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                  <text>: Pqe 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 7, 2o'o 6

Holzer Center for ·
Cancer Care continues
celebration, A2

7-0

Native People
of the Point, B6

CINCINNATI (AP) - For

tbe second straight year,
Gincinnati has chosen a
Texas outfielder as its No. I
draftpick.
· The
Reds ' picked
University of
Texas junior
center fielder
Drew Stubbs
with .
the
eighth over- ·
all choice
Tuesday in
baseball 's
annual draft.
Stubbs, 21.
is one of fi ve
: Stubbe
finalists for
Golden Spikes Award, which
is presented annually to the
natiOn's top amateur baseball
player. The right-hander batted .342 with 12 home runs
and 58 runs batted in for the
Longhorns, who went 41 -21
and were eliminated from the
NCAA
tournament
on
Sunday.
He was picked in the third
round by Houston in 2003
after his senior season at
Atlanta (Texas) High School,
but chose to attend Texas. He
started in center field all three
seasons with the Longhorns,
helping them win last year's
national championship.
"I'm very excited," the. 6foot-3, · 21 0-pound Stubbs
said. "This is a huge honor
for me to be in the position
I'~ in ri~ht . now . I_ like ~he
thmgs Cmcmnatt ts domg
with the organization. I'm
excited to be a Red. I like the
direction they're moving in."
The Reds picked Texas
high school outfielder Jay
Bruce with their No. I pick
last year.. Stubbs is the first
college position player chosen No. I by Cincinnati since
Louisiana State · infielder
Brandon Larson in 1997.

• New faces, new
places in NBA finals.

'.

'·

OBITUARIES
Page A5 ·
• Gary R. George, 49
! .Qlto Marc[ll&lt;o, Sr., 56.

• Janet 'Janie' Murphy, t3

-~

::::CLEVELAND (AP)
!fhe Cleveland Indians select. !:l9 left-hander David Huff of
UCLA with their ftr&amp;t pick,
No. 39 overall, in Tuesday's
llaseball draft.
: Huff, a 6-foot-2 junior, has
been compared to Oakland
lefty Barry Zito, who was
~heduled to stan for the
~thletics on Tuesday night
against the Imj_ians at Jacobs
Eield.
. : The 21-year-old Huff was
Clrafted twice previously, by
the Angels in the 31st round
jn 2003 and by the Phillies in
the 19th round last year. Huff
turned down the Angels' to
pitch at the UC Irvine, where
Ire went 3-0 as a freshman in
2004 befere transferring to
UCLA.
.
· Huff went 4-2 with a 3.24
ERA for the Bruins in 2005
and reponed! y turned down a
$500,000 contract offer from
l!hiladelphia to return to
UCLA this season.
In 16 stans for the Bruins
in 2006; he went 7-4 with a
2.98 ERA, walking only 27 ·
while striking out I00 in 129
2-3 innings for coach John
Savage - Zitp's coach at
Southern California-in 1999.
The Indians, who dido 't
have a first-round pick for the
ftrSt time since 1999, have
five selections in the top 75
this year.
Cleveland lost its own firstrounder (No: 25) to. the Los
Angeles Angels ·as compens~tion ·for signing free. age~t
nght-hander Paul Byrd m
December. However, the
Indians did .pick up the 39th
and 57th selections when
they lost free agent reliever
Bob Howey ' to the Chicago
Cubs. •
They also got the 56th pick
for losing free agent Kevin
Millwood to Texas, retained
their own second-round .
selection at No. 69, and were
. awarded the 75th pick when
free agent Scott . Elarton
.,
signed with Kansas City,
With their consecutive
selections in the secon'il
round, the Indians took
Hawaii right-hander Steven
Wright and infielder Joshua
Rodriguez of Rice. Georgia
Iech third baseman Wesley
Hodges was Cleveland's pick
~ No. 69, · followed by
Lehigh catc~er Matt McBride
at No. 75.

INSIDE

Perennials
Quart: 5 2.69 each ·

.or 2 lor 5 5.00 "
.Gallon: s4.99 each
or 2 lor sa.oo

..

'

See Page A5
• VanReeth awarded
'
scholarship
to OSU.

See Page A5
• UMW women meet.
See Page AS

• PVH welcomes new
family practice physician.
• Law You Can Use.

See P'ge A6

· WEATHER

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
grand jury indicted a former
admimstrator at a small
Roman Catholic college on
charges that she failed to
report students' claims that
they were sexually assaulted.
Also
Tuesday,
the
Cuyahoga County grand jury
indicted Daniel Carl Wolfe, a
former student at Notre Dame
College in suburban South
Euclid, on charges of rape,
kidnapping, burglary, assault,
gross sexual imposition, menacing by stalking and intimic
dation of a crime victim.
. Wolfe, 19, of Pomeroy.in
southeastern Ohio, hAs been
accused in attacks against six
women at the school last
year. He was expelled in
December.
Patricia O'Toole, who
resigned in March from her
job as dean of students, faces
three counts of failure to
repon a felony. Three of the
students reported being
attacked to O'Toole, who
failed to tell police or college officials, according to
the charges .
· When confronted by campus polic e and uni\'cisity
officials, O'Toole tolJ them
she had' r.romised Wolfe's
18-year-o d accusers that
she .would keep their identities secret.
"Had she told the police
about the first attack, none
of these other attacks would
have occurred," Assistant
County Prosecutor Rick
Bell said.
O'Toole, 40, could not be
reached for comment. A
voicemail message was left
Wednesday for her. An
arraignment is set for June 20
in
Cuyahoga
County
Common Pleas Coutt. The
court does not yet list an
attorney for her. ·

Meigs County, also.
"Everything is moving forward," Rennie said. "Nothing
has changed."
Rennie said AEP filed its
application with the OPSB in
March, and in response to
questions from the board,
asked for a 90-day extension
to answer those questions.
That extension was granted
on May 24. Once the questions have been answered,
Rennie said, the OPSB ·is

expected to declare the application complete and proceed
with· a hearing process to
. determine if the proposed
IGCC facility may be located
on AEP's I ,300-acre site.
The hearing process will
take 30 to 60 days to com. plete, Rennie said .
Rennie said the board
posed approximately 40
questions, which AEP is now
answering. Those questions,
he said, relate to a variety of

topics, including the company's cultural resource investigation, pan of the preliminary site work now underway at the Lebanon
Township site. That investigation includes an archaeological study to determine if
any historical anifacts exist
at the site.
After a year, the Public
Utilitie s Commission of

Please see AEP, A5

Commission
approves
$200;000
note for
Southern Local ·

With school out and summer
· here. Gener~l Hartinger Park
in Middleport is a busy place.
With the opening of the
Middleport Pool, activities
conducted by the Abstinence
Builds Character program,
BY BETH SERGENT
baseball games , and picnics, BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTJNEL.COM
there's always something
going on . Middleport's July 4
·RACINE - Over the
activities will center around
course bf ouf lives most of us
the park, but In the mean·
will experience a financial
time, swimming lessons are
pinch, maybe we rob Peter to
being planned for both chi!·
pay Paul for a little while but
dren and adults, and the pool we do what we have to in
is available for private parties order to survive, just like the
Southern Local School
five nights a week. The poo'l
District which is expected to
is open from noon until 6 ·
take out a $200,000 tax anticp.m. every day, and night
ipation
note (TAN) at 5.45
swimming is offered from 6
.
percent
interest from the
to 8 p.m. on Tuesdays and
Home Nation&lt;!~ Bank beginThursdays. Not far from the
ning on July 5.
pool, teammates and coachThe loan is si;lon term, in
,_. -e~ of·Y.w Mlddlepor~fact
90 days, ar!ll will be paid
' 'Riiit!tc-lilll, a minor leagbe
back as soon as the district
· team with the Middleport'
receives
its upcoming tax
Youth ~eague, were ·practicing schedule payment.
on the diamond Wednesday
Meigs County Auditor
afternoon in preparation for
Nancy Grueser's amended
their next big game.
certificate estimating the
BriM J. Roed/pllotot
amount of current .property
tax: revenues to be received
by the district from the current date until Dec. 31 , from
all settlements· of propeny
taxes from the fiscal year
ending June 30, 2007 is
approximately $602,601.
Requiring
funding
thropgh a TAN may be an
affliction the district deals
with in-between tax schedule payments for years to
come though the district is
now operating· within gener·
al revenues.
In fact, Bill Wolfe, outgoing
president for the Financial
Planning
~upervision
Commission which overseas
all of the financial decisions
,
relating to the district said
yesterday, "There will be no
deficit next year, we all know
.,.,.·
that. It may take a little longer
., ........
to get out of fi scal emergency..
It's now a matter of monitoring the district to ensure no
backsliding." '

-

PIHse see Southem, AS

·Helicopter pad at Portland Fair Board, Coonhunters Association recognized·
· being readied for use .
BY CHARLENE HciEFUCH
HDEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
,

Detatta on Pace A8

2 SECI'IONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
. . Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries .
Places to go
Sports
Weather

A:3
B2-4

Bs
A:3
A4
As
B6

B Section
A6

© 2006 Ohio Valley Pu~llshing Co.

'

'

• Donations provide for
field trip. See Page A2
• Singing in the Pines
begins 24th year.
See Page A3
• Delegates chosen
for Buckeye Girts State.

See Page A6 .

!

1.,\
~

REED

Meigs man
confronts
multiple
·charges·

Indians
pickPHuff
at ·No. 39

•..

J.

news · stories,
AEP
Spokesman Jeff Rennie said
the company 's plans to build
POMEROY - American a $1 billion pl~nt here have'
Electric Power has requested not changed.
an extension of time to
CEO Michael· Morri s has
answer questions from the been quoted as saying AEP
Ohio Power Siting Board in will' likely build its first
preparation for the next step IGCC plant in Mason
in the location of a power County, W.Va., because the
plant here.
L
state has an easier permit·
In light of reported com· ting process. However,
ments from AEP's Chief Rennie said, that does not
Executive Officer and recent change plans to build in
BY BRIAN

BREED@MYOAI LYSENTINEL.COM

See Page B1

..

-

AEP receives extension ·or time in OPSB pennit-process

SPORTS

·~

w

PORTLAND - A helicopter pad and a road leading
into it have ·been constructed
near the Ponland Community
Center arid once lights and
the windsock are in place, it
will be ready for use .
Kenny Hoffman, R.N., a
rotor wing _nurse and team
leader with MedFiight 3 stationed in Wellston, delivered
the windsock and the contraptiO~J to which it will be
attached to Mjla Raymond,
Ponland Community Center
representative, Wednesday.
"The pok for the windsock
still has to be put in place,"
said Raymond noting that the
goal is to get everything finished in the next few weeks.
She said that'Bob Byer of the
Meigs
Emergency
Management Service is

assisting in getting the pole
and lights . but that some
donations are still needed to
help with the cost.
As for . use of the helipad,
Hoffman said a helicopter
could land there now in the
daytime, but not at night.
"However, it's vital that we
know where the winds are
coruing from and how strong
they arc," he said . "That's
why we need to get the windsock up ."
Currently the county has
only one . helipad on
Mulberry Heights near the
Meigs
Multipurpose
Building
tn
Pomeroy.
"Having this one at Portland
Cha- -chjplloto
will inake a big difference. It On May 12 when the Meigs County Relay for Life was scheduled for an outdoor rally on the
mean s we' ll have a safe
Rockspring Fairground s and the weather changed from sunny skies to rain , the Meigs County
place to land without worryFair Board and the Coonhunters opened buildings there for the event. At Monday night' s meet·
ing about wires and other
lng of the Meigs Fair Board, the Relay for Life Committee expressed their appreciation. From
obstruction s, and patients the left, Sue Mason. and JoAnn Crisp, right, present plaques of appreciation to Mike ,Parker and
ltlease see Helicopter. AS Buddy Ervin of the Meigs Fair Board, arid Bill Spaun of the Coonhunters Association.

•

�...

PageA2

LocAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Thursdayi June 8,

2006

EUCLID (AP) - City
Council has passed a law
making it illegal to cover
windows with blankets,
garbage bags, newspaper or
other unsightly items in place
of curtains.
Shades, miniblinds and
other conventional window
coverings in houses and apart·
ments must work and be hung
properly, according to the law
approved 8-1 on Monc)ay.
· Sheets .sewn to look like
drapes also will be acceptable.
Violators wi II receive
warnings and could face up
to six months in jail -and a
$1 ,000 fine .. Residents who
just moved in will be given

some wiggle room and landlords will be responsible for
getting renters to comply,
said Ron Petkovic, the city's
housing manager.
Councilman John Conway
said complaints led to the
measure meant to give Euclid
a nicer image.
"There was no intent to
tum our inspectors, through
this ordinance, into the fashion police," Conway said. "A
lot of it is going to be complaint-driven, and the housmg inspectors will have some
discretion."
Law Director Chris Frey
said he could not find a similar
ordinance to use as a model.

Another Cleveland suburb,
Cleveland Heights, hal' occasionally cited people for
unusual window coverings
under a general ban on
unsightly or offensive decor.
Cleveland State University
Law
Professor
Alan
Weinstein, who specializes in
municipal regulations, said
Euclid might have a hard time
making the law stick because
violations inside a home typically focu s on health or safety, not appearante.
" It would be nice if we
cou.ld legislate good taste,"
he said. "But the problem .
is : Who decides what 's
good taste?"

Holzer Center tor Cancer Care

Holzer Center for Cancer
Care·continues celebration

Donations provide for field trip
Ttie Heart of the Valley Head Start at
Bradbury Learning Center was treateel to a field trip at Noah's Ark
Animal Farm in Jackson. Attending
the field trip were 8.5 children thanks
to donation money from the
·
Harrisonville Masonic Lodge, Meigs
Aerie #2171 Fraternal Order of
Eagles and the Middleport Post #128
American Legion and Advocates for
Kids. Above are the children on their
field trip and at left the Masons from
the Harrisonville Masonic Lodge presenting a check to the school.
Submitted photos

GALLIPOLIS The
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care's First Anniversary
'Celebration concludes . this
weekend with an education
conference for clinical staff
and a garden party.
Saturday, Ju11e I 0, a morning educational conference
for physicians, nurses and
Clinical professionals will
take place. The event is sponsored by The Ohio State .
University Comprehensive
Cancer Center, Arthur G.
James Cancer Hospital and
Richard J. Solove Research
Institute, and the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care.
Also taking place on
S~tuq:lay will be a special
"garden party" held at the
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care and Healing Garden
from 1 to 5 p.m. Features
include a health fair with free
screenings, tours of the
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, music, refreshments,
giveaways, and entertainment for children, including a
children's variety show that
begins at I p.m.
The Holzer Center for

.
'
Cancer Care, a joint venture
between Holzer Medical
Center and Holzer. Clinic·,
opened its doors in March
2005 to provide quality cancer care that is close to home.
The two-story Cancer
Center offers radiation oncol- .
ogy that includes services
provided by a $2-million linear accelerator and a CT sim- '
ulator for treatment planning.
Also included is art infusion
are11 for chemotherapy that
overlooks the Center's
)-!eating Garden, a ·special
place that provides a peaceful
.area for patients and their
families. The Garden features
a labyrinth, reflecting pool,
and benches for resting and
meditation.
Another important component of the Center is its affiliation with the American
Cancer Society. Available onsite is a Cancer Resource
Center (CRC),
Patient
Navigator and Appearance
Center; Volunteers staff the
CRC and Appearance Center
Monday thrpugh Friday, and
are available to assist not
only patients and their fami-

ly, but also any inter~~ted
community member interested in obtaining information
regarding cancer.
The Holzer Center for
Cancer Care is located at 170
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis.
For more information~ please
call the Holzer . Center for
Cancer Care, locally at (7Ml)
446-5474 or toll-free at !800-821-3860.

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BY THE BEND

Jhe Daily Sentinel

~woman

N~rtheast Ohio city bans makeshift. curtains

who sleepwalks has moms suicide on her mind

; DEAR ABBY: I am a 37year-old married woman with
a pro(llem. My mother com-•
milled suicide when I was 18,
and I have never dealt with
.
my loss. The day after she
Dear
died, my father bagged up all
of her possessions and gave
Abby
them to charity. I tried talking
to him about her, but he told
ple she was "gone" and I had
to move on. I guess I have
just put my pain on the back OUT OF IT IN LAS VEGAS
burner alHhese years.
DEAR OUT OF IT: Please·
.For the last five years or so, accept my deepest sympathy
.r have been sleepwalking and for the tmgic loss of your
having horrible nightmares mother. The tlrst thing you
abou~ my mother's death. My must do is ensure that your
husband tells me I carry on . husband has the keys to your
conversations with hitn, but truck at bedtime. '
that I aln not really "there.'~ I · , Then, ·contact your physialso take baths when I'm cian and ask for a referral to a
!echnically asleep. On one sleep disorder specialist for an
,occasion, I woke up behind evaluation. Some people expethe,wheel of my truck in my rience the symptoms you have
garage. I don't know if l went described as a side effect from
out driving or not,' but the certain sleep-aid medications.
thought terrifies· me.
However, if you are not taking
· I am afraid I will hurt anything, ·you may have a ,
myself, or possibly others, in treatable sleep disorder.
.
my zombie-like state. Any
After that, ask your doctor
advice you can give me would to refer you to a licensed psybe greatly appreciated. chothet'apist who can help

Community Calendar
Public meetings

TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 9053, meal at
6:30p.m., followed by 1 p.m.
Thursday, June 8
meeting.
·
POMEROY - Salisbury
Friday, June 9
Township Trustees , 6:30 .· MIDDLEPORT
p.m., town hall. .
Widow's Fellowship potluck
. picnic, noon.• Dave Diles Park .
Thesday, June 13
POMEROY - Bedford
Saturday, June 10
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
POMEROY Return
the town hall.
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
PORTLAND - Portland Daughters of the American
Community Center meeting, Revolution, will meet at 2 p.m.
6:30 p.m., at the center.
at the home of Karen Werry.
Thesday, June 13
POMEROY
Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business minded
luncheon, noon, Pomeroy
,
Thursday, Junes .
Library, catere,d by Pomeroy
CHESTER - · Shade River McDonald's, choice of sandLodge 453 to hold meeting, wich wrap and salad, RSVP
~:30 p.m. at · the hall. . 992-5005 .by June 9 for salad
preference.
Refreshments.

Clubs and
organizations

PageA3
Thursday, June 8,

Singing in the Pines
begins 24th year

you deal with the emotions about this problem, and menyou have kept buried all these tion that her son's name-callyears since your mother 's ing is the reason Noah doesdeath . Once your feelin~s are n't want to be with him anyOUt in the open, you Will be more- and probably part of
Bv NICOlE Ftnos
will gather around them to
able to deal with them - and the reason Evan is not very NFIELOS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
pray, but the singing goes on.
discussing them with a pro- popular at school - without
The
spirit is so strong on that
fessional will help you more causing discord between us?
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. mountainside ."
quickly through the process.
-· PUZZLED IN NEW The gospel will radiate from
Bledsoe said she and her
DEAR ABBY: I . have a HAMPSHIRE
the hillside next weekend as husband have been involved
DEAR PUZZLED: Arrange people from around the with the event since it first
good friend, "Cathy," whose
11.-year-old son, "Evan," is a a private chat with your friend
friend of my son, "Nilah." and tell her exactly what you region gather for Singing in began in 1983 . Planning for
Pines.
the anryual event begins early
Evan has always been a have told me. Love may be theThe
24th
annual
event
is
when they send letters to
name-caller. He constantly blind, but she must be besotted scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. groups
that co_uld potentially
uses words like "stupid," to have allowed herson to verFriday,
June
16
at
Union
smg
at
the pmes, and then
"idiot" and "butthead" when bally abuse his little sister and
talking to my son, but Noah the other children around him Campground near New she and other event organizhas always lau~hed it off or for so long. This is as much Haven. Singing will continue ers pray and ask God to send ·
her fault as ii is her son's. Evan Saturday, June 17, begmnmg the groups He wants to sing
told him to cut 1t out.
·' that year.
·
Today Noah told me he no would be a much happier boy at I p.m. ,
_Evelyn Bledsoe, who, along
Bledsoe added that details
longer wants . to play with if she had curbed his behavior
With
her
husband,
Kenneth,
of
the event typically travel
Evan because Evan is such a when it began. (I wonder if he
coordmates
and
orgamzes
the
fast,
and singers who are
name-caller. Evan's habit watches too much television
event, sa1d more than 65 invited often tell someone
apparently . doesn't bother or is emulating his father ...)
Dear Abby is written by groups and soloists are sched- who tells someone else who
Cathy, since Evan constantly
calls his baby sister the same Abigail Van Buren, also uled to ~rform. Among_t~e passes the information along
names, and Cathy doesn't known as Jeanne PhiUips, and groups from West Y1rgmta, to someone else.
"(The respo1ise) is the best
seem to notice. She is, how- was (outuled by her mother, Ohio, Kentucky and as far
awa&gt;'
.
as
Alabama
are
of
all," she said. "People call
ever, worried about Evan's . Pau(ine Phillips. mite Dear
Sincere,
us
constantly and say ' we'v~
Chnsuan
.
Echoes,
socializing at school because Abby al www.DearAbby.com·
Proclaim,
Matt
Scott
and
Co,
gotta
]et out there .' (The
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
no one seems to like him.
p1lot1 Deh vered, the Eddie Lord) knows good singers,
How do I approach her Angeles, CA 9oo69.
Fam1ly
and · and He sends them."
·
Wtlhams
Justified. ,
She added that a new roof
She said people conti.nue to · is being completed over the
come and support the event picnic tables so people at thi s
because of the strong pres- year's event will be able to
ence that is ' felt by most enjoy refre shments in the
ev.eryone ~ho attends.
shade: Camping also will be
'The spmt IS allowed to available, but there are no
move (during the evenl)," she hook-ups.
·
Sunday, June 11
Friday; June 9
said. "Suddenly, someone
For more infonnation, call
CHESHIRE - Reunion of
POMEROY
Meigs will go to the altar, and others 895-3845.
·
the Elbert and Della Bever County Cancer Initiative, II ~
ffiHilan family, noon ·to 4 1I :30 a.m., Meigs Senior
p.m. at the Kyger Creek-Club Center, informational talk on
House. Take covered dish. breast health, light refreshLunch Is at 1 p.m. ,
ments served, door prizes,
COOLVILLE
umbrella contest.
call 992-2161 ext. 236 for
La&lt;;::hresia
Bogardus
was
Co~ leader Dottie Bond
more information.
named
weekly
best
weightthe progrm "Sa~
continued
POMEROY - Staff of
loss
winner
at
Tuesday's
Saturday, June 10
Yes
to
These
Five." Guest
U.S.
Senator
George
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel Voinovich ·at Pomeroy Public meeting of TOPS (Take Off speaker at the June 13 meet;
benefit sing, 6 p.in ., Old
Pounds Sensibly) Chapter ing will be Joyce Brown from
Library,
4~5 :30 p.m., for open
Bethel Free Will Baptist ·
. #OH 2Q 13, Coolville.
the County Extension Office.
Church. one mile south ,of office hours. Residents invit- · There were 20 members
The group ' meets every
Middleport on Ohio 7, Spirit ed to discuss federal legisla- present. Recognized was Pat Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Led, Proclaimers, Priscilla tion, casework problems with Hall for her upcoming birth- Church. Weigh-in is fro111
Dodrill; Briao and Family federal agencies, or to share day. Umbrellas were pre- 5:15 to 6:15 p.m . with a
Connections; sing to benefit updates on community needs ~ented to Bogardus and meeting at 6:30. For informa:
Fall Harvest Gospel Sing at · and projects.. No appoint- Doris Buchanan for being iion, call Pat Snedden at 662:
Rutland Civic Center.
ments necessary.
co-winners of the recent 263~ or attend a free meeting.

