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Mei~ HighSchool

MGM District bike

rodeo held, A3

band practice, Aa

e
Middleport • .Pomeroy, Ohio ·
.iii(I,I'S•\oi.,)-J. . ,o . ..!;;,)

SPORTS
• Lucky number seven for
Lance. See Page 81

~

Without P..apers
Clarence Spady Band
,'
The Mudfork Blues Band
Mike Milligan and Stearn Sho·~el
Albert "The Kid" Castiglia
·
A 'LL

I&gt;A Y .

&amp;

AL

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

-._y·... w

$5
Jr':l'*lc-tuy
$15
.
,
.~

FREE CAMPING .
·'

OBITUARIES

CLARKS JEWELRY

STORE

SIDEWALK
SALE · .

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@M,YDAI LYTRIBUNE.CO M

Dollar General
Store coming to
Thppers Plains

•

GUITAR CHARMS
MUSIC CHARMS
ITALIAN CHARMS

113 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH

740-992-2054

Page A5
• Frank Cleland, 84

Fisher Funeral Homes

BAUM.LUMBER

590 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH
' 7 40-992-5444

2645 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, OH
740-992-5141

985-3301

992-6687 • Pomeroy, OH

'

I

112 Court Street • Pomeroy, OH

992-2955 • Pomeroy, OH

HOME·NATIONAL Valley lumber
FDi.i
B·ANK . ~ &amp; Supply Co. ,
---LENOER

Charles J. :K·inght
Attorney At Law

· 992-2090 • Pomeroy, OH

992-2136 • Pomeroy, OH
985-3385 • Tuppers Plains, OH
446-2265 • Gallipolis, OH
304-773-6400 • Mason, WV

ft)ii

THE SHOEPLACE/· SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
LOCKER219

949-2210 • Racine, OH
992-6333 • Syracuse, OH

FARMERS BAN'K
"Your Bank For Life"

992-6524

992-5627 • Middleport, OH

• Suicide car bomber
kills at least 22 in Iraq.
See Page A2
• Largest member union
decides to bo~ AFL-CIO.
See Page A2
· • Wyant reunion held.
See Page A3
• Bible school to feature
illusioni~t. See Page A3
• Enrolls in pharmacy
program. See Page A5
• Artists fqrms are
ready for Foothills.
· See Page A5
• Macy's to sell baskets
· made by Rwandan
women. See Page A6
• Report: Coin dealers
set prices when selling.
See Page A6

Chester, Ohio

Tradition -Service- Value

BROGAN WARNER
INSURANCE

INSIDE

555 Park Street • Middleport, OH

'992-6611

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CROW&amp;CROW
ATTORNEYS AT LAW

WEATHER

992-6059 · • Pomeroy, OH

VALLEY

LUMBER
'·

Details on Page A6

992-6611 • Middleport, OH
Calendars

_
Downing-Childs
Mullen-Musser
INSURANCE .
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992-3381 • Pomeroy, OH

Classifieds
Comics

228 West Main • Pomeroy, OH

740-992-5432

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Bs
A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

)'Veather

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B2-4

Dear Abby

Sports

TUPPERS PLAINS -·
Dollar General Store s has
sig ned a lease for space in the
East Meigs Industrial Park in
Tuppers Plains for a ne w
retail store .
The new store wilf be
located at the corner of Ohio
7 and East Park Drive, across
from the Tuppers Plains Car
Wash and across Ohio 7 from
the Cool Spot The Meigs
County
Community
Improvemen, 'Corporation,
which owns the industrial site
property, sold an acre of land
to Cocca Properties Five of
Boardman for $ 100.000. That
f)rm will, in turn, build a
store and lea se it to· the
Tennessee-based retail chain.
"This is good news for
Tuppers Plains and the
wunty.'' s.aiq CIC President
"Paul Reed. "The site Dollar
Genera l Store ha s· cho sen
for it s new Tuppers Plains
store holds much promise,
with its proximity to new
highways and its location in
a busy commu nity poised
for grow th. "
Dol.lar General Stores now
operates stores in several surrounding
communities,
including Pomeroy, Athens,
and Gallipolis, a&lt;)d recently
just opened a store in Mason ,
W.Va . Tawn Earnest. the
company' s press spokesman,
said Friday the company's
new stores are between 6,000
and 8.000 square feet,
although she said she did not
know the dimensions of the
new Tuppers Plains store or a
projected opening date.
" Dollar General Stores are
primarily located in communitie s of less than 25,000 people or in selected localions
within larger metropoliian
areas," Earnest said . "Many
of ou'r customers earn a , mall
paychec k or depend on
monthly government assistan~e. and a considerable
number are retired :"
Dollar General Stores sell
consumable basic goods that
are frequently used and
repleni shed. including paper
product s, cleaning supplies.
health and beauty aids, foods
and snacks. hou sewares. toys
and basic apparel. The stores
also .se ll a varie\y of seasonal
merchandise.
Economic · Development
Director MichaeJ Gulliver
said the nature of Dollar
General
.
.Stores' business and
the1r pnmary market · make
Tuppers Plains a log ica l
choice for a new store.
"ihc grejlt thin g about
Dollar General Store is that
everyo ne ·needs the produc:ts thev • sell,'' Gulliver
sa id . "Rega rdless of in come
level ur lifestyle . everyo ne
need' the basics that are
avai lable there ."
Dollar General Stores
opened 722 '10res in 2004 ..
and expect to open 7.1$) this
yea r. They now operate over
7,500 stores in 30 ,tate, .
Their
stores
g·encra ll y
employ s·ix to I0 people.

unemployment was at 7.5 per- was ,;een in a1'ca counties,
cent for June, an. increase of such as Jacbo n, Lawrence
three-tenths of a percent over and Athens. Jackson . was at
May's leve l of7.2 percent.
7.7 perc'ent , three-tenths of u
Meigs, which had recorded · percent hi gher than its May
9.4 percent in May, saw ih rate of 7.4 percent, while
jobless rate move ahe&lt;td eight - Lawrence wen I from 6.3
tenths of a percent to I0.2 per- · percent in M&lt;ty to 6.9 pe~­
cent in June. ODJFS reported ce nt in June. Athens w&lt;ts up
Meigs had the highes t rate of fi ve-len th s of a percen t.
unemployment for the month from :\ .5 percent in May 10 6
throughou t tile state.
percen t in Jun e.
Th e trend of ri si ng rate &gt;. The (mcmploymcnt rate for

B Section
A6

£ 2005 Ohin Valle~• Publi.o;hinK Co,.

Vinton
Count y
was June w'as virtually unchanged
unchanged .at 8. 1 percent.
from May, " said ' ODJFS
·-rhe sla te's unemployment · Director Barbara Riley. "June
rate ror June was 6. I percent, marks the third straight mo'nth
al so un chang ed from the that Ohio's unemployment
May rate.
.
rate was 6. 1 percent."
The national une mpl oyThe lowest jobless rate in the
men' rate for the month was state was posted by Delaware
5 perccnl. Llqw n one-len th .of" County at 4.3 percent.
a pcrcenl from M&lt;iy's 5. I.
The number of workers
percent.
"The number or peo pl e employed in Ohio was
employed and unempl oyed in
Please see Jobless, AS

4-H.club members hold annual styl~ . show
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAI LYSENTINE L.COM

POMEROY - Everything from formal wear
to lounging outfits was modeled by ·4-H club
members at the annual style show staged
Thursday night in the Courthouse· annex conference room packed wi th parents and friends .
The event concluded with the announcement of
grand and re serve champions. and those receiving
honorable mention in the judging which occurred
in the afternoon. For those· who missed the style
show. it will be repeated at the Meigs County Fair
at 1 p.m. Wednesday on the hill stage.
.. This year's theme for the revue was "Discover
Ihe Magic Junior Fair Brings·.''
Taking those top awards in iheir respective cat- ·
egories were these 4-H Club members:
Clothes for High School and College :· Lindsey
Houser, grn nd champion; Tyler Lee , reserve
champion .
Ready Let's Sew: Shawnella Patterson, grand
champion ; Jennifer Reed. reserve champion; Sarah
Lawrence and Harley Fox , honorable mention .
Fun With Clothes: Sh.andi Beaver, grand
champion..__ _
• .
Sew """ Others: Kayte La wre nce, grand champion: Keri Lawrence , reserve ,·hampion; Nicole
Moodispaugh. Kri sti n Fick and Tyler Lee, honorable mention .
,
Joy ful Jumper: Cheyenne Beaver, grand
champi on.
·
Dress-up Outfit: Tina Drake, grand champion ;
Sarah Martindale. reserve champion: Heaven
Westfall . honorable mention.
Lounging Apnarel: Audrionna Pullins, grand
champion.
Tops for 1\veens: Brenna Holter. grand champion.
Outer Layers: Kelsey Holter, grand champion.
Clo thin ~ for Middle School : Amanda Roush,
grand c:h&lt;~mpion:· Nicole Prunty. reserve champion.
.
Fruga l Fashions: Heaven Westfall. grand cham·
.
p1nn.
.
Chartene Hoefllch/ photo
It 's Time for Clothing lntern\ediate: Lindsey
Culminating a summer of sewing for many 4-H club members was the annu- Hm1scr. grand. champion: Laura Bailey, reserve
·
al style show h~ld in the conference room of the Courthouse Annex on . champion.
It 's Time for Clothing Advanced : Alyssa Baker,
Mu lberry Avenue. Here Tina Dra ke models a tu rquoise suit she ma\Je whi.ch
gr:and champion.
won fo r her the grand champion award. in the dress-up outfit category.
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4-H dog projects judged

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Submmod photo

A HealthNet helicopter will be on display for tours tomorrow at the
Portland Community Center during an outreach health fair
screening and immuniZation ·Clinic sponsored by the Meigs
County He~lth Department and Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.

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INDEX

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June jobless rates post increase in area
GALLIPOLIS
Unemployment in Gallia and
Meigs
counties · moved
'upwurd in June, lhe Ohio
Department of Jobs and
Famil y Services reported .
In its. monthly release of
jobless data for all 88 of
Ohio's ~ount i es, the department found that Gallia 's

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H\\\llll \ d,t~ h .... , ·nt.~~~l ,

'ltl,ll\\,Jl ' I':.!.) .:.! OU ,)

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HealthNet to visit
Portland Health Fair
Bv. BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@M\ JAILYSENTI NEL COM

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PORTLAND
Hc;d thN~ t

.

Beth Sergent; photo

The 4-H dog projects were JUdged Friday at t11e Rock Springs
Fairgrounds by Jennifer Krawsczyn in t11e categones of dog
care, dog grooming and handl ing . and dog obed1ence. Tl1e wmners were for dog care. Breanna Hayman. grand champion,
Tyler Brothers. reserve champion. Larissa Riddle and Kendra
Rick. honorable mention: for dog grooming and handling. Tyler
Brothers, grand champ1on: and for dog obedience. beg1nners.
·Tyler Brothers, grand cl1ampion. and Hayley Aanestad, reserve
champion . Brothers, Aanestad and Hayman qualified' to compete at the Oh1o State Fa1r. P1ctured is Brothers (len) w1t11 hiS
dCi&gt;g Gunner and AanC5\ad will1 her dog Hank.

h~l icop t ~ r

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HealthNe t !light nurse Don
Siiver\ will he tiel ding ques·
tio n's from the public.
Stivers is J friend of Portland
Communit y Center Vice-presid~nt Mila Raymond.
·w e ,hope people come out
ror th e helicopter and the
health fair." Ra vmond said.
"We' re tryi ng ·to promote
both better heal th and the
Po1tland Communit y Center.'' •
• The Portland Commu nity
Center hnpes to O&lt;)e day have ,
its own heli1iad at the center
for medical emergencies.

lhat .
jw(l\·K.Ic:-.
"en it..:l'
to
Charkslon Area Medical
Center will 'i&gt;~t the i1u 1r~ ach
health fair screening and
immunii&lt;Lli&lt;•n l'iinic in
Poll land tomorrow. prm illI in,;, it ;, not ,·ailed &lt;lUI '"'all\·'
1 cl~cr~CIKi~s.
·
· Th~ helic-opter "ill be on
1 displa)
at lh~ Portland
j ("pmmunil) Cc-nter from 5
p.mto 7 p.m. l&lt;•r puhh,· tnu r, .
~_liddkpr•rl
res idem :ind
Please see HealthNet. A$

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�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION •WORLD

Monday, July 25,2005

l

Bv·tHE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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Suicide car bomber kills at least 2~ people; Sunnis prepare to end constitutional b~ycott
BY SAMEER N. YACOUB
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A sui·
cide bomber detonated a truck
packed with explosives out·
side a Baghdad police station'
Sunday. killing 'at least 22
people in the country's dead·
liesl anack in a week.
Separate auacks killed a U.S ..
soldier and a Marine. the U.S.
military said.
·
The auack on the Rashad
poli9e station in the eastern
netghborhood of Mashtal
came during a blinding sandstorm. Security barricades
prevented the bomber from
reaching the· station, but the
huge blast destroyed 1wo
dozen cars and damaged nearby shops.
Police and hospital orticials
said 22 people - most of
them civilians - were killed
and about 30 were injured.
The U.S. military, citing initial
AP Photo/Had! Mlzban
Iraqi police repons, said 40
peopl" were killed, but police Bodies are re moved from' the scene of a truck bomb explosion outside of the Rashad police
said they were uncertain station (not seen) Sunday, in the eastern neighborhood of Mashtal , Baghdad, Iraq. ~suicide
where that tigure came from. car bomber C!lriving a truck loaded w1lh explosives slammed into the Baghdad police station
It was the deadliest attack in kil ling at least 20 people and wound ing another 30, police said.
Iraq since a suicide bomber
blew himself up July 16.near a
Shiite mosque in the central command said the M;trine was ances that · their grievances Iraqis." he said ..
AI-Janabi. who also ts a
city of Musayyib. igniting a assigned
to
Regimental would be addressed.
If all goes well at the break· ·spokeSman for Allawi's
fuel tanker and killing nearly Combai Team-2 of the 2nd
100 people. ·
Marine Division. but the vic· fast meetii1g, "God willing we group. saiu the bloc's contin·
Elsewhere. gunmen killed lim's name was not released. will participate tomorrow in ued participation remains in
the leader of the citv council
On Sund&lt;lV. one U.S. soldier the constitution drafting com· question.
"Our continuation in the
in the insurgent-riddled c ity of was killed· and two were mittee,'' he said.
The Sunnis suspended their committee drafting the consti·
Samarra, 60 · miles nonh of wotmded in a monar attack
Baghdad, police said. Council near Balad nonh of Baghdad, participation to protest the lulion . has become dependent
' chairman Taha JI-Hinderah the U.S. military said. The sal- assassination of Sunni mem- on getting clarifications to
and a companion were gunned diers were assigned to Task ber Mijbil lssa and adviser . what we have asked earlier,"
Dhamim Hu.ssein al-Obeidi al -Jal1abi said.
down as they walked in the Force Libeny.
The mixed makeup of the
. Albu Rahman neighborhood
As of Sunday, at least I,777 by unknown gunmen. The
Sunday evening, police Capt. members of the U.S. military Sunnis demanded an intema- committee was deemed cruLaith Mohammed said.
have died si nee the beginning tional investigation into the · cia! for drafting a constitution
In Mosul, Iraq 's thin!· of the Iraq war in March 2003. killings, beller security and. a acceptable to all of Iraq's eth·
largest city, . insurgents emp- according to ·an Associated greater Sunni role in delibera- nic and religious communi·.
tions.
ties, a key to any political exit
tied fuel from two tanker Pre ss count.
On
Sunday,
members
of
forfrom the unremltling violence
Despite the violence. Sunni
trucks on the Muthanna
Bridge across the Tigris River Arab members of the 71- mer Prime Minister Ayad and the need for American
and set it on tire, police said. member committee draftin g Allawi 's bloc threatened to troops lo remain in Iraq .
If Allawi's secular · group
Two people were wounded in lhe new constitution signaled walk out in sympathy with the
clashes that followed.
they were abou1 to end their Srmni demands. Committee joins the Sunnis in pulling out
Six policemen also were boycott, which began after member Adnan al-Janabi. who of the process, it raises the
killed Sunday in scattered last week's assassination of also is part of secular leader concern that a . commiuee
attacks in Baghdad and two of their colleagues.
· Allawi's eighl·member bloc, alr~ady dominated by Shiite
Kirkuk, officials reported.
The 12 Sunni Arab mem· criticized the way the com· religious parties and ethnic
Gunmen in Kirkuk also killed bers of the committee mission dealt with the Sunnis. Kurds would be left in control
"Their demands and suspen- of prafting the charter.
an Iraqi soldier and wounded · announced they . would meet
AI -Janabi also e~pressed
six people, police said.
with the Shiite chairman over sion of membership should
The Marine was killed breakfast Monday. Sunni have been studied and taken in anger over commission chairHumam
Saturday when a roadside committee member Saleh al· a way that reassures them and man · Sheik
bomb exploded near the desert Mullaq told The Associated brings them to participate in Hammoudi's announcement
town of Rutbah, 220 miles Press he and his colleagues the draft constitution that we that a draft would be ready
west of Baghdad. The U.S. had received verbal assur· wantto be agreed upon by all within days, saying it was "a

draft that we were not consult·
ed about apd I don't know
how it was written or who
wrote it. "
Shiite member Bahaa al·
Araji said no decision will be
taken "without the presence of
the ,brothers (S unnis) unless
there i ~ a reason for the
absence. Therefore; the committee will be committed to
handing over the draft at ' the
time agreed upon."
The threatened walkout by
Allawi's group is the latest
hurdle in the commission's
goal of getti ng a constitution

drafted and approved by the
assembly Aug. 15. That char·
ter then would be scheduled
for a public referendum two
months later.
Voters in only three of Iraq's
18 provinces can scunle the
constitution .if they reject it by
two-thirds majority in the
October referendum.
Iraq has been operating
under a 1959 civil status law
that treated every person dif- ·
ferently according to their
sect. That law will still be in
effect after the new constitu· .
tion is drafted.

NOTICE OF A FINDING OF NO
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT
The USDA, Rural Development utility programs
(Rural Utilities· Service) has received an applica·
tion for financial assistance from the Tuppers
Plains- Chester Water District. The proposed project consists of the following: 1) water lines; 2)
storage facilities; 3) pumping stations, and 4)
related facilities. All of the proposed improve- '
ments are located within the Townships of Lodi
and Carthage in Athens County, Ohio, townships ·
of Bedford, Orange, Sutton, Chester, Lebanon,
Letart in Meigs County, Ohio.
· £required by the National Environmental
Policy Act, the Rural Development utility program
(Rural Utilities Service) has assessed the potential
environmental effects of the proposed project and
has determined that the proposal will not have a
significant effect on ,the human environment and
' for which an Environmental Impact Statement will
not be p~epared. The basis of this determination
is a review of the environmental documentation
included and referenced in the Environmental
Assessment.
Copies of. the E-nvironmental Assessment can be
received or obtained at USDA, Rural
Development, 21330 State Route 676, Suite A,
Marietta, Ohio 45750·6799. For further informa· ·
tion, please contact Christine Crowell or Gordon
Parker at (740) 373-7113.
USDA 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 map of the proposal is shown below.

r -T""-=n:::::· -"'"}; --~-

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ATI'I N1S COIJN'l'Y

Largest member unipn decides to bolt AFL-CIO
Sweeney, they have demand·
said hi s team "bent over back· CIO in 2002.
ward" to appease the dissi ·
Leaders of the dissident ed more money for organiz·
dents "until it's given us a unions say the AFL-CIO ing, power to force mergers of ·
CHICAGO - The AFL· pain in the you-know-where." ieadership has failed to stop smaller ~nions and other.
CIO succumbed to division · SEit) president Andy Stem,
Sunday, with its largest union leading the breakaway effort, the steep decline in .union changes they say are key to
deciding to boll the 50-year- is a former protege of membership. In addition to adapting to vast. changes in
seeking the ouster. of society and the economy.
old federation and three oth· Sweeney's.
ers poised to do so in a dis·
"It' s a shame for working
pule over how to reverse people that before the tirst
organized labor's long slide .
vote has been cast, fo.ur
The four unions, represent· unions have decided that if.
ing nearly one-third of the they can't win, they won't
AFL-CIO's 13 million mem· show up for the game.''
bers, announced Sunday they Sweeney said.
would boycott the feuera·
Gerald McEntee, president
tion's convention that begins of a government employees·
Monday. .They are part of the union with more than I mil· ·
Coalition lo Win, a group of lion members, accused hi s
seven unions vowing to boyconing colleagues of aid·
reform the labor .movement · ing labor 's political foes.
- · outside the AFL-CIO if "The only people who happy
about this are President Bush
necessary. ·
The Service Employees and his crowd.'' the Sweeney
International Union, with 1.8 ally said.
million members, plans to
Rank-and-fde members of
annou·nce Monday that it is the 52 non-boycouing AFLJeaving the AFL~CIO. said CIO affi liates expressed con·
severa l labor oflicials who fusion , and anger over the
spoke on condition of action . " If there was ever. a
anonymity because t)Jey are time we workers need to stick
not authorized to discuss the together. it's today.': saiu
developments.
,
Olegario Btrslamantc. a steel·
We' II deliver all the local happenings right to your home. Stop by our office
The Teamsters unioit also worker from Cicero. Ill.
was on the verge of disaffili- · The boycoll means the
.and subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for 3 months for only $30.19 and receive
ating. and would likely to, be unions will not pay $7 million
the first to follow SEIU's in buck dues to \he AFL-CIO
lead. the officials said. Two on Monday. an act that some :: a FREE comic umbrella*!
If you ;u~..: a curr~ nl S tlh:-.~·rihcr. yol1 can receive a frcC umbrella" hy t?Xlcnding your subscription for 6 .months for onl y $59 . 15 .
other boycouing unions were labor officials consider tanta(
&gt;~&lt;
Pa
y ri1c ru must he made in pcr..on at the D:.1ily Scmincl , 111 Coun St.. Pomeroy, Ohio in order to receive your Free comic umbrella.
likely to leave the federation : moUIJl to quitting the federa - ·
\
.
Quamitics arc limited . .
United Food and Commercial tion . If all four boycouing
Workers and UNITE -HERE, unions quit the federation.
r-----------~----~------------,
a group of textile and hotel they would take about $35
workers.
million from the AFL-CIO.
· "Our differences· are so fun- which has already been
damcntal and so principled lor~~.d to layoff a quaner or.
1
" .
"Your Hometown Newspaper"
.
.
1
that at this point I don't think its 400-person stall ·
.
I Drop this coupon off 111 our ntlk c &lt;II Ill Coun S1. . Pqmcroy, Ohio with yOur ~~y~cnl and receive a FREE c.:omic umbrella .
I
there is a chance there \Viii he
Two other unions that arc
a change' of course," s:iid pan of the Change to Win
· UFCW President Joe Hansen. Coa lit ion did not J)lan to leave
: 0 I ha ve n,;, hcc,n a
in lhc
J O days.
is my pay1ncnt of $30.19
3 monlhs of Ihe Dai/r Sentinel.
"Our differences have 1he Chicago convention: the
I
become unre solvable," said Laborers International Union
I D I currl'ntl~ \Uil~nibl' to thl' V ll i ly s,•mi nt'l End u'tell i~ my payment of $59. 15 for a 6 month 'i.Ub'ic riplion .
I
Anna Burger, chairman of the of North America anJ the
Change to Win CoaJition United Farin Worker,. · They
Nam~ -------------------,..-------;---------1
which is setting itself up to be arc the least likely of .the
AddrL'""
a rival of the AFL-CIO. coalitiun members to leave
"Today. will be remembered the AFL-CIO. though the
------------------~----~------------1
as a rebinh of union stren_gth Laborers ' how signs of cdg·
P lH II H...' ----~-------------'----------------,- 1
in America."
· ing that way. officials s aid.
.0 Visa .
-Expiration Dale
Card#
•
AFL-CIO President -John . The Unite..I Brotherhoou of
0 MasterCard
Expiration Dale
·
.
. Card#
.
. .J
Sweeney, expected 'to easily Carpenters and Joiners of
win re-election over the Anierica. the ~eventh member
objections of the . dissidents. of the coalition. left the AFL-

Bv RON FOURNIER

l

AP POLITICAL WRITER

:

·

The Daily Sentinel

"'~scribcr

~a~l

~nclo&gt;cd

f~r

I

----------------------------..:.__----1

---------------------------•

•

•

Public meetings
'

Park. New members wei·
come.

