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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June

www .mydailysentinel.com

Broussard slams ChiSox in eighth
CHICAGO (AP) - Ben Brnu"ard
waiteil so long for his second homer of
the season. a solo shot in ;t lop,itkd
game would have been OK with him.
Brou ssard hit a pinch·llit grand ,Jam in
the eighth inning and Ronnie Bclliard
homered in his third straight game t&lt;l
lead the CleYeland Indian' O\er the
Chicago White Sox ·9-5 \\'cdne,da!
ni ght.
"I knew everybody '"" bdtind me"'
it was just one of those thing' where I
knew I would get another hnme run une
of these davs ..."Brou"ard ,aiJ. "l'rn ju't
glad the monkey i' otlm) bad, no" ·..
Casey Blake and Lou Mcrhmi al'o hit
. home run' for the Indian'. \\ho ha\1,.
won 13 of 20 to pull mo came, behind
the White Sox for ,c,·ond pbce in the AL
Central.
·
Paul Konerko homered '" ia anJ
Aaron Rowand abo hit one for Chid~"·
which has lost ,ix ,,f eight
Cliff Lee. who i' cun~ntl! appealing"
six-game suspen,ion fur thfl"' ing
behind Ken Griffev Jr.' ' head on June
13, pitched ,;x solid innin~' · 'Lee t7-l 1.
gave up three runs and live hn'. He
struck out si.x and walked three.
"Cliff was good. Early on he thre\\ a
lot of fastballs and he started mixing 111
his changeup and his breaking ball. He
had a pretty good breaking ball t11night.
he was able to command it." Indian'
manager Eric Wedge said.
Whtte Sox starter Mark Buehrle ~ot
his first loss since April cO against ihe

New Yor~ Yankee,. a span of 12 stans.
Bvehrle g&lt;L\C LIP three 'traight 'ingles
to Victor ~laninct. Ca'n Blake. and
Travi' Hafner to 'tart the· eighth. Mike
Jacl"on reliewd. and on hi' lir't pit.: h.
gmc up the lwmcr to Brou,sard. who
"a' hitting ft'r !\krloni . h was
Brou,;an.J', "n,_·t career ,Jam and first
pttli:ll-hit hnmer. ma,ing it 9-4
Ck,ebnd.
"It '"" bt~ fm u,. it
bi~ for Ben .
He wl·nt up-there ready to hit ... Wedge
,aid. "W~ \\anted him to be more ac~re'·
,;,e. mnre a"ertive and stroncer"with
h" '" ing ami uti lite the power that he
h,h...
Ruchrlc (7 -~) pitched scYcn-plus
IIHUng,. gi,·ing up I0 hih and tied hi,
,ca"&gt;n high b! giving up eight ru1h he al"' ga,·e up eight in hi' lo" to New
Yu r". In hi, la't 'tan. Buehrle allowed
-e\cn ruth acain't ~luntreal but did not
~eta deci,ioll.
- Buehrle dnt·,n·t pl&lt;tn ,, pit~hing in the
...\11-Star canw tn Julv.
.. , tigurc I had to h;tw a couple of good
one' (starh). And the w&lt;ty I went out
there toda) if the! a'ked me to go I'd
aim&lt;''' turn around and sav no. I don.,
LbcrYe to ~o. I haven·t thrown the ball
the way I ,fiould ha,·e." Buehrle said.
Chica~o trailed 5-3 in the seventh
inning a'nd nearly tied it against Indians
relie"er Rafeal Betancourt.
With tw o outs. Frank Thomas reached
on a two-base error when left fielder
'-1att Lawton dropped Thomas' tly on the

'"h

track. Lawton knocked into
center i'ielder Coco Crisp, whq was also
in po,ition to catch the baiL
Carlos Lee followed with an RBI-single off the left-tield fence. Lee went into
l1i' home run trot and music began playing but he was tagged out at second.
··That's one of my 'rules, I want them to
run the bases hut everybody thought the
'"'Y he hit the ball the way the ball was
. .:arrying. c\'erybody thought it was a
home run. inc luding myself." White Sox
mana2er Ouie·Guillen said.
BeiTiard homered in hi~ third straight
game otT Buehrle in the third inning for
his fourth homer of the s.eason. It's the
tirst time in his career that he has homered in three cot.lsecuti ve games.
Buehrle walked Martinez leading off
the fourth inning and he scored on
Hafner's RBI single to give the Indians a
2-1 lead.
Belliard led off the fifth with a groundrule double to ce nter and scored on
Lawton 's broken bat si ngle.
Trailing 3- 1 in the fifth, Rowand hit an
opposite-tield solo home run to right for
Chicago...
·
The lndtans came back and scored two
more in the sixth. Casey Blake homered
leading off and one out later, Merloni
homered to left, giving the Indians a 5-2
· lead.
Konerko led off the sixth with his 16th
homer of the season off Lee . He also led .
of( the eighth with a homer off
Betancourt .

pht) ed for the Buckeyes. Salye rs was the
R'"''"·ic; babysitter and hou sekeeper.
13i;mcan.li has denied· the allegations
that he knew of the anangemenh to help
Sa1·m·ic. a membe'r of the Buckeyes'
199~-99 Fi nal Four team.
Salyers' lawsu it contributed to head
n&gt;a0h Jim O'Brien's firing and an NCAA
in,·esti gation of the basketball program.
Ohio Stale fired 0' Brien on June R after
he admitted giving a recruit $6.000 in
1999.
Sicrawski. wlw .said he '"" speaki ng
ahmll the lawsuit because his name has
heen mentioned in cout1 filin2s, said he
met Savovic at the airport whe"n the player arriH:.. U for a recruiting visit· on May 3. ·
199X. Sicrawski said he watHed to help
Sawl\'ic because of their ., hared Serbian
hcriwge.

TURNPI

Rauch stays,
\Vhite Sox win, Bt

warnin~

Man says he also helped Savovic
COLUMBUS lAP)- Another person
has come forward saying he helpeJ former Ohio State basketba ll player Bohan
Savovic with living expenses and that
then-a"istant coach Paul Biancardi knc"
about it.
Michael Sierawski, 51. to ld The
Columbus Dt spatc h for a stor;
Wednesday that Biancardi "knew that
Boban was being supported by 'umebody
at all times."
Biancardi's name sUtfaced in a deplbi·
ti on taken in a civil lawsuit Kathleen
Salyers filed last August see king
$510.000 in expe nses and damages lhm1
two Ohio State boosters.
Salyers contends Dan and Kim
Roslovic reneged on an agr~~ment to pay
her $1.000 a month plu' npen'e' in
exchanoe
for carino
wh ile
c
,c for Savo1·ic
'
. he

24, 2004

Sierawski said he took Savovic to a dinner at St. Stevan Serbian Orthodox
Church that Biancardi also attended.
.. I told Paul if there is anything I can do,
let me know:· Sierawski said. Biancardi
took Sierawski up on his offer, he said .
Sicrawski said he arranged for Savovic
to live with the Roslovics for that summer
and wrote a $500 check to Dan Roslovic.
When Ohio State's compliance ·oflice
learned of the check, they made Savovic
pay the money back, Sierawski said.
Sierawski believes that with Salyers'
frequent visits to campus. 0' Brien would
have known Savovic was receiving outside support.
"Kathy would take Boban to practice in
curlers. I think everybody on the team
wou ld see her drop him off at practices,"
Sierawski said.

~~DRAFTB

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o l I \ IS • \ ol. ;;~. '\o. :!09

SPORTS
• Sunny day for Reds. See.
Page 81
·

2002 SUZUKI XL7

Auto, V6

l.oaded

'"'" ·""''""' " '" 111 ,..1 .• "'"

·Commissioners seeking $435K in CDBG funds
BY BRIAN

J. REED

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners will
$435.000
111
seek
Community Development
Block Grant fund &gt; from the
Ohio
Department
of
. Development next month.
including
SJOO.OOIJ
in
CDBG commu nity di\lre;s
funding for the Village of
Middleport. ·
At Thursday's regular
meeting of Meigs County
Commissioners. . County
Grants Administra1or Jean
Tntssell conducted a second
public hearing Thursday on
the county'' application for

2004 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE
#50450

I· Rill\), ,Jl ' !\11 ·. :!.). :!1104

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Loaded

4x4, V6, auto
t5027t

$ 153.000 in CDBG formula tion of the Middlepon
funds for various wunty pro- . Freight Sl&lt;!tion in Daw Dile,
jects and the coumy \ scnmd Park .· cmd S57.lJ00 for the
applica tion for a vi ll age· demolition of fi1e ahanwide improvement program doncd &lt;~nd co'nde1imcd hou'in Middleport.
An earlier llppl tc:.ttion tiled
Additiunal fundin g for
&lt;ln Middleport\ behalf wa, \1iddlcport\ sl twt paving
nut
approwd .
The project wi l·l come from the
Community Distress pru- Ohio
Public
W&lt;&gt;rks
. gram is a competi ti\'C ,Commiss1o1, Issue II prnstatewide grant program pro- i!ram.
Yidino0 fundinoC' for a varit't\'• .__. Commi..,~iunCrs
have
of projects under one appli- appr&lt;&gt;wd $20.000 from their
cation. Middleport will 'eek CDBG formula allocation
$47.700 towards a S226.~00 toward the demolition wo rk
street pJving progr&lt;-~m. to ~cn·t' as a match for the
$78.500 for the repl&lt;tcement Commun it y Oistres&gt; appliof curbs and sidewalk&gt;. cation. Other projec·t, to be
$12.700 for fire equipnlent. fu nded throu2h the formula
$83.500 for mterior· renova- program thi s year are:

• S20.000 for ball field and
park de' elopment at the
Ha rri,onYille School lot in
Sc ipio Township:
• $20.000 for pa1·ing 111
Letart Township:
· ~ 19.500 for paving 111
Col umbia Town.,hip:
• $18.000 fur interior renovat ion s or the mill in Star
Mil! Park in Racine:
• $22.300 for fire eq uipment for the Rutland Fire
Department.
The liN puhlic hea rin~ on
the form ula alloc;nion application was held in March.
Applications for both the
Cu1J1111~1nity Distress gram
and the annual formu la allocation are due on July 16.

J.

alleged kidnapper 's bond
was redu ced to a $10,000
ow n rec og nizance bond.
POMEROY - A man Ball said a cond ition of this
accused of kidnapping his agreement
was
that
forme r girlfriend had hi s Fitzgera ld have no contact
bond red uce d in June .
wi th the alleged vict im.
Shawn Fi tzgerald. 26. of
In
April.
Fitzgerald
Coolville was indicted last
allegedly broke into the
month in Meig s ·County
Co urt of Common Plea' for home ot Chester resident
Hul se's. where
kidnapping.
felo niou s Steven
Mayle wa' staying at the
as~ault. agg ravated burtime
. Fitzgera ld threatened
g]arv. and intimidatilH1 of
!he ·alleged crime victim. Hulse with a baseball bat,
according to Meigs County
Kimherlee Mayle.
reports. According
Sheriff's
He was being held in the
to
the
sheriff's
report, Hul se
Gallia Count y Jai l 1vith a
bond 'et at $200,000, w1th said Fi tzgerald hit him in
I0 percent paid before he the head with a baseball bat.
During the encounter,
would
be
re leased.
Fitzgerald
allegedly doused
According to court doc uments, upbn the agreement Mayle with lamp oil before
o f both the Meigs County allegedly kidnapping her. At
Prosecutor's office and the arraignment, Mayle said
Fitzgerald's attorney, Claire Fitzgerald threate ned to set
Ball Jr., of Athens, the her on fire if she resiste d.
BY

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOA ILYSE NTIN El .COM

OBITUARIES

2004 FORD ESCAPE
Save a lot of cash

11so31o

Page AS
• Will iam Hart, 91
• Ethel Orr, 99

8 to t•hoost• 6't•o•n

.Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6·4·9
Pick 4 day: 0·8·4·8 ·
Pick 3 night: 6·3·3
Pick 4 night: 6·3·1· 7
Buckeye 5: 18-23-26-27·30

West Virginia

2004 CHEVROLET 1500

Dally 3: 6·7·8
Dally 4: 1-1·1 ·2
Cash 25: 6·7·8·17·20·23

Meigs Local improves
on proficiency tests

SC 4X4
#50310

WEAmER

BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYD.41LYSENTINEL.COM

While the sun may be fun for some people like Daniel Miller (be low ). London Pool lifeguard
Emily Hill is busy at work. (J. Miles Layton)

POMEROY Wh ile
proficiency test score; are
improvin g for st udent s in
the Meigs Local Schon !
District, the di , trict is still
below the state average in
man y s ubje ct

s7,995

tE03051

Saturday, June 26th, 2004
, Turnpike of Gallipolis
is hosting Commitment to Kids, a free Child Safety
event. Parents will receive a complimentary Digital
ID kit . Children's photos will be taken free of charge.
Come on in and bring the kids. Just to be safe.

June 26, 2004

INDEX
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith •Values

Diesel

10:00 a.m. • 3:00 p .m.

2003-20114 school year for
Chad Griffith, library media
specialist. Nancy Morrisey.
TUPPERS PLAINS elementary guidance counThe Eastern Local Board of &gt;,elor. and Sheryl Roush, high
Education approved supple- school guidance counselor.
mental contracts and hired
The board accepted the
personnd for the upcomi ng re~ignalions of Jenn ifer
school year during its Roush as talented and gi(ted
Wednesday meeting.
teac her. ami Judith Camden .
The foll owing supplemental hi gh school math teacher,
contracts for the 2004-2005 and hired Juli e Spaun as
school year were approved: Cris kindergarten teacher for the
Kuhn. high school band director 2004-2005 school year.
and choir/handbell choir direc- pending certificati on.
tor; Pat Newland, head varsity
The board approved a
football
coach;
Howie three-year contract with Rick
Caldwell, varsity volleyball ;md tdward;. who wi ll 'erve as
varsity boys basketball coach.
the district's superintendent
Twenty-day extended con- beginning on August I.
The board also:
tracts were .approved for the
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SECDONS -

\(td·

Eastern Board approves contracts

Details on Page A6

lJ\!\flORD EXPLORER

Gmmitment to

12 PAGES

A2

Movies

As

NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports

B6

Weather

As
B1
A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

195 Upper River Road.
Gallipolis. Ohio

• Accepted a bid from
We,am Cothlruction Co ..
Pomeroy. for the replacement
of the roof on the Tuppers
Plains Elementary building.
• Approved the disposal of
band instruments of ·no
\'Uluc to the district. and
accepted bid' for su rplu s
items for 'ale .
• Approved adverti;ing for
quote' for tires. tubes. petroleum products. diesel fuel.
fuel oil, bakery produ cts and
dairy produ cts for the 2004200.'\ school year.
• Approved James Russell
and Aaron Roush as open
enrollment students .

Please see Board, AS

becam.e there are several

after school programs that
attempt to help stude nts
who fall behind academically. He cited the read in g
al:ademv for kindenwrten
through. second grade or
"1pp!cmental prognum that
offer ind iYidual teacher

The Pediatric patients and staff at Holzer Medical Center would
like to thank the May sponsors of the Earl Neff Pediatric Fund:

.. "

fi

LINCOLN
'.

'

'.

740-446-9800
1-800-272-5179
•

Farmer's Bank

HOURS:

Gallipolis Branch

Mon- Fri 9·7; Sat. 9-5

740-446-9800

1-800-272-5179

www.turnpikeflm.com

Faye Coughenour, Trenton Tackett and
Lisa
our
Director

·.

..

area~.

Even though the test
result.s are only preliminary
and cou ld be subjc·ct to
change. grades fo ur. sixth
and nine made noticeable
gai n., in each of the subject
:m~as of math. sc ience. reading. writing anJ citizenship.
"We didn't impro ve as
much a; we wanted to. but
we still went up acros' the
board:· said Meigs Local
Superintendent
Bill
Buckley.
The reaso n the district has
im proved. Buckley said. is

French City Child Care
'

Comm issioners reviewed a
request fill' the transfer of a
carryou t liquor li cense fro m
Charlene
R..
Doczi.
Lm~&gt;· vi lle. doing 'b usine ss
a, Pick and ShoveL to
Jack lyn B. Be ckner, and
appro,·ed a request from the
count) exten;ion office for
the agency's third an·d final
appropriation for the year. in
the amount of $30.000.
Present
were
Cornmi»ioners Jim Sheets
and_ Mid Dave nport and
Clerk G loria Kloes.

London Pool a popular spot Alleged kidnapper

LOtTERIES

Turnplko of Galllp91i1

Other business

released on bond

Mavs to·
send
Jamison
to Wizards
DALLAS (AP J - The
Dallas Maverick&gt; agreed
Wednesday night to trade
Antawn Jamison to the
Washington WiLards for the
No. 5 pick in the draft, Jerry
Stackhouse and . Christian
Laettner, a source dose to the
deal told The Associated Pre"
on condition of anonymity.
The trade can' t be official
until the NBA offices open
Thursday. By then. Dallas may
be working toward other deab
in its pursuit of Shaquille
o·Neal.
While O'Nea l remains the
center of the Maverick s·
dreams, the hi gh pick also
gives them the chance to take
7-foot-5 Pavel Podkolzine. a
19-year-old Russian.
Podkolzine or the pick also
could be part of the package the
Mavericks wou ld offer the Los
Angeles Lukers for O' Neal.
Dallas did not previously
have a first -round pick in
Thursday night's draft , having
· traded it last summerto Boston
in the deal for Antoine Walker.
The Wizards had made it
clear thev wercn 't enamored
with any of their choices at th~
top ol the drall. Taking
Jamison. a proven scorer uver
his six-year career in DallcLS
and Golden State, is a much
safer move, even if he is owed
nearly $58 million over the
next four years.
For the Mavericks, all moves
for the immediate future will be
viewed as positioning for a
prospective trade for O'Neal.
Other
than .
the
pick!Podkolzine aspect, the
benefit of getting Laellner i;
that he's going into the last year
of his contract. like Walker.
That makes them commoditie'
because U1eir salaries - a wmbined $20.8 millior: - would
open huge cap room ne~t 'ummer.
Their combined salaric; put.'
Dallas much clo&gt;,er to the $23.5
million needed to get within the
league-mandated 15 percent or
O'Neal's $27.7 million prke
tag.

Howard, not Okafor,
No.1 pick, Bt

Debbie Fisher. Assistant Branch Maha(Jer
Shelia Wood . Branch M:.n:.,,,.,

&lt;Jitentio n to help student s
who may need as ststance.
Compared with las t year,
the percentage of Meigs
Local students who passed
the fourth grade proticiency
test went up in math and
reading. wen t "down in science and writing. and stayed
about the same in citize nshi p. The mo't notable
gai ns were in math which
went frum 35.3 percent of
student ., wl10 passed the test
in 2002-2003 to 43 percent
\\ ho made the grade in
200_1-~004. according to the
Ohio
Department
of
Education (ODE). The
number of students who
pas;ed the read in ~ .portion
of the test also nnproved
from 4 1.9 percent to 49.1
percent in the 2003-2004
itcademic year. ·
"Just bec;mse you move
up doesn't mean you are out
of the fire:· said Buckley.
Students who passed the
proficiency test in science
sl ipped about a percentage
pnint from 37.2 percent in
~002-0J to J6 percent last

Please see Tests, A5

�".

'

FAITH •• VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

If you're a parent then it is
a foregone conclusion: you
DO feel that way at times.
"Can't we turn the video
game volume down a little
bi t'l"; "What· s that" Ym1 can't
hear me ove.r your brother''":
and '' Didn't I say that you
needed to clean up your
room?H ··
Perhaps in your role as a
"common citizen" you may
feel that no one listens to you.
You may feel that your stand
for "right" over "wrong" is
ignored by all and your vote
doesn't make a difference. If
that isn't enough to depress
you then just remember tl1at
this is an election year.
Not being heard when yOLI
have something to say is ter·
ribly frustrating. particularly
when what you have to say is.
a matter of life and death.
As a Christian. my life
revolves around a message
that truly is a matter of life
and death . As carefully and as
determinedly as I might ti·y to
share that me,sage. there is
no denying that there are
multitudes of voices and mes·
sages trying to compete for
the same ears. ln fact. I'm
confronted daily by this when
I share about God's love with
folks.
"Well. I'd like to be in
church but I've got yard work
on this day. meetings on that
day. ballgames on this night.

When confronting Job.
God said. "Gird up your loins
like a man." This amounts to
a 'trong·worded challenge
from God essentially putting
' the quality of Job's manhood
in a questionable position.
Could Job stand up to the test
of being the quality of man
God wanted him to be?
Society\ expectations of
what it means to be a man all
too often are based upon
faulty standards. As a result,
perpetuated in each genera·
tion are concepts whereby
men are led to be utterly con·
fused as to what exemplifies
best the role of manhood.
Unbodied sexuality. alcohol
consumption, and propensity
for being utterly stuptd seem to
be what IS widely promoted and
consequently construed as the
nom1 for beino a man, within
the practices ofour present culture. The rub is that society cannot prosper when men live their
lives according to self-serving
and senseless standards.
God expects that men not
consume themselves with
themselves. but rather to
focus on and practice those
things which generates the
greatest impact for good in
the lives of others.
To accomplish the most
.noble qualities for manhood,
we men should set as our personal goal to look to the standards set by God. What kind
of man does God want you to
be? Comparing Scnpture
with Scripture, the standards
of God become quite clear.

God. Who teaches you for
your own good. Who leads
you in the way you should
go" (Isaiah ~~:12-13.17).
Think of it I Even theheav·
Pastor
ens .stand at aucntion at the
Thorn
summons of the King of
Mollohan Kings . How much more then.
as God summons us from
among a people too busy to
walk witl1 Him and too busy
my favorite show is on the to serve. will those who hear
other. and don't forget my · Him calling. jump to atten·
unused 1 al·ation days. Sorry: tion and respond to His in vino time left. Sundavs·• But tation of grace''
that 's the only day I c-an sleep
As He calls you to come
in...
out from under the power of
Ami if I. merely a messcn- sin. death and despair. will
~er. feel frustrated about a you have ears to hear and
culture th&lt;n won't slow down receive His invitation to join
anu carefully listen to th e Him''
message of Eternal Life, what
"In a time of favor I have
docs t'he One Who sent the answered you. on a day of
message 111 the first place salvation I have helped you; I
feel ·• ·
have kept you and give you
In, haial1 ~8. the Lord as a covenant to the people.
laments over His people who to establish th e land. to
have gotten "' far away from apportion the desolate her·
Him and His loving com· itages: sayi ng to the prisonmandments that they only ers. 'Come out,' to those who
know heartache. disappoint- are in darkness. ' Show yourrnent anu luss. "If only you selves.' They shall feed along
had paid attention ' to My the ways. on all the bare
&lt;.:nmmands. your peace would heights shall be their pasture;
have been like a river. your they shall not hun ger or
righteousness like ihe waves thirst. neither scorching wind
of tile sea" (Isaiah 48: 18). nor sun shall strike them
Gull's yearning to be heeded down. for He Who has pity
in order for us to possess the on them wil l lead them. and
peace that He has promised by springs of water will guide
has not faded.
them" (ls.1iah 49:8-10).
"Listen tu Me, ... I am He; I· (Thom Mollohan has minis·
am the First. and I am the tered in so uthem Ohio the
Last. My hand laid the foun· past nine vears and is curdation of the earth, and My m11/r rite pastor of Pathway
right hanu &gt;pread out the Comnumifl' Church He and
heavens: when I summon his wife are the parents .of'
them. they stand at attention · three Ntildren. He inar be
... Thus says the LORD. Your reached bv e-mail at ·pasReueemer. the Holy One of tortltom@parhivaygal/ipolis.c
Israel: I am the LORD your om).

