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•

. Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

.,

www.mydailysenti11el.com

.

Uttle League Baseball -

Big Bend Tour.qament

Monday, June 20,
•

2005

'

'

Aft~t:years of~urance

Cincinnati·scalps Braves, 11-8:

Mason claims Big.Bend title

CINCINNATI (AP) watch the basketball game . sweep there. We were close .
· With a noteworthy home run, and (relax)."
Everybody has an off-day.
BY BRAD SHERMAN
&lt;~i&gt;o tripled home a run and four more runs in the fourth
Ken Griffey Jr. turned
The stakes were less per- Today was just one. of tho~e .
BSHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUNE coM
William Zuspan had an RBI on an RBI tielder's choice by
Father's Dav·. into another
sonal
but That 's not the last ume we re
single in the inning .
.
Za•k Marvel and a three-run
personal halhi1ark moment.
more
dire going to get into a game like
Griffey hit a tiebreaking.
this year. · that.'"
.
.
, SYRACUSE _ Masbn
The BraYes answer~d with double by Roseberry.
The Reds
The Braves were m postthree-run shot in the eighth
all' d f
d - . one run in the bottom of the
Mason finally got on the
r te. ron:~ tive- ~un ehcit tlfth ,,hen Colby Ro,eben') board when an error allowed
inning Sunday, rallying the
hadn't even tion to snatch it away in the
to beat Syra~use J_-6 Ill the . s.:ored on an error - but Zuspan and Branch. who
Cincinnati Reds .to an 11-8
Jed a game end.
Btg Bend Ltttle League Maso n soon put the g&lt;1me each .sing led. to score .
.
victory oYer the Atlanta for ·a week . They · pulled
Andruw Jones 'doubled an_d
B~seball Tournament cham- awav.
Joining Lewis with multiBraves that snapped their six- ahead th~ee times on Sunday scored on Johnny Estrada s
pi~tship Saturday.
The Apaches scored ti:ve pie hits i'CJr the winners was
game losing streak.
- by 2, 5 and 1 run- and single off David Weathers _(4The
Apaches remain more time s to clinch it in the Brach. who doubled and sinGriffey's 51 3th career blew all three leads . Finally, 0) in the eighth inmng. tymg
unbeaten in 19 games thi s sixth. an inning -highlighted gled. and Zuspan. who hit
homer .moved him into sole Griffey gave them one that it at 8. Jones had an RBI smsea'son - but needed an by a three-run doubl e off the two sing les. Wasonga had a
possession of 16th place on would stand up.
gle. the double and th.ree
offensive explosion l;ite to bat of Jamin Branch. The hit triple. Clark a double and
the · career list. prevented a
Adam Bernero (4-2) gave walks, leadi~g a resurgent
do so; Mason scored all its gave Mason " 10-6 edge. Tyler Kitchen chipped in a
four-game sweep by the up a pair of one-out singles in offense.
ruils during the tim1I three then an error allowed Branch single . ,
Braves. and saved th~ last' the eighth before Griffey
Atlanta hils scored 63 runs
innings.
to s.:ore later before Lewis
Colby R'oseberry
led
place · Reds from hitting homered deep to right , break- in its lnst ei.ght game·s.. an
Trailing 5-2. Mason scored doubl~d in the final tall y.
Syracuse with a double and
another low point.
.
sing a tie with Ernie Banks average of just under e•gh!
five times in the fifth frame . . Early nn. thou gh. ru'nner- single \Vhile Noble tripled
Last year. Griffey hit homer and Eddie Mathews on the per game.
·
· .·
finally taking the lead on the up Syracuse looked like it and t.ndrew Roseberry and
No. 500 on Father's Day in career. list. Relieved · team"We' re happy ·getting thre,e
strength of a Bryce Clark was poised to hand the West Ethan Martin eacn si ngled.
St. Louis with his dad. Ken mate s mobbed .him.
of four," manager Bobby Cox,
two-run double.
. Virginia team its onlv Jo,s of
Members of the champiSr.. in th~ stands. His father . ''You can go to Sunday din - said of the series. "We 'score~
Josh Lewis. ,who paced the the 'year alter j umpi •~g out to onship Mason squad are
followed · the game from ner and not have to think enough runs today to make
Wasonga. Zuspan, Branch.
Apache bats with a pair of a 5-0 advantage.
home on Sunday. ·
about a loss, but we've still you think you should 1\ave
doubles off the bench, folTyler Noble tripled in the Clark. Lewis. Kitchen .. Tyler
''He'll know," Griffey said. got a lot of work to do," swept them. When yotl scor~
lowed with a two-bagger that tirst' inning and later Sl'ored Roush. Colton McKinney,
'"Even though he's home, he's Griffey saict. :'Guys are going that many. you should win."
plated the tinal run in the on an error to break the scor- Garrett Ohlinger. Gabriel
still there."
. up there and putting a little ' The Reds appeared to be in
pivotal frame. Alan Wasong&lt;\ ing ice. Syracu'e then addetl : Starcher and Zack Worth . .
Griffey has five homers on too much pressure on them- control after Adam Dunn hit ;a
Father's Day, trailing Mike se lves to win it all by them- three-run
homer
int&lt;&gt;
Piazza by o·ne for the ·most · selves.''
Atlanta's bullpen in the fifth
among active players. Hi s 15
Neither pitching staff had a and-Joe Randa followed with
NBA Finals
RBis are the most by any cur- good time. The Reds matched a solo shot into Cincinnati''
re nt player on the day.
their season high with 17 hits. bullpen for a 7-2 lead. It did;
'' I've hit home Tuns on and the Braves reached· dou- n't last long', underscoring the'
Fath,er's Day, Mother's Day. I ble-digils in hits for the sixth · Reds' struggle to do anything
try
to space them out," said straight game.
right.
,
~
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN
Richard Hamilton missed a
Griffey,
whose
gift
was
a
tie
.
"We'Vj!
been
doing
it.
for
Since
their
chief
executive
ASSOCIATED PRESS
·runner from the lane and
with pictures of his children. the most part," •said Braves flew ·to Colorado to deliver ·~
Bruce Bowen rebounded to
''There 's something about reli.ever John Foster, who win-or-else ultimatum twa
end it, allowing, the Spurs 'to
AUBURN HILLS. Mich.
those
days. Today means I gave·up a pair of homers that . weeks ago, the · Reds have
run off jubilant.
-Big Shot Bob did it again.
can go home and do whatever · put the Reds up 7-2 in the.~ gone 6-8 w,ithout major
Atier four blowouts·, this
Robert Horry. the veteran
I want - which is watch TV, fifth. "We almost had the changes.
'
·was
the type of game everyplayer whose clutch postseaone had been waiting almost
son 3-pointers have detined
two weeks to · see - an
his career, knocked down a
As a freshman Conn was someone of Amy's caliber t&lt;l
intense, closely-fought nailwide-open 3-pointer with 5.8
selected
honorable mention leave the program. "! con;
biter befitting of a champiseconds remaining in overAll-AMC ih 2002. She bat- sider these girls like ·a
Spurs lead series 3-2 onship series. The fourth
time Sunday night to give the
from ·Page 81
ted .301 (34-for-113) as a daughter and I dread it whe.ti
San Antonio Spurs a 96-95
Harry inbounded from the quarter was close throughout,
rookie with a home run and any of them leave ," Pyl~s
victory over the Detroit left sideline near midcotirt with clutch shots coming
centage while manning first 14 RBI in 38 games played. said. "Especially Amy, na!
, Pistons in Game 5 of the with 9.4 seconds left. tinding from Billups and Hamilton
For her career Conn was a only has she been a great
base.
N!lA Finals.
Manu Ginobili in the corner. for the Pistons. and Robert
Conn batted a, career-best . 333 hitter ( 172-for-516) player, she 's a· great person
The Spurs took a 3-2 lead Detroit's defenders collapsed Harry and Manu Ginobili of
·
·
.394 (65-for-165) as a junior while playing in all 170 to be around."
·
in the best-of-seven series. on Ginobili and left Harry San Antonio.
Amy was the Ioiie senior
with 34 RBis, 16 doubles games of her collegiate
The player who wasn't hitbOuncing back from a pair ,of wide -open for the . return
the 2005 squad.
·:
·on
and t'wo triples . She was career. She scored 67 run s,
ting the big ones was twolopsided losses to defeat the pass.
·
Conn received her degre't;
tabbed 2nd Team AII-AMC ripped 44 doUbles, four
time NBA Finals ·MVP Tim
defending champs in their
Bad
idea.
as
so
many
of
South in 2004 and also · triples and . clubbed five in Sports &amp; Exercise Studies
Duncan '. who missed six
own building and s~nd the
.
achieved high marks acade- home runs. Conn posted 97 in May.
series back to San Antonio Harry 's opponents have straight foul shots and a putthe
past.
learned
in
Amy
is
the
daughter
of
needing just one more victomically, earning AMC and career RBis.
back at the end of the fourth
Detroit had one final quarter that would have won
ry for their third title in seven
NAIA Scholar Athlete
Rio Grande head coach Chuck and Kim Conn of
years.
chance after Harry 's shot, but it for the Spurs.
awards . .
David Pyles is sorry to see Wheelersburg.

. hikes, drivers get ·
some relief, A2

at
Middleport.•·Pomeroy, Ohio
'
'

,) 0

t TN

rs. \ ul.

.~, .• . :\n .

• Cardinals fly past
Cincinnati. See Page 81

~ COWACT TRACTOR

S361/rnonth
SALE '12,999.

IIIPl£IIEII1S SOLD SEPARATELY ..

• 28 HPc....-dilsellflline
• Post'Trtllt• Qn.lllmiltd
lw'-wheel *iva
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OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Helen Bragg, 86
• Teresa LaComb, 85
• John Miller, 69
• Nonga Roberts

INSIDE

WEATIIER

S183/month
SALE '6,599.

• 1911" Klwaslkl- Y-Twin
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• lllf Comnlllld CUI System·

• Tlow)•limilld~

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rANK· M60-KH.

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Details on Pace A6

·SALE '7,499·

INDEX

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35 HP• OR 45 HP•
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WITH A HUGE LOADER AND LIFT CAPACITY, THE SERIES 8000
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A R 'iTE THAT'S TOUGH I 0 BlEAT: 0 ..
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. Dear Abby

A:3

Editorials

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As

Obituaries

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
8·880 UNITED LANE

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE

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A -----'---

(TOLL FREE)

BY BRIAN J. REED .
BREED@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

degree .felony. alleging that he engaged in oral sexual
he engaged in digital sexual conduct with an unnamed
conduct with an unnamed victim, between May I. :2000
victim, between May I, 2000 and April 13. 200 I, ~nd that
and April 13, .2001 , and that the victim was less than 13
the victim was less than 13 years of age.
• Co,unt Nine. rape. a, firstyears of age.
• Count Seven, rape , a first- degree fdony. alleging that he
degree felony, alleging that engaged in oral sexual conduct
he engaged in oral sexual· with an .unnamed victim ,
conduct with ari unnamed between May ' I, 2000 and April
victim, betweeti May I. 2000 13, 200-1 , and that the victim
and April 13, 200 I, and that was less than·l3 years of age.
the victim was less than 13
• Count 10, rape. a ·firstyears ofage.
degree felony. alleging that he
• Count Elght, rape, a first- engaged in vaginal se xual
degree felony, alleging that · conduct with an unnamed vic-

POMEROY ~ A bronze
marker of the Ohio Histori cal
Society, the 18th to be placed
in Meigs County, was dedicated at the Meigs County
Fairg~ounds in a Monday
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
noon ceremonv .
HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL .COM
The occasion . marked the
finale
of the Oct. 23 Make a·
RACINE - "Proud to be
an American - Called to Differ~nce Day project of the .
Serve" will be the theme of Meigs County Hi storical
4
Racine Society c3J!ied out at the fairthe . July
Independence Day celebra- grounds. Volunteers did
tion which will kick off with plantings and painting , as
well as repair work and
a parade at I0 a.m.
Line-up will be at Southern repl aceme nt projects to beauHigh School at 9:15 a.m. tify and improve the facilities
with flag raising by · the which are enjoyed every yea'J'
American Legion Post 602 at by thousands of residents.
The supplies used by volun~
9:45 a.m. Parade will follow
teer
workers and the hi storical
Elm Street to Third to Vine ·
on to Fifth and back to Elm. mark&lt;H were paid for with the
There will be awards in the $2,000 Ohio Hill Country
float entries of $100 for first . Heritage Area grant and some
sponsored by Home Natibnal local matching funds.
In her welcoming remarks
Bank; $75 for second and
the dedication ceremony
at
$50 for third, both sponsored
the
Meigs County Hi storical
by Racine Volunteer Fire
Society president Margaret
Department.
There will be an award for Parker spoke of the fairthe walking unit sponsored ground 's historical ·signifiby Wooly Acres Farm; three cance describing it as a place
places in bicycles sponsored where county fairs have been
·by Dr. Mel Weese and Dr. held since 1968.
The hi story as detailed on
Doug and Tonja Hunter; three
place awards for antique trac- the marker speaks of the ·
tors sponsored by RACO and Meigs County Agricultural
vehicles sponsored by Star Society which held its tirst
Mill Park Board members, fair on Oct. 22, 1851 in
Middleport, its second at the
'and awards for horses.
·The fire department will
have a chicken barbecue and
homemade ice cream with
serving to start al II a.m.
. Activities begin in Star
Mill Park at 3 p.m. with a
· patriotic program. Other
activities starting at the same
· time will be games for kids
including water slide (age ,
and weight limit, take bathing
suit and towel) , moon
bounce, bungee pull, and Big
Bend Farm a~:~d Antiques
Club display.
At 3:30 p,m. parade awards
will be presented. At 4 p:m.,
Big Bend Cloggers, under the
direction of Vivian May, will
perform on stage. At 5 p.m.,
there will be RACO's 12th
annual frog Jump. There will
be two divisions - senior 16
and over and junior division
15 and under.
Awards in the senior division
will be $100, $75, anct $50;
junior division will be $40,
$25, and $10. Rules will Qe
posted at the park. Participants
will be able to rent a frog. All
frogs will be returned to their
habilat .following the jump.

I

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"'t' 'r51 year ot_ or t;ofla! ow ner~P · I'ear ' two afl91hr~

5

5! ,_....,.........

Agency, Inc.
1583 St Rt 160
&lt;;alllpolis, OH 45631

,
;~,~

Other times of significance was moved to the fai rgrounds
which marked change to the ·and 'reconstrucied .. A si ngle
· fairgrounds recorded on the barrack from the Civilian
marker include 1889 when Conservation Corps camp of
. the one-third mile racetrack the 1930s . re mains in use
., was increased to a half mile, today and that too is noted on
· 1890 when the unique curved the marker.
Speaker at the dedication
grandstand was constructed,
and 1987 when the 1829 was J D: Britton, director of
Fosler-Jenkinson log cabin
Please see Marker, AS
J·

Volu.nteers
in town

Charges filed
in death of .
Reedsville man
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A group of volunteers from
the North Broadway United
Methodist Church in
Columbus is spend ing the
week in Meigs County, com· .
pleting several civic projects
in the community. The work
crew, made up of 25 teens
and 15 adults, is staying at
the Racine United Methodist
Church. On Monday, they
' were painting the gazebos
along Pomeroy 's riverfront.
They will at so do other work
.in downtown Pomeroy, includ·
ing other painting projects
and the restoration of brick
sidewalks in the Court Street
mini-park.
Brl., J. Reed/ (111oto

1-

._

J~C.

CNer

THE SCIENCE OF COMMON SENSE.

"•••••· ~ •

Hoelllch/photo

.

Rock Spring Hotel on Oct.
3 1, 1852 , imd sub sequent
fairs around the county until
March 14, 1868 when the
first section of a permanent
location was purchased from
Leonard and Jane Carleton
near Rock Springs and
became known as the Meigs
County Fairgrounds. ·

t
liat...-,. hw• hdto.,. ;;wcwkendlaldngcareol
•s I al•'"lllfl·namallerwllai--IOIIIOOMd.
WE IIELEVE lilliE POWER OF SPORT.

"Cr Orot"'Ot·;-~ :.·: · c.~E-! 1~~ ~··""' ·~e :· :- · :· ~·!:! ·: .:... r ;:cor-e;•.aa. Ccf~"Me5 An-~ P~r·:.,se ~&lt;a•e 'or ovc:n&lt;tse5 5 '8 q&lt;1~ · s ~ '"''"'""'-1J') as oi2J1/~ ano "' ~· w1ry after !flat datt
v·- .-; rar:r &gt;a·;-e s : ~o.;: :' .::- -:+ ?; l:X. · .~. 'J •• :cl •• •.• • ... • --- ~,-e.. , o-, ,c.•r ~-e ja•e 'or ·we fC~!.f'&lt;:.JT ~e ,..01",~5 F nanc·rg pr:t'r-OI'Or" lor C')ITO«'. T;ro. ¥lCI Uf•••rr Verotle Ct.sl ~tfS onty
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p..r Fewer C.-~,· Card ~•""~.rt~um 10'h clown ~nl •s

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count 16. which charged him
with corrupting th~ · victim
with marijuana, a fourthdegree felony.
Ward. who remains free on
bond. will face another jury
,on June 28 to answer tht;; first
five counts of the .indictment,
wh.ich charge unlawful sexual
conduct with a minor, a thirddegree felony. Those charges
go back to 1992 and 1997,
alld involve two other alleged
female victims.
A prior indictment aj\ainst
Warp, containing Similar
charges. was dismissed.

This historical marker tells the history of the Meigs County Fairgrounds. It has been erected
beside the 1829 Foster-Jenkinson Jog cabin which was moved to the fairgrounds and recon·
structed in 1987. Participating in the dedication ceremony were from the left, the Rev. William
Middleswarth , J: D. Britton, Margar!!t Parker, Rep . Ji mmy Stewart, Ed Holter, .and Joyce Davis .

11 ,,_.,;..u •-· w ra- INt~ lddoo""" tlwuw • bill o-lheio ohouldar won't.. 111 . . big 1 - buttltey do •...., • tow
l.Jke haw to taU a pildl. How ID otreldllhe
_._..,.,_..,_...., . . tr
W!wl yau .-,. ....,.U, you don'! just learn haw to be

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tim, between May 1,, 2000 and
April _13, 2001, and that the
. victim was less than 13 years
. of age. •.
•.
• Count 14, rape,'· a firstdegree felony. alleging that he
engaged ih vagi nal sexual
conduct with an unnamed vi~tim. between May I, 2000 and
April 13. 2001 . and that the
victim was less tnan 13 years
of age.
The jury found Ward in nocent of counts II. 12. 13, and
15, which made the same aile-·
gations as those· count s on
which he was indicted. and

At •

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·••

•

COOLVILLE
A
Coolville woman has been
charged with aggravated
vehicular homicide and
operating a motor veh.icle
under the influence of alcohol in · the . death of a
Reedsville man .
Josie D. Coe, 29, faces the
two felony · charges 'in
Athen s Comity Municipal
Court. Tony J. Rood, 29, of
Reedsv ille. died June 10 as
the result of injuries .caused
when the vehicle Coe was ,
driving went off the roadway on Bethany Ridge
Road near Guysville and
struck a tree .
·
The Athens Post of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol
continues to ' investigate the

Some play for money. Some play for glory.
Soene.play for the occasional trip to the ice cream shop.

•

:JVC.,~ses ¢1 S.:t 500 or "'ort 'T'Iade Uf'N :7f31/2005

BSection

Sports

~oc ~ar: .: 'Mf!S :• ~ :: n• ~a,-1!""'! ::.rl ·_. a_ ·~·:! ~- -!!"&gt; .are~· t)' ~aoe&lt; dflC .,..i'J'-ary Ia., ~~ ··~11~1. s:e•up ¥&gt;C t-..lnl3hng cNVges ml'j oe aOC:h!IOI'\lll and may v.-y Model:s

ao&lt;!o••O:C •,

•• -i:. ,:.;;.;; ~::.Pit: YCJ•,--_

(740) 653-2827

:!UU;i

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLIC H@MYDAtlYSEN Tt NEL.COM.

0% for 36 mo nth s u Vtstl your local relatler today.

TANK. M48-KW

' ' I SP \\ . .ll · ~·· ~·.

Racine
Historical Society dedicates marker,at fairgronnds
announces
July Fourth
festiVities

• As Egypt ponders
elections, Rice makes
case for democracy.
See Page A2. .
• Kids' day at the park.
. See Page A3
• Garden club members
discuss fair flower shows.
See Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• PVH offers new
diagnostic equpiment.
See Page AS

0% fo r 30 months .. Vtstl your local rc ta1lcr today.

..

POMEROY -A jury convicted Raymond Ward of
Rutland on six counts of rape.
and acuitted him on four other
rape charges and a charge of
corrupting another with drugs
late Friday.
After aday and a half of .testimony and two days of deliberation, the Meig s County
Common Pleas 'Court jury
convicted Ward, 33, on the
following counts: '
• Count Six, rape. a first-

Conn

SALE '6,999.

:! II

Ward co.nvicted on six counts, acquitted on five

SPORTS

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AMERICAN FAMILY

~-

"2005

001 ~ - ~

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•

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·.

PageA2

NATION_. WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June

21, 2005

Public mee_
tings

BY RICHARD PYLE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Saddam
Hussein loves Doritos, hates
Froot
'Loops. ' admires
. ,.~ Presi'dent
Reagan. thin ks
Clinton was "OK" and consid- "
ers both Presidents Bush' "no
- good ." He talks a lot, worries
about getms and insists he is
still president of Iraq .
Th()se and other detail s of
the deposed Iraqi leader's life
· in U.S. military custody
appear in the Jul y issue of GQ
magazine. based on interview s with five Pennsylvania
National Guardsmen - who
went to Iraq in 2003 and were
assigned to Sad~am 's guard
detail for nearly I0 months.
The magazine, which reached
AP Pholo/ GQ, Kurt 1\'larkus
newsstands Monday, said the
In
this
photo
provided
by
GQ
magazine
,
soldiers
who
guarded
former
Iraqi
President Saddam
Gls could not tell their, families
in
pose
together
in
Daytona,
Fla.
,
on
April
16.
From
left
are
Specialist
Jesse Dawson,
Husse
what they were doing and
signed pledges not to reveal the Cpl. Jonathan "Paco" Reese. Sergeant Nick Costello , Specialist Sean O'Shea, and Sgt. Casey
location or other details of the Dunnigan of the Pennsylvania National Guard. Thrust unexpected ly into the role of prison
U.S.-run compound where guards for the deposed leader, an article in GQ 's July issue says t~e soldiers found Hussein to
Saddarn was an HVD. or " hi~h be a friendly, talkative "clean freak" who' loved Raisin Bran for breakfast; did his own laundry
·
value detainee," awaiting· tnal and insisted he was stilt president of Iraq , says a repor_t published on Monday.
by iraqi authorities for mass
Dawson quoted Saddam 'as O'S hea interpreted 'as a ing to reach instead of the o·ne
killings and other crimes.
saying:
"He knows · ) have "spanking" gesture, laughed he was in.
However, the five soldiers
told GQ . of their personal nothing, no mass weapons. He and · went back to doing his ,:'Then he started laughing,"
recalled Reese. "He goes,
interi!'C tions · with Saddam. knows he' ll never find them." laundry in the sink.
Their description of the man
The · soldiers also said 'America, they dumb. They
saying. he spoke with them· in
·
rough English. was interested who once l.ived in palaces and Saddam was a ''clean freak" bomb wrong palace."'
Saddam also said his capture
in their Jives and even invited now occupies a cell with no who washed after shaking
them back io Iraq when he personal privacy matched hand s and used diaper wipes in an underground hideout on
recently published photos, to clean meal trays, utensils Dec. 13, 2003, resulted from
returns to power.
"He'd always tell us he was apparently smuggled out of and table before eating. "He betrayal by the only man who
still the president. That's what prison, showing Saddam in his had germophobia or whatever knew where he was, and had
you call it," Dawson said.
been paid to keep the secret.
he thinks, I00 percent," said underwear and a long robe.
The
story
said
that
once,
The
article
said
Saddam
"He was really mad about
Spc. Jesse Dawson, 25, of
when Saddam fell during his preferred Rai ~ in Bran Crunch that," Dawson said. "He comBerwick, Pa.
A Pentagon spokesman had twice-a-week shower, "panic for breakfast, telling O' Shea, ·pared himself to Jesus, how
ensued. No one wanted him to "No Froot Loops." He ate fish Judas told on Jesus. He was
no· comment on the article.
The Gls recalled that be hurt while being guarde.d and chicken but refused beef. · like, :That's how · it was for
Saddam had harsh words for by Americans." One Gl had to · . For a tin1e his favorite snack me.' If his Judas never said
the Bushes, each of whom help Saddam back to his cell. was Cheetos, and when that anything, nobody ever would
while another carried his ran out, Saddam would "get have found him, he said."
went to war against him.
grumpy," the story said. One
u.s. · officials said at the
"The Bush father, son. no underwear.
Saddam was friendly-toward day, guards substituted Dor'itos time that intelligence from
good ," Cfl. Jonathan "Paco"
Reese. 2_, of Millville, Pa., his young guard's and some- corn chips, and Saddam forgot se veral sources Jed to
quoted Saddam as saying.
times offered fatherly advice. about Cheetos. "He'd eat a Saddam's capture.
Spc. Sean 0 ' Shea, then I9, When O'S hea told him he was family size bag of Doritos in
The magazine said Saddam
prayed five times a day and
of Minooka, Pa. , said Saddam not ·married, Saddam "started 10 minutes," Dawson said.
later mellowed in that view. telling me what to do," recalled . The magazine said Saddam kept a Quran that he claimed
"Towards the end, he was say- the soldier. "He was like, "You told his guards that when the to have found in rubble near
ing that he doesn't hold any gotta find a good woman. Not Americans invaded Iraq in his hideout. " H~ proudly
hard · feelings and he just too smart, not too dumh, Not March 2003, he "tried to flee showed (it) to · the boys
wanted to talk to (George W.) too old. not too young. One in a taxicab as the tanks were because it was burned around
Bush, to make friends with that can cook and dean."'
rolling in," and ·U.S. planes the edges and had a bullet
him," he told the magazine.
· ·Then he smiled, made what struck the palace he was try- hole in it," GQ said.

