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•

•

Holzer cancer center
donates to Meigs COunty
Relay for Life, A3

Chorus attends
competition, A2

1

Four indicted in alleged ~iddleport ki~napping case

.SPORTS
• Crooksville steals win
from Southern.
SeePage 81

2005 Silverado
Ext. Cab 4k
Auto, AC, 5.3 tpw pkg$

2005 Cobalts

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UO, Ac·, CD

22 499
AFTER REBATES

2005 Impalas ._

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~ell Equipped. All Power~

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Loaded

POMEROY - Four men
who allegedly kidnapped a
man and held him in a
' Middleport home against his
will a mpnth ago were indicted by the Meigs County
Grand Jury.
. _ Indictments . against ·the '
four: Elisha L. Dickens, 25,

7AFTE~ REBATES

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OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Ruby Pollis Dye, 77
• Jon Freeman, 49
· • Walter T. Rollins,
. 85
• Ronald Lee Twyman, 56

2004 Chevrolet ·
SlO Blazer

2004 Venture Van

900
,

.

16,588

INSIDE
- ···--· • PVH hormrs nurses.
See Page·.A2
• The President's
I'
Challenge prepares Me1gs
students for Relay For
Life. See Page A3
• Holzer Medical Center
observes Hospital Week
May 8~14. See Page AS
• Meigs Girl Scout Diary.
See Page A6
~·

2004 Chevorlet Cavalier

2004 Oldsmobile Aler9

$9,999

$9,900

Value Priced Used Cars

Used Trucks

1995 Oldsmobile Ciera ...............................................$3,450
1999 Chrysler Cirus LXI .......,.....................................:.$5,750
1998 Oldsmobile Delta 88 ....................................... $5,750
2000 Saturn LSI ................,................................................$5,490
2000 Pontiac S~nfire ........:....... . .. . ................. $5,275
19S7 Dodge Dakota Pickup Ext Cab SLT ..... $5;995
1999 Pontiac Montana Van .........:... :......................$5,885
2000 Ford Windstar Van ............................-$5,900

$17,775

21,000 miles .......................................................................... $10,900

2001 Chevrolet Silverado LS

off Road Riot-Promotion

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WEATHER

2001 Ford f -150 Regular cab, SWB, VB, .
auto, air, CD ........- ................................................................. $ 12,600
1998 Fod FISO XLT Ext Cab, V6, auto, air:
_52,000 miles .............................. .'.............................................:... $9,950
1997 Chevrolet Silverado Regular cab SWB, 4x4, VB, Auto,
Air, CD ............................................................................................ S9,999
2003 Dodge Ourango VB, auto, air, 4x4

includes:
~
r-----------:--:----=~-;:~
•10 X 13 Dome .Tent
4 Sleeping bags • Chairs • Cooler ------ _
Need not be present to w!.!:_ ~
_...,........-__.........-~
.
~

.Register to win a
Kawasaki Jet Ski, 4-wheeler
or motorcycle iri
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.fM 1015 The River,

Regular cab, LWB,

VB, auto, air, 22,000 'miles .............................:..................... S13,800

• I
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~egister to win a camping packag~

only 33,000 miles ................:........................ ,.... - ................ $12,880

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1002 Ford Ranger XLT Edge, Ext Cab

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•
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CZ7hotbuttGn

-onPaeeAS

}NDEX
'

2 SI!Cl10NS- 16. PAGES

Calendars

A3

USED _CARS

Classifieds
.C'omics

B4 ·6

1004 Pontil!IC Grand Prix GT Maroon .................. $ 14;440 .
1004 Pontiac Grand AM SE 4-door, red,

Dear Abby

Obituaries

A3
A4
As

Places to go

A7

Editorials

V6, auto, Air ..................:....._ ............................................. :....... SII,888

1004 Buick LeSabre C~m V6,auto. air- ... SI5;490
11104 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP LoadecL.......".....S17,450
1004 Pontiac Sunfire $E Coupe 4 cyt, auto, ilir, tilt, cruise,
remote keyless ........:....................._,_ .. ,, ...................~.........._ ... $9,850
1001 Chevrolet Cavalier LS Coupe 4 cyt, aUto, air, 33,ooiJ
miles.................................................,_...................~....................... S8,900

Tina Mandrake of Ravenswood receiVing keys froiD
Don Tates - General Manager, Harvey Jett to a new
Buicli LaCrossCX, She won playing the
·Hot Button Contest. Ask how you can be a winner!

~ ~(J(#, 'P'liu ~eat/ele M de ~- ..

DON .f'Af'B

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GMC:. 0C)!c!smoblle
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Dickens, who faces multi pie drug charges from previous arrests thi s year. hi s
brother, Jo shua. and Ben
Harri s, Jr. were arrested shortly after the alleged kidnapping took place. Harri s was
not among those indicted.
Elisha Dickens is charged
wi lh kidnapping , a firstdegree felony, abduction, a
third-degree fe lony, two

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFICH @MYDAILYSENTINE L.COM

SlOCKt 590S

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2004 Chevorlet Impala l.S

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count s of felonious assault, a
second-degree felony, trafficking in .food slamps, and
two counts of possessing·
criminal tools, all fe lonies of
the fifth degree.
Joshua Dicken s, and Long
are charged with kidnapping,
abduction a.nd two counts
each of felonious assault.

Please see.1ndlcted, AS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Loaded, All Wheel Drive

STOCK* 5860

$9,999

•

was transported to the home of
Elisha L "Lacey" Dickens,
held against his will. and beaten. He was held in·· the home
overn igh1 and was then
returned to the home of his
mother; Beeglr said·.- The · victim, who has riot been publicly
identitied; was hospitalized in
the intensive care unit of Holzer
Medical Center as a .result of
the assault against him.

More Salisbury
Margaret Blennerhassett visits Southern Elementary
building renovation
· RACINE -. Margare-t Blennerhassetf
approved by Board
visited sixth and seventh graders at

$21A~ER999

AFTER REBATES

2004 Chevrolet Malibu

Middleport.
Joshua
L.
Dickens , 29, Pomeroy, David
R. ." Richie" Long, 35,
Middleport, and Steven R.
Nevi lle, 32, Racine, were
among I 0 filed late Monday
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
Bee-gle said Wednesday the
charges slerri from an incident
on April 14, in which the victif!i

.

$17,999

2003 Chevrolet Trail
Blazer L\ 19

J

BY BRIAN J. REED .
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2005 Colorado
Trucks

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AS

li005 Ohio V.Uey l'llblioblJI&amp; Co.

POMEROY -. Expansion of ongoing
renovalion work at the Salisbury building to. convert it . into administrative
offices for the district was approved by
the Meig s Local Board of Education
Tuesday night,.
The board approved inslalling a'ir conditioning in lhe gymnasium and kitchen
areas, now leased to Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, and heating units in
three rooms to be used for storing district
nialerials. Those things had not been
.i!lcluded in the original renovation plans.
Cost of lhe additional improvemenls will
be $57,606 which includes $2,335 to I he
general contractor, $1,780 to the plumbing
contractor, $4,811 to the heating and air
conditioning contractor, and $8,680 lo lhe
electrical contractor.
"These additional improvements still
keep us below the biidg'eted amount for the
renovation," said Superintendent William
Buckley. The original cpnlracts for work on
the building lotaled $260,508, well below
the estimated cost of $355,000.
Buckley said lhat as work progresses if it
appears everything to be done still falls
below that budgeted amount, then perhaps
the' windows in lhe three classrooms, the
gym and kitchen should be replaced to
make the building more cost efficient to
cool and heat, and if there's anything-lefl it
perhaps could be used to upgrade the parking lot "But we need to look at these things
later," he added.
The Salisbury project is being paid for
with the balance of funds generated by I he
pennanent improvements levy which went
off the tax ballot in December.
The work at the school got underway last
monlh and is expected lo be compleled in
August so that the administrative.·personnel can move into the buildmg · in
September. Currently the Board is paying
$500 a month rent to the Villa~e of
Pomeroy for second floor offices m the
municipal building . The entire front of the Salisbury building phis the hallways will be renovated to
provide offices for the superintendent,
assistant superint_endent, treasurer, technology coordinator, and nutrition director, administrative · assistants and clerical
personneL
Some walls will be removed to make
larger offices. One large restroom will be_
divided into two smaller ones, . and there
will be a reception area and break room for
the -employees.·
The only thing 10 be done to the gymnasium and kitchen is to install the air conditioning, Buckley said. He also npted that
space heaters will be used in the three
classrooms to be used 'for storage .
Other business of the board at Tuesday
· nighl's meeting included
• accepting of a $1,000 state grant award
from Ohio's Agricultural Education
Partnership to be used in the tech-prep
progra1n;
.
. _
.• accepting me resignation of Mary Grueser
·as high-school newspaper advisor and hiring
Suzanne Bentz for the position _for the
PI "H -

ll&lt;ith Sorgent/ photo

Performer Debra Conner of Parkersburg, W.Va. addressed students
at -Southern Elementary as hi_storical figure ·Margaret
Blennerhassett. Conner also performed for Southern ·High School
students as Zelda Fitzgerald, writer and wife of author F. Scott
Fitzgerald. Conner will be performing as Fitzgerald at the Ohio
Chautauqua, July 12-16 at Chester Commons in Chester.

Please see Southern, AS

Middleport Farmers Market
A sign has been post·
ed at the site of a
new Farmers Market
in Middleport, to
begin at 10 a.m. on
Saturday in conjunction with the
University of Rio
Qrande Crossroads .
Appalachian Heritage
'Celebration. The sec·
and market is scheduled for 10 a.m. on
June 4 on the vacant
lot neXt to Peoples
Bank. Here, Meigs
County Chamber of
Commerce Director
Erin Roush. Donna
Hartson and Brenda ·
Phalin of Crossroads
and Tourism Director
Bi llee Bentley are pictured at the market
site.

-

'

S.llsbtlry, A5

Southern Elementary yesterday lo discuss
her fife on · Blennerhassett Island near
.
Belpre.
Since the real Margarel Blennerhassett
died in 1842, performer Debra Conner
from Parkersburg, W.Va. made the trip to
Southern Elem·entary in her place.
Dressed in period clmhing from the .
nineteenth century, Conner portrayed the
charac1er of- Margaret Blennerhassett by
discussing the Blennerhassett Mansion,
children and scandals thai plagued the
Ohio Valley family.
Students addressed Conner as if she
were the real Blennerhassett and asked
questions such as: "How did you meet
· your husba_nd? Why would you build such
a nice house if it would only burn down
later? When did you die?"
Conner was broughl to Southern
Elementary by lhe Chester Shade
Hi storical Association to promote not only
an interest in history but in the urcoming
Ohio Chal!tauqua event, July 2-16 ;It
Chesler Commons:
During the Chautauqua, which has a theme of "The Roaring Twenties," ·conner
will portray Zelda Fitzgerald, wife of
famed noveli~t F Scott Fitzgerald. Conner
portrayed Fitzgerald earlier in the day at
Southern High School and has visited
Meigs and Eastern High ,School as
Fitzgerald as well.
.
"She cast a spell over the kids." Chester
· Shade Historical Association member
Dixie Sayre said about Conner 's convincing performance as Fitzgerald at Southern
High School.
"They want to ask me about
(Fitzgerald's) mental illness, her marriage
and her child," Conner said aboul the
questions she receives from her audience
in regard to the character; she portrays .

-

J. Rood/plioto

Need Extra Help?
310 East Main St.
PomerQy,OH

-_
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.. '

,

•

�'

. .,.. .

'

MMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Thursday, May

.

Sub,nltted photo

Members of the 'Pieasant Valley Hospital Patient Services' team. are being honored this week in celebration of Nationai.Nurs.e s·

~Week. They are. left to rigbt. Dave Sf1yder, RN·. MBA, surgical service~ coordinator; Sue Zirkle . RN. South I clinical manage~:

Jodi Dabney·Cat l, RN, case managem~nt; Lillian Rodgers, RN, BSN, performance Improveme nt coord inator;, V1ck1e Keefer, RN:
'ssN. case management supervisor: Carol Garrett. RN , BSN , education superv1sor: Den1s~ Queen , .RN , obstetnc nurse ; Jen
Kitchen, RN, BSN. obstetrics and pediatrics supervisor: Tara See. RN, B,SN. educat1on: Usa Merry, RN, BSN, patient represen·
tative; Patricia Snyder,. RN . critical services coordinator: Misti Chapman. RN: Sandy Wood. RN, MSN, .v1ce·pres1dent of pat1ent
services: Sue Hussell. RN, BSN, telemetry. unit coord1nator and Katie Larck. RN. emergency care center.

PVH HONORS . NURSES
wh ich is being addre.ssed in tme strong voice,.'' shared r.:are issues affecting nurses
POINT PLEA SA\JT. .
The work of America\ 2. 7 thro u ~h ANA\ ·'Handle with Sanely Wood, RN , MSN , and the public.
vice-president of patient serTraditionally,
Nationa l.
million registered nurses to Care·r campaign .
Nurses
'Week
vice:-;.
is
devoted
10
Na1ional
Nurses
Anoually,
save li ves and .to mainwin the
ANA. through its 54 con~ highlighting the diverse ways
Week began on Ma) 6 and
he~Jth of millions or indivi d ~
uals is the focus of this year's ends on Mav I~. 'the birthday stituenl member associations. in which registered nurses.
of Florence Nightinga le. it:-; Asso~iate Organizational the largest health care profes ~
National Nu rses Wed.
"Nl!rscs: Many Rok~. O~e founder of nursing as a mod ~ Members (AOMs) and orga~ sion. are working to improve
Profession" i·s the theme for ern profession . During th 1s nizmional afti liates·. advances health care. From bedside
2005. This .year the American week. registered nurses wil l the nursing professi.on by fos~ nursing in hospitals and long~
Nurses Assoc iation !ANA ). be honored at Pleasant Valley tering high standards of n urs~ term care facilities to the halls
.ing practice, promoting eco- · of research instit uti ons. state
in ·conjunction with its · Hospital.
.. As 1iur~es. We all share a nomic an~ ' general we lfare, legislat'ures. and Congress.
Constituent State Nurses
Ass&lt;;&gt;Ciations, wi fl be rccog ~ com mitm ent to improving pwmo.tin~ a positive and th e depth and hreadth or t~e
ni zing nurses by Jrawing the health and well~being of realistic vtcw of nursing, and nursing professio n is meeting
. d serving our lobbl·in bn Connrcss
the expa ndins health care
special anen tion to safe our patients 'l:m
b
'
. and the
pati ent lifting and handling, comm unities, and are united regu atory agendes ·on health • needs of Amencan societ y.
1

LAW YOU CAN USE

Tenants have security deposit rights
Q.: I have g.ood reason to
believe my landlord may
improperly withhold my
security deposit at the ,end
of my 'lease. Can I watt to
pay my last month's rent',
and then pay up if my land·
lord comes through with the
security deposit?
A.: You should always pay
your last mon th 's rent, and
don't assu me you r security
deposit will . cover .it. For
exam ple, you r landlord may
charge you for extra clean ing
that your deposit won't cover.
If you don ' t pay . your last
month's rent. and your land,
lord tries to collec t money
("damages") from you . for
more than the amount of the
security deposit. the law will
not protect you, since all of
youl security deposit would
be right fu lly withheld by the
landlord as rent. If you do pay
your last I month's rent. how ~
ever, and can show your lan d~
lord improperly wit hhe ld
your security deposit. a pro vi~
sion in Ohio law (Ohio
Re vised Cocle 5 3 21.16)
allows yo u to go to court to
recover double d(!mages and
attorneys fees from your l and ~
lord .

from your secu rity depos it
an d refund the remainder of
the se..:urity depos it to you. If
you can prove you properly
notified the landlord of you r
forwarding address.. aml tha t
your landlord wrongfully kept
any portion of your security
depos it for more than 30 days.
then the co urt may order your
landl ord to pay you double
damage and auorn ev fees.

caused. clean your unit. Hire a
profession~il cleane r, and keep
your receipt. Videotape the
place before you leave, hold~
ing up a copy of that day's
newspaper so that the camera
captu res the headline date.

Law ·You Ca n Use is a
·-;,;,eekly consumer legal infor·
mation column provided by
the
Ohio
State
Bar
Association (OSBA). This
· article was prepared' by Eric
E. Willis-on, an attomey with
the Columbus finn of Harry
Lewis Co., LPA. Arlicles
appearing in this column are
intended to provide · bmad,
general information about
the law. For information
about a variety of legal top·
ics, visit the OSBA's Web site
at www.ohiobar.org. Before
applying this information to
a specific lega/prohlem,
readers are urged t!J seek the
advice of a licensed attomey.

Q.:What if I do all that,
and the landlord still sends
me a n itemiled list of dam.ages I never caused?
A: If necessary, you can sue
Q.: How can I improye mv yo ur landlord. Generall y; such
chances of getting back my case... are heard in small
security deposit?
clai m ~'&gt; court.
, A.: First.,yc\ u should review
When yo u take such a case
vour leusc to make sure there to court, remember that the
are no "i ntent to vacate" person or company you think
·cLauses. " Intent to vaca te'' IS your land lord ·may only be a
cllluses are se ntences or rental manager for another
phrases wit hin your lease that person or company. Look 'up
:-.i.ly you mu.:-;1 give your land~ who owns the property yo u .
lord a certa in amount of rented on your cou nty audi~
not ice thai vou in tend to leave tor's or recorder' s Web site
at lhe ei1ZI of your lease. und make sure th e ow ner is
Courts ha ve enforced clauses ·aliio named as a defe ndant
that renew a lease for a year if in your lawsuit. Be sure to say
the tena nt does not give such in the complaint that you are
notice. Make sure you get bringing suit under Ohio
Code
Secti on
you r noti ce of in te nt to vacate Revised
in on time (according to the 532 1.16. and that you are
te rms of your lease) and keep req uesting double damages
a copy of what you sent bye ~ and attorneys fees (si nce you
ertified mail to the landlor,d. may need to hire an attorney
' Even if you have no such later on). If the w urt deter ~
clause in your agree.ment. it is mines th at your · landlord
Q.: Does the law require a good idea to send your ian wrongfully ,withhe ld any
my landlord to give back my ord a certified letter that con~ amount of your security
· tains your forwarding address· deposit, then the court must
security deposi t?
A.: You must notify your
award you doub le th~ amount
land lord of you r forwarding
Q.: Is there anything else I of "'hatever portion was with~
address in writing or ·in per~ can do to make sure I get my held.
Son. After having received deposit back? ·
·
The cnurt also must hold a
your notice. your landlord has
A.: After yo.u have remo,ved hearing to determine what
30 days to give you a written , your possesswns an,d hxed attorney fees were reasonable
itemization of · deduclions any damage you may have and should be covered.

C~orns

Thursday, May

'

Community Calendar

CouJ•tNews
POMEROY
Meigs costs, probation, passing bad
County Court Judge Steven checks; Peggy · D. Nttz,
L Story recently processed Syracuse. $2 1, 'peeding;
the foll owing cases:
Timothy
C.
Ntzen,
Angela · M.
Abrams. Youngstown. $52 and costs.
Columbus. $60 · and costs. speeding: Jason A. Nottingham,
speeding; Jame s L Adams, Long Bottom, $100 and costs.
Racine. · $30 and costs, seat equipment misuse; Melissa D.
belt violation; Faye R. Aeiker, Priddy, Langsvtlle, $350, 10
Pomeroy, $20 and ·costs, fail ~ days in jail, suspended, proba~ ·
ure to register; Mark A Allen, lion .. DU I, probauon. · parking
Belpre, $30 and co&gt;ts, speed~ · on highways; Brittney J.
ing; John K. Bentz, RaCine, Raubenoli. Albany. three days
$30 and costs; speeding: in .jai l. suspended, probation,
Sam ir P. Bhagat , Jacksonville, underage 'consuniption;L;tcy S.
Fla. , $50 and costs, speeding; Redmo nd. Cheraw, S.C., $20.
Brian S. Brown , Racine , $25 . . seat belt~ passenger; Arthur W
right~of~way I public high~ Roberts. Elkview. W.Va., $30
way; Taryn A. Burn s. and costs. speeding; Jeremy M.
Colu mbus. $50 .and costs .. Rose, Racine, $20 and costs.
1
spee~in g; Della , I. Caste.". properly secured loads.
Pomeroy. $20 an? costs. tali ~
Chanda R. Russell, Racirie,.
ure to yield .l/2 roadway.
probation. $50 and costs,
Terry Cheadle. Malta. $30 drug abuse; Todd V .. Sams,
and costs. speeding; Lauren Athens, $20 and costs, failure
A. Colburn, Columbus, $20 10
register;
Gregory
and costs, assured clear dis- Satterfield, $350, 30 days in
lance ; Michelle M. Copen, Ja il, 27 suspended; probation.
Cheshire, $100, 90 days in DU I. $25, pro~ation, fa ilure
jail, suspended, probation . 10 control: Robert Sellers ,
attempted possession; Joseph Portland, $30 and costs, seat
M. Coul ter, Milwood, W.Va .. be lt violation; ~obert E.
$30 and costs, speeding. $25 Smith, Pomeroy. $20, v i o~
and costs. seat belt violation; starting I backing; Eric
James R. Cravens, Wellston. Spencer. Pomeroy, $20 and
$30 and. costs. seat belt vio l a~ costs, failure· to register;
tion; Derek R. Ell ars. Lowell , T. Spohn. New
Ama nd a. $30 and costs, Lexington, $30 and costs,
speedi ng;
Jennifer
D. speeding; April J. Stearn s,
Fairchild, Nelsonville, $50 Pomeroy, $20 and costs. stop
and costs, speeding; Jennifer sign; John F. Thabet, Mason.
L. . Fra lic, Worthin gton , $20 W.Va., $200, 180 days in jail,
and costs, assured clear dis~ 11 9 suspended, probation,
tance.
attempt~d possession; Manly
Michael P. Fry, Findlay, $30 A. Thomas , Cameron·, N.C.,
and ·costs, speeding; Steven · $30 and costs, speeding.
R. Grose, Reedsvi·lle, $30 and
Deangelo L. Thompson,
cbsts, seat belt violation : . Pomeroy, $68.,35, fictitiou s
Kennith W. Hick man, Racine , plates, $45, seat belt viol a~
$200, 10 days in jail, 7 sus~ tion ;
Kwia J . Tyrrell,
pended, probat ion, drivin g Gaithersburg, Md., $50 and
under fra susp; Wallace R.. costs. speedin g; David L
. Hill , Point Pleasant, W.Va., Vance, Portland, $30 . and
$30 and costs, speeding; costs, speedi ng; Chri s D.
Robert L. Keaton. Coolville, Wandling, Albany, $100 .and
$20 and costs, stop sign; costs, 60 days in jail, s u s~
William
G.
Kerby pended, probation, cri minal
Millersburg, $30 and costs, damagi ng I endangerin g;
speeding;
Michael R. Chris D. Ward •. Pomeroy,
I:ambeyt. Lancaster, $30 and $200. 180 days m JUII, 165
costs, speeding; Charles J . suspended,
probati on.
Miller, Ravenswood, W.Va., attempted possession; Brenda
$30 and costs, seat belt v iola ~ S. Weaver. Vinwn, $25 and ·
tion :· Jenni fe r N. Moleski', costs, no O.L.: Paul E.
Jacksonville, $20 and costs, Wilson , Shade, $30 and costs.
failure to control.
·
dnig abuse; Todd" E. Wittig,
Matt Myers, Long Bollom, Mt. Pleasant, Mich. , $30 and
$25 and costs, probation, pass~ costs, speeding; Yahia A.
ing bad checks; Matthew Zabarah, Henderson, N.C.,
Myers, Long Bottom, $25 and $30 and costs, speeding.

Clubs and
organizations

1

PagcA3

·'

YTHE
D
Husband asks if torn marriage
can be stitched ·back together

The Daily Sentinel

12, 2005

MeigsCo~ty

,

'

County economic devcl&lt;1pmen1
Wednesday, l\lay 18
director. wi II be the s(l&lt;?aker.
REEDSVILLE - Walton
MIDDLEPORT The Manley will be 91 on May
Middleport Lodge .163. 18. (&lt;&lt;rds may be sent to hii11
DEAR ABBY: After .six
hctwccn you. they'll come to
Thursday, May 12·
F&amp;AM. specia l · meeting. at 50\17.\ State Route 681 .
year~
nr
marriage
anti
a
beauaccepl
it.·
POMEROY -Alpha Iota 7:.10 p.m .. to welcome Grand Reedsville. Ohio 45772.
tiful
daughter.
my
wife.
DEAR
ABBY: I have been
M asters. 6 :.30 . p.m.. S1. Pau I Master"s r.:la~~ member:-. of
"Ci)anelle."
demanded~~
sep
·
dating
"Chris:·
a wonderful
Lutheran Church. Hostesses · Middleport Lodge 363. An
Church
'aid
.she
needed
guv.
for
nine
months
The
aration.
She
wi ll be Clarice Kra~ner. · education program for new
time to "lind he rse lf'." She
subject of marriage ha' come
Charlotte Elbe rfeld. and members and any interested
Saturday,
May
14
·
forgot
to
mention
that
she
Dear
up. and Chris say' that when
Norma Custer.
friends is plati ned. This is an
LONG
BOTTOM
was
having
an
&lt;lffair
wit
h
a
Abby
he's
married he wi ll not wear
CHESTER ·- Shade River · open meeting. and all Revival services wil be held
subordin.ale
at
work
...
Ear.l.·:
a
wedding
ring becau~.e of hio.;
'L d
453
7 30
· Masons and friends are in ritat
the
Long
Bouom
Freedom
Eventually. Earl's wife and .,
job. He j, crpo lic~ ofll&lt;er.
0 ge ·
'
:
p.m.
Refreshments.
• ed. Refreshments. will follo\v. Mission on Country ~oad 31 found out. Chanelle los t he r
I don't think , wea~tng "~
TUPPERS PLAINS -. .
LONG BOTIOM - Forked 6:30 p.m. Saturday and
joh.
her
boyfriend
and
.her
wedding
ring would •kn ~,l!'Y
· .
Run
SptH1smen\ Club's
VFW Pos t 905..3' 7 p.m.,
m A
I K'd F' " ' D
" Sunday. Clyde ' Ferrell will be self~rcspect.
fam ilv.
. way put his life at ns ' , Ill
hall. Meal is served at 6:30.
nnua , . s ""''"g ay: &lt;,. the preacher:
· ,
Sudden ly she wamed me . In "all fairness. Chanclle extremely upset about th1 s.
RUTLAND _ Rescheduled a.m. to noon, for children
Sunday, May 15
·' b&lt;\ck. I waSit ' t sure I coul d was rhe l~~&lt;t person you'd Am i makino a big deal out ol
· ·meeting of Rutland Village through 15. at the dub pone!.
POINT PLEASANT li ve with .a woman who had th ink . would . have an affair. nothino - · c:'r is Chris m.aking
Council. 6 p.m .. in council
Evangelist John Elswick lied and cheated on me.
· She was family ~orienfed c(nd excu se~ out of fear of com ~
·chambers.
.
. .
will ho ld serv ices at the old
After a year later. Chanc llc had conservative values. Earl mi tment? - SUSPICIOUS
Friday, May 13
log church on the Wes t became pregnant · with our ~was the last person you'd iN ROCHESTER
MIDDLEPORT- Widows·
Tuesday, May 17
Virginia
State
Farm son. who is du e in a few imagine she'd choose. He's a
DEAR SUSP IC IO US : I
Fellowsh ip noon luncheon at
POMEROY - Charles E. Museum grounds near Point months. I'm positive the c hain~ s m oki ng : married red~ consulted the Los Angele '
Millie 's Restaurant.
Blakes lee. long ti me resident Pleasant. There will be s pe~ baby is mine. so we· dec ided neck with a history of infi~ · · Police Department and wa'
Saturday, May 14
of Pomeroy, will observe his · cia! si nging. A carry -in di n- fnr the children's sake to rec~ delity.
to ld that an officer may wear
POMEROY Return ., 95th birthday on May I 7. ner will be he ld at noon. A oncilc.
Both sets of in~laws are try~ a wedd ing band on duty if he
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Cards may be sent .to him ~t . gospe l sing will begin at I
·I
still
can·l forgiv'e ing to sc_lbotage· the ma1Tiage. or she chooses. However. · 11
Daughters of the American the home of his. daug hter. p.m. by Proclam , Aaron Chane ll e for the affair. She my feelings t&lt;11· my wife have the 0fficer is goi ng undercov~
. Revolution, will meet a I p.m. Jennifer Btrtcher. .3400 West Grate , Ray and Delori s used a stri ng of lies to cover chariged. ;.uid ' l ·OOW reali1e I er. it might be in hi s or her
at the Pomeroy Library. Rid gewood Drive. Rockport. Cu ndiff. and the Gloryland her activities. so fm having never reall v knew Chanelle at best interest no.t to wear cer~
Michael Guliver, Meigs Ind. 47635.
Believers .
severe trust issues. I was
Can thiS marriag'e be saved? ta in jewel'ry.
.
If Chris was the one who
faithful throug hout our mar~ . -S HAKEN. NOT STIRRED
riage. While we were separat~ · IN WEST VIRG INIA
raised the subject or mar~.
ed, I frequen tly lent her
DEAR ·
SHAKEN: riage. I doubt he has a fea r ol
SPECIAL
money and ran errands for Absolutely, provided you and commitme nt. It 's possible
. M01HER'S DAY her. At the time. she to ld me your wife make up your that he simply doesn't like to
she had n't bee n in love with minds that . you really 11e'ed wear jewelry. 'Not all married
DELIVERY
me since the birth of our eac h other· and are willinl! to men wear wedding rings. and
work out yo ur problem; in not all men who· wear them
daughter. Now I fee l used.
A special Mother's Day deliv·
During our sepa ration. I marriage cotmseling . Both of are f;tithful husbands. If I
ery was made to Loretta
made sure our daugh ter &lt;.:ailed you ~ave you r work c ut out we re you, I' d li~ht e n up .
Holsinger by her ryral route
C hanelle's paren ts every · !'or yo u. You must explore
Dear Abby ts writte11 by
carrier.- Peggy Hill , left, of the night. We spent holidays with whar drove you apart in the Abigail Vall Burell, also
Racine Post Office. Holsinger them while Chane lle work ed. lirst place and fix it. Do not kttoW/1 as Jea/11/e Pltil/ips.
won some spring flower
Instead of thanking.me for it , hlame your parents for their a11d was fou11ded by It er
stam ps and a flower basket
they insist that I drove their attitude, or your in~ laws for motlt er, Pauline Pltillips.
when her na me was drawn
daughter into the arm s of . reacting to what they were Write
Dear Abby
at
from registrations at the
another man . To make things to ld du rin g you r separation . www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Racine Post Office.
worse, my parents refu se to If you and Chane lie make it Box 69440, UJS A11ge/es, CA
accept Chane lie back into the d ea r that noth ing will come '90069.
. Submitted photo

events

Birthdays

t

an.

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Holzer cancer center donates to Meigs County Relay for Life
The Holzer Center for Cancer
Care recen tly made a ilona~
tion as a corporate sponsor
to the Me igs County Re lay for
Life that wilt be held May 13
and 14 at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. Here Steve ·
Beha, corporate sponsor
chair fo r the ·Meigs County
Relay for Life, accepts a
check from Ken Moore, exec·
utive director of the Hol zer
Center for Cancer Care. The
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care. a joi nt effort between
Holzer Medical Center an d
Hol zer Clinic, is located at
170 Jackson Pike. next to
Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis. The Center
opened for patients on March
21 offering radiation and
medical oncology, in add ition
to a number of speciat.fea,
tures incl uding a Cancer
Resource Center. Navigator
and Appearance Center for
the American Cancer Soc1ety.