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For example. within the
context of marriage. God
wants a man to be a loving
man. While most men are
quite quick to boast how
good they are when It comes
to kissing and hu~ging . there
is more to God s expecla·
tions than most men are will·
ing to practice.
God set&gt; a very sto11t
responsibility upon
the
shoulders of men in their
leadership of relationship
with wives . Here it is from
Ephesians 5: "Husbands,
love your wives. even as
Christ also loved the church,
and gave Himself for it."
How good are we at being
that kind of lo ving man°
We can find out very
quickly. All we have to do is
to stack· up the quality of our
love for our wives against
that quality of love for the
church exhibited by Jesus
Christ. His love was an oth·
ers·oriented love. His love
If · ·
I
H'
was a se -glvmg ove. IS
love was a sacriftcial love.
It is right at this point that a
man should pause to make a

Chul'l"h o( Jesw Christ "-pMIOik
V11nZandt and Ward Rd ., Paswr: Jamts
M iller. Sunda~ School - 10 : ~0 - a.m.,
E\enmg - 7:.-ro p.m
River Vallty
Apostolic Worship Center, 813 S. 3rd
A\t= ., MiddlejXIn, Kevin Konkle. Pastor.
Su nda ~. 10 . .\0 a.m.
Wednesday. 7:00
· p m .~ Youth Fn . 7 ."\0 p.m.

Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle Inc.
Loop RJ off Ne-v. L1ma Rd. Rutland.
Senkes: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:)0 p.m .
Thurs. 7:00 p.m .• PastoJ Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God
Liberty A~mbly or God
P.O. Bull: 467. Duddin~ Lane, Mas1.m.
W.V&lt;t .. Pa~tor : Nell li.. nn ant . Sunda)
Sel'·ice!.- !O:OOa.m. anc17 p. nl .

Baptist
Chrshlrr Baptist ChuN"h
PaMor: Steve liul~ . Sunday School: 9:)0
am, "Monung WoMip: 10:30 am, Sunday
~wni ng : fdO pm Wednesday 6·JOpm
Hope Baptist Church {Sootbern)
570 Grant Sl.. Middlepon . Sunday school

- 9 ~0 a.m.. Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m..
WeJm:..day Scf\ i~.:e - 7 p.m.
Rutland Fint Baptist Chun:h
Sunday · School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship IOA5 a.m
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pil sUi r Jn n Bnx:k en . East Main St..
Sunday School - Q: .\0 a.m .. Worship 10: ?.0 a.m
t'int Southern Baptist
~IK72 Pon1crn&gt;· Pike , Pastor: E. Lamar
O' Bryant. Sunday School - 9 : ~0 a.m..
Worship- IS : 15 a.m .. 9 : ~5 am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
WeJnt=sday Ser\"Kt'S • 7: 00p .m

what the Lord is working
through 'my life.
There is nothing wrong
and everything right in striv· ing to be the man God wants
you to be .

Fir"li'l &amp;ptist Church
P:~ st or· Marl: Morrow. bth and Plllmer SL.
Midt.ll epurt . Sunday School - 9:15a.m ..
Worship · 10:1 5 a.m ., 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday SeT"\ ICC· 7.00 p.m .

Racine First Bapti!tt

Special singers
CARPENTER
Dayspring of Athens will be
at Mt. Union Baptist Church,
6:30p.m. Sunday.

Mount Hope
Team coming to
Flatwoods

world. and that's now chan~ing who connected with his fiancee
a lot. .. said Paul Clough. mmis· through a Jewish bar night at
ter of singles programs al Ward Como's in Ferndale. '"This gives
Church.
a good opportunity to do that
Ahout once a month, 100 to •md good place."
·
125 Jewish singles !lock to a bar
At Trinity Church in Livonia,
to socialize in the sem·ch for a the Rev. Michaci'Van Hom has
lifelong partner.
taken a different approach to the
The meetings are ca&lt;;ual and large number of college students
are a chance to meet new peCJ.. and young people who attend
pie, said Jonathan Goldstein. his church: Integrate, don't sepdirector of the roung adult divi· arate them from the congregasion at the Jew1sh Federation of tion.
Metropolitan Detroit, which . "I think in a healthy church,
helps organize the bar nighl&lt;;.
you have cross· generational
"In reality. there are a lot of relationships," Van Hom. said.
single Jews out there who want . "And that means that young colto mee.t other Jews," said lege students worship with those
Goldstein, 27, 'of Binningham, who are inanied or widowed."

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Branch

personal asse,sment. A man's
life is not measured by how
much living he can heap on
himself. hut. rather. how
much life he can instill in the
one whom he should consider
as his most prized possession
as well as closest neighbor.
Such is further claritied by
God's e":~ctatio.n that a man.
"nounsh ht s w1te m terms ol
fostering spir!tual 11ro~th and
matuntv. To ·chensh 1s the
exhort;ition ·'to keep warm.''
"To be joined unto his wife::
literally means "to be glued.
You want to be the man God
wants you to be'' ll1en, gird up
your loins to be a loving man.
Second. God wants a man
to be a moral nian. The fail ·
ure of matly is the mindset
that there is nothing to do or
nothing enjoyable in lite
UlJiess it is mixed with an
immoral quality. Yet, life is
best qualified when a m~n
strives to live out what IS
right in God's sight.
It was my dad who set
before me this Godly stan·
dard for manliness. I never
saw him do anything of an
immoral quality. Rather. he
was always involved with
something that made a posi·
tive contribution to home,
church. and community. His
·moral life set the tone for

Community Calendar

Michigan religious groups reach out to singles
NORTHVILLE TOWNSHIP.
Mich. (AP) - An increasing
number of churches in Michigan
are reachinll out to singles. pro. viding spintual guidance and a
comfortable place to meet.
Ward
Evangelical
Presbyterian
Church
in
NorthvHie Township has one of
the largest sing les ministries.
About 3,000 participate in the
church's three singles groups
geared for people from their 20s
to those over 50. The church
offers· separate services for
unmanied members and events
mnging from softball leagues to
movie nights.
·
"In the· past, it was a married

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday·, June 25, 2004

Be the ·man God wants you to be

A Hunger For More
Ever feel
like your
voice can '.t
be heard?

Page.A2

POMEROY - Mt. Hope
Prai,se Team from Beck ley,
W Va. will visit Flatwoods
United Methodist Church at
6 p.m. on Sunday, with special singing, ' live -music ,
youth choir. short dramas
and sign language to music.

VBS set
POMEROY- "Passport to
the Holy Lahd, Following
Jesus Every Day" is the theme
of the vacation Bible school
program to be presented at the

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Pomeroy Church of Christ,
July 5-9. Classes will be held
from 6:30 to. 8:30p.m.
The school will be a five·
day world adventure featur·
ing fun, crafts. music and
active Bible learning. Classes
will be held for ages three
through 14 at the church
which is located at 212 West
Main Street, Pomeroy. For
more information call the
church at 992·2926.

Day camp to ·
start Monday
POMEROY - Children
entering grades one through
seven are invited to attend
the Amazing Grace Day
Camp to be held at Grace
Episcopal Church, 326 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Monday
through July 2. Classes will
be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The camp is sponsored by St
Paul Lutheran Church. St. John
Lutheran
Church, GrdCe

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Pastor: Rick Rule. Sunday School - 1J30
a.m .. Wur.~hip - 10:40 a.m . 7:00 p.m..
Wcdncl&gt;day Services- - 7:00p.m.

Episcopal Church, Southem
Ohio Synod of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America and
Lutheran Outdoor Ministries in
Ohio. More infonnation can be
obtained by contacting Pastor
Jim Brady. 992-2010: Louise
Michael, 985-4237. or Fr.mk
Sisson. 992-3867.
Activities will include
crafts. singing. games. recre- .
ation, and Bible study. There is
no cost to participants. Lunch
and snacks are provided daily.

Sil\'t-r Run Baptist
Ptlstor: John Swanson. Sunday School lOa.m .• Worship · lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesday SeT"\' ICes-7:00p.m.
Mt. Un.io n B•ptlst
Pastor : David WiJeman. Sunda)' School9:45 a.m , · E\-ening - 6:]0 p.m ..
Wednesday Sel''ices- 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem B•ptkt Chu~h
Great Bend. Route 124, Ritcine , OH,
P~~ostur : Danie-l Mecca, Sunday School •
9:30a.m., Sunday W(m;hip- 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday Bible Study-6:00p.m.

·Services
planned

Old Bethel Free Will B1plllt Church

28601 St. Rt . 7. Middlepon. Sunday
·school • 10· u.m., Evening • 7:00 p.m..

COOLVILLE - Special
Sunday services at U1e Faith
Harvest Church of Coolville
will feature two speakers,
Wally Quinn of Abiding Glory
in Rorida at the I0 a.m. ser·
vice, and international prophet
and evangelist Drummon
Thom of Louisville, Ky .. at the
7 p.m. service.

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Thunda·y Service"- 7:00
Hlllllde Baptist Chu~h

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr .• Sunday Unified
Servh:e, Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m,

Vh:tory Baptilllndependenl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James

E. Keesee, Wonhip - 1Oa.nl .. 7 p.m.,
Wednesday·Services - 7 p.m.
Fallh Baptist Chuft'h
Railroad St .. Mason. Sunday School- 10
a.m .. Wors hip • I I a.m ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Young's Carpenter Service
26 years In local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215

popular song shares

Tolstoy. in a letter to
his son. wrote, -The
goal of our life should
not be to flnd joy in
marriage, but lo bring
more love.and truth
into the world. We
marry to assist each
other in this task.
The highest calling is
that ofthe man who
has dedicated his life
to serving God and
doing good, and who
unites with a woman in order to further that purpose."
Of course, Mr. Tolstoy did not mean we should not be happy with
our mate. Happiness finds a couple when they unite as one spirit in
God's service. In the marriage vows themselves, we hear "...and the two
shall be as one:
Had God fell that Adam could have accomplished his mission on
earth alone, He would not have given him Eve as a helpmate. The
Creator chose to unite the two. "It is not good that man should be alone.
I will make him a helper fi.t for him." (Genesis 2: IS)
. In this month of happy unions, may you remember that God
. makes a good marriage great. Worship together and stay together. May
God Bless!
IUUDlY

·We otTer physical, occupational,
speech, art &amp; music therapies
740-667-3156

"1Vest and Rest"

Michael L. Crite~
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of We"
Page Street
(740) 992-6472

333
Middle,;-ort OH

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport, Pastor:
Rev. Gilherl Craig, Jr.. Sunday School 9:30a.m .. Worship - \0:45a.m.
Antiquity Baptl~t
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10:45 lf.m., Sunday EYening ·6:00p.m.,

Fax i74()\ 992-7406

Pastor: Mark McComag

more than a romantic
sentiment. Leo

MONDAY

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Coalville, Ohio
.
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

Fomil Run BapUst
Pu~tor : Arius Hurt, Sunday School - 10
a.m , Won;hip- II a.m.

WUIKSilY nuil!llY

JllllV

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

Acts 2.4:16 .

209 Third

Racine, OH

':A Home Bank for
Home People"

Open 7 days a week
740-992·7713

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

Salem St., Pastor: Jamie Fonner. Su nday
School - 10 a.m., E\-ening · 7 p.m.,
Wednesda)' Services- 7 p.m.

Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily SpeciaJJ

Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood. WV. Sunday School 10 am. Morni ng worship II 11m Evening· 7 pm.

Wednesday 7 p.m.

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

Catholic

your light so shine befonel
that they may see
works and glorify
IF'atl1er in heaven, "
Matthew 5: I

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If ye abide in Me, and My

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

Rutland Fret Will Baptist

:Mi[[ie's 1{estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

499 Richland Jl,venue, Athens
740-594-6333'
I-81Hl-45 I -9806

6 am -8 pm

740-949-2210

Hills Self Storage

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

Hour~

Warm f,-inrdlr
Atino.1·ph1'1'(' ·

words abide in yorr, ye slra/1
ask wlrat ye will, and it slrall
be done unto you.
Jolm15:7

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

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

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middleport. OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies.
nranues t-shirts and more

"Do not steal. Do not lie.
Do not deceive one
another."
•
Leviticus 19: II

Socrod H~ CotWk Churdl
161 Mulberry Ave .. Po~roy, 992-5898,
Pastor: Re\'. Walter E. Heinz. Sat Con.
4 :4VIi : l5p.m, Man· 5:30 p.m., Sun.
Con . -8:45·9:15 a.m... Sun. Mass- 9 :]0
a.m.. Daily Mass-8:30 a.m.

Pomeroy C hu~h of Christ
212 W Ma in St. , Minister: Anthony
Morris
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m , Wcmhip10:30 a.m .• 6 p.m.. Wednesday Services7 p.n1.

Pomeroy Westsidt Church of Cluist
33226 Child~n'5 Home Rd ., Sunday
School - II a.m , Worship - IOa .m , 6 p m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of Christ
5th and Main. Pastor: AI Hart.son.' Youth
Minister: Josh Ulm, Sunday Schwl- 9:30
a.m ., Wonhip· !1 :15, 10:30 a.m., 7 pm ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
K4!oo Church or Christ
Worship - 9:~ 0 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m .. Pastor-Jeffrey Wal!l!.ce. lst and
3rd Sunday

Bearwallow Ridge Churclr ol' Christ
Pas1or:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30

a.m.
- 10:30 a.m .. 6 :_30 p.m.
Wedne-~y Services-6:30p.m.

Wor ~ hip

Zion Church otChris1
Pomeroy, Harri~onville Rd. (RI.I43),
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Worship · 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Tuppen Plain ChuN"h of Chr-UI
ln stru memal, Worship Service - 9 a.m .,
Communion - 10 a.m .. Sunday School 10: 15 a.m , Youth ~ 5:30pm Sunday. Bihle
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Church of Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon. 3955S Bradbury
Road, Middleport , SunJay School - 9 :~0
a.m
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Rutl•nd Church of Chris1

Su nday School - 9:30 a.m.• Worship and
Commumon- 10:30 a.m.. Bob J. Weny,
Minister

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G,_ Epl""P"J Chur&lt;h
326 E. Main St., ,Pomeroy. Sunday School
Holy Eochltfi&amp;t II :00 a.m

and

Holiness

Churth or Chrbl
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent. SUnday Bible Study 9:30 a.m., Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Community Church

Pa10tor Su::ve Tomek. Main Strct:t.
Rutland.. Sunday Worship--10:00 a.m.•
Sunday Servtce-7 p.m.

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Dan'iUe Holiness Churrb
31057 Statt: Route 32S. Langs\'lle, Pa!&gt;lor:
V1c1or Roush .. Sunda)' school - 9:3"o a.m..
Sun4ay won;hip - 10:30 a.m . &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesday pra~·er serl-'ice- 7 p.m.

SundaY School - 9:30 a.m., Worship \0:30 - a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday

Services - 1:00 p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Morl1h Church of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine, Pastor : James
Satterfield, Sunday School - ~:45 a.m.,
Evening , 6 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7

p.m.
Rutland Chuft'b or God
Pastor: Ron Heath. Sunday Worship • 10
a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services • 7
p.m.
Syncu~e

Flnt Church of God
Apple and Second St.s., Pastor: Re\'. David
Russell. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m.
E\'ening Services· 6:30 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 6:30p.m.
·
Churth or God or Prophecy

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992·3785

hNnFRSON
t 'U NI· RAI. HOM E
174 Laynts...... PO Bo1l10

N,.. Hmn, WV lll6!

OllSi!i Chriitian Felio•ship
t ~on--denommauonal

Calva.,· Pilgrim Cbapd

Harrisonv ille Road, Paslor: Charles
M c K~n z 1c. · Sunday School Y:30 a.m ..
Worship - II a.m .. 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Sef"\'Jce -7:00 p.m.

Leading Creek Rd. , Rutland, Paslor: Re\ .
Dewey King, Sunday Khool· 9:.'0 a.m ..
Sunda)· wormip -7 p.m .. Wednesday
pra~·er meeting- 7 p.m.
Pht4! Gm\·e Bible Holine9S Chardl
Ill m1le off Rt. 325. Paswr: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School • · 9:30 a.rn ..

Communit~- of Christ

Pon\and-Racme Rd .

Ruth (Middlt-porU

10 :30 am

Pastor-· Rod Bnw:cr. Sunday School - 9:30

LluF-el ClifT Free Melhodist Chun:_h
Pastor: Glenn Rowe. Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:"30 a.m. and 6
p.m..~ednesday Service-7:00p .m.

Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran
Beady
Our Suktur Lulheran Chun:b
Walnut •nd Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. P•stor: David Russell, ~unday
School- 10:00 a.m., Worship · 1I 1.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Chuft'h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy.
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m., Wonhip • II
a.m. Pastor: James P. Brady

United Methodist
Graham Unlttd Methodl11
Worship-9:30a.m. (lsi &amp; 2nd Sun).,
7:30 p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4th Sun),Wedneiday
Service· 7:30p.m.

OfT 124 behind Wilkenille, Pastor: Re\·.
Ralph Spire§, Sunday School - 9:]0 a.m .•
Worsliip - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.• Thursday
Sm·ice~ • 7 p.m.

Melp Cooperative P1rish
Nonheast Cluster, Alfred, Puslur: lane
Beauic:, sUnday Schpol - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Che ~ ter

Schoo l." Pa ~tPr" Rnt&gt; Bart-er.
Assi"stanl PaMor: Karen Doni' - Sunda)
Wor~h 1p · 10 am: 1:\ enmg \\.,r~ hlf' b rm.
Youth groop 6 pm. Wcdn~...:ia~ Po.,.. er m
Prayer . and Bible Swd~ - .. pm
Adl Strttt Church
.-\ sh St.. ~tJddleport - Pa,\Or Greg Sr,n~
Sunda~ Scht&gt;OI - 9 ~() a m . M o rnm~
Wor~h1p · 10.30 am &amp; 7 pm. "-edoc-lod.it ~
Sentcc - 7:00p.m .. Yoolh Ser-.Ke- i:\10
p.m.
Agape Ur~ Center
··Fuli-Go~pel Church'". Ptl"~tor£ John &amp;
Pauy Wade. 603 Second ·-"' e. Ma ~o n . -- _l.5017. Serqce time Sunda~ 10 30 am.
WedJI{'~ay 7 pm

Pastor: Boh Robinson. Sunda~ Sl"hool - 4
a.m.. Won-hip - 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship- 10 a.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rud Brm~o c r . Wun.hip- 9;30 a.m.,
Sunday School- !OJ5 a.m
Rock Springs
Pas1or: K~ilh Rader, Sunday School- IJ 15
a.m.. Wors h1p ~ 10 a .m .. Youth
Fellow5hip. Sunday - 6 p..m.

Abundant Gntet R.E I.
9~3

S Third 51. . Middkpon. Pn\IOT Tcre,:~
Davis, Sunda~ ~ ef\H:e, 10 .t m.

WedneMiay

Joppa
Pa!tor: Bob Randolph, Worship - 9:30
a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Lona Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship ·
10:30 a.m.
Reed.vUle
Worship • 9:3 0 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m .. First Sunday of Month • 7:00

............ ,.
..,.......
...............
;ttfbtr ;tuneral.,omt
MHIHM1

1.111.....

Brogan-Warner

INSURANC.E
SERVICES
214 E. Main

992-5130 .
Pomeroy

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

~n JC!.'.

7 p.m

F&amp;ith Full Gospel Cbun:h

Luug Bonom. Pa~lvr Sie-\e Reed. Sullli.J~
Sl·hool - ~ -J U J m . Wor&lt;ihlr- '&gt;I .'!1 a m
and -7 p.m.. Wedile:.da~ - 7 p.m. Fmh) -

Billie Stud)·: Mmlda)- 7:00 pm
Snow-"Yille
Sunda)' School - 10 a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m.

rdluv. ~ hlp

Beth•n)'

loef\ llt'

7 p.m

Harr iso nville Communit} Cbun:h
Therun Durham. Sunda~ - 1;1; -'IJ
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wc dncMia~ - 7 p.m

Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School 10
a.m .. Wor ship - 9 a .m .. We&lt;.lne!odily
Services· IIJ a.m.

Pa~ _wr :

Middi4!J!Or1 Community Church
57.5 Pearl St.. M1ddlcpnrt . Pastor: S11m
Anderson. Sunday s~· h ool 10 am .
E\•ening - 7;30 p.m.. WedncsJa~ Semce ·
l:30 p.m .

C•nnel-Sutton
Carmt:l &amp;-Bashan Rds . Racine., Ohio.
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday Sl"hool -

9:30 a.m., Worship • 10:-15 a.m . . Bible
Study Wed 7:00p.m.

Faith V•llt-y T•bernadt Church

MornlnaSt.r
Pastor: John Gilmore . Sunday Schoo! - II
a.m ., Worship - 10 a.m.

Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Re' Emmeu
Rawson. Sunday E vemng 7 p.m ..
Thursday Service· 7 p.m.

Eut Letart
Pastor: Sunday School - 10 a.m.• Worship
- 91l.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m.

. Syracuse Ml•lon
1411 Brid11eman St ., Synu.:usc:. SUnJa~
School - 10 a.m. EveninJ - 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Radne
Pastor: Pete Shaffer. Sunday School • 10
a.m .. Wonhip - II a.m .. Wedne~y 7
p.m.
Coolville United MethodiJI Pal11b
Helen Kline. Coolville Chur~o:h,
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sunday School - !0 ·
a.m .. Worship . 9 a.m., Tuesday Servic~s 7 p.m.
Pa~tor :

Haul Community Church
Off R1. 124. Pastor. Edsel Han, Sunday
School · \UU a.m , Wonhip · 10:30 a.m..
7:30p.m.
Dynvtlle Community Chun"h
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship -

Sunday school - 10 a.m .. Worship - 11
a.m .. Wednesday St:rvice- 7 p.m.

Township Rd .. 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m . Worship • 10 a .m., Wednesday
Services- !0 a.m .

Fahh Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday School • 9 JO am.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesduy 7:30 p.m.

Hockln&amp;port Church
Grand Street, Sunday School-9:30a.m..
Wo~hip- 10:30 a.m ., Pastor Phillip Bell

Mt. Olive Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday Sehoul -

Torch Churth
Cn . Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.•
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

9:30a.m .. Evening - 6:30p.m.. Wedneday
Sef'\&lt;·i~e • 7 p.m.

Nazarene

FuU Gotpc:l Ll&amp;ftlboust
33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy, Pastor; Ro~·
Hunttr, Sunday School - l0 a.m.. E\·enini
7:30 p.m .. Tuesday &amp; Thursd11) - 7. ~0

Middleport Church of lh4! Nuarene
Putor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Worship- !0:30a.m .. 6:30 p.m ..

p.m

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m., Pastor:

South Belhtl Communltl Church
Silver Ridge· Putor Linda Damewood,
Sunday School - 9 a.m., W("mhip Ser.·ke
!0 a.m . 2nd and 4th su"nda)'
Carltton lnterdenomin1tlonal Churc h
Kingsbury Rnad , Pa§tor· Rohen Vance.
Sunday School · 9:.10 a.m.. "-~'unh1 p
Service 10:30 a .~~ E'· ~ninl! Seni..-:t: fl

Reedavllle FeUow•hlP
Church of the Nazarene, Pastor: Jamie
Pettit, Sunday School-9 :30a.m.• Worship
- 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m .. Wednesday Servi~es
• 7 p.m.
SyracuH: Churth or the Nazarene
Pastor Mike Adkins, Sunday S~hool - 9:30
a.m., Worship • 10:30 a.m. , t'i p.m..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

•

· Stiuno\illt- t:omr.iunit~ -\poslolk
ChurTh
Pal-oior Waynt' R Je .,. ell. Sunda~ Srf"\ ILC'
t~-oop

•

m . Thu r~~ t.Ulp m

Rt-jokirq: lire Chun:-h
~ nd .-\.\ ~
\{tddlepon. Pa,tor
M1ke Fon- man . P"J ~IOi
Emt'TIIU~
Lav. rern:e Ft•re man. Wo r~h lj}- llhl() .1m
Wc:drie&lt;;d a~ ')cr-.!t·~~- 7 p m

'iflfl

'\

Cliflon TabrrniK"It Church
C"hfllln. V. \ a. Sunda~ SL·hool - 10

r m. \l. edne~~

v. ·0r.h1p--

ll

m.

Ser.1t·e- •

rm
~e"'

Lift \"k-10~ Centt"r
Crt·ek Rclo\U. Go~lhf'('h'. OH
P~-.to r Bill St.titn. SunJa~ SeT"\ Jt'c:' · HI
a.m &amp;: 7 p.m \\t=dl"k.'!.da~ - p m 6:.
Yuuth 7 p.m
~-- .'- G.:ur~e!&gt;

Gospr-1

Full

Churt'h or tht Lhing

Rt-3.\S. AnlllJUII} . Pll~\l;r
Serv~ce~ S&lt;iturda~ ~ :00

J.:-'-"'-~ \1 om,_

p.m

Salf-m C'ommunit:'"Churrh
Bad.: ot We~ t C1llumto1a. VI \ J •'m Lie\ mg
Road. P.1~ Hlr ChJrll'" R 0 u~h ~0--11 6'"'5~~g&amp; .