As Egypt ponders elections, Rice makes case for ·democracy

•

"'

AP Photo

Melissa Senatore stands in the driveway of her home in
Riverhead, N.Y .. with four of the five veh icles her family owns.
Sariatore was paying over $14,000 a year for au.to insurance
on the cars, but has gotten the bill down .

After years of insurance .
hikes, drivers get some relief
BY MIKE COLIAS
ASSOCIATED PRESS 'WRITER

CHICAGO Melissa .
Senatore watched helple ssly
as the insurance premium for
family's five vehicles ·-·
including a 2003 Jaguar and
her teenage son's I999 Ford
Mustang - . climbed by a
few thousand dollars in
recent years.
But _the 48-year-old Long
Island homemaker got a nice
surprise when she went In ·
search of a better deal a few
mon'ihs ago: .Senatore switched
insurers, from a local company
to Allstate Corp .. and ·shaved
her annual payment nearly 30
percent, from $14,000 to a bit
more ihan $10,000.
"I was relieved. It just
seemed hke I was paying so
much more money every
year,", S,eJ?atore said. .
She s nght. Between 2000
and 2004, dnvers endured
nearly 6 percent average
1ncreases a year,tor the cost
of auto insurance .- jacking
the average policy from $687
to $857 annually per vehicle.
But this year insurance companies are throttling back on
rate increases,_ and premiums
are even declmmg for many
drivers. A steady decline in car
accidents and savvier . riskmanagement techniq4es are
allowing insurers to pass savings along to p\llicyholders,
while simmering competition
has put pressure on prices.
"The market for auto insurance is becoming very competitive,"
said
Robert
Hartwig, chief economist at
the Insurance Information
Institute. "Millions of con·
sumers are . likely to see a
decrease this year."
Nationally, rates still .are
rising -. albeit at their slowest rate in. five years.
,Spending on auto insurance is

expected ,to grow an average
of I .5 percent this year, to
$870 pe r vehicle, according
to the instittlte.
But many drivers are getting
a break. In New York, 10 big
auto insurers- including market leaders AllState, GEICO
Corp. . and State Farm
Insurance Co.- have cut rates
an average of ,5 to 6 percent
thi s year, saving New York.dri·
vers nearly $350 million.
State Farm, the nation's.
largest auto lrisurance ·underwriter with about I9 percent
market share , says it has
dropped prices in 32 states
this year while raising them
in just one: North Dakota.
While the recent price reductions have left healthy margins,
observers fear they could signal the market is topping out.
"The insurance cycle has
been very stron~ the last several years. It 's JUSt not gomg
to last." said Matt Nellans, an
analy st at · Morningstar. "I
think we' re coming ·into a
market where some companies will just slash prices to
gain policy holders."
Indeed, insurers IJ'I billions
during a four-year span in the
late 1990s, when premiums
were stagnant. By 2000, insurers were paying out $1.10 in
claims and expenses for every
$I in premiums, in a misguided attempt to retain market
share . They had been making
up the difference in the booming stock market, but had to ..
reverse course and aggressively raise rates after stocks
tanked in 2000. ·
"Companies really need to
maintain an underwriting dis·
cipline and generate income
on the business they write.
They know they can no longer
make it up on the investment
side," said Richard Attanasio,
analyst at insurance rating
firm AM Best &lt;;:o.

·eL_

~ayment ~f

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Monday. June 27
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible school at the Bradford
Church of Christ, June 27-30,
9' to I I :30 a.m . Classes fo r
preschool to tee ns. All youth
invited. For more information o~ transportation cul l
992-5844.

PageA3

END I
Deceased children are·_touchy.
·topic.in casual conversation
Tuesday, J .u ne

21, 2005

Wednesday, June 22
TUPPERS PLAINS -DEAR ABBY: "Grieving
find common ~ round with
Eastern Local Board of
in Richmond . Va.'' asked
&lt;Ill openiu g gan~hit.
· Education. regular meeting,
how she shou ld respond to
If the mother d1oo s ~s tu
6:30
p.m..
Eastern
people who ask how many
talk about ii . &gt;he slwtild sa).
Elementary School libraty
ch ildren she and her )ws"Sus ie is in Baliimnrc. Jack ·
canference roDm.
.
band have . She had rece ntl y_
·is in col kg ~ and Bob-recent -Dear
-Thursd~y, June 23
lost a 24 -yea r-o ld son in a
ly &lt;li ed 111 a car accident. So
. POMEROY - Meigs Soil
car accid ent. ··
.. . wrere do ydu wor\(_)··
Abby
· and Water Conservation
Saturday, June 25
I 'Josl my 22-year-olt\ son, ·
This is brie!' anu hon esL The .
: District will have a reg ular
Sunday, June 26
LONG BOTTOM. - A
Natha-n. Ji vc years ago and
sensitive que .stioner wou ld
REEDSVILL
E
The
meeting at I I:30 a.m. at the hymn
sing
featuring
am frequent ly usked that
re~poml. "I' Ill ..... orr y ror you r
office. 33 101 Hiland Road, "Delivered" will be held at 7 Biram-Hayman reunion will question. He was our on ly
loss . r·rn an e nginee r at
Pomeroy.
p.m. at the'Mt. Olive Church, be held at I p.m at Forked ch ild at the time: Three years
ABC company." .
Run State Park. Shelter 2. ago . my husband and I adopt- same si tu ati on. We alway s
Long Bottom. ·
Inciden tally. two 4uestiqns
· Basket lunch and fellowship. ed our daughter from Chi na. su id, "We have three chri- I h3ve learned never to &lt;hk
REEDSVILLE
and ~
When asked how many chil- dren" and never menti oned are. "Is · thi s your fathe r.
Singspiration wil be held m 7
dren 1 have. or if 1 have chil- our loss. '" ii alwa ys made mother. niece or daughter'"
p.m . at the Eden United
everyo ne
uncomfortable
Brethren in Christ Church,
. · . . · . · . The much-older husb&lt;~nu and
dren other than my daughter, . 1 s
1
usuall
y
respond
by
savin
o
.
a
1d
.
ee
med
h ke .t btd IOJ the mlich,you1iger .wife t ~ nd
located on State Route I24
Thursday, .June 23
Wednesday, June 22
1
..
·
·
""
sy
mpathy
.
to be offended by i·t. Alsu,
. RACINE - The Ohio halfway between · Reed svill e
CJ . f · d . . d r· -1
I have two, my daughter and
POMEROY . - Martha
son ,
osc nen s ,a n .IIlli y 11ever ask. "When is you r
Hockingport. Hu sted Greenaway will- cele- a deceased
River Producers FFA alumni and
.
. . · . . .. .
kn ow about our tragedy. but
will meet llt 7 p.m. in the . Refreshments following.
brate her 94th birthday on
I u;derstand th at1t c.1n be our. . casual frie nd .s ma y · baby du e''" -Llr "Are yo u
· Sunday, .June 26 ·
Southern
Ag . ·Room.
Wednesday. ·cards and mes- awk a1d -;hen_ .tsk~d thrs never know. Some . people expecting?'' unl ess the baby
PORTLAND -Spanish- sages may be se nt to 335 I7 quest1on, espec1ally so soon we ha ve since heco mc close is emerging at that exact
Di scussed will be the role of
agriculture education in the language Mass at Our Lady Ohio 833, Pomero y, Ohio after such _a trag1c loss. with know about our .Joss . _ moment. - JAN IN VALcommunity. Anyone interest-· of Guadalupe Mission,. 6 · 45769.
H_owcver. 1! the CjUestwner We revealed it whe n the sit- DOSTA. GA .
DEAR JAN: Boy. uo I ever
ed in developing the ag p.m., - Harris Farms Market,
Saturday, June 25
has any comp~ ss1o n at all, uation presented itself. It
industry in thi s area is invited Ohio 124. Ministry of Sacred
POMEROY - Kathleen he or she wont ask turthe r sti ll hurt s after all th ese ag ree on that la st one
Heart Church, Pomeroy.
to attend.
Bailey Scott wil-l celebrate 9ues]1ons unle-s th e mother years. and that' s why we because I learn ed the hard
TUPPERS PLAINS - The her IOOth birthday at a party lllltl ~t es tl. h personally keep it personiJI excep t with _way. Years ago. I was at a ·
CARPENTER
- YFW 9053 will meet at 7:30 Gabriel Quartet will be in to be held 2 to 4:30 p.m . on mak,es me feel. good to people who kn ow anu party. and was told Ih at
· p.m. at the hall.
c.oncert at 6:30 p.m.. at the June 25 at the ·Forest Run acknowl edge that I have one understand us. and those we another guest was expecting ·
Sunday, June 26 ·
Mt. Union Church near United Methodist Church. ch1ld here and one 111 he av- tru st. - STILL GRIEVIN G twins in· four months. She
look ed loyely. and fa irly
TUPPERS PLAINS Carpenter. For information Her daugh.ter, Mary Wise and en.- SEASON EO GRIEV - DOWN SOUTH
YFW 9053 will have a I p.m. call' Pastor David Wiseman, faniily, are hosting an open lNG
MOTHER,
DEAR STILL GRIEVING: . slender in her heavy, white
dinner for members and their 742-2568.
ZANESVILLE.
OHIO
Pl
ease accept my deepest silk cocktail lent dress - so
reception .
DEAR MOTHER: Thank .sympath y for your lo". If l ;:nade a point or mentioning
·you tor lettmg me and · my there' s ·anyth ing 1 have to her that. I'd heard ihe good
r~ad ers ki]OW how you han- learned from the mail I have news and how wonderful she
die this touchy si tuation . I rece ived. it's that there's no looked. I' ll ne ver forget her
advised "Grieving" to reply sinele answe'r to the question repl y: "Thank yo u. We ha' e
a surrogate.·_·
RUTJ__AND
The Gerald Simpson of Racine ; that she had three children• I was asked .
Dear Abby is writte11 by
DEAR ABBY:
Your
reunion of Elbert and Della Paul Glenn and Suellen - one rece ntly deceased Abigail
Van Burell, also
Gillilan was held June 5 at · Simpson of Portsmouth r .and then to change the sub- advice wjs se nsiti ve. but a
MIDDLEPORT The the Kyger Creek Club Mark, Regi11'a, Jdsh . and ject. However, not all of the better answer might be' to k11own as jeanne Phillips,
Silver Run Baptist Ch11rch is Hou se. Lunch was _served Tiffany Simpson, Gene and people I heard from ag reed simply respond by givi ng a11d . was founded by her
-hosting a Kids' Day at the followed by sowthzmg and Mary Lou Hawkin s of with my advice - or yours , the number of children to mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
Park, I I. a.m. to 2:30 p.m: games and pnze s were Middleport ; Lori, Rachael, Read on:
Dear Abby
at
whom she gave birth. The Write
Saturday, at Dave Diles Park awarded to all.
DEAR ABBY : We lost questioner may simply be www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
_ . "'
Abig'ail and Brock Bearhs of
in Middleport.
our
first child in infancy attempting to make polite Box 69440; Los Angeles, CA
There were 66 tamtly and Chester;
Diana.
Todd,
There will be free hotdo¥s· frtends attendmg. Tho se Andrew Brady Haley and and had to deal with the conver satio n or trying to 90069.
· snack s and drinks along w1th attendmg were: Dolore s. Tv Biss~ll of L~ng Bottom;
a variety of entertainment. to Raymond,. Jonathan, L1nda, Bd R
c 11 f
ea an_ . ex.. ar Y e o
· include gospel tricks with the Jody and Becca Donahue
l-lamblys. puppet shows, and Tony of Harrisonville; Westerv~lle , Bn_an, Tammy.
.
.
clowns, face painting, balloon Linda, Gary, Jordan and Preston and Rexte Carlyle of
POMEROY
The a.m . by Sunday school. At fo rmer pastors.
animals, juggling. and games. Isaiah Haynes, Lockborne; . Ashville; ViCki and Robert
There will be no evening
Cliff
Free
Methodi
st I0:30 a.m. Distrkt superinLaurel
·
Joe
,
Derek,
Shepherd
o.f
Grove
City
;
Kenda,
Alun,
along with special music.
1
and
Dedra Wendy, Kevm, Andrew, and Church will observe its tendent Charlie Young will se rvice. The public is invited
John Swansoo is pastor of Raymond
ann1 versary
on speak. Following a noon to join the congregation and ·
· the church located just off Armstrong of Jackson ; Alex Myers of Lancaster; I 25 th
Sunday.
carry-in mea l,. there will be Pastor Glenn Rowe and his
Brenda
Neutzling
and
Betty
Spaun,
Chelsea
and
Jlme
26.
Route 7 below Middleport aff
Story 's Run Road . Services at . Andr~a , Paxton and Xavier Zack Imboden, Matt Lehew . The day 's events will begin an afternoon se rvi ce at I :30 wife. Linda, in · the celebraof Racine ; and Mary and Roy at 8:45 a.m: with a continen- p.ni. with "Together for tion. For more information
· the church are I Oa.m. Sunday Whitlow of Pomeroy. ·
Mildred William s, Jan, Gillilan, Patricia Collins, tal breakfast followed at 9:30 Chri st" .. and recogniti on of call 992-0758.
school; II a.m. morning ser. vice ; 7'-p.m. ~vening service; Cameryn and Billy Harmon Carol Cline and Georgie
and 7 p.m. on Wednesday. ·
of Racine; Shirley and Mount of Long Bottom.

Other events

Clubs
organizations

Birthdays

~ Kids' day

at the park·

R~union recently held

To celebrate 125th anniversary

EXTRA! EXTRA!

.Garden club members discuss fair flower shows ·
I

RUTLAND - The two
Meigs County Fair flower
shows with a scheduled carrying out the theme "The
Many Facets of Summer"
was discussed at the recent'
meeting of the Rutland
Garden Club.
Meeting at the home of
Marjorie Rice, the members
were also reminded of the
: July 11-.13 annual conv~ntion
· of the Ohio Association of
: Garden Clubs.
· It was re~orted that the
flower beds m Rutland have
been planted Donna Jenkins,
Rice and Pauline Atkins,
. president, competed the
: plantings. A vote of ti:Mnks
· was extended . to Bob's
- Market for the flowers which
included marigolds ··and
dusty miller.
Officers elected for anoiher
: year were Atkins, president;
: Dorothy Woodard, vice pres: ident ; Rice. treasurer; and
Betty Lowery, secretary.
The program was on
springtime with Rice using
, "Azaleas Take Center Stage"
• as her theme. She talked
: about Jay Pratt's -gardens in
: Sharptol\(n. N. J which are
: alive \Vith vivid flowers, the

appeal they have for the pub·
lie, and the pathways which
wind through open 'areas.
wooded sections, and show a
variety of spring pla(lts.
Rice said that Pratt started
planting different varieties
of azaleas a long time . ago
and what started out as a
hobby became a show place
for all to visit. He is now
expanding i'nto some exotic
plaqts. and trees.
Donna Jenkins talked about
crab apple trees describing
their blooms as a breath-taking. She said some of the
good ones to consider planti· ·
ng are Apams, Bob white ,
Red Jewel, Adirondack, red
Jade, and Gold.
i Beside ihe bounty of biossoms the fruit can also be v~ry
colorful and more attractive
. than the hollyberry, Jenkins
said. These trees a nice size
for home garden paths an
ornamental landscapes. While
they love the sun, they can. be
planted in the foreground of a
tall shade tree.
"Where to pant purple
. flowers" was the theme used
by Betty Lowery. She talked
about sunlight angles and
planti.ng 'plants where ihey

can be seen with back or side
lighting . She said it pays to
frame purple leafed plant s
where they are framed by
yellow, green or Silver leave s.
because otherwise they can
appear murky.
· Purple leaves occur in
many plants from coleus to
shrubs (smokebush or certain
barbarries) or some tr,ees
such as red maple or purple
beech. The guidelines for
exploiting their coloring. she
said. are the same regardless
of size. Position dark leafed
plants so they catch the early
morning or late afternoon
light . from behind and also
use chartreuse or gray COfl!panions as' framers for their
backdrops.
· Members were reminded
that azaleas like an acid
soiL It was suggested they
be occasionally watered
·with a mixture oftwo tablespoons of vinegar to one
quart of water.
·
Rice gave daily thoughts
for daily needs, and members
responded· to roll call by
reading a poem . Woodard
provided the door prize won
by Jenkins. Chelcie Steams
will host the June·29 meeting.

Coming Friday, July 29, 2005
Th~

Daily Sentinel

Son of

Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis

Pictures must be in by Friday
July 22nd, 2005. Pictures can
be picked up after August 1st,

Complete the fonn below and-enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus.
a $7.00 chargeJor each photograph. lf more than one child is in the picture.
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child . Enclose payment with picture.
Send t o :

The Dailx SentiD.el
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

She attends Rodney Pike
Church of dod near
BidwelL She has participated in ·local community ac tiv. ities such .as March of
Dimes, Relay for Life , and
is a volunteer for mB;ny of
the county school programs.
Mrs. Miller is a public
speaker and is available to
help · with
local , and
statewide events by calling ·
her at (740) 379-9887.

--~------------------~---------------------~~--,
I

Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s):,___________,__________:___ _ ___

City &amp;

State:'-~------------_.__,-----~---

••• The above inrormation will be usffi in the ad. •••

,,
I

Phone Number: ------c;------ Submitted by: --~------- - ~-------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ..J - - - ..

Pro'11d to be aplm of your life.
The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992·2155
• www.mydailysentinel
.com
.
'
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·.

•

'.!005.

PATRIOT - Pat Miller of Elizabeth , - Ashley
and
Patriot was crowned Mrs.' Amber, and has been married
· Gallia County USA; in · to her husband, Doug, for
Mrs. Miller was a runner. up to the crown for Mrs. Ohio
: USA. She won first place in
: the talent category for
; singing a patriotic melody,
·"America the Beautiful," and
: first plac~ for Outstanding
- Community Service. ·
She works as an Avon district manager for Gallia,
: Lawrence, Scioto and Meigs
: counties. She is the mother
.- of three teenage daughters,.

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition .filled
with photographs of ·local
children -·ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the -July 29th issue.
. Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

Tristan Roach

: Miller crowried Mrs. Gallia County for 2005-06

I

'

families at the Tuppers Plain s
halL
Thesday, June 28
RACINE - Racine Area
community Organization will
meet at 6:30p.m. at Star Mill
Park . New members wel come. Potluck.

Church events·

'she was · concerned for the nomics maj.or at Cairo by America," she said. "This
AP DIPLOMATIC WRITER
future of Egypt's reforms University, said she was is the message she wants to
because of the violence thai happy to hear Rice reiterate deliver everywhere." .
CAIRO,
Egypt
has faced "peaceful support- that she is not trying to
Rice also offered a brief
, State ers of democracy."
Secretary
of
· impose democracy.
checklist for democracy to
Condoleezza Rice ·- made a
"President Mubarak has . "I like most the part that · both suppqrters aqd oppo·
forceful case for democracy . unlocked the dQor for change. democracy is never imposed nen.ts of established govin the Muslim world Monday, N0 w, the Egyptian govern·
telling Egypt's conservative m~nt must put its faith' in its and would n~ver be imposed ernments.
governmet)t leaders "the fear own people," Rice said. "The
of free choices can no longer Egy)?tian government must ·
justify the denial of liberty."
fulfill . the promise it has
Rice's remarks were to made to its!eople, and to the
some 700 invited government entire wort , by giving its citofficials, academics and other izens the freedom to choose."
guests at the American
Anti-government 'protesters
University in C~iro. The set-. gathered at Cair.o's highest
ting is notable, both because court.
Egypt plans multiparty elec"The American regime has
tions in the fall and because to be boycotted as long as
the· Bush administration has they are occupying Arab and
made no secret of its dissatis· ·Islamic_lands/ said activist
faction
with
political Abdel Hamid Kandil. "We
progress and the treatment of don't accept any Americans
opposilion figures by the or Israelis visiting Egypt.
government of Egyptian The American regime does
President Hosni Mubarak:
not have. any seriousness in
"For 60 y.ears, my country, democracy.
Today
the United States, pursued !=ondoleezza Rice was talkstability at the expense of ing about free and fair elecdemocracy in this reg ion, tions. How this can be serihere in the Middle East, and ous if there are no candiwe achieved neither," Rice dates and no elections in the
said. "Now, we are taking a first place?''
different ~ourse. We are supAmong those who 'attendWe'll deliver all the local happenings right to your home. Stop by our office
porting the (jemocratic aspi- ed Rice 's speech. Sanaa
and subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for 6 months for on'ly $59.l5 ;and rec;eive
~ations of all people."
Eid. an AUC alumnus and
She noted that President fmmer banker. said the seca FREE comic umbrella*!
Bush, in his second inaugural retary' s talk left her hoping
•
If you are a current Subscriber, you can receive a free umbre lla by extending you; subscription for I year for only $ 11 5.84.
address. said the U.S. would for more .answers . ·
("'Payment muS("t)e made in person at the Daily Sentinel, Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy. Ohio in order to receive your Free comic umbrella.
not ·try to impose an
"The Americans want to
Quantities are limited.
Amei-ican style ·of govern- impose their control on the·
ment on the unwilling and country not only for the sake
r-------------~--------~~-~---,
ihat the goal of his adminis- of democracy." she said. "It
1
·
· - ~
tration was to
others find is our right, and we are very
- -""v""
ery eager to be 'like them m
"Throughout the Middle democracy, but I don 't feel
"Your lf.ometown Newspaper"
I
East· the fear of free of c hoi c ~ that this brings results."
Drop this coupon off in Ollf office at Ill Court St.. Pomeroy. Ohio with your payment and recelve a FREE comic umm:ella.
es can no longer justify the
Moheb . Zaki , a se nior
I
denial of liberty. It is time to advi ser to a pro-US' think
abandon the excuses that are tank, said he wished that '
I
I
0
I have no! .:.en a subscriber in the past 30 days. Enclosed is my
$59.15 for 6 monibs of the Daily Swti11el.
ma&lt;ie to avoid the hard work · Rice 's speech had been
I
. .
I
of democracy," Rice said.
more forcefuL
·
I 0 I currently subscribe 10 the Daily Senti•.el. Enclosed is my payment of S t t5.84 for a !-year subscription.
Rice took· the governments
"People are claimil)g that
I
of Saudi Arabia and Egypt. the United States has no .
Name------------------------------------------------------~1
both close U.S. allies. to task bu siness interfering
in
for cracking down on dissent. Egypt's business," he said.
Address
In Saudi Arabia, three peo- "Actually, the United States.
pie are currently in jail for it has a strategic interest
Phone
1
petitioning the government ' here. Then It is their busi0 Visa
Expiration Date Card*- - - - - - - ''That shou·ld not be a crime ness. also. to see that derrioc·
in any country." she said.
, racy is implemented in ev~ty
0 MasterCard
Expiration Date ·- · .
Card jj
She lauded Mubarak fo r ' place 'in the world." ·
calling for elections but said
lnj y Mohammed, an eCO·
BY ANNE GEARAN

. BY . THE .

The Daily Sentinel

:Community Calendar

Saddam's fare in prison: Com chips,
Raisin Bran but no Froot Loops

. '

•'

HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY July 22. 2005!

�·,.

•

OPINION

· The. Daily Sentinel ·

HANOVER. N.H.- For
a long time. I've wanted to
write an ideas co,lumn not a big ideas column, but
about small. practical ones.
Being away at my 45th
MortOO .
Dartmouth
College
Ko drack
reunion
pw,vides
the
n
e
opportunity,
because
Han over is afflic ted with a
problem that's widespread
.·
over for ·'advice" on in America . .
Specifically. it has terri- read approva l of - · the
'ble cellul~r phone service . clothing being tri~d on . Or
So. idea No. I is for the they wait to pay for the
cellular
industry
in merchandise .. They~c;a-i!.'t
America !0 do whatever ·it stray to the men's depart·
takes to provide service as · ment. as the stores evidentgood as it's reputed to be ly hope t~ey will, for fear
in Europe and many parts of being accused of abandonment.
of Asia .. No dead zones.
Why not give them enterGood connections. No little messages on · your tainment - a nook som~:
where near th ~ dressin~
scree n
reading,
"No
room area with chairs and
Service- SOSOnly.".
some televisions ·t]lrned 10
You may think. "Well. ESPN. ESPN2. the Golf
you ' re in New Hampshire
Channel and mayhe Fox
- the North Woods. You
News'? (OK. ma) he CNN
can't expect cellular .;er- and MSNBC. too I
vice to be perfect." I reply,
Idea No. 3 could help
· "No, in the woods. in re alsave lives. Auto manufacly rural area s. I. don't turers should develop a
expect perfect servil:.e yet. de vice to eliminate those
But this is. a college town, blind spots where-. you·re
and service . shouldn't be
changing lanes but· can't
ava il ab le on one street and see a car approaching from
not available two streets the rear. .
away.!'
Every driver I know say's
And
what
about a prayer of th ank; at' lea;t
Washington. D.C. 0 There once ,a week- I know I do
are dead zones all over - that he or she didn't
town. This is the greatest have a serious accideni
country on Earth. So why changing lane s because the
is cellular se rvice so coast looked clear but waslousy''
n't. I know. I shou ld crane
Idea No. 2 could be a real my neck. but somet imes I
winner for.American (etail- don 't, · and the driver
ing: The women's section s behind me angrily honks. I
of large department stores. swerve .
such as Saks Fifth Avenue.
If high'end automakcrs
Bloomingdale' s
and can pt1t TV cameras on the
Macy's. should provide back of cars to help drivers
something for men io do see people and object s they
while their wives. daugh- · might back into. they can
ters or girlfriends try on surely build a la ne-changclothing.
. ing
warriing
system .
You've see n what hap- Gradually. the price would
pens to men in such stores co me down and it cou ld
now : They sit like zom- become standard on all
bies. waiting to be called tars.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
·General Manager-News Editor .

