<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5073" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5073?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-06-09T22:31:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15001">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/352650698e7c99099740ca9964c95257.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3707bdea23888131e9c7ba029c00c79f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="17322">
                  <text>i
'

.

'

Family, friends die
in murder-suicide
hoitrs after
graduation party, A6

STAMP Mentors
recognized,.Aa

•

,o

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

I :\ I'-. • \ ol. ..I . :\o.

II I '-.II\\

1•11•

\I\\ :t 1

·•no , ,

1\\1

" ·'""l.oil"o·ulout'louuo

SPORTS

Memorial Day: A time for remembering'and paying tribute

• American Legion
baseball preview.
See Page 81

He spoke of the hundreds
of flags placed on the graves
of veterans in ·' Meigs
POMEROY - Memorial · County's cemeteries for
Day is all about remember- Memorial Day and called on
ing and paying tribute to his at~dience to give thanks
those who went to war to for the everlasting commitfight for freedom, those who ment to peace and to vow
returned and those who did- never to forget the sacrifice
n't , as well as those who of those veterans.
serve today.
A parade through downThat was the message of town Pomeroy led by Post
Drew Webster Post 39 39's honor guard opened the
Commander
Mickey Memorial Day program. The
Williams. speaker at the Southern High School band
post 's annual observance under the direction of its new
held Monday on the Pomeroy director, Chad Dodson, fire,
p&amp;rking lot.
and· emergency units from
"We are here to honor fel- several communities, a horse
low Americans ~ho sacri- patrol, and antique . autos
Charlene Hoenlch/photos
ficed all of their tomorrows were included.
·
Navy veterans Robert Burton, Lennie Jewell and John Weeks prepare to place a wreath im the
so that we could gather freely
The Southern band played Ohio River in tribute to those veterans lost at sea.
here today," said . Williams the National Anthem, the
adding that "over a million of pledge was given after the
them died wearing a military flag was raised, and Joe
uniform for our country, and Struble gave the invocation.
regrettably, more are des- Commander Williams weiRlg11t: The honor guard of
tined to follow them."
corned those attending and
Drew Webster Post 39,
."As we gather here today, John Musser, Pomeroy
American Legion, left to right,
we are again a nation &lt;!I war mayor, brought greetings on
Gerald Rought, Jim Fry, Fritz
.- a war against terrorism behalf of the village. Gladys
Goble, George Harrrs, Jr. and J,...,
here and a fight for freedom Cumings, Legion Auxiliary
Bill Kitchen, leads the annual ,
in Iraq. We need to stand president, read "In Flanders
Memorial Day parade throug~ ·
behind those who serve ahd Field."
downtown Pomeroy.
to remember that sacrifice is
John . Weeks,
Robert
a pre-condition for a free Burton, and Lenriie Jewell
people, and neglect comes at
the cost of all that has made
Please ... Trfbute, AS
America what it is ."
BY CHARLENE Ho.EFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Anna K. Ellis
• Belva B. Stewart
•Sam May
• Mary Lou Saunders .
• Garner William 'Bill'
Triplett

More than 300 attend ·PHS alumni reunion
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICHOMYDAILY SENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• Bush vows to pursue
Iraq mission as he honors
tliose who died fighting for
their country. •
See Page A2
• Meigs students win
science award.
SeePageA3

WEATHER

POMEROY- Awarding of
four scholarships and recognition of Kathleen Bailey Scott
of the class of 1925 were features of the annual reunion of
the
Pomeroy
Alumni
· Association held S&lt;J,turday
night at Meigs High School.
More than 300 alumni and
guests attended.
.
The scholarships were
awarded to children and
grandchildren of Pomeroy
High
School . alumm.
Presented the Bob Roberts
Scholarships of . $800 each
were Renee Bailey· of
Pomeroy, the granddaughtt:r

.

Andrew Harrison

Cassie Michelle Lee

of Ruth Barnhart, a 1950 Michelle Lee, Pomeroy,
gra.duate, Joanna butcher of .granddaughter of Ann Smith
Rockport, Ind. the daughter of · Rue, class of 1948.
Jennifer Blakeslee B.utcher,
Bailey plans to attend Oho
class of 1967; and Cassie University this fall where she

.American flag donated to newly
opened Middleport Pool

Renee Bailey

Joanna Butcher

wili major in·physical therapy, design; . and · Lee will be
Rio
Grande
Butcher . will be going to attending
Purdue University's School of University in preparation for
and
Family
Consumer
Please see Reunion, A5
Science to study. fashion

AlligatorJacks Flea Market opens

INDEX
2 SFCilONS -

Calendars .

12 PAGFS .

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs-6

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

As
B Section
A6

. ......... '/JII!OtO

The Middleport Pool opened for business yesterday, giving away
free food and refreshments to their patrons who. also enjoyed
the sight of a new American Rag. The flag was donated to the
pool by Rich Hays. right, former Middleport resident and represen~ative of Woodmen of the .World Insurance Agency of Grove
City. Woodmen of the World have donated over 25 flags to the
village in the past three year'S~ The company plans to donate
another new flag, a 30-foot .flag pole and a plaque commemorating the victims of the attacks of Sept 11, 2001, Which will be
dedicated on Sept 11, 2005· at Dave Diles ,Park. With weood
are pool manager. Dale Riffle and Mayor Sandy lannarelli.

Beth SerC~Mt/plloto

The ribbon was officially cut at Alligator Jack's Rea Market in the old Pam ida building on State
Route 7 this weekend. · we want to. thank everyone for their support, " manager Brandon
Buckley said to the · well wishers, singling out members of his family, the Community
Improvement Corporation and members of the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce. Buckley
manages the flea market with wife Leah and brother Ryan . Alligator Jacks is open from 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. on Fridays and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays year round . New vendors
interested in setting up shopf an reach Alligator Jack's at 416-4650. (Beth Sergentjphoto)
'

Holzer Medi·cal Center
Chaplaincy Services is proud to be a sponsor of the
.
·~

'

·1st Annual Inside-Out Yard Sale
Galli'a County Outreach Center - 275 .State Street, Gallipoli~.
.

Wednesday,"June ·1 • 9:00AM-3:00PM ·
~

For more information, please call 740.446.7555

..

.

.~

�PageA2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday,

M~y

31, 2005

STAMP Mentors recognized

BUSH VOWS TO PURSUE
IRAQ MISSION AS .HE
HONORS THOSt WHO
DIED FIGHI'ING·FOR ...
r
'
rnEIR COUNTRY

PO\ lEROY - This year students from all school districts in Meigs County participated in
the Std) Toba,·cu-Frce Athlete Mentor Program (STAMP) which i' a youth tobacco use pre' c11l1un program of the Americm Can.:er Society, Ohio Di\'ision.
To~m:co-frec high "'hoof students from Meigs. Eastern and South~rn were trained to pre·" lll tour .:urncultlm-based classroom sessiOns to students m upper elementar.y and middle
,L"JlooJ.., in th~ir districls.
'
·

· Bv PETE YOST

war were becoming apparent.
Before his Memorial Day
re1r1arks in 2003 , Bush had
ARLINGTON, Va.
declared major combat operaQuoting letters of the fallen tions at an end. the U.S. govfrom the war in Iraq. ernmenl confident ly predictPresident
Bush · vowed ed · that . weapons of mass
Monday to a Memorial Day destruction wuuld be -found
audience of military families and Ameriqn genera ls said
and so ldiers in vniform that troops were in the process of
·the nation wi ll ho·nor its dead stabilizing lra4.
·
by striving for peac~ and
At that time , some 160
democracy, no . matter the American soldiers had been
cost.
killed in lra4 . Tod.ly. the total
"We must honor them by is over I ,650.
'
completing the mission for
On Monday, Bush evoked
AP Photo
which they gave their lives; the memories of American President Bush, right, and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. ce~ter. and yhairhlan oflhe Joint Chiefs Gen. Richard Myers
by defeating the terrorists," soldiers who have died, read- look to the audience during a Memorial Day ceremony at the amphitheater at Arlington National Cemetery.
the president told a support- ing ex,cerpts from the letters
ive crowd of several thou- they wrute. in some cases let' 2003, the president said the was killed when the heii- note for a woma; and a low wreath-laying, ceremony arid
sand people at Arlington ters that were to be· opened . war is part of a greater con- copter he was helping to pilot note for ·a man, up to 25,000 two flyovers by military air~
National Cemetery.
on ly in the event that the so l~ tlict necessitated by the Sept. crashed in Kuwait in the notes in ail.
. craft in the "missing man"
Bush's ·remarks come as dier didn't make it home.
11 terrorist attacks that early hours of the war.
"The civilian deaths are not formation .
· ·
. the U.S. military supports a . "M~ death will mean noth.; claimed nearly 3,000 lives,
Elsewhere in the Uni ted taken into account and rarely
- Wisconsin . Gov. Jim
massive weekend show of 1n g . · .1f you .stop no w, . toppled the World Trade States:
Nancy Doyle led . an emotional
reported." . said
- On the beach in . Santa Adanl's, director of the Memorial Day tribute to 41
force in Baghdad by Iraqi Louts1ana National . Guard Center and heavily · danJaged
forces ··aimed at hafting Sgt. M1chael. Evans wrote 111 the Pentagon, which 'is near Monica, Calif., the anti-war Mobi.us Anists Group, which . Wisconsin residents who
· attacks . by insurgents. The a · letter home. Evans d1e(l the cemetery -where . Bush group Veterans for Peace set organized the event. "We're have died since the terrorist
vio lence has killed more than Jan. 28 while on patrol_ in spoke.
up a temporary "Arlington trying to take note of all the attacks · of 2001. including
"Two terrorist regimes are West" display of more 'than causalities of war."
. 700 people since Iraq's new western Ba~hdad. part of a
three who died in Iraq in the
government was announced maJor secunty operatiOn to gone forever, freedom is on I ,600 white crosses in memo-Also Monday, a memor- past week.
Apri l 28. The sweep of protect the first free I~aqi the march and America is ry of American soldiers killed ial for American soldiers
Umbrellas covered
Baghdad was ans\vered by elections in more than SO more secure." Bush said of in Iraq. Some crosses were killed in Iraq and Afghanistan Georgia's Marietta National
counterattacks by insurgents; years.
the end of the Taliban regime decorated with flowers along was dedicated in a courtyard Cemetery on Monday as hunand south of the city, two sui"I know it' ll be hard, but 1 in Afghanistan and Saddam with pictures and names of behind the Old North Church dreds ·sat through a steady
cide bombers blew them- gave my life so you could Hussein's .rule in Iraq. ·
the dead.
in 8oston's North End.
rain 1'0 honor the fallen
selves up in a crowd of police live, not just live, but live
But it f;ia's excerpts from
- . ln . Boston , about 70
''We do this to remen)ber," American soldiers buried
ofncers, killing up to 30 peo- free," Evans wrote.
the lett~rs that · Bush read to mustctans · gathered
on said the · Rev. Patrici'a there.
?le and wounding dozens.
Bush's nine-minute address the audience thai drew tears Boston 's City Hall Plaza for Handioss of the 01(1 North
"A little rain is . a small
The ·president's tribute at · was punctuated eight times from some, alor\g with the a Memorial Day tribute to Church. "It is important we inconvenience compared with
Arlington came · in sharply by applause from a crowd of strongest appia~se.
.
civilians kiHed in Iraq. never forget what our young the sacritices we · are reme!lldifferent circumstances from military families, some of
"Realize that I died doing Performers with wind, per- nien and women are doing, bering today," said the Rev.
the Memorial Day visi t Bush whom were accompanied by . something that I truly love cussion or string instruments not for us but for the world." Victor P~ntz. ·
made' to the cemetery'sTomb soldiers in wheelchairs recov- for a . purpose greater than · formed a Circle and sounded
- New Yorkers marked - - - - - - - - - - of the Unknowns two years ering from their wounds.
myself," Marine· Capt. Ryan notes for each of the war's Memorial Day with parades
On .the Net:
ago. just as the nation's probAs he has done since U.S. Beaupre of St. Anne, 111., civilian casualties - a high and an observance aboard the
White House:
!ems stemming from the Iraq forces invaded Iraq in March wrote to his family. Beaupre note for a child. a medium USS Intrepid that included a
http://www. whirehouse.gov
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Chirac seeks to salvage his legacy after
·stinging de~eat in referendum on EU charter

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
Very Special With A Father's Day
Thank You Tribute ...
To Be Publl1hed In The Daily Sentinel
. On Friday, June 17thl

Bv JOHN LEICESTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER'

PARIS - President Jacques
Chlrnc
moved
swiftly
Monday to shnkt up his @OV·

emment following a stinaing
referendum defeat of the
· European Union's constitution, with his. beleaguered
prime minister expected to be
the main victim,
The president's office suid
he would unnounce "his decisions regardina the goverri·
ment" Tuesday und then
address the notion in the
evening.
The
National
Assembly canceled a scheduled session Tuesday to await
AP Photo
the announcement, chamber
. president Jean-Louis Debre French president Jacques Chirac, left. and Prime Minister
said.
Jean-Pierre Raffarin attend ceremonies in Paris in this April
Chirac reached beyond 26, 2005. file photo. In a stu.nning rejection of the European
French borders seeking to Union's latest ambitious move to ·unite its 25 nations, French
control damage from his vot- voters shot down the bloc's first constitution, dealing a poteners'defiant "non!" on Sunday, tially fatal blow to · the charter and humiliating Chirac in
speaking with European leadSunday's referendum. Raffarin was widely seen :Monday as
ers and Russian President
·.
Vladimir Putin .. The~ EU's the most obvious victim of any Cabinet shuffle.
euro currency dropped below Review of Political Sciences:
$1.25 for the first time in "He probably never irrlagined liament, where his centerright government has a majorseven months as the vote cast that it could be a tsunami."
ity, pass the treaty meant to
the 25-nation European
The
outcome
was
riot
even
mark
Europe's next big step
Union's future into disarray.
close:
The
"no"
polled
nearly
in
a
50-year
process of bringChirac ganibied and lost in
calling the referendum, mis- 55 percent and the "yes" · 45 ing the continent's once warreading the national mood. percent Turnout was 69.3 ring nations together.
Although it was later abanThe miscalculation left his percent
As Chirac sought to salvage doned as impra'ctical, Chirac;
judgment and mandate to repwhat
will probably be his last German Chancellor Gerhard
resent France internationally
two
years
in power, his prime Schroeder and British Prime
open to question and had him
the past three Minister Tony Blair even
minister
for
loolcing like a Iaine duck at
the end of a checkered four- years, Jean-Pierre Raffarin, toyed with the idea of getting
called together his aides to lawmakers in all three coun- .
decade political career.
His hopes that the French bid farewelL They packed tries to vote ·on the text on the
would fall into line behind boxes as Raffarin met with same (lay -· perhaps May 8,
celebraled as the end of World
· him left him seeming hope~ Chirac for 30 minutes.
The
president
also
.
s
umWar II in Europe, Chirac's
lessly out of to.uch. A lastditch TV appeal from hi's moned possiple replacements, current and former aides said.
Such a symbolic passage
Elysee Palace three days including Interior Minister
Dominique
de
Villepin
and
have given unstoppable
could
before the vote. when he dramatically urged voters to con- Nicolas Sarkozy. the head of momentum to the !reaty.
Instead. Chirac soug~t to
sider their children's future. Chirac's governing pany who
makes
no
secret
that
his
ultifollow
the .tradition of his
had no apparent im~act
mate
aim
is
the
presidency.
political role model, Gen.
Chirac and his a1des point
Chirac's age- he turns 73 Charles de Gaulle, who called
out that all political panies
had wanted . a referendum. in November~ always made five referendums between
But, as president, the decision it unlikely that he would seek 1958 and 1969. But ,unlike de
a third term in 2007. Sunday's Gaulle, who resigned when
was his alone.
"It was a gamble," said vote could make it a certainty. the ·tast of his proposals was
Even with a new team, it's rejected, Chirac had said he
Noelle Lenoir. who was
Chirac's minister for Europe hard to see how a P.?iitically would remain in power.
until March and now heads weakened Chirac, wtll be able
Chirac has misread the
the Institute of Europe think- to make mucp headway Fr~nch before: In 1997, Ire
tank. ''The result shows that against France's pressing called early elections, only
having a lot of power leaves problem~ - led by Pftsistent for voters to tilt to the left,
you too alone."
high unemployment and slug- saddling him .with a Socialist
gish
growth .
. Added Serge HUrtig , direcprime minister for the next
tor of the International
Chirac could have had par- five years.

•

Tuesd~y,

May 31, 2005

submitted photos

· Eastern High Schoo~ STAMP mentors included (from left) front row, Branden .Batey, Brittni
llensley, Hallie Brooks, Sara Wiggins. Amanda Windon ; back row, Brian Castor, Derek Roush,
Jillian Brannon, Brittany BisselL

Man needs attitude check for negative vie}l' of women
DEA_R READERS :. A .18year-old man wrote to me
saying he ha' never married that when he was in his 20s.
women ignored him or told
him he was "nice, but boring." or that he didn't ha\'e
enough money. He said that
women want only "bad guys"
or men with deep pockets .
"but now that they're past
their prime arrd have t\XO kids
th.e-bad boy ie ft them with" - .
he is now good enough. He
concluded by saying . "If I
wasn't good enough for them
then. why should 1 be good
. enough now?"'
Frankly, i found his attitude
offensive . I ad vised him thai
if he was still dating women
as shallow as those he · d tried
ro date in his 20s. he should
not involve himself with any
of them - that he would be
singi!!· forever, and I suspect'
ed . t~t\ the way he wants it.
Sorr\e readers felt I didn't
look deeply · enough. Read
on:
DEAR ABBY Please suggest to that man that. it's possible the women he mentioned have now matured and
realize what qualities are
important in a mate. father
and role model. Too often,
young women think that a
fast, wild, carefree romance
is the tick~t to happiness. Too
often, by the time they wake
up and realize lhe ''boring,"
kind, stable guy was a far
better choice. they have children, a broken heart. shat. tered dreams, and are trying
to piece their lives back
together.
1 don'l believe those
women are looking for a
meal ticket, but rather someone they can ·love, respect
and trust to help raise their
children in a safe. loving
environment.
it's. sad that man is so negative and stuck in. the past
instead of trying to build a
future wilh someone . You
were right, Abby. He probably wiii end up alone,
because there .ARE men who

\1ADlSO!'I. WIS . 1\1ALE1
READER
DEAR READER : I th Jnf.
'ou hit th~ nail on !he head
Thank }ou for ) uL1r 'hre\\ J
analvsi,. You tau~ht m,·

Dear

~omfthiog today.

Abby

..

DEAR ABBY: The fact the
writer Yiews \\Omen ~onega ·

tively is \abotaging an) g'~oJ

relationship h' might. have.
That writer needs to re:~liLt'
will step up 10 the c.hallenge that women are indi,·iJuak
of being kind. lo\'ing stepfa- so me make good choices.
thers to the child~en. and lov- others poor ones. He needs tu
ing husbands to women who fi~ure out whv the onh
made unfortunate choices in . women he meets' are 't.he on e',
the past. I know. because I who m;ike poor choice,. ;uJd
married one. HAPPY the good women a,·oid him.
MOTHER OF FOUR IN He -blames women for hi'
woes. hut chances are th at.
CALIFORN IA
DEAR HAPPY: I agree. he he's the real. problem . . is "stuck." And u7Jtil he GOOD GUY WHO GOT
makes up his mind to live in THE GIRL. HOUSTON
the moment. he will stay that ' DEAR GOOD GUY: I
way.
agree,
DEAR ABBY: I have -Deqr Abby i.&lt; writte11 by
encountered the same attitude . Abigail Van Burell, also
that . writer describes. and the .krwl&lt;'n as }earme Phillips,
wop1en weren't all shallow or and was jou11ded by her
conceited. They simply mother, . Pauline Phillips.
believed they were due more Write
Dear
Abbv
at
than a decent. loyal and hon- www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
est guy. It's no different than Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
the man past his prime' claim- 90069. • .
ing a trophy wife because he - - - ' - - - -- -feels he ··cteserves·· it - and
everyone agrees that's a
.
•
despicable altitude.
Both come from the same
·
source, I suspect: Media that
constantly tell us from every
direction , more than ever
POMEROY - ' Ju,iin l'
before, that only the highest Arnold and Bradlev D. Jones
level of physical attractive, both of Middleport' were winness is acceptable in a mate . ners of an Ohio A.:ademy of
That concept is shallow. but ·science Award having been
it affects an awful1ot of pe-o- given an excellenl rating on
ple who aren't. It feeds on their
project.
"Hidden
our deepest insecurities. the Heritage (A study in mice
junio.r-high self who was genetics)" at the Ohio State
ostracized for being different. Science Dav in Columbus.
and who never truly goes
Earlier this year Arnold and
away.
Jones won best-in-show with
By placing the blame for the same project at the Meigs
the man not dating back on High School Science Fair
the women, you ignored the which eamed them the right to
true problem for both men move on to the Ohio 'state
and women. and invalidated Science Day competition .'
someone who may have an
Jones and Arnold's experaccurate view of his world. iment bred rodents to reflect
Seeing reality is the first step the power of genetic trait's
toward changing it.
through the generations.

Meigs students
Win SCience
award

·HARD WORKING.
DEPENDABLE. TOUGH ...
EXACTLY WHAT YOU EXPECTED FROM AKUBOTA

Southern High School STAMP mentors included (from .left) front row, Chris Tucker, Jordan
Neigler, Ashton Brown, Jake Hunter. Becky Rader: back row, Nikki Riffle, Kristina Williams,
Ashley Roush, Mallory Hil l, John Fisher. Not pictured , Brittany Philson .

