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'

Slumping Reds fall to Brewers, 6-5
'

CINCINNATI - (AP)
'Moments after · his first
major-league victory was
clinched , left-hamler Zach
Jackson met the two dozen
relatives who drove in from
Pittsburgh and presented
them with two game-used
baseballs.
See, they didn't all wind up
in the stands.
The 23-year-old rookie
gave up four homers and was
facing his first big-league
loss Monday night when the
Milwaukee Brewers rallied
for a 6-5 victory over the
slumping Cincinnati Reds.
Prince Fielder hit a tying
homer in the eighth , and
Rickie Weeks followed with
a go-ahead· single.
Quite a way to get that first
wm.
"That's the kind ofpitcher
I am," said Jackson, who
challenged the N L' s most
homer-reliant lineup. "I ' d
rather make them earn it. If
that's what happen s, I give
. up a couple of runs, so be it."
The comeback was stirring
for the Brewers- only· their
fifth win in the last 16 games
- but· the rookie's start was
..• the most ·encouraging part.
Milwaukee 's downturn is
directly tied to its depleted
pitching staff.
Since Ben Sheets and
Torno Ohka went on the disabled list in early May, their
replacements have gone 211. And . one of those wins
now belongs to.Jackson (10), who has clearly been the
best of the backup bunch in
two starts.
"He did a nice job," manager Ned Yost said .. "The
home runs obviously hurt
him, but he was on the attack.
He got us through seven. We
haven't had that luxury with
the pitchers we've been trying to fill in those spots with,
and he's done it twice."
The Brewers took advantage of Cincinnati 's shorthanded bullpen and sent the
Reds to their fourth straight
loss. · Fielder led off the

Tuesday, June 13. 2006:

www .mydailysentinel.cqm

Pqe B6 • The Daily Sentinel

.

Milwaukee
Brewers' ,Corey ·
Koskie (47)
slides safely
into second
with a double
as Cincinnati
Reds shortstop
Felipe Lopez Is
late with the
tag in the
fourth inning of ,
- a baseball
game, Monday
in Cincinnati.
AP photo

UnllmHodAB
1...•. No. sm ....Dustin Blars '
2. . ... No. 9 . . ...Adam Traylo~
3. . ... NO. 401 ....Michael Mo'es
UnllmHod CD
1.....No. 688 ....Tim Cfealh
2..... No. 618 ....Ronny Burns
3 ..... No. 359 . .. .Corey Ward
QuodC
1. . . • .No. B . ..... len Smith 1
2. . ... No. 9 ...... Reed Bist&gt;op
3. . . .. No. 77 .....Charlie Mulley
50PW
1. . ... No. 00 .
. .Andrew Fuller
2..... Ng. 299 ....Tanner Williams
3. . .. No. 11 .. ... Denver Thomas
80JR
, 1. . ... No.11 x:

.... Jona'"an Hoffman

2 . .... No. 4 ...... Tyler endr~k
3 . . ... No. 19 ..... Anlh ny Arrowood
80SR
1 . . ... No 1 4 . . . .Jeremiah Hoffman
2. . ... No, 7 ...... Garrett Dye
3..... No. 120 . . .Zakk Heaton

250C
1. ... No. 619 .... Andy Duty
2. . ...No. 3 . ... .. Tomrhy Curtis
3... ·..No. 618 .. .. Ronny Burns
B

. .No. 601 ... .Dustin Biars
2 . . ...No. 9 ..... Adam Taylor
3. . ..No. 28 .. .. .Cody Spangler
1.

Quod B

eighth with a homer off Kent them , and Adam Dunn and
Mercker (0-1) on a 1-2 pitch , Jason. LaRue each had a solo
tying it at 5.
shot for Cincinnati,. which
"That's just a game we scored all of its runs off
should have won right there," homers. The Reds lead the
Mercker said. " I ·have no .• National League with 95
excuses. I've been through overall , and Milwaukee is
this before, When it goes next with 90 .
The last time a Milwaukee
bad, it goes bad. I throw one
bad pitch, and it's a home pitcher gave up four homers
run. When .you're going was Aug. 6, 2003, when
good, that same pitch is Atlanta hit that many off
.
' Wayne Franklin .
popped up."
After Brady Clark 'singled
Dunn started the Reds '
with two outs and pinch-hit- power show with a 432-foot
ier Jeff Cirillo worked the homer in the second inning,
count full before drawing a hi s 21st. The · solo homer
walk, Weeks lined a run- · extended a trend for Dunn,
scor ing si ngle . off closer who is 4-for-14 in the last
Todd Coffey, broughJ into the five games with three solo
game earlier than . usual homers.
because of the injury-thinned
Ross hit a two-run shot in
bullpen.
the fifth , and LaRue followed
Once the Brewers got the with a pinch-hit homer that
lead , left-hander Brian tied it at 4. LaRue has lost the
Shouse pitched a perfect starting catching job because
eighth a~d Derrick Turnbow of his prolonged slump got the last three outs for his the homer was only his sec18th save in 22 chances.
ond hit since May 19.
Jackson learned the hard
Ross hit a solo shot with
way that it's a losing proposi- one out in the seventh for the
tion to leave pitches over the third two-homer game of his
plate at Great American Ball career and a 5-4 lt~ad.
Park, one of the majors' most Jackson gave up nine hit s in
homer-friendly fields. The seven innings arid struck out
Brewers hadn't allowed four six, including shortstop
homers in any game all sea- Felipe Lopez four times.
son.
Reds starter Aaron Harang
David Ross hit two of was ill and struggled with his

control through five innings,
giving uP. four runs while,
throwing I 08 pitches.
" I don't want to make
excuses for him, but he wasn't feeling good tod1ly or last
.ni~ht , " manager Jerry Narron.
smd. "But he still wanted to
take the ball. I give him credit for that. "
Carlos Lee hit a solo homer
and had one of the Brewers '
three sacrifice flies off
Harang. Lee has three.
homers in his last 10 games,
leaving him with 21 overall.
Notes: RHP Rick Helling
is scheduled to make his next
rehab start on Thursday for
Triple-A Nashville, then
return to Milwaukee to be
examined. Helling has been
on the disabled list since
April 16 with a sprained right
elbow.... Clark was back in
the Brewers' lineup after
missing one game because of
a strained shoulder. He went
I -for-4. ... Reds reliever
David Weathers won't throw
a ball for a few days, resting
his tired arm. He had to leave
a game Sunday afier feeling
numbness in the arm . .. ·. The
Reds have five pinch-hit
homers this season. LaRue
has four in his career. .. .
Ross' last two-homer game
was April .15 last season.

Bush tells Iraq leader U.S.
will stand with him; is
pressed in turn not to
withdraw troops too soon, A2

Mason Co. Motocross

1. . . ..No. 00 ..... Joey Vales
2.. .. .No. 24 ..... Eddie Havery
3.
. .No. 20 .....Brenl Fetty
.
Quod 30+
1.... .No, 66 .... .Bobby Knudson ·
2., . . .No. 66X .. .J.R. King
D

1. . .No. 04 . . .Lenny Tennant
2 .. ... No. 45 ..... Brad Hayes
3. . . .No. 188 .... R.J. GliHith
60JR

1. . .. .No. 5 ......Garrett Coe
2.
. .No. 192 ....Nick Taylor
3. . . .. No. 8 ......Zakary Davis
80SR
1. .. .. No. 03 ..... Dalton Call
2. . . .No. 2 ......Jacob linville

\

125C

1..... No 619 ....i\n9Y Duty •

2.. ... No. 688 ... _,. Tim Creath

3. . .. .No. 1 ...... Wyatt Ball
Mini Quad 80'1 to 90'1

1. . . .. No. 7 ......Cotton Hendrick
2 . .... No. 15 ..... Co~on Bartrum ~
3 . .. .. No. 3 ......Ryan Miller

Mini Qued 50'• to 70'1
1 ... No.11 .....Jonathan Fry
2..... No. 5 ... .. .Makayla Rose
3..... No. 313 ... .Cotten Miller
50JR
1. . ... No. 9 ...... Zachary Goddard

2.....No. 17 ..... Hayden James
3. . ..No.911 .. ..Ty Vansickle
.
50SR
1. . ...No.5 .
. .Garren Coe
2. , . , .No.4 , .. , , .Justin Arrowood
3.
. .No. 00 .. , ..Andrew Fuller
· Mini Trell with Clutch
1.. . .. No. 85 ..... Ryan Hesson
2.
. .No. 6X
.Dine Collins

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

3. . . .. No. 6 ... . .. Jeft Combs

Quad Money
1. . . .. No.116 .... Kyle McKenzie
2. . ... No. 77 ..... Danny Demko
3. . ... No. 99 .....James Patrick
Mini Trail- No Clutch
1..... No. 5 ...... Nathan Parsons
Quod SchoolbOy ·
1..... No. 8 ...... ian Smith

2. •. , .. No. 14 ..... ShadOw Knudeon
3..... No. 300 .... Tyler Woodridge
Beginner 100 end Undw
1. . , .. No. 03 ..... D!ilton Call"'' .
2. . . .No.11X ... .Jonathan HoHman
3. . . . .No. 60 ..... Dino Collins
Super Mini
.
· 1.. . . .No. 299 ... .Tylor Williams
2..... No. 14 ... .. Jeremiah Hoffman
3. .... No. 174 .... Tyler Ward
Beginner Quad
1. .... No. 13 ..... Julia Hoffman
• 2. . .. No. 73 . . ... Brodie Gill
Quad 350 and Under
~
1..... No.55 . . ... Josh COoper
2.. . .. ."io. 5 ......Char1es Hollenbaugh '

,')0

( ' l•: 'oJ' I'S • \'oJ. :;,; , ~0 .

· • Heat chase down Mavs.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
will likely propose a levy in
November to help pay for· the
costs of police protection and
other village services, as the
village faces a $115,000 general fund deficit next year.
Council has also begun to
consider a number of cost. saving measures in the meantime, induding layoffs, pay
cuts, the elimination of at

Next Race:
June 23, 2006; Sign Ups at 4:30p.m. · •
Practice at 5:30p.m.: Race at 7 p.m.

" ""· "' ~ tl . oil ~wll l irl&lt;' l m no

:.! llllh

least one village department,
and requiring employees · to
pay a portion of their health
msurance costs.
MeeJin~ Monday evening,
council d1scussed but took no
action on possible ineans of
savings in the general fund.
Council Member Jean Craig
suggested council consider a
number of measures to 'reduce
expenditures,
and
Councilman Ferman Moore,
who serves as chairman of the
finance committee, said council should also consider the

possibility of combining
police service with neigl)bormg Pomeroy m an effort to
save costs.
· Council President Stephen
Houchins said passage of a
November levy- possibly as
large as live mills- will be a
necessity if the general fund is
to remain solvent next year.
According to Fiscal Officer
S11san Baker, the willage will
face a general fund deficit of
at least $13,000 before .the
end of the year.
•
"We're going to need

$2 15,000 to make payroll .in· and other non-wage' expenses
the general fund 'for the rest of are. calculated.
the year, and we're going to
Last month , when council
have $202,000 ava,ilable," approved the payraises, she
Baker told council members. advised against them because
Operation of the police . of tight general fund finances.
department will .cost the gen- Only Moore voted against ·
era! fund $320,000 this year. them.
"We have to come up with a
A month ago, council
approved
$1.50. hourly way to pay the police, and it
payraises for police depart- has to be paid through the
ment employees. Those. rais- general fund, because that's .
es, according to Baker, will the law," Baker told council.
cost the village an ·additional "We' II have $1 15,000 less
$34,320 per year; even before
Please see Deficit. A5
payroll taxes, insurance costs

•

fielding. The offense is one o(
the NL's · most product! ve, and
the rotation has improved dramatically over last' season,
ranking m the league's top four
so far.
The defense has made the
second-most errors in the NL
- only Milwaukee has more.
And the bullpen is one of the
league's worst as well, compiling a 4.90 earned run average.
During the first four games of
the current homestand, the
bullpen gave up nine earned
runs in 9 1-3 inmngs.
The Reds need to make some
sense out of this soon.
Weathers started the season
as the closer, converting nine of
I 0 save chances. When he blew
four in a row, Narron moved
Todd Coffey into the closer's
role.

W.Va. still
trailing Ohio
on new bridge
construction

Middleport
Coundl ordfrs
demolition of
Irvin building

'I'

BY BETH SERGENT

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

BSERGENTliiiMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
• Unda Wright
..... -- ....... .
~

~

INSIDE

.Classified· ·
'a Galllpollll

\\ ' l·. ll N I·.S il.\\ . ,Jl i,\J I·. q ,

:! 1:.!

Middleport council considers projected deficit

SPORTS

Reds' bullpen short-handed
CINCINNATI (AP) - For
the next few days, the
Cincinnati Reds' bullpen will
kshort·handed.
Reliever David Weathers has
. been advised to rest his tired
·arm for a couple of days, leaving the Reds without one of
their serul' men. Manager Jerry
Narron satd Monday there were
no plans to put Weathers on the
· disabled list.
So Narron was hoping to get
good starts out of Aaron Harang
and Bronson Arroyo in the first
two games of a series against
Milwaukee, allowing him to
take it easy'with his relievers.
"l'lljust try to match guys up
and see what happens," Narron
said.
..
The bullpen has developed
into one of the Reds' main concerns, along with their poor

Brewers down
Cincinnati, Bt

• West seeks consensus
over Iran, but nonaligned
nations support Tehran's
uranium enriChment.
See Page A2
• Masons contribute to
Special Olympics fund.
See Page A3
• 4-H Club News.
See Page A3
• Lydia Circle discuss. .
summer programs.
SeePageA3
• Harrisonville Alumni
have reunion.
SeePageA3
·• Court orders govemor to
provide contested·records
for review. See Page AS
• Abortion debate retums · ·
- briefly- to Statehouse.
SeePageAS ·.

WEATHER

POMEROY
·MIDDLEPORT
Construction on · the West
Middleport Village Council
Virginia side of the new
has ordered the demolition of
Pomeroy Mason Bridge is
a
condemned building on
four .to five weeks behind ·
North
Second Avenue, and
construction on the Ohio side
will impose a daily fine
due to problems with con,
againsl
ils ow ner if the buildcrete imtially used to coning
remains
standing after 30
struct the West Virginia
daysc
•
tower.
Michael Gerlach, downThe West Virginia tower
town revitalization coordinawas subsequently tom down
tor, met Monday evening
and work resumed on the
with Village Council to distower's r~onstruction, ~
cuss
a recent meenng of the
time' .wiili' tJie- new conCrete
village's
design review board
passing t!Je test. In fact, the
and Allan Irvin, the buildWest Virginia tower has since
ing's owner. Gerlach said no
risen to SUryJass where it was
substantive
. steps have been
when the dismantling began.
. taken to make the building
"When speaking in terms
safe or to meet building
of construction, four to five
codes and said Irvin has
weeks difference in the
failed to demonstrate his
progress of the two towers is
financial ability to perform
really not that notable,"
the work or provide any docStephanie Filson, public
u.mentation that was required
information officer for the
of. him.
Ohio
Department
of
The review board, in a JetTransportation · (ODOT)
ter to council, recommended
District I 0 said. "Our focus is
an order for demolitioh. The
that we are seeing continual
board must approve any
and visible progress on the
demolition in tjle dowmown
entire project and we're
shopping district ,. and had
pleased with that. The end
granted Irvin a 30-day extenres111t will be a bridge that
sion · of demolition beyond
serves the entire region and
improves traffic capacity in
the deadline for demolishing
the Pomeroy vicinity."
it after it was condemned, in
exchange for a waiver of liaIn regards to the West
Virginia tower, construction
bilily allowing the demolition
workers have poured thro11gh
of the three buildings next
segment nine, with segments
door.
Beth Sereont/plooto
I 0-13 yet to be poured.
Irvin bought the building
Segment 13 is the last seg- Construction on the West Virginia side of the new Pomeroy Mason Bridge (background) is four from Jack Carsey after it was
to five weeks behind construction on the Ohio side (foreground) which is ·attributed to fallout
PI
..
H iH Brtdp. AS
Please see Demolition. A5
from
problems with concrete used to construct the originai tower on the west Virginia side.
,
'

.

.

Middl~port

Council
•
approves
siX
.
•
·.payraiSes
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
approved pay increases for
SIX more employees at
Monday evening's 'regular
Detallo on Paco A3
meeting.
Village
Administrator
Bradford Anderson requested
$1 hourlr increases for F~ed
Older, J tm Morrison, Mtke ·
Lavender, Don Hysell, Floyd
2 SECilONS- 12 ·P AGFS
Fitchpatrick, and Randall
Calendars
A3 Might . . Council's finance
committee, meeting last
Classifieds
82-4 week, recommended the raises, and council approved
Comics
Bs them unanimouslY.. ·
The raises w1ll be paid
Dear Abby
A3 from several departments,
but none will be paid through
Editorials
A4 the general fund (See related
page I). They will be .
Obituaries
As story,·
paid through the water,
8 Section ' sewer, street and ceme1eries
Sports
funds.
In the past month, council .
Weather
A3

INDEX .

--

~allipolts
""

•'

' (740)
'

~rtbune
446~2342

matlp

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

1

© aoo6 Ohly Valley Publl•hln&amp; Co. .
•

"'

. .!;

................. As

..

i'{

Cha~eno Hoeftlchj photo
These GED graduates attending the recog~ition dinner Monday
night were .among 23 who received their diplomas in the 20042005 year. From t~e left, seated are Jessy Young. Natasha
Tackett. Amanda Miller. and Bessie Fisher, and back. Ephriam
Herdman, Sara Hammond , Lisa Stone, and Joy Rhodes.

Ceremony honors adults on
education achievement
BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH
HOEA.ICHCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Achievements of students
enrolled in the Adult Basic and
Literacy Education (ABLE)
program in Meigs County were
recognized in ceremonies at
Meigs High School Monday
night.

Those who have compleled
requirements for their general
equivalency diplomas (OED)
and those who are still working
toward that goal, their families
and friends were guests for the
recognition progmm at a. dinner' hosted by the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club.
Dr. ·John Costanzo, director
of
the
Ath e n s- M~ig s

•

Cho~ene

Hoeftlc.hj photo

Fantasy Durham talks about her life since getting her GED in
2004. She just completed her first year in the nursing program
at the Un iversity of Rio Grande.
Educational Service Center, its successes. '
extended the welcome with
It was a time of praise and
Carol Brewer, Meigs coordinaPlease see Adults, A5
tor, speaking about ABLE and
•

�.

. .

'

•

NATION •

The ·Daily Sentinel

..PageA2

WoRLD

VVednesday,June14,2006

Community Calendar

West seeks consensus over
Iran, but nonaligned
nations support Tehran 1
uranium enrichment

Public meetings
Wednesday, June 14
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Town ship Trustee s regular
session, 7:30 p.m., township
garage.
Friday, June 16
MIDDLEPORT - Village
of Middleport ordinance
committee meets at 3 p.m.,
council chambers.

