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Page D6 • 6unbap ~tm:H-6tntfntl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipoli~

. Sunday, July 16, 2006

Israel, Hezboilah trade
rocket attacks as
violence flares
in Lebanon, A2

In this photo
provided by
lee Reich,
soon after the
blossoms fade
on your rhododendron'S is
your final
opportunity to
prune them
this year. That
pruning might
entail nothing
more than
snapping
spent flower
stalks off with
your fingers tq
direct a
plant's energy
into growth
rather than
seed production.

50 CENTS • Vol. 5:;, Nn. 2;44

. SPORTS
• Post 128 blasts
· McArthur. See Page 81

YOUR RHODODENDRONS ~ TO
PRUNE OR NOT TO 'PRUNE?
Bv LEE JtEICH

Your last chance to prune
your rhododendron.s this
year comes soon after their
blossoms have faded .
That pruning might entail
nothing more than snappi ng
spent nower stalks off with
your fingers to direct a
plant's energy into grow th
rather than seed production.
Or, you might do something more dramatic: pruning back stems, a good way
to reduce the size of an
overgrown plant.
Ideally, prepare the bush a
year or two before it is to
undergo drastic surgery
with mulch and a ge nerous
supply of moisture and
food. Be careful , though,
because not all rhododendrons will sprout. new
growth from old stubs left
after drastic pruning.
Play it safe by cutting back
no more than a few large
stems any year, then watch
to see if new sprouts appear
within a few weeks. No sign
of new sprouts means no
more drastic cu.tting.
Rhododendrons that do
sprout from older wood also
can be pruned less severely
by
merely
shortening
woody stems as a way to
make them bushier. Such
pruning awakens buds just
"beneath the cuts. These
buds grow out into new
shoots, resulting in two.
three or four shoots where
there was only one stem.
Yet another way to q-.ake a
rhododendron more bushy
- whether or'not it sprouts
readily from old wood - is
by shortening young, growing shootS. '·Except for late-

don' t touch them. The slender buds. in contrast,
become shoots. Three or
more typically cluster at the
tip of a stem, but usually
only the middle one grows.
Pinching out that middle
bud allows two or more of
the others to grow.
Don't get the idea that
. rhododendrons rieed plenty
of pruning .. Young plants do
eventually develop good
form and size without pruning .or removal of spent
flowers, but less quickly.
As for full-grown rhododendrons. choosing the
right plant for the · site
makes drastic pruning ,to
control size unnecessary.

flowerin g rhododendrons,
such as rose bay. these shoots
begin growing around the
time the hlossoms open. Just
pinch back those shouts by a
third to a half their length
with ym)r fingernails. But
don 't wait too long to do so
or the shoots won't have
time to develop .flower buds
for next year.
There was another opportunity. earlier in the season.
10 prune rhododendrons to
make them more bushy.
Let's go back .to early
spring and look closely at
the buds that were then just
swelling. We saw two kinds
of buds. The large , fat ones
open to become blossoms;

'

.~

I

r

l\10N llAY, ,JULY 17, 20IIh

www.mydail)·scntincl.cum

Meigs County Fair tickets go on sale
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'from any Fair Board memHOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM ber or the Sugar Run Flour
Mill.
POMEROY Season
Season' ·tickets may be
and membership tickets for purchased at Baum Lumber
the 2006 Meigs County Fair Co., Chester; Sugar Run
to be held Aug. 14-19 on the Flour
Mill,
Pomeroy;
Rock Springs Fairgrounds Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy,
are now on sale.
Pomeroy;
Gloeckner's
Pomeroy;
The price for season tick- ·Restaurant,
ets which are sold only to Whaley's Grocery, Route
individuals and not to a 681, Darwin ; B&amp; R. Market,
company or or,ganization are Syracuse; Dan's Pomeroy;
$14. The tickets give gate Taz 's Marathon, Route . 7,
admission to the fair, free Pomeroy; Reed's Country
parking all week long, and Store, Reedsville: TNT Pit
entertainment and shows, Stop, Middleport; Farmers
but not amusement rides.
Bank, Tuppers Plains; Hill's
Membership tickets which Citgo, Racine; · Rutland
entitle holders to. admission Department Store, Rutland;
and voti-ng privileges are By the Way Country Store,
$15 and may be purchased Langsville;
Landmark,

Chester; Fanners Bank.
Pomeroy ; ·
Dettwiller.
Pomero)',
Daily admission to the fair
is · $7, Monday through
Saturday. The daily admission tickets include all
entertainment and shows as
well as the amusement rides.
For those holding membership. season, or 4-H tickets, there will be an additional charge for rides -- $5
a day Monday through
Saturday.
As in the past children
under two will be admitted
to the fairgrounds free.
However, if they want io
ride, they must purchase a
ride pass. "As in previous
years Senior Citizen's Day

•.~

will
be ob~erved on
Thursday and ~eniors wi II
be admitted to .the fair,
grounds free until 2 p.m.
Kiddie Day will be on
Wednesday and children 12
and under will be admitted
free until noon and can get a
hand stamp for $5 to ride all
day.
The rides will operate on a
schedule
of
Monday.
Tuesday. Thursday. Friday
and Saturday, I to 4:30 p.m.
and 6 to II p.m.; and on
Wednesday, noon to 5 p.m.
and 6 to II p.l'(l.
Reserved parking in specified areas is being offered
for $25 for the week. The
parking . cost does not
include admission onto the

gro unds. There are also
camping spaces available
for the week at $110 which
includes electric and water.
Spaces can be reserved at
llie secretary 's office on the
Rock Springs fairgrounds on
Saturday, Aug. 6, but cannot
be sponed before noon on
Saturday. Aug. 13.
All open class entries
must be registered at the
secretary's office on Friday
and Saturday, l)ug. 4 and 5.
The office will be Ojli)n from
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. both days.
The deadline for registering
entries is 4 p.m. on Aug. 5.
Season tidets can be · purchased those days or at the
gates anytime during the
fair.

-·"•

.::.·;,:' ~~

·Eastern schools increases
lunch prices; hires personnel
Kuhn, band director, choir,
and hand bell choir director; Rodney Ash, . junibr
REEDSVILLE
high schOol assistant footStudents and staff return- ball coach; Tyler Brown,
mg to school 111 the assistant high school footEastern Local School ball coach ; Cary Hanes,
District tllis fall will see assistant high school footan increase in the amount ball
coach;
Aaron
Schaekel, volunteer assisthey pay for lunches. ·
Action to increase lunch tant high school football
prices was taken at -the coach; Brad Higgins,
·
h. h h 1 f
recent
Eastern · Local
of Educ.atr'on. Of assistant Ig sc oo oatBo •.,rd
•
ball coach: Wes Sanders,
course the increase will . volunteer assistant high '
not affect students recetv- school football coach and
ing Llmches free or at a Linda Faulk. senior 'class
reduced prrce through the • adviwr.
Federal
Free
Lunch
Kimberly Sampson was
Program based on farmly hired as a substitute bus
mcome gurdelmes. It wrll driver for the school year
mclude teachers and other and Faulk was approved as
staff eatrng 111 the cafete- an intervention instructor
na.
for the 2005-06 year.
For
the
students
the
The board voted to
Cha~one Hoenlchfphotos
pnce wtll go from the
·
·h
The traditional sing-along following the Ohio State Harmonica Competition is always a high- $1.50 they paid last year to renew membership wtt
light of Chester Shade Days. Here the contestants gather, including Gene Willoughby of $1. 75 in the coming year. the. Oh~o Coalttron for
Albany, second from left, who took the championship, to play songs for the audience to sing. The increase, according to Equrty and Adequacy of
school spokesperson~ was School_ Fundmg and gave
..
necessary because of the d~prov:II to several studeficit at which the lunch dents tor open enrollment
I or the coming school
program operates.
As for the teachers and year.
The students were Aaron
other ' staff who take cafeRoush.
grade 5, Federal
teria selectinn , each one
McKenzie
will pay a 25 cent Hocking;
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
1,
Federal
Roush
,
grade
increase.
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Hocking.
and
James
During the meeting the
Board hired some person- Russell, grade 10, Meigs
CHESTER - . Despite
nel for the 2006-07 school Local.
Friday's overnight rain
Financial reports were
year.
which turned the Chester
by the board,
approved
Joel
Adam
Pryor
was
Commons into a marsh and
an acceleration
along
with
given
a
one-year
contract
Saturday 's hot' and humid
policy
recommended
for
pending proper certifica- ·
weather, the annual Chestertioll' to teach · math .at t!le the district.
Shade Days went along ·
Next regular meeting
high school.
mostly as planned and with a
Numerous supplemen - will be · held at 6:30 p..m.
good crowd.
tary
contracts were award- Aug. •21 in the library conThe only change was
ed.
These
including Cris ference room.
Saturday night's Civil War
ball. The dance which usual"
ly takes place on the grassy
Commons was moved to the
first floor of the air-conditioned
1823
Chester
Courtholl?e. "Miz Rosebud''
was there to call the dances
for the many who attended in
period attire , ·
Kicking off the festivities
Friday night was a community picnic and concert by the
Riverbend
Community
Band. Saturday several artiCarol
sans
including
McDonough , · a potter,
Marvin White, a broom
maker. and AIan Blackwood
who creates steel-blade
knives of all ' sorts and sizes
were busy demonstrating
their skills.
. The heat didn't deter the
CaiYary .Bible Church from
cooking up a kettle of ·veg·
ctable soup over an open tire,
as one of several groups serv- Danny Russell of Calvary Bible Church stirs the vegetable soup
cooking in a kettle over' an open fire at Chester-Shade Days.
ing food on the Commons.
During the afternoon exhibits of antiques and arti - Marlene Harrison, second,
adults and kids enjoyed a facts.
and Andrew Bisse ll. third .
variety of period games. a
The
day
featured
a
parade
All23 pies entered in the conconcert by members of a
several
contests. test were sold' at the auction
Beth Sorgent/photo
Columbus harmonica club, a and
Winners
in
a
pie
baking
cenbringing in more than $300. Middleport's street paving project got underway Friday. A
commentary on Civil War tea
customs by Sally Gloeckner tes! were Pat Ho-lter. first for a The winners were given contract of $201.424.50 was
. awarded to the Shelly Co. for
blueberry
pic
which
sold
at
the
paving
of
22
streets
and
alleys in the village. Tho;l work
and Carrie Wood, and visits
Please
see
Days,
AS
is being paid for with State Issue money.
to the Courthouse to view an auction later for ·$4'5,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLtCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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• Community Calendar.
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Monday, July 17, 2006

'

ISRAEL, HEZBOLL\H TRADE ~OCKEr ATIACKS
AS VIOLENCE
IN lEBANON
BY HAMZA HENDAWI
LEE KEATH

Foreign •
comparues
buying U.S.
roads, bridges

AND

Bv LESUE Mlu.ER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TERS

BEIRUT. Lebanon Hezbollah and Israel traded
rol:ket and lni~si1e barrages
without letup for a fifth day
Sunday. as the war that has
suddenl y 'flared in the
. Middi'e East -showed no sign
of easing. Hezbollah rocket'
struck deep inside lsrael,
killing eight people in the
nonhern city of Haifa. and
Israel answered with even
more lethal blows across
Lebanon and into the Bekaa
Valley near Syria.
The toll on both sides rose
to at least 178, including
three Lebanese soldiers and
many civilians, as strikes
· continued into Monday. In
addition to the Israeli ·vi'tims at a rail ~epair facility
in Haifa. eight Canadians
vacationing at their family
village in Lebanon died in
an Israeli raid, and a sealaunched missi'le killed at
least nine people at a civil
defense building in the
· southern Lebanese port of
Tyre.
.
Israel warned of massive
retaliation after the Haifa
attack. and accused Iran and
Syria of providing the
weaponry used. Military
officials said the missiles
were more advanced with longer range and heavier warheads - than the
hundreds of rocke'ts the
guerrillas had rained on
northern Israel earlier.
With the violence rising,
foreigners began to flee by
' the hundreds and several
nations drew up plans to get
their citizens out. U.S. planners arrived to organize
evacuation for all')' of the
25.000 Americans trying to
. leave. Italian military tlights
rushed out some 350 people,
mostly Europeans, and two
Marine helicopters ferried
21 U.S. citizens, most with
medical conditions, to
Cyprus.
In the early hours of
Monday, witnesses reported
· that , waves of Israeli
airstrikes had hit the
Lebanese city of Tripoli and
Hezbollah strongholds in
eastern town of Baalbek.
Barrages from gunboats
killed four in a village south
of Beirut. Three Lebanese
: army soldiers were killed
: and seven missing after an
' Israeli airstrike in the fishing
: village of Abdeh in north:·ern most Lebanon.
With violence spiraling.
: world leaders meeting in St.
: Petersburg produced for the
: first time a draft framework
' to end the crisis and a U.N.
: envoy landed in Beirut. The
. Group of Eight most industrialized nations expressed
· concern over "rising civilian
: casualties on all sides" and
: urged both sides to stop their
attacks.
"These extremist elements

WASHINGTON - Roads
.and bridges buiU by U.S. taxp;oyers are starti_ng to be sold
orr. and so far toretgn-owned
companies are doing the buying.

On a single day in June, an
Australian-Spanish partnership paid $1.8 billion to lease ·
·the Indiana Toll Road. An
Austmlian company bought a
99-y.ear lease. on Virginia's
Pt"-'" hontas Parkway, and
Texas ofticials decided to let a
Spanish-Ametican partnership
build and run a toll road from
Austin to Seguin for 50 years.·
Few people know that the
tolls from the U.S. side of the
tunnel between Detroit and
Windsor. Canada, go to a subsidiary of an Australian company - which also owns a
btidge in Alabama.
Some experts welcome the
trend. Robert Poole, transportation director for the conservative tlunk tank .Reason
Foundation, said private
investors can rais'e more
money than· politicians to
build new roads because these
kind of owners are willing to
raise tolls. ·
"They depoliticize the
AP Photo t9lling decision," Poole said.
An Israeli gunner covers his ears as a heavy artillery piece fires at a target in southern Lebanon, near Kiryat Shmona. on Besides, he said, foreign comthe Israel i border, Sunday. Lebanese guerrillas fired a relentless barrage of rockets into Haifa on Sunday, killing eight peo- panies have purchased infraple at a train station and wounding seven others, police said. Israel i Prime Minister Ehud Olmert vowed that there would structure in Europe for years;
only now are U.S. companies
be "far-reaching consequences " for the attack.
be!,~nning to get into the business of ·buying roads and
and those that support them Ministry in Gaza City, and worked their . way through exrected a drawn~out fight bFidges.
cannot be allowed to plunge clouds of smoke rose from the debris gathering pieces even as diplomatic efforts
Gas taxes and user fees
the Middle East into chaos the building, which has been of llesh amid pools of blood. began in earnest.
have
fueled the expansion of
In an initial response soon
[n Beirut, Vijay Nambiar, the nation
and provoke a wider con- hit before.
's highway system.
Hezbollah's leader. Sheik after, warplanes hit · south U.N.
Secretary-General Thousands of miles of roads
tlict," the G-8 leaders said in
a statement. "The extremists Hassan Nasrallah, said that Beirut around Hezbollah 's Kofi Annan 's special politi- built since the 1950s changed . ·
already cal adviser, met the the landscape, accelerating the
must immediately halt their despite the barrage, the headquarters,
guerrillas were "in their full reduced to rubble. In the ).,ebanese prime minister. growth of suburbia and creatattacks."
•
The United Nations. the strength and power" and that southern port of Tyre, an "Enough innocent lives ing a reliance on motor vehiEuropean Union 1\nd Italy their "missile stockpiles are Israeli missile tore of the top have been lost and property cles to move freigh~ get to
of a 12-story building, infrastructure has been dam- work and take vacations.
also pushed ahead with sep- still full ."
·'When
the Zioni~ls killing at least nine. Rescue aged," Nambiar said.
arate efforts Sunday to try to
In
1956, · President
Syria w~rned Qn Sunday Eisenhower pushed to create
behave like there are no workers pulled bodies from
end the lighting.
that any aggresston agamst the interstate highway system
But ·both Israel and rules and no red lines and no the crushed concrete.
Eight
Canadians
of it "will be met with a firm for a different: to move· troops
Hezbollah signaled that their limits to the confrontation, it
attacks would only intensify .is our right to behave in the Lebanese origin, all mem- and direct response whose and tanks and evacuate civilin an already brutal battle same way," .a tired-looking · bers of the same family, timing and methods are ians.
that has killed at least 152 in but defiant Nasrallah said in were killed by an Israeli unlimited." Hundreds of
The Bush administration's
a televised address. He said strike on their village in the cars
Lebanon and 23 in Israel.
drove
through plan to let a foreign company
Israeli Prime Minister Hezbollah hit Haifa because south where they'd come for Damascus on Sunday night manage U.S. ports met a
Ehud Olmert vowed "far- of Israel's strikes on . a summer visit. Canada said with drivers and passengers stonn of protest in February.
it was sending commercial waving
reaching. consequences" for Lebanese civilians.
Syrian
and · But plans to sell or lease hi~h­
Nasrallah tried to rally the ships to evacuate its citi- J:iezbollah flags and honk- ways to companies outside
the
Haifa
attack,
world
around zens.
Hezbollah 's deadliest strike Arab
ing horns.
the United States have not
After nightfall, rsraeli
ever on Israel. The morning Hezbollah, saying the battle
Iran threatened "unimag- met such resistance.
barrage of 20 rockets came was an opportunity to deal missiles destroyed fuel inable damage" to Israel if
John Foote, senior fellow at
after Israeli warplanes Israel a "historic defeat." depots at Beirut's airport. Syria were .attacked, and its. Harvard's Kennedy School of
unleashed their heaviest Iran and . Syria are prime Hezbollah retaliated with supreme leader Ayatollah Government. said the ~ovem­
strikes yet on Beirut,.flatten- supporters of Hezbollah and rock~ts that exploded in the Ali
Khamenei
said ment .can take over a highway
town
of
Afula
and
Hamas,
raising
fears
the
Israeli
ing apartment buildings and
Hezbollah was winning its in an emergency. But he
blowing up a power station sides could be drawn into a Upper Nazareth, showing a fight against Israel and objects to selling roads to
. to cut electricity to swaths of regional war.
longer range than previous would not disarm. !ran's for- raise cash.
.
· the capital.
Still, they denied Israel 's barrages. There were no ~ign minister headed to
But that is just what
The
Israeli
military claim that they had provided immediate reports of casual- Damascus late Sunday for Chicago has done.
talks.
·
warned residents of south advanced missile tcchnolo- ties. ·
Last year, the city sold a
Lebanon In flee . promising gy to Hezbollah.
Another
series
of
The damage in southern 99-year lease on the eighthea\·y retaliation after the
Smoke rose over Haifa airstrikes followed that, hit- Beirut - a teeming Shiite mile Chicago Skyway for
Haifa :L'5atlit. "Nothing will and air raid sirens wailed as ting on the Mediterranean district where Hezbollah:s $1.83 billion. The buyer was
deter us." Olmert &lt;aid:
the deao and wounded were coast near Beirut and in the main headquarters are local~ the same consortium that
Along with the Lebanon evacuated fro'm a train sta- northern port of Tripoli, as ed - was colossal after leased the Indiana Toll Road
attacks. Israel attacked lion warehouse full of work- well as in the eastern town Israel unleashed its worst - MacqLmrie · lnfraS\111Cture
along the second front ers that took a direct hit in of Baalbek, police and wit- bombardment yet, before Group of Sydney, Australia,
where !srael is fightin g. in the strike, just one hour into nesses said. At least four the ·Haifa strike. A series of and Cintra Concesiones de
Gaza. Fighter jets bombed the new work week. people were killed.
18 explosions rocked the !nfraestructuras de Transpone
the Palestinian Foreign Orthodox rescue crews
of Madrid, Spwn.
.
Western nations clearly city before sunrise.

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...

·~ In the Daily Sentinel
A Special supplement to hfghlight babies,
Your Baby's Name Here Ages newborn to four years old.
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be published
.July 27

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Deadline for submission,
Friday, July 20

The Daily
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1U Court St. Pomeroy, OH

BYTHEBEND

The Oaily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, July 17
POMEROY .- Special
meeting of the Meigs
County
Agricultural
Society, 7:30 p.m. in the
Coonhunters Building for
the purpose of ffHal·preparations for the fair and other
business.

Virginia. Guests are welcome.
CHESTER
Past
Concilors Club of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Masonic hall.
Potluck refreshments.

.Reunions
Sunday, Julyo22
ALBANY - A reunion
of the descendant s of Jo-e l
and Lydia Staneart will be
held at Lake Snowden in
the Big Oak shelter hou se.
Albany, at noon . Each fami ly is to take a picnic lunch
and lawn -chairs. For more
informatoin call 992-5502.