Congress 'slwll make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the free4om .
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceablJ' to assemble, and to petition
the GOIIernment for ·a redress'·ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

REA ,DER'S VIEW

Eagle~·

200§

Gub thanks qfficers for going beyond

Dear Editor:
Just a few words abotlt the local law enf9rcement in Meigs
County.
As tru&gt;tees of Pomeroy Eagle's Club, we have had close
working relations wit h Chief Mark Proftin and a few of the
other officers. They have.in our view. done their job with a
walk through of our club. answering any calls made to their
immediate attention with· professionalism and respect to our
customers.
We have called and talked to .dispatchers many times for
memqers and ourselves .. and they have always went beyond
their duty to help. especially dispatcher Tammy Smith. We.
sometime s forget what a thankless job they have but when we ·
need them we ~xpect them to be there.
.
We are not speaking for ail members of our club. but we
wish they would suppon our local pollee depanment and sheriff's department as we do. We thank both depanments for a
job well done. ·
Robert ~obie
Robert Boster
. Dick D1igan
(Trustee's of Eagles C~b)

·-

Ideas No~. -+ and 5 con- cient. a nd pay for itself
cern traffic in Washington. CI'Cntuall)&lt;through reduced
D.C.' Remember
how ga,oline usage and lower
Wa&gt;hingtonians guffawed tailpipe emi.s ;ions.
Idea No. 6 cou ld help
at the 1995 movie "The
Americun
Pre~ident." en~ure th at our beloved
I
B .
w 1en
Annette
entng, Washington Na!ionals are
playing an environme ntal locally owned: · M.ake the
lobbyi 'st. told Michael team a publicly owned
Douglas. the president. company by s~lling stock ..
thm she. was late arriving . As thin ~s stand. there's a
from Capiio l · Hil l for a
· ~
danger that Major League
White House · meeting· Baseball. which now owns
, because "the traffic is terri- the team. wi 11 se ll it to
ble at Dupont Circle." some out sider who has lots
Well. you still don't :go
from the Hi ll to the White of money but little loyalty
Hou&gt;&lt;;; by way of Dupont to the Dis trict. ·
C ircle. but ever since the
"P ubl icly
owned··
Secret Service closed emphatically does not
Pennsvlvania Avenue in, n\ean tiwned by the city. It
fro1it of the White House means that the · fans of
and E Street behind it. traf- Washington would buy
fie is always terrible:
siock to help l a~a l bidders
My ..itle~ 'is , to reopen E match any 'Outside offer.
Street to relieve the con- (It' s not 'that unusual:
ge~rion. If the sectirit y. peo- Football's ' · Green
Bay
p\e say iJ·s till safe becau'se Packers are owne.d by local
1.1 truck bomber could dam- .stockholders. and basket1lue the White House. the ball's Boston Celtics once
t1~~cb could be banned. the sold stock.) And even if the
road could be depressed or amount of . money raised
a trullic tunnel cou ld be was not enormous
built. Admittedly thi s though I think it well could
. would
require
some be- it would demonstrate
.expense , but I believe it a degree of. local · popular
would be worth it. ·
· suppori· that could tilt th e
Idea :--lo. 5 is a lot sim- ' balance
when
Major
pier. It makes abso lut ely League Ba sebal l decides
no .;en;e for traffic li ghts which bid to accept.
to operate as they normally
·Idea No. 7 is a bigger one
would when sec urit y or that I'll write a co lumn
construction work · has about ,\!hen 1 ge t back.
changed traffic patterns at When 1 was in college.
inter&gt;ection; . This is a after the Ru ssians launched
problem now at 17th and
Sputnik. Congress , passed
Penn&gt;Yivania
Avenue the 1958 Na ti onal Defen se
North~· est · near the White .
House and Con.st itution Education Act to enc.ourand First Street Northeast age more. yo ung people to
near the Capito l.
study science, math, engiSomeday. one hopes neering. foreign. languages
. soon . American cities. will and area studies. After
instal l sensors at all sign if- Sept. II. 200 I. and facing
icant intersections that wii.l high-tech challenges from
monitor the I'Oiume of traf- China and India . we need
fie in various directions to do it again.
and adju st the tlow inte lli(Monon Kondrade is
gemly. It will be costly up execuri•·e edi10r of Roll
front. but it will also make Call, rhe netL&lt;paper of
transportation more effi- Capiro/ Hill . J ·

' TODAY. IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday. June 21. the 172nd day of 2005. There
are 193 days left , in the year. Summer arrives at 2:46 a.m:
Eastern Daylighi Time:
Ten years ago·: Dr. Henry Foster lost a crucial Senate vote in
his b.id to become surgeon general as only 57 senators voted
to cut off debate. three short of the 60 needed. (One last vote
the next day also fell shon.)
Fi've years ag 0 : North Korea promised to refrain from longrange missile tests after the Uriited States lifted some economic sanctions against it. Some 55 years after World War II
ended. 22 Asian-American veterans received the Medal of
Honor for bravery on the battlefield during a White House
ceremony.
· One year ago: The SpaceShipOne rocket plane punched
· through Eanh's atmosphere. then glided to a landing in
California's Mojave Desen in the first privately financed
manned spaceflight. Connecticut Gov. John Rowland
resir,ned amid graft allegations and a federal investigation.
Thought for Today: ''Th'ree o:clock is always too late or too
early for anything you want to do." - Jean-Paul Sanre,
French philosopher ( 1905-1980)

•

Daifur: How many more will have to die?
In hi s book, "Night,"
women. then often astraabout· Hitler 's · "firial ' solucized for life in that cuition,'' Elie Wiesel asked a
ture. tell afterwards of the
go,'ernment's militiamen.
question that has never
bee.n
satisfactorily ·
the Janjaweed. saying duranswered, and now rever- ·
Nat
tng the rapes: "You are
berates as the genocide in
Hentoff
black people. We want to
. wipe you out.''
Darfur continues: "How
could it be possible for
----•
Moreover. this genocidal
them to burn children and
gol'ernment with which we
for the world to remam
are restoring relations.
silent?"
afier the Senate over- Kristof notes. "ha s also
New York Times CO'lum- whelmingly . passed the • imprisoned rape victims
nisi Nicholas Kristof. who Darfur Acco.untabilit y Act. who became pregnant _
keeps returning to Darfur, establishing a no-tly zone for adultery. Even those
trying to make it impossi- over Darfur and freezin2 who · simply seek medical
ble for the world to say the assets here' of officials help are harassed and
that, alas, it didn' t know involved in the genocide. a humiliated.''
what was happening there, White House letter· sue1 partially understand
cessfully
stripped the se . w.hy President Bush. clear- ·
wrote on June 7:
.
f
"Refugees fleeing to sanctiOns rom. a. suppleI)• . a . man of decent
b'll
I
Kalma from a village menta appropnattons ' ·I instincts. is no longer pubcalled Saley.a described The UPI story quoted licly. .Passionately conhow nine boys were seized Sudan 's
murderous demning the Khartoum
by the Janjaweed, stripped President Omar Bashir as government. Sudan's intelnaked and ti'ed up, their being pleased that there ligence a,ge nts have been
noses and ears cut off and has been a "positive providing the CIA with
· their eyes gouged out. change" in the Bu sh valuab le information on
They were then shot dead ~~~~~~~ation's position terrorists in Muslim countries. Moreover. they have
and left near a public well.
Nearby villagers got the
The same report also told actually gone after AI
of a meeting in Kharto.um Qaeda suspects and turned
message and fled. " .
A letter writer 'to Ythe ·between
U.S.
Deputy them over 10 us.
Times, Frank;· Skraly. after Secretary of State Robert
This all iance with mass
.
h
h
.Zoellick
and
Sudan's
·
·
d
rea mg ot er. sue reports
· mur d erers an d raptsts
IS
from Darfur from Mr. · Foreign Minister Mustafa the very . definition of
· f . sa1'd : " Wh et her Osman Ismail. The latter rea 1po 111!
· ' k . b ut at w hat
Knsto
you lean left or right, stop- said "the two agreed for a price~ Not only with
ping the killing in Darfur Sudanese government del- regard to the world's definsee ms like a no-braine r. egation to visit Washington it ion of the United S.tates.
1 at era 1 but also to our definition of·
What political risk would soon to d .Iscuss b'l

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EDITOR
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·addressing issues, not personalities.

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there be m

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relations in more detail in

ourselves''

As

Leonard

intervention in Darfur. up
to a million people may be
dead by the end of thi s
y,ar.
Ah, but the International
Criminal Court has opened
an investigation into war
crimes i.n Darfur. The ICC
has collected thousands of.
documents and many wit·h
·
1
nesses . a ong wtt aena 1

g: =~·: : ::::::: :.~~~~

Hartis. Elot 15
(lottllde =Brenda Otwis, Ex116
c:-Jeln:.: Jtid&gt;j Clart&lt;. Ext. 10

-

g:monlh . .........;:!.70
70
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Circulation
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~ibOISSI10uldromtin-.:o&lt;hcl

"'"" DailySidd. No subscription ttv
i n . , _ . - . , home

carrierserviceosavaiiOOie.'