•

ter or l\)r information .
RACINE -St. John
Lutheran Church VBS,
"Construction Zone.'' 6-8:30
p.m.. for pre-school through
~rade 6. 992-2542 for infor-

REEDSVILLE - VBS at
Eden
United
Brethren
Church , Ohio 124 between
Reedsville and Hockingpon,
6 to 8:30 p.m. through July
29 . •"Kingdom of the Son"
is theme .

Monday, July 25
POMEROY Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m.,
117 Met11orial Drive.
Monday, .July 25
mation .
POMEROY
Meigs
SYRACUSE - Vacation
M.IDDLEPORT
.
County Library Board regu-' Bible school will be held Middlepon Chu rc h of the
Thursday, Jilly 28
Jar meeting. ~ p.m .. Racine from 6 to 8:30 p.m. through Nazarene . VBS, 6 to 8:30
SYRACUSE
'
The
Library.
Friday at (he 'First Church of p.m. through · Jul y 29. Wildwood Garden Club wi-ll
God. Syracuse tor ages I tb Theme ''Where Kids .are . meet at 6:30 p.m. at the
13. "Power Up With Jesus" Wild :rbout God." Bicycles home of Joy Bentley.
wi ll be the 1hemc. For more will be given · away. Cookout
inforlllation call 992- 1734.
at 7 p.m. Friday concludes.
Sunday, July 31
STIVERS VILLE
In formation at 992-3 191.
CARPENTER
S1iversville
Community
Monday, .July 25
POMEROY - VBS at Homecoming at Carpenter
Church
Bible
school
will be Zion Church of Christ, Ohio Baptist Church with momPOMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club meeting and auc- held Monday. Tuesday and 143, o:30 to 8:45 p.m., . ing service at 10:30 a.m .
. tion , Pomeroy l-ibrary. Co in Wednesday. 6 to H p.m. with through July 29. Jerusalem with
speaker
Robert
. grading class. 6:15 p.m. fol - '! wiener roast on Thur,day. Marketplace
is
theme. Sanders, and singer, Bob .
"Kingdom of the Son" is th e Crafts. Bible-time games, Siders. Dinner at noon. and
. lowed by 7. p.m . meeting.
theme.
snacks. music. Program afternoon ser.vice with the
'fuesday, July 26
POMEROY
-. Hysell practice and pizza party Builders Quartet and Sidets
. RACINE - Racine Area Run Commu ni ty Church Satu rdlty morning bef9re presenting special music.
. Community
Organization VBS. 6-8:30 p.m .. tbrough closing prognim at T p.m.
PORTER - Covered dish
dinner, I p.m. followed by
. potluck, 6:30 p.m .. Star Mill July 29. 992-7036 to regis- Information at 992-5195.
. ..

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

2005

.
gaspe I smg
at ?_ p.m . at
Clark Chapel Church. The
evem will feawre the Roush
Family, Together-4-Christ.
Sandra Wise . 3!18-807 5 for
information.

Other events
Saturday, July 30 '
CHESTER
, Chester
Ball Associalion's annual
end-of-season annual party.
1.1 a.m.. Chester bal r field
beh~nd Baum Lumber. All
advenisers and learn spon·
sors invited.
SHADE - Three-on-three
baskelbal-1 IOurnamem , 8
a.m ., Shade Communi'ty
Center. RSVP 696-0811 .

p.m., Ponlm)d Community
Center. sponsored by Meigs
County He~lth Department.
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club . Health -Net helicopter
of Charleston Area I'Yledical
Center available for tours.
TB office will admi ni s1er
skin test., . Bnng shm
records. · medical ~ards .
Chi ldren mmt he accompa·
nied by parent . or · legal
guardian .
$5
u(l nation
accepted but nul requ ired .
Refreshmenh provi ued by
Rotary. ·
POMEROY - Chi ldhood
immun i1.:.Hion

e,linil'

;it

Meig s
County
Health
Depanmem. 9- I I a.m., J.,l
p.m.. 112 E. Menlllrial Dr.
Bring shot rccuru, .. medic-al
card. ,if applicahle .. Cili!J
'fuesday, July 26
must. be accompamed by
PORTLAND - Outreach parent or legal guarJiait SS
health fair screenin~ and · donation accepted bu1 nm
Immunization clini c~ 5· 7 required .

:MGM.District bike rodeo held Meigs High School band practice
POMEROY - The annual
MGM District bike rodeo
sponsored by the Chester
Cub Scout Pack 235 was
held rece ntly on the Meigs
High school parking lot.
The winners were as fol . low "
F~1s1est race: ti gers, Austin
Dillard, firS! , Sean · Evans, .
second, and Adam Russel l
third: wolves. Johnny Curtis.
tirst. Jacob Lemley, second,
and Tryslan Dowell. third:
bears. Chase Cook. · first.
Nicholas Burke. second , and
Tyler Barber. third; Webelos.
Garrett Ritchie, first, Ethan
. Nottingham. second, and
· Marshall Aanestad, third.
: The overall winners were
Johnny Curii s. first. Chase
Cook. second'.· and Garrell
Ritchie. third .
Obstacle Course: tigers.
Adam Russell. first. Sean
Evans, second. and Nathan
Redman. third: wolves, John
Witham , first, Johnn y Curtis ,
second, and Casey . Ridenour,
third; bears, Chase . Cook,
first, Nicholas Burke. sec·
ond. and Tyler Barber. third.
Mar&gt;hall
Webelos.
: Aanestad. fiJ st, Ethan not·
tingham, seco nd . and Garrett
ritch ie, third. The overall
winners were Adam Ruse ll,
tlrst, John Witham, second,
and Marshall Aanestad, third.
· Circle Course: tigers.
Adam Ru sse ll. first. Sean
Evans, second, and Ross
Keller third : wolves, Casey
Ridenour, first, John Witham,
second. and Brad Buckley,
third; bears, Nicholas Burke,
first, Brandon Mahr, second,
Chase Cook third : Webelos,
Marshall Aanestad, fir st.
Ethan Nottingham, second,
and Garrett Ritchie, third.
The overall winners were
Adam Russell', first, Casey
Ridenour,
second,
aild
Nicholas Burke, third .
Balance course: ti gers,
Adam Rtrssell, first. Sean
Evans , second, and Ross
Keller, third; wolfes, Johnn y
Curtis, first, Brad Buckley.
: second, and Casey Ridenour.
,. third: bears. Nicholas Burke.
: first, Brandon Mahr, second,
' and Chase Cook, third:
Webelos. Ethan Nottingham.
first. Garrett Ritchie. second,

RACINE - John Louis.
. ~ C'hristian variety artist.
; will · present a program of
"illusions that do not lie"
at the closing program of
Racine United Mettiodist
Church's - Bible sch,ool
. which begins today and .
: continues through July 29
.· with classe s each night. 6
· to 9 p.m.
·
Loui.s ha s perfotmed in
hundreds
of
churches
around the coun tr y. on
radio and television. and
at the • Cincinnati Z:bo
whe're he . presented over
800 live performances.
"On the edge· of Illusion
Gospel variety Show is
described as an exciting
full sta1;e variety pirogram
· that usess comedy. music ,
: juggling. li ve . animal s anu
: illusions to deliver an
' in spirational message .
Louis is said to use a
variety of method s lo ·

:

Monday, July 25,

Community Calendar

Submttted photos

The overall winners in the bike rodeo of the MGM District sponsored by the Chester Cub· Scout Pack were from the left. front,
Adam Russell, Casey Ridenour, John Witham,. and Johnny
Curtis, ana back. Marshall Aanestad, garrett Ritch ie, Chase
Cook and Nicholas Burke.
Chartene Hoeftlch/ photo

Colorful feather boas wi.ll be used by the flag carps in routines th is fall when the Meigs H1gh
School band takes to the footb.all field . Here they hold a practice session in preparation far
band camp being held at the school this week.
•

Wyant
•
reun1on
held

Michael Bird of Pack 256. left , was the winner of a new bike
·at the MGM Rodeo. Winning bike helments were from the left,
Brad Buckley. Sean Evans and Garrett Ritchie. all of Pack 235.
and Marshall Aanestad. third . Chase Cook, · second, and
The overal l winners were Tyler Barber. third: Webelos,
Johnny Curt is, first. Adam Marshall Aanestad, first,
Russell.
second .
anu Ethan Noningham, second,
and \Jarrett Ritchie, third;
Nicholas Burke. third.
Slow .race: tigers. Nathan Wcbelos. Marshall Aanestad,
Redman , first. Ro" Keller. first, Ethan Nottingham. and
second. and Sean Evans. Garren Ritchie, third. The
wt nners
were
third: wolves. John Witham. overall
first, Brad Buckley. second. Marshall Aane stad. first.
and Jacob Lemley, third: John Witham. 'second, and
bears. Ni cholas Burke. first. Nicholas Burke. thi rd.

Bible school to
·feature illusionist

••••

PageA3

' '

Proud to be apart of ·
your life . .
The Daily Sentinel

___

Marian, who .remembers
NEW HAVEN ~ W.Va. In memory of Roy and that her first paycheck was
Shelma Jones, a gift of $30 a month. has 55 vears
$500 was made to the New of se rvice and is a tribute·
Haven Library to be used 10 the community. Smah
for the purchase of new has been active "ith the
library for. over 15 years.
book s.
It was the second family
The gift was give n by
HARRISONVILLE
gi
ft
made in memory of
.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jone
s·
daughThe children of the late
Mr.
and
Mrs. Jones. Their
Rawlings
of
ter
Betty
Jones
Leroy and Goldie Wyant
grandsons
were inslrumengat!Jere·d
at
the Maso n, W.Va. , and their
wl in beginning a library at
Harri sonville
Masonic son Mich ae l Jones of the
Lakin
Women' s
Leeds.
Al.a.
Lodge hall recently for
The check was presented Correctiona l facili1v . at
their annual reunoin.
Tiinothv
to Marion Batey and Sarah Lakin. W Va .
Carla Wyant gave the Gibbs, library employees Rawlings of Williamsburg.
blessing before a potluck and neighbors and personal Va . .- Todd Rawlin gs of
dinner
was
se rved . fri·ends of the late Mr. and Chug iak.
A Ia ska. . and
Attending were Ed , Ed , Mrs . Jones. Both. Batey and Thoinas
Rawling s
of
Jr. and Dakota Gilliam, Gibbs sta rted their employ· Cleveland. Tenn.. joined
Margy Haning. ·Jennifer ment . as volunteers and together to purchase over
Partlow, Luke and Mae have supported the cit izen s .150 books for the correc Gilliain , 'Janice DeBord , of New Haven for many tional faci li ty library in
honor of their grandparent s.
Jean and Norman Wood, years.
Ti~1 and Carla Wyant,
Mick and Bll y Wyant,
Jeff
Haning,
Mike
Haning. Chris Haning.
Ju dy and Harold Gilliam .
The J,ublic Utilttics C'omnussini1 of Oh io has st"t ll&gt;r public hcarin£S.
Terri and Taylor Petras.
Case No . 05-J 76 - E L-U ~C.. /11 the .\ furrer o(1he . ~ppi1C t l l ion o(
Vicky and Maria Abdella.
Colu
mhus So ulh!!rn Pm1 't 'f ( ·o mplim· uml Oh in Pmn 'r Cumt'om ·
Elizabe th Abdella. Eric
.for
A111h ori ~r to Recm·a ( 'o .~· 1s A s.wJtiorcd H·irh rhc "l ·nm lnwlum
Foster. Joey Haning , Chet
1md Opa atlrm ol an lnreg!).llt'd Gm'(/inu ion Combined t) 'C/c'' ·
Wigal. · Ch uck Gilliam .
£ feetric Gt'llt! ratiug Facil1(r. 10 co nsider th~ d~\ \.' h' rm ~· nt q f a
James Hanin g III. Ronnie
mechanism and to re view th~ rccm ~· 11 of costs &lt;lS~&lt;,c ia1 c:d w ith the
Wood. Phyllis Cline and
construe! ion ar;d ull in~~llc npcr&lt;lti\Jr11~~r an ii111:£_rat..:d g.a ~ i tka tion
Kenny and Lois Wyant.

LEGAL NOTICE

...
...
·Information Needed

~-...;.....

~

Illusionist John Louis

deliv er

in spiratiun ;d
Hi..;
prog ram
wi II be pr ~sc nt e d at 7
p.m . on Friday, Jul y 29.
at the church located on
Elm Street rn Ra cine .

messa ge .

an

Family donates to libraries

-----~
~

Civil War Scholars need informaion
on the 7th Ohio Volunteer Calvary Co.
K and Meigs County Civil War
contributors. Names of interest, but
not limited to: Braley family, Thomas ~
~ Brunker, R. Downing, Israel Garrard,
Joel Higley and William McKnight.
Items of interest: pictures, letters,
news clippings, documents, record,s,
et.c. We will be iri Meigs County
August 7,8 and 9. Contact Don Maness
at 870-926-1415 or 870-972-3616 or
email dmaness @astate.edu.
-+c
~
-+c - - - -- ~ ...- - - - -- ~

combined cyt:k,l·l cctril' g~ ncrat i ng fa~i- l il )· t(x c.)Juillhu:- SllU th~rn
P\1\\' ~ ' (umpany a ild Oh i~1 f';.r•n.:r Comp:;;;y_Thr jl~ ;rp•~:. c n i'thr
hc,arings is 10 J li&lt;1W int..:rcstcd members of th~· puhlu: the c 1ppun u n it~
to\ uicc their opin ions ahollt th~: applrl'atlon' , \ddrt l~l ~la l tnti. m n:~t t lm
· rega rdi ng. thi s appl ic alillll m~~ b~ Llbt a i n ~·ct h~ '~ ntmg t tl tht'
Cmmnr ss iltn al I !'i O bt ~t Broad Str~.·t: t . Cl,Junft'lu'. ( ) hhl ·B 21 5- ·
17.91: or calltng th e C'ommi--,~ion \ hotl ltll' .It 1- ~00- 6:\t• - -~~ (, . '1 ~1
TT Y TOO at 1-X00-6Xfl- l .:&lt; 1 () nr rn Columhu:- at -+t, l, - ~ 1:-,(l tl1r th~·
hcanng imrai rcJ; or b~ \'It'\\ mg the .tpplll·attl 111 1111 the C.. ·\llllllll':-'on·:websi te at W \\~\ . ru ~'. -.tat~ . l)h '" Pl CO Dnc ~ ~l ltl g rnd c \ .dm .-md
inrutt ing the :-tbln ~· Jlt l!Cd ••·a~c n utnh~'r. Th~· puhhc lwa n n);' are
scheduled tn hc ,hcl d \ lll l lll' li.,lk"' mg ~t a t c~· a ad lime-. ·

· Au~uSI I. 2110~ - h:JO p.m .
liill iard 1\ hn uc 1 p~1 1 Hui ldms.
Cuv CounL" il Chambers
.~x Oo ~t un id pa1 \\·a)
Iii)hard . 0 114 )11~6