Thesday, July 18
. POMEROY Meig s
County Board of Elections
will meet in regular session
at 8:30a.m.
POMEROY
Pulic
meeting of the Leading
Creek Watershed . Group
will be held at 5:30 ptm. at
the Pomeroy Library. D.
Michael Worley will talk on
Bluebirds
of
Ohio.
Discussion of projects of
Monday, July 17
the
Leading
Creek ·
SYRACUSE
Bill
Watershed including acid ·
Hubbard
Little
League
mine drainage abatement
and treatment plan . Potluck Tournament, Syracuse · ball
meal ii1cluded. Take a cov- field.
ered dish. RSVP requested
Friday, July 21
at 740-992-4282.
RACINE
Parents
meeting for all Southern
High School football players, 7 p.m. , high school
football field.

Youth events .

Club and
organizations

Monday, July 17
ATHENS - Southeast
Oho Woodland Interest
Group 7 p.m. at the Athens
County extension Office,
with Dr. Mike Tatro, an
emergency room dtrauma
physician
at
Marietta
Memorial Hospital to give
program on emergency
issues and first aid treatments in the woods. For
more information, call 5938555.
Thesday, July 18
M!DDLEPORT
Brooks-Grant Camp, Sons
of Union Veterans of the
Civil War, and the Major
Daniel McCook Circle
Ladies of the Grand Army
of the Republic, will meet at
7:30p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Temple building.
The program is on Civil
War in South western Wesi

· Church events
Wednesday, July 19 '
COOLVILLE
In te rdenom ina tiona!
Holiness Camp Meeting
through July 23 at the
Coolville campigrounds.
Rev. Tom Bell, evangelist,
William and Naomi Tillis,
song evangelists, and Terry
and Karen Duncan. missiionary speakers July 20.
Services , 7 p.m. each
evening, ring meeting 6:30
p.m. each evening; Sunday
services, 11 a.m and 7 p.m.
Monday, July 17
TUPPERS PLAINS
Vacation Bible school at St.
Paul United Methodist
Church, July 17-20. 6 to'
8:30p.m. Ages kindergarten
and up. Parents and grandparents invited to attend.

•

Other events

Birthdays

Thes!lay, July 18
POMEROY
Bill
Matlack will observe his
90th birthday .on July 18.
Cards mav be sent to him at
34784 State Route 7,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.
Thursday, July 20
POMEROY - Rowena
Vaughan of Pomeroy will
observe her 90th birthday
on July 20. Cards may be
sent to her at P: 0. Box 249,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 . .

BY BE1H SERGENI'

Monday, July 17, 2006

sia, and most of them only
make you talkative and
amnestic. [don't know of' a
single one that is guaranteed to produce the truth . [
hope the woman who might
be gelling a divorce due to
her hu sband's response
reads this. - PAT !N MARSHALLTOWN, IOWA .
DEAR ABBY: It is my
experience that much of the
public refer to anyone wearing scrubs as a nurse. In
fact, many other employees
in health care wear scrubs,
including lab techs. nursing
aides and assistants, orderlies, housekeepers and unit
secretaries. Assuming you
are interacting with a nurse
when. in fact , you aren't in
a health care setting can
lead to consequences ranging from annoying to downright dangerous.
.
There was no excuse for
· any employee 'in health care
to
have
made such
appalling
comments .
Especially in this age of
overburdened health care
workers and crowded hospitals. it is imperative that
the public know with whom
they are speaking, questioning, or taking instructions
from in a medical setting 1
- AN R.N. IN EUGENE,
ORE .

Dear
Abby

pletely incapable of lying,"
the police would be giving
this as a test instead of polygraphs, neither of which are
admissible in court as reliable indicators to convict
someone. Other evidence is
needed. - JUANITA ' IN
MELBOURNE, FLA . .
DEAR ABBY: My husband had a colonoscopy,
and when [ met him in the
recovery 'room he was still
"under the influence."
When I asked him ho.w it
went in there, he responded,
"Well, we had Earth, Wind
and Fire in there, and we
were dancing all .over the
place." I replied. "I lind that
hard to believe, honey," ani!
he said, "1 won the dance
Contest!"
·
I would advise that wife
not to believe what others
say while coming out Of
anesthesia. - CINDY IN
. ANN ARBOR, MICH.
DEAR ABBY: Since I
Dear Abby is written by
have been giving anesthesia Abigail Van Buren, , also.
for more than 30 years, I kiwwn as Jeanne Phillips,
feel somewhat qualified to and was founded by her
comment on the nurse's mother. Pauline Phillips.
statement that "It 's impossi- Wrice Dear Abby at
ble to lie under anesthesia." www.DewAbbv.com PO.
There are many classes of ·Box 69440. Los Angeles,
drugs given during anesthe- CA 90069.

or

Grange elects officers .
SALEM CENTER Activitie'S, Janet Morris;
Jan
Macomber;
Officers were elected at the Deaf,
recent meeting of Star Historian, Vicki Smith;
Grange 778 held at the hall Legislative, Carl Morris ;
with Master Patty Dyer pre- Youth, Rick Macomber;
siding.
Junior,
Linda
Elected were Master, Mojltgomeroy; Community
Patty Dyer; Overseer, Larry Service, . Jan Macomber;
Mongomeroy;
Steward, Membership,
Carolyn
Tom Bart ley; Assistant Chapman.
.
Steward, Rick Macomber;
A special guest to the
Lady Assistant Steward, meeting was Norma Torres
Maxine Dyer; Chaplain, of the Meigs County Cancer
John Chapman;· Treasurer, Initiative's Think Pink
Avanel Holliday; Secretary, Program. She discussed
Opal Dyer; Gatekeeper, Jim breast self exams and used
Chapman; Ceres, Janet a model to demonstrate the
Morris; Pomona, Bernice technique.
Midkiff; Flora, Martha
Dyer reported that the
Bartley;
Executive Meigs County Fairboard
Committee, Carl Morris.
was to have constructed the
Master Dyer appointed · organization's fair display
the following committee booths recently. A donation
chairpersons:
Women's was made to the Ohio

Circle discusses fall activities
'

Beth Sergenl/photo

Pleasant Valley Hospital Phlebotomist Leanna Gibbs prepares to draw blood from Rita Buckley at the Meigs County
Senior Center. PVH is bringing its lab on the road to Meigs
County from 9-11 a.m., every other Thursday at the center.
several years now.
"We
consider
Meigs
County to be a primary Service
area and we're actively looking
for other opportunities to provide more services," Fleck
said, explaining this inciLtdeJ
looking at other space tor phys-

ical therapy services which are
currently offered at the
Middlepon tlinic.
~hlebotomist Leanna Gibbs
will be perfonning the services
evety other Thursday at the
Meigs Senior Center.

RACO.discusses scholarship fund
donated $200 to the July 4
entertainment and sponsored the . frog jump. Also
discussed at the meeting
was an appreciation ' plaqu ~
which will be presented to
the Ravenswood, ·W.Va.
Foodland for their contributions to RACO . The food
drive was recently held and
all contributions were given
to the Meigs Cooperative
Parish. lt was noted that
new rest rooms are planned
for the park. A report ws
given on the spring yard
sale an the flower festival
and schedules planned for

•

•

DEAR ABBY: I just fin ished
reading the letter
Theme is Treasure island.
the husband who,
regarding
RUTLAND - Vacation
Bible School will be held at while coming out of an~s­
the
Rutland Nazarene · thesia, "confessed" to
Church, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. cheating on his wife.
You were dead on when
July 17-20. Family Fun Fest
6 to 8 p.m. on July 21. -For you said, "People babble all
more information call 742- sorts of nonsense when
· coming out of anesthesia."
2202.
·
RACINE
Racine Some of it may be true, but
United Methodist Church most of the time it is not! I
will have vacation Bible know from experience.
When I had ~ee surgery,
school July 17-21 from 6to
I
later
learned that while I
. 9 p.m. Them is "The
Incredible Race." The Bible was in recovery I told the
school is open to preschool- nurse I hoped Meredith
wouldn't see me. as I
ers thorugh sixth grade.
looked horrible. When
asked who Meredith was, I
Sunday, July 23
said
she was my wife. Abby,
M!DDLEPORT- Kevin
I
was
14 years old at the
Spencer and Friends will be
time!
in concert at 6:30 p.m. at
I hope that the wife in that
the
Hobson Christian
letter
realizes that maybe
Fellowship Church, located
her
husband's
confession
south of Middleport on ·
was
just
the
result
of being
Route 7.
in a completely , different
world. And hopefull,y, the
husband's alleged mistress
is only as real as my supThesday, July 18
posed "wife" was. - GREPOMEROY - A tea with GQRY B., CINCINNATI
Fran DeWine will be held
DEAR GREGORY B.:
from 2 to 2:50 p.m. at the Thank you for sharing your
Wildhorse Cafe. She will be · experience. Believe it or
giving out cookbooks.
not, I got a rash of mail
. from people telling me I
Saturday, July 22
should not pave printed that
HARRISONVILLE ~ letter because it would deter
The third annual men's soft- people from having necesball tournament hosted by sary medical procedures
the Harrisonville Youth . that require an anesthetic!
League will be held July 22 What the hospital worker
and 23. learns must be reg- had actual! y done was share
istered by July 20 by calling an old wives' tale. Read on:
748-742-2623 or 740-698DEAR ABBY: If it were
2804.
true that "people coming
out of anesthesia are com-

BSERGENf@MYOAILYSENllNEL.COM

RACTNE - The Racine
Area
Community
Organization's scholarship
program and the benefit
fund raisers including the
Sept. 9 Hill's Classic
Car/Home .National Bank
Saturday Night Crusin ' Car
Show were discussed at the
group's recent meeting.
Read at the meeting
were thank you notes frbm
recent scholarship recipients, Brad Crouch, Amber
Holsinger, Selena Spencer
and from the University of
Rio Grande for John Bentz.
!t was noted that RACO

PageA3

Anesthesia is not a truth serum- and that's no lie.'

Bringing the lab to the people
POMEROY -Getting lab
work done can often be a
tedious but necessary part of
. life, especially for those on several medications or with other
chronic health problems but
now for patients of Pleasant
Valley Hospital the lab is coming to them.
From 9 a.m. 'lo 11 a.m.
every other Thursday a phlebotomist from Pleasant Valley
Hospital will be at the Meigs
County Senior Center ready to
draw blood, saving the client
from driving to Point Pleasan~
W.Va. 1be next visit from the
phlebotomist will be on .July
27.
''We thought this might help
the community as far as -making health care more accessible
in the area," Jeff Fleck, business development coordinator
for PVH said. "For some people transportation can be an
issue and its convenient to have
lab work done. here.''
·Fleck said in order to have
the lab work done a person
must have a.doctor's order and
bring their insurance card with
them. This service is not just
for seniors but anyone needing
. lab work done at PVH.
"Health care has to be made
easy," Fleck said of the mobile
lab.
Health care made ea~y is not
. a concept to most people in
· Meigs County who' have been
·· existing without a hospital for ·

.

•

handling the gates at the
fair. The conversation also
included a discussion abolll
American MunicijJal Power
being supportive of RACO.
Libby Fisher gave the
blessing before the potluck
meal, President Kathryn
hart presided over the
meeting. Lillian Weese
gave the secretary's report
and ·Ann Zirkle the treasurer's report, and the meeting
closed with Dave Zirkle
leading in the llag pledge.
Nonna Torres will attend
the next meeting to discuss
the Think Pink Project

RACINE - Fall activities
were discussed and it was
decided during a recent meeting of the' Bethany-Dorcas
Sonshine Circle that the group
would enter a float in the Sept.
9 Racine Fall Festival.
It wa5 also decided that a
booth would be set up at the
festival with baked goods and
possibly homemade noodles
to be sold, Other fund raising
projects were also discussed.
Judy Gilmore opened the
meeting with devotions and
prayer, Kathryn Hart.led in the
pledge to the flag, and Betty
Proffitt and Evelyn Foreman
gave a program centering on
the July 4 holiday and including patriotic readings.
The next meeting will be 7
p.m. Aug. 10 at the church
with · guest speaker Norma
Torres discussing breast cancer awareness.
Refreshments were served

Local
Weather
Monday ... Patchy dense
fog in the morning.
Mostly sunny. Hot with
highs in the mid 90s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph .
Monday night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
60s.: Southwest winds
arounq 5 mph.
Thesday ... Mostly "sunny.
Hot. Humid with highs in
the mid 90s. South winds
around 5 mph.
Thesday night through
Friday ... Mostly
clear.
Hot. Lows arpund 70 .
Highs in the lower 90s.
Frjday
night
and
Saturday ... Partly cloudy .
Hot. Lows around 70 .
Highs in the mid 90s.

.

after the program. Those
attending were Martha Lou
Beegle, Mattie Beegle, Mabel
Brace, Julia Campbell, Julie
Campbell, Evelyn Foreman,
Judy Gilmore, Kathryn · Hart,
Lillian Hayman, Nondus
Hendricks, Edie Hubbard,
Hazel McKelvey. Betty
Proffitt,
Letha
Proffitt,
Blondena Rainer, Ruth Smith.
Holly Stump, Sheila Theiss.
and Jackie White.

Charitable .
Grange
Foundation for the Junior
Grange Department. Food
items were collected for the
Meigs County Cooperative
Parish Food Bank.
Carl Morris. legislative
agent, reported on the
recent vote for the protection of the American Flag.
It failed by one vote. He
also reported on work being
done on the Social Security
Trust Fund.
Janet Morris, women's
activities
chairperson
rer.orted that craft judging
Will be held at the Aug. 5
meeting
Members were reminded
to write down their community service hours so the
report can be completed and
sent to the state for judging.

Keeping
Meigs'
County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscr1be today
992·2155

RAVENSWOOD .
CHIROPRACTIC .CENTER
L\. Kely L PieS ~id~

( 'lm• •rr&lt;KI&lt;lr of the ~ca r

CHIROPRAOOR

IWR

/l. l ~rnl'&gt;.-r i• l \ m~fl&lt;an

Auto Accidents
Worker's Compensation
• Sports Injuries
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316 Washington St

MID-VALLEY

HRISTIAN SCHOOL

Middleport, Ohio
is offering a Summer Reading Program for
Students entering 1st, 2nd &amp; 3rd grades.
This is a Phonetic based reading program,
teaching children to read by sounding out
words. A 10 day program with class times
8:30 am • 11 :30am ,
July 24th • Alig1.1st 4th
Cost $200.00
Please register by July 18th
Class is limited to 10 students .

740-992-6249

�....

'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene HQeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Cor~gress

slra/1 make 110 law respecti11g an
establislwrent l!f" religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise therel!f; or abridging the freedom of
speeclr, or of the press; or tl1e right of the people peaceablJ• to assemble, and to petition the
.Governmmt for a redres.1 of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Tolerance
Son~£ seems to

Pagei\4

be needed ·

Dear Editor: ·
In the July I I cui lion of The Daily Sentinel, one of the
"protesters": comm~nt&gt; at the Pomeroy council meeting
slated thai urillkillg u11 Bourbon Street (New Orleans) had
given a home to one of the "biggest homosexual and lesbian movcmcms in the country."
·
The ·protester who voiced this should study a little bit
about gay anu lesbian history. We live in communities
across the United States not because drinking is allowed in
the strcers. but because we tire made lo feel welcome, safe.
and. we, despite what he may think, are active and vocal in
the communities in which we choose to live. Gay men and
lesbians uo nul uecide where they are going to live based
on whether or not we can drink in the streets. And we cerwinly do not view Olll'~elves ns part of the "problem" needing to be fixed ·
When my partner and I moved ba&lt;.:k to Meigs County
(our place of origin) afrer a 20-plus year absence, it was
with pleasure we di scovered the welcoming arms of neighbors. churche~ and businesses. We are both active in• the
community and drinking on 111e Pomeroy parking lot had
nothing to do with our decision to move back home. Being
closer to family was the deciding factor.
Whether he likes it or not. we are, as the old saying goes:
Everywhere. Even Meigs Cnunry. And the economy of
Meigs County would thrive if. indeed, a gay and lesbian
mciv.emenl did erupt here for this is who we are: Taxpayers,
consumers. worshipers, law-abiding citizens, and loyal
friends to !hose who treat us with dignity and respect.
Jim Brewer and Dale Rij]le
Middleport

Monday, July 17,

2006

Connecting the dots on Islam
I was supposed to go to
New York City this week,
and found myself making
travel arrangements on
7/II, the latest blood-red
letter day of jihadist infamy.
That was when bombers
struck in Bombay, killing
more .than 200 and wounding more than 700 rushhour commuters just trying
to gd home for dinner. I
decided to tly.
But was that !he best
(read: safest) way to go?
The plot to blow up
Manhattan's
Holland
Tunnel had this same week
been "disrupted," as they
say, so maybe driving a car
before another plot was
cooked up was the berter
bet. But since not even the
Department of Homeland
Security could "disrupt" the
heavy traffic on the New
Jersey Turnpike, l still
decided to fly.
Then again, aviation news
was hardly confidencebuilding. The HousTon
Chronicle reported that a
man with "a Middfe Eastern
name" and, as one. airport
screener put it, "all the com.ponents" of a· bomb except
for the explosives (~ 9-volt
battery taped to an alarm
clock, a copy of the Koran,
and "gutted out" shoes) was
somehow cleared to fly the
friendly skies by a local
policeman. Which sounds
quite nuts ... And while the
cop involved has been
transferred to a desk job,
that's no relief.
·
That's because this is jus!

Diana
West

life as we know it, and,
worse, life as we expect to
know it in America, land of
the free and stomping
ground of the Islamic terrorist. Frankly, 1 hardly recognize the old place. The
"home of the brave"
becomes something else
again when "brave" necessarily constitutes booking
that domestic flight, taking
that commuter train and sitting like ·ducks wondering
whether we'll reach our
destination in one piece unlike hundreds of innocents in Bombay. An Indian
railway laborer made the
carnage vivid to · the
Washington Post: "We collected scattered limbs with
our own hands and put them
in bundles and sent them to
hospital."
Noting the ensuing secu. rity upsurge ·in American
cities, Islamic expert Robert
Spencer wrote the following
at his must-read Web site,
JihadWatch.org:
"This is the effect of terror, and this is just what the
terrorists want that effect to
be. It ties up their enemies'
time and money, and it
strikes fear in their hearts, in

accordance
with
the
Qur'an: 'Against them
make ready your strength to
the utmost of your power,
including sreeds of war, to
slri ke terror in to (the hearts
ot) .the enemies, of Allah
and your enemies, and others besides, whom ye may
not know, but whom Allah
doth know. Whatever ye
shall spend in rhe cause of
Allah, shall be repaid unto
you, and ye shall not be
treated unjustly (8:60). "'
Spencer continued: "Of
course, from the infidels'
standpoint all anti-terror
measures must be undertaken. But they should be
accompanied by a strength
of will that realizes that it is
precisely · fear and the loss
·of the will to resi~t that the
jihadists are ultimately hoping to bring about."
He's right. The will to
resist is indeed the target of
jihadists rrom India to
Israel, from New York City
ro London. But, as Spencer
would undoubtedly agree,
security measures alone walking through metal
detectors (in our socks),
submitting our belongings
to random searches- don't
constitute policy. They
don't solve the problem of
global jihad: the war of terrorism. At best, securiry
measures thwart acts of terrorism - and thank goodness- but only for another
day, another trip, another
short hop home .
Besides the will to resist,
then, we need the know I-

edge to r.esist- the knowledge that there is in the religion of Islam itself the historical, inexorable and dri· ving fo,rce behind what the
entire non-Muslim world is
now experiencing as jihad
terror.
Whether
most
Muslims wouldn't hurt a fly
is an increasingly irrelevant
footnote to the hostile
aggression
of
other
Muslims who, in a very
short time, have actually
transformed civilization as
we used to know it.
If the will to resist allows
us to manage the threat of
violence. the will to connect
the dots would compel us ro
eliminate it. How? By carefully examining and, 1
would hope. reconsidering
and rev.ersing, through foreign, domestic and immigration initiatives, what
should now be seen. gimlet-·
eyed, as the Islamization of
the non,lslamic world. Such·
an assessment, however, is
all too vulnerable to catcallattacks of "bigotry." even
"Nazism" - a deceptively
inverted assault given - the
doctrinal bigotry and similarities to Nazism historically promulgated by the
Islamic creed.
But it's something to
think about this summer on a vacatio11 trip.
(Diana West is a columnist
for The Washington Times.
She can be contacted via
dianmve st@ veri zon.net.)

A

signed. ami incltu/,, oddi.Y\'S ond tf!!ef'llune number. No

postage paid at Pomeroy.

992 -2156.

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MEIGS COUNTY 4-H NEWS

Patrida Johnston

GALLIPOLIS - Patricia Ann Finch Johnston 74
~alii polis, died Saturday, July IS. 2006 at her residen~e.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Ralph J.
Johnston.
,
Funeral services will be held ar ll a.m. Wednesday, July
19, 111 rhe Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. Pastor Paul
Voss will officiate. Burial will be in the Centenary
Cemetery, Greeu Township. Gallia County, Friends may
call from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.