'

•

BX2230
• 22 HP, 3-Cyllnder E-TVCS
l iCiuid·Cooled Diesel Engine

• 2WD/4WD St8ndard•
• HST Transmissi(_m

·

.1

• Category I, 3-point'Hitch and Rear PTO StandArd
• Hydrostatic Power Steering
• Ful l Flat Deck .and Cruise Control ·

Happy
Father's Day

Happy .
Father's Day

ZD25F
• 25 HP, E·TVCS J-Cyl1nder
Liquid Cooled Diesel Engine
• Shaft Drive Mower Deck and Transmission
• Hydraulic beck Lift
'
• Professional Grade Mower and Deck.
• OSHA Approved ROPS

(Your Father's
(Your Father's
Name)
Name)

Love
.(Your Name)
1 Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ... $10.00

Love
(Your Name).

B. 1X5 Greeting with Pli:ture ...$13.00

1 Father's Nam•- - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - -

1 Your_Name(s) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I

Address _ __,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- - ' - - - - - - - -

1 ' clty/StateJZip._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone_ _ _ _ _ __
I

Meigs High School STAMP mentors included (from left) front row, Pamela Franklin, Gallia-Meigs
. ·community Action Agency STAMP Facilitator Trainer, Brad Soulsby, Dan Bookman·, Dru Reed,
Cody Davidson. Mary Hawk, Meigs Middle School Principal; back row, Ashley Browning, Melia
Whan. Jennifer Smith, ·Kayla ,Grover. Not pictured, Cody Diii, . Ann~ Hartenbach .

Send Coupon and Payment to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Public meetings
Thesday, May 31
POMEROY '"'- Final hearing on the Pomeroy Distress
Grant application with projects to be discussed, 7 p.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center.

Wednesday, June l
PAGEVILE
. Scipio
Trustees will meet at6:30 p.m.
at the Pageville town haiL
POMEROY -· The 911
committee will meet at 6:30
p.m at the EMS training room.
Th~ meeting is open to the

Deadline For This Special Father 's Day Tribute Is
Friday. June 11. 12:00. Noon .
.

R I V900 Utility Vehicle
or Recreational Models Available
• 21.6 1-jP Diesel Engine• Hyd rostatic Power Steering .
· ~
• 3-Range Va riable
Hydrostatic Transmission

public and for more infor!Tia- childhood immunization dintioh call 992-66 i 9.
ic, 9-11 , 1-3, 112 E. Memorial
Dr. Bring shot records, medical cards. Children must be
accompanied by parent or
legal guardian. $5 donation
Thesday, M11y 31
accepted
but not required for
RUT j,:AND Rose _of
Sharon Holiness Church will immunizations.
hold a reviv.al at 7 p.m., May
3 1 - June 5. With Rev. Tom .
BelL Pastor Dewey King.
Monday, June 6
LONG BOTTOM -Victor
Bahr will be 85 on June 6.
Cards may be sent to him at
Thesday, May 31
POMEROY
- Meigs 38814 Township Road 404,
County Health Department Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

•4WD
• Wet Disc Brakes

. lOW:RATE ·
FINANCING
AVAILABlE

Church events

Birthdays

Other events

·,

•

The Rugged Kubota
• General Purpose, Worksite,

Community Calendar

I

'

•

PageA3

.

.

.

.,

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT.
0 NE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
. ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/800-710·1917
"t"'I A'R

I(•J~')t'l.
EVERYTHING YOU VALUE

l11ontr~ 101 tlllfll "~ m l4 month••••~•blo rtumr ~h J~n•

d1.1ltr1. Kub:ill "T'Ii!IOO 11&lt;11

tli~joiH

.11 :1005 en " "'

(lllmpil 'A lt ifiOftttllou II 0'\ A Pll

r~uor.H

IQUI~II'tot

m •llrl hlll l"lll

Clrtltl~lhflil

ll payments ol S41 51 plr Sl.lnl IKirrOWIId

Fin1nt1119 lllrGu ~~ k""oto CtOtJttCorp&lt;~~ohton, USA, 1utljoct Ill t rlldottppr.,.tlond 10'i d"""n oa.mul Some Uct;l!i~nl &amp;~p~,
flnon~"' !l fat '"~~'' up lO l&amp; monlhl '"'ltllla lllrOI!Il~ Jur11 Jll, tD05, en ,.,. ltl'lpmlnl rn •n•ontar, •t portlclpotmg
d11fw1 l(ubgg I'I'TV900 r10I 1~111111 . Ell1mpll • A :!I1!111RII1 1~n 11 ~ · APR II~UIIII l&amp; paym1n1&gt; of 121 78 pe r 11,000 bor"'""~d

-o\ UA

Fir&gt;l"t:l~ ·mrngn lri:ubau C•ocrn Corpornoo, USA.•~~IICI10 crtdl! 1~9fDY~ IM 10"" oo"'n P•¥"'•m.. Som' •'"•ptlons IPP~

•

�.

The Daily Se~tinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio yalley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene .Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establislmrent of religion, or prohibiting the
free e.v:rrcise thereof; or abridgi11g the freedom
~f speech, or of the press; or the right ofthe
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Covernment for a redress of grievances.
Ame~dment to .the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Strange
Mothrnan legacypuzzling
Dear Editor:

,

I' ve been thinking a good bit about the young lass froni
Racine and her interest in the Silver Bridge disaster (front.
page. May 13). and otter thi s additional perspective for considerat ion.

AL·conJin2 to an author named John Keel. the incident must
be viewed ;vithin the context of a whole series of mysterious
events around the vicinity. including early 1967 UFO sighting&gt; in Gallipolis Ferry. and ;trange phenomena in the TNT
area. ALTording to Keel. he received adv;1nce warning from an
unidentified caller that there would soon be a major disaster
on the Ohio Ri ver. Several people around Gallipolis and Point
Pleasant ex perienced ·di sturbing dreams abo~t Christmas
. pa.:kage~ tloating in water.
And what of the famou s "Mothmmi?'' Where might he fit in
to all of this'.' The fact that the U.S. has conducted horrible
experiments upon people (both mind control and geneti&lt;.:) has
inclined me to believe that certain elites deemed the TNT area
as a perfect miniature eco-lab to test this tragic figure 's reaction to the environment. Witnesses reported individuals wearing uniforms with strange insignias .
Whatever the full story, there were some very strange things
happening around here involving people in high places.
Jeff Fields .
Syracuse

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday. May 31 : the 151 st day of 2005. There are
214 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History : On May 31, 1889. more than
2,000 people perished when a dam break sent water rushing
·
through Johnstown. Pa.
Today' s Birthdays: Actress Elaine Stewart is 76. Actordirector Clint Eastwood is 75. Singer Peter Yarrow is n7.
Former Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite is 66. Football
Hall-of-Famer Joe Namath is 62 . Actor Tom Berenger is 55. ·
Actor Gregory Harrison is 55. Comedian Chris Elliott is 45.
Actress Lea Thompson is 44. Singer Corey Hart is 43. Rapper
·DMC is 41. Rapper Kid Frost is 41. Actress Brooke Shields is .
40. Actor Colin Farrell . is 29. Rock musician Scott
Klopfenstein (Reel Big Fish) is 28.
Thought for Today: "One does not love a place the less for
having suffered in it unless it has all been suffering. nothing
but suffering." - Jane Austen. British novelist ( 1775-1817).

LETTERS TO THE
. EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
. .be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address .·
and telephone number. No un~igned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste;
·
addressing issues, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

·
.

Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate . If Yoo know ot an errpr in a
story, ca ll the newsroom at (740) 992·
2156.

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

.

News
Reporter:

B et~

(USPs 21a-sso)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published BIJery afternoon, .Monday
through Friday. 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Second--class postage
paid ' at Pomeroy.

Member : The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper AsSociation.
Postmuter: Send address corrections
to The Dally Senlinel. 111 Court Street.
Pof!!eroy, Ohio 45769.

Subscription Rates

Editor: Ct1ar.lene Hoeflich, Ext 12
ReJX)rter: Brian Reed, Ext 14 •

Sergent, Ext 13

, Advertising
Outside Sales: Da:ve Harris. Ex1. 15
Outside Sales: Brenda-Davis, Ext 16

ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10

Circulation
Olstrlcl Mgr.: Jason Patterson . Ext. 17

By carrier or motor route
One month . . .. ...... .'10.27
One year .....• "\ .....'123.24

· Dally .......... ·........50'
Senior Citizen rates
·
One month ........... .'8. 70

One year .............'96.70
SubScribers should remH 1n advance direcl
10 the Daly Sentinel. No' subscription by
mail permined in areas where home
carrief service is a'V9ilable

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County

General Manager

13 Weeks . . . . . . . .

Charlene Hoeflich, b1. 12

26 Weeks ........ . .... '64.20
52 Weeks .

E-mail:

. 532.26
.1 127.11

,

news@ mydailysentinel com

Web:

Www mydallysentlnel.com

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks .
. ..... '53.55

26 Weeks .

•
'

'

.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel·

-The First

,.

I

. ... l107.10

52 Weeks . . . . . . .... .' 214.21

PageA4r
Tue;:day, May 31, 2oop .
5

Tuesday, May 31,

party that's "hungry to win. "
Another forme•' chair·
man. thou~h. ;aid he doubtell that McCain could do it.
"Hi s rroblem is not so
much with estab li shment
Republi.:an' a&gt; wi th ranKand-fi le Republicans iu
closed -primary states like •
South
Carolinu · and
Virginia . It's hard to get the.
Republkan
nominati on
when you spelld th ree-quartersofyomtin\e as the ant i·
Republican ." he said, ref&lt;;rTing to McCain' s . opposition to Bush's tax cuts and
oil drill ing in Ala ska au ~l
support
for campai gn
finance reform and actiou
to cu rb global warming .
M.:Cain savs he hasn' t
made up hi s inind wheth_e)·
he will run again, but boo &lt;;~
ers point out that. if he docs.
he should have go in g for
him the fact that he refused
an offer to be Democrat Sen .
John Kerry's (Mass.) ruuning mate in 2004 and cam ·
paigned tirelessly for Bush
and other Republicans:
·.
In addition. McCain.
unlike Hagel. has been a
steadfast supporter of Bush 's
Iraq policy. eve n if som ~­
time s a critic of its impl ementation . McCain has also
strongly
b~:cked
.John
Bolton's nomination to he
U.N. ambassador.
·'
· The nuclear · option deal
certainly is go.od. for the
Senate and the country. It
preserves the Senate's hi storic role as a erotector o.r
minority rights resistant t\)
popular passions. It keeps
the Senate from breaking
down in partisan warfare and
.allows it to do the publi c's
business.
.It's hard to know whe(hel'
the nuclear option fight wi II
be ·a f~ctor in a presidential
contest three years from
now, but at this moment it
ought to be clear that
McCain was a major force
in pulling the Senate back
from the brink of chaos and
that Fri st got Bush 's judges
confirmed. Other potential
candidates
were
jt\St
bystanders.
(Morton Kondracke is
&lt;'xecutive editor of Roll Ca(l,
the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)
'

Are we educating for citizenship?
Among the most deficient
pa,rts of the curricula in
America's school systems is
teaching students why they
are Americans - how our
government works, our system of justice, the. history of
the
Constitution,
and,
indeed, U.S. history and
what it's taken to maintain
and protect our Hberties.
A chilling 2003 report
from The Center for
Information and Research
on Civic Learning and
Engagement (CIRCLE) ai
the University of Maryland,
revealed that in our high
schools, "most formal civic
education today comprises
only a single course on government - &lt;;ompared to as
many as three courses in
civics, democracy, and government that were common
in the 1960s." ·
This situation has ·not yet
markedly improved.
The report adds that in this
single civics . course, these
days. there is hardly any discussion of the role of a chizen in this sodety. ·
It's· not surprising, then,
that as columnist Robyn .E.
Blumner
of
the
St.
Petersburg Times reports :
"A National Conference of
State Legislatures survey
recently found that 64 percent of 15- to 26-year-olds
.:· can identify R,uben Studdard
as a winner on American
Idol, while only 40 percent
can name the party that controls Congress."
This May, in New . York
City, 81 percent of dghthgraders flunked the ..state's
basic social studies exam.
which includes civics knowledge. Said Councilman
Oliver Koppell (D-Bronx) to
the New York Daily News: "I
am dumbfounded that when I
go into a class and I ask the.m
who the mayor is. or what a
congressman does, they

·our constitutional democra- American !lag:
cy are Ral!J:h Regula (R" If there is any fixed sti1r
Obia), David OJJty (D-Wis.) in our constellation, it Is
and the 96 ·House members that no official, high or
·who joined them. In the petty, can pre scribe what
Senate,
keeping
the shall be orthodox in pol iNat
Founders' legacy alive in our tics, nationali sm, religion,
Hentoff
schools are Arlen Specter or other matters of opinion.
(R-Pa.) and Tom Harkin (D- or force citizens to confess
lowa), aldng with 36 other . by word or act their faitl1
senators who have signed a therein."
Each and every American
around the country trying to "Dear Colleague" letter.
Like
its
House
counterpart,
citizen
should care abotit
remedy this crucial omission
the
letter
emphasizes:
whether our children .no w
in how we prepare the young
"Independent
evaluations
and
in generations to con]e
for citizenship. One of the
to
the
success
of
testify
understand
the value, mean most . impressive is the
these
programs
in
promot.
ing
and
re
sponsibility of
Center for Civic Education
in Calabasas, CaHf., and ing civic knowledge, intel- being a citizen. Our free Washington , b.C., whose lectual . and participatory doms are not an absolute
foundation .
programs reach some 4:8 skills. and .civic dispositions unmovable
million students across the such as civility, tolerance, They need to be both nurnation annually (3 million respect for the rule of law, tured arid protected. As
domestic and the 1.8 million .and a devotion to the com- Supreme Court Justi ce
William Brennan once told
yotingSlers involved' in its mon good of all citizens."
A
separate
pocket-sized
me, "the Founders knew
foreign programs).
the
Center
publication
from
·that
liberty is fragile. "
For years, I have recomfor
Civic
Education
is
the
In
today's America, with
mended their "We the
'"American entertainment -o b ses se'd
People: the Citizens and the inexpensive
Legacy:
The
United
States ·youth exposed to wha.t
Constitution" program in my
Constitution
and
other National Endowment for the
visits to elementary, middle
of Arts Chairman Dana Gioia
Essential
Documents
and high schools. Its comcalls
"cultural
pelling curriculum makes· ·American Democracy.'~ The rightly
contents
includes
The
we ri S.k
impoverishment,"
the Constitution, ·B. ill of
Mayflower
Compact
of
·
forgetting
our
beginnings
as
Rights, and the essential
principles of this democratic · 1620: sec tions of the a constitutional democracy.
Federalist Papers: George now the oldest in the world.
repubHc come alive. ·
Washington'
s
farewell If future citizens don' t kno \v
The Center for Civic
address;
Thomas
Jefferson's
their heritage, as Robyn E.
Education also runs "We the
People : Project C.itizen ," first inaugural address ; Blumner poignantly wrote in
which gets middle school Sojourner Truth 's "Ain' t I a the St. Petersburg Time s:
we
lose . tne
students and youth organiza- Woman ?"; excerpts from "When
Franklin
Roosevelt's
"Four
Republic, will
anyone
tion s to participate ir local
. ?''
Freedoms''; and Martin noltce.
,
and state government.
However,
President Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a
I deeply. hope Congress
keeps the "We the People"
Bush's education budget for Dream."
I always have a copy of civic education program
the next fiscal year annihili:lted funding for these pro- "American Legacy" with alive, and I sure wish every
grams. Therefore. both in the me for talks to students,' and American had a copy of its
House and Senate, there is a for help in writing this col- pock~t -s ized
"A merican
strong bipartisan drive to ' umn. The booklet also has Legacy." Its Americanisp1
in sure that the · Center's part of my favorite Supreme makes you proud .
opinion,
West
Civic Education Program is . Court
(Nat Hemoff is a nationalincluded in the fiscal 2006 Virginia Stt~te Board of ly re110W11ed malwrit\• 011 the
Labor, Health and Human Education
v.
Barnette · First Ame11dmelit i:md tlte
Services,
Education ( 1943). The High Court, in Bill of Rights a11d author of
Appropriations bill at $2 1.5 an 8- i decision, ruled that se.ver&lt;d books, includi11g
million. the~. same level as the school board violated "The War on th e Bill of
. last year.
the . rights of Jehovah's Rtghrs a11d the Gathering
don 't know. ~~
In the House , leading this Witne~ses ' children by forc- Resistance" (Seven Stories
Yet there are. organizations vital support for the future of ing .them : to · salute the Press. 2003)

'
www.my'aailysentinel.com

..

Deaths

Frist and Mc,Cain both won in nuClear deal ·
•
As he left the press conferFri't led the "ay in trying to
ence unnoum.·iilg the pact
take federal jurisdiction over
a\'erting
the
Senate's
Terry Schiavo. even "diag"nuclear'· standotT, Sen .
no~ing" her on the ba~i~ of a
.John Ml·Cain. R-AriL.. said.
videolape. ·
"The first quest ion that rhe
Two tests may ,·ome 'oon
Morton
media are going to ask us is.
on just how far Frist will go
Kondracke to appeal to GOP base vot'Who won and who losr•·
The Senate won ·and the
ers: embrynnic stem cells
country won :"
and immigration.
· Thml true. And McCain
Hou se moderates suc in passing . legisla.:eeded
won. t,?o· emergmg - once . George Allen, R- Va., and
agam - as a courageous. Chuck Hagel. R-Neb. · tion to lift President Bush's
independent leader who' s both presidenti al hopefuls limits on federal funding of
·not on ly wil ling to take on _ denounced the deal. "Our stem-ce ll research using
passionate interest groups activists will not be happy embryos "leftover" at feuilbut also able to achieve a with thi s so lution ," Allen ity clinics. M.:(uin. who
despite the radical right 's
decisive victory.
said. "I ' m not."
.cri
tici sms is firmly apti At the same time. it' s
Some .o f those who support McCain for the 2008 worth noting the response of abortion. has· endorsed the
presidential
nomination . Focus on the Family's James , measure. It remains to be
While .
he ·seen · whether Frist, . who
think his victory represents a Dobson.
deteat for Senate Majority denounced the deal as "a defended Bush's limits, will
Leader Bill . Frist. R-Tenn .. complete bailout and betray~ call up a con1panion bill. .
his prospective presidential al
by
a cabal
of It 's al so unclcm how l1 e
.rival. Deriwcrats quickly · Republicans," (he was no· would vote on the issue.
On immigration , M.:Cain
began crowing about a frist· friend ofM~Cain's anyway).
he also praised Fri st for · is the co-sponsor with Sen.
defeat , too.
But that 's in.accurate. Frist "courageously fighting to Edward Kennedy. D-Mass :,
a
bill
regu larly
won , too, and Democrats . defend the vital principle of of
by
many
denou need
lost. The "Gang of 14" deal basic fairness."
that McCain brokered makes
Sen. Lindsey Graham. R- (though not all) conservait all but certain that the S.C., one of the 14. had it · tives as granting "amnesty"
immi gra nt s.
three Bush judicial nomi- exactly right when he said t·O illegal
nees Democrats had labeled that ··w ithout Frist, there . Actually. it sensibly (and
"radical extremists" will be would have been no human ely ) strengthens borcontirmed.
McCain. no breakthrough. der . security while permit- .
In fact, it's ne·arlr as cer- Frist pushed (the nucl ear ting ill egals and new immitain that five of seven nomi- option) to the wall. Without grants to obtain work pernees previouslv faced with a deadline. there would have mits and le ga l sta tu s. as
"' filibu sters w"ill betome been no deal." .
.
long as the illegals keep a
appellate judges. Maybe
Graham. who· supported clean record and pay a fine.
even six will be approved, McCain in the 2000 presi" . What Frist will do on
depending on the outcome of dential election, said the deal immigration remains to be
action on 9th Circuit nomi' ''helps reinforce wha·t people see n. Even
supporting
nee William Myers.
think of McCain." while Bush's position- work perMoreover, contrary to altering Frist 's image . "Frist mits with()ut legal status Democratic spinning that will lose. some as the wise will offe.nd hardli(le rightFrist's nuclear option is off doctor with the friendly face. wtngers.
the table. it's not. It's merely He comes out looking hardWhen I asked several GOP
whether
sheathed.
er. But with the base. he profes sional s
If Democrats resume fiJi. establishes himself as a· McCain could win the presibustering judicial nominees tough guy."
. dential nomination. some of
who don 't qualify as "extraIt's clear that Frist has been them, such · as former
ordinary circumstances." . working overtime to cement Republican
National
Fri st can move anew to his position with the GOP Committee Chairman Bill
change the Senate rules to base, particularly the reli- Brock, responded 'with a
ban filibusters.
gious
right.
As . The long, long pause.
It's true that s6me hot- Economist magazine recently
Finally; Brock said : "Yes, ,
heads on what McCain calls noted, Frist, in hi s book but. he 's got a high hill to
"the far right" are deeply "Transplant" (Grove/Atlantic, climb," because of frequent
unhappy with the deal Inc., 1989) argued for chang- breaks from the party line.
because the nuclear option ing the legal definition of
Still, Brock said, "he 's the
was not detonated. Some "brain death" to make it easi- best known of the potential
also criticize Frist for not er to harvest the organs of candidates, and he' d have a
being able to control. all 55 anencephalic babies certain to head start." And with his
Republicans.
die but still . showing some appeal to independents (and
· Apparently eager .to curry brain activity.
also Hispanics), McCain
favor with the right, Sens.
This yea,, by contrast, · could be the choice. llf a

2005

Anna K. Ellis .
RACINE - Anna K. Ellis. 92, of Lockport. N.Y. for merly of Raci ne , died Thursday, May 26. 2005 in
Lockport.
·
She was the daughter of the late William T. and Kate
Fought Ellis.
.
Graveside serv ices will be held at ll a.m. Tuesday.
May 31. 2005 at the Greenwood Cemetery. Racin e.
The~e 'w tll be no ca lling hours. Cremeens Funera l Home .
Rac1ne, IS 1n .:harge of funeral arrangements.

