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NBA

Thursd.ay, June

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

~7, 2004

•

Associated Press
AUBURN HILLS. Mich.
Phil Jackson stood at the podiurn in the inten ie\\ room with
four of his ti"e ~rown chi\Liren
and said there 'was a "prctt\'
slim chance" he'll cm ch the
Los Angeles Laker; next '~ason.
Then he said it again..
"I've had a lot of persuasion
given lonie by these kids. They
were hoping I could .win the
lOth &lt;md retire. but mavbe los. ing this one. this opporiunity is
enough lor me to say that it's
time to give it up.'' he said. "But
right now I'm not ready to
make that decision or giYe that
statement."
So while Jackson wouldn't
comm1t. it certainly appe;ued to
be a farewell - at least for the
time being - from a SK-vearold
. coach
_ ·\\'hose
I· .. pert'ect
_ .1 dbrecord
,
Ill. thehna_s ""' spo1 e ") t11e
Detroit P1stons. lea~ m_ h1111

"I've had a lot of
persuasion given
to me by these
kids. They were
hoping I could
win the 1Oth and
retire, but maybe
losing this one,
this opportunity
is enough for me
to say that it's
time to give it up:'

,I.

ditlcrem summer lor a lot of
rx~ple . Everyone i~ ~oing to
lake care t1f their own hu~ine:--.~
and do what\ t&gt;e,t fur them .
indudin!! me." 0':'\~al said .
"I'm lll&gt;L sure reallY "here the
OP...:!;.Ulitation w~uw..· 10 ~ 0 fmm
he~·e ...
Chan~e will come l&lt;l other
1\BA franchi&gt;es. too. ocginning
ne., t Tue,da\ "hen the
Charloite Boticat' select 1-l
players from other teams· I'OSters in the cxpa 11 ,ion dmli .
.
The re~ular uraft comes two
da\, later with the Orbrido
Ma!!i.: ho\din!! the tirst o\'emll
pick.
In aJJition to deciding
tx-t ween
Emeka
Okafor.
Dwi~ht Howard and other
potential No. 1 picks. Orlando
must tlt!ure out what it plans to
do with Trac~ McGr&lt;lU)'. who
will be a free agent a year from
now· and does nnt plan to stay
with the Magic through a
. . pnl&lt;:ess.
rcbuildmg
The
champion
Detroit
Pi,tOib also ha,·e sm11e oncer' taint) to deal with. beginning
wit\1 the 4ue,tion of whether
Rasheed Wallace plans to re-

Hurricanes trade goalie
lrbe to Blue Jackets

'·

..

SPORTS
• Fans cheer Couch's
arrival in Green Bay. See
Page 81

·-r

The 37-year-old went 7-24-2
with a 3.1 R goals-against-average for Carolina in 2002-2003.
In February, the Hurricanes
brought lrbe back from the
minors to be a back up.
He haJ been in the low
minors after refusing a $1.8
million buyout of his two-year,
$5.2 million contract. lrbe went
5-2-1 with a 2.45 goals-against
average in I 0 games with
Carolina last season .
"We thank Archie for his
y~ars
with
the
good
Hurricanes," Carolina president and general manager Jim
Rutherford said in a news
release. ''I'm happy that he can
continue hi ., career in the
NHL."
Doug MacLean. president
and geneml manager of the
Blue Jackets. 'aid lrbe 's experience would he a good fit for
Columbu:-.
"We felt thi' was a good
opponunity lor u' to add a
proven vete ran tu our mix at
that pmiti on." MacLean said in
a release.

Engineer questions DuPont C8 claims
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY
Studies
conducted by a former manufacturer of Perfluorooctanoic
Acid. or C8. show detinite
health risks associated with
exposure to the chemical.
which has been detected. in
lo~al water supplies.
A 1981 DuPont study on
birth defects among children
born to plant workers ex·posed
to C8 revealed an increase in
defects because of exposure
to the &lt;.:hemica\.
DuPont, &gt;vhich uses the
chemical at its Washington
Works plant near Parkersburg,
W.Va .. is now the defendant in
a class-:lcti on lawsuit filed by
water
consumers
near
Parkersburg, W.Va .; who
allege health problems directly re,ulting from consumption
of water contaminated by the
chemical.

Los Angeles Lakers head co'ach Phil Jackson has words with guard Kobe Bryant during the third
quarter of game 5 of the NBA Finals against the Detroit Pistons at the Palace of Auburn Hills,
Mich. Tuesday. Jackson may have coached his final game with the Lakers. but hasn't decided
if. he'll return yet. (AP)

'

PONnAC

~~gn.

'Tm ~oin~ to bask in the
glory fnr the'moment. I probably won't have a decision for a
couple of weeks:· he &gt;aid following the Pistons' decisive
Game's \'ictory ... , have to talk
that OYer with my wife and kids
anLI get their input. If it's a situ.ation or something here that
they don't like or they see
shakv. I have to take all thill into
cnn,slderation ...
Free ugenC~ can begin signing
with teams beginning in the
middle of July. and Bryant will
be the biggest prize on the market if he decides to stan anew
- Los Angeles Lakers head
elsewhere.
coach Phil Jackson
Other top unrestricted free
agents indude Wallace. Steve
tied with· ReJ Auerbach lor Nash, Marcus Camby. '\1ehmet
most titles by an NBA head Okur. Vlade Divac. Stephen
coach (nine).·
Jacbnn. Hedo Turkoglu. Bob
Jackson said he planned to Sura and Brent BwTV. The list
meet with members of the of restricted free agents
Lakers' org&lt;mization in the days includes Kenyon Martin,
ahead to discuss a future ·that Quentin Richardson, Manu
promises to be filled with .Ginobili. Dcuius Miles, Morris
· changes.
Peterson and Jamal Crawford.
Question No. I will , be
Pbyers who can· opt out of
whether the franchise still their contracts indude Antoine
believes Shaquille O'Neal and Walker. Latrcll Sprcwcll, Nick
Kobe Bryant can coexist. Van Exel. Payton, Malone,
Bryant plans to opt ou1 of his Derek Fisher anLI Bruce
contract and become a free Bowen.
agent, although he has said he
The Phoenix Suns, Denver
wants to be ··a Laker for life."
Nugcrets. Utah Jazz, Atlanta
Team &lt;)Wner Jen-y Buss has Hawks. San Antonio Spurs and
given every indication he wants Los Angeles Clippers are
to keep Bryant. whose fr&lt;u:tured among the teams with the most
relationship with Jackson and salary cap ~pace, and each
O'Neal could be one of the dri- would jump a; the opportunity
ving forces behind an offseason to 'ign a player of Bryant's cal· of change around the league.
iber.
Not only will Bryant be a free
'' I loved playing for Phil. I
agent, but Gary Payton and leamed so much playing for
Karl Malone also can opt ou t of Phil and playing with Sha'lui\le,
their contracts. O'Neal too," Bryant said. " I think
already angry that the Lakers we 've got a lot of great thin~s
wouldn't give him a contract accomplished despite our tllfextension - could demand a ferences we'.ve had in the past.
trade if he decides the time has We' ve played ex tremely well
come to ·end his association together. We've had an incrediwith a team that failed in as ble run. So I would not be
quest for a fourth title in tive opposed to playing with them
!()rever. It's just not up to me."
years.
'This summer is going to be a
Bryant\ most immediate

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Arturs Irbe was ~raded by the
Carolina Hurricares to the
Columbus Blue Jackets on
Wednesday, ending the ~oalies'
up and down six-year stmt with
the team.
The Hurricanes swapped one
of the heroes of their unexpected run to the 2002 Stanley Cup
finals for future considerations.
Irbe leaves as the franchise 's
career leader with 130 wins
and 20 shutouts.
"He's looking forward to a
new opportunity,'' said Paul
Theofanus , lrbe\
agent .
"Clearly he was very happy
and enjoyed hi' time with the
Hurricanes, and his only
lament is that they didn't wii1
the Cup that year.''
lrbe, a native of Latvia and a
former Olympian, was I 0-8 in
the 2002 playoff, when the
Hurricanes lost to Detroit in the
Stanley Cup linals.
But Kevin Wceke' became
the starter the next season. and
lrbe split time betwee11 the
minors and Carolina.

nine-em is his freedom. He is ·
scheduled tn;o on trial late this
summer in t.ag\e. Colo .. on a
sexual &lt;L"ault' charge. and a
convi&lt;.:tion would render moot
'Ul\' decision he makes re~ard­
im! his future with Los Anl!eles.
Malone. -+0. also has some
soul-searching to do. A badly
sprained knee . forced · him to ·
watch Game 5 from the bench
in street clothes. denying him a
chance to eam the title that has
eluded him throughout his
career.
ve never been a guy who
w.u1ted to · jump from team to
team to team. but I will say this:
If I meet with my doctor in the
next couple of days and I can't
be I 00 percent by training e.unp
- not 95, not 99 - then r II
make that decision:· Malone
said.

Clone wars flare in
state legislatures
nationwide, A2

Reds sweep
Rangers,Bt

Jackson bids farewell,
sort of, to begin NBA's
sumrrter of change
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

.

Fifty Dollars
Down delivers any
New or Used Car!

At a public meeting held
Thursday at Meigs High
School. Jane Houlihan. an
environmental engineer with
the Environmental Working
Group · in Washington, D.C~
presented information about
potential health risks from C8
exposure. and the chemical
giant's alleged attempts to
hiue the facts about those
health risks from the public.
The meeting was conducted
by Ohio Citi zen Action, the
state 's largest environmental
group. at Meigs High School
on Thursday evening.
,
CR is a soap-like cliemical
used as a processing agent in
making non-stick materials
like DuPont's own cornerstone product. Teflon. It is
part of a family of chemicals
knoi·n
as
Pertluorochemicals, used in
products such as Gore- Te~.
Stainmaster and Scotchgard,
which the EPA removed

from the market in :woo.
"C8 i' in a whirlwind of
regulatory
review
in
Washington. D.C .. and we
think of local communities
like these as ·ground zern' for
the Cl! probtcm:· HOltlihan
said. "We believe Cl! sl1ould
not be manufactured at all."
"Use of these chemica ls is
pervasive." Houlihan ., aid.
•·and is under an unprecedent ed s&lt;.:rutiny by the EPA ."
Houlihan said the chemical
has · been detected in tap
water. outdoor air. green
beans. apples. bread, ground·
beef, landfill leachate. rivers
and wi ldlife.
"Virtually all of us have CR
in our system: but the le ve l of
C8 is higher in those communities with plants wh ich use
Debra Cochran of Pagevi lle, a local activist involved in publiit," Houlihan said.
cizing
the potential healt(l risks due to C8 exposure. and Don
DuPont only recentlv be van
'
"'
manufacturing C8 at a North Poo le. general manager of the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Distnct. are pictured· at a public hearing on C8 held at Meigs
·Please see DuPont, AS
High School Thursday evening. (Brian J. Reed )

Space Painter

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Simania Ross

INSIDE
2004 Suntlre Coupe

2004 Bul•ck

$9,000 off MSRP

off MSRP

off MSRP

2004 Vibe
$4,300 off MSRP

'04 LeSabres
In Stock
5 Demos-

2004 Montana
.,o,.~vu

off MSRP

2004 Grand Prix GT

$6,000 off MSRP

"'

• Clinton tells CBS he
. never considered
resigning, most proud of
economic plan.
See Page A2
• Nina Sharp to perform
at annual Rutland Ox
Roast and Independence
Day celebration.
See Page A3
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6

Savings
.u p to $10,000

,,._,,. ..,. ,,1 • i

'f'

I, '

'

•'·' •' '

WEATHER

As part of the Meigs County District Public Library's Children's Summer Reading Program. Tom Spa rough. also known as "Space Patnter," entertained loca l chil
dren with a juggling show at the main library, in Pomeroy on Wednesday afternoon. A special afternoon entertainment prog ram fo r youngsters is planned for each
Wednesday afternoon at the main library through July 21 , and a pool party at London Pool in Syracuse will wrap up the program schedule on July 26. Mea nwhi le .
children participating in the program can enjoy a clown show on June 30. a comedy and magic show on July 14 and otl1er events to be announced. Each program will begin with a story hour at 2 p.m., led by Children's Librarian Amanda Milhoan, pictured here. Story t1ours are also he ld at 2 p.m. on Monday at the
Racine library branch, 2:30p.m. on Tuesday at the Eastern brancl1, and 2 p.m. on Thursday at the Middleport branch. The tl1eme for this year's s umnie r reading program is "Discover New Trails at Your Library." Children are rewarded for read ing boo ks and are eligible for prizes each week. All of the program events
are free of charge. (B rian J. Reed)

•
Details on Page AB

'04 LeSabre Limiled ........ ,................................. 4,000 miles
'04 Sun fire 2 Dr .................................................6,000 miles
'04 Century .. .-.... ..... .. .... ................................... I 3,000 miles
'04 Vi be .......................................................... I 0.000 miles
'03 Cavalier ..................................................... lO,OOO mites
'03 Sal urn L200 .. ...... .. .................................... 19,000 miles
'03 Alero ....... ,... ,.................. ,.......................... 22,000 miles
'03 Grand Am V6 ... .. .. .. , .. .................. .. ........... .. 19,000 mites
'03 Regal ....... .. ............................................... 23,000 miles
'03 Bonneville SSEL ................... .. ................. 10,000 miles
'03 Montana Vim ...... .......... .. .. .. .... ..................... S,OOO miles
'03 Rendezvous ............... ,........... .. ... .....'....... ,.. 25,000 miles
'02 Grand Am GT ............................. .. ............. 18,000 miles
'02 Monte Carlo SS ........... ,.................. ........... 12,000 miles
'02 GMC Ehvoy ................................................ 26,000 miles
'02 Chev. Suburban ........................................ 28,000 miles

'02 Cadillac Seville 5LS ..... ,....... ..... ....... .. ........ 23,000 miles
'02 Rendezvous AWD 2 ............. .. ........ ............ 32,000 miles
'0 1 Saturn \)L t ................. ............................... 26,000 miles
'0 1 Sunfire 2 Dr ................................... ,.. .. ....... t 7,000 miles
'0 I Malibu ......... ............... ... ........ ............... .. ... 22.000 miles
'0 t Monte Carlo 55 ................... ...................... 33,000 miles
'O t Century Limited ................. ,.. ......... ,.......... 14.000 miles
'0 I Park Avenue Ultra ... .... .. .. ....... .............. ... ... 37,000 miles
'0 I Seville SLS ............................ .................... 2 7,000 miles
'01 Blazer 2 Dr ..................................... ,........... 20,000 miles
'01 GMC Jimrny SLT .. ............................ .... .. ... .27,000 miles
'01 Jimmy 2 dr ...... ........... .. ............................. 30,000 miles
'01 SIO Ext Cab 4x4 .............. ,........................ 3i,OOO miles
'01 S 10 Ext Cab 2 WD ........ ......... ... ..... .. .. :....... 22,000 miles
'01 Concorde LXI ,.. ,., ...................................... 47,000 miles
'01 Saturn 5C2 2Dr ......................................... 24,000 miles

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

.Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby ·

Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies

•

16 PAG&gt;CS

A3
Bs-6
B7
A3

A4
A6

Obituaries

As
As

Nascar
Sports

BB
Bt

Weather

AS

Syracuse council member
discusses council's decision to
relieve five fire fighters from duty
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENT INELCOM

SYRACUSE - Seeking to
do what is right for Symcuse,
villa~e council at a recent
meetmg approved all but five
members of its volunteer fire
department.
Council member Jenny
Hatfield Thursday explained
Council's decision-making
process . She said Brian
Justice, a certified firelighter,

© 2004 Ohln Valley PuhliNhing Co.

was not approved because he
li ves outside the vi ll age in
Racine: that Steve Smith.
who is not a certitied firefighter, was not approved
because he is not eligible lor
coverage by the village's
insurance policy because of
his driving record and al.so the
fact that he lives outside the
village: and that Kenn,Y
McKnight, who is not a certified firefighter, was cut

Please see Council, AS

BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@\11YDA.i l YS(N fi NE L.COM

POMEROY --The hidden
cost of the war in Iraq was the
topic of discussion when
members or the Appalachian
Peace and Justic~ Network
came to Carpenter'' Hall
Thursday

evening

in

Pomcrov.
The A-ppalachian Peace and
Justi~e
Network (APJN )
works with local communitics to address the root cause &gt;
o( vio l enc~ and inju,tice.

Please see War. AS

Cllristie Trul y.
program and
devetop•11ent
coordinator for
tile Appatach1an
Peace and
Just1ce
Network.
discusses the
ways the
spending on
tt1e war in Iraq
t1as affected
soCii:ll programs
111 southeast
Ot1io. (J, Miles
Layton)

,nlty Health Fair
I ) '~

(, .J

•

•

..

.

�The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

NATION • WORLD

Clinton tells CBS he never considered
resigning, most proud of economic plan
BY MADISON J. GRAY

On Wednesday. Clinton
told an audience of about
1.000 peopl e at a screeni~g
NEW YORK - Former of a documentary about hts
President Clinton tells CBS' presidency in New York that
"60 Minutes" that he never he became an enemy of right
considered resi gning and is' wing Ameri&lt;a in an attack
proud he fought efforts to led by Whitewater prosecutor .
Impeach him amid the scan- Ke imeth Starr. The film wa'
dal over hi s affair with tirst shown Tuesday in Little
Monica Lewinsky.
Rock. Ark .
"I stood up to it and beat it
Clinton said Starr was "the
back," Clinton says of the instrument of a grand
impeachment process. which de sign ." The documentary.
he describes as "an abuse of ''The
Hunting
of the
power."
Pre sident," portray ' Clinton
"The whole battle was a as the target of a political
badge of honor. I don 't see it smear campaign by its filmas a stain. because it was illc- makers Harry Thomason and
gitimate."
Ni&lt;kolas Perry. Thomason is
The · illterview. to take up a close friend of Clinton's.
the full hour of Sunday's
"When the Berlin wall fell ,
·program, is timed to next the perpetual right in
week 's , publication
of America. which always
Clinton's
memoir. ''My needs an enemy, didn't have
Life," which covers his an enemy any more, so I had
Arkansas childhood. his to serve as the next best
tenure as that state 's gover- thing." Clinton said.
nor as well as his presidency.
Making only an indirect
Clinton sees the Lewinsky, reference to his affair with
affair as "a terrible moral Lewin sky after the film's
error" whose disclosure to screening. Clinton referred to
his wife, Sen. Hillary it as his "stupid. personal.
Rodham Clinton, put him "in wrong mistakes.''
the doghouse."
In the "60 Minutes" inter"! did something for the · view with CBS News anchor
worst possible reason. Just Dan Rather. c'linton· said he,
because I could ," Clinton his wife and their daughter,
says of his infidelity. "I think Chelsea. dealt with their fumthat's just about the most ily crisis through counseling .
morally indefensible reason
"We did it together. We did
anybody could have for it individually." he says. "We
doing anything."
did family work."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Friday, June 18, 2004

J uantricc Deadman, II.
who was not related to the
other three.
Witness accounts of the
accident varied. Apparently,
Lauren jumped or slipped
into the water. Juantrice
tried to reach in and help
her but fell in herself.
Lauren's father and brother
then jumped . in to try to
save the girls.
Police
officer
Tony
Moldanado, one of the first
rescuers at the scene. told
the
Fort Worth
StarTelegram that when he
jumped in, the suction "literally sucked the socks off
my feet."
One witness, Christian
TiUis, 14, said he saw the
girls slip into the water and
tried to help.
"I dived in after them. I
felt a little-bitty hand, but
it slipped out," he said.
"And then I had to get out
because I couldn't breathe."
The 9-foot-deep pool,
called the Active Pool; lcollects water from several
waterfalls. At the bottom, a
powerful pump pulls the
water through a drain so it
can be recirculated, fire
offi&lt;ials said.
At Thursday 's . serv1ce,
Dew urged mourners to
remain faithful.
"In spite of . the tragic
events of yesterday, God is

Clone wars flare in state legislatures nationwide
BY KEVIN McGlU

BATON ROUGE, La .
Denny Bass' 9-year-old daughter has diabetes, So does Darell
Hicks' 5-year-old daughter. But
the two men are on opposite
sides of the issue of stem-cell
research using cloned human
embryos.
Scientists believe such
research could someday lead to
a cure for diabetes and other
diseases or IIIJUfles . But
Louisiana is on the verge of
becoming the sixth state to ban
all cloning - not just cloning
to create babies, but cloning to
treat disease.
"Very few people who have
children with dJabetes agree
with what I say." said Hicks. a
Baptist-reared Roman Catholic
convert who believes destroying embryos to obtain stem
cells is immoral.
Bass; who says the answer to
his child's daily ritual of finger ·
pricks and insulin injections
lies on the cutting edge of science, is unhappy with the
heavy religious overtones of
the debate.
"''m not Catholic, but what
is happening is. the Catholic
Church is dictating how I care
for my child and they're using
religion to do it." he said.
The proposed ban has the Sheryl Brady, left. holds her daughter Brooke , 9, as John Brady
support of two of Louisiana's kisses their older dilughter Brittany, 14. who is a diabetic durbiggest
political
forces: ing a American Diabetes Association news conference held at
Christian conservatives in the the State Capitol in Baton Rouge La. (AP Photo; The Advocate,
suburbs and the rural north. and Arthur D. Lauck)
Catholics in New orleans and
the Cajun southwest.
diagnosed with Alzheimer's body cannot produce or properly
If the measure passes, disease in 1994. has cast a spot- use insulin; doctors believe embryLouisiana will join Arkansas, light on the issue. Right before onic stem cells could be used to
Iowa. Michigan and the Reagan's death. former lirst create insulin-producing cells.
Dakotas as the ohly states with lady Nancy Reagan and 58
Most embryonic stem cells
such broad restrictions.
U.S. senators asked President are taken from excess embryos
Nine states ban cloning to Bush to relax restrictions he created through test-tube fertilcreate a baby - Arkansas, placed in 200 l on the use of ization and donated by fertility
still on the throne," he California. Iowa. Michigan, federal funding for embryonic clinic s. But many scientists
said.
New Jersey, North Dakota, stem cell research. Bush has helieve stem cells will have to
Before Wednesday. the Rhode Island, South Dakota rejected those calls.
be taken from embryos cloned
park's most serious accident and Virginia. In November,
Stem cells are !he body's \vith the patient's own DNA to
was in 1991, when an SO- California voters will decide a building blocks. Scientists avoid immune-system rejection
foot light pole fell and bond measure that would pro- believe they can be coaxed to problems.
In Louisiana, Democratic
killed two people, The city vide $3 billion for stem cell develop into specific cell types
has paid thousands of dol- research and explicitly allow that can be used. to replace Gov. Kathleen Blanco may
lars in claims to visitors the cloning of embryos for cur- damaged tissue and treat such have to decide between two
as
diabete s. bill s - one that would ban all
. conditions
injured in falls, the Star-. ing disease.
A
proposed
federal
ban
on
all
Parkinson's
disease
and
spinal reproductive and therapeutic
Telegram reported.
cord
injuries.
(Scientists
are cloning, and another that would
forms
of
cloning
in
the
United
Designed by architects
States has bogged down on less confident ·about the ban o1i1y reproductive c Ianing.
Philip Johnson and John
prospects for using stem cells
Blanco said she has not
Capitol Hill.
Burgee, the · gardens are
decided which bill she would
Last week's death of former to treat Alzheimer's.)
free to enter and a com- President Reagan. who was
Diabetes happens when the sign should both hit her desk.
mon refuge from hot Texas
days. Each minute, 19,000
•••••••
•••••••
•••••••••••••
••••
••••
•• ••••
'\ ••
gallons of water courses •••
•• ••••
••
"'
through the garden, accord· ••
•
••
ing to the Fort Worth I.
-:::
Convention and Visitors . :::••
•
Center.
"No swimming" signs are
posted in the · park, city ·
••
·~r :::
spokeswoman Dot Kent
said.
••
Jesse Spann, o.ne of the
church's deacons, said ther~
•
Our beautiful omdoor jim1it11re
('(m!fim. rela.rn l sty le and
•
are no barriers around the •
unl"nmpmmised qulllity. Vhit mir shuwruom Juday a m/ dtoo.\t' }rom m 1 . ••
OU/SfGIIdilig se/ectiOII offumishillgS tJIId (ll'(f! .'I.HJrit-'S /}f!lj l!l 'ffor _\'OUr yarJ .
area and that there are
•
••
steps leading down to the :.••
·:::
All Gilders available in Z",-4', 5', &amp;. 6' foot sizes
swirling pool. "As a child, :: : ~
•••
when you see a waterfall, ••
•••
you think you can go play ::: ~~
-:::
and swim there," he said.
••••
••
••
Fire
Department
••
spokesman Lt. Kent Worley •
••
•
said the Water Gardens :::
..:::••
..
would remain closed until •
••
police finish their investiga- •
:::\
0
tion.
•••
••
•
•.,
• ••
••
•••
.,..,
,
••
•
Clinton pronounces his
economic plan as his greatest
accompli shment of hi s eight
years in office.
"I kept score. how many
people's lives were better
otT,'' he tells Rather. "People.
actually had the ability to do
mo re thing s than ever
before.''
The former commander in
chief also takes pride in
assembling the coalition that
stopped former Yugoslav •
Slobodan
Pres1dent
Milosevic 's crackdown on
independence-minded ethnic
Albanians .
. "The day that Kosovar war
ended
and
I
knew
Milosevic's days were numbered was a great day. I had
a lot of great days," he say s.
Excerpts from the interview, taped Tuesday at
Clinton 's
home
• in
Chappaqua. N.Y.. and last
weekend in Arkansas, were
released Wednesday. The
book, published by Alfred A.
Knopf, has a first printing of
1.5 million copies.
"The Hunting of · the
President,'' based on the bestselling book of the same
name by Joe Conason and
Gene Lyons, documents the
Whitewater scandal, the
Paula Jones sexual harassment suit, the Monica
Lewinsky
scandal
and
Clinton' s
subsequent
impeachment.

m
H
·
:Dreath of
f re•shH"lr

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Saturday, June 19
SALEM CENTER -· Star
·Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will hold Fun
Night and potluck supper at
6:30 p.m. at the Grange Hall,
located three miles north of
:Salem Center on County
:Road I. All invited .
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 special meeting, 7:30p.m. at tile
temple. Work in the E.A.
·
,
Degree.
Monday, June 21
pomeroy - Meigs County
Right to Life will meet at
7:30 p.m . at the Pomeroy
Library. The public is invited.

Support Groups

Wednesday, June 23
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at the
home of Debbie Jones on
Flatwoods Road .

Monday, June 21
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible school will be held
from 9 to II :30 a.m. at the
Bradford Church of Christ
June 21 -24. "Lava Island,
Where Jesus' Love Flows"
will be the theme. Classes for
preschool through teens. For
more information, call 9925844.
CARPENTER - Vacation
Bible school will be conducted 6:30 to 8:30p.m. June 2125 at the Mt. Union Baptist
Church near Carpenter.
Theme will be ''Desert
Caravans." For more information
contact
David
Wiseman, 742-2568.

Homecomings

Other events

Saturday, June 19
POMEROY - Hysell Run
Holiness church homecoming.
Potluck dinner at 12:30 p.m.
music by The Gracemen at 2
p.m. Public invited . For more
. informatoin call 992-5275.

Saturday, June 19
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community
Association , "Pops in the
Park." 8 to II· a.m., Dave
Di)e s Park . Offering free
breakfast with fathers . Menu

Thesday, June 22
POMEROY - The Bits
·and Pieces Quitters Guild
will meet at 6:30 p.m at the
Pomeroy Library for a "fat
quarter" exchange and to
finalize plans for a trip to the
Amish Country. Judging program books will al so take
place. New members are welcome. For more information,
call 742-0212.

Birthdays
Friday, June 18
TUPPERS PLAINS
Ethel Carson will observe her
90th birthday Friday. Cards
may be sent to her at P.O.
Bo~ 174, Tuppers Plains.
45783
Saturday, June 19
POMEROY
Polly
Eichinger will celebrate het
90th birthday with a parry
from I to 4 p.m at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center. It has
been requested that ·guests
not bring gifts. Cards wi II be
appreciated.
Wednesday, June 30
POMEROY Former
Bend area residen~ Charles
R. Lyons will observe his
93rd birthday on June 30. He
now lives at 142 Fourth Ave.,
Crestview, Fla., 32539. Lyons
operated the Lyons Garage in
Mason until he retired .

Evans receives plaque from ABLE

11

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thinK IOU are .
DEAR ABBY V.1mt i' !he
pro10col for avoiding a co- "or~­
~'\ third \\edding '7 E\.tr)one in
our office "a' ill\ it~d to her '&gt;C&lt;:und one. a large. catered affair.
We all kne11 the m:miage 11 ouiJJ\ IOU

Dear
Abby

n·t h.t't becau't.' 'he''' a:-. m~UTYin~

a .i••ble''· irre,pon,ible pard&gt;it~ ·

She j, a~ain mam in!;! for tht"
"ron!.! n::.t~on .... She. ad~11it... "he

do,,n't Itil e her rlance. hul he
'\e -..h:rdc~\ .,, hL 1 I .trn,t&gt;J.
pnn-id~~ . . e...:urit~ ·and uke.., care
there -..~11 tli(,.· n:·,\t'lL'f ~ilt:' h~td
of her t11o 'on' from her li N t.tkc n !he d.11 ••II lrom \\O il

mani..1ge. hoth of \\hom h,l\ e .111J JiJn t -1 Jot:t' 11tt:. I'm
prohlenh -.he can·t handle' .
afr;nJ 11 I f"'~nP:..:: ·u p the fal'l
I don' t plan to anend. " ' am that l nn ~..·• lr, ;,, '' hether 1H
I obligated to 'end a gift.' fl (l ! I -..hPuld :.:..~ tP '' atd1 thL·
She·.., h;n in~ annther l&lt;.m.:e 1-iJ,. I'll '"' m1 1oh ·\,eddi ng. ~he ay..,_ bc:1.:au~c GETriV; 11\l 'i 'Jk.\TED
the' net&gt;d mnnl"\ for thL~
DF'AI\ Cd rll\(i I'RLS -

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hou1e the) juq bought - TR ..\TF'D: 11 , 11mc tn c\p.md
Dl SGL'STED 1!\ DETROIT ~"~ur ~.:11\.'lll rl1 .. r~·• I ~ ..li1J1l"ar . .
DEA R DI SGLSTED You \ llll ,' I t' h1..'lll~ !.tkT !!II ~r;lll l­
are under no uhl i~ation to ~I' c.:' eJ ,IIIJ t.tkll ~hil.,ll!J~c· &lt;~I b tl
vour co-worker J £!ift. Since \ ·ou the 1111Hher ''' L'\i'l..'l:1 ~ ou ll
ha,·e to ,.~, ork '' it11 the '' U1 1ian . fl''CJ"\L' .I hid ... II l1Jl1L' d!lJ t llL'Il

con:-.ider '-.end in!! J loYeh !.!reet- nut J1 .t~ · ltn Jt J .. llk•!Jl-.Jder;Jlt'
inf! card clr tokeil i.! ift aloi1~ \\ nh .tl1J unf..ur l rL'...'•lfll!llt.'lld \tlll
\"1lur !.!Ood wishe~~
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llhl!ILHI: a .:-+.-hPLJI 1. . llll~i lo~ ·
. D{". R ABBY: I am a 13- tiu n poli~,.·~ I \ jil"l'lt.'thl'd
' ear-nld gi rl. I h"h,·-,il for a 1\.' " J''lll'-.Jhk hdh~ '-llli.'l" dl1..'1l I
Lum lv wit h three cl1 iiJrcn. I e,t..,, to linJ
\\atcl1 them twiL'L' a v..eek

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from afte r school unti l the 4.hn..:~lll ' ;,,·) !J ifl'o 11.
mo the r arri' l'.., home frum u' .11 "'II'• ei:1 1
h li!