.-\u~usl 3.1005 - 6:J().I),nt.
Cullll\rl Citv !Iall
Cnu ncd Cl~amhl'r~. I ~t Flnnr
~~~ Ch·,danJ A,.: . SW

. Cantlm , 011 ..t-PO~
.\u~usl

4. 200; - 6:.1!1 p.m.
Htgh ~d 1oo l Ca f~·tl'rt ,l
-c oq 1 \\1mcn\~ Ptl.. c
Pmlll'rn\ . O il ..t .' 1(1Q
~k t g.~

'•

.,

�PageA4

OPINION

The .Daily Sentinel

T.he Daily Sentinel
11 t Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157 ·
www.mydallys~nllnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make tro law respecting an
establisltrnent ~{religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereoj; or abridging the freedom
· of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people pmceably to assemble, and to petition
the Gol•ertllllent for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S: Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. July 2:\ , the 2116th day of 2005 . There are
!59 days le ft in t h ~ year_
Today\ Highl ight in Hi story:
,
On Jul y 25 . llJ56. 5 1 people died when the Italian liner
Andrea Dori a sank aflcr wlliding with the Swedi sh ship
Stockh o lm oil til&lt;' New England coast.
On this J atc:
In I X66_ Li ly""·' S. Grant was named General of the Army,
the fi rst officer 111 hnld the rank _
In I ~6X. c.. ngress passed an act creating the Wyoming
Territ&lt;JJ"V.
In i&lt;JS.1. B ~ n ito Musso!ini was dismissed as premier of Italy
l&gt;y Ki ng Vic tor 1-0mmanuel Ill, and placed under arrest.
(However. Mu ssol i11i was later rescued by the Nazis, andreasserteJ hi..; auth ori ty. )
'
.In I94(1, the Uni ted States detonated an atomic bomb at
Biki11 i Ato!f in the Pm;ific in the first underwater test of the
device .
.
In \&lt;J52. Pue rto Rico became a se lf-governing commonwea\t\1 of tilt' United States.
In 1%3_ the United States . .the Soviet Union and Britain initi aled a treaty in Moscow prohibiting the testing of nuclear
weapo11 s in the• atmos phere. in space or underwater.
·\11 I&lt;J?R. Lo uise Joy Brown. the first "test tube baby," was
born in Oldh am . England ; she'd been conceived through the
techn ique of in-vitrll fertili zat ion .
ln ·IY X5 . a spokeswoman for Rock Hudson confirmed .that
the actor. hospitalized in Paris. was suffering from AIDS .
(Huchon died the foll owing October.)
In I ')&lt;)~ . Israe li Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan 's
King Husse111 signed a declaration at the White House ending
their coun tri es' ~6 - ye a r-o \d formal state of war:
_
Ten years ago: A bomb exploded on a Pari s subway, killing
se,·cll .peopk and injuring ai least 60. A U.N. war crimes tri bunal indicted Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, army
commander Ge nera l Ratko M lad ic_ and 22 other Se rbs for war

Monday, July 25, :wos

Wisliful thinking about Islam
Last week. I outlined the
problem of the age : the
incompatibility 0f Islam
with a multicullural West
that hide s · away inconvenient history and dislllrbing
doctrine under h!yers of
political
correctness _
Without stripping them off
to examine the problem. all
we get is a lot of wishful
thinki.ng_
Historian Niall Ferguson ,
writing in the London
Telegraph on the intensify- ing "Muslim coloni zation"
of Europe. has decided that
such "demographic shifts"
are nut- "invariably a bad
thing." After all. seven centuries of jihad-imposed
dhimmitude for intidels in
Musl.im ~pain gave us the
Alhambra, or something_ It's
that . pes ky "ideology" of
conquest that follows all the
shifting that's the problem
some thing he thinks
European Muslims ought to
take "a much closer look at. ..
Really stern stuff.
Over at The Boston Globe.
a lefty editorial mantra turns
culture clash into harmonic
convergence : " European
Muslims and non-Muslims
must learn to live together.
Each wi II have to practice
the tolerance that (murdered
Dutch filmmaker Theo van
Gogh)
-assass in
(Mohammed)
Bouyeri
proudly scorned ." They
must, must they ' As sharia
law becomes a democratic
option , who will . enforce·
· · ·
such tolerance ?
As conservatives, columnist Charl es Krauthammer
and blogger-cum-radio' host
Hugh Hewitt still fight the

West again and again, to
denounl'e. without argument
or sidebar mention s of
Israe l. eic .. the use of te'rrori•m as a weapon ." Almost
desperate is right.
Diana
Ha ving_ determin ed that
West
"99 percent" of European
Muslims are "peace-loving
and not engaged . in terror,"
Charles
Krautha mmer
'
good fight. but, in tl1ese mul - sound s a similar al arm .
ticultural day s. that me&lt;ms "They · mu st
acti ve ly
sorting through "extremism" denounce not j ust --- the ter_and findin g nothing too terri - rori st attacks. but thei r
bly Islamic about it. Mr. source: the tslamist ideology
Hewitt writ es that my argu- ami its -practitioners_ Where
ments of last week were arc I he ratwus against Osamn
wrong. citing "functioning l&gt;in Laden? Where are the
democracies in Tu rkey 'and denunciations of the very
other predominantly Islamic idea of Silicide bombing?
countries" a~ evidence o f Europeans mu st demand thi s
lslamo-Wcstern compatjbili- of all their Muslim leaders ."
ty. He throws in the loyal
Why Europeans? Wh y not
host ('' millions of loyal the Krauthammer 99 perBriti~ h and Ameri can citi·cent. or the Hewitt millions ?
zens") for good measure . This is where it gets tricky.
Problem is. the extcllt to wllcre those cultural t1es
' to
which Turkey -. where, just terrorism 's tacti cs and/or
incidentally. " Mein Knmpl" goal s see m 'to be all too
was a top- \ 0 bestseller th is binding. It is . true -that in
spring - has ever fun c- . Ma rc h. something called the
tioned as a democracy is Spanish Muslim Council
directly related to the effort s iss ued a f~tw a against
of a strong man, Atatur~. to · Osa ma bin Laden, calling
constrain Islam 's grip on the him an apostate for hi s atniccountry 's
in stitution s, itics. Judea Pearl, _father of
replac ing reli gion with a slain journalist Daniel Pearl,
doctrine of Turkish racial mentions fhis in hi s Boston
and civilizatioi1al suprema- Globe piece about a clerical cy. And while it tugs on the ly star-studded conference
heartstrings, the loyalty of on Islam in Jordan this
individual Muslims fails to ' month . Mr. Pearl note s that
neutralize or reform the the fatwa led many to
institutidns of jihad and l&gt;e\ieve it would be followed
dhimmitude that rise from by others, ''and," he- writes.
Islamic teachings. That I "that using the Islamic
even raised the issue, Mr. instrumems of fatwa , apostaHewitt writes. "underscores sy and fasad (corruption).
the a\ most desperate need Muslim s would be able to
for Muslim leaders in the di sassociate
them selves

from those who hij ac ked
their reli gion ."
He
continues:
" Unfonunately, the real ization o f these expectati ons
will need' to wait for a !&gt;rave
new leadership to emerge .
The linalwmmunique of the
Amman conference, issued
July ti, states explicitly: 'It is
not ·possible to declare as
·apostates any group of ·
· Muslims who believes in
· Allah the Might y and
Sublime and His Messenger
(may Peace and Blessings he
upon him) and the pill ars of
'faith , and res pects the pill &lt;1 rs
.of Islam and does not deny
any necessary article of re ligion .
Mr. Pearl spells out the.
chilling rami ficati ons: "In
other words. belief in basic
tenets of faith pr~vides an'
immutable protectio11 from
charges of apostasy. " Evcn
what Mr. Pearl call s "anti"
Islamic behavior.'' including
"the advocacy of mass murder in the name of rei igion,
cannot remove that protection," he writes. "Bin L.adcn,
Ab11 Musab ai-Zarqa wi and
the murderers of Daniel
Pearl and Nick Berg will
remain bona fide members
of the Muslim faith , as long
as they do not expli cJtly
renounce it. ''
Whi ch leaves conservative
Muslims, liberal Mu slims
and everybody else between
a rock and hard place ..lsn ' t it
time to nack things open''
(Diana West is a co/umni.1·t
f in- Th e Washington 1l111es.
She can · be col/tacrcd Pia
d;anawesr@veri zon .fi et.)

•

cn mes.

Fi ve ye ars .ago: A New York-bound Air France Concorde
crashed outside Pari.s shortl y after takeoff. killing all I 09 people on hoard and fom peopl e on the ground; it was the firstever cras h of the supersoni c jet. The Middl e East summit at
Camp David collapsed. Te xas Gov. George W. Bush selected
Dick Cheney tcf he his running mate. One year &lt;tgu: lsral'li s formed a human chain stretching 55
mil es from Ciaza to Jeru salem to protest Pri1\le Minister Ariel
Sharon 's Gaza Stri p withdrawa l plan . Lance Armstrong won a
record si.xth Tour Lie France.
·
Today' s Birthdays: Actress. Estelle Getty is 82. Actress
Barbara Harris is 70 . Rnc k mu sician Veruine White (Earth.
Wind &amp; Fire) is 5 ~ . Model -actor lman is 50. Cartoonist Ray
Billingsley ("C urtis" ) is 48 . Rock musician Thurston Moore
(Sonic Youth ) is 47_ Act ress ·ll Jeana Douglas is 40. Country
s in ~e r Martv Brown is ~0 - Ac·tor Matt LeBlanc is 38 . Actor
Br; d Renfro is 2J.
_
Thought for Today : " No matter what side of an &lt;\rgument
ym&gt;re &lt;in, you always fi nd some people on your side that you .
wi sh were on the other side_ .. -· Jasclm Heifetz. Ru ssian-born
American violini st (·140\ - l\IR7l.

Leut~r. \ Jo

n lito r are H'dco me. fh ey should ht les.\' tha fl
300 wo rd ,-. All letters are .w hji'Ct ui editing. 11/Ustl" sig11 ed ,
and i11clude address and telepho11e number No .umigned lei·
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:addressing i.B.If&lt;js. nul !Jen una l;t;cs. Leller.\· l~/' thank.\· to orga ~
:ni~ation s w;d illlliridua!s wiII not l11• acapted f or pu blication. ·

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. ! 107.10
.

Deaths ·

4-H STYLE SHOW WINNERS
Frank aeland

RACINE - Frank Cleland. 84, Racine died s'unday. July
24, 2005 . 111 the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis_ Funeral
arrangement s will . be announced by Cremeens Funeral
Home. Ra,ine.

~ 1 4 .2 1

Grand champions
in ~ respeGtive
category of clothing projects were
from the left, Alysis
Bake r, Amanda
Roush . Lindsey
Houser, Heaven
Westfall , Ke lsie
' Holter, Adrionna
Pullins. and Tioa
Drake .

Concert scheduled to raise
money for scholarships
•
BY NICOLE fiELDS

ceeds of the event will be
used for future awards.
Sang serves as the president
· POINT PLEASANT .- of the Marshall Trj-County
Want to hear great music Alumni Club, one of the
w~ile helping local students event's sponsors, and he said
~ay for college?
he hopes the ·event will generThen you should plan to ate more inlerest for the local
attend the first annual college facility and cause
Thunder on the Rive r, a con - more students to enroll at
cert scheduled to benefit stu - Marshall.
dents in the tri-county area by
San g added that members
raising . money for future uf the alumni club, which has
scholarships io be used at the been in exi stence for two
Marshall University Mid- years, strive to raise awareOhio Valley Center.
ness
about
Marshall
. The concert, whi ch will University and MOVC.
feature. Shhhhang, will begin Luckily for the club, the
at 7 p.m. Saturday, Jul y 30 at members' efforts seem to ]-Je
the Point Pleasant Riverfront working.
Park . Admission will be $5, ·. "There is just a huge numand tickets may be purchased ber of alumni from Marshall
at the 2ate or in advance ar University in these three
MOVC- or the Mason County counties. almost along the
Tourism Center_
·
lines .. of Cabell . &lt;;:ounty
According to Brad Sang, alone," Sang said. "I was realthe concert ha s been orga- ly surprised."
nized for rhe sole purpose of
Other sponsors of the event
raising money for &lt;I scholar- are Fruth Pharmacy, Marshall
ship to pe awarded to a stu: University Mid-Ohio Valley
dent in Mason. -Gallia or Center and Pleasant Valley
Mei gs countie s. and all pro- Hospital. ·
NF!ELDS&lt;li&gt;MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Charlene Hoeflich/

photo•

4-H'er Kayte
Lawrence, left,
took a grand
champion award
for the sun dress
which she made
. for her sister. Kourtney. Other
grand champions
in their classes
were from the left ,
Brenna Holter.
Shawnella
Patterson and
Shand i Beaver.

Enrolls in pharmacy program
LONG BOTTOM - Cody
R. Dill , son of Steven and
Joanne Dill of Long Bottom,
has enrolled in the College of
Pharmacv at Ohio Northern
Uni'versiiy for the 2005-2006
school year_
A graduate of Eastern High
· School. Dill was active in
varsity football and basket•
ball , and a member of
National Honor Spciety and
French Club. He was named
Conferece Scholar Athlete,
All-Conference First Team,
All-District First Team, AllState · Honorable Mention,
and was a class valedictorian.
He received the Trustee.
Northern is aft1llated with the
Merit Scholarship.
Founded in 1871 , Ohio United Methodist Church .

N\.\L

SETilEMENT

FANS

JACKSON. Artist registration form s for the 24th ·
annual Foothills Art Festival
are ready.
The festival, held at the
indoor lodge at , Canter 's
Cave 4-H Camp, live miles
northwest of Jackson , will
run from Friday, Oct. 14 to
Sunday, Oct. 16.
Artists are invited to exhibit in the following categories:
Oil/Acrylic, Pastel/Drawing,
Photography, Prints, Three
Dimensional Wotk , and
Watercolor. Juried booth
spaces are availabJe to
exhibiting artists with separate registration form . Booth
participants must be entered
in the exhibition.
The show is professionally
' judged but not juried. Artists
'bf all ages and experi ence are
encouraged to enter. Entrants
are limited to four works per
category_ Entry fees are $6
per piece. or $20 for 4 pieces:
$ 1,2 I0 i'il cash pnLes .
sponsored by the Sands Hlll
Coal Co. and OSCO, will be

Named reserve
champions oo
'their clothing pro·
jects from the left
were Kerl
Lawrence who
sewed for her
Haley Musser,
Laura Bailey,
Nicole Prunty, and
Sarah Martindale .

·awarded.
Dozens
of
Purchase Award Patrons
select artwork during a preview reception on Thursday
evening, Oct. 13.
Foothills Art Festival is a
program of the So~thern
Hills Art Council.
Call th~ council at (740)
286-6355.
e-mail
at
shac @zoomnet.net. or write
Box 149, Jackson . Ohio
45640 for further information
or entry torms . Registration
·
deadline is Sept. 2.

~-----~-'--------------­

Health Net
from Page A1

Latel y, a number of
statewide newspapers have
run stories detailing the
·alleged violations of ethics
laws by publi c official s.
Whi!e it is very easy to read
about a few inquiries and
decide that every public servant has some questionable
actions regarding etl)ics, the
reality is that most elected
official s - both Republican
and Democrat - follow the
law.
Ohio 's ethics laws are

Sen.
John A.
Carey

Al ong with mem ber.s of
the General Assembly and
statewide exec utive ofii ~-

enforced by ihe Oh io Eih i..:~ ~ holder s. upper- level slate·

Commi ssion and the Joint
Leg islati ve
Ethics
Committee . Thes,e mandates generally create a uni form ethi cs stand ard for
b oth state aud local ~ovcrn ­
ment official s to fo llow and
establ ish specific rcqLiircmcnts. including the 11\ ing
of a personal llnancial di sclosure swtemcnt (FDS).
Every year since , public
offic ials have ·been requ ired
. to fil e these reports. which
di sdose all sources of
income , inves tments, rea l
estate ho ld ings and other
fi nancia l interests. Not onl y
do these re port ~ serve as a
reminder to publ ic ofli cia \s
to protect agai nst any potentia l contl i,cts or interest: they
also help ro ensure public
confidence that pLiblic ser va nt s arc not ltlisu5ing their
offic ial positions for til; ir
own personal benefit.

-·

employees are also req4ired
to fil e an amwal FDS. In
additi on. Ohio is the onl y
state that requi res state oftlciah and senior pu hlic
employee' to·· fi le post
employ nicnt ·
disc \o, ure
statcme111 s fo r a lwo-yea r
period ulte r leaving public
service or public employment. These statemeJlts JllU.st
specify whether the person
leav in g will receive any
income from a lobbyist. a
lob!:Jyist's employer ur any
entit y, association or business that, at any time during
the prior two yea rs._ was
awarded a cont act .hy any
' tate agen cy vai ued at
$ 100.000 or more .
As a state legislator. I am
requi red to rile an 'i']nual
fDS
wit h
the Joint
.Leg islative
Et hic&gt;
Comm ittee . Along wi th '
sources of mcome. ' these

re port &gt; require me to li st
an yone who has given me a
gift with a value more than
$75 (excluding those from
most famil y members), or ·if
the gift is from a lobbyist, I
am 'rcquired to repon·thc gift
if the value is more 1han
$25 . In addi1i on. I am
·required to report when I
rcce ive foo d and beverage
val ued at more than $ 100
annuall y and other things of
value , such as travel expenses incurred in connection
with ufliciai uuti ~s.Often, it's through lobbyis\s that many official s
receive gifts, meal s and
cmert;iinment that must be
listed on a FDS _ Lobbyists
re pres~1t a variety" of inter-·
e.&gt;t groups, including everyone from teac hc" to trial
· attorneys to motorcycle riders, and pl ay a significant
role in supplyi ng informalion and servin g as a voice
fo r many Ohioans.
Although I avoid th.e
"social sce ne" of Columbus
in an effort to · prevent any
'dppeanmces of impropriety.
I try to•kee p an open door
policy in my office allowing
anyone who has inlo nnation
on pending legis lation,
whe1hcr they he a constituent or a lobbyist hired
by a corporation or interest
grouP', hccause it helps educate me a&gt; I vote on im portant , tate matters. Whether I

agree with them or not, it .is
my job to hear their views
and make the best decisi&lt;.ms
for my con stituents. I stri ve
to represent those in my di stri ct honestly and fairly during my time at the
Statehouse.
Ohio's ethics laws are in
place to protect the interests
of all Ohioans. They not
only remind officials of their
.financial interests and kee p
them '' in check" to avoid
abu sing their positions. l&gt;ut
they al so ensure the public
can have confidence in those·
they have elected to serve as
their voice in government.
Whi)e there are literally
hundreds of people that tile ·
financial di sclosure reports,
. only a handful have ever
been questioned. It's im por, tant ro remember that 111ost
public servants follow tl1e
strict ethics laws put in place
to ensure the views of ihcir
con stituen cies are o penly
'and honest! y represented.
As .always. I we lcome
your views on state issues. If
you have any qu estions,
thoughts or concern s. or if
' yo u need assistance working
with a state government
, age ncy. please wri·te to me:
Sen. John A. Carey, Ohio
Senate:
State hou se,
Columbus, Ohio 432 15, or
call my office at (614) 4668156_

Jobless
from Page A1
362.000. down from 36,3.000
in M,ay. The number of
unemployed has decrea_sed
by 4,000 over the . year from
366,000. The June unemployment rate tor Ohio was
down from (\.2 percent in
June 2004.
County ·and city rates posted by ODJFS are unadjusted.
meaning they do not take wto
account seasonal adjustments
1
,
in employment.
· ·(The A.1snciated Press contributed to rhis sJnrr.)
-

'

PROUD TO BE APART
' OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe roday • 992-2155
www.mydailyseminel.com ,

asking for a $5 donati on for
i·mmun izat ion s although it
is no t requ ired. Children
mu st be accompani ed by a
parent or l eg al g u &lt;, trdi :. u~

1

t1 /(:'

The Daily Sentinel• Page As .

www .mydailysentinel.com

Artists forms are ready for Foothills

Gifts·to public qfficialsgoverned by strict laws

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Monday, July 25,2005

The Outreach health fair with shot record s an d medscreening and immunization · ical card s. Adult inunun ii.H-clinic is sponsored by ' the tion s for ' tetanu s will al so
Me igs
Count y
l-l ealth be i.! i ve n.
Department
and
Tl1e .Rotary Cl ub will pn&gt;Middleport - Pomeroy vide li ght refreshment s.
Rotary Club .
Heaiil1'Jct Ae romedical i&gt;
Free ~ervi ce s offered Hl the the onl y statew ide hos pital clini c will be cholesterol. based uir nn.:dil·al se rvice in
sugar and blood pressure the Un ited Stares. Tile five
checks by Hol zer Medical he lil'opt ers serve
We.st
Center and the MCHD. Viroi ni a and si.!!.nifi c:Hll \)01'e
,
Hol zer may al so offer free
·
ti&lt;.m
s
of
Kentu
cky. Ohio.
bone
den sity
checks
although that was not bee n Virgini a. Maryland and
L:unfi rmed at press ti me. Pe n~1'-'ylva ni 11 .
H e alth N~ t ha s bee n in hu si·
Free TB skin tests will be,
ness
for nw r 19 years :md
offered by the Meig s Count y
has transported over ~(l.OOO
TB Office.
The health department is patients.

Q!lr,.lKt~l~ tK..l)~~~
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OHio

