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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June

www .mydailysimtinel.com

Lightning

Major League Baseball

from Page 81

Nellonlli I.Ngue .
EAST

W

NY~

l

Pet

-~9·

30

QB

.6 12

B~•

Tampa Bay

18

31

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12

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W

L

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cncaoo Sox

20

592

Minnesota

29
27

Det~ll

23

Cleveland

~

23
27
26
.31

540
460
458
354

Kansas Qry- -

"

-

5-5
7-3

11 •

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16·9
12·13

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Mon1Teal

CENTAAL
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13-14

4-6

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11-14

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16-11
12·12

12-13
6· 15
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551

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23
31

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15·7
'6-9
12-9
9·13

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'
15-13
11 · 13
14· 14
9· 18

7, De1ron 3
Texas 4 Toronto 2
Tampa Bay 7. NYYriees 6
BosiOrl 9 Seattle 7. l121
~rnnesola B. Kansas C11y 3
ChiCago So~ 1 1 Anane~ 2
Ba~rmore

ngors 8, Royals 4

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34 4 9 4 Totals
36 814 8

Kansas City

.A.Snchz cf 5

002
021

001
201

001

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4

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Datroit
02x E--Geltls (1). DP---Kan58S City 2. DolfOII 2.
LO~ansas C.tu
.. , 5. Detrorl 9. 2B--Grattan1no (4), Beltran (13). Aelaford 141. D'fOung (1),
HI(Jginsoo (8). 38--'--CPena (2). HR-Harvey
(7), CGu1l~ 2 (61. Mu01SOn 2 \6). lntante 13)
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1 1-3

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6 1-3 7 3
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100

3

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0

0

0

OPimro ph 1000
1 Totals
Totals
l5 110

Temp~~

Bey

Minnesota

ab f hbl
4 000
4 1 1 0
4111

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Cddyer 2b
Mn!kw 1b
Koskie 3b

ltbrhbi
2 0 1 0
4 0 1 0

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4022 CGzmnss 1200
29 3 4 2
Totlls
32 1 8 7 Totala
JoCruZr{

020

102

002

-

7

Minnesota
001
010
010 3
E--fiBell (1). DP-Tamaa Bay 2. LOB-Tam~ Bay 3 ~irlnesota 4 28--Huff (i ), THall (41,
M~antluawicZ (14) HA- TMartinez (8). McGrrH
(1), HBtanco (4) . SB-TMari~nez { 1), LFord (5)
C5-Crawlord (91 . &amp;-Gipson SF-JOCIUZ .
IP H RERBBSO

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Ballour
11·3 0 0 0 1 0
Fultz
1000 00
Muh:llland
1-3 2 2 2 0
0
Aometo
2-3 1 0 0 p 0
JoSosa piiChed to 3 batters f'l ~ 8lh
HBP----4:¥ ABell (LFad). WP---fbnero.

Umpifft3o-4-lome. Mall HolkM!ell: F1rst Larry
Vancwer: Second. Sam Holbrook: Th1rd. Paul
Nauert. T-2:35. A-25,191 (45.4231.

.. ....
~

Bostan

abrhbl
Damonct 5021
Bllhom 2t.o 3 0 1 0
Tejada ss 5 1 i 0 ' Dubaat1b 1 0 0 0
llopeus 1 0 1 0 DOrtiz d1 3 1 0 0
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3 1 0 1 Dornqec 1 0 0 0
4 0 1 0
Md1adoc 1000 Varitekc
Su!hollrf 5242
A811S8 ss 4 1 2 0
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5 1 1 1 M1l~rrf
4 1 1 2
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42 1316 13- Total&amp;

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121

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000
001
2t0 4
E-JVLopez (2), Varitek ( 1), Youk1lrs {2) DPSaltlmore I LOB-Ba!t1more 10, Boston 9.
28-B Roberts 2 (l5). APMm'l!lro .(7), Matos
(8). Hairston Jr. 12). Damon {12). HA-MOia
(10}, Surtroff (2). Mrllar (3) SB--BAOI:lert:. (18),
Matos (7). Hs~rston Jr. (5) . C&amp;-vantek (2).

.

s-

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~""""

ALopez W.4-2

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Chicago

000
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32 311 3

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1 0
I 1
6 2·3

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1

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0

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0

0

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100001
Bantz pitChed to 3 batters ., the 7th

WP-NttkoWSkL
Uml)lres-Home. Adl Aood: First, Ed Rapuano.
Secood. Ted Barron Th·ro, Alfonso MarQUez.
T-2'37. A-24,945 (50.09 1)

Dodgers 3, Brewers 2, (10)
Milwaukee

c1

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Spivey2b
J8nkins H
CN!bay1b
KG1ntrJb
BCiarltrt
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540

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25
23

24
24

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489

4
5

5-5

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L2
L2

14-12
9-15

11 - 12
·14-9

W

l
22

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GB

P10

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W1

Home

Away

560

13-9
14-11
15-14

15·13
13- 11

WEST

26

San Otego
Los Angeles
San Francosco
ColOrado
4nzona
·

27

22
24

26
18

?-3

551
520
367
353

31
33

18

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3 0 0 0
4 0 01
4 0 0 0
4 13 1
4 o0 o
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4 01 0
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WI D
l4
L3

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2·8

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16·9 -~ 14--12
14-9
13-\4
12-10
15-13

W2

5·5
5·5
10·0

2
9 ,,

11-10
6-18
10-16

12-13
8·15

Sund.y's Results
Mootreal 6. Clnc.,nati 2
PIJ,Iadalohra 4. Atlanta 1
Chocago Cubs 12 Plt\sbuf9'11
Mouston 7. St LOUIS t
San Ooego 5. Milwaukee 2
Florida 8. NY Mets fi
San Francrsco 3. Colorado 1
Los Angeles 3. Anzona 0

Chicago Cubs {Rusch 2-0), 8;05 p.m

r.-

..ttmdz2tl 0 1 0 0
34212 Tatdl
34313

pn 1 0 0 0

Milwaukft

000 001 100

0 -

2

Los

000 000 002

1 -

3

A~

One ou1 when w!l"'mng run scored ·
OP-Mrhovaukee 2. los Angeles 1. LOB--Mil·
waukee 6. los Angeles 7. 28--Jenklfl!i (13).
BCtark p), Moeller (6) HR-Jenkrns (5). &amp;Podsednlk. Wose. DAoberts SF-Bf·la"
IP H RERBBSO
MilwiiUk•
53 0 0 0 2
w~
220001
Kmoy
1 C1 0 o o 2
LVrzC81r'Ci
Kolb
1 3 2 2 0 1
1-31111
o·
Bu~ l.3-1

Loo-

QF9rez

752206
1 1 0 0 0 1
TMartJn
2-3 I
0 0 D 1
Sanchez
1·3 0 o. 0 0 1
Gagne W.NJ
1 1
2
HBP-toy Ga111e (Poo:lsooruk ). by Kolb (lo
Ouca). by LVllCali'IO (Coral Ba11----0Per02 .
Ump!feS----Home. Paul Emmet Ftrnt. Terry Crall:
Second. Mike DIMuro Th·rd. Joe West.
T- 2:44 A-32.642 (56,1X.()J

Ore.1or1

o o o·

Reds 9, Martins 7

Los Anyeles
abrhbi
4 0 0 0
5o 2 1
3 1 , 0
4 0 2 0
4 1 1 0
4 0 2 •
Gl'llwsk~
4 01 1
Cora2b
JOOO
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0000
OPerez p 2 0 0 0
Drnonp
oooo
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DRbrts c1
tzturiSss
LDL.Cac
SI!Gren lb
Beltre3b
JEcrcn rf

abrhbi
LCstllkl2b

4230
4330
5 I 2 3
50 0 0
4141
4 0 1 0

P181T11d
Lcwell 3b
Cbrerar1

Conrfli!H
Choo 1b

~lzss4011

3000

CirlCinr\eti

Aredhng W,4-Q
T.ioco&lt;
Graves S.2-4
Florida

f'heiM:

Phi~

N.wYork

ab r hbl

Ma1SUI

eb rhbl

5 2 20

$$

2&amp;11e3b
502 1
Fklyd~
401 1
Morenop 1000
Cmeron ct 4 0 1 2
DGrcraph 1000
Va~ 'rt
2000
Prazze lb 3 o 1 o
MG1n11p
1000
JPhllps c ·3111
KGarcart 3000
Sj)"'IC(If I
1 t 0 0
WW1tl 2b 4 1 2 0
Totals
37 5 '0 5

NewVork
Phlladelptlia

Byrdct

4000

ledae pll
Pratte
OaBell :IJ
BAttreu rl
Thome 1b

5 0 2 2

Burrell ~
I.:JIIey2b

lbrthal

~

Ma.dscrrp
ToPerzss

Glnville d
Wleisph 0000
Totals
32 3 5 3

100
000

020 010 -

110

020

5
3

E-P1azza 18), KGarc1a (3) . LOB--New 'for1l 7,
PhllaCielphia B. 28--Matsui (17), Zeile (BJ
Floyd (6J, Wiggnton 18), Cameron (8) . HRJPru:l,ps [5). Burrell (1a). SB-Matsui (6). Wiggmton 12) S-JPhillipS. BMyers
IPHRERBBSO

Moreno W,
"""""'

-

1-1

""""""
Slanlon

3

0

0

0

1

'
1 2·3
1·3

31
0

'

0

' '
1
1

1
0

Lacpur S.8
Pfllladetphill
SMyer!; L.3-3

0
0

0
0

1

1

I

\

1

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

1

3
4

1
2

1
2

0
1

2
1

Telemaco

3
2

Gca~

100 0

2

1

0

0

0

2

RHemanOOz

1

2

2

2

0

0

5111tCflph

1000

LH;.rspl1

1000
39 714 5

MadSOn
100002
Umpires-Home. And)' Fle1cl!el : F1rst. T1m
Wahl: Second. Jim Reynolds: Third. Gary Gederstrorn . T-3·02 . A-43.620 {43,500).

120

300 -

5

m

5

1

0

0

~

2 0 1 0
4 0 0 0
3 I 1 1
4100
3 0 0 0
0000
4 1 , 0
I 0 0 0

4000

Totals

003

I 0 0 0
1000

2000

9

;

~

5

~

~

0

0
0

2
1

6

566622

100010
1 3 3 3 1 1
Bu/Tl)
110000
Pensho
1 0000 1
Reding ptiChed to 2 0811ors tn the 7th, Bump
prtched to 1 barter'" the 91h.
WP- \Ian Popoel. PB---laRue. Balk-Van ~

pet
T-3:03. A-26.364 (36,331 ).

Cardinals 8, Pirates 3
St. Louis

Pittsburgh
eb rhbi
ab rhbi
Wmacl\205221
~aile
5010
Anlenass 5111
JWilsnss 4010
Pupls lb 4 I 2 2 Ward 1b
3 1 1 0
Tguch1H
0000
CW1Isnrt 4142
Ralen3b 4233 Mckm3b 411o
Edn:ondd 5010 BayH
4021
ASndrsrl 5000 TRdmnd 3000
Mill.xylf
4 0 1 1 ANunezph 1 0 0 0
hlltheny c 40 00 Srmonlb 1000
MrquiSp
423 0 Hill2b
4000
Kllllep
0000 Bensoop 2000
Tvarezp
0000 Coreyp
1000
Totals
40 813 8 ' Totals
3G 310 3

St. Loui•
014 012
000 B
PIHsburgh
200 001
000 3
E-Ward (2), Mackowrak (5) OP-St lours 1
Pittsburgh 1. LOB-St. Louis, 7, Pittsburgh 7

26-Renleria (9). Pu1ols (15), Marquis (1) ,
Kendall (9). Bay (5). 3B:-Bay (1). HA----"Womack (2). Rolen (13). CWilson [12).
1P H RERBBSO
St.Louis
Marq1.1s W,4-4
7 10 3 3 1 5
Tavarez

2-3 0 0 0 0 0
11·3 0 0 0 0 1

P........ h
Bensoo L.4-4

5 2-3 11

B 6
3 1-3 2 0 0
MarqUIS pnched to 2 batto~ ln the BIM.

Corey

Mats 5, Phlllles 3

ACstro c

8or18nd
WayneL3-2

K~ne

T-2 :~9. A-12 .582 138.496).

Phelpsp
Easley ji1

Florida
410 002 000 7
E-Hummel (1). laRue 2 (5] . DP-Crrw:mnatl
2. LOB--Concrnnat15. Flonda 11 . 2B-P161T9 2
(8) lOW8~ (171; Con1ne 2 (11 ). 3&amp;--DJimenez .
12) HA-Lark1n (3). Casey. 2 (9) . G'iffey Jr
(13). WPena (4). SB-lC&lt;~st~lo (8). Prerre (15)
SF-AGonzalez
IP H· A ER BB SO

CineVan Poppel

W~-

Florida

flowolp
1100
Totals
37 910 9

{7), NGreen (1 ). JDrsw (10). S-NGreen
'
1P H AERBBSO

P~o:tlk

l!

'21_

3

Monlreal
000 000 200 2
Atlanta
000 101
&amp;Olt 8
E-Vnlro (2). DP-M011traai 1. LOB--Mon!real
5. All;m1a 5. 28---CnChilveZ (fi). NJohnson (2),
AJones (13) DeAoSil (10). HA-Scnll8oder

Nltkowsk1

13·11

2-8

54C

2

HSSIM1b

J3 2 6 2

......

12-10

WI

540

1

ab rhbi
Furcal ss
4 2 1 0
t&gt;.Green2b 3 1 1 3
JDfewrl
32 11
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AuOrllzp 2 0 0 0

Wlkrsn n 4 o o. o

AL.OrtlZW.~

WI

5-5

23

LaAuec

Allanla

Montreal

TOO&lt;"

6·4

23

1

Braves 8, Expos 2

.,..

4'1,
5 .
13'1

27

0

T-2:15 A-39.380 (39.3451.

.........

500
480
320

27

Q

Poncilo.

Totals

14-11
13-11
1:)-15
11-15
7-17

St LOUIS

0

3

Ha&gt;MIU"lS
1 I
1
Borawslit S.9
1 2
1
Umptres--Home. Greg GIOSOn; Fnn .Bruce
Ored\man: Secctld: Mile FICfltef. Th1rd. laff'l

ECh11BZ d
Vidro2b
TBista 3&gt;
C&gt;Gbefa ss

16-10
14--11

Houston

4
0

(9). Hidalgo (14) Alou (12). HoHarldsworttr (3).
Bako (3) HR-Berio.man (14). Alou (13) &amp;AChavez . MaddUll
IPHAERBHSO

-

5-5- -Ll

Cn1cago Culls

0
0

001
020

LOB-HO\Isloo 10. Chrcago 6. 28--Ensberg

Dswah l.J-4
GaHo
Han.'!lie
Chic:a90
Maddux W,4-4
Far1"191N0f1tl

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L
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23

Cincin!VIti
ab rhbi
FrooiH
4100
LarKin ss 5 2 3 1
Casey 1b 4 3 2- 4
C)r! Jrcl
5123
dJmnz 2tJ 5 0 1 0
WPooarf 4. 121
JaCruz pll 1 0 0 0
Dl.flnH
1000
JCastro3b I 0 0 0
Hmme13b 3000

000 1
OOx 3
E--JKent (2\ . Of'-Houston 1. Chocago 1

LHmdz L.3-5
Booo

Orioles 13, Red Sox 4
8Rbns2b
Mora3b

4 1 2 1

•
Ensbrg 2b 4 0 1 0
Hda9:Jr1 3010

JVzcno pn

Rays 7, Twins 3

Bav

JKen!2tl
Brkrm n

4 o 1 o
4 a 10

Bgwell 1b

Oswahp
Lamb pt,

Devil

Tampa

5 0 1 0

abrtlbi
4 0 0 0
40 0 0
4 1 2 0
AIOIJ~
4 132
AAmr:z3b4010
Hlnds.'lrt 4 1 1 0
REMtr.z ss 3 0 1 1
Bakoc
3030
~Oduwp
2000
Fmswrp
0000
Hwk1nsp 0 0 0 0

TWallo.r 2t1
DeLee Ill
CP!tson cl

0
0

Umpires-4-iOOlll, Gilrp Darlrog Frrst. Maril Ca1!·
son: Seco-ld. &amp;~a~1 Al.fl98. Thkd. 9111 Hohn_T2.39 A-12,962 (40.120)

Huff3b
TMrtnz 1b

nbl

4 0 20

0

WP---"""&gt;

Crwfrdlf
Baldelli c1

ab r

2

000

0

Chicago

0
1

121102

4

Cubs 3, Astros 1

1

Urtma

7

7

Cublllan P«ched to 4 baners n thll 7'ttl. Dl~
I)IIChed 10 5 baners 1n the 6th
WP-Cr.blllan
Umpires-Home. Brli Welote. Forst John
H1rsctbeclo.. Second. W'i!ft.j Bell. Thord. Laz Draz
T-3 31 . A-35.465 (35.095)

0
2

1

JWalker

3

'

8

0 -~
3

Leskaruc
LEIWie

55

5

233310
253111

B
d
IQ9IO ss
AEVrtt

-.y

Milwaukee (Sneets 5·3) at los Angeles (Weaver 3·6), 10:10 p.m

DLoweL4-5

Houaton

"

Home~

ll

San FranciSCO (Hermanson 1-2 ) at Araooa (Sparits 2-4). 9:35 p.m
ColOrado ICOOk o-O) at San Diego (G&amp;rmWJo 1-01. 10:05 p.m.

Dinardo

·JBrcwn

25

Housl on (DuOOwrth 1-0) at

2 000
1 o 1 o

2-3

= W2-\

O

"""""""

""'

551-

Btrk

1·3

· N Y Mets (lll'ter 1-2) at PtutadelphiB (Mrl'wocd 4-3), 7 05 p.m
Monlr9i11 (Armas Jr Q-0) a1 Atlanta (Wnght 3-5 ). 7.35 p m

2· 3 3 2 1 ' 2 1
2 2 1 1 1 3
1 00000

"'-Booton

22

P10

Tue.day's Games
CII"ICinn&lt;tt• IHiloang 4-2) at F1onda ( F\tnn~ 6-21. 7·05 p m
:,'! l OUIS (S~pan 4-4 ) a1 Pittsburgh (~soog 1-4). 7·05 pm

l\letctay's Gwnes
Te~~:as (Drese 2-2) al CIIN&amp;Iand (Saootn~a 2·3) 7.05 p.m.
Bahnore (Ponson 3·5) at N.Y Yankees (Ml.ISS1na 5-4 1, 7 05 p.m.
Kan.B&amp;S City (Geofge [}-()) at DelfOII (Rooer1son 4·3) 7 05 p m.
Tampa Ba~ (Abbon 2-41 a1 M1rmesota {S!fva 5-3). e 10 p.m
Toronto (Halladay 5-4) at Seattle (Meche 1-5). 10:05 p.m
BoS!on (Arroyo 2·2)ilt Anal1e1m (Colon 4--3). 10:05 p n
Chicego While Sox (lo.iill! 6-3) at Oakland (Redman 3-3) 1o:as p m.

Cubillan

21

Monday's Res.ulta
~tla.nta B. Montreal 2
l os Angeles 3 Mdwaukee 2. ( 10\
Chocago Cl.tls 3 HouSlon I
C10eonnato 9. Floroda 7
II.·V Mets 5. Pt1 iladelpl'1ta 3
St LOU'S B. Pottsburgtl 3
San Francosco 8. Auzooa 4
Cok&gt;rildo ~~ San D1ego

Sunday's Rnutts
4. Qallland 3

C~eVelaOO

belrort 8, Kansas Cl!y 4
Tampa Bav 7. M~nnesota 3
Toron1o a1 Seame

30

27
25

GB

W
30
27

PJ!1shurgn

20
22

Pd.

16

12·19

L2

L

,, ,.

Atlanta

8·14
4-17

.,.,

W

Mon!My's R.ults
Bahrnore 13. Boston 4

Pn1ladelph1a

&gt;111

30
27

Seollle

17-12
13·1,
12-10

W

s..

WEST

Oakland

EAST

P10
7-3
3-7

...
·-·

6

lw.y

1~7

L1
L1

·-·

5

~

Home

Strt

7-3
7-3

24
2.L_.5tt
~~
-~-~=~===i'~'=-~~
28
.440
To~
~

P10

2
0

"
3

AL Leaders
BATilNG---Mora, Baltimore.. 380 : ASanchez.
Oel:ro~. 357: MAamrez. Boslon, .355: Hervey_
Kansas City•.354: VGuerrero, Anaheim. .348.
LFord, ~111oosota. .335; Uribe, Cm;ago.. 335.
RUNS-Mora, Baltimore, 45; \!Guerrero, Anahern,45.Matsut, New'fi:W1(.. 41 ;Belhom,Boston.
38; La-Mon, Cle.&lt;eland. 38: CGuilloo, Detro!!:, 36,
MVoung. Texas,35:JGullen , AncFielm.35:ARo-

driguez. New~- 35
RBI-DOrnz, Basion, 44: Xiuillan, As'\ahWn. 39;
IRodngLJeZ, Detroit 39: VMartilei:, CleYelarld,

38: Tejada.

Ba~.

38: VGucrrero. A~lahe~Jrl .

38: THa1ner. CIEMlland, 37: MRamirez, Boston,

37.
HIT'S-lSuzuk1. Seattle. 73: MVotrig Texas. 71:
Mora, BaRmore, 70: VGuerrero, Anaherm. 159.
MRarmrru. Bol;t011, 66: IRodnguez. DatiOII . 62;
ASandlez. DooOII 61 ,
OOUBLEs---DOftlz. Boston. 21: WJells. Tort'f'l·
to 17: THalner. Clelieland, 16: Bell1ard. 06\/elard, 16; Posada. New Yoric . 15: MRamirei.
Bost011, 15, Bla~ Texas, 14, Mo!a, Ballimor!l,
14; \/Guen-ero.Anah!lro, 14.
TRIPLES----f'igglns, Anahein, 7: Crawtorct, Tempa Bay. 4: MYoung. Texas. 4: CGuillan, DetrOit, 4;
Lol!CJ"I, New Yont 4: Uribe, Ch~go. 3; Wood-

ward. Torcrrto, 3.
HOME ~UN5--MA amire z , Boston, 14;
ECha.vez. Oa~l&lt;vld, 13; Blillod, Texas, 12:
VGuerrero, AnaheiTl , 12: AAcxltiguez. New~ .
12: Bettmn, Kansas Crty, 11 , Glau&amp;, An~m.
11 : OOrtr.z, Boston, 11.

NLLeaders
BATTING-Casey. Onc1mab. .392: Bonds. San
FmnciSCo, .364; Lo Duc.a. Los Aof}ele$, .357;
JWilson, Pittsbr.rg"r, .352: Berkman . Houston,
346, LCM'ell. Flonda. .344: CWilson. PittsOOrgtl,

341 .

.

RUNS--PujOIS, St LOtJis, 44: AEveren, Hooston,
39: BAbreu. PhJlalillptua. 38: Cabrera. Floods,
37: Casey, Ctncinnet1. 37: loretta. San Diego. 37'
Bagwell, Houston. 31 : lGonllllez, Arizona, 37.
FtBI-Rolen. St loUIS, SO: Castilla, ColoraOO. 43;
Burrell, Phi1a~la. 41 ; Beri&lt;man, Houston. 41;
AAam1rez. Chicago, 41: ~ Mtlwaul&lt;ee, 40;
Bumilz, Colorado, 40: JKont. Houston, 40 .
HITS--Casey. Cincinnati. 74: JWiiSon. PlttsOOrgh, 69, Pierre, FlQnda, 66; Burroughs, San
Dego. 65: loretta. San Diego. 64; lowell. Florida, 63 : CWils!ri, Pittsburgh, 61; Overbay, Miwaukee, 61; Aoi9n, St. LOUIS, 61 : Alou, Ch!CaQO,

61

- the 1942 Maple Leafs against the
Red Wings - has overcome that disadvantage in the final. lt didn't help
they were wi1hout two key regulars.
forward Ruslan Fedo~nko and
defensemen Pavel Kubina, who were
injured in Calgary's 3-0 vic10ry
Saturday.
But the Lightning have been a1 their
best .when cornered. going 6-0 after. a
loss while outscoring their opponents
18-5. They also kept ahernming wins
and losses. some1hing they've done in
every game since splining the first
two games of the Eastern Conference
final against Philadelphia.
· Even
without
the
injured
Fedotenko, who has I 0 playoff goals.
und Kubina. who plays an average of
24 minutes per game. Tampa Bay
pressured from the s1art, something it
couldn 'I do in Game 3. It paid off with
the opening goal - a big momentum
lift given that the team scoring first
has won every game in the series.
Calgary also tried to establish its
physical, hard-checking style immediately, just as it did in wearing dowp
the Lightning in Game 3, but Chris
Clark ~ cross checking) and Mike
Commodore (holding) bo1h drew
penalties just I :52 in.
Tampa Bay, 0-for-3 on lhe power
play during the first period Saturday,
1ook advantage of the 5-on-3 advantage with Richards powering a onetimer from just above the hash mark

1, 2004

past Kiprusoff as the goalie was
screened bv Vincen1 L.ecavalier. 11 was
only the second time in 12 games
Calgary has allowed a goal in the first
., period.
It was another good omen for the ·
Lighming. who are 12-2 when ~conng
fi rsl.
Still. Calgary did e,·erything but
score in the first perind before an electric, ali-in-red crowd of 19.221 1hat
began cheering an hour before the
game. The Flames had 12 shots in the
{leriod. 10 more than in Game 3. and
even had a good chance shrm-handed
la1c in the period when Vtlle
Niemi·nen gol loose on a breakaway
only to have the puck skip off his st ick
before he could get off a back-hander.
. Khabibulin also gave the Lightning
a scare in the tina! minute of the peri od. nearly mufting the puck as it skidded down lhe ice toward him. forcing
him 10 abruplly close his pads to stop
il. It was aboul his only mistake of the
night.
, Calgary was held lo live shots in the
second period. bu1 stepped up the
pressure in the 1hird period as it des- _
permcly tried to hold unto the homeICe advantage. Two of the tina! three
games. if necessary. will be in Tampa.
But the Flames were at a big disadvanlage in the final 4:13 as Nieminen
was called for a five-minute major
'penalty for ramming Lecavalier into
the boards _
Kiprusoff was nearl y as sharp as
Kh abibulin. bu1 had almost no chance
on the goal by Richards . He has
allowed only six goals in the four

•

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
, )U (

I :\ I S • \

U

i .) I . :'\ 0

• Reds fillet Martins, 7-6.
SeePage 81

t Fox'sPizza Den
t Fur Peace Ranch
tFUZZ
t Gino's Pizza
t Holiday Inn

t Holzer Clinic.
t Jividen's Power Equipment
t Kayser. Layne &amp; Clark
t Kentucky Fried Chicken
t King's Island
t Fredric E. LaCarbonara, MD
t Lamar Advertising
t Laredo's Steak &amp; Seafood
t Layton's Garage
t Mary's Tee Time Grill
t Mason Co.Area Chamber of Commerce
t McDonald's
t Meigs High School
t Miami Dolphins
t Breton L. Morgan, MD
+Motion Masters
+ MU Mid-Ohio Valley Cenler

+ N~w England Patriots -+NorrisNorthup Dodge
+Ohio River Bear Company
+OhioState University
+Ohio University
+Pepsi Bottling Group
t Philadelphia Eagles
+ Pigskin Chuckers
+Pizza Hut
.+Pizza Plus
+Pleasant Valley Hospital
+Pleasant Valley Hbspital Auxiliary
+Powell's Food Fair
• Pu1ney Pbotogiaphy
+Ray's &amp;Son Complete Car Cleaning

+Red Parrot Cafe
+ Riverbend Marina
+River City Smokelwuse
+ RiversideGolfCourse
+Sassafras Tire
+' M.C Shah, MD
t Sider's Jewelers lnc.

