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                  <text>Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,

Page D6 • i&gt;tmbap m:nncs i&gt;cntnn' l

OH

s.unday. June

..

12, 2005

Four U.S. troops ~ed

In special congressional
· election, it's all ·
.about values, A6

- in~J',28

. bullet-rid·
bodies
dumped in and
near Baghdad, A2

. ..

I'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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Bannai's cousin wants to reopen New Haven plant

SPORTS
• PVH Flag Football
Tournament.
See Page B1

clients can get the idled plant
up and running again ,
Binson said he wants the
POINT · PLEASANT court 's approval to open the
Officials with the Global . plant and run it.
· Industrial Produc(s plant in
"! had never abandoned the
New Haven are tryi;1g to get plant," he said. 'The plant
an emergency hearing in fed- needs nurturing. And with the
era! court so they can reopen actions that Bori s (Bannai)
the plant.
has taken, i t is al so harmful to
According to R. M iChae I the cred itors."
On
May
31 , . G lobal
Shaw, the Point Plea sant
attorney for Jacob Binson and'. Industrial Products shut i ts
ltzhak Bannai, the goal o f the doors and laid off most of the
hearing i s to get relief so his 134 employees. On June 2,
BY DIANE POTTORFF

DPOTIDRFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Recieves Deficiency Free State Licensure,
· · Federal Certification And
Life Safety Code Survey
From The State OfOhio

the primary owner. Dr. Bori'
Bannai . tiled a Chapter II
Bankrttptcy suit in the U.S.
Feueral Bankruptcy Cmtn.
Southern
West
Virginia
District.
The following day. cmp.loy·
ees were told they would nbt
receive
their
paychecks
because of the bankruptcy. On
Wednesday. members of the
United Steelworkers Un ion
receiv;::d their paychecks.
Bin son said he spoke with
Bannai 's secretury on Sunday

and a&gt;keu abou t the paychecks. H ~ &gt;a id he cjuestioned
her and to ld her he knew there
was money available for the
payroll. He abo wanteu to
knuw why Bannai wou ld not
sign the. ch~k s.
'The money was availab le.
but she .cou ldn·t give me an
an swer," he sa id.

·

B i n ~on

a lso said he wanh to

keep the plant in its current
New Haven location and keep
the employees that operate the
machinery inside.

Sights Ofsummer

Plus. the employees should
have an em p Ioyer who cares
about theJn . Binson ·said.
.. They are nul stup id. They .
are needed.. he said. "The
employed know how to run
the plant.'.
He said that with .the plant
bein2 closed and 1he ' tumaces
turn,ed off, the company is
looking at about $100,000 a
week in damages to the fur·
Please

see Plant. A5

Keep children
safe during
trauma season
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

COL UMBUS Injuries
peak in summer months for
kids ages 14 and y ounger.
Ohio Emergency M edical
Services. is encouraging par- ·
ents and caregivers to tal\e
extra precaution this summer
when children are o ut play ing. ,
Last year 163,300 Ohio
children visited emergency
rooms for i njuries suffered
during the summer "trauma

OBITU~ES ·
-·~

Page AS
• Ellen Forema11 Arnott
• Glenna Fruth
• Clara Jane Anderson •
Queen

season."

INSIDE
• Cheney says no plans
tOY now to dose- I .
G\lantanar'no prison.
See Page A2
· • Design study class
offered for gardeners.
See Page A3
• Mother of student
missing in Aruba says
three detainees 'know what
happened to her. ·
See Page AS

Beth Sorgonljphotos

Although summer has not officially arrived on the calendar yet, it has arrived in Meigs Co.unty in the form of heat and humidity, as
well as little league baseball, softball, vacation Bible School and ice cream that tastes a little colder and better th an usual. Some
of the ::;ights of summer include Drew Humphreys, 4 , left, of the·Pomeroy Patriots giving the tbumbs up after making it to th ird base
d'uring a local T-ball game: Another sure sign of summer is attending vacation Bible school like these children ; right.who were singing
in praise at Syracuse Nazarene Church's vacation Bible school held at the Syracuse Community Genter last week.

. "EMS personnel are pre pared for th e trauma season .
. H owever, parents and caregivers can prevent many
summer-related injuries with
safety gear. proper e ducation.
and parent a l supervision ;" .
said Ohio EMS Executive
·pireetor Ri c hard N. Rucker.
"By teaching children early
on about good safety habits,
they may be able to avoid
future visits to the emergency

Please see Children. AS

Seniors receive recognition for volunteer service
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATHER

Detalla on P • A6

INDEX
:z SECilONS

-

B3-4

Classifieds

Bs

Comits

Editorials
Obituaries

'

Sports

.

Weather

p AGFS

AJ

Calendars

Dear Abby

l:Z

•

AJ

A4
As
B Section
A6

© 2005 Ohio v.Uey PubliOJhing Co.

POMEROY '- Thirty-two
. years of volunteer service by
Meigs County se nior citi·
zens was celebrated at a spe·
cial dinner and recognition
program held Friday at the
Center.
In a setting of red, white
and blue decorations, a prograin with
the theme .
" Heroes Aren't Born, They .
Volunteer" was carried out.
Diana Coates, director,
sang the praises of volunteers who work at numerous
station s, all non-profit. The
organizations which get the
volunteer help include the
American Red Cross, Holzer
Hospice,
Emergency
Management office, schools,
the Racine Area Community
Orga~ization
and
The
Maples, a housing center for
the elderly and disabled.
Each of · the volunteers
were presented wiih a
Presidential Service Award
issued on behalf of President
Bush.
.Coates
George
explained that the program is
funded by the Corporation ,
for National and Community
Service the Oho Department
of Aging. administered by
buckeye Hills-Area Agency

PleMe see Seniors. AS

,

Charlene Hoefttchj photos

Volunteers at the recognition dinner receivi ng plaques were
from the left, front, Mary K. Roush and· Kathleen ·scott, 25
years; Jean Nease , 15 years; and Wilma Reit&gt;er, 10 years; and
back Dolores ' Will, Rosemary Keller, Sarah Hul l, Leafy
Chasteen arid Carolyn Salser, 10 years. .

B~an

The Merry Makers Senior Chorus presents a program
patri·
otic music at the RSVP 32nd annual votunteer.recognition pro·
gram at The Senior· Citizens Center. Shirley Hamm is director
and Debbie Finlaw the accompanist.

Some play for money. Some play for glory.
Some play for the occaalonal trip to the-Ice cl'fam shop.
At k~M~li 1 ''-l!r .,_.., weluiow liNt! 11101t ltldt who lllrow 1 btl over 111t1r ti!OIIIcllf won'tllld

t~~tlnllilllltllll-llliiii!IJ •1111 111m elwwiiiiDI'!I. Ulllhowlollillltpltoll. Howtoetretclltl!e
IIUIIt. WMw It.,..... Nr ... ...,,,, Wilen you FIMY eporte, you clon'1 ]11M INm haw toN • ~
.. , II,WI ....... ,..NII. Alii! Ill "'tworkoflllftle dtdiOIItdlt Ill IIWDrkllncllitkl"l OINof

Holzer Senior Care_'--''-•
380 Colonial Dr. • Bidwell, Ohio 45614
1-740-446-5001

J. R -/ pftotO

The Gloryland Believers were ohe of the gosJ)€1 bands pe~­
torming· at Saturday's Gospel on the Levee. held at the
Pomeroy Amphitheater. In addition to those who enjoyed the
summer concert from the seats of the amphitheater, there
were also plenty of pleasure boaters who enjoyed the concert
from the river itself. lri addition to the concert, several churche.s ·and organizations offered free refreshments. games and
ministry information along the parking lot.

.

.

AMERICAN FAMILY
INSURANCE

&gt;11 1 w'repnlllilto 1$ ant Dr ...,.tw old .... . noiMIIIfwllllldrlvw ~toauceeecl.

;

WIIIWI'n tH THII'OWIII 01' IPORT.

1583 St Rt 160
Gallipoli:s.. OH 4 5631

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(740)·446-0214

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gwoo I @amfam.com

..

•

=-=~--,

~mertean

225 Broadway St
Jackson, OH 45640
' (740) 286-4385 ' .

jwood@amfam.com
Mon. • Fri. 9:00 1m • 5:00

Fam1ty Mutual Insurance Company ancl itS

Subs1dianes
Amencan Standard Insurance Company of W1soonsin
Home Office • Maf!tson . WI 53783 ,

t:\

Amernoan Family 'lnsurance Company
American Standard Insurance Company of Ohto

W · Hom6 Office - Columbus. OH 43240

"'200S

,

001ot..92 · ~

·

�,

'

PageA2

•WORLD

The Daily Sentinel ·

'

WAR IN I RAQ1'~, ·

Community Calendar

Four u.s. troops killed in bombings, 28 bullet-riddled bodies
BY PAUL GARWOOD
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD. Iraq - The
milita ry
attnllltnced . 1he
killin g of fum more U.S. so ldiers ~lll Sunda1. pushing the
Amcri,·an death toll past
. L 700. anJ ~'''I iLe found ,the
bullet-riddle-d ·bodies of 2X
people - n\at\} thought 10 tie
Sunni Arah s - buriecf in
shallow gra1es or dumpeJ
streetside in Ba~hdad .
The botlies w~re· discol'ered
as the Shiitc-led governmclll
pressed to open disarmament
talks with

in~urgenh

respun-

sible fur relemless violence
that

ha~

take-n on om in(ms

sectarian

o1·cnoncs with
reCurri1 l ~ .tit-for-tat kill ings_
A cnt~kJow n by Iraqi security forces in Baghdad and
offensi1es carried nut by U.S.
forces in wcstcm Iraq haYe
only l'emporarily blunted the
carna~e in which at least 9-10
peopl~ ha1e died since Prime
ivlinister Ibrah im ai-Jaafari
annou nced his goYernment
six weeks agu.
AI-Jaafarl\
spokesman
Laith Kuba said ma nv mili tant groups were reach.mg tiUl
tn the rrovemme nt. He umcd

tltem to lay down their · 11;;,
Some tnsurue nis are n1,H i·
1·ated to end their res i,t;utce.
Kuba argued. by the election
of an Iraqi gove rnment which
put the American presence in
the backgrouod. althou~h it s
mi lit ary~ ts still 1-10.1100
&gt;tro ng.
"Now is the right time for
any group tu lay dpwn their
weapons and take pan in the
(political) process." he said .
The offer did not include

in and ·near Baghdad

Many were apparent revenge
killin~s .that have ,raised fear,
of sectarian civil war.
Despite the violence. there
were several positive developments Sunday.
The French journalist
Florence Aubenas and her
Iraqi
assis tant
Husse in
Hanoun ai-Saadi were freed
Saturday after five months in
captivity.
Aubenas left Baghdad at
noon Sunday on a French
government plane in the middle ot a sands!Orm that had
closed the capital"s· international airport for two days.
AI-Saadi received a· hero's
welcome - hugs and kis.ses
from
more than '60 relati ves
·
and friends at his somhern
Baghdad home. A band of
trumpe" played Arab tunes
and ·a sheep was slaughtered
to cekbrate his homecoming.
.
On her return to France, the
veteran reporter for the
Liberation new spaper said
she had been held in an Iraq
.
'
cellar in "difficult conditions." tied up and with little
water. French officials said
· no ransom was paid.
AP Photo
Jn northern- Iraq , the I J 1I ra ~;; ilrtT. , 11 .ic J ' ' '"'the Second Battalion, fifth Brigade. patrol the Rasafah district duringtrrining with U.S. Army soldiers lnember Kurdish Parliament
.. ' t ' '~ .ir u Infantry Division in Baghdad, Iraq . .The lraqi .government claim€ld Sunday that some ins urgent gr.oups have agreed · unanimously elected veteran
guerri lla . leader · Massoud
·on the need to join lraq·s political life and called on them lay down their guns.
·
Barzani to be the first presifo reign extremish .:..uch as the the war begatl in March 2003. and targe ted the feared Wolf shot in the head were found dent of Iraq 's northern
Jord anian-born ai-Qaida in The number includes five Brigade. a Shiite-dominated Sunday in two different loca- Kurdistan regio n, prompting
commando unit that Sunnis tions ·in Baghdad's predomi- horn-honking celebrations by
Iraq leader Abu Musab ai- military civilians.
claim
is ki lling members of natly Shiite northern suburb supporters. Barzani will also
AI-Zarqawi's .group has
Zarqawi because "they only
of Shula, police Clipt. Majed lead the esti mated I00,000
want to kill.'' Kuha said.
c'laimed respo nsibili ty for their community.
Four American soldiers multiple suicide bombings. · On Sunday, Gen. Rash id Ahdul Aziz said. The bodies member Kurdish Peshmerga
died Saturday ·in two roadside including Sat urda{s attack Flaiyeh. who runs all the could not immediatel y be mi litia.
Some 2,000 soccer fans
bombings wes t of Baghdad. in side Bag hdad' s heavily Interior Ministry elite units identified.
"The interior mmt ster tried . to ignore the violence
increasing to m least 1.70 I guarded lmerior, Ministry including the Wolf Brigade,
the · number of U.S. forces headquarters. That attitck escaped an apparent assassi- keeps saying se"u'rity is get- lind watched two of Iraq 's
who have. died in Iraq since killed at least thre.e people nation attem pt when a mortar tmg better, but everyday we elite teams play at Baghdad' s
barrage rained down on his hear of 20 bodies killed here biggest sports complex, the .
mother's fuceral in northern and other 20 bodies found 50.000-capacity ·
Shaab
Baghdad. · Eleven mourne rs there," said Salih ai-Mutlak, Stadium. It reo pened to the
we re wo unded, Lt. lsmael head of the prominent public Sunday after it was
Abdul Sattar said.
umbrella Sunni body, · the commandeered two years ago
for a U.S. military base.
·
Lt. Ayad Othman said a National Dialogue Council.
shepherd found the buried
The grisly discoveries were
Zawraa, an anc ient name
bodies of 20 men on Friday announced two days after 2 1 for Baghdad, beat Shurta,
in the Nahrawan desert, 20 men. were found slain Friday Arabic for police, 2-0 in a
. miles east of Baghdad.
near Qaim, on the lawless game that many spectators
''All were blindfolded and Syrian frontier about . 200 feared could be marred by a
their hands were tied behind miles west of Baghdad.
mortar attack or suicide
their backs and shot from . It was .feared the · bodies bombing.
behind," Othman said. ·
may have been those of Iraqi
"We were terrified at the
Witnesses claimed the slain soldiers who went missing begirtn_ing, but when the
men were Sunnis, according . Wednesday after leaving their game started we had the
to a statement from the influ- base in Akashat, a remote ,vi!- · chance to forget about the
entia! Sunni organization, the lage near Qaim, in a bus attacks, the bombs and the
Association
of
Muslim bound for Baghdad.
violence for a little while,"
Scholars. No details were
Last month, multiple batch, said Shurta fan Ghazi Fai'sal,
provided to support the chiim. es of bodies turned up in var- a police major. "For once
The bodies of eight men ious locations across Iraq . there was some joy."

---

P-ageA3

BYTHE BEND

The Daily .Sentinel

~onday,June13,2005

'Monday, June 13, 2005

Meigs County 4-H Club News

Public meetings

Board of Education wiII be
held at 8 p.m. at the school.

Church events

Monday, June 13
POMEROY
- Orange
Township Trustees special
meeting. 7:30 p.m., home of
the cl.erk. Osie Foil rod. to discuss chip and seal on township roads.
RACINE . A special
meeting of the Snutheni Local

1\Jesday, June 14
SYRACUSE - A public
meeting to discuss the fate of
the London Pool will be held
at 7 p.m. at the SyFacuse lire
station.
13EDFORD- The Bedford
Township Trustees will meet
at T p.m at the town halL

Saturday, June 18
POMEROY
·Homecomt· ng wt'II be held at
the Hysell Run Com'munity
Churc.h of Hysell Run Road,
Pomeroy. beginning with a
potluck dinner at noon. and
singing by. the Gtac;emen at 2
p.m. Pastor Larry Iem iey at

Pioneers 4-H ·
Club

(7-10)742-317 1 can be contact&lt;:d for more information.

Sunday, June 19
CARPENTER
The
The Pioneet·", "' -H Club 111et
G
race men Quartet wi ll be in recently at the home of Debbie
· . , Drake with eight member'
concert at the M t. un1on
Bap t.tst
Ch urc h
near and two advisors attending.
Carpenter at the. I 0:30 a.m.
A carwash. t-shiris and
serv ice.,. For more i"nforma- camp
were . discussed.
tion, ca ll · Pastor David · Everyone reported on their
Wiseman.
proJect progress. Ashley Life
-==----=------------:-----------.:______..:_____:______ ~-- ftave a dem~onstration on cat-

Design
st_
udy _class off_ered for g·ardeners
'

SYRACUSE - A des~ n
study class wi ll be held at the
Carleton School in Syracuse
at I0 a.m on- JLKie 18. It is
open to all garden·ciub mem. bers in Meigs, Gall ia, Athens
and Washington Cou nti~s.
The class will be. taught by
Faye Colli ns of Minford. an
accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
and a design teacher.
Those attend ing are ·to take
plant and line material for
each design. a container fo r
each one and their · ow n
arranging tools. Anyone need- ·
ing addi tional information
may call Valerie Notlingham
at 985-3383.

The class will deal ,with
underwater design of a ereative nature with plant material to have a hard surface
when placed under water so as
not to detenorate. as. rap1dly.
Good plant matenal ts roses,
anthunum, evergreens, magno has, pmtea, carnations, and
fohage. Thm pedaled flowers
such as daffodils and iris do
not hold up well under water.
For that . segment students
will meet the following items:
Contamer · A large c!ear
glass or transparent contamer
(Odd or Btg Lots or Hobby
Lobby is a good place to find
glass containers.) Maybe a
gallon of water.

.· Plant Material · some ereative line material. ·vines. fantail willow, weeping willow',
Harry Lauder's Walking Stick,
· etc. The number of pieces and
the length depends on the stze
of destgn to be.made. Three tu
five mediUm stze fl owers and
·some greenery will be needed.
Needle Pot nt holder or other
mechanics to support your
plant material.
For the design incorporating or featuring fruits and
vegetables.
When the schedule sa~s fea~
tunng 1t means that I S the
most dominate thing in the
de ~ i g n. When !t says· fruits
and vegetables tt means both

s:~vi~~~~n~ak;~d~Fi~kgg

howtostuffapillow. .
The next meeting will be
at 2 p.m. on June 19.
Katlyn Sauvage, News
Reporter .

Randy Da\ is on rahhtts. ancJ'
Dakota Collin&gt; on the purl&gt;
of · a hammer. N tcolc
Moodispaugh ga\ e a report
on a s·Jrcbu :::. . The r~port
concern~d treatment and preventton ol sun bum
Refreshmen1s
11·cre
serv ed by th~ Powells,
Dav1ses - and . Ha11·thornes.
The next meetini! will be
June . 26 at the l3e lleville
Lock
and
Dam.
Demoils.trations wi ll he
given by Casey Hannum.
Zach Moore, Ryan Amos.
Benjamin Ayres, Baylee
Collins. Kayla Hawthorne.
Morgan Powe ll , Breanna
Hayman, Austin 'Lute and .
Janae Boyles.
Zach . Moore,
News
Reporter

fruit and vegetables. If it says
frui ts and/or vegetables, it
means you may feature fruit
or vegetables or feat ure both.
This may be a creative design
, or a traditional design.
Take to Glass flower arranging tools; container, Oasis if
fresh plant material is used, or
The Lakeside Leaders 4- H
styrofoam if dried materi als Club rnet recent ly at the
are to be used, along with tape Belleville Lock and Dam with
to hold the Oasis in the con- 19 members. five adv i ~ors and
tainer.
14 · visit ors in attendance.
Some tall materials . glads, Important
dates
we re
cattails, . ferns, whatever you reviewed. Details on a camphave that will give height. The . ing trip were finalized and
flowers may be spike and/or details . on Splashdown were
round forms . Take some gathered and shared.
foliage, and the fruit and veg- · Project lessons were given ..
etables to be featured.
by Alex Amos on sfteep,

The Harrisonv ille 4-H Club
met recently at the Scipio
Vounteer Fire Department.
'with three membe rs and one
advi sor anending. Projects.
fair theme and fair booth were
di sc ussed.
Sarah. Lantz,
News
Reporter

Birthday observed

Birth announced

Veteran raises funds

Lakeside
Leaders 4-H Club ·

.

