<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5765" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5765?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T18:19:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15695">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/416cc8c68f9008e04680907adf0c2edc.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3f074ae27e25cbe186292b3bfb2d136b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="19413">
                  <text>•
j

P!lge 86 ~ The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com'

Wednesday, June 18,2003

Dear

Abby

TM Rtl&gt;.lLY
'TIR'EP Cf

Jan. 19)- You could have a
strong tendency today to be
talking at moments when you
should be listening . Later,
when you need the information told to you, you might
not remember the key points.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Being able to stay
within the bounds of the
budget you've established for
yourself could be rather difficult for you today. Avoid
frivolous expensive activities
and do no credit buying._ ·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -Conditions could be a

bit unsettling on the home
front today . Treat developments as tactfully as possible,

48 Wry
so On terra
1 Dessert
firma
choices
· 52 Kind deeds
5 Rodeo
53 Border
prop
plants
10 Long54 Reeked
winded
55 Red-Ink
12 In a weird
amount
way
13 Walch out
DOWN
14 Handy
15 Extend
1 Kind
.across
of school
16 Seize
2 Hawkeye's
18 Sault
home
3 Splrited- Marie
19 Not yet
ness
4 Title lor
expired
21 Marth bird
Gulnness
25 Oyster
5 "- Girls"
treasures
6 Mars,
29 Sun-dried
• to Plato
brick
7 Prepare
30 Money,
flour
slangily
8 Fishtail
32 Widespread 9 Popeye's
damage
Olive 33 BIHer
10 "Mystery!"
34 Milder
channel
3r Thumbs
11 Lucy
through
Lawless
38 Talk
role
40 Court
12 Blake of jazz
evidence,
17 Jungfrau,
maybe
e.g.
43 Belief
19 Some tees
44 Needlnn .,.;n
rtiVnh .l

Could the loveliest rose,
cursed with its thorn,
Be simply a weed imperfectly born ?
Dear Abby is writ/en by
Abigail Van Buren. also
known as Jeann e Phillips,
and ·was founded by her
moth er, Pauline Phillips.
Writ e Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com · · or
P.O . Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

Pidure yourself
1n a new career.
•

Find it in the
Classifieds!

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 201

40 Darnl
41 - Scotia
42 By and by
44 Chan
rejoinder
(2 wds.)
45 Oecays
46 Retirees'
kitties
47 - Plaines,
genre
Ill. ·
Petty of
48 Maybes
"Tank Girl" 49 Get one's
Willowy
goat
Want51 Roman sun
Film specgod
taculars
Thing
in law
Far East

27
28
31
35

36
39

Bv J. MILES
Staff writer

nAnnv

.

AVERAGE GAME 115· 175

.,..,

41hOOWN

JUOO'S TOTAL

-

•_lL

AVERAGE GAME 155-165

by JVDD HAMBRICK

Scrim·

259

FOUR PLAY TOTAL

TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

OtRECTIONS: Make i 2- to 7-letter word tram the letters on e8Ch yardllna
Add points to each word.or letter using scoring directions at rlgtJt. ~vfiD.Iel1er
&gt;NOrds get a 60-point booiJS. All words can be toune in Webster's New Wor1d

mag~

c.,..,.
.....

JUOO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

Dlctiooa~ .

\N\1'&lt;', TVE qcJ1
\-IA\.'r A M\1-l.D
lb I&lt;NC(K.

~tiR~t.\4

CA\.\.\W:l
M~ Olf&gt;l ··

\\l'i BL~
01'1=

\NIT'ittl

Partly cloudy, HI: 80s, Low: 60s

1116 GMc!'.R'f CI\RT·.

PU5~

111~

CLA~51C 5~M60L

()f "l'lt

Cl\ll:f

I !lEMON:

BA&amp;f

S!RATE M~
Ltl\11Nf1

Mlll&lt;~NAL

0

''

n

I·~~

Hllfo 1!1 PU5~
IT, I 5ENO
A IYIE!t.&gt;I'6E Of
RESI'E~T FOR

11\E CRITlCAL

l1'WE
TURNS, WE Rll£·
PIJM 1\IE m•UL
6\UE·ANO·TAKE

Of HEALT!i~
PARENTJN~ IN

ROLE...

I

J. MILES
Staff writer

These Texas retirees are part of a 15-camper Airstream Caravan traveling from Dallas to
Vermont for a national convention of Airstream enthusiasts. They made a brief visit to
Pomeroy as part of their scenic byways itinerary. (Brian J. Reed)

Airstream caravan
stops in Pomeroy
BY BRIAN

J. REED

Staff writer
POMEROY - When Jack
Kerouac wrote "On The
~oad," a legendary novel
about friendship and four
trips across America, he didn't have Airstream campers in
mind, but a group of Texans
visiting Pomeroy Wednesday
find the distinctive silver
campers the perfect vehicle
for a cross-country oddessey.
On the way to an Airstream
Owners' Convention in Essex
Junction, Vt., the group of
retirees from North Texas
arrivetl m Pomeroy early

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

TliE.. .

'
Oualln N..h, 4th &amp;rade
Pomeroy Elementary

I
f

I 'M

6011'11~

YES~

~

"t'ES .

A HE.SSAG.E I

To MAKE.

-"LL THE

r I...OVE

~

SCREENS
tT ' W!-4A'T 'LI...
15-lANK 1•
IT" SAY ?
Tt-IEN A
WHAT'S THE.
ME. SSAG.E
ME~SA(.E '
WILL
j'--,~-1

(i,O

NOw TI'IAT.

Index
2

Sections - 12 Pllces

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

wt'V~2f~,

83-4
BS ·
BS
A4

AS ·
Bl-2
A2

0 2003 Ohio Valley Publishins Co.

ltN~NTEP

-....
=: LANIIUAGE. LtT'S
TAl-IC AIOLIT OIJit
:
F.E~ATIONftiiP.' '. \

POMEROY _U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland has requested
$829 ()()() from the federal
budg~t for renovations at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
in conjunction with local
efforts to secure federal
funding for a community
clinic.
A steering committee has
submitted a second application through the U.S. Dept.
of Health .. and Human
Services to fund a community health center, which
would provide primary medical care, behavioral health
services and dental care to
the entire community.

:i

APPEAl'.'

~

IMRII.f.Tifl(, (N-'&amp;,1(,1-&lt;, WE.
0
M/&gt;¥.f. ~O::E 1-lfi\U\
..l
H\( Nli'lt1~ et.O.Jn.JG,

~

0

...:c=

tf ~OU (.~\(!',
1'\'( DRI n !

Wednesday, by way of the
Appalachian Highway, Ohio
124 and curvy,
narrow
Mulberry Avenue.
·
A total of 15 Airstream
coaches make up this caravan, and more are e.Jtpected to
join up between here and
Vennont. The core group left
Texas on June 8, and have
been following a pre-set itinerary since.
Their trip is one which
emphasizes "scenic byways,"
and includes the Ohio Scenic
Byway Route on which
Pomeroy and Middleport are
included. Their route was
mapped out a year ago by car-

avan leaders, and the trip to
Pomeroy was considered an
"optional" .stop on the way to
Wheeling, W.Va., where the
caravan planned to spend
Wednesday night. .
.
The visitors were particular·ly impressed with Pomeroy's
Gennan-intluenced architecture -- Sacred Heart Church,
for example -- and of course,
the bending Ohio River a' seen
from Pomeroy's Riverfront
Amphitheater.
Following rivers, primarily,
the caravan is actually divided
into several groups of three or

Please see caravan, AS

A decision on ·the grant year lease on the 4{) year-old
application is expected building.
sometime in August, about
County
Commissioner
the same time Congress acts Mick Davenport, who has
on the budget requests sub- served as chainnan of the
mitted by members , includ- steering committee seeking
ing Strickland's.'
federal funding , said a
· A critical access hospital. physician annistrator have
whtch would .mclude emer- already '.'s igned on" in ·the
gency room servtces, would event 'the federal grant is
be included in later plans for approved. and said the steer·
the hospital, if federal fund- ing committee has deter·
ing tor a community health mined local management of
the facility is in the best
clinic is approved .
Strickland's request cites a interest of the citizens.
need for facility renovations
"We've ' had a number of
and equipment purchases for 'health care providers and
the hospital building, which groups look at the facility.
has been vacant since but we hope it can be Meigs
Consolidaterl Health Systems, County-based, because that
Inc .. the parent company of . would help us control our
Holzer Merlical Center, relen- own destiny," Davenport
quished the balance of its 99 said.

·America's

-

~~--

--------·-·-.- . ----

The building, which once housed Karr and VanZandt Motors ,
and more recently. Meigs Tire Center. was demolished by
Jeffers Excavating Wednesday. The West Main· Street lot was
recently purcha.sed by Horace Karr, and will be developed into
a parking lot for Karr's new restaurant, The Wild Horse Cafe,
located JUSt across the street. (Brian J. Reed)

&gt;tf\ERE Nt£'1'0U &amp;OJ~ 7

'1o 11'.\:-roof , TO Cf\Qi&lt;, Tf\E.'"'! .
WtNI&gt; DtRECXtON

fO~ YOU!

for

An event of the American Diabetes Association

J

r· fr-.:o.

· Saturday, June 21 , 2003
Gallipolis City Park · 3 Mile Walk
Check-in Time: 9 AM • Start Time: 10 AM
For more information or to register, please call
1·888-DIABEJES