Bv GEORGE JAHN

nuclear program, diplomats
· said.
One diplomat familiar with
VIENNA, Austria
the consultations among the
Western countries pushed nonaligned countries said that
Tuesday for broad support on supporters of Tehran 's sta':lce
the need for Inin to freeze engaged in a "shouting
uranium enrichment, but non- match" Monday with those
aligned countries . backed leaning toward the Western
Tehran, saying all countries line. The diplomats spoke on
have the right to pursue a condition of anonymity
nuclear program for civilian because the consultations
were confidential.
use.
The Western push suffered
A statement drawn up by
the 16-nation nonaligned a setback Monday with revebloc at the board meeting of lations that China and Russia
the International Atomic . were not prepared to join
Energy Agency "reaffirmed America and its European
the basic and inalienable allies . in a ·unified message
right" of all co11ntries to insisting that Tehran halt
develop, produce and use enrich!pent.
atomic energy ' "for peaceful
Their reluctance reflected
purposes, without any dis- lingering differences along
crimination and in conformi- East-West lines among the
ty with their respective legal six world powers that two
obligations."
weeks ago appeared to be in
The statement - · made agreement about how to
available to The Associated engage Iran over enrichment
Press ahead of delivery w)len and to persuade it to give up
Iran comes up on the agenda technology that could be used
later in the week - was to ml)k:e nuclear arms. ·
mostly a repetition of a comResistance by Russia and
munique issued last month at China to tough UN. acti&lt;m
a meeting in Malaysia of the contributed to Washington's
nonaligned bloc's foreign decision last month to reverse
ministers.
·decades of policy and agree
Iran says it has a right to to join i!l multinational talks
enrich uranium for purposes with Iran - if Tehran accepts
of generating electricity a package of rewards, freezes
under
the
Nuclear enrichment during the talks
Nonproliferation Treaty. The and places a long-term moraUnited States and its allies torium on such activity.
assert the claim is a cover for · In a symbolic sign of supattempts to develop a port by Moscow, Deputy
weapons program using high- Poreigtl Minister Sergei
ly enriched uranium in the Kislyak was among those
core of nuclear warheads.
with top EU foreign policy
While the focus now is on official Javier Solana when
negotiations with Iran he delivered the incentives
including newfound U.S . package to Tehran last week.
willingness to join in multi- Russia has said it is prepared
national talks if Tehran to join any negotiations with
agrees to freeze enrichment Iran, and China has indicated
- the Bush administration it might also do so.
has refused to unequivocally . Still, other diplomats spoke
rule out military action of more potential divisions.
should Tehran remain defiant . China. Russia and possibly
The statement from the Germany might push to allow
nonaligned bloc warned .that Iran · some lightly controlled
"any attack or threat of attack and small-scale enrichment
against peaceful nuclear rather than see talks founder,
facilities ... constitutes a they said. Russia and China
grave violation of interna- also might balk at enforcing
tionallaw."
selective U.N. sanctions on
The U.S. and its allies were Iranian officials and activifocusing on key nations with ties.
clout among nonaligned
Long-term. verifiable suscountries such as Brazil , pension of Iranian enrichIndia and Argentina, urging ment is a "red line" for the
them to put pressure on Iran United States and its key
in individual statements to Western allies, one diplomat
accept an offer for talks on its . said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP Photo
U.S. President George Bush, left, speaks as Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri ai·Maliki, center, listens during their meeting at the U.S.
Embassy in the hl'!avlly fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, Iraq Tuesday.
·

U.l

tells

is

to
Bv TERENCE HUNT
/IS' WHITE HOUSE CORijESPONDENT

too

part of a stable and secure

"God willing , all of the suf- administration attempted to
Middle East," Bush said.
fering will be over, and all of regain the initiative a~r
Bush's trip comes at a time the soldiers will be able to months of increasingly deadly
when many Democrats - and return to their countries with violence in Iraq and nagging
some in his own party - are our gratitude for what they support for the war among
calling for a substantial num- have oftered," ai-Maliki .said. . Americans.
ber of American ttoops to be
Before leaving Baghdad,
In Washington, Secretary of
brought home by the end of Bush addressed a group of State Condoleezza Rice and
this year. ·
about 300 cheering U.S. troops Defense Secretary Donald H.
War anxiety has been the dri- assigned in·supporting roles to · Rumsfeld gave a classified
ving force behind Bush 's the U.S. Embassy. He thanked briefing on Bush's trip to
plunge in the polls and a cause them for their work and said a selected senators.
of Republican distress · about top U.S. priority was now to
Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan,
holding control of Congress in support the new government.
senior Democrat on the Anmed
the November mid-tern elec"Our job is to help them sue- Services Committee, told
lions.
ceed and we will," Bush said.
AI-Maliki himself did not
Several U.S. lawmakers reporters afterward that Bush's
know the president was in briefed on Bush's trip predict- trip "is likely to lead to phased
Baghdad until five minutes ed that a phased withdrawal of redeployments this year and
before they met in the blue- U.S . ttoops might be accelerat- continuing in t)Je next year."
domed palace once used by ed following the presidential
Rumsfeld said that many
Saddam Hussein but which visit.
U.S. ttoops have already been
·now houses part of the U.s.
This time, Bush flew by heti- . brought home. He said officials
Embassy in the heavily forti- copter
from
Baghdad would meet with Iraqi leaders
fled. Green Zone.
International Airport to and "in the weeks ahead discussing
The Iraqi prime minister had . from the Green Zone, where at what pace we're going to be
come to the embassy expecting lraq 's government meets and able to draw down our forces
to participate in a satellite the U.S. and British embassies and it wiU all be done in a very
video conference with Bush are based.
orderly way."
and aides from the presidential
Bush also met with other
Bush's visit came six days
mountain retreat in Maryland.
Iraqi leaderS before leaving the after a U.:S. ail' strike killed terInstead, Bush sat beside him. country.
·
ror chief Abu Musab alThe video conference wenron
Lat"r.
spel)k:ing
with · Zarqawi and five days after alas scheduled with the U.S. offi- reporters for about 35 minutes Malik:i completed his cabinet
cials still at Camp David.
on Air Force One, Bush said by naming the ministers of
''I've c.ome to not only look one of the Iraqi cabinet minis- Defense and Interior - events
you in the eye. I've also come ters asked him about the U.S. the president's advisers hoped
to tell you that when America military's conduct in terms of would lead to political
gives its word ,. it keeps it~ human right~ of Iraqis.
progress.
word - that it's in our interest
"I assured her any com- · But underscoring the danthat Iraq succeed," Bush told plaints she had, the ambas- gers that remain, a series of
al-Maliki.
sador · ·IS more than willin'g t0 explosions struck the northern
Bush didn't say whether he listen and there will be full city of Kirkuk on Tuesday;
and the prime minister had·dis- investigations.?' He said he . killing at least !6 people. And
cussed the timing or scope of a reminded the Iraqi officials that
.
possible U.S. military with- mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners the new leader of al-Qaida m
drawal. There are now about by Americans at Abu Ghraib Iraq pledged 10 avenge prede130,000 U.S. troops in the prison "is a sorry chapter in tl1e cessor ai-Zarqawi's death with
country and Bush. faces Iraqi experience." .
horrific attacks, according to a
increasing pressure at home to
The · U.S. troops cheered stalement posted on the Web.
begin bringing many of them loudly and raised cameras high . AI-Maliki has won U.S.
home.
· •• Bush visited them.
admiration by promising to
AI-Maliki, speaking in ""·Thought I'd stop by to say crack down on militias and
Arabic, thanked Bush for U.S. hello," Bush said, to laughter. sectarian violence, promote
protection, but expressed a "I bring greetings from a grate- national reconciliation, accelergeneral hope for the day when ful nation. And I thank you for ate reconstruction efforts and
American troops would be your sacrifice."
restore essential $4lrYices such
gone.
Bush 's visit carne as his as electricity.
•

BAGHDAD,
Iraq
President Bush told Iraq's new
leader in a surprise face-to-face
visit on Tuesday that the fate of
his war-scarred country was in
Iraq's own hands. Bush was
pressed in turn not to withdraw
U.S. ttoops too quickly.
'There's a worry almost to a
-person that we will leave
before they are capable of
defending themselves ," Bush
said as he flew back to the
United States ·after his light·
ning, long-distance trip to meet
with Prime Minister Nouri alMaliki.
Bush spent over 5 1/2 hours
in Baghdad in his second visit
of the three-year war, both kept ·
secret until he had safely
arrived. He met with American
troops at Thanksgiving 2003 in
a visit confmed to the airport
and limited to several hours.
This time,.he traveled to the
city's heavily fortified Green
' ZOne.
ln a mission designed to
both showcase U.S. support for
the new unity government and
to ease war concerns at home,
the president told the Iraqi·
prime minister the United
States would stand by the new
government as it works to
achieve stability.
"When America gives its
word, it keeps its word," Bush
said.
.
At the 5ame time, he empha-sized that Iraq must control its
own destiny.
'The decisions ·you and your
'
. cabinet make will be determi· nate as to whether or not a
. country succeeds that can govern itself, sustain itself and
defe,nd itse'f," he told alMalik:i.
·
Bush slipped away from
: what had been billed as a two. day meeting at Camp David,
· Md., for the 11-hour overnight
· flight that brought him to his
' · _...c...;.:_',,. ~.:;;..._:_.:""'"
fir&gt;t direct talks with al-Maliki ~------~-------..--.~~--.----..--:;;;:-"'----~---------------,
and members of the new gov- ,
f~l
· ~~
emment.
·
1"1- ., 7 ~
~. • •
His visit was accompanied
. : by incredib~ tight security.
:LeavingBa dad, lightswere
: turned off th on the heli1
• ,J .... il
w:.#.A
· copters that took Bush and his
..,. ~a
""~
entourage to the airport and on
VJ;.#. A
"
Air Force One itself:
Farmers Bank
Farmers Bank
Farmers Bank
. Only a handful of close aides
Home Equity
Construction Loan
. knew about the trip in advance.
Adjustable. Rate
: Later,
speaking
with
Mortgage Special
Line of Credit
Special
; reporters on the llight home.
. Bush said he assured the lmqi
leaders "they didn't need to
Interest Rate
Intere st R a t e
. wony" about U.S. ttoops withAnnual Percentage Rate &amp; Interest Rate
.. drawing too soon and too
Discount for 6 Months
: quickly.
·.
Annual P e r c entage Rate &amp; Interest Rate
Annual POrcentage R a t e
·· 'They are countmg on us to
f o r e Month C o nstr:-uctlon !-oan P .e rlod
: continue to take the lead until
No Closing Costs!
Construction or Major Renovation
Locked In For Three Years/
: such time as they are ready to
No First- Year Annual Feel
·
On Primary Residences
Available For Purchase or Refinance
· take the lead ," Bush said.
On Primary Residences!
· Bush said that top U.S. milior
toe "
on
tary and policy officials would
mo&lt;"'t&gt;e ••P•Yrn• " ' la•m. "'ontntv J&gt;aymen t o t Sl583 11 7, total ' '" •nee c na •g• a t
sit down with Iraqi officials in
tt ....
tta ..... .....,
n&lt;&gt;\
· the days ahead "and ·devise a
"""•'"""""II
: way forward.:' The president
: also said he would step up
· pressure on other world leaders
Farmers
Bank
f.··~· " ·~
o~ ~
&amp; Sa v ings Com pany
to do more to help Iraq.
"I am going to call - these
Member FDIC
leaders' again and remind them
ra~P~Ia: .:l:. :n:=•-.:::6.::6.7:::
:. .3:.:1c:::6:.:1_ _:G:::a=Uipolls 446.2265 ·~...., 0 t!:no Pleouoan! 674-6200&gt;
that a stable and Secllfe Iraq is L~----,--'P~o~m'!:'."'e~ro&lt;J:YUP"'9~2,~.2~1~3~&amp;~_,M~a.!!a.':'o!:'n..!7.:!7:,'3~.6~4:!'0~0~-T~u=pt:p!:.e~
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I

Thesda y, June 13
POMEROY
Meigs
. Chamber
of
County
Commerce, business minded
luncheon, noon, Pomeroy
Library, catered by Pomeroy
McDonald's. choic.e of
sandwich wrap and salad,
RSVP 992-5005 by June 9
for salad preference.
HARRISONVILLE ,
Harrisonville OES will meet
. at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Refreshments will be served
at 6:30p.m.

'•

Thursday, June 15
POMEROY Meigs
County American Cancer
Society Task Force, regular
meeting, noon, Pomeroy
Library, lunch provided, call
992-6626, ext. 24 for information and to RSVP.
RACINE
- Sonshine
CirCle picnic, 6 p.m., Marvin
McKelvey camp . Bring lawn
chair, covered dish or·
dessert. Meat s, buns , iced
tea, paper products, games
prov ided by hosts.
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers, Racine Southern
FFA Alumni, regular meeting, 7 p.m., Southern Vo-Ag
room .

.
Youth events

MIDDL'EPORT - Revival
services will be held at the
Victory Baiptist Church, 525
N; Second St., Middeport ,
Sunday through Wednesday.
Dr. Jerry Cheney will have
services at 7 p.m. each night.
There will be special music.
Pastor James Keesee invites
the public.

Other events
Monday, June 19
TUPPERS PLAINS - TB
Clinic staff at Tuppers Plains
firehouse, 4:30-5:30 p.m., to
admini ster skin tests, returning Wednesday to read tests.

Reunions

Monday, June 19
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene.
vacation Bible school, 6-R:30
p.m., Syracuse Community
Center, "The First Action
Herpes" theme .

Church events

Saturday, June 17
MIDDLEPORT
Cunning ham/! mbode n
reunion, 2 p.m., Hartinger
park.

Birthdays
Sunday, June 18
TUPPERS PLAINS
Ethel Carson, former of
Tuppers Plains, now residing
at Arbors of Marietta, will be
92 Sunday. Cards may be
sent to her at Arbors of
Marietta, 400 Seventh Street,
Marietta, Oho 45750.

Masons contribute to Special Olympics fund

I

I
\
I

•

.,

COLUMBUS
Ohio
Masons will present a check
for $140,000 to Special
Olympics Ohio to support
the annual "Sponsor an
Athlete" program for the
Summer Games held in
Columbus. ·
Over the past 23 years; the
Masonic Fraternity in Ohio
has' contributed nearly $2.5
million to support the Annual
Summer Games. This equals
the largest annual donation
Ohio Masons have made ,
and represents the highest
level of contribution to the
program since 1993.
In addition to financial
~upport, the Masons host a

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Young poet salutes our flag with prize-winning rhymes.

Sunday, June 18
Wednesday, June 14
MIDDLEPORT ...:.. The
POMEROY
Meigs Bakers of Kentucky will be
County Board of Health , singing at 10:30 a.m. at the
regular meeting, 5 p.m. , Middleport Church of the
conference . room of the Nazarene . A Father's Day
Meigs
County
Health dinner will follow to honor
all fathers.
Department.

.

BuildAit!

5.75°/o
6.385°/o

Clubs and
organizations

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

welcome center for Speci'al
Olympics athletes and their
families. provide volunteer
help during the competitions
and participate in the parade
the openof
. athletes duripg
.
'
mg ceremomes.
·
Special Oly~pics Ohio
provides year-round sports
training and competition
opportunities for more than
18,000 children and adults
with intellectual disabilities·.
Special Olympics contrib~tes
to the physical, social and
psychological developmel)t
of the athletes . Through successful experiences in sports,
they gain confidence and
build a positive self-image
.

which carries over into the
classroom, home, job and
community.
There are app~oximately
75. local and area events and
Specii!l Olympics Ohio hosts
eight state-wide competitions
' each year, covering 22
sports. More than 2,500
Special Olympics athletes
will attend this year's summer games June 23-25, at the
athletic facilities of The Ohio
S.tate University.
The . opening ceremonies,
which include the parade of
athletes, will take place
Friday, June 23, at 6:30 p.m.
at the Jesse Owens Sports
Complex.

4-H Club News
Pioneer 4-H Club
Sunday, May 21, at the
Morgan {Werry gave a
The Pioneer 4-H Club met on Reei:lsville United Methodist' demonstratioh on how to make
May 21 , at the Lawrence home . Church with 24 members and a biscuit joint trom her finishing
with eight members, three three advisors attending.
up project. Amanda Eason gave
cloverbuds and three advisors
Business discussed was the a demonstmtion on making
present.
·
. fair theme - "Get Fired Up Hemp jewelry as a self deterBusiness discussed was serv- About Junior Fair" and 4-H mined project.
ing a dinner for Chester·alumni, camp at Canters Cave.
Refreshments were served by
going to camp and the Health
Demonstrations were given Laura Bailey and Megan
and Safety Speaking Contest.
on animal projects by Austin, · ~roderick.
·
For the project lesson the Randal and Derick.
The
The next meeting is to be on
members went over lesson· Nicodemus,
Riddle and June 25 at 2 p.m. at the
books; public speaking; and Cowdery families served Buckleys.
wrote what steps to take.in mak- refreshments.
Pam Buckley, advisor.
ing a peanut butter sandwich.
Special plans for the next
Keri Lawrence showed her meeting were picking a new
Believers and Achievers
The Believers and Achievers ·
guinea pig and what it eats. place (or meetings and who
Emily Davis made brownies would give demonstrations or 4-H Club met on June 4, at the
Ohio Valley Game Birds with
from her cooking bOok.
reports. .
Everyone went fishing in the
Abby Collins, News Reporter eight members and three adviLawrence's pond and all caught
sors in attendance.
Business discussed Wa!) getBelievers and Achievers
a fish. A thank you was extendThe Whiz Kidz met on June ling shirts for the club and a trip
ed to the Dad's for baiting a lot
of hooks. The Lawrence, Drake 4, at the BuckleY, home with to Lake Snowden on June 23, .
and Fick families prepared a seven members and one advisor' · A tour of the Ohio Valley
present
.
Game Bird site was enjoyed.
cookout.
The next meeting will be on
4-H t-shirts were pa~sed out,
Keri
Lawrence,
News
judging dates and project work July 9, at the home of Kelsie
Reporter
done 'so far were reviewed, and Burton.
·
camp and who would be gbing
Eddie Hendricks, . News
Lakeside Leaders
Reporter
The Lakeside Leaders met on were discussed.

Harrisonville Local weather
Alumni
have
Thursday night ... Mostly
Wednesday ... Mostly
sunny
in
the
morning
...
Then
clear.
Lows in the mid 50s.
•
becoming partly cloudy. North winds around 5 mph .
reumon
Patchy fog in the morning.
Friday
and
t' riday

Highs around 80. North night...Mostly clear. Highs
HA~RISONVILLE
The Harrisonville Alumni winds 5 to 10 mph.
in the lower 80s. Lows in
Wednesday nighLPartly the upper 50s.
held its 76th annual banquet
in
, the
at the Alumni .Center in cloudy
Saturday
through
evening
...
Then
clearing
.
Harrisonville with 90 alumMostl.Y
·clear.
Monday
...
Lows in the mid 50s .
ni and guest attending.
High s in the upper 80s.
The Harold Graham fami - Northwest .winds 5 to I 0 Lows in the mid 60s.
ly provided the dinner for mph .
Monday
night
and
Thu..Sday ... Mostly sunny.
the group. The classes honTuesday
...
Partly
cloudy
.
Highs in the lower 80s .
ored were 1936, 1946. i 956. Northwest winds around 5 Lows in the mid 60s.
The class of 1946 had five mph .
High s in the. rnid 8os:
present. The collection for
the scholarship fund was
$729.00.
.
The Nazarenes provided
the entertainment singing
Inst~lled
several
gospel
songs.
White Vinyl Double Hung
Numerous merchants proJ
.
. vided prizes for the event.
Better Window, Better Price - Since 1993
Officer elected for next
Quality Window Systems, Inc.
year were Harold Grah am
president. Ray Alkire, vic'e
1-800-291-5600
pre sident ; Gladys Cumings,
www .q ualltywindowsysterhs.com
treasurer, and Joy . Clark ,
740-992-4119
. wv #023477 '
secretary.

DEAR ABBY: Years ago,
when our daughter, Stacy, was
in the eighth pade, a contest
was held at her school to see if
they could win one of the flags
that had nown over the U.S.
Capitol.
Our daughter, who is now
grown, won the prize for the
best poem. We thought you
might like to print it on Rag
Day for your readers to erijoy.
We think its message is one that
is ~ worthwhile. - STACY'S
PROUD PARENTS IN NEW
YORK
DEAR PROUD PARENTS:
I agree with you, It is not only
worthwhile, I found it tou~hing .
Readers, this poem was read
into the Congressional Record
during the second session of the
89th Congress. Read on:
THE FLAG
(By Stacy Frank, Grade 8)
This flag of red and white and
blue
May not mean yery much to
you. ·
But as for me this banner flies
And with its mighty voice it
cries
·
Out to peoples far and near
To proclaim olrr freedom
· here.
A small beginning, I agree,
But like the acorn to the tree.
Thirteen states we had.at first,
But as our country grew, our
thirst

Dear
Abby

For land and freedom did not
stop.
.
That land did well; produced
a crop
For countries of the world to
share
And then they knew our nag
was fair.
. And underneath this starry
wmg
Foreign peoples help to sing
The greatest story ever told,
The story of our country hold.
Of its birth into the world
And of its wondrous nag
unfurled.
And over the world there
ne'er will stand
The fla~ of any other Iand
That wdl mean as much to
me
As this nag of liberty.
DEAR ABBY: I am 19, and
I'm wondering if you could
give me some information.
When I was in high school, one
of my teachers told us about a
little program where we could

Lydia Circle discuss sumrrier programs
POMEROY ·
The
church's vacation Bible
school to be held June 19-22
was discussed at a recent
meeting of the Lydia Council
of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Needs of the Bible school
were noted \li!d it was reported that classes will be held
·from 9 to II :30 a.m. In the
absence of Paula Pickens,
president, Sherry Shamblin
presided opening the meeting
with prayer praises and
requests. Thank you notes
were read and mother-dau ghter banquet pi~tures were
passed around for members to
look at.
Decisions on who woud
receive sunshine baskets and
cards in June were made, and
a visitors list was circulated.

