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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

:www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June

I

1, 2005

Co~ts

plan to pu,nishDoss Backe lifts Houston pas't Reds
·after weekend·arrest
HOUSTON
(AP)
Brandon Backe remained
unbeaten at home as a starter
and sparked a two-run fifthinning rally, leading the
Houston Astros to a 4-3 victory over the Cincinnati Reds
on Tuesday night.
Backe (5-3) Improved to 70 in nine career starts - all
· Houston wins - at Minute
Maid Park . Backe, who
broke into the staiti ng rotation last ·Season, is 8-1 at
home in hi s career.
Backe · allowed i1ii1e hits
and three runs in 6 2-3
inrlings: Joh11 Fram:o guL the
last out of the seventh , Dan
Wheeler struc k o ut the side
in the eighth and Brud Udgc
did the same in the ninth hitting 96 mph or higher with
all three third-strike. pitches
- for his II th save in 13
chances.

BY MICHAEL MAROT

Ken Griffey Jr: homered
off Backe to give the Reds a
2-1 lead 'in fifth inning, but
Backe singled and scored on
a hit by Todd Self in the bottom half to tie it. The Astros
took the lead later · in the
inning on an RBI double by
Lance Berk inan .
Adam E;verett made it 4-2
with a homer in the sixth otT
former Astros reliever Ricky
Stone. · Sean Casey had · an
RBI double in the s~ven th
for the Reds.
Matt Belisle (2-5) retired
the first II Astros batters and
allowed only three balls out
of the
infield
before
Berkman hit a two-out single
to left field in the fourth
inning. Morgan Ensberg
walked and Mike ' Lamb's
roller past shortstop scored
Berkman.

Suspected suicide
bomber ki11s 20 in
Afghanistan, A2 . '

The run ensured the 'Astros
wouldn't be shut .out again.
They lost 9-0 [VIonday and
lead the majors with nine
shutout losses.
.
Belisle got his first major·
league ' hit in the second
inn1ng to load the bases wtth
two outs . Adam Dunn
walked and Jason· LaRue si ngled to dee p ,third . base_
before ·Belisle htt a Imer oft
Backe for a hit. Ryan Freel.
then flew out to end .the
threat.
The Reds took a 2- I lead
in tbe fifth when Felipe
Lopez beat out llll' infield hit
that extended · his · hitting
streak to 13 games. Griffey
then hit a first -pitch homer
over the right tield fence. It
was Griffey's 509th career
homer, two .behind Mel. Ott
for 18th place on the alltime.

Tuesday's voluntary 1111111- before giving the players last
ramp. Instead. he was in weekend off.
Akron, where he signed
"The disappointing thing to
INDIANAPOLIS - Mike
papers that me is that we talked about this
will result very situation on Thursday
Doss' weekend arrest on a
felony weapons charge could
in a g rand when we broke from here,"
result in a harsh penalty from
Jury review Dungy said. ''We said these
the Indianapoli s Colts.
r'~ l. 0 ~h~ ate some of the things that can
Doss,,24: was charged with
we, a p 0 n s happen · and
don 't get
carrying a. concealed. weapon, '
involved: It's always disapcha
andr pomung
· · w hen you have guys
discharging a firearm within
threergelesse
Akron, Ohio, city limits ,
charges. . .
in the headlines that are not
indudng . panic and obstruc ton the sports pages." , ,
ing official business. The
'' It's very, very disappointDoss has started 24 ·games
weapon charge is a felony, ing." Dungy said. ".It 's some- since the Colts took him in the
second round of the 20m
while the other charges are all thing I'm not happy about."
· misdemeanors.
Mike Callahan. Doss· attor- NFL draft. He was slowed last
b h
t .
d
Akron poli.ce estimated that ney, declined to comment on s
the charges, and a message eason . y ams nng an
five or six gunshots were
groin injuries.
he.ard outst'de 311 · Ak 1.011 was left ,by The Associated
Doss has made 150 tackles
restaurant about 2 :ZO a.m. Press with Doss' agent, Tom
Condon.
and intercepted three·· passes .
d.d
·
·
Sunday.
0 oss 1 not enter a p 1ea 111 in. two seasons with the Colts
Dungy
Colts Coach .,.ony
,.
Ak
'1 · · 1
after winning a national
. ourt ,
.
Sa'td Tuesday he .· wottld C . 11ronh " umctpa
d B h
championship at Ohio State.
' . Impose a _swift· and severe
a a. an sa t. · ut t e proce~
This ts the · third off-field
punishment although he , du.re allows a Summtt Count)
declined to discuss possible · grand JUry, ":htch meets incident for a Colt.s player
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - · for arguing ~ as he was dur- two outs in the eigh'th before
sanctions. Dungy said he Fnday•. to constder whether since January. Defensive
,Victor
Martinez's two-run ing a game against the walking Matthew LeCroy
must first collect more details there are . grounds for the tackle Montae Reagor surrenhomer
broke
a sixth-i nn ing Indians at the Metrodome on and yie lding to Bob Howry.
dered to Colorado authorities
about the incident and then charges· ·
tie Tuesday, . lifting the
May 5. Thi s Sabathia gave up seven hits,
confer with NFL officials 10
"A ll he did (Tuesday) is after an arrest warrant was
Cleveland
Indians
past
the
t i m e , three i·uns and two walks
see what he can do.
''
what we call a sign and go,'' issued charging him with
Minnesota Twins 4-3 on
Gardenhire while striking out three harassment and . telephone ·
After speaking wjth Doss Callahan said.
,
another
wil(i
night
between
got mad when his first victory in four starts
by phone, Dungy acknowl- . Doss is free on bond.
threats to a former girlfriend
·
home
plate against the Twins thi s seathe
divi.
s
ion
rivals.
who lives in the Denver area
edged that the third-year safeIf Doss rema.ins charged. in January. •
It began with the return,
. umpire
Bill son.
,
ty violateq team rules- even hi s arraignment in ,Summit
and
rapid
exit,
of
Indians
Hohn
warned
.
Bob
Wickman
pitched
the
Pro Bowl wide receiver
though he avoided talking County Common Pleas Court
slu gger ·Juan Gonzalez. Out
both . benches · ninth for his 14th save in 16
about the criminal charges. could occur by June 1O, the Marvin Harrison and two
si nce spring training with a afte r starter · Carlos Si lva opportuniti es.
The league also co uld · penal- day after the Colts conclude other men were also accused
S ilva (3-3), who gave up
strained
right hams~ring, threw high in the sixth &lt;ind
ize the former Ohio State their summer monthlong of attacking three boys who
Gonzalez
aggravated
the
Jody
Gerut
had
to
duck.
just
one earned run in his
wanted Harrison 's autograph
'standout, but Dungy doesn't summer sc hool program . ·
C.C. Sabathia (4-3). who previous 17 innings, wasn't
injury while running out a
· expect the team to wait lon'g
But when he returns to the ·a day before February's Pro
grounder
in
his
tirst
at-bat
fueled
the mutual di slike ear- bad - but the lon g ball did
before announcing Doss' pun- Colts, which Dungy expects Bowl. A laws uit. was tiled on
and
never
made
it
to
right
lier
this
season by saying he him in. Ben Broussard, 8ishment.
to happen Wednesday, there behalf of the three boys.
lield. ·
hated the Twins, threw inside for-18 with five RBls in his
"We will get all of the facts will be more explaining to do.
" It's really not the third
These
AL
Central
clubs
to
Shannon Stewart in the career against the right-hanimd determine which of our
Dungy was upset with incident this .offseason, but it
have exchanged their share second inning - drawing der.. hit the first pitch of the
team rules have been violated Doss· . actions because he · will be portrayed that way,"
of
stares, shoves, trash talk some boos from the crowd .
fourth inning into the fo lded · ·
and how best to handle that," often reminds players about Dungy said. " When I do
and
elbowsplus.
plenty
of
Stewart
was
fined
for
stacks
of footbal l seats above
Dungy said., 'T promise you it their responsibility to act as something,. it reflects on the .
inside pitches and hit bats- elbowing Cleveland reliever ·right field to tie the game at
will be swift and it will be role models and uphold the Colts and ·we all know we
meri
- . si nce the century Jason Davis at home plate in 2.
severe."
image of both the NFL .and have that responsibility. It's
turned,
'l,na Major League that May 5 game, shortl y
Then Martinez hit a twoDoss did
not
attend · the Colts. He did that again something we take seriously."
Baseball told both managers after he was hit by a pitch out shot tliat traveled to just
before their · series
in from Davis. Davis has not about the s;tme' spot, giving
Cleveland last week that bad been
well-regarped
in the Indians a 4-2 advantage.
behavior would not be toler- Minnesota. since throwing at Silva gave up nine hits, four
ated .
Torii ·Hunter in a July 2003 runs and one walk without
Minnesota manager Ron game here. ·
·
any strikeouts m se ven
Garcjenhire got ejected again
On Tuesday, Sabathia got innings.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

c

• ••
Middleport~.

:;o l'FI\:TS • \ ul. ;;~.:'lin
. I&lt;JS
'

·charge
from Page 81
had been 5-0 against New
Jersey, Washington and the
Pistons.
·
Neal picked up his second foul just 6 : 14 into the
first quarter with the score
ll - 11. and the . Heat were
behind · 32-25 when h.e
returned 2 1/2 minutes into
the second quarter.
O'Neal"s third foul came
just over 2 minutes later
when · he was called for
bumping Hamilton on a
drive. O ' Neal protested that
he had his arms straight up,
then frowned at the referee
who made the call. Jack
Nies, as he exited for tht'
rest of the half.
Miami had a 13-3 run to
pu.U to 46-42 , but tiJings
went bad .for the Heat after
O'Neal's backup. Alonzo
Mourning , drew 'his third
foul
with . 3:30 · left. ·
Hamilton scored six points
and Billups had four as
Detroit closed the half with
a 14-4 run for a 60-46 lead.
Wade had just 10 points at
the half as Hamilton did a
superb job keeping him ou t
of his rhythm.

·o·

· ''We just wanted to change
up." Brown said. '' The kid's
a great, great player. You
can't always give them the
same look'' .
0 ' Nears fourth foul came
with 3:05 left in the third
quarter after Miami had
pulled to 70-65 , and the
Heat entered the fourth
,quarter trailing 79-69. A 3pointer by Damen Jones
pulled the Heat to. 84-75
with 7:51 ' left. but Prince hit
a short jump-hook to start a
9-1 run that made it 93- 76.
" We're obviously a better
team with him in the game.
but we can' t worry about .
' What if the big fella didn't
get in foul trouble.' and stuff
like that," Heat forward
Udonis Haslem said. "We
didn't play team defense ."
Earlier Tuesday, Brown
was unusually defensive and
testy in reacting to a report
on , ESPN.com that he'
already had agreed to
become president of the
Cavaliers.
. Brown has three years
remaining on a five-year
con tract, but the Pistons
have made it clear they
would not stand in Brown ·s
way if he wants to sec ure a
position .with another club in
case hi s health prevents him
·
from coaching.

"All my players ever • ask
is how I'm feeling," Brown
said. "They know I want to
coach, that's what I do.
Could you imagine me not
coaching?"
The players have regarded
the rumors surrounding
Brown as more of an annoyance than a distraction,
though. it is clear they aren't
too happy with the timiQg of
·the revelations about Brown .
possibly
leaving
for
Cleveland.
" We ' ve been in this situation before," Prince said.
"The stakes are higher now,
but we dealt with this during
the season with New York
ahd those rumors. The only
difference now is that we ' re
in ·the Eastern Conference
finals . We're a mature team
and we know how to handle
it,.
Notes: O ' Neal did not
speak to reporters after the
game .... The 1999-2000 Los
Angeles Lakers were the
only team in NBA history to
go unbeaten on the road in
the postseason (8-0). . ..
Detroit avoided falling
behind 3-1. a deficit only
seven of 159 teams have
recovered from in postseason
history.
Commissioner David Stern
attended the game.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Kenny Cooke
• Hobart M. Darst
• Paul Leslie Johnson
• Kimberly Jo Morrow
• Oma Powers Stinson

• New school boom: U.S.
studentpopulation soars .
to highest level ever.
See Page A2
• Fulks joins ODOT
District 10 senior staff.
See Page A3
• 102nd birthday to be
observed. See Page A3
• State Route 554 to
close for 45 days.
See Page AS

Details on Pace A2

'

HC\ppy
Father's Day

INDEX
2 SECnONS- 16 PAGES

A3

Calendars

(Your Father's
(Your Fatber's
Name)
Name),

Cla~sifieds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby
Obituaries

A3
A4
As

Places to go ·

' B3

Editorials

Love
(Your Name)

Sports

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

Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ... $1 0.00

B Section

Weather

B. 1X5 Greeting with Picture ... $13.00

A2

Four Meigs County students were among 24 students selected to participate in the two-day
Regional Scholars 2005
Leadership Conference
held at Burr Oak State
Park. They took part in
activities involving group
dynamics: self-esteem .and
confidence building, theater and visual arts. entre. preneurship, test-taking
skills and career investigation. Going from here were
from the left front , Miranda
Beha and Whitney Thoene,
and back, John Bentz of
Southern, and Taylor
Russell of Eastern.
Submitted PhotO

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishina eo.

Father's Name•- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -- -

•

Your Name(sl .- - - - - -----,; ----~--- _ _ _ __

,.

Address ---~---------~~--------------

City/StateiZip
Phone·----~--­
Send Coupon and Payment to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy; Ohio 45769

Racine Alumni recognizes
graduates, awards scholarships
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
RACINE
· Sal.vation
Army
Major ' Sherman
Cundiff of the class of 1967,
in' a speech marked with
humor and reflections on his
years in the schools at Racine,
. was a hi ghlight of Saturday
night 's 2005 annual reunion ·
of
the
Racine-Southern
Alumni. Assocation.
SUbmitted photo
Cundiff related what he
Nicki
Tucker
of
the Class of
had done and where he ·had
been before being called, into · 2005 was presented a $700
the ministry and service of scholarship by the Racinethe Salvation Army. He Southern Alumni Association.
recalled the good times of his
A special tribute was given
grade and high school days,
to
Ora Martin Bass of
commented on memorable
Syracuse,
who left school
e·xperiences w~ile in the
armed forces, and· talked after the lith grade in 1944
about his many years of and after' 60 years returned to
working on the railroad.
· dass to earn her. G.E.D. Her
Major Cundiff, introduced five chi ldren who all graduated from Racine/Southern
by Bob Grueser to the over
attended and were introduced.
200 alumni 'and guests Shirley Johnson presented
attending the Saturday night flowers to Bass and she was
banquet , currently resides in g·iven a standing ovation for
South Carolina with his her accomplishments.
wife. the former Michele
Spencer of Racine.
Please see Radne, AS

Gallia County's .R elay.for

·one subject per picture

·Holzer Medical Center is a
proud sponsor ot'the
Gallia C.ounty Relay for life

Friday. June 11 . 12:00 Noon .
-

Please see Pomeroy, AS

FORUFE

-------------------------------------Deadline For This Special Father 's Day Tribute Is
..

~

•
RELAY

I

•• All Ads Must Be Pre-Paid •·

around the village with a digcan'lera. taking photos of
these dilapid&gt;ued properties
to s ubmit with the grant
application.
So far. Musser has documented 17 of these structures
on Fisher, Condor and East
Main Streets.
The . dilapidated . structures
mentioned by residents in the
surveys were located on
Butternut Avenue as well as
Fisher, Liberty, Chester and

~tu l

Duncan, who helped paint
everything from the pool itself
. to. the ·flag poles. The next
MIDDLEPORT Despite painting project will be painting
cooler temperatures and a fick- the· pool's exterior walls if the
le sun on the opening day of the funds or donations for paint ·
Middleport Pool, 'patrons were . become available.
lined up the hill and to the sideThis season, the pool will
walk above the pool, waiting to
offer night swims for adults
get into the water.
and children from 6 to 8 p.m.
"Business has been great,"
on Mondays and Wednesday,
pool manager Dale Riftle said.
"Even wjth the rain on and ni ght swims for adults
from 6 to 8 p.m. on Fridays.
Memorial Day l' d say we had
over 200 kids and 50 adults Riffle said that there are te ntative plans to implement a
here."
The pool was opened in big senior citizens night.
The pool's regular hours are
part due to donations and the
·to 6 p.m. on Tuesday;
noon
efforts of village workers and
Saturday
and
volunteers who worked hard to Thursday,
Sunday.
and
noon
to
5
p.m.
on
get the pool open by Memorial
Day, according to Middleport Mondays and Wednesdays.
Individual and family passes
Mayor S&lt;\ndy lannarelli.
·
.
are
available.
'
' '"This is an excellent turnout,"
assistant pool manager Jim
Several diving board daredevils
Brewer said. "The community
lined up to take their turn
support has been incredible."
showing
off their skills at the
The
Middleport
Pool
Midd leport Pool this week
employs seven lifeguards, one
concession stand employee and while under the watchful eye of
has . three volunteers . Riffle
three lifeguards.
added that there is still a need
. Beth Sergenl/photo
for volunteers, like Michael

Meigs
County .
Regional
.Scholars

WEATHER

(Your Name)

Fisher Street. repairing West
Main Stree.t from the Exxon·
·station to corporation line
towards Mi(ldleport. sidewalk
rep,rir oq West Main Street.
clean sidewalk on Mechanic
Street and back of Sacred
Heart Church. repair Lincoln
Hill sidewalk.
The data also reflected a
strong de sire to tear down
abandoned buildings that
have become not only eyeso res but dangerous. Mayor
John Musser said that he has
ti.;en touring several places

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

'

Love

'""' ·'"" t.•ihwuiiiH'I
"""
.

Middleport Pool ·
opening is a splash

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone ·
Very Special With A Father's Day
___,
Tllank You Tribute
...
'
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On Friday, June 17th!
.

Happy
Father's Day

TIJl iRSil.\Y, ,JI IJ\:J.. ~.~ no:;

Bv BETH ·SERGENT
the village and excludes the County Grants Administrator
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM 'business district ,of down- Jean Trussell compiling
town. The $300,000 grant them into specific data that
· POMEROY - The fina l focu ses
on
commu nity ·refle cts · the wishes of
public meeting to discuss the improvements .for individual Pomeroy residents.
possibilities of a Community neighborhoods.
·
.
Some (but not all) of those
Development Block Grant for
· In order to complete the specific
wishes ' were:
Pomeroy was recently held grant application process. sur- installing storm drainage on
with street repairs and th.e veys have been circu lating Pleasant
Ridge
Road.
demolition of abandoned throughout the village si nce installing a fire hydrant for
structures topping the wish last fall aski ng residents to Anne ., Street, cleaning the
list of residents.
specifically list where · they Mulberry Pond, replacing the
The
·. Comm'unity believe the grant money sidewalk
on
Mulberry
Development Block Grant is a sho uld be used.
Avenue, replacing the basketgrant specifically . used to
So far 787 surveys have ball courts at the patk on
make improvements within been collected with Mei gs . Butten1ut Avenue. repainng

• Bizarre play costs FB.
See Page B1

INSIDE

.

'

Street repairs, de"'olition of abandoned buildi'ngs top Pomeroy survey.wish list .

SPORTS

·.Cleveland falls tQ Twins, 4~3

cuss Brown's situation ·with tion. Brown, 35, would
Cavaliers ownership.
become the league's second
The 44-year-old had the youngest coach.
Pacers' blessing while the
While the Pistons defend
Cavaliers' considered him. their NBA title, Larry Brown
From the outset, he made it has had discussions with
clear to Cleveland owner Dan .Gilbert's
representatives .
Gilbert that he was only inter- However, the 64-year-old
ested in the job if he. had full coach has insisted that he
control of the basketball deci- wants to address a health
sions and reported directly to problem after the season is
the owner.
. over before ·deciding his next
When the Cavs indicated career move.
they were changing the strucWith Morway no lon~er in
ture of their front office to the mix, Washington Wtzards
include a president, Morway director of player personnel.
was no longer interested. ·
Milt Newton appears to.. be the
" I have a great job with the leading candidate to be
Pacers working with Donnie . Cleveland's
new
GM .
Walsh and Larry Bird," Newton played on . Brown's
Morw11y said. "It' would have NCAA championship team at
had tq. be a very special job to Kansas in 1988.
the
Gilbert has tried to keep
leave. I appreciate
Cavaliers for givi ng me the Cleveland's front office' and
opportunity and wish them coaching searches a secret,
good .luck." .
but ,word has leaked throughOn Monday:· two sources out the process.
toldThe Associated Press that
On Sunday night, he
Pacers assistant coach Mike responded to an e-mail sent
Brown has been offered by the AP asking if he had
Cleveland's coaching posi - hired a new coach.

Pomeroy, Ohio

I

Morway out.as signs point to
Larry Brown .joining·.Cavaliers

CLEVELAND (AP) ,Indiana · Pacers vice president
David Morway is no longer a
candidat6'&gt; ', to
become
Cleveland's general .manager,
another sign that Detroit
coach Larry Brown could be
joining the Cavaliers.
Morway was considered the
front-runner to replace the
fired Jim Paxson before the
Cavs began courting Brown,
who may join the team as ·
their president of basketball
, operations once the Pistons·
season. ends.
Morway gave the Cavaliers
a Monday deadline to let him
know if he was still in their
plans.
"They indicated to me that
they were exploring the possibility of hiring a high-profile
president, so we came to a
mutual understanding and
agreement that this wasn'tthe
right situation for me,"
.'Morway said Tuesday. "They .
wanted to go in another direc tion and I respect thai."
Morway said he did not dis-

OVCS kindergarten
class perfortns The
Three Uttle Pigs,' A3

.I

�NATION • WoRin
New school boom: U.S. student
~ suspected al-Qaida suicide bomber kills population
soars to high~st level ever 20 in mosque attack in Afghanistan

·~The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 2, 2005

Community Calendar

'

PageA3

THE B 'END

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

Thursday, June 2, 2005

Free health kit helps women to take care of themselves .

DEAR ABBY: Your readwould like to eliminate from
'Cards may be sell! In her at will meet at 7 p.m. the _ers ha'e a history ofre &gt;poncim/ life is vain. shallow and a
ing enthusia,tically to the
37800
Sumner
RoaJ. Cnurthouse .
tight" ad - even though her
-15769
Pomerov.
Ohio
Friday,
June
3
~ood
advice
vou
share
with
hushand is " ell -off.
Monday, June 6
t\tonday.
June
6
POMEROY
P.ERS.
them
:
Because
of
that.
r'm
She insists on hosting holiSYRACUSE Sutton
LONG
BOTTOM
LcJCJI
7-+.
will
meet
at
II
:-+5
Writing
on
behalf
of
the
Food
day
and family parties at her
Township Trustees. 7 p.m. at
Dear
Victor
Bah
r
will
be
85
on
a.m.
for'
a
luncheon
at
the
and
Drug
Admi~istration·,
house. then telb everyone not
the Syracuse village hall .
June 6. Cards mav be sent to Senior Citi1.ens Center. Call Office of Wome n·s Health
Abby
onlv to bring the food but also
him at3881-+ Tm,;n,hip Road 992-2161 fo r luncheon reser- and the Federal . Citizen
to ~bririg eXtra portion~ .JO-+. Long Bottom. Ohio vations~
·
Information Center to offer
which she use&gt; to feed her own
.J57-+3,
'
Saturdav, June 4
our new. free · Women's ·
fam ily the following week.
Saturday, June 4
RACINE - · Raci ne Area Health Informati on Kit. It
The gifts she gives are
PORTER - Rev. Lucian
Community Or£anization contain,; some uf Uncl e has been compiled by the either recvc.led. or stained
Nelson will be the ~uest
wi ll be bolding il:, summer Sam·s best advice on more gove rnment at taxpayer and torn items of clothing she
speaker at 6 p.m. at Clark
food drive for th e Meizs than a dozen health topic&gt; expense. That's why the v're purchased• from thrift stores.·
Cnnperative
Parish from's that concern today's women. otlered at no cost to you - · When I · give her gifts, ·she
Chapel ch urch on Clark
Fr!day. June 3
a.m. tn I p. 01. Saturday at the
All of these materials. are not even· postage . I have te ll s me to return them and
Chapel Road. Porter.
MIDDLEPORT
corner of Third and Pearl · P::u:t of the Take Time to Care '· reviewed the kit. and it con-. • give her the money·. If she
.
Sunday, June 5
·
BIDWELL - Services at Peoples 'Bank of Middle port Streets in Racine. Canned information seri es . . Between tains a gold mine of handy- admires something of mine.
Springl1eld Baptist Church . will host a customer appre- food. as well as paper prod-· _- caring for their families and dandy information on topics . 'she'll heg until 1 give it to
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m .. ciation coin ... , how wi th ucts. shampoo an co11ditioner. stay1ng busy at work. wpmen that' include heart disease (the her. then return it to the store
Sunday. 7 p.m. with Pastor refreshments. pnLe s .and deodorant. laundry soap. dish are al":'ays on the go. Trat 1s leading ·kiiler of women in for the monev or sell it in one
· fun. Coins can be brought in soap and monelarv donations why Its more tmportapr than the United States). mammog- of the garage sales she holds
Clyde Ferrell speaking.
-Pap
· smears . . t,wice ij month.
for free appraisaL A ' large will be accepted.· For more . ever lor.:vomen to "lake time raphy.
Thursday, June 9
depression.
When her kids were little.
VINTON - Revival ser- co llection of coi ns and information call 949-2656 or to care about thetr own menopause,
pap~r
money
will
be
on
dis9-19-2031.
h•·alth
.
Whether
they're
manstrokesand
mo'
r
e.
her
philo&gt;ophy was that
vices at Fairplay Chapel off
There
are
three
ways
to
everyone
el&gt;e should · drive.
play.
Featured
prizes
to
be
Tuesday
June
7
aging
their
medications,
State Route 325, 7 p.m.
given
in
draw
ing
s·
will
POMEROY:_'_
The
Meigs
lookin~
for
wc,
I
ys
to
min
imize
TTTC
Women's
them.
baby-sit
them. take
order this
through June I 0. Rev. Harry
David Russell preaching . include two u.ncirculated sil- County American Cancer thetr . n sk ot heart attack or Health Information Kit. them places and foot the bilL
online
at Reciprocation is not a word
of · ver certificates with con sec- Society Taskforce mee.ting -l ea~mg_ about menopause .-. Order
Bluegrass · Be.acons
Send
in her vocabulary.
www.pueblo.gsa.gov.
utive
serial
numbers.
a'
wtll
be
held
al
12
p.m.
in
the
they
II
hnd
some
g_real
advtce
Columbus to present gospel
your
name
.\nd
address
to
1 feei life is ·roo short . ro·
-concert June II at 7 p.m. Morgan silver dollar and a basement conference ro0 m of Ill . our . Women .s Hea lth
-Women\ Health Information · wast~ on people like this. Is
the Pomeroy Library. Lunch lntormation Kit. .
More information call 742- .. Peace si lver dollar.
kit, Pueblo. CO 8 1009.1 0r this how people get rich? Thursday,
June
2
will
be
provided.
Call
Thanks,
Abby.
tor
always
2271.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Courtney Sim for more infor- pro'tdmg _llmely. practical calL toll-free 1-888-878-3256 FED UP IN SAN DIEGO
DEAR FED UP: On the
VFW Post 9053 Auxiliarv mation or to RS .. P. 992- and good advice to your read- weekdays 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
will meet at 7 p.m. at the halL 6626.
ers. And please ask 'them to (EST) and ask for the contrary. This· is how people
New officers will
be
'VII DDLEPORT
place , lhetr orders now, Women 's Health Information impoverish themselves -in
Saturday, June 4
installed.
· Middleport
Lodge
because
supplies are limited. Kit. If you 're ·interested. every way that's important.
363
Dear Abby is written by
POMEROY
- · Rutli
CHESTER _ Chester- F&amp;AM will meet at 7:30p.m. - MARSHA HENDERSON. don ' t wait. Do it today.
DEAR ABBY: I have _Abigail Va11 Buren, also
Taylo.r will· be 88 on June 4. Shade Historica l Association at the Temple
·
ACTING
ASSISTANT
recently
recovered from a life- kiiOW/1 as )earme Phillips,
--:------------~--.,--,,--------,--·
_
_
_
_
COMMISSIONER
FOR
WOMEN'S HEAl-TH. FDA threatening illness. and it has and was jou11ded by her
DEAR MARSHA: I'm made me want to re-priori!ize -~ mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
delighted to spread the word. my life. I have· decided I no Write
Dear Abby
at
Readers. as many of you longer want to spend holidays www.DearAbby.wm or P.O.
know. the information in with some of my relatives. Box 69440, &amp;Js A11geles, CA
these· special kits for women The person I specifically 90069.