Reunions

Other events

Losers .recognized

Church events

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone. ·
'
Very Special With A Father's Day
Thank You _Tribute ...
To Be·PubUshed In The. Daily Sentinel
On Fri.d ay, June 16th!
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46384 State Route 248
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'

Friday, June 9, 12:00 Noon.

•

2006

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
'·

General Manager-News Editor

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

VIEW

Helper
Auxiliary refognizes volunteer
Dear Editor:
This is a letter in refrerence to the Poppy Days for Drew
Webster Post 29, American Legoin' Auxiliacy.
.
I spoke at the Memorial Day service on the parking lot in
appreciation to the., volunteers who offered poppies in remem~
brance of our veter'ans. Several Auxiliary members and veterans helped in getting the poppies out. Bikers in for the
Memorial Day run also donated.
Missing this year from the volunteers was Ruby Marshall,
who had a death in her family. However, she sent a donation
in memory of her husband, Charlie Marshall, a' veteran.
Gladys Cumings
Auxiliary president,
. Pomeroy

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, June 8. the !59th day of 2006. There are
206 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 8, A.D. 632, the prophet Mohammed died.
On this date:
In 1845, Andrew Jackson, seventh president of the United
States, died in Nashville, Tenn .
In 1861 , Tennessee seceded from the Union.
In 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt offered to act as a
.
mediator in-the Russo-Japanese War..
· In 1953, the Supreme Court ruled that restaurants in the
J?istrict of Columbia could not refuse to serve blacks.
,
In 1966, a merger was announced between the National and
Ainerican Football Leagues, to take effect in 1970, .
In 1967,34 U.S. servicemen were killed when Israeli forces
raided the Liberty, a Navy ship stationed in the
Mediterranean. (Israel called the anack a tragic mistake.)
: In 1968, authorities announced the capture in Londop of
James Earl Ray, the suspected assassin of civil rights leader
the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
In 1978, a jury in Clark County, Nev., ruled the so-called
"Mormon will," purportedly written by the' late billiohaire
·Howard Hughes, was a forgery.
.
Ten years ago: Declaring racial hostility was behind re~ent
church fires in the South, President Clinton said in his weekly radio address he would devote whatever resources were
needed to "smother the fires of hatred." China set off an
underground nuclear test blast. "Editor's Note" won the
Belmont Stakes.
.
Thought for Today: "Malice drinks one-half of its .own poi. son." - Seneca, Roman statesman (circa 5 B.C.-A.D. 65).

'"'''

&gt;·

The latest gambit by a
floundering \\(bite House
is that President Bush has
decided to give not so
much pea&lt;;e a chance, .as he
is adulthood. It could :b e a
ruse; merely another elaborate fake-out like Bush's
forgotten vow to seek a
U.N. Security Council vote
about Saddam Hussein's
phantom WMDs in 2003,
immediately before commencing the· "shock and
awe" bombing campaign.
But there are reasons to
think it's real. "Senior officials" ha·ve been sent out to
whisper to reporters these
astonishing developments:
Regarding the ongoing
"crisis" with Iran, Bush
has actually learned from
experience, heeded opinions slightly at odds with
Dick
his
own . (and
Cheney's), realized that
threats weren~t working,
and allowed Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice to
negotiate a face-saving
compromise.
The · United States and
five other nations
Britain, France, Germany;
Russia and China - · have
offeted Iran both economic
incentives and direct talks •
·the Persians have long '
sought if it agrees to s)ispend uranium enrichment.
.Tbat's today's story, anyway. Deepening the irony
is that Rice's partner in
crime (sorry, in moderation). is reported to be.
German Chancellor Angela
Merkel. Supposedly, the
two women, one a certifiable European, persuaded
Bush that attacking Iran
militarily is not a realworld option, and that U.S.
refusal to. negotiate was
only helping the Persians'
· very unpleasant governmeot defy international
worries about its suspected

. Letters to the.editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All leiters are subject to editirzg, must be signed,
tind include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga~izations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

. The Daily Sentinel
{USPS 213-9601 '
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley
:our main cOncern in all stories is 10 be
:accurate. H you know of an error in a

)ilory, call the newsroom at (740) 992·
2156.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Fr!day, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
paid at Pomeroy.

Memf1er: The Associated Press and the

&lt;

Our main number Is
. (749) 9112-2156.
Department extensions are:

Ohio Newspaper Association. , .
Postmaster: Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel, 1t 1 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

'&lt; '

News

'~: ChMone Hoellich, Ext 12

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Aapo."'ter: Bn~n Read , Ext 14

. . .. Beth Sergent, Ext 13

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'Oialde Sa!H: Dave Harris, Ext 15
O.alcle SaiH: Brenda Davis, E.t 16
:CIII..JCirc.: Judy Clarlt, Ext I 0

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Charlene HOeflich, E.t. 12

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J¥hite House flirts with reality

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"""' "' .. "

' Gene

Lyons

nuclear-weapons programs .
Although the White
House and Rice publicly
dismissed Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's
rambling, eccentric ISpage open letter. to Bush 18 sentences would have
been · IJlore appropriate evidently
somebody
noticed its relatively conciliatory tone. No threats,
and no depictions · of the
United States as "The
Great Satan."
Not
everybody
in
Washington believes in the
new grown-up .Bush. "I
want to see the proof," said
retired
. Col.
Larry
Wilkerson, Secretary of
State Colin Powell's former chief of staff. "I cari
hope, as I imagine 60 to 70
percent of Americans are
hoping, ... we are going to
see some moderation and
it's going . to bear some
fruit. But I've got to see
the fruit, because r ve seen
this before."
Certain signs point the
other
way.
Neoconservatives frantic to
involve the United States
in yet another glorious
Middle Eastern . crusade
have stepped up their propaganda .
Recently,
Canada's National Post rari
a column by one Amir
Taheri claiming that Iran's
government had passed a
law requiring Jews to wear
yellow
ID
badges.
Illustrated by a photo
depicting Jews under Nazi

' ol'•-to •• •·"''~

...... .-. ,,.

o t•-o

I

. .. ... , ,

rule forced to wear a· Star
of David, the story also
in
Rupert
appeared
Murdoch's New York' Post .·
Exposed as a hoax, the
story was quickly retracted. Author Taheri, howev~
er, was subsequently invited to the Bush White
House with others to share
their "honest opinions"
about Iran.
E.d itorial cartoons and
columns continue to appear
depicting Ahmadinejad as
the new Hitler, based upon
his reponed threat to "wipe
Israel off the map." The
fact, however, appears to
be ·that Iran's president
never said that.. According
to
Juan
Cole,
the
University of Michigan
professor whose ''Informed
Comment" Web site is
must reading on the
Muslim world, The New
Yorlf. Times ba~ly mistranslated
his speech. .
(Sound familiar?)
Anybody waiting for Iran
to choose a government
friendly, to Israel will be
waiting a long time. What
Ahmadinejad actually said,
though, was closer in spirit
to "ke,ep the faith" than
"we will bury you." He
compared the Palestinians'
struggle to
the
lat~&gt;~
Ayatollah
Khomeni's
determination to overthrow
the Shah of Iran.
'Here's Cole's translation :
"The Imam said that this
regime
· occupying
Jerusalem must (vanish
from) from the page of
time ." It's not a threat; it's
more of a reminder that the
Israeli regime could go the
way of the Shah's.
Cole, ·whQ personally'·
despi ses
•:everything
Ahmadinejad stands for,
not to mention the odious
Khomeni," think.s it's nevertheless crucial to recog-

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nize that he hasn't calleq
for Nazi-style exterminatjon of I ~ra~ l.
Nor
has
Ayatollah
current
Khamen i, . the
"Supreme Leader," wh~
holds the real power in the
Islamic
Republic. TV
accounts of . Khamenils
recent speech stressed ht' •
"
prediction t~at attacking
Iran. would disrl\pt Western ·
oil supplies. But he also
argued at great length that ·
"Iran is not a threat to any
country" and does11't seek.
nuclear weapons.
.:.
"We do not have an¥,·
objectives or aspiratio~
for which we will need 16
use a nuclear bomb;'•'•
Khameni insisted. "Wo
consider using nuclell'l'
we·apoits against I~lamic
rules.
Unlike th'e'
American ~ ~ho want, t~ .
rule the world with force,
we do not claill) to control
the world and therefore· do
not need a nuclear bomb."
It · would obviously be
foolish
to
take
the
Ayatollah's word for it. But
it .would be downrigh,\
crazy - a Mrategic blun~
der almost .beyond imagin.~
ing - to launch an unpro•
voked att~ck against a
nation several times larget
than neighboring Iraq o'rl
the basis of c(ude propd.~
ganda from zealots of ou'r'
own .
Watch for the Persians to
begin haggling ; . it's theiF ·
national pastime.
'
.. ·
(Arkan·sas
Dem'ocrat:..
Gazette · columnist Gen.e
Lyons is a national magd&lt;
zine award winner and co.'
. author of "The Htmling of
the ·
President " ·
'(St:'
Martin 's Press, 2000) . .YoU
can e-mail Lyons at gene'·'
lyons2@sbcglobal.net.) ' !

Obituaries
•

Otto Mardnko, Sr.
REEDSVILLE - Otto . A. Marcinko, Sr., Reedsville,
passed away Saturday, June 3, 2006, at the age of 56, in San
Angelo, Texas.
He was the son of Winifred A. Marcinko of Reedsville and
the late Otto A. Marcinko. He was a veteran of the U.S . Army
during the Vietnam Conflict.
He is survived by his children: Marie and Due Thach,
~tephanie and Shelton Fisher, Kimberly and Stephen Guy and
Otto A. Marcinko, Jr.; grandchildren: Andy, Danny and Kell)'
Marie Thach, Reese and Mikayla Fisher, Mackenzie and
Madison Guy; a brother and sister-in-law, Danny and Roxie
Marcinko; sisters and brothers-in~ law, Winnie and Steve Jacks
and Rita and Roger Fortney; several aunts, cousins, nieces and
nephews. and a special friend, Gina Winters.
Besides his father, he was preceded in death by a grandson,
Connor James Marcinko.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at II a.m. on
Friday, June 9, 2006, at Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy
With Rev. Walter E. Heinz officiating. Burial will follow at .
Our Lady of Loretto Cemetery in Reedsville . Military
graveside rites will be conducted by TupP,ers Plains VFW
Post 9053.
· Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on ThursdaY.
at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville, with vig1l
at 7:45 p.m.
''

'

·Deaths
Gary R. Geoage
. LANGSVILLE - Gary R. George 49, Langsville, died
June 6, 2006 in Mason, W.Va. Arrangements will be
announced by the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral ijome

Janet'Janie'Murphy
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Janet "Janie" Murphy, 73, of New
Haven, W.Va. died Tuesday, June 6, 2006 at Pleasant Valley
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
. Friends may call from II to noon Friday at the FogelsongTucker Funeral Home. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday
at the Cunningham Memorial Park, St. Albans, W.Va. where
burial will take place.

Local Briefs

POMEROY Jennifer
Smith of Shade and Hoflie
Richard of Pomeroy will
serve as delegates to Buckeye ·
Girls State next week.
Samantha
Shontz
of
Middleport is the alternate.
Their trips to Ashland
U~iversity in Ashland will bt&lt;
sponsored . by the Ladies
Auxiliary at Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company and Peoples Bank.
· Smith is a senior at Meigs
High School. She is a member and section leader of the
band, and plays basketball
and softball. She has been a
Girl Scout president and
member of the Meigs County
Junior Fair Board.
·Richard attends Eastern
High School. She is a member
of the chorus and handbell
choir, serves as ~retary of
National Honor Society and is
a . member of the Prom

~e

us

ki
Je
m

Jennifer Smith
Committee, French Club and
Stand, and 4-H. She has also
served as a volunteer at
Camden-Clark
Memorial
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Shontz is a member of the
band at Meigs High School,
and participates in STAMP,

Stand, Hi-Y and volunteer tunity to actively participate
in a democratic form of govprojects.
Buckeye Girls State is ernment.
designed to train young
·Girls are chosen bas~d on a
women in the duties, privi- definite interest in governleges, rights and responsibili- ment, scholastic achievement,
ties of citizenship by provid- moral chardCter and leadering each attendee the oppor- ship abHity, and maturity.

VanReeth awarded scholarship to OSU · UMW .
women
meet

POMEROY- Christopher
VanReeth, son of John and
Gloria VanReeth of Pomeroy,
Pomeroy, has been awarded a
Land Grant Opportunity
Scholarship Award from
Ohio State University.
VanReeth is one of 107
Ohio students selected to
receive a full scholarship for
four years at Ohio State valued at $17,000 a year. The
scholarships are awarded to
class leaders with multiple
talents, ranked near the top of
their high school class .
VanReeth was an academics
honorarian .in his 2006 graduating class at Meigs High

School. Many of the scholarships are awarded to provide
an opportunity for lowincome high school students
to obtain a college degree. ·
VanReeth plans to get his
undergraduate degree in
political science -prelaw. At
Meigs
High
School
VanReeth' was in the
National Honor Society on
the Quiz Team, and active in
the band. At the recent band
banquet he received the
"outstanding
musician"
award. He is also an Eagle
Scout having completed his
work through Troop 299 earlier this year.

TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains St. Paul
United Methodist Women
recently met wit~ight mem-.
bers present.
Barb Roush prese.nted a .
program on peace wh1ch surpasses all understanding.'
Joanna Weaver read a letter
from a missionary in Japan
and she also read a arttcle
from the Response magazine:.
Bible·
Daily
vacation
school was. discussed and at
the July meeting VBS will be
organized. Norma Torras will
be a speaker · on breast
cancer at the August meeting.
The mel)ting was closed with
a circle of hands prayer.
Connie Rankin served
refreshments to the group.
Those attending were Terri
Soulsby,
Barb
Roush,
Connie and Mary Rankin,
Anna
Rice,
Betty,
Chevalieri, Joanna Weaver;
Sharon Louks .

Natural Resources meeting
MARIETTA - A meeting of the Natural Resources
Assistance Council will be held at 10 a.m. on June 15 at
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development
District in Marietta, to review the criteria used to rate Round
4 Clean Ohio Conservation Fund projects for District 18.
Questions may be directed to Brent Snuth at 374-9436.

~

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -The 24th Annual Singing in the
Pines gospel concert.will be held at 6 p.m. on June 16 and I
~~aon June 16 at the Union Campground in New Haven, .

The Weatherforos 619
Summer Classes Begin 6112
Reglstl\r now for Acting,

Admission is free. Information about groups performing
may be received by calling (304) 895-3845.

Dance &amp; Siring

Emerson Drive 6/14

Worship center yard sale

AEP

fromPageA1
Ohio approved the first
phase of cost recovery for
the project two months ago.
Rennie said the next step of
cost recovery cannot begin
until AEP determines how
much it will cost to build
~he plant.
"The hall is now in our
court," Rennie , said about
the next step of cost recov-

Turning in her resignation
effective yesterday was
Susan Oliver, longtime commission member. Although a
" from Page A1
rephicement ·has not been
found for her as of yet, new
·' Wolfe made his statement commission member Tonja
at yesterday'~ commission Hunter was sworn in after
meeting · whtch mcluded yesterday's meeting: Hunter
approval of the $200,000 will take the place of former
'FAN. The note was previous- member Sandra Hawley.
ly proposed by the Southern
Outgoing Southern LOcal
Local Schqol Board for the School
Superintendent
commission's consideration Robert Grueser introduced
and was to be voted upon by his replacement,
Mark
tile board last night.
· Miller, to the commission .
· Other commission business Grueser then went on to
update the commission on
, included:
' The introduction of Neil the district's 3. 75 percent
Uhrig, new commission p_res- rise in health care costs
ident. Uhrig is a reured which was in contrast to the
superintendent
of
the 13.7 percent increase offered
Huntington; Ross
School by the qistrict's· current
District: He resides in Ross provider, Anthem. Grueser
said the decrease was made
County near Chillicothe.
Also making a first appear- possible through negotiallflCe was ·Jackie Osbourne, tions and the district joining
the commission's new fiscal a consortium . with other
officer which will take the schools to pick the best plan
place of Nancy Burbacher and price. The district will
change from Anthem to
who is retiring like Wolfe.

·southern

j

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Read lbe GalllpoUs Dally
Tribune ror your chance
to win 2 FREE tickets

Barbershop Concert 6117
ARer Glow Party after the show
Cha~one

Ballroom Dance Party 6128

Hoallch/pholo

Kenny Hoffman, R.N., team leader for MedFiight 3 in Wellston, delivers a windsock to Mila
Raymond of the Portland Community Center to be installed at tbe site of the newly completed ·
helicopter pad on land adjacent to the Center.

ery. "The Front End
Engineering and Design
phase of the project wi II
determine, how much it will
cost to build the plant, and
from PageA1
. once we know that, we can
go· to the PUCO to re.quest
can be brought 'to us," he .
permission to recover ,those
added. "Pilots really like to
construction costs."
.
have a helipad to land on·."
Rennie said the FEED is
Raymond said that Shelly
scheduled for completion in
October, but could be fin- Sand and Gravel Co. volunished sooner. In the mean- . teered to build a blacktop
time, he said, AEP expects helipad and the road leading
.the OPSB hearing process to up to it. It has been estimated .
that it cost the company more
begin in the fall.

rd
1e
1-

ld
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i.e
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:, REEDSVILLE - The 4th Annual Golden Harvest Food
f,antcy Auction will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday in Reedsville.
SJgns will mark the location.

· MIDDLEPORT -The River Valley Worship Center on
803 South Third Street will be having a yard sale from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m., today and Friday, and from 9 a.m. to noon on
Saturday. Chairs, pictures, all size clothing, an assortment of
miscellaneous items.

e.

Samantha Shontz

Hollie Richard

Benefit auction

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L
Delegates chosen for Bu~keye Girls State

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

. www.mydailysentinel.com

Gospel Sing

I

LETTERS TO THE
EDJTOR

Reader Services

,.