There will be no Lydia meeting in July but the next meeting was scheduled for A iug. 7.
The Women' s Fellowship
of Churches of Christ will be
held on June 22 at the
Bradford Cl:urch's activity
building. There was a discussion on the mentoring program as well as plans for the
observance of Father's Day:
The KYOWVA meeting to be
held on Sept. 18 at the
Bradford Church was noted .
A committee was chosen to
organize a list of what is needed with the lists to be circulated at the August meeting.
Members were reminded of
free mammograms being
offered by the Meigs County
Health
Department.
Information can be obtained
from that agency.

'

.

are needed to help clean up all
the flower beds around the
church
and
parsonage.
Carolyn Nicholson and
Sherry Smith were hostesses
for the June meeting.
Nicholson read a devotion
called "Hands that · Sewed
Love" and Smith read
"Friendship" and some origi nal material on what the Lydia
Circle meant to her during the
time of her recent health problems.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses to Nancy
Morri s, Suzie Will, Cristy
Will, Kathy Dyer, Megan
Dyer, Neva Chapman, Sherry
Shamblin, Diana Maxwell.
Madeline . Painter, Charlotte
Hanning, Madi son Dyer. and
Brenda Bolin.

Local Briefs

ACI - 37.78
AEP -34.34
Akzo- 49.61
Ashland Inc. - 57.67

Ice cream social
· planned

Krager - 19.64
Ltd. - 25.16 .
NSC- 48.46
Oak Hill Financial 25.15

RACINE - The Bas han
Volunteer Fire Department
will have an ice cream social
Saturday. Serving will begin
at noon .

BBT- 42.23

Bob Evans - 27.38
BorgWamer - 6L24
CENX - 31.99 ·
ChampiOn - 9.28
Charming Shops - 10.87
City Holding - 35.48
Col- 50.28

Peoples - 28.74
Pepsico - 58.99
Premier 14.60
Rockwell - · 62.85
Rocky Boots - 21.81

Sears -

DG -14.52

152.60

Wai-Mart - 47.53
W611dy's - 56.86

DuPont - 39.98
Fed&amp;ral Mogul - .45

Worthington -

USB- 31.40
Gannett - 54.45
General Electric GKNLY - 4.75
Harley Davidson -

27.00

ova-

BU- 15.82

16.36

Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

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write to soldiers -you know, a
comforting letter to let them
know there are people out here ·
who support them.
I have moved several times
since then and no longer have
the address. Today J mentioned
it to my gmndm01her, and she
remembered that she had
recently seen in your column a
Web site to write to our servicemen. Do you still have that Web
site available? If ~o. would you
please let me have it ? I'd ve ry
much apprec iate it. - A
FRIEND . LN NEED, LAKE
HAVASU CITY, f\RIZ.
DEAR FRIEND IN NEED: I
certainly do have it. The Web
site your grandmother referred
to is OperationDearAbby.net and it has been up and running
since 200 I. If you go there and
dick on "Send a ·message," you
can send. as man ~ message,s of
support to as many branches of
the armed forces as you wish. ·
They will be read by military
servic.e members around the
globe.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
krwwn as Jeanne Phillips, and
was foumkd by her mother,
Pauline PhiUips. ffi'ite Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, l-os
Angeles, CA 90069.

Tu ers Plains, Ohio

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I'

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157
www.mydallyaentlnel.~om

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion; or prohibiting the
free .exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press;' or the right of the
people peaceably to assem~le, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Kids lose
interest
Dear Editor:
I'm writing to address the organiz.ations that our kids are
involved with. Over the past few years, it seems these groups
just make things harder to keep the kids involved.
The baseball youth league needs to address some changes
for the kids. We look at this as a summer program for when
· the kids are oin.of school, which it used to be. Now, we start
playing games in May and are finished in June. The kids lifl:
still in school, still have state testing, teachers are still giving
homework, they have other sc hool activities taking place in
May and we are out playing ball all hours of the night. Some
of the kids in .Meigs get up and catch a bus at 6;30 a.m. Ball
games need to have certain limits on how long they are played
on school nights. During the school year, most parents have
their kids to bed no later than 9 p.m. T-ball games lasting three
hours or more for older kids on school nights is ridiculous.
Younger teams are going through the changes and should be
learning fundamentals, sportsmanship, eic. Kids aren't enjoying what should be fun at these early stages and it isn't any
better for the parents. We want our kids involved and stress
free, but everytlting seems to be a competition. We all live in
Meigs County and should let the kids play and enjoy being in
these organizations. We a:ll have mal)y things we are invo!ved
in and enjoy having our kids involved and learning responsibility, but losing kids' interest in what little Meigs County has
to offer doesn't look too promising for future involvement.
Dawn Kopec
Middleport

As the academic year
winds down, there's cause
for mourning in some neighborhoods in New York City,
where some schools wiU be
closing their doors for good.
They're not just any schools
- and I'm not just saying
that because the school
where I spent nty fttst eight
years was nearly among
them. They're Catholic
schools that have achieved
miracles.
Besides doing easily quantifiable things - teaching
disadvantaged students at
half the cost of public
schools - they often distinguish themselves· from
nearby public schools in
another important way.
As one principal explained
to Manhattan Institute education expert .Sol Stern (for
Stern's book "Breaking
Free" (Encounter Books,
2005)): "We are here to educate l!fld empower these kids,
to do two things with them.
One is to make sure that they
learn how to read, write and
do math - every day. The
other is to form the character.
We believe in the divinity of
being; we believe in the holiness of our existence. That
infuses the culture we're in."
But next fall, the Big
Apple is going to come up
nine schools short. Stern
calls it a "tragedy," but
there's far more peri I afoot.
Just as some of these
schools were beginning to
close up shop ·for good,
"People" magazine ran an ,

woman who found herself
pregnant. Upon learning that
she was having triplets, she
opted to selectively reduce
- get rid of two of them .
The words "selective reducKathryn
tion" were new to a lot of
Lopez.
readers that Sunday. And if
reactions I heard were any
indication, people wondered ·
how far we had come toward
article on a Catholic school a "Brave New World,"
teacher in Appleton, Wis., embracing a sterile phrase to
who was fired for artificially describe this practice, Does
conceiving
her
twins. thi s mean that it's too late to
Immediately, you're oui- tum back?
raged: At a Catholic school?
Maybe. Maybe not. One
Aren't they pro-life? Don't way you can reverse a cuithey want to encourage preg- ture's direction is by teachnancies and discourage abor- ing children· differently. At
tions?
·
·
religious schools, where
Well, perhaps. But the morals-training is part of the
teacher was reportedly fired package, educators have a
for using in vitro fertilization unique and powerful opporto conceive. That's a iough tunity
and with that
one; your heart breaks for a · comes great responsibility.
couple who want to conceive As
Vatican
official
but just can't on their own. Archbishop J. Michael
But IV.F, as it is . regularly Miller, secretary of the
practiced, involves, however Congregation for Catholic
recently
unintentionally, the destruc- Education,
tion of embryos, and for that explained: "To fulfill their
reason, among others, it's responsibility ... educators in
not something the Catholic Catholic schools, with .very
Church wants to encourage. few eltceptions, should be
A Catholic school teacher practicing Catholics who are
plays a unique role in being cortunitted to the Church and
both a role model and a liv- living her sacramental life.
ing embodiment pf what the · Despite the · difficulties
Church teaches. And, as high sometimes involved, those
an order as that may be, it's a respbnsible for hiring teachrole a teacher signs up for ers must see to it that these
when she agrees to teach in a criteria are met."
Catholic school.
•
The case in Wisconsin
About two years ago, The isn't the first of its kin(j, or
New York Times Magazine · the first io make headlines.
ran a piece by a young Earlier this year, a single

•

female teacher in New York
City found herself pregnant
and, before long, the cente!
of controversy. She' accused
the school of sex discrimina,
tion for firing her because of
her pregnancy. Anyone who
values the protection of
human life must hesitate to
do or support anything that
would di scourage anyone
.
'
with child from having th~
child - so the first thing I .
want to know is whether tha~
teacher was offered any help
she needed, by friends, famr•
ly and church. But the school
also has the right to say: We
can't have you teaching hen!
if you are having a child out
of wedlock. It's not what's
we're about.
·Catholic schools have th~
right to be Catholic and __;._ ·
considering .what they con·
tribute - Americans should
want them to be. As Anthony
Picarello of the Becket Fund
for Religious Liberty puts it
to me, "Religious schools
are where religious groups
transmit. their message from
one generation to the next.
And whoever control s hiring
controls the message. So
keeping the government out
of those teacher-hiring deci•
sions is separation of church
and state in the best sense." ·

Reader Services
Correction Polley

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...,
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Published every afternoon, Monday
·through Friday, 111 Court Street.
·accurate. If you know of an error in a Pomeroy, Ohio Second.:CI~ postage
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992-

paid at Pomeroy..
Member: The Associated Press and the

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Ohio NeWspaper Association .

Our main number Is.
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Ednor: Chartene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
Reporlltr: Brian Reed, EKt 14
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Advertising
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Outside SaiH: Brenda Davis, Ex! 16
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"~ ~ ~· · ~ ~ • • -

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Learner's permit to kill

.

, ... -..U: . ...to o _• .. - ·• -··- --· · - ·0 ~&lt; - ••

uirn&lt;;:d inside out to become
a Level 5 Haz-Mat suit. The
· great mystery of all James ,
Bond films is not how Bond
is going to stop the villain
from destroying the planet,
Jim
but how Jame s Bond's
Mullen
clothes got.tp his hotel room.
You never see him carry any
luggage. You never see him
standing at the baggage
frustrate me. Bond walks carousel. Who wouldn't
into a strange office and· golf, who wouldn't ski, who
. downloads secret files onto a wouldn't program their own
hard disk disgui sed as a computer, who wouldn't
mole on his cheek with the travel if it was really this
aid of a paper clip and a easy'1
I tlew from New York to
fountain pen. Could he
please come to my house London last year, and I have
and get my printer and my never been so exhausted in
computer to talk to one my life. ·The people in first
class looked tired, the people
another?
Bond !lies from London to in business class looked
Rio and .before he gets to his tired. the people in my class,
hotel, he has three dirtcbike abusive coach, looked
chases, one parachute jump clubbed and beaten. The
and pilots a mini-submarine ·flight was so numbing it
to a yacht in the harbor, took only o'ne flight attenwhere he finally meets the dant to tie down our drugged
second
most-attractive and drunken air-rage passenwoman on Earth, and beds' ger. Nobody on the plane
was up for one dirt-bike.
her.
That evening Bond, who chase, and th,e closest thing
carried no luggage, will turn to datjng . was a Char.les
up at a casino in a custom- Bronson impers~&gt;nator in a
made tuxedo that can be muumuu.

... ..... , , '.. wo ~-;;"oo,.·

code and restore it, and was
given the extension in order
to present the design review
from PageM
board with · architectural
plans, cost estimates, and
. proof of his financial ability
condemned. A letter to Irvin to perform the work. Gerlach
from an Athen s architect said Irvin failed to provide
states the building is struc- any documentation at a meetturally sound; however, since· ing earlier this month.
the buildings next door were
Since before he purchased
demolished, Irvin's building the building, Irvin has said he
has only three walls, and he has potential investors in the
has · failed to file for any project. However, none of
building permits or demon- those investors have been
strate that he can afford to named or have stepped for·
repair the building.
ward to defend Irvin's plans.
Irvin had 'expressed plans · "(Irvin) was able to provide
to bring his building up to no more informati.on after 30

day period than he was ,11ble
to when he thst met with the
board ~ month before,"
Gerlach said.
.Gerlach, who is not a member of the design review
board , ·said the board had
granted the elttension, in part,
in hopes that at least one historic building in the shopping
district could be spared the
wrecking ball.
Irvin will be given 30 days
to demoli sh the building, at
his own expense, .and will
face a fine of $150 per day
Charlene Hoeftlch/ photo
for every day the building . , Robbie James of the Central-Southeast ABLE Resource Center. presents Sarah E. Hammond
remains standing after that , with a cerificate of acceptance into the National Adult Education Honor Society.
time.
Middleport-Porneroy Rotary include Kurtis B. Allen,
Club.
·
Jordan W. Bradford. Sarah
to proceed with the work be will be made available to the
Robbie
James,
a
resource
D. Bush, Steven W. Call,
overruled. She and Ferman public for use as a communi·
·speciali
st
with
the
Central·
Jennifer M. Cunningham,
from PageA1
Moore voted in favor of ty center.
Southeast
ABLE
R eso~rce Anthony G. Davis, Bessie.
reversing the variance comA report of May police
from PageA1
Center in Athens, recognized M. Fisher, Eli zabeth A.
mittee 's ruling, and Stephen activities i'ssued by Police
Sarah
E. Hammond, Jordan Fisher, Mark E. Brye, Sarah
· Houchins and Sandy Brown Chief Bruce Swift showed encouragement to students
Elizabeth A. E. Hammond, Ephriam V.
Bradford
has approved payraises of voted no.
seven traffic arrests, 29 crim- enrolled in the program from Fisher andand
announced their Herdman II. Amanda L.
:various sizes to the fiscal
Downtown Revitalization inal arrests, 41 mayor's members of lhe staff which
induction
into'
the National Miller, Sarah A. Qualls, Joy
officer, income tax adminis- Coordinator Michael Gerlach cases, five juvenile cases, operate three · centers Adult
Education
Honor L. Rhodes. Lisa J. Stone,
trator, employees in the discussed a $10,000 grant four accident reports, and 24 Meryl Houda,helt, Lisa King
Society.
Natasha tv! . Tackett, KelliN.
police department, and public award received from the incident reports.
and Richard Nease at
"Less
than
5
percent
of
Dustin P. Vaughn,
works office.
Ohio
Department
of
Middleport, Madeline Neece ABLE students are accepted Tatterson,
Council also:
Dana
R.
Williams.
Jr. and
Council cast a tie-vote, 2-2, TransP-ortation for gateway ·
• Authorized adverti sing and Susan King at Bradbury, into this honorary society," Jessy W. Young .
on an appeal of a zoning vari- beautification · efforts at the for bids for the village's Issue and Loi s Knadlt;r at Tuppers said James, noting that the
Numerous certifi cates in
ance bOard qecision which intersection of Powell Street II paving project, to be com- Plains.
requirements for. nomination recognition of hours earned
would have allowed James and Ohio 7 at Hobson. The pleted later thi s summer.
Upon f!!Cognition. a few of are academic achieveme nt
the program were also
Young to demolish a house llrant will allow for landscap'the
students spoke brietly and perseverance over great ' in
• Approved payment of'
pre
se
nted by the instructors.
on South Front Street, and mg and signage, but will bills in the · amount of about the struggle and effort challenges . .
·
At
the conclusion of the
of getti ng-their GED . Fantasy
replace the house with a man· require some work by village $41,887.75.
GED graduates of the program door prizes donated
ufactured home.
·
workers.
'
• Approved the mayor's Durham told of her accom- Meigs Comity ABLE pro- by local bu sin esses were
Mary Wise updated council report of fees and fines col· . plishments and current enroll- gram over the past year . awarded.
· The Youngs provided photographs of other homes in on the status of the renova- lected in May in the amount ment in the nursing program
at the Uni versity of Rio
the v1cinity of their property, tion work at the freight depot. of $4,143.93.
Grande
where she has comwhere work had been com- She said plumbing work has
• Excused
Councilman
pleted
her
first year. "Had it
pleted without building per- . been completed and the new Robe.rt Robinson from the
not been for this program I
HJ'm
mils or variances granted . floor has been installed, and m~eting .
Council Member Jean Craig electrical work is underway. . • Approved the purchase of would not have gotten this far.
QJade a motion that the vari · She said the project will be a new LITE software docket It prepared me for a brighter
·
ance committee's decisiou completed later this summer,, control systern for the future," she said .
Twenty-three students were
against allowing the Youngs
Once completed, the depot mayor's court.
recognized for having complete,d GED requirements dur·
begin on the West Virginia ·
She went on to explain the ing the past year. They were
side within a month..
magazine found it a U!lique presented with plaques by
of
"Thi s is actually going to project due to the locatiOn Brenda Barnhart of the
be happening rather quickly,'' chall enges, includin g the
from PageA1
my
Filson said of the appearance close prmimity to the exist·
of stay cables on the West ing bndge, the Ohio slip and
·
rnent and wi.ll cap .off the Virginia side.
other obstacles the construcA total of 96 cab le stays tion has faced as we ll as the .
tower.
ESTABLISHED 1895
. In regards to the · Ohio will be used on the new aesthetically pleasing design.
Call today for a
"This is the fir st cable
tower, construction workers · brid~e. .
· ·.
jun~ 14
stayed
stnicture
District
I
0·
Pter table decks for both
have poured through seg ment
Emerson Drive 7 pm
FREE hearing constJitation.
lO which happened around sides of the bridge have been · has ever taken on ," Fi lson
If ear their liCK; .'lingle at
Jhe middle of May. Segments poured. The first few seg- ex plai ned. "It made us feel
emersmrdrivt.com
499 Rirhland A•·•·· Athen.-. OH ~57111
11 -13 remain to be poured ments of the .bridge deck are good knowihg that a national
June
17
•
7:JO
pm
publication took iQterest in
·with 13 also being the las1 called the pier table.
Barbershop Concert
The new bridge was our project in Southeas t
segment.
594-6333 or 1-800-451-9806
' The towers · will ri se recently featured on the cover Ohio.''
'
Youth Acting Classes Begin
Of course .the end result of
approximately 249 !'eet above of the national publication
This Week!
the river and 170 teet above .Construc ti on
Dige st that project will be the two
I the concrete decking.
Magazine in the May edition. sides meeting in the middle
Rc~istrution for Youth and
· ! As motori sts may have earni ng a four page spread.
of lhe Ohio River. The pro·
Ad ull D~nce Cla.•ses Saltirday,
completion
date
.June 17 t-3 pm
floticed, some stay cable s
"In essence thi s bridge ject 's
have been erected and, replacement 's the single remains late 2007 with an
Box OHice: 428 2nd Ave.
stressed (tested) on the Ohio largest project District I0 has ·estimated cost of roughly $54
Gallipolis. OH (740) 446·ARTS
million.
side, a process which will ever. sold," Filson said .

Raises

•

.'

Our main concern in all stories is to be

governor.
The court ruled April 13·that
Taft had a limited right to keep
the public from viewing certain records sought as part of a
bureau ,investment scandal.
Looking at the documents
privately "wi ll enable the court
to verify the identity and contents of the disputed reaords,"
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
wrote. In · tum, that will help
the court decide whether Dann
'met a legal burden proving he
has a right to the documents.
Taft says he has already
released reports about the
insurance fund ·and that the
remaining reports contain sensiti ve business information
unrelated .to workers' camp.
Spokesman Mark Rickel said
Tuesday the governor would
follow the court~s order and
turn over the documents for
court review.

.., ,

A l 1~, ....._ - ~

Defi•C·l•t

Demolition

.,

(usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Pul!llshlng Co.

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Supreme Court on Tuesday
ordered Gov. Bob Taft to hand
· over a series of contested doc-~
uments regarding .the troubled
state insurance fund for injured ·
workers for the court to review
and decide whether to release
publicly.
The ruling was a partial victory for state Sen. Marc Dann
of Youngstown who is suing
Taft for access to documents
related to unorthodox rare-coin
investments by the Bureau of
.Workers' Compensation.
Dann, a Democrat ·running
for attorney general, argues
that his case would be weak· ened if he isn 't allowed to see
the records, mostly weekly
reports that Taft aides gave the

.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daiiy Sentinel

WELSH-HUGGINS

Mf(EA6E?

