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                  <text>.Page D6

. G ARDENING.

iunba~ Ottmes -ientinef

. Sunday, June 19, 2005

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the past." Corr say., . ··we
· i.:an ta ke somethmg that
someone has found in their
Conjure up an image of · garden in Hohokcn (N.J. )
the typical plant breeder and 1ell it in South Afri ca.
and you'll probably. see in ·we can ·reall y give it the .
your mind's eye a lab-coat- li ght of day."
ed sc ientist in ·a brig htly lit
Now gro wing on a prop·
sterile room . busil y blow ing erty near you is a white.
pollen grains in one direc- · do uble-fl owered
Shasta
lion or another.
daisy deve loped by a garYou would be right. for dener in Gerninny called
the most par1 ; propagatio n ,the " Leucanth emum k e
usually is done in a co rpo- Star. " The long- bl oomin g
rate setting. . .
, perenni al came to Ball by
But a surpn stn &amp; ~umber wny of a Connecticut man
ol new plant vanettes are . who oot a finder's fee for
making their way into yo ur the tip. "He was· specificalflowerbeds court esy of ly loo king for things of
bac ky ard breeders. Th ese in teres t to u,' ,'· Corr say s.
are people who pattet)tl y
Then there's "Magilla." i,l
and . pri vately hybrid ize red, wh ite and green perilla
their way. generation al'ter rese mbl in2 a coleus. It was
generation, toward longer- spotted by a Ball employee
lived, more brilliantl y col- who was tra ve ling around
ored pl ants. ·.' Lot s of people Japan. ·'A·guv had it growin this world are interes ted ing in hi s ¥arden;" Corr ·
m JUSt one plam: a del- says. "(The empl oyee)
phinium or something_. asked if the grower .would
That.'s what they do for be intercsted in marketing
emertainmem," say s Bri an it. "
AP Photo
Corr, new crops developPlant prospec lin g is a A surprising number of new plant varieties are making it into the nation 's flowerbeds courtesy of backyard breeders. A hobby·
ment manager for Ba ll suhj cc ti ve
enterprise. ist from Massachusetts developed this daisy-like lavender bloom a few years ago. It's cal led Boltonia " Jim Cr&lt;'lckett" and is
Horticultural Co. in West Se lectio n lies entirely in the sold nationwide.
Chicago, Ill , ''They · may eye of the beholder. But
just be out there doing a lit- Ball wa nts something that let variety from India he
"Purple Majesty" ornaShipments to garden ce n- Nebraska ge ts most of the
tie backyard pollen da b- will gi ' c gardeners good decided to bring home for a menl al mill et features ters began in 2003 under a roya lty and I share the
bling. But ·it's peopl e like value. The plant al so must spot in the university 's attracti ve, deep purple licensing agreement with remainder with a former
that who are making a dil- prov ide strong· color, from genetics nursery in the mid-. leaves with a red stripe run- the
Univer ~ ily
of co-worker, so it's not exact.
beg inning .or season to end. 1980s· even though it didn 't ning down the middle. The Nebraska. "The rapidity of ly a backyard (oil) gusher,"
ference ."
And it:s people like Corr ·"Eye d tndy." Corr says. "It appear to have a future as cattail-like plumes are cov- the market. development Andrews say s. But Ball
who are charged with find- has .to be visually appeal· forage or a food grain.
ered with bristles, making all
to .
Ball oversees the legal , produccredit
ing them and then ensuring ing, If it doesp't turn your
A commercial nursery- them stand out in 'floral Horticultural - ·surprised tion and marketing work,
that the discovery is mutu - head . it 's probably not man saw it growing in a arrangements or . as a tall me · the most ," Andrew s leaving Andrews free to
ally beneficial. Ball is one go ing to go anywhere."
universily plot a decade or ornamental grass, swaying says. ·"In 2004,· Purple spend hi s mornings in a
Whi ch brings us to David so ago and lifehasn't been in harmony with the wind.
of a number of companies
Majesty was being sold in university
greenhouse,
in the business of breedin g, Andrews and his ornamen - the same since for the 71 ·.
Th e new ornamental 24 countries."
developing new progeny iri
producing and distributitl'g ta l millet plant. ·
year-old Andrews.
. mil.let
quickly
found
Andrews says the rewards part by blowing pollen·
ornamental plant s world·Andrews ,is a University
' 'Once it became obvious fav or as a backdrop plant are many for plant breeders, grains in one direction . or
wide. The privately owned of Nebras ka emeritus pro- that others recognized it as or in massed di s play s not the least of whi ch is another.
Ball Discoveries was creal- fesso r of plant breeding . He something valuable, I was after being named a 2003 having an avenue to showed to link the parent com- spec ialized in sorghums and able to give it more atten- , All -America Selections case your abilities. "You · Recommended reading
pany with hobbyi st pl ant pearl millets for agricultural tion," Andrews · says. "Up Gold Medal Award 'win- · can do it until you· can't do
"Makinx More Plants:
breeders.
rather thai1 horticultural use until then, I didn't believe ner. Ball was selected to it anymore," he says.
The Science, An and Joy of
And then there are · the Propagation . " By Ken
"We may have formali zed durin g hi s 45 yeai·s in plant ··anyone considered that di stribute the . plant 1998
our outreach a bit more propagation. But there was ·color. It wasn't all that and began producing seed royalties.
Druse. Clarkson Paller. List
in quantity .
"The
than has been prevalent in . one unusually colored mil- common in ornamentals."
University
of t&gt;rice: $50.

.

• I

ScientistS finding

Law leads to better
trauma care, A6

earliest signs of
Ahhehuer's as they seek ·
to ptevent the diseaSe, A2

Plant breeders can be in your backyard, too
'

•

BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FE.ATURES

''

l

Lwton
.....

Sil~er

Creek

Buy 1 Get 1 Free
··'- Select Styles

: $.7,llS/750 ml
' $10.39/Llter
: $26,&amp;6/7!5~ ml
Popo•
f7,99/L tcr .
CapcainMorpn
· $11.99/750ml
l4acardl
$10.00/750' ml
Platte Valley Com Wliitkcy $12.291750ml
E&amp;J Brandy
. $.11.49/Lirer
Evan Williams Bourbon
K...tera Wbia¥r
Grey Goooe

$2.62

j

GAMBLI!'.i.

..

$14.57/L6~

CROWN ROYAL ,·

&gt;

$21.091750ml

~PageB1

$7.85!60L&amp;

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Teresa LaComb

• Harrisionville-Scipio
holds reunion. ·
See Page A3
• Forest stewardship
workshop scheduled.
See Page A3
• Livestock report..
See Page AS
• Congressional cuts
threaten public
broadcasting.
SeePage AS .

Ornamentsfeaturing old·
and new bridges available
POMEROY- Glass tree
featuring an
artist' s renderings of the
current
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge completed in 1928
and the new bridge linking
Meigs and Mason Counties
ornament ~

now under construction will
go on sale this week :
The limited edition ornaments are being sold by the
. Pomeroy
Merchants
Association with all proceeds to. go into the 'beau.ti·
fication
of downtown
Pomeroy.
The ornament of the old

bridge in a gloss green was
first produced in the early
1990s as a part of a series of
Meigs County landmarks. It
sold out several years ago.
When the Merchants
Association had the n·ew

Modern Woodmen donates to historical association

Charltno Hooftk:h(plloto

The S~lisbury scho·ol took on a new took last week when the
front canopy was torn down. All that rematns now is the sidewalk and railing at the front bus parking area . Even the
entrance has been boarded up.

Salisbury·school tindergoing renovation
'
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILY SENTI NEL.COM

BY

__

onPoceAa

I ,

INDEX

R.OLJ.ING
ROCK.
'
.

$3,79 ' -.

,._... bvc qJ_.,

2 SECTIONS -

Calendars

Classifieds
MAllLBOJt.O

$29~99/~ ld
$10.49j24~~
'

. ,, ....,

Comics
Dear Abby

DORAL $12.49/c,tD!JG .

Editorials

~.,.......,,

Obituaries

I

Sports .

Weather

The committee of Ohio's aides~ standing courthouse in
Chester gets a boost with
costs of providing ·educational opportunities and other
12 P AGFS
. operational e~penses as
~
Dale· Colburn on behalf of .
the Middleport-Gallipolis
B3-4 '
Modem Woodmen presents
Pat Holter of the ChesterB5
Historical Association
Shade
'
a checK. The Chester-Shade
A3 Historical
Association raised
$3,000 at its annual dihmir
A4 and
auction which qualified it
for
a .match of $2,500 from
As
the Modern Woodmen.
B Section
CharteM lloelllc ../photo

POMEROY - · The old
canopy which for many years
protected ' stu~nts from rain
and snow as !hey went to and
from their school buses at
'Salisbury Elementary was
torn down last week.
· All that remains are the .sle p
railings near the roadway to
which a yellow ribbon has
been attached.
Plywood
boards cover the large double
doors at the front entrance· to ·
the .school. The canopy
removal and the boarded-up
fran) doors are the ftrst indication on the exterior of the
extensive work going on
inside.
The school, vacated when
the new Meig-s Elementary

A6

llJIIJBNDL-yc.
I.D"l1.B CIGAJIS

\\ I \ I

f1.89

$9.S9Jc:atua

~

MORE .. ,with Lifeline there24; hours a ·d ay,fknow she is safe and
can enjoy the independence she cherishes so much.

$11.69

$9.99
$6.19

Prices good while .supplies last

suRGEoNGENERALSwAANING:a"'tbngsmoldng .

Now Greally Reduces Senous RISks"' Yoo' -..;,.

'pho&lt;o ID n:qwrnl 'no .dmitunce under 18 wichour"" adult ' All )&gt;ric&lt;s subj&lt;ct ro dung&lt; . L----------

'

Please see Jobless. AS .

John Musser, president of the Pomeroy Merchants Association. and Peggy Barton, treasurer,
took over the ornaments featuring an artist 's renderings of the 1928 bridge linking Meigs and
Mason Counties and the new cable-style bridg!l now ~nder construction ..

$25.99/carton

NATVIlAl.IJTB

was at 5. 5 perce nt . in May,
dow·n four-tenths o f a percent
from April' s 5.9 percent;
Jackson County fe ll six·
tenths of a percent from 8 per·
cent in April to 7.4 percent in
May ; and Lawrence. County
dropped eight-tenths of a per·
cent from 7. I perce nt in April
to 6.3 percent in May.
Vinton County was at 8.1
percenl in May, do wn seven'
tenths of a . percent fro111
April's 8.8 percent.
:
The state's unemploymenl
rate was 6.1 percent in May,
unchanged from the April
rate.
The national unemploy·
mimt rate for Mav
. . was 5.1.

Charlene Hoeftlch/photo

WEATIIER

Mkkcy's $3.79/6p'k
.
Miller Lighr $6.99/U pk bouJa

''

well as demographic data and · mate in _the downto wn shop·
input presented at a pu blic ping distri ct. Amo ng those
re tail gitps identi fied in the
meeting earlier this year.
The study identifies retail study are a full-serv ice restau·
gaps. or businesses lacking in rant offering brea kfast and
the village but with the potcn- lunch fare. ~ barbc 'rshop, and
tial for success, and is al so an expanded supermarket.
·
designed to aid the vil-lage in · The village has a pplied for
acquiring grant fund s to ass ist a $15;(100 downtown revital·
with facade improvements ization grant throug h the Ohio
and other improvements Depmtment of De velopm.ent,
des igned to improve the
appearance ,and business eli - Please see Revitalization. A5

POMEROY
.
Unemployment in Gallia and
Meigs, as well as in surrounding counties was down in
May, the Ohio Department of
Jobs and Familv Services
noted.
•
Gallia County saw a. 1.6
percent drop in joblessness
last month, posting a rate of
;7.2 percent. Its April unemployment rate was 8.8 percent.
Meigs County saw its jobless rate dip by' nine-tenths of
a percent (rom I 0.3 percent in
April to 9.4 percent in May.
Around the area, DJFS
reported that Athens County

BASIC

Labatt Blue $4.29/6 pkborda
l'
Dead Guys AJe 1M on9 place m to1111t you ca fi"" it!

Middleport 's retail district io
members of the Middleport
Community
Associati on.
members of a leadership
group appoi nted by Mayor
Sand y lannarelli to work
toward downtown renewal,
atid oilier members of the
community on Friday. The ·
results are based on two surveys - . one of local business
owners and · another of
Middleport re sidents - as

BY KEVIN KELLY ·
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRI BUN E.COM

I I~

$9.99/18 pk cans

downtown re vitalization:
Those steps could include
·additional grant applications
for downto·wn rev italization
funds, meetings with those
invol ved in other successful
revitalization projects and
·even pl acing a faci litator with
experience , in the field in
charge of downtown re-devel opment.
ILGARD presented its final
draft of a sllldy of

Jobless rates fell in May

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.C OM

1

. ·Coon &amp; Coont Lipr

BY BRIAN .J. REED
BREEb@MYDA ILYSENTI NEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Now
that the Institute for Local
Governm ent
and
Rural
'Development has coinpleted a
· mal draft of a retail and service-based market study for
the Village of Middleporl, a
localleadership group and the
village ,government mu st
determ \ne the next steps in

•

$13.60il2 c;i%.

BI

• Night of Fire a hot draw.

INSIDE

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'

Middleport revitalization group considers next steps

SPORTS .

- -- --...J
-- ~ -.-.'

24 Hours a Day • 7 Days a Week
To refer a family member or loved one, call:

140) 446-5056

Another service provided locally by

School opened. is being renovated into offices and storage
space for the Meigs Local
School Di strict offices. The
cost of the renova tion along
with some ·parking lot and
roadway improvement is
expected · to . co st about
$3 ()()' ()()().

The plan is to have the
building ready for the admin·
strative staff to move into this
fall. For many years the dis·
trict has rented offices in the
Pomeroy municipal building
for $500 a month.
Asbestos in the areas of the
building where the offices are
to be located was removed
lasl fall. Installation of the
new heating and cooling sys.
tem is \i.:ell underway, as is
Pt...w: see_SdlootA
.....,.s_ _

�•·

NATION

The Daily Sentinel
J

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• WORLD
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Monday; June 20,
.
.

The ·Daily Sentinel

2005

Community Calendar

·Scientists _finding earliest signs of Alz~eimer·'s as they seek to prevent the disease
'

Public meetings

Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP MEDICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON
A
subtle chan ge in a memorymaking brai n region seems
to predict who will get
Alzheimer's disease nine
years before sy mp,lbms
appear, sc ie ntists reported
Sunday.
The findin g is part of a
w'av.e of researeh aimed at
early detection of the deadly deme ntia - and one day
perhaps even preventing it.
Researchers scanned the
brains of middk-aged and
older people while .they
were still healthy. They di scove red tha t lowe r energy
usage in a part of the brain
called the hippocampus correctly signaled who would
get Al zheimer 's or a related
memory imp'airment 85 per. cent of the time:
;,We found the . earliest
predictor," said the lead
researcher, Lisa Mosconi of
New
York
University
School of Medicine. ;&lt;The
hippocampus seems to be
the very fir st region to be
affected."
But it is too soon to offer
Alzheimer's- predicting PET
scans. The discovery must
be confirmed. Also, there
are serious ethical questions
about how soon people
should
know
that
Alzheimer 's is approaching
when nothing yet can be

Early detection

Mondav, June 20
RAC INE- Racine Village
Counctl w 111 meet 111 recessed
session at 7 p.m. in council's ~
. chambers at the municipal
building.
·
·
LETART FALLS - Letart
· Township Trustees, 12 noon.
office puilding.
·

•

A new study suggests a special
PET sean may.predict who will
get Alzheimer's di.sease years
before symptoms occur.

Picturing the l)rain

AP Photo

· Lisa Mosconi of the Department of Psychiatry at the New York University School of Medicine
speaks at a press briefing at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference on
Prevention of Dementia in Was hington ..
done to forestall the disease.
Still, the di scovery may
provide leads to sc ientists
searching for therapies to
at ' least delay the o nset of
the dege nerative brain dis e ase. It already affects 4.5
million people in the U.S.
and is predicted to st rike
14 million by 2050 as the

r

PET scan
machine

·Finding focus

Hippocampus

admit they
seek out terrorism·
expertise after Sept. 11

Thursday, June 23
RACINE - The Ohio
River Producers FFA alumni
will meet at 7 p.m. in the
Southern Ag Room. Discussed
will be the role of agriculture
education in , the 'community.
Anyone interested in developMonday, June 20 ·
ing the ag industr,y in this area
Ty!IDDLEPO~T - Revival
Thur~day, June 23
se rvi ce will be held at the old is invited to attend.
POMEROY - Meigs Soil Betel Free . Will Baptist
and Water Conservation Church, 7 p.m. through June
District will have a regular 24. Evangelist will be Rev.
meeting at II :30 a.m. at the Norman Taylor. There will be
Wednesday, June 22
office. 33 10 I Hiland Road. special singi ng each night.
POMEROY
- Martha
Pomeroy.
Ralph Buroher is the pastor.' Husted Greenaway will celeThe church is · located on brate her 94th birthday on
Route 7 at Story's Run.
Wednesday, June 22
Wednesday. Cards and mes·
CARPENTER - Vacatio·n sages may be sent to 33517
TUPP.ERS PLAINS
Eastern . Local Board of Bible sc hool will be held at Ohio 833, Pomeroy, Ohio
Education, regular meeting, the Mt. · Union Bapti st 45769.
6:30
p.m. ,
Eastern Church near Carpenter, 6:30
Elementary School library · to 8 p.m. through June 24 . .
· Saturday, June 25
conference room.
Theme is "Awesome God."
POMEROY -· · Kathleen
For more information, call Bailey Scott will celebrate
her IOOth birthday at a party
742-2568.
to be held 2 to 4 :30 p.m. on
June 25 at the Forest Run
. .Sunday, June 26
PORTLAND - Spanish United Methodist Church.
Mass at Our Lady · of Her daughter, Mary Wise and
Monday, June 20
POMEROY Pomeroy Guadalupe Mission, 6 p.m., family, are hosting III) open
· Chapter 186 OES will meet at . Harris Farm s Market, Ohio reception.

C

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0 Visa
Expiration Date
Card It
I

The hundreds of pages
of testimony obtained by
The Associated Pre~~ contrast
with
assurance'
Mueller repeatedly ha s
· given Congre ss that he
was building a new FBI.
from tofl to bottom , with
experts able to stop terrorisl attKks befure ' they

important aspects of the
case," he said .
Watson. who oversaw the
fi"t two years of tmnsformatio n. testified he cou ld
not recall a 'ing)e meeting in
the aftermath of Sept. II in
which FBI leaders discussed
the type of skills or training
n~dedfurrounterterroris n

, 0 MasterCard
Expiration Date
· .
· : Card K
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Monday, June 20,

2005

HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni
Association held its annual
banquet at the newly established Alumni Center at
Harrisonville with 129 alumni
and guests attending.
The dinner was provided by
the Harold Graham family.
Following the dinner, one of
the alumni, Donna Burbridge

Wilson ;'The Meigsgan"storyc· arship fund was $273 . There
teller provided the entenain- were six scholarships awarded
ment and CDs of the "golden to members of an alumn i's
oldies"were played.
family. Several merchants
Reunion classes recogni zed donated prizes which were
and honored were 1935, one awarded at the banq uet.
Officers elected for 2006
present; 1945, two present;
1955, three present. The class- were Larry Clark, president;
es of 1946 and 1951 both had Helen Pickens. vice-president ;
fi,ve membe r~ present.
· Gladys Cumm ings, treasurer;
The collection for the schol- and Pauline Parker, secretary.