Dismal new results on
ricula and get girls to for a doubling of the budU.S. student performance
enroll in computer camps. · gets of the National .
in science ought to spur
It also held a town meet- Science Foundation and
Congress to pass President
ing in Washington, D .C. , other
physical-science
Bush 's
competitiveness
earlier this month to devel- research programs •over 10
,! •
agenda this year - and to
MOiiDI"'
op new strategies to get years and expandzng sct~ .
extend his "No Child Left
Koridlcde women and minorities · ence . education. ·
Behind" program to high
involved in information
After the lates t NAEP
school s.
technology.
scores
were
releaseO.,
The
competillveness
On the larger issue of Alexander sai,d they "ill us; ,.
agenda - which includes
overall U.S. competitive- trate the urgency fo,~;
scholarships aimed at pro- Sanders, CEO of the ness, it has finally gotten Congress to pass compr«&lt;duCing 10,000 more sci- National
Center
for through to Congress and hensive c9mpetitivenes~
ence teachers per year as Women and Information the Bush administration legislation this year."·
well as increases' in U.S. Technology, the percent- over the past year that tl)e
.Hi s ·
· legislation:
research funding - has age of women enrolled as United States is in danger Protecting
America'1j
bipartisan support but is university computer•sci- of falling behind other Competitive· Edge Act, has
moving slowly through ence majors- has rr.ached nations, especially China 70 co-spensors, but it ha~
Congress.
an all-time low despite and India, which . are yet to be marked up in th~
Markups of key legisla- burgeoning o-pportunities ·devoting major efforts to Senate Health, Education 1
tion hav~ yet to take place in the field.
• scientific research, educa- Labor
and
Pensions
in the House or Senate,
Regardless of the fact tion and industrial devel- Committee. Similar legis;
and leader,s have yet to that
computerization opment.
lation is scheduled for
schedule floor. time for the accounts for much of
Sens. •Lamar Alexander, markup in th.e . House
and
Jeff Science Committee afte£
bills, which could· repre- America's improved pro- R-Tenn.,
sent a major success for ~ucti~ity- a~d is a g.row- Bingaman, D-N.M., trig- the Memorial Day recess .
Congress this year.
10g f1e~d. of mter~attonal gered the new interest by
Meanwhile, even thoug))
· The need for action, competttzon desp1te the , asking for a National the NAEP results show A
shown over and over by early-decade ".tech b~st" Ac'adel)ly of Sciences s harp fall-off in scien~
poor U.S. student perfor- · -. Sanders sa1d apphca- study, " Rising Above the performance among high
mance on national and tu~ns for college computer- Gathering s.torm," warning school students, similar to
international tests in math SCience programs have that the Umted States was scores In math and readand science, .was demon- dropped 40 percent among in danger of losing its ing, Congress and the
strated again last week both men and women technological
pre-emi- administration have no
with results of the latest since 1990.
nence.
·
plans this year to revive
"national report card" on
Girls represeat only 15
Studies have exploded efforts to extend tli~
science.
percent of young people one widely repeated statis- NCLB
testing
and
· The
National taking
.
Advanced tic included in that 'study · accountal:iility · require·Assessment of Education Placement tests in comput- - that China. graduates ments to high schools.
Progress s)lOwed a slight e~ science, · she said. And 600,000 new engineers
The administration made
improvement in science gul.s make up less than I 0 each year; Jpdia~ 350,000 an ill-fated stab at that. in
test . scores by fourth- percent
of
computer and the United States, only 2001, but it was rebuffeJI
· by Congress under presgraslers frol)l 1995 to entrants in the Intel 70,000.
· 2005, no improvement by Science Fair competition
One study showed that sure from the national·
eighth-graders
and
a and 15 percent of bache· the actual numbers are vocational
education
lor's degree awardees at 137,000 in the United lobby, whose funding the
decline for 12th-graders.
It showed a narrowing of major research universi- States; 112,000 in India; administration tried to
traditional
performance ties, she said.
and 350,000 in China, giv- eliminate to pay fo1
gaps between white stu"Wome~ are .entering ing the United States the NCLB. ·
•
The Senate's immigrt
dents and minorities in the other sctence ftelds m lead in engineers per milfourth grade, but no large numbers," she told lion of population. Still, tion bill contains provi•
improvement in the eighth !"e: ·~But ~e're losing out no one has challeng,ed the sions to .attract foreign sciand a widening in the m mformat10n technology. basic finding that China entists and graduate stu12th. Girls consistently We've got to change its and India are swiftly dents to the United States
performed slightly below image · from '.geeky ' to upgrading their science with green cards, and
'challenging."'
and research programs that's good. But what
boys in all three grades.
Bills in both the House
that'~ , not . strictly and t!J.at represents a long- America needs is to edu~
·and Senate contain provi- C9ngress
busmess, · of term threat to the U riited cate its owri kids - boys
and girls -. to love and do
sions to expand minority course. Sanders' group . is States.
participation in science, backed by the National
After
appeals
by sci~nce. Right now, we're
but .t,h ere 's reason to think Science Foundation and Alexander and several . still failing.
extra steps should be taken 100 computer companies', House members
Bush
(Morton Kondracke is
to get women into comput- unive~siti~s and nonprofit included a competitiveness executive editor of ·RoU
er science.
orgamzattons that are try- initiative in his State of Call, . the newspape.r · bj•
.,.
According
to
Lucy ing to change school cur- the Union address, calling Capitol Hill.)

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740J 992·2157

READER'S

Thursday, April 27, 200~

Thursday, June 8, 2006

~

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
-.mydallynntlnel.com

~

New 'report card' shows Congress must act on science·

The Daily Sentinel

Charlene Hoeflich

PageA4
' .

Helicopter

than $40,000. She mentioned
that having a helipad , in the
Portland community is of
special importance since it is
near the proposed power
plant site.
"It's really a wonderful
asset to the community and to
think someone donated it,"
commented
Hoffman .·
Raymond responded "We're
just ghid the Shelly .Co. was
interested enough to want to
be a part of the community,"
Raymond responded.

Medical Mutual as its health
insurance provider beginning July I.
·
Grueser also updated 'the
commission on the district
being chosen to participate in
the
Rebuilding
Ohio 's
Schools progr,am which is a
funding package .distributed
by the Ohio School Facilities
Commission for renovations
or repairs. ·
Thzs program is not 100,
percent funded with the. district shouldering at least a
partial financial burden. The
Southern Local School Board
met with an architect last
night to discuss facility
upgrade options · and the
costs.
Southern Local School
Treasurer Dennie Hill reported that his five year forecast
only
modest .
projected
growth, approximately one
percent per year. According
to footnotes to the treasurer's
repon, difficulties the district
faces is a loss of revenue
from. open enrollment and a

constant fluctuation in state
funding : Hill 's office reported $100,876.78 in revenue
iost in the 2004-05 school
year to open enrollment.
The next commission
meeting will take place at
10:30 a.m., July 26, Southern
High School.

Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.

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LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

PVH welcomes new family practice physician
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. -. Canie M . Lockhart
Dillard, M.D., a family practitioner, has recently joined
the medical staff at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, acoordin!J to
William A. Barker, Jr., VIcepresident of the non-profit
healthcare facility located in
Point Pleasant.
She will begin her practice
in August, 2006. Her specialties include women's
health, pediatrics and office'
·procedures.
Formerly of New Haven,
Dr. Lockhart Dillard will be
located at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Medical Office
Center, 2414
Jefferson
Avenue in Point Pleasant.
Appointments can be made
by calling (304) 675-1484.
She will be working in a partnership with Nancy B. Lares,
MD, also a family practitioner. The practice is currently

I

·J
l

I

I

PageA6

medicine services to patients
and utilizing the services at
Pleasant Valley Hospital,"
said Barker.
Pleasant Valley Hospital , a
201-bed facility, is a full service hospital with state of the
art equipment. The· hospital
has over 40 physicians practicing with the hospital in
many specialty areas.
Lockhart Dillard received
her medical degree in 2003
from the Joan C. Edwards
School of Medicine (JCESOM) at Marshall University ,
(Huntington, W.Va.) and will
complete her residency at the
Dr. Carrie Lockhart Dillard·
Department, of . Family
Medicine Residency at the
scheduling new patients . .
same institution in July,
"We welcome Dr. Lockhart 2006. She also possesses a
Dillard !Othe dedicated team bachelor 's degree in chemof physicians at Pleasant istry from West Virginia
Valley Hospital . She will be a University
(Mo rgantown , ·
wonhy addition to our orga- · W.Va.) · where • she was an
nization by providing family Honors Program Scholar and

named to the Dean 's' List.
In 1998, Lockhart Dillard
worked as a substitute
teacher in science and chemistry at Hannan High School
(Ashton, W.Va.) through the
Mason County Board· of
Education .
·Her professional affiliations ·include the American
of
Family
Academy
Physicians, the West Virginia
State Medical Association,
the
American
Medical
Women 's Association and the
American
Medical
Association.
This dedicated' physician
and her husband, Dustin, an
attorney . for
Flaherty,
Sensabaugh &amp; Bonasso,
PLLC, in Charleston, W.Va.,
recently had their first child, a
son, named James Pierce. ·
Lockhart Dillard's parents are
Shirley and James Lockhart,
DDS of New Haven.

and I'd rather not deal with
my inheritance . until I've
had time to grieve; My
brother is the executor of
her estate. Do I have to do
anything about my inheritance rightaway?
A. : Practically speaking,
you ma,Y not get your inheritance Immediately. Assets
must be inventoried, debts
must be paid, and court
approval may be needed. If
the estate is large enough to
be subject to estate taxes
(more than $338,333 for
Ohio . and
more
than
$2,000,000 for the federal
government), your brother, as
executor, must file an Ohio
and/or federal estate tax
return, and your share of the
tax will typically be taken out
of your inheritance.
If your brother makes any
distributions before the government gets its cut he is
responsible personally for
any shortfall. For this ' reason, executors and trustees
generally are reluctant to
make distributions until after ·
the government has been
paid and has issued a "clos-

Youngstown •

COLUMBUS
Her
prospects uncertain, Ohio
State University President
Karen Holbrook announced
Wednesday she w'ill retire at
the end of the 2006-2007
school
. . year
. when her .contract exp1res.
At the urging of some of
Holbrook's critics, the university's board was recently
expanded by the state
Legislature - and trustees
had privately been consider-

~

f

LocAL SCHEDULE

74' I 56"

GALLIPOLIS - A schedule of upcoming coll&amp;gtl
and high school varsity spor1ing events InVOlving
1eamslrom Gallia, Meigs and Mason counties.

Manallekl•
75' 156'

Todey'a gem11

American Legion Baseball

Lancaste·r at Gallipoli~ (at Rio Grande), 6

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*CQtumbua

p.m.
,

Saiurday. June 10
Amerlc.an legion Baseball
Feeney Bennett at lancaster (DH), 1 p.m.

Meigs. Juniors a1 Ashley (DH) , 1 p.m.
Sunday Jyne 11

AmeriCan Legion Baeebell

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Flurries

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Ice

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Thursday...Mostly cloudy
in the morning.. :Then becoming partly cloudy. A slight
chance of thunderstorms. A
chance of showers in the
moming ... Then a
slight
chance of showers in the afternoon. Highs i!) the upper 70s.
North winds around 5 .mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent. '
Thursday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s.

enter a major capital cam- including a nationally publi- ·
paign next year. It will be cized offccampus riot, .sports
Important to the success of scandals and tuition increasthe campaign for donors to es prompted by a conhave confidence in consis- strained budget.
tent leadership over the next
In an attachment to her
five years and perhaps letter, · Holbrook cited the
longer," wrote Holbrook, university's successes under
watch, · including
who earns $367,309 a year her
and gets a car and a house expanded academic reputation and rise in national
from the university.
Holbrook's leadership as rankings; improved reten- .
the 13th presideni of one of tion and graduation rates ; ·
America's largest universi- growing diversity in the stuties has been 'marked by both dent body ; and increases in
remarkable accomplishment research
grants
and
and a series of difficulties, bequests.

Rockwell - 66.34
Rocky Boots - 22.55
Sears - 163.46
Wai-Mart- 47.04
Wendy's ,...- 59.24 ·

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PVH FLAG FOOI'BALL
Eartv ""'""a•

,
98tunloy, Juno 10 '
Pl&gt;lnt PIHunt IIOOM Lodge Uoldl
Ba urtv for toom pletu,...
Ratn or ehlne

''·ea.m.
Field A - X·Tremes ¥1. HOlzer Clinic
Field e - Bennlgana vs. AnU\ony J.
McEldowney. MD '
'
flt!d C - Fredric, LaCalbonara, Mlil
ve.' Shamblin
Field D - Wai·Marl ve, Norrie.Northup

built himself. "They believe
in something a lot stronger.
That' s why 'teams come
together., They believe in each
other, and believe in some·thing."
Dallas coach Avery Johnson
has spoken of the same belief,
but it will be tested on both
sidelines when Game ' I tips
off on Thursday night. Not
much is similar about these
.two team s, apart from a
hunger for victory and a
remarkable
enduran.ce
through their playoff struggles. .
The Heat have peaked in
the postseason with impressive efforts from Dwyane
Wade, Shaquille O'Neal and
their eclectic cast of support·
ing players. The Mavericks
used their versatility and a
breakout performance from
Dirk Nowitzki, who stole
O' Neal's mantle as the
game's most dominant 7-footer during a wonderful post-

'.

•

season.
But while Shaq has the
experience of five previous
trips to the final s, Nowitzki
already ·has imagined the
pr~ssure of his first step on
basketball's biggest stage.
Though the German forward
has met every challenge he
faced this ~os tseason, everything now IS in Shaq's shadow.
'There's nothing compared
to. this," Nowitzki said . "I
played ·in the world championships, I played . in the
European championships, I
played in Germany, but this is
as big as it gets. I ihink that
the pressure is· goi ng to be
equal. on everybody to perform, so I'm not going . to
even worry about that. I know
once the tip is up, it's still basketball.
"It's an exciting time. It's
probabl)l the most exciting
Please see N-. Bl

Lewis says
players have
embarrassed
Bengals

·ta.m.

Fltld A - ead .Anttude ' vo. Robert
Mi:Ciijary, MD'
&lt; ·
Field B - Vaic!ya Urology Center vo.

Alta-Aid
·~~ ~ - Simon's Pain Train vs. John

0

Field D - Tolllvels Pre-Owned Auto
Center vs. Aalr Furniture

CINCINNATI
(AP)
Cincinnati Bengals coach Marvin
Lewis said Wednesday that he let
two players know they've disMASON , 'W.Va. - The
graced the team with their offWabama High School basket·
field legal problems.
ball coaching staff will host
"I told the people that yes, you
the third annual summer basembarrass us as an organizauon,
ketball camp for all boys and.
myself, and the coaches when
these things occur," Lewis said of
girls in grades K-6.
rookie linebacker A.J. Nicholson
'The two-day camp will
and
second-year .receiver Chris
held
at
New
Haven
Henry. "Right, wrong or indifferCommunity ·building on
ent, there are certain things that ·
l\1onday, June 12 and
you're asked not to be a part of or
VVeduesda,,
June
14.
around."
Children in grades K-3 (next
Lewis insisted, however, that
school year) will report to the
the
recent arrests of Nicholson
first session from 9 a.m.-11
and
Henry
-. Henry's third arrest
a.m. Children in grades 4-6
within seven months - aren't
(next school year) will report
distractions
to the team as it pre- .
to the second session from
pares
for
summer
minicamp next
11 :30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
week.
Each camper must bring a
'
· "We' ll move forward and move
parental. consent form signed
on, and they'll be dealt with as
and dated. by a parent or
they are allowed to be dealt with,"
guardian to be allowed to
Lewis said after'players gathered
participate. Forms will .be
.
AP photo
for a voluntary practice. ·,
available at camp for those . Edmonton Oilers' Ryan Smyth (94) tries to get the puck past Carolina H.urricanes goaltender Cam Ward in he first period dur· .
Nicholson, 21, is charged with
who did not receive them at ing Game 2 of the Stanley Cup hockey finals Wednesday in Raleigh, N.C .
· grand theft and burglary-, both
school. Campers should also
felonies, in a break-in at a former
brif!g their own basketbAll if
avatlable.
·
·
the Ben~al s' fifth-round draft
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) .
their choice in the nets until 30th team to sweep the first But, after viewing an over· choice th1s year.
Henry, 23, dmfted iii the third
It didn't matter who was in Jussi Markkanen led his team two games of the best-of- head replay, it was clear that
goal for Edmonton . Cam onto the ice for the opening ' seven series at home; the Weight managed to graze the round last year from West
Ward turned aside everything faceoff - the first goalie in Chicago Blackhawks in 1971 puck with a swjpe of hi s stick Virginia, is recoveri ng from a
MARIETTA
_
The the Oiler.s sent his way, and 45 years to make hi s tirst are the only team to blow as it was on the way to the January knee injury. He was
Sunday in nearby
. such a lead, losing to the net - making it a legal goal. charged
Cincinnati Reds will be hold· the Carolina Hurricanes were playoff start in the finals ,
Clermont Collnty with speeding
After vowing to rally Montreal Canadiens in seven
ing its annual Legen&lt;js Youth . · simply unstoppable.
The call was overturned, and drunken drivin~. Be also
Baseball Clinic June 14-16 at
Ward saved 25 shots for his around their new goalie, the games.
Carolina celebrated and the faces trial Aug. 21 m Orlando,
VFW Base ball Field in second shutout of the play- Oilers didn 't play with any 11 Game 3 is Saturday night. Oilers fumed. Shortly after- Fla., on a concealed. weapon
The Hurricanes poured it ward, Ethan Moreau threw a charl!e following a January inciMarietta.
pffs and the Hurricanes over- sort of passion, especially
after
Cory
Stillman
scored
a
on
in the final period, getting left-handed punch to the face dent m which police say he pulled
The three ilay clinic is for whelmed his re placement at
a~es 5-19 and will focu s on the other end of the ice, seiz- back-breaking goal with 2.4 . every break while the frus- of Hurricanes defen se man a pistol on a group of revelers.
pllching, hitting and fielding ing control of the Stanley seconds left in the second trated Oilers turned chippy.
Henry pleaded guilty in March
Glen Wesley as the tw o cwne
to
make
it
3-0.
Doug
Weight
appeared
to
period
mstruction . The camp will Cup final s with a 5-0 rout
together ai center ice.
• to marijuana charges from a ·
Edmonton finds itself in a kick in a defl ected ~ hot early
run daily from 10 a.m. to 3 Wednesday ni ght to go up 2·
Georges Laraque delivered December arrest in Kentucky,
huge hole headil)g back to in the third and the referee
p.m. and will star former 0 in the series .
avoiding jail time after completPluse see Breeze, Bl
The Oilers didn 't re,veal Alberta. Carolina became the waved it off immediately. ·
ing a drug rehabilitation program.
Reds players Don Gullett,
Gary Nol an; Todd Benzi nger, ---------~----------------~-----------------_:__ _ _ __ __
Kal Daniels, Leo Cardenas
and Joe Charboneau.
Early .registration can be
done any time and any
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Rich ing . Harang threw seven inning in 23 innings.
campers who register by May A uri lia matched career shutout innings in a 1-0 vicSidney Ponson (4-1) lost
25 will receive an auto· . highs with four hits and five tory April 14, and he had
for
the first time in nine
graphed Reds Legends com- RBi s Wednesday night, thrown 12 consecutive
memorative baseball card leading the Cincinnati Reds scoreless inning s in St. starts with the Cardinal's,
who signed him as a free .
·and mini helmet. The regis· to a 7-4 victory over. the St. Louis before gi ving up three agent in the offseason. In 5
tration deadline is June 12.
Loui s Cardinals that pulled runs in hi s final inning.
1-3 innings he gave up five
For more information them into a tie for first place
ln 5 2-3 innings, Harang runs and eight hits.
about the camp, please call in the NL Central.
allowed eight hits with three
Consecutive RBI si ngles
. 740-373-3476.
Aurilia hit a three-run strikeou ts and a walk to win by Hatteberg and Aurilia
homer off Tyler John son in hi s second straight start.
gave the Reds a 2-0 lead in
the sixth that made it 7-0.
The Cardin als wrapped up the third, and RBI doubles
Scott
Hatteberg
had
two
a
3-6
homestand and are 1-2 by the same duo made it 4-Ci
CoNTACT
hit s, two walks and two since Albert Pujol s went on in the fifth . Aurili a hit his
RBi s to help . the Reds the 15-day disabled li st on seventh homer in the sixth .
OVP Scorallne (5 p.m.-1. e.m.)
. stretch their winning streak Sunday with a strained right
Todd Coffey got the last
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
to a season-best seven side muscle. They snapped a three outs for hi s fourth save
or 992·5287 (Meigs Co.)
games . They compl eted a IS- inning scoreless slump, in five chances .
three-game sweep with Ken their longest since June
Notes: Reds C Jason .
Fox- 1·740·446·3008
Griffey
Jr.
(left
quad)
and
2004,
in
the
sixth
on
Scott
LaRue
snapped an 0-for-29
E·mall - sports 0 mydailysentinel .com
Edwin
Encarnacton
(left
Rolep
's
two-run
doub
le
and
slump
with
a bloop single in
lpgrta Staff
ankle) out with minor Jim Edmonds' RBI single.
•i1e seventh. .. . Before the
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
injuries.
They
also
swept
a
Edmonds
added
his
sixth
game, the Reds clinched
(740) 446-2342 , ext. 33
three-ga
me
serie
s
in
and
first
si
nce
May
homer,
their first series win in St.
bsherman 0 mydai!ytrlbune,com
Houston during a 7-2 road 12, in the eighth off David Louis since May 2003 . The
Bryan Waltara, Sports Writer
trip.
Weathers.
sweep was their first of
(740)446-2342 , ext. 23
Aaron
Harang
(1-4)
·Singles
by
David
Ecks
tein
more than two games in St. .
bwattera 0 mydailyt:rlbune.com
AP photo
became the first visiting and Rolen in the first gave Lou ~s sinci! . July · 13-15.
Lar,Y Crum, Sports Writer
Cincinnati
Reds'
Rich
Aurllia
connects
for
a
th
ird
inning
RBI sin·
,pitcher to wi n twice at new the . Card inals, who were 1998 . "fhey are 7-2 against
(740) 44.6·2342 , ext. 33
Busch Stadium, dominating alone in first place for 23 the Cardinals after going 5· gle against St. Louis Cardinals' Sidney Ponson on Wednesday at
Ierum@ rnydaityregiste r.com
for five innings before tir- games. th eir first multihit II las t year. ·
Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Aur ilia hit scored Felipe Lopez.

