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                  <text>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.

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

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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!
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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

�&amp;
·Pomeroy, Ohio

Entertainment
Rib Cook-Off

Cuided Bike Tours
PeoJllfs Choin Awards

Juried Artisans
Non-Alcoholic Event

,,

•

lf you enjoy riding your Gold wing on great country roads with
. spectacular river views come join us in 'Pomeroy, OH fflf
our .f!'irst Annual Wi
&amp; Ribs lt'estival!

Friday. June 4th, &amp; Saturday, June 5th

®OHIO@

Pomeroy Parking Lot
Motorcycle Cruise-In
2 Guided Motorcycle Tours thru Meigs County
Games, Food

SATURPAY
• 9:00 am - Registration Opens
· • 9:00 - 10:00 am - Cliff Basel will give a safety talk on motorcycle trailering
(main stage)
o 10:00 am - 12:00 pm - First Tour (requires registration
•10:00 am· 10:45- Professional Story Teller Donna Wilson (main stage)
•10:45 am -12:00 pm- DJ entertains (main stage) (Rockin Reggie)
•12:00 pm -1:00pm- Crossroads Band (Gospel music) Live at the
riverfront amphitheater
o 1:00 pm - 1:00 pm - Don Mills from CSX Rail Road will give a safety
presentation on Rail Road Crossing (main stage)
~ 2:00 pm • 3:00pm - CrosSroads Band (Gospel Music\ - Live at ihe

2004 Gold Wings and Ribs Festival Schedule of Events
FRIDAY
Bring Your Lawn Chairs and get comfortable for the evening and Saturday
• 12:00 PM -Vendors arrive and open whenever they are setup
• 5:00 PM - Registration Opens
(all visitors that have pre-registered can pickup their registration packets at the registration trailer)
· • 5:45 PM - Welcome by the .Festival Committee on the main stage
• 6:00- 9:00 PM -the 3rd Shift (Country Music)
Live at the river front amphitheater
.
• 9:00 -9:45PM -Motorcycle Light Parade through the river cities of Pomeroy, Syracuse, Racine and Middleport
• 9:45- 10:00 PM - Refreshments following parade (Ice Cream) (required registration)
• 10:00 - ? - Motorcycle light show- Bonfire on the river bank We invite everyone to stay and enjoy...
The Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival will be held rain or shine.
are planned.

River Front Honda
Yamaha •.Polaris
'
Tri-States Largest Goldwing &amp; ATV Dealer

'

We offer a variety of merchandise from antiques
and collectibles to retired baskets, candles, cno unrrv1
crafts and much , much more. Stop and see us!

If the weather refuses to cooperate we may be forced to limit some of the activities that

1-800-98-CYCLE
' Parts &amp; Service- 446-2648
740-446-2240- Sales .

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) ~2-7100
Hour~:

FISHER FUNERAL
HOME
992-5444 • Pomeroy, OH
992-3785 • Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5141 • Middleport, OH

Fqrmers Bank

Downing-Childs
Mullen-Musser

INSURANCE
•

992-3381 • Pomeroy, OH

5

Meigs County Chamber .
992:..ssos
Meigs Co. Economic Development
992-3034
Meigs County Tourism
992-2239

CRO

Middleport, OH

..

992-6059 • · Pomeroy, OH

992-2432 • Pomeroy, OH

992-~627 .

• Middleport, OH

992;,..2955 •

Pomer~y,

INGELS CARPET

992-6614 • Pomeroy, OH ·

175 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH
740-992-7028

I

BROGAN WARNER
INSURANCE

WHITLEY'S
221' Mill Str~et
Middleport, Ohio
740-992-0008

992-6687 • Pomeroy, Ott

_____.,__ - - -- -

-·-·--·- ~ -

,

100 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

We offer silk flower arranging/or special
occasions &amp; funerals
Sumht~· -

Clost'd

BAUMLUMBER

168 N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport, Ohio
740-992-7878

740-992-1998

985-3301

Hrs: TWTH - 9:30- 5:00; Fri &amp; Sat - 10:30 - 5:00 pm

e)ii)Jt

~~(41~

Major &amp; Minor repairs

M-FS-5
Sat, 8-12 ·

Cars

992-3322

Melissa's Style&amp; Tan
DETTWILLER
331 OS Hiland Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
TrueValue LIUMBER
740-992-2826

ACREE FUNERAL HOME
244 North 2nd Avenue • Middleport, OH

'

.

634 E. MAIN STREET • POMEROY, OH

740-992-7900

....

949-221 0 • Racine, OH
992-6533 .• Syracuse, OH

'700 N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport
Phone: (7 40) 992-6451

Guardrail, Fence
&amp; Sign Ereclian

Riverway Cafe'

Fa~(740)992-3074

PDK

St. Rt.

CONSTRUCTION·
INC.

124 Syracuse, OH

740-992-2507
Homemade smoothies &amp; Milkshakes
· Call in or carr~out
Daily Specials

Coma chaclc out out naw llummat manu

P.O. Box683
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769-0683

"'

.\felis.~a

1\ay /Juudy, Owner

1Month unlimited $27.00

HOME NATIONAL
____
Gl
BANK
f:oii
·-LiiNDiifl

Chester, Ohio .

&amp; Light Trucks

James Acree, Jr., Director

Brazier

Antiques, Gifts,
Folkart

1555 Nye Avenue Pomeroy, OH

OH

DAIRY QUEEN

740-992-7696

BINGSAUTO REPA.IR

'·

Don Tate Motors

106 W. Main Street• Pomeroy, OH
740-992-1702-

f}{adi[yn 's 6Jreasure
·
{]test
Stop in &amp; Check out our line of leather apparel

CROW'S FAMILY THE.SHOE PLACE/ SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
LOCKER219
PHARMACY
RESTAURANT

HARTWELL HOUSE

Urs; Monday- Saturd:1y 9-5:

$7.95

&amp;CROW

Bob &amp; Loretta Cox -Owners

WEAVING STITCHES
'

All flats &amp; hc;anging baskets

wv

ATTORNEYSATLAW

Sat 9-5

Man· Sat 10am-6pm

PRODUCE &amp; FLOWERS .

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

436 St. Rt. 7 North • Gallipolis , OH 45631

Mon-Fri 9·6

. MITCHS'

Your Bank for Life.

------------------------------~--------------------~--~----~--~--~
''"" .lr~u,

o3:00pm-5:00pm -Second Tour (requ1res registration)
• 5:00 pm- 6:00 pm- Awards, Door Prizes and Entertainment (main stage)
• 6:00pm-9:00pm - Dwight Icenhower "Elvis" Tribute Artist (Dv.;1ght won 1st
,place in the 2004 Elvis competition in South Bend.) Live at the riverfront
.amphitheater.
• 9:00pm-9:45pm - Motorcycle Light Parade through the river c1ties of
Pomeroy, Syracuse. Racine and Middleport .
• 9:45-10:00 pm - Refreshments following parade (P izza &amp; Pop) (req Uire
registration)• 10:15 pm- closing .
SUNDAY
o Start the day with a Wing and a Prayer. The First Southern Baptist Chu rch
. invites you to join them for morning worship at 8:15 am . Come and enjoy the
I
I

VALLEY
LUMBER

lure's Restaurant
uFrom Our Family to Yours."

820 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH
{740) 446·3837
Hartinger Parkway • Middleport, OH

(740) 992·5248

992-6611 • Middleport, OH

356 East Main • Pomeroy, OH
992-6292

JudyKay~s

Computer Sales and Service

Restaurant
Best Kept Secret in Middleport
195 N. 2nd Ave.

740-992-1622

Sunday 10·3; M- Sat 7-7pm
Judy Kay Clifford, owner

CPU Inc. ·
Specializing in Horne &amp; Business Networking

110 Court Street

Pomeroy, OH

. ' 740-992-1135
cpu inc @fro gn,et.ne l

We're Here To Help

�P~gei\.4 .

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 3,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

I

Publisher

I

General Manager-News Editor

Con~~ress

slrall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tlrereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tlze GoPemment for a redress of griePances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
T,lll,l\ 1' ThuNI,t}. June 3. the !55th day of 2004 There are
211 d.J)' lelt 111 the year
Toda) ·s H1ghlight in H1story: On June 3, 1963, Pope John
XXI II d1ed at .tgc 81 He was succeeded by Pope Paul VI.
On tim J,Jte In 1621 , the Dutch West India Company
reLcl\ ed .1 Lhm ter lor New Netherlands - now known as
Nell' York
In I~08. Jd'fer,on Davis - the first and only president of
the Confeder,Jcy- was born 1n Christtan County, Ky
In IXXX. the poem "Casey at the Bat," by Ernest Lawrence
Th.t) cr. 11 as first published. 10 the San Francisco Datly
Ex.JmJnCJ
In llJ48 the 200-Jnch reflecting telescope at the Palomar
Moum;un Observatory 10 Calitorma was dedicated.
In 1965. asironaut Edward White became the first American
to "w,t!k" 111 space. during the flight of Gem101 4.
In llJ68. pop .trllst Andy Warhol was shot and cnucally
wounded 111 his New York tilm studiO, known as "The
Facto!) ... b) Valene So Janas, an actress and self-styled milit&lt;~nt temtn1st
In llJ81, Pope John Paul II left a Rome hospital and returned
to the V,HJean three weeks after the attempt on hts ltfe.
In 1989. Iran's spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah
1
Khome1n1. d1ed.
,
In I'JSlJ. Chmese army troops began theH sweep of Beijtng
to crush student-led pro-democracy demonstratiOns.
Ten ye&lt;~rs ago: Prestdent Cltmon, continumg his tour of
11.!1). 11"1ed the graves ot Amencan soldters killed in the
&lt;\two !.Jmhng dunng World War ll. The Umted States began
consultations wnh South Korea, Japan and Russia on how to
ret.tltate for North Korea's removal of vital evidence about Its
nuclear weapons capability.
~~ ve ye.t rs ago: Cavmg in to Russ tan and Western demands,
Yugosl.tv PreSident Slobodan Milosevic accepted a peace plan
tor Kosovo des1gned to end mass expulsiOns of ethmc
Alb.tlll.Jils and II weeks of NATO airstrikes.
One year ago. World leaders closed out a summit in Evian,
Frdnce, by pledging to rebuild Iraq and combat the threat of
nuclear weapons m Iran and North Korea. Arab leaders
pledgeu to renounce terror and help end vwlence against
Israel, standmg in sohdaflty with President Bush at a summtt
Ill Egypt. Enc Robert Rudolph pleaded mnocent m a deadly
199R abortiOn c!Jmc bombmg in Birmmgham, Ala Sammy
So sa was eJected 111 the first mmng of Chtcago 's 3-2 win over
· Ihe Tampa B.ty Devil Rays after umpires found cork m his
shatte1 eel hat
Thought lor Today· "Today's shocks are tomorrow's conve ntion s." - Carolyn Heilbrun, American educator and
wnter (1926-200J)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

1
!.~.~ s£~}}Y S~~.~~~7
.

.

CorrectiOn Polley

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published

every

afternoon.

Our ma1n concern 1n all stones IS to be Monday through Fnday, 111 Court
accurate If you know of an error 1n a Street, Pomeroy, Oh1o Penod1cal
story call the newsroom at (740) 992 postage pa 1d at Pomeroy

2156

Member: The Assoc1ateo Press
and

Our main number

IS

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the

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Newspaper

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Postmaster: Send address correc-

tions to The Da1ly Sentinel, 111
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Pomeroy, Qh 1o

45769

News
Ed1tor Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12

Reporter: Bnan Reed Ext 14
Reporter: J M1les Layton Ext 13

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- ·-

Time''
grudgmg retr.tc'tJt&gt;n ul tis ell\er.tge of those dthJie h.1tp
'wcttpllll' ol rna'' lk...,tntctlon·

proves nothmg ~~-~. 11' the
absurdity of the Rcpuhl1c.tn
nght's chenshed nl\ th .tboul
·Jiheml b1.t," m the "'t,thJJ,hment press
Thmk about 11 LlntJI l.hl
week. 14 month' h.td
since the tnumph.tllopplin~ nf
S.ttlddm Hussem\ ,t,IIUc' 111
Baghdad w11h no sign of h1'
teJTifymg .11 sen.tl. hut k11
hulls ot regret !rom .t ne11Sp,tper whose credulous repon mg
helped UtOpian tdCOiiii,!UCs Ill
the Bush .tunumslr,Jtlon t.Jkt•
the nauon to war under t.d"pretenses
Whtle the Times' aLl ul wn trition had clearly been 1t1 tht'
works tor some tnne. 11 h.tt
.1ppeared to Ioree 11 ntH&gt; p1n11
was a U.S. Arn1y-FBJ I.tid on
Ahmad Ch,t!Jbt. the h'ng -tJmc
Iraqi exile, .miJ-S.tdd.tm
activist and con' Jclcd cmbetzler
Once touted .ts the top
chotec of Pemagon neo-conservatives to take mer lr.tq.
Chalabt now fmds htmsell
suspected of bemg dn lranwn
spy. Indeed. there are tantalllmg hmts of what 1t's tempimg
to call a ·PeN an horse· strategy, a counter-mtelligence coup
by Iran to dupe the U S 1nlo
attacking nval Iraq
That's probably too imagJnattve by half But T1me' editors don't dcnv that Ihcv were
taken for a nde. Virtu.dly all of
tis discnedtted WMD cmeJage, the newspaper conceded
on May 26, 'depended at Je.tst
m part on mfonn.tt1on fJom .1
ctrcle of Iraq• mfonnants.

Insld&lt;! Meigs County
13 Weeks
'30 15
26 Weeks
'60 00
52 Weeks
. '118 80
Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks . .
. .•so 05
1100 10
26 Weeks
52 Weeks . .
. .'200.20

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

Gene
Lyons

Ucte~hH\ ~tnd

l.'\des bent on

'1cgnuc ch.mgc' Jn!r.tl.J.JX'nplc
11 hthC ucdthtlit~ has come
Ulldl'l l llUl'd\tng pubhl debdle
Ill rt'CC!lt \\CCkl (Tile most
t'mllllllelll ol the .mtJ-S,tddam
,·amr·"t!ncJ' r\hnMd Ch.ti,Jbt.
h.t~o. ht.'l.'ll n.tmcJ .t:-. .m lX:i.:.l..,l~)nttl ...nun.:.: 111 Tun~ . . ~ut1clcs
"&gt;lllu~ .lt k.ht 199\ lll1d h~t'

1nu oduced 1ep&lt;111eJ s ILl otlle1
exile- He became a l.tvorite of
h.lld-ltlll'l' Wi thin the Bush
.tdmtnlq l.ttJnn ,md a p.nd broke! ol Jntomlatton from lraqt
ex tie' until hts P·•&gt; men!, \\~re
cut ul'l l,tst 1\Cek)
The
xt·ounts ol th~se extles were
ofkn e.tf&gt;erly conlirmed by
Um tcd States oftlcwls conI tilted of the need to tlllervene
til !J.Jq AJmmJstratton oftiCJ.Jis nol\ .tcknowledge th.Jt
they sometune&gt; tell for mtsmtorm.t iJon tmm these exile
sotll ce' So d1J m,my news
organizdtions - in particular,
thts one ·
The Tunes' retractton Cites d
h.tlf dozen specttic stones. but
name' no 1epo11e1 s 01 edtto".
\\'ho'e work gave the 'unrnl'-

t.lkable · llllpression. the newspapel 's ombudsman Dan
Okrent pomteJ out 111 a strong- ·
ly worded dt1icle of h1s own.
'th.tt S.tddam Hussein posse"ed. or v,as acqumng. a
l'nghi~ning
arsenal
of

WMD(s )... Except. of course.
&lt;that Impression) appears to
h.11e been nmtaken ·
Okrcm does name names,
'pecttic,tlly Judith J1,1tller, the
il.Jmhoyant reporter who
b1okc one WMD 'exclusJve'
,tfter .mother. became a TV
celehnty and appeared regul;u·ly on PBS and CNN Her
\\ork mcludes a now notorious
11onl p.tge arttcle published
Sept K 2002. stmmg uncqUivoc:.tlly that Saddam had
launched ·a woildwtde hunt
for mmenals to make an atomIC lxnnh' and quotmg Bush
admnltstratton offict,tls as
lemt ul Illat the tirst stgn ot a
'smokmg gun'
may be a
mushltlom cloud ·
EmllusJasttcally endorsed
on the Sunday TV news progtams by D1ck Cheney, Coltn
Powell and Cond1 Rtce, the
amcle put the Times' imprimatur on the dnve to war,
addmg mcalculable pressure
on Congress to g1 ve Prest dent
Bush the war resolutton he
demanded JUS I before the 2002
~Jections. Rice even adopted
the 'musluoom cloud' trope as
her very own. Chances are
she'd fed it to Mtller m the tirst
place
Challenged about the tlaws
111 her work. Miller actually
told Michael Massing, writmg
tor the New York Revtew of
Books. that as a reporter, 'my
JOb J'&gt;n't to a'sess the govemment's mlonnatton and be an
mdependent mtelhgence analysi myself My JOb IS to tell
readers ot The New York
Tunes what the government
thought about Iraq's arsenal '
No Soviet-era Pravda flunky
could have put it hener.

·Judy is a smart, relentless.
incredtbly well-sourced and
fearless repo11er, 'limes editor
Btll Keller told Ne~'&lt; York
Magazme. 'It's a httle galling
to watch her pursued by some
of these armchair media ethiCISts who have never ventured '
into a war zone or earned the
nght to carry Judy's laptop ·
It's not clear 1t Keller meant
Okrent. who noted th,ll some
Tunes
stones
'pushed
Pentagon assertions so aggressi~ely you could almost sense
epaulets sproutmg on the
shoulders of editors ·
Keller can play the
Hemmgway card all he likes,
but Okrent's basic potnt is
mdisputable For a newspaper
to allow anonymous sources to
escape the consequences of
peddling dismformat1on is
'worse than no detense It's a ·
license granted to liars.'
I'd be more sympathetic had
I not spent years trymg to diSabuse New York Times edt tors
of the great 'Whitewater'
hoax If propagandiZing for
war with lraq was vastly more
hwtful than helping keep a
president under partisan mvestigauon for six years, the
Ttmes' JOUrnalistic sins gulhbtli ty, willful blindness
and stunning arrogance strike me as familiar In those
days, the newspaper had no
ombudsman; cntics got the
back of 1t~ hand
(Arkamas
DemocrarGa~erre colummsr Gene Lyons
IS a natwnal magazme award
wmner and co-author of The
Hunting of the Pres1dent' (St.
Ma11m'' PreH, 2000). You can
e-mail Lyons aT genelvons2@cs.com.)

0fA\\L~·

®ThE CIN&amp;IN~ATI ~
'2.001.

I

!

I

u

./
Difending Chalabi
I f1rst met Dr. Ahmad
Chalab1 m the spnng of I LJLJ8.
a year when George Bush w;ts
stillthe1governor of Texds .mel
when Bill Cltnton and AI Gore
were talking about Ihe
inescapable nece"1ty ol
removmg Saddam Hussem
from power because of his
continuous conneclion to tcJ ronsm and hi s &lt;tddtctton to
weapons of mass destruction.
At our long meeimg.
Chalabi satd the ovenhrow ol
one of the world's foulest-ever
despotisms could be accomplished I knew that any lraq1
taking this posttion 111 public
was riskmg his ltfe &lt;~nd the
ltves of his tamliy.
The anti-Chalabi torces h,td
several cntJctsms to m.1ke
The first was that he wa'&gt; a
shady businessm,Jn whose
Petra Bank had lleeced the
depositors ol Jordan. The second was that he w,ts an ·exik. ·
remote from lr&lt;tq \ le,t!Jty The
th1rd was that he w.ts ttXJ close
to the lramans. The lourth w.ts
that he w&lt;ts too amh1t1ous The
f1fth was thdt he was .111
American puppet.
l do not know wh.Jt hdppened at the Peu ,t !:lank. Not
even Andrew .tnd Patrick
Cockbum. mtthms uf ·Qui nl
the Ashes: The Rc,UJ rectton
of
S.tdd.ml
Hussem
(Perenm.tl, 2(){){)), who h.11e
done the most wo1 k on Ihe
subject, can he 'u1c lh.ll
Hus~em\ Ltgcnh 111
were not 1111 ohn l 111

Saddam

Jordan
the md1c1ment ot Ch.tl.tbJ h) .1
rather oddly cnJhtllu tctl
Jordaman court. The lttt)2.1t Jnn
and recnm11Mt1nn unltmn c..,

and 11 ought .Jt least to he
noted that Chalab1 sti ll mamt,uns he can prove his case
As lor 'ex de ' - a term used
as d sneer by many people
~'&lt;ho h.tve nevet set foot 111 Iraq
- 11 " .1 word tll.lt would
cover Wtlly Brandt. Bruno
Krcisky. Antl!eas P.tp.mdreou,
Bclllgnn Aqu1n0 ,md Kun Dae
Jung. to n.tm~ a few.
AdmJttedly. these br.tve men
Wl'!C Ill flllHlllllellt po~ll1011S Ill

cxJstJng mass-based parties
helore they !led thei1 homel,mds, Idler to return as leaders
However. dunng the 1990s
Ch.tldbJ h.td .Jctually spent a
good deal of It me 111 liberated
no11hcrn lr.1q. and lllilllY lraqts
and Kurds who had had their
doubts aboul hnn had been
tmpresscd by illS com age.
A' lor Jr,m. 11 is the most
~JgmlicL~nl

ol llaq s ne1 ghbors,

and no asp1nng poltttctan can
,t\lltd the rcspomtbdtty ol
LlllllluLtmg rcltltJOih With 11

Ch.dabt h.ts never made .my
secr~t ot h1s dosene" to
Td)J,IIl .• md he oper.tteJ a
he,ldlJU&lt;Ii1Cr' tileJC. With the
tull cncourdgement ot the U.S
g:u\'ernmcnt. dunng the run-up

to the I\llcrvcntton
The !.1st Iwo .t!Jegations too ,unbJtJous .111d too much nl
a pupp~t - .u-c JJTC!cvam and
ah,md. Anyone taking pan 111
the lr.Jql tr.m ... Jtlnn IM"- to bed

full-hlo\\n hardnose. .tnd the
charf!C of puppetry. ncve1 1ery
l llll\ !IH..:IIlg. "ecm-.. In ha\'e
been dropped !.Jtcly
It h.ts now been rcpl.tced
"Jth d whole new mdtctlllCJll
th.Jt Chalab1 md.ed the Uni1ed
Si.Jies tnto IV.JI .• md that he ha.'
t: J\Cil

national sccunty

~cret\

to !J.tn -nlc litsl half of this i'
g 1n te"lJLH.~

nn 1h fnce E\en if

you assume the worst to be
true - that the INC's 'defectors' were etther mistaken or
coached fabncators- the fact
remams that the crucial presentation of the admtmstratJon's case on WMD and tetronsm was made at the United
Nat tons by Secretary of State
Cohn Powell, wtth CIA
Dtrector George Tenet sitting
nght behmd him. after those
two men most hosttle to
Chalabt had been closeted
together
• The plam and overlooked
111.1th ts that the admimstration
acted upon the worst assumplton .tbout Saddam Hussem
and that he hnnself strongly
conlirmed the presumptton of
gut lt by, among many other
things, refusing to comply
\\ith the U.N re solutiOn
\\! hoever anu whatever convmced many dtscrepant forces
ol that idea, it was not
Chalab1's INC
As to the accusation that
Chalabt has endangered
Amencan nattonal secunty by
slipping secrets to Tehran, I
can only say that not long ago,
l broke my usual mle dnd had
a ·ctecp background' meeting
~'&lt;Ith a very 'semor admtntStratJuu ofltcJal · This person,
gtven every opportunity to sign.tl even slightly that I ought 10
llc.tt the charges senously,
rxnmedly declined to do so
Some of my Iraq• and
Ku1dtsh
comrade~
have
expressed a dtfferent misgiving
.tbout Chalah1 tiMt he ha.~ been
playmg contesstonal politics
.md maneuvering with the
Shutes to get llllnself a power
b&lt;L'iC. I entirely share their dts·taste lor this kind of politics, but
I don't see that anybody IS not

