<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5082" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5082?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T19:28:32+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15010">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b532124fdb36a494309dfff18e868cf3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>010a234e694ae5fb1fa7458e0748c179</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="17349">
                  <text>''

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
("1.:\TS • \ oJ.

.'j~ .

:\o.

NBA Finals

CHRts SHERIDAN

llfl ' I{S)),\\. ,Jl ' :'\1.

:! O ; \

&lt;). :!00 .)

,

'"'" ·•nsd .oi h"·nti &lt;u I,""' .

'

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

ne

&lt;

:-ill

Bv

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

f;' I pmt •tm
:t !im!IP will ....
oi:OOpmCitilw lto1C

-.. 12 ,_,
.
(10
FI9J¥:i&gt;~ ~ .
PM r ,. we•••fiM•• - .._ 13, 1.a, nd 1.s
9:00 Nil • 11:00Noon • HMC F~ 500 ltGom
,.,_~ 11 N11olltOMU llkGI'co• 111 &lt;W owJ "-o jfll&lt;iiOCt.,t!M'- )OUt~ iO -.d
""'-FafE
...

e.

---'-----------------------...,.----------------------1

f1llo l'lllf SJOII 1 fTOIIP t...,..._aJity /lwArl~Yii. ~ antlliolr.r Mt l JGtnfor.
I; i h J-l-' • S:Xli'M · 8:00PM • 1-K Eduatian &amp; Conl.nnc. Cen1lr Aoom A&amp; ·
.... dla.-J..t ilt:bdo.. fllll-..l-.... • .. ta.p, ""' t•loo &lt;OIIItlocb/paln ...........
.fw-ltifc:wmclot• «lll .
dMIMi ~at{1• ..WI'.Il«I . . .16-51St

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

'

'I
- ··· ~--

- ·- ¥

~

~-

· - . ....--------'-:r ---=----- ..• -

MEDICAL CENTER

··Hcalthcarc in Your .
Olvn Bad~yard'~
www.holzer.org

.. ~-·-'-'..:.·-----

,

�·,

PageA2 .

OHIO

The· Daily .Sentinel

I.

lawmakers not open
to major ehanges

POMEROY - The £raves
· of 1\lembers Eleanor Rabton
Smith iu1d Abbie Stral!on
were nwrked in ceremonies
by
RelUrn
conducted
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
Daughters of the American
Revolution before Memorial
Day.
. I
Members gathered at the
sites to place the official DAR
. markers on their graves. The
marker features a replica of
the DAR insignia in the form
. of a spinning wheel with 13
spokes and a field of dark
blue ename l with the rim
bearing the name "Daughters
of the American Revolution.
On the ,outer edge df the
wheel. opposite the ends of
the spokes are 13 small stars.
At the memorial grave site
· of Abbie Esther Warner
Strallon ..,. Marv Rose read a
- 'eulogy noting- her service to
· the chapter and her communi-

cally change spending," said
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
· David Ellis. policy director
for the Center for Community
COLUMBUS - Before Solutions in Cleveland.
lawmakers know! how much
The state collected $613
extra· money. if any. they'll · million more than expected
have to work with in the final in the tirst II months of the
days of crafting the next two- current ·budget year, and Ellis
year budget, groups who've said he was confident most of
been fighting for more funds that would carry over into the
throughout the process have next budget.
ideas how to spend it. ·
· Rep. Chuck Calvert, a
House and Senate leaders Medi11a Republican and head
say that while they're sympa- of the ·House Finance
thetic to the concerns. the Committee. said he's heard
joint committee working' out similar numbers but isn't cermore than 500 ·differences tain if they were accurate.
between the two . versions of · House Speaxer Jon ,Husted
the budget isn't open to major said he wants to use any surnew proposals. Besides, lead- plus for more tax .cuts.
ers have their own plans .for
"If there' s extra money we
what to do wjth any surplus.
should· give it back to the citThe budget staffs of the izens of Ohio to generate
governor's
office
and economic growth in the state
Legislature were to update and provide them a better
revenue estimates for the $5 I . quality of life," the Daytonbillion spending plan on area Republican .said. ·
Thursday. Lawmakers could
Senate President
Bill
have more money to work Harris, of Ashland, disagrees
with because of higher than . on tax cuts.
expected tax collections this . "To maintain tiscal responyear, which· might lead ro sibility as we implement a
higher estimates for collec• new tax code, as we impletions the next two years. .
ment Medicaid reform, I'd
'That could be reduced by feel much more comfortable ·· ·
other factors such as property having those dollars- whattax collections that affect ever it is - in the rainy day
school revenue and the number fund," Hams said.
of new people expected to
The four Republicans and
enroll in Medtcaid. If there is a two Democrats who will make
surplus, leading lawmakers say the final changes to the budget
they want to replenish the .before sending it back to the
state's depleted nriny day fund. Legislature will not hear ·pubA coaluion of agencies for lie testimony. Advocates for
· child care. food banks and various groups wanting more
senior · citizens proposed money, including schools,
itl4S
million libraries and cities, must lobby
spending
Wednesday for expanding a individual lawmakers.
program ,to keep people out
The social service advoof nursing homes and cates called for $30 million to
increase health and dental expand the program that
care for the poorest Ohioans. helps_seniors get home health
"We are talking about poor care, saying otherwise a wait
working families we made a list of 3,000 people could
compact with," said Lisa develop over two years and
Hamler-Fugitt,
executive .· the state could end up spenddirector of the. . Ohio ing $90 million more on
Association of Second nursing homes. In Medicaid,
Harvest Foodbanks. "We told they want to restore coverage
them, get off welfare and for adult dental care and
we.' !I provide services." ·
medical care for more workthe advocates said · they ing parents. .
understand that lawmakers
A separate proposal calls for
don't want new spending, so using $42 million in surplus
their package could be paid federal welfare money to
for mainly with savings else- increase payments to child care
where in the budget and any centers that take subsidized
surplus - with money left clients at less than market rates
over for tl)e rainy day fund.
and cap what the families pay
The fund, meant for emer- at 10 percent of income.
gency spending .. stands at
The largest request is $60 ·
$181 million, down from million _to restore medical
$1.1 billion in July 2001. It and prescription benefits for
was slowly emptied to help about
15,000
di'sabled
fill several budget deficits.
Ohioans who earn less than
"We're not going to drasti- $115 a month.
BY CARRIE SPENCER

.'

AP Photo

In a photo released by University Hospitals Paula Lipinski. bottom left. Claudia Lillibridge, bottom right, Celia Lipinski, top left , and Doug Lillibridge are shown in Cleveland Wednesday. In
simultaneous operations Tuesday. Doug Lillibridge reGeived a kidney from Cella Lipinski, 46, of
Racine, Wis. Lillibridge's wife, 36-year-old Claudia, donated a kidney to Lipinski's sister, Paula
Lipinski, who has acute kidney failure and had been on dialysis for nearly two years.
\

Less than 24 hours after is! My husband will be feel- computer program that
the operations. all four ing better and off dialysis assigns points for blood and
patients were in gllod cot1di- and so will Paula, his tissue type; patient siie, age
tion and ·'doing wonderful- donor's sister."
and health; and other facly," . said· Alison Bibb, a
Aeder was joined in the tors that go into a match.
University Hospitals spokes- operation rooms . by Drs. · The operations are done
woman.
James Schulak. Christopher simultaneously so the kidIn a statement released by Siegel and Juan Sanabria, all neys spend less time outthe
hospital ,
Claudia fa&lt;.:ulty members at Case side of a body.
.
Lillibridge said the fami'lies Western Reserve University's
Michigan and Indiana will
were relieved that the paired medical school.
join the Ohio consortium
The'
Ohio
Health later this month. ·
donor program helped them.
"We are paired up with Department am10unced the
Similar registries operate in
people in the same dire situ- Paired Donation Kidney metropolitan Washington ,.
ation." she said . "What a Consortium
in
2003. D.C .. and among six New
life-saving gift exchange this Participating hospitals use a England states.

Workers' comp agency reviewing entire investment portfolio

Samuel's office Wednesday. works for MDL, though not
The state Inspector General
Taft was told of a $10 mil- as an investor.
is investigating , any connecAP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
lion to $20 million loss last
"Because of the fact my tions between the bureau's
fall but didn't learn of. the daughter works for a firm that
COLUMBUS - Gov. Bob $215 million shortfall until has lost a tremendous amount investment' in MDL and
Forbes' daughter, Mildred
Taft's oftice 'was informed of Monday, Rickel said.
of money, that puts me in a Forbes, . a human resources
Taft said in a stateme nt very uncomforlable posi a massive investment loss in
an October e-mail from the Wednesday he was outraged tion," said George Forbes. a manager with the company,
Jackson said. ·
head of Olrio's insurance and disappointed by news of
fund for injured workers, but the investment losses. but he Cleveland lawyer and one of
George Forbes said he did
the news was. apparently did not directly address the five members of the Ohio not vote on MDL contracts to
Compensation
never passed on to Taft.
failure of Conrad llr Samuel Workers·
Oversight
Commission.
"I am avoid · any appearance of
James Conrad, . former · to tell him about the size of
hesitant to remain on this impropriety.
·
administrator of the Ohio those losses.
Messages seeking comment
Bureau
of
Workers'
It "has become increasingly board knowing· this money
been
lost."
has
were left with the company.
Compensation, told Taffs top apparent that the Bureau has
business aide on. Oct. 26 of a not been able to handle its
$225 million loss in a fund responsibility over its very
managed by MDL Capital large investment portfolio,"
Management of Pittsburgh. Taft said.
according to the . e-mail tirst
Taft said he's hiring a fullreported Wednesday by The time ·staffer to keep him
Columbus _Dispatch..
. inf&lt;,Jrmed on developments at
The total loss was about the bureau and the work of a
$215 million after MDL team he appointed to review
· recovered some of the bureau investment practices.
investment.
Also Wednesday. top ·law"In sum, the entire value of makers announced their own
MOL's portfolio is · down ,review of the bureau.
approxi111ately $225 million
''In light of recent developon a total investment of $350 ments. it is clear that a commillion,'' Conrad wrote to prehensive review of the poliJames Samuel, Taft's execu- cies and procedures of the
tive assistant for bu'siness and Bureau
of
Workers'
Compensation is needed,"
industry.
In the same e-mail , Conrad said House Speaker Jon
said the bureau refused Husted,
a
Dayton-area
MOL's request for $25 mil- Republican, · in a joint
lion to try to move the fund an nouncement with Senate
into the black, despite t~e President Bill Harris.
company's assertion that it
.The committee. made up of
might go under without the .two Republicans and one
We'll deliver all the local happe·n ings right to your home. Stop by our office
Democrat' from .each chamadditional money.
Samuel directed Conrad's ber. will review past investand subsc~be to· the Daily Sentinel for 6 months for pnly $59.15 and receive
media relations office . for ment practices and recoma comic FREE umbrella*! ·
several years before goirig to mend changes to state law.
. · work for Taft. Samuel recogRepublican · lawmakers
If you are a curtenlsubscriber, you can receive a free ulllbrella by e1tmding your 11UbsaiptioD for I year fQt' only Slt~ . 84 .
nized the e-mail when Taft's have . already made some
!*Payment muSI be made in penon al the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Porileroy, Obio iD Older 10 m:eive your Free comic umbrella
office learned of it Tuesday changes to the bureau's ·
·
'
Quantities are limited.
but had not remembered it i.nvestment practices. Over
previously,
said
Taft the objections of Democrats.
spokesman Mark Rickel.
they tightened investment
"Whi le the governor's dis- · con.trols as part of the state's
·
appointed that Jim did not S5! billion budget.
"Your Hometown Newspaper" .
·
share this infotmation with
Democrats · wanted such
I · Drop this coupon off in our office al It I·Court Si.. Pomeroy. ~o with your payment and receive a FREE comic umbrella
I
him or his chief of staff. he · proposals in a separate bill
is also very disappointed dealing only with workers'
that Jim Conrad didn't call comJ)ensation issues .
II 0. I ,have. not been lt su~ber
11.im personally to inform
The bureau is reviewing its
. in the paSI 30 days. Enclosed os my payment of SS9
· .. ! S fOI' i. months
. of the Doily ~n;;n.l.
II
him of a· loss in excess of entire $14.5 billion invest·
ment portfolio to identify aod
I 0 ! .currently sub.cnbe to the Daj/y Stntintl . Enclosed is my payment of SIIS.84 fQt' a !-year subscription.
$200 million."
Conrad resigned two weeks fi)( any problem s in light of
ago after leap~ing that SIO the S215 rriillion loss. bureau
N~------'------------~--------~------~-------------1
million to S12 million was spokesman Jeremy. Jackson
Address -------~----------:.--------------1
missing from a separate fund &lt;;aid Wedne&lt;;day.
~------~------------------~-----1
invested in rare coins.
Al'o Wedne&gt;day. a member
Phone
Conrad told the Di o;patch he of the commi&gt;Sion that overcouldn't explain why Taft ,ee' the v,orker&gt;. compen'&gt;a0 Yisa.
·Expiration Date
Card • · - - - - -- wasn't told. saying, "I'm just tion bureau said he will likely .
0 MasterCard
Expiration Date
.
Card"•
'
tel·l·ing you what we did ." re,ign his po,ition. in part to
T,here was no an~wer at protect hi s daughter. who

r----~-------~----------------,

1.

The Daily Sentinel

·

·. . . · :

I
I

MIDDLEPORT - Molly
Johnson, 92. was named
inother of the year at the
recent
Victory · Baptist
Church mother-daughter held
at the church.
"The Hand of a Mother"
was the theme of the obser- ·
vance. Johnson was crowned
by Linda Keesee, who spoke
along with Johnson's niece.
, Linda Bates. about the hon, oree and the influence she
has been in their lives and to
· the church.
As part -of the banquet, a
· , meal was served and a pro. gram was presented. Phyllis
Hudnall and Suzie Adkins
. gave welcomes, and Hudnall.
had the blessing before the
dinner. Adkins and Helen '
'Jane Brown presented a skit,
"Don't
Stand · ln
My
· Canoe."Brow n
played
''Thank You Lord" on the
, piano. Keesee and Tammy
. Ball read poems, and Lisa
. Swanson gave devotions.
Ruth Boyer. Bessie Fisher.
Lois Hawl ey and Leona
Girolami were given hanging
basket.s.
The color scheme. of lilac
and pink was carried out in
the .table decoratoins and centerpieces made . by Donna
Neece. While the women prepared the meal , the men of the
church served the dinnet.
Each of those attending
received a gift and Keesee
thanked everyone for coming
before giving the closing
prayer.
At the banquet were Sueann
Runnion , · Suzie Adkins,
Connie Kohl·, Phyllis Hudnall,

1:1ke an old athletic· sOCh.
1&lt;rap it around the dog\ middle and pin it at the 1o,p. 1 The.
hell) band. although nol a
perk&lt;:! solu tion lor the
bel1a1·ior. can at ka,t minimile ·damage to property -

Dear
Abby

in. w..lll iuuu

lo lcs~cning

the

chances of a family feud o1·er
the do~. - DESS IN DLNC Af'dt LLE. TEXAS
DE;&gt;;R DESS :. "Doggie
beer. Is Liebc·hen neutered·.• Depend, ... , llo v~ it'
.
If riot. it would explain a 101 .
DEAR ABBY: I have the
While male dogs do mark perfect ;olution to protect
their ·territorv ·Somelimc.s lhat WO~iflan\ furniture . The
after being neutered. it\ far nLXI•Iimc her mother-in-law
more cotnmon for' them 10 do . come; over.,, she should be
so · when they're intacl. prepareu with baby Pampers
Although '·Saturated" and her . and duct lapc. The size of the
mother-in-law may not know . Pampers depends on the &gt;ize
it. neutering can help. Their of the dog . Wrap the Pampers
veterinarian can instruct the around the dog JUSI·in front of
in-laws about other medical his hind legs. and fasten over
advantages to neutering. such . the back with duct tape. If the
as a reduced risk of prostate mother-in-law doesn't like il.
cancer and eliminating the she should be told h.er daughrisk of testicular cancer. ter-in-law can't afford to
SPAY :EM AND TRAIN ha1·c ~er furniture profession' EM IN LA.
ally cleaned . every · time
DEAR
LOUISIANA : ·. Liebchen cumes 10 her home.
Good point. Thank you for Try it. It worked for me,
the re'minder about pet neu- · Good luck' - CHRIST INA
tering. Not only does it curb . IN GREAT FALLS. MONT.
behavior problems. as you · DEAR
CHRISTINA:
"pointed out, but it also has Thank ,you for the suggeshealth benetits.
· lion. It' s worth a try, and if it
. DEAR ABBY: A solution works. it'.ll keep Liebe hen
that might cause less qf an and his owners out ·Of the
uproar with .the in-law s doghouse.
would be ·to offer "Doggy
[)~ar Abby is written by
Depends.'' Male . dbgs that Abigail Van Bu.ren, also
insist on marking their terri- known as Jeanne Phillips,
tory can wear a belly · band and was foumjed by her
with appropriate material mother, Pauline Phillips.
tucked inside. They life easy Write
Dear Abby
at
to make, and also available www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
for purchase in most doggy Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
boutiques. (Some folks just 90069.
·

Peoples Bancorp Inc.'s Robert E. Evans retires as CEO
MARIETTA - Peoples both Peoples Bancorp . and ·'leadership of our companies." Evans ·said. "I plan to
Bancorp Inc . announced that, .Peoples Bank .
effective May 3!, Roben E. " As pan of a succession plan contin ue
with
People~
Evans retired as ·Chief announced in February. Mark Bancorp as Chairman of the
· Executive Ofticer' of Peoples F. Bradley has been named Board. bu~e have more time
Bancorp Inc. and its banking · PreSident and CEO of both for. attention to my family t
subsidiary Peoples Bank , Peoples Bancorp and Peoples friends and health."
National Association. Evans Bank effective May 31 .
Evans had previously
will continue as Chairman of
"I think .the time is right for planned to retire as CEO on
the Board and · a Director of Mark to assume the CEO June 30.

SubmHtod plloto

L.inda Keesee crowns Molly Johnson mother of the year at the
Victory Baptist Church 'mother-daughter banquet.
Helen Jane Brown, Linda
Keesee, Brandi , Jerrika.
Marrisa Keesee. Ruth Ann
Boyer, Ruth Farmer,, .Carrie
and Lucinda Schwartz. Kristi
and Grace Riffle. Carolyn
Watson. Lynn and Angela
Faith Keesee. Bonnie Young,
Lois Hawley. Mary and Haley
Musser, Megan and Lisa
Swanson. Verenia Barkman.

Avis and Tammy McClellan,
Shirley Beegle, l ammy Ball,
Della Cl!ailastri. Lynn Parker.
Corinn Caner, Myrtle Quillen.
Bessie Fisher. Leona Girolmi.
Jennifer and Julie Daniels,,
, Debbie Kuhn. Linda Bates
and Molly Johnson. .
Each of the women was
pr~sented a long stemmed
rose.

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
Very Special With A Father's Day
Thank You Tribute ...
TQ Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On Friday, June 17th!
I X5&amp; ...... r.Pidure·

. $13.00

: Community Calendar.·
•
:
.:
:

I

l

::

Clubs and

organizations .
I

.

r Thursday, June 9
CHESTER- Shade River

·

IX3GrNIIIJUI .

QOly$10.00
. .

Church events

'

l

Bluegrass
Beacons
of
Columbus 10 present gospel
concert June II at 7 p.m. More
information call 742-2271.
Friday, June 10
LONG
BOTTOM
Praise and worship services
will be held at 7 p,m. Friday
and Saturday. and 6:30 p.m.
on
Sunday at the Mt. Olive '
Thursday, June 9
.
VINTON - Revival ser- · Church, Long Bottom.
LONG .BOTTOM - The
vices at Fairplay Chapel off
State Route 325, . 7 p.m. King Family of Lancaster
through June 10. Rev. Harry will be in concen at 7 p.m. at
David Russell preaching. the Faith Full Gospel Church.

at noon at Ginos in Mason.
Saturday, June 11
CHESTER - Track and
Thesday, June 14
SYRACUSE -A publi' baseball'cookout will be held
meeting to discuss .the fate of. . at 6 p.m at Eastern High
the London Pool will be held School. Take vegetable.
dessert and lawn chair.
::a;ig~~· at the ·~yr~-cuse fire

Public meetings

Lodge 453 will meet at 7:30
p.m. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS
: VFW 9053 will meet at 7
p.m. at the Tuppers· Plains
_ hall. There will be .a meal at
: 6:30p.m. "
-Friday, June 10
· • POMEROY - The annual
·heritage dinner will be held
at · the Meigs County
Museum
at
7
p.m.
Reservations are to be made
by calling 992;3810.
MIDDLEPORT - . The
Widows' Fellowship will meet

·Keeping .
. Meigs

, .-...

~

Happy
Father's Day

Happy
.Father's Day

......................

!0
~......:J: •

t

~~

WEST

FOUNDATION

1vour Father's
(Your Father's
Name)
Name)

• . .
-~~~ J 0 *'

• ~· ' ~· •

····-· .''•.:.J.. BINGO I .Jd••
! Eve;;
Nigh;• I
,;;~ ~0./e

......

,-~k--

~~.·

~

-I

J

*'

~ ·.