/

t Agnes A. E. Simon, MD
t MaNha Slater- State Fann (Barboursville)
t Splash Down
+Spring Valley Cinema
t Spring Valley Country Club
+Subway,
t Super 8Motel
t Tampa Bay Buccaneers
t The Amazon .
t The Lowe Hotel
+Thomas Do· it Center
+ToUiver's Pre·Owned Auto Center
+Tudor's
, Biscuit World
+University of Kentucky
+ Vajdya Urology Clinic
'
+Village Pizia Inn
+ Wal-Mart of Mason
t WBYG ·Big Country
+ West Virginia State College
t West Virginia University
t WOWK·TV Channel \3
t WYVK- The Frog

Dooley said small gift&gt; wil l '""'be

MIDDLEPORT - Th~iddlepon
Com.munity Association plans a free
breakfas1 to honor fathers on June 19.
and will again oversee lhe c·o mmuni1y's July 4 celebration_
Association members met Tuesday
morning to tinalizc plans for the June
and July events.
Vice Presidenl Tom Dooley said
lhe free .. Pops in lhe Park'. hreakfasl
will be served from 8 to II a.m. lhe
day before Father's Day in Dave
Diles Park. While the Father'&gt; Day
· weekend breakfast is not planned as
an association fundrai ser, donations

\\ \.'\ \\

111 \

d.rII \ ·· •

l

d

II H

I '

II tl •

given to tho~c v.-hn attenU .

Dooley updaled the member' on
plan ' for the association·, J4l y -l cel ebration. also to be held in Dave
Dile s Park _ Plan s for enlerlainme nl
during the evening program are no\v

nearing completion. and th e lineup
will he annou11ced ne.xt week.
Dooley said.
Fundraising cani..,ter.., will go into
area bu,inesscs thi.s week. in an
efforiiO help rai se Ihe S5.000 needed
for Julv 4 fireworks. Dooley said tile
associ,ition has already raised S 1.-100
toward the firework\ display. primar-

il) from local busi nesses _
•
Sue Baker di,l·ussed plans' for the
llpl'Oming Bear Baskel Bingo. which
abo rai-.cs monel for 1he firewo rk'
and other July -l expen .ses _The g;une
wiII he held al the Feenn -Rcnn etl
American Le 2itlll l1a ll on · Jun e 2-l _
Baker ha.; d~~ i g.neLI three -..pecia!
Ohio Riv er Bear . . to bL~ !.!1\t'll tma\'
alun~ wit!~ Lon !..:ahL·r~er-

h;.l .... ~t'h l()

\\im{er' of the ' hin~~'- and 1-lal-.er
rcm indeu membe rs rl1 at thi' vca(,
bill!..!O l!amc '"'ill ha,·.: two wmrlcr~ in
cal:h g:tme .
·
·
Baker

-.a id

Gll l'~nr i l~..,

hll\ t'

changed for Ihe July -l parade. Thts
yea r's paraUe

categn ri e~

ar~

IliU"ot

patriotic. beSI all-1errain vehicle_

hL·q-dres&gt;ed pet. he't 'intage car.
he' I float. bc' t \\ alk.tng/ marching

untt. best equestrian unit. and best
hic' \ck cnt n _ She said this veur"'
par-adL~ l'.t t~g.Or~ ,~,inner . .

\A

ill n!c~ivc

\-tiddlcport merchant gift cenificutes
in rJacl..' nf trophie ....
Duull'\ "ai d 'illa~c n1Lllll" il will
alhm tliL' a~ . . ncl:.ttHlil· aL:L·e~ ... to the
.~l iJdk pon Dcpnt for both --pops .in
the Park-- and Jul y -l e,·em,_
Doole\ ,a id 23 of the 30 trees
pbn1ed- in Jo\\nto\\n Middleport
hJ\ ,. hc·en purchased hy local Jonors.
and that ...,puri:-.ur . . ll i p uf the r;e mai ni ng

"'L' en rt•main..., a\ ailahlc . The as~n c ia ­

tio n j.,. 11ow con:-.iderin~ murker-. for
tree' \\'htch ha,·e been ::ponsored_

LoTIERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 1-8-3
Pick 4 day: 2-8-1-6
Pick ~ night: 9-3-0
Pick 4 night: 5-5-7-8
Buckeye 5: 6-9-23-32-34

More than 200 bikers from 11 states along wi th 2,500 festival goers attended the firs t -Gold Wings and Ribs Festtval
last year. This year promises to be a spectacular event that
will feature gu1ded bike tou rs. ltve entertainment. crafts and
anything and everything for anyone.

West Virginia
Dally 3: 8-5-3
D;~ily 4: 5·9-6-0
Cash 25: 1-2-6-8-17-22

Second Gold Wings and
Ribs Festival becomes a
.Meigs County tradition

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Dennis Kapple, 59
• Edna Kerwood, 55 ·
• Chalmer Blaine
Dailey, 69

BY

As a thank you for their use of the Syracuse Community Center, Meigs County Girl Scouts
took part in a beautification project at the center with the Syracuse Garden Club recently.
This·year's ,day camp for scouts will be held there June 24-26. This year's theme is "Mak1ng
Friends with Nature." Campers will learn to set uP a campsite, cooking outdoors, and how
to use natura l materials for mak ing crafts . As a special feature, students and staff of
Hocking College will present a program about snakes and birds of prey to campers.
Brownies may spend the night indoors on June 25. and Juniors and Senior Gtrl Scouts maytent camp Thursday and Friday nights. June 26 will be Parent Night. followed by a pool party
at London PooL

WEATHER

New legal eagle comes to Pomeroy
closing so lhat he could
devote more time 10 his new
JOb_ At lea't 6.300 cases a
POMEROY -· There is a year make th eir way throu gh
Meigs County Coml which
new f&lt;1ce proseculing th e
is p~esided over by Judge
guilly in the Meigs County
Steven Story who rcccnlly
courthouse.
celebraled a mi le,lone hirlh Richard Hedges is 1he new day. Hedges is the for me r
a&gt;Sistanl proseculor for law director and prosecutor
Meigs County. He will be in Nelsonville.
primarily responsible for
Hedges has defended &lt;I
representing the county in numher of high pro tile diem,
Meigs County Court which in Athens County. LtSI year
handles ntisdemeanors and he defended a Coolville marminor 1raffic offenses.
shal who was convicted of
"I look forward to serving stealinQ $50 in electronic
the people of Meigs equipn~ent from lhe Wai-M;1rt
County:' said Hedges, an in Athens_Earlier lhis year he
Alhens attorney who r~ pre­ defended a New Mi1r, hli eld
se ntcd clients from Meigs woman. who was previously
County for a number of convicted of kidnapping in
years_
2001. of a shop lifting charge
Hedge s graduated from which would send her back to
Capital Law School in 1995 . prison . One of lhe 'trange'l
He has a law office in ca~es Hellge s said he ha ~
Athens on Court Street defended involves a man who
which I1 e said he would be was chmged with DUI while
BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Calendars

12 PAGES

A3

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

J.

MILES lAYTON

J LAYTON@MYDAI LY SENTI NEL. COM

THANKS To ALL PVH COED FLAG FOOTBALL SPONSORS!
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+ Banrum &amp; Brown Football Camp
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+Cincinnati Bengals
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+ Michael W. Corbin, MD
+ Day Dreams &amp; Night Things
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w iII be accepted_

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BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Blisters

We could not have done it without you! .

\\ ' I .I• N I'.S I),\\ , J CIN E :l 1 :! 00 .1

. It· :.."

Middleport Community Association plans events

SPORTS

games.

onship mmch. wbcrc he lost to No. I
Roger Federer. Two gutsy come back
victories last week I1ad No. 20 Safin
lhinking he cnuld make a similar
from Page 81
showing a1 the French Open - but
Ihey also drained him and beat up hi s
"Look at me:' a smiling Kuerten
large hands_ _
.
said moments after winning. --Thi s
Lrke a plillll ..,l or '-lurgenn. a teiJI11~
never happened to me in my life _ I'm
player relies on his hands for his
all dirty."
livelihood_ It\ all about feel. sen.sing
Nothing was messy about Gaudi _o 's lhe fuzzy ball on 1he racket"s tightly
6-4, 7-5, 6-3 viclory over Igor wound
strings.
And
against
Andreev, who knocked off defending Nalbandian. a player he'd bea1en in all
champion Juan Carlos Ferrero in the four previous encounters. Safin not
second round. Gaudio's quarterfinal only couldn·t mu-rer the proper delifoe will be No. 12 Lley10n Hew in . a 7- cacy - he was in pain 011 shot after
5, 6-2, 7-6 (6) winner against Xav ier shoL
Mali sse.
.. The last four ga mes_ I couldn ·r
Two men 's quarlerfinals are play. I cou ldn't hit a forehand:- said
Tuesday : Coria vs. 1998 champion Safin. who looked as if he had taken
Carlos Moya, and Chela vs. No_ 9 Tim part in a hi gh school biology class
Henman, lhe firsl Englishman to gel experiment. ·' I couldn't do many
this far a1 Roland Garros since Roger thing s:·
Taylor in 1973. All women·s roundBy the fifth game. he was looking at
of-eight matches also are Tuesday. · one hand or the other after nearly every
highlighted by Serena William s errant stroke. With Nalbandian serving
agains1 Jennifer Capriati in a show- at 40-30 in lhe nexl game. Satin interdown between pasl champions.
rupted play 10 have a trainer work on
With Safin ·s departure. three men his hands. lhc first of al lea.sl seven
are left who have won a Grand Slam limes he was lreated for the blislers title: Brazil's Kuerten, Spain :s Moya. six on his left hand. five on his right.
and Australia's Hewitt, the 200 I U.S.
Safin drew whistles and jeers from
Open and 2002 Wimbledon winner.
the crowd when he called for the lrainWhen Safin walloped Pete Sampras er at 30-all during the tifth game of the
3 1/2 years ago in the final at Flushing fourth set. He walked slowly to his
Meadows, his potential seemed limit- seat. chucked his racket down. and
less. The 6-foot-4 Russian was jus I 20, threw a hand in the air. as if to reply.
his serve was fearsome, and only his .. Hey. get off my case:·
temper and a taste for the nigh1 life
To his credit , Nalbandian wasn't
appeared to sland between Safin and a fazed much. hi s only real blip coming
slew of Slams.
·
in the tiebreaker. He tised drop shols
Well, he's still stuck on one such ·effectively throughoul , five times geltille and counting, although he did ling clean winners, and repeatedly lurreach the Australian Open final twice_
ing SaJin to the net before whipping a
It was at that event in 2003 thai he tore
passmg shot.
ligaments in his left wrisl, an injury
Asked aboltl that tactic. Satin paid
that sidelined him fur the season's lasl
Nalbandian an in sightful compliment.
three majors and sent his ranking
"He has a greal touch. He' s one of
down to 77th_
·
lhe most laletited people," a subdued
Unseeded at this year's Au stralian Safin said _.. He has really great hands_
Open, he upset Andy Roddick and Great hands _"
Andre Agassi to reach the champi-

REDS: Vander
Waal needs more
re~abilitation, B6

Indians struggle
• •
once aga1n
m extra
innings, Bi.

A6

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

operating a Jawnmuwt~r.
In aduition to heing an
attorney. Hedge s is a pr~&gt;fes­
sor al Ohio L"ni,er.sily who
teache s health admini,lrcl lion_ He received both hi .s
undt:r!:!.raduate

i.IIH.I

UoL'toratc

from ' the Unive rsit y of
Kentttcky Hed ges ;, an
active · Detnocrat
wllo
attended the party caucus in
Jdfer"&gt;n Countv during the
prcsid,enlial priniary to l·oice
hi ' sup pori for Wesley
Clark _who ;, still a possihlc
vice-pres idcnt i;li candidale _
Hed ges take~ over from .

Dana Gilliland_ who left lhe
prosentlor's office a few
weeks ago .l o give birth to a
six pound haby boy. Alec
Benjamin. who many wurthnuse observers describe a.'
"an awful cul e baby:·
Mei g' County Prosecutor
Pat Story said Hedges \\Ould
be a welwme addilion ln Ihe
pmsccull&gt;r'' office .

POMEROY - The second Gold Win u' and Ribs
F~,tivul opcth ' 1he fcsti ,-a I
r..t:a'~on in Mei!..!\ Count\' on

lake place June-land June 5.
The schedule of ewnls is
;Is folln\\'s:
Fridav
• Vcn~lur-.; ;urin· and oren
"helle\ L'r they cu-e x·lup. 12 p 111.
• Open rcgi.,.tratiun ~ all
\ i ~ttu r ... that h~t\~ pre-rcgi-..-

Frida1· and s.~u rd ;i\ :1i lhe
Pnme'my amphith~&lt;ttu_
The f~,l iv&lt;tl "ill in,· lud ~ lL'n:d L:1 11 p1ck-up llll'lr reg _nn\L'd I ~ I\ j..., imp~r ... nnlllor i.., trat inn pack.ct~ at th t' rq;i-.lJ\1. i~lll lc L'IlhllW~L ri\ L' rih
_tratioll traikrl. 5 p.m.
\:emlor'... '~cveral 1 ~ uidl'd
• \Vckomc hv the Fcs~i,al
nwtorcvck· lou r:-. thrn~u:: hou t Commiltce oi1 the main
the colrn !\. li\L' t.:.·nte~·tain ~
... tag c.) :-+.:;; p.m.
ment. priiL' dr awi ng,_ ~111d
• -- ~1nsic ill the Park" with
\ ' ariou~ ·t!all1C\ and ~.·nniL'~t ....
Todd Bur~c 1110 L"ll\W) at
De,pi tc \ he ralll. tnllrc' th an c'"'~'~ Su-ect Grill_ 6 p.m.
2.500 peopl e &lt;lll cndcd 1he
• The Third Shill tcountry
festiv:d last vcar.
mn siL'I li1c &lt;II the riverfronl
"Th i' l~ai- we 1h inl-. \\C ""']lhilhcatcr. 6 p.m. to9 p.m.
\\·ill h aY~ a hl'tter IUI"IHHII_- • .l \1otorn de Li~ht Pa raUe
said Paul Dmncll. ,-h,tirm&lt;tn tllro u!.!h th~ ri\'L'1':" c itie~ of
or Ihe Gold Wine' &lt;tnd Rihs Pt lJ llc~nw_ S\' lac u...,e. R ~t~..: ine
1-'~st i \al (Dillllliltcc . " ]think and Mi"idlel1on _lJ
L'\~nhnd\' \\il"l ha\c .1 ~tli)Ll
p.m. 1o Ll:-15 p.m .
tinw-&lt;tnd i hope lh e lr&lt;tdltion
• Rdrc, hments following
L'illlti!llll"' IWL' ~! U'I (' tlli . . j...,
parade 1it-~ cream). 9:45
!.!Ulld lor not onh for \k1 ~...,
p.m. In 10 p.m.
('outlt\'_ but fo t.- c\ ~r' both
• Mnltlrncle li ght show
)\ItO attCilLh thi' lcsli\-Cii -- - bonfire tin the river bank.
Darnell added 11ta1 Meigs 10 p.m. until:
C(lllllty\ "(.:l'llil' t·o:lr..h\ ay . . .
hi.. , tnri c lnuh.inl! d~'\\ ntown
Sa1urda1·
and rhcr front \'1:-.t &lt;h arc a hi!!
• R~.·i!i.., iL_Itinn ()pens , 9
dra"· !( n- hil-.er,, He " 1id there :\. Ill .:
wcr~ at le;bl 2tX) bi l-.es \\ tth
• Clitf B&lt;tsel will give a
rider., fn11n II difkrem .stales ,afcl, tall-. "" motorcycle
all ~ ndin ~ lhc li:sli\'clllast vear.
traik r in~ on the main slage.
Local\ cnclor.s and &lt;lrt ;·san, l) a.m. 111 Ill &lt;LIII.
will a],o he on hand_ selling
• Fir:-.1 tour (rl'LJUirc~ regis1hei r \\arl' ... to th n~c in ·:men ~ trati,m l. 10 a.nl. to 12 p.m.:
dance . Sponsored h\ the
• Prn fes, ional Story Teller
''.
GoiJ Wi11 £s &lt;llld Rihs
Please see Fest. AS
Committec .t lw i"L-sli\al \\ill

The American' Cancer Society

Cancer Education Series
11

1 Can Cope"

6 Week Program beginning Tuesday, June

8, 2004

5:30 pm - 7:30 pm (Light dinner provided)
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Rooms BC
"I Can Cope" is a series of educational classes developed by the
American Cancer Society and sponsored locally by Holzer Medical. Center
and Holzer Clinic for patients and families facing cancer.
To reserve o lace in fhis FREEs eciol series, or lor more inlormofion, lease coli (740} 446-5055 .

•

R
MEDICAL CENTER
niscovcr the If ol:a'1' Dif/i!r'C11CC

www .holzer .org

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

-

PageA2
Wednesday, June 2, 21l04

Bush lowers expectations of other Gov~rnment begins
countries sending troops to Iraq
expanded mad .cow testing

WASHINGTON (AP)
Iraq's new leaders "are not
America's puppets." the
White
House
declared
Tuesday while President Bush
scaled down hopes that other
countries would send sizable
num~ers of troops to help
U.S. soldiers tight rising violence.
'"
Bush warned the v1olence
· probably would get worse as
Iraq's -caretaker government
takes charge June 30 from the
U.S.-Ied
occupation.
"I
believe there will be more
violence because there's still
violent people who want to
stop progress." the president
said.
With little notice, Bush
came to the Rose Garden and
stood in bright sunshine
before television cameras to
give aJ : unqualified endorselllent to Iraq's new leadership
_ Ghaz1 Mashal Aj1l al- Yawer,
a powerful Sunni Muslim
tribal leader. who was picked
for the largely ceremonial
p9st of pres1dent. and lyad
Allav. i. who was named
prime mm1ster last week.
Bush said the1r selection
brings Iraq closer to democracy and freedom.
On a sensitive subject, Bush
played down suggestions
Washington had played a
major role 111 choosing the
new leaders. U.N. envoy
Lakhdar Brah1mi was "the
quarterback." Bush said. "I
had no role in picking . Zero."
Condoleezza R1ce, Bush's
national security adv1ser. also
denied there had been undue
U.S. influence.
"Look, these are not
America's puppets," she satd.
"These are independentminded Iraqis who are determined to take their country to
security and democracy."
A member of Rice's staff,
Robert Blackwill , spent
weeks in Baghdad providing
Brahimi with the names of
tribal shetks and provincial
leaders who could be named
to Iraq's transition government. Secretary-General Kofl
Annan smd Brahimi's assign-

ment was difficult. "He\ had
to make compromises to
move the procc" ahead,"
Annan smd. "It was never
gomg to be easy. He knew
that."
Fred
U.N. spokesman
Eckhard said the U .S.-lcd
Coalition
Provisional
Authority played the lead
role.
'The CPA governs the
country." Eckhard
said .
"Please do not for~et the context in wh1ch Mr Brahimi was
working."

With 135.000 troops in Iraq.
the United States has carried
the heav1est burden and Jlas
appealed to other countnes
for help. But the momentum
has been 10 the other direction
_ Spam. Honduras and the
Dominican Republic pulled
out the11 troops _ and Bush
held out little hope that the
tide would change.
"I don't know 1f there will
be a major commitment of
new troops but I think there
Will be a maJor focus on helpmg Iraq become a free country." he said.
R~~:e sa1d some countnes
"might be willing to send a
few troops here. a few troops
there" after the U.N. Secunty
Coun ci l approves a resdlutJOn
setting up the mechani sm for
the new lro~q1 government and
procedures for elections.
"But no one really believes
that we are about to have a
masstve mfuswn of fore1gn
forces into Iraq," Rtce satd.
She said Iraqis want other
countries to concentrate on
training their troops and their
police to take over thelf own
security needs.
Bush said U.S . forces
would remain in Iraq even
after the interim lraq1 council
assumes "full sovere ignty."
He noted that the new prime
minister had said earlier in the
day that Iraq needs help from
US. and other multinational
forces to help defeat "the enemies of Iraq ."
Allaw1's statement was seen
as a prelude to the new government negot iating an agree-

ment that would allow troops
of the U S -led coalition to
contmue operatmg m the
country.
"I am contident" that the
new Iraq• leadeJShip wanh
the U.S. military to remain,
Bush said. "People on the
ground ... the Iraqis. feel comfortable m asking us to stay."
Bush sa1d the next step was
getting approval of a Security
Council resolution.
The United States and
Bntam circulated the resolution Tuesday hours after the
announcement in Baghdad of
the interim government. The
revised document would end
the mandate for a multination al force by 2006 and g1ve the
new mtenm government con-

trol over the Iraqi army and
police.
"I've been speakmg with a
vanety of world leaders. to
encourage them to_ by telling
them we're willing to work
w1th them to achieve language we can live with but,
more importantly. language
that the lraqt government can
live with," he said.
He said 1t would be helpful
for Iraq 's government to send
a rcpresentat1 vc soon to the
United Nations, and left open •
the possibility of an Iraqi otficial joining with other world
l eo~ders next week at Sea
Island, Georgia, at the annual
summit of industnalized
nations.
Bush offered a modest
expectat ion of what other
countries would do in Iraq.
He said he was looking for
"a commitment to work
together. A commttment that
we all understand the importance of succeedtng in Iraq.
Understanding that terrorism
w1ll flourish and be emboldened if we're not successful in
promotmg a free government
in Iraq. "
He spoke by telephone w1th
Allawi and al- Yawer .about
the new government in
Baghdad and Iraq's security
needs. Bush also spoke with
Bahrain's king, Sheik Hamad
bin lsa AI Khalifa.

Prosecution opens penalty phase of Nichols\
murder trial; victims) family members testify
BY TIM TALLEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
McALESTER, Okla.
Prosecutors began making the
case Tuesday that Terry
Nichols deserves to die for hi s
part in the Oklahoma City
bombing, puttmg on the stand
a father whos~ 6-month-old
son was so mutilated in the
attack that he had to be identified by his fingerprints .
Kevm Gottshall said his
son, Kevin Lee Gottshall II ,
was in the federal building's
second-floor day-care center
when the bomb went off on
April 19, 1995. A photo of the
sm iling baby was beamed
over television monitors to
Nichols' jury as Gottshall
described the child's death.
A total of 168 people were
killed in the bombing, mcluding 19 children.
"Lee was healthy and
happy. He was 6 months old
and full of potentwl ,"
Gottshall sat d. "He had a
wonderful smile, and he had
six teeth."
But his family never had a
birthday party for h1m.
"All we get to do is go to
the cemetery and put stuff on
his grave," Gottshall said.
Gottshall was the first prosecution witness to testify in
the penalty phase of N•chols'
trial. Ntchols was convicted
Wednesday of 161 counts of
murder.
Testimony began after
Judge Steven Taylor ordered
prosecutors to have their witnesses avoid irrelevant information about victims
or
gruesome details of lhe1r
fates.
"There will be no memorial
service for the victims in thi s
courtroom," Taylor said. "I
am here to guard against emotion taking over th1s trial."
Still, witness Clifford Cagle

brought JUrors and spectators
to tears when he testified
about the loss of his left eye
and other injuries. Cagle
worked for the
U.S.
Department of Housing and
Urban Development on the
building's seventh flour
"The left si de of my face
was crushed," said Cagle,
who wept as he smd he's had
three operatiOns to repmr the
damage
In opening statements ,
prosecutor Sandra Elliott sa1d
Nichols desenes to die by
inJection Elliott smd N1chols
"constitutes a contmutng
threat to society." She also
reminded the jury that "there
were many, many, many others who came close to dying
that day as well."
Among them was Regina
Bonny, a former police officer
who was assigned to the Drug
Enforcement Administration
and was working on th e
bulldmg's ninth tloor.
Bonny testif1ed she dug her
way out of a p1le of debris
after the explosion and helped
two Bureau of Alcohol ,
Tobacco and F1rearms agents
who \\ere in an office next
door.
One, Vernon Buster, had a
p1ece of metal sticking out his
side that she pulled out,
Bonny said. The other, J1m
Skaggs, had a hole in his head
that she covered with a shirt.
A photograph of Skaggs
with a bloody shirt wrapped
around hts head was projected
over
. TV monitors for Nichol s'
jUry.
In h1s opening statement,
Nichols defen&gt;e attorney
Creekmore Wallace urged
jurors to consider all sentencing options in the case. The
jury has the choice of giving
Nichols hfe 111 pnson .
He said the defense wi II
give jurors a glimpse of
~

N1chols' life before and after
the bombmg, including hts
relationships with his two former wives, his three children
and h1s large extended family
in Michtgan .
He said Nichols has never
been a disctpline problem in
prison and has formed relationships with members of
bombing vict1ms' families as
a prayer partner.
Nichols
and -Timothy
McVeigh were convicted of
federal charges in the bombing. McVeigh was put to
death and Nichols was sentenced to life in prison.
Oklahoma
prosecutors
brought the state murder
charges against Nichols in
hopes of winomg a death sentence.
Among others prosecutors
brought to testify was Kathy
Youngblood, who said she
was devastated by the loss of
her husband, John, a U.S.
Department of Transportation
worker who died 23 days
after the bombing from his
inJuri es.
"It was my youngest daughter who kept me from followmg John.'' she said.
Jurors and spectators wept.
as Matilda Westberry testified
she has lived in fear since the
death of her husband, Robert.
"I miss his touch and his
smell," she said, choking back
tears. "I miss him rolling over
m bed and swinging his arm
ov~r me, just to know he's
there."
Aren Almon-Kok spoke of
her 1-year-old daughter,
Baylee, who died in the daycare center. A photograph of
Baylee's limp body in the
arms of a tirefighter was pub1ished worldwide.
"My dau ghter became a
symbol of the bombing," she
said, "but she was a real person. too."

WASHINGTON (AP) The Agriculture Department
began expanded nat1onal
testinu for mad cow disease
Tuesday, intending to test
about 220.000 animals for
the brain-wastmg condition
over the next year to 18
months . .
Ofticmls sa1d the department was able to handle the
first day's samples even
though most of the dozen
regional laboratories aren't
yet equipped to perform the
initial tests.
The government last year
conducted mad cow tests on
tissues from 20,543 annnals,
VIrtually all of them cattle
that could not stand or walk
and had to be dragged to
slaughter After the nat10n's
tlrst case of the diSease in
December. the department
initially doubled the number
of ammals to be tested th1s
year to 40,000.
Wtth many forctgn governments still reluctant to ease
bans on U.S . beef, the testing
program was expanded at a
cost of 570 million to mclude
as many as 220.000 slaughtered animals, following rec-

ommendatio1h from an •nternattonal scient1f1c review
panel About 35 million head
of cattle are slaughtered each
year in the Upited States.
The overwhelming majority of te sts will be 011 animals
considered most likely have
mall cow _ those showing
any sign of bram disorder,
unable to stand on thetr own
or deemed unfit for human
consumption for other reasons. Tissue samples from
those animals would be tested, as would samp le s from
animals that die on farms.
The department's testing
plans also include about
20.000 ammals that appear
healthy but are at least 30
months old, the age at which
mad cow disease appears.
The 12 slate-operated labs
around the country will perform the initial te,sts on bram
and central nervous system
tissue from slaughtered cattle .
for mad cow disease. also
knov.n as bovine spongiform
encephalopathy, or BSE.
Results from those tests will
be returned in 24 to 72 hours.
If that rapid-response test
indicates the animal may

Wednesday, June 2
TUPPERS PLAI:'&gt;/S
Eastern Loco~l School D1stnct
will hold a special board meetmg at 5:30 p.m. at the admtnH;tration bulldm~ for mterviewing supennte~1dent candi dates and to tran saLt other
nnpendmg busmess as can be
legally dealt with by the board.
Sc1pio
PAGEVILLE Town sh ip TnJStees will meet
at fdO p m at the P&lt;~gevillc
Town Hall.
REEDSVILLE · - Oltve
Township Trusteu,. re~ ul,tr
meeting. 7:30 p rr . township
garage on Joppa Kd

h&lt;~ve

BSE, t1ssue samples
will then be "sent to the
department's
National
Services
Veterinary
Laboratory in Ames. Iowa.
for confirmatory testmg that
could take four to etght days.
Seven of the rapid-test l&lt;tbs
are able to handle large
batches of tests, at least I ,000
per month, but only five of
these were operating on the
first day. department spokeswoman Andrea McNally said
Tuesday.
The other two had "lastminute problems," she satd.
F1ve other labs. which would
handle smaller batches, were
not testmg samples Tuesday
but are scheduled to begin
the work later, she said.
The five working labs a(e
"more than suffic1ent" to handle the initial testing load,
McNally said.
The department expects
some rapid tests to indicate
BSE, although that does not
necessarily mean the animal
has the disease, said Dr. Ron
DeHaven. admmistrator of
the department's Animal and
Plant Health Inspection
Service.

