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•

Thursday,

"Sale Start1

We will be CLOSED Sunday, July 4 for the Hol1aa111t

&amp; Ends

•

DO·IT
VOU"IIL' PLUMIINO

*

SCHEDULE 40 PVC
Wt hove ev!lfYihlng you need and
wt will shoW you how. All you
nHd 11 1 ~lhtbrulh and • uw and
you can "do-lt·yourself"l Be your
own plumber and save!

.. . . .

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•

4"x10' ... .'............ $12.99

:'Not res

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32" or 36"

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Gettysburg
s-x S"x 98"

Post

19104 .........

;$18.49

5Hx 5" Bt!vel Post (:ap 19107 .. S .1 .99

'
3Rail Vinyl Fence

·-

bracket~

-·

6' ·section 19058 ...................... S78.89
8' Section 1906o.:................. S110.99
10' Section 19062 ..•..... . ....... $152.99

$5269

2. 39
4"x100' Flexible. Solid, slotted or perforated. 20421. 20437. 20413 .....23·.99
20414 ..........

•"x250' Flexib!e.Sotid, slott~d or perforated.

20410 .... 57.9

20·120. 204JO.

,GARAGE ·
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24'x24' .Standard 2 Car Garage Package
16' O.C. wall studs. 24" O.C. engineered roof trusses. White vinyl siding.
16'x7' Ctopay garage door, prefinished White. 3'0" service door.
7/16"x4'x8' OSB roof shea1hing. GAF roof sh1ngles.
Architectural plans for easy .assembly. Cement &amp;
foundation extra. GK2424
26'x28' Premium 2 Car Garage Package
2~9x7' garage doorsf2·3'Q." windows. White vinyl siding &amp; soffit 16" O.C.
wall studs. 24" 0.0. engineered roof trusses. 3.0" service door.
7/16"x4'x8' OSB roof sheathing. GAF roof shingles.
Archiiectural plans for easy assembly. Cement &amp;
foundation extra. Includes gutter. GK2628
· M for illuslrative purposes only. Nol exactly as shown.

~

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r--=-=---=--r------=--=-...::.==-=------;

per-·

DICK PACKAQIB

plans and expert advice. Anyone With just
a few simple tools can create a dock that
will be the envy ol y-our neighborhood. If
you've developed ~our own plans. bring
them along ... wa"l be glad to quote you a

with

110

I

See our store

tor your

·~

I

easier than you think with our free deck

you assure

Page AS
• Anna Biland
• Mary Lewis Franks
" • Wendell Lee Rossiter
• Juanita Sears
• Danny Shain

water heaters
and
replacement
parts.
ELECTRIC

Build a patio deck this weekend. trs

price. By using

OBITUARIES

70189

·(

pr~ su re- treated

lumber,
of decades of use
maintenance Never need
yourse~

WEATHER

These deck paCkage prices are tor the
sake or companson . We can help rou
with your deck project from stan to finish .

, ,_

'

'

J.

REED

Services and commi SS ioners for in 1he same amount as lasl year"s. but
• $."1 .0()() for. pare lllinl! edunrtion
workforce econom ic deve lopment TANF fund s are heing cut m ·erall.
services lh roug h Meigs County
services will fum] lhc wunty 's ceo~
""Each yea r. we see a cut in 1he Common Pleas Courl.
nomic development office and lhe TANF fund s ava ilable. but i1· has • • $376.000 to the Alhens/Meigs,
positions of Economic Development been u gooU thing. using the funUs Educational · Sen·ice Center for
Direc1or Perry Varnadoe. Touri"n for economic and work force dewl ~ ad mini slration of the "'Help Me
Director Billi Bentley and ot her opment.'" Thornton said .. "It has been Gruw··.child well ness program.
staff, and will make. workforce train ~ useful in job creation ."
• $ 100.000 in WIA fund s. for the
ing serv ices and other inccnlives . T,he county's econom ic developavailable to prospeclive employers. . ment prognni1 also receives 52 5.000 University of Rio Grande/Rio
Conimuitity
College
Meigs County was the firsl in_Ohio in fund s through the Comm unity Grande
10 use TANF fu nds for econom ic Improvement Corporalion\ general Crossroads Program. which offers
development efforts. when welfare operating funds, and $25.000 from job r~1d i n ess and training skills for
reform efforts changed the way pub ~ 1he CIC from rev,enue generated young adults 19-2 I.
• $ 100.000 in WIA funds. for the
lie assistance programs were funded fr om Americmt Electric- Power's
Athens/Meigs
ESC for administra~
and controlled.
lease of lhc former Ohio Department
According to Jeff Thornton. pre .&gt;i~ of Transportation garage on Ohio 7 tion of 1he l ong~ t e rm aliernative
school. which serves at ~ risk youth.
dent of the board uf comm issioners, near Che ster..
1he new contract. to run from
Other contracts approved yesler~ 1 4 ~ 18. who are experiencing prob~
Thursday lhrou gh June 30, 2005, is day indude:
lems in the public sc hoo l system.

POMEROY - A child enrichment center lo serve three
and four year olds will be opening this fall in .lhe new ·
Mulberry Community Center as a complement to the God's
N.E.T. progra m of the Meigs Cooperative Parish.
Called New Horizon, trustees for the non-profit organi~
zation dedicaled to enriching the lives of children, are
' Jennifer and Michael Bartrum. Greg and Putty Taylor, and
Huey and Susan Eason.
h will be operated in two rooms of the Community
Center located in the former Pomeroy Elementary School
with a private entrance from the sidewalk at the rear of the
building.
The cel11er will occupy the former kindergarten and first
grade classrooms on the right end of the building . The
space is currently under renovation. Ip addilion 10 two
·classrooms. one for the three year ·olds, and another tor the
four year olds, there wi II be restrooms and office space.
Each room will be 22x35 feet and will accomodate 22 stu~
den ts.
Teachers and co~administrators for ·rhe pre ~sc hool pro~
gra m will be Patly Taylor, a teacher for lhe past 13 years;
and Susan Elason, a speech pathologist for the past five
years. Each teacher will have an aide.
"What we will be operating here is a faith~based non ~
denominational licensed facility," said Taylor, "w ith the
program to include Bible stories and snacks."'
"Classes will be 2 1/2 hours a day, 9 a.m to II :30,
Monday through Thursday. Then as enrollment increases,
an afternoon session will be added," she said. "We're hop·
·
ing to be ready to open in September."
Bartrum, a tight end an11 long · snapper for the
Philadelphia Eagles, commented that he "won'l always be
playing football ," and his plan is to "come back when I'm A fa ith-based child enrichment center will open th is fall in•two classrooms in the new Mulberry
done playing and participate in the program here at God's Community Center in Pomeroy. Here Greg Taylor, front, and Mike Bartrum do some pre,liminary
work on the walls before the contractors move in to begin extensive renovation. (Charlene Hoeflich)
N.E. T." .
.
.

Hillside attempts to score
ESC may seek
touchdown on Meigs football field single Meigs office

40 gal. 404&amp;96 ...... 187 .00
· 50 gal. 405564 ...... 189.00

painting or staining , unless you want to.

'

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

$3.99
(

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HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

d Lattice
Panels

Storage Building Kits .

:* fJIJ{

Child enrichment ceryter to open this fall

2·'x8'

Not •xactly aa shown.

'_!

.

70186
will enhanc e yOur bacl&lt;. yard
wl1ile p1oviding year a round protection lor storing
pai•O ~um•ture , toots , recreational 11el1icle s.

,, J )-

99

or p, c om

Wooden S timt-'tt

11 ' 11.1 \\

J

· P,OMEROY - · Meigs Cmmty
Commissioners approved a $170,000
conlract for economic development
servkes ,
using
Temporary
Assistance to Needy FamHies fund s,
during Thursday's regular meeting:
The contraot for services through
lhe . Meigs County Economi c
Development Office was one of over
$700,000 in contracts commi~siconers
approved yesterday for workforce
and economic development servires.
The contracts will be funded through
TANF and Workforce Investment
Act funds .
The contracl
between the
Departmenl o f Job &lt;ind Family

10%

c::==~~~~=~

32'x48' Pole Barn Kit

•

BY BRIAN

~

99 . · $

24' X 32'
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FREE easy-to-follow plans with
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Round Aluminum Columns 95323
·Add beauty &amp; safety to your home
Round, White Aluminum columns
8"x8" 169919
6"x8" 169900

·$

.' 1

'

Commissioners approve $700K· in TANF, WIA ,contracts

SPORTS

Cr•ft

Light
Tfor side
walls over sheathing, u·nder

~

. Heavy asphalt base
coated with mineral
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6' Section 19050 .. ....:............... S64 .. 59

·-

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Does nol include posts.

8' Section 19052,, ... ........ ..... .... $88.49
10' Section 19054~., .............. S 136.8~

~Rail End Post 19 126 .... ......... $15.19

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VALUE·CORE'M

MAINTENANCE FREE VINYL FENCE
6'x 6' Fence PaneiJ 9 10o ..... ::S69.49
:5-'x 6' Gat~ 19102 ................... $5'9.89

show program still

'

OWOUT- SALE!

3: x10' ................... $8.69

· Meigs splits at
Athens' Classic, Bt

•

~

1-1/2"K10' ............. $4.59

.. Boyages tries to

let us d6sign , est1mate &amp; deliver your
deck today.

BY

J,

MILES lAYTON

Bv BRIAN J. REED

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.C&lt;;IM

oh Richland Avenue in
Athens.
"Both facilitie s are wholly
POMEROY
- The inadequate for our needs,"
Athens/Meigs Educational Struble said . "Our staff has
Service Center will likely grown considerably, espeseek new headquarters ne\t cially since the ESC has
year. and may operale exciLI- taken on operating the Head
sively from Meigs County. if Slart programs in Meigs and
adequate space can be found Galli a counties."'
,
here..
"The board will have · to
Mike Slruble, one of 1hree make some rou~h decisions
Meigs County residents on' in January, and we' re now. in
lhe
two ~ counly
ESC the process of determining
Governing Board, met , with our need for space, ,and
.
. •
I
County whether
Meigs
1t s necessary or
Commissioners on Thursday advisable to operate offices
to discuss the board's need in both coumies ...
for more space, and to ask lhe.
According to Struble, find·
board tQ consider possible . ing suitable" space in Meigs
locations for an ESC office. Coumy may be easier and
The ESC now operates from more affordable than finding
two offices. one in tbe it in Athens County.
Pomeroy
Municipal
"We "re not funded to own
Building. ·and another in the
Please see ECS, AS
old Morrison School bu.ilding
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16'X7' Steel Woodgralntd Garage Door.lnaulattd. 12422 ........................... ~....·$469

Treated
Land•cape

INDEX

Tlinbere

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith• Values
Movies
O
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

3"x5"x8'

2 SE010NS- t6 'PAGES

·

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740-446-2002
Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday ll-5

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B7

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B3

As
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. A8

"
©,2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co. .

'

Thomas

Rt. 2 By Pass Point Pleasant, WV

304-675-5200
Mon.-Sat. 8-7 •
.

ll-5

- - ·- - -

This cabin , owned by David Lewis , sits precari·
ously on top of a h111 behind the Bcib Roberts
fdotball field in Pomeroy. Th"e Ohio Department
of Natural Resources is spending about
$200,'000 to stabilize the hill. (J Miles Layton) ·

...·

River Recreation· Festival
'

:loitcenter

- - - -·- - - - - ' - - - - -·

A6
B4-6

POMEROY - Without the support of
a retaining wall constructed over the past
several weeks. the hillside behind the
Bob Roberts foptball field in . Pomeroy
could by now be part of the end zone .
The hillside just off Spring Street is
one of many areas in Pomeroy where
abandoned mines ha've left the nills han~ .
eycombed and subject to slips.
Jeff Casto, an inspector with E. L
Robinson Engineering, said there is an
abandoned mine shaft about two-thirds
of the way up the ltillt~al has been filling
up with water for decades. Since the
water has no place to go, it eventually
saturates the top soi l above causing slippage (lnd erosion, he explained. "Once
· the soil gets saturated, it comes down.
This is a common problem in this area."
Robin son 's company built an 84 foot
long, 14 foot high retaining wall at the
base of the hilL He said the wall , which
Please see Field, AS

· The 39th Annual River Recreation Festival
will be ·held in the Gallipolis CJty Park July 2-4.
Free ~creenings and health information will
Center
.be available at the Holzer Medical
.
Wellness Wagon. Schedules posted daily.

MEDICAL ' CENTER

Discover the Holze1~ Difference ,

.

www,holzer.org

We'll be looking for yo.u!
·•

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PageA2

·FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, july 2,

mean,.. to he American Yet l
believe it is clear that the
cnmmon thread that binds all
Ameri,·ans everywhere is the
liberty wc ·&lt;.: efebrate. Wh1le
we struggle at ttmes to
de lme even what it me;tns to
be free: let us each concur
that he who does not kn ow
how to 'pe nd his freedom
nobly " not tru ly free at all.
"What sort of persons ought
we to be in leading hves of
holines' and godhnes.'?"
(I ro m 2 Peter 3: II)
In 'like manner, !et u ~ who
call upon the name of Jesus
and consider ourselves to be
free. follmv in every way the
lea&lt;.l ing of the Savior. Jesus
sa1d. "If yo u hoh,l to My
te,tch i ng. yo u are really My
dtsc i p ies Then you will
kn ow the truth. and the truth
will se t you free .. I tell you
the t ru th. everyone who sin s
is a s lave to sin Now a slave
h.ts n o permanent place 111
the fa mily. but a son belongs
to it forever. So if the Son
sets you free, yo u will be
free indeed" (John 8:3 1-32,

BY PASTOR RON BRANCH

Nehemiah M: I 0 states,
"The joy of the Lord is your
strength ...
Although ·the Bible o ft~ n
makes reference to "joy." it
is nonethele ss a spiritual
quality misundeFstood, especially when equated with
happiness
On the one hand, expenencing happm es~ is totall y
· conditioned bv external circumstances. · Fu rthermore,
happiness 1s the antithe sis of
sadness. Happiness and sadness do not mix.
However. one c.m experi ence the spi ri wal quality of
joy regardless ot ctrcumstances . For example , there
is sometimes joy despite the
presem:e of sorrow. There is
sometimes joy de spite the
presence of grief. Je sus
Chnst, who is characterized
·as a man of joy but acquaint-'
ed with grief, exemplifies it
best.
As a matter of. fa ct.
Hebrews 12:2 says this abott~
the Lord, "For the joy that
was set before Him endured
the Cross, despi sing the
shame."
Think about that for a
moment. Our Savior was
often opposed. He was radically ridiculed. His life was
constantly oil the line. Yet ,
He possessed such a spiritual
quality of joy that He was
prompted and propelled by ii
to do what "'as necessary to
bring salvation . The joy set
before Him . under- girded

34-36)

Pe rhaps yo u have spent the
two years following 9- 11
rellc c tmg , deeply on your
tdcntity us an American and
the e nlltlei'nent of fellow
hum a n bein gs acr6ss the
globe to freedom. May you
also not neg lect the need to
cons ider whether you are
still in bondage to sin and
death . May you truly be set
tree . into God 's life and
peace and become the new
.creati on. He has had in mind
all a lo ng.
"Therefore. if anyone JS 111
Chri s t, he is a new creation;
the o ld has gone, the new
has c ome!" (J. Corinthian s
5•17 ).
(Th om Mollolw11 lim ministere d 111 soathem Ohio the
past nine years and IS cur'
rentfy rhe pastor I!{ Parhwqy
Commuwrr Church. He and
his w ife cu·e 'Th e pamlfl' of'
Three c/11/dren. He mav he
reached by e11wil ar ·p&lt;lslorl h o m@paTh waygalflpoll§- c

endurance despite dire disappOi ntments..
.
So, what is thl") joy of the
Lord? Wh y ts tt un portant to
be filled with it'! What dif·
ference docs it make for the
saint''
I looked for a definiti on
that would qualify the joy of
the Lord. but found nothi)lg
to adequately fill the bill for
me. Thus, I looked to my
own expenence concernin g
it, and captured the essence
uf it for myse lf in the foll oy,ing tet•ms.
The joy of the Lord is that
experi ence of the heart ,
mind, and sot! I mini stered to
by the inspiratio n, reward,
and contl dence of God.
In other words, God mmisters joy to us \vith such· in spiration · so as to inllate QJJr
sense of well being come
.hell-or-high water. God ministers joy to us with such
reward that our li ves feel no
lack of a n y~hin g needful.
God ministers joy to us with
such confidence that nothing
can sap our courage to face
victoriously wha'tever confronts us. The joy of the
Lord is a di stinct Christian
quality that makes a detlned
difference.
Constder, for example. an
ordinary balloon that is filled
on the ins ide to capacity with
air and tied off. The balloon
is not deflated although
someone severely criticizes
its color, because its filling is
not affected by outward circumstances. The same is true
if someone uses a fi st to bop

Visituso

MLller, Sunday Se houl -. 10 30 a m.
E~enln g -7.3()p.m

River V•lley
ApostoltG Wor11h1p Ce nter:
S. 3rd
A~c , Mtdd lepun , Ke\\n Konkle, Pastor.
Sunday. 10:30 a .m
Wednesday, oHIO
p m ;YnutlrFri 730pm

Hn

Emmanuel Apostoli c Tabernacle lm:.
LOOp Rd off New Li ma Rd. Rutla nd.
Servtces Sun 10·00 a m &amp; 7·'0 p m ,
ljlurs H)() ('I m , Pastor Marty R Hulton

Assembly of God
Lib\!rty 1\ssembl~ of God
P.O Box 467 Oudd1ng Lane. Mason.
W Va. Pas10r No:=tl l ennan t, Sund;ty
• Servtces-l OOO II:m a00 7 p m •

Baptist
Cheshire Baptist Church
Pastor. Steve ltttle, S unday Sdwo l 9 10
urn, Mornmg Worship 10.30 urn. Sunday
evening 6·30 pm Wednesdoy 6 ·iOp1~

570 Grunt St , M1ddh: pon. Sunday schoo l
- 930am .. Worshtp - ll a m nml ft pm .
Wednesday 5C1"111CC- 7 p m
Rutl and First Baptis t Church
Sunrlay Sc hool - 9 .~0 am. Worshi P.
10 45 am.
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pas tor Jon B ro ~.: t. e n . Ea~ t Ma m St:.
Sunday Sc hool - 9 30 am. Wors h1 p
10:::\0n m
First Southern Uapti~t
41872 Pomeroy Pike . Pas tor E La mar
O'Bryant . Sunday Schoo l - 11-:\0 am .
Worsh1p - 8 15 am. 9·45 am&amp; 7 00 p m ,
Wednesday Ser\ tces- 7 00 p 111
Fll"!lt Baptist Chun-h
Pa~tor Mil rk Morrow, 6th and Palm er St ,
Mtddkport. Sunday S"hool.- 9 15 am ,
Wors htp - 10 L'i am. 7.00 p 111 .,
WedneOOay Ser.tcc - 7 00 p m

lbchw First Baptist
Pastor. R1ck Ru le, Sundn) Sc hool - 9 30
am , Wurs61p - 10.40 a m 7.00 p.m ..
Wednesda y Serv1 ce~- 7 (){l!] m

Silver Run Uaplis t
Pas to r. John Swanson. S u nd~y Sc hool !Oa.m , Worsh1p - · II am 7 00 p m
Wednesday Scr.•u.-cs- H )O p m

•

l~oud to be' apart ofyo~r life.

Pom e-roy Churth of C hri ~ l
212 W Ma1g Sl , Mlll lsh: r Anthl,.ln}

Moms
Sun da y Sclwo l
9 30 a m , Worshl p10 30 B 111 . n p m. Wcdn c'lday Ser\'ll'CS7pm
Pum ~:ru,.

Wesloilde Chul'\:h of Chri&lt;~ l
Home Rd . Sunday
S(hO~l l · l lam Worshtp -IOam 6pm,
Wcdnc~Jay Scrv tLCS - 7 p m
11221\

.Your online
source for news

Hillside Baptist Church
St Kt 143 .J Ust ol f Kt 7 Pastor R~v
Jam es R Acree S r . S und:~ y U1u 1Jcd
Serv1 ce, Wnr~htp - 10:30 u 111 6 p m ..
Wednesday Se rv1 cc~ -7 p m

Keno C hu rch of;Christ
Wm s htp • 9 30 11m, Su nd.l) S" h uu l -

10 ~0 11.111 , P11s10r JeiTrcy Walla(.:C, 1st and
3rd Sunday
Dearwallov. 1-Ud!i!CChurch of. C hrist
B ru~,;~: Tc1 ry Sund ay Slhool -9 .10

Pash1r
om

10·30 a m fl 30 p m.
Wednesday Scrvtccs - b 10 p m
Wnrs h1p

p m , Wednesday

rr

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rr

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rrr

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r

r

r

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Road. Middlcpnn. Sun day School

E

ach )ear these words multiply
in value in direct proportion to
the attempts of some to re1me
God from our public places...
beginning with school children, our
next generation of lawmakers. This is
most significant, [or without God in
the future; the God on whom our
country wasfounded, our children
and their children could live in chaos.
More than an~ time in history,
we must incorporate God into our
lives and the lives of our children llwe
"anttheir future to be bright. Begin
with we&lt;klyfamily wo,hip, and then
incorporate our Heavenly Father into
each day and each decision. Keep Kis
"ords in your heart, where they are
safe from hann. Unless we act no~ ,
the lives of our heroes that were 11111 in
the name of freedom, and the
suffering of those who ~ill live, will
have been in vain.
When you hear the churchbtlls
this week on God's !b) ... remembtr
thai theyare the belli of freedom.
Maythey fomerringin our ~reat
nation ... the United Sillies or America!
~

Freed Ring"
5UNOAY

MONilAY

211111001ty
1!1-tll

Copynghl2004 KetSler

W111~s

&lt;TUE5DAr

WEDNESDAY

THUI1SDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

2c.m.hlont

2Ccm1Uno
2:!1·17

1:1-11
Scnptur•s Selected by ThB AmetiCBn Bible Soaety
Newspaper Semces. P 0 801: 8005 Charlones't'llle, VA 22906

Young's Carpenter serulce
26 years In local business

Roofing &amp; Building Work
Pomeroy; OR

740-992-6215

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located Jess than 30 mmutes [rom
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
We offer physical, occupational ,
speech, an &amp; music therapies
740-667·3156

Wonlu p- 10 :1011 m

Rutland Chul'\:h of Christ
Sundll) School - 9 ill a 111 . Wllrshtp nnd
Cnmmumnn - 10 JO a m , B~)]l J Werry.
M 1n 1 ~ 1 er

Hkkor) H11l ~ 'C hlf:ll of ChriNt '
Evungclt st Mtkc Muurc, SunJay S~.: h oo l ·
9 a.m . Wo r ~ h1 p - 10 ,, rn . 0 ~U p m
Wetlnesduy Serv 1 ce~ - 7 p m
~

Reed1i\ lilt Church of C hri ~ t
Pa\'lor Philip Sturm . Sund,ty Sclwol l) .'0
um . Wmslup Scrv1cc· 1()'10 a 111 . B1t&gt;lc
Study, Wcdncs;Juy 6·10 r m
Dexter Chunh of Christ
Pastor Ball Eshelman. Sund.1y sehoul 9 10
11 111 , NornMn Wtl l. ~ up c rmt cnd..:: m
S und .t~ wor~h1p- Ill ~0 am

''N~st and Rest"

@

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

• Acts 24:16
uardratl, Fence &amp;

s1gn erection

(740) 9'j2-645 1
~

Fu

---~~

P.O. Bo&lt;663
Pomero Ohio 4576.9-0663

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
. t-800o451·9806

Blessed are ihe pure
in heart; for they
shall see Go4.
Matthew 5:8.

Wllri/J

209 Third
Racine, OH

740-949-221 0
':A Home Bank for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

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

If ye abide ill Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
'
ask what ye will, and
it shall
be done u111o you.
John 15:7

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulbern Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tol free 'l -877-583-2433

6 .1111 - ¥

Home Cooked Meals &amp; Da1ly SpeCials
Open 7 days a week ·

..

p.m.

Rutland C~urch or Goil
Ro n Hea th , Sund01)' Wors hip · 10
a.m , fl j} ll1 . Wt-dn csd&lt;Jy ScrV1Cl'~ - 7
p.m •

-\ pplc.: and Sc~.:on d S t ~ .• Pa~tor Rev Da~· td
Suml uy Sdmul and Wursh1 p- 10

Ru ~scll.

am
Evcmng Services- 6·)11 p 111 , WcdncWoy
StrV1!,;CS -

91's
Episcopal

Qli E \1uln St Pomemy. Sunda} So.:hnol
ond Hul} Eudmnsl II 00 am .

fhthHHtd ~

Holiness

Coolville, Ohio

www kwoows com

7

.

,

6.30 p m

1,1

10

l'e11 rl C hll llt•l

P Jstor Ro ul Hrn\\ &lt;'r

K m ~. ~ u n d ay ~c hnol-

-7 p.m.,
prayer mcctmg 7 p m
wur~lup

9 JO

d

Rud;

"
l'ine Gro\t B1ble Holincs.'i C hurch
II:! nule ~) tt Kt 125, Pa~tor. Rev. 0 IJd l
~ a n ley. Su ml:.~y S(,:hOtll · lJ 30 ,l m .
Worsh ip - 10·10 u m
7 30 p m ."
Wcdn~sd.t ) Ser\ tl'C - 7 1'10 p m

Run Hnllness Churdt
P,t,Wr RL'v Larry Lcmlt)" Sund.1y Sdl&lt;lnl
- Y 30 .tm . Wors.J-up . I() 4, J m. 7 p m
llnt rsd.ly Blhlc SiuJy .md Youth - 7 r \11

~ H y ~ell

Laurel C lif1' Fret• 1\lcthodlst Church
Pastor Gk nn Rowe, , Su nday S(h11o l I) \{) J m . Wor~ lup - l(J 11) .t m ,md {,
v m ,Wl·dnc ~day Scrv1cc - 7 '00 p m

Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran

II) .till

• lJ '(),1 m .

,\ m

s,,,:illi!S

P.tstnr K&lt;•tth R.id&lt;' l Sund.J) Sdmu l - 'J I~
,1m
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Youth
Fdl,•w•hLJl , Sund,L) - t. pIll

Rutlnnd
1-'~~lor lltl~ Rnurn, Sund.l} Schnul IJ 'Ill .1111 ""r'hlp - 10 \0 o~ m . l' hut'll ~\
Set\ll~•-7pm

Su lcm C'l' llh t'
P,l~tor Wtll1.un K M ,11'-h,dl &lt;iunJ,n
SL hl•vl • 10 15 am \\111 \hl]' - '} l:'i illil,
Uthk Study, ~ l und,!\ 7,(KJ pm
Smm villc

Hetha tH
P.l'hll ]oll\11 G1lmon.•, Sund.1y Sdu•ul' 10
,l Ill
w••• ,h lp t) .~ 11 \\ ~tlnc:, d,J}
Sl' I\ I'L' ~

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Unitt·d i\lrthudi~ t l'ut ish
1\ts tor f k kn Klute L11nl1dk Cln rr Lli
M,un &amp; l 1lilt S1 Su nd.l\ Sdtnill
10
till

Woor-.h!p - 'J . tm . lu,·,~ ld )

S&lt;rl l&lt;l', .

7r m

St. Puul Luthera n Chun:h
Sycam ore &amp; ~eco n ll St , Po m ~roy.
S und.ty St·honl - 9 ..\~ .t m , WLlr~ h• r - I I

Co m ~r

United Methodist

Mt. Olin Unitt-d l\lelhodist
0 11 I :!...\ llchii\J Wtllw•Hlk. Pdslor Kc~·
R alph Sptrch, Su mby Sc hon! - IJ ~0 u 111
Wor~ h t ll
Se rY1{'C~.

lh-lhel ( 'hurch
Town\h lp l ~d ..\flloif Sun d.t) Sdwu l &lt;)
,t m w,r,hlp - 10 ,, Lll
w,·J n,·-.l,L~
Sct&gt; TLC~- I0, 1 m

Grnham lJ niiL-d Methodist
Wor~ h1p - 9 10 am ( 1st &amp; 2nd Sun). ,
7 ..lU p m. nrLI &amp; ~ l h Sun),WcJ ncsJ,\)
Sc n•ke 7 lOp m

llnr kingpm·l Chunh
Gr,md .Sir,,·t, Snnd.tl Slhnoll - '} 'lll. t IlL
\\ni'IHp - 10 JII.L rn . P,htnr I'IHII1r lk ll
l~m· h

Chu rd1

Co Rd f1\ Sun,l.tl '\L iwol - 1! :\0
\0~

\\'ol-..111]1 - 10

Iii ~0 ,u m, 7 p m Thursdu;
7 r 111

Meiw,: Cooperatu e l'a rish
Nnrt h cu~t Cluster. Al lred , Pa~tu 1 J.tw:
Aeulue Snntluy Sc hool · Y 30 a m
Worsh1 p - l lam 6·10p m

o~

111

m

I)

:-crv tLe 7 p 111

t·aith Full Go ~ pel Church
Long Bottom. Pa'itnr Steve RccU Sunday
Sdmol 9:3() a m. 'Vu rsh1p- 9 30 u m
o~ t HJ 7 p m , Wetlnc stluy - 7 p m . Fndn} -

Nazarene
i\1iddlt•porl C hurch of th e "l ulur ene
A l len ~ I JJ&lt;, t p . ::;unday Sl hnnl 9 ~()a!\\ , W!L r~ htp --10 lO.tm, f1 1flp Ill
P:~~tm

WcJ lli!S i..l ll~

St'T\Ile~

7

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P.l'•lll/

Hurri~tmvi.lle Community Chu~h
P .t~tul ,

Tho.:r&lt;HO Du rham. Suntl ny - 9 '0

.t 111 ,\IIJ 7 p rn , WcdnesJ .ty - 7 p m

1 0.~0

Middlepo rt Community Churd1
P ~.ul St Midd lcpnn
Pa~tor
.1111
Andcr,ntl. Sun tllt y Sc hnnl 10 11m .
h ~n tn g 7 111 r m . WcJncsJay ScrV1!,C7 lO p Ill

57,

Foith Vull{'y Tabernacle Church
1\mky R1111 Rn ad l'.tstor Rev Emmtll

Su nJ.t}

]{,tw ~ •~n.

1 ~11

-

Sunday Sd10ol - 9 lO ,, m
10.3 0am
W!lr ~ hip

- 1J ~0 a m . Sunday Schoo l ·
10 ."«1 am , Ftrst Sunday,,, MM ih .- 7 00

P11n1c t o~

Ca h an H1hlt l htird1
PtJ...c Cu Kd l'.i\1&lt;11 ,..1&lt;''\

B lac k~~o txlli

IillO

WcJnt",d,l\

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'i~lt"ol

LL&lt;' - '1

,t m

'! lJt

pm

1 ~11

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"I p Ill

S thtn\ llle Comm unit~· \Jmstuh{
f' hu rt•h
Pastor \\a~n~ R 1.·~~~11 Stmd II s~n li. C0
pIll rhur,&lt;J;n • (• {Ill p 1\\

ou

R eJnil'i n~
~~WJ

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l.i fr l'h url'h
\1!dd~cp..r1

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F~·r~mJ.n

W~d nL''id:t y

r,~,h,r

l::.nwntu~

P.1'1"r

.

111()(J J.ll t.