1

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'
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Birth announced

Serving you since 1946 with
Quality Prescription Service ·
at Competitive Prices.
We Honor Most Third Party
Prescription Plans
OPEN Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Saturday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Sunday - Closed

:The President's ·Challenge prepares
Meigs students for Relay For Life

·I

r
l

l

l
f

f

Submitted photo

The French Colo ny Chorus rec ently atte nded the Sweet Adelines Region 4 ·s annual chorus and
'. quartet competition April 8-10 in Covington. Ky. Back row ; Dorothy Musgrove, Mary Madsen,.
Marti Edelmann . Director Susan Russel l. Suzy Parker. Judy Li nder; front row: Amy Sprague.
Donna Patnck. Bev Alberch1mik1 , Li nda La ne. and Na n Heiskell. Also attending but not in the
photo were Toni Ford . linda Ha ll and Sue Priest.

----• --

STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDA ILYSENTI NEL.COM
.POMER OY Recent
·.= studies have found that stu~
: dents who engag~ in regular
physical ac tivity demonstrate
an increase in concentra!lon
:and improved test scores in
:math, reading and writing.
: For thi s reason, students
· :oonna Wolf's and Kath y
:: Sargent's math classes at
: Meigs High School are par~
· ticipating in The President's
:challenge Physical Activity
: Program ..
• The Presidential Physical
· : Fitness Program began in
. · I966 and encourages as well
as promotes · healthy and
active lifestyles among young
:people. Dennis Eichin&amp;er,
· principal at Metgs Htgh
:school (a former physical
· : education teacher) recently
· explained the · benefits of
physical exercise on 'both the
body and the mind to students.
: After the . math students
: received permission from
; their parents, the school's
·nursing students, under .•the
:supervision of instructor
Jackie Newsome, checked
the blood pressure and rest~
· ing heart rate of each student
:before any walking . took
:place.
• Each student received a
:participant T·shirt and was
· given a pedometet to wear at
school and at home . Students
·are keeping a Jog ·of their
: progress on the computer as
they try to earn the

•

JACKSON -· Allison and
Greg Norris of ·Jackson
announce tl.1e birth of a
daugh rer. Regon Sue-A·nn.
born April 1.1 at Holzer
Medical Center. She weighed
6 pounds, 6 ounr.:es.
Maternal grand/)u rents are
Beverly and A Illy Fetty of
Pomeroy. and p·at!.!rnal gr4!11d parenls are Charles _ Norris.
Newark. and the late 'Con nie
Parsons. Crooksv ille .

Regon Sue-Ann Norris

Submitted .photo

attends competition

12, 2005 '

Presidential Active Lifestyle
Award (PALA) by walking a
minimum of I 0,000 steps per
day for six weeks. Students
also rece ived a "Get Fit "
booklet, wi.th motivational
tips and suggestion s for per·
so nal fitne~s. to read during
"Right to Read and Do Math
Week."
These studen ts will also
have th e opportunity to represent Meigs High School at
the Relay for Life event on
Submitted photo
May 13·14 , involving the Meigs High Schoo l nursing students take the blood pressu'res
students iri the figh t agains t -a nd resting heart rates of their fel low students who. are par~
caricer as well as commun ity ticipating in the Presidential Physical Fitness Program and the
sCrvice.
American Cancer Society's Re lay for Life.

.

'.

VIRGINIA JOBS FOUNDATION

BINGO!

CADIA COUNTRY FAI
SaturdaY: May 14, 2005 from 1-4 PM

FUN 'FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY!

J:RIDAY 1~HJ.J Will B~ ~QM[QtJ~ '~
-LUCKY DAY·
'

·

Petting Zoo,
Carnival Games with Prizes.
Pony Rides 1:30- 3:00PM
, Kiddie· Tractor Pull 2:00 PM
Making Homemade Ice Cream 12:30-2:00 PM
· ·
Jarvis Family Sing 1:00~2:00 PM
Rocky Mountain Bluegrass 2:30-3:30PM

Be one of the 1st SO pl11yets fot 11
I='Me Chllnce
to win II ..s2· TV!!
.

~PERFECT BINGO PROGRESSIVE ·
· Be the 1st to hit a BINGO in 4#'s and
. win an additional

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lThis

740-667-1156

i:, a Pru~rcs~ivc Game . The L'O!! I i&lt;.. $1 to h1..· ~.·ll g •bk.

If ow bjt 1hr; dqm mgnry

For More Information Contact:
Kathy MCDaniel
. Arcadia Nursing Center
·
-Coolville, OH·

$500 .

124 HIGHLAND AVE.

wj ll

h,· j!d'kt! tp Jb,· I -\CD PC1T 1 l

PT PLEASANT, WV

(Old Carolina Lumber Build 1ng Across from CSX)

..

675-3877 •

�•
'

NON

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Co•ngress shall make 110 law respecti11g an
establishment ~f religiou, or prohibiting tlze
f-ree exercise tlrereo}i or abridging tlte freedom
. ~f speech, or of the press; or tlte riglzt of tl1e
pe.ople peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tire Gor&gt;cr11me11t Jor a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

CFIDS.
·Bringing awareness

I

Dear Editor:
May 12 " ln tcrnaiiUIIal enos Awareness Day anu as a
local re"dent atlcc ted by thiS serious. yet misunderstood dtsease. I am ask111g you to he lp ratse aware ness about 11
Follow ntg "a descnpllon or the debthtattng disease, CFIDS ,
whtch torced me to testgn an acttve pasto rale and dtrector or
communll)' mtntstry in Vtnton County Ohio 111 1994. Thts is
one of the in\l"b le. dUIO tmmune illnesses, whtch cosl mdtviduals and out communtt ie:-, many lost hours of work' and service.
Th ts is a teal til ness often htdden in misdi agnosis.
In our Appalachtan ate a of Oh10 I know of prufess tonals
and l ahorrr~ whose cont ri but iO ns have been lost to our co mmumt ics ami whose li ves have been devastated by CFIDS.
Help us edu cate the publi c to this real di sease.
·
C hrome fall gue and immune dysfl,mctton syndrome
(CF IDS. abo know n ,\s chrome fatigue sy ndtome or CFS)
affects at least 800.000 American adults and teens, yet few
people undetsland lis serious and long-lasting effects.
CFIDS is char.oclettzed by severe exhaustion, di sabling
problem s with memory and' co ncentration, widespread muscle
and jmnl pain and pciS istenl llu-like sy mptoms. Research has
documented defects 111 the brain and many body systems. but
we sti ll don't know w h&lt;~l causes 11 or how to effectively treat it.
Accordtng to researc h from the Centers for Dtsease Control
and Prevenuon. CFIDS " as disdbltng as chronic obstructive
pulmonary dtsease and rheumato id arthritis. Each year 11 costs
our economy $9. 1 btllton roughly the eqmvalent of Wai-Mart's
annual prolns 111 lost produ cti vlly alone. Medtcal expenses and
di sabtltty payme nts further Increase the cost to our nal!on .
Here' s how you can he lp. Researchers have found that80%
of people " ho have lh ts de biitlaling condition don ' t ha'e a
dtagnos i:-. 01 ad equc~ t e L\tre.
Health c~rc ptmide" ,uen't skill ~ d al diagnosing it. Your
coverage of the CFIDS tss ue will provide credtble mformalton to the pu bhc .mtl the hea lth care community that may
enable peuRk to get the help they need. '
Plea&gt;e l'tsll lllljl'//11 "w cl tds org/profre sources/media-professton.ds asp to ttnd sto ry ideas, fact sheets and other
resources. The CFIDS Assoc1alton of Amenca IS the nation's
largest org.tnli.J iton dedicated to co nquering CFIDS, and they
can he lp put ~ou iu to uch w11h experts and pattents who will
spedk on the record
Th,mk you for helpmg build understandmg about this devastati ng condtltonlhat has such a profound 1mpac1 on the indivt du al and a stglllftca nt tmpacl on our commumly.
Rev. Kay Pucliell
Limgs''ille

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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be less than 300 words. All leTters are subject to
ediTi11 g and must be signed and include address
and Telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing i5Sun. not personalities.
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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patd at Pomeroy

Our main number Is
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Department extensions are:

News
Edttor: Charlene Hoe lltch Ext 12
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Postmaster: Send address corrections
to The Datly Senltnel, t 11 Court Street ,
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Pagei\4.
Thursday, May 12,

Thursday, May 12,

2005

Fortas fotces had only ~5
the ~l·orpton ~tnJ th e r, og )
votes. and ht s nominattun
The lrog otters the scorpwn
'"" pro mptl y wtt hdr•mn
.t ride .1tro" the pond
H o\\-eyer. tt's also tru e
MuJway the s..:orp1 un stiug:-.
thai in all of American htsthe frog In one ver~wn of
tnry. no Supreme Court
Morton
nominal!on had ever bee n
the story. '" they 're both
Kondracke ltltbustered belore.
drowmng the ~corp10n
exp lam s.
"That's
th e
The Forlas case shou ld
show bot h parl tes why the
Mtddle L"t ..
But ng ht II OW. s,tdly.' the
ltltbuster should be availstory m.ty apply to the thdl JUdtci.tl nommall o ns ab le 111 ex trao rdin.trv cases.
' should be approved or di s- Fortas had fla gra ntl y vio latUntied States Se11a1e.
It cooler he.1ds don ' t pre- .tppruved by st mple maJori- ed the pnnctp le of se paraty vote. out!&lt;tw ing the fili - tion of power! by se rving as
Vdtl soon. the Sen,tte ts
a vtrt u.tl White House staff
going tu Lh~mge t~tdH.: d ll y. buster.
The ploy " " nuclear" 1n e mbe r
gwi ng ur it s 200- yem tradt·
for
Pte stdenl
because
minm
it
y
Lyndon Johnson and lcaktion of extenJ ed debate and
mtnom y nght- to become De mocrats vow to bn ng mg the contents of confi just a self-tmportanl copy o l Sepate busme ss to a vtrtual dential Supreme Coun
the
Hm"c
of halt 111 retaliation. Thts may deliberat ions to him .
not be much of a lo&gt;S tn' lhe
II also deve loped that
Represent.oltves
the
Democrats
short
run
Fortas was having hts cou rt
For now. tt see ms al mo!'i t
inevi table .
Sen,1te have no pos111ve age nd a for salary suppleme nted 'by speRc publt ca n leauets. w ho the country nght now - but c tal interests, which ulli call themselves "conserv.t- the y will · hiive played then m&lt;Itely led to his resignatt ve." are abou t 10 ab,mdon part 111 de stroYing Senate tiOn
conservatts m 111 the 11 ad t- tra dtii OIIS that currently proBut tn 1968. Democrats
had 62 votes m the Senate.
1 timlal
sense that J!'i, tec t them.
Democrat~ are as much
Rep ubli ca ns and Democrats
res pec t tor the past and ca usco rpt ons of the are c urre ntly
de batin g
llon 111 the lace ot tmpul se the
- to ensure vtctones f01 Senate's tmpendtn g tr,tgedy whether Fortas dtd or dtdn't
h.tve th e suppmt of a majOJthctr team
'" are Republican s.
By lakmg the easy way ity of' Senators at the lime of
Democrat s have been
usmg the ltltb ustcr - the out and conve rtmg a last- the ftltbust er. rt do esn ' t
minonty
refuge · that re&gt;o rt nts lru men l tnto a rou - matter. If the Re publicans·
requires a supe r-m.1jonty llne devtce to block Bu sh's " nuclear optton'' goes into
for Se nat e actta n to no minees , Democrat s ha ve etfecl. a "Forlas" in the
block Pres tde nt Bu sh' s provokep the "n ucl ear" future ltkely wtll be cona ppea l s~co u11 nomtnce s. So res ponse.
fmn ed.
And , Democ rdl s ha ve the
So, what's to he don e to
now,
e mploymg
the
" nuclear
. op tt o n." most 10 lose If th e filibu ster preve nt tht s~ There are two
Republicans are pre pat ing e nds. the Senate will op tions. The less desirable,
become like the Hou se. is that Frisl can't win the
In stamp out the fii ib ust et
where
the majm it y rul es support of 49 fellow
Re publtc,\lls say th ey
wtll c han ge Senate rul es more or less absolutely and Republicans - plus Vice
o nly in re gat d to JUdi c ttll the maJonty part y ndes Preside nt Cheney as the lienummees, not leg islatt on, roughshod over the minon - breaker - and the "nuclear
op tion" fatl s.
but. as so me conservati ve ty.
Senate
Democrats
should
Democrats an'd allted libc ntics of the move are
warning . it wtll be onl y a look at the pathettc plight of eral group s fi g ure. ri gh t
matte r of lime until 'th e thetr Hou se colleagues now, that th ey have the supJUdtctal preceden t ge ts across Capi to l Hill to sec port of three of the six
extended across the board. what the future hold s. Republicans they need to
Senate Majority Leader (Republicans, too, should block nuclear war - Sen s.
McC am
(Anz.),
Btll Fnsl. R-Tenn. ha s co nsidet: Someday, thi s John
to
us
.)
could
happen
Olympia
Snowe
(Maine)
already goite so far as 10
De mocrats can argue, and Lincoln Chafee (R 1. ).
assert - contrary 10 all ht slory - that Senate rule» do n ghtly enough , that ftliAdditionally, Sen. Chuck
not carry over from one busters of judicial nominees Hage l (Neb) recently made
Co ngress to ano the r and are not unprecede nted In some anll-nuclear noi ses in
that new ones may be estab- 1968. the nomination of New Hampshire. So the libltshed by Simple nutjnri ty Supreme Court Justice Abe entls are lookmg at other
Farias In be chief justice moderate Republtcans and
rule
And
so
under th e deftnitely was blocked by a " in stJtUt!Onaltsts'' for the
"n uc lea r option,'' he 1s ftlibuster.
remaining votes - Sens.
In
those
days,
it
look
67
about to change Se nate .
Susan Collms (Maine).
votes (later, the rule was Arle n Specter (Pa.), John
rul es by simple majonl y not two-thirds, ~s curre nt changed to 60) to mvoke · Warne r (Va.), Dick Lugar
rul es dtctate - to establi sh cloture and end debate . Pro- (Ind .), Mtke DeWine (Ohto)

and John Sununu (N. H.).
' Defeat 1s the less-des irable option because it will
enco urage De mocrats to
conltnuc resorting to the lilibu&lt;ter 10 defe•l nonunalton s. ra ther than makm g
th e effort to prove to a
maJority that any give n
nominee truly is "extreme."
The bener way lu avo id '
nuclear war ts a peace
ag reeme nt , tn wri ltng .
Reportedly,
Senate
M i nortty Leader Harry
Re id. 0-Nev., has floated an
agreeme nt. not in writing, to
allow votes on so~ of the
seven Bush nomtnees currently under filibu ster threat
111 return for a nuclear standdow n.
But 1h1 s offer defeats the
very notion that all of the
th rea tened nominees are ·
"ex Ire me." Indeed, the
De mocrats already have filtbus lered so me nomineesMig uel Estrada and Charles
Pi ckering in the 108th
Co ngress- who were in no
way extreme.
The deal should be this:
De mocrats will permit upor-down votes on all of
Bush's current nommees tn
return lor a wrmen agreement from Fristlhal first, all
JUdt ctal no mmees wtll be
brought to the floor for
debate',
answering
the
Democratic complaint that
President Bill Clin!On's
nominees were routinely
bullied up in the Judiciary
Commtllee .
And seco nd, the GOP
will abide by the c urrent
Senate rul e that the rules
ca n be changed o nl y by
two -lhtrds vote and the tradtlton thai Senate rules
carry over from one
Congress to another. And
third, that the filibuster
should be preserved as a
nunority optton in "extraordinary circumstances."
II would be ideal if GOP
and Democratic leaders
reached a pact. But it could
be imposed, too, by "i nstilutionahsls" of both parties
Indeed, there are rumors of
such a deal to deprive the
scorpion of its sling.
(Marron Kondracke ts
executi ve editor of Roll
Call, the new;paper of
Caprtol Hill.)

.

Gene
Lyons

nuclear option currently
be mg pu shed by Senate
Majortt y Leader Btll Frist ,
R-Te nri. , for killing the fili bu ster, cutting off debate in
the U.S . Senate by a simple
maJ ortt y vote, ab+tndontng
200 years' of tradition for
the purpose of converting
the federal J udtciary mto an
arm of the Republican
Party and gomg a lon g way
toward turning the. preside nt into a kmg . ·
In a tone of sweet reasonableness, Bush allowed as
how "for the sake of fair ness." the good folk s he' d
nominated dese rved nothing more or less than an
" up-or-down vote on the
tloor of the Senate."
He neglected to mention
that since · th e Supreme
Court gave him th e presidency in a parti san 5-4 vote
in 2000. the Senate has
confirmed more than 95
percent (205 of 2 15) of the
judges he has nominated,
and that !here's no precedent in American history
and nolhmg in the U.S.
Consmution that says the
rest deserve an up-or-down
vole. Republicans prevented 60 of Prestdent Bill
~ lmton 's JUdicial nomi nations from gelling a vote
between 1995 and 2000
with
no
talk
from
Democ rats of a ''culture
war" or a co nstttuttonal criSIS

,

Here's what Article 2 of
the U.S. Constitution says

about the president's power
to make appointments. " He
shall have Power, by and
with the Advice and
Conse nt of the Senate, to
make Treattes, provided
two thirds of the Senators
present concur; and he
shall no mmate, and by and
wtlh the Advice and
Con sent of the Senate ,
shall appoint Ambassadors,
other · pubhc Mmi sters and
Consuls , Judges of the
Supreme Court" etc.
Notice that there 's not a
syllable implying a simple
maj o rity
vole.
That 's
becau se · the enltre document was carefully crafted
to prevent what Jame s
Madiso n called "factions"
from. se izing control of the
country by winmng o ne
election .
'' A religious sect," he
warned m Federah&amp;t No.
10, "may degenerate mto a
political fac tion " He might
ha ve bee n talking about
"Focus o n the Family," the
Famtly Re search Council
and the rest of these hoteyed zea lots who mtstake
their own opmions for the
voice of God.
'The reason we have three
separate branches of government a nd two houses of
Congress is to prevent narrow l)lajorities from tramplin g everybody e lse's
rights. The judiciary isn 'I
supposed to be subordinate
to the president and hts
·party but mdependent of
them.
"This point 1s of speetal
importance," writes constituti onal
scholar
Cass
Sunstein, "in light of the
fact' that many of the
co urt 's decisions resolve
conflicts between Congress
and the president. A presidential monopoly on the
appoi ntment ,of Supreme

.

Court JUstices thus threatens 10 unsettle the constitutional plan of checks a,pd
balances ."
Moreover, the U.S . electorate remains very closely
divided. While Bush eked
out a close win in the 2004
election, 45 Democratic
senators
~ hosen
over
revolving six -year terms
represent more Americans
than their Republican colleague s.
Seizing a narrow advantage now could eventually
have explosive repercus sions. Nol)ody understands
that more clearly than AI
Gore, who, yielding to a
badly reasoned Supreme
Court decision in 2000,
gave up hi s presidential
hopes m deference to the
rule of law.
" I can tell you without
any doubt whatsoever,"
Gore emphastzed · in a
speech last week, "that if
the justices who formed the
majonty tn Bu sh v. Gore
had not only all been nominated to the court by a
Re publican president, but
had also bee n confirmed by
on ly Republi can senators
in
party- hoe
votes,
America would not have
accepted that co urt 's deciSIOn ."

The so-called nuclear
option has nothing to do
with conservatism; it's radical utopianism in a religious disguise .
(Arkansas
DemocratGazette columnist Gene
L.yons is a national magazine award winner and coauthor of " The Hunting of
the Presidenr-" (St. Martin 's
Press, 2000). You can email Lyons at genelyons]@ sbcglobal.net.)

The Dail y SL·ntincl • Page As

Holzer Medical Center observes Hospital Week May 8-14

GAL LIPOLI S - Hospttal &gt;,' p.trent corporallon ol Holzer
dLfO..,~ th~ United State~ unite
Meutcal Cemcr. and Holz'er
fur on e wn:k 111 May to L'ele- ChnK' break grou nd for the
hii.tlc hL'althcarc and !I s Ho lzct Cemer for Cance t
PROCTORVILLF. - Ruby Po ll ts ,Dye. 77. of Prnclutvil lc irlipdct oncon 1munttJe\.
Care The Ce nter opens lor
"ent lube wtlh the Lord on Tuesday, May 10. "005.
"A C'alltnu to C.tre" IS the patients on March :2 1. :2U05.
Gravest de &gt;ervtce wtl l be conducted
noon on Thut , d.t)
May 1". 2005 at Rome Cemetery. Proctorvtlk. Vdth the Re1 . theme 1'01 the 200-1 N.llional Ken Moore ts n.omed
Hospna l Wee k cclebrallon, Exec u1i 1e Dtrec tor. while
'
Eddte Salmons olt tc iating.
She w," born No\ e mher 25; 1927 111 P1ke County. Ky. tunntng M.ty 8- 1-1. Local ly, James Unge rl ~ t der. MD, is
Hol1cr
Mcdtcal Center named Medtcal DtrectOJ Dr.
dau~h l e r ot the late Anthony and An na Gu llolom Pol it&gt;. In
ob-:crvc-..
t hi ~ s pec1al week
Ungerletder was prevtously'
addtiJOn to her parents. she w.os precedt;d m death by he r husvearlv
associated wtth the James
band Benl'tmm Dye 111 I'll) l ,md brothers Jerry anu Joe Poll ts
·
"
He&lt;~hh
care
h.ts
•J person.tl
Cancer Ce nter at The Ohio
Ruby wa.s a member 01 Ftrsl Mtsstonary Bupttsl Ch urc h tn
and
very
powe
rfu
l
role
111
the
State Un tvcr&lt;il y in Columbus.
Kenovd. 'W Va She 1 ~ surv tved by two daughter:-; aw.J ~on ~- m­
• HCHS and Ho lzer Cltmc
law Mary C Dye Burcham and husband Scoll of Proctorvtl le. li ves of eve ry member of our
co
mmunllv,"
sa1
d
J
nn
work
10 expand and enh ance
and The tes.o Morgan .md husband Larry ot Mtdd lepon : gtandPhtlltppe.
Pres
ident
of
Hol
zer
and equipment fm
serv
ices
sons Ben Crager. Adam Bu t cham. and Scull Motgan ; one .
Medtc.1
1
Center.
"Nauonal
t he Holzer Card imasc ul at
gra nddau ghtet Scottiann McLain and her hu sband Patnck.
Hos
ptt.tl
Week
gtves
us
an
Institute. In early 2005, two
two great gt anuda ught ers Brou~lynn and Hanna McLam. one
oppo
nu
nny
to
connec
t
with
new cdrdi ac ~ urgeons, RaJ
brothe r Rudy Pollts and wi le o of Stone. Ky.; and seve ral
our
empl
oyees
a
nd
commu
niGulati,
MD. ,and Mtchae't
meces and nephew s. VIS itat ion Will be held one hour bclore
se rvtce at Hall FLmetal Hume 111 Proc torvi lle. Condolences" ty in a pos1 tive environ ment Swanson. DO. are htred
• Anodyne Neu ropathy
may
be . e&lt;pre &gt;Sed
to
the
lam il v
at .tnd ce lebrate the great thtngs
happen
ing
111
hea
hhcare
and
Ca
re Ce nter program ts
ww".ltmeforme m01y com/b,III
·
.tl Hol zer Medical Center."
offe red through the Holzer
Launched in 1921, Nation al Medtcal Therapy Center to
Hosptlal Week has grown into asst sl diabeltc patients wtth
the nail on\ largest hcahhcare fee t se nsation.
LANGSVILLE - Jon Michae l Ft ee mail, 49, of Langsville, event. Dunng the week, AHA
• Annou nced the avmlabtlldted Tuesday May 10, at IS restde nce foll owing an extended members promote communi- ty of the Posuron Emissio n
illness.
·
tv :nvareness of health care Tomography (PET) scanner
B ~n\ Apnl ll. 1956 in Galhpoh s the son of Rtchard K. and
programs and recognize the that allow s ph ystc1ans to
Alice M Garlesky Freeman .or Pomerov. He worked tor AEP contnbut10ns of healthcare dtagnose and determme the
for 26 years and was a nverboat ptlot.' He was a membe r of workers.
extent of vartous cancers and
Sacred Hearl Catholi c Church 111 Pomeroy dnd .1 uraduate ol
Holzer
Medtcal
Center
Witneurolog1ca l disorders. The
Meigs Htgh School
~
nessed a very exc tting and pro- Hospttal ts the lirst in the
Besides hts parents he ts surv ived by hts Ftance Shtrley
ducti ve ye,tr in 2004. Among area to prov ide thi s cunmgBuckner, of Langsville; brother, Dr. Joseph Freeman, of
some ot the highlights were:.
edge technol ogy.
South Bloomualc. and severalunls, uncles and couSins
•
Hol
zet
Consolidated
• American Cancer Society
Several Au nts Uncles and Co usins
Health Systems (HCHS ), the (ACS)
places
Cancer
A Memonal Ma" wtll be held Saturday at Sacred Heart
Cat holt c Church in Pome10y. Rev Father Waller Hetnz w1ll
and receivi ng stolen property,
ofli ciate. FISher Funeral Home in Po1neroy is in charge of
a fourth-degree felony, stemarrangements.
min g from l~e April 18 burglat'y
at the Chapman resifrom Page A1
dence in Pomeroy
.
Marcum.
18 .
• Eddie
Neville is charged with kidMtddleport
,
on
charges
of
nnpptn g, abductio n, feloniou &gt;.; as~au\1 and a seco nd~ breakmg and entering. a fe lony
deg ree felony assault charge. of the ftfth degree, recetvmg
stolen property, a tifih-degree
Also indicted wete:
• · Martin A. P1erce , 44 , fel ony, and safecracking, a
VINTON - Ronald Lee Twyman. 56, of Vtnton ." Ew10g1on
Commu nity. passed away Mo nday, May 9 at James Cancer Rotl and. on two counts of fourth-degree felon y. He ts
Ce nter at the Ohio Stale Umversit y Med tcal Center 10 grand thett. fourth cdeg ree accused of breakmg mlo
Recycling
in
re lo nt es, two counts ol Manley's
Columbus
Middleport,
and
slcalmg
tlems,
Funeral se rvices will be held al II a.m Fnday at the Vmton rece ivi ng stole n property.
Baptist Church, 11818 State Rout e 160. 10 Vinton , wtlh Rev. also fourth -degree lelonies. includutg a safe am;l credtl card
• Ltsa Waugh, 41, of
David Stulley officiating . Senices are under the C&lt;tre of an d th ree co unts of tampering
wtlh drugs,
speciftcally Pomeroy, on charges of forgery
McCoy-Moore Funeraf Home, in Vinton and G&lt;~lipolts
Klonapin, Zoloft and Buspar, and receiving stolen propeny,
Burial will follow in the Vinton Memori al Park .
alleging she forged the name
Friends may call at the Vinton BaptiSt Church betwee 2.30- all third-degree felontes.
Pterce allegedly stolen a on a stolen check. The counts
5 p.m. and 7-9 p.nr. Thursday.
In lteu ot t1 o1~ers, mem01 ial gtlts ma y be sent to the tracto r and .camper. and the are ftfth-degree felomes
• Kelly J. Daniels, 42. of
Ewmgton Church of Chnsl in Chnstian Umon, c/o Mary tlems .tnd drugs· were discove red on a ro utine call to the Middleport, on a charge of fatl Tyler. 155'!2 State Route 160. m Vmto n. Ohio 45686.
Condolences may be e- ma1led to mccoymoo re(glcharter. ncl Pterce reSidence to March. At ure of a sex offender to provtde
that tnne, deputies dtscov- nollce of restdence address
or on the Web at www.timeformemory com/mm
e red martJUatra planls and change, a fourth-degree lelony.
• Way lo n Spurlock, 19,
prescription drugs apparently
packaged for tll ega l sale, Huntmgion, W. Va, on a
charge of failure to appear in
Beegle reported at the lime .
, GALLIPOLIS - Walter T Rolhns, 85, Galltpohs. dted
• Ronald
K ~yes,
41, court on recognizance
Monday, May 9, 2005 , in the Holze r Medical Center. He was Pomeroy, on charges of burNone of those indi cted
born in Letart, W.Va.
glary, a second-degree felony, have appeared m court.
Funeral services will be at I p.m , Thursday May 12 at the
Cremee ns Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. wt rh Re v. Alfted Holley
officiating Bunal wtll be in . the Ohio Valley Memory
asked her (as Blennerhassclt)
Gardens. Friends may call aflet II a.m. on Thursday at the
how a peal bog was fann ed
Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
The peat bog queslton was in
regards 10 Ble nnerhassett's
from PageA1
Jmsband Harman's lnsh roots.
While staytng m the characConner serves as a wnter-inreSJdencc for the Ohio Arts ter of Margaret Blennerhassett
Counctl and West Virgmta Arts she said she simpl y respondCommi ssion. She has partici- ed. "Oh my husband womes
pated 111 Ohio Chautauqua for about those thmgs."
After the ht story lesson
POMEROY - AM VETS Post 733 of Pomeroy meets twtce the past four years.
Conner
stepped o ut of charWhen asked if she's ever
monthly. 7 p.m. on the second Tuesday of eac h month at the
VFW Post 9052, and at noon on th e last Friday of each month been stumped by a questtpn acter a,nd addressed the stufor the ch,araclers she portrays dents as herself, renunding
at the Meigs County Annex. behtnd Holzer Meigs Clinic.
Dave Barker. a veterans' . sen ices officer from the V.A (bes tdes Blennerhasseu and them of the importance of
Medical Center in Chtllicothe auends the Pomeroy meellng Fttzgerald she also portrays history and the ltving htslory
and takes claims mformation from II a. m. to noon on a ftrsl- poet Emily Dickmso n) she that wtll come alive at
come, lirst-served basts. All veterans are welcome regardless · satd once an audtence member Chautauqua thts summer.
of whether they are AMVETS members
The post recently purchased two used concessions lratlers to
• hiring Tony Dugan as a
help ratse funds fo r the .Post 111 its efforts to assist veterans.
substitute teacher for the
and is now seekmg donaltons to defray the cost and retire a
remainder of this schdol year;
loan balance of $2,328 50. The loan is due at the end of May.
. • approving textbooks as
from PageA1
Do naltons may be se nt to AMVETS, Post 233, Tuppers
recommended by the AthensPlams. Ohto 45783 . Anyone wit h questions may call (304)
Meig s Educational Servtce
remamder of the school years;
275-4522 or 667-3097 .
Ce nter and Meigs Local
• approv tng the hst of the teac he~ s;
2005
MHS
grauualing
• and approving parent volsemors as recommended by unteer/chaperones for primary· school field trips
POMEROY - The name of the grandmother of Private Dennis Eichinger, pnncipal;
•
conlinutng
membership
in
Attendmg the meeting were
Til]1olhy Edward Voss who graduated from trammg wtth the
the
.
Oh10
High
School
Buckley, Mark Rhonemus,
U S. Army in March was mcorrectly listed in the story. Her
Athlettc
Assoc1a11on
for
next
treasurer,
and Board members,
correct name is Margaret Eskew of Pomeroy. His grandfather
year
for
both
Meigs
High
and
Roger
Abbot~
Scott Walton,
IS Charles Faulkner '?f Middleport
Ron Logan, and Victor Young.
Metgs Mtddle Schools.