George Winfield Brickles II

through Su~ .111d George
Mora's gardc ;" for her gardening project and will give
her gardening demonstration
at the end of the tour.
Members of the club arc
Hannah Hill, Haley Hill ,
Marcus
Hill,
Britney
Morrri son, Paul Morrison,
Timothy Elam. Eric Pierce.
Eric Klein. Meredith Gaul,
Kelsey
Myers,
Haley
Aancstad, ,Logan Grate,
0' Bryant
and
Brooke
Andrew O'Bryant. ·
Meredith Gaul, News
Reporter

Silver Spurs ·
~H Club
The Silver Spurs 4-H club
learned basic horse safety
practices at a recent meeting
held at Racine United
Methodist Church with fifteen members present.
Upcoming horse shows were
discussed for interested
members. Changing the
club shirt color was mentioned, hut no d"cision was
made.
Members were reminded
ro take their project bi&gt;oks
and a school photo f&lt;•r fair
·passes.
Miranda
McKelvey,
News Reporter

Pam Buckley. Advisor

Lakeside Leaders
4-H Club

George Winfield Brickles H. 87. Crystal Lake. Illinois.
formerly of Pomeroy, died July 14, 2006, in Memorial
Medical Cemer in Woodstock, Ill. He was born in Pomeroy
May 17, 1919. son of the late Clyde Elfonso and Faye
McMurry Brickles.
He was a 1937 Gniduatc o.f Pomeroy High School. Mr
~H
Bnckles served as a medocal tech 409 in the 200
70th Combat Engineer Battalion in the United States Army
Selling of fire extinguishfor 31/2 years during WW!I fighting in the European theers
and firsr aid kit s and
ater. In Ius early years he worked for Hunt Cannery in
ideas for !he fair b.ooth were
California, delivered milk and was a crane operator at the
discussed
at the recent meetVanadium Plant in New f(aven. In the 1970s he moved to
ing
of
the
Whiz Kidz 4H
Crystal Lake and was a drill washer for Precision Twist and
Club.
Drill and in 1983 after some health problems he started
A crafr with food was carProject updates andjudgdelivering bulk papers for the Courier News in Elgin, Ill. ried out at a recent meeting
ing
were discussed. Cassie
before retiring.
of !he Shining Stars 4-H Hauber gave a health report
In addition to his parents. he was preceded in death by a Club held at the Chester Fire
son, Allan Ray Brickles; a granddaughter. Janelle Brickles; House. The food was M &amp; on wearing seat belts and
a grandson, George Winfield Brickles IV; two sisters, Ms. raiSins, sprinkles. Daniel Buckley gave a report
on Conservation Camp.
Jennie Sue and Leatha lrine.
Hershey Kisses, peanut but•
Reports were given by:
Surviving are children, Ellen Elaine (Lonr~ie) Justice of ter, licorice, and celery. The
Cassie Hauber on Becoming
Crystal Lake, ~o~ce Ann (Robert) Romines of Middleport, club made edible "bugs".
Moneywisc; Tyler Lee on a
and George· Wmfoeld (S.uzy) Brickles lil of Pomeroy; eighr
Cookies and drinks were Leadership project; Laura
grandchildren; I 0 great grandchildren; two brothers, provided by Bethany Gaul,
Bailey on You·re the Chef;
Richard and Clyde; and a sister, Eva Jean.
Paula Morrison and Penny Cheyenne D 0czi on Raising·
Services will be II a.m. on Wednesday, July 19, 2006, at Elam.
Fancy Poultry and Ethan
the Middleport chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Layne
At the July 2 meeting, the Steger on Fishing for the
Daniels officiating. Burial will follow in Miles cemetery in
Rutland. Friends may call on Tuesday evening from 6-8 club members talked about B&amp;ginner.
projects and the fair booth.
Amanda
Eason
and
p.m. at the funeral home.
Kelsey
Myers
gave
a
demonAndrea
Buckley
served
Online condolences may be senr to www.fisherfuneralstration on sewing. She refreshments.
Members
·
homes.com.
explained to the club how to were reminded to take picsew certain stiTches and tures for their fair passes and
showed her sewing utensils. the fundraiser order forms
It was noted that Meredith and money to the next meetGaul has arranged a tour ing.

Whiz Kidz
Club

The Shining
Stars 4-H Club

Local Briefs

POMEROY - Fran De Wine, wife of U.S. Senator Mike
De Wine, will be in . Meigs County from 2:30 to 3:15 p.m.
Tuesday visiting with local officials at the Wild Horse
Cafe . She is Touring the state meeting with voters and personally handing out copies of her "Family Favorites" cookbook. Senator De Wine is running for re-election to a third
term in the U. S. Senate.

Striking steelworkers
approve contract .

ALL BUSINESS: History shows Fed pause won)t help stocks
Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

The Daily Sentinel

in a story, ca ll the newsroom at (740)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

The Lakeside Leaders 4H Club mer on June II. 2006
ar the Bellville Locks and
Dam Shelter House with 15
members, one advisor and
nine visitors present.
Business discussed was:
project update ; camping at
Forked run was finalized;
judging date s and requirements were discussed and
the informaTion on the
Live-rock Clinic was provided.
Demonstrations
were
given by: Rebecca Chadwell
on "Fru it Kabobs"; Baylee
Collins on "How to Clean.
Slice, Dice anu Shred
Carrots"; Janae Boyes on
"Creating an Illusion with
De.sig ns in Fabric s" and
Mallory Nicodemus on
"Wilbur the Per Rahhit ".
The Collins. Pullins and
Davis families provided
refreshments. Ar the June 25
meeting, als.o held at the
Bellville Locks and Dams
shelter house, there was dis~
cussion on project updates,
upcoming events and dates.
and lloat and booth work.
Demonstrations
were
given by: Kayla Hawthorne
on "Clothing": Brianna
Ayres on "Pigs"; Nicole
Moodispaugh on "Carmel.
My Fair Goat" ; Breanna
Hayman
on
"Banana
Pudding and Homemade
Egg Noodles"; Benjamin
Ayres on "My Fair Steer" ;
Abby Collins on "The Food
Guide Pyramid"; Dakota

follow a more nightmarish
path al'ter the Fed pauses a
rate-raising cycle.
Of course, looking in the
rearview mirror might not
accurately predict what's to
come, but it should alert
investors that they can't
count on the market changing its troubled ·course all
that fast.
The Fed · has been boosting borrowing costs since
June 2004, pushing up the
overnight bank lending rate
- also known as the federal funds rate- to 5.25 percent in 17 quarrer-poinr
steps.
There is growing hope on
Wall Street that the Fed
could almost be done,
which is why all eyes are on
the outcome of the central
bank's policy-making committee meeting on Aug. 8.
Higher rates tend to spook
investors because they
increase corporate borrowing costs, which can eat inro
p,rofirs us well as slow the

economy. They also make
other investments, like
bonds, more attractive and
boost returns for savers.
But this time around there
·is more to investors' concerns. Worries abound over
whether the Fed has "overshot" the necessary rateraising range by slowing the .
economy too much· to combat growing inflationary
pressures, potentially pushmg it into a recession in the
coming year.
Economists note that
while the Fed has been
tightening, yields on mosr
long-term U.S . Treasury
securities have fallen below
those of the funds rate, creating what is known as the
"inverted yield curve." The
2-year note now yields 5.17
percent, the 5-year is ar 5.07
percent, the I0-year yield is
5.10 percent and the 30year is 5.14 percent.
Recent history suggesTs
bad thin~s happen when
that occurs.The whole curve
has inverted four times in
the last 25 years - in
March 2000, August 1998,
January • 1989 .and January
1982. In' each case, the
inversion preceded either a
downturn 1n the economy. a
major financial strain or
both, according to Merrill
Lynch .
All this has unnerved
· investors in recenT 'months,
sending major stock marker
indices down from their .

.. ......

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highest levels in nearly five tors that outperformed the
years. Since mid-May, the S&amp;P 500 during the plateau
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 period in between r&lt;jte
index and Dow Jones indus- cycles over the last 35
trial average have lost6 per- years. His results: health
cenT apiece. ·
care stocks outperformed 76
That's why - investors percent of the time, conseem to be hanging their sumer staples outperformed
hopes on a pause in the 66 percent 0f rhe time and
Fed's rate moves. But look- telecom services outpering back at the seven times formed 63 percent of the
since 1971 that the Fed time.
raised interest rates more
David Rosenberg, Merrill
rhan once during a tighten- Lynch's
chief
North
ing cycle. the S&amp;P 500 fell American economist, favors
on average 2.1 percent some contrarian thinking.
between the time rhe Fed He suggests that investors
paused and then began cut- take a look at the winners
ting rates again. That gap and losers from 2003 when·
typically lasts six to seven
the Fed finished its rate-easmonths on avera~e. accord- ing cycle by pushing rhe fed
ing to S&amp;P chief mvestment
funds rate down to I percent
strategist Sam Stovall.
"Should hisTory repeat in its anempt to fight defla-itself, and there's no guar- tion. Investors should· play
antee it will, substantial the opposite today, he says.
For instance, in 2003 conequity price appreciaTion in
sumer
discretionary. techthe period ahead might be
nology
and energy stock&gt;
difficult ro justify" during
the plateau period between outperformed, as did smallthe Fed's rare cycles, cap shares, while defensive
shares like telecom and
Stovall said.
Still , this doesn't mean health care lagged behind.
Of course. the sr.ock marinvestors should run from
ket
is unpredictable. If it
srocks. The key ro the
months ahead, according to followed the same historical
the experts, is ro take a path, there wouldn't be
defensive stance and focus much money to be made.
on stocks that generally do But at least the past helps
well in an uncertain. and map out a potential course.
(Rachel Beck is the
potentially economically
difficult, environment.
national business cnlumnisr
That's where another his- fvr The Associmed Pre.&lt;s.
tory lesson might help .. •
Write
to
Ita
·at
Srovalllooked for the sec· .rbeck( at )avorg)

-

HANNIBAL (AP) - A . year, and has since sold a
union representing workers at rolling mill where aluminum
a southeast Ohio mill owned is rolled into sheets to
by aluminum maker Ormet Beachwood,
Ohio-based
Corp. approved a contract late Aleris International Inc.
Sunday, ending a year-and-a- About 350 . workers were
half strike.
employed at that plant, also in
Terms of the contract were Hannibal.
not immediately announced.
Union members have not
The company, based in worked at Orrnet's plants in
Canonsburg, Pa., said when Hannibal, along the Ohio
the tentative agreement was River, since Nov. 22, 2004.
reached last month that the They voted to strike four days
contract incl11ded a signing before that, but a judge later
bonus, raises and protit shar- ruled that . their acrion was
ing, and would expire in actually a lockout and work2~~ deal covers workers ers coul.d get unemployment
from an aluminum reduction part the time of the strike,
facility in Hannibal. about 115 Orrnet said it wanred to save
nules east of Columbus along. $23 million by freezing penthe Ohoo-West Vorgmoa lone.
·
be fi
· .·
Onner still needs to negoti- .. soon
ne ots, raosmg health
ate a new deal for electricity msur-.mce costs for workers
service similar to .what other and retore~s and chanl\mg
' · industrial users have in the rul~s for JOb and overtome
region before the company assignments.
can restart the reduction facilT~e ~mon had propose~
ity, which turned ore into alu- elrnunaung 3()0 of the .plants
minum for processing, the 1,~20 JObs, rmsmg the compa·
union said.
ny s health care d~ucl1bl~
"Om! major hurdle has been and freezmg ots pensoon plan
taken care or The next hurdle in favor of conTributions to the
is to get this smelter reduction United Steelworkers plan. ·
plant back up and running,"
After the worker~ went on
said Jim Markus, vice presi- strike, groups of protesters
dent of United Steelworkers were arrested twoce, and sher·
Local 5724, which represents iffs deputies said som~ had .
about 850 workers.
knives, baseball bats and
. A message seeking com- other weapons. Seventeen
menr from an Orrnet spokes- striking workers were arrestwoman was lefr Sunday night.' ed, and an aluminum contracOrmet - emerged !rom tor was accused· of pointing a
.Chapter II bankruptcy · last loaded shotgun at strikers.

Days
from PageA1
prizes , first, second and
third respecTively, $20, $15,
and $10.
Pet show winners were
Wade Harrison with "Abe,"
a black lab, with both second and third ~oing to
Taylor Jones. Wonners in
the prerty baby contest in
their respective age categorie s
were
Colton
Reynolds.
Sydney
Reynolds , Maddie Combs,
Dallas Krawsczyn. Isaiah
Reed, aoid Wesley Milhoan.
•This year's champion in
Ohio State Harlnonica
Competition was · Gene
Willoughby of Albany.

Collins on "Dog Care Spaying": David Frank on ·
"How
to
Measure
IngredienTs and Serring a
Table": Wade Collins on
"Participnting Safe ATV
Ridin g Techniques" and
Lari ssa Riddle on "My Cat
Sassy". .
The Nicodemus and
Chadwell families served
refreshments.
At the July 9 meeting at
Forked Run Srare Park, 31
members, four advisors and
21 visitors attended.
Upcoming
important
uales, booth and tloat plans
and a club pool part·y and
cookout were discussed.
Mem·bers participated in a
"Mock Judging" to help prepure them for their upcoming
judgings.
and
Demonstrations
reports were given by
Caitlyn Cowuery on "Pig~";
Austin Ross on "Grooming
Mv Feeuer Calf"; and
s~ivannah
Moore
on
"Groo ming
and
Conditioning a Horse."
The Amos. Hayman and
Riddle families served .
refreshmenTs.
The ne xt meeting is July
23, 2006 at 4:00 p:m. at
Forked Ron State Park
Campsite
#7. ·
Demonstrations will be
given by Ryan Amos, Tyler
Barber,
Kimberly
• Brooke
Hawrhornc, .
Johnson. Kate Moore, Zach
Moore, Devin Riggs, Aimee
Watson
and
Heaven
,Westfall.
Abby Coilins, News
Reporter.

•

on

I

unsigned !erten ll'i// be tmiJ!ished. Lettm; should be in
NEW YORK· Investors
good INs/e. addressing issues, not persUtw!ities. Lerters of
thanks to organi~ations &lt;f/1(1 indil'iduals H·illtwt be accept· often like to dream of the
perfect world, and their cured jiJr publicaTion.
rent
vision · has the Federal
- -- - ------..--------·- - - - - - - ,
Reserve . soon ending its
two-year interest-rate tightening run and the stock
ma,rket soaring afterward.
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Servic:es
But history argues other"
Ohio Valley Publishing
wise. Whar rhe past has
Co.
Correction Policy
shown is that stocks tend to
P1.1bli shed every afternoon. Monday
·
,
0 ur ma1n concern 1n a 11 s1ones 1s to
.
through Friday. 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error · Pom'eroy, OhiQ
Second-class

}VWW.mydaiiysentinel.com

.Fran DeWine coming

Today is Monday. July 17, the I98th day of 2006. There
are 167 days lefr in the year.
Tnday's Highlight in HisTory:
Ten years ago, on holy 17, 1996, TWA Flight 800, a Pari&amp;bound Bbeing 747, explodcu and crashed off Long Island,
N.Y. shortly after leaving John F Kennedy International
Airport. killing all 230 people aboard.
Thought for Today: "Every soul is a melody which needs
renewing." - Stephane M(lllarme. French essayist and poet
(1842-IH9X).
.

Lel/ers 111 the editor are ll 'cicvme. Tltn should be less
than' JUO "'ord1·. All Ielfers are suiJject to. editing, must be

2006

Obituaries
•

TODAY IN HISTORY

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Monday, July 17,

'

BY DIANE POTTORFF
DPOTTORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

'NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Construction is moving right
along at the American
Electric Power-MounTaineer
Plant on a new stack, scrubber, conveyors and a landfill.
The project began in rhe
fall of 2004 with the relocation of some utilities under
the plant to make way for a
new scrubber and stack thar
would be able to burn high
sulfur coal, said Ed Young,
construction manager on the
scrubber project.
Today, the stack is about
80 percent completed and
will be open on Aug. 18.
·Young said. The scrubber is
about 45 percent completed
and will go on line Jan. 7.
2007.
"The whole .project is on
schedule," he said·.
Work on the stack did
come to a stop a few months
ago following a fire inside of
a similar one ar the Mitchell
plant near Moundsville.
where ne man was killed and
three more had to be extricated by a helicopter during
the emergency. They were
treated and released froin the
hospiral following the incident.
"We shut down for safely
precautions," Young said.
"We need to take a look ar
everything to make sure it

'

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.
Diane PoJtorfl/photo

A new conveyor system will carry gypsum from the AEP·Mountaineer Plant to a landfill on
company property. The conveyor will be environmental friendly.

coal from the Gatling No. I
mine to the plant. are also
underway, Young said.
And, workers are placing a
liner and other materials for
the landfill.
But, Young said there has
been a problem with all-terrain vehicle riders who want
· to travel across the landfill.
"It rears the membrane of
the liner.'' he said.
The entire project which
was safe.'
costs
over $500 mi)lion is
Now, the shell of the stack
is completed and work on environmental friendly.
Young said the conveyors
the liner continues, he said.
·
has
been built close ro the
Work on a Conveyor system that will take gypsum ground and will have hoods
from the plant to its landfill over top of them to keep
tmd another that will carry· dust down to a minimum.

With rhe new scrubber friendly." said. Phil Moye,
going in place. work is also spokesman for AEP. "We are
continuing on a river facility doing similar work at the
next ro the plant that will John Amos planr."
dock barges which will be
Currently there arc 1.081
full of limestone and gyp- employees, besides the ,perSlim.
manent ones, working on rhe
LimesTone is used in con· projects. By peak time ,
nection with the high sulfur which will be about October
coal in that it·binds with the of November. the plant is
sulfur (0 keep majority or expected lO have almo~t
it from going into rhe atmqs- 1.500 employees.
AEP has sla2gered the
phere through the stack,
which could produce a great shifts to minin;ile heavy
deal of pollution and acid traffic on W.Va. 62 and
rain. ·
when the new conveyors are
"All of thi s is part of a consTructed across the road$4.1 billion improvements at · way. the plant will minimize
our coal-fire plant to make the closer to j ust a few hours .
th~m
environmentally insle&lt;td of days.

a

1

·Second child dead after
suspected arson fire

WEST CARROLLTON
Second place went to Ray (AP) - A second ·c hild
Horsley of Lucasville, and of a woman charged
third to Ray Baker of with murder in a house
Athens. The contestants fire- that killed
her
played music of every genre
ranging from country. folk. daughter has died .
Mikel Silverman, 4,
jazz, rock and gospel to the
Saturday
at
delight of an appreciative died
·Shriners
Hospital
in
crowd gathered in !he
Cincinn.ati from injuries
·courrroom.

from a fire that killed
his 4-month-old · sister,
Keylee, Thursday in this
Dayton suburb.

A!!f;!,&amp;

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LOOP CAIPIT lad ICULPTURED CAIPIT.
. , ."- atn...,.e fer~~~ lamlt1lre
.

SEVEN DWARFS
presented by
The Ariel Jr. Theatre
JULY IS, l6, 22 &amp; 23

MID-VALLEY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
Four Year 91d Pre-School
A safe, loving atmosphere for your child.
Laying a foundation for phonetic reading.
@lass size limited to 15 students. ·
For more information and to tour our facil ities.

Visit Our Scholastic
Book Fair In The Ariel
Lobby July 15-23

Call 740-992-6249

BoK Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740~ 446·ARTS

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The Daily Sentinel

CHESTER-SHADE DAYS

PageA6·
Monday, July 17, 2oo6

Inside

..

The Daily
Sentinel
__.

BUSt'h wins NASCAR race, Page B2.
Tour de France, Page B2
MtB Standings, Page 86

.

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Monday, July 17, 2006
SPORTS BRIEFS -

Post 128 'blasts
McArthur, 11-1

Southern grid camp

•o

•

RACINE Southern
High School will hold a football camp for boys grades 712 on July 24 through July
28 at the high.school.
The camp will run from 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. and anyone
playing football is asked to
attend.
For more intormation call
coach Dennis Teaford, 8435434.

Charlell$ Hoelilch/photoo

Members of a Columbus harmoniQa club came to Chester to present an afternoon concert
for the Chester-Shade festivities.

Dunfee fans 13 in tourney opener
BY BRYAN WALTERS .
SPORTS@MYDAilYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCK SPRINGS
When it comes to summertime baseball, the best way
to beat the heat is to make
short work of your opponent.
That's exactly
what
Feeney Bennett Post 128 did
in its American Legion
District 8 Tournamen-t opener Sunday with a seven
inning, 11-1 victory over
McArthur Post 303 at Meigs
High SchooL
Battling outdoor tenmcrntues that
90
degrees.
( 13-19)
starter Ausf Dunfee delivered some
of hi.s own
.!~~~~~itt~l:3;s of the 21
he faced in .
decision.
currently a junior
High School.
out two batters in

·Southern football
parents' meetin2
Checkers was one of several period and traditional games taking place on the Chester
Commons during Chester-Shade Days. Here Garrett Caldwell, left , and Tyler Barber engage
in a contest.

, RACINE - There wi'IT be
a parents' meeting for all
Southern High School football players on Friday. Jyly
21 at the high school football
field. The meeting will start
at 7 p.m.