CHESTER Joey . and 1
Tish · Coates of Chester
entertained recently with a
party in celebration of the
first birthday of their daughter, Tessa Nicole.
A butterfly and daisy
theme was carried out.
Attending were the honoree's half-brothers, Zach
and Trey, her half-sisters,
Alexus and Britney. Derrick,
Metheney, David Might,
Kathy Stone, · Amanda and
Ryan Dill, Ryan and Jenna
Dill, Rick Metheney, .Jane
T8$sa Nicole Coates
and Rod Baker, Jessie and
Clarence Might, and Roger Erik · Metheney,
Vickie
Coates. Sending gi fts were Metheney, and Jeni Stewart.

''

Harrisonville 4-H
Club

Treyton Richard Hill

LONG
BOTTOM
Corey and Lorre Hi II of
Long Bottom announce the
birth of their tirst child, a
son, Trey ton Richard, ·born .
Dec . 23,
weighing 5
pounds,
8
ounces.
· RACINE
·Laraine
Brook
Lawson
of
Columbus
.
.
,
Paternal grandparents are
daughter of Mike · and Margie Lawson of Racine, recentDon
Richard and Mary
ly completed the Bachelor of Science in Nursing proHill of Racine . Maternal
gram at Mount Carmel College of Nursing in Columbus. grandparents
are Terry and
She is a 2000 ·graduate of Southern High School, and Kathy · Wyatt of Pomeroy
the granddaughter of Gene Jeffers and Katherine and Bill and Jean Osborne
Lemaster, both of Albany.
of Reedsville.
'

Completes nursing program

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~

AP Photo

IrS TH'ATTIME AGAIN!
-

...

In this photo reviewd by the U.S: military, a guard looks out from a tower at Camp Delta 11n the . ~
long-term detention facility at U.S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, Wed., April13. Vice ~l
President Dick· Cheney said Sunday there are no plans for now to shutter the U.S. · prison at
·~
Guantanamo Bay where terrorism suspects are held.
·~

'

'

·~

·~

C,heney says no plans for now !l
to close Guantanamo prison .
'

.

J

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LET US HELP
YOU HAVE ••
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YA-RD SALE!!
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: RU(ie encounterin barroom destroys,camaraderie at work

tl

WASHINGTON (AP) when initially you began it. Sunday -.talk shows, . Sen.
Vice President Dick Cheney; or can. this be done some Chuck Hagel· said the U.S. '
fl
is '' losing the image war
reacting to a growing chorus other way a little better''"
~
of calls to close the U.S.
President Bush has said around the world" and ..
prison at Guantanamo Bay his adininistration is "explor- Guantanamo is one reason.
~
where terrorism suspects are ing all alternati ves" for. :·It's identifiable with, · fo r
~
rig ht or wrong . .· a part of
held, says there are no pre- detaining the prisoners.
sent plans to do so.
"We've already screened America that people in the
"The important thing here the. detainees there and world believe ·is a power. aR
·~
•
to understaml is that the released a number. sent them empire that pushes people
••·~
at back to their home coun: around, we do it our way.
people
that
are
·~
,
'
Guantanamo are .bad pea- tries,'' Cheney said in the we 'don' t live up to our
pie: · he said.
· ·
interview taped Friday. "But commitments to multilateral
••••
"I mean, the se are terror- what's left is hard core."
institutions," Hagel, R-Neb.,
ists for the most part. These · He said Bush and Defense told CNN's "Late Edition."
are people that were cap- Secretary
Donald
H.
He
contended
that
••
have
"both P~ntagon leaders have failed
tured in the battlefield of Rumsfeld
1
Afghanistan or rounded up emp~asized the importimce to take responsibility for the ~· 3 Bright 11,. x 14• All-weather signs
as. part of the ai-Qaida net- that you need to have the · situation , including harsh
Over 275 Pre- Pricing
labels .
·
work.'' he 'aid in an inter- capability
to
imprison interrogation techniques and
'
view to be aired Monday on detainees that we capture treatment of prisoners.
Successful Tips for a •No Hassle" Sale
Fox
:-ie&gt;~'
Channel\ during th~ cour'e of the war
··Thb· is all addi~g up to a
Pre-Sale Checklist • Sales. Record .
"Hanni!) &amp; Culrnes ...
on terror.
.
very dangerous dnft m this
••
·
Human ri~hh acti1 i,r, and
··Th~y hoth emphastzed country. ... Not only is it :l Form
some la11 m~ler' - mu&gt;tl) that. At pre&gt;ent. the re's no going to end in disaster for ••
••••
Democrat\ - are pressin~ plan to close Gitmo. The us and liumility for ,this ·~
3
Ad:
Day
Ad:
for the pris un"' closure president &gt;ays we re vi e1~ all wuntry. but we're going to
••
becau'e of allegations of tor- ot our opt!ons on a contmu- .present to the world a very
$7.00
15 words or less
.$10.0015
words
or
less
ture and abuse ~of deta"inees · ous basts.
dangerous world tf we don't
•
Sen . Mel Martinez of · The prison in Cuba holds • wake up and smell the cor$6.00 Kit .
$6.00 Kit
Florida .on Friday became · ·about 540 detainees. Some fee here," Hagel said.
hi
the
fir\t
high-profile have been there more than
The Pentagon said in a · ·~·
Gets You Great
·~••
·Gets You Great
Republican to · say the three year' without being statement Sunday that it ••
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administ(ation ' hould con- charged with any crime. "does not · wish to hold ••
••
Moq were captured on the detainees longer than neces••
sider. clo~ing the pri,on.
••
"lt ' bect&gt;me an icon for banletlel d' of Afghani,tati in sary and effective processes
bad 'torie' and at st&gt;me 2lXl I and 200 2 and were are in place to regularly
point· yuu w,ondcr the c0\1· 'em to Guamanamo Bav in review th~ status of enenn
benefit ratio.'' \l artino 'aid. hope llf extract in~ u;eful. combatant,:·
:
·
The
Senate Juqiciary
"How much do 1ou ~et U'm intdlig~ncc about the al.
·~
of having that facility" there ·&gt; Qaida terrori'1 network.
Committee plans a t'ft!aring
Is it 'erving all the purpo'e'
.With the fate of the prison , Wednesday on the issue of
you thought it w.ould 'ave camp a leading topic on the detainees.·
tiiiili~IIII;IIIII~IIIIIIIIIII:::IIIIIIIIIIIIIXXIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11

·

~alltpolis ~ailp UCrtbune
~oint f'leasant l\egister
: The Daily Sentinel
•

..

$1 6

tl

§.. .
••••
••••

.

SubmiUed photo

. Former Marine and Iraq War veteran Aaron Frechette recently completed his Journey for Life
· Run, which raised. money for the American Cancer Society. Frechette ran from Athens to
Parkersburg, W.Va. , a journey of 3·7 miles after recovering fron'l his own battle with cancer of
· the knee. Members of the Meigs-Gallia-Mason Marine Corps League spbnsored Frechette's run .
· Presenting a check for Freeh11tte's efforts were, from left, M-G-M members Senior Vice
Commandant Jerry Bain, Commandant Chuck CoofJer, Frechette representative Patti Ueb, wife
of former Cor)Jmandant Wayne Lleb, and Junior Vice Commandant Dwight Taylor. Frechette con·
tinues to raise funds for the American Cancer Society and can be reached at 698-6505.

§

DEAR ABBY: My fiance,
"Tim,''· and J were having din,
ner at a bar and grill one night
last week whe.n some of my
male co-workers walked in.
We exchanged greetings and I
·Dear
· introduced them to tim.
. A sho11 while later, one of
Abby"
· · them approached us and said,
"Don't take this 1he wrong
way, but the guys and I were
taking a survey, and we'd like
.
to know what size bra you · pie involved? I usually avoid
· wear."
socializing with co- workers
· Tim and I were dumb- -w)lere .alcohol is served for
founded at the crude .remark. I t.his very reason. ·· HURT
told him to tell the guys it was AND OFFENDED IN DAYnone of their business. and he 'tON
DEAR
HURT
AND
went. away. On our way out.
Tim made it clear that we OFFENDED: You have noth. were not happy with their il)g 1o gain by confronting the
·: rudeness, but only one of men who harassed you. As to
· them had the courtesy to offer the matter "going away on its
an apology for the remark.
own," as long as your
I work with these men harassers continue to allude
every day. We always had a to the incident without apologood rapport. There was gy, the matter will not d'ie .
. never any disrespect prior to I'm casting my vote with the
: this . I have seen ·these men co-worker who ad,ised you
: every day and had work. relat- to report the incident. If your
ed discussion s · with them. company does not have clearTwo of them have made ref- ly written sexual harassmem
ere nee to the incident, but policies, then it's behind . the
times.
neither has apologized.
I discussed the incident
DEAR A!3B Y: 'Last April,
: with a female co-worker who my nephew, "Frank," a ftrst
· is in a supervisory position lieutenant in the Army, was
over these men. She was ijvid on the third day of a road trip
and recommended 1 report it. from Fort Campbell, Ky., to
as
sexual
harassment. Seattle to deliver his ptckup
However. their actions have truck to his parents' home for
made things here at work stomge during his se&lt;;ond tour
very uncomfortable for me. of duty in Iraq. He was on 1. I'm afraid if I make it a work· 80 near Cheyenne, Wyo., in a
: place issue· it cpuld' be detri- snowstorm- when hi s truck
mental.
skidded on an icy patch, colShould I let this go away on lided with a big rig. rolled
its own, or confront the peo- over multiple times and land'

ed off the roadway in the
' snow. Frank hqd multiple
deep lacerations to his head, .
legs and feet, crushed bones
in one foot and back, and
neck injuries.
Several passers-by stopped
to help. One was a nurse who
held his neck straightuntil the .
paramedfc s arrived, and a
trucker couple who called
Frank's parents. However,
while these good Samaritans
were helping him , another
group was going through
Frank 's things and stealing
whatever they wanted. These
scave ngers took his cell
phone, digital camera, Army
helmet, wallet with military
ID, the truck radio ·· even his
keys . .The tow truck driver·
finally shooed them away.
I have never considered
myself nai ve. I have lived on
I-80 for 20 years and never ·
heard of thi s happening.
Abby, those p~ople actually
stole the mihtary ID off a
bleeding soldier. ,Is this as
.shocking to you as il is to us?
APPALLED
IN
ROSEVIlLE. CALIF.
DEAR
APPALLED:
Shocking and deplorable, yes.
Unheard of, no: To parap!u'ase a quote I heard many
·years ago, "We have seen the
enemy, and it is us." '
Dear ·Abby is written by

Abigail Van Buren, also .
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write · Dear Abby at
W'!'w.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
.

Is your score card full of high numbers 1 When· it com~s to cardiac scoring, higher numbers
are defi.nitely not par for the course and may be indicators of se rio~s health proble'ms.
Cardiac scoring is O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's latest addition to CT scanning
technology. This test for coronary artery disease measures the amount oi calcification in
the arteries. of the heart. It can help determine whether or nor heart disease is present
long .before recognizable symptoms develop. This 'non-invasi,•e rest is painless and.rakes
ory·ly a few minutes. ·
Candidates for cardiac scoring examinations are oyer age 40 and h a,·e one &lt;lr more Df '
the following risk factors for heart disease:
·
•High blood pressure
~High LDL or total cholesterol
• Family history ·of heart disease
• Sedentary lifestyle

• Ohesity
• High stress le&lt;·els
• History oi smc1king
• Diabetes

·Call (740) 592-9483 Monday through Friday' between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. tor more
1

i!lformation or to schedule a cardiac scoring cxaminatiori. Phystct ttn referral
is n ot required .
'
1

Cardiac scoring examinations are perfo~ed at O'Bieness' Radiology anJ Medical imaging
department at the Camop Center in the O'Bieness Medical Park. Our qualified ""tf
invites you tO rake a closer look at 'advanced diagnostic imaging as we measure pwgres•
in community health- one patient at a rime.

e

O'BLENESS
Memori~J Hoopit.J

at-r~~~

•'

�..
,, .

. '

Pag~ A4 ·

•

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 13, 200,5

· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157·
www.mydailysentinel.c_o m

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
'

i

Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor ,..

Congress shall make no law te$pecting an
establishment ofreligiQ11, or prohibiting .the
free e~ercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or !'f the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govermne11t for a redress of grievances. ·
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Cons~itution

TODAY -IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. June 13, the 16+th clay of2005. There are
20 I 'days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On June 13, 1966. the
Supreme Court Issued tts landmark Miranda decision, ruling
that criminal suspects had 10 be informed of their constitutional rights pnor to questioning by police.
On thi s date: In 1888. Congress. created the Department of
Labor.
·
In 1900. China 's Boxer Rebellion targeting foreigners. as
well as Chinese Christians. erupted into full-scale violence.
In 1927. aviation hero Charles Lindbergh was honored with
a ticker-tape parade 111 New York City.
·In 1935. James Braddock daimed the title of world heavyweight boxing champion from Max Baer in a 15-round fight
in Long Island City. N.Y.
In 19:12. President Roosevelt created the Office of War
Information. and appointed radio news commentator .Elmer
Davis to be its head.
In · 1944. Germany began launching flying-bomb attacks
. against Britain during World War II.
· In 1967, President Johnson hominated Solicitor-General
. Thurgood Marshall to become the tirst black justice ori the
U S Supreme Court.
In 1971. The New York Times began publishing the Pentagon
Papers, a· sec ret &gt;rudy of America "s involvement in Vietnam.
In 1977. James' Earl Ray. the convicted assassin of civil
rights lead,er Martin Luther King Jr .. was recaptured following
his escape three days earlier from a Tennessee prison.
In 1983. the U.S. space probe Pioneer lO,Iaunched in 1972.
became the first spacecraft to leave the solar system as it
crossed the orb1t of Neptune.
.
.
Tpn year&gt; ago: Pre&gt;ident Clinton proposed a 10-year plan for
halancing the federal budget, sayi ng in a televised address his .
proposal would cut spending by $1. I trillion.
.
Five years ago: The presidents of South Korea and North
Korea opened a summit in the northern capital of Pyongyang
, with pledges to seek reunification of the divided peninsula.
· Italy pardoned Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turkish gunman who'd
tried to kill Pope John Paulll in 1981.
One year ago: In Iraq, gunmen assassinated a senior
Education Ministry official. Former President George H.W.
Bush celebrated his 80th birthday with a 13.000-foot para. chute jump over his presidential library in College Station,
Texas. Annika Sorenstam won the LPGA Championship for
the second straight year.
Today's Birthqays: Artist Christo is 70. Artist Jeanne-Claude
is 70. Magician Siegfried (Siegfried &amp; Roy) is 66. Singer
Dennis Locorriere (Dr. Hook) is 56. Comedian Tim Allen is 52.
Actress Ally Sheedy is 43. "The Early Show" co-host Hannah
Storm is 43. Singer David Gray is 37. Rhythm-and-blues singer
De niece Pearson (Five Star) is 37. Actor Jamie Wlllters is 36.
Singer-musician Rivers Cuomo (Weezer) is 35. Actorii'iteve-0
("Jackass") is 31. Singer Raz B is 20. Actress Kat Dennings is
19. Actresses Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen are 19·.
Thought for Today: "The penalty of success is to be bored
by people who used to snub you ... - Viscountess Astor, ·
American-born English politician ( 1879-1964 ).

guard must be mindful that
Thank
you,
Michael
"qre should· be used so that
lsikoff.
Because
of
the right hand is the prim ary
Newsweek's
coinmode
one used to manipulate any
Quran story - the one that
part of the Quran due to the
went down the drain in a
cultural association with the
retraction - . a previously
Diana
left hand."
undi sc lo ~e d threat to our
West
It goes on. There's more ·
' very existence has been
revealed. ·It may be too late ·
"revere nt m1i11ner." more
to avert, but before admit- '
instructions for conveying ·
ting defeat, I just wish every ...__,.....,.._
the book inside a ··clean. dry
American would take a good Army policy, the stapqard detainee towel. '" The cocklong moment to reflect; not operating procedure ts:_ eyed picture is clear. Bpt 11
. on the hysterical headlines "Handle the Quran as if it doe sn' t explain what's
trumpeting "Qu~an abuse," were a fragile piece of deli- gmng on.
At first _glance, this scene
but rather on the U.S. cate art."
Army's Quranic Code of
What's going on here '' By may seer:ri to exemplify a
Cond,uct
in 1 place . at official order, a whole lot of bizarre excess of good man "respecting the dignity of the · ners. an absurdly obsequious .
Guantanamo Bay. ·
The orders aren't Called Quran:"
According . to respect 'for a largely foreign
that; of course, but that's as Section 6-5-c(3), should a faith. Since w'hen does the
apt a title as any for the rele- Quran need: to be removed· United States specifically
vant sections of the official" from a.detainee·s cell- you direct its soldiers to show
Iy
titled
"Detention know, carried somewhere -· · two-hand~d "reverence·· i-n
Operations Group Standard and the detainee is personal- "the hatidling of any religio~s
Operating Procedures" that . Iy unable to. move it (best book"? But it seem; to me ·
·go for Gitmo. And, it bears option), and . the Muslim that there's more behind \his
· repeating, every American chaplain, librarian and inter- charade. The "clean gloves"
should take a good long preter are also unable to and "detainee" towels are
(second-best · the tip-off. The fact is, under
moment to ret1ect on what move ·it
they mean.
option). then the U.S. Army Islamic law, non- Muslims
Since all of Guantanamo's guard, as a very last resort. are dee med unfit to touch the
Quran. That. much is gener'
inmates happen to be mem- may take actiori.
Th~n the insanity really
ally known . What is not usubers of the same famed band
of Muslim extremists, the begins. The guard is directed . ally co'nsidered is the reason:
Army has seen fit to distrib- to don "clean gloves ... in full According to the ·.Islamic
ute Qurans. So far. so good, view of the detainees prior to law. we are undean.
I. guess. But the Army does- handling." He must use'··two
The term IS "najis." On the
n't just distribute its Qurans hands ·... at all times when multilingual Web site of the
like any other religious handling the Quran m man- Grand .Ayatollah Ali albook. That is, the Bible may ner signaling respect and . Hosseini ai-Sistani, the leadget passed around. · riffled reverence." Why "respect" ing Iraqi Shi"ite •cleric. there
through, dropped, tossed and alone isn 't abundantly suffi- is a catalogue of Islamic
stuffed irito hotel room cient isn't mentioned. While laws (www.sistani.org). This
drawers. · Btll not the Quran. signaling two-handed respect includes a list of "najis
According 10 United States and reverence, how~ver. the things.'' There are 10, begin- ,

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The' Daily Sentin~l • Page As