Sund&lt;t~

S~huul ~

.'l.J &lt;tm.

e\cnmg '-t'f"\l•·t• - 1Kl pm.
Wedrk'&lt;.dJ~ ..Cr\ Kt"'., IWI

':iund.J~

A1i'&gt;l~

Stud~

rm

Hohson f"hris1ian fello\oloship Churt'h
HeP.K.·h~l Wh11e. Sunda~ Sdll.&gt;c-.1-

Pa$tOr:
10 .1m.

Sund.1~

Churt·h

,t·f'\ 1&lt;.:.: - t&gt; ~o

rm

Wednc...da~ 7 pm

Re--storation

Fello-....;hip
Pa&lt;.tnr'
Lonnie Cow•. SundJ: \\ \~ r~ h1p llU I(J .tm.

936~

Hooper

\\'edne-~a~:- 7

(.'hri~tian

Road . .-\then,_

rm

Langnillt Christian Churt'h

Full Gospel. Pa~lo r Rnhcn '-l u,'-CJ .
Sunday School 9:.m am.. \\'or~Jup 111:~(1
am - 7:00pm. WedneMLI~ Scf"\l•·c '"' :00
pm

Pentecostal
Pentrc01t•l A§St'mbly
St. Rt. 124. Racine . Pastor: Wtl!i am
Hoback, Sund1:1y School · 10 am ..
E'·eninj _- 7 p.m., Wednesday Services- 7
p.m.

Presbyterian
· Syracuse: First Uultrd Pre~byterian
Pastor: Roben Crow. Wo!"\hi p- 11 a. m

Harrilonvlllf! Prtsb)·terian Chure:h
Pastor: Roben Crow. Worsh1p · 9 a.m

Middleport Presby1eri1n
Pastor· Rober Crov. ., Wurstup- I0 a m

Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulberry Ht s Rd .. Pomeroy.
Ulwimk)-~

Saturd11y

Pa~10r R o~

Seni r.:c~:

Sahbath

Sehoul- 2 p.m .. Worship · _, p m

'

United Brethren
~II.

Ht:rmon Un.lttd Bn:thrtn
in Christ Churth
Te.u!&gt; Communi\) ~6411 W1ckham RJ .
Pastrir: Peter Manindale, Sunda ~ Schon!
9:J O a.m .. Wors hip - \0 ~0 am, i 00
p.m. Wcdnt',da) S~rvice~ • 7:0L) p rn
Y11uth group mee11ng 2nd &amp; 4th Sund:J:&gt;'
7 p.m.
Eden L'nited Brrthrtn In Chris1

State Ro-ute 124. Reedmllc. Sundu•
School - t 1 u.m .. Sunda~ Wor~hip · I!10\l
a in. &amp; 7:00pm. Wedne~dll~ St'f\ll'l'' 7 :00 p.m Wcdnt: ~dll) \\1uth SCf\l.'t: -

7:00 p.m.

Whilt's Chapel Wesltyan

The care you dtstrvt, close to home

Chicken"

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

God and man."
Acts 24:16

Cain~ Bible Churr-h
Pome-rt).'+ P1ke. (,, RJ. P.t•1tlf R.-1
Bl ac l~~o(l(.,.l Sunda~ ~ch,-..•1
'-1 ;II ~ m
1A or,h1p
10: ;\&lt;l J m. - -.o p m
\l.ednesd.'i~ Sen l~e - - ~! r In

Frtedom Gospel ~IIS!ilon
Bald Knob, rn Co. Rd . ·'I, PastM: Rt'\.
Roger Willford. Sundll) School - 9 ]0 a.m.
Wor-5hip-- 7 p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS
Crow's Family Restaurant
REHABILlTI'ION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before

Faith Ftlkt•·§hip Crusadt' for Chri~~ol
Pa.stor Re' • Fr.:m~lm Did, en-. SeT"\ ~~r
Fnda~ . - p m

p.m .

Pomeroy Chul'(:h of the Nazarene
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunday School ·
9:30a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

1\la~ .

Rnan

10 :30 a.m ., 7 p.m.

Mont Chapel Church

Belhtl Church

Allen Midcap
Chester
PMtor: Jane Beattie, Worship - 9 a.m .,
Sunday School - 10 a.m . . Thunday
Services - 7 p.m.

Wedn e~da~·

Bdhel Wonhip Centr:r

S•lem Ct'nter
Paswr Wilham K. Mar5hal1. Sund11y
School - 10:15 a.m .. Worshlp-9:15 a.m.•

- Hysell Run HoliMSS Church
Pastor: Rev. Larry Lemley: Sunday School
·9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m..
Thursday B1ble Study and Youth · 7 p.m.

Jim Pwffiu.
IA ur~.lup ·
Sen1ce, - 7.LMl

Pa ~1or:

P-~-

a.m.. Worship - II :00 a.m.

Wtsltyan Bibit HolintP Churth

Pa~lnr

il m \I. Uf\hlr - ()(I
p.m .. Wed.nesda ) Btblr Siud' - • 1(1 r m

Sunda:o School· 9 'II

Sunda) S•·hool · 9 -'0 a m .

75 Pearl St .. Midd\epon. Pastor: Rick.
Buume. Sunda)· Sehoul- 10 a.m. Worship
-IU:45 p m., Sunday Eve. 7·00 p.m..
Wednesday Service -7: 30p.m

p.m..

Biblt CburTh

LttMt . \It Va. Rt I

South Founh A\enUC" \11ddl~pon

PMtor Oms Stt'll.art 10:00 am Sunda~
Other ~c-tmgs 10 h0me~

Forrst Run
Pa§tor: Bob Rotoinson. Sunda) School· 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bourn~ . Sunday Sehoul Y:JO a.lfl .. Worship - IU:JO a.m Thursda y
Semce .~ - 7 p m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m, L\0
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

fellov. sh1 p 1

Mctttng 10 !he old Amencan Ltgi(ln Hall

Miners,·ilk

Mt. Olh•e Unlled Methodl1t
H.rtford Churth or Chrl1t In
Chrlsd1n Union
Hartford, _W.VK., Pastor :Dnid Greer.

. OtherCburches

Pastor:· Arland King. Sunda~ School 10:30 a..m . Worship · 9:30 am. Bible
Study Wed 7:30
Pas10r Kenh Rader. Sunday Schoo! · 10
a.m., Worship - 11 a.m.

St. Jolm Lutheran Chun:h
Pine Grove, Worahip - 9:00a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a .m. Pastor: JameS P.

DrXkr Church otChrl1t
Pastor: Bill Eshelman. Sunday school9:30
a.m., Norman Will, superintendent.
Sunday \IIOnhip - 10:30 a.m .

Sunday School · 9·45 am . \\orsh1p - 11
a.m.. Wednesda) Str\.·u..--cs- 7::\0 p.m.

Flatwoods

Hickory Hills Chu~ of·Cbrb:t
Evanselis_t Mike Moore. Sunday School 9 a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sel"\·iceli • 7 p.m.

Putor: Philip Stunn, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service : 10:30 a.m .. Bible .
Study, Wodnesday, 6:30 p.m.

Asbury (S)-racuse), PastQr Bob Robm!&gt;Ofl,

Enkrpri:sr

The Chun:b or Jesus
ChrUt ofUner-Day Sidnu
St. Rl . 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10 :20-11 a.m., Relief
SocJety/P~esth_ood
II :05-12:00 noon,
Sacrament Servite 9--10:13 a.m.,
Homemaking meeting, I st Thun. • 7 p.m.

Bill Quickel

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667·311 0

Episcopal

Cooh1llt Road Pi!otor Re\ Ptulhp
Ridellow". Su.nd.a~ ScOOol
9 -~~~ "m.
\ll'or"St-up - 10 3-0 o1 m. 'ol.ednelod.t~ Si"l"' Kt
-7 p.m.
Fail"'~

Ruu..d Church ol the Saun:or
Sunduy School · '11:30 a.m , \\-orship 10 30 am .. 6 30 p m . We~~
Sef"\·ices - 7 p m

Central ClllRU

l'rially Chord!
Second &amp;: Lynn. Pomeroy, Pastor. R~v.
Jonathan Noble. Worship 10:25 am ••
Sunday School 9:15a .m.

Bradford Church of Christ
Comer or St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Mini~ter: Doug Shamblin, Yooth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School - 9:30 a.qa,
Wors,hip - !1:00 a.m .. 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wed"'esday Services -7:00 p.m.

Reedntue Chur&lt;h ol Cbrial

Tuppen PW• St Paul
Pu.tor Jane Beame. Sund.ly School - 'il
am .. Worshtp - 10 a.m.. Tutida) Sel'·t-e~
-730pm

Congregational

Rose of Sharon Hollnfss Church

John 15:7

'

pm

Church of Christ
Hemtotk Gro¥e Christian Cbwda
Minister: Larry Brown, Worship • 9:30
a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m :. Bible Study ·
7 p.m.

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
Full line or
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
Products+
wlrat ye wil~ and it shall
"
Financial
be done unto you.
Services
..
AGENCIES Inc.

'

O.J White Rd off St Rt 160. Pastor: PJ
Cbapmm. Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Won.hip - I J a.m.. Wedne&amp;dly Services - 7

a.e.tB Church el lht Na.r.:arew
Pastor· Re\ Herben Gmt. Sunda~ School
- 9 30 am , WorUup - II am., b p m .
Wednewhy ServJct§ - 7 p m

992-5432
or God so loved the llwld
the gave his o11ly
lbe!(OI'/etr

SOIL..

John 3: !6
jtnoufler':fire &amp;: itafrtp

-

( ltt...-tHm

TOLL-Bill
1...00-IU·-oiiJ

Meigs Count}\ Oldc~t

EastMain
Pomeroy. Oh
740,992,2644

Flnri~t

~

W

740.992·6298

MY 2race is sufficient
for thee: for mY
stren2th is made
Perfect in weakne.ss.
II Cor. 12:9

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

�The Daily Sentinel

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

READER .' S VIEW

Fair
Dust control on dirt roads
. Dear Editor
I am a Meigs County resident. To be more specific, I live in
Orange Township.
For several years, those of us who Jive on din roads, have
gotten dust control in front of our houses in the summer,
which makes it kind of nice, we don't have to suffer with as
much dust when people fly by our houses. This year our
trustees have decided to chip and seal, instead of the usual tar
and oil mix. Sounds great, doesn't it? · Not when you look at
how unfairly it was done.
To my understanding, as well as everybody I have spoken
with, there was supposed to only be one 8-foot wide pass right
down the ·middle of the road in front of each house. But, that
·apparently didn't apply to all of the residents. There are a few
. who got chip and seal from ditch line to ditch line. Hardly
seems fair, does it? Well, this seems to be an every year
occurence. While everyone else still has to choke on the dust,
from the many cars that refuse to drive in the middle of the
road, these others don't.
That's not the only problem. though. While driving home,
on the same day that this chip and seal was put down, I
' noticed what looked like bare patches. The chip and seal was
:put on so thin that it was coming up in spots on the tires of
; yehicles driving through. I think that I speak for most of the
:·tesidents when I say that our trustees, when doing a job like
:\his, shouldconsider treating all of us the same.
. : · Anita Fryar

PageA4

OPINION

Friday, June

25, 2004

· Friday, June 25,

·

George
Plagenz

graduates .to go home and
copy down the words of
English Victorian poet
Matthew Arnold and paste
them on the bathroom mirror to read every morning.
Ah. love, let us be true
To one another! For the .
world, which seems
To lie before us like a land
of dreams.
So various. so beautiful.
so new.
Hath really neither joy.
nor love. nor light,
Nor cenitude, nor peace,
nor help for pain;
And we are here as on a
darkling plain
Swept with confused
alarms of struggle and
flight,
Where ignorant armies
·
clash by night.
The words are from .
'Dover Beach,' which
Arnold wrote in 1867, and
they place the source of our
happiness on the fidelity
and closeness of our human
relationships and force us to

Host washes houseguests right out of her bathroom

Ethel Orr

ask ' Have we been looking tragedie' or did ~ ou change
in the wrong place for life\ the qualit) nf the-e experience&gt; so that in the end the)
satisfactions?"
We should also remind ble;sed your life'!
Maybe we ha' e ' aid too
today's graduates that the
often
to young people. 'The
years ahead ·can be good for
anyone who believes we world before ) ou i' bright
were put on this eanh not to with promi'c .' Perhap' "e
be comfonable but to build should ha' e been tellin g
character. The last 50 years them all alon~ to make
have taught us self-indul- friends with pain. i11'tead of
gence instead of self-denial. encouragm~ them to flee
We have forgotten that from it (wh'en really that i;
going without often gives not possible ).
We should tell them about
more pleasure than giving ·
oy,ter. When thi '
the
in to our desires. The seemtng hopelessness of the remarka l'&gt;le creature ll1uh
world situation is further itself irrii.1 ted b\ a ~rain nf
exacerbated by the fact that 'and \1 1 ·: in ii, ,Ttell. it
in our religious life today. ~ecret~ :"! t rnat t.~rial that
we are more concerned with coal\ th-: tur~ l!:.!ll ~uh~taJh..:t&gt;.
our personal salvation than not unl: rclie~ing th e pain
" e are with ;aving our but producing a pearl of
great price and t&gt;caut).
world.
Today\ young people
Folio" in ~ the '"ample uf
may never know the aftlu- the humble "' 'ter. \1 e c·an
ence ~nd comfort we knew. make our own pcarh h~
But t! ') may be better off l'Oitting th~ ~harp 'e~ation"
for it. Hardship often bring&gt; of life with qualitie&gt; 'uch '"
out the best 111 us. Hugh patience. serenity and good
Studden-Kennedy. another humor - and the lm e that
British writer. sai d that never faileth .
Unable l&lt;l a»ure toi.bv\
when we get to the eternal
judgment seat. God will ask graduates of a pot of gold. at
us not ·How did life treat the end of the ra inbow tor
you'&gt;' but rather ·Well , what eve n a rainbow). we can tell
them to ·remember the oysdid you make of it?'
What did you make of . ter.' If t.hev do tit at. thC\
your di sappointments, the may find the happines&gt; anJ
hard times, the tragedies in peace that tom otTO\\'&gt;
your life? Did they remain world cannot gt,·e or take
disappointments
and away.

RACINE -Ethel L. Orr. Nonbview Senior Living · Center.
Johnslow1L fonncr1y of Olester ;uxl Racine. passed away June 24, 2004.
She was born May 4. 1905. at Dorcas. daughter of the late
Edward M1c~ael "Mike" and Mary Elizabeth. "Betty" Theiss.
Also precedmg her rn death were three brothers: Edward,
Blythe and Charles Theiss. and two sisters, Alice Hill and
Thelr:na Watch.
A member of the 1925 Racine High School graduating
class, s he recetved ,her teaching certificate from Rio Grande
College m 1928. She married William Anhur "Art" Orr and
they lived on the family farm near Bashan until moving to
Chester in 1963.
· Mrs. Orr was a member of the Sutton United Methodist
Church, where she was active for over 50 years. She hosted
the Sutton Ladies Aid Society in her home for Bible study and
where ~any hours were spent in quilting. Countless apple pies
and chtcken noodles were made for the church's food booth at
the Meigs County Fair.
She also anended the Chester United Methodist Church, ·where
she taught Sunday school and was an active member of the
Wom~n's Society of Christian Service. She was a 70-year member ot the Chester Council. Daughters of America, Lodge #323,
Past Counctlors and Chester Township Fire DepanmentAuxiliary.
Fan11l ~ members preceding her in death were her husband,
Anhur. m 1982; her grandson, Bob Bill Lee in 1986: her
daughter. Manha Ann Lee in 1999; and two sons-in-law, Dr.
Roger Grueser, in 1993, and Roben Lee. in 1998.
She is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law, Marilyn and Ed
Newman of Galion, and Janet and George Mara of Canal Winchester.
nme gr.mdchildren: Linda Zimmennan of Solon, Iowa, Kathy
Scvennski of Rocky R1ver, Jane Beacom of Johnstown, David
Newman of Canton. Gina Meyers of Canal Wmchester, Lisa Griffith
of Lancaster. Susan TomliiL&lt;;On of Canal Winchester, Jennifer Mily of
Johnstown and Becky Bentz of Racine; and 20 great grandchildren.
She remembered all fami ly binhdates and was faithful in
sending birthday cards. When her eyesight failed and she
could no longer enjoy her love for reading, she relied on her
amazrng memory to recall all the poetry, hymns and Bible
verses she could recite from memory. She looked fo..Ward to
each new day and prayed each morning. 'This is the day the
Lord hath made; Let us rejoice and be glad in it."
Calling hours will be from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. on
Saturday. June 26. 2004 at Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine
where services wi ll be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, June 27, with
Rev. John Gilmore and Rev. Dwayne Stutler ofticiating.
Burial will follow at Sutton United Methodist Cemetery.
Memorial conuibutions may be made in Ethel's memory to Sunon
United Methodist Church. P.O. Box 323, Racine. Ohio 45771 .

William Hart
SHADE -· William T. Hart, 91. of Park Road, Shade.
passed away on Wednesday. June 23, 2004, at Overbrook
Nursing Center in Middleport. .
He was born Aug. 23 . 1912. at Helwig Ridge in Bedford
Township, son of the late Glen V. and Enni &gt;Cuckler Han. He
was a former school bu s driver. farmer and retired Ohio
University employee .
He was a member of the Shade United Methodist Church
and the Burlingham Camp, Modern Woodmen, for 60 years.
He is survived by a son and daughter-in-law. Reid and Juanita
Han o( Athens. and a daughter-in-law, Helen Hart of Shade;
two sisters. Murl Colburn of Middlepon and Ardith Han of
Athens; two brothers-in-law. Fred Ziegler and 'Ciair Zeigler of
Pomeroy: and a sister-in-law. Mildred Ziegler of Pomeroy.
Also surviving are g:r.mdsons, William Hart (Jackie) of Athens;
Henry Hm1 (Jmnie) of Shade: Jetr Hart (Rhonda) of Athens. mtd Jase
Han of Athens; a gmnddaughter, Jennifer (Randy) Secoy of Shade;
great~grandchildren, Heather (Jeremy) Collins of Atltens. Cody Hart
of Athens. Adam Hart of Shade, mid Carrie Caldwell, Teresa Stout,
Tun Stout, mtd Nicholas Secoy: rutd great-great grandchildren,
Austin Colli.ns. and Christopher and Jimmy Caldwell, all of Athens.
Besides his parents. he was preceded in death by his wife of
65 years. Ethel Hart; and a son, George "G.G." Hart.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Tuesday, June 29, 2004,
at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. John Elswick
officiating. Burial will folllo.w in Burlingham Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m . on Monday.

DEAR ABBY: My ·fiancee
and I recently traveled out of
town to visit my best friend.
"Frank,"' who recently married his 'weethean. ''Gail.··
Frank graciously invited my
fiancee and me to stay at
their apanment. This had
been our arrangement prior
to hi s marriage, and I
accepted the offer.
Each morning, my fiancee
and I got up early and took
our morning showers before
our hosts. As we finished our
showers. Gail would run into
the bathroom with an armful
of cleaning . supplies and
scrub it from ceiling to floor.
We are not diny people.
We didn' t make a mess in
their bathroom. We were a
little offended, but said noth·
ing. Was this her way of
telling us she didn ' t want us
staying there ? Should we
stay at a hotel next time we
visit?
.
FORMER
HOUSEGUEST, NORTH
OLMSTEAD. OHIO
DEAR
FORMER
HOUSEGUEST: I'd say she

conveyed that message pretty clearly. Considering ihe
fact that they are newlyweds. I think you'd all be
more comfortable were you
to book a room at a nearby
hotel or motel.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 42year-old woman. To those
around me I seem to have
everything - great kids, a
beautiful home, a career and
a pretty zood life. But deep
down I am miserably lonely.
I divorced a cheating
spouse eight years ago. I
haven ' t been in a serious
relationship since.
I have concentrated on my
children. my career and my

Local Briefs

IT workshop on attracting investment capital offered

Senior packets
available
POMEROY - Meigs
High School 2004 gmduates
can pick up their packets and
pictures at the school on
Friday. Monday and Tuesday
from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Car show set
for Sunday
POMEROY - A car
show will be held by the
Meigs Band Boosters at
Meigs
High
School
Sunday. Registration will
take place between II
a.m. and 2 p.m. with
awru·ds to be· made at 4
p.m . The entry fee is $10.
Dash plaques will go to
the first 50 cars registering.
There will tx! awards for the
best street rod. best original,
best truck, best mini-ttuck,
and the people's choice.
The show will be held
rain or shi ne. There will be
door prizes. food avail·
able, and a ·live remote.
For more information call
992-2071 or 992-4441.

.Proud to be apart of
your life. .