E-

-·------~---

Coming down

Holzer Health Systems is a 13roud sponsor of Gallia County's

~~~~~· · ~~-.::~~:_:~n,...,:~~~~·~:~~~~~~~~
1:1:: f"'BE-fOCE WE; LN.MCI'. QUI:. Nf.I-J'"'I

accident" and was glad no one
was hurt. The mayor -said
Klein was doing nothing
·wrong and that it is "fringe
POMEROY
Mayor benefit': for village employees
Victor Young III told vi llage to use the garage to repair their
council Wednesday
not to worry about
the damage to the village gara~e and the
vehicles mside that
was caused by the
fire Tuesday eve11ing
because these losses
would be covered by
insl!T'dllce.
·
Whik! itemizerl daffi.
age. .taals are still arning in fium IXmning
01ilds Mulkn Mtl'll::r,
!be~ C&lt;lDH fer
!be ~ !be map
said tbe garage was Robert Kle in's car also has damage
insured for $50,000. resulting from the fire Wednesday at the
Three vehicles old junior high building. (J. Miles Layton)
were damaged In
the fire. Young said one truck own vehicles. Young said
was totally destroyed and two Klein will not be reprimanded,
other trucks received minor but that his vehicle will not be
damage . Village Fire Chief replaced al village expense.
Rick Blaettnar placed prelimAccording to eyewitnesses,
inary estimates of damage to there was little chance that
village-owned vehicles at Klein could have done any$75,000. The mayor said the thing to extinguish the fire
village has a separate insur- before it spread. After the
ance policy, also through council meeting. assistant
Downing Childs Mullen police chief Floyd Hickman,
Musser, which would provide who was on duty nearby at the
the money necessary to repair police department when the
fire erupted, said he heand a
or replace the vehicles.
The garage caught fire when loud explosion. He immediRobert Klein, a city employee, ately went to see what had
was making repairs to his car. happened, but by the time he
While Klein was replacing the got there, the garage was up iri
automobile's fuel pump, he flames. Hickman saill that if
dropped a trouble light on the Klein had been in the building
ground. The ligbt bulb broke a moment longer, he might
and ignited some gas fumes.
have been seriously_ injured in
- Young said this was "a freak the explosion .
lAYTON

Pomeroy hospital subjec~
to budget request
Staff writer

THERE'S T~E YELLOW ONE ...
AND THERE'S THE RED ONE 1
AH . WHAT MEMORIES!

Fire damage
covered
by
•
Insurance

LAYToN

POMEROY - Potholes have
tten making driving conditions in
the village less than enjoyable for
the past severn! months. It wa&lt;&gt;
noted at Wednesday night's meeting of Pomeroy Village Council
that WelshiOWn Rood and Lincoln
Hill are particularly bai
Leroy Landers, who lives on
Welsh10wn Rood, askerl OJuncil
last night to do something about
the problem on his street
"You can't even drive up that
hill," be said.
Landers told council about
motorists driving up Welshtown
Rood who have lost ex)"laust system' or punctured new tires.
Council president Todd Norton
said the village is aware of the
problem and will be doing something about it in short order.
MayO.. Victor Young ID said the
street department will deal with
problems very soon. perllaps a&lt;&gt;
early a' this weekend weather permitting. The mayor said the reason
it has !liken so long 10 repair the
roads is mainly becauo;e of the
weather.
"We have not had three whole
dry days in a month to get this
done," Young said.
To repair these roOOs, the street
department needs to clean out the
· potholes and prepare them before
they can be fillerl with a mixture of
hot tar. Young said enough pot·
holes must be prepared so that
street wOikers will be able to use a
fulllood of tar to fill them in. Then
the streets must stay dry long
·enough 10 put the tar down un the
roads. It !likes about three days of
good weather to complete the
whole process:
Young said this is a ternporlll)' ·
solution 10 get the village by until
it receives the money lium the
Federal Ernergercy Management
Agency (FEMA) promised the
village after the ice stonn in
February. The. village has yet to
receive more than $40,(XXl which
will be used to do major repair
work on the streets.
Clerk-trea.,urer Kathy Hysell
said the village can not afford to do
any major repair WOJk without this
money. Sbe said other places have
received mdney from FEMA, but
Pomeroy .has yet 10 get it's share.

Answer

• 25

www.mydailysentinel.&lt;om

BY

~~"'!!!""--:--!

to
previous
Word

THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 2003

Villiage
On the road again
council
to address
potholes·

20 Table linen,
often
21 Nasty laugh
22 Wax-coated
cheese
23 Ramble
around
24 Bassoon
cousin
26 Music

so that you don't contribute to
magnifying the problem further.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - About ull you'll get
from today will be a ·whole
bunch of good intentions if
you fail to follow through on
what's on your list of things
lo do. Your time will count
. for nothing.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - It's fun to go along
with the crowd, but only if
you can afford to do so. Be
sensible about how you use
your resources today or you
may not have anything left for
the rest of the week.

3rd DOWN

•

•

I~__________A_s_tr_og~r~ap~h--------~~~~~~
·BY BERNICE 8EOE 0SOL
- Protect your image wtth
You are going to get the
both your behavior and vour
chance io deal with a number
comments today. If either
of old problems and finally
crosses the line of propriety,
the story will make the rounds
put many of them to rest in
the year ahead. Adversities
am~ng your peers and you 'II
that are eradicated will open · be Judged accordtngly.
pathways. to more pleasant
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Be particularly careful toconditions and successes.
GEMINI (May 21-June
day when working with any
new products. tools or maten20) - If your ideas are not
being met with any enthusi- . als. Plunging in before you
have methodically read the
asm from your cohorts today,
there might be something
proper usage instructions
could cause mishaps.
wrong with them. Don't push
for things thai could potenSCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
tially be bummers.
22) - People's feelings are
CANCER (June 21-July
tenuous today, so when out
22) No matter how juicy
with friends make cenain you
some information told lo you
don· t unintentionally hurt
·in privnte is. put a lid on your
someone by showing more ateagerness to share it with othtention to one pal over aners . Even tantalizing hints
other.
should be avo ided, lest they
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23reveal too much.
Dec. 21) - Be watchful that
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) you don't give anyone the imIf selfishness take,s precepression that she or he has
dence concerning a jomt en·
your permission to speak on
deavor you're involved in. the
your behalf today . This per·venture is destined to fail. It
son could misrepresent your
can only foster mismanage- · thinking or intentions and get
menl.
· · you in trouble.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·

"G})fac~ f(J ~ f? ~df~ 3f)t $~:

ACROSS

Couple must rekindle passion
in marriage that's burning low
DEAR ABBY: Th~ love
one person 's . weed is
of my life, "Stacy," and I
another's flower. That colhave been together for 20
umn inspired me to write a
years - married for I 0. I
poem. I hope you like it. adore her. We have three
MARY G. SKELTON,
beautiful children.
LYNN HAVEN, FLA.
I consider myself to b&lt;1
DEAR MARY: Like it? I
fairly good-looking. I work\
love it! And I know my
out regularly, have good \
readers will, too. ft is
hygiene and I'm in excelbeautiful.
ADVICE
lent health . I work hard at
WEEDS - THE BEAUtwo jobs so Stacy can be
TIES OF MY GARDEN
home with the children. I these feelings that .I can't
Weeds, to some, are like
make sure my family has keep my mind focused, and1 memories long past,
the best of everything.
. it's starting to affect my
Needing to be plucked of
My problem is Stacy job
performance .
- the ·shadows they cast gives me very little affec- SOMETHING'S MISS·
But I see their beauty, for
tion. She is a loving per- lNG IN NEW JERSEY
God placed them there,
son; however, she rarely
DEAR SOMETHING'S
So that 's where I leave
touches me, lies in bed MISSING: You're work- them and tend to their care.
with me or kisses me. ing two jol)s. Your wife is . Their roots, growing
When we do make love, caring for three children deeply, hold fast and true,
it's not as exciting as it under the age of 10. It 's
As my faith, my love and
was 20 years ago. I feel time for a second honey- my hope must do empty inside and I ache for moon where the two of you
To garner my strength for
some warmth.
can spend time alone, get another day,
Recently, at a business to know each other again,
To weather life 's storms
~a thering, a slightly intox- and rekindle the passion that come my way.
tcated female employee you once knew. Please
Where I see a flower and
surprised me with a pas- make it a priority. It 's you see a weed,
sionate goodnight kiss . It · important for the two of Its presence and purpose
fe lt wonderful. I can ' t stop you to talk to each other fulfills my need thinking about that feeling. and share feelings . That's
To do what I can to manI yearn for that same feel- where the true intimacy in age the earth,
ing with my beautiful wife, marriage lies .
.
In my small garden,
but she shows no interest.
DEAR ABBY: In a letter regardless of worth .
I am desperate for you .. printed
signed,
As I· nurture my weeds
advice. I don't know how "Watching My Garden and watch them grow,
to talk to Stacy about this. Grow in Tulsa," the writer
There's something I've
I am so preoccupied with made clear the point that often wanted to know:

!

••
'

I

HEALTH SYSTEMS
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�·Ohio

The Daily Sentirel
Friday, June 20
MICI&lt;.

'
I

I

•I

I Mlnofltld lso"no· I •

... -

0

""·

t:l:.;.;.

Su'lny Pt.

CICIUd'f

C~

ShowetS

~
tiiib:;;,._ - "' . .. Nl? --~
~-....
-·
. ..
f.&amp;IOrms
Rain
FIU!rles
Snow
tee

Partly cloudy through Friday
Today...Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs near
80. Northwest winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Tonight...Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 50s. North winds
around 10 mph. Chance ·of
rain 30 percent.
Friday...Partly cloudy with
a slight chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 70s. Northwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of rain 20 percent.
Friday night...Mostly . clear.

Lows in the mid 50s.
Saturday... Mostl y sunny.
Highs near 80 .
Saturday
nigl:H ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
Sunday...Mostly
clear.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Monday.. .Mostly
clear.
Lows in the lower 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.
Tuesday .. .Partl y cloudy•.
Lows in the lower 60s and
highs 84 to 88.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
A slight chance of showers
and thunderstorms during the
night. Lows in the mid 60s
and highs in the mid 80s.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

June 18, 2003

Dow
Jones

Pet

9,293.80
c:tonge

lmm p!9Yiouo:

.0.31

MAR

APR

High

LAiw

9,333.136 9,232.05

Record high: 11,722 .98
Jan. 14, 2000

June 18, 2003

1.800

Nasdaq
composite
1,6n.14
Pol. c:tonge
lmm p!9Yiouo:

.0.113

M.IIR

APR

High

LAiw

1,685.04 1,653.02

-

Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

Honored

Bv ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS loved them and appreciated the
Associated Pless
life he had with them, "even
- - - - - - - - - thougt) it wasn't a good life."
His last words were, "God
LUCASYill..E (AP) - A bless
all of you. That's alii have
convicted killer whose last
to
say."
words accused the state of using
false testimony to imprison him . The injection consists of sodiBy The AIIOCiated Preu
was executed Wednesday after um pentothal, which induces
unconsciousness; pavulon, a
Three more Ohio· inmates are scheduled to he executed
wishing his family weU and muscle
rel
axant
that
·stops
in
the next fjve weeks. If the executions are carried out,
saying he held no grudges.
breathing;
.
a
nd
potassium
chlothe six injection deaths in 2003 would outnumber all of
Ernest Martin, 42, mainride,
which
stops
the
heart.
those
in 1999 through 2002.
tained that another man comAfter
the
curtain
was
drawn,
The faster pace is. due 10 more death penalty cases finmitted the crime that led to his
ishing their lengthy appeals processes, the Ohio attorney
death sentence 20 years ago. He his sister, Debm Reese, said,
was executed by injection at "Finally set free."
general's office has said. The- state Supreme Court sets
"Don't worry, JehoVah will
I0: II a.m. at the Southern Ohio
execution
dates.
Correctional Facility after drop- take care of it. We'U see him in
• Ernest Martin, 42, on Wednesday became the eighth
ping a mental retardation claim the end," she said.
inmate executed since the state resumed using the death
Martin spent most of
and losing a late court appeal.
penalty in 1999. He had been the third inmate sentenced
The U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday morning on the
to
die in 1983 after the Legislature reinstated the sentencrefused on Tuesday to delay his phone with his mother, Frances,
ing option.
execution while he mised issues 6.7. and visiting with other rela· Gov. Bob Taft has not decided whether to grant clemen- ·
tives at the prison. He slept for
of poor legal ai6.
cy in two of the upcoming cases, and a third had not yet
In a written statement about an hour.
He
had
dropped
the
retardabeen heard by the Ohio·Parole Board. The upcoming exereleased after his death, and durcutions scheduled at the Southern Ohio Correctional
ing a three-minute speech while tion claim after a psychologist
hired
by
his
attorneys
deterFacility near Lucasville are for:
st111pped to the death table,
Martin compared his situation mined he was not mentally
- Lewis Williams, 44, on Tuesday. He was convicted
retarded. The U.S. Supreme
to the trials of Jesus.
of murdering Leoma Chmielewski, 76, in her Cleveland
"Just the same, the state of Court last year said the execuhome in 1983.
·
Ohio has succeeded in its quest tion of mentall y retarded
He has been ordered to attend a hearing Monday in
for my life by way of peljured inmates is cruel and unusual
Cleveland
- about four hours nonh of the prison - to
testimony and false witnesses punishment and therefore
determine if he is mentally retarded and whether he
who were paid to teU the lies unconstitutional.
,
shOuld be allowed to fire his coon-appointed attorneys
For the first time since 1999,
they did," the written statement
and dismiss his mental retardation claim. no execution witnesses represaid.
- Jerome Campbell, 42. on June 27. He was convicted
·
Martin was the eighth inmate sented th.e victim. The only
oc'stabbing Henry Turner, 78, to death in his Cincinnati
to be executed since Ohio family member the state could
find,
Robinson's
widow,
Anna,
apartment in 1988. Campbell is the first inmate for whom
!)egan carrying out the death
the parole board has recommended that Taft change the
penalty again in 1999. Three did not want to be present, said
sentence to life in prison without parole.
more executions are scheduled Andrea Dean, spokeswoman
for the state prison system.
in the next five weeks.
-Richard Gooey, 36, on July 24. He was convicted of
Martin's spiritual adviser, · ldlling two University of Akron students, Wendy Offredo
He was convicted of shooting
store owner Robert Robinson, Charles Morgan, his sister and
and Dawn McCreery, in 1986. They had been raped and
70, to death during a rebbery in his nephew, Cwtis Martin, witbeaten. His clemency hearing is set for July 8.
nessed his death.
Cleveland on Jan. 21, 1983.
The following is a chronology of the executions since
Outside the prison, about a
Martin says a man he knew
1999:
'
only as Slim committed the dozen people were protesting
- Wilford Berry, Feb. 19, 1999, for the 1989 murder of
crime. He says he walked to the an hour before the scheduled
Cleveland bakey Charles Mitroff Jr.
store to see what happened after execution time. "An eye for an
- Jay D. Scott, June 14, 200 I, for the 1983 murder of
the robbery occurred. Slim was eye makes everyone blind,"
Cleveland deli.catessen owner Vinney Prince.
said one sign.
never identified.
At
I
0
am.
in
Cleveland,
four
- John Byrd, Feb. 19, 2002, for the 1983 murder of
Wearing a white short-sleeve
shirt, dark pant~ and brown death penalty opponents held
Monte Tewksbury of suburban Cincinnati.
boots, Martin calmly entered hands and prayed outside the
..:.... Alton Colemim, April 26, 2002, for the 1984 murder
the death chamber shortly after Old Stone Church on Public
of Marlene Walters of suburban Cincinnati.
I0 am. He gave a quick, friend- Square.
- Robert Buell, Sept. 25, 2002, for the 1982 murder of ·
"We live in such a society
ly wave to the five media wit11-year-old Kris(a Harrison of Marshallville. ·
where violence is acceptable
nesses.
:_ Richatd Fox,' Feb. 12, 2003, for the 1989 murder of ·
"l'ni being treated the same behavior," said Tom O'Brien,
Leslie Keckler of 13owling Green,
way Christ wa~ treated," he said 39. "What Mr. Martin did was
-David Brewer, April 29, 2003, for the 1985 murder
from the table. "But I don't hold wrong and he should be punof
Sherry Byrne of Springdale.
·
no grudges agillnst no one."
ished for i~ but I think to put
-Ernest
Martin,
June
18,
2003,
for
the
1983
murd~
of
Several state and federal him to death is just another act
Robert Robinson in his Cleveland store.
'
courts upheld his conviction.
of violence by the people of
Martin told his family he Ohio and the state of Ohio."
•

Cynthia Bauers. second from left, acce pted a certificate of appreciation .to the Meigs Co unty
So1 1 and Water Conservation District for the Leading Creek Watershed project from Ohio
Department of Natural Re sources representat ives Mi ke Sponsler, David Hanselmann, and John
Kessler. left to right.

Local efforts recognized
at statewide conference

)

'

Witness: Defendant tried to give Traficant bag of cash

•1,010.09

Pet=-

rmm

-o.1s

M.IIR

APR

High

LAiw

1,015.12 1,004.61

RKord high: 1,527.46
Marth 24, 2000

Local Stocks
.IIEP- 30.79
.llrch Coal- 20.76
Akzo-28.09
AmTech/SBC - 25.136
Ashland Inc. - 33.15
AT&amp;T- 18.16
Bank One- 38.99
BLI- 14.81
Bob Evans- 28.31
BorgWarner - 65.45
Champion - 3.14
Charming Shops- 5.18
City Holding - 28.90
Col-24.19
DG - 19.22

DuPont- 41 .07
Federal Mogul - .29
USB-24.97
Gannett - 77.79
General Electric- 30.77
GKNLY -4.20
Harley DavidsOn - 42.14
Kroger- 16.63
Ltd. ,.-- 15.81
NSC- 20.95

Premter - 9.63
Rockwell - 24.46
Rocky Boots- 9.19
AD Shell - 48.62
Sears - 33.72
Wai-Mart - 55.24
Wendy's - 30.08
Worthington - 14.77
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing .
Oak HI Fnanclal- 25.73 quo1es of the previous
OVB - 23.00
day's transactions. proBBT- 35.50
vided by Smith Partners
Peoples- 25.92
at · Advest Inc. ol
Pepsico - 44,97
Gallipolis.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
businessman charged with bribing former U.S. Rep. James A.
Traficant Jr. tried to give the
congressman a brown paper bag
filled with money, an associate
testified Wednesday.
Richard Detore, 43, is the last
of four businessmen to go to trial
on charges that resulted from an
FBI investigation of Traficant
Detore pleaded innocent to

Correction Polley
2156.

Our 11111ln number Ia
(740) 992-2158.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
RepOrt... Brian RI!Qd, Ext. 14
•Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext. 13

Advertlsln!J
s-: Daw Harris, Ext. 15

Clau./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation
Dt81rict Mgr'.:

.3 1/2" Doubles

every

Mike Jenkins. Ext. 17

Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Eoflllft:

-:

newa Omydallyllantinel.com

~atlonwlde

Thursday, June 19
POMEROY - Meigs County
Democratic
Executive
Committee, 7 p. m.. Carpenters
Hall. Public invited.

Poatmaater; Send address correc·
lions 1o The .Daily Sentinel. 1.11
Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month . . . . . ... .•. .'9.95
One year .. . .. . . . .. . .'1 19.40
Deily ... ... .. .. .... ....50'
Senior Cltlun reteo
Ont1 month . . ... .. .. .. .'8.95
Ont1 year ...... . . . ...."98.70
Subscribers should remil in
advance direct to The Daily
Sentinel. No subscription by mail

Saturday, June 21
SALEM CENTER - Sta r
Gra nge 778 and State Junior
Grange 878 fu n night a nd
potluck sup per, 6:.30 p.m. at the

,,...,.....,

-

With 150 IMII·frh-...

,Ul your tliumN do thti Wiling.

)

~----~A~a~k!~~a~ut~a~u~m~·~·~··~me~·------

~-

....._. ___ _

•

Gallia • 446-2342

Sunday, June 29
REEDSVILLE - HaymanBiram reun ion will be held at 1
p.m. at the Forked Run Strate
Park. There will be a. bas ket
dinner.
··

.

- -

-

- ···

HOURS
tolon - frl8am- 9pm
Sai.Bam - 5pm

Dt~n 'I

S..n.O-

·r

l'dday lana Jllltb

.. \' ••.,n•

-·" .....

,o•~

,.u

Ill • II·•· "'~~S'o
~c~
'Riverside §
C{u6
ll,r,
.

&lt;II i-' -

L.

'

A

0

Hurry n &amp; you could

AIUU«d

$15,500=&lt;'o&lt;&gt;(
1 G&lt;oPd Proze ..V,nn~~

l O L f:3o.'

•

recliner

•
Nc PurchiiSII Nec-"1 Purt:lw!ll! "''I rei lncrlliiSll ywr ~ l\lllnce~ Dl wmrnng Ml!SI De IRgiU
r"odent o4 50 U S . DC, 01 C~U\1108 . wl'lo ruched age ol m~~,orny '" I!IM Sllllll/tlrO'(Ir)Ce,ter~ o;y ol
r11S101!nee 1n C..r.tdll . ll1H THl I PJl''" E no. 6.'23:03 I/COO:IIn CueD« ana wnere orono!)~«! co, 1aw
Subt9cl to Ol'lloci&amp;l Rules IC~Und at OllrtiCIPIII•n9 La ·Z·Bov reta •lers

)

Country Store
will be open
as well as -the

Country Kitchen ·

mm 1hiJ.Qreal hleekeniLI

Mon · Sat9to5
Frldly !H
Closed Sunday

~- -

Mexican Buffet

Meigs • 992-2156
Mason • 675·133J

Thursday, June 19
POMEROY - An informational meeting will be held at 2
p.m. at the Meigs Middle
School cafeteria for all seventh
and eighth grade students
interested in trying out for the
Meigs Middle School cheerle ading squad. Tryout clinic will
be June 24-26 and tryouts on
June 27. All students i!lterested
in trying out must have physicals competed before the clinic
the tryouts .
POMEROY - A fellowsh ip
dinner will be served ftom 4:30
to 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Spaghetti
will be served and the public is
invited io attend.

b !!mm 'W!m ~~~

Demonstrations:
Print Shop
Blacksmith
Carpenter

Open WeekniQhls 'llll9 • Friendly Service

I' -

Send us your club news. 992-2 156

Civil War Encampment
Living History ,
ULife as a Civil War Soldier''

R- Outalde Melga County
13 Weeks .. ...........'50.05
26Weeks .......... . .'100.10
52 Weeks ............'200.20

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Sunday
' Times-Sentinel

Proud to be apart of your life.

Other events

CIVILWAR
YS
June 21·22·23 91M-5PM

Credit ChKM •nd

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Kenneth McCuiiQUC)h, R. Ph.
Charles Rllfte, R. Ph.
Prescrlpllon Ph. 992~2955
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Homecomings/
Reunions

· ~~~' ~gJE

long dlotance Included

Try Ut For All .
Your Photofinlthlng Needtl ·

permitted in areas where home
carrier serviCe is available.

Keeping
.Gallia, .
-Meigs&amp;
Mason
informed

•

wtth e one- or tw~y,.ar
service agreement

(

Hanselmann, Mike Sponsler,
chief of the ODNR Division or
Mineral Resources Managemen~
mJd John Kessler of the Division
of Su rface Water at the Ohio
Environme ntal Protectio n
Agency. presented the award
cert ifi cate.
The Wate r Management
Association of Ohio (WMAO )
and the Connecting Ohio's
Watersheds Initiative joined forres
for this year's conference. 'The
·goal of the conference was to
facilitate an exchange of ideas
among the state's water resource
professionals on what goes into a
meaningful watershed management plan.

churches of Mason County,
was chosen because of its natural amphitheater and ex i.sting
open tabernacle bui lding that
seats 500.
'There is lots of seating .
under the roof, but people
always bring lawn cl]airs and
sit out under the trees," Evelyn
said.
There .is no admission chw·ge
for Singing in the Pines, and no .
&lt;:harge for parking or camping. ·
The sing is fi nanced by pro- :
ceeds . from the concession ·
stand and freewill offerings.
Musician s do not charge
either. Their only compensation
comes from the sale of tapes
and CDs. Hurvest Gospel
Studio of Huntington provides
'the professional soun9 system.
l'rce of charge . .
"Evervone i, . a volunteer at
the sing - people who get :
everything ready. who n m the ·
concession ·stand. who run the
sound board . park the cars.
cleun the baihroo'ms. mow and . '
trim . If it wasn't for the vol un'
teers. there· d be ·no Singing in
the Pines.'' Evelyn said.
Singing in the Pi nes will
begin · at 6 p.m. Friday and .
again· at I p.m. on Saturday..
The campground is about three
miles from New Haven, j ust off ·
of U.S. Route 33. Signs will be ··
posted from New Haven to '
lead people t" 1he campgrounds.
If anyone wants 10 volunteer, ·.
call 895-3845 ,

INSTANTLY WIN A
$0

From Orlglnal110 or 135 C-41 process rolla.
See one of our clerks for details of the .
FuJI True Color Film Club Card.
HAVE 6 ROLLS DEVELOPED
AND GET THE SEVENTH ROLL
DEVELOPED FREEl

grange hall near Salem Center.
Members to take. items for the
food bank.

Clubs and
Organizations

Nokla1260

Ariy E•p.

Mall SubscriptiOn
ln.tde Melgo County
13 Weeks ............ ' 30.15
26 Weeks .............'60.00
52 Weeks
... . .. .'118.60

General Manager

4" Doubles

The 'conference drew more
than 200 elected ofticials, regional planners. educators, environmentalisll, students, reM:archers
and others interested in the health
and well being of Ohio's watersheds.
"Over the past 1wo years, seveml state programs have tean1ed
up to help '39 local stakeholder
groups develop comprehensive
watershed plans," ,s;~id David
H&lt;mselmwm, chief of the ODNR
Divi sion of ·soil &amp; Water
Conservation. "The, watershed
planning process has fostered a
greater understanding of Ohio's
water resource problems and
needs. It ha~ also fostered a more
concrete collabomtion between
local and state organizations."

Thursday, June 19
POMEROY Salis bury
Tuesday, June 24 .
Township Trustees will mee1 at
RACINE
- Racin e Area
7:30 p.m. at the Rocksprings
Community
Organ ization
township building .
(RACO) at 6:30 p.m. at the
park building. A potluck dinne r
will be served. New membe rs
always welcome.

(400 Included • 200 llddltionlil Anytime Mlnutn~

$399

afternoon.

Monday through Friday, t t 1 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.

Depllrtmentuten•lon• are:

~

Publisl')ed

Public meetings

•Unlimited night &amp;
Weekend minutes
-600 Anytime Minutes

EVERYDAY

(usPs 213-960)
.
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main cOncern in all stories is to be
accurar_e. If you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom al (740) 992·

problem. I'll take care of it,"
Lange said.
Lange later met Traficant for
dinner, and the congressman
wanted to know where ''the
5,000 pieces of Japer were"
that Detore ha promised,
Lange said. Lange joined
Detore arid Traficant for
monthly·
dinners
in
Washington, D.C., to discuss
their deals with him, Lange
said.

there's always something to talk about.

2nd Set Free

POMEROY - ReJJ~=ntatives
of ihe Leading Creek Wmershed
Pmjcrt in Meigs County were
1\.'&lt;.:ipienLs of a (.-ertiti cate of appreciation for. their work to improve
the stream\ quality at a recent
~tatewidc conference of the Ohio
Depanmen t
of
Nat ural
Rcsoun:es.
Accepting the aw:u-d on behalf
of the loe&lt;~ project was Cyntllia
Bauers of the Meigs County Soil
&lt;md Water Conservation District
office. and coordi nator of the
Leading Creek Watershed
Project.
The recognition program was
held to strengthen relationships
&lt;unong Ohio's watershed conservation groups, according to an
ODNR spokesman.

BY KANDY BoYCE
are invited to come back each
Reg ister staff writers
year, but .no one is scheduled or
--''--- -- - - , . - - - - paid.
·
NEW
HAVEN
"We have an open invitation
Organizers of the 21st "Singing to groups lo come. and sing.
· th p· "
whether they' ve been here
b ·
m e mes gospe 1ce1e rauon before or not," she ' aid. "We
hope that the sun shines this
·
. weekend when the sound of pray before the meeting each
music will fill the air at the year ihat the Lord will bring to
Union Campgrounds near New the Pines the singers He wants
Haven.
there. so his name can be gloriThe gospel sing draws gospel tied. New groups lhu1 we' ve
musi&lt;; enthusiasts and campers never heard of show up each
from hu ndreds of nliles away to ye&lt;u-."
.
join them in a two-day celebraBledsoe and her husband,
tion that takes place every third Kenneth. were ori ginal orgaweek in June.
ni zers of the evenl. Kenneth
More than 50 different .was vice president of the
groups are expected to sing and Mason County Gospel Singers
play southern gospel, bluegrass Association, a forerunner to
and country music during the Singing in the Pines. in 1983.
marathon, held min or shine.
when the group began meeting
"We' ve had it in the rain at Union Campground.
before. The rain doesn't keep
The MCGSA gradually
us away," said Eve leyn became inactive and the vo lunBledsoe, one of the organi z~rs . teers concentrated their efforts
'The mu sicians sing until 3 or4 on operating the Singing in the
in the morning Friday night and Pines celebration each year.
. then stan all over again the next
In 1988. organizers incorpoday.
rated to establish ownership of
"Once they begin, no one the sound equipment . and
· Ww1ts to go home, come rain or kitchen items they had
shine," she added.
acquired . By 1990, the tradeMany campers come to the mark emblem had been