Ruby Pollis Dye

I"

,

Jon Michael Freeman

Indicted

Deaths

Ronald Lee 1\Nyman

Walter T. Rollins

Southern

Don't ~e fooled by the good
cop
.
Ve ry shrewdl y, Presi de nt
Bush beat a tacltcal retreat
on the role of religton 111
politi cs dunn g hi s re cent
Whtle 1-I&lt;il use press co nference.
Speaktng soo n after
"Justice Sunday," a closedcircun teleca st tn whtch
certain ot the Rep ublic a n
Party's more fe rvtd theolog tan s ·
decreed
thai
Democrats had show n th e ir
enmity to "people of fatth"
by rej ec tin g a handful of
hts JUdt ctal nominees, Bu sh
was ask,ed tf that stru c k
him as an appropriate characterization
After a bit of tap-dancmg
- the prestdent said he
didn ' t agree with callin g
Democrat s anu-God. but
wouldn't call It Inappro pri ate, ei th!'!r - Bu sh eventually e mitted a bit of
bedrock Americani sm.
" I thmk faith ts a person- ·
al issue ," he satd . "And I
take g reat stre ngth from my
fa ith . But I don ' t condemn
somebody tn the polittcal
process because they may
not agree with me on religio n. The great lhmg ~ bout
America ts that you shou ld
be allowed to wo1ship a ny'
way you want. Aitd if you
choose nul to worship,
you ' re equally as patrioti c
as somebody who doe s
worship. And if you choose
Ia wors hip, you're equally
Ameri ca n 1f you ' re a
Christian, a Jew, a Muslim .
And that' s the wonderfu l
lhmg about our cou ntry and
that 's the way . 11 should
be ."
t
Do nut be deceived . In
effect , Bush IS playing
"good cop" , to Ja mes
Dobson · and
Charles
Colson and the rest of his
nght-w mg fundamen talis t
a ll ies' "bad cop.'' What' s at
stake here ts the so-ca lled

www .mydailysentinel.coni

Obituaries

Both parties should halt bifore blowing up Senate traditions
Rcmcm bc1 thl: stm y .tbout

2005

Local Briefs

AMVETS meet

Holzer Hospital

Resource Cen ter (CRC) fn r
Gallia County 111 the Hospn.tl
The C RC ts moveJ Ill the
Holze r Ce nter fot C11tccr C:11e
m Marc h 2005 The ACS also
assigns ,, Patien t N,l\ l!_!dtor t~)
Gallipoli s .md G,tl lta Coul) t)'
Ktm Pautler ts one ol only

.

• (i y ncc.:,tre 1 V'l pn&gt;ccdurc
lor Ull llat y

II KOiltlnen~.:e

111

wn tl1'e n maJc: d\ a!l.th!c
• 1-I C HS asststs the
Un1 vers1t} ol R1u Grande
Wtt h. the ncuttt)tl of .1 chagno:-. ti c mcdtca\ :-.onogrdph y
{ U\t ii:iSOU IH.J ) ptogram
fourteen Ndvig,Jto rs in the
Holze t Mcdtc.o l Cent ct is
Stale of Ohio She is avai l.tble ex nteu .obout the opportunt 10 ass1st and help ··navtuatr "
ltes 2005 ptbe nls dnd looks
patietvs and thetr' t.ur\thes lor\\ .t id to upg t\idlllg .tn LI
through the cancer ex penence. eniM ncing pr~)g ra m-., tiMt lue
• Amc11c.tn Cancel Society curren tl y olk ted
and Hol zer Medical Ce nl ct·
For more 1n torm at1on
beg in spom:onn g monthly abou t the setv tccs Ho lzer
Cancer Support Groups
Melhcal Cen ter pro vides to
• Brachyther.tpy procedure the co mmun tty. please call
fot prostate . ca nce l nrnue .(740) -1-+fl-5000. or log onto
available.
wWw.holze r t1 rg

The Dairy Barn offers
summer art camp
ATHENS - The Datry
Barn Art ~ Center will agdJ!l
this yea t ofler stx weeks of
exc ite ment c~ nd fu n dt -., um·
mer art ca mp .
Children &lt;lges 6 10 12 wil l
enJOY cre.1t1ng mulucul tural
art protects under the gutd·
ance ot ex pen enced an
instructors. Camp " oftet ed
the weeks of June 20-27, Jul y
11 - 18 , and August 8-15
Themes for thiS yea r's cam p
utclude Tnbe s. The PallertJS
ol Lt fe, An ctent Egypt,
Futunsm. Man y Cultu re s ol
Africa. Credti ve An ot
Puppetry, Dramatic Art of
Puppetry, Arts ol Japan, Papet
Art, Wt zarU Summer School,
Cu linary Arts and Art in the
Garden
Th e monung sessiO n ts
from 9 u m to 12 noon. the
afte rn oo n sesSion JS I to 4
p m. All day sess ion is 9
a.m . to 4 pIll . With a s4pC1·
vtsed lun ch &lt;1nd play lime
trom 12 10 I p.m. A ltght
snack will be provtded durin g both sess ion s. One hour

bdore an d .tltet c,un p c.on be
scheJuled lor S6 a n hour.
ChiiJrcn ovc 1 12 c&lt;~ n pdrtJcipatc an d ac t u-., d s -.J~Ian t s to
the you nger child re n lor half
the fee
The dc,tdlt nc 101' regtstratlotr and p.tymcnt to ensure
e111 ollment " June I Alter
June I rcgJSita\io ns will be
taken tf space is ._tVi.litJbJe
Thr fee ts $75 a " eek lm half
day sesston s, and ~ 150 a
week for lull day sessw ns A
dtscoun t " '"atl.tble lor
D,ury Barn membe rs. additional ses:-. tons afte1 two, and
to r add1ttona l children 111 the
same sc5' ton Call 7-10-5924981 for addt tiO ila l tnflll rnali on or to reg1s.ter.
For more informauon or 10
reg!Sier. restden ls m.ty cal l
s n-4n l
The Ohio Arts Counc il
hel ped fu nd thi s orgmmallon
with state ta x dull,u !'i to
e ncourage economic grovvth ,
educat iO nal excellence and
c ultu ral e nnchment lor all
Ohtoans

Keeping Meigs County informed

The Daily Sentinel
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Salisbury

Correction

For the Record
Dissolutions
POMEROY - Actions for dissolution of marriage have
been liled m Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Charles
F. Chancey and Melissa Chancey, Syracuse. Leroy Paul
He ndn x and Ao'lY M. Hendrix , Coolville. and Sandra Carrol l.
Long Bouom, and Benjamin D. Carroll. Portl and.

Divorce ·
POMEROY - An action for dtvorce has been ftled in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Vonda Kay Garnes,
Pomeroy, against Harry Delbert Garnes. Jr.. Pomeroy

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404 5th Street Racine, on

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Thursday, May 12, 2005

r

(

MEIGS GiRL SCOUT DIARY
PO~ lEROY

- Grrl Smut
c\ en" tm the munth of ~l.t!
and June ar~ .1:-. folh.''''·
• May 1-+. Troop I ~08 "til
be h,l\ th~ .t c,tr. \\,t sh ,11
McDonakl's tor thetr trip tn
Nr,tg,tr,t f'.tlls. N.Y Also on
Ma\· 1-+. there wi ll he ,1
Scicnc·~ Trv- rt Rrot ,,, the
Fel lo\\sh tp 'nl the Na;cre ne
Chutch lo t Bnm n•es ,111&lt;.1
bndullH! D.ll~lc,·. The ~''enl
willloc~rn ,11 I p m. For rnt or"rll:Illtlll._ c~mJ tu ~~~i,tt::r. ~.:on­
t,t.:t Slmk' CL&gt;2:1r .tt LJIJ1166X Tin-,t S,tlnpson and
LlllJ ~I Putm.ul .ue d1.unnen
• Spring Fltng. ~1:1\ 21. at
the ~1iddkpnrt Church ot
C'hnst's Famth Lrfe Center.
fct~tunn~ a t~Lk;nt ...;ho\\ fu1 dlt

a£e in'e ls ".dull and girl
a\\ards \\til he d"ll ibu ted
Troop 120X \\'til P"" tde
1elreshmenh to help wuh
thc1r trip ''' Ne" Yoll; rn
June
• June -+. O._Ji,Jes .md
Bro\\niCs "til en101 ,, 111p to
Duff's P:~rins 111 Rtlli,llld tor
the "G1anJp.t. D.rddy. ,md
Me" F"hlll~ Da\'. The cost ot
th e e' ent 1 ~ $6 · To regtster.
please Clllll.rct Shtrley Cogat
Also on June -+. 'A rt N the
P;uk" "Ill be held 10 ,1.111 to
-+ p m ut the Sytacuse
Gnmm unrt v Center. . Gtrls
wtll e.un th~tr AttistiC Crafts
Interest project patch. Gtrls
h;l\e" chnrce in c.tndle
mak111g. sn,tpbookmg. !lora!

'"II

de,Jg_n. workmg "'ith clay.
lllOI e lnfm malton i~
avatlablc by con tacting
J e rr~na Ebersb,tch dl 99277~ 7 The cost ol the event"
S 12. whtch covers the
expense of the uaft supplies.
patches. dn afternoon snack
,llld mote.
• The re~t&gt;tratton deadhne
for stun mer day camp ts May
15. Thts ye,u 's c,unp will be
held June 23 and 24 at
Syracuse Commumty Center.
There are lots of tun activities being planned. For more
mformat10n about camp,
please comact Dawna Arnold
at 992-2486.
Troop reports.
i.tlld

MEIGS BROWNIE
TROOP 1015
On April 2. Hannah Young .
Lauren Booth. and Katie
Gilkey anended the tea parry
and eatned their Manners
Try-!l .
.
On April 7. we worked on
Workmg 11 Out and He4\thy
Habits Try-tts with sel'eral girls
completing bo~1 lhts month
We had a cookte and bake
sale on Apnl 9 m Peoples
Bank. and the following
attended.
Shana Rou sh,
Morgan Rus sell. Katie Gt!key.
Savannah Abeshtre. Ttffany
Wtthrow. and Kelsey Hudson .
On Apnl
17. Jenny
Rtdeno~r ot Meigs Soil and
Water Converservation vistt- .
ed our troops ami had an
Earth and Arbor Day program. We worked on Worktng
it Out and played. Savannah
Abeshire was a guest.
On Apnl 23. we had a busy
day in Columbus desptte ti)e
rarnv and StlOW\ weather.
The ,firsl part of ihe day. we
enjoyed COS! We earned
our "Snence 111 Acuon" Trvit by experimenting and partictpattng 111 · the many
exh tb m !here In the afternoo n. "e \1 ent to Columbus
Zoo and \..·ent to the
Educauon Department and
earned our An11nals Try-tt

We made an11nal sounds. see what excttmg thmgs they
talked about an11nal move- will be doing during day
m~nts .•tnd pl&lt;!yed severa l
camp and the followtnt
We also had th e school year as Brownies.
!.rames
~hance 10 pet a ferret. legless
Our troop would lik e to
l11ard. and htssing cock- thank tJ1e Washburn Dairyette
ro,tche' We also meet Rust1c 111 Tuppers Plams for spanthe Owl. who we weren't sonng our troop. We would
able to pet. but our gutde · also lrke to thank all the other
talked about him.
leaders that have put on wonWe h,tve
The best part of our vts it of derful events.
the ZOO W.tS VISiltng "My enJoyed all thai we attended.
Hou'se" 11.herc we had.-49 find We would also like to thank
anima ls and insects &amp;cards our parents and grandpar~ nls .
111 il makc-bdievc home We Without them. some of us
were sad th,tt a lot of our wouldn't bel able to attend
member' "eren't able to go meetmgs and specmJ· eve ins.
Attcndmg the event were
Sabrina and Titfanv Withro~~..
POMEROY BROWNIE
Brll. Julie. Katte ·and Matt
TROOP 1271
Grlkey. Vada Johnson. Lauren
We have had a great momh.
Booth. Cassandra, Dannelle.
Ftrst. our girls wem to !he
and Olt VIii Davis. Jerrena and Brownie Datsy Tea and
.Hailey Ebersbach.
earned their Manners Trv-tt.
Our girls wem to emil for
EASTERN BROWNIE
the Browme Day Camp.
' TROOP 1316
They helped solve a crime by
The troop has been work- learning to capture fingermg on several Try-its. They pnnls. looked at items
.tre planning a trip to the clr- through
a
microscope,
cus in May
cracked a code and inve stlgmed possible culprils While
SOUTHERN BROWNIE
we were at COSI the gtrls
earned
their Science in
TROOP 1120
Action
Try-tt.
They worked
On Apnl 2. 16 girls attended the Tea Partv C\&lt;ent held at together 10 solve the crime. In
Syracuse Communtty Center. preparation for our tnp to
Gtrls had fun whrle earn.ing COSI, the gtrls earned their
their Manners Try-tt. They Travel Right Try-it
At our last meeting-_ the gtrls
had fun domg a pocketbook
earned
their Lets Pretend Trv scave nger hunt, havmg lea
il
while
we worked oti getting
and cookies. and learning
greetmgs from around t)le ready for the Talent Show.
world. while earning !heir The girls of troop 1271 are as
follows Alyson Dettwtller.
Manners Try-It
At the Apnl 4 meeting. 17 Devan Dugan. Mtranda
girls participated in tinishing Manley. Brehana Thompson,
the second half of the Colors Bnttany Durst. Patge Philltps.
and Shapes Try-il, by weaving Hailey Roush, and Vtctoria
a pattern Wtth constructiOn Walker. Our meetings are 2 to
paper and experimenting with 4 p.m., every other Sunday.
different-shaped
sponges Our next meeting wtll be May
dipped m pamt and placed on 15 at Zion Church of Christ
p.tper. Girls also helped pick on Ohio \43 Troop Leader ts
up sltcks outside, so grass Dee Swartz, co-leader IS
could be mowed at the Center. Stacy Phtllips.
Seven girls !raveled to the ·
Wesl Virgmta Stale Museum.
SOUTHERN JUNIOR
Pomt Pleasant W.Va , to
TROOP 1204
expene nce !he Appalachian
Seven girls were present at
Heritage event Girls and the Apri\4 meetmg. More gtrls
thetr famihes spe nt !he day brought in their dairy food. We
learning aboul storytelling, got to try egg salad, deviled
herbs and their purposes, eggs. and potato wtth cheese.
mustc. and quiltmg.
Girls gave reports on their
An evenmg at the Hamm trip to Harry Potter 111 Athens
Dmry Farm. Apnl 18. was on April 2 Girls have been
attended by 18 girls and fam- bringing in aluminum cans
ilies Girls sa ~~. the milking for a service proJects for the
process m action and new Community Center. They will
·calves. followed by home- be doing thts for April and
made ICe cream. and goody May. Anyone in Syracuse that
bags with ilems from the would like to help us can drop
American Dairy Associatmn off the cans at !he Cemer I0
Thank you to Chris Hamm a.m. to noon on the first
and family for making this Sawrday of the momh. to
possible.
noon . If you need someone lo
Fiv~ girls :mended Racine
p1ck them up call 992-2668.
Flo\1-er Festival parade and
New officers for April and
braved !he cold and rain to May are. Joyce Romtnes,
participate.
president; Kimmy Deaver,
An overnight trip to the vice president, Jessica Stines,
Columbus Zoo is planned.
dues and atiendance: Tara
Eakins, secretary/public relaEASTERN PAISV
llons. Old officers we[e !Old to
evualare themselves on how
TROOP1334
On Apnl 2, the troop well they thought that they
attended a tea party. Thanks did. , Girls decide that they
to those who put forth the wanted to go to Point Pleasant,
effort to make sure a took W.Va. for the Appalachian
place . The girls. mothers, and Heri1age on May 18.
Member did badge work on
grandmothers enjoyed the
On and Food Power.
Lead
event. The girls have been
Six gtrls allended the April
wbrking hard to earn the last
of their petals. The slarted I I meeting. Brittany Cogar
creating a scrapbook of !heir brought m cheese btscuits for
own. 10 remember what they her Datry Product. Girls
have done lhts year. We Ialked .aboul going to Plants
would like to report that all of and Animals event and
1he troop will be rejoming for Makmg tt Matters. This will
next year. They ·can ' t wait to make for a full day.

Bob Evans exhibit traces underground railroad

'

RIO GRANDE The capture of slaves. td !he aucHome,tead Museum at !he tion block. 10 their labor and
Bob Evans Farm 1s hosting a allempls at rebellion and
spec tal exhibit "Freedom escape, lo the rise of aboliSeeker;,. Ohto and !he tionism and the development
Cnderground Ra~lroad" when of the Underground Rrulroad
- !he texl, artifac!s and phobegan in Apnl.
The exhibtl traces the histn- tographs will bring this story
ry of Africans who were cap- to hfe for vtsi!Ors ..
tured and brought 10 tht s
J)isplays in the exhibil
country as slaves and their include !he Underground
JOUrney to freedom
Ratlroad Traveling quill:
The museum and the exhtb- images of a slave coffle, hold
tt are .open daily Ihroug.h Dec of a slave shtp. runaway slave
31. and admtsston I S free. posters and route maps: neck
Hours are II a.m . 10 5 p m. and leg shackles. chains.
Apnl I through May 27 and brandmg trans. whips and
Sept. 5 through Dec. 31. o1her related items.
Hour' '-'lemorial Day week"The
Underg round
end lhrough Labor Day are Railroad was perhaps the
9:30a.m . to 5:30p.m. Groups most drama1ic prates! mO\Iement againsl slavery 111 the
are welcome a! any ttme
"We broughl tht s exhibit to l,;nited Slates." said Ca!hy
the Homeslead :\1useum fot - :-lei son.· founder and presiour enure 2005 season dent ementu:. of the Fnends
because it has an tmpoi-tant of Freedom Society. "Ohio
qon to tell 'a boul herotc played an integral role in this
. attempt\ at freed om." satd 1ecreti1e. and often clandesBob E1 ano Farm Manager tin e. network l!J ass tst escap- ·
Ra) .\1cKinms:.. "Frum the mg sla1·es to freedom."

John Mattox. curator of 1he
Underground
Railroad
Museum in Flushmg, Ohw.
added. "The Freedom Seekers
exhibit is a very powerful
expression !hat visitors will
profil from see ing . It was
developed by people wilh a
passion for !he subject and
will give visitors a better
understqndmg of !he many
cultures !hat came together
during
this
pe,riod
of
American hiSlory."
The Underground Railroad
was neither underground nor
a ratlroad. but a syslem of
loosely connecled safe 1\avens
where those escaping !he brutal conditions of slavery were
sheltered.
fed ,
clothed,
nursed, concealed, disguised
and instructed during their
journey 10 freedom. "Ohio's
his!Ory has been permanemly
shaped by the thousands of
runaway
slaves
passmg
Ihrough or tindmg permanent
restdence 111 thts state:· satd
McKinmss.

Page A7 • The Daily Sentinel

ScoutJIH!. and each ~llrl llhlde lhe Hogwarts Event m
.1 scrap hook p.tge Ath~n,. Hours \\ent towards
On Apr tl 2J. tour of the the Program Aide patch and
~trb
11 '" ckd
to Ohto Contnbullng to Gtrl Scoutmg
l.J ni,e1srtv to the Cnll e£e of for the three girls
Engm~cring lor a day ol sctWe had several fundratser'
ence The 1.1dies of th e this month for our trip to
girls- took turns intmchiL'Itng Soctcty ol Women 'Engmeers N ta~at a Falls. NY. We had a
someone
helped them earn thetr Make booth and bake sale • a!
On April \8. there "a~ stx It Mattei badge. .
Powell\ on April 16 with
girl s present A tepolt on the
On 1\.l.t\' I. we had a meet- Ch,1ssidy Wtlls. Chelsea
event Saturdav was dl' - mg \\here \\C prepared for Davts. Hatl ey Eber~bach ,
cussed. We had scYen ~,r[, !he t.tlcnt siKm and earned Cnsta
Marlin.
Autumn
who went : Brrtt.rnv c,)~.tr. our Theater badge . We also ~ Ebers bac h. Ericka Cogar,
Tara Eakms. Ashle·v Deem. 11~\peu Bto" 111e Troop 1271 Am her Hockman . Kimi
Megan
McGee.· Jo)ce e.trn their Let's Pretend Swishet.
and
Ashley
Romtnes. Kt111111\ De a' er h.1d~c ,md started thetr Junio1 Romines participating.
and Katelynn Gt,n.ther. Gtrb 'At de badge .
.
On Apt t1 19. we parttctpat-'
loved making the quilt block
The ~trls nt Jumor Troop ed in ,, (\mununtty Night at
More work was done on Lead I 276 arc as lullows Allyson Wendy's. Not only was this
On biidge. For th is the !!lfls Oil\ rs, Alyssa Cremeans. · fun. but good experience. It
made up a t,tlk sho" ,md Ashley Runy_on. Bethany gave us a chance to see what .
tnterviewed thetr co leader.
Spaun.
Canlyn·
Wtll. working in a fasl food res!auGirls m.tde a c,unera i!nd Ctss.tmha
John son, rant was all ' about. We
'used cell phone for mu sic. Cheyenne Beaver. Danelle cleaned off tables. carried
More gtrls brought tn th e Runyon .
Emma
Perrin. trays tor the customers. and
hobbtes. We had more dolk Hannah
Ktng.
Holly . much more. Those parricipathorses. and coms
Mc·Gr,llh. .l ess t Meadows. mg were: Ashley Romines,
At the April 25 meettng. Kcana Robtnso!l. Kendra Ericka
Cogar.
Stacy
there were se\ en gul s preMaggte Smtth, Macomber. Chelsea Davis .
H.tntn g.
sent. Rachel Pi!yne brought McKen1.1e Whobrey. Nakayla Amber Hockman
Kimi
1n a lruit tray for her fruit
Ratlrff. Oltvta Cleek. Savanna .SwiSher. Hailey I;:bersbach,
K11nmy
Dea' er
group
Capeh,ut. and Tess Phelps.
Autumn Ebersbach, and
brought in cake ilnd tee
Our
next
ev~nt
IS !he Juntor
Crista
Martm. We thank our
cream for the ~rrls to share
COS ! C.unp-in on May. 13 family and friends for comfor her btrthdav~
.
A report on the two el'ents and 14. Our next meeung ts 2 111g and supporting us.
were gi\.en by the guls Vv'c '? 4 pIlL May 29, &lt;11 Zton Thank s also to Steve Grady
for arranging this for us .
had seven girls go along wit h Church ot C hnst.
On Apnl 23, . Hailey
a Browni e· Ashley Deem . .
EASTERN
JUNIOR
Ebersbach went to COSI and
Ashley
Bntem.tn
l " ~e .
Columbus Zoo with Brownie
TROOP 1290
Brittany Cogar. Tara Eakms.
On Apnl ~- four gtrls Troop I015 to help with the
Meg,m McGee. Kimmy
Deaver. Joyce Romme s. and attended the Harry Potter troop The troop started workBrownie Sarah E.tkins The event 111 ".thens. They all had tng on the Travel Inrerest
girls met a new Gu\ Scout ,, 2re,1t time. Thanks to the Project Patch. At their meetfriend !rom another counctl Athens troops for putung on mgs tht s month. they worked
and in~ited her to ~o with such ,, fun event. On April togelher to locate map and calJO. most of the troop attended culate how many miles we
them to Makmg tt Matters.
an 0\ ern tght eve nt to COSI wtll be traveling We made our.
Ill Columbus It was an exnt- lt st of what 10 bnng as well.
POMEROY JUNIOR .
tllg ewnt based on the hi! TV
The following girls have
TROOP 1276
series
CSI
There
were
a
lot
completed and wtll be awarded
April has been a month of
ot
thtn
gs
to
learn
on
cnme
thetr Fashton Design Interest
badge work and lots of eve nh.
~cene
inve
stigation.
patch:
Amber
Proje_ct
On April 2. several of the girls
At
the
nextrneetmg
we
Will
Hockman. Hailey Ebersbach,
traveled to Athens to attend
be
having
a
bndgmg
ceremoAutumn
Ebersbach, Ericka
the Hogwarts Cas1le Event
ny
lor
the
gtrls
who
will
Cogar,
IGnu
Swisher, Chassidy
There they learned to perform
Cadettes
next
year.
become
Wtlls and Ashley Romines.
some spell s. went through a
The followmg gtrls commaze. went to the candy store.
pleted
and will be awarde-d
saw several of the character' CADETTE TROOP 1208
thetr Cookies and Dough
from the Harry Potter books
and enjoyed a snack.
Imerest
Project
award:
Autumn
Ebersbach,
Ericka
On Apri I I0. we had "
meeting where we comple1ed
Cogar, Ktmi Swtsher, Ashley
our Sign of the Sun badge by
Romines , Hailey Ebersbach,
learning about values 111 Girl
Amber Hockman.

Ash lev Bateman Lee shllll cd
her doll.collcctton Ill finrsh her
"Col lecling Hobbtes .. Other
gtrl:, are to bnng tn one t)f then
lavonte llellb 111 the hnhhr es
More work on the Lead on
. badge was done. For thts the

Noted violinist to perform in -Qhio
Vall~y Symphony's season finale
GALLIPOLIS - · Gallipolis residents will welcoq~e a
. world-renown violinist to the stage or the historic Ariel
Theatre when the Oh10 Valley Symphony presents its
final coucert of the season.
"The Immortal Tchaikovsky V10!in Concerto" is
scheduled Saturday at 8 p.m.
Guesl violinist Oleg Pokhanovski " the winner of
·pres!igious competittons in Poland, Italy and Spain. He
· has performed throughout !he United States. •Canada.
Europe and Ru ss ia
Recognized early as musically gifted, Pokhanov ski. at
age 6, performed a Vivaldi violin concerto with the
Kuyby shev Symphony in Ru ssta. Al age II, he entered
. ~he Moscow State Conservatory, the highest music insti , tution tn Ru ss ia. Invited to move to the U.S ..
. Pokhanovski won scholarshtps to st udy at The JUilliard
School with Dorothy DeLay and at the Manhallan
School wuh Pinchas Zukermann In 1999. he completed
a doctorate of music m pertormance at the Universtty of
Montreal where he sludied with Vladtmtr Landesman.
The symphony's program wtll fea!Ure Borodin's
. "Prince Igor Overture": Tchaikm sky' s ·:Viohn Concerto
· in D Major" and "Swan Lake Sune. Op. 20a," and
Shostakovich 's "Ballet Suite No. I."
The Ohio Valley Symphony is in its 15th season, Wtlh
Maestro Ray Fo~ler conducting. Fowler is also artistic
dtrector of the Bay View Mustc Festival in Mtchigan.
Ti ckets for the OVS concert are available by calhng
the Ariel Cultural and Pcrlonmng Ans Centre, 740-446, ARTS (27R7) nr at the theatre located at 426 Second
· Ave. They also are avatfable at Tawney Jewelers, Purple
Turtle and Oak Htll Banks. Prices are $22, $20 for
seniors and $10 for studel1ls.
The concert IS sponsored 111 part by the Ann C. Dater
Endowmem, The Ohio Arts Council and Baker &amp;
. Hostetler.
Season llckets for the 2005-2006 five-concert series
also are available. Prices for the subscripllon series are
- $100 for an tndtvtdual: $90. senior citizen: $50. student
and $275 for families.
The Ohio V'llley Symphony IS the only professional
· orchestra 111 so utheast Ohto. Mustcians hat! from six

'

On Frrday, May 27, we wtll publrsh a specral page de~oted to those who are gone but not
forgotten . They will be srmilar to the sample below

.,
you ~ish, sele&lt;l one ofthefollo"ing FREE verses below to
laccon&lt;tparry your tribute.
1 We hold )OU m our lhooghts ;md memone.'! forever

David C. Andrews
~uly

10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews and
family

.t

H1' hand

4. Thanl you for the wonderful day' we ' hared together My prayeiS
\.\111 be \1. 1th vou unttl we meet a~am
5 The days we shared were s~o~.eet ~I long to sec you aga1n m God's
h~;~\enl~ glof)
.
6 Your courage and bra"ery stl llm~p1rc us all. and the memory of your
-.nulc tills us wu h JOY and laughter
7 Though out uf ~1ght. you'll forever be m my hean and mmd
8 Theda~~ rna~ ~.orne and go. bulthe ume~ \loC ~ hared 1,1,111 alwa)S remam
9 Ma\ the hght of pe&lt;H.:e shme on )Our face for etem1ty. •
10. Ma) GOO's angels gUide you and protect you througho ut ume
II You ...,ere a hght m our hfe that bums fore\er m our heart"
12 1\1a&gt; God's graces shme O\i er you for all ume .
13 You are m our thoughts and pmyers from mommg to mght and from
)Car to year.
14 We ~nd th1~ message wuh a lovmg K1ss fo'retenlal rest and happmess
15 ~ia) the lord bless )OU wHh H1 s gro:~ces and warm.lo,•m&amp; hean.

•

•
:

•

j
'

\

POMEROY - Doors will
~ open at 7 p.m. on Salurday at
· Janna Kaukonen 's Fur Peace
· Ranch in Meigs County for the
: venue's
annual
Guitar
! Summit
• The summit will feature
: Kaukonen, Ed Gerhard, Pat
; Donohue and Woody Mann.
'· This event, hosted by
· Kaukonen, owner of FPR and
: a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
;• member,
will feature four bril.

