanlcd to 00 Gare gJVer. aub}tct
tothe Federa l
1
Mobile Home Ropalr....................................860
- . I"UI\'II!oKVafll'll1.JUI...r, • - - - - - - - Knowledge of legal desc np ·
to better yourself, contact
Wil care lor elderly 1n their .Fair Houaing
of 1968
MObile Homeo for Rent ............................... 420
A 011 &amp; Gas Broker lion, pnor sales experience, Se!VIce ManagerJ1m
R&amp;J Truck1ng Leadn"lg The home, 16 yrs exp, WhiCh mlkHAct
It Illegal to
Mobile HomH for Sale ..... .................... .. .. ... 320
3
Fam•lv
yard Com'pany 1s took1ng for an lamiharity wilh the reg1on
ThOmas
Way R&amp;J Truckmg now References
Ava•lable.
edwertlae " any
Money to Laan ... :......................................... 220
sale Fn &amp;Sat ,Julv6&amp;7 9·00 ad'mn asst for the Gallipolis and local courthouse are a
JiJi!lf!JII
Hmng at our New Haven. {740)388-9783 or (740)591- prtferanoe. limitation or
Motorcycteo I 4 Wheelers ..................... ..... 740
AM.
_ 55S
2nd office Candidates should be plus tr you are nterested lrl '
WV T
ermmal For Reg•onal. 9034 . _
dlacrlmln~~tlon based on
Musical fnotrumento .., .......... ....................:.570
Ave ,Middleport. Household self starters and posses finding out more aboullhls
""' .....,. ""''"~·Havls·Dump D1v. 1 year
race, cotor. religion, aex
II'\ \ '\t I \1
Personala ........................ .............................oos
nems,dothes,baby furniture. good organizational skills, rewarding career. please
,.,_ l · ····· . ... ,...
OTA verifiable e)(p Call t·
familial •latu s o r;, n•tlonat
Pets tor Sole .................. .............................. 560
origin,or an~ Intention to
- - - - - - - - proi1C1ent1n Word, Exceland oonlacl Dan Stevenson 0 - - -- - - - - 800·462·9365 eSk for Kent ;;;;;;::::::=;
10
7,0-" 6·6800 or ra res ume
Plu.mblng &amp; Healtng.................................... 820
maka an~ SU&lt;:h
Bust~~
4·6
yard
salesO
utlOok
Ki\owledge
of
land
PrvfeNional Sarvlcn ........................... .. .... 230
prefertnce, limitation or
Twp.Rd 404f8ahr Ad 3 M1.N descriptions and title exp. is to 740-446-6802
Salas
OPPolrruNrn'
Radio, TV I CB Repolr ......................... ...... 180
disc rimination "
ol Chesle• off AI 7. July 7th. a plus Must have a hogh
IRS JOBS
Rill Elllta Wlnled ....... .............................. 380
Cloth•ng.avon,periennlais-? diploma and some college
,
Anoutstanding opportu·
Th \a newspeper will not
Schools 111111rucllon..................................... 150
expenence
preferred $18.46·$326_0fnr... now hir·
mty forthe r~ght person
knowlngty .ccept
- , Plant&amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
Prefer some sales expo5 fam1ty garage sale, July Please caM Andrea Healy at 1ng. Paid Tratnmg IS prov1d·
adverllMments for rut
SHuotlono Wontad ....................................... 120
6th, 341 Rutland St , 740-44 6-6 800 or fax10 740. ad For appiiCahon and tree licensed Practical Nurses
rlence. but W111 consider
e1tate which lain
Space lor Rent ............................................. ol60
M1ddleport,
fu rmtu re, 446.6802
government 101&gt; mfo call Pleasant Valley NurSing and , possibility of training
vlol1tl00
of the law Our
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
clothes &amp; m1sc
- - - - - Amencan Assoc. of Labor 1· Rehabllltahon 1s currently ideal card,date Ofler
readers •rt hereby
SUV'IIor Sole...................... ........................ 720
~------ An Excelenl way to earn 913·599-8244, 24/hrs. emp. accepting applications for
day work W94lk
jnlormed that all
Trucka lor Site ............................................ 715
7·4&amp;5.SA248 Chester.2 money The New AllOn. '
serv
full·lime and per-d1em Excel\ent ,~..':~~pl&lt;g, ;_,·~hogh
ci'Mtllnga lldvertlted In
Upholllery ..................... ............................. 870
sloryofyellow
house on girls
left Gall Manlyn 304·882-2645 Need a lolling, responsible nLePnce
N'S. lpo•englerlreedrmM
caure ehxapev •
• thll MWSPIPif are
Vena For Sale...............................................7~0
top
hiii.Scrubs.lnfant
Carolyn~ontact
Mvrdock
51
0
ava.I1M* on an eqUII I
Wonted to Buy ............:\............................... 090
clothes, boys 6·8,pack &amp; AVQNIAll Areas! To Buy or adult to babySIIIn my home wv license 12 hour sh1f1s
Ofhce Adm1n
opportunity blilft.
Wsntld to lluy· Farm ~upplleo .............. .... 620
play,swngs,walker,toys
Sell Sh1rley Spears. 304- •n the Racine area during Please contact Angl€ Mon·Fn (740}446·3093
Wonted To 00 ..................................... ......... 180
675-1429
the 2~7 · 2008 schoOl year. Cleland. D1rector of Nursmg
or ema1tresume to
.
.ill For sale or rent 3BR2story
Wanted to Ront ............................... ............. 470
Friday, July 6, 8 til?. Rt.7. 2 - - - -- -- - part-tlm.e or lull lime, must I 304-675·5250 AAIEOE
f760@clayton.net
.
.~ hOuse Sale $68500 Rent
Yard Sate- Golllpollo ....................................072
miles north o1Chester End Help wanted at Darst Adutl have references, Please -.a,=.:..::..:=====-: to schedule an 1nterv1BW
$650 + $500fdep CaM 441·
Yord Sate-Pomeroy/Middlo .........................074
l abies,~~'ing SIZe bed, mc· Group H
ome, some liftmg, send to POBox 75, Rac1ne. TOMATO Ptckers Needed
" ol chickens
NoWalk-Ins Please
8953
Yard Salo-PI. Pteosant .. .. ........... ................. 076
nacs. lots
7·5 shift, 74U·992·5023
Oh 45771
247·3901 or 247·2165.
lb~~,;,;,.=:;...!l

r

Ir4

I

I

r

I

__
...·ran
~

Olympics
fromPageBI
Putin.
He had left Guatemala by
the time the result was
announced but called IOC
president Jacques Rogge
from his plane when he
heard the news. Putin
expressed his "deep gratitude" and confirmed Russia
will complete all the
Olympic projer;:ts "in due
time and budget," Deputy
Prime Minister Alexander
Zhukov said.
The Putin magic matched
Blair's
influence
on
London's victory in the race
for the 2012 Summer
Olympics. Blair was instru·
mental in wooing IOC
members in Singapore in
2005, helping London
defeat Paris, Madrid, New
York and Moscow. Putin
did not travel to Singapore
for that bid, which lost in
the first round.
" If Putin is net here, I
think it would be different
results," said IOC executive

•

'

~

seashore you can enjoy a
fine spring day, •but up in the
mountains, it's winter .. . a
real snow is guaranteed."
Although most venues
must be newly built, Putin
assured: "We guarantee the
Olympic cluster in Sochi
will be completed on time."
" No traffic 'jam s, I
promise.'' he said with a
smile.
. Noting
that athletes
would have a short walk to
their venues, Putin said,
"Five minutes' walking dis·
lance, not bad ."
Ru ssia, an Olympic
power which has won 293
Winte r Games meaals, has
never hosted the Winter
Games. That ":as a strong
point in Sochi 's favor with
the IOC , which likes to
spread the Olympics to new
host countnes. Moscow
hosted the 1980 Summer
Games, which were hit by
the U.S.-led boycott following the Soviet invasion of
P.,fghanistan.
The Soch1 bid won out
over the appeals of its rivals
Sal zburg. presenting
itself as a safe, no-risk win·
ter sports mecca at the heart

~

I

'r"
Ti

...

®

1o1

I

'"

..

,_ .

r

"'"''

_ ____________ ___________
__;._.

�Page 82 • The paily Sentinel

MLB

.

. www.mydailysentinel.com

BY HOWARD FENDRICH

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Amoricon~

Eall Dlvlllan

GB

Pet

B~

52 31

627-

Toron10

41 43

.488 11 }.

New YorW:
39
Baltimore
37
Tampa Bay 33
COntrol

42

4a1 12

46

.446 15

50

.396

19

Dlvlolon

WL

PctGB

Cleveland

51 33

.607 -

Detroit
M1nnesota

48 34
43 4()

585 2
518 7',

CIIIC&amp;go
Kansas City

36 45
36 49

.424 15'1,

W L

51

Pet

Los Angeles

33
46 35
43 41
36 48

607 .568 3'it

.444 13~

-Divtok&gt;n

seame
Oakland

Texas

GB

.512 8

429 15

Wedneld8V''• Games
Boston 7, Tan"(&gt;ll Bay 5
Mimesota 6, N.Y Yankees 2
Toronto 10, Oakland 3
Detroit s. Clewland 4
BattifOOfe 9, Chicago White Sox 6

Seattte 4, Kansas City 0
TeM&amp; 4, L.A. Angels 2
·

11\unday's Gamoo

Minnesota (Slowey

3-0l

Yankees (lgawa 2·2). 1·05 pm

at N.Y.

Cleweland (Sabathla 12-2) at Oetroil

(Verlander 9·3), 105 pm

Tampa Ba~ (Howell 1-2) at Bo&amp;ton
( - H 11·2), 7.05 p.m.
Baltimore (Burres 4-2) at Chicago
White Sox (Danks 4-6), 8.11 p.m.
LA AngelS (ESCObar 9-3) at Texas
(Tejeda 5-7). 8 35 p.m
Seattle (Bat1sta 8..S) at Oakland

(Geud1n 7-3), 10.05 p m.

Frktay'a GlmH
Minnesota at ChicagoJNhfte 8&lt;»1, 2.05

p.m.• 1st game
Bo810n at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
L.A. Angela at N.Y
.Yankees, 7.05 pm
Cklveland at Toronto, 7·07 p.m
Tampa Bay at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.

ChiCago White SOx. 8 11
p.m , 2nd game
Balt1more at Texas, 8 35 pm
Seattle at OaktanCI, 10 05 p.m
Minnesota at

New Y
ork
Atlanta

Natianatl.Ngue
Ell! Division
WL PCIGB

Phlladelptua

46 36
43 41

561 512 4

-63

506 -6'1.

Florida

45
34 50

464 8
405 13
central Dlvlalan
WL PctGB
-'8 36
571 Mitwalikee
Chk;ago
42 41 506 5l.
38 43
469 8'~r
St LOUIS
Plllsburgh
37 47 .440 11
37 48 435 Il k
Houston
Clnc1nnat1
32 52 381 16
Weat Dlvlalon
WL PCIGB
San Diego 47 35 573 Los Angeles 48 36 571 Ar1zona
47 39 547 2
Colorado
41 43 488 7
San Francisco 36 46 439 11
Washington

39

42

Thursday, July 5, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Williams ~ters at Wimbledon: VentJs rises, Serena falls

PRo BASEBALL
WL

11nirsday, July 5 , 2007

WIMBLEDON , England .
- Venus Williams giggled
and hopped on her toes
Wednesday, looking more
like a kid who just won her
first match than a veteran
who just beat Maria
Sharapova in a showdown of
Grand Slam champions at
Wimbl~on ' s Centre Court.
Up in the players' guest
father
box,
Williams'
jumped for joy, too, thrusting his arms in the air
repeatedly.
Two hours later, the set·
ting and the family were the
same, yet the mood was fm:
more subdued. Younger sister Serena shuffled off to the
locker room, having lost to
APphoto
No. I Justine Henin in the Justine Hen in reacts 'as she wins a point on her way to
'JUarterfinals at a second defeating Serena Williams, in their Women 's Singles match
consecutive major.
on the Centre Court at Wimbledon Wednesday.
What could have been
another wonderful day for Serena sajd Wednesday: nap during a rain delay.
"After that," Bartoli said,
the Williams clan at the All "She played a very highEngland Club was only half quality game·. I thought she "I was feeling much better."
Henin acknowledged she
so:
After
three-time played probably soll)e of h~r
best
tennis."
still
has "a lot of work to
Wimbledon champion Venus
Adventurous .tennis, as do," and Serena would
overwhelmed Sharapova 61, 6-3, two-time Wimbledon well, especially late. Trailing ·agree. Asked whether she
champion Serena couldn't 15-30 while serving in the thought she lost to the evenovercome her own l;'oor final game, Henin won a 10- tual champion, Serena said:
heallh or a detenmned stroke rally with a drop shot. "The eventual Wimbledon
Henin in a 6-4, 3-6, 6-3 She serve-and-volleyed on champion I saw playing in
her first match point, though the fourth round today, deft·
defeat.
that
didn't work. It ended nitely."
"I wasn 't even sure if I
That, of course, would be
was going to go out and when Serena sent a backhand
long.
Venus,
who was pretty close
play," said Serena, who
Despite acknowledging to flawless against 2004
played with tape on her left
calf and left thumb, both that she battled nerves late, champion Sharapova.
She averaged 115 mph on
injured in her dramatic Henin moved two victories
away
from
her
first
first
serves and reached 126
fourth-round
victory
Monday. "l'f I'd have been Wimbled'n title, which mph. She won . 33 of 42
healthy, I think I would have would complete a career points' on her serve and only
Grand Slam .
once was taken to deuce.
won, 100 percent."
Henin next meets No. 18 She compiled a 9-3 advanManaging to be slightly
more gracious than after los· Marion Bartoli, who reached tage on points that lasted at
ing to Henin at the French her first Grand Slam semifi- least I 0 strokes.
"You've got to give' her
Open - "All she had to do nal by coming back to beat
was show up," was the post- No. 31 Michaella Krajicek credit," the second-seeded
match assessment then · 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 l)fter taking a Sharapova said. "Her aver·

age first serve was 115, and
somemendon' tdothat."
They played all of three
points Tuesday at 800-seat
Court 3 before the founh·
round match was suspepded
because of rain. They
resumed at 13,000-plus
Centre Court on Wednesday,
then had to deal with a rain
delay of nearly two hours
that came in the middle of an
epic game at 1-1 in the second set.
Sharapova was serving,
and the game featured 13
deuces and seven break
points, filled with h!ghp1tched grunts and h1ghpo~ered groundstrokes. The
shrieks, so loud at bot~ ends
of the court, drew smckers
from spectators.
Eventually,
Sharapo ~a
held agam for a 3·2 l~ad m
the set, but she wouldn t wm
another game.
Even thoujlh there were
shower~ on e~ght of the tournament ~ mne days, all
seven smg}es matches on
Wednesdays sc~edu~e were
completed, making 1\ more
hkely that the. men s and
women's titles will be decided on time.
Second -see de d
Ra fael
Nadal finally wrapped up a
victory over No. 28 Robin
Soderling in a third-round
match that was supposed to
start Saturday. No. 4 Novak
Djokovic also reached the
fourth round, while No. 3
Andy Roddick and No. 12
Richard Gasquet set up a
quarterfinal meeting.
For Venus, it was a masterful performance against a
tough competitor. Give!) that
Venus owns five major titles,
that shouldn't be surprising
at all. Given that she was
two points' from defeat
against 59th-ranked Alia
Kudryavtseva in the first

round and was down 5·3 in
the final set against .?1 stranked Ak.iku Mori gami in
the third; it was surprising.
"Well, th at happens.
That's tennis. That's life.':
said Venus, who meets No. 5
' Svetlana Kuznetsova in the
quarterfinals. "What mattered is that I got throujlh it.
It built character:·
She has plenty of that
nowadays, at 27 and a pro
since 1994. Injuries have
kept her off court in recent
years, a reason she's ranked
3 1st and faced Sharapova so
early.
"In my whole life, I' ve
been a' big-match player,"
Venus said. " II wasn't the
ideal draw for her."
The Will iqms' father,
Richard, is rarely shy about
expressing an opinion and
had plenty to offer after
watching Venus win.
"I think she can be a
champion until she's 34, 1
really do," he said. "I'll tell
you something else I
believe: 1 don ' t think you 've
seen the best of Venus.''
A h
h
ht
he
not er
t ou~
shared: He d1dn t wa~t
Serena to play Henm
b
fh . . .
e:;ause 0 er IDJ_uncs. .
. If ~.erena was m h~r ~ght
mmd, R1chard Wtlhams
said, ."she'd ~o home."
A httle wh1le later, she was
headed that way. Done m
smgles, she Withdrew from
doubles, wh~re the Sisters
'Yere ~ompetmg for the first
ume smce 2003.
Henin 's coach , Carlos
Rodriguez, said it was tough
for the Belgian to figure out
how to approach a match
against an opponent whose
fitness was in question.
"I wasn't really focu sed on
what did happen on the other
side of the net," Henin said.