Eastern football
toholdcamo

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern football will be holding its high school instructional camp for Eastern players on July 17, 18, 20, 24,25
and 27 from 6 p.m. to 8:30
p.m. at East Shade . River
Stadium.
For more 'information,
please 'contact
Coach
Wallace at (740) 596-0076.

C

•.j

''( ~~ ~f'-'~..~ ~fM~'·''t.
··~
··
I
.
.
1

. Eastern football
havin2 fundraiser ·

Marvin White demonstrates the making of brooms the old-fashioned way at Chester Shade Days.

Kevin Hawk, 81, enjoys looking at an .antique oak dresser on display in the 1823 Chester ·
Courthouse. Numerous antiques and artifacts were on exhibit for Chester-Shade Days.

Creative Carol
McDonough
demonstrates
the art of pottery making and
displayed several pieces she
has made. A
fine. arts gradu-"
ate of Ohio
State University,
she is a frequent exhibitor
of her work at
area art shows.

I

...

TUPP!Th.S · PLAINS Eastern football players are
currently holding a fundraiser.
Contact any player to order
pizza kits, cookie dough, or
numerous ·other food items.
All proceeds will benefit
the EHS football program.

' 1

j~

. ..

,.

.MYL to host AllStar tournament

MIDDLEPORT , - The
Middleport Youth League
will host a Little League AllStar Tournament for bov s
ages II and 12 starting
Tuesday, July 18.
The tournament has a double-elimination format and
all interested teams are
encpuraged to sign up before
July 15.
For more information,
please coniact MYL Director
Dave Boyd at (740) 5900438, Sue at (740) 992-7717
or lim at (740) 992-7747.

'·I .

..

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..

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' '-J

·,.•

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'

,
.
Bryan Walters/photo
Feeney Bennett starter Austin Dunfee delivers a pitch during the fourth inning of Sunday's
11-1 victory over McArthur in the first round of the District 8 Legion Baseball Tournament
at . Meigs High School in Rock Springs. Dunfee struck out 13, allowed four hits and an
earned run over seven innings in picking up the winning decision.

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~10 LJRANDE Both
University of Rio Grande
men's and women :s basket_ball programs are sponsoring
a Golf Scramble to be held
August 12 at the Cliffside
Golf Club in Gallipolis
The event is a four-person
scramble. Flight "A" ·will
consist of a total team handicap of 75 or below while
flight "B" will consist of a
total team handicap of more
than 75.
For more information contact Rio Grande Basketball
Coach Ken French at (740)
245-7294.

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illlZl•

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Dtatrtct 8 'fi!umo.-rt
tlunday't reeultt
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(3) Feeney Bennett"11, (8) MCMI1ur
1 - 7 Innings
,
(4) Atf1ens 4, (5) Logan 3
(21 Pickerington 38, (7)" Galtljjolli 1
- 1 lnni~
'" :. ~-

...

.

Mondoy't.
All games at 5:30p.m.'
·
(3) Feeney Bennettvs, (1) t..anoeo1!J&lt;
at,Lanea.ster Bea,vers Field
,. ,
(4) AthMB V$. (2) Picl&lt;at1!'G!Oit at :

-v'·--

Picl&lt;erington Central

·. .

Ait gameut 5:30 p.m.
·
(7) Gallipolis vs. (5) Loglln at
~~korington No~
.
(6) MoArthur vo. Atllen./P,tcbrlngton

looor at Plekerington cerrtraJ

.• -

the day."
Feeney Bennett · quickly
took the lead in the bottom
of the first when Luke
Haislop grounded into an
RBI fielder's choice. Matt
M
d
h 1
ooney score on t e p ay
for a 1-0 advantage.
McArthur (6-19) responded in the top half of the third
_when Andy Wasch walked
with two away. Tyrus Coyan
delivered a double that plated Wasch, tying the contest
at one apiece.
,
Then 10 Feeney Bennett's
half of the third, back-toback leadoff singles from
Eric VanMeter . and Zack
Haislop gave the hosts two
runners with nobody out:
Mooney laid down a sacrifice bunt to advance the runners. then Jeremy Blackston
delivered a two-RBI double
to the right field gap for a 31 lead.
,
Now with two outs and a
runner on second, Terry
Durst singled to plate
Blackston for a 4-1 advan. tage.
Joel Lynch followed with
a walk, then Cory Shaffer
reached safely on an error

Please see Blasts, ••

--Major LEaguE BasEball--

RedS sweep Rockies

HYL to hold men's
softball tournev
The third annual Men's
Softball Tournament hosted
by the Harrisonville .Youth
League is on July 22 and 23.
To register your team,
[&gt;lease call (740) 742-2623 or
(740) 698-2804. Teams must
be registered by Thursday
morning, July 20.

every inning except the sixth
and also set down the side in
order in the fourth. Dunfee
also gave up just one earned
run and four hits in the triumph. ·
That - along with an
offense that yielded nine
earned runs on ll hits enabled Feeney Bennett 'to
march onward to the quarterfinals of the District 8
winner's bracket, where topseeded Lancaster awaits
today.
.
Afterward Post 128 coach
Chris Stewart was most
pleased with the overall performance from his starting
pitcher.
.
''Austin gave us a tremendous effort on the mound
today. It was probably his
best outing of the year," he
said. · "Thirteen of the 21
outs were ~i s all by himself,
and that helps your defense
out a lot. It really gave our
team confidence the rest of

Legio~Sco_., _.

BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI ~ With
two late-game rallies, the
·Ci ncinnati Reds learned
what it's like · to be on the
other side of those bullpen
meltdowns.
Rich Aurilia's pinch-hit,
bases-loaded single in the
bottom of the eighth inning·
rallied the Reds to a 6-4 victory Sunday ·and a fourgame sweep of the Colorado
Rockies, who let· the last two
slip away.
Just like that. things arc
Larry Crum/photo looking up for the Reds.
Two dragsters race to the line during Saturday's action at Kanawha Valley Motorsports who improved their bullpen
Park. Saturday's event was a success at the track and promoter pon Smith hopes to bring with two trades in the•last 1'0
back bigger and better events to Mason County In the near future .
days. The s.eries sweep sig.
. nifican tly upgrad ed their

Need ~or speed· Satu-rday's
action at K~awha Valley a hit
-

.

BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

SOUTHSIDE, WVa. FanS" came to Kana,vha
Valley Motorsports Park
Saturday night hoping to see
CONTACT US
a lap under four seconds what they got was even bet·
OVP. Scoreline (5 p:m.-1 a.m.)
ter. ~1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
While inost tracks don't
or 992-5287 (Meigs Co.)
deal with more than an eight
car field of the _Pro Top
Fall- 1-740-446-3008
Outlaw Dragsters, Ron
E-mail- sports@mydailysenlinel.com
·Smith
and the rest of the
Spqrt$_,$lJf1
crew
at
Kanawha· Valley
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
Park ventured
Motorsports
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
out and brought in 17 of
bsherman@mydailytrlbune .com ·
these incredibly l;ast cars,
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer each hoping to take home a
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
first place trophy and maybe
bwallers@mydailytribune.com
even set a lap of under four
l-arry Crum, Sports Writer
seconds on the 1/8 mile
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
track.
lcrum@mydailyregister com
And while they didn't

·

•

accomplish their goal, the
racing was as close as it
could get ·and the .show/ was
even better.
"It is truly amazi ng that 17
of them came to our track,"
said Smith. ''They had heard
a lot about us and they knew
that if they rould come
down here and put &lt;)n a great
show, we would bring them
back. There is no doubt in
my mind that we need to
bring them back."
All evening the cars flirted
with the four second barrier,
with the fastest qualifier
during the days time trials
dialin~ in at 4.01 on an
incredtbly slick track in the
afternoon su n. But as the sun
set and the track tightened.
hopes were they could break
the barrier.
But once the sun went

J..'

m?.~t

attitude is we're in u
situation -where it's going to

couple of weeks, and the
more wins we have, the
more fun it is." said Ken
Griffey Jr., who singled during the go-ahead rally. "If
we continue to do the little
things. big things . will
come."
Aurilia's twocrun single
off Jose Mesa (0-3) sparked
the Reds· second dramatic
comeback against a bullpen
that has been the Rockies'
main problem lately.
Colorado ha" lost a seasoli-high seven straight, its

beal~to:funoverthenext PleaseseeS:~p:B&amp;

Thins erase Indians .

down, another problem
reared its head - humidity.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Jeremy Sowers. but couldn't
As the engines tried to suck
Carlos
S"
i
lva
"threw
six
·
solve
Silva.
•
in oxygen from the night air,
smooth
innings.
Rondell
Joe
N~1than
pitched
the
they were instead bringing
in moisture, _bogging down White hit his first home run ninth for his 16th save, tinthe engines and limiting of the season in his first , ishing a bittersweet weekgame backJromthe disabled end for Minnesota- which
horsepower.
list,
and the Minnesota piaced three ouifi~lders on
But that didri't stop th~m
Twins be&lt;\1 the Cleveland . the disabled list in I he past
from trying.
four days. The big, . , blow
Based on the days time tri- Indian s 5-2 on Sumhiy.
Lui-; Castillo anti Michael_ came during · thi , game,
als,. the field was broken
down · into the fastest eight Cuddyer also homered and when the team learned
and the next fastest seven, Jason Tyner drove in two standout center fielder Torii ·
racing for Orst in each divi- runs for the Twins, who won HunteP has a stress fracture
sian. Throughoutthe n_ight's the .last three of the four- in his left foot.
After two solid seasons as
raci_ng action, the cars bar- game series to start the seca stabilizer in the middle of
reled down the track. even ond naif.
creating a tense moment _ Grady Sizemore's leadL&gt;il the rotation. Silva (5-9) had
when one of the dragsters home run wasn't nearly an awful first half. Three
blew its engine at the finish enough for the Indians. who consecutiv.e strong starts in
line, sending a ball of fire were hoping to emerge from late "June were followed by
into the sky and burning the the All-Star break in far bet- two rough outings in July,
ter fashion. They turned .four
Pleasf see Speed, 86
double plays benincl rookie
Please see lndlilns, 8:1
J

�•
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 17, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 17, 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83
'

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\egtst

'·

'r,.:

C LA s·s I F I ED

Mt!p (:ou11t}. OH

•

f'al!ll. C&lt;&gt;unly

OH

I

Indians
from Page Bl
and he left 111 the second
mnmg ot the last one wtth
soreness m his ri ght knee
Silva. who had sutgery to
repatr a torn memscus tn the
knee last September, was
checked out by two doctors
over the All-Star break
But he began the second
halt by holdmg Cleveland
to tive htts and two run s
whtle strikmg out tour without a walk
Stzemore's 16th homer
was an upper-deck shot that

set &lt;Ill ommous tone for
Silva, who tehes h e&lt;~vilv on
&lt;1 smket th,n leads to &lt;~ Jot nl
ground b,t!Js whcntt's wotklng well But the btg ttghthander re.ttred seven straight
alter that A two-out RBI
stngle by Casey Blake m the
thtrd tnn111g was the only
other dam.tgc done.
Sowets ( 1-'l). mdkmg hts
fourth career st,ut , d1dn't
keep hts lead lor very long.
Ctstlllo h1t hts tlllld homc1
to start the bottom of the
ltrst.
,
Joe M.tuet. the Jcadtng
htttei in the llMJOts , gtuunLIed tlllo two double pldys.
One wtped out a leadoff stn-

gle by N tck Pun to 111 the
lourth But Cuddyer rame
next with his home run, and
then Justtn Morneau stngled Whtte Jut .t shallow tly
to
felt
that
Todd
HoiJ,mdswurth lost 111 the
Metrodome ; t11cky. gruymg
cetlmg lor .t !luke double
ryner. who h&lt;~s ltve RBb
.tnd stx htts 111 12 at-bats
st ncc be mg c.tlled up thts
weekend. smacked a smgle
to left that scored two and
gave M mn ~sot a a 4-2 lead
White . stgned for $2 5
mtllton thts season. never
found Ius st10ke ,md h.ts
been bothered by ttghtness
111 hts sutgtcally repatrcd

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW NLINE

mates to do so Landis wants
to keep hts team of support
nders as fresh as posstble so
they C&lt;in help hm1 up the
cltmbs m the Alps
"We'd like to have some
other teams wtth some motivation to ntle. other than us," '
the Pennsylvama nattve satd
Sunday
At some pomt before Pans.
of course, Landts Will need to
get back the lead if it he is to
be the successor to seventune
winner
Lance
Armstroni\ And he ts benmg
that Peretro, when tt' really
counts. won't be able to stop
htm
Peretro struggled tn the
Pyrenees last week and was
slower than Landts m the tirst
long time trtal at the end of
week one. So even it he
wotks mtr.tcles and holds off
Landts and the rest of the
field 111 the Alps - whtch
even Peretro thmks ts unlikely - Phonak is bettmg that
he' ll succumb eventually in
the tinal tune tnal
" He\ not ~oing to gtve tt
up easily,'
s,ud
Levt
Letpheunet. a U.S. ndcr on
the Gerolstemer squad. " But I
thmk Floyd\ ttght. I thmg
he\ gonna cr.tck."
Gtven Pereira's tlaws,
Landts ' btggcr wornes are the
nther top contenders like him.
Rtders ltke Russtan Dems
Menchov, Australian Cadet
Evans, Spaniard Carlos
Sastre or German Andreas
Kloeden Fbr the moment,
they are all 111 Landts'
rearvtew mm·or. tnuling htm
by stgntticant but perhaps not
lllSllrlllOUntabJe di110Unts Of
tune. In order to wm, Landts
wtllneed to make'sure that tt
stays that way m the Alps no easy task.
·
''In the Alps you can eastlr,
Jose 20 m111utes 111 one day. '
Moerenhout smd If Landts
''has one bad d,ty, it's over"

Je I1 shoulder that sent ht m
to the dtsabled lt&gt;t and on a
rehabtlilatton asstgnment
wtth Tnple-A Rochester. He
ts battmg 190 wtth 16 RBis
m 184 at-bats
Whne drove an 0-1 pttch
mto the lell-fteld seats leadmg oft the seventh agamst
Sowers, who gave up II
htts and ttve runs wtthout a
walk In sev~ n innmgs while
strikmg out one
Notes . Cuddyer's homer.
his 12th, was his ftrst 111 a
span of 81 ,tt-bats . Travts
Hafner extcl)dcd hts careerlong luttmg &gt;treak to II
games for Cleveland wtth a
smgle tn the eighth

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the rlghtto edit,
reject or cancel any

ad at any time.
Errors Must B
eported on the flra
ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
eglater
will
b
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ore than the cost o
he apace occupie
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he llrst Insertion W
hall not he liable fo
ny 1011 or expens
hat• results from th
ublicatlon or omia
ion of an advertls

ent Corrections wit
made In the flra
vallable edition

Box number ads ar
lwaya confidential.
Current rate car
pplles

)&gt;All .Real Estat
dvertlsements ar
ubtect to tho Fedora
air Housing Act o
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Thfs
newopape
ccepts only hei
anted ads meetln
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We will not knowing
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f the law

1•uhli...: Nntlc11.•s In Ne\.\ spupc.-s.
'\:'our Right to Kno\.V, Dellvl"rcd JU~ht to Yuur· llnur.

wt~th~a~~o:f:::a~p=e=r~m;,it:l,~ll:ce:n:s:e==.~b=e:fo:r:e~t~he::d,:'re:c:to:r~b:y:r=~~~~~~~-

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please contact

Go1ng back the way we
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ATLANTIC CITY
TRIP
Oct 20, 2006 Oct. 22, 2006

PVH Community
Relations
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326

LIMITED SEATSt
West Vtrg tnta
State Farm Museum wtll
have an
Anttque Tractor Pull

July 22nd

6 pm

•

$200/person
(double occupancy)
$250/person
(stngle occupancy)
Pnvate Jel from Charleston ,
WV Accommodations at
Harrah s ,Castno &amp; Resort To
r.nake reservations please call
PVH Community Relations,
(304) 675·4340, Ext, 1326
We accept cash, checks,
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LIMITED SEATS I •
Please call the
, PVH Communtty Relattons
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to make a reservattor~t

--...

Meigs

than tO% of the bid
amount in the favor of
the atoresald Meigs
C
o
u
n t y
Commissioner. Bid
bonds
shall
be
accompanied
by
Proof of Authonty of
the official or agent
signing the bond.
Bids shall be sealed
and marked as Btd
for· Meigs County
Pavtng
Protect·
Round 20 and ma1led
or delivered to· Metgs
C
o
u n t y
Commissioners
The Meigs County
Courthouse, Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(7) 7, 10, 17

County

Street, Pomerw, Ohio
45769 unttl 1:15 p.m.
Local T1me, July 20,
2006,
and
then
opened and read
aloud
The proJecl provides
for paving 15,840 L.F.
of Me•gs CR 17
Cotterill Road, 13,675
L.F of Meigs CR 29
Bowmans Run, and
33,211 L.F. of Meigs
, CR 32 Eagle Ridge
Road and paving
5665 L.F of portions
at Ol1ve Township
Roads T73 , T296,
T1038, T1053, T1054,
T1055, T1056, T1057
wtth•n the Community
of Tuppers Plams and
915 L. F. of portions
of Orange Township
Roads
T296
and
T1036
wlthm
the
Community
of
Tuppers Platns. The
engtneer's estimate
for this proJect IS
$579,668 00.
Domestic Steel use
requirements
as
speclfted in Section
153.011
of
the
Revised Code apply
to this proJect Copies
of Section t53.011 of
the Revised Code can
be obtained from any
of the offices of the
Department
of
Ad m i n 1 s 1rat I v e

Starting July 1st
1st pack is $10.00
2nd Pack Free
All other packs is
$5.00 each

Sept. 29 to Oct. 2

ter of credtt upon a
solvent bank In the
amount of not less

Courthouse, Second

Door open at 4:00
B1ngo starts at 6:30

CHARLESTON,
SOUTH CAROLINA

C o u n t y
Commissioners
al
thetr 6tttce at The

_

___._

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
County· Meigs
The
followiiTQ
applications and/ or
verified complaints
were received, and
the following draft,
proposed, or final
actions were Issued,
by
lhe
Ohto
E n v 1r o n m en t a I
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) last
week
"ACTIONS" Include
the adoption, modlflcation, or repeal of

meeting

regarding

Draft

Actions

filing an appeal within
30 days of nottce of

the

Action

Ftnal

Pursuant

to

Ohto

revised code sect10n
3745.07,

a

Ftnal

Comments or public

Action tssuing, deny·

meeting
requests
must be submitted

tng, modlfytng,

revok~

1ng, or renewmg a
within 30 days of
permit, license, or
notice of the Draft
variance wh1ch is not
Action. " PROPOSED
preceded
by
a
ACTIONS" are written
Proposed
Actton ,
statements of the
may be appealed to
director's Intent wHh
th~ ERAC by ftlmg an
respect
to
the
appeal withm 30 days
Issuance,
denial,
of issuance of the
modification, revocafinal act1on ERAC
lion, or renewal of a
appeals must ba filed
permit, license, or
with: Environmental
variance:
Written
Review
Appeals
comments
and
Commission,
309
requests for a public
South Fourth
meeting regarding a
Street, Room 222,
proposed action may
Columbus,
Ohto
be submttled wtlhln
h2t5 A copy of the
30 days of nottce of
appeal
must . be
the Proposed Action
served on the dlrecAn adfudlcatlon hear·
tor wtthtn 3 days after
mg may be held on a
ftling the appeal with
proposed acllon If a the ERAC.
hearing request or
Final Issuance of
objection Is received
Renewal of NPDES
by the OEPA within 30
Permtl
days of issuance of
Eastern Local School
the proposed actton
Dtst
Written comments,
38900 State Rt. 7
requests for publtc
Reedsville, OH
meetmgs, and adjudiAction
Date:
cation
hearing
08101/2006
requests must be
Rece1ving
Waters:
sent
to: 'Heanng
East Branch of Shade
Clerk, Oh1o
River
EnvIronment a I
Facility Oescnptlon.
Protection Agency,
School or Hospital
P0
Box
1049, ldentlf1eat10n
No.:
Columbus , Ohto
OPT00046'BD
4 3 2 1 6 • t 0 4 9 This final action not
(Telephone 614·644·
preceded by pro·
2129)
posed action and. Is
"FINAL ACTIONS ", appealable to ERAC.

(other thah

are actions of the

Syracuse - Racine

emergency orders);
the issuance, demal,

director which are
effective
upon
Issuance or a stated
effective
date .
Pursuant to Ohio
Revised
Code
Section 3745 04, a
final action may be
appealed
to
the
E n vI r o n me n ta I
Review Appeals
Commission (ERAC)
(formerly known as
the
Environmental
Board Of Review) by
a person who was a
par,t y to a proceeding

Regional SO WWTP
Yellow Bush Rd
Racine, OH
Action
Date .
08101/2006
Receiving
Waters
Ohio River
Facility Description.
Regional Authortty
Jdentlftcatlon
No..
OPQ00003'GD
This falnal actton not
preceded by proposed act1on and Is
appealoble to ERAC
(7) 17

orders

Services

modification or revo-

Bid documents may
be secured at the
off1ce of The Meigs
County'
Engineer,
34110
Fairgrounds
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, Phone Number
740·992·2911 for a
$10 bo non-refundable tee
Each b1d must be
accompanied
by
e1ther a b1d bond m
the amount of 10% of

cation of licenses,
perm1ts, leases, variances, or 9,ertlflcates,
and the ..,proval or
disapproval of plans
and specifications.
" DRAFT ACTIONS "
are written state·
ments of the dll'ector
of
Environmental
P r o t .e c t I o n ' s
(Dire&lt;tor's) Intent
with respect to the
issuance, demal, etc.