Public meetings

School Administrators. His
group has identified more
than 400 such distrips.
.
WASHINGTON
A
"The
pressures
are
to
stay
BY NOOR ~HAN
record 49.() million students up with it. to hire. to get the
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
filled U.S. schools . in 2003. classrooms staffed; to find
breaking a mark set by th€ir' quality principals," Hunter
KANDAHAR. Afghanistan'
baby boomer parents .and giv- said. "But the joy of it is you
- · A suspected .al-Qaida suiing educators a new genera- have this tremendous _Qpporcide bomber walked into a ·
mosque during lhe funeral of ·
tion of challenges.
tunity. because the ,commua Muslim cleric and blew
The growth is largely due to nities have a real clear stake.
himself up Wedrtesdav.
all the children who were so you have vibrant school
killing 20 people. including
born in the late 1940s to earfy systems."
.
Kabul's police chief. aml
1960s and hav~ since become , In other parts of the counwounding -+2 others.
'
P!lrents themselve.s. . the try, such · as the upper
The alla&lt;·k was the deadliest
Census
Bureau
said Midwest. the school populain Afghanistan since a s ur~e
Wedricsday. Rising immigra- tion has declined in · some
in violence began in ~ l'arc'h.
tion. played a part. too. in counties. Mather said. "Some
casting doubt on U.S. claims
pushing enrollment past the of those kids are driving an
that it is stabilizing the coun1970 record of 48.7 million. hour or two on a bus to get to
try and reinforcing fears that
" You could have ' predicted school because there aren't
militants here are copying the
this back in 1970 when we enough kids to keep local
tactics of those in Iraq .
had all those kids, .. said Mark schools open:· he said.
Hundreds of mourners were
Immigrdliofl helped fueled
Mather. a demographer for
' crowded inside the mosque
the Population Reference the boom. A total of 22 perfor the funeral of Mullah
Bureau, which assesses popu- cent of students had at least
Abdul Fayaz in the main
lation trends.
one foreign-born parent,
southern city of Kandahar
··we knew they were going including 91 percent of Asian
when the bomber struck. ·
to have kids of their own. We children . and 66 percent of
•
President Hamid Karzai
have thi s classic echo effect Hispanic youngsters.
condemned the assault as an
Many high-growth states
going on."
··act of cowardice b~ the eneEven if it isn't surprising. have not prepared well for that
mies of Islam and the enethe record tally of students in racial and ethnic transforrnamies of ihe peace of Afghari
the tirsl 12 grades poses steep tion. said Patrick Callan. presAP Photo
~ople" and ordered a high- ·
for sc hools: ident of the Natipnal Center
A guard frpm the Afghan National Army stands guard at a mosque after a bomb blast, challenges
level investigation.
recruiting
teachers.
helping for Public Policy and Higher
Parts of the bomber"s body Wednesday in Kandahar, Afghanistan . A suspected ai-Qaida suicide bomber blew himself up children who don ·r speak Education. With the largest
were found and Kandahar during the ·funeral of a mod., rate · Muslim cleric, killtng. 20 people Including the Kabul police 'English, keeping ' class sizes ever high school graduating
Gov. Gul Agha Sherzai said chief, and wounding 42 others, officials said.
manageable and coming up class coming soon, colleges
he belonged to Osama bin
sives after comi~g , close to act of violence upon innocent , killing two of them and with enough financial aid for are being pressed to provide
Laden's terrorist network.
capacity for everyone while
' wounding tlve. said Patrick college students.
"The allacker was a mem- the police commander. but it civi lians and a mosque."
In
population
rings
outside
keeping tuition affordable.
While SherLai put the casu- Fruchet. spokesman for the
ber · of al-Qaida. We have was not clear .if he was targetand
in
West~rn
"These kids are coming
urban
areas
found documents on his body , ed. said Interior Ministry alty toll at 20 dead and -+2 U.N. Mine Action Center for
as
Nevada
and
along
at a time when- unlike
states
such
_
that show he was an Arab:· · spokesman Latfullah Mashal. wounded, Kandahar Hospital Afghanistan.
Khakrezwal. a Karzai sup- director Mohammed Hashim
AlthQugh the insurgents California, the grow th has the baby boomers· - their
Sherzai said. "We had an
. intelligence ,report that Arab porter, was police chief in the Alokozai said 72 were have stepped up ·'their offen- been intense, increasing chances of a middle-class life
without college are almost
&gt;ive. they have also sutTered demands on schools..
al-Qaida teams had entered capital for ·rwo months. Prior injured. four gravely.
"They just really don 't.have nil ," Callan said. ·'It's going to
Deputy police chief Gen. heavy casualties. losing about
Afghanistan and had been to that, he had been police
the
fiscal capacity to match drive higher educatibn policy
· commander in a northern city Salim Khan said the explo- 200 men since March. followplanning terrorist attacks ."
this.''
said Scott Young. senior over the next few years. This
A · purported
Taliban and for Kandahar.
sion occurred near where ing a winter lull in the fightMany local leaders had been people remove their shoes ing , a~cordin~~ to Art:Jerican policy specialist in education · is a huge challenge."
spokesman. Mullah Latif
During the peak enrollment ·
and Alghan otflcial s.
. for the National Conference
'
Hakimi. said in a telephone expected to allend lhe funeral before praying.
of
State
Legislatures.
year
during the Baby Boomers'
Tension has heen hiQh in
" I was knocked unconcall to The Associated Press .of Fayaz, the top Muslim
In districts outside Atlanta. time in school. almost eight in
scious by the blast. When I .Afghanistan and neighboring
that the rebels were not leader in the province.
Houston
and Las Vegas, I0 students were non-Hispanic
'woke
up,
so
many
·people,
Pakistan
after
deadly
antiFayaz. also a supporter of
responsible for the bombing.
enrollment
has soared more whites. In 2003, 60 percent of
Hakimi often calls news orga- Karzai, was shot to death. in were ktlled or wounded. . American riots sparked by a
nizations, usually to claim Kandahar on Sunday by sus- People were running around , news report - later retracted than 20' percent in last five students were white. 18 percent
responsibility for attacks on pected Taliban gunmen - a some were lying on the - that interrogators· at the years. said Bruce Hunter, who were Hispanic, 16 percent were
. behalf of the former regime . week after he led a call for ground crying. Dead bodies U.S. prison al ,Guantanamo directs lobbying for the black and 4 percent were
His information has some- people not to support the were everywhere." said Nanai . Bay. Cuba. detlled the Quran. American Association 'of Asian.
Agha, a mourner who was
times proven untrue or exag- rebels.
Kandahar was a stronghold behind a wall in the mosque
gemted, and his exact tie to the
of the Taliban regime that when the bomb exploded.
rebel leadership is not clear.
In
a
second attack
. Among
those
killed was ousted fmm power in
Wednesday was Kabul police late 2001 by U.S.-led -forces Wednesday. a bomb exploded
on a bridge west of Kandahar
chief
Gen.
Akram for harboring bin Laden.
Yonts,
the
U.S.
Col.
James
Khakrezwal , two of his
as a group of Afghan explosives experts working on a
spokesman
111
nephews and six of his body- military
. guards, Sherzai sa id . The Afghanistan, condemned the Japan'ese-funded dcmining
attacker detonated the explo- blast, caHing it an "au·ocious project were driving over it ..
.~

Bv BEN FELLER

AP EOUCATION WRITER

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Birthdays

OVCS kindergarten class peiforms '17ze Three Little Pigs!

Fulks joins ODOT District 10 senior staff

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

:

.

'

·

·

Submitted photo

. The Kmdergarten class of 2005, at Ohio Valley Christian School concluded the .year with a rnusi: cal program, ·The Three Little Pigs. " Sue Murn;Jy, 2B-year kindergarten ieacher and aide.
:Brenda McDaniel , organized the program . The class sang.the song as the three little pigs built
·their hquses and hid as the big bad wolf (Benjamin Rutherford) blew the houses down , until
they built the brick house. The entire class presented academ ic recitatio ns and Biblical prais·
es to the parents and grandparents. In the roles as little pigs were Brady Anctrew, Andrew Hall.
and Jacob Riley sitting in front of the ir brick house.

MARIETTA - Scott Fulks,
a former employee with the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation District I0, has
accepted a position \\lith the
department as business and
human re!&gt;ources administrator. Deputy Director George
M. Collins announced today.
Fulks began his ODOT
career ain the 10 · Office in
Marietta in 1981 as a permit
technician. After four years, he
was promoted to management
analyst where he continued for
16 years with the district. At
that time.- he was again promoted to the Highway
Management department as a
transportation manager II. In
2002. Fulks was promoted and
transferred to ODOT Central
Office in Columbus as a
Transportation Manager UL
It was upon the recent

appointment of past Business
and
Human . Resources
AdmiQistrator Jim Spain to
ODOT District II Deputy
Director that the opportunity
arose for Fulks to transfer
back to southeast Ohio.
Fulks is now responsible for
the oversight of several departments with ODOT District 10
including Personnel. Payroll.
Finance.
Information
Technology. Labor Relations
and Facilities.
" District I0 is happy to weicome Scott back to the dislrict," said Collins. "He
demonstrates the work ethic
and the commitment to excellence that the district tries so
hard to convey IO ' our customers. I am certain that he
will. serve the department and
all of southeast Ohio well." ·
Fulks has earned his bache-

Jo2nd birthday

·to be obsetved

JXSCiia•••

·Oftly$10.00
Happy
Father's.Day .
Happy
·
. Father's Day
(Your Father's
(Your Father's
Name)
Name)

Love
'

(Yo~r
Thursday, June 2
Morning (7a.m.-Ndoll)
It's going lo be a cloudy
morning. Light rain is forecasted. The rain should stan by
8 a.m. The rainfall will tlni sh
around noon with total accumulations for this event near
0.13 inches. Temperatures will
hold steady around .61 witll
today·s low of 61 occurr:ing
around 9 a.m. Winds will be 5
to I0 MPH from the east.
Afternoon (/-6 p.m.)
h should ' continue to be
cloudy. Expe.ct a couple of
raindrops around the area.
Temperature&gt; will linger at
62. Winds will be I0 MPH
from the east turning from the
southeast a; the afternoon
progresses.

Eveni11g (7 p.m.-Midnight)
lr will continue to be
cloudy. Some raindrops are in
the forecast. ·Expect accumulations of 0.02 inches.
Tem'peratures will hover at
62 . Winds will be I0 MPH
from the southeast.
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
It , will continue to be
cloudy. There may be a brief
sprink le. Tem~ratures will
remain around · 62 .with
today 's high of 63 occurring
around 6 a.m. Winds will be 5
to 10 MPH from the southeast
turning from the east as the
overnight progresses. ~

ing. We are predicting light
rain. The rain will start
around I0 a.m. Expect 0.04
inches of rain by the en&lt;;! of
this morning.' Temperatures
will ri se from 63 to 70 by, late
this morning. Winds will be 5
MPH from the east turning
from the. southeast as' the
morning progresses.
Ajternoo11 ( 1-6 p.m.)
lt should be a humid and
cloudy afternoon. 'Expect
light rain . lhe rain should
reach 0. 14 inches by t)le end
·of
this
afternoon.
Temperatures will stay near
75, Winds will be 5 MPH.
from the southeast turning
Friday, June 3
Morni11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)
from the- east as the afternoon
It louk&gt; like a cloudy morn- progresses.

Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ... $10.00

Name)

Love
(Your Name)

-----

B. 1X5 Greeting with Plcture ...$13.00

Father's Name__~---------:------------­
Vour Name(s) -----:-------~--------

Address _~----------------~--------------------­

LONG · BOTTOM
Mattie Ruth · Stethem · of .
:Long Bottom will celebrate
:her I02nd birthday on JUlie
: 14. For the past few years
· she has resided with her son
and daughter-in-law, Gerald
and Faye Stethem. in
. Canton. Cards may be sent
:to. her at M. Ruth Stethem.
:c/o Gerald Stethem, 5911
:Lake 0 Springs, N . .W. .
: Ca.nton, Ohio 44718.

Mattie Ruth Stethem

.Local Stocks
:Acl- so
: AEP-35.91
Akzo- 39.52
Ashland Inc:. - 68.91
:AT&amp;T -18.77
:BLI-12.88
'
: Bob Evans - 23.53
: BorgWarner - 54
: Champion - · 4.20
Charming Shops - .9.36
City Holding- 33.35
-Col- 49.53
:DG -19.98
:DuPont-- 47.06
:.Federal Mogul - .62
:usa- 29.55
Gannett- 74.24
General Electric - 36.93
: GKNLY - 4.60
: Harley Davidson ,..;,. 48.44
: JPM- 35.76
.
~ Kroger 16.65

Clty/State/Ztp
Phone·------,-- - Send Coupon and Payment to: ,The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day''
.
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
·

Ltd.- 20.78
NSC- 32.33
Oak Hill Financial 26.12
OVB- 26.21
BBT- 40.71
Peoples - 28.03
Pepsico "- 56.82
Premier- 10.50 . .
Rockwell - 51.74
Rocky Boots - 29.98 .
RD Shell- 58.3'8
SBC- 23.28
. Wal-Mart- 47.92
Wendy's - 44.99
Worthington -17.01
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous. day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
· Inc. of Gallipolis.

.Town yard sale
is Saturday

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
'

'

.

The Daily Sentinel

,. Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

Deadline For Thi s Special Father's Day Tribute Is
Fr iday, June 11 , 12:00 Noon .

•
•

. ,..

lor of scie nce degree in com~
munications . f~om
Ohio
University and is a Phi Theta
Kappa Society member. He
has been awarded certitica· tion through the State of Ohio
and the National Certified
Public Manager Consortium
as a Certified
Public
Manager. He has participated
in the Ohio Award for
Excellence program and has
served as an examiner three
times. In addition. he has
been involved in Emergency
Management Coordination
Jor the ·department and has
completed the Leadership
Academy through ODOT
Fulks currently resides in
. Columbus but is in the process
of moving back to the
Marietta vicinity. He is·the son
of Eddie and Mary Fulks of
Crown City in Gallia County.

.·.,

�...

•

NO

The·Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio .Vall'ey Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall mak.e 110 law respectitrg an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedonL
of speecl1, or of the press; or the riglrt of the ··
people peaceably to assemble, a11d to petition
the Govern_ment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

.

No·show
Don't use ~teryforfireworks
Dear Editor:
In Tuesday 's (May 24) Sentinel it said that in Middleport's
Council meeting held Monday night. Mr. Tum Dooley said
organizers are considenng Riverview Cemetery to set off the
July 4 tireworks.
Cemeteries are supposed to be sacred . quiet. dignified and
restful places to honor the dead .
This is the most disrespectful and inconstderate brainstorm
that" anyone has come up with . Also, this is a slap in the face
of everyone who has a loved one buried m Rt ve rvte w.
Keep the fireworks at the n ve r or at the parks ani! leave the
cemetery alone !
Dorothy A. McDaniel .
Middleport
(The names of 24 others who object were listed in the letter)

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, June 2, the 153rd day of 2005. There are
212 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: -On June 2. 1953, Queen
Elizabeth II of Britain was crowned in Westminster Abbey, 16
months after the death ·of her father, Kmg George VI.
Five years ago. President Clinton. visiting Germany, was
honored with the prestigtous International Charlemagne Prize .
at Aacpen Cathedral.
One year ago: Three foreign aid workers and two
Afghans were shot and killed in an ambush in north\\ estern Afghan,istan in an attack claimed by resurgent Tali ban
militants.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Milo O'Shea is 80. Actor Stacy
. Keach is 04. Rock mus1cian Charlie Watts is 64. Singer William
Guest (Gladys Knight &amp; The Pips) is 64. Actor Charles Haid is
62. Composer Marvin Hamlisch ts 61. Movie director Lasse ·
Hall strom is 59. Actor Jerry Mathers is 57. Actress Joanna
Gleason is 55. Actor Dennis Haysbert ("24") is 51. Comedian
Dana Carvey is 50. Actor Gary Gnmes is 50. Singer Merril
Bainbridge is 37. Rapper B-Real (Cypress Hill) is 35. Actress
Paula Cale is· 35. Actor-comedtan Wayne Brady is 33 Actress
Nikki Cox is 27. Actor Justin Long is 27. Actor Deon
Richmond is 27. Rhythm-and-blues singer lnsh Grinstead
(702) is 25. Rock musician Fabrizio Moretti (The Strokes) is
25. Country smger Dan Cahoon (Marshall Dyllon) is 22.
Thought fo r Today: ."Truth is stranger than fiction , but it ts
becau~e fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities: trutb isn't."
- Mark Twain ( 1835- 1910).
'

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 unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, ·not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our mam concern mall storieS. IS to be
accurate. II you k:now of an error tn a
story. call the newsroom at (740) 9922156

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

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed . Ext 14
•Reporter: Beth Sergent. EKt 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harns. EJCt. 15

OutakSe Sales: Brenda Davts, Ext 16
ClaasJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext 10

Circulation ·
District MQr.: Jason Patterson Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , E)(t• 12,

E·mall:
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.'32.26
.

64.20
'127. 11
1

..

Outside Meigs County
13 W&amp;eks .
. '53 55
26 Weeks
. . .s107 10

52 Weeks

PageA4

'21 4 21

Thursday, June 2 , 2005

As Senate returns to angry (normal,' what _will get done?
•

It certainly didn ·, tak~
lung for the U.S Sen.ue t(&gt;
get back lo lr:u.: ltous norma l
after a moment of goou feeling engendered b) the recent
filibuster deal.
Ju st three days ,later.
Democrab stopped the John
Bolton United Nauons nomin.ttion .tnd Republi eans
agam
were
shoutin g
"'obstructionism."'
You cou ld be dismayed by
the developmenl. but h.trdl y
surpriscu . After all , a
uoughty band or just 14 se nators - seven of each party
- sa'veo 'the body from ·
instllu ll ona l meltdown by
bl ocking Democrats· JUutctal
filibu sters.
the
GOP's
unprecedented imposttion of
majority rule as the means of
chi.lngmg Se[late ru les and a
retaliatorv ·
Democratic
blockage ·of most legi&gt;lative
action
The other 86 Senato rs
were prepared to let parli amentary di saster unfold.
show ing more loy,tlty to
thetr respecttve part tes and
tdeo lugical agendas than to
the Senate or the achievement of the public's business.
So. at the earltest opportumty - the ideologicallycharged Bolton llldller - the
Senate descended into gridlock again. with Democrats
usmg the filibuster to delay
the nomination to force the
Bush administration to . produce documents they ho pe
will cause the nominee's dtsqualification.
Only three Democrati c
moderate s - who also parttcipated in the "gang of 14"'
judi cial
agreeme m
departed from parti san fo rmation
·on
Bolton .
.Nominally, Democrats (and
a few Republicans) oppose
htm because he's a mean
guy. Actually, tt's because
he 's
a
Bush-CheneyRum sfeld foreign policy
hardliner
So, is there any reason to
think
Democrat s
and
Republicans can cooperate
on such issues as energy,
immigration. Soctal Security
and health care 0
Well , a little. While 86
Senators weren' t party to the

mination to block practically can'1 debate Social Securi ty,
immigration and the war in
everythmg he stands for.
Rep ubltca n · leaucr Bill Iraq without having arguFrist (Tenn .) not onl y'go t his ments ."
He auded that ''askmg senjob with White House supators
why they're arguing is
Morton , port. but also i&gt;. nmn tng fo r.
d
premlent and " eager to like asking Johnn y Cash
Kon racke curry favor with his party's why he 's singing. That' s
what we do. Nobody should
conservatt ve activ i ~t base.
A biparti san · Cen tr ist be · surpri sed that we have
Co,tlllion ex tsts - and it differences of opi nion, but
May 23 ag!.eement on judi- includes many of the ''Gang they should be disappointed
nal nominations, many of ·uf 14"' - bLII as Sen. Ben if, afte r we argue for awhile.
them ex pre"ed reltet • Nelson. D-Neb. one of the we are unable to form coalieven JOY - that i.t was le,tders of the 14, obse rved. tions and solve these problCtKhed ,ut'd rea li ze~ that it n's more of a discussion lems."
Ah;xander doesn' t think
saved the Senate from disas- group than an action group
ter.
It hasn · 1 act ually taken much of formal coahiions.
Also. 11\ a fact of Senate 'command of any legislattvc "If you try to create an tdeolife that 'i rtuall y nothing slluation since the early days logica l group to do that, It
unpurtant can get done with- of the first Bush admi nistra- defeats the purpose," he told
out a measure ot biparti san- tton. whe n ex-Se n Joh n me .' '"You be~ome . 'the cenship. This year, Democrats ' Breau x. D-La. , and Sen: trists' or "the moderates."'
Things get done, he said,
have cross-ed the Ime 111 sub-' Lmcoln C hafee, R-R.l ..
st,mtial numbers to pass combined to limit Bush 's when "four or fi ve senators
class actton and bankruptcy first tax cut from $1.6 tnl- sit around and talk about,
say, illegal immigration and
reform leg islation and a !ton to $1 3 tn llion.
bighway bill. '
As Sen Lamar Alexander, come up with ditfere nt ideas
The same· has ha ppened in R- Tenn .. ' sa id m an inter- even though they may be of
the House. a body that's view, the seven Republicans different parties."
The unfortunate reality is,
almost totall y nmed m parti- who we re pa11 of the Ga ng
sanshi p. In a rare example of - of 14 are "not an organt za- he said. "there's almost no
Republicmls joinin g with lion and aren't trymg to be opportunity for that. The
Democrats to buck the GOP an organ ization. They were only times we have regular
majority. the House also looking for a way to·defuse bipartisan ga therings is at
breakfasts
on
passed legJS iation to lift an int~actable problem . They prayer
Prestdent Bush's limits on avoided a tra m wreck Their ' Wednesdays and Thursdays
on
codel s,"
federal fund ing of embryo n- hope, and most o.f our ca u- and
ic stem cell research .
cus', is that we can get back Con-gressional · del egations
that make foretgn inspection
When the ·'gang of 14" to normal here."
briefl y took control of
Alexander. even though he trips.
"The rest of the time,
Senate and avoided. the so- was not one of the 14,
calle.d "nuclear" standoff. mspired 1ts work with a you'r6 in team meetings or
there was a brief flurry of speech March 9 in which he policy lunches. You never
talk that perhaps moderates pronused not to filibu ster have time to swap ideas with
of both parties could unify any JUdtcial nominee and anyone on the other team."
Nelson,.who agrees there's
and take commanu on other suggested that if other senaissues.
tors made the same pledge, too little inter-party contact,
It 's a tant alizing thought, the "nuclear ontion" dispute told me he hopes nevertheand theoreti cally poss ible would be solved.
less that the judiciary agreein the Senate,' but it's not
The io(ea was taken up by ment could engender "cooplikely to happen. For one Democratic Sens Mark eration, collaboration and
th ing. par ty leaders, the Pryor (A rk .) and Nelson, mutual trust on other
.
"
people who control the who led Democrats among tssues.
Senate age nda, are totally the 14. Sen. Trent Lott, R"We've go ne from the
represenlattve of their parti - Mi ss., tntitially led the nuclear cycle to the spin
san caucuses.
Republicans, but was pres- cycle. That 's where we are
Democratic leader Harry sured by homestate conserv- now. I hope we can go o.n to
,Reid (Nev.), despite a mod- atives into droppin g the the business cycle."
erate demeanor and the cau- effort , which was picked up
The first test, lie told me
!lunary expe nence of hts by Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) before it happened; was the
predecessor. Sen. Tom
Alexander, in an interview. Bolton nomination. It turned
Daschle' s (S.D.) defeat fo r sa id "tt' s unreali stic to out that Senate machine
obstructing President Bush's· expect' that we're not going · ground to a hall.
agenda, has repeatedly to have big arg uments.
(Morton Kondracke ts
expressed - in word and We're here for that. Our pol - executive editor of Roll Call,
deed - his party colleagues' itics are about big, important the newspaper of Capitol
revulsion at Bush and deter- conflicts of principle. You Hill.)

The Iraq war debate .slipping into silliness
.

.

Wit~ respect to the Bush
admini stration 's ''war on terror," our administration
appears to have entered the
Mont y Python stage of
debate, where extreme silhGene
ness· trumps all competing
Lyons
values.
I refer to the inspired
scene tn "Ltfe of Brian" in
which a cabal uf toga-clad
,
revolutionaries styling itself out Newsweek: 'Newsweek
the
"Judean
People's hid behind anonymou s
Liberation Front" meets m a sources, which by their own
Roman coliseum to argue . admi ssion do not withstand
strategy.
scrutiny. Unfortunately, they
h 's time to confront the cannot retract the damage
real enemy. Poor Brian, the they have done to this nation
amiable dunce who keeps or those that were viciously
being mistaken for the mes- attacked by those false allesiah, obligingly shouts an gations.'
anti-Roman slogan, only to
" It was almost as if VIe
be · coolly informed that the Newsweek. fi asco
had
real enemy is, in fact, the occurred 111 a vacuum, or in
"People's Liberation Front an alternate reality, where
of Judea."
the Iraq war, fought over
As a send-up of 1960's non-existent weapons of
left-wing factionalism , it's mass destructton, had never
priceless.
occurred."
Meanwhile, the same
So now we're doing it all
over again, except this time newspaper's
estimable
the crackpot radicals appear Walter Pincus, in a story
to be the White House and unaccountabl y buried on
its allies. (It doesn't help that page A26, reported that back
so many of the administra- before the war, both the CIA
lion's princtpal figures and German tntelligence
appear to have been driven sources
hand ling
. bonkers by Jane Fonda-style "Curveball" warned that the
radicals during the Vietnam Iraqi defector was at best
era.) Instead, the admmistra- "problematical." Nothing he
lion spent last week' attack- satd could be confirmed. He
ing not AI Qaeda or Iraqi was eventuall y determined
insurgents, but the real- . to be a fabricator peddling
enemy: Newsweek mag a- .tall tales.
zine and pusillammous
Contrary to the White
Americans who doubted the · House Ime that the president
wisdom of mvading Iraq l !! wa misled by poor intellibegin with.
gence. Pincu' said that
Washin gton Post colum- "many U.S. intelligence ana.nist Terry Neal found it ly'ts were internally ques"mind-boggling listening w tioning almost every major
Defense Secretary Donald piece of prewar' mtelligence
H Rumsfeld, who used · about (Saddam) Hussein's
information from a now dis- alleged weapons programs."
C·redited' source known as
Elsewhere 111 the news.
'Curveball' to make the case The New York Times broke
for war against Iraq, calling yet another story about an

under-trained and poorly detainees.
supervised group of soldiers
Then there was the story
who allegedly decorated of former NFL star Pat
their tent with a Confederate Tillman, a genuine American
flag and called themselves hero who gave up a $4.5
the "Testosterone G;!ng ," million contract to defend
sys tematica lly beating and his country after 9/11. After
torturing prisoners to death he was killed by his own
at Bagram Air Force Base in troops in a tragic combat
Afghanistan. Even worse, blunder onJa mountainside in
Army investigators believe, Afghanistan, the Pentagon
some victims were innocent hid the actual circumstances
civilians caught up in the of his death from his own
chaos of war. It's estimated family for many week s,
that 85 percent of Bagram seemingly fearful that the
deta inees were released facts would render his sa~Ti­
without charges.
fice meaningless.
Atrocities happen in all
'111ey realized," Tillman's
wars. Two things, however, embittered father told The
make the reported American Washington Post, "that their
transgressions
at recruiting efforts were going
Guantanamo', Abu Ghraib to go to hell in a 'handbasket
and Bagram Air Force Base if the truth about his death
particularly appalling: first, got out. They blew up their
the way they appear to con- poster boy."
firm everythmg Islamist proWith all due respect, I
pagandists say about the think the elder Tillman· and
"crusaders' contempt for the Pentagon are both misIslam": second, that they . taken. His son is no less a
proceeded directly from the hero for the tragic circumadministration 's
country stances of his death, and
club tough-guy rhetoric.
most Americans are grown
Classic psychology exper- up enough to handle the
Iments ha ve repeatedly truth. Hardly anybody .
shown that, absent stringent opposed the mission into
discipline among their cap- Afghanistan, and few do
tors, isolated groups ren- today.
dered help.less and defined
What they can· t handle,
as the "other" often fall prey and what's forcing the Bush
to sadism and brutality - a administmtion and its supphenomenon
hardly porters into increasingly
unknown to U.S. military absurd postures, is their
authorities. Instead of proper growing awareness of tile '
training, however, inexperi- comprehensive
disaster
enced American Reservists caused by tbeir misguided
were encouraged to treat the obsession with Iraq and the
captives as '"terrorists" to propaganda campaign that
whom the· president naively got us there.
determined the Geneva
(Arkansas
DemocrarConventions did not apply.
Gazette columnisr Gene
In effect, if not intent, Lyons i• a natiortlll magaGeorge W. Bush and zine award winner and coAttorney General Alberto author of "The Hunting of
Gon.q~les, who signed off on
the President "' (S1. Manin :r
memos validating torture for Press, 2000). You can e-mail
"'enemy
combatants," Lyons at geneiJOns2@shcdeclared open season on global.net.)