Dear
-Abby
,

ATHENS - A workshop
for entrepreneurs with information technology and hightech companies poi sed to
attract Investors is being
offered by the IT Alliance of
Appalachian Ohio and Adena
Ventures from l 0 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Ohio
University Inn in Athens.
The workshop has been
described by Gary Little,
president of the IT Alliance
of Appalachian Ohio as a
"great opportunity for entrepreneurs and companies to
meet angel investors looking
for investment opportunities." Angel investors are
individuals or groups of individuals that invest in early-

Tests

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~'Qe less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
•
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:be published. Letters should be in good taste1
;addressing issues, not personalities.
:: The opinions expressed in the column below
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\
'{Ire the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
~ Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
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from PageA1

When the news is unfit to print
Every day, a box in the
upper-left corner of .the
front page of The New York
Times proclaims 'All the
News That's Fit to Print' - ·
that being, presumably,
what the publishers want
you to believe their newspaper contains. If you take
that boast seriously, it is
high time to review your
assumptions,
especially
after the paper's most recent
gaffe.
First, some background:
The Bush administration's
justifications for its invasion of Iraq boiled down to
four: (I) Saddam Hussein's
regime possessed ·weapons
of
mass
destruction
(WMDs) that represented a
serious, albeit not necessar- '
ily 'imminent,' threat not
on ly to its neighbors, but to
the United States itself: (2)
the events of Sept. II called
attention to the exi stence of
a group of Muslim fanatics
who would be happy to use
such weapon s on the United
States if it only had them,
and these people had links
to Hussei n's regime : (3)
toppling Hussein would liberate the Iraqi people from a
gruesome 30-year despoti sm; and (4) democratizing
Iraq would have a powerful
beneficial effect on the
entire Middle East.
Justification (I) was
undermined when our
invadin g forces failed to

lapse. and with it the last
really good excuse for
Bush's war.
·
Rivers of ink, therefore,
have been squandered on
the que stion of wheth er
William
such links existed. It was
Rusher
long ago established that .
Hussein played no part in
staging Sept. II , and Bush
has never alleged otherwi se
find the allegea WMDs - indeed, he has repeated ly
either because they .were rej ected the idea. But there
spirited away to other coun- have been numerous assertries such as Syria, or were tions, by spokesmen for th e
destroyed by Hussein's Bush administration and
regime before America others, that Hussein and AI
attacked. Justification (3) Qaeda had other contacts
was quite true, but open to stretching back over nearly
the •criticism that America a decade .
had no business barging
Imagine, therefore, th e
around the world, expend- thrill experienced by libering the lives of its fighting als when the Ti'mes ran a
men and women to liberate four -column headline at the
remote peoples from their top of its front page for June
domestic
tyrants . 17 reading 'PANEL FINDS
Justification (4) was, and NO QAEDA-!RAQ TIE.'
remains, too speculative to The panel in question was
either rely on or dismi ss.
the respected biparti san
That made it extremely commission appointed by
important for critics of Bush to report on Sept. II ,
Bush (including The New the nation's response there-·
York Times) to establish, if to , and ways of improving
possible, that Osama bin our defenses. If anything
Laden's AI Qaeda had no could resolve the di spute on
links (or 'ties' or 'connec- thi s question , surely it was
tions ' or what-have-you) to th at commission. Bush's
Hussei n's regime that would last excuse for his war lay
make it plausible that in ruins. In an editoria l in
Hussein might give WMDs the same issue. the Times
to Bin Laden to use against declared that ' President
the United States. If this Bush sho uld apologize to
could be demonstrated, jus- the American peop le .'
tification (2) would colUnfo rtunatel y, howe ver.

that was not th e end of the
story. The finding reported
by the Times. it tran spi red.
wasn't that of the biparti san
panel; it was ' imply in a
draft pre pared by the
panel's staff and leaked to
the Time s. Worse yet, hoth
the panel's Republi can
chairman, former Gov.
Thoma s Kean of New
Jersey, and it s Democratic
vice chairman . former
Congressman Lee Hami lton
of
Ind iana.
promptly
expressed wonder that anyone could sttppose tile draft
seriousl y contradicted the
Bu sh admini stration's position. (Commi ss ion members have since asserted
that the panel may rewrite
the fin al report significan t·
ly, to furth er clarify this
point.)
Well ! Conservati ve&gt; wait ·
ed eagerl y to see what the
Time s would report about
this, shall we say, modification of its story. in the June
18 issue. But - would you
believe it '!- there wa&gt;n't a
word on the Kean and
Hami'Iton statcmenh. Tilat
bit or news . you ;ce. was
apparently unfit to print.
Perhaps it 's the Times that
ought to apologize to the
Ameri can people.
(William Rushcr is a
IJi &gt;t inguishcd Fellow or the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy. I

year. Writing .slipped from
60.9 percent to 56 percent of
students who passed the test.
Citizenship saw a modest
drop from 32.7 percent of
students who passed the test
in 2002-03 to 32 percent this
pasi academic year.
Across the state, the performances of fourth-grade stu·
dents improved in some subjects. and remained stable in
the other subject areas tested
from March 2003 to March
2004. Increases of 8 and 6
points were seen in mathematics and science. where the
percentages rose from 58 to
66: and from 58 to 64, respectively. There was lillie change
for writing and citizenship.
Sixth grade students did
much better on their proficiency tests. They improved in
every subject except citizenship. According to the ODE,
the number of sixth grade students at Meigs Local who
passed the math ponion of the
test went from 46.6 in 2002-03
to 65 percent this pa~t year.
The number of students proficient in writing also saw dramatic gains from 73.6 percent
to 88 percent in 2003-2004.
The number of students proficient in science also surged
ahead from 51 .5 percent in
2002-03 to 69 percent during

Board
from Page A1
• Approved creating a position of local district coordina·
tor, establishing a contract of
202 days per year.
• Set a special meeting for
~-

the last academic year.
Reading profic1ency levels
ga-ned less than a percentage
point from 57.1 percent to 58
percent of the number of students who pass.ed this portion
of the t~st in 2003-2004.
Citizenship dropped from
66.3 perceni to 63 percent. ·
For the sixth-grade test,
percentages of students
statewide reaching the proficient performance level
increased in :mme subjects,
and remained relatively the
same in the other subject
areas tested. For mathemat·
ics, there was a 13-point
increase from 52 to 65 per. cent proficient; and for w-riting. the percentage rose from
85 to 90. Figures for the other
three subjects showed little
change from 2003 to 2004~
according to the ODE.
. Ninth graders Jed the pack
and improved in ea~h subject
area. These tests are administered four times a year which
gives students numerous
chances to pass subject areas
they may -have scored in
before. The ninth grade proficiency test is being phased out
in favor of the Ohio
Graduation Test. The number
of students in Meigs Local
who are proficient in reading
improved from 78 percent in
2002-03 to 92 percent in 200304, accordin~ to the Ohio
Depanment of Education.
Writing saw the same kinds
of gains from 77.3 percent to
90 percent proficiency level
7 p.m. on July I in the elementary library conference
room, for the purpose of
approving the fiscal year
2005 budget and discussion
and possible employment of
personnel, and set the next'
regular meeting for 6 p.m. on
July 21.

------·-----..
'

fmancial portfolio. But now that
my kids are older and I have a
lot of idle time on my hands, I
miss being in a relationship.
I have tried singles groups,
chat lines. and I'm even
attending more social events,
to no avail. l take good care
of myself and look good for
my age . But the 20- and 30something
competition
makes it hard. if not impossible, to attract the kind ·or
man I'd like to be with.
What advice have you for
someone my age who has
been benched for years and
is ready to play ball again·&gt;
- LONELY IN GEORGIA
DEAR LONELY: Only
this: Stop selling yourself
shon. You have stability and
life experience to offer. and
a man with an eye for quality will appreciate · it. Don ' t
be discouraged; dating is a
hit-and-miss game, regardless of age . You are only in
the founh inning. so get off
your . rusty-d!Jsty, stay . out
there and keep on pitching .
DEAR ABBY: I am 15.

My grandfather recently
committed suicide. He asked
to .be cremated. Since there
was no funeral or visitation,
I feel like there was no closure. Is there any way I can
tell my grandfather goodbye? - NEEDS CLOSURE
IN GEORGIA
DEAR NEEDS CLOSURE: Plea se accept my
sympathy for your loss. I'll
tell you a technique that has
worked for many other people. Write your grandfather a
letter. Put into . it all the
things you wanted to say to
him but didn' t have a chance
to. Put it aside for a week,
then re-read it and "send it"
to your grandfather by burning it. I hope it works for
you. too.
Dear Ahbv is wrillen bv
Abiga il Vai1 Buren. also
known as Jeann e Phillips,
and wa;· founded by her
mother. Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abby
at
WIIW.DearAbby.com
P.O.
Box 69440. Los Angeles, CA
90069.

or

stage companie s that have
the potential for rapid, high
growt h and have promising
products or services.
The workshop will feature
presentations by experienced
angel investors, · company
owners whose businesses have
grown and succeeded in pan
because they attracted angel
investors or venture capital
funds, and legal professionals
discussing deal structure and
pannership issues.
The
IT Alliance
of
Appalachian Ohio is a regional
organization supponing the
development and expansion of
the information technology sector. Adena Ventures is a regional
venture capital ftrrn that seek&gt;

company investment oppommi·
ties in Appalachian Ohio, West
Virginia, and ponions of
Maryland and Kentucky.
ITAAO artd Adena are working
to expand angel investor networks in Appalachian Ohio. ·
The workshop cost, which
includes lunch and workshop
materials, is ·$25 for ITAAO
members, and $50 for nonITAAO members. Entrepreneurs
and companies can register by
contacting
ITAAO
at:
itaao@itaao.org, 740.597.1408,
or toll free at 877.850.6367.
Registrations should be made
prior to the event. but payment
can be accepted at the door.

Civil suit

allegedly unpaid unemployment taxes in the amount of
$20,84132 .

For the record
Marriage
license

POMEROY -A civi l
action has been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by the Ohio
Department of Job and
Family .Services, Columbus,
against George W. Miller,
Middleport, to
collect

POMEROY -A marriage
license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Coun to
Brrutdon Mattltew Buckley. 24,
Pomeroy, and Leah Michelle
S&lt;mders, 22. Reedsville.

Proud to be apart of'
your life.

·

Subscribe today • 992-2155

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Coming Friday, July 16,' 2004

Subscribe today • 992-2155

The

: · Coolville

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Remember the oyster
I didn't receive any invita·
tions to make a commencement address this year.
Maybe it's just as well.
What could I tell today's
graduates that would inspire
them?
When I graduated from
college, the ·commencement
speaker told us. 'The future
will not be easy but it ts
bright..
You couldn't tell that to
today's graduating seniors.
True, I .could tell them the
first part- that life will not
be easy. But bright'
It isn't only that the world
outlook is. bleak with news
of terrorism threatening all
of us who occupy the planet. And here in the United
States. those standing in the
long unemployment lines
must now make room for
record numbers of college
graduates looking for work.
More often we feel that
waste, deceit and violence
are all around us and there
are few signs that things are
going to get remarkably bet·
ter.
So what can we tell
today's youth who are going
out into a hostile · world
where things may get worse
despite youth's high ideals
and strong determination?
Had I been asked to give a
commencement address this
year I would have told the

2004

in the last academic year.
Science scores improved
from 69.2 percent to 85 percent and math improved from
64.5 percent to 8 I percent.
Reading also improved from
78 percent to 92 percent of
the number of students who
passed the test in 2003-2004.
Despite
improvements,
Buckley said between 20 to 25
percent taking the test in the
disuict have learning disabili·
ties who struggle academically
to keep up. Many of these students are on individual education programs to try and bring
them up to proficiency standards. Even though the ODE
allows for a certain percentage
of these students to be eliminated from cumulative totals,
Buckley called this number
"minimal" to affect any real
change in testing statistics. .
"There is certain! y room for
improvement, but we have
made progress just not as much
as we would like to," he said.

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
.·appear in the July 16th issue.
Be sure your.child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

Son of
Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis
Pictures

Thursday

must

July

be

8th,

In

by
2004.

Pictures can be picked up after

July 19th, 2004..

Complete the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus ·
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

------------------------·- ---------- -- ----------,
Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s)= ----~--------------

Parent's Name: _ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ __
&amp;Smte:. _____________________________
***The above information will be used in the ad. •••
Phone Number: - - - - - - - - - Submitted by: - - - - - - - - - -

SPECIAL SNEAK PREVIEW
SPIDER·MAN 2
WEDNESDAY AT 12:01 A.M.
JUNE 30TH

· ----- ~ ··--·-------~----...:.

HURRYU PICTURE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY JulY 9. 2004!

_________________ __ __________
...:.._

..:._

._

�•

rhe

PageA6

BYTHEBEND

Daily Sentinel

Friday, June

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

25, 2004

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, June 28
POMEROY Veterans
Service Commisson, 9 a.m.
at the office, 117 Memorial
~rive , Pomeroy.

.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, June 28 ·
· RUTLAND
- Rutland
Garden Club. I p.m .. at the
bome of Mrs. Joy Combs.
: RACINE - The Southern
Band Boosters will meet at 7
p.m. in the Southern High
School band room.
. POMEROY - OH -KAN
Coin Club. 7 p.m. at the
~rpenters Hall in Pomeroy.
D.ues are payable. Auction to
~held.

Reunion
Sunday, June 27
HENDERSON. W:Va.
bescendants of Sam and
Melvi~a Birchfield will hold

Everyone invited to attend
the free dinner.

a reunion with a carry-in dinner at noon at the Henderson
Community Building _

· .
Other events
Ch urch serv1ces -

ewsChannel

Saturday, June 26

Sunday, June 27

Friday, June 25, 2004

MIDDLEPORT -Free
dinner. Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
4:30 to 6:30p.m.
Sunday June 27
COOLVILLE -_ ''Country
Style" open house at Arcadia
Nursing Center. I to 4 p:m.
Food. games. entertainment
by
·' Delivered."' · "Local
Girls" and "Double Shot &amp;
Co." Free to the public. ·

POMEROY - Brian Bear
of Evangelical Outrearh in
Ironton will be preaching and
singi ng along with Ray and
Delores Cundiff at 2 p.m. at
the Poplar Ridge Free Will
Bapti't Church on State
Route 55-l on Poplar Ridge
Road. For more information
call 7-l0-593-7390.
CARPENTER
Dayspring of Athens at Mt.
Union Bap~ s t Church. 6:30
p.m. Information at 742-2568 .
POMEROY - Mt. Hope
Sunday, June 27
Praise Team from Be~:kl ey.
w:va. will visit Flatwoods POMEROY - Leona
United Methodist Church at 6 Machir,' formerly ·of New
p.m. on Sunday. with special Haven, W.Va. and Point
singing, live music . youth Pleasant. W.Va. , will celechoir. short dramas and sign brate her 87th birthday on
June 27. Cards may be sent to
language to music .
POMEROY - Pomerov her in care of her daugher,
Church of Christ. West Main with whom she now makes
Street, Pomeroy, community her home. at 39761 Sumner
potluck dinner. 5:30 to 7 p.m . Rd. , Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

Birthdays

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!

I

Knight staying
at Texas Tech

The Ohio Tobacco Quit -Line
celebrates almost 4,000 calls

I.

. ATHENS The Ohio
Tobacco Quit Line will have a
- booth during Women 's Health
Fair at the Athens Community
Center Saturday, 9 a.m to I
p.m., with a live radio remote
as part of the celebration.
· :Nearly 4,000 calls from
Ohioans · anxious to end
tobacco use have been made
to the Quit Line, 1-800-9344840
which
pro motors
describe as "tremendous
acceptance" of etlorts to get
people to quit smoking. To
celebrate the success, th e
Ohio Tobacco Use Prevention
and Control Foundation
(TUPCF) will host a series of
events in targeted communi-

save lives and inform Ohioans
un the danuers ·or tutraccu and
" what the Quit
that is
exactly
Line has accomplished."
The Quit Line connects
Ohioans who want to . quit
using tobacco with trained
&lt;:ounselors who provide :
callers with a personalized
schedule to help guide them
in their attempt to quit.
TUPCF has deve loped a
full-scale integrated marketing campaign in order to
inform Ohioans . about the
Quit Line. The program is .
funded from the
Master
Settlement Agreement (MSA)
between tobacco companies
and 46 states.

ties wound Ohio to provide
Ohioans with another opportunity to learn more about the
Quit Line and how it c~n help
them improve their health by
becoming tobacco-free. The
Athens event is one of those
celebrations.
"We are very excited ·with
the success of the Quit Line. It
has become an invaluable tool
to eliminate tobacco use in the
state of Ohio. To receive about
4 ,000 calls from Ohioans
. eager to quit using tobacco
product s is fantastic. " said
Michael Renner, Ohio TUPCF
Executive Director. "We
established the Quit Line
because we 111anted to help

Local Stocks
ACl- 35.89
AEP- 32 05
Akzo-37.10
Ashland Inc. - 5 I .88
BBT- 37.28
BLI- 14.93
Bob Evans - 27.00
Borg Warner- 44.15
City Holding - · 32.03
Champion- 4.29
Charmi ng Shops - 8.48
Col- 32.58
DuPont - 44.00
DG -20.20
Federal Mogul - .28

Gannett- 85.34
- General Electric- 33.25
GKNLY-4.70
Harley Davidson - 61.53
Kmart - 70.85
Kroger- 18.16
Ltd - 18.85
NSC -.25.90
Oak Hill Financial - · 31.29
Bank One -49.81
OVBC - 3301
Peoples - 25.25
Pepsico - 55.16
Premier - 9.85
Rocky Boots -. 22.86

RD Shell- 52.62
Rockwell - 35.81{
Sear~ - 39.70
SBC - 23 .79
AT&amp;T- 14.79
USB -28.31
Wendy's- 35.50
Wai-Mart -. 53.19
Worthington - 20.38
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes or the
previous day 's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners at
Ad vest Inc. of Gallipolis .

.(
I ' ....~

...

A:j~

TAVERN A: GRILL

MONTE CARLO LS

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Cincinnati Reds ' Cory Lidle (15) and Jermaine Clark. nght. celebrate with teammates Sean Casey (21) and Juan Castro
(7) after they scored in the seventh inning against the New York Mets Thursday at New York's Shea Stadium. !API

Fullerton ousts
South Carolina

Howard, not -Okafor, No. 1 pick

out seven.

2004 CHEVY

23nl.

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........ t . . · t pm • AU. a SAT. 9 ... ·10 pm • sutmAY 1pm • 9pm

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Take 1-77 to ~ FAIRPLAIN lnlelchange
(axi1132) Tum North on Rt 21,
~ i&amp; 3 miletl on left

BY RtCK GAND
Associated Press

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) Scratch Bob Knight's name off
the list of candidates for the
Ohio State coaching job.
The Texas Tech coach
released a statement Thursday
night saying he ';, been told that
his alma mater won't be considering him.
"La.st night. a friend of mine
from Columhus called me to
say that the athletic director
had decided not to discuss the
vacancy · with me . .There lure.
there was no need for me to
'consider it." Kni ght said.
·,_he Buckeyes are looking
for a replacement fur Jim
0' Brien, who was tired on
June 8 after athletic director
Andy Ge igeF . said 0' Brien
admitted he had given 56.000
to a recruit in 1999.
Knight agreed earlier this
month to a three-year extension of his contract with the
Red Raiders. which would
keep him at Tech until 2009.
Nonetheless. his name was
linked because of his ties to the
Buckeyes.
"During the past two weeks,
I have called nu one nor initiated any inquiries ahout the ha'ketball coaching position at
Ohio State." Knight said.
"However, several people in
Columbus and in Ohio have
called to ask if I would be wi ll ing to take the job."
Knight. who won three
national championships at
Indiana. has led Texas Tech to
,three straight seasons of at
least 20 wins. At 832-323. he is
48 victories shy of Dean
Smith's mark as the winningest coach in Division L

OMAHA , Neb. (AP) Scott Sarver and Jaso n ·
Windsor combined on an
eight-hitter, and Cal State
Fullerton advanced to the
College World Series championship round with a 4-0 victo: .
ry Thursday night over South
Carolina.
· The Titans (45-22) wi ll face
top-seeded Texas (58-13) in
the best-o f-three championship . series begi nning
Saturday.
Sarver (3-2) pitched -six
innings in just his second start
of the season. allowing tive·
hits, walking two and striking

...

,...
m
___....
.....,
__..,

Rauch
stays,
Chi Sox
w1n

Windsor. who earned his
first career save, limited the
Gamecocks to three hits and
struck out the side in' the ninth
to send the Titans to tbeir first .
tina Is since the 1995 team won
the championship.
Windsor had pitched a
three-hitter last Saturday in
beating the Gamecocks 2-0 in
the first round. In 12 CWS
innin¥s, all against . South
Carolma, Windsor held the
Gamecocks to six hits and
.struck out 19.
Fullerton became the ti.--t
team since Pepperdine in 1992
to record two shutouts in the
same Series and the first team
since California in 1957 to shut
out the same opponent twice .
The Gamecocks, who had
scored 35 runs in their last
three CWS games, became the
first team to be shut out twice
in the ·same CWS since
Fullert.on in 1982.
South Carolina forced
Thursday's elimination game
by beating the Titans 5-3
Wednesday.

Sunny day for the Reds
cciltd wilh the \1ilc y &gt;aid. "B ut with that sun ... it wa'
base\ loaded in the a wugil play fur Mike. It wa&gt; a ,-ery
sc\'~nth inni ng. it ni,·e New Ymk da y...
was·n·t an e a~ y out.
Car.ueron 'aiu he\ been down this
NiH at all.
road before. playing hide and 'cck with
Two -time Gold the .-.un.
Glove winner Mike Cameron. sun
"It l1appen' a lot or times." he said. ·
l!.lassc~ Jown. st'emed -.eL to catc h 1he •·Sometime\ (the hall) comes out and·
baiL Then. at the last second. it glanced 'omet imcs il due'n·t. In thi' ca\e. it
off hi , ~love for a two-ba,~ arur. didn't. It cost us three runs. I feel bad
clearin~ 'the base' "' the Cincinnat i fur cverybouy. htrt it's uver anu done
Re lb r,;llicd fo r five run&gt; .tnd a 6-c vic- witlt.
tory"' cr the Ne" York Met&gt; .
"By far. it' , one of the tou ghe't play'
· ·· rn most cases. yeah. you think the
Please see Reds, 81
inning i' over." ReLb rnana ~er Dave

BY HAL BocK
Assocrated Press

1\'EW YORK - Ken Griffey Jr. has
played center field long enough In
know all about 'unny day' and what
havoc lhcv ·can create.
Thursd,;y at Shea Stadium wa' one
of those d;!Y S.
" It was p.retty bad out there with the
sun directl y ahove you." Griffey said.
"Ball s hit on a line were OK. But pupups are trouble.''
So when Gri\Tcy lofted a lly l1all to

BY CHRIS SHERtDAN

NY

Associated Press
NEW YORK - In the capital city
uf sa rcas m. Erncka Okafor answered
with a strainht face when asked about
being c hos ~n seco nd ralhcr than fir' t
in the NBAdraft.
"It made rnc feel real 'pccial, all
warm inside:· Okafor deadpanned on
a night when potential wa\ valued
more than experi_ence and high
sc hoolers were a lwttcr commodity
than coll ege kids.
Hi gh school senior Dwiglll Howard
of Atlanta was cho,cn No. I by the
Orlando Magic, beconiing the thi rd
prep player in the past four yea" to
be cho sen fir't coverall. The expan-

04

sion -Charlillte Bobcats 'rooped up
Okafor at No. 2. getting the player
they preferred .il l &lt;dong.
·'A-, far as th~m hc!icvine. in me . it
make' me kel ~oud:· Okat·or '"id.
Eight high ~chun l player' were
chosen ahead of J:rrnecr f\:cl,on. ihe
co ll ege player nt' the year who
dropped to the Dcrrver - ~uggeL' at
No. 20 anJ w:l\ subsequently dealt to
Orlando fur a future"" - I pick .
The quest for )-Ollth hruught an
unfamiliar dylramic to a draft nrgl1t

that began with rn;.,tery. the identit)
of the Mag i,·\ pick a 'ecrct to alm os t
everyone i·i~ht up unli] t:nmmi~..,ioner

Da vid Stern walked on'ta~e at
Madison Square Garden ·and Jc lil·ered the new \.
When the pick was anrl(llrneed.
Howard ·, family leapeJ out of their
scats as Okafo(, family applauded at
the next t&lt;ihlc. Th e two players shook
l1ands before Ho ward became ihc
first player of the eve ning to he
greeted by Ste rn .
_
"Thi s feels so good."' How ard \Ill d.
"I want to go out th ere and prove all
the doubter' wrong ...
A crowd of ablHrt I 0.000 fans rn

Blue Jackets to announce Gerard

Gallant as head coach today
RusTY M tLI:ER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS - Gerard Gallant
will have the "interim" dropped from
his Columbus Blue Jackets job title
on Friday.
Gallant. who took over as interim
head coach on Jan . I. will be
announced as the Blue Jackets head
coach. Blu e Jackets president and
general manager Doug MacLean
was to make the announcement on
Friday. according to broadcu't and
new,paper reports that cited
unnamed source~ .

M tH.: L-.ea ll i ~ in
Raleigh, N.C. for
this weekend's NHL
draft. Phone me&gt;sages seeking _comment were
left
Thursday
for
MacLean
and
Gallant.
The Blue Jackets
al&gt;o &lt;tre expected to
Gallant
announce the hiring
of an associate
coach to replace Nev. ell Bmwn. who
mo~cd into the team ·, hncke)- operations d~partment soon after fiallant
replaced Mac Lean .

\lame .

... Chica~ll\ fifth ..,tarter:-. had

hcen 0-ll th is ,casun hefnre
Rauch . il -l) limited the
lnd1a11~ to om.· ·run in five

innings. l-Ie gaYe tip ~ix hits.
and White Sox reliever' held
the Indian' l1itle".
In hi .&gt; onlv other start this
) ear. Raul'i1 ' " "' roughed up
by Anaheim for fiv e runs and
I0 hits in ju&gt;t 3 2- .\ inning s
011 May 24i.
Not only did he lose that
~ame 1u the An~eb. he lost
ihc re,pcct of his teammates
anJ an~ered £!enera l mana12er
Kenny' William&gt; with 'an

Please see ChiSox, 81

Please see Draft. 81

NHL

BY

CHICAGO - Jon Rauch
. stuck around to enJOY the _v ictory. Reall y. he had little
d10ice - hi;, left arm was
handcuffed to his locker.
The 6-foot - 11 righty atoned
for an earlier episode when
he left the clubhou'e before a
!lame \-'va~ O\'er and led the
\Vhite Sox pa\t the Cleveland
Indian' 7-1 Thur,day.
"I made a stupid mi stake
and I'm not makmg it now,"
Rauch 'aid. 'howing his
handcuffed wrist. a prank
courtesv of teammate Mark
Buehrle .
"It doe,n'l bother me at all.
, It\ all in llnod fun:· Rauch
said.
Ju,e Valentin hit a threerun homer in the first inning
and the White Sox tacked on
four runs in the ei~hth. In
between. Aaron Rowand
made two 'tellar catc hes in
c:enter field to protect . the
lead .
In the fifth, Rowand ran
d01-1-n Joll y Gcrut's lung liner
and crashed into the centerfield wall at full speed. but
he ld onto the ball.
"I knew there were runners
on base and I knew I needed
to get l(l it. If I run .into the
wall. I run into the waiL"
Rowand said.
"But the play needed to be
made. I knew if I didn't make
the play. it would be a tie ball
game at that point. "
In the eighth. with the score
,till 3-1. Rowand leaped at
the fence to catch Casey
Blake\ dri ve.
"Rowand.
straight up
Rowand ..A fantastic play. It\
wh) I' rn 'tanding here with a
smile on my face: · RatrL'h
&gt;aid. " If he doesn't make that
catch . rt\ a different bali ·

(iallant, -\0. , took over fnr
Maclean midwuy throug h last \eason and guided the Blue Jackets to a
16-24-4-1 record. The team was ju't
9-21-4-3 before MacLean stepped
aside and ele1·ated Gallant, who was
an assistant coach.
The Blue Jackets finished with the
second-worst record in the NHL\
Western Conference. but there is
cause for optimism.
Rick Nash ti~d for the league lead
in ~oal' 'cor~d with ~I &lt;rt the auc lli'
19-and .wa' an All-Star in onl\· hb
sectmd s ~a,on . Ruo,ie Ni~t&gt;l.ri

Please see Gallant, 81

GALLANT FILE
NAME: Gerard Gallant
AGE: 40 (Born Sept. 2, 1963). _
BIRTHPLACE: Summerslde, Prince
Edward Island.
FAMILY: Wife Pam, daughter Melissa and
son Jason.