..
•

TI1e DailY Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Court Street • Pomeroy, OH 45 769
DEADLII'iE: FRIDAY, MAY 20th, NOON
r---------~---------------------------,

Please publi sh m) inbute in 'the &gt;pe&lt;tal Memory Page on Friday. May 27th

Name of d e c' e a s e d - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

ShakeRpeare's

Kenneth Andrews, former member of the Monlreal Symphony.
He holds a master \ 111 music
woodwind performance from
Mansfield
Universtty
in
Pennsyh ant a and has completed
doctoral coursework m com para'" e arts a1 Oh10 Un iversny. lobar
also is a ptanist and composer.
performing h1s own music in the
old ume siyle ol boogte. blues
and Jazz. He ltves in Athens and
teaches elementary must(' in
Marietta.
·
Kitchen was a band director in
Parkersburg for 17 years, as well
as· teachrn g manmba studen ts .
Acme 111 many groups. he is a
reg ul ar member of the Russ
ChidtSter Rh\ thm Aces and he
freelances with local blues and
rock bands and church groups. He
received a bachelor's degree in
music educalton from Glenville
State College whtle studymg percussion with John Kmney. He is a
resident of Manetta
The Evergreen Arts and
Humanities Series has been bringing cultural. antsltc and tmelleclual program~ ·to the residents of
Southeastern Ohto smce 1999.
The Senes sponsors events that
are open to the public at no charge
and ts supported m pan by financtal support of donors through the
Washmgton State Communny
College Foundation. For more
informatton about the Evergreen
Arts and Humanities Senes or !his
event. VI' It www.wscc edu

~As

PORTSMOUTH
The
Unicorn Players and A Working
judged in categones su&lt;·h as best team. best costumes. best Theatre Company, in collaboraoverall them e and best ou thou se Team members will tion
with ' Shawnee
State
make thetr own outhouses For the races. the ou1houses Umversity
Theat~r.
present
will travel through obstacle co urses for a very entertaining Shakespeare's "As You Like It"
event.
m the Kahl Stud to Theater in the
The ou1house events are open tq !he publtc. and area res- SSU Vem Riffe Center for the .
tdents can qill regtster for the outhouse parade or races Arts. May 1-2- 14 at 7:30p.m. and
through Friday.
.
Sunday, May 15 at 2:30 p.m.
The Appalachian Hcrnage Celebratton will al so feature
"We decided to take the
a vanetv of craft and mformalton tables. A.rea residents Shakespeare play thai is set tn a
will be able to buy a wide array of crafts and eve'n make a rustic area, because we're in a
rustic area ourselves. and adapl 11
tew ttems. such as brooms and rugs.
"We are going to have many drfferent food booth&lt;' to the hills of Kemucky in the
Phaltn said. ·'We are also startmg a farmers. market local- early 20th century.'' satd Jtm
ly. and the Appai;Khtan Hentage Celebration wrll ktck that Hayes. dtrector and SSU adJunct
theatre professor.
off.''
·
Hayes said it is a total comedy
The farmers. market will be geared toward those people
that
contams Appalachian music,
.from smaller farms who want to sellthetr products. atlCIII
will be held on the downtown streels of Middleport. square dancing, runnmg. and
Beginnmg in June. the farmers, market will be he ld e~ery wrestling.
The brother against br01her play
Saturday·mthe summer m Mtddleporl.
pushes
the Appalachian dtalect of
The celebratton and the Ianners. market are btlth comthe area, accordmg to Hayes, and
pletely free. and the p11bltc is mvned to the events.
as a transition from scene to scene
Jeanne Jones Jindra. who work s wllh the Crossroads
they are usmg bluegrass mu sic
Program on the Rto Gr,mde campus. said !hat thi~ year's
"Shakespeare had wntten five
celebration will have a strong focus on cratters. She added songs for this play and of course
!hat with all of the entertainers. g,une' and booths. the fes- nobody knew what they sounded
tival should be something spec ial.
like because there was very linle
"It's gomg to be btgger this year than it was last year.'' musical notation from that time,''
Jindra said, addmg that last yea1 's eve nt was very popular. Hayes satd. "We've managed to
For more information on the Appalachian Heri1age find live mu sical piece s !hat are
Celebralion cail Phalm at 992-0000 For more mformalton bluegrass inslrumentals and we
on upcomm g events at Rio Grande. and on the wide vari- set Shakespeare's Iyne s to blueety of academic and professional programs available at grass music.''
Hayes smtl plans call for the
Rw Grande's mam campu' and ill the Meigs Center, log .
onto www.rio edu
play to be opened wtth a pre-

'

You Like It'

show called " Poims of Comact"
in which they wtll compare
Eltzabethan
English
10
Appalachian dialect and draw
conclusions about the fact thai the
Appalachian dialecl pretty well
comes from Ehzabelhan Enghsh.
Tickets for the play are $5 and
are avatlable at the McKmley
Box Oftice in the VRCFA at SSU
or by callitig (740). 351-3600.
The cast and crew _conststs ot
veleran and beginning actors
mduding' Jtm Haye s ol Waverly:
Lorn Tipton of Port smouth.
Karen Chatfield of Beaver.
Andrea Chatfield of Lucasv ille:
Buddy Adams of Portsmouth:
Loren Keller of Lucasv tllc. Kasey
Wallace of Manetta; Sara
Chalfield of L~casvtlle: Nathan
Wheeler
of
Whee lersburg:
Charlte Cummtngs of Ashland.
Kentucky: Tommy Book of
SctOtovtlle, Chaz Farley of
Qreenup: Jimmy Webb ot
Port smouth , Hank Waring of
Rubyvtll~: Rtcky Kammer ol
Wheelersburg. Kelli Chatfteld of
Lucasvtlle; Rt ck Bender of
Portsmouth: Lydta Chmtield ot
Lucasville. Matt Chatfield of
Lucasvtlle: Gavan Johnstone of
Chicago. Illinois: Vinnie Herman
of Alhens, Matthew Knox of
Phoenix,Anzona:
Shane
Henderson of South Shore ; Mary
Baughman of Portsmouth, and
Brandon Thacker of Kingston.

liant guitartS!S performing
individual sets of !heir respecuve styles of music. Astde
from hosting the summit,
Kaukonen also will perform
solo, a set of music reflecting
his four decades in the music
world .
'
Ed Gerhard, is. im illusuious
inslru1l1en!ahst wtU insp1111tion
ranging from 'Segovia to
Mississippi
John
Hurt .
Gerhard's inventive use of open

tumngs has gtven hts gunar a
votce that is recognized and
respected worldwtde Also performing at the Summit 11.ill be
Pat Qonohue .. who shares a
. Grammy wtth Gerhard for las:year's "Best Pop Instrumental
Album"-"PmkGuitar,'' which
is a coUeciion of Henry Mancim
tunes on acoustic gUitar.
Donohue has been prai sed
by Chet Aikins as ··one of the
greatest finger pickers in the

world today" He has been the
guitarist for the "Prairie Home
Compamon" radto sho)V dur'ing !he past 12 years.
Woody Mann studted at the
feet of the "blue s masters''
such as Rev. Gary Davis. Son
House, Bukka Whtte and John
Fahey. He has taken !hat music
and evolved il imo a style that
ts all his own.
The 'format for thts concert
will present each guitarisl

developmg hts own 40.:mmute
se t Gerhard will start the
evening and be followed
tmmedJately by Kaukonen .
After a 20-minute mtermtsston. Ma.nn will perform hts
se1. which will be followed by
Donohue closmg outlhts mght
of guitar. Four masters of the
guitar wilh very distmcl styles
wtll fill the evemng and make
the "Guitar Summtl" a mghl of
gu ilar mustc that will lift you

to the hetghts of six-strin g
heaven ..

For further information,
please
comact
Ranch
Manager John Hurlbwat 740992-6228.
For more bwgraphjcal mfo
on e,u h uf rh e performers
plea1e \ isir rhetr respecti\'e
H'eb sires:
JOrmakaukonen com. edgalranl com

iroodnnamt. com

a~d pardonolwe.c;&gt;m.

••I

L,

••J

Date of bmh - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date of passing _ _ _ _ _ __

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2005

Fur Peace· Ranch to hold guitar summit

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MIDDLEPORT - The second annual Appalachian
Heritage Ceiebratton ·will be held on the streets of
Middleport on Saturday.
. The celebration. which will take place on two downtown
. Middleport blocks that wil! be ,t lo~ed to traftic., will begtn
at 10 a.m. and commue unttl 3 p.m.
The fe stival is being organized this year by the
Crossroads Program auhe Universtty of Rto Grande/Rio
Grande Community College Meigs Center in cooperatton
wah the village of Mtddleport. The Crossroads Program a!
the Meigs Center works to help area · residents gain life
, sktl\s, further thetr educational goals, gel involved in paid
: work assistance programs and search for JObs .
• The Crossroads Program is involved with the
:Appalachian Heritage Celebratton as a way to honor the
• cui!Ure of the area.
: "The Appalachtan culture is a big part of what we are . It
· is who we are," said Brenda Phalin, who works for !he Rio
; Grande Meigs Center Crossroaus Program . Phalin satd
:that the Appalachian cull ural has been negatively stereo: typed and many people are not aware of aJI of the positive
•• parts of.11.
~ .. Our main inleresl is lo make sure all of these positive
( things are laid out," Phalin said. ~'It's not only a fun day, bul
. a day of knowledge and learning."
· The Appalachian Heri1age Celebration will have a wide
: variety of entertain men! throughout !he day. Musician
:Denver Rice will share his '·loilet seal banJO musi&lt;;'' with
• the crowd, the RoadCreek Boys will perform !heir blue : grass mu sic , and Bob Ward and Kendra Bence will play
~ dulcimer music for those at the celebration. A group of
' local cloggers will also enterrain the crowd dunng !he day.
'' We will also have a variety of games for the kids,"
: Phalin said. The games will include a worm dig and a sun: flower seed spitting contest.
·
: "We are also having an outhouse parade a[)d outhouse
~races," Phalin said. The outhouses in the parade will be

Thursday, May 12,

M_ARIETIA .- An evemng of
classical and jazz music featuring
local artists and composers David
Nus, Michael Tobar, Scan
Kilchen and Aaron Doty will be
held
at Washington Slate
Community College's Graham
' Audi!onum on Saturday at 8 p m
The free concert will be the
fi nal e1ent m this year's
Ever~reen Arts and Homanlltes
Sene's.
The program will tnclude a
se lection of classLcal pieces.
mcluding classtca l compos itions
by Da' id Nuss. a, ptan!St and
organist. Jazz selections include
compostllons by Mtchae\ Tobar.
pnncipal fluti st for the River
Cities Symphony Orchestra. Scol!
Kttchen. percusswmst. al so performs in a number of mu sical settmgs. includmg the Rt ver Ctlles
Symphony Orchestra. ·
Nuss. "ho' is curren!ly orgamst
at St. Paul' s Unued Methodtst
Church in Park~rsburg , earned a
bachelor's degree in mustc education from Sioux Falls College m
South Dakota, where he studied
piano· with Maynard Berk . He
studied composillon at Indiana
University with Bernhard Heiden.
Thomas Beversdorf and Jan
Oteg Pokhanovski
Orrego-Salas, and ptano With
Fred Baldwin . He now resides
stales and teach ,tl well-known orgamzat10n' 111 near Manetta .
Columbus, Pinsburgh and Baltimore. to name a few
Tobar studied with Loren Lind
People who are unabl e 10 anend the 8 p.m. co ncerrs of the Phtladelphia Orchestra,
are welt.:ome to sil 111 on open rehearsal&gt; from 7 to I 0 Claire Rocama10, former member
p.m. on Fndays and 1-4 p m on Saturdays the week- of the Boston Symphony; and
ends of concert s For more informatr on. call the Ariel
Theatre at 740-446-2787.

·Second annual APPalachian
Heritage
Celebration
is
Sablnlav
.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

2 Ma\ GoJ cradle \o Ou m H1s arms. no"" and fore\er
3 ForeH•r m1s~d ne,cr forgotten May God hold you m lhc palm of

www.mydailysentinel.com

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•Vming ~ums
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• Ferns &amp;: Morel

·

PLANTERS
Two Convenient LocatiOQI:

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porch or deck!

2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446-1711
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1/4 Mile North
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone (304) n3-5323

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Olli:o

.The Daily Sentinel

.

Page A~
'

~ursday,

May 12, 2005

Ohio Guard weighing base-closing challenge
BY

•

Bl

.· The Daily ·s entinel

INSIDE:
Rebels win fi~t-ever tournament game, Page B2
Blue Angels lame Waverly, Page B2
NBA playoff _roundup, Page B3
Winslow takes first step back, Page 84

' '

JAMES HANNAH

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

T

he Ohio National Guard
is trying to decide
whether to join other
states and congressional delegations that are challenging
any attempts by the Pentagon
to close Guard bases without a
governor's pennission.
"We're just not sure how
effective that would be," Ohio
Guard spokesman
Mark
Wayda said Wednesday. "We
have our legal peopl'e looking
at that to make a detennination."
•
Wayda said that even' if a
·governor co uld keep the federill gJvernment from closing a
base, the Defense Department
still could remove the equipment and effectively eliminate
the mission. ·
The Pentagon plans to
release its list 'l:lf proposed
base closuces Friday, The
Ohio
• Department
of
Development is waiting to see
what bases are ·on the . list
before deciding what to do.
"Nothing is ruled in or out in
tenns of what our response
be,"
said
agency
will
spokesman Bill Teets.
Gov. Bob Taft's strategy so
far has been to try to unify the
host communities and promote the economic value of
the bases to the Pentagon.
"Whatever's announced.
we'll respond accordingly,"
said Mark Rickel ,.Taft's press
secretary.
The office of Rep. Mike
Oxley, R-Ohio, ha' been following the arguments ·being
made by stales and delegations making the challenge .
"We'~e just trying to study
all the sides right now," said
Tim Johnson, Oxley's press

Thursday, May 12, 2005

Prep Schedule
Toumomont BaMblll
MUier at Eastem. 5 p.m.
GaUia Academy at Warren, 5 p.m.
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
.. ·~
Tnlck
TVC Meet at Vinton County, 4 p.m:
w,va. R.egionals at Rttchlo Co., TeA
Ttnnl•
,
Slctlonal at Portsmouth, ·g a 1m,
W.va. State Tournament, TBA

.

'

Fdelly'o gamoe ·
Tourno-.t-11

AP Photo

The headquarters of the Air National Guard 118th Fighter Wing at Springrfield Municipal Airport
in Springfield. City officials say the loss of the base in the next round of Pentagon cuts wouldn't mean the airport would closE;., ,b-LJt it would have. a major impact. In the past 10 years, there
have been $70 million in improv/,ments to the airport, $40 million of which was from federal
military-construction money.
secretary.
Oxley's district includes the
!79th Airlift Wing, a 1,060mem.b er Air · National Guard
unit based in Manstleld.
The Ohio Air National
Guard also has bases in
Columbus, Springfielfl and
Toledo. The four installations
account for more than 4.000
j o bs.
Defense analysts say they
ex pect more ~han two dozen
Guard facilities to be tapped
for closure or relocation. They
suspect the Air Guard will be
hit hard, given that the
Pentagon wants to scale ba&lt;;k
the F-16 fighter jet and other
older planes located at domestic Air Guard facilities.
The New Jersey ·congressional delegation has asked
that the Pentagon cease any
attempt to close Guard bases.
Governors in several states

inc ludin g North Dakota,
Delaware and Arizona have
weighed in on the issue. And at
least one state, Illinoi s. is
threatening to go to court to
block the move.
The governors and delega.
lio ns cite a law that says in part
that Anny or Air Guard units
can' t be relocated or withdrawn without the consent of
the govemor of the state.
The Pentagon argues .that
another law that authorizes
this ' round of base closures
takes precedence and allows
the Pentagon to close or
downsize Guard bases without getting approval . from
governors.
Defense analysts say Air
Guard and Reserve bases will
likely be high on the baseclosing li st because of their
smaller size and the aging aircraftthey fly.

BY THE AsSOCIATED PRESS

AP Photo/The Plain Deater, C.H.Pete.Copeland

Lenny Markowitz works in his favorite place, seated in il chair
at the side of his bed : in his Mayfield Heights home April 2B.

World War II vet puts pen to
paper to bOost troop morale
MAYFIELD . HEIGHTS since childhood - portraits of
(AP) The way Lenny people he saw in the newspaMarkowitz figures it, a home- per, people he saw in his
sick GI is a homesick GI, no Cleveland neighborhood. So it
matter the era or war zone.
was only natural that daily
The 79-year-old from subur- news reports of com bar deaths
ban Cleveland has started in Iraq reminded him of a stash
drawing cartoons for the of the old cartoons he still had.
United Services Organizations
"Those guys, 1' m telling
of Northern Ohio to send to you , every day they ' re being
troops overseas, so they can . killed. Every day," he said,
turn around and mail them to shaking his head.
family members.
Markowitz dug out the old
It takes hill) back to when . pictures and forwarded them
he used to draw on the to the USO. Officials there
envelopes hi s Army buddies were happy to gel that batch
were sending home from and happter still to hear ihat
Europe during World War II, Markowitz has started crankMarkowitz said . . In those . ing out more, they said.
"I could do hundreds of
days, the Bronze Star recipithem,"
Markowitz said. "It's
ent recalled, -mail call was the.
a labor of love."
highlight ~f the day.
Like the .ones he drew six
His comrades in the 5th
Infantry Division appreciated decades ago, most of the carthe chance to send a note to a loons ·will ·be Christmas·
girlfriend or a wife, parents themed, Markowitz said.
or kids, with a little pen-andink
picture
attached,
Markowitz said.
·pens, envelopes and holiday
The cartoons brightened up stationery, said Sue Swider,
the letters, helped bring them who coordinate's a USO proa touch of normalcy amid the . gram that has been sending
hundreds of care packages
chaos of battle.
Markowitz has been drawing per week to troops .

~:ir-~ir;~~~~~n~/~~:~~~

COLUMBUS- U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland w~s standing
outside the House chamber
Wednesday when armed
sec urity· officers in the U.S.
Capitol began· shouting for
people to leave.
The officers yelled, " Run.
run! This is not a test," said
Strickland,
a
Lisbon
Democrat who is running for
Ohio governor in 2006.
Once outside, Strickland
saw an F-16 lighter aircraft
fly overhead.
"At that time, no one knew
why we were running. We
didn't know if it was something _chemical or biological
in the Capitol or something
else," Strickland said.
Such was the confusion
. Wednesday when a small
plane entered restricted ·airspace in Washington D.C.
and came within three miles
of the White House, triggering an evacuation of government buildings.
.
Many members of Ohio's
congressional
delegation
were in the Capitol Building
at the time.
Rep . Steve Chabot, a
Republican from Cincinnati,
said people moved very
· quickly out of the building
during the evacuation.
" Police were v.ery businesslike and efficient, telling

Aavef1sw&lt;&gt;o&lt;l at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
'1111ck

everyone to keep moving,"
Chabot said. "They weren't
messing around. Everyone
was doing what they · were
supposed to do and following
in structions."
But at least one member.
Republican Rep. John Boehner
of West Chester, said he almost
got run over by excited tourists
as he went down some stairs
during the evacuation.
Doug Gordon, who works
in the office of Rep . Dennis
Kucinich, D-Cieveland, fled
the Longworth Building and
walked about four blocks.
. "Anytime this sort of thing
happens there is a ·certain
amount of anxiety, or high
emotions," Gordon said.
Joanna Kuebler, a staff
worker for Rep. Sherrod
Brown, D-Lomin, said she had
thoughts of Sept. 11 as she hurried out of the congressman's
office in the Rayburn Building. ·
"We saw motorcades with
leaders of the House going by
and that was an indicator. that
thi s was serious," Kuebler said.
Kuebler sai\1 her cell phone
did 'not work for about I 0
· minutes because many others
were using their phones at the
same time.
Two men . in the aircraft
were taken into custody and
interviewed by authorities at
a Mary land airport where the
plane landed after a military
escort.

at Faldand, 4 p.m.
Tonnlo

r:NC -

Thursday, May 12
evening progresses.
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
· Overmght (1-6 a.m.)
It should be .a cloudy mornIt will continue to be

ing. We are predicting light cloudy. Temperatures will
" It is the small and single- rain. The rainfall should end hold steady· around 54 · with
mission bases that are the most around · 10 a.m. with total today's low of 52 occurring
vulnerable," said Mi chael . accumulations for this event around 3 a.'l". Winds will be 5
Gessel, who close ly follows near
1.43
inches. MPH from the east.
defense issues as vice presi- Temperatures will rise from 66
Friday, May 1)
dent federal government pro- early morning to the 'high for
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
gram s for the
Dayton the day of 69 at 8 a.m. as they
It's going to be a cloudy
Development Coalition.
drop back down to 58 later morning. Temperatures ·will
Gessel said closing Guard This afternoon. Winds will be . rise from 58 to 70 'bY. late this
and Re serve bases can be I 0 MPH from the southwest morning. Winds w1ll be 10
attractive because their mis- tuniing from the north as the MPH from the southeast tumsions can be moved to active- morning progresses.
ing from the south as theduty bases . He said there is a
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
morning progresses.
.
movement
within
the
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It ·will remain cloudy.
Pentagon to do that.
Temperatures will stay near
It looks · like a humid and
Charles Smith, an associate 61. Winds will be 5 to 10 cloudy aftefti\JOn. We are pre;
with The PMA Group, a MPH from. the northeast..
dieting moderate rain. The rain
Washington -based consulting
·Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) will start around 2 p.m. Expect
fi'rm on defense and other
It should continue to be 0.38 inches of rain by the end
iss ues, said there also seems to cloudy. Temperatures will of this afternoon. Temperatures
be an effort within the Air drop from 61 early this will linger at 74. Winds will be
Force to get rid of older fight- evening io 53. Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH from the south
er planes, C-130 cargo planes, 10 MPH from the northeast turning from the southeast .as
and KC: 135 tanker planes to turning from the east as the the afternoon progresses.
free up more funding for the
new F-22 fi ghter.

Ohio lawmakers caught up
in Capitol Hill evacuation

.

.

.

Todily'a gamea

Local Stocks

ACI-48.62
AEP-35.29
Akzo-40.76
Ashland Inc. - 66.9!!
AT&amp;T-18.79
BLI-·11.28
Bob Evans - 21.44
BorgWamer-50.75
Champion- 3.92
Channlne Shops- 7.76
City Hok1111C- 32.65
Col-47.40
DG-20.98
DuPont -47.43
F-ral M«&gt;eul- .49
USB-28.57
Gannett- 76.29
General Elect~c - 36.19
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Harley Davidson- 48.25
JPM-35.30

Kroear- 16.25
Ltd. -20.49

NSC-31.83
Oak Hlll .FlMnclal- 29;89
OVB-27.75'

BBT-39.76.

•

Peoples- 26.80
Pepsico- 68.93
· Premier- 10.15

~at Portsmouth, 9 a.m.
.W.va. State Tournament, TBA

S.O.rday'o ll"mN .
Tournament SOftball
Wattr1o~lller at

Eastern, 5 p.fR.

Tr-

SEOAL -Meet at Logan, 10 8.m.
r..nl•
W.Va. State Toumament. .TBA

Spans Briefs
Eastern sets date
for hoops camp

Prep . Softball ..,... Division II sectional

Marietta claws Lady Marauders,. 6-3
.

STAFF REPOI!T
SPORTS@MY,DAILYSENTINEL.COM

MARIETTA - All good
things come to an end.
Meigs softball,. which has
clail)led three of the last four
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division crowns, could not
overcome
Marietta
Wednesday with a 6-3 loss in
the Division II sectional playin game.
The Marauders (12- 7) had
plenty of chances :o hang
with the Tigers ( 12-7) despite
falling behind 3-0 after an
inning of play, but the host
Southeastern Ohio At)lletic

Prep Softball

L e a g u e
squad simply
ca me
up
with the key
defensive
plays when
they · were
ne eded · to ·
sec
ure a date
:
with Warren
ill the final
Pierce
Saturday.
0 ran g e .
and Black second baseman
Samantha Grosklos came up ·
with se veral web gems that
ultimately ended most of the
Maroon and Gold's scoring
chances, the biggest being .in
the fourth when she turned a

·

Rocky Boota 4- 29.87
RD Shell- 68.59

SBC-23.30
Wa~Mart- 48.60
Wendy' I - 44.11
Wot1hlneton -18.30

TUPPERS PLAINS
· · Eastern High School will be
holding its 7th annual Eagle
Basketball Camp May 31
. through June 3.
The camp is open to boys
and girls who will be entering into grades 4, 5 or 6. The
cost is $30 for pre-registration and $40 on the first day
of camp. .
Included in the camp cost
will l?e fundamental basketball instruction, a camp !shirt and basketball and indi·vidual awards are possible . .
For more information contact Howie Caldwell, 40878
Old Seven Road, Reedsville,
OH, 25772.

MERCERVILLE - South
Gallia will hold its annual
Spring Sports Fling Friday at
the high school. Tlje purpose
of the event is to raise mqney
· for new football uniforms
and equipment for the golf
program.
.
Among the sc heduled
events ·are a Longaberger
Bingo, an old car show put
on by the Gallipolis Car Club
and an auction/raffle of several items.
Included
in
that
auction/raffle are: two tickets
to an Ohio State football
game, two tickets to a
Marshall football game, two ,
nights and three days · in
Myrtle Beach, S.C., and two
pair of Cincinnati Reds tickets against the Atlanta Braves
at Great American Ballpark.
The Fling is scheduled to
start at 6 p.m.
For more information,
please contact SGHS football
coach Justy Burleson at 740- ,
245-5805 or SGHS golf
coach Jeff Fowler at 740256-6661. -

Dally atock raporta are the4 p.m.
cloatne quotea of the pravloua
day' a tranuctlono, prov- by
Smith Partnere at AdvHt Inc. of
GalHpolls.
·

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A JOB? LOOKING FOR
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"

Wonderful opportunities are available In Tom Peden
Country. We are expanding our staff and need more
salesmen and saleswomen. No Experience is required,
only a willingness to learn, work as a team and have a .
strong initiative.
• 401 K Retirement Plan
• Work At 111e ~ - Dealership ~ ...,.,. ,Insurance

• Potenllallncome 40-6011

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Tom Peden Country
1..8!10.82?-41417 • 372· 2844
475 South Church S1r1let • Ripley, WV 25271

·

in the season finale.
Bradford -was credited with ,
the win. g&lt;)i ng seve n.innings
and su rrendering an earned
Jrun. Bradfo rd also struck out
four, w'alked one and aiiO\Yed
seven hils in the victory.
The loss ends the season
f
M ·
. d th
or
e tgs an
e prep
careers _of. P1erce, Garnes,
Renee Batley, Ashley Ba~lor,
Jenmfer Cade, Amanda Kn:rg,
Natasha W1se and Jenna Wtlt.
Division II sectional

Marlena &amp;, Melga 3 '
Meigs
000 012 · o 371 ·
Marietta . 300 300 x 6 ·9 2
Joey Haning and Megan GartlEis. Tara
Bradford and Nicole Best; WP - Bradford.
LP- Haning.

Redwomen hoops-signs
PG Lollis
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE
The
University of Rio Grande
women's basketball continued its' busy
off-season.
with
the
signing
of
prized
recruit
Shawn a
Lollis ·to a
national letter of intent.
Lolli~.

Lollls

Bryan Walters/photo ·

Southern catcher Bonnie Allen, right, is late in applying a tag to Crooksville's Nicole Hahn during the seventh in ning of
Wednesday's Division IV sectional play-in game at Star Mill Park.

C-rookSville steals win from Southern, 13-12
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM ,

RACINE - Southern's
Division IV sectional play, in game with Crooksville
featured almost everything a
fan could want to see in a
high school softball game.
Early offense, defensiye
miscues, some late game
heroics to complete an
Incredible comeback, and a
little bit of extra -fnning con-

troversy surrounded . Star
Mill Park Wedne~day .
Unfortunately for the host
Tornadoes (9-14), the only
thing missing was the happy
ending in a 13- 12, nine
inning loss to the ·Lady
Ceramics (6-16).
The . Purple and Gold
pounded out 19 hits in the
contest and held a comfortable I 0-3 lead after four
innings of play, but the Red
and White rallied.back to tie

the game at 12 with two outs
in the bottom of seventh
wnen CHS catcher Allie
Bolyard hit a two-run homer
that forc~d el\tra inning~.
Then m the top of the
J_Jinth with one out and a runner at thtrd. a textbook routine play from start to finish
turned into disaster for
Southern.
That singlular play was
the focal point of Southern
coach ·Scott Wolfe after ihe
·'

game.
"We get tlie ground ball
we needed hit to third base,
, Whitney Riffle looks the.girl
back to the bag and gets the.
out at first. Nicki Tucker
. makes the heads-up play at
first and throws right on the
money to the plate," he elaborated. " Bonnie (Allen )
takes ihe high throw and
lays the tag down, but the
.. ·

Please see Steals. 11

:• Pleasant· Valley Hospital &amp; the· PVH Foundation re.iest
t•e
pleanre
.r
yo1r eompaay... :
·
·

•

••..

•
•
:
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•

Please .

LQills, .11

TEAHS BEING ACCilPTED FOR TUUNNUAL PVH COED FLAG FOOTBALLTOiJRU)lllNT
.

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All proceeds g~ to the Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation and the Bartrum &amp; Brown Football ,C.am'l
.

•
..
convention :

'

..eSaturday,June.ll,2005 (Sign-up deadline is May 27,,2005)." ':....
.
~
.
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••~
~·.1'\:·~!!' '
eBanquet/Auction takes plaeeFriday,June 10,2005 at Riverside Golf Co~~~
1
1!,,
e$150 entry tee per team (Maximum roster: 8 men &amp;8 women)

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
National Rifle Association
will hold its 2007 convention
in Ohi~'s capital city, which
is
considering
banning
assault weapons.
The group, which expects to
draw 60,(XXl people over three
days a1 the Greater Coliunbus
Convention Center, opposes
any attempt to revive a federal
ban on military-style assault
weapons. The NRA also considered Portland, Ore.. and Reno.
Nev., for the annual event
The convention ·is used as a
forum for addressing gunrelated issues, and guns and ·
accessories are displayed. No
guns are !i&lt;Jld,, but orders can be.
placed on the exhibit-hall floor.

• Rain or shine · Double. Elimination
• Must be 18 or older to play- Limited number ofreams
• Point Pleasant High School &amp; Mason County Career Center fields
elndividual trophies to top six finishing teams
'
.
' e Pick-up entry packet at the PleasantValley Wellness C¢nter
'

'

,'

•

.

'

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• ~ake all checks payable to "PLBDH J.u.LO II&amp;PiiJL ftlllll!llf"
·• For more infunnation please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext 1326
'

Anyexpense$relared to injuries are 1M sole responsibilityoftbc pi~ PlelUalll Vlll~y H'ospitlll, Inc. and iJS •u~idi~ will not be held responsible for an)- injurit• that maybe iacumdwlllkporticiparing _in thetllurnamont
'
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a 5-

foot -6 point
guard, has
the potential to be one of the
best-ever to play at Rio
Grande. She was first team
all-conference in· each of the
last two seasons for the
Springfield South Wildcats.
Lollis
was twice AllSouthwest District honorable
mention and made the Clark
County coaches all-county
team and was named first
team. Springfield News-Sun
All-Clark County media team
and all-area media team.
·
Lollis feels good about her
decision to sign with the successful Redwomen program.
"I think it's a good opportunity for me to play for them,"
Loll is said. "I've got an
opportunity to make the team
better and I think I'll fit in the
program just perfectly.
"Me and my family talked

•

·

NRA picks Columbus to host ~007

double play contest to 6-1 .
th at thwarted
The Lady Marauders' added
a rally that , two more runs in the sixth ,
would have but that .was the end of the
cut ·~to the . oftense lor both · .squads and
ho sts
3-0 allowe&lt;J Manetta to walk
advantage.
away Wilh the trtumph.
Afte_r \hat,
Sam Pterce and Meg_an
M a r 1 e t t a ·Garnes led the way tor Me1gs
would tack with two hits apiece, · while
on
three Bradford paced the Tiger~
with three hits. Kay lee Sutt on
Garnes
1 n s ur an c e
.
runs to take and Jenn ifer Wheeler both
command of the contest with had two safeti es in the tria 6-0 edge.
umph.
Amber Burton's two-out
Joey Haning went the dissingle in the fifth plated Sam tance for -Mei gs, allowing
Cole to break the shutou.t nine hits, six .earned runs and
attempt from Marietta staner three · walks .in the losing
Tara Bradford. pulling · the deFision. Haning fanned.four

.SGHS Spring
Fling on Friday

Rockwell- 48.55

'

Division IV sectional

• • ••• •• ••••• •• •••••• ••• •••• • • •• •••••• ••• ••••• •• • ••• •••••• ••••• •••••• •
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. Page B2 ~The D&lt;~ily Sentinel

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'"Thursday, May12, 2005 .

wWw. mydailysentinel.com ·

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Thursday, ~ay 12, .2 005

The D.1.ily Senb11t'l • Page 13::!

www.mydailysentincl.com

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Prt=p Softball -

OJvt ""'o , v s-t.