'

Thursday, June 2,

2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Local Briefs

· Kimberly Jo 'Sissy' Morrow

;

The Dail y Sentinel • Page As

,

SWCD day camp
planned

Shtiners Hospil,tl wtll he held Friday
and Saturday at Powells. Dollar General
'
in Pomeroy dnd The Mllrkct pl,I&lt;C (forPOINT PLEASANT - Kimberly Jo "S issy" Morrow. 58.
me rl y V,wgha n's) 111 M1dd lepor1.
of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va .. dteu Tuesday, May 31, 2005, at the
Sh1ine
rs wtll he loc,lled outsllk the
.Meigs Sotl and Water Conservatt on
Pleasant Valley Hospital in r.,int Pleasant.
CHES HIR E - The Ohio Department
bu
sinesses
from 8 am . to 6 p m to
ol Transportal ton District I0 announces
She was an emplo~ee of the Mason ' County Boart.l of• Dtstnct is spot1sorin g a Watershed Day r e~.:~t ve donal mn:-..
EducatiOn as a bus dnver. a consultant of the Longabcrgcr Camp June 15 and 16 ne.tr Rutland . A
that SR 554 will be closed hegmning
$
10
reg
istration
tee
per
chi
ld
or
$15
l'or
Company, a graduate ot Point Pleasant High School class oi
Tuesday, JLtne 7, to allow tor a hndgc
1964 and wa~ a Eucharistic Minister and member of the two ch ildren wtl l help cover cqst of
rerlaccment.
lunch and snacks for each day. The camp
Sacred Heart Catholic Chu rch of Pomeroy
The closure wi ll be located one-halt
ludes ha nds on nature activittes. hikREEDSVILLE - The Eastern Alumni mi le west ol County Ruau 101 !Africa
She was born Jan . 10, f947 in Mason COLmt y. dau ghter of inc
ing. an d fu n l e~~ull .'\ on clcLin ,water and Asso~illlion banquet and dance v.i ll be
the. late Tr~cy Robet1 and Helen Lou ise (Johnson)·S impkins.
na lural resou rce con"ervat10n. Those he ld at Eastern Elememary School cate- Road) and one-hall mil'e east of County
In addttton to her parents, she was preceded in death by interesteu
Road 99 !Ward Road) _approxtmately six
in attend ing should call 992three brothers, Samuel V. Stmpkins, Gene Simpkins and Tracy 4282 or stop by the SWCD office before tonum on JunJ:. II.
Dmner and busine-.;s meeting \\till be mtle, \\CSI of .the village ol Cheshire .
Lee Simpkms.
4:30 on Friuay.
held from 6 to 7:30 p. m . .wtth a &lt;.lance Thts dosure " an llctpated 10 be 111 ettect
She is survived by her husband. James E. Morrow of Point
open to the publ ic !rom 8 to II p.m. Cost lor 45 days
Pleasant: three sons, Guy (Jodt) Morrow of Lawrenceburg.
Motorists may use the following oflt of the dinner is S I0 with annual dues ol
Ind., . Bill (Shelh) Morrow of Granger, Ind. , and Bryan
SS tor alumni . One boy and one girl grad- cial posted detour· SR 7 to U.S 35 to SR
(Stephanie) Morrow of Point Pleasan t; one brother, Patrick
uate of Eastern wil l be awarded a $250 160 back to SR ~54
Jason (Pam) Stmpkins of Mason, W.Va.; and stx grandch il Fo1 a complete \!sting ol all Oh10 roud
scholarshtp Coimibutions to the· fund
dren, Chelcie, Brandon, D ~trian . Collin , JoLyn n and Kye larPOMEROY
The
annual
Shn
ners
n1.1y
be
sent
to
Geo
rge
Collms,
5'1
049
clos
ures. v1sit our web s 1te a t:
Morrow
tablotd
sale
to
raise
funds
fur
the
Rice
Run
Road,
Reed'Ytlle,
45772.
www ~buc k eye tratfi c.org.
Mass. of Chnstian Burial will take place II a m. Friday, June
3 at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy wtth Father
Walter Heinz and Father Frank Neville officiating Bunal will
respecuve attend ing were as Graham Allen,
Margie Cu ndtll. Anderson. SC.
follow in the Sacred Heart Cemetery in Pomeroy Vtstlation
follows:
Stobart Wolfe, Patty Roush
I %9. o Becky
Say re
will be 6-9 p.m. Thursday, June 2, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
19J3:
Harold Ro~sh , Pape. Karen Ho lter Werry, He nsler. Racme
in Point Pleasant, with a vigi l service beginning at 8:45 p.m
Elkv iew. W.Va .
from Page A1
Mary Eu ler Hill . Don Beeg le.
1971. Barbara Bass Koker.
1e Rac ine· Syr&lt;~c u se: Don Smnh. Gary
1935:
Mary . Loui ,e Sue Buck Bcene'-'
" '
Ei!!ht sc holatships we re McDaue Ours, Hun'tmgton, Carol Deem Willman, Bethel Smllh. Racine.
~
W Ya. Ei leen Roush Buck. Park, Pa: Robert Lewts.
I'!72
Jo hn Eichinger.
by
the
Alumni
Racine.
awarded
'
High land. Md.;
Beaufort.
S.C.
MIDDLEPORT - Hobart M. Darst. 81, Middleport, passed Assoc tation. A $700 scholarHaze l Hilldore
1938:
1961: Sue Stob,ut Rt cc.
I'!74
Cherri
Bass
away on May 31 , 2005, at the Ohio Vetenins Home m sht p was give n to Nicki McKel vey, Portland.
Joyce
Parsons
White.
Racipe
.
ha
rt.
Lqmg10
n:
Patsy
Rine
Georgetown,
Tucker, a 2005 graduate who
1940 : Orville Brooks ,
1962:
Alan ' Graham. Proffitt Corneii. ' Syr&lt;~cuse.
He was born on Aug. 3, 1923, in Gallia Coum y. son of the wtl l be attending Ohio Sayre, Pomeroy : Ehzabeth Syracuse.
1975
Paul
Stmpson,
.lale Ray and Irene Daniel Darst. He was a gradu ate of Un iversit y, while
$200 Cozart Willford, Racine.
1963:
Jess
Wood.
.
Jeff
Cit
de. Long
Portsmouth
we tit to Sma
L
Middleport High Sehoul. He was an Army Air Corps veteran awards
·
Coolv
ille;
Janice
Sm1th
Bonom; Don Bush. Howard
, Rachel Cottnll,
1942: Martha ou Beegle,
of World War II and received a Purple Heart for combat ser- Cammarata
As hton Brown , Brittan"· Ruth Carnahan Simpson, Salser. Racine: Kay Willforu Buudy Ervin. Racine.
., vice in Germany. He also served in the U. S. Air force until
J
Paul Beegle, Racine.
Graham. Syrac use.
1977 · Davtd Bass. Lt sa
he retired in 1969. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge Phtl son, Ash ley Roush , Bryan
1943 : Mryna Brewer
1965: Danny Proffitt. . Allen Woods. Sy~acuse; Carl
Close, Waterford.
of Middleport and a member of the Middleport Church of Sm ith and Ryan Smith.
Johnston. Port l,tnd.
John
Christ.
The banquet opened with
1945: Nora Wolfe Lewis, Lancaster;
Dexter;
Jim
Hamm.
1978: Larry Fisher. Racm'e.
In addition to his parents, he was, preceded by brothers, Larry Fisher ex tending a wei- Point Pleasant, w. Va.; Mrytle Blanchester: Garv Wal~er.
I'!79: Daria White Tucker.
come and gav ing the invoca- Easterday Holter, Rac ine: Nancy
Kennelh Darst&lt;md Delmar Darst, and a sister, Ann Biron.
Parker • Grueser, Racine.
He is survived by a sister, Mary Kathleen Williams, tion before members of the· William Roush,- Portland ; Donna Dailey Watson. David
198·3: Tonya Sa lser Hunter,
Middleport; a sister-m-law, Helen Darst; sister-In-law, Helen SHS Class of 2006 served the Audrey Hoback Boichyn, St Hensler. David Fox , Racine. Racine; Cmdv Evans Brown ,
Clatr
Shores
Mi ch.: Linda Eichinger Collin s. Racine.
Darst, Middleport ; aeveral nieces and nephews: and several dinner.
·
Shirley
Johnson
reiported
Blondena
Taylor
Rainer,
great nieces and great nephews
Parkersburg. W.Va. Roger
Ct ndy
1984·
Allen
Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday, June 3, 2005 , at on the Alumm Assoctatton Racine.
Sa} re. Groveport . Linda Johnston, Portland.
1946· Btlly Joe Spencer-, Lipscomh
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport, Bunal will be in Gravel finance s incl uding the scholEastman.
1985· Robert S Taylor,
arshtp
fund
and
then
called
Pomeroy;
Herman Carson , Pomeroy: Suzanne Price Racine.
Hill ,Cemetery and military services will be conducted graveside. Friends may call on Thursday, June 2. from 6 to 8 p.m. the roll of classes present. Jr., Coo lville; Delores Miller Commarata, Pau·la Sayre,
19H6· R e becc~ VanMeter
The class of 1965 was given Fisher, Galhpohs; Elizabeth Portland.
at the funeral home.
Harry
Bush. Zuspan. Mason. W.Va; Gma
On-line· condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- special recogniton fur having Ftsher Prottitt. Belpre.
Molino, Fla.: Y1c10r Durs t, Nance Roush. Racine.
17 members present, the
1949:
Carro ll
Cleek, Richmond.
homes.com
Va.,
Steve
1989 Rebecca Lave nder
largest attenuance of a smgle Columbus ; Howard Ervin. Cleland. Houston. Texas:
Matson.
Racme
dass. Second largest class Racine.
Fbher,
Syrac
use.
1990·
Doug Lavende r,
Gordon
1950: ' Ruth
Bradford
represented was the class of
1966: Gary Willford. Larry Syracuse.
1960 with 15 members.
Frank. Rac ine:
Robert Circle,
Thomas Theiss. Gary
199 1: Norman Matson,
MASON - The family of Kenny Cooke, lifelong area resHarold Roush was honored M'll
pennyan.
N .y .;
1 er,
E'
ans.
Linda
Adams
Denny
Syrac
use.: Juni e Beegle
ident, announce a celebration of life memorial reception for being the o ld est graduate Barbara Pierce, Aaron Wolfe,
Chery
l
Spencer
Evans,
Mavnard.
Racme.
Tuesday evening, June 7 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Riverside Golf there, a member of the class Racine: Paul Marr, Pomeroy.
1992. Teresa Lee Lavendar.
Racine.
Club in Mason .
of 1933, and other early grad195 1: Ge ralu Simpson, Proffitt.
1
967:
Robert
Gruese
r.
Svracuse
His many friends are invited and encourageo to attend . This uates recognized were Mary Racine.
"1998: Nathan' Hensler.
ine; Sherman Cundiff.
event will follow a private family graveside service earlier in LoUise McDade Ours and
1952:
Victor
Wolfe. Rac
Anderson,
SC:
Darrel
Wolfe.
the day.
Et leen Buck of the class of Racine: Dora Birch Lipps. St. Loui s. Mo.: An ~ a Rae me,
2003: Kurt .Crouch. Rae me
He passed away m February in Ormond Beach, Florida after 1935.
Mary
Virginia Torch; Marilyn Brewer Beall , Houdas helt Moore, Htckorv:
2005:
Ashton Brown,
a recent relocation. He will be mi ssed by his many tnends Easterday. Class of 1936. and Columbus.
Clifford
Ashley,
Racme.
·
Bryan
Smith
, Rya n Smith.
and family. Survivors include his wife Jean, daughter Conme Hazel Hilldure McKelvey, · 1953: Geo rge Thetss,
I 968: . Lenora
Bass Ntcki Tucker. Rac~el Cottrill.
· (Don) Pullin and son Tom (Kim), both of Ormond Beach. Class of 1938.
Belpre :
Joann
Brewer Offenberger. Torch , Debbie Ashley
Roush. Racme: Sara
brother Bill (Rosemary) of Pomeroy and sister Charlotte
Becky VanMeter Zuspan Daniell, Canal Winchester:
Hubbard
·
Offenberger.
Cammarata.
Portland~
(Danny) Yonker of Mason, three grandchildren and one great- recognized Shei la Young Lou Dan Smith. Racine; Libby
grandchild. Brothers Robert, Bernard, Donald and John also who trave led from New Diddle Fisher. Racine; Alice S}racuse: Michele Spencer Bnuany Philson. Syracuse.
Mexico to attend the banquet. Fisher Wamsley. Pomeroy.
preceded him in death.
1954: Shirley Stobart
Born in Graham Station, West Virginia to J.C. and Hattie Howard Ervin was recognized
Cook, he graduated from Wahama High School and worked as the graduate present who Roberts, Lexington ; Shirley
44 years as a Riverboat Chief Engineer with DRAVO had the most children grad ual- Powell Shtvely, Col umbus;
Corporation, Pittsburgh, Pa., before retiring in 1985. During ing from Racine/Southern, Norman Roush, Charleston.
his lifetime, he also had interests in real estate. property man- seven. Four past valedictori- W.Va: Joyce Hart Manuel ,
agement and insurance . He was a member of the Mason ans and several fonncr senior Racine: Harold Circle, Larry
VFW, Ri verside Golf Club, Masonic Lodge, and Eagles Club class presidems were recog-. Wolfe. Jane Gilmore Beegle,
nized and all were presented Racine.
with flowers.
1955: Delores Krae uter
Gordon Fisher, retiring · Wolfe.
Phylli s
Adams
Southern Hi gh School princi- O' Brien , Shirley Gtllilan
BIDWELL - Oma Daphne Powers Stinson. &amp;4, of Bidwell. pal, was honored and giv.en a Simpson , Paul E. Hams,
passed away Tuesday, May 31, 2005, at St. Mary 's Hospital in gift from the Alumni Board Lillian
Powell
Weese ,
Huntington, W.Va.
for his assistance with plan- Suzanne
Proffitt
Bush,
She was born March 6, 1921 , in Dwell, Ky., to the late ning the reunions for the past Racine: Dorothy &lt;:;haney
Eugene and Oma Powers Pruitt.
12 vears.
Stewart, Gahanna: Barbara
An auction conducted by Sayre Will is. Albany. ·
Daphne was married for 42 years to Clarence Hickory
Stinson, who preceded her in death.
Dan Smnh was held and
1956: Robert E. Beeg le,
She was a homemaker. Daphne was a beloved wife. mother, mi.ed several hundred dol- Racine:
James Cundiff.
grandmother and great grandmother.
Jars for the scholarship lund. Syracuse: Don R. Hill.
Surviving are her children, Fred and Phyllis Joy Stinson of Also adding money 10 the Racine: Janet Beegle Roush.
Bidwell (Porter Community). Jim and Peggy Stinson of scholarship fund was the sell- Charleston . W.Va .
Jacksonville, Aa., Judy Baisden of Turtle Creek. W.Va., Joe mg of tickets for a basket of
1957:
Dwain
Sayre.
and Ida Stinson of Clinton, Ohio, Ted and Rayanna Stinson of food items made in this area. McCutchenville ;
Don
Gallipolis, D. Paul and April Stinson of Cheshire. and Trudy Lisa Allen Woods drew Johnson. Portland; Robert'
and Gary Baisden of Vale, N.C. ; grandchildren, Robin and names for door prizes of Euler, Elkview. W.Va.
Mike Pasquale, Tammy and Toby Hudson. Juhe Brown. flowers contributed by tile
1958:
Hazel
Stobart
James and Traci Stinson, Todd and Beth Batsden. Jay and Lt sa local greenhouse gro\\&lt;ers.
Dudding, Racine .
Stinson, Jessie and · Chasity Stinson, Carl Stinson. Luke
To conclude the evening.
1959: Nadine Roush Euler.
Stinson, Cindy and Ke vin Causey. Heather and Mac Cann. Larry Fisher led in the school Elkytew; Shirley McKelve)
Steve Stinson and Debra Jarvis: and great-grandchildren. song and Roger Sayre gave Johnson. Portland. Ronnie
Salser. Racine: Arlene Thetss
McKinzie Brown, Jordon and Faith Stinson, Mihla and Alex the benediction.
Pasquale, Ashley and Eli Hudson. Holly, Evan and Patrick
Members of ~he Alumni Wallace. Delaware , Mary
Stinson, Christian McCarty, Isabell• Causey. and Emma Board planning the event Cundiff Lavender. Syracuse.
included Shirley Johnson.
1960: Louise Fisher Smith.
Jarvis.
She is also survived by a sister. Gladys Vance of Peach Lisa Woods, Bob Grueser, Baltimore; Mary Hams
Creek, W.Va.; a brother-in-law and ~ ister-in-law. Claude and Larry Fisher. Junie Maynard. Houck. Parkersburg. W.Va:
Ruth Stinson of Peach Creek, W.Va.: and a sister-in-law. Ltllie Dennis Wolfe. Becky Zuspan Joyce Carson Rice. Roanoke.
Mae Spencer of Pecks Mill, W.Va.
and Alan Graham. Gordon Va.: Sheila Young Lott.
· She was preceded in death by her parents: her. hu sban~. Ftsher also
Carlsbad, N.M.: Mary Stobart
Clarence Hickory Stinson, on May 3, 1980; a stster, Sylvta I Graduates
from
their Cowdery. Long Bottom: Lois
Jean Kimmell; and four brothers, Delbert, Harry. Charles and I _____ __;_~------'------'---c-'-

State Route 554 to
close for 45 days

Alumni reunion set

Shriners' tabloid
sale set

Racine

Hobart M. Darst

113""·

Kenny Cooke

Oma Powers Stinson

Timex Watches 30% OFF
Extra Special Friday Only
OFF
Cold _Pop 20oz. ·bottle
ONLY nr;

Vitamins Complete Stock
.30%0FF

Ice Cream bars, sandwiches
and cups
30%0FF

Carl .
'
·
Services will be l I a.m. Saturday, June 4, 2005, a'. the Willis
Funeral' Home in Gallipolis, with Pastor D. Paul Sunson olltciating. Burial will follow in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Fnday, June 3. 2005.
from 4 to 8 p.m.
Pallbearers will be her children.
Please visit www.willisfunerafhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

Deaths

1

.

pomerov
·
1
ftom Page A1

Rock Streets.
Other community projects
that ranked high on the li't
according to the surveys
were sidewalk repain. fire
equipment and facilities.
storm drainage improve-

ments, improved water
facilities. tmpro' ed sew~r
facilitie' and park' and
recreat 1on.
· The deadline for the CDBG
is Jul y 15 . Musser does not
expect 10 hear 1f the SJOO.OOO
grant was approved until
October and SaJd that worlt
00 the projects mentioned in
the survey could begin
almost immediately if the
appbcation IS approved .

PROUD 10 BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
MIDDLEPORT - Memorial services for Paul Le'lie
Johnson, 70, of Middleport. wbo died Monday will be he!" at
II a.m~ Saturday a the Middleport First Baptist Church. The
Rev. Mad Morrow will officiate.
·

The Daily Sentinel
Slbsailie tod&lt;rJ • 992-21.55 • -mydaily5entinet.com

Candy Bars 2!79r;

Hival Cigarettes
$18.50 carton EVERYD~Y!

KetHN!tltMcCullough, R. Ph.
Chor1es Rltlle, R. Ph.

Prescription Ph. 992- 2955
1 12 East Main Street
Pomet fro/, Ohio

HOURS

Mon - Fti Bam - 8pm
~t~m-Spm
:xm. CLOSED

�•

1ngs
&amp; is
Festival

The Gold Wings arid Ribs Festival is open to the general public and all motorcycle enthusiasts. No matter what
you ride we invite you to join us for a goo~ time and some great food. The Gold Wings and Ribs· Festival is a family
oriented, alcohol free event. The major source of funding to put on the festival is supplied via sponsorship by local
b.usinesses. We hope you enjoy your visit with us and if you have any questions or suggesions pease -don't
· hesitate to let us know.
·
•
•

&lt;

·,

.

. •Pomeroy, Ohio
.

..

-

'

Friday, June 3rd, &amp; Saturday, June 4th
.

®
®
! OHIO

®

Pomeroy Parking Lot ·.··.

'

'

SATURDAY. JUNE 4TH

• Ride the Ohio River on the Spirit of South Charleston Sternwheeler
• Tour a working AEP River Transportation Towboat
,.
• Guided Motorcycle Tour ·along the Ohio River ·
.
• Motorcycle Pinstripper on site
. • Friday Evening Motorcycle Light Parade from Pomeroy thru New Haven, WV
·
• Bike Show includes 4 classes of Gold Wings and an open class
·
• Lots of local Artisans
· • Country Chome Motorcyles Parts &amp;.Accessories
. .
.
· . • Riverfront Honda new model display .
.
.
.• Honda of Jackson new model display and motorcycle parts and accessories
• Saturday Evening Motorcycle Light Parade from Pomeroy/Middleport
·
.
·
thru Racine
·

And

.

.

a whole lot ~o.re, come and join us ....

.

'

~

Downing-Childs
Mullen-Musser
INSURANCE .
.

· 992-3381 • Pomeroy, OH

"·

Computer Sales and Service
CPU, hie.

WEAVING STITCHES

CROW&amp;CROW
.

Meigs County Chamber
992-5505
. Meigs Co. Economic Development
992-3034
Meigs County Tourism
992-2239 .

106 W. Main Street~ Pomeroy, OH

·

Specializing In Home &amp; Business Networking

740-992-1702

.We have decorative plastic basket sleeves

ATTORNEYS AT LAW

for your outside landscaping
'

992-6059 • Pomeroy, OH

'

~ tni9ift.al deat9•a euated

44'4

Pomeroy, OH

740-992-1135
"We're here to help" ·

H

DE,TWILLER
FISHER FUNERAL
.
!rueValue
LUMBER
·HOMES .·

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

&amp;34 E. MAl" STREET • POMEROY, OH

992-5444 • Pomeroy, OH
· 992-5141 • Middleport, OH

992~2955 . • Porneroy,OH ·

992-5627 · • Middleport, OH

'

110 Court Street

cpulnc@frognet.net

Hrs; Monday . Saturday 9-5; 's unday - C losed

THE SHOE PLACE/
LOCKER219

........,.,..,. . . . .

THESE FINE BUSINESSES

'
992-2138 • Pomeroy, OH
985-3385 • Tuppers Plains, OH
446-2265 • Gallipolis; OH
304-773-6400 • Mason, WV

992-3785 • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY

·Your Bq,nk for Life.

.

• 9:00 am - Registration Opens
• 9:00 am · Rockin Reggie spinnin tunes on the main stage
• 9:30 am - Bike Show Registration Opens
• 9:30 am - Art in the Park opens
• 10:00 am - Food Vendors open
•10:30 am- AEP Towboat open for tours .
• 11 :30 am - Country Road 5 on the Riverfront Amphitheatre
• 1:00 pm - Bike Show Judging Starts
• 3:00pm - The Prescription on the Riverfront Amphitheatre
• 3:00 pm - Guided Tour Leaves the Festival Parking Lot (tour is approx. 2
hrs)
• 6:00 pm - Shhbang on the Riverfront Amphitheatre
·. • 7:00pm- Bike Show, Art in the Park, Ohio'S Best Ribs Wi pners
announces
·
'
·
·
~ 9:00 pm - Staging for Light Parade through Pomeroy, Syracuse, Racine,
Middleport, OH
10:00 pm- light Parade Refreshments at the Fetival Parking Lot

• 10:00 am- Registration Opens
• 11:00 am- Food vendors open for lunch
• Noon - AE:P Towboat open for tours .
•12:00 -1:00pm- Julie Inboden on the Riverfront ..
Amphitheatre
• 2:00- 3:00pm- Julie Inboden on the Riverfront Amphitheatre
• 3:30 pm- Joey Wilcoxen on the. Riverfront Amphitheatre ·.
• 5:30- 6:00pm- Dwight Icenhower on the Riverfront
Amphitheatre
• 9:00 ·pm - Staging for Light Parade through Pomeroy, OH ,
Mason &amp; New Haven, WV (Leaves@ 9 :15pm).
• 10:00 pm- Light Parade Refreshments .at the Festival Parking
Lot (Ice Cr~am)

Farmers Bank

Don Tate Motors
992-6614 • P.o meroy, OH

L£_,.

175 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH
740-992-7028

740~992-1771 .
credit @c reditxpress.com www.cred.itxpress.com

BROGAN WARNER
INSURANCE

Insurcn .:e M ode S1mple
KOMZ, AUTO, Llr£ 0 Ks:JU.'I'K
FLOOD, Sill zz•s I Fll KOJifDS
aVSilNESS

~~. -h~
tW

;

992-6687 • Pomeroy,OH

L"f.J

:ls- ..... ;n, ·

..., •

s-· "'--'~•

740-992-6677

•• • Co.UI 51. • P o.n••oy

Guardroii, Fence
1 &amp;SignErection

Phone:(740}992~6451

~,

, ........ PDK --.___.
,
/ CONSTRUCTION-...__ .
INC. .

740-992-2507
Daily Specials

,

'

Ingels Jewelry.
·&amp; Picture Gallery

St. Rt. 124 ~yracuse, OH

Fox:(740}992-3074

·vALLEY.
LUMBER
.
992-66.1 f • · Middleport, OH

Riverway Cafe'

-----

1\Sl R.\\CE Pl.l"S .\GE\CIES. Inc. I

'

· 949-2210 • Racine, ·OH
992-6333 • Syracuse~ OH.

518 Main Street • Pomeroy, QH 45769

100 E. Main Street .
Pomeroy, Ohio

7 40-992-7696.

Antiques, Gifts, .
· ·

Folkiut

estaurant

. MFrom Our Family to Yours." .
Hartinger ParkWay • Middleport, OH • (740) 992-5248

356 East Main • Pomeroy, OH •'(740) 992-6292 '

203 W. Main Street • McArthur; OH • (740) 596-9349

HOME NATIONAL
Gl
BANK
'
FDi"
i
----

INGELS
CARPET
.

HARTWELL HOUSE

820 Jackson ·Pike • Gallipolis, OH • (7 40) 446-3.837

112-IQI

. ./'--"

•c.-

Middleport, OH
740 ... 992~2635

CaD in or Cli!TYOUl

. Come efll!!k Ollf our ,., &amp;lllnrnet ll'llhu

M- T-W-F 9 - 6; Thurs- 9:00 - 1:30; Sot. 9:00- 2:00

MITCHS'
.PRODUCE &amp; FLOWERS
Middleport, OH

All flats &amp; hanging baskets

$8.95 .

.BAUM LUMBER
. 985-3301
Chester,,Ohio

P.O. Box683
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S 769- 0683
. I

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Page AS ·· Th~ Daily Sentinel,

Thursday, June

www. mydailysentinel.com

2, 2005

The Daily ·Sentinel ·

INSIDE
Strong field headed to Memorial, Page 82
Twins scalp Indians, Page 82
Gonzalez headed back to DL, Page 82
N8A Playoffs, Page 118

.
'

NEws-ABOUT
SENIOR--CITIZENS IN MEIGS COUNTY

Bl

'.

Thursday, June 2, 2005

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
· The Senior Nutrition Meal is served Daily at 11 :45

JLin•05

'.

Menu is Subject to Change

Prep Schedule
Friday's game

For

'
Oven Fried Chicken
Oven Browned Potatoes'
Peas
Cantaloupe Wedge
Biscuit

State

Tnoc:k oncl Flotd .
(et:t Jesse Owens Stadium.

M~t

~

COlumbus), 9:30a.m.

Ham loaf
Baked Sweet Potato
Boiled Cabbage
CornBread '
Banana

Pot Roast Beef
Boiled-Potatoes &amp; Carrots
Broceoli!Caulitlower
Raspberry Jell-0
W/Pears
Wheat Bread

Saturday's game ·
Tnoc:k ancl Flotd
State Meet jat Je;sse Owens Stadium,
Columbus), 9 a.m

· Friday's game
Lancaster JV at Feeney Sennett (at
Me+gs H.S.), 6 p.m.

Sausage Gravy &amp; Biscuit
Hash Browned Potatoes

Chicken Salad Oh-Bun
Tomato Cheese

.

'

Bollttd Egg

. &amp; lettuce

Fried Apples
Orange Juice

3 Bean Salad
Strawbelries On
Cake

Macaroni.&amp; Cheese·
. Cl'88l'TI8d Tomatoes
·1ta11an Green Beans
Watem :alQn
Com Bread

Polish Sausage
Sauerkraut
TatorTots

Plums
Applesauce Cake
WheatBraad

Ceitter I(Jtchen

Chopped Steak W/Onions
Mashed P-o~toes
Green Beans
'
Pears
Wheat Bread

Spaghetti W/
Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Grapes -

Chicken Patty On Bun
Cream Of Broccoli Soup
Calico Macaroni Salad
Orange Juice
Pickle Slices

Beef&amp; NOQdles
Brussel Sprouts
Peaches
Cheese Cake

Creamed Chicken &amp;
Biscuit
Mashed PotatQiils
Peas W/ Onions
Cinnamon Applesauce
Oatmeal Cookie

CloAdFor
Training

21
Tuna Salad Plate

Country Fried Steak

Baked Ham

BBQ Chicken

lja.mburger On Bun

Tomato Wedges
Cottage Cheese
. Tropical Fruit
Wheat B.read

W/Gra'Vy
Baked Potatci
Succotash
Peach Short Cake
W/CooiWhiD

Mashed Sweet Potatoes
Cabbage. Pineapple &amp;
Marshmallow Salad
Cauliflower W/Bread Crumb

Baked Beans
Com Confetti
Nectarine
Wheat tsre;3a

W/Lettuce &amp; Tomato .
Potato Salad
Carrot &amp; Celery Sticks
Strawberry F.luff

Sloppy Joe On.Bun
Baked Beans
Garden Slaw
Vanilla Pudding
Fresh Berries

Tultey &amp; Dumplings

Lasagna
·
Cucumber/Tomato/Olive

Roast Pork W/Gravy
Steamed Rice
Buttered Beets
Apple Juice
Lime Dream Cake

Thank You For Your Donation

Carrot Raisin Salad
Orange Juice
Brownies
Com Muffin

satad-

Gra~

Garlic Bread

Suggested Donations Per Meal
ts $2.00. For Ingredient
Information, Contact

Theresa Marcinko or

Coral .

Activity Schedule

interest and participation, we
will continue the weekly
bingo. So, invite all of your
friends lo play bingo.
June I we will play bingo
and you need to bnng a paper
product to play. Paper products can be paper towels, toilet paper, napkins, tissues, etc.
Jurte 7 and 16 will be regular ·
bingo, and on June 21,
Rocksprings Rehab Center
will host bingo.
· All of the bingo sessions
will start at II a.m.