Thursday, June 3,

· Obituaries
Malissa Perry
MIDDLEPORT - Mahssa
Ltsa Dawn Perry. 25. of
Mtddleport , formerly of
W.Va..
died
Spencer.
Monday. May 17, 2004, from
injunes sustained 111 an automobile accident 111 Meigs
County
She was born m Spencer. a
daughter of the Mtchael
Dean Lawson of Charleston,
W.Va., Carolyn Starcher and
stepfather, H D
Buddy
Starcher of Spencer. She was
formerly
employed
at
Kellwood. Jackson County
Live stock Market and dtd
odd jobs.
Besides her parc llh, she ts
survtved by her husband,
Paul Edward Perrv. Sr.: four
stepchtldren: Ma•y Lynn.
Mtchael. Paul. Jr. and Tiffany
Perry: maternal grandparents,
Pete and Mane Whtte of
Gandeeville. a step brother,
Dame! Tanner ol Spencer;
and two siep ststers, Kelly
Hum and Renee Starcher.
both of Spencer
She was preceded in death
by her paternal gralldparenls,
Lilbllln and Garnet Lawson
A memonal servtce will be
held at I p.m. on Saturday,
June 12. 2004. at Grace
Baplist Church 111 Pmnt
Pleasant. W Va

William E. Slater
MIDDLEPORT
Wilham E. Slater. Sr.. 74.
Middleport, passed away on
June 2, 2004, at Pleasant
Valley
Nursmg
and
Rehabtlitation Center In
Point Pleasant, W Va
He was born on Sept. 4,
1929, m The Plams. son of
the late Charles Edgar and
Clara Kirkendall Slater. He
was a retired conductor for
Conratl and a veteran of the
U S Army dunng the Korea
Conflict. He was a member
of the VFW Post 9926 in
Mason, W.Va., and a member
of the New Haven Arnencan
Legion Post 140. He attended
the
Pomeroy
United
Methodist Church
Besides his parents, he ~'&lt;as
preceded 111 death by hts
wife. Martha Ann Slater, in
January, 2004.
Surviving are hts daughter
and son-m-law, Susan and
Tom Watkins of Dublsm, a

involved to some extent m playmg the sectarian or tribal cards
Chalabt says in his own
defense that it's necessary to
keep good relations with the
Sistani bloc and that the ayatollah has been very helpful:
most particularly in his fatwa
against private revenge by
those Shtites who lost relatl ves, or limbs, to the hateful
former regime. And I would
add 11n Chalabi's defense that
he d1d call for an earlier transfer of sovereignty and earlier
~Jections· an odd position for a
man with 'no base' to take and
also the position now taken,
with diffenng degrees of
regret and remorse, by almost
evel)'one involved
It ts clearer every day that
Iraq under Saddam was
becoming a fat led state as well
as a rogue state. The hurruliallon of tts people. the looting
and degradation of the economy and society, and the measures by the Baath Party were
all even worse than we
thought. If thts realization vindtcates ·anybody, it vindicates
those who urged a swifter and
earlier mternauonal rescue
expedttion.
Chalabi had been saymg this
tor stx years by the lime I met
hun in 1998. Those who now
say that the whole mess is his
fault are pamcking and scapegoating. as well as attnbuting
superhuman powers to one
mdiVIdual Of course, 1f he
were that good, and that powerful, one mtght even want to
bet on h1m all over again.
(Christopher Hucl!em is a
cohunm't for Vatuty Fwr. H1s
book 'Blood, Class and
Empire' (Nation Books) lru just
been published in paperlx1Ck)

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) A judge presidmg over one of
three federal court challenges
to the Partial-Birth Abortion
Ban
Act
questioned
Wednesday whether the Jaw
ts enforceable.
U.S Dtstrict Judge Richard
Kopf commented during
closmg arguments in a case
brought on behalf of four
abortion doctors seekmg a
nationwide tnJunction agmnst
the law.
The hearing in Lmcoln
came a day after a San
Francisco judge declared the
law unconstttutwnal, saymg
it places an undue burden on
a woman's nght to choose
That rultng affects the
nation's 900 or so Planned
Parenthood clinics and their
doctors.
The thi1 d case, 111 New
York, IS mov1ng toward closIng arguments later thts
month . The Jaw has not been
enforced whtle the cases
move forward .
Kopf satd he would tssue

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Deaths
son. Dr Wilham E Slater. Jr..
Bluttton:
grandchtldrcll'
Thoma' (Ltsa) Watktns. Jr.
Christopher
1Barb.l! .tl
Watkins. Patnck (Che renel
Watktns, Matthew Sl.llel. and
Dylan Slate!; great grandchildren Heather Watkms,
Ashley Watkins, Wtliam
Watkm s. Ahzabeth Watkins.
Jason
WatkJIIS ,
Jordan
Watkin s and Cosette Strong:
a brother. Ed Sl.ner of New
Marshfteld and a ,ister. lla
Darnell of M1ddleport
Services will be held at II
" m Oil S.Jturday, June 5.
2004. al Fisher Funeral
Home . Mtddleport. with
Pastor Rod Browe r officim111g
Bunal will ·be 111
Rivervtew Cemeiery.
Military graveside ntes
will be conducted by M.tson
VFW Posl 9926
Fnends may call hom 6 to
8 p.m on Fnday at the funeral home. and may send onlt llc
condolences to www fisherfuneralhomes com,

Rose A. Sisson
GALION
Rose A
S1sson, 84. ot 761 Het&gt;e PMk
Lane Ext, Galion. and formerly ot 37S 2nd Street.
Pomeroy, dtSd Tuesday. June
I. 2004 at Heartland of
Bucyrus afier an ex1ended
battle with breast cancer.
Mrs. Sisson was born u\
Gallipolis on Apnl 19, llJ20
to the late Alfredo and
Paolin.t (P1erottt) Angele1t1
She marned Leland (Ttm) E
Stsson on July, lLJ. 1942 and
he
preceded
her
Oil
November 28, 1984.
She hved here smce 2002,
comtng from Pomeroy. She
was a 1938 graduate of
Pomeroy High School and
was employed as a clerk by
New York Clothmg House,
Pomeroy, until her retirement
111 1989 atier 31 years Mrs
Stsson was a member of
Catholtc
Sacred
Heart
Church, Pomeroy.
Beta
Stgma Phi Sorority Alpha
Iota Masters Chapler. Sacred
Hea~t Catholic Ch111ch CWC.
Metgs County Chapter #74
PERI, and served as a Me1g s
County Board ot ElectiOns
poll worker from 1956-1999.
In her spare time. she
enJoyed embrotdery and crocheting.
She IS su1 vived by son,
Alfred (Fi ed ) dnd Altce

Sisson of Galton: two grandJ.Illghters. Andrea M Sts,on
and fiance Mark Holland of
Blackhck. and Angela P
(Cims) Bowen ol Dublm.
ststeJ. Olga Gaudm ot Wesl
Palm Beach, Fla , SISter-mlaw. Caihenne Angeletti of
Hmck lev: stster-in-Jaw and
brother-'m-Jaw. Nancy and
Roland RJdford of Rock
S(mngs. and severa l ntece'
and nephews
She was preceded m de.Jth
by a son. WJJit.tm Richard
Stsson as a ch1ld. and brother.
George Angeletti
Friends mav call from 6-9
p 111 Thursd,ty at the Mark A
Schneider Funeral Home.
G.thon Praye1 servtce will
be held .tt .8 30 p.m W1th
Rev Mr Kevm Wmtersteller
ol ftc mung Fnends may also
ca ll from ll am. td-1 p.m
SaiUrday. June 5, at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church.
Pomeroy, where a Mass of
Chns11an Bunal wtll be held
at I 15 p m wtth Fr Walter
Hemz officwtmg 8unal will
follov. 111 Sacred Heart
Cllholtc Ceme1ery. Pomeroy.
Memonal contributions
may be made to Homecare
M&lt;ttlers/Hospice. Galton. or
Sacred
Heart
Catholic
Church.
Pomeroy,
or
A me11can Cmcet Soc1ety, 111
care of the tuneral home , 303
Portland Way North. GaliOn.
OhiO 44833

Kathleen
Manley
MIDDLEPORT
Kaihleen Gladys "Hawley"
Manley. 83. of Mtddleport
passed away on June ll,
2004 at her residence.
Born on October 25, 1920
111 Cheshire, she was the
daughter of the late James
and
Sparkle
"Fr,IZJer"Hawley She was a
homemaker and a Go ld Star
Mother Post 128 Amencan
Legion. She attended the
Htllstde Bapllst Church.
Beside s her parents, she
was preceded m death by her
husband, Donald R Manley,
son Ronald Manley. grandson Donald Hood, sisters
Helen
Farley.
Audrey
Hawley, and Georgta Pulltns
and brothers. Ernest Halley.
t\onnan Hawley. James
Hawley, Delmar Hawley and
R1ch,ud Hawley

She is survtved by a son
Kenneth (Renee) Manley of
Arlmgton Hetghb . Ill. .
POMEROY - Joyce S.tuiers ot Pomcto) d1eu \VeJne,J.t)
daughters
Donne
Joan
June
2. 2004 a1 Holzer \1edJcal Center. G.Jlltpt&gt;lt'
(Arthur) Hood ot Mtddlepon
and Pam (Erme) Roush of Arrangements will be ,mnounccd by ALree Funer.J! Home 111
Now Haven. W.Va .; grand- Mtddleport
sons
Steve
Hood
of
Mtddleport. Jeremy Roush of
New Haven. W.Va.. Jason
Roush of Gallipolts. Ronald
and Randal Man ley of -------,-----~___:_ ___ - - Jllinms. mne great gran dchtl McAuiJfle 11111 'P~·''
dren, two great-great grandabout the llllJltll t.tJllc lll
children, a SISter Bonme
Oh10 111 200.J
He 11 Ji :
Ebersbach of Mtddleport .
.HJdre'"'
a
group
o·
and brothers John Hawley of
Democrdtlc .tllJ\I~t' dnJ
Pomeroy and Frank Hawley
Ohll)
l!1111 ersJI\' 'tuden t'
of Columbus.
AduJtJonall).
McAulilk
Fnend s may call at the
Acree Funeral Home tn
ATHENS
Tern \\ ill spea~ ,Jhoul tile toh.JLC"
Mtddlepo11 from 2 to 4 p m McAulifte . ch.utm.tn ol the b~t) ou t opposed b) Preside Ill
and 7 to 9 p m on Fnday Democr.ttlc
Na11onal Bu'h Senator John Ke1r1 I'
June 4, 2004
CDmmlllee. will be tn 111 f,nor of the buvout 11h1ch
Funeral servtces wtll be Athens on the campus of "ould help tobdcco farmers
hold at 2 p rn. on Saturday OhiO Umversny at II 30 dunnQ difficult cconomtc
tunes· Appro\lm.ttel) 389
June 6, 2004 at the Hillside a m. Thursday.
Baptist Church on SR 143.
He will be jomed b) State JObs are allected 111 Oh1u
Pomeroy. Pastor James R. Senate candidate Terrv du:mdrng to d ne\' ~ release
McAnlttfe 11 ill ht~hliuht
Acree. Sr Will offictate and Anderson. who 1s runntn~
bunal Will follow at the for the Ohto Senate 1n the an econom1c h-..ue-.. atTect~ng
Oh1o,ms
'
"
Gra~el Htll Cemetery
'20th dJslnct

Joyce Sauters

Local Briefs

Democratic
national
chairman in
Athens

Dennis Kapple
POMEROY- Denms Ray
Kapple. 59. of 110 Maple St.,
Pomeroy. pa ssed away on
May 30. 2004, at Overbrook
Center 111 Middleport.
He was born Nov. 30,
1944, in Galhpolts, son of
Marjorie Gilmore Kapple of
Pomeroy and the late Denver
Kapple He was a mechamc
wtth the tormer Kapple's
Pennzoil and was an avid
NASCAR racmg tan.
Bestdes h1 s mother, he is
survtved by hiS sister, Phylli s
Irene Kapple of Pomeroy.
two aunts, Louis~ Gtlmore
and Edna R1ce , and numerous cousms and fnends
Bestdes his father, he was
preceded 111 death by his
grandparents, John and Ina
Kapple. Elza, Sr. and Nora
Gtlmore. and aunts and
uncles: Elza and Evellyn
Gtlmore, Flossie and Leland
Nelson, and Stdney Kapple .
A graveside servtce wtll be
held at I p m on Thursday,
June 3, 2004, at Beech Grove
Cemetery 111 Pomeroy with
Rev Keith Rader ofttciatmg.
There will be no calhng
hours.
Memorial
contnbutions
may be made to the family
for funeral expenses.

Judge weighs Nebraska challenge to federal abortion ban

'

BY CHRISTOPHER HITCHENS

Leiters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editmg and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be publi.1 lted. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opmtons expressed in this column are the
cOII\C/1\US of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

I

Yut~

P""""

Charlene Hoeflich

at last

The Neu' York Times comes clean
It The New

2004

'

his decision by the en d of could be unsure ex;tctly what house ·
Kmg, a Republican, satd
Augusl
ptocedure Ihey would perthe nation has to re-establish
The federal antt-abortion form before they begm
"How are you ever gomg to the separation of JUdtc tal and
measUJe, s1gned by President
Bush lds1 year, bans the pro- prove thdt," Kopf asked JegislatJ ve powers and that
cedure known 10 docwrs as "Does the doctor have to gtve "acttviSt JUdges" were usmg
mtact dilatton and extraction, a deposttion beforehand so thetr positions to 1m pose their
but called •·partial-birth abor- thai he can be prosecu1ed ? personal views on the rest of
tion" by .1bortton foes. Why would you enact a Jaw society
Last month. Bush. renewDunng the procedure , usual- . that ts unenforceable, ..
ly done in the second
Coppolino said the ldw mg his support tor a proposed
trnnester. the fetus IS partml- addtessc' only cases where a constitutional ban on samely removed from the womb uoctor begJns with the mtenl sex man 1age. sa1d "The
and its skull IS punclured 01 to p~rform the banned proce- sac1ed mstllullon ot man mge
shou ld not be redefined bv a
dure.
crushed
'
few acttvtst JUdge&gt;··
Kopf
also
cnttc1zcd
as
Doctors challenging the
A JUdge in New York ts
ban say tt ts vague and could "stllptd and superficml" the
be mterpreted as covenng notton that federal judges scheduled to hem closing
mo1e common, less contro- impose their personal beliefs argumems on June 22 111 Ihe
thtrd challenge of the ban.
versial abort1on procedure, 111 m.tkmg rulings .
Kopf sa 1d he did not think brought by the Nationdl
also done 111 the seconJth.tt "one unelected JUdge, Abortion Federation. which
tnmester
Kopt expressed skept1ctsm f1t1111 the hmterland s to boot. tepresent s nearly halt the
to Ju stice Department lawyer ought 10 veto what Congress nat1on 's abort ton p1 OVJdeJ s
The Partial -Birth Abortton
Anthony Coppolino that the . docs JUst because he or 'he
government could p1ove doesn't l1ke It. I' ve nevet Bdn Act 1s seen by .tbortton
nghts actiVIsts as the governwhether a doctor had spec11tc seen a judge like Ihat."
Earlter tn the tnal. Rep ment's ftrst step toward oulmtent to perform the banned
Ste\e Ktng of low.t sat in on la" ing abortion. Violating
procedure.
The JUdge noted that seveJ- testimony and spoke to Ihe law carries a Iwo-year
al doctors testthed that they reporters outSide the coutt- pnson term

Flags
from Page A1
Woodmen of the World. presented Jannarelli wtth llags
tor the fire and police departments, the village parks. a'
well as Ihe village ·s three
cemetenes
"It is my pleasure to be
able to come back 10 the town
I was born and raised 111 and
present these t1ags.'' he said
"I am trying to pay the town
back for what they d1d tor
me.''
Woodmen is second on ly to
the U S go\ernment m presenting Amencan flags to
civic and non-prof1t organt-

Banners
from Page A1
petumas which pang on the
light crossposts
Plans are now hemg made
to buy anothe1 balllleJ 111 the
fall. Accordmg to Susan

from Page A1
was the result of the fallen
trees and tree hmbs."
'There are tree limbs down
everywhere," Byer smd.
Medtcs with the Metgs
County Emergency Medical

;o,UL h

a~

Slhoo\-.. and

chUJches 1.\ll.tre lli h.td l11 gh
pra1se fo1 Ha)' .md smd the
ll.1gs demon,trate CJ\ 1c pnde
that m.1kc' MJddkport ,'
grea1 pl.tce to IJ\ e
Thts " uood because 11
clemonsiJ,tte; the pnde and
sptnt of M tddlepm t. · ,,ud
J,m ,u e IIi
Last year on Sept t I
Woodmen began presennnp
tlags. fLtgpoles and memonal
plaque s 111 honor of the 1tetJms of the 9111 attacks T11o
\ICttms dre chosen through
Ihe
Pnmts
ot
Ltghl
Founda11on to ha1e 1he1r
bwgraphte' presented at the
dedtcauon of the memorial
La st year. o'er 750 memonals were dedtcated acros' the
COUll!!)
Clark, ch.llllll.ll1. II will feature a repi1La of the courthouse on ureen v111vl tabnc
The ne~ bnc!ge ~banner "
the tourth 111 a series purch.Ised h' the Metchanh
AssocJattn.n stnce the penod
lights wei e \IN ailed 111 1996
The others feature ChJlstlllas
the Oh10 BtcentennJal. .md
... ternv. heele r de"lf!!l~

Proud to be apart of your life.
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Sunglasses
Services were busy Tuesday
evening, accordmg to EMS
Admtmstratot Gene Lyons. who
satd the department was "tmlndated'' with calls, piim,mly fium
patients on home oxygen.
"After the slorm. we had .111
enormous call volume about
trees down in r oad~. and
about pat1ents whose oxygen
suppli es were 111 danger
because of Ihe power Ollt-

Storm
from Page A1
Lord was Jookmg out for me."
The tree's upper most limbs grazed
the same covered porch that Klein had
replaced a year ago when the ice storms
invaded the cou nty and left thousands
without power. The tall tree was planted
in an aging nearly forgotten cemetery
across Welch Town Road. None of the
.. gravestones, some dattng back to the
1800's were upset when the tree came
crashing down .

ages," Lyons s;ud "We VISII- tome! s 111 the Pomerny sered several homes Io ensure vtce area. whtch mcludes .til
that oxygen eqUipment was AEP customers 111 Meigs
County.
working p10pedy "
"We've had crews workmg
"There were no lllJUnes as
a result of the storm, howev- . around the clock to restore
1er. aud we'te grateful for power, and the maJOrity ol
the 3,800 customers who
that." Lyons satd
,
-According to Suzanne rematned wnhout power on
Pnore of AEP. the storm's Wednesday are expected Io
h1gh w1nds mtcnupted elec- have servi ce restored by late
tnc servtcc lor 8.500 cus- Wednesday''

Even though the u·c~ wm. down. Klem
sa1d he was womeJ aboulloose power lines
and a nearby hJc,J!.er box wh1ch was sparking. Amencan Electnc Power wo1 kers were
on the scene soon afte1 Ihe inc1dent rcmovmg tl1e th1ck llee trunk wttll chain &gt;aws
The powet was cut ofl and the lines
secured. but they still &gt;tretched broken
across Welch Town Road by late mornmg. M.ul c.trlleJS. newsp.tper deliverymen ',md residents caulll)usly dtnvc over
the dead wtrc&gt; laymg across the road
whtch were sllll connected to the poles.
Netghbors cat11e by and talked with
Klem as he assessed the damage and
retlected on the mght before.

Even though 11 could have been
worse, Kletn is somewhat vindtcated by
the tree's fate. Ever since he moved mto
hts hou se 111 1997, offictally located at
31790 Welch Town Road. he has tried to
get Ihe tree CUt down because of the hazard it could create tf the wind blew the
wrong way. He approached both AEP
and the Sutton Townshtp Trustees. but
notlung was done
Klein said he ffi glad no one got hurt
and that the damage was mimmal
"I'm glad everythmg worked out the
way it did. but it could have been a lot
I'.Or&gt;e," he sutd

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�COMMUNITY

}he Daily Sentinel
'.

PageA6
Thursday, ii.me 3,

2004

Community Calendar

Scholarships awarded
·at MHS alumni banquet
MIDDLEPORT Six
. Susan G. Park Scholarships of
.$400 each
....,..
were pre" ...........
sented at
the annual
Middleport
H i g h
School
Alumni
Association
banquet
and dance
h e I d
Adkins
Saturday
. night.
·
Recipients
of the scholarships
were:
Meg an
Adkins. a
gradum? of

{I ·*

l' '/

R i v e r
Va I I e y
H i g h
School and L--...;
Berns
daughter of
Velvet
.Swisher Davis of Vinton and
·Douglas Atkins. who quali. tied through her grandparents,
. William and Nola Swisher.
She will be attending Ohio
State University to major in
precmed.
Michael Berns, a graduate
of Pike High School and son
. of Kraig and Dianne Barron

of Indianapolis, who qualified
through his grandfather.
Edward
L
e
e
McComas.
He will be
attending
Florida

S

a

t

t

e

University
where his
major
1s
undecided.
J a y n e e '---=:;;_;._,_J
Davis,
a
Davis
graduate of
Meigs High
School and
daughter of
Wayne and
Debbie
Davis.
Pomeroy.
who qualif 1 e d
through her
father. She
will
be
Hudson
attending
Ohio Valley CQIIege where
she will pursue a degree 111
business administration.
R&lt;mdall Hudson of Rutl&lt;md, a
graduate of Meigs High School
and son of Kevin Hudson ami
Kimberly Sisson. qualifying
through her grandmother.
Connie Mulford. He will be
attending Ohio State University

at Wooster and plans a career in

horticulture
science.
Maggie
P a r k
Lisbon, .
daughter of
Christopher
Park
and
Jeanette
G w 1 a dow sky,
qua I i fy i ng
through her
grandmothPark
er. Rae Ann
Mills Gwiadowsky. The
Lisbon
D a v 1 d
Anderson
High School
gradu~te wi II
be pursuiryg
a career 111
history education
at
B e r e a
College.
Stump
J a c o b
Stump of Charleston. W.Va., a
graduate
of
George
Washington High School and
son of Tom 'Stump and Amy
Thornton. yualifyed through
his
grandfather,
Alfred
Scarberry. He will be attending
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University to focus on aeronautical engineering.