·Mother of student missing in Aruba says
three detainees 'kriow what happened' to her
Bv PETER PRENGAMAN
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

and· la st sa"' her bel'ng
approached hy a nian in a
secmity guard uniform before
ORANJESTAD.
Arublt they drove off. a lawyer for .
(AP) - The mother of a the brother's has said.
mi ssin g Alahama ' teenager
The three yo ung men were ·
said Sunday that she believe s detai t1ed on Thursday. Two
three young men who were former hotel security guards
' VJ.ith her daughter the day of who work'ed at a hotel not far
her disappearance know what from the Holiday Inn have
happened to her.
been detained since June 5.
Beth Hollow ay Twitty said Lawyers for all Jive have
Aruban authorities s'hould insisted their Clients ar.e innopre ssurc t·he young men to cent. and no one has been
· reve&gt;tl what they know about · charged in the case.
the disappearance of 18-yearHolloway Twitty said she
appreciated all that Aruban
old Natale~ Holl oway.
"Al,l three of those boy s authorities have done but
know what happened to her." added .. ") will nor be satisfied
Holloway Twitty said during until they give me back my
a 45 -minute interview with daughter. 1 want her and I
The Associated -Press in her want her now.'' .
But Holloway Twitty also
room at the Holiday Inn, ttie
AP Photo
same hotel where her dau gh- said that ,she reviewed all of Arubans . and tourists ' the visit Alto Vista chapel in Noord. ·
ter ., was staying before she the secmity ·videos from the Aruba, Sunday. Alabama high school ·graduate Natalee
disappeared on .May 30. Holtday Inn and that she has Holloway disappeared while on a graduation trip to this Dutch
~rUth
"They all know what th~y did concluded that · the young Caribbean island on May 30.
' .
men . nev er bro ught her
with her that night.' '
Glenna Lucille Fruth. 84, of Mason, W.Va .. passed away on
Holloway
Twitty, 44. daughter back .to the hotel as to continue holding theni .
vices Sunday ttl pray for the
Saturday, June II . 2005 at St. Marv's Medical Center in Blue declined to say what she they told police.
·
"This
is
turning
into
a
teen.
Springs, Mo.
'
thought the boys had done or . · "That story was a lie ." she
Valerie Stanton. a .35-yearShe was a member of the Mason United Methodist Church. whether . she thou ght her sa id. ··1 don't believe they game, an illogical inve stigaShe has lived in the Kansas City area with her daughter. Carol daughter was sti ll alive. She ever brought Natalee back to tion,'' said Nomina Pietersz. old computer'technician visitthe attorney representing · ing from Washington, D.C. ,
and husband Thomas Latta. for the past 1.0 years. She was a also said she thought that two the hotel."
Antonius '"Mickey"' John , 30. prayed Sunday at the Alto
homemaker, mother and gra ndmother. and she loved sewing . former hotel security guards
Authorities
have
said
they
John and Abraham Jones. 28. Vi sta chapel outside the capi·
and baking.
detained . in connection with are pursuing all le.ads, while had been deiained a week as tal. "This could happen in any
She was born May 20, 1921 in Mason, the daughter of the . Holloway' s disappearance Prime
Mini ste r
Nelson of Sunday, and .have denied city and it's unfortunate a
late Arthur and Lellna (Stanley) McArdle .
were innocent· and should be Oduber has said that "no one . any connection to Hollowqy. d.ark cloud , is now over the
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her . released.
stands above the !awl' on . the "The prosecution is pretend- island because people here
brothers, Josep h McArdle and James McArdle·~. and sisters,
The three young men - the island.
·
ing it has information that we a_re so nice ." ·she. said.
Eleanor Bessellman and Mrs. Bill (Mary) Roush.
17-year-old son of a Dutch
Natalee Hollowav vanished don't have."
She is survived by two daughters. Carol Latta of Corder. justice ministry official and hours hefore she was expectAttorney General Caren · At the Santa Ana Catholic
Mo. , and Cr~ s tal Kautz of Pomeroy: five grandchildren, two Surinamese brothers - ed at the airport following a Janssen
said Sunda)( that church in the town of Noord,
Christophcr 'Lyons , Le slie Lyon s Feldkamp, Tyler .Whitlatch, have told pohce they brought five-day trip to the Dutch wasn ' t the case but declined al so outside the capital, the
Jenna Kautz and Jacpb Kautz; and two great-grandchildren. Natalee Holloway to a light- Caribbean island with 124 to give details. '"We are still Rev. Rudy Lampe told about
Peyton Richardson-Feldkamp and Hailey Feldkamp.
house beside the . isla nd's classmates and seven chaper- in the middle of an investiga- 300 parishioners to "pray 'to
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Anderson Funeral
' .. she sat'd.
give the family an oasis of
Home in New Haven . Burial will follow in KirklanJ Arisha Beach. but didn' t get ones celebrating their gradua- tton,
A confession reported by a · peace.'"
of the car. The brothers, tion from Mountain Brook
Memorial Gardens in Point Pleasant. Visitation will be 6-8 out
Satish
Kalpoe,
18
;
and
High
_
School,
near
Holloway Twitty said she
polic
chief and its subsequent
p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. ·
by the attorney she will not leave Aruba until
In lieu of !lowers: tl'te family asks that contributions be Deepak Kalpoe. 21. also told Birm'ingham. Ala. Her U.S. retraction
general fueled rumors of the her daughter is found.
and
the
passpo!t
and
packed
bags
police
that
Natalee
made to the American Cancer Society. A guest register is Dutch boy had been kissing . we(e found in her hotel room. young woman's demise. The
·'] have no choice but to
available online at www.andersonfh.com.
·
'
in the back seat of _the car.
Defense lawyers for the family has said no body has stay strong. I was somehow
They said they dropped her former security guards said been found, and islanders and cho~en for this (situation) and
off at her hotel about 2 a.m . there wasn't enough evidence tourists attended church ser- I've got to sec It to the end.'_"

. Ellen Foreman Arnott. 91 , of Ne\1 Matamoras passe&lt;:! away
at 9:40 a.m. Sunday, June 12 at Country Haven Adult Care
Facility. in ·Newpnrt.
·
·
Born on September 25. 191 3 in West Virginia, she was the
daughter ol the late Charles and Sarah Rowan Foreman.
She was member of the Racine United Methodist Church
and Ohio Eastern Star, Harrisonville Chapter.
In addttton to her parents. she was preceded in death by her
husband John Arnott. and sisters. Edna Ours. · Estella Clarke
and Elsie Zahrndt.
·
.,
Surviving_ are children. Virginia (Joames S. Jr.) Rees of
Racme , Louts (Gene)'Weaver of J~ck sonvil.le, Fla .. and Kenda
(Bob) Brown of N~w ~atamoras: grandchildren. Jonathan
(Mtssy) Re~s. Jay ( fma ) Rees. Beth (Jim) Clarke, Michael
(A ndrea) Weaver. Shelley (David) Kendall , Tonya Pelphrey.
Shannon Brown. Justin . (Robin) Brown : II great-grandchil. dren; ~:m e great ~great-grandchild; sister. Goldie Heiney ;
Stster-m -law, Vtolct (Lawrence) Bush ; brother-in-law.
Kenneth Ours and longtiq;te friend. Martha Wolfe. ·.
. '
· Se~vices will he held at 2:3 0p.m. Thursday at Letart Falls
Cemetery Chapel. in Racine.
·
·
Officiating will be Rev. Morris Wolfe.
Friends may call fro th 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Interment will be at Letart Falls Cemetery.

Cilenna

dianmresr@ren~nn.ner.)

ARE

'IOU SURE

Clara Jane Anderson Queen

THIS I~
THE

Clara Jane Anderson Queen, 79. of Gallipolis passed away
at her residence peacefully on Saturday, June I I.
Services will be I p.m . Tuesday at Willis Funeral Home
with Pastor Alfred Holley officiating.
Burial will follow in Mina Chapel Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. today at Willis Funeral
Home.
Pallbearers will be Dean Queen. Jesse Queen, William B.J.
Denny, Dillan Queen, Richard Cremeans, and J.E. Cremeans.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
. condolences.
..

RIGHT

PATH?

Smoke-free campaign outspent
Columbus bar owners

The Wal-Mart checkout
lfldY couldn't contain ~erself.
·
"Cleaning
out , the
garage?" she cheerfully
inquired, banging her . bar. " code reader 28 times against
the )lUge plastic ttib on top of
· 27 others just like it.
"Nope,'i I replied:
She banged some more.
"Growing a container garden r·
. ·
Nope."
. 22, 23, 24 ...
Finally I took pity on her.
26, 27 ...
'"I'm moving. Camping,
actually."
" How long?" she asked,
whacking the Tupperware
box one last time.
"A while ~" I replied; and
p&lt;feled out of her lane lille
Danica Patrie~ grabbing the'
Indy 500 lead.
We are gypsies now, my
husband and me and the dog.
The night before we moved
out of our sol4 house I lay in
bed staring through the little
skylight counting stars, as l
had nearly every night for
the five years we lived there.
Under the vaulted ceiling. l
was safe in a place where I
felt I belonged. '
But not for long; our timing !s bad_ Our new, snialler

www. mydailysentinel.com

;

ning ' wi th an assortment of
cxc~etions and hmly tluid s
- obvious stllff tl1at reall)
shouldn ' t need special mention . On the ·'mijis· : list with
urine. feces . .etc .. are the pi g.
the clog and the '"kafir." Tha t
i11eans the Chrisli;Jn. the Je\1 .
the unbclie,·er . in Islam and, chan~cs are. the Gitmu
guard.
In efkct. t-hen. wi th . its .
official · poli cy of dean '
cloves and detainee towels .
the United St&lt;ttes military i',
promoting. enabling and
acceptm!! the lsl'amic concept of n;tji s - the unclean
infidel - a barbarous notion
that · hc~s helped fuel the
bloodltist of jihad ami the
non-Muslim subju gation of
dhimmitude. Our so ldiers
are many things; self-sacrifi cing. hold. loyal and true .
Thev are not ui1clean.
Is-this political correctnes s
r.un amok'! Not ex ·tctly. It'&lt;
something else again, a nev.
threat from within that needs
vigtlant redress. P.C. is about
victimology. the elevation qf
perceived victim groups tu
the canonical pant~eon. The
Gitmo rules arc · more blatantly about surrender, a voluntarv self-extinguishment .
a spreadmg .'condition or
denial of what is right anJ'
worth sta ndin~ for. Not wha t
you expect from the United
States Southern Command.
(Diana Wesr is 11 co /umni.,r
for The Wa shington Times.
She mn be cunwcred via

Home

Sentinel

...

Deaths ·

LETTERS. TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They shoujd
be less than 300 words. All letters 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.

13 , 2.005

Obi~uaries

U!hat's being desecrate4 here?

The Daily Sentinel

Th~ Daily

Monday, June

home is }till · stacked in
metal-banded piles all over
an empty lot. Thousands of
dollars worth of two-byfours. ·six-by-eights and
glue-laminated beams have
yet to be hammered and nailgunned into a new sanquary
that will embrace our future
hopes and cushion our disappointments.
· ·
Unless we get a miracle in
our zero-vacancy rental market we' ll be homeless in
·se.ven weeks, . wheil absent
friends reClaim their house .
Our shelter options' are a tent
tarp or a tlllpaper roof on a
cobbled-togethe~ temporary
. shed between Labor Day and
·
Thanksgiving.
Just thinking about camping in the dark. in downpours, surrounded by centipedes. makes my stomach
tum over. Nobody's giving
out merit badges for this
endurance ws.t.
·Holed . up for now in a
friend 's borrowed house. I
lecture myself that the end
justifies the means. that I'm
not a sissy, that I need to get
a grip and keep my sense of
humor. that living out of
doors under the slars (and in
the rain) will be an adven, ture, not an ordeal .
To fortify myself. I'm pl¥:king some treasures to take
with me: 28,plastic tubs full .

•

First, · I put ·in my ET
stuffed ·animal. because its
favorite word ·is "~orne ."
Then I added my ceramic .
·piggybank so I can keep robbing it to buy cookies at the
store. Handfuls · of ..favorite
COs and DVDs can work off .
batteries. so Norah and
Bridget Jones are coming
with me. ·I also tucked in my
Christmas address book, just
in case the carpenters continue to lie to me ("We' ll definitely
be
done . by

home is much more than a
collection of things : .it's the
love I share with my husband, and the companionship of a good pet. Still. I
continue to whine - '" How
will I cook? How will I keep
clothes clean'' How wi ll my
husband grade papers in the
dark?'' - and that big 'one
-.'-will . anybody see me
when I go to the bathroom?"'
My friends·. wh\) are wzily
·tucked under their own insulated roofs. offer empty .platThanksgiving~'')
itudes about "communing
My husband packed his with nature·· and "getting in .1
harmonica, ukulele, and . touch with your roots.''
iPod; a sack full of misMy husband tries to reasmatched socks: an 'ancient · sure me. ··You loved 'Out of
baseball bat to scare away Africa· . Pretend you' re on
burglars (who wants to steal safari ."' I remind him he is
Tupperware '1 ): three yoyos; not 'Robert Redford. I am not
every pair of tennis shoes Meryl Streep and our realit y
he's ever owned: and hi s is nor their movie: we do not
favorite pillow.
ha ve a dozen servanb
We are also · dragging trekking ahead to cook dinaround boxes of useless ner and put Mozan on the
bu si ness records ·'·ju st in Victrola.
case:· six months' worth of
Come August.' instead · of
pre-addressed'
birthday circling the wagon&gt;. we'll be
cards. one outfit suitable to · circling the Tupperware
wear to' a funeral. an entire tubs. cooking on a barbeque . .
box of plastic eating uten- eating out ofotooler&gt; full of
si ls. a dog bed Dai:&gt;y has soggy food in melting ice.
ne\'er once slept in. far too bathing in a galvanized wash
many books. and ratty old tub. • and ttekking our:.el'e&gt;
work clothe:. we wi II bum off to the portable potty.
cere1)1oniously the day , we
When it"&gt; time to go to
n'tove into our new house.
sleep. I'll hold tig ht to ET
Of course I know that a and whi&gt;per "home:·

COLUMBUS (AP) -Antismoking activists outspent bar
owners by . more · than
$150,000 to help ~efeat a ballot initiative to exempt bars
from the city's smoking ban,
according to campaign finance
reports.
Fifty-six percent of voters
last month rejected a.proposal
·that would have amended the
ban to allow smoking in establishments whe.re · alcohol
accounis for 65 percent of
sales .

Citizens for Smoke Free
Columbus, a coalition of·political, 'civic and health leaders,
spent $229,711 during the
campaign. The group ran TV,
radio and print ads, including
some featuring breast-cancer
survivor Stefanic Spielman,
the wife of former Ohio.State
linebacker Chris Spielman.
Melinda Swan. chief of .staff
for the Columbus . City
Council. said the · ads were
influential in getting people to
vote. She said a poll at the
beginning of the campaign
showed 52 percent planned to
. · vote in favor of the exemption.
Six contributors donated
525.000 each to the s1noke
from Pagexx
free coalition. ,
Phil Hannon, a lawyer repof Aging, United Fund for resenting the Columbus Bar
Meigs County, and through Owners Political Action
local government. fundrai s- · Committee, said Spielman's
ing, community and individ- involvement was a factor. The
ual donations and ' local levy bar owners spent $79,486.
dollars . ·
Both ·sides filed the camShe spoke of the various paign finance reports with the
programs and recognized Franklin County Board of
several who participate year Elections on Friday.
after year. Recognized for
their service to the &amp;gency
were trustees of the. Meigs
County Council on Aging,
and the RSVP Advisory
from PageA1
Council chaired by Vicki
Wood.
room."
. Special recognition was
Nationally this s ummer
· given to 25-year · members. nearly three million children
' Mary K. Roush. Kathleen will be rushed to emergency
Scott and Ferndora Storv rooms 'for serious injuries
who has volunteered for 2S resulting from motor vehicle
years: Eileen Buck and crashes, · drowning , bike
Ruby Morris. 2.0 years ; crashes., peqestrian inciBetty Mauer, Don Maurer. dents.• falls and.other hazards.
Jean Nease, Hazel Smith.
EMS .offers the following
and Jane Walton. 15 years; tips to help children stay safe
and
Leafy
Chasleen. this ~ummer
.
.Virginia Gibson, Sarah Hull,
Ride safe and secure ChilRosemary Keller. Wilma dren in the appropriat~ child
Reiber, Carolyn Salser and safety seat or safety belt for
·
Dolores Will.
their age and size. Kids
A. program of patriotic should always be secured in
mus1c was p·resented by The the back seat.
Merry Markers, directed by
&gt;S)&lt;Vim safe and always
Shirley Hamm, with Debbie supervise young children
Finlaw at .the piano. The near water and insist ·your
awarding of door prizes con- · children wear personal tlota- eluded the program.

Seniors

Children

..

Report: Medicaid, overpayments totaled about $69 million
COLUMBUS (APJ- The
Medicaid system
overpaid ph armacies by
about $69 million over a
five-year P.eriod. according
to an independent study.
Officials with the Ohio
Department of Job and
Family Services attribute
most of the rroblem to a
2003 update o its computerized system for paying pharmacy claims. They said the
system has been fixed and.
they should be able to recover much' of the money.
The state inspector general
released a report in January
that said the department had
failed to collect millions of
dollars in overpayments for
incorrect or fraudulent bills
~taie's

rroni doctors and hospitals.
department responded
with a plan to 'aggressively
~ursue overpayment s and
review its policies.
The independent study,
obtained last · week by The
Columbus Dispatch, was
done
for · the. Ohio
Commission to Reform
Medicaid, a panel of experts
that lawmakers told to find
potential savings. It found
more than 1.2 million duplicate claims paid off from
2000 to 2004.
T~e computer system is .
supposed to document when
the state pays for prescription drugs that aren't given
to patients, then subtract that
. amount from the next · payTli~

. mellt' to the pharmacy. Job mine why an additional. $11
and Family Services offi- million in overpayments
cials said the system didrt' t were made before 2003.
execute the ,process correctly Alien said the department
· from November 2003 to w'ill try to recover the money
March 2005.
once it deteJ'mines what hapBarbara Edwards, who .pened but its options could
directs Ohio's Medicaid pro- be limited because of the
_gram for the department, ·statute of limitations. ·
said a problem was discov. The review also identified
ered in December 2003 about ' 118,000 Medicaid
when some bills were paid recipients, . with . ~pproxi­
several times because they mately $700 milliqn in pregot stuck in the system. Ohio scripllons, for an unusually
then recovered about $30 high · amount of medical
activity.
million .
. Pharmacies alerted the
Edwards disputed the
state , in February to other totals, saying the~e could be
billing problems, department legitimate medical reasons
for the · recipients get multispokesman Jon Allen said.
. Edwards said she's work- ple prescriptions or see seving with technicians to deter- eral doctors .

·Ohio River Sweep this Saturday
~.