NHL coaching: Assistant coach, Columbus
Blue Jackets. 2000-03. Named interim head
coach, Btue Jackets, Jan. 1, 2004. Team
had record of 16·24·4-1 under him. ·
Junior end mlnor-lMgue co1chlng)t&gt;b1:
• Head coach, Summertlde Weettrn
Capitals (Canadian Junior A), 1995-199B.In
his fll8t full season, 1996-1997, tho team
won the Merltime Junior A championship
after .11 33-11·11 regular season.
• Assistant coach, Fort Wayne Komets (lormer International Hod&lt;ey League), 199899.

.

Top assistant coach, Louisville Panthe/11
(American Hockey League), 1999-2000.
NHL player, 1984-1995:
I Detrort Red Wings, 1984-93, 207 goals

1

and 260 assists 'for 487 points in 563
games. Chosen 107th overall in lhe 1981

entry draft and played two seasons with
Adirondack.
•Tampa Bay Ltghtning,.1993-95. 4-9-131n
52 games.

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Tennis

Point taken: Helped by umpire
error, Sprem stuns Venus
BY HOWARD FENDAICH

Assoctated Press
WIMBLEDON. England With all her inJuries and
mediocre play of late. the Ja,t
thmg Venus Williams needed
was for her opponent to be
awarded an extra poinl.
That's precisely what happened Thursday in the second
round at Wunbledon. and
Williams lost to Karolina
Sprem 7-6 (5). 7-6 (6), the
2000•0 I champiOn ·s earliest
extl at the All England Club
smce 1997.
•
In a stunmn!! ofticiatm~ error
at tenms 'inost hallowed
ground. chair umpire Ted Waus
awarded the 30th-ranked Sprem
a point she dtdn 't eam 111 the
final tiebreaker
And no one spoke up: not
Williams. 'not Sprem. not the
other on-cuun oftici&lt;tb
·-rd like to think he didn't do
tt on purpose:· s&lt;~id Will~&lt;um .
who hasn't been past the quar·
terfinals at a maJOr since losing
to younger sister Serena Jn ,1
second stratght Wnnbledon
final last year. "I don't think on~
call makes a match. I had some
opportuntttes there. and tt's
unfortunate. but I'll le&lt;Ult from

edge - then lost live stratght
points. mo'tl} on m"cues. She
wasted two set potnls m the
opening tiehreaker
"Unfonunatelv. the wav tt
happened. Venu~ dtdn't queiy tt
at the time:· toumament referee
Alan Mill' said. 'They played
pomt after point atierv. ard. and
the re,ult. rIll atraid. stands "'

'' Both

Sprcm. a 19-year-old
Crnatt,m who lo't four straight
Grand Slam mate he' before this
'' eek and owns zero tour titles.
and Williams appeared confu,cd.
"Sometnnes I do Jose track of
the score. and I JUSt felt that
maybe I had lost track agatn."
satd Williams. 26-0 against
evef\ one but her stster here
smcoi 2000.
It's been some time since she
dominated the way she did
11 hile wmmng four majors and
ri'ing to No 1 or while playmg
Serena in five of six Slam
finals. What's tough to tell is
how much is a drop 111 her play
or an tmprovement by others.
Williams missed stx months
with an abdominal strain, then
twtsted an ankle whtle beating
Sprem at the German Open in
May She also had to come to
tenns with the shooting death of
u:·
Yetunde
m
half-stster
Even after the sconng mis- September.
take made it 2-2 m the ti nal
"Somettmes you don't
ttehreaker. Willian1s built a 6-3 always wm.'' the eighth-ranked

Fridav,
. June 25, 2004

www.mydallysentinel.com

Gallant
from Page 81
Zherdev showed flashes of bnlliance after
emigrating from Russia in December. scoring
13 goals and registering 34 points m 57
games. The franchise has several improvmg
young players (goalie Marc Denis, defenseman Rostislav Klesla) and a mix of dependable veterans such as David Vybomy (53
points) and Todd Marchant (34 points).
Interest in the team remains high. with near
capacity attendance at Nationwide Arena.

Willtatns satd. "So l.JUSI feel
like I'm going to find out w~Jat
wcnr wrong. what didn't go
ri~ht ..
Asked if she ·n watch a tllpe
ot the match to figure out what
happened on the scoring foulc
up. Wtlliams satd: "Guess I
should. huh·'"
Actually. all of the day's
action could be packaged as a
video. No matches were played
from Page 81
Wednesday. the toummnent's
tirst total rdinout since 1999, so Charlotte cheered when
llmrsdav featured more thoo a Okafor was not selected by
dozen niaJor champions.
the Magtc, and owner Bob
There were two brief rain Johnson nodded his head
delays - what else is new? and sm iled. Fireworks then
while swtrling wmd played exploded, and orange and
havoc with balls attd sent silver- white confetti and streamers
ware clattenng in the club rained down on the cheering
members ' outdoor restaurant crowd.
Bobcats coach Bernie
overlookmg courts.
Bickerstaff said Magic genSome highlights:
- Martina Navratilova's first eral manager John Weisbrod
to
them
Wimbledon singles competiuon "conveyed"
Thursday
morning
that
in 10 years ended witlt a 3-6, 63, 6-3loss to Gisela Dulko, who Howard would be their
beat her at the French Open last pick. Howard also said his
agent was aware all day that
month
- Goran lvanisevic rallied to he would go No. I.
Okafor donned an orange
defeat Filippo Volandri 4--6, 7-6
Bobcats
cap after the sec(8). 1-6. 6-3, 6-4. then celebratond
pick
was an nounced ,
ed by t0 ssing his shirt and racket into the stands. Ivanisevic, and a large contingent of
who hadn't been to Wimbledon family and friends cheered
loudly from the stands. One
since winrung it in 200 I and ts held
up a sign reading
retiring after the tournament, "Okafor the plymptan," a
plays 2002 champion Lleyton recognition of Okafor's staHewitt next.
tus as a finalist for the U.S.
team that will compete in
Athens.
'
Okafor, a JUillOr, averaged
17.6 points for the national
champion
Connecticut
Huskies, and hts shot blockseason. but not many who ing abtlity and defensive
made them.
prowess made him a conCleveland was ranked 29th sensus ch01ce to be one of
- dead last- in the NBA in the top two ptcks.
3-point accuracy, and earlier
His UConn teammate.
this week they lost their best Ben Gordon. went thtrd to
outside
shooter.
Jason the Chtcago Bulls, marking
Kapono. to Charlotte in the the second time in three
cxpan ~ 10n draft.
years teammates have been
The club helped offset the selected second and third.
loss of Kapono by tradmg a Jay Williams and Mike
future first-round ptck to the Dunleavy of Duke had that
Bobcats for Sasha Pavlovic , distinction in 2002.
who played for Utah last sea"Othet people may be surson.
rised, but I always thought
Pavlovic has excellent
should go No. 1." Gordon
range. but not ltke Jackson, said.
who made 44 percent (73-for, Htgh schoo l senior Shaun
166) of his 3-pointers as a Livingston of Peoria, Ill .,
semor.
went fourth to the Los
Jackson averaged 21.2 Angeles Chppers. who had
potnts. 7.2 rebounds and 4.5 traded down from No. 2 this
asststs per game last season as week in a deal with the
one of just six players nationally to lead his team in · all
three categories.

Draft

Another LJ for the Cavaliers
CLEVELAND (AP)- The
Cleveland Cavaliers Ita' e a
new L.J - one without all
the hype
Desperate tor an outstde
shooter and someone to take
pressure oft LeB10n James.
the Cavalier&gt; selected small
forward Luke Jackson with
the No. I0 overall ptck 111
Thursday ntght's NBA draft.
Despite rampant rumors
before the draft that they
would make a trade, the Cavs
stayed put and gr db bed
Jackson. a four- ye&lt;~r starlet dl
Oregon who shot 46 percent
from the tield - 40 on :lpointers - duting h" college
career.
"It wasn't just hi s ability to
shoot the ball; Cavaliers general manager Jtm Paxson said.
"We think he \ a good basketball player:·
And one with a ltttle att t-

Reds
from Page 81
you have to deal with out
there. Those thmgs are going
to happen . I did everything I
could I tned to make a play
at the end. It just hit the side
of my glove. It 's one of the
worst feelings you can have
on a baseball field"
Mets manager Art Howe
called it an unfortunate set of
circumstances.
"It was pretty clear that he
was fighting it all the way,"
he said. "When the ball stays
in the sun. you can't see it,
you can 't catch 11. These high
sky days, it's very hard to
find that ball. I knew he was
· fighting the hall the whole
way. You feel for M tke. He
feels worse than anybody."
Cory Lidle (5-5) pitched
eight inmngs. allowtng ntne
hits and no walks while striking out seve n.
"I felt good.'' he said. "I

ChiSox
from Page 81
·early ex tt from the locker
room.
Williams said at the ttme
Rauch
jeopardized
his
-chances of ever pttching for
the White Sox again. Rauch
apologized, saying tt was a
misunderstanding.
The White Sox decided to
give him another opportunity,
recalling him from Triple-A
on Sunday.
"I think the way he left the
feeling in the clubhouse last
time he was pitching, I think
he got more pressure on himself to improve and to fit in
the clubhouse or to fit with
the team," Chicago manager
I

tude.
Cavaliers coach Paul Silas
was tmpressed by Jackson's
swagger during a recent workout m Chicago
"He told me. 'Coach. I can
play_... Silas s:.tid. "I liked
heanng that. I told him
LeBron is going to ktck hts
butt. He sa ill, · Bnng him on."'
Jackson was a star with the
Ducks. fimshmg as the only
player in school history to
rank 111 the Top I 0 tn ntne
otTensi\'e
categones.
Howevet. he already knows
hts role wtll be dtfferent 111
Cleveland.
"I'm excited to play with
LeBron." Jackson smd. 'Tm a
competitive guy and I can take
the burden oil Jum a little btl
by being able to shoot outside
shots ..
The Cavalters had plenty of
players who took shots last

was throwing strikes. 1 had enth with a 2-1 lead. Joe
eve tything working I kept McEwing beat out an infield
the ball down. T~at was my htt with one out in the ftfth.
game plan. Keep the ball Glavine sacrificed and Jose
down Let them hit it on the Reyes hit hts first home run
ground."
ot the season, his third htt 1n
Cameron's error foiled a 20 at-bats since coming off
strung start by Tom Glavme the diSabled list.
(7-4). who leads the major
Glavine gave up a run 111
leagues with a 2.11 ERA the ftrst inning on an RBI sinGlavine took a 2-1 lead into gle by Castro, who had three
the seventh. but gave up sin- htts.
The Mets threatened in the
gle' to Tim Hummel and
Javier Valcntm.
fourth when Mike Ptazza sinAfter a sanitice. Rtcky gled with one out and Cliff
telieved
and Floyd doubled over Griffey
Bottaltco
allowed Ryan Freel's ground- in center But Ltdlc struck out
out that scored Hltmmel With Richard Hidalgo and got Ty
the tymg run Jltan Casllo Wigginton on a comeback
then walked. brmgtng up Ime dnve to strand both runSedn Casey
ners.
Mtke Stanton relteved and
In the sixth, Piazza opened
walked Casey. loading the with hts third single ot the
bases for Griffey. Stanton game and Floyd also single(!.
appeared to escape the Jam But Ltdle recovered, retinng
when Griffey hit the fly ball Hidalgo on a pop tly and getto ce nter, but Cameron's ting Wigginton to hit into a
error broke the mning open. double play. The Mets put the
Adam Dunn followed wtth an first two men on base in the
seventh, but Lidle retired to
RBI stngle.
Glavme entered the scv- the next three .

wt th another single.
Oate Gut lien satd.
"We· vc got to get at least
" He pttched reall y well.
Believe me, this was a big one more run there. It's a big
dtfference between 3-1 and
game for us ...
Second ba.eman Ronnte 3-2." Cleveland manager
Belliard \ error on Juan · Eric Wedge said.
But after Rauch rettred the
Unbe's grounder opened the
way for the Whtte Sox 111 the next two batters, Rowand
ftrsl. After Carlos Lee singled made the play of the game.
"Rowand made a couple of
wtth two outs. Valentm drove
hi s 14th homer to deep center great plays in center and that
oil Jah Westbtook (6-4). was the difference," Wedge
The Indians starter didn't ,&gt;aid.
With help from Rowand,
allow an earned run in six
strong innings. allowing just Rauch won back some
respect from his teammates
four hits.
·
"I made a decent pitch and and perhaps solved Chicago's
he ~ot 11 He put a good swing season-long problem with the
No. 5 starter.
on tt." said Westbrook.
''I' II pitch whenever they
Coco Crisp doubled in the
fifth und ~cored on Matt want me to," Rauch said just
Lawton's stngle, und the before the cuffs were
Indians threatened for lll&lt;lre removed. "I'm just glud I'm
after Omar Vizquel followed still here."

f

Friday, June 25, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

Gallant said a(ler the season that he felt the
team had a bright future.
"Once we "'oet another .year or two wtth
.
these young kids growmg up and matunng
and these veteran players~ playing ~ httle bit
better. we ' re going to be a good. sohd hot·ke)
team.'' Gallant satd. "We're not that tar
away:·
The Blue Jackets have t I 'elections mthts
weekend's draft, includmg the No. -+ ptck in
the first round .
Gallant played II seasons and more than
600 games in the NHL. most!) wtth the
Detrott Red Wutgs. He scored 211 goals and
totaled 480 pomts from 1984 to 1995.

Bobcats. The baby-faced.
lanky 6-foot-7 guard had
originally commttted to
play at Duke
Wisconsin guard Devin
Harris was chosen fifth by
Washmgton. which was
ptcktng for Dallas as part of
a
trade
agreed
to
Wednesday night that sends
Jerry
Stackhouse
and
Christian Laettner to Dallas
and Antawn Jamison to the
Wizards.
'
If the Mavericks keep
Harns. he could be a
replacement for Steve Nash
at point guard if ' Nash
leaves as a free agent. But
Dallas was involved in trade
discussions with several
teams, and even Harrts
was
acknowledged he
"clueless" as to what the
true identity of hts team wtll
be.
Stanford junior Josh
Childress went at No : 6 to

Atlanta. which had been try- •
tng to move into the No. I
spot.
"This draft in particular.
no one had any idea which
way~~ would go:· Childress
said.
Duke freshman Luol
Deng wa&gt; picked seventh by
Phoenix. which traded him
to Chicago for a future firstround pick, cash and the
rights to the 31st ptck.
Jack son Vroman. The Suns,
who owned three ftrstround ptcks before dealing
them all away. wanted to get
rid of the No 7 pick to clear
enough salary cap room for
a maximum salary offer to
one of the top free agents.
San Antonto. Denver and
Atlanta also have enough
room to offer a "max" contract to a free agent class
headed by Kobe Bryant and
Nash .

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r.__
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• SUrt Your Adl With A Keyword • lndUde COmplete

POUOEI· Ohio V•lley Publl.tllng rwMrVM the right to .cllt, fWiKt. or c.ncel sny ad .t •ny tlrM. Errors mu1t M .wported on tnt flrat ci•Y of publlcatkm lind
TribU....s.nU~egl'* will M rMpOnalble for no mew. thlln the cMt ot the apecto occupied by lhrl enor .,.d o"'y the flrlt lnMftion W1 ahlll not be liM*

• lnducle Phone Number And Add,... When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Days

MY toM or expen.
rMUitll from the pubUcallon or Dmlulon •n ectventaemenL eon.ction will bll m.o. In
svtlltible
.,..
•tM~y• conf'lchntill. • Cun9nt ..... c.rd -wt+M. • All fMI at.le ttdvwtiMfMrrtll •re •ubfKt to 1M Feder1l F•lr Mou•ln; Act of 1811.
help
*" mMtlrtg EOE st.ndardl We will not knowingty accept •nw advertlalng In vlol•tlon of tN law

Dacrlptlon • Include A P.-.c. • Avoid Abltrft.. ttons

1

fo'•litli•J&amp;-1-Lov.-

SA 850 2 miles from 4·

your Phthpptne Lady

Lane H~ tn Btdwell

of a Ltfettme
1-SOQ-497-8414

Ftll ma-4-Love com

Ne~ghborhood Yard Sale
Oak Dnve. Jackson Ptke
behmd Speedway. Saturday
June 26th

Sale saturday Only to·oo2·00 Garden fresh vegetaADOPTION A lovtng cou- bles. hospttal beds, canntng
pie would hke to adopt you r Jars, gas heater washer.
newborn
Wtll provtde a dryer, ttres 19 14 St At 141 ,

'

home hllecl wtth JOY happt·
ness ltnanctaJ secunty and
a great education Feel conftdenttn knowing because of
your brave dectston your
baby could look forward to a
bnght and wonderful future
Expenses paid Call toll free'
t-866·731·7825
Barbara
and M1chael

ALSO
.
Membershuip package available at $590
For ONLY $359 if registered before August Ist.
Your Membership includes:
• 30 Pheasants or equal value or Quail or Chukar
• 2 Guided hunts with dogs /4-5 hours each
• 3 Shooting preserve sessions /4-5 hours each

r

Call Now for more detJJils and reservations!!!
Pomeroy, Ohio 740-992-1072

CASH?

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EASE -THE
QUEEZE!

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Lost Black male German
Shepherd. iO years old
Kl1 cher Ad (740)441-9774.

Each Kit Contains the Following:
• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sate Stgns - 24'' x t 2"
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 216 Pnctng Labels
• Inventory Sheet
• 4 Mini-signs to be posted on bulletm
boards at laundromats, markets. etc
I Seven-step tnstruction sheet. plus
"Secrets of How to Increase Proftts at
a Garage Sale"
• 3 Mounting Matenals
• 6 Multt-colored Balloons
• t Marker for Signs

1 Day Ad:

LOST·
Black/White/Tan
Sheltle
dog
(Miniature
Collie) Mtll Creek Rd .,
Galhpolls area Children's
pets (7401446-4362

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&gt;

',

Loving pet dog iound
Thursday (17th) PI PI area
must
ldenttly
correctly
(304)675·3359 after 6pm

SALE

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~

YARDSALE
YARDSALEG~

• Av~1lable only With pu rCt'\i:!St: of G arage Sal(t Adv e rtlsliln~r t
Must be OICkOO up~~ our &lt;" lfiCfl
•

1636 Chatham Ave. e/24·
6/26, 8:00-5 00 Furniture,
clothing , odds &amp; ends, mise
Chest, table-chairs, too111 ,
lawn
furniture,
men's
clothes, much more Thurs.·
Sat 1DB Bulavllle Pike

$9.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit

F~iday

&amp; Saturday 9-? Clay
Town House Household
!tams, adult &amp; kids dothes.

$1 5 Advertising!
Gets You Great

Garage
Sale
6/251046/26/04. New cook-top,
lamps, bar signs, speakers
double strollrir, toys, mise
items. 529 Gallla St Crown
City

®alltpolis Jlatlp m:rtbune

Garage Sale 9-? ThursdaySaturday 24-26 Microwave,
wetght bench , candle pot•
tery, golf cart, sman kkje &amp;
adult clothes &amp; Iota of mise
797 Turkey
Run
Ad
Cheshlrl, Oh.

~oint ~leasant ~egister

The Daily Sentinel
thuuuJ::n:uJtuuuu:z
I

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Diesel Mechanic II
PM Shift

FIX:7~384·5472

8 room Ranch full basement, 3 bedroom, 2 5 baths.

No phone calls please/EOE

DRIVERS NEW PAY
SCALE
CLASS A COL NEEDED
.Earn between 45-SOK
.Mtn 1 year a:~Cp
.Home Weekends
.$500 s1gn-on bonus
.Start at 36 cpm
.95% No touch freight
oNO FORCED NYC

1170

MlscEI.LANF.Dll'i

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s seen on r V!· Hts ap
1th ShapeWorksl LosE
~:ght and shape-up
EE body analysts Trac
40-441-~982 Donna 740
43-1172

1'80

WAJVID&gt;
To Do

I

All types ol masonl)4 bnck,
block &amp; stone 20 yrs.
Expenence tree est1mate
, -304-773-9550, 304-593
1007

Call BD0-652·2362

All re•t eatate advertlatng
In thle newspaper Is
subject to the Federal

F•lr Houalng Act at 1968
w"leh m.kea 1111/eg•lto
advertiae "any
preference, llmltatlcn or
dlacrlmlnatlon based en
race, colcr, reUglon, ae»e
familial atatua or natlon~~l
origin, or •ny lntemlon to
make any such
preference, limitation or
d1acrlmlnatlon."
Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
adverti•ementa for real
ae1ale which Ia In
vlol•tlon of the law. Our
read"'• •r• hereby
Informed tttat all
dwelllnga advartlaed In
thia newapaper •re
available on an equal
opportunity