--~-

order, etc. Interested
persons may submit
Written comments or
request
a
public

-

-------- ___,___. _-

a m. on August 9,

\

1:00 p.m.
Frld•'Y for Sunday• Paper

Busln••• D•v• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thur•d•y fol"' Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid•

Friendly black Lab m1x
puppy Approx 5 months old
male needs a good home
(740)245·9740 t740J4412896

t

La&gt;! ANII

FoUND

kltncarlylaOcomcaet.net
Par1s Salesberson wamed
Computer expenence and
knowledge of farm equ1p
menl preferred
Salary
negotiable dependmg on
• Kp n• nC.
H.'llh
'
Insurance
prov 1ded Send
resume lo CLA Box .569. cJo
GallipoliS Tnbune PO BoK
469 GallipoliS OH 45e31

Cash pa1d lor used d1sh nel
work &amp; ce ll phones Calt
(8661860 0110

1-•1

~

I buy Junk Cars (304)773·
5004

www.comles com
II:&gt; 2006 by NEA, Inc.
lost
Black
Rouwe11er
approx 1201bs Last seen on I Will buy J!!n!s Qars Call
Sm1th R1dge Road 1n Long 17401388·9303
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Looking tor SOmething
Holzer Senior Care
Botlom (Portland area)
New?
l\11'1111\11~1
HF:I .PWANTFD
center
FAM ILY PET' REWARD
SIHIIIIS
$200 OO' 740·643·5437
Ra1se funds and renew
Do you want hiQh wages, II you are Interested 1n
memberships for the
110
same day pay and to make working 1n a nurstng facll·
YAKDSALE
Na110nal R1lle Assoc1a110n1
Hft PWA~TEil
your own schedule? Call 1ty who locuses on team
We offer pa1d trammg,
work and res1den1 care
Taylors
Staffing
@
holidays and vacatiOns
(740)446·3305
lor
an we have a part-time
Full and part hme shtfts
opemng for a
appomtment
Monday
~ available
Thursday 10am·2pm We
Receptlanlst/Ward
are now hmng State Tested
F1nd out why we were voted
Ram or sh1ne 7/17·7122,
Clerk
Nurs1ng ASSIStants LPNS &amp;
one of the 2006 "Top Ten
Cleaning Out! 3 mJies out
AN 's EOE
Beaf Placee to Work in
L1ncoln P1ke (off 141 ) New
You must be fam1har w1th
Ohlo"l
stuff added da1ly All s12e
both Word and Excel and
Exper~ence handling horses
clothes,
dishes, kn1ck
be ava1lable for week·
a must Work one week
Call today to earn • $200
knacks,
toys
mov1es,
ends and Hohdays
Aug
6·
13
Call
lor
details
Sign on Bonuel
stereos m1sc
Must
have
reference
t-877·463-6247
Pari-Time STNA'a
(740)245·0552
eKt. 232t

1

.. •. . . .

130

...... . . 660

Loto &amp; Acreage . ........ .
. .... . .. . 350
......••. ... • . .. 170
Mlacellaneoua..... ....... .
Miacellaneoua Merchandise..................... 540
Mobile Home Repair ................................ 860
Mobile Homes tor Rent....
. ....... .. . .... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale . . . ......... .
. .• 320
Money to Loan .......................................... 220
Motorcrcles &amp; 4 Wheelers ......................... 740

Musical Instruments . .......... . .......... .
Personals.. ........... ..•.....

570

. .......... 005

Pets for Sale ........................................, .560
Plumbing &amp; Hooting ................................. 820
Professional Servlcee.... .• . ....... . .....230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair.... .......... ........ 160
Real Eatato Wanted .................................... 360
Schools Instruction... . . . ........... .. .......... 150
SHd , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .
.. ...... . .. . 650
Situations Wanted........... . ........... ....... 120
Space far Rent ............................................ 460
Sporting Gooda .......
................. :.. 520
SUV'a for Sale... ........
. .... ..... . ....... 720
Trucks for Sale ., ............,................... . 715
Upholstery ......................................... 870
Vano For Sale ..........
. . ..... .. ..•.•....730
Wanted to Buy................ . .... .....
. ..... 090
Wanted to Buy- Form Supplies ............... 620
Wanted To Do..
....... . • .....
. .•• 180
Wanted to Rent............ . . ........
. ........ 470
Yard Sole- Goll!polla................. .............. 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ...................... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Ptueant...
......... 076

Expenenced Carpenler to
work on mob1le home
Phone (740)446 7039
E11penenced WSitress Day
sh1ft Parkfronl D1ne1 and
Bakery No phone calls

Please stop by and see
us al 380 Co!on1al Dnve
Bidwell, Oh1o or g1ve
Barb Peterson Director
of Human Resources or
Tesera
Wilson
our
Bustness Off1ce Manager
a call at (740)446·5001

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$15 67$26 19/hr now htr·
1ng For application and free
governement tob mfo, call
Amencan Assoc of l abor 1
91 3·599·8042, 24/hrs emp
serv
Fullt1me Preschool Teacher
and
(tour·day·a-week)
Teacher Ass1stant needed to
100WORKERS NEEDED
serve a preschool class·
Assemble crafls
room 1n Albany Teache1
wood tlems
applicants must hOld a valid
To $480/wk
P K teachtng
license
Matenals provtded
Applicants for asSIStant must
Free 1nformalton pkg 24Hr have compleled one of the
801 428 4649
lollow1ng two ~ears ol h1gh
An Excellent way to ·earn er education of 48 semester
hours or 72 quarler hours
money The New Avon
assoc1ate degree or passed
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
the
Prax1s
ParaPro
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Assessment Both must be
Sell Sh1rley Spears 304 w11fmg lo have a cnm1na1
background check and
675 1429
a11end requ1red tramtng~
Please send a Ieite( Of Interest w1th quellllcatlons to
Sally Hock1ng, The Athens·
Me1gs Educaltonal Servtce
Center,
507
Richland
Avenue Sutle 1OB Athens
Oh10 45701
• NO EX f'E AIENCE NECESSARY
'FULL TIME CLASSES
• COL TR.t.INING
Healthcare Ser~Jices Group
FINANCING .t.V.t.ILAALE
tile naiiOn s largest provider
JOB PLACEMENT
' ENAOUING Nr:JN
of laundry and housekeep
1ng serv1ces lor long term
ca1e 1s currently seekmg
ALLIANCE
laundry and housekeeping
TRACTOR·TRAILER
managers 1n the Gallipolis
TRAIN ING CENTERS
area If you Wanl to grow
WYTHEVILLE VA
w1lh an established publicly
1-800-334-1203 . held company fall resume
to &amp;14·577·0125
Help Wanted
Full·t•me
parts sales postt1on avail·
able 1n a local growmg busl
ness Ouahltcat1ons Include
General Automotive knowl
edge Telephone Sk!lls.
Compular Sk1Hs, People
Skills
Respons1bll1t1es
could mclude but not hm1ted
to Counter Sales Phone
Sales Customer AelaliOns
and Sh1ppmg
Hills
Jo1n lhe Avon team Local Aulomohve Classic Car
Corporate trammg Call Restorations &amp; Thunderbird
(740)379·9422 to sian today Cen1er Paris Call lor an
appo1ntmont 740 949·2217
for only $10

CNC AND MANUAL
'
MACHINISTS
Immediate Dciy and Evemng
sh1ft pOSIIIOn !or CNC and
Manual Macll1msts
Pay
based on exper1ence and
qualifications Must have
own hand tools We offer
1nsurance. Vacation, Patd
Holidays and Aenrament
Phone 1 304·743·1705

1m

added to your classified ads
Barders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Buymg Junk Cars &amp; Trucks
(3041773-5343 (30417735033

r
r

~

(. ~

f!i4

POUCIES Ohio V•ley Publlhlng reHI"YII thl right to tldlt, l'ljK\. or ctncll any td at any lime Errors must be reported on the tlrat day of
Trlttoo.SeniiMI·Regl8ttr will be rupon~lbta for no mort thin tilt-cost ol tn. lptct occupied by ttle error and onl~ the llrttlnsenton We
tny IOH or ex~M that ruutts from ti'M publlcttlon or oml"lon of en adYertiMm~~nL CorrKUon will be made In tM flralnallabla edltlorr: ·~~;;~:;;~::.::I
11'1 alw•y• confldemlal ·Current rata card eppiMs ·All f'lll Illite ldv...UMmtntl are 1ubjeet to the Federal Fair Houll'ng Act ol 1!168 ,Thla
ICCiptl only help wlnttd tdl meeting EOE 1t1nderCS. WI will not
I
I
In vlolsllon of the law

Absolute Top Dollar US
Sliver and Gold Coms
Proofsets. Gold A1ngs Pre·
Free to good home ,Female t935
US
Currency
Boxer Mh:: long tall 4 So111a1re D•amonds· M T S
months very lovable 740· Com Shop 151 Second
742 2380
Avenue Galhpolis 740·446·
2842

Livestock ..•~ ............................................630
Lost and Found. . ................................ 060

•

Jn~Column:

All Dleplay; 12 Noon 2

Yellowbush Road Rac1ne
Dale
Hart
Aas•dence
2 Female 3 monlh old pup Tuesday, July 18th 9 00·
p1es. m1x breed 8/W, 4 DO lots of Items Special
(304)773 6161
Prices
Proceeds go to

Insurance.. . ........ . ....... . .
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. .

:oo

How you con have borders and graphics

GIVEAWAY

Excavating ............ . ........
. ........
830
Farm Equipment...............................
610
Farms for Rent
....... . .. . . ................. .. 430
Farms for Sale...
330
For Lease ............. . . •........
. . •..... . . 490
For Sale. . ...•••...... ............. . ................. 585
For Sale or Trade ...... . ..... ..•.••.. .... .. 590
FruHs &amp; Vegetables....... .
580
Furnished Rooms.......... . .. .. ..... .. ... . 450
General Hauling ............... ........................ 850
Giveaway ...... . ....... . ......................040
Happy Ada.. ..... .. .......
050
Hay &amp; Grain........... .......... . .. ..... . .
..640
Help Wonted..................... . • .............. . .... 11 0
Home Improvements.....
.............. ..... 81 0
Homes fo;Sale .. .•
. .......... 310
Household Goods
.......... • . ...... . . . 510
Houses tor Rent ..................................... .. .. 410
In Memoriam...... . ... ................................ 020

Public Notice

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Djsplay Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Diily's Paper
Sundav

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Oeatlt;lre.s&gt;

Pot\IEROY/MJDDU:

ElectrlcaVRelrlgeratlon ...............................840
Equipment tor Rent. ............................. 480

2006. ProJeCt 060376
Is located In Meigs
County,
RacineSidewalk and Is a
Miscellaneous project The date set for
completion of this
work shall be set
forth in the b1dding
proposal Plans and
Specifications are on
file in the Department
of Transportation
(7) 17, 24

..

y o\Rl) SALE•

no

Offtce of Contracts
Legal Copy ,Number·
060376
Sealed proposals will
be accepted from prequalified bidders at
the ODOT Office of
Contracts unlit 10:00

port1on

4

.. .......... 725
Announcement..
.. ........... 030
Antiques.................. ........... ... •................. 530
Apartments for Rent .•.•.••••...•.........•..••.••• 440
Auction and Flea Market
. ......• . 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories..... ..
. ...... •760
Auto Repair...... ... ............. . .. ......•••........
Autos tor Sale..
. ...•.. .
. .......•.. . 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ......
•.... 750
Building Supplies............. .. ... ...... .
550
Business end Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Business Opportunity .
. . .......... ... 210
Business Training
.......... . . .... .•. . 140
Campera &amp; Motor Homes........ .•. .......... . 790
Camping Equipment ................. . ............. 780
Cards of Thanks
..........
.•.... .. . 010
Child/Elderly Care................ . ........... 190

Transportation
Columbus, Ohio

unused

r

\\\Ot \(I \II \ h

or Fax To (7401 992-2157

44&amp;-3oos

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Notice to Bidders
State
ot
Ohio
Department
of

beginning at
the
Intersection of the
Orange - Bedford
Township line and
Sunny Hollow Road
easterly along Sunny
Hollow Road 0.15
mile. Anyone Interest·
ed In this road clos·
ing Is welcome to
attend both the vlewmg and the hearing.
(7) 17, 24

or Fax To

4x4's For Solo....... .

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE- A
vlewtng of Sunny
Hollow
Road
In
Orange Township will
be held on Thursday,
July 27 at 9:00 a.m.
and the hearing will
be held at1
p.m. at
the Commissioners'
Office The purpose
of the viewing and
hearing IS to close an

(74'0) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

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

Items

l\egister

Sentinel

Word Ads

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

NOTICE TO Ci:iOi:::Nili-i::ilithiiie:::ibld amount
TRACTORS
surety satisfactory to
Sealed proposals for
the aforesaid Meigs
the Metgs County C o u n t y
Paving
Protect·
Commissioner or by
Round 20 Will be certtlled
check,
received by the Meigs
cashiers check, or let-

m:rtbune

To Place

Equal Opportunity
Employer

LABORER EARN AS YOU
LEARN Start building lor
your future now by 101nmg
our Professional Team and
learn the sktlls to become a
H1gh Pressure Cleanmg
Maintenance TechniCian All
pos1!1ons reqwe weekly
'VEL au 1Slue
• oI Oh 10
TR ""'
Company proVIdes loOgtng
transportation
and
PerD1em AVERAGE start
1ng wage WI lh cosI oI be ne·
!tiS mcluded IS $205 00 per
$263 00 per lleld da~
worktJd We provtde paid.
train1ng and EXCELLENT
BENEFITS
Pre·
Employment DRUG TEST
ai-ld a valid Drt\IEir s license
IS reqUired Class A COlts
a plus, but not required
Send work ll1story and day
11me phone number to
TECHNICIAN TRAINEE,
PO BOX 565. MARIETTA,
OHIO 45750 EOE
-------Local fast paced bus1ness
Mana r
nee dl ng OffICe
ge
Must be frl&amp;ndly and work
bite Able to
we II WIth 1h8 pu
multi lask and mal1age
stress 1S a must aIso must
have good telephone skills
ut
knowledge
an d comp~er
Send resume to CLA Box
5!6. r:Jo Gallipolis Trtbune,
PO BoK 469, GallipoliS, OH
45631
-------PositiOn avatlable, ma1nte·
nance supervtsor BasiC AC
healing
electncal and
plumbmg skillS reqUired
Salary 20k 25k to start
based on expenence Apply
m person Absolutely No
Phone calls Holiday Inn

.11~
BAKERY

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Leading The Way

HOMES
FOR SALE

Concealed Pls1ol Class
OhiO, WV, Aug 5 2006,
$75 00
9 OOam VFW
Mason WV Ph (740)843·
5555,
-:--:c-:-::--:---::-:c---::
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740·446·4367
I 600·214-0452
Colll'lcd for Independent

and Schools

12746

Col eges

WANI'Eil

To Do
ouse·vau·- a1r vare o 5 year old Colontal on 3
Disabled Shul·lns Culs acres appro)( 1 900 sq f1 3
Slyles Manicu res Serve bdr 2 balhs, 2 car garage
~.reas Belpre to Alhens
master bdr 1s 28x24 w1lh a
~iddleport &amp; 1n between jaCUZZI IUb
$125 000
all Jenny 740 . 378.6482 (740)446·7029
____ .

-~1~8~,.e~a~cs~e~""~'e~'""•~n~~~~
Melissa's Daycare now
enrolling ages one and up
large yard lo play m meal's
prov1ded seven days a
week 740·992·0070
-------Reliable &amp; trust worthy
house cleantng Elicellenl
references available Free
esltmates (740)256·6147

ro

L,~=:O:tro;R11JNII;::"'~

j

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

=-'-:::..:..:::_::.:.:.::___

Now accepting applicatiOns
for cash1ers Must be ava11
able to work all shifts No
phone calls Apply at Par
Mar l42 15054 State Route
160, V1nton
-: :.:.:...::c;::_c::_____
OhiO Valley Home Health
Inc h1rlnn for Occupational
~
Therap1sl, and Speech
Therap1s1
Competitive
Wages and Mileage Apply
at t460 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, or 24t5 Jackson
Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV
orphonetollfree 1·866·441·
1393
~=---~---:~:-:OhiO Valley Home Health
Inc h1nng for Part Tlme and
Full Ttme CNA, STNA
CHHA PCA CompetitiVe
Wages alid Seneltls 1nclud·
mg heallh 1nsurance and
Mileage Apply at 1480
Jackson PlkeJ GallipoliS or
2415 Jackson Avenue Point
Pleasant WV or phone toll
free 1·666·441·t393

:~~er~ a~~;~v~~s~~~~a~~s

TURN~D

DOWN ON
Apphcanls must prov 1de SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
the•r own transporteiiOn
NoFeeUnlessWeWml
Submit leiter ol 1nteresl,
1·868·562·3345
resume references and a
copy
of
currenl 'i~;;;;;~;;;..----,
certiflcate/hcensels) 10 John ~
HOMI':S
Coslanzo, Supertntendant,
mR SALE
Athens-Meigs educat 1onal t._.,..;.ilii_iilii_.-1
ServiCe Center 320 112
Easl Main Slreet Pomeroy 112 Pleasant Street Po1nt
Ohio 45769
Appl 1callon Pleasarlt WV (304)675
O
J
8 3
26 2006 4034 or (30&lt;11675·041
T eadllne
MESCuly
E 1 bedroom 1 t , 2b~lh 1am11y
IS an qua room d1n1ng room. new w1n
0he A
P P 0 r i u n 1 I Y dews new AC new water
Employer/ProVlder
tank,Jencad yard
WANTED
Full·hme
L1consed Pract1cal Nurse for
a commumty group home lor
People w1th MR/00 1n
Bidwell Hours 9am·5pm M·
F: Currenl LPN L.tcense and
Pharmacology cerllflcatlon
required Salary $10 50/hr
Excellent beneltts package
lncludmg
Health/Dental
Insurance and patd leave
time Pre employment drug
test1ng Send resurne to
Buckeye
Community
Ser'ltces PO Box 604 ,
Jackson,
OH
45640
Deadline for appltcat1ons
7/25!06 Equal Opportunity
Employer

•

5420 Sl AI 7 South, 4
bdrm, 2 5 bath hardwood
Uoors, new roof 2 car
garage $125.000 no land
contracts (740)339 2108

Attention!
local company o11enng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro
grams for you to buy your
home Instead of rent1ng
• 100"'o f1nanc1ng
Wtll do Housekeeping and • less than perlect credit
or clean Bus1ness call accepted
(304)882·3688
• Paymenl could be lhe
same as rani
I I\\\( I \I
Mortgage
Localors
(7401367-0000
8tNNLIO

Enterpnsa Rent·A·Car m Center IS now acceptmg :o;ff;•:nn:g:::;;:==~
Galllpohs and Jackson applications tor a beautiCian
OhiO ThiS opportunity g1ves
k
lo work two days a wee at
MoNF.Y
you llle chance to run your our lac1hty Interested cam:ll·
ro LoAN
own bustness and share 1n dates shOuld apply to
!.,~-------'
the profits you llelp create Aockspnngs Rehablfllalion · - - -............ . ,
Rapid promolions based on
Center, 36759 Aocksprmgs
••~OTICt: ••
performance m a dynamtc. Road,
Pomeroy
OhiO
team enwonment Htghly 45769 Extend1care Health
markelable skills and tra•n· Services, Inc 1s an equal Borrow Smafl Contact
lng In busmess manage· opportunity employer thai the OhiO DIVISIOn Of
lnsttlullon s
ment, sales and serv1ce At encourages
WQrkplace F1nanctal
Otf1ce ol Consumer
least two years of college dlvers•ty MtF DN
e~epenence IS requtred 10
Affairs BEFORE you refl·
additiOn to one full year of The
Alhens-Metgs nance your home or
proless•onal sales and cus-' Educational Service Center obtain a loan BEWARE
tamer service You must be has a pos1t1on opemng as of requests for any large
at least 21 years of age with Supervisor 1n Me1gs County edvonce payments of
clean dnv1ng record Apply Applicants sllould have fees or 1nsurance Call the
online
at extens1va e11penence 1n OH1ce of Consumer
www enteror1se com/careilrs 1mptementtng Cumculum
Affa1rs toll tree at 1 866
EOEIMFOV
Instruction, and ProfeSSIOnal 278·0003 to learn 1f the
Development Improvement mortgage broke1
or
MEOI HOME HEALTH
Plans Thts 15 a 12 month lender
1S
properly
AGENCY
contract pooliOn ~alary w1ll licensed (Th1o •s J pubhc
be based on certification serv1ce announcement
HAS OPENING FOR
and elipenence accord1ng to from lhe Oh10 Valley
salary
schedule
Puhllsntng Company)
"""PAN ANS"""
A d m 1 n 1 s t r a t 1v e
ce rt 1f1cat 1on/hcensure w1lh
128 PEA HOURI
"'")•'
'"''I{IN' II•
strong background 1n mat he·
.-- K\ .. ~..,
$42 PER VISIT
mabcs and sCience pre· "--..,;SERii
·iiiiviiiCiiFJiiS_ _.
Call Judie Reese, AN C
CliniCal Manager at
(740) 441 ·t779or 1800
48::1_:·6::3::34_.:._ _
:-:--:-_.:.
Needed somebody 10 mow
lawn in Gallipolis Please
call (740 )446 •8398