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday, June 2
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Athletic Boosters.

Recognized on
honor roll

Center " m.1kmg $20.000
available to groups lllll:re.., led
111 tormmg cooperatives and
to assist existing cooperatives
in adoptmg new enterprises
REEDSV ILLE Dane
To be eligible. the applicant
Eichmger of Reedsville has
must be a group explonng
been recogmted for academ- opponunit1es in cooperatives.
IC achievement as a United or a coope rative exp,md111g
States National Honor Roll mto a new enterpriSe, and be
Award wmnur.
based Ill Oh1o Applicams
Eichinger. who attends !ll,Jy request up to S 1.500 to
Meigs High School. will perform a pre-feasihthty or
appeal 111 the Umted St,Jtes feasihillty study An incorpoAchievement
Academy Jated cooperat1ve may 1eceive
Offic1al Yearbook.
up to $5.000 111 grant lunds
Eich1nger is the son of !rom the program tor busmess
DennJS and Gall Eichonger developmem activities. Only
and the grandson ot Opil I one grant per year will be
E1chinger of Chester and Russ available to ,lll applicant
Rec1pients must match funus
and D01othy Ke,tr of T1l1in.
rece1ved from this pmgnun with
theit own resnuJ-ces. 1l1is p•ngmm can only p•ov•de funds lo1
up to half of the total cost ot tl1e
study or O&lt;;W emerpnse The
other h&lt;tlf wtllneed to be r~used
PIKETON
The 01\io by the group At le,tst halt of th,Jt
Coope1at1Ve Deve lopment match h,cs to he in cash. tl1c other

BY BRIAN SKOLOFF
uncle and two neighbors he ing important leads that didn't
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER_ _ had been golting all day. He tit their theory.
also was unable to tell police
Geragos did not present hi'
REDWOOD CITY. Calif. - what he had been trymg to case Tuesday but made several objections dm ing Dtstaso',
Within a day of rep_orting his catch on h1s fishmg tnp.
He told investigators that he presentation, indudmg when
pregnant ':""fe mtssmg, Scott
Peterson hed about h1s extra- never had a11 affair a he that the prosecutor said that a han
marital affair. gave conflicting would become very public once found on pltcrs 111 Peterson'&gt;
accounts of h1 ~ .whereabouts hts llllstress, massage thempist small tishmg boat mefutabl)'
belonged to Laci. After speak·
and brushed. off m-_laws help- Amber Frey. stepped forward.
mg search for Lac1 Peterson,
By Christmas Day, Peterson ing with Judge Alfred A
prosecutors smd m ~pemng was more engaged_ and talk- Delucchi m chambers. D1stasc
argum.ents of :eterson s mur- ing in ways that Distaso sug- conceded m the afternoon that
DNA results did not prove the
der tnal Tuesday._
.
gested point to his gui lt.
hair
was a definite match
He called police. for examProsecutor R1ck D1staso
Prosecutors also were stru gwants jurors to connec~ those pie. to ask whether they were
gling
with their own chaldots,along w1th other c1rcum- usi ng cadaver-sniffing dogs
lenges:
the absence of a murstantml ev1dence,
to scare h th e park
. to conclude
.1.
Pe teJSon k.I 11 ed 1liS
WI e.
"'W h
, .
h der weapon . a cause of death
Peterson, 31, could face the
e . aven t come to t e or an eyewitness to the crime
death penalty or life without co nclusto~ yet ~.~at . Lact
They allege Peterson k1lled
parole if convicted in a trial that is Peterson 1 s dead, D1staso his wife on or around Dec. 24
expected to last up to six months. ~md the off1cer told Peterson 2002, m their Modesto home
From the moment Peterson That. ktnd of .sets .. the stage because he was havmg ar
called hJS mother-in-law on tor thts enure case.
altair. then concealed her bod}
Christmas Eve 2002 and satd
Prosecutors had more than a in h1s truck and drove nearl}
he had retumed from a tishing year to prepare what California 100 miles to Berkeley and
trip to ln empty house. things Attorney General Bill Lockyer heaved ll into the bay from the
didn't rnake sense, Distaso said. called a "slam dunk" case the small boat he had purchased
"He says, 'Mom, Laci's day
authorities ·arrested less than three weeks before
misSJng,'" D1staso told jurors. Peterson more than a ye&lt;tr ago Investigators found a loaded
"R1ght then, Sharon Rocha
Defense attorney Mark .22-caliber handgun in the
knew that things were very Geragos ha~ countered that glove box of Peterson's tmck
seriously wrong."
authorities unfmrly targeted but have not said how they
By nightfall, family had Peterson from the start, 1gnor- thmk he killed his wife
joined police to investigate a tf====================="'ll
missing person report that
would unfold into a case that
captivated the nation
Their search first focused on
a park near the couple's
Modesto home, where Laci
Peterson, eight months pregnant, used to walk the family's
gtillden retriever before a doctor recommended she stop
because of recuning dizziness.
Meigs County Fairgrounds
In the park, a panicked Rocha
was rifling through garbage cans
Noon until Dark
in the tog-shrouded eveoing.
Guest Speaker
When she saw Scott
Peterson, she asked, "'What's
joy Padgett
going on'' Where were you
fi shing?"' Dtstaso satd. After
Entertainment
giving Rocha "one-word
responses," Peterson wanDee &amp;.. Dallas
dered off. the prosecutor said.
Distaso ticked otT what he
impl1ed were a series of lies
Peterson told
Peterson told Rocha he was
tishing on San Francisco Bay,
but later told Laci Peterson's \\.================~

Cooperative
venture

~

I

Sunday, June 6, 2004

•

FREE FOOD!
BRING YOUR FAMILY!

service at a sensible price
At AlLTEL we run the phone company l1ke you would That's why we're focused
on delivering qual1ty services at reasonable rates within our service tern1ones

SeMces are avaotable at the follow1ng rates:

Single Party Residence

l:ijgb

I

$1617

$21 .32

S35.37

541 .62

$0.30

$0.30

(Includes Federal SUbscnber Lme Charge)

Single Party Business Service

-'llltEL
You got that right

1n

r H !:i A

V1 E 11 it\ S 'I ;\/ 0 I ,., i\

DEAR ABBY: I am a 20year-old woman in need of
help. I used to live at my
grandmothers hou se w1th
1ny younger siSters and my
parents . My father hasn't
worked since I was born. My
mom managed a local !lower
shop and made good money.
but she was fired two years
ago after she started usmg
cocaine w1th Dad and her
boss found out.
'
My grandma and my 19year-old 'Jster take c.ue of
my 12- and 14-year-old SISters because our parents are
broke . To make matters
worse, my uncle. '"Ralph."
mpved here from Flonda last
year and now lives at my
grandma 's. Uncle Ralph has
a jail record and is verball y
and phy&gt;ically. abus1ve to
Grandma and to my SISters'
cats and dogs. The police
have been called. but they
can't do anythmg unless
Grandma says she wants him
out. The thing is. she's terrified of hun. She told my sister she wJShes he would
leave. but she's too scared to
tell him.
Abby, Unc le Ralph 15 the
reason I moved out. Hov. can
I get him out of that hou se.
and how can I get my parents
help for the~r drug ·probl em''
Most of my money goes to
help out with my SISters. I
need a car and I'd like to go
back lU college, but I ca n' t
until this burden IS lifted off
my shoulders. I suffer anxi -

Support Groups
Thursda}, June 3
POMEROY - ¥Holzer
Hospice Me1gs County will
have a "dinner wtth friend s'"
,1[
6 p.m. at C.ow's
Rcstauro~nt.

rE

II 0

v ~ RT

~

E M E ., ;

! (

half can be an m-k1nd contribution Fo1 exmnple. 1f your group
ts applymg tor S5()(X) 111 gnmt
monies. you must provide
$5rxxl llldtch and $2500 of the
match must he m cash All grants
are rennbursement g"mts. 1l1e
gmup or coupemtive hw.; une
ye,u· to use _the grant momes The
application deadline is 5 pm on
Fnd,ty. July 30. 2(04
All applic&lt;ttions for funding
wtll he reviewed by the "Ohio
Cooperative
AdviSory
Committee''. The aclvJSOJY
bomd w1ll evaluate the applications by .JsSJgmng a pomt value
to each question. For example.
11 a question is worth I0 points.
the 1\dvisory Conumttee can
assign that quest1on a \ alue
from 0-10 p01nts.
1\pphcat Jon and guidelmes
fm .111 Oh1o Cooperative
Development Grant can be
obt,uncd by contacting Travts
West at ( 740) 289-2071.
west.222@osu.edu or by visiting htW//ocdc.osu.edli.
1\ .,. ~.:,

Hl

prominent University of Wisconsin
researcher and has now been awmded a United States Patent for use 111
There seems to be only one we•ght loss and weight manage ment.
Two separate clinical studt~s
explanation why di eters are suddenly ru &gt;htng to drugstores to get have shown that PatcntLEAN was
the impressi ve new we1ght loss · used safely ,md caused no ,Jdverse
SJde e ffect~ when used a' d11ected.
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PatentLEAN Je&gt;ults show that
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warmng for Amen cans to slim down day ut1lizmg exe1cisc JUSt one hunAnd nuw the FDA has banned prod- dred e1ghty minutes during the week.
PatentLEAN is now available
ucts contm~mg Ephed1a.
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tcal results show that PatentLEAN before using it or any weight loss supcan be 3 t11nes mt1re effect1ve than plement. Nn prescription is needed.
· PatentLEAN also includes a
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Dr. Zenk 'aid.
PatentLEAN's powerful active so easy that almost anyone c;an do it,
1ngrediem was dtscovered by a includmg people wht • arc in the high-

WEIGHT LOSS

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the ALLTEL servtce terntones at the

rates, terms and condihons specd1ed m the company's tariffs If you have any

ques11ons regardong ALLTEL serv1ces, resodent1al customers should call ALLTEL at
l-800·347-1991 and bus1ness customers should call t -800-843-92 t4.

'

2004

Dear
Abby

gotten to take care ol yourself.
1sn · t 11 t1me that your
grandmothe• and parents
took responSJbJ!•t.v lor themselves'' You ha\c already
helped them as much as you
can_ more than anyone can
reasonably expect There's a
reason why airline passengers are instructed that 111 an
emergency they muq first
place the oxygen m ~" ks over
their own faces. and THEN
over the faces of the If dependents . It 's so they don't all
black out at once
My advice is to colltact AIAnon and learn how 10 separate other people's problems
from your own. Get back in
school and get counseling
through the ~&gt;tudent health
center. Once you are out ot
school and establt shed fm ancially. then you wtll be in "
stronger position to help your
SJblmgs
DEAR ABBY: . I was brutally raped a few months ago
by a man I had thought was
kind and gentle Alterward. 1
learned that he had also been

w1le and former g1rlfnend.
He's 111 pil for now. hut
wil l have to testofy aga mst
h1m m court soon. and I'm
scared to death.
Everyone tell ' me to be
brave and speak out. but 1
JUst want to put thiS all
behind m~. It keeps prcymg
on my mind. and I'm fnght ened at ni ght when I'm home
alone I" 1D afraid I" II ne\ er
Ieel safe a~a•n
I hd\'e the~e
mghtmares that he escapes
and beats me to death. Did I
do the wrong thing when I
reported h1m'' - FR IGHTENED IN IDAHO
DEAR
FRIGHTENED ·
No. ) ou d1d the right thmg.
Permit me to add mv \Oice to
the chorus of thn~e urging
you to be brme .md te,ut\ .
By standmg up for your,efr.
YllU '"" aho l1eal yourselt.
Ho\\'evcr. you should abo be
recel\ ing 'upport trom a rape
cri'" center durin~ this d!IT!cult time. And when you go
to court_ you 'hould have a
'ictim's advocate by your
SJde. P1ck up the phone and
call i800J 656-4673 It's the
toll-tree number of the Rape .
Abuse.
Incest
NatJonal
Network. They will gu ide
you to the help you need
Dew Ahl" IS IITIItm '"
,A/ngail Vai1 Bu1e11. af,;,
i.11n11" '" lt·w11w P/n/1'1'·' ·
1101
0
founded In her
morhe1: Paulin e Phillip,,
\Vrite
Dear
Abbl
liT
II'IIII.DeorAbhrcom ""P.O.
Bm 69440. Lrjs Ange/e.1 CA

!"'

9006 9

e ty attacks from worry m g ••v,;,ioiilioeniitiily
ii.iaiibiiuiiisioi\ii'ei.iitoi.ihiiisii.ieiiix.-- • • • • - - - - - - - -

about thiS Please help' ANXIOUS IN PENNSYLVANIA
DAR ANXIOUS· You may
not like thts message, but
you need to hear it. You are
not Wonder Woman, and you
have placed far too much
responstbtltt} on your ov.n
shou lders You are foc using
so hard on other people's
problems that you have for-

VI ED l A !SY N Oil,ATE ·

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REFERENCES

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Tott blocking IS avaolabte al no charge to low-income customers who qualify
Surcharges for emergency 9-1-1 SBIVICBS are assessed accord1ng to government
gu&lt;Mnes
Low-1ncome ond1vodua1s el!g1ble for Ufel!ne and Link-Up telephone assoslance
programs may be elogible for discounts on lhese bas1c local servoce charges
Baste servtces are offered to all customers

Wednesday, June 2
LONG
BOTTOM · Rev1val services w1ll be held
at (1'30 p.m. Sunday and 7
p.m. Monday through Friday.
June 4. at the Mount Oltv e
Chu1 ch at Long Bottom
Lo~wrcnc c
Bu sh. pastor.
JIIVJtes the public There .will
he spec1al singing each mght
DANVILLE A
mixed trio from the Penv1ew
B1hk College will smg at 7
p m. at the Danville Holiness
Church

New PatentLEAN'"awarded U.S. Patent for weight loss. Clinical
results confirm safe and effective use of new oral capsule can be
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(Includes Federal SUbscnber Line Charge)
Local Directory Assistance

Church services

BY K AHI"T T F.IlFSC HI
UN I\'FRSAI MEDIA SV.JiliCATr .

Summer Get Together

~

P L C. l A L U r-.. I '•

2,

sales of new weight loss capsule

',

Meigs County
Republican Party

Monthly Range of Service Charges

6.30 p m at the high school.
All parents and coache' are
urged to attend. New officers
to be elected.
Thursday, June 3
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers
Plains
VFW
Aux1llarv of Poq 901353 w!l
meet at 7 p.m. a: the hall.
RACINE - The Bethany
Church Sunshine Clfcle pic nic wi ll be held at 6 p.m. ,11
the Mckel\e y Camp Ham.
buns, pop m1d paper p1oducts
w1ll be furntshccl by the host ess. Those &lt;tttending are to
take a covered diSh and then
own law9 chair.
Friday, June 4
POMEROY
- ~ICI"S
County PERl Chapter 77 mc~s
at Me1gs County Mulllpurposc
Senior Center. with luncheon at
noon and meetmg to h 11l0\\'.
Perry Vamadoe. Meigs County
Econom1c
Deveopment
Director. will be gucs1 speaker.
All members are urged to attend.

Wednesday, June

Family's dysfunction weighs
heavily on woman's shoulders

Community briefs

Prosecutors open their case in
Scott Peterson double-murder trial

through state-specrfied telephone assistance plans

•

Community Calendar.
Public meetings

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

D) Print name and address:

see CUB.BlNT
I

••

,.

61 , No

7. 1

July

2002

the

Cl'lltl

L Zenk , M.D the lormu Clltel tl
Madlctne at St Frantls HDIJillt. Mtnnnota.
IS

'Urf!nll,

Jeii!Red

Medlui / S~tenlitl~

U

Olllur ot lht l1;ensu

el 3-Autwl-7·0u-Oeh¥dll)tptandrutero ne
1

'lMESE STATEMUT! ~AVE •DtllU IY.li.UAUB If TME FCOO
UD CR~G llli111SUA11DM T~!S PROOIIC1 !I lOr IMTEIIDED
TO OIAGIIOU Tmr CUE CR PRmllt m OISUSE

rhese charts confirm there Is a statistically significant reduction in body werghl in the PatentLEAN group which was
far greater ths" cha"ges in the placebo group. Proper caloric consumption aM exercise are recognized for effective
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WaiMart or Taoget SJtnply make your selecl!On on lhe free Authorozatlon form mcluded onsode the
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l;hlt

•

::&lt;In lf.!'&gt;t( 111 '( ., ~ 11

�Wedne~day,

Pagei\4

0PJNION

:The I;&gt;aily Sentinel

2, 2004

·

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, June 2, 'the I54th day of 2004. There
are 212 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 2, 1953, Queen Elizabeth II of Britain was crowned
in Westminster Abbey, 16 months afterthe death of her father,
King George VI.
On this date:
In 1886, President Cleveland married Frances Folsom in a
·
.
White House ceremony.
In 1897, Mark Twain, 61, was quoted by the New York
Journal as saying from London that "the report of my death
was an exaggeration."
·
In 1924, Congress granted U.S. citizenship to all American
Indians.
In 1941, baseball's ''Iron Horse," Lou Gehrig, died in New
York of a degenerative disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
In 1946, the Italian monarchy was abolished in favor of a
. republic.
In 1966, the U.S. space probe Surveyor I landed on the
moon and began transmitting detailed photographs of the
lunar surface.
.. In 1979, Pope John Paul II arrived in his native Poland on ·
'
·the first visit by a pope to a Communist country.
In 1986, for the first time, the public could watch the proceedings of the U.S. Senate on television as a six-week experiment of televised sessions began.
In 1987, President Reagan announced he was nominating
. economist Alan Greenspan to succeed Paul Volcker as chair·man of the Federal Reserve Board. ·
In 1997, Timothy McVeigh was convi.cted of murder and
..conspiracy in the Oklahoma City bombing.
·. Ten years ago: The International Atomic Energy Agency,
. the U.N. atomic watchdog, reponed it could no longer verify
the status of Non~ Korea's nuclear program, prompting the
United States to seek economic sanctions. President Clinton
met atthe Vatican with Pope John Paul II.
Five years ago: South Africans went to the polls in the ir second post-apartheid election, giving the African National
.Congress a decisive victory; retiring pres.ident Nelson
Mandela was succeeded by Thabo Mbeki.
One year ago: President Bush, visiting the Middle East,
pledged to work unstintingly for the goal of Israel and a
Palestinian state living side by side without bloodshed. The
Federal Communications Commission eased limits on media
·:ownership. ·
·
· Thought for Today: "Experience isn't interesting till it
begins to repeat i.tself - in fact, till it does that, it hardly is
experience." - Elizabeth Bowen, Irish-born author (18991973).

I expected to hear from
John McCain or Russell
Feingold. But neither . the
Arizona Republican nor the
Wisconsin Democrat had
much to say when their
Senate colleague John Kerry
was contemplating this week
whether he could get away
with circumventing federal
campaign finance law.
The Kerry camp suggested
last
week
that
the
Massachusetts lawmaker
would delay his acceptance
of the Democratic presiden. tial nomination , the culmination of the party's conven,
tion in July. .
_
Kerry has since announced
that he will accept the nomination on schedule, but the
idea was to allow him to ,
continue to rai se and spei1d
private campaign contributions up until the time
President BuSh- formally
accepted re-nomination by
his party (at which point
Kerry would accept the
Democratic nomination).
The gambit was born out
. of concerns by Democrats
about the five-week lag
between their convention in
Boston and the Republican
convention in Ne:-v York
City.
Under the law, once a candidate accepts hi s party's
presidential nomination, and
once he accepts public
financing for the general
election (which both Kerry
and Bush will do), his fundraising has to stop.
So,.because the Democrats
scheduled their convention
for midsummer, Kerry will

Joseph
Perkins

have to stretch his $75 million public war chest
between Beantown and
November.
And because the GOP convention fall s later on the calendar, President Bush will
be able to continue to raise
and spend private donations
five weeks longer than
Kerry. preserving hi s $75
million in public funds until
atier Labor Day.
The Kerry camp estimates
thai Bush's five-week financial advantage is wortb
somewhere in the neighborhood of $30 million. So it's
not hard to understand
Kerry's motivation to delay
acceptance of hi s party's
nomination .
He wanted to "level the
playing field " between himself and the Republican in
the White House.
However, by suggesting
he might delay acceptance of
his nomination, by considering such an unprecedented
tactic, the Democratic nominee was thumbing his patrician nose at campaign
finance law.
And I expected that Sens.
McCain and Feingold,
authors of the so-called
McCain-Feingold campaign

IRAQI lEADERS PICK

Edna Kerwood

f:..

finance· law, would have maneuvers by Teresa Heinz
screamed bloody murder Kerry to bypass campa ign
finance law in order to supabout it.
But , alas, neither cam- port her husband's quest for
paign finance crusader the White House. Federal
uttered a discouraging word law limits Heinz Kerry 's
about Kerry's cynical gam- personal contribution 10 her
campaign
to
bit. Much as they have been hubby's
muted about other campaign $2.000 . .But through finanfinance shenanigans that cial contribLotions lo varihave gone on this election ous liberal organiz&lt;ilions.
the multimillipnairess is
year.
Indeed. earlier this month, able to contribtlle considerthe feckless Federal Election ably more in indirecl camCommission decided to pa1gn support for her
delay a ruling on the lawful- spouse.
ness of independenl fund- . Indeed through the Heinz
raising organizations. These foundal. ns. Kerry's wife
so-called 527 organizations, helps to &gt;ankroll organizanamed for the section of the tions Iii" the League of .
federal law that. bestows tax- Conservat ,,m Voters. a polilexempt staius upon them, ical advocacy group. At the
a1,· using :•soft money" this very start of the primary seay~ar to promote their chosen
son. according to Human
candidates.
Events, a co nser vat ive
McCain's
home-state weeklv... the leavue
e
eaave
papt•r.
The
Arizona Kerry its formal endorseRL'l"
·. notes that "three ment. II followed lhat ·up
orga1 ., tions in particular, with an $18.528 direct donaall .,L,pporti ve of Kerry, are tion to the Kerry campaign.
raising and spending tens of And it followed that up with
"six figures" worth of tdevimillions."
All of them are claiming, s'ion ads promoting Kerry's
with a wink and a nod, that candidacy.
they are wholly independent
John F. Kerry was one of
of the Kerry election effort. the foremost supporters of
the
In effect, they now consti- · McCain-Feingold. ·
tute a shadow Democratic Bipartisan
Campaign
Party. •
Reform Act of 2002 . Maybe
Indeed , three 527s closely that 's why neither McCain
aligned with the party of nor Feingold has taken
Kerry -- The Media Fund, Kerry or his su pporters 10
America Coming Together task for brazenly flouting
and MoveOn.org ·-- have campaign finan ce law.
(Joseph Perkin s is a
raised $42.7 million, accord. ing to PoliticalMoneyLine, a co/um11ist for Tlte Srrn Diego
Web site that documents Union- Tribune and can be
reached at .Joseph. Perkin.\ @
campargn money.
Then there are the artful UnionTrib.com.)

NEW PRESIDENT...

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(usPs 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published
every
·afternoon, .
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Department extensions are:
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News
Editor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton. Ext. 13

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13 Weeks . . . . .... . . ..'30.15
26 Weeks . ... .. . . .. . .. '60.00
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. L-________J_\_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------~

MIDDLEPORT - Edna Marie Bright Kerwood, 55, of
Columbus, formerly of Gallipoli s. died on Sunday, May 30,
2004, at her residence.
She was born Otl Dec .. 14, 1948, daughter of Sadie
Shoemaker Bnght of Cheshire, who survi v'es, and (he late
Worthy Bright.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, June 2, 2004,
at Addoson Freewill Baptist Church with Pastor Rick Barcu s
offic.iating. Burial will follow at Reynolds Cemetery in
Addtson. .
·
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport, and may send online condolences to www.fisherfuneralhomes .com.
·

Dennis Kapple
POMEROY- Dennis Ray Kapple, 59, of 110 Maple St.,
Pomeroy. passed away on May 30, 2004, at Overbrook Center
in Middleport.
.
· He was born Nov. 30, 1944, in Gallipolis, son of Marjorie
Gilmore Kapple of Pomeroy and the late Denver Kapple . He
was a mechanic with the former Kapple's Pennzoil and was an
avid NASCAR racing fan.
.
Besides his mother, he is survived by hi s sister, Phyllis Irene
Kapple of Pomeroy, two aunts, Louise Gilmore and Edna
Rice, and numerous cousins and friends.
Besides his father, he was preceded in death by his grandparents, John and Ina Kapple, Elza, Sr. and Nora Gilmore; and
aunts . and uncles: Elza and Evellyn Gilmore, tlossie and
Leland Nelson. and Sidney Kapple.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Thursday, June 3, 2004.
at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Keith Rader
officiating. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery.
There will be no visitation.
·
Memorial contributions may be made to the family for
fun~ral expenses.
.

Chalmer Blaine Dailey
PORTLAND -Chalmer Blaine Dailey, 69, of Portland died
Monday, May 3 1, 2004 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born April 10, 1935 in Murraysville, W.Va. , son of
the late Ocran and Gussie Umstead Dailey: He was an U. S.
Army veteran and a retired laborer for Ames.
Survivors include his wife. Mary Fitch Dailey; two sons.
Bryan (Meli ssa) Dailey and Benjamen Dailey; one granddaughter, Bryannah Dailey ; two brothers and sisters-in-law,
David and Deb Dailey and Lonnie and Joan Dailey: and one
sister, Florence Deeter.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by one
brother, Leonard Dailey; three sisters, Chloris Taylor, Betty
Triplett and Lona Cozart; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held 3 p.m. Thursday. June 3, 2004 at
Stiversville Community Church, Portland, with Wayne Jewell
offi~iating. Burial will be in the Morris Chapel Cemetery,
Racine.
Friends may ca ll from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at the White
Funeral Home.
In lieu of llowers contributions may be made to the
Stiversville Community Church. P.O. Box 80, Portland, Ohio .
45770.

Local Briefs
Hanging reported
ALBANY - An Albany man hanged himself at his home
on Monday.
According to Athen s County Sheriff Vernon R. Castle.
Larry G. Nelson, 25, hanged himself on the back porch of his
residence . Castle said Nelson's live-in girlfriend found him
there.
An investigation into the incident revealed no foul · play,
Castle said.

Vehicle recovered
MIDDLEPORT - A 1996 Chevrolet Suburban reported
stolen from Bruce Fisher of Middleport was recovered in
Pomeroy on Saturday, according to Middleport Police Chief
Bruce Swift.
Swift said the vehicle was rep011ed stolen on Friday and w.as
recovered in the parking lot of H&amp;R Block on East Main St.,
Pomeroy.
The vehicle has been impounded pending an investigation
by the . Ohio Bureau of Cr imin al Identification and
Investigation, Swift said.