The Dp.ily Sentinel

Monday, July 25,

Black charter captains hope to draw other blacks to prQfession

'

'·

CLEVELAND (AP)
Roger St. Clair, one of the
few black charter captains on
Lake Erie, loves fishing and
guiding fishing charters and
hopes to encourage others to
follow in his footsteps.
Fishing has been a major
pafi of St. Clair's life si nce
hi s grandfather introduced
him to it when he was 8 or 9
years old.
.
"Everybody fished when I
was a kid," said St. Clair,
who grew up in public-housing projects in Cleveland.
"That was good fun, and
everybody got something to
eat."
·
. St. Clair, 60. decided eight'
years ago to become a charter captain _ a boat owner
licensed to guide . other
anglers on .the water _ and
now spends mttch of his time
~coutin g the best fishin g
spots on the Great Lakes.
·
Since he got his charter
license, at least three other
blacks have joined the ranks
of charter captains in
Cleveland. Toge'th er. they
hope to draw others. especially black youth, to the
sport they love and revive a
fi shing
tradition
in
Cleveland's black commun ity.
St. Clair is treasurer of the
North Coast Charter Boat
Association. which includes
about 600 active captains.
About 30 of them, or 5 percent, are black. said St. Clair.
He believes there arc sev-

PageA6

\

~scaping

2005_

Ohio downs Penn in Big 33 Classic, Page 82
Cleveland doubles up Mariners, Page 86
Harnish bumps_his way to IRL,win, Page B6

the heat

have made.the water warme,r.

NewsChannel

and cleitrer.
There is aiso the problem
of expense.
Monday, July 25
turning from the smnhwest as
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Luther Norman, a black
the afic'rnoon progresses.
fisherman who earned hi s
It should be a humid mornEvening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It should continu e to be
captain's license three years ing. There is a slight ·chance
ago, said cost is an obstacle of rai n. Temperatures will rise humid. There might be a bit
from 75 to 89 by late this of rain around th e area.
but not a prohibitive one.
morning. Skies will range Temperatures will drop from
from partly cloudy to· cloudy &lt;}0 early this even ing 10 77.
with 5 MPH winds from the Skies will ran ge from mostl y'
· clear 10 cloudy with 5 MPH
west.
winds from the south west
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
TatTer, who also has travII
will
remain
humid.
Light
fr01i1 the west as the
turning
eled to Rwanda, noted the
rain
is
forecasted.
The
rain
fall
eve
ning
prog re s se~ .
women
are
working
Ovemight (I -6 a.m.)
pain staki ngly by hand so should beg in around 4 p.m.
!Sxpect a humid and cloudy
there are limits on how The r.ainfall will finish around
quickly baskets can be pro- 5 p.m . with total acc umula- overnight. You will see light
duced for sale.
tions for this event near 0.07 rain . The rai n should stan hy
"We want ro have as many inches. Temperatures will 4 a.m. The rain should reach
Americans as possible to hold steady around 92 with 0.10 inches by this overnight.
know ·of the good stories that today's hi gh of 96 occurring .Temperatures wi ll linger at 75
co me out of Rwanda, the around 2 p.m. Skies will be with today's low of 75 occu rreconstruction and bu's iness, " mostly sunny to cloudy with 5 ring around 6 a.m. Winds will
Kali za Karuretwa. trade MPH winds from the west be 5 MPH from the northwest
coun selor at the Embassy of
Rwanda in Washington , told
The Cincinnati Enquirer.
" T~(s can clu~n~~ the future
of Rwanda. It w1ll change the
li ves of the weavers. Every
si ngle woman could have a
way of feeding their · family
by' making these baskets."
Federated chief executive
Terry J. Lundgren sa id in a
stateme nt thai he hoped the
retail g iant could develop a
long re latio nship with the

CycHng--

Macys to sell baskets made by Rwandan women
CINCINNATI
(AP)
- who use their business conMacy's io addin g something tacts and expertise to help
a little difkrent lo its holiday · women in war- torn or
gift offerings th is year _ col- rebuilding areas.
orful baskets made by
Shalit said she traveled to
Rw andan women.
· Rwanda . sce ne of bloody
Federated
Department gen,oc idal conflict in 1994.
Stores ·Jn.c. says the basket.&lt; for the fi rs t time in 2002 and
will
be · available
on was taken wi th the baskets.
Macys.com and at its New
"These baskets were unbeYork City Herald Square lievably t'xquisit~. some of
store .in time fo r · th e the fin est baskets thai I've
. Christmas shopping season. eve'r seen in the world ;" sh '
And while the re tail sa les saiu. impressed to see them
will provide finan cial hdp made by "the women who
for the weavers in the st ru g- had emerged fro m thi s horgling
African
co untry. rific event. "
Federated officials think they
The baskets are made from
sisal. banana leaves and
will be good sellers.
"It's not just a one-time, papyrus and come in variou s
charitable project. It's a busi- sizes. They wilnell 'for $60
ness
partnership ." - said to $90. wi th a set of four
Ronnie Taffet, vice pres ident smaller Chri st mas tree ornaof public relation s for Macy's ment-sized baskets pri ced at
corporate marketin g in New S29.99. Shalit said the
York . "Hopefully it wi.ll be weavers will earn between
successful. and thi s could be S4 and $40 a basket. which
a r.eal help to their &lt;.:ountry." she says is "a hu ge amount of
Taffet worked with Willa 1i1oney" in their coun try.
Shalit, a New York theater
The income will ·provide
and special events producer economic
sec urit y, for
who founded the Business women ' and th eir famil ies
Council for Peace, a non- and also boost the1r se lfprofit coalition of people esteem. Shalit said.

rurninQ frnm the south as the
Tuesday, .J uly 26
Morning (7 a.m.-Norm)
It w'lll be a humid mnrning.
Li ght ''"in i, expec ted . The
r;~inrall is ex.pccteu to end
:~round R a.m. with total accumu lat iotb for thi s event near

0. 15 in ches. Temperatures
wi ll climh rrom 77 to 90 by
late th is morning . Skies wi llhe p:~ nl y cloudy 10 cloudy
with 5 to I0 MPH wi nds from
Ihe sou th west.
. Ajiemoou (1-fip.m.)

11 should rem:1 in ' lwmid .
l;e mperalmcs will hover at
lJ:l . Ski es will range from
mostly -runny to mostly
cloud y wi th 5 to I0 MPH
winds from the sn uth west.

weavers.

"Macy's is proud to be pan
of this most worthwhile
effort." he said . "These fine
baskets are quite beautiful
and perfect for the Macy's
customer."

Report: Coin
dealers set prices
· when selling
'

RAC INE - There will be
a vo ll ey ball camp held at
Southern Junior High School
on today throu gh Thursday
from
6
p.m. to l\
p.m.
for
grades fi ve
thr o u g h
mne.
Please
include
name. phone number. grade
emcring in the fa ll and T-shirt
size .
'For further information and
price of the camp, call (740)
949-2196 and ask for Roma
and Pete.

U

.
Visit our new ,A.TM at I 2-\ Exxon Mart
(intersection of State Route 7 and Route 124)

·:tc

Ac count balance informatio n.

* Cash Wit hdrawals.
'*· Transferring fun ds between acco unts.

BE SURE YOURBUSINESS IS
A PART OFTHIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION .•.
CALLTODAY! .

R G

Soccer Camp 2005 will be
conducted by University of
Rio Grande socce r coach
Scott Morrisey at the Rio
Grande Soccer Field.
· Morrisey organizes the
soccer camp and trains the
ca mpers just as he would
train the players that atte nd
!he University of Rio Gmnde.
The camp will stress the
basic fundamental ' and leave
the players with ·an overall
better understanding of the
~a me a nd a desire to continue
•mproving on their own .
Any questions can be
emai led to scollm@rio.edu or
call (740) 245-7126
·

Contact Information

* 24 I 7 availability.

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.,

PARI S (AP) - One last
time, "The Star-Spangled
Banner" rang · out over the
Champs-Elysees in honor of
Lance Armstrong.
•
One last time, lJn the podi um again st the backdrop of
the Arc de Triomphe, the
cancer surv ivor who became
the greatest cyclist in Tour de'
France hi story slipped into
the leader's yellow jersey
. Sunday. This time, it was the
winner' s · jersey, for an
unprecedented seventh consecutive year in the world's
most grueling ral:e.
·
He held his yellow cap
over hi s heart as th e
American anthem played,
and hi s twin 3-vear-old
· daughters.
Grace
and
Isabell e. wore matching yel-

low dresses.
"with a beer. having a blast. "
· "Vive le Tour' forever." he said . ·
Armstrong said .
Before that. though. he
Vive Lan&lt;.:e. the once but couldn't resist a parting shot
not future dmmpion .
at "the people who don't
It ' ·Was , the . end -of be ,.•eve in cyc ling. the cynics
Armstrong. s. amallll~ career, and the skeptics" who susand Ill rellnng a' wmner he · peel that doping is rife . and
ach1eved a rare leal Ill sports fue led his domii1ance of the
- gomg our on lop. He satd past seven years.
his dec·ision was final and
"''m sorry yp u . don't
that he walks away with no · believe in mirades. But this
regrets.
is a hell of a ra&lt;.:e ." he said .
'Tm finished," Armstrong "You should believe in these
told a motorcycle-borne TV ath letes. an&lt;;l you should
repol'ter as he rode a victory believe in these people. I'll
lap of the Champs-Eiysees, be a fan of the Tour de
waving to the crowds and France for as long as I live .
accompa nied by another And there are no secrets rider wav ing the Stars . and this is a hard sporting event
Stripes. ·
and hard work wi ns it''
On Monday. he'll be on a
Please see Seven, Bl
beach in· the south of France,

Dunn,
.-Reds,tap
Brewers

Southern to hold
volleyball camp

RIO GRANDE - A high
sc hoo l team soccer camp
which will be held July 25-29
from
5:30
p.m .
until
· 8:30
p.m.
each day at
t
h
e
University of
Rio Grande.

·once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of Th~
Biggest And Best Ever! Look For this Special
Edition In Your_Friday, August 12th Paper.

lEFTLance
Armstrong
of Austin,
Texas holds
the trophy
aloft as he
stands on
the podium
with hiS
children, .
Luke, Grace
and
Isabella.
from iight,
after 'winning his 7th
straight
de
France
cycling race
in Paris
Sunday.

MIDDLEPORT - A 3-on3 double elimination ba ,ke t- ·
ball lllurnament will be held
on Saturday, August I3, at
General Hartinger Park.
Proceeds from the tout'namenl will go towards the
Middleport Youth League.
Check-in during the day of
the tournamen t is 9 a. m. and
the games will start at I0 a.m.
Registrati on form s are
available at tacker 2 19 in
Middleport ,
Middl eport
Trophies and Tees or the
Recreation Center in Athens.
For more information, contact Brill Dodson ill (740)
992-1122.

URG to host high
school soccer
camp today

TOLEDO (AP)- Coin dealer Tom Noe and others at his
company's
subsidiaries
throughout the country often
played dua) roles as manage rs
of Ohio's rare coin i1ivestrnem
fund and sa.lesmen to it. The
Blade reported Sunday.
Based on the operating
agreement between Noe and
the Ohio Bureau of Worker.;'
Compensation, the fund lilanagers could set their ow n
prices for the coins their businesses sold to the state.
The newspaper's review of
bureau records also shows
coin fund managers took millions of dollars in loans from
the state funds. "'
Noe said in a March inter·
view with The Blade LIM the
operating agreement with the
state allowetl his business to
make a profit.
"If we buy a collection over
the counter at Vinwge Coin.,.
and there's a $ 100 ·coin rhm\
worth $200 to anybody in the
country, can we sell that to the
fund
for
200
bucks''
Absolutely," he ~aid "But do
we go out as a regular course.
of business to do it? No . That\
not was this is all about." ,
Revisions of the operating
agreement first approved in
1998 said fund manager-;
could only sell coins to the ..
state at a tair market rate. But .
managers could still tum a .
profit by buying coins below
market rate heforc se lling
them to. the state .
Records also show the flind
managers used \late lu JJd' I(J
buy the coins and then 'old ·
them back to t il~ \ l&lt;l l~.

Tour-dE France

Lucky number seven for·Lance

MYL to host 3-on-3
hoops tournament .
o\·c rnig ht prog resses.

Monday, July 25, 2005

"

SPORTS BRIEFS
in part because commercial
fi shing and · zeb ra mussels

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

"Exposure is the name of
the game," he said. "It's a
life-changing experience. A
child who knows that doesn't
need money. He'll find a
way. Lake Erie is tremendous."
Norman said he has introduced more th an I ,000 children to fishing as an instructor for the Ohio Division of
Wildlife's
"Hooked
on
Fishing, Not on Drugs" program. At the Intercity Yacht
Club, he's working with the
ot her black captains and veteran ·nshermen to get more
black youths aboard boats
and he hopes to draw recruits
from churches and schools:
Norman said he wants young
AP Photo/ Middletown Journal, ·Pat Auckerman
people to see what lies out p&lt;L~t
AP Photo/ The Plain Dealer, Roadell Hickman the breakwalls, and he wants
Chris Smith, 10. sprays his face at Smith Park during the,.final
Charter Capt. Roger St. Clair, left, AI Johnson of 1'1artville, them to see what captai~s like day of the Oh•o Challenge hot air balloon compe.tition, Sunday.
Ohio ; center, a volunteer, and Capt. Mike Blankensl1ip, right, a St.. Clair can show them.
in Middletown .
firstmate fish on Lake Erie dunng a recent tnp. St. Clair. one
:of the few black charter captains on Lake Erie, loves fishing
and guiding fishing charters and hopes to encourage others to
follow in his footsteps. St. Clair, 60, decided eight years ago
to become a charter captain - a boat owner licen._sed to guide
other anglers on the water - and now spends much of his time
scouting·the best fishing spots on the Great Lakes.
eral reasons why there aren't
more .black fi shermen and
charter captains Jn the
Cleve land area.
Fishing may seem too slow
to man y youths · and even
adu lt s in an age of big-screen
TVs. c·omputers and video
games. and schools of fish
that once were close to shore
have now moved farther out.

. '

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~por ts

s po rt ~@ myelall yt ri bu n e. com

Statf

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342, e:c1. 33
bsher man @mydailytn bune.com
Bryan Walters, Sport~ Writer
(7 40) 446-2342. ellt 23
bwalters@ myda ilytribune _com

'
larry 'Crum, Sports Writer
(304) 675- 1333. e:ct 19
Ierum @ mydBJiyreg1s1e r.com

,

Larry Crum/photo

The drive r of the Black Cherrie hot rod gets some air l•me during their run on Sunday's IHRA Mr. G9sket Co. Pro Am at
Kanawha Valley Dragway. Over 200 cars and drivers from 15 states showed up for th e points race Sunday.

IHRA thunders through Mason County
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREG ISTER.COM

SOUTHSIDE. W.Va. Drivers and cars from 15
states converged o.nto th e
Kanaw ha Valley Dragway
Sunda;y for the running of the
IHRA Mr. Gasket C::o. Pro
Am.
A long weekend of racing
boiled down to a showdown
on Sun&lt;;lay with tight racing
for the championship in each
divsion of vehicles.
The two fastest divisions of
vehicles, top dragster and top
sportsman , produced great
racing throughout the day

wi~ h a very close fini sh in
each· of the championship
runs.
Bill Spangler of Shel'licld.
Ohio bruught home lop honors in the Top Dragster di vision wi th a :1 81 E.T whil~
Johnathan Clay of West
Hamilton, W.Va. finished in
the runner-up position .
The Top Sportsman dis·ision SiJW one of lhc closest
battles of the day with Ciilenn
Butcher of Doylestown. Oh io
wi nni ng &lt;lll a -l.X4 E.T in a
2000 Firebird and Chri s
Nyergcs of Burton. Ohio
claiming runner-up hon0r'
on a 4.X2 E.T in a 1963
Corveue. both with speeds

over 146 mph on the 1/H mile
track.
Super Stock saw Craig
Marshall take ihc champi onship in a 19lJX Grand AM
and Bob 'Lowry taking .sec·on~ 1n a 19R4 Corvcuc. In the
Stock cla.'5. Eri c Patt on
placed first · in a llJXS
Mustang and Randy Ta ylor
finished JUSt behind in sec ,,nJ &lt;!riving a 19X(&gt; Camaro.
The Quick Rod di&lt;isiun
placed Rusty Cook with the
cluunpinnship and Ron
Stayer Jr. in second . The
Super Rod t la." p,r,nduced
another close run with Lee
Klin ~en s mith ~:1kin t! the \\in
on a' 6 .:1 1 E.T amr Fr;lllklin
.

'

Humphrie s taking second
with a 6.42 E.T
Finally, the Hot .Rod divi sion fini shed with the lightest·
bailie liJr the win with 'Brian
Lee Baker taki ng the vil·tory
on a 6.99 E.T and Michelle
FtJrr placing second .with a
6.lJH. Sunday's racing action was
an official IHRA sanctioned
C\'Cnt with points ;nid money
awardcJ to divisiot-1 racers .
The Kanawha Valley
D"igway Is open unti I
Oclllber with racing action
es ery weekend including a
J i ;,· i ~ ion

on Thursday's where

CINCINNATI (AP) Austin Kearn s got the
Cincinnati Reds started ~nd
Admn Dunn sent them home
with a win.
Kearns and Dunn, outfielders who were picked back-toback in the 1998 .i;lraft and
have been fri ends and roommates durin g their professional careers, each homered
to provide all of Cincinnati's
offense in a 3-2 victory
Sunday ,over the Milwaukee
Brewers.
Kearn s hit a two-run shot
off Doug Davis in the fourth
inning to put the Reds ahead
2- 1, Dunn led off the ninth by
hitting a 2-2 pitch from Julio
Santana (2-4 ) into the rightfi eld bl eachers to 1napa 2-all
tie and give the Reds their
ninth win in 13 ,games.
"It's fun.." sa id Kearns,
recalled bv the Reds on
Wedne sday' after
being
op tioned
to
Triple-A
Louisville on June 12. ··we
came up together, and we're
as good a friends as you can
be. It 's nice . It' s been a while.
bm it was nice ."
D~vid
Weathers (6- 1)'
pi tched a "'ore less inning for
the win as the Brewers wasted a gutt y effort by their
starter, Doug Davis. The lefthander set a career high with
II strikeouts. but was left
with hi s fifth no-decision in
tl ve starts. He allowed six
hits and two run s with one
illlenlional. wa lk in eight
1111ll1lg:-. .

anvone can hrin g ·in th ~ir
:-. trect \'cll1c k~ anlrace.

Please see Tap. Bl
.

NASCAR Nextel Cup __,;. Pennsylvania 500

'

Busch dominates to win at Pocono
LON f. POND. Pa . IAPl. - lead even as four c·autions ta ined his overall points lead
Kltrt Busch dominateu at the . came out before !he end. with a 12th place finish .
beginning-. surged back to the which forced three extra laps
Busch had the strongest
le;1d late and r;i ccd 10 hi., sec- and the green-while check- car from lthe beginning, takond win of the se:ISon ered llag.
ing the lead from polestitter
Sunday in the Penn syh·an ia
Perhap s drivt ng his last Jamie McMurray on the tlrst
500 al Pocono. Ra ce way.
race al Pocoiw. Mark Martin turn of the first lap.
The dcfe n d in ~ NASC.&lt;\R fin ts hed third and Carl
Bu sch sta11ed .second in his
Ncx tel Cup L· h'ampi on led Ed w ard~ followed hi s win on No. 97 Fo r~ and needed just
II 0 of the fi rq 150 lap' on the moumaintop in June· with II 3 laps to clinch the five
.the 1.5-mil e trian~ le an d a four1h-place fini sh.
bonus points awarded for
kept l1i ' fifth ·place' 'P"' in
"We• couldn ' t run with . leadin ~ the most laps. With
ihc •poillts standing' 11 ith 'i' · Kurt .'m the la.'t "~ I of ti res. .. 90 laps remaining. Busch
race&gt; le ft 10 tk cide t h~' I0 ~ l;~·t 111 ,;ud.
.
, pin~J to llx a loose lugnllt on
dri ve rs who will race fn r,thc
lhc re,u ll wa' pa rt1c ularl y th ~ left fro nt and had ·a 17.5titk .
impr~~' i'c' rnr Edwarcb who se( OJld ''"P · which ,( 0wed
The "Chase for the Cup·· 11 ' " lorc~ d to ' ' " ~'~ at the him down and allowed &gt;ome
beg ins al . New llampslm c hack uf the fid d"hccause he of NASCAR's old dogs to
lmernatio nal Specdwa\' &lt;'n ,k ,ppcd ljt.ahl ) Jng to cop1 - make a nm .
Sept . I X.
p~te in Satu rcl a ~ ·, Bu ,c h
Wallace. whll will retire at
AP photo
Bu sch pa"cd ,c,·on d - pla,·~ Snic' r ae~ . So mehms. he the end of the season with
NASCAR d( Jver Kurt Bu sch celebrates from the rooftop of l1is fin i, hcr Rust\ \\';ill ace ,·om- mmk it near the frnnl of the four career Pocono win s and
··
race car after winning the Pe nnsylv&lt;Jnia 5(/0 at t11e Pocono ing otll of tUJ:n th r~·,,; "i\11 17 pad.. -· ju . . t not fa r t: nough.
.lap' kft and held"" to the
Ji mmie .l 11 lll" l" l main Please see Busch, 86
Raceway in Long Pond, Pa . S~n day.

�•

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Page 82 •

'

'The Daily Sentinel

'·

Monday, July 25, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

Prep Football -

Seven

Big 3 3 Classic

:Ohio rallies past Pennsylvania, 34-28
HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) Bryan Williams intercepted a
pass to stop one scoring threat
and th~n knocked away a
· fourth-down pass at the goal