Mail Subscription
lnoklo Meigs County

General Manager

13 Weeks

Charlene Hoefl!CI1. Ex1 12

26 Weeks
52 Weeks

. '32.26
. . . . ... ' 64.20
.' 127 11

E-mail:
news@ mydaltysentlnel .com

Oublde Meigs County
13 Weeks .
. .. ' 53.55
26 Weeks
· 52 Weeks

~r~!:.~en

the two coun'"
.
.. e are restonng relatfio ns with a . govemmem
1
u 11y com ptcit
as
Nt'cbolas Kr!'stof deta!'led
in the JUne 5 New York
Times- in "a systematic
campaign of rape to terrorize civilians and drive
them from ' Arab larids a poThlicey ohfarapeb.''
·~
er
ve een man~ ·
~~~t~~necon~·ei'n :it~r~~~~ 'reports of Janjaweed ganir
· atrocities In Darfur has rapes of women leaving
become decidedly less camp to ga1:her firewood
intense. (For example. fot cooking . The. raped

Seniot'Cilizenrates

"""' oermii!Bd

•

tssue
earn President
Bush accolades from the
holiest of the right. the
~:ru nchiest of the left and
b d
·
bemotwsteen. esvoerwyhoat yare wine
waiting for?"
On the same day that letter appeared. a United .
Press ln~rnational dispatch from Sudan's capital.
Khartoum. might have
I · d h 1h

Deity ..... . . .. .........50'

Advertising
~-=Dave

Obituaries

.1 10710
.... ,...... '214.21 ·

'

'

''

I

BY AMY

Teresa LaComb

J.

within the joint.
This system can
be u'ed in addition to Magnetic
Re s o na n c e
Imaging (M Rl i
or alone to deter- '
mine the next
plan of action for
Robart
each
patient.''
McCiea1y, , added
. Dr.
D.O.
McEldowney.
The scope . is primarily being
used in the knee and shoulder
and some of the potential benefits of the lnner.Yue systerri
include - · providing a dynaniic
and active diagnostic test in the
hands of the physician . .more
accurate th an the MR! (particularl y with diagnosis of canilage
damage. articular surface damage and assessing arthritis severity). the ability to view the injec'lion location for cortisone or
h yaluroni.c acid injection s. the
ability to acquire 1111 immediate
diagnosis, diagnosi s .. consists of
one needle poke (excluding local
anesthetiC) and the patient may

lEACH

DIRECTOR OF MARKETING &amp; PR
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

BELPRE - Teresa LaComb. R5. of 271-+ Beach Dr..
POINT
PLEASANT
Belpre. died Saturday. June 18. 2005. at her re&gt;idence.
' She was born Jul y 1-+. 1919, in Colorado Springs. Colo .. Pleasant Valley Hospital recently
daughter of the late Daniel and Rose Diecero Diamond. She unveiled another ''innovative
first" for the non-profit commiJwas a member of St. Hean Catholic Church.
Surviving are five sons: Vincent (Donna) LaComb. Anthony riit.y hospital - the lnnerVue
LaComb-. Phillip (Ann) LaComb. Denny Coppers and Wayne Diagnostic Scope System - the
Coppers: th ree daughters: Mary LaComb (Russ Hunt ). Shirley latest technology in microHayle. and Gail Knight: a brother. Felix Diamond: several arthroscopic ' surgery, according
graQdchildrcn and ftve great grandchildren .
to AI Lawson, JD, c;hief execu.
·
Services will be held at 10 a.m. on Tuesday. June 21. 2.005, · tive officer. ·
at Whtte-Schwarzel Funeral Home with Rev. Fr. David
The scope system is curre ntly
Huffman otliciating. Burial will follow in Coolville Cemetery. being used by Raben McCleary.
Friends may call from 2 to -+ and 6 to 8 p.m. on Monday at DO and Anthony J. McEldowney.
the funeral home .
MD. onhopedic surgeons ar the
Point
Pleasant
Orthopedic
In stitute. The physicians' oftice is
located in the Pleasant Valley
Offite
Hospital
Medical
EVANSVILLE, Ind . - John R. Miller. 69. of Evansville. Building.
Ind. , died Friday. June 17. 2005 at his residence.
.
"This enhanced, state-of-the-an
He pwned and operated G &amp; M Service Company. John was
imaging system allows for a more
· a member of the Sons of American Legion Post #44 in ' accurate, · less invasive" proceNewburgh. John very much enjoyed traveling and antique
cars. He was a friend to everyone he met.
·
.· dute." explained Dr. McCleary.
"This equipment is de signed
John is survived by his sons. Scott Miller (Ronda) of Destin.
. Fla ., Tim Miller (Debbie) of Newburgh. Ind .. and Virgil Miller for use in a diagnostic en' iron{Glenna) of Cincinnati; grandchildren: Jarrod and Justin ment to evaluate conditions
Miller of Destin. Fl.a.. and Payton and Hanna Miller ,of
Newburgh. Ind.: hi s companion of 15 years, Judy Happel of
Evansville , Ind .. and her family, ChUck and Kathy Dyer and
thei~ children. Kri sty and Marcus of Mt. Vernon, Ind., Steve
and Debbie Hochstetler and their children. Melissa, Adam and
Kyle of Evansville. Ind. , Su san Parker (fiance Stan Clark) and
PQMEROY
Meigs
Ted Hatfield. Jr. to Brenda
children Megan. Kristin and Benjamin of Evansville, Ind., and County Recorder Kay . Hill Jill Jinks. deed.' Rutland.
l'v1ike and Sarah Happel of Appleton, Wi se.; and best friend, posted the following transfers
Beatrice Carmollee Fink,
·
in real estate:
Dwayne Evans of Mt . Juliet. Tenn.
deceased. to William Fink.
Services were held Monday, June 20, 2005 at ,Alexander
Kathryn L. Evans. Glen E. affidavit.
Village
of
West Chapel, officiated by Reverend Ernest Stair with mlf•r- · I Evans, to Jason A. Harris. Middlepon .
Heather
Harris.
"deed.
ment at Pme Grove· Church Cemetery in West Virginia.
Helen Louise Smith. Helen
Memorial contributions may be made to Riley Hospital for Salisbury.
Louise Mos sman , Heleri
Wenda A. Wilfong to Gary Louise Stobart. to David
Children. Condolences · may · be made online at
www.mem .com.
E. Church. · Rebecca . E. Bumgardner.
David
Arrangements by Alexander West Chapel. 2100 W. lllinois Church, deed. Olive.
Bumgardner Trust, Shirley
St., Evansville, Ind. 47712.
·
Christopher M. Cox to Bumgardner.
Shirley
Penny Smith, deed, Village Bumgardner, deed. Village of
of Middlepon.
Middleport.
Raben S. Parke( to James
Countrywide Home Loans.
Inc.. Mortgage , Electronic E. Keesee. Linda E. Keesee.
Registration Systems. to deed.
Darrell R. Bralley. judgment
Edward A. Crooks, Judith
el)try.
A. Crooks. to Columbus
Grover C. White. Jr., Elsie Southern Power, easement,
COOLVILLE- Helen Bragg, 86, of Buckeye, Lake, died White. to Tuppers Plains- Village of Middlepon.
Sunday, June 19, 2005. at her residence.
.Tara Hupp, Brian K. Hupp.
Chester Water Di s.trict. righ t
She was born May 26, 1918, in Bommer, W.Va .. daughter of · of way, Chester.
Jr., to Columbus Southern
the late John Wesley and Elizabeth Ferrell SLack. '
Kathryn Rob son to TP- Power, easement, Sutton.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Wednesday, June 22. 2005, CWD, right of way, Bedf(/rd
Meigs County Community
at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville with Wilbur
Edward M. Wood to Home Improvement Corporation to
Slack officiating. Burial will follow at Coolville Cemetery.
National
Bank.
deed , Columbus Southern Power,
, Friends may caii'Jrom 6' to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral Sutton/Village of Syracuse.
easement. Oran.ge.
home.
Savilla Barnett, C.A .
Florence Burchett. Bill
to
James
Brannon,
Burchett.
to Ohio Power Co..
Barnett,
.
I
Virginia Brannon, judgment easement. Rutland.
Ronald S. Rife, Marjorie A.
entry, Olive.
Rife,
to Rife Brothers Farm.
Mildred
,
Humphreys
to
POMEROY- A memorial service for Nanga Roberts who
Norman
Randolph
Inc.,
deed.
Salem.
died June 5 will be held at I :30 p.m Saturday, June 25. in
Larry E. Rife, Frankie Dale
Humphreys. Claude Jackson
Trinity Church, Pomeroy.
Humphreys, deed, Salisbury. Rife, to Rife Brothers Farm,
Grant A. Newland, Linda Inc. , deed, Salem.
Joseph L. Rife, Marion E.
S. Newland, to Jeremy Casto,
Sheena L. Casto, deed, ~ife, to Rife Brothers Farm,
Inc., deed, Salem.
.
Chester.
Steven Craig, Gloria J.
Maxine E. Gaskill to
Craig,
to
Citifinancial . Stephen H. Coats, deed,
Mortgage, sheriff's deed, Village of Middleport.
Merle E. Parsons, Pamela
POMEROY- Meigs County Shenff Robert Beegle reP')rt- Villase of Middleport.
G.
Parsons, to Warren
.
Ciufinancial
Mongage,
to
ed the following arrests:
• Many Pierce, ,Rutland, on a charge of violating a protec- Sherri Hart. Randy Hart. Calaway. deed, Orange.
Janet Ruth Jordan, Charles
deed, Village of Middleport.
tion order.
•
,
.
·H.
Jordan, Janet Ruth Stoban,
William
Milton
Stobart,.
• E.lby Nye, Jr., Pomeroy, on a charge of domestic violence.
to
David
Bumgardner, David
Stoban,
Sondra
William
M.
• Connie Akers, Point Pleasant, W.Va., on a charge of
Bumgardner
, Trust, Shirley
Stobart,
to
David
domestic violence.
Shirley
David Bumgardner,
• Brian Bailey, Long Bottom, on a charge of domestic vio- Bumgardner,
deell,
Village
of
Bumgardner,
Trust,
Shirley
Bumgardner
lence .
Middleport.
Bumgardner,
Shirley
• Marion Snyder, Racine, on a probation violation.
Beneficial Ohio, Inc. to
• Michael Westfall, Coolville, on a bench warrant alleging Bumgardner Trust, deed,
E. Vance, Margaret R.
Low.ell
Village
of
Middl~pon.
domestic violence.

John R. Miller

walk out of
the o ffice
immediat~­

ly after the
procedure .
Ihe abilit1
to determine
the t~ pe
,__..;,;.-..;_, 0
f
Anthony J. i 111 p 1" n 1
McEldowney, 10 pro·
M.D.
· ,·ide th.c
be,st treatment · for · a
patient. the patient
remains in the doctor\
office- eliminatin~ the """, need of an offsite \1 Rl
and. can be less inva;i,·e
alternatil'e to explorato·
ry surgery for patiel\t'
that have had metal
imp lan ted.
· For more information about th e
I n n 'e.' r " u e
Diagnostic Scope
please · 2ontaet th e Point
Plea&gt;a 'n t
lnnerVue Diagnostic
Orthopedic
Scope System
In stit ute.
(304 1

MEIGS CO:UNTY POSTS TRANSFERS

Deaths

Helen Bragg

Nonga Roberts

For the Record

Arrests

-

t~e~~p~r:e~si:d.~e~n;t~-~---:1~th~e~s~t~at~e~il~~~::~~~~~~:~!and its facilities.
~he~ ~ marke~ are
h~ce ·

to·

. e~ ~dBers eep
!Story alJve, sal
nnon.
.
,

R.aclne
•
from Page A1

Rocky Mountain Bluegrass
will perfOrm on s~ at 5 p.m.
andagainat7p.m. LastChanz
6
~fro~ill8 ~~~!\~p;.m.
The day will conclude at 10
p.m. with fireworks by the
ftre department.

'

invocation

V~nce. deed. Villa£e of
Rutland.
Kimberl y
A.
Davi's.
Kimberly A. Marcinko.
Dennis Marcinko. to Mark A.
Griffin. Tanya M. Griffin.
deed. Orange .
David A. Carsey, Terri L
Carsey. to Jon D. Macknight.
Anita K. Macknight. deed.
Sutton.
~
Steven H. Dunfee. Teresa
R. Dunfee. to Charles Bryant.
Sue Bryant. deed. Village of
Middlepon .
Nancy J. King to Ron. G.
Scheer, Dorothy A. Scheer,
deed, Salisbury.
Nancy J. King to Steven J . .
Pape, Rel:&gt;ecca A. Pape , Ron
G,. Scheer. Dorothy A.
Scheer, deed: Salisbury. ·
Raben C. billard to Scotty
L. Baker, Deborah R. Baker..
Jill A.
Dillard . deed.
· Salisbury.
Family Home s. · Inc . to
Catherine
Stotts. deed.
.
Sali sbury. .
M,ichael
T
Rossiter.
Draginja Rossiter. to Kenneth
Young , deed , Olive .
· Gertrude Fugate. Frank
Fugat~. to Eva Mae Stoecker.
Eva Mae Emerson, affidavit,
Village of Pomeroy.
William
Gledhill,
deceased, to ·william Gledhill
Revocable Trust, Thomas W.
King, certificate, Village of
Rutland.
Castella
Gledhill,
deceased. to Castella M .
Gledhill Revocable Trust.
Garland Gledhill, certificate,
· Village of Rutland.
·
· William
Gledhill
Revocable Trust, Thomas W.
King, to Garland E. Gledhill,
deed, Village of Rutland.
Castella
M.
Gledhill
Revocable Trust to Garland
E. Gledhill , deed, Village of
Rutland.
Merritt F. Gilkey. deceased.

Federal !\ational Mortgage
Corp.. deed. .Vi II age of
Rutland .
Bruner Land Co. , Inc. , to
Wen.dy Wilfong , deed. Olive·.
Charles Stoban. Diane J.
Stobart.
to
Dayid
Bumganl" er.
.
Davip
Bumgardner Trust. Shirley
Bumgard ner.
Shirley
Bumgardner Trust. deed,
Village of Middlepon.
David H. Mohler to David
H. Mohler. Jenn illee W.
Mohler. deed. Chester.
Emileen E. Sayre 10 Brenda
Lee Randolph. Sandra Kay
Davi s. David Allen Sayre,
deed. Sutton.
Diana S..Carpenter. Ronald ·
B. Carpenter. Anita M.
Musser. Jefferv S. Musser,
John W. Poner.'Teresa Poner,
Mark D. Poner. Misty Poner,
to John W. Porter. deed,
.Sutton.
Diana S. Carpenter. Ronald
B. Carpenter. Anita M.
Musser. Jeffery S. Musser,
John W. Porter. Teresa Poner.
Mark D. Poner. Misty Porter,
to Anita M. Musser. deed. ·
Sutton.
Diana S. Carpenter. Ronald
B. Carpenter. An ita M.
Porter. Jeffery S. Porter.
John W Pone(, Teresa Poner,
Mark D. Poner. Misiy Poner,
to Mark D. Porter, Misty
Porter, deed Sutton.
·
Diana S. Carpenter, Ronald
B. Carpenter, Anita M.
Porter. Jeffery S. Porter,
John W. Poner, Teresa Porter.
Mark D. Poner, Misly Porter,
to Diana S. Carpenter.
Ronald B. Carpenter, deed.
Su.tton.
·
Ronald B. Carpenter, Anita .
M. Porter, Jeffery S. Poi;[er,
John W. Porter. Teresa Porter,
Mark D. Poner, Misty Poner,
to · Diana S. Carpenter,
Ronald B. Carpenter, deed,
Sutton.
·
to

.Coin dealer told bureau of investment uncertainty

MarLrer

for Human Rights asks: ~:~~~efr~~na::i~v~~i'nt;~
··How many people ·will
..
f
.d
have to die before we ·do accomp 1Ice o genoct e as
enough in .Darfur?''
C~e were under President
S 1·h" B k
·
linton m Rwanda .. The
a
I
.
00 er. execullve
VO!'ces
of our clergy. of all
director of the Washington- ,
based Africa Action, ~!'ys: denomination s. should also
"The President of the U.S. resound.
has recogniz~d that geno(Nm Hemoff is a nationcide is occurr ing. but ally renoll'ned awlwrin 011
apparently there are more 1he Fim ·Amendmenr and
pre&gt;sing matters req uiring rhe Bill of Righrs · (Jnd
h,·, attent,·on. We mus' t ask. aUihor or sner'al books.
what could possibly .be including~ "The War on rhe
more pressing than gena- Bill pf Riglus and rhe
cide'' Unless there is an Gar he ring
Resisrcmce"
immediate. inter~ational (S~ven Stories Pres.1. 20031

• . I

PVH offers new diagn~stic equpiment

Marriage licenses

messages. to

ThF: Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentincl.com

21, 2005

photographs of de stroyed
homes and v.illages, but ·
perhaps not photographs of
the. contif\uing gang rapes .
The ICC also has a sealed
,
list of 51 ~uspected, war
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
· ·na1s. Among th em a
County Probate
Court to Matthew Paul
Manin; 29, and
CLEVELAND
(AP)
cqmt
r
e
-.
.k
1
b
ft
..
·
1
f
h
Amber
Dawn
VanSickle,
24,
both
of
Reedsville,
and
Randall
B
~
th
state
agreed
to
l
Y to e 0 tc!a so t e
C
M'rran da Lynn B
kl ey, 20 , invest
e ore in rare
e coins, the coin
s1uedanese
Lin
Moore,
31,
oolville.
and
.
uc
1
Long Battorn. The m
· formation
· was mcorrect
·
1y report ed m
·
B 1 h. govern
Kh men ·
dealer ·'ick.ect to nin the fund
u t e
artoum gov. Friday's edition.
told the Ohio Bureau of
ernment refuses
to
accept
C ompensat1on
.
.
Workers ,
ICC 's jurisdiction and has
there would be no way 10
declared it will not permir
Rep. Jimmy Stewan joined check how much the investany citizen to testify before
~
Parker and Britton in com- ment was worth.
the court; and it will never
ments on the importance of
Coin dealer Tom Noe- a
tUI':l over any Sudanese for
from Page A1
recording on tnarkers the his- prominent Republican donor
a f!)reign trial. Although
~~7ti~~r~~r~~!~o~~ ~~S~
also told the bureau that
·alleged peace negotiations
the local history office of the many people come to the no independent pany would '
have
now
resumed
Ohio Historical Society, whO county fair and so many will evaluate coin deals and that
between Khartoum and
conunended Parker for com- look at this marker and be . his business could profit by
rebel forces in Darfur.
ing up with a Make a reminded of the history of selling coins back to the state.
Kh artoum has broken
. Difference Day project worthy . this place,". said Stewan.
"The most inexperienced
f
the
State
Soc'erv's
recorn
·
b
·
fl
investment
officer
every agreement it has
o
' •J
• . Also speaking
ne y was
f
.. would run ·
made.
mendation for grant approval. Ed Holler, president of the away rom thiS mvestmentas
He gave a history of the Me1gs
·
County Agncu
· 1ru ra1 fast
Congress has tried to act
F as possible,"
'fi said
d Terry
bl"
meaningfully. But only
historical markers in the Society. On behalf of the fail a:~~~~~~. certt .le P~ tc
hundreds of . thousands.
shape of Ohio and the role board he thanked the Meigs
Noe is now under investieven m1.111. 0 ns. of dt' rect
which local societies take in Historical Society for all the
·
d
&amp;
•
th
·
galion
after.
hi
.
's
attorrie~ sm.·d
suggeste text tOr
work done to Improve · e

i ---..J-Edl110t: ::,~:r;i:~~~~e,x;-t2---;:=''~!:;.::;;~~;;:;;~~-+-t-1a;]RThli]~iffi5t~o~n~~-~,~~~:~to-re~l6re-re+atffiffi----r==='="-::-tc'-r.CC~·~,.c--"and-Congr~s
u n&gt;tem o Phy.stc.tans

:::::=:::::'s':~~~~~ 3

Tuesday, June

From celtphones to.trqffic lights: seven ideas

The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, June .21,
'

.'

'

PageA4

that $10 nullio)l to $1

reviewing its inves~ent policy and whether it had
enough people to monitor
investments.
In 1998, Noe t.old the
bureau that the coin-trading
industry was unregulated and ·
that fund managers could
proftt from coin transactions.
"The terms and conditions
in connection with such sales
will not be subject to review
by any independent third
pany and it will '00! be negotiated at arin' s length, but will
be determined solely by the

Dlll-

·'13~~en-if~f":Th.~~:;:;,;':,';'h,~~~-~~
fund. The bureau has

~iddl~~~ar:.e~.reception in
th ldl
,.
"ld
eo og camn was ,,e .

.,
All activities except the
parade .and barbecue will be
held in Star Mill !"ark.
Refreshments will be available throughout the evening
including hot ' dogs , ribs,
tacos in a ba~. and lemonade.

him $55 million since
toinvestincoinstohedgeits
investments in stock$ and
bonds.
B
k
· J
·
ureau
spo
esman
eremy
Jackson said the bureau is

txiCa~:~ :s~b~:: :~

fttOUD ID BE APAKI'
OFYOOR lJFE.

foot space. To reserve a

11Jr DtliJJ s-ilwl

2~~- ~~~~~~a:~~;

other information, individuals. may also call Han.

S h •iH rodq • 99Z-2U5
~--"'--'
--~....---kco.

-! '

managers," Noe wrote in hi s
bid to invest the bureau· s
money.
. Former bureau administrator James Conrad approved
the agreement with Noe.
Conrad resigned in May after
learning that money was
missing from the coin fund.
Capital Coin was not
required to provide audited
financial statements.
The bureau 's internal auditor did review the deal and
raised questions about it. The
bureau. though. continued to

I 0
.

ftAC&amp;J.III C:AifBft "AG CAIPift

...

• - - •.o·a-~~aa•ll
- · - -~- - _
.. _.__C•IPI.
_..,_.. • . . , _ •
•
...... I
Ill'
·U' . . . .
w
"
t

.....

..............•
,
Clll . . . . . . . .

b

I . . .l

:

a

It' 7' I I

I

2

us •'

invest in the fund.
' Records show the bureau's
chief final)cial officer. Robert
Cowman. se nt Noe a letter,
advising him how to respond
to the internal audit, The
Plain
Dealer
reported
Mondav.
The next day. Noe sent a
response to the bureau that
matched Cowman's suggestions. the newspaper said.
Cowman said ~1onday that
he could not comme n.1
becau&lt;e of the ongoing investigation .

�'

'

..

.• '

·'

PageA6

.·

OHIO
Patriotism motiVates surgeon tO join Army at 56
The Daily
Sentinel
.
. .

CLEVELAND (AP) Hands that have perfo.rmed
thousands of delicate heirt
operations soon will learn 10
handle an M-16·rifle.
.
Dr. Robert Stewart has
' enlisted in the Army, leaving
behind 23 years of surgery
· for life as a .lieutenant colonel
on active duty.
The 56-year-old prominent
heart surgeon known for
· leading manY'[ransplants will
leave University Hospitals of
. Cleveland on Sept. I· for II
weeks of officer basic training. at Fort Sam Houston in
..
,. San Antonio. .
After that, he and his wife.
Denise, 51, will go wherever
the Army sends them for the
· next four years .. lt could be an
Army medicat'f·tenter state. side or abroad. r \ ..
"It 's going . to sound like .
tlag-waving, but Sept. II
really bothered· me," Stewart
said. The son of a decorated ·
World War II Army machine
gunner asked himself what he
had done for his country.
·
"I have benefited tremendously as a citizen, but I've
never reaUy given back," he
said.

. Tuesday, June

.

.

.

. ·,

.,

•

Stewart's enlistment is rare ing room.
Stewart missed ~erving in
for someone of his age and
stature. Information about the Vietnam. He was a Wayne
number of cardiothoracic sur- State University medical stu,
geons 'in the U.S. Army was dent in his home state of
.unavailable.
Michigan, which kept him
In 2000, Dr. William out of the lottery. ·
"
DeVries. who implanted the
Stewart. who has probably
first permanent artificial performed 11 ,000 heart operheart in Seattle dentist ations and 500 transplants in ,,
Barney Clark . joined as a 57, · hi s career. said it was "time for
year-old reservist - not as an a new challeng e. Because
active senior officer as . preverttive heart care ·has
Stewart has done .
' improved and .cardiologists
It was more than a year ago now do procedures that only
when Stewart stopped into surgeons once dtd., ~tewart
the
office
of Romild said his job is less necessary
University ·. in a hospital-rich community
Dziedzicki, "
Hospitals· senior viCe presi· like Cleveland.
"It's time to feel needed
dent and chief nursing officer. as well as ari Army again. rather than showing
· colonel.
·
up, doing a service that
When . Stewart told the you're not sure somebody
·colonel he wanted to join. "I . else can't do ' '
Stewart, 6-foot-2 with the
wanted to pinch myself,." said .
Dziedzicki. who ad minis- !(!an look of the runner he is,
tered the oath to Stewart at seems fit. But he acknowlThursday's ceremony.
edged:'feelirig a bit old while
After the 200 I terrorist waiting with other recruits
attacks; "We just wanted to for physicals at the Military
go over there and help," .said Entrance Processing Station
Stewart 's wife. a certified in Broadview Heights. ·
registered nurse assistimt
'The average age
who met her future husband excluding me - was about
in. a Cleveland Clinic operat- 18 1/2," he said.

' AP Photo/The Plain Dealer, Thomas Ondrey

University Hospitals of Cleveland cardiothoraCic su'rgeon Dr. Robert Stewart. left, embraces his
daughter, 1\ayla Stewart, after hi_§ U.S, Army commissioning ceremony at the Case Western
Reserve UrJiversity in Cleveland . Thursday June 9. Stewart. 5·6 , who never served in the armed
forces, became a lieutenant colonel. He said he took the step out of patriotism.
Stewart , who . •'has ne\•er
been in the military. took his
oath of seryice last week just
around the corner from his

. Federer good at Wimbledon, Page B6·., ·
Win escapes Tiger, Page B6

21, 2005

office s
at surgery division. Previou sly.
sixth ' floor
Lakeside l{ospiial , .where he · he set up hemt transplant proco-direct s
University grams at UH as well" as at the
Hospital s'
cardiothoracic Cleveland Clinic.

ANDREW

WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOU.SE CORRESPONDENT

tare Sunday, the petroleum
industry gets two years to
come up with a plan for how
· they, should be taxed under
the new system .
The industry argued that
gas is already subject 'to
numerous ~tate and federal
taxes, including a new 2 cent
gasoline tax !aking effect
July ·t .
·"Ninety-five percent of
the price of the produci is
· alre.a dy in it by the time you
reach the street. " said Ro~er
Dreyer, president of the
Ohio Petroleum Marketers
and Convenience Store
AssociatiOI). "If you figure
the tax on our gross sales.
some of our people wi II
have to .borrow money to
pay the tax."
James . Stoll , who own s
Bag-n-Save Foods. Inc .. in
Dover, with his wife and
five daughters, said he has
even lower profit margins
than gas stations.
· Sroll, 65. estimated he 'II
pay $20,000 in the new com. mercia! activities tax for
every ·$1 0 million in sales.
''All we'd have to do Is $12
mjllion to be equal to what
our property tax is now."
Stoll _said Monday. He
wouldn't divulge annual"

. COLUMBUS - Grocers
and companies that sell gasoline both fought for an
exemption from the state's
new business tax on sales,
arguing they would suffer
because of thin protit margins. Gasoline won by reasoning the tax could be paid
multiple times from the retinery to the pump.
Grocers are now considering their options. including a
legal challenge on .constitu'
tiona! grounds.
"It's ironic that the legislators are more sensitive to the
. cost of what people put in
their .:ars than what they put
in their hodies," Jason
Wetzel, · vi&lt;.:.e president of
governmental relations for
lhe
Ohio
Grocers
Association, said Monday.
The tax debate is part of
sweeping changes to Ohio's
tax system contained in the
·two-year, $51 billion state
budget up forfinal approv.al
in the House and Senate
this week.
The proposal by Gov. Bob
- Taft replaces the current 8.5
percent business tax on proftts, criticized as too high and.
full of -corporate giveaways.
with a low tax of 0.26 percent
on sales by a broader variety .
of businesses.
Under the plan approved

Local Stocks
ACI- 55.15
AEP .- 35.90 .
·Akzo - 39.55
Ashland Inc:. - 70.14
AT&amp;T ·- 19.38 .

.BU-13.87
Bob 'Evans - ,22.74
BorgWamer - 54.10
Champion - ,4.20
Channing Shops - 9.3o
City Holding - 34.68

Col-48.00
DG .- 20.19
DuPont - 48.79
Fedtiral Mogul - .83
USB- 29.32
Gannett -74.98 '
Ge!leral Electric - 36.28
GKNLY -4.85
Halley D&amp;VIdson- 49.50

JPM- 36.05
Krocer- 17.69
Ud.-21.76
NSC :_ 32.45 .
Oak Hill Financial .,....

27.60 '

BBT- 40.22
'Peoples - 26.44
~-56.0

p,..,.,., -

10.30
Rocky Boots - 29.78
RO Shell -: 63:34
sse- 24.07

sales. but said its substantial~ Harris.
an
Ashland
ly higher than $12 million.
Republican. said Sunday.
"How do we cover the
But Democratic Rep . Dale
increased taxes ?" Stoll said . Miller of Cleveland argued
"ll 's not something we can it was inconsistent t.o tax
just add to the customer's grocers mid not the petrolebill. So we either find a way urn" industry.