D~'$-

~

• ..,.
... . ~.

~~~,.;,;,•

~

Friday &amp; Saturday

;

i

( ** • Now Air Conditioning in both

smoking &amp; non smoking rooms)

....rRIDAY NIGHT...

Block of Nine Progle!Hive Pay£ ~1750
(ln~rorr.)

Hot.•'daekpot ~265 plu£ TakA-In ·at doot!
SATURDAY NIGI-H

Love

:

Love

(Your Name)

i

(Your Name)

___________ __ _

·

-;

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

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

Father's Nilme_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~-----------

YourN~s) ------------------------------------------

Be onae of the 1st 60 players for a FREE

chance at winning DIAMONDS from
·
··. Goldman's Jewelry

A~es•------~-----------------------------------

informed

$2000 Block of Nine Propessive Ctf.not.llit ~
S1000 Coverall

City/S1atet'Zlp
Phone• - - - - - - - - - Send Coupon and Payment to: The Daily Sentinel " Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

The Daily Sentinel

DOOIIS OP£N Ill 4:00 PM
E!!!y Birds 5:15pm Rep&amp;. s.u·on 6:30,.

County
~today

992-2155

-------------------------~--~
'

ty. A graduate of Pomeroy
High Sdwol and Ohio
University. she taught school
for 32 years in the Defiance
City Schools before returning
to Meig&gt; County and substiluting in schools here . Her
' passion was to cha llenge the
more gifted students. espcciall y in m;nh. She was also a
private lesson piano tea&lt;.:her,
and volwue~red many hours
in hospitals in Defiance ,
Paulding and .Pomeroy.
Joining the local chapter in
1991 : she was serving as
regent when she died. .
Strallon was described as a
mem'ber eommined to the
DAR and its ·objectives of
fostering patriotism and love
of country.· ·Regent Patricia
Holter and chaplain Peggy
Moore C&lt;,milucted .the memorial service and tribute.
Movetlto the grave site of
Eleanor Ralston Smith. Anna

DEAR ABBY: I just tinished
the leiter from
Cleland read a eulogy honor"Saturated
in Atlanta," whose
in2 the longtime member who
in-laws
allow
their dog.
,.;; acti,-e i11 the Ellen ·'Liebchen" (who.
believe
Harden Woolworth Chapter in me. is · NOT "darling.''
New York City before moving . according to his description).
hack to Meigs County. ln. the to mark his trrritory in her
local t.hapler she &gt;ervcd in house, causing damage in
many
offices
including several places. Not only is
this disgraceful. as you poimre~c nt. 199.1- 1995.
ed
out. but it 's also illegal.
Tlie
descendent
M
Rev()lutionat'¥ War Patriot The courts, call it ·'failure 10
your
dog." ·
John G1'a111. ·Wus a true daugh- control
·:saturated''
may
want
to
conter of an A!llerican patriot and ·
sider
legal
aqiqn.
NEW
commint!d to 'upporting. the
Constitution of the United HAMPSHIRE READER
DEAR READER: Hold
State,.
the
DAR. the your horses. Their familial
Episcopal Church and Qod. relationship is supposed Ia
She was a grad.uate of last. one would hope. long
Pomeroy High School and after Liebchen has trolled off
Ohio University. '
to doggie heaven . I would
Holler
conducted
the advise legal action on ly if
. memorial service. placed the there were no other :Jiternamarker on the grade·. and a tive. Read on:
DEAR A~BY: I don't get .
&lt;:antainer of 'tlowers. A rrionth
it.
Did the in-laws allow their
the DAR members atwl
son
to "wet" wherever he
friends attending was her sis:
wanted when he was' growing
ter. Carolyn Smith.
up? I doubt it. Then why
should their dog be any different? I suggest that
"S.aturated'' make reserva'tions at a dog- friendly hotel
for her husband' s parents and
let him pay for it. It may be
the wake-up call 'they all
need. - MOTHER-IN-LAW
IN HOUSTON
DEAR
MOTHER-IN'·LAW: That might be a. workable solution. However, some
other readers offere'd ideas
that are more pet-friendly.
DEAR ABBY: As a dog
trainer and former veterinary
assistant, my first question to
"Saturated" would have

Victory Baptist honors mothers at banquet

1

I

•

Thursda)•, June 9, 2005
.,

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

:. .

Pag·e A3

YTHE BEND
Meigs·DAR marks graves·Creative solutions offer.ed for problem of leaky pet

, Thursday, June 9, 2005

BY CONNIE MABIN

BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

'

The D,aily Sentinel ·

•'

Members of two families ·share kidneys With ea€h other· As ·budget·wraps .up,
CLEVELAND Two
families, once strangers ~00
miles apan. are now forever
bonded by blood, v ssue and
four surgeons' knives.
In transplants involving
four people, an Ohio. man
suffering from diabetes-rei:lled ·organ faihke re&lt;.:eiwd a
· kidney from a . healthy
Wisconsin woman whose
sick sister. in. turn, received a
kidney from the Ohio ma11's
healthy wife.
It was the fourth pair of
transplants iri the nation's
first state-sponsored program
that llfl'anges kidney swaps
fqr patiem-dorior pairs 1~ ho
don't match eac h other but tit
with another pair..
.
·A team of surgeons led by
Dr. M&lt;uk Aeder performed .
the operations Tu esday at
University Hospitals of
Cleveland. one of nine hospitals that are pan of the program many organ donation
advocates say should be
expanded nationwide.
·
"The need for or~ans clearly is outpacing the·a,ailabiJi·c
ty. so for people who have a
willmg donor this is a way to
get them off dialysis. get
transplanted
and
them
improve the qua lity of their .
li.l'es,"
said
Audrey
Bohnengel. exe'cutive director of the Ohio Solid Organ
Transplant Consonium that
helps oversee the program.
Doug Lillibridge. 33. of
Twinsburg. about 25 miles
southeast of Cleveland. has
suffered from diabetes since
he was I 0 years old. Before
the transplant, he underwent
dialysis three times a week
for the past seyeral years.
He received a kidney from
Celia Lipinski. 46. of
Racine, Wis.
Lillibridge's wife. 36-yearold Claudia, donated · a kid- ·
ney to Lipinski's sister, Paula
Lipinski, who has acute kidney failure and had be~n on
dialysis for nearly two years.

'

-·

•
•

124 HIGHLAND AVE.

.PT PLEASANT, WV

(Otd Carolina Lumber Bulld1ng Across from CSX)

675-3877

'

.. All Ads

.

~~-~~~~aj!!:_.:~!.':!!~~.E.!!J~.~~-----~-------J

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

-

·.•

�•

(740).992-2156 • FAX (740) 99~·2157
ww,w.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

,General Manager-Ne..ys Editor
'

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establislunent of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or qbridging the freedom
of speech, ·o.r of the prqs; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

V·IEW

lbilnk·you
Post 9ffice event was suaesfol
Dear Editor:
I would like to thank everyone who jo ined us on May 27 for
our Customer Appreciation Day. We had a very good turnout,
with 120 hamburgers and 260 hot dogs se rved. Special thanks
to George Harris for the hot dog sauce and baked beans.
The winners in our drawing were Bonnie Barton of
Middleport. Mike Bartrum signed Eagles picture; Tom
·Roush of Middleport, the Sept. II "In Remembrance" Twin
Towers picture; and Marie Curd of Pomeroy, the Ohio Bear
with state quarter.
Thanks to Hometown Market for keeping us stocked with
food and drinks all day. We truly do appreciate all of our customers and look forward to serving you all in the years to come·.
Scott L. }!4stus
Middleport Postmaster

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, June 9, the I60th day of200i. There are
205 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On June 9, A.D .• 68, the
··
Roman Emper9r Nero commined su1c ide.
One year ago: The body of Ronald Reaga n arrived in
Washington to lie m state in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda before
the 40th president's funeral. The Federal Communications
Commission agreed to a record $1.75 million settlement with
Clear Channel to resolve indece ncy complain~s against
Howard Stern and other radio personalities. Ray Bourque, Paul
Coffey and Larry Murphy were elected to the Hockey Hall of
Fame in their fust year of dig1bility. A new scoring system for
figure skating w~s approved after the Olympic pairs scandal
forced the spun's govern mg.body to make radical changes. ·
Today's Birthdays: Guitarist Les Paul IS 90. Former World
. Bank president and former defense secretary Roben S.
McNamara is 89. Actress Mona Freeman is 79. Media analyst
Marvin Kalb is 75. Actor Joe Santos is 69. Author Letty Cottin
Pogrebin is 66. Rock mus1cian Jon Lord is 64. Actor Michael
J. Fox is 44. Writer-producer Aaron Sorkin is 44. Actor
Johnny Depp is 42. Jazz musician Wayman Tisdale is 41.
·Actress Gloria Reuben is 41. Rock musician Dean Dinning is
-38. Musician Ed Simons is 35. Actress Natalie Portman is 24.
Actress Mae Whitman is 17 .
Thought for Today: "Next to the slanderer, we detest the
bearer of the slander to our· cars." .,__ Mary CatherwOQ&lt;I,
American novelist (1847- 1901 ).

Like it or not, Paris
Hilton has turned herself
into 'the "It" girl of the Bush
II era.
Through a shrewd ,combination of shameless selfpromotion and self-promoting shamelessness, the
. hotel heiress, "reality" TV
personality, horror film
actress and home-video
porn star gets more · attention from the E! Network
and Us magazine sector ·Of
the news media than Laura
Bilsh and Condoleezza
Rice combined.
Her impending 'nuptials
to a Greek shipping heir
also named Paris likely will
draw more TV coverage
than the investiture of .!he
pope,
as
will
their
inevitable divorce. For
sheer prurient intere~t. her
ellploits are rivaled only by
the Michael Jackson . trial.
How long, I wonder, before
bootleg videos of the happy
'couple's wedding night
show up ~n the Internet?
But why all the attention?
Even with all· the surgical
enhancement, the woman's
not superficially attraet.ive
enough to make the cut in
the kinds of beer commercials shown ,on ESPN . Just
hasn't got that scrubbed.
wholesome, ''let's have half
a dozen cold ones and
watch the ball game wit~ the
guys" look. She can't sing,
can't dance. As for acting,
[he
acerbic
DCMediagirl.com characterizes her as "a rich bimbo
who. had she not been born
with the last name Hilton.
would probably be churning
out (low-budget porn )
videos in the San Fernando
Valley abou! now:·
So what's the secret of
Hilton's success? Well.
"rich bimbo- is definitely

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should '
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
;and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
:be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
'

The Daily Sentinel
(usPs 213-96o&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

· ' Correction Polley
Our I'Ti.1il'l concem 1n all stones 15 to be
accutate If you know of an e(Tor tn a
stor;, call the newsroom at (740) 992-

PublisheG every afternoon, Monday
through Fnday. 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy. Ot110 Second-class poStage

2156

paid at Pomeroy.
r..mber: The Associated Press and the

Our main number Is ,. .
(740) 992-2156.

.

Del* biMII extensions are:

News
Editor.

Ctla~ene

Hoeflldl. Ext t2

Repor111r: Bnan Reed, Ext. 1.4
Repootor. Beth Sergent. Ext. t3

Advertising
Outside Sales : Dave Hams. Ext t5
0utatc1e s.IH : Brenda Dav1s. E.d 16
ClaHJCtrc.: Judy Clarl&lt;. Ext. tO

Circulation
Olarict llgr.: Jason Patterson, Ext 17

General Manager
Ctlar1ene HoefliCh Ext t 2

1

OhKJ Newspaper

~tion­

Postm.atw: Send address corTections
ttl The Daily Sentine(. 111 Court Street.
f'Qmemy. Ohio :15769.

· Subscription Rates
By "' moiOf route

One month ... • ...... .'10.27

One 'jnr .... : • ..... ! 123.24
Oally ..................50'
Seniot Citizen raws

One month . .. . .. . .. . . .'8. 70
One ye•r . -: . ...... ... ,sg&amp;, 70

&amp;b6oi:Jers shoUd remit fl ~(bet
t:&gt; the Daily Sentllel. No subscnpt!On by
homo

mail - seMCe IS..Milable.
citrrlef

MaiiSubKription
lnokle Meigs County
13 Weeks .
'32 26
26 Weeks
'64 20
52 Weeks _ . . .
. ! 127.11

E-maH:
newsOrnyda11ysentme l com

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks '
26 Weeks , . . , . .
52 Weeks .

__...-... -·--

.-

2Q05

·~3 . 55

' 107 10
'214.21

-~

.

-

. .... . . "'

,

• +~

}~

,

.

. ....

·.:&gt;

Gene
Lyons

part of it. What was it
Gatsby said about Daisy
Buchanan,
F.
Scott
Fitzgerald's 1920s · version
of Paris Hilton? Her voice
had "the so.und of money."
Except that where Daisy 's
money rendered her inaccessi ble, an object of
romantic fanta~y. Pari s'
wealth makes her an obje'ct
of envy and lust.'
- Times have changed.
Today 's - fairy princess
dresses and acts like a courtesan.
The
message:
Anybody can have her,
· except you, because you
can't afford her. But she
will let you ·watch, because
she's an exhibitionist who
gets a charge out of titillating the peasanls. Aren't yqu
glad President Bush's elimin ali on of the·estate tax lets
Pari s keep every unearned
dime she's inheri1ed?
The media love Hilton for
the same reasons. Consider
the tlurry of indignation
over her latest escapade. a
ludicrously over-the-top
' commercial for Carl's Jr.. a
California ·
hamburger
chain . In tl. the he1ress,,
wearing a scanty leather
bathing suit, cavorts with a
bucket of soapy water and a
garden hose whde washing
what else?
a
$200.000 Bentley. With a
&gt;oundtra~k
playing
a
breathy rendition of " I
Love Paris." Hilton pouts
and writhe~ all over the
•

-.

hood of the car like a drag It's only on the West Coast·.
queen
impersonating so most · people wouldn't
Marilyn Monroe before even see it unless it gets all
succud1bing to her impas- this free media. But they
sioned desire to ·take a big particularly do this to be
bite out of a hUI)IOOgous provocative, to get allendouble cheeseburger, yum- tion, to even be offensive."
yum.
In other words, to get
Almost needless to say, plenty of free airtime witbthe ad provoked a media
controve·rsy, precisely as it out having to pay for it.
was designed to do·. CNN,
·:she's eating a burger
FOXNews, MSNBC and there, but she's not really
most of the rest jumped in eating a burger," 0' Reilly
with coverage of what complained.
'
Pretty much the wav
"critics" said were the ad's
excesses.
"The O ' Re1lly Factor,1'
"This commercial is basi- "Today." CNN, the Parents
cally
softcore
porn." Television Council and th~
Melissa Caldwell, research rest use the made-for-TV
director for the Parents controversy to promote
Television Council, told the themselves, come to thin\;:
Los Angeles Times. "It 's of it. (A recent Media.week
inappropriate for televi - report showe4 that Bozell's
sion."
·
outfit was responsible for
Caldwell's boss, the ubiq- 99.9 percent of indecer1cy
uitous L Brent Bozell, claims to the Federal Trade
Went her One better on Commission in 2004.)
NBC's 'Today" .in a mixed Peopie can't get all stirre!l
metaphor for the ages:
. "This is erotica," .he sput _ up about Paris not really
tered. " It's a quantum leap eating the burge r unless
down this pike where we they show the fool thing
try to scrape the bottom of over and over, can they? ·
the barrel."
,
We owe it all to Kenneth
Wheel I love it when L · Starr. Like many innovaBrent talks dirty. I mean if lions in the art of propaga~
that don' t bring your chick- da, the technique wa~ per.
ens home to roost, some- fected during the Bill
body's gonna have to pay , Clinton years, when broa~
the piper or cut bait.
cast scolds learned to titiiOf course. it 's erotica. late and infuriate their audiAdweek 's Barbara Lippe(( ence
simultaneously
explained to an ostensibly throu_gh endless repetitiop
ou traged Bill' O ' Reilly of the magical phrase, ''oral
(who may have resented sex."
Hilton 's use of a sponge
(Arkansas
Democrat-·
instead of a loofah to soap
herself down ).
Ga~e tte columnisl Gene
"(T)heir tarFet market are Lyons is a national mag11r
these motorcycle-dri vmg. :ine award winner and ca.beer-drinking men between authur of "The Hunting of
14 and 30 who love this the President " !Sr. Marrin ',
&gt;tuff." 'he &gt;ald. "They ' re Press. 2000). You can eli~e the bad-boy advertisers mail
Lyons ar gene of the fast-food indu&gt;try. lyons2@sbcglobal.net.) ·
'

2005

The Daily Sentinel • Pag~ A5

":_WW.mydailysentinel.cum

Obituaries

•

Christine Sue Cline
'
REEDSVILLE
-Christine Sue Cline. 47, of Reed&gt;Ville.
was taken by the Lord to be with Him in heaven on June 8
2005.
,
She was born Dec. 21 , I 957 .in Marietta. daughter of Beulah
Santee Cline and the late Rufus Cline.
·
Crissy is survived by her mother. Beulah M. Cline; three
siste(s. Drucilla I. Stewan, Shirley M. Rockhold,and Virginia
"Jenn( K . Parker; two brothers, Raymond R. Cline and John
W. Clme; several meces and nephews; and great-nieces anp
nephews.
,
·
She was preceded i11 death by her father, Rufus W. Cline .
and her twin sister, CIUJestine.
Graveside services will be held at I p.m. Satrurday, June II ,
at Sandhill Cemetery..Long Bottom with Rev. Mike Adkms
officiating.
Arrangements are. by White-Schwarzel Funeral Hon1e ,
Coolville.

Local
Briefs
.·

• .! ' •

'

Pickup grade cards

Payc_
Jlecks
from Page A1

Funding
from Page A1

"

RACINE- Senior packets and underclassmen grade cards
are ready for pickup at Southern High School. Summer office
hours are from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.

POMEROY- The Meigs County Health Department will
be having a vision clinic on Wednesqay, June 15. This clinic
is provided f~ee by the Ohio Department of Health to children
through the age of 21who have vision problems or a poss ible
vision problem. For more information call Sherry Weese, RN,
at the health department, 992-6626. Call before Friday June
10, before 4 p.m.
'

Annual meetingset
SYRACUSE- The I40th annual meeting of the Carleton
College, Board of Trustees will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday,
June 23, at the Syracuse Community Center. Applications for
Carleton College sch9larships are still being · accepted. The
deadline for submitting an application is June 17. Applications
can be secured from Sharon Cottri II at Syracuse Village hall
and also are to be returned to her there.

PUCO
from Page A1'
sutcharge to residential. customers of approximately 58
cents
for ·
Columbus
Southern Power customers
and 39 cents for Ohio Power
Co, customers.
In the second phase, from
2007 to mid-20 10, the companies would recover $237.5
million in construction costs
with a surcharge of $2 for
Columbus Southern Power
Customers and $1.40 · for
Ohio Power Co. customers.
The final phase of cost
recovery would begin when
the plant , begins operating.
The companies would recover the projected $1.033 billion cost of the plant over its
operating life of 40 years.
AEP is unable to determine
that cost to the customer

.Th~ sift porn queen of our times

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

Thursday, June 9,

Thursday, June 9,

1oward tile neoconserva- that tilere·, an ongoing
It certainl y is no summer
beach read, but you' II be
li ves. whose anginal· lead- &gt;truggle to contain an11
edified- and lots of people
er.,. notably lrvmg Kristol. channel man 's evi l tendenw1ll be angered- by Robert
were critica l of 1dcas abo ut l.'ies. Tilat\ what the U.S.
Merry'S' pew book, "Sands
the perfectibility of human Consti tut ion is all 'about.
of Empire" (Simon &amp;
nature but 11\IW; 111 'uch pub- And I buy the notion that
Morton
Schuster. 2005), a ric h and
li&lt;:ati ons tiS son Bill KrisLol's America and the West may
Kondracke
someday." Bttt
deep ' critique of President
The Weekly Standard. ure ctecljne
&gt;ilou
ld
we
assume that'-s
Bush's all eged "Crusader
promoting forced democratiha.ppening nght now? U.S.
State" foreign policy.
Ziltlon of the pl;met.
I think that Merry, presiMerry 'gibes that "these n1i1itary superiority, the
dent and. publisher of especially since Sept II, re&gt;tie" imcllectuals" - the . spread of U.S.. C·Uiture and
Congressional Quarterly. is 2001, with a "new neocon- neocon&gt;- "have a tendency technology and the fact that
far too pessimistic in say ing servatism," different from to make thc1r wav to whatev- Eng li sh is the world's semithat BLI Sh is leading th e , the original versio n, holdin g er watering hofe they · can officia l Iimguu gc sugges t
COI.\ntry toward "calamity" that America must do·everv- find to quench their need tor that our c1vi l1zation is not.
by pursuing a policy of thing possible ·'to ·ensure a rhetorical argumenl of the ye t in decline.
"hun1anitarian imperialism." · that its post-Cold War hege- moment." He says there IS
I'd al so !10pe. as Bush
But Merry not only argues mony
will
cont1nue now nnthing conservati ve believes. that the desire for
his case forcefully, he also throughout the world and about them.
'
freedom i' a Lmiversal yeanlbases it on intellectual histo- into t.he future as far as the
·By
contrast,
wntcs mg of mankind that the ,
ry dating to the 17th century. eye could see."
Merry. Huntington's is "an United States can foster a&gt;
It was then, in the writing
Merry, previously the intellect that focuses laser- long as it does so skillfully.
of' a now-forgotten French author of a . first-rate biogra- id(e on human nmure as it After all , the Iraqi s did brave
social philosopher, Charles- . phy of journalists Joseph and really IS and not on dreamy death to ·go to the polls Jan.
((enee Castel -de Sainh Stewart Alsop. clearly holds ideas about the ideal soci- 30. We should not keep
Pierre, that the "Idea of an opposing world ;. iew. ety or how proper arrange- troops there longer than neQProgress," already develop- namely th e "Cycles of ments
can
trans fo rm essary. but we can't abandon
ing ·in the West, was raised to Hi story" theory. It \vas mankind and spaw n peace !ray to terrorism. ·
a new level , with the notion expounded in the 20th centu- and happmess;"
Moreover. · the evidence
thal governments and social ry by German intellectual
Merry believes, with suggests that Islam .is not
systems could actually Oswald Spengler in "The Huntington, that the West is uniformly hosti le to the
Decline of the. West" and not in the ascendancy, but West. Indones ia isn ' t Taliba/1
improve human nature.
Arnold
Toynbee's multi-vol- rather in relative declirfe. Afghanistan
or
Saudi
Merry contends that Bus~
.is operating in the tradition ume "A Study of History,"
He advocates establishment Arabia.
. of Sa'int-Pierre and other
It, too, is rooted in the 18th of a kind of balance of
Merry argL1es that to tiglit ·
''dreamy" utopians extend- century conservatism of power amo ng the "core the war with Islam, we
ing from French philoso- Edmund Burke and set forth states" of the competing should ha ve allied with
phers Rene Descartes and a·s an alternative to post- ci vi Iizations,
including ·saddam Hus se.in against
Jean-Jacques
· Rousseau Cold War Wilsoniani sm hy Ch ina, Russia apd India .. Islamic radicals (as if that
through Woodrow Wilson to Harvard professor Samuel Unfortunately. Islam lacks were possibl e), that · we
contemporaries
Francis Huntington in a 1993 article · a dominant "core slate."
should be making peace
"Writing before . 9/11 ," ri ght now with Iran anll
Fukuyama,
Thomas in Foreign Affairs and in a
Friedman, Bill Knstol and 1996 book forecasting a Merry notes. "Huntington should
protect
Saudi
Paul Wolfowitz. in trying to "clash of civilizations."
suggested that the dangerous Arabia's reactionary regime.
In contrast to
the clashes.ot the future are like- He also thmks we have to
impose Western democracy
idea,
the ly fo arise fro m ' the intersec, limit Muslim immigration
on the world, especially the "Progress"
"Cycles" theorists hold that ti on of Western arrogance, and population growth in tlie
Islamic world.
'.' Idea . of
Progre ss" human nature can't be Islamic intolerance iJ.nd United States , because H
thinkers: Merry wrili:!S· changed, that evil is a fact (Chinese) assertiveness:··· ·
represents a potential base
of
life,
·
that
conflict
.
is
believe that history is a tale
Echoing
Huntington, for terrorism.
of physical and social inevitable, that cultures dif- Merry believes that the
Thi s is a provocative
improvemt:nt. that it's pos- fer fundamentally, that civi- West is "at war with Islam," book. I think Jt's too
sible to foster a "universal lizations rise and fall and not just with Islamic radi- gloomy and 1gnore s the
culture" across the globe, that there is no "end of his- cali sm, and that Bush is in poss ibility of a middle
that (in Fukuyama 's formu- tory."
danger of losing the war by ground between · naive
lation) the 20th century triMerry 's book doesn ' t inserting U.S. troops into utopiani sm or U.S. imperiumph of liberal capitalist break new intellectual the Islamic heartland (Iraq) alism. on the one hand, ana
democracy is the "end of ground so much as it vivid- and trying to westernize an the "reali st" policy of prehistory," that (Friedman's ly and clearly explores the alien culture. In the process. serving despots in the name
1dea) that economic and cul- history. of id~as about he fears that the United · of stability, on the othel.
tural "globalization" can human history and · draws States could lese its own Still, this .is .a rich read that
end war forever. They also out their implications today. soul and, like Rome in 88 deserves to kick off a sumtend to believe in the superi- His book is made especially B.C .. cease to be a republic mer of learned argument. "
ority of Western culture.
readable by its character and become an t:mpire.
(Morton Koiulra cke [I
These reasonably benign sketches of the major
I agree :With the conserva- executive editor of Roll Cal~.
Wilsonian ideas have been thinkers and players.
tive notion that ' human the newspaper of Capito,/
He is p&lt;)rticularly caustic nature can' t be changed and Hill.)
combined in the Bush era,

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

.,

PageJ\4

_Will Bush sidealism lose (war with Islam'?

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

•

·O PINIO

The Daily Sentinel

.

., .

Blaze
•

from PageA1
Springfield
Township,
Harrison Township, District 2
and Rio Grande volunteer fire
departments joined Gallipolis
in battling the blaze.
·"They all did well," Poling
said. "They worked hand-inhand and did a beautiful job."
Assistant
State
Fire·
Marshal Bob Lawless of
Portsmouth was unable to
visit the scene Wednesday, so
police secured the area to
preserve it for his investigation, said Assistant Fire Chief
Mike Null.
''The cause of the fire is
still under investigation,"
Null said.
,
Frazier, who was off-duty
at the time, saw the fire on
the roof of the building as he
was driving by, Poling said .
Frazier called for assistance,
then started knocking on
apartment doors to evacuate
residents. He and fellow officers Scott Adkins, Justin Rice
and Dave Poling saved the
lives of the apartment
dwellers, all of whom were
asleep aiid unaware of the
fue; Null said.
"If I had not been lucky to
spot that, those people would
have . certainly perished,"
frazier said. "I never sa~ a
fire spread that quick."
Frazier said as he and the
officers got the occupants of
the building out - one of
them barely in time before
the ceiling of his apanment
burst into name - burning
debris from the roof was
already falling to tlle ground.
.Once the 'people were outside, Frazier and the other
officers noticed the frre had
spread to the wall. of the