·
•
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·
5
0
·H urr1canes . reeze ·.y · .· nionton, .-

Cincinnati Reds ·
legends camp

Aurilia, Reds hammer Cardinals

US

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all~rna~~ that allows physi(!ians
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Bars. ·,

·········~··········································
'

Meigs Juniors vs. Sandusky (at Newark),
11 a.m.
·
Meigs Juniors a1 Newark, TBA

DALLAS (AP) - The
NBA final s are a new phe·
nomen on in this part of Texas
· and in Pat Riley 's part of
Florida.
The
Dallas
Mavericks and the Miami
Heat have never been this far
in the postseason, and there's
plenty of rafter room for the
banner to be won in the next
two weeks.
Yet Riley knows how teams
get this far, and it isn't just
with the buzzer-beating shots
and star-making perfor·
mances that have run rampant
. in the most exciting postseason in recent memory. ·
Dallas and Miami have a
wealth of talent, but they
. became finali sts on faith- in
· a system, in teammates, in a
collective will to topple previous champions and shake .up
AP photo the NBA.
Dallas Mavericks head coach Avery Johnson. right, directs
"They believe, like we do,"
pl ayer Jerry Stackhouse during team basketball practice in said Riley, back for his ninth
Dallas , Wednesday. The Mavericks will face the Miami finals appearance with hi s
Heat in the NBA Final s.
third club - the first one he

Wahama Youth
Basketball Camp

·day's transactions, provided by Smith
Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

, Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
q,uotes of the previous

,

West winds around 5 mph.
Friday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Northwest winds 5 to lO mph:
Friday
night;;.Partly
cloudy. Lows in (he lower
50s. Northwest winds around
s mph.
,
. Saturday
through
Sunday... Partly
cloudy,
Highs in the upper 70s. Lows
in the lower 50s. ·

LOcal Stocks
ACI--,42.95
AEP-34.40
Akzo- 53.51
Ashland Inc • ..;,;.., 60.29
BLI-16.19
Bob Evans - 28.80
BorgWarner - 62.84
CENX-37.28
Champion - 8.41
Charming Shops U.42 .
City Holding ....- 35.62
col-52.76 ·
DG-14.88
DuPont - 41.09
Federal Mo&amp;ul ......... 51 ·
USB- 31.56
Gannett - 53.55
General Electric 34.40
GKNLY- 5.05
Harley Davidson 49.30
.
JPM- 42.25
Kroger - 19.86
Ltd.- 26.33
NSC- 49.41
Oak Hill Financial - . ·
26.95
OVB- 25.15
BBT-42.42
Peoples - 29.02
Pepsico - 6.0 .30
Premier - 15.30

~

Weather Underground • AP

ing whether they would sup·
port a contract extension. An
option to do so was to expire
at the end of June.
In a letter announcing her
decision to the board delivered to trustees at their
two -day meeting last week
- Holbrook, 63, said she
was resigning after 35 years
in higher education to
spend time with her husband, Jim, who has been
retired for I 0 years.
" I also believe it is the
best timing for the university as Ohio State plans to

frjd1y'1 QIIDII
American Legion 9aaeball

McArthur at Meigs Juniors, 6 p.m.

~ ~loudy ~ T~l=r_· ~

ing letter" releasing them income' taxes on it?
inheritance, what steps can
from liability.
.
A.: No; most inheritances I take to make sure the
Both Oh10 and federal and gifts are not subject to money is used as wisely as
returns are due nine months income taxation, so you do possible?
after the date of death, but not have tp report the gift of a.
A.: Consult with a cenified
both may 'be extended. The house from Aunt Mary on public accountant or a qualiclosing letter typically is your income tax return. Upon fied financial . planner who
issued six months tQ.Q.ne year Aunt Mary's de&lt;:~ th , the can first help you identify
after the return i's ftled. So, it . "basis" in the house, l¥Pical· . your financial goals. · Then , .
is entirely possible .that you ly what Aunt Mary paid for it, you and the advisor can
will not receive your money . is changed to the fair market develop an individualized
until a year or eighteen value of the house at her plan . for investingand using
months after your mother's death. If you 'decide to sell the money.
death.
the house, you only pay a
Q..: I just inherited a capital ~ains tax on the
Law You Can Use iS' a
small amount of money increase 10 the house's value weekly consumer legal
from my father. I barely from the time of her death.
information column providknew him, as he was never
Some inheritances, such as ed as a public service of the
involved in my life, and I IRAs, 401 (k)s, 403 (b)s, ' Ohio State Bar Association.
really don't want his money annuities, U.S. savings bonds This article was prepar:ed by ·
now that he's gone. Can I and · other
tax-deferred attorney Richard W. Ashley,
refuse the inheritance?
accounts, are ,subject to state ~artner in the Akf'(Jnjirm
A. : Yes, you can refuse or and fedc;,r!!l 'income taxation, ' o Conin, Sanislo, Ufholi&amp; :
"disclaim" this inheritance. If ju~J as they would have been · shley LLC, a,d of co11nsel·'
you do this, the money will taxable income in the hands to the Medina firm o.f .
go to whomever it would of the person who gave it to Largent, . Berry, Preston &amp;
have gone if you were dead rou. Because you will pay Jamison Co.' LPA. Articles
(e.g., . your children). If you mcome taxes on gifts such as appearing in this column are
have children, you may wish the·se at your tax"bracket, you · intended to provide broad,
to put the money in trust for should always consult with a general information · about
them rather than disclaim knowledgeable tax advisor the lnw. Before applying this
your inheritance.
before you take any distribu- information · to a specific
Q.: My Aunt Mary left lions from . · tax-deferred . {e$alproblem, readers . are ,
me her house when she &amp;ccounts yw-1nhent.
.~ ·• iit~~ged to seek the advice-6/ a .
died. Do I have to pay
Q.: Once I receive my ·licensed attorney.
&lt;

•

Feeney Bennett at Beverly (OH ), 5:30

75' 158'

Ohj.o.State president announces retirement amid tension
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH

•

New faces, new.places in NBA finals
•

Partty

Bl

Thursday, June &amp;, 2006

IAiCH

Cloudy

•

Indians &amp;calp Athletics, B2

City/Region
High I Low temps

Forecast for Thumay, June 8

•

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

2006

OSU track coach stepp ing down. B2 .

Today's Forecast

I just inherited money. Now what' do I do?
Q.: My mother just died,

11tursday, June 8,

Local Weather

usE ·

LAW YOU CAN

' .