· line with 55 seconds remain: ing to help Ohio hold on for a
34-28
victory
over
Pennsylvania 'in the 48th
annual Big 33 Footbal'l
Classic on Saturday ·night.
Williams led an Ohio
defense that forced six
· turnovers
and
held
· Pennsylvania scoreless in the
fourth quarter. The game, .
which matches the top 33
graduating high school football stars from each state,
drew a paid crowd of 15,667.
Robby
Quarterback
Schoenhoft got Ohio Oltt in
front during a ~8 - point first
quarter and the defense did the
work from there. Schoenhoft,
an Ohio State recruit from
Saint Xavier High School, finished 11-for-20 for· 267 yards
and two touchdowns and was
named m9st valuable player
for the Ohio team.
Williams, a University of
Pittsburgh recruit from John
R. Buchtel High School in
Akron, ttpped one pass that
was mter&lt;:epted and returned
55 yards for a touchdown by
Derrick Stewart. He intercepted a pass ~t the Ohio 20 with
5:29 left.
·
Pennsylvania scored on
three pass plays of70 yards or
more in the 11rst half. The two
11rst-quarter
touchdowns
came on passe s in the back11eld.
Ed Collington turned d

Tap
from PageBl
"The only mist,lke I made
was locating a pitch up and
away to Kearns," Davts said .
"lf it 's (lown and away, u·s a
groundball. I was happy with
my performance, but I wasn 't
happy that we dtdn't get anything out of it as a team.''
Davis is 0-1 in six starts
since beating the Cubs 9-5 on
June 22.
Cincinnati's Luke Hudson ,
who was 0-5 with a 10.72
ERA in his previous stx

AP photo

Ohio wide rece1ver Mano Mannmgham. front left, IS tackled by
Pennsylvania's Ken Lewis, left rear. and LaRod Stephens·
Howling during the first quarter of the B1g 33 game Saturday 111
Hers hey, Pa.
screen pass into a 70-yard
touchdown
from
Shane
Murray on the first play.
LaRod Stephens-Howling, th'l:
Penn sylvania MVP, took a
swing pass and broke for a 77yard touchdown.
Between the two long
Penn sylvania touchdown s,
Ohio scored four times to take
a 28-7 lead with 3:15 left in
the first quarter.
Schoenhoft went 6-for-7 for
147 yards passing in the first
3:08. He stepped up to hit
Mario Manningham on a post
pattern for a 74-yard score and
then found Brian Hart!tne
from 23 yards.

.

.

Defense helped Oh10 follow
Schoenhoft's passes with two
more touchdowns. Nick
Simon's fumble recovery set
up a 5-yard run by . Dante
Love . Stewart then ran tn the
interception .
Brad Dawson connected
with Carmen Connolly for a
72-yard Pennsylvama touchdown in the second quarter.
Love threw a 48-yard halfback opt ion pass to Jared
Martin to make the Ohio lead
34-2 1 at halftime. Collmgton
ran one yard fo r the only
touchdown of the second half,
midway through the third .
quarter.

inntngs.
" I know his numbers aren't
good, but he's been tough on
us," Yost said. "He's effectively wild.''
Sean Casey smgled leadmg
off the fourth and Kearns followed with hi s se venth
homer and first si nee June 3
to
give the Reds a 2- 1 lead .'
and two run s.
The
oppostte-!teld shot
Carlos Lee, who went into
the game leading the NL with bounced off the top of the
82 RB!s. gave Milwaukee a fence in the ri ght-field ·cor1-0 lead in the first. He fol- ner.
Since returning to the
·lowed Lyle Overbay 's twoout single with a ringing dou- Reds' lineup on Thursday,
ble to the warning track in Kearns 1\as at least one hit in
all four starts and is batting
left-center.
The run was Milwaukee 's .438 (:7-for- 16) with five
first off Hudson 10 12 2-3 RB!s.
starts, lasted six inn ings for
the 11rst time since his ftrst
start this season on June 9.
"It 's about time," he said .
"It 's been too long between
quality stai1s. I felt good, and
11 was all the better that we
won the game."
Hudson allowed stx hit s

fromPageBl
Race organizers afforded
the 33-year-old Texan the
unprecedented honor of
speakmg from the podium.
And that came after an
unusual ending to the overall race he comfortably won
by more than 4 1/2 minutes.
With the pavement slick
from rain. and Armstrong
comfortabl y ahead , he was
declared the winner with 30
miles to go The rare deci sion was made rather than
risk having a mad dash to
the finish in treacherous
conditions
.
Riders were still racing at
.the time , with eight laps .of
the Champ s-Ely see s ·to
complete. and the stage
competition contmued.
. Alexandre Vinokourov of
\{azakhstan e'entually won
the final stage, with
Armstrong finishing safely
m the pack to win the Tour
by 4 minutes, 40 ,.;econds
over Ivan B'asso of Italy.
The 1997 Tour winner, Jan
Ullrich , was third , 6:21
back.
"What he did was sensational ," Ullrich said . .
Looking toward a Tour
without him, Armstrong
said to hi s challengers, ''It's
up to you guys."
One hand on his handlebars, the other holding a
flute
of
champagne ,
Armstrong toasted his teammates as he pedaled into
Pari s to collect hts crown .
At dtfferent points, he held
up seven fingers - one for
each win - and a piece of
paper with the number 7 on
it.
Lookmg gaunt, his cheeks
hollow after riding 2,232.7
mtles across France and its
mountains for three weeks,
Armstrong sttll could smile
at the end.
·
President Bush called to
congratulate his fellow
Texan for "a great triumph
of the human spirit," saying
the victory was "a testament
not only to your athletic talent, but to your courage."
Armstrong's 5-year-old
son, Luke , delivered a different message.
"Daddy, can we go home
and play?" the boy whtspered to him as he stepped
'

otT the podium .
Armstrong choked up on
the podiu~ and rock star
girlfriend Sheryl Crow,
wearing a yellow halter top,
cried .during the ceremony.
"This is the way he wanted to finish his career, so it's
very emotional," she said.
Armstrong set the recon:l
last year wtth hi s sixth. win
one
more
than
Frenchmen
Jacques
Anquetil and
Bernard
Hinault , Belgian . Eddy
Merckx and
Spaniard
Miguel Ind.urain - and No .
7 confirmed him as o ne of
the greatest cyclists ever. ·
Armstrong
mentioned
Wayne
Tiger
Woods,
Gretzky, Michael Jordan
and Andre Agassi as personal inspirations.
"Those are guys that you
look up to you, guys that
have been at the top of.thetr
game for a long time," he
said.
As for hi s accomplishments, he said, "I can't be m
charge of dictating what it
says or how you remember
it.
"In live, 10, 15, 20 years,
we'll see what the legacy is .
But I think we did come
along and revolutionize the
cycling part, the training
part, the equipment part.
We're fanatics.''
· Armstrong's last ride as a
professional - the closing
89 .8-mile 21st stage into
Paris
from
CorbeilEssonnes south of the capital- was not without incident.
Three of his teammates
slipped and crashed on the
road coming around a bend
just before they crossed the
River Seine. Armstrong,
right behind them, braked
and sktdded into ·the fallen
riders, u~ing his right foot to
steady himself and stay on
·
the bike.
His teammates, wearing
special shirts with a band of
yellow on right shoulder,
recovered and led him up
the Champs-Elysees at the
front of the pack.
Vinokourov surged ahead
of the main pack to win the
last stage. He had been touted as one of Armstrong's
main rivals at the start' of the
Tour on July 2, but like others was overwhelmed by
him.
Armstrong donned hi s

83rd and last yellow jersey
in Paris. Only Merckx with· 111 - won' more.
Armstrong's
departure
begins a new era for the
I02-year-old Tour, with no
clear successor. His, riding
and his inspiring comeback
from te sticular cancer
attracted new fans - especially in the United States
- to the race, as much a
part of French summers as
sun cream, fo.rest 11res and
traffic jams down to ' the
Cote d'Azur.
Millions turned out each
year, cheering, picnicking
and sipping wine by the side
of . the road, to watch
Armstrong !lash past in the
yellow jersey, the famed
"maillot jaune.''
Cancer survivors, autograph hunters and admirers
. pushed, shoved and yelled
"Lance! Lance! " outside hi s
bus in the mornings for a
smile, a signature or a just
word from the champion.
He had bodyguards to
keep the crowds at bay _
ruffling feathers of cycling
purists who sniffed at his
"American" ways.
Some spectators would
shout
obscenities
or
"Dope!" To some, his come..
back from cancer and his
uphill bursts of speed that
left ri vals gasping in the
Alps and Pyrenees were too
good to be true.
Armstrong msisted that he
simply trained , worked and
prepared harder thari anyone. He \Vas drug-te sted
hundreds of times, in and
out of competition, but was
never found to have committed any infractions.
Armstrong came into this
Tour saying he had ~ dual
objective - wmning the
race and the hearts of
French fans. He was more
relaxed , forthcoming and
talkative than last year.
when the pre ssure was on to
be the first six-time winner.
Some fans hung the Stars
and Stripes on barriers that
lined the Champs-Elysees
on Sunday. Around France,
some also urged Armstrong
to go for an etghth win next
year - holding up placards
and daubing their appeals in
paint on the road.
Arm strong ,
however,
wanted to go out on top and not let advancing age
get the -better of him .

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Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for
the Meigs County
Paving
ProjectRound 19 will be
received by the Meigs
County
Commissioners
at
their office at The
Meigs
County
Courthouse, Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio ·
45~9 until t:t5 p.m. ,
local time, July 28 ,
2005,
and
then
opened and read
aloud.
The project provides
lor paving 14,510 L.F.
of Meigs CR50 Eden
Ridge, 13,464 LF. of
Meigs CR 15 Hysell
Run , 9346 LF. of
Meigs CR t 6 Beech
Grove Road, 20,962
LF. of Meigs CR 3
Leading Creek Road,
and 9240 L.F. of Meigs
CR, 3 Depot Street,
and paving 3960 L.F.
ol Orange Township
RoadT627, Tt063 , and
T287 within the community ol Tuppers
Plains and 5808 L.F.
of
Salisbury
Township Road 204.
The engineer's esti, mate for this project
is $540,329.00.
Domestic Steel Usa
Requirements
as
specified In Section
153.0t 1
ol
the
Revised Coda apply
to this project. Copies
of Section 153.011 of .
the Revised Code can
be obtained from any
of the offices of the
Department
of
Admin i strative
Services.
Bid documents may
be secured at the
office of The Melga
County
Engineer,
341 tO
Fairgrounds
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
4~769 ;
Phone
Number 74[).992-29t 1
for a $10 .00 nOn~
refundable fee .
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
either a bid bond in
the amount of 10% of
the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to

ter ol credit upon a
solvent bank In the
amount of not less
than 10% of the bid
amount In the favor of
the aforesaid Meigs
County
Commissioner. Bid
bonds
shatl
be
accompanied
by
proof of Authority of
the official or agent
signing the bond.
Bids shall be sealed
and marked as Bid
lor: Meigs County
Paving
.ProjectRound 19 and mailed
or delivered lo:
Meigs
County

VICTORIA
KRUSKAMP
NOTICE OF HEARING ON CHANGE OF
NAME
Apptlcant
hereby
gives. notice to atl
Interested
persons
and
to
Kathleen
Lestar &amp; Claudio
Kruskamp that the
applicant has fUed an
Application
for
Change of Name In
the Probate Court of
Meigs County, Ohio,
requesting
the
change . of name of

t h e aforesaid Meigs
County
Commissioner or by

certified
check.
cashiers check, or let-

------------------------------I

,

Commissioners

The Meigs County
Courthouse, Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(7) 15, t8, 25
Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF
NAME OF
GABRIELLE VICTORIA LESTER TO
. GABRIELLE
HeipWanted

Gabrielle

Oftfee !lowe-~

\ '\\01 \{ I \II \1

r

s

GtVI~\WA\

2 male ca ts 2 yrs otd,
neutered &amp; declawed, vary
frre1ndly &amp; good wrth chrldren (7 40)44 6·0392

2 yellow-str1pped male cats.
neutered short· harr. very
lnendly (7 40)446-2700
4 year old female Collie,
very lov rng. needs a farm to
run on (740) 441-086 5
.(
Ad orable krttens. mdoors
"'-. only, litter trarned, (740)843·

UlsrANil
FOUNil

Pomeroy Eagles Club
Come by &amp; support the
Racine Youih League
'247-2 103

949-2176

AA/EOE

Bul!lllness Daya Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
1
Graphics SO¢ for small
· S1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid'

POLICIES Ohio Valle~ Publlehlng reeervee the right to edit, reject, or cancel enw ad at anw time Error a muat be reported on t he lire! day of publication and
Tribune-Senlinei·A&amp;gleter will be reeponelble for no more than the cott of the apace occ upied by the e~r or a nd only the lint Insertion We ehall not be liable

any Ia.. Of expttnH thet r"Uitt from the publlcellon or omlaalon of an advert leement Correction will be mede tn the first available editton
are alwaya confident ial. • Current rete card appll ... • All reat eatate advertleementa are aubject to the Federal F! lr Housing Act o( ' 968
accepte
I
ada meellng EOE etandllrd1. We will not knowingly ecceptsnv •dverUslng In vlol111on of the l•w

KIT &amp;'CARLYLE

310

Suloot.s

INS'rnUCtlO~

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Srtver and Gold Cams,
Proolsets Gold R1ngs Pre·
1935
US
Cu rrency,
Solitaire D1amonds M TS
Com Shop. 151 Second
Avenue, Galhpolrs, 740·446·
2842

UO~IFS

• Th 11

MrMIILE

"""P••poo·l
UoME'i

lOR SALE

IUR,S,LE

l..l'ii'~ N --(o IT
f"ll~ Now fHAI

r

74

www galltpollscareercol lege com

1'A e, I-£.

U!LI' WAN'Il:ll

1-z..-;-

~r::.=;::;"": ) )~

YARD SAt£

&lt;0 2005 by

Inc.

YARD SALE·

FOIJI'.n

e. G~rdQn Equlpment ........................ 6SO

DRIVE
'NO E)(PERIENCl'. NECESSAR\
·FULl TIME CLASSES

' CDL fAAINING

110

110

liEU' WAI&lt;lHl

• FINA./II(;JNG 4VAILAeLE
' JOB PLACEMENl
' E '!ROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cralts
wood rtems
To $480/wk
Materrals provrded
Free mtormahon pkg 24Hr
'
801 ·428·4649

All shrtts. m all departments.
cooks. wattress and dellv·
ery Apply m person P1zza
Plus. 1044 Jackson P1ke
Gallrpohs
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Cali1Manlyn 304-882·2645

We seflk caree r orien ted
rndrv1duals wh o wrll stnve to
ach1eve the best rn customer
sat1 staC}ron and team work
If you have a des1re to be
successtul wrlh a goal dnven
and growmg company. we
off healtrl, dental, trfe rnsurance prescnohon card
bonus program, pard vacatiOns. 401 K and manage·
ment apparel Advancement
hom wr l h1n If you are mter·
ested m Gall1polrs. Ohio or
Charleston. WV area apply
1n person the Burger Krng
restaurant located at the
0~10 Rrver Plaza, Gall rpo hs
or ma11 resume to Burger
Krng 65 Upper R1ver Rd
Gallrpol1s OH,4563 1 or fax
304·529·0055

AVO N1 All Arcas 1 To Buy or
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304·
Communrty Aciran IS seek675· 1429
Ing an EPPIHWAP CLERK
Banking Opportunrty
tor the Ut1lrty Program
Local ofhce of reg1onal bank Energy
&amp;
Burldrng
seeks qual1hed !ndiVId ~Jal tor lnspec t1on. Weatllerlzatron
part-l rme
pos1t1on
o1 experrence preferred Good
Custome r
·
Serv1ce readrng wr1trng comp reAepresentatrve
(tel le r) hensiOn organrza1ronal and
Essential skrlts mclude computer sk1lls a MUST
eXcellent commumcatlon . Send 01 deliver resume and
custom6r
serv1ce . and references to GMCA A.
cross-selling abrht1es Must attentiOn. Sandr9 Edwards.
be able to effectrvely man· 8010 N State Rou te 7.
age ca,sh drawer, process Cheshire Ohro 45620. by
and balance vanous types at 4 OOpm on 811/05 GMCAA
transacltons Must be ava1l· rs an EOE
able to work vary1ng Murs
beineon G CO and 5 00 Pull T1me Help Wanted Flt35
Monctay-Thursday.
8.00· Adult V1deo &amp; ·Book Store
~ 00 Frrday and Sa1Urday Evenrng shrtt &amp; Mrdn1ght Do
8 00· 12 00 Jf you are a llex- Not Call Srora
Call
lble team player who likes a (304)549-5696
challen;;~e.
subm1t your
OUTS ID E SALES
resume
by
ema1l
to
carcers@pebp com or 'by
REPR ESE NT ATI\'E
fax to (740) 568·1427
COI)'lpet111ve wages and ben
The
Gallipolis
Darly
ef1t package
Tr10une 1s acceptmg
resumes tor a lull trme
wanted·
Bookkeeper
outs1de sales representaImmediate openmQ Pari·
l ~~e to Join our sales learn
trme·Hou rs and days off fle.IC·
and to manage an esta,b·
lble Salary based on explmllshed accoun t list while
ence.
Background ~ m
calhng an new accounts
accounting &amp; Ourckbooks
The successful candidate
preterred Contact Jack Alfewrll be a disc1plm&amp;d. sell·
,Treasurer· (740)446-4653 or
motrved team player that
{740)446-9010 cell phone
understands the tmpor·
(740)339-2450
lance
of developrn g
strong
mutually
benefl·
RNILPN
Qverbrook cen·
tar 15 currently acceptmg cral bus1ness retat1on·
appiiCaliOn s lor LPN 'S and shrps wrth our accounts.

s ...

RNS
7A·7P and 7P-7 A
SMts are ava11at-1e It you
are 1nterested please come
rn and lrll out an appi1Cilt10n
at 333
Page
S11ec1
M'1ddleport or call And
speak
w1th
Hollie
Bumgarner . LPN
Stall
Oevelcpmerlt EOE
'

Colleges

Schools 12HB

MtSCEJJ.J\NWtiS

AN SILPN'S needed tor 100
bed Skilled nu rsrng facllrty

3BR 1 112 bath Ranch 2 ca r
garage
m· ground pool
Green
school
drstrrc t
$11 5 000 (740)446·16 19 lor
photos &amp; more mfoi-matr on
h!lo //www QBOCI!Ies ~
Ulbo!~m~p~so~n~1~32:1_ _ _ _
909 Mossman C1 rc le. Porn!
Pl easan t. WV Ntce home
180
WANTED
wtth many updates m n1ce
- To Do
qu ret neighborhood 3BA 1
bath lull basement Move rn
Call
DHK
Cleanmg •
&amp; condr!IOn. $80.000
Powerwashrng. Can't Keep (304)675-6804 alter 5 39
Up Your "To Do hst too 81g?
Anentlon!
Le t Us HELP You 1 We II
Local
com
pany offenng "NO
Clean· A- Up &amp; Get·A·Oone
We
do
Al l DOWN PAY MENT" pro
R e s rden 1ral / 8 u s r n ess grams for you to buy your
l ns 1d e!O u ts 1de . homE! rnstead ot rent1ng
Darly/W eekly/Monthly. 740 - · 100% hnancrng
• Less th an perlect credrt
965-3639 or 740·41 6- 1823
accepted
• Payment co uld be the
I am able to stay wrth elderl y
same
as renl
or hAndiCapped person Any
Locators
shrft any day withrn 25 mrle Mor tgage

w1th sxcellent opportun 1ty
and rewardmg expenence
Holzer Senior Care Center Great start rate s and excel·
lent opportunrty lor challeng rad1as of Pomeroy Contact (740)367-0000
ll yo u en;cy working m long- rng and rewardrng experl· 740·992-3568 any trme
term healthcare and want to ence. Great start rates and Have a S T N A licence
beca me part of ::1 carrng ex cellent regulalory complr- 190 CHII.IVF:IJ&gt;FRI.Y
team you may be a cand i- ance history
Interes ted
CARF
date for one of the lollowrn g candrdales should appl~ to
.,J
posr1t0n s
Rockspnngs rehabr lrtat1 on
All real estate advertising
Center, 36759 Aocksprmgs Schools startr ngr Writ care
In tAla newspaper Is
NURSING
Road,
Pomeroy.
Oh10 fo r your hllle one whrl e you
aubject to the Federal
LPN- Full Ttme Nrghts
45769. E.~etendr care Health
Fair Housing ACI of 1968
-Part Trme Evenrngs
Se rv1ces, , lnc rs an equal
which makes It llleg~l to
STNA's- All Shifts
opportumty employer that
I!Kivertlse "any
1D
encoi.Jrages
workplace
preference. limitation or
RESIDENT SERVICES·
drversrty MJF ON
dl&amp;crlmmatron based on
ACTIVITY ASSISTANT
race, color, rellg1on, sex
familial atalus or nat1onal
Room anendant needed for
DIETARY
•NOTICE•
origin, or any Intention to
housekaepmg Apply rn perDIETARY AIDE
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
make any such
son al Holiday Inn 577 St
preference, llmetation or
NG CO recommends tha
At 7N GallipOliS No phOne
discrimination ..
OFFICE
ou do bus1ness w1th peo
calls, plea§e
Ward Clerk/Raceptlonlsl·
Ia yo u know anct NOT t
Th is newspaper will not
Pari T1me- 12PM·8PM
enct money through th
knowingly accept
Rotate
Weekends
&amp; STNA'S Overbrook. Center
a1l un til you have 1nvest1
rs currently acceptmg apph·
advertisements for real
Holidays
ated the oflerrn
estate whk:h is In
ca t1ons for full·trme STNA'S
v1olatlon of the law. Our
7A-7P, and 7P -7A and 3AU you are 1ntere.sted rn JOtn·
readers are hereby
shrffs are ava1l·
3p.......
MDNl\
tng our team an d becom1ng
Informed that all
"IU LoAN
part
of
the
"Holzor able II you are Interested.
dwellings advertised in
please
come
1n
.an(:l
till
out
Drfference" grve Phyllrs
this newspaper are
Cantrell, DON or Barb an applrcallon at 333 Page
available on an equal
Street
Middleport
Plea
se
Peterson a call at (740)446opportumty basea
No Phone calls EOE
5001 or come see us at

The rdeal candtdale w1ll
have sale e:-;pet~ence For
conl1dent18l
1nterv1aw.
please send resu"'o and
covor le11er,, to Gallrpohs
Da11v T1 1bune Ann Jrm
Fteelanct 825 Th1rd Ave r
Galhpolrs Oh1o 45631

iiliiiiiil

r

nelDa

IIM IOI C: ... ll Cf.folffl

· 380 Colonral Drr~~e
B1dwell. Ohro'456 14
--------Home Health Care of SEQ rs
currently acceptrng appiiCa·
t•ons for AN's and Ardes
Competitive wages &amp; bene·
Iris t -866·368· 11 00 Toll
Free
Maple Grove Cabme try Is
see Krng an honest dependable rndrvrdual lor fu ll or part