Scr\ ,,~., 7 p n1

ClifUm Talwrnach· l h urth
Ch iton. ,\\ \o.~ ..,und.L) ~ .. hu1•l }II .r Ill
Wur&gt;,lnp - 7 pm \\,·dn,,ddl o;;&lt;'l\t&lt;l 7

pm
:\e" Ltfc \· 1 ~tur~ ( ~nk t
Gcnrgc• CL&lt;'d, ~ n1d . C.i .tlhl"'l!~. Oli '
Pastor 8 111 St:!t\'11 Sund.r1 ..,lflt«'' ](),
Ill\ &amp; 7 rIll
\\ o•dnt•"t, i, · i Jllll c\:
Yo"u lh 7 p m
~77:1

G u ~pcl

Full

C hurd1

l. 11in~-:

ul' dtt•

Sa1ior
Rt ~~R

.l,ntHjlll l ~.

Sct\;tu•,

1'1,•t. •r

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S;~ l urJ, ,} 21~lptn

Sal em Co m mun it ~ ( hu n·h
Wc't Co lunt bt L \\ \,L •' Ill Ltl'\111~
RuaJ P,hl&lt; lr Ch&lt;Hk• ]{u ~ r·h 110-11 67'i::!2.RK SunJ.tl Sdl'"'l II •II Llll , SunJ,11
Cl~llll\g •cntl~ 711!\ )'Ill
Btl&gt;!~ S1ml1
Wed nc•d~~~ '-&lt;.'fill,,. 7 1111 pm
Bulk

1) !

Hobso n C hristia n
P.1 ~t0r

t r ll o l\ ~ hip

Ch ttr,·h

H ~r,Lhl!l \\ IIIIC, Sundll' '~IJ,,.,j
SllnJ.t~

(hur&lt; h .,c! 1 tl e - (l 111 p111

':] pm

Reiitur.thon l hn~ h H n Ft• ll on ~ h t l l
Hu11]11.' l \{11,1d r\lh~n' 1\L'l"l
L u mn ~ ( I&gt;;Jh, Sund,tl \\no•lup lll1ll) Mil.
w~·u ne,d,,~ 7 pm
L a n~e s 1

ill t• Chri stl ttl\ ( hurd•

Go,p\'1
P,l't~&lt;l " R,•l•&lt;tl
~tn,•l.'l
S un tio~:. SlhnniiJ \(1,111\
\\ &lt;•hlnp 10 ~(I
ulll 7 (ltl pm \\ L'c llll' •tl,il 'i1'll l&lt;' ~ 7 1lil

l ull

pm

Pentecostal
\~ ~ t· m h ll

l'enh.'l•m tul

Syracuse Mi ss ion
Bnrl )!l'1li.L1l Sl. Symu1se

llaz~l

SunJa~

wor .. lllp

Sund.Jy
6 pm

St Rl
Hnh,Kk

l~-1

R,t~t nc

Sund.ll

.Pa•h•l \\tllt .i ll t
Sd1nul · HI .L Ill

pm

Presbyterian

Communi I\ Chun·h

Otl Kt I ::!.t Pa~tl&gt;r Ed~cl H.trt Sun day
Sdwn l &lt;I 10 a m . ~n r~hrr- 10 \0 am

s .vrUl'USt' First lm tt'd
p,~, t nr

l' t l·~l)ll('rt :tll

RohL'l1 Cnm \\ o•l•lu p

II

,t

111

7 lll pm

l)}esvilll• C umnrumlr Church
SunJ,t} Sd1~wl - lJ 30 .1m. Wor'h111
lfl,fl n m ,7 pm
Morse. Chapel lhurch
Sund,ay ~c h on l - 10 u m.. Wmsh 1p .1

oil , Wcdne~day

Sen t l'~ -

Pn:~ I J\' t &lt;· t tlln
\~·~, t ,lttp

( 'hu nh
'! ,~

m

1\liddleport Pt l·,hl h·I WJ\
P u~ h lr 1\~•h&lt;.'rC'IO\\

\\'o rr, lll]'

1\l.ttl\

II

7pm

hith Gos pel Church
I ( 11\o! Bill lOili. Su ndHy Sd1ool - 9 ~0 J m ,
W11rs htp
1()4~ am. 7~0 p m .
W~ dnL s i..l ,ty

, llm·risul\\lll1·

Pa,tm Rt•t"lcn Crn\1

7 lf) p 11\

Sevent{l-Day Adventist
St· ~ cnth · Pa' \ d lt'llh 'l

Mul llc n } Hb Hd Pumao\ IJ,L, \I!t
La\.\t lls l y

Sutur d o~\

1\p~

~.ihh,nlr,

S1'llt&lt;&lt;'•

Slht11•l · ::' p m \\"r'l11p \ p m

Mt. Olh c Communily t:hurch
Bus h. Sund.t ) SdH111I ·
9 •o a m. Eve nm g - fl '0 p m Wcdned,ty
P. t ~wr L a~~or~ m.:c

Full Gospt'l Li~hlhu\l!HI .
\ \04~ Htl anJ Rnud. Pomem) P,1swr Roy

IIU11 lcr Sun d tY Sdtn1o l - 10 am E\'e ning
7 10 r 111 Tuc~d,t y &amp; 1 h ur ~ d &lt;~) · 7 J O
pm

United Brethren
MI . Hl'r~onl ' nitr rl Bn·th rt' n
m Chrh t Church .
Tcxa .. Cummuntl\ l{l.l l l \\td,h;~m ~ d
PJ ~I!ll P&lt;'l&lt;'l \ l,ulnH.l,tk Sund.' ..,dl11&lt;1l
9 ~n .tm \\nr,tHr
10 •o 1
7 II!J
pm Wl'd !IC"d ll Scni,L'\ - i ll\1 rm
Youlh J! ll'UP mc~t ll h! ~nd ,\:_ -lth \nnd.L\'
7 pIll

•·t-

Eden l lnitt'd HrN hrl'll in {_ h ri ~l
1.::* h: t"&lt;d•l tlk

..,imJ&lt;L\

Sdtotll • I l .1 nf Suml Ll \\o1•llljl • I ll rMt
am h&amp; 7 t'Ml p m. \\ c&lt;ln,·&lt;,J,~, s, n Wl,
7 on r m \\&gt; t" Jn ll~Ja~ 'tnu1h Sa' I&lt; •'
7U0pm

Wc dnc,l l.t~· ~e n t&lt; o.:~ -

Reedsville

7 1!11 pIll

pm

St&lt;~le l(.,ui L'

Srrae usc ('hurt·h or lht• ~U l iU't' n e
l'a~tur 1\lt kl· Adl!lh. s'und fL\ So.:hulll LJ ' ~tl
11 Ill , \\'1•nhtp • Ill It) ,1 11\
f1 p 111

Wr1n ht p -

Hn,w \l,11

\\ pr-htp 7 00

Fnti d~ 7

Evc nmg 7 r m

South 8eth cl Communi!) Chun;h

~0

Long Bottom

.1111

pIll Wt'dn,· ,tln&gt; Athl, "'llhll

7 p Ll1

Th u r~J a )

a 111

I. p,,h•r

t} ~I )

9J05

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am'
Sundity Sdux1!-

Sl'IH•1,l

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a Ill

P.lj&gt; lur Boh Randnlph . Wnrshtp - '!

Sundu~

W ed nc ~d a ~

..

c\llcn MtJ .. ,L p
Chl'Stcr
Pa ~tor J.mc.. 1-\C.llt! C, wnr~h t p
Sunday Schoo l
10 ;1 111
Scrvt ~.:c s · 7 p m

\\oc du ~sd11y

10

pm
Our ~a vtour Lutheran Churrh
W.tl mtt ,uul Henry St~ .. R. t vc n ~wn ull.
W V&lt;~ !'astor Da' 1d Russe ll Sundd]
Sch(l( &gt;l · ll) tW.Jum , Wor~htp - 11 (\ 11\

Abundanl G race R.F. I.
IJ2J S Tinrd St , MtUJie purt. Pa~ l\lr Tcre~a
Dalt s. Sund.l} sen ace. 10 am

i

Wl.'d lh!sd,t' 7

I I Hlll

\\\ 'a Rr

Luwten ~"' f-~,rem.IJ\ \\ ~H•htr

Clws ter Sc huol. Pastor Rob Burbl.'r.
A ~s 1 sta m Pustor: Karen Da\'I S. Sunday
Wn rsh1p 10 .am E\enmg Worship 6 pm
You th group 6 pm Wednesday Power m
Pr,ty('t , and Btlllc StuJ&gt; - 7 pm
i\ sh Street Churrh
A~h St . M t t ld l&lt;.'port - Pa~tnr · Greg Scar~
Sund,t y St h•1ol - \l '9 a 111 Morn mg
Vinr~lup 10 ~0 11.m &amp; 7 pm, Wednc~Ja y
Sci VIU - 7 ()() p 111 , Yo uth Sc rvt(,:e- 7 00
pm
..\ga p(' Ufr Center
" F,u ll Go~pcl Chul'l;h , Pas tors John &amp;
Patty WnJc, 60~ S~.:'l.: ond A\e. Mw.ou, 77~­
)017. ~o.: r me umc· Sunday lO·JO am .
Wl.'d n ~stl.t } i pm

Sdwnl - 10 .1m. E\Cillllg
\\ocllnc,J.ty Sav1~.:e- p rn.

R:1dm•
Sh1tlkr Sundd\ SLimnl

fa l nh"~ ~~ibk (' hun h
U:t&lt;~n.

Mtke

! htu stlay S&lt;Jl i' I~C

- Y .t m \hdn, ,.l,n - 7 p Ill

St. John Lulhenm Chunh
Pmc Gtl \\c, Wnr ~h r p - Y 00 a rH ., Sund.ty
Sclwo l • 1[l ()[) .t 111 P.tsto l J.uues P
Brmh:

\
Community or Christ
Portl,md -R,ICIIIC Rd , Pastor Jnn Prol fitt.
Sunda\ SchLJol - \f..IO a m , Worshtp
f[) JO am. Wednesday Servt~e s - 7.00

kl!owslnp Sf1 \' ILl' 7 p tn

PH • \Lll

I he l'hurdt of J esus
Christ of Luner- lluy Saint'i
St Rt l AO -1461'l247 nr -146 74l-!fl
SunJ;:~v Sl h,,ol 10 ~U · II .1 111 . lk lt ct
Snl i C i y1P n c~1 h n1 l J
lt O:'i- I ~U0 1 Hll&lt;ll,
S:tlram c nt Scn t'l \) I () I ~ ,1 111
Honu•m.tl: utg tllL'CI 111g. lsi Th ul'\ 7 p m

\~, ,r,hlp

~~

SunJa\ SL hnnl - 10

Ill :

-lfl-15 pm. Sunday be 700 p m .
Wcdno.=~day Sen tlC- 7 ~f) p m

.

JIOllll' rO,\

Wcd n e~J .rf

Wesleyan B1ble Hnhlll'S.'i Chun:h
75 Pearl S1 Midi..l lcport Pu~t or Rtlk
Bourne, Su nd,ty School - I {)~ 111 Wnr,hlp

('hns Stev.an I 0 00 am Sunda}
Other me~tmg l&gt; m home!;-

Brthel Worship Center

Rnse nr Sharon Hnlines.~ Church
LcnJing Creek Rd . Ruthmd P.tstnr R o.:~
Su!tU:Jy

O a~ i s Chrislian Fellowship
tNt m Jt·numtnutlllnal fellu~~oshtpl
~kc1111g mt hd'llld Amencan Lcgton Hall
South Fou nh A~enuc. M1dd lepo n.

pm

a m . \Vor,htp 11 00 .t m

Sundu) Sl hl"'l - ll ,t m , \l,o111~h 1 p

7pm

Pnm t rn~ f' hur1•h nl the ~a J.are n e
Pa,tor J,m Lt~&lt;.:: nd&lt; r Sund,l} S d\1)0 1 Y "\\)a HI. \\\ •1~htp - lfl JO ,I m .md IJ
[Jill. \\oe thle\t\,1 ~ 'S.;IIIU'' / ]1.1\l

ROCKSPRINGS
R~HABILITTION CENTER

212 E. Main Street

Tire care you desen •e, clm-t to"Jwme

Pomeroy

36759 Rockspr•ngs Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

992-3785

ANnERSON
f ' UNERAL HOME

174 Laynt Stml• PO Box 270
Nt w Haven. WV 25265

James H. Andtr5on, Llctnstd Fu nt'l'lilll Dirrctor
Udell

10
•

..

llt•alh t,\ hdd lcport l
P,blof Rod Blllll&lt;'l , Sund,t~ S.. hDol

Worshtp - II ,, m 7 Otf p m Wedne,J,Jy
ScrvtlC . 7 ()() r,m

• Dcwe}

Oth'er Churches

lO

Calvar} Pil11rim Chapel
HarmmlVlllc Road. Pa~tur. Chu rl ~:"
\tl d &lt;enlle, SunLiuy School LJ :10 '\ m ,

K&amp; C JEWELERS

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street

.

Forest Run
P,t\Hlr Hoh RtlhHN•n. Sund.ty Sch!llli
.1111 W1•r'ihtp - IJ .1 111

Worsh tp - 10 'tJ JILL \\dnc,J,L) S&lt;nr,c
- 7" pIll

FMith Fe ll o"~h 1 p l ru~adr fo r l ltn!&lt;tl
Pa•tlll R~·\ ~·rJnl..lm l)a,~o.:n•. Scr\ 11.1'

fl:~ ~tor

llan\illf' Holiness ChuN·h
) 1057 Stut.: Route ;ns. L&lt;lngs~ll~ PJ~tor
VKlur Ruu~h . Sunday slh011l - 9 10 am,
Sunday wor~h •p 1010 ~ m &amp; 7 p m .
WedncsJll) pra~cr'~crvtce- 7 p m

Devls-Qulcleel Agency Inc. ij ye abide i11 Me, and My Brogan•Warner
INSURANCE
Full line of words abide in you, ·ye shall
INSURANCE
·
Ins urance
SERVICES
'-.Products + ask what ye will, a11d it shall
Financial
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
ENCIES Inc. Sei'V Ices
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
'
Bill Quickel
992·&amp;&amp;n

" Do not steal. Do not lie.
Do · no t de c eive one
another."
Leviticus 19; II

Pn&gt;lllr K ~1th R,tJcr Sun&lt; l ll~ Sl'll&lt;Wll - 10
am Wo1•lup - l l 1m

Community Cho!'l'h
Pastor Stl'\l' Tomek. Mam Stt&lt;.'l't.
Rutland Sunday \\orshtr- IU UO ,1m,
Sund01y Ser~lcc- 7 p m.

Rutland Chu rch of the NalAI'\!ne
Sunday School - 9.30 a m , Wor ~hap l 0 \0. a m ', 6 \0 p m , W~n e sduy
S,•ntc&lt;'S 7 pm

7 , 1()1)1\\

• Enler p rise
P.bti!T' o\tland Km g Su lld.tl Sdwul Ill '0 :1111 , Wor•htp - l) 'lfl am tl1 hle
Stud1 \\&lt;·ll •7 lO

G racr EpiSl.'opal Chun-h

740-992-6128

l.ccal source-for trophies,
olaaues !-shirts and more

V.'&lt;·Jnl.'&gt;&lt;l.t~ S~;!lllL'•

Jill

Chester Chun:h or tbe Nfzarene
P.mm Re\ Herbcn Grate, Sunday Schoo•l
- l) \0 'am . Worshtp - I I a m . 6- p m .
V.ednesday Ser~tces- 7 p m

· Sn&gt;t~~

10 l{) aw, E\·cnmg

Scr,n;c 6

rm
Fn-tdom Gospel Mis..o;mn
Pasi/Jf Ro.:v
R11get WJI IIorJ. Su nday School - 4 10 .t m
Wor~ lup- 7 p 111
H.tld Knoh , nn Cn Rd ~ I

Whh~'s

.

Chapel \\esle,.an

Church or God or Prophecy

"Let your light so shme belfon' l
men, that they may see
good •works and glorify
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:

Middleport, OH

l'entml Cluster
o\.\hUrv
~~~!J&lt;-U'~I
. P.t,tm Rnl\ l&lt; nbm,nn
.
.
Sund.L&gt; S&lt;h•"''' 'I -1:1 J m \\,•r•lur - ·1 1

l'rinil} Chul'l'h
S..::cond &amp; ' Lynn, Pnmeruy, Pthlnr Rev
Jonathan . N~,nle Worshtp 10 2~ am.
Sunday Sl hool
am

SyracU!it Flnt Church of God

Catholic

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Congregational

Pa~tor

Second Baptist Chun:h
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday Sch01JI I 0 am, Mommg worshap II m Evcmng - 7 pm.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

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

Second St.

Mt. Moriah Church or God

Mal e H i ll Rd . Rucinc, P a~tor James
Satt cr l1cld. SunJ. ty Sdw~11 - 9 45 am
E\emng- f) p m , \\oc dnesday Services - 7,

Rutland 'Free Will Blptlsl
Salem St . Pastor. Jam1e Fo nn er. Sunday
Sc hool - 10 a m . E\·emng - 7 p m,
Wednesday Scrv1ccs - 7 p m

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

190 N

Church of God

pm

fJJi[fie's 2?,_estaurant
7 40-992-7713

Hurtford Chun·h or Christ in
, Christian Union
Harl rord ~~V.t, Ptt•tnr D a~ ad Greer
Sunday St hoo l - 9 .~ 0 a m , Wor~htp •
10 30 a.m . 7 00 pIll, Wcdn c.:~ J .I )
Serv1ces - 7 00 ~ m

Antiquity' Baptist
Sund ay School - !'.30 am ., Worsh1p 10 45 am, Sunday Evemng - 6·00. p m.
Pastor· Mark McCom as

~ H o u rs

Fn endl\·

A rmo\f1ll l'rt'

Christian Union

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fo urth &amp; Ma tn St , Muldl epon, Pastor
Rev Gtlbert C ra1g, J r, Sunday S~.: h oo l 9 30 am ., Worsh ip- 1045 am

...

.

pm

a rn Pdstur -tames P Br,11ly

Chun:h of Christ
lntcr~c ctl on 7 and 124 W, F v un gclt~ l
De nn1 ~ S ar~c nt , Sunda) Btllk Study 9.JO ulll . Wol~ htp . 10 ~0 a m anJ (, 10,
p.m.. Wednesday B•hlc Stu d) - 7 p 111

m,

l'upJM.'rs l' l m n ~ S,t. P11 ul
Pa~111r Jan&lt;' B ,·,t llu~. Sunda~ Sl'h&gt;~nl - lJ
a·m \\ nrohtj1 - HI'~ Ill ru ..·.....t.L~ Sen 1~&lt;'\
. 7 I() p m

9 ,{1 ,\ Ill

Rrud£ord Church of Christ
Corna.of St Rt ~~~ &amp; Bradbury Rd
M1ntste1. Uoug Shamb ltn , YDuth Mtnt~tcr
B1ll Ambc r~cr. Sumlay Sclu~ol - 9 ~0 u 111 ,
Wnr~ l11 p . i'l 00 a (ll . I 0 10 .1 .111
i .00
p m ,Wednesday Sl' rvkcs - 7 00 p m

Forrst Run Baptl ~t
Pastor . An w~ Hurt, Sunday S~hool- 10
11 m.. Wllrshtp - 11 a. m.

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
OVerbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
•A Celebration of Life"
333 Page S1reet
(740) 992·6472
Middleport OH Fax (740) 992-7406

9 ~0

nm

Faith Baptist Church
Rmlmad St , Ma son, Sunday Schoo l - 10
a rn , Worsh ip - .11 a,m , 6 p m,
Wednesday Se1vices- 7 p.m

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

7 p rn

Hradbury Church of Christ
M1111stcr Tum Runyon. ~9558 Bradbury

Wedne sday Servtces • 7 p m

r

Se r vice~-

Tuppers Plain Churt'h of Christ
In stru mental. Wms ha p Servtcc - 9 a m .
Cumrnum on - 10 ll m , Sunday Sd10ol 10 IS a.m . Youth 5 JO pm Sunday. Bthlc
Stud } W~ dnesd a y 7 pm

N. 2nd St M1ddlepon. Pa~wr · Jame!:i

E Keesee, Worshtp - lOam , 7 p

0 J Whtte Rd off St Rt IW. Past0r P J
Chupmnn, Sunday Sd1111&lt;l • 1U am,
\Vo111h1p · I I u 111 .. WcUm:~da~ St·r\ ke' 7

-

Zion Chun:h of Chrbt
PnmcrO}'. Harn son vtll e Rd . tR I I·Bl.
P a~ t or Rllger Wa tson Su nday Sc h ~," l 930 am, Wor~htp - 1030 a m , 700

Victory Baptist Independent
52 ~

C htlclren'~

Middleport C hun::h or Chril&gt;1
5th and M:un. Pa~ t nr;, &lt;\ I Hargon. Youth
Mtn1 stcr Josh Ulm. Sunqny Sc hool - 9 ~0
am, Worsh tp- 8 15, 10 ~0 am, 7 ll m,

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 S t Rt 7, M tdd leport. Sund,ty
School - 10 am, bc nmg - 7 00 p.m .
Thumla y St.!rvt~es- 7.00

0111 ) .

Subscribe today • 992-2155

Hemi()('k Gro\ e Christian Chureh
MtniSicr· Larry Rmwn \\&gt;n r~h 1 p - IJ · '0
om
Sunday S~hool - llPO a.m , B1 bk SIUdy 7 pm

Bethlehem Baptist Chun:h
G reat Bend. Rout e 124 R acm~. O H
Pasto r Dame! Mcccu. Sunday School Y. JO a.m , Sund 11.y "Worshtp - IO.m am,
Wednesday B1hlc Study- 6 Of) p m

www~mydallysentlnel.com
.
.

}

Church of Christ

- MI. Unlun Baptist
Pastor · Davtd Wiseman. Sunday School
9 4~ am. F.\·~ n.n g - 6 )0 r m .
Wednesday Sel'\'ltcs- 6 lOp m

.

.

Sacrt"d Heart Catholic Church
ltd Mul~ rr)' Ave, Pomcrny '-}(}2-5891'1.
P u~t or . Rc\ . Wuher E Hemz. Sat. Con
-1 45 5: 15p.m . Ma~s ;: ~.30 p m . Sun
Cnn -8 4~-9 15 Am .. Sun Ma~s- 9·10
am. Dlltly Mass - t1 \Ou m

Wednesday Scmr:es · 7 p 1u.

Hope Baptist Church !Southern)

eat

R&lt;MJ PJ•hlr Re\ Phrll tJ'
Rtdt'nour Sundd\ ..,dl&lt;"'' · ~.'HI .1 111

Coohtllc

C hu)'('h of J e5us Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd , Pastor J11mc:;;

"'

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

WO-RSHIP -GOD THIS WEEK
Ffllowshio
Apostolic-

the balloon. The mr serves as'
an mner brace to countermand l'orces intlicted to the
balloon. Such it is with the
JOY of the Lord in·our· lives.
FtJrthermore,
constder
what th e rntlation of air
enables a balloon to accomplish. A balloon never effec•
ti vely mspires unless it is
inllated.
Send a cluster of tlat, wrinkled balloons on a stick to a
sick child. and gauge how
much encou rage ment is
gained to get well soon . But,
deli ver to that same child a
bunch of gassed balloons,
and it immediately ministers
a positive response clearl y
VISible.
·Such it is for those whose
lives are tilled with the joy
of the. Lord. While outside
forces do not affect one's life
filled w1th joy. it is equally
true that one's life tilled with
joy impacts external circumstances. Is it not clear that
thi s world could use more
saints filled with the joy ot
the Lord ?
.
The question before us,
then, is how one gets joy.
Once agam. ir goes right
back to ·Jesus Christ. He
explained that practicing His
spiritual principles was key
that "my joy mtght remain in
you, and that your joy might
remain full. "
In the meantime, my bal-·
loon analogy needs fine tuned. I have not yet effectively factored a pm-prick.
Bac k to the mental drawing
board I go.

•

www.m)ldailysentlnel.com

..

2004

Are you filled with
the·joy of the Lord?

A Hunger For M9re

"My country, ' tis of thee.
Sweet land of liberty, Of
thee I sing: Land where my
I
fathers died. Land of the pilgnms' pride. From every
Pastor
mountainside Let free dom
Thorn
ting!" So penned Samuel F. ·
Mollohan
Smith in the 19th century as
he reflected upon the origms
of a nation still young aml
fresh and still near I ll !Is
roots in God's gracim1s providence.
"Declarat io n
of
Let freedom ring' May lndepe nde nn'" from . sin and
this anthem swell aga in in 'elf. scaled th ro ugh the sliedour hearts and be proclaimed ding of Hi s blood on the
upon qur lips until the "wet eroS&gt;. "Who will rescue me
refrain of liberty is ac hieved ·from thts body of death '?
fo r all me n and y,o men Thanks be to ,God
everywhere! Is this too much Through Jes us Chri st our
to ask for every American? I Lord!
think not. Is it too much to
"Therefore. there is now
ask for ,any man or woman no condemnation for those
anywhere in the wo rld' I who a1 e in Chri st Jesus.
truly hope that we Wl~ ttld becau se t hrt' u ~ h Chri st Jesus
never sell an y hunh!ll be ing the law of the Spiri t of tife
so short as to think he 01 she set me free fro m the law of
was not cntttled to freely be sin and death . For what the
all that God would make lum law was powerless to do in
or her, no matter how dttfer- that 11 was weakened by the
ent from us or fa r removed ' inful nature. God did by
from 11s he or she may live . . sending His Own Son in the
Just think' As surely as our likeness of sinful man to be
nation was once under the a s in offerin g. And sD He
power of a truly oppressive condemned sin 111 sinful man.
government, so were we al i 111 order that the nghteous
once oppressed under the requirements of the Law
iron fi st of sin and death But mi ght be full y met in us,
the Bible says in Roman s who do not live according to
6:19-23, ."Just as you" used to the si nful natme but accordoffer the part&gt; of your body ing to the Spir&lt;t. •
'Those "' her li ve accordmg
m slavery to Impurity und t9
ever-increasing wickedness, to the smful nature liave thetr
so now offer them in slavery minds set on. wljat that nature
to righteousness leading to desires; but those who li ve m
holine ss. When yo'u were acco rdance with the Spirit
slaves to sin , you were free have their minds set on what
from the control of r.ight- the Spirit desires. The mind
eousness. What benefit d1d of sinful man is death. but
you reap at that time from the mmd controlled by the
the things you are now Sp1rit is hfe and peace; the
ashamed of? Those things sinful mind is hostile to God.
result in death! But now that It does not submit to God's
you have been set free from Ia\'(, nor can it do so. Those
sin and have become slaves controlled by the sinful
to God, the benefit you reap nature cannot please God.
leads .to holiness, and the .You, ho&gt;vever. ·are controlled
result is eternal life. For the not by the sinful nature but
wages of sin is death, but the the Sptrit, if the Spirit of
gift of God is eternal life in God lives 111 you" (Romans
7:24, 8: 1-9).
Christ Jesus our Lord."
And so we have given to
It has been said that it is
us through Jesus a great difficult to define what it

Friday, :July 2. 2004

f orrthou&amp;hl Funrral Plannina

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall se'e God.
Matthew 5.

ICr,nw'!:Fcimily Restaurant
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chicken"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

.992-5432

Me1g~

COJJ nty'.\'o Olde"l

352 East Ma1n

Pomeroy, Oh
740-992-2644

f.l1111..,t

6J,

W

740-992-6298

, MY arace is sufficient
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
For God so loved the world
for thee: for my
PHARMACY
·strem!th is made
We Fill Doctors'
on ii Pn SOil. ..
.Perfect in weakness.
Prescriptions
John 3: 16
II Cor: 12:9
992·2955 ·
Pomeroy
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God a nd man."

.Acts 24: I
•

&amp;nouffrr'•
:fire &amp; &amp;afrtp
10.........
1.....111-- U

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

•

�.·

•

-

.,.The Daily Sen~el

I

I~

·

(7"40) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnjll.com

Ohiq Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
·Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an '
. establishment of religion, or prohibiting the ·
·free. exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
, . the Government for a redress of grievances.
:

.

'

'

'

'.

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Todqy is Frid&lt;ty. July 2. the I84th day of 2004. There are
·"!82 day s left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 2, 1776; the Continental Congress passed• a resolution saying that "these Unitect Colonies are, and of right,
ought t0 be, Free and Independent States."
• On lhis date:
In 1881, President Garfield was shot by ·Charles J. Guiteau
at the Washington railroad station; Garfield died the following
September.
In 1890, Congress passed the Sherman·Antitrust Act. ·
In 1926, the United States Army Air Corps was created.
In 1937 ..aviator Amelia Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan
disappeared over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to make
the first round-the-world flight at the equator.
.
In 1961, author Ernest Hemingway shot himself to death at
his home in Ketchum, Idaho.
·
In 1964, 40 years ago, President Johnson signed into law a
sweeping civil rights bill passed by Congress.
In 1976, the Supreme Court ruled the death penalty was not
inherently cruel or unusual'.
., .
,
In 1989, former Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko
di.ed in Moscow ~t age 79.
In 200 l, Robert Tools received the world's first self-contained artificial heart in Louisville, Ky. (He lived 151 days
with the device.)
·
In 2002,. American adventurer Steve Fossett became the
ftrst person to fly a balloon solo around the world as he
re~urned to western Australia.
·
·
, Ten years ago: A USAir DC-9 crashed in poor weather at
:Charlotte-Douglas International Airport in North Carolina,
killing 37 of the· 57 people aboard. Colombian soccer player
Andres Es.9obar was shot to death in Medellin, I 0 days after accidentally scoring a goal against his own team in World Cup com,
() petition. Conchita Martinez won the women's title at Wimbledon
(news- web sites), defeating Martina Navratilova 6-4, 3-6. 6-3.
Five years ago: 'Fonner Northwestern University basketball
coach Ricky Byrdsong was shot to (jeath in Skokie, IlL; authorities
believe he was the victim of a three-day shooting rarnpa~e b~
white supremacist Benjamin Jl!athaniel Smith that targeted nunonties in Illinois.and Indiana. (One other person was kiUed and several wounded before Smith committed suicide.) "Godfather"
autho~ Mario Puzo died on Long Island, N.Y., at l!ge 78.
··
One year. ago: Palestinian police ·marched into Bethlehem,
taking control of the ancient West Bank city after Israel with_-drew under a \].S.-backed peace plan. Vancouver was awarded the 2010 Winter Olymptcs (news- web sites).

Friday, July 2,

Pagt:A4

O .P INION

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

·'

Friday, July

there a spirit .world?

Obituaries
Danny L Shain .

'!'"

Susan Hayes, and an infant
brother.
At Danny's request, a priDanny Lee Shain, 60, of vate memorial service will be
Racine. passed away on conducted.
Wednesday. June 30. 2004, at
Arrangements ·are under
Holzer Medical Genter in the direction of Roush
Pomeroy. ·
·
111
Funeral
Home ·
He was born on June 15, Ravenswood. W.Va.
1944, son of the la!e Harry
and Hazel Snider Shain. He
was an ·operator for Martin
Marietta· and was a veteran of
the U.S. Army.
Surviving are his wife,
Weno'ell Lee Rossiter, 60,
Dorothy Law son Shain of
of
Gallipolis,
died
Racine;
two
children,
William Pursons and Kelly Wednesday. June 30. 2004 at ·
(Jodi ) Parsons , both of Holzer Medical Center.
Born Feb. 3, . 1944 in
Racine; a special son, Danny
(Randi) Gheen and their chil- Scottown, son of the late Ova
dren, Kaleb and K) lie Gheen; Ray Rossiter and the late
a ,brother, Charb Shain of Nancy Marie Caldwell
Pomeroy. Ralph Shain of .Rossiter, he was a heavy
Florida. Sam Shain of equipment operator ·and
Racine, Harry Shain of West served in the National Guard
Virginia and Paul Shain of from 1965 to 1971.
Rossiter was also preceded
Bidwell: three sisters: Ruth
Johnson of Racine. Kathy in death' by a brother, Carl
Searles of Rutland and Nora Rossiter. He is survived by his wife.
Clark of Columbus: 1and several nieces and ·nephews. ·
Linda Harrison Rossiter of
Besides his parents, he was Gallipolis: six chiMren ,
preceded in death by a sister. Wendell (Misty) Rossiter of

• •

Wendell Lee
Rossiter ·

Juanita Sears

..

The Daily Sentinel
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lnllde Meigs CoUnty

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CHESHIRE
Juanita
Sears. 58, Cheshire , died
June 30, 2004. following an
extended illness.
She was born on May 16,
1946. in Point Pleasant,
. W.Va., daughter of the late
Thomas
and
Darlene
Kingery McKinney.
A graveside service will be
held at II a.m. on Monday,
.July 5, . 2004, at Reynolds
Cemetery in Addison. There
will be no .:alling hours.
Arrangements · are under
the direction . of Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport.
. Friends may send online

BEII·.J6 A.'T WAR
DoES NoT 6rVE You
I

TE.I.L EM
WHA1' THEY C.NJ
Po Wl'f'H THAT,

.

Registration
deadline nears
MJDDLEPORT _ The
registration deadline for Kids
· · 0f
C0 11ege at the umverstty
Rio · Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center is 6 p.m. on July 7.
The program for students
ages 9 to 14 will be offered
July 12-16 and July 19-23 at
the_ cen. ter on Mill Street in
Mtdd Ieport.
"If there is not enough
enrollment. at least five stude,nts per class. the class will
have to be canceled," said
URG Meigs Center Director

r

.

Mary Lewis

GALLIPOLIS -Anna M.
Biland, 83 , Gallipolis, died
Tuesday: June 29. 2004, in
LOWER SALEM
GaH~pohs.
. . .·.
. . · Funeral services for Mary
Mass of Chnsttan Bunal Lewis Franks, 66, of Lower
wtll be at II a.m. on Salem, Ohio, will be held .at
Saturday, July 3. 2004, m 2:30 p.m. Saturday, July 3,
the Holy_ Cross. Cathohc 2004 at the Whipple Baptist
Church m Manne City._ Church, Whipple, Ohio with
Mich., wtth Rev. Fr. Tim . interment in Salem Township
Birney offictatmg. Bunal Cemetery. Friends may call
will folio~ at Holy Cross at the McClure Schafer
Cemetery in Marine City.
Lankford Funeral Home, 314
Local
visitation
was Fourth Street, Marietta, from
observed
on
Thursday noon on Friday.

Ei'anks

Gina Pines. "All courses,
except for one, cost only $25;
and there is fin~ncial assistance available to those who
demonstrate need."
Courses offered this year
include: Archaeology and
The Ancient World; Master
Works, a fine arts study;
Investigating Reporters I ·and
II; Creative Arts; Writing
Poetry (for those 13 to 18);
Time Jumpers, a history
course covering Barbarians
and t.he Roman E. mpire, the
medievel crusades and the
. American Civil War; Our Big
Blue Planet, a study of World
cultures; and f,\dventures in
Theater.
A schedule of classe ~ and a

.

Maybe l'mjust an old fogy,
war can be.
last, best hope of earth," but
In addition, fate has as"the world's principal malebut it seems to me that the
decreed that ·America's (nnd. factor. As a result, every war
American people are being
indeed civilization 's) gteat the United States has particiasked --. no, forced -- to
to
some
'
enemy
in the early years of pated in, since and includin~
accustom themselves
aspects of warfare that, for
William
the new century shall be the Vietnam, has had to contend
fa~atical fringe of the great with . a strident domestic
one reason or another, simply
Rusher
Muslim world, a world that · opposition, and we can
didn't exist for most of the
20th ·century.
, .
has simply 0ot yet succeeded exMft this to be a feature of
War, of course, has been .
111 commg to terms wtth eve.ry American military
around since the dawn of his·
moderm1y. Yet the ne~ tech- enterprise for the foreseeable
·
tory, and has take(! many almost· no domestic criticism no logy, paradoxically, has future.
forms. But In the 20th centu- f
come to the aid of these
It is ' necessary to ask
ry tt· ten ded to be waged by o.. the war
· -.. including.
. . our· fanatics . They are able to whether ah open and democ·
war atms, our mt 1ttary
.
(
d ·
hattons"be as d isttngutshed
If there move swiftly and secretly raiic society like the United
f
· ·
strategy, an d the l"k
1 e.
rom tn s) an was·usually were indeed ,critics, they around tiTe world, ·transport- States can be expected to
conducted by highly orga- were hooted into silence. ing themsel.yes and all kinds withstand all of tliese new
nized
and
.
"f specialized forces And t he coverage o f .the waf of deadly .weapons iri~o the factors in the mt"lt"tary equa· tn um orm. These; were was carefully sanitized. 1 can hearts of great Western soci - tion and play its anticipated
drawn from the . popll)ations hardly recall seeing a single eti'es . Unable to wage an part in the world's affairs.
·of the nations inyolved. and PhOtograph of a dead' ordinary war. or win a nor- Confronted wit\) fanatical
were supported"by their patri- American soldier on~ battle- mal victory, they can cause Muslims pr.epared to lay
otic juices . Contemporary field.
·
hideous damage by sacritlc, down their own lives, and to
accounts. of the battles that
Some of the recent changes ing their own lives . They are conduct guerrilla warfare by
occurred were usually highly are simpl-y the result of mod- convmced they can force us the most obscene tactics,
colore\! and favorable to the ~rn . technology __ the· so- :to cut and run by acts of bar- without reference' to the civil·
home team ; it was on(y later. called "CNN effect." The vir- barism (such as mu!jlations ian status pr innocence of •
in memoirs written long after tually in stantaneous tran s- and beheadings)' for which their American victims, do
the events, that the grim mission of news events nothing in our experience has we have fhe fortitude to
nature of warfare was makes it possible to cover . pre~ ared' us. .
·
watch a!l this on television,
revealed in all ils horror.
war's activities in real time ,
Fmally. as tf_ these new m real . ttme, while a signifiThat was certainly !he case and that. ·in turn, makes it external problems were not cant fract1on of uur intellecwi!h the first atid · second impossible to exclude truly t nough, recent generations of lual community, supported
wor,kl wars. It ts often sa1d horrifying scenes of carnage, college professors., emanci- by demonstrators, is openly
thaf 'the latter was the last I ncluding carnage committed pated by modern philosophy attacking our purposes,
really "popular". war the . against, or .. almost.as bad-- from any sense of loyalty to defaming our political lead,
Umted States partiCipated 111. b)l, Americans . No one. their country. have given rise . er-s, and undermining OJ.lr
I served in it, and I can testi- today, has any excuse for not to a signilicant minority of national resolve?
fy that, once.the Japanese had knowing just how· .terri.ble college graduate&gt; who regard
Like it or not, we are &lt;!bout .
the United States. not as "the to find ou~
kicked us into it, there was

.
•

Field
from PageA1
is made of thick concrete blocks, ls connected to a wall of rock - . meaning the wall isn't
going anywhere. Perched at the top is an old
log cabin owned by the Lewis family.
Michael -Patton, a supervisor with Maiden
and Jenkins Cdntractors, said his crew has
been busy ~ince mid-May trying to shore up
the rest of the hill. He said loose soil is being
cut away from the hill and replaced with large
rocks to prevent ,further erosion and slippage.
"l don't think the cabin will fall over the
hillside," he said. "I was worried when we
first started, but not now."
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources
Division of Mineral Resource Management
will pay for the project which Patton esli·
mates will cost $2{)0,000. He said the project
wi II probably be fini shed by the end of next
week.
'

Court news
.

Numerous cases resolved
in Meigs County Court
POMEROY
Cases
resolved 111 the • Meigs
·County Court of Judge
· Steve Story · between May
17 and June 17 are as follows:
Charles
V.
McDonald. Gallipolis, no
motorcycle endorsement.
· $50 fine; Steven W.
McGuire, Cleveland, Ga.,
seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Ralph W. Meister, Rutland,
equipment violation, costs
only:
Wanda
L.
Merinar,
Racine, seatbelt, $3.0 and
costs;
Michael
Middleswarth,
Portland,
driving
under
suspension/revocation, $200

and costs; William E.
Mildren, Vienna, W.Va ..
speeding, $34 and costs;
Joann Milliorn, Racine.
domestic violence, $50 fme
and $86.50 in costs; Teeya
M. Mills, Portland, driving
under suspension/revoca· tion. $200 and costs;
Michael Morris, Racine,
seatbelt, $30 and costs;
James 'A. Newhouse,
Clendenin, W.Va.; speeding,
$30 and£j£Psts; Scott L.
Ntelson, Columbus, · seatbelt, $30 and costs; Kevin
D. Nortz, Sylvania, seatbelt,
$30 and costs; Carl E.
Parker, Pomeroy, seatbelt,
$30 and costs; Mary J.
Partlow, Langsville, no
operator's license, $200;
Raymond L. Patterson,

seatbelt, $30 and cost&lt;;:
David C. Peters, Burke,
Va. , speeding, S30 and
costs, parking on highway.
$20 and costs;·
Ronnie
M.
Pickens ,
Racine, seatbelt-passenger.
$35 and costs ; Carl S.
Pickett, Newbury, Fla. ,
seatbelt, $30 and costs;
John W. Ponigar; Poland,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Gregory
L.
Reed.
Reedsyille, failure to register, $50 and costs; Joseph
A. Rexroad, Coolville, seatbelt, $30 and costs; Eddie
E. Rhodes, McArthur. disorderly conduct, $70 and
costs, resisting arrest, $100
and costs.

Marriage licenses

Pomeroy sets
public ~eeting

POMEROY -Marriage licenses have been issued in Meigs County Pro)late· Court
to Christopher George Stewart. 19, Racine, and Megan Nicole Combs, 19, Racine; and
to Neal Dwayne. Bonecutter, Jr., 31, Pomeroy, and Opal Dawn :Whitlatch, 27, Pomeroy

POMEROY - Notice is
hereby given that between
6:30 p.m. to 7 p .m. July 12, a
public meeting on the budget
· and revenue sharing for the
year 2005 for the village of
Poll)eroy will be held-at the
clerk-treasurer's office in village hall.

CLEVELAND (AP) ferent parts of Ohio, draw- Durbin became a foundry
An ancestor of the man ing top magic stars such as worker, law clerk, magician
.
who arrange,d the first con- · Harry, ·Blackstone
and and political operative.
He
often
performed
tricks
-~
vention of the International Howard Thurston.
Brotherhoo.d of Magicians . His great-grandson, James with political points during
is helping tell his story as b. · Robenalt, a Cleveland campaigns, such as turning
the group holds its annual attorney, has chronicled the a gold coin into many silconvention in Cleveland colorful life of W. W. ver ones .
W.W. Durbin was the
in
his ' book,
during the holiday week- Durbin
tlrst elected president of the
•
"Linking Rings."
end.
W.W. . Durbin staged ·the
William Warner Durbin fledgling brotherhood of
group's first convention in was born 111 1866 in magicians, leading it · from
a theater behind his house Kenton to ·a Civil War 1926 until his death -- in..
in Kenton in northwest ·widow atid an abolitionist ' !937 . He pumped much of
Ohio 78 years ago .
qoctor 30 years he~ senior. his personal wealth into the
Durbin hosted ihe group's The doctor died ·seven years group and multiplied its
first few conventions in dif- . later. and ·as a young man numbers many times. over.

•

Phil Luckeydoo. known in clown circles as "Lucky." entertained boyS' and girls in the Meigs
County District Public Library's summer reading program on Wednesday afternoon, with an
entertaining magic show. He ·was joined by George Wright of Pomerqy, who shared an
American Indian story with the children. The program continues through next month. anctwil:
conclude with a party at London Pool in Syracuse. (Brian J. Reed)

registration form can be
obtained by contacting Pines
at 992-3383 or by e-mail at
gpines@rio.edu .. lnforniation
is also available by on the
center's·
website,
www.rio.edu/MeigsCenter.

Magicians meeting in
Cleveland invoke early influence

Uizr in the.21st.century
.
.

Anna Biland

Local Briefs

D"ICK.

I

condolences to www.fisher- evening at Cn~ meens Funeral
Chapel in Gallipolis, with a
funeralhomes.com .
Rosary service.

L._

.

Gallipolis, Carla Sue (Scott)
Russ&gt;ell of Maspn. W.Va.,
Danny 'Harrison of Rock
Lick, Anthony (Stephanie)
Harrison of Northup. Roger
f)anet) Harrison of Vinton.
Sherry
Harris,on
of
Gallipolis ; . nine grandchildren; four brothers, Merrill
Ray (Norma) ·Rossiter ' of
Scottown,
Bernarcl
L
(Shelba)
Rossiter
of
Gallipolis, Gary Dean (Barb)
Rosstter of Btdwell, Roger
Dale Rossiter of .Gallipolis;
qne sister; Wanda Lou (Jim)
Mohler ofMiddleport.
Services will be I p.m .
Saturday at the Waugh- ·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
with the Rev. Alfrec\ Holley
officiating .. Burial will follow
in Swan Creek Cemetery . .
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6-9· p.m
Friday.
·
·
Full Military Funeral
Honors will be presented at
the cemetery by the Gallia
County Veterah.'s organizations .
To send condolences,
please visit us at www.timeformemqry.com/whw.
.
.

..

Deaths

LETTERS · T,, THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
••
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and incl~de address
and telephone . number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
.
addressing .issues, not personalities.
l1 ,
,
The opinions expressed in this.column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
editorial board, (1ess otherwise noted.

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

· www.mydailysentinel.corn"

'

..

2, 2004

It is the average person's
took up spirit rappmg as· a ·Bringing our story closer to
craving . for immortalily
profession.
home and to tl)e present day.
which probably accounts for
Spiritu&lt;Jii •m was born .
· let me tell,you the amazing
Soon. others were attempt- tale told oy a newspaper
our interest in &gt; pirituali ~ m .
~
ing to duplicate th~ feat of · friend of mine whose veraciChristianity has, alw ays
the Fox si st~rs . purporting_to ty 1 can vouch for.
'
affirmed a belief in an after·
life but sci'ence has served tll
Geor~e ·.
he channel s through wh1ch
"Our house in Kirtland ·
cast doubt on this belief.
Plagenz
communkation with the spir- Ohio. is 140 years old," h~
The result has .been a grow 1t world could be . attected. says. "On numerou.s\ occaing clesire for proof.
·
Not'.' lew w e1e qu1ck to see sions, we have found . the
.
th~ hnan~ l,&lt;tl be~ehts !,obc ·door to the guest room open
Spiritualism daims to pro1
vide this proof hy establi sh- ·e '1ethodt"st E ·, · ·I · realized
.
. fl( m the prufc · s101 when we have got up in the
lll
ing commt~licatinn with
~
PISCOpd ol med1um.
• ·
.
'
those who have departed this Church.
The stdry ofthe.liox sisters ~norntng ' ·. although _we
life. thus demonstrating that . One nigh\ in la'le March. has a strange cncfing. Forty alw.ty s keep It closed to save
there is no death .
I R4R . .the- two little Fox sis- year&gt; after they first reported 011., hea! . .
.
Another reason . people· tcrs -- Maru"ret and · Kate hearin ~ mysterious: rappingsOn ot~er occas1ons . we
consult "mediums" (the word (also cal fed Catherine). said Ill thetr home , Margaret __ have aw.1kened to find a.ltght
refers to a "middleman " they heard strange lwockings who had reportedly ·taken to 01~ 111 the same room. My
between this world and the in the cottage where they l&lt;ty drink (a different kind of wtfe also says .sl)e has been
other) is to keep unbroken · in their beds. Haunted houses spirit )-, unnotmced that spir- •tware on. occasion of somebody breathing in the room.
the ties of affection with were nothing new but this itualism was a fraud .
loved ones who 'have gone was different.
Margaret publicly demon- ""l don't believe in ghosts
on. But as we learn from the
As ·the story goes, when · strated. in October 1888 and feel there rpust be a natbereaved characters in Gian Margare) snapped her fingers before a New York audience, urai explanation for all this:_
Carlo Menotti's 1946 opera. twice and told ·the rapper. that the rappings were made like the wind or maybe the
"The Medium," to those who. twice.
'"Do as '"Count
I do. " to
he IO."
knocked
' toe. latch on the door doesnt· ho1d
she bY crac k:mg her tnc~.
want to believe. no amount com"manded , and the"re were Kate, who was also in· the .properly. ·
of exp~anation will convince 10 rappings..
aud1ence was reported to
"But lately 1 am beginning
·1pprove of the confessiOn
d
them they are being duped.
Some find in spiritualism
Neighbors and skeptics The whole thi 1p ·t t d s ·ci to won er.
g s are · .·m
'.'Several times I have put a
came over to witness thi s
the means of continuine". to' strange communica. tion with M·.'1ruaret
beouse
she
and
' . 'to tease
. . theu. . wad o1· paper between t he
communicate w.ith a departed the spirit world". At ti1,11 es Kate"' w· '..lnted
door
chiJd ·or spouse, or to a&lt;;sure
superst111ous mother. ·
. and the jamb
. to keep •he
'I'
themselve~· that the one who · there were as many as 500
For a while after her con- .ct,oor from openmg -- only to
has departed this life .is alive people in the Fox house at. fcssi_on , Margaret went on hnd the ~oor open ~n the
and well and will be waiting one time to hear the· sounds. tour. demonstrating how she mo1 n1ng ,md the wad ot
when they .themselves '" cross
It was discovered that bv had worked her fraud. But paper on t~e ~loor.
over." It is thus a sorace in means of · a code (f&lt;ir the public showed little interThat dtdn t bother me so
·
instance.· one rap for "y&lt;:s," est. She later publicly denied muc h un t II · one . mornmg
time ol· gnef.
Spiritualism as a move- two raps for "no," three rap&gt; her confession·and went back recently when 1 found the
ment began ·in 1848 .. in the for "don't know"), the spirit to th~ seance
tables. door to the room open, the
Fox household in Hydesville. would answer questions Whatever the truth was in lhe light on -- .and the wad of
· on the des k about
N. Y. Th e Foxes were about the future. It wasn't case of Margaret Fox, spiritu- paper 1ymg
upstanding members of the long before Margaret. Kate alism continued .to attract fol- live feet from the door 1"
community who belonged to and their older sister Leah lowers •ind still does today.
BOO'

.A8'50LVTE PoWER,
MR. PRE~JI)ENI.

2.004

State Re-presentative Jimmy Stewart sponsored House Bill 425, which recently passed,
the House and is now waiting for Senate
approval, that increases the amount a property owner can collect from homeowner' s
insurance for damage caused by underground

r=o.. the record

Inspection shows temperatures routinely top
100 degrees at overcrowded Greene County jail
XENIA (AP) - An inspec- decree to improve the jail.
Greene County commistion by an attorney showed that
Greger filed a motion ask- &amp;ioners W Reed Madden
temperatures in the overcrowd- ing why county officials and Marilyn Reid said the
ed Greene County , Jail often "should not be held in con- county cannot afford to
,excee&lt;! !(X) degrees.
tempt of court for failure to install air cpnditioning. The
State law mandates that abide by the ·terms" of the county estimates it will cost
$600,000 to retrofit the jail
temperatures should not consent decree.
U.S. District Judge Walter with air conditioning and
exceed 85 decrees, said
Lawrence Greger, an attar' Rice . said he ordered required windows.
ney representing the inmates. Thursday's inspection after
Greene County Sheriff's
Greger said on Thursday receiving complaints about · Maj. William Harden , jail
that his inspection revealed ,.jail conditions.
administrator, said the facilithe jail is too crowded and
A hearing qp the matter ty has between 143 to 145
too hot- conditions he says was scheduled to · be held · inmates daily, which exceeds
the maximum of 130.
violate a 1989 consent Friday in Rice's court.

ECS
from Page A1
our own building," Struble
said. "The state has advised
us that owning property is
not a~visable, which means
our only other option is to.
lease space."
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport, who heads a
committee oeeking funding

of space, we should have a.
better handle on what is
available at the hospital or
elsewhere,'_' Davenport said.
Struble said that while
four of the seven ' board
members are from Athens
CountY, some of them actually t'avoF a single ESC
office in Meigs County.

will Have
Sp~cial

Hours
Sunday July 4th
'- 8arn-5pm

mtneS&lt;

Currently, ·Stewart said property owners
. pay a $1 a year into a special fund adhlinis' ·
tered by the state which pays ou~ $50,000 to
people whose property has been .damaged by
mine subsidence. This money only covers
damage; to the main structure and little else. If
Stewart 's bill become law, this amount would
.increase to $300,000 and would cover more' .
·than the main structure. Stewart said property
values have increases! since the 1980's when
. the original $50.000 clairh amount was decided by the legislature.
•
Since many counties in Ap!falachia have
hundreds of abandoned underground mines.
Stewart sJid the legislation would be of benefit to many property owners. He's opiimistic
the bill ,will ..pass before the end of this year.

for a new health. center in
the Veterans · Memorial
Hospital building; said they
will know by January
whether space might be
available at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital building.
"When the time comes ·for
the ESC board to make a
decision relating to the issue

So employees can spend the
holiday with their families!
(tum at caution ./ight on
Co. Rd.5-Bradbury Rd.) .
.

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39239 Bradbury Rd:
Middleport; OH

740-9.92-771 3
PRISONER (PG) 7:30

open 7 days a week • 6am to 8pm

�.

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PageA6
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The Daily 'Sentinel

Community Calendar···
Pub_lie meet_ings.
Monday, July 5
SYRACUSE
, The .
Sutton Township Trustees
will meet at 7 p.m. at
Syracuse Village hall .
SYRACUSE - A meeting
of the Syracuse Board of
Public Affairs scheduled for
·
tonight willobe held instead at
7 p .m on July 12. ·
•
Tuesday, July 6
· RUTLAND Rutiand
. tthmvnbship Truh ste~s . wilI hold
etr udget eanng at 5 p.m. .
at the Rutland Fire Station.
The regular monthly meeting
will follow
· MIDDLJ3PORT
Middle!'Jrt Village Council
'II
d
h d 1d
Wt ho · a re-sc e u e regdmeet!ng Cat 5 ·f'mh on
0
1
es
be Cay ml 1u1n1c k c 1a.mrs. _ounct WI a e ac ton
on all..ttems on the agenda of
the regular meetmg scheduled for June 28, at whtch no ,
quo,rum was pr~sent.
•

ser-Ve refreshments.
POMEROY - The OH~Coin Club will have. a

dts~layfrom 8 : JOto~p.m.t~
the lobby .of the arme~

.By THE ·BEND..
Fireworks ·displays~ a,~ best
enjoyed from ·safe distance
Friday, July

Those attendin~ are asked to
take lawn ch3lrs. For more
information call 304-7735892 ·

DEAR . ABBY:
With
Independence Day · approach~·
Bank and Savmgs . Co, tn
ing, I'm asking for.,your help in
Pomeroy. Free_ coms _and
reminding your millions of
other pnzes wtll be gtven ··
•
readers about the danger of fireaway dunng the day.
works, especially to the eyes.
Saturday, July 10
Tuesday, July 6
Each year during Fourth of
POMEROY
Eagles
RACINE - The Charles
·.
.·
6 30 W. and F:mnie L. Wolfe July celebrations, thousands of
Beaver reunion will be held adults and children are seriousAuxthary wtll meet at :
p .m.' for a potluck· dmner. at the Star Mill, Park iil Iy injured as a result of fire:
Meat wtll_ be pr~vtded. A Racine.
works and pyrotechnic devices.
7 30
;:ung will begm at :
Many of the injuries affect eye. Sunday, July 1
. MIDDLEPORT R
I
RACINE
. Theiss sight, . pennanently damaging
,
.
.
egu ar reunion will be held at I :30 · -and in some cases blinding
meeung ofMt~dleport Lodge
·h
_the victims. In response, the
1 k d'
fh~S:t M~Il~~~~ in ~~~fn~t
.
Optometric
363, F&amp;AM, 7.30 p.m.
Those attending are asked to
(AOA) urges peo· MIDDLEPORT
Mtddlepo.rt
Lodge . 363 ak
.
'
. • . .
pie to re'1111·n from ust'ng fi·~F&amp;AM 7 30 p m
t e an Item •Of a ptg Ill a
•·
u•
·
· · ·
poke" auction.
works and to instead enjoy proMonday, JI!IY 12 .
fessional displays. ·
Association will meet at 8:30
RACIN~
Racine
About two-thirds of firep
·
Village
w
1
1l
hold
a.
pubhc
works-related
injuries are
,
B
k
1
~~dl:~rt eop e s an Ill' ' hearing'' on the year 2005 burns. Most of the burns
·
Budget, at 7 p.m. July' 12, at involve the hands, eyes; head
the Municilal I;!uillling. The and face. Almost half of the
Budget wil be on view at the victims are under 15. years of
Municipal Building from age, and 75 percent· of them
SaturdaJ!;,July' 3
9:00A.M. to J:OO P.M., from are male. The• most, frequent
MASON - A gospel con- · July I, 2004, through July 19, cause of fireworks 'injuries
cert will be held at the Mason 2004.
. -!requiring trips to the emerPark-in Mason, W.Va. beginPOMEROY - Notice ts gency room is sparklers. (Did'
Friday, July 2
.ning at 5:30p.m. Among the hereby given that .betwe~n you know that sparklers can
: SALEM CENTER
group's performing will be · 6:30p.m. to 7 p.m. a pubhc heat up to 1,800 degrees,
Meigs
County
Pomona Eternity, Proclaim, Together meeting on _the budget and enough to melt gold?) A
Grange will meet at 7:30p.m . for Christ ~· the · Gabriel revenue shanng for the year sparkler can also literally
at the Star Grange halllocat- Quartet,
Aaron
Grate, 2005 for . the village of poke someone's eye m;tt.
ed 3 miles north of Salem Glory land
Believers, Pomeroy wtll be held at the
This may come as a surprise
Center on CR I. Inspection Salvation, Matt Scott and clerk-treasurer's office in vii- but bystanders are also not saf~
from injury. Data from the U.S.
will be held. Star Grange will Ray .and Deloris Cundiff. !age hall.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - . Eye lnj1.1ry Registry reveals·that
.
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half of all fireworks injuries

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ClUbS and

Organl'zati'OnS

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Friday, 'July 2, 2!)04

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OmeCOmlng
Reunions

~~:~~~n

M~~?e~;;POR~ommuJi~~

C . rt
OnCe

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Racine's celebration schedule corrected

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2, 2004 ,

butdoitinawaythatwillprolect
your.;elves and your families.
DEAR ABBY: I am 17 and
currently involved with a guy
_
from school. The guy that 'I ·
was with for a year and a half
Dear
(my ex) ·wants to marry me. I
Abb
Y
still have feelings for him, but
not like l used to.
I . like my new boyfriend
and.don ' t really want to leave
him. When my ex and I broke
occur to bystanders.
up, it was only supposed to be
So, on this Fourth of July, "a little time apart.'.' My ex
members of the AOA url\e showed ' s ig ns that he · was
-your readers to protect thetr moving OIL so I did the same .
eyes by avmdmg , _fireworks . Now that he want s to get back
and enJoymg professional dts· together I don't know what to
plays from a safe dtstance.·
. h'
DR WESLEY PITTMAN , do: Should I go back wtth !m
PRESIDENT, A:O.A.
and g1ve tt a .chance or let htm
DEAR DR . PITTMAN : down gently ?- PULLED IN
Thank you for the timely TWO DIRECTION_S
.
reminder. Although many
DEAR PULLED .. You !lfC
people. young and old, regard 17 years old and on the bnttk
firewor b as harmless fun , the of a bnght andexcamg future.
facts sL .. w otherwise.
Why are you Ill such a hu~
According to the tJ .S. to make a permanent commitConsumer Product Safety ment? Since you have alre~dy
Commission, during 2004, an ·:moved on," you should cont;stimated 8,800 people were t~nue movmg on . When tM
treated in hospital ERs , for · nght man comes along, you
injurie&gt; associated with fire- won ' t need to ask " anyone
works. An estimated 20 per- what to do- you'll know.
cent to 25 percent of fireDear Abby is writtefl by
works injuries are to the eyes Abigail Van Buren, also know11 ·
-mostly contusions and lac- as Jeanne Phillips. and wa~
erations - aud most of those fotmded by her mothel';
are caused by firecrackers, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
rockets and sparklers.
Abby at www.DearAbb)\Com
So, a word to the 'wise: Have a or P.O. Box 69440, Los
"blast" on the Fourth ot" July Angeles, CA 90069.

New Haven roadside park at
12:30 p.m . All participants
in Mason) par,ade. which
begins at II ·a.m., are weicome to participate. Anyone
wishing to join the parad'e
can contact Shirley Hesson
at 882-3203.
Musical
entertainment
will begin at 2 p.m. with
Jack Cartwright, Matt Scott ,
Brad Lane with David and
Jason Alias, and Paul
Fitzgerald anq the Bluegrass
H.ciitage at the New Haven
Fire Department.

PLEASE

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DRIVE

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SAFE THIS
4TH OF

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MIOOLEPORTJS .

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5-00 pm Parade Line Up

7:45 pm ENTERTAINMENT
Bev Adkins &amp; Tammy Taylor
BiiiC~ne
·
·
Freed by Christ Quartet
Kids of the USA
Amy Perrin
Jim Soulsby
David Stiffler
Timeline Barbershop Quartet
Dance- ~ockin' Country Cloggers
Swingin' Senior Dancers
Finale- Lights of Freedom and God Bless
America By the entire cast and Veterans

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4th of July Schedule

CELEBRATION
Saturday, July 3rd, 2004
9:15

Parade Line-up-Southern High .
School :
.
9:45 Flag Raising-Post 602
10:00 Parade · ·.
11:00 Chicken Bar-B-Que (Firehouse)
3:00 Farm Antique Club Tractor Pull
3:00 Patriotic Program
3:30 Flag Raising
4:45 Parade Winners Announced
5:00 · RACO Frog Jump
5:00 Last Chancz Band
6:00 Kiddie Tractor Pull
(Southern EleJDentary StarSearch winners will pe'rform
between shows)
8:00 Craig Harrison (Music)
......
Fireworks 10:00
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.:- ~·= ,~~

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For Craft Spaces Call
Call Maxine Rose at
Home National Bank ~49-2210

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&lt;!

RACINE JULY 4TH

Saturday, July 3rd, 2004
9:00a.m ....... Parade Lirie-up
1o:oo ............Parade ·
··
1:00 - 4:00 ... Various artist
.
on stage "
12:00- 1:00. Ro(k'n Country
Cloggers "'
4:00- 6:00 ..... "0asis"
Contemporary
Gospel
a:oo- 11 :oo Nina Sharp
11 :00 Fireworks
Good Family Fun , 1,1,

on Ash Street (contact,Paul Gerard 992-5815)

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RUTLAND

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2004JULY 4TH program
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Daily
.. Sentinel

,Burgers on the grill?

PLAN!

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A DRIVER•••

THAT'S A

Welcome ......................... ,.... by Parade Mars~all Alan
Wallace
"'
Flag Raising ........................... Anierican. Legion Post 128
· Pledge of Allegiance ......... led by Laura Perrin
Star Spangled Banner ....... Brenda Phalin
Invocation ............................ Middleport Ministerial Assoc.
Comments by Mayor ........ Sandy lannarelli
Aimed Forces Medley ....... :Sharon !;lawley
Parade Awards ..................... Middleport Comm. Assoc.
Porch &amp; Entry Contest Awards... Midd. Comm. Assoc.

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There· will be a car show
at the New Haven Library
4
p.m .
from
I · to
Regi stration begins at I
p .m.
The Wahama High School
White· Falcon Marching
Band Boosters .will be hds!ing a chicken barbecue and
various organizations will
be ·providing concessions
during the day.
.There will be an assortment of craft tables and all
events will take place at the
fire 'department.

Coming Friday, July 16, 2004

DESIGNATE·.

'

6-00 pm Parade Begins .
7:00pm Program Dave Diles .Park

EXTRA! EXTRA!

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

't/

Layette show honors·mother and daughter
POMEROY- Paula Wright and her daughter, Chasidy Leib, were recently honored with ·
a .:Jouble baby shower given by Linda and Angel Cunningham.
.
The theme Was "Welcome Babies" and the cake decorations featured booties and paCifiers.
Attending_ were Diane J3.10es, Brenda Tyson, Katlin Clarke, Shannon Taylor, Whitney Fields,
Kelly Helton, Sarah Bush, Missy Frechette and children, Nancy Anderson and Carol Spencer.
Sending gifts were· Fannie Oldaker, Pauline Cunningham, Janice and Jimmie Goodnite,
Karen McCray and f3.10ily, Maurica Parsons and family, Connie Goodnite and family, Sheila
Smith and family.
·

www.mydallysentlnel.corn
•,

Celebration set for Saturday

RACINE- "Freedom, Family and Fun" ~ill be the theme of the July 3 Independence Day
celebratio(\ to be held in Racine sponsored by the Racine Volunteer Fire Department and Star
NEW HAVEN New
Mill Park .Board. ·
A"parade through downtown Racine at 10 a.m. will kickoff the day 's activities and the cele- Haven ' s Independence Day
bration will conclude with a fireworks display at I0 p.m.
.
celebration is , set for
A corrected sch~dule of activities is as follows:
·
.
Saturday.
9:45 pm. Flag raising at American Legion Post 602
Activities commence at
10 a.m.
Parade
·
II
:45 a.m. with a flag-rais11 a.m.
Chicken Barbecue at Firehouse
ing cerenlony liy Richard
3 p.m. .
Tug pull by the Big Bend Farm A1,1tique Club
3 p.m.
Patnotic Program
·
Danberry, representing the
4 p.m.
Big Bend Cloggers
American Legion and VFW.
Parade winners announced
4:45 p.m.
David Alias ' and Mike
5 p.m.
Frog Jump
Rodgers will be performing
5 p.m.
Last Chanz Band on stage
,
the Na-tional Anthem.
(Between shows, Southern Elementary Star Search winners will perform)
6 p.m.
Kid tractor pun
Youth leader Heaih May
8 p.m.
Craig Harrison/singing
from Fairview Bible Church
10 p.m.
Fireworks
will deliver the invocation.
A parade will begin at the

...

ALL ACTIVITIES AT STAR MILL PARK
E.XCEPT PARADE AND 8AR·B·QUE •
Refreshments will be available.

9:3opm Fireworks Display

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[~use meat thermometer

: What's the best way to
make sure a hamburger on
(he grill is done? The
~bsolutely
only recommended way for consumers to test hamburgers
Becky
for doneness is to use :i
·Nesbitt
(neat · thermometer and
~ait until it reaches 160
degrees.
The
U.S.
Department of Agriculture
iays not to peek inside a
burger for pinkness _ to reach a safe~ mediumtests show that's not a rare . state. Chicken .thighs
reliable method . at all. should reach 180 degrees
Burgers that appear pink and breast meat · needs to
~ould be completely done, be 170 deg~ees.
and burgers that appear
Here are a few other
brown might not yet be tips to make your grilling
fully cooked. Only a meat experience a picnic':
·
!hermometer can tell you
• Use hot, ·soapy water
hands
for sure.
to
wash · your
especially before, during and after
: Hamburgers
need to be cooked com- food
preparatidn.
p!etely ·as they are morl! Unwashed hands are the
llpt to carry E. coli number one cause of
0 !57: H7 than steak or food-borne· illnesses.
other beef. that hasn't been
• Keep handy a small •
~round. , That's 15ecause E. bottle -of antibacterial liqcoli bacteria remain on uid or antib&lt;:~cterial wipes
the outside· of a cut of for hands and cooking
ineat until it's ground up surfaces.
!IS . hamburger. When that
• When packing a coolhappen~ and patties are .er, put. meats on tho:! botformed, bacteria .can easily tom so leaking juices
end up on the . inside of doti't trickle onto other
.
th e patty, so reac h mg
an foods.
•
.
internal temperature of
Do not use the same
,1 60 degrees Fahrenheit is _ plate to serve foods that
extremely · important: That you use for raw meat.
can only -be determined
• Keep coolers m the
with a meat thermometer. shade .and out of hot
Food. safety experts also . trunks as much as posstsuggest that steaks ]leed to ble.
b e .coo k e d to 145 d egrees • • , Use a separate cooler

for beverages to prevent
the food cooler from
being opened too often.
• Try to pack the exact
amount of food that will
be eaten, as well as smaller condiment containers,
to avoid handling ' leftovers.
• Throw out leftovers
unless they can be chilled
on ice remaining in the
cooler until your return
home. ·If food has been in ·
the "danger zone" ( 40 ·
degrees to 140 . degrees)
for two or more hours,
throw it out. It is better to
dispose of · leftovers than
to suffer from food poi- ·
soning .
'

Foster Parents .
Needed

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
appea.,- in the July 16th issue.
·I Be sure your child, grandchitd,
or relative is involved!

Son of
Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis

f

The Shoe Place

•''

&amp;Locker219
992-5627

Brogan Warner
. Insurance

~

~

t
'r

•'

992-2155
Pomeroy, Ohio

DowniJ}g-Childs-Mullen·
Musser Insurance

Baum·Lumber

992-3785

"992-3~81

985-3301

Pomeroy, Ohio·

Pomeroy, Ohio

Chester, Ohio

Swisher &amp; Lohse

Home National

Ohio

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Phone Number:----- - - - Submitted by:--- - - -- - ----------------------------~------------------4

HURRY!! PICTURE.DEADLINE IS ~
. FRIDAY JulY 9, 2004!

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••• The above information will be used in the ad, •••

K&amp;C Jewelers

r

-Quality-Print Shop

•••

. 992-:3345

r

-Middleport, Ohio

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•
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144

--Racine

992-2955 7

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992-6491

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

9.92-5444·
- - - - +----- ..., . ..... ___.,_

Fruth Pharmacy

··-·-

~·

-

Bank

~49-2210

Pomeroy, Ohio .

her .
Funeral Home_

Middlep.ort

itiii-

.-Phar-macY .

.

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The Daily Sentinel

992-6687
Pom
·o hio

Midd

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City &amp; State:·--------,--------,---------~

.....

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s): _ _ _ _ _ _·--~----''--------'-----'---

vans@ frognet.net

Middleport, Ohio

r

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: .

. 740-985-4349

Middleport, Ohio

992-2635 '

-Attorneys
992-5132

r

Pictures must ·· be In by
Thursday July 8th, 2004.
Pictures can be picked up after
July 19th, 2004. •

-

Transitions For Youth

992-6611

.&amp;Jewelrv

••"

111 Coult Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769'
------------ .. -------- -·- -'·""----------------------,

We're looking for quality
and loving famll!es with
gentle guidance, patience
and a safe environment
if you are single or
married and at least 21,
gjve us a call or email for
'
more info. ·
·

Crow&amp;Crow

'•-•

The Daily Sentinel

Do you have room in your
heart and home for a ·
child? .

Valley Lumber&amp;.Supply

Ingels Furniture

Syracuse

992•6333

. Farmers Bank
·"Your Bank For Life"
PtllllfiV . 111111a11s · TUHirs Plllll 11111

992·2136 446-2265

____

..-:,_
----~--

· til

681-3161

JJIItll

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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

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Friday, July 2,

INSIDE
Williams reaches Wimbledon finals, Page 82
MLB boxscores and standings, Page·B4
Indians sneak past Tigers, Page B8

2004

Players u·se computer for chance
at record Mega Millions jac.kp~t .
' BY JOE MILICIA

eWsChannel

ASS OCIATED PRESS WRITER• •

--~-------

BROOK PARK (AP) _soJ11e people. use 'birthday~ .
or an myersanes to ptck lottery numbers. but truck dnver Tim Lombardy plays a
number he saw on a State
Highway, Patrol · car I 0
years ago, .
He hopes that someday it
will make him rjch, like
Fnday mght, .w hen numbers
are drawn · tn the record
$290 )ilillion Mega Millions .
jackpo t.
Most players taking a
shot at lottery jackpots truly
trust Lady Luck. According
Ohio
Lottery
to .
Commi ss ion
data.
the
majority fet the computer"
pick their numbers for jackpot;s.
Computers and )luman s
are picking and playing
Mega Millions numbers at a
rapid rate this week.
Sales for the multi-state
lollery Thursday afternoon
Friday,.July 2
accumulations of 0.13 inches · Temperatures will drop from
were $3,575 a minute or
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
for
this
. afternoon . · 81 early this evening to 74.
$214,000 an 'hour in Ohio ·
It's going to be a humid Temperatures · ·will
hold Winds will be 5 MPH from
alone, said lottery commismorning . There· is a · slim steady around 83 with today's the east turning • from the
sion spokeswoman Mardefe
chance that it could rain. high of 85 &lt;xcurrin~S arounc,! . south as ' the evening proCohen.
Temperatures will rise from l :OOpm. \\it Qd s wtll be ) • gre\ses.
The Ohio Lottery expects
71' to 83 by late. this morning. ~PH from t~e no~hwe s t
Ovemight (1 a.m.-6 a.m.)
sales
· of $12 million for
Skies will range from partly turmng tr~m t~ e east as tj1e
It will cm\linue 10 be humid
Friday's drawing, she said.
cloudy to cloudy with 5 MPH afternoon progresses.
and cloudy. There is a slight
In
comparison. sales for an
winds from the north turning · Eve11ing (7 p.m.·Mid1iigltt)
from the northwest as the , It wiU continue to be humid chahce we could see some rain . . $85 million jackpot in
February were $2.2 million .
and cloudy. EX:pect nothing. . Temperaturt;s wtll linger at 70
tnorning progres~es.
Afternoon (I p.m.-6 p:nt.) mor~ thim .il passing shower. wtth today's low of 68 occurFor many lottery players,
. Humid and cloudy after- The . rainfall is expected to ~1g around 6:00am. Wtnds
· convenience . is the reason
noon. Light rain is expected. end around 7:00pm with total wtll be 5 MPH from the southThe rain is predicted to start accumulations for this event west turning from the east as
pear 3:00pm. Ant.icipate 'fain near · 0.14
inches. the ovemight ])rogresses.
-·

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Rockwell
Gannett - 83.70
. - 37.45
General Electric - 32.01
Sears - 37.74
GKNLY - 4.75
SBC - 24.14
Harley David'soll - 62 ~24
AT&amp;T - 14.59
Kmart - 74.73
USB ---:. 27.62
Kroger 18.00
Wendy's - 34.81
Ltd - 18.78
Wai-Mart - 51 .75
NSC - 25.70 ·
Oak Hill Financial - 32.03 Worthington - 2°· 06
OVBC _ 33.00
,Daily stock . reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes··· bf
Peop.les· - 25.97
the previous day's transacPepsico .- 53.55
tions, provided by Smith
Premier .- . 9.72
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Rocky Boots - 23.05
RD Shell - 51.61
Gallipolis.

ACI- 36.27
A~P -. 31.59
l'kzo - 36.93
~shland Inc. 52.81
BBT- 36~62
14.13
Bob Evans - 27.15
BorgWarner - 42:38
City Holding - 30.94
Champion - 4 .09 .
Charming Shops - 8.79
Col- 33.62
DuPont - 43.88
. DG -19.32
Federal Mogul - .285

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ATHENS- Meigs.County
Post 128 missed out on a lot
of prime opportunities in .one
ga me Thursday. but · took
plemy of advantage of them
in another.
Oii the first day of action at
. the Athens American Legion
Post 21 .Fourth of July
• Baseball Classic, M.eigs fell
· to Cincinnati Post 72, 6-5, in
eight innings at Rannow
Field at Athens High School
The Post 128 squad then
bounced back to pound
Mentor Post 352, 11-1, in
five- inning ~ at Dalton Field.
It was a big day at the plate
for Meigs' Ken Amsbary as
he went got on base every
BATON . ROUGE , La .
time
he came up to bat. He
(AP) - LSU is looking to
ended th!'! day going ·6-for-6
fill the only hole left in its
with three walks, two triples,
men's basketball schedule
a
double and three RBls.
with Ohio State.
In the win over Mentor (5"Ohio State is a team
17), Chris Brown threw only
we ' re reul close to getting a
41
pitches to finish off the
game with at home," coach
northern
Ohio team in quick
John Brady said. "That's the
fash ion.
(game) we're going to purBrown recorded a pair of .
s'ue until it either fa ll s
strikeouts,
while' throwing a
through or we get it done."
three-h
itter
and giving up no
The date LSU is trying to
walks.
,
fill is Ja'n : 15 , a Saturday
.
The
game
started
out. with
home date I 0 days atter tl1e
Meigs
colleding
fou
r
straight
2005
So uth eastern
hit
s
to
lead
off
the
first
Conference season begins
inning. in~l~din g Amsbary\
on Jan. 5. The Tigers are ·
-triple.
He later scored on a
. tentatively sc heduled to
base
hit
by Michael Warren·.
have Jan. 5 and Jan . 15 us
· Warren
went
3-forA
the two open dates in their
again
st
Mentor
with
a
three·SEC slate.
Meigs' starting pitcher Michael Davis sets to release the ball to a Cincinnati Post 72 batter with a runner 6n second base.
Brady said he wanted to
Piease see Meigs, Bl
Meigs lost to Cincinnati, 6-5 , in eight innings. '(Brad ·sherman)
fill those dates with quality ·
,opponents. LSU travels to
Salt Lake City to face Utah
on Jan. 3: ·

. Days Until

High School
Football
Season!!!

LSU hopes to
add Buckeyes

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funded through rebates provided by participating drug
makers and the $1 fee that
recipients pay for each prescription filled, Allen said.
Envision will receive $1
per transaction for .the first I
million; 95 cents each for
the · next 4' million and 80
cents for each transaction
after that. The contract runs
through July 2010, but transaction fees will be renegotiated in July 2008, the
department said.
'

CLEVELAND (AP) The s ·an Diego Padre s
thought enou gh of Luke
Jackson's baseball ~ kills that
they cons idered dnifting the
6.-foot-7 left' hander last
month .
In the end, they passed.
The Cleveland Cavaliers
didn ' t let Jackson slip by.
· Jackson signed a threeyear contract Thursday with
. the Cavaliers, who selecteCI
the former Oregon star with
the lOth overall pick in last
week 's NBA dralt.
"He 's going to help us,.".
Cavs coac!J Paul Silas said.
"I expect he's going to play
· right away. If he can shoot.
he' ll play."
·
Financial
details
of
Jackson's deal ·were not
released, but under terms of
the NBA's coll ective bargain"ing agreeinent, Jackson
was in line 'to sign for three
years at $6.37 million.
The Cavs see Jackson as
an answer to their outside
shooting woes. They .we{e .
the NBA's worst 3-point
shooting team .last season
· and figure Jackson can help . .
He made 44 percent (73Cincinnati Reds pitcher Jose Acevedo sits in the dugout after th ~y lost to the New York .
for- 166) of hi s 3s in his
Mets, 7,6, Thursday in Cincil)nati. Acevedo was the lpsing pitcher, giving up fouJ runs in
senior season with the
. seven innings. (AP)
~
Ducks, aild inade 40 percent
of his long-range shots during h~ college career.

Syracuse .downs
Clippers, 4-2
'\ COLUMBUS (AP) - Jeff
homered
and
Guiel ·
Guillermo Quiroz hit a key
two-run double--iii help' the
Syracuse SkyChiefs beat the
Columbus Clippers 4-2
Thursday night i'h the
· International· League.
Syracuse starter Ryan
Glynn (3-2) allowed a run
on three hits in six innings ·
and combined' with three
relievers on a four-hitter.
Kevin Frederick got the
final five outs for his third
save.
.·The SkyChiefs tied the
score 1- I in the fifth on
Guiel's sixth homer this sea. son and took the lead with
three runs •in the sixth. Gabe
Gros,s' RBI si.ngle made it 2· ·
I, and Quiroz added a tworun double for a three-run
lead.
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BY BUTcH CooPER
bcooper@mydailytribu ne.com

Jackson signs
with Cavaliers·

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Legislature when it ·authorized the program, said Jon
Allen,
department
spokesman.
The program,' known as
Ohio's Best Rx, .could provide discounts to as many as
1.7 million Ohioans . Those
covered would include people 60 and older and those
at or below 250 percent of
the federal poverty level about $22.450 for an individual or $46,000 for a family of four.
Once the program is fully
implemented , it . will be

.

www.mydailysentlnel.com
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Aurora firm gets contract for
state's prescription drug ·pro.g~am
&lt;;:OLUMBU'S (AP) - A
•
!lOrtheilst Ohio company got
the contract to administer
ihe state's prescription ,drug
progrwn fllr elderly and lowincome residents, the Ohio
· Department of Job and
Services
said
Family
Thursday.
Envision Pharmac.eutical
Services of Aurora beat out
!hree other vendors for the
contract. The company will
be paid $239,000 to start the
program and will collect
transaction fees from $10
million appropriat~d by the

Meigs splits at Athens'
classic ·
.

Yo..,_r .source f~r n~s on the Net _
' \ "?

Friday, July 2, 2004

•

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they let the computer pick she said.
•
their numbers.
Lombardy, the 47-ycar"l don ' t have the time." old Cleveland truck driver,
said Melvin Walker, a secu· spots other numbers during
rity guard at a downtown hi s travels - 'addres~es. ·
Co lumbu s pharmacy who serial numbers on trucks plunked down S l Thursdity. and plays them .
"One ticket. th&lt;it's all it
He uses some other
takes," he said .
strate gies to win it big;
James Johnson. a 63 cyear- During his travels around
old retiree from Dayton·. the state, .he stops at the lotwho pla.ys Mega Millions tery retailers that . are the
regularl y. sa id he: s .won most "lucky." like the
some money with the auto- Smith &amp; Snow Shell· gas
matic· option. l-Ie said he station in Brook Park .
might' us well leave it to ' It has a reputation for
chance.
· selling winning tickets for
''I don't think you can s·uper Lotto, Buckeye 5 and
figure it out anyway." he the Kicker but has yet to
said.
have a Mega ·Millions winIt's the same story at all ner.
five Columbus locutions of
The Shell station is the
gift shop Nielsen's Stores.
top lottery outlet in the ·state
"Very few ' of. them mess, with nearly $4 million sales '
around to pick out their last fiscal year about
own numbers," said manag- . twi_s:e what the second-place
er Dawn Marshall , noting retailer sold.
•
that more people pick their
Lombardy said he spends
own numbers · for the Ohio too much on · the lottery und
Louery 's Super Lotto game. has · never won anything
Marshall uses the auto- other th~n small prizes but
matic option.
is determined to keep play'
"If my higher power ing,
wants ·me to have the
"'You gotta be in the gamy
money. he' ll put the num- to have a chance," he ~aid.·
bers on the machine or the
Mega Millions tickets are
ticket," .~he said.
so ld in Ohio, Michigan,
But clerk Ida Boyer sticks Georgia, Illinois, Maryland,
to her strategy of playing Massachusetts, New Jersey,
the same numbers based ori · New York, Texas, Virginia
family birthdays.
and .Washington.
"The}''re my kids and my
The
previous
Mega
grandkids - and they're . Millions record was $239
going to bring me money." million in February.

Local Stocks

Bl

";fhe Daily Sentinel

I

-

.Boyages tries.to
sbow .program
still functioning
\

BY RusTY MILLER
Assoc1ated Press

t hem se'lves.
"I've
been in
COLUMBUS - Athletic
I h i s
director Andy Geiger cont inbusiness
ues to- field calls. interview
for
20
· candidates anu confer with ·
an informal search comn1it- now,
rs
Boyages Y e asaid
tee about Ohio State's next Thursda y.
"I've
been
through ·other transitions: I
men's basket ball coach .
A few hundred ya rds away, cou ld tell v·ou horror stories
past ' the murky waters of the abo Lit wh;\t happel)s in the
Olentangy Ri ve r and fi ve interim _ whether it 's a
lanes ~f blacktop. the busi - week or three weeks- how
ness ol basketball. :o!'llnues brutall y oad things can get.
for tntenm co &lt;~ c h Rtck , That's why from the very
Boy ~ge.s at Value Ctty beg inning. we tried to be on
Arena .
top of Jhings."
. Boyages , and two other
So Boyages . LaMonta
asststant coache, . . lett to Stone and Monte Mathi s
handle 'n;atters . 111 the wake . continue to ·hit the phones to
ot Jtm 0 Bnen ' sudden ftr- check in wiih recrui ts. As
111g on June 8.• are trytng 10 was the case before O'Brien
be ~pbeat and profcssto na l was fired for giving a recruit
even . as they rematn app~e- $ti.OOO in 1999, !'hey are
··
hen Sive ab~ut what ltcs
abead for . the Buckeyes and
Please see Boyages, Bl

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Gordon takes
Mets ·hold off Reds.· third straight po~e

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•.. lt .s not like. we're
BY Joe KAY
facing some guy who's
Associate.d Pre5;5
not very good,'" said
Adam Dunn, who dou. CINCINNATI - AI Leiter showed the
bled twice and hi i a
Cincinnati Reds a few new 'things.
solo homer in the
Leiter pitched . seven shutout inn_ings, ninth. '" He's one of the best pitchers in the
Shane Spe~cer htt the m_os~ emphatic of league. and has been for some time.''
Leiter left the game with a 6-0 lt:ad and
New · York ~ four homers, and the Mets
held on for a. 7-6 Victory Thursda)'..
_watched iL llJ:'arly evaporate.
The Reel's ~e m w baiters to the plate for
Facmg a ltneup 11_1tsstng Ken ?nffey J.r.
and ~ea~ CaseY., Lett~r (4-2) got to us_e hts five runs in the eighth. Dunn 's run-scoring
cut fast~all 'llgamst hitters who ha':e rarely double off Ri'*y Botta.lico broke up the
fa7,ed htm. He gave up only tWo htts.
shutout. ·
·
My cutter was w~rkt~~· ~nd I .get a lot
·Braden Looper relieved · with two outs
of groundballs when tt ts, satd Lette~: who .and gave up a bloop RBI single to pinchwalked two and struck out four. Plu~~ hitter . Ken Griffey Jr. and a ·run-scoring
there are a lot of guys there that I ha"en t single by Javier Valentin, cutting it to 6-5 .
fa7,ed ,
. Looper got out of the inning, and Jason
yo~ can tell them what an 88 mph cu~- Phillips doubled home another Mets run in
ter IS \!ke, but unul they face tt, they don t the ninth . It turned out tQ be _pivotal when
~ Dunn hit his ' 24th homer wtth lWO outs .
know.
,
Now •. they all know why he s been so Looper then got Wily Mo Pena on a
g~. smce ;etu.rmng from shoulder ten-, gro under," clinching his 15th save m 17
dtntfis that stdeltned htm m May. The left- chances
hander is 3·0 with a 1.70 ERA since com·
ing off the disabled list. ·
c
PleittH s..- Reds. Bl

BY JENNA fRYER

Associated Press
DAYTONA BEACH: ' FI;t.
- Jeff Gordon had a hunch
·· .his Hendrick Motorsports
team had closed the gap on
Dale Earnhardt Inc.'s domi-

S~~d~a~aytona Intern~t~011 '!1

Hi s i~tuition prnved correct
Thursday mght, when he won .
the pole for the Pepst 400. hts
th1rd stratght ~n the NASCAR
· Nextel Cuf ctrcutt.
Gordon s lap ~~ 188 .659
mph bested DEI · Michael
Waltnp, who qualified second
·rch • lt
to put a patr o
e' ro e s on
the fro nt row. ~twas the fourth
· pole of ~e season and 50th of
Gordon s career. .
.
"Thts weekend .ts workmg
out ..really awesome for us so
tar. satd Gordon. who also
had the fa stest practice Sfll!ed.

•

"For the first time I felt like
the car was rea II y good from
the minute we unloaded it and
the Hendrick .power has been
strong."
Waltrip, · a
three-time
Daytona winner. ran a lap at
188.620 as the first car to
attempt 10 qualify. Although
he didn't know who would