Ceramics .
and Painting

renl ' MCCaA membership Thursday beginning at 4 p.m.
card and $30 for non-mem' To schedule an appointment,
bers. You will receive an indi- call the Wellness Departmem
vidualized diet analysis and al 992-2681, Ext 233.
June 14 at 10:30 a.m. - recommendalions meeting
Doris Carder will be here to with Tiffany Hoffman. D.T.R.; '
Trips for 2005
help you paint a patriotic in 3 one-hour sessions. To
theme on vases. Come and schedule an appointment, call
The following trips for 2005
the Wellness Department at are being planned. If Ynu are
explore your c~ative side.
992-2681, Ex I. 233.
inrerested in cmy of rhe trips.

uled for November 29. 30 and
December I . 2005.
The trip will include trans~
The Meigs Multipurpose
portation. lodging , Dollywood,
Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8 a.m.Louise Mandtell Theater,
4:30p.m. Regularly scheduled
Blackbear Jamboree Christmas
show, the Comedy Barn, shopactivities held throughout the
ping at lhe outlel stores, two
week include sewing, quilting,
dinners and lwo breakfasts.
bingo, checkers and games.
The cost is $340 per-person
Dance team practice is
held eacn ·Monday at 1 p.m.
Diet Analysis "
please make your res'en,ations · for a double room . If interestCost is $1 per session
Massage
Therapy
as soon as possible so final ed in this lrip, please make a
and
Ed~;~catlon
reservation by July I so final
attended.
·plans can be made.
plans can be made.
The Knitting Circle. meets
The
massage therapy
If you are diabetic, have equipment
has
finally
on Wednesday from 10 a.m.Niagara Falls Trip
high
cholesterol,
high
blood
arrived
and
appointments
are
Amish Country in Ohio
noon.
This trip includes two nights
pressure,
are
over-.yeight,
being
scheduled.
Janice
The
cost is $45 for this trip
PERl Meeting
All ages are invited to
lodging,
two
full
breakfast
bufhave been instructed to modi- Haynes, a registered maswhich includes shopping. an
· attend the activities schedfets, two dinners. a guided tour Amish meal and a visit 10 the
fy
your
diet,
or
you
are
the
sage
therapist.
is
providing
The
regular
meeting
of
uled. Lunch is served daily at
of the Niagara area, Daredevil
II :45 a.m. The suggested PERI will be held on Friday, parents or guardians of hyper- this new service for us. Cost Theatre. Chateau Des Charmes cheest; factocy. The trip is
donation for the noon meal is June · 3 at the Meigs active children, you may ben- · of this service is $30 per Winery, and Maid of the Mist. scheduled for October II. 2005.
Multipurpose Senior Center. efit froJ!I dietetic counseling. 'hour or $50 for one hour.
$2 for those 60 or older.
Prices: .
Dates are yet to be
The cost of this program is
Appointmenls can be
Lunch will be served at
Single
$347
determined
for these trips:
$25 for those who have ·a cur- scheduled Monday through
Social Security . II :45 a.m.
Double $289
• Oglebay Park, Festival of
Triple $278 .
Lights. Wheeling. WV
Crafts
· Representatives from the
Quad
$270
,.
• A lheale·r lrip to Columbus,
Athens Social Security Office
The trip is scheduled for . .OH to see lhe Nulcracker
The ladies from the Meigs
will be at the Meigs Senior
September 12-14. A deposit of
Center lo assist people with County Library will be here
$80 per person is due by July · For more inrormation or
1betc ~ several vobinleer opportunities available.
·Social.Security problems and on June 30 al I0:30 a.m. with
12, 2005.
to make reservations, con·
Please read the' descriplion and caD if you have questo provide informati'on. The a different craft project for
tact
Debbie Jones, Activities
tions. or 1ft interested in .volunteering .your time with
dates are June 8 and 22 from each day. Participants get to
Pigeon Forge
.
Director
at 992-2161 or Alice
·any Oftbe'projects.
·
·
10-11 a.m. No appointment is take home what they make.
An overnighl trip 10 Pigeon Wamsley, Volunteer Trip
needed; please register at the
, Forge for Winterfest is sched- Coordinator at 992-3938.
Health and Rtness
Girl Scouts' ·Day Camp - June 23, 24, 25.
receptionist desk.
Volunteers are needed to help in the kitchen preparing
will
present
the
.
food
and snacks (really simple foods, nothing major) for
Linda
King
SuoPort Groups
following programs: ·
· the girls attending ~ day camp. Volunteers are rteeded
frooi 9-3:30on,June 23 an&lt;!24 and from 7·3:30 on June
Get
MovingJune
9
The Caring and Sharing
Grab
a
Handful
2S.Y911
must bave .a current TB test. Volunteers areal~
Almonds,
Support Group meets each
ror
Heart
Health·
June
30
'
n
eeded
to
assist. lillith ei!SY·. craftS On Saturday, July 23.
month
at
I he
Meigs
All of . the programs are' · Girls age S.. 8 will ·work on earning a badge and need
Multipurpose Center at I p.m.
your help With the crafts. · . ,
. · ·
scheduled
at · II a.m. Linda
The meeting date is June 23 .
"We Care About Patiellt Care"
the
Ohio
State
works
with
Lenora Leifheil is the coordiNew Ii~ is a.pre.school klcated in the Mulberry
nator for the group and can be Extension Office and offers a
Hospit~l
variety
of
programs.
Center
(the old Pomeroy Elelnentary School) and needs
contacted by calling 992-9919
volunteers to assist the teachers in the classrooms.
or 992-7400.
Assistance
is nee lfecLMonday-Thursday from 9-11 :30
'Euchre at
The Stroke Support
with reading. playtime and other classroom activities. If
Group will meet from l-2:30
the Center
you have a couple ofboqrs to help out, please give them
p.m. on June 14. pa Tipton,
a call at 992-6245 fot JDQ~ information or to set up an
Occupalional
Therapist,
Euchre is the name of the
appointment to see the classroom.
Holzer Rehabilitation Center, game on Thur'sday_s at the
jcAHO Accredited
is the coordinalor.
Center. Bnng a fnerid and
'
I didn't have much respoqse .on the ''Warm Up,
The· Diabetes Support come and join us at lO a.m.
24 Hour Emergency Senice • Free Delivery
America" projed. It conststs of crpcheting a 7" x 9 '
Group will meet' on June 16. We will play in groups of
rectangle (ot more), then joining your section to 48 othMeetmgs begm at 10:30 a.m. four. If you don't know how
ers to complete a full size afghan. 0( co~. you can
and are held in the , to play, we' ll teach you!
crochet 10 ~tire afghan if you wish. We plan to give
.CoJ:_~ference_ Room at the
We have large print playing
the$e to Hospice, Nursing Homes, (jr to anybod~ wl!o is
Metgs Multipurpose Center. cards for those of you who have
in need of a warm blanket in our comni'unity. Directions
trouble with your vision. Hope
are available in my office oc you can call me and J·will
to
see you here at the Center.
Bingo
· send you a copy. We don't have a specific date to fmish
these. We wollld just like to see how many can be made
We have had several
by the end of the year. .
Blrt~day Parties
requests for more bingo. so
we are trying something new.
On June 23 those with a
Ditul4 Cotun, RSVPDirector
This means that we will have birthday in June can celebrate
?91·ll61
70 Pine Street- 765 E. Main St. 540 W. Union
,.
bingo weekly for the ne~t two with us. There will be surprise
rrrp@-"nmiorl.eDIII
months. If there is enough entertainment.
•·

• Home Oxygen
•
Beds
• CPAP Machines • Wheelchairs
• Nebulizers
• Oximetry

1-800-458-6844

Saturday's gaine
Clendemn, at Mason County, 2 p.m..

Spo,ts Briefs
Southern HS
announces date
for hoops camp
.

RACINE Southern
High School will hold its
summer boys basketball
camp on June 13 through ·
June 17 at Charles W
Hayman Gymnasium.
The camp will .be held in
two sessions, with kids
between grades 6-8 taking
place from 9 a.m. to II a.m.
Participanls
between .
grades 3-5 will start at noon
and end at 2 p.m.
'
. The cost of the camp is $25 ·
per camper and there i.s a $15
charge for each additional
sibling.
Make checks · payable lo
Soulhern Alhletic ; Boosters
and registrations need to be
filled out.
Mail check and ·registrations to Southern High
School.
c/o
Richard
Stephens. 920 Elm Street.
Racine, Ohio 45771. '
For more information. contact basketball coach Richard
·Stephens at 698-6530, or athletic director Alan Crisp at
949-2611 extension 2103.

EasternHS
.announces date
for hoops camp
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School will be
holding its 7th annual Eagle
Basketball Camp .between
the dates of l'vl'ay 31 through
June 3.
The camp is open to boys
and girls who will be entering grades 4-6. The cost is
$30 for pre-registration and
$40 on the first day of camp.
Included in the camp. cost
will be fundamental basket- ·
ball instruction. a camp t.shirt and basketball, and indi~idual awards are possible.
. For more informalion contact Howie Caldwell , 40878
Old Seven Road; Reedsville,
OH,25772.

All-American
Shoot-out returns
•

RACINE -· Southern will
hold the 61h annual Wendy's
All-American
Shoot-out
Saturday. June 25 from 8
· 11-m- to 4 p.m. :it Southern
High School and ' Southern _
Elementary.
Fourteen teams, including
defending champion Meigs,
from
·
throughout
Southeastern Ohio will be
competing for the top prize.
A tourna~ent brackel will be
released at a laler date.
Contact Information
'
E-mail - sportsO mydailysentinel.com
SQOrts Staff

Brad Sherrnain, Sport. Editor
{740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bshermanO mydailytribune.com

Bryon Waitefw, Sporl1 Wrlhlr
{740) 446-2342. ext. 23
bwaltens0 myd8Hytrib\Jne.com
Uny Crum, Sports Writer
(304) 675- 1333, ext 19

-f myctaityreglster~ ,

.Ierum

National BaskEtball . Association

Cavaliers hire Mike Brown,·as·head coach
ToM

coach and may be close Ia
hiring a new general manager and president. ·
CLEVELAND _ Mike . ''Mike Brown was our first
Brown's firs I head coaching choice and only choice to be
job will be to maJce sure the new head coach of the
LeBron James isn' t watch- 6\f~~a~~id in a;ae~~~~?;:
ing the NBA playoffs next the AP. "Mike has learned
season.
from the. very best in lhe
Brown, a 13-year NBA business. He is focused on
assistanl who won a league the defensive end of the
title with San Antonio, has court and 1 am highly confibeen hired as the coach of dent he is exactly what lhe
the Cleveland Cavaliers. On · Cavaliers need 1o move our
Wednesday, the team ended team t\J one of the very besl
weeks of silence to _confirm in the NBA ."
Brown as their choice.
The 35-vear-old Brov. n
He 'II
be
introduced spem the past two years as
Thursday morning ina news Rick Carlisle ·s top assistant
conference at Gund Arena in Indiana, where he was
by Cavaliers owner Dan credited with impro ving the
Gilberl. who finally has his Pacers' defen, ,_. ami &lt;!eve lopBY

WITHERS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.,

n

1

.. g

J e rm a in e
O' Neal and
St e phen
Jac kson.
Brown 's
main chal lenge
in
Cleveland
will be geiting Jan'ie s.
\ Brown
the Cav s·
All-Star forward . · in10 the
NBA playoffs for lhe fir st
lime. Cleveland was poised
for a reiU rn to the postseason
for the first time since 1998
before their 2004-05 season
collapsed amid an ownership .
change and · the . firin g of
coach Paul Silas.
The firing of Silas. which
came with the Cavaliers at

· J +-30, was fo llowed by Jim
Paxson's dismissal as ge neral manage r: rhe si le11'ce of
Jam es. :V ho recentl y fired
agent Aaron Goodwin : and
Gilbert 's secretive search.
Gilben also reponedly
inlerv iewed Phi l Jackson.
Flip Saunders ·. and Eric
Musse lman for 1he coaching
vacancy. Before launching
h1s search , Gilbert said he
wanled to have hi s GM hire
hi s coach . It 's unclear wh y
he changed hi s plan s. ·
Earli er this week. The
Associated Press . ciling two
league sources speaking on
1he cond.ilion of anonymity.
was one of se veral media
outlels to report thai Brown
had been offered 1he
Clevel;md job.

Mason County steals one
CRUM

LCRUM@MYOAILVREGISTER .COM

. ROCKSPRINGS
Tyler Hern 1hough1 he was
out · - so did Feeney
Bennett.
But he wasn'1, and during a bizarre play, he
became the winning run as
Mason County defeated its
Meigs neighbor 5-4 in the
American Legion baseball
opener Wednesday.
With one oul in the ninth
inning and Hernon ser ond ·
base, Josh Whit ,ock
stepped to the plate and, set
off the odd sequence of
events that changed the
game.
After a hit to third was
thrown out at first, Hern
began jogging down the
base line thinking the final
out of the inning had just
taken place. Halfway
down the base path,
Feeney Bennett players
realized that Hern was on
his way to take a new base
and tried to throw him out.
Amongst the confusion, the ball sailed high as Hem
slid into third. With the
ball past the third base- .
man, Hern jumped to his
feet and ran home -for the
winning run giving Mason
County the victory.
The strange play in the
ninth was made possible
by a solid hitting performance late in the seventh
from Mason . County.
Down 4-1 with two outs,
Hern stepped to the plate
· and hit safe)y .with a single.
Josh Whitlock, who had
a solid day at the plate
going 2-for-5, stepped up
and smashed a home run ·
bringing Mason County

Please see Steals, B:Z

Please see lirown, ail

MASON, W.Va. -. It took a
three hole sudden death playoff 10 delermine the 2005
G:O.Roush Memorial Men's
.Divi sion Championship.
· The playoff fonnat was used
as directed by USGA's playoff
sys1em for handicap tournaments. After · three holes,
James MacKnight of West
Columbia was crowned the
2005 champion with a one·
stroke victory over P.J. Gibbs
and Brent Fields of New
Haven.
MacKnighl had net rounds
of 63-68= 131 Ia force the
playoff with Fields and Gibbs.
A lotal of twenty-eight men
and six ladies comrted in the
2005 rendition o the G.O.
Roush Memorial. named in
honor . and memory of
Riverside's owner, Gary
Roush.
G.0. Roush was noted for
his work in the housing industry of Mason County after
World War II and until his
death in the early 70s.
The ladies divrsion was won
by Teresa Roush of Mason
with net rounds of 74-66=140
for a four shot win over
Norma Stanley who shot
rounds of 71-73=144 for her ·
two days .competilion. Third
place honors were taken by
Diana Bodkin of Point
Pleasant.
The winning players were
rewarded gifl certificates of
more than $650 and all players
were treated to the Memorial
Dinner following play provided by Mary's Tee Time Grill.

•

f;' ' - •

Men's Otvtslon ,
JamQS McKnight
63-68 = 131
Brent Fields
64 - 67 = 131
"P.J. Gibbs
67 · 64 = 131
Carl King
64 - 6B 132
Dav1d ROOd Sr.
63 • 70 133
Jason King
67 · 67 :;::; 134

=
=

'
Brad Sherman/photo

'

Jim Casey

.72 - 64 = 136

John Blankenship

6? • 69 = 136

Ladles' Division

Feeney Bennett second baseman Ken Amsbary, right , covers the base whi le Mason County's
Tyler Hern attemp*' to steal second. Mason County won the open ing day contest 5-4.
'

league' s second
youngesl coach behind New
Jersey Nets coach Lawrence
Frank. who is 34. ·
"It's a great choi ce,"
Ca\'aliers guard Eric Snow
said
by
phone
on
Wedne sday, "He's a guy who
has worked hard and paid his
dties. He's very knowledge.able in the game . ll 's great
thatrhey ' re giving an oppor·
lunity to someone who is
very de serving."
Brown is the Cavaliers'
171h full -lime coach · and
s i~th in six years, and 1here
are reports saying he'll be
working under De1roit coach
Larry Brown . Gilbert 's representatives have spoken

MacKnight,
Roush win ·
G. 0. Roush
Memorial

AmErican Lt::gion BasEball .

BY lARRY

He is· 1he

Teresa Roush
Norma Stanley
D1ana B9dkin

74 · 66 = 140
71 - 73 "' 144
77 • 71 148.

=

·.

Astros' Oswalt still owns Reds ·
HOUSTON (AP) - ' Rby
Oswalt took the major leagu.e
lead for victories against a
team wi1hou1 a defeat,
improving to 14-0 against the
Cincinnah Reds by leading
the Houston Astros to a 4-1
victory Wednesday night.
Oswalt (6-6) 'had lost four
of his last five decisions but
he w.as masterful against lhe
Reds. He was . tied for the
lead in ~ictories against one
team Without a loss with
Pedro M'art1nez of the New
York Mets, who has a 13-0 ·
recond against S-eattle. Randy
Johnson of lhe New York
Yankees is 12-0 against lhe
Cubs.
Lance Berkman put the
Astrosahead 2-l in the fourth
inning with a homer off
, Ramon Ortiz (l-4).lt was the
second of the season for
Berkman, who is rounding
back into shape from offseaso'n knee surgery and has hit '
safely in 19 of
last 20

lf5

•

games.
held the Astros to one run.
Jason Lane had a lwo-run . Willy Taveras got his major
double in the seventh inning. league-leading 20th infield
Brad Lidge pirched lhe hit, 'Todd Self walked .and
ninth for his 12th save in 14 Craig
Biggio
singled .
opportunities. The Astros Berkman then took a called
won for tl)e fourth time in third· strike, Morgan Ensberg
five gan1es and Lidge has hit a sacrifice fly and Chris
saved each of those victories. Burke flied out
Oswalt retired the firsl 10
Ortiz pitched 6 2-3 innings.
batters in the. game before allowing Six . hils and four
Felipe Lopez extended his earned runs while ,striking .
hitting streak to 14 games out seven.
with a do'uble with one out in
Notes: For the firsl lime
·
·
since 'Oct. 2. 1982. the Astros
the fourth. A smyle_ by Sean had an all-rookie starting outCa~y and an RB hit by Kel) field wilh Burke, Taveras and
Gnffe)l Jr. evened lhe game Self. :In lhe 1982 game, 1he
at l-l 111 the fourth.
.
starters were Tim Tolman.
Adam Dunn then walked lo Scott Loucks and' Larry Rav.
l~ad the bases but Joe Randa ... Houston 's 10- 19 record
hll mt~ a double play to end (.345) was lhe team's lowest
the tnrung.
.
ever for May. ... Lopez's hitOswalt allowed JUSt one ting streak IS a career high
more hit. He pitched seven and the longest for the Reds
innings, allowed four hits and thi ~ season . ... Casey has hit
struck out four.
safely in nine slraight games.
Ortiz loaded the bases with ... Austin Keams of the Reds
no outs in the first inning but . is hitless ~ his last 20 al-bals.

AP photo

Houston Astros Adam Everett' (28) is out at second base as :
Cincinnati Reds second baseman Ryan Freel (6) throws to first
base to complete the double play as shortstop FeliPe Lope,l
(2) lopks on in the second i~(ing Wednesday in Houston.

�'
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Major LEag~;u: BasEball

Thursday, June 2,

www .mydailysentinel. com

200~

..
PGA Tour- ThE MEmorial

Twins scalp Indians. Strong·field tries to join list of Memorial winners

.

.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Torii Hunter attributed his
big game to luck. His manager .~nows better.
Hunter had a grand , Jam
~mong his five hits and
drove in six runs to lead the
Minnesota Twins to a 6-2
v ictory over the Cleveland .
Indians on Wednesda y
.
. 1ight.
. "Tonight. I wi II be at the
:asino -·· I'm all in." HLmter lon£er. as Ben BruussarJ hit
said after go ing ·5-for:s.
a two-out. two-run horner in
Hunter raised his average ·the first inning 10 put the
20 points to .258 with his Indians up 2 _0 .
career high for hits. matched
But a key mi s.c ue in the
his career best with six RBis field set up· the Twills rally
dnd showed' signs that he's in the third. With two on and
putting a slow stan behind one out. Just in Morneau hi t
hi m.
"
a sharp grounder · to· first.
"He:s been out here early Broussard bobbled the ball
working on just trying to ge t · and cou ldn 't get the out ;n
better. · and tonight it paid second. but Lee forgot 10
off," Twins manager Ron wwr first
base and
Gardenhire
said.
"
If
we
can
,
Moi·neau reached safe!)'.
get him on a roll. we can
· "As we've fouiJd out this
score a lot of runs :··
· Hunter put the Twin s year~ ,any time you give up
ahead 4-2 in the third innin~ ex tra outs in this game. it
with a grand slam to left ol'r gets you." Gardenhire said.
. Cliff Lee. the· [ounh of hi s· " It cost them dearly
.career. Hunter just missed a tonight."
home run in his next &lt;ll-bat
Hunter hit the next pitch
when he doubled high otT - a hanging curve- 410
the wall in right field.
feet to put the Twins ahead
With two outs and the for good . Lee said he didn ' t
bases loaded in the si xth. think the pitch was a mis~
Hunter got a gift double and take.
"I threw a first-pitch curve
two RB!s when shortslop
Jhonny Peralta and left to ·him. trying to throw a
fielder Jody Gerut had trou- strik e, and got it up a little,"
ble communicating going Lee said . " I didn't even
after his towering tlyball. expect him to swing on a
Pinch-runner Nick Punto curve. Looking back, I
and Lew Ford scored 10 give would've thrown that one
Minnesota a 6-2 lead.
again. because l . didn't
"Jhonny thought 1 called ·expect him to hit a curve."
Hunter didn't expect to
it," Gerut said. "Crowd
noise can be a problem. This see one, either.·
place gets pretty loud."
"I wasn ' t si tting on a
It got even louder in the curveball," Hunte.r said.
eighth, when the crowd "lt'sjust that my hands said.
gave Hunter a standing ova- 'Yes!'"
·
tion after he capped hi s· Hunter 's career nigltt
night with a single.
helped the Twins win a rare
"I was just trying to make one-sided ga me in this
contact, and 1 got a base series. Ten of the first I I
hit," Hunter said. "(The ova- games in the season series
tion) was pretty great. They were decided by one or two
recognized that was a career runs, or ·went into extra
mmngs.
high for me."
Brad Radke (5-4) pitched
Lee (6-3) went five
seven strong innings to get .inh ings, allowing four
the victory. He allowed two earned runs and nine', hits,
earned runs· and six hits with He 'walked two and struck
no walks and six strikeouts . . out six in his first road loss
J.C. Romero and Jesse of the year in six decisions.
Crain each pitched a score" I was battling the whole
\ess inning to close the time. ·I never had an easy
game.
inning," Lee said. "I made it
"Radke pitched Iike through a lot of innings, but
Radke pitches," Indians that one with the grand slam
manager Eric Wedge said. really hurt me."
"He expandellthe zone from
Notes: It was Hunter 's
left to right and was able to tirst grand slam since July
take advantage of that. He 2002. He last drove in six
runs in an 11-inning game
was tough on our guys."
The last time Radke faced against Tex&lt;j.s last Aug. 3 I.
!he
Indians
in
the ... Brent Abernathy was .1-.
Metrodome he held them to for-3 with a sacrifice bunt in
. ~hree hits ilt a 9-0·complete- his season debut for the
game victory on May 5. Twins. He was called up
That scoreless streak against from Triple -A Rochester
Cleveland didn't last much alter Tuesday's game.

BY DOUG FERGUSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBLIN- The framed pict,ures of
past champions that hang on the wall
represent &lt;Ill All-Star collection of
major ch;1mpions, a testament to how
. Muirfield Village bri ngs out the best at
' . the Memorial.
Or mayhe therc··s another reason .
. " When you get all the hest playe rs io
one place·. it \ . more likel y that the y' re
!..!Oill!..! to win:· Davis Love HI said
\Vednesday, aching to join that elite list

out being able to prepare for it.
"We talked about it back in 2000
when we played together in his last
PGA," Wood.s said. "He was saying,
'Why am I even here?' I said, 'C'mon,
Jack, you're out here competing. I'm
trying to beat your brains in , you're trying to beat my brains in, so don't give :
n1'e any of that. '
" He' s a competitor, and being such a
great competitor: it must be hard l'c\r
· him not to be prepared," Woods said.''!'·
can undef'tand why he's . bowing out
now.
Woods has had two weeks and two
days to prepare f&lt;li' the ·Memorial, his
final tournament before he goes to
Pinehurst No. 2 for the U.S. Open. He.
is playing for the first time since his
record ~ut streak of 142 tournaments
ended
at . the
Byron· Nelson
Championship, where he missed a ISfoot par putt on the 18th hole to mi ss
the cut by oile shot.
· Any lingering bitterness?
· ''Zero, absolutely zero," Woods said.
"I'm here to try to get ready to win this
tournament, and hopefully come out of
this week positively so I'll be in good
stand ing go ing into the U.S. Open."
A victory ·would return Woods to No .
I in the world in what has become a
case of musical chairs at the top.
.. It all starts with navigating Muirfield
Village, where every year the fairways
seems to get a .little tighter and more
bunkers come into play. The only significant change Nicklaus . made this
year was pushing . the IOth tee back
some 30 yards to keep the big hitters
from getting extra roll off a slope in the
fairway.
That's so mething else the past
Memorial champions seem to have in
common - power. Els, Perry, Woods,
Singh, Coupte·s and Greg Norman seem
.
to back that up.
Still, that would be ignoring winners
like Jim Furyk, Paul Az.inger and Curtis
··
Strange.
"You look down that list, you can't- ·
really say that guy was a chop ballstriker," Woods said. "You have to hit
every single golf shot. Plus, this golf
course, you have to manage your game
so well. The majority of the winners
who have come through here are major
championship winners."
Odds are, there will be another one
by tlie end of the week.

..

of w inners.

The Me morial doe sn' t have the
strongeq field of th&lt;= year - only 10 of
the top 15 players from the world ranking. although it starts with Vijay Singh,
Ti ge r Woods and defendin g champion
Ernie Els.
Tournament' official s don"t pamper ·
players with a Mercedes- Benz for a·
. courtesy tar and chartered e,xcursions ·
for their wives. Players don't have
access to a fiw-star hotel attached ' to ·
the golf course. There was no corporate
outing on Monday that smlt.:ked of
appearance money.
AP photo
All the Memorial offers is a demand- Jack Nicklaus puts on 8th ho le
ing golf course that stretches to 7.300 Wednesday during the practice round of
yards and places a premium on the sec- the Memo'rial Tournament at the Muirfield
ond shot, atid a to urname nt host - Village Golf Club in Dublin.
Ja.:k Nicklaus - who tries to make thi s
feel like Augusta National.
" He j.ust makes this place better
That 's usually enough.
every year," Els said, '.'The golf course
. "When you have a g\l lf course that 's keeps improvi.ng , the quality of the way
· so ·pristine, you just wanno play Well ," th'ey present the golf course gets better
Els sa id . "Ja&lt;:k Nicklau s has also got all the time, and I think thi s year is no
somethin g to do with that. Everybody different. It 's .just great playing on a
wants to win this golf tournament.''
go lf course like this. He runs a great
Most of the big names already have. show."
Twenty-two of the 29 winners at the •For Nicklaus, it might be his final
Meniorial have won major champi - show i·n the United States competing
onships. and the only exception in the against the best players.
last 12 years is Kennr Perry, who is
The 65-year-old Nicklaus has said
No. II in the world. .
the British Open next month 31 St.
Els won last year b~ holding off an Andrews will be the end of hi s compelearly charge from Wo{lds and late one itive,career, although there is always a·n
from Fred Couples, atid by making so asterisk attached. In this . case, he
many clutch putt~ alorlg the back nine reserved the right to play in the
that even the most renoWned clutch Memorial, a tournament he .founded in
putter of them all - Nicklaus -· was 1976, as long as he feels like playing.
impressed .
·
"I've been retiring for years," he
·
The Big Easy has not missed the said.
Memorial since he first started play.ing
Woods spoke to Nicklaus about his
on the PGATour in 1994, and counts it future when he showed up Tuesday
among his favorite tournaments. Even morning for the pro-am round and
better, he will play the first two rounds · empathized with .his position. It's diffiwith Nicklaus.
cult to compete on the PGA Tour with-

· www.mydailysentiRel.com

Thursday, June

p;::::~YD~YS::T~:L area

.

residents looking for a little
weekend excitement will want
to visit the downtown riverfront parking lot of Pomeroy .
where cyc les, food and entertainment will be the fare.
The action of the third
annual Gold Wings and Ribs
Festival will begin at noon on
·Friqay when the first motor·cycles arrive from across the
midwest. the vendors start
serving ribs, entertaii1ment in ·
the amphitheater begins, the
AEP towboat opens for free.
tours, . and the . Spirit of
Charleston ·offers hour-long
cruises. ·
. "This is a family event."
said Paul Darnell, chairman,
'adding that it is open to the
general pub I ic and to all
motorcycle enthusiasts.
."No matte'r what you ride
we invite you to join us for a
·, ·~
·good time and some great
.food at an alcohol free event,"
Submitted photos
he said.
Entertainment
in . the Hour-long cruises on thE) sternwheeler Spirit of Charleston will be offered ·both Friday and
amphitheater will begin with Saturday at Pomeroy's Gold. Wings and Ribs Festival.
vocals by Julie Inboden from
noon to 1 p.m., and 2 to 3 tmtion of motorcycles conti1iues
'
p.m. Country-western singer · includes Rockin~ Reggie spinJoey Wilcoxon will take the ning tunes from the main stage,
stage at 3:30 p.m .. followed an an show underway in the
.by Middleport's Katie Reed at Court Street mini-park, the AEP
5:30p.m.
towboat open for more tours.
The evening show by popu- and one-hour excursions on the
tar Elvis impersonator Dwight stemw heeler
. Spirit
of
..Icenhower will begin at 6 and Charleston. Cruise tickets are
continue until 9:15 p.m., $7.50 and elm be purchased at
when the tirst light parade of the registration trailer on the
motorcycles be~ms.
.
parkin~ lot.
·
The lighted b1kes will travel
Perhmning in the amphithethroug)l Pomeroy, across the ater will be County Road 5 at
bridge into Mason, up to New II :30 a.m., the Prescription at
Haven and back. ·A · second 3 p.m. and Shhhbang at 6
parade will take . place on p.m. Bike show winners and
· Saturday
night
upri ver th·e winner of Ohio's Best
through Syracuse and Racine, Ribs award, selected through ·
and then through Pomeroy . a people's choice vote. will be
into Middleport before com- announced .at 7 p.m. after
ing back to the parking lot for which Shhhbang will return to The Prescription Band of Columbus, with a repertoire of rock
a pizza party.
the stage to continue with an and roll music from the '60s through the '80s, will perform in
the riverfront amphitheater at 3 p.m. Saturday.
Saturday's schedule as regis- evening show. .

.. ..

Bv

IAN McNEMAR

IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.

'

·

Btlld Shet'm8n/photo

Tyler Hern of Mason County dives for first while Mike Davis tries to pick him off. Hern scored the winning run in the ninth
inning on .a strange play in which he. walked to third thinking he &gt;)'as out and, after an errpr, ran in for the winning score.
'

Steals
fromPageBl
within one of the home teani.
Zeb Reed. the very next batter. followed up his team mate 's performance with a
solo home run or his own
making the score an even 44.

Hern also had a big day
swinging the . bat hittil1g 2for-3 with two runs !\I:Ored.
Reed had hi s only hit nf the
day with his game-tying
homer.
Up to that point, Feeney
Bennett had a strong grasp on
the game. Post 128 got off to
a. strong 'tart &gt;coring it; first
run on an RBI ' double by .
Man Mooney. Four batte"
' later Aw,tin King hit for an
Rt;JI giving hi s club ·a two {Un
lead.
Feeney Benn'¥1 again

added to its lead in the fifth
inning with an RBI single
from Ken Amsbury. who also
had no trouble hitting his
opponent going 2-for-3 with
an RBI.
One inning later, Feeney
Bennett added ils final nin of
the game when a ball got past
the catcher, brining 'base runner Tyler Clagg home.
Adding 'to the 'solid performance from the · ~orne team
was pitcher Mike Davis who
pit~hed five innings. giving
up, one run on fopr l]its ll.!ld
striking Out four.
Standing on the mound for
Mason County was Josh
Whitlock who also pitched
five innings. givi ng up three
·rum on &gt;even hits and striking out six :
Ma'&gt;on County could only
mu.,ter&lt;&gt;ne run up to the seventh inning when an e!Tor
brought Whitlock home late
in the fifth.

