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I

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

'

~.mydailysentinel.com

•

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

DEl

.Bv JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHARLOTTE, N.C.
The perception was DEl
would fall apart without
Dale Earnhardt Jr. The real ity is Martin Truex Jr.
appears ready, willing and
abl!) to step into a sHirring
role with the. team.
Truex finished third in
New Hampshire to continue
a strong string of runs that
began
sho rtly
after
Earnhardt's
May
10
announcement that he will
leave DEl at the end cif this
season. In the seven races
since, Truex scored hi s first
career Nexte l Cup victory,
notched four finishes of
third or better, and has only
been lower than 16th once.
Truex has been on such a
roll , he had to couch his disappointment Sunday after
failing to win at New
Hampshire. He led 46 laps,
was beat out of the pits by
eventual winner Denny
Hamlin on the final stop,
and gave up second-place to
Jeff Gordon in the closing
laps. .
"Hey, we'll take third,"
Truex said after. "Six
months ago, I would've
beJlged you for a fhird-place
fimsh."
So true.
Six months ago, Truex
was a bit player at Dale
Earnhardt Inc. despite consecutive Busch Series titles
iii 2004 and 2005. Earnhardt
was the star, and nothing
Truex did was good enough
to take the shirle off his
teammate.
Even his January run-in

with Daytona Beach, Fla. ,
police failed to generate
much buzz. Truex was
charged with disorderly
into~ication after he was
caught urinating on his car
in a parking garage, tjlen
'allegedly tried to pay the
$ 100 fine in cash when confrontt;d by police.
The incident might have
earned bo)d headlines for
most drivers, but Truex flew
way under the radar because
the police repon came out
on the same day Earnhardt
gave ari update on his-con. traer negotiations with stepmother, Teresa.
Asked that day if he disliked being stuck in
Earnhardt's shadow, Truex
explained that attention is
earned 'through perfor·
mance. If he could pick it up
on the race track, the spotlight would find its way
toward him.
That's exactly what's happened, said Max Siegel,
president of DEI's global
operations.
.,
" I think fhat probably the
most difficult thing for all of
us is trying to battle public
perception· ... and if you
look at fhe focus of what
people talked about at DEI,
11 was always Dale Jr. vs.
Teresa," Siegel said. "Whel)
you perform on the track, it
pushes away all fhe personal issues."
Truex stayed out of
Earnhardt's contract squabble, and learned at the same
time as everyone else that
Junior was leaving when he
watched the announcement
on live TV.
As DEI's detnise was

instantly predicted, Truex
buckled down and reconfirmed his commitment to
the organization. Hi s contmct runs through 2008, and
sponsor Bass Pro Shops last
week extended its deal wifh
DEL
"People think I'm crazy
when I say this, but I reallr,
don'·t think it's a big deal, '
Truex · said a day after
Earnhardt's announcement.
" Just 'cause Junior isn't driving for us , I don't see it
making that big of aii
impact. Maybe long-term,
-.but not in the ne,xt couple
years.
"I've got to give it a fair
shake. T~ey gave me my
opponunity, and I've decided I'm going to finish out
the year and honor my contract because of all the
things they've dorie for me."
There's been speculation
that this sudden surge is
related to Earnhardt's decision. After all, Junior said
the inability to win a championship at DEI was one of
the reasons he's leaving.
But in the seven weeks
since, Truex has emerged as
a le~itimate title contender
and IS currently ranked lOth
in the race to make the
Chase for the chall)pionship.
He's 48 points· ahead of
Earnhardt, who is holding
down the 12th and final
Chase spot and giving DEI
ho.Pe that it might have two
dnvers racing for the Nextel
Cup title this season.
Siegel said the timing -.
particularly as it ~nains to
Truex - is coincidental.
" Manin's equipment has
b~n good all year," Siegel

'

A-Rod big bon:us winner

NEW YORK (AP) - Alex
o•' .
RodriJluez
is gettin,g some
said. ''His team had good
for his trip to
extra
up
money
momentum at the end of last
the
All-Star
gam~
a
year, and the chemistry is
$200,000
bonus.
gelling for that whole crew.
A-Rod is receiving the
And we've been focu si ng on
highest
amount among the
perfonnance for some time
$2.13
million
in bonuses
now.''
earned
by
players
picked !Qr
Although Truex is showthe
July
10
game
in San
ing he can carry DEl into
Francisco. accor-tii ng to a
the future, team officials
·don't want to burden him study of fheir contract provisions by The Associated
with that. They learned
Press.
throu~h Eartihard1's paning . Forty-one of fhe 62 players
1hat 1t's never healthy to
picked for the rosters
have one superstar sur- announced Sunday had Allrounded by a supporting Star
bonus
provisions,
cast.
.
including the Cleveland
"Not that Martin is even Indians' C.C. Sabaihia and
trying to step into Dale Jr.'s Victor Maninez.
shoes, but he's almoSt been
Cincinnati's Ken GritTey
pushed into it and has Jr., who was the top vote-getaccepted it an eager and ter in fhe NL, was among
mature way," Siegel said. ~ fhose without a bonus provi"And can he be our marquee sion. So was Barry Bonds,
driver? Absolu1ely. But we fhe only Giants player selectwant to be stronger as an ed for the game.
entire company, we want to
Rodriguez, who has a $27
have four, strong 'teams, not million· base salary fhis year,
just one. And I don't think earned $1 00,000 for getting
we want to put the pressure selected to fhe AL All-Star
on him that he's responsible team. The New York Yankees
for the future of DEL"
third baseman picked up an
Either . way, Truex '~ suc- additional $100,000 for fincess has made it easier for ishing with the most votes in
Earnhardt to walk away his league in fan balloting.
from his late father's comMagglio Ordonez and Ivan
pany.
Rodriguez of Detroit, Carlos
"It takes a lot of pressure Beltran ·of the New York
and worry off of me for Mets, Vladimir Guerrero of
wtfat everybody's plans the Los Angeles Angels,
were with DEl and what Derrek Lee of the Chicago
everybody assumed would Cubs and Sabathia get
happen," Earnhardt said . $100,000 each.
"He's going to be able to
Martinez, added to the AL
provide that company ·the team by manager Jim
success it needs to garner Leyland, gets a $50,000
the sponsorship dollars it bonus and the possibility of
needs to ·garner to bring in more money in the future.
the corporate interest it Because the ca~er was
needs to compete."
picked for the--Pill-Star temn,

Guinther
.attends Buckeye ·
Girls State, As.

•
"

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,4~(

f \ l "l • \ t rl

1( ,

11

·~,

\\ I I J'\ I '-. 11 \)

•

• Cincinnati hammers
Giants. See Page B1

the price of the Indians' 20l 0
option on Martinez increased
by $100,000 to $7.1 million.
Beltran was on ·track for,
earning
an
additional
$1 00,000 as the top vole-getter in the NL but was overtaken in the final days of balloting by GritTey, who finished 475,000 votes ahead.

BY BETH SERGENT .
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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S119tMONTW

Skatopia
outside
of
Rutland, council decided to
forgo
a
fabricated
· skatepark design for a concrete design.
The ball, or rather the
skateboard, now rests in
'Martin's park who is give
Clerk-Treasurer
Dave
Spencer a detailed estimate ·
for constructing the project
as well as a sketch of the
concrete park he's proposing. Council is required to
advertise for bids for a
period of two weeks in the
newspaper, followed by
two weeks for reviewing

and ultimately awarding
the project.
Martm, wno ·works for
the same contractor who
built the Athens skatepark,
said he would be doing the
work himself along ·with a
few crew members. Martin
told council he envisioned a
24 feet by five feet miniramp (a half-pipe) which is
40 feet long ranging from
four to six feet in height
over what he called ·a
"gradual lift." The park
would be toughly 3,000
square feet in size. c
Martin said just how

high concrete lifts actuidly
reach depends on how deep
he call dig. Being located
in the flood plain, Martin
said french drains would
have to be installed to
avoid the pressure of water
on the concrete :
"My primary goal is to
give the kids something
small enough and versatile
enough to allow them to
learn and also advance and
from that they can develop
skills if that want to go furfher in the spon," Martin
said. He added he has spoken to young people who

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
740-593-3279 OR 1-800-710-1917
MON - FRI9:00AM - 6:00PM/ SAT 9:00AM - 5:00PM

Wingett,p~rch~se!! !!!e9.l~

school bulldmg m 2002-•.f or
• Clifton R~oles, 79
$79,000 and then don~~ted it
• Gwlnnie White, 93 ·
to the village for use as a
community · center. Then
under his leadership the ren- ovation began with much of
the work being handled by
val unteers.
.,
Outside some trees were
• DofA members
removed to provide space
hear rally report.
for parking, overgrown
shrubs were taken out, and
See Page A3
new
landscapin!lt, and
• OU finds new
flowerbeds were ad~. The
practices make positive
old cannon in the school
house yard was sanded,
impact. See Page A3
painted and remounted on a
• Local Briefs.
new concrete base, the old
brass school bell was
See Page A5
mounted in a decorative
• Family Medicine:
stone foundation for disEhrtichiosis, like Iyme
play, . a barbecue pit was
built
behind fhe building,
disease, is spread by
to dawn lights were
tick bite. See Page AS dusk
installed to illuminate the

• New wildlffe officer
assigned to Southeast
Ohio. See Page AS
• OSU graduates
announced.
See Page AS

bu_i,ldi~tg a! n!ahJ, new se~er
lineS: ·were · m~talled, and
some paving ·WaS done.
The interior included
repairing, replastering and
painting of the walls all
around · the
building,
rewiring part of the · structure, sanding and refinish·
ing floats, renovating the
kitchen so fhat a food ser·
vice permit could be
obtained and getting tables
and chairs so that fund-raising dinners could be served,
putting in a sound system,
furnishing meeting rooms .
for local groups, and equipping a fitness room.
It was through Wingett's
leadership and contributions, alon,g W'ith fund, rais·
ers by a group of interested
citizens that the renovation
progressed rapidly over the·

'
Syracuse Community
Center
"

.

years. Even after the acci- ject were 'carry on' .... .and
dent which left him in a that is what we are trying to
wheelchair
he
stayed do - carry on as we carry
involved and saw to it that out his wishes for _various
the work continued. His projects, inching forward in
'!ntimely death last year left the development of 1 the
a void which can never be improvements of fhe comfilled, but a generous gift to . munity center," said Joy
the Center was provided Bentley one of many faithmaking it possible for ful workers at the Center.
"As a project is completprogress to continue.
"His favorite words when ed, or a . wedding is held 'II
we were involved in a pro- the Center, one of us invari-

At'"""

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&lt;

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~·

.

YOU CAN'T GET ANY BETTER :'

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAt LYSENTIN~L.COM

MIDDLEPORT - MidValley Christian School will
begin its 23rd year by
expanding to include seventh and eighth-grade students.
Classes at the school will
begin Aug. 27. The school,
located
in
downtown
Middleport, is affiliated
.with Rejoicing Life Church.
Faye Tillis, a former
teacher at Ohio Valley
Christian
School
in
Gallipolis, will teach the
new combined seventh and
Delallo on Page A3
eighth grade class . Sara
Harris, a former teacher at
the Meigs Middle School, is
the new fifth and sixthgrade teacher.
Administrator
Brenda
2 SEcnoNs- 12 PAGJ?S
Barnhart said the expansion
is a sign of the school's susAnnie's Mailbox
A3 tained
growth in enroll ment.
The
enrolled
Calendars
A3 in the new students
upper-level class
Classifieds
B2-4 are students who have been
enrolled in the school in
Comics
Bs past years , but there are
openings in the class for
students.
Editorials
A4 new
Barnhart said only two
As
~ students enrolled in the
Obituaries
school last year will not
Sports
B Section return this year. Last year's
nrollment of 44 was the
Weather
A3 largest at the school in 12
years. This year's enrollment is at 59, so far, and
© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

able says, 'Bob would ha~e
been proud to see fhis.' and
that thought inspires us to
carry on," she added.
Syracuse
The
Community Center will
always be a reminder of the
concern and contributions
of a generous man. It is
appropriate to acknowledge
that in a public way with a
"Bob Win~ett Dedication
·
and ApprecJate Day."

New class ~ign . of Christian school growth

INDEX

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told him what they'd .like to
see at the park which
includes banks, steps, pyra-·
mids and handrails.
"I ·think everyone here
agrees we'd like to · have a
concrete park," Mayor J.
Scott Hill told Martin, citing
low maintenance and the
longevity of fhe structure. . .
Martin said if his..bid was
chosen he could ·start work
possibly Aug. I and have
the project finished in
around a month, saying that
he· would build the park so
that it would also be
expandable for additions.

SYRACUSE - The man
who made it possible for the
village of Syracuse to have
a community center will be
remembered Sunday at a
"Bob Win$ett Dedication
and Appreciation Day."
Hostmg the public event
to be held at2:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse
Cotnmunity
Center will be the Board of
Trustees. At that time a
plaque dedicated to the late ·
Mr. Wingett will be
unveiled.

WEATHER

.IJ· ~• 139'1\ &amp; m~~ t! :ltltr)

, , ,,rr.r•• · ·

HOEFLICH@MYDA!LVSENTINEL.COM

·INSIDE

HEAVY-DUTY GARDEN TRACTOR
• Heovy-duly shall drive

,,,,,t.,J

, BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

Page .AS_. . . _·

GT 2542

,1 , 1 •

Wmgett appreciation day set for Sunday

OBITUARIES·

ZERO-TURN LAWN TRACTOR

l :.~ ()(~ ""'

Racine skatepark possibility for September
RACINE - A skatepark
for Star Mill Park in
Racine could become a
reality
by
September
though several details
.remain to be worked out.
The biggest detail in
Racine's favor is the
$45,000 state grant appropriated for the skatepark.
money the village has
already received. After
talking with Brewce Martin
who has skated ·an the professional circuit and owns

fromPageBl

11046

Ji 1 \

.·""''

.Rio
a very, very good shooter,
she's played point guard for
us that last two years, she
can also handle the ball
•
very well.
"She is a very unselfish
player," Pequignot added.
"The team always comes
first in her mind and our
team's success the tast
three or four years with
her in the hackcourt really
speaks for itself."
Smith has played with
's ome of her future teammates in open gyms at Rio
Grande . She talked about
how comparable her level
of high school competi- ·
tion is to what she will
face once she suits in the
Rio uniform . "It'$ similar,
they like the fast-paced
game; the open gym was
very fast-paced."
Smith will have an
opportunity to come in
play significant minutes
as a freshman and she
believes she will be up to
the task. " I think I will be
prepared, but I definitely
have a lot of hard work
ahead of me though," she
said. " I know l just can ' t
walk on the floor and be
given the starting point
guard, but I think with my
J&gt;ast years in AAU and
high school ball has prepared me for it."
Rio Grande head coach
David Smalley likes the
credentials that Smith
brings to hi s program .
"She is a fantastic basketball player," Smalley said.
"She set numerous (seven)
record s, sco red over I ,400
career points in a very
good program, :n a tough
league."
"We ' ve talked extensively about bringing in
players from programs
like this in hopes that it
.:.&gt;will be a smooth tran sit/ tion," Smalley added .
"They've learned how to
work hard, they know how
to win and they understand what it 's all about.
" We ' re exci ted to have
Jenna - in because I think .
not only will she bring the
academic and the at hleti c
prowess to our program ,
but she ' ll al so bring that
leaders hip," Smalley said .
" I' m exc ited to have that
and as lon g as players ca n
provide the leaders hip we
don't care what year they
arc and I think she will do
that."
She is cu rrentl y undec ided on a major.
Jenna is the daught er of ,
Bre nt a nd Di a ne Smith .

\

Brian J. Reed/photo

Teachers at Mid-Valley Christian School for the upcoming fait term include, l·r, tqve Briles,
pre-school, Sara Harris, grades 5 and 6, Brenda Barnhart, adminstrator and kindergarten
teacher, Patty Asbeck, grades 1 and 2, and Beth Edwards; glades 3 and 4. Not pictured is
Faye Tillis, who will be teaching the new seventh and eighth grade class at the school.
there are still openings in
some classrooms for new
students.
"Our sturlents are happy,"
Barnhart said. "Sometimes
it takes a while for students
to adjust when they come to
us from a different school
environment, but once they
get the foundation , they're

..

happy and they stay happy." mote good relationships
Barnhart said both stu- among the s1udents and
dents and parents are attract- between the students and
ed to the school because of the teacher," ·Barnhart said.
th e small classroom size. "We teach our s1Udents to
Only 15 students are accept- · develop a relationship 'with
ed into any combined class- the Lord, and everything
room , with returning stu- else follow s, like moral value s and good manners."
dents give n priority.
"Small classrooms pro- . Names will be added to a

...

waiting list for classrooms
that are full.
The school will also have
a new computer labora1ory,
with 10 new computers,
when the fall term begins.
Barnhart said the preschool and seventh and
'eighth grade classes will
meet in the Rejoicing Life
Church. She said the school
.. hopes to move its entire
operation into the church
building next year, due to
space restraints.
Returning teachers are
Barnhart, who teaches
kinderganen , Love Briles,
pre-school teacher, Patty
Asbeck, teacher in the first
and second-grade primary
class, and Beth Edwards,
who teaches grades three
and four. A new aide will be
place'11 in the pre-school
classroom, Barnhart said .
Asbeck said the school
will continue the classicsbased curriculum it introduced last year with a Latin
class for the primary grades.
A second year of Latin will
be added, and all students
will learn Latin together.
Asbeck said learning
,Latin not only helps children ]earn to read through
the , school 's phonics-based
reaoing program, but also
helps students w)lo undertake a foreign language, like
French or Spanish. in their
hi gh school ye~s.

"

�'

. .

PageA2
.

NATION • .WORLDMethane gas accillent ~lls. 5 on
. VIrginia

The Daily Sentinel

•

Community Calendar·

.

Noxious fumes
accumulated
in manure pit
Bv DIONNE WALKER
ASspCIATED PRESS WRITER

BRIDGEWATER, Va. Deadly methane gas emanating from a dairy farm's
manure pit killed five people - a Mennonite farmer
who climbed into the pit to
unclog a pipe, and then; in
frantic rescue attempts that
failed, his wife, two young
daughters and a farmhand.
''They all climbed into the
pit to help," Sheriff Donald
Farley said.
Farmers typically take
pains to · ventilate manure
pits where methane often
gathers. A family member
questiorted whether cattle
feed could have trickled
into the pit and accelerated
the formation of the gas. .
"You cannot smell it, you
cannot see it, but it's an
instant kill," explained Dan
Brubaker, a family friend
who oversaw the construction of the pit decades earlier.
Scott Showalter, 34, apparently was transferring manure
!rom one small pit to a larger
holding pond on Monday
evening, the sheriff said. •
About once a week, waste
is pumped from the roughly
9-foot -deep pit into ·II' Jarger
pond, · When swnt)tbing
cldgged. ,. the ·. dra,in,
Showalter
shimmied
throug_h. the· Moot opening
into the enclosure, wbich is
similar to an tiilderground
tank. He · . would · have
climbed down a ladder into
about 18 inches·o~ manure.
"It was · probably some..
thing he had &lt;lone a hundred
.

APphoto

Members of the farming community work to finish clearing a drain at a barn at the Showalter dairy farm near Bridgewater,
In the foreground is a pump conneo.ted to a manure pit. on· Monday night, four members of the Showalter
family and a hired .hand died in a methane gas poisoning accident. The victims were Scott Showalter, 34, his wife, Phyillis,
33, their two daughters, Shayta, 11, and Christina, 9, as well as Amous Stoltzfus, 24. Rockingham County Sheriff Don
Farley said that after the fir!lt victim, Scott Showalter..was overcome trying to unclog a pipe in the covered manure pit, the
others climbed in one· after the other in a frantic rescue ·attempt.

va. Tuesday.

times," Farley said. "There
was gas in there and he
immediately succumbed.".
Believing Showalter had
suffered a heart attack.
police said, a farmhand followed him moments · later
and al.so passed out. ·
That's when another farm
worker alerted Showalter's
wife, Pliyillis.
·
"The family took . off to
try .to get him," said Sonny
Layman, who·rents a house

on the farm. "Phyillis threw
the phone out at me, and
asked me . to dial 911."
Layman inste;~d follo~ed
her and two.· . of the
Showalter's four children.
By the time he gtit to the PI't
a few feet away, ''Ther were
i!ll gone, ex~t Phyillis."
&lt; Layman srud he trioo' to
· pull the wqplim out of ilie
pit but could not. She died,
along , with
d~u$hlei's
Shay!a, 11, and Christma, 9,

-!·

ran down into this holding
pit, it fermented and made a
toxic gas," said Bruce
Good, who .saw Showalter
about once a week.
Whether the victims suffocated from the fumes,
drowned or died of another
cause might never be
known. No autopsies were
planned, in part · because
investigators were satisfied
that the deaths were accidental, the sheiiff's office said.

and farmhand Amous
Stoltzfus, 24.
· The Sho:walters' two surviving daUghters were being
cared for by family members.
On Tuesday, a co11sin of
Scott Showalter's questioned whether runoff from
a pile of brewer's grain had
accelerated the formation of
the gas. Scott Showalter had
been using the grain to feed
his cattle.
·~'ll raineli, and some of it
.·
.

The 'deaths struck hard in
this picturesque farming
region dottc;d with red
barns, gleaming silos and
church steeples that peak
above rolling fields .
The Showalter clan is
well known in the community where neighbors do
each other's laundry. On
Tuesday, friends tended to
the family's animals.
"The cows have to be
milked twice a•day, even in
an ordeaf like this," said
Frank Showalter, Scott's
great uncle, standing a few
feet from where his relatives died.
•
The Sho~alters milked
I 03 cows on their farm west
of Harrisonburg in Virginia's
Shenandoah Valley. They
belonged to a conservative
Mennonite church whose
mell)bers shun many of the
tnippin~. of modern society
but drive cars, use telephones .' lUtd. according to
police, .tals;e modern farmsafety·precautions.
FeUow church memj)ers
were in shock Tuesday, sl\id
the Rev. Nathan Horst, a
·
Mennonite bishop.
''We've never had a tra~cily
of this magnitude," he srud
Stoltzfus had moved to
Rockingham County from
the Lancaster, Pa.,·'llrea less
than a ye;u- ago and was taking a class to join the church.
"lle was very full'of life,"
HorSt. said.
. Doug Michael, a child•
hoOd. friend of Scott~s.
described him as a dedicated fanner and a family man.
"Soott was a very likable
young man, very friendly,
~!ways going out of his way
to help anyone who needed
a hand;" Michael said. ·· ,
As!(ociated Press · writer
Suf! Lindsey. in Roanolie'
conttibuted to this report.

:Army hot line tries to cut through·red tape for wounded troops
'BY PAUUNE JEUNEK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

••

'l

!

·t

l
'

WASHINGTON- Every
!laY for weeks, in~ured Army
pilot Joseph Luc1ano talked
to an .answering machine at
Walter R~d hospital, trying
· to get .an appointtnent for a
heart scan.
Tlien he called the Army's
new Wounded Soldier and
Family Hotline. Within six
hours, he got the appointment - along with an apology from the colonel who
heads Walter Reed· Army
Medical Center's radiology
department.
The hot line has logged
more than 3,500 calls since
it was set up three months
ago following revelations
that Walter Reed outpatients
were languishing in shoddy
housing and suffering
bureaucratic delays in getting additional care, evaluations and compensation for
wounds, mental problems
and other health issues.
"It's totally needed," said
Luciano, a 59-year-old

Army National Guard Black a sense of ur§ency to everyHawk helicopter pilot from thing we do.·
·
Callers l:lave included solCarlisle, Pa\ "Tbere are ...
plenty of SQtcliers wjlo just diers, their relatives, veter·
don't know' ·Which way to ans and members of otbe.r
turn when they've ruo into a services. They call ab(lut
' frustrating1 probl~m."
missing recotds, questions
It solvea 'Luciano's prob- over treattnent, requests for
!em. "Totally," he said.
surgery and help with the
The hot line - 1-800- complicated
evaluatiop
984-8523 - is staffed 24 process that judges their
hours a day, every day, by ability to continue in ser100 employees on three vice and decides disability
shifts.
payments.
They aim to get an answer
Though the hot line profor every caller within three gram was planned as a ruedbusiness days - not solv- ical help line - and more
ing the problem themselves, . . than half of calls are on that
but channeling it to the per- subject - the issues arl)
son or agency that can. The wide ranging. Callers want
operation essentiallx cuts fimincial counseling. help
through red tape hke no finding a lawyer or to know
average caller could.
why they didn't get a pro"We cut through it and get motion or award they think
(the request) in the proper they earned in their lime
hands so people understand overseas.
there is a sense of urgency,"
Some want simple inforsaid Col. Robert Clark, mation like phone numbers
deputy director of the call to call, directions to the hoscenter. "When a soldier pita! or Web sites to consult.
calls us, he may have tried
One soldier noticed
other avenues and not got- money was being subtracted
ten an answer. So we attach from his pay and wanted to

know why. The call center
tracked it down as deductions for an old student loan.
Callers are "going to get
an answer," Clark said,
though it may not be the one
they want.
A wife asked how to serve
her soldier husband with
divorce papers while he's at
war. She · was advised she
couldn't, since he can't
come home .to represent
himself in the case.
Another was ill and wanted her husband home from
assignment in Europe. The
hot line passed that on, and
he got a two-week leave,
but not a permanent homecoming.
To get the hot line up and
running quickly, officials
used borrowed space with
staff borrowed from various
offices, and so there is no
figure yet on the cost of
operating it, they said.
It is one piece in a broad
effort the Army has scrambled to make across its
health system since problems al Walter Reed sur-

'

faced in F~bruary.
In March, President Bush
ordered creation of a presidential commission to
investigate care given to
wounded troops and apologized to some of them in
person during a visit to
Walter Reed. He visited the
hospital again on Tuesday.
· "There has been . some
bureaucratic, you know, red
tape issues in the past that
tile military is working hard
to cure," Bush told reporters
there. "But when it comes·
time to healing broken bodies, this is a fabulous place."
A panel of Army officials
reported to Congress last
week on what progress has
been made to upgrade,.mi litary hospital care. They said
work has been done toward
repairing buildings, in.creasing funding, hiring more
psychiatrists and other staff,
improving training, mobilizing lawyers and assigning
new teams to advocate for
troops and their families.
Overall, the military's
health system was unpre-

pared for the unexpectedly
high number of casualties in
Iraq. Some 26,000 service
members have suffered battle-related injuries and thousands more have been
injured in accidents. They
are treated at different facilities, and Walter Reed says
it has received nearly 6,000
from Iraq and more than
500 from Afghanistan.

I•No_""_, ,,,......,.....,..
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liN ~I

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In the Daily Sentinel

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Age

Parents Names Here

•

Clubs and
"' organizations
Thursday, July 5
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 ·Auxiliary, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., at the post.
CHESTER - ChesterShade
Historical
Association, 7 p.m. to finalize plans for Chester Shade
Days and work on fall programmmg.
Friday, July 6
POMEROY - Partners
in Care Caregiver Support
Group, noon in the conference room of the Meigs
Senior Center. Caregivers,
family members, others
interested in Alzheimer's
Disease are welcome.
Refreshments. For more
information call Kaihy 1
McDaniel, 992-2161.
Sunday, July 8
POMEROY - Modern
Woodmen Camp 7230 annual picnic, 12:45 p.m. at the
roadside Rest Stop U.S. 33
north, Pomeroy. Hometown
Hero lo be announced. Take
covered dish and/or dessert.
All tableware furnished by
Camp.
Monday, july 9
SYRACUSE - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,"'
covered dish dinner and
membership drive, 6 p.m.,
Riverview
Bed
and
Breakfast Inn, RSVP, 9922311.
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge 453 special
meeting, 7 p.m., to confer
Entered Apprentice degree
on one candidate. All
Masons
invited.
Refreshments.
· Thesday, July 10
POMEROY Meigs

Independence
Day...
Mostly sunny. Hot with
highs in the lower 90s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10
mph .
· Wednesday
night ...
Mostly cloudy. A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening ...Then showers and thunderstorms likely
after midnight. Lows in the
mid 60s. Southwest winds 5
to 10 mph. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Thursday... Showers and
thunderstorms likely. Highs
in the lower 80s. Southwest
winds 5 to I 0 mph . Chance
of rain 60 percent.
Thursday .night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUCIAII

Pear Readers: Happy ·
Fourth of July. Here's one of
our favorite quotes from
Erma Bombeck: "You have
to , love a nation that eelebrates its independence
every July 4, not with a
parad~J of guns, tanks, and
soldiers who file by the
White House in a show of
strength and muscle, but
with family picnics where
kids throw Frisbees, the
potato salad gets iffy, and the
flies die from happiness. You
may think you ~ave overeaten, but it is patriotism."
Dear Annie: I have a
younger sister in her 30s.
"Raylie" has been married
for three years and has two·
toddler boys. She recently
built a beautiful home and
asked my family and me to
come and help her move in.
Our mother was also there.
While we were in the
house, Raylie and her hus•
band got into a big argument, and we thought it wa~
going to become physical.
This was very upsettmg to
my mother and my family,
and it caused our visit to be
cur short. Shortly after, I
spoke with my m!Jther and

Reunions

.Saturday, June 7
POMEROY - Annual
Blake reunion 12:30 p.m•. at
the Zion church of christ,
Route 143. All relatives of
Edgar and Addie Reed
Blake invited. Meal potluck
with ham and tableware
provided. Pictures to be
taken. Pictures and genealogy items on display.
Sunday, July 8
RACINE - The Theiss
family reunion will be held
at the Star Mill Park in
Racine. Take a covered dish
and "pig in a poke" item.
Lunch is at I p.m.
POMEROY- The annual Lovett reunion will be
held at I pi.m. at the Zion
Church of christ, Route 143.
All relatives of daniel and
Phoebe Lovett and Wiliam
and Mary Lovett are welcome. Surnames include·
Lovett, Slacks, Bush, Boyd,
and .(loldsberry. Potluck
dinner; ham and tableware
provided. Pictures will be
taken, photos and genealogy items displayed, silent
auction held.

CHESTER
Mary
Barringer reported on the
rally at Portsmouth when
Chester
Council
323
Daughters of America met
recently at the Masonic Hall
in Ch(\ster.
Jean Welsh presided at the
meeting which opened with
pledges to the American and

Friday, July 13
MIDDLEPORT - First
Presbyterian
Church,
Middleport, Bible School,
July 13. to to 8 p.m. and
July 14, 9 a.m . to I p.rq .

Lows in the lower 60s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
Friday and Friday
night... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 80s. Lows in the
lower 60s.
Saturday and Saturday
night... Mostly clear. Highs
in the upper 80s. Lows in
the upper 50s.
.
Su~day and
Sunday
night...Partly cloudy. Hot.
Highs around 90. Lows in
the lower 60s.
~onday
through
Thesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s. Lows m the
upper 60s . Chance of rain
30 percent. ·

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I Baby's Name

tAge
1Parents

-1.1.03

I Simply send your baby's
I photograph along with the coupon
I

·

I to the left with your payment of

I $10, and we'll do the rest.
I
1
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Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, 0 H 45769
Deadline ror submission,
Friday, July 20

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60.71

•
"

COLUMBUS - Ohio
State has issued its honor
roll for the spring quarter,
li sting the names of graduating and undergraduate
students who achieved
high academic averages for
their quarter" s work .
Th-ose honored received · a ~
grade. point average ·of at'
least 3.5 (A= 4.0, B = 3.0,
etc.) and were enrolled for
at least 12 credit hours.
Making the list were the
following students:
Emily Linnea Story of
Middleport; Brent Morgan
Buckley of Pomeroy Jennifer
Nicole Dunn of Pomeroy;'
Michele Elizabeth Run yon
of Pomeroy, Jonathan
Andrew Will of Pomeroy:
Benj amin Thomas Fowler of
Racine, and Jennifer Lynn
Hayman of Reeds vi lie.

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General Electric (NYSE) -

Ohio State
announces honor
roll dean's list

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)

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111 Court St Pomeroy, OH
•

.1.

21.96

The Daily·
wtll not be pubhshed
L--------•-------------J Sentinel
.

.

Christian flags, the pled~e,
scripture reading. and wllh
singing of the National
Anthem.
It was noted that a cake
walk will be held at the nex(
meeting. A Panc!lke breakfast was served recently at
the firehouse in Chester. A
letter from the State Board

ATHENS - The number set of strategies (see link #I)
of
Ohio
Uni versi ty that the Coalition Advocating
Judiciaries cases involving Res~nsible
Drinking
student alcohol violations DeCISions and the Alcohol
dropped more than 32 per- Response Protocol Task
cent in 2006-07 compared to Force (see link #2) developed
the year before, a decline to curb high-risk drinking and
Vice President for Student its negative consequences.
Affairs Kent Smith attributes · The blend of existing,
to new university straii:!lies enhanced and new strateto reduce high-risk drinking. gies includes adjudicating
Smith presented a report off-campus alcohol offenses
on the judicial cases to a as well as those occurring
committee of the Ohio on campus, expanding notiUniversity
Board
of fication of students' parents,
Trustees late last week.
enhancing sanction.s for vioAcco.rding to a report from lations of t~ Student Code
the
Alcohol
Policy of Conduct and instituting
Implementation Team, which use of an "alcohol audit."
included ligures for fall and The audit .helps assign viowinter quarters - and from lators to one of two internew numbers just . in for vention programs: Prime for
spring quarter - there were Life, designed for at-risk
1,602 alcohol-related cases students, or Brief Alcohol
in 2006-07, down 32 percent Screenjng and Intervention
from the 2,362 cases in of . College Students for
2005-06 and I0 percent from high-risk students.
the 1,782 cases in 2004-05.
The strategies also include
In addition; there was a 60 stepped-up sanctions such
percent drop. in repeat as longrr probations for
offenders,
offenses when comparing first-time
increased
use
of
suspensions
fall 3fld winter quarter 200607 cases to the same quar- as a sanction for repeat
ters the previous year. The offenders and a mandatory
spring quarter recidivism · $100 fee for each offense.
Of the 2,361 total cases
rate is not yet available.
"Do we believe the new handled by University
policies are having the Judiciaries during the 2006intended effect? Absolutely," 07 academic year, I ,467
resulted in probation, 109 in
Smith told the trustees.
In fall 2006. the university
implemented an integrated

Thursday, July 7
POMEROY Harry
Lodwick will be 80 years
old on July 7. Cards may be
sent to him and 37842 West
Shade Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

65.57

of the really nice guys are
already taken. The single
ones are usually single for a
reason. Not to mention we're
competing with lots of
younger women. There are
some 75-and-up guys out
there, but they're either too
set in their ways or very timedemanding. I've seen some
suc~-essful and happy friendships and marriages among
older folks, but the odds are
against us. - Lonely, Too
Dear Lonely, Too: The
odds may not be great, but it
doesn' t mean you should
fold up your tent. Let your
friends knowi you're looking, keep acttve and get
involved in · commumty
activities. You never know
what ·mi¥.ht har.pen.
Annie s Mmlbox is written by Kathy MitcheU and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box Jl8190, Chicago, IL
606ll. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

of Officers was read. · The meeting closed ~·n
re Everett Grant was escorted ular form. Those pr ent
to the altar,Jresented a gift were Julie Fleming, Opal
and was rea a Father's Day Echinger, Doris Greuser,
poem. It was noted that the Laura Mae Nice, Goldie
books will be audited at the Fredrick, Mary Holter,
end of the month. Having Charlotte Grant, Ruth
quarterly birthdays were Smith, Everett Grant, Mary
Everett Grant and Goldie Jo Barringer, Opal Hollon,
Jean Welsh and Marge Fetty.
Fredrick.

OU finds new practi~es make positive impact

Birthdays

Norfolk Southe1n ( NYSE) -

family members, and they all hurt by this. It's not really
expressed concern for Ray lie about the money. It's the
and the kids. They explained principle. I would talk to my
they had witnessed other · husband, but I know he 'll
instances like this in the past. Jell me it's nothing to be
I thought I should talk to concerned about. Should I
Raylie, but when I expressed just keep my · mouth shut
my concern over the tele- and not look a gift horse in
phone, she hung up on me. the mouth? Or do I need to
The only conversation we speak up?- J)isenchanted
have now is wben I initiate it. Daughter-in-Law
My mother wants me to keep
Dear Disendumted: You
calling her and make her do realize your in-laws do not
come around. I invited her to owe gifts to any of you, in
my son's high school gradua- which case, whatever you get
tion, but she dido 't respond. should be appreciated.
My heart is tom, and Ueel However, it is not good polimaybe I should have stayed cy for them to treat you like a
out of it. But then I think second-class
relative,
about her little boys. Any because it creates the exact
advice?- Concerned Sister hurt and ill-will you are
Dear Sister: You cannot describing. Tell your husband
make Rayli~ "come around". how this makes you feel, and
if she is unwilling, and a big ask him to explain it to his
argument does not necessar- parents. We hope it helps.
ily constitute potential physDear Annie: I read the
ical abuse. However, we letter from "Lonely," the
agree with/our mother that · 60-something widow who
you shoul keep in touch was looking to re-enter tlie
with Raylie, not to lecture dating scene.
her, but to keep an eye on
I am also a 60-something
the situation, and so she can widow who would apprecitum to )lOU if she needs help. ate good male company and
Dear Annie: Every birth- maybe remarriage. After
day, my in-laws send a $100 several years oflooking, let
check to each of my two me tell you what's out there.
boys and my husb;md. With Not much.
me, they 'II send a $20 check.
We 60-types are a small
I feel a little insulted and part of the population. Most

DofA_members hear rally report

Church events

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I Address
1 Phone
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Your Baby's ·

County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-mind·
ed
luncheon ,
noon,
Thursday, july 5
Pomeroy
Library,
Subway
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury .
Township of Pomj:roy catering. Sen.
Trustees, regular meeting. Joy Padgett speaking,
RSVP 992-5005.
6:30p.m., town hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS ~
Sunday, July 8
SYRACUSE - A Bob Eastern Music Boosters, 7
.Wingett .Appreciation Day p.m., high school music
will be held at 2:30 p.m room. Fair booth discussed.
Thursday, Jull' 12
Sunday at the ~racuse
CHESTER
' Shade
Community
rtenter. River Lodge 453,- 7:15p.m.,
Refreshments will be served.
with annual award of scholThe public is invited.
arships.
Monthly stated
Thesday, july 111
meeting
follows
. All Master
POMEROY - Bedford
Masons
invited.
Township Trustees will
have a budget hearing at 7 Refreshments.
p.m. at the town hall .

Local Stocks

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

Baby Edition
to·be published
Friday, July 27

,

-Keep an eye onfamily.situation

•

Public meetings

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Local Weather

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Gra'ndpas and Aunts and·Uncles ...

I ·
I

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

PageA3

22.60
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions lor July 3,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
StP'C.
~

reprimand, 88 in suspension
and 492 in dismissal of
charges. A total of201 of the
2006-07 cases reinain open.
Statistics for previous years
show similar percentages in
each category; however the
rate of suspension for repeat
alcohol offenders increased
from 16 percent in 2005-06
to 40 percent in 2006-07,
according to the report.
Fees charged to students
found in violation of alcohol
policies totaled $109,000
during fall and winter quarters, helping to fund additional counseling and education programs. Spring-quarter fees are not yet available.
While alcohol-related.cases
are down, Smith said the
number of drug cases is up 19
percent, from 267 in 20052006 to 331 in 2006-2007.
There were 276 such cases in
2004-05 . Smith said most of
the violations involve marijuana use, a fact that led him
to commission a Student
Senate group" to study drug
use and make recommendations . Smith is reviewing
those recommendations now
and expects to put a new pol·
icy regarding marijuana in
place during 2007-08.
The
Alcohol
Policy
Implementation
Team,
formed in spring 2006 to

implement the new strategies, was reconvened this
· spring lo review and report
on how well the new efforts
have worked. Among its recommendations were to
improve or replace the alcohoi audit to ensure students'
needs or situations match the
intervention used; adding
more Prime for Life sessions;
and improving the scheduling of judicial hearings.
Overall, however, the new
stats are encouraging.
"The increased efforts are
paying off, and we are definitely headed in the ri!lht
direction," Assistant VIce
President
for
Student
Affairs Judy Piercy, who
chaired the Alcohol Policy
Implementation Team, said.
Groups providing feedback
during throughoutthis process
have included
Student
Senate's Speciit.l Committee
on Alcohol Response, the
Ohio University Code of
Conduct
Review
and
Standards Committee. the
Athens City/Ohio Universiry
Joint Committee on Civic
Responsibility, the Residence
Life Councils, and the
Council of Student Leaders.
The university also hosted a
campus Day of Dialogue in
February 2006 to take an indepth look at the alcohol issue.

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PageA2
.