to reduce expenses. or we
If a lawsuit is filed by a ·
raise prices. 'and we really grocer. it would. focus .on a
don't want to raise prices."
constitutional . provlsiorr
Lawmakers tried to hold against taxing food , said
the line on exemptions to the · Wetzel of the g rocers'
new tax, saying . ·such so- · association.
called carve-outs were one of
People mistake the massive
th~ things that limited the profits of big oil companies
· effectiveness of tpe current with the thin margins" of
btisiness tax.
small businesses ;· said James
For example, ther al so Patileau.
presideilt . of
rejected auto dealers argu: . Medina-!Jased
Free
ments that, like grocers, the .Enterprises , Inc.. a · 65new tax hurts their world of employee fuel · wholesaler
high sales volume but low and retailer. ·
·
profit margins .
''There's very few things :
Sen&lt;lte President Bill that the state of.Ohio is going
Harris defended the petrole- · to do to hurt the large major
um exemption, pointing out oil companies ,"' ·Patneau said
·' it's only for two .years. He Monday. "We were looking
said the industry will al so for something that would .
give up part of a discount give us a chance to"'Continue
they receive for collecting in business."
~
and paying the state gasoline tax.
·
'
On the Net:
"The thing that we 've
• .Ohio Grocers Association:
attempted to do is be very
http://11 ., nv. ohiogrocers. o rgl
restricted on what the carveouts are and only do those
• Ohio Petrolermr Marketers:
that we felt ensured that
hllp:!!www.pmaa.org/assowe' ve protected Ohio jobs," . ciatimislolrio.lum .

Tuesda~, June 21,

.

Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise to 77
with today' slow of 62 occurring around 6 a.m. Skies will
be mostly sunny with 5 MPH
winds "from the squth turnin.g
from the: southwest as the
morning progresses·.

Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)

.B Y BRAD SHERMAN
8SHERMAN'@MYDAILVTRIBU NE,,C0M

'
G lo.ustel' at Feeney Bennet!. 6 p.m .

. Thursday's game
. Mason Coun~ at·Marietta , 5

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It should be a cloudy
evening. Temperatures will
fall from 81 early this evening
to 70. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the west turning from

P.m.

Friday's games
Marietta at Feeney Bennett . 6 p.m .
Mason County at Parkersburg, 6 p.m .

·saturday's games
Logan at Feeney Bennett, .1 p.m

Ma"son County at Richie, 2 p.m.

Sunday's game
Pic~erington at Feeney Benne11 . 1

p.m.

8th District Legion
League .
8th ALL
5·1 10.10

Lancaster

the southwest as the evening .
progresses.
Overnight (1-'6 a.m.)
It should · remain cloudy.
There is a slight chance of rain.
Temperatures will stay near
68. Winds will be 5 MPH from
the west turning from the north
as the overnight progresses.

4·1
3·2
2-2
2·3
1·4

tQ-6·
9·6
8·6

0·4

1·9

3·4
3-7

·Indians see
win streak
snapped by
Red Sox

Wednesday, June 22 ·

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
There could be a few . raindrops around the area . .
Temperatures will hold steady
around 70. Skies will be
sunny to cloudy with 5 to I 0
MPH winds from the north.

Afternoon (1-6p.m.)
Temperatures will linger at
81. Skies Will range from
sunny to mostly cloudy with 5
to 10 MPH winds from the
north.

&lt;&gt; .'

BY JoE

MtuctA

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND The
Cleveland Indians were
sailing along, until they ran ·
into- the World Series
champs.
Manny Rarriirez homered
and drove in · four runs
against his .former team,
and the Boston Red Sox ,
beat
Cleveland
10:9
Monday night to stop the
Indians' nine-game winning
streak.
Ramirez
and
Jason
Varitek each hit a three-run
homer, with Varitek 's shot
coming during a six-run
fifth inning that ' sent
Indians
starter
C.C.
· Sabathia walking .off the
field in disgust after one of
the worst..starts of his
·career.
Johnny · Damon also connected to provide a key
'insurance run for the Red
Sox . .who have . won seven
of eight. All that offense .
'made a winner of David
Wells (6-4), who ~on his
. fourth straight decision
despite a rough outing.
The Indians' winning
streak was their longest
since 2002 and moved the
club to seven games over
.500 after a slow start to the
season . .
Cleveland made · it close
witli con~ecutive !)orne ntns
in the eighth. Travis Hafne r . ·
hit a·tY{o-run shot, his lOth,
off Alan Embree . Keith
Foulke took over ·and gave
a homer to Victor

Notice -of.the Availability ofan
Environmental. Assessment
The U.SDA Rural Development utilities programs (Rural
Utilities Service) has received an application for.financial
assistance trom the Tuppers Plains- Chester Water
District, Athens &amp; Meigs Counties, Ohio. As required by"
the National Environmental Policy Act, the Rural
Development utilities programs (Rural Utilities Service)
has prepared an Environmental Assessment that evalu·
ales the potential environmental effects and consequences of the proposed project. This notice announces
the availability of the Environmental Assessment for pub·
lie review and comment.
The proposed project consists of the construction of a
. water distribution system that includes water lines, storage facilities, pumping stations and related"'facilities, to
be operated by Tuppers Plains- Chester. Water District.
· All proposed improvements are located in: Townships of
Carthage and Lodi in Athens County, Ohio, Townships of
Bedford, Orange, Sutton, Cheste.r, Lebanon, and Letart
in Meigs County, Ollio. Mitigation measures for the pro·
posed project include, but are not limited to items: to
minimize the effect to floodplain&amp;, wetlands, cultural
resources, endangered species, water quality and mis,
celtaneous issues. The alternatives considered to the
proposed project included: Different types of storage and
supply systems and the "No Action" alternative. .
Copies of the EnvironmentAssessment are available for
review at USDA. Rural·Development, 21330 State Route.
676, Suite A, Marietta, Ohio 45750. For further information contact Christine k. Crowell at ·(7 40) 373-7113. Any
person interested in cpm·menting on this proposed project should ·submit comments to the address abov.e by
July 1!~ . 2005.
.
Rural Development Is An Equal Opportunity Lender,
Provider and Employer. Complaints of discrimination
should be sent to: USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights,
Washington, D.C. 20250-9410.
A general location niap of the proposal is shown below ·
• . - ------,-1~

. PICKERINGTON -. Mike
Davis pitched eight shutout
innings, and Man Mooney
worked out of a major jam ·in
the ninth, as Feenev Bennett
Post 128 picked up animportant
7-3
victory · over
Pickerington in 8th District
American Legion baseball
Sunday.
The win improved Post 128
!03-2 in district play- just a
game back of frontrunners
.Pic kerington and Lancaster.
Pickerington trailed . 7-0
heading into the bottom of the
ninth, where it scored three
times and was able to bring

.
.,
the tying run to the plate.
Davis left the game; then
Mooney came on to record
the final out with the bases
loaded to earn the save.
Pickerington's
Brian
Carpenter · worked the fir st
seven innings on the mound
and took the loss. ·
Terry Durst1'hit a two-run
home run for Feeney Bennett
(9-6). while Luke Haislop
doubled
and
singled.
Mooney, Tyler Clagg and
Ross Well all had two · sin- ·
· gles. Eastern products Chris

Myer s and Ken Amsbar y
chipped in a dpubl e and single respectively. ·
·
Malt Wil son hit a home run
for Pickerington (I0- 6 ). while
Eric Arnett led the way with
three . singles . Justin Ferrell
tripled .and J_esse, · Campbell

LOGAN
Feeney darkness and will resume H)
· Bennett Post 128 mllied for · a.m. Saturday, prior to their
three run's in the ninth inning regularly sc.heduled game .
to even the score 5-S at Logan
Post 128, which just comMonday.
.
pleted u ri~orous eight games
And that's the way it'll in eight oays stretch of the
stand-· until Saturday.
schedule is · off .today. It
The 8th Pistrict Am~~can , returns 10 Meig~ High Sch~l
LegiOn cont~st was called Wednes~y for an 8th Distnct
· after rune .r,nmngs because of game agamst Glouster.

had a double m.the setback.
Pickerington . earn~d f doubleheuder spill by ptckmg up
a 10-1 victory in th~ non league contest.
Chad Smith had two hits.
including a home run , a ~

· Pickerington pounded out 14
hits. Ryan Weaver doubled
and singled while Kyle
· Smith. Campbell, Wil son .
Drew Matfield . and Ke\·in
Castle also had multiple hit s.
FB managed only three

hits, all •singles. off. wiririing
pitcher Lee Norman. who
.worked all seven innings .
Myers took the loss for Pos.t
128 ..
Clagg. Amsbary and Well
all hit safely in the setback.
•·

.

'

Cardinals fly past Cincinnati
.

..

BY TERRY KINNEY
. ASSOCIATED PRESS
'

CINCINNATI -:- Chris
Carpenter took a shutout
into the ninth inniog and
the St. Louis Cardinals got
two-run
homers
from
Albert Pu]ols and Reggie
Sanders · in a 6-1 victory
r· ld b
f J.
'ov·e r the Cincinnati Reds on center te
ecause 0 tm
Monday night.
Edmont;ls' rib injury, made
.. Sanders hit an . RBI dou- an Edmonds-like catch in
ble in the third and home- the sixth, reaching above
red :in tne fifth. his !4th. the wall to rob Aurilia of a
Reds pitchers have allowed home run.
at least one home run in 57
Notes: Pujols has nine
of 70 games for a total of homers at Great American .
I 06 homers _ most in the Ball Park, and Sanders has
maJors.
.
seven .... It took Harang 24
Abraham Nunez ..added pitches to get his first out.
an RBI single in the sev- After loading the bases
enth. Ryan Wagner then with two singles and a
came on in relief for .walk, he got Sanders to fly
Cincinnati , and Pujols hit out to right. ... OF Larry
his second pitch into the· Walker was scratched from
right-field seats for his 18th the Cardinals' lineup just
hom~r. making it 6-0.
· befor.e gametime with a
Carpenter (I 0-4) allowed stiff neck, ... The. Cardinals
. three hits. through eight were
ready
to · send '
innings
before
Felipe Efunonds home for · treat-.
Lopez ted off the ninth with ment of a hairline fracture
his 12th homer, ending the of his left middle rib, !Jut he
right-hander's career-best. said he was feeling better.
scoreless· streak at 17 Man·ager Tony La Russa
innings. Carpenter threw a said Edmonds woulil take
one-hitter to beat Toronto batting practice and be
_ 7-0 last Tuesday.
available to pinch-hit after
. He was lifted after walk- missing the first six games
ing Rich Aurilia, and Ray of the Cardinals' road trip.
King got three outs to fin- :.. The Reds put INF Luis ·
ish
the
four-hitter. Lopez on the disabled list
Carpenter struck out eight with ·a torn hamstring, and
and walked two. He has recalled ' INF
William
allowe:J jus~ fo~r runs over Bergolla from Triple-A
31 mnmgs m hts past four Louisville.- ... Lopez · will ·
starts. . . ,
. have surgery and is expectSt. Louts first five runs ed to miss the rest of the
were charged · to Aaron season .... Reds .leadoff batHarang (4-6), ~ho has lost ter Ryan· Freel, who has
.
~~
all. four ~tarts tn June . . He started at five positions this
St.
Louis
Ca(dinals'
Reggie
Sanders,
left,
rounds
secol)d
base
past
Cincinnati
Reds
third
basegave up hve runs and etght season missed his second
hits in 6 1-3 innings.
straigh; game with a s;re man Joe Randa, right, after hitting a two-run home run during the fifth inning · Monday in
Cincinnati.
So Taguchi, starting in toe.

.

Infielder Luis Lopez out with torn hamstring
CINCINNATI (AP) with the Cincinnati Reds this
Luis LopeZ knows his season · season. "I've still got a lot !o
is over. He'snot ready to give offer baseball." ,
The 34-yea'r-old Lopez
up on his career, though.
Lopez was put on the 15- described the injury as being
day disabled list Monday similar "to oile that ended Ken
with.a torn right hamstring. Griffey Jr.' ~ season last year.
He originally thought it was when he pulled the muscle
just a strain, but ·an MRI from the bone.
revealed the career-threaten- · "It's a shame. but it's realiing injury.
ty," Lopez 'said. "The first
" 1 knew that I did some- . step is to let the swelling go
thing, but nothing of that down."
magnitude," said Lopez, who
To fill Lopez's roster spot,
appeared in only I 7 games the Reds recalled infielder

Willi.a m
Bergolla
from
. Triple-A Louisville.
Lopez has played 'in more
than 90 games just twice in a
10-year career: in 1999 with
the New York Met s ( 117
games) and in 2001 with
Milwaukee (92 games) ..
He · also played for ·s an
Diego and Baltimore, and
. signed a minor league contract with . Cincinnati in
December. Lopez was promoted to the Reds' rbster
May 20 and started two

County
Club.
Franklin
Valley (Jackson) was third
followed by Fair greens
(Wellston),
Brass
Ring
( Logan) and Woodridge
(Parkersburg,
I'Iantation
W.Va.).
,
John Reed of Athens CC
won medalist honors with a
score of .J 40 after rounds of
71 and 69.
Cliffside'sAaron Bickle, a
recent Ohio University grad·
uate, was second overall with
a 142 while teammate Mike

Haynes carded a 143' for
third . Cliffside's Chris Tpler
was fifth overall.
,
Nine golfers per team hit
the course each day, with the
top six scores counting .
Toler' s first round 72 paced
Cliffside, also counting
toward the team's Saturday
total was a 73 from Danny
Cox, 75:s by Harris and Jeff
Slone, Bickle' s 77 and Mike
Burke and Ron Toler tied for
sixth with 78.
Bickle shot a very low 65

garries at .second base and
two a·t shortstop.
Now he ' s headed home to
Puerto Rico to discuss possible surgery - again - with
his wife. He missed the enti re
1995 season because of
Tommy John surgery_on his
right elbow.
''It 's nor what I expect~d .
But if I want to play baseball
again, I've _got to do it."
Lopez said: "I'm not gding to
dwell on it. I've been through
a lot of stuff in my career."

Surgery has been tentative- .
ly .sched11led for July 5, the
Reds said.
'
·
Bergolla. 22. is getting his
second .chance with the Reds
thi s season. He wits with
Cincinnati last month and
appeared in 15 games. but
was optioned back to the .
Triple-A affiliate when Rjch
· Aurilia came off the disabled
li st.
· ·
. · Bergolla hit .143 (5-for-35 )
with an RBI in his stint with
the Reds.

-r-~~==;c~

4~- ~TY

Contact Information ·.

BY BRAD SHERMt\N
BSi-IEHMAN@MYDAil'VTRIBUNE.COM

Fax- 1-740-446-3008
E..Mil ~ $portsOmyd&amp;itysentinel.com
, smrta Staff

.w.. Mart- 48.86

·-

Shonnon, Sporhl EdHor
ext. 33
b6hennan 0 my&lt;iailytribune .com

Wandy's - 46.92
Warthlngton- 17.42

(740) 44&amp;2342,

o.lly stoCk repOrts are

. . _ - . Sporhl Wrtt.r

tlle .4 p.m. cloSing quotes
of the previous day's

(740) 44&amp;2342.

ext. 23

bwaltersOmydailytribune.com

bMlllttlons, provklecl by
Sn o1t11 Pal biers at Advest

LMry Crum,
~,

Inc. of Gallipolis.
'•

...

Today's game
Mason County a1 Parkersburg, 6 p.rri ,

Wednesday's game

.

Temperat!Jres will remain
around 81 with today's high
of 83 occurring around 5 p.m.
Skies will range from mostly
sunny to cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from .the southwest
turning from the west as .the
aftern\)on progresses.

2QQ5

' Post 128 wins big.·game over Pickerington

•

Pickerington
Feeney Bennett
Athens
McArthur
Glouster
Logan

Thesday, June 21

.

.

Gasoline beats out groceries in fight for new tax exemption
BY

Bl ,

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

sPans Wrtt.r

(304) 675-1333, ext. 19
lcruffiOmydaityregtster.com

ATHENS
Three
Cliffside golfers fini shed in
the . top five and the
Gallipolis course won the
81 st annual Southeastern, the
Southeastern Ohio Golfer's
Association amateur tournament.
Cliffside had the low score
of 890 over the weekend, 18
· shots better than host Athens ·

on Saturday followed by
There was al so senior (50
Haynes' 70, a .7.5 by- Chris and older) and super senior
Toler, Cox and tlfew Dunkle (60 and older) divisions.
with 76's and a 78 by Mike Cliffside's Ron Ellis was the
Burke.
·
overall runner-up in · the
Also competing for the super senior class . · •
champs was Gabe Bevan. · . A pro-am event to kickedwho shot ro~J,nds of80 and 79 off the weekend on Friday.and Tim Snedaker turned in two-man. best ball format.
an 81 on Sunday.
Franklin
Valley 's'' · Ron
It was the first victory for Jackson and Doug !son took
Cliffside since 2001 , when it fust while Cliffside's Chris
last bosted the event; it and ·Ron Toler as -well as 'felreturns to the French City low Gallians Bobby Kincaid
next year.
·• ·
. and Haynes tied for second.

�•

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel·
Baseball

Flrsl Half
North Oivltl on
W L Pet. GB
)!·Hagerstown (Mats)
42 28 .600
)1 -Le)lington (Astros)
42 28 SOO
lake County (lndiaris) 40 30 571 2
Greensboro (Marlins)
35 34 so7 5·;
Delmarva (Orioles)
30 40 429 12
Lakewood (Philhes)
25 45 357 17
West VJrg1n1a (Brewers) 25 45 357 17
Hickory {Pirates)
22 44 333 18
South Division
WLPct.GB
lt·Charleston (Yanks ]
43 26 623
Augusta (G1ants)
40 27 .597 2
Rome ~Braves)
39 29 574 3',
Asheville (ROCKies)'
38 31 551 5
Kannapolis (White Sox) 36 33 .522 7
Greenville (Red Sox)
35 33 515 7 ,
Savannah (Nallonals) 31 37 . 456 1 1"1
Coh.unbus (Dodgers)
28 41 406 15

International League
Nort h Divltllon ·

W L Pet. GB
Buffalo ( lnd1ans)
43 28 606
Ottawa (Onoles)
36 33 522 6
Rochester (Twms)
36 35 .507 7
Pawtucket (Red Sox) 35 35 500 7 ,
Syracuse (Blue Jays) 35. 36 493 ·a
Scranton·WB (Philhes) 29 39 .426 12'. ;
South Division
w· L ' Pet GB
Norfolk (Mets)
40 32 55i,Durham {Devil Rays)
Richmpnd (Braves)
Charlotte (White Sox)

32 40. .444 8
26 46

361

14

2) 48 .304 17" .

West Divi!Sion
W L Pet.
IndianapoliS ~Pi rates ) 43 27 .614
41 28 594
Toledo (Tigers )
Columbus (Yankees ) 42" 29 592
louisville (Reds)
34 37 .479

GB
1',
1',

)(·won hrst hall

9.
Mond ay 's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesd ay 's Games
Charleston. S.C. at Savannah
Delmarva at Lake Co1.,1nty
Greensboro 81 Hickory
Greenville at Columbus
Hagersto~n at lakewood
Kannapolis at Asheville
Rome at AUgusta
West Virginia at Lexing ton
Wedne sda y's Games
Charleston. S.C. at Savannah
Delmarva at Lake CotJnty
Greens.boro at Hickory
Greenville at Columbus
·Hagerstown at Lakewood
Kannapolis at Asheville
Rome at Augusta
Wes~ Virginia at Lexington

Mond ay's Games
Columbus 5', ScrantonWilkes-Barre 3
Pawtucket 9, Durham 4
Louisville 3. Charlotte 2 , lO innings
Bulfalo 4. Norlolk 3
,
Richmond 3. Syracuse 0
Rochester 4, lndi&lt;inapolls 3
Toledo 10, Ottawa 2
Tuesday's Oames
Columbus at ScrantonWilkes·Barre
Durham a t Pawtucket
Louisville at Charlotte
Norfolk at Buffalo
Richmor_ld St Syracuse
Roches ter at Indianapolis
Toledo at Ottawa
Wednisday 'a Games
9olumbus at Scranton Wilkes-Ba rre
Durt1am at Pawtucket
l ouisville at Char lOtte
Norlolk at Buffalo
Richmond at Syracuse
' Rochester atlndlai1apolls
ToteQo, at Ottaw!l

Tu11da~ ··

GB

1
5
GB

''

7
7
7i,

WNBA

Monday's Games
No games sched uled
Tuesday's Games
Evan sville at Roclo:tord
Mid -Missouri at Florence ·
Ohio Valley at Kalamazoo
River C ity at Chillicothe
Washington at Ga teway
Windy City at Richmond
Wednesday's Games
Evan sville at Rockford
Mid -Missouri at Florence
Ohio Valley at Kalamazoo
River City at Chillicothe
Washington at Gateway
Windy C ity at Ric;:hmond

EASTERN CONFERENCE
WL Pet
GB
Connecticut
8 1 .889
746362
lnd~na
Detroi t
545563
4 4 .500 3\
New Yo rk
Washington
4 6 .400 4'1
Charlotte
1 8 .1 11 7
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W ,L Pet GB
Sacramento
8 2 .800
Seattle
6 .4 .600 2
Los Ange les
6 5 .545 2",
Houston
5 5 .5oo a
Minnesota
5 5 500 3
3 7 .300 5
Phoenix
San Antonio
2 9 .182 6'1

South Atlantic League

Eeat Ol¥1alon

Phoem)( at Minnesota. 6 p.m.
Connecticut at Seanle. 10 p m.

Baltimore
Boston
New York
Toronto
Tampa Bay

Thursday's Games
San Anton1o at Charlot1e. 7 p.m

Soccer
Major League Soccer
CQnference
L T Pts GF
1' 4 25 21
6 2 23 24
3 s 20 20
4 4 19 18
3 6 18 21
7
13 - 10
Conference
L T Pts GF
2 3 27 23
4 2 ~3 · 19
3 6 18 18
B 2 ·14 15
8 2 11 8
10 3 6
14

·
GA:
10

22
13

·,s
. 18
20
GA

12
14
15

·,a
21
33

NOTE : Three points for v1ctory. one point
·
"
for tie.
Wednesday's Games
New England at Columbus, 7:30p.m.
CD Ch1vas USA at FC Dallas. 8:30p.m.
Los Angeles at Real Sal1 Lake, 9:30p.m.
Sa1urday 'a Garnes
MetroStars at New England. 7 ~ 30 p.m
CD Chlvas USA at Kan'sas City, 8 p.m .
FC Dallas at Coloradd, 9 p.m.
Los Angeles at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Su['\day's Gam11
Re al Salt Lake at Chicago, 7 p.m.

NBA FINALS
. (Boot-of -7) ··
San Antonio' ya Del (Oil
Ttlureday, June 9
San Antonio S4, Detroit 69
Sunday, June12
San Antonio 97., Detroit 76 ·
Tuesday, June 14
Detroit 96, San Antonio 79
Thursday, June 16
Delroit 102 . San Antonio 71
Sunday, June 19
San Antonio 96, ·Detroit 95, OT, San
Antonio lead s series 3·2
Tuilsday, June 21
Detroit at San Antonio, 9 p.m
Thursday, June 23
Detroit at San Antonio. 9 p.m., if necessary

•

Transactions

WL
41 28

Pct

GB

.594

39 30 .565 2

36 33 .522 5
35 35 .500 6~
24
Cenlrel
W
47

46 .343 17'', .
Dlvlalon
L PctGB
ChlcaOo
22 .681
Minnesota
38 29 .567 8
Clavoland
37 , 31 .544 9 '\
Detroit :
33 33 .500 12'"
Kansas City
25 44 .362 22
Waal Dl v lalon
WLPc!GB
Los Angeles
40 29 .580
37 31 .544 2 :-,
Texa&amp;
Seattle
31 37 .456 8 \
30 39 .435 10
Oa~iand
Sunday 's Games
Milwaukee 5, Toronto 2
Cleveland 3, Arizona 2
N.Y. Yankees 6, Chicago Cubs 3
De troit 10. San FranciSco 8, 10
innin(;IS
Baltimore 4, Colorado 2
. Bo ston 8, Pitt sburgh o
Wastiln~to n 8, Tex as 2
San Diego 5, Minneso ta 1
Kansos City 7, Hou ston 1
St. Louis 8, Tampa Bay 5
Seattle 11 , N.Y. Ma ts 5
Oakland 5, Phil adelphia 2
Florida 7, L. A. Angel s 5
Chfcago White Sox 4, L.A . Dodgers 3
Monday'• Qamta
Boston 10, Cleveland 9
Toronto 11, Battimore 2
Tampa Bays, N.Y. Yankees 4
Chk)ago 'Wh lte Sox 11, Kanaas City B
Oakland 6, $eaHio 2
L.A. Angels 5, Texas 1
Tu•aday'a Garnee .
Bos ton (Ar royo 5· 3) at C leveland
(Mil lwood 2-4), 7:05 p.m .
Tampa Bay (Nomo 4· 6) at N .Y.
Yan kees (R.Johnson 7·5), 7: 05 p.m .
Baltimore (L.opez 5·2) at Toronto
(Chacln 6-4), 7:07 p.m.
Kansas City (Greinke 1·7) at Chic ago
Wflite SOx (G arland 11 ·2), 8:05p.m.
Detroit (Sonderman 8-4) a t Minnesota
(l ohse 5-5). 8 :10p.m.
OGkJand (Gl ynn 0· 3) at Seattle
(Pineiro 2·3), 10:05 p. m.
Texas (Park 7· 1) at L.A. Angels (Colon
8-4), 10:05 ~. m .

Dlvlelon
W L Pet
~1 29
Was hington
38 32 .543
Fthlladelpnla
36 33 .522
Atlanta
34 32 .515
Florida
33 36 .478
New York
Central Olvtalon
W L Pet
45 24 .652
St. Louis
35 33 .5 15
Chicago
31 37 .456
Pineburgh
Milwaukee
31 38 .44 9
29 39 .426
Houston
27 43 .386
Cincinnati
West Division
WL Pct ·
39 31 .557
Sen Diego
35 36 .4 93
Arizona
33 36 .478
Los Angeles
San Francisco 29 39 .426
22 46 .324
: Colorado

TODAY'&amp; MAJOR
LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-BRobertl, Baltimore . .355;
Damon, 8o&amp;ton . .339; A Rodriguez, New
York, ' .323: Vantek. Boston . . 319;
MYoung. Texas, .31 6: Tejada, Baltimore.
·.3f6: Hillenbrand, To rch to. · .314;
GAnderson. L.os Ange!&amp;S , .314,
"
RUNS- Teixeira, Tex: as, 54; ASorlano,
Texas, 53; ARodriguez, New York, 52;
'MYoung, Texas, 50; Damon, Boston,
· Jeter. New York, 49: Tejada. Baltimore.
48.
RBI-AAodriguez. New York. 6~;
DOrtlz, Boston, 58; Teixeira. TalfaS. 56:
Tejada, Baltimore. 56: MRamirez.
Boston , 55: . Matsui , New York, 54 ;
Sexson. Seattle, 52; Konerko, Chi(j,ago.
52.
HITS- Damon. Boston, 93; MYoung.
Texas, 89: Tejada, Ba ltimore, 87:
BA oberts. Baltimore, 86: \Suzu ki.
Seante, 86; Crawford. Ta mpa Bay, 83;
Hillenbrand ,
Toronto,
83; · Mora.
Baltimore, 83: AR odriguez: New York,
83.
DOUBLES- Tejada·, Baltimore. 22;
Matsui, New York 1'21: ·A Soriano, Texas. :
20: !Rodriguez. Detroit. 20; Gibbons,
Baltimore, 19i Wlnn, SeaHie, 19: DOrtlz,
· Boston . 19.
TRIPL£8-Sizemora'. C leveland. 6;
DeJesUs, Ka nsas City,
Figgins, ~o s
Angeles. 6; Crawford , Tampa Bay. 6:
lnge, Detroit, 6; ISuzukl, Seattle, 6;
Rlos. Toronto. 5: BR obert&amp;, Sattlmore, 5.
HOME RUNS- Teixeira , Texas, 20;
ASorlano, Texas, 19; Tejada, Baltimore,
19; A~ odr l guez , New York, 1~ ; Konarko,
Chic ago, 18; DOrtlz, Boston, 1 6;
Sexson, Seattle, .15; MRamlrez, Boston,
15.
STOLE!!
BASES- Podsodnlk,
Chicago, 38: Figgins, Los Angeles, 23: ·
CrawfOrd, Tampa Bay, 18; Lugo, Tampa
Bay, 17: Womack, New York . 17;
!Suzuki, ' seattle, ·· 16;
THunter,
Minnesota, 16 .
PITCHING' {7 Daclslone}-Buehrle, ·
Chic ago, 8·1, .889, 2.67; Clement,
.
Boston , 8-1, .889, 3.48; Park, Texas, 1·
1, .875, 5, 15; Garland, Chicago, 1 1·2,
.846, 3. 61 ; Rogers, Te xas, 9-2, .818,
1.98; OHernandez, Chicago, 7-2, .778 ,
4.88 ; Rlope z. Baltimore, 6·2, .750,
4.2 1; Moyer. Se attle. 6·2 •. 750, 4.42.
S TRIK"EO UTS -J oS an ta n a ' ·
Minnesota. 124; AJohn son, New Yo rk,
9 1: Halladay•.. To ronto, 63; Clement,
Boston, 78: Lackey. Los Angeles. 77:
Haren . Oakla nd , 73; Sonderman .
Detroit. 73.
SAVES- Wiekman , C leveland , 20;
'Guardado,
Seattle,
19:
BRyan . .
Baltimore, 18: Nathan, Minnesota , 18 ;
FCord ero, TeJ&lt;as, 17; Hermanson.
Chic_ago, 17; MRivera , New York., 16. ·

sa;

e:

GB

.sae·

3.

...

7';.

G~ l l1~

In· One Week With
4',
5'·1

16

Appll~nt

hereby
givaa notice to ell
Interested persons
tho! the applicant has
flied on Application
lor Chang. of Nome In
"'" .......... Court of
Melga County, Ohio,
twq,.atlng
, the
change of nome of.
C1ov18 Ray R - to
Ray Clovlo A..m...
Thl hearing on the
application will be
on 1111 22nd day
of July, 2005, at 2:00
pm. In thl Probate
Court
of
Meigs
County, lca!MI at 100
Ea~t Second . S1r..t
CourtllouH,
2nd
I

2nd