tlerlbune- Sentinel - l\e lster
CLASSIFIED
Gallla

In One Week·With Us
classified@~~~!l~ribune. com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Register
(304) 675-1333
Now you can have borders and graphics
-..,...
added to your classlfted ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large ,_,

M9nday thru Friday

:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOW I0 WRUE Aft A0
Should Include These Jtems
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*
OhloVIIIey
Publilhlng miMI

1111 rtslhliD ldlt,
fljocl or ..,...t ony
Ill atony-.
Errors

Mull

Rooc&gt;rtoct on 1111

ft

,

ANNouNa!MtNrs

~r= t

.,.

advwtlalng

Slarl!eyOinbox com

lllbuno-Sonltnot

PRAY

..,l·.·o-Hru&gt;-·W·ANnll--.,111"0 Hru&gt;WANnll

AN's and LPN's.
Applications must possess a
current license In the S1ate
of Oh1o. Potential applicants
should contact Diana
Harless. OON al (740)446·
7150 EOE

"

A BATH

cANB!ii A

-

I
· - - - - - · 794-1950

Truck Driver wfth Class

wI;;I).FtltJ

INI\-\t
~ANtiS

home,

]\

OF

Cl\1~1:&gt;.

Pyrenees, 1· 9ma c&gt;d, 1·

Squash

Wednnday'a Gamn

away from the grounds
crew while it covered the
field.
With no baseball to worry
about, Bopds got to spend
some time with an old pal.
As part of a team function, the Reds and their fam·
ilies played on the field
before the game . Bonds
went out in his gray uniform
pants and a black Giants Tshirt and sought out Griffey.
The two have felt a kin·
ship
throughout
their
careers. Both had famous
fathers who took them into
clubhouses when they co11ld
barely walk. Bonds played
mentor to Griffey when
Junior was just gettmg start·
ed on his career.
The bond was evident.
Bonds shared a belly
laugh with Griffey and his

wife, and playfully hoisted
Juninr.'s 5-year~old son in
his ~~- It was a special
moment"· for th~: twO OUt·
fielders,~ who , will have
another one next week in
San Francisco, when they
start side-by-side in the AllStar game.
Once they got done
socializing, one of them got
down to business.
After Bonds hit a two-run
homer in the series opener
on Friday night, he declared
that he was up. 1·0 in their
head·to-liead c~mpetition.
A day later, Griffey matched
his RBis with a less-dramatic swing - a two-run single
that put the Reds up 3-0 in
the third.
Griffey remained at 585
career homers, one behind
Frank Robinson for sixth on

the career list.
Notes: The Giants put
left-handed
reliever
Jonathan Sanchez on the
15-day DL with strained
muscles in his side.
Sanchez felt sqre when he
warmed up Saturday and
hadn 't pitched since. RHP
Scott Atchison was called
up fro'm Triple-A Fresno to
take his place. ... Aurilia
made his first start since he
returned from a stint on the
DL with a sore neck .. .. SS
Omar Vizquel committed
his fifth error of the season.
... The Reds have given up
five grand slams this sea-son . ... The Reds haven't
won a series since they took
two
of
thre e
from
Cleveland · at
Great
American Ball Park from
June 8- 10.

Kobayashi for six years. so
it's about time · it came
home," said Chestnut, hold·
ing an American flas ·in his
anns. "I knew going mto this
contest that Kobayashi was
going to give 100 percent."

slicing liner into the leftfield corner, but Thames
made a diving catch.
Ryan Garko then hit a
from Page 81
ball to deep right-center
that would have easily
Guillen in the first and lnge scored Hafner, but the ball
in the second. Casey Brake bounced over the II 1/2made it 2-1 with a run-scor- foot fence for a fluke
ing groundout in the third, ground-rule double. Hafner
but the lpdians saw a poten· was stopped at third , and
tial rally snuffed out in the . after a fist-pump of relief,
next inning by great defense Rogers letired Franklin
and bad luck.
Gutierrez to end the inning.
Travis Hafner walked
Detroit took advantage,
with one out and Jason scoring three runs in the
Michaels followed with a bottom of the fourth to go

up 5-1.
With one out and runners
on the corners, lnge bunted
the ball to the right side for
a
perfectly
executed
squeeze.
Granderson
followed
with an RBI double to
make it 4-1 , and he scored
when Gu't ierrez couldn't
come up with a diving
catch on Polanco 's liner
down the right-field line.
Cleveland got a run back
in the fifth on Victor
Martinez's RBI double, but
Guillen stopped another

run with a backhanded stop
of Hafner's smash up the
middle . The Indian s got
into the defensive act in the
bottom of the inning when
Jhonny' Peralta dove to turn
Ivan Rodriguez's hard
grounder into a 6-4-3·double play.
Hafner made it 5-4 with a
two-run homer off Macay
McBride in the seventh, but
Guillen and Rodri gue z hit
back-to-back tripl es to
restore the two-run advantage in the bottom of the
mnmg.

board
member Sergei
Bubka, a Ukrainian won a
pole vault gold medal for
the Soviet Union at the
1988 Seoul Olympics. "He
did a fantastic presentation
- his speeches, his communication with people
these last few days. They
were very impressed about
his personality, his intelli"
gence. I think this final
touch made the difference."
U.S. member Jim Easton
also said' Putin might have
swung the decisive votes including by making his
presentation in English,
breaking with his practice
of speaking in Russian.
"I think people were sur·
prise~; I was surprised he
came out and spoke in
English," Easton said. "It's
those little things that some·
times switch some people
who are on the line over.
This reminds me. of the
Tony Blair scenario."
Rogge also spoke of the
importance of Putin 's backing.
"This is very reassuring
for
the
International
Olympic Committee," he
said. "It guarantees us the

support of the public
authorities of the country....
Today a successful bid is a
b1d that entail s the whole
country and population."
Sochi bid chief Dmitry
Che rny shenko called the
vtctory a "key TJIOment in
Russian history."
" You have decided to play
a maj or role in Ru ss1a's
future. The games will help
Ru ssia 's transitiOn as a
young democracy," h~ said.
Zhukuv said the decision
was a reward fur th e
"largest winter country in
the world," where winter
spons is "part uf our soul
and heritage.''
·
"The whole of Russia will
be celebl'atmg these days,"
he said . "We understand lots
of (work) is waiting for us
once more."
Putin 's government has
pledged $1 2 billion to
develop Sochi into a worldclass winter sports complex
linking the. palm- hned
Blac k Sea coast - the socalled "Russian Rivi era" to th e. soarin g Caucas us
mountams nearby.
Putin praised Sochi 's nat·
ural settmg, saying, "On the

the
22nd
of Europe with world-class announc1ng
venues already in place; and Olympic Winter Games in
Pyeonjlchang, offering the 2014 are awarded to the city
potential for peace and rec· of Sochi."
onciliation on the divided
Many of the winning del Korean peninsula and pro· egation headed across the
moting winter sports in street to Ru ss ia House,
Asia.
where they waved the
It's the second time in a Ru ssian fla g, pl ayed the
row that Py~ongchang has national anthem and celelost by a h:l'ldful of votes brated on a specially conafter leading in the first structed ice rink.
round . The Koreans lost 56In Sochi, cheers erupted
53 to Vancou ver, Bntish from the crowd of more
Columbia, for th e 20 I 0 than 15,000 that had gathOlympics four years ago.
ered for a pop conce rt and
This time, ninety-seven the announ cement m a mam
IOC members were eli gible squ are.
•
to vote m the first round,
"We did it all toi!bther. We
wiih 95 casting valid bal· wo n,"
the l:oncert 's
lots Members from bidding 'announcer said fro m the
countnes are ineligible to stage as fi reworks !las hed
vote as long as their cities
remain in contention. With and boomed in the sky.
Salzbur!l out, I 00 delegates · People hu g~ed and waved
were ehgible ·in the second their hands m the air. Some
round, with 98 casting valid appeared to ha ve tears in
their eyes.
votes.
''It is great. I've never
The Russian delegation
erupted in cheers, j umped to been so happy in my li fe,"
thetr feet and hugged each said Marina Matveyeva, 23,
other after Rogge opened a who works in a bank. "II
sealed envelope and read mean s that Ru ss ia has
the
words :
"The re ache.d the level of Europe,
Intern ational
Olympic and we can be proud of our
Committee has the honor of country.' ,

fromPageBl

Washington 6, Chtcago Cubs 0
San Francisco 9, Cincinnati 5
Philadelphia 8, Houston 3
Pittsburgh 5, Milwaukee 3
St lOUIS5, Arizona 4
Thundoy'o Gomn

Milwaukee (Sheets 10.3) at P1ttsburgh
{Gorzelannv 8-4), 12 35 p m.
Florida (Kim 3-4) at San Diego (Peavy
9·2), 3·35 pm
Chicago Cubs (Marshall 4·3) at
Washington (Bergmann 1-5), 7 05 pm
San Francisco (Morris 7-4) at
Cincinnati (Arroyo 2·9), 7 10 p m.
Arizona (Dav1s 5-9) at St. louis
(Wainwright 6·7), 7:15p.m
NY Mets (Ma1ne 9·4) at Houston
(Jennings 1·3). 805 p.m.
Atlanta (THudson 8-5) at l ADodgers
(Penny IQ-1 ). 10:10 p.m.
Frlday'a Gamn
ChicagoCubs at Pittsburgh, 7·05 p m
Milwaukee at Washmgton. 7:05 p.m
Arizona at Clnc1nnat1, 7 10 p m
N.Y. Mets at Houston. 8 05 p.m.
San Francisco at St Louis, 8:10p.m.
Philadelphia at ColorQdo, 9 05 pm
Atlanta at San Diego, 10:05 pm
Florida at l A Dodgers, 1o 40 pm

only three runs in his last 32
innings on the mound .
The Reds trailed 3-1
when Aurilia beat out an
infield single to .load the
bases and bring Lewis to the
plate.
"I felt something was
going to happen," said Cain,
who gave up four runs in 5
2-3 innings. "It was weird. I
just had a feeling, after
Aurilia got that infield hit, ·
like things were going to go
our way."
Ray Durham, Aurilia and
Mark Sweeney hit solo
homers for the Giants, who
sent the Reds to their first

Dog

Japan's long dominance of
the contest. The only previ·
ous non-Japanese winner
since 1996 was New:Jersey's
fromPageBl
Steve Keiner in 1999. Third
downed 60 hot dogs with 60 - place this y~ar went . to
seconds to go when another .Amencan, Patnck
Chestnut _ the veins on his Bertolett1 of Ch1cago, w1th
forehead extended - put
away the ~nal franks to end
Kobayashi s re1gn.
Kobayasht, through a
translator, prom1:~ed • to
return fo~ the 2008"'event.
The VIctory by the San
Jose, Calif., resident ended

loss in two · games under
interim manager · Pete
Mackanin. Sweeney's shot
in the ninth was his 15th
pinch-hit homer, tying Dave
Hansen for seventh on the
career list.
Mackanin got to experience a meltdown by a pllching staff that was one of the
reasons manager Jerry
Narron got fired on Sunday.
"You see potential, you
see good arm strength,"
Mackanin said. "You see
guys who are on the fence,
and you're waiting for
somebody to fall on the
right side, and they keep
falling on the wrong side."
A fast-moving storm
delayed the game for 51
minutes in the middle of the
eighth inning. Gusting wind
repeatedly blew the tarp

4~This title's been held by

Indians

2yrs l&gt;d. (740)245·5984,
(7401845·3083.
2 Kittens~ (M) 6wks, blk
(F)
IOWks, - FREE
SPAY/NEUTER call 304·
895-8854 MUST GO ASAP lost· red &amp;While beagle in
4 kittens 2· male, 2-lemale Morn1ng Star area, Reward,
to good home 304-675~ caH (740)94lf·2544
7906

obtain a loan. BEWARE

A

Hiring Bonusl

make calls you r~AL
believe in for many
Conservative Political M&amp;J Cleaning Service
Organizations
Business and Reslden!JB\,
licensed
In Ohio and W\1.
Plua we offer:
Cell 304·444-4&lt;i94
• Full-lime potltlon1
40 hrolwk
TURNED DOWN ON
• Up to $8.50/hr.+ -kly SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
bonus potenlll,l
No Fee Unless We Wml
• $300 Hiring Bonus
1-888·582-3345
• Complltt benefits
Iii \1 I "' ( \ \!
package
• Peld vecetloWholldaya
HOMI'l&gt;
• Fnondly, ptOieOIIOINII
I'ORSME
office envkonment
You could

r

YARD SALE
Dish Network Satellite Dish. ~::~~:;;==~

r

BOrrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Division ol
Fmandai Institution's
Of1ice of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or

of requests for any large
advance payments of
~!e~~YH~~~~ ~a:::~ tees or Insurance Call the
responsible, mature. Send Of11ce at Consumer
resume to Driver Resume, Affairs toll free at t-866PO Box 655 GallipoliS Oh 278-0003 to learn 11 the
45631
mortgage broke r or
lender IS properly
WI oHer Great
licensed (ThiS IS 8 publiC
Employment
serv1ce announcement
from the Oh1o Valley
Opportunlllos
Publishing Companv)
Plus 1$3110

DI\IIIC.IO~~ ~

both 112 Aust &amp; 112 Great

!:~~

:::::::::::
••NOTI£F.••

cations for

r

good

Ir

Scenic H1
ils Nursing Center
Is currently acceptmg appli·

&amp;