becau se the market prices for
generating electricty will
vary during the plant's estimated 40-year operating life.
One of the most notable
opponents of the plan is the
Ohio Consumers Council,
which has raised several
questions with the plan,
including whether all AEP
customers who will pay for
the construction will benefit
directly from it. The OCC has
also raised issues with AEP's
plari to recover costs before
plant operations begin.
During a March visit to
AEP
Ohio
Pomeroy,
President Kevin Walker said
it is "highly probable" that
the PUCO will approve the
plan , allowing construction
to be~m in 2007. An !GCC
plant 1s' more costly to build
than a standard coal-fired
power plant, but Walker said
AEP believes the new plant
will operate most cost effectively once ·it is operating.

one in Meigs County.
.
Meigs Count y Recycling
and
Litter
Prevention
Program Manager Paula ·
Wood said that .the recycling
would likely continue in the
county but would be significantly diminished if the proposed cuts are made .
Diminished services may
come in the form of sca ling
back or eliminating p1ckups
of recyclable materials and/or
closing down the recycling
bin,s located in communities
throughout the county.
Wood said that if alternative funding is not' secured,
her program would likely see
those diminished se rvices
this fall or winter but she
could not be certain.
Last year the ·Meigs County
Recycling
and
Litter
Prevention Program collected
over 825,348 pounds of n~cy­
ded material that would have
otherwise ended up in a landfill with local villages foot1ng
the bill for trash removal.
Although recycling would
feel the pinch. litter prevention would get the brunt of
the budget cuts and be all but
gone state-wide according to
Armfelt.
Litter prevention takes it he
form of not only educating ·
students in the schools about
litter but physically picking
up trash during events like
the upcoming Ohio River
Sweep an June 18.
"Frankly speaking, all that
can go away." Armfelt said of
the fate Of litter, rii'VCntiOil .
programs and the c! rants 'to
sponsor them with.
.
To make up for the cut of
the corporate franchise tax,
the
Ohio
House
of
Representatives proposed
charging a $1.00 fee per ton

on municipal &gt;Oiid wa~te ~o
ge nerate $7.2 million fo r the
Division. However. the Ohjo
Senate devised a plan where
75 cents per •ton would be
charged on construction and
debris which would generate
$5 million fot the Division
which cuts their $ 10 million
budget m half.
Armfelt said that whichever cut ends up 111 the budget,
there will be significant statewide changes in grant progra ms and statewide litter
programs.
"We anticipate changes,"
Armfelt said. "Whether our
funding. is decreased by $3
million or $5 million, recycling opportun1t1es will
decrease although will continue to some extent. Litter
prevention will probably stop
completely."
Members of the Ohio
House of Representatives and
Senate are meeting today in
Columbus to discus s the
funding for recycling and litter prevention in the state.
"I hope someone can come
up with some alternative
funding ," Armfelt said of the
meeting.
Armfelt and Wood hope
that concerned citizens across
the state wi II contact their
state representative s and senators if t~ey disagree with the
budget cuts to recycling and
litter prevention programs.
Most of these representatives
and senators can now be
reached by e-mail.
The law mandates that Gov.
Taft must sign the new budget
by June 30 although amendments can be added later.
In the last five years, in the
village of Racine alone, nearly 300 tons of recycled material was picked up by Meigs
County Recycling and Litter
Prevention at no charge. This
recycled material could've
ended up as 300 tons of trash
that the village would have
had lo pay to dispose of.

On the mher ·hand. members uf the Mason County
Cornmis~ton are not as optimtslic.

"All three of us are deeply
distu rbed by ·the lost jobs,"
Commission President Bob
Baird said.
' Baird said he was troubled
that the employees had. not
rece ived their paychecks last
Friday.
.
"People depend on their
paychecks."
he
said.
" Hopefully they will ge t
some help during this time."
During the past few years,
the company has had to lay
orr employees about two or
three times, he said.
"This was a terrible hi ow to
Mason
, County,"
Commissioner Miles Epling
s;JJd of the plant closing.
"You !Jon ' t want to see any-

are on lay , off due to business problems," Moore saiJ.
"We are · lopkin g forward to
the plant reopening. There
are goo(! dollars 1n it. And.
the market is there for its
products." ,
He smd union offi ci'als are
hoping the plant wil l open .
"Boris is gning to extremes
to keep this place {)pen,"
Moore ·said. "Must companies don't follow through
after they have fil ed for
Chapter II."
Ll't Thursday, representatives for Bannai filed Cliapter
II proceedings in Federal
Court
'in
Bankruptcy
Huntington . Chapter II gives
a company protection frqm one go out of business.''
During one or the times
its creditors as it Tcorganizcs
or hardship. the company
a way to make payments
"It is our hope that 1hey ha s received as e; istance
will be able to put together from the West Virginia
Development
plans of restructuring," Economic
Moore said. "They are work- Authority but not with
the
company,
ing diligently to do that." , funding
He also said that once plans according to spok~swoman
are in place, the laid off Jan Dickens.
"We work with a1iy compaemployees may be ca lled
ny
to help them achieve sucback to work at the·plant.
"Mason County needs· this cess." Dicken' said . "We try
'
., he s;;u'd' .
bustness.
to help theni.''

Bissell
from Page A1

Will gain a greater understanding of the1r own culture, history. government.
political and economic systems. and social structures .
Throu gh workshops. excursions and discussions delegates will discover the
politi caL economic and cul tural links between . the
Unit ed States and Europe
and become stronger citi- .
zcns of the world. according to a news release.
The program is coordinated ,by People to People
Ambassador Programs to
fulfill the v1sion Dwight D.
Eisenhower had for fostering
world citizenship when he
founded Peopl e to People in
1956.
Btssell, who will be 111 the
seventh grade this fall, will
tly from New York to
London on Oct. 8. Each stu'dent will have ·an ·advisor.
The school w1il contribute
$1.500 to the st udent's
expenses ..with the balance of
$3,500 to come from donations by family and friends.

earning academic credit..
"The
lnteFnational
Summit is a rare opportunity
for aspiring you1Tg leaders to
consider European perspectives on world affairs while
connecting with the people
and cultures of England and
France," said a spokesperson
from
People
International.
"From the Tower of
Lo.ndon to the Arc de
Triomphe and the chambers
of. the. European Parliament,
these young leaders will
explore major monuments
and prominent institutions.
International Summit deleNone of the residents were gates will engage in daily
transported to the hospital. A. exercises and explorations
Gallia County EMS umt that will retlect the summit's
remained on the scene as a · focus on international affairs,
precaution.
and diplomacy.
. City police closed part or
As they delve into
Second Avenue. which' also is European heritage and
Ohio Route 7, for much of ways of life, participams
the morning . It was re ,
opened by noon.
Flames gutted the inside of
the apartment building,
Poling said. The. tire ignited a
The Dally Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155
portion of the roof and
charred one side of theSaunders home. The inside of
the house received smoke
damage, he said.
Fire crews remained on the
scene for about I0 hours to
ensure the fire did not re'
ignite.
One reason for the large
nuf!Jber of firefighters was
r;·· i , !/ · ,,
the heat, Null said.
I:. I ' I
'
' I( ' J '- •
"At first, it didn't look like
we needed that many," he
said. "But with the heat and
humidity, they had to take
turns."
· Workers from the Gallia
County chapter of the
American Red Cross provided water for the crews. Later
in the morning, McDonald's
Paul Dal'lt;photo of Gallipolis brought them
Firefighters froni Harrison Township Volunteer Rre Department food, Null said.
help extinguish hot spots in an apartment building that was
The apartment building
gutted by fire early Wednesday in Gallipolis.
was built in the 1840s, said
Mary Lee Marchi, director of
adjoining residence occupied police depanment) does an the Gallia tounty Historical ·
·by Alice Saunders, mother of excellent job in detecting Society. At one time, it was
owned by John Gwinn, · city
Gallipolis
City fires."
Commissioners Dow and
Six families lived in the . manager of Gallipolis for
Jotui Saunders.
apartment building. which is much of the 1930s. He nin
Frazier and another officer owned by local accountant Gwinn's Grocery Store from
site.
.
entered Mrs. Saunders' res!- Lynn Angell, Null said.
In
1956
and
1957, the
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
dence and escorted her out of
Null was quick to praise ·
HOURS
th:e houo;e to safety.
the city police officers for building served as one• of
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
~on - Fri Sam - 8pm
·three nursing dormitories for
" I feel bad that everyone · their work.
Prescription Ph. 992·2955
Sot. Sam - Spm· .
lost everything in the fue, but
"The Gallipolis Police the nearby old Holzer
112
East
Main
Street
Sun. CLOSED
I feel good about getting Department does an excep- Hospita!, said Alice Giles,
Pomeroy,
Ohio'
·
everyone out in one piece and tionally good job at spotting also of the hi storical society.
without injury," Frazier said. fires downtown after dark,'.' At that time it was called
Service
1ill9
Gwinn House.
"The midnight' shift (on the he said.

Proud to be apart of your life.

nl]'

l

•

,.

.

I

I

l'

�'

.

,

..
•''

.,

PageA6

.C OMMUNITY

The Daily
Sentinel
.
'

'

INSIDE

Thursday, June 9 , 2005

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
·
..

Mason Co. rallies lo beat Charleston, P!llle B2

'

·Mason on track for new water system Disabled·shooting sports opportunity
·
·
NITRO. W.Va. - The
ln addition. for those di s- tour for d1sabled marksmen.
New Haven ,Volunteer Fire Nitro Moose Lodge. at I 0 I abled sportsmen who would This year's tour will end in
Department tor _the use of First Ave. in Nitro, W.Va. like to learn the finer points Auoust. at Birmingham. Ala.
thetr new Ftre Satety House:
wi ll host one of the most of precision marKsmanship. wh~re the . top 10 rankeg
1
MASON - The Town of
She .-;md the ~epartment _ s unique sporting events in two of the nation 's foremost co1npetitors will share in
Mason is another step closer
bnngmg the· safety house for
more than _$30.000 in cash
t
1 · h If f h
demonstrations dunng the the nation. Starting at 8 a.m. disabled shooting sport~
d~s~~~~; sy~te~. t e water
Fourth of July l'elebration. . on Friday. July 8. the 7th coaches will conduct a and prizes.
The donation will come annual
West
Virginia training clinic and practi~e
Whether it be competing
According 10 Terry Myers
·
h
k' d
Whe~lchair
Shooting session. beginning at 9:30 · for a statewide champi!rom t e par s_an recr~auon Championships will be con- a.m. on' Thursday. July 7. at onship title, or imp'roving
with TRIAD Engine&lt;;ring. the
fund. Roush smd.
·
k
one's m~rksm. anship skills
Infrastructure ·
Council
approved plans for the .
• C &gt;unci! approved . a ducted for mar smen with the lodge.
upgraded sy'stem.
request 'rom Faith Baptist physical disabilities.
- Dave Baskin. manager oft he for the upcoming hunting ·
Now
the
counc
·
1
wt
'
ll
soon
be
Ch
h
B'ble
School
The
event
distingui
shes
National
Ritle Association's season, West Virginia and
1
'
· West Vjrginia as one of only Disabled Shooting Service' Ohio disabled sportsmen are
urc 1ur a 1
making a decision about which
parade on June 25 .
two states that offer their dis- pepartment.
and
B&lt;;:&gt;b being offered a rare opportu• An ordinance of the town
b d -h
- ·R b
f
u
- d nity. A number of precision .
municipalities will receive a
portion of the $40 million in
givin2 a $2.800 a month fire · a le CitiZens t e opportunity 0 ertson. ormer
nne
d
- t.o display their marksman- States Pmalympic Team coach. air rifles and pistols are
fee has been postpone · unt1 1 h'1
k'll
d
will be 00 hand 10 help dis- available for Joan to particigrants and loans, he said .
Myers was at the Monday
June' 21 so the _mayot has a s P s ·t s an
Win a
council meeting to pick up the
chance to speak with Chief statewid,e championship title. abled sportsmen improve their pants on a first come, first
Paul Johnson about the Two titles will be awarded. mmksmcnship techniques.
served basis.
contracts for the system from
one for the best precision air
The Nitro competition is · For registration information
the town council.
• Plans fur the Fourth of specifics of the 'donatiOn the rille marksman. and the other also the nimh_stop on the and entry forms. call NRA
. Also. council will begin to July Celebration are ready. town is to give. ,
f
_
for the top shooter with a 2005 ll-city NRA-Beeman Disabled Shooting Services at
writing an ordinance for The pmade will be at II a.m.
• An officiall~tter o nouce competition air pistol.
Grand· Prix. championship (703) 267- 1495.
grease traps being pumped with line up at l 0:30 a.m. at for unsafe structures was also
out at least once a month . Faith Baptist Church.
approved by counciL
At
It :30 . a.m..
tpe · • Roush announced that the
according'to Mayor Raymond
Cundiff.
,
Horseshoe Pitching contest . yard of James . Hu'ghes .was .
Cundiff said the town has will begin . Opening cere- name&lt;.J as Mason's June Yard
been having -a lot of problems__ monies for the celebration of the Mon~h- In second place.
with grease building up 'in the will bj: at noon with all aurae- was the yard of Jeff and Janet
sewer.lines.
tions opening a I p.m. All Russell while the yard of
" It is getting bad," he said. events except the parade will Gregory Kelly came in third.
The · motion fo r the ordi- be at Mason Park.
• Co uncil was· reminded
· nance was made and approved
Smah Shields said the choir that the municipal election is
and as soon as it is completed that is being put together for Tuesday. June 14 and early
and passed, it will be enforced. one of the day's entertainment voting is now goi ng on at
Cundiff also said he may needs some male voices.
tpwn halL The town hall will
Thursday, June 9
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
friday, June 10
ask the Public Service She said several churches be open Saturday for. t[]ose
Mo,rning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It will remain humid and
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Commissipn to offet classeS are represented in tlie choir who wish to v.ote early.
Expect a humid and cloudy cloudy. Light rain is forecasted.
ExP.~t a humid and cloudy
on grease ~,raps for those busi- which is made up qfwomen so
• Town ·hall .will be closed' morning. There is a good The rain should reach 0.05 morning. There is. a good
nesses that use them.
· they need several men to join. June 20 for West Virginia Day. c hance of some rain. inches by this evening. chance of some · rain.
4-nd .after they have been
Councilwoman
Agnes
Due to West Virginia Day. Temperatures will rise to 78 Tempemtures will drop frorn 81 Temperatures will linger at
cleaned out, all the businesses Roush asked for approval of the next council meeting will with- today's low of (/,2 early this evening to 73. Winds 74. Winds will be 5 to l 0
would have to do is show _giving a $200 ·donation to the . be June 21. .
occurring around 6 a. m. will be 5 MPH from the south. MPH from the southwest.
Winds will be 5 to I 0 MPH
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Afternoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
.from the south.
It will remain humid and
It should be a humid afterAfternoon (1-6 p.m.)
cloudy. There could be a noon. There is a slight chance
It should remain humid and sprinkle or two. The rain of rain . Temperatures will
• HEMLOCK GROVE - At It was annou need that now because St. Jude's R&amp;nch cloudy. A few sprinkles are should stop · .by l a.m. Climb
.from 78 to 84 by late
its rece nt meeting the Hemlock Grange will be visit- has all they need now.
possible . Temperatures,: will Temperatures will hold steady this afternoon. Skies will be
ijemlock Grange set July l ing Racine Grange on July 21.
The charter was draped for stay near 81 with today's high around 73. Winds wi II .be 5 to partly cloudy to cloudy with 5.
and 2 for a garage and bake
Letters were given to mem- Muriel! Bradford and Elma of 83 occurring mound 4 p.m. I 0 MPH from the south turn- MPH winds from the southsale at the James Fry resi" bers concerning HB 170 and Louks. ,
Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH ing from the southwest as the west turning from the south as
dence with donations to be SB58 to send to state repreSeveral members were rec- from the south.
overnight progresses ..
· the afternoon progresses.
taken there starting June 28.
sentatives and senators. A ognized for weeding flowers
Master Rosalie Story con- thank you was read from the at the hall and at the spring .
ducting the meeting with Kim Bradford family.
Members have also painted
·Romine,
lecturer,
used
It was noted that no more the oil tank and repaired the
Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinE!I.com .
''National Dairy Month" for card fronts are needed ~right side steps at the hall. ·
.The . D~ily_
'.
the theme of her literary pro"
gram. Romine said that
"National Dairy Month" was
started iq 1937 to help stabilize dairy -demand during
. periods . of peak production.
The lecture also touched on
statistics like one can give
200,000 glasses of milk in it's
lifetime; plastic milk containers were introduced in 1964;
more than lO p~unds'of milk
go into one pound of cheese.
'
Ann Lambert, deaf chair- . /
."
man, gave.a report O\J hearing
loss and passed around informational leaflets. . Donna
"~at
-. Davidson read a report on
sevenreasons to hear better.
Inc~
Rosalie Johnson and Sara
&lt;;:ullums performed a skit
.centered around hearing loss.
: Roy and Opal Grueser disIncluding Proven Wlnnen,
cussed using cell phones
limply Beautiful,
while driving in Ohio. A resolution concerning this will be
Boll'l liett:er Blooms,
'' ..
sent to the State Grange.
· and other • 'N' white POtl .....&amp;..::_',
BY DIANE POTTORFF
DPOTTORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

- proof ot _PU) m~nt. he smd.
Counnl approved $700 to
the WatN Department tor the
pur(hase ot a portal;lle pump
am! 20 teet of SU(tJOn hose.
Members also rea&lt;.J a letter
reL·eivcd from Pam VanMeter
askin o if council would
"
object if American Electric
.Power donated monev for the
skate board -ramp. at :h&lt;
M·,Json P·,lfk.
C
d h
ouncl 1agree to 1 e request
but advised that they will not
use anv town rnonev due to the
vandalism to the rainp.
'The city will not be putting
one more dime into it.''
Cuf\difr' said ·
.
In other council business:

v

Thursday, June 9, 2005

Today's games
,Parkersburg at Feeney Bennett. 6 p.m.

Satu.rdly't game•
Feeney Bennett at Marietta (2), 1 p.m.
Williamson at Mason COunty, 2 p.m.

Meigs Chamber
Golf Scramble

•

Hemlock Grange to hold g~rage and bake sale

Proud to be apart of yo~r life ..

,.

.

ttf).ttt~£~ efJ~'t~Ot~e e~j ·;· r:'·

. 's... .

*

' "

Local.
Stocks
'

,

ACl-49.65
'
AEP-35.62
Akzo- 39.40
Ashland Inc. - 67.60
AT&amp;T...., 19.03
BU-12.66
Bob Evana - 22.40BorgWamer - 53.01
C:hamplon - 4.11
Channllll Shope - 9.15
City Holding - 33.49
Col -48.53
DG-20.18
DuPont - 46.31
Federal Mogul - .69
USB -29.16
.
Gannett- 74.25
General Electric - 36.80
GKNLY -

4. 7!5

Harley Dlilvldson - 48.89
JPM- 35.67
((jocer - .16.71 ,
Ltd.- 21.31
NSC- 31.67
Oak Hill Financial - 27.71
ova ..,... 26.20
BBT- 39.65
Peoples - · 27.27
Pepsico - 55.48
Pnimler - 10.28
Rockwell - !50.92
Rocky Boots - 32
RD Shell -

58.88

SBC-23.54
Wa~art- 47.57
Wendy's -· 44.70
Worthlntton ,.;.. 16.62
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closllll quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partner$ .
lit Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

~U· 431,.
••

- 5 0 . , . , . , ,.,, to choose , _

NOW · .

·

..

•· . .·

"

••ell

.

I

-.'

rennials

Quart: s2.69 each
0 .. 21or s5.00

.· :

,

. .

I

- .

Gallon: 4.99 each

c.r s14.00

_5

5 9.00
or 2'0t:
"'··

,for . . . . . . !I

"" .

.-1O'' Premium Hangiilg

potted·plants
combination
containers

Fusr.fl'-1 fllkllel '

..
",. Pull 'siZe lefding·'Ptarit 'lllllt1-·"'
· -~ .SII,!tf~Dn Still A~~ ·~ ' •· :

'.,.._.
ft~,

11 98

$ '

NOW

· . 1\: .. '
·'

~.7 .99...
, OR

,

.l~·l

'

-.

MIXO· ··

•.

MATCH

MASON, W.Va. - Tlie
· annuiu
Meigs
County
Chamber of Commerce Golf
Scramble will be . ' held
Thursday, June 9 at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason. The
Journament will · feature a
new fqnnat - a bring you
own partner four-man scramble.
Teams will be paired based
on two ma3 entries, with a
semi-blind draw for the
remaining two players on the
ream.
·
Price is $60 per players and
includes lunch, golf, dimier
and cart. Prizes will include
~l&lt;;&gt;sest 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

'

Bryan .
·Walters

Major LEaguE Baseball

..

Pe_na rallies Reds past Tampa Bay

CINCINNATI (AP) Wily Mo Pena showed
. 'e m how to celebrate your
own bobblehead night. ·
Pena homered in his first
and - last at -bats on
Wednesday night, sending .
the Cincinnati Reds to an
ll -9 victory over the
· Tampa Bay Devil Rays
while thousands of fans
chanted his name and
waved his dolls.
Eduardo Perez hit his
second career grand slam
'
COLUMBUS . (AP)
for another big Tampa Bay ·
Olympic gold medalist and forlead, but the AL's worst
mer world record holder Butch
pitching staff blew a fiveReynolds is joining . Ohio
run cushion for the second
State's
football staff to help
straight night.
with
strength
and conditioning.
The Reds hit six homers,
Reynolds, a native of Akron,
including back-to-back
starts his new position qn
shots by Adam Dunn and
Monday.
POINT PLEASANT. W.
Jacob Cruz in the eighth
A 1991 graduate of Ohio
Va. - Some twenty-plus
that cut it to 9-8. Then,
State.'
Reynolds set the world
years ago, the Tri-County
Danys Baez (4-2) let
record
in the 400 meters with a
Junior Golf Tour began, and
another one get away.
time of 43.29 seconds in 1988
it's time for the 2005 swingBaez, who leads the
at the Zurich Gran PrilL He ·
.ing on the four local courses . .
majors · with six blown
competed on U.S. Olympic
Thanks to the cooperation
saves in 13 chances, gave
teams in 1988. '92 Wid '96,
and generosity of the fopr
UJ? an infield single to
· winning ·a gold . medal in the
Tri-County Courses, thouRyan Freel and walked Joe
1600 relay and a silver in the
Randa on four pitches in
sands of rounds have been
400 in 1988.
· ·
the
ninth
.
After
Sean
Football
coach
Jim
Tressel
played by young linksters,
said Reynolds· primary responCasey hit into a double
seventeen and under. at most
sibility would be making the
play, Ken Griffey Jr. tied it
reasonable costs.
Buckeyes faster.
with single to right.
Competition at each event
"More and more in college
The crowd of 32,019
is open to any male or female
football,
speed is the element
chanted "Wily Mo!" as
golfers. Age· groups are 15that
sepamtes
the good teams
Pena came to the plate and
17, 13-14, 11-12 and 10-andfrom
the
great
teams," Tressel
hit the sixth {&gt;itch into the ·
under..Youth are grouped to
said
in
a
statement.
"We have
upper d~ck m left field.
compete in their own age
good speed on this team. I
Teammates mobbed him at
groups for nine holes each
believe Butch can help us
home plate, and fans wavwhere they _vie for trophies
become
a .team with ' great
ing their Pena bobbleheads
'peect"
and awards.
s
.
'.
made him take a curtain
In ,1990, the International
Cost is just eight dollars
call.
Amateur
Athletic Fedemlion,
per person at . each outing.
The Devil Ray s have ·
the
sanctioning
body for track
The entry fee covers green
. lost nine of 10, ,and have
around the world, announced
fees, lunch and awards.
the majors' worst road
that Reynolds had tes\Cd posiRegistration is slated for 8:30
record at 4-25 . Much of it
tive for the steroid nandrOlone
a.m. each date, with shotgun
is due to a pitching staff
after an August track meet. 1be
te:e-off set for 9 a.m. each
that' ranks last in the AL
'IAAF banned Reynolds for
time.
.
and has given u·p a lel)guetwo years.
.
Play is postponed only
high 72 homers.
Reynolds
served
as
an assis'
AP phOto
. when lightning is present, so
The comeback overtant track coach at Ohio State
the scheduled dates should be
shadowed another poor Cincinnati Reds outfielder Wily Mo Pena (26) is mobbed by his teammates after Pena hit a
from 1996 to 1998 and was
two-run
home
run
off
Tampa
Bay
,Devil
Rays
closer
Danny
Baez
in
the
bottom
of
the
ninth
.
the times.
·
start by the Reds.
inducted into the school's ath·
Left,hander Eric Milton, inning Wednesday in Cincinnati. Pena hit two horne runs in the Reds 11-9 wtn.
letic hall of fame in 1995.
The opening round is set
the key compone-nt in the
for Monqay, June 13 at
Reds' offseason overhaul ······· · ··········-~---···········································-~-·
'
Hidden Valley in . Point
of their rotation, was
Pleasant. Second scheduled
booed off the field after
iiale calls fat youth hitters to
another
subpar perforplay at Riverside in Mason
mance.
He
gave up eigl!t
oil Monday, June 20. Then,
hits and seven runs in only
on Monday June 27, play
All pmceeds be11ejit the l'on11 Pleo.)'mll Girl 'I· Si!flha/1 League
five
. innings. including
shifts to · Cliffside
in ·
Perez's grand slam.
Gallipolis.
Milton, who ~ot a three: After a one week break for
year, $25.5 mtllion deal, •
Jrily 4, the Tri-Courity youth
.e}IIU lJ
has been one of the NL's : .
golfers play at Pine Hills in
most disappointing pitch- •
Pomeroy on Monday. July
ers.
He leads the league ip •
11 . Then . the final awards
homers (22) and earned :
date roundup comreti tion
runs
(58) allowed, sky- · •
returns to Hidden· Valley on
rocketing
his ERA to 7.46. •
3u:ly 18 for nine holes,
Pena
got
the Reds off to :
~~~ards and prizes to cona rousing start on his big •
l:Jl!de the exciting year.
";. '.
night. The outfielder led •
•
off
the second inning with •
.•.
~ontact Information
his seventh homer, and :
F•x - 1-74()...446-3008
many of ·the fans jiggled •
Ill.
the
bigheaded dolls in •
E-mail- sportsOmydallysentinel.co.m
'
appreciation
as
he
rounded
:
"
Soorta Start
the bases.
" Brod Shormlln, Sparta Editor
Randa's two-run homer
(740) «6-2342. oxt. 33
•
off
Doug Waechter made it
~Vas IM/ST 11 11
'OFICI
bshermanOmydallytrlbune.com
3-1 in the third.
Playing in the city .where
lrpn Waite,., Sparta Writer
•
(140) «6-2342•. oxt. 23
he grew up watching his
Co-sponsored
by
the
bwahersO"myc:saily1rlbune.com
Hall of Fame father. Tony,
hiWii 6
ft«• CDID
'
'
play
for
the
(jig
Red
PLEASANT VALLEY WELLNESS CENTER.
IJorty Crurn, Spoi'IO Wrhor