For the Record
-Dissolutions

"People ·that drive along a
highway and don't see llilY litter
for miles maybe take for granted
POMEROY - Vo.lunteers are that someone has been there to
needed for River Sweep 2005, pick it up until all of the sudden
from 9 a.m. to noon this the liner appears down the road,"
Saturday at three diflerent sites Wood Said. "Litter prevention
and programs like the River
throughout Meigs County.
Sweep
are sometimes taken for
In Middleport volunteers
granted
until they"re gone."'
to meet at Dave Diles Park;· in
River Sweep 2005 is larger
Pomeroy at the stage area in the
parking lot, and in Racine at the than just the Ohio River as volunteers. will be cleaning the
old teiry landing. ·
Volunteers wilfbe given bags banks of the Allegheny,
Monongahela,
Beaver,
and gloves to work with. as well
Kanawha and Kentucky rivers
as free T-shirts and refreshments.'
as well as other tributaries.
Those interested in participating
More than 3,(XX) miles of
should call Paula Wood at Meigs
County Recycling and Litter · shoreline will be combed for
trash and debris during the
Prevention, 992-6.360.

sweep which is the largest enviromnental e.vent of its kind and
POMEROY - An action
encompasses six states.
for
dissolution of marriage
"River Sweep is very important IJec!nse for a few hours on has been filed in Meigs
one , day volunteers can help . County Common Pleas Court
by . Stacy Mae Jeffers,
make a difference in the appear- Rutland.
and John · Leon
ance of this great natural
Bucyrus.
Jeffers.
resource," Project Director
A di sso lutioil bas been
Jearme !son said.
granted to Leroy Paul Hendrix
The key to making the River and Amy M. Hendrix.
Sweep a suCcess is comn:mriity
groups. ·Such as churches, scout
troops and others, who volunteer
their time to come out and join in
the fight against pollution along
POMEROY - A divorce
the rivers and streams.
Iwas granted in Meigs County
Last year, more than 1,100 Common Pleas Court to
volunteers collected trJSh and Rebecca Casey from Donald
debris during the River Sweep.
0 . Casey.

, The goal is to clear the banks
of liner ~ong the Ohio River.

Mason County Circuit Court, · been received in a port in
.was a result of the civil case Baltimore, but never was
which was filed by his broth- delivered to New Haven and
er, ltzhak. and cousin. had been sold to another
Binson.
company.
Since the case has been
Binson said the company
moved .to federal court. all has a good future in . New
proceedings
in
Mason Haven .
"T.he area in West Virginia
County have stopped.
According to Bin son·s is ideal for that place."' he
attorney, Jay Lazerwitz of said. '" I am aware of how the
New Jersey, the arrest war- busi ness works.· And I know
how to make the place . run
rant has not been rescinded.
Binson said he had invest- right."
He added that it would cost
ed about $3 million in
Bannai's company.. which more and take . another five
incl;Jdes a mine in Africa and years to open the same type
a plant in Poland. and that he of plant elsewhere . and he
also was involved in helping has confidence in the
run 'the New Haven plant. He employees in the local area.
filed the lawsuit when Bannai
""The employees are very
refuSed to answer any ques- special... he said. ··And we
tions about the finance s of have an excellent relation·the comp311y.
ship. I care about them and
Court documents have their families.''
He abo said that Bannai
shown that Bannai removed
approximately S l million in has no !;now ledge of running
materials frolll' .the New the plant and that he also
Haven plant and moved thein would like to see county and
to Jackson County. A ship- state officials get involved
ment of ore from ,Africa had with helping the plant open.

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MY DAILYS ENTINELCOM

are

Plant·

tion devices when out on
from PageA1
boats. near open ·bodies of
water or participating in naci:s since they are not fuiqg.
water sports.
Randy Moore, United
Be wheel saJe and make
sure your kids wear properly Steelworkers District 8 reprefitting protective gear e•ery sentative. said the COll\pany
time they ride their bikes. is within its obligations to the
scooters, inline skates or union in distributing the pay'
skateboards. Teach youf'Chil- checks. .
"Rigt\t now the employees
dren the rules of the road.
are
on lay off due to business ·
·. Walk safe and never let
problems:
· Moore said. ··we
yqur child under age of 10
cross the street alone. Teach are looking forward to the
children to obey traffic rules. plant reopening . There are
Make sure your kids wear good dollars in it: And the
is there for its prodretro-reflective materials. and market
·
ucts.''
don't let them walk alone at
Earlier .this year, ~annai
night If they mu&gt;t walk at shut
down the plant anq laid
dawn or at dusk. make sure off more than I00 employees.
they carry a tlashlight, .
afuir
the'ir . paychecks·
Play Si!fe and alway s bounced. He then left the
supervise your children at eountrv and returned to
playgrounds or in the back- lsrl!el. ·
yard. Make sure they play on . [n May. an arrest' wa.rcint
a &gt;afe surface, such as mulch. for. Bannai , which was issu~
rubber or fine sand.
by Judge David W. Nibert in.

Divorce

�•

.

.PageA6

OHI

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June'13, 2005

., ...

..

.I

Bl

The Daily Sen!inel

INSIDE:
PVH Flag Football gallery, Page 82
Spurs ·take 2-0 series lead, Page 86

In spe~ial congressional election, it's all about valu~s

Pat O.,Win~. a rountv com- ~lc,·tion in 1993. President Bush
-.,---..,.---,
ASSOCIATED PREss wRITER
mi:-.sioncr in CinL·innati·. bnlught appointed Ponman as U.S. trade
along his mom. dad !U.S. Sen. represemative in. March. Only
. WEST UNION - The four Mike O.,Wine) ami a cou ple of one Democrat, Thomas Luken
contenders
in
0 io 's sisters.
in the I 970s, hRs represented the
Republican special congressionThe canl!idatc.s steereo dear diwict since 195 I . ·
a! primary tripped over each of \'iolatin¥_ pic ni.c hor~oree . Along.with II Republicans in
other emphasizing fmniJy ·at a Rnnald
K e•~pm ~,
l ith . fue~day s pnmary. there are stx
GOP picnic this weekend.
Cmnmandmcnt - I hou shalt Democrats, includinu Charles
Jean Schihidt, a fonner state not speak ill of another Sanders. a fonner ·Waynesville
. lawmaker, had to leave early· to Republican . - c,·en though mayor. However, he is best
attend her daughter's dance some were pou ncling . the 'ur- known tor losing to Ponman
~ ·I
recital.
waves Jomg JUSt that on l'iJur times.
' -·' .
Bob McEwen. trying io get Saturday.
. · No sion toutino a Democrat
back to Congress after a 13' year · Questions ha~c been rais~d was visible along the 1"3-mile
absence, noted his 29th wedding about McEwen' pverdratts at drive down Ohio 41 ·from the
anniversary coming up Sunday. the Ho.use bw1k, Pat _De Wine's Appalachian Highway to this
' State Rep·. Tom Brinkman personal Ide, Schm1dt s votes o.~ village of about 3.000 people.
told the crowd at a "Reagan pit - the state budget and Bnnkman s The seven-county district
nic" sponsored by the Adams credentwb as a conservative.
spreads from eastem Cincinnati
County Republican Party that
Republicans rule m the 2nd to Ohio's southern tip.
he had proudly been married for CongresSional D1stnct. where
llle area suffers the same eco21 years and is raising six chi!- Rob Portman had been the nomic woes as the rest of
dren.
mcumbent smce hiS owil spec1al Appalac hia. Uneinploymem in
Adams County in May was 8.9
percent. compared with 5.9 percent statewide.
Yet the region overwhelmingly voted. for President Bush in
.*
Photo
November. The Clmdidates say U.S. 2nd District rep4blican congressional candidate Pat DeWine, right, talks with guests dur·
it ·s because the people there are · ing The 1st Annual Ronald Reagan Picnic at the Adams County Fairgrounds in West Union.
"values voters," who pay more
attention to a candidate's stands byist three years ago.
of his campaign.
··r think we should be .above
on abonion. gu n rights and other
The Family Research Council
"I think we ought to talk the fray on mudslinging. We
Monday, June 13
Ovomight ( 1-6 a.m.)
noneconomic issues.
and Citizens for Community about the issues. l wish people should talk about the issues,"
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
A humid overnight. There
"There are elites in the media Values, whose leader is support- would do that, but if people said Schmidt, who has come
Humid and cloudy morn- . is a slim chance that it could and the government who don't · ing McEwen, also have taken want to talk about my personal under fire for her vote in the
ing . Temperatures will stay ra in . Temperatures will linger fully · appreciate
what
" M
E makes
55 out radio ads blasting Mike l.ife. l"m happy to address it," House two years ago that
near 77 . Winds will be 5 to at 73 with today 's low of 71 Amenca great,
c
wen,
k'
h , De Wine for his pan in broker- De Wine. 37, said.
imposed a 20-percent sales-tax
· 10 MPH from the south.
occurring around 6 a.m. sat'd be'.ore
spea
mg
to
t
e ing~ a deal !hilt allows Den1ocrats
Mike De Wine said it's unfor- . increase over two years ..
.
'()()
t
th
Ad
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Skies will be partly cloudy to crow d oI·&gt; L · 1a 1e s · ams
· to block tederaiJ'udicial appoint- turiate that his son's children "It's an unfair attack because
It will continue to be humid cloudy with 5 MPH winds County 1'\gncu tura
oc•ety ments under ··extraordinarv cir- have become pan of the itttacks.
building at the county .fair- cumstances."
While Pat DeWine has been it doesn't tell the whole stoiy.
and cloudy. There could be a from the southwest.
'rou
1ds
We inherited a budget that had
few raindrops around the
g ' ··
At a recent · candidates .forum the subject of negative ads, he
'"The commitment l have to in New Boston, the rhetoric got has · shown he. can dish it Gut, been misspent. in the '90s,"·
Tuesday, June 14
area. Temperatures wi II hold
family
values is such that that's so nasty it tumed olf Margmet too. One radio ad tor his cam- Schmidt said. "This was a tem- .
Momiug (7 a.m.-Noon)
steady around 84 with
It will be a humid morning. · the bedrock of the suppo11 l"m Schumacher. 65. of Portsmouth. paign enlists the help of por&lt;lf)' solution .... It 's unfair to
today's high of 87 occurring
"If I'd had a water gun, I think Hamilton County Prosecutor take a portion (1)1' the story) and
around 4 p.m. Winds will be Temperatures will rise from receiving in southern Ohio,"
5 to I 0 MPH from the south 73 to S4 by late this morning. said McEwen, who has received I'd have used it. When they start Joe Deters, who criticizes distort it."
Jene Pel!, 38, of Peebles, said
turning from the southwest as Skies will range from mostly the support of leaders in the con- with that, it's just like 2-yew·-old Brinkman for opposing the
all tl1e candidates should knock
sunny to mostly cloudy with servative Christian movement. kids in the playground,'' said · death penalty..
the afternoon progresses.
McEwen has come under fire Schumacher, who intends to
Brinkman, 47, said he's just off the negative rhetoric. ·
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) 5 MPH .w inds from the west
consistent in being "pro-life all Waiting in line to choose from a
l.t should remain humid and turning from the southwest as again for writing 166 bad vote tor Schmidt.
checks on the House bank durPat De Wine frrst experienced the way." Brinkman is one of menu of hot dogs, hamburgers,
cloudy. There .is a good the morning progresses.
Aftertioofl (/-6p.m.)
ing his earlier tenure in the the attacks about his leaving his the Ohio House's ·Staunchest baked beans and potato salad,
chance of rajn. Temperatures
wile last year. when he beat abortion opponents.
she wondered, "How conserva.
It's· going to be a humid House.
will drop from 86 emly this
Those same conservative incumbent
Republican
Schmidt, 53, is still SJnalting tive can you get')
evening to 77. Winds will be and
cloudy
afternoon.
5 to I0 MPH from the south- Temperatures will hover at · leaders have been critical of Pat Hamilton
Countv from a bruising Ohio Senate pri."Everybody's a human being,
89,
Winds
will
be
5
to
10
De
Wine,
who
has
acknowlCommissioner
John
Dow
lin,
mary
last'year
that
she
lost
by
22
too.
They make mistakes," she
west turning from the west as
MPH from the southwest.
edged leaving his wife for a lob- who made the issue a focal point votes.
said.
the evening progresses.
Bv JOHN McCARTijy

·

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MODEL LT 2042

$.,
4
9
9**
~~¥~:J.500
• SAJ;E

Shown,

t.AOOEL TANK"' 11.160-KH

PRICE'

1, .

PATHER'S DAY EVENT
GREAT PRICES NOW THROUG!1 JUNE 19TH

ALLPOWER .EQUIPMENT
8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
(740) 593-3279
(800) 710-1917 (TOLL FREE)

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER~ OH 43130
(740) ,6 53-2827
... (800) 710-1921 (TOLL FREE)
.'

•
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·.

...
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·e~e-:··, O&lt;i•·~g5 l&lt;"'o;.o,r • •• ~I ~·

· ·~·go-· -.~•.:
..ar'f ~~ ....

Ta•es

.rc:

-a•~-·1!

games

.

Tuesday 's game

· ·

S. Charleston _at Mason ~u nty, 5 p.m :
Wednei:day'e game

Lancaster at Feeney Bennett, 6 p.m.
.

:..

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&lt;"'! ,.,. ~. ~~,,.. ,. • .......

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Bv BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@M.YDAiLYTRIBUNE.COM

Thursday 's game

Classic (Elkins) , TBA

Friday's games
Portsmouth at Feeney Bennett. 6 p.m.
Mason Co. at Hillbilly Hardball
Class it:: (Elkins)

·

Saturday's games
Feeney Bennett at Lancastec 1 p.m.

Mason Co. at Hillbilly Hardball
Classic (Elkins) , TBA

"'- ·
Fe~ney

Sundiy, June 19 ·
Bennett at Pickeringlon, 2 p.m.

Mason Co. al Hillbilly
Classic (E ikins) ..TB~

Hardball

Sports Briefs

EHS athletes can
still get physicals
TUPPERS . PLAINS ·-,
Eastem athletes ·in grades
7-12 who misse&lt;;lthe ph)' si-.
cals at the "school may still
get one at Dr. Kelly
Roush 's oHice, which is
located at the Holzer
Sycamore Branch.
Dr. Roush will be giving
the physicals · throughout
the .month of June by
·appointment, and there will
be a $10 cost for the examination .
Physical form s may be
picked up in the Eastern
High School office.
For additional inforniation, please contact 't he
office at (740) 985-3329.

TUPPERS PLAINS - ·
All Eastern athletes in
grades 7-12 that wish to
play a fall sport (football,
volleyball, golf and cheerleading)
should sign
up in the
high school
office.
A parent
must be with
the athlete at
the time of
sign-ups to
complete all paper work,
and the pay-to-play fee of
$30 will be collected at this
time.
You must sign-up and
complete all . paper work
before you begin pradice.
Office hours are from
8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
Monday through Friday,
and
sign-ups
begin
Monday, June 13.
If you cannot make the
8:30a.m.- 3 p.m. sign-up
times, please call · the high
school office ·at (740) 9853329 to set up another time .

GALLIPOLIS River'
Valley will begin summer
group running sessions on
June 21 at the bike trail
beside Thomas Do-lt Center.
Runners need to be there by 7 ·
p.m. Any interested River
Valley students in grades 7I 2 are in:vited to attend; tbe
runs are also open to runners
from other schools.
For additional information,
'contact Ed Sayre at 441.-0850
or e-mail to:
gi_esayre@seovec.org.

·Contact Information
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
E-mail - sportsOmydailysentinel.com

SoorJt SlaH

,

{740) 446-2342, ext. 33

bstlermanOmydailytribune.com
Bryan Waite,., Sport• Writer
{740) 446-2342, ext. 23
bwanersOmydailytribune.com

• ""J, \;
·

Vaidyawins flag football tourney

Mas'On Co. at 1-;li!tbilly Hardball

Bt8d Sherman, Sporta Edllor
'I

••__P"'CC&lt;..~· ~"·r.t- .l.~·.at r~·a· ~r

Today's

Fairmont at Mason County,' 5 p.m.
. Feeney B~nnett at Parkersburg, 7p.m .

RV announces
cross country .
summer run dates

A NEW SPIN ON FATHER'S DAY!
GIVE DAD A ZERO-TURN RiDER.

Monday, June 13, 2005

2005 PVH Flag Football rour namEnt - .-

EHS fall athletes
need to register

www.cubcadet.com

.#i.'

.

lo"Y Crum. Sports Wrltor
(304) 675-1333, ext. 19
Ierum a "'Y'fJ&amp;ilyregister.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A
pair of second half touchdowns kept a
slim lead intact as Vaidya Urology
Clinic helil oft Norris Nonhup Dodge
34-33 in the championship game of
the Pleasant Valley Hospital Coed
Flag Football Tournament Saturday .
in Point Pleasant .
.
Chad Lov~joy threw live touchdown passes for Vaidya, which had to
~
fight through the loser's bracket to
win tl\e title. The final scoring toss
:;
was caught by team captain Frank
Hudnall and all but sealed the win, as
••
it made the score 34-26 with around
on~ minute left in the game.
Norris Northup's Chris Somerville
returned the ensuing kick-off for a
touchdown, but it was too little, too
late. Two missed extra point tries in
the first half proved to be the differ- •
ente for the team dubbed "Hemi
Power."
Both squads tinished with a loss
apiece in the double elimination format. Vaidya fell to Basket. Delights in
the third round. which meant it needed to win· two additional loser 's
bracket games to reach the title tilt;
Norris Northup's lone loss was in the
championship, which is considered
single elimination once the tourney
, ·
reaches that point.
The champs went 5-1 on· the day
with wins over CVS, Dr. Simon 's
Orange Express, M.C. Shah and
·Norris Nonhup.
·
Members of the first pl'ace Vaidya
Urology squad were Lovejoy, Frank
Hudnall. Tracy Hudnall, Rex
Eggleton, John McCormick, Chad
Pauley, Stephanie · Childers, Tee
Masters, Sarah Burke, Paula . Ellis,
Michelle Sheer and Tabby Brown.
· Northup was second, Basket
Delights third and M.C. Shah placed
fourth .
The seventh annual installment was
again a success, easily raising more
than $6,000 for charities, according
to PVH Marketing and Public
Relations Director Amy Leach.
· Money raised during Friday's auction/banquet at Riverside Golf Club,
along with entry fees from the 16
teams will again benetit the Bartrum
and Brown Football Camp and the
Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation.
Brad Sherman/photo
The tournament has helped fund
Vaidya
Urology
Clinic
quarterback
Chad
Lovejoy
scrambles
for
a
first
down
.during
the
championship
game of
the Bartrum and Brown 'camp since
Saturday's Pleas~t Valley Hospital Flag Football Tournament. Lovejoy threw for five touc hdowns in his team's 34-33
Please see Flag. B&amp;
victory.

r

'\•

American Legion Baseball

Bth District Legion LeaguE .

Athens tops
Feeney Bennett
.

.

