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.·•

'.
Page 86 • Tiu~ Daily Sentinel

www .mydailyse.n tinel.com

Point Pleasant wins . W.Va. Open Soccer Cup
Suarez added his goal on an
unassisted shot from 25 yards
out in the second half to gi,·e
BARBOURSVILLE. W.Va. POINT th~ t\VO goals it need- It's no longer called the ed. Great l,·ays Expre"
Chevy Cur.. but POINJ' soc- recorded · its lone goal a few
cer was still like a rock as it mim1tes lat~r. but it was not
rolled to its second straight enough as POINT claimed
championship over the week- back-to-back titles .
To get to the championship.
end.
how,eY·
er. POINT had to battle
The Mason Coumians domthrough
the heat and humidity
inated Saturday, · then split •a
day
one.
·
pair of games on Sunday en
In game one on Saturday. it
route to the Under 19 Silver
rolled
to a 6-2 victory over
Division crown at · the West
F.C.
United.
thanks it1 part m
Virginia Open Cup.
POINT defeated Great a hat trick from striker ·
· · Teays Express 2-1 ·on Sunday Stephen Walker. Hi .s three
to claim the cha(llpionship .. goals set the pace as Bruns.
thanks
to · goal~
from Suaress and . Jess Btbbee
Christoph Bruns and Marlon added a goal apiece. · ·
With a boost of contidence.
Suarez .
Bruns headed a ball into the POINT followed up its first
net off of Mitchell Johnson performance witli a 5-0
throw-in giving his club the shutout of Tsunami. Walker
lead in the 18th minute of the · added two more goa ls to his
first hal f,
tournament.
total.
with
BY lARRY CAUM

LCRUM@MYDAilYREGISTER .COM

or

a

Mitchell Johnson. Bruns and leading sixth goal of the tourBibbee adding one also.
namem.
Offense was not the onlv
The team did manage Ill
highlight of the first two rally spirits in its linal game,
games. as great defensive wanting desperately to bring
play allowed the offense to the Cup back to Point
work.·
Pleasant.
As
POINT
Dustin Taylor. Corey Lane. regrouped.
Great
Teays
John Hussell. Tracy Johnson Express could do nothing as
and Justin Sayre were among the team from M;tson County
the defensive stando uts for claimed the title.
the team with Josh Errett anc;l
To complement their title
Kenny Durham providing victory. POINT posteu an S-1
stando ut play' ;tt · mid field record durin~ the spring seaduring play on Saturday.
son in the Kanawha Valley
Heading . into
Sunday . . Soccer League with " a \cry
POINT fuund itself in first young· team .
place as no other teams had
The team inc lu,!eJ Bih.hee.
won more than. one game on Bnms.
Durham.
Errett.
Saturday.
Hussl'il. 1\1 .. .l ohnso11. T
But POINT did nut escape Johnson. Lane. Sayre. Suarei.
the weo;kend un sca thed as Tayler and \\(alker.
Wild River posted a 4- 1 victo,Also on the POINT team
ry to open tournament play on was Mile~ Bod!Jrskl, .Austm
Sundav. The lone goal for the Hannum. Rachel Hannum,
Mason (ounty players came Josh Hart . 'Kyle . Smith . and
from Wafker. scoring his team • Josh Turner.
' .

'

Town benefits from truck
re-routin~ through lower
turnpike tolls, A2

Tuesday, June 7. 2005

Camps ~d Clinics
Baseball

hOld tis annual Big Red Basketball
Camps in June at the Lyne Cente~.

Galllpolla youth baaeball camp
The schedule for the camps , whh
GALLIPOL!S- The Galhp(:llis,Youth fEles are as follows :
Baseball Camp will be held 9 a.m. until
- yarsity ' anci JV Shootout, June 9,
1 p.m. June ~3-16 at Memorial Field.
5130.
•
.Friday. June 17 w1ll ~ used as a
-Varsity Shootout. June 10, $130 .
make-up day in case of rain-out.
- JV Shootout, June ·11. $130.
The camp 1s tor boys and girls enter- JUOIOr High Team camp, June 12·
ing gmdes 3-8 .
14. $190.
Cost is S50 per camper or $40 for
. Varsity and JV Shootoul, June 15,
two or .more l rom the same family. Each S130.
.
,will rece1ve a camp T-shirt and da1ly
- Varsity and JV Team Camp, June
•wai ds w111 be given out.
16·16, $190,
.
.
tCamp(lrs should brmg a glove, bat
Individual Camp,-&lt;' .June 26-30,
fnd cleats ,! you have them.
. $250.
.
.. Contact R1ch Corvin at 441 -0543 or
The individual camp incfudes '"The
~5- 4 80 1 for more in!ormation or to reg- Triple", the nat1on's only triple elimination tournament
~Ier
For more Information, call.245-7294,
'
1-800-292-720~ (ext. 7294), or e-mail
Marietta College Camp of
Rio Grande assistant co·ach Ken French
Champs
MARIETTA - The Marietta College at klr.e"nch Orio:eUu.
Baseball Camp of Champs will be held
ewer the course of the summer at
URG Women's Basketball C.mp
Pioneer Park.
. RIO GRANDE - :rhe University of
The Day Camps for grad9s 2-8 will Rio Grande will hold its women's basbe: held July 5·7. 12t14 and 19-21 , while ketball camps beginning in June ~I.
the ResidenC$/Commuler Camp will be Lyne Center.
held for grades 6- 12 on July 24-28.
The schedule for the camps , with
For a camp brochure. call the base- . fees are' as f(lllows :
•ball ollice at (740)376-4517 or
- lrydivldual 'nd Varsity Team Camp."
{740)376-4673 or check · the web at" June 19·22, $225. .
· ..
www.mariena.edu
- Varsity and JV Shootout. June 25 ...

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
)tJll'\ 1...._•\ td.)-t

\ll

• AII-TVC teams
announced. See Page 81 .

•

- Varsity and J\1 Shootout, Juty 9, ~
$215.
~
- Jun•or High Individual Camp, Ju~
17-20, S225.
·
~
'
.: Varsity and JV Team Camp, July..
21-23. S225.
·
..
For more Information, contact ~avid
Smalley at 245-7491 or e-mail htm atdsmalleyctrio.edu.

LONDON tAP) Paris Olympic bid hist01y - but will' to the bid's success. was put The vote in Singapore. howevreml\ins the city to beat in the serve as a 2uide for the .ll7 eli- into further doubt when the er. will also hinge on geopolitirace tor the 2012 Olympics .. gible voting IOC members state Public Authorities Control cal issues and other factors.
while New York's chances took when they cast secret ballots in Board failed Monday to get the · "You do not dismiss any city
a hit when a powerful !\late Singapore on July 6.
unanimous vote required to on the basis of this report."
.
'Yes I Can' camp at
board rejected- funding for a
Pans has been considered the secure $300 million in state · London bid chairnmn Sebastian
Haldalber; College
TIFFIN - The 25th annual "Yes I
· ·
favorite since the stan of the money.
proposed stadium.
Coe ~id.
Can" basketball camp, featuring author
With a month to go betore campaign nearly two years a!i&gt;o.
The state board could reconBritish bOokmakers reacted
. and coach Stan Kelfner, will be held
the vote, the French cap(tal and Monday's report only rem- Sider the issue again later. But to the rcpon by keeping Paris as
June 26·30 at Heidelberg College.
1
solidified its front-runner status forced that status.
ThE! camp if for boys and girls in'
without the support of member the odds-on favorite, with
,grades 6-12.
Mo~day.. receiving a glowing · The . report's . · summar~ Sheldon Silver the state Ladbrokes listing the' French
For more information, call Bill
revtew m an International pratsed the 'vel)' h1gh q1,1ahty a·ssembly sreaker who came City
· at 1-6 and W'll
.
H'll
t 1&lt;m1
I
lmmler at (440)2.33-7551 or visit their
Olympic Committee report of the Paris and London bid out against e plan less than an making it a J-4 shot. London
web sile at www.yesiCansports.com.
evaluating the five cities bid- tiles. Madrid ;md New York hour before vote was taken- was second at 7-2 and 11-4.
Lll' Blue A'ngel Basketball camp
ding to host those games.
were cited lor "high yuality" the state funding cannot move
The IOC repoll praised Paris.
GALLIPOLJS - Girls in grades
London and Madrid also presentations.
kindergarten through 8th nexl year can 1
forward.
among' other thin.,us, for its
1
eamed high praise in the 123- · New York won positive · "This.r,lan is at best, premabe a part the Ul' Blue Angels Basketba!l
·
Southern Football +mp
"excellent
sports
concept.
Camp al the Nazarene Church on First I
RACINE - The South rn High
. page repon.
words for its legacy plans, pro- ture," Si ver said. indicating he accommodation," 'and "high
on June 13· ~ 5.
•
~
School AthletiC Department a
need
But reviews for New York motion of Olympic sports in was willing to continue talking capacity .and quality'· trans- Avenue
The camp will be held 4 p.m. to 6 that a football camp lor players g des 7·
were mixed, with. the IOC cit- America and strong potential about the issue.
p.m. each day.
.
12 w111 be held al Sou~hern High hool
Each participant will recleve baskel- June 14, 15 and 16. All are asKed to
However, the repoll also pollation.
ing a number of concerns. for local sponsorship and
ball instruction, get to participate in fuf"' , report from 6:30 until 9 .p .m., except on
·The report also noted that
incl!!ding uncertainty over a licensing revenues . . But the cited other issues for New
· games, receive 8 camp t·shirt, along J~n~ ~4 , when ~hose tn sevenlh anQ
v
k
·
h
1
k
f
d
d'
Paris
had
··fully
taken
into
propose~ Olympic stadium. IOC noted that "no guarantees
with a baskelball and refreshments.
I e•ghth report at 5.45 p.m.
.
.or • notmg t . at ac 0 e ,. account" the·· JOC's framework
.
.
· .
d
There Is .no fee for the camp, and 1t
The City s btd suffered a set- were provided" fpr the planned cated Olympic lat1es to ' some
' The cos,t •s $45 .!f pre~reglstere and : will emptlasize offensive and cfetBnsive
back when a powerful state $2 billion West Side stadium. venues ''may .make it difticult tor controlling the cost and size . $55 after June 1. Contact Duane E ~tep f damentals
·
·
board rejected critical pub.lic as well as an international to achieve the stated travel · of the Olympics - a . major at 304-824-5870. Chris Ellcessor at un
441-9838, Mike ·Brace at 245 -9677 .or
times."
point in IOC president Jacques Judy
funding for a $2 ·billion stadi- broadcasting center.
Portsmouth 7-on~7 Paaalng
at 446-3512 fc.&gt;i- more information. !
Caimp
The repoll was based on vis- R,ogg(s 'blueprint for fu ture
um.
"The IOC report has made
Gallipolis Area Basketball Camps t
POF3TSM?UTH -The 13th annual
Moscow. already a longshot, crystal clear that we· re in a · its to the five cities by the IOC gan1es.
GALLIPOLIS
_
The
annual I Ports~uth H•g.n School 7-·on~7 p,asslng
took criticism for its lack of great position to wi'n ... so ion~ evaluation commission, and
"We are really delighted
Gallipolis Area Basketball Camps will ·. ~~::u~~~ ~ Fnday, June ~9 at Spartan
detailed plans.
·
as the · stadium is approved, ' focuses on technical issues because our concept seems to
be . ~~ld a~ .the Nazarene Church '
Cost for the camp is $75. Qnly 16
The report · didn' t rank the New York bid leader Dan such as venue construction, be 1velcomed in the best way.''
Achvtties Butldm~ on June 6-~. and will I teams will compete. Teams are taken on
cities - the most competitive Doctoroff said.
transponation. hotel accommo- Paris ·bid . leader Philippe · feature two sess!ons. Those '" grades I a first-come, first·serve basis.
.
The stadium, which is crucial dations. financing and security. Baudillon said.
and . glamorous field in
4-6_ next year w!ll ~e held from noon r
To enter, contact Curt Clittord at

Football

OBITUARIES

Finals
"from PageBl
'·

Pistons'
17
postseawn
games.
Brown was elated as the
final seconds ticked down,
racing up the sideline to
embrace Wallace near midcourt and then sprinting
back to his bench to whoop
it up a little more.
The sentimental pangs that
Brown was experiencing
before Game 6 were diminished this time.
"Not so much as the last
game," Brown said. "I was
home, my family · was
around. Now, I'm just excit~d about the opportunity,
because these don ' t come
around very much."
Brown has been with the
Pistons for only two seasons.
one of the shortest sti nls

of

Draft
from Page Bl
could play just about any- .
wher~
on . the . field,"
Diamondbacks general manager Joe Garagiola said. "He
is just a whale of a baseball
player."
With the recent signing of
Stephen Drew. the team 's
top pick last year. the .
Diamondbacks have some
depth in their organization
at shortstop. They also have
Sergio Santos. the team' s
top selection three years
ago, and Corey Myers. their
previous highest draft . pick
who went No.4 in 1999.
"That would affect nothing," Garagiola said: "We're
going to take the player we
think is the best player on
the board when we have the
whole thing put together."
Even so. there's a chance
the Diamondbacb might go
for one of the pitchers who
could offer help at the major
league level quickly.'
{lansen is a 6-foot-6 closer with a 95 mph fastball
and a nasty slider. He set the
school and Big Ea t conference records for saves, and
might have raised his stO;Ck
over the weekend whe~ he

and that 's what they did
against O 'Neal and Wade.
too.
"There's so much work
ahead of us," Detroit center
Elden Campbell said. "It's a
relief to get past them. It was
a tough series."
Wade was noticeably slow
during the game's tirst few
minutes, laboring as \le ran
at half-speed and mi ssing his
first three shots. There was a
brief burst midway through
the first quarter when Wade
started to look more like
himself, sprinting downcourt
and feeding an alley.- oop
pass to O ' Neal, then hitting
a 3-pointer for a 17-9 lead.
Miami led 23-21 after one
quarter behind I 0 points
from 'O'Neal on 5-for-6
shooting, but the Pistons
went ahead early in the second quarter and stayed in
front for the rest of the half
Hamilton was the Pistons'
mam offensive weapon.

shootin~

8-for-1 0 for I 6
points, but the Heat pulled to
45-40 at halftime at'ter'Eddie
Jones hit a buzzer-beating 3pointer from midcourt.
Wade was noticeably looser early in the third quarter.
knocking down his first two
shots and looking to penetrate the lane. But as good as
hi s offense was, Detroit's
was just as efficient.
"Anybody in my situation
would do the same thing. try
to gut it out," said Wade.
who took a painkilling injec.
tion before the game. "It
came down to the end, them
making plays. And we did n't."
.
.
Notes:
Damon Jones
sprained ~ left ankle in the
first quarter but returned
before 'halftime. He . scored
only one point. .... This . was
the 91st Game 7 in NBA history. The home team has a
74-17 reco[d .... The Pistons
are 4-4 in Game 7s, while
Miami is 2-2.

started and won for St ~ five picks were pitchers, but the hQidouts of Drew and
John's in the NCAA region- this year I don 't see an over- recently signed pitcher Jered
als.
abundance of any one type Weaver. Boras is again repThe 6-7 Pelfrey is a two: ·of player. I would say it 's an resenting some of this year's
time
Mi sso uri
Valley average draft. talent-wise top
players
.i ncluding
Conference pitcher of the a,nd as far as depth is con- Hansen , Hochevar, Pelfrey,
year who throws a fastball cerned."
Utah high school lefty Mark
that sits in the mid-90s and
Kansas City will make its Pawelek and Georgia Tech
mixes it with a power curve highe st draft · selectipn at sho rtstop Tyler Greene.
and solid c hangeup.
No. 2. followed by Seattle.
"S ignability is always an
Hochevar is another hard - Washington and Milwaukee · issue, something you always
throwing righty who ts a to round out the top live. look at and that we'll conGolden Spikes finalist and Boston and St. Louis. both tinue to look at." said Bob
was the ace of Team USA's World Series teams last Fontaine, . Seattle's vice
gold medaFwinning staff year. have six picks in the president
of
scouting .
last summer.
first two ri&gt;unds, mostly a "Everybody has a budget."
Some of the other top result oflosing free ·agei:ns. ·
The draft lasts 50 rounds
players avai lable include
This year - the draft 's and is conducted through
Nebraska third baseman 40th anniversary - marks Wednesday. by conference
Alex
Gordon,
North the tirst time the selection calL San Diego selected ·
Carolina higli school out- order is based on the previ- California
hi gh
sc hoo l
fielder Cameron · Maybin, ous year's record from worst shortstop Matt Bush with
Long Beach State shortstop to best. regardless of league . the first pick last year.
T.roy
Tulowitzki
and In past years. the picks alter"Going into the draft, 1
Virginia third baseman Ryan nated between leagues.
don't think you have as
Zimmerman.
supposedly going to many star-qua lity players, as
·Also. back in the draft ~ do"It's
what it was meant to do
former Rice right-hander all .. along," Rizzo said . maybe over the last several
Wade Townsend. who was "We're happy the change years," Devil Rays general
taken by Baltimore with the was malie this year because manager Chuck LaM ar said.
No. 8 pick last year but we ge t the first pick instead " But with that said. there 's
turned down an offer and of the second pick."
going to be as many major
returned to ·"hool.
One of the major issues in leaguers come out of this
. "Last year, we thought the baseball draft is the abil- , draft."
there was good pitching· in ity of teams to actually sign
'the draft." said Tampa Bay the players they se lect.
AP Sports Writers Bob
director of player develop- Agent Scott Boras is notori- Bawn !II Ph oenix. Fred
ment and scouting Cam . ous for having drawn-out Goodall in Tampa wul Tim
Bonifay, whose team picks contract negotiations with Korte in Sea.ttle contributed
eighth. "Three of our first teams - as evidenced by ro' rhis report.

compete in contests for prizes.
•
The cost is $45 or $55 after June 1. ·1
Gontact Jim Osborne 446-9284 tor
more information.

Trac

k
' /R

•

Mountain High Running Camp
to be held In Bristol
BRISTOL. Va. - The MOuntain High
Running Camp will be held July 11 · 16
and 18·23 in !he mountains of south·
weslern Virginia.
·
·
For more i r ~r rrllation. Catl Scott
Slr'lmons at I ·8)0-451:1VIC or go to
www.mountalr.'llghr.mning.com.

I

. The _ ca~p will be hel~ in _two ses0.0. Mcintyre Tennl~ Leuona '
~ons. w1th 'k1ds between grades 6-8 l~k- .
GALLIPOLIS _ The 0.0. Mcintyre ·
1ng place from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m .
I p k 0 . t 1 'II II d " nd h;,.;,_
Participants between grades 3-5 will
ar . •s nc WI . o er a u.. a c ..J.,.

start at noon and end at 2 p.m.
I te:nms I~S$ons. The ho~r-h:1ng lessons
The cost ot the CE.~mp is $2S per w1U be h~ld 10 a.m. unt11. 11 a.m.t and
camPer ancf there .is a $15 charge lor also from t 1 a.m. · unttl _12 p.m. on
Saturday mornings.
h dd'ti n 1 'bl'
First group lnstructio'l is set from
eac 8 1 o a Sl tng.
Make chec:ks payable to Southern
Athletic BoOslers and registrations need May 21. thro!JQh J~ne 11.' The second
.
group Instruction 1s June 18 through
robe f•~led out.
.
.
July 16;' there will be no lessons Juty 2
Mail cl'u~ck and. regtstrat1o_ns to tor the July 4 holiday.
Southern H1gh School, c/o, Atehard 1 · The, instructor will be Tom Hopkins
Stephens, 920 Elm Street, Ractne, Ohio and class size Is limited to 20 persons
45711 .
.
. ·
per hour lesson. ChUdren ages six and
For more ~~formation , contact bas· abOve are welcome. Cost is $10 per
ketball coach ~teh~rd Stephens at 698- j person. .
.
6530, or athle11c. d~reotor Alan Crisp at
For more InfOrmation, contact Mark
949·2611 e:denstOn 2103.
Danner at 74()..44&amp;-4612 ext 255.

TIRED OF JUST HAVING
AJOB? LOOKING FOR
A NEW CAREER?
Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden
Count!)'. We afe expanding our staff and need more
salesmen and saleswomen. Np Experience is required,
only a willingness to learn, work as a team and have a
strong
. initiative.
• Potential Income 40-60k
• Work At The 11 Dealership

• 401 K Retirement Plan
• HeaHh Insurance

J.

Tom Peden Country
·.

-

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

REED

POMEROY
. Meigs
Emergency
County
Page AS
Management Agency and the
MIDDLEPORT- An area
• Raymond Cassady,·64
·Emergency
Planning
near Riverview Cemetery is
Committee
(LEPC)
will test
the only suitable place to set
various
sections
of
the
counoff July 4 fireworks, and if
ty's Emergency Operations
the area cannot be used, there
Plan
(EOP) late Thursday
will likely be no July 4 celeafternoon
in . a simulated
bration in Middlepon at aiL
· • WHS alumni gather
exercise
at
Chester.
Tom Dooley, vice presidenl
.. According
for annual reunion.
of Middleport Community
to ·
Robert
Association, discussed plans
See Page A2
Charl..., Hoefttch/photoo
Byer.
EMA
to use an area alongside the Lisa Johnson of Racine. Fantasy L. Durham of Salem Center. and Jennifer Lambert of Racine,
· • Family Medicine.
director,
a
cemetery for the fireworks receive plaques for passing their GED·tests.
transpo, rt
See .Page A2
display, and clarified details
truck making
about the plans. in light of
• Brandi Thomas
deliveries
to
recent criticism from comvarious agriMemorial Scholarship
munity · members. Dooley
culture busi- ~;..;._ _::_-J
winners. See Page ·A3
tirst discussed the plans to
BY CHARLENE HDEFI.ICH
nesses will be
Byer
use the cemetel)' area at the · HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
• Eastern student
.
involved in an
most recent meeting of
accident spilling · containers
accepted at Otterbein
Middleport Village Council,
POMEROY - Plenty of
of a toxic weed killer which
College.
Page A3
explaining that the firm emotion with both joy and ·
res~lts in fumes bein~ admitwhich has contracted to pre- tears was expre·ssed at
• Meigs County land
ted into the air causmg per·
sent the fireworks display Monday night's Adult Basic
transfers posted,
sons in the area to have
will no longer agree- to do so Literacy !"ducation (ABLE)
'breathing difficulties and
See Page A5
!rom the Ohio River.
annual banquet ·as students
burning eyes.
Dooley said the area under were recogmzed for academ• For the Record . .
consideration at . Riverview ic achievement.
Please see Exercise. A5
See Page -As
For
eight
students
it
was
Cemetery is . not near any
graves, and said the cemetery graduation night, a time for
would be closed off to the . receiving theirGED diploma,
public during the display. The for I 5 others it was recogniriver site, meanwhile, is diffi- tion for persistence in movcult to secure, and some· ing forward, and for one it
property
damage
has was being recognized as. a
occurred in the past because member of the National
Adult Education Honor
of the location.
.
"Safety has long been .an Society.
Fantasy L. Durham of Fantasy Durham of Salem Center expresses her delight at
..issue with using the river
bank for the djsplay. Using Salem Center, who dropped qua lifying for membership. into. the National Adu lt Educational
STAFF REPORT
the area near the cemetery out of school to 'get married Honor Society to her ABLE instructor Pat Ne.ece, right. Jeff
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM.
will be much easier for the . when she was 16, was pre- Fantine , director of the Central/Southeast ABLE Resource
fireworks company and safer sented a plaque ,as qualifying Center. was there to present her 'with a plaque.
COOLVILLE -A public
for them and the general pub- for the NatiOnal Honor
meeting has been scheduled
lic," Dooley said. "It's not Society by Jeff Fantine, was nominated for the award Schaefer. Each one was pre- to discuss the pending
Detalt. on Pace A&amp;
of
the by Pat Neece and Susan King sented a plaque in recogni- · Hocking(JI,lll•area slip repair
disrespectful to those buried dire~or
Central/Southeast
·
ABLE
of the Bradbury ABLE tion of their achievement by projects . in eastern Athens
there."
Resource
Center.
Center
where she ·prepared the Middleport-Pomeroy County on June 14 at
. Dooley said the matter will
After
congratulating
over a three month period for Rotary Club which spon- Coolville Elementary School.
be discussed at Monday
Durham,
he
noted
that
she
the GED exam.
sors the ~vent and provides
evening's
meeting
of
Interested propeny o)l'ners
completed
the
primary
qualDurham
is
now
enrolled
at
the dinner.
Middleport Village Council,
2 SEcriONS - 12 PAGES
are
invited to speak with Ohio ·
ification by scoring 630 on the University of Ricr Grande
Attendance
certificates
but
said
·
the
Association
Depaqment of Transportation
Calendars
A3
should be prepared to cancel the GED test. He said that · preparing for a career in· were to Mary I; lien Lambert, representatives from I to 7
score put her into the top 20 nursing - "something I've
hours;
Ashley p.m. Other members of the.
Classifieds
82-4 the July 4 celebration in its percent in the state, also wanted to be since I was in 600
Spradling, 500 hours ; Jtidy public wi II be accommodated
entirety if the cemetery area
noting that she was among grade sc hool," . she said. Searles, 400 hours; Epihriam
is not made available.
Comics
the
top five percent in the "Nursing has . always been Herdman · II, 300 hours; between 4 and 7 . p.m. The
"My thinking is that if there
nation in adult learners .to my passion." As a part of Angel · Reeves. 200 hours; meeting will be held in an
are
Dear Abby
no
fireworks
,
there
is
no
open house format with repreA3
celebration," Dooley said. qua!ify for the Honor befng named to the National Leigha Bryant, Marie Ellis, sentatives available .t o answer
Honor · Society, . she now Michael Ellis, Ishi J}rimm, ·
Editorials
· A4 "We stand to have thousands Society.
questions.
Besides
achieving
a
high
qualifies for scholarships, John
of people in tqwn for the July
Harrison,
Letha
ODOT approached the
score, a varieiy of other fac- Fantine said.
O)&gt;ituaries
As 4 celebration, and the tire- tors
Laude~milt, Tasha Lester,
public
in late March with prewere considered in
Other GED graduates
works are the primary reason
Floyd McClellan. and Lois liminary alternat·ives to
attaining membership includ- include Bobbie· J. Chaffin,
B Section people will be there."
Sports
Pooler,
I 00 hours.
restoring the highway system
ing community' volunteer ser- Jonathan R. Dailey, Lisa D.
· MiddlepPrt's Independence
Dr.
John
Costanzo,
superin
the vicinity. Since that
Weather ·
A6 Day celebration is traditional~ vice. Durham, 28, married Deaver. Joshua M . King , intendent of the Athens- · time, public comment has
with two children, worked in Keith A. Rossiter, Gary J .
the Head Start program. She Scarberry, and Jennifer D.
Please see RNWGI'ks, A5
© •oos Ohio Valley Pubti.ohl"'l eo.
Piease see ABLE, A5
Please see ODor. A5
'

ODOTplans
public- meeting
on Coolville
.slip repairs

•

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A simple reminder about Insurance discounts.
A Saturday morning ritual kind of remln~er.