trme work Expenenca rn
cabmet/ counte rtop work,
fabrrcat1on/ rnstalt atron pre·
!erred Apply m person 9084
St At 218 (740)256-1275
Need help for Parkinson's
patrant rn M a~land Lrve rn
n1ce couples home All
e.~epenses pard plus salary
Need drivers licenses Call
{740}2 86-0290, leave mes·
Sage

arrow Smart Contac
he OhiO DIIIISIOn 0
Fmaricial
lns trt ution '
ff rce of Consume
ffai(S BEFORE you reh
ance your home o
tarn a loan. BEWAR
I requests lor any larg
ctv ance payments o
ees or rnsurance . Cal
he Offrce ol Consume
ffatrs toll tree at 1· 866
78 -0003 to learn 1! th
ortga ge broker o
ender
Is
proper!
1censed (Thrs rs a pubh

The Mergs County Council
on Agr ng IS acceptrng appli ·
caliOns/rasumes lor the fo llowing pos1t10ns Well ness
PrOgram ASSist ant Drrector.
Applican!s should have a
Bachelor ,or
assocrate
degree rn recreation. pu~IC
reta110ns gero ntology or
related t1elds andlor lrve
years equ1valent e:cpenence
Must be highly organrzed.
self motivated and llexible -·
-Home
Care
A1des
Applicants should ·have a
high school d1plor:na or GED.
reliable transport atron. te le·
phone In the home and wrllrng to work · week-ends &amp;
holidays. Must be motrvat$d
and flexrble
W1ll tra m
App lications are sva1lable at
the Mer liJS Multrpurpose
Senror Center. Mulberry Cakes by Kathy- wedd1ng &amp;
Herghts. Pomeroy OH An all-occasion, also Karaoke
EOE employer
call (740)992·0723 alter

r:

3pm

L1h.e new 1999 Schu lt 16x8D
mabrle home. 3 bedroom 2
baths porch, ur:rderpmnmg
$25,000 (740)256·1984
New 14x70 3 bedroom 2
bath Only S198 63 per
month Call Ela1ne (740)3852434

1

"-•••;o;;,;;;;••

----·'

1-800-334-1203

BELl' WANlHl

"'-•••••••• t.,••••••••J
BURGER KING
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES

A.cc•ed•ltng

2036 Jackson Prke, 81d well
OH Very nrce home updated
throughout 3 BR 1 112
bath s on 3/4 acre level lot.
I R DR FA . K1t UT 2 car
detached garage wi th stor·
age bldg- lg dec lo: w1 !h gaze·
bo &amp; much more $137 900
(740)446 4720 alte1 5 30

FREE Home
DIRECTV
entert arnment
' Syste m
FR EE Eqwpment aPd Install
up to four room s 145 channels $29 DO a month . Ask
hOw to get FRE E HBO.
MAX . and STAR S 1-800
523-7556 for detarls

110

TO

lndependflnl

70

I \11'1 0\ \II \I
St- R\ H FS

LEARN

Member

Coun.:•l lor

r

a

I'll MER&lt;)\ /Mnmt .E

Accred1ted

and

r(c, £::A1i&gt;N At..L11'16 &lt;:':!2-liM8&gt;7
v ~ t&gt; 6 !'!. "ft-i"'

Real-Estate Wanted-local
person lookrng lor home lo
buy All cash
Mergs or
Gallra No double wide 01
modular. 740-416-3130

70

~

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Cl ose To Home)
Call Todayr 740·446-4367.
1·800·21 4-0452

--------

Ber'ltr dog. great wllh elderl y Lost 71 16 at the Health
and children
(740)44 1- Dep t Yellow cal wrth orange
stnpes 740·245-9740 441·
0865
0538 , 740·441·2896
Black/whrte female cat
short·harr.
rns rde only Lost Kod ak drg rtal camera
and camera bag. 4th ot July
spayed (7 40)446·2700
@
Parktront.
weekend
Fr ee White Kr ttens
erght Gall rpol rs (740)379·9382
weeks old. 740·992·6762
Kitten/cats avarlable tor
, adoptmn at the Peren nral
Cat Spc3.y/neuter vou chers
available Call tor ;tnlormatlan
(740)446·2700
(Oona tr ons accepted)

~

mJltiY

"

\

All Dl•play: 12 Noo.n 2

Lookrng to rent or buy on
lancl contmct old house m
the country wrth 3 bedrooms
Lost at Kyger Creek Bay or tra1 ler wrth lot or some
f1eld wee k of July4t h acres Sh1ll worker needs
Red/black ba seball bat quret area Call 740·949Sentrmen tal gilt (740)379· 1081

Peraonala ...... ..... ....... ... .. ...................... ........ oos

Dinner
$6.00 per plate
Saturday, July 30th, 05
12-4

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
Friday For Sundays Papl!!:r

lwngh~rc.net

$1,000 Reward
For 1nlormat1on lead 1ng to
the arr est &amp;p roseculton of
the person who stole 18ft
trailer wlracks, grey Qanvas
top w/lreated oulsrde fur niture msrde from W1ll Power
Tumbhng
area
Galt
Gallipolis Poll ee Deparl ment
(740)446-1313 All mlormallon rs co nfrdentra l

2633

5268

WANI'Eil

tJ'

Now you con hove borders and graphics

Display Ads

• Ads Should Run 7 oavs

Pets lor Sate .............. :....... ,......................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heattng .................................... 820
Professional Services ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schools tnstructlon ,........................: ........... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wantod ....................................... 120
Space lor Ront. ................ ...................... ...... 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV'a for Sale .............................................. 720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ..................................:............... 870
Vans For Sale ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplles ...............:.. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. t 80
Wanted to Rant.. .......................................... 470
Y,a rd Sola- Galllpollo ....................................072
Yard Sale' Pomeroy/Middla ......................... 074
Yard Sale-PI, Pleasant............................... 076

Dine In • Carry Out. ·

Oeacllfirw

• Start Your Ads Y!lth A Kevword • Inc:lude Complete
Desc:rtptio n • Include A Prtce • A11otd Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address Wheti Needed

Lawn

Beef Tips &amp; Noodles

Word Ads

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

Llveetock ........................ .............................. 630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlacellaneous .... ............... ........................... 170
Mlocettanoous Merchandlsa....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr ........................... ......... 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sata ................................ 320
Money lo Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ....... .. ....................., .. .• 570

Portland Community Center

Regt~ter

(7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675~1333
Call Today...
.
.
II'I""'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _O::.:r_;,F,.;;a;,;.,;
x To (7 40) 446·301'!'0""
8_ _ _ _' O_rF--a::.:.x--T_;,o..:.(7_4:_;.0:_)9::.:9:.:2.::.-2::.:.1:.:57.....,•

General Haullng... .........., .............................850
Giveaway............................. .........................040
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln ......................... .,......... .. ............640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home lmprovements ................................... 810
Homes lor Sata ........................... ................. 310
Housahold Goods ...................... ................. 510
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
tn Memorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance ..................................................... 130

Tuesday, July 26th'
5-7 pm

Sen'tinel

Your Ad,

Furnished Rooms ..... ...... ... .. ..... ....... ............ 45D

sponsored by
Meigs County Health Dept.
&amp; Middleport/Pomeroy Rotary
Club

!304 &gt;675-5236

\!rribune

To Place

For Lease ........... .... ...................................... 490
For Sale ...................................................... 585
For Sale or Trade .................................. ....... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ... ..... .... .. .... ................. .. 58D

Immunization Clinic

Angela Cleland. DON

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

Farms for Sale ........ ..... ................................ 330

Help Wanted

Count y OH

.,

CLASSIFIED INDEX

2nd
Floor, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Sharon Durham
35855 Vance
Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(7) 25

Apply In Person Or Call

G~ll a.o

4x4's For Sale ...... .c........ ................ .. ........ ... 725
Announcement .... ................................... ..... 030
Antlques .... :.........:........................................ 530
Apartments for Rent ................ ................ ... 440
Auction and Flea Market............. ................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .................. ........ 760
Auto Repair .................................... .... ......... 770
Autos for Sale ............................... .............. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate ......................... .... 750
Building Supplies ....................................... 550
Business and Buildings ......................... .... 340
Business Opportunity ..... ,.................... ..... 210
Business Training ........ ......... :....... .............. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment .......................... .... ..... 780
Cardt of Ths~ks .......................................... ot o
Child/Elderly Care .................................. ..... 190
Electrlcai/Refrigeralion .. : .... .. ...................... 840 ,
t:quipment for Rent. ... ..... ..... ..;.......... ..... .. .. .480
Excavating .............. .......................... .......... 830
Farm Equlpment .... .......................... ............ 610
Farms for Renl. ............... .........~ .......... ..... .. .430

Courthouse ,

Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center is seeking
· applications from RN's hcensed in
West Virginia to fulfill responsibilities
As charge nurse on the 7am-7pm shift.
' thi s person must have excellent
communication skills, management ·
experience and excellent clinical
assessment skills. Must have long term
care with rehabilitation ex pereince.

CLASSIFIED

Found on Nerghborhooct
Ad Tan Pekrngese very
lnendly Call (740) 446-4757

Lester to Gabrletle
VIctoria Kruakamp.
The hearing on the
application will be
held on the 29th day
of August, 2005 at
I :30 o'cto~k .P.m., In
the Probate Court of
Meigs County, locala
· ed at 100 East
Second
Street,

The·Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m;rtbune- Sentinel -

r

VIctoria

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL .
RN Charge Nurse

www.mydailysentinel.com

White 2 yr old male ca t Movmg Sale 22·23·24
neutered. shorl·harr white . Baby cloth es appli ances •
electronrcs. much moret SR
1ns1de onl y (740 )446-2700
6B 1 West 1 6 m1tes lrom 33
Lu;rt.Nil
740·992-3462 for mare mfo

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Public Notice

Monday, July 2.5, 2005

For sale 2 bedroom hOuse·
Single bath wrthm crty l1m1!S,
askrng
S60 000
Call
(740)446·8595
alter

New 3 BR Home Only
$189/rno Includes q.'c deilvery and set up (7401385-

,4.;,
36;,7,:..=;;&lt;"'-n;=::-.=""
f':-'! l e AC~e_. Mo_or e ome.
BR 2BA LA KiiCt',en
P eclo:&amp; Burlqrngs A1r See a
76 Oshel Ad

Tra1ler 1982 3 bedroom 2
bath CI A stove re f drsh
washer $7 500 (740\4418976 or (740)645·6734

fl"'

8L''IM:-.'i

\Nil IIL'IUJIN&lt; .s
OII1Ce Bwldrng w,2 apart·
ments on 2nct Ave 1n
Gallipolis Avg rental ot
apartments $1.2001month
Pnce $120 000 w111 cons1der
land con trac t w/money
I

Fm sale Rrverlront acreage
around 6 acres on AI 7, nrce
place fo r a new home Call
{740)446 8595
afte1
900pm
Land 2 ac. m/1 water &amp; sep·
lie Patr1ot area (740)379
2540

Rl:\1. E'&lt;l'\I'F
W\N'IHl
I Buy Homes· Local person
buys homes Conlrdentral
Ou1ck. cash Jm1 740-992·
6300 No calls atte1 9

Rl'\i\iS
10

Hl&gt;l iSl~
~uR lbs r

2 bedroom house on
Ne1g hborhood
Aoad
Gall1polrs
$425fmo
(740)441 0194 Of (740)441
1057

2 BR house loca ted m
GallipOlis $400 month plus
depos11 No pets reference
reqwred Call (740)44 10 110 or (740)9925174 ask
for Jay

9_00_p_m___________ --------------- · '
4 room house qnd bath ,
lovely ranch style home on
2 314 acres ol lana 3 bedroom 1 5 bath large l1111ng
room wrth beaut1ful hand
pa1nled room w1th tieauhlul
hand pamted murlal on wall
New
rerrlgerator /SIOII€
washer/dryer Included New
hoi water hea ter m base·
ment Tot al electnc home 36
years old A steal at
$59 900 ~3922 St At 160
Vrntvn. Ohro Call llarold ai
~RA Realtors (7 40)3 84·
5177

Reasonable rent (740)446·
097 4
--------Anention l
Local compan)' oflenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT
pro·
grams lor you 10 buy your
home 1nstead ol rent1ng
• 1oooo t 1nanc 1ng
• Less tnan pertect cred 1t
accepted
• Paymenl could be the
same as rem
Mo'rtgage
locators
\ (740)367·0000

Split Level House tor Sale
2913 Brook Dmre Po1nt
Pleasant A.ll Elec!nc 2000
Sq Ft WID Stove 24 A/G
PoOl. 70x112 Lot $79 900

Brand new 2 bedroom
hOuse 1n Galhpohs 0 1\
laundry room stovelrefngerator turn1shed
S550 mo
(740)441 0194 or (740)44 1
1057

(304)675·8993

Under new management - - - -- : : - - - - - ---~----Heating &amp; Coohng busrness
TURNEO DOWN ON
WONW.orvb.com . Hot.se lor Rant Pt Pleasant
IS looking tor mstallers With SOCIAL SECURITY fSSI?
Home ll•ttn gs
$4 00 (30 4 )~75·554 0 Ot
1 year ot hands on and a
No Fee Unless We W1n!
(304)675 4024
ask lor
· 1 f 1
1
.
L1st
your
home
by
call1ng
.aa
.
1 8 582 3345
teehmea o
year a ary
17,.01446 •3620
Nan cy Homestead Re a l 1~·
Paramed 1cs
&amp;.
EM T's depends on experr ence
Broker
needed Apply at 135 4 Send resume to HVAC PO
V18W photosnnfa onl1ne
Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis
Box 572. Kerr OH 45643 ~
IO
House for ren l rn Pomeroy
Uom:s
It's a Steal" 4 bedroom 2
no pets (740)992 5858
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
FORS.u .E
Wan
ted·
Front
desk
clerk
bath
2
car
garage
New
IMMEDIATELY!
Apply 1n person 8! Holiday
~ :\IOIIILE 110\U:S
Earn up to S8it10I.Jrl
1401 Cedar St 3 Bedroom Haven. WV Code 6505 or
mRR!.'T
Inn·
Ga
lhpohs
No
phone
call
{304)882·3368
We also oHer·
1 112 Bcitn , Corner lat. new
calls
please.
•MedrcatMson
Roo!. move-rn cond1tron 321) Momu. Uo\IP.&lt;
2 O&lt;lo 2 ba no pets Roo
• Paid Vacatrons/Haltdays
new Carpet and Floonng
FOR
S
·
\
I
Jo:
Grande
area $400 rnonrh
Wtreless
Gallery
now
h1rmg
· •Pa1d Trarnrng
Storage Burldmg Fenced rn
S4 00 Cleo (7401367 7025
tuli and part 11me help Cell Back Yard .~304)675-7708
•Weekly pay • bonus
5 Homes under S10 000
phOne expenence helpful
2 bedroom A C very mce
not
necessary
For
rnter·
2
BR
house
1n
Pomeroy
W1ll deliver (740)385- 7671
but
CIIITodly
no pets
1n Gall.pohs
1-877...63-e247 .... 2.. 57 111ew consrderahon call 740-992·5502
97 Fleetwood 14,70 total 17401446-2003
{606)928· 1608 or emar l
Ray &amp;' Sons Co~plete Car wllelessga lleryO zoom1n te1· 3br 2ba pool garage. stor· etectnc W1ll help w1tr" dehvbldg
'app11ances ery Includes centra a1r Only 3Br Tra1ler w re!r1dg &amp;
Cleanrng
Help Wanted , net net or ma(l resume to PO age
&amp;
dryer
must have valid Drivers Box 6792. Huntrngton WI/ $130 000 5 m11es !rom ~ S\0 995 Call 17401385· Stove washer
1ncl uded (3041576·2934
pn At6a1 (740)592-()426
9621
25773'
LICense {304)675·7375

s

'

�..
•

•
' Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
'MOBIU! HOMES

r

L.-.:FOR;:;:::,.:;RENT~-..J .
Beautiful river view In
Kanauga . Ideal for 1·2 peo~
pie . No pets. please.
Applications be1ng taken .
Call (7401441-0181.
N ice 2BR mobile home tor
rent. 5min . !rom town
$375/mo. 2 relerences &amp;
depoSit required. Call after
5pm (740}446-9342.

APARIMH,' Ili
FOR Rl:N:r
1 and
' · 2 bedroom apartments. l urnished and unfur.
depos't
n 1Shed . secun 1Y
n;~Qulred' no pets. 740·9922218.

MlscEI..LANEoLs

MF.RCHAND.si

Approximately 200 canning
jars, 300 wine bottles.
Bronco Spitl1re wood/coal
stove, dressers &amp; msc. lurniture. (740)7 42-0519

IrmL

yr. old

(740)441·10~3 .

&amp; 2 TVIO units for sse each:

hke ne~ Sony Play Station
One w/20 games· (some
brand new not opened) $60;
Several 'like new boom
boxes. (740)949-2543

APHA Reg. Mare, 5 yrs old,
$1.000 includes all tack . Call
,(7:_:4::0:-:144::::6~·6::68=9:.
. ---~
-For Sale Anglo Arabian
d
Gelding Horse,· 8yrs ol .
lnvacare Lynx 3 mobility gooct Trail Horse $1)00
scooter-used less th an 1yr. ,(3:;0:::4:-:16:::7.::5:::·6:::5:4:0_ _ _ _
LiSt $2,545. sell $750 . New -For
· sale: 2 registered miniacontroUw. speed control, 2
ture Yearlh'lg Gotts; S400
new batteries 1'740.1446· each. (7 40)367-00 18.
. 4561
.:::::.:__ __ __ _ _ Horses and tack tor sale,
JET
AEAA.TION MOTORS
$2,200 080, call (740)992·
Repaired , New &amp; RebUilt In 6255

1 bedroom apart ment Ill
Gallipolis near . Wai-Mart.
Ut11lt1us Included . (740)245· Stock Call Ron Evans. 1800·537 -9528
5555

r___

1988 Ccibia Momt e Qarlo
52,995; 94 Ford Aange"r 4x4 194 open· bOw. lull cove r,
'II
$4,200:93 Cadillac S. D'vl e
$ 1.
~ 89 Ford Ranger PU, bow cover. Bimine Top e)(tra
prop, skfs. excellent condi$l ,200
lion. $3800. Ph· 740-517 Southern Auto Sales
701 2nd Ave
7913 cell or 740-742-2420

995

P_h_
: 1_7_40,.-1_44_6_·8_5-:5-::4--:::-

Aun~

IURSAU:

:o::.•c_l'~·&lt;:.:O:c.l6:_4:::5..:-6::0::2:::9::_____

1997 Dodge Dakota SLT V6 .

AutomatiC, f Wheel Drive.
72.000 miles (304)593-1614 . er, IT. e)(cellent condition ,
52600 lirm , (740)843~5274
1999 Dodge Ram, true~ VB.
black &amp; silver, 87,000 actual 1995 Dulchman Classic
miles has camper tdp camper. 26 ft .. 2 bedroom.
sleeps 8. $5,900 . Phone
(7 401256-6505.
(740)256-1 142.
2004 Ford F-150 Supe1crew
lite Banl am
4x4 , FX4 off road package. 1:199--Trail
Flyer.
Ex
cellent
cond1tion.
5.4 VB, 6-CO changer. runLoaded.
Must
see
74Dning boa rds, power every·
949- 2709. S7,BOO
thing. Tonneau cover. tow
pa ckage, 27.000 miles, 2000 Aerolote 23 toot.Futly
e)(cellent CondiiiOn. N.A.D.A. Equt
Like New. $7999.
Book Value 530,375. sell tor 740 . 99 2. 595 3
$28.900. (740) 446-8217.
2000 Dutch Star 36 ft 12 ft.
99 Dodge Dakota Club-Cab slide out, Ford V10, low
·
SLT. WO.OOO.Imi tes 4x4, mileage . fu ll y equipped,
318/5spd, loaded, man" gOod condition. (740 )446 ·
ex tras. nice Tr uck .. $8,000' . 0714 ~or appt
(304)882·2845
::_.c_'"-'C:::.----;;;;,~;;..:.;.;;;.,~---, 2001 Jayco Designer Series
4x4
27RKS, 5th Wheel. Lots ol
FoR S .-\LE
accesso 1i Efs
$21 ,000
-(304)675-2246

:=:.::::..:==--- - - -

i

:":.:"::":::·h
c:i::.:
lls::.'•::s::IO::·::.'o::m:__ _

EHO

SI'.-\CE
fUR REI\T

1989· Chevy 4 WHDI=I . orig- Coleman Ca mpmg Trailer
inal owner. $2999 740- 12FT. 2 King Beds, $4,995
992-5963
ca ll for Details (304)675_17:._3:._1_ _ _ _ _ _ __
1999 Blazer 4)(4 LT, original
owner. 76K, exc _ co nd ., For sa 1e: amper roo1 1op
1
7 01 a, good
loaded. oover in mud $9,500 . air. seep
$2 500
)370
(304)458·1002
shape.
.
· (740
y·
2540, (740)379-9887.
1999 Chelly Suburban 4x4,
"il It\ I&lt; I "i
good ·condition, loaded. f)SW
tires
Asking
$1 1,000
HOM I:
(740)441 ·0658 or. (740)709:
IMPIIOVEMEN'IS
1931

c

1967 Plymouth Satellite.
small block, 4-Speed. new
interior_,
Demon
1972
Qod9e
(304)675-3773
Jeep
Liberty
2003
, BASEMENT
CKC Golden Retriever pup·
Renegade. Loaded, •b4 ,
WATERPROOFING
1989
Pontiac
Grand
Prl)(,
p1es lor sale $250. Wormed
19,000 miles . $12.500. Call Unconditio nal liletime guartfrst
snots. Call one owner, 157, 000 miles.
and
(740)256- 1618 or (740)256- antee. loca l references furruns
good.
Phone
(740)367
(740)388-8965 .
6200.
nished. E ~ tabl is hed 1975.
0397 or (7 40)645·0021 .
Call 24 Hrs. ,(740) 446·
CKC reg1stered Pomeranian
puppy. female. 2.5 pounds. 9 199 4 Lincoln Town Car. 986 \suz u Trooper. Mud 0870, Roge rs Basement
weeks old . coat 1s hght g1n- Good Cori'dition, Clean tires, runs good: $800 080 Waterprooling:
ger. vet checked and all vac- (304)456-1935 or (740)709· 2002Yamaha Raptor 660cc,
$3 .800. Good co ndition .
crna lions ar.e current. $400. 6424

Pleasant Valley Apanment
Are now tak1ng Applica tion~
lor 2BR . 3BR - &amp; 48A .
Applrcatrons are
taken
Monday thru Fr1day. from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M . Otficc IS
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dnve Point Pleasant, WV Call (740)44 1-72 18.
Phone No is (304)675- CKC
Aeg rste red , Toy
5806. EHO
Poodles puppies $500.00
..-ownhouse 740-992· 70° 7
Tara
Apartments. Very Spacious. Cocker Spanrel pupp1es. B
2 Bedrooms, CIA. 1 112 weeks old. buff color. shots,
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby $150 each. Call (740)388Pool. Pat1o. Start $385/Mo. 0401 .
,·No Pets, Lease PIUs ::.::.::.._ _ _ _~-Security Oepos 1t Required. · For Sale : Chocolate Lab
:1740)446-3481 .
Pups. 8 weeks old. $100.00
(740)992-6227
Twin Rivers Tow9r rs accept·
ing applrcatiqns tor wait1ng
lrst fo r Hud-subsrzed, t · br.
apartment call 675·6679

L....;:;;:,:.;,~:.:;,o;::lii.J
j 990 Empife camping tra1l- ·

Aportments in Middl eport BlacK Sable Collies for sale .
Frorn $295-$444 . Call 740- 1 male. 1 female. $ 75 each
992-5064 Equal Hous1ng Parents
premises
on
Opportun111es