Barbeursville
cuts down·
Mason Co.
Bv lARRV CRUM
LCRU M®MYDAILVREGISTER.COM

Blackston, who committed
to Shawnee State last
- - - - -- - - - - week, finished with five
ROCKSPRINGS
RBJs.
Haislop singled twice to
Nick Springer and Chris
Pitts hit back-to-back go along · with his fourth
home runs -. part 'o f a s'ix- homer of the ·season and
run seventh inning for Josh Eddy had a pinch hit ·
Athens, which beat Feeney double . Austin King , Ken
Bennett 13-10 in an 8th Amsbary, Zach · Haislop
District · American Legion and Eric VanMeter all
baseball game Sunday.
chipped in a single apiece. ·
~ost 128 led briefly · 1-0
Springer's was a threeas Blackston doubled in
run shot that gave his team the first irining, went to
much-needed insurance, third .on a Luke Hai slop
then Pitts followed with a . si ngle , a'nd scored on a
solo homer to the same wild· pitch .
spot over the left field
But Athens scored three
· '
fence :
times iri the third to take a
The big inning gave Post lead it never relinquished;
21 a comfortable seven-run · Pitts had an RBI double
lead; but Post 128 man- and Hewitt hit a. two-run
aged to make it interesting single to bring in the goafter rallying for four runs ahead scores.
in the eighth inning, highThe two clubs exchanged
lighted by a L~ke Haislop a sing le run each in the
fifth , and 'scored four times
two-run home rian.
Pitts had three total hits, each in the sixth.
Feeney Bennett is at Post
including a P&lt;!ir of doubles,
,.
'and , three runs batted in . !04 of Parkersburg 7 p.m.
Springer added a single, tonight.
while Tyler Chadwell ,
Phillip Hewitt and Mike At~na13, Feeney BenneH 10
Cassels also had multiple Alhens oo 3 o 1 4 6 o o~ 14 14 4
•
hits for the Athens . . ·
F.Bennen10o 014 040~ 10116
Brad Grimm, Tyler Chadwell (8) 'and
Jeremy Blackston was Chris Carpinell, Greg Poston (2).
only a home .run short of Shaphen Robinson. Jeremy Blac1&lt;st011
Brad Sh,rman/photo
'
(6) and Luke Haislop. WP - Brad
Feeney
Bennett's
Zach
Haislop
receives
the throw from
the cycle for Feeney Grimm. LP-ShaphenRobinson . HR_:
Bennett (4-3), which fell to A: NickSp&lt;inge&lt;.s.,.nlhiooing, &lt;woon : his brother, Luke, to catch Athens ' Brad Grimm on a steal
Chris Pitts, seven inning, none on . Fa,~
1-l in 8th District play. Luke Haislop,eighlh inning, ono,on . . attempt Sunday at Meigs High School.
Bv BRAD SHERMAN

. BSHERMAN@l'MYOAilYTR!BUNE.COM

..

•

..

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va .
- ·Things ju'st did not fall into
place on a hot Sundai after,
noon for the Mason County
legion baseball team.
Both teams matched each
other in po~er throughout ihe
game, but Barbou.sville Post
177 (2-1) proved to much, taking an 11 -3 win from Mason
County (4-3) at home.
The home tea)ll came in'to the
game tired but motivated after
a sweep of Williamson the day
earlier with wins of 14- 1 and 91.

.

From the early stages of
Sunday's game, both · sq uad's
looked e\'enly matched until a
fou r run fifth inning from
Barboursville broke a 2-2 tie
and 'gave them the lead they
would never lose again .
Mason County did not help
matters in that Same inning as
·it made two costly · errors to '
help the visiting Post 17Ttake
the. lead . An error allowed Josh
Chinn to lead the inning ·with a
base hit, followed by teammate
Smith Garren with a sing le.'
Bases were loaded when
Justin Maynard was walked
' and the scoring, began with an
Alex Whitt hit. which resulted
in the . second of two errors in
the inning . When it was all
over.
Barboursville
had
Please see Cuts. B6

�...
'

Page B2 • The Dail\' Sentinel

Monday, June 13, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday,'June 13, 2005

'

2005 PVH Flag Football ., TournamEnt -

www.mydailysentinel.com

'•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

\Eribune - Sentinel - 3Re

MorE ImagEs

'

CLASS I F·l ED

·

r.o n ia County, OH

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

··Ut:ribune

3Register

Sentinel

(7 40) .992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Ozftfe~ II()~~

{}eacl/1ir~
Display Ads

Monday-Prlday for ln•ert'lon

All . Display: 12 Noon :z
Bu•lne•• Days Prior To

Now you can have borders and graphics
~·
addedtoyourctas.sifledads
(I~

In NeKt Day•• Paper

Publication

.1m

Word Ads
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Monday .t hru Friday

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

1:00 p.m.
.f~~·.~:~:v.;l~n-Colun1n:
Sundays Paper

Jer~my

.CVS Painkillers · Nathan Ke lley runs after
making a reception

Nott. with ball. splits a pair of Vaidya r1AfArlr1A·r&lt;

Norris Northup Dodge's Chris Somerville. with ball. avoids a ,. · ·
pair of M.C .Shah defenders.

POLICIES: Ohio V1t11y Publllhlng riiM'IIIIhl right to Milt, raj.ct, or c•ncalany ad at any lima. Errora muat be rapor11d on tM.flral day of
Tribun ..Sentlnat-Raglatar will be reapcn1lbl1 tor no more tt11n thl eo11 of thl apae• occupied by thl error snd only tM firat lnsertlan. We I halt not
any lo11 or a•panM that r..utta frorn tha publlc.tlon or ornlaalon of an adylilrtlaemant. Corractifm wilt be mad1ln the flrat availabtleditlon. • Bo•
are alwayl·conlidanllll. • Currant rata card appi!H. ·• All real Hlate advert!Mmenll are ·
to the Federal Fair Houalng Act Ot 1868.
accepta
want.clldl
I EOE aUIRdlrdl. WI will not
in vlol1t!on of th1 law.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Loving , Home
: 3013

ll'tmn.vi~uiue.aln

Norris Northup Dodge receiver hauls in a pass during the cham'pf'
onship game Saturday.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PUBLIC
NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE
The
following
applications and/ or
verified complaints
were received, and
the folloWing draft,
proposed, or llnal
actions were issued,

by

the

Ohio

Environ me n ·t a I
Proteclion
A{Jency

cation of licenses,
permits, ' teases, vari.ances, or certificates;
and the approval or

disapproval ol plans
and . specilications.

"DRAFT

ACTIONS"

are written slatemenls of the director

o1

Environmental

Protection 's
(OEPA) last week . (Director's) Intent
" ACTIONS" include - with respect to the
the adoption, modifiissuance, denial, etc.
cation,

or repeal of

orders

(other

than

·emergency order,s);
the issuance, denial,
modification or revo-

of a permit, license,
order, etc. interested
persons may submit
written comments or
request
a public
meeting
Draft

regarding

Actions .

-::::::H:e:lp::W:a:n:t:ed=::::: CommeniS or public

;

. meeting'
requests
must be submitled
wilhln 30 days of
notice of lhe Draft
Acllon'. "PROPOSED
ACTIONS" are written
statements of the
director's intent with
respect · to . th'"e

. Experienced Merh;mir
-W h r~. w'n·k
p,1id V.1c,1ti on..,
Sal.m Ne~ ••ti.lblt·
Mu-.1 h,l\" ''"'n h•• •l ~
v .•• ld dm •.r-... 1.. ,.,,..,.
Soutt1 East Imports
740..592-2497

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

••

the Proposed Action.
An adjudication hearing may be held on a
proposed

aatlon If a

hearing request or
objection Is received

by the OEPA within 30
days of. issuance of

the prQposed acllon.
Wrilten comments,
requests for public
meetings, and adjudication
hearing
requests must be
sent
to : Hearing

Clerk, Ohio

Street,

Room

Columbus,

222,
Ohio

·43215. a copy of the
appeal

be

must

served on the. direc-

3 days after
filing the appeal wit~
the ERAC.
tor within

Draft NPDES Permit·
.Subject to Revision

City Ice and Fuel
SatRte7&amp;124 .
Middleport, OH

Action

06/07/2005

., Receiving

DAte:
Waters:
Fork
to

Thomas

Protection

Leading Creek
Facility Description:

P.O.

Box

1049,

Columbus, Ohio .

43216.-1049
(Telephone: 614·6442129). '
"FINAL ACTIONS"

Pursuant

to

Revised

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Review Appeals

ResPiratory Therapist

OPR00151'AD
(6) 13

the

Therapist.

Boord 01 Rev low) by o

Must

be a griJduutc of un

approved Respiratory Therapist Program .
Current West Virginia license required .
Excellenl salury. holidays. health.
·insurance single/family plan, dental plan,

.life

imuranc~.

vacation, long-term

disubi lily and retirement.
Send resumes to : Pleasanl Valley Hmpital.
c/o HLlllHI!l Re..,ourc::c-,,
2520 Valley Dri ve,
Point Plea&gt;anl. WV 25550
(304) 675 -4340
www.pvallcy.org
'
AA/EOE
I

'

NO MATTER
WHAT YCJliRI
STYlE. ..

· revlaed

"3745.07,

to

Ohio

code iectlon
a

Final

ACtion lseulng, deny·
lng, modifying, r11W0k·

Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
I ·Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In .
•
The
Tri~County Marketplace!
·1·
.

'

.

·,

:

:•

.

•

i
i
I
••

•

l
I
I
I
j®alllpoli~·~allp ~rlbune The Daily Sentinel .lBolnt l9leasant J.e_gi~ter I
•

• ... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!! ·

lng ,. or renewing a
by

''
•

I.

l

permit, license, or
variance which Ia not

preceded

l

•

person who wee •

Pur1uant

! Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's

•

•'

••

Environmental

party to a procoodlng
beloro lho dlroctor by
filing on oppeol within
30 doyo of notlc0 of
· tho Final. Action.

I

1
••

Commission (ERAC)
(formerly 'k nown ia

Pleasant Valley Hospilal is curren ll y
accepting resumes for a Respirawry

'

:

Ohio

to
the
Environmental

"

i

No.:

Code

appealed

I •

••

Identification

date.

Section · 3745.04,, a
final action may be

i.·-

0.05 1

are actions of the
director whiCh are
effective
upon
issuance or a stated
effective

•'

Semi-Public

MGD

'·Reaeh 3 Counties ·

•

Env· ironmental

Agency,

.

i

issuance,
denial,
Proposed
Action ,
modification, revoca~
may be appealed to
tion, or renewal of a
lh~ ERAC by filing an
permit, license, or
appeal within 30 days
variance.
Written
of issuanCe of the
comments
and · final action. ERAC
requests for .a public
appeals r:nust be filed
meeting regarding a
with: Environmental
proposed action may
Review
Appeals
be submitted within Commission,
309
South Fourth ·
. 30 days of notl~ of

•

•

•

l._. __\~t~:.~~-. ~·-. -·\~l.~:.~.-. - . ~. ~~~. m:~.~._j

a

•

•

(~04}895·

" I H\ It I "

Fou~n

I

·l

!-\~ N~'&lt;~IA&lt;\~ MV~r Be:

iir;i
·to;;;;;;;HELP;;;;;
·;;;;;w;;ArmiD;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;I

Due to recent changes in
coverage area Medi Home
Health Agency is seeking a
highly motiVated, independ·
ent full-time Registered
Nurse to manage/service
clients cut of our GalliPolis
office. Must be licensed in
both Ohio and West VirQinia.
We offer a Com~etitive
salary, benefits package and
401K. E.O.E. 'Ptaase send
resUme to 352 Secol')d Me.,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 or call
Attn :
1-800-481-6334.
Audrey Farley, AN.
Energetic. etflclent staff
member needed for busy
chiropractic office. If quali·
lied send resUme to: 750
First Ave .. Gallipolis OH
45631.
Established Heating-Cooling
Company in Gallia ColJnty
looking for experienced
Installers and techniCians II
interested send resume to ;
CLA BolC 566 c/o Gallipolis
Tribune .' P.O. Box 469,
Gallipolis, .OH 45631.

STNA- aU shift&amp;
LPN· all shifts

Borrow Smart. Contac
he Ohio Divis)on. o
Financial
Institution'
ffice of Consume
!fairs BEFORE you reli
nance your home o
blain a. loan. BEWAR
I requests lor any larg
dvance payments o
ees or insurance. Cal
he Office of COnSume
fiairs toll free at 1-866
78-0003 to learn it tt1
ortgage broker o
eQder
is
properl ·
icensed . (This is a publi
ervlce announcemen
rom the Ohio Valle
Publlshin Com an

I

\

\_J
)J l -----

-

I'ROFF1&gt;15tOML
SERVIC~

~

© 2005 by NEA Inc .

WANTED
To Do

Little Caesars Pizza is
accepting resumes tor all
management positions at
our
Gallipolis location
Please fax resume to 1·866471 -2 196.

Jackson Pike. GalliPolis.

TASC of Southeaat Otilo

Eld.rIY·

C0 n'ac' Kr.slln.

HarbOur {304)576•2495
Exterior'
· Painting,
Experienced. Reasonable
rates, References. For Free
Estimates call 740·645·

2638

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unlesfj\'e Win! .
1·888-582-3345
IH\11"1\11

3BR, 1BA Ranch style
house. located 6 miles past
Holzer hospital on At. 160.
{740)3S8·9263.

Down\ 3 bedroom, 1
4 bath, UR, D/R, FIR,
garage, fenced 1n
' yard- 112 acre.
lose to town .' $132.500.

1997 Doublewide. 3 bed-·
room . 2 bath 1+acre.
(304)675- 1019.
1998 Clayton 16x80. vinyl
siding, 3BR, 28A, covered ,
front porch &amp;, back deck.
• .(740)446-3316
2000
Fleetwood, . front
kitct1en model witp skirting
and central air. Will deliver.
Very clean . 1·800-837-3238

Judy Kay's
Re staurant
w/upstairs apartments. 740·
416-1808, 740•247 -1100
·

j

LoTs &amp;

.L___A_CRL\_._G;;E_ _.t
1/2 Ac lot Tycoon Lake ,on
Eagle Ad Co. Water (not
lake
front )
$7,500.00
(740)247·1100 or (304)532·
6271 cell

85 acres aoout 6 m1les .
south of Oak H1l l. Call
(740)682-791 B after 6p &amp;p
Land a... allable If' Galha.
Jackson . Metgs and V1n1on
Co1 Large number ol tracts. ·
Aangmg from one to fifty
acres. Land CIIJntracts Wrth
good cred1t (740)669-0143.
L.ook~ng

lor , Pr1vate large

iot, 200x300 lor my Mobile

Duplex, each- 3 BR. LR,
OR. Kitchen, Bath &amp; Pordl.

CLASSIFIEDS
BARGAINS

1997 14x65 Premier 2 bed room. 1 bath. all Electric.
Exc . Cond . Lots of extras
$11 ,000 (304)675-7588 or
(304)553-3715

Pioneer FarmstElad. 4 bed- .
New 3 BD 2 Bath Home room. reconstructed hewed
Only 198/mo. Includes ale, Log House, modern tac1h· ·
delivery and se~ up. 740ties .
2
hewed
log
385-9948
57
acre
Outbutld•ngs ,
ChriStmas
Tree
Farm ,
New 3 BR 2 Bath Sectional 25,000 mme/less trees. 27
Home
Only
249/mo. acres matu re hardwood:
Includes AJC , delivery &amp; tre e' machinery. mmerals.
county water. 112 mile pave,9 ,
setup. 740:.385-7671
road frontage. $265 ,000
(304)675-4t3B
New 3 BR Home Only www.landandfarm.com
18~/mo. lncllKles a/c. detiv- ~p«&lt;r;;:;::~~:::::::;:;:::::_.,
BL,..
ery and set up. 740-385..
• ;tl.-.
~···~
:...:u
4367
AND 8UU~I&gt;INGS

Rio Grande
J-4 BA. 2 1!2 BA. LA . DR.
wood floors, basement.
garage, carport, ewer 1800
sq. tt, 5125,000 . Call
1740)245-9413.

.

FOfl ,

Thla newspaper witt not
knowingly accept
advertiseml!tnta for real
l!t&amp;tatl!t wt'tlch Ia in
vlol1tion o1 the law. Our
reader• are hereby
lnlormld that all
dwellinga adver1iald In
this naw1paper are
a,allabla on an equal
· opportunity base~ .

3br, '2ba, pool, garage, storage bldg, appliances included. 5 miles from 33 o.n
No Down ·Pay:ment even
Rt681 , {740)592·0426
with less than perlect credit
on this 3 bedroom .. 1 bath
home in MiddlepOrt. Cornel
lot, carport , wrap -around
porch, fenced in yard. base·
menl, payment. same as
7 Homes under $14000. r8flt, 740-992·6300
Will deliver. 74Q-385-4367

tar is currently accepting
8J.)phcatlqns lor LPN'S and
AN'S. 7A-7P and 7P·7A
Shifts are available. It you
are interested, please come
in and till out an application
at 333
Page
Street;
Middlepor1, 01 call and
speak
with
Hollie
Bumgarner. LPN, Stafl
Development. EOE

if ~rkin~ in~ .fr iendly, "team
onented _1acll1ty appeals ~
you stop 1n to talk to Phyllis
Cantrell RN , DON at 380 .
CoJon!al Drive, Bidwell, Ohio
or g&amp;ve her a call at
{740)446-5001 .
Holzer
Senior Care Center otters Sales
competitive wages and ben- Gallipolis Daily Tribune is
etlts and ' is · an Equal accepting resumes for a full
OppOrtunity Employer.
time outside sales repfesenr
tati\11. The ideal candidate
will have sales experienCe.
preferabfy print. Please send Cur6o Cabinet
Cherry.
resume and cover letter to: $150.00. Gall Joyce 7&lt;().
Gallipolis Daily Tribune AHn: 992.a762
Jim Freeland, 825 T~ird
Ava., Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
DtRECTV
FREE Home
entertainment
System.
Legal secretary needed In
FREE Equipment and Install
Gallipolis. Experience preup to tour rooms. 145 chan·
ferred. but not re(juired .
nels $29.00 a month. ASk
Plea543 submit resumes to
how to g81 FREE 1HBO.
CLA Box 5-48, c/o Gallipolla
MAX. and STARS. 1-M0Daily Tribune, P.O. Bok 469,
523-7556 for details.
Gallipolis, OH 45831 .

All real estata advertising
In thla newspaper ls
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which make• it lllegallo
advertise· "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination ball!ed on
race, color, religion , sa•
familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, Umllatlon or
discrimination."

0

Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
Bath. Mayo Dr. in New
mil! just call 304·675-1957.
Ha,en, Totally Remodeled
HL Construction
$83.500 (304)882-3131
Metal Roofing &amp; Shingles,
Concrete -work. Decks. 3-Bedroom.,
1-Bath
Painting Interior &amp; Exterior. RemOdeled·. Fun Basement,
Pole
Barns. Garages Appliances
included,
(304)895-3720
Outbuilding &amp; 24FT Pool.
1 will care for your loved one 188 Park Drive (304)675in my home. Call {740)386- 7460
0118.

- -·

1979 Homette 12K50 2 ,
Bedroom/1 Bath, gas, sell .
cant-air conditioner. Will
rent lor $265.00 a month or
sell lor $3.495 .00 740-3854019.