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not save money in the process? Call your American Family
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BY BRIAN

.

INDEX

I

•• Rio Grandt

celebration
will depend
·on fireworks
site approval

WEATHER

Tennis

echedu~

Simulated
disaster·.
exerciSe set
for·Thursday

see

j

RIO GRANDE -The liniwrsity of

within the same county can
According to Trussell,
beconie eligible, which elimi- Middleport has so far spent
nated Pomeroy from the $47,700 on street repair, while
process this year..
$12,700 has gone to. the
Trussell said she was aware Middleport Volunteer Fire
of that grant stipulation . Department.
.
beforehand and that she
Since last fall, h~arings ·.
believed she could have the. have taken place throughout
60 percent _expended by the Pomeroy- to meet the condideadhne Wtth the s tdew~lk . tion s , 0 f the CDBG, applicarepair bid. The CDBG prov1d- tion and 10 gauge where the
ed $89, I 00 for Sidewalk residents wished the $300,000
re()atr and tree removal for to go throughout the commuMtddleport. The JOb w1ll be
·
.
re-bid thi s summer.
Please see Grant. A5

'

Volleyball

(E-mail your. camps, clinics or
Jeagus registrations ro sportsOmydal·
lyfribun9.com or fax them to 446-3008.)

. Trussell said the bids were
advertiS(d through the newspapedor three weeks and that
individual letters were sent
out to contr&lt;Jctors.
The CDBG is a federal
grant offered through · the
Office of Hou sing and
Community Partneyship, a
divi sion
of
the
Ohio
Department of Development.
The CDBG has a stipulation
that 60 percent of an entire
award must be expended
before another community

ABLE students honored for achievement

unniDJ:

~·by Blue Basketball C~mp
. GAlliPOLIS~ Boys and Qtrls who
Will be in grades 1·4 next year can
attend the annual BabY, Blue easketball I
Camp at the Nazarene Chur9h on July
5-7,
.
The carrip will be h~ld from 1 p.m .
untll2:15 p.m. each day.
Each participant will receive basketball instruction and will participate 1n tun
Marietta College to hold summar
gcimes, and will get a camp basketball,
volleyball Clmp
refreshments and a l·shirt.
MARIETIA -The Marlet1a College
The cost is $30 or $40 after June
volleyball program will hold a summer
21.
1
Contact Jim Osborne 446-9284 lor camp lor girls grades 7-12:
. The camp will run fr(l'm 8:45 a.m. to
more mformation.
4 p.m. , June 13:16 wilh a registration..
southern High School .announcet fee of $100, which includes lunch.
~
date for hoops camp
For more information, call he~~
; coach Tom Symons at (740)376·4410 ot
.
RACINE _ Southern. High School e-mail him at symonst0mariet1a.edu. . __
will hold its summer boys basketball. I
•
.c.mp on June 13 through June 17 ., .
1
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium.

Bfg Red Booketbetl Compo

POMEROY Pomeroy
has been oeclared ineligible
for a $300,000 Community
'Development Block Grant
(CDBG). this year due to a
stipulation that Middleport
spe nd 60 percent of its CDBG
money by July 15.
Middleport was awarded a
CDBG last year but has not
yet expended the required 60
per&gt;eni of their $300,000,

thus disqualifying Po(lleroy
from applying for a grant
thi s year.
Meigs County
Grants
Administrator Jean Trussell
said that she recently adver,
tised a bid for Middlepn\1 tree
removal .and sidewalk repair
that would have expended
that 60 percent but received
no bids. Time has now run
out to re-bid the project and
to, contract the work our by
the July I 5 CDBG application deadline.

·INSIDE

740-355. 4416 or T&amp;d Newsome at 74Q'
82 1.2-422
·

refreshmenis and a t·shirl. and can I

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

his nomadi c coaching career
- but easily the most successfuL
"It's turned out way
beyond my wildest dreams,"
Brown said.
Brown will·visit the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minn ..
soon after Detroit's season
ends to address a medical
problem that developed after
complications from . hip
surgery. If surgeons are not
able to correct it,, Brown
plans to retire from coaching . Speculation has been
rampant that if he ·leaves
Detroit, Brown may join the
Cleveland Cavaliers· front
office.
Detroit got 18 points from
Chauncey Billups and 13
from Prince, proving ag'!in
that a tea·m effprt can be
more than enough to defeat
two superstars. That's what
the ·· Pistons did agains t
O ~Neal and Kobe Bryant in
the NBA · Finals last year,

""'\.111\d , lih"'l' lltlllt."li.lllll

July Fourth

Basketball

unttl 2 p.m., while grades 7-9 will be
from 2 p.m.·4:15 p.m.
Each participant will receive basketball instruction , a camp bask:etbaH,

\\)ll'l~l)\l .. Jl'l X.:.!OCJ.)

.!IJ..!

No ~ommunity De~elopment Block Grant for Pomeroy, this year.

SPORTS

the

Reds Legends to hold 3~1V clln lc ·
MARIETTA - The Cincinna!l Reds
Legends w•11 be hold•ng a 3·day youth
baseball clinic for k"ids ages 5-19 on
June 22 -24 at VFW Baseball Field In
Marlena. Ohio.
The 3-daV event will focus on the
fundamentals of pitching, hitting and
fielding, and will include instruction from.
former Reds greats such as Ken Griffey.
Sr., Dave Parker. Lee May, Jack
Billingham. and others.
The cost of the clinic is $10Q It registralion is completed by June 15 and
the deadline ror registering is June 17.
For more information, please can 74Q373-3476.

Keisler lifts Reds over
Devil Rays, Bt

Rio Grande's men's basketball team will

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Paris gets top review in IOC report oh 2012 bid cities
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LocAL •

The Daily Sentinel

·pageA2

.
Wednesday; June 8,

STATE

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'

The Daily Sentinel'

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2005

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WHS alumni gather for annual reunion

I

MASON. W.Va. - The goin~. into sipecia\ education . Harrah, Pete Burris, Betty
annual reunion of Wahama
Jett Jodan recetved ' the Roush Burris, Orpha Weaver
High School alumni was held class of 1955's annual schol- Fields. Betty Grinstead Rice.
May 28 at the West Virginia arship. He will \be going into Lois
Ha11
Bumgardner,
O!arles Yeager; 1947: Dorothy
State Farm Museum near the nu rsing profession. ,
Point Pleasant.
· Jamie Rickard, who will be Perry Sayre, Roben Banon,
· Alumni were greeted by pursuing a ·career in biology. Sarah Kelly Gibbs; 1948:
longtime pr~sident Jim Stewan received the annual Wahama Barbara Lieving Zirkle, . Dale
and seated at tables decorated Alumni $500 scholarship.
Sayre,
Avalee . McGraw
in the school colors of red and
Walburn thanked the group Hanshaw. Kenneth Gerald
white. The Rev. Bernard for their support of the schol- Kearns, Verla Roush Harrrah,
Lieving had grace before the arship fund and em;ourdged Danny Yonker. James Sprouse.
baked steak dinner was served. continued interest.
Evalee Fry Wolfe,. Attarah
Dewhurst,
Mary
Those attending from the · Bernard Lieving, a retired Roush
Class 'of 1955, celebrating Army chaplain, stressed the McKnight, Kathleen Grinstead
their 50th anniversary, were scholarship cause to a greater , Rousll; 1949: Jane Foreman
given .speciat recognition and degree as he explained how a Abbott. Rosanna Fry Manley;
1950: Vernon Smith, Aleta
presented flowers, candles $500 scholarship changed his
and special booklets created whole life's direction in 1955. Snider Weaver. Gemld Kelly,
by a fellow classmate, and he will' always be greatful Arlene Grimm, Charlotte
Patricia Roush Noel.
for that ex.tra step taken by a Cooke Yonker. Bill Cooke,
In .the group were David and teacher at Wahan1a. He also. Jackie FoX., Lou Gilland, Erma
Carol Roush, Evelyn Mani~ mentioned a second teacher that Roush Gilland; 1951: Eleal10r
Young, Sylvia Blake Sayre. lett a mark o'n his destination. Weaver Davis, Rose Ross
George
Zuspan,
Suzie That • teacher had ,stressed · Corliss, Charles Roush, •
Canwright Hall. Neil Pickens. '" Anything worth doing is worth B.ernice Edwards Dudley, Ray
.
AP Photo
Janice Nicholson Bergdoll. doing right." lieving ex.plained Pickens; 1952: Walter Arnold Tiucks drive through downtown Bellevue, Ohio, on U.S. 20 in December 2003. The town 's main
Wilda JeffePs Vanmeter. Jack the steps he had taken to dimb Roush; 1953: Susanna Roush street parallels the Ohio Turnpike . City officials say the state's efforts to lure tr~cks back onto
Winebrennef, Patty Knapp the ladder of education and sue- Lewis, . Glen Harrah. Doris .
Paugh, John Charles Bond, Jtm cess and said he never forgot his Litton
Harrah,
Wilford the turnpike with lower tolls and equal speed limits with cars have drawn customers and venand Carol Roush Proffitt, Jan beginning as a member of the Scarberry, Benjamin Roush; dors back to the downtown area. The state says the number of trucks using the turnpike in
Schneider, Mary Stevens first junior high class to go 1954: Martha Henry Coleman, March increased by 100.000 from the same month a year earlier.
Mark, Raben Kent Roush, through Wah:)ITia. He was pre- 'John R. Roush. Bunon Riffle,
Carol Russell Workman. Janet sented a plaque by Bumgarner Ruth Lieving Roush, James
Stewan; 1956: Sandra Roush
Nicholson Robinson. JoAn!) in appreciation.
Embleton, Geraldinf Mattox
Jim Stewart gave the secre- Pomeroy; '1957: Jerry Arnold,
Clarke tary/treasurer 's report. and it Dick Young; 1958&lt; Agnes
Roush.
Marjorie
Walburn, Patricia Roush Noel. was decided the same slate of Young Roush. Linda Brinker
BELLEVUE (AP) - ·Gone
Traffic on the four-lane
A complex anchored by the
Ada Lee Boston Lynch, Jack officers would be iri for 2006. Meadows, Edna Scarberry,
Pickens,Roben Roush, Betty
Bumgardner presented Rex · Ann
Chisler · Garfield. are the mile-long traffic jams road that runs parallel to the hardware store · and a grocery
Neal Russell, Bernard Lieving, Howard the Outstanding Marshall McMillon; ·1959: that used to choke the town's turnpike often. backed up for store has a new pharmacy
said
Jon moving in next month and a
.Calvin McDaniel, Carroll Wahaman Award for 2005 for Dorothy Sayre Lieving. James main drag, which once drew . blocks.
an
average
~00
freight
trucks
.
Wynbissinger, a manager at a gas station under renovation .
Knight, Peggy McDaniel his devotion and volunteering Fry, Oris Elliot Coffee, Larry
an hour through t9wn and · hardware store that is one of The area · is in high demand
Edwards, E;mily Turnbull to the Wahama White Falcon Bruce Staats;
the district's anchors. Many for new vendors, Crosby said.
Kearns and Patty Gibbs Waid. Band and his devotion to
1960:
Marilyn Swartz kept shoppers away.
City
officials
say
the
state's
residents avoided the bumperGov. Bob Taft announced
Marjorie Clarke Walburn. civic and church functions. Strother, Nathan R. Roush.
to
·lure
trucks
back
effons
to-grille gridlock that clogged plans last fall to relieve the
an alumni volunteer, present- Jim Stewan recognized the David Zirkle, Guindilin Taylor
onto
the
turnpike
with
lower
the road, named Main Street turnpike's parallel highways of
ed the alumni scholarships anniversary classes and Staats. Sally Roush Ebersbach,
tolls
and
equal'
speed
limits
in Bellevue. or they turned off through tntftic.When the speed
awarding the first one to Dale Patrcia Roush Noel gave the Larry Hill, Wilmerine Clark
with
cars
have
drawn
cusreathing their destina- limit for trucks was raised to 65
before
Keathly, $1,500 in memory of recognition of classes.
Hill; 1961: Beverly Roush
Donald .Fog\esong. a past pirPrior to the dinner, a Plymale, Judith Fry Reiber, tomers and vendors back to tions when struck in traffic . . mph in September, traffic on
Although the quaner-mile the turnpike increased by 10
incipalandteacheratWahama Waharna clock and a painting ."Ann Maynard Zirkle, Susan the area. Turnpike traffic has
24
percent
increased
about
stretch
of family-owned · percent, according to the Ohio
knowri for his concern for his by Lola Roush Miller were on Zuspan Winebrenner, Karen
the
changes
were
made,
restaurants,
stores and insur- Turnpike Commission. When
since
fellowman . Keathly will be display for donations· to the Stewart Werry, Peggy Dee
entering the field of sports scholarship fund. The winners Anderson Bumgarner; 1962; the Ohio Department of ance agencies still gets clogged truck tolls were reduced in
at times, the diesel fumes have February from $42.45 to $31
were Karen Stewart Werry, the Georgia Sherry Jurrell, . Okey Transportation said Tuesday.
management or coaching.
has
translated
into
an
That
for a cross-state trip, traffic
lessened, city officials said.
A scholarship Of $1,000 clock. and Carroll Knight, the Capehart; 1963: Paul Hesson,
estimated
15
percent
"People
aren't
afraid
to
go
grew another 4 percent.
went to Heath Stanley to painting. Dee Bumgardner Carolyn Lieving Hesson;
in
traffic
on
downtown
and
park
their
vehidecrease
Tolls increased by 82 perhonor Evelyn Proffitt. the old- handled the awarding of20 gift 1964:. Barbara Sherry Zuspan;
Route
20
iri
Belle.vue,
about
anymore,"
Crosby
said.
cles
cent
between 1995 and 1999.
est living graduate of cenificates. The Clyde Roush 1965: Mary Foster Hendricks•.
70
miles
west
of
Cleveland,
"They
used
to
be
afraid
they·
d
During
that period, truckers'
Wahama. It was noted that Family provided miniature Judith Duncan McWhorter;
according
to
Jeff
Crosby,
the
open their doors aild have use of alternate routes such as
she was a mentor for kids at dolls to be give!] to. the group. 1966: Nancy Proffitt; 1967:
them taken off by a truck."
city's
safety
service
director.
U.S. 20 boomed.
Wahama and especially for . Rex Howard led the group Wanda Harrah Stafford; 1968:
· the White Falcon Band.· in the singing of the Alma Karen Staats Hinde!, Diana
Proffitt had the privilege of Mater and God Bless America Roush Jeffers, Chris Harrah,
presenting the award to to close the evening. The Elizabeth Hudnall, Gary
Heath, her great-grandchild plans are to have the 2006 Green; 1970: Barry Haynes;
'
who will be studying in the gathering at the farm museum. 1971: Lee Bumgarner, Bernita
field of radiology. Lindsey
Attending
were: 1927: ,' Staats Allen, Dorsal Adkins;
Roe who will be entering the Evelyn Foglesong; 1933: 1972:
Debbie
Paugh
field of nursing was given
Mildred Fry Roush; 1934: Bumgarner;
1973:
Jean
$1 ,000 scholarship in memo- Pauline Roush Piechnix; 1935: Harrrah Pickens, Rebbeca
~
!'¥of Isabella Riley VanMatre. Leota Reitmire Roush; 1936: Paugh Coleman; 1975: Parry
Other scholarships present- Survilla Johnson Gilland; Athey Montgomery, Rex
1937: Clara Rollins Capehan, Howard; 1977: Jacqueline
ed included:
Nicholas Dailey, a · $500 Paul Fitzgerald, James Staats; Paugh; 1979:. Charles Stanley;
scholarship in memory of 1940: Mary Foreman Thabet,
1980: Angela P,roffitt
Dorothy Russell Dawson, Joe· Berry; 1941: Garland Stanley; 198 t: Dorothy
described as an avid and Clyde Roush; . 1942: Roy Roush Circle; 1995: Ric,hard
· devoted Wahama · graduate, Roush; 1943: James Ben Baird; 1998: Megan Harrah
'former secretary and life-long Sayre, Annabelle. · Grimm Pickens; 2004: Erin Marr;
fan. He will be pursuing a Hudnall; .1944: Lawrence 2005: Winona Hufliman,
career of graphic arts.
Foreman; 1945: Anna Faye Lindsey Roe, Heath Stanl\!Y.
Winona Huffman, a $600 Roush, Joyce Roush Carson, Jamie Rickard,' Nick Dailey,
scholarship from the class of Loretta Rickard Haynes, Harry Jeff Jodan, Dale Keathly,
1947 and I ~48. She will be Pickens;
1946:
William Sarah Gleason.

!

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I

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

a

FAMILY MEDICINE
'

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.

Reader should not let grandkids ride.on his lawn mower
Question: I read an anicle
in our paper about a young
child injured by a 'ridihg
mower. Does this happen
often? What can be done about
these injuries? Should I go
back .to a push mower now
that I am a grandfather, to keep
my grandchildren- safe? The
little ones really like riding
with me while I mow the yard.
Answer: Lawn mowers,
both push type and riding, are
involved in more than 75,000
injuries each year in the
United ,States. Of those '
injured people, about 10,000
are children. Many factors
contribute. ,to these injuries,
th~ most im~X&gt;rtant of which ·
is not followmg proper safety
precautions. So safety educa- ·
tion, rather .than changing to a
different type ?f mower, is
probably the best strategy to
keep your grandchildren safe.
A power mower, whether
push type or riding. is the
most powerful and dangerous
tool that most people own. It
sbou\d be operated by a
responsible J?Crson wearing
proper clothmg and safety
gear. SpeCifically, wear long
pants. steel-toed work boots
and safety goggles. This will
help protect you from flying
objects, and rotating blades.
.Power pu sh mowers should
not be operated by anyone
under 12, and ridi~ g mowers
should not . be operated by
anyone under 16 . .Some
sources say no one under 16
should operate any mower.
Be sure to train your chil-

dren iri mower safety and
operation. Clean up your yard
before mowing. Never mow
over debris. Flying objects
can be thrown from a mower
at over 200 m:p.h. These projectiles can seriously injure
people, pets and property. "
Keep people out of the yard
while · mowing, especially
children. This can keep them
out of the way of flying
obJects as well as prevent
back-up injuries.
These back-up· injuries are
especially tragic, as theyusually involve young children
who are badly mutilated,
crippled or killed. Adding to
the family heartbreak. the dnver is usually. a parent, grandparent or sibling. There is one
safety feature that can 'greatly
reduce, if nor eliminate, these
types of acctdents. It's called
N-M-1-R technology. This
stands fqr. " no mowing in
reverse." and means that the
drive sh~ft that turns the
blade is disengaged whenever the rider places the mower
in reverse. If you have a riding mower, make sure th~t it
has this safety feature.
And there are yet other
types of lawn mower-related
inJuries . The engines get very
hot and can cause serious
burns if touched. Also, the
engine should be off and cool
before refueling. A hot engine
can cau se a·gasoline fire.
To summarize, I'd like to
pass on a few "do's" and
"don ' t ~" from the American
Academy of Pediatrics .

Don't let children play in
areas 'adjacent to where mow·ers are being used. Don't let
children ride with the mower
operator' or ride in cafts or
trailers being towed behind
the mower. Don't allow children to play on or around the
mower, even with adult
supervisiOn.
Do. keep children younger
than five indoors while mowing is being done. Do require
that any child 14 or older be
given proper training before
being ·allowed to operate a
power mower.
I know that your young
grandchildren are probably
fascinated with' machinery, as
are most kids. I'd recommend, however, that you find
some fun, low-risk activities
to do with them and use your
riding mower when they are
not around.

Family Medicine® .is a
weekly column. To submit
questions, 'write to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O_, M.B.A., Ohio
University
College
of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O,,
Box flO, Athef!s, Ohio 45701,
or via e-moil to readerquestions@familymedicinenews.o
rg. Medical information in
this column is provided as an
educaJiotUJJ service only. It
does not r.eplace the judgment
of your persotUJJ physician,
whq should be relied on
to diagnose and recommend'
treatment for any medical
conditions. Past•columns are
available online al wwwJamilymedicinenews.org.

Happy
~ather's Day

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

Love

Love
.(Your Name)

'

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

High a.chiever in college struggles to stay in control

'
·sale. Refreshment s will be baseball cookout will be held
served .
at 6 p.m at Eastern High
CHESTER
The
Eastern
SchooL Take vegetable .
· Wednesday, June 8
Boosters
will
meet
at
Athletic
de
ssert and la,wn chair.
POMEROY - The Meigs
6:30
p.m
at
Eastern
High
1
County Board of Health
School.
Coaches
an
parents
meeting will take place at 5
p.m. in t)le conference room asked to attend.
Thurr.day, June 9
of the Meigs County Health
Thursday, June 9
CHESTER
- Shade River
Department.
VINTON - Revival serLodge 453 will meet at 7:30 vices at Fairplay Chapel off
p.(ll. Refreshments.
State Route 325 . 7 p.m. TUPPERS PLAINS through June I0. Rev. Harry
VFW 9053 will meet at 7 .David Russell preaching.
p.m. at the Tuppers Plains Bluegrass
Beacons
of
hall. There will be a ri1eal at Columbus to present gospel
MIDDLEPORT
~iddl e port
Lodge
363 6:30 p.m .
concert June II .at 7 p.m.
F:riday, June Iii
F&amp;AM will meet at 7:30p.m.
More . int'ormation call 742POMEROY - The J nnua! 2271. ...
at the Temple.
her.itage dinner will be held
MIDDLEPORT
Friday, June I 0
at
the Meigs County
Middleport
Community
LONG BOTTOM
at
7
p.m. Praise and worship services
Association, 8:30 a.m. at Museum
Reservations are to be made will be held at 7 p.m. Friday
Peoples Bank.
CHESTER
Chester by ~ailin g 992-3810.
and Saturday. and 6:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT The on Sunday at the Mt. Olive
Council, D0IA will met at
7:30 p.m. in the Masonic Widows ' Fellowship will Church, Long Bottom.
building. Auction will be meet ·llt noon at Ginos in
LONG BOTTOM •- The
held and members are asked · Mason .
King Family of Lancaster
to take or &gt;end items for the
Saturday, June .It
will be in concert at 7 p.m. at
good of the order committee
CHESTER - Track and the Faith Full Gospel Church.
.
-

DEAR ARBY: I Lun a
freshman in college. and I
ha\le been havin g an awful

Brandi Thomas Memoriai.Scholarship winners.
POMEROY - The Brandi
Thomas Memorial Scholarship
was recently awarded at Meigs
High S,chool's award~ assembly with students Cassie Lee
and Derek Johnson being '
selected as recipients.
· Both · Lee and Johnson
received one $800 scholarship each.
Lee, a Pomeroy resident
and member of the Meigs
High School Class of 2005
will attend the University of
Rio Grande in the fall.
Johnson , a Middlepon resident and member of the
Derek Johnson
Meigs High School Cli!SS of
200 I attends Ohio University. ·
Any Meigs High School school were eligible to
. senior or graduate attending receive the scholarship for a
· college, having participated in maximum of two years,
track or cross-country a miniThey were chosen on the.
mum of two years in high basis of character. extra-cur-

I

I

I

Prospectus available for annual
festival exhibit, competition
GALLIPOLIS - Artists,
both professional and amateur,
are invited to submit their work
for the 37th Annual Festival
Exhibit and Competition at the
French An Colony, located at
530 First Ave., Gallipolis.
This event, sponsored by
Peoples Bank, Gallipolis
Career
College,. Willis
Funeral Home, the Ohio
River Border Initiative Grant,
in cooperation with the River
Recreation Festival, · is not
only an excellent opportunity
for anists to sell their work,
but the FAC believes exhibiting is an important part of an
artist's development.
To receive a prospectus giving details on the competition, call the FAC at (740)
446-3834.
Cash awards will be given
to artists who receive first
place and second place, as
well as best of show. in both
the professional and amateur
categories. .
Purchase awards are avail-

year. . My famil y situation is
extremely unstable, and I'm
;tlways afraid I'm going to be
left alone .
. I have a great boyfriend. hut
I don 't want to rely on him for
money 9r a place to stay.,even
though I know he would support 1ne if I needed it.
I \1ave to maintain a very
high GPA to keep 111y schol ar,
ship and continue school. I
work 'as much as I can ; however, I can 't support myse lf. I
have always been an excellent
.student (I graduated inthe.top
five of my class). but I feel
like nothing in IllY life is in
my control. I work hard and
study all day and have no time
to myself. I'm afraid I'm
~\way s going to be a burden to
everyone close to me. Please
help. - STRESSED TO THE
MAX IN NEW YORK
. DEAR . STRESSED: By
studying hard and makin g
vour grades your highest priority. you ARE doing every thing you should be cluing
right now. Regardles s of what
happens with your parents'
marriage, I'm sure they both
want what's best for you.
Before your grades become
affected by your 1\/0rrying,
p_ay a vi sit to the student
health center and ask to speak
with a psychologist. Some
sessions there will help you
realize that your current situation is only temporary. and it
won't be long before you
achieve the independence
you nave.