Belva B. Stewart
GALLIPOLIS .- . Belva Belle Siewart. 95, Gallipolis
(Bulavlile Community) died Sunday, May 29, 2005 at her
re sidence .
She was born in Addison Town ship , the daughter of the
late Eli and Emma Atkinson Shaver.
•
~ Funeral services will be I p.m. Thursday, June 2, 2005
m the Cremeens Funeral Chapel , Gallipolis. Officiating
w1ll be Rev. Carl Swisher, Alfred Holley, Andrew Parsons
and Joseph Godwin . Burial will be in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Cheshire. Friends may call , from 6 to 9 p.m .
.
Wednesday at the funeral home.
.

.

Sam May
BIDWELL - Sam May, 73, Bidwell, died 'Friday, May
27, 2005, 111 the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis. He
was born in McAndrews, Ky ., son of the late Wed and
Lenora May .
·.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday, June I,
2005 in the 'Freeman Funeral Home, Chapmanville, W.
Va. Burial will be in the Forest Lawn Ceme.tery at Pecks
MilL Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral home . . , . ·
·
·
Local arrangements were by Cremeens Funeral Chapel ,
Gallipolis . ·
. · ··

Mary Lou Saunders
GAHANI:'fA - Mary Lou Saunders, 69 , of Gahanna
passed away on Sunday, May 29 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
She was born on Jan. 30, 1936 in Gallia County to the
late Charles D. and Mary Smith Carter.
Services will be 10 a.m. Friday at the . Margarum-

Reunion
from Page A1
'

pharmacy school.
The
Charles
Gibbs
Scholarship of $300 went to
Andrew
Henderson
of
Pomeroy, ·grandson of Joanna
Thornton Vaugha~. class of
1954. He will be attending
Oho University an plans to
pursue a degree in music education.
In recognition of being the
olde~l gruduute nllendlng the
banquet, Mrs. Scott who will
be I00 yenrs old on bet. 6,
Was presented an engraved
locket holding a picture of
her~elf und the old high
school, The presentation was
mnde by her duugh:er, Mary
June Scott WIse, cl uss of
19~6; Also attending were
Mn. Scott'~ granddaughter,
Jennifer Harrison und her
daughter for u four-genera·
tion representation. Also reco~nized
wus
Bonnie
Etchinger Kelly who bought
the first ticket to this year's
banquet.
Others recogrlized were
Patricia Watson Buck·of Sun
City, Ariz. who traveled the
farthest; Carol Ebersbach
Kanan of the class of 1955,
attending her first reunion
and Bob Hysell of the class
of 1968, the youngest graduate at the banquet for the first
· time.
New officers elected were
Wiliam Young, president;
Wise, first vice president;
Marcia Grueser Arnold, second vice president; and Carol
Strauss Kennedy, secretarytreasurer. ,
Joe Struble was master of
ceremonies for the banquet .
with Frank Vaughan leading
in the pledge, and George
Dallas the singing of .
"America the .Beautiful" and
"Purple and White." The
Rev. Louis Diehl gave the
invocation ..The annual
necrology report compiled
by Lila Terrell Mitch was
posted. Following the banquet George Hall provided
music for dancing.
Alumni attending from
their respective classes are
as follows:
·
1925: Kathleen bailey Scot
·of Racine.
, ··
1929: Martha Brown
Greenaway of Pomeroy, and
Helen Grueser Maag of
Racine.
· 193 I: Mary K. Baer Roush
of Racine,
·· 1932: Virginia Smith
Heilman of Canton.
1934, Rachel Elberfeld
Downie of Racine.
1935 : Dora Swank Crispin
of Westerville.
1937: Margaret Thomas

'

'
Bailey and Charles
Sayre of
Pomeroy.
1938: Ruth Brown Tate of
Hilliard.
1940: Jean Smith
Seidenabel, Mary Karr
Bowen. Nellie Fugate
Brown, and Lawrence
Leonard, all of Pomeroy;
Annabell Lewis Houdashelt,
Hickory, Ky., and Kathryn
Holmes Crow, Syracuse. ·
1942: Mary Sayre Rogerts,
Danbury, Texas.
1943: Belva Young Glaze, ·
Cecil Brickles, Vada Paulson
. Brickles, Homer Hysell of
Pomeroy; ~ichard Gress of
Middleport; Martha Roedel
Hrtmm un Robert Hnmm,
Chillicothe.
. 1944: Wynu 0. Will,
Grove County; Harold
· Blackston, William buck,
and Sara Curtis Dill,
Pomeroy.
1945: Enid Kina Bare of
Powell; Agnes Bentz Rose .
of Little Hocking; Barbara
Scholl Weeks, John Weeks,
·Louise Gilmore, Harold
Hysell, William Radford,
Eunice Hill Jones, Guido
Girolami, and Patricia .
Watson Buck, all of
Pomeroy; Elnora Barnitz
Wells of Warsaw, and Louise
Dailey Kelly of Grove City.
1946: Mary K. foster Yost
of Syracuse, Roy Holter,
Howard B. Mullen; and
George Wright of Pomeroy.
1947: Frank Vaughan,
Mildred Kapteiila Phillips,
Joe Struble and Ida Mae
Johnson Murphy of
Pomeroy; Frank Ryther of
Syracuse; Horton Thomas of
. Howard, Ohio; and Kenneth
Wiggins of Racine.
·
1948: Gerald Custer of
Chardon; lla Hayes Bowers
of Pataskala; William R.
Knight of Point Pleasant,
Kenneth Harris, June ·
VanVranken, and James Will
of Pomeroy.

Sclloedinger Funeral Home in Gahanna with Pastor John
Haye s olliciating.
Vi sitation will be from II a.m. I I p.m. Wednesday at
Willi s Funeral Home in Gallipolis.
Visitation wilt also be he ld from 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. on
Thursday at the Mar~arum-Schoedinger Funeral Home .
Burial will follow 111 the Forrest Lawn Cemetery.
Please visit www:willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

CROWN CITY -· Garner William "Bill" Triplett. 60.
of Crown City passe d away on Monday, May 30 at his
Eesidence.
.
. · ·
'
He was · born on Decerr!ber 21, 1944 in Kanawha
County, WVa: to the late Lionel Triplett, Sr., and Mabel
G. Bowyer Tnplett.
.
Service s will be II a.m. Thursday at Willi s Funeral
Home with Pastor Alfred Holley officiating.
Burial will follow in Old Mercerville Cemetery.
Friends may cap . from 6 - 8 p.m. on Wednesday · at
Willis Funeral Hom e.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

Local Briefs
church's youth . groups.
Call 992-2914 for more
information.

Dodge ball
tournament

MIDDLEPO.RT - The
deadline for sign-ups for
the Middleport Church of
Christ's
First
Annual
RUTLAND - Leading
Dodge Ball Tournament is
June 1. The cost is $50 per Creek water ha s a main
team (six player s) and line leak on . Leading Creek
there will be both adult a.nd road which wi) inter'rupt
youth bracket s of competi- . water service in that area.
tion. The tournament takes When service is re stored,
place from 10 .a.m. to 4 the following roads will be
p.m. on Saturday, June 4 at under a boil advisory until
the church's Family Life further notice, Leading
Center. Lunch will be pro- Creek , Lasher. Nichols,
vided and winners in each Titus. Carson PuHins Hill,
category ·will take. home Likens , Hatfield. Swick,
trophies and prizes. The Higley, Wells al)d adjacent
money raised . benefits the road s.
.
·

Boil adversary

. 1949: Ann Foster Cottrill,
Lancaster; William Tubbs of
Syracuse; Ruth Fox Douglas
of Amesville; Carmaleta
McBride Williams of
Louisiana, Mo .; Lawrence
Eblin, Lois Smith Hawley,
Peggy Dailey ,Houdashelt,
Martha Terrell Struble. and
Irene Angus Bailey of
Pomeroy; George M. Dallas
of Agoura Hills. Calif; .
James Russell of Stuart, Fla.;
Rollin Daniels, Cathedral
City, Calif.
19~0: Bonnie Eichinger
Kelly, Joyce Fischer Mills,
· Margaret Thuener Lehew.
Pnt Burttside Thomas,
Robert Burton, und Noru
Riggs Eason, ull of Pomeroy,
O~orf!e W. Paulsen, Ashland;
Eugene Hawkins of
Middleport. Varna Osbortte
Snowden of Oaltlpolls;
Ernest Bowers of P11tuskala;
Betty Oenhelmer Knight
Polnt Pleasant; Bernard
Orueser and Donna Stanley
Orueser of Trendon;
Emmogene Edwards
.
Hamilton of Syracuse, Gene
· Yeauger of Enon, and Betty
Thomas Grant of
Crooks ville.
1951: Norma Scholl ·
Harrrah of Vandalia, Janet
Hill Theiss of Racine, Lily
Girolami Strickland of
Woodville.
1952: Dan West of D6ver;
Guy Guinther of Gallipolis;
and Phyllis Meier May of
Pomeroy.
·
1953: William Roush of El
Paso. Texas; Shirley Smith
Smith, Ed Kennedy, Marlene
Moore Wilson, Clarice
Clifford Kitchen, James W
Kitchen and Frankie Evans
Hunnel of Pomeroy;
Kenneth Cole of Bellville,
Sue Struble Tubbs of
Syracuse; Ted Scott of
We·stland, Mi.; Daisy Russell
Gillogly of Albany.
1954: Rosalie Story, and

of

II ltltll Jl&amp;.

........

111J1111111. JSI@I
~ ailll•
I

-·--

placed a wreath in the Ohio
River in remembrance of
those lost at sea and a tribute

Vaughan in memory of hi:,

father. R;chard. a World War
II veteran .

Taps presented by Fritz Goble concludes the 2005 Memorial
Day obse1·vance in Pomeroy. (Charlene Hoeflich/photo)
..•

CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP)
- The state will pay $4.35 mil·
·lion to a coal mining company
for land that should not be
mined, according to a settlement of a dispute that goes back
to 1988.
·
The settlement, filed Friday
in Guenisey County Common
Pleas Coun, requires the state to
buy the rights to more than 500
acres of coal, . includ.ing 188
acres of marshland above it.
RTG Inc. had planned to strip
mine the site since the 1980s.
Pleasant City asked the state
to stop RTG's mining plans
because initial work damaged
an aquifer that is the sole source
of water for the town of about
440 people 60 miles 'east of
Columbus.
The Ohio Department · of
Natural Resources declared 833

a.:res unfit for mining in 1994.
The comp&lt;my sued in 1998,
arguing it should be paid for the
land that could not be mined.
In 2002. the Ohio Supreme
Court ruled 4-3 that the state
had to buy the coal and pay the
company's lawyers.
Natural Resources Director
Sam Speck silld the sfate also
might have to pay other companies for coal that it declares
shouldn't be mined- causing
tl1e state to give its authority
over coal mining to the fe!ieral
govenunent.
RTG attorney Mark Stemm
said he doubts other companies
will sue.
'
"I would just say that this
case is highly unique and likely
never to be repeated."' Stemm
saiq.

Joanne Thornton Vaughan of Morris, and Carolyn Sisson
Darlene Justis Newell. all of
IPorneroy; Lela Grueser
Teaford of Pomeroy; Robert. Pomeroy; Ruth Ann Brotrers
Ervin of Athens, Madeline
Roberts of Uniontown, and
Riffle of Middleport. and
Hysell Painter of
Janet Struble Williamson of
Mike Roberts of Akron.
Middleport; Martha Sayre
Rutland.
1962: Anita Russe ll
1958: Shirley Browu ·
Serwe, Ft. Meyer, Fla.
Neutzlng of Wadsworth.
1955: Robert Paulsen of
Ruth Edwards Parker of
H311T\an of Belpre, Mary .
Albany, Cynthia Tompkins
Lou S'mith Hawkins of
Marietta, Michael C. Werry
Bayliff of Cridersville;
of Belpre, Carla Dill Caner
Middleport, Marcia Grue sr
Sharlee Newman Whittle of
Arnold, Jerry Fields, and
of Pomeroy, Jean Casto
Scottsdale, Ariz.; Roger
Thelma Davis Jeffers of
Hilton of Parkersburg .
Hines of Logan, Carol ·
Pomeroy.
1.963: Judy Wehrung
Lo~ks Taylor, Winter
1959: Sandra Smith
Sisson and Allen Downie of
Spnngs, Fla.; Carol
Laudermilt, Marlene Scholl
Pomeroy. Frederick Crow of
Ebersbach Kana! of
Harrison, and Kathryn Slack · Syracuse.
Clearwater, Fla.; Doom!
Johnson of Pomeroy, and
. 1964: Don Mayer of
Wildermuth Goble of ,
Pomeroy.
.
Robert Gloeckner of Cunul
1965: Brenda Potts Hopfer
Gallipolis; Jo Snowden West Winchester.
of Dover; Nnncy Jucobs
or Cent~rvllle, fhotnns
1960: Janet Rummel of
Hunoid of Columbus;
Ebersbtich of Columbus, ·
Humburf!, lowu, Kurcn
. Marilyn Grueser Quint, of
Drake Smith nf Guhnnn:un.
Puye Crumer lsenhuur nf
Zune"vlile; l'uul Wise of
Nuncy Drown Strawser of
Cluremont, N. Y.. Louts·A..
Diehl of Norwulk, Barry
Reynoldsburg. Churles A.
Columbus: Charles rridley
of Westerville; Wllllnm
Downie of Wolfchorn, N. H.. Boyer of Multu, Churle~ W.
On~ter of Purkersburg,
Hysell i:lf Columbus; Gordon Puul Roush of Reed.• vllle,
Susunnu Arnold rltzgernld
Winebrenner of'Syrucuse,
Norma Roush, Junlce
Teaford Zwilling, Jim
of Olathe. Kunsus, William
Stacie Arnold, Tom Smhh,
Cur.ol Strauss Kennedy, ·
Jewell
of Tucson, Aril.
Sisson, Barbaro Eskew
Fields, Mury Burnside
Bessie Wutson Sylvester of
Harley Johnson. Paul
Houdeshell, Ed Bartels, Phil
Eichinger, and John W.
Luke Wurth, Fla., George L.
Harrison, and Vincent .
Harris, Jr. of Middleport, .
Teaford of Pomeroy, Eva
Flora Hayes Karns of Logan, Knight, nil of Pomeroy,
Junice Wehrung Kilker of
Mentor, John Curd, Linda
Linda Crow Beegle of
Marlene Brown Reinh!lrl of
· Albany, Larry Hamm of
Darnell Mayer, Donna
Worthington, Jan Thomas
Hamilton, Doris Well
Hauck Carr, John Anderson,
Gettles of Jackson, Ellen
Young Thomas of Rutland,
Snowden of Huntington, W.
Joan Hewetson Anderson all
Howard Parker of Marietta,
Va., Ray Shasteen of The
of Pomeroy, Patty
Villages, Fla.; Mary Donna
Charles Riffle of Middleport, BuffingtonThompson, The
Jim Smith of Tuppers Plains, Plains, Carla Will Werry of
Hemsley Davis of Racine,
Reva Rea Bunce of
Beplre, Robert Crow, Jr.-of
James Guinther of
Millwood, W.Va.: James
.Middleport; Sharon Douglas Syracuse, Robert Emler of
Mesa, Ariz.: Marianna
Heines Grueser -and Don K.
SwiJldell of Shace, Marilyn
Blackwood Poulin and
Grueser of Racine; Fern ·
Thompson Mitchell, San
Antonio, Texas, Peggy
Richard Poulin of
Colmer Daniels of
Folmer
Crane of Middleport.
Middleport, Harley
· Middleport, and Donald
Spencer of Vincent.
1966: Guy Sargent of
Mossman of Dokki Geza
Pomeroy. ·
Egypt.
1961: Margaret Handley
· 1968: Pauleue Hudson
Jurado, New York, N.Y.,
1956: Carolyn Brown
Harrison and Robert Hysell
Norman
Price,
Ben
H.
Charles of Syracuse, Mary
of Pomeroy.
Ewing, Wililam Young. and
Janes Scott Wise of ·
Middleport; Dale Harrison
of Pomeroy, and Robert Hill
of West Jefferson.
1957: Ted Beegle of
Worthington, Lila Terill
Mitch, April Shasteen Smith,
June O'Brien Eichinger, Dan

IC1JU!IUag CAIPII.
N4t.u tN rt ..... d IISD II N•

••sa .... em•

.from Page A1

Ohio paying for coal that can't.be ~ined

;etue••ll•••

c.~

Tribute

r
wa' given by the firing
squad of Po,t 39 to conclude
·the annual observance.
Again this year the wreat h
was donated by
Dick

· Garner William "Bill'' TripleH

Alll'flllleln
CAINlf MX0Nr CAIKt;,.
CAlm;
l.1VILUMWCAaK'I_.
I

The iail y Sentinel • Page As

992-3671

�Page A6.

.T he Daily Sentinel ·

Bv KATE ROBERTS

corn · and

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BELLEFONTAINE .:.._ Au
18-year-o ld about to gradu.'
ate from high school apparently shot hi s grand parent s,
mother · and two friends to
death, the n comm iited suicide in a rampage that perplexed sc hool .offi cials who
said he see med to have
been in good spirit s.
A seventh victim , the
gunman 's 15-year-old sister.
was shot in the neck. but
su'rvived. She called her
stepsister, · who

•

aner

in

cli sc.overe d

the bodies af two nei~ hbor­
ing ·t ·annhou se s n ea~ thi s
west-central Onio town.
"Oh my God. there's one
. in the li vin g room. There\
another pne on '·th e ..:ouch...
Nicole Vagedes , the stepstster. told dep uti es in an
angui shed 9 11 call.
The deaths came hours
after a famil y part y to celebrate graduation.
Pre liminary
ev idenl C
shows
that
sumeti me
between 7 a. m. and 10 a.m.
.
.
AP Photo
Sunday. Scott Moody went Logan County Sheriff Michael Henry, left, and lead detective Jeff Cooper, face reporters.
to the farmhou se ne xt door Monday in Bellefontaine. Hou rs after a party to celebrate his pending high school graduation in
and killed his grandparents thi s rural commu nity, an 18-year-old shot and killed his grandparents, his mother and two famwi th a . 2 ~ -c alibe r rille and ily frienas before ki lling himself. the s heriff said . .
then went bac k home
where he shot the others. farm and fit wel l into the four ·students who were Moody . . and the body ~ ?f
Moody,·
then him se lf. Logan Co unty area when he came to the shot.
Sheriff Michael Henry said . . district two years ago .
There was rio sign of a
" None of them seemed
"He wa s a farmer at like troublemakers ," Stewart struggle · at either house;
Henry sa'id Monday he
did not know if authorities heart ... she said . "He said while !lipping through Henry said. Karus and
would ever find out why worked the land ."
his yearbook 'to point out Harshbarger had ·stayed
Moody's family took out photos . "
Moody acted· as he did.
overnight following the
"but we 're going to try."
two congratulatory ads with
Henry identified the vic- party. It appeared they and
Bernie Pachmayer. super- Moody's picture in them in tims as. Moody's grandpar- " Sheri Shafer were killed
intendent for the · school the
Bellefontaine ems Sharyl Shafer, 66, and while they slept, he said.
di strict. said no one had Examiner's graduation sec- Garv Shafer. 67, who were
Stacy Moody remained in
seen any indication Moody tion last week . The ad from found dead in ·one farnn- critical
condition
on
was troubled. He was look- hi s mother and sister read house . The_ others were Monday l\t Ohio State
ing forward to graduation "Good luck and have fun! '' Moody's mother, Sheri University Medical Center,
Brandon Stewart, 16, a Shafer, 37, and two friends, the hospital said.
and was in great spirits,
she said.
. year behind Scott Moody Megan Karus. 19, and
The houses are about a
· "In our minds, it cou ldn' t and Karus at Riverside Paige Harshbarger, 14.
quarter-mile apart along a
Their bodies were discov- two-lane state route a mile
possibly
be
Scott." . High Sehoul, said all the
Pai:hmayer said.
students a! the small school erect in the other home west of the city of 13,000
She said he was a clean- know one another and that, along with the wounded people, 45 miles northwest
cut bov who ' wanted to everyone got ~ l ong with the survivor. 15-year"old ·stacy of Columbus. Fields where

soy bean s

are

grown surround tile wili.te' paneled. two-story ilomes.
In a cell pilonc, call ,
Stacy Moody told Vagcucs
tilat she and her mother
had been beaten· up and
th ~ t she could . not wake up
her mother, Henry said .
The stepsister wen t .to the
house . and called 9 11.
telling emergency di spatchers ·. abo(Jt finding bod ies
thro'ughout the house.
"I can't wake her," she
said of the mother. .Sheri
Shafer. " I can't get · a
pulse." ·
Vag ctl es~

voi ce

became
higher pitched as she fa un~

more bodies upstairs. ther
another in the living room.
Authorities said it was
f(aru s who was ·0n the
couch; otiler victims were
in ·upstairs bedrooms.

" ( !'~ toup.h on us." ll enry
saiJ of · the shoot in ~. "We
kncv. these people." We ' re ·
farmfiar with these kids. I
feel so h &lt;~ dl y for these fam il ies. thi s L'ommunity."
Moody :r nd Karu s were

to have grad uate.d Sunday
afternoon fro m Riverside,

in ne&lt;~ rb y
De Graff.
Schoo l . offi ci'* · who ht!d
onl y min ut es of . not ice
abo ut th e ·dea ths before
the cerem on y bega n. he ld
oradu
"t. ion as sc hedu led ·
0
and ann oun ced the· shootings afte"r\vard .
·
Two
sea ts
re nlained
empty at the ..:ommen&lt;;ement.
·'Eve rybody Was wondering. ' Where are these iwo
kids'?"' Pac hmaye r said on
Monday. "1 think in st inc'
ti ve ly they knew someth ing·
wrong."