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Cheryl A. Raynolda
424BeechStraot
Middleport, OH 45760 ·

6121

'

Monday thrL,I Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Sentinel

Pisolay Ads

Dallv In-Column : 1 : 00 p . m .

All Dlaplay : 12 Noon

Monday- Frlday"for In•ertlon
In Next Day' • Paper
~:\~=:·~ Jn- Colymno 1:.00 p . m .
P'or Sund•v• Paper

Business Days Pri or To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play : 1 :00 ".&gt;~;:;, ;,
Thur-aday for sunday•

P

r
""••••••••,.1

·. iiir. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I.
.

GI\'FAWW

4 .

'rex:

.KIT &amp;

YARD SALE·

POLICIES: Ohio Vallav Publishin g r".rv•• the rig ht t o edit, r•J.ct 1 or can cel any ad at anv li ma. Error• muat be report!Kt on th e fir st ds.,- of
Tri bun •Sentlne i·FI~ I eter will be responsible lor no more than the cost or the specs occu pied by the error an d only th e firsl lneer1 ion. We
eny lo.e or expenn that reau lt' lrom the publica tion or ornieelon ol an advertisement. Cor...ctlon will be made In the fir st aveileble edltltJ n. • Bo x;~;:;.~~~::
ere elwsye confldentlel. • Current rat1 card eppilee. • All reel eeta te edve rtleemenl e are subjact to the Federal Fair Hou aing Act of 1968. • This
anty halp wanted ads mHting EOE el.lnderj!a. Wa wUI flO! knaw lngly aeeept an~ advertia lng In violell on or tl1e lew.
·

CARLYLE

COLLEGE

·cot1on

lt___

www.orv .com
Home Listings.
Llsl your home by calling
(740)44 6-3620
All real estate advertising
in th is newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing A.;:t at 1968
w hic h makes it illegal to.
advertise "any
prefere nce, limitation or
discrimination based on
ra ee, ector, religion, sex
familial status or national
origin, or any intention t o
make' an~ suclr' .
preference. limitation or
diserimination."

oi%tiiANimiiBiii
!N
ioo_ _.

..

r==G=AlliPOLJS=~·I~uo

I
•

I
••

••

• am
e
Frid ay. June 24 and
Saturdav. June 25
8AM·SPM 3399 State
Aoute 141 • Just past
the J umbo on the left

"'I In II I "

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cr2tts.
wood items.
To S480/wk
Mate rials proVided.
Free inlormation pkg. 24.hr
801·428-4649

home. About a year old. Has
3rd Annual CVS Pharmacy
not been neu tered or
Flea Markei/Yard Sale
declawed. Please can 740Bring your stun (ove r 50 An ElCcellent way to earn
• 446·4466_.
sites available .) Ca ll 7 40- money. The New Avon .
· Lost: Small white dog with 441).7459. June 251h,8am-? Cal! Marilyn 304·882·2645
br own patch over eye.
weighs about 5 pounds. 4867 . St. At . 850. Bidwell. AVON! All Areasi ~To Buy or
Male, Answers to tt1e name .22th-25th, 9·? A!l size Sell. Shirley Spears. 304·
Junior. Reward s1oo 'North clothes, baby. boys, girls. 675- 1429.
. At 2 1·mile past Paul's furniture. toys. Two trucks.
Bartender needed. weekend
• EJtXon. (304)675· 1990 or two cars. Lots more.
hou rs. Apply at The Legion.
: (304)444)742
Mon-Fri. (304)675·3437
:· Lost:
White German
Shepherd wiHi a red Collar.
lost at Belle'meao (304)675·
4812 A Reward

;

I

CLASSIFIED INDEX
For'Sale .............................................. 725
Antlques:...................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
AuG!Ion and Flea Market. ............................oao
Auto Pans &amp; Acceuorles .......................... 760
Repalr ..................................................no
Autos lor Sale ..............................................710
Boats &amp; Motors fO. Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppll...........................:.....,........sso
Businesa and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty................................. 210
Business Tral~lng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ............: .............. 790
Camping Equipment................................... 780
Cards of Thanka ........ ....... ........................... OIO
Child/Elderly care .-...................................... 190

Electrlcai/Refrigeratlon ...............................840

Equipment for Aont ....:...............................480
Excavating .......:........................................... 830
Farm Eqillpment ............ ,............................. &amp;10
Farms for Ront..........................................,..430
Farms for Sate ............................................. 330
For Leose ..................................................... 490
Far s.te ........................................................585
FOJr S111&lt;! or Trade ......................................... ~
&amp; VegehPbles ..................................... 580
Roorna........................................450

Haullng....:...................,..................ISO

ConstructiOn companv look·
ing for a ·full time secretary
to start immediately. Job wi!l
last th rough 2008. Please
reply tO Daily Sen1inel, P.O.
Bole 72g..22. Pomeroy, Oh
45769
Deni al Hygienist need ed.
Send Resume to PO Box 45
PJ. Ple asant or fax resume:
304·675-6553

D r i - . -:
COL Drivers willing to drive
for local ready-mix-concrete
company. Experience is
preferred but not necessary.
Driver must be willing to do
pre-maintenance on trucks
&amp; equ1pment. vard work &amp;
other miSCell aneous chores,
EKperience operating equipment &amp; extra skills such as
welding a plus.
Call (304)937-3410
Full time· mechanic needed
to work on Heavy equipment. Please reply to Da1Jy
Senrinel. P.O. Box 729·22.
Pomeroy. Oh 45769
Full-time babysitter needed
Bartori Chapel Road. Mason
County. No students apply
call 6pm-9pm 304·576--3353

•

HoirStylllta

oOn·t m1ss this great opportunity With Fies ta Hair
Salons! We currently ha'v'B
openii'IQ&amp; lor full and part.

time 1 - Hair StyU""'
at our salOn In Muon. We
otter

guaranteed

hourl'l

wages.
~ eca.. wtlh
up to 52% MrVtcl ~

MW

m~ retait and tanning
eommiulona, madicaJ, Clental, vision and IH in&amp;,

advanced educati on, and

Home fl-'&lt; .........- ........................ 8110
HarMs tor Aen1 ............................... 420
HarMs tor s.to ........:.......................320
to u.. ............................................. 220
• 4 Whllllrw ..: .......................740

much {nOra. Call 1-ln-3271001 for mort information.
Local Homo Health Agency
' accepting applications for
HHA's and PCA's in Gallia

ret
a1
n
aso
. Special" for Summer, 1so·
If
Beg1nning on Jun
1st · July 5th 304·773

Inc.

1'1:1'"-------, -m;---------,I-,.r--..,.----,I
iiO

r

r·10

H£Lp

\V.OOID '"••lfELp•••W•AN11:D•••,J

~alhpoli~ iailp lribune· The Dai~y Sentinel ~)oint Jleasant !egi~ter
"

•

675-1333
•

'
· - ~--·---~-

.

E~6;::00:!,__ _.,:__ _ _..J

Duple.ll. each Wi th 3 BA. LA..
.DR . KitChen . Bath &amp; Porch
TURNED DOWN ON
House 3 BA. LA . Kitchen .
SOCIAL. SECURITY ISSI? Bath
Both In Point
No Fee Unless we W1n!
Pleasa nt
( 304 )675 •2495
•'· 888 · 582 -.3345
after 7:00pm

lfs a Steat !1 4 bedroom.
bath . 2 car garage
ew Haven . WV Code
505 or call (304 )882·
368.
1\IOBILE H O.I U::S

mRSAu:
1970 12x65 2BR. 1BA.
neecls little work . Asking
s~oo oso. Needs to be
moved . (740)379 - 29~0
1975 SchtJitz mob1le home .

All elect. central a1r. new

windows. 2 yr. old hot wa:er
tank Ref. &amp; stove S2.500 .
(740)386-8743.

r

t3041a7!HI022

at

1354

tttrt.l' is currently accepting applt-

Mlddlapo,rt,
Ohio.
Experience in dental field
wid help, please faJ resume
to: 81-1-890-7507

740)446-8325

1-an

ruring aJ locations, full or needed. Appl.,.

Need an oraJ surgery aSsistant b: 8'oferV Saturday 1n

0
c Down 1 3 bedroom. 1
14 bath. UR . 0/R. FIR
ar garage. fenced 1n
ack yare. 112 acre:
lose to town . $1 32 500.
ode 4505 or call

DIRECTV
FREE Home
entertainment
System.
~1\II S I\11
Great Houses at Gre-at 1993 cloublew1ae 3 'bedFREE Eqwpment and Install
6526.
Pnces!
We have 2 hOmes 1n room . 2 bat hs m1.1st be
up ro four roo'ms. 145 chan10
Now Hiring Sale Dnvers.
the
Gallipol
is and Autlarid moved. S25.000 (740)388·
nels S29 .00 a month. Ask
HOMES
Apply in Person at ~ r local
areas. WE FINANCE 1 NO 8978.
how to get FREE H~O.
FOR SALE
Domino·s Must be over 18
CLOSING
COST.
NO
POSmON
MAX. and STARS. 1·8Q01995 Clayton .doublewtde .
Contact N1ck
POINTS!
ANNOUNCEMENT
523· 7556 for details.
24x52. 3br. 2ba. Central a1r.
$59.000. New Haven 2 .800
Now Hiring!
Hultman ~
1"800 · 333 · total eteotnc S18 .00Ci OBO
sq. ft Log Cabin· as is. wt3-5
40 hOurs a week
WMm&gt;
6910.
Posting Date June a. 2005
acres.
Call
Mike
(513)314·
(:lo4)675-2907
$7·$8/hour
TnDo
2754 No Down p ayment even 199714x65 Prem1er 2 bed·
Call tor m&lt;ijor NQn·Prolit , University ot A10 Grande is All Types Maso11r"y. Brick.,
w1th less than perfect credit
b th
El 1
seeking toUr graduate assls:
room . 1 a . \1 11
ec nc .
2b"r in NeW Hal'en for Sale or
Organizl!tions or Help
3 bedrOOM. 1 bath Exc. Cond Lots ol extras
Block,
Stone.
Free
Est1mate,
on
thiS
!ants in the areas of. softball ,
Rent 527,000 to btJy. S375to home in Middleport. Corner
Protect vour Gun Rights!
304-593· rent (304)882·2890
. track and field · and volley· (304 )773-9550
S1 ·.ooo 1304)675·7588 o•
lot. carport. wrap-around .
'
ball. Monthly stipend. tuition . 6421
53 -3715
porch.
Paid vacations, paid
tenced
1n
yard
.
base·
(304)S
3
bedroom
Ranch
2
car
room and board are incltJd·
holidays and paid training.
garage. m-ground pool . ment. payment same as 1997 Doub1ew1de. 3 bed- .
ed. Graduate ~ Assistants DHK
Cleanmg
&amp; $90 ,000. Call (740)256· rent 740·992·6300
room . 2 bath 1•acre.
must be enrolled or plan to
Call toelav to scnedute an
Powerwashing. Can·t Keep 1962.
(304)675--1019
Etnroll
for
Fall'
Semester
1
n
No
Down
Payment
Poss1
ble.
interview.
Up Your "To Do- list too B1g?
the Unriersrty ol Rio Grande Let Us HELP You! we ·ll 3 Lg Bedrooms. 1 Bath . 1900 square ft house. 3
Master's
Program. Clean·R-Up &amp; Ge1·R· Done. Den . 1 level large Lot bedroom. 2 bath . full base- 2000 28x80 '*atnot. 4 bed··
-46U247
room . e11cellem cond1t1on
Interested a ppt~eants please
ment. new heat pump. sets
We
do
AU : $38,000 1304)882·2688
Askmg
$48 .000 . Needs
ext 2455
e-mail or taX resume arid list
on 3 acres SA 7 · Eastern
Res 1de n ti ai / Bu s i nes s .
moved
.
(740
)367·7245.
of references to
Qfllce Aulotant
l ns1de / O.uts1de . 3-4 Bedroom . House. 1 1/2 SchoOl D1stnct . {740 )985·
Bath , Mayo Or. In New 432'1
Daily/Weekly/Monthly, 7408 u_sed homes under 51 .000 .
Ms. Phyllis: Mason . SPHR
Haven. Totally Remodeled
985·3639 or 740-416·1823
A fast. paced non-profit
Rental
PropertieS
for
sale.
Wi ll help with delivery.
Director of .Human
$83.500 (304 )882·3131
( 740)385~9621.
orQanization is seeking a
Trailer aM Garage Apr ..
ResourCes .
self motivated pe rson to
painting , 3BR. 16A Ranch .sr.,te Mason on ,4th Ave . House on Great ·2000 Fleetwood 2
Interior/exterior
University ·of Rio Grande
work apprO)(Imately
32
reasonable rates
refer- house. located 6 fn1ies past ,l.Madison Ave . Pt. Pleasant bedroom with tutl delrvery.
Rio Grande. q H 45674
ho ur&amp;~' week. This position
ences. expe rienced, lor free Holzer hOSpital on At. t 60. House Roush Ferrell Lane set-up and central air. Call ·
Qmason@riO.edu
will include light sew~tarial
Pt. Pleasant Four Vacant Russ . (740)385-2434 .
es'timates call (740)742· (740)388·9263
duties. Typing and compute r
lots 1n Mason County
Fax number (740)245-4909. 20 13 or 645·2638
3b~. 2 1i 2 ba, ApprO)( ., 2· (304)675-191 12
skills necessary. send a
pr SAVE·SAVE-SAVE
LOW·MOIS!Ure
acres, lg-2·Car Garage &amp;
resume to : The R ench An
( ~)593 -2096
Stock models at old priCes.
ANILPN'S--Ovtlrbrook cen·
Barn. Country settmg ask1ng
Colony. P.O Box 472.
Carpet-Cleaning
2005 models arrrvmg Now.
ter is currently accepting
5120.000 (304)882-2890
Gallipolis , Ohio 45631 by
Brand New Metnod
Cole's
Mob 1le
Home5.
applications lor LPN'S and
June 30th.
Dry in 1 Hour
15266 .U.S. 50 East. Athens.
AN'S. 7A-7P and 7P·7A
3br. 2ba. pool. garage. star·
No Steam-or-Shampoo
mno 45 701 . (7401592·1972.
Oral Surgery AssiStant lor Shilts are available. .If you
age bldg. appliances lncluctFree-Estimates
:Where
Vou Get You r
are
'interested
,
'please
come
'ed.
5
m1
les
hom
33
on
every
SattJrday
JO
... Ciearty Clean• ...
Money·s Worth'
Rt.681 , {140)592-()426
Middleport. · OH
Fax: in and fill out an application
at
333
Page
~Jt.~et·
Resume 10 (614}800. 7507
f.-\R\IS
4 Bedroorn home. 2 blocks
Middleport. .or call ·- and
Cleanmg. f rom school, Q00e1 ne~ghbOr · FoR S.m :
speak
with
HOllie OHice/House
OUTSID E SALES
~umgarner, LPN
Staff Experienced, w/Reference, hood .,. 648 4th Ave . Call R1o Grande
R E PR ESENTATIV E
ready to Clean tor You call (740)388·8164.
3·4 BR . 2 112 BA. LA, DR. P1on!iler Farmstead. 4 bed·
DevelOpment. EOE
Amy (304)675-35013
--'-~-~--~- wood · fl oors. base ment. room . reConstr1.,1Cted hewed
.
4 Sale or rent. Courltry &amp; gar!ge, carport. over 1800 log House. modern tac1l1·
lhf Gallipolis Oally Tribune Styh&amp;ts needed at Fantastic
qUiet, 3 bedroom· full base- sq
h. S.1.25 .000. Call 'ttes ,
is ~epting . ~esumes for a . Sams new location in the
2
hewed
log
Ohio Valley Engine Repair ment: hardwooc floors (740)245·9&lt;413 .
OutblJIIdmgs .
57
a,cre
tuB~~~-CX:'~
:!~
·
'
::
,
wat-Mart Plaia .. S1gn on Lawn mowers, small engine
58 "MIU"'
Cadmus, (740)379-2540.
10
bonus. Free CEU hours.
Tree
Farm.
Rodney Village II 3 BR. 1 car Chnstmas
team ,and to manage an paid vacation , full &amp; part rep&amp;'ir. S~les and servw::es.
25.()(l(l
moret1ess
trees.
27
7
rooms,
1
112
bat1'1
,
garage
.
garage
DA
LA
,
large
es~llhed . account lilt rime help needed. Come &amp; 28~ Grate Road. Patnot. OH
basement.
deck, mclud1ng k1tchen . deck on back . T acres matu re hardwood.
45658.
while calling on new WQ(i( 1n our friendly tamiiV
09ed to · rtVerbank, tor 1nto · acre +I· 570,000. Must' see tree machmer y. mmera ls.
accounts. ~e successful atmosphere. Cal.l (7..0}446-call740-992·3424.
740-992· to appreciate . [740 )245· co~:~ nty wate r. 1'2 m1le paved
c~idate Wllf11 ~.J dil ecl-- 7267 or stop in.
Will take care ol the !lderty
road fro ntage
$265 000
1949.
740-742·2097
:_99:_1_7_---'----plmed, se mou ,_, earn
1n their Home
Have
(3().4 )675·4138
player tnat understands the
Tractor/trader driver needed Expenence cat (304 )675·
Roush La ne. Cheshire www l
importance of deYe!op1ng to s~art immediately Full · 3264
Attantlon!
Beaut1fut 3 bedroom. forma t
strong, mutualty cenefic1al time through 2008. WVA
Local company offenng ""ib
d101ng room. Oak k1tchen.
business relationships with area. Must have good dnv·
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
Oak floors
Sun

part-lime. p,ck up awhca· Jackson Pika. Gallipolis.
tion at tocation &amp; Drino back
between
10:00am
&amp; STNA'S CNetOrook Cenlef
Monday

· 1\t&amp;~.....At\"EOL~

Needing certified tan tech·ni·
cian, part time . (304}675-

~.
c-

1 1:OOam,
SallJrdaj.

r170

• .

r3ii

'

This newspaper will not
-•knowingly accept
adve nlsements tor real
estate which is in
viOlation or the taw. Our
readers are her eb~
informed th8t
dwellings advertised in
tl'!ls newsp.11per are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

V1ew photoS/info online

an

experienCe needed.
O&amp;Jiy Sentinel, PO. Box
vide tritining and flexible The ideal candidate · will 22,'Pomerny. 01\45769
scheduling. Please call naYe sale 8lperience. For
in1 erv1ew,
(740)441·1377 or (740)992- confidential
please senel resume and
L'b"JJIll(.'TION
01190.
cover letter to Gallipolis
L.ooking for a p1amst tor Daity Tribune Ann : Jim
Golllpollo
COfloga
goopel and &lt;:hurd&gt; groups. Freeland. 825 Third Ave .. (Careers c;1ose To Home)
(740)2~78.
. , Clalfipotis. 01\io 45631 .
Call Toda'l! 140 H6 4367,
1...(o)..214---0452
McOure's Restaurant now Paramedics
-&amp; · EMTs

IN THE BULLETIN BOARD
.

Ho~u::s
FOR SALE

Hmu:~

IURS.\Lf

2 family sale Fri-Sat 24-25
Corner
Flatwoods
&amp;
Skinner. Pomeroy. Clothing ,
Beanies. cra ft supplies. collectibles.

YARDSAU:·

GEORGE WA~ H I NG JON-E xtendecHhe
.contract of Joe McKeown , women's basketb~ ll coach, th rough 2011 .

I

·

r.___LosT·F·OUND·Al-~1)..__.1 r

•

992-2155

Graphics SOti for small
$1.00 for large

1

· One puppy 11 weeks old, Jack Russell, and bird dog. Abso lute Top Dollar: U.S.
: black lab mi;.~;, cute and Family pets. {740)379-2205 Silver and Gold Coms.
Proofsets, Gold Rings, · U.S
Jimm y Duke.
: frie ndl y. 740-985·4324
Currency,-M.l. S. Coin .Shop,
151
Second
AventJ e,
G II' I' 740 446 2842
I \11 ' 111\\11 \I

••

"

:z

l,'oMEROY/MIDDLE

Reward tor sate return
Missing female gray Tabby.
' 4 llutty kittens, tiger &amp; white. Wea ring pink collar with fake
: Out of part Siamese. Pretty diamonds and red name tag.
big eyes. (740)446·1062.
Lost near old Bidwell school
(740) 388·6 166.
Free kit1ens 4 male- yellow,
2 female· calico. Call REWARD, Lost between
: (740)446-059 1.
Smokey Rd. Boggs area.

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

(740) 446-2342

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~

• All ads must be prepaid"

Description • lnc:lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Humber And Addre11 When Needed
• Adl Sh~uld Run 7 D•v•

\\\tJI \(I \ I I \ I "'

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Word Ads

A.D. • Shirt Your Ade With A Keyword • Include Complete

'I

'

·us

Oecullfir~

Offtee IIPW'~·

J•

· LAUREL CLIFF FREE'
METHODIST
125th Anniversary
Sunday, June 26th, 2005
Pastor Glenn &amp; Linda Rowe
&amp; Congregation.cordially
invites everyone to come and
Celel;&gt;rate with us.
For more information contact
740·992-0758 or
740-992·9173

Coullly, OH

~.-egister
Your Ad, {740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) . 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To (74Q) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

••

NAIIE

m:rtbune

To Place

Brian Burke e.~~eeut ive vice p reside nt and
general manager. Tim Ryan executive vice
president and chief operat1ng otl icer, Bob
Wagner senior vice president and chief
marketing otlicer and Mike O' Donnell
se nior vice president and general manag·
er tor Anahei m Arena.

..

'

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE-

9

Sunday 'a Gamea
Milwaukee 5, Toronto 2
Cleve land 3, Arizooa 2
N.Y. Yankees 6. C!licago Cubs 3 ,
Detroit 10, Sari Francisco 8, 10 innings
Cincinnati 11 , Atlanta 8
·
Baltimore ( Colorado 2
Boston 8, Pitt sburgh p
Washington 8. T-exas 2
San Di ego 5, Minnesota 1
Kansas City 7, Ho·uston 1
St. Louis 8. Tampa Bay 5
Seaute 11 , N.V. Mets 5
Oakland 5. Philadelphia 2
Florida 7, L.A. Ange ls 5
Chicago White Sox 4, L.A. Dodgers 3
Monday'e Gam••
Washington 7, PIHaburgh 4
St Lou is 6, Cincinnati 1
Houston 7, Colorado 0
Chicago Cub&amp; 5, Milwaukee 4
San Diego 1, L A. Dodgers 0
San Francl&amp;eo B, Ari zona 3
Tutaday 's Gamet
Washington (Orese 1·0) at Pittsburgh
(OI,Peroz 5.5), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Benson 5·2 ) a1 Philadelph ia
(Myers 5·3) , 7:05 p.m.
·
St. · Loui s {Ma rquis 8-4) at Cjnclnnatl
(Claussen 3·4), 7:10 p.m.
·
FlOr ida (A.J.Burnet1 4-4 ) at Atlanta
(Smoltz 6·5), 7:35p .m.
Ch icago Cubs (J. Williams 0-2~ at
Milwaukee (Santos 2·6), 8:05 p.m.
Colorado (Jam .Wr ight 4·6) at Housloo
(ROO rlguer 2·3), 8:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Lowe 5·7) a t San Diego
(W.Williams 2·5), 10:05 p.m.
Arizona (Vargas 0--t) at San Francisco
(Tomko 5·8), 10: 15 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
.
Was~lngto n at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m.
s t. Louis at Cincinnati, 12:35 p.m.
Col orado at Houston , 2:05 p.m.
Florida at Atlanta, 7: 05 p.m .
N-, Y. Mats at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Chic ago Cub s at Milwauke e, 8:05p.m.
L. A. Dodgers at San O!eg o, 10:05 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco. 10: 15 p.m.

GOU CHER- Named
Dld l
women:S b as ketq~ ll coach.

OH

REACH OVER 28S,OOO .PROSPECTS

GB

The

Advanced tickets (non-relundable)
al Early Education Station
2122 Jefferson Ave . Pt. Pleasant

·.

. ClB

Reach 3 Counties

'.'.

M~ip Cu u nl~

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mascm
Counties Like
No One ·
Else Can!

E..t

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

BASKET BINGO
Thursday, June 2Jrd
"Middleport American Legion
6:30 pm
$20.00 Special
Games: Raffles

m:rtbune - Sentinel - 1\egister

National League

Oakland at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Texas at L.A. Angela, 1 0:0!5 p.m.

BASEBALL
American League
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Placed RH P
·onando Hernandez. On thE! 15-day DL.
. Recalled RHP Brandon McC arthy from
Charlotte of the IL
CLEVELAN D INDIAN$-Agreed to
term s with RHP Joe Ness and LHP Ryan
Edell.
DETROI T T IGE RS-Agreed to terms
with C Chris Robin son. RHP Kevin
Whelan, OF Clete Thomas and C Schuyler
Will iamson.
KAN SAS CITY ROYALS-Placed 1B
Mike Sweenev. LHP Jeremy Affeldt and
Wedneeday's Games
RHP Amb1ori.11 Burgos on the 15-day DL
Tampa Bay at N.Y. v,nkees, 1:05 p.m.
Called up LHP Jimmv Gobble from Omaha
Kansas C ity at Chicago .White . Sox,
of the PC L and 1B Justin Hubtl( from
2: 05p.m.
Wichita of the Taxa~ league. Reassigned
Boston at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.·
Joe Jones, first base coach, within the
Baltimore at Toronto, 7: 07p.m.
bas eball operations clepartment.
Detroit at Minnesota. 8:,10 p.m .
LOS AN GELE S ANGELS-Agreed to
term s with SS P.J. Phillips, RHP Tommy
Mendoza. OF Jerome Moore, RHP Robert
NEW YORK MET5-Released RHP Mike Doug Johnso ri tO a' one·year contract.
Aomero. RHP ~ o b ert Mose bach . OF
DeJean. Placed 2B Kaz Matsui on the 15·
Waived OL Larry Burl , DB Charles Byrd,
Bradley Coon, IN F Darrell Sales, INF Ryan · day Ol. Activated LHP Dae·Sung Koo
DB Justin Fraley. WR Bradley Chavez, WR
Pressley, RH P John Sullivan , 36 Dallas
from the 15·day Dl.
Bill Flowers and RB · Adimchmobe
Morns, AH P Kevin Lynch, 18 Colby
· Echemandu .
BASKETBALL •
, Overstreet. RH P Timottw Didjurgis. SS
National Baske tball Association
· GREE N BAY PACKE RS-Signe.d G
Marco Albano. C Flint Wipke and QF Cody
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS-Named John William Wti itticker. ·
Fullac.
Kues ter assistant coach .
MIAMI ·OOLPHIN5-Na med M i~e Baugh
National League
FOOTBALL
.zlssi"stant director of player personnel.
CINCINNATI REDS-Placed INF l.uis
National Football League
SEATILE SEAHAWKS-Signed DE J ab
Lopez on th e 15-day DL. Recalled INF
INNATI
E\ENGA,L5-Ciaimed
QB
Huckeba
to a multiyear contract
CINC
Will iam Bergolla from Louisville of th e IL ·
Graig Krenzel oH waivers from Chic ago.
HOCKEY
COLORADO ROCKIEs-catted up RHP
Waived LB Khalid Abdullah and DT
Hockey League
Natlonaf.
Dan Miceli from Coloradoa Springs o~ the
Terrance Martin.
·
ANAHE IM MIGHTY DU CKS........ Name d
PCL. Designated INF Ti m 'Olson for
C LEVELAND BROWNS- Signed QB Michael Schulman chi ef e.11ecutive· otlicer,
assignment.

Center Memberships
Buy 2 months get 1 free or
Buy 5 months gei 1 free
For more info please call

The Da il y·Sentinel • Page 8'3

CLASSIFIED

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

lebanon Floor, Pomeroy, Ohio
Township Trustees 45769.
· will hold a public Ray C. Reames
hNrlng on the budget Box 258 42183 State
of lebanon Township Rt. 7
lor the year 2006. This Tuppers P!alns, Ohio
·meeting . will be held 45783
July 2, 2005 at 7 pm at (6) 21
lheTownahtp Building
prior to .the regular
Public Notice
meeting. The budget
wtll be available lor
Inspection at the Probate Court ol
Clerk's homo June 22, Meigs County, Ohio
2005 lhru July 2, 2005 . In Re: Change of
by appointment only. · name of Samuel lee
Regular meeting of Chick to Samuel lee
Lebanon Township Reynolds.
'll'ualeea. will be held Case No:
following the public Notice of Hearing on
heerlng.
· Change of Name
lebanon
Township Applicant
hereby
Tl'lllleea
gives notice to all
John Krider
interested
persons
Charles Weddle .
and · to Timothy L
Donald Dailey
Chick, that the appll·
Dorothy Roseberry, cant has flied an
application
for
Clerk •
843-5474
Change ol Name in
(6) 21
the Probate Court of
Meigs County, Ohio,
requesting .
the
Public Notice
change· of ·name of
s.m..l lee Chick to
PROBATE COURT OF Samuel Lee Reynolds.
MEIGS
COUNTY, The hearing on the
OHIO
application will be
IN RE: Change ol h81d on the 22nd day
name of Clovis Ray
ot July 2005 at1 :30 o'
Reames to Ray Clovis
clock p.m. in the
Reames
Probate Court of
Meigs County, located
;;;:;;;.;",;;0-2005 6 032
OF HEARING at I 00 East Second

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June·at, 2005

,

American League

Wectntsdty 't Games

Eas tern
W
Ne~~o England
7
·Ch1cago
7
MetroStars
5
D.C. yn11ed
5
·Kansas City
4
Columbus
4
Western
W
FC Dallas
8
Los An~eles
7
San Jose
4
Colorado
4
Real Salt Lake '3
CDChfvasUSA1

Tuesday, June 21 , 2005

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Gam••

Phoenilc at Washington , 7 p.m.
San Antonio at New York, 7:30p.m.

Pro Basketball

Frontier League
East Division
W L Pet.
Evansvill e
14 10 .583
Was hington
14 1 o 583
ChiUicothe
13 11 .542
Fkl r9nce
13 11 .542
O h~ Valley
13 11 .542
9 ·~5 .375
Richmond
West Dlvlalon
W L Pet.
Kalamazoo
15' 9
625
625
Rockford
15 9
14 9 .609
Rive r City
8 16 .333
Gateway
8
16 .333
Windy City "
7
16 304
Mid·Missoun

Mondey'e Gamt t
ConnectiCUt 90, Los Angeles 70

Page B2

cations-lor rutl·bme STNA'S
7A-7P, and 7P·7A. and 3A·
JP-itlitts are avail·
able. If you are Interested,
please come in 1afld fill out
an appliCation at 333 Page
Street, Middleport. Please
No Pf\o&lt;1e tails. EOE

. -.gaJ!palieearftf"Colege.com
ACci'IICI!m'd Mlmbar Accr«&lt;! llng