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

~~~d~i~:~~:~~t::sH~P:;

�•

Thursday, June 8, 2006

www .mydailysentinel.eom

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday; June 8, 2006

'
The Daily SentineL• Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

m:rthune - SentinelC L 'A S S I F·I E D

G11l(. County, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
m:rthune
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad,
(7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1-333
Call
Today...
.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _o.:.:..,r;.,;Fa;;;,x To
Fax To (740) 992·2157

....,~""""

Breeze
fromPageBl
an even more flagrant hit,
Carolina's
pummeling
Andrew Ladd with a shot
from behind in the closing
minutes to get tossed out of
ilie game. ·
.
: Maybe he was just mad at
Ladd, who scored off a
deflection in the tirst period.
Frantisek Kaberle made it 20 just past the midway point
. !)f the second with a shot
through Markkanen's legs.
::. With Moreau in the penalty
box, Carolina swarmed m
front of Markkanen until
Mark Recchi got free in front
to deflect the puck past the
~hellshocked goalie. The
Carolina fan s spent the rest of
ihe
game
heckling
Markkanen with chants of
~ 'You-seee! You-seee!"
Markkanen was picked to
till in after Edmonton 's playoff star, Dwayne Roloson ,
·:&gt;ustained a series-ending
knee injury ,in .Game I. The
~! -year-old Finn had last
played on March . l, but
Edmonton coach Craig
MacTavish decided he was a
better option than Ty
Conklin.
The Oilers ' other goalie
took over after Roloson was
burt on Monday and botched
play behind the net in the
final minute, allowing Rod
Brind'Amour to stuff the

a

puck into an open net for the
winning goal in Carolina's 54 victory.
Markkanen didn ' t make
that sort of blatant blunder.
but he didn 't get much help
from his teammates.
The Hurricanes overcame a
3-0 deficit to win the opener
matching the largest
comeback in finals history and have now outscored
Edmonton 8-1 over the last
83 minutes of the series.
Suddenly. the Oilers look
very much like a team that
struggled just to make the
playoffs, not the squad that
swept through the We stern
Conference
with
three
straight upsets to become the
first No. 8 seed to reach the·
finals under the current format.
The 22-year-old Ward
spent most of the regular season watching Martin Gerber
from the bench. When the
starter struggled in a firstround
series
against
Montreal, the Hurricanes
switched to their backup.
Ward has played like a seasoned veteran, giving up only
one goal in the series that he
had even the remotest chance
of stopping. The Hurricanes
al so clogged things up in
front of the net, making it
tough for Edmonton to get
any sort of clear shot l)t the
net.
Ward's teammates blocked
plenty of shots, too - 11 in
the first period alone.

Or

Olfteello~~
Monday thru Fri.day
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

New
from PageBl
time of my life."
For O' Neal, it's a chance to
win his first championship
without Kobe Bryant by his·
side - and a chance to make
his late-career move to
Miami into the success he
predicted nearly two years
ago, when he guaranteed a
championship to the fans of
South Florida.
.
"Right now as a player, I
have three. but I'm not satisfied with three," O'Neal said ·
of his ring collection. "You
want more, and I have the
opportunity right now to get
more. .. . Personally, it just
adds to my book."
The series also allows fans
in the league's growing television audience to become
acquainted with a few of the
sport's next big things.
The NBA has produced
stars, set cultural trends and
become a global economic

force in the last quarter-century, but its top winners' cir- .
cle includes just the most
elite company. Only seven
franchises have won champi- ·
onships since 1979, fewer
than in any major sport.
An eighth will be added
when Dallas or Miami wins
its first title. The Mavericks
have been in the league since
1980, while the Heat joined
in 1988 - and through good
seasons and bad, with a few
stars and many more schlubs,
neither club ever got this far.
Two teams without prior
championships are in the
finals for the first time since
1971.
"It's just two classy organizations, first time .being here,
and it's going to be ·a fun, fun
series." O'Neal said .
The finals have never been
to this part of Texas, where a
regular-guy owner became
larger than life. Mark Cuban
wrote the checks and led the
cheers as the Mav-wrecks
were transformed into a
perennial winner despite

annual personnel changes.
And Dallas improved more'
quickly than anyone expected this seasons, with
Nowitzki's incandescence
and Johnson's alchemy getting them into the finals with .
impressive series victories
over the · NBA's top two
defenses (Memphis and San
Antonio) and its top offense
(Phoenix).
The Mavericks' sense of
destiny has grown with each
of Nowitzki 's
amazing
achievements in the postseason. He tied Game 7 of their
second-round series against
the ~efending champion
Spurs with a stunning threepoint play that many call the
biggest shot in frnnchise history, and he followed it ·up
with a superb conference
finals against the Suns, highlighted by a 50-point game.
But the hunger for a title is
equal on the other sideline,
where Riley assembled a cast
around O'Neal and Wade,
then hoped everything would
·
blend in time.

While the Mavericks were
pushed through the regular
season' s final days and
entered the playoffs on a roll,
the Heat say they didn ' t find
their stride until the postseason began. Miami struggled
ihrough portions of the regular season while its disparate
parts merged, ·even losing at
Dallas by 36 points on Feb. 9.
But the Heat got it together
in the playoffs, dispatching
Chicago and New Jersey
before holding off the oncedominant Detroit Pistons,
who couldn't match Miami's
varied attack. Fans love the
Heat, with Wade's grace and
O'Neal's brute charisma supported by a cast of recognizable playerS: including veterans Gary Payton, Antoine
Walker .
and
Alonzo
Mourning.
"It's great for young kids
growing up ... to see younger
guys, exciting guys and guys
that they can feel like they ' re
a part of, like they kne.,\i
when they gn:w up," Wade
said.

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

•

\'\\I ll \ II \ II \l'-1

r

GTVFA WAY

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

1

sarvlca providers are

Services; 175 Race
Street, Post Office
Box 191, Middleport,
Ohio 45760, no tater

than Monday, June
12, 2006 at 4:00 p.m.
All submissions must

be received by mall or
hand dallvery by the
above date and time.
No materials recelved
after the date wilt be
Included In previous
submissions nor be
considered.
The
department reserves
the right to reject any
or all -proposals. In
accordance with 29
CFR part 31, 32,
Meigs
County
Department of Job
and Family Services
ts prohibited from
discrimination on the

expected to link programs
with
local
labor needs, provide
a strong connection
between
academic
and
occupational
cashiers check, or let·
tearntng, and estabtar of credit upon a
lish programs which
solvent bank In the
prepare youth for
&amp;mount of not less
post secondary edu·
than 10% of the bid
cation or unsubalamount In favor of the
dlzed employment as
aforesaid
Meigs
appropriate. Services
County
should
Include:
basis of race, color, Commlasloners. Bid
Determining eligibilishall
be
national origin, sex, Bonds
ty for WI/I programs,
accompanied
by
providing a compre-. age, religion, political
Proof of Authority of
henalva arTay of earvbeliefs, or disability.
the official or agent
(5) 25, (6) 1, 8
lces tel eligible youth
signing the bond.
and Incorporating the
Btda shall be sealed
tan prog'r am elemente
and marked aa Bid for
under WIA. Two proPublic Notice
VIllage of Syracuse
g111ma will be award·
St-t .Paving Protect
ed and program coat
NOTICE TO CON·
and melted or dallvmutt
not exceed
TRACTORS
orodto:
$100,000 . .ch (aub·
Seated propoaala for
Meigs
County .
ject
to
available
the Paving of Ft,. (5)
Commisalonera
lunda) and ahall be
ttrHta In the VIllage
lor tilt period qf July
ol Syracuse, wlli be Courthouaa Pomeroy,
Ohio 45781
1, 2008 to Juns 30,
1'11C8ivad by the Malga
Attention of blddara
2007. Administrative
C
o
u
n
I
y
ta called to all of· the
coat may not exCHd
Commlulonera
at
tO% of lhe lotal con· their olflot 11 the requirement• oon·
talned tn thll bid
!raat-rd.lnaddl·
Courthouaa,
Ill% of the lOIII Pomeroy, Ohio 45788 packet, particularly to
the Federal Labor
c0111r10t award mull
until
1 :DO
·p .m.,
t.. U88d II! HI'YI out· Thuraday, June· 211, Standarda Provtalona
Devla·Bacon
ol·achool
youth.
2008 and then at 1 :15 . and
Wagaa, vartoua lneur·
PropDNII
muat
pm at Hid office
ance requi1'11mantl,
dtlllonetrata
the
opened and read
~aricua equal oppor·
capability to meat
aloud lor the lollowtunlty provlaiona, and
'parlormtnct
atan· •lng:
the raqul........,t lor a
dardt •nd to quantify . Repaving of five (5)
program outcomae. A atreeta tolllllng 3,380 payment bond ond
performance bond lor
copy ol the Request
Linear feat and vary100% of the contact
for PropoHI may t..
lng wldtha In the
price. No bidder may
picked
up
from
VIllage of SyrecuH,
withdraw hla bid withThareH Lavender or
Meigs County, Ohio.
In thirty · (30) days
Jane Banks at The
Specifications provld-

Sunday~!~

r

Paper

Commissioners
reserve the right to
reject any or all bids.
Mick
Davenport,
President
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(6) 6,12, 14

FREEDOM RIDE
MOTORCYCLE RUN
Saturday, July 1, 2006
11 a .m:
Begins at large parking lot
beside of Well ness Center
$20 pre-registration
$25 same day registration
$15 for a passenger
Fees include a
commemorative shirt.
All proceeds benefit PVH
Foundation &amp; Hospice. ·
For more information please
call th~J Community Relations
Department (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326 or 1492

AUTOGRAPH
SESSION
Players from the Huntington
Heroes Arena League Football
Team will be available from ·
10 am to Noon on
_Saturday, June 10, 2006
at the PVH Coed Flag
Football Tournament.
The event will take place In
the large picnic shelter at the
Point Pleasant Moose Lodge.
Fans of ALL ages are
encouraged to attend. Then
stay to cheer on your favorite
flag football team I

Flower' Gardners
Beat the Heat
2 Day Sale
Fri. &amp; Sat.
A Touch Of Thyme
Hartford
All shrubs 2 gaL up

•

Check out our other
savings bring this ad
and enter to win a shrub
every hour from
9-5 .
All Real Eatat
dvertlaementl a

June 9, 10, 11

French 500
Flea Market
Gallia County Fairgrounds
Dealers Welcome

ADVERTISE YOUR ITEM R EVENT
IN THE BULLETIN BOARD
FOR FAST RESULTS!
I '

prepaid'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARDSALE-

r;;;;;:;;::;;;:;;;;::;:::-=:--------,.-·l•tlo
kHncarly~comc~~tn«
www.coma com

.GAUJPOUS

1 yr. old female Jack Russell
Terrier, (740 }742•1507
Found· mixed breed female
puppy near New. Lima Rd.,
2klttens 1male !female. (740)742-2380
mother part Himalayan. -~-----~hart
haired,
wh ite Found.Uttle tan Chihuahua,
wlorange tipped ears/tall, wlblue . collar, int Gallipolis
blue eyes. (740)992-2099
Ferry, across from Beale
School (304)675-7545 or
5 · month old female Lab- {304)593·0348
~pttweller - Mastlft
mill;: -~-----Black. All shots. (740)446·

1F

548 Left Fork Rd., Sat. June
10@ Bam. (Beside Galdwell

Trucking) Lots of Good1esl
Home furnlsh.ngs, tam1ly
apparel, sm appliances,
toys and much more.
..:.- -- - - -'-6 family Garage sale. 922
Jencho Rd. Chesh1re, Oh1o.
Friday &amp; Saturday. Rain or
shme.

Beagle dog, lemale Good
'¥th kids. (740)379-9445.

Four Famil y. Kids clothmg,
lots of nice things. At Grange
Hall on lovers Lane, 619-

~

6/1 1.

to good home beautiful .
011ts of all colors. 1740)4464,177.

,.....___

"'•-·~

r-uMrKUYIIYIWIIIL

Fri·Sat-Sun. , June 9,1 0.11;
Multi-tamily yard sale, 554
Jay
Or , Spnng Valley All
Free tu good home, 2 good
sizes clothing- 1ntant·adult.
Watch dogs. (740)446·4177.
Missing! Since May 1, 2006. Large variety of Items;
Free to good home. lab mix
Huskle!German Shepherd linens/curtains. glass ware,
R~pplee. 1740)446-4122.
clog. Reward $300 Call kitchen ware, books, collectibles. 98m·5pm
740)398-()446.

4 family· June 9th-10th,
26381 Tanners Ad, Racine,
2 miles past High School
turn right (3 miles), men's
women's small-x-large, girls
18mo-31, boya 6-8, lots of
mise, (7401247-4001, rain or
sh tne

Friday &amp; Saturday, June 9 &amp;
10 , 8am-? ? 2033 Graham
SchOol Ad. r,ight oft 141 . 1st
sa le this year Horne Inten01,
·
1 h
l .Itt1e 'ry k es, o•rls
cot es
infant to ex. womens clothes
and much more
'

Fantastic Sale. Rainer
Garage, Tad&lt;.eerv!lle Road,
Racine
Friday·Saturday
Antiques, V1ntage Textiles,
Jewelry,
Glassware,
Household
____
· -~--

..'

.

r

YARD SALEGAlLIPOLIS

•

I

S

'------..t

Drii'4~~Y-IIRD-~S-ALE_·_"'IIh6

Rt

lblJ' WANJID

llho
, •

Dom1no's Pizza Now Hiring
Kitchen Aldol
Sate Drivers
Point
Meal Transporter
Pleasant,
Gallipolis
&amp;
Pomeroy locations Apply in Gallta County Council On
Aging/Senior
Resource
Person
Center Is currently accepting
Drtvora Needed:
applications for Kitchen
COL(Cises B) Drivers will- Aid/Meal Transporter, part
Ing to drive for local ready· t1me position. Must have
mix~oncrete companY.
val1d dnvers license and be
' Experience Is preferred but e.n insurable nsk Must be
not necessary Med. Insur- able to read, wnte and follow
ance &amp; other benetlts avail· directions. Needs to ass1st 1n
able after waiting period
meal preparalion, clean up
Driver must be willing to do and be a suitable meal driv·
pre·malntenance on trucks er A complete ' job descrip·
&amp; equipment. yard work &amp; tlon and application aVail·
other miscellaneous chores. able anator send resume to.
EKperience operating equip- Gallla County Council On
ment &amp; extra skills svch as
AgmgiSenlor Resource
weld1ng a plus.
Center
Call Aobertsburg
PO BaM441
1304)937-3410
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or Lekln(304)773-5234
An Eqllal
Located In Masori County
Opportu nity/AffirmatiVe
near Buffalo WV.
Action Employer

lblJ'WANIED

AHentlon Dnvers·
R&amp;J
Trucking IS lookmg for
Drivers w/ 1 yr OTA,
Experience for Aeglonpl
Hauls. Average pay 40's to
mid 50's Home every
Weekend
call
Kent
(800)462·9365

- - - -- - - Attention Mechanics: Now
taking appttcatlons for experiences Truck Mechanic
Mail resume to
R&amp;J
Truck•ng· 14530 St At
?,Marietta, OH 45750

Garage Sale June a , 9, 1oth

AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
everyone Sell Shirl ey Spears, 304·

G arage sa e 1165 t.
. Somethmg tor
588 . Child s blke, scooter, hom Route 7 to Eagle Ridge
675- 1429.

Hllll' WANJID

Employment Opportunities.
The Meigs County Board of
Mental
Retardation
&amp;
Developmental OlsabUities
is accepting applications for
the following positions:
Multiple Disabilities Teacher
Must have current valid Ohio
Department of Education
certification/licensure and
have or be eligible to obtalri
Intervention Specialist vall·
dation In the area of
Moderatellntens1ve educe·
IIOn' l needs. Instructional
Aides to work with students
with multiple disabilities .
E~epe rl ence andlor training
preferred. Must be eligible
for an Aide Certificate from
the Ohio Department of
Education.
Para·
Professional Certification
preferred. Submit applica·
tlon or resume by June 14th
to: Carleton School, P.O.
BaM 307. 1310 Carleton
Street.
Syracuse, OH
45779.

toys, clothing, baby ltem.s. Road, go 5 1/2 miles to
books, household •tams. Sugar Run Road (signs)
Thur. Fri. Sat 8·4.
1508 Lincoln Ave. If Interest· Kids clothes, toys, adult - - - - - - - ' - - ' - clothes
&amp; shoes.
Neighborhood one mile yard
td. please take.
HUGE Multi tam1ty yard sale sale. Four·F1ve houses.
June 9 &amp; 10, H64 Kerr Rd. Seven·nine
Families.
9am-?
Saturday, June 10. Rain
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Cancels. Three miles North
&gt;lx4'a For Sole ..... ........., ...... ......................... 725
• NO EICPERI ENCE NE CESSARY
Large yard sale, Baby, boys, of Chester Ohio off Route 7
Announcament ............................................ 030
'FIJLL·TIME CLASSES
girls
and
JUniors
clothes,
' COL TR.IoiNING
Antlqueo .............................. ............... : ......... 530
toys, books an d ~o re . 1954 Rummage Sale· Meigs
~EOERAL
' FINANCING AVAILABLE
Apartment• for Rant ................................... 440
'JOB PLACE~E NT
Graham School Ad. Friday &amp; Senior Center, June 9th, 9·
Auction and Flea Marke\............................. 080
POSTAL
JOBS
' ENROlLING N&lt;M
Saturday 9·5.
3, June 10th, 9· 1
Auto Parta &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
$15.67-$26.19/hr., now t'llr·
Auto Repalr ............................, ............ .. ....... 770
ing. For application and free
Neighborhood sale Green Sat. June 1oth. 9am·2pm,
Autoa for 8ale ....................................... ....... 710
ALLIANCE
governement job inkl, call
Valley
Dr.
off
At.
160
or
Kerr
509
South
Third
Ave
,
Baata &amp; Motors for Sale ..... .. ...................... 750
TRACTOR-TRAILER
American Assoc. of Labor 1·
Ad Furniture, clothing, col· Middleport.
,Building Supplfoo ........................ ......... ...... :tl50
TRAINING CENTERS
913·599-8042, 24/hrs. amp.
Butlnett and 8ulfdfnga ........................... ,.340
loctl bles &amp; more. 619-6110, 8· ~:;r...;.;.;~-~--.,
wviHEVILLE, VA
serv.
llutlnoaa Opportunlty .................... .......... ... 210
4
YARD SAlE.~~alne11 Tralnlng ........... :........................... 140
1-800-334-1203 Growing Home Health
1
Park Lane Mobile Home -.
~emporo lo Motor Homes ........................... 790
Parks
Annual
Yard
Sale
w1
11
L~~::!!
"'~
""'"'~m~
""~""!!!'!!!'
w~~
~.J Agency has Full-Time posl·
F~mplng Equipment ................................... 780
Large Yard-Sale clothes, furtlon lor an AN or LPN .
1-"'erdo of Thenko .......................................... 010
9th
be J une
&amp; 10th 9 · 5
nlture, pictures, tools, fire-' Come and j01n our teaml
1
Competitlw
wages, bonus·
ClllfdiEiderly Cere .............. ...... ................... 190
Surplus from my store placo .insert ~nd muc: ~ The Holn:lay Inn of Gallipolis es, &amp; benefits . Contact
'E tectrlcat/Rofrlgeratlon ................ ..... .......... 840
"Creative
Expression s• much more . Frl &amp; Sat S to 3 seeks to hire a full time dish- Home Health Care ol SE6
Equipment for Ron\ ...................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Bra nd new Items: flower 4 112 miles out Sandhill Ad. washer. Please apply in per· TOll Free at 1·866-368·1100
.F onn Equlpment ................................ .... .. :... uto
arrangements, hand deco- - - - , - - - - - - son. No phone calls please.
lf:lrme for Rent ......................................... .... 430
rated candles and holders. Yard Sale Washer &amp; Dryer.
Help needed to provide care
f'anno for Safe ............................................. 330
heat transfer tee shirts full size bed, fol ding chairs.
Deliver The
for wheelchair-bound female
For Loaeo ..................................................... 490 Rebel Dixie and Country Karcher pre ssure washer.
Charteaton Gazene
in Clifton area. Llghtllfting
For S.le ....................................... ........ .. ....... 585
Girl, body lotions, bath craftsman to ols. Tiffany
Evans to Leon
required
Expereince
For Site or Trade ............................... .... ......590
lamps
much
more Frl June Earn up to $11 00 monthly wlhydrau11c patient 11ft rvre
accesson es, tablecloths,
fo
..,. •
Fruita 1o Vegelabies ..................................... 580
tablerunners, placemats, 9. 6 Sto neybrook Ests. 8·?
be re expenses
ferred
Call(304)n3 -5942
Fumlohed Roomo ....... .............................. ... 450
napkins and more. Pnced $1
WANT'Im
APJ?roxima~e~ay3 to 4 hours belore-5PM or (304)773General Haullng....................................... ....850
to $ 20 Gently used Items
910B·atter·5PM
·
Olvoawoy ...................................................... 040
10 BuY
Dependable
Happy Ado .................................................... 050
boys clothing Infant to si ze 7,: · ~
muotvehicle
HOME HEALTH AIDE S·
0
lo Oraln .......... ........................................640
women's cloth ing, VHS Ab
t
US
CALL _ oo-WVA·NEWS SIGN ON BONUS. Home
1
6
11
0
11
1
He p wanted ................................................. 1tO
so u e op o ar: . .
Health Care of SE Ohio is
movies, toys, and more,
Homelmprovementa................................... 810
pnced to sell. 205 Third Silver and Gold Coins, _ _ _E_xt_._
17_0_
9 _ _ _ currently hiring home health
Home• for Sate ....... ........................... .. ........ 310
Avenue, Gallipolis (garage F'roofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
O.llvarlht
...
1935
us
c ur•enc
aldes·competitlve wages.
Houoehotd Qqode ................................ ....... 510
on
Grape
Street)
,
June
9th
·
·
y,
Cho"aa~
Goette
117 .n .• 62 •1222 .
Houeee for Rent ..........................•• ~ •.•.•..••.... 410
and 1oth, 9am-5pm, rain or Solitaire Diamonds· M.TS ,
ln,~h~~nOf
a
"tVov
ln·Memorlem .................................... .. .......... 020
151 Second
shine.
Coin
Shop,
Point
Pleasant
HVAC
Company Is looking
'naur.ance ..................................... ................ 130
- - - - - - - - Aven(Je, Gallipolis, 740 ·446 ·
Earn uP to $900 monthly
for e~eperlenced Installer
Lawn lo Oerden Equipment ...... .................. 860
Llvootock ..................................... ,................ 830
Yard sale to benefit 2842.
before expenses.
Must have 1 or more years
J,oot and Found .................................. ......... 060
Guinther· Kiser ·Johnston - -- -- - -Approxlmat 1 2to 3 ho
e~!;peri ence in resident ial.
Scholarship
Fund.
Saturday,
I
will
buy
JwlJs.
CAr6
Call
e
Y
urs
Pa"
on
exper,·once
l.ofo Acreage ................ ............................ 350
a day
1
7401388
9303
1
Mlacellaneoue.............................................. 170
June 10, 9·3, 2.3 m1les north ·
Dependlble vehicle
Technical a plus Call for
Mlacellaneoua Merchandlae.......................s.to
ol Holzer hospital on SR
appllcallon (740)441 ·1236
1 mU•t
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 880
160. WIDE variety ot items
CALL 1..aoo-WVA-NEWS or tax resume to (740)441 ·
Mobile Homos for Rent... ............................ 420
Yard Sale· Thursday &amp; ji;ji~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ___,__·E_x_t._17_0_9_ _ _ _1_26_6_ _ _ _ _ _
Mobile Homoolor Sale................................ 320
110
Money to Loan .......................................... ... 220
Fr.ilda,y•.346r.. Addison Pike 1/4
lJELp WANnD
Dental Assistant Needed
POSTING OF POStTION(S)
Molorcyctes &amp; 4 Wheelers .... ...................... 740
1
m1e; rom nt. 7.
Part·tlme Dental AssJstant Position:
High
School
Muelcallnetrumenl• .................. ................. 670
41'oMERoYARD~SIMIDt&gt;Au;,.LE
needed lor Progfes&amp;!ve Principal
Peraonata ............................ ......................... 005
•100 WORKERS
NEEDED Gall ipolis Dental Office Posting Date: June 5, 2006
Peta for Solo ........................ ........ ................ 560
A
ssemble
E&gt;c perlenca
and Qualifications. High Sct1ool
Plumbing a Hoatlng ......................... ........... 820
. crafts,
ood
Profeaslon•l Servlcea .••.•....•.............•......;... 230
w
Items.
, Radiographer's
Licen s(t Principal CertlficateA.Icense
Ftodlo, TV lo CB Ropalr ............................ ... 160
3 tam1ly yard sB.Ie- lots of
To $480/wk
Preferred. FaM resumes and or the Equivalent
children &amp; adult clothes, .
Materials p'r"'"•ldod
.
Roof Eotate Wan1ed ..................................... 380
"'"
references to (740)446· Interas I8d parI 18e 5 hou ld
8choola Instruction ..................................... 150
tent, off Bashan Ad. Bald Free Inform ation pkg. 24Hr. 4840.
submit letter of interest
Seed , Plant 1o Fertilizer .............................. 650
Knob Stive rsville Ad., Wed.,
801·428·4649
resume and credentials to
Sltuatlono Wanted .............................. ..... .... 120
,Thurs. &amp; Fri.
Desk' Clerk needed Parson Eastern
Local
School
_B pacator Rent ..... ........................................ 460
An E.~tcellen t way to earn with good communication District
A1ck Edwards.
Sporting Goodo ... ....... ..... ............................ 520
skill, good attitude &amp; self- Superintendent 50008 SA
3581.1 Loop Ad , Rutland- money. The New Awn.
SUV'a tor Salo .............................. ................ 720
Call Marilyn 304·882·2845 motivated. Shou!d apply at 68 1, Reedsville, Oh 45772
go
out
New
Lima
Rd.
to
Truciuo'for Salt ............................ ....... ......... 715
Budget Inn, Jackson Pike, Deadline. June 16, 2006
Forest Acres Park watch for
Uphototery ........... ......... ............................... 870
signs, Fri.,a nd Sat., .9th and Application's being accepted Gallipolis. No phone calls,
V•n• For Sele............................................... 730
Full
Time please
Licensed Social Worker .
10th, 9 to 4, rain or shine, for
ted to iluy ............ .................................
Secretaty/Recptlonlst. J 0. : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Middleton Estates wil l be
(740)742-2743
Wanted t 0 Buy- Form Suppfleo .................. 620
Drilling Company, 107 North Direct Sales Fa ntastic OOCf!ptlng bidS for contract
Wanted To 00 ...................................... ........ 180
SDK
no LSW. It Interested please
4 family yard sale· June g. Third Street Racine, OH · Opportunity,
, Wanted 'o Renl ............................................ 470
1o, 9-5, SR 124 South of Must have knowledge of Prob lem. Must be Motivated call Pam Shee ts, CS , at
Yard Sale- Oalllpoflo ....... ...............,.............. 072
Yord Soto-Pom~roy/Mtddlo ......................... 074
Raci ne, lots of house hold Computers. apply In person and Se tr Starter. Call Ken (740).,.46·48 14 or (7.,.0)446·
Yord Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................... ........ ..... 076
I mmed ia te~.
1740)992-7440
8145.
Items

ubltct to lhe Federl
air Housing Act o

968.
n~apape

ccepta only htl
anted ada mettln
DE lllndarde.

rL.-------,.1

tter,

c,

a

r

YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

w...

I

oeo

/.

6

1"

HFUWANTIID

r~=;~~~=~
~~

1

Parts Salesperson wanted .
Comp'uter e)(penence and
knowJedge ot farm equ1p·
ment preterred
Salary
negotiable depending on
exper ience.
Health
Insurance provided Send
resume to: CLA Box 5e,9 c/o
Gallipolis Tribune, PO Box
469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

••NOTICE**

~rrow Smart. Contac
he Ohio DiviSion o
h.nancla l, Institution'
~.All ee
of Consume
fAHairs BEFORE you ref1
ance yo ur home o
blain a loan. BEWARI
Pf requests for any larg
dvance payments o
ees or insurance. Cal
he OH1ce of CQflsume
~tta1rs toll free at 1-866
i278-Q003 to lea rn 11 th1
~ortgage broker o
ender
Is
.properl
1censed (This is a publi
ervice announcemen
rom the Ohio VallE! \
~ul&gt;~hino Comcanyj

RB Elec tncal Contractors
Inc., ts now taking quahfled
Applications for Electricians
"1_
304):.:6..;
75:..·2::2::86:;__ _ _
Rio Grande Food Service
now hiring an experienced
cook and c ~;~ shier Apply in
person 6/f2•6116 2_4 pm
only at the UAG cafeterir\.

Se9king a qualil1ed, depend·
able person t care for disabled child in my home.
training required and prOVId·
ed Benefits 1nclud8d, reler·
ences a must
Call
(304)675-6851
Senous
L1ve-1n Caregiver and companlon for senior couple. Intere sts only please
Gallipolis area. (740)446· Wanted
Guitarist
and
4208.
Vocalist tor Rock Band ,
- - - - - - - - 1740)992·9904,' · 740-416local Insurance Agency 1090
seeking full time Customer!r.l:Z§)II"'"-~---...,1
Service
Representative .
Sa-tOOLS
Weekday hours, pa1d vaoaINsrR.ucnoN
tion . P &amp; c l1cense helpful.
but not requi red
Submit Galllpoll• C1reer College
resume to Box TSC-3 1 c/o (Careers Close To Home)
Point Pleasant Register, 200 Call Today! 740-446-4367,
Main Street, Point Pleasant,
1-800·214-()452
VN 25550
- galhpolltca,llercollage.com

t.,-.;;oiiiiiOiiiiiil-io,.l

r

PROfmOONAI;

l

SERVICFS

"--aiaiiiiliii.iiiiiiil-.,.1
TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345
I{ I \ J I ..., I \I I
1ji~;;;;;;;:;:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r.o

Ho~
Lw-..OiiiiiiliitiiitO....
mR SALE

1 Bedroom briCk CA, CH 96
Olive Street near GDC
35,900 CALL 446-3952 01
1-865-679-831 1
:
11 2 Pleasant Street Pomt
Pleasant. WV (304(675-

Accredllod Mombcr Accrod1tmg
Coun&lt;:H to r lndopendanl Colleges

4034 or (304)675·0418 3
bedroom, 1 1 /~bath, family
MiscEu..ANEOU_S
~oom, dining room, new win·
1.
, dows, new AC, new water
tan k, fenced yard
Personal mail boxes for buSI· =-::-::..:.:~:..:.-:--­
ness or apt. building 740- 29 12' Ann iston Or.. Pt.
992·2678
Pleasant. 3BR . 2BA, LA,
FA, Garage. Nice neighbor·
"'A•~
ltlltl
n. "'w
hood (304)675-3637 days,
To Do
(304)675-2355 oveoongs
ar.dSchOols 127·16

170

I

Affordable Computer Repair. 380, 2Ba. fireplace, 40x60
Expert Serv1 ce. {740)992· barn, 8 tlat acres F'leasant
Valley Rd., R1o Grande
2395
$120.000. (740)709-11 66.
George's Portable Sawmill,
don't t1aul yo ur Logs to the
Mill just call 304·675· 1957.
Rooling , Decks. Pole Barns.
j3arages, New Construction.
Top
Notch
Buildi ng
Contractors. WV#036667
(304)675· 3042 or 13041593-

r
-·~--------- ~---~---~-· ....

$10.99

Sun

Thur•day for Sundeya

POUCIES: Ol'tla Vell•y Publletalng NMt¥.. tht rtghl to Mitt, reJIICt, or e~~nc.. any .tel at any time. ErrtX• mu•t be reported on the first dey of
Trlbun•StntiMI-Reglet. will be rwpo.W!lfe for no more thin t~ coM of tM SJ)IICI occupied by the ..-ror end only the tht lnHrtlon. we shall not
•nv ION or expenM thld I'MUtt. fTom the publlclltlon or omiHion of 1n lldwrtlnment. Con.ctlon will bt made In the tlret available edition . • Box
,,. &amp;IWiyl contk*rtlel. • Cunwrt rat. CM:1 appllel. • All real NtD ldVII'tiH!Mnta . . aub)ect to tl\e Federsl Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Thlt. ,.,,,..,,.,.
accept• only help wsnted •ct. mMIIng EOE st.nderde. We will not knowingly IICcepl 1ny edvertlslng In vlolltlon of the law.

...

after the actual date
ol the opening thereof. The Meigs County

tlan,

I .

Publication
Sunday Dl•play : 1:00 p . m.

L

167 Woodland Drive Frl·
ti11aeing: 2
i
Sat 9·4. New and reduced
Shepherd &amp; Whtte Lab pup.
items
fleward. (74ll)985-4408
~wing Set. Can be seen at 914 4th Ave. Fri &amp; Sat. 9-7

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740.992-2895.
A deposit of 0 dollars
will be required for
each set of plans and
specifications. The
full amount will be
returned within thirty
(30) days after receipt
of bids.
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
either a bid bond In
an amount of 100% of
the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs
County
Commissioners or by
certified
check,

In Next D•v'• P•per
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p . m .

1
ps&amp;l

-•

Commissioners,
Courthouse,

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
BLi•lnen Daye Prior To

Collie female
Great on St Rt 160 . Thurs June 8
Personality Free to good and Fr1 June 9, 9am-5pm
home, (740)992-5232
Rain or shine Adult, childrenand baby ck&gt;thlng , shoes,
To e good home· AKC sheets, towels, baby furn1·
Golden Retnever, 8 years ture, dishes, chair pads,
GivEAWAY
ok1, male Good with chil· changl~g table, Chinchtlla
7 4 0 682 4 05
cage and accessories, f1sh
(3) 7 wk old lltler trained ktt- d'z";-n.,;,l•-!)~-·.t.--., tanks,
typewriter,
tens, raised Indoors. good
Losr AND
Longaberger, and mise
with kids. (740)379·9445.
FOUND
household Jt&amp;l'fiS.

••

ad In bid packet.
Specifications, and
. bid forms may• be
secured at the office
of
Meigs
County

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday•P'rlday for lnaertlon
P'or

Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
tJ~
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

• All ads must be

I ~rnM~I·~------~·~
• One 3 yepr min Border 2 miles N of Holzer Hospital

~

Meigs County Job
and Family Services,
175
Race
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio
45760.
Proposals should be
submitted to Theresa
Lavender,
Meigs
County Department
of Job and Family

·

Oead'~irM

• St.rt YOur Ad• W~h A K~yword • Include Complete
Deacrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlon•
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Days

...

Request for Proposal
The Meigs County
Department of Job
and Family Services
Ia seeking proposals
to provide a comprehensive year-round
youth program to eligible youth ages 1421 consistent with
Meigs
County's
Workforce
Development
Plan,
provisions of the federal
Workforce
InVestment Act (WIA),
and related federal
end alate regulations.
In establishing youth
activities. under WIA,

Word Ads

4 year old Colonial on 3
acres. a ppro~~:. 1,900 SQ fl . 3
Will care for your loved one
bdr. 2 baths 2 car garage,
1n my home, Pr1vate Room,
master bdr. IS 2Bx24 with a
3 hot meals, Gall (740)388- jacuzzi tub
$125,000.
0118
'
,'
1740)446-7029

1 1, 5

Will take care ot the Elderly 48 R. Foreclosure only
1n the1r home, have 10 years 20.QOO. For listings call
Manne Mechanic Needed expepence call (304)675· 800 .~ 9 1 _ 5226 ext. F254.
Must Have Experience 3264
740-992·6520.
5 acres pnvacy plus. 3 br.
CHIUCd:•!~. ERLY
--~----.-uu:.
2ba, Rancher. 4 miles from
Overbrook Center IS now · - - - - - - · Toyota Plant. Low or no
acceptinn applications lor a
down payment. Payments
full )1 me tJOtlice assistant If l"he Gingerbread Hou se starting at $599 a month,
you are interested 1n becom· Daycare has openings tor move 1n condJtl on, won't last
Jng a part ot our team ple'ase 5chool Age C211dren ages 5 long (304)562·5605
till out an application today to 12 years. all (740)992· C
A'C
A:.
A.:_M
_:O
_D
_U_l_A_R_•_
an_c_h
at 333 . F'age
Street. ~ 3142 tor Rates.
models '$55 838 M'idwos)'
Middleport. OH. No phone
·
calls please. EOE
imF;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Homes (740)828·2750
' Attention!
Overbrook Rehab Center
0PPOR11JNI1Y
Local. company offering UNO
will be holdmg STNA class·
DOWN PAYMENT" proes during the month ot June.
gram I
to b
or youof renting
uy your
Please stop by an d till out ao
•NOTICE•
homes1nstead
applic~~;tiOn to be considered t?HIO VALLEY PUB t iSH • 100% f1nancmg
tor the c18sses. No phone lNG CO..recommends tha
• Less than perfect credit
calls please E O.E
ou do business w1t h pea
accepted
- - - - - - -t&gt;le you know, and NOT t
• Payment cou ld be thl:t
Paid framing
end money through th
same as rent
Individuals wil ling to train for lmall urlttl you have Invest!
Mortgage
[ oca tors
otodthooHorl·n--.
c1eriCa1 or drivi ng positions. I~:::.:II:.Oi:::::O:O:'"o
lli.
. _...l (7 40)367-QOOO
Must be AGE 55 OR OVER
and meet eligibility reqUire· Party. Supply Store tor sale
ments Addition al training In Pomernu
~ ~ (304)675-5332
positions ava1lable Call th e
S
enlor Employment
Center
on
(866)734·2301
.

·s

I

1190

Fld

B~

~=======~

143e;t'JuiUITijii"'l
SAVINGS

Part tim&amp; positiOn to Manage
Country Homes rental community m Shade Area·
Includes a house to live 1n.
Send resume to Countr y
Homes, PO Boll '1 033
Logan, OhiO 43138
- -- - - Part-lime
Server,
Experience required 19 yrs
or older Apply m person
J1maneU1'S · PIZZB,
RIO
Granda

Central a1r, full basement,
hardwood Hoors, detached
garage, covered pat1o,
fenced back yard newly
remodeled . 3 or 4 bed;
rooms,, close to sc hools.
Point Pleasant. $69,50&lt;1.
(740)709· 1382'
•

Shop
Classlfieds!

New 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
brick home !dr sale In Rio
Grande. Colll740)379-2815

�.•

.

. -.

. ·.

. .

•

Th~rsday, June 8, 2006

. www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS _

ALI..EY OOP
Wanlod- land to loaoe lor CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO a AFFOAIMILEI
hunHng In Meigs County
Townhouse
l partments,
and/or small l)ouarla FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
torapplicatlon&amp;lnlormatlon.

Need

to sell your home?

Late on payments, divorce,
job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. AU cash
and quick closing . .J40-4 163130.
HI ' I \I -..

HOt.W;
FOR RENT

Jolln DMro Mlnl ElCC&amp;vator/ 1988 Ch&amp;Yy truck 1 ton, d\Jal
Tractqr Loader Backhoe/ 'lrheele, 350 engine, $1 ,800.
Skid Steera. carmichael 1989 Ford Taurus atK&gt;w car
Equlpmenq740}«6-2412 · wtth Stan transmissiOn 3.0
-----.......,.- '' --dual owrhood Cams. nooOO
tl'll!""!~----'""1 Now John Deera CompBdS ehltting cable, $600. 1979
~~
and 5000 Serlee Utility trw&gt;- Dodge pick up Slant 8
Cottage
In
Gallipolis.
..__......
tors 00% Fl1od for H engine, fair shape $700.
""'ntho through
John (740)441-7382, (7o40)256Depoalt and reforenc;oo
required . No pets. Call
Deere Crod~. Carm~hael 8184 ceH (740)794-os2•.
1938 aq. "- aold willie oak Equipment (74()J-«6-2•t ~
(740}«6-2468.
1\oorlng. 2114", Cllbln ~- __;__;__ _;__.:__ __;_ 11188-Forcl-150
XLT,
GraciOus living. 1 and 2 bed- (740)2~f0.
• Quality John DMN "-Y 75,000/ml. Includes T~
room apanmenta at Vlfloge 00" F~ldalre Gas Range, lquflln*rt tor lees-round Gate, Tool boxes. o~l-.1 tail
Manor
and
Riverside Mlf-dean Oven, like new, baler11, aquare baiera &amp; .gate and rear bumper.
1\panments In Middleport. used
monilia. (304,.,,,._ mower condltlonorl 04.7% $2,400 (304)875-4548
9
From $295-$444. Call 740,...,.. Fixed tor 48 monlhl through .:.:.:....::.;:..:.:.;=..:..._;_,;__
992-5064. Equal Housing ~2e::1c:2..:__ _ ___:.___ John
Doers
Credit. 87 Dodge 4x4, greaf cond.
Opportunities.
·
lntant/Chlldrans
clc;nhea, Carmichael
Equipment new tires, 4spd, $1 ,200
lwln glrfo thur IZ 3+ othera, (740)448-2412.
. OBO. (740)256-9031 or
Immaculate 2 bedroom
(740)256·1233

r.

~=~=(~~~~~::·

ll:nowlngl)' accept
lldvwtl......ms tor ,..,
Mt*whlchleln
vlolo1lon altho tow. Our

-. ... -,
lnfotttwcl thlt all

--odnrltoodtn
I tNe I'MIICIIIPP.,.,..
•Ill IIIII on .n ,.qUill

HANDYMAN

SPECIAL .

lived in . Sits on 2 beautiful
acres. City water at react
•""ut 20 mlno. south ol
..,Athens.
OH. $74.500.
Owner financing. (740)489-

9:146.

House for Sale in Syracuse;
t+o-bedroom with bath,
attachtd garage and base·
~t ..
An .estate sale.
$70,000. Phone 992·3690.

Jitckson County Home. 7
rooms, 3 BA, 1 1/2 baths,
hardwood floors, full base·

LMsrocK

Ir'
•

--tor-

-~
·&amp;h

r-------...,
Free Measurements

Ray Martin
Installer
Carpet

Ceramic Tile
Hardwood ' Vinyl

·I

For Sale: Two Appelooaas.
4vo afud $300 and 3YO
mare $400. 1nqulrtea at 740.
258-1253 after 8 p.m.

--f---'--Miniature Donkkts for sale,
Bebleo $225 each. Jack
$300. Jann, $500, pregnant
Jenn, """"· (74())448-0itB.
...,...
Nelsons Meet Processing.
smoke House working:
Beef, Hogs, Dear.
No
Appointments necessary.
Mitton,
(30'1)743-54()0

~stretch
Lamiriates

740-517·3704
740•992 -o6SO

'--------.1
~

.

Yello~

~payed

Otl,

OH, SHE'S
MORE'N JEST

-..wW.tlillbnoieeltoablaruy.-

SHE'S UIIFFIN'

AT ME I!

&amp;MIL.IN' I!

***JUNE MONTHLY SPECIALSm

~~-

CIIIITIICTIII

S?"''a

rum l'l'i'l fJtl

Dining Par

U§l~

Open '

Deli &amp;: Bakery
Bologna $3.0Sib.
Colby $4.50lb.
,
Fresh Mozzarella $6.59lb.
Hummus $5.59lb
Amish Potato Salad $3.45lb.
Pasta Salad $3.50lb.
Cannoli $1.75
.
Breakfast Bales $1.75
Breakfast Tornados 21$2.00
Brownies .7St

I

BORN LOSER

·'I 'NEI&gt;Ii \0 ~.1-1 E.XC.LUS\IJE. fUl-l~

,-WOW!

f-1.0~ W~ fi.I,E.I'OOI:&gt;~

~SE.Rr '1'ESiE1tbj&gt;.,'I-1WO f\~

bOLLI&gt;.~ "'

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE

"------11.1-,J

Auto&amp;Truck
Repair.

rlloA~~~~

.

• Mowing,

Trimming, Etc.