Expenenced Rooters M~st N1ght Shift with Elderly, Exp,
have own tools &amp; transporta- &amp; Rei. (304)675-7961
tiOn (740)379-9079 after
Wtll Pressure Wash house's,
CALL 800-652·2382
7pm
mobtle homes, metal buildAuto body repa1rman, must Instructors needed to leach mgs, and gutters Call
have experience 1n body Records Management and (740)446·0151 ask tor Ron For sate By Owner Ranch
'"
or leave message
work, frame work and palnt- Commun1cauons
Style,
recently
lng, references required, call
Gallipolis Career College
II '\\ '\II \I
--;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ pamtedfremodeled 4 bed(740)446-4387
(740)992·5553
l'1!'10
rooms 2 baths, combined
Mr John Danlckl
BusiNI:SS
dtnrng roomlk•tchen , uttllly
MechamcJSmall
OPPORTUNI'IY
Auto
Engtne Mechanic, must be Mason Ctty and New Haven J..-------~ room, dec~. storage buildexperienced Shade Tree Pubhc Ltbrarles are seek1ng
lng, attached 2 car garage In
Mechanics need nor apply a Part-ttme Ubfary ClerK
Bankers Life and
qutet community 1 mite from
(304)675-3600
The successful applicant
C••u•lty Company
hosp1tal Call (740)446- - - - - - - - - must be friendly, familiar
6822, 598 Jay Dnve, vlewtng
AVON! AI~ Areas! To Buy or with computers, and able to
•expanding Field Force·
by appointment. $125,000
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304- lift up to 25 pounds
*Tralnlng*Leeds"
~
675-1429
Interested applicants may
Polenllal $25·160K Yr.'
U.:. Rio Grande, Spacious
p1ck up and return an appll·
Call (304)343-0400
Log home, 5 acres, 3·4 bedBartender need, expenei'\Ce cation to the Mason Ctty
room , 2 bath, huge kitchen
Applications p ubllc Library located at B
Eq--..11 ~·uniN
r~ulred
....
·
~~·
., com"anu
~ ,
wfoalt cabinets &amp; tsland
MIFIH
cook1op, ftnlshed basement
accepted until 6/28/04. Send Brown Street, Mason Ctty
to P.O Box 303, Gallipolis, EOE
w/naslon ftreplace +central
10
Cll
•
•
OH""HIO VALLEY PUBLISH heat'alr, 30x54 heated workMeeli Home Health Agency,
$ 197 000 (74012•5
•
·
Contract writer for shoft
NG CO. recommends tha shop
Inc seeldng a full·tlme and ·- · d bu 1
9169
1h
business related articles PAN AN 's, and a PAN ,-ou 0
a ness wt pea - - - - - . , - - 11 you know, and NOT 1 Letart Falls, OH; 3 bedroom
Mall resume to
0
1 Th
lsi 1o
ocupatlona
arap
r "and money through the
I
Ch
Commun ty
est,
the Galltpolls, Ohio area '=.'~~.
house 1 bath , detached
••• 811 until you have invesll narage, new roof, siding ,
28 Locust St
Must be licensed both In bated the otterlna.
•
GaUipolla, 0 H 45631
Ohio and West VIrginia.
:;:~:::::!::::~ windows, carpet. &amp; kitchen ,
or fax to: 740·441 ·9820
offer a competitive salary,
~
$85 000 00 (740)247-2000

ba•••-

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Applications will be taken lor
bartender &amp; kitchen asals·
1ant. Saturday June 26th
from 12·00 to . 2·00 pm,
Eaglet Club, 224 E Main St ,
Pomeroy Oh.
Family Addiction Community benefit package lor full-time,
and 401 K E 0 E Please
CIIOICOII Director
Treatment Servtces· An
sand resume to .352 Second
Outpatient "'lcohol and Drug
•
Ave , Gallipolis, 0 H 450J31
Medl Home Health
Counseling
agency
Is Ann Diana Harless, Clinical
Agency, Inc seeking a
accepting Rest,Jmes for the Manager or call 1·8()0-481 ·
full·llme AN Clinical
followlng position.
6334
Prevention
Educetor- -------Director lor the Galllpol~.
Ohio
Seeking an energetic lndl- Opening New Retail Outlet
location
VIdual to work youth and Middleport, seeking full·tlme
adult In Gallta and Jackson manager, asststant manag
Posttton Requires: OH
counties Responsibilities er,
part-time
and WI/ RN licensure,
Include, but not limited to: cashier/ stock/ production,
alcohol. tobacco and otner
minimum two years of
only persons that are se 11
home health nursing
drug education, classroom starters, wlhlgh energy,
experience In a managepresentations,
trainings, motivated, need apply, ' sub·
ment role, knowledge of
fairs, community events, mit resume to. The Dally
Federal and State home
development and implenta- Sentinel, PO Box: 729-46;
health regulation, JCAHO t)on or grant projects, etc. A Pomeroy Oh 4576 g
experience preferred.
Bachelors
minimum of
EOE
Degree required with ~now!· Over the Road Truck
edge of alcohol, tobacco Drivers. High mileage, good
crulae control, A/C. Call
Submit resume to: 68150 and other drugs Send p~.
...,
Bayberry Onl'tl,
resume,.,..., June 30, 2004 to 11•")•••.• 1•2.
"tv .JOO • "'
FACTS, " ' '45 Olive Street,
St ClalrtviUI, OH 43950.
Galllpolia, Ohio 45831 or Flaramldlca
&amp;
EMT'a
Attn . Katrina Dunaway,
FAX Jo: (740)446-6014 needed. Apply a1 1354
RN .
EOE, MJFIH
Jackoon Pike, Galllpolla
Director of Nuraina

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Affordable
omputer
Repair- Gallta, Meigs, &amp; surroundtng areas, (740)9920
3
9
7
http 1/Www geocltles com/loti
er45620
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
N F U 1
W W 1
ee ness e ")
1·888·562·3345

Beauttful river view 1deal for
one or two people No pets. - -R- --_--d-rm_h_o~u,-.1
5 7 54 8
references (740)441·0181
bath garage bsmt You pay
Ntc e 2 and 3 bedroom all utllllles Rtver access
mob tl e homes lor rent S650fmo ... S650 sec dep
mcludes water sewer &amp; 1126 2nd Ave-1 Bdrm
trash no pets, starling at house gas hi , A/C. garage
$300 per month 1n Shade you pay all ultlllles $475/mo
area
deposit reqwed + $4 75!sec clap
(740)992 -2 167
729 2nd Ave. (3) 1 bedroom
:..._...:...__ _ _ _ __
studto apts you pay elect
Leon WV (must be moved) Trailer-3 bedroom. 2 bath $250-$300/mo Sec dep
1994 Commodofe, 14x60 large back deck E~cellent
reqwred
on
all
Call
2-bedroom. 1-bath ut1llty- cond1110n $425/month plus
(740)446 3644 lor appllcaroom , tncludes stove, relrlg- utthltes/deposit
1!4-mlle
ltons
erator, washer, extra cabt- 218. (740)446-7322.
nets all underpmnmg, front ~~~-----.,
&amp; back porc.hes wfawmng 1440
APAKT!\.lli.l'fl~
Upsta1rs lurn1shed apt 3
all block &amp; sidewalk steps t.,.--iit'OiiiRiioiiRiiFNfiiii--' rooms &amp; bath Clean no
heatpump AJC
Excellent
pets References &amp; depoSI1
conditiOn.
$13 800 1 and' 2 bedroom apart- reqwed (740)446-1519
(740)698-2613
men ts, furmshed and unlurSP.-\CE

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ntshed, security deposit
fUR .Rmr
B
required no pers, 740-992- ·--ioiiiiioiiiiii--"
AND UII.J)JNGS
2218
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Sq
Footage for
rent
Approximately 2800 sq ft
3 umt apt bwld1ng potential
bedroom
apt
Owner may remodel to su1t
gross tncome oI $ 13 050 Wash. rldry er hook uP. $ 290
month Located 1n downtown rent depoSit requ1red No (304)675-4260 (304)675Galllpolls Pnce $120 000 pets 740-441·1184
4975

BUiiNOO

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HOIIft:'C'

·n:.:~
'-.--,:,FOR~,;;iS~ALE~::i-..,1
"''
2 bedroom, 1 bath, flat 31•
acre
Newly remod•led

Autland. must be moved
$12,000 (7401387-7886.

..-:tJUZ.,

87 nran"ille t 4 , 85 • very
~.:~
•
clean, CIA, new appliances,
good outbuilding Ready to
move
Into.
$9,500
(740)388-0460

- ------

ro RF.Nr

HotiSEHOt

IU ' I \I..,
Attracttve one bedroom apt Good Used App liances
2nd floor corner Second Recond1110ned
A1'1d
Washe rs
HoUSI-~
and
Pme
No
pets Guaranteed
FOR R.FNr
References
reqwred Dryers
Re nQes
and
Relngerators Some start at
Secunty
clepostt
$300
per
·
month water tncluded Call
$95 Skagg!&gt; Appliances 76
1 bedroom hOuse located on
I
(740}446-4425 or (740 446 - V1ne St . (740)446-7398
3rd
Ave ,
Galltpohs 3936
$250/month plus depos1t
Renter
pays
utlltt1es BEAUTIFUL
APART- Mollohan Carpet , 202 Clark
(740 )256-666 1
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Chapel Road. Porter, Ohto
- - - - - - -- - PRICES AT JACKSON (740)446 -7444 1-877 8302 bedroom house m country, ESTATES, 52 Westwood 9 162 Free Esttmates Easy
20 mtles E of Jackson. 20 Drive from $344 to $442 ltnanctng, 90 days same as
mtles w ot Athens 1n Vmton Walk to shOp &amp; mov1es Call cash Vtsa/ Master Card
county, 1 m11e off ol St At 740-446-2568
Equal Dnve- a- ltllle save a lot

·-------,.1
rld

32.. S500 mtly (740)698- Houstng Opportumty
2804 not HUD approved
Beautllul unlurntshed, Of'e
2 bedroom , Bulavllle Pike bedroom apt overlooktng
Water &amp; trash paid No pets Ctty
Park .
references
$3SO
h required no pets. sacurity
$350 depostt,
mont
(7401388 1100
depostl $400 per month
Call
(7 401446-2325
or

Thompsons Apphance &amp;
Repatr-675-7388 For sale
re·condttloned
automaltc
washers &amp; dryers, refr~gera­
tors
gas and electr~c
ranges a1r conditiOners and
wnnger washers Wtll do
3 bedroom, 2·112 baths, 2 (740)446-4425
repa~rs on mBJOr brands m
car garage Close to Holzer,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· shop or at your home
$750 month (740)441-03t0 ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

Clean 2Br Ref, Depos1t
~ {304)675·5162

t:W

5400/month (61 4)595·7773
or (800)798 ' 4686

i

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MOBFORII.Iln~

I

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j32ll MOBFORILE~~~
- :J!S

1,

For sale or rent· 2 bedroom
mobile homes starling at
$270 per monlh, Call 740992·2167
·:::..:.,_.::.;______
Inside In Gallipolis Ferry, Good ulld 3 bedroom
across tracks from Beale 14X70 Includes c.ntrt.l air
School Two nlc41 outbulldOnly $10,995 00 Includes
lngo ~9 • 500 · 00 (JO&lt;)•SS- delivery
Call
Nikki
1673
(740)385·iS4t!

··---- --------------------------------~-

r70

WMTED
1 bedroom unfurmshed
apartment Atr range, relngAcJU:AGt.:
erator, disposal garage
DepOSit
&amp;
references lndtvtdual wt shes 10 rent
requ1red
136
Ftrst
A11e secluded house or farm m
1 mobile home lot at
Johnson's Mobile Home Rear Gallipolis (740)446- the country Call (606)7686700
Park at Gallipolis (740)446- 2561
2003
1 bedroom stove and relngerator , turn1s hed . utdtttes Aelocat1ng to Gallipolis
2 Scentc wooded lots Green tncluded $400 month pl us Famtly wants to lease n~ce
Twp Each lot 1+ acres depOSit (740)245-5859
home Wlth at least 3 bed$25.000 per lot (740144 1·
rooms wtth garage needed
I Br apartment $350 month 1mmedlately Call Jackie
9516
all u1111tles InCluded $ t 50 740·707·7999
740-589Mercerv1lle Lots for sale secunty depoSit clo~e to 5258
shared entrance off St Rt downtown Pt
Pleasant
218 3·13 acres Phone (3041675·3654
(7401256·1825
10
1 Br Houso Ill New Haven.
.1)
Two homes1tes for sate. Both Appliances &amp; partially furGootJ~;
one acre mil 3-1 /2 m!les ntshed , no pets
$250
from Holzer Hosp1tal
deposit
$275
month 1800's Oak Love Seat
620 Evergreen Ad . $19 500 (304)882-3652
Hooster Oi:lk kttcher. cup
560 Evergreen Ad . $18.500 :.:.._...:...__ _ _ _ __
boarCllstde board Oak pte
C
I 8840
2 bedroom JUSt past Holzer
and
cha 1rs
or $425 month Call (740)441 - sate/table
all
(740 446 t7401645-4513
1184
(740]286·6522

Lors &amp;

Car Garage, Ftmshed base- 1 bedroom on 40 acres ol
ment, Heat pump, call lor woods .
Central
air

n3 5338

FORRf.:Nr

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock models at old pnces,
2005 models amvmg Now,
Coles
Mob1le
Homes,
15266 U S 50 East Athens.
Ohto 45701 (740)592-1972,
"Where You Get Your
Money's Worthn
-Tr-a-lle_r_fo_r_sa_le_L_oc_a_le_d_a_t

Lower Mason 2BR. 2BA 2 Immaculate CabtnJCottage

appointment (304)
•
Nice House lor sale m

AI'MID lENTS

N•ce two bedroom apartRt2/Rt62 , Ntce location ments Large rooms Fully
more
1nformat1on
call equtped kllchen Central
(30 1]697-1341 or (304)593· heattng l coollng
1939 or after 5 pm call Washer/dryer
hookup
13041675-5631
(3041 882·2523

room, 2 bath, wtth central
a1r. thermal pane wmdows
and 10X20 shed Immediate
occupancy
avatlable
$14.995 00 Call Harold
(7401385-7671

G:t -

and Schools 12748

Onvers Needed P1erceton
Truekmg 1 yr ex:penence
required Class A With Tank
&amp; Hazmat. Call 1-800·4460355

• Thla _ _;;;.

N1ce 98 Fleetwood, 3 bed- 2Br. Located tn P1 Pleas

Galllpollt C1reer College 2 5 acres, family room , cov·
Dom1no's now htnng safe
ered deck. $99.900 No land
(Careers Close To Home)
drivers
all
positiOns, Call TOday I 740-446-4367, contract (740)446 -2196
Galllpohs, Pomeroy
Pt
1-80Q-214·0452
Pleasant. &amp; Eleanor call
WoNW galhpoltscareen:oueoe com
store (304)675-5858 lor Accredited Memb•r AcCJedll!ng
Call 740 71o-ooo7
CQuncll tor Independent Colleges
applicatiOns

we

3 Day Ad:

$6.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great
Advertising!

/6

•ANEW CUNICAL
PEELS I'
Want to look younger AND
earn Money? Let's talk the
NEW AVON call
Marilyn (304)882-2645.
Joyce (304)875-6919,
Aprll(3041882-3830

pa+d weakly
.NO NYC
• Home Weekends
.$500 Stgn On Bonus
.95% No touch fretght

edition. • Bo1 numbel

...,.,W

1-

I

Sma!llovable doQ great wtth 2907 Maple Ave June
k1ds to gtveaway to good 25&amp;26 boys&amp; guts plus s1ze
clothes, household 1tems.
hOme, (304)882·4021
'"'o;:t•::o::.f:::nl:;:ck~-n~a:;ck::;•:...--.,
To Gtveaway 1/2 German
WANJm
Shepherd, 1/2 Auslraltan
Shepherd dog, 1 1/2 year ~
lU BUY
old Female (304)675-7713
Absolute Top Dollar U S .
Whtrhtzer Church Organ.
~liver,
Gold
Coin&amp;,
Needs some work , It has 2
Proofsets Diamonds, Gold
keyboards and 2 foot pedRmgs ,
U S. Currency,dles. Very heavy (740)843M T.S Coin Shop, 151
5194
Second Avenu9, Gallipolis.
740-446·2842
I '11'1 I., 'II"\ I
"I I ~' II I ..,

~only

tM tin~t

Df

Part time or full ttme Sales 2-Bedroom t -Bath, Uvmghelp. E•cellenl commosslon, room, Dlnmg-room, kttchen,
Arby's 1s currentty seeking
local calls- phone or 1n per- basement. covered font
RumpcIn ~.
""' •• the
u•
son Ex:penence +S less porch, General Hartinger
quality lndivtduals who are
Wllte lndultry.
tnterested
1n
e:~Ccellmg
$40,500 00
PositiOn aaalatl aenlor l Important than motivation ParkWlW
upward and are hungry lor
Send resume to
t7401992-3057
experienced mtchlnlct
Commumty Chest
opportunity.
with repetn &amp; m1lnte3 bedroom house Rutland
28 Locust St
Galhpohs, OH 45631
NICe, QUiet neighborhood
Our current request ts for nance such aa lubrication,
or fax 740-44 1•9820
NOT
In
flood
area!
team players rang1ng from ektctrlcal and brake work.
f~rst
ttme JOb seekers Requires mechanical aptl- - - - - - - - - - Hardwood tloors. Shade
traes Central aor. Famtly
tude with betic knowledge
through expertenced gener·
Pnvate Garden Weedtng,
room ,
Laundry
room ,
of
vehicle m1lntenance
aiiENel management.
general mamtenance etc
and repair- ex:p wtth dtesel
Storage butldmgs (740)742Tel 740-208-7977
2824
we offer Competitive wages power vehtcle preferred
Must also have own tools, Wanted Expenenced full&amp; Salanes based on your
3 br Cedar Cape Cod 2 112
pnor a~~:penencesl FteKtble famt11anty with repair manu- time Billing Clerk, e)(cellent
Ba ,2 car garage 2 67 acres
Seheduhngt Free Meals' als and a mtmmum ot 1 year ICD9 &amp; CPT codtng sktlls of nver1ront property tor sale
Free
Umforms1
Paid performmg s1m1lar dulles. computer literate. compet!- m Mason call304-882-2623
Vacations' Proftt Shanng Must be able to lift 75tbs
t•ve salary Send Resume to
Quarterly
Bonus Excellent compensation &amp; TSC16 . 200 Ma~n St Pt 3bedroom, 1 story while
Plan '
Program!
Heallh
Care benefits with medical, Pleasant, WV 25550
vmyl stdmg. fenced back
yard , Pt Pleasant Great
Benef•ts for those who Qual- dental, 401 k. vacation &amp;
1ty• Unlimited Promotion &amp; penalon. Pleaaa come In Wanted Recept!On~st!Off•ce starter home-or-rental propCareer
Advancement and apply anytime Mon- Assistant Send resume to arty (304)675-5209
CLA Box 555, c/o Gallipolis .:-:':-'------'----::Oppor1umtlesl A Prom1s1ng Fri. 8am-5pm:
Tnbune. 825 Third Ave . 3BR on 5 129 acres. Green
Future!
· r.ke the wheel of your
Rumpke Watte
GallipoliS, OH 45631
Township close to school
Askmg price $89 000 More
Everyone IS welcome to 28 AW Long Road
tnfo (740)446-7377
applyl
Wellaton, OH 45692

Yard Sale. large 2 family,
clothtng lawn eqwpment.
turnrture, dtshes, m1sc , toys
Thursday
Fnday,
and
Saturday, June 24. 25 &amp; 27
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
741 Keystone Ad Vtnton
lor sale. Chester Township,
Me1gs County send leners Yard Sate-Saturday, June
of mterest to The Datly 26, 1086 Lincoln Ptke L1ke
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20. NEW
baby/toddler
g1rl
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
clothes NEW toys, pack-n- Those who are mterested tn
play NEW !dult clothes,
Crew or Management postGIVEAWAY
hardcover books &amp; much
ttons may complete an applimore.
catiOn at Arby's of Galhpolls.
4 YARD SALE1521 S.A 7 SOuth (m front
Free 9 week old beautifUl,
ol Wai·Mart)
clean spotled ktHens Shots. ~~-·PoM-iiiEROiilliiYIMIDDLEiliiliiliiiiliiJwormed.
ht1er
tramed Those whO would prefer to
(7401446-2296
June 25&amp;26 Rac1ne 826
submit
a Management
John's Rd Lawn aerator,
Free k1nens to gtve to away gas lawn edger, many resume may Fax to 1-606836-96 17 or E-matl to~
(7401379·2159
household 1tems
1ee1rOcarteeland com or
G1ve away 9 Lab/Rottwe1ter
Sale
Dale
Hart Mall to Arby's, 201 St6wart
male Yard
pupptes
Adull
Yellowbush Ad , Aactne , Avenue Worthmgton KY
Rottwetler. adult female Lab/
June :24 &amp; 25, 9-4, computer 41183
Aottwetler dog (740)44 1desk, dtshes. headboards,
9220
farge p+ctures Chmese dish- - - - - - ' - - - - - - Ktttens &amp; frl9ndly 6 month es, games, toys, table &amp; ATI'ENTION OWNER
old Corgt ml)'(ed fema le dog chatrs &amp; lots ol m1sc All OPERATORS
to good home (740)245- 1tems
donated
for
RACO/Edtson
Bare Canton. Ohto reefer
9890
Memonal SCholarship Fund company lookmg for
Mother cat &amp; one baby kitOwner Operators to
ten
Ango ra &amp; Pers1an
YARDSALEearn between 125-150K
mtxed. very good cats
Pt..FASANT
(304)675_·_79_8_0 _ _ __
.2 Senlement OptiOns

Beginning in Nm·ember
· This event Includes:
Breakfast, Bird Tower Shoot of Pheasants, Quail, Chukur
and Ducks, Lunch-a traditionally hunt of tly-otTs and a
portion o~ bird meat (dressed)

$QUEEZEDF

G_a_lh::_po:_:h:.:s- - - - ' - - - Tools, outdoor equtpment ,
anttques. etc anyth1ng for
everyone 2806 Morgan
Center Ad Thurs -Fn -Sat

tMI:

__w._ANJm
__,.~l r·a
ILon.a_Hw&gt;_.w._ANJID
__,.rll"a Hw&gt;WANIID ILoii.a_Hw&gt;
ABBY'S It Now Hlrtogl

June 26, 2004, 9am·?? 4629

for Love and Happtness

Presented By

,

Now you can have borders and graphics
lLJ
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
SI .00 for large

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

I'ERsoNAu;
___•_ _... Movtng Sata- Ratn or Shtne

Come Join

i~ter

2 bedroom tratler for rent,
Tuppers Platns area, porch
$300 plus uttlitles &amp; deposit
(740)1367-3487
--------2 bedroom trailer, $325 per
(m3o04ntl2h64-86p~u3s
depostt
2000 Dutch 16x80 mob•le

home 3 bedroom , 2 full
baths, on large tot In Point
Pleasant, In Old Town
H
p ~
Moblla orne a'"'· across
from Point Pleasant HIgh
School, available Aug 1
$450 month with $500
depool1(30')875-8933

TownhOuse
apartments . Twin bed $75 twtn ma tand/or small houses FOR tresses , $25 each , Full stze
RENT Call !740)44t·t 111 bed . $150 lull stze bed
tor appliCation &amp; Information $125, table &amp; 4 cha.rs, $75
For Rent 1Br. Apt 2nd lloor lamps $i0 each , ptctures
In Po tnt Pleasa nt Aef&amp; startmg at S7 Kenmore
washer/dryer set . $300
deposit
requtred
Call
Crosle~ relngerator
like
(304)675-2144 or (304)675 - new $1 75 chest-of-draw3653 attar 5 00
ers, S40
.:..c.__ _ _ _ __
Skaggs Appliances
Gractous ltvlng 1 anct 2 bed76 Vtne Street
room apartments at VIllage
(740]446-7398
Manor
and
Atvers+de
Aparlments 1n Mtddleport
From $295-$444 Call 740- Used Furntture Store 130
992·5064 Equal Hous1ng Bulavttle Ptke Dressers
cOp.:.:..po_r_tu_n•_
lle_s_ _ _ __ couches. manresses reclinNew 1 bedroom apt Phone ers grave monuments 2000
Pontoon boat (740)446(740)446-3736
4782 Galhpohs. OH HAS
1 l-3 M-F 24'x32 Pole Barn
New Apt One Bedroom lur·
tor
rent
nlshed an utilities Pd $500
month, 3 mtles to Hosp1tat
(304)674-0031

r

Twtn Rivers Tower ls accept·
lng appllcattons fof' waiting AlJger Mm1 14 nfle 20 rolJnd
list tor Hud-subslzed, t- br clips $400 4 shot guns 2
apartm8nt. call 675-6679 savage 22 caliber rilles
EHO
(740)245-5229

�Friday, June ~5, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

· BRIDGE
Buy or Hll. Riverine AKC Pekingese puppies tor
Antiques, · 1124 East Main sale. 3 male, 2 female. Call
992-2526.

Ruu

Phillip
Alder

Moore,

Chihuahua female. 6 weeks
old. Parents very small, can
C»d solid oak offiCe desk be registered. (7 •o)245-

Witll Hft up type wtitO&lt; well, 598&lt;1.
(7401992-775t
-------

r ~~-~ I _'__"'Y ~r_,._ndc.ly_._s_ve_a_rs_old_.
..~

Pit Bull puppies, wccellent
bloodline. $250 each. Call
Police Seized Property! for
more lnlo call (8001749· ~
( 7ZI40~1-2 5&amp;
~t:i3-t6-·::-~-.,
8107 extP509

$ 10 _001 Tits from $tO.OO!

· 2 Troybih Tillers. 1 electric

r

~OR~

~~-------,J

start 8 hp, excetlent condi·
don, used vary little, $850. 1 ·For Sale or trade: WW11 Nazi
Tufty Tltler. e•cellent condi· Smm Rifle trade for 1889 to
tfOn, used only a few times, 1891 Mauser Alfie that
shoot
765x53
rounds.
S650. (7401441·8299.
2002 27'~e4' used aprox. 2
dozen time Round pool.
$2,000 or best oHer.

I \I.:\ I " l 1'1'1 II "
,\ 11\1 .... 1111 I,

16 ft . Bison Canle Trailer.

FOR RENT- 24'x32 ', 3 stall . Good conclition , $1,800.
pole barn. Private. At. 7. (740)446-2801.
$200 per month. {7401446 . -1968
- -4-02_0_Jo
_ h_n_D
_ee
_ re-tr-ac--

For Sale: Canning jars. 16
dozen quart-wide mou1h and
·stanctard . 6 dozen pintswide
mouth,
530.00.