NATION • .WORLDMethane gas accillent ~lls. 5 on
. VIrginia

The Daily Sentinel

•

Community Calendar·

.

Noxious fumes
accumulated
in manure pit
Bv DIONNE WALKER
ASspCIATED PRESS WRITER

BRIDGEWATER, Va. Deadly methane gas emanating from a dairy farm's
manure pit killed five people - a Mennonite farmer
who climbed into the pit to
unclog a pipe, and then; in
frantic rescue attempts that
failed, his wife, two young
daughters and a farmhand.
''They all climbed into the
pit to help," Sheriff Donald
Farley said.
Farmers typically take
pains to · ventilate manure
pits where methane often
gathers. A family member
questiorted whether cattle
feed could have trickled
into the pit and accelerated
the formation of the gas. .
"You cannot smell it, you
cannot see it, but it's an
instant kill," explained Dan
Brubaker, a family friend
who oversaw the construction of the pit decades earlier.
Scott Showalter, 34, apparently was transferring manure
!rom one small pit to a larger
holding pond on Monday
evening, the sheriff said. •
About once a week, waste
is pumped from the roughly
9-foot -deep pit into ·II' Jarger
pond, · When swnt)tbing
cldgged. ,. the ·. dra,in,
Showalter
shimmied
throug_h. the· Moot opening
into the enclosure, wbich is
similar to an tiilderground
tank. He · . would · have
climbed down a ladder into
about 18 inches·o~ manure.
"It was · probably some..
thing he had &lt;lone a hundred
.

APphoto

Members of the farming community work to finish clearing a drain at a barn at the Showalter dairy farm near Bridgewater,
In the foreground is a pump conneo.ted to a manure pit. on· Monday night, four members of the Showalter
family and a hired .hand died in a methane gas poisoning accident. The victims were Scott Showalter, 34, his wife, Phyillis,
33, their two daughters, Shayta, 11, and Christina, 9, as well as Amous Stoltzfus, 24. Rockingham County Sheriff Don
Farley said that after the fir!lt victim, Scott Showalter..was overcome trying to unclog a pipe in the covered manure pit, the
others climbed in one· after the other in a frantic rescue ·attempt.

va. Tuesday.

times," Farley said. "There
was gas in there and he
immediately succumbed.".
Believing Showalter had
suffered a heart attack.
police said, a farmhand followed him moments · later
and al.so passed out. ·
That's when another farm
worker alerted Showalter's
wife, Pliyillis.
·
"The family took . off to
try .to get him," said Sonny
Layman, who·rents a house

on the farm. "Phyillis threw
the phone out at me, and
asked me . to dial 911."
Layman inste;~d follo~ed
her and two.· . of the
Showalter's four children.
By the time he gtit to the PI't
a few feet away, ''Ther were
i!ll gone, ex~t Phyillis."
&lt; Layman srud he trioo' to
· pull the wqplim out of ilie
pit but could not. She died,
along , with
d~u$hlei's
Shay!a, 11, and Christma, 9,

-!·

ran down into this holding
pit, it fermented and made a
toxic gas," said Bruce
Good, who .saw Showalter
about once a week.
Whether the victims suffocated from the fumes,
drowned or died of another
cause might never be
known. No autopsies were
planned, in part · because
investigators were satisfied
that the deaths were accidental, the sheiiff's office said.

and farmhand Amous
Stoltzfus, 24.
· The Sho:walters' two surviving daUghters were being
cared for by family members.
On Tuesday, a co11sin of
Scott Showalter's questioned whether runoff from
a pile of brewer's grain had
accelerated the formation of
the gas. Scott Showalter had
been using the grain to feed
his cattle.
·~'ll raineli, and some of it
.·
.

The 'deaths struck hard in
this picturesque farming
region dottc;d with red
barns, gleaming silos and
church steeples that peak
above rolling fields .
The Showalter clan is
well known in the community where neighbors do
each other's laundry. On
Tuesday, friends tended to
the family's animals.
"The cows have to be
milked twice a•day, even in
an ordeaf like this," said
Frank Showalter, Scott's
great uncle, standing a few
feet from where his relatives died.
•
The Sho~alters milked
I 03 cows on their farm west
of Harrisonburg in Virginia's
Shenandoah Valley. They
belonged to a conservative
Mennonite church whose
mell)bers shun many of the
tnippin~. of modern society
but drive cars, use telephones .' lUtd. according to
police, .tals;e modern farmsafety·precautions.
FeUow church memj)ers
were in shock Tuesday, sl\id
the Rev. Nathan Horst, a
·
Mennonite bishop.
''We've never had a tra~cily
of this magnitude," he srud
Stoltzfus had moved to
Rockingham County from
the Lancaster, Pa.,·'llrea less
than a ye;u- ago and was taking a class to join the church.
"lle was very full'of life,"
HorSt. said.
. Doug Michael, a child•
hoOd. friend of Scott~s.
described him as a dedicated fanner and a family man.
"Soott was a very likable
young man, very friendly,
~!ways going out of his way
to help anyone who needed
a hand;" Michael said. ·· ,
As!(ociated Press · writer
Suf! Lindsey. in Roanolie'
conttibuted to this report.

:Army hot line tries to cut through·red tape for wounded troops
'BY PAUUNE JEUNEK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

••

'l

!

·t

l
'

WASHINGTON- Every
!laY for weeks, in~ured Army
pilot Joseph Luc1ano talked
to an .answering machine at
Walter R~d hospital, trying
· to get .an appointtnent for a
heart scan.
Tlien he called the Army's
new Wounded Soldier and
Family Hotline. Within six
hours, he got the appointment - along with an apology from the colonel who
heads Walter Reed· Army
Medical Center's radiology
department.
The hot line has logged
more than 3,500 calls since
it was set up three months
ago following revelations
that Walter Reed outpatients
were languishing in shoddy
housing and suffering
bureaucratic delays in getting additional care, evaluations and compensation for
wounds, mental problems
and other health issues.
"It's totally needed," said
Luciano, a 59-year-old

Army National Guard Black a sense of ur§ency to everyHawk helicopter pilot from thing we do.·
·
Callers l:lave included solCarlisle, Pa\ "Tbere are ...
plenty of SQtcliers wjlo just diers, their relatives, veter·
don't know' ·Which way to ans and members of otbe.r
turn when they've ruo into a services. They call ab(lut
' frustrating1 probl~m."
missing recotds, questions
It solvea 'Luciano's prob- over treattnent, requests for
!em. "Totally," he said.
surgery and help with the
The hot line - 1-800- complicated
evaluatiop
984-8523 - is staffed 24 process that judges their
hours a day, every day, by ability to continue in ser100 employees on three vice and decides disability
shifts.
payments.
They aim to get an answer
Though the hot line profor every caller within three gram was planned as a ruedbusiness days - not solv- ical help line - and more
ing the problem themselves, . . than half of calls are on that
but channeling it to the per- subject - the issues arl)
son or agency that can. The wide ranging. Callers want
operation essentiallx cuts fimincial counseling. help
through red tape hke no finding a lawyer or to know
average caller could.
why they didn't get a pro"We cut through it and get motion or award they think
(the request) in the proper they earned in their lime
hands so people understand overseas.
there is a sense of urgency,"
Some want simple inforsaid Col. Robert Clark, mation like phone numbers
deputy director of the call to call, directions to the hoscenter. "When a soldier pita! or Web sites to consult.
calls us, he may have tried
One soldier noticed
other avenues and not got- money was being subtracted
ten an answer. So we attach from his pay and wanted to

know why. The call center
tracked it down as deductions for an old student loan.
Callers are "going to get
an answer," Clark said,
though it may not be the one
they want.
A wife asked how to serve
her soldier husband with
divorce papers while he's at
war. She · was advised she
couldn't, since he can't
come home .to represent
himself in the case.
Another was ill and wanted her husband home from
assignment in Europe. The
hot line passed that on, and
he got a two-week leave,
but not a permanent homecoming.
To get the hot line up and
running quickly, officials
used borrowed space with
staff borrowed from various
offices, and so there is no
figure yet on the cost of
operating it, they said.
It is one piece in a broad
effort the Army has scrambled to make across its
health system since problems al Walter Reed sur-

'

faced in F~bruary.
In March, President Bush
ordered creation of a presidential commission to
investigate care given to
wounded troops and apologized to some of them in
person during a visit to
Walter Reed. He visited the
hospital again on Tuesday.
· "There has been . some
bureaucratic, you know, red
tape issues in the past that
tile military is working hard
to cure," Bush told reporters
there. "But when it comes·
time to healing broken bodies, this is a fabulous place."
A panel of Army officials
reported to Congress last
week on what progress has
been made to upgrade,.mi litary hospital care. They said
work has been done toward
repairing buildings, in.creasing funding, hiring more
psychiatrists and other staff,
improving training, mobilizing lawyers and assigning
new teams to advocate for
troops and their families.
Overall, the military's
health system was unpre-

pared for the unexpectedly
high number of casualties in
Iraq. Some 26,000 service
members have suffered battle-related injuries and thousands more have been
injured in accidents. They
are treated at different facilities, and Walter Reed says
it has received nearly 6,000
from Iraq and more than
500 from Afghanistan.

I•No_""_, ,,,......,.....,..
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liN ~I

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In the Daily Sentinel

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Age

Parents Names Here

•

Clubs and
"' organizations
Thursday, July 5
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 ·Auxiliary, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., at the post.
CHESTER - ChesterShade
Historical
Association, 7 p.m. to finalize plans for Chester Shade
Days and work on fall programmmg.
Friday, July 6
POMEROY - Partners
in Care Caregiver Support
Group, noon in the conference room of the Meigs
Senior Center. Caregivers,
family members, others
interested in Alzheimer's
Disease are welcome.
Refreshments. For more
information call Kaihy 1
McDaniel, 992-2161.
Sunday, July 8
POMEROY - Modern
Woodmen Camp 7230 annual picnic, 12:45 p.m. at the
roadside Rest Stop U.S. 33
north, Pomeroy. Hometown
Hero lo be announced. Take
covered dish and/or dessert.
All tableware furnished by
Camp.
Monday, july 9
SYRACUSE - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,"'
covered dish dinner and
membership drive, 6 p.m.,
Riverview
Bed
and
Breakfast Inn, RSVP, 9922311.
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge 453 special
meeting, 7 p.m., to confer
Entered Apprentice degree
on one candidate. All
Masons
invited.
Refreshments.
· Thesday, July 10
POMEROY Meigs

Independence
Day...
Mostly sunny. Hot with
highs in the lower 90s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10
mph .
· Wednesday
night ...
Mostly cloudy. A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening ...Then showers and thunderstorms likely
after midnight. Lows in the
mid 60s. Southwest winds 5
to 10 mph. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Thursday... Showers and
thunderstorms likely. Highs
in the lower 80s. Southwest
winds 5 to I 0 mph . Chance
of rain 60 percent.
Thursday .night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUCIAII

Pear Readers: Happy ·
Fourth of July. Here's one of
our favorite quotes from
Erma Bombeck: "You have
to , love a nation that eelebrates its independence
every July 4, not with a
parad~J of guns, tanks, and
soldiers who file by the
White House in a show of
strength and muscle, but
with family picnics where
kids throw Frisbees, the
potato salad gets iffy, and the
flies die from happiness. You
may think you ~ave overeaten, but it is patriotism."
Dear Annie: I have a
younger sister in her 30s.
"Raylie" has been married
for three years and has two·
toddler boys. She recently
built a beautiful home and
asked my family and me to
come and help her move in.
Our mother was also there.
While we were in the
house, Raylie and her hus•
band got into a big argument, and we thought it wa~
going to become physical.
This was very upsettmg to
my mother and my family,
and it caused our visit to be
cur short. Shortly after, I
spoke with my m!Jther and

Reunions

.Saturday, June 7
POMEROY - Annual
Blake reunion 12:30 p.m•. at
the Zion church of christ,
Route 143. All relatives of
Edgar and Addie Reed
Blake invited. Meal potluck
with ham and tableware
provided. Pictures to be
taken. Pictures and genealogy items on display.
Sunday, July 8
RACINE - The Theiss
family reunion will be held
at the Star Mill Park in
Racine. Take a covered dish
and "pig in a poke" item.
Lunch is at I p.m.
POMEROY- The annual Lovett reunion will be
held at I pi.m. at the Zion
Church of christ, Route 143.
All relatives of daniel and
Phoebe Lovett and Wiliam
and Mary Lovett are welcome. Surnames include·
Lovett, Slacks, Bush, Boyd,
and .(loldsberry. Potluck
dinner; ham and tableware
provided. Pictures will be
taken, photos and genealogy items displayed, silent
auction held.

CHESTER
Mary
Barringer reported on the
rally at Portsmouth when
Chester
Council
323
Daughters of America met
recently at the Masonic Hall
in Ch(\ster.
Jean Welsh presided at the
meeting which opened with
pledges to the American and

Friday, July 13
MIDDLEPORT - First
Presbyterian
Church,
Middleport, Bible School,
July 13. to to 8 p.m. and
July 14, 9 a.m . to I p.rq .

Lows in the lower 60s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
Friday and Friday
night... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 80s. Lows in the
lower 60s.
Saturday and Saturday
night... Mostly clear. Highs
in the upper 80s. Lows in
the upper 50s.
.
Su~day and
Sunday
night...Partly cloudy. Hot.
Highs around 90. Lows in
the lower 60s.
~onday
through
Thesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s. Lows m the
upper 60s . Chance of rain
30 percent. ·

-22.62

Big Lots ( NYSE)- 30.34
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)-

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 25.00
BBT (NYSE) - 41.80
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 27.10
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.59
Premier (NASDAQ) -16.25
Rockwell (NYSE)- 70.70
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

37.44
BorgWarner (NYSE) -

r----------------------,1
I Baby's Name

tAge
1Parents

-1.1.03

I Simply send your baby's
I photograph along with the coupon
I

·

I to the left with your payment of

I $10, and we'll do the rest.
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1
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1

.

Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, 0 H 45769
Deadline ror submission,
Friday, July 20

Century Aluminum ( NASDAQ)- 56.09
Champion (NASDAQ) - 6.86
Channing SIJC!ps (NASDAQ)

39.03'

169.03
Wai·Mart ( NYSE) - 48.4 7
Wendy's (NYSE} - 38.39
Worthington ( NYSE) -

38.70
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) -

60.71

•
"

COLUMBUS - Ohio
State has issued its honor
roll for the spring quarter,
li sting the names of graduating and undergraduate
students who achieved
high academic averages for
their quarter" s work .
Th-ose honored received · a ~
grade. point average ·of at'
least 3.5 (A= 4.0, B = 3.0,
etc.) and were enrolled for
at least 12 credit hours.
Making the list were the
following students:
Emily Linnea Story of
Middleport; Brent Morgan
Buckley of Pomeroy Jennifer
Nicole Dunn of Pomeroy;'
Michele Elizabeth Run yon
of Pomeroy, Jonathan
Andrew Will of Pomeroy:
Benj amin Thomas Fowler of
Racine, and Jennifer Lynn
Hayman of Reeds vi lie.

18.89

Collins (NYSE) - 71.61
Dollar General ( NYSE) -

28.46

'

54.22

Royal Dutch Shell - 83.95
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

DuPont (NYSE} - 52.13
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.50
Gannett (NYSE) - 54.91
General Electric (NYSE) -

Ohio State
announces honor
roll dean's list

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)

City Holding (NASDAQ) -

JP Morgan (NYSE) - 49.34
Kroger (NYSE) - 28.52
Limited Brands ( NYSE) -

111 Court St Pomeroy, OH
•

.1.

21.96

The Daily·
wtll not be pubhshed
L--------•-------------J Sentinel
.

.

Christian flags, the pled~e,
scripture reading. and wllh
singing of the National
Anthem.
It was noted that a cake
walk will be held at the nex(
meeting. A Panc!lke breakfast was served recently at
the firehouse in Chester. A
letter from the State Board

ATHENS - The number set of strategies (see link #I)
of
Ohio
Uni versi ty that the Coalition Advocating
Judiciaries cases involving Res~nsible
Drinking
student alcohol violations DeCISions and the Alcohol
dropped more than 32 per- Response Protocol Task
cent in 2006-07 compared to Force (see link #2) developed
the year before, a decline to curb high-risk drinking and
Vice President for Student its negative consequences.
Affairs Kent Smith attributes · The blend of existing,
to new university straii:!lies enhanced and new strateto reduce high-risk drinking. gies includes adjudicating
Smith presented a report off-campus alcohol offenses
on the judicial cases to a as well as those occurring
committee of the Ohio on campus, expanding notiUniversity
Board
of fication of students' parents,
Trustees late last week.
enhancing sanction.s for vioAcco.rding to a report from lations of t~ Student Code
the
Alcohol
Policy of Conduct and instituting
Implementation Team, which use of an "alcohol audit."
included ligures for fall and The audit .helps assign viowinter quarters - and from lators to one of two internew numbers just . in for vention programs: Prime for
spring quarter - there were Life, designed for at-risk
1,602 alcohol-related cases students, or Brief Alcohol
in 2006-07, down 32 percent Screenjng and Intervention
from the 2,362 cases in of . College Students for
2005-06 and I0 percent from high-risk students.
the 1,782 cases in 2004-05.
The strategies also include
In addition; there was a 60 stepped-up sanctions such
percent drop. in repeat as longrr probations for
offenders,
offenses when comparing first-time
increased
use
of
suspensions
fall 3fld winter quarter 200607 cases to the same quar- as a sanction for repeat
ters the previous year. The offenders and a mandatory
spring quarter recidivism · $100 fee for each offense.
Of the 2,361 total cases
rate is not yet available.
"Do we believe the new handled by University
policies are having the Judiciaries during the 2006intended effect? Absolutely," 07 academic year, I ,467
resulted in probation, 109 in
Smith told the trustees.
In fall 2006. the university
implemented an integrated

Thursday, July 7
POMEROY Harry
Lodwick will be 80 years
old on July 7. Cards may be
sent to him and 37842 West
Shade Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

65.57

of the really nice guys are
already taken. The single
ones are usually single for a
reason. Not to mention we're
competing with lots of
younger women. There are
some 75-and-up guys out
there, but they're either too
set in their ways or very timedemanding. I've seen some
suc~-essful and happy friendships and marriages among
older folks, but the odds are
against us. - Lonely, Too
Dear Lonely, Too: The
odds may not be great, but it
doesn' t mean you should
fold up your tent. Let your
friends knowi you're looking, keep acttve and get
involved in · commumty
activities. You never know
what ·mi¥.ht har.pen.
Annie s Mmlbox is written by Kathy MitcheU and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box Jl8190, Chicago, IL
606ll. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

of Officers was read. · The meeting closed ~·n
re Everett Grant was escorted ular form. Those pr ent
to the altar,Jresented a gift were Julie Fleming, Opal
and was rea a Father's Day Echinger, Doris Greuser,
poem. It was noted that the Laura Mae Nice, Goldie
books will be audited at the Fredrick, Mary Holter,
end of the month. Having Charlotte Grant, Ruth
quarterly birthdays were Smith, Everett Grant, Mary
Everett Grant and Goldie Jo Barringer, Opal Hollon,
Jean Welsh and Marge Fetty.
Fredrick.

OU finds new practi~es make positive impact

Birthdays

Norfolk Southe1n ( NYSE) -

family members, and they all hurt by this. It's not really
expressed concern for Ray lie about the money. It's the
and the kids. They explained principle. I would talk to my
they had witnessed other · husband, but I know he 'll
instances like this in the past. Jell me it's nothing to be
I thought I should talk to concerned about. Should I
Raylie, but when I expressed just keep my · mouth shut
my concern over the tele- and not look a gift horse in
phone, she hung up on me. the mouth? Or do I need to
The only conversation we speak up?- J)isenchanted
have now is wben I initiate it. Daughter-in-Law
My mother wants me to keep
Dear Disendumted: You
calling her and make her do realize your in-laws do not
come around. I invited her to owe gifts to any of you, in
my son's high school gradua- which case, whatever you get
tion, but she dido 't respond. should be appreciated.
My heart is tom, and Ueel However, it is not good polimaybe I should have stayed cy for them to treat you like a
out of it. But then I think second-class
relative,
about her little boys. Any because it creates the exact
advice?- Concerned Sister hurt and ill-will you are
Dear Sister: You cannot describing. Tell your husband
make Rayli~ "come around". how this makes you feel, and
if she is unwilling, and a big ask him to explain it to his
argument does not necessar- parents. We hope it helps.
ily constitute potential physDear Annie: I read the
ical abuse. However, we letter from "Lonely," the
agree with/our mother that · 60-something widow who
you shoul keep in touch was looking to re-enter tlie
with Raylie, not to lecture dating scene.
her, but to keep an eye on
I am also a 60-something
the situation, and so she can widow who would apprecitum to )lOU if she needs help. ate good male company and
Dear Annie: Every birth- maybe remarriage. After
day, my in-laws send a $100 several years oflooking, let
check to each of my two me tell you what's out there.
boys and my husb;md. With Not much.
me, they 'II send a $20 check.
We 60-types are a small
I feel a little insulted and part of the population. Most

DofA_members hear rally report

Church events

AEP (NYSE) - 46.02
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 86.48
Ashlal)d Inc. (NYSE) -

88.07

I
I Address
1 Phone
I
1 Address

Your Baby's ·

County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-mind·
ed
luncheon ,
noon,
Thursday, july 5
Pomeroy
Library,
Subway
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury .
Township of Pomj:roy catering. Sen.
Trustees, regular meeting. Joy Padgett speaking,
RSVP 992-5005.
6:30p.m., town hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS ~
Sunday, July 8
SYRACUSE - A Bob Eastern Music Boosters, 7
.Wingett .Appreciation Day p.m., high school music
will be held at 2:30 p.m room. Fair booth discussed.
Thursday, Jull' 12
Sunday at the ~racuse
CHESTER
' Shade
Community
rtenter. River Lodge 453,- 7:15p.m.,
Refreshments will be served.
with annual award of scholThe public is invited.
arships.
Monthly stated
Thesday, july 111
meeting
follows
. All Master
POMEROY - Bedford
Masons
invited.
Township Trustees will
have a budget hearing at 7 Refreshments.
p.m. at the town hall .

Local Stocks

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

Baby Edition
to·be published
Friday, July 27

,

-Keep an eye onfamily.situation

•

Public meetings

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Local Weather

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Gra'ndpas and Aunts and·Uncles ...

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BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

PageA3

22.60
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions lor July 3,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
StP'C.
~

reprimand, 88 in suspension
and 492 in dismissal of
charges. A total of201 of the
2006-07 cases reinain open.
Statistics for previous years
show similar percentages in
each category; however the
rate of suspension for repeat
alcohol offenders increased
from 16 percent in 2005-06
to 40 percent in 2006-07,
according to the report.
Fees charged to students
found in violation of alcohol
policies totaled $109,000
during fall and winter quarters, helping to fund additional counseling and education programs. Spring-quarter fees are not yet available.
While alcohol-related.cases
are down, Smith said the
number of drug cases is up 19
percent, from 267 in 20052006 to 331 in 2006-2007.
There were 276 such cases in
2004-05 . Smith said most of
the violations involve marijuana use, a fact that led him
to commission a Student
Senate group" to study drug
use and make recommendations . Smith is reviewing
those recommendations now
and expects to put a new pol·
icy regarding marijuana in
place during 2007-08.
The
Alcohol
Policy
Implementation
Team,
formed in spring 2006 to

implement the new strategies, was reconvened this
· spring lo review and report
on how well the new efforts
have worked. Among its recommendations were to
improve or replace the alcohoi audit to ensure students'
needs or situations match the
intervention used; adding
more Prime for Life sessions;
and improving the scheduling of judicial hearings.
Overall, however, the new
stats are encouraging.
"The increased efforts are
paying off, and we are definitely headed in the ri!lht
direction," Assistant VIce
President
for
Student
Affairs Judy Piercy, who
chaired the Alcohol Policy
Implementation Team, said.
Groups providing feedback
during throughoutthis process
have included
Student
Senate's Speciit.l Committee
on Alcohol Response, the
Ohio University Code of
Conduct
Review
and
Standards Committee. the
Athens City/Ohio Universiry
Joint Committee on Civic
Responsibility, the Residence
Life Councils, and the
Council of Student Leaders.
The university also hosted a
campus Day of Dialogue in
February 2006 to take an indepth look at the alcohol issue.

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Bart &amp; The Chasers from 9-1 am "$3.00 Cover charge"
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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

force for good becomes a
force for evil. But ~uch is the
with
Amnesty
case
International.
In April, the 1.8 millionmember human-rights organization announced its support for abortion. Amnesty
International (AI), in a press
release, made it clear that it
stood ~y "the rights of
women and gil'ls to be free
from threat, force, or coercion as they exercise their
sexual and reproductive
rights." .
f certainly don't want
women and girls to be sexually or reproductively forced
or coerced into anything.
But if the U.S. Supreme
Court overturns Roe v.
Wade, would Amnesty
International consider the
U.S. government even more
of a human-rights violator
than they already do? AI
should probably take a .look
at their own policies toward
human rights before they
start pointing fingers.
How can AI be a credible
human-rights
defender
when it will not unconditionally defend .those who
are truly voiceless - the
unborn? Congressman Chris
Smith (R-N.J.), , a prO-life

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

..

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shalf make·no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, July 4, the 185th·day of 2007. There are
180 days left in the year. This is Independence Day. .
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted the
Declaration of Independence.
On this date:
In 1802, the United Stales Military Academy officially
opened at West Point, N.Y.
In 1807, 200 years ago, soldier-statesman Giuseppe
Garibaldi, who played a key role in Italy's unification during
the 19th century, was born in Nice.
In 1826, 50 years to the day after the Declaration of
Independence was adopted, former presidents Jobn Adams and
Thomas Jefferson both died.
In 1831, the fifth president of the U.S., James Monroe, died
in New )'ork City.
In 1872, the 30th president of the U.S., Calvin Coolidge, was
born in ~lymouth, Vt.
In 19 I7, during a ceremony in Paris honoring the French
hero of the American Revolution, U.S. U . Col. Charles E.
Stanton declared, ''Lafayelle, we are here!"
In 1939, baseball's "Iron Horse," Lou Gehrig, said farewell
to his fans at New York's Yankee Stadium.
In 1976, Israeli commandos raided Entebbe . airport in
Ujlanda, rescuing almost all of the passengers and crew of an
Air France jetliner seized by pro-Palestinian hijackers.
Ten years ago: NASA's Pathfinder spacecraft landed on
Mars, inaugurating a new era in the search for life on the Red
Planet. CBS newsman Charles Kuralt died in New York at age
62.
Five years ago: A gunman opened fire at Israel's El AJ airline
ticket counter at Los Angeles International Airport; three people were killed, including the gunman. Benjantin 0. Davis Jr.,
leader of the famed all-black Thske~ee Ainnen during World
War U and the first black general m the Air Force, died in
Washington at age 89. Wmnifred Quick Van Tongerloo, who
survived the Titanic sinking, died in East Lansing, Mich., at age
98.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Gloria Stuart is 97. Conductor
Mitch Miller is 96. Advice columnist Pauline Phillips {the original "Dear Abby") is 89. Actress Eva Marie Saint is 83. Actress
Gina Lollobrigida is 80. Playwright Neil Simon is 80. Baseball
team owner George Steinbrenner is 77. Country singer Ray
Pillow is 70. Singer Bill Withers is 69. Actor Ed Bernard is 68.
Actress Karolyn Grime's is 67. Broadcast journalist Geraldo
Rivera is 64. Rhythm-and-blues musician Ralph Johnson
(Earth, Wind and Fire) is 56. Rock musician Domingo Ortiz
(Widespread Panic) is 55. Singer Jobn Waite is 52. Rock musician Kirk Pengilly (INXS) is 49. Country musician Teddy Carr
is 47. Rock D.J. Zonka (Big Audio Dynamite) is 45. Tennis
Hall of Farner Pam Shriver is 45. Rock musician Matt Malley
(Counting Crows) is 44. Actress Jenica Bergere is 33. Singer
Stephen "Ste" McNally (BBMak) is 29.
Thought for Today: "All progress has resulted from people
who took unpopular positions." - Adlai E. Stevenson,
American diplomat and politician ( 1900-1965).

. DEAR
MR. PRESIDENT...

(740) 992·2156.

Department extensions are:

Edttor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

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Reporter:
Reporter:

Bnan Reed , Ext 14
Beth Sergent. Ext 13

One year

There is a man who
knows how to solve all the
problems in the Middle East
quickly and easily. He
knows exactly what we
should do in Iraq. He has the
solution to global climate
change, the high price of
gas, the immigration turmoil, affirmative action,
stem cell research, gangs
and the drug problem.
He can speak extemporaneously for hours on tax
fairness, campaign finance
reform, . universal health
care, voter fraud, education
reform, farm ·subsidies and
foreign-aid.
Nothing is too big or too
small to escape his notice. In
the past half-hour he has
touched on Indian casinos,
"The Sopranos"' ending, the
crisis in Darfur, Paris
Hilton, Rosie O'Donnell,
globalization, spice rubs and
the iPhone.
And where is this man? In
the government? Out on the
campaign trail running for
office? Writing position
papers for some prestigious
think tank? Teaching at one
of the great universities?
· No, he's right at the table
next to me and Sue at the
local Applebee's. What
luck ! Not only is he an
expert on world and national affairs, he is an expert on
football, baseball, basketball, motocross, hockey, ten-

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Local Briefs
Veterans poker·run

11\0W,;

RACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 will
sponsor a veterans poker run this Saturday. Registration is
from ll a.m. to l p.m. atthe legion h.all and the cost is $10
per person or $15 r.er couple. The first bike out will be at l
p.m. and the last btke will he in _at 4 p.m. There will he cash
drawings, food, door prizes and a Longaberger Basket
drawing. All vehicles welcome. Contact Gary Willford at
949-2301 for any questions.
·

tfr~'Yt1lv.'P~

MIDDLEPORT - Michael Gerlach, local historian and
downtown revitalization coordinator, will lead a guided walking tour of Middleport following the 2 p.m. dedication of the
Walk Into Middleport's Past mural series on Wednesday.
The walk will include a number of sites significant to the
village's history and its role in the Civil War era:

My . isn't this man running the world?

By carrier or motor route

Senior &lt;;!tlzen reteo

MIDDLEPORT - .Gwinnie White, 93, of Middleport, died
Tnesday, July 3, 2007 at the Overbrook Rehabilitation Center.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by
the Fisher Funeral Homes in Middleport. In lieu of flowers
donations may be made to Holzer Hospice or First Baptist
Church of Middleport.

ATHENS - Christopher administration, education,
22, of Mount hunter safety, and special
Sterhng has been assigned ·projects.
As a state wildlife officer,
as a new at-large state
wildlife officer in southeast Dodge will be tesp~msible
Ohio according to the Ohio for .enforcing wildhfe laws
Department of Natural on public lands as well as
Resources
(ODNR) private lands and providing
Division of Wildlife.
assistance to other law
Dodge is one of 13 new enforcement agencies as
wildlife officer cadets who needed. He will also assist
have been undergoing other Division of Wildlife
extensive training and were professionals in a variety of
sworn in as commissioned projects as assigned and
state wildlife officers during continue to receive addiceremonies June 29 in tional resource training durColumbus. He began his ing his career.
Dodge received associates
new duties the following
degrees in fish and wildlife
day.
Following completion of management and forest
the Ohio Peace Officers management from Hocking
Training course on April 27, College. Before being hired
the cadets were provided as a state wildlife officer,
with nine weeks of addi- Dodge worked at Deer
tional specialized training Creek State Park and at the
by the Division of Wildlife. Division of Wildlife's Deer
In addition to wildlife law Creek Wildlife Area.
enforcement procedures and · "I .am very pleased and
agency polictes, the cadets 'extremely fortunate to be
received training in areas working for the Division of
such as wildlife and fish Wildlife and serving those
management. communica- who enjoy Ohio's wildlife
tion s, public relations, resources," said Dodge.
Dod~e.

postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Preas and
lhe Ohio Newspaper Association.
Paltml.lter: Send address correc·
tiona to The Deily Sentinel, 111 Court
Street. Pomero~. Ohio 45769.

One month

Gwinnie White

New wildlife officer
assigned to Southeast Ohio

j)ubllshed every afternoon, Monday
throug h Friday, , , Court Street,
Pome roy, Ohio.
Second-class

Dally

Deaths

TUPPERS PLAINS -Bible school will be held at the
St. Paul Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains July 16 to 19,
with sessions 6 to ~:30 p.m. each day. Theme will be
Avalanche Ranch. Children 4 to 12 xears of age are invited On Thesday a horse and cart wtll be there to provide
rides for the children.

(USPS 213-960)
Ol'!lo Valley Publishing
Co.

One month,
One year

human-rights advocate, is
right in advising AI against
the policy change: "The
killing of an unborn child by
abortion can never be construed I!J be a human right.
Therefore, taking a position .
that supports violence
against children is antithetical to everything Amnesty
International stands for,"
Smith said at a press conference.
What's so frustrating
about lhe new policy is that
AI founded by a
Communist and Roman
Catholic con vert - can do a
world of good with its global resources. Days after pro-.
,life groups were blasting AI
for its new policy, the organization was publicizing the
plight of the blind Chinese
human-rights activist Chen
Guangcheng, who was beat.en in a prison. He is serving
a four-year sentence on

CHESHIRE -Clifton H. Moles, 79, Cheshire, passed
away at Cabell Huntington Hospital on July 2, 2007.
He was born on March 2 1928. in Greenbrier County to
the late Lonnie and Alberta (Shanks) Moles. He was a coal
miner and a construction worker for most of his life. Mr.
Moles was.a member of the Cheshire Baptist Church and a
.
former member of the Old tar Club.
In addition to his parenls, he was preceded by a son,
Larry Moles and a daughter, Diana Moles. ije is survived
by his wife, tetty Moles of Cheshire; children, Patty
(~onnie) Pack, Canal Winchester; Terry (Sharon) Moles,
Ttm (Sharon) Moles, and Jeff (Lisa) Moles, all of Cheshire;
l 0 grandchildren, and six great-grandchildren; three brothers and' a sister, and ·several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Friday, July 6, 2007
at the Middleport Chapel of .Fisher Funeral Home.
Officiating will be the Rev. Steve Little. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call on Thursday, July
5, 2007 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral home. On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuner.alhomes.com

Bible school planned

Subscription Rates
News

Lopez

aifton H. Moles

are noticing. AI's antics are
"creating a \l!lcuum and
need for organizations and
individuals that have a prop-.
er view of human rights,"
says Wendy Wright, president of Concerned Women
for America. Like a lot of
pro-life activists I talked to
about the AI policy, Wright
is optimistic: "Just as the
U.S.
abortion lobby's
extreme posi"tion against
partial-birth abortion bans
helped create a majority
now against abortion, AI's
mind-bending adoption of
the, view that killing babies
is a human right goes so
against common sense that it
could result in causing people to think about the trile
human -rights
violations
caused by abortion."
So, in its inadvertent way,
maybe
Amnesty
International will give
human-rights activism a
new. life -. despite its own
refusal to give amnesty to
the unborn.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalre·
view.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.)

DEAR
N1R. PRESIDENl;

The Daily Sentinel

Our main number 11

Kathryn

trumped-up charges; his real
transgres~ion was exposing
the inhuman treatment of
women and unborn children
in the Shandong province,
where.local Linyi City officials use forced sterilization
and abortion to meet China's
population-control · man-.
dates. If AI is supporting a
man who is fighting against
the mistreatment of women,
how can they not realize
how similar that fight is to
the preservation of unborn
life?
tyfary Ann Glendon, the
Learned Hand Professor of
Law at Hii,~Vard University
Law School, has tried to
solve the AI riddle.
''Amnesty International is
a textbook example of what
Max Weber called the routinization of charisma,"
Glendon observed. "They
started out as noble partici- .
pants in the human-rights
revolution that helped to .
bring about the collapse of
totalitarian regimes in
Eastern Europe.... They had
grown into a member of
what has become a humanrights industry - professional groups with continu~
ous need for things to do and
Il\Oney to do them with" ,
The good news is, people

' 53.55
' 107. 10
'214 .21

J•

Jim
Mullen

nis, golf, NASCAR racing,
bass fishing, target shooting,
volleyball, roller .. derby,
horse racing, cycling, ice
skating, ice-dancing croquet, pro wrestling, boxing,
bowling, curling, snowboarding, surfing, windsurfing: ski jumping, tractor
pulling, darts; parachute
jumping, badminton, bull
riding and team roping.
He is.extremely principled
and highly moraL He has
nothing but contempt for
athletes who take steroids or
athletes who don't win I00
percent of the time. They are
miserable, despicable failures who lack character.
They are bad role models
who corrupt our youth by
sending out the wrong message about hard work and
dedication.
Even wors~ . it screws up
his betting system. Which is
why, through absolutely no
fault of his own, he's three
years behind on the child
support - because of all
those Ja~y. good-for-noth·

ing, overpaid athletesThe overpaid athletes rank
right up there with the overpaid Hollywood celebrities
who change partners faster
than you can change channels on your TV. Their marriages fail because they are
so self-centered and egotistical. They can't think past
themselves.
Whereas his own three
marriages failed l'&gt;ecause his
wives were all nagging
witches. Nag , nag, nag.
Nagging him to get a job,
nagging him to stop drinking, nagging him to take a
shower, nagging him. to fix
the car so she could drive to
work instead of walking to
the bus.
"The walking would do
her good' Get some pounds
off her butt."
So, it 's not just world and
national affairs that he's an
expert on, he is also an
ex pert
on
women.
Unfortunately for them,
most of them do not come
up to his hi gh standards of
height-weight proportion ,
gymnaslic abil ity and hutlock size. Mosl women are
therefore ineligible to have
fast, energetic sex with him
right lhis very minute no
matter how much they 'd
like to.
Plus, the restraining .order
that his second ex-wife has
taken out on him that says

he can't come within I ,000
yards of her or the kids is a
distraction. And it was based
on a complete misunder·
standing. He was simply
cleaning the baseball bat
when it slipped from his ·
hands and · accidentally
destroyed the dinette set in
the kitchen and her collection of Lladro fi gurines in
the living room.
•
Now, because of her, his
children will be deprived of
a father's tender love. How
will they learn how to ftsh?
How to hunt? To cheat on
their taxes? To hotwire a
car? To post bail? To drive
on a suspended license?
Who wi II teach them that?
The overpaid, morally defi·
cient judge 0
As we ate desert, we
learned to how to solve our
problems with North Korea,
unreasonable flight delays,
the quality of Chinese
imports, wind power and the
crystal-meth epidemic.
"This guy can 'I even run
hi s own life but he thinks he
should be running the
world," I said to Sue.
"What makes you think he
isn't?" she asked.
(Jim Mullen is the author
of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Simple
Life'" and "Baby's First
Tattoo . .. You can· t·each him
at jim_mrtllm @myway.com)

•

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Guinther attends Buckeye Girls State-.

J •

Historic walk

Letlers to the editor are welcome. They should be less
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unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
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Our main concem in all stories Is to
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In a otory, call the newsroomat (740)
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:Obituaries

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N~WS ITEM: BIJ5H CoMMUTES LIBBY~ SENTEOCE~

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Correction Polley

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

.

It is a tragedy when a

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Reader Services

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

A,;,nesty Internation~ls i~humatJe human-rights policy

The Daily Sentinel

•

, PageA4

•

OS~

graquates announced

COLUMBUS The
Ohio State University has
issued the li st of seniors and
graduate studenls who
received degrees at the
spring quarter commencement exercises on June I 0,
2007, in Ohio Stadium.
Meigs students included
on I hat li st were as follows:
Emily Linnea Story.
Middleport, bachelor of science, magna cum laude ;
Robert Edward Swisher,

Middleport. bachelor of science;
Brent
Morgan
Buckley, Pomeroy, B.S. in
agriculture; Jennifer Nicole
Dunn, Pomeroy, associate
of science; Garrett Clayton
Karr, Pomeroy, RS. in civil
engineering;
Jonathan
.Andrew Will, Pomeroy, B.
S. Welding: Joshua Craig
Ervin, Racine, D. veterinary
medicine, cum laude; and
Charles
Alan
Moore,
Racine, associate applied.