~~~3:;&gt;:~97As~ng

::17..:40::l..:44..:6::·..:t4..:o.:.9·. .:_- --'-•• :
$600. _o_at_ly_
. _ _ _ _ _ __
28R , .1 bath , A/C, outbuild·
1991 Searay,25',454Chevy
ing. Centrally located to
shots, $300. &lt;7 256-1498 1994 Oldsmobile Cutlass stainless prop, hot water
power plants· Gallipolis &amp; Air conditioner 10,000 BTU Blue Healer pupa both par- tierra, 4 dr, · auto, air, tilt, tank, shower. sink, stove,
for you.
hospital. No pets. (740)44&amp;- S95: refrigerator 17 cb.ft. ents at Farm (304)675·3927 cruise,
93,000,
Good trailer. $19,500. (740)441·
CALL 992-5422
4234, (740)208·7861.
nice $150; washer $95 dryer
Condition, (7.0)994-5408 1487,
_::::;:._c..:_::::.:.:....::.:.:.____ 595 G , •· r
- - - - - - - - - ~;;:;;;;;;;;:;;~
76 CKC Miniature Pinscher evanlngs
3 bedroom. 2 bath, in coun·
· enes ....,...p lances,
pups. 008·5131106. Takinn
1996 Kawasaki jet ski pair.
Vine St. back of Mollohan's
•
try, B miles 10 Pomeroy, 12
deposits. AKC Red MlnPin. 1995 Mercury Village $350. 650and750. Aiumlnumtrail·
6 good condition used miles to Atbanv. $475 per Carpet,
(740 }4 4S·lWO Ready for stud service. t985UncolnTowncar$475. er. $3,000. (740)245·9875, ,...L:.IUOILLU.I.LLLW~
1
2
mobile homes, 1997-2000 month plus depos~ &amp; utili· oem· pm,
after
~pm (740)388-8788.
Phone (74())245-5812.
(74())441·3798 .
(740)367-7886.
·
models, 14 &amp; 16 wide. 2·3-4 ties. (8591806 _4354
bedrooms, all with central =::..:::.:..:::.:..:.::...::::____ - - - - - - - - - Miniature Oonkiee tor sale, 1995 - Pon_tiac 'Bonneville ·
CAMJUS &amp;
air. Special 1997 'i4x70, 3BDR , 2Ba. dou bl ewide
Bablea $225 each, Jack 3800 VB, 20 mpg, 93,000
MoroRHO!Imi
2BR, 2 bath, $16,500. close to RVHS. $450 month,
$300, Jann, $500, pregnant miles, all power. AC, $2,600
Oayttme
(740):Je8-oooo, $450 dep., ref. required . No
Appliance Jenny $600. (7o40)441Hl118. DBO. (74())245-5934.
02 Wildcat 28ft. Sth wheel,
n10 g (740)388 8017
pots. (74())367-7025.
•
·
twe ·
One
week old. tern ale 1998 Chevy camaro ve, slide out lib9rglass sides,
'88 Crestrlge 14&lt;70 2BAI2 Mobile home sites tor up to
Wlirehouse Sholtle .and min. Collie Ssp, T·topa, rod, lOOks sharp, .$17,500 .. Excellent condi·
bath, $8,995. call (740)3e5· 16x80 in Country Homes.
mixed. For Sate $150.00 No runagreat$3,900.( 7 4())256- lion, clean. (74())245·9109,
9948.
(740)3e5·4019. '
pepem. Female. Parents on 6251 , (7o40)S4S-139 3.
(74())441·7832.
In Henderson, WV. . Pre· preml.... First shota glt18n.
'88 Skyline lront kitchen.
APARlMENTsFOK
n~owned Appliances starting Sanoua Cells Only. Janet 1997 Buick Park Avenue. 2008 Javco 27'traveltraller.
LBBiher, loaded, all mafnte- Used twice. QuoonlluiVtwin
cash price $8,995. Will L~----•"'""iilo;,:.'-,.J at $75 &amp; up all under Jeffers at 740-992.5232 _
deliver. Call (740)385·9948.
Warranty, ~;~lso have reconnance records, well main· beds &amp; sofa, lg. shower, surIf
,
1 and 2 bedroom apart· ditioned etg Screen TV's Poodle Puppies Toy, 2 male. teined, 116k, asking $4,600. round sound. Was $18,000, .__s_e_-s_t_o_r•...;l;,.•_ __,
9/10th of an acre for sale on ments , furnished and unlur·
white, 8 M old, CKC (740)245--5934.
Now $14,000. (7.0)446·
1-43 . 2mobllehornes. 740by Ron's TV (304'--75- ICII-.tottrad $25000 oeo
2600
nishod. security deposit
'" · ,.,..
·
·
· ' - ' - - - - - " - - - - - :.:..:.:_ _ _ _ _ __
YOUN G'S
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ i7ro40-P.742-..·2..,380...;.
. - - - . . . . , 1998 Buick Skylark 98,000 For sale: 1899 30' Aerolite
992·5858.
required , no ,pets, 740·992· _7_999
AAA MODULAR ranch 2218.
Low prices· complete livln·
·FR.urrs &amp;:
mlles, excellent . condition. campe~. Ducted AC and fur·
models $55,838. Midwest - - -- - - - groom set $250 , dining
V~
' $2,80(), Call (740)388 9645 nace, microwave , privata
7
28 2750
~
1BA apt. for
rent hookups
in Spring. table, 4 c ha1rs, etc. m1sce
.
118·
no.~~•- ( 4(l)B •
Valley.
WI D
,998 Neon 4 door, air, auto, be d room . C a11 (7'")
oov 379 •
RoomAddhlon• &amp;
.
neous.
Must
see.
(740)339$1
500
080
.
.
(7'ft)258
1652
2415
Romodolln••
Brand
new 16'
wide OQposit/references required .
Home grown tomatoes.
.
· .....
·
7400
vt,Vshlngle $181 /mo. Call Call
(740)446·0834
or __ _ · __...--·- -- - Picked dally. No Sunday _o_r(:...7_4()...;)_256_·1_2_33_ _.,..._
(74())385·7871 .
(740)645-4846 0r (740)339· lhornpsons Appliance &amp; sales. 'to mllea wool of I99SPontiacGrandAM. GT,
Rooflng&amp;G-ro
03e2.
Ropalr-675-7388. For sala, Gallipolis on SR 141 at 5 _.... bi 8ck hood d t r10.
HOME
.·1 , Yln,IS1dlng&amp;Polntfng
LAND &amp; HOME PACK·
Yodefa Greenhouse 10321
..,.••• ,
•
en '
•·~
Potfoond Porch Docko ·
AGE&amp;- 1st time buyers &amp; 2 bedroom apt. $400 mo. re·cQndilioned · automatic
needs motor, $t,OOO QBO
J.mrKV~
WV 038725
11
1 41
FHA.
Midwest
Homes water, sewer, trash pd. washers &amp; dryers, retrigera·j
~SiiiRr:.::~toiG!!a~lliil:po:i:;!_:s;..--~ (304)675-6439
V.C. YOUN G Ill
tors, gas and el8ctrlc
FOR SALE
BASEMENT
(7 '")446-4734
7 )828 2750
( o40
•
~
·
rang~s. air conditioners. and
2001 Z-24 suoroof $3,'900;
WATERPROOFING
'•'&lt;2 I, 1 I
2000 Stratus ..D sunroof Unconditional lifetime guarf' ••fll • I' y I )j)or
NEW 3 br doublewides from 4 rooms &amp; bath, stova/ref. ~ringer washers. Will do
"
1
l 1 •I f 'I •'
1 r
$269 mo. Midwest Homes Utilltles paid . $450/mo. repairs on major brands in Uricoln Welder AC 225 sxe $3,500; 1997 Tahoe 4x4 · antee. Local references tUr(740)828·2750.
Upstairs, 46 Olive St. No aho_p_o_ra_t...;you_r_hom_o_
· · - - trailer. Uka new 100,000 $6,900; ~999 T(710ta Corolla nished . Established 1975.
pets. (740)446·3945.
·~ $4,200; 1999 Taurua SE Call 24 Hrs. (74()) 446· r---:
N!W
SINGLE WIDE·
Used Furniture Store, 130 BTU furnace· new. 3 ton """'"' $3,700; 1997 510 $2,900. 0870, Rogers Basement
$22,572 Midwest Homes 7 room apt plus 2 bath. Bulaville Pike. Stop by.
Sunfires, S8turns, Honda,
(740)828·2750.
Centrai/VC. Overlooks City (740)446·4762. Gallipolis,
Grand Am &amp; othoraln atooft. Waterproofing .
Park, deck, $675 mo. Greg
3 months/3.000 milo warran- - - - - . . , . , - - : : - - Nica 14x70 3 bedroom only Smith
(740)446 -7313, OH Hrs. 11·3 (M-F)
$10,995. Will help with deliv· (7401645_2890 _ ·
Sl'otmNGGooos
ty. Sao Can or Rodney at Handy Man. Horne Sarvices
ery. Call (74())385-9621 .
::.::::::...:.:..:=:::.:....._-'-_
Cook Motoro, 328 Jackson and Repairs. Call (740)845·
Accepti ng application s lor 2
Pike (74())448-0103.
7524.
AEPO'S
USED from bedroom apartment, $500
$1 ,900 down. Midwest month , kitcheh appliances &amp; Sol9flex exercise machine, For Sale Farmai·M.PuNing 2003 PT Cruiser, 4 cyl.,
Home• (740)828-2750
WID furnished , water &amp; butterfly leg &amp; ctlp attach· li'actor Excellent Condition runs &amp; looks great, good gas
M
.
I I d d
IS ments. Gold's Gym Olympic
mileage,
$7,200.
Call
end all welghto'. 1-740-742- (74())388.014().
Very clean 14x84 2 bed· ga ••age nc u a ' no pe .
room . Only 57 ,99 5 . Call · ,st month, security deposit dumbbell &amp; curling bar .oudlt 2750
&amp; lease required . (740)448· with weights &amp; plate rack. All - - - - - - - - - 97 Olde Achelva, 4 cyt, cold
9585.
fo r $400 OBO. (740)245· Have l&lt;line hauling to do? air, $600 down $200 month;
~06!l!11!lt.,.- - - . . . . : . - - . , Carmichael
EquipmentBEAUTIFUL
APART.
•our aource lor quality 94 FonJ Tempo, 4 cyt., cold
MENTS
AT
BUOOET
AN11QUE8
E,oosenocka, dumps and utll· air, $600 down $200 month;
PRICES AT JACKSON
Illes. Your ctealar tor Proatar M&amp;J Auto, AI. 160, Vinton ,
3 lola 4 sale. $18,500 each. ESTATES, 52 Westwood
and Load Trail trailers. Oh, 2pm·6pm, 740·388·
SIBSOn Rd.. Portar Oh. Ortve from $344 Ia $442. Antiques ; Repaired and ( 40)448·
9693 or 740-742·2662
241 2 :
7
(740)448-4734.
Walk to shOp &amp; movies. Call Refinished. Also, Buy and
740·446·2568.
Equal Sel l.
Lumber for Sale. Holland Carousel sener Must Sell Moving. 2004
4 Sale large almost an acre
I 0
rt .ty
Gibbs
Wood
and $1 350 flrm (740)379 2789 GMC
Envoy, Warranty,
o u•:...n'-'.gc.:.:p:.::po
.:_u_n_•,_._ _
'
·
· •
· 20,000/miles,
Onatar,
COmmerlcallot In town of ?t. -.H.:.::
Restoration Shop, 49985
·
clean
efficacy
John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill loaded. KBB's $21,000 will
Pleasant. wf 1 rental below Nice
Tornado Road, "Racine. Call
Apartme nt 1br. Ref &amp; Dep.
for
rent.
Carmichael sell $17,000/tlrm (740)685·
app ralsed value a good"'"'
""'
949-2246.
(304)548-7323 efter 6prn
NO pets. (304)675-5162
Equipment (7o40)448-2412.
5737

• Let us see what
wecan&lt;lo

:40)

I

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH
1OX1 OX10X20
992•3194
Or 992•6635

e

r

"Middleport's only .

I

L-------·j

E)(TRA
(II.EPIT,

IMPORTS
Atherra

WOLFE~

CONSTRUCTION~
Chuck Wolfe
Owner

r c:.or

A UO!

..
PEANUTS

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

1

1

1M SORR'f' 1M LATE
• WITI-l '!'OUR SUPPER .. I

Licensed Home Builder

STOPPED '1'0 ADMIRE
Ti-lE SUNSET ..

(740) 992-0496

Ti-l ERE WAS A I:I~UIWf
IN Ti-lE Sl&lt;'f' LIKE
l'lfE NEYER SEEN

15SFORE ..

1 DON'T TI-IINK Ti-IERE'S
A WORD TIIAT DESCRIBES
I-lOW rr CAN MAKE
'(OIJ FEEL ...

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

2:~~t~~!~:~:!

Ldd~nlial • Commen:lal • Genenll Conlructlna

Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
J
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additi o ns • Remodd~~'

WV 031182
OH 31244

• Plumbing • El~clrical
• Accouslic Ceiling

7.W·367
740..339-:W121

CARPENTER
SERVICE

iimr;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

==~r,lumblng

==------'---

j .

CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

QUIS!!IS WHO
HA!!i A
&amp;L-INP PA'I'IS
'!"ON 16H1"i'

R~NT-

MEICS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space

a

•r

__.. ..____ _

--·-- .. -

·- ---..

Soulh mlghf rebid three no-lrump, which
works fine here. Buf four spades is "normai.M
There are two diamond losers and two
rounded·suit finesses . So, you win tr!ck
aria or trl~ two 'Nith your diamOnd ace,
play a spade to&lt;dumnty's jack, and take
the heart,finesse. Uloses, they cash their
diamond frlck(s), and e&lt;H wHh a trump to
Ihe board's ace. Now vou take . tha club
linesse. Unlucky - West has thai king
too: down one.
You gruml)je that your finesses always
lose, and that one of the finesses would
work 76 percent ol the time tor any other
player on the planet. Then you notice that
partner Is shaking his head. He has realized thai you'went down in alaydown.
When · you win a diamorid trick , you
should play the ace and .another club.
After West wins with his king, the defenders take their diamond(s) and cast adrift
Witt1 a trump. You. win that on the board
with the ace and discard your heart
queen on the established club queen no finesses and no sweatl
Do not finesse unless it is
necessary or cost-free.