3 bedroom house In
Pomeroy Off ma1n road
R1ver VIeW $26 000 I 740
992·2593
-------4 bedroom 2 bath double
garage pool 2 acres
Easlern School D1str~ct
740·992·3465 after 5 00 PM

www galhpollscareercollegs CQm
Accrsd1llld Member Atcred!Hng

R&amp;J Truck1ng now Hmng at ,p
our New Haven VW
'11
•NOTICE•
Term1nal For Regional
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Hauls·Dump D1v 1 year
lNG CO recommends
OTA
that you do business With
venf1able exp
people you know and
Call1-800·462 9365 ask lor NOT lo send money
Management
Trainee
Kenl
through the mall unld you
Opportunldea available at Rockspr~ngs Rehabl lilaliOn have mvest1gated the

8

~~dnc~ ~0 Wa~::~c;w~; 1~

Plant Maintenance
Heiner's Bakery seeks qual
1f1ed mamtenance eng1neers
to work 1n the Huntington
plant Duties mclude pre·
ventatlve
maintenance
mach1ne fabncat1on, electrl
cal work, baste plumbing
retrlqeratlon repair welding
mach1ne shop work, bakery
production equ1pment repa1r
and
troubleshooting
Candidates must have a
h1gh school degree or GED
technical tram1ng or certifl·
cation 1n a maintenance field
ol study and prev~ous ma1n·
tenance. experienCe Apply
tn person at 1300 Adams
Avenue,
Huntington
between a 30 and 4 30 p m
Monday-Friday No phone
calls please

Sclloot..~
IN~·nu;cnON

All re1l eetate advertlalng
In thle newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makealt Illegal to
advertise ~a ny
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
race, eo!OI', rel!glon, eex
familial .status or N!l!onal
or1gln, or any Intention to
make any such
prelerence , hmllallon or
dt~crlmmatlo n

'

Thl1 newspaper will nol
knowingly accept
advertisements lor real
estate whtch !sIn
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• ad~Jartlaed In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportumty baaea

COUNTRY LIVING
By Owner 2 acres new
1anch 4 bdrrns 2 baths 111
dry wall stage leo:s 1'"1an I yr
from Gallipolis S7-l 50('
Owner F1nancmg (Y-30)6~9
2741
Gall1pol1s Ferry 3 Bedroorn
t 112 Bath 2 Car Garage
wood floors
Fireplace
Maple Kttchen (304)675·
2364
House tor Sale $155 000 DO
or Rent $600 per month,
Depos1t and lease requtred
No pets tns1de 1 5 m11es
lrom Po1nl Pleasant located
on 5 acres 1800 square
feet 3 bedroom 2 baths
great room ktlchell rl1n1ng
and laund•y ~ cn• gA·age
Call (304)593·020S or
(304)58€ 2003

Mason Co Rebe l R1dge Ro
2 m11es !rom Hannan H1gh
School. 3 Qed' 2 bath 3 car
gorage
llvmg AM;
F1replace ' 2 ac Land Lived
116 S Patk Or 5br 2ba 2· m 2 men
$120 000
s1ory b1leve1 deck abo~Je !304)562·5840 (30 4)552
· nd
1 II 304 675 0756
grou
poe ca
·
·
78oa aflerl5pm
Mason 3rd Street 2 BR. i
1 case
1
2 homes 1or sae,
to ba, great starter home or
town c1ty schools 1· 3 bed· Investment
property
room ranch 2 baths newly Prudential Bunch Realtors
remodeled etec heel C'A Bobby Muncy
Realtor
c1ty wat er
(740)709-&lt;&gt;299 or (304)525
1 older 3 bedroom 1 112 7761
bat~ Ja 11:~e fam 1 1~ room gds ----,:---~-:-:·
heal 9; .x•ol-.ln
c A New B1g 4 8edroon1 Wa\1&lt;.
{
17401446 3907 4 191565 In Closets F1replace Pant!~
Blacktop Dnve PriVate 2•
4137
acres 3 m1nutes from
5bd FORECLOSURE• Must Holzer town or 35 Must
Sell $33 0001 For llst1ngs Sell Trade or Best Offer
800 391 5228 ext F254
(740)389 8228

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

~.,r._,..::1i)~:·~;:;:s:;·._,JI
6

NO DOWN PAYMENT even
wtth less than perfect credit
is ava1laOie on this 3 bedroom 1 bath home 1n
Middleport Corner lot vinyl
stdmg . fireplace in hv1ng
room . good carpet t1le floor
in kitchen French doors
open to master bedroom.
jacuZZI tub off street parK-

ing Payment around $550
per month. 740·367·7129
Pnced to sell! Very mce

3BR. bath. upsta trs . furnished 1BR apt downstairs.

lurniture store in rear. car lot
on side All on t/2 ac lot at
130 Bulaville P1ke Gallipolis,
OH C9ll to s~e (740)446·
4782
.

MOIIILE Hom:-;
mRSAI.I:
1979 Bayview, 3BR wfl 1!2
Ba ths
andrent Expando
Current
lot
$75 per
month
AU appliances
included
'S5.90010BO
(304}593·1567 or (304)6755785,

t

www.mydallysentlnel.com
HOUSE'l

WI~&amp;­

ACREAGE

LEVEL LOT
1.75. Acres Mason Co. WV
Ctty Water &amp; Sewer

HJII

RENf

House. for rent

It

APAKI'MENIS

10

HOL"St::.'i
FOR RENT

2 Bd./ 1 Bath. Pomeroy. Nice
conditiOn. $450 00 740·
2000 1 6~80 Cla}rton. VInyl 843 . 5264
.Siding, Sh1[1gle Roof, Heat
Pump, New Carpet. 6 other 2 bedroom. 2 batn. near
hOmes on Lot. Call tor Holzer,
$B 50imo
plus
Pricing.
(7401388·0000· deposit.
(7 40)245·9880.
days:
(7401388 · 8017· (740)645·3636
evenrng5, (740)794-0460" - - - - - - - - cell. (740 )645·6150 - cell.
2BR home - Vin ton St $375
mo. + sec. dep. You pay utili·
2002 Redman Double W1de lies Gas heat (740)44628x70 $50.000 startmg 3644
Pnce Call for mfo anyt1me
(304)882-3057
"'28R hOLISB· Gartletd Ave
S460 rent 1l sec . dep 3B8
2007 28x80 w, game room t10use- LeGrande Blvd
Only $59.995 . Includes free $600 rent &amp; sec. dep You
delivery &amp; set up Call pa~· utilil1 es. Lease &amp; reter·
(740)385·2434
'
ences required. (740) 446·
36 44 for appl1calion .
'86 Creslrige t4x70 2BR/ 2 - - - - - - - bath , $6.995 Call (740)385- 3-4 BR horne Geo. Creek
9948.
Ad.· Non Smok1ng rental5600/mo. sec . dep. Ca ll
'86 Skyline front kitchen . ·1740)446·3644.
Cash price $8.995. Wrll
,
del1ver Call (740)385·9948. 3bd HUD ·home. 8 uy 1or
$ 15.900 ' For L1st.mgs 80091 Breezewood t4x70 3 391
.5228 xt709
bedroom. 1 bath. total elec4 to 5 Bedroom Horne in
triC . Call (740)256·6687
Mason.
$425/mon th ,
Brand new
16
w1de S300/deposil.
No Pets
(304)882 3652
vinyl/shingle S1811mo Call _ _ _-_ _ _ _ _ _
740 385 7671
(
'
.
·
4BR house for rent on Slate
Route
7S. 5650fmo. plus
Great used 3BR home on ly
ctep.
Call
(740)446·3644 for
59,995. Will holp with delivinto.
ery Call (740]38 5-7671.
- -- - - - - AHentlon !
Mobil e Home for sale. 14 X
Local companv oUering "NO
70. good condit1on. Wi ll sCI I
,
on land contract. 740-992· DOWN PAYME NT" programs lor you to buy your
5858
home instead of ·renllng.
Nice 14x70 3 bedroom only • tOO% 1inancing
- L
th
" 1
d.t
$10,995. Will help w1th dei1V·
ess an pe .. ec ere '
ery. Call (740)385-9621
acconted
._
, . Payment could be the
very clean 14 x64 2 bed- "same as rent
Locators.
0 I
995 Cal l Mortgage
room . n Y S' ·
1740 367
;,~,.,
4,;:01,38
;;;,;5..·0;,;6,;;98;,;._ _ __, __ _1__ _-oo_o_o_ _ __ .,
~
Uns &amp;
Hou se for rent on Lincoln.
ACIUAGE
Will be available July 151h.

1

----,---

MOFORRILEn'!~l:s

I

::.:.::.:::-'.:.:_____
For rent: Nice 2 bedroom
mobile home in Country
Homes. $32 5 + depos1t.
(740)385-40 19.

30amp transfer switch. 6 circuits and cable included
Hardly used. $2000. Ph:
(740)446·1282.
-------JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Call Ron EYans. · 1800·537·9528.
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
CO ncrete,
Angle ,
Channe l, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446--7300

- - - - Yorkie·Poo,
- -- "Tea-cup
female , baby doll lace. 5
months
apartment in the COIJnliy. "Toy Poodle. male regis ~:=.::.:.:.::.:.:-'.:.:___ New carpet &amp; cabinets,
Mobile home sites for up to fresh ly painted &amp; decorated, tered, 13 weeks. (740)446·

r

94=2~8;.
16xBO in Country Homes. W/0 hookup. Beautiful coon- ~
· -~-~~-.,
(740)365-4019
'
try •Setting . Must see to
Fauns &amp;
app•eciate.
$399/mo
VF£EfM!LI:s
Mobile Home sites lor up to (6 14)595·7773 or 1·600"
16x8o •n Counlry Homes. 798 4686
1740)385-4019.
"
..
Blackberries
for
sale:
$2 .75/qt $t1 .00fgal. 740·
APARIMENfS
L"ge 1BA in county.
n..,.....
Washer/dryer
hookup. 949--2193.
~
H&gt;R tv.nl
--Water/sewe r paid. $290fmo. For · Sale: Vine
Ripe
1 d
· &amp; 1
d 2
Pus eposll
re erences. Tomatoes
at
Yoder's
1 an
bedroom apart· (740)388-9686. '
1":&gt;
ho
0 .
I
ments, furnished ~nd untur~reen use, 1 mt. est o
~alii 1.
SA
ni shed, security deposit Modern 1 bedroom apt. ~.:~ pots on
141
required, no pels, 740-992· Phone: (740)446·0390.
221 8.
N·,ce,
clean
Eff.,c.•enN
1 BA apt/cabin, all utilities
-~
paid. Call (740)441-0117.
~~a~~se~~~~is~ 1~~p.req. O .,.!~"""'...

w

rl

Are you 65
or older?
If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
·subscription!
r

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

and Load Trail
(740)446·2412.

trailers .

John Deere 10 ft. No Til DrMI
tor
rent . • Carmichael
Equipment (740)446·2412.

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•

Subscriber's N'ame ______ _

_____ __
,

1

1

I

I

---,---

Address _
City/State/Zip -

-"--- - - - - - - , - -

Phone ____________________

::::IC:OH:l:EASE::-::1 if,r=--L-IVI:sTOCK---..,
1500"2200 sq. N. newly 'reo·
ovated prime .business
space on busy downtown
corner Gallipolis. (740)709·
• 1690.

\liiH II \\111'1

Hot.sE:How
Goons

Quality horse and !ives1ock
trailers no'.'{ available at
Carmichael Equipment. New
dealer for Va lley and
Kieferbuilt
Horse
and
Livestock Trailers. Many
options available· steel, alu·
minum. dressing roOms. liv·
inq Quarters. (740)446·2412.

p40

HAY &amp;
GRAIN

Hay for sale 2nd cutting
Atta lla Hay in shed you toad

Appliance

Warehouse

or drop off this coupon along

with a copy .of your photo ID to

1

I Ohio Valley Publishing P.O . BoK
I

469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

j

·-------·------------------------

-':,1':.':~

"'

. . l ~j

Hours

7:00AM-8:00PM
111411 mo. pd

~ ·-,

636 East Mam St

(J-IJ&amp;l

74().992-612!

-

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

992-5682

Lw-------,.1

7999

t K QJ

t 994 Ford Tempo, 4 Door,
Blue, Body In Excell ent
.Conditiorl , Tinted Windows.
Spoiler, New Tires ,Low
Miles, Front Wheel Drtve,
Automatic, CD j:)tayer. Very
Easy On Gas, .Awesome
Stereo, 500.00 Rims, Great
Car For Teen,
Price
Negotiable .Without Stereo
System, lots Ol Extras.
Used Furn~ure Store. 130 2000.00 {7401256·1020.
Butavllte Pl~e . Stt;)p by
(7 40)446·4762 , Gallipolis, 1998 Oids Delta 86, high
.7512 (evenings)

__

r'

Buy Of selL Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992·2526. Russ Moore,
owner.

2002 Mercury Mountaineer.
Loaded with only 48,000
miles.
2002 Ford Lighting F150
pick t.JP 30,000 mites. Call
(740)256"1245
eveninQS
and weekands.

... 7 5 t
West
t.:ast
&gt;11 109816
"' ., l3
• 5 'l
• J 10
t 109U16
• ',' 1 3
,. ,\109 63
"' 2
Sou lb

MONTY

"' ·~ 2

¥ t\K Q73
•
'&gt; 2

•"'K QJB
Dealer: Sou th

Vulnerable: East·West

(7.,- ~~~~:1~~ ~~

Joxvaw

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

30 Yrs.

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Tt4~Y'~e
~VOLVIN6!

Ut4·0H,

5 Mattress

-Paton

Toll Free 87:r-&amp;t59-t0001ll
10 Pine Street; Gallipolis

~

1

2002 Yamaha Vstar 1100
· Classic. 5:.500 miles, black,
new condition, leather bags,
50mpg, $s-,ooo. (740)245·
5934.
-------Harle)'
Davidson 2003
Anniversary "Blu e" Wide
Glide, 9,500 miles, ltke new,
lots of extra's $16,000 call
(740)441 -11 87 (304)593·

r

23 2
66,000
mites.
080. ~5;:
99 Dodge
Ram$5,900
1500 Sport.
~=--""'!~~--,
VB, 31 B, 2WD, leather,
BoATSroR~SMALEoroRS
loaded,
94,000
miles.
$8,900 OBO. (740)416-

I

0548,
(740)416·60 10, 2t ft. Glasport boat &amp;
(740)446 ·7077 ·
Tand em trailer. 305 Chevy
i n b 0 a r d~f 0 u I b 0 a r d
Rome Auto Sales
Mercruiser, 150 hours. Call
.(740)441·9544
(740}384·2646. $6,000
01 Grand Prix GT $5,200
For sale- 2 man boat with
97 Ranger $5,900;
97 Venture $ 2,200
electric anchor used 3times
97F-1504x4$4,850
$400. 4.5 HP gas engine.
tank 8ttached $450. Phone
98 5 . 10 $ 3,800
(740)441 8299
97 Cavalier $1,395
·
·
97 Cavalier Z-24 $3,000
CAM~n&lt; ·&amp;
S
S
&lt;~
98 eb1• 2.200
MOTOR HOII·~
79 CJ 7 S2,000
=
00 Alero $3,200
99 Aahger 4x4 $4, 100
02 Wildcat 27M. 5th wheel,
01 Dodge Ram quad cab sli da . out. Look and make
offer Call (740)245 9109
~4B~;~ . _
(740)441 · 7632.
.
,

r

BARNEY

Hamood Cabinnrr And hmHure

'CEPT HE SAID THAT DOC SAID
THAT MABEL SAID THAT
LUREEN TOLD HER !!

www.tiaabar-creekoabhtetry.eoJD

~;;;;;;;;;~~~~:~~~~~~;;;d

ROBERT

TREE

TRIMMING &amp;

BISSELL

.