~~~ct~~~ c~~~;~~/OTe,

he
"Yow never know where it's
going to come from," Waltrip
said. "It 's a battle and the
bombs are coming from every
which way every week. But
we seem to be consistently
good and d
J ff"
,
sooese.
Ricky Rudd qualified third
and Dale Jarrett fourth in a
pair of Fords \hat use engine~
from the Jack Roush-Roben
Yates 'partnership.
Daytona 500 winner Dale
.·
Please see_,Gordon, 82
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Page B2 • The Daily SentinE:l

Friday, July 2,

www .mydailysentinel.com

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Williams, Sharap~va
.reach Wimbledon final

Gordon

..

NASCAR - Nextel Cup
"Pepsi 400

from Page 81

Lineup

Earnhardt Jr. was fifth, Joe . Nemechek sixth
and Scott Riggs seventh. Ward Burton. Elliott
WIMBLEQON, England become. at 17. the ttiird- born in Siberia. began playing Sadler and defending rae~ champion Greg
Wi,mbledon tennis at 4. and entered Nick Bitlle completed the top l 0.
(AP) - Serena Williams· younge;t
,A. tier qualifying was over, NASCAR disalrackei was cracked. Not her .women's · tinalist in history. Bo)lettieri 's . Tennis Academy
lowed
Sadler's speed because both rear quar·Davenport ,•. 2H. said tbis 1s in Florida at 9.
...
• will .
terpanels
on his No. 38 Ford were too l,ow. It
After all she's been through prQbably her last Wimbledon.
Coim:u'lentally. Sharitpova
"1 never expected it to hap- (who righted her game after a moved him back to the 39th starting posnion,
the past 12 months. the
heartache and knee surgery pen so early jn my life;·. No. , 52-minute rain delay) and while Biftle moved into ninth and Terry
and uneven play, Williams 13 Sharapova said.
.
Williams each .rallied after · Labonte claimed the final s'pot in the top I0.
The top IDe .::onslsted of seven Chevrolets
wasn't about to let a big
She began the day by wprk- trailing by a set and 3-l in the
deficit, determined foe or bro- ing on a sociology essay second. And whil11 Sharapova and three Fords. The highest qualifying Do9ge
was rookie Brendan Gaughan in 12th.
k~n equipment sidetrack her . toward her high school degree. reached her tirst Grand Slam
Earnhardt; w~o won this race in 200 I and
bid for a third straight Now she has until Saturday to final in her seventh such tourstudy Williams. who won their nament. Williams 1s in h&lt;:r . has six victories in the last 12 restrictor-plate
Wimbledon title.
Down a set and a break to only encounter in straight sets eighth major title match - but races. shouldn't need much time to hook up
No. 4.Amelie Mautesmo in a at Key Biscayne. Fla .. . in 'only_ second against someone with Waltrip after the start . Waltrip expects .the
rollicking semitinal Thursday. March. · ·
other than older sister Venus. a two DEl cars will push each other in an
attempt to give the company its third victory in
Faqs witnessed two ten-i fic second-round loser.
Williams reacted to a miscue
" It 's going to be different,'' this race in the last four years.
by spiking her racket to the v.omen's semit1nals Thursday.
"We understand what you have to do to be
turf. Playing with damaged a welcome change from the . said Williams. who was 17
suj:cessful
and We'll work hard at doing that
goods for thret; points. lackluster and lopsi'ded Hench when she won the tirst.of her ·
Williams won then1 all. spark- Open semis ;md tina!. It would six majors by defeating Saturday night." Waltrip said.
Gordon, who domi1!ated _in his victory last
ing her comeback fora6-7 (4), be a treat if there's similar Martina Hingis at the U.S.
week
at Sonoma. Calif., by winnmg the pole,
drama Friday. when No·. I Open.
7-5, 6-4 victory.
the
race
and leading every practice session,
"1 thOught, 'I could be on Roger Federer meets No. l 0 · The last came with a victory
my way home if I don't Sebastien Grosjean. and No. 2 over Venu s at Wimbledon a will be seeking consecutive victories for the
change fast.' But I kept tight- Andy Roddick faces 63rd- year ago. That was also''the last 20th time in his career.
He won the pole at Michigan three weeks
ing. That's alii really had, was ranked Mario AnCH.: in the time the entire family gathered
together: The Williams' half- ago and dominated the early pan of the race
fight," Williams .s.aH.f: ''I don't men 's tina! four.
Federer has won 12 straight sister ,Yet'u nde was shot to before his engine blew up and knocked·him out
give up. I mean. things can't
of the event.
always go your way, in gener· matches at Wimbledon; death 2 l/2 months later. ·
'
Gordon already has a restrictor-platc victory
Serena had knee surgery
al, not just on the coun, but in Williams iv+p1'o 20, barely.
"We boTh.. were down to the Aug . I,·missing eight months. this year, winning at Talladega Superspeedway
life ."
It was wonderful theater, nitty gritty. I mean, 2 l /2 hours At her tirst major back, the in April. He's never won two plate races in the
filled with brilliant shotmak- later, we were still fighting," French Open, she" and Venus same .season and will try ·to change that
iilg, momentum shifts, some said Willi;u:ns, who wasrf' t lost in the quarterfinals, send- Saturday ni15ht.
"This team is on a roll ri~ht now," he said: "I
Iterves. fis~ pumpsoand yells, fazed when Mauresmo took a ing Serena's ranking out of the
hope
we can hang on to it. '
.
medical timeout to have her top I0 for the time in five
laughs and frowns.
To
beat
the
DEI
duo,
Gordon
will
need help
So. too, was the first semifi- back massaged. "I don 't think years.
"It ·hasn 't been an easy road from some of his Hendrick Motorsports teamnal. Maria Sharapova beat she broke mentally. I don't
back," she said. "I really was mates. The closest to him on the starting grid is
1999 champion •Lindsay think I broke mentally."
.Labopte, in lOth. Rookie Brian Vickers was
Davenpon 2-6, 7-6 (5), 6-1 to
Nor did Sharapova, who was struggling a lot."
· 14th and Jimmie Johnson, who holds a 27point lead over Earnhardt in the series standfield ing, forced the next J&gt;hree Amsbary connected on an ings, was 19th.
Tony Stewart qualified 18th ~nd many combatters out to end the game.
intield hit back to the secend
petitors
felt the former series champion was
The win helped keep Meigs baseman scoring both to.give ,
fortunate to be in the field after avoiding a susin the running for a tourna- Meigs the lead.
·from Page 81
pension
for hittirig Vickers last week. Stewart,
Warren was ·3-for-4 against
ment seeding ·&lt;IS the top four
teams in each division (there Cinciljnati (16-7), while
run homer in the . fourth are five teams in each divi- Luke Haislop went 2-for-4
mnmg.
along with Amsbary's 4-for-4
earn playoff spots.
· In addition for Meigs ( 15- sion)
Meigs
nearly
made
it
two
showing.
7), Angelo· Hardy was 3-for-3 wins Thursday as they led
Cincinnati lied it in the bot'with a sacrifice fly in the sec- Cincinnati 5-4 going into· the tom
half of the sixth on a sinfrom Page 81
ond, while Doug Dill and bottom of the eighth. Post 72, gle by Tim Schuben scoring
!
Andy Parsons were each 2- though, took advan!age of a Derek Terral!, which helped
for-3 .
Spencer
hit
a
three-run
homer
in
the
.sixth
pair of walks to begin play in send the game into extra
Meigs added three ru.ns 111 their half of the eighth.
off Jose Acevedo (4-7). Eric Valent, Jose
inntngs. •
~
'the second and five more in
Pat Ray and Tim ·Murphy
In the top of the eighth, Reyes and Richard Hidalgo added solo shots
the fourth, capped off by were walked by Meigs ' Amsbary tripled wit!t two as New York matched its season high for
Warren's homer, bui it was in starter Michael Davis, who outs and scored when Wan-en .homers in a game. •
·
the fifth when Meigs finally pitched solid ball up to that doubled to left field as Meigs.
The Mets topk two of three in the series,
finished off Mentor.
point. Davis allowed only But, Cincinnati bounced back then headed home for a rematch with the
Josh .Eddy doubled and two
Yankees. The Mets dropped two of three at
earned runs and eight to snatch &lt;IWllY the win.
scored on a base hit by Terry hits through seven.
Yankee Stadium last weekeQd .
Meig .~ is in third place in
Durst. Later in the inning,
Leiter had his way with a lineup missing
Cincinnati then loaded the the National Division with its
after Durst was called out at bases
Griffey
and Casey, both hamper~d by sore
on a base hit by· pitch one win. Zanesville won
the plate tryrng to score,
legs.
Casey,
one of the NL's top hitters all
Wade Roush before twice to take the early lead,
Hardy singled, stole secondo . hiller
Ryan Gregory drove in the including a 5-4 win over season, missed the .series. Griffey was limitand third and came home on game
tying and winning-run s Portsmouth ,along with the ed. to two pinch-hit singles.
a Mentor error.
It might not have mattered much ·even if
a single to right.
win over Mentor. Cincinnat.i
Meigs led by I0 at that with
Meigs left II base runners and P-ortsmouth each only they were in the lineup. Leiter was that good
point.
·
against the Reds.
against Cincinnati, played one game Thursday.
Mentor, though, who lost to stranded
nine of them in scoring posiMeigs will face Ponsmouth
Zanesville Il-l in five tion,
at noon today at Dalton Field
innings in an earlier. game,
prior to a 3 p·. m. contest
Meig~ trail~,d 3-2 in the top
tried to keep the game alive , of the SIXth when Hardy sm- against
Zanesville
at
as Mark Gibson and Matt gled and Ross Well was Alexander High School.
Porter led off the bottom of walked. With the two runners
Tournament. play is schedthe fifth with singles.
on
second
and
third,
uled
to begin Saturday.
BrQwn, with some solid