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NBA Playoffs -

Lady Rebels win ·first-ever tournament game over Tartans
inning. htll their 1rip to
The Lady Tartans started
8SHERMAN @MY0AILYTRIBUNL COM
Willow \Vond Juo ~L? d h.l he th~ g am~·, scoring in the
in
jc·opard:after fir" inninu on the stren~th
SL·iotn\
ilk·,
Shawna
of a two-o;.t.lwo-run double
MERCERVILLE
A
William s qancd a rally with dov.n 'the right neld line by
youth muvcment "t South
an in~iJe - 11H:-pa •-k ho111t.~· run Peters.
Gallia is rcspon&gt;ible for the
hdorc the Ladv Tartan'
South Gallia came hack.
school'" muq -.ucc~~-.ful
loaded the hases. ll'ith nne thou~h. witfi three ·scores in
softball sea,oh ever - but it
out.
'
'I h e bnt10111. of the frame to
was some crafty 'ctcrans
.. nl 11e · u· ' pu 11 t·.tk··, ., , _,_.,_:''1
,,..,,···.
Ftllks ·'•.··'ttl·
·· 1 fe I( con l1dc
'
u
who helped secure lh&lt;;, pro- thrnuuh." Shriver admitted. &amp;.led and swiped a coup le
gram 's biggest win ' on " I eY~n felt more ,·omrort - . bases to set up an RBI sing le
Wednesuay.
• •·
G ·
able wilcn there ·were two off the bat of Laltra wtnn.
Senior · ·Stacie Fellur~·s (Sciotol'illc runners) on A .se.:ond run scored thank s
sixth-"inning si ngle ~rove in h~tse. thL'Y do bdtrr \vhcn to head s- up base running on
an imporl&lt;lnl in surat1CL' run there·, ,(11 ncbodv nn first an infield fly, then the final.
as the lady Rebels · had .1&lt;) and seu,nd ~ it gi&gt;es them run was forced in later on a
stave off a SeiotoYi lle rally more options:·
ba,es, Jo aded walk ' to Julia
i11 the seventh to escape with
Freshman pi tclm _Niki Gw inn .
'
a 7-6 victory .- th eir f ir &gt;~· Fulb induced an infield
The· Lady Rebel's added
pop-up for the sel'lllld out. another run to the lead when
ever in postseastm play.
"I don'tthink it ·, begun Ill . then got Daviellc Daniels to Fulks beat out an infield sin sink in what this team has ground &lt;lU I 10 sho rt slnp !!le. then stole her way
accomplished ... said first , Glen&lt;1a Wri~ht. wl"' tossed arou nd the hase paths before
year coach Amy · Shriver. the bed I to ' Gwinn at first scort ng on a wild pitch .' ,
The see-sav. 'bailie cant in· "they . don't acknowledge base to que ll the eo meh&lt;Lck
what
the
y've
done
thi
s
.
allelllJ11.
~
.
u~d
as . Sciotovill.e scored
.......---•I
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•
year.
Fulks. wlw wen t th e di,. three times in the third.
But that's not surprj., ing of lance rm the pitc:hi n~ deci - thC~nks in lcu·ge part to two
a team filled with 10 fresh - ,; ,in . .st ruck out four and · errors. Two runs scored
. man . five of which stall. c111J walkeu three whi'le sun·en- when a thn~w found its .way
five sop homores. The win derino ' five
runs · 1two · through the infi eld into the
crowd and th e runners
was the fourth of the season earned) on nine hits.
She itlso helped her l&gt;Wil• were granted two additional ·
and third straight -for " program tilat haLl nul won ' a cause with a pair of hits and bases. A 'el·ond error
game during -the previous fou r sto len hase,. Fellow ~tllowecl a third runner to
three years.
frosh Laura Gwinn and score and gave the Lady ."1 don ' t thin k it's really hit sopllomore Kristen· Halley Tartans their final lead at 5them . other tha n my two added singles an d Ashley. 4.
seniors. who have seen the C lary drew an RBI walk. .
South - Gaflia tied it on a
R,Jercy-ruli tJgs and taken the
William s adde&lt;.l a double Fe.llure RBI single in the
big spank ings in the year.&gt; to go alon g with her hustle fifth hefore tacking nn single
before. " explained Shrive r. homer to pace Sciotuville's runs in the fifth and sixth
Fellure. one of only two offense . Katie Peter&lt; also frames. Clary urew a basesseniors on the team, led the lwd two hi ts. including · a loaded walk in the fifth to
way with -three hit s anu double. with I hree R Bls. make it 6-5, then Fe Ilure
drove in two runs. Classmate Alyssa Adkins and Holly struck again with another
run -scoring single- in the
Julia Gwinn also had an RBI Moore ch ipped in si ngles .
and was a so lid glove at first
Bobbi Snook took the sixth. ·
base for South Galli a (4-1 0). pitching loss.
allowing
which will play for • a ,even runs on seven hits , but
Division IV sectional
South
Gallla 7, Sclotoville 6
Divi sion IV section al title 1· was also hampered by a
Sciotoville
203 000 1 -698
p.m. Saturday at . Symm es defense that com milled eight South Gallia 3 1 1 0 t 1 X - 7 7 5
Brad Sherman/photo
Valley.
.
·
erro rs hehind her. South Bobbi Snook and Katie Peters. Niki Fulks
and
La
ura
Gwinn
..
WP
Niki
Fulks.
LP
South
Gallia
pitcher
Niki
Fulks
delivers
a
pitch
during
Wednesday's
7-6
Division
IV tournament
·The Lady Rebels leu 7-5 · Gallia. o nly slightly better, Bobbi Snook. HR- SE: Shawna Williams,
win
over
Sciotoville
East.
heading into the seven th had five miscues . •
seventh inning,- none on.

Mavs eclipse Suns, even series

BY BRAD SHERMAN

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AP photo

Dallas Mavericks' Dirk Nowitzki, of Germany, shoots the game·
winning shot during the final seconds of a Western Conference
semifinal series ga·me against th~ Phoenix Suns.

.I

brining in Lewis and giving which she threw to first. to
lCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.coM
· the Angels a 2-0 lead.
· end the game.
----------~
In the fourth inning, Gallia ·"Its nice to win a tourn·aGALLIPOLIS - If the Academy brought in four · ment garne," said coach Jim
girls of Waverly did not more runs on the homerun by Niday. "It was nice for the
know what a strike w,as Lewis and some key errors, seniors to go out on a win on
before, they do now thanks opening their lead to six Memorial Field."
thanks in part to sloppy play
Other offense from the
to Amanda Lewis.
Angels came from Rame y
Gallia Academy had no from the Lady Tigers.
The
sixth
saw
much
of
th~
who
ended with two hits and
trouble handling the Tigers
for an 8-0 win. in Division II same as the Angels added an RBI, Ashley Jones went
sectional softball action two more runs thanks to a · 1-for-2 with three runs
homerun from Jennifer scored and Jessica Dingess
Wednesday.
managed a hit in the game.
Pitching was the key · to AngeL
With an eight-run lead
The Tigers had little
victory behind senior hurler
heading
into
the
final
inning,
offense
with only Taylor
Lewis, who sat down 17 hitthe
Angels
took
to
the
field
managi
n·
g
a hit. Becca Lacy
ters via strikeout and only
gave up one hit en route to with hopes of a no-hitter and is credited with the loss, she
the victory. Lewis also added more importantly, a win. pitched a complete game for
a homerun and an RBI to her However, the inning did not Waverly with five strike-outs
stan off as planned when two of her own.
winning performance.
Gallia Academy will next
To start the game . the batters drew walks.
The Tigers then man.aged face
Southern
Ohio
Angels jumped to a early 1-0
their
only
hit
of
the
afternoon
Conference
power
Scioto
lead after two innings thanks
to an RBI from Cursten from Houy taylor, loading Northwest lhis Saturday.
the bases with no outs.
Ramey:
Dlvslon II oecltonal
A tense . crowd watched as
In the third. Lewis led· off
Lewis
prepared
for
the
next
!"•lila
Aeademy •· waverly 0
with a hit to center field
WaWJrly
0000000-014
which was dropped, bringing batter. As the Tigers bench · Gallia Academy o 1 1 4 2 ox-s 7 o
her around to third. Michelle prepared for a ralley. Lewis Becca Lacey and McKenzi~ Gullion.
Elliott followed with a shot ended the game in perfect Af\landa' Lewis and Sarah Cochran . WP
'k'
h f"
~ Amandalewls . LP-Beccalacey.HR
.
to third which was again fas h10n.
stn tng out t e trst _ GA: Amanda Lewis, Jo~rlh 1nning, one
dropped whe'n thrown home, two batters and fielding a hit on; Jennifer Angel , fifth inning, one on.

Bv BRAD ,SHERMAN ·

BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

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PROCTORVILLE - What
better way to prepare for one
· of the best teams . in the area
than to play another of the
: best.
And what better way to
build momentum than to beat
that team.
Gallia Academy, in a tune,
up for tonight's Division II
sectional championship game
at Warren, used a big game
· from Luke Haislop to bea)
No.
8
Fairland
7-5
Wednesday in Proctorville.
Hai slop tripled, doubled
twice and knocked in four
runs for the Blue Devils, who
won their third straight to
improve to 13-11. Kyle
'Burnett had two hits. includ, ing a run-scoring double.
· It was only the third loss of
the season for the Dragons
(17-3); they had previously
lost .to Federal'· Hocking and

.1.

LARRY CRUM

T

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Southern coach Scott Wolfe talks with h'i s infield during the sixth inning of Wednesday's, sectional tournament game with Crooksville .

Steals

Lindsay
Buzzard
and no-decision . Ritlle recorded
Whitney Riftle each pounded two' strikeouts, allowed three
out three in the setback. hits and walked none for
Ashley Roush. Nikki Riftle Southern.
from Page 81 ·
The loss ends Southern's
and Bethanv Rifhe each
runner ;, called safe •because added a pclir of hi ts for season and -also ends the
Southern. Brvoke Ki s'er, · career; of Kiser, Roush,
of blocking the plate. Let the Nicki Tucker and Joanne · Pickens. Tucker. Nikki Riffle
girls win it or lose it on the Pickens all had one 1afety.
&gt;md Jordan Neigler. Coach
field."
Allen abo scored three Wolfe was nothing but
Nic(&gt;le Hahn 's controver- times in the contest. with ·. praiseful of his upperclass- .
sial. run proved to be the dif· Pickens and Nikki Riftle men, stating that they have
ference-maker in advancing plating
twtce
apiece. been like family during their
Crooksville to the sectional . Whitney Riftle drove in three time as Tornadoes.
final with · Trimble this run1 for the Tornadoes. while
•·t often tell those. seniors
Saturday.
Buzzard and Roush both that they are my kids .because
Though the play took 'omc chipped in two RBis.
I. ~ee them more than I see my
wind out of Southern ·, 'aik
Lynd,ey Gorby guided the own." elabor~ted a proud
' Wolfe abo a&lt;:knowlcuged Ceramic ... with four h1h. fol- Wolfe. "They were pan of the
that one pia} did not make lowed by Bolyard with three 21'-5 ;eason two years ago.
.the difference' in the game.
hits. Nicole Hahn. A»hley they were a pan of sectional
"What happened tonight Hahn .and Carrie Ellioll. eah championship and most of
has been the '&gt;101"1 of our sea- had a pair of hit&gt; in the win. them have played vur~ity
son .. 'aid Wolfe . " We've Bolyard leu Crooks"vi lle .with -.mce they were sophomores. ·
bee~ able 10 put run s_ on the three rum balled i n .
•
Nicole Hahn was credited J; m very prou~ of them for
board. but we have made
some tlelding mistake., and with the win. ti ni:,hi~g "'ith the outstanding careers they
'
we haven't made the big play three ;trikeout; and 1ix walh have had...
in the clutch when we've in fhe com plete 2:a:mc deciDivision IV sectional semifinal
needed it. Howeve(. I thought ..,inn. Bethany Riffle Wa\ '~adCrooksville13., Soulhern 12
191nnlngo)
the one thing the girl' did uled "'ith the lo;~ in her i-....o
Crooksv!l e 210 042 301"- 1313 3
tonight was battle. the) nc,cr inning.., of reliet of \tart~r Soumern
504 102 ooo- t2 19 6
Brooke Ki -,er. who ""em · NJcole Hahn and Aflte Bolyard . Brooke
gave up."
frame\ and f&lt;J n ned K1ser Bethany A1ffle (8) and Bonn1e Allen :
Bonnie Allen led the Lady &lt;--even
'
WP - Hahn LP - ·~hftle HA C - Alhe
'Does with four hit\. while three anJ walked fi\e in her Bolyard. seventh 1nn1ng, ana on.
I

·Lollis
from Page 81
it over and we think it will
be a -perfect t'it," Lolli's
added. " Hopefully we'll
win more games."
Lollis played with members of the team in a work. out on her visit to campus
and.likes the prospect of getting to play with the current
members of the squad and to
be a part of the tearn. '·They
were nice, we got along with
each other, it worked out
perfectly; it was good,"
Lollis said. "We went up and
down the coun. we ·got tired,
we l•mghed with each other;
I just connected with them,
so I think it will work out
perfect with them ." '
Lollis said she - liked
everything
about
Rio
Grande on her visit. "The
program , the atmosphere.
the teachers. the gym. the
way everyone was. · just
energized and happy as soon
as I .stepped on campus I
knew it was a perfect fit for
me;• Lollis said.
Springfield South head
coach Leeann Ballard felt
good · abou't the fact that .

Lollis' signing continues a .sarily the Division I level.
tradition of sending quality but I think a lot can play JUSt
athletes on to college schol- about anywhere,". Ballard ·
arships. " It's always a big added. "There's somebody
day to see these kids actual- · that can use their skill s
ly get a chance to get out of somewhere.
Springfield." Ballard said.
"So I hope it is a motivat·
"To see what the world is ing thing for them."
about, get out' and meet new • Rio Grande head coach
people . and to' experience David Smalley was excitetl
basketball at another level." that he was able to get Lollis
"We . play pretty good to ~ign on the dotted line.·
competition here; we think," "Shawna is probably one of
Ballard added . '.'We're doing fhe most athletic guards that
a lot of good ,things, but it's we've had in the program
always interesting to see and we've had some good
how they can expanu their ones down · through the
game and see how they can · years:· Smalley said. "Of
grow as players at the next course. she has to come in
level."
and prove that. but as far as
Ballard is hopeful that the the skills. she can shoot the
younger
student-athletes · three, handles the ball very
will use this signing as moti· well. can get it to the glass
vation to try to accompli&gt;h and is just a very, very talsomething simi lar through ented young lady.
hurd work and dedication.
"We· re not sure what her
"A lot of times you only see &gt;latus '&gt;Viii be as far as redthe big-time Division I shining or playing next
~ehools as the only place year," Smalley added. ''That
you can go," Ballard said. will be determined at a little
"What t· want these. g·uys to later date.
realize is that there are a lot
"Certai11ly bringing her
·of different sized schools into the program will be ·a
and that there 's a school out huge plus for us."
there for everybody.".
Lollis plans to major in
" I think we've got some &lt;;omputer Science.
kids 'that are coming that can
Shawna is the daughter of
cenainly play. at not neces- Robin Jordan.
)

Spring Valley.
inning. Haislop doubled home
· It was a balanced otfensive Clagg, who hit by a pitch,
attack for Gallia Academy. th en King knocked in his
which amassed a dozen hit s teammate with a single to.
amongst nine batters. Tyler make it 2-0. A sacrifice fly off
Clagg. Matt Mooney, Austin the bat of Saunders brought in'
King, Justin Saunders, Brad . the final run.
Caudill, Shawn Thompson
Fairland answered with two
and Shaphen Robinson all hit scores in the home half of the
safely one~..
, ,
frame, bui the Gallians added
Nic Zundec doubled and two runs each in the second
singled for Fairland while and fourth inning s to pull
Mike Hill added a two-run ahead comfortably.
Haislop hit a two-run douhomer in the seventh during a
rally effort that came up short. · ble in the second, then an RBI
The Blue Devil s led 7-2 triple in the fourth . Burnett
after four innings, but the followed with a double down
Dragons came back with the third base line to knock ' in
three . over, the final two hi s team's fi'nal run.
Qallia Academy's tournaframes to narrow the gap.
Winning
pitcher
Jeff · menl game at Warren begins5
Golden and Caudill teamed p.m. today.
up to annex the pitching vicGallla Academy 7, Fairland 5
tory. Chris Barilett, who also
Gallia Academy 3 2 0 2 0 0 0 - 7 12 2
pitched during a 12-1 win Fairland
200 001 2-5 7 1
over the Devils two weeks Jeff Golden, Brad Caudill (6) and Luke
Ha.islop. Chris Barnett, Trenton Moore (4)
ago, took the loss.
and Adam Fuller. WP - Jet! "Golden. LP Galli&lt;1 quickly jumped out Chris Barnett. HR - F: Mike Hill, seventh
to a three-run lead in the first inning, one on.

Satule 111 1he
Class 01.·

'

I

,...

•''

tieu it at 106 with 27.4 seconds left.
After a ti1iwout. the Mavs got the ball to
Nowitzki . who worked his way inside
and got the game-winning shot oil over
Richardson.
Pacers 92, Pistons !B
AUBURN HILLS. Mich. (API - The
NBA's most resilient team buum·eu back
i.lgam.

.

.

.

Jerniaine O' Neal scored 22 p01nts.
Reggie Miller had 19 and . Jeff FQster
grabbed 20 rebounds Wednesday night
to lead the Indiana Pac;ers past the
Detroit Pi stons 92-83 in Game 2. tyi ng
their Eastern Conference semifinal series
·,lt one game ~tpiece.
.
,
The Pacers trailed for two -plus· quarters before t&lt;iking over with an 11-0 run
in the -fourth quarter. They lost % -81 in
Game I.
O'Neal prevented the Pacers from
trail ing by more than 15 in the first quarter with eigh t points, the·n led their surge
in the third with 10 points.
Miller made a runningjumper.and a 3pointer to put Indiana .ahead for the first
time with 4:10 left in the th ird. The
Pistons scored th e la.st six points of th e
quarter to take a 69-68 lead.
After rive more lead changes, the score
was tied at 77 midway throu gh the fourth
quarter.
Miller's 3-pointer put Indiana ahead
82-77 with just under 5 minut es left.
The Pistons had won eight straight
home ga n1es in the playoffs., dating to
last' year' s conference finals.
Foster 'gave the Pacers a hu ge lift off
the bench with 14 points. Jamaal Tinsley

~ THERE; WILL

BE A
1SPECIAL EDiTION ON ,;; ~

'

I--:,

,"'': . _
1

had 12 pnints and 12. ""i'" and Stephen
Jackson audcd 13 poims .
Dctmit's Tayshaun Prince 'cored 14.
Rasheed Wal lace anll Richard Hamilton
each had 1-l and ChatiiKe) Billups
~orell13.

·

The next two game, in the be,t-ofsevel.l se ries are in lndianapoli-; on
Friday night and Sunday"artcrnoon. •
Many wrote th e .Pacc1's dl'f when their
Nov. 19 bri1wl with the l'i;tons and their
fan s led to unprecctlented stispensions.
but the P&lt;tcer&gt; ditln ' tlet the lu" uf Ron
Ancst antl others - or a slew of. injuries
later in the seasnn - devastate the.m.
Indiana even pulled ot't'" rare road win
in a Game 7 of th e fir st rtllmd at Boston
to .auvance to play the defending" NBA
champion s. w.ho ended the Pacers· season in the cunference fi nals last year.
Miller. who plans to retire ;tfter .the
season. _,cored just two points in each or
th e first two quarters before closing
strong in the secnnd half. ,He scored six
points in the scri~s opener.
. .,
The Pacers ,sa1d 'th ey wmilll d&lt;; anything - and they did - to try to slow
down Hami lt on after he sL'Clred 2H points
Monday. ·
·
Miller started out guarding Hamilton.
then Jackson did before the Pacers useu
a zone. but none of the &lt;~djustments
worked as the Pistons jumped out to a
24-11 lead . Detroit was ahead 33-1 ~
after the first quarter wi th flrince scori ng
II - three more than he had in Game I
- atid Hamilton adding eight points.
The Pistons led 50-40 at ha!i'time. then
tell behind tiy fiv e in the third before
going back ahead.

S ITH II SUPERSTO

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AN AIYIH'.AN R:VWJTD ~
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· · -~~~~---____:_--------,--Bryan Walters/pholo

PHOENIX (AP) - Dirk Nowitzki
sank a 12-footer with 6.8 seconds
i·emaining Wednesday ll'ight to give the
Dallas Mavericks a rugged I()~, It:J6 victory over the Phoenix Suns, sq uaring
their best-of-seven Western Conference
semifinal series 1-1.
Quentin Richardson 's 3-point allempt
for Phoenix bounced off the back rim al
the ·buzzer.
Mi&lt;:hael Finley scored 3 1 points ,
shoot ing s,of-6 on 3-pointers, and
Nowitzki aduetl 23 points and 12
rebounds for the Mavericks, who turned
to rough defense and a slower tempo to
bounce back from a 127-102 blowout
loss in Game I .
Erick Dampier, ca ll ~d out publicly by
Nowitzki after being outscored by
Amare Stoudemire 40-0 in Game I. had
15 points, I0 in the first quarter, and
grabbed 12 rebounds. ·
Stoudemire had 30 points and 16
rebounds for the Suns. who lost Joe
'Johnson to a mild concussion from a
hard foul from Jerry Stackhouse with
19.7 seconds left in the first half. Steve
Nash had 23 points and 13 assists and
Shawn Marion auded 23 points and 15
rebounds .
Nowitzki .sank two fre e throws to put
Dallas ahead I06-102 with I :55 to play,
then Stoudemire missed a dunk and a
layup 011 consecutive possessions. But
Marion . l;&gt;,locked Nowitzki's shot. anu
Stoudemire dunked on a pick-and-roll
feed from Nash to cut it to I 06-104 with
50.9 seconds to play.
··
·
Jason Terry threw the ball away on the
next possession, and Nash's 18-footer

Gallia Academy burns Dragons, 7-5 Chevrolet Cars &amp;.. Trucks Now At

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Lewis, Blue Angels tame Waverly
Bv

Roundup

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Diesel Dually/
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SOURCE FOR PRE-OWNED!

SALUTING ALL MEIGS COUNTY

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YOUR CAR &amp;TRUCK SUPERSTORE NEXTTO WAL·MART
1900 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS OH

j

•

�'
Page B4 • 1h-' Dail\ Sentinel
.

.

Thursday, May 12, 2005

www .myclailysentincl.com

·,

Tribe scalps Los Angeles, 9-3
A!'\ .-\CIEI"I.
Cal1i'.
lAP\
clid,c·d for the CkH•IimJ
lmhcilh. than!,, h&gt; a rnamped lineup
that had .1 "''''tile ctlcc:t on alnttht
e\'en one 111 1t.
Ben Brnu"·'rd humercd a11d haJ three
hit:-. m h1-. ftr"t gallll.' 111 thL' deanup ~pol
th1s sea"m. hdpin~ the lmk111&gt; beat the
Los Angclc-.. -\ngcJ.., l) ~ i un \Vednesday
··,J ltli'C hittin~ i11 ihc· middk of the

Ul\ler , \\ lwre\ l'l ,._ it·.., ar.·· L3rou ... ~arLI said.

"That\ 11 here: I lm 1111 11 hnk c:areer 111
the min()[' lc:tguc . . . tile 1--l "P{)I. But
w~·\e i!Ot ... nmc 1e ~ tl ~uod J--+ · ~u,· :-. on
th is tcclin. '" l'm !'inc l1itting ~. ~- i,halm.t'

Thursday, May 12, 2005

tu h1t

· "We ·,-c heen kind of t11eakin~ the
lin~up all year. tr;. lllg to get it going and
lind the n~IH mi,wrc . That's the wav it

is when ,zlu·re . . cuftling It \\ as a Ql)ocJ
feeling tlK.I:.iy. to bL· 111 ._ there ami hwe
som~ :-.ituation ... '' h~T~ guys til front of

you ware get tin g nn ba"e ·:
Jhonn1· Peral ta and C1se1 Blake hit
so1o ho1i1er~ in the ei!!hth in.nin~ for the
Indians. who fintshcd 5--l on. tllctr road
.tnp hy lakin)! t\1'0 or three .from the
defend 1n g AL West c·hampiL&gt;ns. Coco
Crisp IIL'nt -~- for--1 ll·ith' two douhlcs nnd
an RBI single.
Cli ff Lee 1-l- l \ s hru~~eJ off Jose
Molina·..., two-run hnmetTn Lhe . . ecnnd
and won for the third tnnc in tour sutrts.
allowin~ three run' two earned AP photo
anJ ll veh 1h 111 ' " 1 nn111~s. The left-hander struck out fo lll' ,md ;;..alkeJ none.
Cleveland Indians' Coco Crisp IS tagged out by Los Angeles Angels shortstop
Cleveland manage! Em· Wedge shu f- Orlando Cabrera on an attempted steal of second 1n the seventh mn1ng 111
fled hi s bauin~ order aga inst ~Kell· im Ahahe1m, Calif.. on Wednesday.
Escobctr ( 1-1) Ill an atteni'pt to wake up
an otfense that had produced just I0 off the second wuh a drive to right-c:en- 10- 1 ~Vith the onl y loss commg 111
runs in its previnu~ f&lt;,ur games. Escobar ter t'qr his second homer. JUmp:qaning Anaheim.
"That's what happ'~Jlt; when you get
alloweu four 'uns anJ SIX hits in five Cleveland's I ~-hit assault.
inning:-.. :-;triklllg out nin~.
"The guys dtd a good JOb of beaung a any .pitcher on the ropes and let htm setGrad) Si1cmore. lllle of fi1e players to really tough pitcher." . Broussaru said. tle 111to his game." said Finley. who left
hit leadoff 111 the past two weeks. was at "Escobar has the kino of stuff that some- in the seventh be~ause of tightness in his
the top of the urue1 fo1 the secon_u time. times seams unhittable. so you've JUSt groin. "Lee started throwing good qualBlake. whnlcd on llllllc tlrst t\10 !!CIIllCS got to concentrate and bati le and hope ity strikes. and the rest is history. They
came back anJ &gt;Co rell the runs to put
of the serie,. hit 'econd Ronnie Bel liard he makes some mistakes ...
batteu 111 tl1e tlfth spot after makmg all
Cnsp. moveu mto the &gt;ixt h spot th.;m ahead and that was the ball game."
Angels first baseman Darin Erstau. iri
26 of his pre1·imt' stans as th e No·. 2 hit- Tuesday night after batting no l01ver
than second through the tirst 31 games. a 4-for-16 slump that has dropped his
ter.
"Case.\ had .some su~cess in the 2 hole greeted reliever Esteban Yan with a averdge to .24 1. sal out tor the tirst time
that kind or got him going last year, and leadoff double 111 the sixth and scored on tillS season.
Notes: Angels pitch1ng coach Bud
Grady's had ,omc qpcrience up top:· Peralta's sin'gle.
Wedge said. "Offensively. thi s v.as
Sizemore follov.ed with ,m RBI dou- Black. who ha' turned down several
arguab ly one of ou1 best Jays of the year ble that made it 6-3 and Crisp adued an managmg oppo11Ulllties since the team's
- if not the best. And they kept it going. RBI sinele in the seventh. The Los 2002 World Senes title. smd he wouiJ
too. wh1ch" somethmg we hadn't been Angeles 7Jati~e fini shed the series 7-for- have to listen it: Kansas City contacted
doing . So that 11·as tmponam:·
11 with two homers. three RBis. three him about replaung Tony Pena.
Sizenlllre anJ Blake both struck out doubles. three stolen bases and six runs. ''Obl'iously. it would be tlattenng:· said
their first two times up. But in the third.
The Indians batted .275 in the three- Black. who spent seven seasons with the
Sizemore Singled. Blake doubleJ and game series. 42 points above their sea- Royals and helped them win a world
championship in 1985. "My formative
Travts Hafner-dro,·c 111 Sizemore with a son average.
groundout to put Cleveland ahead -l-3.
Molina gave the Angels a 3- 1 lead in years in the game were shaped by the
Umi l then. lnul .lll' leaJoff batters haJ · the se&lt;:ond wllh his second homer after a Royals. But like I've said over the las t
scored only one run 111 the previous 13 leadoff si ngle by Dallas McPhersqn. But couple of years. I would have to look at
games.
.
Lee retired his last I~ batters afte1 giv- the situauon and see whether the timEscobar struc:k out the side in the first · ing up Steve Finley's two-out double in ing's right tor me and my family to even .
·
ml'ltn~ on 13 pitches. but Broussard led the second. Last year, Lee started out explore that.

BEREA iAPl - Ten' days
after he surl'ived a wtentially
fatal motorcycle crash. Kellen
Winslow Jr: began repairing
his NFL career.
While Winslow's return to
the field for the Cleveland
Browns IS still in yuestion . the
tidH end visited the · team's
heaclquhrters to stan rehab on
his inJmed right. knee
Wcdnesdav. less than 24 ' hour~
after his release from the hospital.
' .
"He was happy to be here:·
Browns coach Romeo Crenncl
said. "He was in pretty good
spirits.''
Winslow sustained unspecified injuries in a May I accident when he crashed his highpowered motorcycle into a .
ratsed parkmg lot curb at 35
mph. The Browns are most
Cllncerned abou t Winslow's
knee. which wtll be re-examined in 7-10 days when
swelling subsides. team president John Collins said.
The club. said Winslow Jid
nut have any surgery during
his hospital stay.
Respecting the wishes of
Winslow's family and abidtng
by privacy laws. the Browns
have not disclosed any
specitlcs qf what happened to
their 2 1,year-old star. who
mi&lt;&gt;sed 14 ga mes last season
as a rookie with a broken leg.
However. it 's ·clear from
what the Browns are pem1itted
to discuss thal Winslow i's
lucky to be ali ve.
"He easil y could have been
killed." general manager Phil·
Sava2e said.
Collins said it 's too early to
determine if Winslow. the
club's first-round rick in the
2004 NFL draft Will play thts
season. But despite a . public
from
outraged
outcry
Cleveland fans who would
like to sec the team cut
Winslow for breaking his contract. the Browns hqve- no
plans to release him.
"Absolutely not:· Savage
said. "We need him and we
want him ."
Winslow walked out of the
Cleveland Clinic on Tuesday
with the aid of cn1tches but
was unable to put any pressure
on his wrapped right leg. He
was assisted into an a'Waiting
SUV and taken to h1s home in
suburban We s tl~ke.
Before Wednesday, the

Brown; had been very vague
about Winslow's accident
Thev had not provided an
upuine on · his status ;ince
releasmg a statement on May
4 that said he was recovering
from internal injuries.
By riding the motorcycle.
Winslow l'iolated a clause in
hi~ contract that stipulates he~
is not .to engage in dangerous
activi ties. The Browns 'have
already paid him $5.05million
in bonus money over the past
two seasons and could require
Winslow to return some or all
of it if he can't play.
''The contract is clear about
an injury resulting from hazardous activities,'' Collins
said. "It doesn't preclude anybody from doing those activities. 1i just protects the club in
case somebody is injured or
can't perform."
With rumors running rampant about the nature of
Winslo',\''S injuries and his
future. Collins was a~ked if the
former Mtami star's career
could be over.
"I don ' t think there is any
mdication that this is career
ending."·Collins said.
Winslow's decision to ride
the recently purchased motorcycle has been viewed as reckless and irresponsible. A
brazen act for someone with
so mudr to lose. But despite .
the te&lt;~m's best attempts,
Crennel said it's impossible to
regulate what players do with
their tree time.
"We can't hold these guys'
hands 24 hours a day." he said.
"We've got 53 of them. We
have to hope that they're
going to make sound. logical
choices. We will try and continue to educate and counsel
them about their chotces on
and off the field .''
While ihey're disappointed
with Winslow's judgment, the
Browns are relieved that he
wasn't hun worse. Savage didn't have a sense of the severity
of Winslow's injuries until he
visited the hospital.
"We· re thankful that he was
here this morning and hopeful
that he will be able to make a
recovery in due time."
Crennel said Winslow apologized to him for what happened.
"He· told me he was sorry
about it," he said.

Rutland
Civic Center
Spri11g Fling
Dance
3 Live Bands

Sat .. May 14
7;11:30
Blue Grass-

Country • and
Rock
Concessions by
Rutland Fire
Dept.
12-6 $3.00 - $5.tHI

t:nder 6 Free
ut the door

"o

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily SenU(lel '

' BULLETIN BOARD
REGISTERED NURSES
Per Diem
Pleosonl Volley Hospital 1s accepting
applications for Per Diem Registered Nurses
1n the ICU department
Excellent salary, holidays. health insurance
single/family plan, dental plan. life
1nsurance, vacation. long-term disability and

Gallipolis's Great
Garage Sale
Saturday, May 21st
9 am til3 pm

ret~rement.