.Devricknamed Volunteer of the Year
POINT PLEASANT Kanda Devrick, a volunteer at
Pleasant ' Valley Hospital for
the past six years, was select. ed by her peers as ''Volunteer
of the Year" at the organization 's
annual
banquet.
Devriek's volunteer hours
totaled approximately 3,000.
· "! am truly elated and
:appreciative, "
beamed
Devrick. "I enjoy being a part
of the Pleasant Valley
!-lospital Auxiliary and giving
something back to the community
through
volunteerism."
· Devrick. a native of
Charleston, W.Va., is a retired
_elementary school teacher
n.nd principal who served her
students for over 32 years in
the Mason County sc hool system. She attended Marshall
University (Huntington. WV)
where she received her bachelor and master degrees in education. Always striving for
-i;nowledge, Devrick attended
elasse~ at the Floridu Institute
;gf Technology (Melbourne,
:Fla.) and West Virginia
. ~ ni versity
(Morgantown.
:W.Va.). She also completed
.~ost-graduate work in educa·lion administration.
"Kanda is extremely dedicated and reliable," praised
·Charles · Fulks, president of
the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary. "She is exemplary
in her work and serves as a
positive role&gt;.model for others.
l wish we had a hundred volunteers just like her."
A trustee at the Main Street
Baptist Church, Devrick oversee.s the church's scholarship
program and serves ,as assistant director of the choir.
"Spirituality is extremely
important to me and 1 am currently taking classes through
the School of Christian
· Studies of the West Virginia

Meigs
Counties
informed
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Gallia • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2156

Meigs County to host charitable giving workshop .1

POMEROY - A workshop on charitable giving
uptions for Meigs County
will be held on Tuesday at 7
p.m . al the Meigs County
Annex located on Mulberry
Heights behind Holzer Clinic.
This meeting will begi1i to
look at the county's capabili- ·
ty and readiness to grow

COOLVILLE - A perit'CI ·
no-gain week was recorded
when Tops # 2013 met for
weigh in last week at the Torch
Baptist Church. The weekly best
loser certificate tmd fmit basket
was presented to Donie Bond.
At Tuesday's meeting Amy

Kanda Devrick. at right. a volunteer at Pleasant Valley Hospital for
the past ·six years, was recently selected by her peers as the
Volunteer of the Year at the organization's annual banquet.
Devrick's volunteer hours -totaled approximately 3,000. Shown
presenting her with a plaque is, at left. Alvin R. Lawson, JD,
FACHE, chief executive officer of Pleasant Valley Hospital. and.
center, Mario Liberatore, chairman of the PVH Board of Trustees.
Baptist Convention."
Devrick is involved in
numerous organizations and
aftlU!);ions including the
Ple~s~ Valley
Hospital
Wellness Task Force, Pleasant
Valley Hospital Annual Coed
Flag Football committee.assistant state coordinator and
instructor for the American
Association
for
Retired
People (AARP) Driver Safety
Program , Mason County
Association of Retired Sehoul
Employees, county representative for We st Virginia
Education
Association
Retired, treasurer of the
AARP - Mason . County
Chapter 3192, marketing and
membership committee of the
Pleasant
Community
Educational Outreach Service
(CEOS), is a nationally-certified child safety passenger
seat inspector and was codirector of the North East
Regional4-H Leader's Forum

2002.

Devrick also manages to
work a demanding schedule
in the Pleasant Valley
Hospi tal Gift Shop. makes
si lk tlower bud vases for
patients and signs-up for
almost any special event in
which the volunteer-based
progra'm is involved · includmg, health fairs, the annual
Baby Fair, "Bubbles" handwashing tutorial, open houses, bake sales, etc.
''Several years ago, I was
approached by a friend who
urged me 10 become a volunteer," remembered Devrick.
"It is, without a doubt, one of
the best decisions l have ever
made. I would encourage
everyone. especially those
individuals who have retired.
to gel more information on
becoming a volunteer."
To learn more about
becoming a volunteer at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
please calL (304) 675-4340,
Ext. II 00 or 1263.

r--------......,

Gallia &amp;

Or. Fred Williams removes his llat " ' the final awards assembly at Ohio Valley Christian
School to reveal his newly shaven ba lu nead. Williams.promised the students he would come
to school with his head shaved the last day of school if they were successful in raising
$35,000 in the school's annual Servathon Service Project fundraiser. Will iams new look
provided the students with the evidence that they reached their goal. He announced that
they actually raised $35,535 setting a new school record. Williams thanked the students.
parents. and friends of the school for their fantastic service and support.

charitable giving resources.
Using The Philanthropy
Index. a step-by-step process
that measures a rural com munity's potential fur engaging community members in
creating a charitable fund.
the workshop will nttempt to
begin a c'ommunity conversation on the desirability of

developing sucl1 a fund for,
Meigs County.
The project i.s a pilot effort
of the Fnundation for
Appalachian Ohio and Ohio
State Universi ty Extension.
~kigs County. Fur infonnalion contact Becky Baer at
7.+0-\l92-o6lJ6
or
baer.2911!' osu .cd u. '

TOPS records no-gain week

Howell birth announced

Keeping

Public meetings

CAMBRIDGE - Keith and
Becky Winebrenner Howell of
Cambridge announce the oirth
of A son, Christian Brenner, at
Genesis Bethesda Hospital ef
Zanesville on March 26. He
weighed 9 pounds 7 ounces .
Paternal grandparents are
Scott and Vicki Howell of
Sardis. Paternal great-grandfathers are Paul Etter of
Marietta and Ray Howell of
Sardis.
Maternal grandparents are
Susan
Gordon
and
Winebrenner of Syracuse.
Maternal great-grandmother i1 ' - - - - - ' = ......_ ___.__.
Ernestine Zuspan of Pomeroy.
Christian Howell

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

Hendrix was the top loser al the next mt!cting.
and received a ccnitlcate and
Top&gt; meets every Tuesday
fruit basket. A membership evening at the church. Wei gh
drive was discussed. Doris in begins at 'i: 15 p.m. with
Buchanan gave a program the meetin g at 6:30 p.m
titled "My Best Friend Anvone imerestcd \huuld
(Me)," and handed out a CO!ltact Pat Snedden at 662questionnaire for discussion 2633 or attend a free meeting.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Subscribe today¥ 992-2155

Monday, June 7
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees. regular
meeting. 7 p.m., Syntcuse
Vi II age Hall :
·
CARPENTER
Township
Columbia
Trustees. 7:30 p.m ., lire SUIlion. •
:Tuesday, .June 8
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees will meet
at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
Wednesday, June 9
POMEROY .- The Meigs
County Board of Health will
meet at 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department.
Friday, June ll ·
NELSONVILLE
Region
I4
Workforce
Investment CEO consortiium
will be held at 8 a.m. at the
Ranmda Inn. Nelsonville.
NELSONVILLE
A
Region
14
Workt'orce
Investment board meeting

will be held at 9:30 a.m. at
the Ramada Inn, Nelsonvi lle.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, June 3
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers
Plain s
VFW
Auxiliary of Post 90653 wil
meet at 7 p.m . at the hall.
RACINE - The B~thany
Church Sonshine Circle picnic will be held at 6 p.m. at
the Mckelvey Camp. Ham,
buns. pop and paper products
will be furnished by the hostess. Those attending are to
take a covered dish and their
own lawn chair.
Friday, June 4
POMEROY
-Meigs
County PERl Chapter 77
meets at Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center.
with luncheon at noon and
meeting to follow. Perry
Varnadoe, Meigs County
Economic
Deveopment

Director, will be guest speaker. All members are urged 'to
attend.
Monday, June 7
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at
7:30 p.m. at the hall. New
officers will be elected.

Church services
Sunday, June 6
VETO Homecoming
wi II be observed at the Veto
Tabernacle Sunday. There
will be a carry-in dinner at
noon, preaching by John
Elswick, and music by the
Gabrie.l Quartet starting at
I :30 p.m.

Support Groups
Thursday, June 3
POMEROY
Holzer
Hospice Meigs County will
have a "dinner with friends"
at 6 p.m. at Crow\
Restaurant.

Family Medicine

Knowing BMI can reduce health risks
Question: I went to .the
doctor for 111y annual physical. He said I was overweight.· I weigh what I
always have. I50 pounds. He
then told me not to worry

predicting other health measures.
The Body mass Index
!BMI) is a mathematical formula that is a weight to
height ratio. lt is more highly
about beinn overweiuht correlated with body fat con" a pear. Can
"
becau.' e I was
tent that any other heightyou please tell me what he weight indicator. A BMI of
was talking about? I would 22 to 25 is considered a ·
also like to know how n1uch I healthy weight for almost
should weigh.
anyone. A BM I under 18.5 is
Answer: It ~ee1m that the underweight. Mild obesity is
problems of be ing over- a BMI uf 25 that correlates to
weight and ilhese are on the' about 110 percent of idea·J
front page of the paper very .body weight. Severe obesity
frequently these days. Also. is a BMI of over 30 and muryou may have noticed that bid obesity ·is a BMI ~remer
what we consider to be over- than 40. The BMI dettnition
weight has changed in recent or obesity is the same ,, for
men and women. Your fami years.
Whatever the exact cutoff ly doctor can supply you with
points .between normaL over a BMI table, or you can find
weight and obese are. it's a handy BMI calculator
always a matter of judging online at the Center for
Control
and
what the appropriate weight Disease
is for a given height. For Prevention's Web site at
· many years physicians used http://www.cdc.gov/nccd height and weight tables cre- php/dnpa!bmi.
As for being a "pear," the
ated by insurance companies.
While these tables are good, other important correlation
more physicians are now between weight and disease
using the Body Mass Index is how the fat is distributed
(BMl ).
on your body. People with
primary fat distribution
Obesit~ is defined as an
excess of body fat tissue in around their abdomen are
relation to your lean body said to be "apple shaped" and
mass. So while we previous- are at increased risk for carly just looked at height and diovascular disease and
we1ght, we now understand insulin resistance. People
that how much fat tissue you who are larger around the
have, as well as how it is dis- hips are said to be "pear
tributed is very important in shaped." A lying-down waist

measurement . of over 35
inches in women and 40
inches in a man place these
people at risk. Measuring the
ratio of the waist to the hips
also can help assess risk. If
the waist is larger than the
hip measurement. the risk is
·increased.
While this pear vs. apple
business is of some hel p.
what you really need to know
to properly "size up" your
individual risk is your BMI.
If you find · that your BM! is
above 25. I'd recommend that
you lake steps to reduce your
weight so that BMI ·drops
down into the normal ran~e .
This will reduce your risk~o r
a host of disease~ including
Type II diabetes and he,an
di sease.
Famil1· Medi cine® is a
weekly ·column. To mhmi.t
quesduns, II 'rite to Mw·rlw A.
Simpson, D.O .. M.IJ.A .. Ohio
Unil•ersiry
College
of
Osreoparhic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701,
ur &gt;'ia e-mail to rwrderquestions@jamilymedicinenews.u
rg. Medicai information in
this column is provided as an
educational service only. It
does not replace the judgment of your personal physidan, 11(ho should be relied on
to diagnose and recornmend
treatment for any medi.c al
conditions. Past columns are
available online at www.familymedicinenews.org.

.Dorsey: Meigs programs
help boost Rio enrollment
Bv BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL

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exciting career that will work in the real world .
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COM

MIDDLEPORT - A substantial enrollment increase
Enrollment at The University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College is due in
part. .the university's president said. to expanded programs at the Meig s Center,
new online courses, and outreach programs.
Rio Grande set another
enrollment record in the
recently completed spring
semester, during which Rio
Grande had 2,745 students
taking classes on and off
campus, an increase of more
than 250 students from a year
ago. Enrollmem at Rio has
increased by more than I .000
studen ts in the past seven
years.
The Meigs Center in
Middleport, opened in 1999,
now offers a one-year certifi. cate program in information
technology, associate degrees
in business information tech-

PageA7

BY"THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

nology and business manage- Program that was added durment, and an associate degree ing the last school year."
in early childhood education.
"Programs such as the radiAccording to the .center's ological technician program
Director, Gina Pines, the cen- are in demand in the region,
ter also has increased its gen- as employers want qualified
eral studies offerings, avail- workers in these fields, and
able not only to students pur- students want to be trained to
suing degrees at the local work in these areas."
center and the main campus, In addition to adding probut to the general public.
grams on campus, the tradiThe Mei gs Center now tiona) course offerings are
operates from a Mill Street also seeing in creases in
location owned by the Mei ~s enrollment. Popular areas
County
Community such as nursing. business and
Improvement Corporation. education continue to see a
but the community college's rising interest; Dorsey said.
In response ·to the increased
board continues to negotiate
with the C!C for a new facil- enrollment. Rio Grande is
ity. to be built to university · adding faculty members in
specifications at a location to areas such as nursing. and
· be announced.
increasing its faculty and
"We arc serving more and staff workforce around cammore students every year," pus.
said Rio Grande President
Besides helping the local
Barry Dorsey. ·"We have economy, Rio Grande also
added severa l programs. ,continues to add cultural and
many in the allied health educational evems for the
field, including the popular campus and community
Radiological
Technician every year, Dorsey said.

Penny from heaven should
be returned to rightful owne~
DEAR
ABBY
Your
"Penny From Heaven" Jerter
about the coin found by the
employee of a car reconditioning business (the penny
was given to his Do" )
missed one important fact.
That penny belongs to the
owner of the car and should
not have been taken without
the owner's permission. It is
called stealing. Shame on
you. Abby. - HONEST TO
A FAULT IN PHOENIX
DEAR HONEST: Your
lel!er was one or hundreds
I've received from st icklers
for honesty who also scolded me for not chastising her.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: That penny
could well i1ave been "from
heaven " for the client who
owned that vehicle. It could
easily have fall en from the
cliem's pocket or purse and
have been presumed lost.
That writer should have
offered the penny back to
the customer. And you,
Abby. instead of taking
pleasure &lt;ll the taking of
another's properly, should
have pointed that out. C.R. IN WALLER. TEXAS
DEAR C.R.: Thank.' for
· punmg your helpful criticism so kindly. One reader
from ~tudio City. Calif..
asked me if I had a geranium in

my cranium for over-

looking the point.
DEAR ABBY: My daughter, "Melanie." and her
fiance. "Tom. expect their
first child .next month .
Tom· s mother. "Shirley,"

daughter to ,trengtben her
backbone and learn to '"serl
herself. It would be nice i r
her l'iance had matured
enough to tell hi' mother to
back olf at &gt;ollie point. but
it appears he hasn't.
DEAR ABBY: My son-inlaw. "Donald." ransacks our
desk and bureau drawers
and looks at everything
when he comes to \'isit. He
doesn't take anything. but

Dear
Abby

currently has no -home of
her own and is living with he goe~ throu gh anything
relatives. Shirley plans to that arouses his interest.
attend
Mel anic ·s babv
Donald has a pleasant disshower three weeks before position. but his paw ing
the babv is due. and remain through our things makes
indefinitely with them in my other daughter furious.
their apartment. The apart - Neither of us knuws what to
ment i.s big enougl1 for Tom. do about it because we don't
Melanie and the baby. but want to alienate my you nger
certainly no more.
daughter.
Tom can't bring himself
Ailyt\ling you suggest will
to say "No" 10 Shirley. and be appreciated. L"t week.
Melanie is distraught over . he opened a " na il drawer
this. She doesn't like having where I keep my checkbook
people around her 24/7. and and
monthly
payment
she's physically sick to her records . It 's dri\·ing us batty.
stomach about it. Shirlev Help~ - GOING BATTY
was not invited. She simply
DEAR CiOING BATTY:
informed my daughter when Relocate yo ur financial and
she would arrive and where personal papers to a locked
she would he sleeping .
filing cabinet. Put a loc k on
Should I ge t involved. or you r bedroom door and usc
should I let the children it 'when Donald is in the
work thi s out themselves·' house. Actions speak louder
Please advise. - ANX- than \i ord,
IOUS MOTHER II\' MASSDear Ahhr i\· 1\T;Ul'll lnACHUSETTS
Ahigai/ \ &lt;rir Burell. 1ris;,
DEAR ANXIOUS:
k11mrn m lt-&lt;11111&lt;' Plrilli!'s.
advise you to stay nul of the and u ·11.1 /iJfmded In her
fray. Oiler your daughter 111otho: Pauli11e Phillips.
emotional support. but do Writl'
Dmr Abln at
not fight this battle for her. a·\\"1\ '. DeurAhh\'.com (ir PO.
As much as you might like Brn ri'J-J./0. Lt;, Angeln. CA
to help ~ it is time for yo ur I.JOIJfN

Raccoon 'Captured and set free
"There will be no charges til es abm·e the nursery. Last
filed al this time against the Frida\'. Musser and Proffit!
raccoon or her babies for the worked tonethcr to net the
" but
POMEROY - After ter- . damages dnne to the animal out "of the ceiling.
rorizing the_ co ngregation church... said Pomeroy to no aL·ail. A trap. borrowed
. and vandalizing the Trinity Police Chief Mark Profl'in from the Sugar Run Flower
Congregational Church for jokingly.
Mills. was deployed to capnearly a week. a rac'coon
Slipping through windows ture the potentially dangerwas captured early Sunday or a door left ajar. the mama ous &lt;1nimal cmd her brood. '
mormng .
Pomerov
Pam
wtis
raccoon. otherwise known'"
Church Council Presidem Pomeroy Pam. broke into unavailable for c·or11m~nt at
John Musser said the rac- the church last week lind press lime .
coon and fo ur of its babies made a nest in the cei ling
were captured in a Iive trap
set outside in a nearby alley.
Apples coated with peanut
butter were used as pait.
The animals were set
Subscribe today • 992-2155
loose in a forest far from civilization.
BY J.

MtLES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSE NTINEL .COM

Proud to be apart of your life.

.

.

It's Customer Appreciation Day
In Mason!
Friday, June 4, 11 :00 am - 2:00 pm
Mason Office • Wai-Mart Plaza

Celebrating speeiDI dtlfS
·
with you!

We Wcirll to show our ,lppr cr1,1rlon because without you,
we woulcJ rmt he r1crcl
Carre JOin
'::rrore

\A:l"~

rn the fun i

v. r:·,·c:

?-~..

)

·,

.

..

.

.

.

···- -,. ,-,- _··1
"-

~·· ~·

1

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

Sunday Times-Sentinel
992-2155
• - --'--·-o · --·- ··- ·- -

Thursday, June 3 •. 2004

•

- - ·----- ----

�'

Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 3,

Market watch

A DAY ON WALL STREET
I

June 2, 2004

June 2. 2004

Dow Jones

Dow Jones
Industrials

Industrials

NewsChannel

I

Hlgll

10.288.81

10,197 06

1,12499

Russell

. +1.07

2000

c.......:...,,------------ 1.800

•
•1.79 '

---:-:-:-:::--=:---:=---::-:::-MAR
APR
. MAY
JUN

1,988 .98
IIOmprevloua:

Panthers rookie
Carter tears knee

+179

Poor's 500
2,200

Nasdaq
composite

t

t,988.98

Standard &amp;

Jan 14 , 2000

Thursday, June 3, _2004

-1.79

composite

Re&lt;ord high: 11.722 98

LOW

June 2. 2004

Pel change

10,262.97

Nasdaq

--~~~~--~~--~--92~
MAR
Al'R
MAY
JUN

~7

Pel change
hom prevtouo: +0.59

·I

.eo.32

------------9 . 7~

...O.S2
10,262

2004

-0.09

High
1.998 32

Low
1,978.71

Marcn 10, 2000

Advanced :

_j

:~~\1\~·~:-;.z'.,_""''S"\f\~
-;-"~~-""".~:~c~~~~-=:
...

::

Advanced:
Declined:

--=----=----:-:-::-:---=-1.o00
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN

1,124.99
Pet change
flomprevlou&amp;: +0 .34

High
Low
1,128.10 . 1,11864

1,607 New highs
89
t ,494 New tows

Unchanged '

Rocortt high: 1.527 46
MarC1124 , 2000

1.549.593.360

Nasdaq diary

~----------------- 1.050

+179

1.965 New highs
107
1,301
Declined:
New lows
Unchanged:
175
17

Vo.lume:

1.200

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

573.56

NYSE diary

1 ,600

Recortt high: 5.048 62

June 2, 2004

Volume:

21
390
1,503.332.452

L_~--------~--~--------------~­
AP

1

AP

Local Stocks
ACt -

AEP -

Thursdav, junt' ]
Momi11g (7 ·a.m.-Noon)

Expect a cloudy murning.
Temperatttres will ri'c from
60 to 71 bv late tilis morning. Winds. will he 5 ''' _10
MPH from tile west turmng
from the nortil a' the morning prugre~ ~e~.
1

mostly sunnv to mostly
douJv 11 ith 5 to I 0 MPH
11 inJ; from tile north.

from the north.
Friday, june 4

Eve11i11g
Midnig!rt)

Temperatures will climb
from 55 to 69 by late this
morning. Skies will be
sunn y with 5 MPH winds
from the north turning from
the northeast as the morning progresses.

(7

p.m.-

Temperatures will fall
from "73 early this evening
to 63. Skies will range
from clear to mostly cloudy
with 5 to 10 MPH winds
from the north.

Aftemoou (I p.m.-6 p.m.)

Temperature s will rise
from 70 early afternoon to
the high fm: the day of 76
at 4:00pm as they drop
back down to 75 later this
afternoon. Skies. will be

Ovemig!rt (I a.m.-6 a.m.)

Temperatures will decline
from 60 to Imlay's low of
53 by 6:00am . Skies . will
be dear with 5 MPH winds

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

Aftemoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)

Temperatures will remain
around 72. Skies will be
sunny with 5 to I0 MPH
wirids from the northeast.

Police cast a different light on crime prevention
BY

CHRIS STADELMAN
AS SOCIAl ED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
Ohio
State University and city
police want people . to use
ultraviolet ink pens to write
their driver's license numbers
on hand-held computers,
bicycles and other oftenstolen items.
Marking items with the
invisible ink . that glows
brightly under a black light
bas been a theft-fighting tool
in Great Britain for years. but
has been slow to catch on in
the United States.
Items marked with the ink
also can have holographic
"UV liD"" sticker affixed to
them to try to deter theft. The
ink markings enable police to
iden tify the owners of stolen
items recovered from pawn
shops or other locations.
Ohio State. the nation\
seconct-largest public university wi,th nearly 51.000 students at its main campus,
introduced the program about
a year ago. This f&lt;1ll , incoming students will be encouraged to mark laptop compu ters, cellular phones and even
textbooks.
The university and city
used grants to buy pens and
st ickers, which Columbus
distributes through more th&lt;Jn
. 150 neighborhood groups.
Columbus Lt. Richard Bash
of the department's community liaison section said he
a"lso hopes to use up to
$750,000 in Llrug education
funds to make them avaiLihle
to everyone in the city.
"We're going to do (1Ur
very best to make sure everybody has &lt;~ccess:· Ba'h said.
··rm going to purchase thousands."
John Kleberg, -Ohio State\
director of risk a&gt;Ses,me nt ,
hemd about the pen.' two
year' ago at a conference. He
'aid LonJon police u'e UV
ink to combat theft , especially or ce(Jular phone,.

··we found that there was a anywhere you go in Britain
great deal of interest on the there's some sort of marking
part of students, probably being used," said Ball , whose
because they all watch CSI," company adds a DNA-like
Kleberg said, referring to the code to its ink to make ideopopular CBS crime. dramas tification .even easier. "People
set in Las Vegas and M)ami. forget how important it is to
"Most of crime prevention is be able to identify something.
getting people's attention. If you can't prove it's yours,
This was a mechanism to get tough."
people's attention."
Bob Benedi ct, executive
Theft is by far the biggest director of tne National
campus
crime
problem Pawnbrokers Association,
nationwide. Burglary and said the group's 2.000 memtheft accounted for 94 percent bers nationwide support
of the crime on Ohio State's ultraviolet pen markings. A
campus in 2002, according to large-scale marking program
FBI statistics. and other makes a difference, he said.
"If it was standardized and
schools 1:eport similar figures.
Kleberg said a handful of everyone did it, it would be
universities around the coun- effective," he said.
try have expressed interest in
Karen Weise, president of
adurHing the program.
an Ohio State student govern·· we JUSt ordered the pens." ment group for professional
said Sgt. Troy Williamsklf the coll.eges such as medicine
University of Cenrral Florida and law. has promoted the
Police
Department
in technology to the 3,000 stuOrl;mdn. "We haven ' t even dents she represents.
had a. cbance to hand them
"My life is in my Palm
out yet
Pilot;" she said. "We're kind
Williams said he heard of a higher-risk population in
about the program through that we have a lot of electronOhio State and used a grant ics we need for school work.
to buy pens.
We're also on campus late."
Robert McCric. a professor
It's important to make the
of security management at pens and stickers easily availNew Yurk"s John Jay College able. she said.
··They're just not going to
of Criminal Justice. said the
programs are
a fresh go out of their way to use
approach to the decades-old them,'" Weise said .
concept of deterring theft first
Kleberg said he doesn 't
and 1dcntifying items if they have numbers about how
are taken. A major university many items have . been
and city working together is a returned because of the markplus. he said. ·
ings . The school spent $5,000
"'That sounds Iike an a~:t of in grant mpney on the UV
I~&lt;Kkrship to reach out to the pen program and another ini'
community.'" McCrie sa id. tiative to deter bicycle theft
"O ne side of the street does- over tl1e past two years, and
n"t belong to the university . he is sure the prograni is
and the other side to private worth the money.
pmperty i.wnc rs.
"'Textbook theft at the
Nick Ball. an England beginning of every quarter is
native and vice president nf a problem." he said. "A medUtah-ba., cJ Forensic Security ical or legal technical text can
sy,tcms. said Americans easily be a $ 150 book. The
ha\en·t gotten into marking pens are about 88 cents each
tlfcir property.
in bulk. We think it's really
··1 wou ld say pretty much going to work.""