•

"

MODEL LT 1042

'1,599*
'1,999*

*** A mErican Legion BasEball "{::{ 2005 Prt=vievv '~ '~*

Prep Schedule
Friday's game
Track and Field

Post 128 Schedule

State Meet (at Jesse Owens Stadium,
Columbus), 9:30 a.m.
·

June

Saturday's ga.rne
Track and Flald

r

Date Opponent

State Meet (af'Jesse Owens Stadium,

at 60 . Ski es will ran ge
Thesday, May 31
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
. fr om' pa rtl y clo ud y to
Temperatures will ri se to 7 1 mos tly .:lou dy with 5
with today 's low of . 56 MPH wi nd s from the
occurring around 6 a.m. northe ast turn ing from the
Skies will be sunny with 5 east as th e overni ght pioMPH winds from the north gre sses .
turning from the northeast as
Wednesday, June 1
the morning progresses.
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Afternoon (/·6 p.m.)
Temperature s will climb
Temperatures will · hold fro m 63 to 75 by ·Jate this
steady around 75 with
today's high of 77 occurring morning. Skies will be mostaround 4 p.m. Skies will be ly · sunny to partly clou~y
sunny with 5 to I0 MPH with 5 to· I 0 MPH winds
from the east.
winds from the northeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) . Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will drop from
Temp~ratur~s wtll. hover at
75 early this evening to 63. 76. Sktes wtll range from
Skies will be clear to mostly mostl y sunny to cloudy wtth
cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH 5 to 10 MPH wmds from the .
winds from the northeast.
'east turning from the ·southOvernight (1·6 a.m.)
east as the afternoon proTemperatures will linger gresses .

Mason County
;;
Lancaster JV
5
at McArthur
6 ' JtBeverty
8
at Lancaster JV
9
Parkersburg 15
11
at Marietta (OH)
12
Athens (DH) .
13
&amp;!·Parkersburg 104
15
Lancaster
17
TBA
18
at Lancaster (OH)
19
at Pickerington
., 20 at Logan
22
Glouster ·
24
Mart&amp;tta
'25
Lagan
26 ' Picl&lt;erlngton (OH)
27
at Glouster
29 ·McArthur .

Wednesday's game
Mason County at Feeney Bennen, (at
Meigs H, S,} 6 p.m.
FrJday 's game
.
l ancaster. JV at Feeney Bennett (at
Meigs H$.), 6 p.m.
•

• 19 Ifpt Kohler" COUI18e• engine ·.
• 42' twin-blade deck
• Serviceable hydrorstatK: lnnsmission

• 26 Hi&gt;' Kohler" Conrnand •

V·Twil OHV qine .
• SO' triple-blade t1Kt
• Serviceable h)*ostalic lnnsmission

Zero mleresl cind zero payments lor 12

months"~

·Meigs· girls .
eamTVC
Ohio honors

'

• 42" QuickAitlch· dKt
u~terest

t1

'2,999*

..

at Chillicothe
Beverly
14
Parkersburg 104
17 . DlstrlclToumament
18
Dlstriel Tournament
19
District Tournament
20
District Tournament
21
District Tournament
22
District Tournament
23
DistriCt Tournament

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

13

Sp.m.
Sp.m.
Sp.m.
TBA
TQA
TBA
TBA'
TBA
TBA
TBA
Brad Sherman!OVP ~lie Photos

Eastern 's Ken Amsbary. left, and Meigs left hander Mike Davis are two of Hl Meigs Coutians on the 2005 edition of the Fenney Bennett Post 128 American
Legion baseball team,
·

Sam~

game, brand new name

'Meigs' name gone; Post 128 baseball team now known as 'Feeney Bennett'
Bv BRAD SHERMAN

Middleport was sponsoring the team Academy leads the way with seven. give Post 128 a solid rota'tion.
financially. At a recent Legion meet- while Meigs has six .
"We have three guys that 1 have all
.
ing. Stewart lobbied for the name
The group is quite diverse, though. the confidence in ·the world in. right
MIDDLEPORT _ Some.ma be a · ch,?ng~ ,
.
..as. this year 's 18-man ro.ste r is com- now:' Stewart said. "We will build
"FB" 1 y
We ve got some of the kids from pnsed of. players representmg tour our pitGhing staff around those
b't
1 hconl fuse.d b), th
the
ogo on Meigs High School. but the team is different high school s across Gallia guys."
eac p ayer s cap IS year.
M ·
· ·
·A
·
·
·
T s'
Another who. wi ll eventually be
It stands for Feeney Bennett, the not a et.gs te~m. '.t IS an ~enc~n a~d ~etgs counttes.. he outheast
official name of Post 128. and the Le)pon tea!l' that draw;~ from seve r&lt;~! Dt stnct champton Eastern . Ea¥1es worked· into the main rotation is
new hand le .for the American Legion dt!~erent· htgh schools, he satd. . • have tour representatives. anil Rrver . Brandon Fackler, a Meigs product
baseball team formally known as
I thmk one of the thmgs thaltl s Valley JUSt ope. ftrst baseman Josh that didn't play during the Spring.
"Meias"
done, 1t has helped with recrulllng. Eddy.
"He 's a heck of a talent," Stewart
" In" y~ars past, · this . American Some of the kids were reluctant. to
Stewart's stable of ~itchers. include ·said ol' Fackler, "he could easily be
Legion team was actually sponsored come play because they ass ume Its a Metgs lett hander Mtke Davts. w,ho in that group of starters that I wouldby three American Legions in Meigs Metgs team and the Metgs ktds are along wtth Jeremy Blackston ,. helped n't feel bad giving the ball to."
County;• new manager Chris Stewart gomg _to get the ftrst opportunity - gut de the Marauders .to thetr hrst Tn As· confident as Stewart is in his
explained : 'That why they used the that's JUSt not t~e case .
V~ll ey Conference mle 111 16 years pitching staff. he thinks· his club's
name 'Meigs,' because we couldn' t · Although still the base school. thts past season . They along With ott ensive firepower may be even betcall it just one of the posts."
meaning all home games are played Galli a Academy ace Shaphen ter.
But for the past few seasons, only there, Meigs doesn't e.ven ha ve the Robinson, who was 7-3 with a I .46
Please see Legion; B:Z
Feeney Bennett Post 128 of ·highest player count this year. Gallia earned run average in the Spring, ·'
BSH ERMAN@MYDAtLYTRtBUNE COM

'

.

Finance With
Farmers.

•

and zero payments for 12 months ..

RZT50 MOWER

7p.m. ·
Sp.m.
1 p.m,
1 p.m.
7p.m.
Sp.m.
Sp.m.
1 p.m.
2p.m.
Sp.m.
Sp.m.
6p.m. ·
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

p.m.

• 'HNY'tdutY !haft drive
Zero

6p.m.

Athens Tournament TBA
Athens Tournament TBA
3
AthenS Tournament TBA
6 / " at Athens
7p.m.
8 • at Masori County
6p.m.
g '. at Parkersburg 15 (OH)1

• 18 HP' Kohler" COIIlll\llld"

V-Twil OHV qine .

July

t
2 .

STAFF REPORT

ROCKSPRINGS
Meigs ' Renee Bailey was
named most valuable offensive play er and Nathan
H~n s on was dubbed top
coach as the Tri.- Vall ey
Conference Ohio Division
softball &lt;:hampion s garnered
much res pect during all league vot ing.
Vinton Count y' s Kri stin
Collins was named the divi sion 's defensive MYP.
. Bailey Was joined on the
first · team by teammate
Megan . Garne s, while. three
other .· Lady Marauders
.earned second team nods.
Also · on the first team
· were · Alexande r's Ashley
HudnaJI and Jamie Miner:
A shle y
Hamilton
and
Andrea Waters of Belpre;
Vinton County' s Brandi
Brooks and Kri sten Collins:
Liz Abdella and Erin
Sturgill of Wellston and
Nel sonville- York ' s Stevie
Mitchell.
Meigs' Joey Haning·, Sam
Pierce and Melia Whan
made all -league second
team along with Al exander ·
sophomore Keilee .Guthrie,
Belpre's Nikki Epperly and
Jeri Bently from Vinton
County.

· Time
Sp.m.
6p.m.
4p.m:

1

ColumbUs) , 9 a.m

.

NewsChannel

·Bl
Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Saturday 's game

Zero mtcrest and zero payments lor 12 months.u

MODEL LT 1050

Pitching set to carry Mason County, Page 82 .
Spurs blinded by the Suns, Page 82

&lt;:; tendenin at Mason County. 2 p.m..

1

.

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

·Tuesday, May 31, 2005

• 22 HP' Bri8P &amp; Straiten"
~nt~~t• V·twWIIIIsjlll
.
• so· semi-~ deck
• Z.O..IInl-

100

Y(',lf5

of Comrnunity Building

Zero 1nterest and zero payments for 12 mor.ths••

Home Equity Line

The. appeal of a Cub Cadet• lawn · or garden tractor is timeless.
· This offer, however, is not. Hurry into your local Cub Cadet retailer and
take advantase of this special limited-time offer. www.cubcadet.com

'

'

.

.2.99°/o·

Interest Rate/Annual Percentage Rate

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
8880 UNITED l,ANE
ATHENS. OH 45701
(740) 593·3279 /(BOO) 710·1917 (TOLL FREE)
•

'

.

,

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT .

Fa Farmers Bank

l830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER. OH 43130
710·1921 {TOLL
FREE)
.(740) 653·2827 /(BOO)
.
'

&amp; Savings Cornpany

•

Pomeroy
992:2136

•

Cop.••

¥&gt; ~ r· ·- ..,_ Oil!"Jlf~ ""' ·I f.hl ~~ u

""' &lt;0&lt;' ....

•-ir:l

.,

o' ,.. """"' I ~ • .,.., · • [;&lt;0"'~'-

,•

"'""'lll*p

'· · • ~ To o

•1'&amp;..11

)r

Tuppers Plains

Gallipolis

Mason

667.3161

446.2265 ,

773:6400

"**""'"

,__ 1M',.......

~

'

THE SCIENCE OF COMMON SENSE.

'.

Member FDIC

Ha doling mm. ~~""*tot~ NfUI'Y lcJ.o1n ~OtJucts ot mirWmum $zo.ooo. It&lt;* will rw"' dlfCOW't z,'"' APW rcw·•
months. · SubHquef1t riMe ¥Will be' 11/... Strefl ~Prime. IIAijee1110 ~ d.iiiiiiJ. Catl for ' """" ..-.d Nft. Itt* i1 subjcd.,
,
cNngr. As of 4.11.05, the o1f1nUaf JX'c:entage ~-IN'tt'l rang&lt;eG from S.75'tlt to II.QO'IIo. T«ms lilt for 10 ye.ws.. 'armcntopcjOnS
. ~ motlthiy ~ ol ~only. ~~"MY" refiJh .Cenci ot ten ,ur tmn if not Pit":' down. IYII rvr ne-e ll:qUiC)'
lfnn wttl nut e--a 1ft AnJ.Iaf memt.nhlp ~ wit! be IIII'OJivrd rot the fttst 'Jf:'- ~so ~ 'fU' ~, on ~· II'Wtial
ad'Winft' tJt $5.000 R c1o1H11Q. $JOO minimum ach'.wu there~. TroiWIS«tton r- of S 10 ln e.-.ceu of l'i¥~e ~per
rrQ'Ith, Malmum loi11'1110 Yilllue It 10'\. ~ lruYrarxt! ..,oiH tM! ~red. Loans Wbjecl to crrdll apptowN. ~ consuttyow
Ql. .a.ct111:uW regard! "'I droduaibHI!)' of irlcltren. O'l'n no! appfkaofe- rq e.isiing FolfTTIIer 8&lt;11* homt" equrty pfans"UI'Wu ~ntn..
Of9'ft" endS June: ~. 1005.

• :;.e (r J&lt;~ ,• · or~ ~oe :ov- · Ol!otr ·• .....C...:r rc c'~l ~~&gt;&lt;tl t&gt;~ GE
c~ C.d Co ~ tc pt.II"CNMol o1 1'799 Ot mort,.._ ""'~ Juror 30, ~on , _ " c.r m ~ ( oOM ~ •t ..-.;., ~ ,.. - .,,n t;,.
....0 ..., ......-~ "'tJf"1"1'J ~,~,...,. • H l&gt;t ' *""-"'""' an ·,ru: "'""""'~ .....t l\to!ll .btl...:.to ~ P' ~ m.p.....,.,oon.l -thn&lt;~ o.l.-.: r on lull '?t'1nll -"':1 qi/11&gt;01 ,. _ . , . . 1*•011 It r='IJ 6i:I IICII, ~ -· t~ . . * tl .
Dti5NS.wo;l .'&gt;'"- '_,.~-cr.al p\n•..wllf'lt'!:• 1' :&lt;" •lit OF• ':-'~•' C ... te lli&gt;G .., ~ ,,..._.,~1 ~~' 1* 11 ~ TWQO..IfHDnl!lt 1-lfiii'ICJr-- W"\151 ~e St~a ta~
10-ii&lt;W'IGI IONI~ n.lfl• !f\11 prllmG!~f '~ , ..,.,. ~,......p.,y., . Wt~W, -..,. r,- ·r 'tlff l&gt;t,.. ~' ~..rt''Ut&gt; 1 ' !~ ~ fl"l- ,~.......m'l tt O!lJ' ~ 111'\0',_,., &gt;trr II"«&lt; 11\a! &lt;!on .,...,........, Fof'laro&lt;c• C'-:... 1 1 N'R o1&lt;l011l"'i'!lo ••I """" II,..,.,. 1_. 11:1 1i*1,.....
r:&gt;r,...... _ _ f'll'
"'

·

'

·•

I

I

�' '

'

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Strong arms set to
carry Mason
CouD.ty
••
.

lCRUM@MYD~ILYREGISTER

.

'

in
Al&gt;ll playrng for Mason Sww' Communitv. College
"
Coumy th" ·)ear " Fowler North Carohna. Number two
who hit .109 on the regular m.tn Dale Ke~tnc1 wa~ abo a
season. \\hi le tea mmates start rng pitcha this yc,u· at
Clark and Stafford also came Potomac State J umor College.
up \, ith timely hits for the Mason County c·oach Clark
Whttc Falcons.
said that both players were
Point Pleasant. which was solrd hillers rn high school.
also a rer!i01ial tournament but may be rus ty &gt;i nce they
'qualilier. ~ill have one player have not picked up a bat sii1ce
take the lield for the summer pitching this ye.rr at the collegion team
lege le\'d
Pitching ace Ned Park will
Other pluyers from Ripley
hold some of the pitching include Zcb Reed at catcher.
duties on . thi s year's Mason
Richard kcsmcr. brother of
(Qunty team. On the regular
season, Park pitched a total of Dale . who "ill play as a utrli42 innrngs, gi,ing up only 26' ty player. Adam White. an
walks and striking out. 50 b~ t­ eighth grader wl1o wi ll play
ters. Offensively, he hit .450 outlield and spend some time
with 27 htts. 29 RBls and six on the mound and Brent
home runs to !lelp the Big Barrett will play at lirst base
Blacks make it to the region«! and do &gt;ome pitching.
The rest of the squad fron~
tournament for the second
Ripley
. are Nick .Mosse·r
time in the past 20 years.
The rest of the team wi II be (pitcher. outfield). Johnathan
comprised Qf players from Ullom (third base, pitcher),
Ravenswood and Ripley. Robby Goodson (outfield),
·Ravenswood brings. with it ian Henry (third base. utrlity).
two players in Tyler Hern. a Nathan Randolph (tirst base,
starter this year for Da,idson pitch) and Seth Phalen (secElkins College. who will play ond base).
outfield and also see some
The stall who will help with
pitching action as the only the teuw throughout the year
lefty on the team. Their other · include assistant coach Mike
player is Nate Adkins, a versaReed.
. statistician
D.
tile player who will see time
Whitloch.
post
commander
as prtcher, infielder and utility
Gra\g Coll'il]s. last years coach
wherever needed.
R,on Durst. West Virginia
The Vikings of Ripley will
make up the bulk of thi s University and former Mason
year's Mason County squad County picher Kenny Durst
with 12 players taking the and assistant Bradford Clark.
Mason County will kick off
field from that school. They
its
season 6 p.m. Wednesday
will be headlined by two college pitchers who will fmd at Meigs High School against
themselves as the first and Feeney Benneq. Most of the
home games wrll be played at
second hurlers an· the team.
Josh Whitlock. the number Point Pl~asant High School
o(le pitcher on this years team, · with a few others taking place
went 6-1 as a freshman at at Ripley High School.

BY lARRY CRUM

COM

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
will be the kcv
cO vic·tory during the upcum:ng legion season.
The
'Mason
County
American Legron Post 23/140
baseball tear1l is looking to be
strong with an experie"nced
pitching staff leading the way.
The team will be lead by tirs\
year coach Brent Clark. who
said that the tean1 should be
strong based on the strong
pitching and above-average
hitting of the squad.
'T m looking tbrward to this
team, O!l ~ time will tell what
they will do depending. on the
senior leadership," Clark said.
"We have a good rmx of
young kids and older crowd."
The team .will consist of
players from Point Pleasant,
" Wahama. Ravenswood and
Ripley. with three of the ehgible players having played college baseball this past year.
The Mason County schools
will' comprise live of the 19
players en the team.
Wahama will be represented
with four this year on a squad
that was one win away from
the state tournament. Those
players are Kameron Sayre.
Brandon Fowler. Brenton
Clark and Nathan Stafford.
Sayre was second on the
team in batting average, hitting .448 through the regular
season. adding 39 hits along
with a streak of 12 multiple hit
games on the year. Sayre also
did sante pitching, going 4-1
un the year with a 2.84 ERA
through 32 innings with 30
strikeouts and 18 walks.
~ Experience

Tuesday; May 31,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Legion

.438 with 35 runs batted in
while King finished with a
.414 average and 33 RBls.
"Thi s is, so far, the most
from PageBl
exciting aspect of our team
Gallia Acfldemy power hrt- right now.:· Stewart said.
ters Luke Haislop and Austin referring to the offense. "I ·
King. who combined fQr II think we can be good (offenhome ru'ls this past season. sively) as anyone in the ·
will give pop to the middle of league.''
Post 128. cpmpletes in the
the batting order. Haislop hit

2005

Suns finally.make a dent in
Western Conference finals
SAN ANTONIO. Texas
(APj- E\'en if the Phoenix
Suns don't come all the way
back and make the NBA
Finals. they're guaranteed of
havin g at ·leas t one good
memory from ihe Western
Conference finals .
No. make that a great on)!.
Finally getting out on the
'fast break and doing a better
job on defense, the Suns
showed a never-quit spirit
from start to fini sh - especially the finish - to beat
the San Antonio Spirrs IIII06 Monday night and prevent being swept in four
games.
A mare Stoudemire was far '
better than his statistics (31
points, · five
rebounds)
showed. making a series of
big plays down the stretch.
He held Tim Duncan to just
15 points, only four in the
second half. and leaped
above the rim to block his
dunk attempt with 36 sec·
.ond s left that would have
brought San Antonio within
two points.
· Phoenix went up by 12. its
biggest lead of the series,
midway throu gh the third
quarter and never gave it up.
de sp ite the Spurs doing their
be st to pull off their third
fourth -quarter comeback of
the series. San Antonio
made it I 02-10 I on a 3pointer by Robert Harry and
107-106 on a 3 by Bruce
Bowen with 1:031eft but the
Suns refused to go down.
The
victory
ended
Phoenix's lon ges t lo sing
streak smce droppmg six
straig ht in January and,
more importantly, sends

The annual. report

Form 990PF lor the
Kibble Foundation,
Bernard V. Fultz,

of Elizabeth Maude

Trustee is available

Plaintiff

public Inspection
at Bernard v. Fultz
Law Office, 111 112.
West Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

for

during regular busi~
ness hours for a peri-od of 180 days subsequent to publication
of this notice.

(5) 18, 19, 20. 23, 24.
25,26, 27, 31(6)1,2, 3
Public Notice

PUBLIC SALE
Notice Is hereby
given that on June 18,
2005 at 10:00 a.m. a
public sale will be
held lOr the purpose
of satisfying •a landlord's lien on the contents of seH-service
storage room. The
goods to be sold are

Joachim
Deceased

Burkett,

demands the Court to

Defendants

the next state of
inheritance and deter·
mine the share to
which each is entitled
according to
the
statutes
in
such
cases made and pro-vided and for such

Notice by Publication
Case No. 33098

To: The Unknown
Heirs, Next of Kin,
Spouses, . Devisees,
legatees ,
Administrators,
Executors,
Successors
and
Assign.s of Nicholas
Price, · Elizabeth

J!Kles Price, Michael
Price, Evan Price,
Maude Price', May

Price, Estella Price,
Daisy Price, Peter
Joachim,

Sauvage

Elizabeth

Joachim,

Catherine Joachim,
Elmer W.C. Joachim,
Emma ·
Margaret
Joachim,
Emma
Margaret Bachman ,

Emma

Margaret

for viewing immedi·
atety prior to solicita-

Frank
Theodore
Joachim, John Philip
Joachim,
Kenneth
Bachman,
John

Emma
Rose,

Charles P.J. Joachim,

Bachman, Betty Jane
Bachman, Betty Jane
Wilkinson aka Betty

Accessories, Bed Full Jane Wilkins, Edith
Slzo, TV, Toys, · Morgar , Edith Cox ,
Pictures,

Coffee
Clothes,

--

· Chairs,

Tables,
Fishing

Potes, Ruga, Armour,

who are

entitled by the laws of
the State of Ohio to

Morgan,
Margaret

MaHress,
Dryer,
Washer, Computer &amp;.

d~;termine

Vs
Frank L. Cox: Jr.• et at

descriJ&gt;ed generally
as household. The
room will be opened
tion of bids.
Description of proparty as follows:

In the Probate Cc;&gt;urt
of Meigs County,
phio. The ob;ect of
the
Complaint

Eighth
Distrkt
Legion Terry Durst , Cory Shaffer with Rio Grande. and Matt
Mooney are two of th e
League along with perennial and Chris Myers.
Another
Gallia
Academy
team's top defensive players
powers Pickerington and
Lancaster. Other opposition product. Kyle Burnett. hit and will be joined in the outin the district incl udes over .300 on the high school field corps by Meigs' Eric
and
Austin
Athens. Glouster, Logan and season. Blackston, in addi- · VanMeter
tion
to
a
solid
pitching
arm.
Dunfee.
Another
Marauder.
the newly revived McArthur.
Ken Amsbary. Eastern's ·also hit for a high average for Ross Well , is a versatile player that can handle duties at
leading hitter, will also be a hi s Marauders.
Gallia
Academy's
Tyler
nearly every position and
part of the potent Post 128
line-up. as will teammates Clagg, who rece.ntly signed eighth grader Zach Haislop

from Gallia Academy will
also serve as a utility player.
Feeney Bennett has 32
games already scheduled ,
plus two tournaments - the
Athens Fourth of July tourney and the Eighth District
postseawn.
Post 128 opens the season ·
6 p.m. Wednesday at home
against Mason County.