Courtney GUinther who attended the 2007 Buckeye Girts State representing the Racine American Legion Auxiliary recent·
Jy visited with auxiliary members, received gifts and spoke about her visit to the. annual state gathering. Guinther gave a
spe.ech about het experiences at the event, saying she was elected the clerk of the Cook City Council and met Ohio
Governor Ted Stickland. She also said she enjoyed meeting girls from all over the state, hearing new music in different
language~ and taking part in the election process. Mallory Hill, the 2006 Girls State Representative also attended and
also received gifts. Both girls made plans with the members to ride on the auxiliary's July Fourth parade float in the Racine
parade. Refreshments were se(ved during a social hour pictured here. ·

FAMILY MEDICINE

Ehrlichiosis, like Iyme disease, is spread by tick bite
Question: Last week a can he spread not only by · become suspicious of ehrli- repellaht on your animals. If
friend's child was diag- tick bites, but sometimes by chiosis after blood tests you get bitten by a tick,
nosed with an infection flea and mite bites as well. show a depressed blood remove it promptly. It takes
from a tick bite. She had 'Ehrlichlosis - unlike Rocky count and elevated liver · 24 hours of the tick being
been sick for a couple of Mountain spotted fever, function. This may v.roml&gt;t a attached to your body for
weeks before the .doctors which was ftrst identified in more precise spectfic anti- the infection to pass from
were able to figure out what · the 1890s - is a relativel;v body test that can detect the the tick to you, so prompt
removal is very helpful.
was wrong. The ,mother said new illness that was identi- · rickettsial bacteria.
If you do remove a tick,
it was ebrlichiosis. I have fied and named in 1990.
Once the diagnosis is
never heard of this. Can you . Ehrlichiosis can be diffi- made, the infection is easily make a note of the time and
tell me more about it? Will cult to diagnose as the symp- treated with antibiotics. date in case you become ill
The patient be¥ins to feel with flu like symptoms with- ·
the child be OK?
toms resemble the flu fever,
chills,
headache,
better almost tmmediately in two weeks of the bite.
Alllwer: Ehrlichiosis is
an uncommon disetise that malaise, and muscle aches. after starting antibiotics, but
is spread primarily by tick Sometimes there is a: rash full recovery can take about , Family MedlcinelfJ II a
weekly column. To submU
bites. This is why we see it that looks like heat rash and three we11ks.
Prevention is always the questions, write to Martha
in the summer when ticks is itchy. These symptoms
are more active. ·
follow a tick bite by about best treatment. You can pre- A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
It is commonly spread by seven to nine days. vent tick bites by using an Ohio University Colltge of
the dog tick, the deer tick or Oftentimes, due to the time insect repellent and wearing . Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
the Lone Star tick. The lat- lapse, the ti.ck bile is forgot- long pants and long sleeves Box 110, Athens, Ohio
ter, as the name implies, is ten by the victim and not when out in the woods. It's 45701, or via e-mail to
found abundantly in Texas mentioned to the doctor. often a good idea to tuck the readerquestions@jamilybut also as far away from Some experts believe that bottom of your pants into medicinenews.org. Medical
the Southwestern United many cases go undetected your socks so that ticks information in this column
States as Rhode Island. The because the symptoms are so can't just crawl up your is provided as an educabacterium that causes ehrli- mild that no medical atten- socks and onto four legs.
tional service only. It does
Regardless o the protec- ·not replace the/"udgment of
chiosis. belongs to the germ tion is sought and the person
family
known
as recovers without medical tion you lake, it's always a your persona physician,
Rickettsiae. Other bacteria intervention. Frequently, good idea lo check yourself who should be relied on
in this family cause a vari- though, the flu-like symp- for ticks after you have been to diagnose and recomety of serious diseases toms continue to last for sev- out in dense brush and long mend treatment for any
medical conditions. Past
worldwide,
including eral days and the sufferer grass.
Also, check your pets for columns are available
Rocky Mountain spotted seeks a doctor's help.
.When the person sees the ticks as they can carry them online at www.familymedifever and typhus.
The rickettsial diseases doctor, he or she may into the house. Use tick cinenews.org.

School districts, developers find new uses for old buildings
COLUMBUS . (AP) School districts embarking
on new construction projects
are auctioning off o,ld school
buildings to developers who
are turning them into offices,
community centers and even
private homes.
It's a relief to school officials eager to dump outdaled buildings but still want to
see the properties pul to
good use.
The former Hazelwood
Elementary
School in
Newark, 30 miles east of
Columbus, is now the Look
Up Center. a community
center owned in part by
Spring Hill Baptist Church.
Another central Ohio di strict demolished an old elementary school and turned
it into green space. The 3acre site of the former Ruth
Boardman Elementary in
Delaware now hosts outdoor sports, field days and
is occasionally used by
Ohio Wesleyan University
for summer band camp.
During the past I 0 years.
the Ohio School Facilities
Commission has helped
build or renovate 440
~chool buildings across the
state 111 a cost of almost $5
billion, spokesman Rick

Savors said. The commis- to good use in the commusion subsidizes such pro- nity," Montgomery said.
jects based on the wealth of "We don't want them to be
an eyesore."
the district.
Columbus Public Schools
Savors said the commission intends to· renovate or auctioned nearly 70 properreplace about 2,500 build- ties between 1979 and 1999,
ings by 2017.
records show.
The district still has 31
· Newark City Sch()()IS are
in the middle of a seven- buildings that aren't permayear, $139 million upgrade nent school sites and is
that eventually will renovate holding on to some empty
or replace every school ones in case student enrollbuilding in the district. The ment starts to grow and
school board has approved extra space is needed.
Sometimes selling or
the sale of three buildings so
far. The next one to go is leasing costly old buildings
Central Intermediate School, makes sense, Columbus
a downtown building sched- public schools spokesman
Michael Straughter said.
uled for auction July 17.
.
The district is renting a
Newark
Assistant
Superintendent
Dan former middle school to the
Montgomery said every city of Columbus, which is
building went through an us·ing it as a recreation cenassessment to determine ta. The IS-month lease is
which ones to save. If the expected to save the district
cost of renovation was at $60,000 year in utility and
least 80 percent of a build- maintenance costs, he said.
In Zanesville, David
ing's current value, it would
not be worth fixing, he said. Mitzel bought the former
"We just hope they are put Pioneer )O:lementary School

a

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

·--·--..

fHHIII\lf\(; ,\II J~(

•

•

•

•

Taking Applications

The Maples
HUD Subsidized
Efflciency/1 Bedroom
._SOyrs or qualifying disability
Low Income priority
7 40-992-7022
Silverheels
A Realty Company-EHO

Coming Thursday il'\ the sentinel ...

"Pfae~ f~ ~ f? -~~ f" JP""

last year for $27,500. The
schoolhpuse, buill iti 1915,
. sits on a hilltop an'd has
great views of the city.
"It's going to be my
home," Mitzel, 61, said. He
and hi s wife, Katherine,
also plan to convert some of
the classrooms into large
guest suite ~.
The idea is lo invite former
Zanesville residents who
have gone on to successful
careers to come back and
stay with them for 'a week or
two al no cost. The guests
would meet with students
and civic leaders to discuss
ways to improve the city.
"This project is · all personal," Mitzel said . "We're
saving a great old building
and ~iv in g back to the com·
munny."

•
•

'
•

~·-

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Beat the Heat!
Melodrama Performances &amp;
Theatre Tour;s July 5, 6, &amp; 7
Afternoons: I, 2 &amp; 3 pm
$3 per person .
Cmriing Soon!
Disney's 101 Dalmatians Kids
Live StJige Production
July -t4, t5, 21 &amp; 22
ask about our Puppy Parties

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

force for good becomes a
force for evil. But ~uch is the
with
Amnesty
case
International.
In April, the 1.8 millionmember human-rights organization announced its support for abortion. Amnesty
International (AI), in a press
release, made it clear that it
stood ~y "the rights of
women and gil'ls to be free
from threat, force, or coercion as they exercise their
sexual and reproductive
rights." .
f certainly don't want
women and girls to be sexually or reproductively forced
or coerced into anything.
But if the U.S. Supreme
Court overturns Roe v.
Wade, would Amnesty
International consider the
U.S. government even more
of a human-rights violator
than they already do? AI
should probably take a .look
at their own policies toward
human rights before they
start pointing fingers.
How can AI be a credible
human-rights
defender
when it will not unconditionally defend .those who
are truly voiceless - the
unborn? Congressman Chris
Smith (R-N.J.), , a prO-life

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

..

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shalf make·no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, July 4, the 185th·day of 2007. There are
180 days left in the year. This is Independence Day. .
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted the
Declaration of Independence.
On this date:
In 1802, the United Stales Military Academy officially
opened at West Point, N.Y.
In 1807, 200 years ago, soldier-statesman Giuseppe
Garibaldi, who played a key role in Italy's unification during
the 19th century, was born in Nice.
In 1826, 50 years to the day after the Declaration of
Independence was adopted, former presidents Jobn Adams and
Thomas Jefferson both died.
In 1831, the fifth president of the U.S., James Monroe, died
in New )'ork City.
In 1872, the 30th president of the U.S., Calvin Coolidge, was
born in ~lymouth, Vt.
In 19 I7, during a ceremony in Paris honoring the French
hero of the American Revolution, U.S. U . Col. Charles E.
Stanton declared, ''Lafayelle, we are here!"
In 1939, baseball's "Iron Horse," Lou Gehrig, said farewell
to his fans at New York's Yankee Stadium.
In 1976, Israeli commandos raided Entebbe . airport in
Ujlanda, rescuing almost all of the passengers and crew of an
Air France jetliner seized by pro-Palestinian hijackers.
Ten years ago: NASA's Pathfinder spacecraft landed on
Mars, inaugurating a new era in the search for life on the Red
Planet. CBS newsman Charles Kuralt died in New York at age
62.
Five years ago: A gunman opened fire at Israel's El AJ airline
ticket counter at Los Angeles International Airport; three people were killed, including the gunman. Benjantin 0. Davis Jr.,
leader of the famed all-black Thske~ee Ainnen during World
War U and the first black general m the Air Force, died in
Washington at age 89. Wmnifred Quick Van Tongerloo, who
survived the Titanic sinking, died in East Lansing, Mich., at age
98.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Gloria Stuart is 97. Conductor
Mitch Miller is 96. Advice columnist Pauline Phillips {the original "Dear Abby") is 89. Actress Eva Marie Saint is 83. Actress
Gina Lollobrigida is 80. Playwright Neil Simon is 80. Baseball
team owner George Steinbrenner is 77. Country singer Ray
Pillow is 70. Singer Bill Withers is 69. Actor Ed Bernard is 68.
Actress Karolyn Grime's is 67. Broadcast journalist Geraldo
Rivera is 64. Rhythm-and-blues musician Ralph Johnson
(Earth, Wind and Fire) is 56. Rock musician Domingo Ortiz
(Widespread Panic) is 55. Singer Jobn Waite is 52. Rock musician Kirk Pengilly (INXS) is 49. Country musician Teddy Carr
is 47. Rock D.J. Zonka (Big Audio Dynamite) is 45. Tennis
Hall of Farner Pam Shriver is 45. Rock musician Matt Malley
(Counting Crows) is 44. Actress Jenica Bergere is 33. Singer
Stephen "Ste" McNally (BBMak) is 29.
Thought for Today: "All progress has resulted from people
who took unpopular positions." - Adlai E. Stevenson,
American diplomat and politician ( 1900-1965).

. DEAR
MR. PRESIDENT...

(740) 992·2156.

Department extensions are:

Edttor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

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Reporter:
Reporter:

Bnan Reed , Ext 14
Beth Sergent. Ext 13

One year

There is a man who
knows how to solve all the
problems in the Middle East
quickly and easily. He
knows exactly what we
should do in Iraq. He has the
solution to global climate
change, the high price of
gas, the immigration turmoil, affirmative action,
stem cell research, gangs
and the drug problem.
He can speak extemporaneously for hours on tax
fairness, campaign finance
reform, . universal health
care, voter fraud, education
reform, farm ·subsidies and
foreign-aid.
Nothing is too big or too
small to escape his notice. In
the past half-hour he has
touched on Indian casinos,
"The Sopranos"' ending, the
crisis in Darfur, Paris
Hilton, Rosie O'Donnell,
globalization, spice rubs and
the iPhone.
And where is this man? In
the government? Out on the
campaign trail running for
office? Writing position
papers for some prestigious
think tank? Teaching at one
of the great universities?
· No, he's right at the table
next to me and Sue at the
local Applebee's. What
luck ! Not only is he an
expert on world and national affairs, he is an expert on
football, baseball, basketball, motocross, hockey, ten-

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Local Briefs
Veterans poker·run

11\0W,;

RACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 will
sponsor a veterans poker run this Saturday. Registration is
from ll a.m. to l p.m. atthe legion h.all and the cost is $10
per person or $15 r.er couple. The first bike out will be at l
p.m. and the last btke will he in _at 4 p.m. There will he cash
drawings, food, door prizes and a Longaberger Basket
drawing. All vehicles welcome. Contact Gary Willford at
949-2301 for any questions.
·

tfr~'Yt1lv.'P~

MIDDLEPORT - Michael Gerlach, local historian and
downtown revitalization coordinator, will lead a guided walking tour of Middleport following the 2 p.m. dedication of the
Walk Into Middleport's Past mural series on Wednesday.
The walk will include a number of sites significant to the
village's history and its role in the Civil War era:

My . isn't this man running the world?

By carrier or motor route

Senior &lt;;!tlzen reteo

MIDDLEPORT - .Gwinnie White, 93, of Middleport, died
Tnesday, July 3, 2007 at the Overbrook Rehabilitation Center.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by
the Fisher Funeral Homes in Middleport. In lieu of flowers
donations may be made to Holzer Hospice or First Baptist
Church of Middleport.

ATHENS - Christopher administration, education,
22, of Mount hunter safety, and special
Sterhng has been assigned ·projects.
As a state wildlife officer,
as a new at-large state
wildlife officer in southeast Dodge will be tesp~msible
Ohio according to the Ohio for .enforcing wildhfe laws
Department of Natural on public lands as well as
Resources
(ODNR) private lands and providing
Division of Wildlife.
assistance to other law
Dodge is one of 13 new enforcement agencies as
wildlife officer cadets who needed. He will also assist
have been undergoing other Division of Wildlife
extensive training and were professionals in a variety of
sworn in as commissioned projects as assigned and
state wildlife officers during continue to receive addiceremonies June 29 in tional resource training durColumbus. He began his ing his career.
Dodge received associates
new duties the following
degrees in fish and wildlife
day.
Following completion of management and forest
the Ohio Peace Officers management from Hocking
Training course on April 27, College. Before being hired
the cadets were provided as a state wildlife officer,
with nine weeks of addi- Dodge worked at Deer
tional specialized training Creek State Park and at the
by the Division of Wildlife. Division of Wildlife's Deer
In addition to wildlife law Creek Wildlife Area.
enforcement procedures and · "I .am very pleased and
agency polictes, the cadets 'extremely fortunate to be
received training in areas working for the Division of
such as wildlife and fish Wildlife and serving those
management. communica- who enjoy Ohio's wildlife
tion s, public relations, resources," said Dodge.
Dod~e.

postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Preas and
lhe Ohio Newspaper Association.
Paltml.lter: Send address correc·
tiona to The Deily Sentinel, 111 Court
Street. Pomero~. Ohio 45769.

One month

Gwinnie White

New wildlife officer
assigned to Southeast Ohio

j)ubllshed every afternoon, Monday
throug h Friday, , , Court Street,
Pome roy, Ohio.
Second-class

Dally

Deaths

TUPPERS PLAINS -Bible school will be held at the
St. Paul Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains July 16 to 19,
with sessions 6 to ~:30 p.m. each day. Theme will be
Avalanche Ranch. Children 4 to 12 xears of age are invited On Thesday a horse and cart wtll be there to provide
rides for the children.

(USPS 213-960)
Ol'!lo Valley Publishing
Co.

One month,
One year

human-rights advocate, is
right in advising AI against
the policy change: "The
killing of an unborn child by
abortion can never be construed I!J be a human right.
Therefore, taking a position .
that supports violence
against children is antithetical to everything Amnesty
International stands for,"
Smith said at a press conference.
What's so frustrating
about lhe new policy is that
AI founded by a
Communist and Roman
Catholic con vert - can do a
world of good with its global resources. Days after pro-.
,life groups were blasting AI
for its new policy, the organization was publicizing the
plight of the blind Chinese
human-rights activist Chen
Guangcheng, who was beat.en in a prison. He is serving
a four-year sentence on

CHESHIRE -Clifton H. Moles, 79, Cheshire, passed
away at Cabell Huntington Hospital on July 2, 2007.
He was born on March 2 1928. in Greenbrier County to
the late Lonnie and Alberta (Shanks) Moles. He was a coal
miner and a construction worker for most of his life. Mr.
Moles was.a member of the Cheshire Baptist Church and a
.
former member of the Old tar Club.
In addition to his parenls, he was preceded by a son,
Larry Moles and a daughter, Diana Moles. ije is survived
by his wife, tetty Moles of Cheshire; children, Patty
(~onnie) Pack, Canal Winchester; Terry (Sharon) Moles,
Ttm (Sharon) Moles, and Jeff (Lisa) Moles, all of Cheshire;
l 0 grandchildren, and six great-grandchildren; three brothers and' a sister, and ·several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Friday, July 6, 2007
at the Middleport Chapel of .Fisher Funeral Home.
Officiating will be the Rev. Steve Little. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call on Thursday, July
5, 2007 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral home. On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuner.alhomes.com

Bible school planned

Subscription Rates
News

Lopez

aifton H. Moles

are noticing. AI's antics are
"creating a \l!lcuum and
need for organizations and
individuals that have a prop-.
er view of human rights,"
says Wendy Wright, president of Concerned Women
for America. Like a lot of
pro-life activists I talked to
about the AI policy, Wright
is optimistic: "Just as the
U.S.
abortion lobby's
extreme posi"tion against
partial-birth abortion bans
helped create a majority
now against abortion, AI's
mind-bending adoption of
the, view that killing babies
is a human right goes so
against common sense that it
could result in causing people to think about the trile
human -rights
violations
caused by abortion."
So, in its inadvertent way,
maybe
Amnesty
International will give
human-rights activism a
new. life -. despite its own
refusal to give amnesty to
the unborn.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalre·
view.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.)

DEAR
N1R. PRESIDENl;

The Daily Sentinel

Our main number 11

Kathryn

trumped-up charges; his real
transgres~ion was exposing
the inhuman treatment of
women and unborn children
in the Shandong province,
where.local Linyi City officials use forced sterilization
and abortion to meet China's
population-control · man-.
dates. If AI is supporting a
man who is fighting against
the mistreatment of women,
how can they not realize
how similar that fight is to
the preservation of unborn
life?
tyfary Ann Glendon, the
Learned Hand Professor of
Law at Hii,~Vard University
Law School, has tried to
solve the AI riddle.
''Amnesty International is
a textbook example of what
Max Weber called the routinization of charisma,"
Glendon observed. "They
started out as noble partici- .
pants in the human-rights
revolution that helped to .
bring about the collapse of
totalitarian regimes in
Eastern Europe.... They had
grown into a member of
what has become a humanrights industry - professional groups with continu~
ous need for things to do and
Il\Oney to do them with" ,
The good news is, people

' 53.55
' 107. 10
'214 .21

J•

Jim
Mullen

nis, golf, NASCAR racing,
bass fishing, target shooting,
volleyball, roller .. derby,
horse racing, cycling, ice
skating, ice-dancing croquet, pro wrestling, boxing,
bowling, curling, snowboarding, surfing, windsurfing: ski jumping, tractor
pulling, darts; parachute
jumping, badminton, bull
riding and team roping.
He is.extremely principled
and highly moraL He has
nothing but contempt for
athletes who take steroids or
athletes who don't win I00
percent of the time. They are
miserable, despicable failures who lack character.
They are bad role models
who corrupt our youth by
sending out the wrong message about hard work and
dedication.
Even wors~ . it screws up
his betting system. Which is
why, through absolutely no
fault of his own, he's three
years behind on the child
support - because of all
those Ja~y. good-for-noth·

ing, overpaid athletesThe overpaid athletes rank
right up there with the overpaid Hollywood celebrities
who change partners faster
than you can change channels on your TV. Their marriages fail because they are
so self-centered and egotistical. They can't think past
themselves.
Whereas his own three
marriages failed l'&gt;ecause his
wives were all nagging
witches. Nag , nag, nag.
Nagging him to get a job,
nagging him to stop drinking, nagging him to take a
shower, nagging him. to fix
the car so she could drive to
work instead of walking to
the bus.
"The walking would do
her good' Get some pounds
off her butt."
So, it 's not just world and
national affairs that he's an
expert on, he is also an
ex pert
on
women.
Unfortunately for them,
most of them do not come
up to his hi gh standards of
height-weight proportion ,
gymnaslic abil ity and hutlock size. Mosl women are
therefore ineligible to have
fast, energetic sex with him
right lhis very minute no
matter how much they 'd
like to.
Plus, the restraining .order
that his second ex-wife has
taken out on him that says

he can't come within I ,000
yards of her or the kids is a
distraction. And it was based
on a complete misunder·
standing. He was simply
cleaning the baseball bat
when it slipped from his ·
hands and · accidentally
destroyed the dinette set in
the kitchen and her collection of Lladro fi gurines in
the living room.
•
Now, because of her, his
children will be deprived of
a father's tender love. How
will they learn how to ftsh?
How to hunt? To cheat on
their taxes? To hotwire a
car? To post bail? To drive
on a suspended license?
Who wi II teach them that?
The overpaid, morally defi·
cient judge 0
As we ate desert, we
learned to how to solve our
problems with North Korea,
unreasonable flight delays,
the quality of Chinese
imports, wind power and the
crystal-meth epidemic.
"This guy can 'I even run
hi s own life but he thinks he
should be running the
world," I said to Sue.
"What makes you think he
isn't?" she asked.
(Jim Mullen is the author
of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Simple
Life'" and "Baby's First
Tattoo . .. You can· t·each him
at jim_mrtllm @myway.com)

•

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Guinther attends Buckeye Girls State-.

J •

Historic walk

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Our main concem in all stories Is to
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:Obituaries

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N~WS ITEM: BIJ5H CoMMUTES LIBBY~ SENTEOCE~

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Correction Polley

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

.

It is a tragedy when a

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Reader Services

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

A,;,nesty Internation~ls i~humatJe human-rights policy

The Daily Sentinel

•

, PageA4

•

OS~

graquates announced

COLUMBUS The
Ohio State University has
issued the li st of seniors and
graduate studenls who
received degrees at the
spring quarter commencement exercises on June I 0,
2007, in Ohio Stadium.
Meigs students included
on I hat li st were as follows:
Emily Linnea Story.
Middleport, bachelor of science, magna cum laude ;
Robert Edward Swisher,

Middleport. bachelor of science;
Brent
Morgan
Buckley, Pomeroy, B.S. in
agriculture; Jennifer Nicole
Dunn, Pomeroy, associate
of science; Garrett Clayton
Karr, Pomeroy, RS. in civil
engineering;
Jonathan
.Andrew Will, Pomeroy, B.
S. Welding: Joshua Craig
Ervin, Racine, D. veterinary
medicine, cum laude; and
Charles
Alan
Moore,
Racine, associate applied.

Courtney GUinther who attended the 2007 Buckeye Girts State representing the Racine American Legion Auxiliary recent·
Jy visited with auxiliary members, received gifts and spoke about her visit to the. annual state gathering. Guinther gave a
spe.ech about het experiences at the event, saying she was elected the clerk of the Cook City Council and met Ohio
Governor Ted Stickland. She also said she enjoyed meeting girls from all over the state, hearing new music in different
language~ and taking part in the election process. Mallory Hill, the 2006 Girls State Representative also attended and
also received gifts. Both girls made plans with the members to ride on the auxiliary's July Fourth parade float in the Racine
parade. Refreshments were se(ved during a social hour pictured here. ·

FAMILY MEDICINE

Ehrlichiosis, like Iyme disease, is spread by tick bite
Question: Last week a can he spread not only by · become suspicious of ehrli- repellaht on your animals. If
friend's child was diag- tick bites, but sometimes by chiosis after blood tests you get bitten by a tick,
nosed with an infection flea and mite bites as well. show a depressed blood remove it promptly. It takes
from a tick bite. She had 'Ehrlichlosis - unlike Rocky count and elevated liver · 24 hours of the tick being
been sick for a couple of Mountain spotted fever, function. This may v.roml&gt;t a attached to your body for
weeks before the .doctors which was ftrst identified in more precise spectfic anti- the infection to pass from
were able to figure out what · the 1890s - is a relativel;v body test that can detect the the tick to you, so prompt
removal is very helpful.
was wrong. The ,mother said new illness that was identi- · rickettsial bacteria.
If you do remove a tick,
it was ebrlichiosis. I have fied and named in 1990.
Once the diagnosis is
never heard of this. Can you . Ehrlichiosis can be diffi- made, the infection is easily make a note of the time and
tell me more about it? Will cult to diagnose as the symp- treated with antibiotics. date in case you become ill
The patient be¥ins to feel with flu like symptoms with- ·
the child be OK?
toms resemble the flu fever,
chills,
headache,
better almost tmmediately in two weeks of the bite.
Alllwer: Ehrlichiosis is
an uncommon disetise that malaise, and muscle aches. after starting antibiotics, but
is spread primarily by tick Sometimes there is a: rash full recovery can take about , Family MedlcinelfJ II a
weekly column. To submU
bites. This is why we see it that looks like heat rash and three we11ks.
Prevention is always the questions, write to Martha
in the summer when ticks is itchy. These symptoms
are more active. ·
follow a tick bite by about best treatment. You can pre- A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
It is commonly spread by seven to nine days. vent tick bites by using an Ohio University Colltge of
the dog tick, the deer tick or Oftentimes, due to the time insect repellent and wearing . Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
the Lone Star tick. The lat- lapse, the ti.ck bile is forgot- long pants and long sleeves Box 110, Athens, Ohio
ter, as the name implies, is ten by the victim and not when out in the woods. It's 45701, or via e-mail to
found abundantly in Texas mentioned to the doctor. often a good idea to tuck the readerquestions@jamilybut also as far away from Some experts believe that bottom of your pants into medicinenews.org. Medical
the Southwestern United many cases go undetected your socks so that ticks information in this column
States as Rhode Island. The because the symptoms are so can't just crawl up your is provided as an educabacterium that causes ehrli- mild that no medical atten- socks and onto four legs.
tional service only. It does
Regardless o the protec- ·not replace the/"udgment of
chiosis. belongs to the germ tion is sought and the person
family
known
as recovers without medical tion you lake, it's always a your persona physician,
Rickettsiae. Other bacteria intervention. Frequently, good idea lo check yourself who should be relied on
in this family cause a vari- though, the flu-like symp- for ticks after you have been to diagnose and recomety of serious diseases toms continue to last for sev- out in dense brush and long mend treatment for any
medical conditions. Past
worldwide,
including eral days and the sufferer grass.
Also, check your pets for columns are available
Rocky Mountain spotted seeks a doctor's help.
.When the person sees the ticks as they can carry them online at www.familymedifever and typhus.
The rickettsial diseases doctor, he or she may into the house. Use tick cinenews.org.

School districts, developers find new uses for old buildings
COLUMBUS . (AP) School districts embarking
on new construction projects
are auctioning off o,ld school
buildings to developers who
are turning them into offices,
community centers and even
private homes.
It's a relief to school officials eager to dump outdaled buildings but still want to
see the properties pul to
good use.
The former Hazelwood
Elementary
School in
Newark, 30 miles east of
Columbus, is now the Look
Up Center. a community
center owned in part by
Spring Hill Baptist Church.
Another central Ohio di strict demolished an old elementary school and turned
it into green space. The 3acre site of the former Ruth
Boardman Elementary in
Delaware now hosts outdoor sports, field days and
is occasionally used by
Ohio Wesleyan University
for summer band camp.
During the past I 0 years.
the Ohio School Facilities
Commission has helped
build or renovate 440
~chool buildings across the
state 111 a cost of almost $5
billion, spokesman Rick

Savors said. The commis- to good use in the commusion subsidizes such pro- nity," Montgomery said.
jects based on the wealth of "We don't want them to be
an eyesore."
the district.
Columbus Public Schools
Savors said the commission intends to· renovate or auctioned nearly 70 properreplace about 2,500 build- ties between 1979 and 1999,
ings by 2017.
records show.
The district still has 31
· Newark City Sch()()IS are
in the middle of a seven- buildings that aren't permayear, $139 million upgrade nent school sites and is
that eventually will renovate holding on to some empty
or replace every school ones in case student enrollbuilding in the district. The ment starts to grow and
school board has approved extra space is needed.
Sometimes selling or
the sale of three buildings so
far. The next one to go is leasing costly old buildings
Central Intermediate School, makes sense, Columbus
a downtown building sched- public schools spokesman
Michael Straughter said.
uled for auction July 17.
.
The district is renting a
Newark
Assistant
Superintendent
Dan former middle school to the
Montgomery said every city of Columbus, which is
building went through an us·ing it as a recreation cenassessment to determine ta. The IS-month lease is
which ones to save. If the expected to save the district
cost of renovation was at $60,000 year in utility and
least 80 percent of a build- maintenance costs, he said.
In Zanesville, David
ing's current value, it would
not be worth fixing, he said. Mitzel bought the former
"We just hope they are put Pioneer )O:lementary School

a

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last year for $27,500. The
schoolhpuse, buill iti 1915,
. sits on a hilltop an'd has
great views of the city.
"It's going to be my
home," Mitzel, 61, said. He
and hi s wife, Katherine,
also plan to convert some of
the classrooms into large
guest suite ~.
The idea is lo invite former
Zanesville residents who
have gone on to successful
careers to come back and
stay with them for 'a week or
two al no cost. The guests
would meet with students
and civic leaders to discuss
ways to improve the city.
"This project is · all personal," Mitzel said . "We're
saving a great old building
and ~iv in g back to the com·
munny."

•
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'
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~·-

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Beat the Heat!
Melodrama Performances &amp;
Theatre Tour;s July 5, 6, &amp; 7
Afternoons: I, 2 &amp; 3 pm
$3 per person .
Cmriing Soon!
Disney's 101 Dalmatians Kids
Live StJige Production
July -t4, t5, 21 &amp; 22
ask about our Puppy Parties

Box Olftce: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446:ARTS

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel
'

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

l.ocAL ScHEDULE
POMEAOV - A scnectJie of upcoming co1ege
end hltjl school V81'$ity sporting everts inYoMng
leema !rom Gallla and MB!ga oountilll.

Today'•

game

Legion BaHblll
Meigs at Athens
Tournament, TBA

l.oglonBOHI&gt;tll
GalUa at Logan, 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

BBYFL sign-ups
for 2007 season

,,

PLEASE DON•t DRI
.

.

&amp; DRIVE

'

As we continue on this holiday weekend, our area merchants encourage you
to celebrate.responsibly- for your own safety and the'~safety for our entire
community. Wrlether you're driving a car or a boat, it's Important to remember
that alcohol impa!~~" yo~r judgment and.~lows re.actlon time. You can help
prevent drunk d~iving tragedies this ho.iid.ay~e~kena·· ar,d youf;~round by
··~...
sober behiftd1he·wheel·and·
king,·and drivi

BY RusTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS.

Fourth of July

Tbunclty'l QlfM

'

Matta recovering from .back surgery, record season

MIDDLEPORT - The
Big Bend Youth Football
League is having sign-ups
for any' child who will be ·
in grades 3·6 this coming
school year.
Regular sign-ups will be
held at the Middleport
· Stadium on Saturdays
(July 14th, 21st and 28th)
from 10 a.m. till I p.m.
. Parents need to be with
the child as fitting for
equipment will be done at
the .time of sign-ups.
Football camp will begin
on Monday, July 30 and
the one-time membership
fee will be $25.
The league will honor its
early sign-up fee reductions. Parents may take
advantage by mailing in
the child's name, grade,
school attending, age,
address and phone number, along with $15 to P.O.
Box 212, Middleport,
Ohio 45760.
There will also be an
early sign-up held at the
Rutland Celebration on
Saturday, July 7, where
the league will have its
dunking booth set up .
Sign-ups being mailed
must be post marked by
July 5.
For more · information
contact ,Roger Thompson
at 740-992-0351, .or Dave
Jenkins at 304-674-5178.

COLUMBUS - Seconds
after Greg Oden was picked
No. I by Portland in the NBA
draft last week, Ohio State
coach Thad Matta turned to
Oden 's mother and said,
"Zoe, can you imagine if he
had come back how high he
could have gone?"
Matta laughs long and hard
on a wann July afternoon.
He's had his share of thrills
and chills over the past few
months since ridmg the
efforts of freshmen Oden and
No. 4 pick Mike Conley ~r. to
a 35-4 record and the runner·
up spot in the NCAA tourna'
ment.
·
After that record season
melted away, Matta went
along to New York to sd
Oden and Conley - high

school
teammates
in
Indianapolis become
instant millionaires. Another
freshman, Daequan Cook, the
BuC:keyes' sixth man, was
taken with the 21st pick in the
first round by Philadelphia
and traded to the Miami Heat.
''I don't think there's ever
been a program that had three
freshmen drafted in the flfSt
round," Matta said proudly.
The NBA's gain is a loss for
Ohio State and its energetic
t1Jird· year head coach, who
turns 40 on July II.
· Matta now must deal with
the impact of the three players leaving early. On top of
that, he had back surgery
recently and has yet to regain
the feeling in his right foot.
"The back feels good
though," he said with a laugh.
"I'm up and around. I've got
a cane and I'm hobbhng

•

·Mackanin
would love
to stay in
Cincinnati

HYL holding men's
softball tourney
~

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HARRISONVILLE
The
4th
annual
Harrisonville
Men 's
Softball Tournament wi II
be held on Saturday, Juiy
28, and Sunday, July 29 at
the Harrisonville ball
CINCINNATI (AP) - In That record-book homer
the city where Hank Aaron landed
at
Riverfront
fields.
The two-day tournament completed his quest, Barry Stadium, which was demolhas a $100 entry fee per Bonds came out hammering. ished in 2002.
Bonds hit homer No. 751
Bonds' second career
team and all teams are
welcome . All proceeds in his ftrst at-bat Tuesday homer off Aaron Harang (9·
will go towards ,the night, a two-run shot that 2) was the master stroke in a
Harrisonville
Youth moved him within four of sloppy game between lastLeague. Deadline to regis- Aaron's record during the place teams in the NL's West
San Francisco Giants' 7-3 and Central divisions. They
ter is Monday, July 23.
For more information loss to the Cincinnati Reds. combined for 14 walks, two
Brandon Phillips' grand hit batters and a wild pitch.
please contact Sarah at
slam
gave Pete Mackanin a Giants left-bander Barry
.
740-992-0351 or Regina
victory in his debut as Zito didn't ~ive up,a hit until
at 740-698-2804.
Cincinnati's interim manag· the fifth innmg- and didn't
er. Mackanin was promoted throw many strikes, either.
HYL holding co-ed from advance scout after He walked five batters in a
baseball's worst team 'fired 44-pitch fourth inning,
softball tourney
Jeuy Narron on Sunday including
Edwin
night.
Encarnacion and Alex
HARRISONVILLE
That's not what the fans Gonzalez with the bases
A co-ed softball tourna- came to experience.
loaded.
ment bas been scheduled
Bonds ' homer on his third
Phillips put the Reds
for Saturday, August 4, swing of the game drew loud -i'bead to stay with his sec·
and Sl!nday, August 5 at and prolonged boos from the ond career grand slam in the
the Harrisonville ball crowd of37,299, a-reminder sixth off Kevin Correia 0·
fields.
that fans outside of San 4).
The two-day tournament Francisco view his record The game had a couple of
has a $100 entry fee per chase through the prism of intriguing subplots: A rare
te&amp;m. All proceeds will go baseball's steroid scandal.
matchup of famed home run
towards the Harrisonville
Like it or not, he's closing hitters in Bonds and Ken
Griffey Jr., and a near·
.Youth League. Deadline to m.
Bonds' latest came in the novice manager dabbling in
register is Monday, July
city where Aaron hit No. 714 one of baseball's great dra30.
For more inf9rmation on opening day 1974, tying mas.
The 42-year-old Bonds
please contact Sarah at Babe Ruth's previous mark.
740-992-0351 or Regina
at 740,698-2804 .

Cincinnati hamnters Giants, 7-3

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Sporto_Slllff
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740)446-2342, oxl. 33
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(740) 446·2342, exl. 23
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(7401 446·2342. old. 33

•

•

AP photo .

San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds hits a two-run home run of! Cincinnati Reds pitcher Aaron Harang in the first inning of a
baseball game on Tuesday in Cincinnati. Reds catcher David Ross is at right. The home run was the 751st of Bond's career.

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The Buckeyes also will
have another talented group
of incoming freshmen,
including the top two players
in the state last season in 6-7
Jon Diebler and 7·I Kosta
Koufos. They are joined by 69 Dallas Lauderdale and
swingmen Evan Turner and
Eric Wallace.
'The biggest thing is for us
is we have so many unan·
swered questions," Matta
said. "Last year we only had
one starter back; we're in
exactlr the same boat again.
There s going to be a lot of
teachin~, a lot of hard work
and we re going to have to
jell as a team. That's a good
thing- we've got great kids
corrnng in. From that aspect,
We're going to be in good
shape."
The coach's back may take
longer.
.

around," he said. "But believe I'd say looking into their eyes
me, this is hard for me and seeing that smile on their
because I go so much."
faces, that was probably the
Matta has taken little time greatest thing I' II take away
to look back on the from the night of the draft."
{luckeyes' rise to No. I in the The talent pool is still pretpolls last season, a second ty deep for the Buckeyes,
consecutive Big Ten title and despite losing the three fresh·
the impressive trip through men along with seniors Ron
the NCAA tournament.
Lewis and Ivan Harris.
A year ago, the excitement
Jamar Butler will be direct·
was building because Oden, ing traffic for a fourth year at
Conley, Cook, classmate a guard spot Lighty is comDavid Lighty and junior-col· ing off a series of fine· post·
lege transfer Othello Hunter · season games and is a mem- dubbed "The Thad Five" ber of an international team
-were just getting acclimat· that will play for the under-19
ed to Ohio State.
· ·
world championship in
A lot has changed in those Serbia later this month.
12 months.
The.6-foot-9 Hunter and 6"Somebody said, ' Poor 8 Matt Terwilliger provided
Thad, losin~ three freshmen depth behind Oden a year
ip the draft," Matta recalled. ago, while 6-10 Kyle Madsen
"I said, 'Hey, we had three is ·c;ligible after silting out a
guys reach a dream. That, to year since his transfer from
me, is what we're in this for.' Vanderbilt

bwalfers@mydallytribune.com

and the 37-year-old Griffey
have been friends for most
of their careers, sons of
famous fathers who showed
them how to play the game.
They catch up online about
once a month and feel even
closer than their home run
totals.
Griffey flied out and
walked three times on
Tuesday, leaving him with
585 career homers. .
It was the first time since
Aug. I, 1976 that two play·
ers with so many homers
played in the same game,
according to the Elias Sports
Bureau. Cleveland's Frank
Robinson
(586)
and
Milwaukee's .Aaron (755)
played in that one.
The question in this one
was whether Mackanin
would let Bonds get any·
thing to hit.
Bonds slept on it, taking a
nap in a clubhouse chair.
Then, he woke up and
warmed up with a batting·
practice drive off an adver·
tising board in center, drawing aahs from the crowd and
hinting that something mem·
orable was in the making .
Fans booed Bonds loudly

when he went to the plate in
the first inning and came out
swinging. He fouled off
Harang's first pitch, a 92
mph fastball, and swung
through the next one. Then,
the right-hander got a little
too comfonable.
Harang tried to throw
another fastball by Bonds,
who sent a drive deep into
the seats in right-center field
near the advertising panel he
plunked during batting prac·
tice.
Boos
filled
Great
Ame ric an Ball Park while an
unaffected Bonds jogged the
bases with head down.
When he went back to left
tield, he raised his left hand
to acknowledge a dozen
Giants fans who gave him a
standing ovation.
Harang and Mackanin
made sure he wouldn't get
another chance.
In Bonds' next at-bat,
Harang threw fotir wayward
pitches for a walk, showing
he'd learned his lesson.
Bonds got an intentional
walk the next time up, then
flied out and ended the game
by fouling out.

Indians outlast Tigers in extra innings, 5-4
DETROIT (AP) - Casey
Blake homered in the 11th
inning Tuesday nisht to give
Cleveland a 5-4 vtctory over
the · Detroit Tigers, the
Indians' sixth straight win.
The Ti~ers had opportuni·
ties to wm the game in the
IOth, hut two of their All·
Stars came up shon with the
bases loaded.
Blake hit his 12th homer
off Jose Capellan (0·1) with
two outs in the 11th to give
Cleveland the lead. Capellan
was making his debut with
the Tigers two days after

being
acquired
from
Milwaukee in a trade. ·
Franklin Gutierrez made a
leaping catch of Curtis
GrandersOn's leadoff liner at
the tPp of the right· field wall
in the bottom of the IOth.
The Tigers then loaded the
bases on two singles, a wild
pitch and an intentional walk.
But Tom 'Mastny (6-2) got
Carlos Guillen to pop up and
Ivan Rodriguez to ground
out.
Joe Borowski was perfect
in the bottom of the 11th for
his 25th save.