Gannett - 86.82
General Electric - 31.10
GKNLY - 4.35
Harley Davidson - 57 .97
Kmart - 54.85
Kroger 16.83
Lid - 19.16
NSC - 24 .41
Oak Hilt Financial - 31.78
E)ank One - 49. I 5 .
OVB - 33.52
Peoples - 25.86
Pepsico - 54.26 · ·
Premier 9.25
Rocky Boots - 20.73

32.60

31 .57

Akzo - 36 .90
Ashland Inc. - 47.88
BBT - 37.28
BLI - 14.64
Bob Evans - 26.32
BorgWarner - 42.25
City Holding - 30.28
Champron --:- 4.32
Charming . Shops - 8 .68
Cot - 30.78
DuPont - 43.24
DG -19.41
Federal Mogul - .245

RD Shell - 50.46
Rockwell - 34.06
Sears - 38.13
SBC - 23.87
AT&amp;T - 16 .22
USB - 28.53
Wendy's - 36.21
Wat -Mart - 56.35
Worthington - 19. I 3
Daily stock reports are

the

Subscribe today • 992-2155

by Sm1th Partners at Advest Inc.
ol Gallipolis.

Regulator says grid agreement
should lead to better management
COLUMBUS (AP) -- The
opemting agreement between
the momtors of electric transmission lines stretching from
Manitoba to the New Jersey
coast could one day result in a
seamless management of the
!,'lid. Ohio's top regulator said
Wednesday.
·
However. a New Ym stale lawmaker said th: danger of a ~
of last surnrm-'s blockout wru!d
exist as ~as tile managem:nt of
tlnie lines IS voluntaiy.
The two grid monitors -Midwest Independent System
Operator
and
PJM ·
Interconnection -- reached an
agreement in December to
jointly SUfJCIV
. ise their lines.
MISO s coverage area
stretches from Manitoba in central Canada south to Missouri
and east to Ohio- all or pans of
15 states. PJM operates m nine
states from New Jersey to Ohio
and Indiana and the Chicago
area. The two companies· lines
interconnect in six states.
· The Aug. 14 blackout that
darkened the homes and busi- .
nesses of 50 million customers
began in FirstEnergy Corp."s

northeast Ohio territory . and
mpidly spread across the upper
Midwest, New England, New
York tmd Ontario, according to
a binational ta'k force.
Part of the problem wa&gt; grid
management, the study tound.
Most tmnsmission and distribution lines are owned by the utilities tl1at usc them and until the
blackout they had little incentive
to merze their opemtion.
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio Chaiiman Alan
Schriber. a member of the task
force. said the MISO-PJM
agreement could be a staJting
point toward true coordmauon
of grid opemtions.
Schriber spoke after a meeting of the top executives of
Ohio's four investor-owned
electric utilities - FirstEnergy,
American Electric Power,
Dayton Power &amp; Light and
Cinergy -- briefed Gov. Bob
Taft on steps they had taken to
prevent another blackout.
The four utilities have the
incentive to improve grid reliability or lean on one another to
get tt done, Schober s.ud.
''These companies put a lot of

peer pressure on each other. One
company screws up and th: others don't like that at all.'" Schriber
said. '"It's recognized by the
· transmission organizations."
Taft added that Ohioans can
not afford to wait for Congress
to mandate grid regulation.
Currently. compliance with
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission gu1delines ·is volunrarv.
"They should be enacting that
legislation this year. It go t_
bogged down in a lot o 1
Washington politics. It's unlor
lunate." Taft said.
The chiefs of the utilities told
Taft tl1ey had upgraded comput
er progmms, impf?ved employ
ee trammg and mcreased the
trimming or removal of vegeta
tion that can interfere with elec
tricity transmission ·__ three
areas singled out by the task
force.
Paul Tonko, a Democrat who
chairs the energy committee in
the New York State Assembly.
said Congress and the Bush
administmtion have bad almos
one yeai to act yet had done
nothing.

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Indians Notebook, Page B2
NASCAR driver convicted of DWI, Page 82
Sutter complains about bias In Finals, Page 83
Baseball scores and standings, Page B4

'.

CHARLOTTE . N.C (AP)
- Rookie wide receiver Drew
Carter of the Carolina
Panthers tore the anterior truciate ligament in his left knee
Wednesday. the third such
injury of h1s career.
The injury came on the first
day of the Panthers· minicamp.
'
Carter. a fifth-round draft
pick from Ohio State. injured
himself while runnin~ during
Wednesday morning s practice. It was the se~:ond time
Carter has torn his left ACL.
He also had the same injury on
his right knee.
·
The previous tear to Caner's
left ACL happened in October
before a game against Indiana.
He had surgery and was sidelined for the remainder of his
senior season.
He showed good progress in
rehabilitation and was running
well in the weeks leading up to
the NFL draft. which helped
persuade the Panthers to spend
a lifth-round pick on him. .He
participated in · the team's
rookie minicamp in late April.

Steelers cut LB
Jason Gildon in
salary cap move
Former All-Pro linebacker
Jason Gildon. the Pittsburgh
Steelers· career sacks leader.
was released Wednesday in a
long-expected move that create~ $3.65 million of salary
cap room.
·
· Gildon. who will be 32 next
month. leamed weeks ago he
would be traded or released.
The Steelers also told him not
to attend last month's mini camp or their ongoing voluntary coachi ng sessions. though
he has y.torked out by himself
at the team\ practice complex.
Until the Steelcrs re-signed
cornerback Willie Williams
last week , Gi Idon was the last
player remaining on their ro~ ­
ter from the team that lost to
Dallas in the Super Bowl in
January 1996.
By releasing Gildon. the
Steelers freed themselves of
his $3.65 million salary but
still must count $1.3 milliu.n of
hi); deferred s igning bonus
against their 200~ cap and
$2.6 million next year. They
would have been required to
count the entire $3.9 million
this year if they had cut Gildon
before now.
""Jason has been a very productive player and team leader
for us the past 10 years,"
coach Bill Cowher said in a
statement. "Unfortunately, .in
this system. some very difficult decisions have to be
made:·
The 6-foot-4. 255-pound
Gildon. coming off .two conseclltive Jown seasons after
making All-Pro in 2001, is
expected to sign shm1ly with
.u1otl1er team. The Texans,
Rel)skins, Packers. Ravens
and Browns are believed to be
interest~d in Gildon.
Gi Idon knew his I0-vear
Steelers career was elfecti"vely
over when they 'igned his former backup, Clark Haggans,
tO- a $ 10.2 million, four-year
contract on March 6. Haggans
wjll slide into Gildon's starting
position at left outside lineQacker,
"It's part of the business,
and I understand that," Gildon
said recently. '·But it's kind of
disappointing because of how
long r ve been here."
;Haggans is five years
yqunger than Gi Idon and has
been productive in a backup
role, getting 6 1/2 sacks in
2002. The Steelers also needed
to rree up some salary cap
room to give quafterback
Tommy Maddox more money
and to pay their draft class,
which includes quarterback
tlen Roethlisbcrger. They also
may try to sign linebackers
James Farrior and Kendrt~ll
Bell to contract extensions
before the season stans.
Gildon was disappointed the
Steelers didn't offer to bring
him back at a much-reduced
salary. as they did with running back Jerome Bettis.
Bettis agreed to a salary cut
from $3 .6 million to $1 lmllion after losing his full-time
starting job last season.
•'

Jay Haas
A new kind of buzz at Muirfield Village keeping
an eye on
Virginia
PGA Tour-- The. Memorial

'

.

BY DouG ·fERGUSON

Associated Press

DUBLIN -- There's a buzz
at the Memori;~ Tournament
that cannot be ignored.
It has nothing to do with
Tiger Woods imd Yijay Singh.
the top two players in the
world ranking who will be
playing in the same group for
the lirst time this year.
It isn "t about tournament
host Jack Nicklaus . .winding
down his incomparable
career. Not even the U.S.
Open looming two weeks
away can generate this much
attention.
This is a real buzz -- a
swarm of cicadas that has
retumed to Muirfield Village
for the lirst time in 17 years.
as big as Texas grasshoppers
and almost loud enough to
drown out the Ohio State

marching band during open- ·
mg cercmontes Wednesday.
'"I thought we had some big
bugs in Africa. but these
things ..:· Ernie Els said.
Kenny Perry was playing a
pro-am round Tuesday when
a cicada flew under his arn1
during. his backswing and
zoomed past his face.
'"I kind of flinched and I hit
it way left.'" he said. "They
could actually play a role m
this tournament ...
·Jay Haas is one of the few
players in the tield who were .
here m 1987 when the ctcadas
showed up. He was reminded
of them durino a practice
rou nct. when he fooked across
from the fifth tee and saw
Sin~h on the third tee.
··He let go of the cluh
because one hit him in the Jack Nicklaus flicks a cicada off his sleeve as he partici·
pates in the Memorial Tournament Pro-Am at the Mu irfield
Please see Buzz. 83
Village Golf Club in Dublin Tuesday. (API

Mighty Casey at the bat
TtM

REYNOLDS

Associa1ed Press

MIAMI -- Dontrelle Willis made the
pitch he wanted. Sean Casey still wasn't
fooled.
Casey stroked a two-out single in the
seventh inning to break up Willis" bid for a
perfect game. then hit a tiebreaking tworun homer in the ninth Wednesday that lifted the Ci ncinnati Reds over the Florida
Marlins 3- 1.
Casey's homer oil left-hancler ·Matt
Perisho -- brought in to face the major
leagues· leading hitter -- helped cap a
three-game sweep of Florida, which hadn't
been· swept at home since San Francisco
took three straight in May 200~.
Perisho had retired Casey in all - five of
his previous tries. The sixth landed i1nhe
right-field seats.
··unhelievable. huh"' There's not much
else you can say about him:· said ReJs
manager Dave Miley. whose team
improved its NL-best record to 32-21. '"The
g"uy busts -up the peiiect game ... then gets
the big hit .""
Brian Reith (2-1 ). who worked a~score ­
less eighth. got his second win in as many ·
days. Danny Graves worked a pe1tect nmth
for his major league- leading 26th save in
10 chances.
Miguel Cabrera had two hits and Juan
Pierre had a RBI single for Florida.
"'When we went on the field in the seventh. I'm thi nking. wow, we're only nine
outs away from a perfect game." the
Marlins' Mike Lowell said. "Then we went
from a perfect game to a big loss:·
Wi II is carried a perfect game into the
seventh and wound up allowing only three
hits and one run over eight innings against
a team that scored 16 runs in the first two
games of the series.
.
''He pitched u magnificen t _game.''
Florida manager Jack McKeon &gt;&lt;tid. "We
didn ' t give him any runs, so he had no margin for error."
Willis retired the first 20 batters. yet lost
his bid for history -- and a 1-0 lead - in
the seventh.
Casey. who raised his average to .39 1, hit
a tWO-OLit single to lett field , a soft oppo- Cincinnati Reds' Sean Casey points to the fans after hitting a two-run home
run off Florida Marl ins relief pitcher Matt Pe risho in the ninth inning
Wednesday in Miami. The Reds won 3 -1. (API
Piease see Casey, Bl

DL"B Ll:" Ja v Haa'
,i ould prefer not be low Haa'
thi ' weekenJ.
Pia\ in~ in hi' 27th consecuti\ e ·!\1elnnrial Tournament.
Haas' thou~hh will be wiih hi'
. sun. Bi ll~ at the ~CAA
· Champilln,hip' at Cascade'
Golf
Course
at
The
Homestead in Hot Spring,_ Ya.
··((, Bill\ last ewnt as a
college pia) er.""the elder Haa&gt;
'aiJ \\"edne,Ja \ . ·· He was
mted pia) er of the ) ear a few
"""k' a~o
- -- the Ben Ho~an
~

Please see Memorial. 83

[ American
League
1

BY

bi2 swing to make him feel
like a ma}nr leaguer agJin.

Matihews
.homered
leading off
the ninth
inn im: and
H. a" n 1Bial&lt;&gt;ck
Cl)!liT~~: l('Lf

,; itil l\\0
\nn .... kadinu the Texas R~IIH.!L' r~ tn a 5.1 "win over the "ck,eland
Indians on Wednc·,dal
and
' - .
~w~·t·p

PARIS -- Gustavo Kuerten's right
hip hurt, plain and simple. A shot. a
.sprint, a lunge: Each was · enough to
cause pain . making his task that much
tougher against a de_termined David
Nalbandian in the French Open quarterfinals.
Hoping to somehow prolong his stay
at his favorite t9urnament. the site of
his three Grand Slam titles. Kuerten
gutted it out for more than three hours
Wednesday until losing to Nalbandian
6-2. 3-6.6-4. 7-6 (6).
"That's the toughest part -- to main tain your mind ready and fresh and
thinking about the game all the time:·
Kuerten said. '"Sometimes. it's really
tough to forget all the pain that you
have .'"

·'

woml'n·~

~emifinab. f1.1cing

El~.n~t

Dcmentieva. while Jenn ifer Capri ati
plays Anastasia Myskina.
..
.
'"A n unbelie,able week.
'arJ
Gaudio. 13-5 at Roland Garros and 715 at other majors . '"Maybe an
Argentinian gu) i" going to ta~c th~

final. anJ it\ going 111 he l1kc a
dream. "

the

t\\(l ·g ame

Mat the''' · who hit an RBI
double in the second anJ a
sacrifice 1'11 in the 'i.\th . .:on nccteJ on· a· 0- I 1\itc·h from
Rafael BetatKOUrl 1~ - -ll to
break a 3-J tie.
The h()lnd -- \bttltc'\1 s"
rir-.t ~illl'C Au~. 2(, 1'\tr San
Dil'!..:O -- \l.' :.t~ .... a :-.p.:l··i .d on.:

fur lh~ 1ournc\ man ''utli~kkr
playing With liis ,c,·cnth tea111
since' IIJIJ'l . He 'i~ned 11 ith
Tex a-... i11 April aft~1: hein g cut
.by :\tJ.mta in , pring trainin g.
"It'.., 111\ l ir~ t -...in~..· t: l'l)lllin~
back up:· · said Matthn,.,-_
\\·ho c·amc· Ill ~-fnr - 1 7 'illl'l'
hi :-. con tract

purch;t-...cd

\\a:-.

fn•m Triple-A Ohlah&lt;Hllil on
tvta\ · 25 . '"All\ ti1 itc \ tlu c;ul

l1it :1 ~a me\\ i'n11L'f. it\ rl'~lih

a bic lift...
.
·
T,\·o tlllh after 1\latthews'
,11111. Blaluc· ~ hit hi ., I :lth
homer a' Tc.\a~ · ,,nn a third
:-.trai!!ht rnad · ~amc for the
rir~t "tiilll' thh '~a . . on .

The ,tt·cal-\ Ind ian' il a\c
had , their l;i:-.t fhl' game..,

decided in the fin;tl at -hat.
Bctanc·oun 'at &lt;\ nd 'tared in
hi' loc·~cr f,ll. ,e~ ·cral minute .'

Three out of four ain't bad: Argentine trio in semis
Associated Press

or

-.ene~.

do

percent chance:·
The inter lo per'' Ser,e-and-mllc)
'pecialist Tim Henman. the firq
Englishman in th e French Open 'cml final ' in .f) y~ars. On Frida) . ltc·" ll face
Coria. the only man not to (o,c a 'c t.
Nalbandian mee" Gaudio.
Never before had more than t"" .
Ar~cntincs reached a Slam·, quartcrfi na r,. Anotl1er player from Arge ntina.
Paola Suarct. is in Thur"la\ ·,

WITHERS

CLEVELAi\'D -- All Gary
Matthews needeu wa' one

before.'

It Liidrt"t hel11 that Nalbandian was
like a metronome. swatting stroke &lt;~ftcr
stroke from 6 feet behind the hascline.
then scrambling to get i111o position for
the next.
Thwack. pau se, thwack . pause .
thwack.
Gaston Gaudio did th e same again st
Llcyton Hewitt. like Kucrten a fmmcr
No. I player and a ma_10r w1nncr.
Strct(·hing points and mrcl~· making a
miscue, the unsecded Gaud to eltmmated No. 12 Hewitt 6-~. 6-~. 6 - ~ .
Nalbandian and Gaudin play similar
styles, neither has won a Slam. and
neither has won any title since 2002 .
Oh, tinJ they have this in common. too :
Both are from Ar~entina . as is No. ~
Guillermo Coria.- ri1 ing the nation
three scmi tinalists til a nlajor for the
first time .
"It\ great ror the cOUntry. whoever
wins,"' Nalbandian saiJ. '"We have a 75

ToM

Associated Press

French Open Tennis
BY HoWARD FENDRICH

MtuER

Assocrated Press

Rangers
top Tribe

Casey's two-run homer
lifts Reds over Fish, 3·1
BY

Bv Rusrv

~h~)\\ L'I'! IH!.

·· 1 malic had "pitchc, . and
that Il l!' it.'" he saHI. "' I didn ' t
Ill\

.ioh ...

Tc\a, rc·lin cr C.1rl&lt;"
.-\lm;ultar I ~-Ill pi.:~cd up the
win J~::-.pill' ~i\ in~ ur a tying
. . in!.!it' in thr..' ci!!hth.

1-'"ranciscu c(,rdcro walhcd
t\\ o

in thL' ninth hcrorl' t!L'tting hi . , 1Xth . . a\ r..· in 1S tric ....
\L'tl Ill !! a tctllll rccnrJ. He had

,harcJ the m,ulnl 17 'traight
L'Ull\Crled

... a, c ...

" ith John

Wetteland t ILJIJ'li and Jeff
Zi mmc' nn &lt;lll I~()() I I.
After the otic-nut \\alb.
Cordero 'true!.. &lt;HJI Matt
La\\ ton

;mU

1201

Omar

Vi;quel on a fnul popup for
the fin al out and a place in
Texas · record book.
"'That"' nice for me.
Cordero ' aid. ·· 11 mean' a
lor.· ·
Jm.h Cicrtll homered for the

Actually. it's not 'o unuqml for one

Please see French. Bl

----------

Please see Tribe. Bl

�I
· Page B2 • 1he Daily Sentinel

· Thursday, June 3.

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

.

Tribe ,

Indians just can not stop streaking
Bv ToM WtTIIERS

Associated Press
CLEVELAND - Team Streak is off on
another run.
The Cleveland Indians. who from week to
week go from one extreme to the other. have
had their last five !!ames decided in the final
at-bat following Wednesday\ 5-3 lo'' to
Texas.
It's the latest streak for the up-and-down
-Indians. who spent May swinging back and
fonh like a pendulum.
"I hate streaks. good or bad:· center fielder Jody Gerut said. " It's diftlcult to deal with
when you have a streaky team. I don't know
if that\ how we're going to be characterized, but that's how we're playing.
"It's hard on me. I hate it."
The Indians onlv seem to he ahle to do
things in bunches. Last month. they followed long winning streaks with extended
losi ng skids - and vice \'ersa.
Theories anyone·'
"I have no idea at all why we· ve played
that way:· third baseman Casey Blake said:
"I like the way we're playing. though. We
just need to keep the losii1g 'treaks to a minimum. One game it week would be good."
Blake does see a positive in all the tight
games the Indians have been playing of late.
·'I think it's going to make us better
because of all the close games we've been
in," he said. "I think your focus is off when
you play lopsided games. It's goi ng to build

NOTEBOOK

character for us later
on."
Gerut said he wasn't aware of the club's
hot and cold tendencies until he was
asked about it. For
now. he can only hope
the Indians find some

normal C).
"I like consistenn ... he said. "It's easier on
the ticker."
·
MILTON'S MELTDOWN: Milton
Bradle\'s ball-throwing tantrum in Los
Angeles on Tuesday night didn't come as a
'hock to some of hi' former t~ammates.
"It . was. ju'l a matter of time.'' Matt
Lawton 'aid.
Bradle•. whose trade to the Dodgers in
April w,i, prompted hy a final.run-in with
Indians manager Eric Wedge. was ejected
from a ga me with Milwaukee for arguing
with plate. umpire Terry Craft.
Before lea,·ing the field. Bradley dropped
his h~lmet. batting gloves and bat near home
plate and then emptied out a ball bag from
the dugout.
It was the latest in a long list of transgression for Bradley. who has a history of runins with umpires. other players and managers.
-Until now. Bradley hasn't been suspended .
Lawton thinks his luck has run out.
" I think he's going to get five or six
(games),'' he said. "I think he's in trouble

Wimmer said in a statement posted on the
Web site of his sponsor, Bill Davis Racing,
that he won't appeal the decision .
'' I respect the' decision of the couns."
Wimmer said. "''m eager to put all of this
behind me and move forward. My next commitment to putting all of this behind me is to
try and help others froni making the same
mistake that I've made."
Should Wimmer lose his license, he would
not necessarily be banned from NASCAR
events, spokesman Mike Zizzo said. To drive
in NASCAR races. drivers must possess only
a valid NASCAR license, which requires that
they be 18, physically fit and able to pass driving ability tests administered by NASCAR.
Alexander said his client may not go forward with an appeal.
·
Wimmer moved up to the Nextel Cup NASCAR· S top level - last fall after three
seasons of racing in the Busch Series. He had

Casey
from Page 81
site-way liner that tailed away from Jeff
Conine- who had no chance to make a play
1 ·
on the ball.
"When you're going good like, that, you're
going to get those !lares," Willis said. "I
thought the whole game I kept him off balance.1'
Ken Griffey Jr. walked, and D'A nge lo
Jimenez singled to bring home Casey and tie
the game.
In the ninth, Felipe Lopez hit a one-out single off Ben Howard (0- 1). Perisho was
brought in, and C~sey connected for his IOth
home run of the year- his fifth off a left-hander.
"They're one of the best teams in the NL.
and we feel like we're on of the best too:·
Casey said. ''It was just a good series. It was a
big series for us to get a sweep. Anytime you
go into Florida and play a team like the
Marlins, it's going to be tough to sweep these
guys. But we feel good about the way we're ·
playing."
Casey is carrying the Reds these days.
Cincinnati is 12-3 in its last 15 games. a
stretch that has seen Casey raise hi s batting

French

.

this time:·

BY

EYE TO EYE: Stay tuned for the next
Alex Escobar-R.A. Dickey meeting.
· The two exchanged words and ice-cold
stares in the seventh inning on Wednesday.
Afterward. neither had a good explanation
of what happened.
Escobar \\ail-ed with l\Ht outs. forcing
T~x~b mana~:cr Buck Showalter to remove
his startec. A~' Dickey ~··alked to the dugout.
he and Escobar renewed acquaintances.
"It probably was a little but unprofession;~1." said Dickey. who was upset with the
way Escobar was looking at him during the
at-bat. "He eyeballed me like I walked him
because I didn ., want to give in to him.
''He shouldn't ha\'e been starit)g at me like
he did."
Texas manager Buck Showalter defended
Dickey by saying ~e thought Escobar was
out of line. too.
··1 don't think that was a very good thing
for Escobar to do:· Showalter said.
Escobar shrugged otT the incident to "part
of the game. intensity...
BASELINES: Of Cleveland's 43 homers
this season. an astounding 34 (80 percent)
have been solo shots. In addition, 20 of those
solo homers have led off an inning .... SS
Omar Vizquel is batting .323 (31-for-90)
with a homer and eight RB!s in his last 24
games .... I B Ben Broussard picked up an
RBI single on Wednesday. but remains in a
3-for-35 slump.