(740)441-0865 .
New 1 bedroom apartment ·
(-740)446·3736

CAMI,.:RS &amp;
Mt11lJK H O!\Il·:S

l-"'R SAI.E

L.__.:;,;,;;;,;_,;;;,_.,J

1500

Rive rsi de

L-•'•Aillii
nilllilipii
,\iiKill~.·iii&amp;-"
Aco-~
-.;oRIIi;'

Mercedes Benz 260E 88
Engine rebuilt, too much Chevy 2.8 lite( V-6. comAltalla new to list 25MPG. Nice pletely rebu ilt molal. 16.000
ride $3,950·. (740)245-9 142 miles.Can hear run. $475 .
TRUCK:;
740 675-513 1
15

PEl'S .
1960 Thunderbi rd
Black
el\teriorwithnewpaint. New
BEAUTIFUL
APARTAT
BUDGET L.--..::ll~&gt;:;R.OSi::
'';::":;:·F;;,:.,..J black 7 wh it e in te rior.
:MENTS
.PRICES AT JACKSON
Aechrome bumpers. Engine
female . Pekingese AkC compartmerl t de tailed. Wire
).STATES; 52 westwood
·Drive trom $344 to $442 , reg iStered , 8 wk s old. very wheels. Frame-up show car
·
Call loving' (740)446"l000
h &amp;
'
W a"
I 1o s op m0vies ..
Price $28,500.00.
Hill's
740-446-2568
Equ&lt;JI - - - - - - - - - c·
·c
2 .tamale Bassett Hound Automotive ·
tass1C
ar
Housing OppOrtunity
pups. No papers $125. · Aestor~li·on&amp; Part s, Inc.
:coNVENIENTLY L OCAT· (740)446-0974 .
Phone :
740·949·2217.
·ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Website:.www.hill sfesto.c.om
6 male registered Golden
Towl)house
apar tments. Retreiver puppies, first shots 1965 Mustang Fastback
:Snctlor small nouses FOR &amp; worm d. . $300 each. Rangoon Red exterior: black
'RENT. Call (740)441-1111 {740)416-2793
interior, 6 cycle, 3 speed. air
con ditioning , radl.o. good
lor application &amp; inlormat1on.
AKC Basset Hound puppies. driver. Rust free A2 car.
Furnished upslarrs. 3 rooms Shots. w&lt;ilrmed. parents on Prrce : 5 19 .000 _00 . Hill's
&amp; bath Clean. ret. &amp; dep. prentlse . $300 each. AKC Automotive Classic Car
requ1red No pets. (740) 446- reg · 2 Y' Old male Basset Res toration &amp; Parts, Inc .
Hound. (740)256-6887,
1519
29670
Bashan
Road ,
.h
T
Aacrne.
Ohio
4577
1.
Phone
GraCIOUSIIVIIIQ. 1 and 2 bed- AKC reg · Sh 1 zu puppres
room apartments at Village 'for sa le. Call (740)446-1523 740-9 49·2217
Website :
and

exhuasr pipe,

$3,100; 95 Chev. Lumina

.n'!'t

r

~(71'!4~0.;.14_4_6;.·.;12.;3~7~.- - - . . . ,

1996 Pontiac Grand Pri)(,
$1.500. (740)44 1·8976 or
,17:.4c:O:.:I64:.:.:.5·..:6.:.73:.4. c.____
1997 Honda Civic 109.000
mi . Afte r market acces·
sorres. 38+- mpg . Clean.
black/black . Call (740)441 9865.

Phillip
Alder

Sharp 2002 .Yamaha 125 l , FMF

$1450 .00
740-992·2762
..-.:...:...:_:__ _ _ __
2003 Honda 250EX $750 in
ahermark~t parts. Better
than new.condition. $2,800.
(740) 446·8402.
95 Tracer, 4 cyt, 5 speed new 2004 .Honcta VTX 1300C.
tires. A/C, extra clean Low m11es. $1 ,500 in extras,
insidefout. N ice paint, runs black, $8.300. (740)288·
great · $1 •500 · (7401669- 7246.
0302.
'Jii-!~-"':"":'"::---,
--~----- ' BoATS &amp; M&lt;YIORS
S
9g Dodge CeuBvan $4,900;
94 Pont. G. AM GT DR L-••"iiilRii.oiiiAiilii
.Fio
. --"

Cutting
bedro::nn Apt . Pomt ' NEW AND USED STEEL 2nd
Pleasanl, 1 bedroom House St 1 6
p1
·
A b
ee eams.
pe e ar ·
. Gallipolis. HUD (740}446·
For
Concrete.
Ang le.
2200 or (740)709-0062
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
WOW!! 0% Financing for up
Grating
For
Drains.
to 50 months on qualitylng
2 bedroom apt, newly
Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
G X &amp; X Series John Deere
re modeled , SA 160. JUSt
·
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
past
Holzer
S4601.mo.
.Lawn Trac tors or No
Tuesday, Wednesday 8. Interest. No Payments until
(740)441 -01 91\ or (740)44·1Fnd~y; Bam -4 :30pm. Closed January 1. 2007 on all new
1057.
T11ursd ay
Saturday
&amp;
premium lawn tractprs with
.2 bo droom apts. Porter. Sunday. (740) 446- 7300
John Deere Credi t·appr'oval
'$400 . Water. hash &amp; sewer
Ht iiU:ii Nl ;
Carmichael Equipment Inc
'.pd Call (740)367-7746 or
SI J1'11
(740)446-241 2.
·(7401367-7015.
L.--~:;:;,:~:..-

Manm

ACROSS

·&amp;--·.·1___

HA_\_
'
GIWN

2 bedroom, 1 bath . water Block. brick , sewer pipes,
pa1d . $350 month. $350 wmdowS. lintels, etc. Claude
Call Wmle rs, Rio Grande, OH
S8Cljri\y
depOSit
Call740-245-5 121
(740)446-3481 .

Vs

VANS
FoR SAL£

~-

Get AJump

2001 Ford Windstar 4D r. V6
Loa ded $7995 .00.
1993
Buick Regal 2Dr. V6 Auto Air
$1995.00. Riverview Motors
2 blocks above McDona tds

ENERGY EFFICIENT

Downtown OHice Space- 5
room suite S650f mo: 1 room bage

$9,000. (740)709-

SOil' per head . Call 200 1 Chevy Cavalier 2 dr,

ofhce- $225/mo . 2 room
5/sp. AJC . 23,800K, $4,100.
sUite $250/mo Security
1999
Buick
Le Sabre.
depos1t requrred You pay
loaded. clean. 67,000K,
utilities. All spaces very n1ce. ~;;:;;;==~===~ $5.100. (740)379-2748
Etevator·Call (740)446·3644
10
F\R.\1
::_:.:.:.:....::..::.::...:....:::..::::___
f~l
ll-t\
IEN'I'
98 burgundy Stralus 4 cyl.
tor appointment
automatic, 98.000 miles.
For Lease: Oflrce or re1a1l $500 Demonslra tron Bonus- $2.000 OBO (7 40)256 ·
spaces 1n ~ery good condi- Le t us demo a John Deere Z 1233.
tion _ Downtown Gallipolis Trak or )( Serres All-Wheel
Apprax: 1600 sq. fl . each 1 SJeer on your lawn an d
or 2 bath s Lease p,rice rece1ve an e:ctra $500 oli our
negotiable 10 encourpge already discounted prrces.
new
bus 1ness.
Coli Lim11 ed
Irma
ofl er ·
(740)446·4425 or 1740)446- Carmichael EQuiPment Inc
3936 ..
(740)446-2412.

2001 Custom Panzer, 2000
miles,
$13,800;
2903
Hundred Annv. Heritage,
600 miles. $17.000: 2000
Dyna Wide Glide. 16,000
miles.
Sit ,500:
2003
Hundred Annv. Road King,
Gold Key package w/$7000
extra chrome. 300 miles.
$17 .900; (7 4())992 -6520.
740·99'2-2670

0% Anenclng ·tor up 10 36
months on John Deere
.10
Hous&gt;:H&lt; &gt;Ul
Compact and 5QQQ Senes
Tractors wilh John Deere
•
Credit approval. Check them
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark 1toutl Carmichael Equ1pmen t
Chapel Road. Poner, Ohio lnc. (740)446·2412 .
(740)446· 7444 1-877-8309162 Free Estimates. Easy OOk Finar'tclng for up to 60
tinancmg. 90 days same as months on 'Jonn Deere
cash . V1saJ Master Card Round Balers. 0% tor 48
Dnve- a- lltlij! save alot
months on John Deere
Mower Conditioners wiih
ThOmpsons Applian ce &amp;··John Deere Credit approval
Aepa 1r-675-7388 . F.or sale. Carmrch.lel Equipment Inc.
re-conditioried
automati c (740)446-2412
' ~
washers &amp; dryers. retngeia- Farmall Super C Tractor with
tors. gas and electric C.]rltivators $1.750 060. (1)
ranges, arr conditione rs, and 15xt04 . (I) 20x104, (1)
wringer waShers_ Will do '30x104 wlall plastiC , doors,
repairs on maJOr brands m fans , shutters &amp; heaters.
shop or at your nome
SIO.OOO·OBO.

Goous

• KQJ92
• l 0 7 lj 4
af- 10 II 5
"" Q J 94
South
• I 0 \f 1.1 5 3
¥ 1\ 965
t A3

45783

&lt;!o AK

Dealer: South

740-667-0700 J-888-HUPP234

Vul nerable:

and

Will's ATV
Parts
Quulity Guaran.tced
ATV Purls &amp; ACC:

.huncs A Will .Jr.
· Owner
.~2119

\-\'l&gt;lshtown Ud.

Pomeroy. Ohio

45769
(740) '192-2432
Emuil:jwi1145769
@yahoo.«..'OIII -

Myc&lt;s T&lt;ee

Service

£EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Owner: Jeff Stethem

740-992-6971
lnsun·d

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

TRIMMING &amp;

GENERAL
· CONTRACT! NG
• Prompt &amp; quality

740·742-2293

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room AddiUona 4
Remodeling
• New Garegea
• .EI&amp;etrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
t VInyl Sldlrlg &amp; Prilntlng
• Palla and Porch Decks
We do It all excepl
lurnace work

P'

, "&lt;)

I Wf&gt;.SK'I 1\W(&gt;..R( YOU t\f'-D
jOI 1'1(\:&gt; 1\ COUtH RY CLUB I

V.C. YOUNG Ill
\'I'V {I:IIi/o'!&gt;

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Loc:al E• rlenee

~Astrc­
~ Graph

Storage
Phone
(740) 992-5232

BIG NATE

SxiO, IOxiO.
IOxiS , 10x20.

ElErrRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME

Pomeroy, Ohio

MANLEY'S
SElF STORAGE
Beech Street ·
Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6615

97

" Middleport' s only
Self-Storoge•

ROBERT
.BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages
· Complete
Remodeling

140-992-lm
Srap &amp; Compare

.

ARrtG!

A f '/\ .1'1\ L
RE UNION

Tt-tiN GS~

DIDN 'T'

GETTIN. G

WE

10x30
Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road

Shop the
Classifieds!

P:
. .
""
[ H\II'll&lt;. I'LL f\(1\1) 0\1 t:.R TO
Ti-l( CLUB 1'--1'\E.R WOR.K I

High and Dry

• FOR All YOUR

OHIO LICENSE # 38244

' to the dummy and relirid - successfully
-on the heart l ine sse
'
Aided by the auction . East sensed what
was happemng_ He look trick two with his
spade ace. Then he shifted lo tile heart
two.
Now look al matters from South's point of
view Surely West had the spade queen:
So, apparently the contract was in danger
only if East had switched to a singleton
haar1. Then. if declarar fi nessed. West
would win with the king and give East a
heart ru ff. Instead . Soutll ,· thinking he
was sale, won with his heart ace and
played a spade to dummy's jack_ But East
produced tile queen out of his back pocket, cashed the heart k1ng . and played a
diamond to his partner: one doWn. ·
Impolitely, !he saying atJout taking candy
from a baby crossed East's m1ild.

YOUNG'S

992-6215

GO
O NE

_',u ~.,
'{ (J

:1:

I-\1&gt;.TE TI\EsE

l H,t.TE

.t: \4ATE

8EING
TOL.t&gt;

f" INCt-iED O N

THE CHEEK ' I

HAlE

E-EIN &amp; TOLl&gt; Ho W'

OF

MUCH

I 'VE

GR.O WN 1•

THAT,
TOO!'

Whaley's Auto
Parts
' ·st. R1.t&gt;8l

Darwin .

OH

.

PEANUTS

740-992-70 13 or 740-99 ~-5553 ·
Rl"slorki•tg {,., ll" Motlt"l StJ h ·a.ge
and ;\rll"r Ma rkl"l f'a ,.,,.

WELL, SO LONG, CORMAC...
I'M GOING i-IOME TODAY..

MA'i6E WE'LL SEE EACI-4
OTHER AGAIN SOMETIME

Sec Brent or Btian Whaley

AND IF YOU EVER NEED

1-\N ATTORNEY. HERE'S

M'i CARD..

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

High cost

fertilizer got you
17-17- 1.7,.
$265 ton {While Suppy Last)

• fll!ushroom Compost

Available

$35 - I ,000 lbs Approx. weighl ~~~
18 spreadet buggies available for use
Airway pa sture renovators and seeders

=-----

available to rent.
Licensed agronomi st on staff available for

011, Y£AH, 1 flAt) M
1f.W.
fi)E.tl!'~ /:YIBRJUAfORS'

/IJSTAUW

/

consulting.

SllAllt: RIV ER A(; S~: RVI CE
35537 St. Rl. 7 Norlh'

~ARFIELD
YOIJ LOOK LIKe YOU'RE
IN M OOOP A MOOP
252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-446-0842 • 949- 11 55 Evenings

0

..

:·152~~ocirp~B~/al;7~~;~~~~

PIC' YOU TAKE THE
I..A5T COOKIE TOO?

AS tAM!

NORTHUP DODGE

.couches . dinettes. rec11ners
grave monumems much 6535
more
(7 40)446 -4782. :::::::.__ _ _ _ _ __

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

r

Hill's Self
Storage ·
29670 Bashan Road
Rac1ne, Ohio
4577 1
740-949·2217

Sizes 5'x10'

to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

GRIZZWELLS
:. ~E.11tlt~ 1 "rnii\K
• ~ 15 JU5T P\.A\1-\

' Now Available At

BAllM Llll\1BER
Scorpion Tractors

.,

"Taking The Sting Oul Of
Hard Work!"

·St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

111411 mo pd

'

~t: \b\.1) 1-1\'C ~1\t: WA.~5 A
A.\R COA.T FOR 1\t.R 'BIImi~A'I

order

55 Ready
10 pick
carn ivore
56 Ape studier
16 Do nothing
- Foasey
17 Forensic
57 Old cloth
science tool 58 Insurance
1B Relieves
claim
20 Book page 59 Toolh pro's ' ""-'-"1.!:
21 Final letter ·
deg.
22 Gluard
22 Tax pro
23 Wrestler's
24 Popular
DOWN
coup .
takeout
1 Mr. Lugosl 24 Photo
27 Spring ·
2 Gas orelec. 25 Can 't be
. blooms
3 Liverpool
30 Brit's
26 Wacky
poky
27 Do a laundry
exclamatlo,
{2 wds.)
4 Vttal sign
chore
5 Kind
28 Underwater
31 QB
ol system . .
shockers
- Tar1&lt;snton
6 tbllsvle's sl 29 Closeout
32 Nibble on
7 Luftwaffe foe 31 Beginning
34 News
B Yield
ot
·
channel
9 Governess 33 Jusl a bil
35 Boast
in Siam
35 Variety
36 Earthen pot
37 Magnate
10 Hard
of klttuce
39 Cleared the
ol hearing
36 Ofter more
dishes
12 Flashy
money
40 Mil. branch 19 Bleachers
38 Cow's
41 Gear
shout
moultllul
42 Food fish
20 Scokl notes 39 Set class

41
.
42
43

Trouble- ,
some jolnta
Hoalowr
Luau·ontertalnmtnt
44 Take down
46 Placed
47 Old·tlme
oath
48 Guidry and
Howard
50 Web lddr.
51 Grande, e.g.
52 Family
docs
·

KTA '·

'CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos ·
Celecrny Cloher cryptograms are c1~ared from quotations by lamoos people. pes1 and OII!S8fll

Each letter •n lhe ~ rpN11 slancs lor anolher
· Today's clue: X equals P

"M

w c c G N MH

N0 XS

E. NWOUS

HGWL

vs;

GNS

F0 0 ' G

M

F 0 RC A

HWVS

WH

CMJ S

M'ZS

UI W 0 A

WCFWLH

PSSO .."

FMOOSI

I WTWSC .

GO

H .C W V

OWAWC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ' Stars live in a cocoon ol praise . They never meel

the people who don'lllke them." - Aoben Morley

"*&gt;ur 'llirl~:

I

SOGITE

I

;lI ;1,;1;1~I· ~
· YNOLN

LUBIO ~ ~

I===·===·=
I I ·=-=·-~..,
r
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rL.

OWLPLI

I'_ _._L_...___.___

.
·.Tobealeaderofalargefoi-

lowing
just--do twolaneroad
the. speed- lim~
ona
----

I

.

t--.~,..:-.r~--;..;.~..;:':...!,-1'-1 0
.

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Complefo tho &lt;hudlo quoted
.l.-...1..---'·
. by I1Hiru., i" the mis!lir.g words
yov develop from ste~ No. 3 btk&gt;w.

PRINr NUMBEREO IEII!RS·
IN THESE SQUARES

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO

.GET ANSW!R

SCRAM-lttS ANSWERS 7-2 2- 0$

Unpack - Gourd - Sh.een - Piacffi · LEARNING
"How mvch education do you have ?" the agent asked
the old ti me1 . "Well ." he replied . "s1oears of schooling ·
and n years of LEARNING'"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

4·?0
. .:...0

" WAK~UP, " 5A I D
TH~ f!URS E."IT'5
WI~ FOR YOUI&lt;
5L~~PIIJG: ~Lt.! "

SOUP TO NUTZ '
J:!;.-.::.- '

'

M~\lERoF

•

'

.

Tu es day, July 26, 2005
By Bernice Bede O sol
Give l ull expression to your croativa
juices in ! he year ahead. because
your bright ideas co uld easily lead
you to a larger bank accoun t.
Creollvity con enhance your present
position or open up something n ew
for you .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Situations
th at you personally taka an interest rn
and direct have excellent chances• lor
success today. Don't let anybody try
to usurp you r auth ority wh~:m it comes
tp important situations.
'
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Be alert
for bett er than u sual cipporluniries
wt1ich yOu . cou ld take advantage ot
today. Your pro spec ts for p ersonal
acJ:~u lsrtion an d large gains from o th~)r
than you r usual sou rcfl!S are good
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)- It a successful frrend wantS to· talk to you
about something new he or she has
been conside rl_ng getting rnvo lved ln .
give your trrend your full ;;m ention
Thera cou ld be someth rng worttlwh1le
In It for you .
SCORP IO · (Oct _ 24 -Nov. 2.1) Se t
meanrng tul obJectives for yaursa l!
loday and don't waste thrs valuable
acllreverne1 rt cycle you're m . Now's
the rime to go after something you've
been afraid 10 tackle in the past .
SAG ITTAR IUS (Nov_ 23-bec 21) Things you ca nn ot accomplish solely
on your own can bo achieved today it
you wi ll first take the time t o fi nd some
competent as s1stance Don 't hesitate
to ask a goOd lriend lor help.
CAPR ICORN (Doc. 22-Jan . 19) ~
When it CQmes to Commercial dea l·
ing s todaY. you must be determined
and exa c t ,-ega rding yoUr term s
You'ro in a strong position to negotiate
because you'vo got what others want
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19) There's no lleed to !eel intimidated
today Should you I.Jo H:tqui1ed to .make
some rmportnnt declsrons. Your JUdg ment pertarn1ng to crrtical Issues rs
e;.:ceplronally keen at thrs lime
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Til e
pieces could ;:~II come together l o d&lt;~v
regarding a matter Wh ich you 've boen
hoprng would produce :'! pl'olir Try 10
get eve•ytlling cleared up and f.nal ·
i:zed as pr\JrnJJtly as poSsible
ARIE S tMnrch 21-April 19) - Don 't
even lhrnK about playing a subordlnale ro le today in a SituA tion tllBi
' needs a capable manage r who rs tit r
sighted and l inn. Your leadel' ship
qualities lit tll al bill quit e well .
TAURU S
(April 20- May 20) Sorntoone is going,to come to ,.·our aid
to day and do sorne manrpu latrng !rom
bohlnd til e scenes 111 order to help you
resolve whn l has been o slicky situation you haven 't been able to handle
GEMINI (May 21-June 2 0 )
Atlendrng a sacral functron and soc•al lzlng wilh th e pa rtic ivants in the mtd dte at your warkwook won 't be a
wa ste o f 11me for you torlay. Tho business contac ts you wrll meet prove
11elpflrl.
CANCER (June 2 1-J uly 2 2 ) - The
astrologrcal aspects rndrcate. that you
could be far .lu cKrer lodny in tlnancml
or careeo- ma tte rs tl'len you wrll be
tomorl"ow, so l ake maxrinum advar1 ·
tage ol these favorable conditions
now

~

~~ruL

t\0 I&lt;IPDIN6 ?
'11\1DU61-rT
'7~t INI&gt;S A

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubgta Engi nes

BAUM
LUMBER
•

~
49 Mug
50 Yon
53 Othello's
betrayer
SA Tavern

If East, as most ol us wou ld ~~ ave done,
had taken the trick with his. spade queen,
declarer would have driven a tr ump entry

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

Advertise
.
'
in this
space
for
$52 per
month

1 Moth orant
4 Orchard
produce
8 Ronar
11 Frat letters
13 Pac-10 team
14 Vane dlr.
1S Lorge

10.

(Co mmerdal11nd Re\ldentral)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming. Aeration, Fert ilization,
Spraying of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as plant ing and mulching.

. ·

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Esti'mates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley

'

LAWN CARE DIVISION

•:stimnll'S

STANLEY TREE

work

.

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-688l
POWER WA$HING
·
(Com m~ • da l and R~ id enti11 l)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks,4Jrivewdys,
.
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreas.ing ol
Equipment, Boats, Cllmpers, Tractor Tr;ulers,
Dump Trucks, painting ·or staini ng of your deck
or log lmme, Aluminum br ight~nin8 .
.
Special rates to Tru cking ;md Dump rt ucktng Comp.:~me).

Mor8

45

Sir Winston Churchill sa1d . "There 1s no
liner investment lor any communi ty than
putting 'm1lk into Dab1es.··
There is a vague "babf segue into th1s
deal. How did East try to delea t four
spades after West led the diamond king?
Although South ~ad weak spades, with a
six-loser hand (three spades. two heans
and one diamond) , h.e made a ga·me-try
with three hearts. Perhaps -his partner
was 3·5 in the majors. t-.j orth was happy
to jump to game because all of his honors were in hi's partner's two bid su1IS.
Decl.arer thoug ht that he· needed one
major-suit linesse to wo rk. So. he won
with his d1amond ace and ran the spade

TRI - STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

David Lewis
. 1111

E#lNI~.

'

W~ll
~NOUGH

i

Take a baby bottle
from a man

· t.~AV~ IT ALON~,

;\.

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

All 'fype$ Of .:

hl'l'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck .

donc~te Work
25 Yclm Experience

Ea~t

!'ass
All pa ~s ·

• Opening h~ad : t K

Tree Service

Let me do it for youl

• CARPENTRY
• ROOF • PAINT

-------------~------- ·L---

East West

Pas~:~

JONES'

Advertise
in this
spacefor$104
per month.

REPAIRS

•

• A Q
¥ K 742.

• 8'

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

Used Furniture Store. 130 lmgatlon systerr. (2) pumps,
Bulaville Pike: Appli~mces. (3) Nelson Brg Guns wlalum
mattresses.
dressers: stands &amp; over 4,000 ft of

GallipoliS, OH Hrs 11 -3 (M· 1ncrect1ble Deal. w1th Ford
S)
8000 ,
105hp, hke-new
Totally cernedEiled mecham·
A~·not,;r.s
cat ana structurally. · New
rear trres Brush hog and
M~· fork ,added .
$9.000
Great
Deal
Ant1que maple Dedroom negollable
su11e Numbered Cushman 1364177~-5333
Classrc Creat1on 2 tw1ns.
John Deere 10ft. No Til Onll
dresser. desk , mmor. nrght
lor
Rent
Carmrchael
stand , select comlott mat Equrpmenl. (740)446-2412.
tress $1 ;200 (740)446·
John Deere Commarc lal
8325
WorkaUe
Product•
Bi.!Y or self
Rrverrne Compact Elf.cava1ors/S krd
AntrQues . 1124 East Marn Steers!Tractor
Loader
on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740- Backhoe rn st oc~ Check out
992-2526 Ru s:&lt;. Moore. our rental rates Great
owner
lrnar1c1ng
avarlab le
Carmichael Equrpmenl Inc
Le1sa 'S A·nllques· IJought· (740)446-2412
Sold at Alligator Jacks Flea
Markel. At 7. Pom eroy. .trJrnr· Your ProStart Trai ler Dealer
ILUe
pnm1trves. boltl_es C(lrm1chael ~Equipmem Inc
(740) 446-2412
(740t992·5068

East

WP..,l
Pass

Where Can You
Find the Perfect Pet?

\IIIH II \'\I&gt;ISI

.

Pom,eroy, Ohio

FRurrs

c1 o0n9~i.tion .