Forest stewardship workshop scheduled

ATHENS - The Sunday woodland, said Carlen M. · aerial photos, fore st inve ntory
Creek Watershed Group, in ·Emanuel, Forest Ecologist equipment. compasses and
The
Nature . GPS units, and will learn how
colla,boration with the Rural with
Actien Sustainable Forestry Conservancy, who will teach these. tools can be applied to
Program, has organized an the workshop. which will be woodland management.
Pre-registration is required.
opportunity for a small group hosted at the Sleepy Fox
of landowners to learn about Farm .on the Athens-Morgan Interested parties can register
a new tool for managing their County line.
.
by calling Jessica Smith at
forests.
Jessica and Ri ch Fox,. the Sunday Creek Watershed
Set ·for June 24 and 25, the members of the Southeast Groupoffice, (740-767-2225). ·
Forest
Stewardship Ohio Woodland Interest Cost is $10 for members
Workshop will provide atten- Group and the Athens County (Sunday Creek Watershed
dees an opportunity to learn Grazmg Council, own the Group, · Rural
Action' s
about basic oak ecology, 125-acre farm, located .on. Sustainable Forestry Progra m
including factors involved in Hooper Ridge Road just out- or Rural Action), and $20 for
non-members. ·For more on
tree regeneration. With both .side of Trimble.
"Taking good care of our · other SCWG projects, email
indoor and outdoor sessions
planned, this even.t will forests becomes more impor- scwg@ frognet.net or call
enable trained woodland tant every day" said Jessica 740-767-2225.
Rural Action, a local memstewards to develop written Fol(, who also se rves as
Project bership-based,
nonprofit
management prescriptions for Sunday . Creek
promoting
.each stand in their woodland. Assistant. "We.' re happy to organization
Participants do not neces- host this gathering and help 'social , economic and en visarily need tree identification others learn valuable conser- ronmental justice, works for
sustainable
communities,
car accident.
skiJ.ls to succee.d in using this vation skills."
I confronted Tiffany and she tool to meet personal man- .Attendees will gain experi- economies and environments
denied it. I believe my son agement objectives for their ence with topogl'dphic maps, in Appl)lachian Ohio.
because she was discovered
being molested by my 14year-old cousin a couple of
years back.
MIDDLEPORT
RALEIGH, N.C.
Chad and
My husband was very upset
Cathy
and George Justis
about this and decided to call Jessica Hamilton Jones of Raleigh,
N. C. announce the birth of a daugh- of Middleport announce
the child protective services
the birth of a son.
on my mom. When they came ter, McKenzie DelilaRae. born June I Matthew Thomas, born
.out, my mother called me and at Wake medical Hospital in Raleigh.
May 10 at Pleasant Valley .
read me the riot act. Why did
She weighed 6 pounds. She has HospitaL
she get mad, at me when two sisters, Lil-Ann and Kasi Janelle.
The infant weighed 7
T'ff
d h 1? D
Grandparents are Charles and Gerri pounds, 5 ounces. The
0 you
1 any nee s e P·
think we did the right thing?- Miller and Marie Jones of .Raleigh couple has another son,
PROTECTIVE · MOM IN and ,'Wian and Regina Hamilton of Brandon.
Grandparents are Judy
Pomeroy. Great-grandparen~s are
NORTH CAROLINA
Laudermilt
of Middleport
DEAR
PROTECTIVE: Jerry and Ellen Rought and Fae and
and
the
late
Eileen and
Your mother may have been Kenny Wiggins of Pomeroy, and
Raymond Justis.
angry·becauseshehadn'tbeen Bella Jones and Hartford, W. Va.
informed and was unaware
that Tiffany had become . a
mole ster. .She may have
dumped on you because she
couldn't dump on the person
c .
she was really angry at - your · ·
husband. I hope ·your niece
receives the counseling she
needs so she won't continue to
act out. Your7-year-oldshould
also receive some counseling
about boundaries, and to heal
the effects of his own molesta-

Wof1?an runs out of answers for needy friend at work
DEAR ABBY: I'm a single
woman in my 20s who .works
hard and has friends I like and
respect. One of thein, however, "Ava," is making it hard for
me to be around her. Ava is 38,
never married, has had onlyone boyfriend in her life, and is
very lonely. As a single person,
I understand how that can feel.
It has\become a daily ritual

Dear
Abby

for. her to come over to my
DEAR EXHAUSTED: This
desk for one of the following woman is not looking for
three re~s~ns: (I) to talk about answers from you - she's
her _Ionehness. and havmg .. using you to vent. The next
nothmg m her hfe to look for- time 1t happens, carefully
ward to; (2) to borrow change observe 'her demeanor and
because she has no money for your reaction to her unloading.
doughn11ts, a soda. etc; (3) to The more tired you become
rub my back so I'll feel oblig- does she become more ener:
ated to rub her shoulders that gized? If the answer is yes,
day. (I don ' t ask for the back then recognize that Ava 1s a
rub, but I didonce-t~oye.ars . "supper" who draws her enerago - and now she thmks we gy by depleting yours.
My advice is to withdraw
. have an)mspoken ~gr~ment .) .
· When I offer advtce on over- slowly. When she asks for
coming her loneliness, Ava change, tell heryoudon' thave
ignores it. The money issue is any to. spare. When the back
also upsetting because she tub starts, tell her nicely that
·earns more than l do and is in you don't have time for it right
terrible debt. I·tell Ava repeat- then. Ditto when she begins
edly she needs counseling for dumping on you: You ' ll be
her money problems and lon_e- doing the woman a favor,
liness, but she refuses because becau~e as long as she has you
she "doesn ' t need to see any- to listen, she will never look
one." Also, the back-rubbing for the help she needs.
hasgottenold. l'mnotherperDEAR ABBY: I have three
sonal masseuse.
sons; the oldest is 7. I caught
How can I refuse wiihout him messing with his 2-yearsending her into a deeper old half-brother in a sexual
depression? I'm . becommg way, and l asked him where he
mentally exhausted. She's a got the idea. He told me that
bottomless pit.ldon'thaveany my niece, "Tiffany," has been
more answers; I' ve given ·a]] doing things to him . My mom
the answers l can give. is raising her because her parEXHAUSTED IN MISSOURI ents died three years ago in a

.News and
information for
senior citizens of
the ·Tri-County...

'

tion.

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
andwasfoundedbyhermoiher, Pauline Phillips. Write
Dear .·
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

er
-...... *599-

S.rta
Plush Euro lop

.

..

...
......
,.
...... - ........ -$399.; *799-=.... -·. ~

OS48 . . .

\

July 8, 2005

..........., . 5

$597

Sentinel ·

_ _ __ls-.1·iddUe.._.....Eitstt_er-'r~or"Piste.
· m_r.ierlCC._iiiLnc_lu..od·llineg:L.thJJCo'fse~ectqu.s.i~te&lt;fl..f. s_k ii Jeu;:d_;~~~~-_
~}_he_Dailv
Some could not even explain bureau' s work. lack the
the
difference
between skill s to work with foreign
" Your Hometown Newspaper"
Sunnis and Shiites. the two Dovemmenls or even their
Drop 'lhis coupon off in our office cu: Ill Coun St., Pomeroy, O hio with your payment 'and rece~ve a ,FREE comic umbrella
primary groups of Muslims.
.S. counterparts," By man .
"Probably the strongest · concluded.
leader I. krtow in coUnterter"Knowing about countenI have not been a &amp;ubscriber in the P"-" JO days. Enclosed. is my payment of S59.t5 for 6 months of the ~i/y Smtinel.
rorism has no counterterror- errorism would help a superism in his background," visor ensure a proper investiBald insisted.
. gation and avoid missing
I currently subscribe to the Daily Sentinel. Enclosed i• .my payment of 5115.84 for a !-year subscription.

11

·

hUrCh eventS

and· recei~e

1

124. Ministry of Sacred Heart
Church, Pomeroy.

7:30 p.l)l. Potluck refreshments at 6:30 J1.m. with memhers to take a covered dish.
New officers to be elected ._ ·
POMEROY
. . Me1gs
Cou.nty Rtght to hte. 7:30
p.m, Pomeroy Ltbrary.

Clubs and
organizations

population ages.
not clear if the men in the
Moreover.. researchers are s tudy beca me I ~ss social
•
honing in on lifestyle because Alzheimer's already
J: hoices th at may help pro- was at work , but social
teet the brain .in the first activity is mentally stimu. place.
.
. _lating. '
"It's exciting that we can
A brain-healthy lifestyle
even talk about prevention," aside, a big quest ·is to
said William Thies, scientif- develop ways to identify
DOctors then
ic
director
of
the Alzheimer's disease before
Alzheimer ' s
Association. symptoms emerge - findlook for lower
He noted that just I 0 years ing biomarkers that could
energy usage
ago there was hardly any be targets for preventive
research into that · possibili- therapies.
in a key
ty.
Think of it as hunting the
, Among the findings pre- equivalent of the cholesterol
memory
~dn't
se nted Sunday at the ·asso- test for Alzheimer's, Dr.
making region. ·
ciation ' s first Alzheimer's Neill Graff-Radford of the '
prevention conference:
Mayo Clinic safd.
who
drink
fruit
He measured blood levels
People
·
WASHINGTON (AP) o.c curred. not so lve them
SOURCES: AlZheimer'S Association; AP
or vegetable juke at . least of different types of beta
In sworn testimony that con- afterward.
Radiologylnfo
trasts with their promises to
"The FBI's shift toward three times a week seem amyloid, the sticky protein
less
likely
to
that
makes
up
Alzheimer's
four
'
limes
the public, the FBI managers · terrorism prevention necessiMosconi
scanned
53 out that familial risk.
who crafted the post-Sept. tales the building of a develop Alzheimer's than hallmark brain plaques, in
She
tracked
To prove if these early
healthy
people.
II fight against terrorism say national level expertise and nonjuice drinkers, according 565 people. Those with
expertise about the Mideast body
of
knowledge," to a study of' I ,800 elderly lowest ratios of a particular them for up to 24 years. indicators are real, the ·
or terrorism was not impor- Mueller told Congress a year Japanese-A mericans. The amyloid type were three Six so far have developed National Institute on Aging,
tant in choosing the agents after the suicide hijackings. theory is that juice contains times more likely to devel- Alzheimer's and 19 devel- with financial help from the
as lawmakers approved bil- high levels of polyphenols, op dementia within five oped an Alzheimer's pre- pharmaceutical industry and
they promoted to lop jobs.
cu{sor called ;.mild cogni- Alzheimer's Association, is
And they still do · not lions of new dollars to fight compounds that may play a years.
. believe such experience is terrori sm .
brain-protective role.
The reason: Prol)ably less tive impairment," or MCI. beginning a $60 million
necessary today even as terDespite the testimony of
- Less education, gum amyloid was floating in the Those ,people . showed less study to scan the brains of
rorist acts occur across · the its managers, the FBI said it disease early in life, or a blood because it was stick- glucose metabolism in the 800 older Americans and ·
globe.
has fundamentally reshaped stroke were more important . ing in the brain instead .
hippocampus than the still try
to
pin
down
'" A bombing case is a itself 10 ensure the field ·
Alzheimer's earliest biologiPET scans already can healthy.
bombing case," said Dale agents on the ground who than genes in determining
Other
research
supports
cal
changes.
Watson, the FBI's terrorism work the cases have the nee- who got dementia, canclud- show Al zheimer's plaques the hippocampus' early role.
That Alzheimer's · begins .
advanced
disease.
chief in the two years after essary skills, training and ed a study of 100 dementia in
of
Wisconsin
·
developing
so early means
University
Sept. II, 2001 : "A crime background for fighting ter- patients with healthy identi- Mosconi's study is the first
researchers gave a differ- even young people should
scene in ~bank robbery case rorism. U noted it hired or cal twins. Education stimu- to . so rigorously examine
ent
brain scan, called a adopt
a
brain-healthy
b,rains
before
. is the same as a crime scene. .redeployed more than I ,000 lates neuronal growth; gum peopl~ ' s
functional MRI, to healthy lifestyle, said Dr. Mark
you know, across the board." agent s to co unterterrorism di sease is a marker of symptoms ;tppear.
children
of Sager of the Wisconsin
PET, or positron emission adult
The FBI's current terror- and hired an additional brain-harming inflammation.
fighting chief, Executive 1.200 intelligence analysts · - Decreasing social activ- tomography. scans show Alzheimer's patients. The Re gistry for Alzheimer's
ity in old age is a risk fac- . images of how brains use researclJers found that the Prevention. .'; what we're
Assistant Director Gary and linguists.
"We
fundamentally tor, a National Institute on glucose, or sugar, which is hippocampus was not as hoping is that 55 is not too
Bald, said his first terrorism
active as in people witp- late," he said.
training came "on the · job" changed !he criteria for hir-. Aging study suggests. It is the brain's main fuel.
'
when he moved to headquar- ing special agents and intelters to oversee anti-terrorism · ligence analysts to ensure
strategy two years ago.
that we get the critical skills,
Asked about his grasp of knowledge and experience .
Middle Eastern culture and we need to address today's
history, Bald responded: " I threats," Assistant Director
wish that I had it. It would Cassandra Chandler -told the
be nice."
AP.
"You need leadership. You
"New agents receive perdon 't need subject matter sonali zed training
from
expertise," Bald testified in Muslim
leaden.
Street
an ongoing FBI employment . agents and managers in
case. " It. is certainly not every field office have gotwhat l look for in selecting ten to know the Middle
an official for a position in a Eastern and Muslim commucounterterrorism position."
nities in their territories ·and
In a development that has regularly attend training sesescaped public attention, FBI sions sponsored by commuagem Bassem . Youssef has rtity leaders," she said.
questioned under oath many
Daniel Byman, a national
of the FBI' s top leaders, security expert who worked
including Director Robert on both congression;~~I and
Mueller and his predecessor, presidential investigalions of
Louis Freeh, in an effort to terrorism and intelligence
show he '\'as passed over for fai lures,
revie \fed
the
top terrorism jobs despite his Youssef' case for the court.
We'll deliver all the. local happenings right to your home. Stop by .our office
expertise. Testimony from Byman . concl uded
the
his lawsuit was recently sent spumed agent is one of the
and subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for 6 months for only $59.15
to. Congress. . ..
government' s most-sk illed
Those who have. held the . terrorism fighters and that
a FREE comic umbrella* !
bureau 's top terrorism-fight- the FBI overall remains
injl jobs since Sept. II often weak in expertise o n the
If you are a current •ubscriber. you cah receive a free umbrella by euending your •ub.cription for I year for only $1 15.84.
-satd in their testimony that Middle East, terrorism and
(•Payment must be made in person at the Daily Sentinel, \ II Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio in order to receive your Free comic umbrella.
they - and many they have intelligence liaison.
·
· Quantities are limited.
promoted since - had no
"Many of its ofticers 1

PageA3

.Harrisionville-Scipio holds reunion ·

. Birthdays

Patients are
injected with a
sugar molecule
then an image of
the .brain is
·· captured using
positron emission ·
tomography,
known as
a PET.
scan.

AP Enterprise: FBI managers

.B y.THE BEND

•

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, Fino

Senior Citizens make
·up 65% of the total
·population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your
Representative.
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�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentinel.com
'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co..
Jim Freeland
Publisher

~ Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establislunetlt of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tl1e press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, atrd to petition
the Govern,tfletlt for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to. the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
'

Today is Monday. June 20. the .171 st day of 2005. There are
194 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History :
On June 20. 1782, Congress approved the Great Seal of the
United States.
On this date:
.
In 1756. in India. a group of British soldiers was imprisoned
in a suffocating cell that gaine&lt;l notoriety as the "Black Hole
·
.
·
of Calcutta": most died.
. In 1837. Queen Victoria acceded io the Britis1l throne fol lowing the death of her uncle. King William IV.
·
In l!l63. West Virginia became the 35thstate ..
In 1.893. a jury in New Bedford. Mass ., found Lizzie Borden
innocent of the ax murders of her father and stepmother.
In 1898. during the Spanish-American War, the U.S. cruiser Ch\lfleston captured the Spanish-ruled island of Guam.
In 1943. race-related rioting erupted in Detroit; federal
troops were sent in two days later to quell the violence that
resulted in more than 30 deaths.
·
In 194 7, Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel was shot dead at the
Beverly Hills, Calif., mansion of his girlfriend, Virginia Hill, ·
apparently at the order of mob associates.
·
In 1967. boxer Muhamrnad Ali was convicted in Houston of ·
violating Selective Service laws by refusing to be drafted . .
(Ali 's conviction was ultimately ove,rturned by the Supreme
Coun).
Ten years ago: U.S. Air Force Captain Jim Wang. a radar
officer, was cleared 'of wrongdoing in a friendly fire attack on
. ·two U.S. helicopters over northern Iraq in 1994 that resulted
in 26 deaths.
·
· ·
Five years ago: After.a furious last-minute lobbying blitz by
the Chnton adhltntstratton, the Senate voted 57-42 to approve
legislation making it easier for federal. prosecutors to try hate
cnmes. attaching the measure to a defense authorization bill.
(However, the House stripped the hate crimes provision from
· the defen se bill th~ following October.)
·
·
One year ago: The Arab satellite TV network AI-Jazeera
aired a videotape from al-Qaida-linked militants showing a
South Korean hostag.e begging for his life and pleading with
hts government to wtthdraw troops from Iraq. Relief Goosen
captured his second U.S. Open Golf championship in four
years at Shinnecock Hills.
.
Today's Binhdays: Actress Olympia Dukakis is 74. Actor
James Tolkan is 74. Actor Danny Aiello is 72. Actor John
Mahoney is 65. Movie director Stephen Frears is 64. Singersongwriter 'Brian Wilson is 63 . Actor John McCook is 60.
Singer Anne Murray is 60. TV .personality Bob Vila is 59.
~ustctan Andre Watts is 59.·Actress Candy Clark is 58. Ti~a
Srnatra ts 57. Rhythm-and-blues srnger Lionel Richie is 56.
Actor John Goodman is 53. Singer Cyndi Lauper is 52. Rock
musician Michael: Anthony (Van Halen) is 51. Musician John
Taylor is 45. Rock musician Mark DeGliantoni is 43. Rock
musician Murphy Karges (Sugar Ray) is 38. Actress Nicole
Kidman is 38. Movie director Raben Rodriguez is 37. Actor ·
Josh Lucas is 34. Actor Peter Paige is 31.
Thought for Today: "Love your enemy - it'll drive him
,
.
·
nuts.'' -Anonymous.

T~ ~PUEL,CAN;

21'56.

Circulation
Dletrlcl Mgt.: .JaSOfl Patterson, Ext. 1i·

General Manager
ChaMene Hoeft1ch. Ext. 12
E-mail:

-

news 0 myda1tysentJne1.com
www.mydailysennnel.corn

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~VIOR!
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M~.

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•t

1

Charlene Hoelttch/photo

School
from Page A1
'

Home
The Wal-Matt checkout · .-------.
lady couldn't contain,herself.
· "Cleaning
out , · the
garage?" she cheerfully
inquired, banging her barcode reader 28 times. against
Tad
the huge phlstic tub on top of ·
Etartimus
27 others just like it.
"Nope," I replied.
She banged some more.
"Growing a container garden?"
. · have yet to be hammered
. and nail-gunned into a new .
Nope.''
sanctuary that will embrace
22, 23, 24 ...
our future hopes and cushion
Pinally I took pity on her.
our disappointments.
26, 27 ...
Unless we get a miracle in
"I'm moving . Camping, our · zero-vacancy rental
actually.';
market we'.ll . be homeless" in
''How long?" she asked, seven weeks, when absent ,
whacking the Tupperware friends reclaim their bouse.
box one last time. ·
Our shelter options are a tent
"A while,'' I replied, and tarp or a tarpaper roof on a
peeled out of her lane like cobbled-together- tempoDanica Patrick grabbing the rary shed between Labor
'
Indy 500 lead.
Day and Thanksgiving.
We are
downmg m the
The night before we
pours. surrounded by cenout of our sold house I lay in tipedes. makes my stomach
bed staring through the little turn over. Nobody's giving
skylight counting stars; a' I out merit badges for this .
had nearly every night for endurance test.
·
Holed 1111 for now in. a
the five yearli we lived there.
Under the vaulted ceiling, I friend's borrowed house, I
was safe in a place where I lecture myself that the end
justifies the means, that 1'111
felt I belonged.
But not for long; our tim- · not a sissy, that I need to get.
ing is bad. Our new, smaller a grip and keep my sense of
home i~ still stacked in humor, that living out of
metal-banded piles all over · doors under the sws (and in
an empty lot. Thousands of the ' rain) will be an advendollars worth of two-byture. not' an ordeal.
fours, six-by-eights and ,
To fortify myself, I'm
glue-la,niinated
beams packing some treasures to

Ohio Newspaper Associatiorl .

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to The Dally Sentinel. 111 Court Street,
Pornew,l. Ollio 45769

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OUtside Sates: Dave Harris, Ext 15
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Cows-Higher

Russe ll Bush . works on updating the electric system in the
Salisbury school which is being converted into offices for ttie
Meigs Local School District.