Remember when James.
Bond out-golfed Goldfinger
by one stroke? Bond never
practiced, but he played golf
like a pro. I play golf twice a
week, and I get worse.
Bond walks through the
Q's laboratory, picks up the
latest gadget and knows how
it works instantly - without
ever having read the manual.
l can't even do something on
my cell phone with the
instructions in front of me.
It takes me 1.5 minutes in a
rental car to figure out how
to turn pn the lights and the
radio and adjust the seats.
Jimmy B jumps into the
world's newest and most
sophisticated fighter jet and,
never having seen it before,
he flies it like a Blue Angel.
Yes, I hate him.
I go to a casino and I lose
every single hand, every roll
of the dice. Bond? It's like
the place is his personal cash
machine. He knows all the
dealers and all the bartenders. He's just come to
withdraw a few hundred
thousand dollars:
The computer I've been
using for years still figures
out new and exciting ways to

I

·court orders governor to provide
contested records for review
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRiTER

timony. That would have Right to Life president, them, " Folger said as the
been difficult before law- said he saw no .reason to audience gasped . "They are
makers rece ssed for the permit abortion in cases of on · the wrong side of
COLUMBUS
The sum mer. The bill has 17 co- rape.
women, the wrong side of
contentious debate over 'sponsors, all Republicans.
"I don't see killing a science, the wrong side of
abortion returned to the
About 50 people on both baby for the · crime of his technolo~y and the wrong
Statehouse on Tuesday as a sides of the 1ssue signed up father," Willke said.
side of history."
House committee held a- to testify before the comNationally, about 32,000
Before the heari ng, the
daylong hearing on a bill . mittee, most in groups of rape victims become preg- head
of
. Planned
that would outlaw abortion four or five who shared nant each year and forcing . Parenthood Affiliates of
in nearly all cases, includ- similar views . Th e packed the women to carry the Ohio sai d the key to ~educ. ing rape. ince st or the hearing room - · all seats fetus deepens and prolongs ing unwanted pregnancies
were taken and House aides their trauma, said Corinna is education and contracep- .
health of the mother.
About 250 people, mostly and reporters took up avai l· Lohse of the Clevel&lt;md tion.
·
s upporter s of abortion able wall space - was Rape Crisis Center.
·
"If politicians really care
rights, crowded the build- quiet, during most of the
"We 'believe choice was about reducing the need for
ing's largest hearing room testimony, with one side or taken away froni the sur- abortion, they should work
·whil e another 100 li stened the other occasionally sigh- vivor when she was raped," to pass commonsense meain on loud speakers· in the ing or sarcasti cally chuck· Lohse said.
sures that inc r~ase access
Janet Folger, a former to birth control and ruedatrium two floors below:
ling. White quick ly gaveled
The bill likely ,will down those outbursts.
. Ohio Right to Life execu- ically accurate selt educaMost of the test imony tive director, was' blunt tion ," said Gary Dougherty,
receive ju st one hearing
and then be shelved , but covered territory fam iliar about her opposition to executive director. "Laws
Health
Committee to both p~oponent s and abortion rights activ ists.
that criminalize abortion
"Our side has been hav- are bad for women's health,
C hairman John White , a opponents of abortion.
Springfie ld Republican and John Willke, a Cincinnati ing children while their bad medicine and bad pub- ·
stau nch abortion foe, said · doctor and former National side has been aborting lie policy.''
·
he schedul ed the hearing - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - --,--....,---because he wanted to give
November, 2004.
Counci l must face the
the bill "a rich going-over."
Both ' Moore and Craig prospect of a levy failure,
The oply exception to the
have recommended that however, if past levy perforfrom Page A1
cou nci l cons ider hiring a pri- mances are an indicatton. In
outright abortion ban in the
vate firm to operate the addition to the failure of the
' bill is if a doctor, in trying
to prevent the death of a next year than we have this income tax department, as three-mill levy in 2004,
pregnant woman, also ter- year."
has been suggested by state council had to make two tries
minates the pregnancy
The village received a examiners, as a cost:saving to pass a levy for operating
expenses for streetlights,
.without intending to do so. $90,000 wi ndfall thi s year in . measure.
Sponsoring Rep . Tom the form of an inheritance tax
The village now pays 100 which passed just barely in
Brinkman , a Cincinnati payment which will not be percent of the cost of a single May.'
Baker said other municiRepublican , sai d he consid- available next year, and insurance plan for full-time·
ered restoring the eltception $25,000 the village has employees, and 30 percent of palities have found levie s
for the health of the moth- received from a three-mi ll tax the cost of a family policy. pass more readily when they
er, so a court could over- levy will no longer be col- Craig sa id counci l should are proposed for a specific
turn that section but let the lected after this ta" year, consider sharing insurance purpose , such as -police proother parts of the ban because voters rejected it in costs with employee~.
tection .
stand. His goal is to get a
case before the U.S.
Supreme Court that would
overturn Roe v. Wade, the
1973 case that led to 'legal
abortion .
However, · White and
Karen Tabor, a spokes. woman for Speaker Jon
Husted, said Tuesday 's
hearing likely would be the
bill's last. Husted had told
Brinkman the bill would
get a hearing and White
said he held it in Jun e
because he wanted to set
aside an entire day for tesASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

(Kathryn Lopez is tire edi'
tor of National Review
Online
(www.nationa[re·view.com). She can be con'
tacted at klopez@ nationalrec
view. com.)

.

Letters to tlie editor are &gt;tie/come. They should be less than
30(J'ivords. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lel/ers should be in good taste,
.addressing issr1es, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will twt be accepted for publication.

Bv JOHN McCARTHY

ASHVILLE- Linda Wright, 58, of Ashville, passed away
Monday June 12, 2006 at Grant Medical Center, Columbus.
Born Ju,ne 8, 1948 at Concord, W. Va. she was the daughter
of the late Carl and Lorena Perry Dillon. She was a member
of Eastern Star Chapter #207 , Wilkesville.
She wa~ preceded in .death by her parents; her husband,
Rog.: .- Wnght; brothers, Harol d and Roger Dillon; sisters,
~arena Butler and Erma Wiley.
, She is survived by a daughter, Karen (Michael) Rose,
f.shv1 1le: grandchildren, Crystal (Josh) Traylor, Roger Justice,
J~shua Rose; brother, Kenny (Sally) Dillon , Junction City;
s1st~rs, Yuvonne (Bryant) Walker, Spring Lake, N.C., Brycie
Stetgel·,
Lang sv ille,
Luetta
(Carl)
Shenefield,
~angs~ille; brother-in-law, Rodney (Andrea) Wright, Rutland;
SISter-m-law, Kay (Don) Cullums, Pomeroy: numerous nieces,
nephews and cousins.
_Friends may call Thursday June 15 from 2-4 and 6-8 at the
.Oltver-Cheek Funeral Home, Ashville, where serv ices will be
held Friday, June 16, 10:30 a.m. with Rev. Frank Water offi·
ciating. Interment will be in the Harrison Township
Cemetery.
Because Linda was recipient of a kidney-pancreas tra[\splant she was able to enjoy 14 more years with her family.The
family urges othe rs to consider becoming an organ &lt;md tissue
donor. Memorial contributions may be made to Karen Rose in
. memory of her mother.

BY ANDREW

'fhe Daily Sentinel • Page As

Abortion debate returns - briefly - to Statehouse

. Linda Wright

IF HOLLYWOOD
CAN MAKE CARS
TALK, WHY CAN'T
DETROIT MAKE .
THEM WITH BETTER

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Obituaries

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NOW SHOWING

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, June 14, the I 65th day of 2006. There
are 200 days left in the year. This is Flag Day.
.
Today's Highlight in History.:
On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress in Philadelphia
adopted the Stars and Stripes as the national flag.
On this date:
,
In 1841, the first Canadian parliament opened in Kingston.
In 1940, in German-a&lt;;cupied Poland, the Nazis opened
their concentration camp at Auschwitz; the same day, German
troops entered Pari s.
Thought for Today: "And the Star-Spangled Banner in triumph shall wave/ O' er the land of the free and.the home ofth~
brave'" - The closing words of "The Star-Spangled Banner .
. by Francis Scott Key (1779~ 1843).

VVednesday,June14,2006

lVednesday,Junet4,200~

Religious schools must discriminate

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

·pageA4

...

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My feet hurt, my clothes
were rumpled. Don't 007's
feet ever hurt? Doesn' t he
ever get jet lag? Does Bond
ever spend two hours goin)!
through customs? I wasn't
met at the airport by a sexy
female driver with a double~
entendre name I ike Vi Agra
who would tlirt with me a:;
she drove me to my swank
hotel in her brand new
BMW convertible.
No, I took mass transit to
what had once been a meager one-star hotel but was
now seedy and faded. My
hotel room had no grand
staircase, no gih furniture,
no fresh-cut tlowers. no wet
bar, no spectacular view. On
the plus side, there was no
one in the room waiting til
kill n1e. How do you fight in
a closet, anyway?
But I did feel very James
Bondish. Thanks to the airline, I too, was now luggagefree and shaken, And stirred.
(Jim Mullen is the author
of "It Take.1· a Village Idiot'.·
Complicating th e Simple
Life" am/ "Baby's Fir~/
Tauoo. " You can reach him
at
. jinunu/len@mywa)'.comj
.

Adults

having
the best
conversations

Bridge

)\RIEL

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life."

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Yankees shut out .Indians, B2

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HOME NATIONAL BANK'S COMMITMENT TO
COMMUNITY

Wednesday, J~e 14, 2006
'

Maloney maintains narrow lead in Riverside Senior League ,

Meigs Co Recycling
Raco
.
Meigs Cooperative Parish
Meigs Band ·
Rocksprings
Rehab Center
Girl Scouts
,
Boy Scouts Pinewood Derby
Pomeroy Blues &amp;Jazz Society
Meigs co. 4-H Committee
.Meigs Co. Chamber of Commerce
FirSt Baptist Church of Racine
Star Mill Park
Southern Elementary PTO
Racine Volunteer Fire Dept.
Eastern Athletic Boosters
Antiquity Baptist Church
· MeigsSWCD
Southern Athletic Boosters
Syracuse Fire Department
Community Bankers
Muscular Dystrophy
Meigs Co. 4-H Dairy.
Meigs Trustees
Southern FFA
Southern High School
Chester Shade Historical SoCiety
St. Jude.Hospital
Racine Youth League·
Hill's Classic Cars ·
American Cancer SoCiety, , ..
Orvc National Wild Turkey Fed.eration . . ..eashil~ Flre Department
·
Portland Communlty·Gi?ter ,
, · ' ,. ~eriiy fOr Life
Ch~;~.
s
ter'Ball
Association
FFA Horse S~ow
.Vall~y _Hoopsters
London Poo.l
.
. Raeo,Food Drive
Middleport Easter -Egg Hunt .
Raco Flower Festival
Ohio Highway Patrol mQCk ev!3nt
Middleport 4th of July.
Meigs Co. CounCil on Aging

LocAL SCHEDULE
1

Wedot•day'a qam11

Thyraday'e Qlmtl
American Legion Bal8ball
Meigs Juniors at Logan Wooden Bat
Tourney, TBA
Frtday't QIOl!l
American Legion Benbaa

Feeney Bennett at Waverly 142, 6 p.m.
.Meig~ Juniors at Logan Wooden Bat

1 p.m.
Meigs Juniors at Logan Wooden Bat
Tourney, TBA

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
-The 2006 Junior Golf Tour
is undeJWay and opening day
was marked with usual excite·
ment, close competition and a
three-person, two hole playoff
over the Hidden Valley layout.
· When the premier 17-15
age group totaled scores after
the nine-hole round, only two
strokes separated the top and
bottom player in the testing.
Three players, J.T. Reynolds,
. Will Garrison and Adam
Roush finished in a three-way
deadlock for top-honors,
while Chris Long was a single
stroke back .at .f7 and Kamal
Dayal just one off that pace at
48.
.
While the three linksters
split the points for placement
equally, a playoff was necessary to determine winners of
the first and second place
Fruth Pharmacy trophies .and it was quite a match.
On the first playoff · hole,
Reynolds and Garrison tied
with par while Roush barely
slid by on his par putt and had
to rettre. Then, on the second
playoff hole, both remaining
players ran into trouble as
Reynolds save bogie to win
just when Garrison's putt
, stayed out.
'
The 15-14 group was not so
close. Torrey Wolfe fashioned
a 48 for first place and the
Fruth championship trophy.
Second place was captured by
steady play from Travis
Grimm in a 53 round, while
Kylenn Criste posted 58 to
edge Beau Bellamy by a sin·
gle · stroke for third place .
Close on their heels came
Chris McDermitt at 62 and
B!'()\:k. McClung-with 69.
The II c 12 age bracket was
won by Opie Lucas with the
low round of the day, a nifty
45. But then the rest of the
pack' were snuggled closer
together. Andrew Roseberry
finished strong to snare sec- ·
ond place on a 58, while Erik
Albnght was right behind at
62 for third, with Anthony
Darst fourth at 64, just a single
stroke ahead of Jacob Leach.
Caleb Riffle followed with 68,
just ahead of Jarrod Long and
Hunter Bellamy.
No one showed up for the
· 10-and-under group, but tour
veteran Lilly · Leach played
well to fash1on a 63 for top
honors and the coveled Fruth
Trophy.
Now, the Junior players
move to Pine Hills for the second round on Monday. June
19, things get under way up
there at the usual 8:30 registration time and the 9 a.m. teeoff. All area young players are
. u~ed to join in the golf le&lt;~m­
ing and fun.
'
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. You will have the latest information on
Home National Bank's interest nites ·
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Saturday 8:00 am to 12:00 pm
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Saturday 9:00 am to t:oo ·pm
Both drive thru's
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1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

or 992-5287 (Meigs Co.)

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ATM's 24/7

Halloy Rice 94.5: 9. Kan Whltod 92.0; 10. Bill Yoho 90.0: 11. ttla) Oon Wildie anti
Curtlt Grullb 87.5; 13, (tie) Oon Flelde and AUOI.Hollan&lt;l 83.5; 15. Kenny Greone
81.5: 16. otck Dugan 81.0; 17. Jll)l Capohart 80.0; 16. Claud6 Profli" 79.5: 19. Bob
H)'sl&gt;ll79.0; 20. Gary Ba!M77.0; 21 . (tie) Harvey Blain an&lt;t Gene Gray 76.0; 23. Bil
Pe1hol75.5; 2¢. Tom Fiohl'r 73.5: 25. Roy Oli118r 72.5: 26. (tie) Don Wiloon and Cha!
Th&lt;ll'n$! 72.0; 28. Bl~ Wlnel&gt;•ennor 71 .0; 29. Ed Wilson 70.5; 30. Torn Nunnery .Bi.O;
31 . (tie) Jim Gonion llfld Glarald Kally 88.0:
Geo(lle Millo•66-ii: 34. 1tlo) Milcl! BI'IIGO
and We&amp; Peterson.

as.

weeks left to play and plenty
of time to increase the yearly
total of players above the 120
players playing at this time.

Three new plpyers took. part
in Tuesday 's event including
Willis Korb, Don Russell and
Edison Baker.

BY .FRANK CAPEHART
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

·' f~m your personal computer is bolh
easy arid convenient. Check your
c~Rillg acq:~unt, transfer funds
;, betw8en accounts, reorder chect:ts. ·
·: make loan payments and pay bills.
.

1. Jack Maloney 127.5; 2. Miok Wlnabr811f1ar 126.5: 3. Pat Willlamoon1 tO-O; 4. PaUl

Somerville 108.5: 5. Clark Gnoene 103.0; e. Jacl&lt; Fox 97.0; 7, Gary Minton 95.0: 8.

Junior Golf Tour
finishes first week

..., !frht&lt;ltg with Home National Bank

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Riverside Senior League Standings :

Beat

Seturdav. Juot17
American Legion Bataball
Feeney Bennett at Pld&lt;erington 283 (DH) ,

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the team of Bub Stivers,
Curtis Grubb, Hasl&lt;:el Jones
and Paul Somerville.
In second place with a score
of 60 was the team of Dan
Littlefield, Ray Oliver, Gerald
Kelly and Harley Rice, while
the third place team of Micj(
Winebrenner, Dan · Tillis and
Jack. Fox shot a score of 61 .
The closest to the pin wioners were Ron Phalin on Nci.
7 and Mac McCarty on No.
14.
.
There are still several

Tourney, TBA

Meigs Co. Fair &amp; Livestock Sale
Kiddie Tractor Pull
Jordan·Russell
Tyler Hendrix
Tim-Sands
Tim Ba!IAiyson Dettwiller
Ashley ~amar
Garrett Ritchie
Kara Osborne
mith

been no
the account.
There has

teams !rom Ga llla, Meigs and Ma100 oounHM.

American Legion Baaebl!lll
· Feeney Bennett at Parkersburg 15, 6 p.ni.
McArthur·at Gallipolis, 6 p.m.

A new location
in the palm of
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account is dormant if for three
Years there have been no deposi Is
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A IChedule of upcoming ~I&amp;Qe
and high SChool varaily sporting !Mtflts involving
GALLIPOLIS -

··r
····fn

·. '
Pretty Baby Contest
Adam Lee
Jared Russell
Michael Manuel
Ryan Beegle .
Cameron Brlnager
David Tucker
Kasie Sellers

ning to make a move on the
lead in fourth . place with
108.5 points.
MASON, W.Va. - Jack
Rounding out the top I 0 is
Maloney of Gallipolis is Clark. Greene ( 103), Jack Fox
clinging onto a one point lead (97), Gary Minton (95),
over Mick Winebrenner of Harley Rice (94 .5 ), 'Ken
Racine.
. Whited (92) and Bill .Yoho
Maloney has tallied a total (90) .
of · _127.5 points after len
A total of73 players played
weeks of the 2006 season. In on Tuesday with 16 teams o.f
third place is Pat Williamson four players and three three
of New Haven with II 0 man teams making 19 points
points with defending cham- possible for the day. The low
pion Paul Somerville begin- - score of 59 was recorded by
STAFF REPORTS

SPORTS@&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

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Fox;- 1-740·446·3008
E·mail- sports0mydaily6dntinel.com

Soorta Stan

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 440-2342, e&gt;&lt;t: 33
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bshermanOmydallytribune.com

· Bryan Waltera,' S~rts Writer
(740) 446·2342, e&gt;&lt;t . 23
bw&amp;lters 0 mydallytribune.oom

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{

Ierum 0 mydallyregl ster.com

(740) 446· 23-42, 9KI . 33

BY TOM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI - Hours before
the biggest game of his life
and the most important in this
city's hoop history, Dwyane
Wade, brimming with confi·
dence and South Beach coolness, gave his take on the
NBA finals.
"It's not over," he said.
Not if he says so.
Wade scored 42 points and
orchestrated a furious fourthquarter Miami comeback that
reached its crescendo on Gary
Payton' s jumper with 9.3 seconds left as the Heat escaped
with a 98-96 ·win over the
Dallas Mavericks in Game 3
on Tuesday night.
The Heat rallied from a 13point deficit in the final 6:34
to· keep alive a series that
looked to be over with Dallas
up 2-0.
"As a team, we just came
out and said this could be the
season if they win this game,"
Wade said. "We came out, ran
our offense to the crisp,
locked down on defense and
came back and won this
game."
Despite blowing its big
· lead, Dallas still had plenty of
chances late but Dirk
Nowitzki missed one of two
free throws with 3.4 seconds
to go and the Mavericks
couldn 't con vert on an
·· in bounds play in the final secAP photo
ond thanks to Wade, who
Miami Heat guard James Posey (42) and Dallas Mavericks guard Adrian Griffin (44) battle for tipped away the last gasp pass
a loose ball in the second quarter in Game 3 of the NBA basketball finals in Miami Tuesday.
after scoring 15 points in the

MIAM,L

HEAT

fourth quarter.
As the final horn sounded,·
Heat fans simultaneously
exhausted and exhilarated,
tossed their "White Hot''
white T-shirt s into the air, .a
ce lebration that seemed
unimaginable just a few minutes earl.ier.
Now, ' after
watching
Wade's heroics and Shaquille
0 ' Neal and Udonis Haslem
hit four straight crucial free
throws in final two minutes,
they're coming · back. for
Game 4 on Thursday night .
Miami was down and
apparently done after Jason
Terry's basket made it 89-76
with 6:34 remaining.
That's when Wade, playing'
with five fouls and conjuring
memories
of
M1chael
Jordan 's playoff miracles,
decided it was time for him to
take over.
He hit a jumper. completed
·a 3-point play and dropped in .
another bucket to bring the
Please see Chase.