primitive campground on the designed and r~g i stered with
site and set up as early as West Vi rginia and Ohio.
Wednesd~y to get a good spot.
Under Kenneth's leadership,
People come ti-om as. far away Singing in the Pines has grown
as Texas and California.
from a local, Mason County
. 'They return year after year. event to one that attmcts people
It's kind of like a fam ily from all over the U.S.
reunion," Bledsoe said.
Union Campgrounds, owned
Bledsoe said that the singers by the United Methodist

Community Calendar

Unlimited night &amp; weekend minutes

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

chanles of funneling bribes to
Lange. chief engineer at U.S.
Traflcant from his company.
Aerospace Group, testified in
Detore, of Manassas. Ya, was the trial's second day
the chief operating officer of U.S. ·wednesday that he was in a car
Aerospace Group, a now-defunct with Detore and Traficant when
company that was madreting a he saw Detore offer the bag of
laser-guidance system.
money to the congressman.
Federal prosecutors say Detore Lange said he could not count
and Albert Lange Jr. concealed . the money but believed the bag
gifts, cash and boat repairs given contained about $5,000.
to Traficant in the late 1990s in
"I can't do · it this way,"
exchange for the congressman's Lange testified Traficant said.
ass'istance in having the Fedeml · ' Detore answered, "Not a
Aviation Administration certify
the system.

Thursday, June 19, 200~

'

Three more inmates
~et to die by August

BY KRISTEN GEUNEAU
Associated Press

.Page A3·

Gospel -event has visitors
'Singing in·the Pines'

.

June 18, 2003

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500

Local News

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 19, 2003

.

il

IND.

'

Executed man's
lasfwords accuse
.
state of using false testimony

Ohio weather

0

·PageA2

... "

--

.

.

--- ..· ..

~··

-· .... ·- ··-·

- -·--- .- ·-- - •.

--~-·-

•

-·- ·

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

"aRAHD NAME f1Jilt6TURf. AT ~ISCOONT PRICES

iiiZ•

y·

�•
•
0 IniOn

The Daily Sentinel

c.

PageA4

Thursday, June 19, 2003

Thursday, june 19,2003 .

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

""""

The Daily Sentinel

Wf-laT'S W~NG ·
Winl a LiTTl-e.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlene Hoeflich
General manager and news editor

Local Briefs

REGIONAL VIEW

•

·

-·

-

--...ol\

.

Asking churches to boost
gambling:for:ded scholarship
doesn't make sense

Iran is a more menaci ng
adversa ry than Saddam
Hussein's Iraq ever was, yet
the Bush administration
seems to have no clear strategy for dealing with it . Nor is
the Iran problem much discus.sed among Democratic
presidential aspirants.
Run by repressive and vir• The Dominion Post of Morgantown:
ulently
ami-American
The separation of church and state is one ofthe reasons we are
Islamic clerics. the · Iranian
what we are. Some of us would li~e to believe it's the ·reason our
regime sponsors terrorists
nation has flourished, while others would point out it's why our
who have killed hundreds of
nation is morally bankrupt.
Americans. · And it has a
We choose to believe the former when the subject arises, and
robust nuclear program that's
maintain that's the way it should remain.
estimated to give it a bomb
Our nation's creation owes its existence to a contradiction: milarsenal by 2006.
itary assistance from one monarchy to defeat another. The arguPresident Bush named Iran
ment then was since we were fighting for our very lives, we
part of the "Axis of Evil" in
would have taken guns from the devil himself.
2002, but administration polA similar dilemma has arisen in West Virginia.
icy for dealing with the threat
seems to be caught up in
Many state pl"\lgrams are directly funded by taxes on tobacco,
familiar combat between
alcohol and gambling. One such state program is the PROMISE
Pentagon hawks and State
scholarship program.
Department
diplomati sts.
We've had mixed feelings about PROMISE since its inception.
State has wanted to
We opposed financing this program with proceeds from gray
"engage" the Iranian reg ime
machines.
in hopes of inducing its modRecently, the director of PROMISE announced that the state
erate
elements to slow down
will begin promoting this scholarship program in churches, 4-H
·
or
end
its nuclear program
and summer camps. When Robert Morgenstern announced
and halt aid to terrorist
recently that he was going to ask churches throughout the state to
groups
such as Hezbollah
legitimize PROMISE, we got righteous.
•
and
Islamic
Jihad. Bush has
"If they decide to do a sermon on the value of higher education.
rejected an "engagement"
we would welcome that," Morgenstern said.
strategy.
allowing only inter-.
So would we, but how do pastors, ministers, priests and rabbis
contac ts that are
mittent
quiet
make a case for PROMISE knowi'ng full well it's funded by gamcurrently broken off because
bling proceeds?
of suspicions that Iran assistObviously the state is aware of the preponderance of churches
ed the al Qaeda terrorists
in West Virginia. And in many rural areas, the church is the only
responsible for ·lethal bombsocial institution in town.
ings in Saudi Arabia last
The state normally keeps a healthy distance from )NOrking with
month.
the church community on projects and programs because of such
Exactly what the Pentagon
dilemmas. It is one thing for the state to license and tax gaming
wants to do about Iran is
machines, but when it asks churches to promote programs th'at
uncl.ear. but some outside
gambling proceeds are dedicated to, we think some congregahawk s recommend covert
tions might raise their eyebrows and then some.
action to destabilize the
For governments and private businesses to promote these types
regime, which is hated by its
of arrangement is one thing, but for the church or the Boy Scouts
c itizenry, ~nd others say that
10 promote this program, we don't think so.
the United States should get
Yes, West Virginia has one of the poorest college attendance
ready to bol'hb Iran's nuclear
rates in the country despite having one of the better high school
•plants. There's no evidence
graduation rates.
that the administration has
. And yes, we know a church's mission extends beyond morali ~ ·
opted for those aggressive
choices, either.
ty, encompassing social responsibilities like food banks, a place
According to Patrick
for community events and facilitating our youth's future.
co•
.Clawson, an Iran ex pert at
But to sidle up to the state and promote a scholarship program
that exists as a direct result of gambling is heresy.

Moderately confused
IT~

AN

ANTfQUE

LAPTOP.

· ~;
®20Q3 by NEA, Inc

nuclea r J~terre n t.
an ultimatum to Syria : Shut ·
Ru ssia is in sisti ng that, down Hezboll ah camps in :
when the Bushear plant goes Lebanon or the United States
on line, it will remove the wi ll do it militarily.
spent fuel and not allow it to
Iran's Achilles' heel see ms
be fabricated into bomb to be domesti.c unrest. After a
Morton
material. If fuel is di verted, quarter-century of life under
Kondracke though.
nonprol iferati on rigid. repressive Islamic rule.
- - - - ·· expert Henry Sokolski esti- . Iran's ci tizenry ha s voted
mates that lran.could have an overwhelmingly for reform
arsenal of 50 to 75 bombs by but has gotten prec ious little :
2006.
or it.
the Washington In stitute for
In addition . however. Iran
Right-wing mullahs conNear East PoI.tcy. "Us
. . po 1·1- is also mining its own uranitro
l Iran's foreign policy,
cy tlms far has been to de Iay urn · and is buildin g both a
de velopment s
in
the heavy water nuclear reactor military and security appara(nuclear) program in the of its own and 3 sophisticated Ius. They close down news- .
hope that the hardliners will uranium enrichment plant papers, jail di sside nts and
lose control before Iran gets that Sokol ski estimates could send police and pro-regime ·
the bomb." Another expert he.lp produce two 10 six militias to shut down demontold me that "hope is not a bombs a year by 2006.
strati ons such as those curstrategy," and Clawson said,
International
Atomic rently roiling college cam-.
"It looks to me like they' ll Energy Agency in spec tors puses.
get nukes before there's a have reported that fran is in
Kemp, a former Reagan
regime change."
c
violation of the Nuclear administration official now at
Iran actually has multiple Nonproliferation Treaty, but the Nixon Center, argues in a
nuclear programs. overt and it remains to be seen whether forth coming article in The
covert. apparently stimulated ·the IAEA board will rcc'om- National Interest magazine in
-- among other things -- by mend action by the Un ited favor of trying to negotiate a ·
the example of Iraq's defeat Nations Security Council. as "grand deal'' with moderates ·
in the 1991 Persian Gulf War, the Bu sh administration in the Iranian gove rnment to
which might not ·ha ve hopes.
· stop it s nuclear weapons prooccurred if Israel had not · Iii the mealllime, according gram in return for a lifting of:
destroyed Iraq 's Osirak to Iran expert Geoffrey eco nomic sanct ions.
Clawson said . "J' mall for a :
nuclear pl ant in 198 1. In Kemp. " Iran provides by far
February, during the run-up
the
largest
financial
and
mili·
.1
~
uea 1 1'f' you can get one. b ut
.
to the Iatest Iraq war. Iran s tary support to Hezbollah . I' d 1 k
h
supposedly moderate presi- estimated at more than $ 100
a so eep t e pressure on
d
M h
d Kh
·
for huma n rights and demiJc- :
em, u amma
atamt , million annually."
ratic reform . a' we did with :
an nounced that . Iran was ' Based in Syrian-cnntrolled the So~iet bloc during the ,
developmg facthttes to pro- areas of Lebanon. Hezbollah Cold War."
duce and process tts . own. was responsible for bombing
That analogy has also been
nuccIear t ueI. It was a way oI the U.S. embassy and Marine
say.mg that, even tf the Corps barracks in Beirut in cited by Sen. Joe Lieberman
Umted States destroyed or !9~ 3 and for forcing Israel to (D-Conn .), who has spoken - .
delayed .the Bushear nuclear give up its occupation of - in no great detail and alone .
pl ant betng built by Russta. southern Lebanon.
among Democratic presidenexpected to be completed late
Iran is blamed for the 1996 tial prospects -- of fostering :
thts year, Iran ,had other bombing of th e U.S. Air "regi me change" in Iran.
Iran policy is a rich subject
means of becommg a nuclear Force's Khobar Towers res ipower.
dence in Saudi Arabia and fo r Democratic debate, espe. The spectacle.nf Hussein \ according 10 former Senat~ cially since the Bush admin- ·
qutck and crushmg defeat by Intelligence Chairman Bob istration seems to lack a plan ·
the United States t.his _year, Graham (D-Fia.), Hezbollah of action.
coupled wt,\h B.~sh s lt st mg maintains sleeper cells ip the
(Marron Kondracke ·is
Iran as an axts target. can United States. Graham has n' t executil'e editor of Roll Call,
only have msptred Iran .to said what he 'd do about Iran. the ne11·spaper of Capitol
hasten development of Its but he has called for issuing Hill.)
·

A few crisp lines on the chart

'Speak Out!'

'·"

, Two television monitors
faced the neat rows of leatherbacked benches in San
Francisco City Hall 's grand
and ornate Room 250, where
the Board of Supervisors held
budget hearings this week.
The monitors were overkill. A
smattering
of
ctli ze ns
watched as a steady parade of
department
suit-and-tied
supervisors defended their
budgets to a smattering of
supervisors.
F~fty miles socth. on 690
acres of green in rural San
Mateo County. Calif., a few
dozen teen-age boys from San
Francisco's toughest neighborhoods were surely obli vious to the proceedings .in
Room 250. But what happens
in this room will determine
what happens down there.
Some powerful children's
advocates want tn close the
60-year-old
Log Cabin
Ranch, San Francisco's only
residential camp for juvenile
offenders. With money so
scarce, they argue. the city
cannot justify spending
between $40.000 and $70.000
per child in a program that.
they say, is not effective. The
money would be be11er spent
on community · programs.
Such decisions are being
made in city and ' tate governments across the country. ·
Chief juvenile probation
officer Jesse William' spent a
chunk of hi s allotted time

..

Church
announcements
STIVERSVILLE A
hymn sing will be held at the
Stiversville
Community
Church at I :30 p.m. Sunday.
The Williams Family of
Ashland , Ky. will be the
singers.

Bush administration lacks a plan for Iran

(740) 992-2T56
extension 29

Wiletta Abbott
COOLV ILLE - Wiletta
Abbott. a resident of Arcadia
Nursing Cente r. Coolville,
died on Wedne~day, June 18,
2003. Arrangements are
under the direction of Fisher
Funeral Home and will be
announced upon completion. ,

CONSOLiDaT;oN ?

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

Deaths

she said recently. "Judges
have not been very excited
about sending kids there, but
if it had more to offer. we'd
send twice as many kids."
It ought to have vocational
Joan
education, fo r one thing. II
Ryan
ought 10 teach kids carpentry
and other skills that would
prepare them for union
apprenticeships. ·'But there's
no one at the helm say ing.
before the super visors on "'Let's do . this,"' Hitchens
Wednesday arguing for the noted.
'
·
ranch'&gt; survival. .It sa\'cs kids
One ll:;a,uu t'v1 lhe lack of
who had failed everywhere creative ingenu ity · is the
else, he said. It doesn' t save revolvi.ng door of leadership.
everybody. But enpugh kids The mayor appoints the chief
are getting their high school juvenile probation officer,
diplomas and GEDs as a unlike the chief adult proba-·
result of the program. Enough tion officer. who is hired by
kids are ·staying out of the and accountable to the court .
juvenile justice system when The chief juvenile probation
they return home.
officer. therefore. changes at
"There are no simple and least as ofte n as the mavor
quick solutions,'' Williams changes. Williams. not waitsatd m the hallway after ht s , ing until a new \nayor is electpresentatton.
.
ed in Nove mber. has already
The argument over Log taken a job in FloridacHis laq
Cabin Ranch has been gmn_g day was Thursday.
Jack Jacqua. co-founder of
on for almost as long as II s
been open. .
.
the Omega Buy&gt; Club, supSan Franctsc'o. S~penor ports keeping the ranch open.
Court Judge Donna Hnchens. "You need it because of the
:-·ho spe~t ni~e years as a possibilities of turning the'e
JUdge m JUVemle court. con- kids' lives .around." he said
tinue; lo be frus trated by_the from hi s oftice at juvenile
unrealized posstbthlies ol the hall. "The ranch i~ turning out
ra~ch.
.
an occasional victory. Where I
San Franctsco shou ld have · come from. that 's no small
one of the most creative and thing. I know we could have
dynamtc ranch programs · m more victories, and I don't
the state, if not the country," think the politicians realize

the complexity of the problems oui here on the street. ·•
The Board ot: Supervisors .
will hold another hearing July :
26 on the juvenile probation
department's budget and Log
Cabin Ranch . The debate will
follow the usual script: It's not
working, one side will say.
But it's all we have. But it
should be better. It's getting .
better. Bul it costs too much.
Good programs are expensive.

Then, all together now -let's convene a committee to
.I
study 11.
That will be the compro- ·
mise. Log Cabin Ranch will
stay open. but a committee
wi ll get together the first
Tuesday of every month for
six months to gather infnrmation and talk. They will pro- ·
duce a re(Xtrt . It wi II join the
many other reports s!ashed in
filing cabi nets throughout the
city.
Next spring. when budgets
are again up for approval, portions of the report will be
shown on the television monitors. And the me"Y· complex
lives of the city's highest-risk
boys will show up in Room
250 as a few crisp lines on a
chart.
· (Joan Rran is a colrmmist
for tlr.• San F ranciscn
Chronicle. Send commems to ·
her i11 care of thi.&lt; newspaper ·
or .&lt;end hu ~- mail at joan·
ryansfclmmic/e.cam.)

To sing
CARPENTER
The
Gabriel Quartet wj!l sing at
the I0:30 a.m. service of the
Carpenter Bapti st Church
Sunday. John Elswick, pastor,
invites the public.

vas set
MIDDLEPORT - Bible
school will be held from 9
a.m. to noon, June 23-27, at
the ~iddleport Church of
Christ. There will be classes
for children ages 3-12. Rides
are available for the
Pomeroy-Middleport area by
calling 992-2914.

vas planned
POMEROY
The
Bradford Church of Christ
will hold vacation Bible
school, 9 to II :30 a.m., June
23-27 at the church. There
will be classes for preschool
to high school. Theme is
"Son Harvest." all youth of
the community are invited.
For more information call
992-5844.

River Sweep
planned ·
REEDSVILLE
- The
annual Ohio River Sweet will
be held Saturday at Forked
Run State Park. Participants
will meet at 8:30 a,m;• at the
first shelter house just inside
the park entrance. T-shirts
and refreshments will be provided. The public is invited to
participate.

Board meets
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern ·Local Board of
Education will meet in regu'
tar session at 6 . p.m. on
Tuesday in the conference
room of the elementary
school library.

LEPC meets
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Emergency Planning
Committee will hold its regular monthly meeting at II :30
a.m. on Tuesday at the conference room of the Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center
on Mulberry Heights.
The agenda will include the
current risk assessment now
being conducted by the R.D.
Zande and Associates Co.,
'l!ld the spending plans for the
homeland security grants.
Training and equipment
needs of first responders will
also be discussed in order to
qualify for future threat and
nsk assessment weapons of
mass destruction grants.
A training seminar will he
held in July at Burr Oak State
Park to assist in the needs
assessment on terrorism to
better prepare local al!encies
in developing multt-discipline management capabilities and vulnerability to a terrorist attack.
·

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

www.mydailysenlinel.com

Relative peace settles on Michigan town
after riots fueled by anger, frustration
BENTON HARBOR, Mich. and firefighters. Protest.ers
(AP) - ResiQents of this city, burned at least six bui ldings
plagued for years by poverty, and five cars and injured
high unemployment and about a dozen people . '
racial tensions, say frustraTerrance Shurn, 28, lost
tion and fear fueled the two control of ·hi s speeding
days of street riots that fol- motorcycle and crashed into a
lowed the death of a motorcy- building as he was being purclist during a police chase.
sued by Benton Township
Someone set an arson fire police. Shurn was black ; the
befor~ dawn Thursday, &lt;;a us- officers who chased him into
ing extensive damage, but the city are white.
. otherwise things had mostl y
Min isters walked thro ugh
settled down by Wednesday the area, talking to residents
evening, the Berrien County and discouraging them from
Sheriff's department said. violence. Shurn 's brother,
One arrest was made for an . Raynard, 33. also called for
allegedly concealed weapon. peace at a community meetThe relative calm came ing Wednesday.
amid rain, a heavy presence
"I would say to the people
of police in riot gear and call s of Benton Harbor that I feel
by the crash victim's family your pain, your frustration
and city leaders to stop the and, yes. your anger," he said.
violence.
"But I ask you and I beg yim,
"Well, God has blessed us," please stop the violence."
Resident Tony Sims said he
Police Chief Samuel Harris
said at Benton Harbor police wants to see at least one
headquarters.
Benton Township police offi lt was anything but quiet cer fired over Shurn's death.
Monday and Tuesday nights, · He remembered . Shurn as
when hundreds of people someone who took pride in
roamed a six-to-eight-block the young son who shared his
area, setting fires and attack- name , had a girlfriend and
ing passers-by, police officers planned to start taking col-

lege courses. ,
"If I don 't get no justice,
there ain't gonna .be no
peace," said Sims, 26. who
wanted to protest Wedn ~sday
ryight. ''I'm going to be heard,
one way or the other."
Naneue Partee said many
black residents, ~spec iall y
you ng black men, are fed up
with the Benton Township
police.
"Some people say Terrance
wouldn 't stop ·because he
feared for his li fe,'' she said .
Resident Uttonya Doss
says she's worried Benton
Harbor's poor schools, deteriorating neighborhoods and
dismal · economy will keep
her three young children from
ever having a chance for a
better li fe.
She said Shurn 's death was
just another sign that the deck
seems stacked against the
12,000 residents of this community in Michigan's southwest corner.
."It seems like every time
someone tries to turn their
life around, somethin~ really
bad happen s," she satd after
attending a City Hall news

conference
Wednesday
"Benton Harbor (is) one of
addressing Shurn 's death . the poorest communities in
"I' m scared to death for my the state of Michigan," he
kids to grow up here."
said. "There's no excuse for
B~mon Harbor is 92 per- us not having the same
cent black, and Benton opportunities for jobs" and a
Township is 52 percent black. better way of life. ·
accordmg to the 2000 census.
The decay affects everyBoarded-up butldmgs and c .
•
. , ..
homes dot the communit y. thmg from ,he,clty s abthty to
and the city's average unem- attmct new busmesses to the
ployment rate last year was netg hborhoods surr?_undmg
25 percent. Appliance maker schools._
Whirlpool is headquartered in
Th e clly has had some new
Benton Harbor, but sits on·the · bustnesses set up shop 111 Its
outskirts of town .
renaissance zone, which
The struggling city is sepa- gives tax breaks to companies
rated by a· river bridge from that bring jobs to areas desSt. Joseph, which offers a perate for economic growth.
stark contrast: The ctty of
Harri s said this week's riot 8,800 is 90 percent white, ing will discourage that kind
bustles wtth trendy restau- of growth.
"We've been worki ng to
rants. bouttques, offtces and a
ptcturesquc waterfront. and rebuild the .city. · 10 invite
had .an average une.mploy- busi nesses 10 come in to our
ment rate last year of 2 per- . W .
II k' d lc
cent.
clly. e ve got a m s o..
Ralph Crenshaw, a Benton tax breaks ~nd tncent tves,
Harbor city commi ss ioner Hams sat d. But no one wtll
and Shurn's uncle said the want to come tf they thmk
difference between ~he paver- this is the way we act. _If we
ty in Benton Harbor and the have a repeat of thts kmd of
aftluence in the surrounding law lessness, we 'll ne ver
county breeds frustration.
attract anyone."

Harry .Potter author sues New Boy, 12, killed by
York newspaper over preview alligator while
NEW YORK (AP) - The
author of the Harry Potter
book series has slapped the
Daily News with a $100
·million lawsuit after the
newspaper published tidbits
about the fifth novel four
days before its official
release.
The News said it bought a
copy of "Harry Potter and
the Order of the Phoenix"
from a health food store that
had mistakenly put the book
out for sale Wednesday
despite being embargoed
unttl Saturday.
The suit, prepared by
lawyers for author J .K.
Row lin~ and U.S. publisher
Scholastic lite., claims the newspaper damaged Row ling's intellectual property rights and
· harmed Scholastic's $3 million
worldwide marketing ·' campaign.
The book has been under
extraordinary security ahead
of the release. In a statement,

Scholastic said it hoped '.'this
unfortunate situation will not
spoil the surprise for millions
of children around the country
who have been eagerly await'
ing the book."
Scholastic provided a copy
of the suit to The Associated
Press and said it had been
filed late Wednesday in
Manhattan federal court.
·There was no way to verify
the
claim
Wednesday
evening.
"We will vigorously defend
any action and are confident
we did nothing wron~ journalistically or legally.' Daily
News
spokesman
Ken
· Frydman said.
The News story contained
what it called a "brief glimpse
into the 870 action-packed
pages" of "Harry Potter and
the Order of the Phoenix." An
accompanying graphic di splayed, with legible text, two
of the novel's pages.
The News said the health

swimming in Florida

store owner received a shipment of four books from a
wholesaler and decided to put
them in the window. The
owner told the paper he didn't know he was supposed to
wait until Saturday. The
paper withheld the name of
the store and its owner.
The book goes on sale at
12:0 I Saturday. Stores
across the United States plan
late-night parties Friday, and
a countdown is scheduled in
New . York's Time s Square.
Festivities al so were planned
in England, New Zealand,
Australia and South Africa.
Scholastic has commissioned a first printing of 8.5
million copies.
Authorities in Newtown·le-Willows, England, were
lookingc for a tractor-trai fer
containing 7,800 copies of
"Harr)' Potter and the Order
of the Phoenix " that was
taken from outside a
warehouse.

TAVARES. Fla. (AP) -A
I0-foot alligator attacked
and killed a 12-year-old boy
who was swimming near a
marina in central Florida,
police .said.
Brian Griffin was pulled
under the dark water
Wednesday, 'minutes after
two friends spotted alligators
and screamed for him to get
out of the Dead River where
they had been swi mming,
witnesses said.
Deputies and witnesses
saw the alligator surface at
least once with the boy in his
jaws, but the animal quickly
disappeared across the river,
the Orlando Sentinel reported in a story for Thursday
editions.
The boy was under for at
least 25 minutes before a
sheriff's helicopter spotted
him and dropped a buoy to

Email engagement wedding 0, anniversary
announcements ana photos
to news@mysentinel.com!
·

Peterson investigators discover
additional
wiretapped phone calls
.
SACRAMENTO (AP) - An to any others before having them
investigator who wiretapped transferred to computer discs and
Scott Peterson's phones says he sealed in envelopes for Superior
recently discovered 176 calls that Court Judge AI Girolami to
were recorded without his review.
The newly discovered calls
knowledge, ar1d prosecutors are
asking a judge to determine could present another hurdle for
whether polioe can screen them prosecutors as they light defense
claims of pmsecutorial misconfor evidence.
In court papers filed' duct over the wiretaps. When
Wednesday, investigator Steven word of the previous wiretaps
Jacobson said the calls were dis- came out, defense lawyer Mark
covered Friday by an expert from Geragos asked the judge to disthe software company that miss the prosecutors handling the
designed the wiretap system. The case or toss out the wiretaps
two men listened to about 10
seconds of one of the calls to
detennine that hidden computer
files contained actual phone
calls and not a dial tone or dead
air.
"We heard a person in a
Southern drawl talking to Scott
SUMMER
WEOTHAU SUN
Peterson in what appeared to be
BOX
OFFICE OPENS
a business-related , call,"
6:30 PM MON 6 TUES
Ja.."'bsOn v.rote in an affida,~t.
Jacobson said he had not II--R..!I!UUG.6.R.zA~:rs~Go¥Sw':!IL-=:D,.(~PG~)heard that conversation before
7 :30 a. 9:30
among the 3,858 phone calls
polioe previously acknowledge{(
logging on the fertilizer saTesHARRY MET LLOYD (PG131
man's home and cellular
7:10 &amp; 9:10
phones. He said he didn't tisten
MATINEES 1:10 9:10

· becauo;e investigators listened· 10
portions of conversations
between Peter.;on and his lawyer
Peterson, 30, has pleaded innocent to two counts of murder and
could face .the death penalty if
convicted in killings of his wife
and unborn son. He was arrested
after their remains washed ashore
in San Francisco Bay in April,
near where he said he was fishing
Christmas Eve when his pregnant wife vanished.

Caravan

I

7:15 &amp; 9:30

2

They're a part
of the family.
'

When a pet passes
away, it's really important to some families that
they are able to say goodbye to the family friend in
a caring way. It may.
seem a little unusual , ·
but for some indi victuals being able to experience a gnevmg process.
and closure is very important in making
their memories of their best friend complete. At Fisher Funeral Homes
we offer affordable
cremation
arrangements
for pets.

STARRING HAAAtsOH
JOSiol HARTftETT

In fact, som~ members of the
cara.van traveling through
Pomeroy don 't limit their
from ,Page A1
Airstream time to caravans
such as this one. Several live in
four campers, to avoid traffic gated Airstream communities.
congestion on secondary But they. always enjoy new
roads. A "caboose" group ~igbts and new places.
leaves the designaled camp
"When you make a trip like
site last each morning, to this, you always see places you
ensure there are no problems want .to return to," said
,;.ouvu!l the way.
,
. m
. a way, " Adrienne
Walters. "And
re gypstes,
Pomeroy
is
definitely
a place
said Bob Woolridge. "We have
homes, but we spend a lot of we wanted to come back and
see more of .."
time on the road, too."

guide deputies, who pulled
him up. The boy was pronounced dead Wednesday
night at Leesburg Regional
Medical Center, deputies ·
said.
His friend Justin VanGorder,
14, said the gators were
around "all day."
"Every time we saw them,
we would get out of the c
water," but Brian stayed in, .
he said.
Investigators dimmed the
lights around the marina and
said they were going to shoot
any alligators they could
find . Several shots rang out
Wednesday night, but no
g;ltors were killed.
Authorities said complaints about alligators have
increased because so many
are turning up around rainbloated retention ponds,
ditches a nd canals.

FAST 2 FURIOUS (PG13)
7:30 &amp; 9:30

FINDING