2003 Clayton Anglebrook ,
16x80 JBR. 2BA, large ·
deluKe country k1lchen
leaded wfcabinets. includes
Jill Whirlpool appliances and
Great Houses at Great washer/dryer. total electric .
Prices! We have 2 homes in (740)367 -7060 leeve mesthe Gallipoli s and Rutland sage.
HOMf.S
rto
areas. WE FINANCE! NO -------~
FOR S.U.E
CLOSING
COST,
NO 92 Southern Elite M. H., 14
Contact Nick X 70. Good Condition. 2
$59,000. New Haven 2,800 POINTSI
sq. It Log Cabin as is, w/3-5 Huffman @ 1-800-333- bed room , 2 bath , some
applia,nces .
$9.0QO.OO
acres. Call Mike (513)314· 6910.
must
be
mo'Jed
740-9492754
House &amp; lot fer sale on 36 2011
2·3br Hom e.
1/2ba, Chillicothe Ad. 2stcry- 2
Hardwood Floors, Totally bedro'oms. Estate house- New 14x60, only $198.73
Remodeled (304)593-2532 must sell at once. $15,000. per rpo. Includes complete
set up and deliverY. 740or ('859)245-7454
. (740)446-0720
385-2434
3 bedroom Ran ch , 2 carl In search ot private, secludgarage, in-groUnd pool ed wooded parcel i-10 ~AVE -SAVE-SAVE
$90,000. Catl (740)256- acres witfi smell home or Stock models at old pr1ces,
1962
cab1n with utilities. Must be ~5 models arriv1ng Now.
- - - - - -- - within 30 minutes drive time Cole's
Mobile
Homes,
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, of Rio Grande. Doesn't have 15266 U.S. 50 East. Athens .
has
some to be fancy, tiKer upper ok 1 Ohlo45701, (740)592-1972 ,.
Kitchen
Appliances, Basement has Have
already
been "Where You Get Your
Family Room. B.A. and Full approved lor 100% financing M;;o;,n,;;•Y:,.;,';.W;,;o;,.
"..;
h'-· - - - - ,
Bath, 3011 Parrish Ave
and looking · for 1mmediate
fAitl\t'i
(304)675-3260
possession! Call (740)44f"---·_;FO;;,;:;RIISIIAiii.•E. ._.I
3-4 Bedroom, House, 1 112 1395

I

Rocksprings ~Rehabilitation · DHK
Cleaning
&amp;
Center is looking for dedlcat- ,Powerwashing, Can't Keep
ed compassionate State Up Your "To Do" list too, Big?
Tested Nursing Assistants. Let Us HE,LP Youl We'll
Competiti~e wages, · health Clean-A-Up &amp; Get-R-Done.
do
All:
and dental benefits, Bnd ~ w~
401K available. We take Ae'sidentiat /B usiness .
pride in our lacility anc!'resi~ ' t n s i d' e I 0 u t side,
dents and need great team Daily/Weekly/Monthly, 740·
players to join us. If you 985-3639 or 740-416-t8.23·
have these qualifications
please
apply
to
Experie~ced H~me , Hea!th
Rocksprings Rehabilitation . Care g1ver. w11i s1t . w1tt1

McClure's Restau·rant now
hiring all locations, full or
part-lime, pick Up applica)ion at location &amp; bring back
!O:OOam
&amp;
between
11 :OOam,
Monday thru
Saturday.
Center. 36759 Rocksprings
Road,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Night Shift Cook, 35-40 hr
45769.
Extendicare
per wk. 18 or older. pick-up
application at Dairy Queen, Healtt1 Services. Inc. is an
No
Phone equal opportunity employer
Middleport.
that encourages workplace
Callsl!
diversity. M/F DN
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is currently accepting STNA'S Overbrook Center
applications. lor part time is currently accepting applidietary coo k and dietary catioos for full-time STNA'S.
aide, If you are ' interest,ed, 7A-7P. ·nd 7P·7A. ·a(ld 3A·
please come in and com- 3P----·
shiMs are. availplete your application at 333 able. ll you are Interested,
Page St. Mlddlepoet, Oh. please come in ~nd fill cut
45760 E.O.E.
an· application at 333 Page
Street, Middleport. Please
Paramed ics · &amp;
EMT's
No
Phone cails. EOE
needed. Apply at 1354

eG:t

"""''''"''I

MOBILE HOMFB
IURSALE .

HOMES

FQRS.UE

.

~\~.

Part.. Time
Cock/Helper
n6eded lor 100 bed skilled
nursing facility. lnterest~d
applicants should apply to:
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Road,
Pomeroy.
Ohio
Experienced Timber Cutlef. 45769. E~etendicare Health
Call (740)682-7318 after Services. Inc. is an equal
opportunity ·employer that
6pm.
encourages
workplace
HoiJ:er Senior Cart
diversity. MJF DN
Center
Part-Time
Medical
Nu111lng Polltlona
Consultant or Nursing
· AYillable
Assistant, needed tor busy
If you are interested In w'Ofk- PhysiCians Office. Please
ing in a tong term care lacili- send A;esume to PO Box
ty and value making a differ- 220 Po!nt Pleasant, WV or
ence in ttJe lives of others 3009 Jackson Ave, Point
you may 'be a candidate for Pleasant. WV
one of these full time or part ~R.::Nil:::;P::N.::'S~-:.:-Q.:....\&gt;a_rb-roo_k_ce_n­
"tlme positions:

u,Nonn;**

v-JI-\AI . INSOMNI~ 15 .

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
wood iteins.
To·$480/wk
Materials provided.
Free infQrmation pkg. 24 hr
801-428-4649

~~I

Antlques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market..............................080 .
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repalr .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for S.ale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................550
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Buslneas Opportunlty .................................210
Buslneas Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equlpmen.t .................................. ,780
Cards of Thanks .......................... :...............010
Child/Elderly Care .......................... ,............ 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ...............................!140
Equipment lor Rent. .................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment. .........................................610
Farms lor Rent .............................................430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale .......................................:................ 585
For Sale or Trade ......................:... :.............. 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....................................580
Furnished Rooms ..................:.....................450
General Haullng ...........................................aso
Giveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln..................................................840
Help Wanted ......... ,............. :......................... 110 .
Home lmprovementa...................................810
Homes lor Sale ............................................310
Household Goods ........................ :.............. 510
Houaes lor Rent .......:.................................. 410
In Memorlem ................................................020 ·
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlprrient .......'............ :.... 660
Llvestock......................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreoge ............................................ 350
Ml1cellaneous ..............................................1TO
Mlacellaneoua Merchandloo....................... 540
Mobile Home Repilr ....................................660
Mobile Homes for Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
Muolcollnatruments .................... ,.............. S70
Personala ..................................................... oos
Pets lor Sale ..........................................;..... 5611
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ...................................820
Proleaslonal5ervlcea .................................230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ...............................160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoolslnstructlon........................:............150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space lor Rent .............................................460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV'alor Sale..............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ................:................:.......... 7f5
Upholotery ................................................... 870
Vans Fllr Sale ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ..........................,.................. 090
Wonted to Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent............................,...............470
Yard Sol• Golllpollo....................................072
Yard Sai•Pomeroy/Middle......................... 074
Yard Sal• Pt. Pleaunt.. .............................. 076

~; ;o; ;:; ;:; ~: ;:;c~; ;:;: : =: : : : :;:;: : =: : : : : :=: : : : = -: ~; ; ;~ijiji; :; ; n . ~r;:::ro:M:1o:N:~::;I

K
[ www;IT;;;;;;&amp;;:;
.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

·~·-··-··- ·-·~··-···- ·-.··~··-··-~~-·~··-··-··~··.-···~~~~-·.·-"1

i

Public Notices in New"papers.
Your Right to Know, Deli,·ered Right to Your Door.

.

1

Family in need, wanting yard
sale items to sale to help
with bills. Ar.y help is appreFern. Chocolate Lab to good
elated. Call (740)446-9327.
home in country. 740-992·
4158
Moving sale: June 13th14 th , 9am-5pm. Lots of
Giveaway Dryer (needs mise, 1987 Volvo, 69,800 An . Excellent way to earn
repair), old student desk, miles, $1.200. Bula.ville Pike money. The New Avon.
and navY loveseat (needing corner ol Greentree·Rd, mile Cal.l Marilyn 304-882-2645
marker 7 5
repair) . {740)388·8676.
Are you looking for a
4 YARil SALE·
stable job?
Kittens 7 weeks old, litter P"
Give
us a calli
l'oMFJ!OY/MIDIJI.E
trained. very ' playful. ·differ·
You
could
earn up to
ant colors (304)675-2349
2 Family garage sate . Roufe SBihour plus bonuses. We
please message
also offer paid training,
143
112 mile · off 7.
holidays, .and vacations.
Losr i\ND
13th, 14th, 15th. 9:00-4:00
Full or part time shifts
available.
_
Call today!
Found -2 keys in the park1·877·463·6247
ing-lot of old Central Elem . 1960·61
Rutland H ·s
ext. 2454
school. call304-675-1333.
Yearbook . Dick Williams
AVO~! All Areas! To Buy or
940·367-7Q73
Sell. · Shirley Spears, 304Found Recently und BoUght Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. 675-1429.
Siberian Husky puppy has Silver and Gold Coins.
Drivers Needed:
• returned home to original 'Proofsets, Gold. Rings, U.S.
: sales wilh collar. call 74().. Currency,-M.T.S. Coin Shop, COL Drivers willing to drive
.. 992·5685.
151
Second
Avenue, for local ready-mix-concrete
company. Experience Is
Gallipolis, 740·446-2842.
preferred but not necessary.
Lost Bleck and while Pit Bull Wanted to buy: Bench press
Driver must be willing to do
in Addaville school aree. weight lifting set. Call
pre-main tenance On trucks
(74_.0)845-4942.
(740)388 -0321.
&amp; equipment yara·wor1&lt; &amp;
other miscellaneous chores .
'Experience operating equipment &amp; i!XIra skills such as
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
welding a plus.
Announcement ............................................ 030
Call (604)937-3410

r'

Photos
by Brad
·Sherman.

r

I \1 1'1 tl\ \ II '\ I

YARDSAIL

L~-9.·.·, -~·,~-:·,~·.:·~-,o.,J~ ~r=n::::~~~=;s:,:LE=-==~

LEFT:
M.C.
Shah's Jared
Billings cross·
es the goal
line. RIGHT:
Jimmy Beaver
runs the ball
for Simon's
Orange
Express.

'

r

\\ \ 111 \(I \ II \ I S

Sunday
~'';~~~;'~,"~·~~~~~;~.~
Thur.clay

• All ads must be prepaid•

Description • Include A PriQ! • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 D•v•

CVS Painkillers '

Borders $3.00/.per ad
· Graphics 50¢ for small
Sl.OOforlarge

Shop
Classlftedsl

Houae 3 BR, LFil, Kl~hen .
Bath.
Both , in Poffit

Pleasant. (504)675·2•95
after 7:00pm
·

Home , 14x65. all Electric,
11 yrs old gooa shape. or 1
acre coun try settin~;~, place
Rio Grande
Investment Ftroperty waJJI, to lor pets 1n Gall1a Co .. OH or
Umvers1ty (2) Apartment 'Mason Co .. w/all hookups.
buildings. (3) two BR umts w1ll pay S1501monttl._ Reply
$129,000. Call (740)245- 10 PO Box 611 . Rooloy, WV
25271
9413.

•

�'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentine l

t

'--A·f~~~-~-~~-~~-~.;rs"· '

Rt:At F.~1:\Tl-~
· WMm:o

r.o__".~-~--FlliiiOiiiL•D-,.11

_, ...

·Monday, June 13, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

r

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel •.Page B5

....

PETs
FOR SALE

111~111,

Htll'Sf:S
FOR

RENT

2 Houses : ( 1) 4 bedroom,
(1) 3 bedroom. $900 &amp; saoo
plus deposit. (740)25681 52.
3
BR
Ranch
Home
w/attached Garage in Camp
Conley area ol Pt Large
fenced yard 1n grecit neighborhood. $675 mth. Deposit
and References required .
Call 1-304-531 -1197 or 1·
304-273-1112

3BR ~ ick . 2.5 baths, large
eat-in Kitchen . close to . city
• limits, no pets. Reference/
deposit
requiredCall
(740)4 46-4404-am
or
(740)245-1 513-pm . No calls

aNer 9pm .
5 t&gt;edroom , 3.5 bath, Stone
Ranch home with 1n-ground

pool

~arge

beautiful home

aM se"ing on Rout"e · 160
$1,000/month. Lawn mainte -

nance
1ncluded.
(7 40)446-3481.

Call

Attention!
Local company offe ring :.NO
, DOWN PAYMENT""" pro- .
· grams for you to buy your
· home mstead of renting.
: • 100°'o financing
: • Less tMn perlect cred1 t
accepted
• Payment could be the
sarnl;! as rent
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)992-7321

t1ookups $290 per month +' (740)449 -7444 1-877 -830- checked,
$&gt;.400
each ;
or 9 162. Free Estimates, Easy Pomeranian puppies, AKC,
dep. (740)388·00 17
llnanc1ng, 90 days same as 2 female, light brown, $400
1740)339-0362
cash. Visa/ Master Card. each: {740)696-1085
2· bedroom newly rendvated Drive- a- little save alot.
I \l~\1 '-~ I 1"1'111"
Apts for rent Downtown
Gall1polls. R1ver &amp; Park v1ew. Thompsons Appliance &amp;
..'\. II \ I ..., I CIC 1\
$360-$600/mo. Some utili- Aepau -675-1388. For sale,
re -conditioned automatic ~r~IO~-'"'!F!"ARM-...;._ _,
t 1~s pa1d. Now acceptm g
EQulPT\IIFNt
appt 1c;wons Call {740)709- washers &amp; dryers, refrige rators, gas and electric
1690 (local call)
. ranges. air condi tioners, and
. Availabl e
irnrnediatety. wrin ger washers Will do 0% Fi:l(ed Rate up to" 36
Beautiful. clean . and spa- repairs on major brands m month s on New John Deere
· CompadTractors &amp; 110TLB
CIOus 3 bedroom town - shop or at your nome.
at Carmicllael Equipment.
house . With storase/ptayUsed Furniture Store, . ~ 30 (740)446·2412 "
· .
room . Downtow"n Gallipolis.
5610/month No utilities Butaville Pi~e. Washers. drypa1d No pe ts Ca ll (740)446- ers, refrigerators·, ranges .. 565 New •Holland Baler &amp;
mattresse.s,
dreSsers, 4590 M ~ W. R ound Baler,
9961.
couches, dinettes, rediners, Ne!/PiasliC Wrap or String,
BEAUTIFUL
APART· grave monuments, much · both like new call (304)675·
(740)446-4782 5724 or (304)675-5578
MENTS
AT
BUDGET more
PRICES AT. JACKSON Gatlipoli$, OH Hrs 11-3 (M·
John"Deere 10ft. No Til Drill
ESTATES. 52 Westwood S)
101
Rflnt.
Carmichael
Onve tram $344 to 5442
Equipment (740}446·2412 .
Wat~ to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
ANTIQUES
740-446 -2568.
Equal
John Deere ' Commercial
Housing Cppor tun1ty.
Worksite Products In Stock!!
Buy
or
sell. .River ine Compact Excavator 27C ."
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· An11ques. 1124 East Main 35D, 50D/Skld Steers 371 ,
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· 320,
325; · 328fTractor
Townhouse
apartmen ts. 992-2526 . Russ Moore,
Loader Backlloe 110TLB.
and/or smal l hOuses FOR owner
CheCk out our rental rates
RENT. Call (740)441-1 111
·Great Financing Available·
MISCELlANEOUS
for application &amp; 1nlormatiO:n.
Carmichael
Equipment .
MERCHANDISE
(740)446-2412:
For rent 1 and 2 bedroom

r
P""

.

apa rtinents Spring Valley 3··30X100 Wooden Truss
area .
References
and Green Houses complete to
depos1i
required .
Ph be torn down $2,000.00 for
(740)446· 2957
·
everything,
3 Dog Frick
Saw Mill gas power unit
Furnished apt . 2nd . Ave. $ 4 _500 _00 _
Woods- 750
Upsta1rs. all utili ties paid. Bac k
Hoe for tractor
One bedroom . no pets,
.
Galli ofis. (740)446·9523.
I$ 2·500 ·00 · 1991 A·· Frame
P
pop·up caniper $2000.00 .
Furn1shed.upstairs , 3 rooms 740-949-2115 leave num&amp; bath . Clean, rei. &amp; dep. ber, lf, I'm not at home.
1

required . No petri. (710)446- Apt . size washer &amp; dryer.,
· For sale 'or rent In country, 1519.
Buck stove fireplace )nsert..
: Cadmus. 3 bedroom, tutt
Call
(7,40)645-1485.
Grac1ous livJng. 1 and 2 bed'·basement. hardwood floors,
room aomtments at Village
JET
pets. (740)3?9·2540
Manor
and
Riverside
AERATION MOTORS
In tow n location· 1·2 BR Apartments in Middleport. Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Ranch home. nice yard . AC . From $295·$444 . · Call 740· Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1References '
requ1red 992-5064. Equal Housin g 800·537·95 28 .
·
S450/mo. ren t &amp; $450 Sec. OpportunitieS.
· Dep. You pay all ut1lilies.
6/15'.
Call Nice 2BR. 1 bath w/attached NEW AND USED STEEL .
; 1Availabte
gar. $400 per mo no pets. Steel Beams , Pipe Rebar
• (740)446·3644 .
&amp;
references . For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Deposit
Nice 2 bedroom home ih the (740)446-2801 .
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
country. No ins1de pets.
Grating
For
Drains,
North
Tl1ird
Avenue .
740-698-7244
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Middleport One Bedroom
Pom eroy 101
Pleasant furnished apt . No Pets. Scrap· Metals Open Monday,
Tues day, Wednesday
&amp;
Ridge , 3 bedrooms, gas Previous remal ref
740Friday, Sam-4:30pm, Closed
hea t
Available July 1 992·0165
Thursday.
Saturday ~ &amp;
$450 . 000eposit .~. $400.00
per month 740·698-6783
Pt6asant Valley Apartment ~unday. (740)446-7;300

:no

MoRin: How:~
FUR

Rt:vr

14x70 e)(pando 3 bedroom ,
1 1/2 bath $4"75+ depoSit,
includes wa ter. sewer &amp;
trash pickup- (740) 4464824
16x70, 3BR , 2BA, utility·
room. CIA &amp; heat all electric , 1.5 miles from town.
e)(cellent conclil.ion, water
paid, no pets . references
required. $450/month &amp;
$450/deposit
(740)4466565 after Spm .
2 Bedroom Mobile Home
$375/mon .
Located
in
Gallipolls
Ferry.
Call
(304)675·3423
260 total electric , CA (iil
country)
S350/month ,
$350/deposit , references
required . No pets. Call
(740)245-9491 , no calls
after 9pm.
2br, $300 Deposit &amp; · S350 '
Aent (304)882 -3970

Are now t a~ ing Applications
tor 2BA, 3BR &amp; 4BR. .
Applications
ijfe
taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9:00 A.M.·4 P.M. Office is
L()(;ated at 11 51 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No. . is (304 )675·
5800 . E.H.O

r

1

(7~0e)44 21·4;~~~~ l~ders.

,...ooo.

Mu~t Sett!l

Naw John Deere Round
Balers @ 1.9% FiKed Rate
FinancinQ lor 48 Monlhs -or
New Model 457 Standard
Round Bater "Only $t3,250
cash . Makes 4;X5 Sale.
Carmichael
Equipment.
(740)446·2412
Special Purchase· John
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel
Rakes/ John Deere Disk
Mowers. Can for price .
Carmichael .
Equipment.
(740)446-2412.

r

LII'!SIUQ(

Winte"rs, Rio Grande, OH
Call 740-24&amp;-5121.

"""FOKiOiiiPrniiSiliM£-._rll

t..,
· _.

2 female Pekingese, AKC,
sable wlblack mask, 6 wks
old.
Adorable!
$300.
(740)446-1000 leave mes· ·
sage.

It &lt; \'"I'! liU \1111\

to

Al!IUS

fOR SALE

1948
Chevrolet
Five
Passenger Coupe, WV
Sticker, New Tires, GOOd
Paint "Sharp"
(304)576~

2288

--::-:--=------,--

4 Sale Small Beagle Hounc 1952 Plymouth 4dl, for
puppies M &amp; F. ITI()(e info. Restoration ,
no ·Rust,
7AM··7PM. 7~742.0528
Engine runs, Body Original,
lU RF.Nr
no Dents. 31 .000/miles·
Look1ng for hOuse to rent
(304)576-2532
locally Mason o'r meigs co, AKC Bluelick (Beagles)pupBuick·
LeSabre
pies, Good Hunting stoO: 1997
call-·304·773-5600
Limited,
75
thousand
miles. '
$100.00.
· Australian
Loade(f,
Sheplleard
puppies. Leatller ' Int. ,
$5,995
BeaUtiful
blue
marieS Garage Kept.
HotSEHOU&gt;
(304)675-1731
5150.00 740·742·2728

~

APAKThiENI'i
FOR Jb.J\T

Ne wr Holland 630 round·
~a= . Massie .Ferguson

r

i.