Meigs

Reds

I

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was more than
just O' Brien's lieutenant; he
was also hi s best friend. The
Wakefield
, Mass., native
from Page 81
worked under 0 ' Brien for
three years at 'Boston
making plans to visit AAU College. then .moved to
tournaments, · clinics and Columbus ·when O' Brien.
camps tO' let high school took the Ohio State J·ob in
underclassmen know that
Ohio State· basketball is still 1998 · After three years. he
·left to ·become · 'the head
w-11·
&amp; M
functioning.
h
They still. report for work &lt;:oac ' at 1 Jam
ary.
He returned to Ohio State 15
every day, monitoring the months ago _ at the urging
Buckeyes'• current players ·of O' Brien and Geiger_ to
while staving off their own assume his old J·ob.
self-doubts.
If he feels betrayed by the
Boyages, 42 , remains" a
ugly scandal that cost
candidate to replace the man 0' Brien his J.ob.. Boy ages
whom he assisted for I0 sea- doesn' t show it.
sons. GeigeF ' promised
After Geiger chose him as
Boy~ges that he would be interim head coach, howevco~stder~d for the JOb. _._er, Boyages quickly separatGetger d1d not Teturn tele- ed W.mself from O'Brien.
phone messages Thur'sd&lt;!Y· , "i had no knowledge of
but he has rep~rt~dly spoken any of this," he said of the
to . Vanderbtlt s . Kevm li st of alleged NCAA violaS~alhngs , Wilhs Wils~n of tions being invrstigated.
~~~e, Los. Angeles Lakers
Team captain Terence
asststant Jtm Cleamons and Dials said Boyages could
Penn cpa~h Fran Dunphy provide a seamless transi:about the JOb.
.
lion if he were picked to
. Alread_y 23 days mto the replace O'Brien. ,
~arch (II took 16 . days to
"He has been with coach
btre football coach Jim O'Brien he knows the sxs-Tresselm 2001-r,ctr-may be a- tern : he-'k now s us.:-personalfe"! more . days before ly," Dials said. "He ·would
Getgerrecommends a c~nd1- be a great fit for us."
date to Ohto State Pre.stdent
Boyages believe~ that
Karen Holbroo~, who ts c11r-. ·Geiger will give him an
re~tly ~m ~~catt~n.
opportunity}o make liis.case
~ thmk 11 s gOlD)! to take a for tht; job.
"Mv sen.;e is that everywhtle }or evetrthing to get
done, _ Oh~o
Sta~e thinls been very positive,"'
spokesman Steve Snapp s;ud be said oJ the response to his
Thursday.
. ·
·· interim work.
, In t.he meantime, Boyages
In the meantime, the
~~ try,mg to keep thmgs run- · coa~hes watch over their
ntDIII~ the ~ffice. ~e checks flock . The three incoming
In i:liuly , wtth Getg~r and freshmen ate enrolled in
aasoclate at~I~tlc dtrector summer classes at Ohio
Mlechelle W~lll$, who over· $tate. The current playel'li
sees the men s program.
are attending classes. going

Boyages

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~oyage s

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page BJ

www.mydailysentinel.co m

2004

through weightl!fting and
conditioning ~and playing
. pic~up games and in the
Sum)ller
Worthington ,
League. No one has asked
out of their scholarsl)ip to
escape the Buckeyes program.
The coaches are prepared
to evaluate high school a:nd
junior college players from
July 8-17, followed by
another from I0-ctay'· window from July 22-31.
Boyage~ still stunned
by his boss' abrupt dismissal
- is holding things together. He gives pep talks to
players, incoming freshmen,
recruits and even his fellow
coaches. Stone and Mathis
have been at Ohio State jus!
two and thre~ years, respectively, so it is unlikely they
will be retained. So Boyages
encourages them to pursue
job opportunities after·
they 've completed their
Oh10 State duties .
-.
· "The best to help Qhio
State and the players and the
program is to set the table as
best we can for continuity,"
Boyages said. "We' re still
beipg paid by thomiversityc
It' s profe ssionalism. What
happened, happer.ed. By the
next mor11ing, you've got to
move forward. "
Just as he faces questions
at work, he also encounters
them at home.
"I've got three daughters
- 7, 6 and 4 years old," he
said slowly. "We talked a little bit . about the chain of
events that led to this . The
older two had a coup!~ of
questions,'' .
His voice trailed off. He
didn't have any answtrs for
them, anymore than he bas
1hem for· himself. ·
•

'

By The Associated Prest
Thursday 's qualifying; race Saturday

AI Daytona International Speedway
Daytona, F'la.
Race distance : 400 miles, 160 laps
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (24) Jeff Gordon. Chevrolet , 188 659 mph.
2. (15) M1chae1Wat1r1p, Chevrolet. 188 620
3. (21) A1cky Rudd , Ford, 188.426.
4. (88) Dale Jarrett. Ford . 188.328.
5. (8) Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet . 187 .939
6. (01) Joe Nemechek. Chevrolet. 187 907 ..
7. (10) Scott A1ggs. C.he.vrolet. 187 868 .
'8 (0) Ward Burton, Chevrolet 187.750.
9. (16) Greg Biffle , Ford, 187 641 .
10 (5) Tprry Labonte, Chevrolet, 187 149.
, 11, (29) Kevm Harv1ck. Chevrolet, 187 110.,.
12 (77) Brendan Gaughan, Dodge , 187 001
13. (12) Ryan Newman . Dodge, 186.994
14. (25) Bnan V1ckers, Chevrolet. 186 966.
15. ( 18) Bobby Labonte . Chevrolet. 186.908 .
16. (19) Jeremy Mayfield , Dodge, 186 869 . ·
17. (20) Tony Stewart. Chevrolet . 186.858.
18. (1) John Andre1t1 , Chevrolet. 186.834 .
19 (48) Jimmie Johnson , Chevrolet , 186.676 .
20 (33) Kerry Earnhardt, Chevrole t. 186 606.
21 . (6) Mark Martin, Ford , 186 567
"
22. (4p) Sterling Marlin . Dodge , 186 528,
23 (30) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet 186 490 ·
....-- -~24. (41) Casey Mears. Dodge, 186 474.
25. (31) Robby Gordon . Chevrolet , 186'447
26. (99) Jell Burton Ford, 186 401
27. (2) Rusty Wallace. Dodge, 166.374.
.
28. (09) Bobby Hamil to n :Jr., Dodge, 186 243.
29. (49) Ken Schrader. Dodg e. 186 181
30. (43) Jell Green, Dddge, 186. 147.
31 . (9) Kasey Kahne , Dodge. 186 073.
32 (42) Jamie McMurr.ay. Dodge, 186 039
33 (45) Kyle Petty, Dodge, 185 870
34 (98) Bill Elliott. Dodge , 185 797
35. (97) Kurt Busch, Ford, 185 755
36. (17) Matt Kenseth , Ford , 185.716
37. (22) Scott Wimmer, Dodge, 185.624 .
38. (32) R1cKy Craven , Chevrolet, 185.548 ...
39. (38) Elliott Sadler. Ford ProviSional.
40 (4) Jimmy Spencer. Chevrolet. ProviSIOnal ·
41 (50) Mike Wallace , Dodge, Provisional.
42. (96) larry Gunsefman ~ Ford , ProviSIOnal. .
43 (89) Morgan Shepherd , Dodge, Provisional

·

.. If you ltave a question or a comm!lnt, write:_ SCAR This Week, c,lo The Gaston Gazette, 80. Box 1893, Gaston1a, NC 28053

Rac'e: Pepsl'400
Where: Daytona !Beach. Fla.)
.International Speedway (2.5
mi.), 160 taps/400 m11es.
When: Saturday, July 3
.
last year's winner: Greg Bif·
fie
Qualllytng recol!l 8111 Ell1ott.
Ford , 210.364 mph, Feb. 9,
i987 .

Race record: Bobby Allison,
Mercury, 173.473 mph, July
4,1980.
last.week: Jeff Gordon gave
the NASCAR world a lesson
in perfection. His 'performance in the Dodge;save Mart
350 was so faultless that not were s1x cauttOQ S tn the race ,
even NASCAR s officials but only th ree for crashes
could figure out a way to But there was plenty of paint
mess things up. In fact. swapped between cars.

Failed to quality.

44 (37) Chad Blount, Dodge 185 540
45. (23)Tony Rames, Dodge. 185 422 .
46 . (94) Oemke Cope, Chevrolet, 185 311
47 . (04) Enc McCl ure, Chevrolet, 185 151 .
48 . (00) Kenny Wallace, Chevrolet. 185.052.
49. (72) K1 rk Shelmerdlne, Chevroletl&gt; 183.012.

.

fined $50,000 and dockeJ driver points, felt
that punishment was stiff enough.
''I'-m not sure I totally agree with the punishment," he said. "I know other people have disagreed and said I probably should have been ,
parked this week. "
Bill Elliott, driving a Dodge borrowed from
car owner Ray Evemham, qualitied 34th and
will make just his third start of the seasmt.
Again .
The ·left-hander has .a prominent place in
Reds history. His two-hitter beat them 5-0 in ·
a on&amp;-game playoff for the NL wild card in
1'.199, ending one of Cincinnati's most
enchanting seasons with a deep disappointment at Cinergy Field.
He's been nearly as tough on the Reds ever
since, a trend that continued in his first career
start at Cincinnati 's new ballpark. An injury
to 'his foot didn't even slow him.
D'Angelo Jimenez stepped on Leiter's
right fool'as he 'covered first on a grounder to
Valent, twlsting his ankle awkwardly. Leiter
fell to the ground and got up wincing, but
continued after a few warm ups. and pi)ched
out of .a scoring threat.
Since returning on June I from his shoulder prbblems, Leiter has allowed only 21 hits
and seven runs in six starts, a huge boost for
a rotation that is one of the majors ' best so
far.

•

CASH?

top
his test siK
)•(!108$ ollmhin• from 30th to
cup points
I be ·a prime con-

.

lb 2003.

•

. Jo"Jimmle Johnson maintained
the points lead at a track where
~e had never .done well in the
put. Another challenge wilt
come at Daytona, however,
where 'Dale Ear,nhardt Jr. 1s the
man to beat.
•Jeff Gordon's slump IS qu1te obviouslyover. When you're handi·
capping the playoff race, It'S
hard to overJDok the man who
has won four championships.
Where Gordon 1s concerned, it
doesn't rr)atter that the system ·
has changed.
• Why do road races at lnf1neon
Raceway and Watk~ns Glen draw
so many more fans than other
races at 'those tracks? Part of
the reason IS the fact that stock·
car raCing has· become tha coun·
, try's preeminent form of motor·
. sports. but part of It is simply the
" ~ct t11at the ?tack cars are a b1t
unWieldy on road courses. l'ans
Jike io seem them slide around.
1&gt; Eemhardt Jr. took the blame for
·flnlshtng outside the top 10. The
- .,. problem, he said; wasn't the car.
. 'Iliad a better car. and I expect' ed to come back here.and im·
·:. prove on what we did last year,"
i' he, said. ·we did, but t didn't."
.'il" NASCAR officials did away with
'· 'free passes" on to the lead lap
.' · :• for one race. It wouldn't be a
bad Idea to get rid of that wei: !are program altogether.
• " WfriG' S'-HOT~-~
• AND,WHO' &amp;N&amp;T-r

•

.

Each Kit Contains the Following: .

Day -Ad:--~.

fl.

I

~

I''

Chevrolet. -125.094 mph,
July 7. 2001.
Last· week: Dodge dnver Ted
Musgra~e wo~ at the Milwau·
kee Mile m West All1s . Wrs.

.

NEXTEL CuP SERIES,

.
No. 43

.

v

CHEERIOS DoDGE

.I

E
R

. ''

s
u

Tony
Stewart

Green -comes~from one ofKentu,cky'~ rr)_ost prolific racing families
Changing tire compounds has ham- do that. It kind of hurts me iti the long
pered
the team; according to Green. · - run in a race because of that."
NASCAR This Week
''We used to run up against the wall,
•'
Contact Monte Dutton at
,
down
on the bottom and in the middle
Jeff Green is one of four racing
hmd48~8@peoplepc .com
brothers froth Owenslioro, Ky., a city of lhe race track at a lot of these
that also gave NASCAR three-lime race tracks. where we go," he said.
champion ·Darrelt Waltrip, Michael "For some r_eason, it' ha·s taken
that groove away from us. With
Waltrip and Jeremy Mayfield.
our
specifically, the tires
1\vo of the Green brothers, Jeff and wearteam,
out more, so from lap one
David, have won the Busch Series
to
75,
however long the run is,
championship.
Jeff, 41, is the only brother racing the pace is going to slow down
currently in the Nextel Cup Series. A more because the tires wear
27lh.pJace finish at lnfineon Raceway out. In my situation, everybody
on Sunday was the 141 st Cup race of lias been running more gear
his career. He has finished in the top and more ~!!r because the pace
slows down so much. ·
five in five of them but never finished
"We can 't ruJl....thai
•,
higher than second.
·
gear - as .
How did the Green brothers -Jeff, much
'David and Mark- become stock-car much as other
people - be'
) ,.
racers,
cause
of •. our
"I know exactly where it came motor package.
from," said Jeff. "When it rained in1 We've been reKentucky, we had gutters out in front
of our house. As young kids, when it ally working
hard to get
would rain, we. would ge'i popsicle that turned
sticks, eat the popsicle off of them, around so
then take a Sharpie and put numbers
on them and race them down the gut-, we can
ters.
"From day one, we were competitive with 'each other, especially growing up with three boys in one house.
My dad drag-raced, so we kind of
helped him as we were growing up. I
think all that stuff, when you have
that bred into you and you see that ·
day in and day out, you end up.with
a competitive nature, I think
that's where we got it from- my
· · dad."
Jeff Green has qualified
third twice and eighth twice
this year but has yet to fin·
ish higher than 15th in a
race. His car number, .43,
Jeff Green (right)
was made famous by
Is one of four
Richard Petty, but return• racing brothers
ing Petty Enterprises to
·from Owensboro, Ky. ·
prominence has been a diffi- .
cult proposition.
By Monte Dutton

s

Brian
v'ickers

"

. Tciny Stewart
vs. Brian Vickers

~

.Valley

No one. save perhaps Stewart.
· knows what ma.de h1m

m~d

at ViCk-

ers, but the 2002-charl'RIOn had to
be pu lled away after COnfrO'n(lng VICk·
ers at the end of the Dodge /Save
Mart 350. Vicker s thought S'tewarl
was com1ng over to ap'olo~IZe for

wrecking h1m during the race. Appar-.
· ently that just ma'de Stewart maoder.
NASCAR This Week's Monte
· Dutton gives his view: "A f1erce de·
s1re to win IS a reason Stewart 1s one
of NASCAR's mtngum g pers'onaiJtle-s.'
but now the f1re seem s to be burnmQ ·

out of control He has to learn t6
respons1b1 ltty fo~ h1s

take

act1on s ,

and stop bla{T11ng others for h1s prql&gt; .
lems"

Sweepstakes will pay
$250,000 to one lucky fan
Nextel announced a sweepstakes

that will award $250,00Q to une fan
who correctlyfo recasts the cham p,.
on of the''2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup
Senes. The "pnze w11t be awarded fol,

lowmg the Ford 400 1n H om~stea d ..
Fla., on Nov. 21 Belween July 1 and
Sept. 5, fans aged 18 and older can

· enter bY seleci1ng the'' dnver they
think will wm the cha mpionship. Fans
mar
enter
oniine
at

www.nextel.com/race' or thro ugh Nex·

tel

auth orized

ing a

phon~

representat ives by us- .,.
w1th Nextel onlme serv-

ice or at The Nextel. Expenence. the
interactive "fa n destmation· at m(!JOr

NASCAR e\lilnts.

,

•
Petty's 200th career win
came 20 years ago
. It's been 20 ye ar s smce R1charcl
Petty won for the 200th t1me 111 what

was then called the Flfecracker 400.
The race ended under caut10n. w1th
Pett~

edg1ng Cale Yarborough by 1nch·

es when. the two .ra ced !o the yellow
Se&lt;:·

nag. BuJ Yarborough. didn't f1n1sh
ond. He thought the race was over
and pulled down p1t road. The actual

&amp; Supply
Co.

'
• Available only with pur::hase of Garage Sale Adv••rti"Ome nt. - -J
"-1ut~t be picked up at our othcl!

$6.00 - is words o~ less
+ $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great
Advertising!

49al~ipoliu

Race r8,cord: Rtcky Hendrick,

second -pla ce flniShe r tha t day wa5:
Harry Gant.

- :-

. s12

JEFF GREEN

Race : O'Re1lly Auto Parts.
250
.
· Where : Kansas Speedway.
Kansas C1ty 11 5 m• j, 167
laps/ 250.5 m1les.
When: Saturday. Jury 3
Last year'nllnner. Jon Wood
Qualifying record· Chad
Chaffm. Chevrolet. 166.323
mph, 2003.

.

EASE THE
UEEZE!

• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sale Signs - 24" x 12'
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 216 Pricing Labels
• Inver/tory Sheet
• 4 M1n1-signs to be p'osted on bullptin ·
boards at laundromats. markets, etc.
• 1 Seven·step 1nstruction sheet. plus
"Seoets of How to Increase Profits at
a Garage Sale··
• 3 Mount1ng Materials
• 6 Multi-colored Balloons
• t Marker tor Signs

c

to be get. SiKteen win·
.,.'''"~" races are obviously preying ·
his mind, and he could use a
:. vlotory,, It's almost ]Ike he's tryhard, but he's ultimately
' res&gt;oonslble for his actions and,
,·.·n•~• to settl~ down.
.,. Robby Gordon had a wheel fly
,,' .off his car thre~t times In one
race. What a nightmare for the
. qrlv&amp;r who won ·hOth road races

·'

'

NASCAR offic ials were fairly Race: Wtnn Dixie 250
invisible. Which is the way of· Where Daytona (Beach. Fla.)
ftctals are supposed to De. International Speedway (2.5
-But the race was one g1gant1c mi.), 100 I?PS/250 m1ies. •
mess ... everywhere but at When:' Fnday. July 2
the fro"nt. Gordon, who has last year's winner · Dale
won more r9ad-course events Earnhardt Jr.
(8) than anyone else in the Qualllytng record: Tommy
history of major-league stock· H0 uston, Bu1ck. 194 389
car ra·c1ng, hadn 't won one mph.1987.
smce 2001, but he probably ,Race record: Geoffrey Bod·
~:;:au ld have won t his one ine. Chevrolet. 157.137
pul ling a tra1ler. He led all but mph . Feb 16, 1985.
18 taps . As such, the 'mad, last week: Chevro let driver
cap ant1cs ~the pie fights, Ron Hornaday Jr.' won at the
the free-for-a ils. the rhubarbs Milwaukee Mile 1n West AlliS.
-were all beh1nd h1m. There Wis.

555 Park St • Middleport

3 Day AcF

992-6611

$9.00 - 15 words or less

+ $6.00 Kit

$1 5. ·Gets
You Great
Advertising!

11Batlp tn:rtbune

~oint ~leasant 1\egister

. The Daily Sentinel

'

106 North Second Ave. •' Middleport,
OH
.
~

252 Upper River Rd.
.Gallipolis, O.H

Crow!s .Family Restaurant
Fmlu/'b;g K811tlid:;.Fried Cl!icken
228 !lbln SL .

Orife-1'1\ra WIJI(kn•

Pon,.roy, Ohio

�•

•

.,

•

•

•

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 2,

www.mydailyse n tinel.~om

'

Friday, July l, 2004

2 004

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

•

'

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MBaueta W7 5
WP-Mah~y
ab r hbl
abr hbl
San Dt.go
Adams
0 0 0 0 2 Cal.ee tl 41 2 2: Koskie 3b 4 o 0 0 j:!UIIl
U_rnp es-Home B II We lke First John
Houlton
Chloago
Loftoncr 4 0 0 o !Valdez l8 5
T- 32lA 25 159 (40120)
L.gtanberg
0 0 0 0 1
Knerko lb 4 0 0 0 THntsrc:t 4 0 0 0
H 15ehb9ck Secl)nd Wally Ba ll Th rd Laz Damon cl 501 0
' 7 6 6 ' 3
1
ab r hbl
ab rhbl
Blhorn2b 60 0 0 Ctuo2b 2121
2 0 0 0 0 1
WtesiCk
Tempe Bey
D az T ~ 2 42 A-35 966 (47 -447)
eieg10t1
51 2 0 Grd.ztn2b 5 o t a
Vlent1n '' 3 0 0 0 JJonesrl 4 D 1 0
DOruzdll 51 3 0 JaterSs
4 01 0 lnebnnk
Awandc! 4010 LeCroy dh 3 0 1 0
3 a 7 5 t 1
Athlatlcs 7. Angals 3
1 1 1 0 II.
-.t . .rtt sa 3 o o o CPttson cl 5 1 2 0 Hndrdo;L5~
Kaclet pr 0 0 0 D JaGbph 1000 p, ...
Fortunato
3 4 1 1 t 4
Crede3b 3000 Rstvlch dh 0 0 0 0
t amb2b 0100 SSosarl 5111
0 0 0 0
Phllllas
10.
Expos
5
0
4klend
Anaheim
Nf~on dh
.0 0 C1 TCark lb 5
2
ColOMe
10000 1
Burkec
3000 Cddyer ph 1 0 1 0
CBeltmcl 4224 Aoutl
211 t
ArlzoM
eb r h bl
eb fh bl
Ph lie
MAmrzll 6243 Fhertyph 1 0 1 1
Montreal
Mauer c
3010
TreMIHer
1 4 2 2 0 0'
Mmn rl 5 000 ,6,Amrz3b 4 01 t
FossumW26
6 4 3 ~ 2 3
Eckst
n
ss5120
Byrni:IScl
3
0
2
0
ab
r
hbi
Shlfeldrl3
4
000
ab
r
hbl
Vartek
c
5000
Punta 2b. 3 0 l 0
JoSosa
, 144422
lklwal 1b 40 00 DeLee1b 3 t 00
4 1 2 1
100002
Wlksnct 3 2 1 1 Rotmsss 4 220
M!ar I
6 0 0 0 ARdrgz 3 ss5 0 1 0 Oessens
Totata 31 2 4 2 Totlll 32 1 8 1 F1ggns3b302 0 K"'ty II
J'Vzcno 2b 4 0 0 Barrert c 4 1 1 1 Hendrk:kaon p tcl'led to 7 oa~ers 1n the 4ft1
VGreodh 501 t Httberg b 4 I 1 0 OCbere'Ss 2 1 2 1 Planco 2b 5 1 2 0 M~ty b 4t10 Matsutl 4010 Choate
1 100 02
Ensbrg 3b 4 0 2 0 ROn:lnz ss 3 0 2 1 HBP-bv UBat1ste (Fordy~~ WP-Fortuna
GAndsn ct 5 0 2 l Oyerl
3 11 2 Vd o2b #' 4122 BAbreurl 4 t 1 1 '\Yuk iiSJb JO 10 Crosby cl 1 0 0 Q SeNice
13
2 2 2
Chicago
200 000 000 .,_ _
2
Asmusc: 3 0 0 0 GodWin ph 1 0 0 0 to PS-Zaun
JG
!Ient
3000
Crasb~ ss 4 1 1 1
23
0 0 0
Ump re~ome MarJ!I; Weg(1er Flat Larry Mlnneeote
100 000 000 1 0Vnonrl !JOOO Karros dh 3 1 2 0 TBtsta 3b 3 0 0 1 Thoma tb 3 1 1 1 Cr~spo 2b 1 0 o 0 BWilllS dh cl6 0 0 0 Koplove$2
Munop o 0 0 0 REMttt ~s 0 0 0 0
Bur eH 5233
Aeesess 4 0 0 0 Posedac 4221
!Valdez pitched to 1 bauer n the 5th
OPtmroph 100 0 Pr10r p
2oqo Young Second Angel Hernandez Th rd Mike [i) P~hk: a go 2 LO'S-Ch1Cago 5 ~ nnaso Oun1an1b5 p 0 0 Durazo dh 1 0 0 0 CEvttll 4 000 [;)a8el3b4
220
EWisn2b 3 0 0 HBP--by FosaLim (G eene) WP-Lmebrlnk.
JAivarl
4000
Ia 7 28--Cal ee (22) CGuzman ( 13), Man
Everitt
Rddlngp 0 0 0 0 Merckrp 0 0 0 0
JMonac
4111
DM~erc
4
2
2
3
Seralfrt31i0
NJhrlSn b 4 0 0 0 Lbrlhai c ~ 1 3 4
lldewlcz (16) Cuddyer (131 HR.,...Calee (7)
lana ph
0 0 0 Frnswrp 0 0 0 0 T- 25 A- 14417(43969)
KopiOVJ\
4t2Q Mchelsd 3010
Tctala 46 41 0 3 Totala 47 511 5
SB-TPeru \2) Valentm (5) CS-CGuz BMolna IJh ~ 0 0 Scutao2b 4 0 0 Q EDazc
Wthersp 0 0 0 0 TWalkrph 1 0 0 0
Ump1res--Home J1m Re,.nolds F1rst Andy
AKndy2b
4
1
4
0
Germn3b
3
0
I
0
401
AFo~ p h
1000 Wollp
man (4)
~otal1 34 4 7 4 Total• 35 5 9 5
Me1s 7, Reds 6
McLmr 3b 1 0 0 0 ECIWftz ph 1 0 1 0
Botton
000 002 100 000 1 - 4 Flatc:har SecOfld T m We ke Th11d Gary
IP H AERBB SO
Totala J8 312 3 Totels 34 712 7 Carol! ph 1000.
New York
Clnclnnetl
New York
020 010 000 000 2 ....!&gt; 5 Caderstrcm T-2 33 A-22 631 (49 033)
Chi....
Houeton
000 001 030 0 4
eb r hbl
ab r hbf
GarlandW65
7 7 1 1 3 2
Toll ls 31 5 8 5~ Totals 311o1e 10 Two outs when wnn ng run scared
Chi cago
100 300 000 1 S
000 000 300 3
F\eyes2b 5 I 2 1 Freelcl
4010
E- Shelied (6), Crosby (1 l DP-Boston 2 .A~ ~aadars
MarteS4
2 1 0 0 0 2 Anaheim
No Otll&amp; when w nn1ng run scored
Oek!afld
001 104 011C 1 Monlraat
WnneiOIII
103 000 010 5 New Yo k 3 LCB-Bos on 9 New York 13
OP-Ch!Ca90 1 LOB-Housto(\ 7 ChiCago Matsui 56 5 1 1 0 JCastro 56 5 1 o 0
E-F
gg
ns
{9)
Hetteberg
(31
DP-Aniihalm
28-00rt z 2 (3 1) McCEirty (i) Ca1ro (7) BATIING-1Rodr1guaz DetrOit 384 Mo a
SantanaL6-5
8 3 ~ 2 2 212
Phlladelphle
106 t02 ODx - 10
7 28-6 gg10 (24 JV zca no {5) AO donaz fl'1auac 3 1 1 o OJmnz 2b sooo
2 L08-AnA.helm 14 Oak and 5 28- E-E01ez (1) DP-Morftr~al Ph1ladelph1a Flaherty {4/ ARod rlguaz (13} Posada ~22} BaH mol8 357 VGuerraro Anahe m 342
JPtl lpsc 1 0 1 1 DunnH
4232
Nalh!iln
1 1 0 0 11
(2) 38-Barl8tt (3) HA-CBeltran 2
AKenned~ (7) HA- JMoUna (2) Kielty (6)
WPenart 4 1 21
Floydtt
4
010
Ump res-Home Bnan Go men F1f'AI Dale
1 LOB-Monlleal 4 Ph• adelphia 10 28- 38--Ca ro 2) HA-MAan11rel 2 (22') Posada MRem1raz Boston 333 Hervey Kansas
SSosa (13) SB-Aiou {2) CS-Ensbe g(2
Dye (161 Crospy (11 ) OMll ar 2 {7) SB- 0Cabrera (11) EnCha11ez (B) Thome (16) {10) TCiark (6) SB-McCarly ~( 1) ARo
Btttcop
0000 LaRuac 4 1 1 {
Scot1 Second Ron Kulpa Th rd 8111 Mile
C ty 327 MYoung Te~aa 326 ASanchez
&amp;-PMunro Pno
Eckste
n
(7)
Z81l&amp;
tb
t 0 0 0
Hmmellb
3000
T-220A-21 127(45 423)
Bulre11 l 12) l ebeftka 115) HR...-W lk&amp;fson dr guez ( 18) 5-Reese
IP H A ERBBSO
Detroit 321 •
IP H A ER BBSD {16) V dro (10) Liabartha1(9l CS-OCebr
Hdalgorf -4221
JaCruzH 01 0 0
Bailon
~~ H R ER BB SO
Hou• ton
AUNS-VGuerrero Allahe m 66 Mora Bait!"
An1hem
Spnoerct 3 ) 1 3 Larson 3b 3 0 0 0
era {3) Michaels (1) S~Oowns SF- PMart nez
7 4 3 3 3 8
464..412
Indians 7, Tigers 6, (10)
PMunro
WashburnL845 t3 Q9 S 6 2 2 T8allsta
more 59 Crawlc d Tampa Bay 57 CGu1len
Wggntn 3b 3 o 1 o MMtws p 0 0 0..0
Foulke
2 2 0 0 1
Rodd ng
3 0 0 0 0 3 Valent 1b 4 1 t 1 GrtJr ph1011
G10~
123 2 0 0 0 2
Glevaland
Detroit
IP H RER BB SO
Tmln
23
1 0 0 G 0 Oet ort 57 Lawton Ceveland 57 Damon
Weathers
1
0 0 2 0
l brhbl
ab rhbl
Percval
1 1 1
0 0
la~ap
3010 JCarlcct 0000
Embr'i!e
113 0 0 0
0 Boston 56 AAodnguez Naw York 56
Montreat
1
0 0 0
1
Bull n~er 'r
Lawton ~ 5 1 1 3 Infante 2b 5 2 3 0
Oe kland
JoA~dop
2000
Leskan1CL04 123 4 2 2
3
Downs L02
2 1 3 9 7. 7 1 0
RBI-OOrt l Boston 75 VGuer ero Afll
0
, 1 0 0 Mc:Ewg tb 1 0.0 0 Vlanb
Udge L 2-4
Vlz:quelss
50
i
6
Hggnsnrl
52
'4
2
SaaloosWtO
5
5
0
0
1
n 1b 2 0 1 1
Nt!W'York
SKm
1233111 3
Ch1cego
hem 69 Taada~ Baltlmoa 65 MAa m raz
l-lalner
dh
4
1
0
IRdrgzc
3
1
2
0
Lehr
1
1
3
3
'
3
3
2
TOIIII 37 712 1 Totals 37 s a t
513 4 2 2 2 5
PriOf
71353334
Biddle
2 3 2 2 4 1 .Ha scy
Boston 59 Blalock Te~as 57 VMartiJJ&amp;z
RRncon
0100.0
VMrtnzc 5000 DYongdh 3114
0
Ou~trl
"
132
1 00 Cleveland 57 JGu1lten Anah81m 56 IF.IoMardiar
1311100
gl!l
2
0 0 Qt
13redlord
1 23 2 0 0 1 2 Va
New
Y
ork
000
013
111
1
Garut
rt
524~CGillenes
5000
Head a
2300000
Phi adelphia
Farnswor1h
113 1 0 0 2 1
Ootel
11001~
Monroe c:l 5 0 0 0
000 000 051 &amp; Blake 3b 4 1 1
1 2 3 0 0 0 0 1 dr guez DetrOit 56
Wo1W3 3
7 5 4 4 2 5 Gordon
Le~Ct~sterW2 0
1 0 0 0 1 1 Clnclnnetl
Saartoos p tch'ed to 2 batters n the 6th AR'h
CPena 1b 4 0 1 0
E-WIIjQinton (11) Ve en1 (1) OP-Naw Brssrd1b 4 0 0
MRvera
2 2 0 0 1 2 HOME HUNS-Blalock TaK8s 21 DOrtlz
AHa
1ardel
2
1
1
0
0
Udge pitched to 1 baner n Ike 10th
con p~ched to 1bat1er n lhe 71h
York 1 C nclnnal 2 LOB-New York 1 611 ard2b 4 121 Thme!~ 3000
StutzeW30
2 2 1 1 2 1 ~oston 21 Konerko Chcago 20 MRam1rez
ump res-Home Kerwin Danley F r~ Marvin
8Wagner
1
10
0
0
0
HBP--by Saa loos (JGLllllen)
Cr spcf
4 110 WhltaH
2000
HBP----tv T ml n (Jete ) by Hered e (Damon) Boston 20 VGuarra o Anaheim 19 AAo
l-iudson Second Dana DeMuth Th rd J1m CIJ1C nnat a 28-Matsul (21) P ana (1 71
HBP- t&gt;y Wolf iOCabre a) WP- SK1m
Ump res-H ome B uca F oemm ng F rs
JPhlll ps (13) H(dago (1'7) Dunn 2 {1 4
Munson 3b 5 0 0 0
Ump res-Home Jack Samue s F1st Paul by lesk.anc tShbtlleld ) by PMartmez dnguez Naw York 19 Thomas C h~t:ago 18
Ja,-ca
Tobtla 40 711 7 Tot• ls 40 611 6 Kev n Kele~ Second M ke Wnters Th rd T m Sch1 eber Secor.:J Ed Mon111gue Th d Jer y (Sh&amp;Held)
LaRue (1- 1) HR- Reyas (2) Hidalgo (6
T-2 54 A--39 1 t6 (39 345)
Tlmmone T-244 A-221 14 (43662)
Spencer (3) Valent (5) Dunn {24) SBUmp res-Home J m WoW F s1 T m McCte
Maa.ls T-2 58 A--43 246 (43500)
Clavetend
003 003 000 1 7
DJimanaz (8)
land Second Tony Randauo Th rd F eidin N~ ~eaders
Blue Joys 14, Devil Raya 0
Detroit
001 040 001
0 6
IP H RERBBSO
Brawers 10, Rockies 9
Culbmlh T--4 20 A-5 5 265 (57 47Bl
BATTING--Casey Clncrmtltl 352 Bo11ds
Braves 9 Marlins 1
DP-Ciaveland 1 LOB-Cie~e l and 6
New York
Toront o
Tempe Bay
Mltwauk&amp;e
Co orado
San
Francisco 351 HaKon Colorado 344
Oetro1
1
9
28-THatna
(25)
Garut
2
{201
LerterW4
2
..
7
2
0
0
2
4
ab r hbl
eb rhbl
Florida •
Atlenla
ab r h b
eb rh bl
Dodgers 5 Giants 4
Ro len St LOUIS 342 JE!II Ada Atlanta 339
Hgg1nson (15) !Rodriguez: ~ (22) HR2-.345500
Mnchno!96241
Crwlrd~
4 00 Q BonaiiCD
ab r h b1
eb r h b1
4 5132
BCiwkcl
51
1
0
Mes2b
L11wton ( 12) Gerut (7) Hggmson (4)
LooperS 15
11331101
JW lson P nsburgh 339 Overbay M1lwau
0Hu!1sn 2b 5 2 ~ 2 Gt11rght cf 4 0 0 0
Los Angeles
Peec:l 4 000 Furcal ss 2 2 0 0 Sa n Fran
D'Young {5l SB-Gerul ( 1) Blak.e 2 (5) Sp1vey 2b 4 2 1 0 LuGnzss 3 0 10
ClnclnMtl
eb r hbi
Jhnsoncl 6112 Huff3b
4 01 0
ab r hbl
LCsflo 2b 4 1 2 0 JGilrcass 1 0 0 0
kee 333
Jenkii"IS
I6211
FSS80'?
I
0
0
0
SF-Broussard
JoAcrw&amp;da L,4 7
6 7 4 4 3 3
OAbts I 4.0 1 I
l"!msk&amp;Jb 6 0 3 3 TM11nzdh 3 0 0 0
Dham2b 4 0 0 0
NGeert.:b5 1 2 I
R UN S~Pl!JOIS
St LOUIS 65 BAbrau
Ovrbay lb 4 3 2 2 Ga'p'1onsstOOO LoweiiJb 4 a 1 I
IP H RERBB SO
GWhije
111100
lztUiiS~
3010 Phi adel ph a 62 Bonds San F anc1sco 61 "
launc
5121 D FQ.rl
4020
Tuc~ar rt
4000
Mrdca1 3b D 0 o o JOrewrl 3120
HaMon
Gr811f!r1
5
1
40
tb
4
1
2
3
Clevetend
MMstlhews
1 2 1 1 1 0
Gomez l b 6 1 2 0 Luge 56
4 0 1 0
Cbrerart 4 0 00 "Thmes if 1 1 0 0 Gssomc4 11 0 LDucac 4 ~11
5 6 5 5 2 5 Helms 3b 3 0 2 2 PrW!sn c:t 5 0 fl 0 ConneH 4 000 CJones l::l 2 1 0 1 BondsH 2 11 1 Be~re3tl 3000 ARam rez CI'IICago 58 HaHon Colorado 57
t
~
1 1 0 0 Cllee
Ales rt
52 1 o McGrff 1b 4 o o o AledlrlQ
GBnnttc
5002
fick1ng
ss 1 0 0 0
1
Robertson
2
0
0
0
0
HBP-by Bona ICO (JaCruz) by Le1ter (Freel)
.IPhlpsdh 4 332 Frdyc:ec 2000
Chol1b
3020 JEstda c 3000
Prr,nsc ' 1 2 0 8rdle~ c1 3 2 1 0 JDrew AI anta 56 Clayton Colorado 56
M~ler
1 0 0 0 3 Cunsell ss 4 3 0 Castifa 9b 3 2 1 0 AGzz ss30 !0 JuFrco tb 4 0 I
Bergtt
5222 Bum2b
30 1 0 Umplrea--Home Dave A&amp;cl1wege Firat 8 11
ShGren lb 4 1 2 2 RBI-Aolen St Louis 76 Cash Ia Colorado
Fez3tl
4 0 11
113 2 1 1 1 2 VSantsp 2 0 0 0 Burntlrf 512 0 Tranor c 2 0 10 Hssmn 1b 0 0 0 Snow 11J 4 0 1 0 JEcrcnrf 3 1 I 1 62 Dverblly M !waukee 58 Berlcfne.n Hous
. rotate G 142013 Totata 32 o 5o an 0 Nora Second Ph 1 Cu u~ Th1rd Jerry Riske W4 2
A1Whlte 51
1 0 0 0 1 1 JBennnp 0 0 0 0 H"day~ 5 232
Crawtord
3000 ton 58 Thome Ph ladelph1a 57 ARemlrez
1000 AJones cf 3
3 0Culss300 1 COfa2b
KG1ntrph 10 0 0 CJhsonc 51 2 2 Nunez rt
OWOit
Toronto
002 51 0 024 - 14 T-2 58 A-3 1 633 (42 27 1)
2000 Ch cago 56 Gritley J C ncmnet SS
Smellp
1000 MrreroH 4 1 2 3 Sc~motp 2 111 Lmap
Kschnkp 0 0 0 0 MaSwyph 1 0 0 0
JJOM IOn
7 13 9 6 6 2 4
Tampa Bay
000 000 000 0
DrHortp
0
0 0 0
LHarrsph
1
0
o
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AuOrt1Z
p
4
0
0
FAdgazp
0
0
o
0
LWalftr rl 1100
RUNS- Thoma Philadelphia 27
Cofyer
1300001
E--Gomez (6) Hutt (5) Fordyce (1) DP- Whlta Sox 2, Twins 1
Eyep
oooo Vntueph 1 0 0 0 HOME
Totala 31 1 7 1 Totals 32 9 9 9
TOtel
a
39
1014
7
Tolala
41
914
9
Dunn Clnc~n n atl 24 P~ols St Louis 20
Yah
1 1·3 1 0 0 0 0
Toronlo 1 Tampa Bay
LOB- To ronto 11
TMartn
p
0000
Mmnnot•
U rb~na L 33
1 1 1 1 0 1
Tampa Bay 7 2B- JPhelps 2 10) Berg (2) Chicago J
000 000 010 1 Tota ls 31 4 7 4 Totals 3{1 5 7 5 Bonds San FranciSCO, 20 Cabrera Florida
1b r hbl
Mllwauka•
013 402 000 - 10 Florida
hbl
Robertson prtclled to 2 bette s n the 7th
38-Menach no (3) OHudson (2)
19 Baltre Los Angeea 19 SF nley Arzona
Atlanta
600
100
20x
9
Colorado
001 111 050 9
TPerezrt 30 1 0 CGlmn ss -4 1 2 0
HBP-by CILee (D'Young)
tP H RERBB SO
4 19 Griffey Jr Cmcnnat 19
DP~ FIO r l da 1 Atlanta t LOB-Florida 6
Sin Franc ICO 001 100 200 -

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BINGO
July 3
6 30

CLASSIFIED INDEX-

Ame,n can Leg1on

vs

Steven

aka,

Jenklne,

Stephen

0

Jenkins, aka 1 Stephan

Jenkins at al
Defendants
COURT OF COM.MON P~EAS , MEIGS
.COUNTY, OHIO
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to mp
directed from said
Court In tha above
entitled action, I will
offer for IIIIa at public
JIUCIIon lo be held on
·the Front Steps of the
Meigs
County
Courthou..
on
Augual 6, 2004, at
.10 30 am oleeld day,
the
following
described premlees
Situated In ~etart
Township,
Melga
County, Ohio, being
part of a 10 acre par·
eel of real estate
described In deed
recorded In Volum•
251 , Page 183 of the
Melga County Deed
Recorda and being
part of 100 acre lot
no 257
Beginning
7315
leal weal from the
northeast corner of
eele lot 257 on the
north line of lot 257;
'thence wHt along
llllld north line 208',
,thence eouth along
the - • line ot aald
10 acre tnct of rHI
487 5'; thence
cut along the aouth
line of uld 10 aero
tract of real estate
2011· thence nOtlh parallel with the - • t Una
of llllld 1o aero tract
of ,..1 Htal8 487 s· to
the plae~~ of begin,
nlng, containing 2.32
--.monorleu
~ Excepti ng
and
reeervlng an """''· all,

gaa and other miner-

ala with the right to
remove the ume
which
have
not
alreaclj been axceptedatrourved.
Being pari of !"• 10

acres of reel estate
described In Volume
25 1, Paga 183 of the
Meigs County Deed
Recorda
Referanca Deed
Volume 327, Page
345, Meigo County
Deed Recorda
Permanent Parcel
Number 08-00294 001
Property addreoa
47670 Adams Road,
Racine, OH 45n1
APPRAISED
AT
$48,00000
ond cannot be sold
lor leas lhan two- •
thirds of that amount
Torma of Sale: Ten
Percenl (10%) down
at the time the bid Ia
accepted Balance to
be paid within Thirty
(30) days Any aum
not paid within eeld
Thirty (30) days shall
bear lntereal at the
rate, of Ten Percent
(10%) par annum
from the dale of eale.
RA~PH TRUSSE~~.

Sheriff
Malga County, Ohio
Mark A Poland
Attorney lqr Plaintiff
24755 Ch19rln Blvd,
Sulta 200
Cleveland, OH 44122
(211) 314).7200
(7) 2, 8, te, 23

Public Notice
~EGA~

ADVERTISE-

MENT
SHERIFF'S SALE
Cauu No 02 cv 100
The State of Ohio,
Melga County, ••·
Pureuant Ia the command of an order of
llle from the
Court of Common
Pleas Qf -¥~kl county,
and to me directed, In
the acllon of Bank

One, NA, Plllntlfl, va.
Terry L Ottman, Ill at,
Delendlllta, Relph
Tru-'1, Shariff, oheH
offer fat aale at public
auction 104 Eaat
Second Street In the
city of Pomeroy,
County of Melga and
State of Ohio on
Friday, the 6th day of
Augual, 2004 11 10.00
o·clock am of uld

..

day, the following
described lands and
tenements, to-wit
Situated In the
ToiiV,IIshlp
of
Leblonon, County of
Melga and StaiB of
Ohio
~
Being 10 acres off the
East side of the fol·
lowing described real
aatate, being 80 rods
long and 20 rods wide
and being In Section
25, Town 3, Range 11
of
the
Ohio
Company's Purchaae,
~abanon Townahlp,
Meigs County, Ohio
Bounded
and
described aa lollowa.
Being 111 rod Weal of
the Norlheaal corner
of
aald
section,
thence Weal 57 roda,
thence North 80 roda
to the place of beginning, containing 28 •
112 acres.
Exception 2 - 112
acrea deed to Harry
w. Richard In Volume

163, Page

~

Meigs

County
Deed
Recorda, and Except
1 acres dHdad to
Sh, rlay
~ong
In
Volume 249, Page
637, Melga County
Deed Recorda The
Minerals un"der the
allow dHcrlbed real
..tate are Included
with
Thla
con-

vee

Raterfnce
Volume 282, Page
1003, Melga County
Deed Reco rda and
Volume 268, Page
918r Melga County
De8d~

Property
Addroaa
51781 Bald Knob
Road, Long Bottom,
01145743
parcel
No.
070070300
A deposit of a C8i11:
fled check, poty1tble to
the Sheriff, at caah
lor bin (111%) percent
of the purchue il'tce
wtll be .-.qulrod 81 the
lima the bid Ia M:CePIed.
The full price ahall be
. paid to the Sheriff
within thirtY (30) daya
from the data of llle
and on tan... to do

ao, the purchaser
shall be adjudged In
contempt of court
Appraised
at
$20,000 00
Torma of sale, cash
Ralph Trussell, Sheriff
Amy
~
Arrighi
Attorney
1940
HUIJ,I Ington
Building
925 Euclid Avenue
&lt;;leveland, OH 44115
(216) 621.()()40
(7) 2, 9, 16

Bedlor Townahlp
42774 Helwig Rlctde
Shade, OH 45774
74!1-696-1244
(7) 2

Crank It Up Tipboard
$9,00000
Starburst $1 ,650 00
Door Pnze $900 00
Lucky Ball $300 00

Fare Dept
CHICKEN BBQ
&amp; Homemade Ice Cream
Saturday, July 3rd
Serv1ng at 11 DO a m

Thursday
from 7 00 till close
Open M1c
9 00 Severage Contest
9 30 Hula Hoop Contest
Fnday-DJ &amp; Great Sax
8 00 Hot Dog Ea11ng Contest
9 00 Wet T-sh1rt Contesl
Saturday-DJ &amp; Great Sax
8 00 Ha1nest Back Contest
8'3o B1k1m Top Contest
9 00 Dance Contesl
IRON GATE
615 Ma1n St
Pt Pleasant

' Eagles #2171
presents

The public hearing lor
the Bedford Township
budgel lor 2005 and
the regular monthly
meeting will be held
on Tuesday, July 13,
2004 at 700 pm at
the town hall The
budget lor 2005 will
for
be
available
Inspection at the
clerk'a home upon

"Audience"
Fnday 8-12 &amp; Saturday 7- 11

r&amp;qiHMII

Barbara J
Clerk

All packs $5 00 each

Racin~

Public Notice

Gruaser,

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

NOW HIRING
Amencan Electnc Power Company's
Ph1hp Sporn P lant, located m New
Haven, WV, IS seekmg personnel In
the Operations beparnnent Mm1mum
QualificatiOns are an Assocmt~/
Techmcal and/or eqmvalent Regular
full ti me positiOns Overtime and
rotating sh1ft scbedule as requtred
Entry level wage rate of pay 1s $14 66
per hour Benefits mclude med1cal
dental, v1s1on, 40 I K and retirement
Interested candidates should submit
the1r resume to
AEP-Philip Sporn Plant
Attn: Human Resollrces
P.O. Box 389

Announcement ...............................................oao
Antiques
530
Apartments fat Rent
440
Auction and Flea Markel
.080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Auto Repair
770
Autoa for Sale
710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale
750
BuNdlng Supplies
550
Busmeoo and Bulld•ngs
340
Bualneaa Opportunity
210
Business Training
140
Campera &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment
780
Carda of Thanks .. . .
010
Electrlcai/Ralrlgaratlon
840
Equipment lot Rent..
.480
Exc,vatlng •
830
Farm Equipment i;i
• 610
Farms for Rent
430
Farms for Sale
330
For ~ease
490
For Sale or Trade.
.•• 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnished Rooms
•. 450
General Hauling
850
Giveaway ..
. 040
Happy Ada
050
Hay &amp; Grain
•••640
Help Wanted
110
Home lmprpvementa
•••810
Homea1or Sale ..
310
• Houeehold Goods....
••• 510
Houaeelor Rent .• •
410
In Memoriam
••••020
lnaurance •.••••
13j)
~lv..tock
•• ..•••. 630
~oat and Found .
080
Lola &amp; Acreage ••
-· . ••• 350
Mlacellaneoua ...
170
Miscellaneous Merchancilee
-· . 540
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Homes lor Rent .
• .420
Mobile Homes fat Sale •.
320
Money to Loan ••
Motorcycle&amp; &amp; 4 Whaelera1 ........................... 740
Mualcallnatrumenta
•. 570
Pereonala •• • ......
005
Pels lor Sale

Middleport

New Haven w111 be
Sponsonng a Car Show
Saturday, July 3rd
Reg1strat1on starts at 1 DO
Troph1es &amp; Door Pnzes
at4 DO
New Haven L1brary

304-675-2200

.

Duff Farms
Pay Sport F1 sh1ng
$5 00 Open 7 days 24 hrs
Dexter, OH 740-7 42-2 182
Pnm1t1ve Camp1n

PIONEER DAYS
SaUSun July 3 &amp; 4

pull on Sat Church serviCE! I
on Sun Country K1tchen &amp;
Country Store Will be open

I T "&gt;r t.· .•

\

P!!L
Jllblnll.&amp; H.uli.Jig=,~::···:·
P........,lonal
Senilc:es ... ~:~:~::::::::::::::820
.... 230
Radio, TV I CB Repair...
160
Real~ WMited

•

New Haven, W'V 25265
Resumes should be received no later
than
July 12, 2004
An 'Z!f'al opportumly employer M!F/DN

'

•

- -- -

Bchclola Instruction
Seecl &amp; Fertilizer
511uatlona Wan18d
5pllc:e for Rent •
Sporting Goocla...
Trucb fat Sale
Upltolalery. •
Vena &amp; 4-WDe .
Wtllltad to Buy.....
Wantad to Buy- Farm Supplies
Wantacl To Do .•..
Wantad to Rent
Yard Sale- Galllpolla •••
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
Yard SIIH't. Pfellllnt ~···

Huge Yard Sale July 2nd &amp;
3r_lj Kelly Elc ht j:~ger s res•
dance Van M e ter Hll A d
Rac me Longaberger cur
l ams comforte rs Hom e
8 1g Yard Sale AI 7 rn Crown tntenor turn1ture campers
C1ty
7/3/04
Bam ? hardware c lo thes!" mtsc
Treadmi ll Lots ol clothes Somethtng to r eve ryone

9684
SA
7
Sout h
8arnes/Glmore Yard Sate
Friday On ly Craftsman 10
Inch Red al Arm Saw $350

_•t_c_ _ _ _ _ __

lost Golden Ae tMver name
Noel home M ason member
C 1 Bee r Carry O ut perm1t of the fam1 ly for 12 years
lor sale Chester Townsh1p p lease ca! w1th Informa tiOn
Me1gs County send letters (304 )773-5566 or 1304)593
of 1nterest t&lt;:l The Da1 y 2512
Serttme! PO Box 729 20
Lost 4 year old ve ry l nend
Pomeroy OhiO 45769
ly RottweUer lasl seen tn
Estate
Sale
Furn l ure P ne G rove area lam1!y Pet
Glassware
smal( 1740)992 5833
App 1ances for more mfo call
(304)675 2356 Sa1 only 8

GIVEAWAY

.... 360
. •

y, Ril SALEPoMEROY/MniDLE

1740)446 0049

,,

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REA~ ESTATE
CASE NO 02 CV 125
Branch Banking &amp;
Trust Company, at al l
Plaintiff

' All ads must be prepaid•

Los'r AND