~~~ ~

7:00&amp; 9:00

TIIUI

"" 1 ~

6:35,6:50,t.35.9:50 1 I

(~~~r~~~r~...,IEttlln -~

,.Q

ALEX I EMMA

I

Call us, to find
out how our staff
can help ·you ,with
the loss of a pet.

7:00,10:00 !

(~llMII(llfWW, !i!IIIID llill1llll

FROM

,.

7:30.9:55

· for more information call

(740) 992-5141

�Th~

PageA6

Nation • World

Daily Sentinel

BY JEFF DONN

Associated Press
BOSTON (AP) - An absortr
ing book or a challenging crossword puzzle may keep your
. mind mo1e than busy. It may
keep it healthy, too. according to
a 21-Year srudy of mental breakdown in old age.
The study adds to the evidence·
that stimulating the mind can
ward off Alzheimer's disease and
other dementia, much as physical
exen:ise can keep the body fit.
The study was led by Alben
Einstein College of Medicine in
New York City and published in
Thursday's New England
Journal of Medicine. It was fundAhorse on MacDonald's Ranch at the base of the Arizona Snowbowl is silhouetted against
ed by the National ln~1itute on
a smoke-enhanced sunset In Flagstaff, Ariz., Tuesday. Smoke from the Lizard Rre burning
Aging.
11 miles southeast of Flagstaff drifted into town throughout the afternoon. (AP)
·
Researchers are eager tO establish whether keeping mentally
active can help guard against
dementia: That would provide a
simple, drug-free way of reducing the risk of the widespread,
debilitating ailment. About 10
percent of people develop
dementia between ages 60 and
70.
"I think the hypothesis is plausible enough !hat I spent several
years of my life trying to figure

A member of the Horseshoe Meadows Hotshots walk the night fireline while fighting the
· Cherry Rre, Tuesday, near Prescott, Ariz. (AP)
·

.Arizona homes evacuated
as fire burns on mountain
BY ARTHUR H. RoTSTEIN
uated late Tuesday. About 20
Associated Press
fire trucks were posted in the
...::..:..:..:...:....::..:.._:..:..:..:.._____ southern Arizona community
TUCSON, AriZ. - Homes Wednesday morning, Peterson
and businesses were evacuated said.
A blaze in the Sierra Nevada
in a mountain community near
Carson City. Nev.. had
because of a wildfire feeding been contained after burning
, on pine forest ravaged by 1,200 acres and closing a highdrought and bark beetles.
way to Lake Tahoe.
About 150 acres had burned
The nation's two largest
by early Wednesday two miles wildfires ha,d blackened a total
south of the hamlet of of nearly 70,000 acres in southSumrnerhaven, on Mount western New Mexico, but they
Lemmon outside Tucson, said were low-intensity blazes
fire
information
officer being managed for the benefit
Marylee Peterson. lt staned of the forest, officials said.
Tuesday.
"They're good · fires," Gila
All residenoes and business- National Forest spokeswoman
. es in Summerhaven were evac- Loretta Ray said Tuesday in

out what the mechanism is. and 1
would advise our government to
spend millions of dollars ttying
to figure it out," said Dr. David
Bennen. a neurologist at RushPresbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital
in Chicago. He has done similar
re5earch.
In the Einstein College study
of 469 elderly people, those in
the top third in mental activity
had a 63 percent lower risk of
dementia than the bottom third.
Taking part in a single activity
one day a week reduoed l'le ·risk
by 7 percent.
The use-it-or-lose-it notion is
not a new idea. Other researchers
have discovered evidence that
mental activity may guard
against dementia. But it is hard to
prove, since early dementia without obvious symptoms ma;Y
cause people · to slack off thetr
hobbies. If this is so, dementia
affects hobbies - and maybe
not the reverse.
The researchers tried to minimize that possibility by considering only those who were dementia-free for seven years after joining the study. They also tried to
eliminate the potential role of
education and intelligence in
guarding agains! dementia.
,
This "study also took physical

Silver City, N.M. "It's been a
good opportunity to allow fire
to resume its role in the ecosys-

WASHINGTON (AP) American fon:es have captured
Abid Hamid Mahmud al-Ttkriti,.
Saddam Hussein's presidential
secretary and No. 4 on the U.S.
most-wanted list of Iraqi leaders, the U.S. miliiary said
Wednesday.
U.S. forces captured Mahmud
on Monday in Iraq, a statement
from U.S. Central Command
said. It did not say where in Iraq
he was caprured.

Third in power only to the for- ·
mer Iraqi president and his
younger son, Qusai, Mahmud
Controlled access to Saddam
and was one of the few people
he is said to have. trusted completely, a U.S. official said,
speaking on the condition of
anonymity. ·
A distant cousin of Saddam,
Mahmud is also the ace of diamonds on the U.S. deck of cards
portraying leaders of Saddam's

exercise into account. Nearly all
physical activities, including stair
climbing and group exercise,
appeared to offer1no protection
against dementia. The only
exception was frequent dancing,
perhaps because danoe music
engages the dancer's mind, suggested lead researcher . Joe
Verghese, a neurologist at
Einstein College.
It is not clear what physiological mechanism might oonfer the
protection. But researchers say
evidence is accumulating that the
brain is much more easily molded than scientists once thought.
Mentally engaging hobbies
might lay down new neural pathways, one theory holds.
"The cerebral oonex and hippocillnpus, which are critical to
lhese activities, are remarkable
plastic. and they rewire themselves based upon their use," said
Dr. Joseph Coyle, a Harvard
Medical School psychiatrist who
wrote an accompanying commentary.
Even if keeping the mind busy
offers no protection against
dementia. Verghese s;tid doctors
can hardly go wrong in recommending it: "lf nothing else, it
improves the quality of life."

regime. The U.S. military calls
him Saddam's national security
adviser and senior body guard.· .
In the 1990s. Mahmud was
put in charge of several security
portfolios, including responsibility over places lraq has been
accused of hiding weapons programs. He started his career as a
non-commissioned officer in
Saddam's bodyguard, eventually being promoted to lieutenant
general.
'

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

tem."

And in central Arizona, a
prescribed bum that jumped
ftre lines had burned some
1,500 acres, forcing the evacuation of about 15 homes in the
rural community of Cherry.
Although Summerhaven is
home to about 100 year-round
residents, the population swells
during weekends and summers. There are more than 700
homes and cabins on the flanks
of9,157-foot Mount Lemmon.
Peterson said she dido ' t
know how many people had
been evacuated.

AGRICULTURE

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Qu;1lity Window Systems, Inc.

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com
INTERNET SERVICES
AU10MOTIVE

BlueStarr Network

Norris Northup Dodge

www.nbrrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.bluestarr.net
MEDICAL

· www.turnpikeflm.com

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org

BUSINESS TRAINING

Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

SIX
MONTHS
Sz • • Cesh•
"'.A.C:. -

s..-.r..-

www.holzerclinic.colh
Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

COMMUNITY
. Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

www.meigscountyohio.com

Yokeyes Birtt),wear
~.yokeyes.com

NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune · ·

EMPLOYMENT
lnfoCision Management Corp.

www.infocision.com

www.mydailytribune.com
The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

ENTERTAINMENT

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com

Charter Communications

www.charter.com
GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

LLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS
Herbalife Independent Distributor ·

Precious Memories

www.photosonchina.com

. www.herbsndiet.com

'

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!

~ 8

-

Cs!!Y fJ./..61-.
Plush

@.! fJ./..61-.

'

Pillow Top

349 399 499 .": 599

8

FREE
Parking
Mon ·Sat 9 toS
Friday IH
Closed Sunday

8

'1;

FLAIR

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

"BRAND HAM£ FURHITVRE AT DISCOUHT PRICES"

Ate 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV

•

·Scoreboard, Page El2

Thursday, June 19, 2003

Forces capture key Iraqi figure,
No. 4 on u.s~ wanted list

Pillow Top

The Daily Sentinel
PageBl _

Keeping mentally ·tit wards
off dementia, study says.

Fire lights horizon

@!;

Inside:

675-1371

8

Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EYERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in our

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

1

Thursday, June 19, 2003

•

I

Chicago 4, Cincinnati 1

Prep softball

Chapman,
Lodwick
voted
All-Ohio

I

I

Days Until .
High School
Football
Season!!!

BY ANDREW CARTER

Sports editor

d

I,

I

"

Hall of Farner
Doby, AL:s first .
black ·player, dies
NEW YORK (AP) - Hall
of Farner Larry Doby. the first
black player in the American
League. died Wednesday niglit
after a long illness. He was 79.
Doby died ar hi s home in
Montclair, N.J., said his son,
Larry Doby Jr.
Doby was a seven-time AliStar in a 13-year career, almost
all of it spent in the outfield for
the Cleveland Indians. He
helped lead the Indians to their
last World ·series title in 1948.
On . July 5, 1947, just II
weeks after Jackie Robinson
broke baseball's color barrier,
Doby joined the Indians.
Though he would go on to
hit .283 with 253 home runs
and 969 RB!s in a big league
career that lasted through
1959, his locker room reception that first day was chilly.
Some teammates would not
even shake his hand.
"Very to ugh," Doby once
re(lalled. 'T d never faced any
· circumstances like that.
Teammates were lii1ed up and
some would ~reet you and
some wouldn t. You could
deal with it, but it was hard."
He was voted into the Hall
of Fame by its Veterans
Committee in 1998.

San Antonio
honors its world
champions
SAN ANTONIO (AP)
The San Antonio Spurs celebrated their second NBA
championship Wednesday in a
farnihar way.
Taking a cue from their first
title celebration in 1999, the .
Spurs had a barge parade down
the city's famous Riverwalk,
followed by a boisterous rally
with . 50,000 people at the
Alamodome.
The Riverwalk was packed
with fans, who cheered players
and the glimmering gold trophy that the Spurs won Sunday
by defeating the New Jersey
Nets in Game 6 of the NBA
Finals.
A loud clianl of "M VP'
MVP!" rang out as Tim
Duncan, the most valuable
player during the regular sea~on and in the fmals, hugged
the trophy and waved to the
tens of thousands of well-wish~rs lining the river's edge.
·~It was a lot of fun to be out
there and hear all the people
screaming," Duncan said afterw~. "It was everythinE it was
m 99 .... San Antomo .ans ar
so loyal to their teams."

Wilson to start
in place of
Graves today .
CINCIN!'IATI (AP) Danny Graves originally was
scheduled to start today for
the Cincinnati Reds against
the Chicago Cubs, but has
been pushed back to Friday.
Instead, Paul Wilson will start
the final game of the series.
Wilson staned on Sunday
and threw 38 pitches before a
game againsl Philadelphia
was rained out. With Wilson
rested and Grdves bothered by
a blister recently. Boone
decided to flip their assignments.
·
"It's good for both of us,"
Graves said.
The blister on the tip of his
middle finger is healing.

COLUMBUS Southern 's Rachel
Chapman and Eastern's Kass-Lodwick have
been named to the 2003 Divi sion IV AllOhio softball squad. Both were se~ondteam selection s.
.
Chapman, a senior, posted a 21-4 record
with I06 strikeouts and just
walk s · for
the
56
Tornadoes, who advanced
to the district semifinals
this season. She hit .360
with 31 RBI.
She was voted most
valuable player of the
Hocking Division.
"She's got a great attitude and an outstanding ..____;
work ethi c," said Scott
Chapman
Wolfe, head coach at
' Southeni
during
Chapman 's
four-year
career. "She's worked very.
very hard to get where
she's at."
Wolfe said replacing
Chapman will be no easy
task.
"She won all 21 of the
games that we won this L..-_..__ __,
year." Wolfe said , "And
Lodwick
that pretty much speaks for
.itself. In fact. when I presented her to the
panel for the vote, 1 said had she not been
the pitcher, we could have very easily been
5-21. She was that much of an impact play. ,
er.
Wolfe said Chapman will be remembered
as one of the greats in Southern softball history. He believes her 21 wins in 2003 and
selection to the All-Ohio team are both
firsts for the Southern program. Wolfe said
he is currently researching that information
to confirm it.
Chapman also excelled in the classroom
at Snuthern earning academic All-Ohio and
All-TVC honors. She is also a member of
the National Honor Society.
"She 's just someone you like to have
around your program," Wolfe said.
Wolfe said Chapman plans to attend the
University of Rio Grande. .
.
Lodwick, a junior catclier, was a mainstay
on the Eagles ' Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division and district cham,t?ionship squad. Eastern (21-3) reached the
Region 15 semifinals this season.
Lodwick was a first-team selection in the
AII-TVC Hocking Division voting.
Like Chapman for Southern, Lodwick
has been a force offensively and defensively for the. Eastern program since her freshman season.
Eastern coach Pam Douthitt, who was
voted TVC Hocking Division coach of the
year, could not be reached for comment
Wednesday night.

..

Chicago Cubs' Tom Goodwin, left, is safe at home as Cincinnati Reds catcher Kelly Stinnett! is pulled off
the plate by a high throw in the fifth inning, Wednesday, June 18, 2003, in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/AI Behrman)

SOsa, Wood bully Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sammy
Sosa hit a prodigious homer, acting like nothing had changed
since he got caught using a corked
bat. He couldn't help but notice
the one striking difference.
,
From now on, one of baseball's
beloved stars can e"pect to get booed:
Sosa singled the first time he
made contact while cracking hi s
bat - nobody made a fuss - and
later hit a two-run shot
Wednesday 'night as the Chicago
Cubs beat the Cincinnati Reds 4-1
in their slugger's return from ·a
seven-game suspension.
Cubs star Kerry Wood (6-5)
retired the first 17 Reds batters
and finished with a three-hitter.
Still, it was Sosa's show.
Sosa's fifth-inning homer off the
lop of the batter's eye in center field
against Jimmy Haynes ( 1-6) showed
he was ready to get on with it.

On the last day of his suspension,
he asked fans to forgive and forget
that he had used a corked bat. But
many of the 39,053 fans at Great
American Ball Pari&gt; - where Sosa
got a standing ovation when he hit
his SOOth career home run on April
4- weren't ready to do either.
The Reds sold 7,835 tickets
when the ·windows opened, their
biggest walkup sale of the season
for only their eighth sellout.
Sosa heard only cheers the last
time he was in town, connecting
for the first historic homer at the
new stadium .
The , adulation was gone on
Wednesday. Boos drowned out the
cheers, and some of the 39,053
fan s yelled "Cork'" as he waited
for pitches.
They booed when he singled to
right field the first time he made
contact, cracking his black bat

toward the handle. Plate umpire
Jeff Kellogg matter-of-factly
handed it to the bat boy, who
deposited it in the dugout.
Sosa did his trademark home-run
hop in the fifth. when the ball left the
bat with a loud cmck and soared to
center, smacking off the top of the
enormous batter's eye party room.
Sosa ag;tin got booed as he rounded
the bases with his head down on the
homer, estimated at 464 feet.
It was his first since May I, a
span of 69 at-bats. and his seventh
of the season .
Wood took it from there, holding the Reds without a runner
until Reggie Taylor lined a single
to center with two outs in the
sixth. Jose Guillen led off the seventh with his 12th homer.
Wood didn't walk a batter and
struck uut nine in his first com plete game of the season.

Conferences in crisis

..

Source:
·ACC
Floridian dominates junior tour
to make play
for Va. Tech·

BY FRANK CA~EHART

Sports correspondent

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. _
Soggy conditions failed to damp-

en the spirits or effort,~ of young
golfers in the opening round of the
2003 Tri-County Junior Golf Tour
on the Hidden Valley Course.
The soft ground posed early
moist lies, but liright sunshine
came along midways, and it was a
fine beginning highlighted_ by
competitive play and the annual
appearance of Floridian Brittany
Lincicome.
In the premier 15-17 age group,
Lincicome teed it up from the
long tees with the guys, and proceeded to fire an even-par round
of 36 for the best oft he day. It had
to be that way as Randall Sharrett
of Gallipolis was close behind
with a good 3-over par 39.
Lincicome, granddaughter of
Dotty Campbell, has played for
several years in the tri-county and
is now one of the U.S. best junior
amateurs. She won the Florida
State Championship this year,
played on the Junior Solheim Cup
team last summer, winning two of
her three matches, and won a host
'
of other honors.
This year, she heads to Europe

for the return matches.
while Johnny · Wells of Point
Spurred on by Lincicome 's notched· 55, and Bo Bellamy of
lead, the older players rifled many Point was close behind.
. dandy shots and only some tough
Erin Dunn of Meigs caJ?tured
lie s kept more from the 30s. the first-place trophy for gtrls in
Behind the two front runners, Josh the 11 -12 division.
and Jake Venoy of Meigs each
Finally, the 10-and-under group
posted solid 43 totals.
' was led by tirst place winner Jeffrey
Ryan Young of Point was fifth, ·Roush of Pomeroy. Roush posted a
while Andrew Johnson and John 48, while Steven Theiss of
Staton, both of Wellston;_ were Gallipolis captured second, ahead of
. next just a stroke apart, and fol- Jacob Leach and Hunter Bellamy,
lowed by Craig Barker of each in their tirst tour match.
Gallipolis.
Next Monday morning, the
In the 13-14 division, Dru Reed juniors meet on the Riverside
of Pomeroy finished strong to win course. The fee is $8 each time out
the coveted fjrst-place Fruth and covers all fees, awards and
Pharmacy trophy for the week.
lunch. Registration is at 8 a.m., tee
Deadlocked for second were off at 9 a.m. , and usually conSteven Stewart and Evan Dunn of eludes by noon.
Pomeroy at 50 each, just ahead of
Each week, trophies donated by
Danny Roush of New Haven with Fruth Pharmacy are awarded to
52 . Justin Arnold and Jordan first and second place winners in
Roush of New Haven fired 55 and each division, boys and girls.
56 respectively, just ahead o.f Cass Instruction and competition. plus
Lavally.
creation of friendships in golf
Tour veteran !'!ryan Harris of excitement make for lasting memRacine cruised to a strong 41 to ories.
·
win the Fruth trophy for the 11-12
For those who missed the
age group. Garrett Burdette of schedule, after Riverside in
Point fashioned 47 to nip Seth Mason , next week ; on Monday, in
Perry of Meigs at 48 in a tight bat-. Pomeroy, and at Cliffside in
tie for runner-up honors. Close on Gallipolis on Monday July 7. The
their heels came Will Garrison of finale fun day is on Monday, July
Point at 50, just ahead of 14 at Hidden Valley in Point
Gallipolis' Craig Jagers with 52, Pleasant.

I

'

RICHMOND, Va. (AP)- Atlantic Coast
Conference presidents have asked Virginia
Tech to c~nsider joining three other Big
East schools in jumping to the ~CC as part
of its expansion plan, two sources ·told The
Associated ~ress on Wednesday night.
The sources spoke to The AP on the condition they not be identified.
The .decision to add Virginia Tech was
made during a three-hour teleconference of
the nine league presidents on Wednesday
after it appeared that the· original expansion
involving Miami, Boston College and
Syracuse would not get the required seven
voles for approval, a government source
with knowledge of the talks said .
The suggestion to reconsider the ·Hokies
was made by Virginia president John T.
Casteen Ill , who, has supported including
Virginia Tech in the plan throughout. After
the Hokies were first rejected last month, he
pledged to continue pushing for their inclu~oo .

.

Virginia Tech president Charles M. Steger
was noti,fied of the ACC's change of heart
in a meeting with Georgia Tech president G.
Wayne Clough in Blacksburg on
Wednesday night, the second source said.
Clough said he did not meet with Steger
in any official ACC capacity.

�Page ,__

• The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 19, 2003

.www.mydallysentlnel.com

\!r:ttbune- Sentinel - ~egt~ter

Scoreboard
Texas .

Pro baseball
NlltiOIIII League
-Eoll

W
"ttanta ............... 46
Montreal ............ 39

L Pet.

23

.667

3:1

.549
.522
.-471

P!\iledelphia ....... 36 33
Now 'lo&lt;k ........... 33 37
Florida ....... , ~

W

L

GB
8

.466

,.

Pet

GB

35

39

.426

42

.400

It

W
, los Angeles ..... 42
San Francisco ... 42

L
28
28,

Pet

GB

Colorado ............36

7',

Arizona .............. 34

37
36

.600
.600
.493

San Otego ........23

50

.486
.315

2!)~

3t

33
33

-

1',

2

•
9

8

''ed: 1 tdl)''a Gernee
Pittsburgh 7. Montreat 3, tot game
Pittslturgh 4, Montreat 3. 2nd game
N.Y. Mets 10, Florida 5
A~anta 6, Philadolphlo 1
Chayo cut&gt;o 4, Clndooati t
Arizona 2. Houston 1
St louis 9, Mitwaukee 1
Co&lt;ndo &amp;. San Dtego 3 •

los Angeles 8. San Francisco 2
lburocloy'8-

Montreat (Ohka ..7) at Pittslturgh (Wells
2-3). t 2:35 p.m .
Chago CWo (Prior 8-2) at Cincinnati
(Wilson -.4), 12:35 p.m.
Atlanta (Hampton 3-3) al Philadelphia
(Padilla 5-7), t :05 p.m.

St. Louis (Tomko 2·5) at Milwaukee
(0\Jevedo t-2). 2:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Bacaik 1-1) at Florida
(Phelps 2-2), 7 :05 p.m.
Arizoo&amp;. (Bati&amp;tl -4-3) at Houston
(RoddinV 4-5). 8:06p.m.
San 01ego (~ ..7) at ColOradO
(OWvor 3-5). 9 :05p.m.
San Franctoco (Schmidt 5-3) at Los
Angeles (Od.Parwz H). tO: tO p.m.

Fttdoy'IGomoo
Chayo While Sax at Chago Cubs,
3:20p.m.
1!oronto at Moolreal. 7:05 p.m.

'BOlton at PhHadelpnia, 7:05 p.m.
N .Y. 'r'ankeea at N.Y Mets, 7:10p.m .
Baltimore at Atlanta, 7:35p.m .
Tampa Bay at Ftorido, 7.35 p.m.
Mtnneoota at Mtlwaukaa. 8:05p.m.
Houaton at Toxaa 8:05 p.m .
CIOYOiond at Pittlburgh, 8 :06p.m.
Kanass City at St. Louts, 8:10 p.m .
Oetroil at ColOradO. 9:05 p.m.

Seattle at San Diego. 10:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Arizona, 10:05 p.m.
San Franciaco at Oakland, 10:05 p.m .
Anaheim atl.ol f\ngataa, tO:tO p.m.