Jhonny Peralta's sacrifice
fly in the first gave Cleveland
a I·0 lead, but Rodriguez tied
the game in the bottom half
with an RBI single and Sean
Casey made it 2-1 with a sac·
rifice fly.
The Indians went ahead 3-2
in the third on Peralta's RBI
double and a sacrifice fly by
Jason Michaels, but Detroit
tied the game in the bottom of
the
inning
on Gary
Sheffield's 19th homer.
· Detroit made it 4-3 with a
two-out rally in the fifth.
Placido
Polanco
and

Sheffield singled before
~agglio Or&lt;lonez became the
first batter to receive an unintentional walk from Paul
Byrd in more than two
months, a span of 77 2·3
innings.
Guillen followed with a
bloop single to left, scoring
Polanco, but Michaels threw
out Sheffield at the plate from
left field to end the inning.
Tigers
starter
Nate
Robertson allowed three runs
and six in five innings. Byrd
allowed four runs and seven
hits in seven inuings.

CINCINNATI (1\lp) When the Pittsburgh Pirates
offered Pete .. Mackanin a
chance to manage their
Class-A team in Dunedin,
Fla., last year, he politely
declined.
"I think I'm a little too
youn~ to be put out to pas·
ture,' the 55-year-old man·
ager said.
Good decision.
Mackanin was introduced
Tuesday as the interim man·
ager of the Cincinnati Reds,
who offered him the opportunity to get back into the
majors for at least a few
months.
Granted, they're the worst
team in the majors, but at
least they're in the majors.
"Without question, it's
tough," Mackanin said.
"This is a tough job. I'm up
for the challenge. Hopefully
I'll be recognized for doing
a good job.
"I'm ~oing into it with my
eyes wtde .open. It is.n't a
pleasant situation to get
mto. But I'd like to help get
the organization on track.''
It's going to take more
than one interim manager ·
with a total of 26 games of
experience managing in the
majors.
•
Mackanin had spent 13
years managing in . the
minors w,hen the Pittsburgh
Pirates gave him his first
chance to run a big-league
game. He took over when
Lloyd McClendon was fired
near the end of the 2005
season and went 12-14 the
rest of the way.
The Pirates decided to
hire Jim Tracy as their next
manager
and
offered
Mackanin the Class-A job.
After he declined, Reds
general manager Wayne
Krivsky - a longtime
friend from their scouting
days - hired him as an
advance scout.
Once Krivsky decided it
was lime to lire Narron, he
thought of Mackanin, who
had stepped into the same
tough situation two years
earfierin Pittsburgh. ·
The two of them became
fast friends when they met
in Philadelphia 10 years
ago.
·"We hit it off,'' Krivsk.y
said. "We talked baseball
for hours. It was a lot of fun.
He's just a guy I connected
with talking about the
game." ·
Now he'll find out
whether it's a .good thing
that a friend is letting a
friend manage the Reds.
Cincinnati is at the bot·
tom of baseball for good
reason . The bullpen is the
National Lea~ue ' s worst,
the starting hneup 'is too
reliant on homers, and the
energy drained out of the
team as the losses mounted.
The Reds were 31-5 1 when
Narron was ftred.

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel
'

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

l.ocAL ScHEDULE
POMEAOV - A scnectJie of upcoming co1ege
end hltjl school V81'$ity sporting everts inYoMng
leema !rom Gallla and MB!ga oountilll.

Today'•

game

Legion BaHblll
Meigs at Athens
Tournament, TBA

l.oglonBOHI&gt;tll
GalUa at Logan, 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

BBYFL sign-ups
for 2007 season

,,

PLEASE DON•t DRI
.

.

&amp; DRIVE

'

As we continue on this holiday weekend, our area merchants encourage you
to celebrate.responsibly- for your own safety and the'~safety for our entire
community. Wrlether you're driving a car or a boat, it's Important to remember
that alcohol impa!~~" yo~r judgment and.~lows re.actlon time. You can help
prevent drunk d~iving tragedies this ho.iid.ay~e~kena·· ar,d youf;~round by
··~...
sober behiftd1he·wheel·and·
king,·and drivi

BY RusTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS.

Fourth of July

Tbunclty'l QlfM

'

Matta recovering from .back surgery, record season

MIDDLEPORT - The
Big Bend Youth Football
League is having sign-ups
for any' child who will be ·
in grades 3·6 this coming
school year.
Regular sign-ups will be
held at the Middleport
· Stadium on Saturdays
(July 14th, 21st and 28th)
from 10 a.m. till I p.m.
. Parents need to be with
the child as fitting for
equipment will be done at
the .time of sign-ups.
Football camp will begin
on Monday, July 30 and
the one-time membership
fee will be $25.
The league will honor its
early sign-up fee reductions. Parents may take
advantage by mailing in
the child's name, grade,
school attending, age,
address and phone number, along with $15 to P.O.
Box 212, Middleport,
Ohio 45760.
There will also be an
early sign-up held at the
Rutland Celebration on
Saturday, July 7, where
the league will have its
dunking booth set up .
Sign-ups being mailed
must be post marked by
July 5.
For more · information
contact ,Roger Thompson
at 740-992-0351, .or Dave
Jenkins at 304-674-5178.

COLUMBUS - Seconds
after Greg Oden was picked
No. I by Portland in the NBA
draft last week, Ohio State
coach Thad Matta turned to
Oden 's mother and said,
"Zoe, can you imagine if he
had come back how high he
could have gone?"
Matta laughs long and hard
on a wann July afternoon.
He's had his share of thrills
and chills over the past few
months since ridmg the
efforts of freshmen Oden and
No. 4 pick Mike Conley ~r. to
a 35-4 record and the runner·
up spot in the NCAA tourna'
ment.
·
After that record season
melted away, Matta went
along to New York to sd
Oden and Conley - high

school
teammates
in
Indianapolis become
instant millionaires. Another
freshman, Daequan Cook, the
BuC:keyes' sixth man, was
taken with the 21st pick in the
first round by Philadelphia
and traded to the Miami Heat.
''I don't think there's ever
been a program that had three
freshmen drafted in the flfSt
round," Matta said proudly.
The NBA's gain is a loss for
Ohio State and its energetic
t1Jird· year head coach, who
turns 40 on July II.
· Matta now must deal with
the impact of the three players leaving early. On top of
that, he had back surgery
recently and has yet to regain
the feeling in his right foot.
"The back feels good
though," he said with a laugh.
"I'm up and around. I've got
a cane and I'm hobbhng

•

·Mackanin
would love
to stay in
Cincinnati

HYL holding men's
softball tourney
~

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HARRISONVILLE
The
4th
annual
Harrisonville
Men 's
Softball Tournament wi II
be held on Saturday, Juiy
28, and Sunday, July 29 at
the Harrisonville ball
CINCINNATI (AP) - In That record-book homer
the city where Hank Aaron landed
at
Riverfront
fields.
The two-day tournament completed his quest, Barry Stadium, which was demolhas a $100 entry fee per Bonds came out hammering. ished in 2002.
Bonds hit homer No. 751
Bonds' second career
team and all teams are
welcome . All proceeds in his ftrst at-bat Tuesday homer off Aaron Harang (9·
will go towards ,the night, a two-run shot that 2) was the master stroke in a
Harrisonville
Youth moved him within four of sloppy game between lastLeague. Deadline to regis- Aaron's record during the place teams in the NL's West
San Francisco Giants' 7-3 and Central divisions. They
ter is Monday, July 23.
For more information loss to the Cincinnati Reds. combined for 14 walks, two
Brandon Phillips' grand hit batters and a wild pitch.
please contact Sarah at
slam
gave Pete Mackanin a Giants left-bander Barry
.
740-992-0351 or Regina
victory in his debut as Zito didn't ~ive up,a hit until
at 740-698-2804.
Cincinnati's interim manag· the fifth innmg- and didn't
er. Mackanin was promoted throw many strikes, either.
HYL holding co-ed from advance scout after He walked five batters in a
baseball's worst team 'fired 44-pitch fourth inning,
softball tourney
Jeuy Narron on Sunday including
Edwin
night.
Encarnacion and Alex
HARRISONVILLE
That's not what the fans Gonzalez with the bases
A co-ed softball tourna- came to experience.
loaded.
ment bas been scheduled
Bonds ' homer on his third
Phillips put the Reds
for Saturday, August 4, swing of the game drew loud -i'bead to stay with his sec·
and Sl!nday, August 5 at and prolonged boos from the ond career grand slam in the
the Harrisonville ball crowd of37,299, a-reminder sixth off Kevin Correia 0·
fields.
that fans outside of San 4).
The two-day tournament Francisco view his record The game had a couple of
has a $100 entry fee per chase through the prism of intriguing subplots: A rare
te&amp;m. All proceeds will go baseball's steroid scandal.
matchup of famed home run
towards the Harrisonville
Like it or not, he's closing hitters in Bonds and Ken
Griffey Jr., and a near·
.Youth League. Deadline to m.
Bonds' latest came in the novice manager dabbling in
register is Monday, July
city where Aaron hit No. 714 one of baseball's great dra30.
For more inf9rmation on opening day 1974, tying mas.
The 42-year-old Bonds
please contact Sarah at Babe Ruth's previous mark.
740-992-0351 or Regina
at 740,698-2804 .

Cincinnati hamnters Giants, 7-3

CoNrAcrUs
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1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
Fax -1-740-446·3008

E·mell - sportsOmydailysentinel:com

Sporto_Slllff
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740)446-2342, oxl. 33
bsherman 0 mydailytribune .com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, exl. 23
lcrumOmydailyreglster.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(7401 446·2342. old. 33

•

•

AP photo .

San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds hits a two-run home run of! Cincinnati Reds pitcher Aaron Harang in the first inning of a
baseball game on Tuesday in Cincinnati. Reds catcher David Ross is at right. The home run was the 751st of Bond's career.

THE SHOE PLACE/ Ingels Electronics BROGAN WARNER
·and:Jewelrv--. · : ·INSURANCE
LOCKER219·
992-5627 • Middleport, OH

The Buckeyes also will
have another talented group
of incoming freshmen,
including the top two players
in the state last season in 6-7
Jon Diebler and 7·I Kosta
Koufos. They are joined by 69 Dallas Lauderdale and
swingmen Evan Turner and
Eric Wallace.
'The biggest thing is for us
is we have so many unan·
swered questions," Matta
said. "Last year we only had
one starter back; we're in
exactlr the same boat again.
There s going to be a lot of
teachin~, a lot of hard work
and we re going to have to
jell as a team. That's a good
thing- we've got great kids
corrnng in. From that aspect,
We're going to be in good
shape."
The coach's back may take
longer.
.

around," he said. "But believe I'd say looking into their eyes
me, this is hard for me and seeing that smile on their
because I go so much."
faces, that was probably the
Matta has taken little time greatest thing I' II take away
to look back on the from the night of the draft."
{luckeyes' rise to No. I in the The talent pool is still pretpolls last season, a second ty deep for the Buckeyes,
consecutive Big Ten title and despite losing the three fresh·
the impressive trip through men along with seniors Ron
the NCAA tournament.
Lewis and Ivan Harris.
A year ago, the excitement
Jamar Butler will be direct·
was building because Oden, ing traffic for a fourth year at
Conley, Cook, classmate a guard spot Lighty is comDavid Lighty and junior-col· ing off a series of fine· post·
lege transfer Othello Hunter · season games and is a mem- dubbed "The Thad Five" ber of an international team
-were just getting acclimat· that will play for the under-19
ed to Ohio State.
· ·
world championship in
A lot has changed in those Serbia later this month.
12 months.
The.6-foot-9 Hunter and 6"Somebody said, ' Poor 8 Matt Terwilliger provided
Thad, losin~ three freshmen depth behind Oden a year
ip the draft," Matta recalled. ago, while 6-10 Kyle Madsen
"I said, 'Hey, we had three is ·c;ligible after silting out a
guys reach a dream. That, to year since his transfer from
me, is what we're in this for.' Vanderbilt

bwalfers@mydallytribune.com

and the 37-year-old Griffey
have been friends for most
of their careers, sons of
famous fathers who showed
them how to play the game.
They catch up online about
once a month and feel even
closer than their home run
totals.
Griffey flied out and
walked three times on
Tuesday, leaving him with
585 career homers. .
It was the first time since
Aug. I, 1976 that two play·
ers with so many homers
played in the same game,
according to the Elias Sports
Bureau. Cleveland's Frank
Robinson
(586)
and
Milwaukee's .Aaron (755)
played in that one.
The question in this one
was whether Mackanin
would let Bonds get any·
thing to hit.
Bonds slept on it, taking a
nap in a clubhouse chair.
Then, he woke up and
warmed up with a batting·
practice drive off an adver·
tising board in center, drawing aahs from the crowd and
hinting that something mem·
orable was in the making .
Fans booed Bonds loudly

when he went to the plate in
the first inning and came out
swinging. He fouled off
Harang's first pitch, a 92
mph fastball, and swung
through the next one. Then,
the right-hander got a little
too comfonable.
Harang tried to throw
another fastball by Bonds,
who sent a drive deep into
the seats in right-center field
near the advertising panel he
plunked during batting prac·
tice.
Boos
filled
Great
Ame ric an Ball Park while an
unaffected Bonds jogged the
bases with head down.
When he went back to left
tield, he raised his left hand
to acknowledge a dozen
Giants fans who gave him a
standing ovation.
Harang and Mackanin
made sure he wouldn't get
another chance.
In Bonds' next at-bat,
Harang threw fotir wayward
pitches for a walk, showing
he'd learned his lesson.
Bonds got an intentional
walk the next time up, then
flied out and ended the game
by fouling out.

Indians outlast Tigers in extra innings, 5-4
DETROIT (AP) - Casey
Blake homered in the 11th
inning Tuesday nisht to give
Cleveland a 5-4 vtctory over
the · Detroit Tigers, the
Indians' sixth straight win.
The Ti~ers had opportuni·
ties to wm the game in the
IOth, hut two of their All·
Stars came up shon with the
bases loaded.
Blake hit his 12th homer
off Jose Capellan (0·1) with
two outs in the 11th to give
Cleveland the lead. Capellan
was making his debut with
the Tigers two days after

being
acquired
from
Milwaukee in a trade. ·
Franklin Gutierrez made a
leaping catch of Curtis
GrandersOn's leadoff liner at
the tPp of the right· field wall
in the bottom of the IOth.
The Tigers then loaded the
bases on two singles, a wild
pitch and an intentional walk.
But Tom 'Mastny (6-2) got
Carlos Guillen to pop up and
Ivan Rodriguez to ground
out.
Joe Borowski was perfect
in the bottom of the 11th for
his 25th save.

Jhonny Peralta's sacrifice
fly in the first gave Cleveland
a I·0 lead, but Rodriguez tied
the game in the bottom half
with an RBI single and Sean
Casey made it 2-1 with a sac·
rifice fly.
The Indians went ahead 3-2
in the third on Peralta's RBI
double and a sacrifice fly by
Jason Michaels, but Detroit
tied the game in the bottom of
the
inning
on Gary
Sheffield's 19th homer.
· Detroit made it 4-3 with a
two-out rally in the fifth.
Placido
Polanco
and

Sheffield singled before
~agglio Or&lt;lonez became the
first batter to receive an unintentional walk from Paul
Byrd in more than two
months, a span of 77 2·3
innings.
Guillen followed with a
bloop single to left, scoring
Polanco, but Michaels threw
out Sheffield at the plate from
left field to end the inning.
Tigers
starter
Nate
Robertson allowed three runs
and six in five innings. Byrd
allowed four runs and seven
hits in seven inuings.

CINCINNATI (1\lp) When the Pittsburgh Pirates
offered Pete .. Mackanin a
chance to manage their
Class-A team in Dunedin,
Fla., last year, he politely
declined.
"I think I'm a little too
youn~ to be put out to pas·
ture,' the 55-year-old man·
ager said.
Good decision.
Mackanin was introduced
Tuesday as the interim man·
ager of the Cincinnati Reds,
who offered him the opportunity to get back into the
majors for at least a few
months.
Granted, they're the worst
team in the majors, but at
least they're in the majors.
"Without question, it's
tough," Mackanin said.
"This is a tough job. I'm up
for the challenge. Hopefully
I'll be recognized for doing
a good job.
"I'm ~oing into it with my
eyes wtde .open. It is.n't a
pleasant situation to get
mto. But I'd like to help get
the organization on track.''
It's going to take more
than one interim manager ·
with a total of 26 games of
experience managing in the
majors.
•
Mackanin had spent 13
years managing in . the
minors w,hen the Pittsburgh
Pirates gave him his first
chance to run a big-league
game. He took over when
Lloyd McClendon was fired
near the end of the 2005
season and went 12-14 the
rest of the way.
The Pirates decided to
hire Jim Tracy as their next
manager
and
offered
Mackanin the Class-A job.
After he declined, Reds
general manager Wayne
Krivsky - a longtime
friend from their scouting
days - hired him as an
advance scout.
Once Krivsky decided it
was lime to lire Narron, he
thought of Mackanin, who
had stepped into the same
tough situation two years
earfierin Pittsburgh. ·
The two of them became
fast friends when they met
in Philadelphia 10 years
ago.
·"We hit it off,'' Krivsk.y
said. "We talked baseball
for hours. It was a lot of fun.
He's just a guy I connected
with talking about the
game." ·
Now he'll find out
whether it's a .good thing
that a friend is letting a
friend manage the Reds.
Cincinnati is at the bot·
tom of baseball for good
reason . The bullpen is the
National Lea~ue ' s worst,
the starting hneup 'is too
reliant on homers, and the
energy drained out of the
team as the losses mounted.
The Reds were 31-5 1 when
Narron was ftred.

�'
'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Ser1tin.el

\ll:rtbune - Sentinel 2 1\egt~ter

•

C LAS Sl FIE D
I ~,t__vFR.HG.: :~.s.B.fr..,.l
s
3 or 4 bedroom house tor
sal e m New Haven The
bathroom 1s newly remod
eled covered front porch
back deck garage fenced 1n
back yard new central heat
and a1r new crown mold1ng
and baseboards new d1sh
washer and oven Asktng
well below recent appratsal
of 8~ Call 304-882 3n3
for moce detatls

Galli a
County
OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

E-mail

classlfled @mydallytnbune com

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!Jea«'~ire.f'
Monday thru Friday
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Dleplay Adp

Dally In-column 1 .00 p.m.
Monday·Frlday for In••rtlon
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: l:DO p.m.
llor Sundaya Paper

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
8ueln•u Day• Prior To
Publication
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both 112 Aust &amp; 112 Great
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Female Lhaso Apso Sliver In
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Ave Reward QIWn $500 for
the return of her Please call
44G 2432 or 645·728Q or ,
794·1950

2 Kittens bllwl1 (M) 6wks blk
(F)
tOwks
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Dish Network Satel1te Otsh l ost red &amp; whtle beagle In
Must be able to take down Morning Star area, Reward,
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call (740)948'2S44
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CLASSIFIED INDEX

Houaes tor Rent
In Memoriam .
ln1urance.. .••....
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
UvoiiiDCk •
Lolt and Found
Lola &amp; Acreage......
Mlocelleneous ....
Mlacellaneous Marchandl118
Mobile Home Repair

.410
. 020
.. .. 130
660
630

...... 060
.350
170
540

880

Mobile Homes for Rent!. .:::.::::::::: ....:::::::::::::420
. ...
320
Mobile Homos for Sale...
Money to Loan.......... • ......
.220
740
Motorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelers
Mual..llnatJ1Jments
570
PoJ'IORIIIO.. • ....
.. .... 005
Ptta for Salo . .. ....
.. .... 580
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
Prolesalonal Sarvlcea •
..230
Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Repai r......
• .... 180
RHI Eotata Wonted • •
.. .. 380
School• lnettuctlon
•150
Sood , Plont &amp; Fertilizer ....
SHuotlono Wonted.
120
Space lor Rent
...480
Sporting Goodo
....... 520
SUV'o for Stle...
• .... 720
Truc:lco lor Stlo
..... 71 5
Upholotery ..
• 870
Va111 For Sal• ...
.. ..... 730
Wont.d to Buy ..........
010
Wont.d to Buy· Farm Supplies
820
Wont.d To Do • • ...
.. ....................... 180
Want.d to Ron! ..........
470
Yord Stle- Golllpollo.....
072
074
Yord Sale-Pomeroyi\llddle
Yard Sale-PI Pleasant
078

. ........ eso

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=. .

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GAIJJPOLIS

·--iiiiiiiiriiiiiiii!IP

3 Famtltes July 5 6 7 Sam
to 4pm 71 5 3rd Ave
rJ
Gallipolis Plus size mens
and womens clothes name
FOUND brown laD Haven b
10
lo h
Heights area Free to Good rand boys c I as s•ze
to
36
voong
mens
Avon
vm
Home 304-882 2849 or 304 tage colledlbles, electron
8822244
fCS, turn.. re and antiques
shoes and cleats

4x4's For Sale. .. . ..
725
Announcement .......................................... 030
AnUqu... ... ....................... .. .....
•...... 530
Apartments lor Rent ......
. ..... 440
Auction and Flea Markel.
. ...080
Auto P•rta &amp; Acceuorlea
.. '1760
Auto Repair ..... .... ........ • • ........ •......no
Autoalor Sale...
71
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale
• 750
Building Supplle• ... ....... .. ....... • .....550
.......... 340
Buslneaa and Buildings
Bualnesa Opportunity'
210
Bualnesa Training .. •
... • 140
........ 710
Campara &amp; Motor Homes
Complng Equipment •
• 780
• 010
Carda of Thanks
.. ...... 110
Child/Elderly Care ...........
Eloctrlcai/Rtl~gorstlon .....
.. .... 840
480
Equipment lor Rent
Excsvatlng
•
• .830
Form Equipment.
.. .............810
Farm• for Rent
430
Forma for Sale
• • 330
For leaH .. .....
.. ..... 490
For Sale ..... .... •
.... 585
For Sale or Tr••
.590
.. 580
Fruita &amp; Vet~etables
Fumlshed Rooms.... • •
.450
Ge-•1 Hauling..... •
.850
Giveaway
040
Happy Ada
050
Hay &amp; Grain. .........
..840
110
Help Wanted
Home Improvements
810
Homes lor Sale... •
.. .. 310
Household Goodo
... 510

www comics com

YAROSALE

Lorr
AND
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1-'1

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3 family sale Thur, Fn Sat
gam 6pm Just West of
Stone Harbor on St RT 588
862 Harnsburg Ad, off SR
850 July 6th &amp; 7th Desk,
Patio Furniture Bath cabi
net mens, womens &amp; kids
Rain or Sh1ne
Addison 234 Honeysuckle
Dr Wed 7/4 -Sat 7f7 g ? 3
Secllons ot Iron fence
Fn &amp; Sat Garage Sate
Beside Holiday Inn TV Car
Seat Table Kids and Adult
Clothes a little of everyth 1ng

GOOD PAYING CAREER
OPPORTUNITY· Local 011
and Gao Company looking
to fi ll position of Land man or
Land Agent m SE OH and
Western EV Ideal candidate
1s a sen starter wtth bBSic
computer knowledge strong
communicatiOn and negot•a
t•on skills who Is w1lling to
travel wlthm the reg1on
Knowledge of legal descr~p
tlon pnor &amp;ales expenence
familiarity with the region
and local courthouse are a
plus If you are Interested 1n
f1nd1ng out more about tht&amp;
rewardmg career please
contact Dan Stevenson @
740 446-6800 or fa~e re9llme
to 740-4411-6802
- - - - - , - -__,Help wanted at Darst Adult
Group Home &amp;OfTle llft1ng
7 5 shift 740-992-5023

nJmr.aw-.uuwtJLr. • Fam1ly Court Is seek1ng
applicants fir a Family Case
Huge moving sala Fn 7-6 Coor&lt;linato&lt; position Dulles
one day only Something for In dude administering the
everyone Don t miss th1s case,. management system
one 2 m1 S of tP•ams on pre tra1l meetings w1th 1111
Rt 7• The Grales
nt
II b~
ga s revieWing t es o;nvre
court, pre-medtalton screenJuJu 6&amp; 7 tt\lllt Kids &amp; edun
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cl othes
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Must be willing to travel
Stiversvllle Ad off Bashan Must be discreet and profes
Road At The McM1Ran
slonal In appearance an
Mlu lon Trl p Fund R.I... condud Reqwres a four
Frl 6th &amp; Sat 7th 9am ? year college degree 1n legal
Everything
a11 cellent stud1es SOCial work manco nd lots ot kids clolhes agement or other relevant
toys &amp; books coats &amp; l•ek:ls Must pass an NCIC
shoes Hollister Jeans &amp; background check Equal
other teen ergo g1rl clothilg Opportunity
Employer
kmg SIZe beddmg small Reply by lener of Interest
kttchen apphances some and resume to
Judge
new OOLLSI Househol d Delor~s
J
N1bert
Family
1tems car seat dress up 0 n Mason/Jackson
At 7 1 m•s of Chester pll'lk Court 200 6th Street Pomt Orlvers Co &amp; 100 Cant
Signs lots of parking
Pleasant WV 25550 No
phone calls please
Raeler, Flatbed,
Mut11 Family yard sale 97 Fr I S a t
6 &amp; 7 Desk Clerk needed at
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2007 Harnsomnlle men sslul Budget Inn 260 Jackson.
f women s
stuH cook1e P1ke look1ng tor a person
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Friday &amp; Saturday End of
588 at Rodney Lots ol NICO
ClotheJi What nots No
Tools
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Jul1 5th 6th 71h 9am-6pm S1lver and Gold Coms
5 112 mtle North of Holzer's Proolsels Gold A1ngs PreUS
Currency
of'i AI 160 Gas Cook Stove 1935
Weedeater on Wheels G1rls Sol1ta1re D1am0f'lds ·M TS
name brar-~ d cloth1ng much Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Galbpolts 740 446
more
2842
July 6 7 4 family at ROdney
l \ 11'141\ \ 11\1
COmmunity Center First one
"'I B\ II I "''
th1s year Ou1lts toys furm

1o

lure clothing

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GARAGE Sale July 6 &amp; 7 Need a loving responsi ble
Vinegar St RD 1 1/2 mile adutt to babys1t In my home
m the Racine area durmg
East of Five Pomts
the 2007"2008 school ~ear
July 6 and 7 ~om 8 00 part t1me or full lime must
._ OOP M Clothes
kniCk have references Please
knacks and more 4n94 send to PO Box 75 Aac1ne
SA 124 (Ant1qwty Oh)
Oh 45771

(

Family Oriented Carner
based 1n Canton OH needS
OTR Rdnvers to pull refnger
ated tra•lers to the South
and Eastern States

.

••perlence

Gatllpolll career COllege

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1 BOO 2t 4 0452
WWWglillpoiiM:areatcOiegecom
.~"'M~!'''~'

Col~&amp;gea

licensed Prachcal Nurses
Pleasant Valley Nurs1ng and
Rehabilitation 1s curre ntly
accepting applications lor
full t1me and per d1em
LPN s Long term care e~epe
nence preferred Must have
VN license 12 hour shifts
SceniC Hills Nurstng Center
Please
contact
Ang1e 1s cu rrently accepting appli
Cklland Director of Nurstng cat•ons for AN s and ~PN s
A.pphca!1ons must possess a
I • •
I • ·
I
oo mg or m1
current
m applicants
the State
of OhiO license,
Potenllal
CPlplu·,' L'r !hat will
should
conlact
D1ana
1
Vlir. r~ WITI-1 ~'Oll
Harless DON at (740)446
71 50 EOE

A OK·Corrals &amp; Baros
Metal Roofing Sh•nglea
Remodeling
Concrete
Decks
Pole
Barns
Garages Free est1mates Call
304-633-1230

Lawn mowtng Rates by the
JOb, not the hour Fre e
Estimates Call Paul t&gt;
(304)675·2940

Earn S8 50/hr FT
~ Wrc~lv Bo1us

sss ss sssss ss ssssss s
SJOO 00
HIRIN G BONUS
ssssssssss~ssssssss

lrilll1 111 (1 CI&lt;1SS beginS
July 9th
CALL N0W 1

1-888·1 MC-PAYU

The Cratg Group needs out
gomg Oh1o res1dents to help
Wllh statew1de cam pa1gn
Each person w111make 1 to 2
dollars per Slgnalure &amp; up to
$500 weekly Call 740 25 1
7591 &amp; ask fOI' Ch r~s or
e mall
dbanas®cralg
group com
Truck Ortver w1th Class A
COL Local Hauling Moo Fn,
home every n1gh! Reliable
responsibl e mature Send
resume to Dnver Resume
PO Box 655 Galllpol s Oh
4563 t

1-858-- 162· 729iH

Job ext. 1911
•'1\';\'i

.rntor:r:o ron. com

Mason County EMS 1s
accepfmg sppiiCBl1ons for
Med1cs and EMrs for more
mformatron ca/1 675-6134

We offer Great
Employment
Opportunities
Plus a $300
Hiring Bonusl
You could make calls you
belteve 1n lor many
Conservative Poht1cal
Organ1zattoos

Overbrook Center is cu"ent
ly accephng applicatiOns for
STATE TESTED Nu rsmg
As&amp;tstants Full Ttme and
Plua we offer
Part T1me positions avail
• Full time potlllona
able Interested applicants
40 hrolwk
can p1ck up an application or • Up to S8.50r'ttr + weekly
contact Hollie Bumgarner
bonus potential
LPN Staff Development
• $300 Hiring Bonut
Coordinator
0740·992
• COmplttt btntfltt
8472 M F 9a-5p at 333 Page
pockogt
St Mlddepon Oh EOE &amp; a • Pilei vocttlorv!tolldoys
participant or the Drug Free
' Friendly, profotolont l
Workplace Program
ofllct environment
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OTPaid Tram1ng
Vacations FTIPT
1 866 542 1531
USWA

I

Call today tor more
Information about starting
a new career Wllh
lnloCiolon
Hln-46:H247
oxt 2301

For llstmgs 800 559 4109
11 1709
1 possibly 2 Br House 1n
New Haven $325/month
S325/deposu No Pets
(304)882-3652

Neighborhood Ad App ro~e
t200 sq ft 3 acres m/1 2 BA
2 full baths wlwh1rlpool tubs
large LA Ask1ng 87 500
74()..446-7029

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__

Hor.mo

FOR SALE
0 Down even with less lhan
perfect credit Is available on
this 3 bedroom 1 bath
home Corner lot fireplace
modern kitchen jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month 740 367 7129
Beautiful M1ddlepon home!
3BA, 2BA lull basemenl1
H2 car garage With a room
above Many NEW features!t
Must see th•&amp; one• 740 4161548

•

tu.J'.,

•

•

H ou;rnOill

Gooo;

Apar tment available now
Atverbend Apts New Haven
VN Now accephng apphca
lions fo r Hud Subsk:l1zed
one Bedroom Apts UU!h1es
md uded Based on 30% of
adjusted Income
Call
(304)882 3121 available for
Sen1or and Disabled People
Equal Hous1ng Opportunity Pol e Barns 3Dx 4 0~e 1 0
Dell \18red &amp; Erected $8 595
Apartment for rent 1 2 plus Sales Tax Call
Bdrm remodeled new car (937)718 t4 71 wwwnatJon
pet stove &amp; fn g wa ter Wldepolebarns.com
sewer trash pd Middleport
$425 00 No pe{S Rei Woodworking Tools Jet
reqwred 740 843 5264
Delta and Craftsman also
Beautiful Apta at Jackson Walnut and Cherry lumber

·------=----

52

Westwood

r___

lphzo:"ne;..;.304
;..,;6":7~5 ot22"'4.;.6 _

o

FARM
EQuiPMIM

'-'--'-"-__,~-.,.--.,.::

In Pomeroy House for rentt 3
bath newly remod
eled total ele;ctrtc 740 843
cS-264
_ __,-_,----,l arge 4 bedroom house 1n
Pomeroy very clean newly
remodeled new cab1nets
new carpel (140)949 2303

Bd 2

-------Garage Apart

Mason l br lully

turn shed uh rhes pard $450/mo
$3501dep References 304 593

8167 or :J04 593 8107 Aller 5pm

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at V1 llage
Manor and R1verskt e Apts n
Middl eport from $327 to
$592 740-992 5064 Equal
MOBFORII.Enf!.~IDi
tu.r'il
Housmg O pportu mt~ Th s
Institu tiOn s an Equal
Opportumly Prov1der and
1 BA DillOn Ad GallipOliS Employer
Includes water/trash WID
slave and fndge a d1118Ue Immaculate 2 bedroom
set wood fl oors covered apar!menl New carpet &amp;
porch axa bldg $385/mon+ cabinets freshly pamted &amp;
$315 dep call256 1106
decora ted W/0 hookup
Beautiful country settmg
14x70 very n1ce 3 BR 2BA
pr vacy 1n country Me•gs Must see to apprec1ate
$400/mo 1614)595 7773 or
School diSt $475 + dep I 800·798 4686
859-806-4354 or 740-742
3046 Available July 1
Middleport Beech St 2 br
16x80 Tra 11er 3br 2ba fu rn1shed apartment ulllll•es
located on 1s acres tn PI patd deposit &amp; references
Pleasant
$ 5SO/month no pets (740)992 0165
$550/deposH 740 416 3342 Middleport North 4th Ave 2

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" I 1\\ /1 I "

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2 Br
AJC Very mce br furnished apartment
t998 Claylon Spmt II Lots of Johnson Mob le Home Park deposit &amp; references no
elllras e~ecel l ent con ditiOn 74().446-2003 or 446 1409 pels (740)992 0165
Must be moved Call 949
3 BR 14x70 Addav1lle New 2BA apartments
2698 after 4 p m
School d•slnct 740 367 Washerldr;ter
hookup
t998 Redman &amp; 2 acres 3 7762 or 367 7272
stove/relngerator tncluded
bd &amp; 2 baths off New L1ma
Also umts on SA 160 Pels
m Rutland for sale or rent Beauhtul Rtver V1ew 1n Welcomet (740)44 1 0194
Kanauga Ideal lor 1 or 2
74().992·35t4
people references No pets New Haven 1 Br Furll4shed
2007 Clayton
Loc 5 mt from Gav n Apt has WID No Pets Dep
5BR/38A 2000 Sq Ft
1740)441 0181
&amp; references 740 992 0165
Starling at $33 00/sp ft I
Mob• le homes for re nt Tara
Townhouse
NO DOWN PAYMENT
M1ddleporl area no pets
Apartments Very Spac1ous
to qualified buyers
1740)992 5858
2 Bedrooms CIA 1 1/2
The Home Show
Remodeled 2br 1 ba Ba th Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Ashland , KY
Hartford WV $375/month Pool PallO Start $425/Mo
888·928·3426
Aeferences / Depos t No Pets Lease Plus
2007 Doublewide
reqUired No Pets 304 576- Secunty Depos41 Reqwed
1740)446 3481
3BR 2BA
4037
Delivered &amp; Set $39 999
Tw1n A1vers Tower s accept
AI'AKI'MFXIS
The Home Show
rng applicAtions tor wa 1t1 ng
FORRf.Nr
Ashland Ky
list for Hud subsized 1 br
Toll free 888 928 3426
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments apartment for
the
, - - - - : -:-:-:-:-:-:-- for Rent Meigs county In elderlyfd•sabled call 675
Great used 2005 3 bedroom town No Pets Deposit 6679
Equal
Hous1ng
t6~e80 Wllh v1nyVshlnQie ReqUired (740)992 5174 or =O;;
pp~o;,rt;;;u;;;
nty
~~--...,
Must sell Only$25995w•th (740)441 0110
SPACE
del•\lery Call (740)385 4367
1 and 2 bedroom apart
FOR R FNI
New 3 Bedroom homes from
$2t 4 36 per month Includes ments furntshed and unfur
many upgrades delivery &amp; mshed and houses 1n Commerc1al bu1ldrng For
set up (740)38 5- 2434
Pomeroy and Middleport Aanr 1800 ~ u are tee t off
.,.--'--'-~.,.--.,.-,--- securit~ deposit reqwred no street parkmg Great loca
t1on 1 749 Th1rd Avenue 1n
N1ce used 3 bedroom hOme pels 740 992 2218
Gall1pol
s Re nt $350/mo
vnyllshmgte Wtll help WJih 1 BA Apt WID HOOkups
Call Wayne (404)456 3802
740
385
4367
delivery
Owet wooded locati on
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE Free mternel www spring Pr~me commercial space for
Program $0 Down If you va l ley properties com rent at Spnngvailey Plaza
own Land or use Fam•ly (740)339 0362
Cai1645 2192
Land We own the Bank your
1 BR mce walk to Wal Mart
W ANffll
Approved 606-474-6380
Utilities pakt Dep req No
IU RtNr
Lors &amp;
pels $550/month 245 5555 ~~---liliiiiiriiolll!lr
.o. GE
or 441 5105
Ac.--ur
~
.~
LAND Q.W NERS NEED
2 bedroom apartment down EXTRA FARM INCOME?
2 Acre Bldg lot on State town Pomeroy $150 plus We have responsible sports
Route 7 304 675 4421
utd1t1es (740)992 7511
men lookmg to lease huntmg
property 1n this area
Horse
Prop
401180 2BR apts 6 mt from Holzer M dwest Trophy leases Inc
lnsulated&amp;heated barn w/ 10 Water/trash/sewer
pa1d (304 )532 6015 or 1 800
box stalls/ 4 BA llv1ng quar $400/mo+dep
740 682 698 1073
ters/43 acres 446 3844 UM 9243 or 988 6 t 30

i

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. ~

Full Size Mattress &amp; BIS
$180 Sofa &amp; Loveseat sets
$400 Dnve 8 little save a
lot Mollohan 202 Clark
A HIDDEN TREASURE' Chapel Ad Bidwell
l aurel
CQmmons
Mlscn.LANEous
Apartments Largest m lhj
MfllCHANDlSE
area• Beautifully renovaled L,~--iiiiiiiliiiriiiiiiilii_.l
th roughout mcludmg brand
$500 Coupon
new kllchen and bath
Hot Tlrb Outlet II
Startmg at $405 Call today!
Top Ouatrty/Warranty Mlion
1304)273·3344
Flea Mkt SIS 606 326 0777
Accepttng applicat ons lor 2
BA 1 BA apt s!ove fr dge
JET
WID mcluded Water &amp;
AERATION MOTORS
Garbage pa1d No pets very Repatred New &amp; Rebr.ull In
n1ce clean &amp; attrachve Stock Gall Ron Evans 1
$500/mo 1st mo + $500 800 537 ~528
Sec dep required Avatlable
7/16/07 Apply w1thm 1743
Centenary Rd Gallipolis No
Ph one Calls Pl ease

Eotateo

Home grown Sweet Com
available at McKean Farm
Centenary Ad &amp; W•Uiam An n
Motel J I 3 446 9442
1 'in I ... I 1'1'1 11 . . ,
,\. I I ' I ...., I 4ll t..