'

Send resumes to·
Pleasant Volley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520.Volley Drive
Point Pleasant, wv 25550

(3041675·4340.
www

Alcohol

.Woodyards Mini Mall
New Load of Sealy Mattresses,
Lil Dolly Dresses , South Pole
Auction this Sat. -Fred Voshel

pvalley org

7 40-446·7327

M/EOE

Fri-Sat-Sun
May 13, 14! 15

Announcements

French 500
Flea Market

CiUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

Gallia County Fairground
Dealers Welcome

CLUB
All proceeds
·will be devided
between
Squad 90 of
Reedsville &amp;
Squad 66 of
Tuppers Plains
Rim Fire Riffle
Only
12 Noon
Sunday 15th

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SuccessfUl Ads-Should Include These Items
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Friday For Sundays Paper

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Auto Repair ..................................................
Autos lor Sate .................., ........................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ..........................~ .. 340
Business Opponunity .................................210
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ......... ~······ ·· ········ 790
Camping Equipment. .................................. 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaURefrigeration ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent .....................................480
Excavating ...................................................1)30
Farm Equlpment .........................................!Sto
Farms lor Rent. ............................................430
Farms tor Sala ............................................. 330•

For lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ...................... ,................................. 585
For Sale or Trade ......:-.................................. 590
Fruits &amp; Vogetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng ............................................ 850
Glveaway ..................... ,................................ 040
Happy Ads ....................................................
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................640
Help Wanted .................................................110
Homelmprovements ...................................810
Homes lor Sate ............................................310
Household Goods ............................ .'.......... 510
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................b20
Insurance ................................,.................... t30
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660
Uvestoek......................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................350
Miscellaneous.............................................. 170
Mlac:ellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home llep.Otr.................o... ., ... ......... . 860
Mobile Homes for Rent.. .......,..................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelors ..........................740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570

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Personals ..................................... .: .............. 005

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City/State/Zip ---'---- - - - - - - -

Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Professional Sarvlces ................................. 230
Redlo, TV &amp; CB Repalr ................,............... 160
R•t Eotata Wanted ........... :......................... 380
Schoolslnotructlon ......., ............................. 150
Seed , P1an1 &amp; Fanlllzar .............................. 650
Stluatlona Wanted ....................................... 120
S.,.ce lor Rent .............................................460
Sporttnjj Goocts ........................................... 520
for Sale ........., ....................................
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholatery ................................................... 170
Vana For Sale ............................................ ... 730
WanMd to Buy ...................:......................... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
Wanted To Do ........................................:..... 180
Wentad to Rent ..........................,. ................. 470
Yard Sale- Galllpotls.................................... 072
Y81d Sate-Pcimaroy/Middl&lt;l ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleasant ................................ 076

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Phone ____________~-----------------Mall or drop off thla coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publlahtng P.O. Box 469, Galllpolla, OH 45631

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3 Family Garage Sale--May
13th - 14th
3 mtles East
of Tuppers Platns S R 681,
Turn nght on Joppa Road.
3rd dwellmg (right) Home
lnterror entertatnment-center. TV, storm door, lawn
chatrs. shelves
dishes
Chnstmas items. M•sc

Fnday. May 13&amp; 14&amp; 16

On
bestde
Methodtst
Church tn Aacme close to
Southern Local School
Camper, dishes. children's
clott1es and toys Lots More

Etm .

3 rnoolie homes for sale

S2 500 each Call (740\388 ·
9900
New 1-lx60 Or"lly 5198 73
per mo Include s comp lete
set ~,;p ar&gt;d deliver)' 74C·

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE

© 2005 by NEA, Inc.

M1~1 o::--------.., ~~~~10::--------,

HEI.I' \\1AN'IH)

Hfl.P WANIID

AVON ! All Areas• •To Buy or
Hol2er Clinic
sen Sh irley Spears, 304·
675-1429.
l:ium..a.n..B.eaources
·
Manaaer:
Busy Accol.LOftng Otftee
Holzer Clime ts seetung an
see~1ng Pari Time
HR Manager to manage all
Employment 1n the Potnt
HR functtons tncludmg, but
Pleasant area Send
not ltmtted to employment,
Res ume to TSC 11
em~loyee relations, beneftts.
200 Ma1n St.
appraisal program. potictes
Potnt Pleasant , WV 25550 and procedures worker's .
compensatton and unemCecil 1. Walker Machinery
ployment. Thts person wtlt •
Co. tS looktng lor a Delivery
also be responsible for manDriver/ Warehouseman for
agtng
all prOCesses withm
our Jackson Ohio branch
lhe
HAIS
database.
Candtdate must have a cur·
Bacheior's' degree reqwed.
rent Commerctal Drrver's
Three IO f1ve years ot HR
ltcense EXcellent Benetti
expenence
preferred
package EEO Employer
Candidale mllsl have strong
organtzattonal. communfCaPlease subm tt your resume
!ton. leadership. and com·
to
puter sk1lls
Cectl I Wal~er Machtnery

Co
PO Box 2427
Charleston WV 253~9
ATIN · Human Resources
Dept

Oualifted apphcants may
apply to
Holzer Clmtc
Human Resources
90 Jackson Ptke
Galltpolts. Ohto 45631-1562

1304)674 6118
I Will do Adult Care tn your S95 .000
Home or Pnva te Duty atter 5 30
W'HW.eomies.com
(304 )675-6761
Attention•
Local company offenng -No
If you have a Job that
f.!rO·
110 .
nobody wants All pha·ses of DOWN PAYMENT'
.
HEU'W\NTEO
Constructton
call
Matt grams for you 10 ou~ your
1
home 1nstead of rentrng
Blankenshlp(304)895-3720
• 100°g ft nancmg
• Les s than perfect credtt
In
Home
Oua
lrty
Ch
tld
Care
TRUCK BODY REPAIR
Fu ll &amp; Pa rt-ltme accepted
' Prov1der
• Payme nt could be the
One ol Oh1o's leadmg motor Open1ngs hours 7am 6om
same as re nt
•
earners has an 1mmedtate call Shelly (304 )675-2343
opentng lot a heavy·duty
Mor tgage
Loca tors
truck body repatr techn 1c1an KRS Lawn Mowmg servtce (740)992-732 1
wrth mechan tcal e)(pettence and hauling Discoun t for
War~
expe ri enc e
wtth sentors t (740 )245-924 0 or
Internat ionals
and (740)339-0066 .
Fre1ghthners tS desirable .
F1ve day work week , pa.rd
vacatiOn . personal days
Brand New Method
All real estate advertismg
healtl\, msurance, patd t)o\1·
in this newspaper ts
days, o~ert me pay. 401K
Dry in 1 H,aur
.
No Steam-or-Shampoo
subject to the F&amp;deral
pian and untlorms are
Free·Esttrnates
Fair Housmg Act of 1968
among the many benefits ol
"*"Clearly Clean•••
whtch makes 11 tllegalto
wor~1ng at Arcttc Express.
_
304 675 0022
advertise " any
inc Wtll' pay top dollar lor the .L--.&gt;::::::&lt;:::..::::::::o:.._..J
preft="rence, limitation or
right person Th e pos1t1on IS Need SomeoMe to Mow Yarel
·discrimination based on
open now and you can begm near Leon . Ca ll (3041675race, color, reltgion, sex.
wor~ immedtalely. Fa)(, ematl 7612 and leave message.
famtlial status or national
or in person apphcants are
or~g t.n , or any tntent1on to
welcome
.. "\\,( 1\1
make any such
preference , ltm1tation or
10
dtacr1minatton
Denver Fanmn
BLISL'~~

1

M a 1 n t e n a n. c e
Supenntendent
4277 Lyman Drtve
Htiliard, OH 43026
Fax 614-527·4114
lnley@arc!JtfX·
Ematl:
press.oom
E 0 E /Drug tree workplace

OPI'oRnNm

I
GallipoliS,
i-- : Wk~
ro

OH 45631 .

oNUTICE•

r

MoNEY
·

TO

loA.'

~orrow Smar.t Con ta c
lle Oh10 DtvtSIOn o
tf:manc1a l
lnstttutton'
Ptftce
of
Consume
~ffatrs BEFORE you relt
~ance your home o
~bta m a loan. BEWARE
~~ requests for any larg
~dvance payments o
ees or tnsurance Cal
he Offtee of Consume
Ha1rs toll free at 1-866
78-0003 to lea rn 11 th
mortgage
tiroker
o
ender
tS
proper!
tcensed. {Thts IS a publt
enflce announc eme n
rom the Oh io Valle
Publrsh tng Company)

BUILD!NG (304)675-1333

. Hanstyllst and Nail tech 9AMT04PM

needed tor new salon tn Now accepting resume's at
Absolute Top Dollar : U.S. Pomeroy Open ing Soon
Court Gnll tor parl·ttme cook
Stiver aM Gold COins. Call 992·6573
&amp; bartender.
Proofsets. Gotd Atngs. U S
Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT's
Currency,·M.T.S. Cotn Shop, Help Wanted
151
Second
Avenue . Managers. ass tstant man- needed App ly at 1354
agers. cash iers and toad Jackson Ptkll, Galhpolts
••
seNtee employee posillol"'s
I \11' 1 ( n \II' I
available. Fun or part time Parr Ttme LPN. ' Monaay~
" I In II I"'
wtth flexJble schedules and Fnday. no weekends , no
Holidays. no sh ift work. .
BXCellent benefitS.
A.pp ly tn person. Medical
Plaza, !336 State Route 160.
Apphcattons avwtable at.
Gallipolis.
2943 St At 141 , GallipoliS
~Wanted) Licensed Phystcal ~5054 St. AI 160, Vtnton
Secreta ry for Galhpolts
Therapy Asststant lor home 56 Vrne Street Gallipolis
office Hours at operation M·
healtl"t servtces Please send Or apply online at parmarF sam-4pm Call (304 )481 resume to McGraw PhysiCal stores com or tax resume$
1636 · to schedule
an
1-7.0:373-6854.
Therapy, Inc. P.O. Box 983,
appointment to'r an tnter·
Jackson. OH 45640 or call
Help wanted- Darst Adult VI9W
(740)286-6631
Group Home, 040 )992·
Seakmg energetic. bnght
100 WORKERS NEEDED 5023
collection specialist Dental
Assemble crafts.
background helpful Fax
News Repo".,wood items
resume to (740)446-4840
Gallipohs Daily Trrbune
Matenl!lls pi'OV!ded.
has an tmmediate openStylist Wailted Smart Style
To $480/wk.
Ing lor a full bm~ News
Salon Full-time Of' part· time,
Free tnlormatian pkg 24 hr
Reporter. Please send
hourly rate vs , commsston
tt;:l~ -428-4649
resume. wnting . and
Patd vacauon. insurance
cover tetter to J tm
An Excellent way to earn
ava11able. Please call 1·888Freeland. 825 Thlfd Ava ..
money The New Avon
888·7778 ext. 1294 as!( for
GaJ11po1.s. Ohio 45631
Call Manlyn 304-882·2645
Darlene.

to

DtRECTV
FREE Home
entenainment
System
FREE Equipment and Install
up to tour rooms 145 chan·
nels S29 00 a month Ask
how lo get FREE HBO,
MAX. and STARS. t-aoo523-7556 tor detatiS

MOVING

SALE

Two 8X10

r

Buildings. computer desk.
horse tack, horses, trans
AM/Formula car . and body
parts Engines, holst, a6gnment machrne. • AND• 11ems

TU~NED DOWN ON

t~merous to mention

740·992-2800 or
416-1960
"

'l'tiO·

~I

WA&lt;'IIDD
To Do

SOCIAL

SECURITY ISSI?

Unl~'5!5 We Win'
,-888·58'2-3345

No Fee

740,

I

Thta newl!lpaper will not
knowtngly accept
advertisements lor real
estate which ts rn
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
informed lh&lt;lt aU
dwellings advertised In
this newspaper are
available on an equa l
opporturiily bases.

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG1CO recommends tha
ou do business wit!"t peo
le you ~n ow . and NOT t
end money through th
atl until you have tnvestt
ated the oHenn

(3041675·5858

•

2000
front
krtchen model wtlh S~lrltrg
and central atr Wttl ae!lver
Very,..clean 1·800· 83? ·3238

13041586·4858

Thursday rFnday. Ra ctne··
Ftrst Road
Past Htgh
Jackson OhioFax 74Q-441·3592
School
Home InteriOr.
o81ivery!Warehous'eman
Apphcat•ons ma~ be
Furnrture. clothtng. d1shes
re'lnevl?d from
Cook needed appy tn perbaby items
www
holzerchntc com
son Holiday Inn of Galltpohs
6
Equal Opportumty Employer Tuoperware. Sell or date a
YARUSAU~­
No phone calls
shOw. Earn $160 FREE
Pr. PtEASAJ'{[
McClure's Restaurant now Tupperware Hurry Otters
Domtno snow Htnng.
hinng all locattons. full or ETJds May-27 (304)773·
Sate Drtvers
Garage Sale Th ursday,
All LocattonS' ...i '.
part-hme, ptck up applica- 5630
Friday
Salu rday
9-2
tion at tocalton &amp; bnng back
Apply m person
HousehOld rtems clothes.
between
1o.ooam
&amp;
toys, ntee prtees 907 27th
11 ·00am . M.onday thru
(740)446·4040
Street '
Saturday
- - - ' - - - ' - - - - - · Establ tshed Heattng ·Cooltng
Gallipolis Career College •
needed
Yard Sale 191 ..3 Jefterson Company 1n Gallta County Mechantc
(Car~rs Close To Home)
Blvd (beside ERA) Sal May loo~ 1 ng for expenenced E'xpenence is required. Call
Call Today' 740-446-4367.
14th 8-?? Aatn or Shine mstallers and technicians If (740)446-2263 for an 1nter1·800-214-0452
Men 's, Women s B"rand mterested send resume to vtew
www Q&lt;lllpojr$ClilrMr~ollege com '
Name Clolhmg, Bedroom . CLA Box 568 C/O Galltpolts
NEED ESTIMATES ON AccredliM Membe• Accr&amp;arlln;.
Kitchen &amp; Mtsc Items
, Trrbune. p 0
Box 469.
Coonol lor l~nl Coll~s
ROOFING I
PAINTING and SChools 12748.

Btl'

system
washer
dryer
stove
re'ngerator
diSil·
washer
Must oe moved
S8000 (7401645·67:3-1

3br House Dtntng Room 385-2434
K1tchen. Hot water neat &amp;
Electrtc Ctty-Water &amp; Drtlled
Stock models at ala onces
We ll Br ick 8 Vtnyt E•1
2005- models arnvtng Now
I wtll clean hOuses or otf•ces
Cole's
Mob•le
Homes
References avatl able Fcir
5 Bedroom. 2 Ba th 1 8 15266 US 50 East Athens
th e best tn clearihness call
mtles out Sandhill Road Oh10 4570 1 l?-l0)59,2·1972
·Maltnd.a at 304-531·1794 or
fireplace decks , 24FT pool. ' Where You Get Your
740·992· 5805
appliances tnduded .ask1ng Moneys Worth"
Georges Portable SawmtH
don't .haul your logs to the
mtll JUSt c all304-675- 1957

wect-

yARD S-\LE-

porches Must be moved.
$25,000 (740)388-8978

3-Bedroom
!·Ba th
Remodeled. Fu ll easemert
App ltance s
mcluced
Outbut ldtng 8. 24FT Pool.
188 Park Dnve (304!675·
Gentles Conlruci!On- Home 7469
Improvement
30
ye ars
expenence Cust ome r sat1· 3br D ouble W tde 2 l u I
faciiOn guare need Anytmg Batrs on 1 3 acres on Rt 2
t
w1th home 1mprov.em ent toward Pauls Exxon
Compare nur prlcEis Free Dutbwldtng wrap a·o und
Centra l KeaVA tr
esttmate (740)256·6878 or Porc h
(304)675· 10 19 after 6pm
(740 )441·0342

8 Ktlten s 2 months old .
'
Caltco, Millen Paw. Irish 511 2 · 51 ~ 4 Ram or Shtne
Lg yard sale, m1sc Items 3
C ream &amp; Black (J0 4)675 _ tnstde garage sale. 2 112
mtles out St At 775
mtles E. of Porter on 554
7137
Saturday.
Btg 6 famtly garage saleMay 13·14 164 Ann Dr ,
A atnl shtne 8am·5pm. Frt 8:30-4 .30,
off
Sat
922 Jencho Ad , At 7S.
Raccoon Ad Baby clothes
Cheshtre
toys ect Houstng goods
Free to good home 2 rabbtt, Carport sale- 4201 Addtson
gwnea ptg s, 3 cats. roosters Ptke Frtday/Saturday, May Opening Friday, .May 3tst
Call (740)256-6433 or leave t3thl 14th 9 DD·5·oo Ftrst Cold Mountatn Condtmenls
lnlersect•on
message.
s·ale m 15 years Men's! and Crafts
- - - - - - - - - · women's clothmg, table Lrncoln Pike and State
Gtveaway· Small lem ale cat, lamps, Maytag washer, too Ro ute 141 Wood crafts ,
9rey/ttger stnped . "lready many tlems to ry~enlton. antrque lamps, handmade
QUillS. Amtsh baked goods
spayed. good wtlh ktds. Good clean sale.
'(740}441·1565
Amish ·made cand•es 31
Fn, Sat, Sun 8am-Spm, 230 vanettes Amish made 1ams
Male
Yellow
neutered . Ltnwood Dr (otf ot Bulavt lle and Jellies. Open spectal
declawed olde( cat to good Ptke) Numerous boy baby Hanging Baskets SB 50
home (304 1882·3218
. clothes
each

20 ~IOHU.F.II0\11~~
F()~ S.-\ l.f,

S \I.E

DHK CLEANING 8. POW- 1993 Sunsh tn e doubtewtde 1982 Fleetwood 1•t q o trail·
ERWASMING. wtnOOws Let 20x60 3 bedr oom 2 batl1 er 3 bedroom 2 baths CrA

Humane Soctety fund r81ser
9·5 . May 13-14 , 1031
Second Ave . Huge selectton
cloll1tng. housewares. collectibles
Relreshments
avatlable.

Free to good home ~tttens 5
weeks old
Call-740·9926894 evenmgs

Ht)\U~"\

ro~

Lost Male Beagle with
Fri. 13th· 3-6pm Sat , 14th·
Shocktng collar. lost .tn TNT
Dt Danny WOShttureltlttll Wtll area Reward (304)075-2245 8am ·4pm 224 ~ Fm;t Ave
Ratn or shtne lots of chtl·
be Openmg a D•et Chntc m
the next couple ol wee~s At Lost· dark brownfblac~ dog dren . ladtes clothes. great
thrs ttme we plan to be open -s lackte : collar wltags. St chtldren toys · many mtsc
on Fnday·s and Salurday s AI 68t . Tuppers Plarn area , ttems Park on Street walk
up drtve.
for Dtet Clmtc Only. Contact Reward , (740)992-2042

3 pupptes, 2 gt rls. I boy 4
weeks old. part Mtn-Ptn &amp;
ChI h U a h u.-a I Sh t h- T l U

•

POLICIES. Ohla Valle~ Publiahlng ruerv••lhe right to edit, reteet. or cancel any ad at an~ l1ma Error• muat be reported on the hr1t day of
Tnbune-Sentinai-Register will bto ruponsible for no mor• than the cost of the space cx;cup~ed by the error and only the ftrst 1Mert1on We
any loaa or expense that reau111 from tne publication or omission or an advertisement Ccmection will be made m the first a~a1lable edlt1on
"~;~";,~.~::1
are atwayJ confidential. • Current rate card applies. • All real estate adverttaemenla .ue subject to the Federal Fa1r Housmg Act ol 1968 • Th1 1 r
accepts only help wanted ada mHling EOE standards We wtll not knowmglv accept any ad'verus tng In YIOialton of the law

Shth-Tzu type dog found Garage sale May 13 9·00near chtldren s home Call to 5. 00 12 Oakwood Drtve on
588 Furniture . toys. cloth·
3 cats &amp; kiMens all dttferent tdenttf~· (740)446-4963
ing, shoes mise
colors. Call (740)388-0406

.Here's all you
need to do .. ~
Fill out the coupon
below- and drop off or
mail it -with
a
.
copy of your photo ID.

I

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m. ·
Monday-Friday for In;;;ertion

AD NOTICED

Now you can have borders an'd graphics
~
added to your classified ads
'
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1
for large

Display Ads

r

on your home delivered ·
subscription!

•

Word Ads

GETY'OUR CLASSIFIED liNE

Westmoreland Famtly Care
Center @· 304-773-5333 or Lost Female Tabby. long Fnday-5113/05 . on 218. 1.5
ha1red cat. Vtcmtty of Ktneon mtles from At 7 Good Pock·
773·5000
et kntves. gas gnll al")d more
De Call(740)•46·0350.

.

-------------------------------

Oeacltf;,e.s&gt;

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
Lu.-r A.'&lt;II
n Y-\Ril SAU:·
ANNOUNCb\tENTS 1·"---oifiiOiilNii'lii.l-_..1 Lw-•Giii'liiAiiil.llii.liii'Uiiilii.L'·,;,_.I . twrlght@ic net

Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760

Dail!' Qtrthune

l\egister

r

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ..................................'.......... 030
Anllques .......................................................530
Apanments for Rent ................................... 440
AuC!ion and Flea Market............................. 080

0

s~

.

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

•oint t)lea~ant B.egh~ter
The Daily Sentinel

Where Can You
Find the Perfect Pet?

I

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

Sentinel

992-2156 .. (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (7 40) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157
675·5234

Senior Discount*

~aiUpoU•

\!l:ribune

To Place

74

If so, . you qualify
for a
.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

•

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Announcements

www.mydailysentinel.com

Winslow takes first
·step back with Browns

EICI'Ithin~

e' er the,· need

•

Lm~ &amp;
Al'R~~\!:E
1.2 Ac iot Tycoon LaKe on
Eagle Ad
Co. Water tnot
lake
front)
$7 500 00
( 7~0)247 · 1100 or (304)532·
627 1 celt
100 x t 50 Lo t Gal tpolts
Ferry Blacl&lt; Top Ad Ctty
Water t304i675-75 11

2 acfes more or less all Wt l·
tltes paved ~o ad
from. Chesler

2 mtles

S,6 000 ·

(304)483· 7550
~1· \t\I.S

10

.

Hf)l Sl :...
HJR RE\T

025~21 07AHentlon t
local compa ny offer ng · NO
DOWN P4YMEN T
programs tor you to buy ~o cur
heme 1nstead ot rent1r.g
. 1oo:~ ftnanctng
Less \han pertecl cred1~
accep1ea
~
• Payment coulo be the
::.arne as rent
Mortgag e
Locators
(7 401992· 7321

11
oed room house
Garf •eld twe 5350 month
Call i7J 0i W41 0 194 or
(740) 4J 1· 1184
1 bedroom nouse tor rent tn
Galhpol1s Cen\fal A1r He at
$350 month
t bedroom
aoartment lor ref' t n Pctm
Pleasant {.740144 6·2200

House lor sale al 648 .t th
Ave Calll740l 388-8164

2 b'e aroom house base·
'Tlent garage 1 mtle !rom
New 3 BD 2 Bath Home tow., S650 mortl· C at
Only 198 mo Include s a c (740,441·0194 0' 1"'40!441·
del1very and set up 740· 1184
385·9948
2 Houses { 1 1 3 beoroorn
New 3 BA 2 Batn Secttonal ( 1 1 4 beproo m S900 &amp;
Heme
On ly
249 mo 51 000 plus depos11 Calt
Includ es AJC oeltvery &amp; {740!256-8152
setup 74 0-385· 767-t

2br Sma ll House 5275 plu s

No
Pets
Ne~" 3 BR Home On ly Uhli t1es
Re
ferences
1364)675-4874
t89/mo Inclu des at de 1v

ery and set up 7 40·385· or ~ 304t614-6105

4367

3 bedroom · large yard· no
,pets
Ret &amp; dep Patr·ot
New
Re molded
3·
(7&lt;10)379·25JO
Bedrooms 2· Ba th 2·Ca r
Garage on 1 arce Su'1 Se' Beec, Streel Mldaleporr 2
Lane
off Sandh tll Ro oearoo--1
unfurn1s!'leO
Asktng S90 000 Call. for house no peis depostt &amp;
Appotntment (304)675-4352 refere nces \7-'01992·0165
No Down Payment Possttl&lt;e
1900 squ are 11 ;ouse. 3
~room . 2 bat" lull basement. new heat pump sets
on 3 ac:;res SR 7 t: astern
School D1stnct. '! 740 )98 54321

Bra1d new 2 beoroom
nouse 1r town 5600 r'P'1CntM
Ca 1
740)441 -0 ' 94
or
17J0)4J., -1184

In town •Ocauon- t -2 BR
Rar;tch hom e. ntce yaro AC
References
reqwred
'
Reaqy to mo'o'e tn. 3 BR 54 511 mo rent &amp; $450 S~.tc
Home tn coumry sen:tng onty Dep You pay all Cftlt!1es
198,mo wtth 1Q 0 g down A11atl abl e
6 15
C'3 1l
740.385-4367
1740 )446-3644

IH \I I"' I\ II

:\lolm..EI'OR~~IES

I,

Newly remodelea 3 beeroam house ~~J rth yard &amp; 'olar·
den
on
JencM
Ad
1
FOR SALE
Assisted living care tn my ~---iiiiiiiiiiiiii;.,_.l 1971 2 bedroom tra fer New cresl'l.re OH Fletere rces &amp;
carpet. new ktlchen caO•· sec ur1ry depostt r8Q u1reo No
home Pnvate room and
bath , 3 hot meals Call , $59,000. New Haven 2.800" nets on rented lot 53 500 .nstde pets or smoM:tng
sq ft log cabm as s w1l-5 080 (740)44 1·3683
(740)388..0118.'
( 7J0 IJ{i7 · 7()4 7
acres. Call M1ke (5nJ314Call Usl We 00 lawns at'ld
~ne "'' " · MoD•Ie Home ·Small 2 Oedroom house
weed-eating . Call Jor an est1· - - - - - - , - -..,--...,.-:-:- . BR . 2BA. LA , Kttchen $475 'TlOrth 1 mtle from
mate, · 1f nq answer' leave 7 Homes ~:~nder $ 14000 Deck&amp;Bu tldmgs. Atr See a town CaJI (740)441-0 194 or
(7401441-1184
Will delt\ler 740-385-4367
76 05flel f1C
message (740)256-1097

.

pto

2754

-------~----------------~~---•

?,20
,

HOM&amp;S

I[

~

�'

L.l•O--i-J•Ul•'
;S'•
;;; :S;__.J
~
Hll&lt; R£.~~-

L,--H•&lt;Iilliii
'SI.:H•O•I)•l_.J
Goilllii

. , May 12, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 ":'flleDaily Sentinel

TERRY'S ENGlNES

i

'

ROGER HYSELL
GRRRGE

Auto &amp;Truck
Repair

L....iliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiio-_.1

r-------_.1I
L
AN'IlQlll-~

3 miles west of.
Pomeroy,. OH
State Rt_.

992-5682

t...-..liiiiiilliiilillililiio.,.J

PRIVATE GYM

r

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

BISSELL
BUILDERS InC.

Ne w H 11lllC.., • Vinyl
Sit.l ing • t\"t:w Gam gcs
• Rc p l accn u: n t

W indow~ • Ro ni'i11 g .
COMMER CIAL and
RES IDENTIAL

FA~E ESTIMATES

. 740·992-7599

o ·

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
MONTY

41800 SR #7
Tuppers Plains, OH
l-.4e~ 45783 .

CARPENTER
SERYICE
• Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
, New Gareges
• Elec trical &amp; Plumbing
. • Roofing &amp; Gut1ers
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• PBtio and Porch Decks
· We do it all except
furnace work

..

992·6215

WII CJ6725

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONS'rRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
. All Types Of

Concrete Work
25 Years Experience

David Lewis

740-992-6971
Insured
F rec_Eslimales

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

S~rvice
Top •· Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

WRITESH &amp; SONS

r·o-

•Ffltlsdmatas.

949-1405

i

r

quality

992 7473

Let me do 1\ for youl

liNDfS PAINnNG

65

·Mrnrature Pi ncher&amp; 1 male, 1 37,000 m rt~s. · $15.900 .
' fem ale, black/tan. tails • (740)256-1618 or (740)256Appliance
docked, dewclaws removed, 6200.
wor.med. Ready May 16 fh. -2002
- -ZX-2-Fo_r_d_E_sc_o_n_S
Warehouse S300 each. (740)388-81 24. speed. 4 cylrndel". 30.000
miles. one owner. $6.000.
MLliiCAL
1n Henderson . WV
Pre(740)44 1-0 157- (740)645L\Silll\\IENfS
owned apphcanes startlng aJ
514 1.
"\
S75 &amp; up an under warranty
. J.
wt dO sen11ce wor1&lt; on an Gemernl'lard1 22 SP Silver 2002 ·Dodge ::,tratus AlT.
Make and Models f304 )675- Flute Vatue at S550 wrll Under mrleage, wrll ~~~ ~r ,
take SIOO tau (740! 446· pay ott 01' sorneone to refi7999
'
9471 .
nance · PL. PW, Leather
seats. •Power-Seats. AC .
Sunroof
CompaSs. Auto
Manual, Strck. TS. CC
[304)675-5461

Ttlt

New Deater tor Montana Tracters ·
starling ut 27 horSl' -57 horse
with shuttle transmission
4-wd. remote hydraulics 3 year warranty
'~'**"'A lso aYailab.le"'*"'*
• Task Master Tractors 26 horse - .3 8 horse,

so

YOU CAN use

Free Eslimates
.•

CAilPOOL
l-ANe.
. 5 · 12

.BARNEY

4wd (I year warranty)
• Farm Pro Tractors 20 horse · 30 horse

AN' JEST SO
IT GITS INTO
TH '
TRANSCRIPT .. .

loaders, finish "mowers ••tillers
NEW ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Thrn
Radius Mower) 30 inch cutting widih to 50
inch cutting width 3 yi'ur warranty
IM! TRM"!'OR SALJ:::i &amp; EQUIPMENT
right in thelli..rt of OleSier

~

Formerl~· at

No w open

W. Main Pmne.ru~·
IS NOW OPEN AT
The Mul~?errY

Flo wer ~

Communi!)" Cenler

&amp; Vegetab le

; THE BORN LOSER

plants Flat $6.95
10" Hanging Bu sket s2U v"'. $5.95- 17.95
Perennial s 6" - I""

260 l\lulberr}" Ave.
'Pomeroy
.Same Greal Low Priu.~
"and SmiUng
l' rie"ndf.~' Faces.

IS ••• ?

.ELEVEN ·FEET
. E IGHT INCHES,
YORE HONOR !!

•

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracus e. OH
740-992-5776

I08

TH' NEW
RECORD

•''••

985-4384

P":

I

.

. '"1

01-\, t&gt;EAA . Tl-\t: P\-10\0 0 F Mt:.
5LO'Nif&lt;G OUi \1-\t: CAADLG 01'\

$2.95 - $5.95
Puued Plan t!) 4"- 12''
$1. i5- $12.95
12" Fern&gt; $10.95
O~n Daily 9-5;
Cl osed Su nda

I'"WAAT 00 '(OU Tl-\\t-IK.
WE.~T

WROt-IG?

· ~\-\(~ \-l(R£ ~ ~'&lt; C,._,I--IDLt~'"'
W '\OUR CNZE., 11-\C. CI\M.[Ji(J\S
Fl.I\Sf\ WOULDfi'T
W.IGe:.ER !

iI

1&lt;\'1 ~l".ll-lt:4&gt;\'1 0¥£
CO/I'f. OJT!

High and Dry

Storage
Phone

(740) 992-52J2
5xl0, lOx to,
10xl5, 10x20,

10x30
Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road

Pomeroy, Ohio

:..r-, ...: ~- .
.

se.-'

'· R·-.,......ix
_· • "R.
.Hupp, . ·'
.

\;

~

~,.~."·
.'·~. '

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

IOxlOxlOx20
992·l194
or 992-66l5
"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICTION
.• New Homes
•-Garages

• Complete ·
Remodeling

740-992-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

IT J UST S O t1 A.PP'E NS

}'

YOUR
F/WOR1TE
C.l-1 \CK
..-.no.V! I
STR I'P
CONS1PER MYAGAIN ? S.ELF A COH lC-

IMPORTS
Athens

.STR IP

THI\T ONE OF TH~
C:OM\C STRIP S I S A'LL

IT '-s
G Entr-IG
1-V'ROER

ASOUT .. lJH.

TO DEFEND
THIS .

FAN~

.o

Whaley's Auto
Parts

St. R.t.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restncking (.ate ,\•i-Jdel So h'II!Je
ond Arter .\hrket Rlrls

• PEANUTS
'1'E5,

A COUPLe OF DA'r'5 ... HERE'5
MV El'CUSE ..