James

Douglas

Joachim ,
John
Randolph Joachim,

Garrett C. Joachim,

Truck,

project. The date set
lor completion of this :
work shall be as set

of Transportation.

week for six (6) successive weeks . The

last publication will

be made' on the 14th

day of June, 2005.
and the· twenly-&lt;!lghl
(28) qays lor answer
will

commence

NOMA
WHAT
STYlE...

IUUI'(

that date. In the case
·of your failure to
answer or otherwise
respond as requested
by the Ohio Rules of

••

Civil Procedure, judgment by default will

••

be rendered against ·
you and lor the relief
demanded in the
Complaint. Dated this

2nd day of May, 2005
(5) 10, 17, 24, 31, (6) 7,
14
.

•

...THE

Elec.

.n..

l
i
i
i.,

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE IIi
The Tri-County Marketplace!

••

on

HAS
SOMETIIING
FOR YOU!!

We Cove
Counties Uke
NoOne
Else can!

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
. PLUS YOUR· AD NOW ONLINE

•

I
I
•
•

Sentinel

·i&amp;egtstcr

Your Ad;
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) .675-1333
Call TO~ay... or Fax To (740) 446·3008
. · or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

. Oearlgire.s-·
Word Ads

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

..,t__·L&lt;N•F•ou•r::'•:n•iD-,.1 F
Lost cat. long ha1red Female
Tabby W1th while paws. Call
AD OPT A Happ1ly marned, (740)446-0350
"hild less Co uple longs to
Sll Are our lntes w11h your
ba by Wtii .PrOVIde a l!let1me
of love . happmess oppty &amp;
&lt;;e CtJflty We know .that your
.ieCISton w111 be made out of
pure love for your baby
Expenses pd
Please call
M1 ke· &amp; Donna 1·866·720·
5099

______
.l r
C

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

Gln:AW\'\

r

r 1) female AustrallafvBiue
Heeler. 6 months old (1) 112
La b temale 1 6 months Ol d . ___

YARD SALE

,

• All ads must be prepaid'
KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARDS,\LE·

June 1·2. 1 mile out Vanco
Ad Name brand adult cloth·
1ng. boys 4-6. Home ln1eflor.
DVD player, mov1es, shee1s,
queen comfOrt set. kn1ok·
knacks. glider rocker. queen
red , Chr1stmas decoratiOns.

,,
71\~'D Se1"1ef2.
\11'-Vl&gt; liZ.I '7- yc.i€

1-IM!ti..I'T)'

rugs

lf'I~UJ1.1'1N~ .

Movmg sale, Anl1que rolltop ,
desk. 24' aOOve ground pool.
oak china, bar p1nball
machine. glassware , toys,

0

tJ

•

anhques &amp; collectibles. lots
more Located at Chns
Lane. oft Krause Beck Rd
June 4, from 8am·5pm.

YARIJSALE·
GAU.JPUUS

Extenor
Pa1ntmg.
Expenenced Reasonable
rates Ae!ferences For Free
Est1mates call · 740-645·

G1veaway · 512, 513, &amp; 5/4. Lot s ol name
Yard Sale· 1939 Chatham
brands. something for everyAve June 1st. 2nd. 3rd
one Ra1n or shme
Free K1tens and Mama Cal
clolhes. dosh·
HF.LP
740·992·7285
3 Family yard sale, June 3-4
74
Healthy , l1tter tra1ned , a 9am·6pm. 1036 Addison
YARIJ SALE·
Established Heating-Coolmg
Neek Qld k1tlens
tree to Pike Wood crahs, clothes. .
PoMEROv/Mrnm.E Company
in Galba County
elc
good home
look1ng lor expenenced
Estate ?ate of Mal)! Henry 4 Family Yard Sale June 3 &amp; installe1s and technic1a ns If
May 30·31', 9am·6pm , June 4 Carleton Street . Syracuse Interested send resume to
1 . 9.im-3pm. Large selectiOn Ct11ldrens Clothes up to S1ze CLA Box 568 clo Gallipolis
Yard Toys , Maternity Tribune. P.O. Box 469,
of furniture, mclud1ng out- 6
Femal e Husky found on Fa 1r
door furniture, lots of m1sc Clothes. Baby Items 8 AM Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
Ground Rd . Wednesday
iiems 247 Kelton Rd. beh1nd to???
(7 40)446-0350
Nationwide Insurance on SR
Commun1ty Ycird Sale on Excellent Income NatiOnal
Lost
Pekepoo on Jericho 160, Gallipolis
Willow Creek Ad ··-Tools , Cap1tal FtJnd1ng GrouP, n&lt;lw
Ad If Found please call
h1rmg
Courthouse
Garage Sale. 167 Woodland ant1ques. mce clothing all
'(304)675-31 32
Researchers W1ll tra1 n to
SIZeS··IO!S
Of
QlriS
SIZ8
8
May
Elnve, Mon TtJes
work irom home on your
30 .31. 9·5 A l1ttle bit of Knick Knacks. Avon botlles,
compuler. No experience
m1sc
Follow
signs
from
old
everyth in g
Pamida Store June 1st-4th necessar~ Call 1-800-440·
7234
Huge yard sale 1st. ·2nd,
3rd
on 588 beh 1nd June 2-3. Harry Holter resi·
Community
Bod1mers. Utile bit of every· c1ence 32797 Pine Grove Gall1a-Meigs
tl1ing. no tools
Ad , Rae me, Oh ra1n or AciiOn Agency IS accepting
apphcat1ons fo r the following
pOSitiOnS.

ro

r.":::"-------,

:~.'~~~:b~~=-

i..NrANU
FOUNn

WANTEJl

www.comlcs .com

~~-------,

l"o

HELP WANtiD

r.:'l::'-------,

11110

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030

Antlques ...................... :................................ 530

Business Opportunlty ................................. 210
Byslness Tralnlng .; ···············-·· ······............. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790

Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .........................................:01 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190

Electrlcai/Refrl geration ........•.•..•.••.. ,,.........• 840
Equipment for. Rent ..................................... 480

Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment ......................................... 610

Farms tor Rent. .........• ~................................. 430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490

For Sale ................. .. ,................. ................... 585
For Sale or Trad8 ......................................... 590

Fruits &amp; Vegetabtas ..................................... 580

Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450

General Haullng ........................................... 850
Gtveawoy ...................................................... 040
Heppy Ado .................................................... 050
Hey &amp; Gratn ......................... ,........................ 640
Help Wented ................................................. 110
Homo lmprovomanto................................... 81 ~Homea ~or Bate ............................................ 310
Houaohold .Goodo ....................................... 510
HOUIII for Rent ... .'............................. ,........ 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ..................................................... t 30

Lewn &amp; Garden Equtpmant ........................ OIO
Llvaatook .......... ,........................................... tl30
.Loal end Found ........................................... 010

Loll &amp; Acreage .............................. ,,,,,,,,,.,,•. 310

Mlocatlanooua .............................................. 170
·Miocallonoouo MorchandiM ...........,......... :.640
Mobile Home Rapotr.................................... 810
Mobile Homao lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homaa lor Sala ................................320
Money to LOen ............................................. 220
Motorcycloo &amp; 4 Wheelera ..........................740
Muolcollnotrumanto·................................... 570
PeraoD•I• ................................................:.... 005

Polo lor Bole ............................................ :... 510
Plumbing &amp; Heollng .................................... 820
Protesalonal Servlcea .......................,.•.••••.,230
Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Ropolr .............................. 180

Real Estate Wentad .....................................380
Schoololnotrucllon..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertttlzer .............................. 650
Sporting GOO&lt;R ........................................... 520
SUV's for Sale .........................:.................... no
Trucks for Sate ............................................ 715

Upholstery ...........................:....................... 870

Vans For Sate ......................... l. .................... 730

Wanted to Buy ............................................ ,090
Wonted to Buy- Form Supplies .................. 620
Wonted To Do .............................~................ 180
Wonted to Rent ....,....................................... 470
Yard Sale- GaUipolto ....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middla ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasent ...............,. ............... 076
)

HELP W~r-mD

2638
I w1ll care for your loved one
1n my home Call (740)388·

3~ Bed room

1·Bath
Remodeled Full Basement.
Appliances
mcluded
OutbUIIdmg &amp; 24FT Pool,
188 Park Dnve (304)6757460

.

3BR. 1BA Ranch style
house located 6 m1les past R1o Grande
Holzer h0sp1tal on At 160 3-4 BA . 2 1/2 BA. LA. DR .
wood floors. basement .
(740)388·9263
garage, carport. over 1800
sq
ft.
125.000
Call
Attention!
Local company oHer1ng "NO (7 40)245-9413
DOWN PAYMENT' p&lt;o·
grams for you to buy your
home 1nstead 'of renting
• 10001o fi,nancmg
• Less than perlect cred11
accepted
• Payment cou ld be the
Same as· rent.
Mortgage
Locators
R1o Grande
(740 )992·7321
Investment Property walk to
Un1vers1ty (2) Apa rtment
bUildings. (31 two BR lJni!S
5129 ooo Call (7 40 )2 45·
9413

s

0118

I wlll clean houses or offices ·

All real estate advert•smg
in this n~spa~r t9
subject to tt'le Federal
Fair HoUSing Act ol1968
whleh makl'IA it illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limll&amp;tlon or
dfACrimln&amp;tlon based on

www.orv .com

References avai lable For
Home Listings
Managers Position
Ltsl you r home by calling
Salesperson
needed the best 1n cleanliness call
(740)446-3620
Expenenced m sales and Malinda at 304-531 -1794 or
A local Athens electncal diS·
hardware. Apply 1n person 740·992·5805.
tributor is lookmg lor an 1nd1·
Thomas
Do-lt
Center,
vidual who can supe rvtse
Gallipolis
Oh1o.
'l:iF;.;;;~;..;;..;.;.;......;.,
and deYelop others, proYtde
race, color, religion , sex
BtSIN~
familial status or national
exceptiOnal customer serv- % Down I 3 bed room . 1
STABILITY til
0PPOKI1JNID'
origin, or any Intention to
ice and be able to parlici·
4 bath, UR, D/ A, FIR ,
.._
......
iiiiiliii
........
'
·make any such
pate 1n all as'pects of runmng
ar garage fenced 1n
Do you worry about the
preference, llmltallon or
a bus1ness. Pre\'IOUS electri·
ack yard 1/2 acre
future of your job?
discrimination."
•NOTICE•
cal sales/managers experi·
lose to town , $132,500
Do you feel hke yotJ are not
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
ence a plus
ode 4505 or call
This newspaper Will not
appreciated?
NG
CO
recommends
tha
Send
resume
to
HA
knowingly accept
7 40 446·8325
ou do bus1ness w1th peo
Department P.O Box 6668.
advenlsamants tor real
Why not beg1n a career w11h
le you know and NOT t
Hunllngton WV 257!3
estate which Is In
a stable emp loyer that
end money through th
violation of the law. Our
tr.~
values the hard work
a11 unt1l you have mvest1
readers are hereby
FOKSALE
)!( Mason County Anima
you do?
ated the offerm .
Informed that all
ellare
Leagu
dwellings advertised in
t 979 Homette 1 2x50
2
Employment Opportun111es.
We oHer
MONEY
this newspoper are
8edroOml1
Bath.
gas
self
Part T1me Dog. Warden
•Up to 48111r. With no elCpen·
available on an equal
cont. a1r cond1t1oner
Will
roLoAN
Pos1hon open tor a dog war
rent for $265.00 a month or
opportunity bases.
en . Must like ammals , ence
•Me&lt;l•caV40t lkl
'-....;.;~..;;...;;:..==---'
n;
YARIJ SALEave good dnvmg record, •Paid vacat1onsfholidays/
- - -- - ' - - - sell for $3.495 00 740·385~
J&gt;r.I'LEA.sANr
Case Manager 1
n be available to wor
traimng .
Duplex each w1th 3 BR LA. 4019
. $8 90 per hour
eekends
DR. K1tchen Bath &amp; P.orch
1993 Holly Pa rk mob 1le
Community Sale Gunville
Full lime. temporary
Part T1me kennel employ
Call Todayl
House 3 BR. LA . K1tchen.
home
2 bedroom·2 full bath.
R1dge Ad June 3·4 From
es · Pos1t1ons open for
1-877-463-6247 ext. 2457
Bath
Both m Po1nt
fng . range. washer &amp; dryer
Pomt Pleasant At 2 North to
Case Manager 2
age cleaners Must lov
Pleasant.
(304)675·2495
central a1r, large covered
At 87 go 6 miles Follow
$9 94 per hour
Veterinary Ass1stant need·
mmals and Willing to wor
alter 7.00pm
deCk
&amp; OlJt bu11q1ng
SI ns 9-?
ad Experience preferred,
Full time temporary
ome weekends
OtJtie
but
w1ll
1ra1n
PTfFT,
some
M1ll
Creek
Ad
Gal
llp'olls·
(740)441
·0121
·nclude cleanmg kennels
weekends
required.
BUY
Positions Will be responsible
athing
an1mals
an
Excelle nt
Condition
&amp; 1999 Oakwood t6x75 3
Mm1mum
wage.
Send
nswering phones
for supervision of temporary
Locat1on . 5-Room
3br. bedroom, 2 bath . underpm·
youth workers (age 14·18)
resume to French Town
olunteer Posii!Ons neede
Ranch , Bnck Front. Vmyl· nmg
and
front deck
Absolute Top Dollar U.S. at various worksites 1n
Vetennary Clinic , 360 SA
Fund ra1s1ng Cha~rperso
Std1ng , Heat Pump, 0.31 ac. Excellent
cond1llon .
Stiver S.nd Gold Coms, Me1gs County. as well as
r a non prof1t ammal shei 160, Gallipolis. Or fax
fu lly
equipped K1tchen . 519.500 Needs moved Can
Prootsets, Gold Rmgs, U S ma1ntenance of required
er. grounds people, fran (740)446·4101 .
Replacement
Windows. (740)446·6565 after 5pm
Currency,·M.T.S Com Shop, proJect records. POSitions
Attached Garage Storage
sk workers, dog walkers
151
Second
Aven ue. Will be active early June until Please send resume I
ScHoots
Buildings .
call
5-9pm 200 Clayton 14x70. 3 bed·
GallipoliS, 74().446-2842
L'5TRUCflON
August , approximately 10
room , 2 bath , central a~r.
CAWL
clo
·Sail
(304)675·5038
weeks .
shmgled roof, vmyl s1d1ng,
ammack 6120 Hacke
Gooa
Quality
Roolmg
Gallipolis Career College
Mt Vernon Ave 4br, Full slttmg on two acres of
Dnve ,
Harnsburg ,
P
Slates Will pay $2 00 per
(Ca reers ClOse To Home)
Basement, Garage Lg Lot ground n1ce place : $35,000
Qualifications: Age 18 or 17111 No phone calls t
slate. For ufie m Art ProJect
Call
Todayl
740·446·4367,
With
Carport, Some App llrm (7&lt;10)7 42-4012 .
older, h1gh,school diploma or "'.!:h_!!;el~te"-r!:;PI!!ea!,;s~•:........:__..:J
Call 740·992·9177
I -600-21 4-0452
Central HeatiAC $65,000 Or
GED. valid dnvers license, ..
lront
Fleetwood.
www ga.Hipoliscaroorcoll~ com
I \ 11 11 I }' \II \ I
Best-Offer
(304)675· 2000
clear back ground check and McClure's Restaurant now
k1t~hen model w1th sk1rt1ng
Accredtted
MemOer
Accreditmg
7783-'leave · messag~
drug test, pnor expenence hlr1ng all locations, full or
.., IH.\Itl ..,
and central a1r W1ll deliver
part·time, pick up applica· Counc:M for lnt!ependent Colleges
m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ w1th youth preferred
and School• 12749
New 3 BD 2 Bath Home Very clean 1·800·837-3238
liOn a1 locatiOn &amp; crmg back
Only 198/mo Includes ale · 2003 lSxBO Noms 3 bed·
HEl.P \VANTID
ApphcaiiOns available at:
between
10 OOam
&amp; NAA CONCEALED P1stol
TURNED DOWN ON
deltvery and set up 740·
n :OOam , Mondav lhru Class Saturda~. June 11, SOCIAL
room . 2 bath, all appliances
SECURITY /SSI? 385•99.18
Meigs One Stop, MCOJFS. Saturday.
2005 , 9 :00 A M
Mason
Call (740)367·0402 leave
No
Fee
Unless
We
Win
I
100WORKERS NEEOEO 175 Race Street, Middleport
VFW $75.00, Call (740)
, ·866·582·3345
New 3 BR 2 Bath Sectional messa~e
Assemble crafts,
GMCAA,
1369
Powell Medl Home Care has an 992·9444--·Cell• (740) 418·
Home
Only
249 fmo 94 C laylon Nom s 14.70
1 ~ 1 \I 1 -.. t\11
wood IUtms.
Street, Middleport
opening for a LPN Fax your 3329 or E Mall J)Efi:Includes AJC . dellvety &amp; total electnc . 2BR , 2BA
Materials provlc1ad
ClMCAA, 801 0 Ncrlh Slale resume to (7-'0)441-1071 or SON60VERIZON NET
setup. 740·385·7671
·
Tc $480/Wk.
vinyl skirt ing, 2 decks, heat
Route 7, Cl'1eshira
WV, OH And All Legal
Free Information pkg. 24 hr GMCAA, 859 Third Ave, contact John Kearna at Statee, muat be 2t
pump ,
$14,000
080
(740)448·3680. .
New 3 BA Home Only
BOt -428-4849
• Clalllpclla
(740)388·8739.
189/mo. Includes ale. dallY·
earn Clallla One SlOp, ClCOJFS.
$59,000. New Haven 2,600 try and Set up 740·385· 99 Holly Park Glenrroor 3
A n PceUent way to
Center
Ia
current·
Overbrook
848 Th ird Avenue , Galllpolla
tQ . ft. L.og Cabin as ia, wf3·5 4367
BR . 2 batl'1 . vlnylf shingle
money.
New Avon
1/ accepting appllca!lona !or
ocr01. Call Ml&lt;o (51 3)314·
Alo Grande 81ready stn up
Coli Motiyn ~&amp;!2-2114!1
Applications
mutt
be LP'I'I ALL SHIFTSII If you DtRECTV
FREE Homo 27~
No Down Paymenl Is posal· or can Oe moved. S1 1. ~00
are
Interested.
pleaae
come
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or racolvod at ClMCAA,
entertainment
System
bit on this bea utiful 3 Oed· (304)633-8536.
.
Sell. Shirley Speoro, 304· North $R7, Cl'leahlre by In and fill out .an application FREE Eq~lpmont on&lt;llnl!tll 1DO% financing available room , 2 bath home. 2 car
at
33a
Page
Street,
4pm T\Jesday. May 31, 2005.
up to four rooms. 145 chan· tvtn with 1e11 than perfect garage Deck oYerlooklng New 14x60 . only $198.73
675·1&lt;429.
Middleport, Oh . EOE
nell $2!l 00 a month. Alk credit on thla 3 bedroom. 1 beautiful view F1ve Po1nts pe r mo lncrudes complete
Domino's rtOW Hiring:
Equal Opportunity EmpiO'jar
set up and deiiY&amp;ry, 740·
hew tc gil FREE HBO, bath home In Middleport. area (7401192·6667
Safl Orlvera
Par1 t1m1 po11tkJn available MAX. an&lt;l STARS . t-6()()- Corner lot, carport, wrap·
385·2434
and Management
around porch, fenced In Owner reloc ating Oo/u down
Local dental office &amp;tfking at Dental Office in the Pt.
11
All Locations .
an ,enthusiast~. multi· task· Pleeaant area. Pleau send
yard. basement. 416-4290 Must see this Immaculate
Appty 1n person
2000 sq. It home with
lng Individual. Mull have r11ume to 3984 Indian
(304)675-5858
108 Legion Terrace , ranch· 'remodeled kitchen/ built·ms
general office skills. compul· Creek Ad. Elkview, WV .__ _ __
(740)446-4040
type house has a· sunroom Great ne1g1'1borhood, close
~
er skills, and 'a desire to 25701
w1th a beautiful view of river. · to tow n. Cal l (740 )446·8325 SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
Carpenter
Work
25
yrs.
exp
.
develop dential knowledge.
Due to recent changes in
Please send resume and Point Pleasant Dtnlal Offite Deck&amp;, block. concrete, new Th1s 2 bedroom home· faa- or vis it www.ORVB.com Stock models at old pr1ces:
coverage area Medi Home
hand wntten note Indicating seeking Dental Hygienist building from ground up. lures hardwood floors , cell· Cod• •50S Pnced to se ll at 2005 models arr1v1ng Now.
Health Agency Is seekinQ a
ing fans, · gas fireplace and $132.500.
· Cole's
Mobile
Homes.
vour Interest to : P.O. Box Send Resume clo PO Box t304]675-5987
highly motivated. ln&lt;lepen&lt;l·
breaktast nook Three yr old - - - - - - - - ' - 15266 u S 50 East. Att\e ns.
704, Pomeroy, 01'11o 45769 45 Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550 -C!-c-nn-io-·s-C
._h_l_ld_C_a-ra-..-.,n
ent full·tlme Aegtstered
root, ctose to business sec- Ranch Bnck Home 3Br. 1Ba. Oh1o 45701 . (740)592· 197~ .
or fax 304-675-6553
Nurse to manaQel serv1ce
lion. $47 .500. (740)992- 2 I C a r · G a r a g e • " Where You Get Your
50%
Selling
Avon
can
Tuppers
Plains.
Now
has
Make
clients out ol our GallipoliS {740)4.16·3358 .
Basement/Sunroom
All MoneY's Worth~
openings on Midnight shift. 5502
office Must be licensed in
Responsible , E•per1enced 20 Years 9)1perience Call ·
Appliances included B~ -~-----belth Ohio and West VIrginia
3 bedroom, 1 bath house In Appotntme nt (304)882·2230 Tra1ter and 101 14x70 3.4
Ch11d Care needed 1n my 741&gt;-667-6329
We ot1er a compet1t1ve Wanted· Billing person for Home tor two Girls ages 6 ·
town . fenced back yard . or (304)533-6636
acre . 1 br . cent a~r Ml'ld1·
sals.ry. benef1ts packa9e and physic1an offiCe Part ttme and 7, References ReqUired Gentles Contrucbon· H~ HUGE 2 , car garage
cap ace.. carport. out bu1ld·
401K E 0 E Please send Must have rehab!e trans- (304)675-6082
Improvement 30 years $60,000 (740)446·3136
Ready to move 1n 3 BR 1ng. nice hOme or renta l
experience Customer ·satl·
resume to 352 Second A"Ye , portation and medical oHtce
Home 1n country sett1ng only ,property,
36058
Roc~
Gallipolis. OH 45631 or tall codmg and b1lhng experi- -~-----­ taction guareneed. Anyting 3 Bedroom. 1 Bath. Large t981mo. with 10".. down Spnngs
Rd .,
Pomeroy
Reta11 Sales Clerk.-28 hOurs with home improvement Fenced Lot. Lots of Storage, 740.385-4367
(740)992 2762
1·600·481 ·6334
Attn · ence· computer and typ1ng
plus
a
week.
Some Compare our prices Free
skills
a
mtJst.
Benefits
avail·
Audrey Farley, AN .
Sandhill
4 mtles out
able Send rosume to CLA evemngs······No Sundays·· estimi.te. (740)256-6878
1304167 2507
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s Box 569, c/o Gallipolis $7 .00/hour Pick up apphca·
5- , under $14000
needed. Apply at 1354 Tribune. P.O. Bo~~: 469 . lion at Sw1sher &amp; Loshe Dozer for Hire (304)895· 7 Homes
357t or. (304)89,5-3638
W1ll deliver. 740..385·4367
Gallipolis. OH 45631
Pomeroy
J~son Pike, GallipoliS.