five wins in three years in the Busch Series:
He was arrested Jan. 31 for driving while
impaired after wrecking a 2004 Dodge Ram
pickup truck owned by Bill Davis Racing.
Wimmer drives for the High Point-based racing.ream in NASCAR'S top-level Nextel Cup
senes.
Police had found some of Wimmer's pos·
sessions near the truck that had overturned in
a ditch. Wimmer was found in his High Point
home, crouched beside his bed and bleeding
from._ a head wound, police said.
High Point police records state that
Wimmer was charged after a breath test found
he had a blood alcohol content of 0.15 percent, nearly twice the state legal limit. Drivers
are considered intoxicated if their blood-alcohol content is more than 0.08 percent.
His wife. Jody Ambrose. was found innocent of charges that she impeded the investigation by lying to police.

average 22 points by going 27-for-60, a .450 .
clip.
" It would be Casey to get the hit.'' Pierre
said. ''The guys been so hot."
Reds starter Cory Lidle wasn't as dominant
as Willis, but ultimately just as effective. Lidle
allowed one run in seven innings, scattering
seven hits, striking out six and lowering his
ERA- up to 5.24 three stalls ago- to 4.42.
"He really kept us in the game," Casey said.
"If they scored any more runs the way
Dontrelle with pitching today. we were in
trouble."
Willis was pitching to a catcher, Matt
Treanor. who was making his major league
debut -after being called up Wednesday morning. arriving about 3 1/2 hours before the
game and borrowing equipment because his
luggage got lost somewhere between
Albuquerque and the ballpark.
Treanor. a minor leaguer tor II years, had a
memorable day - and not only because of
Willi s' performance. He singled in the fifth ,
his first oftlcial at-bat, moved to second on
Willis' sacrifice bunt and scored two batters
later on Pierre's two-out single to center field
for a 1-0 Florida lead .
Treanor said he 's keeping the game's lineup
card and the ball that he got his first hit with.
''I'm not a big memorabilia guy.... But I
think I' m go ing ·to keep those two things,"
Treanor said.

and again when Kuenen
served for the set at 6-5. In
the tiebreaker. Kuerten led 52,
but Nalbandian produced a
from Page 81
forehand on the line, a service winner, and a backhand
country to dominate the to the corner.
French Open: Spain had three
~· It
escaped from my
semifinalists in 1998 and hands.'' sa id Kuerten, whose
2002. Nor is it rare that who- first tour ti tle came at the
ever hoists the Coupe des 1997 French Open. and he
Mousq uetaires on Sunday added victories here in 2000will be celebrating hi s first 0 I. ''But maybe 80 or 90 permajor championship: he ' ll be cent of this was because of
the tournament's II th first· his effort. and not my fault."
time Slam champ in the last
As always in Paris. the man
16 years.
.
known as Guga received
Nalbandian came the clos- tremendous crowd support ..
est of the bunch, losing to One group broke the monotoHewitt
in
the
2002 ny of changeovers by
Wimbledon final. He also singing. "Ole, ole, ole, p-Ia,
reached the semifinals at last Gu-ga, Gu-ga!"
year's U.S. Open, then won
Neither
that,
nor
the first two sets and held a painkilling medicine, nor
match point before losing to three visits from a trainer
Andy Roddick.
could help his right hip.
There were
moments Kuerten, '27, has never been
Wednesday when it loqked as the same player since arthro·
if another lead might slide scopic surgery in February
away. Four times, Kuerten 2002, and it's fair to wonder
was a point from forcing a how much longer he' II comfifth set. Four times, pete with the best.
Nalbandian rose to the occaSeeded 28th, he qeeded
sion, including a spectacular five sets just to get out of the
cross-coun forehand winner first round against a qualifier
when Kuerten was serving at ranked !30th. He summoned
5·4.
the will and some brilliant
With wind kicking du&gt;t off shotmaking to upset No. I
the court into the players ' Roger Federer in the third
eyes. Nalbandian broke there, round. but Kucrten acknowl-

edged he didn't have much
left.
"He made me run a lot. I
really suffered," Kuerten
said. " Right now, I don 't .
know what's going to happen
if I had to play another
match.''

Gaudio, of cou,rse, is
thrilled to still be around. He
considered quitting the sport
when finance s were tight during his early years on tour.
"Sometimes. there was no
money to travel." sa id
Gaudio. 25. "Sometimes you
had to stay in Europe for an
extra month to wait for the
next tournament. We couldn' t
go back home because we
couldn't pay the airfare."
Against Hewitt, the consummate baseline scrambler,
Gaudio played patiently. He
had 19 unforced errors to
Hewitt's 43 and showed he
can mix things up, winning
20 of 21 points at the net.
Gaudio finished the match
with blood trickling down his
right shin from a final-set
tumble.
"He was too good.'' Hewitt
said. "He's very confident at
the moment, especially on
this surface, and his movements are as good as anyone
on this surface."
As good as Nalbandian, for
example 'J
\

1
. Thursday, June 3.

Indians, who were blanked for &gt;i\ innings by
Texas staner R.A. Dil·key.
The right-hander. mixing a fastball and
changeup\vith an offspeed pitch he calls :·The
Thing ... allowed an unearned run and SIX htts 111
6 2-J innings. However, Dickey remained winless since May 1.
.
"I wasn't doing anything different than I have
been ... lie said. "But today I had my change. my
fastball and "The Thing" all working for me.
When you ha,·e all three pitches. it makes a big
difference."
Down 3-0. the Indians got an RBI single from
slumping Ben Broussard (3-for-35) , in the seventh and then tied it with two runs in the etghth
off reliever Brian Shouse.
Gerut hit his sixth homer with one out to bring
the Indians to 3-2. and Victor MartineL followed
with his first career triple. Shouse then struck out
Travis Hafner before he was replaced by
Almanzar.
Casey Blake greeted the right-hander with an
RBI single. but Blake got thrown out trying a
delayed steal - his second bad baserunning
deci sion in two days.
"I got a steal sigti,:· Blake said. "I don't want to
say I panicked, I just delayed. I don't know why.
We don' t even have a delayed steal sign. To be
honest. I don't know what the heck happened."
On Tuesday night. Blake hesitated on an
auempted sacrifice bunt in the lith inning and
was thrown out at the plate in Cleveland's 6-5.
12-inning loss.
The teams played their second game in 13
hours Tuesday. The short turnaround affected the
Indians. who didn't get anything going against
Dickey until the seventh.
Dickey was pulled with two outs after the
Indians scored an unearned run. As he left the
field after walking Alex Escobar, Dickey
exchanged words and cold stares with
Cleveland's outfielder.
"He eyeballed me like I walked him because I
didn't want to give into him," Dickey said . "I
didn't think he should be staring at me like he
did. When I strike guys out, I don't stare at them
when they go back to the dugout. "
Escobar was surprised by Dickey 's reaction.
"He was (mad) about something." he said. "I
didn 'I know why he was staring at me. I guess it
was part" of the game." Notes: Rangers 2B
Alfonso Soriano hit into his first double play in
217 at-bats in the first. He hit into eight double
plays with the Yankees last season. ... The
Rangers have won six straight against Cleveland .
... Before the homers. Betancourt had pitched 7
2-3 scoreless innings in his last seven appearances .... Like father. like son. Matthews has also
played for the Chicago Cubs. Piusburgh . the
New York Mets and Baltimore. His dad played
for San Francisco. Atlanta. Philadelphia. Seattle
and the Cubs.

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, June 18th!

, ,e

.,urp~fi S ~ j,...--o----'ntv;,__s_13.-'--oo__,

·. .·

The Daily Sentinel' • Page R:J

www.mydailysentincl.com

2004

Flames' Sutter complains about pro-Lightning bias in finals

from Page 81

NASCAR driver Wimmer convicted of DWI
HIGH POINT, N.C. (AP) - NASCAR driver Scon Wimmer was convicted of driving
while impaired and leaving the scene of a
January accident.
He received a 60-day suspended sentence
and was placed on unsupervised probation .for
a year Tuesday. He also Was ordered to .perform 24 hours of community service.
Wimmer can still compete, but he will be on
probation for the rest of the NASCAR season
and must perform funher community service
thattlie series is arranging .'
Wimmer was granted a limited driver's
license for 12 months. meaning the license
could be revoked if he is found driving with
alcohol in his system. defense lawyer Chuck
Alexander said Wednesday.
The 28-year-old driver already has undergone an alcohol assessment. which found he
had no substance abuse problems. satisfying
the last term of the sentence. Alexander said ..

2p04

1 X S GreetlnQ &amp; Picture

1

Ila

'·

series by winning 1-0 Monday wasn't supposed to be here and m·er.
•
night in Calgary.
.
a lot of people don't want us to
Sutter aJ,o hintcJ media pre,.
Late in that game. Nieminen' be here and to make sure that ;urc on the league to \Uspend
- a feisty. aggressive a\litator we're not successful. We ·know Nieminen fi~ured into the decisuspended once earlier m the that."
'ion. A' a re~ult. he i' que"ionplayoffs for a hit on Detroit
Asked to whom he was refer- ing his own policy of not letting
complain
about
goalie Cunis Joseph - · ring, Suner said. ''None of your players
rammed Lightning star "Vincent business." .
mjurie,. even if they occur on
Lecawlier face-ftrst into the
But it was obvious whom he plays that aren't penali?ed .
glass. Lecavalier's helmet . meant. At one point during his Nieminen wa' given a 5popped off and he needed 20-minute news conference. minute major penalty for
stitches on the right side of his Suner's cell phone ran!!. He let board in£ and a game mi,conhead, but he said Wednesday he it ring, then said. "Probably. duct for ramming into
feels fine and will play in Game New York again," a reference Leca,·alier.
5.
·
to the NHL's main offices.
"Hey. the media is a powerful
NHL director of hockey
NHL commissioner Garv tool. belie,·e me.'' he said .
Sutter's attention-&gt;hifl i n~
operations Colin Campbell Beuman released a statement
hmted Nieminen's repeat· late Wednesday about Sutter's tactics are similar tDtho'e uselt
offender status figured into a remarks.
.
by Flyer&gt; coach Ken Hitchcock
one-game suspensiOn that infu"Mr. Sutter's comments were and Lightning coach John
riated Suner.
ill-advised. inappropriate and · Tonorella during the Eastern
"So fine , we know what inaccurate," he sa1d. ''The focus Conference finals. At one point.
we're up against," Suner said. of the Stanley Cup Final should Tortorella "uti Hitchcock
"We're the underdojl. We've be on the ice, and to the extent 'hould ..,hut lm yap."
said that. I am not saymg it now any response is needed to any
This time. Tortorella had little
to make a point, buttt's dead on · gamesmanship off the ice, 11 to say. declining repeatedly to
true. We're the little team that will be made after the Final i&gt; discus' the pia) or the suspcn-

ALAN ROBINSON

Associated Press
TAMPA. Fla. - Calgary
Flames coach Darryl Sutter
deflect~d ~uen~ion away from
V1lle N1emmen s suspension by
complaining Wednesday that
some NHL factions badly want
th~ Tampa Bay Lightning to
wm the Stanley Cup.
Sutter said suspending one of
his top players for Game 5 only
reinforces his small market.
Canadian-based team's status
as underdogs in a finals that
were expected to be fast and
furious bur 'instead have been
physical, injury-filled and lowscoring."
The two teams have alternated victories heading into
Thursda{s pivotal game.
which wtllleave the winner one
.victory shon of the Cup. Tampa
Bay avoided a 3: I deficit in the

Memorial
from Page 81

same time, he didn't want to add to
the pres sure.
"I ju~t felt like I needed to do the
same as I've always done and let him
do his thing, and we'll play in tournaments together and I'll watch him
play for a long time in the future ,"
Jay said. "But it is difficult. I was on
the computer last night looking at hi s
score.''
Bill shot a second-round 68
Wednesday and is at 2-under 138,
near the top of \he leaderboard. He is
trying to follow in .his father 's foot. steps. Jay was the NCAA m~alist in
1975 - at Ohio State 's Scarlet
Course.

Award -and he's had an outstanding year and career and everything.
So to miss his last event, that was a
tough decision."
Bill is a senior at Wake Forest and
one of the nation's finest collegiate
·golfers. His 50~year-old father has
won nine tour titles and continues to
be a contender on the PGA Tour even as he makes his first foray into
senior golf. He placed second to Hale
Irwin by a shot at last week's PGA
Seniors Championship.
RYDER CUP FITTING: If playJay Haas has finished in the top 10 ers didn't already know how much
at the Memorial eight times and has . this Ryder Cup means to u.s. captain
won more than $430,000 in the Hal Sutton. they got another
event.
When the father saw that this week reminder Wednesday at the
Memorial.
coincided with his son's biggest tourEven though Sutton isn't playing
nament, he hesitated. He wanted to this week, l:le flew 10 Muirfield
be a part of the big moment. At the Village and had the top 25 players on

the points list get fitted for their uniforms .
Asked if anyone needeu tn ln1e
weight. Sutton laughed and 'aid .
'"Me."

CHANGE IN MANAGEI\IE:"&lt;T:
Ernie Els has changed manager' for
the third time in the Ja,t year. si gni n~
with IMG. The deal is exp~ctcd to he
announced next week.
Els left longtime i1gent NiL-k
Frangos last year and ;ought lie\\ .
management. He wa&gt; looking t(lr
someone who didn't haYc :1 li&gt;t t&gt;f
other clients and ewntuallv htlO~cd
up with David Abell. the 'agent for
Nick Price.
That didn'i work out. dthcr. anJ
they paned after the Master.,.
El&gt; was close friend&gt; with I~ IG
founder Mark McConn ack. who t.licd
last year. One re,Nm he didn' t ' ign
with IMG right away was becau'e

•ion. Leca\'alier ;aid onlv that
~c planned to play Thur&gt;da;. .
"Oh yeah. of cour-,e." he 'aid.
a" if it never wa'&gt; an i"&gt;!-tUe.
Both team, are undefeated in
Game 5s - Calgary is 3-0. all
on the road. and Tan1pa Bay is
2-0 - and Lee a• alier and
teammate Brad Richards \aid
that the game was their focu •.
not the recurring injuries.
Leca\'aiier's mjury was the
third to a key Lightning player
in two games. Defenseman
Pavel Kubina &lt;lower bodv
injury. possible concussion)
and right wing ·Ru,lan
Fe.dotenko 1facial cut. po"ible
concu"ion ) sat out Game 4. but
both practiced Wednesday.
·Thev (the Flames) are verv
~ood 'on the road." said
.Richards. who scored his
record seventh game-winning
goal in Game 4. "Just because
we ha\'e home ice two out of
three doesn't mean anything.

Hi; main agent ~~ill be Peter
German in IMG \ London office.
German handles IMG golf tournaments &lt;werseas, so El&gt; will be the
unly player in his ;table . Peter Malik
in the Cleveland office will help out
"hen Eb ts in the United State,_

CHANGE IN WEATHER: The
temperature was in the 70s at ,
Muirlicld Village on Wednesday- a
dramatic change from one of Lee
Trevino\ most memorable previous
trips there.
During ceremonies on Wednesday .
afternoon. Trevino and the late Joyce
\Vethercdwere presented as the tournament\ annual honorees.
Wcthercd won five English
Amateur and four British Ladies·
. Amate ur c·hampion&gt;hips. Bobby
Junes once said of her. "She is the
J'inc'l ~o i J'er I have ever seen: ·
Trt•,;no \\'Oil four majors and more
the agency \Va~ too hig.. it!ld !he Ri g than f:l) title\. hut ne\ er linished
Easy wanted ·someone "ho could hi~her than tied for seventh at the
devote ti me specitlc;ifly to him.
Memorial. In 1979. he ~hot an 81 in
•

included- where his tee shots Championship. where Woods
might go. Despite spraying the held off Singh to win by two
ball off the tee hts last two shots, a victory that carried
.
tournaments, Woods still man- him to l)is tifth straight PGA
from Page 81
aged to finish one shot out of a Tour player of the year award.
The conversation was noth·
playoff at Quail Hollow and
face on his down swing," Haas the Byron Nelson .
ing like the 'round-the-clock
said.
"I'm close with everything.'' noise from the cicadas. It went
· These are called 17-year Woods said. "It's not just my something like. "Titleist 1.
cicadas because that's how . driver. it's my entire game. You're away. Here's your
long. they have been in the You've got to keep working on card," over 18 holes.
ground. They crawl out to it and keep staying l?atient, and
"When Vijay and I play. we
· mate and lay eggs in tree hopefully things will fall into just play · our games.' Woods
·branches. That constant place."
said. "We're trving to win a
screeching sound is the mating
Later. however. he conceded golf tournament. It\ going to
:call made by the males 24 that "you go through periods be an enjoyable but competihours a day. Along the tree- where you just don't play tive envtronment. and we' re
. lined fairways of Muirfield well."
going to out there and play.''
Village. the noise sounds like
·
It could be quite a show.
Woods and Singh last played
police sirens in the distance .
together in the first round of especially if they wind up
"We don't . have bugs in the TOLir Championship in together on the back nine
:Ireland," Padraig Harrington Houston. The more famous Sunday with the tournament
·said. " h was interesting the eocounter was tl1e last round of on the line. Even the cicadas
:very first day to hear the noise. the
Amecican
Express might shut up and watch.
We weren't quite sure what .
they were. I read about it in the
paper, so I was kind of expect:mg it. I actually wanted to see .
my first one. Once I've seen a
:few, I've seen them all. That's
ROTOTILLER
:enough."
DRYWALL JACK
The cicadas won't be all the
Break
up
Drywall sheets are too
rage once the tournament
garden or
heavy cumbersome
starts.
flower bed:
to hang without this
The Memorial, which
Our rototillers
handy jack.
Nicklaus founded in 1976,
are just the tool
Lifts and holds
::remains one of the best stops
for
greenthumbers.
·on the PGA Tour because of
drywall
:the course that Nicklaus is con:stantly tweaking. and a toumament he tries to nm Iike his
Per Day
beloved Masters.
The only significant change
;this year is three additional
PO~ER WASHER
·bunkers down the right side of
·:the 18th fairway to punish big
the hose away and do
to us for digging
·hitters who try to cut the corfOb right.
ip ment and keep your
. ner, and cutung down about
a power washer to
schedule.
No one can
500 trees to allow more sunlr.l••"n
up
your
act.
lmteP.tcontractor needs like
. .light ·for the grass and more
I
show
you
how.
-wmd tunnels to create havoc
:on cenain approach shots. ·
· The field mcludes nine of the
:lop 12 players Phil
M1ckelson. Mike Weir and the
Per Day
injured Jim Furyk are missing.
Perry is the defending champton, winning by two shots last
PORTABLE
·:year despite closing with three
SKID-STEER
::straight bogeys. ·
COMPRESSOR
LOADER
· But all eyes - even those
Take you(compressed air
tru ly multi-purpose piece
·:spooky orange eyes of the
supply where you need it to
equipment. Downright
·cicadas - figure to be on the
run
tools.
Woods and Smgh the first two
rounds at Muirfield Village.
They will be joined by the
ever-popular Joey Sindelar,
::who might want to change his
::name to Joey Switzerland.
·While the respect between
Day
Per Day
Woods and Singh is mutual,
their relationship is cool at
r best
Singh all but predicted more
.than a year ago that Woods'
dominance would not last forever, and he might be right
Serving You '""" 2 Locations.
'The 41-year-old Fijian h~s
already won three umes th1s
,_~N'I/WIA
year, and has closed the )lap on
740-446-3399
oai\'{.~ 7 40-992-4034
No. I to a mere 1.89 pomts.
JCT. RT. 35 &amp; 160
399 S. THIRD ST.
Woods remains the center of
GALLIPOLIS, OH
MIDDLEPORT, OH
· .attention, not because of his
OPEN MON·SAT.
OPEN MON.-S AT.
·brilliant play, but because
7:30AM • 5 PM
7:30 AM • 5 PM
::Cveryone ts curious - Woods

We\e unt tn trL'.t'.
Gumc
..,ho\\ n

11 lt ~e ~~

hl'l'&lt;IU"-l' tlh..'' h ~t' L'
the\ •.:an !..'( 11lh.: 111 .mJ

1

\\in Game ·s. . nn tl.l' ru,td ·

Sutter '"" tilL· 111111 l·btllt' •
&lt;·oach or pl&lt;t'L'I "!'"~ Lt li-ed
Wcdne,da) \\Ill! 'c'J'&lt;lrtu ·, .
After learm ne
1 1,11
Ill\
1

Lightnin~ pl d~eJ-.., tui~L·d

itft e 1

tra\'elin~

Tue•d.tl. ~uttL' I ll!Jdc
hi' pl•l\'(..-, pfl-llill!l'
\ i emi n~n· . . nJli.:- .t1!1l' .. u . . pen,ion CPillt'"' .JillJll k·hak
whether the FlalliL'' s•llltu te
empha' '' from hc:11~ .11 uptc'lll'·
po. thri1 e-ulf-111 i•t.tk•.k'.llll l&lt;'
one in tell\ nn '' L'antL d1 1\\ n the
Li!:!ht m n~ '' nh ph~ ...7\.·,tl ~1!,1~

1-1

huninp tht.· m mnrL' tli.u1 it 1..,
he !pin~ .

The,_ Ln.!htlltll\2·.., d~l· J ..,t\ t:
QOal \fon U:t\ ~.;anl~..' ~LHtll~ ~~ :'-

On -J ath ant~ r~L' Ill thL' np:·nlllg
minute \. ;md .Ill\ FI.HrL·, ~._ttme­
back hufll'' Ill. lilt llll.tt IPur
minuh.~ . . \\ cr\· Ct 1 \:d h' the

:-Jiemincn pcnalt'

·

the se&lt;.:ond round 111 lh'l l'l lrc· ,llnditions that included lc'lllJ''''·'·lllc' llL'ar
free Ling. rain. lla u-hcrhL!l~ "' n:,l dlld
snowtl:ike&gt;.
~
,
Tournament f(lU!ldl' t .tlhl_ \1 ,...,! I dl f..
Nicklaus bt11nped inlll TtL'\ 11·,~ 111 the .
locker room anJ a-.,~ r.?d h(l\1 ht-.. d;t\
went.
"I said. '!made ,t 1')-l,llltc·r ll~.!lrn~
to death on the I Xth hc,k. · I I-,~, 111:,
said. "It took hi m ,, 1 &lt;'"'' lP ~ct me
back becau'e tlllCe It skctccl hL'!C.
·that was it for me ."
DIVOTS: Retired \ ell Ynr'
Yankees outfielder Paul (J'\,·tll "·''
at the practice rcmgt.? -.,:htlHlOJing
"ith the pia) er' .... The \ IL'Illt&gt;n't!
has been one ol the ll hlsl llc'.llill'··.
plagued toLirnamcn t' ~ ,, cr illL' : L'd l '- .
with two n.Jllllll.., L'i.UlLek d .t nd .Inn! her 25 su~petKkd O\ c r ~ s ~ l '&lt;l r '-.
Surpri~ipg 110 unc. 1l l ·ll·~.111 1t 1 r.tlll
duri ng Wedne..,cb~ ·.., ht l lliHl'L'" ~..:L'rL·­
mnny ... . The ficiJ nf 1t)5 lllc·ludc'
nine of the lltp 12 pial L'l' 111 !he
world ranking, .

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Wll

.

NOW$11,900

02' Rendezvous
AWD. GMAC Lease Turn-ln.

01' GMC SONOMA

ontv. 30.000 Mttes

llll . SIS. 4 wheel drive. V6
3nl Ooor. Power Wln6ows. etc.