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"ork . Latcl\·. the kid' ha1e

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been im oht-J in 'port' anU

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Nina Sharp to perform at annual Rutland Ox
Roast and Independence Day celebration
Country s inge r Nina Sharp of
West Union. W Va. will be
the featu red eve ning ente r ~
tainment at the annua l
Rutland Ox Roast and
Independence Day celebration. Since July 4 fall s on a
Sunday, the observa nce will
be on Saturday, July 3. Sh arp
wi ll perform from 8 to 11
p.m. on the stage in the
Rutland Park. She has
opened for well-known
Nashvil le acts incl ud ing
Blackhawk. Darryl Worly.
Chris Cagle, David Ball and
Cletus T. Judd and recently
completed her f1rst recordi ng
in Nashville . It will be
released later th is yea r.

Subscribe today • 992-2155

\ l t&gt;ig\ HaruUIIn !),,,/
4JI11JI I'•Jmt•rm• l'il.e, f'omt'r•JI flltlt•- 4;

~"-' ~AtAIXXt 6AMO
ftUMMtt f~QMCOU\.' to04

Avonell Evans accepts a plaque from Carol Brewer, left, coordinator for the Adult Basic and
Literacy Education (ABLE) program Monday night's annual recognition dinner at Meigs High
.• SchOol. Evans, who holds a GED diploma, has been an instructor with ABLE for the past 20
_years. (Charlene Hoeflich)

June 2004-

UMW meets

.

Practice resumes
..
Monday the 28th from 9:00 - 12:00
All week

July 2004
Sun

Mon

This Father's Day. come together under one roof- ours .
Our special menu on Father's Day Is a great chance to enjoy
a delicious family feast with dad. Stt back and relax In our
dining room and you don't have to ·worry about who Is
going to do the dishes. We'll take care of everything.