Cuba 4, Reclll 1 -

ChiCAgO ........ ooo

oat ooo - • ,

o

Cincinnati ..... 000 000 100 - t
3 0
Wood and Bako; JHoynes, t.teld&lt;er (6),
Sullivan (7), Heredia (B) and Stklnan. W-

Wood 6·5. L-JHaynea

1-6

HAs-

Chicago, SSosa (7) . Cincinnati. JGulllen
(12).

Afnerlc:en League
Eut
W L

Naw York ........... 42
Boston .............. 40
Toronto ....... ......40

29
30

Pet.
.592
.571

31

.563

2

Baltimore ........... 32
Tampa 8ay ........ 24

36
46

.-471
.343

17),

GB

1'1.
a·~

control
WLPctGB

Mlnnesota .......... 38
Kansas City ....... 36
Chtcago ............. 33
CleYeland .......... 28

32
38
41

.543
.529
.465
.406

g:,

Oetro"--. .......... ... 17

51

.250

20

3:1

-

1
5~

WLPctGB
seento ............. 48

27

&lt;42

391

20 ',

Oakland ....... ..... 40

22
29

.686
.580

Anaheim ............ 34

35

.493

7'·,

13 ~

Toronto 6 , Battimore 2
C~nd 4, Deti'Oft 1·
N.Y. Yankeea1 , Tampa BayO. 121nnings
Kansas City 8, Mif"I{Misota 6
Chicago White Sox 3. Boston t
2. Anaheim
Oakland 4, Texas 3. 11 1nnings

Seame

tO
13'..

.557
.535
. 529
. 500

Chago ............. 39
Hou&amp;ton .. ........... 38
St. Louis ............ 37
Cincinnati ........... 35
Pinsburgh .........29
Mitwaul&lt;ae .........28

...

-MOdlry's GloiTHHI

o

Thu.-.day'e Glmee

EvansVllle . ..... 14
RIChmond ........ 12
Kalamazoo ...... ,... 8
Florei'\C8 .. ....... 3

a
9
14

.636
.571
.364

3
4 '1
9

18

.l43

13',

23 ................... ........ ...... Athens, 6 p.m.
24 .......................... ........ Manena. 6 p.m.

Well Olvlolon
W
Gateway ........... 13
Aoddord
11
Aiv&amp;r City .......... 10
Cook County .. B

L
6

Pel.
.684

GB

12

.478
.476
.421

4
4
5

11
11

Tampa Bay (Bell t&gt;-t )' at N.Y. Yankees
Kenosha .. ............ 8
11 :421
5
(Pollino H). t :05 p.m.
CleYatand (B.Anderson 3-6) at Detroi1 Mid-Missouri ...... 9
13 .409
s·,
(Cornejo 3-4) , 1:05 p.m .
-nesday'o Go"'"
Minnesota '(Mays 7--4) at Kansas City
Ga1eway at Chillicothe ppd.. rein. lsi
(Snyder 1-3), 2:05p.m .
game
Boslon (Lowe 7-3) at ChiCBgo White
Gal~y al Chillicothe. ppd ., rain. 2nd
Sox (Wright ().3) , 2·05 p.m.
game
Toronto (Escobar 4-3) at Baltimore
Aocldord 7, Kalamazoo 2
(Helling«). 3:05p.m .
Evansville 6, Mid -Missouri 4
Texas (Va~ 6-2) at Oakland (Mulder
Aict"lmond at Cook County, ppd., rain
9--4), 3:35p.m.
.
R1ver City 3, FIOrBnce 1
·
Anaheim (Aa.Ortiz 7·5) at Seattle
Washington at Kenosha, ccd., rain
(Moyer tD-3), 4:35p.m .
Frtdoy'o Gomoo
ThUI'Sday'8 GIMU
Chicago White Sox at Chicago CubS,
Gateway at FloJence
3:20p.m .
Kalamazoo at Cook County
Toronto al Montreal, 7:05p.m.
Kenosha at Richmond, CXJOll. c4 5USil game
Boston at Philadelphia , 7:05pm.
Kenosha at Richmond
N.Y Yankees at N.Y Mets, 7:10pm.
Mtd-MISsouri at Chillicothe
Baltimore at Atlanta, 7·35 p m.
R1ver City at Evansville
Tampa Bay at Florida, 7:35p.m.
Washington at Rocl&lt;ford
Minnesota at Milwauke(t, 8:05p.m .
Friday'8 G1me•
Houston at Texas. 8 :05 p.m.
Gateway at Florence
Cleveland at Pittsburgh. 8:05p.m.
Kalamazoo at COOk COunty
Kansas City al St. Louis, 8:10p.m.
Detroit at Colorado, 9 :05p.m.
Mid-Missouri at Chillicothe
Seame ar San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Richmond at Kenosha
San Franc1sco at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
AM!r City at EvansvHie
Anaheim a! Los Angeles, 10:10 p.m .
Washington al Roddord
Indiana 4, Tigers 1
c-and .....
000 310- 4 to 1
Oetrolt ......... 000 000 001 - , 7 1
JaDavis and Bard: Sonderman. Spurting
(7), JWalker ~8) , German (9) and Hinch
W-JaDavis 6·5. L-8onderman 2-10.
HA-Oetroit, Munson ~9) .

ooo

International League
North Divl•lon

W

L

Pet.

BuffalO ...... .. .. .....40
Pawtuckal.. ........40
Ottawa ... ... .. .. .36

28
29

.588

.sao

•.,

35

.507

S't.

Scranton ............36
Rochester ... ,. .....33
SyraCtJse ..........28

36 .500
37 .471
38 A24
SOuth Olvl•lon
w · L Pet.
Norfolk.. ............ 36
32 .529
Oumam ..............34
35 .493 ·
Charlotte ........... 32
36 .471
Richmond ....... 33
39 .458
-Oivtoton
W
L Pet.
Louisville ............ 41
30 .sn
Toledo ........ . .... 35
Coumbus .......... 33
Indianapolis ....... 30

GB

8
8
tt
GB
2 ),

4
5
GB

34

.507

5

38

.465

B

.429
10 ~r
"WednndiY'• Game•
BuffalO 5, Norlolk t
ea,wtucket 4, Durham 0
Louisville 4, Columbus 3
onawa at CharlOtte, ppd., rain
Rochester 5, Richmond 2
SaantoWNI/kes·Barre 10, Toledo 3
Indianapolis 6, Syracuse 4
Tllurocloy'o Gltmaa
Buffalo at Norfolk
Durham at Pawtucket
· Louisville at Columbus
onawa at Charlone
Richmond at Rochester
Scranton-Wilkes-Barre at Toledo
Syracuse at Indianapolis

40

Frtdoy'o Gamao
C Mrlotte at Buffalo
Durham at.ScrantonWilkes·Barre
Indianapolis al Pawtucket
Norfolk at COlumbus
RIChmond at Ottawa
Rochester at Toledo
Syracuse at louisville

Chomplonohtp (-·ol-tnrwe)
SOiurday, Juno 21

7 p.m.
Sunday, Juno 22

2 p.m.
Monday, June 23

necessary

Legion baseball
Juno

E••t Dlvlalon
Washington ..... 17
Chillicothe ....... .. 11

SOuth Carolina eliminated
Game 10 - Texas 5, Miami 1, Miami eliminated
Wodnold-w, Juno 18
Game 11 - Stanford 5, Cal State
Fullerton 3
Game 12 - Rice 5. Texas 4
Thuradlly, June 18
Game 13 - Cal State Fullerton (50-15) v.
Stantord (49·16), 2 p.m.
Game 14 - Winner Game 8 vs. Winner
Game , 2, 7 p.m , if necessary
Frtd-w, Juno 20
No games scheduled

Meigs American Legion

Frontier League
W

Game 7 - Miami 7. Southwesl Missoun
State 5, SW Missouri State eliminated
Game 8- Rice 12, TPBS 2
Tuoaday, Juno 17
Game 9- Stanford 13, South Carolina 6.

Game 3- 7 p.m., if

L
5

Pet.
.n3

GB

6

.647

3'1

5 ................ ... .... at Mason County, 15-4 L '
10 ...........
... ....... at Marietta (OH), 5-2 L
1O........................at Marietta (DH), 1()-6 L
11 ......... ......... ...... at Athens , 7-2 W
1 3 ......... ... ... .......... Mason County, 11-9 L
15 ...... ... at Pickerington (DH). no report
18· ....... ........... at Parkersburg, ppd., ra1n
19 .. .... ....
........at Wellston. 6 p.m.
22 ..................... Lancaster II(DH). 1 p.m.

......tp'ynU 65 or Older?

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Coming Friday, July 2, 2003

If so, you qualify for a

The

Daily. Sentinel

10% Discount
on your home delivered subscription!
Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below.
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.
Emma Johnson

lalltpoli' lail~ utrtbunt
Joint Jltaiant Rtgijttr
The Daily Sentinel

Daughter of
Frank and Janet John5011
Someflnetown, OH

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of ·local
chi!dren • ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 2nd issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved! ·

PIC1ures must be In l)y
Thursday June 19, 2003.
PIC1ures can be picked up after
July 3rd, 2003.

Complete the fonn 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:

iaturbap limt~ -itntintl

iunbap·
ltmt,·ientinel
...._•. _____________.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name_
· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..--_
Address ________________
City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Phone.________________
I

Mall or drop off this coupon along with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
········~········································

'

.

In One Week With Us '
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
\lrrtbune
Sentinel
•

c

College World Series

Game ·2 -

G. m., County, OH

Prep softball

ROHnblan Stadium, Omoho, Nab.
(double ettmlnotlon)
Friday, June 13
Game 1 - Stanford 8, South Carolina 0
Game 2 - Cal State-Fullerton 8 , lSU 2
Saturday, June 14
Game 3- Rice 4, SW Missouri State 2
Game 4- Texas 13, Miaml 2
Sunday, Juna 15
Game 5- South carolina 11, LSU 10.
LSU eliminated
Game 6 -Cal State-Fulerton 6, Stanford 5
Mondoy, Juno 11

Game 1 -

Honorable Mention: Tamsyn Kellough .
sr, COF, Waverly; M~hele Dettwliler, sr, C.
2003 Tri-County Golf Tour
July
Greenfield McCia1n: Jessica Rock. sr. CF.
Monday, June 23 Aivei'Slde Golf
3 . .. ..............., ... ........ at Wellston, 6 p.m.
Maysvtlle , Jessica DaGrav-a, sr. CF.
5 .................. Parkersburg (DH). t p.m.
BucXeye Local: Miranda Simmons. Jr.. C. Course (Mason)
Monday, June 30 - Pin e Hills Golf
6 ......................... Shmnslon (OH), 1 p.m.
Norwalk; Jamie Siefker, so. OF, Celina,
Course
(Pomeroy)
7 .....
. .... ..........Mason County. 6 p.m,
Bnnany Howell , Ao, SS. St. Mary's
Monday, July 7 - Cliffside Golf Course
8
........ at N~ro (OH), ., p.m.
Memorial; Jade Cunningham, sl'; P, Wltlard .
IGallrpoils)
Gortney Schafer, Jr. , SS. Northwestern ;
10 .
... ·-····· Wellston, 6 p.m.
Monday, July 14 - (Roundup) Hidden
11
..... ,.... Parkersburg, 6 p.m.
Rachel Campbell, sr, 3B, St. Paris Graham :
Valle-y C.C.
.
12... ................... __ ...... Nitro (DH). 1 p.m.
Sara Roseberry. sr, P. Urbana ; Lisa
Cost - $7 per person each week.
Steadman, sr, 3B, Astabula Edgewood , Registration - 8 ·30 a.m
t3 ...... ........... ....... at W infield (DH), 2 p.m.
... at lancaster (OH), 5"30 p.m.
Rachel Stephens. C, Keystone ; Arian
1,5
Tee Off- 9 a.m.
Tunte, sr, P, Conneaut
16 .. ................... ........ .. .. at Athens, 6 p.m .
Age Groups- 15-H, 13-14, 11 -12. 1oDIVISION Ill
19 . ..
. .. , .
.AU\ens (DH), t p.m .
and~under
20 ............Distric1 Tournament a! WeNston
Firat Tum: Christina Montana, OF. St.
(All home I)OIMI played II Molga High Thomas Aqumas; Kat1e Olive, INF, Mineral
Ridge ; Gina Schneider, sr, 3B, Indian Lake ;
School)
Molly Stock, so, P, Waynesville : Jamie
BASEBALL
Echelberger, P, Hillsdale; Amy Mattin, so, P,
Amerk:•n
IAague
Delta ; Kelli Sheibley, Jr, P, Colonel
DETROIT TIGER5-Recallod OF Andras
Crawtord; Leslie Strong, jr., OF, Evergreen:
2003 AP All-Ohio
Leetcycia. Brown, so, P, Monroe Central: Torres from Toledo of the IL. Purt:hased the
COLUMBUS (AP) - Here are the 2003 Enn Lincoln, jr., P, Sandy Viltley; Jamie contract of c· A.J. Hinch from Toledo.
Brandon lnge to Toledo.
All-Ohio H1gh School Girls Softball Teams Leffler, sr, P ,B, Mt. Gilead; Whitney Plar, Jr .. Optioned
as voted by tile Ohio High SChool Fastpltch . P. Bloom-carroll; ANson Davis, sr, P·B , Des1gnated OF Ernie Young for assignment.
MINNESOTA TWIN5-Senl AHP Tony
Coaches Association:
'North Union; Jadtie Edwards, sr, SS, New
DIVISION I
LeXington; Ali Hull, jr., 38, Portsmouth , Fiore to Rochester of the IL. Activated AHP
Flret Team: Tracy Le.bman, sr, C, Rachel Staley, sr, P, Whemersburg.
RiCk Reed from' the 15.oday dis8bled list.
AnthOny Wayne: Abbey Winland. fr. SS.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAY5-Released
Second THm: Nikki Brooks, sr, C, Zane
Zanesville; Rachef Thomas, sr, P, Gahanna Trace; Natalie Hanson. 51, P.SS, WesHal ;l AHP Steve Parris. Recalled RHP Brandon
Lincoln: K~ten Farley, sr, C. Marysvil_le; Jennifer Jones, sr, CF, Proctorville Backe from Durham of the IL.
Alex Hermann, sr, SS, Logan , Megan Fairland; Coree Price , jr.. SS, North Union:
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Stgned SS
BriCker, OF. Medina; Jennifer Pancake, P, Candice Maurer, sr, C, Sandy Valley ; Aaron H1ll.
Boardman; Annie Pk:luse, IF, Cuyahoga Meredith Hitchcock, jr., P. Steubenville
Nltlonal League
Fall~ : Miranda Halt, Jr., P, Centerville; Keir
Catholic; Erica Singer, sr, SSCF, Fairview;
MILWAUKEE BREWERs-Purchased
McEachem, jr, P. Lakota West; Justine Knslin Eickholt, Jf., R'tB, Convoy Crestview: the contrac1 of RHP Dan Kolb from
Mahler, sr. 18, Colerain: Brittany Runner, Christa Coppus, so. SS, Mohawk; Maria Indianapolis. Placed RHP Jason Durocher
sr, 1B, Greenville; Jenn Woods , sr, P, Benza, sr. 1BP, Cincinnati Hills; Rachel -on the 15-day diSabled list.
A~thony Wayne ..
Herrmann, 1'·· CB, Cincinnati Hills: J1ll
SAN. FRANCISCO GIANT5-Piaced OF
Second Toom: Alex Boros, IF, Elyria; Alk!lrding. INF, Loudonville; Alicia CeUette. Marvin Benard on the 15-day disabled tlst.
A.shley Dietz, C, North Canton Hoowtr; INF, CuyahoQa Valley Christian : Katie
retroactJve to June 16. Recalled IN,:"-QF
Courtney Pfl!ner. IF, Akron Elet; Rachel Wheeler, OF, Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary.
Francisco Santos from Fresno of the PCL.
Straight, sr, P, Chillicothe: Lauren
Honorable U.ndon: Lesa Bauer, P,
'
BASKETBALL
Brinkman. sr.·:i!BP. Cols. Watterson; Andrea
RootstOV(n: Denlelle
SChneider, C.
National Basketball At80CI•tlon
Orahood, sr. Pr.B. Delaware Hayes; Autumn Woodridge ;.
Molly
SOrslg.
OF,
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERs-Named
Dalton . si. 38. Zanesville: Jacqueline Northwestern; Megan Miller, jr., Pl':B, Dixie;
StBYe
Patterson president.
Noble. sr, P, St. Ursula Academy; Melissa Kristin Patrick, sr, SS. Natkmal Trail ; Nicole
TORONTO RAPTOA5-Named Kevin
Bowie. sr, SS. Clay: Amanda Stewan. sr, P, Donaldson, jr., RF, Elmwood ; Kyla
Kettering Fairmont: Emily Ba1ley, sr, OF,
Ramirez. sr. 2B. Delta: Amber Davenport, O'Neill coach .
FOOTBALL
North1f10nt: Leah Turts, sr. tB, Lebanon: sr, CF. Ontario; Kristen Cochran, jr.,
National Footbllllll8flue
Katie Halcomb, sr. P; Hamilton.
PC1NF, Newcomerstown; Lyse Bree&lt;ten.
BUFFALO BILLs-Named Terry WOOden
Honorable Mention; Michelle Costa, P, sr, p.,e.. Bellaire ; Nlckie Sipe, sr, C. Mt.
Medina: Enn Du1gnan, OF, Green; Jill Gilead:. Taryn . Hensel. jr., P. Ridgedale: scout and Tom Roth college scouting
Gigliotti, C, Medina: Stephanie Vonderhaar. Cour1ney Charles, Portsmouth West ; administrator. Promoted Shawn Heinlen to
Jr., P, Northwest; Debbie Szaletko, sr, SS,
Ashley Keen. Porlsmouth West: Jenna area scout
Beavercreek; Andrea McGlothin, sr, 1B, Williams, na .
CHICAGO BEAR5-Wt!Mtd TE ~i
Lakota West; Stephan1e Turvene, 38,
Afanogun, WR Gary Lusk and C Caison Da:ll.
DIVISION IV
Butler: Stephanie Beavers, sr, C, St. Ursula
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed DE
Flrtt Tum: Allory Hooper, jr., PCSS,
Academy ; Ashley Kuhlman , sr, 1B, Findlay; Trimble ; Lori Harmon. so, PSSOF, Mark Word to one·year contract eXIension.
Hflary King , jr., PSS, P1Ckenngton : Jenny Symmes Valley; Danielle Ze1gler, jr., P. through 2004.
Brewer, sr. P. Whetstone; Courtney Wright.
Strasburg; UndS~ Romick, sr, C, River :
GREEN BAY PACKEA5-Signed WA·
sr, SS, , Hilliard Davidson: Sha1na Jamie Wonderly, sr, P, Gibsonburg; Dana KA Brian McOonald.
Vanderpool. jr.. 3B. Ch l ll~the .
Hartlngs, Jr., P, Marion Local ; Jessica
JACKSONVILLE JAGUA Rs-Signed
DIVISION II
Kramb, sr, St. Wendelin; Josc:ie Kaup, jr., C. WA Matthew Hatcnette.
Firat Team: Lyndsey Lemon. jr.• SS,
Fort Recovery: Brooke Hermiller, jr., OF,
NEW YORK GIANT5-Signed DE Radell
Warren; Geri McFanrt . jr., P, River Valley Miller City; Krissy Kester. sr, .P, Newton; Lockhart Released DL Brad Hams.
(Cheshire); Mandee Luers. sr, P, Do\19r; Ashley Hensley, jr , P, Southeastern; Amy Named John Mara ch1ef operating officer in
MOrwce Blanford, sr, SS, River View; Difore, c. Cuyahoga Heights.
addition to eKBCUtive vice pres1dent and
Tamara Cohen, sr, C, Lexington: Christina - Second Team: Brittany ·Skolnicki, INF, general manager Erme Accorsi senior vice
DeMoss, so, P&lt;B, Clear Fork ; Justine Lora1n Catholic; Heather Fields, Jr., SS.
president.
Johnston. so, P, Wauseon : Amanda Covington; Franny Spangler, so, P.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS - Signed G
Houchin, so, C. Lima Bath: Jenne Binz, jr.,
Hous1on: Donnie White. sr. C. Old Fort: Dwayne Ledford and CB Fred Weary.
P, Ke nton Ridge; Jennifer Meu1ner, Jr , P, Jaime Hoshock. jr., OF, Ayersville; Sara
TAMPA
BAY
BUCCANEERSTurpin; Oanlelle Larson. so, CF. Benjamin Gomez, jr. , 28. Pettisville; Aimee Genter,
Restructured the contract of OB Brad
Logan: Katie Naumoft, OF, Poland jr., P, Pettisvlll~. Kelly Peters, sr, SS,
Johnson.
Seminary; Brlttney Robinson. P. Keystone:
Spencerville; Usa Merryman, 1r , P.
TENNESSEE TITANS- Released LB
Amanda White , IF, Tallmadge.
Shadyside; Carty Kaufman, sr, P:B,
Randall Godlrey.
Second Team : Jaclyn Spirtos. C. Garaway; KASS LODWICK, JR., C,
WASHINGTON AEDSKIN8-S1gned DE
Highland; Ashley Clapsaddle, sr, P.B, EASTERN; · RACHEL CHAPMAN, SR,
Jonathan Brown and DB Fred Booker.
Valley View; Jennifer Schamp, sr, SS, P&gt;OF, RACINE SOUTHERN.
National Hockey League
Valley View; Mandy Green, sr, t 8, Kenton
Honorable Mention: Charity Stroot. Jr..
PITISBURGH PENGUINs-Announced
Ridge: K1m Bowman, sr, SS, Clear Fork: P. Bealls\liUe; Gabriel.le Burns, Jr. , P,
Kelli Williams, jr., SS, Celina; Sarah
Wellsllllle; Jessica Rolston. sr. C. Upper !he retirement of G Tom Barrasso.
COLLEGE
Pearson, sr, 1B, Clyde; Karty Lalonde, sr, Scioto Valltey; Amanda Poling, Van Buren;
APPALACHIAN
STATE-Signed
SS, Clyde; Lakyn 8andlo, so, P, Edison; Jana Suman. jr , OFDH, Parkway: Kari
Nichol Abbott, sr, P, John Glenn; Susan Wenzinger, so, P, M1ller City; Marissa Houston Fancher. men's basketball coach.
Dodge, sr. 1B, Buckeye Valley; Samantha Kreischer. jr., SS, Uncotnview; Kari Hoying, to a two-year contract extension.
METHODIST -Named Kelly Brown
Hood , sr. C. Teays Valley ; Jessie jr., CSS, Russia ; Ashley Chain. sr, C,
Swinderman. so. P. Sheridan: Susan Fairfield Local: Tommie Holbrook. sr. C. women's tennis coach .
Eberts, sr, P, Vinton County; Lorena
PEPPERDINE-Named
Steve
Symmes Valley; Aayann Klingler, jr., SS,
·
Floccari. P. Walsh Jesuit; Lmdsey Royer, C, Riverside.
Rodriguez baseball coach

Transactions

College baseball

"I

C L·A S S .1F I E D

Golf

Marlington .