Reduced To

$10,500

NOW

lltHd IIOot.TY. IIououor~~··,::::~J local owner. A/C. sm. Shm

Ji~HIIR, Pillllll SOIUJC. Co

NOW $8.995

l.&lt;tri!t '

NOW $7,995

:-idt•t·Iinn nl' l.:!lt· \ludl'l. l.tt\\

UJ&amp;Utnr 1mer1ot.

01' Jlmmv 2dr.

28.000

98' VW BEETlE

White, Power Sunrnf

Onlv 12.000
Actual Milos

,......_
·- •

96' CHEV. MARK Ill VIN

02' Monto Carlo

leather tntertor.lnded

From $19,900

or Cadillac

03' Aztec FWD
Tift. Cruise. Power WindOWS
was 513.900

NOW$11,900

NOW

or Buick
canturv · 02' GMC ENVOYS
limited

On1111511.loathor 101. Auto.
Climate conlrol

Factorv4W3:vehlcte

---=~

.

oo· Jeep
Cherokee
lhMI DWJIIr, lmtniCIIIte
LOCI~

cenunton. rawer £verYihtne.
Mlllllllr'lllll'lll
wos$12.901

\lilt·;t~t·

or Chevv
Sllveradonl

( :.... ,_ Trtti·l..:;. \anl'\ Sl l\ ·,

1900 EASTERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS 116-2282 Tnll Ft'l'l'
.,

1·877-~14-(l-2282

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 3.

www.mydail)sentme l com

Thursday, June 3, 2004

2004

··---------------------------------------------------------------------------•'

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To Place
~rtbune
l\egt~ter
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
~----------------------~o_r_Fa~x.T.o(740)446•·3·00~B~______
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HBP-by PMar1 nez (JGu Den) WP-wesn

Monday thru Friday

Ump es-Home LAnce Barl&lt;sdale First Doug
Edd ngs S&amp;cood Den iassogne Th rd Jell Ke

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

wm

00200010-4
000 000 200 2
E - Kos~ e 4 DP Tampa Say 2 LOB-

Tota 1
Toronto

040

100

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

2 0

0

0

3 1 2

000 -

5

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response

BATTlNG-Mo a Ba 1ma e 385 Harvey
K8nsas Crty 367 ASanel1ez Detron 359
MRam ez Boson 356 VGuerre o, Anahem
345 Suzuki Seattle 338 MYoung T9JC8s

336
RUNs--Me a Ballln'IO e 47 VGuerre o Ana
hem 45 Matsu New York 42 Lawton Clewand 40 Be horn., BoS1on 39 CGu len Del 01
00: BAober1s Ballimo e 36 MYoong Texas
36 ARod 19uez New York 36

r

RBI-[X)rtiZ 8os on 44 VMart nez C fN&amp;-

Iand 41 Taade. Ball.more 41 VGIJ8fl'ero AA!r"
he m 40 Roctiguez Detrort 40 JGu len A.na
helm 39 MAam ez Boston 39
H Ts-tSuzulu Sean e 78 MYwrlQ Tsxas 76
Mora Baltimore 75 VGuerre o Anahern 70
MRam ez Boson 69 ASanchez Detrort 65
Rod .guez Detro~ 65
HOME AUNs--MRamlrez 8os on 4 8 alocto.
T91Cas 3 EChavez Oak ood 3 VGuerre o
Anahem 12 AAod guez N13Vt'York 2

The Home Nat1onal
Bank will auct1on the
tollow1ng Item on
Saturday June 5
2004 at 10 00 am at
the banks parking
lot
2002 Dodge Dakota
Quad
Cab
4x4
1B7HG38NX2S69632
5 Loaded 37 400
miles extra nice

1997 Chevy Cavalier
1G1JC1249V7145188
The Home National
Bank reservea the
right to reject any and
all bids
For an
appointment to see
call 949-2210 ask for
Shalla
(6) 2 3 4

Public Notice
IN

THE

P~EAS

COMMON
COURT OF
COUNTY

MEIGS
OHIO
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
Case No 04CV021
VS

THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS NEXT OF KIN
SPOUSES
DEVISEES
LEGA
TEES
ADMINISTRATORS
EXECUTORS
SUCCESSORS AND
ASSIGNS OF TONY L
WELCH AKA TONY
WELCH DECEASED
ET AL
DEFENDANTS
NOTICE BY PUBLI
CATION
To
T
h
e
Unknown Heirs Next
ol Km
Spousas
Dev1sees Legatees
Adm tmstra tors
Executors
Successors
and

Ass1gns of Tony L
Welch
aka
Tony
Welch deceased
whose na mes and
addresses
are
unknown
You
are
hereby

nohl1ed that you have
been

named

Delendanls In the
acl on entitled
Home National Bank
Plalnl1ff
VS The

Unknown Heirs Next
of Kin
Spouses
Devleees
Legatees
Administrators
Executors

Successors
and
Assigns of Tony L
Welch
aka
Tony
Welch deceased at
al Dalendanta This
action
haa
been
assigned Caae No 04
CV 021 and Is pend
lng In the Court or
Common Plaaa or
Malga County Ohio
The object of the
Complaint demands
judgment against the
decedent Tony L
Welch
aka
Tony
Walch
and
the
Defendant Gwenne

D
Welch
aka Gwenne
Welch aka Gwenna
Grady In the aum of
$13 002 30 plus Inter
all at a rate of
$4 10 par day from
January 22 2004 In
order to foreclooa
upon a mortgage
upon real estate
located at
29337
State Route 124
Langavllle OH 45741
which Ia more fully
described In deed
recorded In Volume
25 Page 269 Molga
County
Official
Records and at 341
Park
Street
Middleport
OH
45760 which Is mora
fully described In
deed recorded In
Volume 16 Page 811
Meigs County Official
Records and upon a
1974 Cameron mobile
home IDN0735768H
Ohio
Certificate of Title
and
15300048762
coata of this action
and atlorney feeo
that the mortgage be
foreclosed and that
the Ilene and/or Inter
eats In or on aald
property II any be
marshalled end tho
real estate title quiet
ad and oald real and
paraonal
property
sold In the loreclo
sura action and all

amounts due Plaintiff
be paid !rom the pro
ceeds olthe aale
You are required to
anawer tho Complaint
within twenty·alght
(28) daya alter the
Ieat
publication of thla
Notice which will be
pubtlahad once each
week lor IIX (6) IUC.
ceaslve weeka
The laat publication
will be made on the
17 dey of June 2004
and the twenty,.lght
(28) daye lor anawar
will commence on
that data In the c11a
or your !allure to
anower or otherwlea
raapond as requested
by the Ohio Rules or
Civil Procedure judg·
ment by default will
be rendered agalnet
you and lor the relief
demanded In the
Complaint
Dated this 27 day or
April, 2004
Marlene
Harrison
Clerk of Courts
51132027
6131017

Public Notice
SHERIFF S SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 03
CV062
Bank One
Plaintiff
VS

Swindell Alan B

et

al
Defendant•
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
COUNTY
MEIGS
OHIO
In pursuance ol an
Order of Sale to me
directed !rom sold
Court In the above
entitled action I will
expose to aale at pub
lie auction at tho
Courthouse on July
23 2004 at 10 00 am
of said day the tol
lowing described real
estate
Tha
following
described real eatate
altuated In Bedford
township
Meigs

County In the State
of Ohio In Sect• on
18 Township 3N
Range 13 W of the
Ohio
Company
Purchase and being a
parcel created out of
real estate owned by
Gloria
Mcintosh
Rebecca L Hunter
Philip Swindell and
Alan Swindall as
recorded In Volume
324 Page 605 of the
Meigs County Deed
Records sold new
parcel being bounded
and deocrlbed •• fol
lOW I
Commencing at an
Iron pin aet by this
ourvay at the. south
wall corner ol the
real estate described
In volume 324 Page
605 or the Meigs
County
Deed
Records from which
an Iron pin aet by this
survay at the north
west corner ot aid
real estate boars
north 03 deg 15 min
utea 00 seconds East
2412 58 feet and an
Iron pin set by this
survey at the south
east owner or said
real estate bears
South 86 deg 56
minutes 17 seconds
East 2848 26 teet and
thence runnmg along
the west boundary ot
said
real
estate
described In Volume
324 Page 605 ot the
Meigs County Deed
Records North 03
dog 15 minutes 00
seconds East 422 00
feet to the center ot
Swindell
Roa d
(County Road 23) and
the point of begin
nlng of the real estate
descrtbed
herein
thence along new
parcel boundary the
following four cours
es 1) along the canter
of Swindell Road
South 44 dog 21
minutes 27 seconds
East 25 30 teet 2)
North 68 deg 20 min
utes 38 seconds East
217 89 feet to an Iron
pin aet by th1a survay
passing an Iron p1n

acres

Permanent

Parcel Number
00786

01

Prior Instrument ref

erences Volume 31
Page
675
Meigs
Offic ial
County
Records
Proparty
address
41490 Swindell Road
Shade OH 45776
Appraised
at
540 000 00
Terms or Sale Cash
Ralph E Trussell
Shenff Me gs County
Sara M Petersmann
Lerner

Sampson

&amp;Rothfuss
120 E Fourth Street
8th Floor
C1ncmnatt

Ohio

45202
(513) 241 3100
CH Sup Ct #0055402
(6)3 1017

Pubhc Not1ce
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed b1d propos
als Will be rece1ved by

the Meigs
Board of

County
County

CommiSSIOners

100E Second Stroet
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
Clerk
of
Attn
CommiS Sio ners

Dale Thursday June

17 2004
Time 1 00 pm
lor the acqUISition of

open1ng
of
The
Board
County

a computer system to

Commissioners

automate the actlvl
ties of the Me•gs
County Probate and
Juvemle Courts Bids
will Include appllca
lion soltwara system

reserves the right to
reject any an all bids

software

hardware

Installation warranty
trainmg maintenance

and support All ven
dors mterested in
submitting
a bid
MUST attend the
Vendors Conference

at 1 00 PM Monday
June 7 2004 at the
Meigs
County
Probate and Juvenile
Courts
100
E
Street
Second
Pomaroy Ohio 45769
A
Requast
tor
Proposal RFP may
be obtained by con
tactlng the Clerk of
the Commissioners
at the Commission a
Office 100 E Second
Street Pomeroy Ohio
45769
In accordance with
ORC 307 88 each bid
must ba accompa
nled by either a bond
with satisfactory cor
pon~te surety

or by a

certified

check

cashier s check or
money order on a sol
vent bank or savings

&amp; loan In the amount
of not less than 10%
or the b1d amount
conditional that bid
der shall 11 bid I•
accepted execute a
contract In conform!

ty to the RFP and the
bid
Bids
shall
be

withdrawn

pnor

to

the scheduled clos
mg t1me for the
rece1pl of b1ds but no
Bidder shall withdraw
h1a bid wllhm 60 days
after the actual bid

June 5th
630pm

aren't only for
bt~ylnl or sellln1
Items. you can use
this widely read
sedlon to wish

11am

...
..

~

•
•
:
•
•

someone •

Happy Birthday,
provide a 111ank
You. and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one
For more Information. contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publlshln1 office.

spayed

ai

Ga age Sa te June 4 &amp; 5
F &amp; Sa Sam? 1149 Var ety of qua ty tams
nc ud ng some co lect bles
Saturday June 5 Bam rlot
before On St R 7 Nor h
fUSt pas Ga a Coun y I ne
Watch foe s gns

YARD SALE

YARDSALEGALUPOtJS

13 13 Safford Schoo

••

THE
LASSIFIEDS

ndoors

Ad

6 4 Bam 4pm 6 5 Sam

...
:

Bke

toos

Chestnut

c afts

Huge Garage Sa e
out At 218 2 lam y ots of
6/5 04 Bam Bpm P esto
boys glr s womens cto h
Pressure Canner g ass ja s
ng toys compute equ p
rug shampooer f oo pol sh
ment lots of mise ~ems
er kerosene heater ug
Fr day &amp; Saturday
gage
hou seho d tams
Huge
yard sale June 3 d
c othes much more
4th 5 miles down At 7 on
2 Fam Jy Sale Bonnie Lana
the r ght Baby chlldrens
Apts behind E lte Look on
clothes &amp; items home
160 ntants girls womens decor 8 30 4 00
mens cloth ing plus more
Huge yard sale June 4th &amp;
2 family K da &amp; lad as cloth
51h Bam 6pm ON 8 ade n
ing mise items 9537 St At
Ad on Swan Creek
s
554 at Eno Sat 9 5
house Name brand clothes
234 Honaysuolcie Drive s zes 5 18 womens mens
Add1son
Thu rsday thru 38 baby g s &amp; boys 3
months ;;;T
accesso es
Sunday 9am?
matern ty household terns
3 tam y yard sale 9 4pm elc
Roush Lane
Chesh re
Baby pus s ze womens
c oth ng toys pool some
fu n tu a 91 full s1ze Blaze
4x4 Too much more to men

t on

MAKE
SOMEONE'S

®alhpohs 1.!Ballp

•

•

•
:

DAY!
~nbune

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~leasant ~eg1stet

(304) 675-1333

3 tam y yard sata June 4th
&amp; 5th 3686 Add son P ke

9 OOam?
3 fam y ya d sate Clothmg
a s1zes nc udmg k ds m sc
tams am esou 141 84
Fr Sat
3 Fam y Thursday 6 3
Frday 64 800400 274
Butav e P ke
C othes
boys(2T 8)
g rls (3T t 4)
lad es(a 18) shoes sand
~able
box
creepe r
baby household terns toys
much more

(740) 446-2342

.$)omt

All Display 12 Noon 2

Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display

1 00 p m
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepatd'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
ww. comics

lwnght@tc net

•
•

110
1.

com

June 3 4 5 8 G YARD
SALE Clo~hes odds &amp; nns
VCR f sh ng eels bed
d ng rada de~ ector some
th ng for everyone
4 m es f om he Korne
Store at B dwe
go ng
towa ds Chesh e turn eft
39465 Ce penter Hll Road on Morgan Cen er Ad then
1/2 mite past Mount Union the f rst oad to the ght
Chu ch ott t 43 616 617 (George Ad ) than f rst
house on r ght (740 )388
Watch lor S1gns
8896
4 family yard sale SA 160 4
mllps f om Holzer Fr day Mov1ng Sa e/Ya d Sate
6 4104 Some~hmg Ia every 3200 Georges Creek Friday
and Saturday 9am ?
one

Wed &amp; Thu s June 2 3
Exe c se equ p Bee H ves
part t on doors b eye as
chest of drawers need
boa ds &amp; frames 3 k !Chen
cab nets w th sta n ass stee
tops small desk &amp; more 76
V ne St n back garage
Yard Sale 525 LeGrande
Blvd June 4 9 4 June 5 9
1 Sometl ng fo everyone

HFt t WAVfiD

HEY DRIVERS Ill

Large 1st Tme Ya d Sae
F da~ &amp; Satu day 6 4 6/5
8 5pm P aypen sw ng boys
baby c olhes adu t cto hes
By Old Ratl 1 Sto e n
V nton

130 Bast an D Fu ntu e
ant ques name b and c oth
ng Power Whee s Home
lnte 10 Friday Saturday 9
one
Sunday
10 2pm
6p m
(740)446 2923

enclosed In a sealed
envelope marked on

the outs1de with the
bidders name an
address and marked
lor
Me1gs
RFP
County Probate and
Juvenile Courts
Any b1d may be

Now you con hove borders and groph1cs
oiL..&gt;
added to your class1fied ads
{p~
1m
Borders $3 00/per ad
Graph1cs 50¢ ror small
$I 00 ror large

46 Jun e 4 56 6516 SA 554
B dwe
Home Inter o
eco ds

Satu day June 5) 9 OOam 2
les past Hotze on 160
m
shots
exce ent health
Tu
n on Ke Road go I
I end y
740 992 6236
M Ch u ch me u n on 203 P ne H
(7 40)992 7660
Church St B dwe t Oh a Road Ro o T lie s (name
June 4&amp;5 Ya d Sale &amp; M t b and too s) ne .. c oth ng
household
tems
dogs baked goods d nks guns
New Home In er or arge much mo e
cloth es
Found P €!tty g ey wh le cat
Saturday Ju ne 5 ONLY
ound at E zabeth F Dav s
9am 4pm Jun per Lane In
House URG
(740)245 Commun ty
Yard
Sa e the Meadows Mutt fam y
7186 (140)44 1 0249 ask fa Fr day Saturday C ndy Or ya d sale Ant que ch na
Ka a
c Olhes AM 25 Suzuk Bay co lee b es famous ame s
(740)992 7285 w ndow &amp; sc eens m sc name brand c oth ng many
o d com c books &amp; a the
terns
book s games a ge a ea
Fr day June 4th Weste n rugs lots of n ce househo d
books &amp; mo e State Rou e Plea se pa k on st ee No
218 Baley Chape Church
eaybd s
pakng at g?
Saturday June 5 9 4pm
&amp; Sat
2 backwhle
ca co
c othes hou seh o d tems
Jackson
Gall pols
Fe ry
area
183 Jackson P ke
(304 )576 3364

kept

4 Bonds San Fa

Amencan Leg10n M ddleport
Coverall B ngo 1n 46 Numbers
W1n $1 000 00
150 people B1ngo 1n 46 Numbers
pays $2 000 oo
Crank It Up T pboard $5 500 00
Starburst $1 450 00
Door Pr ze $650 00

YARD S&lt;I.E
GAl Ltl'Ot IS

Beaut ul lema e abby cat

to wa1ve any lnfor

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Daily In Column 1 00 p m
Monday Frtday ror Insertion
In Neact Days Paper
Sunday In Column 1 00 p m
Friday For Sundays Paper

5&lt; HOOI S

ISO

0
6

0

10

I~S rRl( liD~

Galllpol s Career College

(C a ee s C ose To Harre
Here s a g eat apport n 1y
Ca Today 740 446 4367
to come g ow w h us
1 800 214 0452
Kun zman T uck ng an 80
www ga ::&gt;0 sea et«
yea o d Reg ona Truck oad
A ced Cd Mrt1tl
Ca r e w th term na s n Covnc o nda en
A I ance and Co umbus Oh o 111d Schoo__l~.. 1l'7~ B
has opened a new term na tOO
\'\- I~TFil
n Pketon Oho Ony had
To Do
work ng e)(pe enced d
e s w h a c ean MVA and a
ov ae has
m n mum of wo yeas expe Ch d Ca e
ence need app y
We have open ngs fo
Da ene
15 Company 0 ve s
15 Owne Ope ato s
Fo
o ca Ray
t 866 436 1013

l HAVe: A
~/.£1'&lt;lfll IN M'l
CL- o'J€1: So WHAT 7

r

4 Lowel F o ida 4 8L.mitz ColCine nna

MNOUNCEMENTS

r
r

malltles In the b1ds
received
and
to
award the contract to
the lowest and beat
bidder
(6) 3 10

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

oisplav Ads

Re ax and earn free g fts n
the com for t of you own
home wh te you ent oy the
feel ng of a mode n spa
Hod you ve y own Spa
Escape pa y Fo deta Is call June 5 Barn 4pm Adu t
eeze
household
(304)675 3008 leave mes c oth ng XL un fo m )acke s
ca seat boosts seat new 1ems cad s of ba ga ns on
sage
su t (mans) m sc
cloth ng mens 36S L&amp;XL
s ze s 4 10 women s su Is
912
Creek
Ad
GI\EAWAY
home
schOo e s I end
Ga I pols F day Satu day
ta
ble
vacuum
gol bag
6566 9am4pm Rght
5 I ee ~liens 2 yellow 2 around cu ve t om Golf
Sat
Ju ne 5 h At 7
black
1
black.lgray Couse
son
bes de
G&amp;G
Add
(740)992 31 14 M dd eport
ad u t
9525 St At 218 4 3 4 5
eave message

go 65

4 G lley J
CISCO. 4

""

YARtl S&lt;t F.
GALLU'OUS

Pome oy Oh o 45769

1--.uhll..: Nc-•ti&lt;Lcs ln. Ncvvspupcrs
t&gt;~liv~ 1 eel l~ia.(ht tu Vuue
Door.

set by th1s survey at
32 52 teet 3) North 10
deg 57 minutes 48
seconds East 156 27
feet to an tron ptn set
by thiS survey 4)
North 79 deg 19 min
utes 09 seconds West
239 29 teet to an Iron
pm set by this survey
on the west boundary
ol the real estate
described In Volume
324 Page 605 of the
Meigs County Deed
Record lhence along
the west boundary of
said
real
estate
described In Volume
324 Page 605 of the
Meigs County Deed
Records South 03
deg 15 minutes 00
seconds West 260 51
teet to the point of
beginning passing
an Iron pin sot by this
survey at 219 89 feet
containing
1 135

Oea.r/tiru-

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Com-plete
Desc:.,-lptlon • ln~:lude A Pnce • Avo1d Abbrev atlans
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

of nterest to The Da ly
Se nt ne PO 8011 729 20

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San Franctseo 365 Lo Duca Los Angeles
35B CW son Pmsbu gh 353 Be kman
Houston 35 JEs rada A. an a 349 Rolen
St Lou s 348
RUNs---PUIO s S lou s 48 Casey C nctlnat
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burgh 66 Loretta San 019Q0. 65 Alou ChK:a

Houston

~,.