36 Mos
ava•lable now on John
Deere z Trak Zero n.ns &amp;
5 99% Fixed Rate on John
Deere GalOre Carmichael
Equ1pment (740) 446 241 2
4506 Deutz 45 HP 3 Cyl
Diesel lndep PTO clutch
wet lines, good shape
Ask1ng $3800 256-6309
K1eler Bu11tM Valley BisonHorse
and
livestock
Trailers Loadmax·
Gooseneck
Dumps
&amp;
Utt llty Aluma Alumi num
Trailers B&amp;W Gooseneck
H1tches
Trailer Parts
Carmtchael
Trailers
(740)446 241 2

1981 F 100/F 150plck up 2
w d 5 Ol eng1ne 8 cylinder
3 sp auto cap on bed trail
er hitch, duel gas tanks
power brakes power steer
mg 1 owner runs goOd
92 000 mtles eskmg pr1ce
$1 000 phone (740)985
4409

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200 1 Harle ~ Davidson
Sponsler 8fl3 4200 m11es
Metal Flake Blue $4800
1740)245 5984 (740)645

:

Jet Ski Yamaha Wave
Runner like new Garage
kept less SOhrs wfC011er &amp;
Tra1ler $1 200
304 675
3564
- - - -- - - One man Bass boat • trolhng
molor + trailer $375 OBO
379 2706

.__IMPRiiiiiiOiiVE11f!\115iii-iii-'

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Yamaha v Slar 11 00
S•lverado
W•ndshteld
Saddlebags Back. rt:~st Lots 1988 NomadCamper tw1n
more 7K miles $5800 cunks &amp; front bed Excellent
(740)245 5934
cond1tlon Bath/w tub&amp;
shower Pull behmd 3dog
"2005 H D Fat Boy custom frick ~ mill make an offer
maroon
w/emboSsed 949 21 15
4x4
flames 1 of 200 made aoo
FOil SALE
m1les smce new pnce 95 Coachman 24ft 5th
$19 000 080 call for wheeler wlhitch 1nd D1n1ng
1995 Ford F 250 Pick up details 74Q-949 22 t 7
shde Canopy Sleeps 4-6
truck good mechanical
Very nlcet Pulls wl 112 ton
8oA1N &amp; MoroRS $5900 Galllp area 740
cond 5 9 l 5 speed trans
I'OR SAJ£
$4000 F1rm 740-949 2127
245 92 14 or 645 0873

---1999 Mercury Moootaneer
4WD 102 000 miles Exc
Cond
Sunroof Power
leath er Seats
$6200
740 45-0344 after 5

88 Wellcrafl 20ft V 8 350
Mercrulser tandem axle
trmler wlbrakes good cond
740 256 6160

AT
CHESHIRE
Nomad-North Trml 34 With
hyd
E~etended section
Camper nearly as new
$12 500 Neg Call David
(606)571 9446 Russell KY

Profeulonal Surveyor
No. 8044, October 15,
1998 Subject to all
leases, eaeementa and
rights of way of record
No opinion of title nor
cortlflcatlon as to
accuracy
of
tho
deocrlpUon Ia given by
the preporer of this
lnatrumenf. The above
cleocrlptlon
Ia
tho
same 11 the aurveyod
cleocrlptlon as pre·
pared by George F
Seymour,
Ohio
Proleoalonal Surveyor
No. 8044, October 15,
1998.
Parcol Number 0900407.010
Current Ow~or . Harold
L Adamtet al
Property at 63375 St
Rt 124, Long Bottom,
OH
PPI 09.Q0407 010
Prior
, Doed
References
Volume
91 , Page 75
Appralaod at $65,000
Tormo of Sole. Cannot
be oold for 1111 than
213rds of lila appraised
value. 10% down on
day of aale, cooh or
cartlfled check, bal·
ance due on conflrma·
lion of ..le
The appraisal did not
Include an lnte~or
examination of the
house.
Robert E
Beegle,
Malgs County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Lorner Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
120 E 4th St 8th Floor
Cincinnati, OH 45242·
4007
513-241-3100
(7) 4, 11, 18

1831.50 feet !rom the
Northweat corner of
aald
Section
16,
Townohlp • 7, Range
14,
thence leaving aald
centerline and along
the a..umtd East' line
ol eald 4 1/2; acres
mora or loss tract
South 13 tlag. 15' 05"
Weal peaelng through
a 518" Iron pin with I.D
Cap let at a dlatance
of 20.00 feet and going
a total dlotance of
506 24 feet to a 518"
Iron pin with I D Cap
set:
Thence leaving said
Eaot line North 81 tlag
28' 23"Wset a distance
of 91 .00 fnt to a 518"
Iron pin with I.D Cap
set,
Thence North 04 deg
52' 28' West a distance
of 95.42 feet to a point
In the centerline of a
Creek,
Thence along ..td cen·
lerllne tho following
Three couroeo.
1 North 09 dog. 52' 04'
Weat a distance of
96 99 feet to a point,
2 North 15 dog 29' 1 5"
Eaot a dlotanco of
180 83 feet to a point;
3 North 25 cittg 08' 35"
Ellet a dlotanco of
123.391eet to a railroad
aplke let In the center·
line of said Township
Rood 142;
Thence leaving the
centerline
of Bald
Creek and along the
centerline
of said
Township Road 142
South
tlag 1 1' 20'
Eaot a dlatance of
123.07 feet to tho prlnclplo point of begin·
nlng containing 1 526
acrea more or ~•••
aubjoct to all legal
eaoementa end right of
wey
Beorlnga arl! aBSumod
and are for the dolormlnatlon of anglo&amp;
only.
All Iron plna are 518' x
30" rebar with pl.. tlc
ID
Cap
stamped
'CTs-&amp;844
The above description
was prepared from an
actual survey made on
tho 21st dey of May,
2002 by C Thomas
Smtih,
Ohio
Profeaslonal Surveyor

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncon&lt;lltlonal llfettme guar
antee l ocal references tur
nlshed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterproof~r~g

Get AJump

on
SAVINGS

Bore Goats full blooded &amp;
percentage The price Is
nght 367 7755

:F"'or-S~a~le 13-m-on-t:-h-o:-ld-:C:-::
oll

r

_, $200 304 895·3943

SHERIFF SALE

c- Number 07CVD1 5
Countrywide
home
Loans
Plaintiff
va Harold L. Adams et
at
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Melga County,
Ohio
In purouanct of an
order of sala to me
directed from said
court In the above anti·
lltd action, I will
axpo.. to sale at publie auction on I~ front
stepo of the Malga
County Court Houao
on Friday, August 10,
2007 et 10:00 a.m., of
.. ld clay, the following
described real ntate
Sltuat.d In the County
of Meigs In the State of
Ohio
and In the
Townahlp of Oqvo, and

bounded

and

described as follows:
- - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - Being a pari of tho
Auction
Auction
tract of land that Is
now or formerly In the
name of Hope Drake as
recorded In Official
Record 47 at Page 539,
Meigs
County
Recorder'• Offlcs, said
tract being part of 100
acre Lot 124, T3N,
R11W, Olive Townahlp,
Molga County, State of
Ohio, and being more
particularly doacrlbed
as follows
Beginning at on Iron
pin found on the
Southweat Corner of a
1 DO Acre Tract as
recorded In Official
Record 51 at Page 875
and
the Grantor's
Corner; thence along
the Grantor's line tho
following two coursoa
RIDD ER . NO RESERVES 1!
1 East a distance of
8 room 1664 sq Jt Ranch burll m 1990 142.53 leet ,Jo an Iron
pin found ~ and , 2
lf« ttu r•os 3 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs central vacuum
North a distance of
fimshed wal k out base ment detached
133.50 feet to a 518" x
electnc heal pump forced alf olleal and
30" Iron pin with a
a1r super knchen w/h1ckory cat1i11Jel s, l
plastic ldonllflcatlon
low m.untenance vm; I s1dmg Th1s house
cap HI,
on laJge one acre lot wlcounty wateJ and Thence with a new llno
"''"'''· located on qu1 e1 scemc road yet IS close
through tho Grantor's
shoppmg and 1deal spot to ra1se chtldren
land the following
three courses· 1 North
IHo"''" Js m move m &lt;:ond1t1on
ESTATE TERMS : Open House 81 degrees 28 minutes
52 seconds east a dl•
~~~;:~~{· July I , 2·4 pm 10% non re fundabl e tsnce of 171 20 feet to
I&lt;
due day of aucuon Bat m 30 days A
a 518" x 30" Iron pin
bu yers fee added to f 1n al b1d to generat e
wHh a plastic ldenUfl·
contra&lt;:t pncc
cation cap eat 2. South
RST QUA LITY AUCTION &amp; REALTY, a distance of 358 86
I Mo,dinla, OH (330) 4 16 J 119
feet to a 518' x 30 ' Iron
pin with a plastic lden·
~~~s;~&lt;;~w::w~,w:waltmMu ctJOilSite com
tlflcatlon cep ae~ and,
I Broker/ 4.ucuoneer
3 Weal a distance of
llliOIJSIEiliOILD· BeautJtul 9 pc Queen A nn
311 85 feet to a 518" x
SUJ t&lt; (Cherry Fmtsh) b) Ashley l um
30 • Iron pin with a
5 pc chrome d1 net set, Ktmball organ 2 plsatlc ldontlflcatlon
l recl i11er&gt; co flce lable &amp; end tables, ova l hbrary
cap
set
on
the
full SIZe bed 3 pon able color TV's Grantor's Uno and the
l wi'rcrrtotes. VCR lg upn ght Kcl Freezer
easl rlght-of·way line
I Mayt;Jg washer &amp; dryer 4 pc fancy patiO sel , 5 of 30.0 foot oaumenf
metal patio set porch s"'mg. prcmc tabl e fo r Drake Subdivision
aa
recorded
In
pes of Fenton· v.tscs baskets bells &amp;
Envelope
78,
1henee
r lc holden; B lue Fenton Buds Wh1 te
along the Grantors
lamp Bell Collectmn Fruit Jars,
line and the said east
J!gt!!-of-way
line, ngrtlt
system
qualnyglltcJ
cookware
applianLcs
ltnneus.1gnhrtot &amp;
&amp;
a distance of 200 00
s l e~gh bells mtlk can Wah DISne)
feet to the point of
M1cke) Mouse &amp; others, old books
beginning, containing
2 000 acres, more or
l woO&lt;lell 1cc cream maker sleds b1&lt;:ycle built
less, and aubjoct to all
life Slyle l 100 treadmrll , gas gnll hand
eaaementa of record
vtse Cmftsman 10" table saw Century
All 518' x 30 ' Iron pins
amp welder. Homehle blower 120110 BTU
whh plastic lden!Hicaladders, rotoullcr fert spreader Aymo
tlon caps sot ara
MTD 12 H P 38 cut lawn lraclor
stamped "Seymour &amp;
Associates ' The bear·
lngo used In lhe abova
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:
descr ibed tract wore
dorlved from a prevl·
ous survey as racofd.
ad In Official Record 51
at Page 675 and are for
1·304·773·5441: OR 1·304·773·5785
tho determination of
OWNER: ADRIAN LATHEY
anglea only Th e above
L ICensed and bonded '"the State of Oh10
described tract was
ON HOUSEHOLD CASH OR
'surveyed by George F
W i lD
Saymour,
Ohio

l

l

02 Yamaha V Star 6500
miles $1500 In extras I ke
new Askmg $5200 740
645 2399

5 m1n1ature horses 1 stal
lion 2 mares. 1 colt and 1
mtmatu re dwarf lemate Call
381M1670

EllmView
Apartments

I

14:&lt;70 2 bedroom 2 full bath
newly remodeled New cen
tra l a1r un1t and furnace call
74Q-367-7143 or 740 794
0022 $9 000

~===ro=lo=AN==~

HI 'I I " I ' I I

MOBFOILE
R S~~

3 Ams &amp; bath WID hookup Aespons1ble TN hunter look
clean No pets 446 1519
1ng to lease your land or
farm 1or hunting Please call
4AM &amp; Bath stove fndge 423 746 7045 or ema11
ullht•es pa1d upstairs 46 rdavls@MUSFIBER com
Ohve
St
No pets
$450fmonth 446-3945

Dnve, from $365 to $560
Pm
___
HAGRAJNY
&amp;
740 446 2568
Equal
FOR
SALE _.~l
Housmg Opportu nity Th ts
InStitUtion IS an Equal
Black La b Ltvestock Feed shelled corn
Opportunlly Prov1der and A:KC Reg
Puppies $1 50 00 740 742
Employer
$5 20/50 lb &amp; horse crunch
2966 If no answer please $7 22/50 lb
&amp; more
leave
message
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments CKC D~c hs hu n d puppies
and/or small hou ses FOR t st shots &amp; wormed Ready
RENT Call (740)441 11t t 1o go July 61h $400 304 895
For rent or for sale 2 BA lor apphcatton &amp; mfo rmat1on 3617 after 5pm
Nice Remodel ed Home 1n
town, No Pets Renovated
CKC Toy Rat Terriers Choc 1990 Chevrolet Lumina
All new carpet
Call
&amp; Wh1te 1st shot s ta•ls Euro 2 door 1992 GMC
(740)446•7425
d\)Cked Ask1ng $250 379- 4~e4 S1erra 304 675 2929
For Rent Bnck hou se •n •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments 9515 or 645·6857
1990 Toyota Cel1 ca GT Call
MerceiVIIIe 1BA A.pt all ulll •Central heat &amp; AJC
Mml
Dachshund
pups
vet
7
_
4:-0c:2_5_6-~1-77_6-:-:---:-:-:­
1t1es &amp; cable paid 1n Crown •Washer/dryer hookup
checked shots &amp; wormed 1999 Chevy Monte Carlo
Clly (740)256 8132
-c'--'---"'=::-:--,--,-- •Tenant pays electriC
(Aegtslered) 7wks old $125 158 000 miles Loaded $304
HUO HOMES! 4bd only
741 0 388·0318 Mom&amp; Dad 675-7934
(304)884!·3017
$155fmo 3bd $181/mo
on Prem•ses
2004 Ford Mustang GT 5
More 1 4bd homes a"¥11
Purebred Shelt1e $150 00 speed leather 52km les leat
able 5% dn 20 yrs @ 8%
For hsl1ngs 1 800 559 4109
each F1rst shots &amp; wo rmed her, loaded to many extras
X F1 44
no papws 740 6911-0475 to list Call (740)379-2296

Upd ated 3 BR 1 BA home
n Pomeroy wtlh newer fu r
~ce water heater plumb
ng &amp; electriC Call Sandy
Collms Sole &amp; Bloom
Realtors 59~ 9202 $25 900

i

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

34 bedroom home In
Syracuse $500 plus u1111t1es
(740)992·7511

In town out of
flood plane Brick Home
Excellent l ocation 6 Acre
Ap~e 4000 sq ft SRms 3 Br 2
1/2 Bth 2 f1 re Places 2
Garages Lots ol Storage
Details Ca/1740-992 4197
Newly buill home •n Green
Twp on Kmg Ad off

:o:H;e:nng:::;:;:==~
MONEY

f.A&amp;J Cleamng Serv1ce
Bus1ness and Res•dent1al
ltcensed m OhiO and WV
Call 30 4-444 4694

3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse $500/monlh +
depos1t No Pets (304)6755332 weekends 740 591
0265

~tlddlepon

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SH
tNG CO re commends
that you do business with
people you kn ow and
NOT to send man~
through the mall un111 you
have 1nveshgated the

SE:RVJCE;

2 Bedroom House 1 bath 7
m las
Rt
2
North
$400/month $300/depoSit
No Pets 304-675-2381

HUD HOMESI 4bd only
$155/mo 3bd $181 /mo
More 1 4bd homes ava1!
able 5% dn 20 yrs @ 8%
For listings 1 800 559-4109
x F144

Professionally
Clean
Olfl ce / Housecleanl n g
Reasonable
Rates
References (304)675-2208

I'RoFlNOONAI

1302 Hogg St 2br House
Central Heat/AC 1 year
l ease No Pets Secunty
DepoSit T1 304-675-4030

For sale/land contract 3 BR
house m Gal lipolis W/D
connectiOn $1500 down
$400/mo or rent $475fmo
Also 1 BA 1n Gallipolis $750
down $200fmo or rent
$250/mo.Call Wayne 404
456-3802 for mfo

Mchela s Oaycare now
accept1ng ages 18 months
to 13 yrs Hours Mon Wed
Fn Bam-tipm Tues &amp; Thli'S
6am
to
Spm
Rutland!Harrl sonvllle area
call 1740)698 0214 ask lor
Michele

r

$155/mol Buy 4bd HUD
home! 5% dn 20yrs @ 8%

8953

l awn-Care Serv1ce, Mow1ng
&amp; Tnmmu'IQ Call (740)44t ·
1333 or (740)645 0546

Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO DIVISIOn of
Financial
lnst•tuUon s
Olf1ce of Consumer
Affwrs BEFORE you ref•
nance yo ur home or
obla1n a loan BEWARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments ol
fees or insurance CaM lhe
ffice of Consu mer
Affairs toll free at 1 866
278.0003 to learn •f the
mortgage broker or
tender
•s
properly
licensed (Th1 s IS a publiC
serv1ce announcement
from the Oh•o Valley
Pulj•sh•ng Company)

HOUSF.S

fOR

.
Attention I
l ocal company offenng "NO
DOWN PAVME,H" programs lor you to buy your
home 1nstead ol renlmg
• 100'%, financing
• Less than perlect credit
accepled
Paymenl could be the
For sale or rent 3BA 2 story same as rent
house Sale $68500 Rent Mortgage
Locators
$6 50 + $500/dep Call 441 (740)367-()000

JiliJJIIII

R&amp;J Trucking Leadmg The
Way R&amp;J Truckmg now
H1nng a~ our New Haven,
WV Terminal For Reg1onal
Hauls Dump 01v 1 year
OTA vertflable exp Call 1
800 462 9365 ask for Kent

0

REm
iwlll!llll!liriiiiiiiiiiiro_.l

new1papar will not
knowingly acc:ept
edvertl18menlt tor real
Htlte which lain
I 'violation of the law Our
readers are he reby
Informed that all
dwelling• advertised In
thla newapeper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

Member Ace red ling

1

rl

This

Wanted to Do Care g1ver
Will care tor elderly m thetr
home
t6 yrs exp
Thomas
Available
Public Health Nurse Position References
at the Mason County Health 1740)3811-9783 or (740)591
Department for Reg•stered 9034
Nurse Oeacllne lor apphca
A -·· . . .....
- - - - - - - - !ton extended to July 10
Apphcahon and JOb descrlp
liOn mlil¥ be obtained at 2t6
5th Street EOE

Prime Inc

www pnme1nc com

I

w~ ~.,rM__INSTR_Sc!looui_ucn
__
ON_

Overbrook Center located
0333 Page St Middleport
Ohk» is pklaaed to aMounce
we will be holding an STNA
Cl6sa scheduled lor July
Hours wtU be Sam-4 30pm II
you are Interested fn JOining
our friendly and dedicated
staff please stop by our
front office Man Fri 9am
5pm ahd fill out an appllca
Uon Full time and part time
positions available to those
qualified Indivi duals com
pteting the class App licants
must be dependable (atten
dance Is a must) team play
ers with positive attitudes to
join us In providing outstand
1ng quality care to our res•
dents If you have a n~ ques
tiQns 1 contact
Hollie
Jolin Song Ford Uncoln Bumgarner, LPN Staff
Mtn:ul"f
Develoj)l:r(ent Coordmator
Has a posttlon open for an Cl74p.992-6472 Overbrook
Aulomotlve Technldan We Center iB an E 0 E and a
are looking for an lndlvklual partlctpant at the Drug Free
that has a well fOIJnded
Wofki&gt;laca Program
knowledge about automotive repair Foo:t Motor
Company training will be DFIIVERS·
NO EXPERIENCE?
provided and I• on going
HIED TRAINING.?
We ollor a cornpetlllve com
pensatton plan and our ben- Company Sponsor!td fr8 tmng
ell! packagalncludes health "Gee your COL In Juat a
Fow Short Woekt
Insurance, 401K retirement,
•1.t Oty lnaurance
disability 1naurance and life
Start your new carHJ
1nsurance tf you are tired of
Todoyt
w0fk1ng for someone that ts
88H11·2778
not workmg for you or want
www jolncrat cam
to better yourself contact
CAST
VAN EXPEDITED
SerVIce Manager Jim

800-248-7735

IRS JOBS
$18 46-$32 60/hr now hlr
mg PaJd Tra•mng IS prov1d
•Late Model FrelghHiner ed For appltcatlon and free
Condoo
government JOb tnfo, call
•No New York City or
Amencan Assoc ot labor 1Canada
913 599-8244 2._/hrs emp
•95% no touch fralghl
serv
•Medlc411 1ns 1 401 K
•Homettme moat
Job Title Towboat D1esel
weekends
Mechamc m1111mum 40
•$500 Sign an bonus
hours a week Monday
through Fnday wllhng to
work overtime some hght
Must have a Cllll A COL electriCal abilities oo call
with 2 years
twice a month expenence
req
uired E~ece lle nt benefit
Call Bob at 800-652-2362
package 401 K available
Mon Fn 8am-4pm
pa1d holidays company pen
Fruth Inc Is seek1og an st on .pa1d vacatton, Blue
assoc1ate to work tn the Cross/Blue Shield Medical
warenouse Ouahf ed candi VISion Included Dental plan
dares must have a 11arld drN Bonuses Please contact
ers license be able to lift at M1ke Gray at Campbell
least 80lbs on a reg ular Transportal1on Company at
bast&amp; have a h1gh school 30&lt;'-675-4545
diploma or equivalent, and IF=:Sa;:;ole::o:=Poo;;=:=
:;1=:u':'
on
: ="'il
be able to tolerate extreme
temperatures tf lntereS1ad
An outolandlng opportu·
please mall your ruume to
nlly lor the rlghl pereon.
Fruth Corporate Office Attn
Prefer aome sale&amp; expeHuman
Resourc11
rience but wm consider
Warehouae Poal11on RA1
possibility of training
SOx 332 Point Pleasan1 WV
Ideal ca ndidate Ortar 5
25550 No phOne calla
day work week
please!
Excellent benellt pkg
General laborers needed
Contact
Jar the Gallipolis area pay
Carolyn Murdock
rate 18 $8 hr Shift 6 OOam·
Office Admin
Contact
Lisa
2 30pm
Mor&gt;Fn (740)-3093
Caudill Kelly Serv1ces
or email resume to
(
_
7401353 7785
r7600ctayton net
'--'----'--TOMATO P1ckers Needed to schedule an Interview.
No Walk Ins Please
247-3901 or 247 2165
·Weekly Ply
'$ 40 Pllr Mile/All Milos

I

Spnng Cleamng Sale LIII!IIII!IIII!IIII!IIII!IIII!IIII!I.,J
across from Addav•lte School Sat only 9 ?
HIO WORKERS NEEDED
Yard Sale 818 1st Ave Rear Assemble crafts
wood
on Fn 718 Sat 7{7 from 9am •terns To $480Jwk Mater~als
5pm
prov•ded Free tnformat1on
pkg 24Hr 801 428 4649
4
YARD SAI.Ea
Poft.tnlOYIMmni.J: . A 011 &amp; Gas Broker
lwoiioiiiiiiiiiiioiiriiriiiiiiiiiiir' Company 15 looking for an
admm ass! for the ~ H 1 pol1 s
3
Famtly
yard
off1ce Cand1dates should be
sale Fn &amp;Sat July6&amp;7 9 00
sell starters and posses
AM
55S
2nd
Ave Mtddleport Household good organ1ZBt1onal Skills
prof1c1ent m Word Excel and
1tems ctothes baby furniture
Outlook l&lt;nowleclge of land
4
yard
sales descnpttons and t1tle exp •s
Twp Ad 4041Bahr Ad 3 Mt N a plus Must have a h1gh
of Chester ott Rt 7 July 7th diploma and some college
preferred
Cloth1ng a'JOO per~en mals ? expenence
Please cau Andrea Healy at
7 4&amp;5 SR248
Chester 2 740 446-6800 or fax to 740
story yellow housa on left 448 6802
top of hill Scrubs Infant girls
clothes boys e 8 pack &amp; An E~ecellent way to earn
money The New A.von
play swlnge,walker toys
Call Manlyn aa..-882·2645
Friday Ju~ 6 8 Ill? Rt 7 2
miles nortf1 of Chester End AVONI All Areaal To Buy or
tabl e&amp; King size bed nlc Sell Snirley Spears 304675 1429
nacs 101&amp; of tnickens

r

~

Cl 2007 by NEA, Inc.

or

riO tiJlu&gt;

'
John Sang Ford Uncoln
Men:UI"f
Need! three individuals
that are lnter&amp;Bted In a
career u an Automotive
Consullant We are looking
lor lnOMduala thai are out
Qolng 8011 motivated and
protesmonel We have one
of the bes1 compensation
plans In the Industry and a
beneflla package thai has
health Insurance 401 K
retirement disability and life
Insurance If you want to
ears an excellent IMng and
better yourself contact Pat
Hill or Brian Ross

Found on June 29 on

Gartleld Ave Male chocolate
Conoeal &amp; Cony Training, Lab , no collar/tags 446NRA Cart lns1 , Bam 07107 0$81
Mercervtlle Fire Dept , --:-:::-::-::-::---:---:---:--.,.
(740)256-e514 Email
LOST DOG· Small Greg &amp;
s1arl&lt;ey01nbox oom
White Female Dog Lost
near 3ro /we, Gallipolis Sun

_.I

lor.o_tlllu&gt;_W_ANIUJ
_

R I \ I \I ""

1St

O..Crlptlon • I nclude A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• lndude Phon• Numbar And AdciNu When Need.ct
• Adl Should Run 7 Day•

\ \ \ t i l '\11 \II '\ I "

Property for sale located 1n
Spnng Fteld Twp l eft Fork
Ad C1ty school d•stnct being
appro~e 27 Acres more or
less W111sell as a whole or
d1v1de Rural water available
$75 000 740 245 5060

All real eltate advertlllng
In this new1paper 11
subject to the Federal
Fair HOUIIng Act of 1968
which makH It IUegal to
advertlae any
preference, limltatlbn or
dlacrlmlnaUon baled on
race, color, rellg•on aex
familial atatul or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon '

• st.rt Vour.Acll Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete

*POLICIES*

55 acres more or less
$69 000 Call 740 256 9247

Local company ofte r1ng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams for you to buy your
home Instead of renting
• 100% f1nanang
• Less than perfect cretllt
accepted
• Payment co uld be the
same as re r:~t
Mortgage
Locators
(740)387 0000

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NO'riCE;I)

Wgrd Ads

4 acres+ located at 9617 SA
775 w/water and etec
hookup for house plus barn
and sm bldg Paved dnve
way Ask1ng $21000 245
5145 Senous offers only

3bd
GALLIPOLIS
Foreclot urel
Buy for
$50 9001 Only $404/mo 5%
dn 20yrs @ 8% For 11sbn gs
call ~00 559 4109 ICF254
Tra1ler lot tor rent Ph
(740)446 7834
Anentlont

l\egt~ter
TO Place
\ll:rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To
992-2157
675-5234

I

-rhe Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~l~~Jj~' ~tereo

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO. #66

Public tJollce

n

SHERIFF SALES
CASE
NUMBER
07CV019
JP
Morgan
Chasa
Bank NA Trustee
Plolntlff vs
Susan Lyn Joneo at al
Defendanta
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuanc~ of an
ordor of ealo to me
directed from said
court In tho above entl·
tlod action, I will
expose to sale at pub- 16844.
lie auction on tho front Current Owner Susan
steps of the Meigs Lyn Jones et al
,
County Court House Property at
35383
on Friday, Aug 10, Pagevllle Rd
2007 at 10 00 a m , of Albany, Ohio
said day, the following PP# 11·00180.001
described real estato. Prior
Deed
Situated In the County References
Volume
of Meigs, In tho State 271 , Pago 163
of Ohio and In the Appraised
at
Townthlp of Scipio
$50,000 DO Torma of
Being a part of 1 4 112 Sale Cannot be sold
acres more or less for less than 213rds of
tract of land transR the appraised value
ferrod to Steven D and 10% down on day of
Barb!!!• C. &lt;&amp;!lorlll .as sale, cash or cErtHiod
recorded as Parcell In check, belance duo on
Deed Book 271 at Paga confirmation of aale
163 Molgo County The appraisal did not
Recorder's
Office Include an Interior
Melg o County, Ohio examination of the
also being a part of house
Section 16, Township R Robert
E
Beegle,
7· North, Range • 14· Melga County She~ff
Weal, Scipio Township, Attorney
for
the
Molgs County, State of Plaintiff
Ohio and more partlcu· Javltch,
Block
&amp;
larly de oc~bed n lol· Rolllbolll UP
Iowa
602 Main St , Sulle 500
Beginning at a point In Cloclnnatl , Ohio 45202
the centerline of town· 513-744· 9600
ship road 142 being (7)4, t1 , 18
tho Northeast corner
of said 4 1/ 2; acres
more or loss tract and
Public Notice
Ia asaumod to bear
South
tlag. 1 1' 20 Shorm Salea
East a dletance of Case Number 07CV0,17

n

JP Morgan Chaao
Bank
PlalnUff
va
Charlet Klein Jr, et al
Defendant• Court of
Common Pleaa, Meigs
County, Ohio
In purouance of an
ordar of sale to me
directed from aald
Court In the above
onfltltd acUon, I will
oxpoae to salo at publie auction on the front
atopa of the Meigs
County Court House
on Friday, Auguat 10,
2007 11 10·00 am., of
oald cloy, tho following
dncrlbtd rnloatato
Tract No.1:
The following real
ottato In the Counfy of
Melga, State of Ohio
and In lhe Vlltago of
Pomeroy,
and
described as follows
Beginning
at
the
Northwoat corner of o
lot formerly owntd by
John"Voao oometlmes
refarrod to as John
Fop. Thonce South or\
tho line of said Lot 44
dagr- West 100 feet;
thence
North
34
det~r- Wast 40 feat
thonce
North
43
dogma East 82 feet to
the
front
atroet,
Butternut Avo , thence
with Hid street 44 feet
to tho place of beginnlng, BAld property
being a part of Lot No
303, Town 2, Range 13
of Lot 189 Said propar·
ty being doslgnatod on
the Tax Duplicate sa
Lot 47 of Subdlvlalon
of Lot No. 189 In
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The aforeoald real
eatate being subject to
a certain agreement
made between J P
Bradbury and Henry
Koehlar on November
14, 1871 , as recorded
In Volume 1, Pago 259,
Molga County Leaso
Records,
reference
which Ia hereby made
Tract No. 2.
fhe following real
estate ahulltd In the
County of Meigs, In the
Slate of Ohio, and In
tha VIllage of Pomeroy,
and bounded
and
dsscrlbtd aslollowo H
being Lot No 48 of
Subdivision of Lot No
189, • and part of
Triangular Lot No 515
Situate on Butternut
and Valo Streets In
Pomeroy
Parcel
Nos
1600614.000 and 16·
00613.000
Property Address 132
Butternut
Avenuo,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Currant
Owner
Charlea Klein Jr et al
Prior
Deed
Aefarencaa
Volume
213, page 667
Appr,lsed at $50,000
Terms of Sale Cannot
be sold for loss than
213rda of the apprallll&lt;f
value 10% down on
day of aale, Caah or
certified check, bal·
anca due on conflrmaR
tlon of sale
Tho appraisal did not
Include an Interior
uamlnatlon of tho
houee
Robert
E
Beagle,
Melgo County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
Co LPA
600 S Pearl St
Columbus, Ohio 43206
814·221-1662
(7) 4, 11 , 18

�'
'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Ser1tin.el

\ll:rtbune - Sentinel 2 1\egt~ter

•

C LAS Sl FIE D
I ~,t__vFR.HG.: :~.s.B.fr..,.l
s
3 or 4 bedroom house tor
sal e m New Haven The
bathroom 1s newly remod
eled covered front porch
back deck garage fenced 1n
back yard new central heat
and a1r new crown mold1ng
and baseboards new d1sh
washer and oven Asktng
well below recent appratsal
of 8~ Call 304-882 3n3
for moce detatls

Galli a
County
OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

E-mail

classlfled @mydallytnbune com

Webs1tes.
www myda1lytnbune com
www mydallysenllnel com
www myda1lyreg1ster com

!Jea«'~ire.f'
Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Dleplay Adp

Dally In-column 1 .00 p.m.
Monday·Frlday for In••rtlon
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: l:DO p.m.
llor Sundaya Paper

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
8ueln•u Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dleplay: 1:00
ThurHay for Sunday•

• All

Now you con have borders and Qraphlcs
~
added to your classlfted ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
S1.00 for larQe

ads must be prepaid'

Ohlol'llley
Publllhlnglho right ID odlt,
rejoct or concel My
lei II My Ume
Errora Muol B

lleoortecl on 1M
olpublclllon
Trlbune-SenH
later
will

otble for n
Ilion tht cool

r ~~
~
I
r

_Kr:IT:;"::CA:;:R;::L::;Y:L:E=:::;==========::::;kHncoriyl. .comcut net

PRAY 7C0740 PRAY FOR
THE USA II 4 o'clook
everyday unttl 7-4.074·
0~
1111111""
_ _ _ _ _..,

r

GIVFAWAY

iwlll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!llll!lr'
2 dogs need good home
both 112 Aust &amp; 112 Great
Pyrenees, 1 9mo ok:l 12yos old (740)245-5984
(740)6ol5-30!!3

~~ f'.\.'liM~
~A~

Y'"l-'&gt; t-tl' fl. A~ 1'o
A &amp;1~ bt;:Al- of :e..1N6\

111'1&gt;~!1~t&gt;ENf

'foutzf~

6124 Answers to Kalle
Rewaro Ollered (S 14)27t
5888

ol'l 1'1'1~

Of JuLy.

-------------Lost or stolen
Female Lhaso Apso Sliver In
COlor, cut very shan Lost
06/29107 from Chatham
Ave Reward QIWn $500 for
the return of her Please call
44G 2432 or 645·728Q or ,
794·1950

2 Kittens bllwl1 (M) 6wks blk
(F)
tOwks
FREE
SPAY/NEUl'ER call 304895-8854 MUST GO i.sAf'
4 kittens 2- male 2 female

to good

Currenl rate
pplles.

7906

:---:-:--:-::--:---:-.,.-

Dish Network Satel1te Otsh l ost red &amp; whtle beagle In
Must be able to take down Morning Star area, Reward,
Call 446 7124
call (740)948'2S44
Klttenslogoodhome 2 F's,
1 black and white, 1 long
ha1red caliCO 740-446-2290
Nethenand Dwa~ Rsllbn to
good home Buck, very
friendly 740 794 0425

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We will not knowi
ICC8pl any adver
-

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CLASSIFIED INDEX

Houaes tor Rent
In Memoriam .
ln1urance.. .••....
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
UvoiiiDCk •
Lolt and Found
Lola &amp; Acreage......
Mlocelleneous ....
Mlacellaneous Marchandl118
Mobile Home Repair

.410
. 020
.. .. 130
660
630

...... 060
.350
170
540

880

Mobile Homes for Rent!. .:::.::::::::: ....:::::::::::::420
. ...
320
Mobile Homos for Sale...
Money to Loan.......... • ......
.220
740
Motorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelers
Mual..llnatJ1Jments
570
PoJ'IORIIIO.. • ....
.. .... 005
Ptta for Salo . .. ....
.. .... 580
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
Prolesalonal Sarvlcea •
..230
Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Repai r......
• .... 180
RHI Eotata Wonted • •
.. .. 380
School• lnettuctlon
•150
Sood , Plont &amp; Fertilizer ....
SHuotlono Wonted.
120
Space lor Rent
...480
Sporting Goodo
....... 520
SUV'o for Stle...
• .... 720
Truc:lco lor Stlo
..... 71 5
Upholotery ..
• 870
Va111 For Sal• ...
.. ..... 730
Wont.d to Buy ..........
010
Wont.d to Buy· Farm Supplies
820
Wont.d To Do • • ...
.. ....................... 180
Want.d to Ron! ..........
470
Yord Stle- Golllpollo.....
072
074
Yord Sale-Pomeroyi\llddle
Yard Sale-PI Pleasant
078

. ........ eso

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GAIJJPOLIS

·--iiiiiiiiriiiiiiii!IP

3 Famtltes July 5 6 7 Sam
to 4pm 71 5 3rd Ave
rJ
Gallipolis Plus size mens
and womens clothes name
FOUND brown laD Haven b
10
lo h
Heights area Free to Good rand boys c I as s•ze
to
36
voong
mens
Avon
vm
Home 304-882 2849 or 304 tage colledlbles, electron
8822244
fCS, turn.. re and antiques
shoes and cleats

4x4's For Sale. .. . ..
725
Announcement .......................................... 030
AnUqu... ... ....................... .. .....
•...... 530
Apartments lor Rent ......
. ..... 440
Auction and Flea Markel.
. ...080
Auto P•rta &amp; Acceuorlea
.. '1760
Auto Repair ..... .... ........ • • ........ •......no
Autoalor Sale...
71
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale
• 750
Building Supplle• ... ....... .. ....... • .....550
.......... 340
Buslneaa and Buildings
Bualnesa Opportunity'
210
Bualnesa Training .. •
... • 140
........ 710
Campara &amp; Motor Homes
Complng Equipment •
• 780
• 010
Carda of Thanks
.. ...... 110
Child/Elderly Care ...........
Eloctrlcai/Rtl~gorstlon .....
.. .... 840
480
Equipment lor Rent
Excsvatlng
•
• .830
Form Equipment.
.. .............810
Farm• for Rent
430
Forma for Sale
• • 330
For leaH .. .....
.. ..... 490
For Sale ..... .... •
.... 585
For Sale or Tr••
.590
.. 580
Fruita &amp; Vet~etables
Fumlshed Rooms.... • •
.450
Ge-•1 Hauling..... •
.850
Giveaway
040
Happy Ada
050
Hay &amp; Grain. .........
..840
110
Help Wanted
Home Improvements
810
Homes lor Sale... •
.. .. 310
Household Goodo
... 510

www comics com

YAROSALE

Lorr
AND
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1-'1

home 304-675-

3 family sale Thur, Fn Sat
gam 6pm Just West of
Stone Harbor on St RT 588
862 Harnsburg Ad, off SR
850 July 6th &amp; 7th Desk,
Patio Furniture Bath cabi
net mens, womens &amp; kids
Rain or Sh1ne
Addison 234 Honeysuckle
Dr Wed 7/4 -Sat 7f7 g ? 3
Secllons ot Iron fence
Fn &amp; Sat Garage Sate
Beside Holiday Inn TV Car
Seat Table Kids and Adult
Clothes a little of everyth 1ng

GOOD PAYING CAREER
OPPORTUNITY· Local 011
and Gao Company looking
to fi ll position of Land man or
Land Agent m SE OH and
Western EV Ideal candidate
1s a sen starter wtth bBSic
computer knowledge strong
communicatiOn and negot•a
t•on skills who Is w1lling to
travel wlthm the reg1on
Knowledge of legal descr~p
tlon pnor &amp;ales expenence
familiarity with the region
and local courthouse are a
plus If you are Interested 1n
f1nd1ng out more about tht&amp;
rewardmg career please
contact Dan Stevenson @
740 446-6800 or fa~e re9llme
to 740-4411-6802
- - - - - , - -__,Help wanted at Darst Adult
Group Home &amp;OfTle llft1ng
7 5 shift 740-992-5023

nJmr.aw-.uuwtJLr. • Fam1ly Court Is seek1ng
applicants fir a Family Case
Huge moving sala Fn 7-6 Coor&lt;linato&lt; position Dulles
one day only Something for In dude administering the
everyone Don t miss th1s case,. management system
one 2 m1 S of tP•ams on pre tra1l meetings w1th 1111
Rt 7• The Grales
nt
II b~
ga s revieWing t es o;nvre
court, pre-medtalton screenJuJu 6&amp; 7 tt\lllt Kids &amp; edun
'
~, ~
•ng, prepanng orders etc
cl othes
Bald
Knob
Must be willing to travel
Stiversvllle Ad off Bashan Must be discreet and profes
Road At The McM1Ran
slonal In appearance an
Mlu lon Trl p Fund R.I... condud Reqwres a four
Frl 6th &amp; Sat 7th 9am ? year college degree 1n legal
Everything
a11 cellent stud1es SOCial work manco nd lots ot kids clolhes agement or other relevant
toys &amp; books coats &amp; l•ek:ls Must pass an NCIC
shoes Hollister Jeans &amp; background check Equal
other teen ergo g1rl clothilg Opportunity
Employer
kmg SIZe beddmg small Reply by lener of Interest
kttchen apphances some and resume to
Judge
new OOLLSI Househol d Delor~s
J
N1bert
Family
1tems car seat dress up 0 n Mason/Jackson
At 7 1 m•s of Chester pll'lk Court 200 6th Street Pomt Orlvers Co &amp; 100 Cant
Signs lots of parking
Pleasant WV 25550 No
phone calls please
Raeler, Flatbed,
Mut11 Family yard sale 97 Fr I S a t
6 &amp; 7 Desk Clerk needed at
Tanker· OTll
2007 Harnsomnlle men sslul Budget Inn 260 Jackson.
f women s
stuH cook1e P1ke look1ng tor a person
WE HAVE
jar~ b1kes m1sc
who IS mot1vated great
FREIGHT
~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~::., communication skills and a Blue Cross Insurance
Iii
posttive attitude Please
D1ytan OriMtatlon
WANTED
apply Wlltun
BUY
_;_:,.;.._______
Call Allie @ Eid 6647
DRIVERS

.

::.::==-==='---

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Friday &amp; Saturday End of
588 at Rodney Lots ol NICO
ClotheJi What nots No
Tools
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Jul1 5th 6th 71h 9am-6pm S1lver and Gold Coms
5 112 mtle North of Holzer's Proolsels Gold A1ngs PreUS
Currency
of'i AI 160 Gas Cook Stove 1935
Weedeater on Wheels G1rls Sol1ta1re D1am0f'lds ·M TS
name brar-~ d cloth1ng much Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Galbpolts 740 446
more
2842
July 6 7 4 family at ROdney
l \ 11'141\ \ 11\1
COmmunity Center First one
"'I B\ II I "''
th1s year Ou1lts toys furm

1o

lure clothing

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e

GARAGE Sale July 6 &amp; 7 Need a loving responsi ble
Vinegar St RD 1 1/2 mile adutt to babys1t In my home
m the Racine area durmg
East of Five Pomts
the 2007"2008 school ~ear
July 6 and 7 ~om 8 00 part t1me or full lime must
._ OOP M Clothes
kniCk have references Please
knacks and more 4n94 send to PO Box 75 Aac1ne
SA 124 (Ant1qwty Oh)
Oh 45771

(

Family Oriented Carner
based 1n Canton OH needS
OTR Rdnvers to pull refnger
ated tra•lers to the South
and Eastern States

.