Dog,

Lost or Stolen:
740740 PRAY FOR Female Lhaso Apoo Sliver 111
THE USA @ 4 o'clock color, cut very short Lost
everyday until 7·4·07·4- 06/29/07 from Chatham
O'cloCk
Ave Reward given $500 lor
the return of her Please call
GIVEAWAY
446-2432 or 845-7280 or

2 dogs need

l•w

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

IWhite FemaleSmall Greglost
LOST DOG:

nu;:::l

conftCIItntlel. •Current r.tt Clrd tppiMII. • All rul Hiatt advtriiMmenta are IUbttcl to tl'll Ftdlf.l Fair Hauling Act of 1HI. • This ~
w.m.d lda!Mitlng EOE it.and.rdt. We wHl not knowingly .-ccept tny
In violation or tilt

Train1ng, near 3«1 Jwe, Gallipolis, Sun
NAA Cert.lnst. Bam. 07107 6/24 Answers to Katie,
MercEifville Fire Dept., -.rd Offered. (814)271·
(740)~514 . Email
5888

Conceal &amp; Carry

ol publlcllton
will

t

\\\11 1\1 1\1::-,1...,

t

POUCIES: Ohio V.lley Pub&amp;llhlng NMIY.. thl right to edl, ~or canot1 any 1d lit any time. !n'or1 mullt be repotW on h
TrlbuM-Sentlnti-R"StleWI' wfll bl rnponllfbll tor no morw then the coat at the ap~~ce occuptecl br 1M errOf tnd oniJ Itt. ftnt ln...-tlon.
I no1
tnV kiN Of uptnH tMl rMUitt from thl pubiiCIIIOI'I Of omftlton Olin adVII'IIHmMt. Cortectbl wttl bl madt In 1M tlrtt lfYtlllbtl .clition. • 80x

• StMt Your Ad. With A Keyword • Indude Compt.t.
DeKriptlon • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbrevi.Uon•
• Include Pllone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ada Should ltun 7 Davs

Suc:ceafuiAds

NEA, Inc.

www.comios.com

Mason County EMS Is
sccsptmg applications for
Medics and EMT's for more
Information cal! 675-6134