GENERAL ·
CONTRAOING

COIISmUCTIOII
•

Prompt

work

New Homes

&amp; qualitY

Affordable Rates

• Garages
• Complete

References
Free Estimates

Ul
I J'•0-992·1.,1

"Insured"
G

CaII ary Stan Iey

•

Stop &amp; Compare

~=;;;;;;~

~

1'\C ... BUT nl£ FO~T

Available

Remodeling

740-742·2293

~~~~~~~~

2 600

1992 Rockwood lotd down,
slee ps 6. Good condi1ion
$1 400 OBO (740)245
,
·
•
1206
·
1995 Ford Truck. Stepside.
1990 S b. d S E S I
1994 Nomad. Excellent con·
un tr
' IX)r Y •
Red. Call for details. 740- dition, 5th whetil slide out,
queen size bed, solid oak
.
_
992 6396
wood mlerior, with cedar
closets. (740)256-6392.
t999 Ford F250 Super duty
99,000 miles, Lariat, ext. 2000 GuHslream 26 ft. pull·
cab. long wheel base, 5th behi nd camper sleeps 6;
wheel ready. Excellent con· "ideal for fair season.
~l ion . (740)256·6392.
$7200.740-867-0717
2001 37 112 ft. Sportsmoo
camper with super s11Cieout.
Excellent condition. Like
NEW! (740)446-2895
2002 Jayco Eagle 5th wheel ,
30': 2 slides; excellent condi·
tion. (3041834·0044 or
. (740)256-6279.

... , 1n1t 1..,

HOME
lMPHOVEMENfS

on
SAVINGS

like new electric Hospital
be;
(304)675-6132
(304)675·6963

L

EHst
Pass

4'

Pass

Pass

Pass

opportunity, and when might it be better
to discard?
Let's start with a srtuat1on th at everyone
oughllo have down pal. How should lhe
defenders play to defeat four hearts?
Some 12·point hands with four-card
major-suit support are worth a game
Ioree, but that North hand is nol one ol
them . It is aceless and has the dreadful
4-3·3·3 distribution witfi e,ighl losers
(one spade, three hearts, one diamond
and three clubs) , wh1ch is th e textbook
numb er tor a game-invitattonal limit
raise
West leads his singleton club. East w1ns
with hts ace and return s a cl ub, wh1ch
West ruffs. What should West do now?
West wants to get East back on lead. But
does East have the spade ace or the
diamond ace?
Al trick lwo East if he has lhe spade
ace, returns the highest remaining club
he holds - here, the 10 - as a suil·
preference signal for the higher-ranking
of the other lwo side suits. II Ea'sl has lhe
diamohd ace. he leads back h1s lowest
club - here, the three. {With neither,
ace, he return s a middling club.)
Here are !he basic pnnciples! Be happy
to ruff with a useless trump, especially if
it gains a free trtck, or if you have some·
thing important to do, or if you can get a
second ruff. When giving partner a ruff,
make a suit-preference signal.

•

BIG NATE

"""II

Advertise
in this
space
fQr
s54 per
month

work later.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Success wilLbe
denied you if you don't have th e Staying
power or mental fortitude to be as strong
of a fini sher as you are a starter. Don't
walk away and quit before achievint:J your
aims.
VI AGO (Aug. 23-Sepl . 22) - Associates
will have far more faith In your abilities
than you may have In yourself. f!'ybu
allow negative thinking to direct your

PEANUTS

I KNOW IT'S 140T, MEN ,.

NOT TOO I=AR AHEAD 15
AN OASIS WI-IERE TllERE'LL
BE LOTS 01= WATER ...

1:1UT LET'S KEEP GOING ..

behavior, it's a certainty t11at you 'll ptoVe

!

(740) 949-1405

f
!

Cornerstone
Construction
Residential ~ Commercht.l • General Contr~tCtlng
Painting • Doors • Windows •
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions
WV 038992
• Plnmhing • Electrical
OH 382~
• Accoustic C~ ilinf!

20 Hawk

41

21 Belief
22 Place for a

De,ks
• Remodeling
740-367-0544
740-339·3412

SUNSHINE CLUB

ADVERTISE IN.THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

VANS
FOR SALE

~~-------

GARFIELD

Shop
Classifieds!

2 Designer

24 Em, Bee or

wager

figurehead
23 Steam room
26 Handbooks

label
3 James or
Kett
4 Lodging

Polly
25 AlawHself
26 Proceilses

40 Powdery
41 Story
42 Mountains

29 - -ho

5 Vaccine

30 Objecl to
31 Sundial
numeral
33 Dvnamlle kin
34 Charged

6 Similar
7 Earth,
in eombos
8 Calculating
9 " Brian 's

~articles

cotton

WHAT'S THAT

YOU HAVE AMNESIA AND'

YOU SAY, EL.L.EN?

DON'T REMEMBER ME?

Memory

]an. 5 1928' - July 17, 2002
little did we know that day God
was going !o call your name.
In life I loved yo u dearly,
ln death we do the sa me.
It broke our hearts lo lose you.
You did ,not go alone, part of me
went with you the day God called
y0 u home.
You le ft me peaceful memories!
Although I can' t see you
You ' ll always be in my heart.
Wife-Evelyn E. Hollon and Family

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547
YOUNG'S

MilllEY'S
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street

Middleport. OH
IOxiOxiOxlO
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
· Self·Storage"

oi" river·
43 Antlered

27

ruminant

Where
to gel off
28 Prepare

flour
30 Candle
lover
32 Precondi-

Song" lead

35
36
38
39

Squabble
10 Morelhen
Drinks to
· willing
Qui~ stuffing 1 t Decade
E~enezer ' s 19 Cookieoath
selling org,
~D Dues payer, 20 Abyss
for short
22 Nape knots

44 Crocus
""bulb"
45 Creator of
Quaslmocfo
46 Ka'f)Owl
47 Stage

tions

scenery

34 Meryl, in
"Out of
Alrica "

49 Follow
relentlessly

35 Burritos'
kin ' ,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ceklbnt)' C~· tryp10grams a1e C1ea:ed tern q\IC'l~llons IIV tarr'()_Us peo~ past arlJ present
EaCh tene1ln tit apher s1aros !(J ai'01tle~
Today'sdue. laquaiS~1
"FM

NBBGLTRR ,

JYL ."

•

H

WHXUATJ

KOHLKJHNAX,

KAB

SHJRX

AT

WHXUA

IYRX

AHX

0

ABFT

DGDF

•

·•

ABFTJTG
RDK

HL

BL

XAT

XAT
FDIBJ

ZTONpR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "You can say what you like about long ;resS&lt;!s, but
they cover a multitude of shins." - Mae West

WOIO

UMI

EL~IRYE

TALK A60U1 A

DARK CL.OUD'

H!\VlNG A
5fl.V!SR l-INING!

yoursell right.
~
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -You can do
rt98sonably well, but it will be up to you as
to Whfl ther or not you'll be content with
wh~t you achieve. II your expectations
are unreatislic. you 'll be severely disappointed.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24- Nov. 22)- All agreements. into which you enter must be
clearly thought out and that holds true fw
e11eryone. II an arrangement into which
you enter isn't lair to all, it'll come apart
at the seams
SAGITTARIU S (Noll. 23- 0ec. 21) - II
you fait to follow lhrough on a projecl th e
way you initially enviSIQned It, the end
result s won'! be anyth1ng like you wanted
ana be some thing you won 't be proud to
· say you did
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Be
exlfa mindful of 1t1e image you protect
socially. If you play down to olhe1s or
treal af/ybodv Indifferently, you will w1nd
up With a repulation wllich tsn't apt to be
admired.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Don't be
o11erty concerned about mak1ng a brg
impression on others or 11 could cause
you to boost or exaggerate th ings in
ways whicll may teed your ego. bul do
very ljttle fof you.r image.
PISCES ~Feb . 20- March 20)- Strive to
· '· be sincere and forthnght, even if vou
thi nk it might hurt your chances tor success It you are, you won't have to worry
iater about what you spoKe ol and to
whom you satd it.
AR IES (March 21-April 191 - Again
financial cond1 tfons could con tinue to be
a tnfte tricky lor you . .so 1f you must negotiate In this area. use your bost JUdgment
conce rning how you handle the matli:lr at

II I I I I
L UL F V

.-------, ~

~! U K R T

-f 1" .,

~

A good friend finished his
schooling and was a licensed

He found a nice office in a
To caleb people"s ·
anemio.n he posted a sign.thai read:
~~-;.G:_Y;_:C~E..,N~T,_;... You Have Found The--- Tower!"
J

·:

L.L...L-L.J--J ~

.I• Is

II
•

•

optician.

new building.

l

I 0

rb
_

::oll'lc ierr file ckuddt quoted
OW' l1lhn; tM ltle mtnrn.g '*0101

L..l_,.LJ_,.L_!_). vou oe•e ioo irorn srep No. 3 btl¢.*,

:\ F1!N;

~&lt;UM6HW

t faERI IN

:1

1Hf SE IOUAR£S

t:l.

UNSCIAM8lE ABOVE
10 G£1 ANSWER

Ill

LEII{IS

ICIIAIILETI ANIWIRS 71141!16
Empl•y- Gross-

Ounce- Balsam - CLASSROOM

SrudeniS siill attended Ihe historic university: An old
was nice to have
oe~ple m~e illook like a real CLASSROOM. .
ladv with a tour commemed thal il

ARLO &amp;JANIS
HOWWA&amp;
WOilK
TODAY!

hand.

'Edison :Ho[{on

37 Not present
38 Make a

23 US Army
rank

attire

'lfour'lllrt~;

could b8 beneficial to olhers. wnat lhey
gain will end up rewarding you in large
_measure
CANCER ( ~no 2 1-July 22) - It's unlike
you, but thore·s a chance some frivolous
Interests mlghl sidetrack you away from
your responsibilities and duties . Wasting
your time now will make lor double the

SOHETHINC,.

FREE
ESTIMATES

t 8 Sc&gt;4l weapon
(2 Wds.)
1 Teahouse

year ahead through putting your talen ts
and skills lo work lor you in ways that

.JUST LET
ME CHECK

Athens

All types of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamless Guner
Downspout

17

Good things could,happen tor you tn the

IMPORTS

AI

t4
15
t6

Tueaday, July 18, 2006
By Bernice Bede Osol

.

H.l. Wrh8S81
and Sans

t3

51 Conger
Just serape 52 Syllogism
by
word
Own
53 Soften
Smidgen
54 Undertake
Popular
55 Urban Ill
cruise stop
Deluge
DOWN

AstroGraph

TRUCKS
FOR S,\LE .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. LoCal refere nces fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 . Rogers Ba sem ent
- - , - - - , - - - - Waterproofing.
t999 Chevy Silverado 4WD
P/U, 85,000 mil es, 5.3 va, r-::~:-:-:----;
all options, short bed with
topper. Excellent Condition,
$11,000. (740)645·0'626.
--....,,---,----,--,--95 Jeep Cherokee 4-Wheel,
new rubber one owner.

pii

3¥

post .

Last week, we looked at when declarer
should and should not ruft or overruft.
This week. we give the defenders a
chance to ruff in. When should they ruff
one of declarer's tr1cks if they have the

·r~O~--A·,-~---,1 ·~~«l~~M~OTO-•R•CY---~......
.,
UJ ~
4 w~~ ~·u.ci
2002 Olds Atero teal green
"Awesome car"
Under
21,000 mites V6· 3.4l
engine. Runs great! Asking
$7,000. Call after 6pm
(740)992 -1 090
-------'-2003 Jeep Libert.• Umited
'J
Ed,.t,·on 4, 4, 6 C"i, s•·lver,
,
leather ·,nter,·o,. loaded,

West
P11ss

From declarer's ruffs
to defenders' ruffs

Free Estimates

"---miiiiaoiiSiioALEiiiii--"·

~orlh

.South
I •

Opening lead : A 2

Portable Oxygen • CPAP
Hellos
• Hospital Beds
HomeOII
• Wheelchairs ,
Nebulizers
Delivering Daily •One Stop Shop*

Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

me chanic owned, travel in
style, must see! $5,900 or
$500!
POLICE
IMPOUNDS!
New Sofa &amp; Loveseat, $400;
best
offer. 446·9961
Sofa
&amp; Chair, $350: Cars/Trucks from $500! For
listings
800"391·5227
x390t
Recliner, $200 Open 9am3pm Sat, Mollohan's, 202
In Memory
In
1990 Lincoln Continental, 1
Clark Chapel Road , Porter,
owner car in very good con"
Ohio
(740)386·0173;
dition. Call (740)379·2597.
(740)446·7444.
In Memory
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675·7386. For At e,
re·cordltioned automa ti c
washers &amp; dryers, rehigera·
tors, gas end electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

07 -17 Oli

!J 8 6 ~

•

Pomt'roy, OH

...._

Call Ahead For Daliy Spedal1 99!Z..fi121
Trv Our Breakfa111
Breakfut Ham lc Chee11e Bale11 51.75
Bft.llt:fast Tomadon 2/52.00
S;ausaJie Biscuit 51 .75
Sa uuge 81scuit wfGrillvy 52 ..50
Oonu~, Tumoveu &amp; Lattices
35ct cup of coffee 7-!lam·
Dell &amp;. Bakerr
Kahn's Bologna SJ.OS 16 Honey Ham 5·1.70 lb
Turkey Breast 54.!15 lb
Swlss Chtese $4.05lb
Fresh Mozurella S6.59lb.
Hummu11 55.59 lb .
A.mi11h Potato Sa to~d 53 ... 5 lb.
r .. ,t~ Salad SJ.50 lb .
"Ori10e Thru For lo('a) Tom•lou ~nd other Produc.-"
89c 2 liter of Pepsi, Did Pepsi or MI. Dew
!Willi.- S~pplln 1-.oJII

Repair

Nurth
&lt;!&gt;K QJ .

... JULY MONTiiL Y SPECIALS*"

;;r,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; --------

I,

Ma ll

Auto &amp; Truck

740-949-2217

99 Chevy .Astro Conversion
CraNsman mower ' 18 HP Van . Excellent co ndition,
In Henderson, WV. Pre· Kohl er motor, 44 inch cuL loaded, TVNCA, captains
{740)682 -75 12r seats, towi ng package.
owned Appliances starting
Asking .
·$7 ,300.
Call
at $75 &amp; up all under
17401 367·0622.
Warranty, also have recon·
dltioned Big Screen TV 's
'
A~
Lu xury
Van ,
Chevy,
by R'o n s TV (304.875·
FOH SALE
Excellent
condition,

ANnQUES
I

ROGER HVSELL
GARAGE ·

~~------~"'

ll!
o.,H~
. H.". ·-11-_3 ,;.
1M.-F..;)_....., motes, $2,500 . .(740)6 82·

•

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

r

_ $3.25 e be1.!301i'5-430B

4PalHpolis 11aHp ~rthune
Joint ~leasant Jtegtster
The Daily Sentinel
~unbap t!timei -i&gt;·entinel

H1irs Self
Storage

John Deere Mint Excavator!
Tractor loader Backhoe/
Skid Steers. Carmichael
97 Chevy 4 WD ext cab
Twin Rivers Tower is accept· Equipment (740)446·24 12
wt3rd door. Vortec 350 aulolng applications for walling
matic
very nice, runs good.
New
John
Deere
Compacts
list for Hud"subsized, 1· br,
apartment, cell 675·6679 and 5000 Series Ulility trac· $5,600. OBO (217)316-1 829
Equal Hqusing Opportunity tors @0% Fixed for 36 or (304)576·2762
months
through
John
Valley View Apartments
Deere Credit . Carmichael 97 Ford F- 150 XLT, V 6, 4
Now accepting applications EquipmBnt (740}446·2412
WhE!el Drive, Ext. Cab
for t or 2 bedroom
141 ,000 miles $6.500 OBO.
apartments.
Oua li.ty John Deere Hay 78 Camara Race ready,
Apply at office
.Equlpmanl for less-round never raced Street Legal.
balers, square balers &amp;
800 St. At. 325 .
$7.000 OBO call for more
Thurman, Ohio
mower conditioners @4.7% details (740)446·26 t5 .
(419)526-o466.
P:ixed for 48 months through
TDD#
John
Dee re
Credit.
4X4
EQuipment
FOR SALE
14195260466 ~ Carmichael
(740)446·2412.
1990 7.3 diesel 5 speed,
4x4, 150,000 miles. $4,700.
(740)388-8358.

¥.!!!

46 Emply
47 Conllnent
divider
48 Noisy
50 Novelist

poetry

· 12 Mooring

[5

your source for quality
goosenecl&lt;s, dumps and ulil·
ities. Your dealer tor Prostar

1 Horace's
problem

a:AJUUll'lU'H

Have some hauli'ng to do?
·
,
Carmichael
Equipment·

41 SOar tooth

43 Uncouple

8 "Out, cat!"

I.--:;-------

L.-..iiilllililliillioii-,.1

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 1/2
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mb.
No Pets, LeSse Plus
Security Deposit Required,
(740)367-7086.

Phillip
Alder

r ~=

mo. (qua
740)446ousmg
Opportunity.
·334 4
-------Immaculate 2 bedroom

r

ACROSS

Honda engine. Electric or
recoi l starl. Wheel kit.

ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
IVJ"t
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)44 1·11 11
2 bedroom water/trash pa id,
for
application &amp; information.
neat Porter. NO PETS.
19 gallons of Sharman
Reference, deposit requ ired
Williams ~did stain in medi·
Downtown Apartment 3
$325/mo. (740)388·1100
um-dark ,brown , 5100.00
bedrooms, t 112 baths. ceo"
OBO 740 il92·0413
2 Bedroom . all electric, Hud tral air, carpet/hardwood
Approved, nice yard, Bailey lloors, appliances including
l'l:rs
provided.
roRSALE
Ru n, Pomeroy. No Pets. washer/dryer
Ample storage a\iailable.
740-992-7546.
Deposit
required . Call 6 Miniature Dachshunds first
-------2 Bedrooms-·2 Baths. Aft (740)446·7654.
shots &amp; wormed ready to go
ElectriC, Free Water, wash·
07 ·22·06 304·593·3820
er/dryer.
$450 . month. Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp;
Deposit 740·742·3109.
bath, upstairs. clean. no . CKC Jack Russell puppies.
R,
ba,
CA,
new
paint,
pets.
Aeffdeposit requ ired. Six weeks old. Shots and
2
28
new carpet. Country setting, (740)446-~5 19.
wormed, tails docked. S125
-------IWargte I
It h
yar~ Gracious living..! and 2 bed- each. 740·256·3 166
a er sewer ras
pal
room laPad!!lents at Village
5400/mo. plus deposi1 and ManoV arlti~Riverside - - - , - - - - - - - ·re rerence _(740)388-9686.
--:
Apartments in iddteport. CKC Miniature Pinscher,
2B A, large livingroom. wash From $295-$444. Call 740· Ready to Go. Black/Tan,
room, porch with. awning, 992-5064 . Equal Housing Red/Tan &amp; Cream!Tan. Call
storage building. AJC, very Qpport~nities..
(740)388·8768
nice, no pets. In Gallipolis. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (7401446 . 2003 , (740 ,446 • Honeysuckle
Hills L.9.b pup s, Chocolate &amp;
l409
Apartments, Gallipolis, now Black, shots &amp; wormed
_:_::::___ _ _ _ _ accepting applications for. 2 (304)895·3274
3 Bd . and 2 Bd. Mobile B d
A
N --------. e room par1men 1s, o Homes, both 1 1/2 bath , A 1 1 A
I
·1 bl Pure bred Cocker Spaniel
en a SSIS ance ava1 a a
Pomeroy Area . Call 740th. ·
A
ptJppy $125 . Call (740)388al
ts ttmeE. ent starts
243·5611 . ~
· at· 0401.
13151 .
1 H

2 bedroom
apt. Vine St.
G
. .
a11 tpo1IS. 17 40) 367-7886 .
North 3rd A11e., Middleport,
NB\vly renovated. nice. quiet
2 bedroom, fu rnished .
neighborhood. Can shaY.• on Middleport-·2 Bedroom Apt:
49.5 acres by Tycoon Lake.
deposit &amp; previous renlal
not1ce. The Tan Shak ca ll $45o•. plus utilities_ 740·843· references required, No
Call (740)709· 1166
(740)446-7425 for an app1. 5264
t (740)992 0165
pe s, ·
·

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle '

No Pets. 2-3 bedroom. Green school 7500w generator with 13hp

740:992-5858

::======:: r
"--------,.1

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

s

IU,I\1"

www.mydailysentinel.com

IUKRFNr

district, large yard, no inside
pets, taking applicatioOs
Electric and Gas Available New 2 bedroom house in now. (740)446-6890 anyGr~;~at 101 for Mobile Home GalhpOiis. Clean aM com- time.
or New Construct 1on
· lortable Central air, laundry
11 000
room, also New 1 Bedroom BEAUTIFUL
APART•
(304)295·9090
House Call for details MENTS
AT
BUDGET
(740)441.0194 or (740)441PRICES AT JACKSON
Moblle Home or Butlding Lot _1_18_4_.- - - - - - ESTATES, 52 Wostwood
for ~ale tn Mtddleport 66' X Aactne (in town) 4 Br. , 2 !uti DriVe !rom $344 to $442.
117 . Level lot wtth garage baths, CIA, Water, Garbage WaHl; to shop &amp; movies. Call
Equal
localed at South Thtrd included.
$SOO dep .. 740-446-2568.
Street. 416-1354 or 992- . $500 per Month, references. Housing Opponuntty.
3194
.
740·949-2217
Brand new 2 Bedroom
ll.f~\L
Small house for rent in Apartments Washer/dryer
WAI'ITEil
Middleport.
5400.00/plus hookup , stovel relrlgerator
dep
Call 740-992·3823. included.
NGed to sell rour home? Available August 1st.
At so available un,lts State
Late on payments, divorce.
.
Route 160. Call for details
JOb transfer or a death ? I Very mce 2 &amp; 3 B~ hOmes. (740)441 -0194 or (740)44t' c e~ n buy your home. All cash Attached garage. btg lawns, ·
4
and QUICk clOSing. 740·41 6· no pets, ref &amp; dep. Starting 118 ·
C
- -,al $4 50 1740 )446' 2801·
0 -N-VEc-N
- IcE-c
NT-:cLcc
V-,-LO
:cC
:cA
:::T3130.

•:o.-r.n:

Monday, July 17, 2006
ALLEY OOP

Monday, July 17, 2006

CARPENTER
SERVICE

GRIZZWELLS
1\l\$ 4Uil-\1-1'&lt;.55 !ml&lt; ~ ~ ~~~
'A \.mt.E
otnDAitD

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - In order to
gat you ott his/her back, an assoctate
might pacily you by making an e~trao rdi ·
nary promise to yOu that you'll lake to
' heart Unlorlunately, 1! isn't likely to be
fulfilled.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Do.be protective of yot.Jr perSona! interests . but
atso be sure to share fairly w1t11 others
anything wh1ct1 they have helped, you
gain. Major problems wi lt evolve through
satfishness.

SOUP TO NUTZ
OUR

• Ftoom Addition• &amp;

~a~

Remodeling

• New Gerage1
• EIKtrlcat &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting A Gutter.
·VInyl Siding &amp; Pelnllng

() .

S&gt;aie ·,s RaTeD
&gt;&lt;e Bo-n-&lt;&gt;M iN

Qual.iT'/ ~f LiFe

ISSUES .

· Patio and Porch l?t'ikl
WV036725

V.C YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomrroy Otun
?5 "'r,u~ L,x,JI £ ~pr 1

l'!lro-'

'
••

•

.,

�Page B6 • The Dailr. Sentinel

MLB Standings
Nltlonat L.e1gue

East Division

WLPctGB

New York
Atlanta
Philadelphia
Florida

55 ·
43
42
40
39

37
49
4!1
so

.598
.467
.467
.444

St Louis

52 39 .5Tt 49 44 527 4
45 · 4!1 .484 8
45 '48 .464 8

Waslllngton
54 .419
Central Olvlalon

12
t2
••

16~

WLPCIGB

ClnclnnaH

Hou!llon
Milwaukee

011leago

Pittsburgh

1

35 56 .385 17

32 61 .344 21
W..t Division
WL
PctGB
San Diego
48 43 .527 Los Angeles 46 4S .500 2~
San Francisco 46 46 .500 2~
Arizona
45 46 .495 3
Colorado
44 47 .484 4

A,merlcan League
East Division
W L PctGB .

Boston
New York
Toronto
Baltimore
Tampa Ba-r

54
53
51
43
39

38 .600 36 .596 ~~
40 .560 3'1,
51 .457 13
53 .424 16

Central Division
WLPctGB
62 30 .674 -

Oetrol1

Chicago

· 57 34 .626 4',

Minnesota

50 40

Cleveland

4i

.556 11

50 ....451 20'··?

Kansas City 32 59 .352 29'':.
West Division
WLPctGB
Qakland
48 44 .522 Texas
47 45 .511 1

Los Angetes 46 45 .505 11&gt;l
·44 48 .478 4
Seattle

Sunday's Games
Kaneas City 9, Detroit 6
N.Y. Yankees 6, Chicago White Sox 4
Toronto 4, Seattle 3, H Innings
Baltimore 4, Texas o

"Oaklan~

8, Boston 1

Minnesota 5, Cleveland 2
L.A. Angela 7, Tampa Bay 5

Aorida 9, Houston 3

Clncin,ati 6, ColoradO 4
Wash lr'!g~on 8. Pittsburgh

Innings

~.

St. louts 11, LA. Dodgers 3
Atlanta· 10, San Diego 5
.
Philadelphia 6, San Francisco 2
Milwaukee 10, Arizona 5
N.Y. Mets 13, Chicago Cubs 7

Speed

11

Senden holds off Hayes
SILVIS, Ill . (AP) - John
Sendcn birdied the 17th hole