~~~~

Home Creek Enterprises

Cornarstona
Elactrlcal
Sarvlca

.

'

Tuppers Plains,

Mobile Homes • Metal Roofs
• flat or Low Sloped Roof • Carports
Barns • 'Porches
Residential • Commerdal

8 J

Wes t
• ) 2

MONTY

41800 SR #7

'1118 Wllld'lltllRDDf

SAVINGS

1998 Plymouth Breeze
74,000 miles, runs great, Pomeroy, Ohio {7 40·992-

•

Oi 2:.-0ii

"- 71i3l

Financial Setyices

on

•

North
A K J 6 -1
• Q J \0

Hupp Insurance

• Leave a message

~~----~
cr uise, till, air, $2,300 080. I!!'34;;!90
(7401256·9031 or (7401256·
M010RC'YLW
Schnauzers . Miniature. AKC 1233
4 WHf.ll..ER'i .
males. Salt &amp; pepper. 2 .c:.::_______ _ _ L.oiii.il~=-;;;.;...,.,.1
shots. vet ched;ed. $300. 1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr., 4
1995 Yamaha Virago 11 00
(740)595- 1085.
cyl. 76.000 mil es . $3,000
Ye llow,
V-twin.
OBO. Call (740)441 -071 2
gotdlwlmaroon trim. Lots of
VEGEI:AHU"S
2000 Honda ACcord LX 4 chrome , $3,600. Original
door. 118,000 miles, good owner (740 )446- 1662 .
Half-runners $1. 00 lb. cab-

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

40.000
mlles·$7995.00
1990 Olds Cutlass Suprema
4 Door-$1 495.00 River view
Motors 2 blocks above
evenmg McDonalds, Pomeroy, Ohio.
(l4a-992.J490)

Duect TV equ1pment wiDish calls only.

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

FURSAi.E

Quarter mare.. E11.c. 2002 Ford Taurus

horse. exp. rider, agile lleet,
lrght touch, bright, reining
!rained/ trail exp. Good
bloodlines. Asking $3,500.

Monday, July 25, 2005
ALLEYOOP

•

AIJ£()!;

L,__LM"l
__
~"lOCK
_ _....
6

Monday, July 25, 2005

www.mydai'l ysentinel.com

Ir

•

W"oa 1 A WHol.~
iX&gt;LL8R P~

~e. (3LL oF ll-IE IC EC~e8M MaN IS SOMeliMeS G~&lt;lTeR T- Tl'lt

caLL To

CoNSC ieNce ...

�'

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 25,

'

'

2005

Hornish bumps way to IRL victory~
WEST ALL1S, Wis. (AP) pion and coming off a victory
- Sam Hornish Jr. had to last week at Nashville. when
pass Daria Franchitti twice in Homish todched wheels with
the waning laps Sunday Marlboro Team Penske teambefore pulling away for a · mate Helin Castroneves ,
hard-earned victory in the sending the Brazilian driver
A.J. Foyt 225 at the into the wall and bringing nut
Milwaukee Mile.
another cauti0n !lag on lap
Hornish. a two-tin1e Indy 186.
Racing League champion. · Harnish re,taned fou rth
dominated early in · the race, when tile grw&lt;1 llag waved
but slipped back on a hot , again on lap 1\16. but ho
slippery trac·k before coming &lt;.JU\ckly pa.&gt;Sed series poi_nt&gt;
on strong at the end to grab leader Dan Wheldon fur third
his second win or the season rtacc . chased down and
and the 14th of his career. · passed Kanaan for second on
With tem peratures soarin g lap 20 I af1d bme down on.
into tl1c mid -'IOs. there were Franc hitti .
'
The two leaders touched
several cr,hhes. includin~
one hy rookk sensatioli wheels once as Horni'h tried
Danica Patrick. who came to get outside Franchini on
away uninjured.
lap 208. He finally did get tile
During the caution period lead on lap 2 11 and began to
after Buddy Rice crashed on pull away. But Horni sl1 's
lap 16 7, Andretti Green work was far from done as he
Racing diose to keep slid high into turn one on lap
Franchitti and reigning· 213, barely keeping from hitIndyCar Series ,champion ti iig the wall and allowing
Tony Kanaan on the track Franchini tu retake the lead.
while the rest of the leaders
But. with Franchini sti ll
pitted - hoping one of them trying dcsp~rately to conwotrld win by conserving serve
fuel.
Hon1ish
fuel to the end.
regrouped and chased him
It appeared .!he strategy down once more. easily
might work for Franchitti,the charging past on lap 217 and
defending Milwaukee cham· pulling away to win by 0.384

..

photo
Cleveland Indians' Victor Martinez. right, throws out Seattle Mariners' Michael Morse for the
final out in the ninth inning Sunday in Cleveland. Indians' pitcher Bob Wickman, left , watches.
The Indians won 6-3. · ·
· AP

Cleveland .doubles up Mariners, 6-3
CLEVELAND (APJ Kevin Millwood won for the
first time in five July starts
and Victor Martinez h.it a
three-iun homer. helping the
Cleveland Indians beat the
Seattle Mariners 6-3 Sunday.
Martinez had three hits. His
II th homer. off reliever JJ .
Putz in the seventh inning.
gave Millwood more runs
with one swing than the
Indians have averaged in the
right-hander's 18 starts.
Millwood (4-9) snappeu his
four-game ·losing ,;trcak. The
Indians had been shut out
three times and scored a total
of two runs in those games.
The right-hander. averaging
only 2.7 runs a game of support. gave liP two runs- one
earned - and three hits over
7 2-~ innir1gs. He walked tw.o
and struck out five.
Cleveland improved to only
5-12 since July 5.

Mariners starter Aaron Sele
(6-11) dr()pped liis sixth
straight start and remained
winless si nce mid-Jtllle as
Seatt le l'ost for the tifth time
111 ~ 1x games.
Jhonny Peralta singled
home a run to put Cleveland
ahead 1-0 in the tirst inning
- the first time Millwood
had a lead in 26 1-3 innings .
The right-hander promptly
gave it back. as Richie Sexson
hit a ~-2 pitch for his 23rcl
homer leadi1f-,l otJ the second.
That made Sexson 6-for-14
(.429) with three h'omers ai1d
nine RBis in his career
against Millwood. who reti red
the first baseman the next two
time's up - once on a foul
popup :rnd then on :r drive that
Coco Crisp caught at the base
·of the left-tield wall.
Seattle &lt;eored an unearned
run in the third to go ahead 21. Randy Winn hit a leadoff

advanced on a
~roundout and scored when
Adrian Be ltre 's two-out Iine
drive glanced off center fielder Grady Sizemore's glove for
an error.
Martinez singled to ,start the
sixth, took third on a double
by Ben Broussard and sco'red
on a sacritice !ly by Ronnie
Belliard to tie it at · 2. Casey
Blake delivered another sac
!ly ·otT Jtrlio Mateo to score
Broussard with the go-ahead
run .
Sele gave up three runs and ·
eight hits in 5 1-3 ' inn ings,
falling to 0-6 since-a 5-1 victory (lVer th e Phil&lt;~delphia
Phillies on June 15. The righthamler is 5-I 0 in his career
against Cleveland and has not
defe ated the Indian s si nce
Sept 7. 1999.
Beltre snapped an 0-for-14
slump with a homer in the
ninth oil Bob Wickman.
.·

from Page Bl
Martin , who may be extending his farewell tour another
year. both made , hurd
charges. Wallace even led
most of the last few laps and
made it seem possible he
could tie Bill Elliott for most
career. wins .at Pocono.
Busch pushed Walliice
hard and seemed poised to
take the lead when th e caution came out for debris
from Matt Ken seth 's car. so
Wallace kepi his spot up
front with 33 laps left.
Hi s car just didn 't have
enough left.
·
Jeff Gordon finished 13th
and Dale Earnhardt Jr. was
two laps off the leader in

Day PiCnic Held, A3

•

was onl' vf those 1hin g~ I

Car in Victory Lane.' '
T&lt;lllH" Scheckter wound
up third. fo llowed by
Kanaan , Wheldon and Bryan
Herta. the last driver on the
lead la p. Rookie Patrick
Carpenlier. was sevenrh, one
lap down to the leaders,
Patrick wa' &gt;ixth nnd running )t ron g wheit her car suddenl y spun out and slammed
hard 'rear-end l'irst into the
tlrrn two wall on lap 126.
Patrick. the onlv woman racing in the · tndyCar Series,
!'iaiJ she hild no warning
bet(l!'e the crash.

SPORTS
• Smith-agrees to $57
million deal. See Page 81

·Council accepts bid for repaving Pomeroy

32nd place as two of was mostly th e result of
NASCAR's most sucec&gt;SI'ul ovenrggress ivc
uri ving,
drivers are runriin~ out of NASC AR tri ed another
time to crac k th.c tr1p 10. i'n approach by installing a
NASCAR's chase for the. curb in side Tur:n 2 that
Nextel Cup Championship.
seemed to give some drivers
· Busch, who also won at and their tires tits.
Phoenix . had his seve nth
Gordon and Wallace were
top-five finish and success- among the dri vers who sti ll
fully navigated a Pocono . blasted the tra.:k\ cc\ndition
track that was sharply criti- · even after th e alterations.
cized by drivers thi' week- thopglr the curb and th e
small. patched turn faile d to
end.
NASCAR had the track gil'c the drivers any 'criou'
patched near the treacherous prohlems on Sunday.
tun'nel turn 'hefore the race
after it was d ~lmag ed in
,; ll· s pre tt y rough over
Saturdav\ ARCA stiick -car th ere." Mallin said.
'
When
Kvic
Bu sc h
race. ~.:ausing
sumc pre~racc
CO/Kern from ll few dri vcrs . sli.llllll!Cd int &lt;&gt; . the turn ·one
Th e track's rcputa'tinn. Widl with 50 laps left . it wus
alreauy took a hit after the first nia jor acc ident of
.June· .. ,. race when dri ve rs the race allJ.hrougbt oul the
were victirnized by blown or cauti11n. There were few tire
cut tire's.
woes though there were five
While so.n1e drivers said it stra ight debr is caution s. .

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•

5252 COMPACT TRACTOR • 25 HP' Kohler• gasoline engine

SALE
'6,999*
llock "'~ separolely

•· Standard 3-Point Hitch
with float position
• Hydrostatic transmission

.

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

'-.

• Frank Cleland, 84
• Ruth Gilbert
• Arthur Strauss, 96

• Chautauqu1!'s collectible
Babe Ruth bear awarded.
See Page A3
• Local scouts off to
National Jamboree.
Se9 Page A3
• Golf Scramble Planned
for Health Center building
·fund. See Page A3
• Meigs native recipient
of faculty-staff contribution
award. See Page A3
• Local briefs.
Se9 Page AS
·• For the record.
Se9 Page AS .
• ExxonMobil-partners
with OU researchers.
'See Page A6
• County recognized
for claim management.
See Page A6
• . Retires from OVEC.
:See Page A6

www.tubcadet.com

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INDEX
Sr,c noNS -

THE SCIENCE OF mMMON SENSE.

12

P.• m:s

A3 .

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

B2-4
Bs

A3
A4

Editorials

I 1 'o fA¥ ynur .., r rruM P•l lf•r-• t~ JOUI dc f! ~~I • hr IW'&gt; "~"· '·••

'1'1"1'"'"''
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Deputies seize pot plants
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Sheriff's
deputies seized ma.rijuana
plants from two residences
while conducting other business . Sheriff Robert Beegle
reported Monday.
Beegle said deputies were
attempting to serve a bench
warrant on .vincent King of
Pomeroy, and found marijua- .
na plants growing, near the
rear of the residei1ce . King

BY CHARLENE HOEFl.ICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2

As

Obituaries
Sports

B Section
A(i

Weather
rc , :tOO,'} Ohin \'11IIL•y
'

In other council business:
The following renewal
levies were approved for the
November ballot: a 2-mil
levy for fire protection. a 1mil levy for general street
lighting. a 1-mil levy for the
cemetery.
Resolution 22.05 was
approved
transferring
$5,0()0 from the genera l to
the street fund.
Councifman
George
Wright
asked
Street
· Superintendent Jack Krautter
aboUt pliJcing sealer in cracks

Please see Repavl11g. AS

Middleport
council
considers
change in
health plan

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village
Employees who do not ·participate in the village's health
insurance plan will be paid
more in wages~ if an ordinance
introdooed
to·
Middleport Village Council
is approved.
The first reading on the
ordinance took place Monday
evening. and two o.ther read- ..
ings will follow. The ordi·
nance provides a cash payment of $160 per month for
salaried employees and an
additional $ 1 per hour for
hourly employee s for · those
employees who choose not to
enroll in the plan.
· The . amount to be paid
those employees who opt out
nf the insurance plan dqes
not rellect the cos t of insurance
policy. but is ,;much
•
Brian J. Reed/photo
less,'' Fiscal Officer Susan
Pomeroy Councilman Jim Sisson and Robert Robie of Robie Construction of Pomeroy finished the concrete for a new basBaker sa id.
ketball court in the Sugar Run Park, located off Mechanic Street. The court. largely built with donated materials and labor.
Council President Stephen
is the first of several developments the village ~opes for the park, Sisson said, and donations and mater~als are be ing
Please see Council,.AS
accepted for the project.

was charged with possession
of marijuana, and served with
a warrant charging him with
disorderly conduct. ·
Deputies were investigating a complaint of loud
music at the Middleport
home of Chris Capehart, and
located 20 plants there,
Beegle said. The plants were
seized as e.vidence and
charges in County Court are
pending.

Plees!l! see Plants, AS

Meigs Countian .to be
honored as medical pioneer

Details on Page A6

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and general fund.
By purcha sing thy property as opposed to a lend-lease
arrangement the deed will
be trimsferred into the village 's name anu save on
property taxes.
Mayor John Mu &gt;scr said the
building wi ll be used for star.-ing a varie1y of village property including equipment,
salt, blacktop, gravel. street
lights. park benches and parking meters.
Council accepted a low bid
of $2650 for two garage
doors for the Spring Vttlley
Lane building .

BY BRIAN J. REED ·
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS

WEATHER

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE .
LANCASTER, OH 43130
(740) .653-2827 /(BOO) 710-1921 (TOLL FREE)

Streets. Also included is the
area · near the (lomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department.
The repaving project should
· begin in two weeks. or less.
Cou ncil al.so approved
· enter.ing into a mortgage
agreemen t with Associated
Fabricators to purchase a new
storage building on Spring
Valley Lane.
The property will cost the
village $750 per · month for
seven years and will be
financed through Associated
Fabricators. Payments will
be made via funds from the
street and water departments

OBITUARIES

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

•

·Street falls under the jurisdic·
tion of the Meigs County
Highway Department and
according to Mayor John
Musser will not be paved
.until next year. Musser did
indicate that the highway
department will be patching
East Main Street.
The following is an incomplete list of streets to be
repaved: Union Terrace,
Second.
Wolfe
Drive,
Fourth , Fifth, Seventh,
Sycamore, Condor, L.inn,
Court,
Fisher.
Wright,
Osborne, Las ley, Cherry,
Buckeye. and Mechanic

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Bv BETH 5EROENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTtNEL. COM

POMEROY - · The drive
through Pomeroy is about to
become a little smoother after
Pomeroy Village Council
accepted a bid for repaving
some of the village 's streets.
The bid, submitted by
Blacktop Corporation for
$156,091.25, was accepted at'
last night's council meeting.
Their b.id was $17,296 less
than the closest competitor.
West _Main · Street to the
Middleport corporation limit
will be repaved. East ·Main

MODEL LT 1042 ·

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

wish wouldn 't · have happened but ,at least we got one

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Ohio vital to 2008
campaigns of .
both parties, As

Cancer Survivors

seconds - about three car
lengths.
The winner led a race-high
123 laps, giving team owner
Roger Pemike hi' sixth
Milwaukee victory.
"The car was a little hit of a
handful lbday with the heat
ami the ,li(mcry conditions."
Horni'h said. "There were a
lot of close calls out there.
It 's great to get a win for the
team but it's too bad that
Hcl io and I got toget ber. We
run each 11thcr hard and It

double.

Busch

..

'

~ubli;'hin~ Co.

POMEROY
Larry
Trivieri, an internationally
known e~pert and author, ,has ·
identified Sharry Edwards of
near Albany as one of the true
pioneers in the field of energy
medicine, spec itically the use
of sound as a diagnostic management tool.
•
One of Trivieri 's latest publications, Health on the Edge:
Visionary Views of Healing
ln the New Millennium.
includes a chapter about the
emerging fiefd of Human
BioAcoustics developed by
Shalry Edwards. a 1\)ng· time
proponent of alternative med-

icine and a life-lopg resident
of Meigs County.
Trivieri and other di gni taries will be in Athens for an
August conference that will
honor Edwards for her work
in developing a novel mathe matical model of frequency
biomarkers that are being
used to extrapolate data pertaining to inqividual health
and wellness.
"I've been very fortunate in
having worked with literally
hundreds of the world's •top
physicians and researc hers in
thi's field, "Triv.ieri says, "and
I know that answers and solutions exist right now for all f!f
the health problems currentl y

. Pleese see PlonHr, ·AS
'

EHS .freshntan to represent
Meigs in State Fair ,horse show
Bv CHARLENE HoEA.tCH
HOEFLICH@MYOAtLYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER
· Alyssa
Newland who will be a
freshman at Eastern High
School this fall has qualified
to repre'se nt Meigs County at
the Ohio State Fair 4-H
horse show.
. She
will
be
there
Wednesday and Thursday
participating ir) the competition with her quarter horse.
"A Rock in My · Sock .:·
Newland and her equine part·
ner qualified in showmanship
and hunt seat equitation at the
P.A.S . qualitied' show held in
Jackson-on Jul y 16.
This will be Newland 's
second trip to the State Fair
to compete. In 2003 with her
horse. "All Americ·un Bow•·
she earned reserve chan1pion
showmanship ••grand champi on hunt seat equitation. and
received the "Ou tstanding
Youth of the Day"'award.
The 15-yeur-old is the
daughter of Grant and kinda
Newland and i' a member of
the Klassy Klovers 4-H Club.
"I've been riding since I
was old erlO.ugh to sit up:·
said Newland as she talked
about her experience in riding and 4-H work .

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