Must be able to take down.
Call448·7124
S
_,-~-~--, ~m:-----., ll'll!"_ _ _ _ _., - - - - - - vertlaementa ar
Kittenstogoodhome.
2F's,
~~~
YARDSAI..&amp; 11110 U"""nlll._~ 11116 u ..... w· . . un:on.
OverbrookCenteriSCurrenl·
ub)lcllolho Foctn
~ black and white, 1 long __
•
PoMEJtoylrtfmDLE
our n.-... .,.,
III!.U"
I'U'IIIlV
ly accepting applications for
olr Houolng Act o
h811ed 1100 740-445 2290
STATE TESJED Nurs1ng
ca '
2Fam1ly Yard Sale· Fri ·Sat
Assistants. Full Time and
968.
Netherland Dwart Rabbit to 9-4 01n1ng table, washer. Huge mov1ng sale Frl ,7·6
c... Coordinator
Job Title Towboat Diesel Part T1me positions avail·
good home. Bu~. very freezer. 1pr ant1que tables, one day only. ~met~lnQ f?r
f!:llblAD
Mechanic, m1n1mum 40 able. Interested applicants
This
nowopape
friendly. 74().794·0425
t~ble w/4 chairs:, chil~s 1 everyone. Don I m1ss th•s Family court is seeking hours a week, Monday can p1ck up an application or
cceptt only .,..
IIIB~~----"1 p1ece round plast1ctable and one 2 m1 S of TPia1ns on applicants fir a Family case through Fnday. wllllng to contact Hollie Bumgarner,
ntoct .... meelln
Lorr AND
seats, sand box, bicycles, A1 7=The Grates
CoordinatorpositiOfl. Duties wo~ overtime. some light LPN Staff Development
OE lllndlrds.
1 roll
coordmator .,74
~ 0 992
Call today for more
0 Down even With less than
Ioys, cha.In I'Ink 1encng,
FOUND
nn. Include administering the electrical abilities, on call
· ..,_ _ _ _ _ __.1. of plastic .fencing, Inside July 6 and 7 from 8.vv- case management system twice a month e)(penence 6472M·Faa-5p 81333Page mformalion about startll'lg pertect credit IS available on
door wtrrame, old table saw, 4·00PM Clothes, kmck· pre-trail meetings With IRI: required E)(~llent benefit St.. Middleport, Oh EOE &amp; a
a new career w1th
this 3 bedroom, 1 bath
FOUND brown Lab, Haven many great buys. At 7follow knacks and more 4n94 gants. reviewing files before package, 401 K avallabkt, partiCipant of the Drug-Free
lntoCislon.
home. Corner lot, f11eplace
Hetghts area, Free to Good 141 f~ 7miles (go past ns) SR.124 (Antlqulty,Oh)
court, pre·mediation screen· paid hoNdays, company pen- workplace Program
1-ln-483-6247
mOdern k1tchen. JSCUZZItub
Home 304-882-2849 or 304· tum nght at Pleasant H•ll July 6&amp;7 tovs Kids &amp; adult ing, preparing orders, etc. sian. paid vacation, Blue - - - -- - ext.2301
Payment around $550 per
882·2244
thennCiltatFalrfleld·Church clothes. B~ld Knob Must be Willing to travel. Cross/Blue Shield Medical, Overbrook Center located ...,,...._____., month 740-367-7129
then 11ght on Dogwood 379· St•versvllle Ad off Bash an Must be diSCreet Sind profes- Vision 1nclud&amp;d, Dental plan, 0 333 Page St., Middleport, 1150
~
3 or 4 bedroom house tor
CLASSIFIED INDEX
9211
Road.At The McMillan
sional in appearance an Bonuses. Please contact Oh1o •s pleased to announce
INsrRucnoN
sale 1n New Haven The
4x4'• For Sale ....... ............... ........................ 725
- - - - - - - - conduct Requires a four· Mike Gray at Campbell we w1ll be holding anSTNA Lo.""'!_____rl· bathroom 1s newly remod·
3 lam•ly ~ale Thur, Fri, Sat Ml11lon Trip Fund Rei... year l:ollege degree In legal Transportation Co~ny at Class scheduled tor July
elecl. covered front porch.
Announc:emont ............................................ 030
Antlquea ....................................................... 530
9am-6pm Just West of Fri. 6th &amp; Sat. 7th. 9am .·? studies, social worlc, man· 304-675·4545
Hours w111 be Bam-4:30pm If Glllllpolls C.rHJ College backdeck, garatw:o,fenced 1n
Stone Harbor on St.RT.588. Everything
1 d In 1on1 1ng (Careers Close To Home) beck yard. new •-central heat
Apartmenlllar Rent ................................... 440
excellent agement or other re1evant
you are 1n1erose
Auction end Fteo Marlcet............................. 080
oond
,lots
of
kid'
s
clothes,
fields
Must
pass
an
NCIC
John
Sing
Ford
Uncoln
our
fri
e
ndly
and
dedicated Call Today' ?40·446·4367, and air, new crown mold 1ng
862 Harrisburg Ad, off SA
Auto Porto I ACCIIIOrlll .......................... 760
Mercury
staff, please slop by our
1·B00·2t4·0452
and baseboards, new dish
850, July 6th &amp; 7th, Desk, toys &amp; books, coats &amp; background check. Equal
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
shoes,Holllster Jeans &amp; Opportunity Employer. Needs three 1nd1viduels front . off1ce Mon·Fri., 9am· ~ ~l lr pollacareerooleQe ecm washer and oven Asking
PallO
FurnitUre,
Bath
ceb•·
Autoolor Sote..............................................710
teen age g1rl dothing, Repty by letter of interest that are Interested in a 5pm and hi\ out an app11ca· Accredited Member Accre&lt;tillnO well below recent appraisal
net, mens, womens &amp; kids. other
Bolli 1 Motora tor Sate ............................. 750
king size bedding,small and resume 10
Judge careeras an Automotive 11on. Full time and pan time Courd lor l!ldeperodenl Coii!!IJ95 of BOk. Call 304.882.37-n
Rain
or
Shine.
-" '
"'' to those a!1d Schools 127 48
Building SUppllea .............................. ..........550
kitchen . appliances some OeiOI'iS
J
Nibert, ConsuI!ant We are r-~VVt~.lng
positions availcAnne
lor more details
luslrtell and Bulldtnga ............................. 340
new
,DOLLSI
,Household
MasorJJackson
Fam1
l
~
for
individuals
that
are
out
qualified
individuals
com· ~..,,...._____....., _c__-'-'--'-"---'---Add1
son:
234
Honeysuckle
8UsiMII Opportunlty .............. ...................210
WANTEn
13bd
GALLIPOLIS
Dr Wed 7/4 ·Sat 7fl 9·? 3 ltems,carseat, dress-up .On Court, 200 6th Street, Point go1ng, !elf mot1vated and plehnQ 1he class. Applicants 1180
Buslrtell Training ....................................... 140
Rt.7,1 mi S.of Chester,pink Pleasant, WV 25550 No professional. We have one must be dependable (allen· .
To Do
Foreclosure! Buy tor
Sections
of Iron fence
Campen I Homeo ........................... 780
signs,lots of parking.
phone calls please.
of the best compensation 1ctance 1
s a must) team play$50.900! Only $404/mo.. 5%
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Fri &amp; Sal. Garage Sale,
plans in the industry and a ers with positive anltudes to A·OK·Corrals &amp; Barns dn, 20yrs @ 8%. For hst1ngs
Carda ot Thonks .......................................... 01 0
Bis1da Holiday Inn. TV, Car Multi Fam11y yard sale ~ Fruth Inc Is seeking an
package that has jom us 1n prov1d1ng outstaOO. Metal Roolmg, Shmgles. call 800·559·4109 xF254
Chlld/Etdarly Care ....................................... 180 seat, Table, Kids and Adult 7 , Fri - Sat ,6&amp;7 - assoclatetoWork in the benefits
health
Insuran
ce, 401K lng, quality care to our resi· Concrete
Remodeling,
Attention!
Etectrlcai/Relrlger811on ...............................B40 Clothes, a Ht11e of everything 2007.Harrisonville men'sstuf warehouse Ouallf1ed candl· retuemertt, diSability
and
hie
dents
If
you
have
any
ques·
Decks
Pole
Barns,
Equtpmentlar Rent .. ................................... 480
!,women's
sluff. cookie dates must have a valid drlv· Insurance If you wantlo t1ons contacl Hollie Garages Free est1mates CaH local company oHenng"NO
&amp;caviling ................................................... 830
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
Fridav &amp; Saturday. End of iars,bikes,misc
ers license, be able to l1fl et ears an excellent living and Bumgarner LPfll. Staff 304·633-1230
Farm Equlprnent.......................................... 61 0
588 at Rodney, Lots of Nice
least
80ibs
on
a regular better yourself, conlacl Pat Development Coordinator - - - - - - - grams tor you to buy your
Forma tor Ront............................................. 430
e mslead of ren11ng
Clothes, What nots, No
WANTED
basis, have a high school
Hilt or Brian Ross
@740·992·6472 Overbrook Lawn mow1ng Rates by the hom
Fenno lor Sole ............................................. 330
• 100% f1na ncmg
Tools
TO BUY
diploma
or
equivalent.
and
Center is an E 0 E and a JOb, not the hou r, Free • less than perlecl credit
For L -..................................................... 480
; .. . , .. _
be able to tolerate extreme
part1c1pant ol the Drug Free Est•mates Call Paul @ accepled
For Sate ........................................................585
Jlily 5th, 6th 7th, 9am-6pm Absolute Top Dollar. U.S. temperatures. H interested
........
.
.
.
WorKplace
Program
(304)675-2940
For Sale or 11-......................................... 590
5 11'2 m11e Nonh of Hetzer's Silver and Gold Coins, please mml your resume to - - - - - - - · Pavment could be the
FruHo &amp; Vegebtbln .....................................580
on Rt 160, Gas Cook Stove, Proofsets. Gokl R1ngs, Pre- Fruth Corporate Office. Attn John Sing Ford uncafn
sam
e as rent
Lawn-Care
Serv1ce,
M
ow1ng
POSTOFFICENOW
Fumlahld Rooma .............................. ..........450
Weedeater on Wheels, G~rls 1935 us Currency, Human
Mortgage
locators
&amp; Trimm1
ng
Call
(740)441·
ResourcesMercury
·
HIRING
General Haullng ....................... ............. .......850
nlro6 brand clothing, much Solitaire Diamonds- M.TS. Warehouse Position, RR1 Has a position openfor an
(740)367·0000
1333 or (740)645-0546
Glveowoy .............................................. ........040
Avg Pav $20mror
more
Coin ' Shop, 151 Second Box332,PointPieasant,WV lwlomolve •rechniC.ian wel
tul·Middleport home•
Happy Ado .......... ..........................................oso
$57Kannually
~i chele 's Daycare now Beaut1
looking
I
n
diV
I
d
ua
are
an
lo'
Hey 1 Clraln ..................................., .............640
July 6·7. 4family al Rodney Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446· 25550 No phone calls th 1h
, ded
Including FederalBenefitS accopt• ng ages 18 mOOths 3 B ~. 2BA full basement 1
Help Wanted.................................................110
:.PI'-ea_:.se'-1-:::==== knowledge
a as aBbout
WSn roun
Commun~ Center First one 2842
automoand OT Pa1d Tra1nmg
to 13 yrs Hours Mon·Wed· t /2 car garage With a room
Home tmprovemento .... .. .............................81 0
I '11'1( 1\ \II'\ I
this year. Ou•lts, toys, furni·
GOOD
PAYING
CAREER
t1ve repair. Ford Motor
Vacallons·FTIPT
Fn., 6am·6pm lues &amp; Thurs. above. ManyNEW features"
HornH lor Sote ................,........................... 310
lure, clolhmg
'- ll./\ 111 'OPPORTUNITY· Local 011 Company tra1ning w11be
1·866·542-1531
Sam
to
5pm, Must see lhis onel 740·416·
Houaeltald Goodo ........ ............................... 510
an
d
Gas
C
o
mpany
looking
prov
ded
and
on
go
ng
U
SWA
A
ullan
d/H
amsonvllle
area 1548
1
1
15
HouOHior Ront .......................................... 410
Spring CleaningA S~lle. 1110 u- nW•~ 11ofillposltlOnolland manor We offer a competitive com- Public Health Nurse PosiiiOn call (740)698·0214 ask lor r---~----.,
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
acrose ' from ddavlle
n..u.r ll.lu~
Land Agent m SE OH and pensatlon plan and our benM1chele
~
lnouronca ........................................... .......... 130
School,
Sat
only
g.?.
Western
EV Ideal candidate efil paclcage Includes health at the Mason Coooty Health --__:_:.._______
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
.hb
Department for RegiStered Profess 1onally
Clean.
vard Sale 818 lsi A·~ Rear 100 WORKERS NEEDED Is a se If starter Wit SSIC insurance, 401K retirement, Nurse 0 eadl1ne 1ora p p~ea, Llv-k...................................... ................630
1
Off •ce/ Housec leani ng .
Loll and Faund ...........................................060
on Fn7/6·Sat 7n !rom 9am Assemble (;rafts, wood computer krlowledge, strong disability Insurance and lila 11on extended 10 July 10 Reasonable
Rates,
·5pm
•ems.~o $480/wk Materials communication and negotla· msurance 11 youare tired of A ... 1
Lola I Acreoge ............................................ 350
~;;;..~-~-...., or
~"VP 1
catron and 10b descnp- Re1erences (304)675·2208 All re~l estate advertising
Mlacellaneouo............................ ..................170
Free
Information
lio
n
skills who IS Willing to working torsomeone that Is lion may be obla~ned at 216,
pr&lt;Nided
4
In lhl• newaptper Is
Mlacelllneouo MerchandiN.......................540
n. ...~~v~~..:~.... pkg 2&lt;6Hr 801-428-4649
travel Within the regton not working fo r youor want 5thStreet EOE
Wanlcd to 00 Gare gJVer. aub}tct
tothe Federa l
1
Mobile Home Ropalr....................................860
- . I"UI\'II!oKVafll'll1.JUI...r, • - - - - - - - Knowledge of legal desc np ·
to better yourself, contact
Wil care lor elderly 1n their .Fair Houaing
of 1968
MObile Homeo for Rent ............................... 420
A 011 &amp; Gas Broker lion, pnor sales experience, Se!VIce ManagerJ1m
R&amp;J Truck1ng Leadn"lg The home, 16 yrs exp, WhiCh mlkHAct
It Illegal to
Mobile HomH for Sale ..... .................... .. .. ... 320
3
Fam•lv
yard Com'pany 1s took1ng for an lamiharity wilh the reg1on
ThOmas
Way R&amp;J Truckmg now References
Ava•lable.
edwertlae " any
Money to Laan ... :......................................... 220
sale Fn &amp;Sat ,Julv6&amp;7 9·00 ad'mn asst for the Gallipolis and local courthouse are a
JiJi!lf!JII
Hmng at our New Haven. {740)388-9783 or (740)591- prtferanoe. limitation or
Motorcycteo I 4 Wheelers ..................... ..... 740
AM.
_ 55S
2nd office Candidates should be plus tr you are nterested lrl '
WV T
ermmal For Reg•onal. 9034 . _
dlacrlmln~~tlon based on
Musical fnotrumento .., .......... ....................:.570
Ave ,Middleport. Household self starters and posses finding out more aboullhls
""' .....,. ""''"~·Havls·Dump D1v. 1 year
race, cotor. religion, aex
II'\ \ '\t I \1
Personala ........................ .............................oos
nems,dothes,baby furniture. good organizational skills, rewarding career. please
,.,_ l · ····· . ... ,...
OTA verifiable e)(p Call t·
familial •latu s o r;, n•tlonat
Pets tor Sole .................. .............................. 560
origin,or an~ Intention to
- - - - - - - - proi1C1ent1n Word, Exceland oonlacl Dan Stevenson 0 - - -- - - - - 800·462·9365 eSk for Kent ;;;;;;::::::=;
10
7,0-" 6·6800 or ra res ume
Plu.mblng &amp; Healtng.................................... 820
maka an~ SU&lt;:h
Bust~~
4·6
yard
salesO
utlOok
Ki\owledge
of
land
PrvfeNional Sarvlcn ........................... .. .... 230
prefertnce, limitation or
Twp.Rd 404f8ahr Ad 3 M1.N descriptions and title exp. is to 740-446-6802
Salas
OPPolrruNrn'
Radio, TV I CB Repolr ......................... ...... 180
disc rimination "
ol Chesle• off AI 7. July 7th. a plus Must have a hogh
IRS JOBS
Rill Elllta Wlnled ....... .............................. 380
Cloth•ng.avon,periennlais-? diploma and some college
,
Anoutstanding opportu·
Th \a newspeper will not
Schools 111111rucllon..................................... 150
expenence
preferred $18.46·$326_0fnr... now hir·
mty forthe r~ght person
knowlngty .ccept
- , Plant&amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
Prefer some sales expo5 fam1ty garage sale, July Please caM Andrea Healy at 1ng. Paid Tratnmg IS prov1d·
adverllMments for rut
SHuotlono Wontad ....................................... 120
6th, 341 Rutland St , 740-44 6-6 800 or fax10 740. ad For appiiCahon and tree licensed Practical Nurses
rlence. but W111 consider
e1tate which lain
Space lor Rent ............................................. ol60
M1ddleport,
fu rmtu re, 446.6802
government 101&gt; mfo call Pleasant Valley NurSing and , possibility of training
vlol1tl00
of the law Our
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
clothes &amp; m1sc
- - - - - Amencan Assoc. of Labor 1· Rehabllltahon 1s currently ideal card,date Ofler
readers •rt hereby
SUV'IIor Sole...................... ........................ 720
~------ An Excelenl way to earn 913·599-8244, 24/hrs. emp. accepting applications for
day work W94lk
jnlormed that all
Trucka lor Site ............................................ 715
7·4&amp;5.SA248 Chester.2 money The New AllOn. '
serv
full·lime and per-d1em Excel\ent ,~..':~~pl&lt;g, ;_,·~hogh
ci'Mtllnga lldvertlted In
Upholllery ..................... ............................. 870
sloryofyellow
house on girls
left Gall Manlyn 304·882-2645 Need a lolling, responsible nLePnce
N'S. lpo•englerlreedrmM
caure ehxapev •
• thll MWSPIPif are
Vena For Sale...............................................7~0
top
hiii.Scrubs.lnfant
Carolyn~ontact
Mvrdock
51
0
ava.I1M* on an eqUII I
Wonted to Buy ............:\............................... 090
clothes, boys 6·8,pack &amp; AVQNIAll Areas! To Buy or adult to babySIIIn my home wv license 12 hour sh1f1s
Ofhce Adm1n
opportunity blilft.
Wsntld to lluy· Farm ~upplleo .............. .... 620
play,swngs,walker,toys
Sell Sh1rley Spears. 304- •n the Racine area during Please contact Angl€ Mon·Fn (740}446·3093
Wonted To 00 ..................................... ......... 180
675-1429
the 2~7 · 2008 schoOl year. Cleland. D1rector of Nursmg
or ema1tresume to
.
.ill For sale or rent 3BR2story
Wanted to Ront ............................... ............. 470
Friday, July 6, 8 til?. Rt.7. 2 - - - -- -- - part-tlm.e or lull lime, must I 304-675·5250 AAIEOE
f760@clayton.net
.
.~ hOuse Sale $68500 Rent
Yard Sate- Golllpollo ....................................072
miles north o1Chester End Help wanted at Darst Adutl have references, Please -.a,=.:..::..:=====-: to schedule an 1nterv1BW
$650 + $500fdep CaM 441·
Yord Sate-Pomeroy/Middlo .........................074
l abies,~~'ing SIZe bed, mc· Group H
ome, some liftmg, send to POBox 75, Rac1ne. TOMATO Ptckers Needed
" ol chickens
NoWalk-Ins Please
8953
Yard Salo-PI. Pteosant .. .. ........... ................. 076
nacs. lots
7·5 shift, 74U·992·5023
Oh 45771
247·3901 or 247·2165.
lb~~,;,;,.=:;...!l

r

Ir4

I

I

r

I

__
...·ran
~

Olympics
fromPageBI
Putin.
He had left Guatemala by
the time the result was
announced but called IOC
president Jacques Rogge
from his plane when he
heard the news. Putin
expressed his "deep gratitude" and confirmed Russia
will complete all the
Olympic projer;:ts "in due
time and budget," Deputy
Prime Minister Alexander
Zhukov said.
The Putin magic matched
Blair's
influence
on
London's victory in the race
for the 2012 Summer
Olympics. Blair was instru·
mental in wooing IOC
members in Singapore in
2005, helping London
defeat Paris, Madrid, New
York and Moscow. Putin
did not travel to Singapore
for that bid, which lost in
the first round.
" If Putin is net here, I
think it would be different
results," said IOC executive

•

'

~

seashore you can enjoy a
fine spring day, •but up in the
mountains, it's winter .. . a
real snow is guaranteed."
Although most venues
must be newly built, Putin
assured: "We guarantee the
Olympic cluster in Sochi
will be completed on time."
" No traffic 'jam s, I