11

16oz. PORTERHOUSE

SEAFOOD PLAnER

18

w/Grilled Onions

Beer Battered Fish, Shrimp,

Choice of l sides

Scallops, Oysters, Crabcakes
Choice of 2 sides

$12.99

25

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-

'

~~~~~~~ #~,;~~""
US 50 St Rt 7, Coolville, OH

1

·

Wed

'

Thu

8

7

·

Fri

9

N o PractJ.ce th is " "e e k
'

_____ ....1 13

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' 14

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17

Pre- o-.rn p Pr•otl oee
., ::z: oo All Week . M ~n~e~-F r-ld•y

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Band C • rnP

oll _

·ll

24

~00 AM - 8 : 3 0 P~ All W e e k . IVIondav -:::~ct·.~

, 26

'1 27

28 __ ~ 29
3Q_
_31
[Practice 9:00 - 12:00 Tue sday-Friday!
--

•

A. LLPRACTI CESA RI AI Ml l &lt;.iS tii(JII~t"IHH..JI
DAYSANDTIML S I-"Oi{ 1111 IUJ II I\:.....DPAR/\[)1 · .A\IL1 1H l t&gt;,1Jill1! I P• 1kl l'\1\
AN NOUNCED
SUMMER UNirORMS "ll ! IU J)l'i( I '-,-... ! I)
1111 :&gt;t I fl
~\JMMI-RPRACT i ll..,ARI ltlt_)IIRil l'l..-: \ll \1 1Miq R..._t,! Ill•
\

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BAND.

•

fU '(ii iLARPRAC1 1Cl "\ ARI'I )V IKI'Kn MP i ll

\l!~oo

7AM-9:30PM Everyday

;.!e'!:... 740-667-6100 • 740-667-6101

10

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4.99

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5

··-

Tue

6

Q : OO -

Roll, Cornbread or Hushpuppies

Add 12 pc. Buffalo Shrimp
to the steak special for only

:

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4

Roll, Combread or Texas Toast

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()l)-/-.1(!_ I..~· ~ \l,'.._'t It\_ (~ \ l)( ~!() lj_

Proud to be a part of your life.

ALFRED . Mary Jo
Barringer led the program,
"Exodus
- Moving
Forward," when the Alfred
United Methodist Women
met recently at the church.
The program was a
litany with the leader and
· members
taking
part.
· Names of those who
helped with recent program
were acknowledged , and
minutes of the last meeting
and the trea s ure r~s report
were read , by Osie Follrod .
Pastor Jane Beattie had
the prayer calendar. and
chose Charles Kobersmith ,
who is in edu cation in
· Alaska .
Thelma Henderson read
the mi ssion report from
"Respanse" magazine, ''A
Caring Connection.''
Barringer served refreshments to Beattie, Follrod ,
· Henderson, Helen Wolfe.
· Florence Spencer. Ruth
Brooks, ·Janice Weber, and
Sarah Caldwell.

In

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Clubs and
organizations

DEAR ABBY: I am a 1.:1year-old girl. My brother
molested me. It happened only
once. but since then he ha&gt;
twice offered me mane~ to help
him with his "tixation." He had
a girlfriend for a fe" vear-, and
they had sex all the time . After
they broke up. hi' nex t relationship lasted for only .a fe"
months before she broke 11 off.
That's when he turned to me .
I haven't told anyone becau'e
I'm ashamed of my&gt;elf. I dnn'1
want people to find out - e&gt;pecially my friends. r m afraid
they 'll think I'm gro" or something. What should I do ' ·roy· IN INDIA NA
DEAR 'TOY ': Wh at h"ppened wasn't yo ur faul t. You
have done nothing to be
ashamed of. The person who
should be ashamed i; your
brother. Hi s "fi ~ati o n" is sick.
and he should not be tn i n ~ to
make you a. part of it. · "
It is impo11ant that you get
help. Your friends do not have
to know. Tell vour mother " hat
happened . If she minimi ze,
· what your brother did. Ihen
pick up the phone and call mur
local rape hotlinc . or the Rape.
Abuse,
lnce;t
Na tio nal
Network (R.A .I.N.N.J- ~(XI656-HOPE r4673). The penpk
there will understand the seri ousness of what hap pened anJ
will help you during th is difli cult time. Plea'e don 't \\ait.

:&lt; 101

..

..•

Monday, June 21
LETART- Letart
:Township Trustees will meet
:at 8 a.m. at the office build:ing.

inCludes . sausage gravy and
biscuits,
pancakes
and
sausage. Donations accepted.
Saturday, June 19
Contact
992-3148 for inforMIDDLEPORT - Revival
mation
.
Public
invited. ·
services will be held 7 p.m .
each
evening
through
Thesday, June 22
Saturday at the Old Bethel
Freewill Baptist Church on · POMEROY - Childhood
Story 's
Run
Road, immunization clinic will be
Middleport. Pete Justic will held from 9 to II a.m. and i
be the evangelist. Public is to 3 p.m. at the Meigs
County Health Department.
invited.
·Sunday, June 20
Children must be accompaMIDDLEPORT - Fresh nied by a parent or · legal
Anointing will be at the guardian . Shot records are to
Middleport Church of the be taken. Donations will be
Nazarene, I 0:30 a.m. Dlinner accepted but are not required.
will be held following the
sing to honor fathers. Pastor
Allen Mictcap invites the
public. Everyo.ne invited.
Thursday, June 24
POMEROY - Laurel Cliff
POMEROY
- The Caring
Free Methodist Church,
10:30 a.m . special singing by and Sharing Support Group
The ·
Gracemen
of will meet at I p.m at the
Barboursville, W. Va. Love Meigs Multi-purpose Senior
Alzheimer 's
offering will be taken. Pastor Center.
Diagnosis
will
be
the topic .
Glenn Rowe and congrega-tion invites the public. For For more informaton contact
more information call 992- Lenora Leifheit, Meig s
Cooperative Parish nurse.
0758.

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Community Calendar

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r~!Jl&gt;rs.
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BY THE B END
Incest victim keeps quiet
because of shame and feat

Frida~ . Junct8.2004

:Public meetings Church services

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

..... .

The Daily Sentinel

'

Four Chicago church members, including
three children, drown in Texas water garden ·
FORT WORTH, Texas
(AP) - An 8-year-old girl
drowned and her father,
brother ;md another child
died · trying to rescue her
from a deep, swirling pool
at a water garden where
"No swimming" signs are
posted.
About 2,000 people gathered for a prayer vigil
Thursday morning, a day
after the deaths of t!Je four,
who were visiting from
Chicago to attend a Sunday
school convention.
"Today our city extends
our wings to enfold and
comfort you," Mayor Mike
Moncrief told the crowd,
many of whom held hands
and wiped away tears.
The four had gone to the
5-acre Fort Worth Water
Gardens because the pool
. at their nearby hotel was
closed, .said the Rev.
Gerald M. Dew, pastor of
Antioch Missionary Baptist
Church in Chicago.
The water gardens, which
are not meant for swimming, feature fountains ·and
waterfalls fed by pools that
·use powerful motors to circulate the water. Residents
said people often wade in
the pools on hot days.
The victims were identified as Myron Dukes. 35:
his daughter Lauren, 8; his
son Christopher, 13; and

•

QUESTIONS'! CALl 9&lt;i2 ~7 1-ll (B'\ NO Ul! It !) l IK I M •\ !I \1 t; h11 'l''--' '' ·1'1''-~'' 1t

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�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

In death, there are two Go

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress slrall make no law respecting an
establislrmerrt of religion, or prolaibiting the .
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or tire right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrier•ances. ·
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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READER'S

Friday, June 18, 2004

Resped
Family deserves respect

lives. It is the God of Lost
She was 12 and this \1 as
all are.
"You must think of him of Hope who does that.
her first experience "ith
When death strikes. God is
course. Don't try to forget.
death. Until the moment that
as
sad as we are. But he is a
she was told. "Dear. he·,
And remember the God of
God
of Hope and he still
dead." she had been sure
Hope."
wants
us t&lt;• win, so to speak.
Here. her letter ended.
God would make her friend
George
Let the theologians shake He wi II enable us to take
recover. Every morning folPlagenz
their heads and wring their courage and to begin again.
lowing the accident. she
hands over the idea of two We can count on that.
c:l'lled the hospital. The
When I was a young divinGods. The fact remains that
report was always the same:
itv
student trying to recontheir theologies have too
"There has been no change .
Cile
the existence of evil
His condition is critical."
ter's-daughter-ish but it real- · often proved-comfortless in with the idea of a God who
To which she would . lv isn't.
times of tragedy. The orthoalways sa~ , "I just know · "I belie\'e in two Gods : the dox concept of a God who is was both omnipotent and
tomorrow they v.·ill tell me. God of Lost Hope makes both all-powerful and all- good. my dean, Dr. Willard
Sperry. said, "If I had to
'His condition is fair....
people cry and mourn goad has · always run make a choice between the
But thev never did. After because he takes away the1r aground on the problem of omnipotence of God and the
the news· of his death. she most impon;mt pmsession e\·iJ.
goodness of God. 1 would
went into her room and shut - ' life. Sometimes he takes
Philosophically. the ques- take the goodness and let the
the door.
it from people who are most tion is put this way: '· if God omnipotence go.··
The question that kept tor- deserving of life . Butthere is could have prevented this.
If we believe that God is
why didn't heT
menting her was. "HO\v no gettin£ around him .
all-powerful in every human
"But then there is the God
could God let such a thing
Receiving no answer ,situation. there is a danger
of
Hope.
He
dwells
iri
those
happen'' Maybe there isn't a
(other than the standard but . that when what is dearest to
who remember- those who all-too-often unsatisfactory us is takeh away. we will
God after all."
we'll begin to doubt God's love
Gradually. however. the send cards. bring flowers. reply. "Someday
express
sympathies.
The
know"). many have lashed and goodness. What Sperry
clouds of bitterne's and
bewilderment began to lift. God of Hope makes this out petulantly at God and and the girl in the story were
She took out paper and pen world a much better place . have tlung away from him sayi ng. is that it is better to
and wrote a letter to the dead Although there is always the just when' they needed him tell yourself at such times
emptiness left behind by the tllOSI.
bov's father.
that there was nothing God
.:It 's son of hartf to think God of Lost Hope. the God
The girl in our story wres- could do about it. He would
of what to say." she began. of Hope does a good job of tled with just such a choice have if he could have , but he
"Of course. vou know how filling it - because you before the answer came. It is is nevertheless on our side
think instead of the people not God. she decided. who and will provide us with all
terribly sorry. we all are ...
"Anvwav. I've· kind of got who care .
affliqs children. He has we need to see through our
"I care. If you need any- nothing to do with death. He suffering and come out victhings- in . their place now.
What I am going to say thing. W!lnt anything or just neither wills it nor gives it · torious.
might · sound sort of minis- want to talk. I am here. We permission to come into our

I gue" when they took prayer out of public and state offices
· they took respect out. too.
First. I want to say Eber Pickens Sr.. his wife, and three chil-

no idea

I'm writing thi s letter. I don't know what

mi stakes he has made while he has served on the fire department. Howe ver. llhink if your mayor and council members
· will look at their past, they will find we have all made mistakes. This man has lived and devoted his whole life to this
town. his wife and son working right alongside him raising
money for the fire department. When you are in your warm
bed in zero weather. he was on fire runs. He lost time from
work to go in I()() degree temperature. He and his son were the
first to respond. In the ice storm, he was out getting kerosene
and medicine for the less fortunate and cooking and serving
meals for those who didn't have a place to stay.

· ARE Vov

My prayer is that someday you don' t have a fire or a loved

SURE Tf.IJS IS

one in an accident and no one to go to their aid. But I will say
the news about him being forced to resign must have been

AGooD

very important, as he got a bigger headline in the newspaper

IDEA'?

than the former President's death.
The Bible says to forgive and forget; however, if I was Eber,
Mary, and Eber, Jr. I don' t know if I could look the other way.
Arletta Vanour
Middleport

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- addressing issues, not personalities.
. The opinions expressed in this column are the
:consensus of the Ohio VallfY Publishing Co. :S
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

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Obituaries

Crow-Karr Memorial Scholarships awarded

POMEROY - Simania M. Ross. 81. died on Tuesday. June
15, 2004. at her daughter's home in Pennsylvania. following
an extended illne".
She was born on March 4. 1923. in West Virginia, to the late
Millie Lowe and William Elias Muncy. On Aug. 4, 1958, she
was united in love and marriage to the late Burnie Ross.
Simania is survived by her daughters and their husbands:
Nillie and Charles Caplinger of Columbus. and Diane and
Timothy Gilbert of East Stroudsurg, Pa.: her eight grandchildren: -Ronnie. Burnie. Reece. Brandon. Demetria, Michelle.
Misty and Amanda: her two great grandsons. Mark and
Joshua: and her great granddaughter, Kimber. She is further
survived by many nieces. nephews. great nieces. great
nephews. other relati,·es and many friends .
In addition to her parents and late husband. Simania was
preceded in death by her son. Hillard Ray Price. her brothers:
Willie. Anderson . Reece. Johnn y and Roscoe Muncy. and two
sisters. Nettie Peterfy and Mary Bailey.
Services will h'· held at I p.m. on Saturday. June 19. 2004.
at Ewing Fune~&lt;JI Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Bill Garren
oftkiating. Buri al and a graveside service will be hdd at
Meigs Memory Gardens immediately following the funeral.
Friends and family are welcome from 6 to 8 p.m. on Fnday
night at Ewing Funeral Home.
The family would like to extend many thanks to the Monroe
County. Pa. VNA/Hospice Association for all their help and
support during this trying time. Those wishmg IO do so may
make contribution\ in Simania's name to lhem.

DuPont

SYRACUSE
Three
2004 Meigs County high
school graduates have been
Crow-Karr
awarded
Memorial Scholarships. a
fund established in memory
of Fred W., an attorney, and
Eleanor Karr Crow. a school
teacher.
The scholarships applicable
for accredited colleges, uni·
versities. technical colleges
and other institutes of higher
learning. are awarded annual·
ly to residents of Meigs
County who have. relat ives
aftlliated with Meigs County
serv ice organizations, such as
the DAY. American Legion.
Vietnam
Veteran's
Organization and Veterans of
Foreign Wars.
Awarded scholarships this
vear were Summer Ren ee
Folmer of Pomeroy; Jamitha
Maria Willford of Rutland.
and Kathryn Childs of
·
Middleport.
Folmer. daughter of Donald
and Carol Folmer. will be
attending Hocking College
where she plans to major in
radiology. She is the granddaughter of the late Airman

from Page A1

War

Carolina plant . It was previously made by 3M. but
DuPont assumed manufacturing it when 3M stopped.
Don Poole. general manager of the Tuppers PlainsChester Water District. the
county's la rgest water system . sa1d he asked DuPont m
January about the levels of
C8 released in ihe water. to
determine if a reported
reduction in C8 releases into
the Ohio River from the
Washington Works plant was
responsible for the dimini shing levels of C8 in the TP-C
water supply.
The district has six wells,
and a treatment plant in Long
Bottom, 21 miles downriver
from DuPont's Washington
Works Plant.
"The question I asked was
passed to another person. and
I was told my request was
being reviewed," Poole said.
"To this date, I have received
no reply to my question. We
thought it would be extremely good information to have ...
"There hasn't been a board
meeting in 27 months when
the issue of C8 has not been
discussed," Poole said. "The
district and its board are very
concerned about what's in
'the water supply and what we
can do to combat pollution in
our water supply.'
DuPont itself first det.ected
C8 in the Little Hocking
water supply in a 1984 test of
public water. supplies, . but
failed to nottfy commuml!es
affected, Houlihan said. In
the last two years, it has been
found in the TP·C supply,
~ nd supplies in Syracuse,
Pomeroy, and Mason County.
"That DuPont did not noti·
fy these communities of the

from Page A1
using networking. education.
conflict manage ment and
peer mediation training in
schools and communities and
other activities to promote
non-violent. reflective solutions to problems of economic and social injustice.
The topic of the forum was,
" Liberating
Ourselves:
Jane Houllh&lt;tn
Working to · Bring War
potential risk to water con- Dollars Home ," particularly
sumers was a breach of the how the continued cost of the
public trust," Houlihan said.
occupation of Iraq is resultDuPont has maintained · ing in decreased soc ial and
there is no risk to humans as domestic spe nding .
the result of C8 exposure.
"Due to a war that many
Houlihan
and
the · Americans actively opposed
Environmental
Working and even more are wary of,
Group. and litigants in the there has been an astronomiWe st Virginia lawsuit, dis- cal increase in military
agree with that claim.
spe nding, both here at home
For consumers, Houlihan and to continue the war and
said, C8 ha s potential to occupation in Iraq ,'' said
cause damage to the liver. Christie Truly, program and
kidney, immune system; development coordinator for
reproductive system , and thy- · the APJN. "The increase in
rmd, and in workers exposed military spending, coupled
to C8 in the manufacturing with a stagnant economy, has
proce ss, can cause increased re sulted in a dramatic
prostate cancer, cerebrovascular di sease and other Illnesses. 3M worker studie s
have reve aled.
The federal governmenJ,
has not established a "safe
level" of C8 in water supplie s. ·
·
POMEROY - An action
"Is the level of C8 harming for dissolution of marriage
health in this communily 0 has been filed in Meigs
We do not know, because County Common. Plea s
there have been no long-term Court by Harry L. Leftle,
studie s on those effects. but Pomeroy, and Barbara L.
we do know C8 is persi stent LetTie, Athens .
in the body, meaning it stays
in the body for a long time ,
and is toxic to a large number
of organs in the body,"
POMEROY -· Divorce s
Houlihan said.
ha ve been granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court to Rosemary Eskew
from Carl A. Eskew. and to
Kelly L. Eichinger from
Max· A. Eichinger.

I feel a little sorry for the
liberals.
No doubt about it, the
week of June 6 wm; rough
for them. The obsequies for
Ronald Reagan lasted six
William
days : First, the initial service
Rusher
at the Reagan Library. then
hundreds of thousands paid
their personal respects in the
Capitol rotunda and in the
National Cathedral. Finally, . Thus. The New York
the interment ceremony Times, faced with the duty
back at the library was to sum up his administraattended by 700 of his clos- tion, allowed that Reagan ·
est friends and associates.
was "fortunate" that his term
If it had been Bill Clinton, in office coincided with the
I'm not sure I could have collapse of the Soviet
stood it. I might have fled to Union. The implication that
Mexico till it was over. he had little or nothing to do ·
Actually, I think it is unlike- with the latter is almost stagly that Clinton and his gering in its presumption,
friends will opt. when the but the comfort it gave to the
time comes, for so elaborate Times' followers apparently
a farewell. Nixon sensibly outweighed the violence it
chose not to put the did to the historical record.
Then there was the gambit
American people to such a
used
by the San Francisco
test. and Clinton will do well
Chronicle. In an article dutito follow his example.
Most liberals made it fully noting that Reagan was
through the week in com- by no means the favorite
mendable 'i lence . They president of many residents
were under no obligation to of San Francisco, the writer
like Ronald Reagan. or even pointed out that it was on his
admire hi s record as presi- watch that America first
dent. But a few usually noticed the phenomenon that
respectable organs of liberal has come to be known as
opinion did feel it necessary "the homeless."
A San Jose Mercury News
to blow a sour note or two
editorial
also asserted that.
_on their trumpets.
\

decrease in spending on
social programs and rise in
need domestically. We want
to reverse the si tuation and
bring war dollars home for
sorely needed program s."
Meigs County. which
boasts double digit unemployment ligures at nearly 14
percent. is directly affected
by federal budgets cuts
which trickle down to the
state and local level.
"This iss ue affects everyone particularly the people of
so utheast Ohio and the people who rely on social services," said Jason Heinrich ,
an APJN board member.
"The program s and funding
cuts affect people ip ·this
region more than it affects
people in other places."
Truly cited several programs that the APJN considers victims of the war
because of funding cuts such
as the Head Start program,
men's homeless shelter and
the Meigs WIC program
which helps to low-income
and no-income mothers and
children.

Divorces

Marriage
licenses
NMEROY -Marriage
licenses have been iss ued in
Meig s
County
Probate
Court to Nicholas Jame s
Hagglund, 23, Pittsburgh ,'
Pa., and Joy Jannette
Settles, 23, Pomeroy: and
Jeffrey Neil Baringhaus. 22.
Cincinnati, and Jennifer
Ann
Shrimplin,
22,
Pomeroy.

Brooks rewarded for weight loss
COOLVILLE
Peggy
Brooks was the weekly best loser
and awarded a certificate and fruit
ba'iket at a meeting of Tops #
2013, at the Torch Baptist Church.
Amy Hendrix was rewarded
for meeting her half way to goal.
The Ohio River sweep was discus&gt;ed. There was a program on

food exchanges by Pat Snedden.
Tops meets ·at 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Torch Baptist
Church for weigh in with the
meeting being eld at 6:30 p.m.
Anyone interested in joining
should contact Snedden at 6622633 or attend a free meeting.

Council
from Page Af
because of comments he made
during a meeting betwe_en
coonc1l members and the i1re
depan me nt.
Halllcld said Lamar Lyon'
and his wife Brandi. both certified firefighters. were cut
because they live outside the
village munic ipal limits in
Chester. Not onlv is Lamar
also a cenitied paramedic. but
he said he has just graduated
from nursing school at the
Universitv of Rio Grande.
" I personallv don't belteve
the 10 mile radius (Outside the
village limits) has anythin g to
do with any of th" ... said
Lamar. who was making plans
With his wife to move to
Syracuse now that he has grad·
uated.
Lyons said he was hurt when
he received the news earlier
this week.
"It doesn't make sense to me
when you have people that are
willing to respond. g1ve up
nights of sleep, work with no
pay or compensation of any
kind - and then you arc told
by council that they don't want
you," he said..
.
Lyons believe s there 1s .
another reason he was let go.
He admits that he was responsible for what some would
consider an offensive sian
placed on the women's ba!hroom at Syracuse Village Hall
that sparked the feud between
council members and the fire
department.
. In a le!ler to tanner Syracuse
Fire Chief Eber Pickens. Sr..
Mayor Many Wood described
the sign as inapprop1iate. and
said several people were
offended by the sign. Lyons
said he was reprimanded by
Pickens and removed the sign
immediately.
"If that is the true reason rhis
was caused. am! it is not a per·
sonal vendetta .. then I apolo·
gize," he said. "1 have tal ~ed
with Eber P1ckens, Sr.. alter
the incident and I was verbally
reprimanded for it. I ass ured
him I would never let anyt ilmg
like that happen again." ..
Because of the deci\Ions
relating to the lire depm1ment.
Hattle ld said she and other
members of council have
received numerous prank
phone calls and "'!.lot of_personal · retalmqo n. Hatl1eld.
who has two children. said she
is afraid to leave the hi'U se
after dark. She said council's
decision to let the lire tighters
go was not a personal one.
''It is ridiculous to have ro

Kathryn Childs

\c;!OIOr cia..,.., . . tuJent

Five generations of the Eblin family pictured here are Adria
Eblin; her son, Kenneth Eblin; her grandson. Tony Ebl1n ; great
granddaughter, ~isa Eblin; and great-great granddaughter,
Malorie Jeanann Eblin.

Your source for news
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· www.mydallvsentlnel.com ·

Jul BBIJ 'S OF B£f/IS
SBOiflt:JJSB
Saturday, june 19th
American Legion
New Haven, WV
Slarri~tg

Dwi(lhf :Jct~~thtlt!Hr

S«a,.,
f11 f-1,.,. /jriHH MU:higaff

specu.t IJ"''"' CluU

Spaghetti Dinner 6pm-7pm
Show 7pm-10pm

Vlsn Us Today

$12 per person
at the doorl

C\)UJK' iJ

member. ,e'nior prom com ·
mittee. Frenc:h dub. field
L'Lllllll!ander fur the marchin~
band. and a ,e,·cn year mem ·
her uf the Gallia Performing
Art' Dance Team.
Sh~ i, the ~randdaugiJter ol
1he late Jam~' Chat\\0!1hv. a
L' .S. Anm \'eteran ,\·iw
serwd in France. It aly and
Africa in World War II. anJ
a memhl'r nf Feenev- Bennctt ·
Po&gt;t. Ame rican Legion: and ·
William D. Child&gt; \\ ho
'ened in the L' S Navy durin~ World War II in the
Pi.~ific.

"'lfer throu~h thi, a-, electetl
ofticial-;. hut" we are ju~t Join!.!
our iobs." &gt;he said . "And with
the 'mformatiun tiM! ha' heen
pre.,cmed to U&gt; by L1Ur lire
chiefs !Jack Peterson and Btll
Roush). we Yoted not only on
thi, infonnation. but on what
we felt would henelit our lire
depanment·, future . And if
that mean:, a few people &lt;tre
mad. then their heart&gt; were nut
in it in the tirst place. A true·
firefi~hter will fight a fire
reoardless of the chain of comm~nd becau&gt;e this is a higher
callm g and it is in their heam ."
The~'e action&gt; have prompt·
-ed Ll'ons and a group of supponer&gt; to plan to solicit ami/or
petition residents of Syracu,c
this Saturday about the-actions
taken Lw council. LYons ~aid
he and either people 1\ill be di,.
tributing tlyers and such to
notit\ residents ol the 'ltu:ltion ..'
.
"Don't feel bad for me. feel
bad for the people of
S\'racuse." he said . "Thev are
ttie ones losing out on· thi'
deal."
Hattield remains finn in her
convictions and said council
strongly supports Wood on this
issue.
"The council stand, behind
the mayor." she said . "We are
so proud of our mayor anu we
stand united behind him ."
Even though there ha1 e been
rumblings a5out po"ible re';
ignations from the 10lunteers.
onlv one per&gt;on. Swtt Kimes.
has'ofticially resigned_fromlhe
iire department. Hatfield 'a1d
there is still fire and EMS co1·
ernoe for Syracuse.
·•\ve don't want our 1i llage
residents to panic that the)
don't have fire or E\1 S c·owraoe because our number one
priority is their wdfare:· she
said.
SPRIN G VALLEY
446·452&lt;1

ou· RourE

1~

wto; r

7

ll~J~(I\&lt;;QNPikE

FRI 6118/04 · THURS 6/24104
@

s·:30 PM Nightly &amp; 12 :30 pm
Showing Dally Mat inees

Wed thru

In Memory of
Stanley Starcher
(To AssiH ll'itll F1111era/ Expell .&lt;e.&lt;)

I

•

First Class Donald R. Folmer · High School Student Counc·il.
who served in Alaska and captain of a Relay for Life
Japan. and was affiliated with Team. marching. concert and
the
disabled
American pep bands. ECS. the prom
Veterans and the American committee. speech and drama
Leoion. Drew Webster Post community theater. 'ariel)
39~ He died at 30 of kidnev show and the Jun ior Fire
disease. Folmer was a men-i- Department Auxilial)''
ber
of
the
FCCLA
Her grandfather. the late
Environmental Club, 4-H and Howard Birchfield. 'ened in
Meigs marching band.
the U S. Navy dming World
Willford. daughter of Ray War 11.
. .
and Kimberly Willford and a
Chtlds . daughter at. M1ck
cancer survivor. will be and Twtla Chlds. wil l ne
attending
Rio
Grande attending
Rio . Grande
University. She plans a career Umvers!ly. At Me1gs H1gh
in the field of medicine. She sc hool she was homewmmg
was a member of the Meigs queen . senior c:Jas, tre;N!rer.

Bank Minne sota, N.A.,
Irving, Tex ., against Gary
A. Jones, Middleport , and
others, alleging default on a
mortgage agreement in the
amount of $66.025.03.
A foreClosure was granted
to Key Bank against Connie
R. Black, and others.

POMEROY -A foreclosure action has been filed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Well s Fargo

Jamltha Willford
I

Dissolutions

Foreclosures

"America 's homeless popu- agencies. After all, why on earth
lation, a virtually unknown waste good money on rent
problem in the 1970s, grew · when the weather is equable
to roughly 2 million by the enough - as it is in many
time Reagan left office."
American cities - to enable a
The implication was that person to sleep on the sidewalk?
Reagan's alleged hardheart. This is so obviously the
edness toward the poor problem that San Francisco
resulted in driving large mayor Gavin Newsom (yes,
numbers of them out onto he of the gay marriage
the streets. There are so licenses) is spearheading a
many things wrong with this drive called "Care Not
analysis that it's hard to Cash," that sharply reduces
know where to begin in the amount of money given
exploding it. In 1987, to the "homeless" and subReagan signed into law the stitutes food and shelter.
Stewart B. McKinney act, a
Newsom's actions follow
collection of programs that a trend by municipal leaders
provided health care, shelter nationwide to contend with
and transitional housing for the problem, from Orlando
homeless people, and saved where the homeless face
many lives . Bill Clinton, tines and jail time, to Texas
whose heart (the liberals communities clearing out
always assured us) was as tent cities, to bumane probig as all -outdoors, assumed grams such as Newsom's.
the presidency just four
As you can imagine, even
years after Reagan left it, the la\ter way has gone over
and held onto it for eight among the "homeless" and
years without perceptibly their advocates Iike a condiminishing the number of crete cloud. But I'm pretty
"homeless."
sure the ghost of Ronald
In fact, they litter the streets of Reagan would approve of
most of America· s major cities giving food and shelter
10 this day. Some syuander their . rather than money to homemonthly welfare checks on less. people .
essentials such a~ alcohol ruld
William Rusher is a
drugs, using the food and (in Distinguished Fellow of the
poor weather) the housing ser- Claremorlt Institute for the
vices available at any number of Study of Statesmanship and
churches and other charitable Political Philosnphv.

Summer Folmer

For The Record

Five generations

Reagan didn't ignore ·the homeless

The Daily Sentinel• PageA5

www .mydailysentinel.com

Simania Ross

Dear Editor:

dren have

Friday,Junet8,2004

Saturday
June 19th, 2004
Forest Aues Park
Rutland, OH
(Formerly Fort Meigs)
'Tributt' Run Leaves

@

12:00

From Park
Gates Open @ SAM
Camping Available

Sun

�PageA6

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, June 18, 2004

Opponents
of
gay
marrifige
look
for
A Hunger For Mor~ support in the pews in Oregon, other states
As my family and I stood
last week on the shore of
Chincoteague Island off the
coast of Virginia, we peered
through the darkness watch·
ing for the piercingly bright
beam of the Assateague
Lighthouse to sweep throu~h
the night. As the eye of 1ts
light flashed over us, a thrill
ran through us as we were
struck with the serious
responsibility carried by that
lighthouse.
Built originally in 1833, it
has
signaled dangerous
waters for approaching ves·
sels ever since. So dangerous
were the waters in fact. that
even the official presidential
yacht "Dispatch" ran aground
on Oct. I0, 1891 on its way
to
pick up President
Benjamin Harrison and
Secretary of War Benjamin
Tracy (thus proving that danger and loss are no respecter
persons). It had run onto hid·
den shoal s when the orange
light of the lighthouse was
confused for the red hght of
an offshore "lightship" which
signaled safe waters (a very
costly mile and a half goof
on the part of its captain).
The original gas-candle
lamp was replaced . with an
electric light in 1933. and,
operated by the US Coast
Guard, has kept its duties
fai thfully ever since.
The Lord has placed His
own lighthouses 111 the
world, too. These are
"lamps" through whom His
radiance shines, sending light
into the darkness of our
times. warning us of danger·
ous waters. and signaling
God's resolve to not simply
settle for our sink ing on the
jagged rocks of confusion.
si n, and faithlessness. He has
sent His people into the dark·
ness to be a testi mony of His
great and awesome love.
In the daylight, lighthouses
are spectacles of grace and
beauty. We are fond of them as
tokens of art and enjoy decorating with them (I have several in my office). Are you
aware that no two lighthouses
are identical? In the daylight,
the pattern of their colors and
stripes permits a sailor to
know his exact position along
the coast. At night. each hght·
house flashes its light differ·
ently so that, again, a sailor
might be able to know exactly
where he is as he sails through
the darkness.
Each l?erson who has
placed h1s faith in Jesus
Christ and has been made a
child of God, is a lighthou se.
unique and ·beautiful as God
transforms him by Hi s Holy
Spirit. On the other hand, as

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needed to place an amend·
ment banning gay marriage
on the November ballot.
They' re counting on 1,500
Oregon churches for help.
Organizers won't say how
many they've collected so
far, because the signature·
validation process makes it
difficult to get an accurate
count.
"We're optimistic and
we're hopeful," said Tim
Nashif, the group's political
director.
Chris Stewart, whose
group. the Arkansas Marriage
Amendment Committee, is
leading efforts to ban gay
marriage there, describes the
petition drive as a "pre-emp·
tive strike."
"We have seen what has
begun in our culture across
the nation," Stewart said.
"And we realize it is coming
to 'a town near you."'
Volunteers based in Little
Rock, Ark., have already col·
lected 109,000 signatures 28,250 more than is needed
by the July 2 deadline for a
ballot measure there. Two
church-based groups have yet
to turn in about 25,000 more
signatures, Stewart said.
In Michigan. volunteers
with the Lansing-based group
Citizens for the Protection of
Marriage had signed up
130,000 people by the end of
May. They need 317,000
valid signatures.
And the Montana Family
Foundation in Laurel, Mont.,
has collected more than half
of the 41 ,029 signatures
needed to get its constitution·

Bv SARAH LINN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BEAVERTON, Ore.
Ken Keeley spends his
Pastor
Sunday mornings, at church
Thorn
- not just to worship, but to
collect signatures for a ballot
measure that would ·amend
Oregon's constitution to ban
gay marriage.
beautiful and wonderful as
Keeley, one of roughly
each "lighthouse" is, his or· 2,000 members at the evan·
her primary calling is to
shine the light of God's love gehcal Beaverton Christian
and truth into 'the darkness of Church. describes himself as
our w'orld.
· "not that political."
But he says the issue of
The shoals that abound
same-sex
marriage - and
under the surface of the
waters of everyday life are what it means to much of
just as real as the physicaf Oregon's religious communirocks along the coast of ty - drove him to join the
Assateague Island. They are petition drive.
just as real but even deadlier
"When everything's OK,
for the stakes are not a luxu- you don't have a tendency to
ry presidential yacht nor act,'' Keeley said. "But it gets
even a mere physical life, but to the point where you get
an eternity with or without concerned, and you have to
God.
act."
How does His light shine
Organizers in Oregon and
through you IntO the dark·
four
other states - Arkansas,
ness of our community and
worldry
When
greed. Michigan. Montana and Ohio
immorality, deceit and selfish - are turning to churches for
ambition are the norm, how support of their efforts to
has God's presence in your legally define marriage as
life made a difference for between a man and a w0 man,
others to· see? A lighthouse a move that political analysts
with no light in the darkness call savvy.
is a useless building .. . a
But some churches that
waste of brick and mortar.
support gay rights are war·
If your Iight has gone out. ried the strategy will send the
let God rekindle His tlame in wrong message, while others
you so that His love for those have questioned the ethics
around you may be made and legality of bringing poliknown. May the light of His
grace and goodness so illu- tics to the pulpit.
In Oregon. the Defense of
minate your own altitude and
behavior that those who are Marriage Coalition has just
surrounded by the darkness two weeks left to collect the
of fear, hate and confusion I00,840 valid signatures
cJn avoid the destructive
rocks of sin and meet God's
love in Christ Jesus.
"You are the light of the
world . A city on a hill cannot
be hid. No one after lighting
a lamp puts it under the
bushel basket, but on the
lampstand, and it gives light
to all in the house . In the
MIDDLEPORT
same way, let your light Revival services will be