Published every af1ernoon·: Monday
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Mall Subecrlptlon
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take with me ; 28 plastic tubs love I share with my busfull.
band, and the companionFirst, I put in my ET ship of a good pet. Still, I
stuffed animal, because its continue to whine - "How
favorite word is "home." will I cook? How will I keep
Then I added my ceramic clothes clean? How will my
piggybank so I can keep rob- husband grade papers in the
bing it 'to buy cookies at the · dark?" - and that big one
store. Handfuls of favorite -"will anybody sec me
COs and DVDs can work off when I go to the bathroom ?"
batteries , so Norah and My friends, who are cozily
Bridget Jones are coming tucked under their own insuwith me. I also tucked in my lated roofs, offer empty platChristmas address book, just itudes about "communing
in case the carpenters contin- . with nature" and "getting in
ue to lie to me ("We'll defi- .touch with your roots.''
nitely
be · done
by
My husband tries to reasThanksgiving!")
sure me. "You loved 'Out of
My husband packed his . Africa'. Pretend you're on
harmonica. ukulele, · and safari." I remind him he is ·
iPod ; a sack full of mis- not Robert Redford, I arri not
matched socks; an ancient Meryl Streep and ou~ reality
baseball bat to scare away · i.s not their movie; we do not
burglars (who wants to steal have a dozen servants
Tupperware?); three yoyos; trekking ahead to cook dinevery ' pair of tennis shoes ner . and put Mozan on the
andJrn,~-v
~i~c~tr~
o~
la~.~---

favorite ,pillow.
We are also dragging
around boxes of useless
business records "just in
case." six months' worth of
pre-addressed
binhday
cards.' one outfit suitable to
wear to a funeral, an entire
box of plastic eating utensils. a dog bed Daisy has
never once slept in, far too
many books. and r~tty old
work clothes we will burn
ceremoniously the day we
move' into o!Ir new house .
Of cou~ I know that a
home is much more than a ·
collection of things: it:s the

Your assets are the things
Q.: How can l minimize sense to fund these account' as circumstances of the transfer.
ou
own;
they
mav.
be
wor.th
these
risks''
much as po.ssible.
p rovt·d·mg a&gt;Set protection
·
Y
money or they may have only · A.: There are a number of
Life insurance policie&gt; also for your children or others is
sentimental value. They may ways to manage and minimize may be exempt to the same much simpler than protecting
also include intangibles such these nsks. A corporation or extent. States also typically assets for yourself. You can
as the rights to market a prod- other enllly. can protect .you" P.rovide.protection for the fam- leave the assets in a trust for
uct. In our society, it is from ltabtltty ansrng from tly home. In such states, it them and name an independent
be.-oming increasingly. impor- rental propeny or other assets. makes sense to fund · these trustee with the power to make
tant for you to protect your Funher, you can get insurance accounts as much as possible. di~cretionary distributions.
~ssets.
,
to protect. against the most sig- States also typically provide . Assuming the creation of the
Q.: Why should I worry mficant n sks. Auto and home- protection for the family trust is not subject to attack by
about protecting my assets?
owner's liability insurance can home. In some states. sucH as your creditors, your children's
A. : All of us have exposure provide insurance up to a cer- Florida and Texas. the value of creditors would not be able to
to 'potetitial . creditors. You tain dollar limit for automobile . the entire home is protected. In iouch the asset's in the trust
may have exposure due to the accidents and home injuries, Ohio·, only $5,000 of home except in rare ,circumstan.ces.
assets you own. Perhaps you respectively. An umbrella poli- equity is protected . Withifl reacannot shovel the sidewalk in cy can _provide·additional cov- . son .. you can protect assets by
Lair You Ca~1 Use is a weekfront of your home and your e_ragc tor multtple nsks, ~uch plactng a nonexempt asset. ly consumer legal information
neighbor slips and breaks a as home , auto, and other nsks. such as cash, into an exempt column prui•ided by the OhiO'
hip. Perhaps you own a rental
Malpractice insurance can asset. ·such as a retirement Stare Bar Association (OSBA).
property and the roof collaps- provide protection from .work- account.
This ·article &lt;ras prepared by
es.
place-related exposure.
arrumey Richard W Ashley, rhe
You rriay have exposure due •
Q.: Can I protect my assets . principal of rhe Akron law
· to your employment. Perhaps
Q.·: What about risks insur- by putting them in trusts?
firm. Aslder &amp; As.wciares, and ·
you are a physician . whose ance won't cover?
A.: Putting some of your of coimsel ru rite Medina firm
patieni has a bad outcome and
A.: Insurance poli·cies" do assets into trusts as· gifts for of' LLuxem, Berry Preston &amp;
whose family believes you to have limits, which may be chtldren· or others also may Jamison Co., LPA., anl/ by
be responsible . Perhaps you exceeded by a serious claim. It provide some protection from AlllhOII\' . J. DeGirolamo, a
are an accountant who signed is imponant ,to structure your creditors. However, you mu st . Cantrm.attUI'nev. For infonniloff on Enron's books.
assets to min,imize exposure in make these gifts far enough in tion a/Jour a mriety of legal
You may have expos ure the eve nt the policy limits are advance so that a creditor can- topics. risir the OSBA 's Web
wu·u·.olrio/Jarorg.
from ordinary everyday acts. exceeded or in case you are not make a claim against these sire ar
assets.
For
these
assets
to
be
Articles
appearing
in rhis colPerhaps you do not see that not insured for the particular
the traffic light has turned red risk. Ohio law allows people1o safe, you typically must make umn are intended ro provide
and cause " an · accident. protect assets from creditors. such a gift.before you know of. broad. general information "
Perhaps you let go of your Creditors may not touch retire- incur, or foresee a creditor's abma the lent~ Before applying
shopping can to answer your ment plan's such as pensions, claim . If you do transfer assets rhis informmion· tv a specific
cell phone and the cart rolls 40lk accounts, and ERAs to ·after you incur a debt, the · legal problem, readers are
down the hill hitting a baby · the extent reasonably neces- length of time a creditor has to urged to .ieek' rhe advice of a
'make a· claim depends o'n the licensed atrornev.
stroller.
sary for your suppon.
.
. It makes

Congressional cuts ·threaten
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Utilities Service) has received an application for financial
Lewis, director and general including our transmitters and
assistance from the Tuppers P lains- Chester Water
manger of WOUB Radio and towers. These cuts will have a
District, Athens &amp; Meigs Counties, Ohio. As required by
TV ·contends that the proposed drastic effect on public broadthe National Environmental Policy Act , the Rural
Congressional
cuts could casting. If allowed to succeed,.Development utilities prqgrams (Rural Utilities Service)
destroy public broadcasting.
noncommercial broadcasting
has prepared an Environmental Assessmeni that evalu·
"Supporters of public broad- will be lost in the United States.''
ates the potential environm'enial effects and consecasting are extremely disapwint"It is essential that you make
ed that House appropriators in your feelings clear to Congress
quenclls~oJ-the proposed project. This notice announces
·Washington have proposed more on the proposed 45% cut by supthe availability of the Environmental Assessment for pubthan $200 million in crippling paning action to restore level . lic review and comment.
funding cuts for public broad- funding for public b~ting,
The proposed project consists ~f the construction of a
casting in the new fiscal year," opposing the $100 million
water distribution system that includes water lines, storsaid Lewis. "Proposed funding rescission of fun
to the
age facilities, pumping stations and related facilities , to
cuts as severe as these, represent- Corporation
for.
Public
be operated by Tuppers Plains- Chester Water District.
ing 45% of federal financial sup- Broadcasting, opposing the elimpol1, are a direct attack on public ination of the highly successful
All proposed improvements are located in: Townships of
television and radio."
Ready to l...eanyp"rogram. opposCarthage ana Lodi in Athens County, Ohio, Townships of
She described the action as ing the elimination of the PTFP
Bedford, Orange , Sutton, Chesier, Lebanon , and Letart
. "representing a defining moment prognun. ~
· ing the· eliminain Meigs County .. Ohio. Mitigation measures for the proin the history ·of public broad- tion of fu ing for the digital
posed project include, but are not limited to items; to
casting.'' She said a key conversion rograrn a fedepl
minimize the effect to floodplains , wetlands , cultural
Congressional House appropria- mandate. · OPQOsing the eliinresourc.es, endangered species, water quality and mistions subcommittee voted tWo ination of funding Tor the' satellite
weeks ago to make devastating interconnection r,mgram for pro- '
cellaneous issues. ·The alternatives considered to the
cuts to federal funding of public gr.unming distnbution to local
proposed project included: Different types of storage and
broadcasting, representing a loss stations like WOUB.
. supply systems and the "No Action' alternatiye.
of nearly
$300,000
in 1
"It is imponant that you call;
Copi11s of the Environment Assessment are available for
Community Service Grants to letters will not anive in time to
review at USDA, Rural Development , 21330 State Route
WOUB and the entire $35,&lt;XXl make a difference. For informa676, Suite A, Marietta, Ohio 45750. For further informafor WOUB's Ready to Learn, a tion on your Congressional contion contact Christine k. Crowell at (740) 373-7113. Any
successful educational program tacts, go to woub.org. Whatever
person interesied in commenting on this proposed prothat reaches thousands of elm- your opinion, our elected ofiidre_n throughout southeastern cials need your input as the full
ject should submit comments to the address above by
Ohio.
House of Representatives could
July 19, 2005.
"Last month, another House take final action on these cuts by
Rural Development Is An Equal Opportunity Lend!!r, ·
suhcommittee voted to eliminate Wednesday,
June
22 .
Provider and Employer. Complaints of discrimination
for
the Public Washington needs to hear from
funding
should be sent to: USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights,
Telecommunications Facilities you on whether you think fundWashington, D.C. 20250-9410.
Program' (PTFP), which has ing for WOUB should continue.
A general location map of the proposal is shown below
granted millions of dollars to Make your feelings known,"
WOUB Radio and Television for concluded Lewis.
/

'...

Membtn The AsSOCiated Press and me

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Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext 13

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(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Yalley Publishing Co.

Our main number Ia
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Department exten.alona are:

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S~OCKING

INl\l~lR LlVES!

The Daily Sentinel
Our main conCem in all stories is 10 be
ace~ rate. If you know of an error in a
stOry. call the newsroom at .(740) 992 -

LIVESTOCK REPORT

.Wl.lC\1.! TAATq,

l-tAV~ NEVER MAPE
AN RONBT L\~IN&amp;

· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good.taste,
addres~issues, not personalities.

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LETTERS TO THE
•.
EDITOR

'·correction Policy

BELPRE -· Teresa LaComb, 85. of 2714 Beach Dr..
Belpre. dieu Saturday. June 18, 2005, at her residence.
She was born July 14: 1919, in Color;Jdo Springs, Colo.,
daughter of the late Dante! and Rose Diecero Diamond. She
was a member of St. Heart Catholic Church.
. Survtving ar~ five so ns: Vin cent LaComb, Anthony
LaComb. Phtlltp LaComb . Denny Coppers and Wayne
Coppers; three daughters: Mary LaComb. Shirley Hayle , and
Gat! _Kmght: a brother, Felix Diamond; severa l grandchildren
and I tve great grandchildren.
. Service s _will be held at . I0 a.ni. on Tuesday, June 21, 2005 .
at Whtte-Schwarzel Funeral Hotne .with Rev. Fr. David
Huffman officiating: Burial will follow in Coolville Cemetery.
Fnends may ca ll from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Monday at
the funeral home .
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Finally. our guards at
would do the same. But don't sionals from Cleveland,
Ohio,
whom . · Ahmed
stop there.
Guantanamo Bay are getting
addressed
in October 200 I.
the hang of showing "reverAfter all. reverence and
ence and respect" toward
"When I stated that Islam
respect. ev.en surrender. only
that ''fragile piece of delic,01te
go so far. More sensitivity is had suffered a major setb ack
an" (military-speak for the
needed as well. In a recent after Sept. II (for a grossly
Diana
Quran), and, wouldn't you
with - Daniel un- lslami&lt;: act of vi&lt;lmeeting
West
know. it, om: politicians and
Sutherland. head of the Civil lence). that every Muslim
pundtts,
from
House
Rights and Civil Liberties was in the dock as a result ....
Minority Leader Nancy
division of the Departme111 I was challenged by some
Pelosi · and R-lican Sen.
.of Homeland Security, Arabs and Pakistani s." he •
Chuck Hagel to Tom kill people over a soggy . American
University's writes. ·'They" - Mu slims
Friedman and Bill 1&lt;-•istol, Quran. and "we" lose the Akbar Ahmed had some sug- in Cleve l:111d. Ohio are apgling to put a lock on image war - and all over . gestions. beginning: accord- "called Sept. II a glorious
· Gitmo.
·
the world. according to Sen. ing to a.n online report in the event for Islam . The taking
Why? It's an "international Hagel. He thinks closing Pakistani Daily Time s. with or ··inno&lt;:ent live s was justi. embarrassment," says Sen. Guantanamo is the only way pretty much eliminating fied. they argued, as Sept. II
Patrick Leahy (0-Yt.), to win World Image War I. Muslim profiling at airports. wa~ the continuation uf a
who should know. His col- That's because closing the This. of course. would do full-scale Islamic war takleague, Sen. Richard Durbin, detention center would "give notlii ng to spare my own ing phtcL' ,l agai~1St lsraef.
(D-Ill.), is himself so inter- us a clean slate in the white-haired mother and which is backed by tl1e
nationally embarrassed ·that Muslim world," . as Nancy white- haired
United States. I heard a simmotherhe compared the terrorist Pelo si su.id. rewaling an in. law from the next .. ilar debate when the Muslim
· detainee facility to Nazi ignorance of hi story so vast checkpoint body search, but Counci l of Britain hostcu a
deaths ~amps, Communist . and untamed that facts alone the boost to world image dinner for me in London in
gulags and Khmer Rouge would perish there , · Clean would be colossal. "You . July 2002."
killing fields.
simply cannot humiliate ·· Maybe this last bit helps
slate - - like on Sept. I 0.
And so what if closing
Projecting power is not the \'tuslim s like this.' ' Akbar explain why the Queen of ·
Gitmo. lets hundreds of same thing as winning a sai d, describing a "peak England
this
month
jihadists o.ut of their prison popularity contest. · Nor is level of anger" in "the young bestowed a knighthood on
cages and into· their terror winning a popularity contest ge neration on the edge." Just Iqbal Sacranie. general sec~ells'7 "Sure, a · few may, the same thing as winning one more pat. dowh and retary of the Muslim Counci l
come back to haunt us," hearts and minds - at home they'll blow. He also sug- of Britain . "Sir'' Iqbal
writes Friedman. But being ' where it really counts. or gested "more social and cul- S'acranie: a body blow in the
haunted .- which presum- abroad- which seems to be · tural contact s" between gov- war on image . And abo why,
ably requires some addition- another · poim of desperate ermnent
officials ~and as Sutherland reponecll y· told
al number of American dead confusion. But in our pollAmerican Muslims" and an Akbar, Homeland. Securi ty
to do the haunti"ng .- is driven age of ce lebrity wor- . unspecified reading list on "has undertaken many meaapparentry a risk worth tak- ship,. the popularity contest" Islam .
·
sures to eliminate raCial proing iiJ order to win the war.
is becomrng the preferred
Mavbe such a li st would · filing." I think ! see· a strateI'm not ·talking about the forum for geopolitics. a kind include one of his own gy emerging. Little by l'ittle,
"Survivor"-slash- books. "Islam Under Siege" we'll win thi s war on image.
so--called "war on terror." of
"Who
Wants to Be a (Polity Press, 2003). There, So what if we no longer. recIt seeni there's been a change
in focus. Islamic jihad is out. Superpower?" reality show he des&lt;:ri bes the kind of ognize ourselves..
The war on "image" is in. for world leaders. It this is gathering
Homeland
(Diana Wesr is a columnist
the case, by all means go for Security could really learn for The Washing;on limes.
And, according to the antiGitmo-nists, we're getting that "clean slate" and close from roughly 60 · She can be conracred t·ia
creamed. Go figure: "They" Gitmo. Miss Congeniality Muslim- American profes- dianaw~sr@veri~on.ner. ) ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

.Know How To Protect Your .Assets

Teresa LaComb

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

www.mydailysentinel.com

20, 2005

Obituaries

J!Velcome to the.war on image

The Paily Sentinel

Reader Services

20, 2005

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Mondayday, June

Come August, instead of
circling the wagons, we'll be
circling the ' Tupperware
tubs, cooking on a barbeque,
eating out of coolers full of
soggy food in melting ice, .
bathing in a galvanized wash
tub, and trekking ourselves
off to the ponable pouy . .
When it's time to go to
sleep. I'll hold tight to ET
and whisper ''home."
(Joan Ryan is a colwmmr
for the San Fran, i&gt;co
Chronicle. Send cum 111 enrs
ro her in care of rhis ne&gt;npaper or send her e- mail ar
joanryan@sfchronicle. cum.)

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the updating of th!; electrical
system. Some classrooms are
beil)g divided to provide
sm'aller offices. others are
being combined for 'clerical
space. All of the doors and
windows in the building will
be replaced including those
in .the gymnasium rented to
Drew Webster Post 39,

~--~-------------,----------

' ·Revitalization
· from Page A1

and the leadership committee
has qualified for a $10,000
grant for downtown improv~­
ments, although a specific
use for that ~ant has not yet
been deternuned . It is likely
that other grant funds will be
sought to assist building
owners in making improvements.
.
. The final study is expected
· to be. made available to Phe
"committee and the public by
the end of June,: and at that
time, village leaders must
determine how· to proceed

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with 'the project. ·
The Cny of Wellston has
seen significant improve- .
ments in its downtown and
the development of new busi,
nesses as a result of a similar
ILGARD study. At Friday's
comminee meeting, · the
group discussed the possibility of meeting with leaders in
the Wellston project for
advice on what should be
done next. The ··group also
discussed the possibility of
hiring a facilitator to assist
the village in proceeding
with downtown improvements, seeking grant funds .
and- assisting potential enr,.e. preneurs in starting new businesses.

lowest rate at 3.9 percent.
The · number of workers
from PageA1
unemployed in Ohio in May
was ·362,000; down from
percent, down slightly Jrom 363,000 in April. The number
of unemployed has increased
5.2 percent in April.
"Ohio· s labor market was by 2,000 over the year from
largely unchanged from April 360,000. The May unemto May," Barbara Riley, ployment rate for Ohio ~as
tlirector of the Ohio unchanged from 6.1 percent
.
Depanmcnt of Job and in May 2004.
The county and city . rates
Family Services. said in a
statement. "Slight employ- are unadjusted, meanilig they
. ment gains occurred in the do not take into account sealeisure and hospitality ser- sonal adjustments in employ~
ment.
vices sectors ...
(The Associated Press
. Monroe County had the
highest rate of unemploy- contributed ro this report.)
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American Legion.
The renovation of the
Salisbury building is being
paid for from the balance of
funds generated by the permanent improvements levy
which went off the tax duplicate in December. Should
money remain in the fund
once the planned work is
completed , then consideration will be given to paving
the parking aea in back of the
building and rebuilding the
road around the building.

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· Hartwell House, Weaving
Stitches,
Anderson's
Furniture, Meigs Couniy
from Page A1 .
Chamber · of Commerce ,
Farmers
Bank,
both
metallic gold ornament · Pomeroy and Mason locaembossed with a picture 'of tions., Peoples B~nk in
the new cable-style bridge Pomeroy and Middleport ,
produced last year, some Ohio Valley Bank at the
requests · came in for the Save-a-Lot location, City·
.original ornament of the National Bank in Pomerov,
current bridge as a compan- . Clark's Jewelry Store,
ion piece . . Both are now K&amp;C Jewelers, Dans in
available.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
The individually gift De~ll.nment Store and the
boxed ornaments are now Ohw River Bear Co. in
for sale at $8 each at Middlepon.

Ornaments

Snider, Fuller, Porter &amp; Associates .and

Rob Fratianne, United Healtheare, {'Tc:sent a seminar

Healthcare Benefits
.Update 2005
'

paying too much?
to h~ar som~ solutions.

Visit us
online at

Tuesday, June 21
I I:30 am to 12:30 ~m
Wdd Hone Cafe
. Pomeroy

Lunch .Provided

Thursday, June 23
II :30 am to 12:3.0 pm·
V mton County Community Center
Rt . .93 N, McArthur

Lunch Provided
Please RSVP -~800):451-6125

.......

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Mark Snid&lt;r, CLU, CFI'"' jim Fulkr, LUTCF

YOUR ONLINE SOURCE ·

NEWS

�,

PageA6

OHiO

The Daily Sentinel.

Monday, June

cloudy. Temperatures . wilt
hold steady around 66 with
today's low of 64 occurring
arou nd 6 a.m. Wmds will
be 5 MPH from the so utheast turning from the soutfi
as the overnight progresses.

Thesday, June 21
Mortrillg (7 a.m.-No01!) ,
Cloud y
morning.
Temperatures will climg
fro m 63 to 78 by late this
morning. Winds will be . 5
MPH from the sooth turning· from the southwest as
the morni ng progresses . :
NteriiOOII (1-6 p.m.)
It will continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures wil!
linger at 81. Winds. will be
5 MPH from the southwest.