1

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fu rnished and unturnls liect. security d.eposi t
required, no pets, 740-992·
2216.
'

eo

~

1 bedroom house for rent 1n
Gallipolis, a1r
· · Furniture Sale· Mollohan's
1·2 bedroom apt. in Pomt Sola and cha1r startirig at
Pleasant for rent. (740)446 - S399: Catt (740)446-7444.
2200

Miniature PincMr f rnale,
left . Black/tan, tall docked,
·dewclaws
removed ,
wormed. Ready now. $300
(7 40)388-8124

roJ2 Kla Rio, 30,000mL, 4
door. au1omatic. air, loob
good , runs good . $3,650 . ..
Phone (740)446-4~22 or
(740}645-5102..

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESSONTHISPAGE FOR.

AS LOW AS
$26.00 PERMOtirH! ·

TRUCKS

ENERGY EFFICIENT

Home Creek
Enterprises
·
Ohio
•

FoR SALE

·Advertise
in·this
space.for $1 04
per month.

992-2155

',

MPNTY

2001 Ford E)(plorer 4x4.
Loaded, recently detailed,
59,000 mi les, new tires,
$12,000.
(740)256-6536
leave message.

ROGER HYSELL I
. GHRRGE

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

AQto &amp; Truck
Repair

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Fo~~ALE

~ 999 Dodg_
e 15 passenger
church van . 18,000 mileage,
good .condition, $ ts,ooo.
Call (740)388-8564.

96 Ford Windstar. Power
windows ,
power
locks,
cruise, rear AJC , 160,000
miles. $2,600. (740)256·
8152.

3 miles west of
'
Pomeroy, OH

, ~'IYPesOf
;fi;Oncift!~ W!lrl(
25 Years Experience

on State Rt. 124

David Lewis

992-5682

740-992-6971

Full-sized luxury van. seats
7. mechantc owned, beautiful , 1993, 77,000 miles.
$7,500. (740}446·9961.

r 4~~am
41

111

2002 Yamaha 660 Raptor
yettriw.lblack
wfmatching
KBC helmet.
Excellent
Condition $3,700 (304)6751015

t

•

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic, 10,000 mites, blue.
excellent condition, $13.500.
(740)949-2217

Myers Tree

High and Dry

Service

Storage

•lnsured-t"ree

Alphi $port 50 4-wheeler.
Excellent condition , $650
OBO. CaU (740)388-0413.

"Noloh ThSmlllf"

Racine . OH

7411-247-2162 or
740-416-3508
14 yrs. Experience
1 ""

HOWARD£.
IWRtTfSfl 6 SONS
1

Year 2000, PontoOn BOat. 24
foot , Sweetwater, 50 HP

I'

3-4' "03~ Jayco Eagle 1-1~?:'
slide out l.o18 of ell1ras. Like
new condition . (740)3390218.

ROOFING
All types of roofing:
Shingle. Flal, Melal -

New or Repair
Seamless Gutter ·
Downspout - Siding

•fill bf l'lh

949-148$

Truck C&amp;mper'. AC , tv
Antenna, wired for" catM,
like $6.500 (304)1175-

MANLEY'S
SElf STORAGE
97 Beech'.Street
Middleport, OH

10x10xl.Ox20
991-3194
· or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
5elf-Stor"'e"

inch. cutting width 3 year warranty

.

right in the hem1 or Ch.,1er
9854~

~

The Parish Shop

YOUNG'S

FormeriJ at IOH

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I)

• Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling r
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vlnyt Siding &amp; Plilnting
• Patio aod Porch Decks
We do It all except
tumace work

BORN LOSER
1-\f\l'l'ffitO TO 'IOU&gt;!. FOOi .;'1

992·6215

~

.

.

WV 0361:15

Pomeroy. Ohio

25 Veara LO&lt;:al E• rlem:e

· See •

•

Rocky ''RJ",

Hupp

BIG NATE
\o,fi'TCH "HE GO
~AR.OUND THE

T HE.

WORLD.

l 'HEN EIGHTY
' DI\YS OF
DE TENT ION!

IMPORTS
Athens

STANLEY TREE

• Complete

Remodeling

TRIMMING&amp;

GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gal'( Stanley
740.742·2293
• Leave a me5sage

Whaley's Auto
Parts
SL Rt681 Darwin.

·14D-992-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

OH

PEANUTS

740-9.'12-7013 or 7-10-9'12-5553

RP..ttX'kfng l.a tc• ,Hodel So hugc&gt;
,; tid .4rtcr \In rk£'1 H1 r/s

IF WE'RE FLYING TO 140LLYWOOD,
IT'5 BEEN A SMO-"TH ~LI614 T SO
5140ULD 6E GOING OVER .
F~R. TI40U614 , I-I~SN'T IT?
SOME MOUNTAINS PRETTI( :&gt;vvN,I.
' S~Ol!LDN'T WE .,

See Brent or Brian Wholey

M-Fri 8:30-5:00
SaL ~:30-Noun
Sun. Closed

SfPTIC TANK PIJMPING $95.00
PORTABlf JO/lfT RfNTAl
CAll FOR APPO/f/TMffff TODA-Y
. 992·3251 OR 591·8757

1-r·s -me ·

IIOITHIP

252 Upper River Road • Galli~lis
740·446-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio

7*14.2217 •

Call B.D, Const,
for all yuur home

needs. roofing,
siding,_add·om~
remodeline ell.'.,

~pair

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

ALMOST AS IF Wi:'RE NOT
FLYING AT ALL ..

..SUNSHINE CLUI;I

Htll' s Self

Storage

• free eslimatn

(740)

1/ 1411 mo. pd

9'12-2979

lean· m~a

e

1 KT

2 olo

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

•
•

'

G

A&amp;IN&amp;

'fHINGr -THAT
C.URt&gt;L.E5
MY c.HEE5E

Tuesday,

18 spreader buggies a"ailable lor use
·
renovators and seeders
I
to rent
Ucensed agronomist en staff available for

~ consulling.

·

RIVER AG SERVICE
35537 SL RL 7 North
Pom&lt;roy, Ohio
SHADE

27
29
East

Pa ss ·
All pass

3NT

Now A~aUable At

B.\l':\1 Ll.\IBER
Scorpion Tradors
"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard ltork !·"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor ,
wilh 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

-.. 'lllrtl1di\Y:
Juno . ~4.

2005

24 Met a poker
bel
25 Boxing
great
26 Shellac
·resin
27 ·Makes

40
41
42
.
43

Referee
Siren
No1 on.ell
fours
Processed
conan

~ 44

Blpwgun

weapon

candles

41 -, vidl, viet 19· Emri'la in
43
44
46
49

36 Purple
flowers
39 Eur. airline

39

AstroGraph

tangled
DOWN
F.oK's abode
Hot rod
1 Prom locale
Dull (hyph .) 2 Calcutta
•
Changeable
nanny
911
3 Eight,
responder
in combos
.C oves .
4 Mascara
Latin dance
target
music
5 Date makers
Buy and sell , 6 Memorable
Chefs phnlse · decade
(2 wds.)
7 Fou~dllng
Pocket llem 8 Zany
Wigwams
9 Running
Layer
tracks
Whalratn - 10 As Itbows are
13 Prlmttive,
Soft leather
often

28 Chicago
45
Loop trains 47
30 NFC gridder 48
31 Unfold ,
· In poell)' · 51
32 Attorney's
53
deg .
33 Recolor
35 Welles'

30
34
37
38

By B•rnlc• Beda Osol
. You could be in for some pleasant
results In the year ahead .once you
learn the rules of the game when
negotiating with others. Exper.ience
and time will help you gain many
!hings that were ·previously denied
you.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June ~0)- Be sure
to first consult those with whom you
have dealings today before making
any irhport ant decisions tha t would
affect them . They might see things
that totally escape your notice.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) Nagative conditions can be overcome
today it your attitude is hopeful and
determin ed. Doom and g1o9m will
only put · you "in a funk, while confi·
dence and desire can accomplish
your alms.
LEO (July 23- Aug . 22)- In your opin·
ion, finar1cial trends may not !ook very
prOmising tor you today. but in reality
you could gain in a number of areas
whera you thought you would lose.
Keep pushing ~head .
'"
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22)" - Unless.
you promptly patch Up any misunderstand ing ttjat might occur between
you and a temily member today, you
could harbor your complaints all day
long and let it affect your work
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Do not
forecas t 8\lents in a negative rash ioh
today betore your day even bagins. It
would negate good potential opportunities tha t await you. 'OptimiSm pro~
duces happy results.
SCORPIO (Oct. "24-Nov. 22) - Be
nice .to those 'ldu enco"u nter today, nor
tor what they can ,do for you. but for '
what you can share with them . If they
think they're being used, they'll work
against you Instead of with you.
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23-0ec. 21) Goals can be achieved today. but only
if you are determined and consis1ent.
Shou ld you get negative responses,
use them as a means to see your mistakes and make the necessary
ct.langes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- Try
not to judge others too harshly today.
because they will be taking their cues
from you . Showing them distain guar· ·
antees You s1mllar treatment fro;~m
them .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Dltficuhies with which you m,ay have
to contend today cah be te;;sened
ctJ ns\derably it you trea"t ther"fl philo·
sophieally instead o f becoming Over·
wrought . Be hopeful, not t,~arried
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20 ) - You
may have to have~ lot of stick-to-lttveness today if you hope to negotiate a
good agreement . Don' t panic too
soon e nd buckle under to unfair .
terms . Stay clam and win your points .
ARIES (March 21 - April 19) If
you·re very stow !n geriw1g staned
today. chances are yo4'1l onty accom·
plish a small portion of what you had
hoped to do. Keep this In mind when
you're wasting time In the morning .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) No
matter how ennosrlng others' waye
and mean• or doln,g thing• are to you
tcday. . do not att~~mpt to manlpulat•
them . ln•tead of getting wh•t· you
went , 'the reeu~ wttl t. undealrable.

'

High c:ollt of fertilizer got you

23
24

Why has bridge retained its attractiOn' over
so many years?
There are various reasons. bUt my vote
for the most important is that there are so
many exceptions Ia the " rules .~ If all the
guidelines worked all the lime, we would
have got bored long ago.
Today's deal, which arose during the 1984
World Team Olympiad in Seatlle. is an
example . When you are the. declarer In
three· no-trump , what IS your normf'l
modus operandi? West. le_a(js the spade
eight : two 1 seven, 10. What would you do ·
now?
West's lwo-cli.Jb intervehtion showed a
major two-suiter. NOrtll's j4inp to game
was aggressive, but he ant,icipated his
partner's being able to place tile cards
accuralely after West's revealing overcall
The declarer was Paul Soloway. the
greatest master-point hoider in the known
universe. First. he counled llis top tricks,
finding live : two spades (given the first
trick ). one diamond and two clubs. And he
knew that usually c"le attacks one 's
longest suit first. But look whatllappens if
declarer immediately tries the diamond
fin esse: East gets in with lhe diamond
king 'and return S his remaining spade,
establishing his partner 's suit while West .
still . has the heart ace as an entry. The
contract gOes one down.
{\nticipating this. at trick two. declarer
attacked his sllortest suit ! He led the heart
four and qalled lor dummy's kirig when
West" pl~ed low. (II cooldn 1t help West to
win the Irick .) With a heart trick in tile bag .
Soloway crossed to his hand with a club
and ran the diamond queen , establishing
nine tricks: two spades, one heart, !our
diamonds and two club"s.

.

MOUND

;

~

IT ~1-.\C&gt;, C./&gt;o.\Ji\01'\_: WE:.T rLOORI
WI'-.\ C.\-\ 'lOUR SiE:.P I

1 TI&lt;.IP~C:D ON/&gt;-, $1(.1'\
IN if.\( f&gt;..\~Ll f&gt;,J Tf.\C:

V.C: YOUNG Ill

• New Homes

!35 - 1,000 lbs Approx. weight

Wate~proofing .

ClAY.

ROBERT
·BISSEll
CIIISTIIImll

Available
WAlEAPAOOfiNG

OTtl~ll

r&amp;ll TRACTOR SMJ;;S &amp; EQUIPMENT

Janet Jeffers

$265 ton (While Suppy Last)
• Mushroom Compost

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local reftrencH fur·
nrahed. Establiahed 1975:
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Roger! Basement

IT ON A MIL~
CA/lTON Ttl~

ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Thrn
Rudius !11ower) 30 inch cultin~ width to SO

33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

. 17-17-17,.

BASEMENT

.,

-

i SAw A
PICTU/l~ Of

loaders, finish mnwers, tillers .

IOx30

• Garages

$1 ,601), (740)245-5593.

Coleman Camping Trailer
12FT, 2 King Beds, $5,500
can for Details ·(304)675· •
1731

:('e·'·

!'l..UY

45771

8-4 Palamino fold down,
sleeps 6, good condition ,

O~fiCIT ll~OUCTION PLANT

BARNEY

4wd II year warranty}
• Farm Pro Tractors 20 horse· 3!1 horse

Sx I0, 19x I0,
10xl5, 10x20,

• Garages

• Roorh Add. • Rooling
• Kitchens • Baths

2000 Bayliner 21 ft. cuddy wf
trailer, many extras, very
clean 3Q4--675·5563

19~5
Gutfstream
2•·
Conquest Limited Edition
Class C motorhome. Like
.new with only 7,600 mites
Fully eqlJ ipped with many
ell1rai. $22 ,000: (740)~561428. For pictures sea:
www.rvtrader.comtrvdetalt.p
hp?id+125806.

-

tiAPP~Nf'CI To· Ttl~

SAY, WtiAT

Hardwood Flooring
·

1987 Honey motor home
sleeps 6·8 people. low
mile!,
g~
condition ,
$11,000. Call (740}2459124.

' (740) 992-5232

All Your Home
lmprovem~:nt Needs
• Siding • WindOws
• Decks • Porches
• Ceramic Tile &amp;

Goldwing, 1998, GL · ~500,
81,000 mites, 500 miles on
tires, excellent condition,
ready to ride, $7 ,000.
(740)441-5447 or (740)446·

CAMJUS &amp;
MotoR lbfi!S ,

discount
740-992-2621

ftl ,
CDIIIIruclion

(~04)8&amp;;1-3218

Mercury, Power Trim , 4
Stroke Engine, Big Foot
Outdrive, Lounge Seats.
Privacy
Room , · Depth
Finder, Hour Meter, ·GQod
R,adio, Ha"s onty 50 hours On
Boat, Garage kept In winter,
LikeN~ Paid over $18,000
Will sale . for S13.000
(304)773-5944

. Phone

.;o Y~~ rs El~rienl"l"

Br9nd new Vance/Hines 2
into 1 Chrome Pipes. Fit
Fatboy
2000 and up ·

2003 22ft. Sweetwater
Pontoon
boat
40hp:
Jollnson motor, power-trim,
Hoosier trailer wlladder.
spare tire/bracket, AM/FM
stereo/CO, many extr8s
As~ng $10,995. (740)4462016 or ( 740 )339-&lt;)~24 .

Eslimatt's
• Senior Citizen

West · :'iorth
Pass Pass

16
17
te
20
22

It helps to keep
us interested

****A lso available ****

9~tm to .~pm
Pll: !192-4183

740-416-2813
74tl-591-4641

J?vPGET"
Pf8AT"f

• Task Muster Trol'lors 26 horse · 38 horse,

OPEN
!\·l on-FrL

7-ttJ-9'Ji-71JS3

•

~ith shuttle transmission·
4~wd, remote hydraulic.o,; 3 )'ear warranty

and Smiliug
Friendly Face.~.

South

ts · aecomes

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

starting at 27 horse - 57 horse

11omeroJ·

olo .J32

Vulnerable: Nor\h·South

New Dealer tor Montana Tractors

Same GTeat w ... !&gt;rices

Ohio

. t K 4 32

'Dealer: Wcsl

30 Yrs. £xp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

2cl0 !\·1ull}{:rr_\ Al·e,

¥Q 97:l

A R 5 :?.

, Opening lead: 4!o -~

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

The Mulbe.(Q

7 5

South
4!o A 10 •4
• J 4
• Q ,10 7
.-, A K 7 5

Tree Service

Community Center

~arns

Poru~roy,

2004 Harley Davidson Fat
~y, low miles, $18 ,000
080, (740)949·3004

llloA~~~~

Pole

•

oloQ 98fi

JONES'

IS NOW OPEN AT

rSite
,z. Preparation
·t· Dozer
·r ~ar3ges
tt Utilities

4!oK J9B6

740-667-0700 1-888-HUP,P234
wv

W. I\bin l'omt'ro)'

Backhoe

ti:ast

¥

45783 . ··

Free Estimate_,

.,. Homes
·~Septic Systems
r. Roofing

I

9902.

Insured

West

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

'

'

1999 Bravada, leather, lull
power. Alloy wheels , new
tires,
$6,2~9
060.
(740)645-2729:

r

r

4x4

1998 Ranger 4x4, 5 spd, 3L,
AMIFM cassette, AJC , oft
road package, new paint,
55,500 060. Call afte&lt;
4:30pm (740)256-6257.

r

1

1•

Resioential • Commercial

Army 5 Ton Semi Truck,
multi-fuel, Kiser Jeep Corp,
$6000.00, .. Army 21/2 Ton ·
Truc:k, Kiser Jeep · COrp.,
Multi Fuel, $4000.00 74().
949·0020

+ AI086a
.... 10 4

L..iD!~Tu~ppers Plains, OH

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

1991 Ford Ranger, body fair,
runs fair, $950 (304)6758714

¥ K. 10 G

41800 SR #7

'Tho World's Bell Roof' .

..__llllliii!iiiiiliiiiilolllll,...

06- 13-0S

"'Q 3 2

and Financial Services

•JI~ST ~
Rapflng, Inc.

FOR SALE

The Daily:Sentinel
'

Rocky Hupp Insurance

dard. 133 ,000 miles. Pay
off-$5800.00, 740-985-3B39

3363

.