To

Place

Your
Ad •••

O{{lee llo~.s:
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

r

l'nt-. &gt;NAI.'

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r---------·-------·-----------------------------,

I

'Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s): _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

, Parent's Name: ________________________

: Clly &amp; State: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1

•••

rI

'
HP My n am e 1s Jeffrey
Coon I am a lon ely fellow
look+ng for a co mpanion
Should like to tat k and good
oaks would be a plus
I
nave brow n ha1r. blue eyes,
s·g ·
Any one mlerested
please contact me at PO
Box 57 , Por tland OH 45 770

GI\MWA\

--------·-------------------------------------HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
THURSDAY July 18, 2002!

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
rrtidav For Sundays Papll!'lr

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business oa"ys Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursdav for Sundays

YARD SALE·

I \11'1 0\ \II\ I

G.-\UJPOLL'

"'lll\lll ....

colors. Call between 2 30 ly, 1263 Watson Road .
and 4.30pm . 740-446·9935 Children 's cloth1n'g newborn·
6X . pl us SIZeS Xl-4X . baby
swing , crib, double stro ller.
Lu-H ANII
htgh chair. books .
• fOll:'lll

l

itO

HELPWOO'ID

·I

'-·- - - - - - - - " ' ·
·
Access to a Computer?
Earn $450-$1500 monlhly
part-lime or $2,000·$4,500
tull·t1me, 1·800-585-0760 or

l"o_ HELPWANlm I "1"10:---H-01\_ffii__...,
Sitter

for

evemngs Mt. Alto area in my
home or consider sitter in
roosevelt school diStrict.
Rel 1able Transportation 16
or older (304)895-3117

~w_w-w_o_u
,- _rA_n_s_w_•_r.c-:-o~m-:-:--- ~r.2D

~

1

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
for immediate possession all
within 15 m1n. of downtown
Gallipolis. Rates as low as
6%. (740)446·3218.

2/3 acres Le11el Lot. 2 story
house, 8 rooms. 2 baths,
porch and large deck, heat
pump. recently remodeled .
corner of Green tree of·
Bulav1tle
Pk.
$69,500
(740)367·7272
3 Bedroom newly re mod·
eled, in Middleport, call Tom
Anderson affer 5 p m
992-3348

r

Busooss

T~~~~~~, s©~~:n~A -LG -e;r~·

0

SWYILE

_,I"'~'"'-~z

r

1_-.__1

I;;
16 .

My frienCI says that she
s j
=:,'
knows a rock star who has so .
• .
_ _ _,. much trouble with his tiair that
, - - - - - - - - - - ; h e has to see a barber at least·

II I

1
1
1
"'7.,..:;-.:-_rTo;.,.,co.;.E7,--I~-

~ 1 1

9

0 ~:m·p;.;;

.the chucklo -quoted

by !tiling In the mining word.s
L~L...J-..1.-...1..:-~--' you cl111eloj:J from srep No. 3 below.

I I I I I

!a\

I I I I

Yesterday's
SCRAM·LEl'S ANSWERS
Gallop- Tipsy· Adult- Number· BUGS OUT
we had spent several hours at the park swatting at
fl1es and gnats My neighbor commented that picnics
would be much more fun 11 they could work the BUGS

SERVICE'i

JANITORIAL SERVICE hll
1wo lmm•dlate openlng1.
John'• Contr1ctlng
Experience 1 mu1t In floor
Servlcll
carl.
Crlmlnll beckcarpentry, painting, rooting,
ground check required.
insulation. decklng·lree es11~
(800)988-7847
mates 74Q-367·0437
Utile Caesars
In the
Gallipolis area is now hlrlngl
Accepting
appllcatlon/resum"es
tor
Mgml pos l!lons. delivery
drivers and crew members.
Apply in person or lax
resume 10 (740)886-7425
Need to earn Money? Lets
talk the tiE,W Avon. Call
Marilyn , 304·882·26 45 to
learn all the ways it can work
for you .
Part-time Denial Assistant ,
progressive denial office m
need ol experienced dental
assistant in Gallipolis area
Send resume• and refer·
ences to P.O Box 565,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