Monday, June 20
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
Morni11g (7 a.m.-Noo11) · from the southeast turning
It will be a cloudy mom- from · the east as the afterin g. Temperatures will rise noon progresses .
fro m 64, to 76 by late this · Eve11i11g (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
morning. , Winds· will be 5
It's going to be a cloudy
to 10 MPH 'fro m the south - · evening. Temperatures will
east.
drop from 79 early this
Aftilnrooll (1·6 p.m.)
evening to 66. Winds wil)
Temperatures will stay be 5 MPH from the east
near 80 with today's hig h turning from the so utheast
of 81 occurrin g around 5 as the evening progresses.
p.m. ·Skies will range from
Over~~ight (1-6 a.m.)
partly cloudy to mostly
It should continue to be

The trauma team works with a patient in the Grant Trauma Center in Columbus. Health policy
experts say a recent st&lt;;~te law .that requires paramedjcs and hospitals to send critically injured
patients to trauma centers may be saving up to 900 lives a year. "PasseC'l in 2000 and ,enact-·
ed in 2002 , -Ohio's trau ma law was designed (o make s ure·that trauma patients , people who
are severely injured in car accidents, victims of ,s tabbings or gunshot wounds and people with
severe burns or broken bones .end up in hospitals that are best equipped to take care of them.

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MedFiight charges $5,000 just
to ge t a helicopter · off the
ground and S75 a mile once a
patient is on board.
While the trauma system is
superv-ised by (he state , the air
transport industry is n'ot.
Some question whether
there are too many helicopters
and whether they tly patients
who don ' t need them.
Dr. Bryan Bledsoe , a former
emergency. room physician ·
and now an adjunct prOfessor
at
George
Wa shington
University Medical Cente'r in
Washing ton D,C., studied
helicopter tlights of 37 ,000
trauma calls naiionally. He
said patients h'ad · minor
injuries in 60 percent of the
cases.
Bledsoe said too many
minor injuries are incorrectly
identified as severe by medics
on the ground.
'· It's getting silly;.people are ·
getting wal~ed to a helicopter,:· Bledsoe said.
MedFlight president Rod
Crane said only 5 percent of
his company's flights are misguided and those cases are
!lagged for-review.
· Crane said he wouldn't fight
state oversight, adding that
he 'd welcome the state Health
Depanment to call a summit to
talk about medical helicopters.

·College -students design Web sites for hand-held computers
· ORANGE (AP) - Tiny.
wireless electronics such as
BlackBerries. Palm Pilots and'
Axims are among the fastestselling devices in the world
and an Ohio company staned
by three college students is
trying to get in on the suecess.
. Stan Garber and !WO childhood friends have staned 0Web Technologies, one of
only a handful of Web design
companies in the . nation that
offers toned-.down · sites

• Hydraulic Deck lift

Bill Hubbard
Memorial ·
Tournament
accepting entries

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TUPPERS PLAINS - ·
Eastern athletes in grades 712 who ·missed the physicals
at the school may still get one
at Dr. Kelly Roush's office ,
which is located at the Holzer
Sycamore Branch.
Dr. Roush will be giving
the physicals throughout the
month of June by appointment, and there will be a $10
cost for the-examination.
Physical forms may be
picked up in the Eastern High
School office.
,.
For additional information, ·
riease contact the office '!t
(740) 985-3329.

LOW RATE

· FINIIICING
AVAILABLE

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279 I 800-710,1917

North-South
AU-Stars stats
North 45, South 17
North

Soutl;!

14
tO
3 . 7

14
7

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17

Flrot Dullrtor

specifically for the tiny
7'0ur major reason for • e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
devices for clients such as doing this is that it's our opin·- •
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real estate agents.
ion that everything is moving •
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SOUTH-FG Zurcher 27. 6:3 1
NORTH.-Mannirlgham 21 pass from
Cun&lt;Hff (Kleinsmith kick ). 4c10
NOATH-.Manningham 46. pass from
Cundiff (Kleinsmith kick) ,.1:59

SocondQuartor

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Garber was frustrated
because some Web site's that
looked grellt on .the fullscreen projection of a desktop
or notebook-size comp.uter
displayed smooshed-together
Jext and chaos on a handheld. And that was if the sites
registered at all.
The potential is hu ge.
According to Ganner Inc ., a
Connecticut-based information technology research firm.

from the
Recognizing that usefulness
to the real estate industry, 0Web plans to pitch its services
to mt&gt;re local brokers.
Other Web site companies,
such as Cleveland Web marketer Optiem LLC. are taking
a wait-and-see approach
before jumping into the
ponl\ble device market.
"What you're seeing is the
emergence of so many
devices." Optiem President

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were up 25 percent over last
year.
': It' s .impossible to ignore
this as an opportunity right
now," Garber said. He and
partners Oleg Fridman and
Alex Yakubovich expect the
"PDA optimization" company to qrin~ in anywhere from
$2,000 to l&gt; 10.000 per project,
depending on the .content and
company.
Garber. 20. is the oldest of
0-Web's
founder~. All
will be juniors at Case
Western Reserve Lniver&gt;ity. ·
0-Web does a 'variety of

it's more toe-in-the-watertype stuff fo r us."
Developers acknowledge
that configuring sites 'to run
. ~mooth l y on hand- he lds is
hard .work. The . two 111ajor
steps'mvolve coding eacb site
to work with PDA browsers.
which vary by model.
Not just real estate agent's
are in'terested in the college.
k1ds' -line of work.
When· Cleveland Public
Librar~ lxgan an merhaul of
its site . it commis;ioned
Cleveland consultancy Tenth
Floor LLC 'to help make the

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NORTH-Sutton 20 run (l()einsmith kick) .

8:07
No.-FG Kleinsmith 28, 1:05
SOUTH-Humphreys 74 pass

from

SOUTH--Hurnp!'lreys 4 pass from ·love

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three

ne~:

Web desig? and site ho:,ting.
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BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

another run .
Fortunately. Motz was all
right and was able 'to make a
second, much slower' run for
the fans behind a parade of
fireworks to end the night.
Competing with Motz for
the highlight of the evening
was a pair jet 'dragsters that
can reach speeds over 300
mph.
)'lamed Chicago Rush and
the Terminator. these vehi-

COLUMBUS -· Mario .
Manningham caught touchdown passes the first two
times he touched the ball
and Ohio Mr. Football
Tyrell Sutton darted for 203
yards and three scores on
Saturday to le ad the North
to a 45-17 win in the 60th
annual North-South Classic .
The · North's 45 point s
were the most ever scored
in the game , played before
5,250 at Crew Stadium .
Manningham, a Warren .
Harding grad who wi II
attend Mi chigan this fall,
scored the first two touchdowns of the ga me ·to get
the North off and running.
The North leads the series
35-22 -3 .
.
Sutton , a reco rd- setting
tailback from Akron Hoban,
was a unanimou s choice as.
the ga me's MVP. He gained
99 vards on 12 carries in the
first half, then had I 04
yards on · nine carries and
added one reception for 34
yards in the second half.
It was more of the same
for Sutton , a Northwestern
signee who was se lected .by
the Ohio Associated Press
as the state' s top player last
fall after he ru shed for
·3,232 yards and sc·ored 38

Piease see Fire, 82

'Please see Buries, Bll

4;&gt;15
NORTH-Sutton 15 run (Kleinsmith kick).
2:01

· Fourth au-tar

NORTH-Means 22 pass from Hiller.
(Kleinsmith kick) , 9c36

A--5.250.

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INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

AUSHING-Nortn.
Sutton
21 -203,
Waugh, 6-65 , Davis 3-16, Gray t- 1.
Cundiff 1-(minus 1). South. Tolbert ti-13,
Low 5-1 .
PASSING-North , Cundiff ~109. T'"'
Hiner s--7'435, Greg Micneli t-2-0-34

8~5275.

"l-at .. Martin 2-11 . Wilson 124.. Aamella1 1-10. sOuth, Orten 4--60.
Morton-Green 3-80, Humphreys 2-78,
Amol1-30,

Contact Information

·•

Fu - I · 740-448-3008

•~

E-1Mil- sportliO mydailysenlinetcom

•
•

•

:
•
•
; ·

•f

: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '• • • • • • • • • • ,• • • • • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • • • • .;
•.

Bob . Motz shows the fire power behind his 25 ,000 horsepower semi dragster that uses 50 gallons of fuel per 1/ 8
mile run.

Night of Fire a hot draw
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@ MYDAI LYR~GISTE R .COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - · It was billed as a
night of fire and the
Kanawha Valley Dragway
produced just that.
Behind a record crowd at
me dragway, dozens of ~;ars
lined the track for a chance
to impress the fan s with
horsepower any driver wishes they could · ha ve. And
accompanying the drivers ·

" .

Soorta Stiff

Ired SMall•

.,

Sports Edllar

..

Conn helped turn Rio
softball program aro~d
.,

. , . . . - . SpO,t.w.._
(7ol0) «&amp;-2342 . .... 23
~Ornydailylrilluna. oom

t..., C"""' Spona Wrilor

1304)675-1333, on 19
lcrumOmydailyrogistar.oom

.

RIO GRANDE - Amy
Conn came to Rio Grande
facing a challenge. She was
being · couhted on to be a
building block for a softb all
program that had been a distinct ·downward spiral. To
make the situation tougher
on the former Wheelersburg
standout , the coach · that

doormat to solid contender.
Conn's four years have
been the be st in the hisiory
of the Redwomen program.
Rio Grande won 105 games
and lost onl y 65 the past four
seasons. During that time the
Redwomen have three conse&lt;:uti ve 20-win seasons,
three consecutive post-seaso n appearances and in 2004
posted a sc hool-record 40
wins while finishing 7th 111
the nation at their first-ever

Creek had been
repl aced before she ever set
foot on cam pu s.
' Talk about staning over.
She was the starting sec- .
ond baseman as a freshman.
. but reluctantly made the
switch to first base as a
sophomore and became a
mainstay at that position for

On a personal level. Conn
put up consistent numbers
and was one of the main
offensive threats in a potent
line- up. She batted over .300
in three of her four seasons.
including a .323 (4 l-for127) senior season. She also
ripped l2 doubles and hit
one home run while driving

MARK

WtWAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

(740) -146-2342. .... 33
bshermanOmydaitynibune.com

able fire trail with an engine
that sounded like a . sonic
boom when taking off as the
engine ate 50 gallons of fuel
per 1/8 mile run .
His run left the fans standing on their feet. but for
Motz it was not his shining
moment. As his chute failed
to completely open. Motz hit
the sand pit at the end of tl\e
track at · more than !50 mph,
breaking the steering arm
and leaving fans wondering
if he woulct be able to make

waiting to be the best, were
two side attractions that trul y
stole the show.
As Bob Motz pulled his
three ton semi onto the track,
many fans were in awe of
the look of the vehiclethat was before he fired it
up.
With 'a 25,000 horsepower
Jet . Ken s worth . GE motor
strapped on the ·back. th1s
sem1 was defiantly not fit for
the road. When fired up .. the
truck produced an unbehev-

(ZurCher kick), 7:02

;
•

,.