and saved par on 18 to hold
off J.P. Hayes and win the
John Deere Classic on
Sunday. earning his first
PGA Tour victory and qualifying for the British Open.
Mak ing his !39th start,
Senden shot 3-under 68 to
finish at . 19-under 265 to
beat Hayes (65) by one
stroke.
Seeking his third Tour victory and .,econd win ;ll the
Deere' Classic, Haye s put
himself in position for an
eagle and the lead on the
. 17th hole but settled for a
birdie instead. He drove his
tee shot 335 yards and hit a
S-iron within about 6 feet .of
the hole. His eagle putt
rolled to the right ol the cup.
AftC:r a ta·p-i n. he was
momentarily tied for the
lead.
But Senden took the lead
when he birdied the 17th,
tapping in fram under 2 feet.
Hayes· second shot on 18
landed in a bunker to the
right of the green. but his
next one rolled just over 4
feet pa't the pin. He knocked
in the &gt;hort put to save par
and remain within a stroke.
Thinus goi interesting
· when sencten ·s second shot
on 18 landed in the same
bunker. His chip shot landed
5 inches from the hole for an

more shot at setting a lap
under four seconds. As the
light went green, Tom
Mueller of Cincinnati beat
from Page Bl
Brandon
Booher
of
Chanwain.
Illinois
off
the
·dragstcrs chutes.
.
line. but Booher chased him
The driver did get his car down to the finish and
stopped and was all right. edged Muelltlr with a lap of
but his incidcnnhowcd just 4.0 16, so close to the lap
how hard these drivers were times they were hoping for.
pushing their cars to grah
"These guys are working
the victory.
hard to put on a good show,
Once · the track was they work with each other,
cleared, the cars went back but when it comes to elimi·to racing and came down to nations. it is blood and guts,
the fastest two Outlaw that is the value of their raeDragsters in each class. In . ing," said Smith.
the slower class. Bob
In the rest of the evenings
Wright of Buckhannon racing
action.
Pat
edged Bruce Bennett of McFadden edged Patrick
Maryland by .005 differ- Randolph in the Modiried
ence at the line at nearly ·division, Derrick Carter
defeated Alexis Harper in
164 mph.
·
In the fastest e-ight, fans the Junior Dragster diviwere on the edge of their sian , Tony Saunders beat
seat as the two dragsters Joe Hollaway in the
came to the line with one Supersport Street, Tyler

Monday, July 1'7, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com
•

Sweep

fromPageBI
easy tap-in for par and the
victory.
Alex Cejka (67) and Heath deepest slump since it
Slocum (68) tied for third at dropped I 0 in a row last
16 under.
season. The Rockies were a
The attention most of the half-game out in the NL
week centered on teen sensa- West before the skid, which
tion Michelle Wie and her
attempt to become the first has dumped them into last
woman in 61 years to make place.
"! don't think by any
the cut on the PGA Tour, but
means
that we're om of it."
she was 8 over and withdrew
said
Josh
Fogg, who turned
•because of heat exhaustion
a
3-1
le'ad
over to the
after nine holes Fri\lay. A
bullpen
after
the seventh .
day later, Senden stepped ·
"Thts is just a rough spot.
into the spotlight.
. .
He shot 64 on Saturday to We have a good enough
go 16 under and take a three- teain to go out and put
stroke 'lead on Heath Slocum toget her . fi\·e ; s·ix, seven
and Patrick Sheehan. It was · wins in a row and gain some
the first time the Australian ground. No matter who you
led after three rounds since play for, you go through
joining the tour live years these kinds of slumps."
Colorado hadn 't been
ago. His best previous finish
was a tie for fifth at the Bob swept in a:four-same series
Hope Chrysler Classic in in Cincinnati smce 1993 .
The Rockies are 2-11 in
January.
He was 19 under after a 6- four· seasons at Great
foot putt for birdie on the American Ball Park, where
par-3 seventh, before a they've lost nine in a row.
The Rockies also matched
bogey on the par-4 ninth their
season low point at
his first since Friday. He
three
games
under .500 (44parred his next seven holes,
47).
a
bad
sign
for a team
and a two-man game develwith playoff aspirations .
oped with Hayes.
Fogg limited the Reds to
Hayes, who finished a
five
hits and one run m
tournament-record 22 under
sevej1
innings on a 91to win here four years ago,
was two strokes off the lead degree afternoon . . only to
at 16 unaerafter a birdie on see another solid start
No. II - his fifth. He was ruined by a bullpen tluit has
17 under after a birdie on 14, been highly undependable
French defeated Derek
Baum in the Top/Pro division, Marc French beat Jeff
Adkins in the Trophy Class
and Wanita French defeated
Vickee r;:arter in the Powder
Puff division.
It was the first time all
three of the French family
linished tirst on the same
night.
Now, as the summer heats
up, so does the action at
Kanawha
Valley
Motorsports Park.
Next week will feature
the regular show with
admission being $25 for a
carload, on Saturday, July
29 the track will bring in
. ·Outlaw Funny Cars and on
August 19 the track will
feature 18-20 of the Pro
Modified Automatic . cars
. with a big show planned.
The track is also looking
to bring back the Outlaw
Dragsters in the future, as

eight-player deal with
for the last month
about Washington · before the
The Reds know
that: Before the All-Star series opener.
The Reds inducted pitchbreak; they lost eight of nine
primarily because of their ers Tom Seaver and Tom
bullpen. Now; they're look- Bmwning and first baseman
Lee May into their Hall of
ing more like a contender.
"I think the team knows Fame, honoring them on the
that the front office is doing rield before the game.
what they can to help us Seaver threw . a ceremonial
win," manager Jerry Narron rirst pitch to Johnny Bench,
said. ··•1 think those trades who was his catcher in
kind of rejuvenateq the Cincinnati.
Then, the 27.043 fan s setteam a little hit."
tled
in. to watch a couple of
Adam Dunn &gt;tarted the
comeback by hitting left- up-and-down tea ms scufbander Tom Martin's first flin g to &gt;lay in playoff conpitch for hi s 30th homer in tention at midseason.
Unlike the Red s, who
the eighth inning-. cutting it
to 3-2 . Aurilia 's two-out have made high-profile
single off 'Mesa gave the moves to bolster their main
Red s their first lead. and weakness, ,the Rockies have
Royce Clayton followed stayed the course. The startwith a two-run double for a ing pitching has been cxem. plary, but the offense and
6-3 lead.
"If we're within a touch- the bullpen have been undedown, we feel we're in it," pendable, setting up a lot of
said Dunn. who played close losses.
What do the Rockies do
quarterback at Texas .. "You
never know whose night it's now?
· "Just to make a move to
going to be. That's why it's
fun."
make a move -doesn't make
Todd Colley (4-4) pitched ' much sense:· manager Clint
the eighth to get the win. Hurdle said. "But (general
New closer Eddie Guardado manager Dan 0' Dowel) is
gave up Clint Barmes· solo here. We're talking. We're
homer· i'n the · ninth while watching."
getting his third save in the
.Notes:SS
Omar
, series. The Reds got Quintanilla \\1as out of the
Guardado from Seattle I 0 Rockies lineup with a
days ago. starting the bruised right shin. sustained
bullpen overhaul.
when he fouled ~ pitch on
They also obtained a pair Saturday night. He 's day-toof relievers as part of an day.

· Earthquake and
tsunami hit Indonesia's
Java island, A2

all

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 55, No. 2;~5

• Post 128 knocks off
Lancaster. See Page 81

OBITUARIES '
Page AS
• Eileen Bowers, 87
• George Brickles' II, 87

Larry Crum/photo

.Two of the Pro Top Outlaw Dragsters make -a run during Saturday's action at Kanawha Valley
Motor~;ports Park.

INSIDE
..

from PageBl

'

• Wesif~rners flee
Lebanon, attacks'
-continue, signs of
diplomatic progress
to end fighting.
See ·Page A2
• Bostick-Dayle
awarded for service.
See Page A3
• Jones graduates
from drill sergeant
school. See Page A3 ·
• 4-Hers gearing up for
fair. See Page A3
• Gallipolis doctor
· involved in NCI reseach
project. See Page A3
• Fire damages
historic buildings.
See Page AS
• Ohio lawmakers
find cooperation, privacy
in informal clubs.
See Page A6 .

WEATHER

Please see Rutland, AS

Health
Pepartment
advises
caution during
extreme·heat
STAFF REPORT

Details on Page A6

INDEX

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/800-710-1917
" Your Frielllillf Outdoor eowa Equipment ami Tmctm· Superstore"

2 SF.L.,'IONS __, 12 PAGES

Calendars

.A3

Classifieds

B2-4

•

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

O,bituaries

" As

Sports

B Section

Weather

A6

© :1.006 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

POMEROY
The
extreme heat is predicted to
linger in 'Meigs County for
most of the week and the
Health
Meigs County
Department advises the
public to be aware of heatrelated illnesses.
The hottest temperatures
usually· occur during the
afternoon. · When hot temperatures are combined with
increased humidity the danger level ri,es quickly. The
heat index , designed to give
warning to warm temperatures, combines the effects
of heat and humidity. When
heat and humidity ~umbine
to reduce the amount of
evaporation of sweat -froin
the body. outuoor exercise
becomes dangerous even
for those in good shape.
Key rule' for coping with
heat are to drink plenty of
water to avoid dehydration
.
Please see Heat, As

:!;
'

.

Beth Sergentjphoto

Middleport.
denied
revitalization
application

BY BETH SERGENT

RUTLAND - After the
recent meeting of Rutland
Village Council many were .
leti to wonder abOilt the·future
o(the village's police depart·
ment which may feel the
repercussions of Rutland's
current financial crisis.
Mayor April Burke said
she helieves there is enough
money in the village's general fund to pay oflicers for
the next three months.
After the three months
Burke said it is possible the
village's two officers would
have to be laid off and reinstated in January 2007, that
is if the police protection
levy passes in November.
The police levy would
bring in revenue of $6,000 a
year and although it may
riot cover all the salaries for
the police department, "It
would help tremendously," ,
Burke said.
According to vi II age ·

Several residents came out
last night tq a
FutureGen ·
Community
Forum at
Southern
Elementary
School to hear
about the experimental power
plant proposed
for Meigs
· County which is
in contention
with 12 other
sites across the·
nation, including
one in
Tuscarawas
County. That list
will get even
shorter at the
encl of this
month.

Please see Meeting. AS

Could Rutland
be without a
police force?

NEWS@MYOA.ILYSENTINEL.COM

(,}.

..

being Illinois and Texas.
"' The OFGTF has compiled a, fuur
volume presentation in regards to
RACINE - Last night's meeting Meigs County's viability for the proon the $1 billion. FutureGen power ject, information that can be used as a
· plant proposed for Meigs County marketing piece for the property
drew a large crowd and optimism for should FutureGen pas s on the .
the Lebanon Township site whi&lt;h is Lebanon site. So, in essence Meigs
one 'of two sites in Ohio and one of County has another marketing tool to
12 sites in the nation vying for the perhaps attract another power plant
experimental facility.
or be a future site for a commen:ial
The other Ohio site is located in FutureGen-type venture.
Tuscarawas County.
The FutureGen plant currently proThat list is due to get event smaller posed will be used as a template for
by. the end of this month and tumor- . near -zero-e mmis~ion
coal-based
row legislatures and other interested power plants around the world and
parties wi.ll learn that important date . would possibly set the standard for ·
If Meigs is dn that even shorter list commercial ventures into this type of
representatives from the county \viii technology.
. .
be attending a meeting on Aug. 1-2 in
FutureGen is a joint project of the U.
Pittsburgh, Pa. to clarif~ the next S. Department of Energy and the
.
stage of the process.
FutureGen Industrial Alli&lt;mce, a nonOhio FutureGen Task Force profit consonium of some of the largest
(OFGTF) · Facilitator Jo Ann coal producers and users in the world.
Davidson said she did not know how The $1 billion FutureGen plant is
long- that list would be but was expected to create more than I 00 full"guardedly optimistic" about the time research and facility jobs, approxOhio sites making that list.
imately I ,000 construction jobs, and
Jackie Bird of the Ohio Coal increased univcR;ity research.
Development Office identified the
BY BETH SERGENT

B~ERGENT@MYDAILYSENT I NE L. COM

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

eliminations begin afterward to avoid !he summer
heat and allow spectators to
enjoy the day before coming to the track that evening.

ZEROINONO%

. '""~·my&lt;hoilysentincl.c&lt;&gt;m

FutureGeii meeting produces crowd and optimism

.SPORTS

Blasts ·
that allowed Durst to score
for a 5-1 edge after 1hree
full innings.
Post 128 struck again in
the fourth when. with one
out, Zack H:.tislop and
Mooney ddivered· back-tohack safeties. Blackston .followed with a walk Ill load
the bases, then Luke
Haislop connected on a long
fly ball that cleared the leftcenter field fence fur a
grand slam. Haislop 's home
run gave Feeney Bennett. a
9-1 lead.
Feeney Bennett tacked on
its final two runs in the bottom of the sixth when an
error allowed Blackston to
reach safely in the leadoff
spot. then Luke Haislop singled to put runners on the
corners with nobody out.
Joel Lynch grounded itito
an RBI fielder's choice to
plate Blackston for a 10-1
lead, then Shaffer doubled
Bryan Wallerslpholo
to right-center to score
Haislop for the final run of Feeney Bennett third baseman Luke Haislop fields a ground
ball in the seventh inning of Su~day's 11-1 victory over
the game.
After wrrendering a .lead- McArthur in the first round of the District 8 Legion Baseball
off single to Matt Lockard Tournament at Meigs High School in Rock Springs. Haislop
in the top 'of the seventh, went 2-for-4. hit a gfand slam and had five RBis in the triDunfee struck out the next umph. ·
two batters and induced them this year, so tiJis is a
"We realize tliat we didn't
Andy Grillo to ground out break-even game for us ."
finish like we had hoped,
to end the 'contest.
Coyan, who lasted five but right now is a new seaBoth Hai slops, Shaffer innings in his s.tart for
son," said Stewart. 'These
and VanMeter each hall two McArthur,
surrendered guys know the potential we
hits to pace Post 128 .. Luke eight emned ,runs and nine
have and our
Haislop kd the . way with
. goal in this
.
hits
in
the
setback.
Coyan
tournament qs to maxtmtze
five RBis and Blackston
had a game-high three runs also fanned four and walked that potential. We know we
thtcc in the deCision.
can go deep into this tourna·scored.
Justin
·EO'i·win
relieved
ment and if we play like we
'Black\ton. Moone y anu
Coyan
in
the
sixth
,
allowing
did
today, we should be
Durst had the other hi" for
an
earneu
run
and
two
hits
okay."
the victors.
Feeney Bennett travels to
Besides the outstanding in his inning of work. Erwin
no
walks
and
did
not
issued
Lancaster
today for a quareffort from Dunfee ~m the
record
a
strikeout.
mound. Stewart was also
terfinal
matchup with
Coyan' had two doubles Lancaster at Beavers Field.
happy to see the offense
produce and tl1e defense and the lone RBI in the loss Game time is slated for 5:30
play . error-free baseball. for {'ost 303. Erwin and p.m.
He 's also hop ing I(Jr more Lockard provided the other
Feeney Bennett 11, McArthur 1 .
of the same aeainst District ,afcties for the guests.
seven innings
~
champro t1 Lancaster ' Despite a 3-8 finish in
Post 12S's last II regular Pos\303 001 000 0 ~ 143
today.
· "We needed an overall ·'cason cont~sts,' Stewart i.s Post\28 104 402 x - 11 11 a
effort like we go t Sunday optimist ic that this team's Tyrus Coyan , Justin Erw1n {6) and Chris
he~dcJ into Ltncastcr:· sai(l best baseball is still ahead Comer. Austin Dunfee and Terry Dur5t.
WP - Dunfee. LP- Coyan. HR : FB·
Stewart. ·'We're I-I Jgain&gt;t of them . . ·
Luke ,Haislop, fourth inning, grand slam,

TUESDAY, ,JlJI.Y tH, 2006

"hot contenders" (besides Ohio) as

well as the official IHRA racmg.
.
Mr. Gasket Pro-Am point . · Next week there is also a
event in September, which time change at the track, as ·
feature., dnvers- from 18 gates open at 3 p.m., time
states in several divisions of trials begin at 5 p.m. and

State copes with
first heat wave of
summer,A6

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAlLYSENTlNEl.COM

MIDDLEPORT -· The
Ohio
D,partment
of
Development denied an
early application for downtown revitalization funding
Submitted photos
Numf!rous wreathes were laid at the foot of the main battle monument in the Buffington . for Middleport, but the presIsland State Park at Portland by representatives of patriotic organizations in a ceremony · ident of the Middleport
Saturday. Partic ipants were. left to right, Jl)an Hilton, Emma Ash ley, Betty Coen, .Mick Development Group said
Davenport, Earl Coen, May Frost, Margaret Cokonougher, Joan Dowel , Gerald Crawford, there arc other .funding
options
available
for
Keith Ashley, James Bailey, James Smith. Alan Holter, ancl Donna Fetty.
improving the husiness climate there .
Working with Buckeye
Hills/Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development
District and the Meigs
Community
County
Corporation,
Improvement
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILY.SENTINELCOM
the .volunteer development
group hoped to apply for
PORTLAND -Reflections on the men who $JOO,OOO in Tier II downfought in Ohio's only Civil W&lt;1r battle o•1 July town revitalization funds
19, 1863 at Portland highlighted a gathettng a1 in October. A' pre-appl icaBuffington Island State Park Saturday.
tion submitted in May was
The Maj. Daniel McCook Circle of the
Please see Denied, AS
Grand Army of the Republic sponsored the
memorial ceremonv with assi,tance from
Brooks-Grant Camp Sons of Union Veterans
of the Civil War. The annual program is rec- ·
· ognized by the Meigs County ~ommission
and th e-Meigs Cot&gt;nty Pioneer and Historical
Society as the only official ceremony to
honor the battle.
. •
Dressed in Civil War attire, Kila Frank. pre s~
ident of the Maj. Daniel McCook Circle gave a .
·
synopsis of the hattie involving ROOO Union·
and 2200 Confederate soldiers who fought .
there. noting that it marked the last attempt lif · ,
.STAFF REPDRT
Donna Harper Petty of Columbus placed an invasion of the North hy the Confederacy.
U,S.
presidents
William
McKinley
·
and
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.coM
a wreath recognizing the 7th Oh io
Rutherford B. Hayes fought in the battle in the
Volunteer Cavalry, better known as tre
. ATHENS - The Ohio
River Regiment, , one of two regiments 23rd regiment of the Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
The Rev. John Frank of Brooks-Grant Camp Department
of
containing Meigs Countiaffs who fought
'
Transportation District 10
at the _Battle of Buffington Island.
.Please see BaHle, AS
announces that the Ohio
144 Coolville bridge span. ning the Hocking River will
be permanently closed
Wedn ~s day. July 19.
in 2005 along with the popBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The closure &lt;tnd demoliHOEFUCH@MYOAILYS(NTI NEL.COM
ular quartet. the Dixie tion of the existing bridge
Melody Boy s. which has corn~s a5 part of ~~ largePOMEROY - The annur~ceived numerous award s
scak emergency construcal "Gospel 011 the Rivet:..
for their unique four-p;trt tion project that encompassconcert spqnsorcu by the ·
harmon y.
es portions of the existing
First Southern ' Baptist
For 18 years. Bishop wa' Ohin 144 and County Road
Church of Pomeroy, will be
part of the DOVE award 59 (Four Mile Creek) . The
held at 7 p.m . Thursday.
winning trio, The Bishops. project include;; ihe upgrade
"If the high water goes
Since that group's retire- of CR 59 to state route stan- '
down it will be held in the
ment in 200 I he has contin- . dard and the construction of
amphitheater. If it doesn't,
ued writing and performing a n!"w bridge across the
the concert will be moved tO'
gospel music. Hi s success- Hocking River to connect to
' the parking lot stage, and if
ful solo career has produced two route&gt;.
it rains. the church or :mothseveral popular songs.
ODOT officials say that :
er location will be founu:·
inc.:luding two achie\' in g with the existing L.:.S. 50
said Pastor Lamar o· Bryant.
Mark Bishop
number one, ''Can I Pray for bridges located it1unediately
·'ln any event I suggest .you
You" and ··1 Got He re as to the west and the pending .
rccei'vcd the Singing News
bring along a lawn .:hair.'.'
, c·ompletion of the new span
as I Could ."
"Favorite Fast
Featured at the concert magtlzine 's
.
will be M~rk Bi,hnp who s,)Joist of the Year" award
Please see Bridge, AS
Please see Gospel. AS

Ceremony -commemorates
Ohio's only Civil War battle

QDQT

closes SR ~- ·
144 bndge
at c001Vl,.11e

Gospel on the River concert set for Thursday

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