!llU ll a ppe~tr..,

Th i..,

not on!)

to he C&lt;lllllll ttmclll - phubi&lt;:.

hut al-..o to ha\ c tru-. t j..,..,uc-..
and a

~e riou ...,

lucJ.. of rc.., pcct

for bo undaric, . Do not plan a
future with him "ith otlt

Dear
Abby ·

c x ten .., i vc 'pn:mar ital co un ~

sdi ng. \Vhat he J id ra'i ... c.., J
red fl ttg .
DEA R AB\3Y: Mv \lll,hand
;md I h;11·c recent!) ~cparat cd
It ha' been li1c days . I' m OK
DEAR AB\3 Y: I'm a .11 - w'iJh the ra ct l,) r u~ bein g
year-o\J woman who broke ;tpart . We were defi nitely m\t
~ IT &lt;\ 2 112-ycar rclation,hip meant to be tof2e thcr.
• w1th a man I lo ve. but who
\Vhat ·.., tear~ng IJH:' . up i ~
wouldn ' t co mm it tn mar- tlw fact tllllt he ·, dati n£
riage. (I'll cl1ll hi m Paul. ) We a\read~ . Sho uld I 'tart ·• W h L~I
never li ved togq her.
can I clo jo ckar my head''-·
Paul and I started lil l kln~ CONFUS ED IN T'&lt;ORTH
again' ab ou1 .two m o ntlr~ at!(~ CAROLI NA
and he seemed to kno w m ~rc ·
DEAR CONFUSE D: A
about me and wll ut. I wa~ di V\)J"Ct is n ' t like a han gove r.
doin g than! expected. After u ' " Hair o f the dog." won' t
few week s of c h a ttin~. I 111 ake the ache !.!o awav.
finafly fi gured ou.t that Paul Becau se your a houl- t o- h~-ix
had heen listening to my pri· ·is datin~ doesn' t mean that
vate an swerin g ma ~: hinc m e ~ ~ you sh&lt;\Lild be. In fact. I recsages. He must ha ve nbla ined om me nd again st it fur the
the'cocle when I checked mv time being. Soc,iali1e wi th
me ssages from hi s ho me fe ma le fri e n l! ~- j oin · u gy m.
while we were datin ~.
.voiLIIlteer if yot1 ha ve some
All my friend ' arc say in g extra time on yo ui· hands ,
. I'm crazy tQ continue talkin g &lt;IIlli cunsult a Iawver. But do
to . him and seeing him. not start d ~llin g :1gain Lmtil
knowing he violated my pri - you are separatecl emotionalvacy. I don't know what to ly fro m the m;ul yo u married
do. I still ha ve fe e lin ~s fo r and tha t may · take
him . What 's your take on month s. not days.
this 1 - CONFUSED IN
Dear Abby is written . by
RHODE ISLAND
Abigail Vcm llur~n. also
, DE.AR
CONFUSED : known as jeanne Phillips,
Frankly. what Paul did was and · was jimi1ded by her
not only a violation of your mother, Pauline Phillips.
privacy. it is also a little Write
Dear Abby at
creepy. If you haven't al ready www.DearAbby.com ·or P.O.
done so, chmlge the pas&gt; code Box 69440, Lo.~ Angeles·, CA
on your answering machine. 90fJ69.

Eastern·student accepted at Otterbein College
Cassie Lee

ricular activities, academic
performance
and
other
accomplishments ' ensuring
potential success in college
and post-college life.

Robinson
graduates

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern l;ligh School graduate
Phii ·Pierce has been accepted
at Otterbein College where he
has been awarded a total of
'$62,400 for four years in various grants and Otterbein
scholarships.
Phil was part of a successful
2004 Eastern Eagles football
seaso'n where the team went
7-3. Phil will· also be a member of the Otterbein Cardinal
football roster in (all 2005.
With the help of hi s
Eastern · teammates. Phil
scOred 12 touchdowns and
earned 1200 offensive yards
Phil Pierce
.for .the Eagles during their
2004 season. Phil received which included: First Team
several
football
honors A\1-TVC ; First Team All -

able to local businesses.
· Artists will not know the
results of the awards until
Sunday, July 3, 'when a pri.vate reception will be held in
honor of all the entrants in the
competition.
The reception, sponsored
by Riverfront Honda and
attorneys
Cherrington,
Moulton and Evans, will take
.
place from I to 3 p.m.
Entrants' pieces will be displayed in both the FAC galleries and the Gallipolis City
,
Park on July 4.
The entries juried into the
gallery will .be kept on display
July 3 through July 31.
Entries for the 37th annual
Festival exhibit will be
accepted from I to 5 p.m:
Nikki L. Robinson
Saturday, June II , and from 5
to 8 p.m. Monday, June 13.
RACINE ·-· Nikki L.
All . FAC rrogramming is Robi'nson, daughter of Carl
oft'ered through suppon of the and Carolyn . Robinson of '
Ohio Arts Council. The FAC Racine, graduated May 22
is handicapped accessible. from
Ohio
Northern
Please call if special needs are University's Raabe College
required.
·
of PharF.acy earning the
degree
of
DoCtor
of
Pharmacy. .Nikki is ·a gradu- .
ART COMPEIIIION.TO TAKE PUCE ate
of Seuthern High School
uA LLIPOUS Entry kept aqd exhibited in the FAC':;, class of 1998 and has accepted employment as a staff
forms are available for the · Youth Gallery. July 8-31 .
French Art Colony's .Youth . All .work submitted. will pharmacist at Rite Aid'
Art Competition and "Art in ' receive a recognition ribbon.
Pharmacy in The Plains.
the Park" display. ·
Students in grades K-12 are .
encouraged to panicipate in
the competition.
Entries will be accepted
from 10 a.m. to S p.m. June 710 at the FAC:
All artwork submitted will
be on display for the "Art in
the Park," which will take
place from I0 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Insurer tn the nation, Nationw\de
Saturday. July 2, in the
Agribusmess und~tan ds f&lt;~rmers· needs.
Gallipolis City Park as pan of
Thars wh:,t we offer AguChoice - farm
tnsur a nee producH. spec.'f1Cally ta1lored to
the Riv.er Recre~tion Festival.
' your needs
There is · no entry fee and
submit up to.
students
* Coverag£&gt;J; des•gned ~peo ftcally for yo'"!r ag
three works of an each .
operat1on
Work will be judged in catl ocal, expenenced filrm tnsuri'tnr;;;te
egories detined by age. All
professronals
work, except oils and acrylics
*
Supenor clatm !.Crv tc c , 24 hours a d&lt;"Jy,
on canvas, must be framed.
!&gt;ev~ d ays a ~ ei(
No exceptions will be made.
*
Convenrent btl hr~ opltons
Although oil and acrylics do
,_ Rated A-.. (Supenor) by A. M Best Company
not need to be fr.tmed, they do
need to have a suitable hanger.
l-.Ctwni,ng a farm takes hilrd work. a nd
The " Best in CategOry"
AgnChoKe"'" wtH work hard f~ you.
winner in each division will
Gtve \15 the chance to ea~n buSiness
·
.Ill: given a monetary prize on
.'-~·
·
PUtlonwlcleAgribusiness
behalf of American Electric
iidr
Power. First. Second and third
Bill Morton~
place winners will receive
905 ~ ington St.. ltaYeNWOOC, wv
ribbons. .
304-273.()901)
Pieces that are awarded Best .
,.__........,
,
- OfkJ. ~OM Ulf~
in Category, first, second or
third place winners' will be

District ; Honorable Mention
A\1-S'tate: Ohio Valle y Press
Top 25 ; and coaches "Best
Back" Awaru.
Thi' Friday Phil and some
.of his teammates will partici pate in an all -star football
game coached by Pa t
New Iand .anu the Eastern
Football Coac;hing Staff. The
game will be held at ·
Parkersburg High School in
Patkersbtui W.Va.
Phil was al so part of coach
Brian· Bowen's s ucc ~ ssful
2005 Eastern Eagles baseball
team which went 20-6. earning the title of · "District
Champs."
Phil is the son of Mark and
Rosemary Pierce.

Yourn

·Happy
Father's Day

(Your .Name)

Community Calendar

Clubs and
organizations

u:s.

Wednesday, June .8, 2005

,

Church events

•

'

YTHEBEN

Public meetings

Town·benefits from truck re-routing
through lower turnpike tolls

Page A3

can

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

.

'Father's Name'- - , - -- --'--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

YourNam~s) -~----------~------------.-~~-------~dd~··-------------------------'------------~~-----Clty/State/Zlp
Phone•_:_
• ----------Send Coupon and Paylllflnt to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~~bur

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

~o.w-. c--.. -..-... ( .....-.

•

Is your score card fuil of high number:,! \XIhen it c nrm:~ r( ~ cafJ 1t1c ~o 1nng. hi glll'r nuzTi hers
are definitel); _n o t par fo~ the Cliurse _.anJ ma y he indi cat~ ) rs 11f " l'ri ~ 1 u -, het_
l tth r n1~\t'nb .

Cardiac scori.n g is O'Bicncss Memorial H&lt;&gt;·r ital's late&gt;t ~Jdi tion

to CT &gt;Cann ing
technology. This test fvr co ronary artery Ji sca~e measUre' r h~ &lt;llllt&gt;un r vf C.:llcifJCcttion 1n
rhe arteries of the h ea rt. It can hdp determme whet her ur n(H heart ~,_fl,c e:be 1~ p r i..'~L· nt
~ong before recognizahle symrtl Jms de\'ldnp. Thi ~ Ill m ~ Jn ,· a~l ,\"t.-' te~t t ~ 0pa mk·-.~ ,mJ r~tke-.

only a few minutes.
Candidates fo r card lac scoring e"xaminatilm.S a r ~ •. w cr a ~~ 40 .1nJ han." \)nl..' ur llh lrt= ut

the fo llowin~ risk factOrs for heart Jisca&gt;c•
o High

blood rres&gt;ure
o High LDL o.r w tal chobte;,,J
o Family history of heart Jiscase
~. Sede ntary lifestyle

'
o ()J:.t: ,ll·
• High .. rrt•-.... le\"d ~
•H i ~ tl lf\ 1)f "lll11kmg
o

\)iaf,ctc•

Call (740) 592·9483 MonJay through FriJ ay between b d.lll. .tnd 4 p.m. inr m11rc
info rmat ion or to sc hedul~ a ca rJ iac sc onng ex amin cltll )n , Phv.. KI ,m rddr al
is not requireJ .
Cardiac sconng examinati ons are rerformeJ at O' Blcnc•." RdJi&lt;&gt;l&lt;1(\' anJ :0..1 eJt ca l l ll m ~in ~
Jepartmenr ar the C astmr Center m the O' BlciW'" ~ !,·,heal Park Our ~uahficJ ·••if
in vites you to take a ck;ser loo~· at aJ,·anct:J JJ-~gntJ..,li C tm,1~mg
in co mmunity health -. one patient ell a tl n1t'.

-

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
~ ~@AU~t~

..

" " Wt'

111 t:'&lt;I "Ur~ rrugrt_·-.~

•

�.

•

.

•

..

I
J

With the re cent Frenc h
rejection of the European
Un ion's od ious "con , titu tion." I propose a very differcm radical idea : It 's time

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
• www.mydailyse[ltinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

for a truce.

Jim Freeland
Publisher
I

Charlene Hoeflich .
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make ·no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom
of speech, or of the press; or tire riglrt of tlte
people peaceabiJ' to assemble, a11d to petition ·
the Government for a redress of grieJJances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Honor
Let us remember
Dear Editor:

'

.

This Memorial Day. let us remember the millions who have
fo ught for our country. Let us re member all who died doi ng
so . Let us remember those who came home wounded m mmd.
body and sou l. Let us rememher those who are fighting for us
now. Let us re member we arc truly one nation under God. for
it was God who planted the seeds of freedom. liberty and j ustice ·for all in the minds of our fo umlers so long ago. and
helped them defeat the largest and most powerful .e mpire . not
once but twice in less than 40 years. Let us all ask. God to let
us do and give our best' and ou.r greatest. Let us remember that
it is not how much money you have or spend but.how we use
it to help others. Let us remember to lift up those who have
fallen : the hurt. sick, tired and broken. hearted, to help them ·
stand back on the path of life·so they can walk it beside us. Let
us remember that our future is based ·upon how much we do
to help others. that thi s is especiall y true for how much we
give and do for our children.
Let us remember how important life really is, that it can be
lost or taken in a si ngle heartbeat. Let us remember thatthe.50
stars on our flag are 50 reasons to love America. That the blue
· could be sky above all of u ~. the red the blood shed for us, the
what, allth~t is pure and good about America.
. ...
Let us re member that while we are the greatest m1htary
power ever in the world, it has come to l:le so at a high and
great cost. Let us remember the~e things in the hope of
becoming an even greater and better nation .

PageA4.Wednesday, June 8, 2003

Kathryn
·No. not a truce with the
Lopez
"cheese-eat j ng; surrender
mo nkey" gowrnment that
advocated Brussels' bureaucrat ic. mess of ill -advised
cent ralization.
With the French people: We know it. but we are .at war
, with America. Yes; a pennashouldn't qJnfuse the two.
nent war1 a vital war. a war
In the French vote. which without death.
Yes, they are
the Associated Pre.&lt;s called
very hard the Americans,
"a knockout blow"· for the they
are voracio us: · they
E.U. constitut io n -,you can want un d .lVI·ded power over
see a c lear split. A sp lit .the world." (Full disclosure:
betwee n the French people Boyles writes a column fo r
and
French
pre sident National Review Online th at
Jacques Ch irac. Between the takes a caustic. view of
Fre.nch people ·and the new Euro pean media.)
.
--'
French foreig n minister.
That's lhe qu asi-o!Til'ial
Dominiq ue de Vi.ll ep in, who. French attitude toward us all,
for the heck of it. we' ll ca ll Joe and Jane America.
the ene my of tlje people. Philosophcr Jean-Francais
(S urely you remember hi s · Revel has said we are "prac ro le as the leading anti - ticall y the worst association
Ameri cani st statio.ned at the of human beings that hi story
United Nations in the run- up has ever seen." But, Boyles
to the Iraq war.)
gives the love back with a litDes pite the French gov- tle qualifier, arg uingthat the
ernment 's enthusiastic sup- France that Mit terand says is
port for the SO"called consti- at war with America is ··an
tution, 55 percent of the peo- ongoin g . in ve ntion of its
ple. ' voted ·against Chi rae 's snooty, eliti st; self-sati sfied,
indecent proposal. · Chirac, se lf-obsessed, humorle s-.
who has spent the ·time since Pari s-dwel)ing . gove rnin g .
apologizing to Europe mu st class." That's the same govrue the day the oft top-down 'erning class that wanted to
government .put the proposal · leapfrog' into the European
to a vote.:
Union 's identity-killing, secDenis Boyles. the author ular black hole. And the
of ·'Vile France: Fear, same elite French voters
Duplici ty, Cowardice and rejected. The same French
Cheese" (Encounter. 2005) voters Boyles has some
suirts his book with a .quote affection for. having lived in
·
attributed to former French France until recently.
·When we Americans make .
president
Francois
Mitterrand: "France does not the froggy jokes ~ which.

let's face it. we're not all
above - it's Chirac and
company we're thin king of
in between 'ips of French
Alps Evian. After all.
·'French Women Don't Get
Fat."' so there\ somethin g
America ns can love there.
As John J. Miller and
Mar~ Molesky wr ite in "Our
Oldest Enemy," (Doubleday,
2004) there is a rich hi story
for us • having some Jegitimate issues with the French.
going back to the Fre nch and
l·ndian Wms. The French
considered
Oeorge
W.ashington a villai n. "Our
Oldest -Enemy" - which is
about to be published in
French isn' t kind in.
a"essml; the psyshology of
the :relat1onsh1p : T1me and
ag~ m tn, the l;~st lwo ceotu11 es, F1dl~ce h ~" 1_elus_ed to
come to gnps Wlthll s dlmln1shed stat us as a co untry
~.hose greatest general was a
lore1gner. whose greatest
warnor was a teenage _g1rl,
and whose la&gt;t great md1tarl::
VIctory came on the p_l_mns ol
Wagram 111 .! 809 .. Th~
French word c hauvm~sm .
reportedly
ste ms from
Nicolas Chauv in...a stubborn
Napoleontc othcer who
refused to admrt defeat ot
the imperial cause.
And yes, as "Our Oldest
Enemy" poi,nts out, the
Fre·nch weren t exactly helpful of la te. Save us your
Lafayette ·and Yorktown
remembrances, the authors
say: the French have been
nothing but "insufferable
obstructionists" throughout
the Iraq war.
But for the moment. I' m a
peacemaker: I'd rather not

dwell on that past. as rich as it
is. and as recent as it may be:
In yet a third recent book
o1i France. "The Arrogance
of the Fre nch" (Sentinel,.
2005). journal ist Richard
Chesnoff. who has lived in
France for ·'fourteen self-fla,
ge llatin g years," swears ~y
their "g r~at wme. wondertu l
cheese, and remarkably
beautiful women.'· Arid the•
French may whine about us,
but. according to Chesnot'f.
the people can be won ovei·;
They just don' t want to ~e·
cast off as irrelevant by. let s
face it, the world's only .
superptm cr.
.
Oh come on. We care - ,
after all the French don' t
speak German. do th~y?
. On Sept. 12, 2001 , ")-.e
Monde ," the must-read
French paper ran the frontpage . headline.
"Nous ·
. Sommes Taus Americain s."
We Are All Americans. Let\
run with th at spirit and
embrace the French love of
democracy they exercised
during the E.U. consti tutional
vote. We can bond on this.
Let's consider the French E.U.
"non" of May as a resounding
confirmation : A mi ghty
woman with a torch unites us!
So, go back to your Dom
Perignon , bran.ch out from
the Wi sconsin cheese 'now
and again, and support the
noll-ruling caste Frenchmen.
And, French friends , if you
still feel like joiners, w~
don ' t have a 51st state ... yet.

IS THAT THE
LIGHT AT THE

.•.

(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of · National Revie\i'
Online , (www.nationalrevielv.com). She can be contacted at klope~@natimwl­
revieiv.com.)

NO.••
ANOTHER

END OF THE

CA~

TUNNEL?

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13 Weeks ........

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'64.20
52 Weeks ........... '127 11
26 Weeks

Chartene Hoefhcho_Ext. 12

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E-mail :

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Mere do diets go .to die? France
There's a book on the better-seller li sts right '· no~
called "French Women
Don' t Get Fat." The premise
is that even though French
women eat whatever they
Jim
want -· heavy, creamy, butMullen
tery sa uces; carbo-loaded
bread: fatfy pates and fancy
sugar- fi lied deserts - they
stay thin as wire coat hangers and never go on diets.
"Maman. what's for dinHow is this possible''
ner?"
Well . first , I have been .to . "Your favorite. coagulated
France and r m here to te II cow's blood sausages. How
you that it is not true. Many many do you want""
'French women are not pen- . "Oh. gross. That's · the
cil-thin . Many of them pack most disgusting thing I've
plenty of extra pounds. It's ever heard of. Can ' t" you
just that you don't· notice it make me a hamburger and
so much because they ' re some frenc h fries ' "
topless. But it is true that it
"An 'amburger and .french
is easier to sta y thin in fries? What ki nd of food is
France eve n though they eat that 0 You are joking at me,
, whatever they want. Here's are you not. my little truftle'?
how.
' Ground up beef. That is not
Say 'you have a family cooking. that is gri ndin g.
member who is a few Where, is the skill. where js
pounds overweight. How do the talent. where is the. love
you get them to lose weigh!Z in an ·amburger 0 That is
Nag at them 0 Tell them it's l"hat parents who don't care
. for their own good'' Buy about their children make
only fat-free food" Keep them eat. Le fast food . Why
sugar-loaded &gt;nacks out of would you want to ·eat fa~t''
the hou&gt;e'1 None of that will So you have time to do
work. But serve them only · something better? There, is
French food. as much · a&gt; . nothing better than eating. If
they want, and watch those you want to rush anything. it
should he work. not meab.·
pounds fall away.

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Ohio'Valley Publishing Co.