promise.'' he said with a
smile.
. Noting
that athletes
would have a short walk to
their venues, Putin said,
"Five minutes' walking dis·
lance, not bad ."
Ru ssia, an Olympic
power which has won 293
Winte r Games meaals, has
never hosted the Winter
Games. That ":as a strong
point in Sochi 's favor with
the IOC , which likes to
spread the Olympics to new
host countnes. Moscow
hosted the 1980 Summer
Games, which were hit by
the U.S.-led boycott following the Soviet invasion of
P.,fghanistan.
The Soch1 bid won out
over the appeals of its rivals
Sal zburg. presenting
itself as a safe, no-risk win·
ter sports mecca at the heart

~

I

'r"
Ti

...

®

1o1

I

'"

..

,_ .

r

"'"''

_ ____________ ___________
__;._.

�J

www.mydailyaentinel.com

Thursday, July 5, 2007
ALLEY OOP

Thursday, July 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Fo&lt; 0818.1and contract 3 BR

Atttntlonl

/loose in Gallipolis, W/D Local CQmi)8IIy offering "NO
connection $1500 down DOWN PAYMENT" pro$400/mo or rent $475/mo. grams for you to buy ~r
Also 1 BA in Gallipolis $750 hOme Instead of renting.
down $200/mo or ren1 • 100% financing
$250/mo.Call Wa~ne 404 · • Less than J¥~rfect Cfedit
456-3802 for Info.
accepted
' Payment cou ld be the
HUO HOMES! 4bd only same as rent.
$155/mo., 3bd $181 /mo., Mortgage
Locatorl.

Apartment available ' now
Rlverband Apts. New Haven

one Bedroom Apts. Utilities
Included. BasOll on 30% of
adjusted Income.
can
(304l882-3t2t avallallla lot
· Senior and Oisabted People.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Apartment

able. 5% dn, 20 yrs 0 8%. · - - ' - - - -- --

Bdrm., remodeled, new car-

For listings 1-8Q0-559-4109
x Ft44.
Middleport-In town, out of
IIood plane Brick Home
E•cellant Location. .6 Acre

pet , stove &amp; trig ., water,
sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
$425.00. No pets. Ref.
required. 740-843-5284.

2

Phillip
Alder

WV. Now accepting appllca- ·
lions for Hud·Subsidlzed,

More 1-4bd hOmes avail· (740)367-CIOOO

For rent or for sate 2 BA
Nice Re~ed Home in
town, No Pets, Renovated,
All ) new_ carpet, Call
1740 446 74 5
:.:.._::.__:_..:.:::.....,___

ACROSS

for

rent,

North

--..__
Service

1·2

Or HI; lla, OH41111

Tett•THIII• tllullnt• .......
............. Tnlok

lnMnd•,_l..._
"1'40-441~

... ...ot••• 0..

CC_O_N_V-EN-1-EN_T_L_Y-Lel-::C-11-T-HUD HOMES! .4txl only ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
S155fmo .. 3bd $1B1Jmo.,
apartments,
More 1-4bd homes avail- Townhouse
and/or smau houses FOR
able. 5% dn. 20 yrs c 8%.
RENT. Call (740)441 -tttt
For listings 1-800·559-4109
tor
appllcalion &amp; informatk&gt;n.
X F144.

Apx 4000 sq h 8Rms 3 Br 2
1/2 Bth 2 fire Places 2Garclges Lots of Storage.
Details Call740-992-4197.
Newly built home in Green
Twp. on King Ad off
Neighborhood Rd . Approx
1200 sq.tt 3 acres. m/12 SA
2 M baths wlwhirlpooltubs,
large LR. Asking 87,500.

In Pomeroy House for rent! 3
Bd.,2 bath, newly remod·

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Ellm View
Apartme11ts

eled, total electric. 740-8435264.
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apanments
740-446-7029
Large 4 bedroom house in • Central heat &amp; AJC
Updated 3 BA, 1 BA home Pomeroy, 11ery clean, newly •Washer/dryer hookup
In Pomeroy W~h newer fur- remodeled, new cabinets, •Tenant pays electric
nace, water heater, plumb- new carpet, (740)949-2303
(304)882·3017
ing &amp; electr[c. Call Sandy
Collins, Sole &amp; Bloom
MouFORD.Eni!O~
Asa~oJS, 5~1 -9202. $25,900 ~
""-""'
•

i

i

MOIIIUILER~~?~
~

__

Local Cont,..:tor

740-367-Q544

I

FreeEstlmalw

740-367-Q536

•. RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS ..

2007 Clayton
5BAI3BA 2000 Sq.Ft
Starting at $33.00/sp.ft.l
NO DOWN PAYMENT
. to qualified buyers.
lite Homo $how
Atlhland, KY
888-928-3425

'·

&amp; K Q

•KIOH11

South
• J 10 7 6 4
¥ K J

{]tuniiiJ •·trtaM•

·-

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Ei.ot-Wost

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
7 40-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Wise Concrete
All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise
740-992-5929

Weal
Pass
Pus
Pass

Norlb
19
2 NT
??

Eul
Pu11
Pas11

Opening lead: • S

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-416-1698

'

NOTICf!
TA!Ct LETTUC:f
f,OM TOP Of

5TACIC, 0~
tff Al&gt;$ £.1..

""I

~OL£.{

BARNEY

HarO'NfC8inr,Aidhnlart

740-446-2003 or 446-1409

www.t!wtaaw•.,..n ta;....

feature

1 Caae r-

26 Staahed

~~ld

!

drink mix)
30 mprove by
exporlence

32 Sounded
._,..
34 P18turt

THlS

A $COACMEA !!
MOT w&amp;ATHEA

AIN'T GOOD

FER

NUTHIN'

..
YOUNG 'S
St. Rt. 7, Tuppeni Plains, OH

740.(;67·3177
THE BORN LOSER

free 888·928-3426

r-t'&gt;O '(OU l(.t.IOiol . t AA\/W\ "'I
WI\~11\E

:.E.E-1'\IT FOR
P.. WI\ILE..

I"E/&gt;\\TE. l~:lt

,.-TAA.T eL~T~t,.TI\1!-IC:. l!l
!'1€:.\/E.R t'IE.P..ReN Wfl.E.l-1
· 'IOU WP..~T IT !

'""" ,..Mi&gt;-'1'&amp;. "\W-.1'5 Wfl.'&lt; lfl.E.'( cM.L'I
IT l'o. li:f.IIIOTE!

Dabble your, toe;
do-not belly·flop
Taka a loollal tho t!orth hand, Your partnor opens one damond, you respond
one heart, ·partner rebids one '9'do,
and you jump to two no-trump. (I never
found out nthis was gamo-lnvl1atlonal or
gamo-torclng. fi oughllo ba Invitational.
With tho values tor game, bid thraa notrump.) .Now ·partner continues with
thras spades, showing 5-6. What would
you do?
North knows there are. no rounded-su~
losers. And admitted~ South's hand Is
not as strQng as North would e-.pect.
(With a weaker 5-6, Soulh mlghl open
one spade, calling his hand a 5·5 and
not wishing to risk losing his spade suit
should lhe opponents pre-empt the auction.) ~North, wfih no oonor catdsln
partne~s Ms, should only dabble his
toe in "· the slam water with a lour-club ·
advance control-bid (cue-bid). Since
North camot ba tcying to find a dub,.frt,
this says that ha Is raising to lour
spades, thet he lkes his hand, and !hat
he has the club ace. It shoWs a batter
hand !han a quiet raisa to lour spades.
South would sign off In lour sptides, endIng tho auction.
At th1&gt; table, though, North jumped to
four no·tn.unp, wh!ctl resiJted in a final
contract of live spades, losing three
trump tricl&lt;s.
This dabble-your-loa~ an importanl bidling concept. II you oro 1.11famlior with tt,
tlscuss tt with your partner. II you halo
partne~s suits, you jump ship with. throe
no-trump. If you are lukewarm lor
spades, you raise to game. If you think a
slam is possible, you make an advance
control-bid.

$35AS.oop

T-Post 6R. $3.29

or

Wide Variety
Lawn Seed,
FeniUzer and

•

BIG. NATE

~

Showmaster Show

AstroGraph
_....,,

_

35 Hlll-tlhtll

Item
36 lnjura a tae
37 Cauatlc

aubltanct
38 Whereto
-

otara

39 CloH'Ovar _
again
42 Thai nslgltbal

'10 Dowell

poetry

Kul&lt;o00

lntrencetl
lloulb
1•
1•
3•

2 Br . AJC, Vero; nice,
Johnson Mobile Home Park.

57 Meedow

16 Bleach bot- 58 Subtraction
do
word
18 Foundalion
19 Backer
DOWN
23 Wane
20 Moon, In

27

A K Q 10 1 3

t

'·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

&amp; A 0

• 7. 3
• 98 6

• J.
• J 9. 3

56 Squealed

tantrum•

Eut .

a

• 9 8 52

t BA, Oilon Ad. Gallipoli•
• Includes water/trash. W/0,

The Home Show,
Ashland, Ky.
T~f

West

MONTY

I

2007 Ooublewide
3BR, 2BA,
Dallvarad &amp; Sat $39,999.

mountalno
l5 Temper

•• 2
&amp; A Q B2

.

stove and fridge, a dinette : : - - - - - - -14x70 2 bedroom 21ull bath, set, wood floors, covered
newly remodeled. New cen· porch, axa bldg $385/mon+
lralair unit and furnace call $3t5 dep. call256-1106
740-367-7143 or 740·7940022 $9,000
14x70, very nice 3 BR, 2BA,
- - - - - : - - - - privacy in country. Meigs
1998 Clay1on Spirit II lots of School dist. $475 + dep.
eXIras excellent condition. 859-806-4354 or 740-742·
Must be moved. Call 949- 3046. Available July 1.
2698. after 4 p.m. ,
16xBO Trailer, 3br, 2ba,
1998 Aedman &amp; 2 acres. 3 located on 15 acres In Pt.
bd. &amp; 2 baths off New Lima Pleasant.
$550/month,
In Rutland for sale or rent. $550/deposlt 740-416-3342

740-992·3514.

07-0!Hl7

• 9 3 2
9 A Q 10 6 .

45 Fix a
squeak
1 Soften up
46 Tootada's
5 Deaart plant
cousin
10 Dorm
• 50 Came to
sharer
terma
12 Raw deal (2 53 Fluffed, u
wds.)
hair
13 Naval rank 55 Cheeay
14 Of high
SMCkl

21 ApProved
2 Emulate
22 Antarctic
Oprah
aea
3 Faulty
23 Mountain
4 Toupee kin
curve
5 "lite Klng 24 Lao Voaaa
and I" name
"action•·6 Foul-ball
25 Night
caller
crawler
7 Cattle stall 28 Makea a
8 Sugar
choice
source
29 Onlon
9 Mimicked
couoin
10 Sporto
31 Dlaparaglng
"zebra"
romarl&lt;
11 Forllldo
32 Author' a
12 Sacka
payment
17 And, lor
33 Dull
Wolfgang
37 Aloha tokan

41UUn.~mogl.,.
••
42 Ger. or Fr.

43 SoaWMd
derivative
44 Willy or
Shamu
47 Vonornouo
onakoa
48 High notH
49 Weird
51 Codgers'
querln
52 G-•• Dl
dawn
54 Elactrlc-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos
Celebiy Cii:tl« erwt9'1mt we cr&amp;Hl m qLIJI.OOIDI'lS bV tamous peopi!. past and fi!$Mt
Each lettar in the cipher stands b" another
r~s

"KWTTVKK
CRNKV

SK

ARN

XBSDWPV

Clue: A 6Qii8/s W

NXCVY

LNY'C

SK

BTRSVMVL

HYNA

EZ

CRBC

SYVMSCBEDV ," • TNTN

TRBYVO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'We need an America with the wisdom ol
experience, but we must not lei America grow old in spirit.• - HOO.rt H.
Humphrey

a

r::~:;y S@l\&amp;UM-- r.,~s·

WOlD
GAM!

fcllt•ci by CU.Y A~ POllAN .

.

Rlorrar~oe loiters of the
0 four
S&lt;r&lt;:mbltd words be-

f"""!!!'-,..-1~~.~-.....

. low to formfo,i simple words.

FJ!doy, July 8, 2007
By Iamie. Bade 01101

••-1m

Social Involvements are likely to turn out
to be equally as Important as your career
or wor1~:-reiated activities. New friends
could be instrumental In lurtherlng your

•

Stop &amp; Compare

material Interests.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -

Be elllra
mindful of whet -you s8y off the cuff, especlallo; when In the presence of persons
who could have an Influence over you(
career. What you say, good and bad. will
be duly noted.

BASEMENT
WATeRPROOFING .
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished. E:!tabllshed 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740l 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

llolm; .
IURRENT
$1 55/mol Buy 4txl HUD
"hamel 5% dn , 20yrs @ 8%.
For Listings 800-559-4109
xt709

..

A HIOOEN TREASURE!
Laurel
Commons
Apartments. Largest in the
area! Beautifully renovated
~~30;::2-;Hogg-;-----:S:-t,-:2::-br--,Ho_u_se throughout iricludlng brand
Central HeatiAC, 1 year new kitchen and bath .
Lease, No Pets Security Star1ing at S405. Call today!
2 Bedroom House 1 bath, 7
miles
AI
2
North,
$400/month. $300/deposit
304 675 2381
No Pets,
"
"
3
Bedroom H9uSe in
Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pets .. (304)6755332 weekends 740-591-

11M WRITIN6

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
Street ; Gallipolis
446-0007

.'

~,------­
Beautiful, rare Hinkle-Harris

Hil l's Self
Storage

wild black cherry gate leg
drop leave dining table, 2
leaves + pads. $800. 3799211
Massey
Tractor

Ferguson
150
with
loader,
International 574, 165
Massey Ferguson, 284
International, 9N Ford, Sherltt'a Sale

Mattress &amp; BIS,
$180; Sofa &amp; Loveseat sets,
$400: Drive a tittle- save a
lot. Mollohan, 202 Clark
Chapel Ad, Bidwell.

r

I

r

For
A '~ewHome?
"
Racine American Legion
Post #602 support the
Veterans Poker Run
Saturday, July 7th
·1:00

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-94H217

~D t.,O; HEAR~ CARoL
~ In S::l\) ·I"' 10

I I \\ h
&lt; I l \,I I\ I I I

l () \ '-t I

I~

1Ht;. R:Xll ---...

I I II 1 l '\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of • .
Conmie Work

Butternut Avenue In 136, page 379, Volume
Pomeroy Village. The 133, page 605 · and
26 Years Experience
property lor sale Ia Volume 144, page 482.
David Lewis
beat described In a In Meigs County Deed
warranty deed record- Records.
740-992-6971
ad ln Volume 15 pageo Sealad bids shall be
lnaurec:t
657 &amp; 519. The other accepted until 12:00
Free E1tlrn1tea
property lor sale Ia noon on July 20, 2007.
bast described In a All bldo shall be clearly
quit-claim
deed marked
Jr.
High
recorded In Volume Property Real Eatate
282 page 389.
Bid, on the outside of
Sealed bids shall be the envelope and subaccepted until 12:00 mmed to the Village
pm on Monday, July 9, Clerk, 320 Eaot Main
2007, All bids should Street, Pomeroy, OH
be sealed and clearly 45769.
. . . 27 f1t,ll . . . . . . . . ..
marked Real Estate All bids are aub)ect to
. . . . . . . .12:11 ..
Bid on the outslde of a previous agreement
tho envelope and sub- wtth the Melga County
mlttad to the VIllage CIC, lor "Right of First
••-1
Clerk, 320 East Main ·Refusal"
llllllllcCIIIIIIIIII·C.-.;Street, Pomaroy, OH The Pomeroy Village
·
o fill.........
45769.
Council reaervea the.l-~_ _;!!"!!!!!j-~~!!!!,
(5) 30, (6) 6, 13,20 (7) 5 right to accept or
ICIIftrCIItMPI'ICIII
reject any or all bids.
- - - - - - - (6) 25, 29 (7) 5, 11 , 20
Public Notice
_ _ _;__,:..:_:...:__
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public Notice
Tho Village of Pomeroy - - - - - - desires to sail certain PUBLIC NOTICE
real estate located on
The Sallsbury
East Main Street situ- Township TruotHo will
at&amp;d In the lncorporat· hold their 2008 Budget
ad Village. The proper- meeting July 10th,
Public Notice
ty tor sale, Is described 2007, at the Town Hall
as Lot 82 In the Village from 6:00 P.M. to 7:00
PUBLIC NOTICE
of Pomeroy. This prop- P.M.
The Village of Pomeroy arty Ia best deacrlbed Richard Bailey
desires te&gt; sell certain In a warranty deed Clerk
real estate located on recorded In Volume (7) 5 1 tc
10:00 am Saturday,
July 7, 2007, on the lot
beside tho Shariff's
Office there will be
sold at Public Auction
to 1he best snd highest
bidder the following:
1-1997 Ford Crown
VIctoria min bid $500
3·1998 Ford Crown
VIctoria min bid $550
1·1999 Ford Crown
VIctoria (pollee Interceptor) min bid $700
1-1999 Ford Crown
VIctoria (maroon) min
bid $2,500
1·2000 SID Chevrolet
pickup 4·wheol drive
wtth topper (drug forfailure vehicle) min bid
$3,200
Several air condltloners min bid $20
Vehicles may be seen
by contacting the
Sharltt's Office
Vehicles sold "AS IS"
Cash day of sale
Robert E. Beagle
She rift
llolgs County
(6)21' 28, (7) 5

23=-Aug. 22)

-

Someone Who

is nosy and generally not working In anybody's best Interests may be a bit too
interestBd In the late51 gos51p. This is the
last person you should want to chat with .
vtRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - An acqualn·
tance who loves ·to gossip about others
might anempt to draw you Into one of h~
or her intrigues. No matter how fasclnat·
lng the subject might be. don't take the
ball.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - It you are In
need of talking things out with a friend
about a personal maner, be extremely
selective as to whom you go to for this little chilchal. Your judgment might be 1!1 bit
fau~.

SUNSHINE CLUB

nice, clea n &amp; attractive. 11:'1"':~~----, (740)286-6522
$500/mo, 1st mo + $500
~.JANF.Jll5
New 6ft Brush Hog for skid
Sec.dep. required. Available
"f\.fERCHANDISE
steer. $3500. 388-1579
7116107. Apply within. 1743 _
•
Centenary Ad, Gallipolis. No
Lrv&amp;S1ucK
0265
Phone Calls Please.
$500 toupan
Hot Tub Outlet!!
3·4 b9droom home in Beautiful Apte. at Jackson Top Oualityf\Narranty Milton
Syracuse, $500 plus ulilkies. Eatatea. 52 Westwood Flea Mkt SIS 606·326-Q777 5 miniature horses : 1 stallion, 2 mares, 1 colt and 1
(740)992-7511
Drive, from $36:5 to $560.
740-446-2568.
Equal - - - - : : : : : - - - - miniature dwarf female. Call
For Rent: Brick 01ouse in Housing Opportun1ty. This
JET
388-8670.
MercervUie. 1S:R Apt all util- institu tion is an Equal
AERATION MOTORS
ities &amp; cable paid in Crown Opportunity Pr ovider and Repaired, New &amp; Rebuill In Bore Goats, full blOOded &amp;
City. (740)256-8132
Employer.
Stock. Call Ron Evans, r- percentage . The price is
8Q0-537-9528
right. 36?·7755

TrY the
Classifieds!!

AND TO SEND US
COOKIES ..

\I I W 11\\Hhl

27 3
~13"04'-'1"'
"'"·3344='--.,--- Full Size

Accepting applications for 2
BA, 1 BA apt, stove, fridge,
W/ 0 included. Water &amp;
Garbage paid. No pets, very

A POST

CARD TO CI-IARLE5 ..

~Ill riO "~

1 possibly 2 Br fiouse in
New t&gt;iaven , $325/month,
$325/deposit No ' Pets.
(304)882·3652

Deposit. Ty 304-675-4030

PEANUTS

~ .~r;'&gt;":'l'l·z~a~M,.:•
..
70 Pine

I~ I \ I \I "

LEO (July

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• BomefiU System
• Belios System

GARFIELD

Manlav•a
Recycling

Plft·T·PIICU fll
·-•CIIs•l

___J

r--,r---;;:o-~-....

SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - When
asked to pass along some Instructions to
co-worl&lt;ers. be on the safe side and write
dotNn a11 the details Involved . There's a
slrong chance Important tidbits could get
lost in the telling.
SAGtTIARIUS (Nov, 23-Dec. 21) -When
It comes to your oommerctalaffalrs, do not
treat harsh points Indifferently. Unless the
, edge is taken off the sharJl details, they
could become thorns in the lion's paw.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - If you
- find more to crHicize than you do things to
praise in your mate, harmony is likely to
be threatened on the hOme tront .
Remember: II you can't say something
nice, keep mum.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Do not
think of yourself as the exception to the
rule that no one i5 pertect because we all
ha11e feet ot day. Once you slar1 lOOking
lor faults , you're sure to find them, as others will in you.

PISCES (Feb. 2o-March 20) - Small
extravagances are Wkely to add up to a
shOCkingly large total when all is finally
computed. It's important to be as mindful
of the dimes as you are of the dollar bills,
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) - Because

you have an especially oood eye for
detail. you might have to take care not to
be too critical of the l1nle things In lite that
are meaningless. Don't let negativism

oVerpower you.
TAURUS (AprW 20...May 20) - Being sentimental definitely has its time and place,
but if you allow your err19 U~I perceptions to dominate your f0o1cal assessments, you'll lose. Blend th e two for better
judgment calls.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Sometimes
It Is more costly to do business with a
friend than with a total strangtu, and today

I
I

GRIZZWELLS
t\MR
Pill ibll ;JUST SAY
Mil-lO
SOMET\11~
';&gt;

might be one of thOse limes. Should there
be a problem, it'll be difficult to complain
to a pal.

SOUP TO NUTZ

once said, "Twll great movers
of lhe lmrnan mind are lhe
desire for go&lt;&gt;d :wd the···· of

,. ,. .,J_E.,.~";'7

M_jrR...,,-::-8_OTJ..

,,Q-~~~:~; i;&lt;''~:;,:~g ~:~

'-·...J'--'·'--'-·--'--'--'

you de.,..elop ftcm .srep No. 3 below.

1
.oCio PRINI NUMSEREO
~ LflTERS iN SQUARfS

6)