shine before others, so that held 7 p.m. Friday and
they may see your good Saturday at the Old Bethel
. works and give glory to your Freewill Baptist Church on
Father in heaven" (Matthew
Run
Road,
Story's
5:14-16).
Pete
Justic
will
Middleport.
Thom Mollohan has min·
be
the
evangelist.
Public
is
istered in southern Ohio for
th e last nine years and is invited.

al amendment on the
November ballot.
Recent polls in Michigan.
Montana, and Ohio show
voters support a constitution·
al ame ndment legally defin·
ing marriage as between a
man and a woman. There has
been no · such poll in
Arkansas. but Stewart says
the Bible Belt state doesn't
need one.
Political analysts say visit·
ing churches gives signature
collectors access to a friendly, receptive audience.
"It's a very. very politicall y
astute move,.. said Laura
Olson, a political science
at
Clemson
professor
University in Clem&gt;on. S.C.
She edited a 200 I book on
the role of the clergy in U.S.
politics. ··You know you're
gomg to have a particular set
of people who .are going to
be .95 percent in favor on this
issue," she said. ·
The gay marriage debate
has forged connections
among congregations as di sparate as Southern Baptists
and Roman Catholics. evan·
gelical Protestants and mem·
bers of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints.
"Marriage is at· the very
core of who we are as people
of faith," said Phil Burress.
Cincinnati-based
whose
group,
Cit1zens
for
Community Values. is lead·
ing the petition drive jn
Ohio. Volunteers there ha ve
to turn in nearly 323.000 sig·
natures by Aug. 4.
But Rev. Tara Wilkins. an
independent Portland pastor.

t:hun:h or Je!iUS Chris I Aposlollc
Van/a ndt an~! W.nd Rd .. Pa~tor hmc..
M1llt"r. Su nd &lt;~y s~hool • 10 .\0 &lt;~ .Ill ..
E\'Cmng · 7 11! p m

says th e c hur ch~s· stance
aoamsl
gay mamage mistak·
e
.
enly gives the impressiOn
that no Christian congrega·
tions welcome gays.
" It sends the message that
the re is no room 111 organized
rei igion for people who are •
gav. lesbian or transgendered.
TJiat 's the wrong me ssage."
said Wilkins. director of the
Community of Welcoming
Congregations. who attends a
local L1nited Church of
C'hri,t. Her organization rep·
rese nt s i congregations in
the Portl .1 1·,cJ metropolitan
area. ram::111Q. from mainline
Protestan t cli'urches to Jewish
sy nagogues.
Wilkms and her partner.
Caro l lssac s. were among
more than 3.000 same-sex
couples wh o tied the knot in
Portland in March and April.
after Multnomah County
comm1ss1oners decided to
begin
iss uing
marriage
licenses to gays and lesbians.
Roey Thorpe. executive
director of Basic Rights
Orego n. a Portl and-based gay
rights group, s,tid the church·
based effort .. rai ses questions
for me about how appropriate
it is for people tu use the bal·
lot measure process to
adnncc
their religiou s

pastor
of
Pathway
Communitv Church. He and
his wife eire the parents of
three children. If you would
like to send a comment or
question to him, he may be
reached by email at pas·
rorrhom@ pathwaygallipo·
lis. com.

Bible schools
to begin

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Wor sh ip
10·30 am . 6 ~U p.m.
Wed nesday Serviu.:s- 6 .30 p 111
Zion Church of Christ
Pomem), Harrumwillt" Rd (RI 1~ 31.
Pastor· Roger Wat son . Sunday School ·
1V\O am . Worsh1p- 1 0· .~ 0 a 111 . 7 no
p m . Wcdncsd.Jy Sei'\'ICCS - 7 p m.

Rom;ms

8 : 1· 17
MONDAY
Romnns

8:18 30

TUESDAY

Young's Carpenter Serulce
26 vears In local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Located less lhan 30 minutes from

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6215

Coolville, Ohio

Alhens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
We offer physical , occupallonal.
speech, art &amp; musH.:: theraprcs
740-667-3156
"Nest and Rest"

ke 7 fH I p m

Radne First Baplist
R1ck Rule , Sunday Schuol · 9JO
am, Wll1~h1p . 10 -'0 a. m . 700 p m,
Wedncsd~y Sen·L
t .::s • 7·00 p m
Pa~toJ .

WEDNESDAY
AOilliUlS

1 ~ : H -33

THURSOAY
1 Corinthio1ns
12 " 1- 11

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

Acts 24:16

FRIDAY

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

7 40-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

1 Corinlhi&lt;H1s

I?:D -:11

(740)

992-643 1

SATURDAY

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

Gilli'llian ::;,
5 : 1G ~ 25

T

his Fathers Day presents an ezcellent opportuillty to

consider aome qualities of the "new" fathers of today. New
fathers not only have a new family addition but also face a
much more "bands-on" role.
First, Dads are totally Involved ...In the pregnancy as well as
the birthing. They hang right In there - no cheerleaders were ever
more enthUJiastlct Both parents are truly dedlcated... both are
awake at the same tlme ... and both are uhaUJted when the
birthing It complete. Gone are the days or Dad pacing tae floor In
the waiting room. Today' a dads are "expecting", too.
Once home, the already sleep-deprived Dad shares getting up
In the middle or the night to walla or hunger, changes diapers, and
shares houaehold reaponslbUitlea. He It totally "smitten" with his
new child.
Todlly'a dads are no better than yesterday's dads, the duties
and responsibilities have simply changed somewhat along with
the culture. Have you noticed that more fathers accompaDJ their
children to church these days? As you worship with your (amUy
this Father's Day. especially remember the "nowadays
dada"
the
In

Hills Self Storage

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594·6333
1-800-451·9806

Blessed are the pure
in keart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you. '
John 15:7

MEIGS FAMILVEVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
To! Free 1-877-583·2433

Huurs

Atmulfllrerl'

6am ·Hpm

190 N Second Sl

Meigs Coop4'rath•e Parish
Northeast C iu ~ t cr . J\ l! rcd . Pa slnr Jane
Beame . Sun d,Jy School
9.10 &lt;1 .111 ..
Worship · II a. m.. 6 ,,0 p.m

Chester
Paotnr J.tnc ll ca11J.:. \\.'m , hip - 9 am.
Sunday Sthuol - 10 u m . Thursday

Hutland Chun.·h of God
Pastor Ron lle alh. Sunday Worship - 10
11 m . 0
p m.. Wedne.;;day Semces 7

Pa ~ tor :

J'ln.

Jopp11
Hob R&lt;l ndolph . Wonh1p · ll· 30

"m
Sunda) School · 10 '0 !J m

Syracu~ Firsl t.:hurcll of God
Apple and Second Sts. Pas tor Rev Oav1d
Ru ~~ cll, Sunday Sl hool and Wnrsh!p· 10

""'
Evenin g Sm•1ces- 6
Service~ ·

~0

Long Bollom
Sunday S~ h oul - 9 .\0 ,1 m.. Wotsh1p •
l030a.m
Reeds vi ill'
Worship - 9 30 a m , Sunday Sr:hno l
1010 am. Firsr Sunday of Mtl!llh · 7:00

p m , Wednesday

6:30 p.m.

Hralh t Middleporl J
Rod Brower, Sunday Slhoo] · 9.JO
am .. Wo..Vnp · IIOOam
Pa~t or.

Miners\'ille
Pastor· Bob Robinson. Sunday School
am .. Worship - 10 a m.

9

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - I) a.m . Worshtp - I 0 am
Pomertt)'
Pastor- Rod Brower. Worship 9 JO a m..
Sunday School· 10·35 am

Rock Springs
Pas1or Ke1th Rader, Sunday School · Y 15
a.m . Wor ~ h1p . 10 a m . Youth
Fellowship Sund&lt;~y - 6 p m

Rutland
Rtd:: Bourn!.', SundJy S'hool
9 JO &lt;~ 111 . Wlllbhip · lO ]() &lt;~ m.. TILUr!&gt;da)
Sc!\ ICCS- 7 fl lll
Salem Cenll'r
Pastor· Wil ham K M~r~hall. Sunda y
School· 10:15 am .. Wors h1 p. 9· 15a m.
B1hle Study Mo nda~· 7.00 pm
Snu"'villr
Sund&lt;Jy Schuol · lOam . Worshlp-9a Ill
Bet han~·
Pastor· John G1lmore. Sunday School · 10
am. Wors hip - L.J a. m.. Wednesday
Scrvtces - 10 a.m.
Clarmd.Sullon
Cannel &amp; B &lt;~ s h &lt;ln Rd s R&lt;!cme, Oh1o.
Pa,.Jor John G1lnwre. Sun d,ty 5Lhl10I ·
9 10 a m . Worshtp · 10 · -i~ ft m. . Athi e
Study Wed 7.00 p m
Murning Stur
P &lt;~~ lor John Gilmun:, Sundi.!} Sd1U1-' I · 11
a m., Wor-h1p - 10 a.m
Easl Letart
Pastnr Sunday School · 10 a m .
- 9 am, Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Wo r~ hip

R.adllt'
Pw;tllr P~te Sh~f!er, Sunday School · 10
~ m , Worsh1p . II a m , Wednesd ay 7
p.m
Coolville United Melhodlsl Parish!
Pastor: Helen Klme, Cou!vtlle Chun.: h,
Ma1n &amp; F1flh St .. Sullday School - 10
a.m , Worship - 9 am, Tuesda) Serv1ces 7 p.m lb
Bethel Church
Town ship Rd .. 468C, Sunday Slhoo l - 9
&lt;~.m. Wors h1p • 10 a.m.. Wednesday
Serv1ces - I U a.m

Hocklngporl Church
Grand Strcer. Sunday School 9.30 am ,
Wor~hip 10 JO a.m. Pastor Philhp Bel!
Torch Chun:h
Rd 61, Sunday School - 9
Wor~h tp · 10 30 .1 Ill
C~1 .

~0

am

Nazarene
Middlrpurl Church o£ the Naurene
P.l ~l m Ail ~ n Midcap. Sun day School ·
lJ .30 &lt;1.111 .Wor~ htp · IU.JO am , 6 ..\0 p m .
Wc dne~ Ja y SI."T\ 1ces - 7 p 111 , Pa ~tor ·
Allen M1dcap
Hted Sl'ille Fello"'shlp
, C hur..: h ol the N&lt;~lare nc , Pa~t or Jam1 e
' Pctlll. Su11thi)' Sdwul · 9 ]0 am. Wnrsh1p
- IO..J'i am, 7 p.m . Wednesday Serv1cc~
-7

\\bite\ Chapel Weslf~·llfl
C'o.&gt;I\ Jlic Rooid Pa..tor Re' Philhp
Rtdcm&gt;Ur. Sund.~~ s~hool · 'J 30 a.m .
\'~-t•r,lup . 10 •o am, V.edn~Mia) Service

Rutland Church of the ~azal't'ne
Sunday School · 9· '0 a m . Wonh1p ·
1030 am. 610 pm . Wednelod.a~
Serv1cc~ 7 p m

-., r m

rm

Syracuse Chu lt'h of the Nazare n~
Pastn r Mike A dkin ~. Sumi11y Sch'-"•1. 9 ~0
a.m, W11 r ~ hip . HUO &lt;1 111. 6 r m.
Wedm:~ay Scn· 1~c~ 7 r m
P1m1emy Churth of lhe Nazarene
Pa ~ tur Jan L:ncndcr. Sunday Sc hnul ·
9 :JO a.m.. Wor~ h1p . 10.30 am . aud 6
p.m ' WeJne~Jay s~rHCC~ . 7 pIll

Portland Finl Churrh uflhe Sa~.UJrenr
Pastor. William J ust • ~ . Sunda) School - 'f;J
lO 00 a m , Mummg Worship - I0 45 am.
Sunda) St&gt;f\ ICt" • 6 .\CJ p m

740·992·6128

"Do not steal. Do not lie .
Do not deceive one
anoth er."
Leviti cus 19; 11

212 E. Main Street
Pomero,y
992·3785

992·6677

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

ANDERSON
f -UNERAL HOME

174 Layne Strett • PO Boll70
Ne"' Hann, WV 15265
James H. Anderson, Licensed funeral Oil't(lor
Plannina

740-667·3110

Otibi Christian Fello,.ship
tNon--denomJ natwnal fell n~~h1p 1
Mcct mg m the old Am~rJJ;;jiJ L:gnou Hall
South Founh A~enue. M1ddleJ')(m
Pa,tr1r· Chns Ste\.l.ar1 10 00 am Sunda ~
Other mt'etmg~ tn hom,_.~
CommLmil~' or Christ
Port land-Racme Rd . Pa~tor Jm1 Pwffin.
Sunday School . 9 · ~~~ a m . Wo r,hlp 10:30 am Wc dn c~da~ Scn1ce ~. ?·Oil
pm

kihei Worship Centn
School. Pastor Roh R arh~:1.
As~1stant Pastor Karen D&lt;~ \ 1~. Sunda1
Worsh1p· 10 ~t m . E\cmng WDr.J u p h pm
Ytmlh group fJ pm. Wcdnc'ida) l'nv.cr 10
Prayer , and R1hle Study- 7 pm

Cht"~lcr

Ash Street Ch urch
Ash S1. M1dd!epnrt· Pastor Greg Sea r~
Sund&lt;~y Schoo l · 9 30 am. Mormng
Wm sh1p · 10 ~0 u m &amp; 7 pm, Wedn esda~
Sef\ 1ce • 7 UO p m . Youth Sen 1~e · 7 OU

pm
Agapt' l.ife Center
"Full Go spel Churd". Pa \ tor\ J1'h n &amp;
Pau} \\.adc. 603 Second Ate Ma '-&lt;.m. 77~5017. Sen1ce tune . Sunda\ Ill ~0 a.rn .
\\lednc•da1 7 pm
Abundant Grace R.f I.
921 S Th1rd St. M1ddle port Pa~!tlf Tcrc'a
Da\'IS Sunda~ ~cntce. I !I u m.
Wcdne ~du} sei'\'Kc. 7 p m
Failh Full Go5pel Church
Long Bonom. Pa ~ t or Ste\e Keed. S umlJ~
S(· huol • 9 lO .t m Vvor,h1p - 9 11) .t m
und 7 p m. Wclln e,d;J~ - 7 p m . Fnda~ ·
fcllov..sh1p ser:1ce 7 p m
Harrison\ille Cummunitl Ch urch
Theron Durlum. Suml &lt;~~ · Y
a.m and 7 p m.. Wednc~d"' - 7 r m
Pa~tor

~0

MKldlt'porl Cnmmunit:o- Church
"i7'i Pear l St MtdJieptlrt P&lt;~~ l n r Sum
Ander~on. Sunda~ s~· ht•ol )0 lL m.
Evcmng - 7 10 p.m. \Vednc,d~y Sen ~~·e .
7 30 p.m

Failh \alley Tabernacle Churc h
Balle) Run Road . Pastor Rc\ Fmmt:: tl
Raw ~ll n
Sunday EH nm g 7 p m
Thursduy Sen tee - 7 p.m
S~ncuse .1\ilission
Bn dJi! eman St . S)ral·u ~e . Sunday
6 pm.
S~hool · 10 R m, E\'Cnmg
Wednesday Ser. ICC 7 p.m.
1~11

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pastor Edsel Han, Sunday
School · 9 30 11m .. Worshtp- 10 30 am ,
7·30 p.m
Dyenille Community ChuR:h
Sunday School • 9.30 am .. Worsh1 p 10 .30 a.m , 7 p m.

Morw Chapel Church
Su nday se hoe l . 10 am .. Worship - I I
11m .. Wcdncsda) Scn·tcc- 7 p.m.
Failh Gospel Church
long BPHom, Sund&lt;J} SchlJt)] - \1 JO a. m .
Wonh1p • IU .J 'i .t m . 7 ~tl p m .
Wedn ~,t.Jay7 · '0pm

Mr. OJh·e Community Chun.:h
Pas tor: La\.\ren ~oe Hu sh. Suud:.~y .Sdwt•l 9 10 am .. Ev~111ng . (, .~0 p m. Wed n ~Ja:
Ser.' l l' ~ · 7 p m
Full (;ospel Lighthouse
\ '0-t'i Hilqnd Road. Pomeroy. Pastor Roy
Hunlcr. Sunday Sd mo l 10 ~ m . E\cmng
7 30 p m . Tu c~d a ) &amp; T h01 ~ da } • 7 ~0
pIll.

Franklm

DK.._en~ .

Sei"\'IL'e:

Caha.-,. Bible Churtb
P1 .. e. Co Rd . Pa~tur Re\
BJa~o L"" l"-lli. Sunday Sch1'l•l - 9 30 am ;
V. t•r,lup
10..1{1
_. m.
730
pm.
V.~JncM:Ja, Sci' t~ e · 7 ~([ p m

S11nr.;;,·ille Communily Apostolic
Chun:h
p ~ ,t ,,r , \\a~n~· R lev.ell. Sunda~ St'r\'Jcc ~
6 00pm . Th ur&lt;..Ja~ - 600pm.

Rejoidng Life Churrh
::'nd "-'&lt;' Middleport Pastor·
~hl..o:
Fnrcm.Je
P.dstor· E mcri r u~
Liv.renn• Ftlrt" m.m. Worship !O:OOam
"-ednr:..da~ Sen ll·e ~ 7 p m.

500 \;

Uiflon Tabtrru&amp;cle Cburch
Chhfon. \\ Va Sund;n Scht'oOI - !0 ~ m ,
\\ \l f ~tup - 7 p Ill WeJne,£la~ Si"l"\ ICC · 7

pm
Se" Life \if lor~· Center
377) G t"nrge~ Creek Rl1ad. Galhpoh5, OH ·
P&lt;1qu1 Bill St~tc n Su nd.1 ~ Scf\ l le~ · IU
&lt;tIll &amp; "1 p m Wl.'Jn•.·,da\ · 7 pIll &amp;-

•

'wuth 7 p nL

l"ull Gospt_&gt;l Ch urch of the Lhinr.t
SM\Ior
Rt .ni!l. :\nuyull\, Pa,ltll
k·\~ \1orn ~.
s~·n lln S&lt;1llnda~ ~ 00 p m
Salem ( ommunit~ l'hui'C'h
\\ e~ t rtolumhlll \\ \.1 t\lll LIC~ mg
R,1,1J Pll~tt•r Clwic- Rou~h t ~O-il 675•
~2~H Sunda~ Sl'hi&gt;tll 'J 1(j Jlll. SunJa~
~·,emng Wf\ICC 7\JO pm . 81\ll ~ Stud\
Wt_·dnt·•d,J\ "'-'f\ l~e 7 j)(J p!ll
BJ&lt;-1.. o l

' llohson Chrislian fello"'·ship Church
P:htnr H ,·r~rh ~ l \\h11e Sunila~ s._hool
IU am. Sund:.o : Chun:h -.er\I Ll' fo ~ ~ pm
\\edn._•,da\ 7 pm
Restor~ttiun ( 'hri§lian hllo"'ship
Y.\6:'i H•"-lpcr Rt&gt;~d. Alh&lt;·n, l 'a ~tt1r
L(lllnll' l•l.!h )undl) \\ur,htp HI 011 &lt;1m
\\.:dne'&gt;lb~

7

pm

Langs\'ille Christian C hun:h
Fu ll Gl''t'lC I p ~,ll•r. Rt•l"x·t1 \1u "er.
Su nJa\ Sdu... ,f Y ~0 am. \\1'r'h1p !II 1tl
ollll - 7 00 rm \\ edne,da~ s. ·ni&lt;'C 7 no

rm

Pentecostal
Penlet:OSIMI .-\s~mbl\
St Rt 114 R~l l n~· Pa,ttll \\111 1t1m
Hobado . Su m.ht} s~·hntl l . I() a.m I
[\C illng · 7 p m \\ cdn c~day .Sen1c&lt;.'~ · 7
p.m

Presbyterian
Syr11cuse Flrsll'nlted Pre!ib~lerian
Pllslor Rollert Cro"'. Worship· I I am

Harrlson\·llle Presbylerian Church
P:~slor.

Roher! Cruv.. Worsh1p · 9 un

Middleporl Preshylerian
Pastor Rolle r Cto\\ .. Wo hh lp - I 0 a l1i

Seventh-Day Adventist
\l ulherr~

Hto. Rd

Po n wno~

P.l,l&lt;lr Rn)

LJW uhk ;.. Sut urd !J ~ Scl\l l' t.''

Sdmol · :! p 111 .. \\ur~h1r

Sa"hdlh

: . I' 111

United Brethren
1\11. Hemmn I mted Rrrlh rl'n
in Chml Chun:h
Texas Cl•lllmUilll) lto.JI I \\ ld,ham Rd.
Pas10r Peter Mun111d.dc. Sunda1 s~ h uol ·
9 _,0 :1m. \\.~1r-.h1p - 10 ~(l :1 m.. 7 110
p m . w~Jne,J. 1 , Sn' ll t:' - 7 on r m
Yuuth g1oup meet1ng ~ n J .o:: .tth Sunda~~
7 pIll

South Betht'l Cnmmunil}' Church
Silver Rtdge Pa sw r Lmda Dam('\H ood.
·s t\ntlny Sc hool 9 11.111 .. Wor~h1p So: n1 ce
10 am. 2nd and -i1h Su nd&lt;~)
Carlelon Interdenominational Church
K(n_g~hury Rtl&lt;td. p,,,tnr· RnhL·rt \'nnce
Sunday Sclllllll - 9 10 am WM~htp
Sen1~· c 10·'0 am
E\cn tng: Sc111n' ll

Eden tnlll.'d 8rt'Jhreon in Christ
State R1•utc l ~·l. Rl·l· th~illc. SunJ ,n·
Sdlllt'l . II a Ill , SunJ,n Wn1~h1p- 1(1 tMI
a m lrt:. 7 00 p m V.cdn(•,.J,J\ '\,•nJ ...,., .
7 00 p m \\.:dn c "l:i~ "r'Pulh Sen1..-e 7 110 pm

pm.
l&lt;' reedom ( ;uspel MiSiiion
Bald K1111h. ~·nCo . Rd J L Pa , t\lr Re~
Roger WIIJI,,rJ Sun J.t) S..·honl · \1 Ill am

.

--~ ···

.,

.... -·- - .. - :.- ....._ .,_.,

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so lored the ll'orld
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbegol'ten son ...
Prescriptions
John 3:16
992·2955 · · Pomeroy
&amp;nouffer's
"So I strive always to keep

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they my conscience clear before
God and man ."
shall see God.
Acts 24:1
Matthew 5:8

..

"

Rr:1

Pumcro~

ROCKSPRINGS
1Crc1w's Family Restaurant
REHABILITIION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
care you deserve, close to home
Chicken "
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
Pomeroy, OH 45769
992-5432
740·992-6606

K&amp; C JEWELERS

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide i11 you, ye shall
ask what' ye will, and it shall
be done w1to you.
John 15:7
Bill

r aith .r eiiOWiihip Crusade for Christ
P&lt;~~ L l'f

1--nJ&lt;n 7 p nl

Other Churches

Middleport, OH

Local source for trophies,
olaaues !·shirts and more

Fainit'"' Bible Churdl
Lctan. \\ Vu R1 I Pa~tm Brian Ma}.
Su ndn St:hnul 'J ..'() am . \\of!&gt;hlp · 7 00
p m . \\ednc:.da) B1bk StuJ} ·Hill p nt.

Church of God of Prophecy

your hght so shine before
that they may see your
works and glorify your
in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

MIDDLEPORT .
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Mt. Olin United Methodist
Off 12~ tlchmd W1lkcsvd le, Pa~tor . ReL
Ralph Spi1cs, Sunday Sdl\10! - 9 30 J m .
Wur ~ h1p · !(I }0 a m . 7 pIll . T h ursd,l ~
Sen. t r~s - 7 ll m

Sci"\' ICCS - 7 p.lll

Catholic

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Graham United Melhodisl
Wurshtp, · Y 30 am ( 1st &amp; 2nd Sun) ..
7 ~0 p m ()rd &amp; 4th Su n) Wednesday
Sen IC~ - 7'.~0 p.m

Mt. Moriah Churrh of God
Mile 1-hll Rd . Runne, Pusttw James
S&lt;~ tterfJcld , .Su nday Sc hool - l) 4~ a.m..
Evenmg . 6 ll m.. w~·r.l ncs dl y Sef\' ICe~ . 7
p m.

Second Bllplist C hurth
R,tH':nswood, WV, Sunda~ Sc hool 10 am. Mornmg worship II am E\e nmg- 7 pm.
Wedn c~y 7p m

Open 7 days :l week
740·992·7713

United Methodist

Church of God

Rutland Frte Will ftaptlsl
S!llclll St . Pastnr Jamie Fortner. Sunday
Sc hool - In a m . Evenllt!J - 7 p.m..
Wednesday Sel'\ 1ces 7 p m.

/lom e Cook.f!d Meul,\ &amp; f)aily Specials

Sl. Paul Lutheran Cburt'h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second Sl . Pomcto y,
Sun da ~ School . 9·45 t1 m , WoHhip - II
am Pastor. James P. Brady

llartford Church of Chrisl in
Chri'itian IJnion
Harlfor rl , W.Va. P o~ s tor · Dav id Greer.
'Sundn)' Sc hool · 9 JO a. m.. Worship ·
10 30 ().m, 7:00 p.m, Wcd nc..d&lt;~y
Serv ic e~· 7:00pm.

Antiquity Baptisl
Su nd u&gt; School · Y 30 :un . Wnrsh1p 10:45 a m.. Sund01y Evening· 6.00 p m.,
P.1~tur. Mark McCuma:.

Homemade Desserts Made .Daily

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Wa ln ut and Henry St ~. Ravenswood.
wva .. Pa stor Da\t d Ru sse ll. Sunday
Schoo!· 10.00 H.m.. Worship - 11 a.m

Christian Union

Fuurlh &amp; M ll lll Sl , Middlcpnrl , Pastor
Rev Gilbert Cra1g, Jr.. Su nday School ·
Y.30 am . Worship· 10 .J5 11.111

Mi[[ie's 1(estaurant

Sl. John Lutheran Church
Pme Grm c. Worsh1p - 9.00 :~ . m .. Su nd&lt;~y
Schoo l - 10.00 a.m. P &lt;~s tor . James P.
Bmd}

Church of Chrisl
Inte rsec11on 7 and 124 W. Evangelist:
Dennis Sargl!nl. Sunday Bible Study
9 30 a.m. Worship . 10 ·~0 a m. and 6:30
p m.. Wednesday B1ble Stud y- 7 I'm

Fore~l Run Baptlsl
Postnr Anus Hurt, Sunday Schoo! - !0
am. Worslup - !I am.

WC~nll ft reml/1

Lutheran

Dexter Church of Chrlsl
Pastor: Bill Esheimnn. Sunday school 9:30
a.m.. Norman Will. superintendenl,
Sunday worship· 10 30 a.m

Failh Buptist Chun:h
. R.u!ro:Jd St, Mil~llll, Suml.ty Sdmlll • 10
.a.m .. Wor ~ l11p · I I ,1 m . 6 p 1']1,
Wedne~day Service~· 7 p m

1~·1 - U

Tht' Chul'f'h or Jesu~
Chris! of l.atlcr-11ay Sainl'i
St. Rt . 160. -'46 -624 7 or -t46- 74~ 6.
Sunda y s~· hoo l !0 ::!0- ll am .• Rc!tef
Sol'letyi Pne sthoiLd J 1.05-12 00 mKm,
Sal Jam e,nt Sei\JCC' 9· 10 15 a m ,
Homemakmg mceung. hll hurs - 7 p m

Reedsville Churth of Christ
Pastor: Phtltp Stunn. Sunduy S~hool 9:.l0
am .. Wonoh1p Service. 10 30 am .. B1bk
Sludy, Wednesday, 6 30 p m

Hillside Baptist C hurch
SJ Rt 14l JU~t off Rt 7. Pnslor· Rev
James R Acree, Sr. Sundny Un1fied
Service. Worship · 10 30 am .. 6 p.m ,
Wednesday S e rv 1 ce~ · 7 p.m.

Rom ,1 ns

Latter-Day Saints

Hickory Hills Chun:h of Chrisl
Evaugd1st M1ke Ml1nrc. Sunday S~ hciuJ •
I) ·a ,m, Worslup · 10 a m , 6 JO f1 m.
Wedne~a } Sero1ces · 7 p.m.

Old Bethel FrTe Will 8ap11sr Cburth
2860 1 St Rt 7. Mtddlepon. Su nduy
School 10 un, Evenml! · 7.00 p.rn,
Thur.ida} Serv1ces · 7.00

t740) 992·6472
Fax {740i 992·7406

l_,aurel Clifr FrTe Mr.rhodisr Church
Pastor · Glenn Rm\c. Su nday School 9 JO a m.. Worsh1p 10 30 am . and 6
p m .. Wednc~d a y Sen 1 ~e . 7 00 p m.

Hntdford Church of Chnsl
Cornl.'r ol St l{t 124 &amp; Bmdhury Rd .
Mimstcr Doug Sh,tmhhn . Youth Muuslcr
Bill Amhcrgcr. Sundll} Sl·hnol - 9·30 a m.
Worsh1p - R 00 am . JO·JO &lt;~ . 111. 7 00
p m., Wedne sday Serv1ccs 7 00 p m.

Grea r Bend. Rout e 124. Raci ne. OH .
Pastor Damel Mccea .. Sunday s~· hool ·
9:JO am , Sunday Wo nh1p · 10 ~0 am
Wednesday Bihlc Study · h{KI f1 m

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of Life"

Lcmlcy . Sunday Sc huol
· 9 ~0 am , Wur ~ lnp - 10 ~5 a 111 . 7 Jl .lll ,
Thursday B1blc Study and Youth· 7 p m

Rutland Church of Chrisl
Sunday School - 9·30 a m . Wo r ~ h1 p and
CommuniOn - 10:.'0 am. Bob J. Werry.
Mtm stcr

Belhlehem Baptist Chu,rth

I0

Pa~tnr

Hysell Run Holiness Church

am .
Worship • 10 30 a m

Sih·er Run Raplist
P:L'i h)r John Swanson. Sunday School IOlL m , Worsh ip . ll lLm .. 7.00 p m
, \\'ed n c~ dJ y Scn t ~·co;;. 7 00 p m.

Fort'St Run
Roh Rohinr,on, Sunday School

p.m..

WeNie~an Bible Hulines~ Chun:h
75 Pca1l St. Mlddlcl)lll1 . Pa~tor. Kt~k
Bou rn..-. Sunda y School - JU &lt;~ m Wouh1p
- 10·45 pm . Sunda) Ew 7·00 pm .
Wednesday Scr\'tcc · 7 '0 p.m

Bradbury Church of Chrisl
Mmi ster Tom Run yllfl. ~9558 Br:.~dhu r)'
Roatl, Middle port, Su nday Schoo! • 9.30

VIctory Baptist lndeptndent
525 N 2nd St Middle port, Pastor James
E Ket"see, Wnrshtp - I Oa.m , 7 p.m ,
Wednesday St::rVI Ct::~ · 7 p.m

333 Page Stre et
Middlenort OH

Wnrsh1p - 10 30 a.m . 7.30
Wednesday Sel\ 1ce 7:30p m

l'nppers Plain Chun:h of Christ
ln~lru uwn t ai. Wor~ hip SerVIle - 9 a.m ,
Cumm un1011 · Ill &lt;1.111, Sunday School ·
I U 15 am . Youth - 5 ~0 pm Sund,\}. IJ1hk
Study Wcdncsd~ty 7 pm

MI. Moriah Baptist

SUNDAY

Pint Gron Bible llolitwss
Church
,
It::! m1lc oft Rl l25 . Pa~tor Rc\ O'Dell
Manley. Sunday Sch[)(ll
9 30 a m .

Pa~wr R~· ' l.;t!T}'

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
ARCADIA NURSING CENTER

Rose of Shamn Holines.&lt;; f:hurch
le &lt;~d m g Creek Rd
Rutl tmd, P&lt;~ stor R c~
Dew('y KmJ:!. Sund&lt;~y school· 9 JO a.m..
Sunday worsh1p -7 p.m.. Wednesday
p1ayc1 m c~li ng· 71' m

a.m.

Fint Uaptist Chun:h
l'.i'l"r M,nk Momw&lt;. tlth an..J P.dmer St .
ll.t1ddlcpnrt. Suml ;ty School· 9·15 a Ill,
\\or,hlp - 10 · 1~ &lt;~ m . 7·[)() p m .

Meigs • 992·2155

·r

Pilgrim Chapel
H arn~m 11le
Rood. Pastor· Charles
McKcnlle , Sunday School 9.~0 am ..
\\lorsh1p • II am. 7 00 p m .• Wednesday
Serv1ce- 7 (XI p m

Bearwallow Ridgr. Church of Chrisl
Pastor Bruce Terry Sunday Sdmol .(.UO

Fir~l Southnn Raptist
-i I ~72 Po ml'nl)' Pike. Pa~tur· E Ulmar
O' Br&gt;·am. Sun duy s~· h on l - 9. ~0 u 111..
Wor-;hip- :-! 15 a.m . 9 45 am &amp; 7:0\l p m..
WcdJK'"ll,Ly s~ . , I ll'~. 7 00 p.m

Sunday
Times-Sentinel

·r

Cah•ar~

Kt'no Chun:h of Christ
Wors hip - 9.10 a. rn , Sunday Sdoul ·
10.30 a. m.. Paslor-JeiTrey Wallille, h t illld
Jrd Su nday

Pumeroy •1rs1 Baptist
P &lt;~, ttH Jou Hrnd.cn. Ettst Mam St ..
Sunday Sl·hotll . lJ ~0 :am .. \\.wsiup ·
HI 'Oam

Wcdlll'-.d&lt;l~ S~n

Danville Holiness Church
31057 State Route .'25, Langs,·ll.e. P a~ lur .
Victor Ruu'i h, Sunday -~·hool · 9.30 am ..
Sunda) worship - 10 W a 111 &amp; 7 p m..
W('dncsday pray~-r !i{'r\ ll'C- 7 p m

Middleport Chun:h of Chris I
5th and Mam, P~~ll1r. AI Har iMJU , Yuulh
Mm1st cr Josh Ulm, Sunday Sehuol • Y ~U
am. Worship· 8 1~. IO·jO am . 7 p m.
Wcdnuday Services - 7 p m.

Ho~W R~tpli'it Ch urrh tSourhern J
571) Grant St .. Mu.ldicpon , SundHy ~~·hwl
- ll IO am. Wur•h1p- II &lt;~ . m and 6pm,
\\btnc~lty Sen·1cc . 7 p m
Rutland fir.;J Baptist Church
Sunday Sc huPI - 9 'l.O " m , Wnrsh1p .
! 04~ u Ill

Entnprise
Pastor · A.rland K1ng, Sunda) S.- hcK!l ·
10 ~0 am. Wor&lt;Ohtp 9 ·3(1 am R1hle
S!udy Wed. 7 ~
Halwoods
Pa!itor, Ke1th Rader, Sunday Sc hool - 10
a m.• Worsh1p - II a.m.

Pn.~tor·

ChHter Chul'f'h of 1M ~azareltl'
Rc&gt;\ Herben Grate. Sunda:- S.. huol
- 9 JO .a m.. Wor~h1p ll a.m . fl p m
WedneMia~ S~n LCe~ · 7 p m .
P a~tor

Se11 1 ~e~

am .. Worship - 9 am .

\

am. Mm mng Wonhip· 1O· 30 .t!n .Sund.ty
C\entng: f, ~() pm Wedne&lt;;Jay f, ' 0pm

Jane Beame. Sunday Sc hool - 9

Episcopal

Community Chun:h
Pa~ tor
Ste ve Tomek., Main Street.
Rutland. Sunda)' Wonh1p- IO (X) a m ,
Sunday Scr\'!cc- 7 P.m

Pomeroy Westside Church or Chr-ist
3J226 Chtldren 's Home Rd, Sunday
Sc hool . II a 'm Worsh1p · lOam. fl p m.
Wcdpesday Se rv1~e s · 7 p.m

(heshire Baplisl C hun·h
Pashor Stc\'C Lillie. Sunday Sch01.1] Y :'\0

Thpprrs Plains Sl. Paul
P~ st or ·

Central Ousler
Asl'lury (Syracuse). Pastor Bob Robmson.
Sunday School - 9 · ~5 a.m. Won.tue- - I J
am .. Wednesday St:f\Kes- 7JO p.m.

Holiness

Sunda y School - 9:30 a .m. 'Norshtp10.30 a. m.. 6 p.m.. Wednesday Servtces ·
7 p.m.

Baptist

Keeping
Meigs
informed

Gracemen
to sing

MIDDLEPORT - Fresh
anointing services will be
held at 10:30 a.m. Sunday
at the Middleport Church

~ OrTI ~

Ubtrty A~semht_,. of God
PO. Box 467. Dudding Lane, Ma ~nn.
W. Va . Pastor: Nt'tl Te nmmt. Sunday
SC I \I~·c~ - 10 00:1 111 and 7 r.m

/

Trinily Church
SCr:ond &amp; L)OJI. Pom cro~·- Pa stor Rev
Jonathan Noble. Wonh tp 10.2.5 a.m..
Sunday School 9: 1.5 a.m.

Gract: Eptscopal Church
~26 E. Mam S1 , Pomeroy, Sunday School
~ nd Holy Eucharist I I :00 a m.

Pomero}' Chul'&lt;'h of C hrisl
2 12 W Mam St. Mm1ster· Anthony

MI. Umon Baptist
l'.t,tor DlLVIJ W1~e m an . Sunday School·
'I -' 5 am . Evcnmg · 0 lO p m ,
Wl·dne..clay ScrV Id'' · 6 lOp 111

of the Nazarene. A di rmer
will be held following the
service to honor fathers.
Pastor Allen Midcap invites
the public. The public is
POMEROY Vacation
Bible school will be held
invited.
from 9 to II :30 a.m. at th~
Bradford Church of Chnst
June 21-24. "Lava Isl and,
Where Je&gt;us' Love Flows"
will be the theme. Classes
for
through teens
POMEROY - There will will preschool
be offered. For more
be special singing by the informauon , call 992-5844.
Gracemen of Barboursville,
CARPENTER
W. Va. at the 10:30 a.m. Vacation Bible school will
service at the Laurel Cliff be conducted 6:30 to 8:30
Free Methodist Church. A p.m. June 21 -25 at the Mt.
love offering will be taken. Union Baptist Church near
Pastor Glenn Rowe and his Carpenter. Theme will be
congregation invites the "Desert Caravans." For
public. For more informa· more information contact
tion call 992-0758.
David Wiseman. 742-2568.

Anointing
service set

Su nday School · 10:30 a.m . Bible Study 7 p.rn

Assembly of God

But Keeley. the vo lunteer
at
Beaverton Christian
Church in Oregon. says he
has no doubt that the gay
marnage ban wi ll reach the
ballot.
'· People m e sincere about
their bel ief, ... lt e said . "They
want to ·make a change ...

Congregational

am

Emmanuel Apo~tolir Tabernacle Inc.
L~•up Rd off New L1ma RJ Rutland.
Sen 1cc~. Su n ltl.OO a m. &amp; 7 '0 p.m .
Thur, 7 lK) p.m . P;~ stor Many R Hunnn

p m. 'Oerv1ce

a.m., Worship · 10 am. Tuesda)
- 730 p.m

Hemlock Gro,·e Christian Chun:h
M1 n1stc r LaiT) Brown. Wo rsh 1p · 9:30

Ave . M•ddkpoll, K~v in Konkle. Paswr.
Sunday, I 0 30 a m W~dncsday. 1 00
I" rn : Youth Fn 7 ~U r .m

\ 1ews.

0 J Whtte Rd ofl St Rt 16(1. Pa~tor PJ
C hapman. Sun[l:.oy School - !0 am.
Wor..hip - II a m Wedne..d!iy Ser\'LCes ~ 7
p.m .

Church of Christ

Rinr Vall~y
Apo~Julk Wu r ~hi p Ce mer. 871 S. &lt;rd

Church Calendar
Revival
underway

SacrYd Hr11rt C~tt holh: Church
16 ! Mulberry AH:, Pomeroy. 992·~898,
Pa~tor Re \. Wa ll ~r I:: llemz, Sat Con
4.45-5 : 15p m . \b ~~- ~dO r m , Sun
Cnn -8A 'i-9: 1.'i u m... Sun Mass- 9:30
a. m . Dail y Mass· 8 .'\0 a. m.

~~ -

. · .... ...

.

:f!tt

&amp; ioafrtr

TOIJ.-IIaBI

... oo.au..o111

352 East
"let u~ tend

Mam

y0•1r th ought ~

with ~peclal ~'Jrp"

740·992·2644 740·992·6298 :

Mll erace is sufficient
for thee: for m11
streni!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9 :

•

Office Service &amp; Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

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-~---· -- · - -~

e

M ~ lg sCount y\ Old l'~t Flntt~l

•

�Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Friday. June 18.

Fans converge on Omaha, Page 82
MLB standings, Page B4
.

2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Local Stocks

hannel

Friday. June 18
Morni11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)

r

It should be a h'urnid morning. Temperatures "ill h&lt;lid
steady arouml 73. Skie' will
be partly cloudy to cloudy
with 5 to I0 MPH winds
from the west.
Afternoo/1 (I p.m.-.6 p.m.)
It will continue to be
humid. Temperature' will
linger at 76 with today\ high
of 79 occurring around
5:00pm. Skies \;ill ran£e
from mostl y 'unny to mostly
cloudy with 5 tu I0 MPH
winds from· the west turning
from the northwe't as the
afternoon progresse,_

J
r

Ere11i11g (7 p.m.-.l1id11ight)

It 11 ill rcmam humid.
TempcraturL'' 11 ill hu1·er at
7). Skies 11 ill be nwstly
c·lear to doud~ with 5 \1PH
wind' from the north.
01'emiglrt (I a.m .-6 a.m.)

ACI - 33.13
AEP- 31.57
Akzo- 37.23
Ashland Inc. - 52.25
~BT- 36.99
Bll - 15.02
Bob Evans - 26.46
BorgWarner - 44.35
City Holding .- 30.33
Champion - 4.30
Charming Shops - 8.40
Col- 31.83
DuPont - 43.76
DG- 20.54
Federal Mogul - . .275
Gannett- 87.36
General Electric - 32.36
GKNLY - 4.70
Harley Davidson - 61.48
Kmart - 66.06
Kroger - 17.09
Ltd -19.09
NSC - 25.06
Oak Hill Financial - 31.38
Bank One -. 49.10
OVBC- 33.00
Peoples - 25.14
Pepsico - 54.94
Premier- 9.56
Rocky Boots- 19,75
cloudv moming . There is a .
RD Shell - 52.13
good chance we could see
'omc 101in. Temperatur~s will Rockwell - 35.02
Ji .,~ from 69 to 79 b) late this Sears - 38.70
morntng. Wind' will be 5_ SBC- 24.54
:\1PH from the east ruming AT&amp;T- 16.17
from the south a&gt; the morning USB- 27.90

It ,h,1uld ·continue to he progres~es.
Ajterrwo11 (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
humid . There is a sligln
chance of rain . Tcmpernture ...
Cloudy afternoon . Light
11'111 .remain arounu 6R wtth rain is expected. The rain is
touay\ !011 of 67 occurring predic·ted to start near
around 6:00am. Skies will 2:00pm. Amicipate rain accurange from part!) L·loudy to mulations of 0.1 1 inche;, for
eloudv with 5 MPH wind' this afternoon. Temperatures
from the north11e'l.
Will 'tay near 79. Winds will
he 5 to I0 MPI-I from the
Saturda~- • .June 19
Momi11g (7 a.m.-.Voo11)
soutll turning from the north
It\ going to be a l1umid and a... 1hc afternoon progresses .

.

It 041 ON W~l.l STJ!tET

Friday,Junet8,2004

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Associated Press

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BY JoE KAv

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Days Until
High School

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Football
Season!!!

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Clippers fall to
Red Wings in
extra innings

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Wendy' s - 36.12

p.m. closing quotes of the

Wai-Mart- 55.85

previous day's transactions,

Worthington -

provided by Smith Partners

20.01

Daily stock reports are the 4 at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

I

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Your source for news on the Net

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www.mydailysentinel.com
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Vistit Us Today

r

ROCHESTER. N.Y. tAP)
- Chri s Heintz scored the
winning run on a wild pitch
in the lith innin~ as the
Rochester
Red - Wings
uefeated the · Columbus
Clipper'
:l -3
in · the
Internal ional
League
Thursdav ndll .
Heint/. entered the ~ame in
the eidllh. and had 1\10 sin~les in two at-bats. He
~cored on a wild pitch from
ln, ing pitcher Colter Bean
(:1-h
. Rochester·,
Brian
Simmons tied. the game at II in the second with his
eighth home run this season.
Todd Dunwoody had an RBI
double in the third to give
the Red Win~s a 2-1 lead.
Colun1bus- regained the
leau with two runs in the
fourth. John Rod rigueL singled to drive in one. then
~cored on a single by ·Dan·e n
Bragg. Simmons tied the
game ugain at 3-3 with an
RBI single in the sixth.
Winning pitcher Kevin
Hodge (2- 1) pitched one perfect inning. striking out two
batters.

Woman critical
after being hit
by foul ball
•'
•
;

-J

DAYTON (AP) A
woman was critically injured
when she was struck in the
head by a foul ball at a
Dayton Dragons minorleague
baseball
game •
authorities said Thursday.
Roxanne Harting. 40. of
Centerville. was listed in critical condition in the intensive-care unit at Miami
Valley Hospital . said hospital
spokes\voman
Nan~y
Thickel.
Harting was silting in the
first row on the third-base
side between the dugout and
bullpen at Fifth Third Field
on Wednesday night when
she was hit by a line-drive
fou I ball.
The Dragons said its medical staff &lt;lltended 10 Harting
within moments of the incident and that she was quickly
transported to the hospital.
"The entire Dragon family
joins in the prayers and concern for Ms . Harting and
wishes her a speedy recovery," che team said in a statement.
The Dragons are a Class-A
affiliate of the Cincinnati
Reds.

Annual 5K Run
on the horizon
in Jackson
JACKSON. Ohio - The
eighth
annual
Jackson
County Sports Festival 5K
Run will be held Saturday,
Juiy 3, starting 9 a.m. at
Manpower Park on East
Main Street in Jackson. Ohio.
The mce will "be ran
throu gh the business and residential streets of Jackson
and the entry fee is $ 12 .
No pre-registration is
required and registration may
be made the day of the race.
Fnr more information on
the 5K run.- contact the
Jackson Area Chamber of
Commerce at (740) 2862722.

•
• Taxes, Togs, Title Fees extra. GM owner loyalty rebate included in sole price of new vehicle listed where applicable.
• 'On approved credit On selected modek. Not responsible for typographical errors. Prices good June 16th through June 20th.

..

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Sayre
still leads
Senior
League

Reds sweep Rangers

.

-

'

CINCINNATI -· Junior
is taking his quest for No.
500 back on the road. still
aglow over three incredible
days in his hometown.
Ken Gliffey Jr. failed to
· get his milestone homer
Thursday in front of another
capacity crowd. but the
Cincinnati Red,; pulled off
another late rnlly for a 4--3
,-ictory and three-game
sweep of the Texas Rangers.
Sean Casey had a pair of
hit:; and a ticbrcaking sacrifice fly in the seventh. a consolation prize for a' mucous
crowd that saw Gliffey go 0for-3 with a sacrilice fly.
The Reds then headed for
St. Louis. where Grif!Cy will
resume his attempt to
become the 20th player to
reach the 500-homer mark.
The 3:1-year-old outfielder
wanted badly to ~et it in his
hometown. \,·hich ga' e him
three days of unforgettable

ChetThomas
in second place .
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribu ne.com
\1.\SO:S:. W.Va . - Ralph
Sa\Te or '&gt;ew H~11 · en. W.Va.
ha~ remai ned atop the
Ri 1·ci-side Men\ Senior Golf
Lea ~uc for the third c·onsecuti\e- ~teek. Savre·, total of
I I .I :1 poinh · leads Chet
Thoma, of Patriot hv 11 .5
points. Clark Greene of
Hurricane. W.Va. has 95.5
Point' to rounJ out the top
three ..
,-\ Inial of 56 player,_ mak- .
in~ 1:1 tour,;ome&gt; and 1:1
pn"im' a1·ailabk for the lo11
"'l'nrc. Thi-., wc-~k·~ winning
'core of 57 1-l .I) was shot bv
the
quartet
nl
Mick
I Racine 1.
Wtncbrenner
Harln Ric·e ( ReedSI·ille ).
Santo' Liberatore t.Po int
Pleas ~tnl. W.Va. ) and Paul
Lanham I Ripley, W Va. ).
One shot back in 'econd
phu.:c \\ o.t .. , the gwup of Don
WiJ,on iChe&gt;ter). Larn
Savrc 1 Racine!. Ron Phalin
tG;JIIipnli, l and Bill Pethel
tNc11 Ha1·en. W.Va.L
In third with a "·ore of 60
(-10) was the Keith Woods
(Bradbury) _ Jim Proffitt
I Ma ,on. · W.Va. 1.
Flovd
Chapman !Syracuse/ ai1d

ov~llion,;.

"You always want to try to
hit that home run." he said.
"I just didn't do it thi .' time .
A lot of people wil l be
watching in Cincinnati in
the next week. I'll still be
thinking about the respon;e
r ve had the last three days."
He hadn't been ;o warmly
received in his hometown
since he arrived in a
February 2000 trade with
Seattle. ·and he made ·sure
that fans knew how much he
appreciated it.
When Griffey caught Eric
Ymmg's lly in centet1ield to
end the game. he pointed to

Please see Reds, Bl

Texas Rangers ' Ken Huckaby, nght, is tagged out by Cincinnati Reds' third baseman Tim ·
Hummel. after Huckaby tried to stretch to a triple in the third inning Thursday in Cincinnati.
Cincinnati won, 4-3. (API

Please see Senior, Bl

An unexpected turn of events at the U.S..Open
BY DOUG FERGUSON

Associated Press
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y
- No wind at Shinnecock
Hills''
That's about as likely as a
50-year-old grabbing a share
of the lead at the U.S. Open.
Jay Haas. two weeks
removed from his runner-up
finish at the Senior PGA
Championship. took advantage of a surprisingly calm
day on the links-styled
course repLlled for ih whipping winds. With birdies at
both par 3s on the back nine.
he shot 4-under 66 that left
him tied for the clubhouse
Shigeki
lead
with
Maruyama.
Angel
Cabrera
of
Argentina also was 4 under
through 12 holes when the
first round. already delayed
by storms in the area, wa&gt;
halted for good late Thursday
when fog made it impossible
to see the green.

"It wa~ really pretty for tu nate with the wcatller: · Haas
said. "It was just the kind o.f
day th:Jt yoLt hau to feel you