RoethliSberger upgraded, Brewers down Cincinnati
may get to play this season .
·

BY Au.N ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITISBURGH - Steelers
quarterback
Ben
Roethlisber!ler could be out
of the hosp1tal in a few days
and appears likely to play this
season after a bloody motor- .
cycle accident in which his
helmetless head shattered a
car windshield.
The Steelers' Super Bowlwinning quanerback., a native
of Findlay; Ohio, who played
at Miami of Ohio, was
upgraded to fair condition at
Mercy Hospital on Tuesday; a
day after the scary accident at
a busy Pittsburgh intersec_tion
left h1m and his team shaken .
Despite being tossed high
into the air after his made-forspe~d motorcycle rammed
into a car, causing him to
smack. his head on the car's
windshield, Roethlisber~er
~s~aJ?ed
career-threatenmg
InJUnes.
Doctors . did not discuss
Roethlisberger's condition in
detpil, at the request of his
family, but the quarterback's
nnly major injuries were to
his face:: a broken upper and
lower jaw, a loss of two teeth,
a broken nose, broken facial
bones and various cuts and
bruises.
Jaw injuries can vary greatly in nature and, because of
the rather limited protection
provided by a football helmet,
have the potential to sideline
a player for a lengthy period.
But the surgeons who operat-

8~

6-4

CINCINNATI (AP) - ·
.
.
.
'
Geoff Jenki ns snapped out of
ed
on a slump'"with two hits and two
Roethlisberger RBIS after being dropped
for
seven from third to the seventh in
hours Monday the . batting order and the
said all of his Milwaukee Brewers beat the
fractures were Cincinnati Reds 6-4 on
.
successfu ll y Tuesdav night.
repaired.
'
If that is the
Jenkins had just six hits in
case,
then his previous 41 at bats (. 146)
· ..
Roethlisberger before going 2-for-3 with a
Roetllllaberger might
miss two-run single that snapped a ·
part or most of 1-1 tie in the sixth inning.
training camp but could be
Damian Miller followed
ready for the Sept 7 opener with an RBI single in suppon
against Miami. For the of Doug Davis (4-4), who
Steelers, who would other- hadn't won since beating the
wise go into the season with Reds on May 24. He gave up
b k
Ch I. B h d six hits and three runs with
ac
up
Je ateat quaran
three walks and five strikeouts
rookie OmararJacobs
terback., th{lt is the best possi- in six innings.
ble scenario af1er an accident
Brian Shouse, Jose Capell&lt;m
that left huge splotches of and Dan Kplb combined to
Roethlisberger's dried blood pitch the seventh and eighth
on a city street
mnings
before
Derrick.
Dr. Larry Jones, the chief of Turnbow got the final three
Mercy Hospital's trauma unit, outs for his 19th save in 23
said Roethlisberger's brain opportunities.
'
The Reds have dropped five
was functioning normally,
AP photo
although the QB has a con- straight, after an eight-game Cinc innati Reds pitcher Aaron Harang throws against the
winning streak. They also lost
cussion.
"He is awake, alert , orient- five straight from May 12- 17. Milwaukee Brewers in th e first inning of a baseball game.
The win was Milwaukee 's Monday in Cincinnati.
ed and is resting with his family by his side," Jones said first . against Red s starter in his last three at-hats as he
Milwaukee loaded the bases
during a news briefing, which .Bronson Arroyo (8-3) ., who hit an eighth-in.ning homer to with nobody out in the sixth
reponers were not allowed to· was 4-0 witn a 2.40 ERA in tie tl1e 'game Monday night.
before Fielder hit a chopper
ask questions.
' five previous career start s
The Reds were hitl es~ until · back to Arroyo. who started a
24-year-old again st the Brewers. He Arroyo bunted safely up_ the pitcher-catcher-first l)ase douThe
Roethlisberger, the youngest allowed nine hit s and four third base line with one out in ble play: Bt\1 Hall walked to
quanerback. to win a Super runs with two walks and seven 'the third inning. Brandon reload the bases and set up the
Bowl, was initially listed in strikeouts in' seven innings .
Phillips followed wilh a dou- back -lo -back singles . by
serious but stable condition
Prince Fielder ieJ off the ble down the right field line, Jenkins and Miller.
second inning with a lirst- and Scott Hatteberg 's sacrifice
following the accident
Rich Aurilia Jed off the sixth
Considering
that pitch homer to left, his 12th of fl y to center drove in Arroyo for Cincinnati with hi s eighth
, the season: It ,was hi s second with the tying run.
Please see Down, 81
Pl..se - Steelen, B1

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�Wednesday, June 14, 2006
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

•

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wwv1.mydallysentlnel.com

~ednesday,June14,2006

m:rtbune - Sentinel - .Rft.,.. ter

•

Yankees shut out Cleveland, 1-0
BY MIKE FITZPATRICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Pttchmg
wnh the p01se of an expenenced ace, Chten-MmJ! Wang
used hts buzzsaw of a smker to
stop the New York Yankees'
shde
Wang shut down the
Cleveland lndeans' powerful
hneup. Robinson Cano homered off hard-luck loser Paul
Byrd and New York ended tts
four-game sktd by squeakmg
out a l-0 vtctory Tuesdd y
mght
"We needed to wm that
game ," Derek Jeter sa1d
"Wang deserves all the credtt "
Meetmg for the first lime th1 s
season, the lndtans and
Yankees entered tied for the
maJor league lead wuh 359
runs ap1ece
But Wang and Byrd stlenced
the offenses m an old fashmned p1tchers' duel, and New
York's bullpen closed 11 out
"That 's one thm~ that has
never changed m th1 s game p!tchmg can control the hittmg," Yankees manager Joe
Torre sa1d
•
After strandmg five runners
m his first two at-bats, Cano
conneqed on a 1-1 pitch from
Byrd (5-5) w1th one out m the
s1xth, sendmg a dnve over the
nght-field fence
"It was a hangmg curve ball; ·
Byrd sa1d "He wa~n 't hlttmg
anythmg soft off me, part1cu
larly So I tned to locate 11
down and away I JUSt ffilssed
11 It's a shame that was the
game"
The lnd1ans had the1r best
sconng chance m the top half,
when Grady S1ze)llore led off
w1th a double off the center
field fence and moved to th1rd
on a long tlyout
But after an mtenuonal walk
to Trav1s Hafner, Wang got
streakmg slugger Y1ctor
Martmez to ground mto an

I
I

Chase
from Page Bl
Heat w1thm five Then, after
a m1ss by Nowttzkl, Wade
drove basehne, hung m the
a1r for what seemed hke an
eternity, and hit a floater to

I

Steelers

safeguards to prevent the1r
key players from partlClpatmg m hazardous behaviOr
A standard NFL player's
from Page Bl
contract proh1b1ts any offseaHe struck out SIX, tymg a seaRoethhsberger wasn't wear- son act1 v1ty that can be harmson htgh
ful, but not all players have
The lnd1ans, blanked for the mg a helmet while ndmg h1s clauses for activities such as
fourth tune th1 s year, have losr 2005 Suzuk1 Hayabu sa, a motorcycle ndmg, all-terram
model that we1ghs less than
fo ur at five and seven of I 0
600
pounds but can eas1ly vehicle ndmg and skydtvmg
"You hate to wast~ an effort
Roethhsberger;s
contract
hke that," Boone smd "We JUSt reach 200 m1les per hour m a apparently d1d not, probably
couldn't get much gomg and mod1fied state. the Steelers because the Steelers had no
couldn't get that b1g h1t But real1ze how much worse the
md1cauon he mdulged m
Wang had a lot to do w1th that " acc1dent could have been
Coach Btll Cowher has motorcycle nding before
The Yankees put thetr leads1gmng him m 2004
off batter on m each ot the first sa1d nothmg publicly smfe
"Maybe the first persons
live nmmgs but Byrd p1tched makmg a hasty return to 1t'll
h1t 1s all the quarterPl!lsburgh from a North
out of trouble '
NFL
Player
vacatiOn
on backs ,"
Jeter was b&lt;tck at shortstop Carohna
Assoctallon
prestdent
Troy
after three games as the des•g- Monday mght, and u IS Vmcent of the Buffalo B1lls
nated hllter because of a unlikely any team offtc1al
comment
about sa1d Tuesday "Now all the
bru1sed nght thumb He shook w11l
football QB contracts may have
hts hantl m obv10us pam tmme- Roethhsberger' s
dlatel y after a fifth mmng .future unt1l he IS out of the somethmg m them and then it
check swmg that resulted m a hospital Accordmg to Jones, m1ght start tapenng mto the
1-6-3 doubleplay Buthemade .Roethhsberger could be w1deouts and mto the runa strong, accurate relay throw released m three to five days mng backs, generally your
on Martmez's double-play ball
In an additional develop- h1gh-pnced guys "
Vmcent sa1d he has ndden
the followmg mmng.
ment,
KDKA TV
m
Notes Berme W1lhams went Pittsburgh
reported motorcycles, but never with2-for-3 m h1s 2,000th game for Roethhsberger does not have out a helmet
AP photo the Yankees, fifth on the franIn May 2005, Cowher
a .vahd Pennsylvama motorNew York Yankees' Robinson Cano, above, celebrates With chise list behind Hall of cycle license and that h1s warned Roethhsberger about
teammate Derek Jeter (2) after httttng a home run dunng the Famers
M1ckey Mantle temporary penn1t expired in h1 s ndmg hab1ts after
stxth mneng of baseball act1on agatnst the Cleveland lndtans (2,401 ), Lou Gehrig (2,164), · March, thclugh he does have Cleveland t1ght end Kellen
Tuesday at Yankee Stadtum tn New York
Yog1 Berra (2, 116) and Babe a vahd automobile dnver's Wmslow was InJUred m a
Ruth
(2,084) "It's pretty license The Pennsylvama motorcycle
acc1dent
mnmg-endmg double play
"We needed' h1m and he remarkable
Especmlly
now
Department
of
Motor Wmslow tore knee ligaments
"It worked out perfect for came through," Rtvera smd
w1th the state of free agency," Vehicles declmed to com- and was lost for the season
them," Cleveland manager
Wang walked one, struck out Jeter srud "That's why he's a
"I WISh all our players hked
Enc Wedge sa1d "That kid has three and has allowed only one fan favonte It's been a plea- ment on the report
board
games or low-nsk hol;lNobody has been cited m
a real heavy smker, too It has run m 14 1-3 mnmgs over h1s sure playlng wah h1m for a lot
some run on 11 as well as some last two starts - agamst of those games and watchmg the crash and pohce wtll not bJes," Cleveland Browns
general manager Ph1l Savage
down to It "
Boston and Cleveland
him m grade school m the oth- release mformauon until an sa1d
Tue sday.
Aaron Boone reached on dn
"Most guys, 1! they make 11 ers" . It was New York's thtrd acc1dent reconstruction IS
"Unfortunately,
that's
part of
mfield smgle to start the e1ghth to second, they say how good shutout this season and first 1- complete, Pmsburgh police
the
reason
that
makes
these
and advanced oo a sacn fice, he 1s," Jeter sm&lt;l.
0 wm smce Sept 17. 2005, at spokeswoman Tammy Ewin guys professiOnal athletes
chasmg Wang
Th1s perfonnance was espe· Toronto
Alex Rodriguez said Tuesday
Roethhsberger's acc1dent They have a httle b1t of an
M1ke Myers and Kyle cJally 1mportant for the went 0-for-4 wah three strikeset off debate around the edge to want to do more, seek
Farnsworth got out ot the Yankees, who had dropped outs and was booed lustily
mmng unscathed, and Manano four strm~ht, all at home, to RF Gary Sheffield had surgery NFL whether teams should more Where's the lme? I
R1vera fanned two 111 a h1tle s~ match thetr longest skid of the on his LnJUred left wnst and IS take additional contractual don't know that"
nmth for hts 13th save 111 14 year
still expected back m
chances
"He goes out there and JUSt September
Cano extended
"Mo's got that glare about goes about h1s busmess. I don't his h1ttmg streak to II games
to-back homers for the s1xth
h1m nght now," Torre smd
think he gets too concerned . Cleveland has lost 13 of 15
lime th1s season and second
In h1 s second maJOr league about what's gom&amp; on," catch- at Yankee Stadium since the
m two mghts Ross and Jason
season, the 26-year-old Wang er Jorge Posada srud "You can start of the 2002 season ..
from Page Bl
LaRue hit back-to-back
(7-2) pitched five-hit ball for 7 call any p1tch and vou know Martinez pushed his hitung
homers on Monday. F1elder
l-3 mmngs - tmprovm~ to 6- where he's gomg to be "
streak to I 0 games. . . The
has homered m three consecl w1th a fill-m save m IllS past
Byrd y1elded s1x hits and Indians have -dropped mne of homer of the season, and utl ve games for the first time
Adam Dunn followed w1th
mne appearances
three walks m seven mnmgs tberr last 12 toad games
The Brewers
m h1s career
his 22nd to make It 4-3.
Milwaukee restored a two- won consecutive road games
make It 91-88 wnh 3 36 to senes, calmly spun m two Heat's toughest player made run lead when Carlos Lee for the first time smce May
go
attempts to pu11 the Heat both attempts after firmg scored from thud on Esteban 26-27 at Ph•ladelph1a They
Yan's bases-loaded wlld p1tch chnched the1r thud road
Dallas, meanwh1le, wh1ch wtthm 93-90 1 48 left.
bricks on h1s fust four tnes
Four
senes wm m lO tnes
had shown so much pmse
Wade's Jumper got M1am1
Then, with the game ued, m the e1ghth
Dav1d Ross answered w1th of Arroyo's eight wms thts
through 3 112 qqarters, was withm a pomt, and Haslem Payton, the defens1ve specommg apart at the seams came up wnh the play of the Cialist coach Pat Riley his lOth homer and thrrd m season have come in the first
Nownzkt's two free throws ~arne, p1ckmg off a pass
two mghts m the bottom of game after Cmcmnati losses.
brought
m
th1s
season,
Jenkins batted seventh and
the inning
slowed M1am1 for a moment, mtended for
Nownzk1.
but 0' Neal. whose abysmal Haslem, playmg wnh a badly knocked down a 21-foot
Lee added an RBI smgle m Corey Kosk1e batted thud,
both for JUSt the second time
foul shooting had contributed bru1 sed shoulder suffered m JUmper - JUSt h1s second the mnth to make It 6-4
to M1am1's 0-2 deficit m the Game 2, was fouled and the field goal of the series
Notes The Reds hit back- th1s season

CLASSIFIED

~., ...

NOTICE TO CON·
TRACTORS
Sealed proposals for
the Paving of Five (5)
streets In the VIllage
of Syracuse, will be
received by the Meigs
Counly
Commissioners
at
their office at the
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until
100
pm,
Thursday, June 29,
2006 and then at 1:15
pm al aald office
opened and read
aloud for the followIng
Repaving of five (5)
atreets totaling 3,360
Linear feel and vary·
lng widths In the
VIllage of S'yracuse,
Meigs County, Ohio
Specifications provided In bid packet
Specifications, and
bid forms may be
ucura~ at the oHice
of Meigs County
Commissioners ,
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740-992·2895
A deposit of 0 dollars
will be required for
each set of plana and
specifications. The
lull amount will be
returned within thirty
(30) days alter receipt
of bids.
Each bid musl be
accompanied
by
either a bid bond In
an amount of 10004 of
the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs
County
Cornml11loners or by
certified
check,
caahlers check, or let·
tar of credit upon a
aolvent benk In the
amounl of not less
then 10% of the bid
amount In favor of the
aforH8Id
Meigs
County
COmmlaalonera Bid
shall
be
Banda
accompanied
by
Authority of
Proof
the official or agent
signing the bone!
Biela shall be sealed
and marked as Bid
for
VIllage
of
Syracuae
Street
Paving Project and

or

•

mailed or d~llvered
lo
Meigs
County
Commissioners
CourthoLniB Pomeroy,
Ohlo45769
Attention of bidders
Is called lo all or the
requlremenls con·
lalned in lhls bid
packet, parllcularty to
the Federal Labor
Standards Provisions
and
Qavls·Bacon
Wages, various Insur-

ance requirements,
various equal opportunity provisions, and
the requirement for a
paymlmt bond and
performance bond lor
100% of the contact
price No bldcjer may
withdraw his bid with·
In thirty (30) days

after the actual data

ot the opening thereot The Meigs County
Commissioners
reserve the right to
reject any or all bids
Mlck
Davenport,
President
Moogs
County
Commissioners
(6) 8, 12,14

Public Nottce
LEGAL NOTICE &lt;
Oils Core, Rhonda
Core, whose last
place of 1'811ldence Is
knowil
as
1660
Lincoln
Heights,
Pomeroy, OH 45769·
t 268 but whose pres·
ant place ol real·
dence Is unknown
will take nollce thai
on April 4, 2006
as
Clllbenk, NA
Truotee under the
Pooling
and
Servicing Agreement
Dated
as
of
November 30, 2001
Series 2001-1 Flied Its
Complaint In Case
No 06-CV-o46 In the
Court of Common
Pleas Molga County,
Ohio alleging lhatthe
above - named
Defendant(s), have or
claim to have an
Interest In the real
described
oslate
below
Situated In the VIllage
of Pomeroy, County

'

of Meigs, and State of
Ohio Being known
and designated on a
Lincoln
map
of
Helghls, made by
Breece &amp; Carper, regCtvol
Istered
Eng1neers ,
Hunllnglon,
West
Vorglnla, date Oclober
17, 1942, as recorded
December 17, 1942, in
the Office of the
Recorder of ' Meigs
County, Ohio, In Plat
Book •3, Pages 43
and 44, as Lol No 38,
and beong more par·
tlcularly described as
follows. Beginning at
the point of Intersection of the South line
of Lincoln Road with
the Weal line of Point
Lane, thence with the
said line of Lincoln
Road,
North
63
degrees 51 mlnules
West 50 feet; thence
with the said line
between Lots 37 and
38, South 26 degrees
09 minutes West 200
feet, thence South 63
degrees 51 minutes
East 27 4 feet lo a
point In the said line
of Polnl Lane, !hence
with said line, North
32 deg;ees 36 min·
utes East 201.28 feel,
to the point of begin·
nlng; reserving however, the coal and all
other minerals In and
underlying the above
described property
Together with the
right to mine the
same without encumbrance to the sur1aee,

and subject to an
easement tor sewage

filler ditch or leaching
ditch as set forth and
descnbed In that certain Instrument bear·
lng date November
26, 1943, end recorded In said recorder
oHice In Deed Book
t5t , Page 178
The Palllloner further
alleges that by rea·
son of default of the
Defendant(&amp;) In the
payment of a promls·
sory note, accor&lt;llng
to Ita tenor, the condl·
tiona or a concurrent
mortgage deed given
to secure lhe pay-

ment of aald note and
conveying the prem·
lses descrobed, have
been broken, and the
same has become
absolute.
The Petotoonor prays
thai the Dolendant(s)
named above be
required to answer
and set up their Interest In said real estate
or be forever barred
from asserting the
same, for foreclosure

of said mortgage, the
marshaling or any
liens, and the sale of
said real estate, and
the proceeds of said
sale applied to the
payment
of
Petllloner s Claim in
the proper order of Ita
priority, and for such
other and further
relief as Is Just and
equitable
The
defendant(s)
named above are
required to answer on
or before !he 16th
Day of August, 2006
By Reimer, Lorber &amp;
Arnovltz Co , L P A
l
Mehler,
Peter
Attorney at law
(6) 14, 21, 28 (7) 5, 12,
19

Public Notice
Meigs
County
Sheriff 's
Office
Sheriff Robert E
Beegle
SheriH Sales
Case
Number
05CV017
USDA
Rural
Development
Plaontlff
YS
Barbara Bunch et at
Defendanls
Court of Common
Pleas. Meigs Counly,
Ohio. In pursuance
of an order of sale to
me directed from said
court In the above
enlltled action, I will
axpose to sale at
Public Aucllon on the
Front Steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday, July
21 , 2006 al10 A.M , of
said day, the following Described Real
Estate Exhlbll " A'

---

.Eiit..•5~tht

Description of Real
Property Situated In
the
VIllage
of
Moddleport, County ot
Meigs and State of
Ohio
In 100 acre Lot No.
309, Range 13, Town
2,
or the Ohio
Company s Purchase,
and more particularly
bounded
and
described as follows
Beginning at an Iron
pipe althe southwest
corner of Harry w
McMasters
Lol ,
!hence South 58 deg
West 32 5 feet to an
oron pipe, thence
South 18 deg East
33.5 feet to an Iron
pipe, thence South 78
deg 30' East 323 feet
lo an Iron pipe on the
Weal side of lhe
Rutland Road, thence
along the Weal side
of said roed North t 8
deg West 57 5 feet to
an Iron pipe; thence
Norlh 78 deg 30'
Weal 287 feet to the
place or beginning,
containing
38/100
acres
Property
Address 311 Rutland
Streel, Middleport,
Ohio 45760 Parcel
No
15-01288-000
Current
Owner
Barbara Bunch at al
311
Property At
Rutland
St,
Middleport Oh 45760
PP•
15.01288 000 '
Prior
Deed
References· Volume
320,
Page
t61,
Appraised
at
$52,500 00 Terms of
Sale Cannot be sold
for less than 2/3rds of
the Appraised Value
1Oo/o down on Day of
Sale,
Cash
or
Cerllfled
Check,
Balance
Dlle on
Confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did
Include an lnlerlor
examination ol the
house
Robert E
Beegle, Meigs County
ShAriff AHorney for
the Plaintiff, Slephen
D Miles, 18 W
Monumenl
Ave
Dayton OH 45402
937-461-1900
(6) 14, 21,28

toe:.