LETTERS TO THE
· EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
. be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
. editing and must be signed and include address
:and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
. editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

Obituaries

Posi ·more bills
After a ·public outcry, the
. honchos at Major League
Baseball decided not to let
the "Spider-Man 2" movie
put ads on the bases themselves. Some things are
sacred. Why, if they allowed
advertising in places like
Coors Field, Qualcomm
Stadium, Minute Maid Park
or Network Associates
Coliseum it might cheapen
the entire sport .
Beside s, a tiny SpiderMan logo on the bag might
distract fans from the 20foot-tall beer, shaving and
cell phone ads along the
outfield fence. And it would
be a moral affront to all the
people in the stands wearing
T-shins and hats splashed
with company logos and
brand names and pictures of
rock stars. They might miss
the ad on the ticket stub that
can be used as a coupon to
get 50 · cents off special
items at the local big-box
store. Fans might miss the
ad on the paper hot dog tray
for the place that will
change your oil and give
you a free lube job for only
$19.95.
Advertising on the ba;,es 0
An outrage! Please! Stop!
Laughing! By the way, this
post-game paragraph was
brought to you by a subdivi sion of a giant multi-nation 'll brewer who pretends to

The Dally Sentind • Page As

www.mydailysentinel..com

Middleport hosts
returning MHS alumni
.
.

Skirting campaign finance law

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Wednesday, June

June 2, 2004

dies. He .may not want
Spider-Man on the bases,
but surely he wouldn't mind
having the Expos logo plastered afl over the side of his
catlin. Especially if it lowJim
ered. the price. Remember
Mullen
tho se telephones in the
shape of footballs? Why
not get buried in one? With
plastics we can make conbe a fledgling . Mexican tainers in any shape at all.
microbrewery even though Jmagi ne ·a giant 6-foot-tall
that beer comes out of the beer can lying on its side.
sa me vat as all the rest of it. The lid lifts up like top of a
We see so many ads that, barbecue grill . Inside is the
like common viruses, we man who· drank two sixdevelop an immunity to packs of the stuff every
them . So advertisers are night while watching sports
always looking for new from his 500-channel satelspots, new ways to get their lite dish . What could be
message across. Eighteen- more fitting, more touching,
wheel trucks that used to be more appropriate?
painted white or si lver are
A college football fan
now huge rolling billboards. could get a coffin in the
II keeps painters employed school colors. The inside
and the trucks neat so what' s would be full of pennants
the harm ? In big cities the and memorabilia . He'd be
subways are covered in supporting hi s team and
advertising, the revenue is easing his way into the
used to lessen the taxpayer's hereafter at the same time .
burden
The Martha Stewart line of
I'm bringing this up coffins would come in pasbecause it strikes me that tels with matching trim .
one place where advertising Inside there would be an
mi ght break new . ground eiderdown pillow covered
and also benefit consumers with a linen case and' lined
is in the funeral trade . Why in lhe most tasteful whitecan't the dearly departed's on-white
taffeta .
The
favorite beer or his favorite NASCAR model would
team help sponsor hi s final come complete with STP
rest? Let's say a baseball fan and Napa Auto Parts
decals .
.

..

You could add the number
of your favorite driver .
Why stop there 0 You've
seen those new headstones
with a photo of the deceased
engraved on them. Why nol
a sponsor's name as welP
Say a normal headstone is
$3,000. Have the words
"Got Milk?" on it with a
picture of our late friend
wearing a milk mustache
and the price may drop to
$1 ,500. Tombs in the shape
of bowling trophies could
be very popular. Me. I'd like
to be laid to rest under a
large 2-foot-high golf ball.
On one side it would have
my. name and dates, on the
other "Top Flight."
Instead of pulling hou ses
around golf courses, wouldn't it be more ·practical to
put cemeteries arou nd
them? t'\lo worries abou1
broken windows, no din gs
in the sitting. Besides. I'd
get more visitors from other
golfers than I ever wou ld
from my family. And I'd
know they can'l hit the fair . way, either.
(Jim Mtrlh,n's latest book.
"My First Weddi11g: A
Primer
for
Modem
Couples." was just pub lished br Simo11 &amp; Scltustn
He also co11trilm tl' .\ rc~ular­
lv to Entertainment 1.\.h k lr.
\;•here he can be reached
jim_ri11dlen @eti•.cm/l)

;,t

Trustees meet
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Trustees will hold their
regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday at the town ship
garage on Joppa Rd .

Maggie Park, Li sbon,
daughter of Christopher Park
and Jeanene Gwiadowsky,
MIDDLEPORT
qualifying through her
Recognition of reunion grandmother, Rae Ann Mills
classes and ihe awarding of Gwiadowsky. The Lisbon
eight scholarships highlight- David
Anderso n High
ed the annual banquet and School graduate will be purdance of Middleport High suing a career in history eduSchool alumni Saturday cation at Berea College.
·
night. It was attended by
Jacob
Stump
of
over 200 alumni and guests. Charleston, W. Va .. a graduReunion classes were ate of George Washington
70th, class of 1934 with four High School and son of Tom
members attending: the 65th. Stump and. Amy Thornton,
class of 1939, no representa- qualifyed through hi s grandtion; 60th, class of 1944 with father, Alfred Scarberry. He
one member attending; 55th, will be allending Embryclass of 1949 with 12 Riddle
Aeronautical
attending; 50th, class of University to focus on aero1954 with 13 attending: nautical engineering.
45th, class of 1959 with II
The other scholarships
attending; and 40th, class of awarded were the Crawford1964 with 21 attending.
Gray-Lewis Scholarship to
Six . Susan G. Park Christina Miller, and the
Scholarships were presented l'vl c C o m a s - M o o r e
at the banquet . To date a total Scholarship
to Maggi e
of 168 students have benefit- Parks.
ed from the scholarships
Following the · banquet
totalin g $65,400. Nancy music for dancing was
Cale, Judy Crooks and Cinda played by DJ Tom Payne .
Harris ,
committee,
Alumoi attending the banannounced the names of the quet li sted by class year are
2004 recipient ~. each receiv- as follows:
ing $400.
1932:
Harold Lohse,
They are:
Pomeroy.
Megan Adkins, a graduate
1934: . Maxine Hayes
of River Valley High School Gaskill , Dorothy Dillard
and daughter of Velvet Morris, Middeport; Eizabeth
Swisher Davis of Vinton and Bradford ·Lohse , Rowena
Douglas Atkins, who quali- Harrah Vaughan, Pomeroy.
fied through her grandpar1936:
Clifford
ents, William and Nola Cunningham. Lima ; Mary
. Swisher. She will be attend- Hennessy Harris, Columbu s:
ing Ohio State University to Robert V. King, Bradbury.
major in pre-med.
1937: Howard Russell!.
Michael Berns, a graduate Bradhury.
of Pike High School and son
1940:
Belly
Roush
of Kraig and Dianne Barron Allensworth,
Groveport:
of Indianapolis, who quali- Martha Cuningham. Lima:
fied through his grandfather, Charles Ent sminger, South
Edward Lee McComas. He Charleston, W. Va.: Janet
will be attending Florida Hecox Harris, Columbus.
State University where his
1941: William Dile s.
major is·undecided.
Athens ; Jean Roush Ru ssell,
Jaynee Davis. a graduate Worthington.
of Meigs High School and 1942: John W. Call, Lon g
daughter of Wayne and · Bottom: Joseph Young.
Debbie Davis; Pomeroy, Salesville.
1943: Rowena Warren
who qualified through her
father. She will be attending Young, Salesv ille .
1944:
Jeanne
Young
Ohio Valley College where
she will pursue a degree in Bradbury. Syracuse.
1946: Richard B. Bailey.
business administration .
Alfred
Randall Hudson
of Middleport:
Rutland, a graduate of Meigs Scarberry, Gallipolis; James
High School and sun of Arnold, Johnson City, Tenn .:
Canal
Evans.
Kevin Hudson and Kimberly Roy
Sisson, qualifying through Winchester: John Fulls .
her grandmother, Connie Middleport: John R. Kauff.
Mulford. He wi II be attend- Poinl Pleasant.
1948: Marilyn Knopp
ing Ohio State University at
Fultz.
Middlepon ; Lorraine
Wooster and plans a career
in horticulture sCience. Riggs Neff. Ravesnwood, W.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WWII vets to parachute drop into Normandy even without Army's permission
CLEVELAND (AP) - · on the anniversmy, I think it's
An area. World War II para- important to send a message
trooper and I0 other veter- thai a lot of Americm1s lost their
ans aren't waiting for the lives over there on D-Day."
Pentagon's approval to comThey had hoped 10 be pan
memorate the 60th anniver- of the anniversary in France
sary of the Allied invasion of on June 6, as lhey were al the
· France thi s month by para- 50th anniversary in 1994.
chuting into Normandy.
But the Army decided last
Howard Greenberg of Bay monlh thai the parachute
Village and the veterans will drop would be too dangerous
re-e nact the airborne inva- for the veterans who are all
sion, but they will jump June in their 70s and 80s.
7, a day after D-Day .
"The Army still- wants no
part
of it, but the French gov"I am really looking foiWard
to it," said Greenberg, 79, who emment gave us the OK to
served with the II th Airborne jump on June 7. so lhat's
Division in the Pacific. what we are going to do,"
'Though we would mther jump said Richard Mandich. presi-

Firefighters plan festival

Proud to be apart of
your life. .
Subscribe today • 992-2155

HARRISONVILLE -Scipio Volunteer Fire Department
will have a firemen's festival beginning with a pancake breakfast at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday at the firehouse. Games are
. planned and a chicken ~inner will be served at 5 p.m.

Court news
POMEROY - Cases resolved in the Meigs · Mich., speeding. $30 and costs; Matthew D.
County Court of Judge Steve Story between . Wandling, Pomeroy, seatbelt, $30 and costs;
April 19 and May 16 are as follows: Tory D.
RogerM . Wheeler, Binningham , Ala., speedSwartz, Middleport, seat belt , $30 and costs; ing, $30 and costs: Johnny M. .Whittington.
John
F.
Thabet.
Mason,
W.Va., Thornville, speeding, $30 and costs; Krista L.
$150
in Wiechart, Harrisonburg, Va., speedi ng, $30 and
Phy.control/under/influence ,
costs/$95 fine: Anthony W. Thacker, Racine, costs; Travis.L. Willford, Tuppers Plains, left of
failure to register, $20 and costs; Ashley L. center, $20 and costs; Cheryl A. Williams.
Thomas. Pomeroy, seat belt , $20 and costs :
Findlay, speeding, $50 and costs:
He idi M. Wilson, speeding, $30 and costs:
Mark E. Tootle, Chillicothe, speeding, $30
and costs: Robert Tuggle, Sheffield, Ala ., left Paul E. Wilson . Shade. $50 and costs; Joshua
of center. $35 and costs. failure to A. Wlight, New Martin sville. W.Va ., speeddisplay/valid reg istration $20 and costs; ing , $50 and costs; Raymond F. Yonker. New
Andrew F. Upton, Reedsvi ll e, failure to con- Pittsburgh, seatbeh, $30 and CO&gt;Is; lila J. Yost.
trol , $50 and cosis, hit-skip private property, Racine, no operators license, $50 fine: Codie
'$50 and costs; Kenneth J. Wagner, Northville, N. Young, New Haven. W.Va., $30 and costs .
"-

••

dent of the Return To
Normandy A;.,.socialiun. " I
have 10 ad mil it makes us feel
like .second-cla&gt;S ci tiz~n , ...
Greenberg was among th e·
group of veterans who wanted
to jump into Normandy 10
years ago thai faced similar
obstacles , bul Pre sident
Clinton ;!ilowe&lt;.l the 3l\ velerans to jump near Ste.- McrcEglise. the D-Day objective of
the 82nd Airborne Division .
The upcoming jump will
ill so be over Ste.-Mere-Egli ,e .
Greenberg and the othe!·
paratroopers leave Thu rsday
for London.
" It's our last chance to

make this statement:· said
Mandich. " I don'lthink w(ll
be doing thi ' jum p tlll the
70th anniversary of D-Day...
Mandich. of San Diego.
.saiu I he group i.s .shon of 1he
c,timated 550.000 needed to
pay fo r the.tribute.
"We· ve rai sed 5.1 .000 in
'""h and have a pledge . to
pay for the rental 'of an airplane and the parachutes,..
he said. " We· rc hoping to
rai se I he rest of th e money to
pay for airfare. hote Is and
expen,cs for 1hc men. :rhey
will pay for the trip lhem:-.che . . and get reimbursed as
we ~cl in -tl1c funds ...
'

• Motorcycle Light Parade a.m . Come and eniov the felthrough the river cities of hlw,hip and the t,intin ental
Pomeroy. Syracuse. Racine · Breakfast.
'and Middl epon. 9
from Page A1
p.m. to 9:45p.m .
The Go ld Wings and Ribs
Donna Wilson on the main
• Re freshments fol lowing Festival will be held rain or
·45
a
parade
and Pop) shine. If 1he weather refuses
t ge, 10 a. m· to 10· · ·111 · req uires (Pizza
sa
regi .,lrat ion . 9:-+5
• DJ Rockin Reggie enterto cooperate. l'estival orga10
p.m
.
to
10
p.m
.
.
.
he I.nrce d to I.
.
.
h
.
tams on t e ma111 stage, :
n1zers
may
111111
IO:l
5p.m.
..
.
h
.
•
Closing.
1 actiVIties t al are
45 a. m. to 12 p.m .
so me o1 11e
• Crossroads Band (gospel
Sunday
.
planned . For more infonnamusic) live at the riverfront
• Start the dav with a Wino t1on on the festival. contac t
amphitheater. 12 p.m . 10 I and a Prayei·. The First Paul Darnell at (7-101 54 1p.m.
Southern Baptist Church 0537: or to obtain an artisans
• Second TOLor (requires in vites you to join them for application. or ,·endor appliregistration ), 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. morni ng worship ·at ~: 15 calion 1\mm.
• DJ Rockin Reggie enter-_,___ _ _ _ _....,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
tains on the main stage. 3 r
p.m. to 5 p.m.
• Awards . door prizes and
entertainment. 5 p.m . to 6
p.m.
• "Music in the Park" wi th
Dale Kul char and Chad
Dodson/guitar and sax duo
(no covcr) at Court Street
Grill. 6 p.m .
•
Dwight
Icen hower
:'Elvis"
Tribute
Artist
(Dwight won 1st place in the
2004 Elvi ' competition in
South Beud.) li ve at ri ve rfront amphitheater. 6 p.m. 10
9 p.m.
1

Fest

Sale canceled
POMEROY - The sheriff's sale in the case of Home
National Bank against John J. Ginther and others, Common
Pleas Court Case No. 03-CV-146, set for 10:30 a.m. on June
II , has been canceled .

Va .; Dorothy Miller Roach . Middleport:
Barbara
Middleport.
Capetina Mora. Pomeroy.
1949: Carolvn Clark
1958: Judy Arnold. Sandm
Bachner. Middleport : Helen Fult7 Brnwn. Middleport; ·
Gilkey Byer, Baltimore: Carol
Blaker
Oiler.
Katherine Bachtel Dalla,. Stockport:
Roy
Long.
Agoura Hills, Calif.: Dave Pomeroy; Charle' Wayland,
Diles.
Athens:
Hazel Coolville: Milton Wayland.
Hawkins
Ginther. Big Prarie.
Columbu s: James Holidav.
1959
Gene
Ahbott.
. Alpharetta, Ga .; Virgtnla Millercpon; Pat Michael
Grogan
Holman. Arnold. Pomeroy: Jack
Middleport: Roland Karr. Bacon. Beech Grove. Ind.:
Owen sboro, Ky.: Hazel Stephen Bailey, . Belpre:
Davidson Miller. Sunbury: Edward Crooks, Middleport:
Robert Mill s. Pomeroy: Hersc hel Knapp, Sabrina ;
Rosemary Fisher Moore. Norman Manley. Alma
Columbus; Jane Cu ster Baumgardner
Nel,on .
Sayre , Hilliard .
Columbu s: Richard Roller.
1950 Grace Montgomery Belpre; Carol Hud 'r"1 Wolfe
Abbott, Pomeroy: Mary and Harold Wolfe, Ft.
Gilmore Brewer. Norma Myers. Fla.
Jean Cu ster. Fred
L.
1960: Carter French.
Hoffman,
Raymond Middleport. Olivia Bowle s
Walburn .
Middlepun: Locken. Shaker hjeights:
Robert Richards, Columbu s. Maida
Roush
Long,
1951:
James
Buell, Pomeroy: Lorena Hanning
Knightdale, N. C. : Myron Roller.
Belpre: Phyllis
Duffield. William Swi sher Hilbert ·
Townsley.
. and
Roscoe
Wi se. Fayetteville: .
Denni s
Middleport ; Don Payne. Walburn. Beverly.
Day ton: Jame s Sanborn.
1961 : Jud y Sauer Crooks.
Proctorville ; Betty Ashley Middleport : William H.
Snow-Rosser. Athen s.
McCool. Dublin: Dori s Rice
195;1 :
Nancy
Miller Walburn. Beverly.
Beaver, Middleport: Dori s
1962:
Cindy
Morri s
May se Co leman. Jack son; Abbon. Millersport.
June Seines Duffield. Nola
1961: Forrest Bachtel.
Knopp
Swisher, Ca rol · Phoe ni x. Ari z.: Je anne
Bachtel
Tannehill. Bowl es Gross. Gahanna:
Middleport : Larry Ri ce. Richard Hayes. Grove Cily.
Nicholasville. Ky.: William
1964 : Judy Wildermuth
Taylor, Columbus .
Allemworth. Reynoldsburg :
1953: Arlene Bowle s Marilyn Swan Anderson.
King, Bronyx. N.Y.: Mary Middleport: Carol Scott
Bradley Stan10n Marietta: Bachtel. Phoenix Ari1.:
Marilyn Wolfe. Racine .
Carolyn Nicholson French.
1954: Jeanette Moore Caroll Lyo ns Harpier. Cinda
Cunningham. Huntington. Sauer
Harri s.
Sandy
W.Va .;
Rae
Mill s Ohlinger
lannarelli .
Gwiazdowsky.
Charlene Middl eport : Maureen Durst
Walburn.
Middlepon : lmes. Tuc,on. Ariz.: Ellen
Kathryn Payne Hayden. Dutton Kiehl. Saratoga
Dayton; Charles Hess: Sally Springs. N. Y.: Lillian
Sauer Illingworth. Sun Cily Slaven Manley, Columbus:
We st. Ariz .; Donna Wells · Mick Morris. Long Island.
Jones. Pomeroy; Jack Lloyd. · N. Y. : Iva Stewart Sisson.
Brookville: Virgil Manley. Rutland : Darryl Stumbo.
Brecksville : Bill McG hee Lehei gh. Fla. : Lynn Dani els
and Carl Taylor. Columbus: Wright. Middleport.
Charles
Winebrenner.
1965: Dave Ca,ci. Albany :
Wickliffe: Marcella Tay lor Paul
Gerard.
Diane
Worner. Barboursville. W. VanCooney.
Middleport :
Va.
Many Nicholson. Nashville.
1955 :
Sheila
Stover Tenn .: Si1anne Bradbury
Hubbard. Lancaster.
Sayre. Racine: Judy Kern s
1956: James ' Mourning . Well s. Shade: Chrisline Bahr
Middleport;
Ra ymond Wi lliam s. Galli polis.
Turner, Grove . City: John
19fl(i: Alice Darst Leml ey.
Vroman. Lakeland. Fla .
Ra ve nna .
1957: James Bowles. Point
1967: Susan Morri' Baker.
Pleasant. W. Va.; Gail Middl eport .
Stumbo
Havatt er
and
1968: Caml Kin g Brewer.
Richard
Ho vancr. Bradbury.

Hear the whole story

E

R

Americana Rock (no co\er)
"TheStreet
MF Grill,
Haymaker,'
at •Court
9 p.m.

l~~~~~~~~~~~=========J
AIDS

�;pageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wedn~d'ay,

June

2, 2004

Pistons win Eastern finals, Page 82
Indians Notebook, Page B6

Bl

•

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Two Ohio soldiers killed in Iraq
Bv TERRY KINNEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Annie Odums was expecting a Memorial Day phone
call from her son in Iraq.
Instead, the Army told her
that 22-year-old Spc. Charles
E. Odums II. of Sandusky.
had been killed on Sunday in
Bagdad wh~n a bomb
exploded near his patrol.
"It's only been two day ~.
and it feels like weeks." Mrs.
Odums said Tuesday nighl.
Her son was one of two
Ohio soldiers who were
killed in separate attacks
Sunday.
Pfc. Nicholaus E. Zimmer.
20, of Columbus, died in
Kufa when his vehicle was
hit by rocket propelled
grenades. the Pentagon said
Tuesday.
Zimmer
was
assigned
to
the
2nd
Battalion. 37th Armored
Regiment , I st Armored
Division,
Friedburg
Germany.
Odums was assigned to
Headquarters
and
Headquarters Company of
the I st Battalion, 8th Cavalry
Regiment,
I st Cavalry
Division at Fort Hood ,
Texas: He planned to try to
become a police officer in
Houston when hi s four-year
enlistment was up in another

ewsChannel

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --A DAY ON WALL STREET
,-------·-·-·-·---···-··-----···----·-· ................. -- ...--..-·---·-··-----

Dow Jones
industrials

-"-\d\"
__,.,/"vv\c_
_::!__""-'r.---.,,....--'N'~ I;.,f

+14.20

-==----==----==----:=-

. 10,202.65

June

MAR

- ................. -·

1 , 2004

Nasdaq
composite
+4.03
1,990.77
fn&gt;m pnovlous : +0.20

June 1. 2004

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

...

+14.20
10,202.65

APR

"'.

MAY

JUN

9,250

Record htgh: 11 .7Zl. 98
Jan. 1d, 2000

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

Nasdaq
composite

1,990.77

Standard &amp;
Poor's SOO

1,121 .20

+4.03

+0.62

- - - - - - - - - - - - 2.200

Russell

"

2000

- - - -- ----'-,----1 ,Boo

NYSE diary

--M-A~
R --A~
PA~-M~A~Y-~JU~N---u1.~
1 991 29

Low
1.972 71

Record hlgh: 5,048 62

------

w~~--~~~--------~--- :.: I
)"\?~

~Ad!:.v:!a"-'n~ced=:_ 1'-',6:::9:=3 New highs
79
Declined :
1.582
New Iowa
Unchanged:
143
20

===---'-'=

Man1l10, 2000

-

+4.2\
57249

I

1'00

Volume:

1,538,093,200

Nasdaq diary
Advanced;

1'71 1 New highs

Declined:

1,418

95

- - - -- -- - - - - - 1,050

. +0.52
1,121.20
Pet change
from pn!Yiooa:

•

. H~h

Pet Change

Dow Jones
Industrials

10.250

MAR
Hlilh

+0 05

1,122 70

APR
lOw

1,11 332

MAY

JUN

1,000

Record high : 1,527.46
Marcn 24, 2000

,.

Unchanged:

J

'

Volume :

362

New tows
31

1.432.025.089

AP

AP

GKNLY -4.35
Harley Davidson- 57.80
Kmart- 53.78
Kroger - 16.57
Ltd- 19.27
NSC - · 23.99
Oak Hill Financial- 31.86
Bank One - 4B.50
OVB- 33 .85
Peoples- 26.00
Pepsico - 53.46
Premier - 9 .25
Rocky Boots- 20.78
AD Shell- 50.36
Rockwell- 34.08
Sears-· 37.87
SBC -· 23.74

AT&amp;T. 15 .86
USB-28.14
Wendy's - 37.13
Wai-Mart - 55.44
Worthington- 19.20
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Local Stocks
/

ACI- 33.17
AEP- 31.40
Akzo - 35.99
Ashland Inc. - 47 .75
BBT-37.16
BLI-14.64
Bob Evans - 26.41
BorgWarner- 41.82
Cify Holding- 30.00
Champion - 4 . ~4
. Charming Shops- 8 .44
Col-. 30.19
DuPont- 43:18
DG- 19.32
Federal Mogul - .27
Gannell- 87.20
General Electric- 31 .04

Judge approves dividing 59·
year-old trust for employees
CLEVELAND ( AP) · A
judge approved a tru st se t· tlement Tuesday clearing
the way for $29 million to
be split between a ho spital
thousand
and
several
employees of a manufacturing co mpany.
The trust. representing all
hi s company stock, was ereated in 1945 by Proctor
Patterso n. president of the
W.S. Tyler Co. in C leve land
and Mentor. to provide a
retire ment package fo r
employces.
In addition to Tyle r
employee s. St. Vincent
Charity
' Hospital
in
Cleveland is clue about $11
million .from the fund .
Cuyahoga
County
Common
Pleas
Jud ge
Lillian Greeneapproved the
settlement of a 5-year-old
lawsuit over the tru st.
Jeffrey
Embleton.
a
law yer involved in the .settlement, &gt;aid it wa ., a fair
resolution . He expect ;. the
money to be di stribut ed by
Sept. I, after th e ·sale of
some trust a;.sets.
Notices or the settlement

were mailed to 3.500 peapie . although as many as
8,000 co uld be eligible.
If the employee share of
$ 1R million was divided
· into 5,000 equa l parts. each
would get $3.600.
Patt erson
wanted his
.immediate family provided
for before the money could
be di vi ded . The last surv1vor · wa s a grand so n,
Proctor Patterson Jones, a
lawyer, photographer and
Napoleon Bonaparte biographer who moved from
Cleve land to Sa n Francisco
and lived to be 84.
Until Jones' death in
1999, none of th e tru st
could be touched
by
employees. The trust has
been tied up in litigation
ever since.
W.S . Tyler. which made
wire product' and industrial
sicve1. was founded in
Cleveland in 1872 , expanded to subu rba n Mentor in
1961 and also opened plants
in Sa lisbury. N.C .. and St .
Catherinc s, Ontario . The
company's asse t' were sold
andliyuidated in 1999.

hi;, parem' fre4u~ntl). but
tried to downplay the tlanger
he was in.
"He didn 't want to worry
his mother. " Mrs. Odums
said. "Lately. he 1~ould tell
us

about

going

out

on

reconaissance. how they
would be shot at everytime."
Spc . Odums wa;, trained as
a medic and also drove an
armored veh ide .
"They knew they were .
going to be fired on when
the y went out." Mrs. OdLims
said. "I don 't know if he
resented it ; I wouldn't 'ay
that wmtld be a ~ood word.
He knew his du'ty. and he
knew he had to do it."
Mrs. Odum s ~aid she and
her
husband.
Charles,
tl10u~ht
once
Saddam
Hu;,scin was capmrcd. U.S.
soldiers would return home
more guickly than they have.
"This should not be down- .
played by people who say
this is not a war." she sa id.
"These . young men and
women are being shot at and
ambushed. I just want people
to realiLe it \ not over: I want
all these young men and
women to return home safely.
"Just because my son didn't doesn't mean we don 't
pray that all the others return
safely ."