~~~BlEFORI

I I I Iori I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1 - ~ - 07

Hominy - Grand -- Cloak - Totter - RICH DO
.
l11e trouble with the middle class is lrying to s~ve while
spending as much as the RICH DO. "
' ARLO &amp; JANIS

•

�J

www.mydailyaentinel.com

Thursday, July 5, 2007
ALLEY OOP

Thursday, July 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Fo&lt; 0818.1and contract 3 BR

Atttntlonl

/loose in Gallipolis, W/D Local CQmi)8IIy offering "NO
connection $1500 down DOWN PAYMENT" pro$400/mo or rent $475/mo. grams for you to buy ~r
Also 1 BA in Gallipolis $750 hOme Instead of renting.
down $200/mo or ren1 • 100% financing
$250/mo.Call Wa~ne 404 · • Less than J¥~rfect Cfedit
456-3802 for Info.
accepted
' Payment cou ld be the
HUO HOMES! 4bd only same as rent.
$155/mo., 3bd $181 /mo., Mortgage
Locatorl.

Apartment available ' now
Rlverband Apts. New Haven

one Bedroom Apts. Utilities
Included. BasOll on 30% of
adjusted Income.
can
(304l882-3t2t avallallla lot
· Senior and Oisabted People.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Apartment

able. 5% dn, 20 yrs 0 8%. · - - ' - - - -- --

Bdrm., remodeled, new car-

For listings 1-8Q0-559-4109
x Ft44.
Middleport-In town, out of
IIood plane Brick Home
E•cellant Location. .6 Acre

pet , stove &amp; trig ., water,
sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
$425.00. No pets. Ref.
required. 740-843-5284.

2

Phillip
Alder

WV. Now accepting appllca- ·
lions for Hud·Subsidlzed,

More 1-4bd hOmes avail· (740)367-CIOOO

For rent or for sate 2 BA
Nice Re~ed Home in
town, No Pets, Renovated,
All ) new_ carpet, Call
1740 446 74 5
:.:.._::.__:_..:.:::.....,___

ACROSS

for

rent,

North

--..__
Service

1·2

Or HI; lla, OH41111

Tett•THIII• tllullnt• .......
............. Tnlok

lnMnd•,_l..._
"1'40-441~

... ...ot••• 0..

CC_O_N_V-EN-1-EN_T_L_Y-Lel-::C-11-T-HUD HOMES! .4txl only ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
S155fmo .. 3bd $1B1Jmo.,
apartments,
More 1-4bd homes avail- Townhouse
and/or smau houses FOR
able. 5% dn. 20 yrs c 8%.
RENT. Call (740)441 -tttt
For listings 1-800·559-4109
tor
appllcalion &amp; informatk&gt;n.
X F144.

Apx 4000 sq h 8Rms 3 Br 2
1/2 Bth 2 fire Places 2Garclges Lots of Storage.
Details Call740-992-4197.
Newly built home in Green
Twp. on King Ad off
Neighborhood Rd . Approx
1200 sq.tt 3 acres. m/12 SA
2 M baths wlwhirlpooltubs,
large LR. Asking 87,500.

In Pomeroy House for rent! 3
Bd.,2 bath, newly remod·

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Ellm View
Apartme11ts

eled, total electric. 740-8435264.
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apanments
740-446-7029
Large 4 bedroom house in • Central heat &amp; AJC
Updated 3 BA, 1 BA home Pomeroy, 11ery clean, newly •Washer/dryer hookup
In Pomeroy W~h newer fur- remodeled, new cabinets, •Tenant pays electric
nace, water heater, plumb- new carpet, (740)949-2303
(304)882·3017
ing &amp; electr[c. Call Sandy
Collins, Sole &amp; Bloom
MouFORD.Eni!O~
Asa~oJS, 5~1 -9202. $25,900 ~
""-""'
•

i

i

MOIIIUILER~~?~
~

__

Local Cont,..:tor

740-367-Q544

I

FreeEstlmalw

740-367-Q536

•. RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS ..

2007 Clayton
5BAI3BA 2000 Sq.Ft
Starting at $33.00/sp.ft.l
NO DOWN PAYMENT
. to qualified buyers.
lite Homo $how
Atlhland, KY
888-928-3425

'·

&amp; K Q

•KIOH11

South
• J 10 7 6 4
¥ K J

{]tuniiiJ •·trtaM•

·-

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Ei.ot-Wost

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
7 40-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Wise Concrete
All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise
740-992-5929

Weal
Pass
Pus
Pass

Norlb
19
2 NT
??

Eul
Pu11
Pas11

Opening lead: • S

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-416-1698

'

NOTICf!
TA!Ct LETTUC:f
f,OM TOP Of

5TACIC, 0~
tff Al&gt;$ £.1..

""I

~OL£.{

BARNEY

HarO'NfC8inr,Aidhnlart

740-446-2003 or 446-1409

www.t!wtaaw•.,..n ta;....

feature

1 Caae r-

26 Staahed

~~ld

!

drink mix)
30 mprove by
exporlence

32 Sounded
._,..
34 P18turt

THlS

A $COACMEA !!
MOT w&amp;ATHEA

AIN'T GOOD

FER

NUTHIN'

..
YOUNG 'S
St. Rt. 7, Tuppeni Plains, OH

740.(;67·3177
THE BORN LOSER

free 888·928-3426

r-t'&gt;O '(OU l(.t.IOiol . t AA\/W\ "'I
WI\~11\E

:.E.E-1'\IT FOR
P.. WI\ILE..

I"E/&gt;\\TE. l~:lt

,.-TAA.T eL~T~t,.TI\1!-IC:. l!l
!'1€:.\/E.R t'IE.P..ReN Wfl.E.l-1
· 'IOU WP..~T IT !

'""" ,..Mi&gt;-'1'&amp;. "\W-.1'5 Wfl.'&lt; lfl.E.'( cM.L'I
IT l'o. li:f.IIIOTE!

Dabble your, toe;
do-not belly·flop
Taka a loollal tho t!orth hand, Your partnor opens one damond, you respond
one heart, ·partner rebids one '9'do,
and you jump to two no-trump. (I never
found out nthis was gamo-lnvl1atlonal or
gamo-torclng. fi oughllo ba Invitational.
With tho values tor game, bid thraa notrump.) .Now ·partner continues with
thras spades, showing 5-6. What would
you do?
North knows there are. no rounded-su~
losers. And admitted~ South's hand Is
not as strQng as North would e-.pect.
(With a weaker 5-6, Soulh mlghl open
one spade, calling his hand a 5·5 and
not wishing to risk losing his spade suit
should lhe opponents pre-empt the auction.) ~North, wfih no oonor catdsln
partne~s Ms, should only dabble his
toe in "· the slam water with a lour-club ·
advance control-bid (cue-bid). Since
North camot ba tcying to find a dub,.frt,
this says that ha Is raising to lour
spades, thet he lkes his hand, and !hat
he has the club ace. It shoWs a batter
hand !han a quiet raisa to lour spades.
South would sign off In lour sptides, endIng tho auction.
At th1&gt; table, though, North jumped to
four no·tn.unp, wh!ctl resiJted in a final
contract of live spades, losing three
trump tricl&lt;s.
This dabble-your-loa~ an importanl bidling concept. II you oro 1.11famlior with tt,
tlscuss tt with your partner. II you halo
partne~s suits, you jump ship with. throe
no-trump. If you are lukewarm lor
spades, you raise to game. If you think a
slam is possible, you make an advance
control-bid.

$35AS.oop

T-Post 6R. $3.29

or

Wide Variety
Lawn Seed,
FeniUzer and

•

BIG. NATE

~

Showmaster Show

AstroGraph
_....,,

_

35 Hlll-tlhtll

Item
36 lnjura a tae
37 Cauatlc

aubltanct
38 Whereto
-

otara

39 CloH'Ovar _
again
42 Thai nslgltbal

'10 Dowell

poetry

Kul&lt;o00

lntrencetl
lloulb
1•
1•
3•

2 Br . AJC, Vero; nice,
Johnson Mobile Home Park.

57 Meedow

16 Bleach bot- 58 Subtraction
do
word
18 Foundalion
19 Backer
DOWN
23 Wane
20 Moon, In

27

A K Q 10 1 3

t

'·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

&amp; A 0

• 7. 3
• 98 6

• J.
• J 9. 3

56 Squealed

tantrum•

Eut .

a

• 9 8 52

t BA, Oilon Ad. Gallipoli•
• Includes water/trash. W/0,

The Home Show,
Ashland, Ky.
T~f

West

MONTY

I

2007 Ooublewide
3BR, 2BA,
Dallvarad &amp; Sat $39,999.

mountalno
l5 Temper

•• 2
&amp; A Q B2

.

stove and fridge, a dinette : : - - - - - - -14x70 2 bedroom 21ull bath, set, wood floors, covered
newly remodeled. New cen· porch, axa bldg $385/mon+
lralair unit and furnace call $3t5 dep. call256-1106
740-367-7143 or 740·7940022 $9,000
14x70, very nice 3 BR, 2BA,
- - - - - : - - - - privacy in country. Meigs
1998 Clay1on Spirit II lots of School dist. $475 + dep.
eXIras excellent condition. 859-806-4354 or 740-742·
Must be moved. Call 949- 3046. Available July 1.
2698. after 4 p.m. ,
16xBO Trailer, 3br, 2ba,
1998 Aedman &amp; 2 acres. 3 located on 15 acres In Pt.
bd. &amp; 2 baths off New Lima Pleasant.
$550/month,
In Rutland for sale or rent. $550/deposlt 740-416-3342

740-992·3514.

07-0!Hl7

• 9 3 2
9 A Q 10 6 .

45 Fix a
squeak
1 Soften up
46 Tootada's
5 Deaart plant
cousin
10 Dorm
• 50 Came to
sharer
terma
12 Raw deal (2 53 Fluffed, u
wds.)
hair
13 Naval rank 55 Cheeay
14 Of high
SMCkl

21 ApProved
2 Emulate
22 Antarctic
Oprah
aea
3 Faulty
23 Mountain
4 Toupee kin
curve
5 "lite Klng 24 Lao Voaaa
and I" name
"action•·6 Foul-ball
25 Night
caller
crawler
7 Cattle stall 28 Makea a
8 Sugar
choice
source
29 Onlon
9 Mimicked
couoin
10 Sporto
31 Dlaparaglng
"zebra"
romarl&lt;
11 Forllldo
32 Author' a
12 Sacka
payment
17 And, lor
33 Dull
Wolfgang
37 Aloha tokan

41UUn.~mogl.,.
••
42 Ger. or Fr.

43 SoaWMd
derivative
44 Willy or
Shamu
47 Vonornouo
onakoa
48 High notH
49 Weird
51 Codgers'
querln
52 G-•• Dl
dawn
54 Elactrlc-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos
Celebiy Cii:tl« erwt9'1mt we cr&amp;Hl m qLIJI.OOIDI'lS bV tamous peopi!. past and fi!$Mt
Each lettar in the cipher stands b" another
r~s

"KWTTVKK
CRNKV

SK

ARN

XBSDWPV

Clue: A 6Qii8/s W

NXCVY

LNY'C

SK

BTRSVMVL

HYNA

EZ

CRBC

SYVMSCBEDV ," • TNTN

TRBYVO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'We need an America with the wisdom ol
experience, but we must not lei America grow old in spirit.• - HOO.rt H.
Humphrey

a

r::~:;y S@l\&amp;UM-- r.,~s·

WOlD
GAM!

fcllt•ci by CU.Y A~ POllAN .

.

Rlorrar~oe loiters of the
0 four
S&lt;r&lt;:mbltd words be-

f"""!!!'-,..-1~~.~-.....

. low to formfo,i simple words.

FJ!doy, July 8, 2007
By Iamie. Bade 01101

••-1m

Social Involvements are likely to turn out
to be equally as Important as your career
or wor1~:-reiated activities. New friends
could be instrumental In lurtherlng your

•

Stop &amp; Compare

material Interests.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -

Be elllra
mindful of whet -you s8y off the cuff, especlallo; when In the presence of persons
who could have an Influence over you(
career. What you say, good and bad. will
be duly noted.

BASEMENT
WATeRPROOFING .
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished. E:!tabllshed 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740l 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

llolm; .
IURRENT
$1 55/mol Buy 4txl HUD
"hamel 5% dn , 20yrs @ 8%.
For Listings 800-559-4109
xt709

..

A HIOOEN TREASURE!
Laurel
Commons
Apartments. Largest in the
area! Beautifully renovated
~~30;::2-;Hogg-;-----:S:-t,-:2::-br--,Ho_u_se throughout iricludlng brand
Central HeatiAC, 1 year new kitchen and bath .
Lease, No Pets Security Star1ing at S405. Call today!
2 Bedroom House 1 bath, 7
miles
AI
2
North,
$400/month. $300/deposit
304 675 2381
No Pets,
"
"
3
Bedroom H9uSe in
Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pets .. (304)6755332 weekends 740-591-

11M WRITIN6

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
Street ; Gallipolis
446-0007

.'

~,------­
Beautiful, rare Hinkle-Harris

Hil l's Self
Storage

wild black cherry gate leg
drop leave dining table, 2
leaves + pads. $800. 3799211
Massey
Tractor

Ferguson
150
with
loader,
International 574, 165
Massey Ferguson, 284
International, 9N Ford, Sherltt'a Sale

Mattress &amp; BIS,
$180; Sofa &amp; Loveseat sets,
$400: Drive a tittle- save a
lot. Mollohan, 202 Clark
Chapel Ad, Bidwell.

r

I

r

For
A '~ewHome?
"
Racine American Legion
Post #602 support the
Veterans Poker Run
Saturday, July 7th
·1:00

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-94H217

~D t.,O; HEAR~ CARoL
~ In S::l\) ·I"' 10

I I \\ h
&lt; I l \,I I\ I I I

l () \ '-t I

I~

1Ht;. R:Xll ---...