~~~~~~~ ~

150
.)••.• 650
120
.••. 460
520
.•• 720
870
730
090
620
• 180
470
072
074
076

A:ll Dl•ptay 12 Noon 2
Bualnes s Days Prior Ta
Publication
SundaY Dl a play· 1 00
Thuraday for sunday•~ - - --

F

• Start Your Ads W ith A Keyword • Include Complet4!1
Desc ription • Include A Price e Avoid Abbreviation s
• lnt:lude Phone Number Alld Address When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Da ys

\ '\'\01 \1 I \II '\I"'

Five fam1!y yard sa !e 4 1
Flammgo Dnve Gallipolis
Friday Saturday Suntday 9
? So methlng for everyone!
Fourth of July Yard Sale
201 4th Ave Fr day 9 5 and
Satu rday noon 5 Clothes
toys
c rafts
and mucn
more 11

a

Hugel Sat 713
4pm boys
g1r1s adu lt &amp; m ise 11em s
607 1st St New Haven
July 1st 2nd ~&amp; 3 rd Su pe r
large sale Many n ice 1tem s
Andersons 46 123 State

POLICIES Ohio Valtey Publll hlng reaervea the rfg ht to edit rtject, or cancel any ad at any time Enora muet be l'tlported on the l lret dey ol pu bllc•tlon and
Trlbun..Sentlnel.f'eglatar will be reeponalbls for ho monJ then the coat of the sp•ce cx:cupled by the errOf end only the flret ln..rtion W• ehl ll not be liable
any lou or • • pen aa that reeulte l tom the publlcetlcm or oml11ion ol en advertisement Correctio n will be medii In the fl r•t evellebta edition • Box "~;:~~:~~~
are elwaye confldentlel • Current rete card appllea • All real aatate advartlumenla ars
to the Fedarel Fair Houalng Act ot 1H8 • Thle 1

r

oft 141 on 775 Wed S a t &amp; sh tne
S un
July 2n d &amp; 3rd Dale ElliS
Huge Mul tt Fam11y G arage ras1dence Titus Road End
Sale Fn day.&amp; Saturday July of l eajl ng C reek Ad turn
2 3 9 to 6 1888 Whtte Ad le tt to T1tus B oys c!othes
Tu rn dght on 1st road past stzes 141 616 Swngs all
Hattelt s Ca rpet and go 2 sizes p1cn1c tables aU s1 zes
m1les follow s1gns
cheap etc

Diesel Mechanic II
PM Shift

3•d 19 2)
Ya rd Sale at The L11tle Store
1n GaU1pohs Fe,r y July 3rd 8

'
Yard Sa le
Frr Sat tools mtcrowave &amp;
mtsc items on Fa1r vtew Ad
Camp Conley

r

W AN'IID

ruBuy

Proofse ts D.iamonds Gold
Rmgs
U S Cu rrency
MT S Com Shop
15 1
Second Avenue Galhpohs
740 446 2842

I \11'1 &lt;I' \II \I

..,I 1n u 1..,
I

110

HF.I P WANfFD

1

L.-•••••••pl
'ANEW CLINICAL
PEEL!il•
Wan110 look younger AND
earn Money? Lets ta!k the
N EW AVO N ca ll
Man!yn (304 )882 2645
Joyce {304)675 69 19

Apnl 1304)662 3630

Rum pke Is lhe leader In the
w aste Industry
Pos ttlon assists senior &amp;
ex perienced mechanics
with repa lrs &amp; malnte·
nanc e such as lubric ation,
e!ectrlcal and brake work
Requ1res mec hani c al aptl
tude with basic knowledge
of vehicle m ai ntenance
and repair exp w 1th d1ese1
powe r veh1c e pre fe rred
M ust a (so have own tools
fam 111 anty w1 1h repatr m anu
a s and a mm mum at 1 year
perfor mmg s1 m lar duttes
Must be able to lift 751bs
Ex cellent compensation &amp;
benef itS with medica l
dental 401 k vacation &amp;
pension Please come ln
and apply anytim e Mon
Frl Bam Spm

Take the wheel of ypur
&lt;&gt;Rumpke Waste

28 AW Lang Read
Wellston

OH 45692

Fax 74o-384-5472
No phone ca ns p(e ase/EOE
Dom inos now h1rlng 'Safe
dn ver s
al
pOSi tions
Ga!ll po hs
Pomeroy
PI
Pleasant &amp; El ea no r can
store (304)675 5856 fo r
appl1ca1tons

Ju!y 2nd 3rd 40037 Su mner
Road Ltke new generator
small app ltances an t1ques~
Addresses wa nted 1mmech Dnvers Need ed P1erceton
linens crafts m 1sc 11ems
ately1 No expe rtence neces Truck1ng 1 yr exper~ence
lns1de 'Rummage and Craft July 3 Bam 4pm Sa tu rday sary Work at home Call toll requ1retJ C!ass A w tth Tank
&amp; Hazm at Ca l! 1 800 446
Sale July 2 3 8 to 5 on Iaure! Chff Ad ott of A t 7 (405)447 6397 •
0355
Sowards A1dge Ad Crown boys 4 12 women s mater

C1iy

A1TENTION OWNER
OPERATORS

nty

Large 3 Famlly Yard Sale July 3rd 5th
9 DO 4 DO
Fr day/Saturday So methmg Cht!drens clothes 0
bed
fo r eve ryone 10 5 m 1les on frames Futon snow sk1s
toys dryer 2 relnge ra1o rs
141 at Gage
new cappac1no mach1 ne 1n
Lots of 1nfan1s toddlers and Oox gwnea p1gs
(ots of
adult clothmg &amp; much moril' m1sc Route 33 norl tl of
St At 7N at Burnett Ad Darw1n Pa rk Road Watch
ac ross fro m Honda Bam
lor Stgns
5pm July 1 3
Mu!t1 fam dy summer JUnk
Mov1ng sale 136 LeGrande eKl ravaganza' 2 12 Mulberr y
Bhtd !ot of clothmg g ~r ls Ave Lots of good s tuHt
dresses 5 6 step 2 swmg Saturday only J uly 3rd
se1 bvmg room sutt washer
Naut1lus gym set and much Ram or shtne Thursday
more Saturday July 3 rd 9 Fnday &amp; Saturday 8 OOam trl
whenever Turn at Memory
1
Garden onto Eagle Atd~e
Muh Fam1 fy
yard
sa le Ad Approxim ately 112 m1le
10557 St At 14 1 Fn Sat 1st mtersectiOn 1st hOuse
Clolhes (baby adult) loys on nght Tools clothes
home schooli ng matenals guns toys lots of collectors
household 1tems and much Items Don t m1ss tt
more
Roger Rous h residence 1n
Yard Sale Ra1n or Sh1ne 2 "Rac me Monday J uly 5 t h
1/2 m1les E ol Porter on 8 00 5 00 Turn at Pomeroy
554 1st 2nd 3rd
Aacme Lodge

:n

Yard Sale recent move Yard Sale an· Crew Road
Furmturfl &amp;
household Ju!y 2nd 3rd frOm 9 5
Items July 9 10 Bam ? Take Fumiture doth1ng and m1sc
7 to 141 and lohow s1gns to nems
102 Adelaide Dr ~
Yard Sale 7/3104 Furniture
b•cycle baby item s 94
A1rllne Ad Porter

e~y~'
353 S Thtrd St Mason Juty

r

YARD SALEPT. PU:AsANr

2616 112 Madison Ave Pt
Pleasant July 1 2 &amp; 3rd
Tune 9 00 to 3 00 plus size
women clothes &amp; gtrls other
1tems

1 2 3 9a~_'!t ciOthmg all carolina Flea Mantet F1rst
s1zes baby CIVI~es exerctse Day Free Fn Sat Sun 9 to 5
equtp
lots ol m1sc _. to (304~75-5516
choose from
::.::...:.:~.=~---Ga!hpohs Ferry Clenden1o
4 fam1iy Ju~ tst 2nd 415 Ptke Ad or Rt2 yellow
College Avooue Rutland
house Fn&amp;Sat sola bed
Gun cabtnet PaCk n Play baby items lamp$

712104 7/3104
toward

Rutland

SR

Garage Sale Sat 8-? West
124 Terry Court behmd Fla1r

nght on

~sell _Bun ~ m1le

Tratle• on left

B1g ya&lt;d Sale. July 1st 2nd

Ch1klren s Jt's
Furniture
ladle$ Mens Clothing Toys
+ Household items lots of

.e

'

. 2 Settlement Opt1ons
pa1d weekly

. NO NYC
.Home Weekends
S1gn On Bonus
. 95% No touch fre1ght

.s500

CALL 80().652-2362
Auto body repa1rman must
have expertence m body
work lrame work and pa 1nt
1ng references required cal!

(740)992 5553
AVONI Au Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Sh irley Spea rs 304

675 1429

..