r

Reynolds
to work
withOSU

.
•••
•
••
••

• • "9

•

Welcome back for round
two of what I consider to be
the I 0 best stories to happen
in the Ohio \!alley Publishing
area during the 2004-05 prep
'sports season.
Yesterday I covered stories
lO through six, and today I. . AROUND THE BEND
will -complete . the, list by ----~----· ­
introducing five through one. Southeaste;n Ohio Athletic
For those of you who may League lo I 0 teams starting
not remember, here is a look in 2006 at nine .
At eight. Gallia Academy
back at the bottom half of my
list.
·track stars Kayla Perry (400Southern ending' its 25 , meter dash) and Felicia Close
game football losing streak (lOOm hurdles) earning secstarted the countdown at ond-place finishes · at the
number 10. followed by the Ohio Track and Field
expansion
of
the Championships . . Ahead of

.

COED SOFTBAll. TOURNAMENT

••

. lildudlng Genm/IIIIJS, ..... fteiUitltis, Dou6lt ~ •

.

~eries.

All good things come to an the Blue and White.
end. That was the scenario
Ironically. Galli a' Academy
this year for the Jackson bas"' we nt on to the districts at the
ketball team, led by head Convo, while Jackson made
. an early exit in the sectionals.
coach Dustin Ford.
The lronmen snapped 33 The losing didn't stop there
· years of !loops frustration at for the lronmen, as Coach
Gallia Academy with a 55-45 Ford joined the Western
victory over the Blue Devil s Carolina University coaching
back on February 3.
staff a few weeks ago.
Known simply as 'The · 4. Eastern basketball
Streak' . . the Blue Devils
Without a doubt, the most
watched their ·longest win- fun I have ever had personalning span agai nst any school ly covering any one seaso~ at
in any sport over history one school.
come to an end that night.
Even Oak Hill girls basketSeniors Jared Humphreys ball during their state final
a~d Max Morrow combined season in 2003-04 wasn't this
for 30 points to end one infa- exciting,
.
mous droughi and kept
Eastern High School plays
another going. The Red and at the Division IV level, the
White riow possess a threegame winning streak agai nst
Plene see Top 5, Bl ·

a

~

·cV2" Potted
Geraniums.
-r i:,~~ '1 .9·9

I

"Thank You"

'2. , 9 or $15.0

NOW .. :

.

Bob's Market
"' .&amp; Greenhouses,
would like to say

4'/2" Premium Annuals
'

.

.IIVo-part

that in' the seven spot was
Point Pleasant's James Casto
(wrestling). Leah Eddy (tennis) and the shuttle hurdle
track team (Newt Mattox.
Justin Smith, Steven Deshuk
a'nd Travis Riffle) bringing
home state titles in 2005.
Which led us to numper
six, the import ao~e of team
competition. Ten league titles
and 15 postseason successes
came to the tri-county area,
proving that the- athletes
along the river know how to
play together.
So. 1"ithout any further
ado, l present the Top Five
stories of the 2004-05 high
school sports season.
5. Jackson ends 33-year
basketball losing streak in
the French City.

Tri-County Jr.
Golf Tour slated
for Monday

',

35

Edito, 's Note: The following is the second part in a

f

Sunday's Qamet
Athens at Feeney Bennett (DH). 1 p.m.
Barbousville at Mason Co .. 2:30 p.tn.

-

My Top Five sports stories o 2004-05

.

'

Two Convenient LQcptions:
2400 Ea•tern Ave.
(Across from KMert)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446-1711

.

.

•

.•111.0

(Trees, Shrubs and lOSeS' not Included in this
"Prices good while quantities 1asr

1/4 Mile-North
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone (i404) 773-5323

~

&amp;/'4 /OOS

•••

••

•••
•

(3p4) 675-1333. oxt. 19
lcwmOmydailyregister.com

- ----------

••

PleaseseePena. Bl

- - - - - - -- -

•

rws

'liMA

&amp;ouu

.t/'ICHI

•'

1'11

'
:.•..•......................•........ ~~·····················~········
__ ____ .
.

......_

'

�..
Page B2 ~ The ~y Sentinel

www.m.ydailysentinel.com
•

AmErican Legion BasEball

Mason rallies to beat Charleston
Bv lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYOAILYREGISTER .COM

RIPLEY, W. Va. - It may
not have been for a championship, but the Mason Cpuoty
legion baseball team sure did
play like it.
After a. costly mistake put
them down 2-1 in the seventh
inning, Tyler Hem stepp&gt;ed to·
the plate and drove in an RBI
off of an error to tie the eanie
with two outs. One batterlater,
Josh Whitlock stepped up ·and
hammered an RBf double to
allow Mason County to grdsp
victory from sure defeat to
beat Charleston 3-2 in game
one of the series Wednesday
night at Ripley High School.
Mason County found itself
in the position of fighting from
behind after pitcher John
Larry. Crum/photo
Ullom walked a hatter with Kameron ~ayre focuses before a pitch during game one on
bases loaded, puttin,g the visit- Thursday aga1nst Charleston. Mason County. won game one 3~
ing team up by one.
.
2 in a seventh .inning rally.
McCoy opened up the seventh keeping the home team were .deadlocked in a heated three including the man who
alive with a single to lead off 1- 1 battle.
;;ave Charleston the one run
the inning. After two quick
Mason County drew .first lead.
· .
outs, it seemed that a come- blood with a score in the secBefore Ullom. Whitlock
back would not be possible on ond inning off of an RBI sin- held his ground as pitcher for
this stormy night.
gle from R. Kestner, bringing the Mason County legion
But Hem would keep hopes home his brother Dale tewn. getting four strikeouts
. alive, hitting a line drive to the Kestner.
and givmg up only one run.
first baseman for what seemed
Two
innings ·
later.
Mason County tallied six
to an easy third out. One lucky Charleston tied the game up nuns in game one of the series,
bounce later ';md Hem found with · an RBI from Brad two from Whitlock with his
himself on base, 'driving in Pean;on on only the second hit g;une winning double. another
Kestner to tie the game at 2-2. of the inning for the visiting hit added . from Kameron
· Sayre along with hits from
. As fans cheered the tying · team.
run, Whitlock stepped to the · In the fifth, Mason County McCoy. R: Kestner and p.
plate and decided that this saved a potential nun late in the Kestner.
The win was the tirst part of
game would not go into exlrd· inning when a fly ball to right
mnings as he powered a dou- field was caught and rocketed a doubleheader. with game
ble to right field , bringing across the field to pick the nun- two not being available at
home Hem and ending the ner at third at the get the out.
release time.
game 3-2 iri favor of Mason
When the sixth got under
Mason County legion baseCounty.
·
way, relief pitcher Ullom had ball returns to action 2 p.m. on
Before that, both teams all he could handle, walking Saturday against Williamson.

Pena .
fromPageBl
Machine, Perez rail ied the
Devil Rays with one of his
most memorable games.
He doubled off the wall in
center in the first inning, and
came to bat with the bases
· Joaded and the Devil Rays
trai\in\1 3-1 in the fifth . He
hit Mtlton 's 2-0 pitch into
the lower deck in left field
for his fourth homer of the
season.

Tony and Eduardo have
442 homers, fourth on the
father-son career list behind
the Bonds (Bobby and
Barry), the Griffeys (Ken
and Ken Jr.) and the Alous
(Felipe and Moises).
David Weathers (3-0)
worked one inning for lhe
Reds and got the win.
Griffey · singled in the
sixth. extending his hitting
streak to II games, but was
picked off..second by catcher
Toby Hall, ending a threat.
Hall 's RBI single built the
lead to 9-4 in the seventh.

Thursday, June 9.