The team had a problem
While
Whitlock
and
getting runners on base and Adkins wor.ked the mound.
not being able to do anything Kameron Sayre, Jon Ullom
with them. Before the double · and Seth Phalen added a 'hit a
homers of the seventh. piece to their teams offense.
~ason County ,had left seven .
For
Feeney
Bennett,
runners on base.. Ho~ever. Moone~ -and Austin King
changes m the s1xth mmng added hns and an RBI a piece
may have also had a hand in _ to their slats with Jeremy
the outcome of the game.
Blackstol), Luke Haislop and
Botti teams decided .to Tyler Clagg also hitting safechange things up on the sixth ly for the home team .
inning brining in new pitch- Shaphen Robinson went 2ers for opposing reasons. for-4 with a run scored.
Both teams will be back in ·
While this move wbrked for
one team,' it had {lev~tating action this we~k . Feeney
effects on another.
·
Bennett plays at 6 p.m.
Relief pitcher Brandon Friday against Lancaster JV.
Fackler of Feeney Bennett Mason County will next play ,
gave up three runs on four at 2 p.m. Saturday at home
hits .in the final four innings, agamst Clendemn.
striking out six and giving up
- c - y 5, ,_.., . . . _ .
two costly home runs.
-Bemett002011000-490
Malon County 000010301-582
On the opposing mound, .....
Qav;o,
Fodde&lt;t6l aod Tony
Nate Adkins stepped up and Durst. Jos/1 WNibJL. NaW - . , . (6) and
limited the ·damage, giving Zl!b - · WP -Hare ........ tp Fadller. HR - MC: Josh
up only two runs on two hits 'Millucl&lt;. fif1h
.-.rWlg. ooe on: Zeb and sittipg down four.
Mill ""'"'(~. none on.
'f

ll&lt;-

ll&lt;.,_,

2, 2005

P?v~~~?rEF~?sts week~nd.Gold Wings and Ribs Fe~tival ~elay

URG artist displays unique work at FAC

Gonzalez headed .
for DL after injury
MINNE~POUS (AP) - . Cleveland manager Eric
.Juan Gonzalez's latest come- Wedge said Wednesday..
~ack lasted one at-bat. ,It will "He's been feeling really good
tJe a while before he can and is able to do everything."
attempt another one.
Wedge said he and Indians
manager
Mark
Gonzalez returned to general
Cleveland . for tests after Shapiro wanted to see the
straining his right hamstring results of Gonzalez's MRI
.Tuesday night in Minnesota. before speculating on when
'The fragile outfielder. a two- - or if - Gonzalez would
•ime AL MVP who has spent return.
most of the past three years · "It's too premature at · this
rehabbing a variety of point.:' Wedge said. "We
injuries, got hun in the tirst. haven't had any discussions
inning trying to beat out a about the future yet. At some
· slow grounder in his tirst point. we'll probably bring
major league at-bat in over a Juan into it, but Mark and I
year. .
have to huddle up and laLk
He never made 'it to lirst about it."
·
base, turning right, dropping
Bringing back Gonzalez
his head and heading directly has already cost the Indians
into the Indians' dugout. It 's outfielder Ryan Ludwick, •
the same hamsiring he hurt at designated for assignment
the end of spring training.
Tuesday. The club has I0 days
The Indians said Gonzalez to trade, relea&lt;;e or outri~ht the
will be placed on the disabled. 26-year-old to Tnple-A
list - his I2th career trip Buffalo in the unlikely event
there. However, the club will that he clears waivers.
Losing Ludwick · would
wait at least, one more day to
make the move and had just mean the Indians have noth24 players available . for ing to show for trading pitchWednesday night's game er Rk.mlo Rodriguez and outagainst the·Twin&amp;.
fielder Shane Spencer to
Coco Crisp, who severely Texas in 2003.
sprained his right thumb while
While losing Gonzalez
sliding last month. could be won't be costly to the Indians
ready to return and the Indians (they owe him just $600J:X:Xl),
would prefer to activate him the club may not want to wait
rather than make another ros- around tor him to get healthy
ter move. Crisp was initially again. Despite an 'offense that
expected to mi-,, three ha.'&gt; struggled 'im:e opening
month&gt;. but the injury wa,n't day. Clel'cland ha.~ l'lawed it&gt;
as bad as flfSt thought. and the way back to .500 for the tirst
outfielder may be read,l'. .
time ~ ince April 10 by win"He 's our tirst · option... nhg eight of I0.

Page 83 • The Daily Sentinel ,

, GALLIPOLIS- University
·of Rto Grande an student
:Dave Snyder will be display: ing his work at the French An
·Colony beginning today and
. ending June 29.
.
The exhibit is titled "The \
:Outer Limits."
: Snyder's . work combines
:his · experiences in fine
·woodworking, art, the mili:tary and manufacturing · he
has had throughout his life .
A welder by trade, his
eyes ,ttarted to go bad welding. He learned about
:URG 's fine ·,woodworking
:program on PBS. He came
·to URG shortly . after and
:has been there for three
years.
He has attained a one
year certificate in . fine
:woodworking and is current- ·
:ty · working to finish his ··
:bachelor's degree in visLial
·arts. He is in his senior yeru;
with a 3.964 GPA.
Snyder, 36, a native of
. Schuyl.kill~aven. Penn ., has
·been working in the manu:racturing field all of his life,
:mastering welding, blackian lotc:Nemarlphoto
. smithing, ceramics, plumbing, electrical , pneumatics Dave Snyder stands at the · FAC with a wood planer.. bow· saw
and a screw driver. al l made by Snyder to four times the size of
and hydraulics.
«
"Everything I do comes the original.
from things I've done in the
past, experiences too." he
Much ~:tf his. art is intlu- and, love fo,r old tools to
said. "The process is the enced by the e1ght years he iflspire in his creation of art.
Highly inspired by the
most . important thing;· how · spent m lhe U.S. Army as a
work
of
artist
Claes
do I do it , more so than weapons speCJahst.
Oldenburg,
·
Snyder
·
creates
how should I do it"
Snyder used his collection

HANGING BASKETS ·
Om: SO,IW B rtiNLRouuilc 8 *m
• Nelr Qpne. lljtw:id Iqwrimo
• V . . . C.ct~njnrrw
• Zoaa1.
• Fcus a: Mo:tl

cr-c,•.,.

and is displaying in the
show large s.cale tools, four
times their normal size.
'The more you do to keep
your brain fu nctionin'g, the
better off you are,'' he said.
" When you use trigonometry and calculus to do art, it
makes it worth while sitting
through math . classes."
He made a large screwdriver, · clothespin, wood
planer and .a bow ~aw. The
tools are constructed from
wood and metal.
Snyder has held workshops at URG and the
Marshall University. ·
His father was an artist
and welder by · trade. He
dabbled mainly in pen and
ink and carvings.
two
His
father · has
Revolutionary War. themed
pieces in the Smithsonian
and has one life-size carving
of a jazz ban&lt;) in a .jazz
museum in New Orleans.
Though his fattier died
when Dave was 10. he says
he has been intluenced by
his father and there is a
similarity in style, but his·
father did not teach him
anything.
.
A reception will be held
from 5-7:30 p.m. today at
the French An Colony. It is
sponsored by Rock well
Automation.
The exhibit is sponsored
by Norris-Northup Dodge,
Smith-Buick Pontiac and
Turnpike Ford.
Admission is free .

H1W wjth your
·bv01ite ilowetB...
Ready to Set m your
porcb or dtdf

for Life starts
Frida.y· in City·. Park.

GALLIPOLIS - A signa- · !he opening ccrem·o ny
ture event of the American include~ a patriotic service
Cancer Society in rais ing by Boy Scout Troop 200 and
fund s to find a cure for can- a · selection by Kri stina
cer, the amiual Relay for Life Triona o( Holzer Hospice .
observation has been set for Mon signor William R.
Friday and Saturday in the Myers of St. Louis Catholic
Church will deliver the inovGallipolis City Park.
An, opening ceremony is cation, whi le Dr. Alice
set for 6 p.m. Friday, emceed Dachowski will offer comby Tina M erry, as 24 teams ments !O the audience.
armed with pledges libel "Sharon's Story," by Relay .
money raised from year-. for Life Committee member
round fund-raisers will be .Sharo~ Brown. will follow.
The Galli a Academy High
involved in numerous activities in the park until noon School Choir will provide
Saturday.
.
selections, followed by
"Every yea r we ' ve had introductions from Jill
Relay we've received more Schroeder for the ACS and
and more support from the Gallia
County
Relay
community .and from busi- Committee.
,
nesses in . Galli a County,"
Cheryl Godwin will dis·said Bonnie McFarland , cuss the STAMP anti -tobacR.N .. who·along with a team
co program in the Gallipolis
of organizers have staged the
City Schools .at 7 p.m .. with
local Relay si nce 1998.
music by Pat Wess follqwing
"Everyone has been great."
from 7:10 to 8:30 p.m. A
Relay is of special signifi"Kiss a Pig" fund-raiser
cance because it not only
staged by Galli a County 4-H
serves as a memorial to those
who have been lost to can- is set for 8 p.m. , with Mark
cer, but as a testament to sur- Kinney providing music
vivors Who found the hope from 8:30 to 9 : 15 p.m.
At 9:30 p.m. will be the
and uri veto beat the disease.
That's why organizers luminary ceremony. one of
encourage th1e public to the highlight s of Relay,
come to the park and experi• while Pat Hager will offer
ence Relay · for themselves. music at 10:30 p.m. Country
Live Performers will appear
McFarland said.
"Anyone who wants to at II :30 p.m.
join us is welcome to get a · From midnight to 6:30
feel for Relay," she said. ·'I a.m. Saturday, team actividon't think you 'II find a fam -· ties will be staged. Sunrise
ily in Gallia County that has devotions with Pmil Stinso'n
not been affected by cancer.." are ·set for 6:30 a.m., With
McFarland emphasized refreshments· served to all
that Relay involves as many worshippers ..
local organizations an(l peo- · Kristina Triona . and Lesa
pie in the event to achieve a · Lemley will have music at 7
and 8 a.m., respectively, and
hometown atmosphere.
Registration and se t-up the Ride for Life Bike Kickwill be from 4 to 6 p.m. Off is at 9 a.m. The closing
Friday, followed by a sur- ceremony. and awards and
vivors' reception and regis- recognition . will be held
. !ration from 5 to 6 p.m.
from I0 a.m. until noon.

Fur Peace Ranch hosting
Saturday concert
POMEROY - . The . Fur
Peace Ranch wi II host a concert Saturday, June 4 'at 8
p.m., featuring two guitar virtuosos.
Pete Huttlinger will open
the show-sol\), and then be
followed by Fareed Haque,
who wi II be accompanied by
a tabla player. .
Hutilinger dazzled the
crowd at Fur. Peace Station
last year on his· lirst trip to
the ranch. He has developed a
world-renown . reputation for
tingetpicking skills with the
guitar.
According to Guitar Player
magazine. '·In Peter's hands,
a
fingerpicked
flat-top
becomes a mini-orchestra.
His playing is fun, scary and
ah~·ays inspiring ." Huttlinger
is a must-have sideman and
performed for years with
John Denver. In 2000, he was
named
the
National
Fingerpicking Guitar champion.
,
He has seveml COs and his
most recent, "Santa ·Rita
Connection," is a gem of instrumental guitar masterpieces.

Fareed Haque·s .:areer
spans the spectrum of musical styles between jazz. classical and jamband.
The New York City Tribune.
named him "the most talented .
guitarist/corflposer on the
scene today." He has played
and recorded with many jazz
greats and also is a professor
in jazz. and classical guitar at
the University of Chicago.
While Fareed's guitar play- .
ing can encompass a variety
of .styles, for this show at the·
Fur Peace Station he will be
playing classical jazz and be.
accompanied by a tabla player.
Tickets are available for
this show at the usual FPR
ticket outlets and by phone at
(740) 992-6228 . Tickets for
all FPR shows can also be
purchased
online
at
furpeacestation .com. Tickets
will also be available at the
gate on the night qf the concert.
For more informal ion, call
John Hurlbut. ranch manager, a1 (740) 992-6228.

Two Comtlllllnt tn..attqns;

2400 F I m Ave.
(Acro11 hom Kl'zrt)
Ga'lpo411, 01 .. 45131
. (740) 446-1711

1/4111le Not Ill
~OJIIIason Bridge
. 'IIICM'I; WV 25280 ,
Phol• (304) 77H323,
'

t

�84 • The Daily Sentinel

- Sentinel -

~tibune

r

Thursday, June 2, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 2, 2005

ister

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Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should
ude These Items
To

Dally I n - Colurn n : 1 00 p . m .
M o nda y - F ri day f o r I n se rt i on

In N e xt D a y 's P a p er
Sunday In - Column . 1:00 p . m .
,F•·Idla y F or S unda y s P a p er

1
. 110

G IVb\ WA\
Good Home Only 2 fam1ly yard sale Jarrell
White Female (1ns1de) Cat and
Reynolds
Rtce
ADOPT A Happ1ly marned declawed
good w/k1ds Saturday June 6tl'l at 4821
childless couple longs to (304)675-4431
St At 850 B•dwell l ook for
sha re our hves w1lh your
s1gns There 1s somethmg for
baby Will prov1de a hfet1me
everyone
Ln•n ANn
ol love happiness oppty &amp;
F OUN!J
2746 Bulavtlle P1ke Fr1/Sat
secut•ty We know that your
6/3 6/4 Sam 3pm Baby
dec•s•on Will be made out of
pure love lor you r baby Lost car keys call 304 675 ttems 1oys mfanl toddler
1534
clothes boy and g•rl
EJCpenses pd
Please call
Mike &amp; Donna 1-866 720 Lost cat long ha1red Female 3 fam1ty Friday/Saturday
5099
Tabby W1th wh1te paws Call 9 00-? Arnold Dnve Bidwell
{740)446-0350
Buck stove 1nsert tool boJC
I w•ll not be Responsible for
for truck toys clo thes
any Debts olher than my
couch etc
•
Elmer
McFarland
Own
5/31105
3 Famtly yard sale June 3 4
9am 6pm 1036 Addtson
P1ke Wood crafts clothes
G IVFAWAV

r

3 Free K1ttens L•tter tra1ned
Wormed (304~75-2663

•

K1ttens black/whi l e
blue/gray (304)895

r
n

YAR!JSALE

YARtJSALEG ALLII'OLIS

3382

/ll '&gt;'fMI&gt;.

Call 992

Antiques. ... .... .. ................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent . , . . ..................... 440
Auction and Flea Market. . . ... ... . . .. . .080
Auto Parts &amp; Acci!ISSOf'tes • • • • - - - • 760
Auto Repaor........................ . . ......... .
Autos lor Sale .... ..................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale . .... . .. . . . . ... 750
Building Supplies ... . .
. .... 550
Business and Buildings . .. . . . . _. ... ... 340
Business Opportumty ....... . . ........... 210
Business Training .... . ...................... 140
Campers &amp;: Motor Homes ....... ·- __ ... -· . 790
Camping Equopment . .. . . . . .. . ... .. 780
Cards of Thanks . '·- ........,_ ... -..............010
Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
Electricai/Relngeration ... . ................... 840
Equipment for Rent .. _
_ ...... _ .. -· . _48Q
Excavating .... _ . . ...
.. . . ..... . . ... 830
Farm Equopmenl............................ . ... ... 610
Farms lor Rent ........ ............................. 430
Farms l or Sale .
. .................. 330

no

For lease ... _

. ·- _.... ... .. ·- 490

For Sale .............................. . . . . . ..• 585
For Sale or Trade ....................................... 590
Fru"a &amp; Vegelables ............................. 580
Furnished Rooms __ -.. . .... ·-·· . _. _.. 450
. . .. .. ....850
General Hauling . . . . .

G1veaway ............................ . .. . - - . . . • ••.040
Happy Ads.. . ... .. .....................................050
Hay &amp; Gram . . .. .... .... . .. ... .. . .. ..........640
Help Wanted . . .. .. . . .. .. . ....... 110
Home Improvements........... . .. . .. . .810
HOIMO for Sale .................................... 310
Household Goods .. . .. . . ..................... 510
Houoea l or Rent.. . . . . .. .......... 410
In Memor1 am ............. --·- _. _ ..... _. -·- .020
Insurance ... ___ ........ ........ . ·- __ . _ 130
lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ...~ ................. 660
Uvestock.... . . . . .... .. .. . ......... . . ..... 630
Lost and Found
...................... 060
lots &amp; Acreage ................................ 350
Miscellaneous.. . .................................... 170
M1ocellaneoua Merchlndise ............... 540
Mobile Home Repaor....... .... .. ......... 860
Mobile Homealor Rent............ . ... .... . .420
Mob1le Homes lor Sale ..........................,... 320
Money to Loan .. . ...... . . . ..... . . .. . .... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ................. 740
Musical Instruments ............................ 570

Perooroato ............................................... 005
Pets for Sale . " ..... " ......... . ................. 580
Plumblng • Heating ...... ,. . .............. 820
Prof111 ional Services ........... _._ ............. 230
RMIIO, TV &amp; Cll Repair ............................... 160
Re81 Ellale Wanted ................................. 360
Sclloololnotruction... ...... . . ................. 150
Seed , "'-111 • F~llzer ........................... 650
Situation• Wonted .................................:..... 120
Splice for Rent ....-.•~q~·
460
Spot11ng Goods ................. ,................... 520
SUV'a l or Sale ..... . . ,........................... 720
Trucks for Sale ..................................... 715
Upllolotery ................................................... 870
Vona For Sale............................................ 730
W811ted to Buy ............. ......................... 090
W811ted to Buy· Farm Supplies ..... : ....... 620
Wanted To Do ..... ..
.. .. ............ 180
w.nt.d to Rent ..................................... 470
Yerd Sate- Gallipolis................................... 012
Yard Sale-PomeroyiM•ddle ...... ........... 074
Yerd Sale-Pt. Pleaoant .... ....... . .. . .. 076
. . ·····.._.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

'

~-z..

~

&lt;Cl 2005 by NEA , Inc

www conilcs co m

__

~r tiii~
OiRiDiiiOSAiiiLiiiE"i-o_,1 rn

CLASSIFIED INDEX

°

CR,~f?­

3 1am11y Fnda'l 6/3 8 oo4 00 Saturday 6/4 8 00
12 00 274 Bulav•lle Ptke
Clothes- ladtes mens boy
(2H!) g•rls (3T 14) shoes Green Terrace moti1le home
household
1tems
loys below Green School Lots o1
ch1ld s 4JC4 Jeep much nice lh1ngs tOols guns yard
IOOIS Sat ISIJn lOam 6pm
more

Day sale Saturday only
Bam ? 596 Orchard H1ll
Everylh1ng must go Make
3 5 m•les out 218 corner of
elfers
Spec1al
Kittens Three
Williams Hollow Lots of g1rls
whTie with blue eyes and one 1 m•leon2 1B JIJne3 9-?at
clolhes
b•kes
etc
be•ge To good home Call Haners M1sc Items Ram Fnday/Sah.J rday 9 ?
740-992 6762
cancel
5 famtly brand name clothmg woiJid make good
school clothes .hrst house
on Georges Creek ott At 7
4x4's For Sale .. .. . .. .
. .......... 725
Wed Thu rs Frt
Announcement .............. .... _·-- ... - - - -.030

Healthy K1ttens
7941

'

WMTA

3 fam•ly yard sa le Fu rn•lure

appliances home furmshlngs
cralts baby ttems
l ost
Pekepoo on Jencho
3 Ca liCo kittens 1 yellow 1 Ad II Found please call clothes &amp; more Fr1day &amp;
Saturday 8-5 4761 Mt
yellow &amp; while to good (304)675-3132
Tabor Ad 1 m1le past V1 nton
home (740)949-2437
school

Free
t1ger

.cA "~1~ r;;

elc

1 year ol d male bmcerllab to
good home 740-949 92 17

5 family yard sale Thws Fn
Sat
9am Spm
755
Shoestring R1dge Ad Lots ol
clothes
furniture
m•sc
•tams
5-MIIe Yard Sale
Saturday June 4th •
Bam-5pm

fl74

YARD SALE.·
GAUJPOLIS

yARD SALE·
l'uM&gt;:KOYiM IDIJLE

oo-?

250 Mulberry
Sat June 4 8
Tools Fr1day
campers
top
Prec1ous Pomeroy 10 00 AM Ill 2PM
Moments Longaberger lots Table w1th cha1rs COIJCh and
two matchmg cha1rs end
of m•sc,
tables, Lots More 740-992'
2854

Huge (movmg)yard sa le Saturday 614 Only 48 &amp; 52
6/3-6/4 8 00-? I m le from Spwce St 9 Ill 5
town AI 7 SOIJth

H EI PWA" IFJl

II""
. •

Lots of

mise
JIJne 1 2 3 6420 SA 7
Sou th 1 1/2 m1le down
Route 7 Freezer An!IQIJS
co llectables Longat&gt;erger
baskels Wrough11ron &amp; pottery Boyd bears treadmill
stationary b1ke s1a1r stepper
Aerator for r1dmg
mower
stereo
33 1/2
records frystal glass ware
I1Jrn1ture gnll old tools
Snaps on Creeper
car
ramps tool boJCed mov1es
children s toys beddmg
Zane Gray book collf!Ctlon &amp;
more

Res•dents of Ne1ghbort1ood
Road will be hold1ng a 5~
m ile Yard Sale' All partiCIpants w1ll have SIQnS w1th
yellow balloons 1n thetr
yards Ftnd everything you're large yard sale Fn/ Sat
looking for on one road•
Bam-? Quali ty mens and
(Neighborhood Ad runs women s clothes
Vera
between State Ales 141 &amp; Bradley Furn1lure &amp; m1sc
218)
1tems 634 LeGrande Blvd
6-4 05 900? 75 Gavm Aa1n or Sh1ne
"
Street.
Rodney
II
Ra1n/Shme
GIJns. col Look look look• Large yard
lect1b'es coms mens wom
sale Fn-Sat 613-614 Bamens tumor clothes
4pm
Clothmg
shoes

Garage Sale June 3rd and
4th
9 00 5 00
Fry
---------Res1dence nex t to Former
Two family yard sale Fnday Sal isbury
Elementary
&amp; Saturday Bam Lots of School on CoiJnty Road 25
baby g1rl &amp; boy ch1ldrens
adults clothes Longaber~ r ,Garage Sale Middleport
baskets and m•sc
JIJne 3rd &amp;4th 9AM 4PM
---~-----­

Yard Sale &amp; Bake Sale June
3rd 4th (Friday &amp; Saturday)
Cadmus School House
Sponsored by
Cadmus
Cr1me Watch
Yard sale 1 8 miles oot 141
on r1ght lUSt past Debbie
Dnve 9am 4pm Fnday an,d
Saturday Lots of stuH
Yard sale Sat 'SIJn BOO
6 00 Daybed lw n 6 drawer
capta1n bed With desk at
end dryer beaui!Jul clothes
g1rl women boys men..
m1sc A MUST SEE ROUSH

lANE
Yard sale Fri&lt;Jay only 9am4pm Jumper Lane 1n The
Meadows lots ol quality
hOIJSehold mens clolhmg
outdoor lurn and more

A Large Yard Sale JUSt otf
Leon Ad \rom 87 come past
Bethel Church the first Ad lo
your lelt come down the hrsl
Trarler on the Jefl1s the sale
From Leon walch out lor
s1gns on left Starts at 8 30
Fn and Sat

Nol your average me diCal
OfiiCe lObi OlfiCe su ppo rt
personnel needed tor pro
gress1ve Optometnc pract•ce
1n Athens Learn the essen
tlals of pa tienl care wh•le
usmg yow compiJter knowl
edge typ1ng and phone et1
quette skills We are look1ng
lor a canng self motivated
hard worker who IS able to
m1Jit1task FaJC resumes to
01Je to recent changes 1n
coverage area Med1 Home 740-594-2270 by June 17
2005
Health Agency IS seeking a
highly mot•vated Independen t full-11me Reg istered
Open1ngs ror 2 Par
Nurse to managelserv1ce
clients out of oiJr Gallipolis
oH1ce Must be licensed 1r1 fn me Kennel Workers a
ocal
Ammat
Shel ter
both Ohi O and West V rg•ma
We offer a competitive Please call (304)675-645
salary benefits package and or more infor mation

~

Estate Sale Thu r Fn 9 ?
Falrvtew
Road
Camp
Conley Anbques m lk cans
stone crock oak cha1rs oak
and maple round pedesl al
tables IJnusual kitChen cab •
net wagons pol ato scale
hayh r1 er oak school desks
Other Items
ch1na toys
cnb h1gli cha1rs small app h
ances books little g1rlslboys
cl ot hes
baskets
sleds
wardrobe home 1nlet1or
b1 kes etc Everything Will
Go?

Overbrook Center IS ciJrrent
ly accepting appllca11ons lor
LPN s ALL SHIFTSI I If you
are mterested please com.e
1n and fill out an apphcatron
333
Page
Street
Established Heat1ng Cooling al
Mrddleporl
Oh
EOE
Company In Gall1a CoiJnty
lOOking ror 9Kpenen£ed
Po1nt Pleasan t Dental OffiCe
Installers and 1echn1c1ans If
seekmg Dental Hyg1emsl
1nlerested send resume to
Send Resume c/o PO Box
CLA Box 566 c/o Gallipolis
45 Pt Pleasant WV 25550
Tribune, P O BoJC 469
or faJC 304-675 6553
GallipoliS OH 45631
Rel a1l Sales Clerk 28 hours
Excellent Income Nahonal
piiJs
a
week
Some
Cep1 tal FIJndmg Group now
eve mngs ---- No Sundays hlflng
Court house
$7 00/hour P~ei: up applicaResearchers W1ll tra •n to
tion al Sw1sher &amp; Loshe
work from home on your
Pomeroy
compiJtar No eJCpen ence
necessary Call i -800-440SECURITY
7234

lntere§led m btuld1ng a
career by mentonng olhers?
Gallipolis
Ferry leis talk contact Jeanne
679 Broadway Street 747 Fn/ Sat
across !rom Beale School 3 Ge1gar Avon Independent
eroadway Street
Fam•ly, Brand Name clothes sales representative at
Garage Sale Saturday 4th Ma l e r n 1 t y
(740)286 4351
or
cell
Ra•n or shrne TV s house Decorat•ve/Househol;j Items (740)41 8.()()99
hold •tems lots of m1sc
Frank Road oH of Flatwoods Garage Sale Fn &amp; Sat
Local ctental office seek1ng
9am 3pm 2603 JeHerso'n an enthiJSiaStlc, m1Jr11- taskRoad
Ave Old &amp; New Thmgs
Ing IndiVIdual
Must have
Garage sale• 3rd &amp; 4th 9-4 Garage-Sale Ra•niSh1ne
general office ski lls computram or shme on Eagle 125&amp;126 English Rd Tools- er skills, and a des1re to
R1dge Road many 1tems
FIShing gear Books of all develop dentlal knowledge
kmds clothing June 3rd&amp;4th Please send res iJme and
Garage Sale Fnday June 8?
hand wnnen note IndiCating
3rd 8-4 !h1rd house on left
yom 1nterest to
PO Bolt
on top ol h1ll at Chester (SA Household
Vard
Sale 704 Pomeroy OhiO 45769
248) clolhtng household lnciiJdmg somrJ AntlqiJeS
1lems battery operated 4- Ram or Sh1ne 700 112 22nd
wheeler Harley &amp; horse St Point Pleasant June 2 3
drawn carnage, outsrde 41h
toys etc
RIJmmage Sale Sacred
Garage Sale Fnday June Heart Calhohc Church Hall
Jackson
Avenue
3rd SAM
to 4PM &amp; 2222
Saturday June 41h BA.M to ThiJrs Fn and Sat 9-3

?
Benny Ewmg s next to Three Family Yard Sale
c~m­
puters. biJt work Lots of Yard sale hot dogs baked Pomeroy F1re Dept 300 4th Fnday&amp;Salurday
Boys
kmck knacks One m1le trom goods June 3 at Tnn1ty U M Street Pomeroy, Oh1o
Toddler Clothes etc 5·mlles
downtown at 58B and '_C_h_u_"_h_P~o-'1~•-'-""-""-'-­
CIJI Crab Creek Ad 8-?
June 2 4
8111 Cross s
McCormiCII Road You PICk Yard sale· 107 Colomal Or
Sl ,
Aac1ne, Yard Sale June 1 3 Gallipolis
rt You Pr1ce 11 For donat1on behind Dollar General on P1ckens
clath1ng,
women
s
g•rls
all Ferry Crab Creek Ad 5th
toWIIIowVatleyYouth Camp Jackson Pike June 3 4
dnve on ler1 8 am-?
s•zes &amp; shoes
9am 5pm G~rls name brand
Mov1ng sale Saf 9-7 Sun 9
clothes sz 6- t 2 also shm
Yard-Sale 2308 Jefterson
5 Small turn glass &amp; ch1na sz Exec cond lots o"f other June 4th &amp; 5th Skinner Ad
Ave June 3rd &amp; 4th Girls
2nd
hoiJse
on
nghl
trom
yard
tools
electroniCS
adult clothes &amp; other 1tems
Boys
Clothes
Rockspr1ngs Rd lots ol and
crafts
books
k1tchen
HousehOld llems 9am-2pm
m1sc
11ems
9am-?
linens videos 8 COs etc Yard Sale 1939 Chatham
19635 At 554 1 1111 from Ave June 1 sl 2nd 3i-d
Yard-Sale Fnday&amp;Saturday
325 on nght Follow s1gns
FIJrniture k•ds clothes dish Large F~rst t1me Vard Sale 1 women &amp; mens cloth1ng
m1le out St At 143 June 2
es bi.Jnk beds
sh~s mtSC 4 m1tes below
Onental lurmtura/wall hang4
Henderson Old G1lls Farm
Ings antiques entertain- Yard sale 2 m1les oot Cherry
men I center
loveseats A1dge Sal 4th 9-? KidS Multi family 2nd-31'd m1sc
gaze\1 b1ke freezer and :d~o~th~e~s~a~nd
~l~o~ls~mo
~,~·..,._., Pullins Exc on Rt 833, 10-5
ra1n or sh•ne no phone c&lt;,llls
more SatiJrday 9am 107
Buhl Morlan Ad
yARD SALE..
Top Do llar US
Po\JEROYiMIDDI.E . Sal 9-4 Lots or k1ds clothes Absolute
Sliver and Gold Co1ns
Per earner desk chair
•nfantftoddler g1rllboy SA
Proofsets Gold Rings U S
books, v1deos basket ball 2nd-5th 1940 s bedroom 143 3 1 m11es from Rt 7
CIJrrency,-M T S Coin Shop
stand car ramps, Chnstmas swte V1ctonan chest old
Second
Avenue ,
•tems hospital bed dresser. dtshes Cu1ver &amp; lves dish- Sat June .C. 9-Jpm Dave 151
Barb1e doll 1tems crarts, es apartment range &amp; lots Spencer's 605 Ma1n Street GallipoliS, 740-446-2842
tovs clothetr ch•ldren name of miscellaneous 1tems on Racme adiJit ctothes, teen
Good
0\Jallty
Roof1ng
brand J&amp;an8 JUnlofs mens Noble Summit Ad off Co (AE) SIZe 0 6 , household
Slates W1ll pay $2 00 per
f1sh tank shoes. dishes Ad 5 rain or shma
items rain cancels
slate For use 1n Art Pro1ect
depress1on kmck Krlacks,
Call 740-992-9177
Coke llems. linens fresh 405 Lincoln 51 Middleport
I "l'f II\ '-II'\ I
piCked slrawbernes 1914 JIJne' 3 Fn 9-5 June 4 Sal
State Route 141 , GallrpcMia
baiJW rtems ctoth1ng , m1sc
"I 1, I II 1"

Across !rom the Korner
Store on 554&amp; 160 June 34 Bam ? 'Table chalrs
clothes eiC
B1g Yard Sale Fr1 JIJne 3 {94) (Ra1n day Sal June 4)
525 Th1rd Ave GaH1pol1s
Chesh•re- end or Roush
lane on 554 Home lntenor
baby 1tems
househQid
much more June 3-4 9-5
Community ya rd sale Sl
AoiJte
554
at
Eno
Something tor everyone

613-614
Fn/ Sat June 314 8 00-5 00
1 m11e out Cherry R1dge
Road A1o Grande Home
I ntenor household 11ems
name brand clottung boys
10-16 Jr Q-7
Fnday &amp; Saturday Middleton
Estates by the golf course
Somett11ng ror everyone
Come &amp; see
Friday 3r'd Bam 3 family
yard s8Je 1 m1le down 218
Aatf.'l or shine

r4

t

I

r

Aamed out Yard Sale at
Garage
Sate 168e Uncoln Plka re5ched·
Fnday/Salurday,
6/3-6/4 uled tor June 4 Lots ol
baby/toddler g1r1 clothes
8em-3pm Mlec Items
adiJit clothes and went out
Garage sale June 3 4 So.? of business craft sale Plus
Uttle Kyger Ad Turn at RV mUCh more
H!gh SchoOl 2 gas ranges
$40 eacn mens AE &amp; Old Rodney Village II Graham
Navy c:loth•ng &amp; chddrens Sl 9-4 Sat June 4

5 fam•ly yard sale-

Jw~

3--t

girl' baby girls Jr &amp;
women s adiJI1 cloft'les
hOuiehOid 1tems toddler
bed! video games Marn
Street Rutland

6/ 3-6/4- 5 Famdy Carport
Sale-L1bby F1sher's John"s
Aoad ott YellowbiJsh Aoad
Twrn
Bed 2 0o1Jb4e Beds
clolt'Hng &amp; more
Rummage Sale JI.Jf1e 3rd Baby Bed Playpen Sw1ng
J1Jiy 4th 5th Oua•l Creek 2005 9am-2pm VFW Post Walker Mtcrowave PIJrple
1ra1ler par\( lot 49 8-3- 4th 4464
134
3rd
Ave Martin BoJC &amp; Pole Trude
B-6 5th
Hotdog'alcorn bread
Bed L•ner Moch more l

f

2 Separate Yard Sales 8
Fam•ly total Children to
AdiJit s1zas
Uttle B1t ol
Everything June 3-4 9am2pm Rain date Mon~Tues
176 Midway Onve New
Hcwen

wv

ltio
.