Ten Outlaws members convicted of racketeering

June 1. 2004

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~':.. ~0~- 10~~:57 15~~86
, ..... " " " ' " " ¥ " ' " " " " ' " " " ' " - '

Market watch

...,

10 750

June 1, 2004

I

--··--·--~

year. his mother said,.
"Our faith in god i' seeing
us through." she said. "We've
had our crying period,, but
we're trying to be strong."
She said her son was "very
outgoing. very family oriented_ everyone loved him ."
Spc . Odums met hi s wife.
Melanie. of Independence ,
Ohio. while they were students at the University of
Toledo. hi s mother said.
"Charles never thought he
would be college material.
but we strongly encouraged
him to try," Mrs . Odums
said. "He went for a year and
a half. then got the point
where he said. 'Mom. I'm
wasting your money and my
time .' He couldn't find a job
and decided to go to the mil itary.
"I tried to su,pport him in
his decision. but that would
not have been my tirst choice
for him."
Mrs. Odums said her son
and daughter-in-law. who
live s in Austin. Texas .
planned to "!; tart a family
"when he linished his term."
"He didn't think it was fair
to leave her wit h a child."
she said.
Spc. Odums had been
deployed to Iraq on March 5
and was . scheduled to be
there 13 months. He called

TOLEDO (AP) - Ten
members of the Outlaws
motorcycle club accused of
running a violent enterprise
that distributed drugs in the
Midwest during the 1990s
were convicted of racketeering charges Tuesday.
Two others were convicted of conspiracy to commit
racketeering and two were
cleared of all counts in U.S.
District Court.
The club's jailed leader
was convicted of racketeering, conspiracy to commit
racketeering and conspiracy
to distribute drugs, but he
was acquitted on a firearms
charge. James "Frank"
Wheeler faced 30 years to
life in prison if convicted
on all counts.
Prosecutors said Wheeler
oversaw a highly organized
operation that sold drugs in
Ohio, Indiana , Kentucky
and Oklahoma while threatening and assaulting rivals
to protect their territory.
Jt's the second time in less
than a year that Wheeler has
been convicted on federal
charges. He was sente nce(!
to 16 1/2 years inprison in
.January for racketeering
and other crimes in Florida.
Wheeler's
attorney,
Patrick Helmick. said he
plans to appeal the latest
conviction , saying that
Wheeler was essentially
convicted on the same

charges at the first trial in
Florida.
Prosecutors hope thi s
case and an upcoming trial
this summer involving
another group of Outlaws
members named in the same
indictment will lead to the
dismantling of the club's
network s.
Assistalll U.S. A Horney
David Bauer would only
say he was pleased by the
outcome . He declined further comment , citing t.he
upcoming trial.
A few of those convicted.
sporting graying bearJs l
fought back tears when
their
verdicts
were
announced.
Jack Lee. who was
accused of running lie
detector tests to find out if
any Outlaws members were
working as government
agents , was cleared of all
·
charges.
"I never ' hould've been
here to begin with." he said
afterward. "What I did was
no different from what I've
done for police or anybody
else.''
During the trial, defense
attorneys said that while the
Outlaws often gathered · for
parties and road trip s. the
chapters operated independently and never conspired
to sell drugs.
They also criticized the
government's use of former

Outlaws members who
struck deals to avoid pri son.
Some of the I 0 I witnesses
who testified included former members who recorded
conversations and infiltrated mee tings.
Some .informants rec eived
mon ey from the government and had their rent paid
for cooperating with inve stigators. defense attorneys
said .
The investigation into the
club was sparked by a tip
that the Outlaw s was seekinne to take over a rival orga,
nization in Lima and reju venate its club in Toledo .
Several members of the
ril'al group agreed to join
the Outlaws, but one went
to the FBI in 1997 after he
was threatened because he
fell behind on drug pay ments to ihe organization,
prosecutors said.
Others convicted Tue sday
include Gary Hol111 . former
president of th e Dayton
chapter; John P. Walker,
former pre , idcnt· of the
Indianapoli s chapter ; and
David Mays. former national enforcer.
The Outlaws are one of
the nation's four largest

motorcycle gan gs.

along

with the Hell\ Angels,
Pagans and Bandidos . They
have chapters in 20 states,
ELtrope.
Canada
and
Australia.

Introducing
Hoine Grown

LOANS
•••from your
Hometown Bank
Stop in for your Home Grown
Mortgage_Loan and receive a free
flower pot and planting seeds,
compliments of Home National Bank.
Call (740) 949-2210 in Racine and
(740) 992-6333 in Syracuse.

Wednesday, June 2, 2004

W.Va. Rowdies
holding tryouts
BARBOURSVILLE .
W.Va . - The West Virginia
. Rowdies Soccer Club' will
hold tryouts for the 20042005 U I.J Boys Premi er
Team (players born between
August I. 1990 and July 31,
1991 ) on June 8 at 6 p.m. at
the Barboursvi ll e Community ·
Park Fields t4-H side).
Players will be ex pected to
trave l during the competition
.... ea ....on .

For questions or directions
contact Vicki Adkins at 304or
see .
638 -57 68
www. wvrowdic s.\..'0111.

Jessica Lynch
tourney planned
PARKERSBURG. W.Va.
- Jessica Lynch Freedom
Women's Fast Pitch Softball
Tournament will be held Jul y
3-.J at th e Dugout Softball
Park.
'
The evem ·is open to adult
women's ,low pitch teams
and girl&gt; fast pitch teams
lOu. 12u. 14u. 16u. and 18u.
Four games guaranteetl.
For more infonn&lt;1tion contact Ron at (304 )422-3761

Ohio baseball
duo tabbed
by magazine
ATHENS ~ Two Ohio
Un ive rsi ty
pit chers
are
ranked among the state's top
I 0 prospect s for the upcoming 2004
Major
Lea g ue
Ba seball
Firsty e a r
Play e r
Draft. to
be held June 7-8. according
to the latest issue of Baseball
America magazine.
Junior right-hander Adam
Russell is ranked as the second-best prospect in the state
while 'en ior' ri ght-hander
Marc Cornell is listed at
eighth.
'The draft preview edition
of the national magazine puts
Ru ssell in its "Second to
Fifth Round Tale.nt" catego ry
and says this about the North
Olmsted produ ct: ''The 6foot-8. 250-pound Russell is
an intimidating pre sence on
the mound: His fastball also
c·an be intimidating when it
reaches 95 mph with electric
life in the zone. Because ot
hi s ceiling . he should be
drafted in the first three or
tour rounds ...
Russell. who was drafted
by the Florida Marlins in the
20th round of the 2000 MLB
Draft , made 12 appearances
with II starts during the ·'
2004 season and posted a 1-3
record with a 4.50 earnedrun average. His 61 strikeouts were the second-best on
the tea m while his 64.0
innings were third -most on
the staff.
Cornell was drafted by the
Cincinnati Reds in the fifth
round of the 2003 MLB
Draft but chose to return to
Ohio for his senior campaign .. In 2004, the co-ca ptain
from
Columbus
appeared in eight games with
five st&lt;trts. posting a 1-2
ree ord with a 10.42 ERA.
De spite hauling injury problems durin g his final two seaw ns, Cornell still finished
his career tied for seventh in
s&lt;:.hool history with 187
strikeo uts.
For live coverage of the
2004 First- Year Player Draft,
pll!ase visit MLB.com.

Reds fillet Marlins, 7-6

Team
Smarty's
amaz1ng
.
.Journey_

MIAMI tAP) - · Adam
Dunn's slump appears to be
over.
Dunn homered twice,
including a tiebreaking drive
in the IOth inning, and Ken
GrifTey Jr. homered for the
third time in five games ·to
lead the Cincinnmi Reds over
ihe Florida Marlins ,7-6
Tuesday night.
Dunn. i.n ·a 1-for-29 slide.
was taken out of the starting
lineup for Monday's 'cries
opener.
"I relaxed and cleared my
head.' ' he said. "I had some
things worked out in the bat ting cage. Today. I felt pretty
good ...
With the score 5-all in the
I Oth .. Dunn connected off
Nate Bump (0-3 ) for his 14th
homer of the season. Wily
Mo Pena added un RBI single
for a 7-5 lead.
"They're a lot sweeter than
when yo u homer when
you're losing by nine." said
Dunn . who had his second
multihomer game of the season and the sixth of his
career.
Griffey tied the game 5-5 in
the seyenth with a solo homer
off Matt Perisho. the 495th of
hi' career and 14th this season. &lt;llrilfey also homered
Sunday. moving past Lou
Gehrig into 20th place on the
career list.
"Hittin g is contagious:·
Cincinnati's Sean Casey said.
Mike Mordecai had an RBI
single in the bottom of the
I Oth off Danny Graves. who
then retired Larry Sutton on a
game-e nding tlyout for hi s
25th save in 29 chances.
"Every run we scored Iva &gt;
big... Reds manager Dave
Miley said.
Brian
Reith
( 1-1 ).
Cincinnati's sixth pitcher. got
one out for the victory. the
Reds' IOth in 13 games. The
Reds ' bullpen did not allow a
hit until the lOth .
"When you get to extra
innings. there's no margin for.
error. and they ·have niore
guys who can pop it out of
the park than we do.'' Marlin'
manager Jack McKeon said.
Brought in to face the
Reds power-hitting left-

Please see Reds, Bl

Belmont
Stakes

•

•

'

Bv

RICHARD ROSENBLATT

Associated Press
NEW YORK - It \ a tale a;,
fL'!lKt.rkabk a-.. an~ ~oap op:ra:

murder. a 'tar 11 ho almu.,t die,.
bll rlayer' \\'hll become
...:l' lehri tic...,.
Onl1 S1mu1y lone' ran top
all the drama " ith a Bel mom
St&lt;the' 1Il'lnr\ Saturda1 t(&gt;r the
tiN Tri pie- C row1i " nee
..l.t'tirmcd in 1978.
.-\ml it'll he a maJhou'e at
Belmnnt 1\nl. 11 here nearly all.
ol &lt;Ill e\jl&lt;'ctcd recunJ crowd of
120.1XXI 11ill be cheeti n!! for
t h~ Penn'' II ania-hrcd c&lt;)lt 10
hc'c'\ HllC tlic 12th hor;c to win
ral"ing\. mo . . t CO\Ct~d p1i1e .

··Jt ·, time f&lt;&gt;r tht• c·oronation
of" nc11 'champimL.. Atlinned
jockc) StcYe Cauthen say,.
··11·, 11hat racing needs. what
l'\L'J\LlllC j.., ,, ·aitin~ for.··
Should Smart1 -lone' u&gt;mpktc a 'weep ot' the Kentu cky
DerbY. Preakne" and Belmont.
he \\';Iu ld juin s~attk Slew as
the onl y· unbeat en Triple
Cm11·n 11·inne r,. He'd also eam
a :'15 milliun homh and become
:\unh America\ ric he,t racehnr ...ce '' ith nn~r S 13. million in
l~arnin ~-. .

"Jt',- been an unbe lievable
jnurnc) ... 'aY' Pat Chapman.
who owns the linlc red chestn.ut
coh with her hu,blmd. Roy.
Tile varn kature' a fom1er
trainer ~, bin in Jcr,ev: Phillvb&lt;N'd m\'ller' ·ll'ho ;old thei r
!'arm .!lld all but l\10 or their
hor-...c . . : Srna11y "ilamrning hi :-.
head on a -...t~u1in~ ~ate and

near!) killing him;eil: and a
trai ne r &lt;IIlLI jnL· ~ e' from
l'hiladclphia Pat:k. a , 1i1all-time
tra,·k rardv a"'' ciatcd with
high-q u;tlity ra,·ing.
Ju,t ti1ur Lla" before the
Belmont. trainet: John SeJYi' is
Cincinnati Reds ' Ken Griffey Jr. watches the tl1ght of his home run otf Florida Marlins '
Matt Perisho in the seventh 1nning Tuesday in Miam 1. (AP)

Please see Smarty, 82

Indians struggle once
again in extra innings
Bv ToM WJTHERS
Associated Press

ha se,-lo&lt;~Lkd

jam in the lith and

FranL· i~co Cu t·~k·rn \\UrkL·d tl pcrfet't

12th for 111 , 17th &gt;&lt;II'C in 17 tric, . H ~
tied John W,·ueland I ILJY!Ji and Jetl
CLF.VEI.AND - Rnd IJ&lt;~L ij&lt;~&gt; W&lt;h Zimmcrm&lt;~ll 120021 for 'the club record
able to blud. nut the late lu&gt;ur ·a,Icl the for con-.ccut i \ c- "~I\ c-....
late innliH!.

Baraja,-hit l1is 'cwnd homer ol the
~amc \.\'ith onL' &lt;)lit in thl' I :!til on
Tuesday niglll to ~i1 c the Tna'
R a n ~c r s a 6-5 \'il'tor\' o\·cr the
Clcv'cianJ Indian ,. 11'11D h;td their four,
g&lt;.t lll t' winning ...,trea~ -. tnp pcJ.
~araja .... who a hn holllL'Il:d in thL'
third . drove a 1- 1 pi1ch from J.tic·k
White t2-l) into the Indi an,· centerfield bullpen for hi''"' ~ n th lwm,·r and
first career lllullihomer c: ame.
" I \\i.l~n·t th in~ill!.:. .tl1mtt h i llin~ . 1

Fuur other rclic\cr:-. _ Run Mahay.

Ja\' Pu11ell. Bri;~n Slu&gt;u'c and Frank
helped Tcxa&lt; bullpen
Fr:1nci,ct&gt;
pitl·h :'i ~- .1 . . curl'k':-.:-. inning:-; afte r the
l nd~&lt;ut' tied it at fi1e with a three-run
'i .\I h.
Vi ,·tor ~lartinct had three RBis fnr
Jhc 'treah Indian, . 11 ho ju't c'lllllJlldcd a 1.\-1.1 tvla\ dunn~" 111ch thev wun
three . in a row: l1"t rile."'''" five. \o, t
~L'\'t tl and wnn four.
Cln elar1d loaded th e ha,es _in the
lllh on th ree ,tr.ti0ht 111 n-nut walks
hpm cr.:· the Ran t!Cr\. ., catL;hcr ..,~·tid . ".. 111
oll brat tl·i..,cn. but the\ t';1ilcd In ~core
that \ itua ti on. v&lt;\u can 't \\'&lt;liT\ ahuut '' hL'll C;t-.c\ Bl;t~L· \\il..., thn1wn nu t at
w hat inninl.! il. 1s Pr hu\, til:L'c.i \uu the plate ·h1 third ha,cm&lt;lll HanJ..
miuht he. You ju't haw to ~ccp hat - BLiluc~ un Omar Vitqucl ·, attemp ted
tliJlg and try to g~t .. onK"I hing ~ni ng."' hunt.
Or in this ca,e. end a ~a me th:1t fin BlaJ..e " .t id \'i;qucl·, hunt &lt;Caught
i,hed ju't 11 hour' hd'oi~L' the Ran~cr' him h) ,urpri,c . and r: tu,~d him to
and Ind ian\ v..cre In pld~ ag;titL ht.-...,ttatc before hrL'a~in~ h) the plait'.
Wednc;.day \ fir,t pitch is "· lwduk'd
··11 just \\i.t'n ·t \l'r~ h e ad ~ up nn my
12:05
p.m
fur
Cleveland 's Matt Lawton reaches to grab a fly ball during the Indians· 6-5
Era,mo Ramire; (3- 21 c"·apcd a
Please see Indians, Bl
loss to the Texas Rangers in 12 inn ings Tuesday in Cleveland. (AP )
t

Thursday, june 3, 2004 -Pleasant\ aile) \I ell ness Center

• -l:30 p.m.- Grades 9to 12 (Boys)
r
{al~'

Home
National
I ,'-; Bank
~--'

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,-(.:..;;:1
'I

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•

• 5:30p.m. -Grades Gto 8(Boys)

Racine

Syracuse

740-949-2210 7 40-992-6333

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675· 72 22

PLEASANT
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HOSPITAL

�Page B2 • The Daily 5entinel

Wednesday, June

www .mydailysentinel.com

Pistons on all cylind·ers heading
'into NBA Finals after 01:1sting Pacers

Wednesday, June 2, 2004

Smarty
from Page 81

sull trymg to take it all m
"I can 't wan for the Belmont
during the second round, and finis~ed with him m the face with a toreann, apparently 10 be over to k1ck back and
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN
a combmed total of 13~ _ JUSt four more in retaha11on after Anest was hn below the look what's happened.'" he
Associated Press
than the record-low.
heft
srud. "It really hasn't sunk in
" It wasn' t intentional. He just ran into yet. When it does. it"ll probably
The Pistons won despite shooting a
AUBURN HILLS. Mich. - When a shade under 33 percent from the field.
me:· Artest said.
hn hke a sledgehanmter "
bad ~arne turned ugly. .Ri chard Hanulton
" It certainly had an tmpact." Pacers
·T o think we could win a ~an1e shootmg
A look al how Team Smarty
wa' mfuriated enough to make the shot of. 32 percent blows my mind.' Brown said. coach Rick Carlisle said.
arrived at the threshold of
the night.
.
.
Hamilton made both foul shots to gtve greatness THE HORSE
Hamilton scored 21 poml~. Ben Wallace
In one of the lowest-sconng games m had 12 points and 16 rebounds. Rasheed Detroit its fi rst lead. and Rasheed Wallace
Smarty Jones wa' born Feb
NBA playoff history. Hamilton ~11 a clutch Wallace had II points and II rebounds and followed with a dunk off a missed shot to
28.
200 I, with tramer Bob
running jumper from the left baseline Chauncey Billups added 10 points for the make it 63-59.
Camac
responsible for breedshortly .after heing tlagrantly fouled by Pistons
.. A four-point possession the way this mg the mare he had ptcked out.
Ron Artest
When the final buzzer sounded. Ben game ~as &amp;?ing. that ';Vas almost a quar- I" II Get Alon,\1., ami the stalhon.
The shot gave the PIStons a late four- Wallace twirled h1s way to center court and ter"s output. Brown satd.
Elusive Quahty
pomt lead, and Detroit went on to defeat joined a sptrited celebration that included
Hamilton. still upset over Arrest's foul.
Nme months later, Camac
the Indiana Pacers 69-65 Tuesday mght Rasheed Wall.tce and Hmnilton JUmping got called for a technical foul moments
and
his wtfe were murdered
and advance to the NBA Fmals
atop the scorer's table and salutmg the later, hut Reggie M1ller missed the free His stepson was convtcled and
, A thmg of beauty Game 6 ot the Eastern fans.
throw.
was sentenced to 29 years m
• Conference finals wasn' t. even to Ptstons
"I thitlk he hit me with a cheap shot. It"s Jail. Devastated. rntd with Roy
A chant of "Beat L A ·• rang out as the
: fans who booed m the tirst halt but were on Pistons were presented wtlh the Eastern all a part of the game. My teammates just
Chapman suffering from
: their feet by the end
told me to keep my mental part of the emphysema, the Chapmans
Conference champiOnship trophy•
.
· And it ceruunly couldn't have thrown
The Lakers were mstalled as a 7-poml game. Don' t let him get mto my head.'' were on their way out ot the
anything resembling a scare mto the Los favorite for Game I.
Hmnilton satd. "Sometimes tt takes some- horse business But they kept
Angeles Lakers. who will he the host lor
.. A lot of people don't expect us to wm. thmg like that to set you nght."
Smarty, who was training for
-Game I of the tinals on Sunday mght.
After Anthony Johnson missed a fast- the mc-es at Bndlewood Farm
but in our minds and m our hearts. we feel
"I dcq't know how people around the like we' re going to win a championship," break layup. Hamtlton came off a screen . m Ocala, Ra
• country viewed the game. but ~ s a coach Pistons forward Corliss Williamson said. caught a pass and dnbbled to hts left From
Fannmanager George Isaacs
: who respects hard play and effort. I was "We' re looking forward to the challenge. about 14 feel away on the left baseline. he told them 'Thts might be the
: glad to he a part of th1s:· said Pistons coach We· d love to he able stick our tongue out hn a running jumper for a 65-61 lead.
horse you 're wmtmg lor "
Larry Brown, who wi ll return to the final s at people."
'The kid has grown hefore your very
Smarty arrived at Serv1s '
for the first tune smce 200 l when he
Detroit became the first team to heat the eyes. sometimes you get to see that.'' said bam at Phdly Park last July 16.
coached Philadelphia.
Pacers after tmiling entering the fourth Pistons president Joe Dumars. who traded
days later, d1saster
This will he the Ptstons ' first trip to the quarter. Indiana had heen 9-0 th1s postsea- Jerry Stackhouse for Hamilton two years Twelve
nearlv stmck Whtle workmg
fmals since 1990 when the team nick- son m such situations.
ago.
m the startmg gate. Smarty
named "Bad Bovs·: tor thetr physical style
Anest then tried to dunk over Ben reared up and smacked hts
Jenname O'Neal scored 20 points to
of pluy won thetr second consecut1ve title. lead the Pacers, who were held to 10 points Wallace but mi ssed. and Tayshaun Price head on a metal bar. He frac"
It 's 14 years later, and the PIStons w1ll m the second quarter, I 7 in the third and 15 made a long 2-pointer for a six-point lead. lured his skull and nearly lost
enter the champwnsh1p round wllh a team 111 the fourth
O ' Neal's basket with 2:42 left was hts left eye, but made a comthat plays superb defense. Their offense.
Billups hit a 3-pomter 3 mmutes into the lndtana's last field goal until 40 seconds plete recovery
however, brings a dtfferenl connotatiOn to tounh yuarter 10 make tt 54-54. !he first lie remained.
His 1acmg debut was Nov. 9.
the "Bad Boys·· momker
"It was defimtely a series we should a bit late tor most prorrusmg 2smc~ 1l was 2-2. It was Billups first field
The teams combmed tor JUSt 60 tirst-haJf uoal alter startmg 0-for-8.
have won I heheve we wete the hetter year-olds but the colt crUised to
pomts. breakmg the NBA playoft record of " Wtth the score 5'1-59. Artest committed a team, but say mg tl ;md showing 11 are two VIctory by 7 3/4 lengths After a
62 set by the Ptstons and New Jersey Nets flagrant toul agamst Harmlton by striking d1fferent things," Johnson said
IS-length romp m the
Pennsylvania Nursery Stakes,
Serv1s knew something specml
was huppemng. A wm m the
Count Fleet at Ayueduct, and
Servts took h1s colt to
Arkansas. where he taught
Smarty to relax and turn on the
speed onl y when asked by
JOCkey Stewart Elliott.
Smarty Jones learned hts
dnne," Sindelar said. "Sure, you
was very new.
At 46, Sindelar was another lessons well. and won the
Bv RusTY MtLLER
Tile PGA Tour 111 those days never know 1f you're going to golfer past his prime who was Southwest.
Associated Press
and
Rebe I
was stocked with Ohio State Will agatn, but I never thought I begmnmg to wonder if he Arkansas Derby Although he
should look forward to seniors was 6-tor-6 going Into the
players such as Jack N1cklaus, wou ldn't "
DUBLIN - Fony-stx years Tom Wetskopf, Ed Sneed and
Few outstde of hts home In golf instead of ahead to the Kentucky Derby. he wasn' t
old and flush with his first tour Smdelar's teammate. John Horseheads, N.Y.. thought 11 2004 season.
even the mommg-lme tavonle.
victory in 14 years. Joey Cook, The Buckeyes won the would ever happen. Eleven 40Sindelar is coming home.
somethings won on the PGA
NCAA team title in 1979.
Now considered one 1of the
"We'd run out here and get all Tour last year _ Y1jay Singh,
elder statesmen in the profes- exCited and watch our favorites Kenny Perry, Craig Stadler,
sional ranks, Sindelar trans- play _ always the Buckeyes _ Scott Hoch and Fred Couples to
fonns into a college freshman and then zip over to our course name a few _ yet there was no
when he thinks back to the ti rsl ~md try to m1m1c everything we denymg that a 14-year dry spell
trip he ever made to the saw," Sindelar said. "Such l~tblt ­ creates a lot of doubts
Memonal Tournament
lous memones.'"
The field of every tournament
"I can still rememher how
S111delar made some more is Jammed with young and
nervous we were JUSt commg memones a month ago when ht) aggressive players who have
out to watch," Stndelar smd won
the
Wachovia heen groomed by swing coachTuesday, harkening back to the Championship, heating Arran es since they were old enough
late 1970s when he first Oherholser Ill a playoff. It was to gnp a club As they grow
enrolled at Ohio State. ·'The his seventh tour victory but fi1 st older, they henefit from weigh!
June
course was very, very new and since the I 990 Hardee 's traimng, nutrition counseling
tncredibly exclusive. The Class1c.
and vang uard technology m
Memorial Tournament ttself
"I never thought I was done clubs and balls.
~

2, 2004

~

Sindelar's long-awaited victory gets
him homecoming
ticket
to
Memorial
..

However. he had already won
over racing tans and wa~ the 41 top cho1ce when he "on by 2
3/-llengths.
Two weeks later. 11 was a
record-settmg II 1/2-length
rout 111 the Preakness
Smarty ha.s ~et to show signs
of fatioue dunng the strenuous
campaign, a problem that has
tripped up several Tnple
Crown contenders. mcludmg
Funny Cide. Silver Charm and
Al ysheba.
"I still haven't been able to
gel to the bottom of h1m.''
Servis said.
THE OWNERS
Roy "Chappy" Chapman
met Pat in the mid 1970s. when
she walked into h1s auto dealership in nonhea.~t Philly and left
wtth :\ I 976 Granada Stx years
later. the couple married. He
had three children from a prior
mamage: she had two.
Chappy loved fox hunting.
so Pat lem·ned to nde horses to
keep up Thetr mterest in horses grew and they purchased 11 farm in 1988, calhng tt
Somedav Farm hecause Pat
s.1ys: "We talked about all the
thmo s we were going to do
~
'
the1e"' some day Some
day we
were ooing to do thts. some day
we w~re go mg to do that ..
Tiley had no idea they" d ever
get a shot at the btg ttme. In
I 989. they won the Maryland
Hunt Cup Steeplechase wtth a
oeldmg named Uncle Merlm.
They hired Cm1ac in the early
I 990s. and gave him horses to
run , mostly at Philadelphia
Park
, In 1993, Camac recommended the purchase of the tilly I'll
Get Along .Jl the Keeneland
Septembe1 yeatling auct1&lt;:n.
The Chapmans hought her tor
$40 ()()() She won 12 ro~ces and
ean;ed $276.969 over live
yews.
By the t1me Smatty was
bom. Someday had heen sold.
Ch.1ppy"s health h.1d deteriorated and he was advtsed by doctors to take tl easy. The
Chapmans bought a home 111
New Hope. Pa , and they wmter m Boca Grande. Ra
Roy. who smoked three
packs of Lucky Stnkes t01
much of hts life. now uses a
wheelchatr and needs an oxygen supply t;mk to help wtth hiS
emphysema.

Reds
from Page 81
'

handed hitters, Perisho retired Casey for the
second out before surrendering Gnffey 's
homer.
'' I stuck to my plan , my plan wo tked
agamst Casey and my plan worked agamsl
Dunn," satd Pensho, who struck out Dunn to
end the inmng. " I just threw a puch mto a hot
hiller's swing."
Reds starter Aaron Harang allowed ftve
runs and l 0 hits in ftve innings, whil e
Florida's Brad Penny gave up four runs and
eight hits tn six innings.
Mordecai, who had caught only one time
previously in his career, entered in the second
innmg 111 place of Ramon Castro , who left
because of an mflamed nght b1 g toe.
Mordecai went 3-for-5 111 the plate but was 0for-4 m throwmg out runners attempt111g to
steal _ D'Angelo Jt menez swtped three bases
for Cincmnati. Mordecat 's other appearance
behind the pl ate was on April 2, 2001. for
Montreal against the Ch1cago Cubs

Indians
from Page 81
I

part," Blake satd "It might have cost us It
was dumb, but I won' t make that mi stake
again. That's somethin g I'll put in the back of
my mind.''
The Rangers suspected something with
Vizquel up.
.
.
..
"I've seen h1m do th at several tunes.
Ran gers manager Buck Showalter said.
"Fortunately, we talked about it Hank kept
his po1se and made a good play."
.
Texas starter Ryan Drese was 111 control tor
five inmngs and crut sed inlo the sixth Wllh a
5-2 lead . But on the thtrd ttme through the1r
lineup . the Indi ans got to their former teammate.
Matt Lawton si ngled leading off, and one
out later, Drese hit Jody Gerul with a pitch
Martinez foll owed with a two-run douhle into
~ the gap 111 right-center, g1vmg hun 35 RBls tn
28 games.
Trav 1s Hafn er then brought M&lt;trll nez

'

around with a double lo left-center.
Drese, traded from Cleveland to Texas in
200!2 along with catcher Einar Diaz m the
deal for Hafner, allowed five runs and eight
hits in 6 1-3 inmngs.
The rally kept Indi ans starter C.C.
Sabathia's record spotless (5-0 m stx starts)
against the Rangers, but contmued the lefthander's tough-luck ~e aso n .
. . .
Sabathia gave up ft ve tuns and st x h1ls 111
stx innings. Cleveland 's bullpen h.1s blown
lour w1ns for hun
"Lookmg up there and see mg no wm s
makes me lhtnk I' m press mg a ltttl e."
Sabathia satd. " I have to th row and attack
guys."
Chad Allen , who played five ga mes for the
Indi ans m 2002·. h1t a two-run double in the
fo urth and scored on Herbert Perry\ si11gle as
the Ran ge rs opened a 4- I lead.
Sabath1a struck out fmtr of the fi rst etght
R.mgers .md then hung a brealung pttch with
two outs m the thtrd to Baraps. the No 'I hn·ter. who pulled tt onto the home ru n porch
above let t fte ld for h1s sixth homer.
The Indians took a 1-0 lead in the f1rst on
M.trt ine/s RBI grou ndou t

'

txa~ng

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Sunday In-Column: 1·00 p.m .