tO

~~~!~E

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We WinI
1-888-582-3345

~.,t_.A_Nil_R_li'i iuri-,iN.,;:.INGS
.·---1

r

Apartment bUilding for sale

Apartment upstairs 46-1/2 -

A~~:;'s

bedrooms, 1 bath, li11ing
room , dining room , kitchen
Located at 611 4th Avenue
on 40X130 101. S45.000.
Call 245-7221 or 245· 7203

4 apanments plus o lf1ce Mill . Creek.
2-bedroom .
located tn Racme, OH (740) Water!Trash
Included .
949-2305 tor appointments S275Jmonth $27510eposrt.
(740)441 -0583 or (740)446Point Pleasant . 6th St. 7620 after 7.
across from courthouse. ~-------f321' .MOBILE HOMI-:S
oNice/commercial bldg . ask, BEAUTIFUl
APART·
FOR SAI..E
ing $50.000, day 304·675- MENTS
AT
BUDGET ,
5734
PRICES AT JACKSON ·
used homes urider e11ening 304-675-5038.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
0
I
.
.
L1JI"S &amp;
Drrlle from $297 to $383 .
$2·000 · will help with delrvWalk to shop &amp;. mov1es . Call
ery, call Harold 740 · 385 - ___
At:REAC..~E
740-446·2568 .
Equal
99
__4.,.8_ _ _ _ _-::-::-Housing Opportunity
1/2 acre lot , Tycoon Lake on
14X70 1985 trailer, 2 BR . 2 Eagle Road .. Ciry water. Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
bath , good condition , on $8SOO.OO (7401 247 _1100 or room apar tments at Village
ren!ed lot. $8.500. (day)740- (304 ) 53 2 .6271
Manor
and
R1vers1de
245-9440,
----,-.,--,-:---::-:: Apar1ments 10 M1ddleport. ~
(eve nlng)740·245·554 1
4 acres Eagle Ridge Rd .. ~rom $278-$348. Call 74D-

r

3 Bedroom, 1112 bath, bndoi 14 X?O Mobile Home wrth
on 1 acre. All electric, AC, 2 7 X2 t
d
expan o,
new Y
car attached · garage, out remodeled, newer furnace.
building, extra garage. All A must to see!! (740)446new doors, roof &amp; carpet. 7901
Call (304)675-1714
_ _ _ _ _ _ __

excavated, electric septic 992-5064. Equal Housing
.permit &amp; water ava1tabte. OpportunitieS
1740)992-0031
- - - -- - - - - Localed at end of Ch1111cothe
4~5 acres in Vinton , greal
Road m Gallipolis Two bedhuntmg , no restnctrons Call rooms . $400/month plus
Century Homes 740-286 - $400
security
depoSit
1973
Schultz
12X65,
HOME or 740·286·7113 .
·requi
red.
Ulilltles
not
IncludCentral air on rented lot
available to continue renting . Lot lor sale in Racine, ed . No pels . 740·441-1108 .
(740)446- t089 leave mes- (740)992-5858
Modern 1 br apt. (740)446sage.
N1ce mobile home lots, qUiet 0390
2 Modular Units lor sale- 1 country setting , $115 per
water , Nice one bedroom unfur·
unit is 24x36 with metal Sid- month , includes
mshed apc;~rtment Range &amp;
sewer.
trash.
7-40-332-2167
ing and IS in fair condition is
refngeralor provided Water
ask1ng $6.800; 1 un1t is
It I \ I \I ..,
&amp; garbage pa1d. Deposit
24x36 with wood s1dlng and
required. Call 740-446-4345
also in fa1r condit1on but
atter 6pm
needs some minor repairS .
Hous•~
North 4th Ave ., Middleport, 1 .
Th ey WO!Jid be good tor
FOR IU.! Vf
Sunday
School
Class ·--iiiiititiiiiioiio-.,.1 bedroom furm shed apa rtRooms . Work Shops or as a '
ment. no pets. depos1t &amp; refCabin. Delivery of Units also 1-3 bedrOoms forec,losures erences , (7 40)992·0 165
can be added Make all home from $199 month 4 ~o
esquires lo Steve Pullins at down 30 years at 8.5% APR Now Taking Appllcationslor listing call 1·800-31 9- 35
(740)992-2478
West
2
Bedroom
3323 ID:I .1709
Townhouse
Apa rtmenls .
2001 16X80 Schult Smgle
Incl udes Water
Sewage. :
Wide , like new. 3 bedroom, 2 bedroom. References &amp; Trash , $350/Mo., 740-446- ~
2 bath, AC Call alter 4pm. Deposit. No Pels . (304)675- 0008 .
Moltvated seller. (740)256· 5162
Pleasant Valley Aparlment
6306
3 bedroom with nice yard &amp;
Are now takrng Applications
1641
Lincoln
24 x 36 double Wide modular garage .
tor 2BA . 3BR &amp; 4BA ..
dass room. Bwlt 11ery heavy Heights , Pomeroy Lease. App1 1cat1·ons
are
taken
references
duly to Oh10 building code. 1 deposit · &amp;
Monday 1hn.1 Fr1day. from ·
large open room, no bath or requ1red 1-740-667-3966
9:00 A.M -4 PM Office IS :
kitChen . self contained heat 3 br ranch house tor rent. Located at 1151 EVergreen •
pump unit. Appro~ . 10 years $375.00 a mon . in New Orr ve Point Pleasanl, WV :
old. $6, 500 deh11ery a\lal1- Haven , 120 Howard St. 304- Phone No IS (304)675-5806 ~
able. 740-992·2478 or 740- 675-3458
E.H.O
591-9342
Beaut1lul Riverfront 2br, 2 Tara
Townhouse
Cole's Mob1te Homes
112-bath Syracuse w/d eck, Apartments Very Spac1ous.
US 50 East, Athens , Oh10, AC. Jacuzzi, W/0. $650 . Per· 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA, 1
45701 . 740-592-1972
month . Ulllitres ·Inc luded . 1/2 Bath. Newly Carpeted, ~
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ; ..
Coming Soon The All New (740)594-4446
Patio , S!arl $385/Mo. No :
''Pinnacle Best Buy" Home
· MOBILE HOME.~
Pets. Lease Plus Security ..
You saw them last year
FUR RFNr
Depos1t Required Days : Many were sotd at a fan!as740-446-3481
: Even ings: tic low pnce . Now with more
deluxe features than evGr 2 BA mobile home, 7 m11es 740-367·0502.
"Where You Ge1 Your out At 218, $450 per month,
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- .
Money's
Worth"
Coles 1nclues all utilities except
ing appllcattons for waiting •
electric,
references
and
Mobrle Homes, US 50 East ,
list lor Hud'·subsized, 1- br, •
deposl1
required
.
Call
740Athans, Ohio (740)592-1972
apanment call 675·6679 :
388-9916.
EHO
Land Home Packages &amp;11all1

3 year old Bnck Ranch ,
3,000+ sq.H., 2-1 /2 acres.
mground
poo l, storage
builmng , e&gt;&lt;ce llent neighborhood, (740)446-0149

5 bedroom home, near Rio
Grande . can Century Homes
at 740·286·HOME or 740·
286-7tt3.
Bank Foreclosure Propertylarge 2 story, 4 bedroom. 2
bath, located on .34 acre,
te~l lOt at 407 S. Broadway
Street. Aacme. Oh ., call 740
949-2210, ask for Sheila for
an appointment to see,
priced at $28.000.00

r

VA K E N

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

da~s/earl~ ~---ffioiiiRiiSiiiALEtiiiii.iito-,.t ~s•,n•g•le-feoimoiti t~li i dli wieii i lt•ng•,_.l4

eo

I I

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyregister.com

POUCtES: Ohio Valley Publishing reserves the right to edit, relect, or cancel any ad at any time.,..&amp;rrors muat be reported on the first day of
.Tribune-Sentlnei·Regiater will be raaponsible for no,more than the ca.I of the spac-e occupied by the error and only the fir at insertion. We
not be
any loaa Of expenn that reaulta from the publication or omiHion ot an advertlnment. Correction wm be made In the first available edition. • Box ·~;~~~~~~~
are always confidential. • Current rate card appllea. • All real elllte advertisements are subject to the Federal Fair Houting Act of 1968. • This 1
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE standarda. Wa wilt not knowingly accept any adverti1ing In vlolaUon of the law.

Yard Sale 9-5. June 20 &amp; 21 .
Black lab puppy, lost Sat 4 mile s out 141 at 3180
....S.vvoirru•ANTED•A•110._NS;... .
6/ 14 al French 500 Flea
AVON All Areasl To Buy or Market fa 1rgr ounds
Ca ll ur4
\'ARD Sc\U:Sell
Shirley Spears. 304Babys1t1ing 1n Iffy home any·
7 40-446-4250.
Po~tEROY/MttJDLE 675-1429.
tim~. Yery dependable with
Found
fema le
Calico
low reasonable rates . 740houseoat near Krodel ·Park June 20 &amp; 2t 9-5 Barrett Cook/Waitress Merg s Co.
446-2052 ask tor Candy.
cal l 304-895-3577 leave res1dence on 124, Rutland . Honest, Good Personality
"A STARSEARCH"
m ust be able to cook &amp;
message Found around a Ra1n cancels to 23 &amp; 24
S1 ngers Bands &amp; Vocal
Serve. Interview (740)594- Surrogates
Needed.
month ago
Groups All Styles &amp; Ages .
June 20, 21 .22 SA 143. 4446
Interested m helpmg cou·
Nash v1lle Record Exec!
Lost- on Hayman Ad .. Long Baby clothes, tools &amp; lots
pies complete their families?
Seek1ng New Talent.
CUSTOMER SERVICE
Bottom, Oh, copper-nosed more. Ram cancels
Your eggs w11t ·not be used.
Co mmg to
beagle Reward , ~740)84311 mterested ( ple ase call
Hunt1 ngtorv Charleston
June 20-21 At 7 N. tu rn at We have an 1mmediate full- 1440)356-4604
1034
731 ·424·2229 or 731-424C1tgo, I m1le out Storys Run time customer serv1ce pos1Truck tool box. black. los! on
2141
BUSINESS
Road on right lots of rHce t1on open 1n our main office.
Rt 325 Call 740-245-5208. ·gtrls 0·12 mon th clothes
TRAINING
As of th1s date, 6/18103 . I will
boys 3T-14, ladles. cand les, Must be people oriented,
not be responsible for an'y'·
computer literate, and en1oy Gallipolis Career College
YARil SAt.t-.
etc .
cn es debt other than my
workmg with numbers.
(Careers Close To Home)
Saturday June 21 &amp; Sunday
R1clo. A Saunders
own
Call Toda~ i'74D-446-4367,
June 22 9-5 1648 lincoln Pos11ion otters all company
, -800-214-0452
YARLI S.-\l .t:·
Herghts . Microwave, VCR. be nelits 111Ci ud1ng heal!h and www.gall ipohseereercollege.com
GAU .II,JLl~
C- 1 Beer Carry Out permrt
ex~rglrder m1sc
lite msurance, 401k, and
Reo #90-05-12748.
tor sate Chester Township
paid vacation Please send
180
Me1gs Cour.ty send letters 01510089 Huge 5 tamily .Saturday. June 21 : Dave resume to.
WAtviFJJ
To Do
of rnterest to . The Daily 3374 SA 141 Thurs-Sat , Spencer's. 605 Main Street
..____ittiloiiioiito_ _.
Sentrnel , PO Box 729·20 hOme 1ntenor. over 150 VHS Racine . Clothes, mise Ram
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
mov1es. middleton dolls, cancels
Pomeroy Ot110 45769
Attn : Diane Hill
J &amp; M Construction
longaberQer basKets. barb1e
825 Third Avenue
Shingle &amp; Metal Roofs.
Card Shower for 81l1
"76
Y c\RU S c\I.E•
house. ba rb1es, 2 twrn beds,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Concrete, Gulter, Pa1n11ng,
Barnette .
l~r. Pl.t"AMNT
scented
bears.
Dodge
Remodel1ng , Siding, Pole
To the family and friends of Dakota
bed li ner,
!awn
NO PHONE CALLS!
Barns. and Garages.
William 0 (Brll) Barn ette. On sweeper. brand name k1ds Carolina Flea Market now
FREE ESTIMATES!
June 28th . he Will be 93 clothes·all s1zes. someth ing accep tmg
Vendors Full T1me
Maintenance
{304)593·2153
ye ars o ld . Make this birthday tor eyeryone. Ra 1n cancels
{304)675-5270
Pos1t10n Available. Apply in
OR
memorable by se nding h1rn , ~-------­
person at Holiday Inn ot
(304)675-4862
brrthday cards
Address 4 Fam1ly Ga(age Sale Garage Sale Fr1 &amp; Sat June
Gallipolis.
389 1 Georges Creek Ad Thursday &amp; Fr iday. 3791 20 &amp; 2 1 22 Un1vers1ty Lane
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Add1son P1Ke
9.00am· Stree1
MR FIX IT!!!
Bes1de
National GARDEN Help Wanted .
3 OOpm Ra1n or Sh1ne
Complete Remodeling
Guard Armory Rarn or Wages , hours flexible. Call
Interior &amp; Exter1or, custom
8-9p m (7 40)446-3760
GtHAIIW
708 2nd A11enue. Fr1 6/20 Shrne
deck &amp; fences . Chain
wood
9 00·4:00. Sat 6121 9 00·
Hardware sales clerK . e)(pe· Lmk All odd Jobs.
HOME
INTERIOR
SALE!
1 00 , old milk bottles. med1·
3 month old blac k lab
nence nice but not neces· (304)675-3733
c1ne bottles. other assor1ed Discounted 1tems. light
mllced-sho ts and wormed
sary
Forward resume to
reheshments.
door
pr1zes.
1tems.
Some tramulg (740) 985·
CLA -570 cfo GallipOlis Daily
Saturday, June 21st ,
Transmissions, all type1,
337 1
Tribune, 825 Third Ave,
Brand name clothing .. all 9·00 to 5:00 Butfalo Town
7 40.245-5677.
SIZes. other mrsc , Fri I Sal Halt Fo r more mlormauon
Gallipolis, OH 45631
5 Coon pupp1es fr"le to good 197 Greentlnar. 1 mile out Call (304)937-2929
llome Call 740-446-4201
Heating
and
Cooling W 1ll babySJ1 in my home.
160
Company
looking
tor Over 5yrs prolessional expeYard Sale r:r; , June 20
6 mo. old Female Yellow Lab Friday. Saturday, June 20 8-2 pm. 2625 Lmcoln Ave. Pt H VA C Techmcian with at nence with ch1ldren Great
to a good home. 740-256· ~nd 21 , 2677 At 141 PleaSant 3n1 pool table
leas! 1 yr. experience. Must Refer8nces . Call anytime.
1070
Cent.ena'ry, .
co llectibl es jeans c lo!hes &amp; mise
be certified . Send Resume (7 40)256-6338
tools . clothing, books, bedto P.O. Box 572, Kerr. OH
Adult male pit bull. Friendly, spreds. household 11ems
W~ror!HI
45643
Will do Odd Jobs, pam!,
good w1th chi ldren. (740)
mBut'
June 20 and 21, Clay
992-3229
Help wanted caring lor the mow, weedeat. Galt Bill
Barnes.
Townhouse
elderly, Darst Group Home, (304)882-34 19.
Cedar ward robe (needs MoCar ty
and
Donett, Absolu te Top Dollar : U.S
11\\ \ll\1
Cor ns, now paying mrnimum wage.
Silver,
Gold
reoa1ri. mctat garage cabi· 800am- ?.
new
shltls
7am-3pm.
7amProolsets, D1amonds Gold
ne1. old chest freezer (does·
Plus s1ze clothmg . miscella- Rings.
U.S. Currency,· 5pm, 3pm-1 1pm , 11pm·
n I work) 740-446·8025
neous. 1345 State Route M T.S . Coin . Shop, !51 7am, cal: ·740·992·5023.
0PPOtmJNITY
FREE KITIENS . (740)446- 850, Bidwell, 1Oam·3pm, Second Aven ue. Gallipolis
HVAC Installer OpenlnQ :
Junf) 20 and 21 .
4053
740-446-2842.
!NOTICE!
I
Benetits a11ailable. Apply at
or
Send · Resume
to : OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHBennen s MH Heating &amp; ING CO. recommends that
WORD
Cooling
1391
Salford you do business with people
DAM I
School. Rd Gallipolis, OH you know, and NOT to send
~5631 (740)446-9416 or t - ·money through the mall unt1l
ldttod by CU. Y R. 'OILAI'I
you have investigated the
800-872-5967
offering .
R•orronr;,a l•tterl of the
four s~ramblad words b•·
independent Co ntrectore
low t~ form lour simple wotdl .
Motor
Route
Drlvtrl No·rlsk Internet business.
Wanted tor M110n County, Great new concept. No sellPoint Pl1111nt Reglet•r Ing, free tools, training. No
tor Info cont1c1 Sean runaround. 740-256·6130.
Culton 304-875·1 333 E•t.
20
PROFESSIONAL

The above Information will be used in the ad. •••

Phone Number:-------- Submitted by: - - - - - - - - -

Visit us at: 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailysentinel.com

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • A\loid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

~--------,.t K1ttens var io us ages and June 20 . 21 Bam-?. 5 taml -

The Daily Sentinel
"

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytri bune.com

1\.egtster

All real e1tate ad\lertlstng
In lhls newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act or 1968
which mak... lt lll1f98l to
advertlae " any
preference, limitation 01'"
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
famtllal statUs or nahonal
origin, or any intention to
make an~ such
preference, limitation or
dlacrlminatton."
Thil newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertllements tor real '"
,stale which Is In
vtot•tlon ol the law. Our
readera ere hereby
Informed that all
dw•lllng• ldvtniHCIIn
thll newepeper ere
IVIIIIble on In equel
opportunity btt..e.
FORCLOSURE
3 Bedroom home only
!t 3,500 lor listing call
1-800-719-3001 Ext. F144
Gallipolis. Mill Creek Ad · 1
ml from golf course, 3 br. ~
ranch, brick front , new vinyl
aiding, heat pump', excellent
cond. , appro•. 1/3 ac. asking
$77,500. call aHer 5pm ·304·

r10

~2-'-b-'-.r_m_o_bl-le_h;_o.:_m:_:e_.

&amp;.
_
a3b3-'84e_.._'"-y-ou_'.,."_'·_·_
· (-7-40---:)4_4__
6- anCe Inc luded , washer
a_ll_ a_p_p_lldryer 304·576·9991
Now 14 wlco only $799
Mobile home for rent no
down and only S159.63 per
' 1 0 385 pots, (740)992·5858
II
Nl
month. ca
"k 74 ·
7871
Trailer tor renlln M89on. No
:--:---:-.....-:-:---::--:-:-::-:: p
(304
New 2003 Ooublewlde . 3 BR m"'ll'".
· -.;&gt;.77•3•••57•5.'--~
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
Ai&gt;AR'IMEr.TS
and &amp;295/mo. t -800-69 1·
FOR

r

r

RE:I.T

!ir67fl!7!"'7--~----, ~
FA~t\18
and

I,

67.5-5038
FOR SALE
'
House, up to 5 acre&amp;, 4 BR,
21 f2 bath, gas fireplace,
appliances Included, built Nice 43.5 acre farm with
May 20Q2, 3-car detached 32X60 metal pole barn on
garage, 740-367-7619
Greentree Road , Addison
twp. Wooded, lOt with te11e1
NEW HOUSE tor SALE
frontage nice fbr building,
Debbie Drive. 3 bed"rooms, hunting, pasture (pnced to
2
baths
$129,000 . sell) can (740)441·0806.
(740)245·9268.
Leave Message.

2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unturnlshed , security deposit
required, no pets , 740·992·
22-:'-,-8_ _ _ _ _ _ __
:2 Bedroom Apt 5 m1n. past
Holzer 740-441·0194

0
0

1U
..J
..J

&lt;C

'

·~

.-... '-['.

ffiR

RENT

,.~l :_

2br. furnished, No utllitres to
oay. All conven ience. For
more !nto cal l (30 4)576 - :
2095
cT,-a-ile-,-,-p-ec-a-1o-r-re_n_t_ln :
Middleport. (740)992-5858 :

\II lUll \ ' lll'\1

r10

I.-

HOUS£110UJ
•~_ _GoooR
_____.

Keller maple chine cabinet, :
antique solid oa~ table wl '"
claw feet &amp; 5 chairs, oak col-:
fee table , Evarett console~
4 rooms and bath. all utilities
p1ano S1200 OBO 304-675- •
paid, $400 month . 46 Olive
2982 leave message .
Street (740)446·3945

D.

--

r_...:. . .....

----· --

-..

---

--·~

�'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Full size bed $75, lull size
bed $150, twin mattress &amp;
box springs $80, queen size
mattress $50, king size mat·
tress &amp; bok sprin~s $100,
nice Broyhill couch &amp; chair
$175 , !able and chairs $125,
lamps $10 each, coHee table
$45. Skaggs Appliance 76
Vine Sl 446-7398

L'

New Zealand Rabbits $10
esch. 740-867-8535

r

FRUITS &amp;

Lw--iili ili i i i i i ilo_.J
VF.AJE.'TABLES

Lw------·

Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark J.D. 215 grain heat &amp; trailer
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. r hona 304W·67:~:
(740)446•7444 1·877·830"'-l"'I£4J'
9162 . Free Estimates, Easy
BuY

L.------10

financing , 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Caret
Drive- a- little save alot.
Wanted to purchase tobacco
poundage, highest dollar
Thompsons Appliance &amp; paid , outbid anyone. Call
Repalr-675-7388. For sale. 513-295-6309
re-conditioned automatic iJ!r~::;...

___.,

!.uros.S·ALE--.,1

1 7 good aluminum windows,
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
3 sizes, plus 3 small ones.
Hondas.
chevys,
etcl
$10 a ieee for larger one, $5
cars/trucks from $500. For
for small. Call 740-446listings 1-800-719-3001 ext

Hour• 10-8 pm

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

.Buy 1 Cih Certificate.

Ciet 2nd Free!
Hrather A. Fty L.M.T.

WE REPAIR

740-992-5379

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

Also now ac"pting
mosr insurance

oner !lood thru .~-11-0 .1

PC DOCTOR

are vour

GRAVELY TRACTOR

ONE

STOP
SHOP

204 Condor Street

. business, not our .r;ideline

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Rooi"Tng

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

•

jji;;i;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

740-992-7599

HOME

$10,
500.00 74D-992-2478 l.w-Jiii~iiiPRoiiiiiOiiViiiL\ii!El'miiii
.- ·
or 740- 591-9342
'
DURO·LAST
ROOFING
Flat Roof
Specialists·
Commercial and
Residential
Saves on Cooling.
Metal and Mobile
home roofs· No
Problem. 15-Year
Guarantee

BASEMENT

r

4-WDs

siding, carpeting , &amp; remodeling, extensive experience
King Size
Pillow Top 1·996 Ford Taurus 78,000 1995 Plymouth Voyager
call 245-9023 or 245-9704
Mattress set, New still in miles. 1 owner. garage kept, mini-van; am·fm casselie,
Plasllc. Sale .$299. Cell AI, AC, PS. PB. PW. Cruise. ec, tilt. cruise , new tires.
Phone 304-412-8098 or E)(cellent condition. $4,000. EMcellent
- condition.
(304)675-3182
304-552·1424.
$3200.00. (740) 949-2709
King Size
Pillow Top 1996 Mercury MySIIque-SL· - - - - - - - Mattress set,' New still in v-a • loaded·clean 106,000 1998 Wlndstar Van, 75,000
Plastic, Sale $299, Cell miles $2900.00 OBO (740) miles.
good
condition.
Phone 304-412 ·8098 or 985-441 a
47.000. 740-446·1168 or
740-446-0137.
304-SS2-1424.
1996 Saturn 4 dr. 90K
lincoln Pipeliner Welder
For Sale 1989 Ford Bronco
$319S.
$1900. or make offer.
1993 Grandam 2 dr. 68K II 4x4 , tor parting · out.

·steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
.Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
· Drains,
Driveways &amp; Wal~ways . L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;

(304)67S-3745 after Spm.

and 12 oth·

ers in stock .

r MaroRCY~ I

r

RUII.JHNG

Suwlm;

Blazer,
loaded,
lealherunder
inle·
rior, price
asking
$2.000
book
: 1994
Grand Am.

t

675-2682

304/6.75·3458

Joe Bolin
Steve Lambert
Charles Barrett Jr.
Clerk • Opal Dyer
I

Announcements

In Memory

M~~~

WALLEYE
FISH F~Y

on his birthday,
June 19. We said
goodbye to you
just a few
n1onths ago.

-

*ROOFING
*HIME
MIINniAIICE
dEIMlESS
GOnER
*Free Elllmateb

949-1405
NELSON'S LAWN
CARE
Residenlial •
Commercial Mowing

back even closer
to our hearts.

• Mulching • Edg ing
• Fertilizalion • Le a f
Removal • Pruning

Sadly missed by

• Landscape

wife.

Maintenance Spring

Vera and Famil&gt;:;

and Fall cleanup ·
(740) 985•9829

k •

tion in Meigs County. Hours: As scheduled/as
'needed. 25 hrslw&lt;. Requiremems: High school
diploma I GED, valid driver's license, lhree years
good driving e)Cperience and adequate automobile insurance coveragE: . $7.00/hr.

Send resume to:

.

DEAR ABBY: My co-worker, "Kay," has the world's worst
work ethic. She chats on the
phone and e-mails her friends,
plays games online, reads the
paper, balances her checkbook
all day long on company time.
Our office manager encourages us to work independently,
so no one looks over our shoulders. My problem is I need
Kay's daily reports and sum·
maries before I can complete
my projects. Every week I give
her a hst of deadline but she
disregards them. (She's too
busy playing online solitaire.)
When a deadline is missed, it
becomes my fault, even though
Kay is the cause.
· I tried talking the problem
over with our manager (without
trashing Kay). l.Jnfort\lnately,
he didn 't get the message and
nothing has changed.
Coming to work used to
make me happ)' Now it fi II s me
with dread because every day is·
a fight for survival. I am overwhelmed and swamped trying
to overcompensate for my irresponsible co-worker. I'm tired
of working my tail off while
she messes around. Please help
me resolve this in the most professional way possible. STRESSED-OUT IN OillO
DEAR STRESSED-OUT:
Talk to your manager again,
and this time be direct It's tinie
to stop protecting the guilty. ·

· The problem: I made the mistake of telling my wife that
Amy and I have been "catching
up;" and to my surprise she said
I was acting inapproprialely for
a manied man. Tell me, Abby :
Just because I'm mani ed, do I
need to give up all contact with
fanner lovers and friends? Sign
me
WRONGLY
ADVICE
ACCUSED IN SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
DEAR
WRONGLY
Your future with the company ACCUSED: A lot of water has
may depend on it.
gone under the bridge since that
Keep your manager current college romance
fizzled.
on the status of your work. This Perhaps what has made your
way, he will understand in . wife uneasy is the frequency of
advance that you're not being the e-mails and phone calls.
given the data you need to com- Talk to her about it and see if
plete your iask - and ir will you can reach a compromise. A
provide some much-needed card at holiday time would not
msight to management
seem inappropriate. but . more
DEAR ABBY: I am a 49· than that does seem unfair to
year-old man happily manied your wife, especially if it bothto my wife for 22 years. Before ers her.
we met, I had an mtimate relaDEAR ABBY:i My girl:
tionshiP. with a college sweet· friend, "Alana," and I have
heart I ll call Amy.
been dating for three months.
Last summer, on a whim, I (She is 16 and I'm 18.) ·I am
wrote Amy to find out how her about to meet her parents for
life has turned out Like •me, the first time. My problem is I
she's been happily manied for have a 10-month-old daughter
more than 20 years. Amy and I from a previous relationship.
have since exchanged e-mails, Should I tell them I have a kid?
family photos and a few phone Alana says her mom and dad
calls - strictly platonic. We would make us break up if they
live on opposite coasts and knew. I like Alana a lot, Abby . .
have no interest in rekindling What ·should I do?- NEEDS
ANSWER
IN
our old romance. We just want AN
to keep in touch.
ONTARIO, CANADA

Dear
Abby

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds.start
6:311 tst Thursday
of every month
AII pack $5.00
Being this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get 5 FREE

Hill 's Self

Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

45771
740·949·2217

Sizes 5'x10'

CANCER CHECK
Fin;~lly .. . Molll'Y raiJ to Xlli! whl.'n c:1m:cr
strike:-.. You chuo'c the .tmount up to $)0,000~
Pa\'S in mJdition to other in~urancc .
You' use the money howe\cr you like.
Cillll'Cr ''ill :-. tn h· w hen you lca:-.t c:o;pcl:t it.
It will leave Yllll and vour farnil v fina ncially

mopped." CA~CER CHECK will he
then: when you nl.'cd i1.
Call now to rc:-.ervl.' )1l!!! check

ROCKV HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
Box 189 Mmnu-mRT. OH 45760
740-843-5264
VIII 1fn
General
Contracting
New
Construction,
Remodeling,
Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing.

to 10'x30'

HOME CREEK

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

ENT., INC.

1/14/1 mo. pd

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for youl

liNDA'S PAINTING

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

DEAR
NEEDS
AN
ANSWER: Meet yotir girl·
friend's parents and let thern get
to know you for the wonderful
person that you are - but do
NOT leave their house without
leveling with them. Be prepared to answer a lot of ques·
tions about your obligations to
the baby and the mother of your
child. You should be given
credit for honesty and for not
hiding the truth.
Dear Abby is writ/en by

Abigail Van Burell, also kno.wn
as Jeanne Phillips, and was
fOunded by her mother, Pauline
Phillips. Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069..

ACROSS
1
6
11
12

Like tweed

Laid off
(narow
Home

Puccini
works
55 Excessively
56 Go ashore
57 Nuzzles
58 Good buys

54

anne I(

13 Sci·fi

thriller
14 Nervous
(2 wds.)
15 Midler or
Davis
16 Brouhaha
17 Thick rug
19 Lady's
pump
23 El26 Skating
jump
26 Leafy
climber
29 Type of tire
31 Key In data
33 Singer
·-Pial
34· Lash down
35 To's
opposite
36 Hunter's
need
39 Decide
40 Turnpike
rumbler
42 Depose
44 Patch
46 Throw lava
~1

Onirk

DOWN
t World's
longest
river
2 Component
3 Edible root
4 Afflictions

5 Soph. and ir.

McKellen
and Holm
7 Formal,
maybe
8 ·Aberdeen
boy
9 Quiche
· Ingredient
6

team
Common
phrase
25 Telegraph
signal
27 Poe's
''Annabel

24

dwelling

45 Annexes

47 "Fancy"
singer
-McEntire
48 Europe·
Asia range
49 Duffers'
10 Kiki or Joey
"
goals
11 Science
29 NBA
room
officials
50 Disapprov·
12 Chisel
30 "t knew Ill"
. lng cluck
16 Office
32 Pvt.'s
51 Lots of
laughs
. machine
superior
18 Actor
34 Emergency 52 Lennon's
- Holbrook
signal
wile
53 What
20 Mooch from . :r7 Cash
bartenders
(2 wds.)
38 It may be
21 ·Not hidden
slung
check
54 Unmatched
22 Flctio·nal
41 Saturate
·2:\

Tioht-knit
governess'

~:~~;--r.::--r.:-'l'l':~

~

No matter what
direction you turn
you can always find
'

It In the

·-

Jan. 19) - What you begin
today has excellent chances to
Sllcceed. so it might be a· great
time to start that diet or exercise program you· ve wanted
to get into. This time you
mi ght reach your goal.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
. 19)- Associ ale with friends
today who are upbeat and
think posilive. because it will
have a pronounced effect on
your outlook and atlitude for
the rest of the week.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)Things that you
couldn't get to previously can
be easily taken care of today,
·so don 't waste,ll)is day.on insignificant projects or activi-

\VORD SCAIMMAGE- SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
·

Free Estimates ·
V. C. YOUNG Ill

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232
s•ua:;
•r's GRrE'.,HOUSE
a;, '"'·

(740) 591-3891
~:;::;:;;;:=:;::;::;;:;:::;:::=::;:;:::;:-;;

Bedding, Vegetab~e [( Sweet.
PDtato Plants,
4" annuals [(Perennials
Fruit [( Flowering Trees E.r
Shrubs
(Rhododendrons E.r
NOW Open
7day•
Azaleas)
• weeik dllyllgh!
all on Sale
lo dark! ,

Buckeye Community Services
P.O . Box604
Jackson, Ohio 45640.
Deadline for applicants; 6124/03

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

Equal Opportuo~y Employer

1·740·949·2115

Pd T mo

.

©®

,,,DOWN

"~

2nd DOWN

" 68

3rd DOWN