Notes: LH Casey Fossum,
forced from his start last
Friday, will take his normal
tum in the final game of the ·
series on Thursday .... The
Reds will activate RH Luke
Hudson off the 15-day DL to
start Thursday's game.
Hudson has been sidelined
all season by a sore shoulder. ... Perez's other grand
slam was. for St. Louis on
July 14,2000, off Chicago's
Bobby Howry.... The Reds
. last hit six homers on April
20, 2003 against Montreal.

inspiring 69-59 victory. ..
That win over the Vikings
catapulted the Rebels to th.e
Convo, a place that most of the
from PageiU
kids of Mercerville had never
visited, more-or-less played in ..
smallest division in Ohio, but
Their reward was South
demonstrated an ability to Webster, a team who went to
play with anybody that lined the state Final Four a year earup up with them on the floor. lier, and ·the Rebels truly
The Eagles, led b.y Coach proved that they belonged in .
Howie Caldwell, soared to a · Athens with . the Jeeps even
20-4 record this season against
though the~ lost.
competition that proved to be
More Importantly, they
tough for any program.
paved the way oil how to get
The Green and White over the second-season hump . .
defeated teams like Claymont,
If. at first you don't succeed,
which went on to the regionals
try, try again.
· ~n Division II, and ·Whiteoak,
2. Gallia Academy football
who lost a 13-point lead headdefeats Jackson to open
ed into the fourth quarter in the SEOAL play at Alumni
D-IV District title game before Stadium.
·
·
succumbing to EHS in overEverything about football
time .
season in the SEOAL pointed
BUI I thought the truest sign
of their greatness'this year was toward one place at the begin. ning of the year- Jackson.
who they lost to.
The lronmen were commg
Half of Eastern's losses
off
a 9-3 playoff season in
came · against
Federal
Hocking, a Division III school 2003 and had a majority of its
that went on to win the Tri- team back for 2004.
Valley Conference Hocking . They also had a new school.
a new stadium, a · ranking of
championship.
The other two setbacks eighth in the state poll and a 6- .
came from Diyision III state 0 record headed into week
nmner-up Ironton (70-68) and seven with the rival Blue
IV
Col~mbus Devils. .
Division
On t])e flip si.de, GAHS lost
Africentric, which went on to
a
majority of its SEOAL
win the 'state crown befmre l:he
championship
team from 2003
OHSAA stepped in and tooK it
and
entered
the
Apple City
away.
Eastern was the only pro- with a mediocre 3-3 record.
Despite holding a six-game
gra~ during the tournament to
winning
streak that dated back
hold a lead on the Nubians at
to
1999,
few people gave
or beyond halftime.
Along the way, . Caldwell Ga;Iia Academy a chance to
captured . "hi s 300th career . even be close to the lronmen
coaching victory and his squad as they opened SEOAL road
was ranked seventh in the play in Jackson 's multi-mil. lion dollar facility.
·
entire state.
Someone
apparently
forgot
Simply put, it took the best
to
tell
Coach
Matt
Bokovitz
to beat the best.
3. South GaUia captures and the Devils.
GAHS forced Jackson into
first sectional title in htstory.
five
turnovers that amazing
There is a wise saying .that
night,
. the biggest being a
states that Rome wasn't built
goalline recovery with under a
in a day.
It's true, it took many minute to play.
In the end, this contest will
decades for that empire to
always
be knownas 14:13.
become the power that it was.
Gallia Academy went on to
. The point of the saying is
that you have to start some- win a share of the SEOALwhere if you want io be better. with Logan, while the
That was what the South lronmen t1nished tied for third
Gallia boys basketball team with Marietta.
did when they conquered
And finally, the numero uno
Symmes Valley during the of the 2004-05 sports season.
Division IV sectional final at
I. Bryan Minear and Jeff
Wellston High School.
Payton.
SGHS, which had never
These two young men batmade a district appearance in tled the biggest test of all, life.
any sport during the school's
Minear, a senior at Eastern,
nine year history, knocked and Payton, a senior at Gallia
down that postseason. wall by · Academy, were both faced
going on a 24-12 run in 'the with life-threatening situations
fourth quarter to claim an during their final prep seasons

.TopS

'
2005

at their respective high
schools.
Minear battled . GuillianBarre Syndrome; a temporary
disorder that affects the nervous system, and was left hospitalized for much ofthe summer before his final go-around
with the Eagle football team.
Minear was left immobilized and, at one point, was on ·
a ventilating machine for respiration purposes.
The odds were not in his
favor to walk out of the hospi tal, more-or-less return to the
gridiron for the Green and
White . . .
.
• But where there's a will.
there's a way.
Five months · after being ·
diagnosed, Minear shocked
the medical world by making a
full recovery and P.laying in
every game at tatlback for
Eastern during its 7-3 season .
Payton, on the other hand.
had his spleen ruptured during
football season. .
After being in multiple hospitals for 30, days trying to
recover from this terrible
tragedy. Payton · cai11e. back
midway through basketball
season.
Again, where there's a will,
there's a way.
His struggles were rewarded
with a berth in the Division 11
district semis at the Convo for
hoops, and his return to the
state track ~d field championships in the po,le vault.
Sports ·are a secondary
event, no matter who, no rnatter what. Very rarely do we
realize that .until ~omething -·
like this comes along.
But for Bryan and Jeff. the
ability to overcome life 's
obstacles to simply do something they loved are the best
stories I have heard this year in
the tri-county area.
Their courage and devotion
can never be questioned, and
for all the hard work they did
to get where they are is.a testament in itself.
. That ' is why Bryan Minear
and Jeff Payton are the biggest
story of the 2004-05 sports
season.
And. oh yeah, they both
walked up and received their
diplomas whe.n they graduated.
That's a pretty good story
too, even if it's not sports relat'
.ed.
.
·
.
I want to congratulate all the
scholar-athletes on a· wonderful 2004-05 season and I can't
wairto get started in the fall of
2005.

\!Cribune - Sentinel - 3R ister ·
CLASSIFIED

Auction

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS .· YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~egister
(7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 •(304) 675-1333
Call TOday••• · . or Fax To (740) 446·3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
:..

I

This is the personal property of Mildred
Lee . Located on ihe comer of St. Rt. 692
and St. Rt. 684. Pageville, Ohio.
"Household"
'.
Round table &amp; 4 chairs, slider rocker &amp;
stool. Queen Ann desk, roper wasl1er,
whirlpool dryer, double beds. chest of
drawers. dressers, night stand, portable
T.V., entertainment center. couch. book
shel~es. quilt rack:, misc. chairs, Bruns
heating stove, misc. linens, misc. dishes,
pots &amp; pans, misc. electrical appliances,
cook books, lamps, tables, chest, chicken
collection and more.
''Misc."
Lots of sewing items, humidifiers, tool
box &amp; tools. fishing poles, lawn mower,
step ladder, log chain, bench grinder. vice,
misc. hand tools, Borden dairy horse &amp;
milk cart. step stool &amp; other misc.
Mary Lee-P.O.A.
Dan Smith-Auctioneer 111344
Christopher Cottriii-Apprentice #0096
Cash
Positive I.D.
Refreshments
"Not

~sponsible for

accidents or loss of Pro{H!rt)' "

.r

r.

\\\Ot '\(I \II '\l"i

ANNOUNCEMENTS

__

1•

G1\le away to good home
beautiful black and ch6co·
late lab puppies
Father·
black lab and Mother·l:iorder
col he. Call Greg al740·6961106 or Brenda at 740·992·
3034

THE OHIO RIVER
XTREME

Middleport American Legion

June 9th

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Moi'lday~Frlday for Insertion

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

In N.e xt Day's Paper

Publication

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
friday For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m .
Thursday for Su.ndays Paper

r

YARDSALEGAUli'OUS

Now you can have borders a.,d graphics
~
· addedtoyourclassifiedads
Jm
Borders.$3.00/perad
l!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

_r,;.

'

• Ail ads must be prepaid•

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publishing r ...rvaa the right to edh, n~ject, or cancielany ad at any time. Error~ mual be reported on the first da.,
Tribune-Sentinel-Register will be reaponalb.. fOf no more than the coat ol the apace occup ied by the errOJ and only the flrat insertion. We
I not be i
any ·loa' or expense that results from 11'te publication or omtaaton of an advertisement Correction w!ll be made in the first availebte edition . • Box number
are always confidentiaL • Current rate card applies. • All real estate advertlaementa are subject to the Fed.,-el Fair tiouaing Act of 1968. • Th is "'W'PBI~'I
accepts only t'!elp wanted ada meeting EOE standards. We will no-t knowingly accept any advertising in violation of the law.

.100
&amp;_c_A_R=l:Y=LE~:===~~~==~:-~~~~~ ·~...~1.o.. .HEI.P
. . W,\IVfl])
. . . .~~. 1

KrlT
__

lwrlght@l ~ . net'

1'771
Tyn
Rhos
Ad.
Thurman. 2 .5 mt les up
Cherry Ridge Ad. 619·6/11 ,
9am ·5pm . A lillie bit of
everything, misc. car ttems.
books , children .&amp; baby
Items, kn ick-knacks . Come
and see. Reasonably pnced.

NoW Htring D trec;t Care
Staff. Applications will be
taken · from 8:00·4:00pm at
Middleton Estates. 8204
Carla DrivEL Gallipolts, OH
45631 . No Phone Calls
Please

LorrAND

i

r

r

GtVEi\\~,\Y

•

~ Open ings tor 2 Par
ime Kennel Workers a
ocal
Animal · Sheller.
Please call (304)575·645€
or more 1ntorma11on .

9-4.

_.I

_po_tt_er"-y._ . - - - - 4 Family yard sale June
11t~. 12th. Oua1I,Creek trail:
Sat .6/ 11 /05 . er park, lot 49, aam-6pm .
1- Day -On ly!
Sam-? Lawn tractor. tools ,
snowb lower, home decor, 49 Vintor Ave . 619·6111.
everyth ing must go! 159 SA Fiesta, Imperial. Carnival ,
wome ns XL clothes . tools ,
218.
various items .

• __

4 gray and black Tabby. Call
(740)245·5919.
-------4 month old German shep·
herd. Already has shots. Call
(740)256·6909.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale ..................... :........................ 725
Announcement ............................................ooo
Antiques .........................:....................,........ 530
Apartments for Rent .........r ......................... 440
Auction and Flea Markit .............................080
Auto Parts I Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autos for Sale ..............................................710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750

5 family yard sale, Thurs·
Sat., Jun~ ~th - 111h •• 242
A1 rltne Rd.. Bidwe ll-Porte r
Something fo r everyQne .
Huge!
.

WANilll
To Do

Experienced Home Health
Care gjver. will sit wtt h
Elderly
Contact Kristina
Harbour (304)576-2495
Exterior
Paint ing ,
E.:penenced, Reasonable
rates , References. For Free
Estimates ca ll 740-64 5·
2638

Attention!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT " pro·
grams tor you to buy your
home instead of renting .
j 100°~ financ ing
Gemges Portable · Sawm11t.
• Less than perlect credit
don't haul your logs··to the accepted
mill JU~t call304 ·675 -1 957 .
• Payment could be the

Paramedics
li
EMT"s 0118.
needed Apply at 1 354
Jackson Pike , Gallipolis

,_'t

~~
&lt;tl2005 by NEA, Inc.

www.eomics.com

I \11'1 I)) \II \I

074 . yARD SA.I.[PoMEIIOYIMIDut..E

"11{\111'Booio.s, curtains. clotheS . fur·
ni1Ure State Route 218 &amp;
F.l1;::10~;;;;;;;.:;;;;,;;;;,;;,;;..;.,;...,
Orch'ard H1ll Ad. June 11 ,
37187 Vance Road June 10
.
lh:LP WANtl:Jl
9am-6pm.
&amp; 11. Nice clean teen g~rls
.
Fn., Sat. , Surr. June 10. 11, cloth ing A .E. Hollister, etc.
100 WORKERS NEEDED
12. Multi-family yard sale. Adult womens. hOusehold
Assemble crah§.
554 Jay Dr., Spring Valley. items , comforter set. 3 disc
WOOd items.
All sizes clothing including CO AM FM stero, tools ,
To $480/wk
girliboy infant/toddler. teens. misc . Signs will be posted.
740·992-6833
Materi~
l s provided .
adults. Uuge' varier~ of
Items: linens/curtains. glass· -------~ Free tnlormatton pkg_24 hr
ware. housewares, books, 6 Family yard Sale. Rutland
801-42Q-4649
American legto n June 1Oth
. collecti~es, changing table. and 11 th . B:OO to 4 :00
An E~tcellent way to earn
wood· bunk bedsibunky
money. The New Avon .
boards. 9am·5pm .
La rge
basement
sale,
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
Rutland
Fnday, June 10 Ra1ned out Salem Street.
las1 week. Le t's try again. Collectibles. Fenton. clothes AVON! All Areast Tci Buy or
&amp; furniture. Friday-Saturday SeK. Shirley Spears. 304Strawberries. good ch1!9rens
675-1429.
and juniors clothes. Dish'es. 6/10·6111 .
toys, books, videos , craH Pre MO\Iing Sale--June 10.
Drivers Needed:
!lams, Christmas items, From Middleport Hill past
COL Drivers w111ing to drive
knick knaCks. chest ol draw· RadiO
for local ready-mix-concrete
ers. Rain or shine t 914 station turn first road lel1 5th
company. Experience is
State Route 141 , GaHipolis. house.
preterretj but not necessary.
Friday/Saturday 9-7 6 miles -Ya-rd_Sal_e__-June
- 8-·9-.-Be-side- Drrver must be will ing to do
out Bulaville Pike from 160. Meigs High School
pre-mainte'nance oo trUCks
about4 mHes.from 554
&amp; eqUipment. yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores.
Gigantic yard sale. Friday
Experience operating equip611 ot05; 750 5econd Ave.
ment &amp; eJdra skills such as
Name brand clothes stze 12
welding a Plus.
Camp
Conley
•
Milton
Rd.
thru 16 children . plus s1ze
Call (304)937·3410
8:00am
to
3:00pm
Fri
and
women.
Sat June 9·10 Rain or
Movmg/Garage
sale. Shine. Videos. Puzzles. TV Due to recent cha~s
· '"'- in

r ~~~ - ~

. Green Acres .
Region.. Center, Inc.

Hal an immediate
• opening for: Treitment
Instructor
Job Requirements :
High School diploma or
GED equivalent
Full·time positions available
Working wtfh MRIDD adults
in Varied settings
· Send resume or

Brand New Method
Pari· Ttme
MM1cat
Dry In 1 Hour
Consultant
or
Nursing
No Steam-or- Shampoo
Assistant, needed for busy
Ffee·EStimates
Physicians Oftice. Please
·· ... Clearly C lean""'
send Resume to PO Box ·
.
304 675.0022
220 Point Pleasant'. WV or
3009 · Jackson Ave. Point
Ohio Valley Engtne Repatr
Pleasant, WV
Lawn mowers. small engi ne
PT' Fiscal Officer. Income repair. Sales and ser\lices.
Tax Adm tnistrator, Vill~ge of 281 Grate Road . Patnot. OH
Rio Grande. Pick up aPplica- 45958
tion at Village Hall. 174 E.
College or fa.: resume with Ret1red Ct}nsl!an Lady w111
references ' to (740)245· sit with Ch ildren in your
1704. Application deadline home call (304)675·5392
noon , June 14 ACcounting
experience reqUired.

Rocksprings Rehabil itation
Center !S looking for d&amp;dteat·
ed compass tonate State
Interest letter to:
Tested Nursing Assistants.
Green Acres Regional
·competiti\le wages , health
Center, Inc.
and denta l benelits , and
Attention: Personnel
401 K available. We take
·
P.O. Box 240
pnde in our facility and resiLesage, WV 25537
dents and need great team
Fo:: 304-762-2862
players to jotn Us. If yoU
Email:
have these qualificatiOns
gaR:Udlrecway.com
please
apply
to
EOE
Rocksp rings Rehabil itation
Center. 36759 Rocksprings
Help Wanted
Road .
Pome roy.
Oh io
Waitress. bartender full or 45769. EJdendK:are
part time. will train Apply at Health Services. Inc. is an
JeriChO lrin_304-675-4167
·eq ual opportunity employer
that encourages workplace
Legal secretary needed in diversity. M/F ON

,
Locators

All real eatala adver1islng
In lhis newapaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act or 1968
which makes It illegal to
ad~ertlse '"any
preference, limitation or

dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on ·
race, color, religion, 1ez
familial status or riational
origin, or any intention to

make any sUCh
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
Thll newapaper will not
~nowlngly

accept

advertinmenta lor real
eatate which ia in
violation of the IIIW. Our
readers a.re hereby
Informed that all

dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are

BL~IJIIEl&gt;S

available on an eqlqll
opportunity bases.

OPI'OirruNm·
•NOTICE•

Duplex. ea ch with 3 BR. LR ,
OR, Kttchen . Bath &amp; PorCh.
House 3 BR. LR. K ttchen .
Bath.
Both in Poi nt
Pleasant
(304)675·2495
after. 7:00pm

HIO .VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO. recommends tha
ou do business with peo
le you know. and NOT t
end mopey through th
ail until you have investi
ated the offerin

For sale' o r rent In country . •
Cad mus , 3 bedroom, lull
basement. hardwood floors .
no pets (7 40)379·2540_

MONEY
TO Lo.-\."&lt;

Great, Houses at Great
Pnces! We have 2 hOmes 111
the Gall tpolis and Rutland
areas. WE FINANCE! NO

CLOSING

Gallipolts. Experience pra· Sales
1
d b
·
· d
erre , ut not requtre : Gallipolis ·Daily Tribune is
Please submtl resumes to
accepting resumes for a fu ll
548 clo Gallipolis trme out&lt;'"" sa' los repre&lt;•n·
CLA Box
D
li 'bu · PO
Box 469
.;nU'U
~

COST.

NO

POl NT-5 1
Contact Nick
@
1·800-333·
Huffman
6910.

Happy Ads .....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................640 Saturday, June 11 ; tQam·? and stand. much more. co~rage area Medi Home aily n ne. 45631
· ·
· tative, The ideal candid.ate
In search ol pri\late, seclud·
Health, Agency i!i seeking a Gallipolis, OH
will haW .sates 8)(perience.
ed ·w'ooded parcel . f · tO
Help Wanled ................................................. 110 · 1126 Second Ave. (acro ss Great Pries
motivated, indepeod·
preferably pnnt. Please send
acres with small home or
Home lmprovements..:..:.............................810 from the Nazarene Church). Huge Estate Sale June 9,10, highly
ent full -time , Regjstered Little Caesars Pizza is resume and c:over letter to ·
cab1n with utthties. Must bE&gt; ,
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310 Park Lane Mob i~ Home and 11th 8 :0()-?, Rt2 North Nurse ti!ltmanage/service accepllng resumes for all Gallipolis Daily Tnbune Attn
' w1th1n 30 minutes dnve vme
Household GOQds ....................................... 510 Court, 57 Jay Or It 28, Opposite ECkard Chapel f!ld. cl ients out of our GallipoliS· management pos·.t ions at Jim Free land . 825 Third
ot RIO Grande. Doesn't ha\le
•
OH. June 10 &amp; 11 "The Good S t uff ~
LoW· office. Must be litensed in our
Gallipolis
location. AW .. Galllpohs, OH 45631 .
to be laney. hxer upPer ok !
Houses for Rent..........................................
410 Gallipohs,
8:()().5:00 Canceled if ram.
Pr1tes
both OhiO and Wesr Virgmia. Please fax resume to 1-866Have
alre ady
Deen
In Memorlam ..............................:..............-.020
We oHe r a compet 1 t 1 ~~e 471 ·2196
Wanted : Someone to Haul
approved for 100" e l!nanc1ng
away Old th ings to landfill
Insurance ..................................................... 130 Sat. June 11 . from 8:oo- Large 5- Family Ya rd·Sale. salary. benefits package and
and look1ng lor 1mrned1ilte
3:00.
Sk(s,
household
items.
Fr!day-June-1
o
9
:am
-to·
40tK.
E.O
E
Please
send
LPN
(304)675-~15•7
- Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................660
possess10n C a ~ (740)44 1TV, toys, sm. tent, mise S:pm.Rt -8 7 near Creston · ;esume to 352 Seconcl Ave_, A leading provider ot sup- 11511
ScHooL&lt;;
1395
• Uvestoc:k. ..........................................- ........630 items. 116.Mabeline Dr.
Church Road.
Harold Gallipolis, OH 45631 or call port services to individuals ·
•·
Lost and Found ..:........................................ 060 Sat June 11th. 41amily yard Parsons residence. Name 1·800....•81 ·6334 .
AHn·.· with mental rerardatK&gt;n and .
.11~U(.~
· New 3 BD 2 Bath Home
Lots &amp; Acreage ........ ~........................:...r .....350 · sale. 9-4. Qid Navy, Tommy Brand clothing aiVsizes. Audrey Farley, RN .
developmental disabj~es !S
Only t 98/mo. Includes a c.
·
I!Joj{jng for a lull-time and Gallipolis C•reer CoUege
Miscellaneous.............................................. 170 Hilfiger, J. Sill . Oooney &amp; M1crowave/ Books!S tereo.
aelrvery and set up, 7 40·
(Careers ·close To Home)
Burke, Aeropostale, comput- Lots ot/ml~ Ho u sehold~ Energet_tc. efficie nt staft part -time LPN"s in · the
385·9948
Mi~Q~llaneoU&amp; Merchandise ....................... 540
PRot~
ersl electronics, VHSIOVD. items at Yard- ~e Prices- rilember needed tor bus~ Gallipolis' area AI) Equal Call Tcx:lay! 740-446-4367,
SER•lCIS
· - -- - - - - . Mobile Home Repa1L .................................1160 coins. State 3treet,· besJde NAFA.
1.()00.214.()452
chiroprac1JC offlce. If Quail· Opport unity
· Employer
--New 3 BR 2 Bath Section al
gallipoliaeanloefrlegl!.com
MQblle Homes for Rent ......:......................-420 . o..-.
I"'H......,, ~- -e~lle.
•
tied send resume -to . 750 FJMION For more !nformaTURNED
DOWN
ON
Home
Only
249.'mo
..-~, vu.....,. ~ · " •••
Yard Sale 191'7 N. Ma11i St
'
F irst Ave.. Gallipol is OH lion call Dorothy HarJMlr Accreotled l.lernoer ll,(;cre1:11t1ng SOCIAl SECURITY /SSI? tncluties AIC. delivery &amp;
Mclblle Homes for Sale ...............................320
tor
l110oit:*
r
ThurSday 9th.' Fflday lOCh . 4 8-4 Fri &amp; Sat.
·"
4 563L
•
{740}446-7148.
and Scnools t 2748
No Fee Unless We W 1n 1
setup 740·385-7671
Money to Loan ............................................. 220 fam ily, anbques, dishes,
A
~
1-888·582·
3345
· • Estalllished
_ Heat~.r:;...;
~ u ••~·
~ ~-~-Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers..........................740 Granetware, cloth .IOQ. ~
I.UV&gt;'"·
.,· I.ICI10N
... 1\.,. .. 0AND
~
~
Ne~ 3 BA Home On ly
r!L'l . "~'
ComR•nv in Gallia County
Musical Instruments ...........-...................... 570 2 milesOUI218.
189m~ . Includes ale. dehvfo r expenenced Alocal Athens electncal disery and ser up 740·385·
Personals .....................:............................... 005 Yard sale Frjday 8;00 to Ctoss Creek Auction : looking
rnstallers and technicians If trbrtor 15 looking t:w an i()(j.. Cureo
Cabin et Cherr)
4367
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560 4 ·30 F"IShing potes. knrves. Buffak&gt; every Saturday at 7 interested send resume to :
$150.00. Call J&lt;¥:8 7 40 ~
tool
s.
1.2
mtles
Ke
mper
0u1
of
Stat
n-at
vidual
whO
can
stJP8MS8
Plumbing l o Heating .. :................................ 820 ·
pm.
e ~ ers. CLA Box 566 clo GallipOlis and otheJS. P&lt;ovide 992-6762
No Down Payment even
_ A_d_
. _ _ _ _ _ plus Local Consignments. Tri bune. PO. Box 469 ,
- ProfesSional Services .................................230 H__ollow
exceptionaJ ru_
stomer servS59 000 New Haven 2 800 w1th less. than pertect credtt
FREE Home
'
.
New &amp; Used ·Merchandise. Galtipohs. OH 45631 .
ICe and De at)le to partici- DIREC1V
sq. tt Log Cabin as tS. w 3· 5 on mrs 3 tledroom. lJ?ath
Radio, TV llo CB Repair ............................... t&amp;O Yard sale, 2 taml.es. 68- 1·55(),16t6
Reedy
enter1ainment
System.
pate in all aspects ot running
ac res. Call Mike (5 13)31 4: home 1n Mtddleport C0~1
- Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360 6/1 t . Cloltles, ki1icl&lt;·knacks.
E&gt;&lt;perienced r . . - ·Gutter.
lot. carport, wrap- aro und
a business. PreYIOUs ektctn· FREE Equipment and Install 2754
~able , misc . Burnen Rd ..
Call
(740)682·
7318
afte
r
• Schools lnslntctlono..:._.............................. 150 Kanauga.
porch lanced tn yard. base·
cat salesl~rs experi- up to four rooms. 145 chan6pm
nels 529.00 a monttt Ask 2·3br Home.
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ............................., 650
1/2ba , ment. pay(rlent same as
ence a plus.
·
·Send resume to HA how to get FREE HBO Hardwood Floo rs , Totally rent. 740 -992-6300.
SituJtjons Wanled ...........- ....:..............:.... 120 · Yard sale ' Hoi dogs. baksd
MAX., and STAAS. 1-800- Remodeled (304 )593- 2532 - - -- - -- goods. 9am-$aturday. JtJile
qepanment
~0.
Box
6668.
Absolute
Top
Dolla
r:
U.S.
- 'Space for Rent .........-..............~•.•.•.•..... _.••••• 460 11 . 0 Trinity U.M. Church
52:H556 for details.
cr (859)245-7454
Ready to moVe in. 3 BR
HuntingtOn WV 25iT3.
Silver 'and ·Gold Coins.
5pol1lng GOods......................--......-....... 520 Perter.
,
Home in country sen;ng only
P1oolsets. Gold RirJ9S. U.S.
W.vmn
3-Bedroom.
1-Bath t 9&amp;mo w ith l0° c do wn
SUV'I for Slle....- .....-..-...·-·····..............720
Currero:y.-M.T.S. Coin Shop. Career CenteJ &amp; Rio Grande McClure's Restaurant now
To Do
RemoOelecl. Full Basement, 740-385-4J67
hiring
aM
locatiOns.
tufl
'
or
Trucks for'SIIe n•-••••-..u-•••-'""""'"''"'-' 715
College)
151
5econd
Avenue. Comrnumty
A.pphances
1~ uded ,
Upllolllet r __ .................-....- ...........-.. 870
Requirements; ART. 6S Ill part-tme. pid&lt; up applioaGallipolis, 7«&gt;-446-2&amp;42.
Oulbu ildlng &amp; 24FT Pool .
tion
at
k)c.ati()r!
&amp;
bring
badt
0( retated fieki. Current
v- For Slle......................................- ......730 3391 ChesW - . , acm os - ed 10 buy: Bench press RT
188 Park On.... (304)07510:ooam
&amp;
LICen&amp;e w rtf'l Oh.o State between
from
f&lt;&gt;rrest
Aun
6191
6110.
7460
Wlnted to Buy .......-..............................::-090
weigtlt httmg set. Call Board· of Aesp~ratory Care 11 .008m, Monday thru
Wlllled to Buy- Farm So4Jflliel .... - ....-.•••• 620 Too many items 10 list Lots (1-40)388-032 t .
T'A'O years cfirncal expert- Sarulday.
of fTNSC_ something for all.
once.
Send "'"'""" by .lJne _,...:__ _ __ _ _
Wanted To Do ..- .. --..--...._ .......---110
15:
Sh•ron
Ca rmiChael . Night Shtft Cook.. 35-40 hr.
Good
Ol1e
Thurs.
I
FndaV
Wan led to Renl. ..--·-·-·~ ................_ .....470
Buckey8 •Hilla
Career per M , 18 Of older. Pic*-~
9th/.
,
Otti---8:00 untJI-?
2
Y.-d Sal&amp;- Ga"IJ"Oiil._, ..................- ···'·-072 miles Nor1tl ot Chestet on Rt
Canis&lt;. ~0. 9o&gt;&lt; t 57. Aio BI'I&gt;I'C8bon at Dairy au-&gt;,
Yard Sale Pomero,..,iddfe._....-..............074 7. WwdwoliUog tcds. hots
Grande,
OH
4567• Mfddlepoft,
No Phone
· Y.-d Slle Pt. Ple~sant ..,......- .................... 076 of misc. SIZe 18 clottlel.
L..o.-.,.---,.----' (7-40)2&lt;5-5334. EEO
Callsl'
•