Larry Crumlphoto

NORTH-Sutton 2 run (Kleinsmith kick) ,

~~~-fifSt.·aUartl~f 2005--l'-BA-3ale .-Jeff-~hrs-said . ~'Ri ght now~~
. ------"'

'Y'*" 111M

.

. BY

Schoenhott {Zurcher kick), :44
Tlllftt Quartor

, 8-23-1 -179, l..D'tle 2-6-

._... m

North
buries
South

EHS athletes can
still get physicals

The Rugged Kubota ·
R I V900 Utility Vehicle

X50, a wireless-enabled said. "We also want our •
hand-held device he can use agents to be able to access our :

Halsfop providing the . othe·r · innings of work. .. wi,th · play: · 'said Post ·128 ct&gt;ach
hits wi th a doub le and single · Brandon Fackler strikmg out Chris Stewan . "That is an
respectively.
the side in the seYenth to accompli shment that I am
Game one of the double- sec ure the 13-9 win.
proud of because Lancaster
he11de r w~s considered. on
Clagg led Post .128 . with always has an excellent team .
the schedule. to be the divi- three singles , a double and a It says a lot about our team."
sional match up.
pair of RB! s. while Robinson
The.second pan of the"dou- also drove in a pair with a
Game one
1
Lancaster 16, Feeney Bennett 8
ble dip was a lot like the first , double .
Bennett 205 000 100 8 7 4
as Post 128 battled back from
Bl ackston and Durst each FLancas1er
163 000 06x -:- 16 13 2
an early 4- 1 deficit to pull to had a pair of singles; and Shaphen Robinson, Ma tt Mooney (5) and
a nine-all tie· after six innings Chris Myers added a pair o( Luke Haislop. Da"ne Sw1nehart , Michael
(7) and Cory Cook. WP- Swinehart .
of play.
. doubles and a run batted ill:' "RICe
LP - Robinson .
Feeney Bennett then . wen-t
Haislop also had a si ngle. a
Game two
on to tac k on four runs m the double and an RBI in the vic13, Lancaster 9
top of the seventh, givi ng tory. while Mooney and Ross , Feeney Bennett
{7 inning&amp;)
starter Jeremy Blackston· Well ~l so provided a safety FBennet1 134 001 4 ·-13142
enoug h offense to pick up the apiece.
Lancaster 410 400 0 - 9 8 3
victory...
.
. .
"We were able to win two Jeremy Blackston. Brandon Fackler (7)
and Luke Haislop. Justi n Mil ler. Ryan
. Blackstcm all owed .e1g ht out of three versus Lancaster . Curry.
Kev1n Wallace and Cory Cook. WP
hits and mne runs 111 hts SI X Post II in regular season - Black.slon. LP - Wallace .

,.

SYRACUSE - The 2005
Bill Hubbard Memorial Little
League Baseball Tournament
.i s currently accepting entries
. for its tournament on the
dates of July 6 through July
10.
.
The event is sponsored by ·
the Syracuse Volunteer
Firefighters Associatioo and .
there Will be an entry fee of
$30 and two baseballs per
team.
The entry deadline is June
24 and the drawing/coaches
meeting is slated for June 25
at 10 a.m.
For more information,
please
· contact
Larry
Ebersbach at (740) 992-5400
or leave a voice mail for Josh
Larsen at (740) 591-1853
after 7 p.m.

• OSHA Approved ROPS

The trio recently · launched convenient to traditional
Business on the Run, a sepa- browsers, but also to handrate firm that exclu~ively held users.
focuses on redesigning Web
The new site should be up
sites to be compatible with and running by August.
.
PDAs.
"We figured if we were
Business on the Run 's first , going to redesign tlie Web
client was Goodman Real site. we were cenainly going
Estate Group LLC of .to make it more PDA accessiLyndhurst.
· ble." said Tracy Strobel, the
The new site is ''!~eking all ·library's Web applications
the graph1cs,. but a s _,got the supervi sor. "Our intention is
same funcuonahty:· sa1d that our entire catalog will be ,
Anne Santora, a Goodman available on a PDA."
office manager.

Thursday 's game
Mason County at Marietta. 5 p.m .

Sports Brids

• Professional Grade Mower and O&amp;ek

• 4WD

Wednesday's game
Glouster at Faeney Bennett, 6 p m.

)

• 25 HP, E·TVCS 3-Cylindor

. • Wet Disc·Brakes

Mason County at Parkersburg , 6 p.m:r

p.m .

. Liquid Cooled Diesel Engine
• Shaft Drive Mower Deck and Transmission

• 3-Range Variable
'Hydrostatic Transmission

10-8 edge into the ga me's
SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINE L.coM
tlnal outcome in the Oistrict.
8 showdown.
·
Shaphen Robinson \vas
LANCASTER - Feeney , creJited . with the loss for
Bennett split a road double- , Feeney Bennett. allowing ·10
header
with
Lancaster runs In his four mmngs of
Saturday .at Be~vers Field. work . Dane Swi nehan went .
dropping ga me one by a six innings and gave up seven
score of 16-8 and bouncing' runs in earning the win.
Post 128 produced seven
back in the finale with a 13-9
triumph.
hits in the setback. with Mall
.· Post 128 (&amp;-5 , 2-2) was Mooney leading the way with
doubled up in the .first con- ,a pair of singles.
· test, due in large pan to a pair
Ken Amsbary led Feeriey
of .. six-run outbursts in the Bennett with three RBl s.
seco.nd and eighth innings by while Luke Hai slop followed
the Post II hosts. '
with a pair of runs batted in.
Lancaster (9- 10, 4-l)helda
Terry Durst and Tyler
7-2 advantage after the sec- . Clagg each had an RBI Si nand frame and turned a slim gle. with Amsbary and
S.TAFF REPORT

Tuesday 's game

Sunday's game

ZD25F

• 21 .6 HP Diesel Engine
• Hydrostatic POwer Steeri~g

Feeney Be.n nett at Logan, 6 p.m.

Pickerington at Feeney Bennett, 1

,.

FEeney Bennett Post I 28

_Feeney Bennett splits doublehead·er with Lal)caster .

Today's game

Mas on County al R ichie, 2 p.m . .-·

.o 2WD/4WO Standard
•l-IST Transmission
• Category I, 3-point Hitch and R~ar PTO Standard
• Hydrostatic Pqwer Steering
• Full Flat Deck and Cruise C.,:mtrol

• General Purpose, Worksite,
or Recreational Models. Available

American Legion Baseball -

Saturday's games

Liquid-Cooled Diesel Engine

Bl

·,

Monday, June 20, 2005

Logan at Feeney Bennett, 1 p. m .

• 22 HP, 3-Cy linder E-TVCS

The Daily Sentinel

Sutton's streak gni&gt;\&gt;s in North-South g1101e, Page 82
North squeaks past South in W. Va., Page 82
Mason wlns Big Bend Tournament, Page 86
Spurs one wln iway from title, Page 86

Marietta at Feeney Bennett. 6 p. m.
Mason Counly at P~r.kersburg , 6 p.m.

BX2230

•

INSIDE

Friday 's games

EXACTlY WHAT YOU EXPECTED FROM AKUBOTA

Law leads to better trauma care, experts say

&lt;

I

HARD WORKING.
DEPEND.ABLE. TOU·GH .. ~

AP Photo

way of punishing paramedics or
hospitals that don ·r com ply._ or
keep critical patients too long.
"There·s no teeth in the law
to prevent that ," said Kath y
Haley. trauma nurse coordinator at Children's Hospital in
Columbus.
The legi slatio n also has
pushed more Ohio hospital s to
get into the trauma care business.
Before 2000. the state had
22 ve rified tra uma centers.
Most were in large : urban
areas·. such as Columbus.
which had two adult trauma
centers and one pediatric center. Now . there are . 38
statewide. still mainly in large
·urban areas.
Some hospitals initially
opposed the trauma legislation
because they said that it would
cause them to lose patients but a.
spokes woman for the Ohio
Hospital Association said they
no longer have any concems
and no hospitals have complained.
Because time is essential in
trauma care. companies that
operate medical helicopters
also are benefiting. Eight companies fly a combined 25 med~
ic~l helicopters · all acress
Ohio.
MedFlight.
based
in
Columbus, has seen its revenue
double in five years to $35 million last year. The tax-exempt
company charges hospitals
annual fees for its services.

20,2005

-

NewsChannel

COLUMBUS (AP)
Heallh policy ex~11,. say a
recent state Jaw that req uires
pararredi cs and hospitals to
send critically injured patients
to trauma centers may be saving up to 900 lives a year.
Passed .in 2000 and enacted
in 2002. Ohio ·s trauma law
was de signed to make sure that
trauma patients - people who
are severely injured in car
accidents, victims of stabbings
or gunshot wounds and people
with severe bums or broken
bones - end up in hospital ~
that are best equipped to take
care of them.
.
Medical offiCials say the law
is working. Fewer critically
injured patients are dying 'in
small, rural hospitals or in
nontrauma centers. according
to analysis by The Columbus
Dispatch.
Data from the Ohio Trauma
Registry shows a 22 percent
increase in the number of
injured patients transferred
from community hospitals to
trauma centers from 2001 to
2004, the newspaper reponed.
Last year alohe, 18,1 30 critically injured patients were
admitted to trauma centers.
"If you ' re going to . die of
trauma, you want to die 'in a
trauma center. That means
you ' re getting the best shot of
livillg," said Mike Glenn, state
trauma program manager.
But some critics say the law
doesn't go far enough..It lqcks a

.

•

the
her·Red
finalwomen.
three seasons for
Through it all, Conn was
able to rise above the difficult chall enge and indeed
was a key building block in
helping the Rio program rise
from th!= ashes of perenmal

~~fi~~~~!~E~~!~~~~~~~~~~~;~

numbers
earned
herThose
I ~t
in
26 for . the
season.
Team All-American Mideast
~.:.,.-~_,:__ _ _ _ _.-...~
Conference South Division
!(.thy -..,.ovp ....
honors. Defensively she
posted a .989 fielding per- Rio Grande's Amy Conn, left, make the cat~h while a Geneva base runner retreats bac!l to
first . Conn . the lone senior on the Redwomen softball. team , recently fimshed her sucPh- see
M.
cessful career.

C..-.

.-

•

•

�.

.

•

..
. Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

•

.Sutton·continues streak with
203 yards in all~star game
c.o ach Brian Cro~s was
focusing on the North''
gruunu game. Sutton saiu he
I
COLUMBUS - It was diun't expect to ge t the hall
the cxclammion. point ' on a us much as he diu .
"I'm ~lad I did ." the run :career that already echoed
rring b;lck said. Hi s perforthrou gh Crew S-tadium .
mance
led the North· to a
With 21 carries for 203 ·
yards and three touchdowns, record 45 points. the· most
Tyrell Sutton led the North any team has scored in the
team to a record 45-17 win game's 60-ycar history.
Sutton 's All -Star team :
over the South · sq uad in
Saturday 's all -star North- mates. sang his praises after
South Classic .
the game when . he · was
''My stre:ik of .100-yard announced as the game' s
games just increased by MVP. But it wasn't just hi s
one." saiu Sutton ,. who will speed and footwork that
rccclv'er
Ma~io
play for Northwestern in the wide
fall.' '' It's a great feeling Ill · Manningham auminid.
end with. a game like thi s." · "He keeps you laug hing
Sutton had rushed for· at from play- to-p lay," said
least IOU yards in his last 3K Manning ham, who scored
games in an Akron Hoban two touchdowns and was•
uniform .
nmneu the North's offensive
Although he knew head MVP. "He don't get too
SARAH ANDERSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Buries
from Page Bl
touc hdowns . He set state .
records with hi s 9.426
career ru shi ng yard~ and
10,9 19 all-purpose ya rd s
while ' rushed for I00 or
more yards _in hi s final 38
games.
The North never tra il ed
after running off 24 · points
in a row. scoring on its first
four possessions.
The South took the opening kickoff and drove to a
first down at the North 6
before se tting for a 22-yard
by
New
field
goal
Phil ade lphia's
Arthur ..
Zurcher.
Ryan Brinson, who played
for North coach Brian Cross
at Canton McKinley, took
' the kickoff and retu rned it
· 55 yards to the South 34.
Sutton sped fo r II yards on
first down and three plays
hlter quarterback Billy
Cundiff tossed a quick pass
in ' the left
n at for
Manningham. He s.ide'stepped the tackle attempt

serious. even ttlllug h it's the
All-Star game."
Manningham and defensive b\1ck Derrick Stewart
both cited Sutton 's seco nd quarter tou chdown as the
highlight of the game. The
20-yard run "dow n the right
sidel ine made the score 213.

"My favorite play was
when Sutton was on the
siddinc.· and he r'an ·over
that defender," said Stewart.
the North's defens ive MVP,
"Man. he was something ."
··Sutton's Hoban career
earned him an array of
title s:
including
· the
Mr.
Associated
Press
Football award for'2004. He
rushed for a . state-record
9.426 yards on I ,090 carries
anti tota led 11 7 touchoowns
t'or his team.

by Steubenville's Gary minutes of the half. With
Stu bbs and raced 21 yarus less than a minute left, Ohio
recruit
Robby
State
for the touchdown.
Schoe
nhoft
of
Ci
nci
nnati
St.
After the South punted.
Cu ndi ff
underthrew Xavier t!Sed a pump fake to
Manningham on a tly .pat - freeze fe ll ow Ohio State
tern 'but
Manningham recruit' Jamario 0' Neal of
adjusted to the flight 'o f the Cleve land Olenvit.le. That
the door for
pas s, c utting inside defend- opened
er· David
Bruton
of Schoe nhoft to hit a wideMiamisburg and ma ki ng the open Jared Humphreys for a
catch to complete the 46- 74-yard touchdow n to cut
the lead to 24.-10 at the hal f.
yard play.
The South drew as close
Then Sutton took over. He
gained 2. 4. 9. · 16 and 2 as 24- 17 when Dante Love
yards on five ru ns, then of Cincinnati Withrow (Ball
swept rig ht end, hesi tated to State) tossed a 4-yard scoravoid an onrushing tackler. ing pass to Humphreys
and sped do»'n the sideline · (Ohio Dominican) on the
for a 20-yard score and a first series of the third quarter.
21-3 lead.
Sutton had runs of 12·and
Sutton, however, · carried
13 yards and Orrville's Tim on five straight plays, gai nHiller hit· Avon __ Lake's ing 37 yards on one, to set
Andrew Means for a 24- up a 2-yard TD·. After
yard gai n the next time the Derrick
of
. Stewart
Ursuline
ball'. Youngstown ·
North
go t
the
Manningham scored on a ·(Cincinnati) picked off the
42-yard catch-and-run, but first of his two intercep·
the TD was disallowed by a tions, Sutton sliced for 34
holding calL Joe Kleinsmith · yards .on a screen pass
later kicked a 28'-yard field before adding the 15-yard
tou chdown on a run.
goa L
.
The game is sponsored by
The South's offense finally came alive in the waning Grange Insurance.

20, 2005

and

one

8'

•

6'

entrance. All concrete
wtn be 6" o1 4,000pat
mix. Approx. 190 cu.
ydo. +1·. Include · aa
part ol your bid plaa·
tic vapor berrler and
wire mesh through·
auL Alae Include all
labor, lormlng • . and
materlall. All con·
cr.-a must have a
cure and - I applied.
Expansion --cull
wltt '. - t o be a maximum ol 20' In each
. direction.
Provide
112" aophalt upanllon at all perimeter
openings
1OOL.I.
Questtono call ~740)
591-11975. All bids due
July 5th noon. lhll
bids to 42455 ~
Rolld, CoolVIlle, Ohio
45723.
6115,16,17,19,20

Public Notice

-

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
s..t.d pt..,. ·•• will
IMbe&gt; -reul-- by- the
MEIGS
COUNTY
COMMISS IONERS ,
MEIGS .
COUNTY
COURTitOUSE 100 E.
SECOND
STREET,
POMEROY,
OHIO
45718 ,until 1:00 _pm,
TJ&gt;ui'May, July 14,
2005, lor lumllhing
all Iabar, rnat11rials
...cl equi-1 nec- r y to complete
the puject knf?wn as,
VILLAGE OF SYRA·
&lt;;USE WATER SY51EM IMPROVEMENT
PROJECT at whi~h
ttme the propo... ts
will
be
publicly
-ned ond read

.......,

NotiCe

to

b.-rs.

Street,

In the State ol Ohio to
provide said surety.
Each Proposal must
contain the full name
olthe party or parties
submitting tha pro·
posal and all persons

Zanesville, · Interested

Ohio
43701
and
Village ol Syracuse.
Village Clerk's Oflice ,
2581 Third Street,
Syracuoe, OH 45J19

Each bidder must
submit evidence of its
experiences on projects of similar size
and complexity. The .

and

lram

oWner intends and

Engineering,
534
Market

requires that thlo
project be completed

obtained

Linn
Inc.,

Street,

Zanesville,

no

later

December 17. 2005.
All contractors and
sub co nt rae t ora
involved with the
project will, to the
extent
practicable ·
use Ohio products ,

able.

materials,

Dan Sullivan in the Chicago
power ride.

Rus~

Fire
fromPageBl
cles had a cramped space for
the d~iver, with a jet engine
strap1Jed on the b~ck. With a
3000 horsepower. Pratt
Whitney engine, these vehicles consume around 20 gallons of fuel per 1/8 mile run.
Driver of the Chicago Rush
machine, Dan .Sullivan, said
there is nothing like it.
"Its a rush," Sullivarf said.
"Its like .a great big sling
shot."
· The two drags!ers had

jet dragster shows the fire power behind his 3000 horse-

three runs on the evening,
bringing the crowd to the1r
. feet every time·as the force
· behind the engines left many
speechless. On the . second
run of the evehing, the
Chicago Rush was clocked
at 209 mph and the
Teflllinator, driven by . J.,ou