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Highway Patrol

.
RUTLAND - Jordan· A. Rawso n'. 1 ~. 36750 Ohio 124.
Middleport. was •·ited fo r failure to control by the Galli aPOMEROY
.:,_ Meigs
Meigs Post or the State Highway Patrol following a one-vehi- Coun ty Recorder Kay Hill
cle acciden t on 124 near Rutland on Sunday.
' reported the following transTroopers said Rawson was westbound at5:30 a.m. when the fers of real estate:
pickup truck he drove went off the road and struck a ditch . It
Douglas Campbe ll. Cheri
then overturn ed and came to rest on its side.
Campbell . to Federal Home
The pickup was severely da maged. ·the report said.
· Loan
Mort gage.
deed.
Columbi
•••
a.
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RUTLA ND - J:J'mie M. Fi sher.. 26 .. St. Mary's. Ohio. wa&gt;
Austin
G.
Lawson .
cited for failure to con trol by the patrol followi ng a one-car . Chri stine W. Lawson. · to
accident Saturday on Count y Road 3 tNew Lima) .
.
Robert Warner. Michelle
Troopers sa id Fisher was southbound at the. intersection Warner. deed. Scipio.
with Rutland Township Road 58 (White' s Hill) at4 a.m. when
David A. Carsey. Te rri L.
the car Fisher drove went otT the right side of the road and Carsey,
to
James
A.
struck- a cul vert.
·
Carnahan. -deed. Sutton.
The car had disablillgdamagc. the report said . .
Richard Felly. Sr.. Glenna
Fetty. to Richard L. Fetty. Jr..
La rry E. Feu y. She ila I.
Chandler, deed. Rutland . .
Jimmie L. Bailey. deceased.
POM EROY - A foreclosure action has been filed.·in Meigs
Count y Common Pleas Court by National City Mortgage Co .. to Beverly Bailey. affi dav it:
Miami sb urg, a·gainst Chad A. McKibben, Pomeroy, alleging Ora~ge .
John
W.'
Ambrose .
defmilt . on a, mort gage agreeme nt 'in the amount of
to
Corrine
M.
deceased.
$ 123.827. 10. '
.
Ambrose. affidavi t. Chester. '
Guido Girolami. Leona
Hysell , to Charles H. Klein.
Jr., Carol L. Klein. deed:
POINT PLEASA'NT - Former TNT Plant employees will
POMEROY - Meigs County Board of Hea lth is seeking Vill age of Pomeroy.
have. a reunion at noon Tuesday, June 14, at the Point Pleasant inj unction s in Meigs County · Common Pleas Court against
Norman Eugene Hawley.
R1yer Museum:
John Partlow, Langsville. and Earl Wines, Cheshire. The board Jane Hawl ey: Rand all Gene
.' The event will include welcoming remarks, an 'invocation, seeks injunctions requiring defendants to connect residences to
Hawl ey,
Haw ley. Darla
llltroduct1on of employees, lunch and a time of remembrance. sewer syste1i1s,and re move solid waste fro m properties.
Arthur
·
·Haw
ley.
Karen
The video that was taped when some former employees
Hawl ey. Cindy Ha wley. to
reunited at the river museum during February also wi'll be
Chri
stopher Dee mer. deed,
·
shown.
Village
of Midd leport.
. Lunch will be $6.50 per person and will include dessert and
Marc Travi s Pierce. Wendy
POMEROY - Divorces were granted in Meigs County
drink. Those planning to attend are asked to RSVP to 304Caroline
Pi erce, to Robert
674-0144.
Common Pleas Court to Kelli Dawn McCarty fro.m Jason
·
Kuhn,
Sarah
Kuhn . deed.
McCarty and to Jimmy J. Caruther~ from Sarah Caruthers.
Orange .
Marc Travi s Pierce, Wendy
C. Pierce. Stephen R. Davi s.
·sYRACUSE - The I40th annual meeting of the Carleton
Jessica D. Davis. Anthony
POMEROY - Dissolutions have been granted in Meigs Staley, Jess ica L. Pore.
College, Board of Trustees will be held at 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Community Center. Applications for Carleton County Common Pleas Court to Angelica R. Nickels and Robert Kuhn . Frances I.
College scholarships are still being accepted. The deadline for Donald R. Nickels, Jr., Noah Rollin Hysell and Nancy Kuhn , Robert E: Kuhn, Sarah
submittmg an application is June 17 . Applications can be Marlene Hysell , Mi chel e Irene Francis and Donald Thomas E. Kuhn, Christopher E.
secured from Sharon Cottrill at Syracu se Village hall and also Francis, and Neal B. McMeeken and Judy Ann McMeeken.
Tenaglia , Jena R. Tenag lia.
are to be returned to her there.
. Brandon
Yonk er,
Sheri
Also a test of the new MARCS Yonker, part ial release of
·
radio system will be made. The covenant; Orange.
Rodney
E.
Pierce,
· Jr.,
MARCS radio system, he said, Jame.s· H. Starcher. to Gloria
. POMEROY - The Return Jonathan Meigs- Chapter,
from Page A1
is a statewide coded frequency
Starcher, deed, Olive. ·
Daughters of the American Re·volution, picnic scheduled for
that can be used by EMA, · J. Diana
Kay Carman to Rita
·Saturday has bee n postponed to I p.m. on June 18 at the home
EMS, Fire, Health and Law Voiers. Virgil L. Brogan,
"Parts
nf
the
plan
to
be
testof Karen Werry.
ed," said Byer "will be evacu- Enforcement to talk · to Arlene F. Brogan, deed, Salem,
ation , sheltering . haz-mat Columbus and other agencies
Basil Wright, Florence
response, traffic control, com- through out the state in the Wright. to James J. Hudnall,
munications and response event of a major disaster.
Sr., deed, Scipio.
The exercise will also test
RUTLAND - The 2004 financial report fo~ the village of personnel safety." He no.ted
Opal Mather to Ed Turley.
Rutland is available for review at Rutland Village Hall at 337 that the exerci se will be eval- the ability to communicate
Main Street. The repdrt can be viewed during regular busi- . Liated by Athens and Gallia with area hospitals in the event
of a major disaster that would
·
· ·
nesses hours or by appointment.
EMAs and the Ohio EMA.
Others taking part in the require transporting injured
exercise will be the Chester, and contaminated victims to
from Page A1
and Tuppers Plains Fire the various hospital facilities.
POMEROY - Meigs Coun.ty District Public Library 's Departments. Meigs EMS. the · The EMA director explained .
Summer Reading Program will get a visit from PT Reptiles Citizens Corps of the RSVP that the scenario will also test been received and considHomeland Security, and the the ability to prOvide shelter. ered. environmental and ·
at 4 p.m . today at the Pomeroy Library.
Radio
Amateur
Civil . feeding for evacuees, as well geotechnical studies have
continued and cost estimates
Emergency Service, the asresponse personnel.
A critique of tJte exercise have been refined.
"now we have to wait a little Sheriff' s · office,
Ohio
" Following the previous
bit before we get our prize."
Highway Patrol and the Meigs will be held at the Chester Fire
House following the end of the meeting, we received several
Meigs
County County Health Department.
Commissioner
Mick
from PageA1
"The purpose of the exer- event. Certain roads and areas, questions from the public
Davenport · contacted the ci se.is to test the various parts . around the Chester Commons regardin g various facets of
nity. Along with the public Office of Housing and of an emergency response for will be blocked and traffic will this project," said ODOT
District l 0 Deputy Dire.ctor
hearings, 787 surveys were Community Partnership in a hazardous chemical," said be rerouted around the area
George
Coli ins. "After two
''Thi
s
will
be
a
simulated
the
EMA
director.
·
"The
filled out by Pomeroy res!- Columbus on Tuesday to see
months
of study and
exercise
with
no
chemicals
dents only, rating the impor- if there was any way that Emergency Operation Center
research,
we
. are now in a
tance of street and sidewalk Pomeroy could still apply for will .be in operation charting involved and citizens of the
repairs as well as the demoli· the CDBG this year and was the various messages and area should not be alarmed.. " position to better,respond.''
Much .of the recent study
requests that would be forth- Byer stressed.
told there was not.
tion of old buildings.
has
included environmental
Questions· concerning the
County coming in such an event."
Trussell attended these
The
Meigs
Byer noted that at .ti.mes simulated exercise should be and subsurface investigati ons
meetings ·and helped compile Commiss ion had set aside
some
of the radio traffic will be addre ssed to Byer at 740 along potential alternative
. the data to reflect what the mat~hing CDBG funds to
routes County Roads 59 and·
majority of Pomeroy resi- give to Pomeroy that will encoded to block scanners. 992-4541.
62. ODOT' s pre liminary
dents wanted to specifically now be spent elsewhere .
work in the area viewed the
spend the $300,000 on, . "I believe we can come up
'"Bailey's Drive In," a sock hop upgrades of these two rqutes
should their CDBG applica- with another match between
. with D.J. music from the 1950's as attractive options to be
. tion be approved.
village officials and other
and 1960's, at the comer of weighed, Collins said.
Now, f'omeroy cannot file grants," Trussell said about
from
PageA1
North Second Avenue and Mill
" At ihe meeting, our goal is
for the CDBG until July 15, finding matching funds for
Street. prior to the July 4 cele2006. Howe,ver, the hearings next year's CDBG application.
and surveys that have been
Pomeroy Mayor John ly one of the largest gatherings bration in Dave Diles Park,
The Association will spanconducted so far will still be Musser who has beett . of the year, The Association
plans
an
evening
of
entertainsor
" Pops in the Park," a free
vlllid .for ·any future applica- involved with the CDBG
ment
in
Dave
Diles
Park.
a
breakfast
for Father's Day, on
· · process since the beginning
tion process.
prizes,
June
18'
in
Dave Diles Park.
drawing
with
donated
, "We' ve done .a lot of the de scribed the situation as
Subscribe today • 992-2155
food and other attractions.
The Asspciation voted to
foot work," Trussell said, " very disappoi~ting.''
Brenda Phalin . of the donate $350 toward the operaUniversity of Rio Grande tiQn of Middleport Pool, and
/'
and lisa King of the · Crossroads program said will consider additional fmanMiddleiport Center, and Pat Crossroads plans to host . · cial support later in the season.
Neece and Susan King of the
'.•
Bradbury presented awards .
from PageA1
TUPP ERS PLAINS - Ra ymo nd C. Cassady. 64 , of
TUppers Plams, d1ed Monday, June 6. 2005, at Marietta
Memonal Hospita l in Marietta.
He was born Dec. I0. 1940. in Tuppers Plains. so n of the late ·
Ray and Velma Swindler Matlack Cassady. He was a veteran
of the U.S. Army, a member of the Tuppers Plains Chri stian
Church and was ret1red from Rose's Construction in Racine .
Surviving are a son. Jason C. Cassady and a sister, Dorothy
Lambert Commskyrboth of Tuppers Plains, and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides hi s parents, he was preceded in death by four brothers: W1lbur Cassady, Lowell Matlack. K;;nneth Matlack. and
Curl Matl ack, and. a sister. .Leota Cooper.
· .
·
. Services w11lbe held at II a.m. on Saturd ay, June II. 2005,
at Tuppers Pla1~s Chn stian Church in Tuppers Plains, with
Gary Taylor .otlicmtmg. Bunal will be in Tuppers Plains
Christian Cemete ry.
.
.
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Fri~ay a t
';Yh1te-Schwafzel Funeral Home 111 Coolville.
.

Foreclosure

Local Briefs

Former TNT Plant
employees to gather

Injunctions.

· Divorces · ·

·Annual meeting set

Dissolutions

Exercise

Picnic postpones

ODOT

Reptiles at Pomeroy Library

"'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Correction Policy

MEIGS COUNTY .LAND
TRANSFERS POSTED

Grant

Today is Wednesday, June 8, the !59th' day of 2005 . There
are 206 days left in t he year.
Today's Highlight. in History: On June 8, A.D. 632, the
prophet Mohammed died.
Today's Birthdays: Former First Lady Barbara Bush is 80.
Actor-comedian Jei'Ij Stiller is 78. Comedian Joan Rivers is 72.
Singer Nancy Sinatra is 65. "Dilbert" creator Scott Adams is
48 . Actor-director Keerien Ivory Wayans is 47. Actress Julianna
Margulies is 38. Rapper Kanye West is 27.
Thought for Today: ''I do believe one ought to face facts. If yo~
don'tthey get behind you and may become terrors, nig,htnnares-;---...
giants, horrors. As long as one faces them one is top dog." Katherine Mansfield. New Zealander author ( 1888-1923).

Reader Services ·

For the Recoitt

Obituaries ·

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"Tiens! Taste some' of this lickin ' good. Are two
nice runny cheese. It comes enough? Are four too many?'
from the. milk of a· marmot. You lose weight effortlessly
It .sme lls just like a dirty because they are so filling·
garbage can left in ,-the sun, you won't eat that many.
does it not? Mmmmm! like
Even thou~h there is no
the eat's box when you for- calorie countmg and no limget to clean it. Super, eh 0 i ts on how much you can eat,
But don't till up on it. We've most English speakers fintl
got a threelhour dinner in that they start losing weight
front of us. And you"re in for right away once ihey make
a treat toni ght - there was a the switch to French cuisine.
Has your husband put on a'
special on horsemeat today!
It will be the fourth course. few extra pounds? Wait until'
We'll have it right' after the he starts . e'ating lik.e ·a
free-range snails. Call your Frenchman. Beft;&gt;re you can
·father to the table. the calf say boeuf bourguignon he'IT
be 10 pounds lighter, wearbrains are almost r~ady." ·
You can altnost see the ing a beret and sleeping willr
pounds melt away from the your neighbor's wife. You ' l ~
members of this lucky fami- never have to watch if'
ly. But what about the poor French film again, you' ll 00:
:
business woman who finds living in one.
The book · also· sayS: ,
that the years of eating lunch
at her desk have resulted in French women don't get fat. '
an un -French, poiie-like fig- bec&lt;~use they walk a lot and;
· ure ? Is there any hope for they dol) 't eat snacks. Whal!
her if she eats more like it doesn't say is that most of;
French women?
the walking is between the'
1
Bien sur Instead of eating sink and a hot s'tove '
the typical. fattening take- preparing yet another three-;
out lunch of a slice of pizza hour meal.
•
• or a hot dog. try &gt;Wi tching to
Bon appetit.
~
veal kidneys Provencal.
(Jim Mullen is the au tho;,
Why clog your arteries with of "lr Takes a Village Idiot:'
grea'y Buffalo chicken Complicating tbe Simp/d.
wings when you could easily Life " and " Baby s Firs:.
substitute them with frog Tattoo. " You con reach hi~
leg ~" Talk about fingerat jim_mullen@myway.comr

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Financial report available

TODrAY IN HISTORY

The Daily Sentinel

www .niydailysentioel.com

Raymond cassady

David Edwards
Middleport

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 /(mers will
·be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, nor personalities. ·

Wednesday, June 8, :!oos

Time to make peace with France

The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel

'

Fireworks

'

deed.-Chc"cr.
· · Jame' Allen Young to Heidi
Lynn Young, deed. C!llumb ia.
Jortna
L.
Kaukonen.
Vanessa L. Kaukonen. to J.P.
Morgan Chase Bank. affidavJt . Bedford .
Jame &lt; A.. Pi&lt;;kens to
Michael T. Hendrick&gt;OII.
Luaime S. Hcndrickson.'deed.
Sulton.
·
George C. Fos ter, Mar,y
lane Carr. to Todd Cummi ns.
Pegg y Cum min,. Jackie T. ·
Cu mmins. deed ,. sheriff's
deed . Sulton .
Neal B. McMceken. Judy
A. McMeeken. to Fred A.
Engle. Ann M. Eng!~. deed .
Lebanon.
Ted L. Dexter to James M.
Vaug han . . Gwendolyn Hope
Vaughan. deed. Bed fnrd :
Frank R. Nelson. Jr. . Anna
V. Nelson. to Home National
Bank. sheriff's deed. Chester.
Jamie A. Nick li s to Tupper?
Plain s"Chester Water District,
easement. Bedford.
Ch~d
Sinclair.
Kri sta
Sinc lair. Charl es · Sinclair,
Margaret A. Sinclair, to TPCWD. right of way. Orange.
Jeffrey L Jackso n, Sr. to
Larry
Thornton.
1--inda
Thornton . deed. Letart.
Edith Barnhouse to ·samuel
Fry, Jr.: Martha L. Fry. r~ l ea se
of right of way.
Ed ith
Barnh ouse
to
Kenneth Dav id See. release
of right of way. . .
Martha Joan Graham,
deceaseil. to Deborah Lee
Ball. certificate, Syracuse
Village.
Kathryn L. Evans. Glen E.
Evans. to Jaso n A. Harri s,
Heather
Harri s.
deed,
Salisbury.
.
Wendy A. Wilfong to Gary
E. Church. Rebece&lt;l E.
Church. deed. Olive.
Christopher M . Cox to
Penn y Slilith. deed. Village of
Middlcpon.
Countryw ide Home Loans,
Inc.. Mortgage. Electronic
Reg istrati on Systems, to
Darrell R. Bralley, judgment
entry,
individually answer any
remaining questions property
owners and . motorist:; may
have and sec the stage for
moving
forward
with
repairs," said Collins.
A majority of funding for
the project will be provided
by the F-ederal Highway
.Admini strati on. However,
ODOT will likely still be
re sponsible for approximately 15 to 20 percent of the
repair costs. Because of tlie
emergency status of the project. tl.ti s fundin g percentage
was not incorporated into the
di strict 's annual budget.
Cost is not the only· consideration in ihis project, Collins ·
said:·
"Aithough,c9st effectiveness
is certainly a factor; it is not the
only imp011ant element in this
decision."
said • Collins.
"OOOT's challenge in this and
all state highway improvement
projects is to simultaneously
consider cost, constructibility,
public input, access, maintenance· and sustainability. It is
not an easy task."
to

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel

.

ABLE

Meig s Educational Service.
Center, extended a w~Icome
to the students and family
members attending the banquet. ABLE instructors, lois
Knadler of the Tuppers Plains
Center, Meryl Houdashelt

. to their students.
Carol Brewer, director of
the Meigs ABLE program,
spoke briefly acknowledging
the students acco.mplish" .
ments and expressing appreciation to the Rotary Club for
honoring them.

ao.pel On The LftM ,·
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Pomeroy Rl•'el'flont
I
Slilunlay June 111h tram 1 pm -8 pm
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The Daily Sentinel .

PageA6

•

Wednesday, June 8,

2005

"

Workers' comp reports $215 million loss in another investment
Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

NewsChannel

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS
The
Wednesdav. June 8
cast as the e,·ening prngre"es. emballled Ohio i11surance
Morni11g (7 a.;,; .• Nooll)
O••ernig/u (1-6 a.m.)
fund for injured · workers
It's going to be a humid and
It will continue to be humid Tuesday reported a new
cloudy morning. Light rain is ;uld cloudy. Light rain is expect- . inYestment h"' of S::! 15 mil forecasted. The 'rain should ed. Expect 0.08 inches of rain lion unrelated to the state's
stan by 10 a.m. Accumulations bv the end of this ovemight. investment in rare coins
of 0.06 inches ;u·e predicted. Temper.\lures will hold stead) already under in vestigation .
Temperatures will rise fro1i1 71 awunt! 70 with today\ low of . Tina Kidmcycr. the Ohio
'early tl'\is moming to 77 by 9 68 occuning ar(lund · I a.m. , Bureau
.. f
Workers
a.m .. then drop down to 76 late Winds will be 5 MPH from the Compensation's interim di[~c­
morning. Winds will be 5 , southeast tuming from tile south tor. in limned Go''· Boh.Taft of
MPH from thr south.
as the overnight'progresses.
the losses jn ·a memo Tuesday.
though the agency has known
Afternooll (1-6 p.m.),
,
It should continue to be
Thursday, June 9
about the situation since last
humid and cloudy. Expect &lt;\
Morni11g (7 a:m.-Nomt)
fall. The (Tuledo.) Blade
couple of raindrops around
Humid ai1d . cloudy morn· reponed on its Web site.
the ar~a. Temperatures will ing . Some rain is likely.
The inYe&gt;tment in the
rise from 77 with today's high Tc'mperatures will cliinb from hed2e fund with MDL
of 84 occurring around 3 p.m. 71 to RO bv late this morning·. Capital Management of
Winds will be 5 MPH from Winds wiil be 5 MPH lrom Pittsburgh was made without
the kn'owledge or thenthe southwest turning from the south.
bureau
director . James
the southeast as the afternoon · iljlernoim ( 1-6 p.m:')
progresses.
It should continue to be Conrad. Kielmeye r said. An
Eve11i11g (7 p.m.-Mid11ight) humid and cloudy. We are pre- outside investment consultant
It will continue to be humid dieting light rain. The rain · told the burec1u ' nearly 85 .perand cloudy. · Spme raindrop; should reach 0.07 inches by this cent of the losses were the
•
are in th~ forecast. Expect · afteri1oon. Temperatures will
accumulations of 0.05 inches. increase from 79 to 85 by late
Temperatures will drop from this atiernoon. Winds wi ll be 5
82 early this evening to 70. to 10 MPH from the southwest
Winds will be 5 MPH from the tuming from the south as the
south turning from the south· afternoon progresses.

result of MDL taking investment risks bevond what the
contract pennltted. according
to the memo.
It is "questionable as ' to
whether this investme1]1 correlated with the bureau ·s
inve"ment
policy."
Kielmeye'r said in the memo.
The agency already was
being criticized, for its unusual
..investment of $50 million in
rare coins managed by coin
' dealer Tom Noe of suburban
Toledo. Noc ·s anorney has said.
that SIO million to $ 12 million
is missing·rrom that fund.
. Kielmeyer said the Bureau
had invested throu 2h MDL
beginning in 1998. Terrv
Gi,per. the bureau's ch ief
financial officer, mowp $100
million of the inve sim~nt _into
a new fu~d proposed by. MDL
in September 2003 without
Conrad's knowledge. she said.
A year later. on Sept. 27,
2004. Kielmeyer, then liD. assistant administrator. ·1eamed of
he&lt;tvy losses in the fund and
told Conrad, who ordered chief

investments officer James
Mclean to i~vestigate.
After verifying the .losse,,
the bureau ordered MDL to
close the fund and a'ked
Attorney General Jim Petro to
investigate the losses. which
were determined by last
November to be $215 million.
The hureau als(l -asked
Gasper to resign or be tired: he
resigned in October and is now
being investigated by the state
Inspector General. said bureau
spokesman Jeremy Jackson.
Messages seek ing comment were left Tuesoay with
Gas~r and MDL.
As pact of 'the agency's
investilwtion into the coin
fund. Kielmeyer also said
Tuesday she placed Mclean
pn paid leave 10 give investigators clear access to investment statf and information.
The investment category of
hedge funds . is 'growing for
large institutions such as private and puhlic pen sion
.funds, ex.perts said. The fund ~
carry the chance .of very high

State investigating whether
inmate received proper care

Local Stocks
ACI- 4$.60
AEP- 35.80
Akzo -39.60
Ashland Inc. - 68.02
AT&amp;T-18.94
BU -12.91
Bob Evans- 22.33
BorgWamer- 52.93
Champion - 4.10
Charming Shops- 9.15
. City Holding - 33.43
Col- 48~38
DG- 20.39
DuPont.- 46.73 .
Federal Mogul - .67
USB~

29.03

.

Gannett- 74.50
· General Electric - 36.84
GKNLY-4.65

Harley Davidson - 48.82
JPM -35.48

•
· Kroger -

16.72
ltd. - 21.60
NSC ~ 32.59

Oak Hill Financial - 27.88
OVB - 26.21
BBT- 39.63
Peoples- 27.70
Pepsico - 55.90
Premier - 10.32
Roc'k well- 50.94
Rocky Boots - 33.49
RD Shell - 59.41
SBC- 23.44
Wai-Mait- 47.76
Wendy's -· 44.50
. Worthington - 16.64
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.

COLUMBUS tAP)
State prison . officials are
investigating whether a
physician properly .rreared an
inmate who was· hospitalized
with a staph infection and
later found to be infected
with flesh-e&lt;lting bacteria, a
prisons sp·okeswoman said
Tuesday.
Joseph Milum , 42, an
inmate
at
Pickaway
Correctional Institution, was
hospitalized last month with
a skin infection caused by
staph bacteria. When he
arrived at ·Ohio State
University Medical Center,
doctors also detected bacteria
that create toxins that kill
skin and muscle.
Surgeons amp utated his
right arm and shoulder and
trimmed dead tissue . from
other pans of his body within

two days to stop the bacteria's spread.
·
Prisons
. spokeswoman
Andrea Dean said state inves•
tigators are now rev iewing .
the treatment Milum received
from Dr. Bernard Oppong,
the chief medical officer at
the Pickaway prison in
Orient, about 15 miles southwest or Columbus.
State prison officials are
also working to settle a lawsu it brought by a prisoner
advocacy group that argues
inmates do not receive adequate medical care.
David Singleton; executi ve
director of the Cincinnati-based
Prison Reform Advocacy
Center; has said he does not
expect 'Milum's case will affect
the settlement, and that he .
believes the state is working to ·
improve health care.

· - PO~WELL'S

returns but' also a · small
chance of.'very large losses .
"It's increasingly pan of :ill
institutions· portfolios right
now:· said Geon!e Lucaci,
managing director and 'head
of capital. markets foe
Channel Capital Group Inc.,
which serves hedge fund
managers and investors.
Ohio's investment is not
particularly l.arge compared
with some hedge funds in the
billions of dollars. Lucaci said,
but the amount of loss is rare. ·
Despite the losses. the
bureau still' had , an 8.5 percent return on its investments
in 2004. abo've . the goal or
5.65 percent, Kielmeyer said
in the memo. The bureau also
· returned $6 1O,million to public and private employers last
year, she said.
Also
Tuesday.
five
Repub lican justices on the
Ohio Supreme Court said
they would · identify and set
aside campaign contributions '
fiom Noe. ·a we.l l-known
· politi~al donor.

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•

Tribe scalps Padres in II inning.s, Page B2
Bro~ pennit Verba to pur.me trade, Page B6
NBA Finals prniew, Page B6
'

'

'

Wednesday, June 8, 2005

Today's games
Charleston al Mason 'County, 5:30p.m.

Feefley Bennett at lancaster JV. 7 p.m.
· Thursday's game·
Parkersburg at Feeney Bennett. 6 p.m.

Saturday's games
Fe'eney Bennett at Marietta (2), 1 p.m .
Williamson ar Mason County, 2 p.m .

Sunday's games
Athens at feeney Bennen (DH) , 1 p . m ~
Barbausville at Mason CQ., 2:30p.m.

Meigs Chamber
Golf Scramble
MASON, W.Va. - The
County
annual . Meigs
Chamber of Commerce Golf
Scramble Will · be ' held
. Thursday, June 9 at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason. The
tournament will feature a
new format - a bring you
own panner four-man scram- .
ble.
Teams will be paired based
on two man entries, with .a
semi-blind draw for the
remaining two players on the
team.
Price is $60 per players and
includes lunch, golf, dinner
and cart. Prizes wi II include
closest to the pin, longest
drive (men and women),
skins game, cash pot, door
prizes and split-the pot.
Registration, lunch, networking, contest begin at
noon, shotgun start at I p.m.
and dinner and prizes will
follow the tournament.
For more information contact Erin Roush at 740-992or
e-mail
at
5005
erin@meigscountychamber.c
·
om

My Top 10 sports stories o 2004-05
When I started down here on the
rivet back in fall, I had. no idea what
I was in for as a sport s writer coming from Jackson. .
I knew there was plenty of history wrapped up in the high schools
located in Gallia, Meigs and Mason
counties. but I was unfamili&lt;ir with
how well those I 0 athletic programs had been .over time.
As the year went along, I was
able to learn much of the area. and
the tradition, that surrounds these
prep programs.
I also fo und that along the wav..
J.
these area athletes know how to
pro duce a f..tne Story.
Now that the school year is offi,
cially over, I looked back at the
2004-05 season collectively and
realized that there were a lot of
great th\ngs to happen in my inau-

Bry,an ·
lATaJ.terS
V
VI

AROUND THE BEND

gural season with Ohio Vall~y
Publishing.
I made a list, made four revisions,
·
and came up with what I beli~ve to
be the 10 b.est athletic -stories thi s
year in the tri-cou~ty area.
The list will break down into two
sections in reverse order, with numbers I 0 through six coming in

Powell's FOODFAIR PHARMACY
Open: Mon. ·- Fri. 9am- Spm • Sat. .9 am-1pm
Closed Sun~ay • 740-992·1536

PrEp BasEball/Softball -

All Tri-Vai/Ey ConfErEnce

· GALLIPOLIS River
Valley will begin summer
group . running sessions on
June 21 at the bike trail
beside Thomas Do-It Center.
Runners need to be there by 7
p.m. Any interested River .
Valley students in grades 712 are invited to attend: the
runs are also open to runners
from other schools:
For additional information,
contact Ed Sayre at 441 -0850
or
e~mail
to: '
gl_esayre@seovec.org.

Reds activate
Wily Mo Pena
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Reds activated ouifielder
\ Wily Mo Pena off the 15-day
disabled list Tuesday and put
him back in the lineup.
Pena has been sidelin-ed by
a strained left. thigh since
May 9. He was one qf the
Reds'. top hitters when he
pulled the muscle on April
23. He was on the bench for ·
12 of the next 13 games, then
went on the disabled list.
He's hitting .3 13 with six
homers.
Pena was in the lineup in
right field, batting fifth,
against Tampa Bay on
Tuesday.
To open a roster spot, the
Reds ' designat~d outfielder
Jason Romano for assignment to the tninof1\. Romano
hit .308 in eight games for
the Reds.
Right-hander ·
Josh
Hancock also was sent to
Triple-A Louisville on a
rehabilitation assignment.
Hancock opened the season
on the ,disabled list with a
strained groin.