i

r

Fri-Sat-Sun .
June 10, 11, 12
French 500
Flea Market
Gallia County Fairgrounds"
1

I

..

''

• '111

1

•• _.

Counc~

~

co~ege:s

.. ..-..-UVI,

e.u~l

..

•

4 Bedroom home , 2 blocks
from school, good ne tghbor·
hood . 648 4th Ave Call
(740)388·8164.

1

740-698-1808

-- - -

Ho~n:~
HJK5ALE

1

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 for free. For more info.
Call Amy at

I

I

10

HL Constructto n
sarrle as rent
Metal Roofing &amp; Shmgles. , Mortgage
Overbrook Center is current1
Conc'r'ete work.
Decks. 740)992·7321
ly accepting applications for
LPN's ALL SHIFTS!! 11 yOu Patnttng Interior &amp; Exterior.
are interested , please come · Pole
Barns,
Garages
in. and till out an application (:304)895·3720
at
333
Page
Street, I will care lor you r loved one
Middleport. Oli . EOE
tn my home. Call .(740)388·

Ir~--~·A·~-S.A.~•.E.:

•

BENEFIT BINGO

Display Ads

ADOPT: A Happily married,
cht ldless couple longs to
share our lives with your
• baby. W ill provtde a liletime
of 10\le, happiness. oppty &amp;
security We know that your
decision will be made out of
3 family sale. 61 ~ 0·6/11 .
pure love tor your baby
Toys. baby items. kids
• FOIJND
Expenses pd. Please call
clothes li muc~ more. 337
Mike &amp; Donna 1-866·72DFound·-·Ciass Fling. Call to Roush Lane.
5099
I D 740·992·3412
-3-la-m-ily-ya_ro_sa-le-.-F-ri·&amp;-Sa-t.
The lady w ho bought my
Clay
ToWrihotJSe,
Lovers
.
corner booth &amp; table please
. y 1\lUl SALE
Lane.
Toddler
boys,
girls.
lg.
·- piCk , 11 up. Call (740)446·
mens clothing , toys , lmens,
7375.
Home lnter~o r. video games,

- · Giveaway •._
...... ~........................................... :.040

Call for information now!
740-446-31 00
740-645-2561

Word ' Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lnclud@ Complete
Description • Include A Price • AvOid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

1
....~-. -----...
GtVFAWI\Y

Building Supplies ........................................550
- Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Business Opportunity.................................210
Business Training ....................................... 140
campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks ....,...................................... OtO
Cl)lldiEiderly care ....................................... 190
.. Electricai/Refrlgeration ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent. ...:......................,..,. ...... 480
.. Excavating ...................... :.. :......................... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
Farms for Rent.. ...........................................430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ............ ;........................................ 490
For Sale ............:........................................... 585
For Sale or Trade......................................... 590
- FruHs &amp;Vegetables..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms..... :.................................. 450
General Hauling........................................... 850

Take Your Cheer &amp;
Tumbling Talents
to the Xtreme ...

Dealers Welcome

Successful Ads- - - ,

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

•

10:00AM.

Sentinel

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

~

PUBUC AUCilON
Sat. June 11, 2005
STATE OF OHIO V. replacement · of soli the Meigs County 100% of the contract
aa specified, on prop- , Commlaaloners at pries.
KEVIN DALTON
ATHENS COUNTY ·arty located near their office at the NO bidder may withCOMMON
PLEAS Eastern High School. C o u r 1 h o u a e , draw his bid within
CASE NO. 04CR·Il7B
38900 · SR . 7 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 thirty (301 days attar
NOTICE OF JUDG- Reedsville, Ohio. Bids until
1:00 . pm. the actual date ol the
MENTTO:
will be opened In the Thuraday, June 30, opening thereof. The
ELIZABETH Office
of
I he 2005 and then at 1:15 Meigs
County
GLOECKNER
151 Treasurer of the pm at said office Commlss·lonars
MULBERRY AVENUE ·Eaatem Loc~l School opened and road reserve the rtghl to
POMEROY, OH 45769 District Monday, Juno aloud the following:
relocl any or all bids.
In accordance with
20, 2005 al12:00 p.m. Construction ol 2793 Miele Davenport
Section 2923..32 of Each bid shall be Linear IHt of side· Meigs
County
tho Ohio Revised . accompanied by a bid walks lor the Village Commissioners
Code
Elizabeth bond for the full of
Middleport. (61 9, 16 '
Gloeckner Is hlfeby amQunt or the project Specifications are
notified that, on aupported by a Power provided tn bid peekAnnouncements
February 14, 2005, the of Attorney, for the at.
Athens County, Court bonding agent, and a Specifications, and
of Common Pleas cer.tlflcate from the bid forms may be
entered an Order of department
of secured at the Office
Forfeiture in favor of Insurance or a certl~ of Meigs County
tho State of Ohio fled . check, caahier Commissioners, Rutlan" American
ag~inst
property check or teller of c o u r 1 h o u s a •
Legion
known as 699 Pall! credit for len percent Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
June
12, 2005
Road, Albany, OH and of the bid. Bids are to Phone 740-992-2895.
ll:OOAM
to
1522 Louisa !lvenua, be oeaied and subrrilt- A deposit ot 0 dollars
Albany, Ohio'. The led to Lf8a M. Ritchie, witt be required lor
5:00PM
court
has
been Treasurer,
Eastern each set of plana and· AU You Can Eat
advised
that Local SChool Diatricl, specifications. .
For.$7.00
Elizabeth Gloeckner 50008
SR
681 Each bid must be
Drinks Are Fre.
haa a potential claim RHdavllle,
Ohio sccompanted
by
to theoe parcels of 45772 and ·plainly either a bid· bond in
l!vtryortt Wtlcomt
""'' estate. Elizabeth marked on the out- the amount of 100%
Comt on Comt all
Gloeckner Is hereby side . "Bids for Soil of Jlle bid amount
given Notice pur- A e m e d I a t i a n . •• with a surety satiafacou•ntto 2923.32(EKI.l Su~ceasful bidder tory to the afoi'BS8id'
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
10 that she may taka
wlll be required to Meigs
County
stops to preserve her acquire a perform- Commissioners or by
lnterast, If any, in the
ance bond acceptable certified
check,
l'llllt estate. A copy of to owner and a state. · oaahiers c-. or let·
the
Order
of mont that no delln- .~ter of credit upon a
Forfeiture may be quent personal prop- solvent bank In the
obtained from RObert arty taxoo ora owned amount of not leu
F.
Smith,
Ohio in Meip County.
than 10% of the bid
Department
of The board reaervoo amount in ,....,.. of the
Meigs
Insurance, 2100 Stella ·the right to reject all ·aforesaid
Court, Columbus, OH bids or any portion of C o u n I y .
432315-1067.
a. bid. Project b8etc- Commlaslortera. Bids
Robert F. Smith
ground, scope and lhall be sealed and
Pleasant VaHey Hospital
Special Prooecutor
apeciftcatlhns may be · marked aa "Bid lor
Village
of
Respiratory Therapist
Athans
County obtained by contact- the
ing Ricky D. EdWards, Middleport Sidewalk •
Prooecutora Office
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
o.ted At ' Columbus, Superintendent, at ProJect Bid" and
accepting resumes for a Respiratorj
mailed or delivered
Ohio thll 16th day of (7401 667-6079.
Therapist. Must be a graduate of an
Lloa M. Ritchie ·
to: Meigo County
May, 2005.
approved
Respiratory Therapist Progmm.
(51 19, 26, (61 2, 9, 16, Tnliasurer
Commi1sloners,
(61 2, 9
Co u r Ih o u1 e ,
Current West Virginia license required.
23,2005
·
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576!1.
Excellent salary. holidays. health
AllenHon of bidders
insurance single/family plan. dental plan.
is called to all the
Public Notice
life insurance, vacation. long-tenn
Public Notice
requifllments condisability and retirement.
tained In the bid paetc.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
FOR REMEDIATION NOTICE .TO CON- el, particularly lo the Send re&gt;umes to: Pleasant Valley Hospital.
TRACTORS
Federal
Labor
c/o Human. Resources.
OF SOIL
The Eaalarn Local Sealed proposals for Stan&lt;!ards Provlsiqno
2520 Valley Drive.
Davis-Bacon
Board of Education the cons~ructlon of and
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
will accept btds 'for sidewalks for the vil- Wages, various insur(3041 675-4340
the ·remdval and dis- lage of Middleport, ance requirements,
www.pvalley.org
poeal of contaminat- Meigs County, Ohio, , various equal perAA/EOE
ed soil, along with lhe will be received by ronrlance bond for
I

{!tribune.

To Place
Your Ad,

-.

Auction

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Canl

In One Week With Us

lo

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

-~

~- -- ··-'1

SHOP
CLASSIREDS

..

.

____

---------_:_--...,.-------::-...._

:--...;..__---:

I

�'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 9, 200,5

~~H~~~--~f·~---,~~~~~~--;1

HUMES

FOR SAtE

In town loc,a!IOn- 1-2 BR Twrn Rrvers Tower IS accept·

www.orv .com
Home Lietings.
L!s.t you r home by call•ng
17401446·3620

Ranch home mce yard. AC 1ng applications lor ' warting
References
requ1red !lSI for Hud-subsrzed, 1· br,
$45Q,mo. ren't &amp; $450 Sec apartment, calf 675-6679
Dep. You pay aU ut11111es EHO

V1ew photos/info online.

Avai lable
6 15
(740)446-3644

Call

Valley Apartments in Mason.
WV
currentl y JICCepting
Small 2 bedroom hOuse applrcatrons. Apply at 501
$475 month 1 mile from Sllawnee Trait m Po int
town. Call (740)441-0194 or Pleasant. ' Applications
(7401441 - 1184
acc epted on TuesQays
HUD aSSISted. (304)675~ loun.E H om:~
4900

Down! 3 bedroom, 1
4 bath UR. DtR. F'R
ar garage fenced rn
ack yard 1'2 acre.
lose to town , $132.500
ode 4505 or call
740 446-8325
o.o

HlR

i

Rn;r

~;:;==~==~ ·, 16x70,

SPACI:

t

f580

r

I

MJ,
I·

r

~

Pioneer FarmsTead, 4 bedrOom , reconstructed hewed
Log House. modern t&lt;iciliMs.
2
hewed
log
Outbuildings.
57
acre
Christmas
Tree
Farm.
· 25,000 morelless trees. 27
acres 'mature hardwood,
tr8e machinery, minerals,
county water, 112 mile paved
road ' fror.r tage . $265.000
13041675-4138
www.landandfarm.com

r.

B UiiNOO

AND BUILDINGS

,

JudY
Kay 's Restaurant
'l'llupstarrs apartments. 740416·1808, 740•247- 1100.

r
_

A CREAGE

1 and . 2 bedroom apartments. turnrshed and untur·
nished, security deposit
requi red , no pets, 740·992- ·
22 18 .

r~1

I
•

1/2 Ac. lot Tycoon Lake on
Eagle Rd. Co. Water (not
lake
front)
$7 .500 .00
(740)247-1100 or (364)5326271 cell

2 acres more or less, all util·
.
ed
d 2
·1
roa .
mr es
" res. pav
from
Chester. $16.000.
.
:1304_.:.14_83_
-7_5_50_ _ _ _ _
8.5 acres Green Township.

1 000
' of
·ArbuCkle Rd. over •
Raccoon Creek frontage.
740
286
29
·
S .boo. (
)645'=0
85 acres about 6 miles
south of Oak Hrll. Call
(740)682-7318 after 6pm.
For rent . Trailer kJt. Roush
Chesf\ire .
Ohio
Lane.
· Phone (7401J67-m4 after
5,00pm.
Looking tor , Private Large
Kll. 200x300 for my Mobde
Home , 14x65. an Eleclrrc.
11yrs okj good shape. or 1
'acre country sening, place
for pets in Gallia Co .. OH 0(
Mason Co., w/all' .hookups,
will pay S1 501month. Reply
to PO Box 61 1, Rrpley. WV
' 25271

r

Gallipolis, OH Hrs. 11·3 (M· John Deere 10 ft_No Tit Drill
S)
!or
Ren1.
Carmjchael
Equip~nt. (740)446·24 12.
~
ANTIQUES
John Deere Commercial
___
WorkSite Products In Stock!'
Buy or sell. Riverine Compact Excavator 27C,
Antlque.s, 1t24 East Main 350, 500/Skid Steers 371.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740- 320,
325.
3281Tractor
992-2526. Russ Moore, Loader Backhoe 11OTLB.
Check . out our rental rates
iiiown
:iife":r.~~~~~~~ Great
Financing AvailableCarmichael
Equipment.
(740)446-2412.

1 bedroom house lor rent in
Gallipolis, air
1·2 bedroom apt. 1n Po1nt
Pleasant for rent. {740)446- 22 Oak factory padded
Church Pews. 11 fl . lon.g ,
2200.
good conditron, $125 each.
1BA Apl. in Spring Valley. 40 new Hymnal Churcn
Clean &amp; affordable. WI D books
$360. (740)388hookups.· $290 per month+ 8965
(740)386-001 7 or
dep
1740)339·0362.
3--30X 100 Wooden Truss
Green Houses co mplete 10
28 A apt. State Route 160· be torn down $2,000.00 lor
,S4001month. stovelretrrgera· everything.
3 DoQ Frick
tor included, washer/drye r . Saw Mill gas power uni1
hookup. (7401.441-&lt;1194 or 4 .5oo.oo.
Woods·7S.O
(?_40)«1-1 184
Back
Hoe for tractor

I.

Building for Lease Gallipdlis
Ferry Area .
Ideal fo,r
Restauran11 .Etc . (304)675·
7538

Lors &amp;

Downtown Gallipolis. River
&amp; Park vrew. $360·$600Jmo
Some utilitres paid . Now
, ~Cepting applications. Call
(740)709~1590 (local call ) ·

' CRI ~':1&gt;

A CROSS

Phi llip
Alder

•
'1118 w.ws 1es111oor
hie.