· Pereira, reached a speed of
218 mp_h on the 118 mile
track.
The other spectacle billed
for the evemng, the Cool
Bus driven by Ken Nelson,
did not run because of a broken cam shaft while ·warming the engine up. The vehicle is a school bus that gets
on its two back wheels drag-

gin!;l sparks down the track.
Fmally, . the
Super
Charged Thunder .class of
cars, which brought drivers
· from all over the country,
produced racing action
throughout the evening.
Saturdays champion was
Mike Phol from Erie,
Pennsylvania. ·
The evening produced
qu'ite a show for the fans
and is just one of the events
run at the track throughout
the year. Along with weekly
racing action, the .Kanaw ha
Valley Dragway will host an
IHRA event July 22.23 and
24 that has been a huge success in the past

If so,

45769 .
tuni1y proviliona, ond
Eoch
bidder
is the requi"""""' lor a
required to furnish pay~nt bond md
wl1h ill proposal, •
performance bond lor
Bid Guaranty and 1011% ol the c.cMoba:l
Contract Bond in price.
accordance
· with
No bidder may llitttSectton 153.54 ol the
draw, hio bid wllhln
Ohio Revised Code. thirty ~30) ~~ """
Bid security fur- the actual date ol the
nished in Bond forll! ,
openi119 thereof.
shall be issued by a The Meigs County
Suret) Company or
Com miss i o.ne rs
Corporation licensed · teserve the right to

...THE

'

.FOR YOll!!

Shop the
Classifieds!

y~u

~:

.Losl: Small

~hila

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r

r'
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L&lt;m AND

L.,-io·-oiFiiOUNDiiilioiill!-_.1 ~
___

YARD SALE

YARD SALE-

GAUJI~

Memberships

Buy 2 months get 1 free or
Buy 5 months get 1 free

For more info pie~ call
BASKET BINGO
Thursday, June 23rd
Middleport American Legion
6:30 pm
S20.00 Special
Games, Raffles
'
Advanced bckets (non-n•furldable) l

at Early Education Station
2122 Jefferson Ave. Pt. Pleasant

•o

to start immediately. Job will
last through 2008. Please
reply ,to Daily Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729-22, Pomeroy, Oh
45,769

==------

WmANIIDBU\' .

OHK

Cleaning
&amp; 3BR , 1BA Ranch stvle
Powerwashlng, Can't Keep house. located 6 miles past
Up Your "To Do" list too Big? Holzer hospital on At 160.
Let Us HELP You! We'!! 1740)388-9263.
· Clean-A-Up &amp; Got-A-Done.
We
do
AI!: 3br, 2ba, pool, garage , stor.Res ldent i ai / Busin~ss . .age bldg, appliances includ·
I n s' i d e I 0 u t.s i d e , - ed , 5 miles from 33 on
Dally/Weekly/Monthly, 740- Rt.681, (740)592-0426
985-3639 or 740-416·1823
- - - - - - - - 4 Bedroom home. 2 blocks
Interior/exterior
painting, lrom school, good neighbor·
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estimates call. (740)742·
4. Sale or rent. Country &amp;
2013 01645-2638.
quiet, 3 bedroom - full base·
LOW• MO!ItUre
ment, nardwood floors.
Carpet-Cleaning
(740)379-2540.
.
Brand New Method
Dry In ~ Hour
Attention!
· No Steam-or -Shampoo
Local compaily offering "NO
Free-Estimates
DOWN PAYMENr protuCiearly Cleanu•
grams for you to buy you r
l----"l~l304::;:4=1&amp;i7::;5-002=::.2_ _, home instead of renting.
Office/House
Cleaning, • 100% financing
' Less than perfect credit
~-l-&lt;&gt;
E.w;perienced. w/Aeferen ce,
accepted ·
·
ready to Clean for YOu call
• Payment co uld be th e
Amy 1304)675·3508
same as rent.
C 2005 by NEA, lno. •
Locators.
Mortgage
Ohio Valley Engine Repair
1740)992·7321
, . , . , - - - - - - - , l'tlll"_ _ _ _ _..., 11'1!1'"""_ _ _ _ _.., Lawn mowers, small engirle

/:)u~

111.16

110

11116

. preferred but not necessary.
HELP WANIID
HELP WANIID
Driver must be willing to do
1 pre-maintenance on trucks . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
&amp; oquipmonl. yard. work &amp;
Now Hlri•gl
~
~
Absolute Top Dollar:. U.S. other miscellaneous chores.
40 hours a week
f:t"'"/
,.,.
.,
d G ld C ·
oms. Experience ope rating equip$7-$8/hour
home. Abou t a year old. Has S1ver an
Proofsets,
Gol
d Rings, U.S. mont &amp; e.w;tra skills such as
\ ,..,~
} ,
no t been neutered or
welding a plus.
Cali for major Non-Pro'it
":S:
· to·
declawed. Ple ase call 740- Currency,·M .T.S. Coin Shop,
151
Second
.Av8nue,
Call {304)937-34 10
Organizations or Help
t·o,..~"'l'~.
446-4488.
Gallipolis, 740-446-2842 .
Protect your Gun Rigt11sl
POSITtON
Full time mechanic needed
ANNOUNCEMENT
to work on Heavy equipPaid vacations, paid
Posting Data: June 8, 2005
mont Please reply to Oailv hoh'days and pa1·d tr&amp;lnlrlQ.
· ·
For Sate .............................................. 725
Sentinel. P.O. Bo11 729·22.
Announcemenl .... ........................................ 030
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Call today to schedule an
University ol Rio Grande IS
Full-time babysiner needed
interview.
seeking four graduate asslaBarton Chapel Road, Mason
tanta in the areas of, softball,
County. No students · apply
1-8'n~247
track and field !lnd volleycall 6pm-9pm 304-576-3353
ex!. 2455
ball. Mon1hly stipend. 1u~ion,
rOom and board are lndudHlllr Stytlata
OHica Ayllllnl
ed. Graduate Assistants

1

u ........ u~... ~
,.....,. n~.. ~

repair. Sales and services.
28i Grate Road , Pairiol, OH
456S8.

The
Att1ens
-Meigs
Educational Service Center
is seeking a part-time
Atte~ance Officer in Meigs
County (20 hrs. per week, no
benefit~). Experience in
juvenile S"Siem
preferred.
7
Salary based on training
and experience. Letter of
Interest, resume and re ferus1 be oce· ed by
ences m
r
rv
2:00 p.m. June 27. Submit
to: John D. Costanzo,
SUperinten~ent,.
AthensMeiga Edf:~CBtional Service
Cenler, P 0 Box 684 , 3201/2 E. Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769.
EQual

Don't miSS th is great oppor·
must be enrolled or ptan to Opportunity
Employer/
tunity with Fiesta Hair A fast paced non-profit · enroll lor Fall Semester in Provider.
Salons! We currer\tly have organization is seeking a the University of Rio Grande
openings tor tull and part· self moti\lated P,erson to Master's
Program. - - - - - - - time licensed Hair Styllats work appro.w;imatety 32 Interested applicants please WANTED: Part·time position
at our salon in Maaon.We hours/ week. This position e--mail or tax resume and list available to 8S$ist indMduoHer guaranteed hourly will include light secretarial of r.eferences to
illS with mental retardation
wages, new pay acakt with duties. Typing and computer
at a group·home in BidweU .
up to 52% Hrvke coma skills necessary. Send a Ms. Phyl!lsMason, SPHR 35t1rslwk: ~~pm-8amThurs ;
mlalan, retail and tanning · resume to :·Tha F~h . An
Director of Human
11pm-9am Fri; Sat 7pmcommissions, medical, den- Colony, P.O. Box 472,
Resources
9am Sun. Must have high
University of Rio' Grande
sChool diploma/GEO, valid
ta l, vision and life ins .. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 by
· advanced education. and June 30th.
Rto Grande, OH 45674
driver's ticense and three
much more . Call1-8n-327- ':'--'-':"'----,---,--,--,--:pmasonOrio tdy
years good drMng mq)eri·
7001 lor more information.
Oral Surgery Assistant for
ence. $7.00/hr. Pre-employin fax number (740)245-4IJ99. ment Drug Testing. Send
every
Saturday
Fax
resume
to:
~uckeye
Local Home Heaph Agency Middleport. OH.
accepting applications lor o.-1o (614)890-7507
nvo::oume
Sttlists needed at Fantastic
mmunity
MCes, · ·
Sams nENil location ii1 the Box 604, Jackson, OH
HHA's and PCA's in Galtia
and Meigs C(]unties. No
OUTSIDE SALES
S
, • .,". Deadlll
' 8
.,,.....iW
Wai-Mart Plaza. lgn on """""'
.....,...
experience needed. e pro- .
REPRESENTATIVE
bonus, Free CEU hours, cants:
6121105.
Equal
·-- 1ra1nmg
· ·
VIvo;~
an d II ex1'ble
pak:J vacatk:ln. full &amp; part Opportunify employer.
scheduling: Please call The GallipOlis Daily Tribune o·me .._.... ....-...,;,. Come &amp; IIIli"--::"~~~-,
13n
n40)992
._,... ,__,
(740)441
•
CH' ''
• is accepting resumes tor a work in our triendty tlmily
SaKXJ1.S
=
0990- · - ----:---:--:- full time OU1side sales rep&lt;e- almOSphefe. Call f7oiO)olo46IN!mwcnoN
LoOking ror a pianist for sentaliYe to join our sales 7267 Of stop in.
~ and church grnoonc team and to manage an ·- - - - - - - ....,....
··~-I"
T..,~ -. . . . ~-- ~ Golllp II ~---- ,.-.,_
(l40)245-5078.
,_'""' n.lllll•-.- "~'~~VI-- .....,......
established ac::count 1st
:_:.:....--::----- while calling on new Meigs Courity Board of (Careers Close To Home)
.McClure's Restaurant now accounts. The successful Mental
Retardation
&amp; Call Today! 740-446-4367,

· se ·

~

in

thei r

Home.

Have

All rul ..tlte advertJ•Ing
In thl• newep~~per 1•
•ubf-ct to ttt. Feder•!
F•lr Hout~lnaActof 1988
'i~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
which rnekft 11 llle(flll to
MVfitiM "•ny
8~
..-...........,.... ....,.....,.
·, prefwenct&gt;, llmltetlon or
vrn.m.• vt-v a•
discrimination baNd on
~=====~:; race, color, reflglon, ...
f•mlll .. •t.tu• or ..Uon1111
•NOTICE•
origin, or •ny lnlentlon to
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
meke '"Y IMICh
NG CO. recommends tha
pr.r.rence, llmltetlon or
u dO business wilh.peo
dltcrlmlnatlon."
a you know, aod NOT
Thl• newa~ will not
end money through t
knowingly eccept
ail until you ha~e investi
EKperience cal (J04 )675 3264

I

"rm.

Graln..................................................640
Wanted .................................................110
tmj)tovementa ...................................810
Sale ............................................ 310
Gciocls ..................:.................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
Memoriam .......................................,........ 020
Insurance ...............:..............- ..................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment........................ 660
UveotociL.....................................................630 ·
Los! and Found.................,....................,.... 060

In

Lobo' Aaellge ............................................ 350
Mlocel-...............:..............................170
llercharlllloe.......................540

"'--oiii-iiiiiiioo...

Devhaoe~~=
· ~=:~

hiring all /jX8tions,. full or
part-time. ~ up applica·
Don at kx:ation &amp; bfing back
between
10:00am
&amp;
11 :DOam, Mond8."1 lh ru

candidate will be a disci- .
1-600-214-0452
plined, selfmotived team
"~'~~
,....ga~;
a .com
player that undetstandS the avaltable:
· Multiple. Accfedhea MemtMr ~.:!,!
importance of deVeloping· Oisabilttiel Teacher. Must Ccu'ICil tw ~ ' .•c--.·
..t School&gt;ltZ7.S.
strong, mUtual!)' blneficial have cunent valid 0 hlo

Sab.wday.

l!uSiness ·~ wi1h Dopenmono ol Educ:alion

:!''::"'...tt:~•.;:.

- --..,-'-.,.,-""-.-'OO'Y--.-•..._. ourOCCO&lt;Jr1fs-

~idd· tor,~_.,
.
~~ Tne ideal candida1e will
• .,._.
~~ naw sale._ ...... Fo&lt;
E.Apetief~ in dentat ~ confidential
interview,
wil help, pteue tax resume please send rnume and

i

MONEY

·1

~~;:::;=-m~Lo~I'\N~=~

Pr-

~....--

N;gtt Sl1ift Coal&lt;. 36-40 hf. Paromedicl
&amp;
EMT';
P8' toll. 18 " ' -· p\d&lt;-&lt;4&gt; . -. Apply a1 1354

applk;atiOn at Deity Queen, Jadc80n PUce C'..alpc*;

~

current

No

Pno'"'

·'

__,..IQ

IUfW

ond hiMl., bo _
•

.......-

Domino'a _be...,18

RWLPN'~"""'

••
•
'•
o
••
••·o

- · w.,..,

---Cot-. RND
0111 • • -

ter .. curre(ltl)i accepting ~ .11.. 00.:
a1 "" ,.,.
"
. , . liiMW tor LPN'S .nd ~ ~L
7A-7P and 7P-7A - - ............,
Shlftl: . . ...... tt you No Phone call.

fl,s.

como ., """ f\1c..oo.c
-

eon-

Scltool. 1310
8to'MI, P.arrt~a
.O. 8Cil

301. Syr

• · OH _ , .

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

'-..

AJOB

a•,nounce.,.,nl

::=;~==~~~

r

PRofESSIONAL

rent, 740-992..(;300.

STARS. 1..aoo-

=:::...------'
1\JAIIEDDOWNON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSt?
No Fee UnleN We W10!
1 888 582-3345

Rodney Village II 3 BR. 1 car
garage,. DR. LA, · large
k1tchen , deck an back, 1
acre .,..,. $70,000. Must see
to appreciate. (740)2459917.

Roush Lane, Cheshire.
Beautiful 3 bedroom, formal
dining room , Oak kitchen ,
Oak floors . carpe le&lt;t Su11
room,
2 · 1/3
baths,
$117,\lOP. (740)367-7615.

.

,_

c .

...!Iii&amp;

www.orv .com
Home Llatings.
List your t1ome by calling

t7.00)olo06-3620
View photos/info online.

% Down! -3 bedroom, 1
4 balh, UA. DIA. FIR.
r garage, fenced in
ack vard. 1/2 acre.
lose to tOwn . $132,500.
ode 4505 or call
·
740)446·8325.
rs a Steal!! 4 bedroom.
.bath, 2 car garage.
ew Haven. WV. Code
505 or call (304)882·

r

MOBil£ HOME";

FORSM£

- - - - - - --

· 1997 Doublew;de, 3 bed·
room, "2 bath
1"""1675-1019

1+acre.

...,.......

No Down Payment Pbs&amp;ible. 2000 28x80, Patriot 4 bedf900 square h. houSe. 3 room , excellent conditi&lt;ln,
bedroom. 2 belli. fuH base- Asking $48,000. Needs
mont,_ neal pump. seta moved. (740)367-n45.
on 3 acres SA 7• Eastern
4321

•

Will nelp wi1h
1740)385-9621 .

doliv8PJ.

I HouseMa&lt;QOOa~~ 7;,,'::;-::;
.

Trailer and Garage Apt., For sale Of lease Of lr"BI»Malonon4thAve. Houseon , 2x50 trailer on tne rtver in
7558
Muon, 2 br. batt'l , front
pofoh. c:o.ered . -. boal
WANIID
~·
Pt. Pleasant Four Vacant ctcxk &amp; 3 Jet Ski ramps, nice
10 Do
168.000. 2.800 1o1s i• Muon Counly beach, wil l also trade tor
oq.ft.LDg~uil,w/3.5 (304)1175o-1a1l2
. o• camper ol equal value ,
AI 1'ypeo M
Boid!, oaoo. Col Millo 1513)314- (304_.20118
$1~ . 000.
(740)742-3080.
111oc11, 910ne, Froo ~ 2750
eel 416-3080
(304}n3-11560. 304-sa3- ;-;;;;;;;;A;;;;~-;;
""1
"
•~ bodl oorn ,.__,, 2 car
·
·
nd pool
bei 0011 f with t\.111 CleWity,
lf&gt;1I'OU (741ll2*. .
ul-i4J arwj cent:ral • . call
·~.ooo.
Fluoo. f741l)38S-2&lt;34 .
DHK
Clot liiJQ
&amp; 11162.

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lor-

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~

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,....

c.n' KMp

·

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=.mo..-LPN. ~~ ~~~~n:
""'-·Ott

·-~---------------------~~------·
''

Don: .

iiiiii:;;:;iiiiiiiiiiil.

c.u

-uomo.

IN THE

CLASSIFIEDS

•

197Q 12x65 2BR. 1BA.
n99ds little work . Asking
- - - - - - - : : - - : : - $800 OBO . . Needs to be
Duplex, each with 3 BR, LR, moved. (740)379-2930.
··'
DA, Kitchen, Bath &amp; Porch.
House 3 BR. LA, Kitctlen,
Bath.
Both in Point 1975 Schultz mobile home.
Pleasant. (304)675-2495 All elect. central air, new
afler 7:00pm
windows, 2. yr. old hot water
tank. Ret. &amp; stove. $2.500.
Groat Houses at Great 1740)388-8743.
PriceS! We have 2 homes in
the Gallipol is and Auttand
1995 Clayton doublewi~e .
areas. WE FINANCE! NO 24JC52. Jbr. 2ba, central ·air,
CLOSING. COST.
NO total elec1flc. S18,()(X) OBO.
POINTS!
Contact NiCk 1304)675-29!J7
Huffman 0
1-800-3336910.
- - - - , - -, - - - - 1997 14x65 Premier- 2 bedoawn
·
Poy
nt
room, 1 balh. all Etectnc.
No
m.
even E•- . Corid. Lots of ex1•as
witt\ less than pertect credit
on this 3 bedroom, 1 bath $11 .000 {304)675-7588 or
home in Middleport. Corner (304)553-371~
lat. carport , wrap-around
porch. fenced in yard . bas&amp;ment, p.:tument same . as
-~

Si":ltvns

i Grande
InveStment Property walk to
University (2) Apartment
buildings, (3) two BR units
$129,000. Call 1740)245·
9413.

SAVE-SAVE-sAVE
I Balh.
OM'IIu'"fo Da"ltiiDD ....
......' 3 L9
....,
rnodlls a! old ~f !atge L.ol.
.,. oar 1 J p1ooM como T - - t.ol Ut HELP Voul· We'D
Rio Grondo .
in anct fil oe1 . , W e! ' t to start ~- Futt
0..: Ft Up &amp; G.e R Done. $311.000 (304)112·2688
2005 modiiO Otrivlng - ·
:H SR. 2 112 BA. LR. DA. Cole'a w.
do
AI.':
01 333 POuo Sor•~ time 1hfouglt 2008. WVA
152116 U.S. 50 Etll. --.a.
WktthpOrt. or call .and 11M. Ml.r·tww good c:trttRet tdent i i i/ Bualneas, 3-4 BIOca:w• o. tu..a, 1 112
wood f\ooQ, · 01t1o 05101 , (740)5112-1 m .
-sq. ft.· - ,.., 1800
S125,000
Call "Where YoU Get Your
MontY• )'4orllt'
(7.0)2-13:
0.. 1 .,,,_._ EOE
22.
4511111
' - - - - - - - - ' \l1l6 ..,e rw7~11-1123 $13.500 (304)112-3131

with a COPY. of your photo ID to ·
: Ohio Valley .Publishing P.O. Box 469. Gallipolis. OH 45631 :

'

3P-

••w•'

-_...by

Appfyln-af)IIIU'- 7A-7P.ond 7P-7A.ond 3A-

MAX.

~':....,o::=,_~ 523-

10
olltoln
lntorwnlion
STNA'S o..t.oukCenlof SpoilIn lhe
.:.=.::.;..._ _ _ _ _ _ It~
IJillll- .,_ af .._,., CNidt1Docl.
HlrioJQ Salt DrW.ro. cotionllor- STNA'l!,
.._2410:
Middleport
Callol!

-•M•""-fl-IANml!i-•
D•!Ui_.J.

L..

Education ' 14&gt; 10 four IODrlll- 105 chonT -. Pot1 nolo 128.00 a mon\11. Atll

. MlJII

n......_._, Ohio 4663t .

·

~~;:ll"