co.uld be aggressive at a U.S.
Open."
Shinnecock Hills had just
about every eleme111 except
the one that sharpens its teeth
- wind th at makes it tough
to find tl1e fairwa y and keer
the ball on the green. That
gave way to soupy fog in th e
morning. a steamy sun at

Please see Event. Bl

Phil Mickelson stays dry under an umbrella at the fourth green during the r;,·st round of the
U.S. Open Thursday at Shinnecock H11ts Golf Clu.b in Southampton , N.Y. tAP )

Booster acknowledges
Fans cheer Couch's
paying expenses of Ohio arrival in Green Bay
State basketball player
COLUMBUS (AP) - A husband
and wife allowed a former babysit·
ter to use their credit cards to pay
for travel expenses of an Ohio State
basketball player. according to a
deposition by the wife.
Ohio State boosters Dan and Kim
Roslovic allowed the purchases to
be made by Kathleen Salyers. and
they abo bought her a car, Kim
Roslovic said in, a deposition.
Salyers sued the two Ohio State
graduates, who are now divorced.
last August seeking $510.000 in
expenses and damage,_ Her lawsuit
led to t)le firing of Ohio State bas·
ketball coach Jim O ' Brien.
Salyers · alleges that the two
reneged on an agreement to pay her
$ 1,000 a month to house player
Boban Savovic : Salyers sa id the
Ros lovics· payments for housing
Savovic 'topped in early 1999. but
that Kim Roslovic told her she

GREEr\ BAY. Wis. ( Af' l - Tim
Couch received a pmper Lambem1
Field wekome on hi, first dav in
Green Bay un Thw·,day.
Th~ former Cleveland Browns qLw- .
terback. 'igned as a free agent
Tuesday, was serenaded with the
retrain of' "Go. Pack. go!" by a grnu~
or 25 people on a tour of the stadium.
"There's a special feeling you get
11 hen you come to play at Laml:&gt;~&lt;lll
Field:· 'aid Couch. rememberin~ earlier 'isit' ~~&gt;llh the Bnmns. "lt 's an
~xciting time. Ju~t getting a ch;.mcc to
pia~ h~n.· i~ going to be a· l!reat oppor·
tllnlt\ .
.
Oiuch. the No. I m·crall pick 111 the
1999 drali. agreed to a one-lc'ar n&gt;ntract of $1 .25 million to hack up Brei!
Favre. C'oul'h wa~ r~[L:a . . o:d bv
Ck\ eland Lbt week .
·
Cow:h s:tid as 11l&lt;lllV ~ " ti~c· team,_
indudin~ Chica!:!O. Detroit and San
FratK'i'C~l- shov,:Cd imcrcst alkr the

would be repaid after she and her
husband divorced.
·
Salyers also was paid to watch the
Roslovics ' children and clean their
house. The Roslovics wrote checks
to Salyers totaling about $25.000
between Murch 1997 and February
1999. according to records given to
The Columbus Dispatch by Salyers'
lawyer, Jeff Lucas.
In an April deposition. Salyers
testified thai she housed and fed
Savovic for two years. spending
tl10usands of dollars on phone hills.
car insurance and spending money
for the player who was on the 199899 team that 0' Brien led t() the
Final Four.
Roslovic said that 'he contributed
to the cost of a trip hy Savuvic to
see his brother in Hawaii, according
to court uocuments. Sh~ abo

Please see Booster, Bl

'

Tim Couch

I ••

.,_

Please see Couch, Bl

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 18, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday,Junet8,2004

ll1e Daily S..·nrnwl • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com
'

Omaha is where college
baseball players want to be
BY ERIC OLSON

Associated Press

NCAA

2004

MEN'S

COLLEGE

W 0 R L D

snaps
out of slump as
Mets down Indians

SERIES

ba.~s-loaded

BY HAL BOCK

Associated Press

Two and
vou'reout

Eight teams will play a series of games in a double-elimination tournament
OMAHA,
Neb.
until the Championship Series. Two remaining teams will then compete '
for the national championship title in a best-of-three format.
Indianapolis has the 500.
Pasadena has the Rose BowL
And Louisville has ·the
SHORT HOPS
RECORD
COACH
CWS EXPERIENCE ;
TEAM
Kentucky Derbv. But Omaha
tCWS SEED) '
NCAA-record
· i The Longhorns' third straight tnp to Omaha,
Augie Garrido
has the College World Series.
31th
appearance
and fourth in five years, having won their
~
55-13
332-175-1
Every summer for the past 54
fifth
title in 2002; Garrido is winningest coach
eighth
year
t1)
years, college baseball's chamin
orvision
r history with 1,483 victories and
Texas
pionship tournament has been
four nationaltittes with only two teams.
played there. And though _it
50-15
Ray Tanner
Eighth
Gamecocks playing in third straight
lacks the glamour of some
appearance .
CWS; entering CWS on 10-game
369-150
(2)
sports events. it has an ardent
winning streak and clinched third 50eighth year
following. and the crowds are ·
win season in last five years.
bigger than ever, thanks in large South Carolina
pan to ESPN's live coverage
21st visit; tied
Jim Morris ·
Entering CWS on 12-game winning
49-11·
since the 1980s.
streak; Morris has led Miami to Omaha
for
second-most
521-176-2
(3)
LSU athletic director Skip
nine of 11 seasons and won national
appearances
11th year
lilies in 1999 and 2001.
Bertman, who won five nationMiami
al titles as the Tigers' &lt;:uach.
David Perno
43-21
Fourth appearance Bulldogs have advanced to CWS four times
said players don "t talk about
in six NCAA tournament appearances,
104-76
t4)
going to· the College World
winning
title in 1990; Coach Perno played
third year
in 20 games for 1990 Georgia team that
Series. They talk about "going
Georgia
won CWS title.
to Omaha."
Exactly how Omaha came to
Andy Lopez
35-25-1
15th appearance
Wildcats making first tnp to CWS since
be chosen for the College
1986, when they beat Florida State for
101 -72-1
(5)
national championship; as the No. 3 seed
World Series seems io have
third year
in their regional is lowest seed to reach
been forgotten. But for at least
Omaha this year.
Arizona
I0 days each summer. this city
of 400,000 is in the spotlight.
46-17
13th appearance ! Tigers have won at least 40 ~ames in 15
Smoke Laval
with hundreds of thousands of
; strai~ht seasons; won.CWS on 199t , '93,
135-61
(6)
; ' 96, 97 l\l'ld 2000; their 104-37 NCAA
fans making the trek from all
third year
tournament record is the top winning
over the countoy to watch the
percentag~ in Division I at .738.
Louisiana State
eight-tean1 tournament.
The strong local support has
42-21
13th appearance
Trtans are in CWS for fourth time in six
George Horton
years, but are making back·to~back trips
kept the NCAA from seriously
351
-153t
(7)
for just second time in school history t1994considering moving the event.
eighth year
95); have won 27 of last 32 games after
"It would be the biggest misstart1ng season 15-16.
Fullerton
take the NCAA ever made,"
said Wayne "Chief" Hall. who
45-22
~ Dave Van Hom
Fifth appearance
Aazorbacks were picked to finish next-tolast in preseason SEC poll, but won
comes from Tempe. Ariz.. to
80-44
(8)
Western Division and share of regularwatch the series. "If you took it
sec.ond year
season title; had to win three stra1ght in
Arkansas
to Yankee Stadium, it would
regionals while facing elimination.
just get lost in a big town like
AP
that. It would be just another
event. In Omaha, it's someThe serie's' epicenter is long into the future.
thing."
were there," said Palmeiro,
Rosenblatt
Stadium, tucked in a
"A mayor's .greatest nightThe event. which this year who plays first base for the
runs from Friday through June Baltimore Orioles. 'They treat: blue-collar neighborhood about mare is to lose the triple-A bond
27 or 28, has grown since its ed us very well. We were there thn:e miles from downtown. rdting for the city that we've
humble beginnings, when with seven other great teams The ballpark, which seats had since 194I ," Daub said, "or
crowds averaged less than and a lot of players that I've 26.327, was built in 1948 and to lose the College World
I ,800 a garrie. Last year's total played against in the big has undergone $30 million in Series_,,
improvements over the last
A smiling Mike Fahey, the
attendance was a record leagues."
mostly
at
the
NCAA's
current
mayor, said, 'Td rather
decade,
260,091.
The series ca111e to Omaha in
lose the bond rating."
A study by Creighton profes- . 1950 after it didn't do too well request.
House~ along 13th.Street, the
sor Ernie Goss found that 48.5 in Kalamazoo, Mich., the site
J?CTCent of the fans are from out of the first College World main thoroughfare by the stadiof state. and the economic Series in 1947. or Wichita, Kan. um. are rented out to visitors.
The unofficial College World
impact on the Omaha area is It didn 't do too well in· Omaha
Series headquaners is Pauli's
$33.8 million.
at tirst, either.
Back in the 1970s, when the
But Omaha business leaders Bar, about 5 miles from the staCollege World Series was try- supported the event, and the dium. Owner Paul Griego said
ing to till a mostly empty stadi- city - about 170 miles from 2,000 to 3,000 patrons come to
um, its advertising slogan was the nearest major league team, his bar on the biggest nights of
the series.
"See the stars of tomorrow the Kansas City Royals At the Zesto's ice cream and
today." In that regard, the series stuck with it.
hamburger
stand
near
has never disapp&lt;Jinted. NinetyEach college team that comRosenblatt,
owner
Gabe
five panicipants were in the petes in Omaha is sponsored by
major leagues at the stan of this a civic organization, and play- Barajas meets and greets the
season.
ers and coaches are given same people year after year. He
Some stars who have played celebrity
treatment
that said the I0 days of the series
in the series include Dave includes cookouts, golf outings account for more than a quarter
Winfield (Minnesota, 1973): and tours of Omaha attractions. of his annual business.
"It means a million," he said.
"In addition to all of the
Roger Clemens (Texas, 1982.
"If
there were no College
'83); Barry Bonds (Arizona events. where no stone is left
State, 1983, '84): Will Clark unturned, they make it so spe- World Series, it would be a
and
Rafael
Palmeiro cia! for every single person and graveyard around here."
(Mississippi State, 1985). and player that you always look for- · Omaha, to be sure, is where
Nomar Garciaparta (Georgia ward to coming back," said all college baseball players
Tech, 1994).
Texas pitcher Huston Street, want to be this time of year.
Former Mayor Hal Daub said
"To me, il was just a great who is making his third straight
it
is
the duty of city administraatmosphere the whole time we College World Series appearance.
tors .to make sure that happens

1'

lJ
G

!

!

_,

Cam~ron

NEW YORK- Fur a guy
who once hit four home run~- .
in a game. the dry spell Mike
Cameron was struggling
through was starting tu get
h1111 down.
Cameron hadn't hit homered since May 10 - until he
connected Tuesday night and
led the New York Mets to a
6-2 victory over · the
Cleveland
Indians on
Thursday night.
There was a touch of
urgency to Cameron's at-bat
in the fifth with the game
still scoreless and rain in the
mr.
"You try to go out there
and get something on the
board
pretty
qui ck.''
Cameron said. "It gets us on
the board. It was definitely
nice to continue the momen-

.

tum

r ve got. ..

Cameron is playing in pain
because of.a damaged pinkie
injured in a slide home early
in the season. Hi s batting
average plummeted below
.200, but manage r Art Howe
is sticki ng with him -largely because of his defense.
Cameron's homer in &lt;t
game delayed I hour, 49
minutes by rain Mter the
fourth inning gave him a
five-game hitting streak during which he's hatting .33.1.
He also contributed a basesloaded hit in Tuesday night"s
victory. no small accomplishment for the Mets, who
have been dreadful in that
situation .
The Mets tried to improve
their offense .earlier in the
day, acquiring outfielder
Richard Hidalgo from
Houston, for pitchers David
Weaihers
and
Jeremy
Griftiths.
Kaz Mat sui had another

hit that delivered two runs in the seventh
after the Indians botched a
bunt play, leaving no one to
cover first base.
"The game got away from
us in the seventh." manager
Eric Wedge said. ""We
haven't had too many of
those."
In the seventh, Cameron
reached on a throwing error
by third baseman Casey
Blake and stole second. After
Eric Valent was walked
intentionall y. pinch-hitter
Joe McEwing bunted and
everyone was safe when
Ronnie Belliard failed to
cover tirst base.
"I just missed the sign:· he
said. " I thought it was another play."
Matsui followed with a
two-run single up the middle. It was just the eighth hit
. in 62 chances with the bases
loaded for the Mets.
"That · was a big hit,"
Howe said. ""We were able to
break it open."
McEwing scored when
Todd Zeile hit into a double
play.
"I am relaxing more and I
am
more
productive."
Matsui said thrqugh a translator.
His two hits extended his
hitting streak to six games
during which he is batting
.476.
Five Met pitchers combined on a five-hitter with
the win going to Ricky
Bottalico
{3-1),
who
replm:ed starter Jae Seo after
the long rain delay.
Sea. battling to retain his
spot in the Mets staning rotation, worked four etTective
innings. allowing two hits
and striking 0111 six before
the rain. After Bottalico.
John Franco, Mike Stanton
and Braden Looper finished
up.
.

Event
from Page 81
midday and the threat of
storms th at suspended the
round for more than two
. hours.
, Among the 57 players who
did not finish their round
. were Ma sters champion Phil
Mickelson and Vijay Singh,
both at 2 under par and with- .
out a bogey. Play is to
resume at 7 a.m .
: "No question , today was
;the day for scoring," said
; Mtckelson , who had three
•holes remaining.
Not everyone who played
early had an easy time.
Tiger Wood s needed to
. save par five times from the
·bunker - and once for his
:only birdie - in a pedestrian
:round of 72. It was the
fourth straight time he failed
to shoot · par. or better in the
fi rst round of a major.
Looming . ominously for
, Woods is that he 'has never
:won any tournament when
:starting out over par.
"There's an awful long
way to go," Woods said. "We
haven 't seen the wind up yet.
. It that ever happen s, this
; golf c~mrse is pretty tough."
· Erme Els took a double
bogey at No. II (his second
hole) , but recovered with
some terrific wedge play and
. a few timely putts to salvage
a 70. Davi s Love Ill made
:two triple bogeys and shot
:76.
; The worst score belonged
·to David Duval. Playing for
the first time in seven
months, Duval was tied for
the lead at one point - the
:first hole - but eventually
·unraveled off the tee and
; shot 83, matching his worst
:score as a professional. But
he had a good time aitd realized he wasn't tournament
:tested.
'"! would call it an enor; mous victory for me today,"
;Duval said. '" I can"t wait for
·tomorrow. "
Some guys wish Thursday
would never end.
David Roesch was think: ing of giving up golf after
:this year, but he made it
·through two stages of quali:rying, got into the Open and
:then birdied four of the first
·six holes he played. Roesch
. was in a large group at 68.
• "1don't know if it' s hit me
:yet," said Roesch. a 30-year:old from Wisconsin who
;plays the Hooters Tour. '"I
;don't know if I want to wake

''

••

Reds

Day One
lit the u.s. Op ..

SOUTHAMPTON. N.Y. tAP) -

Jo "ith it.
he shot 65 in the first round
''Tu me. he looked ll ~v IlL'\\ it'- pr\.'""l ll t! .11 h!a~o,t
at Olympia Fields last year.
111icc
toda\:· 'Ji&lt;..l h" !.ulw1 k:c·" &lt;•nlk' Sr..
Hale Irwin shot a 67 at
·
\\ho
v.a-..
~tiT;m:.!Jil~ tu dn\L t11 \1 ! .P UI' .tl!~r the
Southern Hills in the first
frorri Page 81
g~.une. ··Till' higgL'~l rL·.t ... un \\ d ... 1lt~ttilL' \\d!lted to
round in the 2001 U.S .
Uo
it her.:. ~1.110 he put a lot ol uil' h.. L'"'"·lr) ·pre...,Open .
fans in left field. then the one, in ri~lll. hdi1re "ure on him ...c!L I told il11n . ) p: ·\,:'-.'I ll .til \Car
No one was all that sur- nmning ofT the lield.
'
to hit that one home run .. ·
·
prised to see Haas in the
'They've been real 'upponi'-~ tlwough thi'
Griffe)
\~ dl... in cl ]0\ 1. 11 !llil~ ld I)~ hill' til"' _:; amt:.
lead. Even though he turned whole thing," Griffev said. "It '"'' jLhl 1111 wal'
jo~111g about ]Hl\\ lld\l~l ' '·L·.u_. ,·].;11\c.., \\tl"t
50 last December, he has of saying thank you'·
·
·
·
up,~t 11ith him 1&lt; 11 l'r"' ' 'll~lllo- 'IJ, h.oll "' H~
remained a regular on the
The crowd of -l()JI:n 'tood anJ 'cr~amed then went ou t anJ tnL·d 1DP h.trd 111 crhl 1t
PGA Tour and has played encouragement in each of hi' at-bah. A cit~ thai
"He put .J lot of p ! L' ""Urt..· tlll !ll!ll'-l'lf. ·· ... aid
well enough to blend right in watched him grow up wanted Ill 'hare one (Jf hi'
~l&lt;hCr Dann) Gr:ll c''. llh&lt;• ('lkhc·.lr!J. 111111h tor
with guys young enough to greatest momenr, ,
hi" ~ 7 th "~1\l' in 11 L"lldlh.L'" llhr:~ 1, ·\\a-.. a !nbe hi s son.
Instead. he grou nded out. flied out and had " tk OUt OJ hi '-I t!~HllL' J. \ L'.fl \ll t1Ud I h.' ...iJL!Ji' t h tt
In fact, he was playing routine &gt;ani lice lly oiT right-hander R1 an Drcsc 5(H h~ Jid 1111:11 he l1e1d I&lt;, .h 1 t•; \'. .:' tile' ~.1111~.
· (3-4). Down to hi' Ia,t chitnce. he·";" "''"
with his son.
"fl.IJ L"UJ11e. lt ' JI Ul ll H..' ,\ IJL'Il i)l' •pJ~ k .t' l
"There's nothing you can ahead on hi"' final ~v... int! . ....r1iJ..in!! ou t un a 7(1 ~\(1CL'I ii."
about it. He 's good,'' said mph pitch from lcft-hanJcr Brian' Shousc in the
Juni\)J"\ f;rilur~ h1 l111 ].l!lL' 11l!l \\,,• till' RL J~·
Bill Haas, 22, who was 3 seventh.
only lfi,appointmen t n! ;1 h.'·, i\ 1·1_:: ~ ...TIL'"· Th e~
Drese had to rely on hi' 'inl.cr becau'e noth- n:tumed hull1L' at~ ~tlll.l)ll TuL· ... ~..tt\ ~r,Hn an (t-7
over with one hole left.
ing
else wa' y.·orking. He con,idered hiomclf m;Jd I rip thJI 1-.nnd.cd I he Red',,.;"' liN in the
"He's top 25 in the world, so
it's not like he can't play. fortunate to get Grift'ey out.
:\L Central.
"I threw him a cookie in his liN at bat. &lt;md l1c
Mo st kids can beat their
The R~llH.!L'r-.. lo~t 1hL'rr 11 \1!1 h 1n .1 ril\~. matchhit a ground ball to 'econd." Drc,c ,aid. ·cl don·, ing their '-L': t,Hll ll i~IL ~~"']h.: 11!krh~...' :t~. u n rclil'J
dads, but l can't."
if he di&lt;..ln't expect me''' pitl·h him there m '&lt;Mi,· &lt;Ill h&lt;Hncr' and Ilk' i"lc·hu\'" ,1.111 l.1i kll in
Still, Haas hasn't won in know
what."
·
thl" end. Thl'\ hit .., j \ ht mk't" 111 !Ill' ... c nL' "'· hut
more than 10 years on the
Griffey"s desire to reward the fall\ had a lot to batted onl1 .201 mera ll
PGA Tour, and he has never
won a major.
Haas twice made birdies
Pleasa nt (W Va.). 9 Dewey Smn~
B10we-11 9 M 1cj(,
that would have gone I0 feet
Wtnebrenner. 86 . Racine. 1 1 !:. 11 J . )n 85. Mas or
past if the hole had not been
(W Va ): 12. Paul Lan ham 84 ? F , r~'
. ·. 1 1 • 3 J1m
in the way, including a 40Cunntngham . 83 Hunt1n-:;gon v'.' i':
· .J G1'l Pethtel
80 5. New Haven (W Va 1. , : ..... •• -~ ,: 1rj 80 Masor
from Page 81
footer on the 17th that
(W Va }: 16 Ro n P t'allrl. ~? 5 . Ga:.·~
'- Harl!e'y
moved him to 4 under.
Blarn . 78.5 . Pl Pleasa nl ·\V Vet
1(1 -..~&lt;~.' FJx 77 5
"I felt like I stole a couple Bob Hy sell (Pomeroy).
Clifton (WVa .) 19 . MIKe BrrHJ9 ;; Pt P:c:a~.ili 1 11W\/a 1
there," he said.
·
GIII Yoho
The closest lo the pin winner' were Harley 20 Cratg Barnes. 74. P: Pleasant ~·~·1 ..:J
~3 5. PI
It was his best start ever at Blain on the 'eventh hole and Bill' 74 New Haven (W. Va 1. 22 Rus~ :. ·
Pleasant (W.Va ): 23 CJrtls Cin.:oos ;- _ .c~ ~ ·.: ~ 1 F1e:ds
the U.S. Open, and only the Winebrenner or number 14.
7 1.5 . Ha rtford (W.Va 1 "2G F ovd ::-~!··--~r:·rnar\ 7 1
fourth time he has broken
Syracu se: 26 . Pat Wtl l1arnscr 70 5 ~Jt:·,\ H~·'Jt-"r· tVV Va ..l
Senior League Standings
27 . Mac McCarty, 70 Apple Grove 1V/ ·.;.:. 27 Claude
par in the first round since
1. Ralph Sayre. 113.5, New Haven (W.Va .) . 2. Chet
Prot11tt. 70 . Walnut. 29 29 8a'la \·. l".t;brenner 69
his first appearance 30 years Thomas,
102, Patriot; 3. Clark Greene. 95 5. Hurricane
Pomeroy: 30 Bob Ol1ver. E7 31 Ct1ucre 'i'eaa(.'!r. 65 5
ago,
(W.Va.); 4. Keith Woods . 90, Bradbury; 5. Don W1ison , Hunt1ngton (W.Va.): 32 ·Ken Wh1ted 6, 5. Pt- Pleasant
Maruyama put together a 88, Chester; 6. Howard Parker. 87. Pomeroy ; 6. Elmer (W.Va .) 33 Ha rley R tce 66 Rer :--·:1IIP 3~ Jack
great round before a large Click, 88. Cottageville (W Va ): 8. Tom Nunnery. 86.5. Pt. Maloney. 65 . Gal1 1po11s
crowd - he played with
Woods and Chad Campbell
help rai'~ my grandchild and
\C"'--'. rul,·, pnd11b11 't u
(72). The Japanese star has
~njoy
my
children:·
dc111
.ttldct ~...· ... lnl!n I"L'~o."1...' i\ 111 ~
said the U.S. · Open intimidllY
Jitl~l
llLt .tl il clp ll" 111ll ~~11~-­
Ohio
State
fired
O'Brien
dates him with its rock-hard
onco
ther
t iLI!l !&lt;~lllth rucm
on
June
8
after
he
admitteJ
from Page 81
greens and high rough.
bCI•
.
.
he gave S6.000 in 1999 to
"I just tried to get even par
Aleksandar Radojevi c, a
Ohi11 SL1tc .nl·kik' d11·c,· t"r
today," Maruyama said. acknowledged
uroino recruit "Ito ne1·er · attended And\ li~J :..:~..·r k'..trTll...'d nl tilL'
" "
'Through the practice round, Salyers to pay Savovic's
R .t~II']L'\ il
Ohio State becau'e lit'· "a' pa~ 1ill'll l ~ h'
I never hit under par here. I expenses.
.
ruled ineligible art~r the b~C U U '-i,.' ll \\,lO.. llll'll{ltlll\..'d Ill·
wasn ' t very aggressive."
"(Boban) needed spending NCAA round our he h;Jd Si.th 1,.')"". -..! &lt;J lLtllL'nl 111 hL' I
That proved to be a smart money." Kim Roslovic told been paid to pia) in Eurupe . lav.-.. . u it
plan, as Maruyama. never Salyers , according to Mrs.
made bogey and surged to Roslovic 's deposition . "He
the top of the leaderboard didn't like to eat in the comwith a 60-foot birdie on No : mons (at Ohio State) wit h
10 and a tee shot on the II th everyone else."
that stopped 3 feet from the · Messages wel'e left at the
offices of attorneys for· Kim
hole.
and
Dan Roslovic.
Maruyama usually takes a
Salyers
told
The
hot' shower after his round to
control neck and back (Cleveland) Plain Dealer that
she would be wi lling to 'ettle
injuries.
the
case in order to more on
Haas might have been
with
her life .
expected to take a nap at his
"I want to go un with my
age, but he had more imporlife,'
' she said. "I want to
tant things to do. He
returned to the course as a
spectator to watch his son
play.
"I'll watch him tomorrow
afternoon after I get done,"
Bill said.

A

glance at Thuf1day'o _,mo round
In ltle U.S. O!&gt;on at Shlnnocod&lt; Hltlt
Coumry Club:
Leading: Jay Haas aM Shlg&amp;lcl

Maruyama, with 4·under 881..
Just behiM: Six playore at 68,
lncludlflll British O!&gt;on chalr4&gt;lon Ben
Cwtls and Kevin Stadler, lon of 1982
Masters winner Craig Stadler.
Still out tllere: 67 players will finish
lheir opeoing roundoiFrlday mornlflll
after a thuncterstom. interrupted play
for 2 hours and 12 minutes In me
afternoon and then tog finally sotponded play at NO p.m. EDT.
Contending on tile course: Angot
C8brera was 4-ilndar-par tluough 12
holes, while Phil Mlokoilon was 2
under through '5 andVijay Singh was
2 under through 14,
Where'o Tiger?: Tiger Woods made
only one birdie In shooting an openIng 2-oVIlr 72. Woods has """" won
a loumament attar shooting ovtr par
in the first round.
Not oeady lor seniors: II Jay H...
wins, he will be tile oldest Open
champion twer, at age 50. Hale kwln
was •s when he won In 1990.
Shot or 111e day:' Spencer Levll1. a
2(1-.year-old amateur qualifier, made a
hole In one on the 179-yard 171h hole.
Noleworthy: Oavld Duval, playing lor
the first time since laSt year, shot an
83.
Ouotowortlty. 'How many times has
anyone played great In the U.S.
Open?"- David Duval.
Prime times: 8 a.m. Phil Mickelson,
8:10a.m. Vljay Slngl\. 12;50 p.m. Jay
Haas, 1 p.m. Tiger Woods.

up or not."
Kris Cox, a PGA Tour
rookie who has never been
to the U.S. Open, also kept
his name on the leaderboard
throughout the day and shot
68.
"A year ago this time I was
playing the Gateway Tour in
Scottsdale, Arizona ," Cox
said. "Actually, I was hurrying to get done to watch the
Open."
·
Joining them was Kevin
Stadler son of "1982
Masters champion Craig
Stadler - along with Jeff
Maggert, Skip Kendall and
British Open champion Ben
Curtis.
Only three other players
managed to break par Trevor lmmelman, Tim
Petrovic and Brian G~y.
Even without the wind ,
Shinnecock is no picnic.
And there 's no telling what
will happen if the wind
decides to show up.
"Tuesday when we played,
the wind blew pretty hard
and the golf course played
difficult,"
very,
very
. Maggert said. "If we would
have saw that kind of wind
thi s morning, par would
have been a very good

score."
The U.S. Open has a history of treating the old folks
kindly in the first round.
Tom Watson was 53 when

1

Senior

Booster

EXTRA! EXTRA!

~alltpoli~ lailp ~rtbune •~oint l9Iea~ant legt~ter

Coming Friday, July 16, 2004

The Daily Sentinel

Daily Sentinel

The

will help you have a Garage Sale!
The Daily Sentinel Babv.
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photograph s of local
children - ages newbo rn to four
years old. The Baby Edition \\ ill
appear in the July 16th issut'.
Be sure your child, grandr hild.
or relative is involved!

Michigan should calm down
recent NASCAR chaos ·
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) - Rusty Wallace
is hoping calm replaces chaos and confusion at
Sunday's NASCAR race at Michigan
International Speedway.
"The last two weeks h ~ve produced enough
weirdness, controversy and tom-up race cars for
a quaner of a season, let alone just the two
races," Wallace said as he prepared for the DHL
400 in the Nextel Cup series.
"I really think things will calm down a whole
lot this week at Michigan and I' II be totally
shocked if they don't."
The previous Nextd Cup races - at Pocono
and Dover- featured confusion over new rules
and scoring. NASCAR ended up issuing apologies to two drivers, and the races produced 22
cautions, bringing Out the yellow tlag for nearly'
a quaner of the laps.
Most of the problems grew out of rules governing freezing the field when the caution .!lag

is out and when pit lane opens to competitors.
"It must be a situation where the moon is
aligned with some of the evil stars or something
weird like that," Wallace said. "Man, with all
the crashes, controversial calls and unusual stuff
going on, you just wonder what could happen

Tristan Roach
Son of
Charles 8. April Roach
Gallipolis

next."

Wallace was part of the naziness.
At Dover. he avoided serious damage in scv.era! crashes but a stop-and-go penalty late in the
race relegated Wallace to 13th when he
appeared headed for a top-five finish.
At Pocono, his brakes failed and he crashed
with Michael Waltrip and finished ~2nd.
"I can't believe that happened and I hate it for
him and us," Wallace said. "We've had some
brake problems in the pas'. at places like
Watkms Glen and at Martinsville, but never at
Pocono. It just shows you how weird things
have gotten."

in

by
2004.

Pictures can be picked up

after

must

Pictures

Thursday

July

July 19th, 2004.

• 2 sturdy Garage/Yard Sale signs.

Send

26 x I9 inches, 2 wooden Stakes

'

•

'

Ill Court Street. Pomerov. Ohio 4) 7(1&lt;J

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• Instruction and tip shL-et

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The Daily Sentinel
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I

1&lt;):

The Daily Sentinel

• t08 pricing labels

Couch

'

8th,

I

Comple.te the form below and cnci&lt;N.: a snapshot m 11 alk t , j;c·clt'lc"lll\' p11h
a $7.00 charge for each photograph . If more titan one , ilt ld i ' 111 t [,,· fl'- 1111 ,.
please enclose an additional S2.00 per d1ilcl. Enc!thc 11;1: one' Ill I\ 111 I''· trto.

• Felt lip marker

statts Aug. 2. He will remain in Green Bay
through Wednesday, working with quarterbacks
coach Darrell Bevell.
"I want to try to get him as well-versed as I can
from Page 81
in this next week. kind of give him a foundation
to where he had enough classroom work that he
Browns released him last week.
can carry it over to the field," Bevell said.
"But, none of them was any better than this sit- "Whether we'll be able to do that, I don't know.
uation," Couch said.
It just all depends on him."
Couch will wear No. 2 on his jersey, as he did
Bevell spent 3 1/2 hours Thursday morning
with the Browns and at Kentucky.
introducing Couch to the Packers· version of the
As thrilled as Couch was to get a warm wel- West Coa~t offense.
come il) Green Bay, the timing of his ani val was"Just being in the NFL for a long time and hav. n"t the most ideal. Couch missed the Packers' ing a lot of experience is going to help me pick
last offseason minicamp, which ended June 10. that up," Couch said. "I ran a lot qf these same
Consequently, Couch has plenty to study in the plays (with Cleveland). It's just different terminext six weeks before full-squad training cai11p nology."

be

- -

Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s): ____:_____________

1

Parent's

:'~lame:

_ _________ _

: City &amp; State: _ __ _ __
*** The tti)UH' int'ormatinn nilllu.'

U\l'd

in thl' act. ·····

_____ Suhnoittt·d In : __

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HURRYH PICTURE DEADLIN E lS
FRIDAY JulY 9, 2004!

- '

�•

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Frida~Junet8,2004 .

www .mydailysentinel.com

Major League Baseball
American League
EAST

W

L

NY Yank981

42

22

a0st04\

38

27

29- -..
27 ~ 35

TM"Iea~

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T"""'o

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435

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Q_h~Sol

34
31

33

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31
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561
531

31

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12-17
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313

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COOnnat1 4, Texal 3
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Pmsburgh S, l.nar.trn 3
5 , Morm..l 4. (111
Kansas c~ 10. Atlanta 4

14- 17

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Ptlilaoelpnaa 6. Oelrort2. (Qm 1)

DetrOit 11 Ph1iadelpMII, (ppd , ra1n)
Flonda 4, Chugo ~ 0
CMiand 9. NY Meui 1
ClrlConnafl7. Taxu 4
Milwaulo:ee 4 . SNttkt 1

DetrOit 5. Pt'nlad&amp;lpM11 4 . (11. 9m 2)

Seattle 6, M~waukee 3
Boston 11. Colorado 0
San Franci!ICO 8. Toronto 5
Pmsburgh 5. o!,nahe&lt;m 2

Royals

10,
Kanua City

ab r t'l bi
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Rand~3b 5 ~ 1 2
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4,Jones (17). HR-Beltran (13]. Retatord (1),
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35
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27
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FIOocSa 2. CFIICagO Sox 1, 111}
NY t.4ets 6. Cleloelend 2
St. LOUII 5. Oekland 4
Arilona 6. NY l'ankees t
Tampa Bay 4, Sin OtegO 1
Los Angeles 4, Bdtmore 3
Thur.dly'a NL Aeeuft
Chicago ClbiS. HouiJion 4

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Wed........ 'alnt.rlugue Re.\Jita
St. LOuiS 6. Oakland Z
Colora,OO 7, 8ostM 6
Tampa B~ 9, San 01800 6
NY Yankee!i 9, Arizona 4
Los Angell'ls 6. Barttmora 3
San F1111'1CIICO 10, TOfonlo 2
w.dt~~~~dly._ Nl R..ult
Ctltc8~ Cubs 4, Houston 1

~EABBSO

1:1·15

18-12
18-14

---- o.m..

Sptllty (2).

Hdtaby c

W3
W4

a.m.

1;3 3 2 2 1 0
N itkows~1
1 2 2 2 0 0
JuCruz
100001
WP-May. N1tkowak1
Umplr11-Hom e. Ted Barrett: Flftl Ed
Rapuano, Second. Kevin Kelley: Th1rd. ·Aifon·
50 Marquez. T-2:38. A-28.518 (50,091 ).

ab r hbl
Furcal SB 5 2 1 0
NGreert 2b 4 0 2 1
J0rewr1 3011
CJonuJo 4 0 0 0
A.Jones c1 4 0 2 0
M•f111"o~
4000
EOdPr.z c 4 0 1 0

Houston

i?9

GB

Frlday'alictlrit ;ut
Mim11011 (SIIvt 7-JJat Mitwaukee tSn&amp;ets 5-4), e·os c.m
Ba~rnora (Ponson 3-8} et ColorMio (Estes 6-3). 9'05 p.m
Toronto (li~ 5-:31at San Dtega ( O.W&amp;I~ 2-4) 10:05 p m
TamPII ~ (Hnml 2· 1) at Aflzona {Jolln&amp;an 9-4). 10 OS p m
NY.YarUttt (Vazquez 7-~t) at Los Anoetes (Weaver 4-7J. 10:10 c.m .
Boslon (Walutfleld 4·5) at San FrancriiCO (J Williams 6-4), 1015 pm
FrlUy'a HI.
CII'IC/nnati (L.lde 4·5) It St. Louis (Carpenter 7-21. 8 10 p.rn

Orybcl•k•

Breves 4

39

37
_37
33
33

-

Frlclly'a lntlflugue a.m.
Oakland 1Aedman 4-3) at ChiCago Cub! (CiamoYrt 7-4), 3:20p.m
Seattle [Moyer 5-2) at Pmsb.org-. (Vol)elsong 1-6). 7:05pm
ChiCIIgo WMe SOl. (Buetlrlu 7-I) at Molltreal (Patterson 1-2), 7:05 p.m.
Kansas Cll)' tGeoroe D-0) at Pt1•tacelpnia (AbboT~ Q.O), 7:05 p.m.
De!I"Oit {Robertson 5·3) a1 N.Y Mets (Gievine 7·3).. 7:10 p m
Texas [Wudin D·O) at Fklnda (Peony 6-4 1, 7:35p.m.
C~vetand (C Lee 5-t J at Atlanta {Hampl:on 1-61. 7:35p.m.
Anahe•m (E!ICObar 4-21 at Hows1on (Munro D-0). 8:05 p.m

...,.

Laague

Notional

.

8-25

Cont• c1
BShsep

3 0 10
30 00
0 0 00

Broca1l p

0 0 0 0

2 12 0
Orese p
Matnwsrl 1000
Totala

Anaheim
l!ittaburgh

000 3
Clnr;:lnnatl
too 30x - 4
E-Biall)(;ll (5). LOB-TeKas 3. Ctnc•nnatl 8
2B----+tuc:llaDy {1), OreN (1), Casey {24 1,
Hummtl l4) HA-Bialock {1 6). TetJC8118 (101
CS-Oellucco (4) S-Van Peppel SFCaswy, Grtftey Jr
IP H R EABBSO

Rod Sox 11 , Rockies 0
Colorado
ab r nbl

Damonc1 53· 20
Bllho1n 3b 4 2 1 '2
OOrtll: tb 4 1 3 5

Crespo2b 1 0 0 0
MAmrz tt 4000
Mc:Ctv lb 1 0 0 1
Grcprru 5230
Wllm&amp;np 0000
NHwnrt
3120
l".aplerrf 0 0 0 0
Vlrllel\c 3001
Reese2b 41 22
Dlowep , 200.0
Mtllar lf
2 1 10
Totall 3111141t

M,les2b
Clayton u
Hellon 1b
Ca5tilla 3b
PellOw 3b
Burnrtze'l
Frmand
Hlhdl)' M
Holunglf
CJnson pn
Greene e
LuGnztrf

ab r hbl
4

aoo

4 00 0

3000

20 I 0
10 1 0
3 01 0
1000
3010
1000
1o 10
4 0 0 a·
2 01 0
Coolt,p
1000
MaSwvpl'11000
Totals 31 0 15 0

Bo1ton
020 010 332 - 11
CaiOfado
OOQ
000 000 0
DP- Boston 2. CoiOfaao 1 LOB-Boston
11. Colorado 8 2S--Oamo'1 2 (20). Be!lhorn
(15). DOrtiZ (26). Ni)(On (1) M1NII (15). 3BQarcl&amp;parra (1). HFI-DOtt•z (14) 56Damon (8) S-DLowe. SF-McCart)'.
IP H RER8BSO

--J

100 -

2

000

100

221 -

5

8 3 3 2 4
132200

G•ogg

~5-6

Chi~o

Floridl

ab r hbl

UrtDe2D 4 0 t 0
Thmu ID 3 0 0 0
WHarrscf1000

.a:, r hbl
Pterflil cf 5 0 1 0
LC5111lo 2b 4 1 1 0
Cbrerart 4 000
~113b

5000
Vlen!ln 56 4 0 0 0

LH~rrsH
M1dca• ph

Creoe3b

4

Pollltep

0000

Easley ph
Traoor ph

CaLee~

010

5000
3 0 D0

1
1
1
4
4

0 0 0
0 0 0
0 1 1
000
0 1 0

401 0

O~'o'OC

4110

Chl-

Becken

BH&lt;&gt;w•"'
Olfver
JManzanlilo
Benitez. W.2-iJ

2
2
2
0
0

0 0
1 0

0
1

8
2

0

0

I

0
0
0

0

1

I

0

1

2

New York

ab r hbl
MatiUI I I

4 12 2

Zeile3D
3000
p,aznc 4 0 0 0
Stanton p 0 0 0 0
Wg171tn 2b 4 0 1 t
Floydlf
3 010
Willms~
0100
KGa,rca rt 4 0 1 1
Cm.-ond 4 21 1
Valent tb 3 1 0 0
Seop
101 0
Bttlcop
1000
Mc:EwQ ph 1 1 1 0
Tot.la

""""
Seo

1

2

1

1

0

I

0
0

0
0
0
0
'

0
1
0
0
0

6
2
1
1
0

A2
0
JoFranco
0
Stan\00
t 1
LOOPEII
t 2
T-2:J6. A-17.675 (57,405)

BonaliCO W,J-1

--

t 1-J
1 2·3

-

0

o
2

HtrStOn 2tl 4 1 1 0
SF11'118ycf4130
DBtttta rt " 11 2

c . n.. c .......,._oH

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

'

.......

SparQW,3-4
DeU&amp;nl$,2

7
2

3
1

1
0

1
0

7
0

Offtee !lowe-~

llooondllamo
Dttrotl
Phlla
ab r hbl
abrhDI
JSmith 2b .&amp; 1 2 1 Aol~s .. 6032
Knotlsp
2 1 1 0 Tof'erz2b 6 0 1 0
Nor1onph 1 1 1 0 BM!~rl 500 0
Thor'ne lb 4 a o o
5111
lngec
Hggnsnr1 61 31
L.ote~
31\ 1
CGilltn II II 0 2 1 Mchelsll 2 0 1 0
DYongH
4010 CaBell 3b 3 0 o 0
5130
A.Snchzct 1 0 0 0 Byn:lef
422 1
CF'wna,b 4 01 1 Prltlc
Monroe cl 5 0 2 0 MWWQdp 2 000
MuniOI'\ 3b 3 0 0 0 crm•p oooo
Infante 21:1 2 0 0 0 Burrell pn 1 0 0 0
Whltepn 1000 Olnv•lllpl'l 1 0 0 0
IRd.... C 2000 Planco pl1 1 0 0 0
Tot.al:a 48 514 6 Totlll 43 411 4

Monday th ru Friday

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

----===;;;;
L.,.4o iol'oiO~oi l~li HDi l'oi ~lio~i ili ·
r~~~1
ADOPTION : A. lovin9 COU·
pie would like to adopt your
newborn . W ill provide a
home filled with )oy. happt·
ness, tina.nc1a1 secunty and
a great educatto n. Feel co n·
Iiden! in knowing because ot
yout brave decision your
baby could look lorward to a
bright and wonderful-future.
Expenses pa1d . Calltolllree
t -8 66 ·731 -7825
Barbara
and Michael

JWal~er

ASa ~nez: .

32 II I 5

YM

Cleveland
000 000 002 2
NewYork
000 011 31x 6
E-Bi ake IQ). Z11•lv (Q) DP-Cie~lend 1,
New York 2. LOB-Cievetand 3. New YorkS.
2B----lawton pa). THafner 2 (23). Floyd
110) HA-Cameron (8) SB--Geru1 (9). Mat·
sut( 10), Cameror&gt; (11 1
Cltvtl.and
IP H RERBBSO
Elarton
4 1 0 0 1 4
RiWMe L.3·2
1 1 1 1 0 0
1
Betancourt
1·3 1 1 1 ,

Colver
Dfflgman
Urtma ~.2·2
DPatterson 8,2
Phllact.lphla
MiiM'Ood
Cor m1er
Worrall
BWaljner
RHarnanoez
Madson L,4·2

H A£RBISO
2

2

1

1

1

0

0

0. 3

· 1-3
2·3

'
'

3
0
1
2

2
0
0

2
0
0

0
1
1
2

1
1
1
4

I

0

0

0

0

0

6

7

3

3

1

7

1

a o

o o a o

4

1

I

1

'2
3

1
0

1
0

0
1

2
1

1

1

0

2

REQUESTS FOR
PROPOSAL
Gall la·Meigs
Commun 1ty
Action Agency IS seektng an
accou nting firm to perform a
single Agency audit as
required by OMB Circular A133. A. RFP package can be
picked up at our C neshtre
offrce located at 8010 North
S tate Route 7. Chesh1re .
Oh io or will be ma iled upon
reqUest be calling (740)3677341 Proposals must be
recetved by 4 :00 p.m . June
25. 2004 at the C heshire
office,

Happy
Father's Day

Larry
Jeffers

Love, Ron &amp; Candy
Burkhamer

Barn to Give Away you Tear
Down (304)674·1443
.•

Love, Dorothy, Ashley
and Kayla

Gary
Lee

Todd
Love, Samantha, Kara,
Alex, &amp; Garret

Love, Gary, Dorothy
and girls

·Love, Linda &amp; Bob

DonE.
Rea

Free to good home, Saint
Bernard
pupp1es .
Call
(7401256· 1652.

r

Love, Julyan, Alex, Gage
&amp; Baby boy to be

Love and mi ss you very much.
Wife, Sylvia. Kid s- Teresa .

Jenny,

Rick, Johnny, Grandkid&gt;

&amp;

•

Love,
Your son, Gage Kauff

In Loving
memory