Co...nol lor lt....,dloil Colleges
hi Scrlooie 12746.
'

FIND

AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIED$

.nome .
1 Oyrstexperelnce home 1nstead cf renMg
Sn7.000. (740 )367·7615
· Lmk approved Loads of Fun • 100% financmg
(304)n3-5137 ask tor Kelly • Less than perfect crect•t
accepted
'
• Payment -could be the
•
,
o
I
samE! as rent.
Mortg~t);Je
Locators
(740)992·7321
Neat. Clean.
· For Sale ;
Thnvmg Restaurant nea.r
boom1ng
Constructlon.
Owners looking to Retire.
Call (304)882-2490

eNOTI Ch
10 VAllEY PUBLISH
NG' CO. recommends tna
do business with
e you know. and NOT t
nd money. through tn
ail until ypu have 1nvesti
ted tne offenn

RIO Grande
Investment Property walk ·tO
UmtWerSII) f2 } Apartment
bu11dmgs, (3) rv.c BA unrts
$129 .iloo Call 1740)245·
~13 .

SELL
YOUR
HOME
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

Judy Kay·s
Restaurant
w, upsta1rs apartments. 740416- 1808. 740~1 247· 1100 .

r

W'1j &amp;

A CREAGE

1/2 AG lot Tycoon Lake on·
Eagle Rd. Co. Water (not
lake
front )
$7 .500 00
(740)247-1100 or 1304 )532 ·
6271 cell
Lookmg lor Pr rvale Large
lot. 20011300 lor my Mob•le
Home 14)165' an ElecTriC ·
11yrs ala good shape . or 1
acre country semno. place
tor pets 1n Gallla Co.. OH or
Mason Co . wJ&amp;II hookups.

w11t Ptl'l S150/month. Reply
to PO Boll: 61 t A1ptey. WV
2527t

�..
•'

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Tuesday, June 21 ,· 2005

www.mydailysenti'"!el.com

The Daily Se11tinel • Page 85

ALLEY OOP
River lots f9r rent. beautiful Tara.

Townhouse
beaCh. con'o'en1ent IDeation. Apa rtments. Very Spacious ~
2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2
ca!l {740)992·5782
Bath, Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Pat1o. Start S385/Mo.
RE·\L E.&lt;rr.HF.
No
Pets. Lease
Plus
Secur1ty Oepos•t Aequ1red .
1740)446-3481.
I Buy Homes- local person
buy s homes Confidential. Tw1n A1\16rs Tower IS acceptQuiCk cash . J1m. 740-992- 1ng apphca110ns for wa1ting

W•xrw

Wl,l\1'

HJNRtNr
2 Houses: (1) 4 bedroorri.
(1 ) 3 bedroom. $900 a. $800
plus deposit ("740 )2568152.

5 bedroom. 3·.5 bath. Stone
Ranch hOme with in-grouncl

pool Large beautifUl home
and setting on Route 160.
$-1.Ooolmonth. Lawn maintespaces m very .good condl·
nance
mclud ed.
Call
!lon. DowntOwn Gallipolis.
1740)446·348 1.
Approx. 1600 sq ft each 1
Att~ntlon!
or 2 baths. Lease pnce
Local company offenng ~ No nego tiable lo encourage
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- new
business .
Call
grams for yoll to buy your (740)446-·44 25 or (740)446home Instead of ientmg
3936:
• 100% financing
• ~ass than perlect credit Mobil9 hoine space for rent .
Close to Green School.
. accepted
• Payment could be the $1 40fmo. (.740)446-4053.

same as ren.t.
Locators

Small ~ bedr oom house
wllarge yard . 681 West 4
miles from Tuppe rs Plams.
$290 pe( mo.. (740)985-

3504

MOBILE HOMIS
mNRtm
2 bedroom mobile home No
pets , $265tmo . mcludes
water · &amp; sewer. $~00/dep .
Reference. (740.)A46·3617.
Beaulilul river .V19W In
Kanauga . Ideal lor 1·2 peopi e
No pe ts . . please.
Appl icatiOns bemg taken
Calll740)441 ·0181.
;;;;;.:;,;;;:;.;.;,.::.:,::.;;,..__,.
APARTMF.NfS

~R RENT
~~--------,.1.

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished. security deposit
required . no pets. 740·992·
2218.

1 bedroom Apartment , partlally furnished. $300 month
(304)6 75- 435t
1 bedroom Cotta9·e 1n lown ,
no pets. deposit &amp; ref
fe&lt;:Juired . (740)~46-2468 .
tbr Apar tment for rent.
Downstairs in 700- Biock, ·
Viand
St.
References
required available June 1
(304)675-36 54,
between
11am-7pm.
2 bedroom newly renovated
Apts !or rent . Downtown
Gallipolis. River &amp; Park view.
$560/mo. Some utilities
paid. Now accepiing applicalions. Call (740)709-1690
(local call)
3 rooms &amp; bath, all utilit1es
pa1d,
Downstairs,
919
Second Ave .. suitable for 1.
$295/mo. 1740)446·3945.
BEAUTIFUL

MENTS

APART·

AT • BUDGET

PRICES AT JACKSON
EsTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walle to shop &amp; movies_Call
74G-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED a AFFORDABLEI
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or 'small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for application·&amp; information.
For rent: 1 ancl 2 bedroom
apartments Spring Valley
area.
References
and
deposit
required .
Ph.
(740)406-2957.

Furnished upstairs. 3 rooms
&amp; bath. C4ean, ref. &amp; dep.
required . No pels. (740)4461519.
Gracious liv!n~ . t and 2. bedroom apartments at Village
Ai..,ers•de
Manor
and
Apartments in Middleport.
From 5295-5-444. Call 74()992-5064. Equal Housing

Opeortun!!ieS
Pleasant Valley Apartment

Are noW taking Applications
lor ·2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR ..
Applications
are · taken
Monday thru F r~ay, from

9:00 A.M.-4

~M.

OffK:e

~

Located at 1 t51 Eve!green

DtMt Point Pleasant.
Pnone

r

Special Purchase· John
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 . Wheel
RaKes/ JO hn Deere Disk
Mowers Ca ll lor pnce.
Carmichael
Equipment.
1740)446·2412

,

1998 Ra nger 4lt4, 5 spd, 3L.
AMIFM cassette. Ale. olt
road package. new paint,
$5.500 OBO. Ca-ll alter
4:30pm (740)256-6257.

2000 Dodge Dakota 4114
truck. 130,000 miles. $5000.
Only senous offers only,
· please . (304 )576·2742
2003
Jeep
Uberty
Renegade. l oadep. 4:~~4 ,
S13 .900. Call (740)25616 1~ 0~ (740)256·6200'.

•

Inc.

Mobile Homes • Metal Roofs
Flat or Low Sloped Roof • Carports
.
~ earns • PorChes(

r

_

H~Y&amp;

r•

,Fo~\~LE

ENER!;Y EFHCIENT

~

GRo\IN

1

96. Ford Wmdstar. Power
wmdo ws.
power lm:k.s.
M1)(ed Hay 4-Sale $1 .50 cruise . rear AJC ,. t60 .000
bale ~04~675·5072
miles . $2 ,600. (740)256-

I

I •

I

Residential ·· Commercial

Home Creek Enterprises ·
·

Pomeroy, Ohio

wy

No. 1s (304)675-

5806. E.H.O

,

MONTY

1~~~~p~e~~ Plains, OH

• AKJ i
olo AQJ98
West
East
. KJI09 86 -I • A 1 2
¥ A
• Q 10. 7
• Q B3
. 1065"'-12
olo 1&lt;32
South
• Q5

·- .
,. ,.

1•

4s7a3
Home • Auto· • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollover~ • Major Med •
Medic;:tre Sup. • Cancer .• Accident

.,

¥

740·667-0700 1·888-HUPP234

8152 .

South

16 ft . tin1sh mower. used
Block. brick.. sewer pipes. once.
Full-sized lukury van , sea ts
wmdows. lintels. etc. Claude 88 Cadillac lor sale or trade. 7, mechaniC owned. beauti·
Winters , ~io Grande:. OH (740)446-6464.
ful. 1993. 17.000 miles.
Call740-245-5121
$6,999. (740)446-9961
John Deere Riding Mowers m~~...;;;.....;.;.;.;._~
Pf:rs
starting al $ t .399 , Financing
MOIURCYCU:s'
FOR .SALE
availatlle subjec l to John L..i4·W'""HiiiEEii~ii.EiO~RS---,J
Deere Credit approval. Yo.ur
4 Sal&amp; Sma~ f3eagle Hound payments could be as low 02 400 ek Biggun pipe, ·
puppies .M &amp; F. more into. as $39 month. with $0' down . Holeshot tires. @r-eat shape .
7AM··7PM. 740-742-0528
Equipffient $2,500. 1.740)388-9701
Carmichael .
------~·
(740)446·2412.
.Tra1 ler lot, 2.5 miles ou t
1999 Harley Road King
Neighborhood Ad . Call Basset Hound pupp1es full Riding Mower 30" cut rear
·
9,000 miles. tour pac tou ring
1740)446-1685.
blooded . 9 weeks old. 5 Eng1ne, $499. call for details seat. 4 helmets. hea'w'y dtJty
females. 1 male. (740)446- 1304)675 1731
WAJ\7Fh
·
cover. $1 3,000 (740)4460974
RENT
Riding
mower.
1997 4525 after 5pm.
10
'
L---Oiiriiiiiii--,.J Pure bred Siberian Husky HusqvarnaJGT H 220 50 ~
Puppy. Female, Sdble ·and cut. bad transmission. Be~t ~002 Yamaha 660 , Raptor
LooKing lor house to rent
white. mask, loves people. offer. (7401367 _0314
yellow/black
w/matching
locally. Mason or me1gs co.
c an be ins 1de or out.
KBC helmet .
E)(cellent
cail--304· 773-5600
wormed. 12 weeks old, very Zero Turn Z-Trak Mowers Condition $3.700 (304)675\Ill{( II\ \IH'I
nice!ll $160.00 each. call tram John Deere a'Jailabl6 at · 10-15
740-441-4462 or 740-992· 4.9%
lixed
rate
fro - , . - - - - - - - 10
HOI:JSEHOIJJ
Carmichael Equipment wilh 2004 Honda Foreman 450,
5885
.Goons
John Deete Credit approval. Manual shift. E... c.ellent ·
..__ _ _iiiiiiiiiioo.._.l Schnauzer puppies {minia· ( 7 4 o ) 4 4 6 • 2 4 1 2 .Condition .
New tires .
C
C
lure). AKC, 4 _colois.. vet wwwc areq com
$4.200 060(304)882-2662
each ;
Mollohan arp~t, 202 lark checked.
5400
c napel Rqad. Porter. Ohio Pomeranian puppies, AKC ,
200! Harley David SOn Fat
(74°)4 46 •74 44 1· 877 •830 · 2 female. light brown. $400 ~Fiiii;;;;;;;;;;A;;;;IJfOS;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Boy.'66D miles, Windshield,
9162. Free Estimates. Easy each : (740)696-1085
Backrest. Ft Pouch, $16,000
financing , 90 days same as =:::::.~:!:::::..:..:::::::___
1-UR SA.l..E
(3041773 5081 or (304)773
cash. V1saJ Master Card . Seven week fe male AKC L---iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiro-,.1 57591 •
.
Drive· a- little save alot.
Black labs.
Shots and 1948
Chevrolet
Five - - - - - - - - wormed. $200.00. Parents
81 Harley 1340 Custom . 6
Thompsons Appliance &amp; on Premises. 740-992-3357 -Passenger Coupe, WV gal. tanks. $8500 Firm. call
Rep air-675-!388. For sale, or 740•416•2050
Sticker, New Tires . Good
(304}576- _•_na_r_6_(_7_40_)_84_3_·_12_33
_ __
Paint "Sharp"
re -co nditioned automatic
r Homes
washers &amp; dryers. refrigeraMlNICAL
2288
9~ Harley Davidson Ultra
r Septic Systems
tors. gas and electric
r Roofing
· -oiiNsTRililiiiiiiiJl'oii!ElVfSiiiiiiiiii-~ 1952 . Plymouth 4dr, lor Classic. 10,000 miles. blue.
~ Backhoe
ranges. a1r conditioners. and '
no
Rust. excerientcondition·. $13,500,
· ·Aestoralion,
r Sile
wringer · washers _ Will do Parlor Pump Organ-·manu· Engine nms. Body Original. (i40)949·2217
·r· Preparat1 on
repairs on major br.ands in facturect by Putman Organ no Dents. 31 ,OOOJmites
·
~ Dozer
2004
w/ accesHonda
450
shop Or at your home
Co. Lighl Oak. $395. 740· 1304)576·2532
~ Garag·e s
sories. H300 miles. $4.000
Used Furniture Store. 130 992 -4197
·r Uti lities
1985 Pontiac Trans-Am, 080
·
r Pole Barn s
Bula'w'ille Pike. Washers, dry·
FRuiTS &amp;
5spd, 305 H.O .. on ly 55,000 John Deere 235 garden
ers·. refrigera tors . ra nges,
VEG,.:TABLES
miles. viper blue, . Hops, tractor. 3. yrs old, $3.300
Pomero y. Ohio
mattresses . dresser. couch·
74U-9Yi-7.S .~ .
e•ce llent shape _ (740)446· 080. (740)256-6002 .
es, dinenes. recliners , grave Cabbage tor sale at $1 .00
740--&amp;!6-lSlJ
BoATS &amp; MOTORS
,\..
.
monuments. much · more. per head. 79 Spruce St. 0350.
7 ~1-5 1)1 -4641
(74 0)446-4782. Gallipolis.
1992
Ford
Tempo
Gl,
4
IDR SALE
.
Gallipolis.
Phone
(740)645OH Hrs. 11 -a (M·S).
door, auto, very good condi·
0501 .
lion, $1 ,500. (740)992-1777 1984 Bayliner, cuddy cabin
Myers Tree
I \ U \ I ' t 1'1'1 II ..,
Service
1993 Teal Olds C:..~tla ss VolvoiPenla with trailer.
,\ 11 \ l " llllh.
Supreme S. Good co ndition, Good condition . $3,500.
lass than 100.000 miles, (740)367-ll3 14.
Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. POmeroy. 740992-2 526 Ru ss Moore . 0°'0 Fiked Rate up tO 36 1997
Buick
leSabre
owner.
months on.,New John Oeere limited. 75 thousand miles.
CompactTractors &amp; 110 TL6 leather
Int .,
Loaded.
Wanted to buy an1ique. used at Carmichael Equipment. Garage Kept.
$5,995
furnitUre
&amp;
estates. '(740)446-241 2
(304)675-1731
All YllUr Home '
1740)245-5078:
Case 48Q.C ~ck Hoe with 1998 BuiCk LeSabre. 46,000
Improvement N e-e ds
cab and heater. good condi- actual miles. One owner,
• Siding • Window s
• Decks • Porches
tion, $11 ,000 _ (304)675- excellent condition. Phone .
Til &amp;
(740}446-0941 .
• cram1c 1 c
6460
Hardwood Floorin g
_
1995 Yamaha 250 4
Gas 4020 John Deere trac- 1998 Dodge Neon loaded. 4 1987 20 ft Pontoon Boat
• Garages
Wheeler, good condition
tor.
gOOd
condition . dOOr, nice clean car. $1 ,BOO . . with trailer and SOhp Motor • Room Add _• Rooting
$1 .000 .
Cherry Finish
1740)379-2853.
$3.500 . 1740)992·6914.
• Kilchcns • B aths
··No Joh Tfl Srnalf ··
Dresser, cost $899 sell for (304)895--3274 or (304)895S200. Game
Advance 3075
2000 Ford Taurus. 70,000 2000 Baytiner 21ft. cuddy w/
Raci ne. O H
SP. $40 1304)675-2800
Incredible deal, -Mth FOfd miles, 57 .600, (7 40)742· trailer, many extra,s, very
740-247-2162 or
8QOO, 105hp. like-new. :.34;.:;0;.:5_ _ _ _ _ _ _ clean 304-675-5563
740-416-3508
DOll House's lor sale.with or
Totally remodeled mechani- 2000 Pontiac Suntire, low - - - - - -- - 14 yr s. E.1C.pcric-ncc
without Furniture. (304}882~
ca1 a11&lt;1 s1ru d ura 11y. New miles, eltcellent ct:mdition, 2003 2211. Sweetwater l""""""""""""'"''~m::;oO.
24:J!l
boat".
40hp.
. · Back 1og and hay one 6wner, (740)992-7546 Pontoon
rear 1•res.
.---:c-:-=--- Horne Exer.cise Machine . ·hook added. $10,000 Great after Spm.
Johnson motor. power-lrim.
must sell $ 200 OBO call lor Deaf (304)773·5333
l;ioosier trailer w/ladder,
_:c:.;_.:.:c:_-'--_:_c:.;:.:__ _ · 92 Plymouth Acclaim. Auto. spar_
a tire/bracket. AWFM
description (304)882 •3872
John Deere tO ft. No Til Drill AC , $1000 OBQ (304)675- stereo/CO, · many extras.
for
Rent.
Carmichael 6628
Asking $10,995. (740)446JET
EQuipment. (740)446-2412. [
TRUCKS
2016 or (740)339-Q324 .
AERATION MOTORS
15
Alli ypes o f roofing:
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
John
Deere
Commercial
FOR
SALE
AA~~
Shingle. Flal. M etal ~~~
StOCk. Call Ron Evaris, 1~ Worksite Produds In Stock!! ..__________
New or Repair
800-537 ·9528.
Compact Excavator 27C,
350. 500/Skid Siet!fs 371 , 1983 Ford F250 400 Big
Seamless Gutter ·
320 .
325.
328/Tractor Block Dana 60s, front &amp; rear Reactive Stainless Steel · Down spout : Siding
NEW AND USED STEEL Loader Backhoe 11 OTlB. 36" Super swampers, runs Performance Muffler $50
S.teel Beams. Pipe Rebar
............,
1·d bod $4 500 call
or
(304)675·4617
·
Check out our rental rates. g......,., so I
y,
,
For · Concrete,
Angle. Great Financing Avaitabl. e- OBO or WI·11 tra de 1o r good 4 3045~99 .
Channel. Flat ·ear, Steel
wh
)256- cc
Carmichael
Equ 1pmen t
eeler. (740
17uc.
. CAMPEllS&amp;
Grating
For
Drains .
740
6
2412
MOJOR HOME&lt;&gt;
Driveways &amp; WalkWays. L&amp;L (
l44 •
·
1987
Dodge
Dakota.
Scrap Meta~ bpen Monday. NeW: ~3 , 5005, &amp; 5020 111 .000 miles. runs great
Tuesd a~.
Wednesday &amp; Series John Deere Utility good gas mileage. $1 ,000 1999--Trall Lite Bantam
STANLEY TREE
Flyer. Excellent condiUoh .,
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed Tractors 0 O% fixedl 36 080. (740)256·9031
TRIMMING I .
loaded.
Ml:ISI
see.
740Thursday.
Saturday
&amp; . months. U~ Utilrty Tractors
1991 Ford Ranger, l:lcxtf fair,
"GENERAL
949-2709 $8600.00
Sunday. (740)-US-7300
0
.. .9% Variable/ 60
runs fair, $800 (304)675-months.
Carrilichael 8714
Office de5ks, kids adjustable
34' "03" Jayco Eagle 1·12'
Equipment. (740}44&amp;2412
• Prompt &amp; quality
deslcS. tiling cabinets, tables,
1997 F150 4 wheel clrM!. slide out Lots of extras. like
work
_
all sizes of chairs. (7-40)245- New John Deere Round
4.6
aulomatic. Excellent new condition . (740)339- • Affordable Rales
507&amp;
'
.
Balers 0 .1.9% Fixed Ra1e corotion. High miles. PrK:e 0218.
~
• References
Finandng 10r 48 Monllls Of $6,800. (740)379-9885.
Pole Barn 30x50x 1OFT New Mode+ .. 57, Standaid
Co(em~n Camping Trailer
$6795. includes Palmed
• Free
Free .. Delivery · Round Baler Only $13.250 2000 Dodge Da!&lt;ola Sport. 12FT. 2 King Beds. $5,500
Metal,
cash . ' Makes 4X5 Bale. 3.9L Y-f&gt;, Ssp. AC . CD. bed- call for Details (30&lt;')675"Insured"
www.nationwldepofebarns.C' Carmichael
Equipment. tinGr. new tires, $5900 080, 1731
·
Call
Gary Stanley
om 1937)559-83!15
(740)446-2412
(740)992-ms
740·741-2193
Coleman Camping Trailer
12FT, 2 King Beds. $4.995
call lor Details (304)6751731

r

16-1

740-591 ·464t40-992-7953 •

p~rmonth.

-

ROGER HYSELL .
GHRHGE

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
3 miles west or
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

10

992-5682

fi70

L.l,

r

r

LEWIS
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
AU 'fY.Pes Of

Concrete Work

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
lnsun-d

r

TD
ColllllrucUon

r==l

c

·

f3oY

HOWARD L
WRITESH &amp; SONS

I

.j

1

ROOFING

*frllllll•llll•

949-1415

CONTRACTING

· FRANK &amp; EARNEST

BANK
'

starting at 17 horse - 57 horse
with shuttle transmission
4-wd , rt'mote hydraulics 3 yeur wurrunt~·
••••Also availa}lle••••
• Task Master Trarlors 26 horse - 38 horse,
4wd (I year warra,n ty)
• Farm Pro Tractors 20 horse· 30 horse
loaders, finish mowers. tillers
!'lEW' ARRIYAI. ZTR Dixon IZero Thrn .
Radius Mo"'er) 30 inch cutting width to 50
inch culting width 3 yean warranty
1M! TRACfOR SALES &amp; EQUIPMENT
righl in the heart of C00.1er

.

.

BARNEY
HE'S GOT ALL TH'
THAT BUG THAT'$
· GOIN' ROUN' --

COUGH, SORE
THROAT...

911S-4.lSI

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

The Parish Shop

Let me do 1t for yc ul

IS NOW OPEl' AT

liNDA'S PAimNG

The Mulberry
Communit)· Cf nt~r
260 Mulberry Aw.
· Pbtnero)·

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Formerly al lOR
W. Main Pomrro)·

• Room A.ddltlana &amp;

Remodeling
• New Garages

$amt Great Lo,.• Priees
and 5'lililing
Friendly Fads.

THE

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; GuHera
• VInyl Slcltng &amp; Pldntlng
• P1tlo •nd Porch Decks

P"ll&gt;SE.O TO

We do it all except
furnace work

OpEN

LOSER

~f.\OW 1\-IO~Y 1\WJT flOW .

WORR,'(.

l't.W l ~1-.V[ 1

I\50L&gt;T 1-\0W I/IN-\'(
G.~'&lt; AAII:.S l fl.l&gt;-1&gt;

V.C. YOUNG ill

Mori~Fri.

992-6215 "'"'"'
Pomeroy, Ohio

9am to 3pm
PH: 'I'IZ-41H3

25 Vnrs Lot~l Ex rlence

High and Dry

Storage
Phone
(740) 992-5232
SxiO, lOxiO,
IOxiS, 10x20,
10x30

I

Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
991-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
Self-Storace•

1....,

•·

~'

l;AAT LEAVE S

ME

WITH '

7•112-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

"

I N GOL F TERMS,

NOT PLAYIN G MIN1· 60LF
w11H A PINK BALL!
'&lt;OV WANT HE TO LOO~
L IKE
It&gt; lOT~

IMPORTS

Athens

_THAT WA.S T HE

EQUIVALENT
OF A TWO ~
I"'C t-1 PUTT .

Whaley's Auto
Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin , OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

PEANUTS

llestockir'!J Ia le ,t/odel Sa l•a9e
and 4/'ter ,\lu.rket Pa.rts
See Brent or Brian Whaley

M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sal . 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

·SUNSHINE CLUB

SfllTIC TANK PIJMPfNG $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll fOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
992-325f OR 591-8757

ve.

Available
Estimates

• leave a message.

ADVERTISE ~OUR

Truck Camper. AC~ TV
Antenna, wired tor Cable·,
0&lt;e , _
1304)675-

'BUSINESS
ONTHISPAGE FOR
I:OW-AS
.

'$26.00

'

'

ss.soo·

3353

GARFIELD

Hill"s Self
Storage

NlmiP DIDI.E

252 Upper River Road • Galli~lis
740-4{6"-0842 • 949-11 55 Evenings

29670 Bashan Road

Racine. Ohio

~.,r.IOI I1i bli PROi il for,li VL\i i Ei i, Eilio,ll.
NTSi

.

45771
740-94!1-2217

ADVERTISE

WATERPROOFING

Uncondit:iotlaJ lifetime guarantee. ~ocal references turnishect. EstabfisMd 1975.
Gall 24 Hrs. 1740) 446·
0S70. Rogert 'Basement
Waterproofing.

PERMOtml!

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

etc ••

frH rstimates

1740) 992-2979

1/1411 mo. pd

got you
. 17-17-17,.

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

·T he Qaily Sentinel

992-2155
'

$265 lon (While Suppy Lasl)

· • Mushroom Compost

Available
$35 • 1,000 Ills Approx. we ighl ~~~~
18 spreader buggi~ available tor use
Airway pasture renovators and seeders
available IQ &lt;enl
. Licensed agronomist on staff available tor
consutting. ·

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
J55J7St R1. 7 Nonh

·Pomeroy, Ohio

jacket
2 Rose pest
3 Plow

\\test

foo.iorth

East

Obi.
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pas s

•

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
•

where you have 'atready developed
aubstantta.l know-how. If yot.~' re ill-prep ared for excursion s Into new f iel ds .
do your homswork first or it' ll be a
waste o f time
CAN C ER (June 21·July 22) A c tions always speak louder tha n
word s. so make It a po\nttoday 10 perfo rm a t your best Instead o ( liring
yourself out beforehand talking about
all.lhB things you Intend to accomplish
now.
,LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - ' Just
be ca use you already made a decision
on something , doe~ n · t mean your
m ind c an't be changed should you
find revisions need to be made. Don 1t
he sitate to d o what has to be done.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept . 22) - 11 you
p ermit vour ex travagant urges to gain
th e upper hand today, you are likelY to
be the big loser In the lonQ run . Get a
handle on your spending when you
See l!"s out of hand .
LIBRA
(Sept. 23-0!::: t
23)
Som etimes when we are not properly
p repared , we can get away by blUffing
our way ou t of situations, but not
today. Be prepared to cram If necessa r y In order to avqid failure.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -·
Usually your hunc hes or intuitions are
r ight on target , but this may not be the
case today. When you have something Important on the burner, u se .
sheer logic and good judgment at a ll
limes.
SAG ITTARIUS (NO'f. .23·0ac. 21) Be careful not to come oft as boastful
about y_
o ur circumstances tod8y, even
If you are better off than your associ ates. People will respect you only lor
what you are, not for w hat you have .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ,_
When in competitive s itu ation~ today. • .
whether your win o r I0$0, It will be
your behavior that wm affact your
image tn the eyes or your peers. Make
ce rtain you betlave with grace and
dignity.
.
AQUARIU S {Jan. 20-FBb. 19) Persistence and tenacity are nUm "oored among your most admirable
qualities . bu t today You may pack i t in
before yo u even get started if things
do not come easily Get back in character Quk:k.
·
"PISCES (Feb. 20-March ~ 0 ) - You
will be lei down today II you depend
too h8avlty o n ot hers to remove lor
you those things that you d&amp;em to be
In your way. You're going to haYti to
IBnd lor yoursell
ARIES ( March 21-Aprit 19) Reassess your initial appraisal ot a n
Important sliuatlo n todaY as to
whether or not you really are on trac k
You may lind that your ludgment has
been a bit cloudBd and needs to be
changed .
TAURUS (April 20-M ay 20) - Do not
Jet events intimidate y,ou into doing
nothing today. ln&amp;tBad treat serio us
situation s with the respect

terminals

" EX U

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

..

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SAV

JXSBUJOUSYU ·

PZZPSK

PREV IOUS SOLUTION - "I'd i ighl h m lor nolhing ii ihe pnce IS righl '
- Boxer Marion Slarhng . of an opponent .
(c) 2005 by NEA. Inc . 6·21

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· O~«&gt;rrange

11011 . -'
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lollera· of

f®r acrambled ·worcb

low to '"'"' f..,r words.

6

AVTIL
j· 17 1
. . . . "'

,_N:I,

1

.

'

"Ma~ delivery isn't that slow,·

.
my husband sighed. 'We've
.
.
been
back one day and we.al· .
'

I

RH I l T L

lready.----the-----!"

~-~~8;..;.,~_,,;:..~,..g.::.,l--..l Q

l-l.-.l.L--L.-l.-.J.L-.J
.... PRINT NUM8UED
~ lfllfRS

II..

II

Compleie the chutkl• qUOied

by filling In the missing 'WOrds
you develop lrom 11ep No, 3 below.

I -1

ff!q

I

I

I I I

seiAM.LETS ANSWERS 6 ~ 2 o- ~ s

Evolve - Lunge - Noisy- Unmask- MOVING

.

"How was your bip?"l asked a friend. Laughing he
said, "The trouble with traveling is that you have to keep
MOVING."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

You

~ONE~ING ...

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

35

TodaY_$ due· Oepu.i/s P

TIIEN .. T~T CBN ONL~

m

"Taking The Sling Out Of
Hard Work!"

33

Eac1 ~~('I r~ lf\e Clllr&gt;e• stafiOJS lor an :~ lhe&lt;

,SOUP TO NUTZ

~r~-:;;---

32

by Luis Campos

toctay. beCause. she can' t assist you
' there. If you don 't poaaesa the ability,
the r•sutts will be undeslrllible .

~ I J'M fAMIS\IEP, M
~~M£~1~10

B.\t\1 Lt\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

31

.Celeorrty CIJY'!!t cry-pl"ograr'IS sre c ·e iltC~~ Iro"" quolat!QnS try lilfT1~us ;xl&lt;.l0&gt;() past ii""Wl preseflt·

Shouldn't depend upon Lady ·Luck to
help you press past your limitations

Now Availablt At

30

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ment.

GRIZZWELLS

48 Sock port
49 Llly-wMe ·
50 Masculine
Toon Olive
principle
51 NASA
.
Exlreme
degree
· ~ahead
Make - hyph .)
lor il
52 elephone
··-Lisa·· ·
ABC
Huxtable
53 Loop lraiM
player
55- kWOndo
Gore and

decor
28 Overshot
the puck •

clinic

, erall
GEMINI (May 21-JunB 20) -

~

31 Moniker
pioneer
34 VCR button 4 Straight-&lt;&gt;ut
35 -slicker
5 Mine find
36 Stepped on 6 Time span
37 .Lemon
7 Goals
quaff
. 8 Conger
38 Type of test 9 Orange
39 Rome
veggle
wrecker
10 Mag. execs
40 Battery
13 Famous

Wec:tn••d•y, .Jun• 22 , 2005
By Bernice Bede Oaol
In th e year ahead, your gre!atest
"chan c es for success will be in areas

n&lt;E PIN!&lt;.. ONE! I ' M·

ca•m•cn••
Remodeling

variety
29 Gonzalez'$
gold

&lt;Your'llrihda,y:

ROBERT
BISSEll

• New Homes
. • Garages
• Complete

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Easl-West

AstroGraph

eRocltY ''RJ'" .
, Hupp .

Pomeroy, Ohio

97 Beech Street

1 'Yellow

mesugeo
(hyph.)
43 Fleming
and

BarcelOna
Woosnam
26 Grain husk 45 Love dearl'j
27 Change the 46 Appreciate

· fragments

25 New plant

First. look at the West hand. With only
your s1de vulnerable , the dealer to your