OVP Ill• photoe

Meigs senior Jeremy Blackston, left, was named Offensive Player of the Year in the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division, whi le Eastern senior Krista White,
right, captured her second.-straight Defensive Player of the ,Year award in the TVC Hocking. The honors didn't stop there for Meigs .County.

All-TVC teams announced
BY BRAD SHERM,\N
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RACINE - Meigs County
baseball and softball teams
did very . well in the TriValley Conference this year
- look no further than the
all-league selections for eonfinnation.
Meigs, which won the Ohid
Division in both sports,
swept
Offensive
Most
Valuable Player and Coach of

was more top
his skipper
the Year honhonors for
· Brian Bowen
ors. Jeremy
M e i g s
Black ston
was named
Countians, as
and
hi s
Coach of the
c o a c h
Eastern
Year.
F o u· r
J e ·r e m y
pitcher
Grimm took
Krista Whit.e
Marauder s
was dubbed
the honors
and
five
for baseball,
defensive
L a d y
MVP in softwhile. Renee
Marauder s
ball, mean: '-~----' were named
Bailey and
Grimm
while , fellow
Bowen
io the Alll;fansen
c o a c h
N at han
Eas t ern
Ohio squads.
hurler Ryan Smith took that
Blackston is joined by
Hansen won for softball.
In the Hocking Division, it same honor for baseball and teammate Mike Davis on th~

Fax - . 1-74Q.446.3008

E·mall- sports@niydaitysentinel.com
Soorts Staff

bsherman Omydailytr\OUne.com

8ry1n Waltera, Sparta Writer

m . 23

t&gt;wahersO mydailyt:rlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sparta Writer

'

.

-~--·--

'

Please see TVC. 1141 ·

with the hitters and pitchers
before Tuesday's game,
emphasizing the dire situation. By the top of the second
inning, Miley had his head
down again.
Carl Crawford's three-run
homer highl.ighted a six-run.
rally off Ortiz. Fans vented
whiie Miley trudged to the
mound to remove Oniz dur-'
ing the 11 -batter inning.
On came Keisler to change
the course of the game: ·
"It was just good to have
Randy coine in and shut them

BY JOE, KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Contact Information

(740) 446-2342.

baseball first team. Also on ·
the squad· is Defensive MVP
Jake Hale from Alexander,
while fellow Spanans Matt
Demoski and Cory Bean
joined the lanky southpaw.
Vinton County's Josh Ousley
and Greg Powell ; James
Reali and Jordan Thornhill of
Belpre; Wellston's Ryan
Collins and Josh Ewing and
Ernie Perkins of NelsonvilleYork rounded out the firSt

Keisler lifts Reds past Devil Rays, 9-7

'*--••n

t304l 675-1333, ""'· 19

.

o·

RVHS announces
cross country
summer run dates

lcrumOmydailyregister.com

,

today's edition. The Top Five ·wHI ' later. with a 36-3 triumph over
appear-in Thursday "s edition.
Hannan .
Here we go.
9.
Portsmouth,
Ironton,
10. Southern ends 25-game los- Zanesville and ChilliCothe voted
ing streak in football.
into SEOAL for 2006.
Every story needs a good .place to · It wasn't unanimous, but the
'start. and &gt;u did the Tornadoes' Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
footbal l program un,der firs t-year added four ·new members for the
head coach Bob Grueser.
··
· 2006-07 sport 6 season. .
On September I0. 2004, SHS
Jackso n, a charter member since
took the firsi step in the rig ht direc- 1925 , tried t~ stop the expansion
tion by ending two-plus seasons of with the lone no vote from the cur· . rent s1x
· mem b ers, b ut maJonty
· ·
gn·d·1ron 1·rustrato· on Wit· h a 12 -9 v1ctory uver South Galli a.
proved to rule as Gallia Academy,
It wa,sn't ea sy, as · th e Re be 1s ha d Warren , Mane
· It a, Logan . an d
two .chances to take the lead with Athens all accepted the quartet with
· · ·
1nterceptions ·by open arms.
•
1: 8 remamong.
Chris Tucker and Josh Pape secured
This should probably ni.nk higher,
the program 's first victory since but its impact will be felt more over
2001, when the Purp le and Gold the next two seasons.
. defeated Millet by a count of 26-6.
Southern won again two \l'eeks
Please see Top 10. 81

~ ----------------------------~--------------------------~-------------------------------------------

8r8d Sherman, Sportt Editor
(740) 446-2342 . .... 33

700 East Main S~reet • Pomeroy, QH
Store Hours: Mon.• Sun. 7am- 1Opm
7 Days A Week• 740-992-5252

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

_-._._.

__

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•

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'

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Page B:t • The

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June, S.

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

Tribe scalps Padres in 11 innings
SAN DIEGO (AP)
save in 18 chances.
Khalif Greene's two-out
Miguel Ojeda nearly tied it
throwing error allowed the with a two-run homer, but his
Cleveland Indians to snap a long drive to left just hooked
scoreless tie and beat the San foul. Ojeda then grounded out
Diego Padres 2-0 · in II to end the game.
innings Tuesday night.
The Indians won for just the
The Padres have been shut second time in six games. San
out in back-to- back games, Diego has lost five of six.
extending their . scoreless San Diego, which has the
streak to 22 innings. They lost best home record in the NL at
4-0 to the Chicago Cubs on 19-9. lost for the fifth time in
Sunday.
eight ·games on .a 13-game
Jhonny Peralta blooped a homestand, ,, the
Padres '
one-out single to center off longest of the seaSOIJ .
Trevor Hoffman (0-2) in the Starting pitchers Cliff Lee
I I th and Grady Si'z.emore and Brian Lawrence matched
doubled into the right-field eacb other through seven
corner for his third hit, putting innings with neither allowing
runner&gt; at second and third .
any good scoring chances.
· After Hoffman struck out Lawrence shut out the
Coco Crisp. Ben Brou&gt;sard . Indians on five hits through·
hit a grounder tu .shortStop: eight innings . The right-hanBut Greene bounced his der strock out one and did not
throw to first and Phil Nevin walk a batter. Lawrence
couldn't scoop it, allowing : retired 14 of his final 15 batPeralta to score.
ters.
Victor Martinez then sin- . Lee, who has a 5-1 road
gled in Sizemore for ·a 2-0 record , allowed five hits in
lead.
·seven shutout innmgs with a
Rafael Betancourt 12-2) career-h igh nine strikeouts
threw one perfect !nning for and two walks. It was ·only the
the win am.t Bob Wickman fourth time this season the
got three outs for his 15th left-handei p'itched 'at least

Reds
from PageBl
down," Randa said. "That's
more important ·than t~e
homer."
·
His leadoff liomer sparked
a tive-run rally that tied it at 6
in the third inning. Randa
also had a two-run homer as
the Reds batted around
against left-bander Mark
Hendrickson , who hasn't
won on the.road since July6 .
"That's what you try io stay
away from. the big inning,"
Hendrickson said. "And that
kind of gave them the
momentum after we'd gotten
it. It's tough to come 'back
from that."
Keisler also led off the
fourth with a double off
Travis Harper (l-4). He
scored the tie-breaking run
on Sean Casey's sacrifice fly,
and Griffey hit his ninth
homer for a 9-6 lead.
The hits weren't a novelty
for Keisler, who had a gameending single i'n the. 14th

inning of hi s Reds t.lebut, a 43 ll(i n over Washington on
May_ 24. Keisler, who used
teammate Paul Wilson 's bat,
improved to 3-for-5 at the
plate this season.
Rounding the bases was
fun. Running the bases after
his double wasn't.
·
"I didn't realize how stressful it was to get on base,"
Keisler said. "[didn't know
where I was gqing out there."
The Reds got the better of a
matchup of last-place teams
-Tampa Bay is in the basement of the AL East,
Cincinnati in the NL Central.
The Devil Rays have l9st
eight of nine, falling to 4-24
on the road this season.
Both teams have the same
big problem. The Reels are
second,to-last in pitching in
the NL, the Devils Rays second-to-last in the AL.
"We squandered a 6-1 lead
quickly," Tampa Bay manager Lou Piniella said. "Our
pitching's got to get better:
We scored enough runs. We
just.can't make them. hold."
Piniella heard supportive
cheers of "Lou' Lou!" when

seven innings in 12 starts.
San Diego:s best opponunity came in the third after a
leadoff infield single by Sean
Burroughs. a ' walk to
Lawrence and a sacrifice. Lee
got Geoff Blum on a popup,
and c 'tcher Martinez · then
made a great catch over ihe
backstop netting on Brian
Giles' foul popup.
La)'o'rence, coming off ·one
of his worst stans of the season. got out of a mi'nor jam in
the first when Cleveland had
runners at first and third with
two outs. Lawtence es~aped
by getting Jody Gerut .on a
foul popup .
··
The onlv other Indians run ner ·to reach second base
against Lawrence was Crisp
on a tw0 -out double in 'the
sixth.
Notes: Padres CF Dave
Roberts was a late scratch
with sore shoulder and was
replaced by Xavier Nady. ·.. .
che Indians played in ·san
Diego for only the second
time in franchise history.
Their only other 'appearance
was a pair of exhibition
games in 1968.
he came onto the field to
question a call ·early in the
game. Piniella led the Reds to
a World Series championship
· in 1990, and remains a fan
favorite.
·.
It was Piniella's second
return to Cincinnati since he
left after the 1992 season. His
Seattle Mariners swept a
three-game series at Cinergy
Field in 2002.
Notes: The Devil Rays and
Reds are the only teams in
the major&gt; without a complete game this season. ...
Devil Rays reliever Lance
Carter started serving his
three-game suspension for
his role in a bench-clearing
brawl on April ·24 against
Boston .... Harper was the
323rd pitcher Griffey has
homered off.. ,. Harper tied
the. club record by striking
out five in a row. He has been
scored upon in each of his
last five outings- II earned
runs in 7 2-3 innings .... ·
HeadLng into this season,
Keisler was 0-for-2 career at
the plate in three seasons
with the Yankees and Padres.

people around you. Though individual
accomplishments are nice, nothing is more
fulfilling than success as a group.
· That's one thing the tri-county area had
fromPageBl
no s!wrtage of.
Ten, league titles made their way home
It will be the final go-around for the six
in
2004-05, with River Valley claiming the
current schools in 2005-06, and the start
,
most with three.
of something new in 2006-07.
The
Raiders
captured
three-peats
in vol- '
8. Gallia Academy's Perry, Close finley
ball
and
boys
cross
country,
while '
ish runner-up at state track meet.
Batman and Robin had nothing on the wrestling pinned down an Ohio Valley
Blue Angels' dynamic duo. as Kayla Perry Conference during this past year.
Three schools
Meigs. Gallia
and Felicia Close brought home silver
medals from the 2005 Ohio State Track Academy and· Eastern - each claimed a
pair to round out the !~ague crowns.
and Field Championships. .
The 'B lue Devils won a share of the
Both juniors. the pair combined for all
oinrs at Jesse Owens Stadium, lifting SEOAL in football with Logan and went
S to a fourth place finish · in the undefeated in tennis tor the outright title,
1sion II finals.
.
·. while the Eagles soared to Tri-Valfey
Perry claimed her· second-consecutive Conference Hocking division crowns in
,
runner-up finish in the 400-riteter dash, both volleyball and go lf.
w~ited
until
sprin¥
to
do
1ts
damMeigs
losing only to four-time state champion
and current .state record'holder· Ayrizanna age, captunng TVC Oh1o titles m baseball
Favours of Eastmoor Academy. Perry ran and softball.
her fastest time ever in the finals. with a
Then o came the postseason. and seven
56.91, and Favours graduates that record schools rose up to the challenge , with
time of 53.19.
Eastern and Gallia Academy leading the
Close competed in four finals on cham-· way with. four tou(nament successes.
pionsltip Saturday, with her performance
The Green and White qualified for
in the lOOm hurdles being the best show- regional s in both bu~s basketball and
ing.
ba•eball, whtle the Lady Eagles made 11 to
, Close ( 14.9) was edged . out by three- districts in volleyball and softball.
time state champion af\d state record-holdThe Blue and White matched those perer Ashley Trimble, who posted a 14.8 1 .in formances by making the district semis in
her final season at Hamiltqn Township.
volleyball, boys basketball and girls bas-.
Both Perry and Close have competed at ketball. The Angels topped that with dis- "
the ·state meet in Columbus every year trict and regional championships in the
since their freshman season and will look previously mentioned track season.
Wahama had a trio of postseason accomto make their senior campaign one to
plishments, as both baseball and girls basremember.'
7. Point Pleasant captures three state ketball saw regional games in 2004-05.
White Falcon football also made its annutitles.
Nothing says success like a state cham- al appearance in the We st Virginia state
pionship, and Point Pleasant enjoyed three . playoffs.
Meigs golf went to districts, and so did
of them this year.
,
South Gallia boys basketball team .
the
James Casto won one in wrestling as a
sophomore, junior Leah Eddy captured . Point Pleasant repeated as sectional
another in tennis in third singles, and the cllamps in baseball to advance to regionquartet of Newt Mattox, Justin Smith, als, and the final team to enjoy the post Stephen Deshuk and Travis Riffle brought season was Ohio Valley Christian volleyhome gold in the shuttle hurdles at the ball. The Lady Defenders were eliminated
West Virginia Track and · Field Meet to from the ACSI championships at the
regional level.
complete the trifecta.
By my count, that's 25 banners to .be
Casto and Eddy will have another
chance to repeat in 2006-07, but only . hung . before the 2005-06 season. That
Riffle, a junior, will return from the relay might take some teamwork as well.
squad.
Check Thursdav's edition of . the
Again, this could have ranked higher,
Gallipolis
Daily Tribune and The Daily'
but the story could be bigger in 2005-06.
Sentinel to get Bryan's Top Five stories of
6. It's all about the T-E-A-M.
·
In' sports, you're only as good as the the 2004-05 sports season.

ToplO

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·

change of nama ol
Tina Louise BugaJ to
Tina Loulao Sutton.
The hearing on the
application will be
held on the 11th day
of July, 2005 at 1 :30
o'clock p.m. In the

gives notice to all
Interested ·persons
that the applicant has

Street,

Probate

Court

Matga County, located
at 100 Eaal Second
Courlhouee,

2nd Floor, Pomeroy,

\\'\01 \{ '1 \11-\l"i

r"ANNOIJNL'EMENI~
__

Ohlo45769.
Tina Louise Bugaj
52720 St. Rl124
Racine, Ohio 45771

Iliad an Application
lor Chenge of Name In
the Probate Court. of
Meigs Couoly, Ohio,
. requesting
lhe

(6) B

Columbia Township Fire Hall
·St. At. 143 .

Middleport American Legion
June 9th
Door open at 5:00
Games start at 6:00
20 games $20.00
Bring a friend who pays to play
&amp; receive a .,second set of
games lor free . For more info.
Call Amy at

GIVEAWAY

"~------•
•
Give away to good home
bee.utiful black and choco·
late tab puppi es. Father·
black lab and -Mother-bordei'
collie. Call Greg at 740·6961106 or Brenda at 740·992·
.3034.

r '
D

r70

7375 .

r

~
~

.