~.-.&lt;=--._.""

Public Notice
Meigs
County
Sheriff's Office
Sher!H Robert E
Beegle
Sheriff Sales
Case
Number
05CV089
First
National
Acceptance
PlalntiH
vs
Billie Jo Sayre at at
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pureuance of an
order of seta to me
directed from Blld
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose tor ule at
Public Auction on the
front slops of The
Meigs County Court
House on Friday, July
21,2006 at10 AM , of
said day, the followIng described Real
Estate Exhibit A
Legal Description
Situated In the town·
ship
of
Sutton,
Counly of Meigs and
State of Dhlo:
being a rectanglular
piece ol land with a
frontage of ninety·
five (95) feet on the
public road and one
hundred fifteen (115)
feat; the Slid frontage
beginning In the
western
boundary
Una of the Patrick
Hogan property tocat·
ad on tho north side
of the public road ladIng from Pomeroy to
Racine, and extend·
lng westward and
running parallel with
said road lor a dis·
lance of nlnely·flve
(95) leet from the
western boundary of
said Palrlck Hogan
property said reclan·
gular place of land
being cut out of tract
XIII, as described In a
certain deed made by
William D Roush, and
wife on the 24th day
of February 1919, to
the grantor heroin,
and being part of a
tract conveyed to tho
said Wllllamn D
Roush by lhe Audllor

....

of Metga County,
Ohio, by deed dated
Auguot 8, 1917, and
recorded In volume
115, page 269 at seq.,
and being In the
south part ol100 acre
Lot No. 292 aald orlg·
lnal tract containing
20 65 acrea, mora or

leas lo be lhe ume,
more or 1 - but subject to all legal high·
waye. The following
described premloea
situated
In
the
Township of Sutton,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohlb:
,Being the east hall of
a rectangular plece of
land with a fro.ntage
of one hundred IIHy
(150) feet on the public road and one hun·
dred fifteen (115) feet
deep, said frontage
beginning at the
western boUndary of
the property owned
by Clara m Sellars
and Atmmlra Sailers,
ninety-five (95) feet
waat of the weatern
boundary of lhe
Patrick Hogan prop,
arty and located on
the north side of the
public road leading
fronf Pomeroy to
Racine, and extend·
lng westward and
parallel with said
public road lor a die·
lance of one hundred
fifty (150) feet from
said sellers wealarn
boundary and being
cut out of tract XIII, as
described In a certain
deed made from
William 0 Roush and
wife, on the 24th day
of February 1919, to
the Brocalaa Camlcal
Company, and being
a pat of a tract con·
veyed to the said
William D. Rouach, by
the auditor of Meigs
County, Ohio, by deed
dated Auguat8,1917,
and recorded In Vol.
1I 5, page 269, etseq.,
Being lhe soulh ]part
of 100 acra Lot No.
292, alad tract con·
talnlng 20 65 .acres.
Deed Reference· 0 R.
Vol 102, Page 735,
Melgo County, Ohio
Recorda of Daedo.

r-.or-..--~-~ -=- --­
a:~~.::. .... .-- -=&gt;.c.-=--•--

Parcel
No.
20·
00056.000 and 20.
00057.000 Property
Addrea,o: 2872 State
Roed 12412872 Third
street
Racine,
Syracuse,
Ohio
45799.
Current
Jo
Owner: Billie
Seyre at al Property
at· 2872 Third St,
Syracuse, Ohio PPt
20-00056 000
20·
00057 000 Prior Deed
References: Volume
102,
page
735
Appraised
at
10,000 oo Terms of
sale cannot be sold
for leu than 213rda of
the appraised value
10% down on day of
Bile, cash or certified
check, balance due
on confirmation of
sale. Tho appraisal
did not Include an
lnlerlor examiHatlon
of lhs house. Robert
E Beegle, Meigs
County Sheriff,
Attorney for
the
Plaintiff Chrlslophar
J Klym
(6) 14, 21' 28

Public Notice
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Office,
Sheriff Robert E
Beegle
Shariff Seles
Number
Case
O&amp;CV007
Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Co
PlalntiH
vs
,
Rebecca
L
Thompaon AKA Rife
at at Defendants
Court of Common
Pleaa, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In purouance of an
order of sale to me
directed from aald
court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
public auction on the
front •laps of The
Meigs County Court
House on Friday, July
21, 2006 at10 am of
Said Day, the followIng described Real
Eotate· The following
premloea, situated In
lhe VIllage of Rutland,
County of Malgs and

State of Ohio Being
In Fraction No. 7,
Town No. 6 and
Range No. 14 of the
Ohio
Company's
Purchase Beginning
2934 teet eaot and 84
feet south of the
northwest corner of
Fraction No 7 at en
Iron pin In the south
right-of-way line of
State route No 124;
the aald beginning
point also being the
northwest corner of
Christian Dleht'a lot;
thence South 150&lt;
feet, thence -1120
feet; thence north
132.6 feet, thence
northeasterly along
State Route 124 a distance of 121.1 feet to
the point of begin·
nlng, containing 0 39
acre. Subjecl lo a
right-of-way given to
the Ohio Fusl Gas
Company
for
a
pipeline by George
lasher
Reference
Deed Volume 324,
Page 553, Meigs
Deed
County
Recorda
Audltor'a
N
12·
Parcel
00355 000 Property
Addreaa. Rt. 1, Box 8·
A, Salem Street,
Rutland, OH 45ns.
Currant
Owner.
Rebecca L Thompaon
AKA Rife at al property at RT t1 Box 8A
Salem Strael Rutland
Ohio 45n1 PP 1 12·
00355 000 Prior Deed
References· Volume
324,
Page
553
Appraised
at
$45,000 00 terms ol
sale Cannot be sold
for leas than 213rds ol
the appraised value.
10% down on Day ol
Sale,
Caoh
or
Cerlllled
Check,
Balance Due on
Conflnnatlon of Seta
The appraisal did
Include an Interior
examination of the
house
Robert E
Beegle, Malgo Counly
Shariff. Attorney for
Plaintiff Little Sheets
&amp; Warner 213 E
Second 51 Pomeroy
Ohio 45769 740.992·
6689
(6) 14, 21 , 28

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Trtbune-S.ntiMI-R.gl•ter will be reaponelble for no mOfe than tM colt ollhe apace occupt.d by lh• •rror •nd on ly the f1rst Insertion We
eny loea or IXPfnH ltm: r~~ulta from the publl*lon or omla•lon of '" ltdvlr11Mment Correction will be made In the flrtt available edition

are alway• conlldtntllll •Current rate Clrd lpPIIIt •All real ..tllltctvertlumenta are aub.,actto the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1969
EOE 1l1ndarda We will not
edvertlslng In vl o l1tion of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~:

1

kllncarlyle@comcaal net

..,li.io-IIELP--W•M'IID--·' roo

Found Male RaiTerrle r very
lrlend ly probably Indoor
For Sale Goat milk Call the dog Call (740}339 3944
Bears at (740)379 24 15 leave message
$1 50 a qt No Sunday calls
Fou nd Small bla ck dog
I Carolyn Moore am not round on 4th Ave Call
responsible for any debts (740}446 1400
besides my own as of June ;,;,..;::..;;:...;;;,;,;,._ _~...,

r:

12 2006

G~WAY

Cmt~~n l..._•o_..,;noii~iii~.'s,.:~.~~-_.1

The Gingerbread House
Daycare has open1ngs for
School Age Ch ldr~Jn ages 5
10 12 years Call (740)992
3142 for Rates

11 \ \\4 I \I

r
I ~..........

1 blac1cJwh1te male kttten
1ns1de only 1 mixed breed
pup
good watch dog
(740)446·3897

YARD SAI.E

r

.J

YARDSAI.E·

L_ _.;GiiiAUJPOUSiiiiiiiiiioiOiliO..-J
-

5 fafOIIY yard sak3 adult prE!-'

emte·5T baby assc tools
June 1 5~ 17 Roush
1 year old nng tatl Stamese
Lane Cheshire
while In color blu e eyes
beautiful cat Free to good
Annua l yard sal e 1686
loving home Please call
Li ncoln Pike
Galllpolis 1
740.992 6267
Saturday the 17th Lots of
70x1 4 floor frame ho use brand name hke new mens
trader· 641 3rd Ave before and women s, clothing Baby/
toddler gtrl clothesfshoes
4pm
toys ride ons mov1 e s TV
Black Golden Retriever mi)( btke crafts holiday decors
10 good home (304 )895 tions all 1n excellent to like
3248
new condition All pnced to
www comics com
Kittens 2 yellow and w~1te 1 sell'! Ratn cancels unttl fol
grey tiger 6 weeks otd lowmg weekend
(740)446-7484 or (740)44t
Bnng your yard sale stuN lo
7411
ou r annual Ilea markeVyard
Pretty KIHens, lttter trained sale June 24th Stop b'i CVS
10 giveaway (304)67 5-6720 Pharmacy tn Galltpolts and Attenti On Dnvers • R&amp;J
s1gn up today Its hugeli it s Tru cktng tS looktng fo r
free!
i
Dnvers
w/ 1 yr
OTR
Expenence for Reg1ona t
Estate Sale (Indoor sale) Hauls Average pay 40s to
Found
Small
Dog Thursday Fnday &amp; Saturday mtd 50 5 Home every
ca ll
Kent
Foodland parking lot call 9·5pm electnc p1ano turnl- Weekend
tu re pictu res rugs diShes (800)462 9365
(304)593 0886 to ldenllly
bed ding &amp; more 958 Porter ~-------~
Ad Bldwell Oh10

e:d

t

. For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
~-·~ r-.;r~··oc:-:.:&gt;-aa.......-eo.--c=:s;e.a..._.

M~lpCo .. nty

G 1L!~

Down

....

The Daily Sentinel • Pag~ 83

~=I

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4'a For Sale.
725
030
Announcement
Antiques .. . •
.. 530
Apartments for Rent
440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessor lea.
760
Auto Repair . ..
.770
Autos for Sale.
. .. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale.........
750
............. 550
Building Supplies . . .
Buolness and Buildings............ ... . .
340
Buatneas Opportunity... . ....................210
Buotneao Training ................................. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes... . . ............. 790
Camping Equipment......... ..
.... .. ... 780
Carda ol Thanks.... .. ...
. ..................010
Child/Elderly Care........... ........ . ... .. .. 190
EleclrlcaURetrlgeratlon ...........................840
................480
Equipment for Rant
Excavating....................
830
Fann Equlpmenl
....610
Fanna for Rent
..... 430
Fanns for Sale . .
330
For Lease. ..
490
For Sale . . .
585
For Sale or Trade
590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables
...580
Furnished Rooms
....450
General Hauling
....... .... 850
Giveaway .. .
. .. ...040
Happy Ads.. .
.050
Hay &amp; Grain...
. ... .. . ...640
Help wanted
................... 110
Home Improvement•
• .................810
Homes for Sale... . . .
.............. 310
Household Gooda.. ......
..... . .. . 510
Houses for Rent....................
.
410
In Memoriam....... .. . .. ....................... 020
Insurance........................... .. ........... 130
. 660
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment . . .. .....
Livestock.... .. • . .. .
.. .............. ......830
Loa! and Found.............. ....
. . ..... . . 060
Lola &amp; Acreage. . ..
. ...................350
Miscellaneous
...... ... ....... 170
Miscellaneoua Merchandlae ................ 540
Mobile Home Repair
..................860
Mobile Homea for Ront
......... .. .. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale
320
Money to loan
. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeler•
740
Muatcallnalrumenta . .
570
Peraonsla ... . . . ,
.005
Pete for Sale . .... .. .......
580
Plumbing &amp; Heating
.820
Frofeulonal Servlceo
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
160
..... 380
Real Eotata Wanted
Schoolo Instruction "
... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fartlllzor
650
Situation• Wanted
.. ... .. .. 120
Space for Rent.
. ... .. . ... ..460
• Sporting Gooda . .
. 520
SUV'I lor Sale
....720
Trucko for Sale .. ..
715
Upholotery ... . • .... • .
870
vane For Sale
.730
Wanted to Buy.....
.
. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ....
.. 620
Wanted To Do ...................... ..
180
Wantad to Rent.
.... 470
Yard Sale· Galllpollo
... ...................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle . . ................074
Yard Sale·Pt. Plaaoant ........ .
. 078

•

Yard sale 944 Ftrst Ave
Gallipoli s 16th and 17th
9am 4pm •

Y.umSA1~""

l'oMEROY/MnJDLE
Btg and Large Garage Sale
3202 Route 124 Syracuse
OH formerly Jo s G1ft Shop
Antique di shes baby and
Children clothing toys elec
tnc toaste r (brand new}
shoes dresses purses tots
Tues 13th Wed
of mt sc
14th Thurs 1 5th Ram or
Shme

Garage Sale Fnday 16th 8
5 (SA 248 3rd HousEl on
Left Top
Chester
Hill)
Wom en s Men s
Boys
G~rl s
Clothmg
Bed
Spreads Home Decor Baby
Sw1ng Walker Play Gym &amp;
BJCYCies

r

Yo~.RDSALF""

PT. PIIASAN'l

Hugh 3-Famt ly Yard Sale
Thurs June 15th Fnday
June 16th Last House on
Sandhtll Rd at Letart watch
for stg ns Ant1que vanity
Furniture some collectibles

t

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sliver and Gold Cotns
Proolsets Gold A1n gs PreCurrency
1935
US
Soilta1re Diamonds M T S
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446
2842
I will buy Junh
(740)388 9303

l&amp;rs Call

Wanted Cars any condi
loon (740)388 8228
I \I I'll)) \II \ I

. . r,n 1t 1 ....

tio

l
.

H ELP WAN11'J)

tOO WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood tle ms
To $480/wk
Materials provided
Free information pkg 24Hr
801-428·4649

All real aatate edYertlsl ng
In thll newspaper I•
•ubl.c:t to the FIJderal
Fair Hou alng Act of 1968
which make s itlllegal to

advert ln

Drlvont Noodod
COL(Ciass B) Drivers wd l·
lng to drive lor local ready
mtlli-concrete company
Expenence Is prelerred but
not neces sary Med lnsur·
ance &amp; other benefits ava1l
able after walt1ng period
Drlvar must be wlllmg to do
pre ma~ntenance on trucks
&amp; equtpment yard work &amp;
oth er miscellaneous chores
Expenence operating equtp
ment &amp; extra skills such as
welding a plus
Call Robertsburg
(304)937·3410
or Lakin( 304)773 5234
Localed tn Mason County
near Buffalo WV

Ohto Valley Home Health
In&lt; h1nng for CNA STNA
CHHA PCA. Compet1t1ve
wages mileage and beneftts
1ncludlng health Insurance
App ly at 1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis or 2415 Jackson
Avenue Po1nt Pleasant WV
or phone toll free 1 866 441
1393

,.. ,., "' "' ,.. "' ,.. ,.. ""

·-------.,1
lt!IO

please

Direct
Sales
Fantastic
Opportu nity
50K
no
Problem Must be Motivated

and Self Starter Call Ken
(740)992·7440
An Excellent way to earn - - - - - - - - money The New A'JOn
Dominos Pizza Now Hiring
Call Marilyn 304 882 2e45
Safe
Drivers
Point
Gallipolis
&amp;
AVONI All Areas! To Suy or Pleasant
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304 Pomeroy locations Appty In
Person
675 1429

wlol1tlon ot lha law Our
readert are hereby

Informed lhl'l all
dwelllngli lldvertl!ed In
lhls newspaper ore
available on an equal
opportunity bases

Earn an Extra 51/hour
with our attendance

,.. ,.. , ,.. "'

Part time position to Manage
Country Homes rental com
munlty In Sha de Area
Includes a hOuse to live In
Send resum e to Country
Homes PO BOll 1 033
LogAn 01'110 43138

Thla newspaper will not
knowingly acc ept
advertiHmenra tor real

etlale which Is In

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

HVAC Company Is looking
fo r experienced Installer
Must have 1 or more years
eMperiance In res idential
Pay
on
experience
Te&lt;ihnlcal a plus Call for
appllcalton (740}441 1236
or Iaiii resume to (7&lt;40) 441 ·
1266
-------Licensed Social Worke r
Mlqdleton Estates will be
accepting bids for contract
LSW II Interested please
call Pam Sheela CS at
(740)446-4814 or (740)446
8145

dltcrimlnatlon

Stop worryi ng about where
yo ur n9)(t payc heck 1s
comtng from
Stan earning up to
S81hourl

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

_c_a_
ll-740-_6_8_2_1-22_2_ __

familial atatua or national
orlgln, or any Intention to
make any 1uch
preference llmUat1on or

Seeking a qualified depend ~:~~~=
able person I care for diS· Ill
abled ch ld m my home
tratnlng reqwed al')d provtd
ed Benefits 1nclu ded refer
ences a must
Call
(304)675 6651
Ser1ous
Interests only please

bonus
Overbrook Center currently Plua we are now offering
a $200 Hiring Bonus!
has open1ngs for RN s If you
We offer weekly pay and
are a cartng and compas
sionate person who en.10ys bonuses patd tramlng pa1d
worktng with the elderly we vacation and holtdays Call
• NO E)(PERI ENCE NECESSARY
FULL TIMECLA.SSES
would love to have yo u as today to set up an Interview!
' COL TRAINING
t-877-463-8247
part of our team We are
FINANCING AVAILABLE
now oNerrng new per dram
' JOB PLACEMENT
Ext 2455
' ENAOU INIJ NON
pay rates Please stop in and
TOWBOAT ~I LOT
till out an application or call
WANTED
Hollie at (740)992 6472 for
ALLIANCE
more intormatlon EOE
,.,,.,,.,,.,,..,..,.,,..,.,,..,.,
TRACTOR TAA.ILEA
MCGINNIS INC A proud
TRAINING CENTERS
OVerbrook Center IS current leader In the Ma r~ ne Industry
WYTHEVILLE VA
ty acteptlng applications for IS seeking an exper1enced
Dri'fers FREE Health Ins!
a Full Time AN Manage r P1lot tor harbor work on the
1-800-334-1203
Th ts IS a 3PM 11PM shift All Oh10 River Appl cants must
Bon uses &amp; Home-Ttme!
Interested applicants should have USCG license and
Regional Loads
ptck up an apphcal on at 333 have a sol1d nav1gattonal
1
yr
Tractor
Trl
Exp
Req
Deliver The
Street Middleport Oh record Compelltrve pay
Page
MARTIN
TRANSPORT
Charltlton Gazette
For add1t anal tnlormalton along wtth excellent bene
866 293 7435
Evans to Leon
please contact M1chelle ltts Oua llf1ed applicants may
Earn up to $ 1100 monthly
Grlmore 01rector of Nurstng call 740 377 4391 extenston
~'4-4 '1.\ * ...... \~ l~
before expenses
al (740) 992 6472 EOE
5?. tor addlt)onal informatio n
Approxtmately 3 to 4 hou rs
'~
or send a resum e to
a day
Overbrook Cente r Is now
McGinniS Inc PO Bo)( 534
Dependable vehicle
accepti ng applications tor a
1 mu1t
Experienced COL driver for full time of11ce asslslanl If South Pomt Oh o 45680
CALL 1 800 WVA NEWS
trash company Knowledge you ar6 Intere sted n becom attention Port Captam
Ext 1709
of Galll8 Co a Must Pay lng a part of our team please
- - - - - - - - - ~ccordlng to $Xpene nce flit out an application loday Wanted
Gwtar st
and
(740)388·9686
at
333
Page
Street Vocalist lor Rock Band
Deliver The
Middleport OH No phon e (740)99 2 9904
Chartetton Gazette
740 416
FEDERAL
calls please EOE
In The Town Of
1090
Prllnl Pl easant
POSTAL JOBS
ScHont_.'\
Overbrook
Ael'lablltatt on 1:JU
Earn up to $900 monthly
$15 67 $2619/hr now h r Center IS currently accepting
INSTKUC(l()N
before expe nses
lng For application and lree appllca!IOns for part ltm e
Approximately 2 to 3 hours governe ment }ob Info call
LPN s Ava1lable shifts are
a day
American Assoc of labor 1 7A 7P and 7P 7A All tnter GtlllpoiiJ Cen~t~r College
(Careers Ctose To Home }
De~ndable vehicle
913 599 8042 24/tirs emp ested applicants should pick
a muet
Call TOday! 740 446 4367""
serv
up an app1tcat1on at 333
I BOO 214 0452
CA LL HlOO WVA NEWS
Page Street Mldd eport Oh
._gal
lpoiiiCIIIeeroollege com
E11l 1709
Health For further tnformatt on
Growing
Home
AcC [IdiiiCI Membe r Accred 1hng
- - - - - - - -- Agency has Full T1me pos1 please contact Hollie at Counc~ lor lndependen l Colleget
tlon for an AN or LPN (740 )992 64'2 EOE
Dental Ass 1alant Needed
lind Sci'IOOIS 127&lt;48
Part ttme Dental Assistant Competitive wages bonus
Re habilitation
Contact Overbrook
needed tor Progressive ea &amp; benefits
Gallipolis Dental Otftce Home Health Care of SEQ Center rs currently aooeptlng
Experience
and Toll Free at 1 866 368 1100 apptlcallons for lull ti me and
Radiographers
License - - - - - - - - part time STNA s All shifts Persona! ma1l boxes lor bus1
Prefe rred Fa;t resumes and HOME HEALTtl AlOE S are available Interes ted ness or apt bu ld ng 740
re fe rences to {740) 446 SIGN ON BONUS Home applica nt&amp; should lUI out an r,7:i42ir2~8~7.::,8":':'~----,
Health Care of SE Oh o Is a~pllcallon al " 333 Pag e
4840
WMnJ&gt;
currently tltrlng home hoolth Slroel
Mld dleporl
No
J)o
phone calls please EOE
..__ _ _ _ _ _.,;,J
Desk clerk needed Person aides-competitive waQes
wtth good communicatio n
skill good anitude &amp; self
mo11Vated Should app ly at
Budget Inn Jackson Pike
Gallipolis No phone ca lls

any

preference, llmltat1on or
dlaerlm lnallon baaed en
race color religion sex

fo

AHordable Computer Repatr
Expe rt Serv1ce (740)992
2395

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtn!
Nl88 582 3345

For Sale House 2317 M t
Vernon Ave newly remol d
led conven1ent locahon call
(304)675 8872