Roy (Frank) Rime
We miss you so much,
We send our Love,
Your wife Frona,
children, grandchildren
and family and relatives.

Great grandkids

In Memory
Charles L.
Bissell

'r
~

Love, Reva and Donna

Happy
Father's

·-

In loving memory of our Father

Clifford
Jacobs
A special fa1her that will

never be

forgotten
A s each pass ing day

we cherish the memories
we shared and h o ld

We love you and miss you,
Love,
Your wife Margaret,
children &amp; grandchildren

,.

----------------------~-

I

t 10

.

HEU' W\NIID

"ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS! "
Want to look younger AND
earn Money? lei's talk the
NEW AVON call
Marilyn (304)882-2645.
Joyce (304)675-69t9.
Ap'" (304 )882·3630

Found small dog at Bob's AVON! AU Areas l To Buy or
Market in Mason, call to Sell. Shirl ey Spears, 304idenlify (304)882·3000 o• 675·1429.
(304)593·4021
Barte'nder n.eed, experience
requ1red.
Applicatlol'ls
accepte d until 6128/04 Send
to P.O. Box 303, Gallipolis,
OH .
072

•

close to our
hearts o f a sp ecia l
Faoher like you .
Happy Falher 's Day
Love from the fam i ly

e•parlenced meehanlee.
with · repairs &amp; malnte·
nanca auch
lubrication,
electrical and brake work.
Requires mechanical aptl·
tude with b811c knowtedge
of vehicle maintenance
and repair- m:p. w tth d1asel
power vehicle preferred.
Must also have own tools.
lamtltanty wtth repatr manuals and a m1nimum of 1 year
pe rform ing similar duties.
Must be able to 11ft 751b s.
Excallent compensation &amp;
benefits with medical,
dental, 401 k. vacation &amp;
pension. Please come In
8nd apply anytime MonFri. Bam·Spm :

a•

Take rhe wheel of your
Rumpke Waste
28 AW Long Road
Wellston, OH 45692
Fax : 74o-384·5472
No phone calls please/EOE
Dr ivers Needed Pterceto n
Trucking 1 yr. e)(penence
reqwed .. Class A with Tank
&amp; Hazmat. Call 1 -800·446·
0355

DRIVERS NEW PAY
SCAlE

YARn SAI..E-

Ba rtender needed M/F no
experience needed. must be
able to w ork nights &amp; week 4 family yard sale. Saturday, ends call day ti me Only
June 19th, 9·? 1 day only. In Except Wed. &amp; Sun (304 )
front of Isaac's Auction- SA 675· 3449
160, Vinton . Clothes, turn i·
f.;lln ca 1u~ractor
ture &amp; lots of mi,sc.
C fay townhOus e ofl 2~ 8 .
. June 18 &amp; 19. McCarty &amp;
Barn;es.

Medi Home Health
Agency, Inc. seeking a
full -t ime AN Clinical
Director lor the Gallipolis,
Ohio
location.
Position Requires : OH
and WV RN licensure,
minimum two years of
home heallh nursin Q
eMperience In a management role , knowledge of
Federa l and State home
health regulation , JCAHO
experience preferred.
EOE .
Submit resu me to ; 68150
Bayberry Drive,
St. Clairsville, OH _43950.
Attn: Katrina Dunaway,
AN .
· Director of Nurslno

Moving sale: Sat. Jurie 19,
8-3. 1074 8u1avill e Ptke ,
Oall lpo ll s,
OH .
Aiding
mower, boating equipment,
tent, patio table, appliances. Medi Home H~llh Agency,
Inc. seeking a full-time and
Remodeling Yard Sale
PAN AN's, and a PAN
Tables, beds, desk, comput·
Occupational r rerap lst for
erJsoftware, TV stand. chest , th e Gallipolis, Ohio area .
toys , clothes. household Must be licensed both !n
goods-all ~;~ood condition . Ohio and Wesl VIrginia . We
Saturday,
9·2 , offer a competitive salary,
NetghbOrhood Rd . Watch lor benefit package lor lull·time,
Green signs .
and 40~ K . E .O .E Please
send resume to 352 Second
Yard Sale· 9-5 Saturday, 62
Ave., Gallipolis , OH A5631
Hubbard Ave (Kanauga)
Attn : Diana Harless, Clinical
Womens , mens, chi ld rens
Manager or call 1·800·48 1·
clothing , H ome Interior,
6334.
misc.

' - - --· -------

Publlca.tlon

t&amp;und•y ":1~!~~;'~,.~'!;~.~:.:~,;.

Sund•y ln•C::olurnn: 1:00 p.m.
Por Sund•v• P•p•r

ThurH•y

• All ed• muat be prepaid*

SatooL'i

G•lllpolla C•ntar College
{Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 74!).446-4367,
1-80().214-1)452

www g~ilip!JI!acarlleltlOIIaga, ~
.l.cc•.Oitad Member Accredit•nlil
Counc~

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT

lllfld

1ot l~ ldlut COlle~

Schools 127A9.

Postlr'IQ Dale; June 14.2004

Needing more monev to
Cover the bills'?
Wo rk for a cause you
Beleive in!
Help Protect you r Gun
Rights!
Recruit Volunteers and
accept donations tor the
Nation's leadmg N on-Profit
organizations!
Wa are now offering up to
$8/hr with no
experience necessary
Full or Part time ,
Day and even ing shifts
available .
Call our Job Hotline Today!
1· 877·463·6247 e)(!. 2456
~· Full Time . A JACHO

accredited, progressive and
growing home infusion com·
pany situated in southeast·
ern Ohio is seeking a nurse
with 3·5 yrs . e~&lt;perience in
therapies.
infusion
Experience in Medtronlc
refills helpful but not neces~
sary. Uppermost pay scale.
Please fa)( resume to John
Aayti s; 740-622·0715 or
email: Jraytls@ao U:om .

In thlt newtp.apM Is
aubject to the Fllderal
Fair Housing Act of 1868
which male" tt Illegal to
td~t•rtiM

POSTAL C LERK

M•nw-

Tl'le
Un 1vers1ty ot R 1o
Grande invites applications
for the position ot Postal
Clerk..

Must have high school diploma o r eQUivalent. Prev1ous
post office experience pre·
ferred. Good oral communicatiOn sk.ills required . Must
be able to lilt heavy boxes
and matl bags.

Un tversity ot Rio Grande
Community ColleQe

The Eastern Local School
D1stnct. 50008 State Route
7 . Aeeds~ ille . Ohio, is seek·
mg applicants from qualified
indtvlduals to till the vacancy
o f Eastern High School
Pnncipa t. Applicanls must
hold a valid htgh school prin·
cipal ce rti ficate/ license or
provide proof they can
obtain such a ' li cen se.
Candidates may contact
Mr s. Usa M Ritchie , at (740)
667·3319 for an application
package and additional
tnl ormation . Deadline to
submit application materials
is June 23, 2004. The
Eastern
Local
School
Dis tric t is an equal opportu·
nity employer.

or

bi!Md on
I'Kt , color, religion , MX
l•mlllal status or natloMI
origin, or any Intention to
maU•nyauch
prcthtrenee, limlllltion or
discrimination."
dl~rlmlntllon

Tea r
down
house
m
B)(change for building matenels and everythmg in house
please call (304)675·3646

W.vm:o

To Do

All types ol masonry brick.
block &amp; stone 20 yrs.
E~~:perience free estimate .
1-304-773-9550 , 304-5931007
lawn Care.
Call (74())446· 1768 ,
Ask lor Brody
Will Pressure Wash house's,
mob•le homes, metal build·
ings
and gutters. Call
(740~6-0151 aSk fo r Ron
or leave message.

A ll applicants must submit a
11\\'\(1\1
letter of interest and resume
tncluding the names and
. Earn between 45-SOK
addresses ot three refer·
•M1n . 1 year exp.
ences on or before July 5.
• Home Weekends
200410:
, $500 sign-on bonus
M s. Phyllis Mason , SPHA
.sta1t at 36 cpm
pHIO.,VALLEt'Pu'i:usH
Director of Human
. 95 % No touch freight
lN G CO. recommends th8
Resources
oNO FORCED NYC
ou do business with pea
Un1versity ot Rio Grande
Pta you know . and NQT t
R io Grande , OH 456 74
Call Boo-652·2362
end money througn lh
e-matl, pmason @rjo edy
fax
740-245-4909
.
mail
unttl you have investi
E~&lt;perienced auto mechanic.
atea the offering .
good
dnv1ng
record
EEO/AA Employer
requited , (740)388·8547
E~&lt;penenced truck mechanIC. good driving record
required, COL a plus
(7401388·8547

All rul Hwte actwrtJaJng

prer.~,llmltatlon

Responsit&gt;tlttes tnciUOe, out
are not limited to. receiving.
SOttlng and distribut 1ng
incoming mail: we tghlng,
affixing postage and prepar ing outgo11'Q mail: maintam ing necessary records and
preparing
assoc iated
reports as required . W 1ll be
expected to train. supervise
and evaluate student work·
e1s to ensure wo1k tS com·
pleted

r

I'ROFE&lt;."SIONAL
SFRVICR;

Affordable
Computer
Repair- Gallia, Meigs, &amp; sur rounding areas. (740)992·
7
9
0
3.
hnp:/fww.geocilies.com/loiler45620
----~-~~~-

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1 ~888·582·3345
I~ I

r10

\I I " 1 \II

HOMES
FOR

SA.LF.

This newap.aper will not
knowlngty accept
adver'll. .mentl for real
estate which Is In
vlolttlon of the l•w. Our
rudere are hereby
Informed that all
dwelllnga advertised in
this new•p•per •re
av.llabte on an equal
opportunity bas...

1!:4 R10

Grande. Spac•ous

ment. Heat pump, call for
appointment ( 304~773·5338
Nice House for sale in
Rutland , must be moved.
$12,000. (740)367·7886.

Opening New Retail Outlet
Middleport, seeking ful l-time
man ager, assistant manag·
er,
part-lime
cash ier /s tocklproducl ion.
only persons that are self
sta rters, wlhigh energy,
motivated. need apply, sub·
mi l resume to : The Daily
Sentinel, P.O . Box 729-46, l ion and experience. The
Unlversity of Rio Grande
Pomeroy Oh 45769
combines a private tour-year
Over the
Road Truck university with· a state-sup·
Drivers. High mileage, good ported community college In
pay, cruise control. NC: Call a single instttution serving
(740)388·9162.
rural southeastern Ohio.
Applications will be received
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's · until the position is tilled .

needed. Apply at 1354 Qualified applicants should
Jackson Pike , Galltpolls,
send 8 lener detailing their
' t'tons, 8
Pleas ant Vall ey Apartments ·tn t arest and quaIll tea
·
11
1
as a
ts accepting Applications ranscr1pt , as we
· cl ding the names
For a night Security Person resume tn u
• ast
For a family Project FREE an d a dd resses of a t ,e
RENT. For details and appli· lh ree re f. ren ce• 10:
c adons Call (304)675·5806 Ms. Phyllis Mason, SPHA,
9am-4pm .
Director
of
Human
Resources, University ol Rio
Wanted Exper ienced full· Grande Post Office Box 500,
ttme Btllmg Clerk, excellent Rio Grande, OH 45674, Fax
ICD9 &amp; CPT coding skills. 740·245·4909 &amp;·mall pml·
1
computer literate, compeli· sonOrlo.adu .,
EEO/AA
and
ttve salary Send Resume to Employer, Women
TSC16 , 200 Main St. Pt. Minorities are encouraged to
apply
Pleasan l , WV 25550

3bedroom, 1story, white
vi nyl siding , fenced · back
yard , Pt. Pleasant. Oreal
starte r home-or-rental prop :•~rt:_Y_::I304
:.:..:l:.:6.:.75::.·.::52::.0::9~-­
3BA on 5. ~29 acres , Green
Township close to school.
Asking price $89 ,000. More
1nlo (740)446·73n.
4093 Addison Pike, all elec·
tric home on 2.5 acre lot.
O·-•
.... 2 ,500 8Q · •11 •• 314 bed •

Re locating to Ga1l1p0 11S.
Fa mily wants to lease n1ce
nome wttfl at ;east 3 bearoof"' s wrtf" ga rage neeoed
•m!T'ed •ate y Ca l! Jack1e
"": 0-707· 7999
74 0·5695256

Trader lor rent 1:!K70 w1tn
1998 14x70 Clayton . 2Br .
28a. Garden tub, walk in
closet .
Bu1H m China
Cabmet
Centra l
Air
App liances
and
some
Furnitur e. also underpinning
&amp; 2 porc hes mcluded ,
$13 .900
13041576·3248
teava message 1f no answer

24 E~&lt;pand o 5300 rnantn i10
(304)675·8903

·---ti..S

Great used 16x80, 3 br/ 2btt1
2:-;6 walls. upgrade windows .
vinyl Siding Will tlelp With
delivery, Call Ka rena. 740·
385·7671.

9t62 Free Eshma:es E as~
1 an·d 2 ~ed1oo m apart- tmancmg 90 cays sarne as
ments. lurn1shed and untur· casr V1 sa Masle r Cto-c
n•shed . secunty depos1t Dr~ve· a- little sa •; e a to~
requ1re d no oets_ 740-992Thompsons A p;:o11a1C e II.
2218
Cjepatr -675-7388 Fo• sal-.
a u toma' ·~
1
bedroom
ap t re-cond1110ned
Washer•dryer hooku p 5290 v.ashers &amp; drve·s. refrtgel,
ga s ana Elec:·
re nt. depostt requtred . No tors.
ranges. a1r COfldltroners a ·J
pet s 740-441-1184
...,. t~'lger was...,e rs
W·i' .:: ·
1 bed room. stove ·and relr•g- repa~rs on ma1or b1anas n
erato•. furn•she d ut1 l1 ttes snop or at yo u· nom E~

14.22 acres, 3 Car Garage
pn SA 554 . Code 32904
f&gt;r call (740)367-7 619.

~BedroOm, 2 Bath , 2 Car
pa rage, $2500 Csrpet
~llowance Jay Dr ive,
palllpolis. Coda 52804 or
all (74()1446· 7231.

~ Bedrooin. 2 Bath , River
~iewl Access , Privafe
~at Dock in Gallipolis. 1
jacre lot. COde 90303 or
oil (740)446·0531 .

pBedroom Brick Home, 2
Ieath', 3 Car Brick.
!unattached Garage. 2
tory oulbullding . Code
)52704 "coil (740)446·
12566 .

pBedroom, 2 Bath , 2 Car

jc;l~rage , 1.9 acres on SA
141 , Code 33104 or call
740)446-7633

rooms. 3 baths, large living
roam, large dining area
open to kitchen wltn built·in
appliarices, family roo m,
kilchenene , laundry room , 2·
car '"'arane, $99,900. Call
"
•
Sn"de" (7 401367·0667 .
'
8 room Rench , lull base· 1986 Clayton 14x65, 2 bedment , 3 bedroom. 2.5 bathS, room,. 1 t /2 bath , goOd con2.5 acres, family room. cov~ dition. Ph: ( 740)4~6 -03 68
ered deck, $99,900. No land calllrom 3-Spm.
co ntract. (740)446·2196.
2002 16x80 Skyline home,
For Sale·Housa. one 11 1/4 3Br, 2Ba , with 1 acre of
acres. 3000sqft 3br, 2bh , lr, ground, In Mason WV. on
dr, tvr, lsb (304)773·5984or Ohio River, Price Reduced
(304)n3-5808
593·3702

r M~":s~lFN I

HOl'SEHOUJ

Goo

_.,.~

Tratlel
lor
rent
Ca ll
(740)441-9060 af!er 5 catl Goo-:J Used ApJ a nc~s
Reccno1tionea
ana
1740 )245-5690
G~..aranteed
Wasners
Ra rr oes
and
Drye •s
AP&lt;RniE'oi"
Aefngera1ors sOI"'\e Slart at
HlR RE:\T
S95 Ska~gs Appnarces. 76
For sale or rent· 2 bedroom
Vtn e St (7 40)4~ €-7398
1 &amp;2 br apt tn downtOI\ 1 Pt
mob tle homes starrmg at
Pleasant no pets &amp; sec de p
Mollohan Carpel 202 Cla•"
S2.70 per month . Call 740·
requ1red
HUD ac c epted Cl1ape1 Road. Porter O r~.:"·
992·2167
740-446-2200
•7 40 t4A 6-7 J44 1·.S-7·83L·

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock mode ls at old prtces.
2005 models arrMng Now
Homes.
Cola ·s
Mobile
15266U.S 50 East. Athens
Oh•o 45701 . (740)592·1972.
"Where You
Get YO ur
Money"s Wo rth-

r

electric call 8:30 to 5:00

www.orvb.com

3 br. Cedar Cape Cod 2 1/2
Ba., 2 car garage 2.67 acres
of ri\lerlront property for sale
In Mason call 304.a82-2623

Ntce 2 and 3 beo ro~.,
mobile home s tor rert
mcludes water. sewer &amp;
trash. n o pets , starMg at
5300 pe• month. n Shade
area
depos11
requ 1reo
(740)992:2167

Lars&amp;

ACREAGE

Mercerville Lots for sa le
shared entrance off St. Rt
2 18 3-13 acres. Pnone
Riverfront
properly. (740 )256· 1825 .
Manufactured home, 3·4 br..
2 baths , lr, kt. dr, laundry, .78 Private
Camp 1ng
on
acre , 24x32 finished garage, Kanawh a River wtlh boat
large lenced·to back yard, docks call (304)675-5724
picnic shelter, nice laying
prope rty in Syracuse , asking Two homesttes for sa le. Both
$87,500, Serious calls only. one acre m/1 3· 112 miles
!rom Holze1 Hosp1taL
(740)992· 7 120
620 Evergreen Ad $19 500
At 2 Greer Ad. 3BA , 2Ba . 560 Evergreen Ad ., $18.500
(740)446 -88 40
01
House. 5 112 acres land , Call
pond, barn , fenced area. al l (740)645·4513 .

•••ooiiiiiiiiiliiiiioioox•~ (3041675-7386. alte r 5 :00

3 bedroom house Rutland
Nice. quiet neighborhood.
NOT
tl ood
area!
1n
Hardwood floors, Shade
trees, Central air, Family
room,
Laundry
room ,
Storage buildings. (740 )7 42 ·
2824 .

1996
Reo man
Mirage
14x70, 3 bedroom, f bath ,
wi d li)(e new. other lurnrture .
3 yr. O'd heat pump. au •n
exce ll ent condit•on . plus
covered porch . SIS 000 .
(740 )667·3682 Of 74Q-667·
3301.

Log home, 5 acres. 3·4 bed·
room, 2 bath , huge ' ~ilchen
w/oa~ cabtnets &amp; islano
cooktop. finished basement
w/ ga_s log fireplace + central
Trailef lor sale Located at
heaVair, 30~&lt;54 heated work·
Leon WV (must be moved)
shop. $197.000. (740)2451994 Commodore . 14X60.
9169
2-bedroom. 1-bath . ul1hty·
House for sale redUced room. includes stove. retng·
539 ,000,
2b•.
20 14 erator. washer. e~&lt;tra cab1·
Je fferson Blvd . {304)67 5- nets. all underpmning. tre nt
&amp; back porctles w/awn1ng
5865 leave message
all Olock &amp; s1dewa lk steps
Excellent
Letart Falls, OH ; 3 bedroom heatpump.' AJC
$13.800
house. 1 bath. detached cond1tton.
garage , new roof, sidmg (740 )698·26 13 .
windows . carpet. &amp; kitchen .
Used double w1de . good
$65.000.00 (74()1247· 2000
condition ,
3
bdl 2bth .
Lower · Mason 2BR 2BA 2 $ 17,995, can help set -up,
Car Garage, Finished base· Call Harold, (740)385·9948

(30 4)675-q63 1
or
2 bedroom, 1bath, flat 3/4 call
acre
Newly remodele d (3041593·0719
In qallipolis Ferry,
inside
across track s from Bea le
SChool. Two nice outbuild·
ings. $49 ,500.00 (304)458·
Home Listings.
1673
Us! your home by calling
(7401446-3620
3 ·bedroom Brick, , 1/2 bath .
The Universi ty of Rio 1 acre lot. Close to tow n.
View photos/in to online
Grande announces
the Reduced Phone (304)675opening for a full lime non· 1714
Bedroom, 2 1/2 Bath,

tenure track position for a
mathematics faculty member beginning in the 2004·
2005
Academic
Year.
A8Sponsibtlilies
inclu de
teaching a wide variety of
mathematics cou rses at the
underQraduate level includ·
ing dev-elopmental courses.
Applicants should have a
strong Interest in teaching ,
be familiar with the lnstruc ·
tional uses of technolo gy. A
master's degree in mathe·
maUcs or a related field is
req uired . Position available
in Au~ust. 2004 , Salary
commensurate with educe·

Now you con hove borders and oraphlcs
~
oddedtoyourclosslfledods
Borders 53.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
S 1.00 for Iaroe

l'6111.0CI10N

C LASS A C OL NEEDED

YAHDSALE

Moving Sale: Ladders. air
compressor,
twin
bed,
dressers,
bell
cabinet
w/350+ bells, misc. tools &amp;
more. Frl &amp; Sat. June 18 &amp;
19. 1419SI.AI.588.

Ben.·
Kauff

I \IPI en \II \1
'-II 1{\ H I "

CA LL 800.652·2362

Huge yard sale out ol the
rain. Items lor sale incl ude :
Queen size bed with vanUy,
baby bed, car seats. stroller,
baby/toddler clothes, household items and more. Sal.
19 , Bam-? Spruce Street
Extens ion.

A husband, dad, grandpa
who past away 5 1/2 .
months ago.
We mi ss and Jove you more
than words can say. You are
always on our minds. You
will always be missed and
loved.

Looking for 87-91 GrandAm . call (740)992·5546

GAWl'OLIS

Happy
Happy
Happy
Happy
Happy
Father's Day Father's Day Father's Day Father's Day Father's

Brady
Huffman

Absol ute Top Dollar : U.S
Sil ver .
Gold
Cotns ,
Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold
Rings.
U.S . Currency,M .T.S . Com Shop, 15 1
Second Avenue. Galli polis
7 40-446-2842.

Auto
Mechanic/Sm all
Eng ine Mechanic. must be
Found d og, Terrier type , exper ienced Shade Tree
male , Sunday even ing . Mechamcs need not apply
(740)992·2308
1304)675·3600

r

John Causey
In loving memory

r

• NO NYC
Outside cats &amp; kittens to .Home Weekends
gtve away (must find good . $500 Sign On Bonus
homes) , male &amp; female . . 95% No touch fretgh t
(740)742·3805

Happy
Happy
Happy
Happy
Happy
Happy
Father's Day Father's Day Father's Day Father's Day Father's Day Father's Day

Love, Jach, Trey, Brit
&amp; Tessa

lns•de Sa le ; 803 S 3rd
Street, M10dleport. Thursday
17th &amp; Fnd ay 18th. 10·()()..
4 :00 Clothes S I .OO/ba9

Free to good home. your ATTENTION OWNER
pick·
Beagles ,
Labs. OPERATORS
German W irehatred Pointer,
Spnnger Spaniel Pointer Canton. Ohio reeler
(7401446·9357.
company looking for
Owner Operators to
Give away to good home, 2 earn between 125·1 SDK.
year old female Stamese,
neutered . Ca ll (740)256~ . 2 Senlement Options
1375 or (740)446-2404 .
paid weekly

Love, Ron &amp; Candy
Burkhamer

Edward
Howell

Aumpke 1s the leader In the
w11te Industry." ·
Pos itJon 111i1la senior &amp;

TOBLY

JUNE 20

Gary
Lee

Huge 4 family yard &amp; ins1de
sale , Friday &amp; Saturday,·
8 :00-? . 73a S Second
Middleport, Westerns 50c,
glass. linens . cio thes. &amp;
much more.

WAl\'fED

James
Ritchie.

Joey
Coates

Diesel Mechanic II
PM Shift

C- 1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale, Chester Township ,
Yard Sale 6/ 19 Camp
Meigs County. send leners
Conley, Mtlton Ad . 8th house
of tnterest to : The Datty
hi 8- ?
Sentmet, PO 8~»: 729· 20,
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769.

110002
1
1

Big sale- At 143 . 18th· 19th·
20th . lots of slut( come see.

All Dl•pl•y : 1.2 Noon 2
e u • • n - D•v• Prior To

Mond•v- rrld•v t'or ln-l"tlon
J:n Next D•y•a P•per

0. L.,l'.lO_fiiLp
__W_AN•I•tll_.l L,r•10-fiiLp-•W.•Al\-l•tll_.lii'!O

003 000 001 IJ! 5
001 100 200 00 4
E-CGuillln (7). DaBe~ (12). DP-Ottrol11
LOB-Oa11oit 11, Ptl!lld&amp;lpl'ul 11. 28JSmlth 2 (3), H•ggin aon P2). RoiMna (13)
HR-Inge (1), ledee (6). $8-ASanc::hez
(11), Rollins (1 3). BAbteu (14) . 54

_Vlh

{•:4

p!splay Ads

\\.'\11 1 \. I I \ ll '\ 1...

Phll•delphla

IP
5

CHARGE II!

{304) 675-1333 _

Oeeu:l~;,u-

word Acls

D•lly ln-C::olurnn: 1:00 p.m.

Detroit

.....

JUST SAY

44~~00·8~-------0~r~F~a=x~~~o~~~99==2~-2~1~5~7. . . .

3
2

Tigers 5, Phllllel 4, (11)

Knotts

~egister

Sentinel

Call Today••• {7 40) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156

IP H A ER II 50
1 9 A 4 1 4
001110
1211a1

Lieber l.S-4
Htfedla
Pnnz

t!Cribune

To Place

HAPPY
Happy
Father's Day

ister

ab r hbl

r nw

NawYortt

Mete 6, Indiana 2
Clavel•nd
ab r hbl
Lawton I! 4 1 1 0
V1zque1 ss 4 0 0 1
Hatner1b 4 0 21
VtJrtnz c 4 0 0 0
Blake3b 4 0 0 0
Ger.nrl
201 o
Blltartt 20 3 o o o
Cnspc!
3010
Ellirtonp 1000
RiWNap 0 0 0 0
AGnlllpl'1t OOa
Betncrt p o o a o
Merlol"ll 2b 1 1 0 0
Totala 31 2 5 2

0

cs-Pouoa (2).

8 5 1 , 2 5
200005
2·3 1 1 1 1 0
32·3
1 1-3
'
2
2

1

1

000 001 000 1
Arizona
100 000 14r II
E-BWill18ml (1). DP- New York 1, Arizona
1 LOB-New Yorl( e. Ar.zon1 6. 29--SFin·
ley (10) , DB•utiata (13), H1l~brand (12!
D l1on (2 ). HR-AAodriguu (16), Brito (1 )

Chicago
000 010 000 00 - 1
Florida
000 010 000 01 2
Two o!Jia when wlni'III"'Q run acored.
E-Crede (5), lowell (6) . DP--Fiorlda 1
LOB--Ch•c•go 8, Florida 1 2B- T~az {41.
Utibe (1 7), Ch01 {12} 38-WIIIiiJ (1). HAAGonzalel (8) . SB--Valen1 tn (3), LCISfiiiO
(11 ]. CS-Thomaa \'PI
H RERBBSO

l081ZB
Marte
Politte L.0·2
Flo&lt;lda

0

1

""'Yorit:

Rdmm:lc
Choi 1b
Mllrtep
0 0 0 0 AGnztzu 3 1 1 I
KMrko 1b a a o o Beokenp 1000
1000
Loa1Z8p 3000 NunezH
1 0 1 a
Burket
1000 Wolhaph
Totala 31 t II 1 Totata ,. 2 e 2
Gloadrt

0

3

t!Cribunt ~ Sentinel CLASSIFIED

LGnzlzH 3110
Slirtiekl t1 " o o a HJnDm lb A 1 1 2
F'osada c 3 o 0 0 Tracy ~ 4 000
MatSUIH J 0 0 0 Ol5onss 3010
Brrto~
4132
EW~sn2b 2 0 1 0
Leberp 3010 Sparup 200 0
Hritdla p 0 0 0 0 Zroter ph 1 o a a
Sierra pt1 t o 0 0 Ds5e!l5 p 1 0 0 0
)4 1111 II
Toll!.. 2i f 4 1 Totlla

Martins 2, WhHa Sox 1, (11)
TPereul 5 0 2 1

0

3

BWimsd2010
Jelet"SS
4 Q0 0
A.Rd•g;~ 3b 14 1 1 1
~1C
3 0 0 0

852108
120000

Meroa S,\6

--

0

1 1·3

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentlnel.com

D'bac"- 6, Yankees 1

7

Colon L,4-6

,....

Orese L3-4
51-374330
BShouse
1 1·3 0 0 0 1 3
Br«:atl
1·3 t 0 0 0
Clnc;inMll
Poppe l W.J-2
7 6 3 3 1 3
TJonas
110000
Grs..esS.27
1 0 0 0 0 0
Umpor11....-+-tome. T1m T•rnmr;ms Fofll Bruce
Froemm1ng; Second, Mike Wtnters; Third ,
HUJ'\1tr Wendelslften.
T-2:27 A--40 383 (42.271)

01D

·-

000

012
000

000

,.,

t.·"ler

"'"""'

33 511 5

Anaherm 4, Pfttsburgtl 7 28-GA.nders.on
(5). Kendall (12) • .}W1110n t1 6). HR-JW~soo
16). MackOWIIk 112). TAedman 2 {41 CSItAackOW"Ialc (3) 5---13Mson .
.
IP H RERBBSO

W~na~\000
29 4 I ~

Taxa1

ToUia

E- TReo:fman ( 1 I IJP--Prttsburg11 1 LOB-

32 3 7 3 Totah

000 100 100 2
000 102 30:~~: I
E-HtOglnSon (2). OaBell {11 )., 0P- Oetro
AFranklln
6 t-3 9 3 3 4 'I
MMyeriW,3-1 · 2-3 0 0 0 0 0
2. LOB-Diitto11B. Ph111dalph1a
Boo!on
7 26-ASanchez (6) . IAodriguez (1 4), DloweW,6-5
Ha~
2· 3 0 0 0 11
740043
Wh ite (1 8), lnge (6). Thome (15), Mich1el
avf.rd•oo s,12 1 1·3 1 o o o 2
Williamson
100000
II), ~111bertha ! (13) HFI-Mun&amp;on 18), Dinardo
Mllw~~o~kMI
1 2 0 0 0 1
CApuano
642244
Michaels (3) . SF-cGu 1Hen. DaBe ll
Cclcndo
Ktnney L.J-4
2 4 2 2 0 t
IP H AERBBSO
Coolll1·2
5 6 3 3 4 7
Adami
t 3 2 2 0 Q • Detroit
Kroon
1 0. 0 0 1 0
Umpifai-Home. Bill Hohn, FnS1. Gary Dar· M1roth L,5-4
6 6 3 3 4 3 ' Jarvis
156630
Hng; Second, M1rk Carl&amp;on; Thud, Bnan D•ngmar,
1·3 0 2' 2 2 ooonmann
232211
0 0 1 1 I 0 Jarv i ~ pitChed to 4 ba!tel'l •n ll'le 8lt1
",.".;08;··,T_
.. T.;~;.
·S.;,5·,•_-_1.:_9.05
...:,7_:t_41....900
.::;J_.
Colyer
, 2-3 I 0 0 1 0
~
Levine
WP-Cook
Ph lilies 6, Tlgera 2
Phllodolpn•
Ump1r e&amp;-Home, Ed Montague: Fi,.l, Lance
:....:=:::::~c..:.;,!f'.,.::'illa;,.::me_;~~~~ l SMyers W.S-3
7 4 2 1 1 5
Barksdale. Second. Jerry MeaJs: Third. Paul
1 1 Phlla
Schrieber T-3·16. A--40.068 (50 4491
Worrell
1
2 0 0 0 0
Detroit
8Waljflllf
1 \ 0 0 0 1
ab r hbl
lib r hbl
Colye1 prtched to 1 batter ll'l t'1e 7tf'l
ASI'ICr'IHf 4 0 1 0 f1olllns ss 4 1 0 0 Ump1re1-Hom8. LAM') Young F11st, Malt Hot- Plra1ea 5, Angels 2
Hggnsnrf 3 1 2 0 Planco ~b 3 1 0 a
Plttaburth
lowell; Second, Mark Wegner; Third. Rob Anaheim
IRdrozc 4 01 o Thome 1b 1 2 t 0
lb I hbi
lb rhbl
Drake T-2 31 A-44,551 (43,500).
WhrteN
4 010 BurreHM 30\1
F9g•ns 3b 4 o 0 0 Kendallc 3 0 1 0
CGillen ss 3 0 0 I DeBell 3b 2 t o 1
Al&lt;.ndy2b 4 010 JWolsnss A 1 2 1
Rods 4, Rangers 3
CPena 10 3 o 0 0 Mchelsf1 31 3 4
VGreror1 4 000 Wardrl
4020
ln1Jeph
1010 Lbr1t1~1 c 4 0 t 0
Cincinnati
Taxa I
GArodsn cl 4 2 3 0 CWilsnN 4 0 0 0
Munson 30 3 1 I t Glnville cl 4 0 1 0
ab r tlbi
eb r nbi
JG1II&amp;n I! 4 0 1 1 Mokwk 3tl 3 1 2 1
4 I 1 1
levtnep 0000 BMyers p 2 0 0 0 MYongss 4 0 0 0 Free12b
Eflitad 1b 4 a 1 1 Stmon 1b 4 a 0 0
Monroe ph 1 0 0 0 ledeeph 100 0 Blalock 3o A 1 2 2 Lark•n ss 2 1 1 1 JMolnac 2000 Stynes 3b ,0 o a o
ASrano 2b .: o a o Casey \b 3 0 .. 1
Infante 2b 4 0 0 a Worrellp 0000
DVnonph 1 0 0 0 Hll12b
4110
1 000
T~eoratb .: 1 1 1
Gt1 Jr cf
Marothp 2 0 0 0 Byrdph
3 0 0 t
Amzgass 2 0 0 0 TRdmncf 4 2 3 3
NortooJb 1000
Dllucct f1 3 0 0 0 Dunn It
3 0 0 0 Qul!lfan Jb 1 0 0 0 Benson p 2 o a ·o
EYong l!
4010 LaRue c 4 0 0 0
. TDta11 33 2 1 2 Totala 28 6 7 6
Colonp
2000 ANunaz 2b 1 0 0 0
Phlladelpt111

Salmon ph 1 0 1 0
Totals 33 2 1 2

JCiari.rt 3000
Hmrnel 3b 4 1 3 0
Poppelp 1000
J&amp;Cruzpn 101 0
Flopez or o 1 o a
TJone$p 0000

Friday, June 18, 2004

1U \I \I'

1nc luded. 5400 month oJus
Useo Furmture Store 13 :
depos11 . (74.01~ 45 - 5859
B,Jiav•lle P1.c;e
Dressers
couctles . mattresses. rec l•r&gt;·
2 bedroom apt warer
ers . grave monuments 2000
sewer trash pa1d . $400 plus
Pontoon boar
1 7~0!4~6 deposll. no pets 740-3574 782 Gall1pohs Oh HRS
7746. 740-367-7015. 740·
11·3 M -F 2-1,.-32 D;:Jij; B ~")
3.'38-0173
for rent
2 bedroom JUSt past Holzer
S425 month Call (740)441·
t184 .
Anract1ve . one bedroom apt
2nd floor . corn er Second
and
P1ne
No
pets .
tCQu 1red
Refer ences
Secunly depos1t. 5300 ;:oer
month. water tncluded Call
(740)446-4425 or 1740)446·
3936
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES , 52 WestwoM
Dnve from $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; fT'O\IIes Call
740-4 46-2568
Equal
Hous1 ng Opportun1ty.

2 bedroom. Bu!avlile P1ke
Water &amp; trash paid. No pets. Grac •ous hv1ng. 1 and 2 bed·
$350 depos11. $350 month room apartments at Vtll age
Manor
and
A1 vers•de
(7401388·1100.
Apa rtments 1n M iddleport
2 Small , 2 bedroom homes From $295-$444 . Call 740tn Middl eport, k1tchen fu r· 992·5064 . Equa l HOUSing
$400.00
plus Opportuntl1es .
mshed.
deposit. Pt e ~ up renral appltcations at Dairy Queen o• New 1 bedroom apt PhOne
(740)446-37 36.
Vaugnn ·s
grocery

'"

House for Rent 3br. with
garage in country S3501mo
reni+Depostl +reference no
pets (3041882·2666
Ltke country living 3 · bed·
room. 2 5 bath, lull walkout
basement. laundry room .
and mudroom, ·rurntslted . 12
miles south of town on 775
Hannan
Trace.
and
(740)256·8122.

1"211

MOBILE HoME&gt;

SA 1 S-4 Bdrm house. 1
batn. garage. bsmt Yo u pay
all ulllit1eS R1ver access
$650/mo + 5650 sec . dep.
1126 2nd Ave· ! Bdrm
house. gas nt. /JJC , garage ,
you pay all utilt!Jes S4 75/mo
... $475/sec . dep.
729 2nd Ave .· (3'1 1 bedroom
stur:t•o apts you pay elect
$250·$300/mo Sec . dep
requi red
on
all
Ca ll
(740)A46 ·3644 for applies·
ttons

mNRl"NT

Tw1n Rivers Tower •s ac cept·
mg appllca!JOns for wattui g
2 bedroom trailer , $325 per
IISI for Hud-subs1zed 1- br.
de post!.
plus
month
apartment. call 675·6679
(304 1264·8643.
EHO
3 bedroom , 2 bath. large
C.ll
Ltsa
yard,
$450.
(740)256·9121 .

Upsta1rs furntsMd apt 3
rooms &amp; bath Clean, no
pets. References &amp; depoSit
Bea utiful river v1ew 1deal for reQutred (7 40)446·1519.
one or two people. No pets ,
SPACE
references (740)441·0181
In Mtdd!&amp;pOrt. 2 bedroom ,
mcbtle home $375 00 plus
depoSit. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths . CI A , $425.00 plus
deposit No ms1de pets
(7401992·3194

~ 740)245-0135

r

Buy
or
sell
R•verme
Ant1ques 1 124 Ea st Ma;"
on SA 12J E· Pomeroy ; ..;u.
992-252€
Russ MOO'E'
owner

' ~ :\ll'tU.t . I'&gt;Hll 'S
'IEHnLI"ltSI :
2
10000
BT U A ·
Cof"'dlt oners
Casemer-~
style w1 nct'ows both we·~
well. 1· 3yr o•d 5150 00 1-5
yr old $1 00 .00 or S225 00
for both (7401949-2010

Beautiful unturnisl'led . one
bedroom apt. overlook1ng Beauty Shop Equtpment
Ctty
Pa rk.
reterences $400. cOmplete slat,cfl
requ.1red , 10 pets. secunty dryer &amp; 2 recep110n ch a1rs
deposit. $400 per month Ro land Elect nc P1a1 G 5yrs
Call
(74 0)4 46-2325
or ala $1 500
Snare Drum &amp; Stand 58-)
(7 40)446 -4425.
1304)675·7285

CONVENIENTLY LOCATEO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apa'rtmen ts
HOUSI'S
and/or small houses FOR
mN!bJ\T
RENT Call (740)44 1-1 111
for
appltca'IIOn &amp; inlormatt.on
1 bedroom house located on
Gallipolis
Ave
,
3•d
For
rent
1
Bedroom
5250/month plus deposit.
Apa
rtment
•n
Po1111
Pleasa nt.
utJi tties .
R en ter
pays
2 nd floor Call (304)675·
(740)256-6661.
2144 or ~ 30 4)675-3653

Mtddleport .

----

Washe t &amp; electriC Clrve•
good conOit•on $300 Ca ll

t

SCI

mR R£:\'T

Footage

tor
rent
2800 sq It
Owner may remodel to swt
1304)6 75·4260 (304 1675·
4975
Appro~&lt; t mately

Craftsm an

nd 1ng
lawn
rrower I 7llp, 42 Inch cut
hardly
used
$599 00
1304 )576·3364

Cl•b Cadet 1620 4J• n cut
Autumattc . good co ndill OI J
S8oo oo (304)675- 232 9
Cub Cadet Garden Trac tor
Sertes
3185,
Etghtee n
Horsepower b1a nd new
eng 1na
($ 1.475)
ru!l
hydraulics. power steenng.
54 tnch rnowtryg deck . C&lt;~t
"0" 3-pomt h1tcr.-Fron1 H1tCh
48" front Blade-Hvdrauhc htt
and angle 1lu1d we1gnte::J
rear 11res. Front For'( Lilt
(real back saver ) 60J. toteti
hours on tractor- 0 nours en
eng 1n e $4 200 cost o•er
57 000 new 1304)675·8610
FOR RENT· 24'x32 . 3 stall
Pole Barr Private R: ..
5200 per month (740)-l4t
4782 Ga!l •polis.
JET
AE RATION MOTORS
Repa1red , New &amp; Rebu•lt lr"~
Stock Ca ll Ron Evans. 1800·537 -9 528
NEW

AN 0 USED STEEl
Steel Bea ms Ptpe Reber
For
Concrete
Anglco
ChaM€1. Flat Bar, STA('
G1attng
For
Dra 111s
Dr1veways &amp; Wa kweys L&amp;L
Scrap Meta ls Open Monda\
Tuc.s day. Wednesday
&amp;
Fna ay. 8am-4 30om Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Su(1d8)1 (740)446 -7300
Pole Ba rn 30J~;50KI0 on 'y
$5.295; mclucJes pamtea
m etal. plans hov. to build
book Fhae r free delivery
{937)559·834 l
used carpet &amp; pact 13~e1 8
blue . 8K13 green. 9x11
peach_ 7x 11 bh.;e excelle qt
cond•lton ,
$200 al•.
(74019 85· 4264

�'

Friday, June 18, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 18, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysenti nel.com

ALLEY OOP

BINGO
June 19 at 6:30 pm

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

American Legion Middleport
Coverall Bingo in 46 numbers
wins $1,000.00
150 people Bingo in 46 numbers

No
• Q6 3

pays $2,000.00

IF YOU RENT

Pomtro)' Eagles
BINGO 2171

What would you lose if there was a fire?

Even· Thursdav
&amp;. Sunday •
Doors Open 4:30

Crank~ up Tipboard $7,500.00

Starburst $i .550.00

Eagles #2171
Presents
"High Country"
Friday 6/18 only
8-12 pm

Door Prize $750.00

For

Every Paid Bowler will receive
1 FREE slice of Pizza for every

3 games

paid.

a Free Quote or Appointment
Coli:

304-773-5300

THE
EMPTY NEST

every month

June 24, Middleport Am . Legion
. $20

drawing 992-4055 for info

Jutt o« St. Rt. 1

Specializing In Poured Concrete

!f""'"'''in·-~e-"f'pointmt~llt
}fmta R.Amr St•• O..tr

F...

~rttian

.\ll\1 ... 1111"

on his 82nd
:~irthday June 19th

FARM

Tractor par1s &amp; service. specializing
.m
Massey
Fe.rguson , Ford. and
Belarus. 740 696-()358

a 6etter pface:
!1'-{p more pain.

~

1-8
tt~rn
CS•r'tnJ~'f!

1 112 year old white laying
hens lor sale, 50~ each,
(740)985-3956

'Wife-%ra,
cfzi.Mren,
(jranddtiftfnn,
(jreat (jrarnfcliiftfnn

I

H~

I\ I Ill'\

10

FlO

A

r.--~A·I!I'OS~.,....·_,.~I• ~-~FOR-IJIOS·SAI.E·-""""~

actual

miles.

~

·,

'

'-

•

1998 Honda Aecon 250
good · condition, S2,500.
(740)441-7967.

1999 Ya'maha Big Bear 350.
4x4, excellent condition.
Asking $2,500. (740)446·
4473 aher 5,00pm.

FOR SALE

.•

:.:.:...:.·___

Pit Bull pupplas 1or sala. 6
weeks old, parenls on premlses. (740)379-9079.
1 -

'pomerarilan puppies Toys
·AKC, CKC. Vet check&amp;d.
Blacks and Sables, $400.
'(740)643-Q171 ,

great,
$2,500
OBO.
17401256-9031 or (740)256·
1233.
-------1994 Lincoln Town Car,
Execuuve Series. New
brakes, new tires, good con·
dillon .
$5 ,000 .
Call
(740)446·3249,

Windows,
Vant
Visors
(304 )675 -5445
s
89 -10 Blazer, good cond.
4.3 motor, nice 2door red.
ee Taurus SW, good cond .
4cyl. Sspd. $300 9j04)675-

~8ii90f-3-~~--~

"I)£
'

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5232

~======~ L=======~

r

ll!r
~

M010R HOMES

r

RB
Trueking
•

•

Syracuse, OH

Call for Daily Specials

CALLI"
- N ORD'Rn
~ ~

L'
Jmestone
Sand

•
0

W~LCOM~

1995 Fleetwood Cheyenne
pop-up camper, slaeps 6·8.
Asking
$2 ,500.
Call
(740)388·8188.

....- -

2000 Chevy Tahoe Z-71. ~
IMPROVEMENTS
Fully loaded, excellent conBASEMENT
dilion, leather interior. Call
WATERPROOFING
(740)446-£324 or (740)446Unconditional llletlme guar4167 .
antee. Local references furnished . Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

:! ·

Ag Lime

'

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on ·
S.turday, June 19,
2004, at 10: 00 a.m ., a
.public sale will be
'held at 211 W Second
'st, Pomeroy, Ohto. The

45771
740-949-2217

•s·x:to·
F' ;t4,]0•It3o• .. ,
Hours

7:00AM ·8:00PM
1114/ 1 mo pd

Big Bend Antique
and Furniture
, Restoration

Refinish, Repair,
Restore
Keith Battey
740 992-t956

·

Rest'dentl'a! &amp;

IJ ~OOLINC

u

"

M anuf actured H ousmg
·
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen...

·•

&amp;

204 Condor Street

yr Warrantl·es

,.. ~t~
· · -~
-,1':.. ··.:· • ~..:.~..,~"·''

• Huge Inventory
~- • -'-~' ~'"'· , '
• Vanguard Ven!le.ss Fireplaces"'- ~~-~~-~- .

Gbson .

r._'R_P._'PII_nl

tl)'J '~''· · ·

,,,_,~

-..---

.... IIEIIM.

Gallipolis, OH WV010212
~,.._ _,:4:.:::4:li6::.-.9;::4:..1;.::6~r-I~-;:;8~0~0~-8~7~2,::·5::,:9::,6~7--....J

Pomeroy. Ohio

Law11 a11d Garden Equipme111 is our
busi11ess, 1wt our .'i ideli11e..
Manning K. Roush
Owner
0 en Mon-Frl9·5 Sat. 9·12

i

~
~

l.lllc.,n.--

1
~

•
..........~~~~LA.:
THE BORN LOSER
P:

992-2975 .

YA JEST
NEVER KNOW
WHO YO'RE
A-VOTIN' FER !!

_____ , j

Snapper

.

'"l

I"'

M.Y :)\IX..K. I"'1/DTMEH\:) 1&gt;-RE.
LOS\ 1% ~'i, K&gt; Ml..f. ~,____.
M'i COMJ.\ODiiY N-ID

M"'D

1--if-\t:Rf.

~YOU

PU\111'¥&gt;

'iWR MO~Y. 1\-\E:£
(AI..'&lt;':&gt;, \1-\0R.\'\1\PI'L£?

1"'\/(~\M(t-i\:)f

SUE's REENHOUSE
Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, and azaleas.

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,

•

FOI'- MR?

MUST BE
MRS . GOD·
FREY'
~

TFN

BISSELL
BUILDERS me.

New Homes • Vinyl

1

Siding • New Garagc!i
• Replacement

;$Ia ~,

RockY ••RJ"
.Hupp

Window s • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

IMPORTS

FREE ESTIMATES

PEANUTS

PROBABLY COULDN'T
STAND CRITICISM, Elil-lER ..

BEETI-IOVEN NEVER WON
TI-lE FRENCII OPEN, WIMBLEDON,
OR TilE STAt-ILE'( CUP...

..--1'

-~

¢~

Athena

740·992·7599

MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

TRI ~ STATE

Owner: Jeff Stethem
Office:

(740) 99l-l804 Cell: (740) 517·6883

POWER WASHING .

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

·

LAWN

RE DIVISION

(Commercial and Residential)
Mowin~ Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aer.!ltion, Fertilization ·
Spraymg of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small '
landscapin jobs such as planting and mulching.

FREE ESnM rES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.

HOWARDL.
WRITESfl
*ROOFING
*HbME
. MAINTENANCE
dEAMlESS
.GOnER

Ripley, WV 25271

.1"800-822-0417

BETIY
JOHN, WE CAt-iT
~W(ct.e

pOP-X!

l KNOW
HeW '{oU
FEEL, A~E.x

-v-

..F'?ii

"W.Y's # I Chevy. Pontiac, Buick, Olds

&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

Bur tTSTI!E BEST

WAY,, AT L£ASI iN
SOM'C. SENSE HE:
'IJI~L LIV~ oN

""'t' ~§\

GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction
· Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions ,
Garage$, Pole

I'M NOT SHOWI~

NORTHUP DODGE

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-446-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
800-446-0842

MY M~E..[J-'=~~

I

Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall

IJU~INESS
' .
•
on this,.•• lor os lowv ••

· S25.lltl , . , moat~~~

&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742·341

HCS.INC.
New Homes • New

Salisbury Township
Trustee&amp; will hold 1
public meeting on the
budget for year 2005
on the 7th day of July,
2004 at the Township
Hall,
Rocksprings,
Ohio at 6 :30 p.m .
Public is welcome.
(6) 18

1993 1200custom sportster,
13,000 miles. $8,500 invested waniS $5.000. ask 1or
Josl'l, 740-208-8401 or
67_ _ __
:17_4_0 ):..9_92_·7_4.:.
1993 Honda Goldwing S.E.
with matching Escapade
Tra1ler 39,000 miles Call
(3040675-3564

The
' '
Daily
Sentinel

Garages • Pole
Barns • Roofing
• Room Additions
• Remodeling
• Vinyl Siding
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

740·949·1606
1 mo

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodel ing
• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooll[lg &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Deck1
We do It all except
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Local E11perlence

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

I.

Dbl.
Pass

2.

3t

Pass

Pass

I

t

~\-lf..i TflE 1\ECK ,, L~·~
~~~\.. "ffi'C:

~,_...

A.stroGraph
-'Birthday:

Saturday, June 19, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Although the year ahead will be full of
unpredictable happenings, you'll flow with
the lide nicely. In tact, chances are you'll
find ways to take advantage of each and
every event to better your lot in lite.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) 1 Bargains
may abound at this time, so lake the family shopping lod;iy for all those liltle items
that are likely to be on sale. You 'll save a
bundle and they 'll no longer grumble.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Today may
be a good time to relire from the· outside
world and all at its concerns in order to
g1ve yourself an emotional rest . Have a
pleasant lime relaxing al · home with just
the family about.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22)- You may not fee l
much like socializing today and that's OK,
but if you have a need to sort out events ,
find a good lriend wllh whom you can talk
th1ngs over. It'll make you feel better
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - Tned and
I rue pals thai fit like an old shoe· are the
ones who'll enjoy you the most today, so
don't attempt to· knock yourself out trying
to please or entertain peopie with whom
you haVe little in common.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Establish
meaningful objectives today that mean a
lot lo you personally and you 'll be able to
accomplish more lhan usual. When you
like what you're doing , tirhe seems to fly
by.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -Get away
from lhe daily routine today and do somethmg you enjoy. such as getting in touch
with friends you haven't talked to for some
ti me and gelling caught up on all the lateSt
happenings:
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-DeC. 21) - Oon·t
be surprised if you find yourself wanting an
emotional experience today. For example.
you might be drawn to people who have an
intense et1ect on you just so you can leal
lhe passion.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - Tl'le
spotlight will be centered today on your
most personal relationships, but lh1s ,is
because you 're the one who'll be focusing
it on them. Make sure you show off their
best, nol their wo rst.
AOUARIL)S (Jan· 20-Feb. 19) - Spending
ti me on a labor of love will do ml)&lt;;h for
your emolional state today. Its calm1ng
eflects will help your nerves and boost
your optimism .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Your pleas·
ani, get-along-with-everybody nature is
your grealest asset today and you'll find
plenty ql ways to express thiS wonderlul
quality witl'l all those you encounter at th1s
t1me .
ARIES (March 21·April19) ·Spend some
time with those who are near and dear to
you. The most preciou s gift you can give lo
your loved ones is being there lor them
wh!3n they need you.
TAURUS {April 20-May 20) -You're likely
to be more proficient wllh mental tasks
tOday rather tl'lan pl'lyslcal ones, so leave
lhe mending of fef1C8B until another 'time
when your muscles wantlo be exercised.