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

Residential • Commercial
.

f
L

·

Home Creek Enterprises

~~~~~~~~--0-hi_o__.__.._~

99 ChevY 1ton Cab &amp; chas~
sie. long wheel base AJC.
cruise, tilt, 5-speed·. manual
transmission , 350 gas.
69,000 miles. (740)256·
64.03. (740)64S.·0446.

7.J0-99~-7~5J

992-5682 .
LKWIS
CONCR£'1'E
CONSTRUCTION

Mye r s Tree

Service
• lnsured-Frt't'
E~ t i nHit l'S

· Senior Cilizen
di s~·o unl

7 .&amp;0..99Z-lli21

.w types Of .

JU Yeari b.~nenc~

Concrete Work

'I'D

25 Yfars Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

CansbucUon

-All Your H ome
1999 Bravada. leather. full ·
Improvement Neelh,
poWer, Alloy wheels. neW
• Sidinc_ ·• WLJnluw~
trres.
$6 ,299
OBO.
• Decks • PorL·he!-&gt;
( 740) 645 _
_
2729
• Cerami c Tile &amp;
- - - -- - - - H ardwood Flouri nc
95 Dodge truck . 4x4, auto• G&lt;.~rage~
malic.·
$3.000
Call
• Room Add . • Routing
• Ki tc hen.'&gt; • Bath.~
(740l 388 -0011

.r

Insured
Frtoe Estimates

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

"No Juh l O S~rwlf ..

V~'lS
FOR SALE

R a~.- Lne. OH
740. 247-2162 or
740-41 6-35118

r~4tJ:am I

New Holland 630 round
baler. Massie Ferg\!son
Rake. 2 round feeders.
(7401441 ,4288.
$4,000.
Must Selll!

1015

*Free ESIImltiS*

Storage

. 949-1405

Phone

Hill's Self
Storage

i

_..$'x10'
tO 10'x30'

2

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

iL~--------,JI·
lb:AI. }S[\yt
\\'AI~

I Buy Homes- Local person
ooys l'lomes. Confi~n tial .
Otia cash . Jim. 740-992. 6300. No calls after

9: ·

r

H&lt;Jl:sES
nJR RE:i\'T
'
..___oiiiiiiiiiiiiiioi--"·

2 BOA- 2 1'2 baths; 2 car
. ga(ag@. lurnl"shed: 'close to
Holzer .hQsprtal. (740)44 1.
0310.
3

BR

over

r

~·.

~:po
·~

Ra nch
Home
Garage in Camp
Conley area of Pt large
tenc8a yard tn great netghborhood. $675 mth. Deposrt
ana References requrred
Call 1·304-531-1197 or 1·
992-0165
304-273-1112

., w la~

':r rr:~::

Pleasant Valley Apa rtment
AH...-1
local company .Ottenng '"NO Are now tak.Jn9 AppJ1cati6ns
DOWN PAYMENr oro- for 28R. 3BR · &amp; &lt;BA ..
are taken
grams i:)r yQll to buy your Applk:!itlOns
Monday tl'lru · Friday, from
home Instead oi r8fl1Jng
!HIO A.M -4 p M Office IS
• 1OOO"o f'lnarong
• Less t!'!af' o-erfed credit Located at 1151 Ellefgreen
Drrw Po•nt Pleasant, W\1
OCCOI)toO
• oaymel'lt could be me Phone No IS (30-4 }675·
5806 E H 0
same a.s rent
t.tortgage
Locators
Tara
Town l'lou5e
1740)992-7321
Aoartmerts Very Spac10us.
Bra~ New 2 Bearoo""i 2 Bedrooms C A 1 1 2
r-ouse ,.. to...-1'1 S4 75 '""'0 Bat"\
Adul1 P?or &amp; Ba by
C A Nasfler Oryet- Hoo~·Jo P.l;ool Paoo Start SJ85,Mo
StO\I€ Pe'""rgerator Included ' No Pets
Lea se Plus
~u; .U 1..Q194 Of (7401441- Securrty DePOSIT ReQuired
1184
'
174011'46-3481

1"'-sr:'A~F~Arnlll
~~v'IOtrru:r
~~~

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

992-3194
or 992·6635
"Middleport's only
SeH· Storage"

ROBERT
BISSELL

CINSTIIICDIN
• New Homes

• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

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

i

New Dealer lor Mantana Tnctol'$ .
sta rting at H horse . 57 horse
with shuttle transmission
4-wd, remole h1•drauli cs .1 year war rant)·

*••• ..\tso u, ·ailubl en••

• Task Master Tracto rs 26 hotse • 38 horSe.
•
4wd ( I year warranty}
,
4
• Farm Pro 'l'ractors·2o horse - 30 horse
. · loaderS, finish mow~rs,..till ers ·
•
, NE W ARRIV AL ZTR Dixon (Zero Thrn :
Radius ~l owe r i JO inoh culling width to SO • -.
.
inch cutting width -' )'ea r warranty
":
T&amp;D TRA C I'OR SALES &amp; EOIJIPMENT •
right in the heart of Chesler
:

985-4.184

BARNEY
.JIJGHAID, STOP MAKIN'
MARY BETH CRY!!

1

IT AIN'T HIM,
MIZ PRIJNELL y

r•o

w

1971 Tonno, &lt;1 dr . ongm~l
pamt. runs great. 52100.
{740)985·3327 or 740-4164249

Apache 2000 SB toldmg

truck camper Full equ1ppea
,wl eX1ras

SS 000

(740)2~171

Call

.

limn:
l\IPRo\'DlE\'lS

renovators and seeders
to rent

P'"~U\ II 'S PRET\'(

p-I&gt;J..L R.IC,f\\ , C,L/o..t;)'iS,

&amp;. 11-\ /o..T W/o..' i !

L,OW OF '{ OIJ ...

II

P'"

10 RE'j)R.\ \0 LOGIC.

TO WIto\ f&gt;..t.l l&gt;oKWtJB-11 !

BIG NATE
CR;1Ti&lt;- , MY
f RIEND. I"IY
Jce ts. To
·;::.....:._,.' SUI"I UP T HE

Tbt Mulberry

SiJm' Gr'fl/ lAw Priut
and Smi.Wtg
Fn't'ndlJ 1-' uc:rt.
OPE~

)lon-fri. ,
~lu3pm

PH' 992-ltiU

~ YoUI'.:S&gt;

!

740-992-5553

PEANUTS

Ra&lt;tockit'9 La tc .\fode I
and . .41'"1Pr Markel Hlrts
See Bren1or Brian Whaley

Wl-lAT ~APPEN5 IF T!-lERE'S A
LOSS OF CABIN PRESSURE ?

M -Fri 8:30-5:00

W~ERE

ARE TilE EMER6ENCI( '
OX'r'6EN MA5K5 ?

7~~r-------

Sal. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

MlltsCo.B..Wuts!!l

BUCKEYE Sanitation
SUNSHJNE CLUB

SfPTIC TANK PIJMPfNC 195 00
F()RTABlf TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TOTJA Y
992·3251 OR 591·8757

. '.,.

ADVERTISE
· IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

All pass

34 Affront

5 Certain sib

35 Weat her

6 -

room

(den)
7 Have
poison ivy

button

8 Mels ·

sweette

9 A Marx

3t Cowpoke's

lead: ¥ Q

constellation

10 Relax .

c onnector

••

G

. 'ruE~

.

Scorpion .·Tractors

.

12 Tries
to.li nd out

45 Help-

Moo

17 Hlp-bop .
music

w anled

abbr.

37 College

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeletvrtyCr(1lo:!r crypt~~ms areceateo trQfTl (JJO"ta:JOns 0y famoJS peocH past an::r ~t
Eac:tlle~ 111 tt-.: :t~~ Stal'lOS 101' a~Otf&gt;er
Trxiay·s 'c!~ R 9Qual$ 8

" F

CYG ' L

J TGL
J. v y

LV

WI Y WK I

J TGL

F

C TGOI

Ly

VT PI

OVY D IYS DT WVI D

WI Y W K I

RT K T G OVF G I
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "A pertec1 poem IS tmposSible . Once il has been

AstroGraph
-

wntte n. the world would end · - Poet Robert Graves
(c) 2005 by NEA. Inc 6·9

'IIATIMT
HUUI

'IUrthdiiY:

Friday, .June 10; 200 5
, By Bernice B~de Oeol
An extraordinat y number of good
oppor tunities lie ahead for you il'l .th .,
year ahead. H owe'ver. each must bO
handled with all the skill and knowl,
edge you can m us ter if yoi.J hope to
reap the advantages they o ffer.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be
careful today in the .management of
no t only your own resources, but also
With thc:ls~ that belong to others. 1t you
make a mistake , you could lake
everyone down the tubes wlth you .
CAN CER (June 21 ·July 22) - Strive
to. b3 coopera tive wil h Others ·today
instead of bOing bossy. ll Yo u are too
self-centered , they Will quickly make
an exit and take with thelm all the benefits their involvement offered.
LEO
(July
23- Aug , . 22)
Respon sib lli't ies wi ll not go away
to day just bEtca uso you decide to
ignore them . In ta ct, that which you
choose to neglect could become compounded and cause major complica·
lions later.
'
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl . 22) - Dol'l 'l
blindly put faith in an en tefprirse today
which may sound good · but about
which you know llnle . It's OK to got
en thused enou gh to inves t l~a l e it
before you jump in with both le ~t.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct." 23) ---;- Treat
evarybody yo u encounter equally
lodl))'. If you try to buHar up only to
those persons you believe can do you
some good, onlookers will see riqht
through you and re member 11 later.
SCORP IO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22)- Before
you play what yo u believe to be your
tr ump card , be mindfu l of the streng th
ot your opposition . They could b e
holding a higher hand and whe n
· played. makft you look like the JOker.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Be ca refu l in situations w ith p_als
todaY involving 'c ollective expend itures. Pledging their lair share ·isn't
the same as having their lufids to yse
now. Don 't put your money .u~ lor any -·
one
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan _ 19) Normally you are wen anuned to the
social amenities and express them
well. Today, howe\ler. yoU might conduct yourself ,in a mar:mer that could
caUse bo th lrie nd and loe. to blush .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20- Feb. 19 ) Procrastination or indolence could
lead to your undoin g at Work today. It
may even cause you to fail to recog nize an opportunity that can be bene llciai to your c areer being dropped in
you r lap.
PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 20) :.________. This is
one ol those days when what you
know will pro\le to be tar more ii"Tlpor, tant ' than who you know. Kn owledge
and wisdom wilt never let you down ,
but your ~good contactsH might_
ARIES (March 21~Aprii 19) ~ Watch
·out who. you team up with today,
espe ci ally when you 're attempting
som erhing important. A poor chok:e
would not only hindvr your progress,
but could harm your reputation as

KH

II
.

5

s A y I~

I I I' f

It's easier to forgive other's

mistakes and llarder to lorgiv&amp;
:--L-:-:-U-:S-:-E-N---, tllem for having - ••• - • -: •.
5

r',-7

I I I• ,,
_

_

1• e

Comp lete the chuckle quoted
bv fllhn~ in the milling W'O'dl

you d.,eklp lr0111 litO No. 3 below.

SCIU'M-UTS ANSWEU 6- e-n
Gusher. Tongs . Watch . Rodent · OUST RAG
tllat sol)ll! worll·
ing wives stiU come out on the short end of the OUST
1WDI1&lt; in a large otlice and surn\ised

AAG.

.

·

ARLO &amp;JANIS

.~
. . .~ .

, .,

TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - You 'd
be far better oN today starting small
rather than anemptlng to accomplish
spm e thing big i,.: one fell SW&lt;lOp. Take
things one step at a time in order to
figu re out where y~u ·re going riext.

~

SOUP TO NUTZ
·~ ONL"1 Q;) ~N -n:t£'
. SLiOtN6 BoaRP 1-QQ FtlirSf
ONCE

BaTS 3RE THE

T..aT CaN fL"' ~

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

vy

S I Y D .S I

St. Rt. 124 Chesler ' 985·3301

I

J TGL

J

C T G 0 I . ..

BAUM LUMBER
. '
I

mai.

40 Old soldiers

ONL.'1 MaMMaL, 5

" Taking The Sting Out Of
Bard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

surname

28 Slugger's
49 Manl ra
slat s
c hants
29 Ms. Freeman 51 Speck
of films
, 52 Metro RRs
31 -mater
S4 PO
32 Bwana·s
dlspaleh
helpers
33 Alley from

ballpark •

38 Weaken

The speaker of this sentefl(:e rs"unknown :
•A lrghi\Yeight. by definil40n. rs a man who
cannel assert his au thority over the
natronal press.. cannel man1pulate
reporte rs, cannot fmesse ·quest10ns, pre·
vent teaks or command a professiOnal
pubhc relatrons operation" 0 1d he have
anyone rn parllcular m mtnd. I wonder?
In today's dea l. thou~ll. the key word rs
irnesse" Whether you are a lightweight.
mrddlewe1Qht or heavyweight, how would
you try tp bnng hon1e . mree no-trump
a~er West leads the lleart queen ? .
SOuth shouldn't worry about his tack of a
spade stopper for tile one·no-trump
openlnQ. Coveririg opener's weak suit is
fespof\de:r's responsi bility. · •
Wrth Scars to prove· !herr point, many .of
my sludents believe that all filie sses will
larl. At lrmes. they go til rough all manner
of contortrons to try 10 gel home withOu t
tak1ng any finesses. One fellow. many
years ago, wh o was a good player so 1rn ·
tated me 1n thrs way that I devised a les·
son on d1tlerent types· of f1nesses: Slmple,
double . two- way, backward . ruflrilg.
Chinese. 1ntra. I thought that finally. like it
or not. he would be lorced to take some
Imesses. But he never showed up for the
class!
Here, you t1av~ eight lOp tricks: one"
spade. one heart. two dramonds and lour
clubs. That extra trick· probably could
come from diamonds.'" but you cannot
aHo rd to lose the lead , because the
defenders would surely cash too many
heart tricks. Instead. try to get lhe extra
winner from spades by playjng one
lhrough West up to dummy's queen.
Occas1onally, finesses do win - even in
classes and columns.

welt.

•
GRIZZWELLS
· J'M ~Kit-16 oH Mi To·P:H\5]"

Now Available At

DEFIN ITE

HIGH.

Parts
740-99~- 701 3 or

OH, AN D
C H EEZ.
t&gt;OOI&gt;\.ES , TOO.
T HE C HE EZ.
!&gt;OODL ES ARE

THE

A

St. R1. 6&amp;l Darwin, OH

Call B.D. Const.

CQmmunity Cmter
260 :\fulhrrl")' Avt.
Pumrro)·

THAT

Whaley,s Auto

"TONIGHT NE:E:175

Fo~rty a1J 08
\\",)laiD Pomeroy
IS !\OW OPi'l AT

IS N 'T

r-..-

NO 1NTROJ7UC.TION

The Parish S hop

~
tl

HI&amp; HS 1\ND
LO -.IS .

~,--M--Y-F~1R~S~T~~~U~E~S~T~~-, ~

I;::;';l:e~a v=e~rn~~~·=~

.

IIAStMENT
WATERPROOF1NG
Uncondllional lifetime guararnee local references fur·
Rrsl'led. EstaDhshed 1975
Cah 24 Hrs. "(740) 446~
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGI\INS

II

High cost of fertilizer got you
17·17-17,.
$265 ton (While Suppy Las1)
• Mushroom Com post
Available
$35 - 1,0 00 lbs App rox. weight ~~~~
18 spreader buggies available for use

C~s

1948
Chewolet
F1ve 2000 Aer01i1e, 2:!-30'. oUI!y
PassenQer
Coupe.
WV eqpt. , all hrtct1 eqpt. . like
Twrn G1rts ClOthing &amp; Shoes
new. 58900 (7401992-5963
Thru "ze-2. .Baby Bed, Sticker, New Tires. Good
Paint
·sharp·
(304)576
Stroller. 2 older High Chairs
2004 Forres1 River pull
2288
(:»1 )458-1875
camper,.29' w/slideout, used
'little ,
S10.000,
1952 ptymouth "dr, for very
- T-*'1 Restoration. no • Rust. {740)9o49-0053
Huge S01oc00n
Jayco Eagle 1-12'
E~"' runs. Body OngonaJ. 34'
ll'\"lt1'!e0i'ate OeriWrf.
no Derlts. 31 ,OCJOI'miles slide out. Lots of extras lJke
Financing
(31&gt;')5_76-2532
new COrlOlllO.n (740)3391-800-894-69\17
0218
(740~79 .
1965 Ttlundertllrd HOTP.
49K mrles. blue. white v1ny1 84 Pa tamrno fold dowr
~op. AT PB. PS. S5 495 sleeps 6. good cond•tron
(740)245-5617.
$ 1.600 1740)245-55_93

PI CKL ED EGGS,
SAUERKRAUT
' A N ' ONI ON S WIF
TABA SCO

I

'

GARFIE.LD

ro~; a ll )'OUr home
npair nftds. moling,
sjding. add-nn s,
r-emodeling etc.,
free estinlates
17&lt;Ul o.992-2979

East

J ~T

20 Hij dead·
. 41 Llghtwelghl
• center
quih
21 Small hills 42 Pre-owned
22 By and by 43 lditarod
23 Hoo~er· s
terminus
org.
44 Like khaki
24 Loose
47 Prime-time
l hreeds
hour ·
25 - Major
48 Cartoon pig

4 Four
quarters

warmer
(2 wds.)
36 Scale

Do you take
any finesses?

Buekd Truck

I~;2s:v:...:;:LOCII;::;·;:~

CA~IPEAS
S.tOTOR

.'.!_606~71 85

Block. brdo sewer ptpes.
wmoows lintels etC Claude
Wtn1ers. A•o Grande. OH
CaJI 740-?45-5121

· 10xl0x10xl0

:'llonb

Pass

2 Pods fpr
stews .
3 ~hiva '
believer

39 Unfavorable
with ..out"
42 Bonn
11 Eyelel

V.C. YOUNG Ill

F'O

r

Middleport, OH

\\'~s t

l XT

Opening

•

32 Mlslake
(hyp h.)

t A .K 53
olo K Q 10 8

Sou'b

Tree Service

c---

~

I

10

JONES'

PomerOJ', Ohio

97 Beech Street

26 Elec.' unit
27 Yardstick
30 Badminton
target

Vulnerable : East-West

33795 Hiland Road

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

• K95 ~
• QJ '
... ' 3

Dealer: South

J a net Jeffers

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
• Prompt &amp; quality
Classic, 10,000 miles. bl ue.
work
New John Deere Round
excellent condi tion. $13.500,
•
Affordable
Rates
Apt lor ~erit 1,200 sq.ll. $2.500.00. 1991 A- Frame Balers@ ~ .9% Fixed Aate (740)949-2217
• Referen ces
Trash &amp; water paid . 3 miles· pop-up camper $2000.00. Financing lor 48 Months or
from town. $4 2S/month. 740-949-2115 leave num- New Model 457 Standard Brand new Vance/Hines 2
Available
t740 )«l·9StG.
ber. it. rm not at home.
Round Baler Only $13,250 into 1 Chrome Prpes. Fit
• Free Estimates
--------.
.
cash. Makes 4X5 Bale. Fatboy 2000 and up
"Insured''
Ava ilable
immediately. AntiQue Haywood Wakefield Carmichael
Equipment. (3041882-3218
Call
Gary Stanley
table
&amp;
·
cllairs
$600.
Steele
•
BeautiI ul, clean. and spa17401446 2412
"Cious 3 bedroom town- Jeep
S100. · '--'-- - -- - - wheels.
740· 742·2l9l
(7401446-6962.
·
Oliver 60
. Rl)w 'Crop 1rac1.or
house. With storage/playGood condition,
,
•
Leave
a message
51 450
room Downtown Gallipolis.
Apt. srze washer &amp; dryer. OBO (7401367 "596
' $610/monlh. No utrllties Buck stove fireplace insert . _ _· .:.......:__~
_ _._ _ · 1999 Aquatron . 19' boat 7 ·
paid . No pet~. Call (740)446- Call (740)645·148S.
Speci al Purchase- John trail er.
4 .3 li ter V-6
9961
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel Mercruiser. Less than 100
·
Anention:
Mastectomy Rakesi John Deere Disk hours. bought new rn 2000..
BEAUTIFUL
APART· patrenls. le~ breast prosthe- Mowers. Call for price. Includes skis. tube ; life }Bck·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET sis. Srzes 0 &amp; DO. Aegular Carmichael
Sold new lor
EQuipment. els. e1c.
29670 Bashan Road
PRICES AT JACKSON price $230 eact:l,now $25 (740)446-2412.
$16.500, asking $8,000 Call
Racine. Ohio
ES,TATES, 52 Westwood each . (740)446-4680.
(304)6774, or (304)674·
~sn 1
4688
Dnve from S344 to $442.
740-949-2217
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
JET
l..rvooocK
740-446·2568.
Equal
AERATION MOTORS
--2000 Bayliner 2 1ft. cuddy wl
Housrng Opportunity.
Repa1red, New &amp; Rebuilt In Ask about our AQHA trailer, many extras, very
•
-Stock. Call Ron ~Evans. 1~ Member Discounts on """W clean 304-e75--5563
•
, .•
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· 600-537-9!'&gt;28.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
John Deere Equipment. 2003 22ft.. Sweetwater
Hours
Tow nhOyse
apartments.
Carmichael
Equipment Pontoon
boat.
40hp.
41
7:00AM
·8:00PM
Johnson mot or, power-trim.
and/or small houses FOR Utile Trke"s Desk/Chair, (?40}446·2 2.
1/ t&lt;t./1 rno . pd
RENT. Call (740)441·1111 Truck. Fisher Price Kitchen , . Reg. Black Angus Bull. 4 HooSier trailer wlladder,
for application &amp; intoimation. Turtle Sand Box (304}458spare tire/bracket AMIFM
1875
years old Gentle 51100·00- stereo/CO. many extras.
For rent 1 and
bedroom
·740-985-3843
Ask;ng $10,995. (740)446·
apanments Spr;ng Valley NEW AND USED STEEL
2016 or (740)339-0324.
area
References
and Sleel, Beams. Pipe Rebar
deposrt
required
Ph. For
Concrete,
Angle, 16 H P Cra1tsmari lawn Year?OOO. Pontoon Boat. 24
(7401446. 2957 _
Channel: Flat Bar. Steel Tractor. 42" cut-used very toot. Sweetwater, 50 HP
• ROom Additions 1
Grahng
For
Orairis. little, SSOO.OO Phone 740- Mercury, Power Trim. :4
Aemqdtling"
Stroke Engine. Big Foot
~ New G.-ages
Furnrs~ed ap1. . 2nd Ave . Drrveways &amp; WalkwayS. l&amp;L 992· 7689-after 6 :00
. Outdrive , Lounge Seats.
• Electrlcel l Plumbing
Upstairs. all utilities paK:t. Scrap Meta!s Open Monday,
John Deere. Akting Mowers Privacy
Room.
Depth
• Roofing I Gun.n
One bedroom.
no pets, Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; -slartingat$1 ,399. Financing Flr'ldef. Hour Meter, Good
• VinytSiding &amp;Painting
Galllpo1~ s (740)446·9523.
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed available subject to John Radio, Has only 50 nou
. rs on
• Pll6o.nd Pordt DKQ
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; '"'-~r -...,
We do it Ill except
uvure luutl ""to/.... ~ ... . •uo.n Boat, Garage kept in wmter,
fumrrce work
Furnished upstairs , 3 room&amp;
7300
1740
&amp; bolh. Clean. ref. &amp; dep. Sunday.
paymen!S could be .. low Uk.e New Paid
$18.000
reqUJred. No pet's. (740~ Pole Barn 30x50xH)FT as $39 month with $0 down. Will sale for $13.000
Et~uipment (304)n3-5944
992-6215 wv-cr.~
1519.
$6795. inchJdes ~inted Carmichael
- -- - - - - - . - · M.etal ."
Free
Delivery {740}446-2412.
Pomeroy, Ohlo
G"ractOUS livrng 1 and 2
www.nabonwldepolebarns.c
&amp;
room apa rtments at Village om (937)559-8385
'
Wizard Riding Law;t;1 Mcyrer
:
Hot\IFS
14.5 HP. 42'" cut (304)77:!- ~
,
Manor
and . Rrverside- --~------ 528-4
CMIPF_RS &amp;
Apar1ments in Middleport. Shop smrth . lots of extras.
1992· 29' Arrstream ExcaJ!a. L..,,.;l\'iiiii
UJUK
iiiiiiiOHiiill~ii'iiiD&gt;
iilor"
From $295-$444. Call 740- ,tOinter, tab$e saW. drill press. Zero Turn Z·Trak Mowers Very ·good condition. l¥1Jn
992-5064 Equal Hous1ng S2.199
OBO
1999 from John Deere available at beds. Ph_(740)6C5-4454 .
Cote man . Camprng Trailer
Opportunities.
Kawasak.l
Prairie 4x4, 4 .~%
trXed
rate
fro
12FT. 2 Krng Beds . $5.500
Nice 2BR. 1 bath w/attacned excellent ~. $2.5(() Carrnictlael Equipmen1 wfth 1995
Gulfstreem
2&lt;1 '
call for Details (304)675OBO. (740)645-2729.
John Deere Cree*~ apiproval. Conquest · Limit~ Edition
1731
.
(7 4 0 ) 4 4 6 - 2 4 12
C motorhome Lrke
wwwcaraacom
new witn .....,,y
,..u.., 7,600 rTIIIes.
(740}446-2801 .
Top Quality, WatTa/'lty.
FuMy equipped -wyrth many Truck Camper. AC . TV
Antenna. wrred for Gabie,
North . ThirO
Avenue.
~:..n:"CIOU·
tilllfras. 522.000. (740)256lrke new 56.500 (304)675FOR
At1[;!! .--.
1428 For p!Crures · see· 3353
Middleport. one Bedroom
2 locations
turnrshed apt
No Pets.
Mrtton Flea Mariwt
~
www.rvtradet".com/rvdetail p
... ,~\11 1'
PreviOus rentaJ ·ref
7.&lt;10&amp; Ashland Kenrucky
hp?id+ 125806.

s

•

(740) 992-5232
5x10, JOxJO,
10xl5,10x20,
l0x30

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTI.NG

East
A J96J·

¥ A4

High and Dry

Downspout - Sidin g

·,6

• 8 3,2

740-667-0700 1-888-

messages

(hyph .l
13 Employee
56 Buys
14 Pele·s game 57 Obligations
15 Egg on
58 Raised
Sitcom
cattle
planeI
18 Mr. Linden
DOWN
19 Reveals
23 Common
Breezy
ailment
greeting

South ~

35537 Sl. Rt . 7 North

Shingle. Fbi. Me1al New or Repai r

76~ 2
.\J7j

... 90'

SHADE RIVER AG SERV ICE
Pomeroy, Ohio '

· A l l 1ypes or roollng:

2004 Fat Boy, S1 8,000,
(7401949-3004

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

agronomist on staff availa ble for
consultin g.