PROFESSIONALS

100 WOIIItERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood 1tems
Mater1als provided
To$480/wk
Free Information pkg 24 hr
001-4213-4649

(74())446·3358
Managers Pos111on

A local Athens electriCal dlstnl:lJtor IS lookmg IQr an 1ndi
VIdual who can S1Jperv1se
and develop others provide
exceptiOf'tal Cllstomer serva and be able to partiapale 1n all aspects of runmng
a biJsmess Prev1ous electrical sales/managers E!JCpenence a piiJs
Send
resume
to
HA
Department PO Bc»c 6668
Hunt1ngton wv 25773

SAVINGS

SER~lCES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY fSSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n•
1 888-582 3345

r

acres

Call M•ke (513)314

17&lt;10)446·3620
V1ew photos/i nfo online

study/olf1ce With walk-I n
closet Master bedroom and
bath Wllh 2 wa lk-m closets
Whirlpool tub shower and
dual s1n ks Enclosed back
porch 2 car garage 20x40
1n l:(round pool oak wood
wo rk new roof landscap1ng
plus AJC heat Ad]acenlland
approx 4-5 acres available
$179 900 Call (740)446
9312

Ranch Br1ck Home 38r 1Ba
2'/Car Garage
BasementiSIJnroom
All
Appliances Included By
Appointment (304)662-2230
or (304)533-6636

o Downl 3 bedroqm I
4 bath UR DIA FIR
ar gara ge rencud •n
ack yard 112 acre
lose lo town $132 500
ode 4505 or call
740 446 8325

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

r.

MOBll ~ H OMF:S
FOR SALI

"'•••oiiioiiliiiiio•-'
2
1979 Homa!te 12x50
Bedroom/1 Bath gas self
coni a1r cond1l1oner
W1ll
rent for $265 00 a monll1 or
sell for $3 495 00 740-385·
40 19

Al HEAGI-

3 bedroom Tra•ler tOr rent
Pnvale Gauntly locat1on
JUSt t m11e from At 2 1n
Gallipolis Fet ry Garba ge &amp;
Water mcluded $350 per
mon th rent $400 depos11
(:304 ) 576·2241

3 bedroom

2 ba t h 2 5
acres close to college $350
per month plus depos 1
(740)474·3986

Wo~Nnm

(740)441 7641
1999 Oakwood 16K75 3
bedroom 2 bath underpinlront
deck
ning
and
E&gt;;cellen1
cond1110n
$ 19 500 Needs moved Call
(740)446·6565 alter 5pm
2000
Fleetwood
from
k•lchen model w1th sk1rt1ng
and central a1r W•ll deliver
Very clean I 800 837 3238
2003 16x80 Noms 3 bed
roonf 2 balh all appliances
Call (740)367-Q402 lea~
message
--------94 Clayl on NGrr1s 14 70
total e lectnc 2BA 2BA
v•ny l sK~r!lng 2 decks heat
080
pump
$14 000
(740)388-8739

IU '\I \1.:-i

10

HotJS&gt;:S
H1R R ENI

1 BA Cottage 1n Gallipolis
Deposit
&amp;
relerence
reqUired No pels Call after
4pm (740)446-2468
2 6DR 2 112 baths 2 car
garage lurn1shed close to
Holzer h0sp1tal (740)44 1
0310

Anentl o n!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you to buy your
home •nstead of rent1ng
• 100% lmanc•ng
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Paymen1 could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators
(740)992 7321
Brand New 2 Bedroom
HoiJse 1n town $475/mo
C/A Washer 10 ryer Hook up
Slove!Relngeralor Included
(740)441 0194 or (740)4411184

For rent A•o Grande area
3BR 28TH central a1r
Ready to move m 3 BA
washer/dry $550+ depos•t
Horne 1n coiJntry sett1ng only
references Call (304)576
198/ ma Wl lh I 0% down 99' Holly Park Glenmoor 3 2574
740 385-4367
SA 2 bath ' vmyl l shmgle : - : - - - , - - : - - , - - Rio Grande already set up HoiJse lor Rent Jackson
S475 plus One
or' can be moved $11 900 Avenue
M1U Creek Ad Galhpolrs· i ·
(304)633 6536
Monlh DepOSit (304)675EJCceUent
Cond•hon
&amp;
3100
Loca11on
5 Room \ 3br
Handyman spec1al t4x70
Ranch Br~&lt;:k Front, V1nyl
wlexpando $1 000 OBO In town locanon 1 2 BR
Ranch home mce yard AC
S1d1ng Heat Pump 0 31 ac
(740)~46-7734
fully eqwpped Kitchen
References
reqUired
New 14JC60 1 on ly $198 73 $450/mo rent &amp; $450 Sec
Repl acement
Wmdows
per mo Includes complete Dep You pay all UtllilleS
Anached Garage Storage
sel up and delivery 740 Available
call
5 9pm
6, 15
Call
Bu 1ld1ngs,
385 2434
(740)446-3644
(304)675 5038

SELL

CLASSIFIED
AD
.

IJot Sl-iiiJI U

t\ lrstHI ~~lOtS

(;OOI.l'&gt;

, •••klll\~lll"'ilo

F urn1sh ed upstairS 3 rooms
&amp; bath Clean ref &amp; dep
req wred No pet s (740)44 6
t519

Mollohan Car pet 202 Clark
Chapel Road Porter Oh1o
1740\446 7444 1 877 830
9t62 Free- Est mates Easy
l1nanc1ng 90 oavs same as
Gractous lw•ng 1 and 2 bed casll V Sa Mas1er Caro
room apar tments at 'v 1llage Dnve a hltle save alot
Manor
and
Rwers1de
Apartmenls m Midd lepo rt Oak pOker table w1lh 4
From $295 $444 Call .740 cha.rs e~cellent condrt1on
992 5064 Equal Housmg sjgg Ca•' (7 40 )446 4417
OpporH.mlt es
Thompsons Appt1ance &amp;
Large Upsta rs Apartment Aepa1r 675 7388 For sale
2br Appliances lUI mshed re cond uoned
automat•&lt;;
Dep os•t ReqUired Centra l washers ~ dryers relnge ra
AIC $300/month (304)675 tors
gas and e1ec tr1c
7783
ranges a1r cond1t1oners and
wnnger wa sh er s W1ll do
One Bed room No Pets
repa1 15 on maJOr brands 1n
Ul lll •es Pa1d
S40llimo
shop or at your hOne
Oe po s1t
&amp;
R.e te rence
Aequ•red (740 )446 3667
Used Furn1tu re Store 130
Bul av11!e P1ke Wast1ers dry
P leasant Valley Apartment
ers mfnge ralors ranges
Are now takmg Apphca11ons
ma nresses
dressers
l or 2BA .JBR 8 4BA
couches d1nettes recliner s
App hcat1ons
are
taken
grave monuments much
Monday thru Fr1day lron'l
more
(740) 44 6 4782
900 AM 4 PM OH1ce s
GallipOliS OH Hrs 11 3 (M
Located at 1151 Evergreen
S)
Dr~ve Pomt Pleasant WV
Phone No IS {304) 67 5
Sl '{ }Ki lN&lt; .
5806EHO
f'rf&gt;r: HX&gt;oi

3Br Tra1le r w/relndg &amp;
&amp; dryer
I Buy Homes Local person S1ove washer
buys homes Conl•den!lal mcluded (304)576 2934
QIJick cash J1m 740·992
6300 No calls after 9

2 bedroom house no pets
relerence requ11ed starl1ng
at $350/ month Call Jay
1993 Holly Park mob•le (740)441-0110
home 2 bedroom-2 tull bath
3
BR Ranch Home
f r~g range washer &amp; d ryer
central a1r large covered wl attached Garage 1n t:amp
deck
&amp; oul bUIIdmg Conley area ol Pt Large
fenced yard 1n greal nelgh(740)441 0121
.borhoad $675 mth Depos1t
1997 16JC80 Oakwood 3 and References requ1red
BDR 2 bath \landallzed Call 1 304 531-1197 or t$9 200 304 2731112
needs
work

WITH A

Shop
Classlfleds!

2 bedroom mob1le home on
Pole Cat Ad S4 25 month
plus IJllht•es $425 depos11
Call (740) 446 41 07

Rl.ll ESIA il.

01

Only 198/mo lncfudes ale
delivery and set IJP 740385 9948

2754

2 bedroorrl mob1le home 1n
Middleport $375 mo plu 5depoSII also 3 bedr oom
mob •le hom e all electnc
central a1r S425 mo plus
depos11 no ms1d e , pet s
(740)992 3194

MORII ..f l-10\U);
fUR RJ.~,

L&lt;m&amp;

10

row RtN' I

Tra 11er and lot H IC70 314
acre 1 br cent a1r hand1
cap a~ c ca rpo rt out bu•ld
mg mce hom e or renta l
property
36058
Rock
Spnngs
Ad
Pomeroy
(740)992·2762

www.orv
Hom e listings
List your home by call ng

A"' Kf'lllxn;

Small 2 bedroom hous e
$4 75 rt'lonth 1 mile f ro m
town Call (740)441 0 194 or
{740)441·1t84

1 acre lot w/pool and large
garage
lo cated at 96
Hen son
Ad
Add• son
Am G rande
$30 000 firm no land con
Inve st ment Properly walk lo tracl s (93?)828 1526
Un1ver.S 1Iy (2) A.pa rtrn ent
butld lngs (3 ) two BA units 2 acres more or less all utll
S1 29 000 Call (740) 245 1t1es paved roa'd 2 m1les
9413
from Chester
S 16 000
(304 )483·7550

DupleJC each With 3 BR LA
iO
DR K1tcllen Balh &amp; Porcll
H 0!\111)
HoiJse 3 BR LA Kitchen
ffiR SAU
Ba th
Both m ' Po1nt
Pleasant
(304)675-2495
$59 000 New Haven 2 BOO al ter 7 OOpm
sq tt log Cab•n as IS Wl3-5 -N-ew'--3'-"BD_2_B_a_l_h_H_o~m-e

H&lt;M~I;,; .

IUR lbNI

SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models at old pnces
2005 models arr1v 1ng Now
Mob •l e
Homes
Cole s
15266 U S 50 East Athens
Oh10 45701 (740)592· 1972
"Where You
Gel Your
Money s Worth"

t

IH \I I .., I \II

Pomeroy 2 or 3 br Naylor
Run w/d hook IJP Sir HUD RIJge r 10122 Delu~te SS
sc ope
$250
leave message (740)992 stain less
Nonnco
AK47
5350
6886
Aomama n AK47 drum plus
Tara
Townho use 4 30 rei c lips 5500 H&amp;K
Apartments Very Spacc •ous usp 40 cal $500 Rem1ngton
2 Bed10oms CI A 1 112 1100 12 ga
3 br ls
Bath
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Rem 1ngton 8 70 Express
Pool Pat•o Start 5385/ Mo 12ga $200 savag e 22 LA
Clean 2 bedroom mobile
Pets
Le ase
Plus octag on brl piJ mp .v/clip
home close lo town Call No
(740)256-6574
Sec ur~ty Depos t Aeqwred S200 H1gh stand ard 22 l A
(740)446-34131
sem • auto sharpsh ooter
Mobile Ho me Lot only
Twm A1vers Tower IS accepl $350 740)446 2 905
Add1son P1Ke· $125/month
call (740)446 3644 for more mg apphcalmns for wa11 1ng
hst lor H1Jd sub s1zed 1 br
1nfo
apartment call 675 6679
Mob•le Homes s1tes 1n the EHO
Buy
or
sell
R1verme
Shade area Water Sewer
Valley
Apartments
1n
Mason
Antiques
1124
East
Man
Trash mcluded
$130 00
WV
cu rrently accep11ng on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740
per month 740-385·4019
fjuss Moore
appl1cat ons Apply at 501 992 2526
Shawnee Tra11 m Pomt owner
APAKI'I\IE1&gt;1S
Pleasant
Apphcal ons
IUR ibNf
~ 1\h "'iLI-Ll . \MOU"i
accepted on Tuesday s
MERl H,~~lliSI
(304)675
&amp; .2 bedroom newly reno HUD ass•sted

"'"'l()"E.'

vated
Apts
lor
rent 4900
Downtown Gallipoli s Rive(
&amp; Park v1ew $360 $600/mo
FORib:Nl
Some utilitieS pa1(j Now
accepting apphcabons Call
For Lease Ofl1ce or reta11
(740)709-1690 (local call)
spaces 1n very good cond1
1 and 2 bedroom apart tlon Downtown GallipoliS
ments furn•shed and unfur- Appro~ 1600 sq II each 1
mslled
secunty depos1t or 2 baths Lease pr~ce
requned no pets 740-992· negot•able lo encourage
new
busmess
Call
2218
(740)446 4425 or (740)446
1BA Apl 1n Spnng Valley 3936
Clean &amp; affordable WID
\lriH II\ '\IllSI
hookiJps $290 per monlll+
dep
(740)38B 0017
or
0
HotiSIJIOID
(740)339 036:2:

t

2BR apt State Route 160
$400/ monlh slove/refr•gerator 1ncluded washer/dryer
hookup (740)44 1 0194 or
(740)441·1 184
•
BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRI CES AT JACI&lt;SON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve from $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
740-446-2568
Equal
Hous•ng Opportun•W
C ON~ENIEN T LY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
apartmen l s
Townhouse
and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441 1111
for apphcat•on &amp; •nformabon

Smn.

15 2 CF Wh~r l p oo l lreezer
S 100 48 JC96" Anderson piClure w nd ow $75 32 lui
l\11ew metal exter •or door
$50 (740)446 107 9

W nch esler model 12 16
ga 30 lui sold r b rare
length
a lso
barrel
Aemmgton model t ! 00 16
ga vent nb bo111 guns e~cet
lent S 1 3GO Both guns
(740)533 3870
Wolff Tanmng Beds
Huge selec tiOn
Immedia te Delivery
Fmancmg
1 800 894 6997
(740) 44 6 6579

Bvn m ~( .
SL1 1'1'Uf~"i
Block br1ck sewe r p1p e:;;
Windows lin tels etc Clauoe
W nlers A o Grande OH
Call 740 24 5 5 121

r

I'm;

n utS \If

9 montt1 old hand lamed
Aa1 nbow Lo ry, beautifu l &amp;
very lnendly S400 lor Parr ot
&amp; Cage (304)576 2999 or
(304)654 1462
AKC Lab Pupp es Yellow
and Black
Wormed - 1st
shOts Parenls on prem1ses
S250 00 740 992 3357
B1chon Fnse PIJPPI9S 1 t1me
spec1al AKC Reg sterad All
white (740 )441 9510
For sale Toys poodles1 1
male &amp; 1 female $300 each
(740)256 1101
Lab pupp1es $225 Vet
cheCked
1st shots &amp;
wormed
Stamese
H malayan k1ttens
$75
\740)446·1 062
Pureb red S benan HIJSky
pupp1es 3 females black &amp;
wh1le sable &amp; wh1te blue
eyes masks very n1ce•H
Wormed S I 60 aat:h call
(740)992-5885

r

FoRSo~u

Homegrown Strawbernes
740 378 6291 Monday thru
Saturday 8 00 6 00 65002
Stale Route 124 Reedsville

I \I{ \I Sl 1'1'1 II:-.
,\fi\IS!tlth

19 ' TV Twin Bed Elec tnc
Range (304)675 5375

10

F' llt\1

EQt'"''~ '

22 Oak factory padded
Church PewS! I t It long
oo"' F11ted Rate up to 24
good cond1t1on S125 each
months on New John Deere
40 new Hymnal Church
Compacl Trad ers &amp; 110 TLB
books
S360
(740)388 at Carm1chael Equ1pment
8965
(740)446 2412

JET

1995 M F 362 tractor 55
AEAI;.TION MOTORS
GOO!JS
Repa~red New &amp; RebUilt In H P 8430 ease I H ro und
Stock Call Ron Ev a ns~ I ba11e r 55 N H rake 479
N H haybme hay tedder
3 d1sc CD chang er book - 800 53 7 !1528
(740)985·3843
shelf stereo syslem must
sell S79 Call (740)446· NEW AND USED STE EL Hay Wdgon 19 It Stollus
4417 before 7pm
Steel Bear:ns P1pe Rebar kicker wagon Removable
For
Conc rete
Angle steel racks L1ke ne~ t1res
Black &amp; Tan tW€ed 3 p1ece
ilnd bed (740)245 0485
l 1vmg Room Su1te ve ry Channel Flat Bar Steel
Grating
For
Drams
John Deere 10 It No Ti l Drill
good conditiOn $399 Call
Dnveways &amp; Walkways l&amp;L tor
Rent
Carm1chael
(740)446 4417 before 7pm
Scrap Metals Open Monday Equ1pment (740)446 2412
BoQ,\sshell stereo system Tuesday
Wednesday &amp;
w1th DVD player sounds Fnday Sam 4 30pm Closed John Deere Commercial
great $249 Call (740)446- Thursday
Saturday
&amp; Works•te Products In Stock II
Compact EJCcavator 27C
4417 before 7pm
Sunday (740)446 7300
350 SOD/Sk1d Steers 3?1
DVD Recorder rarely used Pol e Barn 30K50xtOFT 320
325
328fTractor
$229 Calt (740)446 4417 $6795 mclude s Pam ted Loade r BackhOe 110TLB
be1ore 7pm
Metal
Free
Delivery Check out our rental rates
www nat•onw•depolebarns c Great F1nanc1 ng A11a1lable
Furniture Sale Mollohan s
om (937)559-8385
. Ca rm•chael
Eqwpment
Sola and cha1r startmg at
(740)446 2412
$399 Call (740)446·7444
SPA fACfO Rl OUTLET

Downtown Point Pteasant
Two 1 Bedroom Apartments
References
&amp;
Oepos1t Green Sola &amp; Charr like
new, $499 Call (740)446Requ•red (304)675 37B8
4417 before 7pm
Furmshed apt 2nd Ave
Upsta1rs "'all IJIIhtles pa1d Metal Computer Desk w1th
One bedroom no pe ls storage drawer $99 Call
(740)446-4417 before 7pm
Gallipol•s {7 40)446 9523

.

Top Quality Warraiily
Wtlolesale Rnanc1ng
Delil.'erleS
2 locaiiOns
Millon Flea Market
&amp; Ashland Kenwcky

16{)6)922·7185

New 5003 5005 &amp; 5020
Senes John Deere Uhl ty
Tractors @ 0°o IIJCed/ 36
mqnlhs Used Ufll•ty Tractors
@
4 9% Var1able1 60
months
Carm ichael
Equ1pment {740)446·2412

,---·-------··------···------···------· ··------···------·· ·------···------· ··------···------···------···------··------· ··------·· ·------···------·· ·------·· ·------·· ·------· · · ------···~··-,

EOE

SECURITY

Reach 3 Count:ies

1

PROFESSIONALS
NatiOnal security firm seekS
PART-TlME employment 1n
the Apple Grove, WV area
Qualified appliCants must
be at l eaSI 2 1 years old .HS
diploma/GED no cr1rmnal
reco rd, &amp; pass drug teSI

1

I

I

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
I Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, Point
Register, or

EKoolle nt pay
-FREE healttlcare
l 1le 1nsurance
-Malchmg 401(11)
Free umlorms
-TutiGos ass1stance
-Awards/bonuses
Call 1-866-325-4150
between 9AM &amp; 5PM M-F
to schedule an 1nterv•ews

~leasant

Daily

EOE
Super B Motel IS now hmng
for bf9akfast bar attendant &amp;
housekeepmg Applying 1n
person No phone cells
please

o.lttpolle C.....

R10 Grande
3 4 BR 2 112 BA LR DR
wood . floors basem ent
garage ca rport ove r 1800
sq
ft
5125 000
Ca ll
(740)245-941 3

HOME

I

Sentin~l,

And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

I

I
I
I
I
I

I

II

~~:-:'"_oo:-,;:-;'--M~o~"-d-•y__'"_'_" 1'§1 ~
Med1 Home Care has an
op~r11ng fer a LPN Fu your
resume to (740)441-1071 or
contact John Kearns at

I'ROFI'N)IONAI.

This newspaper w111 not
knowi ngly a&lt;:cept
advertisements for real
estate wh ich 1s in
VIOlation of the law Our
readers are hereby
1nformed that all
dwellings advertised 1n
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opport unity bases

I"'"

lim u ."i
FUM SAL.

YOUR

Tudors BISCUit World now
h1rlno at Pom t Pleasant
Casll•er
Bailer &amp; Cook
apply 1n person hours
McClure's Restaurant now 5 30em-2 OOpm
hiring all locations, lull or
part-time pick up apphca~ Wanted Someooe to gwe
bon ar location &amp; bnng badt VoiCe lessons 2 days a week
be!Ween
10 ooam
&amp; call (304}675-1602

I

I

CoNew

(Careers Close To Home)
Call TOday! 740-448-4367

I 801).214-0452

w-ga~~·-cchg•O(II'II
Aocrtdlltd Member Aa:recfiUng
ad E:.penence preferred Cound for ''/&lt;"'P'''Idall couagn
but w1ll b'a1n PT/FT some and School• 1Vo4B
weekends
reqwred
Mmlmum
wage
Send NRA CONCEALED Pistol
Saturday June 11
resume to French Town Clue
Mason
Ve!tnnary Clinic, 360 SA 200!5 9 00 A M
VFW
$75
00,
Call
(T40)
160
Gallipolis
Or tax

I
I
I

Vetennary Assistant need-

3rd Anriual StuIt Sale JIJne 1
to 4 9am·to? Antrques Men
and Womens clothes (xxlg)
(740)448-4101
Jewelry Glassware Baby
•tems, too mud1 to hst Al62 An E:.cellent way to earn Paramedics
&amp;
EMrs
South on fight 1 5 m•les past money The New Avon
needed Apply al 1364
Pau l s Ex:-:on
Call Manlyn 304-882 2645
Jackson Pike Gallipolis

•

A Jump
on

National secunty firm seeks
PAAT·TIME employment 1n
the Apple Grove VN area
Qualified applicants must be
at leasl 2 1 years old HS
diploma/GED no cnmmal
record &amp; pass drug test
WE OFFER
-Excellent pay
F REE heelthcare
life Insurance
-Matc h1ng 40 1(k)
Free IJnlforms
•TIJitiOn assiStance
-Awards/bOnuses
can
1 866325 41 50
between 9am &amp; 5pm M-F to
schedule an 1ntemew

(74()~3880

lbli' WANJID

NG CO reco mmends lha
u do bus1ness w1th pea
le you know and NOT t
end money th rough th
arl until yotJ have 1nvest1
ated the olfenn

WE OFFER

Make 50% Selling Avon Call

r

All real estate advert1stng
lfllhls newspaper is
aubject to lh&amp; Federal
Fair Housmg Acl ot 1968
wh1ch makes 1llllege1to
advertise any
jlre:ference, llmltat•on or
dlscrim•na!lon based on
race color rehg1on, &amp;e:~t
l amllla l sta lus or national
orlvln, ar any mlentlan to
make any such
preference, hm1tat1on or
discrimination'

I,

B•g Garage Sale June 2 3
Thurs Fn Lots of everything 1 m•le out Sandhill 401K E 0 E Please send
Road on lhe Comer or Lew1s resume to 352 Second Ava
Lane 8-3 •a1n or Shme
Gallipolis OH 45631 or call
Attn
Community Sale Gunl/lll e 1 BOO 48 1-633 4
Audrey
Farley
AN
R1dge Ad JIJne 3 4 From
Po1nt Pleasant At 2 North to
At 87 go 6 m•les Follow
S1gns 9-?

orrow Smart Contac
he OhiO DIVISIOn 0
•nanc1al
tnst•luiiOn
ll1ce
of
Consume
flairS B EFORE you ref1
ance yoiJr home o
bta1n a loan BEWAR
I requests for any targ
dvance payments o
ees or Insurance Cal
he Olf•ce ol Consume
tfatrs toll tree at 1 866
78-Q003 to learn If th
ortgage
broker
o
ender
•s
properl
teensed (Th1s 1s a publ1

2 3br Home
1!2ba
Extenor
Pa1n11ng, Hardwood Floors, To!ully New 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
Expenenced Reasonable Remodeled (304)593-2532 Home on 11 + acres @
rates References For Free or (859)245-7454
Leon
Stocked Pond C1ty
Estimates call 740 645
Water New SeptiC Syslem
2638
3 Bedroom
1 Balh Ready to move 1n ca:ll lor
Remodeled. Full Basement appl (304)475 4429
Georges Portable Sawm•ll
App liances
Included
don t haul your logs to lhe
Outbu11d1ng &amp; 24FT Pool New 3 BR 2 Bath SeciiOnal
miii iiJ stcall 30 4 675 1!;157
Only
249/mo
188 Pa rk Dnve (304 )675- Home
lnclude:s A/C delivery &amp;
I w111 care lor )IOIJr loved one 7460
setup 740-385-7671
m my home Call (740)3883BR
1
BA
Ra
nch
style
0118
New 3 BR H ome Only
house located 6 m1les past
I will clean houses or oflrces Holzer hospital on AI 160 189/mo Includes ale deliv
ery and set up 740 385
References ava labia For (740)388·9263
4367
the best 1n clea{'llmess call
Malinda at 304 531 1794 or 7 Homes IJnder $14000 No Down Paym en t even
740-992 -5605.
W1U deliver 740 385 4367
With less 1han perlect credit
on \h1s 3 bedroom 1 balh
LDW·MOIStU re
AHentl onl
home 1n Middleport Corner
Carpei·Cieanlng
l ocal company offering "NO lot carport wrap-around
Brand New Method
DOWN PAYMENT" pro porch lenced 1n yard base
Dry In 1 Hour
grams lor you l o buy yoiJr ment payment same as
No Steam-or-Shampoo
home 1nstead ol rentmg
ren t 740 992 6300
Free Estimates
' 100% hnanc1ng
.... Clearly Clean .. •
• less l han perfect ~;red•t No Down Payment IS poss 1ble on th 1s beautlfiJI 3 bed
(304)875-00.22
accepted
• Payment cou ld be the room 2 bath home 2 car
Will take care of the Elderly
garage Deck overlooKing
same as renl
Have
m t he•r Home
Mortg age
Loca lors beaiJIItul v1ew F1ve Po1nts
Experience
phone (740)992 732 1
area (740)992-6667
{304)675 3264
Bnck Ranch B•dweii/Porter Owner relocating 0"/o down
1 1'\ \'\(1\1
At 160 near school gro Must see !hiS lml]1aculate
2000 sq It home With
eery store and gas stallon
remodeled
k•lchen/ bwlt 1ns
Bus~
3 bedroom s, all electric 2
Grea
t
neighborhOod
close
0ProR11JNJIY
112 baths, kitChen w1th nook
to town Call (740)446-8325
pantry disposal microwave
great room w•th stone/gas or VISII www OAVB com
oNOTI Ch
I• replace formal dining room Code 4505 Pnced lo sell at
HIO VALLEY PUBLI SH
With
bay
wmdow $132 500

5 Famtly • SaiiJrday 6/4 AVONI AII .Areas l To BIJy or
607 East 1st Street New Sell
Shirley Spears 304
Haven
Chil dren-adult 675 1429
clo thes toys household
Dommo s now Hmng
pet everyth ing
Safe Drive rs
and Management
5 Fam1ly Yard Sale At 87
George H Keefer res1dence
All Locat1ons
Fnday &amp; Saturday 3rd &amp; 4th
App ly 1n pe rson
8-? l ots of m1sc and cloth(304)675·5858
Ing Ra1n or Sh1ne
(7 40)446-4040

613-614 Bladen Ad on Swan hoiJsehoiQ 1tems old
1s1 house
CreeK Ad
Toddler &amp; womens cloth•ng
toys etc

DHK CLEANING We II Get
A Done FOR '"" YOU I
DAILY/WEEKLY/MONTHLY
WE
DO
Cleamng
Powerwash ng W1ndows
Small Lawns
Pa1ntmg
Clean up
M1nor
Mametance
Carpel s HoiJses
Busmesses
Ofltces
Awn1ngs
Apartments Trai lers SemiTrailers Gu tters Cab1 ns,
Gas Stations
Contracts
lns•de/Outslde
etc
Resldent •ai!Commer•ca 1
lei Us Help Voul Clean-AUp" and "Get A-Done I 740985 3639n40-416·1823 ask
for Karen or Dave ref ava11
able

H ELP WANTFJ)

~-­

l wrig ht@!lc net

r

Con me s Chi ld Care 1n
Tuppers Plains
Now has"
opemngs on M1dn ght shill
20 Vears eJCpenence Call
740-667 6329

POLICIES Ohio Ya lley Pubhahlng rnervea the r~g h t lo ed11, reject, or cancel eny 6d at any lime Errora muat be repo rted 011 the flr11l day of
Trlbune-Senllnei•Reg••t•r w111 be responSible l or no more than the coat ol the space occupied by the error aiM! only the first lnM rtlon We shall not
any loss or e~tpe n ae tt1at reaults lrorn the pub lication or omission of an advertisement Correction will be made In tt1e flr al avail able edition • Box
are always confidential • Current
card applies • All real e11tate advert1sementa are subject to tt1e Federal Fair Houaing Act of 1HI. • Thl• "'"'I~ P•'I
accept• I help
We will not
accept any advertlal ng

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Tollo

(304)675·5987

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
f'~
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

Pub llc::a t lon
Su n da y Di s pla y : 1: 00 p. m .
Th~.;,~r s d a y fo r Sundays P ;• p er.