· .. ·

~~~=:;==~

I rmr
1111

GIVK-\Wi\~

.

YARD SALE-

GAUJI'llUS

3 Beagles pup s. 11 months 3 fam i l~ sate. 6110-6/t 1
old. To good horTia. Call Toys, baby item s, k1ds
,1~7-40-')-44_8_-7_5_95_.·- c---c-- clothes &amp; much more. 337
Roush Lane.
4 gray and black Tabby. Call
(740)245-5919.

!I
f

I

4 month old German shepherd Alr~ady has shots. Call
(740)256-6909.
Free
kitten
grey/black.
Female tabby· 9wks old
13041882-2519

~ ~JI'--U.:.Lii.ft

•111 . . 111!111'

CLASSIFIED INDEX

·-·-·-·~

I

I

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
. ·Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
j Daily'Sentinei,And It Will Run For FREE In
·I
The Jli·County Marketplace!
••
•

Uvestock............,...._ ..................................630

Loet·and Found ...........................................060

7 40-698-1808

,•

Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................350
lllsceflaneous.................................!............ 170
lollscetlaneous Merchlndlse.......................540
Mobile Home Repllr............._. ............ -......860
Mobile Homes for Rent ..................... -........420
Mobile lfomef for Sale........... - ..................320

Money to·U.. .........................- ................. 220
tllolorcycln &amp; 4 Whee ill a.~..-...- ............740
lluslcallnslruments ........_ ........................ 570

on
SAVINGS

Peraonala.. -........... - •. ---··-·--·----·.....005
Peta for Sale ................--.--..................... 560
Plumbing .. Huting .... -......-...-.. _ ............820
Professional s.mc-.............................,... 230
.
.
'
t60
~. TV &amp; CB Rlpelr ...........,.... _.............

Real Estate Wented..........-...·--·...........-.:.360

Schooll iniiNCtlon.....~----"""_150
Seed • "'-" &amp; Fertllizllr
Si1ua11ona Wanted ...... ___.........- -120
Spll&lt;8 for Alli1I---·""'" _ _ _ _.41G
Sporting Qoocla ...

----------550
----·-------·---520
SIN'a tor Sale ...............--···---"""""720

0
0

0

Trudia for Sale ........_.. ~..............----·..... 715

0

•

www.comle-..com

IJpholaMy _____ ,_ ............-----·"'"' 870
For Sale......... _........,...- ...- ....-'--..730

v-

.~

&lt;C&gt; 2005 by NEA, Inc.

- - - ··-

•
.-·

.

- ---- _____,

_.:.._

•

____

-

.

p76

YARJJSALE·
GAI.UI'lll.l'

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2
BI.!IJilness Days Prior To
PLlbllcatlon
Sunday Display: 1~00 p.m ..
Thursday tor Sundays Paper

1771 Tyn
Rhos
Ad,
Thurman, 2.5 miles up
Cllerry Ridge Ad . 6/9-6111,
9am-5pm . A little bit of
everything, misc. car Items.
books, cllildren ' &amp; baby
items, kn ick-knacks. Come
and see. Reasonably priced.
3 lamiiy yard sale. Fri.&amp;Sat.
9-4. Clay Townhouse, Lovers
Lane. Toddle r boys, girls, lg.
mens clothing, toys, linens,
Home Interior, video games.
pottery.
-------49 Vinton
Ave . Carnival:
619-6111 .
Fiesta.
Imperial,
womenS XL clo thes. tools,

_va_ri_o"_'_"_•m_•· ----

Fri., Sat. , Sun .. June 10, ·11;
12. Mulli-lamlly yard sale.
554 Jay Dr.. Spring Vatley.
All sizes clothing including
girVboy inlantl1oddler, teens.
adults . Large variety bl
items: linens/curtains, glassware, housewares, .books,
collectibles, changing table,
wood bunk bedsJbunky
boards. 9am·5pm .
Moving/Garage
sale.
Saturday, June 11 ; 10am-?
1126 Second Avt. (across
from the ~azarene Church).

iteml. COfT!for1er set. 3 disc.
CD ·AM FM stero. tools.
m..c. S9lS wiO be posted.

740-992-8833

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{p~
m
Border.s$3.00/perad
· ·
·
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

POLICIES: Ohio Va lley Publishing reaei-vea the rlght to edit, reject. or cancel any ad at any,r) ime. Errors must bf reponed on
I
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Regiater will be reaponaible for no more than the coat of the space occupied by the error and onlv ihe first ineertion.
any loaa or Ollpenae that results from· th; publicallon or omlaalon of an advertlaament. Correction will t11i made in the first avsll11ble edl)lon .
are always confidential. • Currant rate card applies. • Al1 re~~l estate 11dvertlsements are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act ol 1968.
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda. We wl11 not knowingly accept any advli.rtiting In violation ol the law.

110

Y,\RI) SALE-

Pr. 1'1 .1;.\S;\Nl'.

Hu.r WA~1l:l&gt;

180

ltl II I·SI It I

WANH:IJ

To Do

1•

HOi\11·~

10

'1'01&lt; S .ILIC

Ho\lf:~

-..t

PT Fiscal Officer, Incom e DHK
New 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
C!Daning
&amp; ·--··'OiiRiiiSOi'ii"ii
-Fi:o
Tax Administrator, Village of Powerwashlng. Can 't Keep
Regional Center, Inc.
Home on 1h .acres @
Rio Grande Pick up appllca· Up Vour "To Do" list too Big? ss~.ou0. New Have'l 2.800 Leon . Stocked Pono Ci ty
Has an immediate
opening for: Treatment lion at Village Hall, 174 E Let Us HELP . Vou 1 We'll sq ft. Log Cabm as is. w/3·5 Water New Septic System
Instructor
College or fax resume witll Clllan -R·Up &amp; Get-A-Done acres Call Mike (513)31'4- Ready to move in cal l ·for
, Job Requ1rements:
relerences to (740)245- We
do
All. 2754
appt (304)475-4429
High School diploma or
1704. Application deadline Res.1 en 11a 1 1 ~ us 1ness ,
Huge Estate Sale June 9,10,
GED equivalent
noon, June 14 . Accounting Ins ide / OutSide. 2·3br Home. 1 112t&gt;a , New 3 BR 2 Bath Sechonal
and 11th 8 :00-?, At2 Norlh Full-time positions available experience required
Only · 2491mo
DailyM'eeklyiMonthly, 740- Hardwood Floors To tally H·ome
Opposite Eckard Chapel Rd. Working with MR/00 adults
Remodeled (304)593·2532 includes AJC, delivery &amp;
- - - - ' - - - - - 985-3639' or 740-416·1823
~rhe Good Stuff'
Low·
or (859)245·7454
se tup. 740-385·7671
in Va'ried sailings
SECURITY
Prices
Send resume or
Exp~rienced Home Health
PROFESSIONALS
3 Bedroom. 1 Bath. Large New 3 BR' Hom_e OnlY
Interest letter to: ·
National securily lirm seek.s Care gtver, will si t with Fenced Lot. Lots ol Storage 189/mo. Includes a/c. dellv·
AUC!lON AND
Green Acres Regional
Contact Kristina 4 miles ·out
PART- TIME employment In Elderly
Ft.FA MARKEr
Sandhill ery and se1 up. 740-385Center, Inc.
tile Apple .Grove , WV area. Harbour {304)576·2495.
4367
. (304)675-2507
Attention: Personnel
Qualilied applicants must be
Cross
Creek
Auclion :
P.O. Box 240
at least 21 years old, HS ExleriOr
Pamhng 3·Bedroom .
1-Bath No Down Payment even
BuHalo every Saturday at .7
Lesage , wv 25537
diploma/GED. no cnminal Experienced, Reasonable Remodeled Full Basement. with less than perteci cred1t
pm, Out ol State Dealers. ·
Fax: 304-762-2862
record &amp; pass drug test.
rates. Aelerences. For Free Appliance s
mcluded on th1s 3 bedroom , t balM
plus Local Consignments
Email:
WE OFFER
Est1mates call 740~645- Outbuild1ng &amp; 24FT Pool. home in Middleport . Corner
New &amp; Used Merchandise.
garc@dlrecway.com
· Ex'cellent pay
2638
t88 Park Driv.e (304)675- lot: carport. wrap -around
1-550-1616 Stephen Reedy
EOE .
porch , fenced 1n yard. base·
·FREE
llealthcare
- - - - - - - - l460
.
Auctioneer ~ 1639 .
ment. payment same as
-Lile Insurance
Georges Portable Sawm1ll .
WAN'Il'll
LPN
18A Ranch stYle rent. 740-992·6300.
-Matclling 401 (k)
don't haul your togs to lhe 3BA
10 BUY
A leading provider of sup- -Free uniforms
house. located 6 miles pasl
mill JUSt call 304-675·1957
.,__loliiii&gt;iiiio;,.-r' por.t services to individuals -Tuition assistance
Holzer hosp1tal on Rt. 160. No Down Payment JS possible on thiS beautrful 3 bedwilh mental retardatiOn and - Awa~dslbonuses
(740)388·9263
AbSolute Top Dollar U.S .
Hl Cons1rucl10n
room ,. 2 bath home . 2 car
developmental disabilities is Call
1-866-32
5·4
150
Silver and Gold Coins ,
looking for a lull-time and between 9am &amp; 5pm, M-F, to Metal Roofmg &amp; St11ng !~s . 4 Bedroom home, 2 blocks garage Deck overtook.1ng
Proofsets, Gold Rings, U.S
Concrete· work . Dec~s from schOol , good neighbor· beautiful view_ Five PoJnts
part-time L.PN's in the
schedule an interview.
Currency,·M.T.S_ Coin Sllop,
Palnt1ng lntenor &amp; Exterior hood 64B 4th Ave _ Call area . (740)992-6667
G&amp;llipolis area. An Equal EOE
15 1
Second
Avenue ,
Pole
Barns.
Garages 1740)388-8)64
Opportu'nity
Employer
Gallipolis, 740·446·2842.
(304
)895·
3720
Ready Ia move in 3 SA
F! MIDN. For more informaSECURITY
- - - - - - - - · 7 Homes under $14000. Home 1n country setllng only
Wanted to buy: Bench press tion call Dorothy Har~er,
PROFESSIONALS
t96/mo. w1th 10.0 o down
I will care lor your lo~ed one Wi ll deliver 740-385·4367
weigllt lilting set. Call \740)446-7148.
- - - - - - - - . National security lirm seeks in my nome. Call (740)3Be·
740-3S~4367
(740)388·0321 .
PART· TIME employment 1n on a.
Attention! , .
Managers Position
www.orvo.com
I \ 11'11)) \II\ I
the Apple Grove. WV area.
Local company offeMg "NO
DOWN
.PAYMENT"
piaHome Listings.
' I 1&lt;\ U I-.,
Oualifled
·applicants
'iflUSt
.
i
w
11
clean
houses
or
offices
1
A local Athens electrical dis~
L1st
your
home by cal li ng
grams
lor
you
to
buy
your
be
at
least
21
years
otd,
HS
'References
aYa1lable.
For
"l''-lo11'""_ _ _ _ __, tr_ibutor is look1ng for an indi1
1740)446-3620
HE.L.P WANIID . VIdua l who can supervise diploma GED, no cnminal the best 1n cleanliness call home0 1mstead of ren!lng .
record , &amp; pass drug t,est
Malinda at 304-531-t794 Or • 10Q o f1nanc1ng
1
•
• and develop others. provide
V1ew photoslmfo online
• Less than perfect cred1l
WE OFFER:
740-992-5805.
except1onal customer serv·
·E)(cellent pay
accepted
S5DO-S1 ,800 molpt
ice and be able to parlici·FREE healthcare
• Payment cou ld be the
S2,400-S5,500 molft
pate in all aspects ot running·
·Life insurance
same as rent
c-., Down! 3 bedroom 1
business.
Previous
electriWork From Your Home or
-Matching
40t(k)
Brand
New
Method
Mortgage
·
Locators
1
4 bath . UR . DIR. FIR.
Office
International cal saleslman.3gers experi-Free uniformS
Dry In 1 Hour
(740)992·732 t ,
ar garage. tenced '1n
ence
a
pluS.
Company
needs
-Tutions assistance
No Steam-or·Shampoo
ack yard 112 acre.
resume to
HA
Supervisors &amp; Assistants. Send
Bnck Ranch Bidwell; Porter Close to tov;n . 5132.500.
·Awards/bonuses
Free-Estimates ,
Deparlment
P.O.
Box
6668.
One-on-One training , vaca ...Clearly Clean•••
At. 160. near schOol. gro - Code 4505 or call
Can 1·866·325·4150
Huntington WV 25773 .
oons.
eery s1ore and gas statiOn
740)446 -8325
between 9AM &amp; 5PM. M-F,
304 75-0022
lltWW.Truepiosperlly4U.com
3 bedrooms all electnc 2
to schedule an 1nterv1ews .
McClure's
Restaurant
now
•
1~94~561
Oh1o Val ley Eng1ne Repa1r 1/2 baths. k1tche n w1th nook.
,
EOE
h1ring all locations, full Of
Lawn mowers. small eng1ne paritry. d1sposal m1crowave.
\h»RILE _He)\. IE~
100 WORKERS NEEDED part-time. pidl. up appbcarepa1r. Sales and serviCes. great room wrth stone 1gas
•uR S.-\LI::
tiorl at locatton &amp; bring back
STABILITY !!I
Assemble crafts..
281 Grate Road Patriot, OH fireplace , formal Ommg room
between
tO:OOam
&amp;
wood it~ms .
45658
With
bay
w1ndow. 1979 Hornette 12x50 2
11 :ooam.
Monday thru
Do you worry about the
To $480/wk
studyto1t1ce
w1th
,
walk·1n Bedroom 1 Bath. gas. self
Saturday.
· futL,1re of your JOb?
Materials prcwided.
Do you feel like yolJ are not Ret1red Chrlst1an La~y w111 clOset Master, bed100m and cont-a1 r co nd1!10ner Will
Free inJOJmation pkg. 2.t;·hr
Sit w1th Ch1ldren Ill your bath wrlh 2 walk-Ill c losets rent tor S265 00 a m onth or
N1Qhl Shift Cook, 35-40 hr
appreoated?
801.-428-4649
Whtrlpool tub. shower and sell tor $3.495.00 740-385home ca ll (304)675·5392
per wtc, 18 or oldet, piCk-up
An Excellent way to earn application at Da1ry Queen.
duaf smks Enclosed back 4019 ·
Why nor beg1n a career with
mooey. The New Avon .
Middleport,
No
Phone
Sisters w1ll clean ryour porch. 2 car garaQe 20x4Q
a stable employer that
Call Manlyn 304-882·2645
CaliS!!
values the hard work "" House or .,..atch the -Elderly 1n ground pool oak wood· 1997 14x65 Premer. 2 bed·
PO box 722 Poca . WV work, new roof, landscap1ng · room. 1 Qattl. all Eh~ctric.
you do?
AVON ! All Areas!. To Buy or - - - - - - - plus AIC·heat Adtacentland E11c Con d Lots of e10;tras
Not your average medieal
25159
Sell
Shirley Spears, :304- ott1c8 JOb! Otf1ce sUpport
approx 4·5 ac1es avaJiable St1 .000 1304)675-7588 or
W.e offer:
675-1429
personnel nee&lt;Sed tor pro51 79.900 Ca ll (7 40)446- 1304)553-37,5
Stan&lt;:hng
ttmber
Wanted
to
•Up to- 48/hr wrth no ekpenDrl¥efl Needed:
gress.ive Optometnc practiCe ence .
cut G1ve us a call ( 740~5 · 9312
t997 t 6x80 Oakwood 3
COL Orwers will1ng to dnve 1n Athens. learn the essen7203 leave a message ,
• Mecllca.V40 1(kJ
BOA.
2 bath . vandallzed.
for local ready-mix-toncrete tials of patient cafe while
•Paid vaca!IOnslhohd:aysl
needs
work
S9.200
Jl '\\'\1 1\ 1
company. ExperienCe is
usmg yotJr computef knowltrainmg.
1740)441·7641prefefred but not necessary. edge typing and phone ebOriver must be will.ing to do quette skiMs. We are looking
Call Toda"!
Bl.'Sl"~
1998 16xBO Skylme : 3
Bedroom. 2 Bath Sh;ngled
2457
247
pre-mamtellaflC€ on trucks for a canng. self m:otivated
All real ntate adverttsing
&amp; equlpiTlel'll, yard work' &amp; hard woril:er who is lltie to
V1nyt
S1d1ng
Roo!
in tnl• newspaper is
other miscellaneous chores. rnultltasX Fa.w: resumes to VACANCIES: PROGRAM
•NOll ([•
Appliances
rJoA
1
675-7772
aubjed: lo the Federal
Expetience operating eqwp- 740-594-2270 by June 17. DIRECTOR and CL lNICAl.
or (3041674-5575
Fair Housing Act Df 1961
ment &amp;·extra siolts sucn' as 2005
----- -·· - · - HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
wh;ch mabs it illegal to
DIRECTOR ot RESp!BATQ.
welding a plus
•rant
2000
Fleetwooo
advertise Nany
CaJt (304tfl37-3410
Now Hinng Direct Care BY CARE (Buckeye HiltS
kltcl"\en model w1!h sklrnrg
pmereflce,
limitation Of
Sta·tf Appbcallons w111 be Career C¥1ter &amp; RIO Grande
and central a~r Will deliver
discrimination bilsed ~
Doe ro recent changes in taken from a:oo-4:ooPm at Commun1ty
College)
Very cl~a n . t ·B00-837 -3238
ra.ce, coW, religion, MJ.
coverage area Medl Home Middleton Estates.,' 8204 Requirements· ART BS 1n
familial status or natiomJI
Health Aoenc'f IS seelung a Carta 'Orrve, GallipoliS, OH RT or related field. Current
94 Cl ayton Norps 14.70
ongin, Of My intention tD
total electnc. 28A , 2BA ,
highJy motrvated. nidepelld- 45631 No Phone Calls License w1th Oh1o State
make any sud!
ent full-llme Registered ?tease
Board ot Respiratory Care
vmyl sklrtmg. 2 decks heat
prefefence. tirnn.tion or
Nur5e to managelserw::e
Two years cliniCal expen. ~10\1."'\·
disc:riminationS14 000
0 60
pump
dlenblt&lt;&gt;ut ot our Gall~il " - '
ence. Send resume t:rt June
1'0 LoA.'
!740
)388-8739
•
office. Must be liCensed ;,;
Openings 'b' 2 Par 15: Sharon Cat miChael
This IIWWOp•~·f .... not
Handymar spec'1al t 4~ 70
bOth Ohio and West Virginia.
Buckeye
Hills
Caree1
knowi ngly~
we oHM a competitive ime Kennel Workers a . Center, P:O. Bo,; 157, A10
lldverti~ lor:·...
w' e~ p a ndo . $ 1.000 0 80
estate whM:h is in
J74Q J446-/'738 I
ulary. benefrts pad\age and ocat
AnimaJ ' Shelter Grande,
OH
45674
rio6Mion oil the law. Our
401K E O.E. PieaJ;e send
call (304)675-6451 (740)245-5334. EEO
,...,.. .... het-t!by
New 14x60 only S198 73
resume to J52 Second •ve.. b" ITICJ(e tntormabon.
infori'Md INt all
per me lndLideS Complete
Gallll)Ois, OH 45631 or W OveftlrOOk Cenlef ~ current- Wanted: Someone to Haul
ctweAingt; .Wenised in
set u!:l and 1eh'o'ery 740·
H!OO-.S1-633&lt;t
Ann· ly accepiJng appi&gt;callon6 tot awat old th•ng5 to landfjl
tt-.new~are
385-2434
AOOrev Farley, AN
LPN'S "ll SHIFT$11 If VOU (304)67~- 2 157
on an equal
SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
'Energoebc, effiOefrt staff ate-lnlefested, please come
SUIOOLS
memoer needed for busy ~in and tifl out an application'
StocK rnod~l s at old Dr1ces. ·
lllb'l'RIXI'lON
2005 modelS ar.·r w1ng Now
ch&gt;tOII'actiC office H quaJi- a1 333 'Page Sttee1,
Duplex each wrtn 3 BR LA Cole s
Moone
Homes
fled send resume to 750 Mldcllepol t Oh. EOE
Garro; ,., ear-- College
DR Klld'len Batn &amp; Porct1 15266 Us .so East Amers
Flfst Ave Gattip()f1s OH
45631
1-iouse 3 BR LA Krtchef1 On•o 45701 !740)592· t972
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's (Careers C1o5e To Home )
_:_:c.__ _ _ __
Balh
Both 1n Po1nt "Where You Get Vou r
needed. Apply at " 1354 Cal Todaf 7~367 .
l~2t4--0ot52
E51atl0st&gt;ad~ ..lal:k&amp;onPille.~.
PIE:Iasat11
(304)6 75-2495 Morley s Worth Compillly " Galia CWnty
- - Ql'l'oi
-~ . eoc.n
after 7 OOprr,MedJcal Ac:ereQQO ~ Ace~'~
looiUog "" - ' " " " " " Patt-Time
b ~ ....... ..,. ~ C&lt;*9N
Great Hou ses at Great ~
.lr'IStallers and tecl'lntclans If Cont.uttant Of Nurlfog eo..nc.l
t'l.lll S.u
and Sd10011 171'-'B
111tef6-stecl r.end r.esume to·
Prat5 1 We tta~e 2 hOmes rn
,...,.,.,.., ~ "" buoy
rhe Gallipolis afiO Rutland Mercerv1Ne area 47 acre5
ClA eo. 566 do 'Gallipolio ~ Olfice P1ease
areas WE. FINANCE ' NO bar'!' .
Tnbune. P'O Box 469 . send F1eoume &gt;:&gt; PO Box
MlsoJJ ANil)liS
It catnPtnQ tra.ler
GaltpoOs, OH &lt;15E31
CLOSING
COST
NO approk 1 5 acres tef'(;e-a
220 Potnt Pleasant WV or
POIN!S'
Contact Nick great hunting area Ad)Oineo
~ TWT'tlef Cuttef. 3009 Jac:kaon Aw. Potnt DlltECT'V
FREE Home
Ht..f''Tian
.
0
1·B00-333- 10 000 acre CrOWfl Cif)l pubPleaoant.
W'I
Sy•-·
c'atl (740)682-73,8 after
69t 0
he hunt1ng area Pnce
FREE E - and Install ~
"""''
•
6pm~~·------ wanuog Somtoi~e· to ~ up to 1our f0Qrl'l5. t45 chanS74 900
Hood
Realty
Lawn Work &amp; Lllbor, must """ ' eo 2 aam· ..,.;,. Comoany
Call ,
Paul
$29.00 a monm. ....
1UWEO DOWN OH
H
o
l
p
Wattress, bartender full or t'lar.'e 1/aliO-Or~ now to get FREE HBO SOCIAL SECURfTY ISSI? Only t9&amp;mo 1ocwes ;Mc. 1304)736-0710 or 1JOo4.)522 - .
del1~ry ano set up 74Q..
own \ransportatton MAX, ard STARS t .3CJO.
part time . will tr811'l Apply • &amp;
No Fee Unle&amp;s We W1n'
6252 Jeff t;ood Sf~
385-~
•
r
(30&lt;)675-;&gt;835
JerW:h:llnn 304-675-4167
§23..7556 for details.
t.a88~ ~2-3345
Camp Conley - Milton Ad.
8:00am 10 3:00pm Frl and
Sat · June 9- 10 Rain or_
Shine_ Videos, Puzzles, TV
and stand , much more.
Great .Pries

GrHn Acres

e

r

- - - ---.-

a

r

l.J77~

;xt.

I

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~==Om:Jio;:.~'l:~:T:n:·~·

i::==-~===~

N

4th &amp; Rolint, New Haven,
Duncan'• Res., June 8lh &amp;
91h. come &amp; .,__. oot

6 Family yatd Sale, R.-.1
American l.e&lt;;iion. June 10111
and t11h . 8 :00"' 4:00
-------Huge 3 Family Sale: Adult,
Kid, &amp; Baby dolhes, strol&amp;ef.
walker, l1igtl chair. toys.
etc...;· ft.Mure. 001' ckOI. &amp;.
bag.' f'lav Hut, Swing set,
Pia'! House &amp; ITUCI'I more.
c...-l..!! O'Brier:l&amp;Raon .. .........
4BOoiO AtJam6 Aced. Letart

- · Ohoo.
9, 2005

Ultgo

Thut~.

...,..

-

&amp;a!e,
Slfeet . RutlandCol«tib'ef; Fentoll, c:lol'hell
Salem'

&amp; """""'•· Ftoday-Sabxday

&amp;to.&amp;t1.

-

'Pre MoYilg SM-.ble 10.
From ~· Httl pa$1

Walled
-110
WantN To
to fiMII_,_,_,_,____ .........
410

-"""first IOOd left

Yn.Sale- G 'ip lle ......--'---·-...ll12
vn s.~H&gt;-oy/lllddle.. 1174
Yn S1la. Pl PIIMIIII--·-----1111

992·2157

Oearltir~

• StArt Your Ads With A Keyword • ·Include Complete
Del&lt;:rlptlon • In&lt;:lude A Prl&lt;:e • Avoid Abbreviation I
• Indude Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

on

Fax To

• All ads mu~t be prepaid'

W..ted to llvy .....·-·-·-···--..----1190
W.IIIKI to llvy- Farm S14J ptlu .................. 820

Do-----·--·---

Shop
Classifieds!

Or

Dally In~Colurrlrt: 1:00 p .m.
Monday~Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.,
Friday For Sundays Paper

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Park Lane MobUe l-tome
Announcement ....,.......................................030 Court,
Dr. # 28,
Antiques ..................................................:....530 Gallipolis,57OH.JayJune
10 &amp; 11
Apartments for Rent ......,............................ 440 .8:00·5:00. Canceled if rain.
Auction and Flea Market.............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .........:................ 760 Sat. June 11, jrom 8:00Auto Repair ..................................................no 3:00. Ski's, household items,
Autos tor Sale .............................................. 710 TV, toys, ·· sm. tent, misc.
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale.............................. 750 items. 116 Mabelina Dr.
Building Supplies ..,................. ,,, ................. 550 Sal. June 11th. 4 family yard
Busl.ness and Buildings ............................. 340 sale. 9·4. Old Navy, Tommy
Bus Iness Opportunity ... :............................. 21 0 Hitfiger. J . Sill, Cooney &amp;
Business Trainlng ........................................ 140 Burke, Aeropostale, computCampers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790 . ers/ eledronics, VHSJOVO,
Slate Slreet, beside
Camping Equipment ................................... 7111! ! coins.
Post Offtce. Centerville.
Cards of Thanks .....:.................................... Ot 0
Child/Elderly Care ........................ :.............. 190 Thursday 9th, Friday 10th, 4
Electricai/Retrlgeratlon ............................... 840 fam ily, antiQues, dishes,
Equipment tor Rent.. .................. ,........ :....... 480 Granetware, clothing, tools
Excavating ................................................... 830 2 miles out 218.
Fal'l!l Equipment ....................................,..... 61 0
Yard sale, 2 families. 619Fal'l!ls tor Rent... .....................~ .. :................. 430 6111
knd.·knacks,
Fal'l!ls tor Sale ......:...................................... 330 table,. CJOthe&amp;,
misc . Burnett Ad.,
For Lease ..................................................... 490 KanaU08;·
For Sale................:....................................... 585
For Sale or Tnide .......................................,.590 Yard sale: Hot dogs, baked
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580 goods. 9am-Saturday, June
Fumished Rooms.........................:..............450 11 , @ Trinity U.M. Chut'ch
General Hauling ...........................................850 Porte'
Giveaway..................................................... ,040·
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln .........~.:.....................................640
Help Wanted:................................................ 11 0 3391 Chester ROad across
Home·tmprovements........:..........................810 ti-om fofrest Run 619 &amp; 6/10.
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310 Too l1l3llY Jtem6 to list Lots
Household Goods" .................. """ .............·51 0 of ~· 6Qffiethlng 1of' all.
Houses tor Rent..
...........
:............................ 410
37187 Vance Road .Aile 10
.
.
tn Memoriam ..............................................
·.020 &amp; 11 : Nice dean teen girts
Insurance ........................,............................ 130 dothing A~ . Holltslef. etc .
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ...~ .. ~ ................660 Adult womens. hOuSehold

...

Immunization Clinic

Thursday; June 9th
5-7 pm

r.
I

ADOPT: A Happily married,
chi ldless couple longs· to
sll'are our lives· witll your
baby, Will provide a lifetime
of love, happiness, apply &amp;
security. We knoW that you r
decision will be made out of
"liSt
pure Iove Ior your baby.
LA
•·\ND
Expenses pd. Please call L.~---FIIoiliUNiiiill;.._.,t
Mike &amp; Donna 1-8e6-720-· ..,
5099
Found--·Ciass-Rif"!Q. Call to
---~--.-- 1
740-992-3412
The lady ·wt10 oou'gnt my llllll!""'-.-----,
yorner booth &amp; table -~,..,
..,.,
piCk it up. Ca ll {7o4f
,:
YARUSALE

•

sponsored by
Meigs County Health Dept. &amp;
Middlep9rt/Pomeroy ·R'otary
· Club

HOW IQ WRITE AM AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

.'

Sut'Jscribe today.
' .'992-.2{5.5
.'

/

446·3008

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

. . . . ·-·-·-··-..-·-·-·-·-,
Reach 3 Counties
I
I

of

Or Fax To

Word Ads

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF
NAME OF Ttna Louise
Bugaj To Ttna Louise
Sutton
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON Cl:lANGE OF
NAME
"
Applicant
hereby

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason ·
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

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

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

r·~·~·-·-~-·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

-

- - ----~----- -

..,.

Sit&gt;

___·- ----- - __.,.._

.m

ftease

--·

••IKMe

1'76

.,...,.,nmen1

I ""''"'

r::=.:~~~~~~
~~

____ _____________
..::..

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~&lt;li.\IS

ze

�F•llMS

APART\IEN"l~

FOKSAI.E

mR Rfxr

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepair-6'15-73 813 For sale.
re-cond11ioned
au tomatic
washers &amp; dryers. reftiQera·
tors . gas and elec!riC
ranges . atr conditioners. and
wringer washers Will do
repairs on maJor brands in
shop or at your home

r

(7 40)388 -0017

or

J~d y
Kay's
Restaura nt
(740)339-0362
w/u pstairs apartments 740416·1 eoa; 740·247- t 100.
2BR af.Jt State Route 160.
$400/month . stove/refrigeraLon;&amp;
to r mcluded. washer/dryer

ACREA&lt;;&gt;:

hookup (740}441-0194 or
(740)441 - 1184
_:__:____ _ _ _ _ _ _
·Apt. for rnn l 1·200 sq.ft
Trash &amp; water paid. 3 miles
from !own .' $4"25/month.
( 7 4 0) 44 1 ·9~ 16.

1t2 Ac.- tot Tycooh•Lake on·
Eagle Ad . Co. Water (not
lake
frqnl )
$7 ,500 00
'0) 247·1100 or (304)532(7...
6271 cell

10

FARM

EQull"li1ENr

15

0°o Fixed Rate up to 36
months on New John Deere 2001 Dodge pickup short
Compact Tractors &amp; 110 TLB bed Magnum V6 . Like new
at Carm•chael Equ1pment. conditipn . s~lvage title. ·
$5,500. (740)441-7641 .
(740)446-2412

52 Faimall Super c with cui- 9: Chevy 1ton GaO &amp; chasttvators. very n1ce. will sell us1e, ion~ wheel Oas_e AJC,
tre.ctor separate. · $1 ,950
OBO. (740)367-0596.;

cruiS!J, lilt, 5-speed. manual
tran smis·si?n. 350
gas,
()9,000 • miles. (740)_256·

H'ay wagon 19 ft. Stolfus 640.3. (740)645-0446.
Kicker wagon . Removable
Buy
or s811. Riverine
Arrrry 5 Ton Semi Truck,
steel racks_ Like new tires
Ant1ques. 1 124 East Main
multi-fuel, Kiser Jeep Corp.
and bed. (74"0)245-048,P.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740$6000.00 .. ,Army 2112 Ton
992 -2526
Russ Moore , John Deere 10 It No Til Drill TruCk, Ki.$er Jeep Corp.,
lor
Rent
Carmichael Multi Fuel , $4000.00 740ML~OJ.IANEOUS
EqUipment. (740)446-2412. 949-0020

~-riMI::iriiiii
-RiiUiiilil-\liNiiOliiiiSii.fir
:
John Deere Commerdal
..,
· woiksite Products In St~k ll
2 10" KicKer Stillwater subs Compact E)(cavator 27C,
for small tr ucks , etc. 350. 500/S~id Sieers 37 1,
!740)446-2616
320,
325.
328!Traclor
Loader BackhOe 11 OTLB.
22 Oak factory . padded
Check out our renta l rates,
ChUich Pews, 11 ft .. long,.
Great Financing AYailable·
good condition, $125 each.
Carmichael
Equipment.
40 new Hymnal . Church
(740)446-2 41 2.
Oooks, $360. · (7 40)3.68-

rrl.

r

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments "at Vi llage
Manor
and
A1verside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295-$444. Call 740992·5064. Equal H ous~ng
Opportunities.

HOlJSI&lt;l&gt;
HJRRENI'

Large Upsta1rs Apartment.
2br. Appliances furnished .
Deposit R'eqUifed. Central

2 BOA - 2 1 /~ baths. 2 car NC $300/mon1h -(304)675garage- furn1shed , clOse to 7763
Holzer hosp•tal. (740)441,North
Third
Avenue.
0310.
Midlileport. One Bedroom
2 Oedroom house, no pets. turn 1shed apt. No Pets.
refererlce required, siarting Previous rental rei. 740at $350/month . Call ' Jay 992-0165

(740)441-011 0.

One Bedroom , No . Pets,
3
BR Ranch Home Utilit1es Paid, $400/mo. ,
&amp;
Reference
W/anacMd Garage 1n Camp Depos1t
COnley area of .Pt. Large Aeqllired. (740)446-3667 _
fenced yard in great rieigh·
Pleasant Vall8y Apartment
borhood_ $675 mth. DepoSit
Are now taking Applications
and References reQuired . for 2BA . 3BR &amp; 48A. ."
Cal! 1-304-531·1197 or 1Apphcat1on s
are taken
3Q4-273-11 12
Monday thru F~iday. from
9·00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is ·
Attention!
Local company offering *NO Located at 1151 Evergreen
DOWN PAYMENT' prO- Dr1ve Point Pleasant. WV
grams for you to Ouy your P~one No 1s (304)675·
5806. E.H.O
home instead of renting .
• 100% financ1ng
Tara
Townhouse
• Less than perfect credit Apartments. Very Spac10us
accepted
2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2
.: Payment could be the Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
same as rent
Pool, Pa110. Start $385/Mo
Mortgage
Locators No Pets:
Lease Plus
(740)992-7321
Security DepoSJt ReqUired.
Brand New 2 Bedroom
House 1n town . S475fmo.·
CIA, Washer/Dryer Hook-up.
Stove/Refrigerator Included
(740,)441-Q194 or (740)441 -'

11&amp;1

(740)446-3481 .
Tw1n Rl\lers Tower IS accept1ng apphcations tor wailing
.hsl k&gt;r Hud·SUbSiteO. 1. br.
apartment call 675·6679
EHO

In town location- 1-2 BR
Ranch home. mce yard , AC
References
requ1red
S45G'mo. rent &amp; S450 Sec
Dep. You pay al,l uhllt1es ,
Available
6/ 15.
Call

(740)446-3644.
Small 2 OeC1r90m house
$475 month 1 m•le lrom
town. Call {740)44 1.0 194 or ·

(740)441 -1184

r~~~~

------Valley Apartments in Mason .
WV c urren~ly accepting

_18~7_5 _ _ _ _ _ _ _

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle ,
Channel. Flat · Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Dra1ns.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Bam-4~ 30pm . Closed
Thursday.
Satu rday
&amp;

Sunday. (740)446-7300
Pole Barn 30x50x1 OFT
$6795 . includes Painted
Metal,
Free
, Delivery
www.nationwidepolebarns.c

.om (937)559-8385
Shop smith, lots of e)lfras,
JOinter, laDle saw. drill press.
$2,199
OBO..
1•999
Pra1rie· 4x4 ,
Kawasaki
excellent coodihon, $2.500

i

aSSisted.

r

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

New Homes • Vi n yl

~epair

Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows; Roofing

3 miles west of
Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124

992-5682

(740)949-22 17

-mRSAU:

Reg. Black Angus Bull. 4 . 1999 Aquatron , 19" boat 7
years old Gentle ' 51 100.00· trailer.
4 .3 liter V-6
98
3843
740
'
' S'
Mercruisei-. Less than 100
H-\Y &amp; '
hoUis, bought new in 2000.
9-KAJN
Includes skis, tube , life jack·
---ets. etc .
Sold new for
$16.500 , asking $8,000 Call
Tobacco -Plants lor sale. Call
(304)6774 . or (304)674• 40.446· 7843.
4668
I \11'1.,\4,\IH&gt;I'\I-(!III .

r

16 H p Craftsman lawn 2000 Bayliner21 ft.cuddyw/
Tractor. 42 • cut-- used very trai ler, many extras . very
ti ttle, $500.00 Phone 740- clean 304-675·5563

.

ESTIMATES

740-992"7599

Mobile Homes • Metal Roofs
Flat or Low Sloped Roof • Carports
Barns • Porches

.1995
Gulfstream
24'
Conquest Limited EditiOn
Class C motorhome. uke'
new with CHlty 7,600 i-rules.
Ful~ equipped wi1t1 many
_ .._ $22.000. (740)2561428. For pictures see:

Www.rvtraoor.com/rvdetail .p
hp?iO+t25806

2000 Aerolite. 23-30•, fully
eqpt. all hitch eqpr.. like
58900. (740)992-5963

West

41800 SR #7

~~~~:

Plains, OH

'45783

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

· ·:AU Types Of ·
Call 8.0.. Const.
for all your home
repair needs, !1JOfin~,
siding, add-ons,
remodeling etc .•
frl'C estimates
(740) 992·2979

Coitcrcte WQrk
25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
-F'rc£ Estinuues

lean mcssa ~~

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

r Homes

:-Septic Systems ·
~ R oofing
~ Backh oe

Let me do it for yout

liNDA'S PAINTING

:--Site
:r- Preparation
,r Dozer

Pum~ruy,

740-9'1!-7953
141J·416·lH2J ·

Myers Tree
Service
• lnsurt!d- t"ree

ESIImule&lt;
• St-nior C itizen
dismunt
7-10-992-2621
34H'ea~J

bpcl'ltOCc

'I'D

Cnalractlaa
• Siding • Windows

·

---

I *

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

with shuttle transmission
4-wd, remote hydraulics 3 year warranty

***"'Also available****
• Task Master Tractors 26 horse - 38 horse,
4wd (I year warranty)
• Farm l'ro TractOrs .20 horse • 30 horse
.
loaders. finish mowers, tillers - .