HANDYMAN

SPECIAL

Bnng the ftn sh ng tools
3bdrm Ranch w/2 Oaths 1n
drywall stage Ho us~;t never
oo
lived tn S11s on 2 beau tiful
mil SAL!
at.; res C1ty water at road
about 20 nl n~ ~nut11 vt
2 Bed room
house
n
A! hens
OH
::;~4 500
Po meroy w1th beautiful nver
Own e1 f1 lam:; r y 1""'10J&lt;18()
v ew $39 000 or rea sonable
9146
ofler 992 5502
- - - - - - - - House lor Sale 1n Syracuse
29 12 Anntslon Dr
Pt
two bedroom w th bath
Pleasant 38A 2BA L8
ane.ched garage and base
FA Garage NICe nerghbor
ment
An estate sale
hood (304)675 3637 da~s
$70 000 Phon e 992 3690
(304)675 2355 evemngs

HI I I I ' II II

·------_.1
r

HOMI'S

3BD 2Ba l1reptace 40x60
bar n a flat acres Pleasant
Valley Ad
R1o Grande
S120 000 1740)709 1166

House n Camp Conley
2000 sq 11 3 br 2 ba
approx 1 acre wtrentAIIrall
er
As t..mg
SBD 000
(304)593 3072 n so grmhJC
lull o' m sc lor SA le cA 1 f H
1te ms
Jackson County
rooms 3 BA \
hardwood ll oors
ment 2 112 car
barns
1 I 27

Home
1 2 t at l1
!ul tM"t

grHago
:lCrf·~

4 year old Colon 1al on 3 $145900 Col J(}37\r)t5
acres approK 1 900 sq tt 3 8670 Home (740)28o 7212
bdr 2 baths 2 car garage • Mason Co Own er F1nancmg
master bdr s 281124 with a Rebel A dge Ad 2 m 11es
JSCUZZ I
tub
$125 000 from Hannan Hig h SC 1920
(740}446 7029
• sq ft 3 car garag e Owner

4 B~
Foreclosure
only f1nancl ng
w th $20 oo o
$20 900 For listings call down LIVed m 2 mon ths
800 391 5228 ex! F254
w1l • cons der
trad e m
(304)562 58 40 {304 1552
5 acres privacy plus 3 br 0756
2ba Rancher 4 m11es from - - - - ' Toyota Pl ant
Low or no Ma~on Co Renel Ru1go Ao
down payment
Paymems l m les 1ro n Hru r a11 Hrgl
start1ng at $599 a mon th sc 3 bel ' t 1\h 3 ca
l1V1no
move In cond111on wont la st garage
long (304 )562 5605
AMIFlrepiACA 2 AC lfllld 0
Down lor qua !I! etJ Buyers
653 Ttmd Gallipolis 2/3 BR Lived In 2 months Will con
~ew B~th AC Carport slder Trade In (304)562
Detached Garage
C1 ty 5840 {304 )552 0756
Schools 740 441 0614

AAA
MODULAR ranch Mason :,rd Slreet 2 BA 1
$55 838 Midwest be great sta rter home 'or
models
Georges Portable Sawmill
mvestmenl
properly
don t haul your Logs to the Homes (740)828·2750
Prudential Bu nch Rea ltors
Mill just call 304 675-1957
AHentlonl
Bobby
Muncy
Rea ltor
Local
company
oHerlng
M
NQ
(Y40)709
0299
or
(304)525
care
lor
your
loved
one
Wil
l
Part time Medical Aaa lstanl
PAYMENT" pro 7761
or LPN needed for phy11 in my home Pr vate Room DOWN
grams fo r you to buy your _:__ _ _ __:__
3
hoi
meals
Call
(740)388·
clans of!lce send resume to
home Instead ol renting
New 3 be droom 2 ba th
PO BoK 157 Ravenswood 0116
• 100% f nanclng
brick hOme lor sale 1n Rto
WY 26164
• Less tl'lan perfecf credit Grande Call (l .. o H1 ')0 15
Part-time
Server
Elliperlence required 19 yrs
or older App ly In person
Jlmanettls
F'lzza
Rio
Grande

accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(7401367 0000

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

/

�'

-

'

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

~LLEYOOP

Pric«&lt; to sell. Very nice Need to soU 'vour h&lt;&gt;IM"? ~ting applicolionllor 2
38R, bath upstairs, fur· Late on payments, dMm:e, bedroom aportmenl, $500
nlahed 1BA apt. downstalra. job transfer or a death? I montil. kitchen lpplla"'* 6
furniture store in reaf. Car lot can buy your home . .a.Jt cash W/ D furnished, water &amp;
on skle. All on 112 ac. lot at and quick dosing. 740-• 16- garbage inclUded, no poto,
111 month, securfly dopooft
130
Bulaville
Pike. 3130.
6 lease roquirod. (7o10~
Galllpoijs. OH . Call lo 688
IH ' I \ I ..,
9585.
'
(7&lt;40)«6--4782.
Ranch Slyit, 3 Bedroom.
2 Bath, 2 Gar Garage, 9
mlles
from
Holzer
HospllaVCIInlc. 1 acre
mil •. beautiful landscapIng, screened-In back
deck with hoi tub, VieW
pholos/lnfo
online
www.orvb.com
Code

Anliquoo: Rop~rod and For Sale Cod&lt;atitl w/cage. 1M2 Thunderbird; Blue
Ivory
leather
Ratlrilhod . IIIIo, Buy and Nanday Conure w/cage. Exterior,

Soli.

Lumber tor Sale. Blue Front Amaz;on w/cage
Wood
and (30-1)773-5052 or leave
AoOiorotton Shop, 49985 message.
Tornado Rood, RICino. Coli - - - - - . . , - - - 949-2248.
German Shepherd puppies.
- - - - - - - - - Both parents can be seon.
Buy or ooll. Rlwrlno Father Ia Pollee K·9,
Anliquoo, 1124 EM! Moln Black/tan,
white/brindle.
on SA 124 E.~. 7o40- Aol&lt;ing $200. Calll7ol0)367·
tm·25211 . Ruu Mocro, i72ii88r;;.,
. ~~-~--,

Interior, White vinyl top.
Nice 'driver, 390ci engine,
auto transmlsslon, power
steering ,
power
bfake•.
power window, power seat.
Price $9,500.00.
Hill's
Automotive Classic Car
Restoration &amp; Parts, Inc.,
29670
Bashan
Road ,

owner.

74D-lM9-2217; Fax: 740Pictured
on
94'9-1957;
WI({W thuoderblrdcenter com

Olbba

j Fk &amp;
r~-~v~
•

Home

5286 or call (740)366·
0140.

Chestnut
S treet
Goll!oo!is OH 3 bdrm, 1
bath, carport, fenced back
~ard, heat pump. W/0
hOokup, retridg &amp; stove
included.
$500/mo.
$400/deposit. no pets. Ref. &amp;
security
ck .
required.
(304)675-2525 .

remodeled tow
story home in Mercervilla.
· Walking dislance of schools.
Public
hunting
nearby
$68,900. Adjacent Income
property a\'allabl.e , priced ·
separately. Immediate ocr.u·

tomatoes. 1996 Sulek Skylark 96,000

18cl.l. ft. K4nmore refrigoro· Picked daily. No Sunday miles, excellent condition .
tor/traezer with lee maker sales. 10 miles west ot $2,600. Call (740)366-9645

1 BOO

Recent!~

grown

Racine, Ohio .c5nt : Phone:

$100. Spinet plano, gOOd Gallipolis on SA 1•1 at 2003 PT Cruiser, 4 · cyt ,
condltton
$550.
Call Yoder'a Greenhouse ·10321
runs &amp; looks great, good gas

(7o10)«6-4525.

..

SR 14 Galli I'

I \It\ I -I 1'1'1 II '
\

I I\ I '-. II It 1,

mileage,

$7,200.

Cal,l

(7&lt;40)388-DioiO.

'

I

.._

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING r.
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

ROGER HYS£LL
GARAGE

Hill&lt;.; Self
Sturagt;

Auto&amp;Truck
Repair

, 20070 Bashan Road

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

992-5682

Racine, Ohio
45771

740-849-2217

· • Prompt &amp; quality
. work
• Affordable Rales
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"

•

t
•

Call Gary Stanley

. Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM
111"/ 1 mo. pd

740-741-1193

I.••

for detailS (740)441 -0194 or

,..
aadSOns

(740)388-0034 after 7pm.
1994 Chevy S·1 0. 2.2L,
automatic, Toneau cover,
American Racing wheels ,
nice truck . $2,300 OBO.

(740)256-1537.
9S Chevrolet S·10 truck lor

$3800, (740)667·3655

r

··as

Skyline front kitchen.
Cash price $8,995. W ill

deliver. Call (740)365-9948.

Stop renting Buy 3 bedroom
9/10th of an acre for sale on· foreclosure $14,900. For list·
143 . 2 mobile homes. 740· ings 800-391-5228 ext.

1709.

or roortng:

4x4
FORSAI.Jl

Hardwood CUlnevr And Fumlalre

(740) 949-1405
":"L~~

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISlRICDOII
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

mJUNE

~-f;CIALS'

.. rtch

ua&gt;W "':"1·,
&lt;;;nee'•
&lt;

'

NEW 3 br doublewides from 2 bedroom trailer on farm in
$269 mo. Midwest Homes Gallipolis for rent. Call

.

rya Jr.',~
. ini
~

(740)385·0698

ALRIGHT !!

BREAI&lt;ER,

WIF NARY A HINT
OF JUICY GOSSIP !!

!-

'l'
t
••

carrier
36 Floe hastily
39 Wild country

f"
ou~

""TI-\1\i'!&gt; 1&gt;. BIT
:,TEE.P!

Fo:.E.::,\-1 f'l:)l-\
Ot if\E. I&gt;~\'I \:) 1\ '
~"-UTE.E.t&gt; \IL/&gt;\1'1"'-

Pfl-\rn, PE.\?.f\1\PS
~ 11'1\E:.F:~i

Required .

IMPORTS
Athena

l

I

l

you have no heart loser. If East goes up

'IOU

wilh hiS hearl king and shjffs Ia a dia·
mend, you win wilh your ace, cash lhe
heart jack, cross lo dummy wffh a lrump,
and disca1d your remaining diamonds on
lhe ace-queen ol hearls. You win live
spades, three hearls, one diamond and
one club rulf on lhe board.

C,&amp;.,\Gi OF
Tf-IE: !&gt;1&gt;.''1' !

~Astro­

W'Graph

"BIG NATE

'

Chuck Wolfe .
Owner

Lars&amp;

2006 Jayco 27' travel trailer.
Used twice. QueenltuiVIwln
beds &amp; $Ofa, lg. shower, surround sound. Was $18,000,

ACRFAGE
31ots 4 sale. $18,500 each.
Sisson Ad.. Porter Oh.

Now $14,000. (740)446·

(740)446-4734 .

2800

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling
Licensed Home Builder

iPEANUT$
·,

WJ.IEN I WENT INTO
TOWN TO PLA'&lt; GOLF,
TJ.IE'r' ASKED ME WJ.IAT
MV J.IANDICAP IS ...

.(740) 992-0496
" I R\ I! I "

I SAIDMY
J.IANDICAP
IS I'M A
D06 .

TI-l EN TfiE'( SAID
D06S AREN'T
ALLOWED ON
T~E COURSE ..

SO I
TJ.IOU6HT
I'D

6UT DOGS AREN'T
ALLOWED IN T~E
COURTI40USE ..

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH
~

I!IF~ fl
Handy Man. Home Services
and Repairs . Call (740)645-

7524.

Warehouse

Wanted· land to lease for
hunting in Meigs County

Cornerstone
Construction
• Plumbing • Elcctric.nl
•Accousti c Ceiling

by Ron't TV (304)e757itt

'~

Queen Size Seta Bed good
condition .
Cream color
w/Mauve &amp; Blue Flowers.

~~

••

$125 1304)n3-5967
&amp;

Repair-875-7388. For ..,I.e,
re-conditioned
automaHc
washers ·&amp; dryers, refrigerator&amp;, gas and electric
rangea, air conditioner&amp;, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands In
shop or at your home.

FOR.RENT· MEIGS ~OUNTY

YOUNG'S

Washer $100; drytr $85;
etacl. range $125; rolrlg. F.F.
ftSO; uprlghl freoztr $150;
SOlid wood dreuer $80; cor·
fee table $50; entertainment
center, new $1 00; table &amp; 4

chalro $100; bool&lt; ohelf $75;
Bissell

bagleaa ·•weeper

Skaggs Ap~.
1216 Eastern Ave
(7o10)«6· 7398.

Mill lEY'S
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH ·

10x10x10xl0
992-3194
or 992·6635

CARPENHR
SERVICE
Room Addltlane a

Remodeling
Naw Gar•a••
Eltctrlcat 6 Plumbing
Roofing ta Outten
VInyl Siding &amp; Palming
Patio 1nd POI'ch Deck•

WV03872&amp;

V.C. YOUNG Ill
rvo fl? 111
l'"!llt'fny 0111

"Middleport's only
· S~lf·Stor•1•"

1

Y 11

( "( 1! I •P• ! ! t i l t "

''

~___j_-----~-----'--..:.,__-~-:---------,--·~-----..,.-~-

~

l

~

::1

~

•

J

.• i
\l&gt;i

•'

i i•

1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547

Used Furniture Store, 13o

Bullville Pike. Stop by.
(740)4~6 - 4782 . Galllpollt,
OH Hro. 11·3'(M·F)

$49.

nn

· : ....--------:---::"1

leave message.

Appliance

~~

1

'
·:GARFIELD

old. Call (7ol0)366-ootl1 and

Thompsons

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21.) -

".,
"

For sala: Rainbow' vacuum
cleaner. Less than one year

Friday, June 30, 2006 to
Sunday,July 2, 2006
$200/person ·
Price includes airfoare and
two nights at
Harrah's Casino &amp; Resort
Private jet from
Charleston, WV
Contact PVH Community
Relations (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326 to make
reservations ·
LIMITED SEATS!
Gladly accept credit cards,
personal checks and cash

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

..•

dltloned Big Screen TV's

.

SCORPIO (Clcl. 24-Nov. 22) - You niay

'
'•

Warranty, al~ have recon~

TOdSy's Clue: l equals \J'
SPV~R

" ...

IMJE

SM

OIIDPR

NMB

SLP

SLP

SLP

DPE

FBVZP

NYVFI"-

SLVS

NMB

GS .