-------- r·o

IT'S
YARD SALE
TIME
~======::==:===~~=-~==~--~-, ~sh~•n~e~-~~~~--~
CLASSIFIED INDEX

DHK CLEANING We'll Gel·
A-Done
FOR YQUt
DAILY/WEEKLY/ MONTHLY
WE
DO
Cleamng,
Powerwashing Wmdows
Small Lawns, Pa1ntmg
Clean·IJP.
Mmor
Mametance.
· Carpets-..
Houses.
Bus1hesses
Otf1ces,
Awnmgs ,
Apartme nts, Tra1lers . SemiTra ilers. Gutters Cabms
Gas StatiOns
Contracts
etc
lns1del 0uts1de,
Res1dent1ai/ Commer 1cal
Let Us Help You I "Clean· A·
Up" and ~ Get-R·Done "! 740·
985-36391740-416·1823 ask
for Ka ren or Dave' ref. ava1l·
able

Hmu:~

tUK S..u.t:

tUKSAU:

hNrigh~lc.net

4 K1ttens to
(304)675·6695

tO

Hom~

GAU.II'Ous

Pre·mov1ng sale . Thurs· Fn
6/2·613 9am·5pm 3626
BulaY1IIe P1ke Camper, hot
Callt740)286·8523
1stt1me ' Large" mullt· family. tub. goH clUbs &amp; more
1 year old ma le boxerflab to From At 35 turn on Ct Ad
good home.
46, follow s1gns past R1chard Rummage Sale June 3rd, r
Bros Orchard. From Vinton 2005 , 9am·2pm VFW Post
::1 Free K1ttens . L1tter1:ramed go pas t school take tst left 4464,
134
3rd
Ave
Wormed (304)675·2663
)hen .2nd nght. follow s 1gns Hotdog'slcorn bread

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{,;.
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
SI .00 for large

Display Ads

Dally ln·Column: 1:00 p.m.
All Display: 12 Noon 2
Mond.-y·Frlday for In5ertlon . Business Days Prior To
In Next Day 's Paper
. . Publication
Sunday In -Column : 1:00 p.m. sunday Display: 1 : 00 p..n1 .
For Sunday5 Paper
Thursday for Sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday

Shuatlone Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent .............................................460

®alhpohs lailp m:ribunr The Daily Sentinel t)oint lQirasant iegisttr
[ ,_\!).~.~-..:.._._!!!.2!~.~-·-·-l~.~~~·-·

m:rtbune

To Place

Building Supplles ........................................550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340

publicatipn

Notice,
published once each

·
'

(5) 31(6) 6.

wl1hin twenty-eight
(28) days after the last

.

Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason

Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ...........................oso
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
AlJtos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp;: Motors for Sale ............................. 750

Court may determine.
You are required to
answer the Complaint
of ' the
which witt be

.Reaeh 3 Counties

forth In the bidding
proposal. Plans and
Specifications are on
file in the Department

other relief as the

Ruth
Joachim
Gardner, Phylllo Mao . __P_u_b_l_lc_N_o_tt_ce_.,..
lay t18 Nama: Jo.ochlm, John PHillip
Wand11 Chapman, Jo~chlm , Jr., whoae NOTICE TO BIDDEIIS
Addraaa: 2881 Karl namoa and adclrHHI STATE OF OHIO
IIOICI Apt. 113
It'll unknown.
. DEPAIITMENT
OF
City:
Columbua, Yo~ are hereby noti- TIIANSPOIITATION
fied tnat you have Columbua, Ohio
OH43224 '
Tanna of tha ula witt been
named Olltca of Conlrllcta
be oaah or certlfllld O.fandanta In the ~Copy Number:
1011on amtttld Valma
fllnel.
.
HIU'a IIH ltoraga
Plua, Admlnlatratrlx -led propoula wltl
IH70 laahan Ad. With Will Anne•lld of be aocapr.d form pra"-elM, on 41771
tna
Illata
of quallfltel btdeltre 11
(I) 17, 34, S1
ltbabelh
Maude tha ODOT Dfflca of
Joaohlm
lurtoall, Conlraole u~tll 10:00
O.Otl..d. Plllntltf, 1.m. on June 22. aoot.
'rank L. Co•, Jr.. ot ProjaCI 01200~ It
Publlo Notloa
at., Delendantt. ,TIIIa loootod In Mocking
Ill lite 1'1011118 Coull : action
bMn c o , u n 1 y .
of Mal.. County, Cillo a..lgnad Caaa No. La u tttvllla/Tu ppar
Vtlml
· Aut, 330M. and Ia pending Ptalna Outpoata and
Hand

I

'•

game. Saw Shawn Marion

AP Ph&lt;?~o
Phoenix
Suns'
Amalie
Stoudemire (32) drives to the
basket · over San l(nt,onio
Spurs Nazr Mohammed (2) in
the 3rd quarter in game 4 of
the Western conference
finals In San Antonio Monday
'
them home for Game 5 of
the s'eries Wednesday night
rather than going home to
start thei r offseason.
Suns
coach
Mike
D ' Antoni maintained for
two days that his club just
needed to iron out some
kinks to get past the Spurs
and he proved to be right.
They finally led after one
quarter. 26-23. something

is a · Miscellaneo.us

ClASS I'F IE' D

'

they hadn ' t done in nine
gari1es. since the opener. of
the last round. They got 26
points from their open-court

r·-:-..-..·-··-··--··-..-··-·-·-·-··-·-··-·-··-..

Administratrix with
AnneKed of the Estate

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

\!Crtbune - Sentinel 3S.egistcr

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
-··-:--·-·1
PUBUC NOTICE

www.mydailysentinel.com

Phoenix I I I; San Antonio I 06

return to form and made the .
big plays in the closing· minutes.
Steve Nash had 17 points
and 12 assists. more normal
numbers for the MVP after
haYing JUS( three ass ists last
game. the only one that wasn't decided in the closing
minute s. Joe Johnson scored
17 poi,nts on I 0-of-15 shootIng . Quentin Richardson
scored 14 and Marion 'hall
II , inCluding several in .transition and a 3-pointer that
capped a 15-2 run in third
quarter.
Stoudemire had 1\is fewest
points again st the Spurs all
season and had just the five
rebounds, none in the first
half. But he got the final
rebound that mattered , grabbing a miss by Johnson
awal: from Manu Ginobili in
the final seconds. preventing
the Spurs from getting the
ball back down by three.
· In stead. Nash ended up
getting fouled and made two
free throws with 6.2 seconds
left to seal the victory,
Phoenix's frrst in six games
this season with San Antonio
that Duncan played .
San Antonio lost for the
first time since Game 4 of
)he last round, ending a fivegame winning streak. The
Spurs lost at home for only
the sixth time in 49 games.
and now must wait at least
two . more days before
clinching a trip back to the
NBA Finals .

PUBLIC
N

Tuesday, May 31, 2005

I

MoBtt.E Hm

i

~;:::;=~~~=~

r

rL..----;;;,;,-_.J
WA.'&lt;tlll
ro

I

IUO ·

Th•

801 0

..,..-:-:-==-==--=-:..,..,:.,&lt;":'·==='='...,.,...,

!SHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

.,

--------~------------~----,~-----

·---~J

__

�''

....

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
L.,

A:;,;P';;,;R:,:~&gt;':;:':;E:VTS~:_.I

_ _ fUR RI;'OT

r__

~J:;;.":,;''EOC:::
·:,;.·s,.J

L.,_,.;M;,:ISCEI.:,;
'
1\lt:RCIL\NUISI:

~

1 acre lot wfpool and large BEAUTIFUL
garage. located at. 96 M-ENTS
AT

APART- NEW AND USED STEEL
BUDGET Steel Beams, Pip,e Aebaf
Henson
Ad .
Add1Son PRICES AT JACKSON For
Concrete
Angle.
$30.000 l1rm no land con- ESTATES , 52 Westw ood Channel. Flat Bar. Steel

tracts. (937)828-1528.

Paved
Plams
-Me1gs
00 per

acre. 740·247-2475
RI;\L

\\',~'TW

I Buy Homes - Local person

buys h"omes Conflden!lal .
OUICk cash J1m 740-9926300. No calls after 9.
1{ .. \1\IS

'

BA Cottage In Gallipolis
Deposit
&amp; · reference
required . No pets. Call afler
4pm (740)446-246.8
·

EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Tow nhouse
apanments.
anci/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441 · 111 t
tor apphcat10n &amp; mtormat1on.

Top Quality warranty.

Wh-olesale. Fmam:ing.
Dehvenes.

2 tocalion.s
Mi lton Flea Market

&amp; ~-sh~~~d Kentucky

i.

Fo~~·~
"' .E r .

Avenue. $475 plus One
Month Deposit (304)675- (510
3100
'

r

per month. 740-385-4019

APAIUMENTS .
FUR RENT

1 &amp; 2 bedroom neWry renO·
vated
Apts tor
rent.
Downtown Gallipolis. River
&amp; Park view. $360-$600/mo.
s'ome utilities pa1d. Now
accepting applications . Call
(740)709-t690 (local call )

es . You gather from the field
and save money or place

• Luwn &amp; Tr'al'tor Service
• Pickup &amp; Deli,.·eQ' A\'ailablc

order_ Hage: 740-949-2241

• Wurranly Scr\'icC neater

Deere Cred1t appro'v'al . Your
payments could be as low
as $39 month With $0 down .
Carm1chael
Equipment
(740)446-241 2

I

r

PETS
FUR S.••·
·r
r-u..a:..

9 month old hand tamed
Rainbow Lory, beautiful &amp;
"ery fr~endly $400, for Parrot
&amp; Ccige (304)576-2999 0 1
{304 )654·1462
--------'AKC Lab Puppies. Yellow
and Black . Wormed--1st
shots. Parents on prem1ses.
$250.00 740·992·3357

·~·

Flat or Low Sloped Roof • Carports

Barns • Porches

ROGER HYSELL,
GHRHGE '

II{\ \SI'tlltl \110\

HOUSEHOLIJ

G()(MJS

'========~

1952 Plymouth 4dr, for r
Restoration.
no
Rust,
Engine run:;. Body original.
no dentS. 31,000/miles
(304)576- 2532

• i\l'l'l'ptin~J! Nt:w
i\-h·mbers
• Hen\'\ ' rluh'
Conmien:iai .

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

E~uiplllt"Ut

• \Vorkoul o n

\ 'OUr

own

hours 24n
Striuus lnqui_rit&gt;s Only
740-992-11955

• R!Xlm Additions &amp;
Remodeling

All TypeS Of
Concrete Wo.rk
25 Years Experience
David Lewis

740-992-6971.
lnsul'l!d

• Roofing &amp; Gutters

Ta~e

• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except
furnace work

1995 BUick Park Avenue,
leather int. 52,000 miles,
very good condition . $4,000
1740)367-7t88,

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

~ Homes

,, Septic Systems

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Let me do 1t for you I

·~ Roofing

~ Backhoe

·r Site
r Preparation
·:- Dozer ·

$1,600 , 1740)669· Radio, Has only 50 hours on
Boat, Garage kept in w1nter.
97 Cavalier Z24 2 door, 5 Uke New Paid over $18,000
Hay wagon 19 ft. Stolfus speed, AC, tilt, new black Will sa le for S13.000
klcker wagon. Removable paint, nice interior, looks &amp; (304)773-5944
steel racks. Like , new tires runs
great,
$2.900.
CAMI'ERS&amp;
and bed. (740)245·0485.
1740)669-0302

John Deer' 10ft. No Til DriU
to r
Rent.
Carmichael
Equipment. (740)44~·2412.

15

ROOFING

,

All1ypcs of rooling:
1

Fla t. Mela] •
N~w or Repair

1989 32FT, YukOn Camper
L,.............. has separate bedroom. air &amp;
2000 Silverado 4x4. 28.000 awning $5 ,000 (304)675John Deere Commercial miles. excellent condition . ~ 7982
Worksite Products In Stock!! owner,
$ 14 .500 _ · Cali
Compact E:.ccavator · 27C, (7401446 _1638 _
199'.!- good
29' Airstream
Excalla.
350, SODfSkid Steers 371 , - - -- c - - - - - Very
condition,
twin
320.
325,
328/Tractor 2001 Dodge.1500 Sl?ort V8, beds. Ph . (7401645-~454.
Mollohari Carpel, 202 Clark Loader B~ckhoe 110TLB. quad
cab,
$16,900.
1995
Gullstream
24'
Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio. Check out our rental r.ates. (7 40}645·6734
(740)446-7444 1-877 -830· Gre.at Financing Available·
·
Conquest Limited Edition
9162 . Free Estimates, Easy Carmichael
Equipme~B Chevy 4x4 , 78,000 miles, Class C motorhome. Uke
financing , 90 days Seflle as (740)446-2412.
- s7.900. 1997 Chevy S-10, new with only 7,600 miles.
cash. Visa/ .Master Card .
·
117,000
miles
$3,500 Fully equipped .with many
extres. $22,000, (740)256·
Dri'v'e- a· li~le save arot. · . New 5003, 5005, &amp; 5020 (304)675-8859
1428. For pictures see:
Series John Deere Utility
Oak Poker table with 4 Tractors o· 0% !!xed/ 36 98 Dodge .1600 eKt. cab www. rvt~ader. comlriJdetall . p
·chaIrs , exce II ant condition, months. Used Utility Tractors 4WO, VB, 92,000 miles, hp?ld+12580B
oeo.
Oay . : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
5399. Call (740)446-.4417.
0
4.9% Variable/ 60 $12,soo
evening 1998 30' fifth wheel travel
monihs.
Carmichael 1740)645·5,74 ,
(740)441-8959.
_trailer, double slide. excelThOmpsons Appliance &amp; Equlpm&amp;nt. {740)446-2412
Repalr-675-7388 . For sale,
lent , condlllon , $13,900
re-conditioned automatic New John Deere 5025
4x4
phooe: 1740)696-9319
washers &amp; dryers. refrlgeraFOR SALE
Series Utility Tractors 0 L......--~::;..,..1 34' "03" Jayco Eagle 1-12'
tors ,. gaa and electric
2.99% Fixed/ 36 months.
slide out. Lots at extras. Like
ranges , air conditioners. and C. rm;'chael
Equipment 1998 _Ranoer 4x4, 5 s""", 3L.
·
•
~-"-'
· riew. condition . (740)339(740}446-2412
8
AM/FM cassette, AjC, off
,8.
.
02
road package, new paint,
New John Deere Round $6,000 060. Call after Coleman Camping Trailer
·shop or at your home. ·
Balers .0 1.·9% Fixed Rate 4:30pm (740)256·6257.
12FT. 2 King Beds, $5,500
uSed Furniture Slore , 130 Financing for . 48 Months or
call for Details (304)675·
Bulavllle Pike, Washers, dry- New Model 457 Standard 2004 Ford Exped. XLT, 5. 4
1731
ers, ~elrigerator s . ranges . Aouryd Baler Only $t3,250 Triton VB, 4x4 , power.
mattresses,
dressers. cash . Makes 4X5 Bale. cruise, tilt, excellent condl· Truck- Camp~r . AC , TV
couches, dinettes. recliners . Carmichael
$23,900
060. Antenna, wired for Cable,
Equipment. lion .
grave monuments. much (740)446·2412
(740)245-9162
like new $6,500 (3CM)675more.
(7 40)446-4782
3353
VANS
Gallipolis, OH Hrs. 11·3 (M- Special Pyrchase· John
" I H\1( I '
FOR SALE
S)
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel
Ra~es/ John Deere Disk
HoME
~Vnf,)UES
Mowers. Call for price. .2000 Chevy Astra Van, Bey!.
IMPROVEMENT'S
~........__..,.!. Carmichael
Equipment. GoOd Condition . New Tires.
..,
(740)446-.2412 .
$5,995 oeo 304 576-2934

,.J

Seamless Gutter -

Downspoul - Sidi'ng

, dnelsllmates.

949-1405
~~=::~:==~
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
•

r

~

_,.J

Gracious liv ing. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
JET
Ma nor
and
R1vers1de
AERATION MOTORS
Ask ab ou t our AQHA
Apa rtme nts in Middleport Repa1nid. N~w &amp;, Rebll1ll In Member Discounts on new
FrOm $295:$444 Call 740· Stock Call Ron Evans, 1- John Deere-. Equipment
•992-5064 .· Equal Hous.n~ 800-537-9528
Carmichael
Equipmen t
OpportuM1t1es ·
(740)446 -241 2

98
Honda
Gol dwing .
Excellent Condition, 17,000
miles $8.000 (304)675-4581
Honda · XA 80 D1rt Bike call
(3041675·2359 •

'

•
1

rompt
qua 1ty
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

BARNEY
DID.lA FIN,IS&gt;I
WASHIN'

inch cutting width 3 yenr warranty
T &amp;D TRACI'UR SALES II&gt; EOUII'MENT ;
righl in the hemt of Q.,1er
"

9854JH4
Now optm

The Parish Shop

''

HUll BARD'S
GREENHOUSE '
5•/ra(use. OH
~

Former]}' al 108
W. Main Pomero)'
IS NOW O,PEN AT
The T\·l ulberry
Community Center
26U Mulberry An.
Pomeroy

740-992-5776

;

Fl0wer.~

&amp; Vegetabl e"~~
plants Fl at $6 .95 •
I 0" H;~n g ing Ba s kc1.~ - •
20 Vur. $5.lJ5- $7.4 5 ,
Pcrt:n niah G" - J"
$2.~5 "

$5.9\

!1uttcd Planls 4" - I T
$1.25 ~ $12 . 95

1.2" Fc r~s$ 10.95 .

9am lo3pm
PH' 992-4183

Open Duily'9-5:

THE BORN LOSER

P'i_ (QUL.Di'l'\ FII'-IC&gt; \liE.
~ULt-..1':.. 1\\~~01-\EK~

TOTf..KE.'YOUR
TI::~Rt-..IVR.E..i

'BuT DO!'I'i:WORR'&lt;- .
WE.'LUUST lr.£ Tf\E.
Mf.l•,i T\\~TER
li'IS\00!

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

,,_

IF

t

~OULD U:£

HIE SE.TII!'I~
FOR &amp;£1'?

Closed Sunda

High and Dry

Storage
Phone
(740) 992·5232
5x 10, IOx I0,

C!! ..:... '

'·

· Janet Jeffers

Pomeroy,·Ohio

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
" Mfddleport's only
Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON
• New Homes
• Garages
·Compl ete
Remodeling

740-992-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

BIG NATE

Hupp' ,.,

.W_
h aley's Auto
Parts
St Rt681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Reslnckf"fJ fn.le ll'fodt; l !i:nlm.m•l
and Arter Mn rkel furls
See Brem or Brian
M-Fri 8:30-5:00 ·
S3t S:JO-Noon
Suo. C losed

Whal ey

PEANUTS
D·MINVS''?! I GOT
A ''D·MINU5'' FOR
WHOLE '1'EAR ?!!

-----c

'1'ES, MA'AM, 11M
VER'1' ~ URL I
THINK I DESERVED
ABETTER 6RADE ..

OH ; BY THE
WAY... WH ILE WE'RE
TALKIN6 ...

1

~ERE 5 THE 1300K
REPOR,T THAT WA5 DUE
LAST CI.IR15TMA5 ..

Malge Co. Rnldentelll

BUCKO£ Sanitation
.SEPTIC TANK PIJMPING $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
99H251 OR 591·8757

SUNSHINE CLUB
WH€/IJ l WAS A kiD AU.
1 LOA~ 1D 00 WAS

,

SIT Am.u:&gt; ALL CJ\l(

'·

\!A H.. rr=s ·
1UE.GREAT
AMERICAN

MY OLD
MA~ (Jl.iJ.£D
M~A

13UM

$U(ciSS

$Ta2'i

I

"Insured"

•

740·742-2293
Leave a message.

GARFIELD .