NEW ARRIVAL ZTR Dixolf (Zero Turn
Radius Mower) 311 inch culling widlh to 511

inch ('Utting ~idth 3 year warra"ntJ

·'

!&amp;!! TRACfQR SALES &amp; EQUIPMENT '
right in the heart of Ch&lt;ster.

9854384

Formerly at 108
W. t\-'loin Pomcm)'
IS NOW OPEN AT
The Mulberry
Community Center
260 rt-lulberry Ave.
Pomeroy

. YOUNG'S
CARPENTER ~

.CONTRACTlNCi
• Prompt &amp; quality

141 112--.rl
Stop &amp; Compdre

work
• Affordable Rates

t-.. 61&gt;-.K.E.R~
~:&gt;o Rl'l r o~&lt;:._ ·

V.C. YOUNG Ill

9am to Jpm

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6215 "wvo3672S
25 Vtarl Local Ex

11-\1?££ DOLLt-..R.~ !
-

lance

Tr3Jier w retr10g &amp;
Stove ..-asher
&amp;
Oryer
included (304 )576-2934

, ..

Truck

C.:~mper

a:

--LDIO!lly
AdrJison P1ke- S1~monm ­
cal (7.0)4.46-3644 fOf more

...,

UcJbJ$e Homes Slte5 ·I' !l'\e

Shade area Water Sewer
Trash. 1nclu0ed
5130 00
per """"" 7"&lt;). 385-40 13

-----

i:asn Vt5al Master Card

_
r 7'l)I'&gt;.2SS.
-~1.10•1-~--~ dlamonc::J. fully equ•pped.

11

i

factory

warranty.

e•SEMENT '

22.900

flll:rts &amp;:
miles-. like new. S24.995
·SHOP
, -t:G£ruiU:';
CLASSIFIEDS " - - - - - - - - · (740)25&amp;-1428
Home Growm Strawbel nes. 98 TO'jCita Corolla auiOm80C
FOR ·
7 m1tes west of GalllfJC)IIs on 4 cyt 37 mg iilr, FM. new
StAt 141 Look 1cr K.e1" f5 nres.
5t'latp.
aslung
BARGAINS
wooocran
,$4JCO~OO

WATEAPAOOFING
Unconamonal lrle1Jme guar-

etntee local refer~ furnished Estabh&amp;tled 1975

Cafl
0870

24

Hr.;

Rogers

· WaTerproofi.-.g.

(7401 4-46-Bas.eme"f

t
~

~ t====!==:;=

·~

I DONUT~ I

I DQt.IUTl'&gt; I

I 001'\UTS I

•

ME,

IMPORTS.
Athens

Wha4ey•s Auto
Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Re.ltocking f-11te _i\txlel Sal&gt;ttge
and .4/"ter Market Parts
Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon

AND ISN'T AN't'ONE
GOING·To WELCOME
ME ABOARD?

are de$ Uned to be a leader in th e
year -ahead raiher 1han merely a totlower. Hqwever; it will be up to you not
to play second fiddle. Kno w that yo u ' ll
be fortunate in that which you Person·
ally direct.
GEMIN I (May 2 1-June 20 ) N ormally you're an extremely gener·
ou s person. but today the re's a possibility that you cou ld be a bit too sell·
serving and unl ikely to sh are what Is
Intended for everybody.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - 11 what
you hope. to accomplish today is not
easily achieved on your initial efforts ,
don 't get discouraged. Breaking
through tha1 door can be realized
through co nSistent effort.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Your hce In
the hole to accomplish big thing s
to d ay is your own inner re solve.
However, If isn't lik~ly you'll tap Into It
unle.ss you begin to feet ci rc umstances are squeezing yoU Into a cor·
neJ.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
Someone you 're quite fond at may still ·
be dubious about whether or not you
can be trusted. Ycx.fre going to gel the
ch ance today to prove you're a pal
who cbn be relied upon when need-

· You

1'0 RATf.IER f.IAVE
THE ORANGE JUICE .. ·

Sun _Closed

1

f.·

6
11
13
14
15
16
17

42 Clly rles.
43 uon·a
Striped
quartera
animal
44 Prlar to
1
Like John 46 lnflexlb e
Wayne
49 Bursts forth
Ia ol use
53 Way or
Safe place
means
Floek
54 Boxed
Gives a talk
breakfasr
Pregrown
55 Heron or
lawn
egret
Httchcoek·s 56 Long·
t~le
winded
Eur. country

.t a
21 Deli
offering
23 Explorer·s
• sketch
26 OAS member
27 Kind
. of system .·
28 Thela
follower
29 Hammered
31 Prunes bac·k
32 Salon
creation
33 Horses
36 Bulrush or
cattall 37 Cell habl1anl ·
38 Mao- tung

39 Jr. naval. ·
, officer
40 Appraises

DOWN
)a Contamina- . 41 Feed the

1 Zig
opposlle
2 Magda's
sister
3 Portable
luggage .
4 Truckers·
trucks
5 Permitted
6 Promotion
basis
1 Nowhere
near •
-B ·Tree
product
9 Size above

mod.
10 Lubber"s
_aye
12 Entice
13 Mr. Perot

led .
19 End a shutdown
2c;l Oozes out
22 Mote or \
chipmunk
23 Sets
diamonds
24 Bear
witness
25 Free tickets
28 Here.
lor monsieur
30 Drowse ott
34 Nordlques·
home
35 Remove,
as a cap
40 Happen

kitty
43 Have
supper
45 Common
Market

46
47
48

money
VIsited
Water·
power org.
Autumn
color
Part of mph

50
51 Just a
IIHie bit
52 Cagey

again

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeletJ1ty Gil:.her cryptograms arc created 11om Qootarons bV !amoospeopie.l'\liSI and present
EaCh le!leiln ltle cipher stands for anotner
Today 's clue. E equals V

•

W T· J S T U X

'" D

.WB TF

SLUT

HFWBRRHVZT.
VTTL

KJHXXTL,

KBYZG

HR

HX

X AT

ADR

KBJ ZG

TLG. "

. WBTX

JBVTJX

NJDETR

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Some people sulfer in silence louder than olhers."
- Morrie Bri ckman
' Untold suffenng seldom is.· - Franklin P. Jones

'::!=' S©\\(l~-"~~s·
::::
I. POUAN - - - - -

_ _ _....;.._ -~ 'r ClAY

0 four
too,_ lottors of
omJroblod -dr

I

low· 10 form fov•

1

wor~s.

SEGRUH
2

1 1111

I~ ·i I I f

Hie

boo-

I

--:::-~~-:-A-,C~,-W-H..,-.......,f

I

r. .

.

.

_ _

I. work in a large office and
surmised that some working

r - - - - - - - . , w i v e s still come out on the

lshortendofthe -- - - - --. ,
0 N-OR E T
f-,~·.,,;::...;;,..:,~1.:...::;.1..:_TI-l O Comple1t 1he chuckle quoted

I

L.....JI--..1-.1-.1-!.--1

by Mllng In the ml,.ing -ds
you develop from step No. 3 below.

ed .

.-

SUNSHINE CLUB

SfPTIC TANK PfWPING $95.00
~RTABlf TOILET RENTAL
CAll FOR APPOfNTMlHT TODAY
992·3251 OR 591·8757

~/s

CAUEP~AN ·
~~.. !MIIXIT
"'""'· -...... fl{liaLy .

a.o.. ~·J&lt;E; AU.

ra CfRLY. .. uKE. ~ &lt;::DIV6
"flfYRL'r'f\'1/lN Rl~'.. _

•

ANI' NOW,

Wl'fj.l THE

~ER'TURE. 'TO

'THE

!

WE GfiVE t,IOU WANPA MAE
THROT'fLEeorTOM .• :

OPE:RA "CARMEN". :.

IN THIS SPACE

FOR $52 PER MONTH
\

High cost ollertillzer got you
17-17:17 ~

GRIZZWELLS
:~a )tliJ

'

•[ HAVE
GOTTO
LEARN
'TO REAP

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) - Even
though the compe1i1ion today may
turn out to be tar tougher' tharl you
had antk:ipated it would be, don't
buckle under at the strong threat. With
extra eHort on your part. you ca n W·tn.
,SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22} It's
Imperative today that y~u have laith In
the tact that there's a solution tor
every problem that confronts you.
Wi1h~? ut hopft, you won 't even try to
seek out the amowers and will lose.
S AG ITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec . 2 , ) Unless you take a firm posillon today
In your commerdal affairs. you will
invite those with whpm you deal to
walk all over you . Stand last lor your
principles and your rights .
,
CAPRICORN ( Dec. ·22-J an. 19) EIO"'en if it sf"\ould put ~ in a difficult
. positiOn 1oday, ba&lt;:k uP- a n Individual
who has been there for you in the
· past. Your support means the difference between cowardliness and
integrity.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) ...- The
main thry.S:t of your energies and
effOrts toct:OV should be devoted to the
tutfitlment ol a purposeful ambition.
Wasting vour energy on m1nuscule
aCtivities
is · squahd&amp;ririg your
strengths,
. ·
PISCES ' (Feb. 20-March · 20) Unless you step uti to the front and
take a firm stance on controlling
something in which yQu are presently
involved with othe rs, it will continue to
fall apart one - piece at a time. Be
strong.
.
ARIES (March 21 - April 19) If
you've got the tenacity to take on a
problem that you haven't been abUt to
resolve. this may be the day to do so.
It still won 't be easy, but at least
you've got a chance to unrp..-el the
puzzle.
TAURUS (Ap£11 20-May 20) Your
analytical and fastidioUs faculties
couiO be mpre acute than usual toclay,
so you may ha\r'e to take care tnat
your criticism or comments to others
aren't Overly caustic ,o r backbiting.

SOUPTONUTZ

$265 ton (While Suppy Last)
• Mushroom Compost ,
""Takilrtr fu Slilrtr Ord Of
Hard Wo..t!"

Mid-Size 4Wheel DriYe Tractoc
with 30hp &amp; 40bp Kubola Engines

BAUM LUMBER
SL RL 124 Chester 985-3301

-----------~~-----~------------~---------------------o~----~--------------~--

• ANP HER
AMAZING
KNEE

CYM8AL.S!

ADVERTISE

.

AstroGraph

Thur•day, June 9, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol

GARAELD

COilSUiting.
SHADE RI\'EK AG SERHCI:
35537 $t. KL 7 Nortll
Porrwroy. Qllio
7~985-383 1.

But lhen lhe defenders would wa1ch
whiie South took nin e straight tricks .
'

ROSA ,

PUT O N MY
r-- -1 JOUR.N"'-Ll"1"1
H"'-1 FOR A
MOME NT'

• LeiJVe a message

Available

All pass

assume?
Surely he would "know" that declarer had '
started With doubleton kin9 -queen. NoW it
would be Yery tempting for East to return
the heart jack, believing that his side onlyneeds to get ;n once· to run the hearts.

I

740-742·2193

$35. - I ,000 lbs Appro._ weight
18 spreode- buggies alrailable for use
Ajrway pasture renovators and·seeders
...,ailable to rent.
licerned agronomist on staff available for

3 NT

qoo.. 'lllrlhdiQ&lt;:

•Insured"

1114.1 mo pd

Pass

~
'~

•
ISIG NATE

AC., TV

Antenna. Wifed 1o1 Cat*!,
BtJICk
LeSabre ..... Toy Pood1es for saJe. $300 t 997
56.509 (304)675Beautiful nver v ew 1n MojiCJhan Carper. 202 Clatlc each. eotors vary (740)367- LJmoled. 75 """-'d moleo. 3363
Int.,
Loaded.
Kanaoga.. l41eal .for 1-l peo.- . Chapel Road.· Porter OhiO 7095 or rf no answer call Lea1her
pfe. No pets
please 1740 }446_7444 1 -a17.a30-- (740)71().6471
Gar- Kept.
55.995
~s oe1ng takel'l 9162 F1
Esnrnates E
1304)675-1731
Toy Pooctles Black 1 male,
Cal (7A0~1 -()1~1
,nanongeegJ (l8yS same
ar&gt;d 1 female $250 &lt;;'al 2002 CadMac Oevrile_ ....,.

1-\1»-LF-I)OZE:N !

Call Gary Stanley

Hours
7:00 AM • S:OO PM

""'

61 '10\E: 1\ e,.o.,K.t.Rr~

OR.

We do It all except
furnace work .·

OPEN
Mon-Frl.

'""I'VLG0\1\ e.UCK FlFt'( ,----

'""IWE:t{\'H\\IE. C£.~1:::. (1\C..I-\"'l

7 _..2217

CAlleman Camptng Trader
12FT: 2 Kong Beds. 55.500
caJI tor OelaJis (304 )6751731

l ~T

East

lhe best of all possible worlds, Since lhe
detend&lt;&gt;rs lake 1he firs1 five tr~ks.
But now return to tricK one. SuppO'se
Soulh drops lhe . hear1 queen 01 king
under East's ace. What would East

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771

1995 Chevy TahOe LT
Ell:el\ent co or;.,.,. erneraiC
QfeentSiiver. leather ln!efiQf.
1ully
loaOed.
57.900
(740)441·7641 ! ,,

West. Nurlh

SERVICE

Available
• Free Estimates

ID1t1Jalll

Suuth

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages •
• Etec:lrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guttera
• Ylnyt Siding I Painting·
• Patio and Porch Decks ·

• References

......

A 8-· li 3 .

hearts: So, East should win with th e heart
ace and shift to the spade queen, hoping
1or the best . And here it is for the best in

H111"s Se!f
Storage

36r

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Benjamin Disraeti, a former Britis.h prime
minister, wro~e 1 "'FrS.nk and e)(pticit' that is the right line Ia take -~hen you wish
to conqea l your ·awn mind and to contuse
the minds of others."
He was probably discussing debating in
lhe House nl Commons, bul 11 can apply
·lo a declarer al lhe bndge labte. II you
were South, in three no-trump, now
would you 1ry 10 dellec11he minds of olh. ers? West leads the heart nine.
The defense looks straightforward for .
thinkers and those not locked l"nto "you
mu'st reiurn partner's suit at no-trump.~
First, remember thai a fourth -highest
lead guarantees at least one honor in
lhat suit So, Wesl"s top·ol-nolhing opening salvo denies a heart honor. Therefore,
East should see that there is no future in
plugging away allhal SUill1 is 11lipossible
for lhe defenders lo dislodge 1he hear!
king . gel back ln. drive out lhe hear!
queen, and regain the lead to run the

New Dealer tor Montana Tnctors
starling aI 27 horse. 57 horse

The Parish Shop

K65
KQ 4

A falsecard can
be distracting

CIISIIICDIII
Remodeling

5-1

Opening lead: • 9

·BISSEll

·Complete

•

... 10 ll 7 -l

Vulnerable: Both

• New Homes

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING'
GENERAL

7,

Dealer: South

IOIEIT

• Garages

•

Tree Service

33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

"Middleport's only
SeH-Storap"

A J 2

· and WV

Janet Je(fers

992-l194
or992:66l5

¥

+KQ3

SxlO, IOxlO,
lilxiS, I Ox20,
!Ox30

lOxiOxlOxlO

9Bi 5 :J

t'

Phone
(740) 992,5232_

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

.

•
•

Storage

DillEY'S
SElF STORAGE

Q J 10 7

SouJh ·

High and Dry

All Your H ome

Improvement Needs

•

'

PH : !1112-41113

?40-591-4641

9 4!

740·667-0700 1-888-HUPPll4

and Smili11g
· f 'riendly Facts.

Ohio

A

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

Sumt! Grt!at Lo•• Prit·es ·

·~Garag es
·~ Utilities

E01sL

4

"' .1 6

. 30 Yrs. Exp. •Ins. owner: Ronnie Jones

*lrllbT

Chevrolet · Five
Passenger Coupe, WV
Sticker. New Tires. Good
. Paint "Sharp" (304)576· 1992· 29' Airstream EJccalla.
2288
Very good condition , twtn
beds. Ph_(740)&amp;&lt;5-4454.
_ _BuluJING
_____,I

+ A9 5 2

ENERGY EFFICIENT

•WRITESEl 6 SONS

1948

• lO 6
+KQ JI09

Residential • Commercial

HOWARVL

(304)773-5944

·Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
up~•ers

OII.OSG5

. Oil 83

JONES'

'1118 Wlllhl's BISI Roof'

ROOFING

~.o~------

~REE

Rooting, Inc.

992-7689-after 6:00

SuPfi.JfS

RE.SIDENTIAL

n Pole Bams

------

Huge selection.
!mmed!ate·Dehvery.
Firtancing
1-800-894-6997
(740)44s.ti57.9.

COMMERCIAL and

~

Brand new Vance! Hines 2
into f' Chrome Pipes. Fit
A'sk aOou t our AOHA · Fatboy 2000 and
Member Discounts on new (304)882-32 16
John Deere Equipment
Carmichael
Equipment
BoA-rs &amp; MaroRS

Rlll SALE

BUILDERS InC.

4x4

~

WolffT•nning Bectt

BISSELL

Auto &amp; Truck

FoR SALE ·

t 999 Bravada: leather, full
power, Alloy wheels, new
5~.299
080.
tires,

(740)446-2412.

North

'mo

(304_) 675-· ~
~-·
I• '

"--:----~

LIVESTOCK

Alder

• -Decks • Porches
2003 22ft. Sweetwater
• Ceramic Ti lc &amp;
OBO (740)645-2729.
Pontoon
boat.
40hp.
Hardwood Flooring
John "Deere Riding MOwers Johnson motor. Power-trim,"'
• Gara£CS
SPA FACTORY OVTLET
starting a1 $.1,399. Financing Hoosier trailer wlladder,
• Room Add. • Roofing
Top Quality. Warranty.
available subject to John spare tire/ bracket, AM/FM
• Kitt:hens • Baths
WhotEisale. Financing,
Deere Credit approval. Your · stereo/CO, many extras.
"'No Job](, SmaJl"
Delrvenes .
payments could be as low Asking $10.995. (740)446Racine. OH
210C8110nS
as $39 monttl with SO dOwn . 2016 or (740)339-()324.
740-247-2162 or
Milton. Flea Markel
Carmichael,
Equipment
740-416-3508
&amp; Ashland Kentucky
(740)446-2412.
97 Yamaha t 100 ' Wave
14 yr~. Experience
(606)922-7185
Runner Jet Ski, 3 Seater,
Wizard Aiding ~awn Mower Trailer, Life Vesls asking
Steel-Buildings
Oisplay- 14.5 HP. 42" cut (304)77353.000
call
even_tngs
bu•ldmgs needed in ·your 52&amp;1
-(7 4ol596-8038
area lffimediately. Become
part of a marketing and pro· Zero Tu rn Z-Tra.k Mowers Year 2000. Pontoon Boat. 24
mot1on campa1gn that can from John Deere available at foot, Sweetwater, 50 HP
fixed
rate
fro Mercury, Power Trim, -4
save thousands. and earn 4 .9%
moneyl
Limi tedltawailable Carmichael Equipment with Stro~e Engine. Bi g Foot ..,. All types of roofin g:
Now, 1-800·222· John Deere Credit approval. Ou tdn\le. , Lounge Seats,
Call
Shingle . Flal. Me!al 6335ext1558
( 740 ) 44 6-24 1 2 Pmacv
Room ,
Depth
New or Repair _,
www caroo com
Finder, Hour ' Meter. Good
Twtn G1r1s Clothing &amp; Snoes.
Radio, Has only 50 hours 0(1
Seamless Guuer .
Thru SIZe-2. Baby Bed,.
Boat. Garage kept in winter,
Downspoul - Siding
Stroller, 2 older High Chairs "F'~~tolr"--:--~--., Like New Paid over S18.00o
(304)458-1675
Auros
W ill sale for $ 13.000

apphcahons Applv at 501
Shawnee Tra•l .n Po1nt
Pleasant.,
Appllcations
accepted on Tuesdays.