I I II 1 l '\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of • .
Conmie Work

Butternut Avenue In 136, page 379, Volume
Pomeroy Village. The 133, page 605 · and
26 Years Experience
property lor sale Ia Volume 144, page 482.
David Lewis
beat described In a In Meigs County Deed
warranty deed record- Records.
740-992-6971
ad ln Volume 15 pageo Sealad bids shall be
lnaurec:t
657 &amp; 519. The other accepted until 12:00
Free E1tlrn1tea
property lor sale Ia noon on July 20, 2007.
bast described In a All bldo shall be clearly
quit-claim
deed marked
Jr.
High
recorded In Volume Property Real Eatate
282 page 389.
Bid, on the outside of
Sealed bids shall be the envelope and subaccepted until 12:00 mmed to the Village
pm on Monday, July 9, Clerk, 320 Eaot Main
2007, All bids should Street, Pomeroy, OH
be sealed and clearly 45769.
. . . 27 f1t,ll . . . . . . . . ..
marked Real Estate All bids are aub)ect to
. . . . . . . .12:11 ..
Bid on the outslde of a previous agreement
tho envelope and sub- wtth the Melga County
mlttad to the VIllage CIC, lor "Right of First
••-1
Clerk, 320 East Main ·Refusal"
llllllllcCIIIIIIIIII·C.-.;Street, Pomaroy, OH The Pomeroy Village
·
o fill.........
45769.
Council reaervea the.l-~_ _;!!"!!!!!j-~~!!!!,
(5) 30, (6) 6, 13,20 (7) 5 right to accept or
ICIIftrCIItMPI'ICIII
reject any or all bids.
- - - - - - - (6) 25, 29 (7) 5, 11 , 20
Public Notice
_ _ _;__,:..:_:...:__
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public Notice
Tho Village of Pomeroy - - - - - - desires to sail certain PUBLIC NOTICE
real estate located on
The Sallsbury
East Main Street situ- Township TruotHo will
at&amp;d In the lncorporat· hold their 2008 Budget
ad Village. The proper- meeting July 10th,
Public Notice
ty tor sale, Is described 2007, at the Town Hall
as Lot 82 In the Village from 6:00 P.M. to 7:00
PUBLIC NOTICE
of Pomeroy. This prop- P.M.
The Village of Pomeroy arty Ia best deacrlbed Richard Bailey
desires te&gt; sell certain In a warranty deed Clerk
real estate located on recorded In Volume (7) 5 1 tc
10:00 am Saturday,
July 7, 2007, on the lot
beside tho Shariff's
Office there will be
sold at Public Auction
to 1he best snd highest
bidder the following:
1-1997 Ford Crown
VIctoria min bid $500
3·1998 Ford Crown
VIctoria min bid $550
1·1999 Ford Crown
VIctoria (pollee Interceptor) min bid $700
1-1999 Ford Crown
VIctoria (maroon) min
bid $2,500
1·2000 SID Chevrolet
pickup 4·wheol drive
wtth topper (drug forfailure vehicle) min bid
$3,200
Several air condltloners min bid $20
Vehicles may be seen
by contacting the
Sharltt's Office
Vehicles sold "AS IS"
Cash day of sale
Robert E. Beagle
She rift
llolgs County
(6)21' 28, (7) 5

23=-Aug. 22)

-

Someone Who

is nosy and generally not working In anybody's best Interests may be a bit too
interestBd In the late51 gos51p. This is the
last person you should want to chat with .
vtRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - An acqualn·
tance who loves ·to gossip about others
might anempt to draw you Into one of h~
or her intrigues. No matter how fasclnat·
lng the subject might be. don't take the
ball.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - It you are In
need of talking things out with a friend
about a personal maner, be extremely
selective as to whom you go to for this little chilchal. Your judgment might be 1!1 bit
fau~.

SUNSHINE CLUB

nice, clea n &amp; attractive. 11:'1"':~~----, (740)286-6522
$500/mo, 1st mo + $500
~.JANF.Jll5
New 6ft Brush Hog for skid
Sec.dep. required. Available
"f\.fERCHANDISE
steer. $3500. 388-1579
7116107. Apply within. 1743 _
•
Centenary Ad, Gallipolis. No
Lrv&amp;S1ucK
0265
Phone Calls Please.
$500 toupan
Hot Tub Outlet!!
3·4 b9droom home in Beautiful Apte. at Jackson Top Oualityf\Narranty Milton
Syracuse, $500 plus ulilkies. Eatatea. 52 Westwood Flea Mkt SIS 606·326-Q777 5 miniature horses : 1 stallion, 2 mares, 1 colt and 1
(740)992-7511
Drive, from $36:5 to $560.
740-446-2568.
Equal - - - - : : : : : - - - - miniature dwarf female. Call
For Rent: Brick 01ouse in Housing Opportun1ty. This
JET
388-8670.
MercervUie. 1S:R Apt all util- institu tion is an Equal
AERATION MOTORS
ities &amp; cable paid in Crown Opportunity Pr ovider and Repaired, New &amp; Rebuill In Bore Goats, full blOOded &amp;
City. (740)256-8132
Employer.
Stock. Call Ron Evans, r- percentage . The price is
8Q0-537-9528
right. 36?·7755

TrY the
Classifieds!!

AND TO SEND US
COOKIES ..

\I I W 11\\Hhl

27 3
~13"04'-'1"'
"'"·3344='--.,--- Full Size

Accepting applications for 2
BA, 1 BA apt, stove, fridge,
W/ 0 included. Water &amp;
Garbage paid. No pets, very

A POST

CARD TO CI-IARLE5 ..

~Ill riO "~

1 possibly 2 Br fiouse in
New t&gt;iaven , $325/month,
$325/deposit No ' Pets.
(304)882·3652

Deposit. Ty 304-675-4030

PEANUTS

~ .~r;'&gt;":'l'l·z~a~M,.:•
..
70 Pine

I~ I \ I \I "

LEO (July

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• BomefiU System
• Belios System

GARFIELD

Manlav•a
Recycling

Plft·T·PIICU fll
·-•CIIs•l

___J

r--,r---;;:o-~-....

SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - When
asked to pass along some Instructions to
co-worl&lt;ers. be on the safe side and write
dotNn a11 the details Involved . There's a
slrong chance Important tidbits could get
lost in the telling.
SAGtTIARIUS (Nov, 23-Dec. 21) -When
It comes to your oommerctalaffalrs, do not
treat harsh points Indifferently. Unless the
, edge is taken off the sharJl details, they
could become thorns in the lion's paw.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - If you
- find more to crHicize than you do things to
praise in your mate, harmony is likely to
be threatened on the hOme tront .
Remember: II you can't say something
nice, keep mum.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Do not
think of yourself as the exception to the
rule that no one i5 pertect because we all
ha11e feet ot day. Once you slar1 lOOking
lor faults , you're sure to find them, as others will in you.

PISCES (Feb. 2o-March 20) - Small
extravagances are Wkely to add up to a
shOCkingly large total when all is finally
computed. It's important to be as mindful
of the dimes as you are of the dollar bills,
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) - Because

you have an especially oood eye for
detail. you might have to take care not to
be too critical of the l1nle things In lite that
are meaningless. Don't let negativism

oVerpower you.
TAURUS (AprW 20...May 20) - Being sentimental definitely has its time and place,
but if you allow your err19 U~I perceptions to dominate your f0o1cal assessments, you'll lose. Blend th e two for better
judgment calls.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Sometimes
It Is more costly to do business with a
friend than with a total strangtu, and today

I
I

GRIZZWELLS
t\MR
Pill ibll ;JUST SAY
Mil-lO
SOMET\11~
';&gt;

might be one of thOse limes. Should there
be a problem, it'll be difficult to complain
to a pal.

SOUP TO NUTZ

once said, "Twll great movers
of lhe lmrnan mind are lhe
desire for go&lt;&gt;d :wd the···· of

,. ,. .,J_E.,.~";'7

M_jrR...,,-::-8_OTJ..

,,Q-~~~:~; i;&lt;''~:;,:~g ~:~

'-·...J'--'·'--'-·--'--'--'

you de.,..elop ftcm .srep No. 3 below.