JPES
I

VBSLKB

LPBP
DVOT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "He used lo call me Papa. He .knew how much I
cared about him. He was a good person." - Coach Manny Mala, on Steve
HOYie

~~~:~:~' S©\\~lA-LGr..tts·
IOI!tl
ClAY I . POlUN
0 iov'

~eorron;t

ha've to give someone you like a bit ~I
adv1ce lhat might hurt in order to keep
him/her fro m mak1ng a bad mistake. You'll
find the best way to say what needs to be
sa id.
·

740·367-o&amp;-44
740·331·3-412

In Henderson, WV. Pr•
owned Appliances starting ·
at $75 &amp; up all under

ATLANTIC CITY

:suNSHINE
CLUB
•

Res!dentlal • Commerdal • General Contracting ·
Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room Addition s • Remodeling
WV 038992
OH 38244

by Luis Campos
Celebrity OPher crypt~rams are created ftom QUOtalions by lamous people, past an.::l pre!&gt;&amp;nl
Elldlle!lef 11'1 lhe cipher slands IIJ( arother.

WOlD
lAM I

~y

In the year ahead, there Is a strong possi·
bility you will establish some new, ambi·
tlous objectives for yourself when a number ot restriction s that have hampered you
are finally · eliminated. It'll be full steam
ahead after th at.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) -Your methods and procedures might not be planned
as well as they should be, but if you keep
plugging along , even it you make mls·
takes, you will be able _to achieve your
goals.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) ~ If you make
a concerled effort to live within your
means, you may have no idea how much
you 'll appreciate it tomorrow or next week .
Trimming a lew trills won't be that painful.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - If yo u attempt an
ambitious Jundertak!nQ. take onboard your
vessel only those who can help sail tfie
ship effectively. You don't need any pas·
sengers. only working crew.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) .-You may be
somewhat tempted to participate in frivolous involvements. bul. If you have more
serious mat1ers at hand , your conscience
isn't likely to let you do any1hing superlicial.
LIBRA. (Sep1. 23-0ct. 23) - ' The only way
you 'll have respect for yourself is if you
gi\'e a day's work ,t.or a day's pay. Even If
your mind is on other things, abide by your
high standards of responsib ility and duty.

~Qu~f.~4

r

-...
' &lt;Jllrthdor,y:
.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

looN 10

letlers

of

fhe

ICI"&lt;lmblod words bo
farm four Simple wo~ds

. Thursday, June 15, 2006
By Bernice Bede Oaol

I

.

(740)3/l5·ol019.

go down one.

l_nslead , after drawing !rumps ending on
the board, call for a low hear!. II your jack
loses to West'~ king, the diamond finesse
musl be working. West, who passed as
dealer, will have prOduced the club ace·
king and hearl king - 10 high-card
poinls. He cannel have lhe diamond king
loo. Here, though, how can East delend?
II he plays·a low heart, your jack wins and

I!'&gt;I 00~ \'\01 ~FR.£~

r-..... ...--.n I'Oi:,~l?. 'lS!

yo1:1 continue?

red-suit finesses. ... and

J

$400/mo, $400 deposit.
(740)367·7025

REPO'S &amp; USED from Mobile home sites for up to
$1,900
down.
Midwest 16x80 in Country Homes.
Very clean 14M64 2 bedroam. Only $7,995. Call

'DRY SPELL l

I'LL SAY-SIX WEEkS
IS A MIGHT'Y'
L.ONG TIME !!

:

Deli &amp; Bakery
Bologna $3.051b.
Colby 54.50 lb.
F&lt;esh Mozzarella $6,591b.
Hummus S5.59lb
Amish Potato Salad $3,451b.
Pasta Salad $3.501b,
Cannell $1.75
Breakfast Bales ~1.75
Breakfast Tornados 2/$2.00
Brownies .75(

Nice 14x70 3 bedroom only
2br Trailer for Rent $250
$10,995. WMi help with delivmonth
plus .
deposit

(740)628·2750

IT'S A RECORD

Dinin p
g at;
Open

'

SINGlEWIDE-· 2 Bedroom, 1 Balh, No Pels,

(304 )89~·3561

MERCY, THIS IS
TH' LONGeST
II

(540)729·1331 '

Refe rence

rounds, hO'N would

CAN R'MEMBER

A-IIIII·
Stlrall
112·8311
192-2212

(740)628·2750

Ho~s

Pass

Pass

forma
28 Well·bred
chap .
30 Accounting
time
32 Stockholm

auth.

42 Tie tack
44 Grlmoce
45 Footed
vases
46 Rents
47 feminine
ending
48 AnQkor-·
49 Sw1tch
positions
51 Chum

North's three-spade raise shows 1&amp; maximum pass w11h alleast lour trumps. II YO\I
nave a book lhal says you may make lhis
jump response wilh only lhree-card sup·
port, give it lo an opponenl and lell him
how great it is!
There is a natU ral inclination to take two

IDWRBIUII

(740)742·3033

AGEs- 1St time buyers &amp;
FHA.
Midwest
Homes

ery. Call (740)385·9621.

'BARNEY

www.dmller.. e.....,ablnerry.oo•

FREE
ESTIMATES

148-992-1811

TWo bedroom.

1 bath duplex
on Kingsbury Ad. near
Homes (740)828·2750 ·
. Harrisonville, $425 ' per
~ew
16'
wide month plus utilities. Security
Brand
vinyl/shingle $181/mo. Call and water depoSits required.
(740)385-7671 .
No pets. no smoking,

Midwest Homes

Pass

3.

heroine
27 Verse

staple
41 F.amlllar ,

1972, said, "I'm going lo memorize your
~arne and throw my head away.'
This dealleaiUres a sull combinallon lhal
you should memorize In your head. You
reach lour spades. Wesl, who passed ini·
lially, leads lhe club ace: two, seven,
eight He cashes the club king: 10, six,
live. Wesl plays anclher club, which you
ruff on lhe board wh1le Easl lollows wilh
the queen . After drawing trumps in two

I.L. Wrlhls81

1989 Ford Bronco. E~~:cellent
condition
$2,500.
Call

$22,572

East
Pass
Pass

40 Horror·fllck

entertaining conversationalist who died in

New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

(740)828-27so.

West North
Pass "Pass
Pass

19 Druid's
language
20 Judges'
props
21 AHach
22 Cenall, e.g.
23 Pew locale
24 Fe, commonly
26 Pasternak

Oscar Levant, a jazz pianist. writer, and

Alf ryp.•

NEW

Dealer: West
Vulnerable; Both

A suit combination
for the memory bank

or

(7ol0)828-2750.

1 Phyolclsto'
particles
18
2 Parakset
19
home
3 Curved
21
molding
4 Nothilg at all
·
5-de
25
cologne
6 011 drilling .
29 wn~en
one's heart
plaHorms
31 Skirts the
7Butter
laaua "·
substnute
33 Give, .. time 8 Bruce ·
34 VeQus'
or Laura
allier
9 Newsroom
35 Defense
VIPs
mechanism 10 Yes in
37 Persists
Yokohama
38 Finds fault 11 Tnlad man
40 Interstate
12 Pram
sign
pus hera
43 Low-fat
17 Provide
· ·meat
help
colortaat
Dad'alad
Hold on
tight
Goller
Palmer's
nickname
Script lines

Opening lead: • A

1999 1BxBO Schultz mobile
home. Vinyl siding, shingle
root, 2•6 outside wallS, gas
heat &amp; central ai r, 6K1 2
porch, 8x12 shingled roof.
mini barn, $23,000 or make

LAND &amp; HOME PACK·

16~~-)

9 2
K 9 8 3
7 6 3 2
Q7 6

10 7 6 .
K 54 '
AK943
•
South
. AQI043
• J 2
A Q 10
• J 8 5

South

(740)446·36441or appl.

AAA MODULAR ranch
models $55,838. Midwest

•
•
•

+

• Leave a message

good condition $10,500: Call WV 25550

992·5856.

48 Chin""
soup
Item
50 Futurt ltms
5 Crumble . 52 Roughly
away
53 Cornu as a
10 Submarine
ghost
12 lltlro'l •ed 11 54 Rsepaan
13 Ms.
eye on
Lanabury
55 Not so
14 lce-lt.hlng
nurny
tOOl I
15 Shrink's
DOWN

North
06-14..()6
• K J 7 6
¥A Q S 4
• J 98
• 10 2
East

West
• 8 ;

' MONTY

44 Khlollllppor

1 Click-on

Alder

14x55-'97 Fleetwood MH- wil h 3 reference lo EB7 2po
2BR. 1 bath, elec. heat/AC- Main Street, Point Pleasant,

offer. (660)968·0866
(7ol0)256·1064.

ACROSS

Phillip

:.:17_4o.:.:)4_._,_·1_18_4_.--~
• 3br, 1 ba in Gallipolis Ferry.
$500 a month. Send Letter

Molllu:FORs"AI.Jl&lt;JII.US

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

pancy. (740)256-1965 or 1 BR hOuse- 11 Gartield Ave,
Gallipolis. $350 month. Call
1(661)331-6672.

-i

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

::l-------..JI
~RIZZWELLS
.
,.
':: ~IJ'

THE BIRTHDAY

NIGHTMARES
HAVE BEGUN

-T--,1

--L-E-J-50

I• I

f:) PR INT

15

II

:
:

A~'i. ~

~f&gt;-\C\11""

\'\oW"

0

Comple1e lhe chvclle ouoted
by f.llmo in. th~ ti'11U!no words~

ycu develop from srrp No.

NUMB[ REO l(TTfRS IN

I

jl

THESE . SOI!AR!S

D UNSCRAMBlE AftOVE HTTEIS
10 GET ANSW£1

ll

J below.

' Is I

I Il

.

SCRAMLETS ANSWI!RS 11131041
Zigzag - Lapel - Knoll - Unr~ll - LONGER
Gl311cing through a special edition of J lamous spons
magazine, my friend sighed and s;rid. "I heard lhe
photographers for this shoo\ alked for LONGER hours."

ARLO &amp;.JANIS
011 I'VE:
GOr'l!JOAf

ll's

possible you might be forced to take on a
critical assignment you wouldn;t choose to
do it you cou ld get out ol it. Don't make
things worse by boing unpleasant.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Your
financial footing might reQui re a bit or
·steadying. Even it it hurts a little, give up
the e)(lras you don't need and strive to be
prudent and practical in the management
of your affairs .
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- The affec·
Hon you have for your family w1il be very
much in evidence. bl.lt be careful you t1.on'l
become o"v erly possessi ve in yo ur
a«empls to keep them safe and secure
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - If there is
an Important maner an associate ·wishes
to discuss With you , don't trea111 too lightly
0 1 you may hurt this person's feel ings. Be
as sympathetic and understMd1ng as oossible.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19) - Don't be
swayed by people who can' t recognize an
opportuhity thai has bean dropped' tn your
lap. If you 1rus1 your own assessment.
you'll know hoW to make the most of
what's at hand .
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - lltsn't :;our
lock drive or ambitton that is hold1ng you
back; you're more' likely lo be wast1ng your
ti me ot spinn1ng your wheels on someth1ng

FEVf.R, I!Mnl
'

.

£.Vf,l1.'(fHIIJG, P~~€1
E.V£.1..J11!~oW

thai ha s tittle to do with your work. .

~ ~·

t&gt;R. 1'\-11 L

I ~cw up as a shy kid afraid I
would say the wrong things. As I
, got older I realized that being
introvened was the best way to
keep my fool out of my ·--·.

'sOUP TO NUTZ
'feal\ BuT He's l'lo'T
ve~~

Goo&amp;

�•

Page B&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Celebrate

•I

Wedr:t~sday

www.mydailysentlnel.com

June 14, 2006

Violence dips as
crackdown begins in
Iraqi capital, A6

Bush rejects
troop-withdrawal talk
after Iraq trip, A2 ·

On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress
passed the first Flag Act, adopting The Stars
and Stripes as the official flag of their newly ·
established nation. Originally composed of
13 stripes and 13 stars to represent the original colonies, today's flag still has 13
r~d and white stripes but now displays
50 stars representing the
United States of America.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
lllll&lt;.'iU\, , .It '\ 1

;; o( ' I . ~ T S•\ol .:;,;.:\o.:.! l :~

\n \\ \.lll ~ d •• ,h ... t· •iln• ..ttllll l

I ,),:! OCJh

I

.

.W.Va pt1lling ahead of Ohio for AEP plant?

SPORTS
,

• Oilers survive in
overtime. See Page 81

pursuing cost recovery and
siting in Ohio and if we get
timelY. cost recovery we plan
to bmld the plant in Ohio."
The word "timely" is the
proverbial fly in the ointment
for the plant proposed in
Great Bend in Meigs County.
West Virginia, with it's new
slogan "We're open for business" has at least the appearance of pulling ahead in the
race to be the first to build an
I!JCC plant because of differing political and regulatory
processes in terms of cost
recovery.
' When asked if there was

BY BETH SERGENT
was used b) Frank Pifer, AEP
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM manager of operations and
communications )Nho this
POMEROY- This week a week addressed the Meigs
Chamber
of
delegation from American Cou nty
Electric Power (AEP) walked Commerce along with col·
a fine line between supporting league Jon Buck, AEP managits . proposed .Integrated · er community affairs. Also
GaSificatiOn Combmed Cycle joining the AEP delegation
(IGCC)' clean coal plant , in were Jeff Rennie, AEP
Meigs County and acknowl· spokesperson, and Kathy
edging that ·the compan):"s Mullins, AEP customer secNew Haven, W.Va. IGCC slte vice representative.
may be the first to go online
Buck, who led AEP's predue to the Mountain State's sentation to the chamber said
more "streamlined" approach ·he wanted members to leave
to cost recovery.
the luncheon
knowing ,
The word · "streamlined" "We're (AEP) committed to

anything the people of Me igs
County could do to make the
Great Bend site in Letart
Township more attractive to
AEP, Pifer made the compliment, "I don't think there's
anything you could do. The
only site that scored higher
was the Mountaineer site."
Pifer went on to explain ,
"The biggest issues we face
are the processes we have to
go through in Ohio to get the
project moving .. .it's more
about the political process."
Buck agreed, saying AEP
was already impressed with
the Great Bend site itself and

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

Page AS
• Victor John Morris Jr.
· • Roberta M. Thaxton

- ,•4
• VA data breach will
happen again without drastic reform, investigators say.
See Page A2
• Rove avoids indictment,
keeps focus on White
House political agenda.
See Page A2
• Holzer and Miss
America host Red Hat
Ladies, See Page A3
• Rising oil prices bring
. jobs, higher pay for
engineering grads.
See P.age .AS
. •. Coin de&amp;ler trial delayed
until October. See Page AS
. • 26 militants killed in
eastem Afghanistan;
CQalition prepares southem
offensive. See Page A&amp;
• Bush making Hawaiian
archipelago world's largest
marine sanctuary.
~.~.A,7
, ·,
.
""' .
•)If' ~

Our flag is the symbol of a great nation; in which we enjoy a
multitude of freedoms. The freedom to choose our government.
The freedom to choose where we live.
The freedom to speak our minds.
\_

Display your flag on June 14th, Flag Day, and let everyone
know how proud you are to be an American.
The Shoe Place
lngets Electronics
·orogan Warner
.&amp; Locker 219
· and Jewelry
· Insurance
992~5627

Middle

Ohio

Baum Lumber
985-3301
Chester, Ohio

992-2635.
Midd

992-6687

Pom

Ohio

CROW&amp;CROW

l

'•

992-2155

Pomeroy

Home National Bank
Racine

949-2210

i=Dii
----

: Syracuse ·

992-6533

~

•

•

~.

T eVaughan
Agency · ·
992-9784

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport
1.

'

.....:,.

ATTORNEYS AT LAW
992-6059• Pomeroy, Ohio

Th·e Daily Sentine.l
Fisher-Acree
Funeral Home

Ohio

I

Downing-Childs-MullenMusser Insurance
992-3381
'

Pomeroy, Ohio

Swisher • Lohse

Pharmacy
992-2955

.Po

Ohio

Pome

(F' JJ) Farmers Bank
~ We're Your Bank for Ciftlll
POMEROY
992·2136

GALLIPOLIS
446-2265

TUPPERS PLAIN
• 985-3385

MASON
733-6400

PT. PLEASANT
674-8200

Valley Lumber &amp;Supply
992-6611
Middleport, Ohio

.

Tom Hanks' character
mlght\ie said, "Girls
can't play baseball" in
the film • A League of
Their Own " but he was
soon proved wrong;
just like the girls In
Meigs County have
been proving themselves by playing some
fierce softball lately. A
total of 16 teams that
began playing last
Saturday have now
been dwindled down to
.two that will compete
at 6 p.m. tonight in ·
Pomeroy for the cham·
pionship game .ofThe
Big Bend Pee Wee
Girl's Softball .
Tournament, sponsored by the Pomeroy
Youth League. The
league features girls
ages 10-12. Earlier in
the tournament the
Pomeroy Angels , pictured here. size up the
compe,tition while their
opponent the Chester
Ice gets motivated ·
with a team cheer.

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iNDEX
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, · ~ SdoNS- 16 PAQES

Calendjlrs
... ' .
Glassifieds
,f.
,1

comics

A:3
84-6
B7
I

DearAbby
A:3
, Editorials '
A4
Faith • Values
·ss
Obituaries
As
Sports
B Section
Weather

A6

. © 2006 Ohio Valley.Publlshlilg Co.
. . '~-

l

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'

Chamber encourages new entrepreneurs

...

Ohio

Meigs Locm raises
school lunch prices

Beth Sercent;photoa

' '
.
betana on Pllll" A&amp;

4:37 p.m. on a report of an

un known emergency involving an employee of the power
GALLIA - A Langsville company.
man has died of injuries sufUpon arrival of emergency
fered in an apparent electric personnel , it was determined
line accident in Ga llia that. fr1orris, an employee of
County.'
.
Davis Elliott Electric Co ,
Victor J· Morris Jr., 25, of was working on electric lines
Bowles Road , was pro·
1
d
~
nounced dead ·at Holzer and was e ectrocute . accor,.Medical Center-Jackson after ing to co-workers on scene .
he was transported there from
Bartels said emergency
the scene of the accident, said personnel immediately begin
Jamie Bartels, chief of th~ CPR before he was transport'
Gree~fi el d
. Towns h .tp ed,. Bartels said .
Volunteer Fire Department.
Davis Elliott Electric has
Bartels said t~e fire depart- beeri in the area of Greenfield
ment, along · wnh the Gallla Township for several day s
County Emergency Medical working as a· sub-contractor
Services, responded to the to Buckeye Rural . Electric
area of 977 Kokeen Road &lt;m Cooperative, replacing power
Tuesday at approximately . p6tes, Bartels said.

OBITUARIES

INSIDE
.,. ---- --·

Plene see AEP. AS

Langsville man dies in
electric line accident

A.LEAGUE-OF THEIR OWN

NE14

the local support the compan y
has rece ived fro m Meig s'
political leaders, the Southern
Local School District and
other community leaders.
Buck then assured chamber
members' AEP was working
closely · with the Public
Utitlites Commission of Ohio
(PUCO) which is considering
the company's cost recovery
request.
As reported in last month 's
edition of The Daily Sentinel
the PUCO has approved cost
recovery for the front-end

.

.

which will provide inkjet carBY BETH £ERGENT
BSERGENTiiJMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM tridges and toner for personal
and business computers and
POMEROY
copiers. Barnhart said cusEncouraging business entre- tomers can save I 0 to 40 perpreneurs is a top priority cent on remanufactured, comaccording to Meigs County pa(ible and original manufacChamber of Commerce turer (OEM) cartridges.
President Donald Vaughan
Another service that makes
who addressed the chamber at the neW'·business unique is its
its monthly luncheon this free delivery to all businesses,
week.
· including those in Meigs,
Vaughan was hopeful for Gallia and Mason County,
the local entrepreneurial spirit W.Va.
and encouraged by new busiBarnhart said she believes
ness start up, The Ink Well , in Meigs Count y and
located at 3 18 1/2 North Middleport and flrmly stated,
Second
Avenue
in contrary
· to ·
rumors,
Middleport.
"Middleport is not dying ."
Ink Well owner Brenda
The Inkwell , 992-4465, is
Barnhart addressed the cham- now open from I 0 a.m. to 7
ber, introducing the business p.m., Monday-Friday. and 10

'1

a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays.
Also addressing the cham ber was Diana· Coates from
the Mei gs County Cancer.
Initiative (MCC)) about the
group's upcoming educational sessions on breast cancer
and breast health . Coates also
updated the chamber on
MCCI's rece nt $28.440 Think
Pink grant from the Susan G.
Kernen
Bre ast · Cancer
Foundation to provide free
mammograms to Meigs
County women ages 40-49. •
Upcoming educational sessions include: 7 p.m .. June 14.
Rej oincing Life Church.
Middleport ; 6:30 p.m., June
19. Mary Kay meeting .
Please see Chamber, AS

•i

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
hole, but added that "every
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSE NTINEL . COM doll ar taken OUt for the lunch
·
: progmm, takes away what 's
POM EROY Lunch . avai labl e for ' educational
prices will be highe r. in .a ll purposes."·
three schools of the Meig s As for the student breakLocal School Di strict when fast program the board voted
classes resume 10 late to conti nue it free of cost to
Augu st.
all Students until such time
Action to increase prices as the program is no longer
by 25 cents at Metgs Hi gh self-sustai ning .
The breakfast program,
School and Me1gs M1ddle
School and 15 cent'S at the according to figures providM~tg s
Intermed.1a1e and ed by Buckl ey, show that the
PnmarySc hool was taken by free breakfast program had a
the Me1gs Local Board ~f positive cash· !low for the
Ed~cat10n at Tuesday 111ght s past year. The breakfast promeetmg.
gram .i s mandated by the fedThat takes lun che ~ at the era! government , but the
elementary school fr?m funding is adequate for . the
$ 1.60 to $1.75 · and the hi gh schools to provide breakfasts
.and n_11ddle schools fr?m to everyo ne at no cost to the
$1.75 to $2. Th~ Board district, Buck ley explained.
act1on . als~ prov 1 ~.ed. for
He sa id tl;wt when the profuture mcreases -. th.at .all gram first started, studen ts
student luncl) ~nces at all who did not qualify for free
levels be mcre ased by 25 breakfasts, paid for their
cents each for the 2007-08 selections. "What we fo und
school year; and all student was that only those who ate
lunch pnces reflect to the
. .
·
nearest 25 cents the reim- free parti cipated, and not to
bursement from the Federal many ot them, .becau se of the
Government . Free Lunch sugma. Mak10g 1t free to
Program beginning in the everyone mcreased the (JUr·
·2068-09 school year . and Uc1pauon by students on tree
thereafter."
arid redu ~ed meals wh1ch
The action al so increased resu lted. 10 federal g()vern·
adult lunch price s in the ment retmburscmel:t figures
same amounts at the ·same h1gh enoug h to make It pustimes as student lunch prices. , s1ble for &lt;~I I s.~udents to eat
That raises adult luhch prices breakfas t tree .. , ..
from $2.50 to $2 .7'i for the
The , pa st year s ligures
con1ing school year.
s ho~cd total federal .r:un-.
Last year's figmes fur the burse ment to the d1~tnc 1 ot
sc hool
lun ch
program $174,496 .73. The cos t of
showed a deficit of nearl y ser vth~ breakfas t to all stu$50,000 . , Superintendent dents free ~as $ 133 .464.40 .
Willi am Buckley sa id . "The
Me1g s Htgh.Scho?l.for It s
increase is expected to percentage ot . part1c1pauon
increase revenue by $19.494 111 th e breakfast program
which gets the defi cit going recentl y recetved an award .
in the ri ght direction . The . "Throu gh rearr~ngmg sched·
rai~e in price over the .1ext ule s..
Pnn c1pal Den~1 s
tlnee years will put the di s- Etch1n&amp;er ~as able to gtve
trict near or at what the gov· more tune to .eat10g . breakernment gives us for those last, thereby mcreasmg the
on free lunches."
n;nnbers and
puttmg the
He went on to say th at it ·is high school in a category of
not uncommon for school one pi the h1 ghest levels m
lunch programs to go in the the state," Buckley said.

-.

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