WA&gt;mll

Carpenter Work 25 yrs exp
Decks block concrete new
butldlng from ground IJP

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Start Your Ad s With A Keyword • Incl ude Complete
Description • Include A Prh;;e • Avoid Abbre viat ions
• Include Phone Number And Address When Nee ded
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\'\'\01 \II \II '\I..,

1'110

992-2157

All D ispl a y : 1 2 N oon 2
Bu si n ess D a y s Prior To

10

HoMo:-;
lliRSAU

Gall" County OH

Oea.cllfiruword Ads
Display Ads

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ijtrtbune - Sentinel - 1\.egister
CLASSIFIED

We Cove·- _,

Or Fax To

www.mydailysentinel.com

I·

992 9U4

Cellf (74())416-

3329

E

or

Ma1l

IL~allipoHs
maHp -at::rtbune ....he Daily Sentinel
.
~----·--~740t 992:-_215~-

PER-

50N60~ERIZON NET

WV, OH And All
Stares must be 21

legal

--

F40)_446:-_2342:,

.,

- •

~otnt l3leasant Register I

_________ _

,.

_p04)..675_::t33~-

.,

--

_j

'

�.

Page 86 • Th~ Daily Sentinel
I

l'~\1

[Ql"W&gt;IE'\l"

111 ' ,'\. (, \lm l ' ~ III II '

.l9"o

(7 40)446-2.412

www.careq .com

Deere Round
Balers @ 1 9"c F1xed Rate
Fmancmg lor .t8 Months or
N N Model 457 Standard
Rouna eater Onlv 513.250
cash Makes 4X5 Ba le
Ca rm 1chael
Equ1pment
~ 740 ) 446 _ 2412
.
•
Spec1al Purcnase- John
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel
Rakes. Jonn Deere D1sk
Mowers Ca ll lor pr1ce
Carmichael
Equipment
1740)446-2412

10

At •n,.;

h)IQO

rate

lro 2(.{}3

Toyota

r~ ~IOTORCl'f1.ffi'

I

Thursda·y, June 2, 2005

L,..;:-';.\11\liHI:&gt;li:Rsiill
_iiiil____ _.J.

Spyder 2004

Fat

John Deere Cred1t approval
( 7 4 0 ) 4 A 6 - 2 4 1 2

~ I

K \ \""Pti iH \ 11 0'\

.\no.;

'10

FOR S .\J.E

'---.iiii.iiiiioiiiii.-..0
1948
Chevrolet
F1ve
• Pa ssenger Coupe
WV
Slicker New T·res . Gooo
Pa1n1 · sr.arp
130415(6·

2280

---~----. 1952 Plymoufti 4dr for
Resto rat1o n
no
Rust
Eng1ne runs Body Ong1nal
no Dents
31 000 m11es
1304 )576-2532

t•on. 7.000 miles 6-speed
Se~;~ uenhi!ll Shth, m storage 94 H.artey Dav1dson Ultra
from October to Apr il Cli'ISSIC 10.000 m1fes. blue
(304l675-4318 or (304)208· excellent condttion. St3 500
(7401949-2217
4128
96 ChtN)' Cors 1ca V6 . auto1"lat 1c. 4 door
power
locks tilt mce pa 1nt and
mter1or looks and runs
great. St 600 a40)66 90302
;;,;;;,;;.......;~...,._ _ _ __,
IS
1'Kll'K.\oi

, c.

HJR S".&gt;:
~--..;.,;;;;;,;;;,;iiiil-_.1

For sale
1984 Honda
Goldw1ng 55k , 53.000 080
Phone (740)441-0638
- - - -- - - - Honda XR BO D1rt a1ke call
llco\·~.- ,,,

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

TRAILBLAZE

BISSEll

ATV'S • GO KARTS • CYCLES

~(3~04
:"i:6:-75_·235
-;:9~,:-"--,
"

Sales &amp; Warranty Service Deah&gt;r

&amp; ,

_ ,_ .
1a 111 111 "-,

• Lu"n &amp; Trat·tor Sen it'l'
• Pit:kup &amp; Ddi-1-er_, ..\.'1-ailable

'-.•lllli'iiiUiiiRiiSiiiAiil-iii"-- _.1

"

BUILDERS InC.

!"c1~ Homl'' • Vim I

SiJing •

• \\urrant\ Ser\ke l)ealt'r .
fur H.t.•dnla.x Equipment .
• 10.000 &amp; 1.2.01)0 \\'att Brig2s &amp; Str:mon

l\t."\1 Gara~e~

• R ~p l :lt\~ lllLill

TERRY'S ENGINES

r

740-992-7599

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• I.RA • 4,01 K Rollovers • Major Med ~
Medicare _Sup. • Cancer • Accident

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
miles west

r

'~\

Rt. 124

992-5682

s

PRIVA'I'E GYM

v.,

JONES'

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS

Coleman Campmg Trailer
12FT. 2 King Beds. 55,500
call for Deta tls (304)675- ·
1731

Tree Service

ON THIS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS

10

HO\IE
biPRO\'E:\U..:"\1'5
BASEMENT

The Daily Sentinel

992-2155

All Your Home
lm pro\'t:mcnt :-..·~e d!-&gt;
• S i d in~ • \V i n dr&gt;~\S
• lkdZ~ • Porc hes

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Nutit_.e,s in Nt•\vspupcrs.
Your RiJ;Z:ht to Know. l&gt;elivered Right to You.- I&gt;oor.
Puhlit~

25, 26, 27, 31 (6) 1, 2, 3

e L 1z A B E T H
·.GLOECKNER
151
MULBERRY AVENUE
POMEROY, OH 45769
In accordance with
Seclion 2923 .32 of
the Ohio Revised
Code
Elizabeth
Gloeckner , Is hereby
nolifled
that;
on

suant to 2923.32{E)(1)