Hill's Self
Storage

SOOPOUNt&gt;6
OF t-A5AGINA
OUGII-trA DO 11"

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
7.40.S49-2217

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

Hours

7:00AM· 8:00PM
111411 mo. pc1

High coat

got you
·17-17-17,.

$265

ton (While Suppy Last)

• Mushroom Compost
Available
'$35 &gt; 1,000 lbs Approx, weighl

1~ spreader buggies available for use
A1rway pasture renovators and seeders
avallable to rent. '
Licensed agronomist on staff available for
consulting.
SHADE RIVE RAG SERVICE
355~7 St. Rt 7 Norlh ,
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pass
Pas!!

East

~' orth

I.

Pass
Pass
Pass .

Pass

Pass

Pass
K

41 Prohibit
42 Greenish
mineral
45 Good·
looker
49 El Dorado
loot
50 Mecllelnal
planl
53 Pllol's 1es1
54 Skillet
55 Margarine
56 Popular
salad
57 Fr. holy

woman

dance

21

30
31
32
34
35
36

3i
40

58 Trace
Total
of smoke
19 Astronaut
Fairy·tale
59 Young chap
-Grissom
being
20 Olduvai loc,
Shoulder
DOWN
22 Listener's
muscles
need
Less cloudy 1 Forreal
23 Un1rulh
Frlnge2 Memo abbr. 24 Family
Ti~ked oH
3 First, e.g. ~ member
Service
4 Shorten a , : 25 Coaslal
c harge
skirt, maybe
flyer
Spiral
. 5 Give - 26 Meadows
molecule
whirl
. 27 Golfer's
Business
6 Prefix
shout
salutation ·
lor pod
28 SalamanNaturalelevL 7 Sushi fish
ders
Tycoon's
6 In lhe
29 Split
home
distance
31 In Wlseeraeks 9 Sword part
(as lound).
Baton
tO Hatehels
33 Winding
Rouge
12 Cascade
curve
campus
volcano
35 Stockholm.

Now Available At

38 RNs
provide It
3.9 Noisy bird ·

41 J822 genre
42 Flrot-rato
43 Smell-44 Solttary
46 Disgusting
47 Arm bone
4B' Stow
so In what way
51 .Cotton gin
name
52 Lo·graphics

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by Luis Campos

Ctltbr1ty Clpntr eryolograma a~e cretted 1rom quo!aUons by t.-r.ov~ l)tOple, putiiOd present
Each le!teiln the d~ !lands tor EWJUw•

Today's clue: EeqiJSIS G

" J K II Y
JT

II

Q P U A T ·L

XG

SMLLV

TMSK

BN

BPL

PZ

STUTYTLV

8 N

ATMLZ

YKT

FTIIF

KTMLYZ.
KXZ

JXYKXG .""
NHII~ATLY "

EPZYMIT

· PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ''I'm a theale r aclor ll 's a di1terent br
movie stars are eye candy. They come and go." - Samuel L. J1
.
(c) 2005 by NEA, In c. 5-28

By Bernice Bede Oaol
Several unusual opportunities may be
dangled before you r eyes In the year
ahead which cou ld entice you greatly.
Analyze each carefu lly, and don't
make any comm itments until you're
sure of where the ne)'ll direction leads
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)- ·When
ghtEm comma nd. be e){ trem e1y careful
how you e){erclse yo~r authority over
oth ers today. If you don't handl9
things propar!y, you c;ou ld evoke
some very unplttasant reactions.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- There
are strong possibilities that you will
meet with great diHiculty today In
establishing connections with the very
person you want to see. Verify all
Important appointments beforehand.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) When
a ltemptlng to conduc! business with
established contacts today, be prepared for the une){pected or you could
end up a big loser. Take nothing lor
granted - paopla or history.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -There's
a strong chance you cout&lt;;l have to
co ntend with someon13 today who
uses pressure tactics to get others to
do his or her bidding . Be prepared
and this person won 't be able to over.
whelm you.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0c1. 23) - Playing
games by saying one thing and
meaning another ·will get you a reputation you would not like. You may
think you 're being cute today. but
clever people wilt ~e right through
•
your facade .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24.-Nov. 22) - A relationshiP you thought was on solid
ground may be a bl1 shaklef than you
realize . If you get signa of this today,
flrid the root cause and try to amend
the matter lmmedlalely.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21} Take positive steps loward reaching
your target today or yOu could losa
momentum vary fast . This Is not the
time to ba complacent or wishy-washy
about a goal ol great importance to
you .
,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Under normQI circumstances before
you undertake a project, It Is well
thought out and organized. However.
today you may use supshod methods
that'll negate yo'ur usually eHectiv.;t·
ness.
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It's
generally always unwise to get
involved In an associate's complicated atlalrs and this will be particulai-ly
true for you today. Think twice before
making a lopn or giving advice to a
friend .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - The
Indications are thai should disharmony erupt on • thf:! home front today.
cha nces are you won't have to look
any further than In the mirror to find
the culprit, DOn't stir up a hornet's ,
nest.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - Just
because demands are made ot you
loday to handle some heavy rNponalbllltlea not or your making, tt does
not· mean you have to comply.
Analyza tnatta,.. carefully bafora
agreeing.
TAURUS (April 20·M.-; 20) -You're
rar too eanaiOie a pe,.on to o.u...,.
you can~ ~methlng tor notJ'Itng, ya.t
today aomaone mfQhl oonvlnc. you
that you ehOuld put all your -oge In
or.. .,_eket. It'll ~ your IOee.

I

VIRQEU

1 1 1

I

r1

l
I P·I I I
WYLEN

0

~
~,-.,:D~O_N;.,U:..:;B.--1~
One moiher to anolher lalk·
, ,'
I
Is 1
j.i. ing about he1 young son: "II

J

"::=-=-=~==~ took
me a long time to leach
him to talk, now I have 1o teach

r

-II; ~a:,:,:,~ -~:-·,h~kle

,.

-,r:A..:;XIr.:'R:,.II:..:.;,MI7,..:.Trl

L_.l__J__J.-J.-J.l...J

quoted
~Y fiflinQ In the mialng words
you de.valop lrom lfep No. 3 below.

SCIIAM.UTS ANSWEIIS s~n-H

Fusion· Swepi ·,Round · Egoist· PURSUING

I've noticed lhatmany people go through ~fe running
from something lhat is not PURSUING them.

ARLO &amp;JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

BAlJI\1 LUMBER
Scorpion Traders
"Taki11g

carrier

36 Least

Tueaday, May 31, 2005

IMPORTS
Athens

Road

4 r\T

Pass

Two of my students played this deal in a
10-table pair game. What do you think ol
the auction? And If you were the declarer
in slx spades, how would you plan the
play after Weslleads the club ~ng?
First, I . s·tror}gly disagree with South's
one·spade rebid. He should have bid·two ·
no·trump, showing his hand typij and
COI.Jnt. Il ls the responder's job to look for
a spade fit Th is would have led IO a con· ,
tract o1 three no-trump.
I sympathize with North's declalon to
jump-raise spades, His alternative was a
gam&amp;-lnvltatlonal two no-tri.Jmp, but that
wasn 't attrsctl'v'e with rel atl'v'ely wea~
clubs. (Two clubs would have been
fourth-suit _game-forcing, an O'v'erbld.) If
South had lour good spades, lhe 4·3 m
raled 10 play beaullfully, declaranufflng .
diamonds In lhe shorter 1rump hand,
On the third round, South should have
bid three no·lrump, His hand was no1
nearly distributional enough to drl'v'e to
slam.
·
1
Now Jo IHe play, South, wondering only
where dummy's fourth trump. had gone,
went two down for a bottom . If he had
conceritrated on the job at hand, he
might have seen the need to aim lor
these winners: four spadeS, two hearts,
three diamonds, a diamond ruff on the •
board, and two clubs. So, win with the ·
club ace, play a lrump to the board, lead
a diamond to the jack, ruff the diamond
two in the durrlh1y, cash the remaining
high· trump, cro ss to hand with a heart,
d r~w the missing trumps, and lead a club
toward dummy's jack lor plus 980 and a
lucky top!

j

Rocky "AJ" :

10x30
33795 Hila nd

'

~ ~- $,.

IOx 15, I Ox20,

West

suggestions
Tobe,t&gt;Htnl
Rig a match
Provo's
place
Grab a eab
Frothy brew

16
17
18 Make furious
20 Music and

27

·
~ AstroGraph
~ \1bur 'lllrthdotY:

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local relerences fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 , Rogers Basement
'Miterprboflng.

Pl.E.T'5 ~E.E .. I WOI'\t:ER

Call Gal)' Stanley

j

:~~~:r 0 ~ ~:~:-br~~~S ~~

&amp;

p

loaders, finish mowers, tillers
NEW A RRI VAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Thrn
Radius Mower) 30 inch cutting width to 5!1' :

Mon·Fri.

Shingl.:.

Maroa Hor.n:s

TRl:CK."1
•nR SAI.E

;

Farm Pro Tractors 20 horse - ]() hor!iil'

Frie11dly Fm·e~·.
.
OPEN

ConstrucHon .

6;~~t_'

+:*+*A lso 8\'ailable.*"'**

• Task Master Tractors 26 hurst• - 38 horsl',
4wd (1' )'ear warra nt)')
,.

Samt Grear L()w Prirt.\'
, and Sm(lit~g

TD

HOWARD l.
WR/TfSfl 6 SONS

sl:trting at 27 horse • 57 horse

_ wilh shuttle transmissiOn
,
4-wd, remote hydraulics 3 year warranty 1

1

Sou th
I t

13
14
15

24

To play well,
you must count

New Dealer tor Montana Tractors,

•·rce Estimates

• New Garages
• EII!Ctrical &amp; Plumbing

1995 Ford Probe Auto Air
-~Garages
$1495.00··1996, Plymouth
BoATS &amp; MOTORS
Reg . Rottweiler puppies lor Neon 4 Dr. Auto Air
·~ Utilities
FUR SALE
sale. Mother &amp; lather on $2495.00-- 1994. Plymouth
-r Pole Barnspremises. Call (740)388· Voyager 7 passeng"r VB
Pomeroy, Ohio
9665
•
t 996 StratoS bass boat, 115
~iAir
$1995.00
rc: · -~~---., Au'to
740-99~-7953
fast strike. 200t Soft ride
I\1LIS1CAL
R I VE~VIEW MOTORS , 2 trai ler: custom cover, excel740-41 6-2MB
740-591-46-&amp;t
L..·
Above
$6500'
-, . . .I.JIISffi--UMENl--'S··. ,.I .Blocks
Pomeroy,
Oh McDonald$,
(740-992· lent con dition ,
(740)446'4967
3490)
Story &amp; C'lark wainu t piano :_:_:_·_ _ _ _ _ __
97 ·. Yamaha 100 ' Wave
with bel'}ch, $800. Call 1997
Buick · LeSabre
Runner
Jet Slti , 3 Seater,
740 46-7.271 .
Limited, 75 thousand mites.
Tra1ler. Life Vests asking '
FOR SALE
Leather
Int. .
Loaded.
$3.000
call
evenings
Garage Kept
$5 . ~95 (740)596·8038 .
(304)675-1731
·
7M
' 5
R
Bass Tacker Pfo Team 165
Homegrown Strawberries. 199
ercury able. uns &amp;
740·'378-6291 . Monday thru looks good, garage kept. "Like New" equipped with
Saturday. 8:00-6:00. 65002 high miles , very dependable, optiOnal 40HP motor with
power trim. 40 pound thrust
State Route 124, Reedsville. ·$1 ,500. (740)44 1-8947.
Iron! mounted trolling rnotor.
I \R\1'1 1'1'111""
2002 Cadillac Deville, white 2-New deep cycle battenes.
All Your Ho me
,\ I 1\ I '-IHH'h.
diamond, fully equipped, On board storage, live wells
l mpro\'ement Needs
factory warranty, 22 ,900 and more. Easy launch and
• Sidin g . Windows
miles, like new. $24,995 pickup fake or ri'v'er. Kept
• Decks • Porches ,
(740)~56- 1428
covered and under shelter
• Ceranlic Ti le &amp;
l
S
d
,
Still
has
1/2
tank
of
original
HarJwood
FIQori ng
3
0'}0 Fixed Rate up to 24 200 · , oyota
PY ~r . fuel. Cost $t0,000. Sail
• Garu~es
months on New John Deere Convertible Excellent condl- S7,500 Firm See at Tri· • Room Add. --_ Roofi ng
Sports . Shop
• Kitd1cns • Baths
Compac!Tractors &amp;.'11 0 TLB lion . 7 ·01?0 miles, 6 -speed, County
"N;1 .lo!J To Small"
Sequential Shift, in storage 13041675 _2988
at Carmichael EQuipment. from October to April .'--'----,---~. Riu:inc , OH
&lt;740 )44 6· 2412
(304)675·4318 or (304)208~ 'Year2000. Pontoon Bo6t, 24
740-247·2162 ·or
740-416-3508
1995 M.F. 362 tractor, 55 ~4,::12:::8,_-----,-- foot , Sweetwater, 50 HP
H.P. 8430 ease I. H.- round .96 chevy Corsica V6,-auto· Mercury. Power Tnm , 4
14 y.rs. Expcricnct:
bailer, 55 N.H_ rake , 479 malic. 4 door. AC. power Stroke Engine , Big Foot ~~:::;::~~
P&lt;I=•=mo~
Ouldrive. Lounge Seats,
N.H. haybine hay tedder, locks. tilt. n1ce paint and Privacy
Room . .Depth 1
·
(740)985"-3843_
interio r. looks and runs Finder. Hour Meter. Good
4' Brush hog , like new
(740)446-4605

AAA

39

ENERGY EFFICIENT

.992-5682

~"OR SALE

Bichon Frise puppies. 1 time 1981 Olds 9B. 4dr, Runs
special. AKC Registered. All Good, (304)675-1264
white. (740)441 -9510.
1985 Trans 'Am. VIper blue,
Chihuahua puppies . Very 5.0, H.O., Ssp. Only 55,000
cute, lovable_Call (740)245- miles, with T-tops Call
(740)446~0350.
5984.

I

4 Observance
8 I knew It!

22

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Residential • Commercial

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Q 986 4
9

opening lead : •

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Mobile Homes · Metal Roofs

leave messa e

.
•

,.
••
•
,. s•

Tree Service

'1118 Wd's lest Roar

' (740) 992·2979

J 9 4
Q .J l 0 7

Dealer: South
·vulnerable: Neither

Rooting, Inc .

fn.."£ cstipultes

•
•

South
• K 7 3 2
¥ K 3
• A KJ 2
It A 7 6

JONES' .

'r70

3-disc CO ch"anger booksnell stereo ·system. must
sell, $79 .' Call (740)446·
4417 before 7pm .

r

Roofing ·

East

' 2
10 a 3
KQJ[IR4

COMMERC IAL and

sidjng, add-ons, · ~

remodelinJ!: ek.,

3 nliles west of
Pomeroy, OH .
un State Rt. 124

,..I

45783

Call 8.0. Cnnst.
f'or all your homl'
repair ne-eds, rot)fing.

·

· -. .

1

•
•
.

740-992-7599
'-~----...:,;.;::::,;: :;======;~~=======~
r

J( o7hn400eelre4C4re6dit a2pp4rovta.21

,.,,..--A-IJRJS
__.;;;;...;.,
1 oiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiO..

Window .~

1 -4~~Tu~ppers Plains, OH

I'

7

West
• 10 8 6

820 East

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

• 10

•

"' J532

FREE ESTIMATES

Zero Turn Z-Trak Mowe rs
from John Deere a\lallable at
4.9%
lixed
rate · fro
Carmichael Equipment with

www careq com

A Q 5
¥A B654

RESIDENTI AL ,

Purchase a New · John
Deere
Prem 1um
Lawn
Tractor &amp; rece1ve S250
toward a ~ hn Deere
lmpterhent Accessory or
Maintenan ce Plan. Offer
good May 3 thru June 27 at
Carmichael
Equipment.

Your
used
equipment
M&lt;YTORC\'Cl.fS'
source
Carmichael ~oi4i.iWOiiHii
EEiilliEiiRSiii·. .
Equipnient. {740)446-.2412 ..,

'

• to.4HKJ ,&amp; l l.OfK) Wuu 1\ri~J..t.-" &amp; Stratton
shmdby Generator Systems
n ,,..,.., "-~ \1 -t', "-1 !'&gt;at, 1 · ~~ s ..,., .. , •:.o •...k.,l " """" in 11&lt;JI&gt;d ~••lher.

L~-. .- - - - - - - " - _(740) 446-2412

Block. brick. sewer p1pSs.
Windows. hntels, etc. Claude
W1nters. Rio Grande. OH
Call 740-245·5121 .

New Gara-ges
• Replacement

ing •

05·30-05

rl&gt;

41800 SR #7

ror Redmax E&lt;juipmenl

(740)446-1062.

2 bedroom mobile home on DVD Rec order, ra'rely used,
Pole Cat ~d . $425 month $229 Call {740)446-4417
'
'pius utilities. $425 deposit. before· 7pm
Call (740)446-4107
·
Furniture Sa le: Mollohan's
2 bedroom. 2 bath, Ci A. Sola and c,hair starting ai
t ove / reI rig erato~ . $399 . Call {740)446-7444
s_
waterftrash paid . No petS
please. $375/deposi t and Gre~·n Sofa &amp; Chair, like
references . (740)388-8371 . new. $499. Call (740}4464417 before 7pm.
3 , bedroom. ·2 bath , 2.5 - - - - - - - - acres, close to college. $350 Metal CompUter Desk w1th
per month plus deposit. storage drawer. $99. Call
(740)47-4-3986
(740)446-44t7 before 7pm.

Mobile Homes sites in the
Shade area . Water, Sewer,
Trash, 1ncludad. $130.00

Sales &amp; Warranty Service Oe,al•!r

John Deere Riding Mpwers
startrng at $1 .399. Financing
available subjec t to John·

1

Lab puppies- $225. Vet
checked· 1st shots &amp;
· wormed.
Siamese
Himalayan kittens- $75 .

Black &amp; ·Tan tweed 3-piece
Living Room Suite. Very
Small. 2 bedrOOJTl house.
good cond1tion ,' $399 Call
$475 month. 1 mile from {740 )4 46-4417 before 7pm .
town. Call (74 0)44 1-0 194 or
(740)44t ·1184.
Bookshelf stereo system
with DVO pl'ayer. so unds
lQ MODII.F. HOMES
great , $249. Call (740)446llJRRtNf
4417 before 7pm.

Mobile Home Lot only
Add ison Pike- $125/month·
call (740)446-3644 for more
Info.

Square bale of mi)(ed grass-

I \\\,,\.(,"IWI, I !Illl'

North

Rocky Hupp Insurance'
and Financial Services

ATV'S •GO KARTS • CYCLES

Tobacco Plants for sale. Call
(740}446-7843.

!606)922-7 185

1 ReCess
game

11

~.....-c•,~••'•N-...~
....,

SPA FAcruR\' Ounn

·Nice 2BA . t bath wl&lt;iltached
gar. $400 J.ler mo. no pets
Depos1t
&amp; references .
(740)446-2801

For Lease: Office or retai l
spaces in very gQod cond i·
lion 'Downtown Gallipolis.
Appro:.c . 1600 sq. ft. each_ t
or 2 baths Lease price
negotiable to encourage
business.
Call
washer/dry, $550+ deposit. new
references . Call {304)576·
2574.
(740) 446 -4425 or ( 740 1446·
3936.
· House for Rent Jackson

Clean 2 bedroom mobile
home close to town. Call
(740)2;56·6574._

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

and gentle, S1 ,500
Tennessee Walker geldlnf).

Steel-Buildings
Displaybuildings needed rn you r
area Immediately. Bec:ome
part of a marketing and pro-·
mot1on campaign that can
Furn1shed ups t a ~r s. 3 rooms
save thousands and earn
&amp; bath . Clean . ref. &amp; dep moneyl
Umjted#available
required. No pets .,(740}4.46- Call
Now,1-800-22215t9
6335ext1558 ·

Anenrlon!
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
Local company offering "NO apartment, call 675-6679
EHO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- - - - - - - - - grams lor you to buy your 'valley Apartments in Mason ,
home instead ol renting
•·too% fina ncing
WV
currently accepting
• Less than perfect credit applications. Apply at 501
. Shawnee Trail in Paint
Pleasant .
ApplicatiOns
accepted
• Payment ~o~ld be the acce, pled on Tuesdays.
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators . HUD assisted . (304)6754900
1740)992·732t

=:::.c..:::~:_:_=_:_~-

Reg1stered Qu arter horse

r

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

mare 5 years ald. beautiful

Furmsh ed apt. 2nd Ave
Upsta1rs . all IJtiiJtles pa10.
One bedroom. no pets.
GallipOliS . (740)44 6·9523.