••perlence

Gatllpolll career COllege

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1 BOO 2t 4 0452
WWWglillpoiiM:areatcOiegecom
.~"'M~!'''~'

Col~&amp;gea

licensed Prachcal Nurses
Pleasant Valley Nurs1ng and
Rehabilitation 1s curre ntly
accepting applications lor
full t1me and per d1em
LPN s Long term care e~epe
nence preferred Must have
VN license 12 hour shifts
SceniC Hills Nurstng Center
Please
contact
Ang1e 1s cu rrently accepting appli
Cklland Director of Nurstng cat•ons for AN s and ~PN s
A.pphca!1ons must possess a
I • •
I • ·
I
oo mg or m1
current
m applicants
the State
of OhiO license,
Potenllal
CPlplu·,' L'r !hat will
should
conlact
D1ana
1
Vlir. r~ WITI-1 ~'Oll
Harless DON at (740)446
71 50 EOE

A OK·Corrals &amp; Baros
Metal Roofing Sh•nglea
Remodeling
Concrete
Decks
Pole
Barns
Garages Free est1mates Call
304-633-1230

Lawn mowtng Rates by the
JOb, not the hour Fre e
Estimates Call Paul t&gt;
(304)675·2940

Earn S8 50/hr FT
~ Wrc~lv Bo1us

sss ss sssss ss ssssss s
SJOO 00
HIRIN G BONUS
ssssssssss~ssssssss

lrilll1 111 (1 CI&lt;1SS beginS
July 9th
CALL N0W 1

1-888·1 MC-PAYU

The Cratg Group needs out
gomg Oh1o res1dents to help
Wllh statew1de cam pa1gn
Each person w111make 1 to 2
dollars per Slgnalure &amp; up to
$500 weekly Call 740 25 1
7591 &amp; ask fOI' Ch r~s or
e mall
dbanas®cralg
group com
Truck Ortver w1th Class A
COL Local Hauling Moo Fn,
home every n1gh! Reliable
responsibl e mature Send
resume to Dnver Resume
PO Box 655 Galllpol s Oh
4563 t

1-858-- 162· 729iH

Job ext. 1911
•'1\';\'i

.rntor:r:o ron. com

Mason County EMS 1s
accepfmg sppiiCBl1ons for
Med1cs and EMrs for more
mformatron ca/1 675-6134

We offer Great
Employment
Opportunities
Plus a $300
Hiring Bonusl
You could make calls you
belteve 1n lor many
Conservative Poht1cal
Organ1zattoos

Overbrook Center is cu"ent
ly accephng applicatiOns for
STATE TESTED Nu rsmg
As&amp;tstants Full Ttme and
Plua we offer
Part T1me positions avail
• Full time potlllona
able Interested applicants
40 hrolwk
can p1ck up an application or • Up to S8.50r'ttr + weekly
contact Hollie Bumgarner
bonus potential
LPN Staff Development
• $300 Hiring Bonut
Coordinator
0740·992
• COmplttt btntfltt
8472 M F 9a-5p at 333 Page
pockogt
St Mlddepon Oh EOE &amp; a • Pilei vocttlorv!tolldoys
participant or the Drug Free
' Friendly, profotolont l
Workplace Program
ofllct environment
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OTPaid Tram1ng
Vacations FTIPT
1 866 542 1531
USWA

I

Call today tor more
Information about starting
a new career Wllh
lnloCiolon
Hln-46:H247
oxt 2301

For llstmgs 800 559 4109
11 1709
1 possibly 2 Br House 1n
New Haven $325/month
S325/deposu No Pets
(304)882-3652

Neighborhood Ad App ro~e
t200 sq ft 3 acres m/1 2 BA
2 full baths wlwh1rlpool tubs
large LA Ask1ng 87 500
74()..446-7029

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Hor.mo

FOR SALE
0 Down even with less lhan
perfect credit Is available on
this 3 bedroom 1 bath
home Corner lot fireplace
modern kitchen jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month 740 367 7129
Beautiful M1ddlepon home!
3BA, 2BA lull basemenl1
H2 car garage With a room
above Many NEW features!t
Must see th•&amp; one• 740 4161548

•

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H ou;rnOill

Gooo;

Apar tment available now
Atverbend Apts New Haven
VN Now accephng apphca
lions fo r Hud Subsk:l1zed
one Bedroom Apts UU!h1es
md uded Based on 30% of
adjusted Income
Call
(304)882 3121 available for
Sen1or and Disabled People
Equal Hous1ng Opportunity Pol e Barns 3Dx 4 0~e 1 0
Dell \18red &amp; Erected $8 595
Apartment for rent 1 2 plus Sales Tax Call
Bdrm remodeled new car (937)718 t4 71 wwwnatJon
pet stove &amp; fn g wa ter Wldepolebarns.com
sewer trash pd Middleport
$425 00 No pe{S Rei Woodworking Tools Jet
reqwred 740 843 5264
Delta and Craftsman also
Beautiful Apta at Jackson Walnut and Cherry lumber

·------=----

52

Westwood

r___

lphzo:"ne;..;.304
;..,;6":7~5 ot22"'4.;.6 _

o

FARM
EQuiPMIM

'-'--'-"-__,~-.,.--.,.::

In Pomeroy House for rentt 3
bath newly remod
eled total ele;ctrtc 740 843
cS-264
_ __,-_,----,l arge 4 bedroom house 1n
Pomeroy very clean newly
remodeled new cab1nets
new carpel (140)949 2303

Bd 2

-------Garage Apart

Mason l br lully

turn shed uh rhes pard $450/mo
$3501dep References 304 593

8167 or :J04 593 8107 Aller 5pm

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at V1 llage
Manor and R1verskt e Apts n
Middl eport from $327 to
$592 740-992 5064 Equal
MOBFORII.Enf!.~IDi
tu.r'il
Housmg O pportu mt~ Th s
Institu tiOn s an Equal
Opportumly Prov1der and
1 BA DillOn Ad GallipOliS Employer
Includes water/trash WID
slave and fndge a d1118Ue Immaculate 2 bedroom
set wood fl oors covered apar!menl New carpet &amp;
porch axa bldg $385/mon+ cabinets freshly pamted &amp;
$315 dep call256 1106
decora ted W/0 hookup
Beautiful country settmg
14x70 very n1ce 3 BR 2BA
pr vacy 1n country Me•gs Must see to apprec1ate
$400/mo 1614)595 7773 or
School diSt $475 + dep I 800·798 4686
859-806-4354 or 740-742
3046 Available July 1
Middleport Beech St 2 br
16x80 Tra 11er 3br 2ba fu rn1shed apartment ulllll•es
located on 1s acres tn PI patd deposit &amp; references
Pleasant
$ 5SO/month no pets (740)992 0165
$550/deposH 740 416 3342 Middleport North 4th Ave 2

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2 Br
AJC Very mce br furnished apartment
t998 Claylon Spmt II Lots of Johnson Mob le Home Park deposit &amp; references no
elllras e~ecel l ent con ditiOn 74().446-2003 or 446 1409 pels (740)992 0165
Must be moved Call 949
3 BR 14x70 Addav1lle New 2BA apartments
2698 after 4 p m
School d•slnct 740 367 Washerldr;ter
hookup
t998 Redman &amp; 2 acres 3 7762 or 367 7272
stove/relngerator tncluded
bd &amp; 2 baths off New L1ma
Also umts on SA 160 Pels
m Rutland for sale or rent Beauhtul Rtver V1ew 1n Welcomet (740)44 1 0194
Kanauga Ideal lor 1 or 2
74().992·35t4
people references No pets New Haven 1 Br Furll4shed
2007 Clayton
Loc 5 mt from Gav n Apt has WID No Pets Dep
5BR/38A 2000 Sq Ft
1740)441 0181
&amp; references 740 992 0165
Starling at $33 00/sp ft I
Mob• le homes for re nt Tara
Townhouse
NO DOWN PAYMENT
M1ddleporl area no pets
Apartments Very Spac1ous
to qualified buyers
1740)992 5858
2 Bedrooms CIA 1 1/2
The Home Show
Remodeled 2br 1 ba Ba th Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Ashland , KY
Hartford WV $375/month Pool PallO Start $425/Mo
888·928·3426
Aeferences / Depos t No Pets Lease Plus
2007 Doublewide
reqUired No Pets 304 576- Secunty Depos41 Reqwed
1740)446 3481
3BR 2BA
4037
Delivered &amp; Set $39 999
Tw1n A1vers Tower s accept
AI'AKI'MFXIS
The Home Show
rng applicAtions tor wa 1t1 ng
FORRf.Nr
Ashland Ky
list for Hud subsized 1 br
Toll free 888 928 3426
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments apartment for
the
, - - - - : -:-:-:-:-:-:-- for Rent Meigs county In elderlyfd•sabled call 675
Great used 2005 3 bedroom town No Pets Deposit 6679
Equal
Hous1ng
t6~e80 Wllh v1nyVshlnQie ReqUired (740)992 5174 or =O;;
pp~o;,rt;;;u;;;
nty
~~--...,
Must sell Only$25995w•th (740)441 0110
SPACE
del•\lery Call (740)385 4367
1 and 2 bedroom apart
FOR R FNI
New 3 Bedroom homes from
$2t 4 36 per month Includes ments furntshed and unfur
many upgrades delivery &amp; mshed and houses 1n Commerc1al bu1ldrng For
set up (740)38 5- 2434
Pomeroy and Middleport Aanr 1800 ~ u are tee t off
.,.--'--'-~.,.--.,.-,--- securit~ deposit reqwred no street parkmg Great loca
t1on 1 749 Th1rd Avenue 1n
N1ce used 3 bedroom hOme pels 740 992 2218
Gall1pol
s Re nt $350/mo
vnyllshmgte Wtll help WJih 1 BA Apt WID HOOkups
Call Wayne (404)456 3802
740
385
4367
delivery
Owet wooded locati on
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE Free mternel www spring Pr~me commercial space for
Program $0 Down If you va l ley properties com rent at Spnngvailey Plaza
own Land or use Fam•ly (740)339 0362
Cai1645 2192
Land We own the Bank your
1 BR mce walk to Wal Mart
W ANffll
Approved 606-474-6380
Utilities pakt Dep req No
IU RtNr
Lors &amp;
pels $550/month 245 5555 ~~---liliiiiiriiolll!lr
.o. GE
or 441 5105
Ac.--ur
~
.~
LAND Q.W NERS NEED
2 bedroom apartment down EXTRA FARM INCOME?
2 Acre Bldg lot on State town Pomeroy $150 plus We have responsible sports
Route 7 304 675 4421
utd1t1es (740)992 7511
men lookmg to lease huntmg
property 1n this area
Horse
Prop
401180 2BR apts 6 mt from Holzer M dwest Trophy leases Inc
lnsulated&amp;heated barn w/ 10 Water/trash/sewer
pa1d (304 )532 6015 or 1 800
box stalls/ 4 BA llv1ng quar $400/mo+dep
740 682 698 1073
ters/43 acres 446 3844 UM 9243 or 988 6 t 30

i

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. ~

Full Size Mattress &amp; BIS
$180 Sofa &amp; Loveseat sets
$400 Dnve 8 little save a
lot Mollohan 202 Clark
A HIDDEN TREASURE' Chapel Ad Bidwell
l aurel
CQmmons
Mlscn.LANEous
Apartments Largest m lhj
MfllCHANDlSE
area• Beautifully renovaled L,~--iiiiiiiliiiriiiiiiilii_.l
th roughout mcludmg brand
$500 Coupon
new kllchen and bath
Hot Tlrb Outlet II
Startmg at $405 Call today!
Top Ouatrty/Warranty Mlion
1304)273·3344
Flea Mkt SIS 606 326 0777
Accepttng applicat ons lor 2
BA 1 BA apt s!ove fr dge
JET
WID mcluded Water &amp;
AERATION MOTORS
Garbage pa1d No pets very Repatred New &amp; Rebr.ull In
n1ce clean &amp; attrachve Stock Gall Ron Evans 1
$500/mo 1st mo + $500 800 537 ~528
Sec dep required Avatlable
7/16/07 Apply w1thm 1743
Centenary Rd Gallipolis No
Ph one Calls Pl ease

Eotateo

Home grown Sweet Com
available at McKean Farm
Centenary Ad &amp; W•Uiam An n
Motel J I 3 446 9442
1 'in I ... I 1'1'1 11 . . ,
,\. I I ' I ...., I 4ll t..

36 Mos
ava•lable now on John
Deere z Trak Zero n.ns &amp;
5 99% Fixed Rate on John
Deere GalOre Carmichael
Equ1pment (740) 446 241 2
4506 Deutz 45 HP 3 Cyl
Diesel lndep PTO clutch
wet lines, good shape
Ask1ng $3800 256-6309
K1eler Bu11tM Valley BisonHorse
and
livestock
Trailers Loadmax·
Gooseneck
Dumps
&amp;
Utt llty Aluma Alumi num
Trailers B&amp;W Gooseneck
H1tches
Trailer Parts
Carmtchael
Trailers
(740)446 241 2

1981 F 100/F 150plck up 2
w d 5 Ol eng1ne 8 cylinder
3 sp auto cap on bed trail
er hitch, duel gas tanks
power brakes power steer
mg 1 owner runs goOd
92 000 mtles eskmg pr1ce
$1 000 phone (740)985
4409

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~~

200 1 Harle ~ Davidson
Sponsler 8fl3 4200 m11es
Metal Flake Blue $4800
1740)245 5984 (740)645

:

Jet Ski Yamaha Wave
Runner like new Garage
kept less SOhrs wfC011er &amp;
Tra1ler $1 200
304 675
3564
- - - -- - - One man Bass boat • trolhng
molor + trailer $375 OBO
379 2706

.__IMPRiiiiiiOiiVE11f!\115iii-iii-'

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Yamaha v Slar 11 00
S•lverado
W•ndshteld
Saddlebags Back. rt:~st Lots 1988 NomadCamper tw1n
more 7K miles $5800 cunks &amp; front bed Excellent
(740)245 5934
cond1tlon Bath/w tub&amp;
shower Pull behmd 3dog
"2005 H D Fat Boy custom frick ~ mill make an offer
maroon
w/emboSsed 949 21 15
4x4
flames 1 of 200 made aoo
FOil SALE
m1les smce new pnce 95 Coachman 24ft 5th
$19 000 080 call for wheeler wlhitch 1nd D1n1ng
1995 Ford F 250 Pick up details 74Q-949 22 t 7
shde Canopy Sleeps 4-6
truck good mechanical
Very nlcet Pulls wl 112 ton
8oA1N &amp; MoroRS $5900 Galllp area 740
cond 5 9 l 5 speed trans
I'OR SAJ£
$4000 F1rm 740-949 2127
245 92 14 or 645 0873

---1999 Mercury Moootaneer
4WD 102 000 miles Exc
Cond
Sunroof Power
leath er Seats
$6200
740 45-0344 after 5

88 Wellcrafl 20ft V 8 350
Mercrulser tandem axle
trmler wlbrakes good cond
740 256 6160

AT
CHESHIRE
Nomad-North Trml 34 With
hyd
E~etended section
Camper nearly as new
$12 500 Neg Call David
(606)571 9446 Russell KY

Profeulonal Surveyor
No. 8044, October 15,
1998 Subject to all
leases, eaeementa and
rights of way of record
No opinion of title nor
cortlflcatlon as to
accuracy
of
tho
deocrlpUon Ia given by
the preporer of this
lnatrumenf. The above
cleocrlptlon
Ia
tho
same 11 the aurveyod
cleocrlptlon as pre·
pared by George F
Seymour,
Ohio
Proleoalonal Surveyor
No. 8044, October 15,
1998.
Parcol Number 0900407.010
Current Ow~or . Harold
L Adamtet al
Property at 63375 St
Rt 124, Long Bottom,
OH
PPI 09.Q0407 010
Prior
, Doed
References
Volume
91 , Page 75
Appralaod at $65,000
Tormo of Sole. Cannot
be oold for 1111 than
213rds of lila appraised
value. 10% down on
day of aale, cooh or
cartlfled check, bal·
ance due on conflrma·
lion of ..le
The appraisal did not
Include an lnte~or
examination of the
house.
Robert E
Beegle,
Malgs County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Lorner Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
120 E 4th St 8th Floor
Cincinnati, OH 45242·
4007
513-241-3100
(7) 4, 11, 18

1831.50 feet !rom the
Northweat corner of
aald
Section
16,
Townohlp • 7, Range
14,
thence leaving aald
centerline and along
the a..umtd East' line
ol eald 4 1/2; acres
mora or loss tract
South 13 tlag. 15' 05"
Weal peaelng through
a 518" Iron pin with I.D
Cap let at a dlatance
of 20.00 feet and going
a total dlotance of
506 24 feet to a 518"
Iron pin with I D Cap
set:
Thence leaving said
Eaot line North 81 tlag
28' 23"Wset a distance
of 91 .00 fnt to a 518"
Iron pin with I.D Cap
set,
Thence North 04 deg
52' 28' West a distance
of 95.42 feet to a point
In the centerline of a
Creek,
Thence along ..td cen·
lerllne tho following
Three couroeo.
1 North 09 dog. 52' 04'
Weat a distance of
96 99 feet to a point,
2 North 15 dog 29' 1 5"
Eaot a dlotanco of
180 83 feet to a point;
3 North 25 cittg 08' 35"
Ellet a dlotanco of
123.391eet to a railroad
aplke let In the center·
line of said Township
Rood 142;
Thence leaving the
centerline
of Bald
Creek and along the
centerline
of said
Township Road 142
South
tlag 1 1' 20'
Eaot a dlatance of
123.07 feet to tho prlnclplo point of begin·
nlng containing 1 526
acrea more or ~•••
aubjoct to all legal
eaoementa end right of
wey
Beorlnga arl! aBSumod
and are for the dolormlnatlon of anglo&amp;
only.
All Iron plna are 518' x
30" rebar with pl.. tlc
ID
Cap
stamped
'CTs-&amp;844
The above description
was prepared from an
actual survey made on
tho 21st dey of May,
2002 by C Thomas
Smtih,
Ohio
Profeaslonal Surveyor

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncon&lt;lltlonal llfettme guar
antee l ocal references tur
nlshed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterproof~r~g

Get AJump

on
SAVINGS

Bore Goats full blooded &amp;
percentage The price Is
nght 367 7755

:F"'or-S~a~le 13-m-on-t:-h-o:-ld-:C:-::
oll

r

_, $200 304 895·3943

SHERIFF SALE

c- Number 07CVD1 5
Countrywide
home
Loans
Plaintiff
va Harold L. Adams et
at
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Melga County,
Ohio
In purouanct of an
order of sala to me
directed from said
court In the above anti·
lltd action, I will
axpo.. to sale at publie auction on I~ front
stepo of the Malga
County Court Houao
on Friday, August 10,
2007 et 10:00 a.m., of
.. ld clay, the following
described real ntate
Sltuat.d In the County
of Meigs In the State of
Ohio
and In the
Townahlp of Oqvo, and

bounded

and

described as follows:
- - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - Being a pari of tho
Auction
Auction
tract of land that Is
now or formerly In the
name of Hope Drake as
recorded In Official
Record 47 at Page 539,
Meigs
County
Recorder'• Offlcs, said
tract being part of 100
acre Lot 124, T3N,
R11W, Olive Townahlp,
Molga County, State of
Ohio, and being more
particularly doacrlbed
as follows
Beginning at on Iron
pin found on the
Southweat Corner of a
1 DO Acre Tract as
recorded In Official
Record 51 at Page 875
and
the Grantor's
Corner; thence along
the Grantor's line tho
following two coursoa
RIDD ER . NO RESERVES 1!
1 East a distance of
8 room 1664 sq Jt Ranch burll m 1990 142.53 leet ,Jo an Iron
pin found ~ and , 2
lf« ttu r•os 3 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs central vacuum
North a distance of
fimshed wal k out base ment detached
133.50 feet to a 518" x
electnc heal pump forced alf olleal and
30" Iron pin with a
a1r super knchen w/h1ckory cat1i11Jel s, l
plastic ldonllflcatlon
low m.untenance vm; I s1dmg Th1s house
cap HI,
on laJge one acre lot wlcounty wateJ and Thence with a new llno
"''"'''· located on qu1 e1 scemc road yet IS close
through tho Grantor's
shoppmg and 1deal spot to ra1se chtldren
land the following
three courses· 1 North
IHo"''" Js m move m &lt;:ond1t1on
ESTATE TERMS : Open House 81 degrees 28 minutes
52 seconds east a dl•
~~~;:~~{· July I , 2·4 pm 10% non re fundabl e tsnce of 171 20 feet to
I&lt;
due day of aucuon Bat m 30 days A
a 518" x 30" Iron pin
bu yers fee added to f 1n al b1d to generat e
wHh a plastic ldenUfl·
contra&lt;:t pncc
cation cap eat 2. South
RST QUA LITY AUCTION &amp; REALTY, a distance of 358 86
I Mo,dinla, OH (330) 4 16 J 119
feet to a 518' x 30 ' Iron
pin with a plastic lden·
~~~s;~&lt;;~w::w~,w:waltmMu ctJOilSite com
tlflcatlon cep ae~ and,
I Broker/ 4.ucuoneer
3 Weal a distance of
llliOIJSIEiliOILD· BeautJtul 9 pc Queen A nn
311 85 feet to a 518" x
SUJ t&lt; (Cherry Fmtsh) b) Ashley l um
30 • Iron pin with a
5 pc chrome d1 net set, Ktmball organ 2 plsatlc ldontlflcatlon
l recl i11er&gt; co flce lable &amp; end tables, ova l hbrary
cap
set
on
the
full SIZe bed 3 pon able color TV's Grantor's Uno and the
l wi'rcrrtotes. VCR lg upn ght Kcl Freezer
easl rlght-of·way line
I Mayt;Jg washer &amp; dryer 4 pc fancy patiO sel , 5 of 30.0 foot oaumenf
metal patio set porch s"'mg. prcmc tabl e fo r Drake Subdivision
aa
recorded
In
pes of Fenton· v.tscs baskets bells &amp;
Envelope
78,
1henee
r lc holden; B lue Fenton Buds Wh1 te
along the Grantors
lamp Bell Collectmn Fruit Jars,
line and the said east
J!gt!!-of-way
line, ngrtlt
system
qualnyglltcJ
cookware
applianLcs
ltnneus.1gnhrtot &amp;
&amp;
a distance of 200 00
s l e~gh bells mtlk can Wah DISne)
feet to the point of
M1cke) Mouse &amp; others, old books
beginning, containing
2 000 acres, more or
l woO&lt;lell 1cc cream maker sleds b1&lt;:ycle built
less, and aubjoct to all
life Slyle l 100 treadmrll , gas gnll hand
eaaementa of record
vtse Cmftsman 10" table saw Century
All 518' x 30 ' Iron pins
amp welder. Homehle blower 120110 BTU
whh plastic lden!Hicaladders, rotoullcr fert spreader Aymo
tlon caps sot ara
MTD 12 H P 38 cut lawn lraclor
stamped "Seymour &amp;
Associates ' The bear·
lngo used In lhe abova
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:
descr ibed tract wore
dorlved from a prevl·
ous survey as racofd.
ad In Official Record 51
at Page 675 and are for
1·304·773·5441: OR 1·304·773·5785
tho determination of
OWNER: ADRIAN LATHEY
anglea only Th e above
L ICensed and bonded '"the State of Oh10
described tract was
ON HOUSEHOLD CASH OR
'surveyed by George F
W i lD
Saymour,
Ohio

l

l

02 Yamaha V Star 6500
miles $1500 In extras I ke
new Askmg $5200 740
645 2399

5 m1n1ature horses 1 stal
lion 2 mares. 1 colt and 1
mtmatu re dwarf lemate Call
381M1670

EllmView
Apartments

I

14:&lt;70 2 bedroom 2 full bath
newly remodeled New cen
tra l a1r un1t and furnace call
74Q-367-7143 or 740 794
0022 $9 000

~===ro=lo=AN==~

HI 'I I " I ' I I

MOBFOILE
R S~~

3 Ams &amp; bath WID hookup Aespons1ble TN hunter look
clean No pets 446 1519
1ng to lease your land or
farm 1or hunting Please call
4AM &amp; Bath stove fndge 423 746 7045 or ema11
ullht•es pa1d upstairs 46 rdavls@MUSFIBER com
Ohve
St
No pets
$450fmonth 446-3945

Dnve, from $365 to $560
Pm
___
HAGRAJNY
&amp;
740 446 2568
Equal
FOR
SALE _.~l
Housmg Opportu nity Th ts
InStitUtion IS an Equal
Black La b Ltvestock Feed shelled corn
Opportunlly Prov1der and A:KC Reg
Puppies $1 50 00 740 742
Employer
$5 20/50 lb &amp; horse crunch
2966 If no answer please $7 22/50 lb
&amp; more
leave
message
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments CKC D~c hs hu n d puppies
and/or small hou ses FOR t st shots &amp; wormed Ready
RENT Call (740)441 11t t 1o go July 61h $400 304 895
For rent or for sale 2 BA lor apphcatton &amp; mfo rmat1on 3617 after 5pm
Nice Remodel ed Home 1n
town, No Pets Renovated
CKC Toy Rat Terriers Choc 1990 Chevrolet Lumina
All new carpet
Call
&amp; Wh1te 1st shot s ta•ls Euro 2 door 1992 GMC
(740)446•7425
d\)Cked Ask1ng $250 379- 4~e4 S1erra 304 675 2929
For Rent Bnck hou se •n •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments 9515 or 645·6857
1990 Toyota Cel1 ca GT Call
MerceiVIIIe 1BA A.pt all ulll •Central heat &amp; AJC
Mml
Dachshund
pups
vet
7
_
4:-0c:2_5_6-~1-77_6-:-:---:-:-:­
1t1es &amp; cable paid 1n Crown •Washer/dryer hookup
checked shots &amp; wormed 1999 Chevy Monte Carlo
Clly (740)256 8132
-c'--'---"'=::-:--,--,-- •Tenant pays electriC
(Aegtslered) 7wks old $125 158 000 miles Loaded $304
HUO HOMES! 4bd only
741 0 388·0318 Mom&amp; Dad 675-7934
(304)884!·3017
$155fmo 3bd $181/mo
on Prem•ses
2004 Ford Mustang GT 5
More 1 4bd homes a"¥11
Purebred Shelt1e $150 00 speed leather 52km les leat
able 5% dn 20 yrs @ 8%
For hsl1ngs 1 800 559 4109
each F1rst shots &amp; wo rmed her, loaded to many extras
X F1 44
no papws 740 6911-0475 to list Call (740)379-2296

Upd ated 3 BR 1 BA home
n Pomeroy wtlh newer fu r
~ce water heater plumb
ng &amp; electriC Call Sandy
Collms Sole &amp; Bloom
Realtors 59~ 9202 $25 900

i

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

34 bedroom home In
Syracuse $500 plus u1111t1es
(740)992·7511

In town out of
flood plane Brick Home
Excellent l ocation 6 Acre
Ap~e 4000 sq ft SRms 3 Br 2
1/2 Bth 2 f1 re Places 2
Garages Lots ol Storage
Details Ca/1740-992 4197
Newly buill home •n Green
Twp on Kmg Ad off

:o:H;e:nng:::;:;:==~
MONEY

f.A&amp;J Cleamng Serv1ce
Bus1ness and Res•dent1al
ltcensed m OhiO and WV
Call 30 4-444 4694

3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse $500/monlh +
depos1t No Pets (304)6755332 weekends 740 591
0265

~tlddlepon

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SH
tNG CO re commends
that you do business with
people you kn ow and
NOT to send man~
through the mall un111 you
have 1nveshgated the

SE:RVJCE;

2 Bedroom House 1 bath 7
m las
Rt
2
North
$400/month $300/depoSit
No Pets 304-675-2381

HUD HOMESI 4bd only
$155/mo 3bd $181 /mo
More 1 4bd homes ava1!
able 5% dn 20 yrs @ 8%
For listings 1 800 559-4109
x F144

Professionally
Clean
Olfl ce / Housecleanl n g
Reasonable
Rates
References (304)675-2208

I'RoFlNOONAI

1302 Hogg St 2br House
Central Heat/AC 1 year
l ease No Pets Secunty
DepoSit T1 304-675-4030

For sale/land contract 3 BR
house m Gal lipolis W/D
connectiOn $1500 down
$400/mo or rent $475fmo
Also 1 BA 1n Gallipolis $750
down $200fmo or rent
$250/mo.Call Wayne 404
456-3802 for mfo

Mchela s Oaycare now
accept1ng ages 18 months
to 13 yrs Hours Mon Wed
Fn Bam-tipm Tues &amp; Thli'S
6am
to
Spm
Rutland!Harrl sonvllle area
call 1740)698 0214 ask lor
Michele

r

$155/mol Buy 4bd HUD
home! 5% dn 20yrs @ 8%

8953

l awn-Care Serv1ce, Mow1ng
&amp; Tnmmu'IQ Call (740)44t ·
1333 or (740)645 0546

Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO DIVISIOn of
Financial
lnst•tuUon s
Olf1ce of Consumer
Affwrs BEFORE you ref•
nance yo ur home or
obla1n a loan BEWARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments ol
fees or insurance CaM lhe
ffice of Consu mer
Affairs toll free at 1 866
278.0003 to learn •f the
mortgage broker or
tender
•s
properly
licensed (Th1 s IS a publiC
serv1ce announcement
from the Oh•o Valley
Pulj•sh•ng Company)

HOUSF.S

fOR

.
Attention I
l ocal company offenng "NO
DOWN PAVME,H" programs lor you to buy your
home 1nstead ol renlmg
• 100'%, financing
• Less than perlect credit
accepled
Paymenl could be the
For sale or rent 3BA 2 story same as rent
house Sale $68500 Rent Mortgage
Locators
$6 50 + $500/dep Call 441 (740)367-()000

JiliJJIIII

R&amp;J Trucking Leadmg The
Way R&amp;J Truckmg now
H1nng a~ our New Haven,
WV Terminal For Reg1onal
Hauls Dump 01v 1 year
OTA vertflable exp Call 1
800 462 9365 ask for Kent

0

REm
iwlll!llll!liriiiiiiiiiiiro_.l

new1papar will not
knowingly acc:ept
edvertl18menlt tor real
Htlte which lain
I 'violation of the law Our
readers are he reby
Informed that all
dwelling• advertised In
thla newapeper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

Member Ace red ling

1

rl

This

Wanted to Do Care g1ver
Will care tor elderly m thetr
home
t6 yrs exp
Thomas
Available
Public Health Nurse Position References
at the Mason County Health 1740)3811-9783 or (740)591
Department for Reg•stered 9034
Nurse Oeacllne lor apphca
A -·· . . .....
- - - - - - - - !ton extended to July 10
Apphcahon and JOb descrlp
liOn mlil¥ be obtained at 2t6
5th Street EOE

Prime Inc

www pnme1nc com

I

w~ ~.,rM__INSTR_Sc!looui_ucn
__
ON_

Overbrook Center located
0333 Page St Middleport
Ohk» is pklaaed to aMounce
we will be holding an STNA
Cl6sa scheduled lor July
Hours wtU be Sam-4 30pm II
you are Interested fn JOining
our friendly and dedicated
staff please stop by our
front office Man Fri 9am
5pm ahd fill out an appllca
Uon Full time and part time
positions available to those
qualified Indivi duals com
pteting the class App licants
must be dependable (atten
dance Is a must) team play
ers with positive attitudes to
join us In providing outstand
1ng quality care to our res•
dents If you have a n~ ques
tiQns 1 contact
Hollie
Jolin Song Ford Uncoln Bumgarner, LPN Staff
Mtn:ul"f
Develoj)l:r(ent Coordmator
Has a posttlon open for an Cl74p.992-6472 Overbrook
Aulomotlve Technldan We Center iB an E 0 E and a
are looking for an lndlvklual partlctpant at the Drug Free
that has a well fOIJnded
Wofki&gt;laca Program
knowledge about automotive repair Foo:t Motor
Company training will be DFIIVERS·
NO EXPERIENCE?
provided and I• on going
HIED TRAINING.?
We ollor a cornpetlllve com
pensatton plan and our ben- Company Sponsor!td fr8 tmng
ell! packagalncludes health "Gee your COL In Juat a
Fow Short Woekt
Insurance, 401K retirement,
•1.t Oty lnaurance
disability 1naurance and life
Start your new carHJ
1nsurance tf you are tired of
Todoyt
w0fk1ng for someone that ts
88H11·2778
not workmg for you or want
www jolncrat cam
to better yourself contact
CAST
VAN EXPEDITED
SerVIce Manager Jim

800-248-7735

IRS JOBS
$18 46-$32 60/hr now hlr
mg PaJd Tra•mng IS prov1d
•Late Model FrelghHiner ed For appltcatlon and free
Condoo
government JOb tnfo, call
•No New York City or
Amencan Assoc ot labor 1Canada
913 599-8244 2._/hrs emp
•95% no touch fralghl
serv
•Medlc411 1ns 1 401 K
•Homettme moat
Job Title Towboat D1esel
weekends
Mechamc m1111mum 40
•$500 Sign an bonus
hours a week Monday
through Fnday wllhng to
work overtime some hght
Must have a Cllll A COL electriCal abilities oo call
with 2 years
twice a month expenence
req
uired E~ece lle nt benefit
Call Bob at 800-652-2362
package 401 K available
Mon Fn 8am-4pm
pa1d holidays company pen
Fruth Inc Is seek1og an st on .pa1d vacatton, Blue
assoc1ate to work tn the Cross/Blue Shield Medical
warenouse Ouahf ed candi VISion Included Dental plan
dares must have a 11arld drN Bonuses Please contact
ers license be able to lift at M1ke Gray at Campbell
least 80lbs on a reg ular Transportal1on Company at
bast&amp; have a h1gh school 30&lt;'-675-4545
diploma or equivalent, and IF=:Sa;:;ole::o:=Poo;;=:=
:;1=:u':'
on
: ="'il
be able to tolerate extreme
temperatures tf lntereS1ad
An outolandlng opportu·
please mall your ruume to
nlly lor the rlghl pereon.
Fruth Corporate Office Attn
Prefer aome sale&amp; expeHuman
Resourc11
rience but wm consider
Warehouae Poal11on RA1
possibility of training
SOx 332 Point Pleasan1 WV
Ideal ca ndidate Ortar 5
25550 No phOne calla
day work week
please!
Excellent benellt pkg
General laborers needed
Contact
Jar the Gallipolis area pay
Carolyn Murdock
rate 18 $8 hr Shift 6 OOam·
Office Admin
Contact
Lisa
2 30pm
Mor&gt;Fn (740)-3093
Caudill Kelly Serv1ces
or email resume to
(
_
7401353 7785
r7600ctayton net
'--'----'--TOMATO P1ckers Needed to schedule an Interview.
No Walk Ins Please
247-3901 or 247 2165
·Weekly Ply
'$ 40 Pllr Mile/All Milos

I

Spnng Cleamng Sale LIII!IIII!IIII!IIII!IIII!IIII!IIII!I.,J
across from Addav•lte School Sat only 9 ?
HIO WORKERS NEEDED
Yard Sale 818 1st Ave Rear Assemble crafts
wood
on Fn 718 Sat 7{7 from 9am •terns To $480Jwk Mater~als
5pm
prov•ded Free tnformat1on
pkg 24Hr 801 428 4649
4
YARD SAI.Ea
Poft.tnlOYIMmni.J: . A 011 &amp; Gas Broker
lwoiioiiiiiiiiiiioiiriiriiiiiiiiiiir' Company 15 looking for an
admm ass! for the ~ H 1 pol1 s
3
Famtly
yard
off1ce Cand1dates should be
sale Fn &amp;Sat July6&amp;7 9 00
sell starters and posses
AM
55S
2nd
Ave Mtddleport Household good organ1ZBt1onal Skills
prof1c1ent m Word Excel and
1tems ctothes baby furniture
Outlook l&lt;nowleclge of land
4
yard
sales descnpttons and t1tle exp •s
Twp Ad 4041Bahr Ad 3 Mt N a plus Must have a h1gh
of Chester ott Rt 7 July 7th diploma and some college
preferred
Cloth1ng a'JOO per~en mals ? expenence
Please cau Andrea Healy at
7 4&amp;5 SR248
Chester 2 740 446-6800 or fax to 740
story yellow housa on left 448 6802
top of hill Scrubs Infant girls
clothes boys e 8 pack &amp; An E~ecellent way to earn
money The New A.von
play swlnge,walker toys
Call Manlyn aa..-882·2645
Friday Ju~ 6 8 Ill? Rt 7 2
miles nortf1 of Chester End AVONI All Areaal To Buy or
tabl e&amp; King size bed nlc Sell Snirley Spears 304675 1429
nacs 101&amp; of tnickens

r

~

Cl 2007 by NEA, Inc.

or

riO tiJlu&gt;

'
John Sang Ford Uncoln
Men:UI"f
Need! three individuals
that are lnter&amp;Bted In a
career u an Automotive
Consullant We are looking
lor lnOMduala thai are out
Qolng 8011 motivated and
protesmonel We have one
of the bes1 compensation
plans In the Industry and a
beneflla package thai has
health Insurance 401 K
retirement disability and life
Insurance If you want to
ears an excellent IMng and
better yourself contact Pat
Hill or Brian Ross

Found on June 29 on

Gartleld Ave Male chocolate
Conoeal &amp; Cony Training, Lab , no collar/tags 446NRA Cart lns1 , Bam 07107 0$81
Mercervtlle Fire Dept , --:-:::-::-::-::---:---:---:--.,.
(740)256-e514 Email
LOST DOG· Small Greg &amp;
s1arl&lt;ey01nbox oom
White Female Dog Lost
near 3ro /we, Gallipolis Sun

_.I

lor.o_tlllu&gt;_W_ANIUJ
_

R I \ I \I ""

1St

O..Crlptlon • I nclude A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• lndude Phon• Numbar And AdciNu When Need.ct
• Adl Should Run 7 Day•

\ \ \ t i l '\11 \II '\ I "

Property for sale located 1n
Spnng Fteld Twp l eft Fork
Ad C1ty school d•stnct being
appro~e 27 Acres more or
less W111sell as a whole or
d1v1de Rural water available
$75 000 740 245 5060

All real eltate advertlllng
In this new1paper 11
subject to the Federal
Fair HOUIIng Act of 1968
which makH It IUegal to
advertlae any
preference, limltatlbn or
dlacrlmlnaUon baled on
race, color, rellg•on aex
familial atatul or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon '

• st.rt Vour.Acll Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete

*POLICIES*

55 acres more or less
$69 000 Call 740 256 9247

Local company ofte r1ng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams for you to buy your
home Instead of renting
• 100% f1nanang
• Less than perfect cretllt
accepted
• Payment co uld be the
same as re r:~t
Mortgage
Locators
(740)387 0000

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NO'riCE;I)

Wgrd Ads

4 acres+ located at 9617 SA
775 w/water and etec
hookup for house plus barn
and sm bldg Paved dnve
way Ask1ng $21000 245
5145 Senous offers only

3bd
GALLIPOLIS
Foreclot urel
Buy for
$50 9001 Only $404/mo 5%
dn 20yrs @ 8% For 11sbn gs
call ~00 559 4109 ICF254
Tra1ler lot tor rent Ph
(740)446 7834
Anentlont

l\egt~ter
TO Place
\ll:rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To
992-2157
675-5234