right passes . What wou ld you do?
Alternati'w'ely, the dealer ope ns two
hearts , a weak two-bid promising a
decent Sik-card suit and some 5·9 high·
card points. What would your choice be ·
now?
·
· It is traditional that you pr e-~mp1 at the
two·l9'1el with s i:~~ cards in the suit, at the
three-level w1th seven . and at the fourlevel with eight (or more) . Fo.llowing that
tradition in a social team game in St.
LotJis . West opened three spades, North
made a takeout double, of course , and
South corrected to four heBrts, which was
passed out. The defense took a spade
and two trumps. but dedarer scored up_
game for plus 420.
YotJ will notice that . four spades IS makable fo r East ~West. Whose fault was it
that they didn't bid it?
AI the other table , South traded on the
'J ulnerabmty •to open two heartsl T hen
West, remembering that in pnnc1ple one
does not Pre -empt against a pre-empt .
overcalled two spades. I think he should
ha\le jumped to four. North raised to fou r
hearts . of course, aild th~He the matter
rested lor a flat bOard
Back to the first table . East couldn't possibly bid four spaQes given the pre'Jailing
vulrierabil_ity and his delensivel}t oriented
hand . Instead , with suc.h a wild han d,
West should ha'Je openeO fou_r spades.
Either the dummy would pro'w'e suitable
and the contract would make, or the
dummy wou ld be a disaster and !tie con·
tract would fall by two or tt.lree 1r1cks: 1ft
these situations, b1d game . the contract
with the greatest upside when you ; are
right .

i.

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road

MIIILIY'S
SElF STORAGE

..

With weird shape,
bid to the max

New Dealer rar Montana Tractors

Fl'\'e F.Slimates

I

J96332

Open ing lead: • ;1

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

CONCRET~

,,

· K ·J 065

Pas s

Advertise
.in this
spacefor$104

r

06-21 ·'-&gt;

¥ K8 I

41800 SR #7

'11111 Wllld's But loaf'

Ask about our AOHA 95 Dodge truck. 4lt4, autoMember Discounts on new malic.
$3,000.
' Call
Jolin Deere Eq uipment. (740)388-0011
Ca rm ichael
Equ ipment
(740)446-24 12.

·Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

~

AQHA mare , impress1'w'e
bred , Syrs old , very we lt
broke. great for l•ads. $1 ,000.
1740)256·6824 .

CEO

1 Fat cll'o
de!lreea
47 VoTcanlc
bundle
4 Tlny lneect
. dual
8 Scrutinize
49 Friday,
11 Primate
ollen
12 Peny or
51 Pharaoh 's
Loughlin
110d
13 Anth~
54- Needle case
pologlst
5li Roe
Margaret - . 57 Night flyers
14 That vessel 58 Countess'
spouse
15 -West
• of ·· Balman .. 59 Gullarlsl
16 Mendicant 's
-Wood
cry
60 Ali slat
17 Sea rover
61 P8j19Y and- .
19 Aurora
Sp1ka
20 Tease
locale
62 ~hysics unit · 2~ ~oulette
21 Apportion
··
color .
22 Atom I
DOWN
24 Mile. in

/
1\'orth
• 3

42 Footener

44

Alder

I
L.--•L•I•
V
E'
ITOCK
l
_
.
_
.
_
_.~
·
r
..,

ACROSS

Phillip

I'

r
..

SPA FACTOR\. OtrnET

t

Hll\'SES

Mortgage
. 1740)992-7321

'·

Pool equip: ladders, pump,
chlorinator. filter, covers.
Kreepy Krauter (i n-ground). .
Call (740)44't·3667.

Top Quality, Warranty,
Wholesale. Financing.
Deliveries.
2 locations
Millon Flea Market
list lor ·Hud-subs1zed. 1· br.
8 ~sn:~~d KentuCky
apartment . call 675-6679 ll,...,,ju606~o:.»9~2-2a·7·1,:;BsE....JI
111
EHO
Steel Sulldingt All Must
SI~\CE
Go.
Repos. Cancelled
f'Ok R£Nr
orders. Damages. Factory
seconds
~ake
offer.
Downtown Off1ce Space- 5 Financing available. Call
room suit\3 S650imo : 1 room Today. limited opportun1ties!
off1ce- 5225/mo.: 2 room 1-800-222· 6335 Bxt. 1558
suite $250/mo. Security
deposit r_equ ned . You pay Yeates appti.9nce dolly. alu· .
utilities All spaces 'w'ery nice m1num. H.D.. $81) firm
Elevat or. Call (740)446·3644 (304)"675-2902
lor appomtmen1.
Bt 'ILDING
SUI'I'I.IDi
For Lease: Oll1ce or reta•l

6300. No calls after 9.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDG'I:

�'

Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

'
www. mydailysentinel.com

•

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Wimbledon grass again brings out best in Fef;lerer
.

BY STEVEN WniE
•ssociATEDPREss

·
WIMBLEOON. England In keeping with custom. the
defendmg Wimbledon men 's
champion plaved the opening
match Monclay on Centre
Court . ~oger Federer was
reaBdy.
.
.
ack on his lavonte stage.
the io,P:'ranked Federer hit four
. aces ui his ft!St service game
and successfi_llly begaJ! his bid
for a thtrd con secutl\·c
Wimbledon title by beating
Paul-Henri Mathieu 6-t 6-2.64.
Federer walked on the hal..: lowed court to a ivam1 ovation.
'' hit 18 a€es and extended his
' 'grass-court winning · streak to
30 matches. including 15 at the
All England Club. • ,
"A good start." Federer said.
"! definitely feel sort of
relieved after' this start and look
for.vand to the rest. You're into
the tournament, you' ve seen
the fans and you don't have to
. leave ,right away. So that 's
nice." .
.
No. 3-seeded Lleyton Hewitt.
the 2002 .champion. hit 19 aces
and beat Christophe Rochus 63, 6-3, 6-1 . HewJU is playinij_ in
just his second tournament aner
being sidelined for II weeks by
foot arid rib injwies.
No. 5 Mardt Safin. twice a
first-roundloseratWtmbledon,
overcame· h1s avers10n to gmss
and beat Paradorn Snchaphan

'

,,

Teen 4-H team to
compete in national
shooting contest , A3

'

6-2. 6-4. 6-4.
of ha1 ing that happen. It's hard net infre'/uentl y hut played
··J . fd t reall y conifortablc. to ·walk a"a~ w h~n you lee! with poli'1 from the basehne,
ac tu al !~. and reall y co~tiJeht." li k~ vou ran ac hie1e the ulti- hitting 33 wi nners with just 15 ·
Satin ,aid. "I wi'h I cou ld play rmqe' goal in tennis...
unlorced error&gt;.
thi' le1el of te nni s everv dav.
Davenport n~xt plavs 18"I didn' t want to storm ·too
l'mtr.in~...
·
· 1ear-old Amcrkan ·J amea much to the net too quic·kly;·
Satin \, ill next pht~ 2003 iac· ks&lt;ln. "!11&gt; beat Marta Federer said. ··1 want~d to get
runner-up Mark Phrh ppousm. Marrero 6-2. 6-3. Other my rhythm tlrst."
'·
'\l'ho received a "'ild card into 110men\ wi nners included t\o.
Federer is t~ i ng 10 become
the draw and -beat Karol Beck .1 Amc lie Mauresmo. No. 15 jull the .third man since the
7-5. 6-.4. 6-2.
Kim Clijster' and l'.S. Open 1930s to wi n three con,ecutive
No. 16 Mariano Ptrerta. th~ cha mpion
S~e t lana Wimbledon ti tk'
· French Open ru nn~ r- up i ll'" 1\ JJinc·!, "'"
Hew itt said he·, still roundwee ks ago. lost. to La~s
0-( •. = ~ \mv Fr:tLier lost to · in~ ·in to fo rm afte r slipping ·
Burgs mullcr 6- 1. 6- 1. 6-4.
fe llow t.u 1cri~an Mushona tlo'"' stairs at ho me in Svdnev·
Atlastasia Myskin a. the 2004 Was hingtnn 6-4 . .:r-6. 6--1. No. and crackinu t\1'(&gt; ribs. He
French Ope!' chamP,ion. "'"' ,,n 25 Karolina Sprem. "ho ups~ t rctumcd to tl1e hlur t11 ~~ weeks
the verge ot her secund succe'- ti\Ll-t imc · L'h:.unpwn Venus · ago at Queen '· where he
sive lirst-ruund exit at a m:uur ' Wil limn, _Ia" year. li"as beate n reached the 'ILI:tJ1crtinals ..
eve m when she rall ied to beat biTam:mne Tanasugam6-2.6"The '"'t J\&gt;und &lt;11 an y
18-year-old qualitier Katerina 2.
.
.
Grand ~l;u n is tough.'_' Hewitt
Bohmo1a 5-7. 7-6 (4 ). 6-4.
Amencan Taylor Dent. seed- sa.d. "Its a match you JUS! realNo. 10 Patt v Schnvder · ed 24th.lostscn ·q u,tonceand ly want to get under your belt
instead becumc th·e firs t seeded beat yualitkr IJick Nom1an 7-6 and -~~ t through as quickly_ as
playe r to be ehmmated. She 1-1 ). 7-6 14 ). 4-6. 6-7 (7). 6-1. possmle.It was a good htt v.;_tthwas upset by Antone!Ia. Serra Dent htt 23 a~es, Nom1an 25. out wasnng a lot ot energy.
Z:metu 6-4. 6-7 (7). 6-J
Wild card David Sher.vood. . He witt will next play Jan
Top- ranked
Lindsay an . Englishman ranked 261st. Hernl:c h, who · ralltJ!d past
Davenport. the 1999 champion. delighted the home crowd by Amencan James Blake• 1-6, 6necded'just -II mmutcs to ocat wmmng hrs Wnnbledon debut 4. 7-6 (6): 7-6 (4).
Alina Jidkova 6-0. 6-2. aga in st Ru:anlo Mello. 6-3, 6Myskina stru ggled against
Davenpon had 29 winners and 4. 6--1 .
Bohmova. ranked Nv. 146 and
just nine unforced errors.
No. ' I 0 Mario AnL'ic. a semi- playing in her ti rst .Grand Slam
Davenpo11. 29. thou2ht her tinalist last year. beat qualitier event . Myskina overcame
lo" in last year's seii1ilinals Tobi as Sunimerer 6-3. 7-5. 6- 1. defi cits of 4-1 in the second set.
would likely be her lust match No. 13 Tomln y Rob©lb lost to -1-3 m the uebreaker and 3-0m
at Wimbledon. but she deciued fell ow Spaniard Fernando the tina! set.
10 delay retirement after staging Verdasco 6-1. 6-2. 7-5.
"M ay be if I play more
a career resurgence.
~ '
Following morning thunder- matches like this. then it's easi"I'm still out there because · storn1s. the tournament began er tor me to come back and
AP photo ·
I'm enjoy ing it:· she said. "The in sunshine with temperatures play my best tennis," Myskina
. ultimate.~oal is to try to win . heading into thel 0 wROs.andas said. ··rm really happy that I Defending champion Roger Federer returns a shot fr~ .
another Slam. and ·1 still feel usual. orass brought out the fought back am! that was a France's Paul-Henri Mathieu, during their Men's Singles, first
round match on the Centre Court at Wimbledon Monday.
like I'm knocking on the_ door best in fecterer. He came to the . happy end for nie."

Investigat~I'S

k

.

say pare_nts

had four children work in
shop~ifting ring, A6

· ·

Commissio;ners keep eye on jail housfl:tg costs

SPORTS
• Pistons fOrce deciding
Game 7. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - With the
county's fi scal year just half
over, Meigs County · Sheriff
Robert Beegle has spent well
over half of hi s appropriation
for salar,ies and three-fourths
of the appropriation for
housing pri soners. emphasizing the need to re-open the
county j ail.
According to records in the
Mei gs County Auditor' s

.,

Office , Beegle has a current respon sible for the housing.
balance of $26,27.0 of the "feedin g and medical care of
$ 105,000 appropriate for prisoners in county custody.
housing ·of prisoners. Meigs
"We're aware that the housCounty . Commissioner Mick . ing appropriation is running
Davenport said Tue sday the low," Davenport said. "We' ve
commi ssione'rs and Beegle talked to the sheriff about
have discussed the dwindling . when the jail mi ght be re· housing budget, and are con- opened, because it would save
sidering measures that can be the county money to do so,"
taken to ensure the line item
"I understand that the state
remains in the black for the may be here soon to inspect
remainder of the year.
the work that's been don e
· Commissioners. rather than there:· Davenport said.
the sheriff, are directl y
Beegle continues to collect

-public donations for jail renovations needed to re:&lt;;Jpen the
century-old jail. and. has submined plans .lei the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitations.
and Corrections to ito so. New
security measures have been
in stalled in the jail area.
including additional security
doors and a new keypad security system , paintin g and
other cosmetic improvements.
plumbing
repairs
and
·improvements to the booking
and vi sitation areas that have

been mandated by the state .
Beegle was out of the office
Tuesday. and unavailable to
comment on the status of his
buctget. but shortly. after tak·
ing offi ce in January, he said
re-opening ti:Je jail was a pri··
ority. not only because of the
direct cost of housing inmates
in other Wls, but because of
the cost of paying deputies to
transport prisoners to and
from court appearances to

Please see Costs, AS

'

1\vo putts and a trophy that got away
you feel you had a chance to hole gave him a 69 to fini sh at years ago. when he failed to a playoff with Chris DiMarco.
AssociATED PREss •
win and you didn't take that even-par 2~0 . the first time a hit into a single bunker. broke
lie couldn' t get away with
opportunity to win the tourna- U.S. Open champion didn ' t the . major championship making two bogeys down the
ment. then it 's disappointing . break par since Lee Janten at rcwrd by tinishing 19 under st~~tch at Pmehurst No.2.
PINf';HURST, N.C.- Tiger The two seconds that I've had Olympic Club in 1998.
l felt hke 1f l could get to
par and won by eight strokes.
Woods looked like a beaten ... the PGA at Hazeltine and
Next up is the British Open
But · he also brings some even par and post that num:
man as he stood behind the now here . ... 1 did not get it at St. Andrews. which appeals baggage.
. ber. then I was lookmg preny
18th green, gently rubbin~ his done."
to Campbell and Woods for
There already were ques- good . at least gelling into a
· ~nuckles over his upper hp as
c;:ampbell showed him how. different reasons.
lions about hi s game even play~ff. "
Woods
said.
'he gazed back at the 16th and to do it. .
Campbell· nb longer goes after he won the Masters,. "Unfortunately, it didn't work
17th holes, a 200-yard area of
The 36-year-old from New back to the Old Course think- where he had a two-shot lead out for me. l didn 't feel com' n·g about an opportu.nity that until making ugly bogeys on fortable with my putter all
Pinehurst No. 2 that cost him z 1 d d
d
1 t
roppe on Y wo 1 a ~hance to win the U.S. ea an
shots on the back nine. both didn ' t come along for ar.1other the tina! two holes to fall into week."
Open.
times when it didn ' t maner. . I0 vears. His shot from the
Off to his right was the
One. o( them came on the Roa"d Hole bunker on the 17th
bronze statue of Payne 16th , after Woods had skipped up the sodded bank to
Stewart, striking the winning bogeyed to four shots behind. within inches to save par. and
pose from six years ago.
The other came on the 18th · he had the 54-hole lead. Then
Woods always has said he hole , when he could have he shot 76 in the tina! round-to
was thrilled that Stewart made three.- putted from 3 feet and miss by one shot the playoff
a IS-foot par pun on the ftnal still won.
won bv. John Daly.
hole to win the 1999 U.S.
In between ·was a collection
"It 's just been an interest in~
· Open at 1 under par. He said it
helnPd him sleep better know- of shots that de tine U.S . Open journey the last 10 years, '
•champions.
Campbell said. "Lead.ing the
ing that Stewart finished two
With not much green to Open championship back in
shots ahead of him. and that work with on the II th , '95 amJ· having a chance to
the par putt Woods missed on Campbell blasted out to 6 feet win a major championship. it
the 17th hole that year ulti- and holed the par putt with wasn't my time to win. Bui
mately didn't matter.
authority. He did the same on today was."
·
This time, it did.
Michael Campbell won the the pm-3 15th, having to hit
Now he goes to St. Andrews
U.S. Open by two strokes, out of a bunker with the ball as the U.S. Open champion.
with clutch shots · down the close to a steep knoll. It came one wh(\ didn ' t slide through
stretch and a little help from out perfectly, as did the 6-foot the bac~ door. Under the prespun he made.
·
·sure ot a !mal round, wtth
W~s.guy who has built a And the tina! blow. an 8- cheers rocking around him
mystique by making pressure iron into 20 fee\, was as pure every time Woods made a
putts blinked twice in two as it gets.
·
birdie. Campbell played with
"He brought his game start- poise and confidence 10
holes late Sunday afternoon,
· ·
on the ing with the tlrst swing," .said become the fir st sectional
8f
rt:~mgnr th·r~~ftt e::ino for Olin Browne. who played qualifier since Steve Jones in
·
a
nJ ·n wtth Campbell and shot 80. 1996 at Oakland Hills.
1 th,
bofgey ?net the
ssi g.. "He recovered when he needHe also joined Bob Charles
6 •e
rom
'
d
H
d
· wtt· h a
·Eight shots behind after two e to recover. e exec~te as .the on I y K 'twts
holes Woods found little con- when . he. needed to exewte. m~}or.
. .
lose
call
at
He
dtdn
I make any stupid
Deep
down
rnside.
l knew.
1 ·' fr m th's
1• c ·
so atwn
mt stakes. And. he played that I had somethmg spectal
Pmehurst.
·
ho h· d
· ·m_ "!_e 1o _dod. '-ome rh·mg spe"Depends on how you ~ret sm~rt
..when ,.,.
a .to p1ay
1 1
there, you .know?" he said. "'If smart;
, .
.
. CJ~I , _1e
you come out of nowhere to Th_c on!~ thmg Campbell
Woods .,oes ba&lt;;k to St
get second then yeah. But if dtdn ~- beat was par - that J\ndrews wah memone s· ol
'
meanmgless bogey on the last h1soverwheltnmg vtctory five
BY DoUG

FERGUSON

Campbell , who nearly quit
' the game seven years ago
when a wrist injury led 10
shattered contidence, tinally
has his tirst major championship and wonders where it
.
wtlllead next.
"He was down in the doldrums there _a?,d worked h1s
way out of It, Woods satd.
"And now he 's one of the
best."

News and
information for
senior-citizens of
the Tri-County.. ~
'

.
OBITUARIES
d

·,

INSIDE

.'a,: · . .

over the 19-foot wall in fro m Aaron Boone, Cri sp
center. He stopped on sec - and Ronnie Belliard.
ond thinking-the ball' stayed
But Damon tied it with an
from Page BI
in the park, but second ba&gt;e RBI single to start the siKumpire Larry Vanover •s ig- r,un fifth . David Ortiz then
Damon homen;d leading naled him to c ircle the slapped the ball to Boone at
off the ninth 'to make it .10- bases.
thi rd. whose throw home
8. foulke allowed an RBI
That ended tht; ni ght for was off. all owing Mark
double ·to Jhonny Peralta in Sabathia. who. walked ·off Bell horn to graze the plate
the bottom half, thel) retired the .field ·with hi s hat wiih hi s hand and elude
•
Grady Sizemore and Coco" cocked even more crooked Martinez's tag for a 5-4
Crisp for his 14th .save in 16 than usual. He was ' booed lead .
by the crowd and appeared
Notes: · Boston RHP Curt ·
chance s.
10
Ramirez.
who
left to say something the fans Schilling threw 65 pitche s
Cleveland as a free.. agent silting.
behind
the in a simulated start and will
'throw anotlier sess ion
after the 2000 season hit . Cie v el~nd du gout.
his 15th homer to the p~rch
Sabathia gav e up a Friday in Philadelphia as he
in-left-for-a 3· 1 le ad-in-the---CaLeetJ II g h n me ,a r.~ ~""'~-"'ff'roVi'i"'-t'r;rm'l,.--,nr--:nrrt-tr--'1-~---t~ '1leRJSUfi~----~'""'"2~iti
fourth. . He was simultane- runs
hits
.tnJury.
.
. 1ed
d . in. 43 2-3
... s·tzemore smg
. . andHnine
1
1
3
ously booed by the home- tnnt\)gs. e ashle J~ St . •
in ·the second to 'extend hi s
to~n crowd and ' cheered by tnntng s 111
l S ~revi ? us · hiuing streak to a career·
,
.
F· . ·
vtsntng Red Sox fans as he start.
0 games.
'
Wel.ls
went
fiv
e
innings
ht
gh
I
...
ans Ill
d
d
h
roun e t e bases . .
h
1 r f ld bl
h ·
Ramirez is 6-for-14 with and allowed fo ur runs. 10 .t "'e de ~--Gie
h . eac ..ers
'four home runs and seven hits and two walk s. He lias cnante
et a mrcut to
RB!s against Sabathia (5· not lost since May 24.
Damo n, who took off ht s
4) , . who stood witb' his
Hi s 17-inning sco rele ss hat and turned to fac e the
~a{lipolis
~ribune
han,lls o n hi s hips as streak was snapped in the crowd wtth h1 s arm s •o utRamirez trotted home .
fi rst on Martine z's RBI sin- spread .... Well s has nm lost
~oint
The slugger added a bro- gle . It al so ended 16 score-, to the Indians since. 2000
.
.
ken-bat, bloop double that le ss innin gs by Red Sox and has wo n 12 ot hts lasr
landed on the left-field line starters.
13 startS again st them....
to make it 6-4 in the fifih .
The Indi ans too k back the Bos ton has scored . six or
Two baners later, Varitek lead briet1 y with a three-run more run s in nine of its last
Advertising Deadline- June 27th. 2005
hit a 420-foot homer just fo urth that incl uded RB! s 10 gam es.

Senior Citizens make
up 65% of the total
pop~liltion of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your .

·• The Dally Sentinel

185!&gt;-2005

use today - from the M. P. Moeller God to life through her mmtstry in
Co. of Hagerstown, Md. It cost muslc. A booklet prepared for the !50th
$1 , I00 and was . brought into anniversary observance is dedicated to
Middleport on· a riverboat and Mrs. Haptonstall who died on -March
installed in an ornate alcove of the · 25, 2005:
second-.floor sanctuary. Several years
"History can never measure the conago when it was refurbished, and .a tributions of countless · people who,
monetary value of .$ 160,000 was ' through their devotion to the .work of
placed on it by the Pipe Organ Co. of God. have given their hearts and lives to .
Columbus who did the work.
this church and the surrounding commuFor many years the late Lennie nity," commented the Rev. Mr. Snyder,
Haptonstall was church organist and who only recently assumed the pastorate
Sunday's celebration will pay tribute to of the stately old church on North
her dedication to bringing the Word of Fourth Avenue.

· The suc-cess of the recent
Meigs County Relay for Life
which brought in more than
$40,000 for cancer
research , service to victims
and education. is only poss~
ble when many volunteers
and organiz,etions cooperate.: ·
In appreciation to the Meigs
County Agricultural Society
for use of the Rock Sllri ngs
·Fairgrounds and members
who assisted in getting the
grounds ready, Relay for Life
chairman, Joann Crisp, left,
and committee member, Sue
Maison presented a plaque .
to Kenny Buckley, vice president. center. and from the
left, Buddy Ervin, Dave Burt,
and Mike Parker. who helped
in pr epari n~ for the succ!?ssfu I endeavor.
Charlene - h/ (lllolo

~~--+~~

ij;) 2005 Ohio Valley Publisbin&amp; Co.

Need Extra ·Help?

eaa . . . . ...
J)ailp
J;lleasant l\egister

·-

,.

INDEX

,Representative.
•
•

Rrst Presbyterian Church of Middleport

Meigs County Ag Society appreciated

°

Indians

MIDDLEPO!(T - 150 years of worship, 1855-2005, will be celebrated at.
the First Presbyterian Church of
BY BRIAN J. REED
Middleport Sunday.
BREED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM
Pas10r James Snyder will have the
worship
service at II a.m . and at I p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
If
Middleport's downtown shop- there will be a gospel sing at the church
.ping district is to improve, the located at 165 North Fourth Ave.
While the church was riot officiallv
community must look to the .
Page AS .
Ohio River, according· to a organized until May . 27 , 1855, there
• Patri,cia Mills, 80 ·
study recently completed by are records of Presbyterian familie s
being prominent in what was called the
Ohio University.
The Institute for Local Union Sabbath School in. Middleport
Government and
Rural as early as 1845. Those families who
Development, in its recently- also gathered separately on occasion in
completed service and retail- a schoolhouse for special preaching by
• Missing Scout found
based market study, used sur- the Pomeroy Presbyterian Church pasveys of shoppers and busi- tor, organited with 25 charter members
alive in Utah, 'in
ness owners and input from into the First Presbyterian Churoh of
pretty good shape.'
the public at a March open Middleport.
Services were first held on Sunday
· See Page . A2
house to· identify ways to
increase traftlc and improve. afternoons inthe Methodist Church. The
• Smith earns juris
the retail economy in down- congregati&lt;;m then moved to a school
doctorate degree.
house and were there until the spring of
town Middleport.
·
See' Page A3
Along wtth identifying !'861. Meanwhile the present church
retail gaps, or businesses went under construction and when the
• Five Meigs students
needed in the community, lower room was tinished the congregaattend Buckeye Boys
th.e study, which will be tion moved into it.
The Civil War made further construcState. See Page AS
made available to the public
tion
difficult, but by 1869 the congregain a final form later this
• Family Medicine.
tion
dedicated the upper auditorium of
month, identifies "commuSee Page AS
the
church.
nity theme s" which the vilThe church bell which rings every
• Ohio Democrats buy
lage should focus on in revispecial . occasions was
Sunday
ad focusing on investment talizin~ the downtown shop- purchasedandforfor
·$125
having ·come off a
·
,
ping dtstrict.
scandal. See Page A6
riverboat.
In
1900
the
art glass windows
"The river and riverfront
are seen as the village 's most in the sanctuary were installed at a cost
important asset,". the · study of $50 each and shortly thereafter the
.
says. "Ideas to exploit this ceiling was.frescoed.
Carnegie,
known
for
his
Andrew
WEATHER ·
asset include businesses that
· capitalize on the river, such contributions to the building of
as paddle boats and carriage libraries, helped the church purchase
rides through town, walking the century"old pipe organ - still in
paths, and greater use of the
village dock.
Pub tic . input has also
included support for a sh.owboat and riverboat gambling,
according
to
!LGARD's study.
" Middleport must become
a destination -· particularly
the downtown .area," the
Details on Page ,f,6
study says. " Attractions
could include a farmers market on a regular basis.
increased community events;
including flower shows, to
:t1 SEcnONS - ' 12 PAGES
capitalize on the county's
Calendars
A3 . floriculture industry, lf\Usic
events, festivals and con- .
certs and fishing and campB2-4'
Classifieds
ing events ." .
Organizers say a farmers
Comics
Bs
market now being held every
Dear Abby
A3 Saturday is growing and is
expected to attract more venEditorials ··
A4 dors as. the growing season
moves along. ·
Obituaries
" Village· leaders should
As
identify key markets, let
B Section people know about good
Sports
opportunities and lind busiWeather
. A6 ne sse s that complement.

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..

(

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