Bartender ne(td expenef'ICe
required •
Apphcat1ons
accepted until 6128J04 Send
to PO Box 303 Galhpohs

OH

rec:

or

Mecli Home-Health
Agency: Inc seeking a
lu ll time RN Cltmcal
D1rector tor the G111111polls

CLASS A COL NEEDED
.Earn between 45 50K
.M1n 1 year exp
. Home W eekends
. $500 stg n on bonus
. SI&lt;vt at 36 cpm
. 95% No touch fretght

. NO FORC ED NYC

FOll SALE

PositiOn Requ1res OH
and WV RN hcensure
m mmum two years of
hOme health nurslng
expenence 1n a manage
mont rote knowledge of
Federal and s"ue home
health regulatiOn JCAHO
expenence prelerred

EOE

to 68150
Bayberry Onve

Submit resume

St CIBJrsville OH 43950
Attn Katnna Dunaway

AN
01rector of Nursm

Hair Stylists
FIESTA wetcomes you to

OPI'OR'IlJNfiY

PSYCHOLOGIST

Jo1n the Canng People at

(304)675 7783

•

For sale or rent 2 bed room
mob le homes startmg at
$270 Per month Call 74Q992 2167

Expand tn g Field Force•
• Tra1n1n g·Leads
Potenttal $25 160 K Yr

e are a well respected
th1cal nat on a! prac11c
eallng W1th genatncs W
tter a good starling salary
enef1ts wh ch mclude l•ab ll
ty and health ms uranc
net a 40 1+&lt; W~ are m nee
f a l1ce nsed psycho(og st
au can work as few or a
many hours as y ou wa nt
our JOb s to see people
u r JOb s to bll collect an
1ve yo u the s upport serv
1ce t hat you need We are
us1ness that never ossa
1ght ol the tact that th
enta! health of our chant
s our ft rst concern Cal
Psycholog ical Trans1ttons
77 734 203 1
or
fa
esume 877 734 2030

Ca I 1304)343 0400
For Sale
1983 House
Tra1 !er po rches ncluded
Pr ce $4 000 CaU (740)25 6

__ _____

Equal Opportun ty Company
MIFIH

6663
"'
"'
r - ;;;-"1imll'llllr&lt;.;--..,-

r

,l

A ffordable
Computer
Repa tr Galll a Metgs &amp; sur
l The Gall a County Board of rou11dmg areas (740)992
Mental Ret ardatton and 7
9
0
3
Developmen tal D 1sab ht1 es http /lwww geoc1t1es com/lo1 1
8323 N SR 7 Chesh ire er45620
Oh to 45620 1s seek mg
TURNED DOWN ON
apphcants lor th e pos1t1on a t
teac h er fo r children w1th SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
mult1ple d1sab1 hlles a t th e
No Fee Unless We Wml
G wdmg
Hand
Schoo l
t 8a a 562 3345
A pphcants must have cur
I~ I \I I .., l \II
rent
Spacia l
E ducatton
C e r t 1f 1ca tel In t e r nt 1on
Specialist LICensure Salary
FOR SALE
wtll be b ased on expenence
and cert1flcate according to
the scale and w1ll have 2 Bedrgom 1 B ath Livi ng
b oar d app roved be ne fits room Dmtng room kttchen
covere d font
can
be basement
A pphca110ns
obta1ne d at t h e Gutdtng porch General Hartmger
$40 500 00
Hand Schoo l or by wnttng Parkway

va

_::;

Good used 3 bed roo m~
14 X70 lncludes cen l ra l a r
O nly $ 10 995 00 lncludes
delivery
Call
N1kk
(740)385 9948

HlO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO teco mmeni;ils l ha
ou do Ous mess With pea
le you kno w and NOT I
end m oney throug h th
at unt1l you have mveslt
ated the offenn

HO!\mi

N1ce 98 Fleetwood 3 b~ c;
room
bath w lh centt o\
a1 thermal pane Windows
and 10X20 shed lmmed1a1e
occupancy
available
$ 14 995 DO Call Harold

(140)385 767 1

----SAVE SAVE SAVE
Sl ock models at o(d pnces
2005 models arr vmg Now
Co les
Mob1le
Homes
15266 lJ S 50 Eas1 Athens

OhiO 45701 1740)592 1972
~ whe re

You
Moneys Wort h

1740)698 2613

MR/D D

t

6323 N

SA 7

Get

Your

Tra11er for sale Located at
Leon WV {must be moved)
1994 Commodore 14x60
2 bed room 1 bath ut1l1ty
room 1nc udes stove refngera tor washer e~t l ra cab
nets a() underpmntng front
&amp; back porches w/awnmg
aU block &amp; SidewalK steps
heatpump AJC
Excellent
cond1t10n
$13 800

the Ga!ha County Board o f (740)992 3057

Lars&amp;

3BA on 5 129 acres Gr een
Township c lose to school
ACREAGE
The Galha Co unty Boa rd of As~1n g pnce $89 000 More
MA / D D
IS
an
Equ al 1nlo (740)446 7377
1 acre level lot Sunset Lane
Opportumty Employer
4 Ac res w1th 14x80 Newer call (304)675 2820
Ches htre O h10 45620

Mob1le Hom e

Su rrou nded

The Ualha Lawrence Farm by 10 000 acres lor hunt ng
ServiCe Agency ts accepttng Cal 1740)256-5476

(740)256 1825
Two homesttes tor sale Both
one acre mil 3-112 miles
from Holzer Hospital
620 Evergreen Ad $19 500
5SO Evergreen Ad $18 500

All real eWde advertlain~
In thla newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Houaing Ac:t of 1918
which makee It lllegllil to
lldvertln eny
~ c• llmlllltion or
dlac rimi nation bued on

.-.c:e color,

rel l~lon ,

Call 1740)446 8640
1740)645-45t3

"K

o•

U l '\ I \I "

f•mll+•l .tatua or national

o rigin or eny lnt.ntfon to
make eny euch
~

HCJU;ES
FOR REr«

'

llmrt.tlon or

dil,crimrMt ton "

28r House Fully Remolded
West Columbia large
deck S400 month $400

TN• ~will not
knowingly accept

1n

adYerti...-nentll tor NBI
..Ute which Ia In
viol.tion of the lew OUr
ra.dera .,. hereby
Informed that all

~,. (304)773-9167

., Clean 2Br Ref DepoSit fl.Q

E'l&gt;!li 1304)675'5 t 62

ctwelll~ MvertiMd In
this MWaplpet' .,.

-·11y-

House lor rent In Tu11P9rs
Platns
$450 rent plus
deposit &amp; utihbes {740)667

IIVIMlltble on • n ..,..

JOO Calll740)992 5776 ask

•

22 acres on HOback Road
off Old State Route 124 In
Eas1 Racl!le
Mercerv1Ue Lots lor sale
shared entrance ot1 St A t
218 3 13 acres Phone

Wanted stra1ght trucK dnv
er home every day Must
have C!ass A or 6 COL and
clean MVR 21 years or
olde( 2 months produce
hauling could be a full time

Overbrook Center IS current
tor Don
1y accepting appi!QittOili tor
the position ol a beautiCtan
Must have a Manager's Wanted Full Time 1Mtf11ng
IIC6n$8 please come In and Une Cook Apply 1n person

341!7

Home on Rrver 2 bedroom

Large 3 bedrtx&gt;m 2 bath
2 bath kitchen dinn1ng
erdosed
bacK porch offiCe
laundry
L shape hvtng
laundry room 29 Henkle
room
stone
l1replace
till out an apphcattOn at 333 ~Hrio::~l~;...
klay ln":n~Ga-lh~p·o l..ls-'""1 28X32 garage on 78 acre Ave $500/month ptus
de p o stt / re te re n ces
Page Street Mteldl.eport
Scuoots
(740)992 2060

11!!0

OH 45760 EOE
Paramedics

&amp;

•

(740)31!8-8070 IIYI!mngs

IK'm!LICTION

EMT's . . . .iiiOiiiiiiiiiliiii;.,.,.l

c.rMr

needed Applv at 1354
Jactosort Ptke GallipoliS

Galllpolll
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today'i 740-446-4367

"Fhe Gall18 County Board of

HJ00-2-1~52

Mld Scf1ooil12748

11

teachers
11ar&gt;her ;:;i0rr;;;;;;;-~----..,
WA.NJID
offer
S300 h1nng bonus aides aduH worl&lt;shop a bus
drtvers
coo~s
and
To
t
gUaranteed hourly wages
plus tipS up to 45% seMCe nurse Anyo~ mteresled
comrmSStOil..., reta•l ,aod tan may DbtaJn an applicatiOn at J1m s Carpentry &amp; small
mng commissions 401 (k)' lhe Guidmg Hand Scl1ool or l.Bndscai&gt;ng Call l7.00)446paid vacabon, l'leaJlh vtSKif'l by wrttlng GU1d1ng Hand 250e
PO Box 14
dental and life tns , free SchOOl
attvanoed educahon Jmrfle- Chesh1re OhiO 45620
yards
W 1tl
mow
btg
di4fe dtentele and so much
17 40)992 5594
morel Now h1nng k&gt;r full and The Galtia County Boarcl ol
part ume licensed Stytlsta MR/00 •s an Equal W1ll PreSSUfe WaSh hOuses
at our salon 1n Mason Can Opponunrty E111!&gt;ioY0&lt;
mobde homes metal biJttd
Cindy Cl t-81!8-B21).6363 X
and gun"ers Cal!
Tomato piCkers wanted 1ngs
30 1o fof more mfo aod to
Roush Farm! 1740)247 (740)446-0151 ask tor Ron
9Chedule an intemew # ~
or leave message
2165

Do

Lower Mason 2BR 2BA 2
Car Garage Flnished basemem Heat pump call for

r ~~~~

IIWO'ntmonl (304)773-5331!

MRIDD IS seek1ng subsll
www ~... ~- ~ .ct~m
lutes tor the lollow1ng pos1 Acc"redlled Uiltllber Aa:r~g
hOnS tor lhe 2004-05 SChOO COUncil tor ll . . . ldenl ColegH

checK out what we have lo year

I

3Br 12x65 w/Add1t10n C/A
$3 500 OBO must be moved

Bankers Lite and
Calutllty Company

S72K-$80K

applteaiJOns for a l ull ttme
permanent
oHtce: postl lon
Call 800-652·2362
w1t h benefits Apphcattons
HIRING DIETARY AIDES may be piCked up at the
Far m
Serv1ce
Agenc y
Holzer Sen1or Care Center OffiCe _., 1 1 Jackson P1ke
a 70 Bed long-term care Room , 571 Galhpohs Otuo
nurs ng fac•llty has Full tlrT)e 45631 or by clilhng the ofhce
and part t1me opemngs 1n at 740 446 8667 All appll
the1r d etary department
cat1ons 'fn usl be retu rned by
HSCC prides 1tsett m pro 4 30pm July 12 2004
v1d1ng the h1ghest qua hty ot
care for our semors
The Village of Midd leport IS
If you like worklng wtth lhe accepting appltcatiOns lor a
elderly and are commrnea full ttme mechanrc Must
IO provtdlnQ quality SefVIces have own tools Ap~llcat1ons
1n
a
fnendly
~rea m
mCist be ptcked up and
Onented work senmg come returned to V1Nage Hall at
see us at 380 Colon al Dnve 237 Race Street by July 8
Bldwell OhiO or call 740. 2004 at 4 00 PM the V111age
446 5001 and ask to speak reserves the nght to accepl
w1th Greta Plants D1elary or retect any or a U app~
Manager
ttons EOE

OhiO
location

•
•

DRIVERS NEW PAY
SCALE

Ca nton OhiO reeler
com pany look tng for
O wner O perators to
earn between 125 150K

m1sc

181 West l6cust Street 1n Giant Yard Sakt July 1st
Upper Monkey Run 9 00- 3rd Blatn Lane Gatltpol•s
Ferry ~ Tools
Pmg Pong
500
Table Furmture Clothtng
Carrole Smtih residence lots ot Mise
..,
Happy Hollow Road near
'fluttand Ju~ 1st 2nd a QQ. Large 3-Famtly Yard Sale
leon WateOOo Rd next to
4 00 Jeans t shirts &amp; miSC
Smtih
Church
Absten
Garage saJe. July 2 &amp; 3 ram A&amp;sldence Mise items Thur
or slitne Wr~ght Street FnSatB?
wood crafts pool stutt gas
powered scooter camper F large Garage Sale tools &amp;
150 trt.Jdc Fort! Ranger lots Mtsc No Clothes. on At 2
North on 87 112 ot a mt!e on
mrsc (740)992 2475
left Fn Sat-sun 8 ?
Garage sale Saturday Juty
3Jd 36545 Flatwoods Road Saturday July 3
00 to
Ra1n or shtne
1 00 714 McCullough Fbad

MOBILE H OMES

B USINESS

Yard sale 236o L nco n Ave
Fr July 2nd {9 4) &amp; Sat July

!11 fa!lt ch1ldrell, adu!t c!oth
lng Home ln tenor books
m1sc 1 fnl!e below dam
Sunnys de Dr July 1 3

11\\\( 1\1

HELP WANrnJ

Rou te
124
between ~Absolut e Top DoUar U S
Syracuse and Rae ne
Silve r
Gold
Cams

Ju!y 1st 2nd and 3rd 9 DO
to i 00 Syracuse Nazarene
Ga rage Sale Ratn/ShVJe Church shelter house Home
299 Roush Lane Cheshire lnt er or
baby
1tems
7 / 2 / 04 7/03/0 4 7 15 / 04
Longaberger
baskets
Collectibles
household clothes clothes and clothes
ite ms toys cloth 1ng books
m 1sc
July 2 3 9am ? App eg rove
Dorcas Ad from At 124
G1gant1c Yard Sale 3 5 m11es fou rth house on ngh l raln or

couch clothes &amp; etc

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedloyourclasslfledads
(. ~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00forlarge

DisPlay ACis

Dally In- Column " 1 00 p m
Monday-Frldey for In•ertlon
In Next D•v•• Paper
§~:~:::~ I n - Column 1:00 p.m
For Sundays Paper

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

(41

•b,

/}eatllfirfM'

1

r~~I}N

1992 Southern Elite 14X70
2 bedroom 2 bat h some

1 aw11anceo

Call 1740)949

2011 after 5 00
1 986 Clayton t4x65 2 bedroom 1 tfl bat!"l good~ l 281" Traiter for rent Central
dttiOn Ph (740)44H368 A~r&amp;Heat GarbageiWater
pajd aN EkK:tnc Jell)'li Run
call from 3-6pm

- - - - - - - - • Ad $300/month plus&lt;lam
1!lll7 Sdlull2 Hx72 w/dou ago/doposi1 13041576-2999
ble expando tn LA DR

3bodroom

2baths

CIA lots 2Br located tn P1

of """"" (740}446-411 6

2

Bedroom

Trailer celt
130-4)675-5217 good conch

Rt21Rt62
more

NICe

~

locattan

mformattan

ca ll '

131lt)697 t34t or (304)5!131939 or after 5

pm

ce ll

130&lt;)675-563t

2 000 t6x80 C13yt0n mol);le 38t Trader Wldl Washer and
home Fireplace dlSh wash- Dryer 5'400 montt1 plus one
er walk In closet total elec moplh QepoSII 1304)576
2934 or (304)59:J.44116
tnc 740-446 9599

I

�•

' '

'

•

0

Friday, July 2, 2004
friday, July 2, 2004
ALLEYOOP .•

HelpWenled

HelpWenled

• The Daily Sentinel• Page 87

www.mydailysentlnel.com

NEA Cronword Puz.zle

BRIDGE

Selultill rtwr vJtw, Ideal for
one or two ·people. No pets,

relerei1COO . (740)U1-0181 .

ACROSS

•

~lean 3 bedroom trailer, in
eountry, for rent. Call

Coc:atlon

miles

5

~ lean ,

$500 month: 740-

256·1417

LPN-PH.OR MEDICAL ASSisTANT/
. MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST

from

6alllpolls and 2t B. Nlco and
or 740..256-6228.

Nice 2 a nd 3 bedroom
rfloblle homes tor rent
includes water, sewer &amp;
trash, ho pets, star ting at
$300 per month, In Shade
area , deposit required ,

.

\'

'

(7401256-6574.

Phillip
Alder
''" / I ,

Plea sant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting ·resumes for a Full tjme- LPN-PH or
Medi c al As sistant/Medical Receptioni st.
Applicants mu st have a current West Virginia

"c
. s INC.

license. One-year experieOce in a phy siCian
offi ce or hospital related area, Working -with
,direct patient care. Previous experience with

pediatrics is preferred.

(7401992·2167

. r~ - 1
1 and 2 bedrO~m apartments, furnished and unfurniShed, security deposit
required, no pets; 7 4o-992-

Send resumes to:
Pleasant !/alley Hospital ,
r:Jo Human Resources
2520 VaJiey Drive .
Point Ple11.~ant, WV

'

'

and

2

Bedroom

Apar1ments, Washer/ Dryer
hook·up, Stove/ Refrigerator

furnished. CloSe to hospital.

www.pvalley.org

(740144 1-()1 17
bedroom

0

apt _

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Washer/dryer hookup, $290 -:::::::::::::::::;:;;::::::::::::::::.
ren1, deposit required. No I

pets. 74()-441·1184.

l bedroom. stove and refrig-

erator, furnished, utiliti es
i{lcluded. $400 month plus

oeposlt (740)245-5859.
2 bedroom apt in

resumes for:

Thrcc-Po3ition in Physical Therapy:
I) Outpatienl

-

2) Inpatient

2 bedroom , just p8st, Holzer.

}125 month. Call (740)44tt t84. ,

2 bedroom, references
9eposit, (740)949-2517
&amp;EAUTIFUL

Residential &amp;

Call:

Commercial

Rocky Hupp Insurance

r

Plea~ant Valley Hospital is:currently 'accepting

&lt;i

Call (7401256. 1135 _
,

Contractor

For a Free Q!Jole or Appointment

3) Southeni Jackson County Rehab Center,

APART·

AT BUDGET
~RICES AT JACKSON
bTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.

t-"alk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446·2568.
Equal
l"touslng Opportunity.

•CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·

I

·

·

..

ED 6 AFFORDABLE!

For more information:

PI

apartments,

992-5064 . Equal Housing

o_ppoc;_r_tu_n_it_l•_··~--Modern

1 bedroom apt

r_.Mlscru.ANEous
_____
MEROIANDISE._..l .iio

__

.ARM
r~---

:::..rzn=t

I t986

Honda

with overdri\le plus extr~s.
EleC1ric Aheem 50 gallon' BOO~. 2002 New Idea 6242 . phone 740-985·4183.
·
New 1 bedroom apt. Phone water· h~ater. Used 1 yr. baler, electric tie, used one

,..ec:ently redecorated on~

4782. Gallipolla.

For Sale: 4 plots at Ohio
Valley Memorial Gardens,

101;)8.

Sporlsler.
14,000
miles, forward controls, very
John . Deere 4020 tractor sharp, $7,200 . (740)245·Diesel w/cab $6,600.00 9595.
Massie Furgerson 165 trac·
lor, gaseoline engine, good 1997 Honda Rebel, like new,
cond' l tlon.$ .. . 500.00 3,000 miles, great starter

. AEFIATION MOTORS

Ferguson

lng lor
appllcatlcns
tor waiting
Rellullt 1In•
list
Hup-aubslzed,
1- br, Aepalrad,
Stock. CallNew
Ron&amp; E\lans,
aportment, call 675·6679 800-537-95?8.
EHO
.•

,

Ford,

and Shadow Spirit motorcycle.

jBelarus.· (740)696-&lt;l358
• -~· ·

E&lt;eellenl asking
condlllon,$5,000.
one
owner,

.... • ..,,"""

~..__ _ _ _ __.1

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

i

I

(740)448-7668.

74o-707·7999

Jackie Pole Bam 30x50x10 only

dition

mounted

FOil SAlE

metal, plana how to build

boOk. Flldor lree dollvery.

(937)5Stl-8341 .

on Ford

BENNE'fT'S
ll!'tOOLJNC

UD AITJN~ ~~

Good

Used

Appliances.

i

Slm.JEs

Guaranteed.

Washers,

(304)675-

r

'

lor parts call (304)875-2356 (304)675 237t

SOme

GOOd, $1 ,000, (740)44~2639
_-'--------t988 Old Cutlass Supreme,
•-··• .loa
1ho ••••
(740)446-7...._. 1 .en-830- windows, lintelS, etc. Claude ....,,UQI m1 ge 93 u--"'·

180. 3 miles north ol Holzar
hospital. Ph: (740~157 ..
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Cla.X 8loc:k
Chlpet Rood, Porter, Ohio.
· brid&lt;, .,_ pipes,

Advertise
In this
space
for '
$50 per
month

I

Vioo St., (740)U8-7398

c

1989 Citation Campo&lt;, 23
lool, -ps ·5-6. Good cond~- (7'")256-1~•
....... ..

~

,uou.

9162. Free Eltimates, Easy Winters, Rio Gra('lde, OH 1irm $800
·
1995 30-foot Dutchman
fmsnclng, 90 days saq&lt;e as Call740-245-5121 .
1987 Bronco II, Body greal camper/ travel trailer

cash.

Drive-

Visa/ Master Caret
a· littlo save aiel.

.

shape, needs T~nsmission, loaded. Excellent condition.

Pf:l5
FOR SAu:

cell

(304)675-t975

re-conditioned

automatic weeks old. 1st &amp;hots and runs

wuher8 &amp; dryers,
gaa and

great.

refrigafa· wOrmed, $300 eacll. Call St ,OOO '

lOOks good.

(304)593-2135

electric .C740}441-ov31.
(30o&amp;)675-7355
rangoo, aircondillone&lt;s, and -------~ - - - - - -- wringer waahers. Wi.ll do 8ishon Frlse pt.Wtiel\ only 1994 Dodge Shadow $500
rlljiAiro on rnajof brands in "'""'
• ""Y"Ity owned until 1930's. 1991 Grand AM, beat oHar
111op"' at your hOme.
Non-altergic, non-~ . (304)895-3165

...,I I(\ II I "

r·o

Twin bed, S75; twin mat~
· $25 aad&gt;; Full Blze
bed, $1 50; fuN &amp;ize bed ,

$125; ~

l4 ~$75;

C811 (7o10)o4-t1-9510.

8.

~

·

8 uerfl

u

K · 8.

Y m,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG

Dodge

•g 258-1233.

{:!04)6 7 ~_

5043

740-667-6080

Law11 and Garden Equipmellt is our
busi11ess, not our sideline
.

.

fHE 'BORN LOSER
•

!"''&lt;€.:~Tt.i!.OI&gt;,'( WI\::, ~&gt;, \ZE.i'-.L
• SC.ORCJ-l£R, W~\ II ?

,..w~ 11 E.\/E.~&lt;:.!

P'

Wfl.ffi 11-\E:.I'I I Zf'-,. \:lt:U\/(.R'{
6U'{ GO\ TO OUR DOO~ , \f\E.

. II Wt-::&gt; ::.0 1-'.0T ...

0

"

I PIZZI'-. W/'0 S\\LL
I WI'--!'; I"\ I

Manning K. Roush
Owner

'

n Mon-Frl9·5 Sat. 9·12

byLora

1356 College ~d.
·Syracuse, OH 45779
740-9'12-6122 ' '
.Qudl#y worl for a fair
prlu
All work guaranteed
Master Certified

MechanicS Briggs &amp;
Stratton , 'Kohler.

(740) 985-3917
Lora Bing

Get AJump
on

Murray, MTD All
makes &amp; models $ 10.00
off any purchase of
$20.00 wi th this ad.

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restocking late Model Sal&gt;-age
and Arter Market Parts
See Brent or Brian wftaley
M-Fri 8:30,5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

•,

No.rth

Easl

Dbl.

Pass

Pass

4(o

All pass

Open 7 doyu wHkl
~ornlng Star Road· C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH
TFN

Tru(k_ing
Athens

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt ..,
• Ag Lime

no-985·3564

Dean

am ·

New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

HOWAR[) l.
WRlTESEl

1-800-822-0•U 7

dOIHII

l..::~!:!:;!;,!;;______.lC,~ ,

SOUNDS GllfAT, OOESN'r
1T'?! !'lOT Til ME.\lTI ON

tes,t~LYCOULD
~TINTO~T!

ROARING AAOIJNDON A
1!16 Sill NY MOTORCYC&lt;.e!

diiE

IIIITIIIICE

dElllUI
111111
•Fnl flf FIIU

148-1485
''

Sunset Home ·
Construction

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

Bryan Reeves
Nllw Homes,
.Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Bulldlrige, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE E&amp;TIMATESI

Big Bend Antique
and Fumltuna

Restoration
Rllflnlah, Repair,
Restore

74CJ.74Z-341

YOUNG'S

Flea.'

CARPENTER

Market
Maplewood Lake
Sl Rl124
between Racine

_

Keith Bailey
40 992-1956

SERVICE

.....

• Aoom 'dltttlooa&amp;
Run d lhg

.-..~

~

~~~~~I;~=~~~~=~~
'

ROBERT
BISSEll

......

.

.

I PUNNO ...
7dJP MAY6E' .

Saturday, July 3, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
A big improvement In yo ur relation ships
with pals within yo ur social _cltcle wil l be
taking place in the year ahead. An individ·
ual who has been a thOrn in your side will
lade from the picture,. lea\llng yol,l free !O
be yourself .
CANC E.R (June 21-July 22) - Subd ue
temptations today to purchase things th ai
you can 't pay tor in cash. Slrive to be
money-consci ous and to avoid further
debt, especially il your finan ces are short.
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) - Someo ne you
th ink is a sfaunch supporter may not
always !1old the same position as you and
leave you standi ng•alone today. 1t you think
you're nghl, be sell-s ufficient and act on
your own .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - It's not smart
to put off taking care of matters today that
require
your
immedi ate
a tten tion.
Negligence Will cause complications and
ma ke more work.
LI BRA (Se pt 23· 0 ct. 23) - Why ask for
troub le by associating with a group today
that includes indl\llduals wh o make you
feel ,uncom fortable? Hang out and associate only with th ose who make you feel welcomed
SCORPI O (Oct 24- No'l. 22) - If you 're
having pro blems with someone, especially
if it is a relati ve or in-law, it wou ld be wi se
not to diSCUSS it wilh outsiders today. Some
people love to repeat stories and cause
trouble.
SAGI TIAAIU S (N O\/ . 23-Dec . 2 1) Usually you're pretty prag matic and realistic, but today you may prefer l o view things
as you wou ld like them to be rather than as
they really are. Wishful thinking could be
your undoi hg.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Take an
accounting of any involvement or joint venture where yo u are expected to shell out
your money. Th ~ re 's 1:1 possibi lity you 'll be
played lor a sucker to pay mo1e than you r
fair share.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fe b. 19) - You've
always been a pretty good Horse trader,
but be ·advised today that you co uld meet
your match If you're not carefu l. Be on
guard at all times when negotiating a mat "
te r of importance.
PISCE S (Feb. 20,March 20) - If you ha\18
a tedi ou~ task to perform today; do so in an
atmosphere free from pe~ ring eyes and
outside 1nterlerence, You're not apt to per·
torm too well with others glancin g Ove r
your shoulder.
ARIE S (March 2 t -April 19) - It's quite
poss1ble today that you could run into
someone at a social gathering who can
gel you riled up qwte easily. Be ca reful ,
becau se il'tl hurt your •mage if you display
your di sljke
TAURU S (Apr il 20·May 20 ) - Guard
against tend encies today to poi nt the lin·
ger ot blame at another in orde r to shield .
yourse lf from prot)lems you created you r·
sell. Further complications will anse lor
Y.2!:! if vou're not honest _
GEMIN I (May 21·Juoe 20) - Your mind

• New Homes

At 't ~ in 'TI'!e
Saci&lt; . St~o'f n,t C ilo" ,
MY '1W• fii&gt;I&gt;&lt;GOS aslrep

1

• VInyl Siding • Polnllng
.. PM6a lftd Porch Decb

• Complete

raR:~1\ , ,,.,.1"'G
I Stl&lt;N'(l'l' 1\-llb~Gh
·
otr

·· l)(s•do ME , I wt!li::hcd

to'\r

fumlcoWO&lt;t

· V.C. YOUNG Ill

S5.00

. 11112-1215

' 740.949·2734

Pomeroy, onto

Stop &amp; Compare

22YW1Locol

•

9

founder
47 Bl-her
lhOutl
48 AgrM ·
49 Clucking

clue

sounds

50 Undo
51 .Med.
personnel
54 Bagel

variety

partner

35 Complacent
37 Newshawk's

house

rank

Wano ·
Boards
Rim
End a nap
Hound'o

28 BabysH
31 This,
In Bola
, 33 Poodle

Eur~.aian

quoJy

41 Robust ·
range
43 Ms. Hagen tO Twisted
of films ·
t_1 Car grill
44 Pion~
cover
45 Zodiac sign 18 Blackjack
48 Custodian 20 Roomy

•

40 "Becket"
actor

42 Farewells
44 Jet routes
45 Colorado ·
ski resort

CELEeRITY CIPHER
.• ·

by ·Luis Campos

··

Ce~D' ITV Cipher cryp•.ograms are created fr~ quotations by tamous ~. p!ISI: Mel pttsen!
Each letter In llle qiphel str.ds for 81101~•

TOOBy's clUe: Requals C

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IE

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DHSW

XE

KNBX

ZNRTG

NV FW

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PWZ

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FWX

JX

ENX.

JX

AW

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UHBC ' X

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J'P
HC

Y J R T Y E R TWX,"

~VEETB

My mind wants to see to infinity." - Stellie Wonder

T~~~:t:~' s©~~1A-a£~s·

11-&lt;t
Pass,,..o

WOit
UMI

- - - - - - ldiOod by CI.AY R. ,OLLAN -'-----~

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Rcorrcnge l1ttor't of
faur s:rombled words
low to form four words

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work place has a pert-r:
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..,.,-.,.,-'
1
who will say "That can 't be
I
1
SPUNU

L.-L-....!.-.!.._L_-J '(

L O Wy L H

~

done." That ~erson usually will
r~ passed up by the--- --- ·-

I1--T,-'1',-::-7-rl-,.1--,1-::"---1 O

CoiTiplete the chu die

Qvot•d •

.
.
_
.
.
.
.
by ldlin w in rhe misimg words
'--l.--'--'-'"---'-..1 ycv d1velop h om step , No. ) below. '.

ANSWERS 7-1 -o •

Gossip. Might- Abhor. Tendon- NEIGHBORS
· We have a very nosy ne1ghborwho enjoys sprea1ing
goss ip. My dad listened to ~er one day and then saia, "I
th ink you should tend to your own troubles and nol your
NEIGHBORS."
,

ARLO &amp;

JANI~

SOUP TO NUTZ

• Garages
Remodelini

6 Prospect
for gold
7 Dreams
8 Pedro's

23
24
25
26
27

may have a tende ncy to bti on other th ings
when important instructions are being
given to you today. To oHset this, force
yourself to concentrate by wnting every·
thing down .

• - . PlumOing

We do h .U U«;;lll

boss

36 Distort,
as dat•
38 Lennon's
wile
39 Ta~e away

22 Gaol nipUbllc 46 Cuzco

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Music can moasure how broad our horizons are.

~~!P!:

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

HAULING:

Hele n Rbwl and wrote, 'When a girl marries, she exchanges the attention s of all
the other men of her acquaintance for the
inattention of JUSt,one."
Th at's witty, but depressing when true. A
bridge ex pe rt pay s careful attenti on t.o
the spot-card s he holds; a less capable
player isn't so observant
In this deal , you (South) are the declarer
in four spades. Wesl cashes two top
clubs, the n shifts to a heart. You call for
· dummY's jack , and when it wins the trick,
you cash the sPade ace, West discarding
a club. How would you cont inue?
Sou th's jun',lp in answer to his partner's
takeout double shows some 9-11 poirlts.
North could sme ll a vu lnerable game , so
bid that game.
There is a danger of two diamond losers
to go with the two club tricks already conceded. But whene\ler .you ha\le A-0·10 or
A·0 ·9, tbink elim ination and ei1dplay.
At trick five, play a spade to yOur .seven,~~­
using th e first of your vital, not OYerlooked. tr ump sPots. Repeat the heart
finesse and c..a sh the heart ace. Wit h the
ro unded suit s e liminated, it is time for the
endplay. L:ead a 'diamond to your .nine.
'(East shou ld rise with his diamond jacK.
When declarer is going for an el imination
and endpiay, se cond hand should play
hiQh. But if East doeS that here. Soulh
just covers with the queen.)
West wins the Irick bu t is endplayed. He·
doe s best to lead the heart king , but you
ruff with dummy's tr ump king (discarding
the diamond queen or nine), play a
spade to your nine. draw the remaining
trump,. and claim.

~Astro-

R.B.

and Syracuse
July 2·3
Spaces available

•

West
1 ...

'

74G-992-7599

Tuppers Plain ,

today

Waterproofing.

SAVINGS

r

Free Estimates

occasion
Place your order

199B" Chryster Clrrus-V-6, r--::--:--:-----.
auto, """ · good g..
FRuns &amp;
mileage, NAOA 55,300- Sell
- · s• rs; cheot.of-dlaw- ~ VI!XiEI'AIIIBi
lol'$4.ooo. (740)U8-270t .
era. SolO. ,
2000 Dodge Neon, 4o1K
~Appliances
·
$16
gallon 0&lt; mites loaded B CO "'--r
·,
76 Vlno '
•
.,.,.., '
,.. ,.••-~·
Sol quart Friendly Ridge 55,000. (7o40)U8-2tQ!I.
v 40 ,......-~ (740)258-1141H !!ave ,_.
sage if no anSWSJ,.

j

Pomeroy, 9hio .

FREE ESTIMATES

Residen~al

• Any special

$10 each; pictures Variety of colors Phone - - - - - - - -

llllrtino •1 S7; Kenmore
walhertdryer .... $300:
Crolley retrlgeralor, like

•Log Homes
•Post Frame
&lt;omplete Remodeling
•Replacemeot Windows
•Roofs
·
Commercial and

Creative

• Birthdays
•Weddings

Unconditional tifetinto guar-

antee. local references furNeon, 71,000 nisheO. Established 1975.
miles, air, runs good. St ,700 Call 24 Hrs. (7-40) 446000. 7~256-9031 or 740- 0870, Rogers Basement

1997

-New Homes

SYRACUSE SMAI,l
ENGINE DR'S

,w,t.Ccdces

tor1.

•

B.arnhart Builders
30 years experience

or $6,900.00 (740)949-1828 '

Thompsons Appliance &amp; ~~·------· (304)675-3029
Aopalr-675-7388. For - · AKC Cho&lt;olale Labs, 6 t 993 Cavalier 4cyl. 5 speed,

BUILDERS me.

¥'.!:.,,....

Gallipolis, OH WVOI0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967 •

Dodge Dakota. $1 ,000 new,

Ranges,

"'

..&gt;

-~e•·r
"R!F~-~,;,.,-~:"""l
and All new -~
'IV and inta"·r
nv
Pill
Relrlgeratois,
start at doors, au sizes. Call after t982 Cadillac Oevlkl V-6. 4·
MCAMPFRSOillR
.
...!'~
' $95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 5:00. 50% off. 6t53 St Rt. 'door, Extra Clean, Runs
~
Dryer~,

.

.

.

992-2975

s'ifo· ·,

New Homes • Vinyl
~iding • New Gara'ges
' • Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

• Free Estimates
•c;,
, 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
·.' . . ,
H
1
• • uge nventory
"' . "i''&gt;~~ ' I '
• Vanguard Ventless Fireplaces '•l~~!jr ~
XRPP/111
1 .... '· 6- ~ ' ·
---IIIMJ£2.

and .._ _lliiiiiiiiii;;;;.•r 1980 Ford Bronco suitable will setl for $50Q 080 call

Reconditioned

au; Sill NY MOTORCYC&lt;.e!
Snapper

204 Condor Street

BISSEll

• Super Hi Efficiency &amp;Juipmen...

15xB American Racing Mag
Wheels Fll Chev or Toyota

Hon'd a's, Chevy's 4x4 $250 tor all

V

_Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces

30·30 Jeep's , etc Police lmpoullds 7204
$175.00 ~75-3188
Cars from S500. For listings ,--- , , - - - - - - BuiwiNG
1-BQ0-749-8104 ext3901
Red Trudo: Cap/Topper tor
W inchester Model

V

DAloft

tars $300 tor all Set of 6 Lug·

·
SSOOI.

11 $21. • _ .