2002 John Deere 990 4x4,
40 Hp, 4Cyl, diesei, 175 tlrs,
matching 7 fl. finish mower.
$12,000 (304)n3-5103

Clghted Solid Dark Pine
HutctVChina Cabinet made
by singer, $250
two Solid oak Swivel Bar
Stools $ 100 for both
IBM ThinkPad, Windows 95,
6vo Player. lnternot hookup
good condition $200
Boss Klash Sub-Woofe
(500 Watts) W/Box Plus
10~

500W/Amp (Lightning Bol11
.:.$1..:5c.0.:.(304__:.J88_2_-2_49_•_ _
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For . Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, · Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
DrivaW~ys

&amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open 'Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, . Sa turday
&amp;

Sunday. (7401446-7300

r

·J

Box

189 • Middleport

740-843-5264

--------

5yr old Black Quarter Horse,
very gentle ride, road safe,
Sl,OOO (304)7l3-5103

J""St.llt. 14.1 •
Jua oiFSdlt. 7

! '
PJ.one:1·7•0-992-9922

I.

Starbursts $1,600.00

$5001.
Honda 's, Chevy's
Jeep's , etc Police Impounds
Cars from $500. For listings
1-800-749-8 104 ext 3901

Lucky Ball $300.00

Door

R.A"" s'-,

AUIUl

Tree Service

r

33 .000
1990 Ca dI'llac, runs Illood • 2003 Monte ca•o.
••
(3041675-727 1
miles, $14,000 (3041675·
3613
1992 Chevrolel Camaro, V6 , ::-:--:---:::----All new e)Cterior and interior automatic, 95,000 miles. 91 Bonneville, runs good,
doors, all sizes. Call after Good
Condition .
tilt, looks go·od, SSOO OBO,
5:00. 50% off. 6153 51. Rt. AM/F M/Cassena , $ 2 ,200 . ~(7_4.::'01_
99-:-2:::·34_57--::---

~'R~
High~ Dry

Seff·Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

orange &amp; blact&lt; "T ho~ (hel·
met, boots, pants. jersey,
chest protector, goggles,
gloves. neck roll, kidn'~y
belt) $275 firm. The gear has
been worn for less than 2
hourS. For more information

r

t.,~--oiroRiliiiiiiSiliAUiiiiii1111.,J

r

740-992-5232

. . . . . . . Pome~ffop
106 Butternut Ave.

.Pomeroy, Ohio
llllllllllw.lll
15%1111.-IIMr

11$21.H••n

IEICI.... IIIn ldenl

four cyi., 've. jackets, skies,
·clean. ready for river, $4.500

_
91 Ford Tempo Topaz, runs
good, good tire, bodies
good, 4 ely, good gas
mileage,
asking
$550,
(740)843- 1168
1!._.;-~!"'"---.,

r

740-992-6454

.I

TRucKs
FOR SALE

OBO, mus1 see, (7401992·
3796
-------1986 4WINNS,

19.5', 110

140 HP, 80 HOURS, 1railer,
2 sets of skis, tube, Hfe jackets, depth finder, all manuals, life jackets, 3 covers,
looks and runs great,

$5,000. (740)446-3200.
2001 Odyssey 2 1' Pontoon

boat, 80 HP Mercury, new
con dition. Lots of extras.

BENNETT'S

060. (7401446-4241.

L.~'=-~.,..;·;-~·~:"~...,~-~,..;~~~~

~

Trac1or. (740)286-8522.

loot, sleeps 5·6. Good
dttion. (740I2S6·1238.

con·

Owner Musr Sell!!
2002 Chevy Silverado LS 1997 Salem 25' AK . Filth
Z71 . Fully loacled, excellent wheel camper. Oz. size bed,
condition, 37,700 miles, sleeps 6. Very clean, excel$23,000. (304)675-3 127 or len1 cond1tion. $7,200 with
(7..0) 441 _2748.
hitch, $6,700. wlo hitch.
(74 0) 44 ~ -0972 altar 4pm

r

PUBLIC NOTICE
·
NOTICE: Ia hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, June 26,

YANSWDs&amp;
weekdays or (7401645·0908
.U C 0 C8
leave message.
PUBLIC NOTICE
MUST SALEI1l1 1997 Jay co.
The Board of rr·u oteeo 1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee p
$

2004, at 10:00 a.m., •

of Letart Twp, Melga
County will hold their
Budget Hearing lor
yoer 2005. Budget will
be ready lor rovlew
July 1-4 by appoint·
ment only at Clorko
home at 23238 Hill
Rd., Racine, OH 45771
(740) 247·3125.

public aele will be
held at 211
Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmero B•nk
~nd
I Savmu•
ompany • oe ng
for caoh In hand or
certified check thelol·
lowing collateral:

w.

2002
Ch1vrolet
T r I I I b I I z t r
1GNDT13S022388123
The Farmers Bank
ind
Savlngo
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reeerves the
right to bid at thlo
aalo, and to withdraw
the above collater~l
prior to ule. Further,
The Farmero Bank
and
Sevlngo
Campen•
reaervea
r
the right to reject any
· or all bldo oubmltted.
The
above
deocrlbod collateral
will be oold "eo Ia·
whero II", with no
oxpr11Hd or Implied
warranty given.
For further Inform a·
pan, or lor on appoint·
llllrll to lnapect colla!·
!"I• prior to oale date
contact
Cyndlo
OIHIIan, Diane Rector
or Rancty Hoya at 992·
2136.
(I) 23, 24, 25

p bll N tl

129 000

II 11

d

d

opup camper,

3,000 or

'
m ' "Yery epen • best offer. Call Jacque at
able, runs grea1. $4,500. (740)388 9083
-:-(7:-:40=-12-::4-:-5·-:98_
5-:'·--:--:--:•
·
1997 Black J"P Wrangler iimr;;;~~;;;;;;~
Sport. 6cyl., auto, hard·
HOME
10plblklnHop, good condl·
IMPROVFMFNfS
lion, many extras. As~ng
se.ooo. (7401387 •0244 .
BASEMENT
1999 Ford Wlndstar LX
WATERPROOFING
Board ofTrueteea
80,000 miles. Excellent con- Unconditional lifetime guarRobert Morrla,
dltlon, one-owner vehicle , antee. Local references furWilliam
Graham, (7401245·5419 or (7401645· nished. Established 1975.
Chrla · Wolle, Clerk, _22_0__
0 ·----~- Call 24 Hrs. (7401 446·
J
Whit
0810, Rogers Baseman1
oyce
e
81 Jeep CJ7, 350 4sp, Hard
(6) 25
W.aterproollng.
&amp; Soft Top, needs work
$2,800, after 5pm (3041576· , . . - - - - - - - - - .
2458
Public Notice
97 F·150, 4x4, au1oma1ic,
OM
The Orange Township A/C, 4.6 liter, 130K. $6,000
TruiiMI will hOld a OBO. (740)379-9125.
public hearing on the
proposed bu d get f or 98 Grand Cherokee, 87,400
2005 , July 6 , 2004 at mllea (3041875-5375
7 , 3D at the home 01
tho
clerk,
Oale
MOI'ORCY&lt;US
Follrod.
~
·
(6) 25
1989 fionda Shadow 650,
Runs &amp; looks good, $1 ,100
Public Notice
OBO. (3041n3·5737 after
Spm. or (304)773-5382

rio

SAVINGS

F«&lt;

LEGAL NOTICE
The Rutland Townohlp
TrultHI will hold a
public meeting on the
budget lor year 20011
on July 6 at 5 p.m. at
the
Rutland
Flro
Station with the rtgU·
lar meeting to follow.
Public 11 welcome
(8) 25

AS IF Tti~ SviA~M OF A BILJ..ION
J..OGIJSTS EATING OlJ~ ~~AIN ISN'T
I AI&gt; ~NOlJGt4 --- Tt4H ALSO viANT
S~PAMTe
Gt4~GICS.

I

Shop
Clas.sifleds!

\910'x3l)'
Hours
AM - 8:00 PM
1/14/1 mo. pd

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

BISSEll

BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

MUSCLES,
AWRIGHT !!

• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; I0 yr Warranties

.. / -

.. . .: •
....

• Huge Inventory
• Vanguard Yentless Fire~iaces "

----

'f.'!_"" ,.,

IIHBIJIIfJJM.

Gallipolis, OH WVOI 0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967
TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE
Owner: Jeff Stethem

Office: (740) 991·1804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
PQWER WASHIN!i

·(Commercial and Rl!!sidl!!ntiaf)

Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks. Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas StatKln Awnings, Oegreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Trac;torTrailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck

or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Compenies.

LAWN

CARE DIVISION

(COmmercial and Residential)
Mowin_g. Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,

Spray~ns of fence lines, Leof Romo.al, as wellassmall
landsaping jobs such as planting and mulching.
FREE ESTtMATES

GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

~~~~::~~:"'~;;::;~~;;;:;

H!

o

Creative
Ck

es
Lora
"'1
• Birthdays
Q

,..,

0

•

Weddlnga

Any special

occasion
Place your order
today

(740) 985-3917
Lora Bing

SYRACUSE SMAlL
ENGINE DR'S
1356 College Rd.
Syracuse, OH 45779
740·992·0122

Lawn and Garden Equipment is our
busi11 es!t', not our :.·idelint•
Manning

K.

Roush
Owner
Open Mon·Fri 9·5 Sat. 9·12

Master Certified

Meohanics Briggs &amp;
S1mt1on, Kohler Murry.
MTD All makes &amp;
models $ 10.00 off any
h
f $20 00 .lh
•
pure .se 0
w•
1his ad.

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

Whaley's Auto
Parts

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

--""~ ~~

g:•

g

~

""'~-r::::

THE BORN LOSER
r-f\~\IE. YOU
BE.E.f-1 10 Tf\E..
(,~') :)\t&gt;--\101-l.,

-~---.

'Tf\E l"lZlC.E)

r-t-10 v.!W&lt;.'i'S
Tf\E LI&gt;--\E.S\7

AA.E. )0 1-\IGf\,

! HIE.'!'\&lt;..(

1 Ori'T1&lt;:..11-.\G

R.E.c.etH L'P

I
~

Flt-1~1'1(.1~(:,

a.:; FILL UP) I

~ ,----:-~'-.

. Trucking
HAULING:

Athens

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

Used

1-/0WARD l.

475 South Church St.

WRITESEl

Ripley, WV 25271

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

South. the declarer in five clubs. What
would be your plan alter West leads the
heart two and East plays the Jack?
East opened in third position with a fi"Yecard weak two-bid because, knowing his
side didn't have game values, he was try·
ing to be a nuisance to the opponents.
When East had the problem .. the play
went as follows: South won the first irick
with the he an ace, played a spade to
dummy's jack, then ran the club· 10 to
West's king. Ht;~ shifted to the diamond
queen, declarer calllng lor dummy's two.
How should East have defended?
look at matters ~rom West's point of
view. When dummy's spade jack held,
. declarer was ma r ~ed with the ki ng: East
had no reason to duck. So, to defeat the
contract, West had to lind East with the
diamond ace. And West anticipated
East's having 3·6-3- 1 distribution, so that
their side could win two diamonds and
one club. However, because East is 3-54· ~ , they need to collect one heart, one
diamond and one club.
The key point is that East knows the
position. West's opening lead of the heart
two told East that South began with two
(or three) hearts. So, East shOuld overlake with the diamond ace and cash the
heart king.
Fine , but as Claire Greene. from
Oconomowoc, Wis .. points out. it is bet·
ter for South tO cash the club ace at trick
two. If the king drops, his worries are
over. If It doesn't, declarer plays on
spades, getting home when the defender
with the club king has at least three

Chevy,

Pon11ac. Buick. Olds.
· &amp; Custom Van Dealer"

I(OU I-lAD
ME PRETTI{
UPSET,

6ETTIN6 UPSET IS GOOD FOR
YOU, SIR .. IT PREPARES 'I'OU
FOR ALL TilE T~IN65 TI.IAT ARE
601NG TO ~APPEN TO VOV
LATER IN LIFE ..;

MARCIE .. .

ed .

1

'(OU RE A JOV TO

BE

WIT~,

MARC I

BETTY

HE.'I'! COOt.!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec _ 2 1) - .
Friends will1esent ll it '/OU underm1ne their
interests 1n lieu ot yours. Your faculties are
sharp enough today ld' understand that
unity must prevail If you hope to spend

E.~N

you'VEGOr

'' SCREM\ING

Pt..A'CEI:t ~

surol"?

LORD

P,N M't~

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - II may be
wise to avoid going anyplace today where
you know there is a good chance ol running Into someone with whom you had a
recen t disagreement. The argument is not
yet resolved
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) - Today, you
could be more vulnerable than usual
where your ego is concerned. and 1f you
give intq it early on in lhe day, ils delelerlous eflecls cou ld spill over into the rest of
you r plans.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ~ Instead of
looking for faults in others today, force
yourself to locus on their good points
01herwise you will malo:e yourseU miser·
able over how awful everyone is around
you.

your day with others.
CAPRICORN · (Dec. 22-Jan . t9) Commumcation with your mate is apt to be
quite dilliculltoday if your viewpoinl1s too
demanding or narrow at lti 1s t1me . Fmd
some common groUnd on which you can
be positive

AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Pace
·yourself wisely beginning first thing in the

morning or else you're likely

*Fn• Elllmllel*

to push both

your mental and physical energies beyond
the ir limllS. Do fewe r things so thai you can
do each well

949·1405

PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20) .:..,- Ael aJ~ and

GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction

OTHER ANIN\At-:5 Pl..Ar,&gt;.
OTHER ANIMA\..S FRO\..IC

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens , Drywall
&amp; Mora ·

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124

between Racine

and Syracuse
July 2·3
Spaces available
$5.00

740-949-2734

WE NEED 1'0 MAKE SOME

CHANG.ES AROUND HERE!

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• II
Rtmodeling
• New Garag..
• Electrlcll &amp; Plumbing
o Rooting &amp; Gutter•
o VInyl Siding &amp; P dll'ltint;~
• Patio and Porch De1.. kr

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

We do I! aII except
furnace work

Remodeling

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-1611

992·621
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Ytlfl Local Ex rltnee

Stop &amp; Compare

s

GRIZZWELLS

I)U1' HOW DO WE
CHANGE Al-L. 1'H05E
OfHER ANINIAL..S?

RIG.H1'!

740-742-341

Flea
Market

~

YOU'RE

FREE ESTIMATES!

13 Forntetll'
14 1950a' auto 52
53
lotture
15 Gawkot
55
16 Textbook
dlvlaian
56
17 l.ay
57
of the land
19 Sashes
58
20 Feminine
59
principle
21 VoluntMr
50
23 Wry lace
26 Milked
swordsman
28 Upper limb
1
29 Maple-sugar 2
base
3
4
30 Skating
leaps
34 Shaw
5
·surprise
6
36 Dusk,
to poets
7
38 Practical
joke
39 Archeo8
9
logical lind

concern
JalPen brlllld
Mendicant's H&lt;t'ffi#+Foii
cry

Bog down
Street
aalut.otlan
Milk amts.
Popeye's
OliveEstablish

12 Mexican
genl
37
13 Be more
40
clever
18 Whiskey
41
greln
42
22 Ollie's pal
DOWN
23 Damage
43
S~com allen 24 Source
45
Hang around
of Iron
·
Solitary
25 Mo. T1u1tw1
New
27 Receptive 46
Zealander
29 Pencil end
Sheer fabric 31 Soullte
48
Pepperoni
Ingredient , 49
seller ·
32 Floe hastily 50
Daddy
33 Preston or
Warbucka'
Pepper
S4
ward
(abbr.) .
Slicker
35 Great
Allows to
numbers

of poople
Sea Inlet
Koran
religion
BMuly peel!
Pold
homoge
Averages
Dlanoy'a

Little
Mermaid
Hoopater
-O'Neil
Jumble
Falls back
King's ad·

dress
Camp bod

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipher CfYP1091'EillS are createcltrom QUOtatiOnS Qy lamovs people. past and presen~
Eactllener in the opller Star"Oi Ia' ano1hef

Today 's clue: R equals C

, " KL

MWN

OWNY

TS

NZRK
YKL

EKFOOXN
EWNNXHV

W

·

EPT ;

WHVPF

.CXOOLP ,

TS

WOWH

YKL

TOC
TH

JLH. "
YKL

IXHV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Art is 1he objeclifica\ion of feel ing , and \he
Sllbject~i cation of.nature."

life or dissect things tO such a point that
you can only see the flaws. Don't major in
m'inor thi.ngs.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - Don't be
coerced into hastily making an important
decision today just to please an impatient
person who cou ld caro less about the ou1come . Take your time in figuring out what
is righ t to do.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22)- There's a possibi lity you could st.art off the day on the
wrong foot and creale pn;lblems tor your·
sell. lf you lo:eep this in m1nd and shalo:e otl
any bad attitude, trustralion.!!' can be avoid·

Dean Hill
New&amp;

•ROIRNG
dOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMLESS
GOnER

TEA51N6 'I'OU
'!'ESTERDAY, SIR ..
CilARLES AND I
WEREN'T REALL'I'
T06ETHEIL.

51 Ronch

- Susanne Langer

WOlD
lAIII

Saturday, June 26, 2004
l By Bernice Bede Osol
Atti1ude will be everything lor you in the
year ahead. It will be up to you as to
whether you adopt a posit1ve outlook on

PEANUTS

l WAS ONLV

aile

11 BolllcoM
deity

"rbur CJIIrthda,y :

TFN

IMPORTS

Pass

Pass

Interference

47 PUgrlmoge

Graph

Open 7 days a weeki

R.B.

4 ofo
Pass

¥

lollo-

41STV

Astro-

IGNIT ION

Rooky "AJ"
Hupp

44Siama

Nearly two years ago, I ran this deal as a
defensive dilemma. Bu t suppose you are

BIG NATE

See

2

·A reprise for
an alternative

•

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

74Q-992-7599

East

Pass

~

ALL ON SALE NOW!!
1·740-949•2115

North
Pass

spades.

.

Meigs County's Largest seledion or
annuals, perennials, vegetables ,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhoaoaenarons, and azaleas.

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,

~~~~&lt;V/~

~~::::....U'IJ:l::i.c..rL___Lj j

SUE's GREENHOUSE

Quality work for a fair
prict
All work iuaranleed

}'

COMMERCIAL and

FREE ESTIMATES

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restocking late M?del Salvage
and Arter Mtrket Parts

2002 Honda Shadow A.C.E
750cc, 3800 mllea. AduM rid·
den . $!,000.00
which
tncludea
. $1,500.00/
e&gt;&lt;traa'o. (7401949·1131

Sizes 5'x10'

7:00

992-2975

1....,____
AN ' I OWE 'EM ALL TO
PAW !!

YEP, 1 GOT

~~~
:zi I ..-~,-

SALES &amp; SERVICE
l'omcr&lt;l)·. Ohio

West

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

GRAVELY TRACTOR
204 Condor Street

K 4 2
A 9
5

Opening lead : • 2

Snapper

.

~

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing ·
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen.Jo..

t..-iliiiliiiiiiiiliii-I.J

Get A Jump

29670 Bashan Road
Ra cine, Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

2

Pass

3 II'

5 "'

(304) 273-5321

RESIDENTIAL

Lw_,iiiiiiiilii.iiliiiiilliorl

(740I44 t ·0931 .

.3 "'

GOODNESS, LOWEEZY,
YO'RE SHORE

HEATING U COOLING

,;;r....;C.,_AMPERS;.;;..
.--&amp;,...._,I f1!!!£l!!J Gibson

Condition. Asking
(740)446·4782.
$2,300. Call after 5pm 1970 Ford F350, 10ft Grain ..
A.O.BA Registered Pit Bull (740)446·2398.
bed, tow miles, many new
MoToR HQli.'IES
1
puppies,
$250.
Call - - . . . , - - - - - - parts, new tires/Wheels.
1993 fionda Del-Sol, herd $1200 (7401245·0485.
(740)44 1·9162 .
~
top convertible, CD player,
1974 Winnebago Brave,
AKC Chocolate !-abs; 6 PW. cruise, 5-speed, 17" 1992 Chevy Kodlack. 20 tt. $2,300. (7401388·8473.
weeks old. 1st shots and wheels, 130,000 miles. Roll Back Truck. One owner,
wormfi!d,' $300 each. Ca ll Moving mus1 sell $3,000 real sharp. 3000 Ford Diesel 1989 Citation Camper, 23
Good

Sout.b

Washington Street

Gravely

•

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

STRONG!!

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

• 10 8 5
II' KQJ73
t A 10 7 4

9 6 3

&gt;fo AQJ8743

. BARNEY

Hill's Self
Storage

East

•

•

26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones · '

Free

10 9 5

•

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

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

•

West

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

316

8 •
K 9 6 2

'I

Ravenswood, WV

. • Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

2003 KTM 50 cc SX Pro Sr
Racing Bike. This is a very
fast bike. Asking $1 ,995.
Also have all new gear-

(7401441-0108.

Pkg.

Let me do 1t for youl

t

South

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Yonr One Stop Ponred
Solid Cm1crere Shop''

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

JONES'

MOTORCYCLES

new A!C , good tires &amp;
snowliires, wry good condi- 1997 Pontiac Firebird, Black
tion:
1/owner
$2,000 with T·Tops, 1031&lt; miles, pre·
{304) 675 _3502
mium
sound
system ,
$4,500/090 greal condition

WD, Fully Loaded, Tow

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

Free Estimates

.

"

11' 10652
• Q J 83
• K 6

674·331 1 Fax 304-675·2457

Specializing In Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basement:;, Floors &amp; Walls

H!~!!_: !J."rtfl•y .. Sou'"!!W'~ f

t·

' ~JWtpiiNlfDtt ilri'lllfltlftfflll i1N@4!!~e..!

call (74013811·9994.
2000 Stratus 42K, $4,295;
1996 Achieva 2D 5 speed • - - - -·- - - - . . . ,
Wooden baby crib &amp; match- 1990 Bud&lt; Lesabre, 4-Door, 94K, $2, t95; 1989 Camry
BoATSFOR&amp;S~~~
ing changing table w/mat- 1 owner, 111 ,000 mileage LE 136K, $1,495; 20 in __
:tU..ol'..
•
tress &amp; all accessories, $200 call (3041675-6894 May stock. COOK MOTORS
.oBo. (7401698·2809
leave message (Voice Mail) (740)-446-0103.
17' 1987 Four Wlnn s, 3.0

PErs

H f5769

,, : 4.14&gt;4toJ"£:f'

Prize $850.00 ·

1972 For:d't.TD, 429/engine,
FOR SAu:
31,000 original miles, 4dr, ..__ _ _ _ _ __.

.,.,..--,....--...., 1993 Chevy S·10 B1azer, 4

Cell Phone

!f4.14&gt;4111•t,...,. fw:u.~"f'pointrJWat ·

Crank II Up Tipboard $8,000.00

AIJI'OS
..__iliFORiiiiiiSAl.Eiiiiio_.l.

16,0, 3 miles north of Holzer (740)446•4237 .
hospital. Ph: (74'0)645-6 157. - - - - - . . . , - - 1993 Cavalier 4cyl . 5 speed,
Block, brick, sewer pipes, runs great. looks good ,
(304)593-21 35
windows, Untels, etc. Claude $1 ,000
Winters. Rio Grande, OH (304)e7 s-7355
Call740-245-5121 .
~-------

875-2457

StateWide
Clll Poured Walls

1-866-410-0555

All Packs $5 .00 each

PQie Barn 30x50x10 only 1982 Cadillac Deville V·6, 4· ·(304)875-8951
$5,295, includes painted doo~. Extra Clean, Runs
Suntire.
metal, plans how to build Good, $1 ,000. (740)446- 1997 Pontiac
Mileage 90, 192. Good conbook. FUder free deli\lery. 2639.
dillon $2,500 or trade for
(937)559-8341 .
1989 Olds Ninety-Eight Truelc with same value. cau
Queen &amp; King s1ze bedding 149.000 miles. AJC, cruise, (740)446-3623.
set, Large Rugs '&amp; House PL, PW. Runs we11. $1,850.

hold i1ems (3041675·2801

Early birds start
6:30
Lasl Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Gel
SFREE

...,,_..

6 A QJ 7

Henderson, WV

Doors Open 4:30.