= 76

4th DOWN

AVERAGE GAME 155 · 1~5

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

-

=

16

mag~ ·

GAME 22G-230
by JUDD HAMBRICK

AVE~AGE

'

· ·1t-f1

FOUR PLAY TOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7-18Mer word k om the letters on each yan::lllne.
Add po1nts to ead1 word or lener using scoring directions at right. Seven-letter
wares gel a 60-poinl bonus. All WOlels can be !o111d In Wetlstefs New WOitd
Cotlege Dictionary.
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

.

,..,

245

JUDD'S TOTAL

DOWN

41h00WN

ltl200l Untlltd FUture Syndic~•. !nt

I,

0
0
0
Jnj

morrow.

C2003 Untied Fun.-. Syndleat•. ne .

Ai\IJ I
5UWo5t. ...

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411

3J795H'lIand Rd .

2nd DOWN

YOUNG'S

• Room. Addition• &amp;·
Remodeling
• New Garage•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding • Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

High&amp; Dry .
Self-Storage

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - If you're in need of
going shopping for some spe·
cial11ems. today might be the
time to do so. You're apt to
have a better eye for bargains
a.t this time than you will to·

l

Bry.a n Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Bulldlngs, .Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More

~'R~

tie s. Use it to clear up important mailers.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - Someone who has
come lhrough for you in a
number of wnys in lhe past is
deserving: of compliments.
Show your appreciation today
by acknowledging and prais·
·ing his or her efforts.

992-7953

Sunset Home
Construction

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Chances are the course you
- Your words could carry
select to follow in the year
more weight than usual today .
ahead will prove to be a. far
so make ccrlain that what you
wiser one than those you have
say in front of others leaves
chosen in the past. You might
the exact imfression you want
be able to fulfill an ambitious
to make. It" I be a lasting one.
effort that could put you onto
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)
a successful course.
- It would behoove you to·
GEMINI (May 21-.June . day 1o devote more time to
20)- Instead of half-heart ·
mental f)rojects than to those
edly trying to please someone
that are essentially of a physiwho doesn't appreciate it any· . cal nature . Your mind is
way, spend your time and ef.
mightier and stronger than
forts gratifying your own pervourback.
sonal mterests. At least you 'II
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
have a productive day. .
22)- Don 't just keep think·
CANCER (June 21-July
ing about things you'd like to
22)- Occasionally. it can be
change, do something about
wise to take some quality
them today. Take positive
time to think things through
measures to alter those situa·
that have been bothering you
tions or projects you know
in order to regroup your
can be improved upon.
forces and start anew . Today
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23could be that day.
Dec. 21) - It could be to
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)your ultimate benefit to listen
Keeping an eye on the future
attentively to the suggestions
could help you to begin exof others with whom you
tending your present efforts
share a joint interest. Some·
more effectively into your fu.
one's thoughts could be worth
ture hopes and aspirations.
trying and may prove benefi·
It'll help you make tomon·ow
cia I.
count.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-

Of

WOMEN
oHOPPT%

WITH

5UPP05ED TO

A MAI\l 6ECAU5JE IT'5 WHAT

BE LAOOHINfr
AND PIII'I'INfr

GRO~ER'i

MARRIED
THCRE.

~

PEOPLE

DO.

I SAID t\

~

SAKER'/
51111\PlE~

1&gt;1
MER MOUTH!

992·6215

PomerOy, Ohto
22 Years Locftl

5/9--8/4

MYERS PAVING

Her love a.ffair had

Henderson, WV

ended. She didn't
~ wa.nt to live.

875-2457 or 448-2912

;;J

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax304·675-2457

Now your birthday brings you

needed to war wtth people with mental retarda-

i

I

1

WANTED:

Condilion. (304IS76·2929

HOWARDl.
i WRITESE£

In /ovi11g memory
of my lmsband
Norman ~ber

Emergency Relief Workers (Substitutes)

I

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

I

I

good, $1,900. 740- 19' 1985 Bayliner. 305 VB.
Block. brick, sewer pipes. runs
245-57S8.
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
open bow. blue and while.
Winters, Rio Grande, OH 90 Ford Probe, auto, looks runs perfect, good condition.
good,. runs but need. work, 740•441 •0199 evenings.
I
$300. (740)247-2070 .
----~--1999 Aquatron , 18', w/3.0
95 Hyundal Scoupe, 5· Mercruiser
inboard/outspeed, AJC, 73,000 miles. board, excellent condition,
3 male blackltan AKC runs great, $2000 (740)44 1- tow hours. (740)949-4026
German ShepMrd pups. 1083
Call only after 5 pm . (740)
95 le)(US SC300 luxury
992-3972
Sportscar, aUto, V--6, · sunFerrets for sale 7 weeks old roof. leather. 12-disc . CD,
32ft. Shasta Camper. $5500.
$.75.00 each. Border Collie 101K
mi.,
Excellent
Call alter 5p·m, In good
for sale reg . $100.00 , 304- Condition, $10,000. Call

59t-7002

Truatees

jBoATSFOR&amp;~~
- s ;=====:..::===:;::~
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
.:&gt;AU".

591·4641

meeting will follow.
Rutland
Township

6/19/03

Sunday, '
COOKS MOTORS
740-446-D103
June 22, 2003
1987-XLH-1100
Harley
11:00 am 1998 Olds Bravado, black, Davidson . motorcycle, nice
sunrool. loaded. $9,200: bike $5.500. OBO 304-67S6:00pm
1998 Cadillac Catera. oower 3824
'Rot land
e'w'erything , Bose stereo. - - - - - - - nice car, sacrafice $8.500; t 996 Kawasaki 750 Vulcan ,
American Legion
1992 Dodge 350 extended Garage kept. great condi·
Sunday. (740)446-7300
AII you can eat
ca~~ diesel. ·5 speed. alum tion. 7200 miles. 675-5630.
Queen Pillow Top Mattress bed, high miles. runs strong
675-5664;
606·92HI71
Fish, Cole Slaw,
set, New in plastic w!Warr. $6.500. 740-643-2285.
Will accept $~99 , Cell phone
Baked Beans
i998 Honda 300 2 Wheel
304-412·8098 or 304·5S2· ~999 Lincoln Navigator with drive. 4 new tires. s2200 .
$6 .00 (includes
1424.
TV system&amp; 3rd back seat. (304)675.2209
Drink) Hot Dogs
Queen Pillow Top Mattress $21.500 ~ 17401 992-2209
set, New In plastic wrwarr. 1999 Oldsmobile Alero 1999 Honda 450 4-wheeler,
also available
e•ceUenl
condilion. camo
Will accept $199, Cell phone
$6,800.
(740)256-9197
color.
$ 4.000 .
_
_
Meals to Go! I
740 441
304-412-8098 or 304-5521424.
2 Veblcleo For Sole: ,1999 ~85~7~
4 --=-~---,

992-7953

1-800-822·0417
·wvs #I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0 en Mon' Fri 9·5

(746)388-8402 1740)388·

r

475 South Church St.
· Ripley, WV 25271

Law11 a11d Garde11 Eq11ipme111 is m1r

96 Hornet 25ft T.T. Sleeps 6.
queen bed. microwave and
stereo. Excellent condition .

' Ill\)( I'

New &amp; Used

Pomeroy. Ohio

992-2975

CAMPERS&amp;
MoroR HOMES

-~

Dean Hill

SALES &amp; SERVICE

for
everYtini!
You need!

8422

www.mydailysentinel.com

Astrograph

BISSELL

10

Tree Service

Gravely

Doors Open at 5:00 pm
21 Games for $20.00

i

JONES'

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

1999 t -ton Chevrolet with
WATERPAOOFING •· ·
utility bed, 40,000 miles, Urn;onditional lifetime guarCentral Cooling Systems, 1993 Geo Metro, $375: pick
$18.500. For more info. call
new &amp; used, as low as up sleeper top, $1 00; 1969
antee. Local relerences lur· t:::~~~~~~
(740)24S-5788.
nished. Established 1975. _
Chevy
dump
truck.
$1,200.
$850.00 installed
May
Special ! (7 40)446-6308
All OBO. (740)949-2128· -20-0-1 --0-o-dg-e-~D-a-k-OI-a Call 24 Hrs. (7401 446Public Notice
leave message
·
0870 . Rogers Basement - - - - - - - Full Size Mattress Se1 New _ _ __:_____ Clubcab Motorsport series. Waterproofing.
The Rutland Township
in Plastic w/Warr. Sacrifice 1994 Corvette Coupe. white. Loaded , bed liner, CD
$119, Cell Phone 304-412- red leather interior. loaded, Player.
Keyless
entry. - - - - - - - - Trustees will hold their
E)(ce llent conditjon. 22,000 C&amp;C
Budget
8098 or 304·5S2·1424.
$11 ,000. 740-682-7S12
General
Home Annual
miles. $15,000. (740)446- Maintenance- Painting, vinyl Hearing on
Full Size Mattress Set New
1995 Ford Escort, new tires, 4616
siding, carpentry, doors. Thursday July 3, 2003
In Plastic w/Warr. Sacrifice
excellent condition $2500 - - - - - -- - windows, baths, mobile at 5 p.m. at the Rutland
$119, Cell Phone 304-412OBO 446--4880
Station. The
2002 Ford F-250 SuperCeD, home repair and more. For Fire
8098 or 304-552·1424.
Diesel, 4X4. 1996 F-250 2 free estimate ca ll Chet. 740- Budget will be avail1995 Jeep Wrangler. 4 cyl . 5 wheel driVe . 2002 Caniper 992-6323. 1
able
JET
speed, 4WO. Soft top and Te~y 51h wheel. (740)388lor review by appoint·
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In bikini top. New Tires. Runs 9082 or (7401645·014S
NORTHUP CONSTRUC- ment only by contact·
TION-Home repair, room lng the Clerk at 740·
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· &amp; l ooks Great. 137,000
VANS&amp;
mites . (740)367-7152 or
800·537-9528.
additions, garages, roofing, 742·2805. The July

(304)67S-4975
$289S.
NEW AND USED STEEL Four Cavaliers

~

740·992-2432

Thursday, June 19
6:30pm

Beautiful engagement ring &amp;
S B., TH350 trans, 8 .5~ ~ 0
wedding band, 14K gold
bolt rearene!. black. corvene 1979 FoFd F150&amp; electric
w/ 11 diamonds, size 7 1/2,
ralleys wlflat caps, tint, A!C, cheir 304-576-9929 ·
bought for $800 at Zales will
sell for $350, (740)247-2070 Interior perfect. $6,500
(304)675·1175
1990 dump truck. Chevrolet
BURN
Fat.
BLOCK
Kodiac, CA"Fdeisel, 5 asp
Cadillac
Sedan tra nsm1ssion. 2 speed rear,
Cravings, and BOOST 1992
Energy Like
You Have Deville. one owner, new con- 10' dump bed, air brakes.
dition, 80,000 miles , must C.D.L. required . 48, 000
Never Experienced.
see to beli911e! 740-446- miles e)(Cflllent condition.
WEIGHT· LOSS

(740i339-0707.

Spring

TFN

ENGINE REPAIR

Sponsored By:
The American Legion Feeny
Bennet Post #128

(304)675· 1310
TRUCKS
1987 Monle Carlo-SS, 406 ~---FOiiiRiiSijiiALE.iiiiO.._.

992-5479

1·740.992-7007

32119 Welshtown Ad.·
Pomeroy, OH 45769

740-446·3478 or 740-446- (740)446·300S

New prOduct launch October
23. 2002. Call Tracy at 1993 Chevy Camara Z28,
Black, 379-2282
(740)441-1982

Pomt'rn)', Ohio, 45769

JIM 'S SMALL

BASKET BINGO

17~good aluminum windows.
3 sizes, plus 3 sm. ones $10. 1976 Monte Carlo w/4
a piece tor larger one $5. tor craiger rims. good tires.
66.000 miles, runs good,
sm. Call 74Q-446-0719
many new parts: sell reasonAir Cond. Unit 2·1 /2ton ably. (3041 773-5420 after 4
Carrier also Jantrol. Gas pm
Furnace . Storm windows - - - - - - - and
regular
windows. 1977 Corvette, White with
Furnace ~nd Air Con&lt;t unit Red Interior. 350 automatic,
less than 10 years old. Call 88,000 miles. $6.500 OBO.

3117

.J6 J'I8 Prtlrh Farlt Rd .

Cto•H Sunday•

Red, White &amp; Blue

3901

Jeff Warner Ins.

Neu' llrms AdJrd H"l'ekly

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

Good quality straw. Volume
discount
&amp; delivery avail·
Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main able. Heavy square bales.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- $2.85 per bale. (304)675·
992-2526. Russ Moore, 5724
owner.

r ~ I~,t.id_....

•ml hunting

THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE

Thursday, June 19th
$20 for all packs you can
play
• Extra specials available
• Free Fish Fry For
Bingo Players
Doors Open 4:30pm

REVOLUTION

rlu1hin~

.. 'luirnu:n!

Stop &amp; Compare

Pomeroy Eagles

~~

Cellular

A •·•rit'ly 11f nmouf111gr

~~ Special ~

BINGO SPECIAL

9.0EER. $45.
(304)875-387S

Under New
Managagement

l;f

10/22 riffle, Marlin 22 mag rriJ;;;;;.;;;.;~;_~--,

3731 to see before taken - - - - - - - 1980 CJ5 Jeep. 360 4 sp.
out.
New EnginE!, Tires &amp; Top.
Air Conditioner 12,000 BTU. Nice
$6,300.
Jeep.

Whefil thB cus/om8r
comes firs~

740-992-1671

American Legion
Middleport ·

Russian SKS riffle. Rueger (7401843_5176

0719

.\IJU\' SI IIU'I.I 'S

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

"M ust be 1B to play or lo be in hall"

AOHA registered appendix
yearling filly ; $1200.00. Two
thoroughbred
mares:
$500.00 each . 22 yo QH
mare, run barrels. $1,000,

r

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON

All packs $5.00
Starburst $1,750.00

tresses, dressers, couches.
bunkbeds. bedroom suites. call after 6 pm.
recliners, grave monuments.
740-446-4782 . Gallipolis, - - - - - - - -

t

WILSON'

Saturday, June 21
6:30pm

$50.00 304-937-3348

OH.

BULLEnN BOARD

BINGO ·

washers &amp; dryers, relrigeraL£\~lOCK
tors. gas and electric ._
ranges, AID, and wringer
washers. Will do repairs on 18 White Leghorns $3 .00
major brands in shop or at each must take all.
your home.
10 hole metal nest good
Used Furniture Store. 130 shape 545 ·00
Bulavme· Pike. We sell mat- Small wOOd burning stove

Thursday, June 19, 2003

Covering for lazy colleague
is running worker ragged

Get YoW'~ Ac:I088
Wllh A Dllilv S8nlinel

Ash Street Church will host
Pastor Lonnie Coats
Sunday, June 22nd at 7 p.m.
Pastor Lonnie is the Senior
Pastor of Restoration
Christian Fellowship of
Athens, Ohio. The public is
invited to come and receive
from God. The church is
located at 398 Ash Street,
Middleport , Ohio.

EQuiPMENT

r

200~

CAU:OUR OA"ICE AT 992·2155

Hydroponic tomatoes. vine
ripened. locally grown, taste
tha
diHerence!
Hayes
Gallipolis ..
Greennouse,
Good Used Appliances, 74Q-441·9279.
Reconditioned
and
I \In !"' Pl ' l II...,
Guaranteed.
Washers,
,\ 11 \ I ..., IIU h.
Dryers ,
Ranges,
and ;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Aefngerators. Some star! at
FARM

$9S. Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vine Sl . (740)446-7398

June 19,

'reolumn lneh weekdays
'15"' column Inch Sat. or Sunday

...,,..._......_ _,_....,

r10

Thu~sday,

www.mydailysentinel.com

'Z

&lt;

• Driveways • Tennis Gourts ·
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
.97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'K10' 610'K20')

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

~

:.

G.ETrtN~

Riverwav•
Cafe
in Syracuse
(I"'""'"''~' \\'lri/llt-'1":\J

Under.new ownership
and new management.

COME JOIN US
7 IJays A Weeki
Morning
Thru

•

" The Little rc ~laumm
with I he h1g lastc"

WE.t.IC:ER
:: KOF'J:' ::

She threw herself
in front of a
Zamboni.

She threw

herself in ·

front of a
skateboard.

�Page 86 • The-Daily Sentinel

Thursdday, June 19,2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

hell briWI with Cubl, 11

•

I

verses So

Children's
Day Camp
• The Gallipolis Parl&lt;s
and Recrearion·Department
will be sponsoring a children's day camp beginning
at 9 a.m. until noon the
week of June 23-27.
The camp is open to firstgraders through sixthgraders, for the school year
of 2003-2004.
Each day will feature a
. different theme and several
days of field trips and
crafts.
The cost is $40 per child.
Pre-registration deadline is
Friday, June 20.
. To regiSter or for more
information; call441-6022.

Dogtown
~rfonning
Dogtown will be performing at 9 p.m Friday,
June 20 at the Blue Gator on
Coun Street in downtown
Athens. There is a $5 oover
charge.
Slater Brothers Blues
Band will be performing at
9 p.m. Saturday, $5 charge.
Open stage with June
Bug and Catfish (the
Paranormals), 9 p.m.
Tuesday, June 24. Free.

Fabulous Thunderbirds, 9
p.m. Friday, June 27. $25
cover charge.

Colonial
Days

Civil War
days at Farm .
Museum
Civil War days will take
ploce from I0 am to 4
p.m Saturday, J~.~re 21 arxl
Sunday, Jtme 22 at the
West Vuginia Slate Farm
Museum.
Civil War re-enactors
will demonstrate crafts that
were !X)(JUiar during the
Civil War (x:ricxi There
will be a bla:ksmith, someone demonstrating priming
am the making of woolen

maneuvers and demonstrating weaponry.
A Civil War wedding
ceremony will take plaoe
at I:30 p.m. Sunday.
Colonel John Singleton .
Mosby of the 43rd
VIrginia Calvary and
VIctoria Rose, confederale
spy, will exchange vows.
A~ will follow.
Anyone interested in
participating in the rewares.
enactment is w-ged to call
Re-enactment soldiers (304)762-1157. Some (x:riwill be pacticing drills arxl cd clcthing is aVllilable.

.• lJ-eOJrl-b.reMmm
is~ "Oi:Jlial Thtys"
from I0 am. to 2 pm. June
25at 111! ~ kuued on
Ftrst Avenue in Gallipolis.
Young ladies, ages 8-13
years old, will be able to participate in the event, which
transports them ln:k 200
years to see how the resident
of Gallipoli5 lived in colonial days.
The rost is $10 per child
fu nue infmmioo, OCIIta::t 111! llllR'UI11 at 446{1586.
'

Fishing
• Fishing event for youth
ages six arxl up beginning at
II a.m. until 3 p.m.
Monday, June 23 at the Bob
Evans Shelter House &lt;K-mss
from the Bob Evans restaurant, Rio Grande.
Need to bring your own
fishing pole. or arrange- ·
ments can be made. Parents
must ~ign areleao;e for participation. ·
·
Call 446-7866 for OOditional infonnation.

Fanner's
Market
• M'Rll Cuny Rmu's
!Vhlkt:t will te q:m !ian 8
a.m to2pm &amp;iudly,Jtre21,
ll!liYII1!&amp;11t!J,v .k:m; Bmge

Fun in

the Park
• lJ-e secml week for
SWTllll:f Rm in 111! Pad&lt;, II

am and 7:30 p.m..
Wedreiday, June 25 at the
Tu-Endie-Wei State Pari&lt;,
spx1Sm'd by 111! rak and
the Point Pleao;ant Artist
Series. In Cll.'e of min, the
events will take place in the
Muson County ubmry.
~ to children of all ages
an:! aluJts. The moming program -.viii te ~ by
stte history conieS: ~
Candy Bonecutter and
Racrel W&lt;Xkman who will

discuss Benjamin Franklin
and Jdm Adams. Birds of
Prey are 111! tqJic of discussioo foc 111! evening [:I'Ogllll1t

Dance·

:-;u '

I=' PI

r:: •

Vul

~

l.

,.h :••

Ohio truck
driver
linked to
ai-Qaida
COLUMBUS(AP) - The
news thai an Ohio trucker
had pleaded guilty to felony
terrorism
charges
and
acknowledged
meeting
Osama bin Laden at an alQaida camp in Afghanistan
made his ex-wife "physically
ill," she said.
" It just doesn't seem like
the person I knew." Geneva
Bowling said Thursday night
of lyman Faris. "I don't feel
well. ... I'm still in shock: I
just need some time for it to
sink in."
Faris, 34, of Columbus, has
admitted plots against trains
and the Brooklyn Bridge, and
is cooperating in the investi gation of ai-Qaida, federal
·authorities said Thursday. He
ac knowledged in court docu ments that he met bin Laden
· and worked with other top aiQaida officials.
"This case highlights the
very real threats that sti ll
exist here at ·home in the
United States of America in
the war against terrorism,"
Attorney General
John
Ashcroft said at a Justice
Department news conference
in Washington. "While we
are disabling ai-Qaida, we
don'tbelieve it is disabled."
Faris has acknowledged
that he met bin Laden in 2000
at an ai-Qaida training camp
in Afghanistan and provided
operatives there with sleeping bags, cell phones and
other assistance, court documents state.
Faris pleaded guilty May I
lo providing material support
to terrorists and conspiracy to
provide support, according to
doc uments
unsealed
Thursday in U.S . District
Court in Alexandria, Va.
Authorities said Faris
received attack instructions
from top terror leader Khalid
·Shaikh Mohammed for what
ihey suggested might have
been a second wave planned
fo r
New
York
and
Washington to follow the
attacks of Sept. II , 200 I .
Faris, who is represented

rnu.Aw ·····~

J

Daoce ID music by

~CmmmicyCeria:

Emergency declared in Meigs County
Byer said, but the commissioners' action at their meeting
-----~---- Thursday made it officiaL
POMEROY _ A state of "We thought it best to make
the emergency declaration so
emergency because of land we can get the state in to look
slides and other damaging . at damage, and so we can
effects of this week's heavy begin to gather estimates of
rains was declared Thursday damage," he explained.
by Meigs County commisByer said field agents from
stOners.
the
Ohio
Emergency
Reports of landslides and Management Agency have
other damage were received visited areas hardest hit by this
this week from townships week 's rains, and township
throughout the county. the and county ofticials are
county engineer and some expected to file preliminary
individuals, Meigs Emergency damage estimates Friday.
Management Director Bob
Areas hardest hit. Byer said,
Byer said Thursday.
include Peach Fork Road in
"Some of the damage is also Salisbury and Chester towna direct result of the damage ships, Fairlane Drive in
caused to the ground by the Middleport, areas of Letart
February ice storm," he added. Township and Bald KnobThe actual emergency decla- Stiversville Road in Lebanon
ration · was made Tuesday. Township.
BY BRIAN REED

Talent
'

Commissioners also:
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of
$317,765.
• Authorized transfer of
Price Lane, Silver Creek
Road and Morgan Drive to
the
Lebanon
Township
Trustees, from Jeff Harris.
• Establi shed new fund
line i terns for FEMA-related
appropnat10ns,
totaling
$622,971, relating to payments for the February ice
storm.

Auction attracts
BY ':1. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

HARRISONVlL.LE
Despite the torrential rains,
about 125 people turned out
Thursday at the Harrisonville
Elementary .School to bid on
items left behind when the
building was vacated in
preparation of movfng students into the new Meigs
Local Elementary School. .
Dan Smith, a 35-year veteran auctioneer, went room
to room barking out prices to
the;m&gt;.ious crowd of bidders.
Chairs, desks, book shelves
and computers were · all on
the auction block.
There was even an old
Cold War-era globe with the
Soviet Union descending like
an iron curtain over Europe.
Ray Willford, a member of
the Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department, was hoping to
buy some kitchen equipment.
He said the fire department
has outgrown its current

GALLIPOLIS _ A shroud
of secrecy is dmped over the
Bossard Memorial Public

Singing in
the Pines

Libmry as a band of coven
operatiVes, dressed in black,
work behind covered win-

Nlltalle MlchHI,

Rut- Elementary

Index
2 Sections - II Paps

A3

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B7
- A4
AS
AS

Bl -3
A2

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishinx Co,

BEST DEAL IN TOWN

dows.
The reason for the mysterious goin)!:s-on? The security
surroundmg the upcoming
release of the latest J.K.
Rowling novel, "Harry Poner
and the Order of the Phoenix"
- the fifth in the series of
books about a powerful young
wizard and hts fight against
evil forces.
Midnight Saturday is the
of!icial release date for the
highly anticipated book.
· The Bossard Library will
have copies available for ·
check-out, beginning at 9 a.m.
Saturday. ·
Library Youth Services
Manage·r Marian Cochran and
her staff of covert opemtives
spent Thursday morning
preparing the library's ship-

Norris Northup Dodge

Heavy rains Thursday evening caused another
at the
Meigs County Sheriff's office. The landslide took down a couple. of trees very close to where the patrol cars are parked
behind the sheriff's office. (J. Miles Layton)

hunters, curiosity seekers

building and the members are
thinking about moving into .a
larger one
Rutland
Elementary. Willford said the.
kitc.hen equipment would
come in handy.
Willford, however, wasn't
worried about · high bidders
because he said he had a
secret weapon that he wouldn't divulge.
Carolyn Chapman has two
children
who
attended
Harrisonville Elementary.
She also worked as a cook
for two years there before
transferring to another school
in the district.
If a price was right , really
right, she said, she might bid
on some things.
"They've got a couple of
things here I might like," she
said pointing· to the freezer
and stove.
Carol Riggs, who worked
as a secretary at the school
for 25 years, saw an old desk

Please see Auction, AS

Veteran auctioneer Dan Smith goes room to room selling left over equipment at the old
Harrisonville Elementary School. "Everything must go!" (J. Miles Layton)

ment of books for release.
Cochran said that Row ling's
publisher sent the books on the
guarantee that the library
would not release the 870page book early.
She was even made to sign
an affidavit stating that · onJy
l'b
taff
ld
necessary ·1 rary 5
wou
come into contact with the
book and that no staff would
read the book, or allow anyone
else to read the book before
the June 21 release date.
The library staff dove headon into the top-secret mission.
Dressed in all-black, they
opened the boxes of books,
catalo~ed them for the
library s inventory, and irnmediately placed them back in the
boxes and put them in a safe
hiding ~lace.
"We re really glad that they
let us in on this," Cochran said.
!'AU of this just adds to the
mystique."
Thirty copies of the book
have been delivered, and
more are on their way, she
added. Copies on compact
disc and cassette also-win be
available soon.

Some library patrons adults and children alike have already reserved the
books for check-out, Cochran
said, and there are still plenry
left to· reserve by calling 446READ.
Copies of the preceding four
book th h
11 ·
ff
s, oug • are ymg o
the shelves.
"We currently do not have
any copies of the other four
(Harry
Potter)
books,"
Cochran said.
.
"I think these books are a
great thing. The Harry Potter
character really appeals to all
ages, and kids can really identity with H~ and his problems fitting in. '
A few copies have been
reserved at media outlet Sam
Gocdy in the Silver Bridge
Plaza and several have been
l'eserved at local bookstore
The Alcove, located in the
Ohio River Plaza.
Alcove manager Eileen Bossard Memorial library employee Carel Blank cataVallee said the store has 50 logs a shipment of the latest J.K. Rawling r~lease "Harry
copies of the book available Potter and the Order of the Phoenix . " Employees
and several copies of the dressed in black and wore dark sunglasses to get into·
previous books are still on the mood for the secrecy of the book release . (Millissia
Russell)
the shelves.

1 911i Annual

252 Upper River Road, Galllpoll1, Ohio

446-0842

Health Fair

nFor the Entire Family"

.Saturday, June 28 ·

nRE ROTATION
BALANCING

. 10 AM - 2 PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

S1J95

Oo--

Other business

'Going once .. :

Staff writer

~b

Oil ' Fitt.r •lllbo a..uk
Chedl All Fluids • Check Chasls

"In at least one ins\ance, the
ground has shifted so'dramatically that at least one home has
begun to shift off its foundation," Byer said.

Staff writer

Bv M1lL1sstA RussELL

OIL CHANGE

'"'""'"' ... ._ •• "af&lt;l"•·uH . ........ ..

Secrecy shrouds release of 'Harry Potter' tale

Drily ~!ian 710 IOpm.
Saurday, J~.~re 21 a the

.

lfHil

Please see •I·Qald•, A5
•

•
The
Highlands
Museum and Discovery
Center, 1620 Wmchester
Ave., Ashland, Ky. wiU be
lming a Tri-State Countty
Music Talent Search from
1-4 p.m. on Saturdays, July
19'!11(1August 16.July 19is
resffved for enl!llnts up ID
the age of 15 arx!Augu.&lt;;t 16
entrantS must be 16 and
over.
·
·
The entrance fee i~ $20
arxl spas are limited. Call
the Highlands Museum
office at flX&gt;- 329-8888 for
more information.

Jfl,

.

FREE SCREENINGS
Non·los~ng choleslerol and gluco~ • Blood pressure
Body lot analysis • Bone density... and much more!
Several displays ,and heallh information will be on-hond as well.
5P£CIAL A1TRACTlON FOR lHE KllS - Oczwn Show leaturing Galia feontr's own Ph~ !usl.e..!m

VIsit our new
EutemAVWIUe

Galllpolla, Ohio
Phone (740)441-1711
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

.

'

MEDICAL CENT

Discover th~ Holzer DiJje1·ence

www.holzer.org

II I'M and I PM. Balloon animals handed cot throughout the day.

For more inlnrmotion; call (740) 446·5679.

..
'

,.

.,
'

'

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="479">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9927">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="19415">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="19414">
              <text>June 19, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="295">
      <name>abbott</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