I

-rhe Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~l~~Jj~' ~tereo

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO. #66

Public tJollce

n

SHERIFF SALES
CASE
NUMBER
07CV019
JP
Morgan
Chasa
Bank NA Trustee
Plolntlff vs
Susan Lyn Joneo at al
Defendanta
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuanc~ of an
ordor of ealo to me
directed from said
court In tho above entl·
tlod action, I will
expose to sale at pub- 16844.
lie auction on tho front Current Owner Susan
steps of the Meigs Lyn Jones et al
,
County Court House Property at
35383
on Friday, Aug 10, Pagevllle Rd
2007 at 10 00 a m , of Albany, Ohio
said day, the following PP# 11·00180.001
described real estato. Prior
Deed
Situated In the County References
Volume
of Meigs, In tho State 271 , Pago 163
of Ohio and In the Appraised
at
Townthlp of Scipio
$50,000 DO Torma of
Being a part of 1 4 112 Sale Cannot be sold
acres more or less for less than 213rds of
tract of land transR the appraised value
ferrod to Steven D and 10% down on day of
Barb!!!• C. &lt;&amp;!lorlll .as sale, cash or cErtHiod
recorded as Parcell In check, belance duo on
Deed Book 271 at Paga confirmation of aale
163 Molgo County The appraisal did not
Recorder's
Office Include an Interior
Melg o County, Ohio examination of the
also being a part of house
Section 16, Township R Robert
E
Beegle,
7· North, Range • 14· Melga County She~ff
Weal, Scipio Township, Attorney
for
the
Molgs County, State of Plaintiff
Ohio and more partlcu· Javltch,
Block
&amp;
larly de oc~bed n lol· Rolllbolll UP
Iowa
602 Main St , Sulle 500
Beginning at a point In Cloclnnatl , Ohio 45202
the centerline of town· 513-744· 9600
ship road 142 being (7)4, t1 , 18
tho Northeast corner
of said 4 1/ 2; acres
more or loss tract and
Public Notice
Ia asaumod to bear
South
tlag. 1 1' 20 Shorm Salea
East a dletance of Case Number 07CV0,17

n

JP Morgan Chaao
Bank
PlalnUff
va
Charlet Klein Jr, et al
Defendant• Court of
Common Pleaa, Meigs
County, Ohio
In purouance of an
ordar of sale to me
directed from aald
Court In the above
onfltltd acUon, I will
oxpoae to salo at publie auction on the front
atopa of the Meigs
County Court House
on Friday, Auguat 10,
2007 11 10·00 am., of
oald cloy, tho following
dncrlbtd rnloatato
Tract No.1:
The following real
ottato In the Counfy of
Melga, State of Ohio
and In lhe Vlltago of
Pomeroy,
and
described as follows
Beginning
at
the
Northwoat corner of o
lot formerly owntd by
John"Voao oometlmes
refarrod to as John
Fop. Thonce South or\
tho line of said Lot 44
dagr- West 100 feet;
thence
North
34
det~r- Wast 40 feat
thonce
North
43
dogma East 82 feet to
the
front
atroet,
Butternut Avo , thence
with Hid street 44 feet
to tho place of beginnlng, BAld property
being a part of Lot No
303, Town 2, Range 13
of Lot 189 Said propar·
ty being doslgnatod on
the Tax Duplicate sa
Lot 47 of Subdlvlalon
of Lot No. 189 In
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The aforeoald real
eatate being subject to
a certain agreement
made between J P
Bradbury and Henry
Koehlar on November
14, 1871 , as recorded
In Volume 1, Pago 259,
Molga County Leaso
Records,
reference
which Ia hereby made
Tract No. 2.
fhe following real
estate ahulltd In the
County of Meigs, In the
Slate of Ohio, and In
tha VIllage of Pomeroy,
and bounded
and
dsscrlbtd aslollowo H
being Lot No 48 of
Subdivision of Lot No
189, • and part of
Triangular Lot No 515
Situate on Butternut
and Valo Streets In
Pomeroy
Parcel
Nos
1600614.000 and 16·
00613.000
Property Address 132
Butternut
Avenuo,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Currant
Owner
Charlea Klein Jr et al
Prior
Deed
Aefarencaa
Volume
213, page 667
Appr,lsed at $50,000
Terms of Sale Cannot
be sold for loss than
213rda of the apprallll&lt;f
value 10% down on
day of aale, Caah or
certified check, bal·
anca due on conflrmaR
tlon of sale
Tho appraisal did not
Include an Interior
uamlnatlon of tho
houee
Robert
E
Beagle,
Melgo County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
Co LPA
600 S Pearl St
Columbus, Ohio 43206
814·221-1662
(7) 4, 11 , 18

�•

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Wednesday, 'July 4, 2007

Wednesday, July 4, 2007
ALLEY COP

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The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Public Notice• In

":'~;..';;:,';'a&amp;:::;:~:
Your R.taht t.o Kno'W. Delivered Right to

ACROSS .-

8herii!Sale
n. apprelaal did not Court ol Common - 128.75 t.1 to the atape ol the Melga Columbia Townahlp,
C.. Number 06CV1 74' Include an Interior Piau, Melga County, northeut ol a County Court Houaa Melga County, Ohio

Phillip
Alder

;~;~;;~lf~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l

Ohiopureuance of an In
.22o.ect
acre Boolt
lot deecribed
Auguat
o, ularly
and being
more partieIn
No. 239, on
2007Friday,
at 10:00
a.m., 1of
deacribed
ulol·
order ol tala to me page No. 823 d~ eal!l day, the lollowlng Iowa:
Richard Cogar et at
directed from said recorda
of llolgo ducrlbed ruleelllla: Baglnnlng lor refer·
Dalendanta
Court In the above County, Ohio; thence Situate In theTownahlp once on a 5111" Iron pin
Court ol Common till
entitled actlqn, I wtll north as dag. 28' aoot of Columbia, County of with a plaotlc ldentlfl·
expoae to sare at pub- tOO 1M! to y,e north· Melga, and Stele of cation caput, Ulkan to
Plaoo, Metgo County, John D. Clunk
Ohio.
5601 Hudoon Drive, lie auction olthe front eall corner ol a .23 Ohio:
be on tha northeast
01
In pursuance
an su"a 400
otepa ot the Mllga acre lot deacrlbed In TRACT ONE:
corner o1 Sac:tlon 33;
- order ol aale to me Hudeon, Olllo 44238
County Court Houaa Daed Book No. 243, Baing 5.103 acres, Thence along tile 1111
directed !rom said 330-342-8203
on Friday, Aug. 3, 2007 page no. 925 deed more or laaa, oHulted Uno ol Section ~.
Court In tho ' abOve (6) 27, (7) 4, 11
at 10:00 a.m., ol aald recorda - ol Melga In Section 33, T-&amp;-N, R· Soutll 07" 17' 20" _ ,
antltled action, 1 will
day, the following County, Ohio; thance 15-W,
Columbia a dlaltlnce ol 388.86
CORNER STONE
expoee to sale at pubdeacribed real - : oouth 88 dag. 50' eaat Townahlp,
Meigs lee! to e 5111" lrim pine
lie euctlon on the Iron!
Fubllc Notice
All that certain tract 20 !eel along the north County.
wijh a plaatlc ldentlll· CONSTRUCTION
atepa ol the Melgo
or parcel o1 land, ottu- line o1 a .'¥1 acre lot; Being a part of a tract cation cap set being
County Court Housa Sheriff Sale
ated, lying and being In thence north 5 dag. 09' o1 land that
now or the principal place ol
Roofing, Siding,
on Fmt.y, Aug. 3, 2007 Case No. O&amp;CV17t
the Clty o1 Pomeroy, · - 1 125.85 !eel to tha formerly In the name of beginning ol a tract
· Soffit, Decks,
at 10:00 a.m., ol said Farmers
Bank
&amp; County ol Mllgo, .,d south aide o1 a 25 loot Ronald and Judy herein described;
Doors, Windows,
day, the following Savlnga
'state ol Ohio, and road; thence oouth 87 HI!QOI!y u recorded in Thence
continuing Electric, Plumbing,
deecribed rulelltlte: Plalnllll va
being known and dea- dag. l't ' welt 120 !eel Olllclal Record 53, along tho oaot line ol
Drywall,
Situated In
the Cleveland Howard
lgnated on· a map of along the aouth aide ol Page 01 of the Melga Section 33, South
Remodeling, Room
Townahlp ol Letianon, at al
Lincoln Heights, made said road, to the place County , Recorder's 17' 20" West a dlatence
Additions
County. ol Malga .,d Defendants
by Breece &amp; Carper, ol beginning, contain· Olllce, said tract being ol 249.781eet to a 5111"
State o1 Ohio:
Court o1 Common Reglaterad ·
Civil lng .35 acrea, more or situated In the nortf&gt;. Iron pin with a pluHc ·
Loca~ c o n-otra ctor
Being In 160 Acre Lot Pleaa, Meigs County, Engl.-., Huntington, looa.
aaot quarter ol Sactlon Identification cap set;
#1182 of Lebanon Ohio
W.Va., October7, 1942, Reference
Dead: 33, T-D·N,
R-15-W, Thence leaving the
Free Estimates
Townahlp In Meigs In pursuance of an a copy ol which map Volume 306, Page 511 , Columbia Township, eaat line ol Section 33, ~:7:40-::;3;6;7;·~0:5:36=~
County; Ohio, and order of sale to me was Iliad for, record In Malgo Counly Deed Meigs County, State of and with a line through r
beginning 11 the steel directed from iald the Office ol the Recorda.
Ohio and being more the gramor'o property,
H&amp;H
pin located In the cen· Court In the above Recorder o1 Meigs Audltor'a Parcel No.: partlculariy described South 86' 27' 58" Wast,
ter o1 !Jgte Routa 1124 entitled action, 1 will County,
Ohio. 2D-00066.000
aalollows:
pssalng a 518" Iron pin
Guttering
lithe point ...,_nt- axposa to sale at December 11, t942, Parcel Twp: snuato In Beginning lor refer- with a plalllc ldentlflSeamless Gutlers
lng the Southwell cor- Public Auction on tho Plat Boo!&lt; 13 et pegaa Sactlon 38, town 2, ence on a 5111" Iron .pin cation cap set at
ner of real eatate Iron! stape ol tha 43&amp;44,,alll.lll21,and Range 12, SuHon with a plastic ldentlfl- 953.65 leal, going a. Roofing, Siding, Guners
owned
by
the Meigs Cou~ty Court being mora particular- Township, VIllage ol cation cap set, taken to total dlltance of983.as
Insured &amp; BDnded
"-'otecooltll Aooernbly Houoa on Friday, Aug. ly deocrlbed ao lol- Syracuoe,
Mslgo be on the northeast lee! to a Iron spike set '::7:40:-6:5:3-:96::
57=~
Church; thence North · 3,200711tO:OOa.m.,ol lows:
County, State ol Ohio, comero!Sactlon33:
(60 penny nail) In the r
along the Welt line o1 aald day, the following
BEGINNING at a and being, part ol One Thence along the east canter ol Cone Road
Sta I T
aloreaald church real ctaacrtbed realeatate: point In the north line Hundred Acre Lot llna ol Section 33, (Township Road 7);
n ey reeeltlle a distance ol
SHuata In Scipio of Lincoln Road at the Number 295.
South
17' 20" - t Thence along the cenTrimming
174.2 feet to the township,
llelgo comer - n Lot 21 Commencing at a two a distance of 158.45 tar of Cone Road the
Northweat corner ol County, State ol Ohio and 22, is shown of Inch Iron pipe In the feet to a 5111" Iron pin following (2) couraea;
&amp; Removal
aforaoald church real and being In Section oald mllfl; thence with northeaot comer ol a with a plastic ldentlfl· t . North 26' 24' 43" ' Prompt and Quality
Work
estate; thence Weal 26, Town 7 North, oald line o1 Lincoln 5.5 acre mora or lees cation cap set being West a distance 72.84
running parallel with Range 14 Well o1 the Road No. 83' 51 min. W. tract aa recorded In the prtnclpel place ol !eel to a point, aqd;
the center ol State Ohio
Company's SOIMI;thencowlththa Deed Book 231, Page beginning of tile tract 2. North 34' 37' 53" 'Reasonable Rates
Route #124 a distance Purcheae and baing line between Iotti 21 773 In tile Recorda of herein d-rlbed;
Wast a dlotance ol 'Insured
ol 600 leal to an Iron d-rlbed eelollowa: and 20, No. 26' 90 min. tho Melgo Counly Thence
continuing 127.16 feet to a palm;
'Experienced
pin; thence South runBeginning at 1 50 218.44 feet to a potntln Recordar'e
Olllce; , along the Hit line ol Thence leaving the References Available!
nlng parallel with the Inch Sycamore tree the 80Ut11 line of north thence N. 90 dag. 00' Sac:tlon 33, South
center of Cone Road
WMt line of the afore- Eaat 547 feat !rom the otieet;tllencewith Uld 00" W. along the north 17' 20"Welt a dlaltlooe and with a line through Call Gary Stanley @
uld
Pantecoatal Southweat corner ol nne of north S. line of said 5.5 acra of 210.41 feet to a 518" the granlor'a property,
74f!-742-2293
Auernbly Church rut Section 26; thence 88' 33 min. Eall 50.17 more or laat tract lro~ pin wHh a plaaUc North 82' 53' 34" East Please leave messa e
eatete a distance of Eaii191U7 feet along teet; thenC. with the 671.11 feet to I a point ldentHiceUon cep 881; palling a 5111" Iron pin
174.2-Mt to the center the South line ol uld line - n said Iota In tha exlaUng W'esteriy Thence leaving the with a pluUc ldentlll·
ol State Route 1124; Section 26 to a lance 21, and 22, S. 28' 09 right ol way line ol Lee ealt line of -'ion 33, cation cap Ill at 30.00
YOUNG'S
lhanee Eeet along the pott: Thence North o min. W. 300.55 feet to Circle and · the real and wijh a line through feet, going a toltll diecanter o1 SUite Route dog. 58" 51" West the point o1 beginning. point ol beginning lor lila grantor's .property, lance ol 1129.071eetto
#124 1 dlaltlnce of 600 653.08 - t o 1 point In
Rosa.rvlng however the
land
herein South 82' 53' 34" Wast. tho principal place ol
tnt to tho place of tha
centerline
of the coal and other min- deecrlbed; thence S. 5 pealing a 5111" Iron pin beginning, containing • Room Addlllana I
beginning, containing County Rood 17, pall· eral In and underlying dag. 24' 00" E. along wHh 1 plalllc ldanllfl· 5.099 ecreo more or
Remodeling
2.4 acrea, mort or leu. lng a fence poll at 833 the above deocrlbed the exlltlng wellerly cation cap aet at tees and being subject • New Garages
EXCEPTING all lagll 1881 for reference; property togather with right ol way line ol Lee 1099.07 feet, going a to the right of way ol ·.Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
rlght-of-weyo and SAY· thence South 87 deg. the right to mine the Circle, 27.56 !eel to a toltll
distance
of Cone Road (Township • Vinyl Siding 6 Painting_
lNG and EXCEPTING 45' 02"Weat148.661eet aama wHhout •cum- point In tho axlotlng 1129.07 !eel to a Iron Road 7) and all other • '-tlo an"d Porch Deckt
WV036726
.
the coal underlying along the centarilnt ol bi.,ce to tha surface southerly right of way eplke 111 (60 penny eaaamenta of record.
said premlno with the said County Road 17 to and subject to an eaae- line of Lee Circle; nail) In. the center of Being 5.099 ac.res out
V C. YOUN G Ill
.right to mine the same a P&lt;'lnt; thanc. South ment lor -.ga filter thance No. 87 deg. 1t' Cone Road (Township ol Tract One, Olllclal
CJ925.215
and a rlght-of·wey In 84 dag. 38' 14" Wilt ditch or leachlnQ ditch 00" E. along tho exlot- Road 7);
Record 53, Page Ot.
l'unt'rOf 01'1
every direction along 316.74 feel along the· as eel forth and lng ooutherly right o1 Thence along the can- All 518" Iron plna with !
~
t • Ji
the t coal-me tllera- centerline of said deacrlbed ln. )hat way line ol Lee Circle, ter ol Cone Road the plaatlc ldentlllcotlon
.under Including all County Road 17 to a lnatrumant
bearing 52.73 to an ••tat· following three (3) caps sat are stamped
mining rights.
· point; thence South 79 dato November 28, lng Iron pipe In the courses;
"Seymour
&amp;
J&amp;L
SAVE AND EXCEPT· dag. 45' 23" Wttl 1943 and recorded In northlteat
property 1. North 34' 37' 53" Aaaoclates",
lNG: Situated In the 326.60 feet along the said recorder's olllce corner of George D. West a distance ol All Iron plna 881 being
Construction
Townthlp of Lebanon, centerline ol oald In December 3,1943, In and Shetry A. Buoklrk 71 .981eet to a point,
5111" by 36".
County ol Melga, SUite County Roed 17 to a o.ect Boqk 151 page aa recorded II) Deed 2. North 44' 56' 12" The bearings uoed In • VInyl Siding
of Ohio, and In Sacllon point; thence South 3 178.
Book 283, Pilga 903 In West a dlatance ol tha above deacrlbed - Replacement
··
Windows
34, 180 acre Lot 1182, dag. 28' 14" Eaot Reference Ia made to the Recorda ol the 116.62 !eat to a point, tract ware - d on
Town 2N, Range 11 W, 214.57 feet to a 30 Inch deed of Raymond M. Mllga
County and ;
the east line of Section • Rooting
and bounded and Sycamore Tree, pall• Fotay, Federal Housing Recorder'o
Olllce; 3. north 54" 26' 54" 33 being, South 07' 17'
deecrlbed aa follows: lng a fence poet at 20 Commlaaloner
to thence S., 5 dag. 09' Weal a distance ol 20" Watt and are lor ·pecks
Being a .,...... o1 land teei · lor reference; Gerald E. Schutter and 00" E. alan~ the wast t t .40 feet to a Iron the determination o1 ·Garages
• Pole Buildings
lying on the rightaldea thance North 70 dag. Mildred. F. Schustar, property line ol said aplke tiel;
angles only.
ol the centerHne of a 34' OO"Weet469.70 !eel dated February 4, 1946 George D. and Sherry Thence leaving the The above described • Room Addijlona
aurvay. made by tho to a point In the canter- recorded In Volume A. Buskirk, 78.66 !eel center ol Cone Road tract was surveyed by
Owner:
Department
ol line ol said County t 57, page 41, Melga to a point In the north- and with a llna through George F. Seymour,
James Keesee II
Transportation
and Road 17; thence South County Deed Recorda. eall property corner o1 the grantor't property, Ohio
Professional
742-2332
being located within 13 dag. 03' 26" Wast Addreaa ol Property: Hugh M. and Mlrtho C. North 81" 07' 02" Eaot Surveyor No. 6044,
the boundary polnta ol 78.80 teet to an Iron 1843 Lincoln Heights, McPhail aa recorded In palling 1 5111"1ron pin September IS, 1997. ~
Parcel No. 205-WLR 11 rod; thence South 47 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Deed Book 250, Page with 1 plalllc ldentlfl· SUBJECT TO THE
Public NoUce
delineated upon tho deg. 39' 00" Weal PPI1 HI 562000
803 In the Recorda of cation cep sat II 30.00 R E S T R I C T I 0 N S
Deportment
of 136.50 feet to an Iron Prior Deed Roferences: the llelga County feet, going a total dla- aHoched hereto as are permitted.
Trantportatlon'o Right- rod; thance South 76 Volume157, page 41
Recorder's
Olllc.; lance ol1295.17 feet to Exhibit "C" which ahall 8. Prior to building or
at-Way plan MEG-124- dag. 49' 51"Weal89.00 Appraloed at $25,000. thence S. as deg. 00' the principal place ol run wijh the land and placing a unit on the
3t .57, Sheet 14 of 42 !eat to an Iron rod; Torma ol Sola: cannot 51" W. along the north beginning, containing be binding upon the lot you can usa a
and recorded In Plat thence South 56 dag. be sold lor leu than property line ol olld 5.103 acrn more or Granteaa, their heirs camper on the lot lor
Book 5, Page t 9, 05' 00" Weal 257,50 213rda olthe appraloed Hugh M. a.,d Martha C. 1- and being aubject and asalgns.
recreational
use.
recol!la
ol
the leal to an Iron rod; value. tO% down of McPhail, 88.221eet to a to the right ol way of Subject to aaaements, However, It must be
Recorder's
Olllca, thence South 88 · deg. day ol sale, caah or point; thence N. t dag. Cone Road (Township laaaea, rights-ot-way, removed !ram the lot
Mllgo County, Ohio.
53' OO"Waat 253.00 lee! certified check, bal- 09' oo• West along a Road 7)' and all olhar conditions and restrlc· when not In uaa.
tiona of record.
H Ia understood that to an Iron rod; thence ance due. on ~nllrma- nne, 108.91 teet to a eaoementa of record.
9· Prior to string any
1111 strip of land above South 25 dag. 30' 00" lion olula.
point In the north line Being 5.103 acres out SAVE AND EXCEPT development ol your
described
contains Welt 88.00 teet to the n. appraisal did not ol aald 5.5 acre more of Tract One, Olllclal tho No. 4-4A, Clarion or lot. contact the Meigs
0.128 acreo, more or point of beginning, Include an Interior or I-liaci; thance N. Record 53, Page Ot .
Llmeatone coal which County
Health
laat, Including tho containing 18.95 acreo, examination ol the 90 dag. 00' 00" E. along All 5111" Iron pins with was previously conto review
prtsant road which mora or leSI, except- houae.
the north line ol said plastic Identification veyed . to the Oho Department
home ~lie location.
occuplaa 0.000 acrea, lng all lagal rights ol Robert E. Beagle, 5.5 acre more or 1- cape all are stamped Power Company by Currant Owner: Terry &amp;
more or leea.
way.
Meigs County Shari!!
tract, 25.92 !eel to the "Seymour
&amp; deed dated August 6, Pamela Paraons et al
The
above The description lor the AHorney lor the plain· point o1 beginning and Associates".
1956 and recorded In Property at: 39880
deecribedareao!O.t26 above tract being the tiH
contalnlng0.t88acrea. All iron plno set being Volume 197, Page 541 , Cone Road
acreo Ia io be deleted results ol a aurvay Richard F. Bentley
Subject to 'all legal 518" by 36".
Meigs
County Albany, Ohio
!rom AudHor'a Parcel made by Robert H. 425 Canter St.
hlghwayt and eaae· The bearings used In Recorder'a Olltce.
PPI 05.00124.003.
No. 07.00723.000.
Eason,
Ohio Ironton, OH 45638
manta of record.
the above described PRIOR CONVEYANCE : A
Prior'
Deed
Thlt description Ia Registered Surveyor 740-532-7000
Currant Owner: Robart tract were baled on Olllclal
Records References : Volume
beaed on o survey No. S-08548 dated (6) 27, (7) 4, 11
WOOd etal
the eaotllne ol Sactlon Volume 53, Page Ot, 53, Page 01
made by BALKE ENG~ November, 1982.
Property II: 2411 Lee 33 being, soutll
17' Meigs
County Appraised
at
NEERS for the Ohio Reference
dead:
Clrcla, Syrecuaa, OH.
20" Weal and "'' lor Racordefa Olllce.
$40,000.00 Terms ol
Department
ol Volume 287, Page 629,
Public Notice
PP120-00088.000&amp;20- tho determination ol Deaa Raatrlctlona lor Sale: Cannot be sold
Transportation,
In Malga County Deed
00284.000
· anglaa only.
Cone Road· Township lor less than 213rds ol
2000, By Joseph D. Records.
Sheri" Selea
Prior
Deed The above described Road #7
the appraised value.
Kuhlmann,
P.S. 'Prior Reference Dead: Caae Number 06CV156 Relerance:Volume 44, tract waa aurveyed by t. Lot number 4·5 are 10% down on day ol
Reglotared Surveyor Volume 184, Page 711 , LeSane Bank NA
Page 475
George F. Saymour, being aold lor tingle sale, cash or certified
No. s-&amp;823 under the Mllgo County olllclsl Plalntlll
Appralted
et Ohio
Proleulonal !amity residential uae. check, balance due on
direction and auperv~ Recorda
vs
$70,000.00 Tonne ol Surveyor No. 8044, Once the aeller hao conllrmatlon o1 sale.
alan oi .Ronatd F. Rlsar, Auditor's Parcel No. : Robert Wood Et AI
Sale: cannot be oold September 15, 1997.
been paid In lull, lots The apprelsal did not
P.S.
Rogleterad 17-00382.000
Defendants
lor 1- tllan 213rda of SUBJECT TD THE may be divided II you Include an Interior
Survayor No. B-7093.
Property
Addreu : Court ol Common the appraleed value. RESTRICT I 0 N S.recelve approval !rom examination ol the
Alllron.plna eel are to 33353 Cotterill Road, Pleas, Meigs County, 10% down on day ol attached hereto aa the Molgo County house.
be (314") x 130") by a (t Pomeroy, Oh!o 45769 Ohio
sale, cuh or certHiad EKhlblt"C" which shall agenclaa.
,
Robert E. Beegle,
112") aluminum cap. Current
Owner: In pursuance of, an chectc ·belance due on run with the land and 2. Single Wide, Double Meigs County Sheri!!
atamped "ODOTRIW Cleveland C. Howard at order of sale to me conll,;..lon olsale.
be binding upon the Wide and Modulars ere Attorney
lor
the
DISTRICT 10" and the al
dlroctad !rom said n. appraisal did not Grantees, their helra permitted.
Skirting
Plaintiff
turvaynr'o
Ohio Appraised at $40,000 ·COUrt In the above entl- Include an Interior and aaolgna.
muet be Installed to Will
Karnen, P.O. Bo•
Raglalratlon or survey- Torma ol Sale: Cannot lied action, 1 will examination · ol the Subject to eaoemenlo, unit within 60 days ol 388, Logan, OH43138
or'a name, number be sold lor leas then expose to sale at pub- housa.
laaoao, rlghto·ol-way, being placed o n the 740-385-2121
ancllor company name. 214rds ol the appraised lie auction on tha front Robert E. Baegla, condijlona and restrl~&gt;- lot. Unit muat be pre- (7) 4, 11 , 18
Points listed with value. 10"4 down on slaps ol tho Meigs Melgo County Sheri!! tiona o1 record.
approved
by
the
(Iron pin aat) are to be day- ol sale, cash or County Court Houoe Attorney
lor SAVEAND EXCEPT the Vendor prior to being
set by the contractor certlllad chectc, bal- on Friday, August 3, thePialntlll
No. 4-4A, Clarion or placed on the lot, until
11 Indicated at the ter- ance due on conllrma- 2007 at 10:00 a.m. o1 Lerner
Sampo~n UmeetOf\tl coal which tha note It paid In lull.
mlnatlon ol the con- lion ol sale.
said day, the following Rollusa
wao prevloualy cop- Once the note Is peld
llructlon project
The appraisal did not do"'irlbed real ell~: 120 E. 4th St. 8th Floor veyed to tho Ohio In lull any unit being
Sold oltltlona being Include an Interior Parcel Ona:Thelollow· Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 Power Company by placed on the lot cen
the Station numbers as examination ol the lng real estate being In 513-241 ·3100
deed dated August 8, not be ovar ten yaera
otlpulated In the hera- house. Lend only.
SyracunVIIIageand In (8) 21, (7) 4, It
t956 and recorded In old when placed on the
'\ lnbelore · -mentioned Robert E. Baagle, 100 acre Lot No. 218,
Volume 197, Page 541, lot.
aurvay and ao shown Meigs County Sheriff
Sutton
Townohlp,
Melgo
County 3. No junk or unllby plana on lila In the Attorney for tho plain- Malga County, Ohio.
f!Ubllc Notice
Recortler't Ollfce.
canoed vehicles are
Ohio Department a! tlaa
Described as lollowo: •
TRACT TWO:
permitted on the lot.
Transportation, ChriatopherTanoglla
Beginning at a 2 Inch Sheriff Salao Caoe Being 5.099 acrao, 4. No accumulation of
Mer._, Ohio.
200 E. 2nd St., pipe on the oouttoeelt Number 08CV170
mole or leaa, •"uated personal
ellects,
Said premises alao Pomeroy, OH 740-992- corner ol a 9.6 acre Citizen Bank or Logan In Section 33, T-&amp;-N, R- debris waate, garbage
known aa 50338 State 6388
tract ol land deeded Plalntllf
t 5•W,
Columbia or other unsightly
!rom John McCoy to vs
Townohlp,
Molgo oblecta .
Route 124, Recine, OH (6) 27, (7) 4 &amp; 11
45771
PPN :
071
Archie. Lea, described Terry
&amp;
Ptomola County, Ohio.
5. No lncompletestruc00723.000
In Deed Recor'ded In Paroonrr et 11
Being a pert ol a tract ture, you will be
... THE
Prior o.ect R-ancea:
Public Notice
Deed Book No. 239, Dlllooderltl
ol land that Ia naw or allowed adequate time
Volume 328, page 179
page no. 763, Deed Court of Common formerly In the name ol to complete structure.
Appralaed at $45,000
Sheri!! Sales
records
of
Malge Pl111, Melge County, Ronild
and
Judy 6. All loll must give
HAS
Tennt ol Sale: Cannot Caaa Number 06cv173 County, Ohio, thence Ohio
Hagerty ao recorded In accesslo all pubic utll·
SOMETHING
be told lor laao than City National Bank ol weal
815.85
teet; In purouance ol an Glllclsl Record 53, Illes Including but not
FOR YOU!!
213rda ol the appraised WV
thence South 24.85 order ol aale to me page 01 o1 tho Meigs llmHed to public water,
value. 10% down on Plalntlll
!eat to the oouth side directed !rom uld County
Recorder's electric and telephone.
Day ol sale, cash or vs
ol a 25 loot road ; the court In the abovo tn11· Olllce, aald tract being 7. Only one large ani·
certified chock, bal· Rhonda Milam, Robert place ol beginning lor tied action, .I will oltustad In the north- mal per acre Is permitonce due on conflrma· Schoolcraft, et al
this
description; expose to sale at pub- eaot quarter o 1Section ted. EKample horae,
lion of sale.
Defendants
thence south 6 dag. 09' lie auction on lhelront 33, T·9·N, R-15-W. cow, goat. No swine

8entttctal Ohio Elve
"'--nnlll
va
o

examination
ol the
houae.
Robert E. Beegle,
Mllgo County Sherttl
Attorney lor the plain-

\*

or

RE"T
T' l 'S 1 SALES
Ill 1\L
.
t SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
Q THLV,1 OXYGEN' VISITS
IM N

No~h .

1

• QJ 8 3
• J 10 • •

tAK3

I

MONTY

\

rfamihJ •·&gt;MBM•

.... "• ""' ...

&amp; M.EDICAL EQUIPMENT

or

&gt;

II

O

0 I{ ' 1&lt; ('

•

A K 10 5

• Q 9 52
• Q 2
.. A Q 3

South
!T.J.I

(J.H.)

Owner- R'ick Wise

tNT

Pass

2.

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

J;»us

(B.F.J

East
IJ.A.I

Pa"
AU pass

Openingjead: • 2

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

OJSTeTitiCS
~=~~=;::=~~~~~~~=~

This on-going match
Is on-going

1&gt;~. tiA~V~Y
I&gt;ENTI~Tfi.Y

· l&gt;tt.. tiOOPEtt.
PVS~

PULL

EJ

~
WH'( ·D ''I'A ,THINI&lt;

www.-abl-.,..-

I PUT IT ON HIM

IN TH' F\$ST
PLACE '?!

am

St. Rt. 7, TUpPers Plains, OH

740-667-3177
Full Service Auto Repair
Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
Diagnostics; Full Brake Service, Air
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repair,
Alignment, Custom Exhaust
Hupp-Owner

•IBERT
BISSELL
CIISTIImON
• New Homes
• Garages

748-992-1m

ac:.queen.
'"Wolf played,' said West. "You extracted
my selo diamond sicit cards like pulling
teeth."
That is why this play Is known as tho
dentist's COUll'
.

Mushroom Compost

$35 A Scoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29

.. ,

• Complete
Remodeling

THE BORN LOSER

Jeff Bissell, Manager

Wide Variety of .
Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and

'

W~!!?!,

BIG NATE

Tlourodoy, July 5, 2007
Bytlomtco-0...

I

Ily avaUa.bla to you now.
CANCER (June 21..July . 22) II
behOoVes vou to listen to wt}atever anybody has to say, even idle chatter.
Someone coukl Inadvertently let the cat
out of the bag concerning Info you've
been trying to (Mlher.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Your commer·
clal affairs coold possess some kind of

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unique edge tpat may be more evident to
your associates than to you. If lhey react

PEANUTS
TODAI{ IS A I-IOLIDA'I' 50
I GUESS THE COURTI-IOU5E
15 CLOSED •.

I KNOW •• I I-lAVE TO
60 ALL DA'I' WITH.OUT
SUIN6 SOME~ODV

446-0007

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577t
74D-949-2217

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

crfi!Qd trr:m quciilkm by tamooa fli!IOPit,put llld ~
Eacl'llflller in ttle cipher stm 10r another

Celebllty Cilt*' Cfll*:9.-ns n

rooat~cluo : 0 OQt08Is B

"MU

HUUK

MRPKCL
LIPZ
RH

JH JLUDREJ MRZF

CS

ZFU

UYWUDRUHEU , OIZ MU

HCZ GUZ JLUDREJ

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PWRDRZ." • FIOUDZ F . FILWFDU8

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Wa ITllst change il1 order to suovive.' · Pearl

Bale
.
~
'Be 1fie change 1hal you want 1o see in tho world.' • Mahatma Garxlhi

~!~::;~r S@1t~lA -lt £tfS' GAM!
WOlD

ld;lld II Ct..t y R. POtL•N

Reorrongt leHers of
0 fovr
scrambled words bel~e

low lo ftHm four simple words.

MOYHN!

riences might become more pronounced. Both the ways and means to
gratify these Inclinations should be read-