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

.Advertise
in.this
space for $1 04
permo·nth.

r

!SHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

excenenr

cond;.,on. Call

174014' 1-!1991 .
2001 H._rlsv Road King. Teal
1n colOr, many eJr:tras, Ofle
owner exr:eltent conditl&lt;ln
miles. 116 .000 :
29
(740)446-0213

_oo0

2002 Harley Oyna Low
Alder. 3.000 m1les. Garage
Kept. Impact: Blue . 5151000
740-992-9066
'

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
"IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS
,

FIFW-THREE

I

~AD

~OUR

THE

FLU

•

: SUNSHINE CLUB

'

42 Dog's bark!
43 Icy preclp

Male"

48 Large cay
49 ·summer in

??

36

IIITHIP DODGE

151 Upper River Road • Galli~lis
74D-4(~0841 • 949-1155 Evenings
800-446-0841
.

MIZZE:NMA!IT

-.

5TUC.K UF'
YOUR-

..
'

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE

FOR $52 .PER MONTH
you

S35 • 1.000 lbs Approx. weight ~~~
buggies available for use .
AiNVay pasture renovators and seeders
18 spreader

ava•lable to rent.

Licensed agrooomist on staff available for

consulting.
~VERAG ·SERVICE

Pomeroy. Ohio

' GRIZZWELLS
Now Available At

B \l'\1 Ll .\IBEI{
Scorpion Tractors
"Ta/cing The Sting Out Of
Hard Work! ••

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

; l l1:ij\-IJ!H tiEr At~..m. lA?T

NO, ANt:&gt; I..ET"S
TAI..K ABOUT

AN.,.HING t::L..SE
RIGM'f NOW

woman
limp-watch 10 Uri&amp; novel
painter
"The-"

44

28

A.D.

post

Sultan's

Savoie
51 Drain. It
energy
52 Corrlda cry
54 Gun the
. engine

cousin
29

Part of

47 Mooring

Traffic

pylon
31 Kind
ol portrait

as ·troops
12 Go steady
32 'Llama
cousins 17. Supplement

39 Paydays

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos .

.

Celebfrty CrpMr cryp togr~ms are created !rom qlJQ!Bbons by larrous peofie . pagt and present
Each l&amp;~ er 1n·the ctpher stands lor anolher

Today ·s clue: A equals D

" 'E

DSSK
E

G E V S .

HOFG

H0 FG

p 0

IHSWEOK

PD · 0

G BE X N

A S D EX E G S K R

E G

El

Gp

EXIHEFEXL

G BE I

J

s

V M IE W-0 K

WPVVMXEGR. "

OKEWEO

N SRI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "To find beauly 1n 1he sad, hope in !he midsl
of loss, and dignity in failure is great poetic art.' - David Mamet
.
(C) 2005 by NEA. Inc. 5·12

T~:~:~;;v S@R~}'\-~£~S"

::::

~----:::....: ldirtd by CLAY J, ,OLLAN _...;_,_
. ---'-

0 Reorrance
leiter s of
four &amp;crombltd words

._
gn;~at

d eal of time and ef1ort working on and
d eveloping which haSn't worked out
fo r yo u a s yet may fina lly be realized
in th e yea r ahead . Life will prove that
y o ur pas t ello rts h ave not been in

the
be·

low to form four simple word1.

I

SHATAM

Bonds

• will b e fo rged or strengthened t oday
with o n e you·ve had !rouble genlng
through t o p revio usly. Understanding
and to le rance are now ready to
replace b ullheadedne ss and anim osity.
.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - A s conditions begin to brightan your path
today, a r espor\ slbillty that has been a
he a vy load o n your back will be lifted .
This w ill b e brought about through tho
go od auspices of a colleague.
C AN C ER .(Juns 21 -Ju.ly 22) ..:.....
Dealings yo u have today with persons
w hose g ood track records are familiar
to you will continue to work ou t tine.
Convers el y, you might not be so lucky
with tho se about who m' you know litlie.
L E O (.July 23- Au g . 2 2) Qualities
you possess which assoc iates lack
might be in great denland today. Th is
could mean that you m ay now be in
the positio n o t being able to climb that
ladder lhat"s bea n denkld you .
VIRG O ( Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Words
have groa t iinpac t ori others and
today y o u 'll have the very ones that
· could m e an a lot to s omeone. All lis!enc rs m a y not be impressed with
·what yo u "e ay, but .one ·in particular will
23)

P;PINT hiUMSf~ED LETT(~~ IN'

. rH[Sf

e!rt.

SQUA~ES

UNS( i.AMBL! ABOVE

tf ~ if ~ S

_~:~
_ _;_:TD:::.,:G
::_E~1:._:·~A!:;N~SW
~E!.R_ _ _..J_j_..J_..J__L_l_J

SCRAM
Formal~

·LETS ANSWERS

5 .... 1 l - 0 5

"Truly - Weave. Unless- LO'sT ALL

G
ranny says a man's wealth 1s measured by what he

.

is worth if he LOST ALL his money.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
£AfflYIIJG. FI':&gt;H fHAfFAl.l.
our OF fHE. 6KY...

Someth ing In which you're presently
involved could have a number o f benems rh a t are no t d early d e fined.
HOwever. as each are r8\lealed today,
they' ll n 1o 11vate you to w ork harder.
C :APRICO AN ( D ec. 22 -.Jan. 19) ·-Acqua in ta n ces you establish today
through your socrai activities could
end up p laying sign itlc ant role s if!
vour futu re affairs. lt will be impo_rtant
for you to make a good first 1mpres. sron.
AQUARIU S (Jan . 20-Feb. 1 9 ) Alt hough you're apt to be on a b it of a
seripus mood today , th is could tu rn
out to be to your advanta£»9. Oedrcate
your etto rts to accomplishing som ething substantial and meaningful .
P ISCE S (F eb. 20- ~a rch 20)- You·re
part~eularty good at ma naging difficult
srtuaiief1s fo r others tOday. HOwever.
you mrght not be as disciplined in
using th e same tactics and m e thods
1n handh ng y our 0¥'/n personal affair s.
ARI ES ( M a rch 2 1-Apn r 19 ) Make..
nash! slow ty and Cl'u 81ulty tOday when
11 comes to your financ la,l or commer cial affairs . All wlh work out l o your
sat rsfaction if vou're wrtling to give
your best t o a tl that you do.

SOUPTONUTZ

~T.

•

•

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301
' .

... tt Stations,

' Chihuahua

: 1-116111 ... ~ f\~T ·I WA5

. f'ti&lt;E II y

(softly)

singer

cousin
9 Whirlpool

Hispanic

38 Cartoon

in general rook rather ,
prom 1srng tor ~ou today. Through the
ben evolen c e o f another.' you might
share in somelhing g ood that wouldn 't
o\herwise be atto.-ded you on your
own.
SCORPI O (Oct. 2 4- N ov. 22) - It you
are in a n egotiating s i1uation today. let
the other party make the first offering
and/or es tablish the terms. C hances
are that p e rson will offer you a bener
deal than y o u would have proposed.

•'

41 -voce

need

writer
7 Wrongs
34 Dido's lover 8 Onion

Co ndi tio n s

'•

beeds
23 Muslim
honorific
24 Scrooge's
nephew
-25 " Typical

cartel
30 Horrible
32 Noted sc 1-fi

Friday, May 13, 2005
By Bernice Bade Osol
Sornething whic h you 've spoiJI a

23- 0 c t .

1 Am"azon

Nun's

2 Clue
3 Nudge
4 TierraFuego
5 Point
6 Chatter

35

.
( Sept .

37 Nabokov
heroine
40 Dogmas

21

stern
26 Food fish
27 Sheik's

Thomas Hardy wrote, '"That man·s silence
rs wonderful to listen to."
For a brid ge player, that would become:
"That man 's biddmg or silence is wonderlui to listen to."
Eveo When you lind a lit with partn er,
som e ha nds can still go up or down in
value. depending upon the aclion or inac·
t10n of an opponent. This deal is ~ good
example. Look only at the South hand.
You open one spade and par1ner rai98s ·
to two·· spades. the opponents retaining a
respectful silence. What would you rebid,
if anything ? ,
Now assume · that you r lell·hand opponent overcall s two hearts, and partner still
rais es 10 twO spade s. What would you do
th1s time ?
'
Next, look at East's cards. Your left-hand
tlpponent opens one spade, you r pa rtner ·
overcall s two hearts, and righty bids two
spades. Wh at would you do in this scenario?
Let's take these quest1ons in reverse
order. East needs to remember a key
mantra: M isfits are miserable. Although
he has more points than partner would
expect. where are they goi ng for tricks?
Nowhere ! ~o . East shou ld pass
Hands w1th two live-card su11s are usual·
·· ly promising if th~re is a fit with pa rtner in
one ol them . (And they are great if there's
a fit in both suit~. ) Here. if West p"a~ses
throughout. South would make .a three·
heart game-try on the second rowid. But
West"s two-heart overcall greatly devalues the South hand; he should pass.
Even two spades is probably too high.
. South rates to collect only five spades.
one heart and one diamond. (Note also
"that three hearts tails.)

be.
LIBRA ·.

t::VE:R HAl? A

Mu~ hroom Compost
•
Available

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

T~l NK MA~BE

- -----1!

: GARFIELD

$265 ton (While.Suppy Last)

SHADE

I

'•

f"'l;~h';;;;;d,;;;"i;,1iijj;~;;.i;;;;;";;;;;;~,
f f rt·l·
t

•

MAIIM , NOT~IN6 SERIOUS ...

33 Forefront

goody
22 Barbecue

Ensl

v a in .
TAURUS (April 2 0-May 2 0) -

20 Bakery

source

S A G ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) -

---"

1 tze_r go
17-17- 17..

WAS 5iCK FOR

'

S!
S'li10•
to 10'llt0' '

o e

A

Show

23 Near the

-... 'lllrthdlly :

0

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

~orth

surfaCe

DOWN

. •. workers

A K 87.l

worry
Qet locate&lt;!
Inclined

of hands

t9 Metal

• Graph

" aiG NAtE

56
57
'
58

18 Pilot's
place

Astro~

·'

very fast sport bike, great Blade Good Undercarriage
Shape, $5100. {740)985· Ready to work . Hou rs
9857
un known, $ 18.500. 740-9924119
2001 Ha".Y Davidson Dyne
Wide Glide. Low mileage,

5

To know the fit,
keep your ears open

$0METIMeS ~ TtiiNIC
YOU glliNG ME

30 Yrs. £xp. • Ins. ~wner: Ronnie Jones

OPEN

I

r

g?

37 IRS time

A~ONG JUST

Mlrn-Fri.

Hil l' s Self
Storage

r·

10

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

rr..:--....,.,,_--___,

~

•

o!oAQ 94

2

55 Student's ·

serving

Opening lead: • K

Bucket Truck

The Parish Shop

•

'"

maybe
53 Monet or
Gauguin

cousin
16 Butter

D c~cr: South

a

HOWARDL ·

Q J 4 2
:!

• 2
"' 7 2

Tree

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Vears Local Ex erlence

Conatrucllon

I

•
•

¥ A ·Q 643

JVest

price,

15 Karate

Suutb

South
1•

pouch

46 Drama prize
50 Rescue

along

J&lt;~ D S t

.

of discovery
45 Kangaroo ,

t4 Strolled

"- K 6 5 :1

SMJ\IJ,.
INTESTINE

JONES' .

-

i

lll-l2 ·1l5

7
A 8643

¥KJJ 0985
• K Q j
o!o J1 0 8

740•667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

1

~~:~ti~:de~~~~~th~~s~~:

.

t

'

S&gt;:t:. ~Oil&lt;

V.C. YOUNG Ill

j

:;:~ ~~~~-$~:4~~~lllej~~~ :~~;95 r~~ude;ox~~;n~~~

•

Wt:st

111\IN\\!

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • .401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • ,Cancer • Accident

YOUNG'S

u

ft

North
• 10 9 6

42 Cry

1 Implored
5 Like
gymnasts
10 Followed,
asadog
12 Used the
phone
13 Good
for farming

Vul!crablc: Neither

I·

i

t

NEA Crossword Puzzle

HOMEGROWN

ST~AW B E A RIES

·---·-

s

The Daily ser tinel • Page B7
BRIDGE

L.-~:,;;;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;,:~_.J ,

o

~

FOR SALE

2003
Toyo ta
Spyd er
Convert1ble Excellent condr tion. 7.000 miles, 6-speed.
Available at. McKean Farms
Sequentra! Strr ft, in storage
on Cen tenary Road and the
n1y depos1t references a hnancrng, 90 days same as Wrllram Ann Motel (740)446- from Octobe r to April
(304)675·4318 00 [304)201Jcas h Vrsa Maste·r Card
must [74~) 446 -3 413
9442.
4128
OrrtJe· a· little save alot
I \I{ \I ~ ~ 1'1'1 II~
Three Bedrooms Pomeroy
89 Burck Rr vera 3. a engrne.
$400 00 per month. PILls Thompsons Appliance &amp;
,\ 1 1\1 .... 10( h.
Runs good, looks good, alot
cieposll 992·0064
Reparr-675·7388 For sale.
fARM
el(t r~s Asking $ t ,OOO. Call
re·condrt•Oned
automatrc j610
~ lo1111 .1. Hom:s
washe'rs &amp; dryers. refngera~
EQI !IPME~T
. 1740)446-9742.
HlK R&gt;:r-T
mrs. gas and electnc
99 GT Sunlire . $3,300 OBO.
ranges arr condrtroners, and 2 cyl. dresel tractor, 4 wheel 9 9 4d;.. Su nrire, $2,600
Sales &amp; Warranty Service De•all~r
2 bedroom . Lake Or R o wrr nger wastrers . Wrll do
• l .a" n &amp; Tr~:~c,_·1or Scr,•icc
drive . 2 sp_ tr&lt;TYoSmrsslon , 090 ,
2002
Chrysler
Grande. 5400 1'10nth. 5400 reparrs on maJOr" brands in
•l)ir'kup &amp; Delh-l'Q' A,·ailnblt:'
piO'&lt;'j. disc. br us~ hog, blade Sebring,
$4,650 080.
depoSit f rru
No pets shop or at your home .
• Warrantv Servil't- Ucalt·r
&amp; equ rpment. $4,000 Gall (740)256-6169.
for Redniax Equi)Jntcnt
17401245·567 1
Used Furnrture Store. 130 (740 )367-0 106
15
TKUCK..li\
• IO,I.H)O &amp; 12.000 Wutt llrig).!.s &amp; Stn1ttiln
y_ _ _ _
d_____ _
~"R SALE
2br. Trailer; .A.G No Pets. Bulavllle PrKe Appliances. _
standby l;erlerutor s,·stems
our
use
equrpmen t
I'V
llou n : tl-~ \1 ·1". !!-I Sal .. l"~"*'&lt;&lt; ~ntlu . t:.,;,,.,,.,r h,,.,,... i" ~·· ~ I " '·olht·r,
$300 plus1Ut1thtes and ma ttreSses ,
, dressers, SOlJrce .
L---oiiiiiiiioiiiiioo_..l
.
Car michael
Depos1t
rnUst
have couches . drnettes. recliners'.
Equrpment. (740)446·24t 2 198-7 Dodge "Dakota 2WD.
Refe rences !304 f675- 4874 bunkbeds. grave monlJ·
or vrsit www careq com .
- Warrant" Sales &amp; Sen·kt•
Runs great, t09.000 miles,
or (304)674-61 05
ments
much
more
82o-_East Main St. •
OH 4:5769
$
1.500
OBO.
(740)256-9031
(7401446-4782 Gallrpolrs ,
or
(140)256·
1233
3 bedroom mobrle home lor OH Hrs 11 _3 (M-S) We ·buy L'!.- - • L •
l\•1-•S-ID-CK.- -,J
rent rn Pomeroy ar~a No used lurn trre
_
Pets 992-5858
~-------1993 F1 50 No dent s, no
Call B.D. Const.
18 yearling ewe.s, $125 rusl. 95.000 miles. $3,200.
for all your home
Washer
595:
dryer
S95;
3 Br. , 2. Ba Mob1le Home
each. 740-388-9747 or leave Call
(740) 245-58 15
or
repair needs, roofing,
retrrgerator
S95
:
elec
trrc
Water Eastern
T P. / C.
a messa ge at 740-6 69- (740 )418·9026.
. siding," ad d-ons.
Schools
Call-· t-502-943- range $95: lrKe new w&lt;i:sher 9905
:.:...:=~='------,~
.
5175: wrrnger wa.sher like
1998 Chev. Silverad o, Ext.
remodeling ell: ..
0386.
new 5200. Kenmore Side·
. free eslimates
3 Pygmy Goats, 7wks old , Cab. 4 X4; all power. Auto.
L1ke new 2 bedroom . c~n tral by -srde $295: twin srze .bed
4.3L, V-6- Vortex, Alu m_rims ,
(7401992-2979
make
good
pets
(304
)882a1r. all appliances ll1rn1shed. S75: love seat $50: very nice
2625 .
topper. Pewter/Charcoal, ~~~le~a:v:•:m:•:•:s:•~·=~
Call (740)'446-2003 )
ro'lJnd table w,1 4 chairs $150
98.000
mi.
Ex c'ellent
Skaggs· Appliances
American Alpine Goat K1ds: Condition $9,900 OBO
40 MaroRl."l'O.E.~
N1ce 3 bedroor.n mobrle
76 Vme Street
Bocks,
d oes .
wethers. Phone (304)67 5-2039 after
home rn ColJnlry Homes rn
(7 40)446· 7398
4 Wmll.ERS
[740)98~-2073 •
5:00pm.
the Shade area . Water.
on
124
sewer. trash. included. S325
' Ask abolJt OlJr AOHA 2000 Q.hevy truck Z71 4x4,
a month No pets allowed.
M em ~er Discoun ts on new well maintained , loaded , 2001 Honda CR80 ," $1.200.
(740)685·40 19
..,
John Deere Equrp ment . VGC: $8.500 . Ca ll (740)388- 199B Kawasaki KX 2SO .
$1 ,400.
(740)446 -8 138,
Equipment 0877.
Trailer lot tor rent Just 1 Buy
or sell . Rrverme Ca rmichael
= ' - - - - - - - evening: (740)446·4799 ext.
mrle above Addrson . Call .Antrques. t t24 Eas t Marn [740)446·24 12.
200 1 Dodge 1500 Sport VB. 249 days.
'
(740)367-7878
on SA 124 E PomerOy. 740Chick's tor Sale
quad
cab,
$ t 6, 900.
992-2926 Russ Moo re.
(740)645-6734
.
2002 Yamah a V-Star custom
.S1.25 each
AP.\RT\IfX IS
t \00, low mileage, e•cellent
Heavy assorted
FUK RENT
99 Dodge Dakota Club Cab
MNH.IANWUS
Brown Layers
conditio n. many eKtras,
\
SLT. Loaded V-B, 4x4. Bed3 weeks old
MI:KCHANI)L":
$6.500 frrm. (740)245-5196 .
' .. .'
(2)
bed1pom apts OverRunning -Boards,
liner.
St. Run Oniy
loo king C•IY park Utrlitres
Tonneau Cover.. 95Kmi . 2004 AedC aV11Occ, 4inc luded. S400/rnon th. Call 16"x7' Alu mrnum Awn ing. Buy ~5 Or more .75¢ each $8 .500 [ 304 )882'2 8'5
Wheele•. Pa;d
$1.600
.
Exce l.lem Condition
593-5073
(740) 446·4639
between PO. I
Aski ng ' $1 , i 00 (304)675· ·Accept in~ Nt:n
(304)675·68 10 after 6pm
~fll. \0 1' 1&lt; TIUICK
Members
. Sam&amp; 4:30pm
4262
(304)593·4290
• llt'U \"\' l)uh
YeJrlr ·l·IJ Anqr.. s Bulr&lt;&gt;. r iostly
HlRE
(304)593-0840
leave
mes·
l:umni~:r·
dai
1 and 2 bedroom· apart· .. 18.000 BTU Wi ndow A1r A.l . ex cc ll('" t oloo ... .... l·,;
sage
t:quiprnt•nl
priced'
reasrn
ably.
Slate
Run
ments. t"urnrshed and un fur- ·condiironer usa d very lrttle
Farm , Ja•,ksOn. (740)286·
nished. seCuri!y deposit · (304)675-5622
2004 RedCaV1 1Dec. 4 _ • Wurkuu1 1111 ~·uu1· own
huurs 2417
5395.
reqwred . no pets. 74(}-992Wheeler.
Paid
$1.600
St·l 'iuu... lnll uil'it:~ Onl~
JET
www.staterunfatrn
.com
2218
AsKing S1. 100
Helme t
740-992-0955
AERATION MOTORS
included
(304)675-4'262 ~;:::;:':\:sk~fo=r~J=e=fT=~
2 Bedroom
Apanment. Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
HAY &amp;
[304 )593·4290 (304 )593·
$4 00 a month. no pets, call Stoc k. Call Ron Evans. 1· L~---•GiiiiWNIIi--.J.
Willi A PHOTOI
~
'0840 leave message
740·992 ·4 119·-ask
for 800-537-9528
Ut us help you
• 2005 Honda CRF250. Never
choose a lasti11g
Marge
Tobacco Plants for sate: Call
Call (740)446-2342
been raced. Call (740)245tribute to.your IOI'ed
For Detarls
2 be droom Jirst floor. laundry livrng Room Suite, used
5B15 _or(740)418-9026.
one's memory.
~~a c . ref. &amp; range furn rshed. Dresser'.
Old
Recliner
\( ' REE
·
$4 50/mo. No pets. (740) 44 1- Rocker. &amp; Misc. Items Atte nt ion
Commercial
SUVs
84
Honda
Goldwing
'10M ~11·. !\ I
0596.
Eivehings (.304)882-2637 or Mowers . . La"ndscapers. and
FOR SAt.E
lnters"ia te. Runs excellent.
(740)446·0392
I
( ' 0~11'\N)
Convactors- Ask us about ___
$1 ,500. (740)245-5429 alter
2BA apt Siate Route 160.
Green Fleet ·multi-unh dis-·
5:oopm.
.1972 ~ SR 14.1$4001 month , stove/refr igera- Moving Sale Furniture 'and
2003 Chevy Suburban 4x4, - - - ' - - - - - -- counts available on new
9 H 1
Pumcroy,
OH
tor included: washer/dryer "Misc. HOLrse hold
loadeQ. 52,000 "miles, VGC, 4
ar ey av1dson
ltra
ftems
740-992-9922
John Deere Equipment $23,000 . Call (740)388- Classic: 10.000 miles. blue.
hoo~up.
(740)441 -0 194 or (740)44, -0292
. excellent condit 1on . $13.500,
including commercial mow· 0877 .
Mnn -Sm IO AI\1 -S PM
(740) 44 1-1184.
ih g equipment, compact util(740)949-2217
NASCAA Trckeis
\ \ ,· 1\ , 1"1 1 11~· .i l h_.r
.
3 bed room apartment rn 4 Bu sch . 4 Nextel- Coca ity tractors. skid steers. com4x4
ilPt ll ,\. I ll Ill l l ll"
Middleport No Pets. 992- Cola 600. May
Harley Davidson custom low
FOR SAJ.E
28· 29 . pact excavators, Gator utility
1J'Jl•l 11 1i l l h " ll " .! I ll!,·
vehicles
.
X
Series
lawn
tracrider. Black w/chr&lt;Jme. tribal
5858
Chrysler section. Row 48,
lrrrr rlrc ' " ' I \ •: ll i Li h ,
.
tors. and John Deere trim- 1991 Chevy S· W , 4.3, V6 , flames, pertect shape, only
Bea ch Street, Middlepor t. S800. (7401339-0218.
mars, blowers anQ chain - 4x4, $4 ,200 OBO. Call 21 ,000 miles. many extras.
flJ rnrshed apartment. utrh·
NEW AND USED STEEL saws. Get Jotrn Deere (304)675-5612 .
$9,500. (740)416·2213 or
tie s pd. No Pets Deposit
(740)985·3677
.
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar equipment
tor
less.
and ref. 740-992·01 65
For
Concrete,
Angle , Ca rmichael
EqUiprn~ nt
1998 Chevy Silverado Z71,
BoATS.&amp; MmoRs
~xtended cati, 350 1/ortec,
BEAUTIFUL
APART- Channel . Flat Bar, St eel (740),446-241~ FOR SALE
Grating
For
Dram
s.
$10.000
[740)446·6689
AT
BUDGET
MENTS
PRICES AT JACKSON Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L John Dee re Riding ·Mowers
1998 Ranger 4x4, 5 spd, 3L, 14FT Fishing Boat ·9 .9
ESTATES, 52 WestwoOd Scrap Metals Op9n Monday. sta rting at &lt;.; 1,399. Financing
AMIFM cassette. A!C, off Mercu ry
Engine
all
· Drive fro m $344 tQ $442. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; ava ll.l bl e ub]ect to John
road package, new paint. Accessories (304)675·2915
Walk to shop 1&amp; movres. Call Friday. Bani -4:30pm . Cl os13p Dee re Credit approvaL Yow
Saturday
&amp; payments •u ld be as low S6.000 080. Call af1e r
740-446-2568.
Equal Thursday,
i 99.6 Stratos bass boat. 115
as $39 momn with $0 down . 4:30pm (740)256-6257.
Sunday. (740}4~6-7300
Housing OpportlJnity.
fast strike. 2001 , Sott ride
Carmichael
Equipment
1999 eravada, fully loaded.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT • Oak Entertainment Center [7 40)446-2412.
All Ym1r Ho me
trailer, custom cover. excelleather, dual-power seats,
lmproverncnl Need:;
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
$50 (304));75·2 915
lent · condition ,
$6500.
new ti res , All~ wheels . Blue
Aid .rng Lawn Mower for sa 1e. Book
• Siding • Wind ows
Town house
apartments.
pr"'e $8,750 , sacrifice (740)446·4987
One large Rulf -Haus don It is a MTD Yard Machine
....
• D ecks • Porches
II
h
FOR
dl
an or sma 1 ouse s
~
$6.495 . (7401645 ·2729 or 2000 Bayliner 21 ft . cuddy .w/
• Cl:nuniL" Till: &amp;
11 7401441 11 11 house. Good condrtion. $25. 1B/42 horsepower/inch. It
RENT
· a
·
Hardwood Flooring
for application
&amp; inlormation.
og kenne1 1ence.
sec- ha s a new bell and blades it (740)379-2544 leave mas- trailer . many extras. very
• Garages
lions. Sections are 4' high X run s real good. But it has sage. will return call
clean 304·675·5563
• Room AJd . • Roofmg
Graciou s living . t and 2 Ped- s· long_ Excellent condi tion two flat tlres . For $300. Call 2000 Dodge Durango 4x4 ,
Bass Track"er 14FT. wfTrailer
• KitL" hens • B a lh ~
room apartments at Village 5250. Call ( 7~0 ) 24$-512B.
(304 )458·1644 or (304)610· AfT Sport. 5 .9L VB. 67K
&amp; · Motor. $2,500 call lor
'"No Job To Small"
and
Riverside
6511
Manor
Details (304)675· ~ 731
R-.l:ino..:. OH
9
1
Aiding "mower-Little Wizard
740.247-2162 or
Auro PARTii &amp;
740-416-JSOH
·
Metal, Slider, Free Delivery. 12 112 H.P. -I.C .. Briggs &amp; paint.
$1 1,300
bBO.
992 • 5064 · EqlJ a 1 H ousrng
·
(740)245-0395.
I~ y rs. E xpcrien C("
~
AcCESSORIEll
Opportunities.
24x321! 10$4 .595 Stratton motor. 3&amp; inch cut.
pd 1 mo
40x64)( 12$1 3, 99 5. 4speed, 1996 modeL $400. 2003 Ford F-150, crew cab.
Modern 1 bedroom apt Call (937)599~7740 hnp"//natioo- (740)441·i6n:
4x4 , like new. excellent con- 1993 Ford Explorer 4114.
(740)446..()390.
wjdeoolebarns com
dition , 28,000 miles. Call Parting out complete vehr·
Zero Turn Z-Trak Mowers
cle. {740)245-9346.
Wolff Tanning Beds
tram John Deere allailabte at (740)256·6160
. Nice 2br, Apartmentw/Gas
HeatJAC,
loc ated in Pt.
Huge selection.
4.9%
Jixed
rate
fro 2003
Jetp
Uberty
Immediate Delivery.
Carmi chael Equ;pment with A
d
l' d d 4 4
Plea. -Relridg/Gas-Kitchen
Residential Range Furnr shed, WI D
enega e. oa e , x .
Frnancrng
John Deere Credit approval. 514 500
OBO
Call
Commercial
Hookup
$300/Month
1-800-B94·6997
17 4 o 1 4 4 6 2 4 2 • '
.
"03HJayco Eagle 5th wh 9el.
$200/Deposi t(304)675·762B
.
·
1
(740)256 -1618 or (740)256All types of rooting.
1 slide out, sleeps 9. like
(740)446-6579.
www careq com
6200.
Shingk . Fl at. l"vl~ t a l new. Many extras. (740)339One BR apt. rn Sprrf)Q Valley.
8
WID hookups. $290 per
llii .DINf.:
2004 Ford F150 Supercrew 0218.
Ne w or Repair
mql~1h -t dep (740)388-0017
SUPPl.IES
4x4, F:X4 pacKage, fully
Se::unl e~~ Gutter Al.JI"OS
loaded, 5.4 , VB. bright "red. 1984"Skamper pup-up, 25th
or (740)339-0362"
Down spout - SiJi11g
B loc ~ . brrclo,, sewer pipes.
FUR SALE
6CD changer, Tonneau Anniversary Edition, excelTara
Town hOuse win dows. lintel s, etc Claude
cover, tow package , 20 ,000 lent condition. 16' box. AC
and heat, "stove icebo~&lt; .
Apartments. Ve;y Sp acious. Winter s. Rio Gran de. OH 1969 Volts wagon Oume mites. Ph: (740)446-8217.
d;ne«e, $2.000: [ 740)9492 Bedroo ms, .CIA. t 1/2 cC;a;n_:
74::;0;:;-2~4:;'5:;;·5~1,:i
2 ,:;1·---. buggy. Fiber glaSs body,
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby c
64 Ford F150 4x4. automat· 2709).
"--.!~..~- ·
street
·legal , · $2, 500. IC,•n
·
ewl
-11 302 engme.
·
rt
'" 1J re bu 1
Pool. Pa1·0 . 1ar 1. $"o51Mo.
~
S
[740)44 HI157 or [740)645- A
.
. k
E
'
No
Pe ts.
Le ase · PllJS L__..;toii
COiiiRioiil.'iiiLiiEioo_.l 5 14 1
lumrnum
rnt~ e,
del 1992- 29' Airstream Excalla.
Security Deposit Aeou.ired.
__ _ _··- - - - - -Brock carburator, new tires. Very good condition, tw in
STANLEY TREE
beds. P~ . (740)645-4454.
(740)446·3481
Adorable AKC LaD puppres 1977 MGB Convertible for '$1 .400. 1740)379-2826.
TRIMMING&amp;
Ve t checked- sho ts &amp; restoration with an other
\'..\NS
,. 1998 30' fifth wheel travel
GENERAL
Twr n Rrvers Tower rs acc eptFOR SAL£ .
trailer. double slide, exceling applications lor waitrng worm ed. Yellow &amp; ·choc. comple te. MGB. for parts. ·
.
CONTRACTING
Price S300
Sl ,OOO. (740 )441 -0542 or L~----ioiiiiiiiiioo_..l lent condi!ion . $1 3.900
list lor Hud·subsr zed, 1- br.
• Prompt &amp;
Sramese &amp; Hrmalayan krt· (740)44 1-7603.. ·
phone:.(740)698·9319
apartment, call 675-6679 tens &amp; cats. S125 Phone
1994 Chrysler mini van
work
EHO
(7 40)446·t062.
1989 Pontiac Grand AM , Runs g·reat. cold air1 cruise . Coleman Camprng Trai ler
•
Affordable
Rates .
S550 firm . Ph_one (740)446- tilt. $800 080. (740)256- 12FT. 2 King Beds. $5.500
Vall ey-A pa rt ment~ Mason,
Registere
d
Be
agles.
4248
9031
or
(740)256-1233.
call
tor
Details
(304
)675•
References
AKC
WV
currently acceptrng
1731
Available
ap pl ications Apply at so 1.. 9wks , ti"r·color, wormed , - - - - - - - - sho ts. • $ t OO
Steve t996 Olds Ciera 4dr, 96,000· 1997 Dodge Grand Caravan - - - - - - - - Sh awnee- Trail
in
Po1nt .stapleton
•
Free Estimates
)
_
t
or
miles
$1
.BOO
(304)576-3231
701&lt;,,
BI!Cellent
condition
,
A
V
1994
Tioga,
.
2
9
toot..
1740 446 4 72
Pleasant .
A,pp lrcaMns
·
loaded, new b.rakes . tires. 4.500 miles. e:Keellent condi··
Call Gary Slanley
9
1996 While Firebird, auto, V- $7 ,900 . Call Jay (74n1446 _ tion.
~
accepted on Tuesday. HUD (74 0)256· t 61_
7A0· 742·229l
6, good c ond.-, 133.000 8423 .
assrsted only 675·4900
" 11n11 , ...,
miles. Asking $4,000 OBO.
• Leave a messa e
T-Top.74Q-992-6079
1997 Ford ConVersion Vein ,
Butterfly Kol
74 ,000 mites, e•cellent con10
HOME
2000 MOnte Carlo 48,000 Citron. new ti res , $9,800,
hlPRO~
"--oiiiiiii-.iiiiiiiiiiiii.-J
For Lease· Office or retarl 3 to 9 rnthes LOts Ot Colors. miles. V-6 Eng., Exc Cond ( 740 )992·2945
$8.000 (304)675· 5305
Healthy.
also
Water
spaces rn very good i:ondrBASE.MENT
92
Plymouth
VoyaQe r
tron Downtown Gallipotrs Hyacrnltl s Phon e· (304)67 5- 2000 Nrssan Ouest SE Mini- 107,000 mites. runs good,
WAT10RPROOANG
Appro.o: t600 SQ . ft . each. 1 5043
29670 Bashan Road·
Unconditional lifetime guarVan, 67K m les. sharp black $800. {7-40)379-2826.
or 2 baths Le ase p_nce Chrhuahua plJ ppres. Black exterior. leather, sunroof,
Aacm e, Ohio
antee. l,ocat references turnegotrable to encou rage male, S300. bjack female. 19i ded plus VCR. (740}44145771
nrshed. Established 1975 .
MOTORCY~
new
busrness.
Call S300. whi te female. SSOO.
740-949-2217
Call
24 Hrs. (7401 446_19_12
_. _ _ _ _ __
4
WmD
FRS
(740)446-4425 or (740)446- (740)245-5984
0870, Rogers Basem"ent
3936 .
2002 Cadi llac Deville, wh ite
1
04 Hartey pavidson FLHTI Waterproofing.
Ferret tor sale . With cage, dra mond . fu ll y equipped ,
\ I l l{( II \\lll "i
Electra glide. Black. 10.000
food and litter hOider..o. and factory warranty. 22.900
mi les. $1 9,000. f740)441·
Orrth certificate and (NEiry- miles , lrke new. ~2-1 , 995 .
ExCAVATING
Hot!SEHOUl
9372.
·Hours
thrng you would need. For .!740l2S,6· 14.&lt;B.
G&lt;.xn;
'
' 7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
$350. ~Da 1 1 1 ~ l 4 5 8- t 644 ~r 2002 Dodge Ram 1500 Sti. 1998 Buell ·53 Thunderbolt .
t1a
rley
Davidson
engine:
JD
450E
Dozer,
6
Way
Red . 4 door, 360 automatic,
(304)6 ·

c

•
www.mydailysentinel.com

--·----

. Thursday, May-1'2, 2005
ALLEY OOP

L,-..,;~FR~l~
lm;~·:;:,&amp;;· ,;_,J L
L.~.IO__ _IiiAOIIJTOSii i'iii._.l
Vll :~TAHLES

Responsible couple to rent 2 Mollohan Carpet.f02 Clark
BR home · 1m11e 1rom Chapel Road. Pof'ter. bhro
Galhpohs -:Jil State Rt 588 (740)446·7444 i•877·830·
$400 per month $400 secu· 9162 Free. Estimates. Easy

2

-·

•

�..
~ ~ Page

88--.--The-Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 12, 2005

www.myaailysentinel.com
'

.