Phone
Send Coupon and Payment to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

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1
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~~~~!~~~!~~~~:-~~~~~~£~~~~-------------~
Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tribute Is
Friday, June 11 , 12:00 Noon.

'

l'&gt;nA\

675-5234

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{p~
lr1't
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
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74

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARll S .\ LFI'&lt;nUU:&lt;n~llnnt

F

B•dwelt U M Church
Chu rch St B1dwell Oh1o
June 4&amp;5 Yard Sale &amp; hot
dogs Daked goods dr1nks
New Home tntenor, large
mens-wome n s
clothes
somethmg tor everyone

316 VINE ST., RACINE , Oh
ladies
lg-1x
(mostly
designer names), mens
lg-42 , toys, fu rn 1ture,
household , m•sc., Sal
June 5th, 8-Jpm ram or
shme

Community
Yard
Sale
Fnday Saturday Crndy Dr
clothes RM1 25 Suzuk.1, Bay
wmdow &amp; screens m1sc
Items

3rd 4th Woodrow Moras
State Route 7 by Meigs
Memory Garden 9 00 4 00
Lots ol s1ze 22 ctoth1ng

C-1 Beer Carry Out perm1!
tor sa le Chester Townsllrp
Me•gs County, send letters
ot mterest to The Da1ly
Sentinel PO Box 729-20
Pomeroy Ohto 45769

cha~rs-

10

110

HEl.P WANlTJ)

lwn ght@ •c net

ww.comtcs.com

PublicatiOn Sal es Co h ~r~ ng
18 sharp enthustast•c
lndtvtduals to tra vel the U S
Travel tratnmg, lodg•ng and
transportatiOn furmshed
Return Guaranteed Stan
Today 1-800-781-1344
Want a Great Job?
Want a JOb w1th Great Pay?
Wanl a $200 Sign on
Bonus?

some an t•ques lots of

Fnday &amp; Saturday ten ts
stroller g1rls clothes •n tantGarage Sale June 4 &amp; 5 4T Argner pocketbooks
Fn &amp; Sat Sam? 1149 new dresses m1sses 14
Bulavllle Pike
name b1and Jr g1rl clothes
m•sc household •terns Ma•n
Great Yard Sale Fnday 9·5 Stree t Rutland
Saturday g.? t 5 Oa kwood - - - - - - - - Dnve Galhpohs Furniture lns1de sale- 803 S Th1rd
lots ot house hold 1tems
Middle port June 3rd &amp; 4th
10-4pm 5th 10- l pm fu rmHuge 5 tam 1ly yard sale 614- lure tots of good m1sc &amp;
6/5 1012 Watson Ad 9am clothes
4pm Somethmg tor everyone
June 2nd &amp; 3rd 9 3 baby

150

© 2004 by NEA, Inc .
~,-~~-:-:----

74

Y·\H.IJ SAu-~
JlO.\U.ROY.fl\lmi)J ~

Tuppers Pla•ns com mun•ty
yard sales , Fr1 June 4t h
Sal June 5th, 9-5

Yard
sale· &amp;
Home
Oe(.;orallng Open House
Huge Community Yard Sale furniture bOys 0·2T cloth- Sat June 5th 8am-5pm
Eas t
end
Galhpol•s +ng antique dresser com- Glona 01ler 31645 SR 325.
Chestnut
Cha tham pu ler stand too ls, book· Langsvil le Oh 174017 42_
case whole house tan
Cruse11e
St
Thursday
2076
more
13 15 - - - - - - - -much
Saturday June 3 5
Bndgeman Street Syracuse Yard Sale Fnday-Saturday 2
Huge Rummage Sale June
miles South of Tuppers
t st th ru 5th Too many tte ms June 4-5 8 OOAM to ?? Pla 1ns on State Route 7
to mentton Also on June 4th Bas han Road Watch for
&amp; 5th 4-H Rummage &amp; Hot pmk s1gns lots of miscel la- Yard Sale June Third thru
Dog Sale Rummage hrs neous
F•fth
M•ncrsv1Ue Road
Bam-6pm all week Hot dog -Ju_n_e__5--9a_m_4_p_m_o_n Pmno freezer househo ld
4
hrs 10am-4pm Jet of State Route 143 3 miles 1tems mise
L•ncoln P1ke &amp; 141
from State Route 7, m1sses lli;:76F~~""':S~--..,

··
Saturday June 5 9· 4pm,
d
· 1890 51 AI 14 1 6/4104,• 61510 4 8 am- 6pm, Pr esto clothes househol 1tems.
mtsc 1183 Jackson P1ke
Pressure Canner, glass Jars. across from o ommo s
rug shampooer/floor pohsh- ==~------,-­
er, kerosene heater· lug- Vanet y of quali ty Items
gage , house hold Items. mclud1ng some collect•bles
clothes, much more
Saturday, June 5, Sam-not
before On St Rt 7 North
1939 Chatham St June 1st JUS! ~as t Galha County line
2nd 3rd Furni tur e dtshes. Watch foe signs
what-nots. clothes
Wed &amp; Thurs June 2-3,
234 Honeysuckle Dr•ve, Exerctse equtp Bee Hives,
Addison
Thursday th ru perli!IOn doors btcycles,
Sunday 9am·?
chest of drawers head~
3 family yard sale Clothmg- boards, &amp; trames, 3 k•tchen
alt SIZBS Including kidS, miSC cabmets w•th stamtess steel
Items a miles out 141, 8·4 tops, small desk &amp; more 76
V1ne St In back garage
Fn·Sat

?aturday June 5 8 30 5 00 Eltzabeth La they s
yard sale 1/4 m1le past
B1dwe11/Porter 10100 St
AT160 North Huge 3 famtly
yard sale Lots ol baby
1tems car seats baby 1urn1
1 n1ce baby
I
I
ure ex reme 1
Y 1 lh
L p
I
and todd er g1r co es a
top, scrapbook suppl•es
Home schooling books , lo ts
of m1sc •tams Ra1n date
M
J
7
onday une.

Sa turday, June 5, 9~3. 605
Ma•n Street Rec1ne , Dav•d
SpeCicer's Adult and teen
clothes AE, Aerc , pus h
mower. household •tams
Ram cancels

Yard Sale. Friday, June 4th,
Tha lend-A -Hand of the
729 Second Ave
HarriSOnville Presbytenan
Yard Sate June 4 &amp; 5 Fn Church are havmg a BAKE
Sat 8am-6pm 123 Ptne St and Yard Sale, Saturda)l
June 5th, 2004 The pro·
:G~ar
llip:;,;o:;,;"'~·~O~h~oo~
. :':'::-'-, ceeds
of the sale w111 go
~r4
YARD SAU:toward the Church Bulldmg
PoMF..ROYI!\1JDOI..E
Fund Everyone Wetcoma

99 P•ne Street Wednesday/
Thursday
8·5.
Jewetrylboxes , chairS, can·
nerf]ars glassware , whether
vane. matenals, sewing basket, salt &amp; peppers linens. 3 !amity vard sale, Sal 6/5/4,
books lots more Ra•n or 8-3pm , SA 248 top of
Cheste r H1ll, antiques, baby
Shine
1tems, misc. rain CiH shme
Ammal Welfare League
Yard Sale June 3.4,5, 9·4, 4 fam•IY yard sale, June 4 &amp;
91 Garheld Avenue Huge 5 112 mile out 124 toward
Rutland
selftb't!on olttems

y ,\Ril, AL·Jl'l: I'UA'tANT

II

Toys b1kes, ext door bas·
kets Fenton Home lntenor
curta1ns sheets un1lorms
wood Items speakers, fruit
1ara, k1ds &amp; adults ctothmg ,
too much to list. corner
Broadway &amp; Vine 1n Rac1ne
June 4th &amp; 5',h 9-3pm

110

Ht:u•WANlHl

"ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS!'
Want to look younger AND
earn Money? Let s talk the
NEW AVON call
Manlyn (3041882-2645,
Joyce 1304)675 69 19
Apnl1304)882·3630
Auto
Mechan ic/Small
Engm e MechaniC must be
alipenenced Shade Tree
Mechan•cs need not apply
(304)675·3600
:.::..:..:..:....:.....:..:._-::---:-AVO N' All Areas• To Bu y or
Sell
Sh irley Spears 304675 1429
Class A COl Drivers
Wanted

N[W PI\Y SCALE!!
3 Famil y Garage Sate June
03 7th s t
4&amp;5 8 00· 4 00 3
• Mm ot 1 yea r exp
New Haven Lots o1Items
• Medtcal Ins 40 1K
. Dom1c11e m Canton OH
4 Fa m1ly Yard sale Sa turday
. s.gn On Bonus
June 5th 460 Grant Stree t
• 36 cent per m11e to star t
Middleport Oh•o
• 95% No Touch
eNO FORCED NYC
Large 3 family basement
freight
sale
ColleCtibles
plus
Call 800-652-2362
Salem Street Rutland June

s1ze ma tt ress/spnngs, tools
b•cycle
furmt ur e
collecttbles much more Follow
garage sale s1gns

Moun_... HoMt~
11)R SAI.t

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today I 740·446-4367
1·800·214·0 452

Mob•le home and lot for
sale t4x 80 Mobile home on
n1ce level1 /2 acre lot 3 be d·
room 2 full bath All t:~lec tnc
central a1r good con d1!10n
10x 12 ut•llty shed on prooer·
ty Porter area 540 000 Call
(740)446-4514 days and
(740)446 3248 atter 5

8USIMX'l
A~D BUILillN(;S

dlscr•mlnahon ba&amp;ed o n

race, color, rehg10n, sex
fam•hal status or national
ong m, or any IntentiOn to
make any such
preference, 11milal10n or
dlscrlmmatlon ·

Maratho n
For
Sale
Store
Rt 2
Conv1ence
Ferry WV
Galllpohs
Stoc!V'Land &amp; Bulldmg
Some
Q\\ ner
F1nance
304 7621 11 7

Lms&amp;
AL"Rb\GE
14 acrec; 2 ca r garage
bam o.der mob1 le home
c1ty water M£liQS County
$40 000 740-742-3085
2 7110 acres Welcht own
Road woo ded, not le vel
$2 500 00 1660)563·3753

F1ve room house m Rutland
out of high watef $21 000
phone (7 40)992 0309

6 acres + water 8. electrrc
mstallod
1350
road
fron tage Wnte to J&amp;M
Fo r Sale 2B• House ul New Farms 960 McCully Rei
Haven $27,000 (304)882· Gallipolis OH 4563 1
2890
Lot fur Sate Nrce tP.vel lo t
Aprox 1/2 acre
area All ut•lllles
$ 15 000 Call
4514 Days or
3248 after 5

m Porter
avatlable
(740)4 46
(740 )446·

Mercerville Lots for sate
,.,
A'o
Grand
e
Spac,
us
shared
entral'ce ott St At
0
J1m s Carpe ntry &amp; sm all ~
Lan dsc apmg Call (740) 446- Log home 5 acres 3-4 bed 2 18 3·13 aces Phone
room 2 bath huge krtchen _17_4_0_12_56_18_2_5_ _ __
2506
Rool1ng Decks, Hardwood
Make SO "~o sell mg Avon flo or Installati on rem odel·
Top Notch
L1m1ted
t1me
ONLY •ng add•l•ons
Cont ractors
(740)446-3358 Frrsl 5 to call Build rng
rece 1ves a g1lt
WV036667 (304)675·5 490
or (304)675-3042
Med1 Home Heal th Ag ency
Inc seek1ng a lull-t1me and
PRN AN S, and a PAN
OccupatiOnal TherApi SI for

The Honey Doer Call me
wtth your Haney Do Lrst
{304)576-2835
cW:::a:_:
n:::te:...
d ::.
lo=:d..:
o.:.W
_ 'II-b-ab_y_s_'t-,n

th e Gal lipolis Oh•o a rea m(7y40h)o3m67e-ON4o2n9srnokrng Cart
Must be license d bo th 1n
Oh1o and West V1rg1n 1a We
offe r a co mpet•l•ve salary, Wt ll babysn 1n my home 25
benefit package tor fu ll-t1 me years
exper ience great
and 4Q1K E 0 E Please lam•ly atmosphere please
send resume to 352 Seco nd call (740)985-3840
Ave Gall1pohs, OH 45631
Attn 01an a Harless Cl1n1cal Will Pressure Wash houses
Manager or call 1-800· 481• mob•le homes metal bu lldmgs and gutters Call
6334
DehveryfWarehouse person -~------­ {740)446·0151 ask for Ron
needed full t•me, 1mmed+ate
or leave me ssage
open1ng, must have good Now hmng laborerslmatenat
I· " \ '\("I\ I
dnvmg record. apply at L1fe handlers &amp; machme operators
Dul•es
could
1nclude
Style Fur nllure 856 3rd
J210
HtrS!Nt~-Ave Gall• polls 9·5 no phone gnndrng, we ldmg, mak•ng
Boy s/G1rt's clothes • nama
sand
molds
handl•ng
01'1~lR1t
!NfiY
ca lls
Brand
Toys Anttques
molten me tal. dnll press and
Housewares At 2 North Hams Steak house Now lathe operators Th1s pos1
Oshel Road June 4&amp;5
Hmng (304)675·9726
110n IS phys•cally demanding P HtO VALLEY PUBLISH
and reqwres the flex•b•ht y to lN G CO recommencls tha
Large 1Sale Somethmg tor He lp Wanted- Mamten ance
work over t1me 1nclud•ng ou do bus•ness With peo
dlshwarel Supervisor, skills 1n plumb· weekends Apply m person
everyone,
le you know, and NOT tc
tootslant 1ques all clothmg •nfl electr•cal. heaMgl a•r
at P1oneer C1ty Cast1ng 904
end money through th~
tlems 1 OObag, Mason Co cond•t• on1ng a must Starling
Campus Onve Belpre OH • ma1l unt1l you have mvest1
Fa+r G•ounds 4&amp;5 8to4
salary range 18K to 25K
No phOne call s Please
kjated the ottenno
- - - - - - - - - Apply 1r1 person al the
Rummage Sale Thursday Hohday Inn of Galhpohs No - - - - - - - - Fnday-Saturday 9 to ? ::P:.:
ho::.n:.:•..:c.::.al.::.ls'------ Overbrook Center IS current·
PROFl..'i';tONAt.
ly accept•ng apphcaiiOns for
Sacred
Heart CathOIIC
SERVlCE:S
a part-ttme AN for the N1ght
HEY DRIVERS!! !
Cnurch Hat! 2222 Jackson
A
t
1
Here Is a great oppo rt untty Shift Supervisor pos•t+on
Ave Large ssor men
Please come m and fill out
TURNED DOWN ON
to come grow with us
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
an
appl,callon
at
333
Page
Yard Sale Un1vers•ty Lane, Kuntzman Truckmg, an 80
No Fee Unless We Wtn•
Street. Mtddleport, EOE
baby ttems, furn1tura co l· year old, RegiOnal Truckload
1-888-582-3345
lect1bles and ant1ques Thurs Camar w•th termm als 1n
IH
\ll,llll
- Frl &amp; Sat
· At11ance and Columbus Ohio owner/ Operators W1nted
has opened a new termmal
WAJVJ1':J)
In Piketon, Ohto Only nard 2 Senlement OptiOns pa1d
HOMFS
FOR SALE
L---·f(·J~HiitoiiY--pl worklnQ experi enced dnv- weekly
ers Wllh a clean MVR and a Home Weekends, domicile
.Absolute Top Dollar U S mm•mum of two years expe· m Canton Ot110 S1gn-On 3 bedroom Bnck, 1 112 bath
Silver
Gold
Co1ns r1ence nE!ed apply
1 acre tot Close to town
Bonus
Proofsels Dtamonds Gold We have opemngs for
Reduced Pnone (304)67595% No Toucn Fre+ght
Rmgs • U S Currency ·
15 Company Dnvers
1714
M T S Co•n ShOp, 15 1
15 Owner Opera tors
Call 800-652-2362
3 bedroom, 2 baths on 4 3
Second Avenue, Gatllpohs
For •nfo call Ray
acres In thfl Country Scenic
740·446·2842
1·866·436·1013
Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT's v•ew
S75 000
Call
I '11'1 0\ \II"\ I
lmmedtate opening lor an needed Apply at 1354
166
7401709
"'I I{ \ II I "'
(
.;
accountant postt ton Full Jackson P1ke. Galhpohs
;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;.,_ __, t1me med1um stze company
3 bedrooms, 2 bath f•replace
1-112 acres Buckeye Htlts
IIIO
Exp reqUJred. 9liCellent ben
Pleasant valley Ap artments Rd $SS,OOO
(? 40)709.
ef•ts 401 K Please send
ts accepting Applications 1166
resume to Accountant PO
For a n+ght Secur1ty Person :..:.:.::..---,:::-~:-:--:;-Box 606 Wellston, OhiO
$250·$500/wee"
For a family PrOJect FREE
l11ir Your f1ru .... , 1
45692
Wilt tra1r1 to work at home
RENT For details and appll·
, ,m·u I on f' 11n.. I hu :
Helping the US Gov1f1le
PT/FT Master SoCial Worker cations Call (304)675·5806 3 Bedroom, 2 beth 3 car
HUD/FHA mortgage
detached garage on 2+
needed for grow1ng D1alysts 9am-4pm
refunds. no expenence
acres Separate Off•ce plus
Facli•ly Must have or be ell·
necessary call
g1ble lo r trcensure m OhiO Pos1110n Open at Darst Adult 2 nice Storage Sheds
1·800· 778·0353
(740)867·4471
, Group Home (740)992·5023 (740)286·6336

..,

s

r

r

Al l real estate adYeriiSing
In th1 s newspaper IS
subject to the Federal
Fa1r HoU!ung Act of 1968
which makes 11 Illegal to
advertrse any
preference, llm1tatron or

Th1s newspaper wil t not
knowmgty accept
advertisements for real
estate wh1c h 1s m
vlolalton of the law Our
readers are hereby
mtormed that all
dwet hng a adYer11sed In
th1s newspaper are
I(IV&amp;IIable on a n equal
opportunity bases

miSC

women's mens girls 0 4T
boys 0· 4T computer stuff
fu rniture exerc •se eqUIP·
-enl baby turnllure. diShes
"'
L1ttle Tykes toys, Home
Intel lOr candles curtams "
beddtng bird cage tool box
boat-gas tank traile r _a xles
16 truck ttres tree •tems &amp;
tots more ram or shmc•

Hom:~

mH SAlt

TRAVEL U.S.A

Es tate Sa le 119 18 St At 7
Keeton res•dence Fr1day
9am-4pm Saturday 9am
3pm Lon gaberger d1shes
miSC

Sat , June 5th, At 7
Add1son
bes 1de
G&amp;G
Market NICe children adult
clothmg, m1sc items

85 Arnold Onve. Bidwell,
614-6/5 8·? Brand name
clothes all sizes crafts &amp;
household 1tems

992-2157

Display Ads

Friday For Sundays P a per

Benefit sate Ang•e s Flea
market Mechan•c St June
4·t 1 10Am-5P M Auct1on ,
June
12th
5 30PM
Proceeds go toward funeral
expenses Jotm Hess all
Fnday June 4th Western donatiOns elicept clothing
books &amp; more State Route For mlo (7 40)992 2509 or
218 Ba•ley Chapel Church 1740)742 1408
park.mg lot g.?
Enterpnse UM Church parkGarage Sale 700 3rd Ave rng to t June 4-5 9 00 to
June 3 4 5 9 5 Clo thmg 3 00 oil route 833 be tween
teen g• rls &amp; adult, old table la•rgrounds and Pomeroy

G A.LLifl'OUS

3Regi!)ter

Oeaclliiru

Daily In-Column: 1:00 p.m. ·
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

ADOPTION A lovmg cou·
pie woula l1ke to adopt your
newborn
WJII prov•de a
home filled w1th JOY happ•·
ness f1nanc•al secunty and
a great educatiOn Feel con ·
Iiden! In know1ng because of
your brave dec1s10n your
baby coutd took forward to a
bnght and wonderful luture
Expenses pa1d Cal! toll tree
1-866-731-7825
Barbara
and Michael

G l\ I..A\\ ,\Y

or Fax To

Word Ads

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

Y r\RI) SAI.E•

I

t

446-3ooa

Offtee 11o~~

r

1 Your Name(s)

1
I

or Fax To

Mutt• tam1 ly Fn/Sa t June 4 _s_&amp;_6_ _ _ _ _--::-5 9·4pm 19 Debbte Dnve. La •ge patiO sale- June 3 4,
Large hose found on 1 9mllesout SR 141 , Chest
5, 9-Spm new &amp; lJSed 1tems
Georges Creek Rd May freezer $25
househc ld The Andersons
46123
poss•bly belong to water •lems, loads ot bargarns on State Route 124 Rac ,ne
co mpany Call (740)446- clothing, mens 36S L&amp;XL,
7940 or {7 40\6 45· 1580
SIZSS 4- 10 women s SUitS, M1n1-Fiea Market, June 4-5,
home schooler stutl , end Ramer
residence.
table vacuum, gol f-bag
YARil s ,,LE
Tackervtlle Ad Racma K•ng

Happy
Father's Day

1 Father's Name

1
1

Call TOday...

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 67S-1333

FnUl\'ll

r--------------------------------------,

1 Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ... $10.00
I

Your Ad,

Huge yard sale June 3rd·
4th 5 m1les down At 7 on
Needs A Home
Fnendl y larger rntxed· breed the rtg ht Bab ylcht ldrens
dog. neutered al l shots, ctotnes &amp; Items home
hOuse broken crate-tra1 ned, decor 8 30-4 00
loves to run and to play ba ll
June 1 2 3, 14728 St At
(304)675 1066
55 4
Sidwell
fur nrture
Puppy
to
g1veaway antiques tools &amp; m•sc Ra1n
Australian
Shepherd, or Shine
German Shepherd call after
June 3 4 5, 8·7, Turkey Run
6pm (304}67 5-7713
Ad , Cheshtre Follow pm k
s1gns Ram Cancels
IAJ:&gt;I' AN!l

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

tlr::ribune

To Place

Free
Cocker
Spanrel
Fe male spayed Has all her
shots up to date, ms1de
tra1ned loves every one
Needs a good lov•ng home
she rs a grea t pet for Sr
Ctttzens she IS sma rt and
needs lots of love (304)773·
5899 ThiS IS not a mtxed
breed canme

Only$10.00

Love

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

Free 9 loot AlumHJum
Satellite D1sh w•th Rece•vers
Removal to my sat1sfact•on
!304)675·5975

,

Happy
Father's Day

Else Can!

Fo und Pretty grey/white cat
tound at Elizabeth F Davts
House -UAG
(740)245·
7 186 (7 40)441 -02 49 ask tor
Kara

Only$13.00

Mt&gt;IJ6 Co.,nty OH

We Cove
Meigs, GeUia,
And Mason
Counties I,Jke

PtloOne

r

1.)( 5 GreetlnQ &amp; Picture
"I catch these guys in the bullpen, so the
relievers I' ve seen ," Mordecai said. " It's actual ly a httle easier out there 011 the fi eld
becau se you don ' t have all the garbage behtnd
the pttchers m the bullpen hke beer stgns and
umbre llas that you have to battle "
.
Regular starter Mtke Redmond mt ssed hts
th1rd stratght game because of a bruised right
forearm .
After the game. the Marlins said they would
place Castro on the 15-day disabled list
Wednesday and will call up Matt lreanor
from Triple-A Albuquerque.
Dunn 's two-run homer and doubles by
Junenez and Jason LaRue gave C111cinnati a
3-0 lead 111 the second Dunn had been m a 1fol -29 shde.
Thtrd baseman Ryan Freel threw wide to
tirsl baseman Sean Casey tor an error on
Miguel Cabrera's grounder tn the third.
allowing Mike Lowell to score from th1rd.
and Penny's run -scoring stngle in the fourth _
his first RBI in 29 at-bats this season_ pulled
Florida to 3-2. Lowell then put Florida ahead
with a two-run single.
Barry Larkin tied it with a RBI single in the
l1flh , but Alex Gonzalez gave Flomb a 5-4
lead with a sacnfi ce fly m the bottom half

m;ribune - Sentinel - 3Re
CLASSIFIED

p

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
Very Special With A Father's Day
Thank You Tribute ...
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On Friday,
18th!

-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

""

w/pak cabmets &amp; •stand
cooktop, f1n1shed basement
wlgas log !•replace + centra l
heatla•r 30x54 hea ted wor k·
shop $197 000 (740)245·
9169

Two hornesrtes to r sale Boll"
one acre m' 3·112 rndes
from Hot.z:er Hosp1tal
620 Evergreen Ad $19 500
560 Evergreen Ad $18 500
Call (740)446 8840
or
4513
740
645
Leta1t Falls OH 3 bedroom (
) Farm
house 1 bath detached Want to lease
garage, new roof S1d1ng Acreage for huntmg camp Ill
wmdaws carpet &amp; k1tct1en Me1gs County area Call or
$65 000 00 (740)247-2000
teave message (304)849
9238
01 (304)849 -5701
Must Salelll i NJCe 3BR
18A beh1nr:l Armmy PI
Pleasant All Appl1ances
rncluded $65 000 F1rm
1304)593 3542
410

Rf.\T\1 S

HOL'SI·:'

HlR Rf.Vr
N•ce 3 bedroom t Oath
concrete driveway carport
$49 000
East
Be thel 2 Houses tor Rent 3 bed
Church Ad (740)441 9108
room 1 bath $500 &amp; $650
month
plus
depos1t
Pt PleasantiSandh•ll Road (740)245-9020
3Br 1Ba 1600/sqlt Ranch on - - - - - - - - 6 acre level lot Oak floors J
bedroom
hOuse m
1st house on· R1g ht past Pomeroy $400 a mo $400
Marshall
Un•ve rs•ty deposrt no pets (740)949$103000 (740)949 1131 7004
alter 5 OOPM
3
BR
ranch
Home
Moun.EHo\lf:s
wlatta ched garage m Pt
Pleasant area N•ce fe nced
rnu SAl •
yard m e,.-cettent ne•ghbor14x65 good cond•i•on very hood S675 monthly plus
Retere nces
clean new appliances out- depos1t
CaU 1·304·638
butldlng Ready to move 1nto requ1red
7411 or1·304·273· 11t2
(740)388-0460
t4x70 mobile home tur·
ntshed w1th all new furn•ture
2 bed room 29 It livmg
room 2 bath $6,500 neg
740..256·9247 , or 7 40-645·
0870

4 rooms &amp; bath 52 011ve St
No pets $300 month $300
depos 1 (7 40)446·3945

1-J 1ce 3 BA 1 BA beh1nd

Armory Pomt Pleasant AI!
Appt•ances 1ncludod $550
t 984 Schult z, 14li70 w/6x24 month (304)593-3542
pull out 3 bedroom, 2 bath
J420 MOilll~E HO\liOli
cond1110n
ale,
good
mRJb:NT
(740)992· 7651
1995 FMmont 14x80 3
bedroom 2 ful l baths total
electr•c. heat-pump uncler·
P•nn•ng, book for $16 000
w•ll
sell fo r S13 500
17401441. 0668

14x70 Mob•le home, all elec·
CIA, $350 month Near
160 Evergreen (740)4466865 or (740)446·6189
-------2 Br Mob•le Home lor rent on
Crab Creek
Ad
Ca 1
Coles Mob1te Homes 15266 (304)675 1206
uS 50 E Athens Ohto
45701 New summer tlours 3 bedroom all etectnc
M-T-W 8 AM to 7 PM Th - mob•te home Middleport
F BAM to 5 PM Sat 9AM to C A no ms•de pets S425 00
4PM "Where you get your ... deposit (7401992 -3 194
moneys worth "
_..:....:.:......_ _ _ _ __ 3 bedro om
corne1 ol
For sale or rent · 2 bedroom Creekv1ew &amp; Garners Ford
mob 1te homes starting at Ad
$375 rronth
$270 per month Call 740 S375 deposit $750 Move n
992-2 167
F•rm No pets (7 40\2455671
NICe 1992 Fa1rmont 3 bed·
room wtth central atr w1H Beautiful nver vrew 1deat tor
help with delivery Call N1kk• one or two people No pets
references (7 40)44 1·0 181
(740)385.~948
tr~c

�•

r

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

M~~

I

Po.rricia Michtu•J

Ridge, real nice,

Phillip
Alder

wou/(f like to thank

. (304)675-4S93

l'l'erymw for the
wrd:J, jlmt·ers, food,
uml prayers durir1g
the loss of our lo ved
one. A spt•ciol thcmks
to Pasror James
Acret', Sr. cmd Acree

6- Nice 2 and 3 bedroom
mobile homes for rent
includes water, sewer &amp;
)rash. no pets, starting at

')300 per month, 1n Sh13de
area, deposit required,
!740)992-2167

Nice 2 bedroom mobile
home.
No
pets. Call
(740)446-2003.