~~~~·

Mtlllte which I• In
violation ollhe IAWt Our
IMders .,. hereby
lriformed th8'l all
dwelllnga ildYif'tiMd In
thl• ne11np p ~rare
IIVIIIIIIbM on M ~UIII

--""-·

**NOTICE**

r.II•Jtir-------,1

1 - Specieip .oi- ,
dation in lhe aroo . af DIIIECTY
FREE Homo
Mo01111t.1ntentiVe tduca- entertainment
Syatem.

-="'' 6'--1,-4-1190_ _7:::507:-:---:-:-:--:- """"' ""'"' "' Gallipolis Spedo!
Needing certified !an leCilniTribune Anno Jim

6526

=rw•

actverl .......... for,...

::·~1ed=th:•;ofle;ri;=~

p·o

11,;J

u:.r

Will take care of the Elderly

·tor

.

:• Subscriber's Name ___________
••
•• Address --------,-~------_:__
••
••
•io City/State/Zip _ _ _ __ _ __ _ __
••
: , Phon.e ________-'---------~-••
•
•
Mall or drop oft thla coupon along

~~~~ · I~r.'...FO.".~.s.M£._..~
6

eo

.t)oint ~lea&amp;aut B..egi&amp;ter
The Daily ·sentinel
&amp;unba~ Q::ime&amp; -&amp;entlnel
.'
Pleasant Valley

Constructi on company look·
ing lor a full time secretary

3rd Annual CVS Pharmacy .
Flea Market/Vard Sale
Drlvera Needed:
Bring your stuff (over 50 COL Drivers willing to drive
silos available) Ca ll 740· for local ready-mix-concrete
446-7459. June 25th,Bam-?
company. E.w;perience is

·j

oow••P"F••I

lwright@ic.net

---,
tc h 5ovepounds.
r eye. '
4 fluffy kitlens, tiger &amp; wh ile. brown
weighs pa
about
Out of part Siamese. Pretty Male, Answers to the name 100 WORKERS NEEDED
Junior. Reward $100 North
big eyes. (740)446·1062.
Assemble crafts,
Ar 2 1-mile past Paul's
wood items.
To $480/wk
CKC Registered female E~&lt;xon . (304)675·1990 or
Materials provided , .
(304)444-1742
Cocker Spaniel, 1 year old
Free information pkg. 24 hr.
(4) 6 week old kittEns.
Reward for safe return
801 ·428·4649
(740)446-0375 leave mes·
Miss1ng female gray Tabby. · - - -- - - , - - sage.
Wearing pink collar with fake An E.w;cellenl way (o ~arn
dlainond s and red name tag. mr.mey. The New Avon.
Free kittens 4 mala - yellow,
Lost near old Bidwell school. , Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
2 female· calico. Call
(740)388·8 166.
. .
(740)448-0591.
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
REWARD, Lost between Selt. Shirley Spears, 304·
Male Pit Bull ·16 months old Smokey Rd. Boggs aref!. 675-1429.
to giveaway. Call (740)388- ~ack. Ru ssell .. and bird dog.
0532.
Family pets. (740)379·2205 .aa~tender needed, weekend
. , - - - - - - - , -- - : - Jimmy Duke.
hours. Apply at Tt1 e Legion.
One puppy 11 weeks old,
· Mon·F.ri . (304)675-3437
black lab mi.w;, cute and
friendly.' 740·965·4324
___

POUCIES: Ohio Valtey Publ\ahlng rM«VM the right to.ldtt. ,.j~. or cancel any ad at any time. L=:rrora must b. rewrted on the flral day of
Tnbun•S.ntlnei-Regllltw will be f'MPOMI~ for no mc:w. than the ~et of tht ap11o. occupied by the error and only the tlret ln..rtlon. We
not.be
any tOea or expenM that reeuiU from the publication or omlulon ot an ldvtrtlumant. Correction will be madt In the flrat avella~• .cl\tiO(I. • Bo:.:
are etweya confldMt:lal. • CurMrlt rna card appiiH. • Alf rMI
M:lvertla.ment. are
to the F«&lt;eral Fair Housing Act of ti68 . • Th\a
.cc:epta only help Wllnted adl
EOE atllndllrde. We will
acctpt any
I In violation of the llw.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I \11'111\ \II\ I
'-II In It I ..,

1

qualify for a

.

•

• All ads must be prepaid•

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Here's all .you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it w:ith a
copy of your photo
ID.
.
4§allipoli•ailp Q::rlbune
.

HAS
SOMETHING

iRi~iiiiiiiiiiil304-675-4956

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
All Display: 12 Noon :Z.
Mondhy-Frld.a y for lnsartlon
Buslne•• Day• Prior To
In Next Day' s Paper
· Publication
Sunday In-Column: 1 :00 p.m . Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m .
Frldoy For Sunday• Paper
Thursday for Sunday•

Deac:rlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlatlont
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r

Now you can have borders ond graphics •
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
t!,iilll
Graphics 50¢ for small
·
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

Successfu I Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

on your home .delivered
subscription!

SAVINGS

services,

100 East Second · anc• requiremenm,
SINet Pomeroy, Ohio ..,.... oppor-

Word Ads

• start Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete

\.I'.,

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

Oead'/1;,~

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

Senior Discount*

Get A Jump
on

Center

l\cgister
To Place
~rtbunc .
Sentinel
Your Ad, {740) 446-2342 {740) . 992-2156 {304) 675-1333 ·
Call.Today•••
Or Fax To
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

°

Are _you 65.
or older?

(6) 20, 27

The engineer's eotl- and labor In the
ol
mate ol conatructlon implementation
coot Is $619,934.00 their
·
projecit ..
(Six
Hundred Additionally, contrac·
Nineteen Thousand tor compliance with
NlfMI Hundred Thirty· the equal employfour Dollars). A ment
opportunity
.bid meeting will be requlre""'"ts of Ohio
held al 10:00 am on Adminlatrallve Code
Tueodey, June 28, Chapter 123, the
2005, at the Sy,.cuoe Governor"s ExecuiiYa
Municipal Building, Order of 1972, ond
2581 Third Street, Gooemor'l Exocuttve
Sy...,use, Ohio.
Order 114-9 shall be
Bido shal be -lect requftd.
ond marbd .. Bid lor Bidclars comply
Village of Syrecuse with liMo prevoilinll
Wotei
Syatem on Public
· 1-m p r o v • m e n t s~-t•npr·ov,.m~~rn:.---ln--&lt;
Project and mailed or
County as
determined by thoo
delivered to: .
Meigs
County Federal
Labor
Commissioners
Standards ProvisioM
lhlg:·
County and Davis- Bacon
Courthouse
Wages, -lnsur-

..

L..- ··- - - - - · ·

Commissioners

than

Ohio 45701 upon paymen! by check made
payable
to
Linn
Engineering, Inc. in
the amooot ol $50.00
for each set, which
lhall. be non-refund-

(

In ·One Week With Us
REACH · OVER.285,000 P.ROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR . AD NOW ONLINE

L.r
....--G-'IVEA
- ··.W.·A.Y_.,I

Larry Crum/photo

Mtlp COIUIIJ, OH

G.iu. Caunly, OH

\\'\IH '\.(I \II

waive any irregulari.tles and to reject any
or all bids.
Meigs
County

therein.

CLASSIFIED

three first-half interceptions, time. Morgantown's Patrick
was named most val uable Shadle then made a 22-yard
player for the North. Cabell· fie ld goal . to put the North
Midland's John Saunders, ahead 3-0.
who will attend Marshall,
The North threatened late
won MVP honors for t,he in the second quarter after
South with seven tackles for Parkersburg's Chance Litton
losses and a fumble recov- hit Morgantown's Migel
ery.
· Lockett at the South 3. But
· The South's Michael . the South recovered a snap
Williams of Nitro went 16- over Litton's head on thirdof-29 fo r 181 yards but and·goaL
threw a record five intercepLitton finished with· 39
tions.
yards on I0 rushes and 3-ofThe North's Nate Sowers 9 pass ing for 43 yards.
South C harl~ston's Cody
of Martinsburg went 5-o f-9
in the 'second half, including Cfay . caught seven passes
a 44-yard completion to for 98 yard s for the South:
John Marshall 's Anthony
The teams accounted for
Montez to the South 6 on ninl! turnovers- six fo r the
the second play after halt'- South.

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

UBLIC
NOTICE
specifications, bid·
ding documents, con·
tract and other docu·
menta may be examlned at lhe office ol
Linn
Engineering,
tnc. , 534
Market

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\c

Offtee ~~~~~

"

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

'

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) -Spencer Farley of
Morgantown scored on an 8yard touchdown with II :42
left in the fourth quarter to
lead the North to a 9-7 win
over the South in the state
hi gh school all-star football
gt1me Saturday night.
Ttte. win w&gt;IS the sixth in
·seven years for the Nort h,
which is 18-3 1-3 overall
against the South,
.
The South avoided it s first
shutout since 1980 when
Gordy
Newsome
of
Huntington - 1-yard TD run
with 5 seconds remaining· in
the game. ·
Br idgeport 's
Jamin
·McCue. who had a record

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

NOTICETOBIDDERS
The Meigs County
Agricultural Society
will be biking sealed
bldo lor concrete
Work on a new 140' 1
72' building. In adell·
. lion to the main floor
add alae a 12' . x 14'
llppr08ch at each end

Monday, June 20, 2005

North. squeaks past South, 9.,7

Ohio · North/ South Football Classic

BY

Monday, June

www .mydailysentinel.com

•

'

~~:,::, . ~OrR.~..::

.

�...

.\

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

r

www.mydailysentinel.com

1

~A~~=~=~~~~~
- ~=;·r~~~~~~~~,.iiiiiiiiiiiiilr"-~~~M~mo~~~-~0~"~~,-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-.-.-. . . . . . . . . .;;~;:~.-.-. . . ..-.-...

FARMS

. IUR R ENT

Ze ro Turn Z-Trak Mowers , • 4 WHDl.ERS
.
!rom John Deere available at L..--.iiiiiiiiiliiii;.,_.,.J
Pioneer Farmstead , 4 bed- For r'ent: 1 and 2 bedroom Pole Barn 30x50)11QFT 4,9%
Hxed
rate
fro 02 400 ex Biggun 'pipe,
room, reconstructed hewed apartments Spnng Valley $6795. includes Painted Carmichael Equipment with Holeshot tires, great shape,
Log House. modern laclli- area
References
and Metal,
Free-... Delivery John Dee re Credit approval. $2,500. (740)3B8·9(0~ .
2
hewed ' log (,'lepoSit
tles,
required .
Ph . ·www.nationwidepolebarns.c (740)446·2412
www,careg com
57
acre (740)446 -2957 .
1999 Harley Road King
Outbuildings ,
om (937)559-8385
Christmas Tree
Farm,
9,000 miles, lour pac tounng
II{\ "\-.. l 'r II( I \ lit)\
25,000 more/less trees. 27 Furn1shed upstatrs. 3 rooms Pool eq)Jip: ladders, pump,
seat, 4 helmets, heavy duty
acres mature hardwood. &amp; ba1t:j. Clean. ref . S. dep. chlorinator, tiller, covers,
cover. $13,000. (740)446At.JfOS
~25 after 5pm .
tree machinery. mmerals. required No pets (740)446- Kreepy Krauter {in-ground). j710
Call (740)446-3667.
counry water, 1/2 mile paved 1 519.
FORSAI.E
2002 Yamaha 660 Raptor
road frontage . $265.000
SPA FAcroRY OtrnET
Gractous living 1 and 2 bed·
1304)675-4 138
1948
Chevrolet
Five
yellow/black
wfmatchlng
room apartments at Village
Top Quality, Warranty.
KBC
·helmet.
Excellent
www.landandfarm .com
Passenger Coupe, WV
Manor
and
Rtvers1de
Wholesale. Financing.
Slicker, New Tires, Good Condition 53 ·700 (304 )1575Apartmen
ts
in
Middleport.
Deliveries.
BUSIN~
Painl '" SharpM
(304)576- 1015
From $295·$444. Call 7402 locations
ANI! BUILDINGS
992·5064 . Equal Houstng
Milton Flea Market
8
8
c2_2_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ' 2005 Harley Davidson Fat
Opportunities. ·
&amp; Ashland Kanlucky
Judy
Kay's Restaurant
1952 .Plymouth 4dr, for Boy, 560 miles, Windshield,
_(60~22·7 185
wfupstairs apartments. 740· Pleas~nt Va.lley Apartment
Aestoralion ,
no
Rust, Backrest. Fl Pouch, $t6.000
416-18Da, 740-247-1100'
Are now tak1ng AppliCations Yeates appliance d'il ly. aii.J- Engine runs. Bodr Orig 1nal. (304)773-5081 or (304)773for 2BA. 3BA &amp; 4BA .. · mlnum , H.D.. $80. lirm . no Dents. 31 .000fmiles . 575q
~-=---.,-----(304 )576·2532 . •
Applicati ons are
taken (304)6~5-2~02
81 Harley 1340 Custom , 6
Monday thru Friday. from
1985 Pontiac Trans-Am .. gal. tanks, $8500. Firm , cau
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. q mce is
BUILDING
· 112 Ac . lot Tycoon Lake on Located at 115 1 Evergreen
5spd. 305 H 0 ., only 55,000 af1er 6 (740)843·1233
S
miles. viper blue, Hops,
Eagle Ad : Co. Water (not
Drive Point Plea san t. WV " - - - ·
· iiiiiliJ'I'LIE'iioiiiii,__,.
excellent shape. (740)446- 94 Harfe}- Dav.idson Uttra
lake
front)
$7 ,500.00 Phone No is (304)675·
Classic, 10,000 miles. blue,
(740)247·1100 0' (304)532· 5806. E.H.O
Block, brick. ·sewer pipes. 0350 .
excellent condition, $13,500,
627.1 Cell
windows, lintels. etc. Claude
Tara
Town house Winters, Rio Grande. OH t992 Ford Tempo GL , 4 (740)949·2217
door, auto, very good condiLooking tor , Private Large Apartments. Very sPacious, Call 740-245-512~ .
1K&gt;n
, $1,500,(740)992-1777 Goldwing, 1988, GL-1500,
lot, 200x309 for _my Mobile 2 Bedroom s, C/A, 1 1/2
PETs
Home , 14x65. all Electric, Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
1992 Honda Civic EX 4 81.000 mfles. 500 miles on
IURSALE
11yrs old good shape, or 1 Pool, Patio, Start $385/Mo.
door, full y loaded, 17" rims, ti re!?, excellen t condition ,
"acre country setting , place No Pets. Lease Plus
exhaust, cold air intaKe. lint, ready to ride. $7,000.
tor pets in Galli a Co.. OH or Sec\.) rity Deposit Required, 4 S:9le Small Bea~le Hound aulomalic, $2,500 OBO. (740)441·5447 or (740)446·
990C'.
Mason Co.. w/al l hookups, (740)446·3481 .
puppies M &amp; F. more in fo (740)446-6304.
will pay $150/month. fi:leply :,
. .
·
7AM-·7PM ." 740·742·0528
1993 Teal Olds Cu tlass · Honda 450 2004 w/ acces·
10 PO Box 611 . Ai le, Vvv Tw1n R1 ~rs Tower is acc_ept·
25271
·p y
mg appltcaMns lor wBittng
Supreme S. Good condition. sori~s 1 1,600 miles. 54.000
list tor Hud·substzed, 1- br, Basset Hound puppies full less · than 100,000 miles, OBQ.
River lots for rent, beautiful apartment, call 675·6679 blooded , 9 weeks old, 5 neW tires. :garage. kept. John Deere 235 garden
• beach, convenient loCation. EHO
tractOr, 3 yrs old,' $3,300
females, 1 male. ~740)446- (740)367-7137 .
cal1(740)992·5782
080. (740)256·6002.
0974.
s~~cE
1997
Buick
LeSabre
ma Rmr
REAL t:&lt;&gt;nTE
Pure bred Siberian Husky Umtted, 75 thOusand miles.
BoATS&amp;
WAI'fl...:n·
In!. ,
Loaded, ~
Puppy, Female, Sable and Leather
FORSALE ,
•
Downtown 01fice Space - 5 white. mask. loves people, Garage Kept .
$5\995
I Buy Homes· Local persop room suite S650/mo: 1 room can be inside or out, c(3_:_1
04 6_7_5_·1_7_31
_ _ _ _ _ · 1984 Bayfiner, cuddy cabin
buys homes. Confidential , office- $225/mo.; 2 room wormed , t2 weeks old, very 1999 Buick LeSabre. 46 :000 · Volvo/Penta with trailer
Ouic~ cash. Jim. 740-992- suite $250/mo. Security. nice! 1! $160.00 each. c'au actual miles. One owner, Good condition, $3,500.
6300. No calls aft er g
· deposit reqUi red. You pay 740-44 1·4462 or 740-992- e)(cenent condition. Phone (740P67-0314_.
utilities. All spaces very nice. 5885
(740}446·094 1. ·
I( I "\I \1 s
Elevator. Call (740)446·3644 - - - , . - - . , - - - - - - " - - " - - ' - - " - - - - - - 1985 20ft Rinker cuddy
for' appointment.
'
Schnauzer Puppies (minla- 1998 Dodge Neon loaded, 4 cabin, excellent condiHon.
tu re ), AKC , 4 colors, ve t door. nice clean car. $1 .800 .. (304)67?·2316
HousES
For Lease: Office or retail c hec~ed,
$400
each; (740)379-2853.
FORREN'r.
spaCes in very good condi· Pomeranian puppies, AKC,
tio'n. Downtown GallipoliS. 2 female ; lig ht brown, $400 1999--Trail l:it"e ·Bantam
Flyer. E &gt;~CEillent co ndition.
2 Houses: (1) 4 bedroom, Appro&gt;~ . 1600 sq. ft. each . 1 each: (740)696- 1085
or
2
baths
.
Lease
price
Loaded. Must see 740·
(1) 3 bedroom. $900 &amp; S800
plus deposit (7 40)256- negotiable to encourage Seven week female AKC 949-2709. $8600.00
Call ·Black Labs.
Shots a"nd ' - - - - - - - - - new
bus iness.
6152.
2000 Pontiac Sunlire. low
1740)446-4425 or (740 )446· wormed. $200.00. Parents miles, excellent cond1lion,
on Prem1ses. 740.992·3357
5 bedroom. 3.5 bath, Stone 3936.
one owner. (740)992·7546
Rench home with in-grounu' - - - - - - - - - or 740·4 16-2050
1987 20 ft . Pontoon Boat
M b'l h
after 5pm.
pool Large beautiful home
o • e ome space 1or ren t .
with
trailer and 50hp Motor
MUSICAL
and setting on Route 160 _ Close to Green School.
92 Plymouth Acclaim. Auto. $3,500. (740)992·6914 .
INsTRUMENTS
$t .OOO/month. Lawn mamte- $140/mo. (740)446-4053.
..,
AC. $1000 OBO (304)675·
662 8
included .
Call
WAr\~
nance
Parlor Pump Organ--manu- ~
2000 Bayliner 21 ft. cuddy wl
(740)446·3481
TO RENT
factured by Putman Organ
TRUCKS
trailer, many extras, ve ry
Anentlonl
Co. Ligh1 Oak. $395, 740· ~--IU-R-SiiALiiE-_.1 _'l_ea_n_3_0;.,4·_67_5_·5_5_6_J___
Local company onering "NO Looking lor house to rent
992·4t97 ·
'
2003 22ft.
Swee twater
. DOWN PAYMENT" · pro· locally. -Mason or meigs co.
,fRUITS&amp;
11987
Dodge
Dakota. Pontoon
'boat.
40hp.
grams for you to buy your caiH04·773·5600 "
11 1,000 miles, runs great.·
vr•
m
£&gt;E"'
Jnhnson
motOr,
power-trim
,
VEG
home instead of re.nting.
\Ill&lt;( 111'1&gt;1'1
s
&amp;:.l~
• good gas mileage. $1 ·,000
...._
Hoosier ·trailer wfladder,
'100% financing
.
080. (740)256-903 1.
spa re ti re/bracket, AM/FM
Cabbage for sale at $1 .00
• Less "than perfect credit
.· mB!ny eXtra s.
·stereo/CO,
per
head.
79
Spruce
St.
accepted
t991 Ford Ranger. body lair,
Gallipolis. Phone (740)645· runs Pa ir, $800 {304)675- Asking $10.995. (740)446·
' Payment could be the
2016 or (740)339·0324.
same as rent.
0501 .
8714
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Mortgage
Locators
I \R\1 -.. 11'1 '11 1 -..
1997 F150 4 wheel drive,
Chapel Road, Porter. Ohio.
(740)992· 7321
,\ II\ l...,lilC k.
4.6 VB, automatic. Excellent
(740)446·7444 1·877-830·
condition. High miles. Price
Between city schools. 6 9 162. Free Estimales, Easy
FARI\1
$6,800. (740)379·9885.
rooms &amp; balh. range &amp; ref. financing, 90 days same as
Reactive Stainless Steel
turn. gas heat. new carpet. cash. Visa/ Master Card .
Muffler $50
2000 Dodge Dakota' Sport,
$425 mo. $425 deposit + Drive- a·· little save alot.
3.9L V-6. Ssp, AC, CD, bed:
--------~
ulilities. (740)441 ·0596.
Thompsons . Appliance &amp; 0% Fixed f:late up to 36 liner, new tires, $5900 OBO.
Small 2 bedroom house .Repai r-675-7388. For sale. months on New John Deere (740)992-2335
Tractors &amp; 110 TLB ::..:.::...:.::::.:::=-- .- - wlfarge Yard , 681 West 4 re-conditioned automatic Compact.
at Carmict'lael Equipment. For sale or trade- 1987 S-10
miles from Tuppers Plains, washers &amp; dryers, retrigera- (740 )446 _2412
Chevy, 350 engine, new tires
$290 per mo .. (740)985· tors. gas and electric
&amp; paint (sharp), trade for 34' "03· · Jayco Eagle, 1-12'
3504
mng~s. air condltlqners, and Case 480-C Back Hoe with boat or sell for $3,000 , slide Out. Lqts of extras. Like
wringer washers. Will do cab and heater, gooc:l'condi· (740)742-3080 , Ceii-4 16- new condition. (74 0)339·
Two Bedroom House. Point repairs on major brands in
0218.
Pie
t 1
B
lion. $11,000. (304)675· · c3080111:"-,..."""'!"""'!---,
a,san
'
.
arglah
a
1shem$2asn'o
·
lsh
!
!lloll'p_
o
_•_a_1
you,__'
.ho_
m
_
·
·.
,
6460
4x4
--------~
$42
a mon wt
Coleman Camping Trailer
Depos;1 (304)675-4469
AlmQlJEs
Gas 4020 John Deere trac·
FOR SALE
12FT. 2 K;ng Beds, $5.500
M
H
tor,
good
condition . ..,_ _riiiiiiiiiiiiiii-_.1 call for Details (304)675·
OBH.ERENrOMES
.(304)895-3274 or 13011895· 1998 Ranger4x4 , 5 spd, JL. 1731
~
Buy Or sell. Riverine 3075
AM/FM cassene, AJC, off
Antiques. t 124 East Main -:--:-::---:::-::-:::-:::-::- road package, new paint. Truck Camper. AC, TV
2 bedroom mobile home. No on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill $5,500 080. Call after Antenna, wired for Cable,
pets, $265fmo includes
Rent~ Carmichael 4:30pm (740~256.-625{.
like new $6,500 (304)675·
992·2526. Russ Moore, for
water &amp; sewer. $200/dep. owner..
Equipment. (740)446-2412.
3353
Reference. (740)446-3617.
4
2000
4
Qodge Dakota x
-. 1 I ~\ I I I -.
Wanted to buy antique. used John Deere Commercial
truck , 130·000 miles, $50QO.
turMUre
&amp;
estates. Worksite ProduciS In Stcd;t1 Only
serious offers only.
(740)245-5078.
Compact E~~:cavator 27C, please. (:304) 576 _2742
350, 500/Skid St~~ 371,
320, 325 , 328/Tractor 2003
Jeep
liberty
Loader Back_
hoe 1~ QTLB. Renegade. Loaded, 4x4.
BASEMENT
Check out our rental rates. $13 ,900. Call (740)256WATERPROOFING
1995 Yamaha 250 4- Great Financing Available-- 1618 Of (740)256-6200.
Unconditiohal lifetime guarBeautiful river view tn
Wheeler, good condition Carmichael
·Equipment. 95 Dodge truck, 4 x4 , auto- antee. Local references furr Kanauga. Ideal lor 1-2 peo$ 1,000.
Cherry Finish (740)446-2412.
ple. No pets. . please.
malic.
S3,000.
Call nished. Established 1975.
Dresser. cost $899 sell for
Applications beiQg taken
5003, 5005. &amp; 5020 ~{71J:40~);_;388-00,;,;.~1~1----, CaH 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
S200. Game Boy Actvance New
C.ll (740)441.0181 .
0870, Rogers Basement
Series John Deere Utility IV
SP. $4o (304)675-2806 .
Tractors 0 0% . fixedl 36
VANS
· 1 Waterproofing.
FOR SAu: 1
Baby bed. Twin Girls cloth- mon1hs. Used Utilay Tractors
4 .9% Variable/ 60
ing. 1nfant thru size 2, other 0
Carmichael 96 Ford Windstar. Power
kids do!hing, Bicycle, Dryer. months.
1 and 2. bedroom apart- Antique Ice Box: Home Equtpment. (740)446-2412 windows. power locks."
meniS , turnished and unfur- Interior. Portable Refridg.
cruise , rear AJC , 160,000
New John Deere Round miles. $2,600. (740)256·
nished, security deposit { 304)456~ 1875
Balers 0 1.9% Fixed Rate 8152.
required . no pets. 740-992·
Dog Kennel 12'x24'1t6' with Financing tor 48 Months or
2218.
dog house. $250. Phone New MOOel 457 Standard Full-sized luxury va'n. seats
t bedroom Apartment. par- {740)441.Q668 after 6pm.
Round Baler Only $13,250 7, mectlank:: owned. beautimiles.
tlaUy turnished, S300 month
cash. M8kes 4X5 Bale. ful, 1993.
Doll House's for sale with or
(304)675-4351
Coumichael
Equipment. $6.999. (740)446-9961 .
without Furnrture. (304 ~ ·
{740)446-2412
1 bedroom Cottage in town. 2436
no · pets. deposit &amp; ref. Home Exercise Machine, Special Purchase- John
required. (740)44&amp;-2468.
rnus1 setl $200 060 call to&lt; Dee&lt;e 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel
desc'iptioo (304)882-3872
Rakes/ Jolln 'Dee&lt;e
1br Apartment for rent,
Mowers. Call tor price.
Downstairs 1n ?DO-Block.'
.
. JET
Carmichael
Equipment.
V~nd
St.
Reterences
AERATION MOTORS
(740)446-2412.
rtqutred ' avadatKe June 1 Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In Gl'll:.;...,;..;...,.;..._ _ _,
1304)675·3654,
b&lt;!"'een Stock. Call Ron Eva11$, 1·
11am-7pm.
800-537-9528.
.
--

•URSALE

l\1ERatANDI'&gt;'E

To place an ad

·I

r

r

~~~~

Advertise
·in this
.
·space for $1 04
per month.

n.ooo

Di""

r

2 bedroom newly renovated - - - - - -- - Apts for rent Downtown . Kli"lg sze Wat8f1)ed wtthout
GaJiipotis. At\'ef" &amp; Pat"X view. nlanress. Chest of Orawens.
.$560/rno. Some utilities and Table with: 4 ch.atrs.
peid. Now accep!ing app~;. (304)67;.2570
catiOnS Calll740)709-1690 ,N_E_W
'--A-H_O
_ USE
- -0- STE
- -E-L
Steal Beams. P1pe Rebar
3 rooms &amp; bath. aft utilities For
Concrete.
Angle .
paid,
Downsta.Jrs,
919 Chan~l. Flat Bar. Steel
Second Ave., 5l.lltab6e tor 1 Gratmg
Fot
Ora1ns.
(1oc:al caJI)

$295/mo. (740)446-3945.

Dffleways &amp; WaH&lt;wavs. L&amp;L

-----7~~~~~~~~M~~~~~~~~
immediately. Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;.
Beautiful. dean. and spa- Frklay, 8am-4·30pm ClOSed
cious 3 bedroom town- ThurSday,
Saturday
&amp;
house. With sto"ragelplay- •Sunday: ( 740~7300
room. Downrow-n GallipoliS."
S610/month. No utJhties Office OeskS, luds adJustable
po;d. No pets. Call (740144&amp;- desks . fifing nels. tables .
OJ&lt; si""' of c:hairs. (740)2459961 .
5078
BEAUTIFUL
APARTAvailable

IIENTS

AT

BUDGET Out of my

-ES AT JACKSON
··
EsTATES.
52 WesiWood
Dn¥e trom S344 to 5442.
Walk ro s1&gt;op &amp;
CaJt
740-«6-2568

~qual

Housl"!l ~-·

CONVENIENT\.Y LOCAJ.I!D I! AFFOROASL£!
Townhouse
apartments,
aildlor smaH hou6es FOA
RENT Call (740}4-41 · 1111
lor ~!Caboo &amp; 1mJrmanon

now -

JohnsOn

col-.

AOHA

mare,

impressiVe

bi~. 8yrs old, very w.eU

broke, great for kids. $1 ,100.
(740)256-6824.

Ask

about

OUr

AQHA

MeriJbef Discounts on new
John Deere Equipment.
·CarmiChael
Equ;pment
(740)oto4&amp;-2412.

r-•---•........,iiiiiiil___.I
~

HA: a.
~~

Mi.OO Hay 4-Sale $1 .50
~
ate ~ 5-5072

mower. -

16 " · finish
once.
88 Cadl1ac to&lt; sal8 "' lradO.
(740).,6 8161 .

ro sell, hler Jol1f1 DMre ......., -

CllamPon ....._.
~- . l1ar1ing at Sf ·
-..F""auang
.399.
available sub;ect to JoM
O..:e Credt apprtMII. Your
be as law
as S39 rnon1l&gt; so -.,.
CarmiChael
EQUtpment
_(740)446-2412.
: : - - : - - - --'---::::
A1cMg
mower.
1997
Husqvarna/GTH 220 5(f
cut. bel:l tranSmission. Bell
offer. (7«J)367..Q3U.,

_.-could

•
.
+
olo

l1&lt;1EV ALMOST i;VERYTUIN6 ~
t.\'Ct-IV ANI&gt; IT'S ALL !SOOt&gt;...

Easl
A3
• 7 52
. J . I043
AQ982 ·
A7432
t K J. 6
K.
63
SoUth
. K Q t U9 4

"&gt;8

If 6 5
• 9
oloQ JI052

I.EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

Auto· &amp; Truck
Repair

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

992-5682
'" Homes
·» Septic Systems
&lt;11 Roofing

;~~
AD.....,_•
Of '
J~ .
l
...... ~Wqr;Jt :
25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
lnsun:d
F~~ Estimates

S~ND

/
30

TtiiS

fll.}nflr MVfll&gt;ocr-t !,

~IGI'IT! l.'f,L
FA&gt;C Tl'l~ .

Pomeroy,

Tn~e

Service
• ln!lured·Free
•:Stimales
• Senior Citizen
discount

740-992·2621
30. r~~r s E .\ p!:ft(DCC

'I'D

OPEN

Remodeling

IJri.

• New Garage~
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gunera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting ,
• Patio and Porr:l'l Oet:ks

SIG~ ... I"\\t-11».'1' ~~

We do It all except
furnace work .

i

Pomeroy, Ohio

25 Vears Local Ex

rlence

r-,

1--JI\'{ 10 51"£.1'\C&gt; 01-\E.·SE.'JE....If\
01' Tflt. Wff.K!
.

Blgh and Dry

BIG NATE

SxlO, IOxlO,
IOxiS, IOdO,

CAN I
CHANGE

MY

IMPDm

AN S WER?"

MATCH
PLAY,
FIFTY

CENTS A
HO LE .

Athens

• Garages
"No Job To Smoll "
Racine. OH

740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508
14 y.rs . Experien..:e
1 mo

HOWARDL
WRITfSEL S SONS
I ROOFING
1

All types of roofi ng:
Shingle. Fl at. Metal •
1 New or Repair

MINllrS
Sllf STORAGI
97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

10x10x10x20
992-1194
or 992-6615
"Middleport's only
Self-Storace"

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

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

Re8tocking U.te t\ 'bdel . Sal•u,gc
and Mter J~rkPt Parts

.PEANUTS
LEARN TO SAKE

See Brent or Brian Whaley

YOUR OWN COOKIES

M-Fri 8 :30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

1

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I Downspout · Siding

I

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STANLEY TREE

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISTIICDII
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• Garages
• C.Omplete

Remodeling

TRIMMING&amp; ..

CO=~NG

• Prompt &amp;quality
work
• Affordable Rates
•References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanl_ey
740-742·2293

J40-912-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

SEPTIC TANK PUMPINC $95.00
PORTABLE TOflfT RfNTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TOL\4Y
992·3251 OR 591·8757

• leave a meSsage
WELCOME 'fO
MY Pt.ANE1" !.