Padres beat'Reds, Bochy wins No. 800

MLB Standings
National L~~gue
EootOivlolon

W

tive ~ plus

innings this time, and
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ultimately got beat by ;m old
nemesis. Klesko's three~run
homer put the Padres up 4~2
CINCINNATI
Tim and left him 8~for~l6 in his
Stauffer got a win in his major career against Wi lson with six
league debut and helped B-ruce homers.
'T m trying to muke great
Bochy get No. 800.
Stauffer repeatedly pitched pitches in situations where I
out of jams of his owh making. don't have to," Wilso·n lament~
and Ryan Klesko hit a three ~ ed . .
run homer tii send the San
Wilson matched .his career
Diego Padres to a 7-2 victory high by givi ng up 12 hits over., over the Cincinnati Reds on all , a titting ending to a 2~ 7
Wednesday.
homestand that was horrific
San Diego's eighth victory and historic.
in 10 games handed Bochy his
It sta rted with St. Loui s
SOOth win as a manager. Only pulli ng off the greatest ninthBobby Cox, Joe Torre and mning comeback in its history,
Tony La Russa have more seven runs for a I0~9 win.
wins with their current clubs. Closer Danny · Graves got
"To be honest, l have n't booed or~t the tield after the
even thought about it,'' Bochy .Reds' biggest ninth-inning colsaid. "I was pulling for Stauff lalf·e since 1952.
so muc h."
hat year be.t:ame a refer~
Stauffer ( 1-0), the fourth ence point again in Wil son's
overall pick in the 2003 draft, last start. whe n the Reds gave
calmed himself with deep up 10 first-inning mns forthe
breath~ and made good pnches first time si nce 1952.
·
when lt' mattered. The f!ghtFinally, Graves blew another
hamjer gave up two runs, fO\Ir big ninth-i nning lead on
h1!S_ and three walks m s1xo Monday, allowing .the Padres
mmngs, turnmg a 5-2 _lead to rally from a 5- 1 deticit to ·a
over to the ~mllpen.
. 6~5 , 13 ~ in n ing victory that
The turnmg pomt came m dropped the Reds irllo las t
.
·
the first. inning. when Felipe place.
Lopez hn a two-run homer and . "It 's like I've been saying all
the Reds loaded t\le bases w1th alqng: We get good hitting and
no outs. Stauffer got a double no · pitching, or good pitching
play for h1s first great escape, and no hitung," intie lder Ryan
then settled down wh1le fanu ly Freel said . "Today we fi nally
and fnends che_ered from the clicked. We didn't have anyfirst row behind the dugout.
thing."
"It really wasn 't . nerves,"
The final ga me will be
Stauffer said. ''I'm sure for the remembered more. for what it
people in the stands; it was a meant to the P;tdres - an
little bit different and harder eagerly _awaited debut.
~
for them. I was grateful to get
Stauffer, a 2 1~year~old w1th
out of ihat with just two runs." boyish looks. is repeatedly
Dave Roberts had four htts pitched in and out of trouble.
and Mark Loretta got five at He throws four pitches- fastthe top of San Diego's order, ball. change up. curve and
leaqing a 16-hit outburst. sinker- and is known fo r his
Klesko's sixth homer in his composure.
last nine games put San Diego
It was tested right away.
ahead to -stay in the fou'rth-.
Stauffer hit the tirst batter he
· The Reds have lost II of 13, faced - Freel - on a 1-2
taking a nosedive into last. -pitch. then gave up Lopez 's
place in the NL Central.
fourth homer. The Reds then
Starter Paul Wilson (1-4) loaded the bases with no outs
failed to retire any of the eight - Stauffe r also hit Adam
batters he faced in his last out- Dunn on a 1-2 pitch - -and
ing - a 10-run first inning by Darrell 'May began warming
the Dodgers on Friday. The up in the bullpen.
· right-hander struggled through
That's when Stauffer got a
BY JoE KAY

New pastor installed at
Rutland church, A2

LPctGB

Atlanta
21
13
Florida
19
12
Waohlng1oo
18
16
flewYofl&lt;
16
17
Philadelphia
15
20
Cllllral Olvlolon

W
21
17
15
15

St. Louis

MUwaukee
Chicago
Pittsbur9h
Cincinnati
Houston

12

12

.618 .613 ~
.S29 3
.514 3~
.429 6~

LPeJGB
12 .636 16 .515 4
18 .455 6
16 .-155 6

at

"21 .. 364 9
21 .364 9

Wilt Dlvl•lon

W
20

Los Angeles
Arizona
San Diego
San Francisco
Colorado

20

19
16
9

L Pel OB·
13 .606 - .,
15 .571 1
16 .543 2

17 .485 4
22 .290 10

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

WedMIMy '• G.rtMII
San Diego 7, Cincinnati 2
Miiwaul&lt;ee 5, Philadelphia 7!
Chicago Cubs 4, N.Y. Mels . 3, 10
innings -.Colorado 6, Atlanta 5
Pittsburgh 7, San Francisco 2
Arizona 3, Washington 2
Florida 2. Houston 1
51. LOuiS 9, LA. Dodgers 3 .
.

Thursday'• Games

SPORTS

.

LA. Dodgers (Lowe 2-3) a1 51..Louts
(Cerpenter 4-2). 1:10 p.m.
Clnclnflall
(Ra.OrUz 0·1)
at
Philadelphia (Lieber 5-1). 7;05 p.m.
San Francisco (Hennessey 1-0) at
Houston (Pettltle 2·3), B;05 p.m.
ArizOna , (Au.Ortiz 2·2) at Colorado
(Chacon 1-2), 6;35 p m.
..
.. F~doy'o Oomoo
.
Chicago Cubs at Washlng1on, 7:05
p.m.
.
,
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Clncinneti at Philadelphia, 7:05 'p.m. ·
St. Louis at N.Y. Mats, 7:10p.m.
San Francisco at Houston, 8:05p.m.
Arizona at Colorado, 8:35p.m.
Florida at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 10:40 p.m. . ·

W

into a third-to-home double
play, and Austin Keams lined
out.
.
"We were ki nd of hoping
with ' the way things were
go in~. be' d just get out of the
fi·rst. · .Klesko said. "Your tirst
a t~bat or your .'first inning to
pitch. it 's like you' ve got an
out~o f~ body
ex perience.
Between the nerves and the
excitement, you don't even
know what the heck you're
doing ouf there. But he settled
down. The idea was to try to ge t
him a lead, and he ran with it."

11

GB ,

Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
NewYork
Tampa Bay

22 ·

.667 -

W·

L P01 GB

Chicago

25

9

MIMesota

20

21

13 .616 1 ~

19

16 .543 4

did it once. San Diego stranded 15 runners overall, l 0 in
scoring position. ... Stauffer ·
beat out an infield single in his
tirst major league at-bat. ...
Bochy is the 65th manager to
get 800 wins. ... Ken Griffey
Jr. of the Reds had a double
and a single, He has hit safely
in 14 of hi s last 15 games ....
Wilson is 1-7 io eight career
starts against the Padres with
an 8.84 ERA .... Reds C Jason
LaRue was hitless in three atNotes: The Padres left the bats, extended the•streak to 0~
bases loaded twice. The Reds for-22.

The Reds loaded the bases
again in the third with one out,
helped by two walks, but
Randa popped out and Kearns
swung through a 93 mph fastball. Stauffer's coaches and
teammates applauded and patted him when he got to the
bench.
"He did -a great job keeping
his composure." Bochy said.
"That showed· how mentally
tough the kid is. He could have
caved in there."

Detroll
Cle118land
Kans8s Ci1y

W

L

19
18

14
13

Delee. Chicago . .383: ((abrera.

Florida .. 372;
BCiark, Milwaukee, .341 ; Lo Duca, Florida, .340; Pujols. St. Louis . .338; Overbay.

Pc1 ClB
15 .559 17 .514 1h

20 .412 5
21 .. 382 8

Wectnelday'a Games

RBJ-Oelee, Chicago, 33: Pujols. St. Louis, 29; CaLEie. Milwaukee. 28: JKent, Los
Angeles. 28: Glaus. Arizona. 27;.Feliz. San Francisco, 26: Burrell, Philadelphia. 26.
HITS-Barmes, Colorado, 49; lzturls, Los Angeles, 47: BCiark. Milwaukee. 47:

Delee, Chicago, 46; Pujols, St. Louis, 45; Beltran, New York , 43; Loretta, San Diego,
43.
DOUBLEt-MGiles, Adanta, 14 ; Wilkerson , Washington. 13; Glaus, Arizona . 12;

Helton, Coforado, 12: Delee, Chicago, 12; CDelgado, Florida, 12: CJones, Atlanta, 12;
Griffey Jr.. Cincinnati, 12; Biggio, Houston, 12. ·
TRIPLEs-Holliday; Colorado. 4: Lamb, Houston. 4i Pierre, Florida, 3.
HOME RUNs-G iaus, Arizona, 10; DeLee , Chicago, 10: Pujols. St. Louis. 9: Klesko.
san Diego, 9; ASanders. St. Lou is, 9; Dunn, Cincinnati , 8;' CPatterson. Chicago, 8;
JGuillen, Washington, S: Flo'jd. New York, 8: JKent. Los Angeles, 6.
STOLEN BASE5-Taveras, Houston..10; BAbreu, Philadelphia. 10: Furcal, Atl anta,
9;. Vizquel, San Francisco. 9: Counsell, Arizona, 8; Reyes, New York, 7; Freel, '
·Cincinnati. 7: Rollins. Philadelphia. 7: Delee, Cl:licago. 7.
.
PITCHING (4 Declelons)-Willls, Florida; 7-o, 1.000, 1.08: Webb. Arizona. 4.0.
1.000, 3.30; CHammoM, San Diego, 4·0. 1.000, 1.89; Marquis, St. Louis , 5·1, .833,
3.26; Mulder, St. Louis, 5·1, .833, 2.70; Lieber, Philadelphia , 5·1, .833, 2.57: Eaton,
San Diego, 4-1 , .800, 3.79; Turnbow, Mltwaukee, 4· 1, 800, 2.08: Hampton, Allanta. 41, .800, 2.05; 'PMartlnez. New York, 4·1..800, 3.06.
.
STRIKEOUTS-PMartinez. New Yo~ . 63: SMyers, Philadelphia, 54; Peavy, San
Diego, 53; Burnett, Florida, 52; JVazquez, Arizona, 51 ; Clemens. Houston. 50: Prior.
ChiCago, 46.
SAVE&amp;-Lyon, Ar izona. 13; Mesa. Pittsburgh, 12; Brazoban, Los Angeles, 10; Kolb,
Adanta, 9; Ha:ftman, San D~. 9: Looper, New York , 8; Graves. Cincinnati. 8;
BWagner, Philadelphia. 8.

BAmN~amon .

'

ThUradl)''l Ollmll

Tampa Bay (Kaimlr D-4) at Kansas
Clly (Lima 0·3), 8:05 p.m.
Bal11more (Chen 4·1) al ChiCago
Whl!o Sox (Garland 6-Q), 8:05p.m.

'

eammore, 5-1 , .833, .. ,93.
STAIKEOUTS-Santana. Minnesota. 87: AJol'1nson, New 'f'ofk, 50: Sonderman,
Detroit. 41 ; Bedard, Bahimc:Jre, 41 ; Halladay. Toronto. 41 . Harden. Oakland. 38:

Buyers will be offered top dollar for trade-ins and
no reasonable offer will be refused.
- These units must be disposed of by.the
close of business on Tuesday, May 31st, 2005.

Clement. Boston. 38.

The location of this sale will only be at:
TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS
195 Upper ~iver Road Gallipolis; Ohio.
Factory Certified Representatives will
be 'on hand to assist customers.

,

TeQs, 11 ; Nathan, Mihnesota, 10; FRodnguez. Los Angeles, 9;
SAyan, Baltimore, 9; GuardadO, ~atut . 9; Wickman , C~land. 9: Takatsu, Ch1C8g0,
SAVE ~ro.

8; Foulke, Boston, 8: MBatista, ToroniO, 8

Call 1-800-272-51.79

_Reds put Aurilia on DL
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
R.eds put shortstop Rich
Aurilia on the 15-day disabled
list Wednesday with a strained
hamstring, replacing him on
·
the roster with a pitcber.
·The Reds called up righthanded
starter Elizardo
Ramirez
from Triple-A
'Louisville, protecting themselves in case left-hancler
Brandon Claussen has to miss
his next start. Claussen twisted
an ankle in the fourth inning of
Reds' 5- I victory over San
l)ii:go_ on Tuesday ni~ht.
Aunha wa~ hmmg .198
'

when he strained his left hamstring while running ou! a
ground ball .on .Tuesday night,
forcing him from the gi\ffie.
Aurilia is in a 4-for-32 slunip.
His injury opens the way for
Felipj! Lopez to take over at
shortstop.
Ramirez was 2~ I with a 3.32
ERA in - six starts ·for
Louisville. He made his major
league debut last year with
Philadelphia. The Reds got
him as part of a trade that sent
Cory Lidle to the Phillies last
season.

..

INDEX

~

..

for an appointment or stop in . at

.TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS
195 Upper River Road Gallipolis, OH
.· before May 31st, 2005 !

LINCO~ LN .

~

•

MERCURY

----.

REEO . , ·

during Pomeroy
traffic stop

•

Santana, Minnesota. 5-1, .833, 3.21; ()Hernandez. ChtCago, 5-1 . .833, 2 9 1; Ponsoo.

J.

Local woman inducted into Senior Citizens Hall of Fame Drugs seized

Boston. ·.383: CGuillen , Detroit, .379: BRoberts; Baltimore. 370;

Lugo, Tampa BaY. 9. ·
.
·
PITCHING (4 Doclolonoi-&lt;Jarland,. Chicago, 6-0, 1.000. 2.42 . AfTOI'O, Boston , ~-o .
1.000. 2.91 , 'clement. Boston. 4-0, 1.000, 3.06; Buehrle, Chicago, 5- 1, .833, 3.78:

to

INSIDE

During this disposal, several lending institutions will
be represented and all credit applications
will be accepted regardless of past ~redit history.

Hillenbrand. Toronto.. 370; Tejada, ·Baltimore, .348; Varitek. a«&gt;ston .. 343; ISuzukl,
Seattle, .340.
RUN&amp;-aAoberts. Baltimore. 29; Hillenbrand. Toronto.· 28: ARodriguez, New York.
28: ASOriano, Texas. 27: Teixeira, Texas, 26; Hinske. Toronto. 26; Cellucci. Texas.·26;
Damon, Boston, 26; Jeter, New York, 26.
RIM-Tejada, Baltimore. 36; ARodrigue.z, New York, 32: BRoberts, Baltimore, 30;
56xson, 5eatt1e, 29; MiSweetley, Kan~ City, 29: MRamirez. Boston, 29; GAnderson,
Los Angeles, 27; Sheffield. New York, 27.
HI1'S--Oamon , Boston. 54: Hillenbrand. Toronto, 51 : BAoberts. Baltimore. 50;
ISuzukl. Seattle. 48; Tejada. Battimore. 47; Sheffield. New York. 45: CGuillen, Detroit.
-44; MISweeney, Kansas City, 44.
DOU8LES-00rtiz, Boston, 13: ASonano, Texas, 12; BellhOfn, Boston, 11 ,
MiSweeney, Kansas City, 11 ; Damon. Boston. 11 : S~ffield , New York, 1t · THatner,
Clewland, 10; Bla)od(, Texas . .10; Tejada, Baltimore. 10; JvLopez, Baltimore, 10.
TFIIPL£8--R ios, TorQnto, 4: lnge, Detroit. 4; CGuillen.. Detroit. 4; DeJesus. Kansas
City. 3; BAC&gt;bens. Baltiffiofe. 3; !Suzuki. Seat1le. 3.
.
HOME RUN&amp;-AAodfiguez, New York, 11, BRobertl . BattJmore, 10: ASorlano,
Texas, 10; Tejada, Baltimore, 10; Sexsoo, Seattle. 9: D0r11z, Boston, 9: Konerko,
Chicago, 9; MiSweeney, Kansas.,City, 9: Tt.t!art1nez. New York , 9.
STOL£N BASES Podsedni(c. Chicago. 17; FIOQ!nl, Lol Angeles, 12; 8Aoberts,
Baltimore, 12; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 11: THunter. Minnesota. 11 . ISuzukl, Seattle. 10:

and other local government programs
and merging others into a i1ew pro~
gram - with about $ 1.5 billion less
- at the Commerce Department.
Rep ublicans in Congress halted
the change__s by restoring block .grant
money 111 th e budget that both houses passed on April 28. The budget
they passed calls fo r Congress to
· prov ide the same amount of money
as this yea r. or about $4.7 1 billion,
the Cleveland Pl ain Dealer 'reported
this week.

OBITUARIES

Toronto 12, Kansas City 9
Boston e, Oakland 5N.Y. Yankees 13, Seattle 9
Detroit 6, Texas ·5
Chlca9o'WMe Sox 5, Tampa Bay 2
Baltimore 7, Minnesota 4
Cleveland 9, L.A. Angela 3

_Due to the recent Decreased Stock ·Rating,
Ford Motor Company has·authorized the
immediate disposal of 200 excess vehicles in this area.
Ford Motor Company has authorized
TURNPIKE OF GA-LLIPOLIS
to dispose of the new Ford, Lincoln &amp; Mercury
•
cars and trucks,
at
or
below
cost.
·
.
.

RUNs-BCiark, Milwaukee, 29; JKent, LOs Angeles. 28: Barmes, Colorado. 27;
Delee, Chlcago,' 26; lzturls, Los Angeles, 25; LGonzalez. Arizona, 25; Bradley, Los
.Angeles, 24.
·
,

AMERICAN LEAG\IE

.

~

Milwaukee, .337; CJones, Atlanta, .337.

stru du re projeqs. fi re equ ipment.
and water and sewer extension projects. Other CDBG programs tund
water and sewe r, downtown re1·.i t a l ~
ization , hOL1sing and other programs
~.
at the loca l leve l.
Projects wi ll he evaluated based on
app lications submitted by towns hips
ami villages. and grant awards
announced th is summer.
In order to finance the war in Iraq
and permanent tax relief packages.
Bush proposed elim inating CDBG

River since it fe ll in 1967, las t minute or plan s changed
including IO ~ye arco l d Sara that December day to keep
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Van Cooney of Long' Bottom. people that might've otherThe disaster happened 28 _ wise been on the bridge
POMEROY
Meigs
yea
rs before Sara was born away from it.
Count y Comm hsioners will
begin an· informati on c am~ but she was moved by the
" Everyone
remembers
story
of
fell
ow
I
O
~
year~
o
ld
where they were · at,"
_paign about 911 service next
week. and wi ll consider two · Kathy Byus whose body was VanCooney 's mother Diana
fundin g optio ns. for a local- never recovered from the said, a fac t she learned after
9 11 serv ice thi s summer Ohio River when lhe Si lver becoming what she &lt;:ailed .
the "amateur camera person''
based on needs and public Bridge collapsed.
Page AS
"I read where her teacher for the project.
·
sentiment.
• Beverly Chapman, 66
An important part of the
The means of funding 9 11 _had to move the girl's desk
of
the
classroo
m
because.
out
• Jon Freeman, 49
"Resource
Project'&lt; was
chosen by comm iss ioners ·
she'd
start
cryin
g
when
writing a paper about the
will then go before the voters
• Amanda Hoffman, 43
she 'd.look at it," VanCooney student's subj ect matter and
in
November.
An
informa~
• Harry Richard, 86 ,_
on the subject of the Si lver
tiona! advertisement outlin- said.
VanCooney
created
a
class
Bridge disas ter VanCooney
ing the benefits of a 9 11 s~r~
vice wi ll be printed in The project su rrou nding the dis ~ deci'ded to end her paper
Daily Sentinel on May I 6 aster for her " Resource with the ·sentence, "A chain
at
Southern is only as stron~ as its weakand 18. An official public Project"
Elementary.
Her
project est link." in reference to the
comment period will begin
included
researching
news- one rusted eye-bar th at ulti'
• Harrisonville alumni
later,
Meigs
County
Comn1issioner
Mick paper articles, a reconstruc ~ mately caused the entire
reunion planned.
tio1i of the bridge with .pipe bridge to collapse.
'
Davenport said Wednesday.
See Page A2
a
video
in
cleaners.
and
VanCooney was j ust one
The adverti sing campaign
• Nurse presents program is a cooperative effort of the which she interviewed peo~ link in the chain of fourth
Southern
commissioners and their 911 pie about their own experi- graders from
to retired teachers.
ences
with
the
disaster.
Elementary
who
created
Beth S..&amp;ent/ pl1oto
co mm i tte~. Davenpor-t said,
See Page A3
"
Resource
Projects"
to
help
Fourth
graders
at
Southern
Elementary
recently
researched
"
I
interviewed
a
news
and is not designed to influ ~
them
learn
research
ski
lls
on
and
created
"Resource
Projects
"
on
subjects
that
ranged.
from
• Meigs County Court _
ence the public in favor of reporter from Point Pleasant
one fundin g mechani sm ·· named Maxine Walters who topks that ranged from rain rain forests to ra ilroads. 10-year-old Sara VanCooney chose
News. See Page AS
said she saw debris going fores ts to rai lroads. A li st of the ·1967 collapse of the Si lver Bridge as her subject proving
over another.
The public will vote in down the river .for two days " Resource Project" award that the disaster affects and fascinates a_new generation.
November on whether the aftt;r the bridge fell, " Winners will appear in a later ·. VanCoo_ney posed with her collection of newspaper articles
county should proceed with a VanCooney said about not ed ition of The Daily about the disaster and her replica of the Silver Bridge made
WEAmER
from pipe cleaners.
•
911 plan based on funding only pieces of steel but · Sentinel.
from a $500,000 annual ,
half-percent
sales
tax
increase, or a 50~cenr permonth telephone oharge.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
generate HOEFLICH@,MYOAILY SENTINEL.COM
which · would
approximately $65 ,000 per
year. The comm iss ioners·
POMEROY - "l was so
911 committee has come out thrilled to be to be chosen and
BY · BETH SERGENT
in strong support of the sales so proud to represent Meigs
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
tax increase, · but also has County," said Mary Lou ·
proposed construction of a Hawkins about her induction
POMEROY
new
building, and suggests into the Ohio Senior.Citize ns
De~llo on Paee AS
"
Individuals
found to be in
operating the service fro m a Hall of Fame.'
,
possession
o f dangerous
separate, autonomous agency
The ceremony attended by
drugs in the village of
with a $45,000 per~year many dignitaries including
Pomeroy will be . prosecuted
director in charge.
Governor Robert Taft took
!O
the fullest extent of the
Commissioners,
mean- place
Tuesday at
the
· law," Pomeroy Police Chief
while, have reported signifi- Statehouse
Atrium
in
2 SECilONS- t6 PAGES
Mark . E. Proffitt said in
cant public opposition to a Columbus.
Hawkins,
a
Calendars
regards to his department's
A3 sales tax increase, and say Middleport resident, was one
latest arres t that allegedly
Classifieds
B4-6 cost estimates associated of 13 Ohio senior citizens
involved illegal drugs.
.with building a new 911 cen- selected for the honor.
Charlene Hoenlohf photo
Comics
B7 ter are inaccurate because
Proffitt reported that at
She was the only'one from Mary Lou Hawkins of Middleport who was inducted into the
I :06 · a.m. on May 7 at the
'
Dear Abby
A3 they do not inClude the cost Southeastern Ohio in the Senior Citizens Hall of Fame Tuesday in Columbus displays cer~ inters'e ction . {)f Butternut
of land acquisition and -infra~ 2005 group of inductees~ and
Edito.rials
Avenue and Lincoln Hill,
A4 structure improvements.
the _second of JOO individuals tificates and pictures presented to her during the ceremony.
Pomeroy Ofjicer Christopher
this point, we foresee_ s1·nce the Hall of Fame was f
·
·
Faith•Values
A6-7 · . "At
1
91 1
t
o Area Agenc1es on Agmg pride that Ohio's seniors Gruber pulled over a vehicl~ · ·
0
Imp el!'e.ntmg
as part
founded in 1977., to come and members of the Ohio demonstrate throu gh their
Movies
for having a loud exhaust
As a~ ex1stmg agency or as a -· from _Meigs County. c. E: ·
charitable
service
·and
volunNASCAR
B2 county agencx under _control Blakeslee was se lected for the House and Senate spotlighted teerism,'' Taft said. "These system. During a _search of
the vehicle's passenger and
of thts board,. CommJsstOn~r honor· in 1984 _
the achievements of ihe 13
Obituaries
individuats
make
Ohio
and
owner,
Larry V. Johnson. 55,
As Jm1 Sheets sa1d. The shenff s At the ceremon)':, Governor exceptional se_nio rs in their
commu·
n
ities
a
.better
our
Pomeroy, Gruber confiscated
or
ex1sllng Taft, Joan w. Lawrence, direc- congra tulatoly comments .
. Sports
B Section department
place
to
li
ve
and
I'm
proud
to
what
appeared to him to be
Em~rgency ~ed1cal Servtces tor of the Ohio Department of
"The group 'of men and
Weather
A8 department could be part of Aging. Alan Burnett, presi~ women being honored today honor \heir achievement as powdered cocaine and what
© 2005 Ohio Volley PubtisiUng Co.
Ple•se see til, A5
dent of the Ohio Association personify the spirit and civic
Ple•se see Inducted, A5
Please see Drvp. A5
BY BRIAN

CON.SUMER NOTICE

t
NATIONAL LEAGUE

2006 CDBG fo rmul a package of
$145.000 - a $9.000 cut rrom last
yea r's appropri ation for Meigs
. POMEROY - CongreS&gt; saved the County. according to County
Communi ty Development Bloc k - Commissioner Jerr Thornton. 'For the
Grant progra m from the Bush mlmin- past two years. the county has
istration's chopping block last 'lnonth. received $154,000 lhrough the pro. but Meigs County stands to lose .about gram. ~nd three· years ag~. received
$9,000 in formula fupdsfor local pro- $184,000.
.jects this year when compared to last
CDilG fo rmul a funds are disc reyear's appropri ation.
lionary - fund s. contro ll ed b)( cou nt y
Meigs County Commissioners co mmi ssioners and distri.buteu to
received llotification this week of a townsh tps and village s tor 1nfraBREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ge n~ r atio n s

-tDtvtoron

Los Angeles
Texas
Oakland
Seattle

·I

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13 .606 4 'h:

8

.

J.

BY BETH SERGENT

.735 -

.17 .485 8 ~
19 .424 10 ~
28 .235 17

16
• 14

.

BY BRIAN

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

18
19 .457 7
13
22 .371 10
Central Dlvlelon .

~-~
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Paul Wilson waits to be taken out of the game by .manager Dave Miley
in the sixtti in ning against the San Diego Pad res : Weqnesday in Cincinnati. Wilson wa~ the los~
ing pitcher as the Padres won 7~2
· _,
'

.
reprieve. Joe Randa grou nded

L. Pel

CDBG fQnds saved, but Meigs allocation cut by $9K

Commission Silver Bridge _Disaster affecting new generatiol18
Chri stri1as packages.
begins 911
interview s·
on '.
The
VanCoon'ey's tape al so
promotional Bridge
RACINE - The Silver sisl of stories of riding ferDi saotcr has affected ries
nuss the river and of
•
fasci
nated
and
tales
of
near' misses where
campaign
fro m both sides of the Ohio traffic lights turned red at the

Ea1t Dlvlalon

·•

.MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
BAmNG~ar.me·s. Colorado, .395;

• Eagles pound Miller for
sectional crown.
SeePage 81

American League
·

Carleton School holds
Mini-Relay For life, A3

-~-

- - -..,..___,__
•

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