North

IF YOU RENT

6

e:o~tra large capacity, $165:
L1ke new Maytag dryer, extra
large capacity, $175: Twin
bed including bo11.springs &amp;
mattress. $75; Full size bed
with boxsprings &amp; ma ttre ss.
$125 ; Queen size bed with
boxspring &amp; mattress. $1 75;
King size boxspring &amp; mattress, $150; table with 6
chairs , $95; floral couch .
$95; chest-at-drawers with 5
drawers, $60; chest-of-drawers, solid wood, $60; dress·
er, solid wood light color,
$60.
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished, security depo§it
required, no pets, .74().992·
2218.
1 Bedroom Apartment. for
rent in Pt. PleasBnt, $350

required

• (740)446·2200

apt

· Washer/dryer hookup, $290
: rent, depc..1it required . No
pets. 740·441-1 184.

Clark
• included. s4oo month plus Chapel Road , Por1er, Ohio.
(740)446· 7444 1-877-830·
: deposit. (740)245-5859 .
9162. Free Estimates. Easy
:1
bedroomcomplete financing, 90 days same as
· kitchencentral
air. cash . Visa/ Master Card.
· References &amp; deposit. No Drive- a- little save alot.
pots. (740)446·0139.
Used Furniture Store. 130 ·
· 2 bedroom upstairs apt Bulallllle Pike. Mattresses,
: water. trash included. $285
dressers, couc he s, recl in·
• month,. deposit required .
ers,
bunkbeds.
Grave
· Weekends and evenings
Monuments. 2002 Bass
. (740)446-7620.
Tracker
Fishing
Boat.
2 bedroom. just past Holzer (740)446-4782. Gallipolis,

r

$425 month. Call F40)441· o,.H..
. _H.;'•· 1-1-·3;.,M_·_F_
. . . . ..,
1184
·
2 bedroom, references,
ANnQUES
.
Security, Racine, (740)9492517
Buy
or .sell.
Ri11erine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON 992-2526. Russ Moore,

0

I

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom· apartments at Village
Manor
an·d
Riverside
ApartmentS in Middleport.
From $295-$444. Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.
New 1 bedroom apt. Phone
(740)446-3736.

with scope $100.00. New
10-inch.
buffer/polisher
$20 .00. · (740)992·2217 _
--------DiYing board &amp; spring stand ,
2 stainless ladders, 1-1 h.p.
pump
&amp; · s3nd
filter.
(740)446-0014.

Nice 1 Br. Studio, Furnished,
Water. Sewer and Garbage
included $325.00 month +
deposit (304)675-3042

Nice two bedroom apart·
ments Large .rooms Fully
equiped kitchen Central
heat i·ng /coo ling - - - - ' - - - - Washer/dryer
hook up Easy Go Elec. Golf Cart with
charger. Excellent condition ,
(304)882-2523
$1,800. Call (740)645-4485.
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now tak ing Applications
lor 2BA , :!BA &amp; 48R..
Applications
are
taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9;00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is

For Sale- Amish built Oak
Secretary, $1,200. Call
(740)446·3963.·
--------JET
AERATION MOTORS

Home Grown Strawberries ·
available now at. Charles
McKean
Farm . Phone
1740)446-9442

Gallipolis, Washer/Dryer $100.00, King
Size Bed $250.00, Kitchen
Fami!y wants to lease nice
Table
$250.00,
with at. least 3 bed- Entertainment
home
·
Center
rooms with garage, needed
'pnmediately.
$75.00,
Plano
$350.00
Call Jackie

i

o

ll \ \ PI -.. 1

~OLD

Gooui

I
.

birch doors , oak trlm , 2
wash basons, 1 toilet. Call
(740)446-1712.

1

FARM

'Good Used Appliances,
and
'Recondilioned
Guaranteed.
Washers,
Dryers,
Ranges ,
and
RetrlgeratOf's, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne St .. (740)446-7398

.

TRUCKS

4&amp;
5

hookups

fUR SALE

949-2734

1992 Dodge 350. 5-spd.
Diesel . 8 ft. AI. flat. high
miles. Good 1ruck. $5 ,500.
(740)643-2285.

West

Henderson, WV

.
•

875-2457
Cell

Phone

· cakes

bfLora
.• Any special

r

40

Place your order

·.

Auras

(740) 985·3917
Lora Bing

the PAIN

out of PAINTINGI
Let me do 1t for youl

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Dealer; EasT
Vulnerable: Neither

FOR SALE

02 Yamaha VSTAR 11 00
Classic.
4800
miles,
$500I.POLICE IMPOUNDS,
Loaded. (740)446-6304.
Chevys, Jeeps, etc I
Hondll Cera from $500. 1997 Suzuki GSXR 600.
For llsllnga 1-800·749· Helmet, cove r, plenty ol
8104 ext 3901
extras,
$4,500
080.
(740)44 6·2 158.
1988 Nissen p1ckup, $1,695:
1995 Cutlass Cirea, $1,995; 2002 Yamaha Warrior 2WD
1998 Grand Am , $2,895 . 4/Wheeler. Purchased new
Others · in stock. Cook April 03 , 6spd . Appro)(
Motors (740)446-0103.
75hrs. w/extended Warranty
$3,800 (304)593·4177
1991 Chevy Cavalier, body
Suzuki.
Ca ll
good condition, $400, call RM125
(740)388·8 188.
'(740)992-6079 after 5pm.

fl50 BoATS &amp; MOTOR~
tuRSALE

&amp;

Walls

;: -. .,

CLfAN ...

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center
316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164

needs motor. body good
shape, will take $350. sarious ca lls only (304 )675 _
_
3343 304 675 7806

Hill's Self
Storage

~PJIIilii'J.

29670 Bashan Road
Racme, Ohio
4577 1
740-949 -2217

'SIZ8!1-5'x10' ....

'tQ-10!1130'

7:00AM - 8:00 PM
1/14/1 mo . pd

R.B.

River Way Cafe

Trucking

740-992·2507

Syracuse, OH
Call for Daily Specials

ORD@~
W~LCOM[

CALL-IIJ

Monday 9am-2pm
1\les - Fri 6am-8pm
Sat 1o Sun 7am- 4pm

BARNEY
'WEEZY'S OUT
YONDER PLOWIN'

1

I KNOW, I
COME TO
HALP !!

i
i

Gravely

Ir

Snapper

•

GRAVELY TRACTOR

;.J..L_J

204 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

9192-2975
Law11 a11d Garde11 Equipme111 i.• our
busi11ess, 1101 our sideli11 e
Manning K. Roush
Owner
0

Come ~ee out new

aL.:...:-..LL.LJ

THE BORN LOSER

SALES &amp; SERVICE .

n Mon-Fri 9·5 Sat. 9·12

~

1"':

SORI&lt;:.Y, N:.to\E:.':l. Gli&lt;.C&gt;YS 00'\
COIAf.. \0 TI-\E:
P\-\Ot-1(.-~.('') ,..{,....,L

SWE.i'-.\lt-1'
w111-\ \1-\t.

~)

WORK.IW,OJT

TO ~&lt;. .r.IC.I-\f&gt;.KO . ,__.--....
Sl/1\fi\Ot-15

TI\Pt. 7

OlC&gt;ID!

REENHOUSE
SUE's
Meigs County's largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrullllery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhoaoaenarons,.ana azaleas.

ONLY THIN(;S 1111
IT ,ro,F.,E AWARDS WOtJ

T~E

SY E I THE!'- ARTUit.
OR C:.tNA! IT'S LIKE A

$HRlNE TO THEti'WONOERFULNE'&gt;S!

30 • Racine,

1-740•949-2115

sum met menu!

'r

OH

TFN

BISSEll

Gallipoli s, OH WVOI021"2
446-9416 r 1 ~ 800-872-5967

BUILDERS InC.

PEANUTS

.!li'see

New Homes • Vi nyl
Sidin g • New Garages

1;

'{OlJ CAN'T DO

Rocky' "RJ"

• Repl acement

Windows • Roofing

MUC~,T140U614 , WITI-l

TJ.IIRW-FIVE CENTS

Hupp

COM ME RCIAL and
R ESIDE NTIAL

IMPORTS

FREE ESTIMATES

Athens

7 40-992-7599
Repair
RockChips
&amp; Cracks

Windshield

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE
Owner: Jeff Stethem
Office:

(740) 991-1804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
POWER WASHING

(Commercial and ~esidential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awninss, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Trucki ng and Dump Trucking Companies.

L.w-liiiiiiliiOi.iiiiiiiliiio,J

LAWN CARE DIVISION

1991
Nomad
camper.
Excellent
condition,
$14,000. Slide ou t 5th
wheel. (740)256-6392.

(Commercial and Residential)
MowinB, Trimming, Tree Trimm in g, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraymg of fence lines, Lea l Remo11al, as well as sm all
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

For sale: 91 Avalon 35'
camper wltipout , steeps 4,
w/full accornmodations, like
new, as~ing $5800, call740385·9948
-'-------Slide IN Camper. Great condillon. sleeps 4 comfortably.
Must s881 Asking $800
080. (740)379·9515.

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

Cars~ Trucks·RV 's

740-949-1910

Dean Hill
~ew &amp;. Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

MtJbile Sen•ice.\·
Available

HOWARD l.

WRITESEl
*HOOFING
*HOME
MIINHNANCE
I dEAMlESS
GOnER

BETIY
'TilE USUALA LONE \-IERO
WHO STAND$
FOR Wf.lAi'S

RIGHT

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's

#I

Chevy.

'TllAT SOUNDS

~~my

GOOD - 1 THINK l'D

UKE. 1D ROO SOME.-

. tm .. :rne

Cf:JMIC BOOKS
A~E THIS

IHING ~II(E ~T MYSElf

WAY..

Pontiac. I:Jul('k, Olds

&amp; Custom Va n Dea ler"

*free Estltttlteb

949-1405
I

Sunset Home
Construction

--I.J

HAVE NO'I'HINC,
CELEBRA-re

0

'1'0

0

Bryan Reeves

L.-iiiMiiiiiPRO-V
iiEMENTS
."

New

Homes,

Room Additions,
Garages , Pole
Buildings, Roofs ,

I

Siding, Decks ,
Kitchens, Drywall

&amp;
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report
Form 990PF for the
Kibble
Foundation,

Barnard

V.

Fultz,

Trustee Ia available
for public Inspection
at Bernard
F ullz
Law Office, 111 1/2
West Second Stroot,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
during regular busi-

v.

ness hours for a perl·
od of 180 days subsequent to publication
of this notice.
(5) f.~ . 18, 19, 20, 21 ,
24, 25, 26, 27, 28, (6) 1,

2

· The Home Nallonat
Bank will auction the
following
Item
on

Saturday,

June

More

FREE ESTIMATES!

74D-742-341

5,

2004, at 10:00 a .m. at
the bank's parking lot:
2002 Dodge Dakota
Quod
Cab
4x4
1 B7HG38NX2S696325
,
Loaded,
37 ,400

miles, ·extra nice.
1997 Chevy Cavalier
1G1JC1249V7145188
The Home Natlonar
Bank reserves the
right to rejecl any and
all
blda .
For
an
appointment to see,
call 949-2210, ask for
Shalla.

(6) 2, 3, 4

4•

Pas~

Pass

Pass ·

G

BIG NATE

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,
ALL ON SALE NOW!!
Morning Star Road · C.Rd

l'i!~~.'Yl ~~!~!! '~- .

CAMI'ERS &amp;
MOTOR HOMES

Shop the
Classlfleds!

HALLELUJAH !! 1 WUZ
WONDERIN' WHO WUZ
GONNA FIX
MY LUNCH!!

l

Open 7 days a week!

t:;.-,., ... .

7570 after 7PM
--------94 Mazda MX3, standard,
' llnttt'\
cld, air, pw, sunroof, leather nri;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
interior, (740)992·3478 after rto
H OME
5 pm, can be seen at 50i

r

Big Bend Antique
and Furniture
Restoration
Refinish, Repair,
Restore
Keith Bailey
(740 992-1956

New Hours

· Residenl iul &amp; Manufactured Hou sing
Air Condition ers, Heal Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmenlt&gt;,
• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; I0 yr Warranties· . . •
• Hu ge Inventory
.,
. _-;.
,..
• Vanguard Vent less Firepl aces "f ~·, ,
t

. ..,

ump
on
SAVINGS

!. ' !

Hours

BENNETT'S

j!i~~~..:;.;.:;;;;;.,.

94 Toyota 4X4 pickup 4-cyl 5
BASEMENT .
-speed. Professionally hf1ed
WATERPROOFING
126K mllea gqod condition Unconditional lifetime guar·
$2,800.00 (740)742-1316
antes. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
B ~~~
99 F-150 Trl1on Lariat. Fully
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
L~---iiuiiior
r~
---,.J. loaded, low miles. (740)367- 0670, Rogers easement
;..78.::2:_1:_
. - - - - - - - Waterproofing.
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
Rom• Auto Salal
windows, lin tels, etc. Claude
1-818-777-1342
Winte rs, Rio Grande, OH
Call740-245-5121 .
2000 Focus, $4,995; 2000
Taurus SES, $5,395; 1999
PETs
Aiero, $5,999; 2000 Grand
FOR SALE
Am, $5,695; 2000 Grand
AKC Australian Shepherd, Am , $4,488; 2000 Impala,
black/white/tan· markings, $8.999; 2001 Focus. $5,999;
male puppy, mlcro-ehlped 1997 Breeze. $3,988; 1998
$250.00. AKC Miniature Sable, $3,999; 1997 Sunflre,
Schnallzers
puppies, $3 ,795; t999Concord LSI ,
2000
Ranger ,
salt/pepper $400.00 each. $4,999;
AKC Pomeranian puppy, $6.999.

ANl&gt; GOING ...

-

TH' FIELD, ELVINEY

HEATING f/ COOLING

1996 Pontiac Grand AM ,

East
l olo

ofo J.

II helps to have imagination to play bridge
well. Most br1dge players do not lack
imagination. but they play too quickly to
use it. Would your Imaginative play make
this four-spade contract?
After East opened one club, South took a
two -way shot If four spades made. great
if not, maybe the opponents would have
done well in hearts.
The defenders began with ' lhree rounds
ol clubs _ If you had been South . what
conclusions would you have drawn?
When the clubs split 3-3, deClarer realized that East had started with eMactly 34-3·3 distribution . So, to reach those two
heart tricks, there was no chance of
drawi~g trumps in two rounds and reaching the dummy with lhe spade nine.
Imaginatively, al trick lour, South led the
spade 10. It East had won with his jack.
dummy's spade nine would have become
an entry_ However, Eas1. who now knew
South musl have a heart void (else he
would have claimed), didn't cooperate.
playing his spade three .
East was marked with the diamond k1ng
for his opening bid. but as we have
already noted. it couldn't be singleton or
doubleton . So, drawing tru'mps and playmg the ace and another diamond. ducking in the dummy. couldn 't work . Was the
contract the refore unmakable?
No_ Solrth cashed his spade ace and
corltinued with a low spade. giving Easl a
trick with h1 s jack. This endPiayed East.
He had either to lead a hei::!.rt to dummy's
honors or to play away from his diamond
king . He selected the former, holding
declarer to 10 tricks : s1x spades. two
hearts, one diamond and one club

.,

Kelly K. Jones

Dr.

f[All.' f!ii.ln""""7

lw---KEII\--lR--,J

North

Can't do it?
Get them to help

DUST 8UNNifS--NO .-.. \ \ _., ..• Tti~Y JUST ICf~P GOING
MATnfl tiOw MUCtl - A., 1-::::-/ AND GOING
YOU ,

(304) 273-5321

1998 Kawasaki jet ski 1100
ZXI. Less than 100 hours
usG.
With 19991 trailer.
only.
Serious
inquires
740 441-8285 .
~~;;..:.;:;:;::;:;.. . . . . .~
...Arnn

West

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

l

740-985-3564
'
.

South

Opening lead:

rrr-.-.-r-,--::::r-1

• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

AKQI076 5

• A .l -1
... Q 7 2

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
" Your 011e Stop Poured
Solid Co11crete S hop "

today

Tree Service

MmnRcvcu:~ I • Limestone

10

South

Free Estimates

occasion

JONES'

HAULING:

J • 3

Q 10 9 8

.. A K 8

674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Foundation.•, Basements; Floors

Advertise
I High &amp;Dry . in this
space
SeU-Storage
for
33795 Hiland Rd.
$50 per
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-5232
month

r~

•

•

Specializing In Pou red Concrete

Ta~e

'%4......

3
t;ast

+ KJ

.... J I 0 5

StateWide
CNE Poured Walls

Creative

J7H 32
9 76 3

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

fowe r-windows. ' high miles.
runs good, looks good. 740446-0500. Ask1ng $6,900.

r

Thompsons Appl iance &amp;
Repair-675· 7388. For sale,
re-conditioned automalic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators, gas and electric
ranges. air conditioners, and
cream, male $400.00. All Vet
TRUCKS
wringer washers. Will do checked and hdve 1st shots.
FOR SALE
repairs on major brands In
snap ot at your home.
AKC Lab puppies. 8 weeks
82 Dodge, runs good, looks
New sola and chair, $350. old, ChOCOlate &amp; Yellow. 1st
fair
$700
080.. Call
shots &amp; wormed. (740)367·
New recliners, $150.
(304)675·5131.
MoNahan's (740)367·7015.
0038 (740)367·\202. I

'

•Weddings

also Campsites

r

'

Syracuse

. "'

MONTY

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

SFREE

• Birthdays

available with full

4 FT Bush Hog , Stump 95, 4 x4, Chevy ext. cab

You may quality tor 50% off
a used computer system.
Call ReUse. Thurs-Sat..
10AM-6PM (740)698-8200

r. 5

Ru y $5.00
Bonanz a Get

+ Q B2
... 9 H

ij~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, 94 GMC 4x4 JSO. Auto.

_1304--)6-75_·_234_9~~-- ::M:.:u:.:lbo::r.:.:ry~A.::v:.:e:. . ~---

740·589·

Bring this coupon

Licensed in Ohio and wv

Friday, June

of

• f\'er y month
AII pack $5.00

740-843-5264

1994 Ford Ranger Exlended
Cab 4x4, 4.0. V6 Engine.
Amish Cheese, Lunch Meat,
ca ll (304)882-2928 after
Fresh Fruit and Vegeta bles
11 :00 ar:n price reduced
Open Thurs- Fri-Sat. 1354
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, 1999 S- 10 truck 4-cyt stanOhio. (740}446-7787
dard shllt, AJC, topper, 35K
miles
$4,500.00
firm
(740)992-1683

rL,--oi°EQulPMiili i i li iENfli l-,.1·I·

· Last Thursday

Box 189 • Middleport

KESSEL'S PRODUCE

r

I~ C

r

6:30

Rocky Hupp Insurance
~and Financial Services~

FLEA MARKET
AT MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
State Route 124
Between Radne and

MYERS PAVING

Early birds start

Call:

Spaces available,

Located at 1151 Evergreen RepB!red, NeW &amp; Rebu1lt In 1993 Dodge Spirit AJC, tilt,
Drive Point Pleasant, WV Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· cassette player. $700 OBO.
Phone No is (304)675·5806. 800·537-9528.
(740)256·1652.
E.H.O
1995 Saturn SL, 4 dr., s'enTaking applications for 1
Uft ch air.. 2-way recline, light dard, AC, cassette, needs
bedroom apt. bath, living brown, used only 5 months, rings, $800 OBO, (740)992·
room. kitchen with appli·
excellent condition. $500, 0.B2_·:_9_1e-'a-'vo"-m-'e-'ssa...:.Q•:_·_ _
ances furnished. Deposit, no
i7 40)94 9· 248 1
1997
Suba'ru
Legacy
pets. Can (740) 446-1370
Outback, 78,000 miles, vefy
Tara
Townhouse NEW AND USED STEEL
good
condition ,
many
Aper'tments, Very Spacious, Steel Beams, PiPe Rebar extras. ·All Wheel/Drive
For
Concrete,
Angle
,
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
$7,500 (304)675-3514
i/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drains, 2001 lsuzu Rodeo, 4WD,
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Grating
&amp;
WalkWays.
L&amp;L sun root, fully loaded, e&gt;:celDriveways
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security Scrap Metals Open Monday, lent condition, warranty.
Deposit Required , Days: Tue sday, Wedne.sday &amp; 32 ,500 miles. $12,800 .00
740-446-348 1; · Evenings: Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed (740)949·2 115
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
740-367·0502.
2001 Saturn, 4 dr, auto, air,
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- - - - - - - - - - like · new, 28,000 miles.
ing applications lor waiting Pole Barn 30x50x10 only $6995.00; 1998
list for Hud··subslzed, 1• br, $5,295, includes painted Dodge Caravan. 4dr, V-6.
apartmen t, call 675·6679 metal , plans how to build auto, air, nice, $5795.00;
book. Flider free delivery. and many more great deals,
EHO
( 937 )789 _0309 .
·
trade
in's
· welcome,
Upstai rs fu rniShed· apt. 3 ~-------- Riverview Motors across
rooms &amp; b ath . Clean. no Song of the South "Tale s of from Speedway Pomeroy,
Oh (740)992·3490
Pets_ References &amp; depos it
Uncle Remus". lull lennth ---'-2-·C.:..:::..:...:..:...___
required . (740)446·1519.
&gt;~
VCR tape $29.00. Avail able 92 Blue Ford Taurus 65,QOO
in DVD. Call Toll free 1-888- $2,500/0BO can be seen at
728·6441
Sears Gallipolis or ca ll
(740)446_1546 . (740)446 _
to

For a Free Quote or Appointment

Saturday, June

r

CONVENIENTLY LOCATEO &amp; AFFORDABt.EI
Townhous.e
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111
for application &amp; information .