1
.oCio PRINI NUMSEREO
~ LflTERS iN SQUARfS

6)

~~~BlEFORI

I I I Iori I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1 - ~ - 07

Hominy - Grand -- Cloak - Totter - RICH DO
.
l11e trouble with the middle class is lrying to s~ve while
spending as much as the RICH DO. "
' ARLO &amp; JANIS

•

�•
&lt;

'

Police: No foul play in
deaths of 4 when·minivan
rolled into pond, A7

'' .

Local student receives
scholarship, A6
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

P

on

Youth 'Art in the Park'
GALLIPOLIS -All entries for the youth
"Art in the Park" competition will be displayed from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Saturday,
July 7 in the Gallipolis City Park as part of
the River Recreation Festival's "Youth
Day" activitites.
The Best of. Category winner in each
division will be given a monetary prize,
and first, second and third place winners
will receive ribbons. All award winners
will be exhibited in the FAC's Youth
Gallery from July 7-28.
The main sponsor for this competition is
the Gallipolis Rotary Club, with support in
part by the Ohio River Border Initiative, a
Joint project of the Ohio Arts Council and
the West Virginia Commission of the Arts.

Thaditional Craft Day
RIO GRANDE - Those intereste!l. in
demonstrations of traditional arts and ~ts
are invited to Traditional Craft Day at the
Bob Ev:ljls Farm on Saturday, July 7. Held
from II a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Craft Barn on
the farm in Rio Grande, the event is free
and open to the public.
Traditional craft demonstrations will
include crocheting by Marie Riggs, counted
cross-stitch by .kJanita Rainey, hand knitting by Marjorie Pullin, and quilting by
Ruth Skaggs.
.
Local author Justine Rutherford will
also be on hand for a book signing of her
latest book. Wild Mustard: Flavo•ful
Characters, Opinions and Recipes from
Spurlock Creek.

Visitor to the farm may also enjoy the
Bob Evans Homstead Museum and the
"Homestead Quilt Exhibit: Reflections of
Life" by Helen Forshey AI therr. Both offer
free admission . The Craft Barn is open
daily from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30p.m.
For ,more information about the farm or
other Bob Evans Farm events and activities,
those inter_i:sted should call (800) 994-3276
or visit the website at www.bobevans.com.

Quilt exhibit · ·
ATHENS- The SewN' Sew Quilt Guild
will hold its "Quilt Exhibit 2007" from July
:2 to July 2? at the University Mall on East
State Street, Athens·. Hour·s are Wednesdays
and Fridays from noon until 5 p.m. and
Saturdays from I0 a.m. until 6 p.m.
Special arrangements for groups to view
the quilts can be made by calling (740) 7973065. Tl],e Hoffman Challenge will also be
on display from July 14 to July 22, with
additional open hours on Thursday, July 19
from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. and Sunday, July
22 from noon until 5 p.m.
Quilt shop vendors will be on the premises July 19-21 , from I0 a.m . until 6 p.m.

•

River Recreation Festival
Gallipolis City Park

OMEROY The
Rhythm on the River
free concert series will
present Albert "The Kid"
Castiglia on Friday, July 6 at
8 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Riverfront Amphitheater.
His performance is sponsored by the Big Bend Blues .
and Jazz Society.
Albert Castiglia was born
in New York on the weekend
of the famous Woodstock
Music Festival. He will make
a return engagement to the
Ohio Riverfront in Pomeroy
for a Rhythm on the River
concert on July 6.
With a Cuban mother and
an Italian father, "The Kid"
began playing guitar at the
age of 12 and soon realized
that the passions of his heart
were expressed best by his
music. He realized that he
could sing as well as he
played.
After college he began the
day-night schedule whi~h
put him on the music scene
but · soon found .it was too
much. In 1990 he joined the
Miami Blues Authorit~, .performing as lead guitanst and .
vocalist for the next seven
years developing a personalized musical style, won the
Best Local blues ~uitarist
for 1997, and dectded to
pursue his lifelong dream of
"hitting the road" as a blues
performer.
Castiglia performed so ·
well on his early tours that
he· was soon at clubs and
blues festivals all over the
United States. Canada, and
Europe
winning
rave
reviews for his performances
along the way. While living
in Chicago, Ill.. he was was
lead singer and guitar player known as the "Empress of
in the "Hoodoo Man's the Blues." He opened for
Band" and began touring her for several years.
with Sandra Hall, nationally
Then in 200 I he decided to

Entertainment Briefs

Thursday, Julys, 2oo-z

www.mydailysen~el.com

Schedule of events
· Thursday, July 5

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

5-10 p.m.- Gospel Night, featuring Chuck
Compton

FRID.\Y .. JULY(,, :!007

:;o ("1::'\TS. \ "ol. :;h, :'\o . :! ;1-

""" ·"'"lail"'"" iillt·l.•·•""

Friday, July 6
6-6:30 p.m. - Wing Eating Contest sponsored
by Courtside Bar &amp; Grill
6:30-7:30 p.m.- Sonic Sledge, Main Stage
8 p.m. -Two River Junction, Main Stage
10 p.m. -Fireworks
.
10:30 p.m.- The Boogieman, Main Stage

Homestead Exemption expanded to include all senio~

SPORTS
'

determination on a singlefamily residence, regardless
of income.
POMEROY- Senior citAccording to Byer-Hill,
izens and disabled Meigs the new law became effecCountians may now apply tive on Sunday. The enrollwith the county auditor to ment period for new applilower the size of the proper- cants who were not previty tax bills on their home ously eligibl.e will remain
through the newly-ex~and­ open through Oct. I.
ed Homestead Exempuon.
Applicants can apply for the
Meigs County Auditor exemption the year they
Mary Byer-Hill said the tum 65, as long as they own
new law regulating home- and occupy the house as of
stead exemptions for home- J31). I the year they file. .
Homeowners who are
owners over 65 or those
permanently disabled pro- currently recetvmg the
vide for taking $25,000 off Homestead reduction will
the appraised value of their automatically be included in
homes · for property tax the expanded program and

• Reds double up
Giants. See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH

HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Saturday, July 7
Kids Day

Sponsored by The Wiseman Agency

Al.bert 'The Kid' Castiglia

work on his own material and
began writing and working in
the recording studio. He now
works on his own, lights up

stages throughout the U.S.,
Europe and beyond with his
own exciting and unique
musical style.

Rutland's annual Ox
Roast set for Saturday
RUTLAND - The Rutland Fire
Department's Annual Ox . Roast and
patriotic activities will be held this
Saturday beginning with a parade at
10 a.m. and ending at II p.m. with a
.
fireworks display.
The parade's line up is set for 9 a.m.
with fire trucks and ·larger floats lining ·
up at the grade school and all other
entries lining up at Depot and Brick
Streets. The theme for this year's parade
is "Our Soldiers, Our Freedom" with
awards frOm the parade being given out
at noon. Categories for parade entries
are horses, religious, non-religious
floats, walking units, bikes and vehicles.
A flag raising will take place after the
parade at fireman's park where the
majority nf the activ.tties take place.
Games are from noon to I p.m. and
include ring toss, duck game, spinning
wheel, tic-tac-toe, basketball toss, football ¥Jss, dart game and others. At 2
p.m., the Rutland Church of the

Nazarene will be organizing kids games
with prizes awarded for each game.
Bingo starts at I p.m. at the bingo
building. Also, beginning at I p.m. is
Belistic Championship Wrestling. In
addition. the dunking booth will be
operated by the Big Bend Youth
Football League the entire·day.
This year 's entertainment includes
the band Requiem from 2 to 4 p.m.
followed by the band Swamp Jeuce
fro m 7 until II p.m. after which the
fireworks begin.
,,
Throughout the day, the Rutland Fire
Department will be sellihg concessions,
including its famous roast beef, hot
dogs, sloppy joes, nachos and cheese,
popcorn, ice cream, sno-kones, cotton
candy, french fries and elephant ears.
Any and all vendors are welcome for
a cost of $10 per space though no food
or drink vendors permitted. For information, ca)l Danny Davis at (740) 7422372 or Anna Farley at (740) 416-5991.

'Mounudn Stage' to pick regional winner
PARKERSBURG. W.Va.- Join in
on Saturday, July 21, at the
Blennerhassett Hotel in Parkersburg
for a performance competition featuring the Mountain Stage· NewSong
Contest's exceptional Ohio River
Vall~y regional finalists.
The judges were impressed. And
you will be too. The 2007 Mountain
Stage NewSong Contest, one of the
nation's premier showcases for performing songwriters in all genres of
music, has selected its finalists for its
Ohio River Valley Regional Round.
The following artists will perform
July 21 at the Blennerhassett, where
one of them will be selected to
advance to the international contest
finals alSo to be held iri .New York later
in the summer.
The competition begins promptly at
7 p.m.
Finalists are Bruce Dalzell of
Stewart, Ohio; Harlan Qalzell of
Athens, Ohio; Jim Savarino of
Morgantown; RJ Cowdery of
Columbus , Ohio; Tri stan Kinsley of
Athens. Ohio; D Russell of Canton.
Ohio; Steve Zarate of Athens, Ohio ;
Transcendent Third of Harpers Ferry ;
Vincent Robert Trocchi a of Guysville,
Ohio; Ellery of Lakeside Park, Ky. ;
and. Sam Lamont of Morgantown.
Now in its sixth year, the Mountain
Stage NewSong Contest is one of the
'

nation's premier showcases of emerging performing songwriters across all
gentes of music.
A total of 12 finalists will be chosen
to perform in the international contest
finals in New York City - seven of
them coming from regional rouhds
held across the country. The contest
fea tures cash and other prizes and one
of five winners Will earn an appearance .
on a worldwide broadcast of the prestigious "Mountain Stage'' radio show,
Winners and other contest standouts
will also be invited to participate in
future NewSong proc}uctions in locations throughout the country and will
be candidates for future releases on
the NewSong Recordings label . Nonwinning contestants will also be considered for future "Mountain Stage"
appearan~e s.

Deadline for submitting songs to
the contest's General Round is July
25. For full rules and guidelines. see·
www. mountain st agene wsongcontest. com.
The contest is open to all genres of
.music, reflecting the diversity of styles
and performers on "Mountain Stage
with Larry Groce," now in its 25th year.
The acclaimed ~how. heard on rudio
and TV around the globe, presenis acts
ranging from traditional roots, biLies
and country. to avant-garde rock. world
beat. jazz and beyond.

10 a.m.-3 p.m.- Youth Art in the Park (French
Art Colony)
·
11 a.m.-2 p.m. - Story Telling/Bossard
Memorial Library
11 a.m.-noon- Egg Race and Hay Rolling,
sponsored by 0.0. Mcl!ltyre Park District
. Noon-S p.m. - Pepsi Jumbotron Video Screen
Noon- I p.m. - Eastman's Or~o Stacking
Contest
Noon-S p.m.- AEP Boat Tours, PUblic Access
Area
1-2:30- p.m.- t-Jula Hoop Contest, Bubble Gum
Blowing Contest, Sack Races, sponsored by
H.O.P.E.lnterventlon
2:30-3:30 p.m. - . Water Balloons and Obstacle
Course, sponsored by the Gallipolis Kiwanis
C.lub
·
4-5:30 p.m •.- Terrapin Races, Sack Races and
Frog •Jumping Contest, sponsored by the
Gallipolis Lions Club
4 p.rn. - r;ive Auction, sponsor~d by 1osh
Bodimer and Wiseman Real Estate
4:30-5:30 p.m. - Paul Dean Williams, Main
· Stage
6-7 p.m. - "Dr. Eldoonie" Magici;m, Main
Stage
7:15-8 p.m. - CeeCee Tench, Mairt Stage
8:30-10:30 p.m.- Featured Entertainer Lee
McCormack, Main Stage
·
9:45 p.m. -Jake Koebel Annual Split the Pot
Drawing, Main Stage, sponsoreoby
McDonald's

,.

Ohioans who qualify from
about 220,000 to 775,000.
"The amount of savings
will vary from community
to commumty but should
provide considerable reli~f
_for homeowners ~ho ~ualify for the exemption, said
Levin who went on to
stress that making application to the county auditor
for the exemption must be
completed by the Oct. I
deadli111:. to have it applied
to · the first property tax
bills in 2008.
Levin noted that to accommodate and educate Ohioans
abo ut
the
Homestead
Exemption expansion, the

Ohio
Department
Of
Taxation has set up an infor~
mational section on its well
site, tax.ohio.gov. The sill!
includes answers to fre;
quently-asked questions.
To qualify for the ne\l(
Homestead
Exemptioq,
Levin emphasized that
"homeowners must live In
their home as their primacy
residence and be etther .at
least 65 years old or turn 6S
in 2007 or, certified totaliS
and permanently disabled 3$
. of Jan. I, 2007, or, the surviving spouse of a qualifie4
homeowner who was at
least 59 years old on the date
of their spouse's death." - :

No takers ori
demolishing ·;
houses in
Pomeroy

OBITUARIES

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTII&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page .A5
• V. Howard Blazer, 76
• Clarence Cox, 85
• John Alva Holsinger, 32
• Gladys Machir, 90
•Donna M. Powers, 65

Dally activities

.

Amusement rides by Michael's Amusements
Carnival games
Free train rides sponsored by Norris Northup
Dodge
Face painting by Fantasy Faces
Jake Koebel Split the Pot
Crafters/novelties

··~'

,,

'

INSlbE
• 'Evan Almighty'
might reveal mighty
trutli. See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• 3 shot dead in
apparent fireworks
noise dispute, police
say. See Page AS
• German reunion
·held. See Page AS
• Home from hospital.
See Page AS
• Subway train derails
in east london.
See Page A7
• OU says drinking
cases down amid
tough new alcohol
·policy. See Page A8

2007 Point Pleasant
Sternwheel Regatta schedule
Thursday, July 5
6 p.m. - Regatta Queen pageant, State Theater
6 p.m. - Gospel Evening, Tu-Endie-Wei State
Park
· 6:30p.m. - RiverRock 1 Battle of the Bands,
Riverfront Park
Friday, July 6
6:45p.m. - River Princess pageant, State ·
· Theater
7 p.m. - Comedy Show, American Legion*
7: 15 p.m. - Joey Wilcoxon, Riverfront Park
8:30 p.m. -Rick K. &amp; the Allnighters,
Riverfront Park
.
.
9 p.m.- Charlie Lilly, Tu-Endie-Wei State Park ·
I 0 p.m. - Comedy ,Show, American Legion*
Saturday, July 7
Kids' Day

Rochet Mortlndale/pi!OtOI

on a hot fune afternoon, Pam Riffle runs the quilting machine while Cathy Clark prepares batting for another quilt.

INTERN. THE DAILY SENTINEL

INDEX

Sunday, July 8
Chri stian CQ!lrtyard. Main Street
Car Show, Mam Street
Eternity, Riverfront Park
Youth in Gospel Music, Riverfront

16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A6

Calendars

A6

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Editorials

A4

Faith • Values
Times and shows are subject to change without
notice and are weather permitting. Check out
www.po intpleasantwv.org/regatta.html for a
complete schedule and contact information .
*Tickets for ·the Fireworks cruise (Gallipolis
and Point Pleasant. $20 each) and Comedy Show
($10) are on.sale at WBYG Big Country 99 andthe Mason County TourisQ1 Center.

Movies

A2-3

.As

NASCAR

B8

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A8

· © 2007 Ohj;o Valley Publishing Co.

•

ters

BY RACHEL MARTINDALE

Detallo on Pago A8

2 SECrJONS -

•

Custom

WEATHER

8:30 a.m. - Pleasant Valley Hospital 5k River
Run
II a.m.- Parade, Main Street
Noon - Ohio River Dance, Post Office
12:15 p.m. - Cartoon Idol , Riverfront Park
I p.m. - Kids Game Show, Riverfront Park
I p.m.- New Image (Bluegrass), Tu-Endie-Wei
State !'ark
I p.m. - 3-on-3 Basketball Tournament
2 p.m. - Dewayne Hill magic show. Riverfront
Park
2 p.m. - Outdoor Plumbing Company, TuEndie-Wei State Park
2 p.m. - Line Throwing contest, River Museum
4 p.m. - Rock in' Reggie. Post Otlice
5 p.m. - Pizza Eating contest, Main Street
6:30 p.m. - Colgate Country Showdown finals,
Riverfront Park
9 p.m. - MfXX, Tu-Endie-Wei State Park
10 p.m. - Fireworks, Tu-Endie-Wei State Park
10":30 p.I\J. - r-Roc kin' Reggie,
Fourth Street
"
.•
Noon I p.m. I p.m. 2 p.m. Park

do not need to contact the
auditor's otlice.
The
new
program
requireS proof of age,
including a photocopy of a
photo JD. Information is
available by calling ByerHill's office at 992-2698. ·
Applications are available
at her office on the second
floor of the courthouse.
According to a release from
Ohio . Tax Commissioner
Richard A. Levin the
Homestead ,
Exemption
changes signed into law by
Governor Ted Strickland as
part of Ohio's two-year operating budget, are expected to
increase the number· of

POMEROY- Pam Riffle
has been sewing since she
was 13 but began quilting
only four years ago. Together,
she and Cathy Clark, longtime neighbor and friend now
finish quilts upstairs in The
Fabric Shop on West Main
Street in Pomeroy.
·
Riffle works at The Fabric
Shop five days a week, while
Clark sews samples and other
items at horne, and only goes
into the store to help prepare
quilts for quilting.
. Years ago, the Fabric
Shop received numerous
requests for the names of
anyone who quilted in the
area. So shop owner Becky
Anderson decided to meet
the demand. She purchased
a Gammill Plus Classic longarm 'quilting machine four
years ago and was joined by
Clark to learn how to operate it using muslin pieces.
Six to 12 months later,

Pam Riffle quilts free-hand on the custom side of the
machine. Custom quilts take longer and cost more .
Riffle took up the trade. She within four to six weeks,
learned in six months, teach- depending on the number of
ing herself how to quilt free- orders waiting. At one point,
hand, or custom, after Clark she had about 50 quilt tops
showed her the basics. These in waiting. Most custom
days, . Riffle is the primary quilts take one to one-and-ahalf days to quilt; patterned
operaror of the mach me.
quilts
take less time. Once, a
"SM~sl'~;i'l!;one speed, and
that's fast," Clark said. ··Dear Jane" quilt from
Riffle completes mosr quilts Syracuse took four days_:

.

.

-

Quilting is "kind of a lost
art," Riffle said. Hand quilting, practiced by some
chufch groups and quilting
circles, is rare. Quilting
takes two or thre.e months
by hand, compared to one
(:lay on the machine. ;'\nd
"everybody wants thtngs
fast," she said.
Customers come · from
Huntington, Parkersburg,
Gallipolis, Belpre and
Athens because they know
that Ri file does a good job,
Clark said.
'"That's one thing I like .
about my job - every day's
different," Riffle said of the
variety of quilts she receiv_es.
Riftle said she loves quilting and is proud of her
work. "I do a quilt like I'd
want somebody to do my
quilt," she said. "Quilting is
an art, she added, "one that
others should discover."
Quilting with the longllrm
machine calls for a steady
Please see Qulhers, ~
.. '

..

"

Memorial service for Evans Saturday
Clyde Evans of Rio Grande;
NEWS@MYDAILY SENTINEL.COM
Sieve Davis, chairman and
chief executive officer of
COLUMBUS - Together Bob Evans Farms; Leslie
with the Evans family, Bob Lilly, director of the
Evans Farms Inc. invites Foundation for Appalachian
friends, family and cus- Ohio; David Graham, chief
tomers to a celebration of of the Ohio Division of
R!oben L. "Bob" Evans' life Wildlife; Harold Krueger,
on Saturday at 2 p.m. at Evans'early business partOhio State University's ner; Jim Helt of the Ohio 4Mershon Auditorium. 1871 H Foundation; and several
N. High St .. Columbus.
other esteemed speakers:
The program Will mclude
In lteu ol !lowers or gtfts.
speeches from State Rep .. the family asks that dona-·
STAFF REPORT

•

tions be made to the Bob
Evans Memorial Fund for
Scholarships, payable to the
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio, P.O. Box 457,
Nelsonville , Ohio, 45.764.
Sympathy card s for
Jewell Evan s and family ·
can b!! mailed to the Bob
Evans Farms Corporate
Office. 3776 S. High St..
Columb us, Ohio, 43207 .
· The company will share
memories of Bob Evans on
a legacy website at ·

•

www.bobevans.com/Iegacy.
Memories. stories and well
wishes can be sent to memories@bobevans.com.
Bob Evans died Thursday,
June 21,2007, from complications of pneumonia at
12:30 p.m., at the Cleveland
Clinic. He retired as president of Bob Evans Farms on
Dec. 31, 1986.
For more informaTion,
conracr Jamie Chabra &lt;II the
BEF corporate office, (800)
272-7675.

POMEROY - For a sec:·
ond time no one has replied
to advertisements to teat
down condemned houses in
Pomeroy, leaving hopes the
third·time is· a charm.
Yesterday, Meigs County
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
informed Meigs County
Grants Administrator Jean
Trussell they received no
bids on demolishing 13
homes using Community
Development Block Grant
(CDBG) money awarded to
the village of Pomeroy.
Trussell said she would
attempt to advertise the project ·a third time in local
publications. In addition,
she added she would send
out not only a letter about
the project to prospective
contractors but the actual
bid packet to see if this
entices more interest. A representative from Shelly
Company of Thornville
who was also at the com~
missioner's meeting for a
openin·g
separate
bid
expressed a possible interest
in bidding on the project.
Please see De111ollsh, AS

Commissioners
receive bid
for paving
BY BETtt SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

POMEROY -·
Meigs
Commissioners
County
Mick Davenport and Jim
Sheets opened a bid for
paving three county roads as
well as several streets in
Tuppers Plains at yesterday's
commissioners meeting.
Only one bid was
received from the Shelly
Company of Thornville for
$545.099.90, which was
under the engineer's estimate of $581 ,357.
. County Engineer Eugene
Triplett said the paving
would take place on Eagle
Ridge Road. Cotteri II Road,
Bowman's Run Road and
streets in Tuppers Plains.
One of the streets in Tuppers
Plains will be paved in
Orange Township with
Triplett saying "several" in
·Olive Township in Tuppers
Plains will be paved.
Triplett, who will review
the bid package, said Shelly
is currently doing work in
the county and if the bid is
approved work could possibly begin on the new paving
this month. Shelly has 60

Please see Pavlnc, AS
'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="532">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9983">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="15493">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="15492">
              <text>July 5, 2007</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1124">
      <name>coates</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="512">
      <name>cottrell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2070">
      <name>elberfeld</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="163">
      <name>gibbs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1024">
      <name>holsinger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="241">
      <name>white</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="14">
      <name>wolfe</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4180">
      <name>zehm</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