( Ill '-I r1
~ 0 -' JS.::; -.~S . I

~~~~

The urge to acquire more knowledge
either through reading or personal expe -

...,!. ,~!.-

-

animal
45 Stadium
22 Go blek on
roof
one'a W«d 46 n ..... tayeo •
23 Llko olwayo 47 Decalve
24 Caulllc
48 Go - solution
diet
25 Onlered
50 Watar illy
around
leal
hoklano
26 Droop
51 It may be
32 Glimmering 8
30 Gannon
hlrdobolled
33 Myaterlea
9 C.l~omla' o
al11cla
52 BillyFort36 Small
34 Had
Wllllama
10 More, to
8COutl
occasion
37 Valuable
Padro
lor
35 .Reddloh
mlnoral
t2 Tla13 Scram!
antalopao
38 Mall brew
39 Health club 18 Storage
40 Hound'•
40 Collla'l
places
trail
charge
t 9 Flat broke 41 Mllactv'o
(2 W)lo.)
43 Folkolngar
42 liolttl Cllfl
43 Luge
20 ()nHtlied
Bu~-

~Astro-

Shade R1ver
Ag Service

Stop &amp; Compare

Regular readers wilf know !hat on Ju~ 4,
1
four of tho declaration signatories
repaired to a quiet room IO play a game
remarkably similar to present·day
bridge. After two rubbers, Thomas
Jeflarson was well ahead, wilh Berjamln
Franklin being tho biggest loser. On lhe
first board of tho third rubber, John
Adams made ....,.. hearts with t50
honors. On tho second, Adams went
down in a lour·spade contract he could
have \nade with tho aid of a eclssors
coop. Tills was tho third deal.
Aijalnat lour hearts, reached after v.toat
would come to be known as a Stayman·
sequence, John Hancock (West) led the
spade two.
Jelferaon paused to decide
upon hla line of play. He had on~ two top
iosenl: tho ace and ~ng ollrumpa. He
might llloo hM a club loser, should tho
Hneue fall. And lhla lead had all tho hall·
marks o1 a singleton. ~ so, and Wast
could get a spade ruff wilh a loW heart,
the .contract would depend upon thot
club fi,_ .. . unless ...
Declarer lOOk floe first trick and invnedi·
ately eashed his three diamonds. After
discarding lhe club lhree from his hend,
South called for a heart. East at~ up
with his ace and gavs his partner a
spade ruff. West cashed his hea~ king,
but now was endplayod. II he returned a
diamond, declarer would ruff In one
hand and &lt;iocard a dub from tho other.
And a dub shift would be Into Soulh'B

1 Put out """ 46 Lapwing.
6 Open up
for one
11 llaku up
49 St&gt;IH to join
for
53 White Sole
13 John llulfl
buyl
-Club
54 Injure
14 Light
6S Baker't buy
orourci"
56 Propyrua Ia
t 5 Belltll
one
16 Pouch
17 Blurbt
DOWN
18 Sol
·1 lnHCI raaln
21 Round
tlwelllnge
2Hagenol
''The Other''
23 Collar
Z&amp;Borot
3 Jlmmy'o
coualn
IUCCIUor
27 Prevloua
4 Calle h
qulta
28 Without
help
5 Held up
6 Nato!
29 CruShed, grapes
builders
31 Scroll
7 BruceM!d

ns.

BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinea, And Fur.are

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CARPENTER
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Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

or

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West
• 2

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Slllllllll1:81•12:011 ...

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OF

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IT g;f~ \!ERE 1\1~ ~N61U~ IS
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r;t/~

•

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GRIZZWELLS
1M ~clloo\.'i

'

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'llle trouble wi tio lh( modd k

'1 class is try ing to s av~ wltik
,_
spending as much as the

·@Pi iNt

IJUMBf!fD LEHERI IN

I

!Hfl f IQUAIE I

@)

~~c:~~;~~~ LEHf.RS ro

1 [

1 1.

1

j 1

SCRAM.WS ANSWERS 1 - l - 07

Wiring - Noisy - Holly- Banter - NOTHING
"A cynic," the ledurer told his audience, "knows the price of
everything and the val.ue ofNOTIIING."

ARLO&amp; JANIS

ekcepllonall~ good for you, buill Will be
up to you to be materially aware so that,
when something unelCpGCied develops,
you can recognize it.
PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) - Tfy to
keep ~r schedule as flex ible as po$5;.
ble beCause !hOse things you do on the
spur+Of·lhe·moment are likely to be the

David Lewis
740-992-6971

r'::::;;::;::::::~~:::::F:r~ee:E:•:tlm:•:t~a•

positively to you, act on It immediately.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - You may
get an opportunity to win over a new ally
who could prove to be of immense value
down the line. Treat all new people you
meet atlhls time as treasured finds.
LIBRA (Sept 2~1. 23) -Your IngenuIty and resourcefulness can be advantageously expressed In some unusual
ways, especia lly lnvotvlng important
Issues that have to do with your worX or
career. Use lhem.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No\1. 22) - Some ol
the best things that happen to you,
things ol considerable Importance, could
come about In unexpected ways.
However, none ollhem Is llkety to be of a
material nature.
SAGITT~RIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) II
you are strongly motivated and yOur
objectives are well-detinitd , more than
one major achievement is possible . Once
you establish a goal , don't take your eye
on the target.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - You'll
find that you're a quick thinker and tha\
your first ideas or Impulses are likely to
~~be your best thoughts. Act as your initial
perceptions dictate and then make
adjustments as needed.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20- Feb. 19) - The
proba~ll l ties for personal ga in look

0

1\1~~

I ~~

•

tl'latMn out to be the most fun and

rewarding for yOu.
AAr'ES (March 21 -April 19) - Your logic
and intu ition are working in tandem, so
muCh so that oo llectlvely they give you
an edge over others in accurately
asses sing critical situations - both
ded uctively and intuitively.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - This might
be an e•cellent day to apply some effort
toward one of your newer Interests. Your
analytical powers are pretty accurate.
even with thill!)s about wh ich you know
little.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) -Don't be
too ha&amp;ty to give up on an Important
objective. Just when you think Mlrythlng
Ia going against you. a sudden change
lor the better could take place and turn

things around .

SOUP TO NUTZ
'11-I~T 5lc&lt;JioiDS

a

SIT IMPI.aostBLe ...

~i4U.'1

WMeN lbi&gt;t!!
keG To

aul!aD'I G6T a

!leGl,N Wi1}1 ....

�•

Page B4• • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, 'July 4, 2007

Wednesday, July 4, 2007
ALLEY COP

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Public Notice• In

":'~;..';;:,';'a&amp;:::;:~:
Your R.taht t.o Kno'W. Delivered Right to

ACROSS .-

8herii!Sale
n. apprelaal did not Court ol Common - 128.75 t.1 to the atape ol the Melga Columbia Townahlp,
C.. Number 06CV1 74' Include an Interior Piau, Melga County, northeut ol a County Court Houaa Melga County, Ohio

Phillip
Alder

;~;~;;~lf~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l

Ohiopureuance of an In
.22o.ect
acre Boolt
lot deecribed
Auguat
o, ularly
and being
more partieIn
No. 239, on
2007Friday,
at 10:00
a.m., 1of
deacribed
ulol·
order ol tala to me page No. 823 d~ eal!l day, the lollowlng Iowa:
Richard Cogar et at
directed from said recorda
of llolgo ducrlbed ruleelllla: Baglnnlng lor refer·
Dalendanta
Court In the above County, Ohio; thence Situate In theTownahlp once on a 5111" Iron pin
Court ol Common till
entitled actlqn, I wtll north as dag. 28' aoot of Columbia, County of with a plaotlc ldentlfl·
expoae to sare at pub- tOO 1M! to y,e north· Melga, and Stele of cation caput, Ulkan to
Plaoo, Metgo County, John D. Clunk
Ohio.
5601 Hudoon Drive, lie auction olthe front eall corner ol a .23 Ohio:
be on tha northeast
01
In pursuance
an su"a 400
otepa ot the Mllga acre lot deacrlbed In TRACT ONE:
corner o1 Sac:tlon 33;
- order ol aale to me Hudeon, Olllo 44238
County Court Houaa Daed Book No. 243, Baing 5.103 acres, Thence along tile 1111
directed !rom said 330-342-8203
on Friday, Aug. 3, 2007 page no. 925 deed more or laaa, oHulted Uno ol Section ~.
Court In tho ' abOve (6) 27, (7) 4, 11
at 10:00 a.m., ol aald recorda - ol Melga In Section 33, T-&amp;-N, R· Soutll 07" 17' 20" _ ,
antltled action, 1 will
day, the following County, Ohio; thance 15-W,
Columbia a dlaltlnce ol 388.86
CORNER STONE
expoee to sale at pubdeacribed real - : oouth 88 dag. 50' eaat Townahlp,
Meigs lee! to e 5111" lrim pine
lie euctlon on the Iron!
Fubllc Notice
All that certain tract 20 !eel along the north County.
wijh a plaatlc ldentlll· CONSTRUCTION
atepa ol the Melgo
or parcel o1 land, ottu- line o1 a .'¥1 acre lot; Being a part of a tract cation cap set being
County Court Housa Sheriff Sale
ated, lying and being In thence north 5 dag. 09' o1 land that
now or the principal place ol
Roofing, Siding,
on Fmt.y, Aug. 3, 2007 Case No. O&amp;CV17t
the Clty o1 Pomeroy, · - 1 125.85 !eel to tha formerly In the name of beginning ol a tract
· Soffit, Decks,
at 10:00 a.m., ol said Farmers
Bank
&amp; County ol Mllgo, .,d south aide o1 a 25 loot Ronald and Judy herein described;
Doors, Windows,
day, the following Savlnga
'state ol Ohio, and road; thence oouth 87 HI!QOI!y u recorded in Thence
continuing Electric, Plumbing,
deecribed rulelltlte: Plalnllll va
being known and dea- dag. l't ' welt 120 !eel Olllclal Record 53, along tho oaot line ol
Drywall,
Situated In
the Cleveland Howard
lgnated on· a map of along the aouth aide ol Page 01 of the Melga Section 33, South
Remodeling, Room
Townahlp ol Letianon, at al
Lincoln Heights, made said road, to the place County , Recorder's 17' 20" West a dlatence
Additions
County. ol Malga .,d Defendants
by Breece &amp; Carper, ol beginning, contain· Olllce, said tract being ol 249.781eet to a 5111"
State o1 Ohio:
Court o1 Common Reglaterad ·
Civil lng .35 acrea, more or situated In the nortf&gt;. Iron pin with a pluHc ·
Loca~ c o n-otra ctor
Being In 160 Acre Lot Pleaa, Meigs County, Engl.-., Huntington, looa.
aaot quarter ol Sactlon Identification cap set;
#1182 of Lebanon Ohio
W.Va., October7, 1942, Reference
Dead: 33, T-D·N,
R-15-W, Thence leaving the
Free Estimates
Townahlp In Meigs In pursuance of an a copy ol which map Volume 306, Page 511 , Columbia Township, eaat line ol Section 33, ~:7:40-::;3;6;7;·~0:5:36=~
County; Ohio, and order of sale to me was Iliad for, record In Malgo Counly Deed Meigs County, State of and with a line through r
beginning 11 the steel directed from iald the Office ol the Recorda.
Ohio and being more the gramor'o property,
H&amp;H
pin located In the cen· Court In the above Recorder o1 Meigs Audltor'a Parcel No.: partlculariy described South 86' 27' 58" Wast,
ter o1 !Jgte Routa 1124 entitled action, 1 will County,
Ohio. 2D-00066.000
aalollows:
pssalng a 518" Iron pin
Guttering
lithe point ...,_nt- axposa to sale at December 11, t942, Parcel Twp: snuato In Beginning lor refer- with a plalllc ldentlflSeamless Gutlers
lng the Southwell cor- Public Auction on tho Plat Boo!&lt; 13 et pegaa Sactlon 38, town 2, ence on a 5111" Iron .pin cation cap set at
ner of real eatate Iron! stape ol tha 43&amp;44,,alll.lll21,and Range 12, SuHon with a plastic ldentlfl- 953.65 leal, going a. Roofing, Siding, Guners
owned
by
the Meigs Cou~ty Court being mora particular- Township, VIllage ol cation cap set, taken to total dlltance of983.as
Insured &amp; BDnded
"-'otecooltll Aooernbly Houoa on Friday, Aug. ly deocrlbed ao lol- Syracuoe,
Mslgo be on the northeast lee! to a Iron spike set '::7:40:-6:5:3-:96::
57=~
Church; thence North · 3,200711tO:OOa.m.,ol lows:
County, State ol Ohio, comero!Sactlon33:
(60 penny nail) In the r
along the Welt line o1 aald day, the following
BEGINNING at a and being, part ol One Thence along the east canter ol Cone Road
Sta I T
aloreaald church real ctaacrtbed realeatate: point In the north line Hundred Acre Lot llna ol Section 33, (Township Road 7);
n ey reeeltlle a distance ol
SHuata In Scipio of Lincoln Road at the Number 295.
South
17' 20" - t Thence along the cenTrimming
174.2 feet to the township,
llelgo comer - n Lot 21 Commencing at a two a distance of 158.45 tar of Cone Road the
Northweat corner ol County, State ol Ohio and 22, is shown of Inch Iron pipe In the feet to a 5111" Iron pin following (2) couraea;
&amp; Removal
aforaoald church real and being In Section oald mllfl; thence with northeaot comer ol a with a plastic ldentlfl· t . North 26' 24' 43" ' Prompt and Quality
Work
estate; thence Weal 26, Town 7 North, oald line o1 Lincoln 5.5 acre mora or lees cation cap set being West a distance 72.84
running parallel with Range 14 Well o1 the Road No. 83' 51 min. W. tract aa recorded In the prtnclpel place ol !eel to a point, aqd;
the center ol State Ohio
Company's SOIMI;thencowlththa Deed Book 231, Page beginning of tile tract 2. North 34' 37' 53" 'Reasonable Rates
Route #124 a distance Purcheae and baing line between Iotti 21 773 In tile Recorda of herein d-rlbed;
Wast a dlotance ol 'Insured
ol 600 leal to an Iron d-rlbed eelollowa: and 20, No. 26' 90 min. tho Melgo Counly Thence
continuing 127.16 feet to a palm;
'Experienced
pin; thence South runBeginning at 1 50 218.44 feet to a potntln Recordar'e
Olllce; , along the Hit line ol Thence leaving the References Available!
nlng parallel with the Inch Sycamore tree the 80Ut11 line of north thence N. 90 dag. 00' Sac:tlon 33, South
center of Cone Road
WMt line of the afore- Eaat 547 feat !rom the otieet;tllencewith Uld 00" W. along the north 17' 20"Welt a dlaltlooe and with a line through Call Gary Stanley @
uld
Pantecoatal Southweat corner ol nne of north S. line of said 5.5 acra of 210.41 feet to a 518" the granlor'a property,
74f!-742-2293
Auernbly Church rut Section 26; thence 88' 33 min. Eall 50.17 more or laat tract lro~ pin wHh a plaaUc North 82' 53' 34" East Please leave messa e
eatete a distance of Eaii191U7 feet along teet; thenC. with the 671.11 feet to I a point ldentHiceUon cep 881; palling a 5111" Iron pin
174.2-Mt to the center the South line ol uld line - n said Iota In tha exlaUng W'esteriy Thence leaving the with a pluUc ldentlll·
ol State Route 1124; Section 26 to a lance 21, and 22, S. 28' 09 right ol way line ol Lee ealt line of -'ion 33, cation cap Ill at 30.00
YOUNG'S
lhanee Eeet along the pott: Thence North o min. W. 300.55 feet to Circle and · the real and wijh a line through feet, going a toltll diecanter o1 SUite Route dog. 58" 51" West the point o1 beginning. point ol beginning lor lila grantor's .property, lance ol 1129.071eetto
#124 1 dlaltlnce of 600 653.08 - t o 1 point In
Rosa.rvlng however the
land
herein South 82' 53' 34" Wast. tho principal place ol
tnt to tho place of tha
centerline
of the coal and other min- deecrlbed; thence S. 5 pealing a 5111" Iron pin beginning, containing • Room Addlllana I
beginning, containing County Rood 17, pall· eral In and underlying dag. 24' 00" E. along wHh 1 plalllc ldanllfl· 5.099 ecreo more or
Remodeling
2.4 acrea, mort or leu. lng a fence poll at 833 the above deocrlbed the exlltlng wellerly cation cap aet at tees and being subject • New Garages
EXCEPTING all lagll 1881 for reference; property togather with right ol way line ol Lee 1099.07 feet, going a to the right of way ol ·.Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
rlght-of-weyo and SAY· thence South 87 deg. the right to mine the Circle, 27.56 !eel to a toltll
distance
of Cone Road (Township • Vinyl Siding 6 Painting_
lNG and EXCEPTING 45' 02"Weat148.661eet aama wHhout •cum- point In tho axlotlng 1129.07 !eel to a Iron Road 7) and all other • '-tlo an"d Porch Deckt
WV036726
.
the coal underlying along the centarilnt ol bi.,ce to tha surface southerly right of way eplke 111 (60 penny eaaamenta of record.
said premlno with the said County Road 17 to and subject to an eaae- line of Lee Circle; nail) In. the center of Being 5.099 ac.res out
V C. YOUN G Ill
.right to mine the same a P&lt;'lnt; thanc. South ment lor -.ga filter thance No. 87 deg. 1t' Cone Road (Township ol Tract One, Olllclal
CJ925.215
and a rlght-of·wey In 84 dag. 38' 14" Wilt ditch or leachlnQ ditch 00" E. along tho exlot- Road 7);
Record 53, Page Ot.
l'unt'rOf 01'1
every direction along 316.74 feel along the· as eel forth and lng ooutherly right o1 Thence along the can- All 518" Iron plna with !
~
t • Ji
the t coal-me tllera- centerline of said deacrlbed ln. )hat way line ol Lee Circle, ter ol Cone Road the plaatlc ldentlllcotlon
.under Including all County Road 17 to a lnatrumant
bearing 52.73 to an ••tat· following three (3) caps sat are stamped
mining rights.
· point; thence South 79 dato November 28, lng Iron pipe In the courses;
"Seymour
&amp;
J&amp;L
SAVE AND EXCEPT· dag. 45' 23" Wttl 1943 and recorded In northlteat
property 1. North 34' 37' 53" Aaaoclates",
lNG: Situated In the 326.60 feet along the said recorder's olllce corner of George D. West a distance ol All Iron plna 881 being
Construction
Townthlp of Lebanon, centerline ol oald In December 3,1943, In and Shetry A. Buoklrk 71 .981eet to a point,
5111" by 36".
County ol Melga, SUite County Roed 17 to a o.ect Boqk 151 page aa recorded II) Deed 2. North 44' 56' 12" The bearings uoed In • VInyl Siding
of Ohio, and In Sacllon point; thence South 3 178.
Book 283, Pilga 903 In West a dlatance ol tha above deacrlbed - Replacement
··
Windows
34, 180 acre Lot 1182, dag. 28' 14" Eaot Reference Ia made to the Recorda ol the 116.62 !eat to a point, tract ware - d on
Town 2N, Range 11 W, 214.57 feet to a 30 Inch deed of Raymond M. Mllga
County and ;
the east line of Section • Rooting
and bounded and Sycamore Tree, pall• Fotay, Federal Housing Recorder'o
Olllce; 3. north 54" 26' 54" 33 being, South 07' 17'
deecrlbed aa follows: lng a fence poet at 20 Commlaaloner
to thence S., 5 dag. 09' Weal a distance ol 20" Watt and are lor ·pecks
Being a .,...... o1 land teei · lor reference; Gerald E. Schutter and 00" E. alan~ the wast t t .40 feet to a Iron the determination o1 ·Garages
• Pole Buildings
lying on the rightaldea thance North 70 dag. Mildred. F. Schustar, property line ol said aplke tiel;
angles only.
ol the centerHne of a 34' OO"Weet469.70 !eel dated February 4, 1946 George D. and Sherry Thence leaving the The above described • Room Addijlona
aurvay. made by tho to a point In the canter- recorded In Volume A. Buskirk, 78.66 !eel center ol Cone Road tract was surveyed by
Owner:
Department
ol line ol said County t 57, page 41, Melga to a point In the north- and with a llna through George F. Seymour,
James Keesee II
Transportation
and Road 17; thence South County Deed Recorda. eall property corner o1 the grantor't property, Ohio
Professional
742-2332
being located within 13 dag. 03' 26" Wast Addreaa ol Property: Hugh M. and Mlrtho C. North 81" 07' 02" Eaot Surveyor No. 6044,
the boundary polnta ol 78.80 teet to an Iron 1843 Lincoln Heights, McPhail aa recorded In palling 1 5111"1ron pin September IS, 1997. ~
Parcel No. 205-WLR 11 rod; thence South 47 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Deed Book 250, Page with 1 plalllc ldentlfl· SUBJECT TO THE
Public NoUce
delineated upon tho deg. 39' 00" Weal PPI1 HI 562000
803 In the Recorda of cation cep sat II 30.00 R E S T R I C T I 0 N S
Deportment
of 136.50 feet to an Iron Prior Deed Roferences: the llelga County feet, going a total dla- aHoched hereto as are permitted.
Trantportatlon'o Right- rod; thance South 76 Volume157, page 41
Recorder's
Olllc.; lance ol1295.17 feet to Exhibit "C" which ahall 8. Prior to building or
at-Way plan MEG-124- dag. 49' 51"Weal89.00 Appraloed at $25,000. thence S. as deg. 00' the principal place ol run wijh the land and placing a unit on the
3t .57, Sheet 14 of 42 !eat to an Iron rod; Torma ol Sola: cannot 51" W. along the north beginning, containing be binding upon the lot you can usa a
and recorded In Plat thence South 56 dag. be sold lor leu than property line ol olld 5.103 acrn more or Granteaa, their heirs camper on the lot lor
Book 5, Page t 9, 05' 00" Weal 257,50 213rda olthe appraloed Hugh M. a.,d Martha C. 1- and being aubject and asalgns.
recreational
use.
recol!la
ol
the leal to an Iron rod; value. tO% down of McPhail, 88.221eet to a to the right ol way of Subject to aaaements, However, It must be
Recorder's
Olllca, thence South 88 · deg. day ol sale, caah or point; thence N. t dag. Cone Road (Township laaaea, rights-ot-way, removed !ram the lot
Mllgo County, Ohio.
53' OO"Waat 253.00 lee! certified check, bal- 09' oo• West along a Road 7)' and all olhar conditions and restrlc· when not In uaa.
tiona of record.
H Ia understood that to an Iron rod; thence ance due. on ~nllrma- nne, 108.91 teet to a eaoementa of record.
9· Prior to string any
1111 strip of land above South 25 dag. 30' 00" lion olula.
point In the north line Being 5.103 acres out SAVE AND EXCEPT development ol your
described
contains Welt 88.00 teet to the n. appraisal did not ol aald 5.5 acre more of Tract One, Olllclal tho No. 4-4A, Clarion or lot. contact the Meigs
0.128 acreo, more or point of beginning, Include an Interior or I-liaci; thance N. Record 53, Page Ot .
Llmeatone coal which County
Health
laat, Including tho containing 18.95 acreo, examination ol the 90 dag. 00' 00" E. along All 5111" Iron pins with was previously conto review
prtsant road which mora or leSI, except- houae.
the north line ol said plastic Identification veyed . to the Oho Department
home ~lie location.
occuplaa 0.000 acrea, lng all lagal rights ol Robert E. Beagle, 5.5 acre more or 1- cape all are stamped Power Company by Currant Owner: Terry &amp;
more or leea.
way.
Meigs County Shari!!
tract, 25.92 !eel to the "Seymour
&amp; deed dated August 6, Pamela Paraons et al
The
above The description lor the AHorney lor the plain· point o1 beginning and Associates".
1956 and recorded In Property at: 39880
deecribedareao!O.t26 above tract being the tiH
contalnlng0.t88acrea. All iron plno set being Volume 197, Page 541 , Cone Road
acreo Ia io be deleted results ol a aurvay Richard F. Bentley
Subject to 'all legal 518" by 36".
Meigs
County Albany, Ohio
!rom AudHor'a Parcel made by Robert H. 425 Canter St.
hlghwayt and eaae· The bearings used In Recorder'a Olltce.
PPI 05.00124.003.
No. 07.00723.000.
Eason,
Ohio Ironton, OH 45638
manta of record.
the above described PRIOR CONVEYANCE : A
Prior'
Deed
Thlt description Ia Registered Surveyor 740-532-7000
Currant Owner: Robart tract were baled on Olllclal
Records References : Volume
beaed on o survey No. S-08548 dated (6) 27, (7) 4, 11
WOOd etal
the eaotllne ol Sactlon Volume 53, Page Ot, 53, Page 01
made by BALKE ENG~ November, 1982.
Property II: 2411 Lee 33 being, soutll
17' Meigs
County Appraised
at
NEERS for the Ohio Reference
dead:
Clrcla, Syrecuaa, OH.
20" Weal and "'' lor Racordefa Olllce.
$40,000.00 Terms ol
Department
ol Volume 287, Page 629,
Public Notice
PP120-00088.000&amp;20- tho determination ol Deaa Raatrlctlona lor Sale: Cannot be sold
Transportation,
In Malga County Deed
00284.000
· anglaa only.
Cone Road· Township lor less than 213rds ol
2000, By Joseph D. Records.
Sheri" Selea
Prior
Deed The above described Road #7
the appraised value.
Kuhlmann,
P.S. 'Prior Reference Dead: Caae Number 06CV156 Relerance:Volume 44, tract waa aurveyed by t. Lot number 4·5 are 10% down on day ol
Reglotared Surveyor Volume 184, Page 711 , LeSane Bank NA
Page 475
George F. Saymour, being aold lor tingle sale, cash or certified
No. s-&amp;823 under the Mllgo County olllclsl Plalntlll
Appralted
et Ohio
Proleulonal !amity residential uae. check, balance due on
direction and auperv~ Recorda
vs
$70,000.00 Tonne ol Surveyor No. 8044, Once the aeller hao conllrmatlon o1 sale.
alan oi .Ronatd F. Rlsar, Auditor's Parcel No. : Robert Wood Et AI
Sale: cannot be oold September 15, 1997.
been paid In lull, lots The apprelsal did not
P.S.
Rogleterad 17-00382.000
Defendants
lor 1- tllan 213rda of SUBJECT TD THE may be divided II you Include an Interior
Survayor No. B-7093.
Property
Addreu : Court ol Common the appraleed value. RESTRICT I 0 N S.recelve approval !rom examination ol the
Alllron.plna eel are to 33353 Cotterill Road, Pleas, Meigs County, 10% down on day ol attached hereto aa the Molgo County house.
be (314") x 130") by a (t Pomeroy, Oh!o 45769 Ohio
sale, cuh or certHiad EKhlblt"C" which shall agenclaa.
,
Robert E. Beegle,
112") aluminum cap. Current
Owner: In pursuance of, an chectc ·belance due on run with the land and 2. Single Wide, Double Meigs County Sheri!!
atamped "ODOTRIW Cleveland C. Howard at order of sale to me conll,;..lon olsale.
be binding upon the Wide and Modulars ere Attorney
lor
the
DISTRICT 10" and the al
dlroctad !rom said n. appraisal did not Grantees, their helra permitted.
Skirting
Plaintiff
turvaynr'o
Ohio Appraised at $40,000 ·COUrt In the above entl- Include an Interior and aaolgna.
muet be Installed to Will
Karnen, P.O. Bo•
Raglalratlon or survey- Torma ol Sale: Cannot lied action, 1 will examination · ol the Subject to eaoemenlo, unit within 60 days ol 388, Logan, OH43138
or'a name, number be sold lor leas then expose to sale at pub- housa.
laaoao, rlghto·ol-way, being placed o n the 740-385-2121
ancllor company name. 214rds ol the appraised lie auction on tha front Robert E. Baegla, condijlona and restrl~&gt;- lot. Unit muat be pre- (7) 4, 11 , 18
Points listed with value. 10"4 down on slaps ol tho Meigs Melgo County Sheri!! tiona o1 record.
approved
by
the
(Iron pin aat) are to be day- ol sale, cash or County Court Houoe Attorney
lor SAVEAND EXCEPT the Vendor prior to being
set by the contractor certlllad chectc, bal- on Friday, August 3, thePialntlll
No. 4-4A, Clarion or placed on the lot, until
11 Indicated at the ter- ance due on conllrma- 2007 at 10:00 a.m. o1 Lerner
Sampo~n UmeetOf\tl coal which tha note It paid In lull.
mlnatlon ol the con- lion ol sale.
said day, the following Rollusa
wao prevloualy cop- Once the note Is peld
llructlon project
The appraisal did not do"'irlbed real ell~: 120 E. 4th St. 8th Floor veyed to tho Ohio In lull any unit being
Sold oltltlona being Include an Interior Parcel Ona:Thelollow· Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 Power Company by placed on the lot cen
the Station numbers as examination ol the lng real estate being In 513-241 ·3100
deed dated August 8, not be ovar ten yaera
otlpulated In the hera- house. Lend only.
SyracunVIIIageand In (8) 21, (7) 4, It
t956 and recorded In old when placed on the
'\ lnbelore · -mentioned Robert E. Baagle, 100 acre Lot No. 218,
Volume 197, Page 541, lot.
aurvay and ao shown Meigs County Sheriff
Sutton
Townohlp,
Melgo
County 3. No junk or unllby plana on lila In the Attorney for tho plain- Malga County, Ohio.
f!Ubllc Notice
Recortler't Ollfce.
canoed vehicles are
Ohio Department a! tlaa
Described as lollowo: •
TRACT TWO:
permitted on the lot.
Transportation, ChriatopherTanoglla
Beginning at a 2 Inch Sheriff Salao Caoe Being 5.099 acrao, 4. No accumulation of
Mer._, Ohio.
200 E. 2nd St., pipe on the oouttoeelt Number 08CV170
mole or leaa, •"uated personal
ellects,
Said premises alao Pomeroy, OH 740-992- corner ol a 9.6 acre Citizen Bank or Logan In Section 33, T-&amp;-N, R- debris waate, garbage
known aa 50338 State 6388
tract ol land deeded Plalntllf
t 5•W,
Columbia or other unsightly
!rom John McCoy to vs
Townohlp,
Molgo oblecta .
Route 124, Recine, OH (6) 27, (7) 4 &amp; 11
45771
PPN :
071
Archie. Lea, described Terry
&amp;
Ptomola County, Ohio.
5. No lncompletestruc00723.000
In Deed Recor'ded In Paroonrr et 11
Being a pert ol a tract ture, you will be
... THE
Prior o.ect R-ancea:
Public Notice
Deed Book No. 239, Dlllooderltl
ol land that Ia naw or allowed adequate time
Volume 328, page 179
page no. 763, Deed Court of Common formerly In the name ol to complete structure.
Appralaed at $45,000
Sheri!! Sales
records
of
Malge Pl111, Melge County, Ronild
and
Judy 6. All loll must give
HAS
Tennt ol Sale: Cannot Caaa Number 06cv173 County, Ohio, thence Ohio
Hagerty ao recorded In accesslo all pubic utll·
SOMETHING
be told lor laao than City National Bank ol weal
815.85
teet; In purouance ol an Glllclsl Record 53, Illes Including but not
FOR YOU!!
213rda ol the appraised WV
thence South 24.85 order ol aale to me page 01 o1 tho Meigs llmHed to public water,
value. 10% down on Plalntlll
!eat to the oouth side directed !rom uld County
Recorder's electric and telephone.
Day ol sale, cash or vs
ol a 25 loot road ; the court In the abovo tn11· Olllce, aald tract being 7. Only one large ani·
certified chock, bal· Rhonda Milam, Robert place ol beginning lor tied action, .I will oltustad In the north- mal per acre Is permitonce due on conflrma· Schoolcraft, et al
this
description; expose to sale at pub- eaot quarter o 1Section ted. EKample horae,
lion of sale.
Defendants
thence south 6 dag. 09' lie auction on lhelront 33, T·9·N, R-15-W. cow, goat. No swine

8entttctal Ohio Elve
"'--nnlll
va
o

examination
ol the
houae.
Robert E. Beegle,
Mllgo County Sherttl
Attorney lor the plain-

\*

or

RE"T
T' l 'S 1 SALES
Ill 1\L
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t SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
Q THLV,1 OXYGEN' VISITS
IM N

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South
!T.J.I

(J.H.)

Owner- R'ick Wise

tNT

Pass

2.

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

J;»us

(B.F.J

East
IJ.A.I

Pa"
AU pass

Openingjead: • 2

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

OJSTeTitiCS
~=~~=;::=~~~~~~~=~

This on-going match
Is on-going

1&gt;~. tiA~V~Y
I&gt;ENTI~Tfi.Y

· l&gt;tt.. tiOOPEtt.
PVS~

PULL

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WH'( ·D ''I'A ,THINI&lt;

www.-abl-.,..-

I PUT IT ON HIM

IN TH' F\$ST
PLACE '?!

am

St. Rt. 7, TUpPers Plains, OH

740-667-3177
Full Service Auto Repair
Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
Diagnostics; Full Brake Service, Air
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Alignment, Custom Exhaust
Hupp-Owner

•IBERT
BISSELL
CIISTIImON
• New Homes
• Garages

748-992-1m

ac:.queen.
'"Wolf played,' said West. "You extracted
my selo diamond sicit cards like pulling
teeth."
That is why this play Is known as tho
dentist's COUll'
.

Mushroom Compost

$35 A Scoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29

.. ,

• Complete
Remodeling

THE BORN LOSER

Jeff Bissell, Manager

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Tlourodoy, July 5, 2007
Bytlomtco-0...

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CANCER (June 21..July . 22) II
behOoVes vou to listen to wt}atever anybody has to say, even idle chatter.
Someone coukl Inadvertently let the cat
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been trying to (Mlher.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Your commer·
clal affairs coold possess some kind of

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PEANUTS
TODAI{ IS A I-IOLIDA'I' 50
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446-0007

Hill's Self
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29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577t
74D-949-2217

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

crfi!Qd trr:m quciilkm by tamooa fli!IOPit,put llld ~
Eacl'llflller in ttle cipher stm 10r another

Celebllty Cilt*' Cfll*:9.-ns n

rooat~cluo : 0 OQt08Is B

"MU

HUUK

MRPKCL
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Reorrongt leHers of
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scrambled words bel~e

low lo ftHm four simple words.

MOYHN!

riences might become more pronounced. Both the ways and means to
gratify these Inclinations should be read-

( Ill '-I r1
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~~~~

The urge to acquire more knowledge
either through reading or personal expe -

...,!. ,~!.-

-

animal
45 Stadium
22 Go blek on
roof
one'a W«d 46 n ..... tayeo •
23 Llko olwayo 47 Decalve
24 Caulllc
48 Go - solution
diet
25 Onlered
50 Watar illy
around
leal
hoklano
26 Droop
51 It may be
32 Glimmering 8
30 Gannon
hlrdobolled
33 Myaterlea
9 C.l~omla' o
al11cla
52 BillyFort36 Small
34 Had
Wllllama
10 More, to
8COutl
occasion
37 Valuable
Padro
lor
35 .Reddloh
mlnoral
t2 Tla13 Scram!
antalopao
38 Mall brew
39 Health club 18 Storage
40 Hound'•
40 Collla'l
places
trail
charge
t 9 Flat broke 41 Mllactv'o
(2 W)lo.)
43 Folkolngar
42 liolttl Cllfl
43 Luge
20 ()nHtlied
Bu~-

~Astro-

Shade R1ver
Ag Service

Stop &amp; Compare

Regular readers wilf know !hat on Ju~ 4,
1
four of tho declaration signatories
repaired to a quiet room IO play a game
remarkably similar to present·day
bridge. After two rubbers, Thomas
Jeflarson was well ahead, wilh Berjamln
Franklin being tho biggest loser. On lhe
first board of tho third rubber, John
Adams made ....,.. hearts with t50
honors. On tho second, Adams went
down in a lour·spade contract he could
have \nade with tho aid of a eclssors
coop. Tills was tho third deal.
Aijalnat lour hearts, reached after v.toat
would come to be known as a Stayman·
sequence, John Hancock (West) led the
spade two.
Jelferaon paused to decide
upon hla line of play. He had on~ two top
iosenl: tho ace and ~ng ollrumpa. He
might llloo hM a club loser, should tho
Hneue fall. And lhla lead had all tho hall·
marks o1 a singleton. ~ so, and Wast
could get a spade ruff wilh a loW heart,
the .contract would depend upon thot
club fi,_ .. . unless ...
Declarer lOOk floe first trick and invnedi·
ately eashed his three diamonds. After
discarding lhe club lhree from his hend,
South called for a heart. East at~ up
with his ace and gavs his partner a
spade ruff. West cashed his hea~ king,
but now was endplayod. II he returned a
diamond, declarer would ruff In one
hand and &lt;iocard a dub from tho other.
And a dub shift would be Into Soulh'B

1 Put out """ 46 Lapwing.
6 Open up
for one
11 llaku up
49 St&gt;IH to join
for
53 White Sole
13 John llulfl
buyl
-Club
54 Injure
14 Light
6S Baker't buy
orourci"
56 Propyrua Ia
t 5 Belltll
one
16 Pouch
17 Blurbt
DOWN
18 Sol
·1 lnHCI raaln
21 Round
tlwelllnge
2Hagenol
''The Other''
23 Collar
Z&amp;Borot
3 Jlmmy'o
coualn
IUCCIUor
27 Prevloua
4 Calle h
qulta
28 Without
help
5 Held up
6 Nato!
29 CruShed, grapes
builders
31 Scroll
7 BruceM!d

ns.

BARNEY

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• 2

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Wiring - Noisy - Holly- Banter - NOTHING
"A cynic," the ledurer told his audience, "knows the price of
everything and the val.ue ofNOTIIING."

ARLO&amp; JANIS

ekcepllonall~ good for you, buill Will be
up to you to be materially aware so that,
when something unelCpGCied develops,
you can recognize it.
PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) - Tfy to
keep ~r schedule as flex ible as po$5;.
ble beCause !hOse things you do on the
spur+Of·lhe·moment are likely to be the

David Lewis
740-992-6971

r'::::;;::;::::::~~:::::F:r~ee:E:•:tlm:•:t~a•

positively to you, act on It immediately.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - You may
get an opportunity to win over a new ally
who could prove to be of immense value
down the line. Treat all new people you
meet atlhls time as treasured finds.
LIBRA (Sept 2~1. 23) -Your IngenuIty and resourcefulness can be advantageously expressed In some unusual
ways, especia lly lnvotvlng important
Issues that have to do with your worX or
career. Use lhem.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No\1. 22) - Some ol
the best things that happen to you,
things ol considerable Importance, could
come about In unexpected ways.
However, none ollhem Is llkety to be of a
material nature.
SAGITT~RIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) II
you are strongly motivated and yOur
objectives are well-detinitd , more than
one major achievement is possible . Once
you establish a goal , don't take your eye
on the target.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - You'll
find that you're a quick thinker and tha\
your first ideas or Impulses are likely to
~~be your best thoughts. Act as your initial
perceptions dictate and then make
adjustments as needed.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20- Feb. 19) - The
proba~ll l ties for personal ga in look

0

1\1~~

I ~~

•

tl'latMn out to be the most fun and

rewarding for yOu.
AAr'ES (March 21 -April 19) - Your logic
and intu ition are working in tandem, so
muCh so that oo llectlvely they give you
an edge over others in accurately
asses sing critical situations - both
ded uctively and intuitively.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - This might
be an e•cellent day to apply some effort
toward one of your newer Interests. Your
analytical powers are pretty accurate.
even with thill!)s about wh ich you know
little.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) -Don't be
too ha&amp;ty to give up on an Important
objective. Just when you think Mlrythlng
Ia going against you. a sudden change
lor the better could take place and turn

things around .

SOUP TO NUTZ
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�•
Page B6- The Daily Sen.linel

www .mydajlysentinel .com

Wednesday, July 4, 2007.

Bush asks the nation to
show patience with Iraq, A2

Rhythm on River
continues with
Friday show, B6

•
Midd.lel,lort • Pomeroy, Ohio
.-,o ( I :\I 't • \ nl. ,) h . '\ o . .! : ~h

.ummer

SPORTS

own
Pontiac G·S
. 1111,1111'111
AIIIIIICII 11'11111

• GiantS squash Cincy.
SeePIQjiB1

Pontiac. 0·6

2007 GMC Acadia
HIPIII Tllltl

DIIUIII $4,010
Pl'lcl

AIII,IC

Page AS'
• Cha~otte Elberfeld, 79
• John A. Holsinger, 32
•·Gwinnie White, 93
• Theodore Zehm, 73

INSIDE
414,1.1 n, 1:1 Pllnr,,
Cl'llll, AC, Alii t ·

2At litis Prim

2007 GMC Canyon
MIIIP $14,120
lllck' 7218

2007 Chevy Sierra 314

2007 Chevy Aveo

GI'IWI:III
lflcll7241

AMIIMII:D, C1.- Wllllll
ltHII17107

-P$28~010

.......1,618

... 2007 Buick Lucerne

2007 Chevy Cobalt ·
AIII,AC
ltlcll7211

2007 Chevy Equinox 2007 Chevy Trailblazer
M8RP 821,181
1111111$1,000
DIICGIIIt $2,000
IIIII Pl'lc:l

V\,AII!tAir
6 • 81uCKI

2007 Chevy Impala
MIJIP $21,8101111111 $2,&amp;00

Sttl1falg Af

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT4l&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL. COM

for nearby neighbors. ·
it may be infringing on the voted against the extension. fines were recei ved in
Racine Police Marshal personal rights of those
· Harmon asked if th e Racine Mayor 's Court with
Curtis Jones said he bas responsible owners. Mayor annexation project was $ 1,32 1 going to the village
researched the ORC and J. Scott Hi II said one of the showing progress. Hill said and $40 going to the state.
spoken to representatives problems with this issue and at thi s time priorities. were
Hill also announced the
from thil village's insurance ' others s,imilar to it is the vil- focu sed on fini s hin ~ the Friends and Neighbors
agency and the Ohio lage.isn't zoned.
water treatment proje¢t as Food Pantry in the Raci ne
Municipal League about a
The . four wheeler discus- well as completing the year- Municipal Building will be
proven ordinance that may sion came about at the ly budget though he &amp;aid closed until July II due to
be good fit for the sit.ua- recent meetinj! of Racine annexation was definitely family matters cited by the
tion but there is none. As for Village Council which also still on that list of priorit \es. pantry 's organizers.
.
a noise ordinance, !:he vil- discussed a contract' exten- · Hill said at this time the yilUpon Hill's recommenda-'
la~e has an existing one but · sion with engineet;s Strand lage doesn'thave the fund - lion council also approved
wtthout a decibel meter &amp; Associates concerning the ing to go ahead and pay to advertising the Racme Fire
Jones cannot enforce it. new waler treatment plant. hire a surveyor to survey the Department's gun shoot
Jones said he could research Council voted to extend the land which Racine hopes to property
in
Lebanon
an or!linance adopted in contract thr9ugh June 30, annex: /
Township for sale. The
Cabell County, W.Va. con- allowing Clerk-Treasurer
Racme must have the sur- · property consists of seven ·
cerning four wheelers in Dave Spencer to pay exist- vey complete with the name acres and the asking price is
municipalities and possibly ing bills ,turned in for com- and addresses of landowners $1 ,000 per acre. Hill said if:
develop an ordinance out of pleted work by the contrac- to petition for annexation. 1f the property sells that
that though it would have to tor. This extension takes the 55 percent of those residents money will go to helping
go on the ballot and be contract total to $62,500 and agree with annexation it is mak\! fire tru ck payments. :
voted on by residents.
· was approved by the village then presented to the Meigs
All members of council
Some members of council solicitor to allow payment of County Commissioners for were present for the meet~
had misgivings about the existing
.. invoices. approval.
ing including Marshal
possible ordinance, feeling Councilman Ike Spencer
Hill reported .$1 ,361 in Jone s.

a

OBITUARIES

• ~vey WMe, 70 ·

Chevy Silverado 314

\\\'\\'\.m~tl~tii ~ M' lllmt· l.l·om

Racine discusses·'nl1isance' four wheelers
RACINE - Not everyone
who·owns (and rides) a four
wheeler is a. nuisance which
is the dilemma facing Racine
Council which is discussing
how to deal with those riders
which are a nuisance.
The Ohio Revised Code
· (ORC) states four wheelers
can be driven in a village as
long as they are not driven on
public streets. Council has
heard a nuisance complaint
about one juvenile individual
riding his f()ur wheelel"on his
property but in such a manner that it has created noise
and
dust
complaints.
Councilman Jim Harmon
said the young man has built
what amounts to a "race
track" in his yard and runs it
in a circle on the property,
creating the noise and dust

Two At JlK hicel

IIIIIIP h8,711
111111111$8,110

II II H"'l&gt; \\ . .Jl I) .) , :.!oo-

Alltl, AI:

• Man taken off death
row now eligibl~ for
parole. See Page A3
• Art programs
taking off at airports.
"' See Page A3
• Top cleric captured
in a burqa as 1,000
surrender to authorities
at besieged Pakistan
mosque. See Page AfJ
• River Recreation
Festival Schedule of
events. See Page 86
• 2007 Point Pleasant
Stemwheel Regatta
schedule. See Page B6
• ·Entertainment Briefs.
See Page 86
• Rutland's annual Ox
Roast set for Saturday.
See Page ·86
• 'Mountain Stage' to
pick regional winner.
See Page 86

Mural series unveiled in downtown Middleport
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT -The
people pictured in the first
of a series of downtown
murals unveiled Wednesday
could have a message for
Middleport today: "Carpe
diem! Sieze the day!"
Downtown Revitalization
Coordinator
Michael
Gerlach direCted attention
to people walking up North
Second Avenue in the. early
20th-century photograph,
the first of a· series of 180
square-foot postcard images
to be featured on the onceblank wall next to lngel's
Radio Shack. They could be
telling their 21st-century
counterparts to make the
community the best it can
be, Gerlach said.
The historic "Walking
into Middleport's Past"
mural series is tied into a
self-guided walking tour of
some of the historic sites in
the village, including the
Downing House, the site of
Coe's Opera House, several old hotel s, a keg factory
and the Rathburn House,
whose name sake operated
what later became the
nearby
Middleport
Department Store .

Please see Mural, AS

~f.

· ·~
. .

BY BETH SERGENT

J. Reed/photo

The first mural shows a view of North Second Avenue from Mill Street around the. turn of the 20th century.

Red, white and Racine
.

WEATHER '

B~an

Middleport parade

.

r------:

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - The Fourth
of July arrived in Racine
with a morning parade that
experienced a dra111atic start.
An antique police car
owned by Howard Mullen
whic!J has led the parade for
years stalled at the intersec'tion of Tyree Boulevard and
Elm Street. The car then
cau
ght on fire Sut luckil y
Details on Page A3
for Mullen, he was in a
parade with personnel from
th e
Racine ,
Bashan ,
Chester, Pomeroy, Syracuse
. and Rutl and Volunteer Fire
Department s.
2 SECTIONS - 12 PAGES
The fire was put out
Annie's Mailbox
A3 quickl y &lt;11nd as luck would
have it. a tow truck from
Calendars
A3 Riverside towing was also
in the parpde and towed the
Classifieds
83-4 car
away. ln all, the parade
Comics .
Bs was only delayed around 15
minu tes. No injuries were
Editorials
A4 reported .
After the parade awards
Obituaries
As were
give n to·. the fo llowin
g
parad
cipa nt s:
Places to go
86 ! Fl oats. fir est parti
pl ace , $100
Sports
B Section fro m Ho me Na ti ona l
Beth Sargent/ photo
Ban k. Ant iqu ity Bapti st The flag corps from the 2007·08, ed ition of the South ern
A3 Church: se cond place. $75 · Hi gh School Band shows off thei r pat riotic colors while th e
Weather
.
band plays "Stars and St ripes Forever."
Please see Racine, AS
© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co;

INDEX

.

/•

B1lan J. Reed/ photo

The Meigs Marauder Marching Band, led by Toney Dingess ,
played patriotic nu mbers in Middle port's July 4 parade .
Additional photos from 'Middl epor t' s parade are on page A6 .

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