~~~~~!=~I~E~III§I~·~II~W~III~~~~~~~~~~~~~nl~~~
• ...... ....

74D-589· 55,295, ·includos palntod 111111""-""'!'A•UIDl---""t Custom Ally wheels, Wloon-

5258.

l

, SALES &amp; SERVICE

'J'

.~

J,

1Rifl... lllllr

=-

immediately. Call

'

Meigs County's Largest 5electlon .of
annuals, perennlllls, vegeta/lles,
sltrubbtry, frlllt, ornamental trees. ·
roses, rltodollenarons, anll azaleas.

....,
_
••• 1111111 . .,.

r

i

i··

Pomeroy, Ohio
740• 992• 6454

200t ·OdysseY 21 ' Ponloon
Channel , Flat ,Bar, Steel sldn filly $1,500. (740)448· boat, 60 HP Mercury; new
Grating
For
Drains, iit3:jj1!iO;.
. ....,~~~-...., condition. lots of extras.
llflveways &amp;Walkways. L&amp;L
HAY &amp;
740 6-4782.
Scrap Me181a Open Monday,
GRAIN
Auro PAKI'S &amp;
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
AOCE!iliORJE'i
AFslocollng to Gallipolis. F~day. Bam-4:30pm. Closed
amity ~nta to .lease nice Thursday, saturday
&amp; Straw ror sale. S2.00· per
h&lt;lme wilh al kloat 3 bad
4/Good
w I
740
7300
5
rooms wllt1 garage. ~ _==und=ay"-.-"(..:.:::)448-c:.:::..c
P2651715~~~ tires g=~~

rllq&lt;Jir&amp;d. (740)U8- 1519WANJm
TO 1II1Nl'

.

channel

11
12
13
14
15
16

sources

,The difference
is in attention

GRAVELYTRACTOR ,

106 Butternut Ave.

BoATS&amp; MOTORS '
FOR SALE

Upstairs furnished apt. 3 NEW AND USED STEEL 5 year olcl2ml Division .bar·
~ms &amp; b&amp;rh. Clean, no Steel Beams, PIPe Rebar ret gelding Reg. $4,500
poll. AoterenC:es &amp; doposlt For Concrela, Angle, yea~ing l"""ntive lund buck·

Looking for a
non profit
'
29670 Bashan Road
organization to
Racine , Ohio
work one day" of
45771 •
740-949-2217
admission gates
~-Ts~·at the 2004
tq 1Q'd0' .
'
Meigs County
Hours
Fair. Please Call
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
740-985-4159.
1/1 4/t mo. pd

;;...&lt;\!~.'

bedroom apt. uiiiUies pakJ.
(740)949-0053
bike, black &amp;cream. $2,000.
·
daposll requlrad, no pots.
(740)446·02t3
{7401448-1370.
S350 each. (740)44t-9n1 . Traclor parts &amp; servlco, spe·
JET
clallzlng
In
Massey 2001 VT 1100 Honda
TWin Rivers Tower is acceJ!(~

Gravely

Pom.eTOt

1200

'

8 Hack

Phi-Ks!IPo 56 I, for
Good grloiff
WoHgang
Pub pint
57 Brain part
500 sheelo 58 Gu(lar
Atiantlc flier
cousins
Kyoto
59 Refrain
honorific
syllables
. 17 Write-up
60 Ballo!
19 Expect
• marks ·
21 Goddess . 6~ Worker'siD
of the dawn
22 Yale alumnus
DOWN
23 Big pitchers
26 -Atheno'a
t Look lnlenlly
domain
2 Coupd'29 Physique
3 Stronger-_
toalfng
30 Gellhe32 Fix a ·
4 Dreuy
manuscript
attire
34 Peat
5 Horrlb(e

Opening lead: "' A

·~;;;;;;;;;;:;,;;;;:~..':;;;;:;,;;;;;;~:;::;:;::~

;..(7_40.:.14_46
_·3_7_38_.~--- . As~ing $t25.' (740)448- summer, $8,000, 740·742· ·t996 Blue Custom Chrome

Nice one SR unfumished 2701.
ap.artlnent. Range &amp; refrlg .
p!'O\IIded. Water &amp; garbage FOR RENT- ;2.. '•32', 3 stall
•
•
pole bam. Private. At. 7.
Oeposll
required.
Call s 2 00 per month. (7401446(paid.
)
_
afler
apm.
740 446 4345

'

(304) 273-5321

Hill's Self
Storage

740·992·5232

700cc, shaft dri\len , 5 speed

Phone (740)446.()390.

• AQ9

Soulb

316 Washlogton Street
Rayenswood, WV 2616if
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Pomeroy, Ohio

(
Shadow,

Q. J 9 7 3
9 6 2

4 Meu- 55 Spono

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Free Estimates

.

... ~ 8•7 2

... 10 5

ROARING AAOUNOONA

337~5 Hiland Rd.

K 10 R 3

•

IT'?! NOl' Til ME.\lTION

Self~Storage

K B5 4

•

•

SOUNDS GP-fAT, CXIESN'T

~'R~
High&amp; Dry

•

l!:ast
(o 10 8 A 2
• 10 l 3
-'+ J 5

•

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

• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Tr'Uck

•

"' Q 3

South

Free Estimates

Tree ·service
• Top • Removal • Trim

30 Yrs. El(p,

7 6 4 2

53 Ken or Lena
of fltm

1 Violin part

'·

·. JONES'

I

'r40

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

HttNrt: Mor~Jaf- $4tt4~ ' : '
~ ·1
Barlj' preJUI~Io•~arrangtmmll amildlt. ,
R.Amt Sr., Owrrtr

TRUCKS

AQJ

•

.A .. J .. 64

• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
t Roads t Streets

®&gt;llloP'£:1'

t Vall H
ital
$25 ,500 (304)593·3946
eiiSiln
ey osp
c/o Debra Long
83 Ford F-150, 6 cyl 4 sp.,
lor application &amp; lntorma.tlon .
2520 Valley Drive
. good condition , $1 900; 79
• Gracious living. t and 2 bed·
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Mercedes, 2 dr.. 5 cyt diesel,
room apartments at VIllage
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 2418 .
needs
work ,
$450.Ma.nor
and
Riverside
www.pva.(ley.org '
ANEOE
(740)992·0437
Apartments
in Middleport
From $295·$444.
Call 740. .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
M01URCY&lt;l.&amp;'i
Townhouse

and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Coli (740)44 t-t tt t

.t Driveways • Te.nnis Courts

!fo'l-wi·u•·-f~oe-"ffpoWment•

Windows, Power Locks,
Power Mirrors, Auto 4 wheel
drive ., Towing Package, Tilt
Wheel ,
Cruise
Control
Cus1om Dual E&gt;~haust (Flow
Master), Tool Box; Fog
Lamps , Oversized Ti res

certific'7'10n. WV license eligible (will assist in
obtain c·g). Sign on boous aqd compf'titive
salary. ~ ·
,New g· ds are 'welcome!.-

.Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457·

Special,izing In Po01;ed {:oqcrete
Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls

Phono: 1-740-992-9922
,1-1166-~10-0555 '

•

We st

SlatsWide
t:NI Poured Walls

397aa Sr. Rt.14J • Pom•nw. OH 45769
Jus~; oO: St. lb. 1

FORSAIE

·-

•

875-2457

6:30

.

Norlb
07-02 O&lt;
4 .A K 5 4

Henderson, WV

~onument

)

MENTS

-MYERS

Last Thursday of ·
· ' every month
All pack $5.00
Bring Ibis couPon
. Buy $5.00
Bonanza Gel

. 740-843-5264

Ripley. WV
' ·
· lion $4 ,800 (304)675-7545
Full 11n1e, Current state PT licensure, graduate
2003 Silverado 1500 EXt.
of an approyfd school of PT or graduate of Cab 4x4 Z71 Oft-Road Pkg.
accredited ; allege or university with a 34 ,000 miles, Duel Climate
certifkale in PT. current Bj::LS (CPR) Control. CD player. Power

&amp;

1

Box 189 • Middleport

1996 Dodge Dakota Sport
Truck, Exte(lded Cab, 2WQ,
1 Owner, · 93,000 mites,
matching. topper , Includes
tonneau co\ler, great condi·

.

·

\and Financial

740-992-1189 .

- ~ . Pleasant Valley Hospital

¢entenary, appliances fur- .
111ished, cttilffies paid, e xcept
4te'ctrlc, clean-$350 month.

We cari insure your valuables!•

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing· Siding·
Painting· G.utters Decks· etc.
For Fast Courteous
Service
· Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,
Call ... De11nis Boyd

(304) 675-4340

AAIEOE

BINGO 2171
Ev~ry Thursday
&amp; &amp;unday
Doors Open 4:jo
Early birds start

would you lose if there was a fire?

Houses, porches:
Garages. Pole
Barns, Roofs,
Renovations
740-949-1606
7 40-591 -1053

• Flexible scheduli ng . excellent salary,
holidays. health in surance single/family plan ,
demal plan. life insurance. vacation. long-term
di sabil ity and retircm~n1 .

22tB

IF YOU RENT

52 Mlscell•ny

f';t/'JDe~D TliiS

M

a fvlc;~ tv'\eNT ~tND THeN
CaMe To a s~DDeN
~a L1 'Z.3T1 oN .

�..

•
• Page BS •

..

The Daily Sentinel '

-..

...

.•

;

•

.·

.

..~.my
;J d' ~• 'lysentine
. 1 '
.com

Friday, July 2, '2oo4\ ·

t

~

•

Indians sneak·
past Tigers irL1~th
BY lARRY LAoE

clearly frustrated with his
. bullpen's problems. _
Gerut homered 10 right 011 ·
a 2-2 pitch frotn Ugueth
DETROIT ~ .IOOy Gerui . Urbina (3-3) with one Ol\t in
~yed like a star against the the lOth. and Rick White got ·
trait Tigers. ·
·
three outs for his first save. .
Again. ·
.
. The Tige rs won lht'ee
Gerut's ~01ne run m th~ · straight Oli gume-winning
lOth mmng. sent · tlie home runs before coastin" to
C.leveland lndtan,s to a 7-6 · a 12_5 win ove r ·the indians
vtctory · Thursday over on Wednesday for their
Detrott, endm~ the Ttgers' longest wim1ing streak ·in two
st~;game wmnmg.streak. . years. .
·. ' · .
I swear .I don t Cotl)e m
"Th t' 1· · th · •h. .
I'm Rgo·I ng
e ·itee three
lpg " ~ames
ere " in~na
be thinking
add' thatih'
.d you do
· here
to P hmg \111Y4-tmg • sat row bui it's not ooino to h·tp- .
Ge
rut ' wbl o was
· .'&lt; T1·gers
" man'
·
"I' . or-.5 w1th. ·pen ·all the ume.
d
two
es." t s JUSt one ot ager ..,.,n
A ... T ..
II· .. ·d
those ou.
thmgs
1.umne .s.u .
Ge h· · hi thre 0 f h' .. Detroit had a chance to win
.
rut as t . e
Is seven stmight for ·u1e lirst
seven
homers
this
season
· stnce
.·
1993 . the 1ast
. sea.
. _
· a~wnst the Tigers and 10 ot t1me
hls 31 RBis h~ve come son it had a winning reco_rd.
· t th
InA .1 h h d
Ronnie Belliard's oo-ahead
em. five hits
pn •agai
e nst
a smg
· le m
· the s1xth
· "' ~elpe
· d'
aagams
career-high
Detro't
·
Cleveland avo td a threeo Ge~i.' in his second ma'or
game sweep.
league season, has 10 of ~is
Younj;'s third career slam
29 career home runs and 37 in the hfth gave the Tigers a
of 106 RB!s against the 5·3 lead, but it wasn't ·
Asspciated Press

..

•

:~~s~~~~s~\~~dJ~~~ =~~t~~-~~n!i~~~kahea~

nitely got their number," said
teaminate Matt Lawton, who
hit a three-run homer in the
third.
Dmitri Young hit a goahead gratid slam for Detroit
in the fifth inning, ancl'Bobby
Higginson tied it at 6 with a
homer off David Riske in the
ninth.
The Ttgers then looked as
· ht wm
· anot hthoug h they nug
. er game irl dramatic fashion
when Ivan Rodriguez doubled and Young was l'(alked
intentiol)ally.
But Riske (4c2), getting a
. second chance to be
· Cleveland's closer, struck out
Carlos Guillen· and got Cnt..ig
Monroe to pop out, ending
the inning.
·
· "Somebody's got to grab
the bull by the horns and finish these games off." said
. Indians manager Eric Wedge •.

Duke: Lakers, Krzyzewski
i
·discussing ·~oachirig vacanc~

Spider-Man II comes to the big screen, C6

··
D0RHAM. N.C. (AP) - .Duke's
Mike Krzyzewski met with Los Angeles
Laker~· genera l manager Mitch Kupchak
tin Thttrsdav mid was in ·~serious disc.ussions··· with. tne team ~tiout its cmiching

'
.
· '
are a great franchise."
..Brodhead satd he and ~ lle va urgeq .
Duke spokesman Jon Jackson said Krzyzewsk1 to ftntsh Ius career at th1&lt;
Krzyiewski was in Durham . earlier sc~ool. .
.. .
.
:.
Thursday. The. Lpkers dedined to say
He ll}e,~ns more to thts .Pldce th.an th~
wh~re·the discussions were held.
record ot h1~. VIC!Ortes. 1mp.~ess,'v~
va~ani:y.
An attempt to reach Krzylewski by though that tS, Brodhead satd. He s a
KrzyLewski , a · 57-ye'ar-old Hall of "phone was unsuccessful.
real teacher. l;fe .~eaches char-acter a!
Famer. has led the Blue Deyils t~ three
By Thursday night. about I 00 students well as basketball .
.
• .,
national .:Championships in almost .a and fans gathered at "Krzyzewskivil le"
Krzyzewski has a 621·119 record ut
quarter-century at the school. .
- the grassy plot outside Camerori 24 seasons at Duke. leading the Blue;
., "Coach K, has informed us that the Indoor Stadium where siudents ~amp Devils to NCAA champtOnshtps m
t..os Angeles Lukers have contacted him ou t to attend Blue Devil basketball 1991 , · 1992 .and 200 I. Under
· and et1tered into serious discussions to games- with signs·and flags urging the Krzyzewski , the Blue Devils have I.~ ..
fill their vac.ant h~ad coaching position ." coach to stay.
Final Four appearances, etght Atlanlt~
·•
Duke athletiC director Joe Alleva said.
Duke president Richard Brodhead Coast Conference tournament c hampu
. Lakers spokesman John Blac~ said !Old The Associated Press he and Alleva onships and I0 conference regular-sea~
Kupcna
" k· met wtt· h ......
v• zyzews k't. "Th ey · h a d ;· d'mner wtt
· I1 Krzyzews k'1 on · son
· ttl·1es.
•.•
·talked about our coachino~ vacancy.'' he Tuesda•'.
His Duke
teams have been
ranked
No~
1 af.ter Brodhead became aware
.
. ..
.
.
said: .
that · the coach had talked with th e I tft 12 dtlterent seasons, mcludmg eacq
BI'ack said the tea m hasn:t made a ·Lakers.
of ·the last seven years.
:
dec ision, and was· co. nsiderin g several
Brodhead said he didn ' t know if the . "If he decides 'that he"s. had a grei
other candidates to replace Phil Jackson . . Lakers offered Krzyzewski the job.
~tde at Duke, but .somethmg else cal
Alleva said he di!ln't know if the
"If he has the offer, he's going to have out to htm now, wed have to understan .
K rzyzews k'1 an d the L akers were cIose a b'tg dectston
· ·
be f ore h'tm ," sat'd th at, " Bro dh ea d sat'd; "I n th e mean t'me'
1
,
to a deal. •
Brodhead, 11&gt;ho officially took office as you can b~ sure we II do all we can tq
"! haven't been privy to their conver- Duke 's president Thursday, succeeding persuade him that Duke and the ~olleg= ·
sations," he .said. '~But obviously, they Nan Keohane.
game are the nght place for htm.
•
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:·--------------,---------------------~
•

.
able with the Cavaliers' organization,
owner Gordon Gund and the direction
the team is going," Pelinka said. "l..'m
confident that Jim and I will continue to
have Conversations and we ' ll be able to
work something out. "
The 6-foot-9 Boozer emerged as one
of the NBA's rising stars with a breakout .2003-04 season. He averaged 15.5
points and I 1·.4 rebounds, and along
with Rookie of the Year LeBron James ,
helped Cleveland ·improve its win ·total
from 17 .to 35 in one season.
Boozer was runner-up as the league 's
most improved player and was extended an invitation to play for the U.S.
Olympic team in Athens next month.
Several media outlets reported that
the Cavs had exercised Boozer 'soption .
However, the opposite occurred as the
club decided not to pick up the fina l
year of his deal- a bargain at roughly
$700,000.
·
By not e;&lt;erctsmg the option , the
Cavaliers are taking a calculated risk.

•

The first hybrid SUV, Dl .

,

if

..

tm

Hometown ~ews for Gallia &amp; Mei$S counties
Ohio\ all&lt;·~ Publishing Co.

SPORTS
• Rotary mile winners
anAounced. See Page
81

B,oozer a free agen.t, but not leavi_ng.~

Travis Hafner hit a leadoff
double and scored on Gerut's
CLEV
' ELAND ·(AP)
Carlos'
double. Ben Broussard followed with a sacrifice lly
Boozer's free agency should be shortbefore Belliard's single put·
Jived . He isn't planning to go anywhere.
the Indians ahead 6-5 .
Boozer 's contract option for next sea"What these guys have
son wasn't picked up by the Cleveland
done with what we ' re going
Cavaliers before Wednesday 's deadline,
through in the bullpen, it's
a SW'prising deci sion by the club. which
pretty special." Wedge said.
immediately makes the third-year forBoth staners were far from
wqrd a restr-icted free agent.
s. pecta
· 1.
· Boozer, though, isn't interested in
.
Cleveland's Cliff Lee
playing for any other team than tlie
allowed live runs and six hits
Cavaliers. who intend Jo sign him to a
in live inliings after serving a
long-term deal sometiffitolthis summer.
stx-game suspens 1on for
"I want to be in Cleveland." Boozer
throwing behind Ken Griffey
said Thursday. "I like it here . My wife
Jr. on June 13.
ani:! l are very, very happy here. and I
Detroit's Jason Johnson,
want to be with the Cavaliers. Good
who .allowed only oner i'!Jn
things are happening. Now it's up to my
and one hit in his last stmt:
agent and ~he Cavs to work things our.
gave up six runs and nine hits · .. "I hope they will. "
in 7 1-3 innings this time.
Agent Rob Pelinka has already begun
" It's frustrating ," 'said
contract talks with Cavs general managJohnson. one of his many , er Jim Paxson. ·
short answers. .
"Carlos and his wife, C. C., 'made it
clear t&lt;? ~e that they are very col]lfort-

l.

ALONG THE RIVER

..
•
Another team could swoop in and off~
Boozer a gigantic deal, which the
Cavaliers woutd be able to match .
1
But the cl ub doesn't plan to let thing~
get to that point. Once the NBA's mora!
torium period ends July 13, the Cavs
will be able to offer Boozer a long-temi
contract.
· :
"Yesterday th.e Cavaliers eles;ted no!
to exercise our team option for Carlos
.
Boozer's third season," Paxson said. in~
statement: "As a result. we now are
able, and fully intend, to enter into~
long-term contract with Carlos. ·
·
" ... Cados Boozer is a valuable, coni
part of the foundation o.f this team mov'
mg forward and our.desire is for him to
be a Cavalier for the long-term."
;
Under the l eag u e~s collective bar;
··gain in!;\ a'greement, the ·cavaliers · catJ .
only g1ve the former Duke star a deal
starting at the mid-level exception;
which will be about $5 million a sea;
son. The .contract .can be for a niaxi•
mum.of si.x yearS.

l'nnwro~ • \tiddt&lt;'l""'l • (;allipolis • ,Jul~ -l· ~mq

$1.:!!) •

\'nl. :~H. Nn. ()-

Black.bear makes surprise appear~nce
.

'

came to an opening in the
tloodwall between the Mason
County Action Group Inc. and
GALLIPOLIS - A bear American Legiori Post 23.
released into the wild as part
Alected to the bear's presence
of a state nature conservation atier it was lirst seen at Krodel,
program decided to pay a Point Pleasant Police and the
visit to downtown Point Mason County Sheriff's depanPlea sa n ~ Friday afternoon
ments discovered that after
before mo ving on to Ohio.
goil)g thr,ough · the lloodwall
The black female bear, door, the bear turned left on a
weighing 198' pounds, was gravel, path toward Tu-Endie,
spotted ·at Krodel Park Wei State Park.
..
around 2 p.m., where it· wan ..
Authorities shifted their.search
dered'into the Kingtown area, to the park, scouting the&gt; perimetraveled underneath the ter as onlookers gathered by the
, Bartow Jones Bridge and was Ohio River side to get a view of
then seen on Second Street. · the bear- which .they soon did.
It crossed Main Street and . The bear traveled down the'
BY KEVIN KELLY

KKELLI'o@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

.

.

embankment to the river and tured in Boone County where it
·swam across ahead of a pass- and a male partner •were .banging northbound barge, com- ing around a mine site where
ing ashore behind Ri verfront people had been feeding them.
Honda in Kanauga, .where it
Because male bears are
scampered up I he embank" known to be testy when breedmen! to the amazement of ing, the female was removed
those watching its progress and let loose at the McClintic
from Tu-Endie·Wei.
· Wildlife Management Area.
Considering the afternoon . where the nine-county district
heat and humidity, "the river · Dotson serves is based.
probably felt pretty gmd,"
The bear was expected to
satd Tom Dot son , West return its home. •but Dotson
Virginia Division of Natural noted that ·when . reill&lt;ived.
Re sources di strict biologist, from thei r' regular homes,
who trac ked the bear 's path.
bear will become disoriented.
The bear was still wearing a
·wreneveryouhaveabeartl1Ul's
radio collar attached by DNR. leftitshome,itamOO::omecon!ltsal
Dotson said the bear was cap- and fiightened and can travel as fw·

"'
.r; lll or 400 mile;,·· re said
·· The t&gt;ear c;tused no damage
and aside from some startled
onlookers. no one was hurt, a
spokesman
for
Mason
County 9- f- 1 said.
!'eople on the street. as well
as those at Krodel and TuEndie-Wei , kept their di stance as the bear continued
its swi ft trek fo the river.
Ohio authorities were·man- ·
itoring the bear's trave'ls.' It
was seen by ,; state hignway
patrolman near U.S. 35 at
Kan auga as it continued
moving in land frail) the river.

Please see Bear, AS

The Queen is t:r@Wned -A day at River Rec•

•

OBITUARIES

!

Page AS
• EUa Flora, 9.0 ·
• Merlasa Harris, 2 menths
• Paul D. Parsons, Ill, 69
· •.Danny L. Shain, 60
• Richard Woodyard, 7.0
.. • Earl Ray Myers, 43

ABOVE: The South Gallla High School cheerleaders tumbled
and shouted ~eers all the way ~hrough downtown Gallipolis
during the ·RN.\r Recreation Festival Parade. (I an McNemar)
BELOW: Blake Chamfer (left) pounds his brother, Travis, into
the rope!f'of the. inflatable boxing ring set up in 'the Gallipolis
City Park f9[. kiQ.s. (len· McNemar)
"
·

INSIDE
__ J •.

• Riot of perennial colors.
See PageA2
• Little Miss and Mr.
Firecracker winilers
ahriounced See Page .AS

.

..

'

WEATHER
Stormo posltblo, HI: - · Low: -

·Syracuse rei'ristates·· five firefighters

f

•
•

BY
Detallo

on Pace A6

INDEX
•

"

•

4

S~cnONS-

24 PAGES

· 'Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C4-5
Ciassifieds
D3
insert
Comics
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
A6
State
Bt-6
Sports
· A6
weat}Jer
Down on the F11nn " A2'
© 2004 Ohio Vallty Publlsblntl C...

• Taxl5, Tags, Title ftts extra. GM owrte~loyalty rebate Included In sole price of new Ylhklt 1111111 whirl awJkllllle.
""'OIIJIPIOVId credit.' On u~cttd
. models.Hot rllpOMible for lypographkalerran. Prklt goad June 30th llw'ol9l JW, 4th.

..

W..t Yllcl.,• fl ~ , . , ....., ~

MON.·THUR. t am • t pm • FRI. &amp; SAT. t 1m • 10 ,pm •

I

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

SYRACUSE'. -. . Syracuse
Village Council members
have reinstated the five volunteer firefighters who were
dismissed last month.
Officially, council dismi ssed two firefighters
because they were not certified as firemen, and the other
three because they Jived outside the village. among other
reasons .
Mayor Mony Wood said
the firefighters resolved their
. disagreements at Thursday 's
cou.ncil meeting . .
"I think there were some
issues that needed to be
worked out," he said.

"Council decided to put them
" I think it is personal
back qn the fire depanment against all of us." said
because we need the help in Pickens, who had been chief
Syracuse."
.
for 37 years as of last week's
. "It's like having something council meeting. .
you love taken · away from
Lyons asked council to
you," said Lamar Lyons, a ..reinstate Picken s as tire chief
certified firefighter and para- or co-tire chief. or as the ommedic.
cer in charge at the scene of a
· Despite the council 's fire . Wood· said he and counthange of heart for the fire- cil are .stick ing by the current
fighters, forme( Fire Chief leadership at the fire departEber Pickens Sr.. will not be men!. Jack Peterson will
allowed to join them as chief. remain.as fire chief.
Council removed Pickens as
Wood emphasized that
fire chief in June citing con- there have been problems in
cems about the morale of the the past with Pickens· style of
fire' department. Council also · leadership. Wood atlded .that
charged that Pickens was mak- he has talked with or warned
ittg decisions without coun- Pickens Si?CC Jan uary to
cil's approval, such as putting make some changes, orcouncil would' take action.
stripes on the fire trucks.

..

.

.' '

,J

CNIYIDIU

Wl\lll-

.
.
Asuprised and excited Ashley Caldwell gives thanks to her farl)Uy moments after being crowned
, 2004 River Recreation. Festival Queen Friday evening at the Gallipolis City Park. Caldwell, a
River Valley Aigh School senior, explained how..basketball has affected her life and how it brings
her family together. When asked "What is your recipe for a perfect life?," Caldwell responded,
"God. Laughter. And a ~ense of adventure." (ian McNemar)

( In·' d

July 111.

T1flt I·71 to Rlplty FAIRPI.AIN lnterGI!Ingt
(nit 132) Tum N0111t on Rt 21, ·
a.--11 a m111t on 1t1t

1pm·tpm .

•

J

,.

Wishing you
a safe, healtfty
and .fun July .4th!.
.•

/

MEDICAL CENTER ·
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
'

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