. AH! YOU

Morning Star Road· C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

1·740·949·2115

East

O

•

BIG NATE

Open 7 days a week!

.

North

Croll8word

Puzzle

41 Woll·veratd
(2Wdl,)

42 Jolta with

1 Smart
5 Fat chancel
8 -chi
ch'uon
. 11 Wlllpaper,
etc.
t3 Spacewolk,
to NASA
14 Alrdvortc
snock
15 Look happy
16 MLK title
17 Wood ash
product
t8 Units of
resistance
20 Famed
statuette
22 Divided
country
24 I, lor
WoHgang
25 Webeddr.
26 Quiz
28 Throat·

43 Well- known
uncle
45 Feint
47 Skewers
50 Short note
51 Jowly dog
52 Unlv. do¥80
54 Kovoca or
Pyle
58 Gl address
59 Aurora, to
Socrates
60 Sly looks
61 A* IIJI1I*lg
19 Upper limit
62 Born as
63 Donee move 21 Bandleeder
Artie22 Tiny shrimp
DOWN
23 Any Chuck
Berry tune
1 OJ'a supply
24 Get better
2 Finish a
25 Big Dipper
dress
3 Here,
bear
27 Right away
In Cannes
clearing
4 Use crayons 29 Zen poem
30 Fisher or
5 Thot girl's
sound
32 Eliminate
6 Gladiator's
Murphy
33 Sibilate
hello
31 Beowulf's
34 Ford a river 7 Widespread
drink
35 Lose one's
36 Furtive
damage
balance
8 Soft.mineral
whisper
37 AduH filly
9 Ms. Seton
38 Glossy paint
39 Mont.
tO Llvy'a road 44 Ski resort
12 ,Fix,
neighbor
46 Skirt panels
40 Pub brews
as a pump ·. 47 Oitcti9E6tMd

48 lmmoture butterfly
49 Con.Silo.. lilly .
50 Depl. store
Inventory
53 Work the ;
soil
;
55 Make Iller
taxao
•
56 Fury
57 Psychic
power

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cl!lebfito,· C1pre1 crwro9rams are "reated 11om QootatKJns ~~lam:: us people. pasl all;ll)fll'S9nt
E&amp;eh letter 1
n!he CIPiler slands fa

anothel
Today's clue· F equals J

"VGOUV
AI

OUS

GPSAU

XSNXDS

GUOADSUV

000-WUSSI

FSDDL

TPN

VAG

MSROIMAIW

KSOIV ."

~AIISOU

WUSW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'No dancer can walc h Fred Astaire and not koow

that we all should nave been in another business." - Mikhail Baryshnikov

0

•

ALL ON SALE NOW!!

98
64 Come £ee
740• 5•]5
'new
~::::::;;;~:;;;~;::;cu;m;;m;a;t;ln:Q:n:u:!::;

BENNETT'S

SYSTEM
II

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Racine, Ohio

Set A Sun 7em-4pm
OUt 1

HEA.TINC

TH'
DANG

~~__,

949-1405

Public Notice
Public Notice

BARNEY

Jones

*frealsllmlllh ·

: t991
PONTIAC
'GRANDAM
: IG2NG 14U7MC642812
•1990
CHEVY
:BERETTA
•IGIW114T9LY120223
" THE
HOME
;NATIONAL
BANK
:RESERVES
THE
:RIGHT TO REJECT
;6NY AND ALL BIDS.
' FOR AN APPOINT:MENT TO SEE, CALL
•11411-2210, ASK FOR
' SHEILA.
Sincerely,
Sheila Buchanan
Home National Bank.
-IIJ6,17,18

••

Kelly K.

GRAVELY TRACTOR

29670 Bashan Road

TUIS • Fr1 61m·8pm

'0

I

Hill's Self
Storage

Mpndly tlm·lpm

I .5Free10Estimates

,
•
Salem
camper,
1993 29
quean sz. bed, microwave,
etc .. $4500, (74.0)992·624:8

WV 26164

Gravely

New Hours

•
0 Dirt
•

· Way ( afe
Rtver
740·992·2507

HAULING·.

1965 Bayriner, 21 ft. new

Private
Cam~lng
on
Kanawha
River
with
boat
1993 Chevy S-10 Blazet, 4
WD, Fully Loaded, Tow F»kg docks call (304)675·5724
Sl I~\ II I ...,
Good Condition. Asking
$2,600. Call aher 5pm lrlir--~~
(740)446-2398.
r1o
HoME
THE
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK
WILL AUCTION THE
FOLLOWING ITEM
ON SATURDAY Juno
19, 2004, AT 10:00
A.M. AT THE BANK'.S
PARKING LOT:
1999
PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX
IG2WP12K9XF349907
1997
C H E V Y
CAVALIER
IGIJC1249V7235361
l993
CHEVY SIO
IGCCS14ZXPOIS1690
)993
C H E V Y
LUMINA
2G1WL54TST1111617

33795 Hiland Rd.

•

:(7i1141io0):.;446~-4;.7,;;;82;.._~~
CAMPERS &amp;

Looking for a
non profit
organization to
work one day of
admission gates
at the 2004
Meigs County
Fair. Please Call
740-985-4159.

Seff-Storage

I

1987 24
ft. Bayriner
Sunbridge 350.
OMC.
Asking 7 ,895. (740)4466861 .
- - - - - -- 1994 Bass tracker, tadpole,
14 FT, wlfish finder, 8 Hp
Mercury, also trolling motor,
w/trailer &amp; spare tire. usUd
very linle $2 ,900 (304) 6751731
-''-'------2000 Odyssey 21' rv
~nloon
boat, 60 H.P. Mercury, new
condition. Lots ol extras.

..

,

(304) 273-5321

Ronnie Jones

'It®~~
High&amp; Dry

shape
and new trailer for S10.{ 740)446·8189.

305. goOd condition. Aeacty
for the watar, must sari.
$3,000.(740)446-8507.

ANI&gt; NOvl Tt4~
"COMMANI&gt;" ICH
ISN'T viO~~ING.

WIF

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins.

For Sale: 2000 YamQI'la
Breeze 125- Very good

~

Dr.

West

Do you trust your partner's plays? If he
drops the eight belo're the three {or the
three before the eight). would you not1ce
and draw the appropriate conclusion?
Could yoU trust that deduction? If so.
everyone must dislike playing agains1
you.
Today's deal. played in four spades at a
team tournament m Sydney, 'Australia , is
·instructive in this area.
West's double was negative, showing
lour hearts and six-plus points (or live or
six hearts in a hand too weak lor -a- two·
heart resp onse) .
At the first table. the defense followed the
logical route. East won the first. Irick w1th
h!s diamond king , cashed the heart ace,
and continued w1th a second heart. West
won with the king and gave his pa.r1ner a
heart ruff - one down.
At the other table, the play starled similarly, e)(cept lhat the declarer, Bruce Neill .
at trick two, dropped lhe heart jack under
East's ace, then played the queen on
East's heart _continualion.
Wesl assumed thai South had started
w1th the doubleton queen-Jack. So, he
shifted to the club two. South fan that to
/'lis queen . drew trumps ending in hand.
took another club finesse, and piiChed
his heart e1ght on dummy's club ace plus 620. '
Should West have seen through the
ruse? Yes. II East had begun with the A6-3 of hearts, he probably would have
shifted to a low heart al trick two. But
even if he did cash the heart ace, he
would have continued with the eight, not
1he two: high-low with a remaining doubletOft
Howi:JVer, although West should not have
been fooled. one must admire South's
clever deceptive play.

1n M~MO~Y.

Washington Street

Ravenswood,

Q5

Trust your partner;
watch his spots

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UNSC RAMB lE

ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS ·s -t?-o'

· Notify- Hound- Index - Trudge - ENDING
"'Nhy are you re l urn ing this novel?" the clerk asked the ·
elde rly woman. ~· secatJ se , young man,· the e lderty woman
huffed , "I d1dn ' t like the ENDING'"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
OH, I CAO
JIMHEAQ

111M!

Cll'
I'

(

I

•

t '•

�Friday. June 18.

2004

Learning to fly, Cl

·qg blunder almost cost Jo lon· Race : Metjer 300 Presented Race: O'Reilly 200
Where: M1ch1gan InternatiOn- son the race. Prtor to the · by Oreo
Where: Memphis Motor·
al Speedway. Brooklyn 12.0 •ace. drtvers had been 1n· Where• Kentucky Speedwi!y. sports Park (. 75 mi .), 200
mi.). 200 'aps/ 400 m1ies
structed that the p1ts would Sparta (1.5 m1 .1. 200 laps/ 150 miles.
When: June 20. 1 p.m.
be open under cautton on the laps; 300 miles .
When Saturday, June 19. 3
Last year's winner: Kurt
Bu sc h

Qualifying record• Dale Earn
hardt Jr.. Chevrolet. 191.:49
mph, Aug. 18. 2000
Race Record: Date Jarrett,
Ford . 173.997 mpn, Juoe 13.
.1999
Last week: It wasn't enough
,.,

'

r 1&gt;ln an unprecedented develop-

. ment, NASCAR prestdent Mike

('·.Helton vlslte~fthe media center ·
:,, !Wice duri"'!,OOO weekend to ad' . mit 'mistakes and underscore
:,~~·,thei·gQverning body's determina·'': ~o~ to !letter. Helton's com. ments re"'! hollow after another
•• race marred by serious mis·
takes. ·
· .1&gt; NASCAR hasn' faced this level
of c.ritlclsm ~ and a lot of it is
from within the. garage area 1• '•l;tilce lhe aftermath of Dale
,-,;·, £ainhardt's death. The fans are
;·· ob~iously up In arms, as wit·
"'' nessed by another episode of
debris being thrown on the track
• as a race ended under caution.
. "Rlr the second week in a row,
Dale Earnhardt Jr. made the
most of an unspectacular per·
formance by fini shing safely in
· · !he top 10. That knack is a
marl&lt; of champions, but the sys·
tern has changed and time will
tell how far that ability will take
him once the lQ.race playoff be·
gins.
"'One development unquestion·
ablY tied to the new system is
. the fact that many teams are al·
: . ready testing and prepanng for
the playoff, wh1ch IS st1il. months
• away.
:.. Johnson and crew chie f Chad

that J1m m1e Jonnson merely
ou tra n everyone. He also
overcame the adversity of

NASCAR offte1ais betng un
able to enforce toe rules they
had described in the pre race
dnvers' meet1ng. An offrc.at-

leader's sf' con d tnp around

When : Saturday. June 19.

p.m.

the track after the yellow flag
v.a,ed. Johnson wa s the
leader on lap 156 when ·o1i
on the tra ck" caused a
speed stoppage. In the p1ts.
an offiCial ass1gned personal·
ly to the team told Johnson's
crew ch1ef the pits weren t
open. Othe r drtve rs pitted
wh1 ie Joh nson rema1ned on
the track and uit1mately fe ll
to mnth place after p11ttng lat
er. But Johnson overcame

7 30 p.m
Last year's winner: Bobby
Hamrlton Jr.
.
Qualifying record: Stacy
Compton.
Chevrolet.
176.384 mph. June 13.
2003.
Race record • Bobby Ham il:
ton Jr., Ford. 136.123 mph,
June 14,2003.
L~st week: Jason Leffler
won the race at Nashville Su·
perspeedway in Gladeville.

Last year's winner: Ted Mus·
grave
Qualifying record : Greg Btl.'
fie. Ford. · 120 .1-39 mph.
1999.
Race record : Travts Kvapil.
Chevrolet. 89.065 mph, June
22 . 2002. ·
Last week: Dennis Setzer, in
a Chevrolet, won the race at
Texas Motor Speedway in
Justin.

the error because m the end .
h1s car was JUSt that strong.

Tenn.

_• Knaus were ch.aritable in victory

io that they did not strenuously
• criticize NASCAR officials for an
·· error that could have cost John·
son the race . By thetr own ad~
miss.lon. though, had Johns on
• · not won, their fury would not
have subsided.
"'Helton is being placed 1n the
. , position of repeatedly havtng to
:.: defend the tndefens1bie. He de~
serves credit for answer1ng

"

· : . 'every question, but the p1oblern
: ~ is not the way he is handi1ng
, criticism. The problem IS the
~· mistakes themselves.
~... NASCAR lost a lege ndary figure
:; when Ha ll of Fame drtver and ·
· mechanic Ralph Moody died on
· June· 9. Most fans will always
: connect Moody's name with one~
· tlme business partner John HOI~
· , man. Holman ant1 Moody ran
: • Ford's NASCAR program tor
·: •many years and con .11buted
t&lt;"'
, ,; mightily to blue-oval success in
•-•.~ ~many forms of auto racing.
~·'::

\
Ill •. ·,.

'

'

''

WH&lt;S-'S·H&lt;)'l' ........... •

''

.11;~0 WHO'S· ~OT ~

;Jt.:·Wbo'a hot? Jimmie Johnson

;,~;;hSs nnlshed fourth or better In
~r , six of !he past seven races ....
1
~A

Pl!!e·~rnhardt Jr. is the only cur·

~~;.:ril01driver with four straight top-

,·1 1D:finishes .... Bobby Labonte
.: ·

top-5 finishes in his
races and five top-10s
his·past seven races. He's
';~';.i11fllped from 12th to sixth in the
]:;~~;,;:.~race during that span.
Ji
npt? Mark Martin left
1; ~~t;~o dejected after engine
1,,:!
re legated hirn t9 36th
· arid blunted the tl10menoi his Ociver victory.... Me.
cost Tony Stew. position (he fell from
fifth) in the points ·

NEXTEL CUP SERIES, No.

19 DODGE

DHL400
June 20

Ohio \'allc·~ Puhli,hin~; ('o.

l'nmero~ • 'liddleport • (;a!lipulis • Jum· :w. :.wcq

Bv MtLLisstA RussELL
MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

from the Gallia County Sheriffs
Office. searched for nearlv two hour'
for the teenager. Brud t;uelo\'e oi'
RIO GRANDE - Law enforce· 508 Porter Road. Bidwell.
Due to an anonymous tip. Truelo'e
ment officer' ftom Gallia and
Jack son countie s swar med Rio wa,s later apprehended in a room at
Grande just after noon Friday lo the Blue Fountain Motel in Gallipolis.
search for a mi ssing 15·year-old boy . Deputies were forced Lo make entry
believed to be involved in a serie&gt; of into th e motel room by busting down
th e door. Truelm·e wa' remowd
car thefh in the area .
The Gallia and Jackson co untv without incident. depucics said.
The search began when Truelove
sheriff's office. Ohio State Highway
Patrol. the Rio Grande Poli ce fled from what authoritic' believed to
Department. ;w wel l as an air uni t be a vehicle he had s!Dien minute'

• In the Open. See
Page 86
• NASCAR Weekend .
See Page 85 .
• Bob Knight the on ly
choice for Ohio State.
See Page 81
• Popular Casey also
mighty with the bat. See
Page 81

Kevin
Harvlck

u

s

RIO GRANDE - There
was a little bit of something
for everyone at the Celtic
Folk FestiYal, held Saturdav
at the Univer&lt;&gt;i ty of Ri c&gt;
Grande.
At the admission table sat
Bob Ford, a tr~vcling folk
si nge r. who sang Celtic
fav ori tes such as "Danny
Boy" and others. Sharon
Hughes. who stopped to listen to him si ng. said she h~d
seen him several times not
only at the Celtic Festival.
but also at th e Ohio
Renaissance Festival.
"He lias strch a true Irish
o,pirit and an exce llenl
voice." said Hughes .
Also providing authenlic
Celt ic music to set the mood
was the Capital City Pipes
and Drums. Scottish accordioni st and vocalist Bobby
Murray drew several crowds
wi th his original music and
deep singing voice.
" I started playing as a
hobby when I was a leenag·
er," said Murray. who has
been playing the accordion
for 50 years. " I just like the .
music. and I get 10 meet a
lot of nice. people. e'pecial·
ly at this place."
The festival was organized
by the Madog Welsh Center
at the un iversity. Kara Lewis. ·
se&lt;.:retary at the center. said
she fe lt the festival had
improved in different ways
from the previous testival.
"We have all the old
favori tes. pi t" new vendors
and new entertainers," said
Lew is. " It's good ·because
there's somelhing for everyone. There's an opportunity
to learn new cultures and
jus/ have a good time."
Aside from vendors and
musical entertainment , vis i-·
'tors could attend the
Highland games, which
included the Caber toss and
the Well y toss. They could

Matt
Ken seth

declined commenl. but Harvick sa1d.

"He (Kenseth l needs to check his
ego because tt's getting too b1g."
NASCAR This Week 's Monte
Dutton gives his view: ·Both dnvers
spent a considerable amount of time

1n the NASCAR transporter afterward.
and both e&lt;tted wr thout makmg a

NASCAR This Week

comment. Expect some maJor disci-

\

plinary action against both. The tim-

ing of these outrageous rncidents
wasn't the best, and no one would

be surprised if NASCAR off1ctals, who
have themselves been under consid·
erable criticism. make a strong state·
ment by making an example out of
HarVtck and Kenseth."

Photos Oy John Clark/ NASCAR Th1s Week

Jeremy Mayfield's crew works feverishly to get the N.o. 19 car out of the
pits and back on the track during the Coca-Cola. 600 in Charlotte on May
30 at Lowe's Motor Speedway.

MAYAELD
Mayfield got his Cup career started
with a race at what is now Lowe's Motor Speedway on Oct. 10, 1993. He won
the first of eight car eer poles at Tal·
ladega , Ala. , on July 26, 1996. He left
Pocono ranked 11th in the point s
standings, just two points behind lOth·
place Ryan Newman and 441 behind
leader Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Pocono Raceway is the only socalled oval in which drivers shi ft
gears.
"We were one of the first cars to
shift four times a lap," said Mayfield.
"I'd go down the frontstretch and I'd
shift into overdrive. Going into turn
one I'd go back down into third gear.
Then I'd switch back to overdrive, and
going back into the tunnel (turn ), I'd
go back into third gear. That's four
times , two up and two down . Now
you're seeing more people doing-that
and even takittg it to another level by
shifting in the short chute."
Mayfield's recent up sur ge has him
well-positioned to get into the
makeshift playoff that will decide the
championship .
"We're racing like there's no tomor·
row," he said. "We're here to win
races and just run hard every week
and let the po)nts take off. ... We want
to be .in that deal at the end, but if you
sit back and start point s racing that
can get yo u in more trouble than it
can running hard every week."
Email Monte Dutton at
hmd4858@peoplepc.com

N.C. governor proposes
new test track In Charlotte
North Carolina Gov. M1kt Easley
has ·proposed construction of a
state-funtJed motorsports test facility
to be located near the University of
North Carolina at Cha rlotte. Easley
has asked the state /eg tslature to
approve $15 m1llton to build the facil·
:ty, which could be uttlized by
NASCAR teams and would encourage

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Jasmine Burney

INSIDE
. • Livestock report. See
Page A2
• Agriculture tour
planned. See Page A2
• Community calendars
See PageA3

teams to remain in the Cllarlotte
area . The move comes as regional

officials wor ry that more and more
ra ces are being moved to far-fl ung
parts of the country and away from
the sport's traditiona l base. Almost
every Nextel Cup team 1s headquar·
te red withm a 100-mile radius of
Charlotte.

Hendrick Motoraports
revisits 20 years in book
UMI Publications has laun!led a
new book . ' Twer.ty Years of Hendri ck Motorsports ". documenttng
tile history of Rtck Hendrick's racing
organization. The 176-page publica·
tion was written by veteran author
Ben White and describes the organtzation and philosophy of a team
that has won NASCAR champi~
onships in three diffe rent series.

Since 1984, Hendrick-owned cars
have been driven by the likes of Geoffrey Bod1ne , Ricky Craven. Jerry
Nadeau. Joe Nemechek, Benny Par-,
sons, Tim Richmond. Ricky Rudd.
Ken Schrader. Jack Sprague and
Darrell Waltrip.

WEATHER

Details on Page A6

&amp; Supply
Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSE NTIN EL.COM

24 PAGF.S

Around Town

· A3

Celebrations

C4

Classifi eds

D3

Comics

VaUey

EPA action
expected in
DuPont C8
matter
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Beware
the black bear that is traveling through Meigs County.
According
to
Jim
Preeman. wi ldli fe specialist
of Meigs Soil an'd Water
Conservation Di slrict, a
bl&lt;tck bear swam the Ohin
River from West Virginia
Wednesday. Freeman said it
is an adult male bear weigh·
ing in excess of 250 pounds

Insert

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

(l') 2004 Ohio Valley Puhlishinr.; Co.

POMEROY
The
EnYironmental
Protection
Agenc) i;, expected to take
formal act ion agains t the
chemical com pan\' DuPont for
failing to repon the po'sible
health effe cts of the chemical
C8. which has been to und in
several local water supplie,.
DuPont u;,es pertluourouc·
tanoic acid. or C8. at it;,
Washington Works plant near
Parker, burg. W.Va. C~ is a
soap-Iike chemical used as a
processing agent in making
hundreds of thousands of
consumer products. includ·
ing Tyvek. an insulation used
in construction. Ke vlar. used
to make protective non·tlam·
mabie apparel. neoprene. a
product used in automobile
parts. and Tellon. a non-s1ick
coating and one of DuPont\
most widely·used products.
The chemical ha.s been
found in various wncentra·
tions in the pub lic water systems of LubeL·. W.Va .. Little
Hockin g. Tuppers l?lain;.Chest.er Water District. the
l'li iage&gt; of Syracu'c and
Pomeroy. and in Ma,on
Co unty. W.Va. In 2002. a tc,un
of Ohio EPA loxicnlo£i sts set
a safe lc1 el of CS of 150 parts
per billion. The level ofC8 in
the local water supplies io,
well below thai standard.
The Washington PoS!
Thursday quoted an EPA
spokesman as saying "formal
action" will be taken "soo n"
a~ the re~ult or an in\ ·e~ l i~;w­
lio n into alleged ,·iolations' of
a federa l law requirin g &lt;.:0111·
panies to report po,sible

Members from the Capital City Pipe Band warm up before leading the parade at the Celtic
Fe.stival Saturday afternoon at the University of Rio Grande. (ian McNemar)
also watch Border Collies
herd sheep. lislen to stories.
fide around in horse-drawn
carriages, or attend several
different workshops foc using on Celtic languages and
heriwge. Authentic Celtic
scones and cookies. as well
as Welsh tea. were offered at
concession st~ nds .
Some new vendors this
year include Gothic Edge.
based out of Covington. Ky.
They are affiliated with the
Soci ety
of
Creative
Anachi·onisms. whic h manufactures aulhentic armor.
chain mai I. weapon'&gt;. cloth·
ing ~nd house wares for
Celtic and Renai'5ance re·
enactments and sets. Vendor
John Hammond said he
loved what he does simpl y
because of events such as
the Cel tic festival.
Terry Griner (left) of Columbus holds a piece of metal he is
"Imagi ne g9ing back m fashioning into a drill bit while his assistant. Lilly .Davenport of
Westerville. hammers the metal into shape. (ian McNemar)
Please see Heritage, AS

Bear sighted in Meigs County

INDEX
4 SECfiONS -

\ 'ol. :!~. :'\co. 66

Detention Center in Port~mouth. where
he will be held until Monday.
A " .arrant ""' i"ued for
Truelll\e·, arre't i&lt;ht week after he
ran away fr om home. 'iolating hi s
house arrco,t agreeme nt.
Truelo' e "a' on hou'e arrest fol·
lowing hi' release from a jU\·enile
dctemion center . . e\ ~ral month" ago.
"here he "a;, bemg held for the theft
of a four-wheeler from a Ji,·iden·s
Power Equipment dispht) at lhe
Gallia County Junior Fair Jaq )ear.

.BY STEPHANIE JENKINS
NEWS@MYDAILYTRI BUN E.COM

Kevin Harvlck vs. Matt Kenseth:
The two drivers tangled three times
dunng the clos1ng laps of the Pocono
500. with two of the sptns occurnng
with a yellow flag displayed. Kenseth

By Monte Dutton

•

trdlhponcd to the Scioto Count) Ju_,·enile

E

s

Mayqetd putting
himself on verge of ·
Nextel
Cup
playoff
.
.

earlier from a residence in Vinton .
Sgt. JinHn) Spears of the GCSO
di;.covered the 1998 Che\') Silverado
truck near the Colle~e Hill Motel in
Rio Gr~nde .
c
In addition to the \Chil·ie rcco,·ered
Fridav. Truelm e is believed to be
in\'ol\·ed in a .eries of car theft, in
Gallia. !\lei~:s. and Jackson counties.
a' well as' Ma,on County. W.Va ..
deputie, ,aid .
·Although charge., have not yet been
tiled in the stolen Yehicle investigation.
Truelo'e wa' charged with escape and

v
R

I

S I.:!.)

Police arrest 15-year-old believed to be connected with rash of car thefts

SPORTS

DEALERS/ UAW DODGE

•

Jeremy Mayfield. II' hose most suc·
cessful track is Pocono Raceway,
came close to another victory at the
Pennsyh·ania l'e nu e, finishing sec·
and to .Jimmie .John so n in the Pocono
500.
Mayfield turned 35 on May 27. The
Owensboro, Ky., native won for the
first time at Pocono on June 21, 1998,
and followed that up with another victory at the 2.5·mile, triangul ar track
on June 19, 2000. He has three career
l'ictories overall.
"I'm not sure what it is ," he said of
his Pocono success. "It's one of those
places that early in my career I
adapted to real quick. I like going
there . I like racing there. It seems
like my confidence level is up every
time I walk into the gate, so it 's just ·
one of the places I've always run decent at, but I've had some bad runs
there, too. I'm either real good or real
bad, but it's definitely a place I like."
Mayfield drives the No. 19 Dodge
owned by Ra y Evernham. Hi s teammate is rookie sensation Kasey Kahne.
He said his motto is: "Losers qu it
when they get tired. Winners quit
when they win."
"I kind of live by that," sa id Mayfield. "There's a lot of little things you
gathe r over the years from your experiences, and l believe in fightin·g until
the end. We'v e done that every time.
We've shown that a lot with this team
this year. The other day we came back
and never quit, and just kept going
and going. That comes from the heart
how bad you want it. That's certainly
something I feel that 's helped me get
where I'm at today.
"I've got certain things I believe in,
and you've ju st got to shoot from the
heart sometimes."

tme
Hometown News for Gallia ·&amp;Meigs counties

do

JEREMY MAYFIELD

'

un a

._ If you have a question or a comment , write: NASCAR This Week. rjo The Gaston Gazette . PO. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

Race: DHL 400

2004 Chevrolet Aveo Ls, 01

and it is between tive /o six
feet tall when standing.
The bear was firs! sigl) ted
in the Racine, area and ·
Freeman said it appears to
be heuding north toward
Athens. He said the reason it
came over to the Buckeye
Slate was because there is a
larger bear population in
West Virginia, meaning it
needed to find a new habilat
in which to live.
Freeman wams people not to
hunt or shoot the bear because

it is considered an endan~ered
species . He said a bear shot t(Jr
the wron~ reasons cou ld result
in a hehyc line.
Freeman said people
should also avoid !Ceding
the bear and if inclined to
take photographs. shou ld do
so at a distant lo~ation .
Fre~man , who is avid hunter
and sportsmen. said tile bear
is probably not dangerous
but advises people thai it is

· Please see Bear, AS

'

Please see Adion, AS

Car believed stolen from
Mason County found in Vinton
STIIFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

POINT
W.Va. -

PLEASANT.
An invc~li1!ution i~

continuing imo tile tl1eft of a
car taken in Point Pleasant
and later recovered in Gallia
County.
Point Pleasant Police
Chief Ronnie Spcn~cr said a
1999 Pontiac owned h)
Murilyn L. Cullen. Letart.
wa;. stolen from the Plea,ant

Vulley Wellne'' Ce nter on
Valley Drive sClmet ime
hetween II and II •-+:i a.m.
Thursdav.
The t·ar was I&lt;Kaled near
Vinton bv the Gallia Co unt\
Shni IT's· Ocp;u·nnc m short!~
bd'orc IO•JO p.m .. Spencer
'a iLl.
An) tHlC wi1l1 information
on the theft i' ,requested to
LOntaL't the police .Jepart ment al 130-+i 675- 110-l. ·

992-6611
, Wl'vt ClillAAIII-1111&amp;.

. 106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

'"!''•'~~
•I
f!J( / •· :·.~~
1
'

252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

• Hither Acacltmtcs • Hands on tratntna and experience • Seamless path to an Assoc:latts Dtaree or hlaher
• Dtstaned for hlah school'ati.ICMntl • Technkally challenatna
Coursts offtrtd; Htalthcar•, Auto Strytce
lltcl &gt;•Hilla

tlil!i1

w•~

.lltcklon GaltHiti!IMtv.tt.,

~Gilllt YlnlOII~Cf.WitY ~laton

u.ofRtoGIWldt

and l'l(ormotl&amp;r Ttchnolo~y

i-

Ohio Valley
Tech Prep

Contact your high ..chool ruun8t'lor t..1day!

1

'

'

•

.,.
I

'

~--------

..

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