~~

r-

Phillip

TKUlK\
mRSAI,E

-

ACROSS

Homegro wn Straw bem es. Baumer race car- Monte
740-3'78-6291. Monday thru Carlo: 60 model stereo, floor
Saturdity. a·oo-6·oo 65002 model. (740)6413-0012 .
State Route 124, Reedsville.
Red Honda CIVIC with sun·
I \K\ISII'I'IIIS
root. Good ConditiOI1, stan~\II\ 1 '·-10( "
dard . 133,000 miles. Pay
ofl-$5800.00

2 acres more or less . all uti I- Avail able
immediately
Beau tiful , clean . and spa(740)645-2729.
ities; paved rOad , 2 mil es
cio us 3 bedroom townfrom Chester. $ 16,000,
95 Dodge truck ,. 4x4, auto·
house . With stora,Qeiplay(304)463-7550
matfo.
$3,000 .
Call
room. Oownto;yn Gallipolis.
(740)388-0011
$6
10/month
.
No·
utili
ties
2-8 Acre Parcel paved road
6965.
New 5003. 5005. &amp; 5020
1- Front Tuppers Pla111S water pa1d. No pets. Cal! (740)446VANS
Senes John Doere Utility
:}--30X
100
Wooden
Truss
9961
.
Letar t
twp-Me1gs
Exc·
FOil
SALE
Tractors
@
0%
lixedl
36
Green Houses complete to
Hunting
$80000.00 per .. BEAUTIFUL
APART- be torn down •$2,000.00 lor months. Used Utility Tractors
Acre 740-24'7-24 75
MENTS
AT
BUDGET everything
3 Dog Frick @ 4.9% VariaOief 60 t 995 GMC Con. Van. low
Carmichael miles, tully ,loaded , 4inch,
8.5 ~res Green Townsh1p, · PRICES AT )ACKSON Saw Mill gas power Unit months
Cutback show Saddle &amp;
ArbuCkle Ad. over 1,OOO' of ESTATES, 52 Westwood $4.500 .00.
Woods-750 Equipment (740)446·2412
Equipment (3 04)675-8 t 75
RaccoOn Creek trontage. OnYe hom $344 to $442. Back
Hoe tor
tr!!Ctor New Holland 630 round
$29,000 . (740)645·02 86
WalK i o shop &amp; mov•es. Call $2,500.00. 1991 A-- Frame Dater Massie F~fguson
Full·s1zed luxury Van , seats
740·446-2568
Equal
pop-up camper $2000.00. Rake. 2 round feeders. 7 , mechanic owned. beauti·
85 acres about 6 miles Housing Qppor t uni~.
740-949:2115 leave num - · (740)441-4288.
$4,000. lui, 1993, 77,000 miles.
south of OjiK ' Hill. Cali CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- Oer, it, I'm not at home.
Must Sell!!
$7,50,0. (740)446·9961 .
ED. &amp; AFFORDABLE!
(740)682·7318 alter 6pm .
Antique Haywood Wakefield
40 MaroR&lt;:n:u'S/
For rent Trailer lot. Roush Townt'louse
apartments. table &amp; chairs 5600. Steele New Jolin Deere Round
Balers
@
1.
90,~
Fixed
Rate
Lan.e,
Cheshire,
Oh10. · and/or sma ll hOuses FOR Jeep
4 WHUJ.EilS
wheels ,
$100.
Financing for '48 Months or,
Phone_ (740)367·7774 alter RENT. Call (740.)441-1111 (740)446-6962. •
New Model 457 Standa rd · 02 Honda 400 EX. Exyellenl
5:00pm.
for aophcation &amp; inforrnation.
Attention :
Ma!Dieclomy Round Baler Only ' $13,250 con dition .
$2,800. Call
Looking tor , f?rivate Large For reni: 1 and 2 bedroom patien ts. Lett breast proSthe - cash. · Makes 4X 5 Bale. (740)256;P403 or (740)645apartments Sprmg ·Valley SIS. Sizes 0 &amp; DO.' Regular Carmichael
Equi'pmen t. 0448.
-· tot, 200x300 lor my Mobile
area .
Refere nces
and
price $230 each-now $25 (740)446-2412
Home . 14x65. all Electric.
depos1t
reqUired .
Ph. each . (740) 446-4680.
11 )HS old _good shape, or 1
2002 Yamaha 660 Raptor
Oliver 60 Aow•crop tractor. yellowl btack
(740)446-2957.
wlmatchmg
acre country settmg, place
JET
Good condition. $1.450 KBC helmet.
Excellent
fo( pets in Gallia Co , OH or Furmshed apt. 2nd Ave.
AERATION MOTORS
080. (740)367-0596.
Condition $3,700 (304)675Mason Co.. w/all hooKups. Upsta1rs . all utili!les paid.
will pay $150/month . Reply One bedroom. no pets. Repa1red , New &amp; Rebuilt In Spec1al Purchase- John 1015
StocK. Call Ron Evans, 1to PO Bo11 611 ", Ripley. WV Gallipohs. (740)446-9523.
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel 2004 Fat Boy, $18 ,090,
800-537-9528
25271
Rakes/ John Deere Disk (740)949-3004
Furnished upstairs, ;3 rooms
Mowers. Cal' for price.
RMLESIMl:
&amp; bath . Clean. rei. _&amp; d~ p . Utile Tikes Desk/Ch air.
Carmichael
EquiPment . 94 Harley Davidson Ultra
reqUired . N'O pe ts. (740)446- Truck, Fisher ·Pr1ce KiTchen , (740)446-24 t 2.
WMffil'&gt;
Classic. 10,000 miles, Olue,
1519.
Turtle S~nd Box (304)45.8·
excellent condition, $13,500,
. I Buy Homes- Local person
·buys homes. Confiden tial,
Quick cash. Jim . ·740-9926300. No calls after 9.
HI "\ I \I -...

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85·:
BRIDGE

Used Furmture Store, 130
Bulaville PiKe. Washers, dry-'
ers. ref rigerators. ranges ,
mattresses,
dressers,
1 bedroom house tor rent 1n couches , dmettes, recliners.
8USINt~'iS
Gallipolis a1r
grave monuments. much
ANU Bllii.I)IN( ;S
1,2 Oedroom apt in Point More
(740)446 -4782
P19a'sant for ~e n! . (740)446· Gallipolis, OH Hrs 11·3 ~ M­
Building lor Ll;lase Gallipolis 2200
S)
Ferry ' Area .
lde!ilt for
1 ~R Apt 1n $pring Valley.·
AestauranV Etc . (304)675·
Clean &amp; affordable Wi D ·
7538
hookups. $290 per month+ 1.· _ _ _ _ _ _ _..

r

.

www.myda1rysentinel.com

,
ll .n
GIXJI"'

Pioneer Farmstead , 4 bed - 1 &amp; 2 bedroom nowly reno'foam. reconstructed hewed vated
Apt s
for
rent
U)g House, modern facih· Downtown Oalllpol•s. R1Ver
ties ,
2
hewed
lo'g &amp; Park view. $360-$600/mo.
Outbuildings.
57
acre Some utint1es paid Now
Ch'ristmas
Tree
Farm. acceptv1g applications Call
25.000 more/less trees . 27 (740)709- 1690 (tqca l ca ll)
acres malure hardwood ,
tree machrnery, m1neratS, 1 and 2 bedroom apart county water 1/2 m11e paved ments, furn1shed and unfur~oad frontage. $265 .000 n1shed
secur1ty depos1t
(304)675-4138
reqLured. no pets, 740-99222 18
www.landandfarm .com

dep

Wednesday, June 8, 2005
ALLEY OOP

Wednesday, ~une 8, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.c9m

Page 84 • Th'e Daily Sentinel

..
.'

.

•-- -- --

-~

----

SCJIAM.UTS ANSWEIIS 6-7-H

· Tropic -.Scour- Vouch- K~~enly-· CLOTHE$ ·
One cutie to enother, 'A successful person has more
buttons on lheir phone lha.~ on lheir CLOTHES.'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�''

Page ~6 • The Daily SentiTiel

www. mydailysentinel.com

•

Wednesday, Jime 8, 2005

Nationi!J/ Football League

Br:owns give Verb~ pennission for trade, sign Spear~
BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

wi ll in~

to

tr a d~

for him .

v~rba - start~d all 16 ~am~'
la~t season. th e tm h B'i-o \\ n..,

lineman who didn't. mi'~ an~
CLEVELAND - With Ji,. ri111e .
gruntled starter Ros' Verba
After· Verha " ~nt public·
seeking a trade. the Cln &lt;'land with hi' disp leasure · that
Browns added another le ft Cleveland s~cmed unwilling
t ac kJ ~

on

TuesJ ~t y.

signing to give hi m m or~ mon~y . th~
Marcus B to w n ~
~ i1!ne d
fo rmer

11-year ve teran
Spears to a one-year cont ract.
Verba demanded a new
contract last week·. pro mpt iitg
the Brown s togive him pe(mtssiUn to talk with any tea m

Ariwna tac kle L.J. She lton.
·He's ex pc&lt;: t~ d to rcpla.:c
Verha on the d ub's revampeu
offe nsi,·e line

1hi ~

seaso n.

Vc rha says the . Browns
.

"

the next two seasons and has
already been paid a 5465.000
bonu,.
Ve rba has started I00
games sim:e be in ~ drafted in
the tirst round 1No. 30 overall) by Gree n .Bay in 1997 . ·
Wh ile he seeks a new team.
Verba. 31. has been excuse&lt;\
fro m ta king part in coach
Romeo Cre nne l's passi ng.
'
have ren~g.ed on a promi ~e ll) .:amp.
c i v~ him a raise aftc·r he
The 6' foot-4. 320-pound
reworked hi' deal in 2004. He Spear, . whn has plil\ eJ wit h
is due about S7. 2 mill ioll'for ChiCago . .Ka'"'" City and ·

Ho usto n. 2ives the Bro,vns
de pth and' ex perience · at a
position where they've had
trouble the past few years.
To make room on their ro,.
ter for Shelton and Spears.
the club reldsed .dde tt&gt;ive
backs James Boyd and Ja mall
Johnson.
Spear' played in all 16
¥ame,, in&lt;tking three statts
lor the. T,xans last season. He
was drafted l)y the Bears in
t h ~ se(ond round (No. 39
'?wntl l) in 1994.
·

-

Spears h ~s made 21 starts
and played in I~ games during his pro career. He started
16 games in 200 I for Kansas
City. helpiitg ru nning . back
Priest Hoi mes run tor a
league- leading 1.555 yards.
In addi tion to the ir new
tackles, the Browns signed ·
free . ailent guards Joe
Andru zzi and Cosey Coleman
duri ng the offseason. Center
Jeff Fai ne and right tackle
Ryan TU&lt;.:ker will be the only
starters back in 2005.

•·
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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NBA Finals

CHRts SHERIDAN

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Spurs-Pistons: A series.
to delight the purists .
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Members of two
families share kidneys
with each other, A2

Fun 'N Sun edition
.inside totbty's Sentinel ·

SPORTS

PUCO sets ~earing sched':Jle on IGCC ,plant proposal

• Pena rallies Reds past
Tampa Bay. See Page 81

held in Pomeroy, and the ge nJeff Rennie of AEP Ohio
eral public will be atlorded an said Wednesday the hearings
opportunity to comment on have been scheduled for 6:30
POMEROY -Three pub- the plan at all three of those. ··p.m. on Aug. L at the Hilliard
lie hearings ·have been sched- hearinJiS·. Meigs County Municipal building. Aug, 3 at
uled on the cost recovery plan CommisSIOners have urged Canton City Hall, and Aug. 4
American Electric Power · local residents to speak out in · at Meigs High School.
filed in March with the Public support of the plant. which
AEP. and several interUtilities Commi ssion of Ohio would employ over I 00 peo- venors, or interested parties
for a new power plant it hopes pie once it's operational and - including opponents of the
to build in Meigs County.
several hundred .during the plan, have filed testimony in
One of the hearings will be period o( construction. ·
the case, Rennie said. An evi-

Big Ben stands 6-foot -9. or
6-11 "'to the top of his hair on
ni ghts wh ~ n he blows out his
' frp. He\ just coming off a
secics in wh ich he had to
defend Shaquille o· Neal all
by himself hecau se he plays
for a coach who double teams
about as often as he makes
lifelong commitments.
Wallace was the NBA'S
defensive player of the year,
and now he'll be asked ·ro
stop a two-time MVP. in .

SAN ANTONIO _·· The
.
. b ·
NBA Ftna 1s wt 11 e more
about substance than style.
more about -matchups than
minutiae.
·Neither the Detroit Pi stOns
nor the San Antonio Spurs
are all that sexy on the surface, but both are a 'ig ht to
behold for basketball purists.
And if one l,lnk&lt; deep
~. .·nnu :!. h ,L HI I~u.:ur;, in a few Duncan . whos~ low -po st
·'· p~u~l subplot f . there might . offensive game is much more
.,
refined and multifaceted than
.
just be that hllle extra some- O' Neal's.
thing that draws in the mass"Duncan is a great player.
esOne team is the defending He"ll eventually be a Hall of
champion, The other was the Famer. You know, Shaq is
SHaq, man . That 's a tall task,"
reigning titlist a year ago.
Wallace said:
Then
there's . Richard
The only superstar in the
series, Tim Duncan, seems
dull but is quietly charismat- Hamilton. the Pistons· leadic.· The coaches, Detroit's ing s.:orer. Never has there ,
Larry Brown and San · been a faster player o n 'a !
Antonio's Gregg Popovich. slow-paced team, a guy who
are such good friends that sprints 2 to 3 miles when he
"Pop" was the best man at the feels like having a good off.
·
season workout. The man in
weddmg of "L.B." They the mask has scored at least
speak · on the phone ne!trly
every day.
20 points in all but one of the
OVP file photcM
18 · postseason
Both teams ha ve made Pi stons·
Meigs
senior
Renee
Bailey,
left.
was
named
theTVC
O~io's top offensive player, while Eastern senior Ryan Smith, right, won
defense· and team play their games. and he gets his points
Defensive Player of the Year in the Hocking division.
..
·
..
calling cards. Neither has a the old-fashioned way by
player who will make your coming off screens and
Brandy Brooks; Alexander's Springer is joined on first her coach Tim Sikorslt'i
.
knocking down mid - r~ nge
jaw .drop.
Ashley Hudnall and Jamie team by other Lancers Ryan joined White in takillg top
But fo r those who need a jump shots.
Miner; Andrea Waters and McCune
and
Brandon Hocking softball honors.
But Hamilton has a formi little va-1 num to ·get interestAshley Hamilton of Belpre; Barnhart; Eastern's Ken Also on the fitst team is
from PageBl
ed. at least there's Eva dable obstacle trying to stop .
Wellston
's Liz Abdella and Amsbary and Chris Myers; Trimble's Carri Woodgerd
Longoria, the attractive star him, too, in Bruce Bowen ,
Erin
Sturgill
; and Stevie Southern's Butch Marnhout; and Janelle Nicols; Casey
ol the television show the Spurs' defensive speciai· team.
Mitchell of Nelsonville- Trimble's Anthony Dixon Smith and Jen Armes of
"Desperate Housewives"' and ist who will try to stick to
On the second team were
and Matt Christman; and Eastern; Southern's ·Joanne
the current .name of Sail Hamilton like a sweatMeigs' Chet Wigal and York.
Miller's Jordan Doup and Pickens; Waterford's Ashley
On
second
team
is
Meigs'
Eddie Fife, Dustin Adams
Antonio point guard Tony drenched T•shirt.
.(ordan
Gottke.
Arnold and Angela Martin;
Parker. Her show is on ABC,
It 's one of many match ups
and Luke Nolan of Belpre Melia Whan, Sam Pierce
On
the
second
team
is
·
Terri
WoHe of Federal
and Alexander 's Tony and Joey Haning; Vinton Eastern's Terry Durst; Chaz Hocking
and the finals are on ABC. so that will make this series so
and . Miller's
County ' s Jeri Bentley ;
Castanzo.
we should see more than a lit- interesting from a tactical
Mohler,
Nick
Giffin
and
Malarie
Alter.
,
tie of her.
standpoint. Centers will be
·Bailey and Megan Garnes Keilee Guthrie of Alexander
On the. second ·team is
And then there are the guarding forw ards, forward s · are Meigs· tirst-team softball and Belpre's Nikki Epperly. Terry Holbert of Trimble;
Federal
Hocking
's
Tyler
Eastern
's Brittany Bissell,
representative s.
Vinton
cities, San Antonio and will be defending guards. and
On the Hocking side,
County's Kristin Collins, Smith and Offensive MVP Chadwell ; and Miller's Curt Southern's Brooke Kise[;
Auburn Hills, home to the the 'adjustments that will be
Kayla Murphy and Tiffany
who was Defensive MVP, Nick Springer of league Luning. ,.
Alamo and The Palace , made bi the two wise old
Alicia Andrews
was Wallace of Waterford; and
was also a first team selec- champion Federal Hocking
scenes of two of the most coaches will go a long -way
MVP
and trimble's Sandra Brooks. •
named
Defensive
tion
along
with
teammate
·
lead
the
all-league
baseball.
epic fights in American histo- toward determining which
ry.
team emerges on top.
You've
got
Detroit's
Oddsmakers installed San ·
Rasheed . Wallace . with his Antonio as a slight favorite to
foul mouth and his champi-· win the series, a factor that
ons)lip belt, and San the Pistons will undoubtedly
Antonio's Manu Ginobili sei7.e upon as the latest sign
with his South American flair that pe9ple still question their
and his Olympic gold medal. legitimacy.
There are backup point · "You know, we won the
. guards froni Slovenia and champiOnshtp i?st _year and
San Juan wizened veterans people sull dtdn t gtve us that
in the . f~r corners of each much 9f a chance in this
locker room, public. ,address series (aga!.nst . Miami),"
announcers wtth umque and. Billups satd . .· lthmk our bal distinct styles.
ance ts what mevttably hurt
See? It won't just be about them and beat them:·
X's and O' s.
Indeed .. the Pi stons have
"I think you ' re gQing to see five starters who play well
another
great
series,"· together, each ot whom can
Detroit's Chauncey Billups hurt an opponent m dtfterent
said after the Pistons defeated way s on any gtven mght.
the Miami Heat in Game 7 of Aside from Ben Wallace and
the Eastern Conference finals Hamilton, there's the lloor
to earn the right to face the leadership and _st~adiness of
well-rested Spurs. "It's going Btllups, t~e tnstde-outstde
to be a tough challenge. You game of Rasheed Wallace.
We'll deliver all the local happenings right to your home. Stop by our office ·
·know, I just can't wait, man, 1 and the long-armed menace
. and subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for 6 moriths for only $59.15 and receive
.
of ,small forward Tayshaun
can' t wait." ·
.
Game 1 is Thursday night. Prince.
a comic FREE umbrella*!
The Spurs are built along
and Game 2 is Sunday. The
If you are acurrent subscriber. you can rece ive a free Umbrella by extblding your subscription for I year for onl)' $) 15.84.
series then shifts northward the more traditional line s of
(*Pay mem 111ust be niade in person at the Dai'Jy Seminel , Ill Court St. , Pomeroy. Ohio in order to receive your Free comic umbrella.
. what constitutes ,a · champifor Games 3: .4 and 5.
.
.
Quantities are limited.
.
·
AII subplots aside, it shapes onship team, their fortunes
up as a fair match - maybe . inore often than not riding on
even the kind of serie s that the talents of Duncan rather
will last seven games, some- than the contributions of their
thing that hasn't happened in secondary scorers, Ginobili
the NBA Final s since 1994. and Parker.
"Your Hometown Newspaper "
San Antonio has been wait·
The Spurs proved in the
_
~ I Drop this coupon off in our o ffice at I II Court St. , Pomeroy. Ohio with your payment and receive a FREE c:o mic umbrell a.
I
ing around since fi ni shing off Western Conference final s
the Phoen ix Sun s , last against Phoenix that they can
Wedne sday ni ght. and the adapt to the style of .their
: 0 t have ." " ' heen a suh" rihcr in the past ~0 days Enclosed is my p ayment of $5~ 15 For 6 months oft he Dllilv Snuinel.
Spurs fin ally gut .to go opponent and still succeed.
thtO\lgh a practice T11esday but now they ' re about to go
I 0 I curtcntly !oJubscri bc to th t:: Daily 'Snuin d Em:losed.i s mYpayment of $ 11 5.84 for a l·year subscripliori.
I
kno.wing exactly who stands again st an opponent that
in the way of them winning play" defense with the same
Name ----------------------------~--------------------------~·
their third cham pionship 'in abandm1 as the Suns did on
·Addrc&gt;&lt;
seven years.
.
offense.
"It ' ll be a tremendous·chalThat team. Detroit. is a for------~------~------------------~.
midable obstacle.
lenge fo r us. They"re ,the
Pho ne
I
Start with Ben Wall ace. champs. and they 're the
D Visa .
Expiration Date ·
Card •
because. with the Pistons you champs for a ~easo n , so
7
D MasterCard
Expiration Date
.
Card #·- - . -~--.~
I
can really start with anyone. we've got our wo rk cut out
They are a team built around fo r us. that' s for . sure," .
the concept of being a tea m. Popovich said.

TVC

r-----------------------------,
:
The Daily Sentinel ·
· :
1

1

· BY BRIAN

J. REEO

Funding cuts

'

.

I

RavenswOod Bridge, would
be jointly
owned
by
Columbus· Southern Power
and Ohio,' Powe~ Co.
Under AEP's proposal, the
first phase of cost recovery
would begin next year, when .
AEP would recover approximately $18 million for, site '
engineering with a monthly

Please see PUCO, AS

• , L" ,

·L ~aplD

proposed for
Meigs recycling ·
program

,~

I

IZQTu$.

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- Funding for
0hio's litter prevention and
.recycling programs are on the
chopping black in Gov.' Bob
Taft's proposed budget for
fiscal year 2006-07, possibly
leaving Meigs County, with
diminished Jitter prevSJ!tion
: Page A5
and recycling services ..t'
.
·· • Christine Sue Cline, 47
Ohio
Division ;!\;, of
Recycling
and ';l-itter
PreYention
Awar,eness
Manager Kelly Armfelt said
that as part of Taft's o.¥Srhaul
of the tax system, the;it'orporate franchise tax IY:!JI be
: • Workers' comp agency
eliminated. This speCific tax
reviewing entire investment annually generated. t~ntire
portfolio. See Page A2
$10 million budget ':10r the .
Ohio Division of Recycling
• Meigs DAR marks
.and Litter Prevention.
graves. · See Page A3
That $10 million was then
• Victory Baptist honors
filtered down to smaller communities in the form of grants
mothers at banquet.
for recycling and litter preSee Page A3
vention programs, like the

0BTIUARIFS '

Peter Rushton of P. T. Reptiles kicked off the
· District Public Library's ·children's summer reading
on Wednesday, with a program on reptiles. Over 75
and almost as many adults attended the progrl!!m,_ whiCh ,
allowed "hands-on• l!ncounters with l'l!Ptlles, lf!Ciudtna, tills
young atllgator, "M &amp; M, • and other exotic-be~sts,
·
· ~ pl~ns , weei\1~ programs as part of . l~s.
~Dragons, Dreams and Daring Deeds:· NeXt
LU(;ki:lydpo will present a program wlth'-JIIGitnt
trickS . a~ '2 p.m. at the Pomeroy Llbrary.'' 9ther
inqltide 'Safari Max and Darwin the Dragon, a pullp&amp;lt$~,:on
June 22, and Comic Tom Sparough on June
Each P,P.
gram Is preceded by a story hour, and story hours ilre ·~ l
se~ted !It all of the library's branches, as welt, each wM!&lt;; '·

INSIDE

• Mason on tr;ack for
new water system.
See Page A6
• Disabled shooting
sports opportunity.
See Page A6

Please see Funcllns. AS

Union members get paychecks at Global Industrial Products
Bv DtANE PonORFF
DPOTTORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Steelwarkers union members
who work at Global Industrial
·Products received their paychecks Wednesday from the
company, accurding to a .
union official.
Randy Moore, Unit~d
Steelworkers District 8 r~-

WEATHER

sentative. ~aid the company is
within its obligations to the
union in distributing the paychecks.
"All agreements with the
union were upheld," he said.
Last Friday, employees did
not receive their paychecks and
in the past some of them had
bounced for insufficient funds.
Had · the company not distributed the checks, union offi-

.
, .
Bmgq,; w mner
.

.....
...

cials were ready to take action · don 't think that Dr. (Boris)
by turning over complaints to Bannai wants that."
the. West Virginia Department
He went on to say that
of Labor, Wage . and Hour. things are different at the New
Division, Moore said.
Haven plant.
Should
these
checks
Since the company has had
bounce, then the union will some outstanding debts and
complain to the Wage and have had problems taking
·
care of them; he -also said.
Hour Division. he said.
"If they bounce, then the
"Right now the employees
company will face a multitude
of problems," Moore said. "I Please- Paychecks. AS

Long Bottom student accepted
for International Summit
Bv

CKARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

INDEX
. - • 2 SECrJONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

ClassifiedS

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editori&amp;ls

A3
A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

B6
~Section

Sports

A6

Weather

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publlsblna Cu.

'

LONG BOTTOM- Brady
Bissell, a student" at Eastern
Elementary · School, will be
traveling to Europe in the fall
to join in a People to People
International Summit in
England and France.
The son of Todd and Diana
Bissell of Long Bottom will
join a select group of students
representing their schools, communities, and country, as a
Pe~le to People student leader.
Btssell. previously completed a People to Peo{lle leader.ship program, earnmg acceptance into the summit as an
Tim M-y/photo honored member of the proCirculation manager Paul Barker presents a check for $500 to gram alumni . To participate in
Jane Zirkle of New Haven, who is the winner of the Ohio Valley the leadership pro~ram. students must be n.ommated and
Publis~ing Company's bingo readership promotion.

i

.

dentiary hearing on the proposed plant and cost recovery
plan will begin August 8 at
the
PUCO . offices in
Columbus. At that time. AEP
.and. interVenors will present
their witnesses and evidence
in the case, and witnesses will
be cross examined.
The plant, which ·AE.P
hopes to build on I .200 acres
of land it ·owns near the

BREEO@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

I

11!. HMC

accepted
based
on
scholastic
merit, civic
involvement
and leadership
potential.
People to
People ' s
Brady Bissell International
Summit brings tl)gether outstanding student leaders from
across the United States and
the world to focus on leadership and international relations. Whether they are meeting with .a. member of the
British Parliament or eilploring the role of the European
Union, students will develop
the skills that will help them as·
the leaderS of tomorrow, while

!:.it:.
·tv!

- ..

Apa~tment

dwellers
escape blaze
BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Twelve
people were displaced but
uninjured after fire destro~ed
a downtown apartment budding and damaged an adjacent
home early Wednesday.
An investigator wtth the
state fire marshal's office is
scheduled to arrive . today to
investigate the " blaze that
apparently started in the attic·
of the two-story building at
607 Second Ave., near the
'intersection with Cedar Street.
The fire totaled the apart·
ment building and caused an
estimated $50,000 to $60,!XXl
in damage to the home at 609
Second Ave., said Lt. Bob
Poling of the Gallipolis
Volunteer Fire Departmenl,
who was in charge of the scene .
Gallia
County · 9-1-1
received the first call about
·the fire from Gallipolis police
Patrolman Greg Frazter at
I :34 a.m. It took 65 firefighters from seven deparunents
about 45 minutes to bring the
fire under control, Poling said.
Firefighters from the Point
Pleasant,
Middleport,

Ple•se see Bissell. AS

Ple•se -

...ze. AS

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··Hcalthcarc in Your .
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www.holzer.org

.. ~-·-'-'..:.·-----

,

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