North

Red Honda Clyic with sun-

roof. Good Condition , stan·

New 5003, 5005, &amp; 50.20
Series John Deere Utility
Tra.c tor s @ 0%. ·fixed/ 36
roonths . Used Utility Tractors · 95 Dodge truck, 4x4 , auto·
@
4 .9% Variable/ 60 maliC.
$3.000.
Call
months .
Carmichael (740)388·001-t
Equlpmenl. (740)446-24,12
;,~;..;..;;.;.;~----,

Pole .Barn . 30x50)(10FT
$6795 inCludes Painted
Metal.
Free
Delivery Ask about our AQHA
www.natlonwldepotebarns.c Member DISCOunts on new
om (937)559-8385
John
Oeere Equipment.
Equipment
Carmichael
Shop smith , lots· of extras,
(740)446-2412,
jointer,- table saw, drill press,
$2,199
OBO.
1999 Reg. Black Arigus t &amp;II, 4
Kawasaki
Prairie 4)(4 , years old Gen11e $1 foo.oo.
Tara •
Townhouse excellent condition, $2.500 -740-985-3843
Apartments, Very Spacious. OBO, (740)645-2729
2 Bedrooms., C/A, 1 1/2
SPA fACfORY Outurr
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
16 H fl Craftsman lawn
Top Quality, Warranty.
Pool, Patk:l, Start '$385/Mo.
Tractor. 42' cut--used ~ery
Wllolesate. Financing,
No Pets . Lease Plus
little, $500.00 Phone 740Deliveries.
Securl.l y Deposit Required .
992-76B9-aHer 6 :00
21ocations
(740)446·3481 .
' Mitton Flea Market
John Dee're Aiding Mowers
&amp; Ashland Kentucky
Twin R1vers Tower is acceptstarting at$1,399 . Financing
1606)922-7185
ing appllcatioris tor waiting
available subject to John
list tor Hud·subSIZed. 1· br,
Deere Credit approval. Your
Wolff Tanning Beds
apartm!"nl. call 675-6679
payments could be as low
Huge selection.
EHO
as $39 month with SO down .
lf1lmedia1e Delivery.
Carmichael
Equipment
Financi ng
Valley Apartments in Mason,
(740)446·2412.
1-800-894-6997
WV
currently accepting
(740)446-6579.
applications. Apply at 501
Zero Turn -Z·Trak Mowers
Sh;:~wnee
Trait in Point
from Jof;m Deere available at
Pleasant .
Applications
BUIUliNG
4.9% · tl~ed
rate tro
accepted on Tuesdays.
SuWLIEli
Carmichael Equipment with
HUO assrsted. (304)675John Deere Credit aPproval.
4900
' stock. brick. sewer pipes, ( 740 ) 446 - 2412
SPACE
windows, lintels, etc. Claude wtfW caceg com

Beautiful river v1ew in
Kanauga. Ideal for 1-2 peoJ.'OR ·RENt
ple. No pets, please.
Applications being taken .
For Lease: Office or retail
Call (740)44 1-0 181.
spaces in very good condi·
Mobile Home Lot only
tion . Downtown Gallipolis.
Addison P.ike· $125/month- Approx . 1600 sq . ft each. 1
call (740)446-3644 for more or 2 bafhs. ,lease price
into.
.:.
negotiable to encourage
busmess.
Call
new
.Mobile Homes sites in the
Shade area. Water. Sewer. (740)446-4425 or (740)446·
36
Trash , included. $130.00 r:39:;:i'"o
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�wWw. mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 13, 2005

·'We love you Michael!':

Spurs take commanding 2-0.series lead
quarters. and on defense they
were helpless to &gt;top the prcd,ion anJ · shiftinc" of
Par~er. the pu.int guard from
SAN ANTONIO -- Two Ff:lll&lt;'c.
and Ginohili. ·.the
steps quicker, two games shopting
guaru . fr&lt;illl
·
ahead.
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The San Antonio Sp.ttrwere· at their best Sunday
night in Game 2 of the NBA
Finals, speeding out to a big
early lead and frustrating the
Detroit Pistons the rest of the
·way in a 97-76victory for a
2-0 lead in the best -of-se ven
championship round.
Once again . the quickne,s
and creativity of Manu
Ginobili was the one thin~
-that stood out. But unlike in
Game I when Ginobili took
over all by himself in the
fourth quarter. thi s· time he
did it earlier, too. and
received plenty of help.
Ginobili scored 27 poi11ts
with seven assists, while Tini
· Duncan was his usual . efficieni self with 18 points and
II rebounds. Throw in Tony
Park~r being a speedy complement to Ginobili 's dashing
exploits, Bruce Bowen's 3point shooting from hi s
favorite spot in the corner,
along with Robert Horry' s
effort plays. and thi s one was
all but over by the time the
fourth quarter bega n.
The Pistons did. ma,nage to
pull within eight points ntidway through the final quarter.
but Ginobili s'topped them by
drawing Rasheed Wallace 's
fifth foul. then com ing up
with a steal. an assist and
several free throws as the ·
lead quickly went back to 20 .
Detroit guards Chauncey
Billups
and .
Richard
Hamilton did next to nothing
offensive!~ )'or the first three

Ar~cnt i na .

first half.
Well. this must have been
one of those rare o..:casions.
'" Prince and ffamilton were
h&lt;•th btll'k on the floor·well
before the lirst 4Uarter enued
"ith San Antonio ahead 30-

0pponents hall been tli'CI'- 1'1.
le ." than 8(, points
Ginobili had a particu!Jrty
a iwi~ s i the Piston' in the 'Pt'~t acular stretch midway
playoffs , but the Spur' had through the second quarter.
evcrytlting clit·king "' well executing thTec comple te ly.
that they reached that number different play~ that showwith 5:-+-llefl.
dseu the special way he sees
Only two teams in NBA the court.
history have come had from
First. he ran a give-and-go
2-0 dcriciis to win a champi- play with Parker in wh ich the
un,hip: wh'ich . cou ldn 't have two were never closer .than
been much of a rea"uring 15 feet and used nearl y half
thou ght for the Pi ston' when the court. Parker was a step
they "boarded their plane aficr or two past midcourt when ·he
the game and headed back to hit Ginobili with a pass far on
the right wing behind the 3Detroit
. Game 3 is Tue&gt;day ni ght at point line. and as Parker cut
the Palace of· Aubur n Hill s. .ha rd to the basket Ginnbili
and .the · Pistons arc a long hit hin1 in stride with a perway from where t.hey were a fect ly · placed one-handed
year ago when-they splir the bount:e pass fur ll layup .
Next. Ginobili ·drove t.he
opening two games in Los
Angeles before retur ning lane ;md drew two defenders
home· und · dosing out tbe before flipping the ball out to
Lakers .in fi\'e.
Horry for a wide-open 3Tiii s one got away from pointer. FiDally. he stopped in
them quickly.
the lane after com ing around
Tayshaun ·
Price. . and a pick. rev ersed direction to
Hamilton each picked up two lose Prince and made a quick
fmils by the midppint of the . cut to the basket.
second quarter. leaving
Parker hit him with a pass ,
Detroit coach Larry Browh and Ginobili· dropped in a
with a &lt;)ilet]lma: Should he layup for a 49-31 lead.
st ick to his longstanding rule
San Antonio led 56-42. after
of "two l'ell!ls and you're .· Harry stole the Pistons' lazy
out." which would leave the inbounds pass with 16 secbotlt of them o n the bench fo r onds left before halftime ,
the rest of the first half - or giving the Spurs enough time
should he bend'l
for one more possession that
In hi s pre-game meeting ended with two foul shots by
with reporters, Brown said Ginobili.
The Argentine guard had
he'd only break hi s sel fimposed rule if he felt the 12 points on 4-for-4 shooting
ga me was gett ing too far with five assists, while
away from his team in the Duncan was 4-for-5 for 14
a~ i ng

·

Billui1' &gt;c·ureJ ;ix points in
a 10-2 run that made it 8J .-n
before Ginohili made a l'c\\
more big play; to end the
threat.
So frustrateu were the
Pistons thtn , Brown and
Billups picked up simultane.
.
AP photo
ous technical fouls with 3:54 San Antonio Spurs' Tim Duncan (21) keeps his eye on the ball
left . Gitwbili hit' both shots to
during the second quarter in game two of the NBA finals in San
get the lead back ltp to 20.
Anton io Sund;Jy.

$597

home.

Barboursv•lle020 0 41 004....;..13100
Mason Co. 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0- 3 10 4 .
Alex Wh.n. Jus11n Fallowav (5). Jusr•n

Mason County hoped they
COUld get back intO the 7·3 Maynard t6) and Juslln Jarrell John
· h · h h
h
Ullom . Tyler Hern (6). DalE! Kestner !9) .
game Ill t e stxt w en I ey · and Zeb· Reed wP --,- Falloway LPbrought in pitcher Tyler . Ullom

and helps families obtain pay - ·
ment for the services required
for a child with special needs.
POMEROY - The stateBCMH defines special
funded insurance program, . needs as chronic cohdilions
the Bureau for Children with such as (but not limited to)
Medical Handicaps (BCMH) diabetes, cerebral pal sy, spina
helps families, like those in bifida, chronic lung disease,
Meigs County, attain medical cystic fibrosis, hearing loss,
care for their children with hemophilia, metabolic disorspecial health care needs in a ders, sickle cell disease, canvariety of ways,
.
cer, AIDS, severe vision di sBCMH's lielp includes orders, cleft lip/palate, scoliolinking familie s with quality sis, juvenile arthritis, and conproviders within its network genital heart disease.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

Public
Health
Nurse,
Leanne Cunningham. is the
Meigs County Coordinator
for. BCMH and oftert makes
·home visits to access patients
and provide guidance with the
program.
BCMH has three programs
available to help children who
meet the criteria.
The Diagnostic Program is
a three month periQd allotted
to rule out of diagnose.special
health care needs or establish
a plan of treatment with a

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II M ........

• Calendar of Events.
See PageA3 ·
• Top l~bOr olficial says
he's staying on oversight
bOard. ·
See ·Page AS
• Lawyer: Man accused of
mall plot arrested without
cause, forced to talk.
See Page A6
• State budget provision
would speed permits to fill
wetlands.
See Page A&amp;

Council.· No fireworks for Middleport July 4

Pomeroy man arrested in drug search

Volunteer work
.

'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINE L.CO M .

'

RACINE - A Pomeroy
man was arrested early
..Sunday after the search of
a Racine home where he
had been staying revealed
cocaine, marijuana and
drug paraphernalia .
Racine Marshal Curtis
Jones
said
Jeffrey
Ohlinger, 48 , of Pomeroy,
was arrested at the home of
his son, Clayton Ohlinger,
on Elm Street in Racine
and charged with possessi on of cocaine, possess ion
of marijuana with intenuo
sell, possession of drug
paraphernalia, and having
a firearm under disability.
He was transported to the
Southeastern
Ohio

INDEX. .
2

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SllCilONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

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

1
I

. Sports

' As

Middleport Police Officer
Tony King W(lS donating his
time to the village on
.Monday evening, washing
one of the :police depart. ment's cruisers.
· Brlan J. Rood/photo

.'

B Section
A6

Weather

@ 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

d~ys. Enclo&gt;cd.i&lt; rny paymcp&lt; of $59. 15 for 6 momh: of the Dailr Semine/.·

A~dress ---------------------------..:...-------------------------~---------

Saturday, June l8
8 AM · 12 Noon • . HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

r

FREE SCREENINGS
Non-fasting choleslerol .and glucose • Blood pressure • Body lot anol~is

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'

SPECIAL ATTRACTION FOR THE KIDS ' 9:30 am - II :30 am
Parties 'R U$ wiD be there with one of their inftatablest
-Peanut butter sandwiches- ond special """'"'
for !he
kids.
----

www .holzer.org

·.J

c-'---

~

For more ·

call

446-5679.

.,.

I

•·

:

"

MEDICAL CENTER

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"

Bone density • Displays from hospilal and community programs

Pho ne

D

Please see Drugs, A5

HFor the Entire Family'

.

.

Regiohal Jail · and was
expected to appear in
Meig s County Court on .
Monday afternoon.
Jone s .s aid no other
arrests
were . made .
although others were at the
home at the time of the
sear9h, and that the drugs
and drug paraphernalia
allegedly found in the
home were limited to the
bedroom whe~e Jeffrey
Ohlinger had been staying
for the pa st several days.
According ·to Jones , a
neighbor had called· at 3
a.m. Sunday to complain
about excessive noise from
the Ohlinger home . The
officer who .responded,
Brent Rose, observed drugs

21st Annual

I
.. I
I 0 l,currcntlrsubscribe"lo lhc Daily Seminei. Enclosed is 111}' payhl~lll or $ 11 5.84 for a I -year subSlTiplion .
I
Name---------------------~~--~--------------------------------------~~
I have not he&lt;n a suhscnlx:r in the past 30

Please see Children, A5

POMEROY -Complaints
that · officers from the
Pomeroy Police Department
allegedly harassed bar patrons
in the downtown area were
. discu ssed at last night 's meeting. of Pomeroy Village
Council.
.
Councilwoman
Mary
McAngus said the harassment
took the form of compliance ·
checks or · "walk-thrus" that
the ofticers do to ensure that
establishments that serve
alcohol are cemplying with
the law.
. McAngus
said
she
received several complaints
from both an owner and
patrons at an •mnamed bar
claiming that officers had·
.
Orlan J, Reed/photo
Tom Dooley, vice · president of the Middleport Community Associa\ion, discusses a proposal to use an area at Riverview done · four or five walk-thrus
Cemetery to discharge July 4 fireworks. Council rejected the proposal. and Dooley said last night the Association has voted to over the course of one
evemng.
s9rap the Ju ly 4 celebration if the fireworks area is not approved .
·
"Four or five times in one
evening is too much,"
McAngus said .
"I don't think it was four or
five
times," P.omeroy Police
BY BRIAN J •. REED
Riverview Cemetery to dis- ·which organizes the annual
Some residents have vocalChief
Mark E. Proffitt
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
charge fireworks for the cele- celebration, announced last ly opposed the proposal to
replied. ''We have to 'do ·combration. Councilman Jeff month
that
Hamburg move the fireworks area from · pliance checks. It's something
MIDDLEPORT -· There · Peckham made a· motion for- Fireworks Co. would no the river to the cemetery, .but'
we must do to keep things in
will likely be no July 4 cele· bidding the use of the .area for longer discharge fir,eworks Tom Dooley, vice president order."
the
Middleport
bration
in
Middleport, the fireworks display, and from a site behind Rejoicing of
"We have a responsibility
Community
Association,
s~id
because village council and Council President Stephen Life Church near the Ohio
from
the Department of
the Middleport Community Houchins
seconded
the River. Last night, Mayor he feels opposition to the pro- Liquor Control to do walkAssociation cannot agree on motion. Kathy Scott voted in lannarelli said the company posal is relatively small, and thrus," Mayor John Musser
where to discharge fireworks. favor of it, .and Shawn Rice confirmed safety problems that several thousand people concurred.
Middleport Village Council voted in opposition.
with the site for both fire : are expected to attend the
voted 3-1 Monday evening to
The
Middleport works company employees
Please see· Pomeroy, AS
Please see Fireworks, AS
Association, and the pu~lic . .
oppose the use of a site at Community

.

:0

medications. therapies, nied- ·
ical equ ipment and supplies.
lab tests. x-rays . This program
-requires both medical and
financial eligibility. All services must be ·related to the
child's eligible condition and,
if the child remain·s eligible, ·
services may be renewed each .
year until the child reaches
age 21.
.
The Service Coordination
.Program helps fa milies locate

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATHER

: ·.

BCM H provider. Examples of
services included are tests, xrays, vtstt s to BCMHapproved doctors ... up to five
days in the hospital. public
health nursing services and
therapy cvaluatio'ns. There are
no finan cial requ irements for
this program.
The Treatment Program i.s
one year of treatment for a
medically eligible condition
by a BCMH provider.
Treatment service .examples
may in.clude docror visits.

OBITUARIES

.

Hern to replace stmter )ohn
·
'Ullom.
After the one hit and one
. from Page Bl,
'run given up in the sixth,
Hern struck out four batters
widened the lead to 6-2.
in the seven th and eight
As mistakes plagued innings to help quickly em)
Mason Couniy late in the those innings with no hit s
game, it seemed early that it and no runs .
'
However hi s luck would
would be ihe other way·
around. Brandon Fowler, the only last those innin·gs.
lead off batter for the home· _In the ninth .. four consecuteam, scored the first run of . tive · batters got on base
the game when · three · past ' 1 causing Mason County to go
ball throws brought him wtlh closer Dale Kestner.
~t
was
over,
home. Tile above ayerage · Be lore
distance from the plate to . Barboursvcl le wen t comthe back fence proved to be pletely ~hro~tgh . Its ltneup
a
challenge
for and htt lor lour more run s.
Barboursville all game long. etchmg the 11-3 game tnto
Post '177 answered in the the books.
.
second with a pair of runs
Post .177 had a handful of
scored with an RBI double sol td httter 111 the game wuh
from Nate Wood .
Adam Atkins hitting 2-for-5.
The early back and fourth Andrew Blain had a hit with
game again teetered toward 2 RB!s and a double. Cory
the home squad in the fourth Finley hit 3-for-4 with a
when an RBI from Kameron doubl e. and four others also
Sayre tied the game at 2-2. managed a hit in the game.
Sayre had a good day at the
Mason County matched
plate with four hits. an RBI its opponent' in hits. JUSt not
and a double.
in run s. Those hits came
After the four-run fifth from Seth · Phalen who had
from Barboursville. both lwo. Josh Whitlock had two
teams posted a run in the and a double Reed and
sixth. Mqre paM ball trouble Fowler also ·m;naged ·a hit
from Post ! 77 brought run - in the £a me.
ner Sayr~: to third and a hit
Mason Countv returns to
from Fowler brought h.tm action 5. p.m. t~day against
~orne, giVIng Mason County_ ' Fairmont at Point Pleasant
1ts la~t run of th!! game. .
High S~;hool in a double:
Chmn scored the run tn ·header ·
the sixth for Barboursville
'
·
when a . hit brought him Barboursville 11, Mason Co. 3

• Pistons worrying about
more than just the Spurs.
SeePageB1

Help for Meigs' chronically ill children

Serta
Plush Euro Top

-Flag

Cuts

SPORTS

Pomeroy Council·
.discusses alleged .
harassment·of
downtown bar
patrons by PD

.,· .

met and n~merou s autographed jerseys.
Local businesses also donated items for
si lent auction.
" We had everything from car washes to spa
from Page Bl
treatments to dinners," Leach said.
In addition to Barlrum, several other ath2003. The camp, founded by Marshall lete s and local celebrities made appearances
University alums and current NFL players or played in Saturday's tourney. Included in
Mike Bartrum and Troy Brown, is held during those was former Washington Redskin Eric
May in Huntington and helps teach the fun as well as former Thundering Herd
damentals of football to 'the youth on numer- Anderson.
players Tony Bolland, Curt Nethercutt, Eric
ous levels. ·
Anderson and Casey Hill ,
·
"We started working with Mike (Bartrltm)
Also playing were several. members of the
becau·se we actually worked · his camp and WOWK 13 news staff: Sandra Cole, Brooke
saw how great' he was with the kids and what Baldwin , Paul Heggen and Keith Monday.
a big impact he makes in their lives," . Already one of the largest and well-known
explained Lead~
·
events of it s kind in the region, the PVH Flag
The PVH Foundation will use a portion of Football tournament continues to grow. There
the proceeds to pay for a . new handicap were so much interest in this year's event,
entrance way to the hospital.
that the tournament field could have been
Bartrum was in attendance Saturday, taking · even I arger.
time to pose for a photograph with each team,
"There was such an olltpouring of support
and also donated several unique items for for the tournament thi s year," said Leach.
' Friday night's auction. Some of the more pop- . "We cou ld only .··acco mmodate 16 teams
ular items included a Donovan McN abb auto-. because of space, and actually had to turn
graphed football. a Philadelphia E~gles hel- away eight teams."
·

'

points and Parker was 5-for-7
for I 0 points at halftime.
Prince did not swre in the
half for Detroit. while Billups
and Hami lt'&gt;n combined for
just seven po i111s .
. San Antonio', lead re;1c·hed
23 points in the thi rd qua rter.
and ·Ginohi li made bi g plays
dch time Detroit threatened
to get within striking di s-·
lance : A quil'ivrc!t"a-.~. ) from
the left side mad,, it 76 - 5~.
and Ginnbi·Ji then ,Jl'" " 'd 1Hi l
to Bcno l! ,!,·ih for ,, -' that
ganw the Spur' a 79-6J lead
enwr i n!.! th~ h ..unh.

Roman Catholics
b'Bin priests for
life as CEOs, A6

Fans celebrate after
Jackson acquitted of
all_charges, A2

..,

,,

'

-

L

,

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