~~~ JlonU.@ffi1t
Pon-..

June 26 at 6:30 pm
American Legion
Middleport

(7401985-3956

FlO

Financial Servicest

"'c1nu

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday

MYERS PAVING

BINGO

1 1/2 year old white laying
hens for sale, soe each,

I H. \ \ "'I'OU I \1111 \

a Free Quote or Appointment

Ro,cky Hupp Insurance

welcomes
Heather Hargraves.
Specializing in foiliflg
14 years experience
$5.00 off perms and
foiling.

New Honand 273 HavJiner
JET
square bailer,. good condl: AERATION MOTORS
tion.
Sto~ed
tns!Cie.
Aepalred, New &amp; Rebuilt In (740)742-273 1
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- :.._.c..c._ _ _ _ __
B00-537-9526
Tractor parts &amp; .servK:e, specializing
in
Massey
FergUson , Ford , . and
King Size Bed $250.00, Belarus. {740)696--0358
Kitchen
Table
~250.00,Kitchen Table &amp;
LIVESJOCK

a

Call:

VERA'S NATURAL
IMAGES

(7401245·9127.

Chairs $250 Couch $50
(904)675-2349

For

tor with turbo $8,500 080:

For Sale: 4 plo1s at Ohio 1991 Chevy Cavalier 4cyt
Va lley Memorial ·Gardens, standard
$850
OBO.
$350 each (7401441·9771.
(7401256-6876.

if there was

We can insure your valuables!

Syracuse Church of
Nazarene
Shelter House
· Something for everyoneinfants, big men's &amp; ladies,
Longaberger Baskets,
Home Interior

Crahaman 42~ mowerKohler 15 HP engine. Priced

~47c.8:::2_·0:..:ac.111:..:po_lis_._ _ _ _

would you lose

Multi Family Yard Sale
Thurs., June 24
&amp; Fri. June 25

(74013811-8741

right. (740)245-9378.

IF YOU RENT

Eagles 2171
"Rick Brumfield"
Friday, June 25th
8:00 to 12:00 ·

t';.!
7 Haveocold
4

Aoiln

Norlh

. St50. (7401256·1652.

42 Drowor
pulll

1 Lotthw

10 . . . . -••

.!

Fun blooded St. Bernard,

~

&lt;t1 EXICI

ACROSS

on SR 124 e. Pomorov. 740- (7401992-&lt;l287.

stop taking yourselt or events too serious·
ly today, especially when involved in social
happenings with friends. lf you're uptight, it
will spoil the fun for everybody
ARIES {March 2 1-April19) .,..... It's best not
to begin a "do-it-yourself" prqect around
the hou se today withOut first study1ng all
1he facets lr'WOived in minute delail. Begin
only after you know what you're gelling
1nta.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - lf you slevp
tale today, don't try lo make up for lost time
by rushing through morning chores . You'll
lare better by chang1ng your routine · and
carefully keeping your mind on what's at
hand.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - I t behoows
you to gl11e some serious 1hought today aa
to how you tn1end to' comply ~ith each
obllga11on you owe 1o two cloee friend• .
Figure out B program that'll make both
happy.
·

0 L VAC

I

J UR

I~

·I had JUSt argued with my
bcssandgotagoodlaughwhen
1overheard one fellow say to
. . . . . ·~ another: ' If our dumb boss was
...-------:-...:.., any smarter. wewoutd be out
R0

'

' ' 1 1 Is 1 7
6

I~ -C~~o~e~.-~~he
I
I
I
I I
F ANUSE
?

~uc•ed

ch,ckle
'il by ldl1ng in !he :'MS.!~Q word1

\
L.J_.JL.JL.J-.J__.l you develoo ftom 5tep No. 3 below.

9

PR1NT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUUES

6)

~~~c:~~~\\ tErTERSI

r ,
I

\

l

• 15

II I I I I

SCRAM· lETS ANSWERS

6 • 2 &lt;- o'

Puck.1r- Fable- Humus· French· NUMBER

The dummy ran into the police station and yelled.
·someone stole my carl I couldn't see w.ho it was bu)
we're in luck. I was able towrtte down the tag NUMBER!

ARLO &amp; JANIS

.

�Friday. June 25. 2004

B6 • The Daily Sentinel

ALONG THE RivER

LI\1NG

Rhythm on the River, Big Bend Blues Bash
bring summer-long music series to area, Cl

~ If

•

un

you have a question or.a _comment, write: NASCAR Th is Week . c,lo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893. Gastonia, NC 28053
UllSGH Sl llll S

Race: Dodgej Save Mart 350 reason for h1m to feel so all
Where : lnfineon Raceway. alone. e1ther: This race wasSonoma. Calif. (1.99 m1.) , n·t like the 14 that preceded
I[ thiS season. Dale Earn112 laps/ 218.9 miles.
When: 4 p.m .. Sunday. June hardt Jr. was seldom on the
radar screen. Jtmmte John27
Last year's winner: Robb~ son didn't have the one th1ng.
he probably needed to w1n Gordon
Quallf)'ing record: Sons Sa1d. a thlfd gear- which. oddly
Pont1ac. 93.620 mph. June enough, he lost at just about
the same time the race·s one
20.2003.
·Race record R1cky Rudd, dominant force. Jeff Gordon.
Ford. 81.007 mph, June 23. lost h1s engine That left a
bunch of hungry drivers scuf·
2001.
Last week : Until M 1chig~n fling around Michigan Inter·
rolled around. Ryan Newman national Speedway's two
had been fast but not fast !)liles. Newman's dry spell
enough. For Newman in was 20 races - not a lot for
2004. v1ctory was a long time anyone but him- and he fell
coming. At the end of the a lap down early thanks to a
DHL 400. there wasn't any flat tire.

·

INHNfON OATil

Race : Black Cat Fireworks
20Q
Where: The Milwaukee Mile,
West Allis. Wis. (1.0 mi.).
200 laps/ miles
When: 9 p.m., Friday.
last year•s winner: Jason June 25
Keller
Last year's winner: Brendan
Qualllylng record: Kevin Ha r- Gaughan
VICk. Chevrolet, 122.474 Qualifying record: Greg Bifmph. June 29. 2001.
fle. Ford. 121.,102 mph, July
Race record: Jason Keller. 2. 1999.
Ford, 103.093 mph, June Race record: Brendan
29,2003.
Gaughan, Dodge . 109.689
Last week: Chevrolet driver mph, June 28, 2003.
Kyle Busch won the race at Laat week: Dodge driv.er BobKentucky Speedway, his third by Hamilton won the race at
victory of the season.
Memphis Motorsports Park.
Race: Alan KulwiCki 250
Wh818: The Milwaukee Mile.
West Allis. Wis. (1.0 m1.).
250 laps/miles.
When: 9 p.m., Safurday,
·'
June 26

•

·

:

Dodg;/Siwe Mart350
June 27

l'unw• ·"~ • \liddlt'llln1 • &lt;.:tllipuli, • .ltmt• :.! - . :!ruq

Ohio \ 'all&lt;·y l'uhlishiug Cu.

~1.25 • \'ol. ;~8. ~o. 66

WARN system test works out in Mason County, W.Va.

SPORTS

STAFF REPORT

• NASCAR Weekend.
See Page 84
• Make it so! Jackets
draft LW Picard. See
Page 83
• Pena slam rallies
Reds past Pirates. See
Page 81

NEWS@MYDAiLYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - T.he
Mason Countv. W.Va .. 911 Center
and the Locai Emergency Planning
Committee (LEPC) announced that a
May 19 test of the Wide Area Rapid
Notification (WARN) Sys1em was
successful.
_ All .Mason County. W.Va .. residenls received an initial phone call

containing · a reco,rded message
de,cribing the test within 30 minutes
of &gt;tuning lhe exercise. The successful call completion rate was 75 percent.
The lest was stopped during the
redial step when multiple attempts
were made to conlact a residence
until a completion\, confirmed.
The WARN System is de,cribed by
the LEPC as a powerful tool thai can
. be used by the 911 office or LEPC

members. such as industries. 10 nbti·
fy group' of residenh or the entire
county during emergency re;,ponse.
Residents could be in structed to take
a response action. al'oid an area. or
monitor information media for
updates.
"We are proud that Mason County
is lhe first West Virginia county to
adopt this system: other countie s as
well as the State Emer~encv
Response Ofllce are interested ... an

v
E

•

.

I

seem to be UmingWMt brings 0\JI a yel·

flag on lap five is not the
·•,; ...,,..-.set of circumstai1Ces that
•;W!II ,. bripg one out at the end.
· •W)llitbrtngs out a Cup yellow flag
•.• "QI!en won't bring one out In the
· J3useh Series or trucks. Anyone ·
·' who doesn't believe it hasn't
. beilnwatchingclosely enough.
.,. Why must the field be frozen
for the final lap, when a crash is
. a half lap behind thfi leaders
; and In front of only a handful?
: •Incredibly, 'freezing the field"
; ·may ju.st cause more proble ms
· • than racing back to the yellow
' ·ever did. At least back in the old
• da~. drivers knew what was go·ing to happen. Racing back to
· .· ~utiOn Is Irresponsible, but the
·· ·curr!iht system is chronically in: · consistent
: ....Tony Stewart started last in
• Michigan because he left the
drivers' meeting before it was
: . over. During an interminable pe&gt; t~od of questions - some of
:·. the,m pretty tedious - Stewart
:, ~aid ' let's go racing' and
• ,:Nalked out. Oh, well. He would
; haye started 27th anyway.
• .,.l:ludos to Shane Hmiel, who has
: .by all reports cleaned up his act
t' atter a. drug suspension last
_; ·~~r. Hmlel very nearlywon the,
'i,:.Craflsman Truck Series race at
;,· Memphis but could use a spon~· !!Oi, He'$ a genuine, enthusiastic
·• :kid_.who.deserves support.
~ ·.-J1!!rY $Ingle Busch Series race
;, t~l$ ~ear has gone to either a
• "&lt;l'leitel Cup driver or a team as!-\ ~atl!d
With a Cup operation.
:.,..,_ ,
~1··'-'

~,~:.:;, ..: .·.r~.
WHO '!:.• HOf
"' ANU
WHO "' NO f

Jimmie Johnson
in the top 10 in
!lie !l1QI!S, and now
points . 1~8\ler. •..
W~ltrlp'
finis~ed in
oftl'!e past
Dale·

s
Brendan
Gaughan

s

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

John Clark/NASCAR This Week

Jamie McMurray, 28, has d~Jveloped a reputation as one of the more goodnatured drivers In the Nextel Cup garage area.
I

years ago.
"(Sponsor) Chevron-Texaco wanted
someone that everyone could relate
to, that could go out and speak and
sound intelligent and have a conversation with everyone from a plant worker to the main people at the corporate
headquarters. The No. 1 thing is
you've got to be able to drive a race
car. You have to be able to win races
and perform well, but at the same
time you've got to be able to go and
speak before a group of people. The
racing side, the driving part, for me,
is the easiest part. You love it and
that's what you're good at. Traveling
and speaking, I don't look forward to
that part very much because it takes
away from your focus of racing."
McMurray has just the kind of appealing personality' that sponsors

seek. He's taken advantage of on_track success to give him opportunities off the track.
"I'd love to get to go do anything for
MTV," he said. "Any time you get to
do something outside of racing, that's
that big, that's fun. It's so much differ·
ent. I grew up watching MTV and
CMT. To get to be a part of those
awards shows that you've watched for
so many years, that's cool.
"Junior (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) was
the only guy I've ever seen on any of
those. I think maybe Jimmie Johnson
did the CMT awards, so it's amazing
the opportunities that come along being a race car driver. I know 10 years
ago you never would have seen a race·
car driver on one of these shows , so
·
it's pretty neat."
Contact Monte Dutton at hmd4858@peoplepc.com
I

Robby
Gordon

woman

reccnlly
·sang
her
way to the
top of an

FAN TIPS

.. American

&amp; Supply

Co.

Idol" style
music conwintest.
.
.
mng a pnze

OBITUARIES

package
rh;lt include s

Page AS
• Geneva Blake, 73
• Guy William Jordan, 90 .
• Virginia Gail
McClelland, 89
• Mary Kail
Mollohan, 84
• John Henry Ross Sr.,

74
• Sally J. Savage, 63
• Sadie Straight
Shaver, 96

VIctory Junction Gang
·Camp opened by Pettys
Kyle Petty's Victory Junction Gang
Camp, conceived even before the un·
timely death of Kyle's son Adam in a
racing accident, is fina lly open on the
Petty complex in Randleman , C. C.. The

• Down on the Farm . See
PageA2
• Community calendars
See Page A3

camp will provide fun. relaxation and ·

treatment for kids with chronic and
life-threatening illnesses. and its facilities are an artful blend of form and
function. Although the camp was built
_by the Pettys - Richard donated the
land - it came to fruition because of
charitable contributions largely connected from within the sport. Tony
Stewart pledged $1 million himself.

WEATHER

Emergency personnel attend rescue class ·
MILLISSIA

RUSSEU

BIDWELL
Many
Gallia County Emergency
Medical Service, fire, and
rescue personnel gave up
.Father's Day weekend with
their families to learn new
rescue techniques from an
instructor
with
the
Columbus Division of Fire.
The men and women
received hands-on training
from J. D. Vasbinder, a fellow firenghter and rescue
team member who travels
across the country teaching
rescue techniques. said
Terry Reed. director of lhe
Gallia County EMS.

The lrammg was held at
Red's Rollen Garage in
BidwelL Garage owner
Tammy
Brabham also
donated 15 vehicles for the
class to practice on .
Although hours of training are required each year
for most emergency personnel, this training went above
what many expected, Reed
said.
"This was definitely a
learning experience for
everyone." he said. "One of
the guys told me he learned
more in two days than he
had in ten years of ex perience."
One of the most exciting
techniques
lh e
group

learn ed. Reed said, was how
10 take lhe enlire side of a
vehicle off in · less time lhan
it would have 1aken to pry
open a single door before.
The group also learned
how to tunnel into a
wrecked vehicle through the
trunk.
" I hope we can arrange
something soon to share
what we learned with other
emergency personnel in the
county.'' Reed said.
He added that addilional
training is in the works. and
quarterly training exerci ses
like lhis one will he scheduled soon.

Ceremony to replace onnuol re-creation

· LEGENDS AND !.:ORE ·

Field o.f contenders
narrows on road course
Road races change the dyna mic
of Nextel Cup racing. The field of possible winners is narrowed because
relatively few of the drivers are what
might be considered road·racing expe rts. The Gordons , Jeff and Robby,
are both superb at lnfineon (Calif .- )
Raceway and Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International. So are Tony Stewart and .
Mark Martin. Anew factor tha t must
be considered is the arrival of roadracing specialists like Boris Said and
Ron Fellows. Neither has won. but
both have had competitive runs in re-

J.D. Vasbinder of ·the Columbus Division of Fire. instructed local emergency personnel
from the Gallia County EMS and Rescue and Springfield Township Volunleer Fire
Department on new extrication techniques over Father's Day weekend. (submitted photo )

MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

INSIDE

BY .CHARLENE

HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTiNEL.COM

Details on Page A2

INDEX
4 SECTIONS -

24 PAGES

Around Town

A3 .

Celebrations

C4

· Classifieds
Comics

D3
insert

A4
I

Obituaries

As

Sports

B1

Weather ·

Az

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

. POMEROY - While the
re-ermetors of the 91 st Ohio
Volunteer Infantry will not
be staging a battle this ·year
at Buffington Island , tile
Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War will be there
on July 17, the traditional
time for the battle. for a
memorial wreath laying
ceremony.
The first re-enactment
was staged in 1987, then
was discontinued for a time
before being resumed on an
annual basi s in 1991.
According
to
Keith
Ashley, who has been
active with the re-enactors
for many years, the volunteer infanlrymen decided to
"sit out. a year" and then
start back in 2005.

"'Many of the volunteers
are participating in events
this year where they don'l
have to be the host." said
Ashley. noting that '·i; takes
a lot of effort and hard work
to put together a weekend
event."
Plans for the wreatll lay ing were . made al la st
week's meeting of Bro&lt;;&gt; ksGrant Camp held al the
Riverbend Arts Council
headquarters.
The ceremony will take
pl~ce at 12:30 p.m. at the
battle park in Portland . The
Camp and the Maj . Daniel
McCook Circle Ladies of
the Grand Army of the
Republic will furnish meat
and drink for a picni c to fol. low the ceremony.
The public is invited to
participate· and
those
altending are asked to . take

a covered dish.
At las! week's meeting, a
hi,1oric review of I he IRth
· Ohio Volunteer Infantry of
the Civil War was given by
Glen
Davis
of
Gnadenhutten, Ohio.
Dal'is said tile original
I ~th Regimelll was only a
90-day unit since no one
expected the war lo last
longer than 90 days. In it
were lhree Meigs County
militi a linih - lhe Racine
Tige rs. the Pomemy Guard
and 1he Meigs County
Rangers of Pomeroy.
When the Civil War continued. !he 18th Regiment
was renewed as a three-year
unit. Some of the 90-day
regimen! re-enlisted in the
new unit headed by Col.
Timothy
Stanley
of
Please see Ceremony, A5

555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611
, ....... AI'-IIL

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

I

~A

-.

t.
·=-· '

· ~
· ''

---·"· · ·

English

i.l demo recording co n1ract.

BY

,

Editorials

Valley

and ha' also enjoyed being on

REED

. \'aJiou~ karaoke 'tage~. but it
\\'lb

Brendan Gaughan

cent years.

J.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport

vs. Robby Gordon

·

spo~esperson

said. " Man y
go to the Mason Count)
Department of Health lor securing
Hallt fundin~. l) II 'Director Chuck
Bhlke and LEPC chair Ke\ in Dennis
for leadin" the effons. and Nick
Bnsti.:~. LEPC WARN project leader.
"Thanks to the 91 1 operato" as
well "ho patiently fie lded many
yue'iions during the test." the
spoke,persun added .

BREED@MYDAiLYSENTiNEL.COM

The two got together on the very
first lap of the DHL 400. Gaughan's
Dodge suffered some damage. but
Gordon's Chevy sl1d across the track
and also crunched agamst Kurt
Busch's Ford . "Good day. bad day.
good day. bad day. good day.' sa id
Gaughan. 'Rac ing is an up-and-down
deal. We were pretty darn good. and
something happened one lap and
shot me up the racetrack. I still don't
know what happened. It hurt our day a
little bit, but the team battled back."
NASCAR This Week's Monte Dutton gives his view : "Robby Gordon
has to be looking forward to Sonoma .
an·d one of the circuit's two road
races. He won both last year. but this
year has been one crisis after anoth·
er. In fact. the entire Richard Childress Racing team -Gordon. Kev1n
Harvick and now Dave Blaney - has
had trouble getting it together.'

McMurray has the ·
kind of personality
sponsors dream of

Sometimes a young driver can find
success too soon. It's a good problem
to have, though.
Jamie McMurray, who turned 28 on
June 3, recorded his first Cup victory
in his, second career race at Lowe's
Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C., on
Oct. 13, 2002. He hasn't won since, but
McMurray, who is fr.om Joplin, Mo.,
has finished in the top five nine times
· and posted 23 top-10 finishes.
Still, that second victory has been
elusive forthe driver
of
the
No.
42
Texaco/Havoline ·Dodge
owned.by Chip Ganassi
and Felix Sabates.
"I feel like we've had
a top-10 car every single week," said McMurray. "We had some trouble in a few races earlier . in the year, but
we've just got to keep · doing what
·
we're doing."
McMurray is one of many you ng
drivers who have made their mark,
taking advantage of unprecedented
opportunities spurred by successful
showings by Jimmie Johnson, Ryan
Newmqn, Kasey Kahne and many others.
"It seems like team owners &gt;are
more open now," said McMurray. "You
don't have to be from a NASCAR family. I think most teams have scouts that
search around and find good, young
talent. It seenis like, right now, if
you're falented and young and have
got the skills and you can showcase
that, they'll give you a chance. We see
a lot of young !~lent right now coming
along in good equipment, so I think it's
easier to get in now than it was 10

BY BRIAN

R

u

LEPC

l han~ ,

Middleport singer
wins 'Idol' contest

· · FEUD OF 'HiE"WEEK ·

·

NEXTEL CuP SERIES, No. 42 TEXAco/HAVOLINE DoDGE

JAMIE McMuRRAY

•
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

· CIIAHSMAN IIWCI&lt;

IN THE SPOTLIGHT" · · ·

2004 Mazda6, D1

252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH
'-

a friend and Beckie)

nati,·e "ho encouraged English
to compete on the contest stage.
Angela ~1Nrippolito of the
\1eigs Couill\' Deparlment of
Job and Famil) Sen ices
learned of the contest and
urged English to enter.
Before a crowd of 300.
Enuli'h sa ng .. ~i lli ne Me
Sottly." "I'll Always - Lol'e
You ... \1e and Bobbv
McGhee ... and "What's Love
Got to Do "ilh it." a challenging l ineup of soul

mu ~ic

for am amate ur musician .
Stephanie · English
ul
"She hi'l\u~ht down the
Middleport beat out 3'i other hou~e \\ ith her.._ amazim! voice.··
aspiring singers in the ··Beckley Ma,trippLIIito
sa id ~ Fi\'e
Idol" contest at Sllldiers Beckley r&lt;tdio 'tation judges
Memorial Tileater in Beckley. agreed. and &lt;twarded English
W.Va .. ~arlienhis m0nth. The the coni c&gt;~ s grand prize,.
conlc&gt;t was intended to &gt;howWhile English I,;" no serious
ca&lt;e some uf BeL·kle\ \ II nest design, un the blockbtrsler
musicians. but i! waS English relevision
talenl
show.
who 'tole the show with a .. American Idol:· ;he d(&gt;e&lt;
1
seleClion of sou lfu l pop song,,
take
full
ad'
antage
of
plan
·to
A singer with a po\verful
voice often compared by !he opponunities winning the
friend&gt; to !hat of Whitney contest presented. A telemarHouston , English 's musical tal- keter, English will dedicate
ent has been no secret to her weekends this summer to comfriends and neighbors in Meigs pleting her demo CD at Dream
County. She grew up singing in Mountain Studio. which will
her home church, Forest- Run be submitted to Razamataz
Baptist Church in Pomeroy. Records once it is compleled.

EMA: Planning key

to handling disaster
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAI L'fSEN Tl NEL.COM

POMEROY - Imagin e if
terrorist s hijacked a large
tan ker truck filled wilh a
1oxic material and had plan&gt;
·I O detonate the cargo in
\Vushin!!ton .

On their way to their dc&gt;ti ·
nation. a simple ~toptwcr in

Pomeroy calches the attention of loca l police. who
quickly converge on the
ve hicle.
.
Seeking to avo id caplurc.
the terrorists detonate the
tanker truck at the county
highway garag e.

GralL commander \If the
Gallia-\1eigs Post of the
State High\\ ay Patrol. Bycr
tliwussed !he importance nf
hein g organited · and pr~­

pared

.Bycr-

the e\·en.t nf an

111

e men.!Clll' \.

.

Slrcs,ed the key

ttl

(Jrgani7a ti&lt;Jn

maintainir1g

anJ C01l1111Unication. He
derailed 11te steps \'Oiuntcers
anJ em~rgency \\ orker ...
mu'l t01kc In kee p the situation under co'n trol.

In a si tuation :-.uch a' the
one mcmionc&lt;.l aboYe with
the wnkcr 1nu:L there will
Thi s '-'\'i..t!) the ~cenar in o n be causalities. chaos· and
paper presented ((1 law confusio11 if there is nol a
enforcement and vulunteers plan in place. Byer said.
al a weapons of mass
GralL \\·ho 11&lt;1' 21 yea rs uf
deslructiori exercise hv B1&gt;h sen ice "illt the patrol. said
Byer. director of ~1eig&gt; that C\ erybmly plays a niti Emergency
Management
(EMAl. Friday at the courl- cal rnk in disaster situmion:-. .
"You Gill get .things dune
house annex.
Flanked
.by
Lurie 1nmnrrnw if 'l 0U share idea~
Hauked ah l. field ·liaison for 1nday and come up wirh the
1he stat e EMA. and Ll. Dick right 'olutiono; ... he said.
1

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