-

W.ITH THE

A

GRIZZWELL.S ·

Now Available At

20

Texao bor·

der - ·

21 Offbeat
(hyph.t
22 HOme- ·

products

brand

41 Range
Play In on
allay
43 Prlma

42
,

donnl 11
tune

44 Luxury fur

23 Uahl
24 MTnlbuaes
25 Slnloter
28 Wrhe on
glees
29 Salmon

47 Outback
ml-sl
48 Jlllllor'a

need
49 MS 1'MCien
51 Lyric

variety .

poem .

52 -Alamos
31 Conatantly 54 Relay '"""
32 L.aaa sin·
porllon
cere

33 High elgn
37 Zodiac sign
40 Salected a
card

&lt;lllrlhdot':

Frldsy, June 9, 2006
By Bernice Sede Oeol
Without realizing It, attitudinal changes
about things yoU thought VO!J couldn;t live
without might begin to take place in the
year ahead. The effects will help you eliminate habllual faulty behavior.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) -You might be
inclined to put personal issues ahead of
work that is staring you In the face. If you
are too self-involved, little of consequence
Is likely 'o take place.
CA~EA (June 21 -July 22) - It might be
extremely difficult for you to hide your feel·
ings when dealing with friends or family. If
some aren't too happy abOut w~;tat you say,
you might have to explain yoursel1.
LEO (July 23·AuQ. 22) - T~is is one of
those better days to retire Into your own
private state and seek st1etter from the
de;rnands of the outside world. If you can
take a day off, It might do you a lot of good.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) -Your powers
of observation could be much keener then
usual, but you might have '- be careful not
to be too critical ot others or point out too
many mistakes and flaws found in friends.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Qcl. 23) - II is a day
when you could too easily Identity emotionall~ with your possessions or anything
else you value, creating a possessiveness
about Yot.J that usually doesn't exist. Be
careful.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - B8 careful
you don't unwittingly demand more nurturing from those with whom you !ihare your
day, I.e., family, loved ones and co·work·
ers. Try to have more faith in yourself and
your capabilities.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) ·
Remember, whatever you hide frOm your·
self can control yoU and cause serious
problems you wouldn't have had other·
wise. Face up to your fears and a"itudes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ·If you're
not on guard, there's a good chance ,
something you've been holdin g back say·
lng to anott\er might be blurted out It could
· cause a degree of discomfort in the rela·
tionship.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19),- By your
own doing , you r personal life c ould
become more on display In public than you
would like. Obviously, it would be· best If
you can control that which you want hidden.
, , . ·
. PISCES (Feb. 2t).March 20) -II given the
chance. anow yourself access . to fresh
ideas and -concepts that might be revolu ·
tionary for you. Much can be gained In way
of liberation lrom that which has held you
back.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - Whether
you consider thlt a 1ucce18ful day or not
will depend on how lntenstly you treat
emotional eMperlenc:et. People you deal
wlth•oan have an unu1ually atrong effect
on you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You're a
pretty •••vgoing peraoo moat or thl time,
but today could 1111 your contrOl mort than
usual. Bt aurt to kltp vou r emotions or
patt negative napptningt out of your rtla•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos ·
CeletPy Cipllel r;rypbJr~ n aeM:t hom quotations b'f fMwl ~ . pill nllltftill'll
Eact11etter in the cipher starm tor anoG'*.

TodBy's Clue: 0 equsl! M
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FWA

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PREVIOUS SOLUTiON - "The task ollhe modem aducalor is no! to cuf down
jungles bullo irrigate deserts.' - C.S. Lewis

TIIAT DAILY
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A
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~lgno1111~." lbc profmor
lectured the fll'SI year tlass. "is
generally the vohmwy

misfortune from whic:b we may

,,. &lt;h•&lt;kl• Quot•d
0 -c.:;;~:.,.
by Mlin; in
mtu•no word•

the
you .develoa. f~om 111~

No. 3' below.

PP.INT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE,SOUIIR!S

UN~CR~MSl!

GET ~N5WER

LETTERS TO

I I II I II I
.

. ·

,

SCIIIAMUTS ANIIWIIIII ..-r101
oC:bote - Rotmd ~ Lousy - Posial - STAN.J)S
One fathe.r to another at sports arena. "Did ~
Evcr notice 11 spom ewn1S that most of the
Coaches are in the STANDS7"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
Wf, C&lt;~IJlUAI..l,Y !JOI..D If

OFF FOR f'E.Il~~

oo m Dot..L-A~ .~
I

;;&amp;l.

rc~

Al.lD I:.IIJOT AU.lll!ITIW&gt;,
!.M H WW,r AM H
~JMI~

Ill"~~

~~
s~~l

tionahipa .

SOUP TO NUTZ

BAlli\1 Lli\&lt;IBEI{
Sco~pion

Q

AstroGraph

--=------

1,..,·

•

Pass

~qulrrele

1 Traffic sign 42 loud noise
5 Well·
45 VIva le - 1
IM/Iaved
46 Rum' o pert·
ldde
ner
10 looked as If 50 Colorful
12 Vaguo
percher
1hought
53 Fled 10 wed
13 Popalcle
55 C..oement
flavor
56 Relurnalha
14 Ocean
favor
dwellers
57 Flahlng
15 leland near
spots
Java
58 Thlckena
16 H has long
armo
DOWN
18 Mosquito 19 Forage crop 1 Immunity
23 -been
ehota
had I
2 River duck
26 NRC prede- 3 " - vlnch
amor.,
cessor
27 WHh, to
4 Secure a
· Henri
tent
30 Spelunker·• 5 Medico
lind · ·
6 Homer32 One of hallhitter Mel um'stwo
7 Large earn!34 Kitchen
vore
utenalle
8 Horae's gab
35 Wheal
9 Tizzy
36 Winter
tO Show grief
runner
t 1 Blaets the
37 Rawls or
ears
AHd
12 Eggnog
38 Mortar
Umo
trough
17 DC lobby

Three days ago, the deal featured a line
of play that was 100 percent if you avoid·
od being tempted by · the ave-catching
diamond· finesse. Two days ago, you did
beat to take two finesses in the same suit
- a double finesse. And ,estenJay, vou
had to lake an unlikely - and antiperconlage -lhird-round llnesse with A· 7-6
opposHe K-&lt;l-10-2. What does today's
deal have In store? Against tour spades,
WE:1SI leads the diamond queen . You are
sitting South. What would ba your line ol

&lt;

992-5682

Pass

!NT
"Pass

Do you turn
this way or that?

IIG NAT£
•

on State

$2001·--•

Pass
P8tis

East

39 Mk:eand

play?
On the second round of the auction,

HardWood lablmry And FuriHure

·

~r.10--H•IJINiliOID~ii;;liil-···-" ~Ke~ks. M~~- ~~f:·~~PnPYd

P~INGf.

(740) 949-1405

StrJ

1ggg texv·eo Scdh uttzmhobne
1
horne. 1ny1 s1 1ng, s lnge
root, 2x8 outside walls, gas
heat &amp; central air, 8x 12
porch, 8x12 shingled roof.
mini barn, $23,000 or make
offer. (660)988·0866 or
(74())256· 1084.

Ttlf

oeo

=-'-----,-.- -

I.

/

I;;;;;;99;.l':':.;J~;79:;~ ~=::=:::,g~~~~==~
I.L Wl'hllel
Iiiii SOli
.d!ft!l

•••••••IIIII'

0
""""'

~

CAN'T · ITANI&gt; Ttlf GVY -·~ JV6T GA~,y TtiiS TO A.NNOY

'.'~~

West North

Opening lead:

· Bucket Truck

740-812-lm

i

1.4.

A 5

Dealer: South
,
Vulnerable: East-West

Soutb

Female

6 5631

I .,..,.....;.______,.

t A62

• Stump 6rindlng

\.U!'ch

t K63
4fo9 7 642

•

Top • Removal • Trim

pa\\Y . I•

J 9

¥A Q

Briuany Spallicl, mi x· te male
Many puptes to choose

BISSEll

54 2

•

.KQJ098 7

Tree Service

ROBERT

•

South

2 Au stralian Shepherd Mix

L!l.-------,.J

4
9

4fo K83

1987 H.D. Low Alder, runs &amp;
looks great, $7500 OBO,

East

¥ K 10 7
• Q J 10

lOllS'

very timid

7 5 4
10

West
• 63

I;~;;::;;;~
I

Retriever bengle mix
3 Jack Russell - Mix

c

'SAlE

~ONTY

Call Gary Stanley .
740-742-2293

Hours

chow . Mix male

llu!ky mix

•

... 'Q J

• References

7:00AM • Q:OO PM

OO-OIHNI

¥865 3 2

"Insured"

Mel~• County .

ment, 2 112 car garage, 2 grams for you to buy your
11 .27
acres. home instead of renting.
$1~900. Cell (937)515· • 100% financ ing
8$70 Homo (740)288·721 2 . • • ~ess than pertect ·credit
accepted
Mason Co. Owner Financing • Payment co uld be the
Rabel· Ridge Ad. 2-~les same as rent.
"'
ESTIMATES
mlnum, dreeslng rooms. liv· extras 9,400 mites. Call
from Hannan High SC. 1920 Mortgage
Locators.
lng quarters. (74())448·2412. (74Q)446·9954 or (740)339aq ft 3 car garage. Owner (740):Je7-oooo
financing with $20,000 "-'=.:_.::.:c..:..._ _ __
HAY &amp;
3528,
down. Ltved in 2· months. New 2 bedroom, 1 bath, sin30&lt;o40
an
metal
buidlng
sup·
GiwN
2- 2003 Anni\/Oraary Models - - · • • • •. .
wUI
consider , trade·in gle car garage. Equipped
plied
and
lnltallod
$16,900.
Haney
Davidson,
883
(304)562·5840, (304)552· kitchen. SeCurity deposit. No
Single8edroom$300month Call for addtllonal sizes 01 h....
~~ ... Sportster. 1- 800 miles,· 1·
pels.
$625
month.
(740)446·
1
11
0756
(740) 256-9137
rc an.. grass. 0 ' vr mx~ 50 miles, Mint condition.
2423 or (740)446-3994
+ $300 deposit. 2 br Apt. ---~----- hay, barn-stored. eaoy Daytime
(3041675 •7386
!J50 .a Amonth(304$300) dopo sit. Block, brick, sewer pipes, access, square or round after Spm (304) ~_
675•2288 wln00w8, llntelo, etc. Claude boles.
.racys pt.
Excellent quality
Tara
Townhouse Winters, Rio Grande, OH (304)582-7397-or-(304)895· 2000 Honda 100 Dirt Bike.
• New Homes
•·
"
3333
Good
Condition · $900
21
7 2
• Garages
Apartments, Very Spacious, Call 40- 45-St ·
.
(304)875-8531 or (304)674·
2 BedroOms• .CIA, 1 1/2 '
PF:rs
Tobacco Plants for sale. can 5706
• Complete
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
FOR
(74())446·7843 or i7o40)645- - - - - - - - Remodeling .
Pool, P"atio, Stan $425/Mo. ·--iiiiiiiiirrallllir.l· 1660.
-2000 Yamaha V-star 650.
Plus
Low miles, cobrapipes, sad·
No Pets, lease
Security DepoSit Required, 2 male Min· Oachahund
die bags, a must see ..
MOTIVATED Seller! , Sand
puppies 7 Wks old. 1 rod, 1
$•o, 800. (7'")441
(740)3e7·7086.
~
• 1'"7
~ .
SIDp &amp; Compare
Hill Ad. nice. stick-buill mod· Pomeroy Large 4 bedroom .:._~----~-- black &amp; tan. Full blooded. tractor with warranty- never
2001 Kawasaki, Ninja 500, ,
ular home, meets N.C. hurri- newly remodeled , new car- THE MAPLES APART· $200. Baby rabbits $7. C&amp;ll used to cut
$1 ,599
sharp, · only ·3828 miles, .
cane specs. 3BR, 2 l ull pet, WID hook-up. S900 per MENTS 100 Memonal Drive (304)593-2928
I
$2,700 (304)675-3275
baths, oak kitchen cabinets, month. 740·949-2303.
East
740·992-7022
1.21acres, outbuilding. 304·
Subsidized
Ae.stdentlai 3 female Pyrenees 'puppies.
2002 Hondo VLX/600cc, red
1
A·~
'.:;if-';,;5-;.2;;;3;;1;,9...,................'ll Aent or Sale 4br in Housing tor 50 J"BTS of aga pSapels,.hot6· ·-~1.~ofdmedMa' keNo. r10
with low miles very good
IP
Syracuse. $600/month &amp; . and older. PrioritY Gtven To
·
1\0
•
·
._.._,
condltton. h woutd be a
Ranch Style, 3 Bedroom , Deposit.
Water/Sewer Applicants With Income At good watch dog. $206 each
FOR
great f(arter bike. WIH aell
2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, ~
included, No Pots (304)675- Or Below $10,900.00 tor 1 Cal ceO· (740)208-()518 ask
miles
lrom
Holzer 5332 o~740)591 -0265
person Ql' $12,450.00 tor 2 ~r Kelly.
$5001 Pollee Impounds! tor $3,000(304)937-2733
n.arsanS. Maximum Income· 5 Boston Terrier puppies. 6 Cars from $500. For listings 2003 Art~ Cat 90cc Yourli
Hospital/Clinic. 1 acre
-• •••utt'ful land.-an
Stop renting Buy 3 bedroom '"'~
m,, .,..
__..
1 person $18,150.00 or weekS old, $300/each. No 800-391-5227 ext. 3901
ATV, 2004 Kawasaki V-Force
lng, screened-In back ' foreclosure $14,900. For list·
700Co ATV Phone (304)882·
"h
h
t
b
Vi
ings
800·391
·5228
ext.
$20,700.00
for
2
persons.
papers,
1st
shoUt
an~
3 miles west of
deck w..
P1 u • ew
Must meet HUD/202/8 crite· wormed. (740)379-2467.
1812 Thunderbird: Blue 3100
online
1709.
ria lor household compost·
· Exterior, · tvory
leather
photos/Info
Pomeroy,OH
www.orvb.com
Code
lion.
MANAGED
By ' 6 week old Pull blooded Lab Interior, White vinyl lop. 2004 Honda CR85 dirt bike
1
Ch
1t
d
·
Rt. 124
5288 or caII (740)388• West Columbia At 62, 2br, Silverheels· A
Realty pupp as.
oco a a an Nice driver, 390cl engine, good shape neVer raced
... n 1
Lg. Deck, Lg. Kitchen, Full
black mal
d 1e 1
•
Ot ""'·
'
Companv. Equal Housing
,
es an
rna es, auto transmission, power $1,600 OBO (304)593-3722
Basement $500/month plus
.. , .
(7'ft)24•58t5
·
Opportunity
· .
-·· ~ ~
•· steering, power brake, or (304)675-5831
Utilities (304)773-9,67
1\tOBD.£ HOME'i
8 week old Reglstera&lt;l Shih· power window, power aeat.
'-"·· .,
·
l'Win Alvers Tower is accept- Tzu pups. 1 female, 1 male, Price $9,500.00.
Hlll's
FOR ....U:
j4lD · MOBFORILE J!~ ling applications tor waiting
Automo:tve Classic Car
7
list lor Hud-subsized, 1· br, $400 beg. ( o40)44l·90-\7 or Restoration &amp; Parts. Inc ..
7
5
95
14x55-'97 Fleetwood MH·
apartment, - call 875·8679 ~(...;4()=)84:..::-4:..;_:_1 :..
· - - - - 29670 Bashan Road, 1850 S.C. Crestllner Fish
150- HP
2BA. 1 .bath. elec. heat/AC· 2 bedroom trailer on farm in Equal Housing Opportunity AKC Boston Terrier. 8 weeks Aacine, Ohio 45n1; Phone: Hawk Boat,
good condmon $10,500. Call Gallipolis for rent. c all
old. Arat shots &amp; wormed. 740-949-2217·, Fax: 74()- Evlnrude
01
Motor.
(74())446-36441or appt.
(540)729 _1331 _ •
Two Bedroom Apt. tor $250. (74())38!Hl743.
949·1957; Pictured on Shorelander Trailer. Motor
rent/utilities paid. No Pets.
www thlJOderbjrdc;entor com Guide Trolling Motor bought
14x60, 2br, 1 lull bath. All 2 bedrOOm, all electric, AIC , 740-992-5858.
AKC Golden Retriever pupIn 2003 never used due to
Electric lor sale. (304)576· very nice, in Gallipolis."
pies. $275 females, $250 1982 Dodge . Aires 400. 4 · siCkness.
Call 740·9922934 '
moles (304)882·2391
door, auto, 4 cyl, 8300m. 7462--9:00AM to 5:00PM
Pnone: (740)446 -2003 or

i

&amp;

Available
Free Estimates

Dl&gt;gPouod
Golden Retriever · Mix male
Black Lab . Mix male

1999 Chevy Silverado 4WD
PIU; 85,000 miles, 5.3 V8 ,
all options, short bed wlttl
topp8r. ExceiiEmt Condition,
$11 ,000. (740)645-062e.

wv

r

740-8411-2217

Dog

.

1987 Harley Davidson Low
Rider. Runs and looks
' 1I
740- 11·•-II.I.IW.U.U.I!I•~m
Great, $7,500
Quality horae and llvestocl&lt; 949·1909.
All typH or""'""~~'
TWin bod comp, chest, trailers now available at -,--e-Ho_n_d_a_Go
- 5-k
New or Aepalr
_ ld_w_ln-g.2
99
recliners, desk, tables,
Qartnlchael Equipment. New miles, black s1o,ooo. Cell
Seamless Gutter
chairs, port. refrldg. ok:ler·
dealer tor Valley and 174o)44t·063e.
Downspout
rerrldg., elec. range, lamps, Kieferbuilt
Horse
and L....:..----~-patio set, bicycles, r:_nisc·. uv,stock Trailers. Many 1999 Black Harley Davidson
FREE
~ems (304)458-1875
optiOns available- steel, alu· Fatboy. Lots of chrome and

bitrns,

45771

Please Adopt A

.'

FoRSAUl

F414~=ms/

29670 Bashan Road

North '
• A J

GENERAL
CONnACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates

Carpet

r____
~

Hill 's Sol f
Storage
Racine, Ohio

6 full blood, 1 ,ear old regia·
tered males. Ready to 1993 Jeep Wrangler 4 cyl. 5
$3,750.
Call
breed. Champlonahlp blood· speed,
(7o40)44&amp;4044.
linea. Call (7o40)24~.

ssoo

Bring Jhe finishing, tools,
3bdrm Ranch, w/2 baths, in
drywall stage. House never

Phillip
Alder

1 yaar old Co~. Part
Palomino . $400 OBO. Call 2002 FonJ Elcp. XLT 81 ,000
(740)256-1233.
original mllea. V6 , cond~ion
Ia A·l Inside and out,
18 month old reg . black $11 ,995.00. 740-415-1354
$1 ,000. jioril7r40-;;;,;;99o;2;;,·;;.31~94~---,
Anguli
bull..
(74())-53.
'---------4x_4___.

WI D hookup. Beautilul coun· lloner. 4 ton , 10 yeero old.
2BR house wtth ,basement,
try
sorting. Must see to ~sccsoo_
. &lt;:..7_4().:.)44
_:_.6_4..;~_4_. _ _
hardwood floors, mile from
appreciate.
s•ootmo.
JET
town .
S450fmo/dep.
(614)595·7773 or 1•·800·
AERATION MOTORS
l 740)44 1-0460 9·5. M-F.
798-4686.
R~IredCat'NlewR &amp; ERobulft 11n
3br, 1 1/2ba. full basement
l oft &amp;lyle apartment, total t -.
on vena, ·
on Jericho Rd. (304)206·
electric,
single
garage
with
800-537-9528.
8813
washer/dryer hookup, Call - - - - - - - 3br, t ba tn Gallipolis· Ferry. (740)843·5196
NEW AND USED STEEL
a month . send Letter
Steel Beams, Plpi Rebar
with 3 reference to EB7 200 New 2 Bedroom Apartments For
Concrete,
Angle,
Main Street, Point Pleasant, Washer/drver
hookup, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
VN 25550
stove/refrigerator included.
For
Drains,
:.:.:~==------ starting at $4o6/mo. call for Grating
Jbr, 1ba. Country Home on details (740)441-Q194 or Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Board Ad. Letart, WV (740)441 1184
·
·
Tuasday, Wednesday &amp;
includes full basement, lawn
&amp; ganJeo. (304)675-2484 or New 2BR apts Watson Ad. Friday, 8am-4:30pm. Closed
(304)593-1481
Rodney Pike/850 area. Thursda~.
Saturday
&amp;
C:::.:.!:::.:...:..:.:..:___ _ . Reference/
Deposit Sunday. (74())448-7300
4 Room House near High required, no pets. (740)446·
STEEL BUILDINGS :
3
School Call (304)675-2441
1271 ,
buUdlngs left! 20&gt;&lt;28, 42&gt;&lt;60
4BR house for rent , $650
lor hay storage. Call today
mo. plus dep. Call (740)446·
to take advantage of our
3644 for info.
Program-HUGH
Dlaplay
, SAVINGS!
limited time
Attention!
offer.
1-1100·222·6335
Local compan~ offering MNO
ext.6000
DOWN PAYMENT' pro-

S

_...tt,liooeo.

ACROSS

I

1BR house· 11 Garfield Ave,
Gallipolis. $350 month. Call apartment In the country.
lor detail s (74())441 ·0194 or New carpet &amp; cabinet&amp;,
__
(74())441-1184.
lreshly painted &amp; decorated, Janatrol Central air COJldl·

'l'tU t..W prptr wUI nQt ·

I

Buy or Mil. Rlvortne
AnKquea, 1124 Eut Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992 -2528. Ruaa Moore,
_,.,,

r

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Tradors.