\I I

Doors Open 4:30

jumper, used very little ask·
Auto: · 5.7 liter, runs great.
ing $350. (304)675-6440
$4,900. Ca ll (740)643-2167
Allis Chambers 720 tractor
~ow;n~e~r~----------~ with cab: real good condi~
Mlsrn.J.ANEous 11ion. $5,200.00 1740)949·
MERCHANDISE
.::00:::.53:__ _ _ __
1996 Dodge Dakota, sic
Tractor parts &amp; service, spe· 4x4 , auto, air, · sha rp,
1984 V6 Evinrude boat cializing
in
Massey $5995.00; 1995 Dodge full
motor have title. $500. Small Ferguson &amp; Ford, (740)696size van, 7 passenger van,
horsepower boat motor, 0358
$3005.00: and many more
$50 .
Band-saw,
$75 ,
great deals, trade in's wel Microwave, $40, 25" GE
come, Riverview Motors
console TV. $50, 13" TV.
across !rom Speedway
$20. (740)367-7272.
Pomeroy. Oh (740)992'3490
Angus Bulls for sale
2 plots wlvau lts, Meigs 1740)256·162 1.
1996 5·10 (4,500) &amp; 2000
Memory Gardens, valued at
Ford Explorer ( 11 ,500) both
$2,1 00 asking $1 ,500, relo~ APHA bred Mare. 4 yrs. old. 4x4, V-6. auto, AJC. PW.
caled, call collect (270)785· due In Nov-Dec. (740)367 - 1304 )675· 1670.
7621 .
9045 ' .
'90 Ford Areostar Van , runs
$1100,
phone
Bunk beds with manresses Black Angus Bull. 4 yrs. old, good.
$1,200. (740)245-5788
(740)992-0309
$125 .00. 7-ft pool table
II~ \\ 'I'C )I{ I \ 110\.
$100.00. Marlin 22 mag rif!~

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
740-446 -2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

~~~~07·7999

~

740-992-7283

Lw-------,J -

Relocating

~ We can insure your valuables! ~

Immaculate 2 bedroom , livi ng
room, dining room, bath ,
kitchen comp lete with
dishwasher, refrigerator, range,
laundry room w/washer &amp;
dryer, full basement, detached
garage plus many, many
extras, call for an appointment

Molloh:::::1~:0: ~t___V_:_~--~-·-,.11

, 1 bedroom. stove and refrig, erator, furnished . utilities

Pomeroy Eagles
BIN(;Q 2171
Ever y Thursday
&amp; · Sunday

A must see!

Like new Whirlpool washer.

r &amp; 2 bedroom apt. 740.3677015· 740·367·7746· 74()388-0173. No pets. Before.
Bpm.

What would you lose if there was a fire?

House for Sale· by
Ownert
294 S. 3rd Ave.,
Middleport, OH

Charfe.\' Michael. Sr.
&amp; Famif\'

L,t.J_4 a_~:.~.~.:.RE.1F.NTS; :N·I-._,JI ft

01Ht2 ·04

. , 9 4 2
• A K 5

Fwll'Jal Homt'.

Trailer for rent. {740)446-

bedroom

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS
NEA
ACROSS

Month, Deposit, 5 miles out

·1

ALLEYOOP

Crossword

Puzzle

Card ofThanka

The fwnily of

• month , deposit

Wednesday, June 2, 2004

. www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

BRIDGE

· .Furnished 2 Br $400 a
~edmond

Wednesday, June 2, 2004.

HCS,INC.
New Homea • New
Garages • Pole
Barns • Roofing
• Room Additions

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling

• New G•rav••
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes

• Remodeling

• Roofing &amp; G1.1ttere

• Garages

• Vinyl Siding

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio 1nd Porch Deck•
We do it ell except

• Complete

Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

7 40~949-1606

furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Yeara Loc11l Experience

Remodeling

740-992..1611
Stop &amp; Cbmpare

'(o\J WAt,\1
To WAiCI-1
A LimE

PA'&lt;TIM£
'TIJ ?

. . - - - - -7

·LEI Mt 6.'R.A.'e&lt;
~U~CI-\IF5

:;;oM~

0

I&gt;

AstroGraph
'-Your 'lllrthday :

Thursday, June 3, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Th ere are many opportun111es of which you
ca n lal&lt;e ad11antage in the year aheM from
cu rrent SituatiOns or endeavors. You don't
have to reinvent the wheel.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) -II you 're considering a procedural change at work
today, carefully analyze all contingenc1es
before rnak1ng the move. Be sure 11'11 be a
step up instead ol merely a lateral Shift
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Tal&lt;e the initiative to get ou1 and m1ngle with new
groups today 11 yo u feel your social life isn't
li11ing up to your expectations. Don't wa1t for
the mountain to come to Mohammed
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Bnng to a ~atls­
tactory concl4sion today any projects you
currently have underway betore jumpiilg
feel-first into a_ new one. Let\ing endeavors
over lap could cause il monumental mess.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- The answer
you 're lookmg tor tb fulfill a certa in need
today is right tho re in your mind . Your thin l&lt;ing cap is still in good worl&lt;lng order. but
you may have to tur n 11 around to a new
direclion
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) -There are Indications that you haven't fully utili Zed a
channel open to you that .could enhance
your material security. Stop dawdling and
do something about pulling yoL,Jr oars 1n
the water.
SCORP IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Situations
not subjected to the appro.,al of others that
you can take personal cont rol oyer have
excellent chances for success today. Be
your own person and mal&lt;e th ings happen.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) Because yo u are innately endowed with
l&lt;een powers of perceptions. you often
arri11e at accurate conc1us1ons when you
rely on intwt1ve factors. Trust and depend
on these gifts again today.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. ?2·Jan 19) - Take
pair'ls to be ce rtain yoUI part1ci pat1on 1n
group endeavors- is positive and not nega·
live, because what you say w1U have a
greater influence over your peers today
than yotJ may realize .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - A project
you·.,e been mulling over in your m1nd
could ha11e far- reaching benefici al effects
where bOth your ca reer and finances are
concerned. Mal&lt;e 1t your pnmary objeclive
today.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) - Aev1ew all
that .,atuable knowledge and sk1ll you've
acqu1red over the years - th at you're not
presently usmg - to your max1mum
advantage to see wh ere they can be mar·
keted to you r benefit .
ARIES (March 2.1-Apnl 19) - Don't be
resistanl to alter your course of action
today should shifting condiTIOns occur.
Even though they may not appear to be a
blessing, they could conta1n several hidden
benefits.
TAURUS (Apni20-May 20)- Ot course all
deCISIOns you make that aflect oth ers as
well as yourself should be ca refully considered, but ponder even the nondescnpt
ones. A miscall could have far·reachmg
effects.

SOUP TO NUTZ

48 Baking
ingredient
49 Flower part

1 ~

fAaiOitaot

5~

Answar to Previous Puzne

Tail,

6 Booth
in spy lingo
11 Shrink oway 53 Mar or
12 Wig
Stnlch
13 More
54 Tough
drawn-out
questtons
14 Dexterous 55 Portable
15 Result
home .
16 Trench
56 Beautify
17 Sense
18 Proposal
DOWN
response
1 . Worl! shirker
19 Sluggish
23 Fall short
2 Dentist's
of success
order
2S Birthright
3 Swallow up
seller
4 Baseball 's
26 Tabloid
Tommiesighting
5 Debussy 's
29 Divide up
sea
32 DiBmond 6 Fluy drink
33 UnHorm
7 Slow mover
wearer
8 Gl's addre. .
34 Lowly
9 Hula attire
laborers
tO Tolerate
35 Bullring
11 Musical sign
shout
12 Town near
36 Strip
Santa Fe
of wood
16 More
38 Came to
laid-back
40 Plus
I 8 Qy of dismay
41 Novelist
20 Norwegian
- ~esey
port
42 Spring up
:11 Sprinter
46 Clock part
-Devers

22

Gift-giving 47 One,
time
in Stuttgart
24 Serpent
48 Not
26 Bruins sch.
barefoot
27 Young honle 49 Househot4
28 Makes
member

a choice

50 Percent

30· Apprised ot
ending
(2 wds.)
51 Drain
31 Oisapprov- 52 Mineral
ing cluck
spring
37 Incapacitate
39 Border town
(2 wds.)
41 Hardy

vegelable
43 Quill filler
44 Squirrel

snack

45 Hard

benches

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetmty C1pher crypto-;1ams a1e cre.a:f{j 1 r ~l"1 cuott!llons ~v taiT'OLJs poope oas· ana p&gt;e!ll!nt

Eacr rene• n:'1e c1:1'&gt;!!1 star10s •or ano~r
iod::l}' s crue OcauaiS J

" UGOEV
KEP

HZU

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J RBW

MRV

RGM

HZU

YAHHY U

JAT

VEX

HZAGTN ,
LRV

PURYAFU

YEEW

HZUV

SUPU

HZA GTN ."

PEJUPH

JPRXYH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "TV is addictiVe. ll's a drug . . - Marshall McLuhan
"Television is chewing gum for lhe eyes .. - Frank Lloyd Wright
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc 6·2

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s:u~:,b l ec ~~o·C1 h •·

low rc k:n-, to._.·

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'V1hy :!id r.1y SIS ;e; :r;arr·;
s [ 1 . J 16 ~ :ha: gu~1. ·· I ccnoic:1neS iC Mom'
. . . Sre sr.1 ieo crd sa .c " L.Jclc
•
r----:--::------~ 2r,:_: lOve rare.y wal; ··.-In--.

DR Y H [ B

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SCUM-LET~ ANSWERS , - 1 , 0 ,

I
~l)SDe-

H,JKer
' • .},•ngc.
.
/moo,·~ - ~OC K ii~~·G
::um~e:- _Stlcw;er reads ·v a u ~r;: cn lv

A. :·avol.ie
you are when no on o is LOOKING "

vJr.at

:

ARLO &amp; JANIS
WOW!

IJ~W

oHE.€.15.'

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\

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\

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�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June

www .mydailysentinel.com

2, 2004

·-

Tennis

Indians Notebook

A new kind ofb\1zz at
Muirfield Village, Bt

Williams sisters bid adieu to
Who's at first? Not Hafner surprise-filled French Open
BY TOM WITHERS

...,

Associated Press
.

. CLEVELAND- Travis Hafner may ask
lor duecttons the next time he's asked by
the Indians to play first base. He hasn't
been there in a while.
The Indians· designated hitter has made
only three starts in the ticld this season. and
entering Tuesday night's game with Texas.
he hadn ' t played there since April II.
So, does he miss it'!
"It doesn't really mauer where I play:·
H ~fner said. "As long as I'm in the lineup.
I don't care. I'll do whatever they want me
to and play wherever they want me ...
Hafner has certainlv en-lbraeed his role'"
Cleveland's full-time· DH .
With II RBls in his l&lt;tsl ei~ht ~ames.
Hafner has mowd among the lca£uc leaders. He is a1·eraging one RBI per every ~ -1
at-tl&lt;tb lserond in the Ali a1id his .16 RBis
are the most among DH s_
H:.fncr played -+2 games at first last se&lt;~ ­
son. but he's not nearly &lt;ts )WOd in the field
as Ben Broussard. who has made 3~ starts
at tirst this se;bon .·
It may _"') e1e n more about Hafner's
fielding that instead of usin~ him there to
give Broussard a rest again~t left-hander".

manager Eric Wedge has played Lou
Merloni at tlrst 12 times .
Merloni had mostly played ,e.:ond. third
and shortstop during his career.
But with Broussard· slumping 11-for-27
entenng Tuesday), Wedge said he may LJSe
Hafner at lirst more ofte'n.
"We're going to wor~ him in and ~et him
some time there:· Wedge said. --vvc need
h1111 to be an option for u,_ ..
. To stay sharp when he's not pla~ing first.
Hainer takes 'gro umlballs before everv'
.
game.
" I probably do more now than if I w&lt;ts
playing first all the ttme:· he said.
• MERRY MONTH OF MAY : May
was truly a rnllercoaster ride for the
Indian,.
The Indians went 13-13 last month . The

month !ncluded a three-game wmning
streak tollowed by a 'five-2ame losing
streak followed by a tive-game winning
'treak followed by a seven-game losing
&gt;treak tollowed by a four-game winning
streak,
Whew.
Cleveland's incoils.isten(y underscores
the . club's immaturity. but manager Eric
\_Vedge has seen his team grow during the
ltrst two months.
"I think it was a good month as far as us
wking some 1msitive steps:· Wedge said,
"We didn't settle things in the bullpen until
the end of the month.''
. As had as Cleveland relievers have been,
the bu llpen's ERA dropped from 7A6 in
April to ih current 5.27.
• S IZ EMORE SIZZLES: _OF Grady
S tzemore. who IS ex petted to join the
Indians at some point this season. is heating
up alter a slow start in Triple-A Buffalo.
In his last II games. Sizemore is battino
.~95 117-for-~31 with one homer. eight
RBl s and 12 runs scored. He has raised his
batting average from .229 to .266,
SiLemore is currently tied for second in
the lntcrnation&lt;tl League with live triples.
• BASELINES: With his former Texa&gt;
teammates wat.:hing as he stretched,
Hafner hit three monstrous homers during
pregame batting practice. One shot to cen- .
tcr hit the walkwav behmd the &gt;eats &lt;tnd
bounced into the ballpark's new Market
Pavilion seats. ·_-1 never watch where they
go. Hatner smd .... Despite leading all
maJor league catchers in RBis , Victor ·
Martinez is just ninth in the All-Star voting.
... LHPs C.C. Sabath1a &lt;tnd Cliff Lee
entered the week ranked No. I and 2.
respectively in ERA in the AL The last
time Indians teammate&gt; finished first and
'econd was in 1968 when Luis Tiant ( 1.60)
and Sam McDowell ( 1.81 1 did it. ... RHP
Jason Anderson, who made one relief
appearance with the Indians before being
waived, was claimed by the New York
Yankees and optioned to Triple-A
Co lumbu s.

Stanley Cup Finals

Flames, Lightning both looking
to extend Game 5 success maybe we· ve learned something from that. but sti ll thi s is
Associated Press
ihe first time we've done it in
TAMPA . Fla. _ Three the Stanley Cup finals:·
times before in these Stanley
Conversely. the Li-ghtning
Cup playoffs, the Calgary are glud to be home again
Flames were 2-2 in a series. after getting back into the
Three times they v.ent 011 the series wi th their 1-0 victory
road and won. then took the Monday in Calgary, goalseries.
tender Nikolai Khabibulin 's
Twice before in these play- lifth shutout of the playoffs.
So who has the advantage in
ofts, the Tampa Bay Lightning
played a pivotal Game 5_ They a series where the momentum,
won both, once to end a series and_ th~; favorite, seemingly
and the othertime to take con- .shtlts not JUS! I rom game to
game. but minute to minute?
trol of it.
· So is it any surprise the
If anything. the on ly twoFlames and Lightning go into day break in the series couldThursday night's Game 5 of n't come at a better time for
thei r tighter-than-tight Stanley the Lightning, and not just to
Cup tina! tied, with Tampa recover tram Tuesday's 5Bay holding home-ice ad van- hour llight. Defenseinan Pavel
tage but neither team really in Kubina and forward Ruslah
control·?
Fedotenko both get an extra
" I don ' t look at what num- day to heal after sitting out
ber the game is." Lightning Monday with injuries.
Also,
star
Vincent
coach John Tortore lla said
Tuesday. ·•It's Game 5, and it's · L.ccavalier didn't play the
exactly what it is. lt's the first hnal 4-piLts minutes after
of three and we're looking to being rainmed into the glass
face-first by Vil le Nieminen.
get to four (victories)."
The Flames arc so accus- The Lightning have yet to distomed to being in this posi- close Lecavaliers status for
lion, they don't seem intimi- Thursday. and the NHL hasn ' t
dated by the necessity of hav- announced if Nieminen would
ing to win at least once more be suspended .
in Tampa, where two or the
The Flames' determi~ation
next three games would be to not be out-hit or outmusplayed. Calgary is 9-3 on the cled has forced Tampa Bay to
road and won Game I in tight for every inch of open
Tampa, where the Lightning ice. and it's been successful.
The Lightning have scored
are R-3.
"Game 5 has got to be our only six goa ls in four games,
best game of the series and all but two coming in their 4- 1
then we go from there," the victory in Game 2.
·
Flames' Craig Conroy said.
But the Flames paid the
·'We have tlone it before so price for their overt aggresBY ALAN ROBINSON

siveness by g1v1n g the
Lightning a 5-on-3 advantage
early in Game 4. which they
turned into Brad Richards'
record seventh game-winning
goal of the playolfs.
Tortorella, whose team has
alternated wins and losses
over each of the last two
rounds, is n't surprised the
final has been so defense-ori- ·
ented, even though both teams
were much more aggressive
offensively in previous series ..
"As we've gone along,
Calgary has go ne into more of
a defensive mnde and, again,
we go abo ut our business and
try to get our job done,"
Tortorella said."! just think as
you go through the long road
m the playoffs, it's a matter of
trying to keep momentum."
C&lt;Jlgary captain Jarome
lginla was as much angry as
he was disappointed the
Flames couldn't keep that
momentum Monday, especially with · a chance to take a
commanding 3- 1 lead. No
team has ral lied from such a
deficit in the Stan ley Cup tlnal
si nce the 1942 Maple Leafs.
"Now it's a best-of-three for
the Stanley Cup," he said. "It
wasn't supposed to - be easy
and I wouldn't want it any
other way. The more on the
li ne, tile more fun it is to play
and the more.fun it is to win."
Thursday's winner will have
the obvious edge, as 14 of the
last IR Game 5 winners in a
tied series have won the Cup.
The 200 1 Colorado Avalanche
arc the on Iy team si nee 1971
to rally from a 3-2 deficit.

BY HOWARO fENDRICH
Associated Press

PARIS - Venus Williams
peereq through the rain drops
at the Day-Gio yellow letters
and numbers dotting the black
scoreboard.
First came an unwanted
reminder: · She was losing her
French Open quarterfinal.
Then. like an airport's schedule board. the digits flipped,
reveahng more bad news: Her
sister Serena, seeded second,
was gone already, beaten 6-3,
2-6. 6-3 by Jennifer Capriati
across the grounds on center
court.
Not much later, No. 4 Venus
swatted a soggy. clay-caked
ball wide Tor the last of ·43
unforced errors. allowing
Anastasia Myskina of Russia
to wrap up a 6-3, 6-4 upset.
This anyone-can-beat-any-.
one French Open simply
keeps producing surprises.
Never before had the
Williams sisters been eliminated in the same round at a
tournament; it happened in a
span of 28 minutes Tuesday.
"We're going to pack our
bags and leave," said Venus,
whose 19-m(ltch winning
streak ended. "There's nothing left for us here anymore.
We're going home!'
Clearly, the injuries th at
forced the siblings off the tour
for the last half of 2003 and
pans· of this year hampered
tnem _ in their preparation, in
their performance and in
another vital way.
They've let slip the intimidation factor they built by
being ranked Nos, 1-2, meeting in Slam final after Slam
final. and divvying up eight of
II
major
t_itles
from
Wimbledon in 2000 through
the Australian Open in 2003.
And, as their mother pointed out, with each miscue
(Serena had 45 unforced
_errors to Capriati 's 24 ), the
sihlings' self-belief cart wane.
"When you start making a
lot of errors, you make opponents feel that, 'OK. OK, I've
got a chance now,' and their
confidepce goes up," Oracene
Williams said after shuffling
between show courts to catch
parts of each daughter's
match. "With my girls, when
they do what they do, they
can lose their confidence, too.

take the blows and just keep '
comi ng back ...
Seeded No. 7 after a pnor
start to ·· the season part ly
because of a bad back.
Capriati now assumes the role
of favorite. The other three
women still around owned a
combined total of one previous major semifinal appearance: No .. 6 Myskina. No, 9
Elena Dementieva of Russia,
and No. 14 r'aola Suarez -of
Argentina. a 6- 1, 6-3 winner
against Maria Sharapova.
With Dementieva. a 2000
U.S. Open semifinalist,
defeating No. 3 Amelie
Mauresmo of France 6-4. 6-3.
it's the first time in the Open
era (which began in 1968)
that three of a major's top
four seeded women lost on
the same day. ·
Keeping with that theme.
Tim Henman _ neve r past the
fourth round at a major other
than Wimbledon
defeated
Juan Ignacio CheJa 6-2. 6-4.
6-4 to set -up a semifinal
against No. 3 Guil lermo
Coria. who beat 1'198 champ ion Carlos Moya 7-5. 7-6 (3).
6-3.
Perhaps the performance by
the
serve-and-volleying
Henman. the tirst Englishman
since 1963 in the French

I -

The Reds said Vander Wal minor league wntract two
will likely be placed on the · days later,
disabled
list
with
the
On Mav 12, he was sent to
Louisville Bats, their Triple-A extended. spring training in
afliliatc.
Sarasota. Fla. Two weeks after
Vander Wal. 37. 'igned a that. he was reinstated from
$700.000 contract with the Louisville\ disabled li.st and
Red~ a&gt; a free agent on Jan. b&lt;ttted .250 with one RBI dur12. On Jan. 28. he underwent ing live games with the Bats.
arthro,copic 'urgery to repair
The 13-year veteran batted
damaged cartilage &lt;md a torn ,257 with 14 home runs and
anterior cruciate lig&lt;tlllent he 45 Rl:ll in 11 7 games with
\Ustained in hi' right knee Milwaukee laM season . He
while slmveling .snow. He was ranks fifth in career pinch hits
rele;tscd by th e Reds on with 124 and third in career
March 15 anJ re-, igncd to a pind1 homers with 17.

top Tribe, Bt

\9

chal~ed

~~~~~d:~~Je y~~!~f ~~t g~

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ,oil :-.L..,•\ol. .d

:-.o 1•11

llllllSII\\ ' .II ' NI •'I • .•
• ,,., I

\ \ \ I t\

'" ~' ' • •lh ·· •lllnul•••llt

Officials surveying Tuesday storm damage

SPORTS
~

Mighty Casey at the bat.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
Some
3.800 American Electric
Power
customers
were
expected to have power
restored by late Wednesday
mght , after a powerfu I storm
swept through Meigs County
on Tuesday evening.
Meigs _
Emergency
M_anagement
Agency
Dtrector Robert Bver spent .
most of Wednesday touring
the county, assessing damage
to pnvate property as a result
ot Tuesday's high winds.
_ · According to Byer. the
storm caused mmor property
damage throughout the county, a lt ~ough communities at
Wolf Pen in Salisbury
Town&gt;hip. Sellers Ridge in
Lebanon Township and
in
Sutton
Minersville
Township experienced the
most dramatic damage.
A home on Middleport' s
South Third Avenue also sustained minor damage from a
fallen tree. Byer said.
"It appears that the storm
bounced around the county,
causmg damage in all areas."
Byer said Wednesday afternoon. "The qorm caused .
downed trees and power
lines, but damage to property
was minimal. and generally Lawrence Kle in stands in front of a large tree that fell victim to the storm Tuesday. By the grace
of God, _Kie m smd the tree only grazed h1s front. porch and did not knock over any of the gravestones 1n the Welch Cemetery· where it was planted. (J, Miles Layton )
·
Please see Damage. AS

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Dennis Kapple
• Malissa Perry
• William Slater
• Rose A. Sisson
• Kathleen Manley
• Joyce Sauters

LorrkruES

Severe storm
takes aim at
Minersville man'·
BY

J. MtLES

lAYTON

JLAYT,ON@MYDAILYS ENTIN EL.COM

\11:\ERS\ ' ILLE - A
high p&lt;m ereJ storm blev.
through !\kig' County
Tue"b&gt; 'and left a path of
de,truc·tion 111 its "ake.
L111 ren&lt;e Klein. 60. and
hi' 1\ ik Patricia w;nched
and ":~ i ted "' 70 mph
\\ l iili"

anJ

fier(e

rain~

marched thr&lt;lU£h their
: an.J Tue..,Ja\' eY~ftint"!. The
wooden hou,e seen1ed to
·" '' ~t\- a. . the
- . . tonn made its.
way to the Ohio Ri' er
nearh\ iu . . r aCITJ.,.., Stole
RLnlle- I~-+ All nl '&gt;udden. Klein said
a lar~c hundred vear old
Ira came &lt;:ra,hi1i2 down
toward hi' house~ barely
mJ..;..,mg_ rt and not toppl ing
any of the ancient

~rave­

stones at the \Vekh
Cemetef\ nearbv where it
was plai11ed. Power line'
caug ht the bulk of the tree
for a short while before
!..!rJ\ it\ took oYer.

' "Bu·t bv the ~ race of
God. tim· tree ml"cd m''
hou,e:· hesaid. "The good
Please see Storm. AS

Pomeroy gets new banners

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 8-7-7
Pick 4 day: 7-8·7·7
Pick 3 night: 8-6-7
Pick 4 night: 2·5·5·9
Buckeye 5: 5·14·19-24·26
Superlollci: 1-8-21·26-33-40 (12)
Kicker: 1·5·6·2-7·9

r--"'7'------------------------------.

West Virginia
Dally 3: 6-1-4
Dally 4: 5-6-4-8
Powerball: 5-6-12-26-29 (30)
, Power Play: 5

Checks.

WEATHER.

~

Some banks call it
home equity.

"--- '

2· _: ~; •'

·
"
""-''
'._ ~ :~tye call it '!do it yourself"
,."'.::

··"

~

_ f

~

ii'

.

'

.

\

.

._ you co~. writ~ yourself a lpan as easily as
~
wntmg ai!:heck - wh9never you want
, where~r l;'~U want whatever you want.

.

'

';

.

.

ll"{.b.lt Ho'~ Advantage Home Equity Loan
tQI~tll'l~w;l'loi1te

of terms, so you can select
NttGIPti(Jn that's right (Qf you. Credit life and
'(abi_li . ins~rancejals_o available. And for a
limited 3me~ osmg costs are only $99!
"

~

l.

if'(Jprovem nts, a college education,
new car ·let Fdrmers Bank give you the
Pf!wer to make it a reality!

I

- Be, rt f o,tllfM'',

Bank
• Mason
771·6400

• Tuppers Plains
985·3385

Details

financing.

ft'ahome *191Jityloan from Farmers Bank,

Reds: VanderWal needs more
rehabilitation, return uncertain
CINCINNATI (AP) - John
Vander Wal will need more
time to physically recover
from an otT-sc&lt;tson knee '
InJury and there i' no
timetable for hi' return to
baseball, the Cincinn&lt;tli Red'
said Tuesd&lt;l)'.
The backup oullielder and
pinch hitter told the Red' on
Tue&gt;day that his legs were not
ready to withstand the everyday rigor&gt; of profe"ional
baseball. He is to wruinuc hi&gt;
rehabilitation at his home 111
Grand Rapius, Mich.

semifinals. can be
up to the familiar
sights of rain and green tarps.
Capriati and Serena waited
out a 75-minute delay. then
'&gt;Us~nsion' in the first t\vo
sets.
The temperature was 60.
and both walked out wearing
Starburst-bright sweat pants
and jackets Lipped to the chin
(Capriati's
cherry
red.
Serena·-. a shade of grape)_
Capriati strained her right
thigh in the fourth round. and
it was heavily wrapped
Tuesday. In the second game,
she saved a break point by
sprinting to scoop a drop shot . .
then limped b&lt;ick to ihe baseline.
Otherwise. she showed no
ill effects. Capriati made brilliant returns. including two
winners off tirst serves to end
the opening set. traded power
during rallies. and raced to
keep balls in play. There were
some terrilic exchanges. and
some sloppiness _ ~not the
highest quality:· Capriati
acknowledged.
.
On one riveting. 16-stroke
point. Williams lunged for a
backhand and left Capriati a
sitter she slapped into the net.
Williams raised her arms in a
Y. lost her footing. and
momentum carried her into
the courtside geraniums. That
gave Williams three break
points. and a backhand winner gave her a 3-0 edge in a
second set she dominated.
But Capriati never folded.
showing the resolve that won
three majors in ~00 1-02 but
failed as six of her last seven
Slam lmses went three sets. She credits new coach Heinz
GLmt hardt. who used tn work
with Stefli Graf. with instilling confidence.
" I tried not to li sten to th'ose
voices that sometimes come
in my he&lt;_td. you know. the
negative ones:· said Capriati.
1-1 this year against semilinal
foe My\kina .
" It's about time. tinally. that
I won one of these matches:·
As for the Williarns sisters . .
Venus was asked how lono it
will take for them to retur; to
the top.
"Next event.'' she replied.
"We're both _ co mpet itors
more than anything .... So we
wo n't just sit back'and a.:cept
a·_loss."
Open

It goes both ways."
Their body language was
anything
but
positive
Tuesday. In her third game.
Serena spiked her racket after
getting broken by shanking a
swinging volley 5 feet long .
Venus bent over and let out a
yelp after putting a backhand
return into the net to waste
one -of three break points in
her last game.
"Now. of course. everybody
believes at least that they can
light wi th them:· Myskina
said. Soon , though, she
sounded a word of caution.
saying Venus and Serena will
"be back. I mean, thcv were
the best _ they can be the best
again."
That certainly goes for
Capriati. who lost eight
straight matches to Serena
until beating her at the Italian
Open last mo!llh.
" I have to give myself credit for not giving up." the 2001
French Open champion said,
"You have to take it like a

Ranget~s

• 2004

• Gallipolis

onPage AS
Rich Hays, Ohio Fraternal Coordinator for Woodmen of the
World. presents the Middleport Mayor Sandy lannarelli with an
Americ9n flag for the village. (J. M1les Layton)

INDEX
2 SECf!ONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars

• A7

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A7

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

B8

Sports

B1

Weather

Pomeroy village employee Dale Riffle hangs a new banner on a period light. The banners
were purchased by the Pomeroy Merchants Association. (Charlene Hoefl ic h)
·
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - New tri-color banners
now adorn the · period lights alono
Pomeroy's main streets.
e
Purchased by th e Pomeroy Merchants
Association , the banners in vinyl fabric
feature a facsimile of the new PomeroyMason Bridge in black and white on a
maroon background. They bear the inscription "Gateway to Pomeroy." The bridoe
now under construction is scheduled tfJr

A8

i9 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.......

completion in 2006.
The de;;ign of the new banner matche'
what is pictured on ihc ornamental gla."
bulbs sold by the Merchants A"ociation to

Hometown boy presents
flags to .Middleport BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

raise money for downtown hcautificalion.

In addition tu providing funds for banners, the bulb sale proceeds uo into 1he
plantings in the mini-park. along the tnetliLilll bet~een Mam Str~et and the parking
lot. and 111 container&gt; ol !lower' which line
the streets. New thb year arc the baskels of
Please see Banners, A5

MIDDLEPORT -

A lucal

boy l'amc hollll' a mtm hccu:ing gift:-. of Aml'ri l·an llal! ... .

Rich Hay, . .1 Middlcpun
Hicll School ~raduate pf
l&lt;Jfi.l and SEO;\l all -conkrcncc footh:tll 'tar. h;ts llllll ed

..

Attention Cancer Survivors!

FOR LIFE

June 4 and 5
'
at the Eastern High School Athletic Field on State Route 7

hac·k to hi' lwmclown . On
he half of I he Wuudmen of tl1c
World .
he
prc,cnted
Middkpnrt Mavor Sandv
lanna rdli with st'lt'ral lla~~s
, forthc l il l a~c .
'
H:t\ ' · 1\ hll i, the Ohio
f'ratc-rnal Cnordinatnr for
Please see Flags, A5

And those interested in the fight against cancer
The 2004 Meigs Counly Relay far Life will be held

RELAY

446-ZZ6S

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the llolzer IJ!(fcrence

A cancer survivors' reception will take place at·6 PM on June 4
For more inFormation, please contact Courtney Sim at 992-6626.

All are invited to aHend and join us in the fight against cancer!
For more informalion, pleose call Chairperson JoAnn Crisp at (740)992-2136.

•

www .holzer.org

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