ROOFING

2002 Yamaha 660 Aaplor ,
ye llow/black
w/matching
KBC helmet.
Excellent
Condition ~$3,700 (304)675·

45783

·

HOWARDL
WRITESH &amp; SONS

Seamles~ Gu t ter ~

02 Honda 400 EX . Excellent
condition,
52,800. Call
(7401256·6403 or (740)645·
0446.
.

liNDA'S PIINnNG

1 mo

Full -sized luxury van ,..sea:ts ·
7. mechanic owned. beautiful. 1993, 77,000 miles .
$7,500. (740)446-9961 .

New 5003. 5005. &amp; 5020
Series John Deere Utility
Tractors @ 0% fixed/ 36
months. Used Utility Tractors
@
4.9% Va riable/ 60
Carmichael
months.
Equipment. (740)446-24t2

Let me do i1 for youl

14 y~. Experience

1995 GMC Con . Van, low
miles, fully loaded. 4inch.
Cutback ' show Saddle &amp;
Equipment (304)675-8 175

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

6 3

•
•
A K i j
. (JJI 0 8i
• 10 8

Pom er oy. OH
on State Rt. 124

74tl-416-282.l
7-W-59 1- UHI

4x4

(125
.
·

dessert
53 Curie
S Invigorating
discovery
10 Saaralder 55 PC
variety

OE-&lt;19-05

•

WfS I

_...!110&gt;-Tuppers Plains, OH

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
3 miles west of ·

l,nml'rm . Ohifl

Army 5 Ton Semr Truck,
multi·fuel, Kise ~ Jeep Corp.
$6000.00 ... Army 2 112 Ton
Truck. Kiser Jeep Corp.,
Multi Fuel , $4000.00 740·
949-0020

LIW._..;FiioiiiRiiiiiSiil.-\t.E
iiiii.'-_.1

46 Data

1 Salmon

4 A Q 10

41800SR #7

ROGER HYSELL I
GHRHGE

• Homes
r- Septic Systems
~ Roofing .
r Backhoe
r Sile
: Preparation
r- DozP.r
r· Garages
;· UtiH!ies
~Po le Barns

I

ThucK.S
FORSAI £

ENERGY EFFICIENT

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and financial Services

.Puzzle

50 Frozen

12 Big name ·
In soul ·
~orth

~rossword

NEA

BRIDGE

i&gt;b:&gt;Jf .....~

Red Honda Civrc with sunroof. Good Conditron, standard. 133 .000 ·miles. Pay
Off·$5800.00
1S.

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

YM( 00 ,..,_,
I(L.e.P T.... KIMG-

4 Sa:le Small Beagle Hound t969 Corvette Stmgray. 350
puppies M- &amp; F. more rnfo HP. 350 cub1c rnch 4-speed.
All numbers match, 74,000
7AM-·7PM, 740·742·0528
actual
miles .
$18.000
Sern:rus
Inquires
only.
AKC Adorable Lab puppies. please Call (304)675-6774
Choc. &amp; yellow. Vet checked. or (304)674-4668
1st shots &amp; wormed . Parents - - - - - - - - on
premrses.
$1 50. 1992 Ford Mustang con1113rl(740)446-1 062
lble Auto. air, crurse. tilt
70.000
actual
miles
AKC Bluelicll: (Beagles )pu pExcellent condition $3,750.
ples. Good Hunting stock (740)446·405_3.
$1 DO 00
Australr an
Shepheard
puppres. 1997
Buick
leSabre
Beautiful
blue · merles Limr ted . 75 thousand , miles.
$150.00 740-742-2728
Leather , Int .
Loaded ,
Garage Kept .
$'5,995
·Great P:frenees puppies." 1
(3041675·1731
female. 6 males . Aea{jy
S/15. $200. Call (740)379· 2002 Cadillac Deville, wh1te
.2647.
. diamond, fully equipped .
factor y warranty. 22 .900
Rabbits lor sale. Bar se t and
miles, like new. $24,995
1
stoots. (740)446·3732 ~
(7~0)256-1428.
Toy Poodles for sale. $300
each . Colors vary. (740)3~7· 98 Toyota Corolla automatic
4 cyt. 37 mg air. FM . new
7095 or rl no answer call
tires.
shB;rp.
asking
(7401710-6471 .
$4300.00
Toy Poodles. Black 1 male,
Baumer race car· Monte
and 1 female. $250. Call
CarlO: 60 model stereo. floor
(740)25 6· 1101
model. (740)643·0012.

3BR . 28A. ulrlrty· , _ _llliloi
UoiRioRfi!ii:iNorr
__r'
room. CIA &amp; heat. all elec·
f\.:IOBIU: H O\ I£1ii
tric . 1.5 , mile s from town. For Lease: Office or nHail
FOR SAU
excellen t cond1tron . water spaces in very goocl condi·
pard, no pets,. refe rences Iron . Downtown GallrpO'Iis,
1979 Homette 12~&lt;50
2 oeq· uir8d. .S450bnonth 1&amp; Appro11 . 1600 sq. ft. each.. 1
Bedroom/ 1 Bath. gas. self $450/deposl!
,(740)4 46· or 2 baths. Lea se price
coni -air condit ioner
W111 65~5 alter 5pm
negOtiable to encou rage
rent tor $265.00 a month ·or
Call
new
business
sell to r $3.495 00. 740-385- 2 Bedroom Mob1le Home (740)446·4425 or (740)446$375/mon.
Located
m 3936
4019.
Gallipolis
Ferry..
Call
199714x65 Premier 2 bed- (3041675·3423
FOil L !:ASE
room, 1 batn . all Electnc.
E&gt;ec. Concl. Lbts of extras 2 bedroom mob1te home 1n
$ 11,000 (304)675-7588 or Middleport. S375 mo. plus Building fo r Lease Gallipolis
j304)553-37 t5
deposit also 3 bedroom Ferry Area.
Ideal lor
F'Runs &amp;
mobrl e home , all eteclric, Restaurant! Etc. (304)675·
VF.GI:l;uJW
1998 16x80 Skyline. 3 cenlral .ar r,• $425 mo. plus '7538
Bedroom . 2 Bath . Sningled deposit, no inside pets.
\II Rt II\ \PI"il
Roof. · Vrnyl
Srding. (740)992-3194 ·
Home Grown Strawberries.
Appliances (304)675-7772
7 miles west of Gallipolis ot:J
H OUSEHOLD
or (304)674 -5575
2br. $300 Deposit &amp; $350
St.Rt. 141 . Look for Keirn 's
Gooo;
Rent' (304)882· 1107
Woodcraft.
2doo
FleetwOod .
troni
kitchen model with skrrtr ng 3br Trailer in G¥11tpolis Ferry
FoRSALE
Furniture Sale .: Mollohan 's
and central arr. Writ deliver.. area. No Peis. $375/month,
Sofa and chair starting at
Very clea n. t -800·837 ·3238 Dep osi t &amp;
References
$399. Call 1740)446-7444.
1304)674·4633
Homegrown Strawberries
94 Clayton Norris 14.70.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark 740-378-6291 Monday thru
'3Br.
Tra1
ler
w/
rel
riag
&amp;
total etectnc. 2BR. 2BA,
&amp;
dryer Chapf!l Road , Porter. Ohio. Saturday. 8:00-6 :00. 65002
: v1nyl skr~!lng. 2 Oecks. heat Stove.washer
· (7401446-7444 l -877-830- State Route 124, Reedsville.
•pump.
$14.000
080. ·included (304)576-2 934
9t62. Free Estima tes, Easy
: (740) 388-8739.
I Ill\ I'' 1'1'1 II'
Beautilul river view in ti nancrng, 90 days same as
,\ II\/..,I(HI\
Handyman specral t 4x70 Kanauga . Ideal tor 1-2 peo- cash . Visal Master C~Hd .
w/expando. $1 .000 080. ple. No pels, ple ase. Drive- a- linte save· atot.
FARro!
Applications being take n.
(7401446·7738.
Thompsons App'liance &amp;
EQW'MENf
Call (740)441 ~ 0181
Repair-575-7388. For sa le,
• • New 1.4x60. only $198.73
• per mo. InCludes complete
· re-cOnditione d autt;)matic 0% Fixed· Rate up to 36
Mobile Home Lot only
·set up and delivery, 740· Addisori Pike- · $125/month· washers &amp; d~yer_s, retrigeramonths on New John D.eere
call (740)446-3644 for more tors , gas and electr ic Compact Tractors &amp; 1t 0 TLB
: 385·2434
info.
ranges. air conditioners. and at ~ Carmichael Equipment.
wringer was hers. Will do
(740)446-241 2
Srock models at old prices. Mobile Homes sites 1n tile repairs on major brands .in
2005 models arrivrng Now, Shill1e area. Water. Sewer. shop or at you r home.
52 Farmall Super C with cutCole 's' Mobile
Homes. Trash , included. $t30.00 ---::----:c--- tivators. very nice . wilt sell
: 15266 U.S. 50 East. A1hens. per month. 740-385-4019
Used Furni1Ure Store. ·130 .tractOr separate. St ,950
. Qhro 45701 , (740)592- 1972.
Bulavrlle Pike, Washers , dry·
080. (740)367-0596.
· ~where You "Get Your
A PAilr.\IENJ'S
ers, refrigerators. ranges.
· Money's Worth"
FO R RENJ:·
· matlresses.
dressers, Hay wagon 19 ft . Stollus
O!!Ir...;.._~_ _;..._., L•-..,;oiiiti!iiiiiio--r couc hes. dinenes, recliners. kicke r wagon. RemoYa ble
F ARMS
1 &amp; 2 bedroom newly reno· grave mon!Jments, much steel racks. Like new tires
RlR So\U:
vated
Apts
for
rent. more.
(740)446-4782 and bed.·(740)245-0485.
~

www.mydai lysent inel.com

ALLEY OOP

Al'lllS

IURRE~T

FOR

Thursday, June rJ , 2005

~ · ~- ------

.

~ --------

-

�•

•

•

Outdoor
drama
.
.
.CHILLICOTHE
Audiences can once again
witness the story of legendary
Shawnee leader Tecumseh as
he struggles to defend his
sacred homelands in the Ohio
country in t:he late 1700s during the popular outdoor drama
that is his namesake.
"Tecumseh" is performed
on the large outdoor stages of
the
Sugarloaf Mountain
Amphitheater. which affords
the audience a unique viewing
l!'xperience . .This experience
incl.udes a herd of galloping
horses. a live military cannon
in action. and realistic battle
sequences.
Over I 00 people are
involved each summer in
bringing the drama to life.
The sites and sounds of natur- .
a! elements serve to heighten
this one-of-a-kind theatrical
experience that nearly two
million visitors have witnessed during it's 33-year,old
production . ·
·
.Tickets can be ordered online with most major .credit
cards at www.tecumsehdra- ·
rna.com. or toll free by ph9ne
at (866) 775-0700. or by .writing to Tecumseh, Ann:
ReservatiollJ;, P.O. Box 73,
Chillicothe. Ohio 456010073.
When writing for reserva-

Thursday, June 9,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The DailY, Sentinel

'Tecumseh~
.
.

2005

beginning
soon
Craft~a~
. ·
.slates-Kids

.•

Day 'June 11
.

.

.

·

RIO · GRANDE
Activities, games and crafts .
a re planned for children
attending Kid's Day at Bob
.Evans Farm Craft Barn on
Saturday. June I I. The event
will be held at the farm in Rio
Grande from II a.m. to 2 p.m.
Children may participate in
yar9 games and activities
such as hula hoop, bean bag
toss, basketball, jump ror ~.
bubbles and face . painting
free of chatge. In addition,
. every child will receiv~ a free
potted flower. Make and take
crafts include foam art perso nalized
door hangers
($2.5Q each), painted bird·
houses ($4) and memory wire
beaded bracelets ($5).
Cratters Judy Eggleton of
Bidwell. Teresa Fuller of
Crown City and Jackie King
of Winfield, W.Va., will lead
the craft projects with the
children.
"We are excited about this
Submitted photo
first-ever event at the Bob
"Tecumseh " will open Friday night and .continue nightly Monday through Saturday at 8 p.m. through Sept. 3.
Evans Farm Craft Barn," said
Gale Leslie. assistant managlions and tickets. include date · name, address and phone
Monday
through er of events at the farm. "In
Performance times and p.m.,
of the performance. number . number and payment in full show dates for the 2005 Saturday, June 10-Sept. 3.
addition to all of the activiof adult/child tickets, contact with check or money order.
"Tecumseh" season are 8
All seats are reserved.
ties, the children can visit our
Small Animal Barnyard and
Homestead Museum on a day
that has been planned just for
them ."
·F or more information about
focus on the melodrama per- direction and promotions.
until 3 p.m. each day.
35,000 participants. He cur- . Kid's Day or other events at
formance style popular in the
Participants will also have
Registration fee is $45 per rently manage s the Ariel the !lob Evans Farm, those
late 1800s and early 1900s.
the opportunity to . perform in week. Students must register Theatre, and produces Ariel interested should call the
"These stories are highly the Gallipolis Fourth of July · for both weeks, and be avail-. Theatre productions. Wright farm at (740) 245-5305. or
entertaining with .villains, parade to prornote "Camp able for performaNces.
is also a seasonal performer (800) 994-3276 or visit the
Web
site
at
dastardly deeds, damsels in Melodrama" performances.
"Camp Melodrama" will for the Walt Disney Co.
distres§, and brave heroes that
"Camp Melodrama" has focus on entertaining audiParents may regi ster their www.bobevans.cotn. ·
The Craft Bam is open
save the day," he added.
for
limited . registration space ences with action, drama, children
"Camp
Students will partic ipate available. Students age 8- , music and humor.
Melodrama'' or find out more daily from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30
in all aspects of the pro- 18 may register. Daily
Wright has taught drama information by .calling the p.m. !~rough Labor Day. It is
duction, including: cos- workshops · run Monday workshops throughout the Ariel Theatre, 740-446- located on the Bob Evans
Farm on Ohio 588 in Rio
tumes.
make-up ,
sets. through Friday, from 9 a.m. United States to more than ARTS, (446-2787).
G~.ande . the Craft Barn features a large assortment of
fine folk art and one- of-.akind items.

'Camp Melodrama' set fQr Ariel :
GALLIPOLIS - The Ariel
Theatre will host a two-week
. acting workshop for kids.
"Camp Melodrama" theatre
camp will run June 20-July
I, with public performances
scheduled for the July 4
weekend.
"Camp
Melodrama"
instructor and Ariel Director
Joseph Wright explains. "This
workshop is designed to

Mudfork
to perforn1

Garden tour,
tea set for
June 18-19

ATHENS
Mudfork
Blues, a Meigs County bl\fld;
featuring Sheets and Lohse
. family meml)ers, will be per. forming from 8 to 10 p.ll).
Saturday at the Red Brick
Taverrt in Athens.

Ohio Festivals
and Events
COLUMBUS (AP)
Here is a list of current and
upcoming Ohio festivals and
events:

Through June 17
.Exhibit:
Movement,
Concourse Gallery, Tremont
Rd., Upper Arlington . .

Through June 19
Area Artist Exhibition.
Appalach'ian
Gateway
Center.
SSCC-South
Campus, Route 62, Sardinia.
Strokes
of
Genius:
Masterworks from the New
Britain Museum of American
Art, Cincinnati Art Museum.

· Through June 25

Nicodemus and C.O.R;E. Drama Team

. PARKERSBURG,• W.Va.
- Julia-Ann .Square Historic
District win hold its fifth
annual Victorian Garden Tour
&amp; Tea on Saturday, June 18,
from I to 4 p.m. and Sunday,
June 19 from I to 4 p.m .
The cost is $15 for six gar- ·
dens in the historic district,
all within walking distance.
Men will receive a $5 discount on Sunday, Father's
Day.
A Victorian tea consisting
. of .~n assortment of beverages
as well as a selection of pastries and dessert~ is included:
Tickets may be purchased
the day of the tours. on the
lawn of the Fi~st Methodist
·church at the corner of
Juliana and lOth streets.
,
A plant sale will be · held
throughout the weekend:
Other vendors will also be
available.
All proceeds are t~;&gt; benefit
including a bounce house, a Parkersburg's
Julia-Ann
climbing wall, .an inflatable Square Historic District and
o~tacle course, and game will go toward restoring sidebOoths will be available for walks and other improveyoung people to enjoy. ments.
Refreshments will be served
For mort; infonnation, call
by the churches. Everything is Deborah Shaffer at ( 304)
·free.
428-8536.

Gospel on the Levee set for ~aturday

Sculpture and Drapery :
f'orms
of
FashionPOMEROY - Kicking off
. Exhibition,
College
of
the
Gospel on the Levee proHuman Ecology, Ohio S.tate
University, Campbell · Hall, gram of bluegrass and gospel
music ,at 3 p.m. Saturday on
Neil Ave., Columbus.
Pomeroy' s
riverfront
Through July 1
June
Art
· Exhibit, amphithea1er will be the
Wassenberg Art Center. S. Glory bound Quartet.
Th~ event is sponsored by
Washington St. , Van Wert.

Dr~ma Team from the Bethel
Worship Church will perform
from I I\&gt; 3 p.m. In the group
are Adam Grossnickle. Andy
Francis, Brandon Bartee,.
Stephen Shepard and Michael
Hupp.
A variety of activities,

Ohio Valley Crusade for Christ
with 17 participating churches.
Ot:her groups participating will
be theGrimetts at 5:30p.m .. the
Glory Land BeHevers at 6:45
p.m., and Eternity at8 p.m.
On the upper stage gazebo,
Nicodemus and the C.O.R.E.

..

HANGING BASKETS .
Over 50,(XX) Beautiful Flowuiug Buketa
• New Guinu Hybrid Impatiens
• Vi .

Geraniums
'
• Zooal Gcrauiums
IIllllg

• Ferns &amp; Mon:l
:;..

PLANTERS

·Riled
with your
.

favorite flowers ...

Ready to Set on your
porch or d«&lt;cf

Two Convllllent I 9CIIIunt;
2400 Eastern Ava.
1/4 Mile North .
(Across from KMart) Pomeroy1M11on Bridge

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740)4*1711

Mason, WV 25260

Pbone(304)~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="505">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9956">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17351">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17350">
              <text>June 9, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1725">
      <name>cline</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