2 bedroom t601 Graham Pleasant Valley Apartment
School . Rd . No pets. rent Are nOw taking App lications
$400/month. 5200 /deposlt. tor 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR..
(740)446~0050
App lica tions are taken
M
. orid,y thru Friday. !rom
2 bedroom house. no pets.
reference required. starring 9 00 . A.M -4 P.M.EOfiiCe IS
at · $350/month . Call Jay Located at 11 51 vergreen
Dr11e Po1n1 Pleasant. WV
(7 40)441 -01_1 0.
Phone No. IS (304)675·
2 bedroom. 2 lull size baths.. 5806. E H 0
furn 1shed. on an acre ot -------~ground: 1 year tease: np Pomeroy 2 or 3 br.. Naylor
pets. Phone (740)44 6- t 239. Run. wid hook-up. sir. HUD.
leave message (7 40)9922 BF.l 3 m1tes tram HMC, 6886
$450/mo. depos11 &amp; ret. - - - - - requ1red . No pets_ Call Tara
Townhouse
(740)446 -2651
Apa rtments. Very Spac1ous.
BR
Ranch
Horne 2 Bedroqn'ls. CIA. 1 1i 2
3
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
w/attached Garage rn Camp Poof. Patio, Start $3B 5/Mo.
Conley area 61 Pt Large No Pets. Lea se Plus
fenced yard 111 grea t ne1ghbo~hood . 5675 mth. Deposrt Secunty Deposit Required.
and References required . (740 )446 ' 3481 ·
Call 1·304-531- 1197 or 1· Twin R1vers Tower is accept304 -273-t1t2
ing applicatiOns for waiting

3Br. Trailer w/refr idg &amp;
Stove.washer
&amp;
dryer
Included Section 8 approved
(304)576-2934
Beautiful river VIew in
KanauQa. Ideal for 1. 2 pee·
pte . No pet&amp;, please.
AppliCations being takeO .
Call (740)441 -016t

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
BRIDGE

Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; recently. (740)256·9172 or
Fr1day, Sam-4:30pm. Closed (740)256·61 11.
Thursday,
Saturday .. &amp;.., ,..,!"""--~~--.,
Sunday. (740)446-73'o0
H.-.Y &amp;

r

In town location- 1-2 BR
Ranch home. nice yard ; AC.
R91er9nces
required
$450/mo. rent &amp; $450 Sec.
Dep. You pay all utilities.
Available
6/15. '
Can
{740)446-3644 .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Scrap Metals Open Monday. mon ths professional training

Wolff Tanning Beds
Huge sele&lt;:IIOn .
Immediate Delivery.
Financing
2 BOA- 2 112 baths. 2 car One B:edroom . No Pet s.
1-800: 894-6997
garage- tur.n1shed. close to Ulllihes Pa1d, $400/mo . ,....;.
17_4.;
0;,.
144..;.6·.;
65
;,.7.;9_. - - ,
0
Holzer hospita l (740)441- Deposit
&amp;
Reference
BUILDING
03 10
Required. (7 40)446-3667
Su~ ·

Brand New· 2 Bedroom
House in town . $475/mo
CIA, Washer/Dryer Hook-up
St011e/Aelrigerator Included
(740)441 "0t94 or (740)44 1t184
For rent: Rio Grande area,
38 R, 28 TH, central air, '

_.~I, ,

TUesday, May 31, 2005
ALLEY OOP

from S344 to $442

Downtown Point Pleasant
Two 1 Bedroom Apartmen ts
References &amp; Oep6srt
Requ1red _(304)675·3788

Esnn:

Hot ~E:S
FOR R~:r&gt;T

'.
" '.''ES
- Itx
- ·K.·

Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Gratmg
Fpr
Dra1ns. 6 years old. great dlspOSI·
Walk to shop 8. mov1es Call Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L t1on. $950. Both have Had 3
Dr~'We

2 acres more or tess. all ut1l· 740-446-2568.
Equal
ities, paved road. 2 m1les Hous 1ng Opportunity.
from Cnester, S I 6 ~ 000.
(304)483-7550
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT2--8 Acre Parcel
road front Tuppers
water Letart twp.
Exc ·Hunt1ng $8.000

www.in.ydailysentinel.com

IJI&gt;!OW

o.\41Tltil •

--~~~~ • .itQHT ..

Til~

Sti11g Out OJ ,
Hard 1\'ork !"
Mid -S ize 4Wheel Drive Tra c tor
with 3\Jhp &amp; 40hp Kub ota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
S t. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301
.....

------

.,

••

•

�. .-

.

'

..

Page B6 • The Daiiy S!!ntinei

'

-

Tuesday, May 31, 2005

www.myaailyaentmel.com .

'

ALLEY OOP

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

branches

1 Navy

40 E-moll

server

anllstee 1
slangily

4t Cell
habitant

org.

0:1-JI·O:i

¥ AJ 3
t AK643
We st

E11.~t

•

•

"
' 3
•
Q 9 7 r,
• J !:1" !l 7
4.1 96

10 9 8

., 8 5 4
• Q 10 5
• K tn 1

a

.

Suulh
· A~QJ16
¥ K LO 2

'

-" AQ 4

Dea ter: North
\'u lne1'able: Both
Somh

Wcsl

1•
4•
ti •

North
1

+

Pal:il:i
Pa:-;s

1 NT
4•

Pass

Pass

Eosl
Pass
Pasli
Pm&gt;s
Pas~

Opening lead: • . 10.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

'

How to generate
an extra entry
When

You

42 Gsrllcky
dish
45 Farm .;,lcle

7 Kev-pte
11 Fish ~ to-be
12 Siberian
river
14 Sprightli-

35 Records,

7 Envoy

as mileage 8
36 Tubular
9
pasta
37 lets
10

13 Keepsake
holder

coating
38 Bemoan

19 Watches

39 Dinner

21 Charter

jacket

24 Work on

41 Forbidden

sound

·

tracks

28
29
31

42 Barter
43 Torte or
gateau
" 44 Hertz. ·

brunch
Pleads
One of a
pair
Place
Kegler's

".competitor
46 Soft color
47 Big hurry
48 Sandals'

lack

Wrapsup

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
lPtl "\ 1 ....

• \ ld

, ~

'\, )

SPORTS

51 Unlucky

game

33 PFCs
35 Air show
· stunt

Wrongs
Lady's
honorific

'

things

·fhvph.) ·

25 Slimy
vegetable
26 lunch or

27

e

gambler's
note

. 36 Nonrust

• U of Charleston
volleyball inks Garnes.
See Page B1

are trying to establish the

board's long suit, ydu need(.Elntries over

Often· those entries will be obvious. but
occasionally a little ingenuity is required
to open a doorway.
In this deal. how would you try to land six
spades after West leads 'a trump?

When responder has a hand as strong as
South's. he often does best to make a

BARNEY
YA JEST AIN ~T GOIN'
TO TH' RIGHT

HMPF !! NOT . MUCH
FER NEWS
'1'141S WEEK ! i

SOURCE,
PAW

THE BORN LOSER

P"Nf\~1 \)\\) .'IOU L(I'.Rt'-1 .._-------,
li'ol :&gt;UIOOL TOD~'I,
WI LBEJZfORC.( 7

~

!

' I--'\" 7- - -

mum balanced open1ng. Attar checking
on aces w~h Gerber. he Jumped to sill

·declarer made the Key clever play: He ran

the heart 10.
II it had won , declarer wOuld have had his
12th Irick. When it lost and East shifted to
a club, declarer won with his ace, played

a heart to dummy's jack- the ·neW entry
- and trumped a diamond. Finally, he
crossed to the heart ace and pitched his
club·queen On the diamond six.

~

---

~~~u
·-- · ~~~u ~Astro-

PEANUTS
YES, SIR , MR. PRINCIPAL _M'(
TEAC~ER SAID I S~OULD
COME TALK. WIT~ '{OU ... IT'5
A!lOUT M'&lt; 6RADE ..

! 60T A ''D-MtNUS '' ON ALL
SEVEN OF OUR LAST TEST5 .. 1F
THAT DOESN'T AVERAGE OUT
TO AN 'A;' Wi4AT DOES?

'(Ol/RE A PRINCIPAL, AND
'&lt;Ol! NEVEl&lt;. TOOK. MATI-l 7

SUNSHINE CLUB

f:RfM! so

HO.O~A
~Of (I-lESS.

1

FRIEND?

WI~

BY

DEJ=AVLT

By Bernice Becle O•ol
More involvements with ot he rs will be
prevalent In the year ahead wtth those
who sh11re your social and business
interests. Most wt11 be beneficial
unions, but watch out for the few lUeS
in the ointment don't lead you astray.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - It you 're
trying to promote. or sell · so m e thing
today, don't lay everything ydu have to
oHer on the table all at once. Leave a
tew ~goodies~ to c lose the deal as a
bonus tqr those wno are dubious.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- This is
a day to reach lOr m ore out ot your
nead than you do out of your wallet ,
especially when working out a pricey
deal With others . Don't buy what you
can't purchase on your own terms .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) ~ If you are In
the middle of negotiating an agree-'"
ment today, toOk everything over in
minute detail and you could discover
that you won ' t have tO make as many
concessione as you first thought.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) - When
having work or services per1ormed
today, double-check ~II the bills o r
invoices against the actual jobs ·that
were pOrforriled before , sig ning a
c h41Ck. It 'll protect you f rom being
gouged.
L..IBRA (Sept. 23·0ct . 23) Even
though it may conflict with your plans
today. go along w ith the wilt of the
majority rather than be insistent upon
having your own way. You'li gain far
n""!ore In the end.
&amp;CORf&gt; IO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - Put
your responsibilities be.l ore recre·
ational ectfvities today and you'll be
able to accomplish much mor8 than
you had expected . Once done, there
will be plenty of time lor play.
SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. 21) The merits of an Idea with which
you ' ve ' been toying may be overly
inflated In your own mind. However,
this doesn't mean there isn't value in
it. Separate faCt lrom fiction and m ove
tcrward .
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2.2-Jan. 19)- Do
not make hasty decisions today cbn·c:erning situattons which could atrect
your baM op&amp;rations , aspecially II
you are relying on lady Luck to be
there tor you . You're on your own
AQUARIUS (.Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Be
the tirst to ·call attention to any mistakeS you make
that would ·
attect others. Ae loog as you don't try
to shift the blame on them, ttMJy'll help
yOu makll the necesaary corrections.
PISCES (F8b. 20-M arch 20) Continue to guard your material inter~
ests tOday, especially where JOint ventures are concerhed. So m eone In the
group may not be as ethical as the
others and will bear watching.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - If you
are
spokesperson for a group
today, ~ a tight reign on the conversation because if tOO ·many toptcs
are banered around, hoslllitlell could
replace common sense. Be a leader.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) :...__ You'd
be smart to let others $e,-..,e as your
pr•sa. agents when it comes to voor
achievements. Coming from you . it'll
sound like bragging ; coming from
them, trH b8 pats on the bad!;.

too..Y

!

I 'M OOINGI
C&gt;QWN'fOWN

1'0 G.E'f .
C.A'f FQOO

~t ltl l

HH\\ Ill\tl.ll[ \-.~11111•1· ·' 111

Weekend traffic violations :n et drugs, cash
BY BETH SERGENT
8SERGENT@MYDAtlYSENTINEl.COM

MIDDLEPORT -· A reporl
of alleged erratic driving
called inlo the Middleporl
Police Departmenl ended in
lhe confiscation of approximately 12 grams of suspected
' crack cocaine, the prescriplion medications Percocet and
Xanex, and $1,277 in cash.
Middleport Police Chief
Bruce Swifl reported thai al
4:47 a.m . on Friday hi s

deparlment received a report
lhat claimed a vehicle nearlv
.struck lhe' Homclown Market
building:
Middleport Patrolman Chris
Frame located the suspept
vehicle !raveling west on Cole
Streel in the area of ·North
Third Street
The vehicle continued onto
Cole Streel, 1urning right onto
North Fourlh Street where
Frame observed il . strike a
vehicle owned by Sharon
Cretsinger of Middleport.

· Frame initialed a traffic slop where Tanner w~s fou nd lobe
and indenlifed lhc driver of in possession of approximatethe suspecl vehjcle as Eril:: ly 12 grams of suspected
Tanner, 19, of Columbus. A crack cocaine, and the pre14-year-old male passenger sc riptio n.
medicatoons
from Gallipolis was also in Percocet and Xanex. as well
lhe vehicle.
as $1,277 in cash . .
Tanner WilS arrested for
Charges may be pendi ng on
allegedly driving under the . the juven ile passenger who
inOuence, failure to conlrol, was released into the custodv
failure lo.display valid registra- of his falher.
•
tion and no operalor's license.
Tanner appeared in Meigs
Tanner and hi s passenger - County Court on Friday on
were then ·transported to the the traftic cl)arges and was
Middlepon Police Stalion also charged with possession

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

OBITUARIES

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebity Ciohe!' cry)ltcgr~ms ae aeotd from Cl~alloo~ by famo~AJ peooie. pa$1 and Ple58!11
Each letteril !he Clphel il!nds 11)1" another

Today's clue. Vequals X

" J

IXF'Y

HVCOHNN

TOXYJYOZH ;

NBF ' N
BM

WH

SJMH ."

WHOB

" X-QBZ "

HFBO .TW

NXKHZ
PBH

OHNI'DHO

RIIXOYWA ,
XSHV

OBZOJTDHV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'What a number of the dead we carry in our hearts.
Each ol us bears his cemetery within.ft -Gustave Flaubert
(c)20115 by NEA. Inc .. 5-31

me

8-,-0-NTIOi~
-,J---,Ar
r t t I t" r

·Honesty pays," granny
says.'Yeah."lhey'oungslerre;::~:;:;~~~ plied, 'bull don't think it pays

Is ·,s El RIG AI li I~ '~~~~. ~.
L.

,

•

~

_

•

• p·~~ut~~~~~
•

_

.

.

UNSCIMIII.f A80V! t!TTfRI
JQ G!T ANSWIR

&lt;hucklo . quoted

bv !filing in 'ht miSSin_9 words
you d.,elop frOIR ·11ep No. 3 below.

lETtERS IN ,.

I

Page AS

• Anna Lee Warner
Grimm Mciver, 73
• Paul Johnson, 70

RA

W•dn·• ,dlly, Jun• .1, 2005

(Ot'\f'ET\Tt6N .1 ART JS
NoT A CONTEST!

I

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTtNEl.COM

- ~~==

SECAU&gt;f ARl TAAIISCENDS

\\lll"\I~P\, ,, Jl"\1

of crack cocaine, a second
deg ree felony; corrupting
anot.her with drugs, a second
degree felony; and trafficking
Crack cocaine, a first degree
felony. Funher charges may ·
also be pending against
Tanner who was remanded to ·
the custody of the Meigs
Coumy Sheriff's Office on a
$100,000 cash bond.
Meigs Counly Juvenile
Officer Carl Hysell and
Pomeroy Officer Christopher
Gruber assisted in the case.

MHS ALUMNI AWARD ·11 SCHOLARSIDPS TO GRADUATES

South lound out that No rth had a mini·

There were 11 top lncks. Maybe South
could find the heart queen, or the club
finesse might succeed. First, though; he
tried to establish dummy's diamond six'.
That required two diamond rutts in hand
· and, therelore, three dummy entries. But
only two were apparent: the red-suit
aces .
After drawing trumps in tl'1ree rounds.
..:..;_-='--' . South played a diamond to dummy's king ,
cashed the diamond ace (discarding a
club Uom hand), and ruffed a diamond.
.
'lOUR;
&amp;l()Y,""' When the 4·3 break was revealed ,

s;-" 1 .

1 ~)-

minimum response to tea·rn more about
the strength of his partner's hand. Here,

spades.

•
P"
. .
"'l
L L(I\RNt.tHf\~1 Wf-\f&gt;.T Ti-\( . P"Will-\ Tf\t. ~12t. or
· BRUTUS, YOJ r&gt;W~I &amp;.
1-\UMI'\ OOt:t&lt; 1:&gt; MN:&gt;f__
· I WOIZ\f.l. "'-1 LtA':&gt;T
Of IS WORT!-\ f&gt;.OOIJT
Fill( DOLL~&lt;:s 1 J
SE.\IEN m't'i! -'-rc-'.d'

Budget debate takes
back seat to invesbnent
scandal,A6

number

52 "-Vedis?"
15 Shinto or
Zen (abbr.) 53 SimilaJ
16 Japanese 54 Not bad
soup
55 Exploll
ss. Mosquito,
11 Har,py
18 Ra nbow
to us
57 Gl morale
makers
booster
.20 Deep
58. Contented
gorges
22 Cartoon
sighs
mice -and
DOWN
Meek
23 Tool set
24 Rainout·
1 Trail mix
proof
2 Completed
V Tams
3 ·Romanlic
3j) Mlnf-!)ulta•s · Island
31 - no1re
4 MooChed
32 Hairpiece
5 Spry
34 Halter
6 - -relief

there. It ~ou must ruff two low cards in
your hand, you ' require three· entries: two
for the ruffs and one to return to the
clummy to cash tile es tablished winner(s) .

•

~ -

(2""'1
49 Ripple
50 Diamond

ness

o$o II 5 2

Scott honored
at Pomeroy
Alumni Association
banquet, A3 .

39 Antler

4 Consumer

J\"orth •
• 5 2

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

I' I'

•

SCJIAM.I!TS ANSWERS

e ,. r '

INSIDE
·• Victorian garden tour
· and tea planned.
See Page A2
• Watershed day planned.
See Page A2
• 4·H News.
See Page A3
• Law You Can Use.
See Page AS
• Free childhood
immunizations.
See Page AS .
· • For the Record.
See Page AS
• Fire that killed nine
ruled arson, official says.
See Page A6

WEATHER

2_.·Oth .anniversa_ry.
,

s-u-o s

. a.iivo~ -Newty- Bound- Matrix -BE QUIET
r
• One mother to anolher talking about her young son:
Htook me along time lo teach him to talk now t Jlave to
teach him 1o BE QUIET."
'

ARLO

Pleue s• Alumni, Al

M~morial Run celebrates Police investigating downtown Pomeroy B&amp;E

I I . I· I I•
'

POMEROY - Alumni of
Middleport High School from
across the country returned
for the annual reunion held
Saturday .night in the
Riverbend Ans Council headquarters in the Middlepon
Masonic Temple building.
Orange and black ban~ers
greeted lhe 283 alumni and
guests attending. Activilies
following the banquet featured entertainment by the
Bucktown Band, the · awarding of II scholarships, lhe.
recognition of reunion classes·
and dancing to old familiar
songs.
President Myron Duffield
conducled the business meelCha~one Hoelllch/photo
ing ·which included the election of officers. Duftield was The Bucktown Band, composed mostly of alumni, provided enter.tainment at the Middleport
re-elected president; June High School alumni banquet.
I(Joes, vice president; Nancy
Beaver, secretary; and Carol rabilia could be displayed. At to requ"'t the mone y be ' were awarded 10 eight high
Lilchfield, treasurer.
lhat time, according to returned since it was not school graduales, the children
During the business meel- Duffield, lhe building was to going to ·be us.ed for the pur- or grandchildren of alumni
ing Duffield reported on the - be turned into rental !(nils. pose for which il was given . . with a grade point average of
Middleporl
Cilizens Since then, Duffield said. the Several suggestions on how at least 3.5 htgh school grade
Committee, Inc. and .the village has decided to sell the I he money might be used poinl average.
$8,000 which the ·Alumni building.
·· were disc ussed with no deciSince 1961 a total of 172
Association had contributed
The queslion, said_Duffield, sions being made.
siUdents have benefiled in the
lo lhe renovation of the old is what is to happen to the
The Rev. Clifford Coleman amounrof $67,800 _
Middleport -High School with $8,000 given ro lhe slill ac1ive gave prayers, lhe group sang
Receiving lhe 2005 scholarCitizens the alma maier and door ships were:
stipulations which included Middleport
lh.al a place be preserved for Committee, Inc. for renova- . prizes were presemed.
Healher Ault of Springfield,
lhe alumni to meet and an01h- tion purposes of the schooL
dallghter of graduales Tamara
Scholarships awarded
and
Gerald
Auil
of
er place where trophies, the Duffield presented se veral
school bell and other memo- options and the alumni voted
Susan G. Park Scholarships Springfield , · who . will be

Clark · State
attending
Community College nurs'
ing:
Joanna
Butcher
of
Rockport, Ind.. daughter of
graduates James Butcher and
granddaughter of Margaret
June McElhinny Butcher and
the late Ira Butcher; Purdue
University, apparel design;
Patri'ck
Dowell · of
Middleport, grandson of graduate Carol Mowery, Ohio
University, engineering;
Sarah Pore of Chester,
granddaughter of graduate
James Ebersbach, University
of Rio Grande, education;
Schmoll ' of
Lauren
Cheshire, granddaughter of
graduate Robert Schmoll,
Oho State University, joumal1
ism or optometry. ,...:__._, -·
April Moore of Columbus,
granddaughter of graduate
Lillian Sl:)ven Manley, undecided school, biologtc;ll sci-.
ence·s.
Jam in Riley of Norfolk, Va.,
grandson of graduate Clara
Belle Riley, Old Dominion
University, hislory and politi-'
cal science.
·
Natasha
Wise
of
Middleport, granddaughter of
Andrew Batey, Hocking
College, nursing.
McComas
Receiving
Moore scholarships were
Jacob Young of Portmouth,
$1 ,000, grandson of graduate

8. JANIS

INDEX
SEcnoNs C:alendars
2

12 PAGFS

Classifieds

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - An alleged
breaking and. entering of ·
Insta-Cash on West Main
Streel in downtown Pomeroy ..
someti'me overnight Monday
remains under investigation.
Pomeroy Police Chief
Mark Proffitt said that the
BCI ha~ been contaqed to
assist in the investigation. He
said . that lhe alleged perpetrators apparently entered
through the front door since
there is no other entrance to
the building . A sec1ion of
glass in the · door was Shai-

Pie~ see

Comics
Dear Abby

Editorials

Sullmlttetlplloto

·The Meigs County Bikers Association celebrated their 20th
Annual Memorial · Run this weekend with approximately 700
B Section bikers filling the Pomeroy Parking Lot. The bikers left the parkSports
ing lot and ~eaded to Jqrdan's Campground on Laurel Road
near
Albany where food and live music were part of the weekWeather
A6
end's festivities. The Memorial Run raises money to provide
Christmas gifts for needy children.
© 2005 Ohio V•lley Publ~hinl Co.

Obituaries

Patrolman _Shannon Smith ,
· front, and Chief of Police
Mark Proffitt look at the
shattered glass in the front
door of lnsta-Cash which was ·
entered sometime Monday.
An undisclosed amount of
cash was t&lt;;~ken .

Co~nty's

•
RELAY

SOUPTONUTZ

Palkl., ~

~-lch/ pholo

-for Life is _Friday!

FORUFE

•

..

Holzer Medical Center is a
proud sponsor of the
Gallia County Relay for Ute

'

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="504">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9955">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17324">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17323">
              <text>May 31, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="236">
      <name>carter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="84">
      <name>ellis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1945">
      <name>may</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="135">
      <name>saunders</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="350">
      <name>shaver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="103">
      <name>stewart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="65">
      <name>tripplett</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