C 1 Bee Ca y Out perm!
for sa e Chesler Townsh p
Me gs County send eHers

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Vc-n. ar Right: t.u Knn'\N

Word Ads

logg

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REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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Hooston 5 ChiCllgo Cub5

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'''"'"

Tuesdays Results
Texas 6 C 8'.'61and 5 2)
NY Yankees 8 Baltimore 7
Kansas Crty 5 Dtltron 3
M nneso a 6 Tampa Bay 4
Too to6 Sestte5
Ana/18 m 7 8os on 6
Oak and 6 Ch!CI:lQO so~ 4 2)

Wednnday &amp; Results

Ch cage

i~~~=l:f:=1:

520
500

W

469

Pot

Texas 5 C evelano 3
Oak ar1d 3 ChiCago SoJ 2
De!To 2 Kansas C lV 0
NY Va keas 6 Baltmo e 5
Tan pa Bay 4 M~ neso a 2
A a Btrn 0 B:Json
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National League

-

ijtrtbune - Sentinel

Major League Baseball

•

The Datly Sentmel • Page 85

www mydailysentlnel.com

HO\IF~

FOR S'-LE
~

R o G a de Spacou s
og hOme 5 ac e~ 3 4 bAd
oom 2 ba h nuge k cner
1 c..,k cabne s &amp;
san d
cooK op In shed base me
v gas og f eo ace ent a
reat c:1 w0x 54 hea ed v o k
shOp S 97 000 740)24
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eta Fa Is OH 3 bed oom
"lou:. e 1 ba th de ached
ga ag e new roo! s d ng
"' ndows ca pet &amp; It che n
565 000 00 740)24 2000

'

3 Bed oom 2 bath 3 ca
de ached ga age on 2
Wan ted to do w babys 1 n ac es Sepa are 0 Ice p u
m&gt; home Non smoK ng Ca 1 2 n ce S o .. ge Sheds
(740)367 0429
(740J2A6·6336

"

my home 25
esume to Accoun ant PO
ye a s
expe en ce g ea
Box 606 We ston Oh o lam y atmos phe e pease
45692
ca 740 )985 3840

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Loca

320

\IOKII .f' HO\IE'
I Ul~ S \II

4x.65 good cond t on ve y
c ean nev. app ancas out
bu d ng Ready o move n o
(740 368 0460

f nanc at nst tu on
ng and expe enced
r,;J 2004 by NEll Inc
and guile s
lende Ab ly o ana yze ngs
I nanc a
s atem en s 740)44 5 0 51 ask. o Ron
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su a e w th expe ence EOE
740 "56 92 47 0 740 645
to
BL\StNE,,
BMeft sae
An g es Flea June 5th Ye owbush Rd
sa e
35459 Pease subm I esu me and
Ya d
0870
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Ml
\
ma ke Meehan c Sl June Rae ne ac ass f om Park Aocksp ngs Ad Pome oy sa ary m tat ons to The
4 11 lOAm SPM Aucton
g1rls teen name brand
4 ~ 70 w 6x2&lt;1
as dence c othes Oa ly Sent nel PO 80)( 729
Abba
June
12th
5 30PM clo hes 1eans w ndow ac (m sses &amp; Jr) awn mowe 34 Pomeroy Oh 45769
bath
P oceeds go toward fu neral VCR m sc
H 0 VALLEY PUBL SH
su te
sew ng
bed oom
expenses John Hess a I
mach ne TV p nle can
do nat ons except cloth ng
Large 3 fam y basement n ng ars po ch g de
ou do bus ness w h pea
4JI80 3
For nto (740)992 2509 o sa e Co teet bles pus ke osene heate toys I ttte
p e you know and NOT 1
bed oom
lu ba hs o a
(740)742 408
Sa em Street Rut and June g s clothes Sat 6 5 04
end money th ough h
e ectr c heJ pu"llp unde
5&amp;6
a I unt you have nvest
En erpr se UM Church park
nn ng book o S16000
p
ated the otfe n
~76
S13 500
ng lo Ju ne 4 5 900 to
June3 4
3 00 off oute 833 between
m PRmT s."o~ 1t
fa g ou nds and Pome oy
Occupat ona The ap st to
1526t::
SER\IUS
3
he Ga I po s Oh o a ea
O ho
F dav &amp; Satu day ants
He ghts nea Mason County Mus be censed both n
45701 New summe hou s
stol e g s c o hes nfanl
TURNED DOWN ON
Far grounds and Tr County Oho andWestVrgna We
M TW 8 AM o PM Th
4T A gne
pocketbooks
A a ne
es dance sports lOth house on the offe a compel t ve sala y SOCIAL SECURITY SSt?
F SAM o 5 PM Sa 9AM o
new d esse s m sses I 4
No
Fee
Un
ess
We
W
n
Tacke vUe Ad Rae ne K ng r ght Woman men chI bene t package or fu I me
name 0 and Jr g rl clothes s ze matt ess sp ngs tools
1 888 582 3345
drens cloth ng n c nacks and 40 K E 0 E Pease
m sc household terns Man b cycle
fu n ~u e
col co teet b es moves
HI
II I 'I'\ II·
send esume o 352 Second
Stree Aut and
teet btes much mo e Fo low
Ave Ga I pols OH 45631
B ds 3 House Ya d Sale
mob e homes s a ng a
Ga age sae F
Hum:s
Attn 0 ana Ha ess C n cal 3t0
183 M lton 0~ ve Camp
$270 pe momh Ca 740
June 7 h &amp; 6th 9 4 br ck
Manage o cal 1 BOO 48
FOR SALE
Con ey Lots of th ng to ook
992 2 67
house beyond Aoya Oak New Haven Hts WV June
6334
V dec
tapes
ant ques baby through
Aeso t
on T697
0 d 4th 5yh
3 bedroom nouse No ns de
31$ 1 00 o 50 each Taped
us
s
ze
women
s
terns
p
Flatwoods Road) (740 )992
Ove b oak Cente s cu ent pets Gal po s Fe y WV
on
t
me
I
you
Ike
to
prow
co ectables m sc 9 5 lots
45 79
ly accept ng app cattens for Must
hav e refere nces
come on out Sa June 5th
!urn tu e
a pa 1 r me AN tor the N ght 5500 month S250 depos t
800am
Ga age sa e June 4th 5th
Sh ft Supe v so past on
304)89 5 8795
fro m 9 5 on V nega S~ Ad Sa urday June 5 8 30
Rays &amp; Son Complete Ca Please come n and f 1 out
off o Co Ad 34 off of new 5 00 E ZAbeth La they S Clean ng 2615 t 2 Jackson
333 Page
33 112meeastof5 yard sa e 1 4 m le pas~ Ave Yard Sa e June 5th
EOE
B dwe Porter
0100 St
RT160 No lh Huge 3 lam ty
yard sale Lots o baby
3 bed ooms "2 bath~ re p ace
1ems car seats baby lu n
2 Sell amant Opt ons pad
w
Leg on
1 I 2 ac es Bucke ye H s oom w th ce nt a a
ure ext erne y n ce baby
WANI'ED
week y
s ze and toddle ~ r clo~hes Lap
sc een
Ad $85 000 (740 )709 ne p w 1h delve y Cal N k.k.
BUY
Home Weekends domiC e
(740)385 9948
cothes
1166
op sc apbook supp as
l.oo•••iiiiiiiio••rl·
n Canton Oh o S gn On
Home schooling books tots
LOTs&amp;
Bonus
ol msc tams Ran dee Absolute Top Dol a U S 95% No Touch Fe gh
ACREArl
S ver
Gold
Cons
Monday June 7
P oofsets 0 amends Gold
Call 800 852 2362
c othes
14 ac es 2 ca ga age
Saturday June 5 9 3 605 A ngs
U S Currency
ba n od e mob a home
Me n St eet Rae na Dav d MTS Con Shop
151
Paramed cs
&amp;
EMT s
c I}' vate Me gs County
Spencer s Ad u ~t and tee n Second Avenue Gall pol s
Ajt real eatate advert s ng
needed Apply a 1354
$40 000 740 742 3085
clothes AE Ae o pus h 740 446 2842
In th a newspaper Ia
Jackson P ke Gal pot s
ho useho d tams
mowe
aubject 10 the Federa
I\JPI0,\11'1
Far Houalng Act of 1968
Ran cance s
"il 1(\ II I S
see~

"H

"'

"'

L

ro

l

I

r

-----------

316 VINE ST RACINE Oh
ladlaa
lg 1x
(mostly
dealgner names) men s
lg 42
toy 8
furniture
household m sc
Sat
June 5th B 3pm rain or
shine

- - - - - -- - -

The Lend A Hand Q th e 110
Harr sonv e P esbyter an .
HErr WA~'&gt;TED
Chu ch a e hav ng a BAKE 1
and Yard Sa e Sa urday
June 5th 2004 The lilro Class A COL Drivers
coeds ot the sale w II go Wanted
tow a d the Chu ch Su d ng
Fund Eve yone We come
NEW PAY SCAlE"

Toys b kes ext door bas
kets Fenton Home Inter or
4 lam y yard sal e June 4th
cu tans sheets un lorms
4 June
3rd
4h
5th Cia ~ es de nee
wood tams speakers tru t
m Je bela e Rae ne co p Commun ty ya d sales
Success Ad Cty Ad 46 ars klds &amp; adults clot h ng
mt
South of Tu ppe s Pta ns Oh too much to st co ne
Broadway &amp; V ne n Rae ne
9a m 5pm
June 4th &amp; 5th 9 3pm
Ju ne 4 5 8 OOAM o ??
Bashan Road Wa ch ~o Tuppe s Pans community
pnk sgns Lo s o m scela ya d sa es Fr June 4th
Sat June 5th 9 5
P cke n s res dance l u n orr neous
At 7 on o AI 124 5th hou se
Ju ne 4 5 9am 4p n on Ya d
sale
&amp;
Home
on gh
S ate Route 143 3 m las Deco at ng Open House
!rom State Reule 7 mi sses Sat June 5th Sam 5pm
Bas emen
sh ne F
June 4 5 won en s mens g Is 04T Glor a 0 er 31645 SA 325
clothes ades 12 16 mons boys 0 4T compu e stull La ngsv e Oh (740)742
kts 4SL pants 40 42 34L lu n ture exe c se equ p 2076
Chr s mas deco a ons ots men! baby !urn iu e d shes
of n ck necks cann ng )a s L ttl e Tykes toys Home
shelves and much no e 2 nte o cand es cu rta ns
m les fro m At 7 on County bedd ng 0 rd cage lao boll
Road 26 tu n left on Sm th boat gas tan k a ier axles
Goeg e n D 3 d house on 16 tuck Ires l ee te rns&amp;
ots more A n o sh ne
rig ht phone (7 40)992 3441

•M n of 1 year exp
.M ed ca ns 40 K
. oom c e n Canton OH
. s gn On Bonus
•36 cent per m le to s1a t
•95°., f&gt;lo Touch

•NO FORCED NYC

freight
Coli 800 652 2362
De ve y/Wareho use person
needed fu I I me mmed ate
open ng must have good
dr v ng record app y at L1fe
Style Furn ture 856 3 d
Ave Ga 1po ts 9 5 no phone
cats
He p Wanted Maintenance
Superv so sKIs In plumb
ng ele ct ca heat ng/a
cond t1on ng a must Startmg
sal a y range t SK to 25K
Apply n pe son at the
Ho iday Inn of Ga I pols No
phone ca Is

needed tor grow ng 0 atys s
Faclty Mus have a be e l
gbe fo ! censure n Oho
740)867 44 71

wh ch makes t llega l o
adven\ee any
prate ence m tat\on or
d acrlmlnat on baaed on
race color rei g on sex

fam !Ia status o -.na ona

or g n o any ntent on o
make any such
prele ence mitat on o

d acr m nat on

TRAVEL USA
Pub ca on Sales Co h ng
18 sha p enthus ast c
tnd v duas o tavel he US
T ave 1 a n ng lodg ng and
t ansporta on lu n shed
Ret u n Gua anteed Sta t
Today BOQ..7 8 1 1344

This newapape w II not
know1ng y accept

Wan a G eat Job?
Wan a JOb w th G eat Pay?
Want 11 52 00 Sign on

avalh!ible on an equa

advert sements lor ea\
estate wh cl'l Ia n

vlo at on ot the law Our
reade s are hereby
lnlormed th.a1 a

dwe lngs advert sed In
th a newspaper a e
opportun ty b aaea

one ac e ml 3 2 n es
I om Haze Hospta
620 Everg een RCI $19 50C
560 Everg een Rd $I 8 500
ca
(7 40)446 86 40
o

740)645 4513

Bonus ?
Ce I on behalf o the
Nat on s lead ng Non P of I
Oganzat ons o hep
P otec yo u Gun A ghts
Ea n up to $8 ho v
Pa d ho days a n ng s
And vacat ons
Ful o pa ti me Day and
Even ng sh fts ava abe
Cal tooay to set up a n
lnterv ew
t 877 463 624 7 ex t 2454

~

3 bed oom 2 ul bath
aundry OOM d n ng room
oft ce ag e ') ca ga age
New oaf :; d ng &amp; wate I ne
S6 7 000 (7401 56-6926

Ac eage for hunt ng camp r
Me gs County a ea Ca 1 o
eave message 304)84 9
9238 o• 13041849 570 1

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$

FOR

t bath
coocrete d veway ca port
$49 000
East
Be het
Chu chAD (740 441 9108

BARGAINS
'

�Thursday, June 3, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 3, 2004

ALLEY OOP

Auros

The Daily Sentinel• Page 87

www.mydailysentinel.com

FOR SALE

•

H~

FORRENr
• 2 bedroom house, central

.. ~c. gas heat. washer/dryer

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- 1984 VS Evinrude boat
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
motor have title . $500 Small
Townhouse
apartments. horsepower boat motor.
and/or small houses FOR $50
·Band-saw.
$75.
RENT Call (740)441-1111 Microwave, $40, 25" GE
for applicatiOn &amp; mformation console TV, SSO, 13"" TV.
$20. (740)367-7272

! hook-up, carport, $450
inonth + security deposil .
~all (740)446-4555 after 5
Gracrous living. 1 and 2 bed·

l
I

.2 Houses lor Rent: 3 bed- room apanments at Village

Rrvers ide
1 bath. $500 &amp; ssso Manor . and
Apartments
in
Middleport.
• month
plus . deposit.
From $295-$444. Call 740..
' (740)245-9020.

•rOom,

1988 N1ssan piCkup, $1 ,695:
1995 Cutlass C1rea . $1 .995;
1998 Grand Am. $2.895.
Others 1n stock. Cook
Motors (740)446-0 103

992-5064 . Equal Housmg
, 3 bedroom house m OpoortunitleS.
Divlnn board &amp; spring stand. 1995 Satur· n SL 4 dr s1an
.Pomeroy, $400 a mo .. $400
•
·
·needs2 stainless
ladders, 1:1 h.p .. dard. AC, cassette.
~eposit, no pets, (740)949· New 1 bedroom apt. Phone
pump
&amp; sand hiler nngs. $800 080. (740)992_700_4 _
. ____
· - - .1740)446-3736

o8291eave message.

4 roomS &amp; bath, 52 OliVe St
t-Jo pets, $300 month, $300 Tak1ng applica tions tor I Easy Go Elec . Golf Cart Wilt1 2001 Salurn. 4 dr, auto. Sir,

\

bedroom apt. bath, living charger. Excellent cond it,on. l•ke cew. 26 .ooo m'les.
740 645 4485
1
room , k1tchen With appliCal1 1
1 · S6995 .oo 1998
MOBILE HmiES 1 ances furn iShed . Deposit, no
JET
Dodge Ca ravan, 4dr, V-6,
~
mRRENT
. pets. Call (740)446·1370
AERATION MOTORS
auto, air. nice $5795 .00.
Repaired, New &amp; ReOu111 In and many more great deals,
2 bedroom trailer
1n Tara
m 's
welcome,
Townhouse Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· trade
Middleport. deposit &amp; refEn- Apartments, Very Spacious, 800-537-9528
Riverview Motors across
ences. no pets. 740·992· 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
from Speedway Pomeroy,
O h 1740)992-3490
5073.
1/ 2 Bath, Newly - Carpeted,
2 bedroom trailer Call lor . Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool , L1ft ch~1r, 2-way recline. hght
Pat1 0. Start S385/ Mo. No brown , used only 5 months. 94 Mazda MX3 . standard.
appointment after 5.00pm .
cJd, a1r, pw, sunroof, ·leather
(304)S75-5217 . ·
Pets, Lease Plus Secu r~ly exce llent cOnditiOn , $500,
interior.
(740) 992·3478 after
(740
)949·2481
Deposit Required, Days :
5 pm. can be sean. at 501
2000 16x80 mobile hom'e. 3 740-446 '3481 ; Evenings :
bedrooms, 2 bath. all app li· 740-367·0502.
oNEW AND USED STEEL Mulberry Ave.
ances, washer/dryer. central
Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
air. $420 a .mo,nlh ·, $400
For
Concrete,
Angle , 94 Toyota 4X4 pickup 4 -cyl 5
Upstairs furnished apt. 3 Ch
1 Fl
8
1
.
' deposit
pius
utilities rooms &amp; bath . Clean, no
anne '
at
ar. tee -speed. Professionally lifted
: (3.04)675-4246
Grating
For
Drains . 126K miles goOd ·condition
pets, References &amp; deposit Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L $2,800.00 (740)742-1316
. 3 bedroom, al l electric reqwred. {740l 446· 1519 ·
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Rome Auto Satea
W.o\NTF.D
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
: mobile home. M iddleport
1-888-777·1342
' CIA no inSide p,ets. $425 .00
RENT
Friday, 8am·4.30pm . Closed
· +deposit (740 )992·3194 .
___
Th ursday,
Saturd ay
&amp;
2000 Focus. $4 ,995, 2000
·'
.
. IIs. s.unday. (740)446-7300
.., bedroom, corner ol R
· e Ioca!lng
to G aII 1po
Taurus SES, 55.395. 1999
Cteek\llew &amp; Garners Ford Family wants to lease nice Pole Barn 30x50K10 only
Alero, $5,999, 2000 Grand
:111d.
$375/month , home With at least 3 bOO· $5.295 , includes painted
Am, $5.695 , 2000 Grand
· t3751deposit. $750 Move in' rooms with garage. needed metal, plans how to build
Am, $4,488, 2000 Impala,
: Fii'm. No pets. (7 40)245· immediately. Call Jackie book Flider free delivery.
$6.999; 2001 Foc us, $5,999;
15671 '
740· 707-7999
740-589- (937 )789-0309.
1997 Breeze $3,988; 1998
5258
Beautiful river v1ew, ideal lor
Sable, $3.999; 1997 Sunf1re,
Song of the South ''Tales of
\IIIH 11\\Phl
one or two p6ople. No pets,
$3,795; 1999 Concord L S I ,
Uncle Ae musn fu ll length
. references. (740)44 1·0181 .
$4 .999;
2000
Ra nger,
VC R tape S29.00. AVailable
$6,999.
HOUSEHOLD
In ovp. Call Toll free 1-888Nice 2 and 3 bedroom
Goo~
mobile homes for rent
728-6441
TRUCKS
deposit. (740)446-3945 .

s

i

ro

·inCludes water. sewe.r &amp;
trash , no pets. starting at Good Used Appliances . You may qualify for 50% off
and a usec:t co mputer system .
S300 per month. in Shade ReconditiOned

r

reqwred. Guaranteed .

r

s

m~ I

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON

~

r

~------ ~

ArmQtm;

1950 Fergu son tractor,
$1.000 OBO. can be seen at PR ICE REDU CED! 23 lt. VB
Michael Farm on County Rd . Sea Ray Cuddy, $2,250
ESTATES, 52 Weslwood Buy
080. 30 4~67 5-6 444 or 740or
sell.
Riverine 25. (740)742-2101
Drive tram $344 to $442 . Antiques , 1124 East Main
6115·2729.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· Allis Chambers 720 tractOr
CAMPERS&amp;
740-446-2568 .
Equal 992-2526. Russ MOore, with cab, real good condi- 790
MaroR
HOMES
Housing Opportunity.
owner.
1ion. $5,200.00 (740)9491991
Nomad
camper
con dition,
Tractor parts &amp; service, spe- E)(cellent
in
Massey $14,00 0. Slide ou t 5th
cializing
Ferguson &amp; Ford . (740)696- wheel. (740)256·6392 .

0358

'--------pol
LIVE.\1llCK

Angus Bulls
(740)256·1621 .

for

·1Apache
truck

2000 SB. Folding
camper,
fully

eq uipped,
with
extras,
$5,000. (740)256-8 171 .

sale.

For sale· 91 Avalon 35'
camper w/llpout. sleeps 4,
Appaloosa · Stallion , gentle, w/lull accommodatiOns, like
rides good, $700 OBO. new, ask1ng $5800, call 740(740)256-, 233.
385·99 48

Black Angus Bull , 4 yrs. old,
$1,200. (7 40)245 -5788.

r

HAY&amp;
GRAIN

PRICE REDUCED! 35 ft.,
5th wheel. E:w:cellent shape,
8 fl . slide out. $5.500 080.
1740)645-2729.
Sill\ J( IS

CriMson Clover &amp; alfalfa mnc
hay, $2.50 bale, (7 401985·
3567 or 741J- 985·3889.

810

HOME
IMPROVI'J\I£NTS

BASEMENT

AlJ!Uj

WATE~PAOOFING

Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee . Local references furt9S6 Chevette. 39mp~ , nished. Established 1975.
24 Hrs. 1740) 446gold. a_uto, good condition , Ca ll
57 ,000
miles,
$1,300. 0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
1740)992-6631

tuRSALE

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2111
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30

IF YOU RENT
What would you lose if there was

a fire?

+we can insure your valuables! •
\

For a Free Quote or Appo;'ntment

Call:

I

Rocky Hupp Insurance
d f'
• JS •
~an

1nanc1a

Lasl

Thursda)· of

C\'er" month
Allt&gt;~ck $5.011

erYICeSf .

Box 189 • Middleport

Bring this coupon
Bur $5.00
Bononza Gel
5FREE

740·843·5264

Nof"th
4 A 9 4

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

.

MONTY

875-2457
Cell Phone 6l4-3311 Fax 304-675·2457

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

caramel

some rays

fVJII)

"j

Dr. Kelly K . Jones

H'1gh&amp;Dry
33795 Hiland Rd.

P.omeroy, Ohio

740·992~5232

- r~=======~

R.B.
Trucking

River Way Cafe
Syracuse, OH
740·992·2507

HAULING:

Call for Daily Specials

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime
740-985·3564

CALL-IIJ ORDJ;R~
WRCOM(;

29670 Basha n Road

Racine . Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

BARNEY

•

1·

Snqpper

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

H.

to 10'1(30'

Hours
7:00AM ·8:00PM
111 411 mo. pd

Big Bend Antique
and Furniture
Restoration
Refinish, Repair, ·
Restore
Kei1h Bailey
740 992·1956

New Hours

Monday 9am-2pm
Tues - Fri 6am-8pm

BISSEll

Rcsidenl io l &amp; Manufaclured Hou; in g
Air Condition ers, Heat Pumps &amp; Fumace_s
• Super Hi Efficiency Equi pm e n,~;,
• Free Estimat es

Ne\~ Homes • Viny l
Siding • N~w Garages

• Huge ln vc~ tury

\1

· . ,, ·,

';E."'-\ I IT'S T~E. FIR.~T REAL ""~
~COR.C.f\E.R OF Tf\C:: '&lt;E:f&gt;-R. !

I T'~ ~0

f-\OT, 11-\E. INI( IN f'/\'(

T!&gt;..HOO:)

"'I

I~ ~TI'KTII'.'TO ~)'\I

Mann tng K. Roush
Owner

Open Mon·Fri 9· 5 Sat. 9·12

Meigs County' s Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetallles,
shrubbery, (rult, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, and azaleas.

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,
ALL ON SALE NOW!!

BIG NATE

..

Gallipoli s. OH WVO I 021 2

740·992-7599

PEANUTS

Rocky "RJ"
·Hupp ·

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

IMPORTS

LOOK, MARCIE. 1 PASSED!
1 GOT A PASSING GRADE
iN EVERV' SUBJECT!

.Athens

446-9416 r 1-X00-872-5967
TRI - STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE
Ownet: Jeff Stethem

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
POWER WASHING
(Commcrc1al and Rcsidentiill)
Mobile Homes, Houses, l og Homes, Decks, Dtiveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment Boats, Cam pe rs, Tractor Ttai lers,
Du mp Trucks, painting or sta ining of your deck
or log home, Alum mum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Tr ucking Companies.

LAWN CARE DIVISION
(Commercial and Re&lt;i1den t1al)

Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lint!S, Leaf .Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

IJ,\1

~

M

Creative
Cakes
I:Jy Lora

• Birthdays
• Weddings
• Any special
occasion
Place your order
today
(740) 985·3917
Lora Bing

FLEA MARKET

AT MAPLEWOOD
124

B£'tween Rucine and

Syracuse
June 4 &amp;
Saturday, June 5
Spaces available,
also Campsites
available with run
hookups
Frld~)'•

949-2734

:ADVERTISE YOUR

BUSINESS

on .,_,. eag• #'or. aJS loiN' as
$.2!!1-00 per•••on~hl
•

.. The

t

Daily
Sen.tin.el
992-2"155

Can-Truck.\·-RV :\·

7-11!-949·29/0
Mobile Service's

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

Available

HOWARD l.
WR!TfSfl

BETTY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

USING 11-\~ C.U~Rt:NT PRict 01' COMIC

1-800-822-0417.

WE ~ 'iNCOMETO~'( AS l DID
WHEN 1 \-lAD A PAPER {&lt;CUTE&gt;

. !lOOKS A&lt;&gt; AN INDI CA'IOR 0~
INr\A,-ION ... !'M MAI&lt;:iNG A'¢0U1

Cht='v_y, Ponll &lt;:w , Hui{'k, O ld s
&amp;

Custom Van Deakr"

(y-· ' ' \

'?

'---'w,

auma·

draa EsUmates.

LAKE
Stale Roulc

Windshield Repair
Rock Chips
&amp; Cracks

*ROOFING
dOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS

949-1405
GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions ,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding , Decks,
·Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES !

740-742-341

HCS, INC.
New Homes • New
Garages • Pole
Barns • Roofing
• Room Additions
• Remodeling
• Vinyl Siding
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

740-949-1606

East
Pa!:&gt;s
Pass
Pa!:&gt;s

6•

Pass

Pass

Pass

1"HI5 PAY NE5175

DODGE

• Gallipolis
55 Evenings

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addltl ona &amp;
Remode ling
• ~w Ger•g••
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guuers
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pa inting
• Patio and Porch Deck•
We do It all except
furnact work

V.C . YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Veart L.octl, bperlenc•

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

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

+
+

IMPROVING&lt;

The opponents are 1n a small slam. and
you have a side·SULI ace 1n your hand.
Should you lead that ace. hoping that
your side has another trick to come: or
.should you try . to develop,a trick elsewhere, with that ace being a later entry?
There is no easy answer to that quest1on.
Analyze the bidding and try to judge how
likely it is that your ace will be a winner at
trick one, but not later.
Now look f:ll the West hand in today·S
deal. With the opponents m six spades.
.would you lead the club ace? If nol. wllat
would you choose?
North's three-spade rebi d showed gameforcing , values with ·exactly three-card
support.
If West leads the club ace, he defeats the
contract. It isn't certain to be best, but
since the oppone nts bid the other three
su its, there IS a d1S.I1nct risk that1flhe ace
isn't taken now. it will never win a trick. At
the table , th ough, West selected the diamond 10. (He hoped partner could ruff.
but East, with a diamond void . sure ly
would have doubled the fina l contract- a
Lightner Slam Double, asking for a lead of
'ctummy's fi rst·btd suit.)
South cashed in . He won with the dia·
mond ace. drew trumps . and unblocked
the diamond queen . When East discard·
ed, it was likely that he was long in hearts.
So. South played a heart to dummy's
king. discarded the club king o,n dummy's
diamond king , and called for the heart
two. coveting East's eight with his nine.
Whatever happened , decla re r knew that
he wou ld lose ortly one heart trick and
land his slam .

&lt;!bur 'lllrthd!IY:

a week!

' See

• R~p lacc ment

'!:!!~!!.'!!! Gibson 1~.

~orth

2
3•
5

AstroGraph

BUILDERS InC.

COMME RCIAL and

-- ~ --

UL 1

p--

business, not our sideline

Windows • Roofmg

• Vanguard Ventle ss Firepl aces "i '·

WI\~ C~OUG~ 1'1$. '(OIJ,

-~

Morning Star Road· C.Rd 30 • Racine,

BENNETT'S

,

~

Open 7 d8ys

Como gee ou~ new
gum me~ menu!

• 5 &amp; 10 yrWarrantics

THE BORN LOSER

Lawrr aud Garden Equipmellt is our

Sat &amp; Sun 7am-4pm

HEATING fl COOLING

Pomeroy. Ohio

992-2975

l

, ) Sizes $:;~C,:t0'.,

Wt•s t
Pa ss
Pa ss
Pa ss

view
60 Fiberglass
bundle
61 Nine-lloadod
monster

OOWN
Sundial
19 Child or
46 LoanRoberts
sharking
20 Put a &lt;lop to 47 Perlorm
22 Elec.
48 Volvq.rival

numeral

2 Monsieur's
refusa·l

Blurbs

3

measure . 49 Soprano

4 Female
relative
5 Concert
bonus
6 Monaeo
neighbor
7 Designer

23 Fancy

- Mofto

dresser

51 Masculine

2S Jayhawker
st.
S3
27 More lhan
willing
55
-Claiborne 28 Verse
31 Perry
56
8 Greedy
Mason's org. .
9 Poet's
57
contraction 33 Oly.
11 Handy abbr. 35 Ship
.
12 Quaker
deserter
"you"
39 Henson

(hyph.)
34 Fishing
spot
36 Pen poinl
37 Locker
locale
38 · Economist'
-Smijh
40 Pouch
42 CPR giver
43 Diving
posttion
45 Decoy

13

Experiment

possessive
Crumb·
loter
Whodunil
herring
Always,
lo Keals
Double
helix

. creation

17 Egyplian

41 Make a list
. monuments 44 Fed a line

'

.,.

WE'RE PLUMS OUTTA

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

sound

To find the answer,
listen carefully

-

12 Hoi-dish
holder
14 Bug
15 More misty
16 Silk source
18 Like o deser1
19 Yell insults
21 Dollar
23 Pleasure
24 Barely
scrape by
26 Big pilcher
29 Slate
30 Hun1sville's
32 Merry

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

YOIJ'/le SIJilE YOLJ MAl&gt;E TtiE
ECOLoc:;y ll&gt;IOT -P/lOOf?

59 Block lrom

toe.

Opening lead : ??

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164

Gravely

KQJi6
:\ ~ 6" 5 3

I 4
2•
4 ~""T

Sou1h

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
" Your Due Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

Hill's Self
Storage

I OYK7.l
A986 3
So uth

Oealer: South

(304) 273-5321
"'~

'

"' K

COFFEE, PAW ~lt1===:::::3 ~

1f_ ...

10:; :i
Q 10 8 i
t .I
... QlOi42

• ,, Q

Free Estimates

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck .

•
•

Vulncr&lt;tblc: Both

Specinlizing In Poured Concrete
Foundations. Basements. Floors &amp; Walls

Let me do 1t for youl

"" • 2

4
•

PAIN Ravenswood Chiropractic
out of PAINTING!
Center

Tree Service

t:a~ L

.

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

K J 2
+K 6432
• J 5

Wt~st

t

Ta~e the

JONES'

O(il.lH~

¥

StateWide
CNI Poured Walls

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

0053

i

1 Mindless

6 Creme

in salt

Car~~3-2 1671 Self-Storage

V40
L

u~ac~k·e•r--•Fi.sh.'n·g--•B•o•a~l.

47 Clean-whistle
50 Jostles
52 Appellzer
54 Habhualed
$8 Caught

element

mRSALE

Washers, Cell ReUse, Thurs-Sat .. 1999 S-10 truck 4-cyl. standard shift. AJC. topper. 35K
Dryers.
Ranges
,
and 10AM-£PM (7 40)698-8200
' (740)992-2167
mi les
$4.500 00
firm
Refrigerators. Some start at
(740 )992-1683
Nice 2 bed room mobile $95. S~aggs Appliances. 76
Bllll.DING
Come.
No
pets.
Call Vine St.. (740)446-7 398
SUPPI.m;
1740) 446-2003.
82 Dodge, runs good. looks
Block,
brick,
sewer
pipes.
fBir.
$700
080. Call
Trailer lor rent . (740) 44 6- Like new Wh irlpool was·her.
4234 attar spm
e)(tra large capacity, $165; windows, lintels, etc. Claude (304)675·5 131 .
Like new Maytag dryer, extra Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Call740-245·5121 .
95 41C4 , Chevy ext. cab.
large capacity, $175; Twin
Auto, 57 liter, runs great
bed including bO)(Springs &amp;
mattress, $75; Full size bed
r
oo
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt 740·367- with bo}(springs &amp; mattress.
7015· 740·367-7746· 740· $125; Queen size bad with
Austral1an Shepherd,
.
388-Q1 73. No pets. Before boxsprmg &amp; mattress, $175;
black/white/tan markings,
8pm.
King size bol\spri hg &amp; mat·
mate puppy, micro·chi ped 1 996 Dodge Dakota, s/c
tress. $150; table with 6
$250.00.
AKC Miniature 4x4 , auto. air, sharp.
1 and 2 bedroom apart- chairs, $95 ; floral couch .
Schnauzers
puppieS , $5995.00; 1995 Dodge full
ments, furn ished and unfur·
$95 ; chest·of·drawers with 5
nished , security deposit dravy9rs, $60; chest·of-draw· salt/pepper $400.00 each.. size van, 7 passenger v~n ,
required . no pels. 740·992· ers, solid wood. S60; dr'ess- All Vet checked and have 1st $3005 OO: and many ~ore
shots.. 740-696-1o85
2218.
great deals, trade in's weier, solid wood light color,
corne. Riverview Motors
I
bedroom
apt. $60.
AK C Dachshund puppies for across from · Speedway
Skaggs Appliances
Washer/dryer hookup, $290
sale 2-male, 2·fema:le, 1s1 Pomeroy, Oh (740)992·3490
76 VIne Stre9t
rent, deposit 1-equired. No
shots. 1st worming . $350.
(7 40)446-7398
gets. 740·441-1164.
(740)446-4446.
'90 Ford Areostar Van , runs
good.
$1100,
phone
1 bedroom , stove and relrigFRurrs
&amp;
Mollohan Carpe t, 202 Clark
1740)992-0309
erator, furnishe d, utilities
Chapel Road, Porter. Ohio.
VEGE.TABU:S
1ncluded. $400 month plus
(740)446-7444 1-877-830MOTORC\'CLI'S
deposit. (740)245-5859 ·
9162. Free Esti mates. Easy Home Grown Strawberries
bedroomcomplete financi ng, 90 days same as available now at Charles
a1r. cash. Visal Master Ca rd. McKean
kite/len ce ntral
Farm. Phone 1997 Suzuki GSXR 600.
References &amp; deposit. No Drive- a· tittle save alot.
(740)446-9442.
Helme t, . cover, plenty ol
pets. (740)446-0139.
e~tras,
$4,500
080.
New
sola
and
chair.
$350.
(740)446-2
158.
KESSEL'S PRODUCE
2 bedroom upsta irs apt.
Amish CheBse. Lunch Meat.
water, trash 1nc lud~ . $285 New recliners, $'1 50.
Suzuki.
Call
Fresh Fruit and Vegetables RM1 25
month , deposi t required. Mollohan's (740)387-7015.
Open Thurs -Fri-Sat . 1354 (740)386-8186.
Weekends and evenm gs
Used Furniture Store. 130 Jackson P1ke . Gallipolis.
(740)446-7620
BoATS &amp; Marons
Bulavilie Pike. Mattresses, Ohio: 1740)448-7787
2 bedroom, just past Holzer .. dressers, couches. reclin·
IURSAU:
1~\1(\1..,1 1'1'111""
$425 mQntli . Call (740)441 - ers,
bunkbeds.
Grave
.\II\ I .., 11 )1 h.
1184.
1998 Kawasaki jet skl1100
Monuments . 2002 eS ss
ZXI. Less than 100 hours
2 bedroom, references ,
With 1999 trailer.
use.
FARM
secu rity, Racine, (740)949- (740)446-4782. Gallipolis,
r.IO
....
..
in quires
only.
Serious
OH.
Hrs.
11
-3M-F.
EQUIPMENT
2517
1740)44 1-8285.

deposit

Phillip
Alder

s .aoo.

i

:area.

ACf:IOSS

10 Trace

1991 Chevy Cava11er. body
good condition , $400, call
2 plots w/vaults. "Me1gs (740)992-6079 after 5pm.
Mem9')' Gardens, valued at
$2. 100 asking $1,500, relo- 1993 Dodge Spirit AIC, ti lt,
cated. call collect ~270)785- cassene player. S700 080.
9045
1740)256-1652 .

(740)446-0014.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

1 HAVE. TO
AC'MIT, THAT'S

NO"T BAI'

Friday, June 4, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
You cou ld be part1cularly fortu na te 1n the
year ahead in JOint partner involvements.
pr ovi ded each has something to contri bute to the endeavor !hal is ot equal par·
lty and can tlllln the gaps the others leave
open.
GEMINI (May 21-Jun e 20) - When 1t
comes to your commercial dealings today,
chances are you 'd be better off if you are
patient and wait tor the other party to
make the first otter. Do n·t lip your hand
pramatllre ly
CANCER (June 21·July 22)- Str ive to be
conge nial and cordial with associates
ioday, especially in any fl nanc1al dealings ·
Trying to act like a big shot by throwmg
your weight around will have deleterious
elfec ts.
LEO (Jul,y 23-Aug. 22) Chances are
your luck will be In good working order
today when il comes to secunng your
material goals. but you might not be as fortu nate In you r dealings with co-worKe rs
Be careful
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Try to keep
today·s ac livilies well-ba lanced . If you
devole too much t1me to fu n pursui ts and
neglect your dulles and responslbllitiOS. all
hell cOuld break loose and land on you_r
head
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - It's commendable that your inclinations are lo be
helpful today. but do so only w1th those
who are willing to help 1t1emse lves wh en
they can . Avo td those who are merely "tak.:trs "
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - Seek out
cqhorts today who are compatible to your
think tng and ways at dOing thing s. and
steer clear of jealous or argumenta live
types . Th e latter could el(hibil major hostilitieS
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) - Keep
your nose gl ued to career or work-re lated
invo lvement s today that can be meaning·
ful to you in material ways. It you star I yow
weekend early, you 'll miss out on Lady
Luck's otfenngs.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19) - Even
though your way of domg 1hmgs m1ght be
met wilh critical challenges by oth ers
today. precede on course if you believe
yourself to ba right. Don't get derailed.
t9) AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb
Cond1 li ons today Indicate that you could
profit from situati ons begun by others. bUI
only if you show a willingness to shafe
with them those things you control that are
out of th eir hands.
PISCES" (Feb 20-Marc h 20) - The re ts
noth1ng wrong With ha11ing fun and enJOY·
ing yoursoll tod ay. In fact. YQU should take
some 11me tor yoursetl , but late hOurs and
too much ot a good thing will prove detnmenlal. ·
ARIES (March 21·April19) - Any cAreer
advantages you may have ga1ned in the
. past lew daya can be lost or Sliverely dilut·
ed today It your tact deserta you Watch
your step' sc that you don't step on any·
bo dy's toes .
TAURUS (Ap ri l 20·May 20) - Momentum
Is on your side and Important objecttves
can bt~ achieved today, so long as you
dOM 'I tose sight ol proper decorum. ll you
get too pushy or Impulsive , all can be lost
aga in.

.SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
~y Luis

Campos

Celebntv C phet cryptograms !re ~ reated . IIOIT' quotabons
Eeclll!li~H in

D} 'amo~

people pas I ard present

trle opher Slams !or another

Today's clue P equals B

" YZLWM ,

SZGLCSYHGU

NCBRYHZG
. TBZTKB

ZV

BUZ :

PBKHBIB

WSYCWKKM

HR
W

DCRHS."

KZY

v ·F BM

TKW .MHGU
LWGHBK

W
ZV

WEB

YFB
PWEBGPZHD

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "EntOY lhe litlle1hlngs. lor one day you may looK
back and realize they were the b1g thmgs ." - Robert Brault
(Ci2004 by NEA , Inc 6-3

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Page

88 • The Daily sentinel ·

Thursday, June 3, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Curtis shows his colors
in retum to Ohio, Bt

F1ames win in OT, bum
closer to Stanley Cup, Bt

...

81
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,o,l,l"-.•\111

1l

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tt&gt;,

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Meigs sales tax collectio·ns up again

SPORTS
• Els, Curtis lead at
Muirfield. See Page 81

8Y BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL. COM

decreased signiticantly since that time.
due to a number of negative effects on
the ·local retail economy, including the
POMEROY - For the third strdight closing of Middlepmt's Ford dealership,
month, the collection of sales tax revenue in the closing of .the Pam ida discount store
Meigs County has increased over la~t year. in Pomeroy. and the overall loss of retail
The latest report issued by Meigs traffic to Mason, W.Va.. since the openCounty Auditor Nancy Parker Grueser ing of the Wal-Mart Supercenter there.
The county relies heavily on the ta.x
shows collections in May at $80,668.27.
compared to $76.437.72 in May 2003. · collection for cash llow. and County
The latest payment of sales tax rev- Commissioner Jim ·Sheets said
enue brings the county to a collection Thursday it may be an indication that
surplus of $9.945.42 for the year to local residems are becoming more
date. compared to last year.
committed to shopping locally.
The fi~ures are still far below collec'·J think the consistent increase in tax
tions of tour years ago. In May 2000, the collections over the past few months is
countv collected $106,540.08. Collection definitel y a sign that people are more
of the county's I percent sales tax has aware of the need for shopping local-

Budget
- . .
commiSSion:
2005 budget
to hold steady

ly:· Sheets said. "If you have pride in
your community. and you care about
your communi1y. you:ll be mor~_aware
ot the need to do buSiness 111 11. · .
""This is detinitely a sign that we may
be rounding a corner. in terms of our
business climate:· Commissioner Mick
Davenport said. "It's very encouraging:·
Sheets said the opening of lhe new
Powell's Foodfair lasl month. and the
Wild Horse Cafe last year. may be major
contributors to the positive collections.
He said thai whi le the stlpennarket
primarily sells m)n-taxed groceries. it
also sells a significant amount of taxable merchandise as wel l, and that
local residents may be frequenting the
store because it is locall y-owned.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED©MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POVIEROY - A revenue
rroject ion for 2005 indicates .
lhat Meigs County's tinances
might be stabi lizing after a
four-vcar
. qruoQ:le with dwindlin!! revenue.
The Meigs County Budget
Commission has submitted a
report oi' anticipated revenue
!'or 2005 of $3,267 .SR5 -.
~-+6 more than was projected
a year ago for200-+. ·
While 1lw sli ght increase
may seem minor. it indicates
lo county commissioners that
1he cuts in various revenue
sources may be ending.
Th~ commissioners will
}ubmit the revenu~ projec1ions. along \Vith appropriations requests from officeholders and department
heads. 10 the state next
mnnth.
The projections incl~de
revenue from property taxes
of S945.H I0. sales tax totaling $1.026.000. local government revenue from the state
in the amount of $278,269.
state and federal funds of
$ 1g5_3~ti. and other revenue,
representir.g fees and other
collected funds, totaling
SS32.120.
"It's a good sign that things
are. at least. holding steady,""
said Commissioner · Jim
Sheets on Thursday. ""The
second half of this vear will
tell the story, because that\
when we learn how much
insurance premium s increase,
as welf as how much
Workers' Compensation and
ot he r premi ums increase ...
Last year's June estimate of
200-+ revenue was actually
ro nse·n ative, Sheets sa id .
The buUget conHnJs'-IJnn estimated this year\ . re,·enue ,
over S200.000 short nf what
"''" actually appropriated
~.

Deceased classmates remembered with marker
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A monument placed at the old
Pomeroy Hi gh School by
. the class of 1949 In tribute
to deceased classmates was
unveiled in a memorial service during the 55th
anniversary reunion· of the
class Saturday.
;'In memory .of our classmates. friends forever" is
inscribed on the monument
along with a panther, the
sehoolmascot, and the letter
P for Pomeroy.
Pictures of th e classmates
being remembered were dis played on an easel decorated with purple and white
tulle, the school colors. Joe
Struble and George Dallas
read the names of each one
being
remembered
as
Martha Terrell Struble lit a
votive with purple candles
in honor and memory of
each one.
Festivities of the 55th
anniversary class began
Friday evening with a din ner party at the Wild Horse
Cafe. On Saturday a lun·
cheon was served at Trinity
Church and pictures were
taken before a PHS pur13le
and white school , flag
..
marked with a panther.
Purple and white petunias
with the numeral s "55"
along with crystal votives
with a Class of '59 inscrip-

OBITUARIES
.
Page A5
• Donna Sellers, 61
• Kathleen Manley, 83
• Arnold Johnson, 74

Lo'I'I'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 0.4·0
Pick 4 day: 0.0·6·3
Pick 3 night: 8-4·5
Pick 4 night: 4·9·3·4
Buckeye 5: 7·8·25·28·32

West Virginia
Daily 3:. 2·0-5
Daily 4: 7-9-8-0
Cash 25: 1·4-5·15·23·24

WEATHER

George Dallas and Martha Struble look over the marker placed at Pomeroy High School in
memory of deceased classmates. A memorial candlelight service was held at the unveil·
ing. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Albert Ruschel of Cocoa.
tion and small purple pan- as favors.
George Dallas. emcee. Fla.
thers were featured in the
Saturday night the group
table decorations. Albums awarded prizes one of
of pictures were also on dis- which was · a purple and attended the annual reunion
play. The prayer for the lun- white afghan donated by banyuet and dance held at
cheon was given by John classmate Lee Wince of
Please see Marker, AS
Ihie. The votives were given Surprise. Ariz. and won by

Please see Budget. AS
•

Feud ends in not guilty verdict Sex offender sent to jail
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON
JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - After listening to heated testimony
and two confl icting sets of
lacts, an aggravated menacing ·charge against Pamela
King, 49, of Portland. was
dismissed Thursday by
Meigs County Court Judge
Steven Story.
· The charge stems from u
long-ru nning
dispute
between King and · her
neighbor and one-time
friend, Sharon Phelps, who
. claims she was 1hrcatened
with bodily harm on more
than one occasion by King
during the past several
months.
''I feared for my life."
Phelps said. "I am physically ill from this."
On March 15. Phelps
claimed that while she was

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© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'Two ~venlttnt

traveling to the Meigs prose- menacing threats - both
cutor\ ot'fice. he.r vehicle misdemeanors. The last time
was run otT U.S. 33 by Kin g, King and Phelp' were
who denied the accusation. together at the preliminary
King said she was at the hearing in Apri I, deputies
Ravenswood
Police had to separate the two.
King received notoriely
Department at the time this
to
have last January when she filed
was alleged
charges with the Meigs
occurred.
''They're bikers:· said County Sheriff's Office after
King. ''I'm not going to discovering voodoo items in
her front yard in Portland,
threaten anybody like thi s."
Despite the history shared such as a pentagram &lt;.:ircl~d
by the women. the tri al by lit candles which greeted
hinged around this one event her last New Year's Eve.
Later, a c hicken's foot was
and King's attorney, Charles
found
inside her car which
Knight, pounced on the facts .
leaving Richard Hedges. the had 666 ·painted on th e rear
new assistant prosecuting windshield. A tiny doll decoattorney, ' little room ro rated with pins ·and needles
was found nearby. The Rev.
maneuver.
The morning prior to the Walter Heinz at the Sacred
trial. Phelps filed another Heart Church in Pomeroy
complaint against King who came out to bless the house.
was again charged by the the property and the car.
No suspects were ever
Meigs Sheriff's Department
with disorderly conduct and arrested.

BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM •

Middleport.
Btll. th e Meigs County
Sheriff's Office reports that
POMERO'( - A con-. Bugaj ha .. , been living in
victed sex offender arrested Athens and thai he had
nearl y two weeh ago pled failed tu nutify lhe approguilty in M~i~s Count~·
prialc authorities of his
Common Pleas Courr fo1~
change nr address.
failing to register his new
Bugaj wa' arrested by
address.
Athens CouJll! deputies on
Guarded by Meigs sllaiff's deputy Brian Holman May ~I for failing to propand wearing leg chains to erly regi,ter his addre".
prevent anolher escape Bugaj was later transported
similar to the one he tu 1he Meigs County
atlempted 1wo weeb agu. Sheri l'f\ Department and
Michael Bugaj. 27. was while waiting to be
sentenced to one year in· :1rraigncd in Meigs County
p1·ison by Common . Plea' Court. he atlempted to
c.;L'ape.
Judge Fred Crow II L
Within mnments. he was
According to lhe Ohio
cap1ured
hy Mcig' deputies
Attorney General·, weosilc
for registered sex offend- and placed hac~ in custody,
ers. Bugaj is classifi~U a." a &gt;~ill dripping wet from his
habitual ;ex offender :ind aflernonn swim in the Ohio
he allegedly live,· m Ri\cr.

•

Locat]ona: · •
·1/4 Mile North

..

Attention Cancer Survivors!

FOR LIFE•

June 4 and 5

·~

~~~~....~·Pomer~y-.,.a "

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

RELAY

Cro "''':) F-amily Restaurnnt '
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

at the Eastern High School Athletic Field on State Route 1

MEDICAL CENTER
Discm•er lhc Holzer D{fference

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

228 Main Sl.
Drive·Thru Window

All are invited to attend and join us in the fight against cancer!

992 5432
I

I

www .holzer .org

For more information, please call Chairperson JoAnn Crisp atl740){992·2136.

l

J

•

,,

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