"Taking The Sting 011t Of
Hard Work:!"

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines '

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

·------~--'---:-----"--.:...:__-:----.---~----,---------

I

-- -····-' -- ·-·-~··;..--- --------~

---'"

.. ---·""'--··• ...

,.

,.
~·-~-

'

�.. ..

- --

-~

-

..

. '

.
• •

Page 86 • The Daily Sentirlel

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Thursday, Junes;

-- -

----

Native People of the Point
New event at Fort
Randolph starts Friday

Schedule of events for
Native People of the Point

I

'

SubmtHed photo

will

Re-enactors such as this one
portray various hiStorical events during this
weekend's Native People of ttie Point event at Fort Randolph. The event begins
Friday.
t

Enterainmenf Briefs
FAC exhibits
photographer's
regional display
,.

2oop,

and its upcomin'g events can be · The price includes the meal as well
found at http://facart.home.zoom· as arts and crafts for the children, the
net.net or by calling (740) 446-3834: limbo, several contests and drawings.
"We wanted to ·do this because it's
something new and a luau is a way
band
for people to get together for good
GALLIPOLIS - The French Art
food and good entertainment," Lazy
Colony is hosting ·the photography
T Resort employee Sally Jay said.
exhibit "Out &amp; About in Southern
VINTON _ The Bill Hawks
Ohio" by artist Alan Davis from June Country Band will perform at . the
2-25. This show is sponsored by Dr. Dakota Steakhouse on McCarty .Lane
E. John Strauss Jr., c;arter Plumbing in Jackson on Friday, June 9.
. and William Thomas, optometrist.
The band, which includes Jdey
Born in Boston, Davis learned to Simms and .Paul Freeman, will also
GALLIPOLIS - The Our House
appreciate nature early by way of perform in Chillicothe on June 17 Museum; 432 First Ave., opened for
many camping trips and gardening and at the Paramount Arts Center, the season on May 31. Tour hours are
with his family. Through these expe- Ashland, Ky., on June 30.
10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Wednesday
rience~, . he developed a mature
For information, contact Bill throQgh Saturday, and I to 4 p.m.
apprec1at1on for not only the beau!y Hawk5 at 388-1566.
Sunday.
. Summer events Include:
m large landscape scenes , but also m ' ·
the smaller deta1ls that surround him. ·
L
. Colonial Day for Wednesday~
. "There is beauty an around us,"
080
June 21, and Wednesday, July 19, 10
Davis said. "The ability to see that.
a.m. until 2 p.m . for girls ages 8-12.
· beauty, whether in the details of the
·
Lunch is included forthe $15 charge.
veins
of
a
leaf
or
in
the
overall
perh
The
event features· costumes, crafts,
gpective of a cloudy mountain scene, · RACINE - Residents can get I at
is a great gift given to us by our ere.- Hawaiian feeling at a luau to be held games and manners of colonial
ator. I hope to share the ability to see from 3 to J I p.m. this Saturday at the times. Call for reservations at 446·
that beauty with others through my Lazy T Resort off of U.S. '33 on . 0586.
work."
·
Meigs County Road 34.
• History D~y Army Camp·in the
The French Art Colony is located .. · There will be music, gam~s. dra~- museum courtyard, F(iday, July 7
at 530 First Ave. Gallery hours are mgs and plenty of food with a d1s- from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.,' for boys
from 10 a.m. until6 p.m. on Tuesday· tinctly Hawaiian theme. The price for ages 8-12. Bring a sack lunch . The
thro\lgh Friday, and from .I to 5 p.m . non-members is $25 per person, $15 teacher is Eugene Huffman. T~ere is
on Sunday. Admission is free.
per person for those already. camping a $10 fee. Call446-0586 for resewaMore information about the FAC at. the resort and $10 pet ch1ld.
'lions.

Local
. plans shows

l

GALLIPOLIS - Rising
country stars Emerson Drive
returns to the area od
Wednesday, June 14 with a 1
p.m. show at the Ariel-Date(
Performing Arts Centre, 426
Second Ave.
Emerson Drive consists of
singer Brad Mates, guitarist
Dani~k
Dupelle,
keyboardistlguitl!.[i,i!J · Dale '
Wallace, fiddler .Dave Pichette,
BOUJque and MelaJ10011.
.'
To this groutl,' the road 1s
their home and performances
such as . the one . they will
make in Gallipolis are all part
of the experience. · · . . .
Although the ·band's mem~
bers have all purch(lsll4'
homes and most are living·..in ·
Nashville, Tenn.,' ask them
where home is and they'll
eagerly answer, "the bus." h'
And they're serious. ,l:}ut.;lf
that sounds p&amp;thetic', forget1t~
These guys are havin~ a blas~
There's no place they d ratl!er
be, except for the sj)otllght
and in front of their: fans. . .,
The band members recently
purchased homes in Nashville
.to establish their dedication tO
country music and to the
band's growth in the United
States as well as· in Canada . .
"We will always be
Canadian, it is our heritage and
it will be always be close to our
hearts," Mates said, ''but ·we
wanted to be in Nashville when
we are off the road so that we
can write songs, work on our
music and put down roots in
the home of country music."
· Wh'atever rigors
they
encountered on their travels
over .the past year or so were
blown away by their disintinctions such as ACM Top New
'Vocal Group/Duo in 2003 and
Blllboard's No. I Top Country
Artist of the Year for 2002. •
Most recently. the band tool
home top honors from the
2005 · Canadian Cquntry
Music Association. Wallace
and Pichette were awarded the
distinction of being the best o~
their instrument and won coveted spots in the 2005 CCMA
All-Star .Band.
For tickets afu1 other informa. lion about Emerwn Drives local
performance, contact the Ariel•
Dater Perfonning Am Centre at
(740) 446-ARTS (2787).

Middleport • Pomeroy,.Ohio
,) 0

( 'I ~ TS • \ 'ol. ,);), !\u.

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Formula allocation took
another cut this year, meaning less funding wiU be avail POMEROY Meigs , able for these small commuCounty Commissioners have nity projects.
received eight applications,
The applications include:
totaling $136.700, for funds $23,750 for Olive Township
through · the Community for paving the community
Development B·lock Grant building parking lot; $46,600
Formula program.
for street improvements in
. Commissioners must select Salisbury Township, $2 1.,400
from among the projects later for ballfield improvements in
this month for funding, with Scipio Township; $20,000 for
only $104,000 available. The · playground eqUipment for the
county 's annual CDBG Mulberry Community Center

• Reds blast Cubs.
take Central lead.

See PageB1

OBTIUARIES

''
t1

~

Donna Burton
• Gary Ray George .
• Jeremy Vincent

~

INSIDE
• .Jhe Holy Spirit in ·
the life of a believer.

I

• Laurel Cliff church
observing 126 years.

See Page A2

•

• A Hungec For More.
See Page A2
• For the Record.

See Page AS ·
• Varnadoe addresses
retired teachers.

. Page AS .
See

• Ohio's great train
robbery, a reenactment

See Page A6
•• UMW holds program
on Africa. See Page A6

·
·
• Rio Grande releases
Dean's Honor and Merit
Lists. See Page A6 '·

.• ·Ohio State president
to wrap up tumuHuous
tenure. See Page AS

••

on Pale All

'~
I

INDEX

no minnpws or shad will be
accepted, and must be alive.
Fowler said the event
would not be possible without
the help of several local businesses and organizations.
including M&amp;G Polymers, ·
Jon Parrack Nationwide
Insurance, Wal -Mart of
. Mason,
S&amp;S
Window
Tinting , · Deparunent of
Natural Resources, City of
Point Pleasant and WBYG
Big Country 99.

I

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith • Values
Movies ·

NASCAR ·
Obituaries

w*"'""'*"

' lmlel Now )'01.1 can ~C~Wt~N ...... of lhM
ITIOfNflt Clflilufed In !he /No: prprr. fil't10iol ~.,.....
_
wftln fiWMd or prtnuNI on a '""' or mouN ~·

Vloll

- - ... - - .

Sports

Weather

t6

Grants Administrator Jean
Trussell for review.
The project is part of a larger
$300,000 CDBG Community
Distress grant project, and was
chosen when money set aside
for demolition of condemned
houses was not used and made
. available for other work.
.Commissioners· .
also
approved payment of bills in
the amount of $321,638.91 .
Present were Commissioners
Mick Davenpon and Jim
Sheets and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Middleport
streetscape
,plan slated for
September
completion
By BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT The
streetscape design for down~
town Middleport will be completed in mid-September, after
a working meeting with the
downtown revitalization team
and local business owlfers.
The streetscape plan will
include proposals for sidewalk improvements, historic
lighting, street furnishings,
landscapi ng and "" ~esthetic
improvements to the intersections in the downtown shopping district. The plan will
also include cost estimates
for the work and materials.
David Cutlip and Steve
Jewell of the Columbus-based
design finn DLZ met with the
Middleport
Development
Group Thursday to outline the
scope. of their proposed work
on the project and to discuss
plans for a day-long working
session . to seek community
input into the design. While no
contract with the firm has yet
been signed, tl)e 'Develo(iment
Group has chosen DLZ to
complete the streetscape design
and has set aside $10,000 in
grant funds awarded to the
group to pay for the plan.
The
Meigs · County
Community Improvement
Corporation will be the contract agency for the project.
. The streetscape design plan
wi 11 be an important part of the
village's October gran\ application for Tier II Downtown
·
Revitalization funds. James
Hartzler, who 1\as worked with
Middleport in past re-zoning
work and other projects, will
act as a consultant with DLZ
on the project.
A work session has been
scheduled for July 13, at a
Around 100 children got a . kick out of ventriloquist time and date to be
Mark Wade who was a visitor to the Pomeroy Library. . announced, and retail business
owners . and local residents
Wade's visit '!las meant to encourage kids to re&lt;!d just
Please see Middleport. A5
as he read to become a ventriloquist.

RACINE - The Southern
Local School District is one
of 11· districts approved to
receive state funding to
improve school facilities Beth Serpnlfphotoo .
under the state's Rebuilding
Ohio's Schools program, but
as the old s!lying goes. 'if it
sounds too good to L?e true.,it
probably is. "' . · · · ..
It's true the district is eligible
for the funding. It 's. also true
this funding is not I00 percent,
in fact the state's contribution
to renovations to a facility is
only a 50 ~rcent matdi, while .
the state s contribution to
building an entirely new facility is 72 percent - · the district
BY BETH SERGENT
would still be responsible for
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL,COM
the remainder of the costs.
In Southern's case, this
POMEROY - Normally, a Characfunding (if accepted) would be ter like "Joe The Alligator" can only
used at Southern High School. · be found i~ books but yesterday he
If the money was accepted to
bUild a new high school, the was found ~~ the Pomeroy Library,
state would mandate the facili- speaking to the large ~rowd of young
people who are participating in The
ty be smitller than the existing Meigs County District Public
school based on current enrollment figures. The current facil- Library's Summer Reading Program.
"Joe The Alligator" was brought to
ity is roughly 56,000 square
life
by ventriloquist Mark Wade who
feet while a new school would
told
the children .he learned the art of
be roughly 35,000 square f~.
This would still leave the ventriloquism by reading a book he
district responsible for 28 found at the library as a child.
This year's theme for the program is
percent of the building costs
one
any reader as well as any pet lover
which would no doubt have
. 10 come from a levy.
can appreciate - "Paws, Claws,
If the district decided to take Scales and Tales!"
The program's duration is June 5the state up on paying for renJuly
19. A ~pecial pool party planned
. ovations to the existing liigh
school then the state would at the Middleport Pool will end the
·only agree to pay roughly 50 program with door. prizes, refreshpercent of thoo;e costs, likely ments and eac h child will receive . a
requiring the financial help of free , book donated by WOU B of
a levy to shoulder the district's Athens. To be eligible for door prizes
costs. These renovations can- children must be registered in the
not include a new auditorium s·ummer reading program and all must
or football field among other be accompanied by an adult :
restrictions.
Yesterday around I 00 children
Mark Miller, princiFal at
Please see Reading. A5
Southern High Schoo who
will take over as district
. superintendent on Aug. I , said
. he along with some board
members and architects (that
are not employed by the district) will meet with the Ohio
School Facilities (OSF) in
Columbus about the funding
within the next two weeks.
"We have several questions," Miller said of the proposal. "We're going io try
and get some information at
the meeting. We don't have to
give, them (the OSF) an
answer until July 1."
"We just have too many
questions," Southern Local
Board President Janet Sue
Grueser agreed about being
cautious of accepting the
money, at least at this stage·.
.
Cha~ene Hoeftlch/photo
Grueser said if the district
Accepting
gold
and
silver
banners
for
collecting
the most ;
. accepts the offer, it has the
.
money
for
cancer
research,
education
and
treatment
through ·
option of deferring the fundthe Relay fur Life program are from the left. Martha Meadows
. ing for one year. .
This deferment would and June ~ichinger, represeoting the Home Care Crusaders,
allow the district to place a the gold banner winner; and Sue Lightfoot of the Prayer Givers ,
levy on a ballot though that is Kristy Greenlee of the Cancer Fighters, and Debbie Allen of
speculation at this poini. .
I Carleton SchooljMeigs Industries, winners of silver banner ~.

·Relay for Life bring~ in·over $40,000

Submitted photo

2 SBC'nONS -

Ventriloquist
Mark Wade of
Grove City wows
a packed house
at the Pomeroy
Library with help
from "Joe The
Alligator." Wade
is one of many
guests scheduled to appear
as part of the
Meigs County
· Dil;trict Public
Library's
Summer Reading
Program.

in Pomeroy ; $30,000 for ball- choose projeCts for funding
field lighting in Racine; · by June 22, and will conduct
$1 I,700 for firehouse repairs a second public hearing on
. and equipment in Sy_racuse; the program after that'daie.
$46,200 for street paving in · ' Meeting
Thursday,
Columbia Township; and .Commissioners opened a bid
$20,000 for fire equipment in for ballfield lighting at General
. Pomeroy Village.
.
Hartinger Park in Middleport,
Commissioners
have from
Rainbow
Ridge
received a total of $130,000 Construction of Long Bottom.
in CDBG Formula funds for The bid was the on Iy one
this year, but $26,000 of that . received on the project, in the
must be set aside for adminis- amount of $8,120. The esti. tration and fair housing activ- mate on the work was $15,000.
ity. Commissioners will
The bid was referred to

Summer readihg program
bringing characters to life

See Page A2

Datal!~

Southern
eligible for
funding to
•
Improve
facilities
8v BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAiLYSENTINEL.cOM

. Page AS .

'

Annual fishing ·rodeo set for Saturday.
awarded. Age categories for
the event are 0- 5 years old;
6-10 years old; 11-15 years
old; 16-20 years old; and 21
and over, and Fowler said any
child under the age of 15 must
be accompanied by ail adult.
Prizes will be awarded in
each age category for the
shortest fish caught , the
longest fish caught and the
most fish caught. All fis h
must be caught on hook and
line, must be a gamefish

c u11 1

'

I .

es. Plus, it's a great opportunity for kids and-their parents to
· enjoy some time together. ..
"The main concept is for
families to get out anll do an
activity together," he said.
"It's a pro~en event ihat people enjoy and continue to
come to. Krodel will be lined
.all the way around."
Registration and fishing will
begin at 8 a.m . and la&amp;t until
noon. when winners will be
announced and prizes will be

""\' .llnd.u h ...,t•lllln•l

Commissioners reviewing eight CDBG fonnula proposals
..

SPORTS

FORGIVEN 4 AT
ARIEL THIS FRIDAY

Gallla County's own Forgiven 4 will be aniong the gospel artists taking
the stage of the Ariel-Dater Performing Arts Centre this Friday at 7 p.m.
As part of the Gospel in the Palk s.eries, the concert also features the
Gospel Harmony Boys and and Gospel Hall of Fame member Lily Fern ·
and the Weatherfords. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 .for students,
FQr information, contact Pastor Rick Barcus of Addison Freewill Baptist
Church at 367-7063.

1-'l(llt \\ . •Il l!\: I• (, , :.! Ooh

:.! IH)

'·

Summer events
at Our House

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- The Mason County Family
Resource Network has scheduled '' its
13th
annual
Parent/Child Fishing Rodeo
for this Saturday at Krodel
Park.
Greg Fowler, FRN director,
said .the event is one that is
scheduled to fall on free fish·
ing day in West Virginia so that
more people can come ou.t and
fish wit/tP.ut having to worry
about having the proper licens-

questions of police
.impersonation, AS

Emerson Driv~
takes Arid ••'•
stage June 14 · ~

planned

l .

Activist jailed amid

•

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - It's a new event that will tell an old
story.
·
·
And for tllose eager to learn about local history, next weekend's first
annual Native People of the Point event at Fort Randolph is just the
place to go.
.
Scheduled for June 9-11, the event is one which many people will
enjoy. Festivities kick off Friday at 8 p.m. with a West Virginia
Humanities History Alive! presentation of the legendary Mmgo Ch1ef
John Logan by Dan Cutler. The evening will conclude with an audio
and visual presentation on. the 250th anniversary of the French and
Indian Warm Western V1rgm1a by Doug Wood at 9 p.m. Those attend- ,
ing also will be able to learn the intrigues of frontier military alliances
and backwoods diplomacy.
.
.
· .
•
On Saturday and Sunday, the fort will be open from 10 a.m.-5f:m.
. and feature demonstrations of life skfns and material culture o the
· Native American inhabitants of this region by re-enactors dressed in
period clothing. Live displays. wiJI include hide tanning, rope and
cordage .making, finger weavmg, lnd1an bratdmg. bead workmg,
weapons demonstrations, jerky makin¥ and open-fire cooking.
Throughout the weekend, Taylor sa1d Bill H~nt will give presentations of An(jrew Montour, the French!Iroqums Ind1an agent of the
Susquehanna Valley.
·.
· ·
.
.
Also on Saturday, the fort Will host another H1story Ahve! presenta- ·
tion. At 8 .p.m., Doug Wood will honor his Cherokee ancestors by
·telling the story of Mankiller O~t&lt;;naco 's effort's· during the French and'
Indian War, and at 9 p.m., Dlm Cutler will present the great Shawnee
Chief Cornstalk.
·
·
All events are free and open to the public. Donations will be accepted.
Fort gates will open one hour prior to 'the presentations on· Frida~ and
Saturday evening, arid those attending are asked to bnng lawn chairs. ,
The West Virginia Humanities Council program js bei_ng hosted by
Fort Randolph and is supported With addlllonal hnanctal aSSistance
from the Office of ·the Secretary, West Virginia Department of
· Education and the Arts.
For mote information, call the Mason Counly Convention ·and
Visitors.Bureau at (304) 675-6788.
·

POINT PLEASANT, W,Va. . ~ style drumming, singing and
The following is a schedule of dancing; Andrew Montour presenevemsfor the first annual Native lations by Bill Hunt.
People of the Point event this
5 p.m. - Fort gates close.
.
weekend at Fort Randolph.
7 p.m. - Fort gates re-open:
8 p.m. C.: History Alive! presenFriday, June 9
tatlon of Ostenaco by Doug Wood.
7 p.m. - Fort gates open.
· 9 p.m. - Chief Cornstalk pre,
8 p.in. - History Alive! presen- sentation by Dan Cutler.
tation of Chief John Logan
I0 p.m. - Fqrt gates close.
9 p.m. - French and Jndian
War audio/visual presentation by
Sunday, June 11
Doug Wood.
10 a.m. - Fort gates open;
Nati,.ve American life skills
. 10 p.m. - Fort gates close.
.
demonstrations all day.
SatuOlay, June 10
Hourly -'- Eastern Woodland
10 a.m. - Fort gates open; . style drumming, singing and
Native American life skills dancing; Andrew Montour presendenionstrations all day.
lations by ·Bill Hunt.
Hourly - ·Eastern Woodland
5 p.rn . - Fort gates close.

Believers Voice to· ,·
sing at Rocksprings
Church, As

PAGF~

A6
84-6
B7
A6

A4
B3

As

B Section

AS

© :1:006 Ohio Valley Puh118hi11J Co.

...

.

'

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

----------,-POMEROY -. A total of
$40,853.28 was raised for the
American · Cancer Society in
the 2006 ·Meigs County
Relay for Life. JoAnn Crisp.
chairman, reported Thursday.
" It was another successful
year." said Crisp as she recognized ihe gold and silver
banner award winners . Again
thi s year the Hm)Je. Care
Crusaders took the gold banner for bringing in the most
money. over $5,000. and the
Prayer Givers, · Cancer
Fi ghters
and
Carleton
School-Meigs Industries for
bringing in over $2,500 each
to earn silver bunners . Fifteen
team s participated ' in the
Relay for Life program
emce~d by Steve Beha.

'

. In addition to bringing in
.the mosl money, the Home
· Care Crusaders received
awards for the best cainJ)site
and the mo,s.t spirit. The award
for the most money' raised the
night of the event at the Relay
site wem to Wendy's Garden
Sensations. The Relay had a
10ta 1 of 25 sponsors.
At the Relay 257 luminarie s given in memory or
honor of cancer victims
encircled the ThompsonRou sh building ·on the fairgrounds where the event
was held . During the light·
ing ceremony, Paul Reed
talked on "Hope" commending all the volunteers for
their work in providing survivors hope for the future .
Prayer was by the Rev. Fr.
Please see Relay, A5

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