Get Your....._ AcrOss

VNlthA Daily~

BULLETIN BOARD
· 'S"'column
inchSat.
~~~~ay
'16'"
column inch
Of

West Virginia State Farm
Museum Annual
meeting June 14th
at 8 pm

BINGO
June 4th 6:30pm
American Legion
Middleport
.First pack $10 .00
All After $5 .00 each
Crank·lt-Up $6.000
Starburst $1 .500

Door Prize

5450

Ohio Division of
Financial Institutions, ·
n South High Slreel.
Columbus,
Ohiq,
43215-6120, and the
Federal
Oeposil
I n s u r a n c e
Corporation.
500
West Monroe Street,
Chicago ,
llllnots
60661-3697, for permission to establish a
banking office at 1716
Jefferson Boulevard,
Point
•'" PleaSant,
Mason County, West
Virginia 25550. Any
person wishing to
c01y1men1 on the prOposed
applicalion
must do 10 in writing
to .the Superintendent
and to the Federal

so that she may take
steps to preserve her
Interest, If any, in the
real estate. A copy of
the
Order
of Deposit
Insurance
Forfeiture may be · Corporation within
Obtained from Robert fifteen days after the
F.
Smith ,
Ohio date this notice Is
Department
of published. The comInsurance, 2100 Stella ment period will end
· Court, Columbus, OH on June 17th, 2005.
432315-1067.
'The non contidenlial
RoQert F. Smith
portions of the appliSpecial Prosecutor
cation are on file in
Athena
County
the regional office of
Prosecutors Office
Federal
Deposit
Datlld At Columbus, I n s u r a n c e
Ohio this 16th day of
Corporation 'a nd are
May, 2005.
awallable lor · public
(5) 19, 26, (6) 2, 9, 16, inspection
during
23 , 2005
regular
business
hours. Photocopies
ol the non conflden.Public Notice
tlal portion of the
application file will be
NOTICE OF APPUCA· made svallable upon
TION TO ESTABLISH roquaot.
A BRANCH
(6) 2
PursUIInt to Section
1117,02 of liMo Ohio
Revlaed Codo and
Public Notice
Soctlon 303.7 of the
cOde · of
Federal NoTlCE TO BIDDERS
Regulations (12 CFR
FOR REMEDIATION
303.7), The Farmers OF SOIL
Bank and Saving• The Eutem Local
Company, 211 Weal Board . ot Education
Second
Street, will oc-' bids for
Pomeroy, Olllo ·45769, the removal arid dishereby gives notlc• paul of contamlnat·
that il filed an appli- eel soil, along with the
cation
with
the
replacement ot soil

l&gt;OOfl CLOS~S.
ANOTtl~fl OPeNS-/ tiOW tiAV~

'otl, ONE

•

slurting at 27 horse - 57 horse
with shullle transmiss ion
-1-wd . remote h''draulics 3 ,·ear warranh·

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

4wd ( l \'ear warrant\')
• Farm Pro TraC1ors 20 horse·- JO horse
loaders. finish mowers, tillers
NEW ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon ;Zero Turn ,
Radius Mowerl 30 inch culling width to SO 1
inch t"utting width 3 Year warrant~·
:
T&amp;D TR.\CfQR SALES &amp; EQUIPMENT
right in the heart nf Chesler
9854JI!4 '

IS. l'iOW OI•E:'II AT

The \tulberr~·
Commu'nil~· C.~ ntrr
260 ~lulberr~ · A,e.

Poml'roy
Saml' Grl'at

1..{) 14'

Prices

o11d Smiling
Frie nd~\'

fa cts.
OPEN

-

I

BARNEY
TH'

TH' CHICKEN'S BURNT TO A CRISP,
TH' GRAW'S FULL OF LUMPS
AN' TH' BISCUITS
ARE HARD AS
ROCKS !!

TWICE NEXT
TIME!!

• Room Addilions &amp;

Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical Ill Plurnbln~

• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

, THE BORN LOSER

• Patio aod Porch Decks
We do lt.all except
turru~ce work

P" R,(\)

V.C. YOUNG Ill

'lon-fri.

WI~[. C,OE.S ..-----,

: · WITf\ BEEF ...

P"

/\I'll) \-.11-\IT( GO(S
WIT!-\ Fl~fL

.-BUI Wf\(&gt;,T GOCS
I WI Til. LE.FTOIJE.RS T

'

r--~:---"'-

JefTers

33795 Hiland Road
PomeroJ, Ohio

• Ccfam ic Tile &amp;
Harch\Ood Fl(xning
• Gar;l';c~
. 11
1
• Room Add. • Roulim.'. 1.1.~~~~~~1..10~
• Kllc·hen&gt; • B&lt;nh&lt; - ~ r
"V o Job li• S"w/1 ..
1
Roc·ine. OH
?-10.:!-17·2162 nr
' 740·416.3508
97 Beech Street
l.t yrs. Experience

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

HOWARD l.
W'RITfSfl 5 SONS
ROOFING
All types of roofing:
Shingle. F1at. ~h.'ta l -

Middleport, OH

. IOxiOxiOx20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only

I

see
•.

(740) 992·5232
5x10. 10xl0,
lOx IS. 10x20,
10x30
Jan~t

35537 St. Rt. 7 :'&lt;lorlh

f

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

9 8 3

'

EASTIMPOm
Columl3us Rd.
Athens

YOU

740- 2-24 7

_Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Ro.6 8 1 Darwin , OH

740-9.92 -70 13 or 740·992-5553

He:.tockir!&lt;f l.n tc .Hodel S..ll"a!Je

and .4 rtcr .llarkel Paris
See Brenl or Brian Whaley

i PEANUTS
, IF I WERE TO i-llDE LINt?ER
M'f BED ALL SUMMER . I
WOUWN'T HAVE TO .GO TO
CAMP, WOULD 1

M -Fri 8:30-5:00

SaL 8:30-Noon

SEPTIC TANK PIJMPIN~ $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TOlMY
992-3251 OR 591'8757

T~AT 5 A. 600" I"EA .. NO ONE
WOIJL" KNOW W~ERE 'fOLI
WEltE .. IT'S A PERFECT PLAN ..
1

1
t i..L T/1!( TO THINK
SOMETHING ELSE .

~

"t
\"

'1\

MD ~ MY'I?E.
ALL 1/IJ JAIL.------....

RlS NORTHUP DODGE
800-446-0842

.

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE .
FOR $52 PER .MONTH
Now AvaUable At

B.\l'\1 Ll ' \IBER
Scorpion Tractors
'

" Ta~ing

West
2•

:\!ortb
3t

Pa ss

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

East

Pass

Number one is
to count points

The year ahead could turn o ut to be
an BJdremely fortunate one lo r you
where your work is Con cerned. Doing
the righ t thll'lgs and being In •the right '
place cou ld land you a position you
didn' t da.re hope tor..
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- In your
own quiet way you will have a la rge
impac t today on . how an Individual
y d u 're with goes about achieving his
o r her objectives . It'll catCh the eye of
someone who cari do b ig"' things lor
you
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) Your
warm friendliness and captivating
manner w ill be y o ur two gi'ea test
assets today. and be the main r easons why several key individuals will
s tep forward to help you in yow
c ause.
LEO (J1,.1 Iy 23-Aug . 22) Lady Luck
will be in yoyr corner today where
· major issues are concerned . You may
miss o ut on a few trivial happenings ,
bUt she' ll make sure you sCo r e big
where and when it really counts.
· VI AGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) po not
turn your back on · joi nil)g in on any
social a~ tiv ities that happen along
today. Something quite e}(traordinary
could develop for you with . someone
new you' ll meet at a gathering.
LIBRA
{ Sept .
23-0c t .
23}
Sometimes c hanges init ia ted by
a n other can work against your present plans or interests, but this wilt not
be so today. You will be the one who
ends up benefiting far more than the
SCORPIO (Oct . 24- N ov, 221 Participating in lots o r activities will
.chase away the doldrums today, so
don 't get yowsett Involved In loner
jobs . Wh en friends call . you'll want t o
partake in the get-together. ·
'
S A G ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 2 1) An oppor'tu n ity could arise today
whic h will enable you to get something woncter1ul you 've been wanting
for your h'ome. It'll bring joy to all
those under your roof and those who
you entertain .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your imagin ation is keenly honed
today and you equid come up with
something that will be both worthwhile and profitable. Give your mental
expt"essiOn lrfte reign
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) CNerall cond1tlons are generally favorable t oday and many nice th ingS
cOuld happen for ~ at this time, but
yo u ~ uld be especially lucky financially o r In acquirln'g something Qf

~ball

43

19 Buffalo
features

45 Fraud

.

Mid-Size 4Wheel Dri ve Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engin~s

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

20 Oblige

47 Interest
amt.
Waals force 48 Tell secrets
23 Reproach 49 Wizened
. oneself lor 51 Almost
25 Barely
grads
manage
53 Ot1oman ·
27 Frat letter . · l~le
28 - saltS
55 - -tzu
31 Win ter
("Tao"
Games org.
author)
33 Make a knot .56 Max
35 Geological
opposite
period '
57 Farm
39 Greeted
enclosure
killy
41 Dots in a
22 Van -

river

44 Corrode,
as _iron
40 Sptrlt.

BidS

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~ ~r CfYPJD9rams aJe created rrom ~l!Ons by taiTIC\iS people, pas! arw:t pme!'ll.

Eacl\ letter 111 the ~ stN'ds !01 WlOther

· Today's clue Y equaJs F

. "ONAOKAZWBZXNA

XJ

KHKWT. ZFXAU.

NA

ZFK

V K.W Y N W L X A u·,

X

ENA ' Z

BATLFXAU
R.

BATNAK

EBT

X' l

FK8W '

JBTJ

ZN

LK."

VBHBWNZZX

-PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Perfection is out of the question.· - Anne Archer
"His only fault is lhat he has no 13ult.' - Pliny. the Younger
1Ci2005 by NEA , Inc. _6·2

'::!~.~, S©\\~lA...;~r.~s·
::::
U1tt4
CIAJ L POllAN _;:__ _ __
0 four
IIDrtangt . Iattin. ol lh··
~erornbled
b.
~r

WOfdl

low to form four llmple words.

I

DYCIO!

•1 I I F I I

I
I I I I' I
CENUL

.I 1 I I I' I!
J--------.,
I

~

HU RT T

.

5

.

.

.

!.;

My sister-in·law came into
lhe house and announced,
·The gossip I hear in a beauty
salon is enough to • - - • my

~_,--,-:.,~-VT-1A;,;_.,;.,~. .:EI;-;R;.:_Ir- 1 c;· ~.~"1"• mt

L-.1..-.l..-.l..-.l..-J.---1.

chuckle ouotod

by ltll 1ng in tht missing word1
you d~v•lop lrorn SllfP No. 3 below.

e r:!~:~~~i~~~~s I' I' I' 1· ·.I' I' I' I"
0 ~~~~~~FORI I I I lMvl I I I
SCIAM-UTS ANSWERS

&lt;~o ~os

Wafflo - Gloat - Honey· Comm~- HALF TIME
Thanksgiving is a big (amly day for all my relatives

They get together durina HALF TIMF

ARLO

&amp;JANIS

valUe.
PISCES (Feb. zb· March 20) "T" You
have an eir o t happiness and BJCCitement about yo u today that will be very
appealing and draw others to you .
There aren' t aPt to be any k)ng faces
with those who are in ~r presence.
AAIES {Marc h 21-Aprll
l 9) Although vou may merely be doing
your job. much to your surprrsv others
will appklud the superio.r WOf"k yov've
been putting out . The boss may even
have a bonus in m ind for you .
TAURus {Apt-it 2D-May 20}- There'a
a poe,sit:)Hity that you may be with
some0118 today who wilt han~ mal ·
ters in such a manner that It gives you
a whole new way to look at life and
bring you &amp;dded happiness.

SOUP TO NUTZ
IH6T Wlil'1

Tht Sting O•f OJ

Hard "tlrk!"

, .·

Easl-West

networl&lt;

50 Fracas
olgno
'52 Turf
grllbbora
6 Leola out
· 10 Moves
54 Oomaine
a tern
58 Bull's,aye
12 Pool
59 NarroW
14 Plays
waterway
) 5 Goddess of 60 Droplet
wisdom
61 Cold·
16 Stick on
hearted
18 Gym
iteraUon
DOWN
19 Hole up
21 Require
1 California
23 Sugarcane
Iori
product
2 Mal de3 Emissions
.'4 Re~dy
;1:6 Hockey
watchdog
feint
4 Wanderer
29 Out caller
5 Asserts
30 Chiang-· 6 Went
shek
· · &lt;Swimming
32 Enthralled
7 lck!
34 Ouel~_r ' s
8 Active sort
9 'Loudness
sword
36 Kind of
·unit
system
1f Sound•
37 Air-pump
barrier
breaker
meas.
38 Swill
12 Add brandy
40 Here; to
13 ShOrt
monsieur
snooze
42 '"The Balls'" 17 D_igestive

inaug~,.~rator.

252 Upper River Road • Galli~lis
740-4411-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

'

t

Friday, .June 3, 200!5
By Bernice Bede Oeol

TttAT's
ARTtJF..'~.

COIIISTRICnOI

SHADE RI\'ER AG SE RVICE

7 6

~

'blr 'lllrthdl(f:

BISSELl

Hill 's Self
Storage

•

;BIG NATE

. Hupp

ROBERT

740-992-1611

9 8 1 ...

9 2

AstroGraph

New ur 'R"·puir

949-1415

J •

•

.

Rocky "RJ"

Self-Storage"

erty
near
Seamlt'~:o. Glllh.:r Eastern High SChool,
DoY-n~pou
l_ - Sidin g
38900
SR
7
Reedsville, Ohio . Bids
•Fill EsUIIIItlh
will be ,opened In the
Office
of
the
Treasurer of the
·New Homes
Eastern Local School
·Garages
District Monday, June
• Complete
20,2005 at12:00 p.m.
STANLEY
TREE
Remodeling
Each ' bid shall be
TRIMMING &amp;
accompanied by a·bid
GENERAL
bond for the full
CONTRACTING
amount of lhe project
Stop &amp; Compare
· supported by a Power • Prompt &amp; quality
of Attorney, for . the
work
. bonding agent, and a
• Affordable Rates
certificale from the . • References
department
of
Available
lrlsurance or a certl•
Free Estimates
tied check, cashier
"Insured"
check or letter of
Call
Gary Stanley
credit for len percent
of the bid . Bids are tO
740-742-2193
be sealed and sub- • Leave a message
mltted to Lisa M.
Ritchie ,
Treaturtr,
EaStern Local School
District, 50008 SR 681
· Rudsvllle ,
Ohio
45n2 and plainly
markeill oA the out·
29670 Ba shan Road
aide " Bids for Soli
Racfne . Ohio
R e m e d 1a t 1o n . "
.45771
Succe&amp;atul
bidder
7411'949-2217
will be required to
aCquire a perform·
.,..5'1110'
ance band acc.ptID 10'x30' J
able to owner and a
statement that no
Hours
delinquent · personal
property taxee are
7:00AM - 8 :00 PM
, 14'1 fn() pel
owned
in
Meigs
County.
Th~ board reurvea
cost of lertlllzer got you
the right to ,.ject all
17·17-1-7~
blda "' any pot11on of
• l&gt;ld. Projoct bock$265 ton (While Suppy Last)
ground, scope and
• Mushroom Compost
apecl1k:Miono may be
Available
obtained by contoct$35 • 1,OIX) lbs Approx. weight
lng Ricky D. EdWard•.
Superlnlol'~nl ,
ot
18 spreader buggies available for use ·
'(740) 667-6079,
Airway pasture renovators and seedef5
lla.o M. Ritchie
available to rent
Treasurer
licensed agronomisl on staff available for
(6) 2. 9
consutting.

"

47 " Nova"

1 Ominous

James Thurber Said. "If a playw'righi.Jried
to see eye -to eye with everybody. hE'!
would get the worst case of strabismus
since Hanntballost an eye trying to count
l'iis 19 elephants during a snow storm
while crossing the AlpS:
Did Hannibal realty have only · 19 ele·
phants? My research is inconclusive . One
authority c1a1ms that he Started with 34 ,
but many of them dted during the Crossingot the Alps in 218 B.C. arld in lhe sub·
sequent harsh winter. At the campaign in
Zama m 20 ... B.C., though , he ~ad 80 elephants.
Assuming you are not hindered by strabismus, on whicli side would yoiJ place
your money in 'today's deal? Shou)d
South make four spades, or can the
c:le'fenders kill the contract?
West takes two ' top hearts, dropping .
South's queen. Now he should counlthe
pointS. There are 16 on the board. and he
has 12. That leaves only 12, which South
must .have because he opened the bidding.
This means that the defenders are getting only two side-suit tricks : West's high
hearts . To defeat !tie contract, they rl1ust
also get two trump tricks.
The winning deiense is lor West to play a
third round ol hearts. South will probably
rull in hand and lead a sneaky spade
jack, but W.est should rush in w1th his ace
and play a fourth heart. wtlich East. who
was dying of boredom with his genuine
Yarborough, ruffs with the critical spade
nine , This uppercuts .declarer and pro- .
motes West's spa~e 10 to the setting
trick.
11 the defenders have taken every possible side-suit trick., they should concede a
ruff-and-slulf.

YOV g~tN1

New Dealer lor Montana Tractors

Phone

WATERPROOFING

.LIC
TICES
NO~T:IC~E~:=;::;:=::~§~§~~~===:Fe:b:r:u:a:ry~14~.~2~00~5=.~1:h:e=:S:u:pe:r:in:t:e:n:de~n~l~o=f~l:h:e~:.~.~.:pe::c:lft~e~d
;:,o:n:::p~ro~i&gt;'
annual report
located
.MENT TO:

~--------~------------~------~-----..

Storage

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established t975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 . Roge rs . Basement
Waterproofmg

AKJI067
5 4

,FRAN.K &amp; EARNEST

High and Dry

pO 1 mo

Law Office, 111 112

Bucket Truck

25 Yeara Local Ex rltnce ,

Canstrucllon

•

.
•

Opening h~ad: • A

74il-59 1--'641

TD

EasL

· Stump Grinding

7-t0--Hfi-1X2J

.., I H\ It I ._,

PER MONTH!

Athens County Court
of Common Pleas
entered an Order ol
Forfeiture In tavor of
the Stale of Ohio
against
property
known as 699 Petit
Road, Albany, OH and
1522 Louisa Avenue ,
Albany. Ohio. The
court
has . been
advised
that
Elizabeth Gloeckner
has a potential claim
lo these parcels of
real estate. Efizabelh
Gloeckner Is hereby
given Notice pur-

Top • Removal • Trim

992-6215 wv o:lli7&lt;5
Pomeroy,·Ohio

Truck Camper AC TV
Antenna. wtred lor Cable.
like new $6 ,500 (304)675·
3353

K Q J 10

A 10 3

1•
J •
4•

· Formerl~' al 108
W, :'\lain Pomeroy

1-'0-99%.7 ~5 .\

Al&lt;QJIO

•
•

Soulh

The Parish Shop

'"'"'""-

5 2

.

Vulnerable:

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

fJ. )

•

Dealer South.

*•**A~lso a'·ailabte'~"1'**
·
• Tas~~ !\laster TractOrs 26 horst&gt;- 38 horse,

liNDA'S PAINTING
11401985-4180

6 4

West

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP2l4

Concrete
.
Replatement
All Types Of
Concrete Work
25 Years Experience
David Lewis ·
740-992-6971

Let me do 1t for

lll\ ·02-05

•

Soulh
• KQJ S75
• Q 4
• 7 2
• A 5 4

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

-'x-'

Public Notice
STATE OF OHIO v.
KEVIN DALTON
ATHENS
COUNTY
COMMON
P~EAS
CASE NO. 04CR-Q78 ·
NOTICE OF JUOG-

.North

41800SR#7
-oil!l..._Tuppers Plains, OH
45783

"1118 Wlll'ld's Best Roof'

PUB.LIC
. Thl
Form 990PF for the
Kibble Foundation ,
Bernard V. Fultz.
Trustee Ia available
lor public inspection
at Bernard V. Fultz

I

Rocky Hupp lnsur.ance
and Financial Services

•

$26.00

NEA Crossword Puzzle

DRIDGE

::;:;;,;;:;:;:.~
r

(5) 18, 19, 20, 2·3 , 24,

The ·D aily Sentinel • Page 87

Boy. Sl8.000.

1996 Stratos bass boat 115 ·
2001 Dodge 1500 SpOrt V8 .
W1ndm,.., • Rntol'ing
quad
cao.
S 16.900 fast stnke 2001 Sofl nde
-. tuudb~ Gc:m: nuor S~:o.l e ms
trailer custom coyer excelCOMMERCIAL and
!740)645-6734
)1,..,,..., !!-; \1 -1. II- I ....,.. I 'lo.o-flj ' U""-' • f "•ndcd loAl&lt;.,.._ '" EO.o d ~t.lllhfr
lei'H
cond1t1on .
56500
- - - - - -- - RESIDENTIAL
2001 Dodge p1ckup snor t (740!446·498 7
FREE ESTIMATES
1971 Tortno. 4 or ong1na1 bed Magnum V6 L1ke new - - -- - - - Sa les &amp; St•n ictYour
used
equ •pment pamt ru n s grea1 52100 condlliOn . salvage \ l!le . 97 Yamaha 1100 Wave
M20 East \lain,-,. _
OH -lS769
sou rce
Carmichael t740)985-JJ27 or 74'0-416· 55.500 ~74.0)441 · 7641
Runner Jet Sk1 , 3 Seater.
Equ•pmant (7401446·24 12 4249
Trailer. L1le Vesls askmg ·
98 Dodge 1500 ext. cab $3 000
ca11
evemngs
or VISit www ca reg com
1985 Tra •1s Am V1per :&gt;tue. 4WD. V8 . 92 000 miles. (740 ~ 591'}- BOJB
Call 8.1). Consl.
5 0. HO Esp Only 55000 5 12 500
Da)'
for;lll,·ourhumc
OBO
miles. l'i lth T·tops C&lt;i. ll t740)6J.5-5174
e!o'entng Bass Tacker Pro Team 165
n:pair needs. roonng.
(7 40)446-0350
l74 m44 t _8959 . .
"l 1ke New· equipped wt!h
sidin~. add-ons.
Roofing, Inc .
optiOnal 40HP motor With
rtnuKiclinl! Cit'.,
2 M1n1ature Donlo:.eys Jacks.
1992 Ford Mus tang convert· Arm\1 5 Ton Semi Tr uc k. power tr1m 40 pound thrust
fret.' ~_.,tinmtt'_.,
1 yr old 6 yr old While
1ble Auto. aJr . CrUise till mull;·luel. Krser J€ep Co.rp front mounted trollin g nlotor
47~0)
992-2979
Mobile Homes· Metal Roofs
(3041882·221 3
, 70.000
actual
miles
lean nu:ssa e
Ex cellent con&lt;;li!IOn . 53.750 SSQOO Oll .. Army 21 2 Ton 2·New oeep cycle b.3ttenes
Rat
or Low Sloped Roof • Cafports·
.
Truck Ktser Jeep Corp ~ On ooard storage. li\le welts
7 4 0 4 4 6 4 05 3
Barns • Porches
·
2 Perlormance tested Polled ,t:_:::_
i :_.:_·:_.:_:::~--- Mult1 Fuel 54000.00 740- and more Easy launch and
Residential • Commercial
Heretord Bulls. 17 month old 1995 Ch.evy Tahoe LT 949-0020
pickup lake or r1ver. Kept
&amp; semen ·tested 5 ' reg Excellent cond1 t10n. em erald i......;.;,;.;..._,-,---, cove red and under shelter
ENERGY EFFICIENT
Angus He1fers 15-mon. old green' stlver leather 1ntp_r tor
Still has )/2 tank ol onginal
Dramond L Farms 304-675- fully
loaded
57 900 ___
F OR SAL£
Cost S 10 000 . Sen
fuel
1888
(740)441 -7641 .
S7.5po F1rm
See at Tn1998 Ra nge r 4x4 5 spd . 3l County
Sports
ShOp
1995 Ford Probe Auto A1r
Ask &lt;:~b oU t Qur . AQHA 51495 .0{}--1996. Plym ou th AM FM cassette. A/C . oil (304)675-2988
road package. new pa1n t
Member OISCO\.mts on new Neon 4 Or
Aut o A1r 56.000 080. Call after Year 2000. Pontoon Boat. 24
.
£ElVIS
3
of
John . Deere Eqlllprllent 52495 00-- 1994. Plymouth
fool. Sweetwater. So HP
Carm tC ha.el
Equipment Voyager 7 passenger V6 -4 30pm (740)256-625_7
CONCRE:'I'E
Mercu ry, Power Trmi , 4
Pomeroy. OH
(740)446 -24t2
Auto
A1r
~ 1995 00
CONSTRUC'I'ION
2·004 Ford Exped XLT. SA Stroke Engme. Btg Foot
on Slate
RIVERVIEW MOTORS-. 2 Tnton VS. 4x4 . power . Outdnve. · lounge Seats.
1-l\Y &amp;
Removal
Bl ocks Abov.e McDonalds. cru 1se. tilt. excellent cond1· Pn vacy
Room .
Depth
'· GRcu\
and
Pom~roy. Oh
(7 40-992- t~on
523.900
080. Ftnder, Hour Meter, Good ·
3490)
1740)245-9162
Radro. Has only,SO hours on
Tobacco Plants for sale Call
• .\l·~pl i n ):! :\t'"
, ·997 _: s.Uick
LeSabre ~i~.;....;..;.~,_--- Boat. Garage kept in Winter.
:\ l t-mher~
L1mited. 75 thousand miles.
·
\ \ .'OS
like New Paid over 518.000
_ • ll e~HJ Out~·
FoRSALE
w11
C~\IP£RS&amp;
Leather
lnt .
Loaded .
I
sa 1e 1or
· 13o~
.
Co mmerriar
John Deere Riding Mowers Garage Kept.
MoroR Hm 11c:s
5 5 . 9 9 5 (,304
:;,.;.;
i7_7;;.
3·.5;;.
; 94_4_ _ __
E4uipmt-nt
startmg at 51 3~9 . Fmanc1ng 1304
, i675 73
.1997
Dodge
Caravan I!!
• \\'orkout on "·our own
·1 1
C" II'ERS &amp;
$1 .800 (304)675 -3 765 Of
hours l~n
·
ava1lao1e subject to John
t995
Gultstream
24.'
Deere Credit approval Your 1998 &lt;;:hevy Malibu V6 . (304)593-i+ 120
·--~-IOiiTORiili-HiiOiii\iiiD;Ii.i..r Conquest , L1mited Ed1!10n Serious lnquirh·.~ Onl~·
lnsurt'd
7-10- 992 -1141!'5.
payments could be as low maroon . good condit1on. ~-------­
Class C motorhome. Like
Fl\'e
Estimates
:\
s
k
l'nr
Jeff
as S39 month with SO down ruf1S goo,d. good gas 2000 Chevy Astra Van. 6cyl 1989 32FT. Yukof') Camper new w1th only 7.600 miles.
$3.500
Call Good- Condit1on . New Tires. has separate bedroom. a1 r &amp; Fully equipped w1th many
.Carm1chael
Equtp ment mileage.
(7 40)44_6-2896
55 .995 OBO (304)576-2934 awnmg 55.000 (304)675- extras. 522 ,000. (740)256(740) 446-2412'.
Ta~e
7982
t428. For pictures see
2002 Cad1llac Dev111e. wh1te i7&lt;10 MOTORCYO.ffi'
www.rvtrader com,'rvdeta il p
~ H omes
Purchase a New John dtamond. fully equ1pped.
-' WHEEI.Eil'&lt;
1992- 29 ' Airstream Excalla. hp?ld; 125806.
youl
,. Septic Systems
Deere
Prem1um
Lawn factory warranty. 22.900
Very good cond1li0i1 twrn
·r
Roofing
miles.
like
new.
524
.995.
Tra.c1or &amp; receive 5250
2902 450·S Foreman , 4 beds Ph. (740)645·4454"
1998: 30' llltn wheel travel
r Backhoe
toward . a John Deere (740)256-1428
wheeler.
53 .1 00
Call
trailer . double sl1dO .. exce li' Site
Implement Accessory or 97 Caval1er Z24 2 door. 5 (740)367-0139
2003 Dutchman Lite . 28 tt. lent - cond1110n. 513.900
: Preparation
Maintenance Plan. Offer speed . AC. ttl!. new black
bunk house w1lh slide out. phone: (740)698-9319
.: Dozer
good May 3 lhr·o June 27 at pa1nt. n1ce in ter1or. leloks &amp; 2002 Yamaha TIA·I 125. like tike new. $ 16 000. Call
r Garages
Carm 1chael
Equ1pment. runs
after 34 ' "03" Jayco Eagle 1- t2'
~
1 Utilities
great,
52 .900 . new. ndden occasronally, (7 40)446-8308
slide ou t. Lots ol extras. Like
After 6pm "i ., ~/'';
(740 )446-24l2
$1600 (740)992·2762
6:30pm .
: Pole Barns
1740i669-0302
(BefOla 6pm
\.:.:
new co nd1tion , (740)339flom crv). O hio
0218 . .
leova M~JSOCtl,-~-:: · ..m. .

West Second Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
during regular busl·
ness hours for a period of 180 days tubsequent to publication
of this notice.

W'Nw.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

Carm1chaei Equ1pment ;,..llh Convertible El(ce llenl cond1· (740)949-3004

New John

- -- - - - --

www.mydailysentinel.com

Zero Turn Z-TraM: Mowers
f OR S\l.t:
trow John Deere av3.11able at ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _...

New John DeE! re 5025
Ser 1es' Util•ty Tractors @
2 99"o F1xed. 3fi months
Car'TIICil ae l
Equ1pm ent

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P~e 88 • The Daily Sentinel

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. www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June

:

'

2, 2005

I

NBA Playoffs -

WEstErn ConfErt:ncE Finals

San Antonio headed back to NBA Finals
Proving this wasn't the Everything starts with
typical lip serv ice winners Duncan , thou.gh, and he
offer lo sers, consider what took the .Game 4 loss perPHOENIX _ The San two-time MYP Duncan said ' sonally. After $Coring just
Antonio Spurs are 6 xcited to .to
the
22-year-old 15 points and mi ss ing nine
be going back 10· -rhe NBA Stoudemire
when th ey free throws, he vowed to
Finals.
embraced after the buzzer.
make up for it - and did ,
They're even happier
"I just told him we had a hitting six of his first seven
about not .having to. see great series and that I have shots and putting back the
A mare Stoudemire. Steve no doubt' we ' ll be back in one he missed. He also had a
Nash and the Phoenix Suns ' thi s situation in the years to tip-in with 2:12 left that
until .next season.
come." Duncan said .
made it 95-90, beginning
Tim Duncan had 31 points · Stoudemire scored 17 of the Spurs' clos ing push:
·
and 15 rebounds and the his 42 points in the fourth "I knew I· d put together a
Spurs' defense . keye\l
quarter. several on the pow- better performance than 1
· gamechanging 18-4 thir~- erful slam dunks that have did · last time." he said. "!
quarter run that gave them become hi·s calli~ g card. came in here to rectify that,
enough of a cushion to hold helping l'hoeni• trim a 13- w.hatever that may · be. I
off Stoudemire and the Suns point deficit to three with wanted to give our team a
IOI-95'on Wednesday night 2:45 left. '
chance,to win and not be a
We stern
Stoudemire finished · th e hindrance."
to
end
the
Conference finals iit five ~e ries with the high est scar- With another loss, San
games .
ing average for a con ference Antonio would have been
Duncan 's aching · ankles finals first-timer, breaking headed home for Game 6
,and Manu Ginobili 's bumps Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's 35 - with the Suns halfway to
and bruises have a week to year-old record by 2.8 pulling off a comeback
heal while San Antonio points per game. His five that 's unpreceden!ed in
waits to find out whether it strai gh t 30-poi nt game s NBA .history. but fresh in
will next face Miami or broke his own club playoff the minds of sports fans
Detroit. The Heat and record and it made him the after· ihe Boston Red . Sox
AP photo
Pistons are tied 2-2 with first Suns player to do that did it last October. .San Antonio Spurs owner Peter Holt accepts the Western Con.ference trophy as Manu Ginobi li
Game S on Thursday _night m any five games since Phoenix was off to a good lo.o ks on after Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals against the Phoenix Suns Wednesday
in Miami . The final round Charles Barkley in March ·start, leading by one at half- in Phoenix. San Antonio won 1.01·95.
will start June 9, and the 1993 .
titne, and still up 52-S I a '
Spurs, who won it all in
"I grew a lot in thi s few possess ions into the Duncan passed out of a dou- eight rebounds and six stra-ight home ~ames in a
. 1999 and 2003, will be .the series," Stoudemire said.
third quarter.
ble team to an open Bruce assists. Parker scored 18. postse~son. Their '93 team
that made the Finals also did
Phoenix came into this Then a dunk by Robert Bow~n for a jumper, then ~ although he was 8-for-21.
home team regardless.
it.
... With Phoenix out , the
Although San Antonio season n~ver expecting to Horry gave the Spurs the perhaps the best sign of all . Johnson, whose .big perwon all three road games still be pl ayi ng in June after lead . It al so began a 6:30 for the Spurs -. Duncan formance in Game 4 was the highe st-scoring team will
thi s series, it was never winning 29 games in 2003- stretch that ended with them made two free throws .
Suns· biggest hope for com- not win the title for the 49th
easy. every game was with- 04. But with an energetic up 69-56.
Duncan finished 14-of-24 ing back in the se ries. time in the N BA's 59 seain six points in the final offense, the Suns ran off the Along the way, the Suns from the field and 3-0f-4 coo led off by shootin g just sons. and it'll be ·the 27th
minutes and most were clos- most points and most wins had . four turnovers (travel- from the foul line, missing 6-of-17 for 14 points . time the team with the best
er than that thanks to in the NBA and charged ing by Nash, two lost balls only his first one. It barely Unlike the last game, his regular-season record doesStoudemire averaging 37 through the first two rounds. by Stoudemire and a 24-sec- made it to the front rim , an presence didn'.t help open n't win it alL ... San
points and Nash showing This was only the second and violation) , Nash missed ugly reminder of his 3:for- things up for Shawn M&gt;irion Ant01iio 's Tony Massenburg
why he was · the league's time in IS postseason games three shots, Stoudemire 12 perfon)1ance from the and Quentin Richardson. got into the game for the
Marion had e ight points and first time this series ' with
MYP.
they failed to score 100 missed one and the f.lourlsh .line in Game 4.
"I am thrilled· we don ' t points, the other also against ended with Joe Johnson· g·et"Tim makes ali ihose guys Richardson, who went down 2:5.~ left in the first Half
ling blocked twice .
·
better," said Nash , who had hard in the first half. wiJS after Natr Mohammed
have to play them again," the Spurs.
picked , LIP his third fouL
Spurs
coach
Gregg
Then again, that''s· what The Spurs, meanwhile, 21 points and I 0 assists. s.coreless in 28 J]linltles .
Nash
scored
only
three
Ma"cn burg has played. a ·
Popovich said.
'San Antonio does. This was had Tony Parker find his "He's a tremendou s player,
key role thi s series. though
·"We're j\lsl'ecstatic to get the second straight season groove by hitting one of his a team player, and a win- points in the sc.:ond halL
.._ he was Stoudemire's
Notes:
The
Suns
became
out of this series." added the Spurs allowed the fewest trademark teardrop jumpers ·ner."
Duncan.
points in the NBA.
and two straight 3-pointers.
Ginobili had 19 points, the 13th team to lose three sta1i·d-in during practices.
BY

JAIME

ARON

Pistons not rattled by Game 5 pressure
MIAMI (AP) - Pressure Finals.
were 8-0 in their first two
situarions always seem
The series is tied 2-2; Game playoff rounds.
bring out the best· in lhe 6 is Saturday in Detroit, and Now, for the biggest game
Detroit Pistons.
Game 7; if necessary, will be of the season, the Heat' s al
This season has been· any- in Miami on Monday. ·
home - where, they've won
thing but smooth and serene
"We've won a world cham- 25 of their last 2':/ games. But
for the defending NBA cham-. pion ship, and other than both o'f those home losses
p1ons, who endured f,he after- Shaq, they don't have a lot of during the last 4 1/2 months
math of _Novembers brawl . guys that have been in that came against l)etroit
W!th lndtana: a four-game situation," said guard Richard "GameS is a must-win, and
!ll'dseason losmg streak, plus Hamilton, who had 28 points they probably think the same
mcessant - and current - in the Game 4 win. "We knew way," Heat guard Dwyane
speculatton , about .coach that being down· 2-1 didn ' t Wade said. "Every · game
Larry ~rown s future wtth the mean we should pack it in If we're in is a must-win. We're
franchtse.
.
we keep playing the way :.Ve at home. We· re confident at
And, the Ptstons overcame are supposed to play we'll be home. It's tied 2-2. Go back
a two-games-to-one defictt
..
'
against Indiana in the second fine.
. . ,
_ . to South Beach and see
round of this year's playoffs.
Indeed, ShaqUtlle 0 Neal ts another great game."
.
winning three straight games the only He_at regular wtth a Of the last 21 conference
to advance.
chal!lptonshtp nng m hts pos- finals 5eries that were tied 2Detroit found itself in a 2-1 sesston. He learned last year 2, the winner of Game 5 has
hole . in these Eastern &lt;l[ilout· the tenactty of the advanced 19 times. ·
Conference finals against Pistons,_ who ousted O'Neal's And home teams have a
Miami , before winning Lakers m fi~e. games for the . major edge in tight playoff
Tuesday night to knot the champtonshtp.
rounds; according to the
For 0' Neal's teammates, NBA, of the I 26 times a bestseries. Game 5 is Thursday
night on the Heat's home however. tension is a new of-seven series has been tied
floor, and the Pistons know obstacle. Miami was 59-23 in after four games, road teams
winning this one would move the regular season, wrapped ~ave won Game 5 on just 32
them a giant step · closer ·up the No. I seed in the East occasiOns.
toward returning to the NBA without much problem and ,.There's no doubt in my

to

Brown ·

Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden
Country. We are expanding our staff and need more
salesmen andsaleswomen. No Experience is required,
only a willingness to learn, work as a team and have a
strong initiative.

• Potential Income 40·60k
• 401 K R.etlrement Plan
• Work At The 11 Dealership • Health Insurance

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;; o l'L:"TS • \ 'ol. ;j..J , :'1/o.

'
The Meigs County C&lt;&gt;mmissioners
witt hold the first ol two public
hearings at the office ollhe Meigs County Commissioners,
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio oo June 2. 2005 at 1:30 P.M., lor the
purpose of providing the public information and receiVing ··
comments as to the Notice of Availability of the 2005 CDBG New
Horizon program funds, a federally lUnded program administered
by the S~te of Ohio, Office of Community a~d Housing
Partnerships. Meigs County is elig1ble forSt 5,000 in funding,
providing the county meeiS applicable requirements.

The goal ol the CDBG New Honzon Program is to provide funds
lo units of local government to affirmatively further lair housing in
addition to activities undertaken with their CDBG FoJTnula
Allocation Program funds.
'

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FRIDAY , .I LINE •'I ' ''OW'
,)

_

BSERG:~!,':,.T~AI~Y~~~~~TEL.COM

• Heat, Pistons battle
through Game 5.
See. Page 81

POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners Jim
Sheets and Miek Davenport
a · .. Workers
att ended
Compensation Safety Council
CEO 'meeting yes terday at the
University of Rio Grande
about lowering the county's
workers' compensation rates.
"\Ve ' re trying to lower our

workers' compensation rate to
· bring it into good standing."
Davenport said. "We're trying

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\.\\\\\'.ntydaii)' O.,l"Hlllll"I.I II IH

10

turn. that around."
. ·
By anend1ng the . meetmg ,
the co,mnmstOncrs saved the
count} . ~"0 pe1 cent. on thetr
wo1 kers compensallons rates
whtch JS p.u t ol a plan to save
the &lt;:ounty 20_ p7rcent overall .
Be fo re Ie.tvtng lor the
Umvers t~y oi.Rm Grande, the
commtssJoneJs held the1r re&amp;ular meetmg attended by Fatr
Hou ~tng . .
a~d
Gmnts
AdmmiStr~to~ Jean TrusselL
Tru ssell s _ attendance was
part of the fl,rst pubk heanng
foraNewHonzon.GrantwhiCh

is in .relation 10 fair housing
actJVllJes 111 the county.
..
The New Honzon Grant "
used lor new home ownersh1ps. home ownership training
and rehabdnatton ol homes..
. Davenport s ta~ed t~al if
approved the gr.tnt "'ll . be
worth $100.000 and applied
to fJScal year 2006 lundmg. .
Commissioners also renewed
the county's comract with
Sctot~ . Coun.ty ~ Detent1on
Serv1ces 111 reg.1~ds 10 JUVentle
detatnees. Ju veniles arrested in
Mctgs County wtll conunue to

be boarded 111 the Scioto install ing metal security doors
County Detention Center at a for the booking area of the
rate ot $85 per day for one to 20 jaiL Also recognized · were
days. Any days beyond 20 days Bernie Wright for installing
will be at a rate of $ 110 per day. the doors and keypad locks,
·
. Other business:
and Auto Value Store located
Commissioners. acknowl- on Second Street for donating
edged cash donat1ons to the material to prepare the metal
Mei1p
County Jail by doors for painting .
Harnsonvdle Senior Citizens
An advance transfer request
and Meigs County Retired from juvenile . court in the
Teachers: .
.
. · amount of $500 was approved.
CommtssJoners recognized
Appropriation adjustment
work done by D1ck Felly and request from Meigs ·County
his Meigs High School weld- . Recorder's Office was approved
mg class lor butldmg a·nct in theamountof$1,200.

New Haven Students enhance writing skills through community work
Wolfe said the students
plant closes
pick projects thai directly ·
· BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@M¥DAILYSENTINEL.COM'

Bv· DIANE PoTTORFF
DPOTIORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

NEW HAYEN . W.Va. Over 130 employees with
Global Indu strial Products
were told Tuesday evening
they wou ld not be working at
the plant until further notice.
Page A5
· To the best of his knowl• Ray 'Sonny' FIOW!!rs, 74 edge, the New Haven plant
• Lois 'Marcella' Fraser, 83 shut down Tttesday. according to Point Pleasant attorney
• Audrey Glover, 73 ·
R. Michael Shaw. All of the
. • Thomas Joseph Scott, 89 .. emp loyees, with the exception of a skeleton c.rew of
management, were laid off at
rhat' time.
He said the employees had
no warning of the plant 's·
• Financial workshop
closing.
Layoffs began around 7
for nonprolits offered.
p.m.,
but employees were
See Page A2
still on the job until 11 · p.m.
• For the Record.
Tuesday.
·
·
A union employee, speakSee Page A3
ing on the record in anonymi• O'Bieness offers
ty, said employees were ·signdiabetes education class.
ing up for unemployment
benefits
and looking for new
See Page
jobs Wednesday.
• Boomerang champion
"We are not shocked about
to visit See Page A5
the closing,". he said.
"Everyone knew it was going
• A Hunger For More..
to happen. It was a matter of
See Page A6

0Bfl1JARIES

• INSIDE

"3

when."
Plea" see Plant. AS ·

WEATIIER

BY BETH

SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822·0417. 372·2844

'

475 South Church Street • Ripley, WV 25271

.,._..,p_,.AII
-

INDEX
Calendars
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials

Faith•Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports

weather·

Sut&gt;m"~ed

A6-7

As
B8

As
B Section
A8

© 2005 Ohio Valley l'bbtishin&amp; Co.

photo

'Jesse McKnight puts an aging tombstone back in place at the
old Syracuse Cemetery near Rose Hill Road .

Local teen~ idea turned into commercial

Call To Schedule An .Interview:

Classifieds

NOTICE TO FIRSl PUBLIC HEARING

IC)&lt;)

Commissioners working.to lower workers' compensation rates .

SPORTS

' . 2 SF.crtONS ';_ 16 PAGES

played two seasons . at the after spending two years at a
University of San Diego community college.

fromPageBl
with Limy Brown about
becoming the club's president of basketball operations
when the Pistons'. season is
over.
While the nomadic 64- .
year-old coach. defiantly
maintains that his focus is on
his health and the Pistons,
who are tied 2-2 with Miami
in the Eastern Conference
finals. there are signs pointing to him eventually joining
the Cavaliers.
Mike Brown is one of
them. As an 'assistant with
the Spurs· che won an NBA
title with them in 2003 Brown worked with Grl"gg
Popovich, a cle•e and friend
·and confidant of Larry
Brown 's.
Before joining the Spurs,
Mike Brown was also a
scout and video coordinator
for the Denver Nqggets . He
later joined the Washington
Wizard s as an assistant
under Bernie Bickerstaff and
was also a scout
·A father of two. Brown

mind, -we're going to have to
play our best game," said
Brown, whose team . won
Game 5. on the road in last
year' s . East finals ;~gainst
1ndiana. "We· ve gol· to figure .
out a way to win one game on
the road, and then take care of
our home court. That's .the ·
only way I can look at it''
Miami did not practice
Wednesday, opting to rest
with just one off day between
Games 4 and 5. Detroit
worked out in Auburn Hills;
Mich ., before flying to South
Florida.
Confidence in the Pistons'
camp was high. .
"We've been here so many
times;" point guard Chauncey
Billups said. "Miami is a
strong team, but they haven't
been tested like this. not after
their first two series. Will that
matter? We' II see."

Memorial Day
observance, A:3

~

4550CIATEO PRESS

a

'

Adam D. Tucker returns
to Ariel Sunday, 'A 2

RACINE - A creative
way 10 improve writing ski lls
and self-esteem through community service introduced
into class curriculum some
15 years ago by Southern
English teacher Scott Wolfe
continues to be e ffective .
"Wh;tt we are d'oing here is
developing a sen~c of' pride
by 'carrfjng out needed projects in til e community and
then writing about the ex perience," said Wolfe.·
Originally written as part
of a grant proposal while
Wolfe was teaching English
at Eastern High School. he
was convinced that tying
writing to experience was a
good way of improving the
students' writing skills while
at the same time reinforcing
good citi zenship and enhancing self-esteem.
"Students generally are
inclined to write at a ·higher
level about something ihcy
have experienced. and the
projects give them that
opportunity as well as help
improve their community."
said Wolfe. "The project
work fortilies the sense of
community, the sense of
teamwork, and most of . all
improves writing.ski lls."

affect
the • community.
"Whatever is done must be
able to be seen from the road
or must be in a public place.
El'&lt;lra credit is given to pro- ·
jects done in public places
like at school, in the village,
or at the city park. Also extra
c;redit is given for those clearing· fence-lines of brush and
weeds."
Projects, according to the
vete ran t~acher, are very ereative and have ranged from
painting to clearing brush,
picking up trash, or even constructing shelter houses.- ·
Southern junior John
Fisher aided hi s community
by doing a trash pick up near
the new . SR 33 at Bashan.
After accumulating several
bags of trash. he stood back
and ad mired the improvement and then wrote about it.
Sophomore's
Jesse
McKnight and Eric Zeiner
· took on a major undertitking in
cleaning up the old Syracuse
Cemetery at Rose Hill.
· "At first we were just going
to remove the brush and cut the
grass,;. said McKnight "Bul
when we were done •. the job
didn't look complete, so we
trimmed some more and decided to pick up some of the fall.Please see Work..AS

What interests fourth graders?
BY BETH SERGdiT
8SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

POMEROY - Tyler Lee,
who will be a junior at
RACINE - · What interestEastern High School next
ed you when you were in the
year, was chosen as the winfourth ·grade'' Star Wars' A
ner of a state-wide contest
bicycle with a banana seat0
Eve! Knievel ? Being home
sponsored by "stand" which
· is a movement against tobacbefore the street light came
on' What about the interests
co in Ohio.
of today's fourth graders?
The ''stand" movement
Shortly before summer
assists young people in netvacation
fourth graders ·from
working anti-tobacco, grass
Southern Elementary were
roots campaigns. Part of the
asked to pick any subject on
campaign is producing com·which to do a resource/
mercials · made for .and by
research project Their choickids, the latest of whkh will
es reflect a wide variety of
be based on Lee's idea.
interests and now a deeper
Gallia-Meigs Community .
0f those subjects.
knowledge
Submitted photo
Action Tobacco Prevention
Kody Wolfe chose a rain
Specialist Pam Franklin Tyler Lee. who will be a junior
forest
as his project because
at
Eastern
High
School,
was
described Lee's idea as being
during
a visit to Wal-Mart he
.
.
.
Beth Selli!Oirt/ plloto
similar to a · horror movie chosen as the winner of a
read
a
label f9r Planters Students from both fourth grade classrooms at Southern
where second hand smoke state-wide contest spon·sored
pou-rs from the sinks and by "stand" to produce an anti- Peanuts that claimed they Elementary were honored for their work on resource;
research projects . The subject matter was chosen solely
water fountains at his school. . tobacco commercial based came from the rain forest.
John
Gray
was
interested
in
by the students and reflected a variety of interests from
· Because Lee· s script was on his script idea.
poisonous snakes of ·ohio. ·:rain forests, to copperheads to Delaware Indians . Those
selected · he will travel to
Cincinnati to · meet with mercia! if he chooses to and including the most poiso- receiving awards were (from left) first row, Whitney
Weddle , Chris Chaney, John Gray. Stefanie Pyles. Kody
"stand's" creative and adver-' be allowed to shoot his own nous. copperheads.
'The b'abies (copperheads) Wolfe ; second row, Cody Taylor, Jaclyn Mees, . Ashley
tising teams to determine the b-roil of fihiJ , some of which
exact commercial concept will be incorporated into the are thirty times more power- · Deem, Sara VanCooney; third row; Jeremiah Warden ,
ful than the adults." Gray said · Chandra Mattox . Rachel Bauer .. Olivia Po ling. Not pictured,
and talk aoout his ideas. Lee end project.
·
•.will also appear in the com· Please see Ide•, AS
Please ·see Interests, AS ' Bill DevalL

Crtizens are .encourage to attend this meeting on June 2, 2005,
to make suggestions ane comments and to provide public input
on various activities which may be undeltakeil in this program. If
a participant will need auxiliary aids (inlerp&lt;eter, brailled or taped
materials, assistive listening device. ottw!r) due to a disability,
pleaSe contact Gloria Kloos, Clerk, prior to May 26, 2005, at 740992-2895 in order to ensure that your needs will be
acCommodate . The Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped ·
accessible.
Wriiten comments will be accepted until1:00 P.M., June 2, 2005
may be mailed. to the Meigs County Commissioners, Meigs
County Courthouse . P0010roy. Ohio, 45769.
·

and

t.licl&lt; Davenport, Presidenl
t.teigs County Commissioners

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