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. Racine, Ohio

45771

.

740-94~2217

Hours

!!ldlng,
ftmodelin&amp;: etc.,

fmieotlmates
992-2979

7:110 AM • 8:110 PM
High cost

Of fertilizer got you

i7-17·17,.
$265 ton (While Suppy Last) '

• Mushroom Compost
Available

.

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PEJ!I MONTH ·
Now Avllilable At

B \l\1 Ll \I BEl{
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S35 · 1,000 lbs ApproL weiglit

"Taking The Sting Out Of

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consuhing.

· SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
35537 SL RL 7 North

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

GUM
MA6MGER?

Farrow

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
~letlrtty Cipher

cryptogrMnS are created I rom quolalrons oy lamous people, past and present
Each tetter K" the CJ~er stands for another

Today$ Cll.lfJ: W 6Qll8/S X

"P'V

X

p

Z E.G.

FDPSG

TAW G D

AX

EPN

XPMEZ

J L

X AD

PI

NJDCAL

•

LAZEPLM

DPMEZ ."

IZJDCPLM,

AFFALGLZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Acli ng is a masochistic form ol exhibilionism. II is
not quil~ the occupation of an adult." - Laurance Olivier
(c) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 6-18

':::t~' S©""(tltA-l&amp;~~s·

:::.

0 four
learrange letten of 1ho
acrornbled words below to form ftwr words.

By Bernice Bede Oaot ·
It's Important in the year ahead that

you be extremely selective as to
whom you associate or get involved
with. Those who do · not share your
high standards or attitude toward lite
could prove to be a major hindr~nce
in your advancement.
C ANC ER (June 21-July 22) It isn't
likely that a nybody will come out the
w inner today in matters that get down
to push and shove, so find a way to
dodge any confrontation that s ome one may attempt to introduce.
LEO (July 23- Aug. 22) - If you dis·
cover today that someone is cutting
into benefits to which you· alone are
, rightly entitled. keep a cool head
abOut you . 11'11 help you greatly to be
able to right the wrong .
•
. VIRG O (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) Smile
and ploy it down today If you inactverlttnlly garner a lot of praise. S'"'ould
_you come oH as anything tess than
humbfe, the responses could suddenly turn negatWe and mean.
LIBRA (Sept . 23·0ct. 23) -You'll fall
flat on y~r face today if you should
attempt to copy the mannerisms o r
methods of another who has greatly
impr,Qssed you. 1f you wish to succeed, re1u and simply be youraeH.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2 4 · Nov. 22) Be
sure you're well grounded in fact
before you espouse an opinion or
conjecture today , on something of
imponance to ot~ers. Statemenrs you
make will be challenged for verification.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dac. 21) Do nothing that couki place your
resources in jeoparcty today. This
bec.o mes par1icularty important if you
are consKtering a financial involvement with anOther. Do a lot of
research .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - · If
· you have any hopp of gaining the
cOOI)eration of others today, it is best
tf"oat you tind a way to &amp;oft-pedal your
requests. Aggressive o r pu!!hy over·
tures will be met with rejections.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20· Feb. 19) . Playing the Good Samaritan role
today could work against you,
because the very per-sons you may
be trying to help ~ ld drag you into
·major complications for which you 're
unprepared.
Petty

individuals could arouse your ire
today and ~lui you look bac;L Don't
let them reduce you to their levels;
in81ead elevate them to yours by setUng the pf"oper example.
·
ARIES (March 21-Apri\, 19) - ·II'$"
wise io keep ycwr accomplishments
to yourself today, because although
you . may have no intention of bf"ag·
ging. It coo kf look rha:t way. to others.
Let your deeds speak fof' themsehres.
TAURUS (Aplil 20-May 20) - H may
seem to
that fl'Yeryone you
encounter
to have a chip on

OVVELE

·I 1•

I' I I I

N' U G L!:

I

.---::--::-::~ ~

I• I .Is I I f
I~

I N s y. 0

'How was your.trip?" I asked
a friend . Laughing he said

is

."The trouble with traveling
r--5-M-:-:-U-:K:-::-A-:N:--'l that you. have to keep •.••••:
~
O Complele lhe chuclt:le quo1td

I

I

·I I .,

,_,...~__,.L_-~--.J·---L-.J

..,

by lilli"g in the miSSing WrOtds
vou de.,@lop frc.m ltep No. 3 befow.

8 PR~~s~!~~slETI!IS IN
8 u~~~:;'~N~~~ Ullm

I' I' I' I"

II

rI

IIIIIIl

SCitAM-mS ANSWEIIS s~ 1? ~ G5
'

Exempt • Nylon • Grand· Impact • COPYING ·

to

One mom lo another, "It's hard raise childien prop. erly, sirice it's their parents they are COPYING;

ARLO &amp; JANIS

\. I ' .

'

I

I

I

18 spreader buaies available for use
lli.rw"'' pasture renovators and seeders

available to rent
Ucrnsed agronomist on staff available fa&lt;

FE:EL FREE 1"0 ·

'G-IVE ME THING-5(

37 Tear off
38 House itte
Leafs dut
40 Made
Shuck peas
public
Channels
41 Eflonleso2-13
·ness
Cash
42 Diva
substitutes
- Gluck
Nimble
43 Gu used In
Tow·signs
44 Sneaking
zone
Spruce
suspicion
Bathrobe
45 Makes Into
tie
leather
Maintain
46 Mr.
Parakeet,
Lombardo
perhaps
47 Lyric poem
Obligation 49 Denver hrs.
Drilling
result
(2 wda.)
-

--~--.,... .141to4 ~~ ti.U I. 'OW.N - - : - - - -

-...~:

PISCES (Feb. 2G-March 20) -

GARFIELD .

Hll l·s Se lf
Storage

AstroGraph

Tue•dey, June 21, 2()05

Hardwood Flooring
• Room Add. • Roo fing
•.Kitchens • Baths

All pass

Throwing card s into the middle of the
table to lorm tricks results in an unnatural
mixin·g of those cards: eight spades. four
hearts, 1 ~ diamonds, and so on. Th is
means that be!ore dealing again, you
must give the deck at lea,t .seven riffle
shuffles.
Computer programs shu ffle very · well.
This exciting comptJter-Qenerated deal
occurred during the ~997 European
Championships in Italy. How does South
get on in four spades after the ·heart-ace
siart, anti West in lour h eart~~ after a
spade lead?
Probab ly the auction waS different at
every iable. In this one. South eschewS a
light third-in-hand opening. but North·
compensates with a thi_n takeotJt double.
He is helped by being a passed hand, but
he would prefer to have a fourth spade.
After that, South, who didn't know who
could make what , blasted into game .
. Four spades can be defeated. At trick
. two, West must shift to his club king.
Declarer wins with dummy's ace and
plays a trump, btJt West wins with his ace,
leads a low diamond, and receives a club
rUff in return .
West, to make four hearts, must not be
tempted by the heart finesse. If he wins
with the spade ace, plays a diamond. to
dummy's (East's) jack, and runs the heart
jack:, the defense gets one, spade, one
heart. one diamond ruff and one club. But
it West just plays the ace and another
heart. he cruises home.
Austria and Belgium made four hearts in
one room Bnd four spades doubled in the
other for dOuble game swin gs
Paul Chemla and Michel Perron from
France defeated four spades doubled.
'

G

Phone
.(740) 992-5232

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

1 If
Obi.

Easl
Pass
2W

.

Storage

All Your Hom e·

• Ceramic Tile &amp;

1~
00

99U215 ~;v 036725

PH: 992-4183

THAT ' S 'CUZ IT' S MADE
OU1'TA PARTS: FROM
r,r;;~ ALL TH' ONES HE
WRECKED LAST
'fEAR !!

• Room Addition• &amp;

9am to 3pin

l0x30

• Decks • Porches

HMM ... I DON'T
RECK'fNIZE
THAT MAKE
AN' MODEL

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Mon-Frl.

CaaabUcllan
Improve ment Needs
• Sidi ng • Windows

W. Main Pumt!ruy
The Mulberry
Community «..:enter
2.§0 Mull:wrry A¥e.
PomeroY
Samt' Great-/.ow Price.\·
and Smiling
Friendl)' Fuces.

74().SIJI-4ti41

HUBCAP SM~F'S
GOT A NEW
RACE. CAR
THIS '&lt;EAR !!

II

IS NOW OPEN AT

740-416-2823

BARNEY

985-4384

Let me do 1\ for youl

74U-9Y!-795)

My e &lt;s

at 27 horse · 57 horse
with ·shuttle transmission
4-wd, remote hydraulics J year warran ty
****Also 8\'ailahle**••
• Task Master Tractors 26 horse • 38 horse.
4wd (I year warranty•
• ·Farm Pro TractOrs 20 horse - 30 horse
loaders, finish mowers, lillers
~ ARRIVAL ZTR nixon (Zero 1\orn
Radius Mower) 30 inch culling width to 50
Inch cuUing width 3 year warranty
IM] TRAITOR ,SALES &amp; EOUIPMENr
right in the heart of Cbester

CARPENTER
SERVICE

O~io

FO~!

startin~

YOUNG'S

·,. Garages
·r Utilities
·r .Pole Barns

F-I&gt;C TO

Now Dealor lor Montana Tractors

Formerly at 108

"Site·

Pass
4•

North
Pass
Db!.

Both sides
shuffled well

~EVIS~D SCfliPT TO

Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

The Parish Shop

,r Preparation
.r "Dozer

Wt!st

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

11 Bac~h oe

"south

Opening lead: • A

_·

1"11 - - - - - - - -

lver Johnson Champion
32ga.; J Sr...... 2 400 :
H&amp;R IUlgle bar..r 12ga.
How many guno iM those
have ';OtJ seen all are
e&gt;&lt;ce&lt;ieo1andoog.Jol those
guns have been 1n storage
s;nce t955- S1 .795. Boy all
4 guns. firm, senous
lf1Qu1res . onfy These guns
are rar_e 1(740)533-3870

·ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

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

r

r

West

Free Estimates

EQuiPMFNr

j

45783

06·2()..05

J 8 6
• K7
• Q 10 8 5
olo A 9 7 4

Vuln~rable: East-West

t'\=1

-~

Draw near
Leaf voln
Not open
Thailand,
once
t3 Turldoh Iitie
14 Black-andwhhe divers
15 A Bronte
16 Met neighbor
17 Chive kin
18 Famed frog
20 Game fish
21 Sundial
numeral
22 Drone
23 Panoramic
view
. DOWN
20
26 Checka for
22
fraud
1 1860s
23
29 Mesa
Initials
, dweller
2 Porker 's
24
30 Pointed
• plaint
tools
3 uon·s pride 25
31 Break-dance 4 Retired
26
musk:
professors
33 cars coat
5 Wheel
·27
34 Squashed
spokes
28
circle
6 Now-- It!
35 Rl~erto the 7 Checkbook 30
Seine
amt.
· 32
36 Aussie·clty 8 Dell staple ·
38 Radiance
9 Colors
34
· 39 Smallest
10 Hawaiian
35
· cont.
strings
40 Cyberspace 11 My, myl

Dealer: North

r

•.

o

85

sor'llce
41 Hal supper
43 Scatterbrain l'i'!Ttiiticl'i!!
46 Dresoy
event
47 Not 'nuth
48 Gouda
couoln
SO "Semper II"
grp.
51 Mother
rabbit
52 Projector
pan
53 Slangy
affirmative
54 Windup
55 Final
· 19 Actraas

1
5
8
t2

•

740-667-0700 1·888-HUPP234

MmoR'll

r=l

North

MONTY

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. ~ Cancer • Accident

15

Ir__

ACROSS

Alder

Tuppers Plains, OH

iro

J470
L

Call 992-2155

Sentinel • Page

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Phillip

41800 SR #7

Daily

The

BRIDGE

Rock.Y Hupp Insurance .
and Financial Services

r

r

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP •

Business Card .S26 DO/column inch per month

IIOo.-••i&amp;""m..,_.

r .A~~E

'.

Monday, June 20, 2005

Business Services

I

i

"...

, Monday, June 20, 2005

Drive

. Mid-Size 4Wheel
Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER

"GRIZZWELLS
: ~\\l,q

. ~ 1\f:.TV
~ ~;&gt;

6rOOD

Nke to avoid entangtements, weigh
your words judiciously, ~tlfl with pals.
GEMINI (May 21-J~t~ne 20) Financial situations could be the
~un;e of all your problerr~s today, .so,
it at a11 poeaibkl, avotd these types of
irn~otvements . ft you can 't. handle
your affain1 as wiaely as feasible.

SOUP TO NUTZ
:L-TGa.DV-I!E
PIJT~ 'J.IE'

'-LY SO I

T&lt;ll&gt;ft&gt;le ioj wr1H
HIH~ ...

~~~~ f

....
...,

r

~

I
i

•!
~

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

•

�•

•

. Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

.,

www.mydailysenti11el.com

.

Uttle League Baseball -

Big Bend Tour.qament

Monday, June 20,
•

2005

'

'

Aft~t:years of~urance

Cincinnati·scalps Braves, 11-8:

Mason claims Big.Bend title

CINCINNATI (AP) watch the basketball game . sweep there. We were close .
· With a noteworthy home run, and (relax)."
Everybody has an off-day.
BY BRAD SHERMAN
&lt;~i&gt;o tripled home a run and four more runs in the fourth
Ken Griffey Jr. turned
The stakes were less per- Today was just one. of tho~e .
BSHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUNE coM
William Zuspan had an RBI on an RBI tielder's choice by
Father's Dav·. into another
sonal
but That 's not the last ume we re
single in the inning .
.
Za•k Marvel and a three-run
personal halhi1ark moment.
more
dire going to get into a game like
Griffey hit a tiebreaking.
this year. · that.'"
.
.
, SYRACUSE _ Masbn
The BraYes answer~d with double by Roseberry.
The Reds
The Braves were m postthree-run shot in the eighth
all' d f
d - . one run in the bottom of the
Mason finally got on the
r te. ron:~ tive- ~un ehcit tlfth ,,hen Colby Ro,eben') board when an error allowed
inning Sunday, rallying the
hadn't even tion to snatch it away in the
to beat Syra~use J_-6 Ill the . s.:ored on an error - but Zuspan and Branch. who
Cincinnati Reds .to an 11-8
Jed a game end.
Btg Bend Ltttle League Maso n soon put the g&lt;1me each .sing led. to score .
.
victory oYer the Atlanta for ·a week . They · pulled
Andruw Jones 'doubled an_d
B~seball Tournament cham- awav.
Joining Lewis with multiBraves that snapped their six- ahead th~ee times on Sunday scored on Johnny Estrada s
pi~tship Saturday.
The Apaches scored ti:ve pie hits i'CJr the winners was
game losing streak.
- by 2, 5 and 1 run- and single off David Weathers _(4The
Apaches remain more time s to clinch it in the Brach. who doubled and sinGriffey's 51 3th career blew all three leads . Finally, 0) in the eighth inmng. tymg
unbeaten in 19 games thi s sixth. an inning -highlighted gled. and Zuspan. who hit
homer .moved him into sole Griffey gave them one that it at 8. Jones had an RBI smsea'son - but needed an by a three-run doubl e off the two sing les. Wasonga had a
possession of 16th place on would stand up.
gle. the double and th.ree
offensive explosion l;ite to bat of Jamin Branch. The hit triple. Clark a double and
the · career list. prevented a
Adam Bernero (4-2) gave walks, leadi~g a resurgent
do so; Mason scored all its gave Mason " 10-6 edge. Tyler Kitchen chipped in a
four-game sweep by the up a pair of one-out singles in offense.
ruils during the tim1I three then an error allowed Branch single . ,
Braves. and saved th~ last' the eighth before Griffey
Atlanta hils scored 63 runs
innings.
to s.:ore later before Lewis
Colby R'oseberry
led
place · Reds from hitting homered deep to right , break- in its lnst ei.ght game·s.. an
Trailing 5-2. Mason scored doubl~d in the final tall y.
Syracuse with a double and
another low point.
.
sing a tie with Ernie Banks average of just under e•gh!
five times in the fifth frame . . Early nn. thou gh. ru'nner- single \Vhile Noble tripled
Last year. Griffey hit homer and Eddie Mathews on the per game.
·
· .·
finally taking the lead on the up Syracuse looked like it and t.ndrew Roseberry and
No. 500 on Father's Day in career. list. Relieved · team"We' re happy ·getting thre,e
strength of a Bryce Clark was poised to hand the West Ethan Martin eacn si ngled.
St. Louis with his dad. Ken mate s mobbed .him.
of four," manager Bobby Cox,
two-run double.
. Virginia team its onlv Jo,s of
Members of the champiSr.. in th~ stands. His father . ''You can go to Sunday din - said of the series. "We 'score~
Josh Lewis. ,who paced the the 'year alter j umpi •~g out to onship Mason squad are
followed · the game from ner and not have to think enough runs today to make
Wasonga. Zuspan, Branch.
Apache bats with a pair of a 5-0 advantage.
home on Sunday. ·
about a loss, but we've still you think you should 1\ave
doubles off the bench, folTyler Noble tripled in the Clark. Lewis. Kitchen .. Tyler
''He'll know," Griffey said. got a lot of work to do," swept them. When yotl scor~
lowed with a two-bagger that tirst' inning and later Sl'ored Roush. Colton McKinney,
'"Even though he's home, he's Griffey saict. :'Guys are going that many. you should win."
plated the tinal run in the on an error to break the scor- Garrett Ohlinger. Gabriel
still there."
. up there and putting a little ' The Reds appeared to be in
pivotal frame. Alan Wasong&lt;\ ing ice. Syracu'e then addetl : Starcher and Zack Worth . .
Griffey has five homers on too much pressure on them- control after Adam Dunn hit ;a
Father's Day, trailing Mike se lves to win it all by them- three-run
homer
int&lt;&gt;
Piazza by o·ne for the ·most · selves.''
Atlanta's bullpen in the fifth
among active players. Hi s 15
Neither pitching staff had a and-Joe Randa followed with
NBA Finals
RBis are the most by any cur- good time. The Reds matched a solo shot into Cincinnati''
re nt player on the day.
their season high with 17 hits. bullpen for a 7-2 lead. It did;
'' I've hit home Tuns on and the Braves reached· dou- n't last long', underscoring the'
Fath,er's Day, Mother's Day. I ble-digils in hits for the sixth · Reds' struggle to do anything
try
to space them out," said straight game.
right.
,
~
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN
Richard Hamilton missed a
Griffey,
whose
gift
was
a
tie
.
"We'Vj!
been
doing
it.
for
Since
their
chief
executive
ASSOCIATED PRESS
·runner from the lane and
with pictures of his children. the most part," •said Braves flew ·to Colorado to deliver ·~
Bruce Bowen rebounded to
''There 's something about reli.ever John Foster, who win-or-else ultimatum twa
end it, allowing, the Spurs 'to
AUBURN HILLS. Mich.
those
days. Today means I gave·up a pair of homers that . weeks ago, the · Reds have
run off jubilant.
-Big Shot Bob did it again.
can go home and do whatever · put the Reds up 7-2 in the.~ gone 6-8 w,ithout major
Atier four blowouts·, this
Robert Horry. the veteran
I want - which is watch TV, fifth. "We almost had the changes.
'
·was
the type of game everyplayer whose clutch postseaone had been waiting almost
son 3-pointers have detined
two weeks to · see - an
his career, knocked down a
As a freshman Conn was someone of Amy's caliber t&lt;l
intense, closely-fought nailwide-open 3-pointer with 5.8
selected
honorable mention leave the program. "! con;
biter befitting of a champiseconds remaining in overAll-AMC ih 2002. She bat- sider these girls like ·a
Spurs lead series 3-2 onship series. The fourth
time Sunday night to give the
from ·Page 81
ted .301 (34-for-113) as a daughter and I dread it whe.ti
San Antonio Spurs a 96-95
Harry inbounded from the quarter was close throughout,
rookie with a home run and any of them leave ," Pyl~s
victory over the Detroit left sideline near midcotirt with clutch shots coming
centage while manning first 14 RBI in 38 games played. said. "Especially Amy, na!
, Pistons in Game 5 of the with 9.4 seconds left. tinding from Billups and Hamilton
For her career Conn was a only has she been a great
base.
N!lA Finals.
Manu Ginobili in the corner. for the Pistons. and Robert
Conn batted a, career-best . 333 hitter ( 172-for-516) player, she 's a· great person
The Spurs took a 3-2 lead Detroit's defenders collapsed Harry and Manu Ginobili of
·
·
.394 (65-for-165) as a junior while playing in all 170 to be around."
·
in the best-of-seven series. on Ginobili and left Harry San Antonio.
Amy was the Ioiie senior
with 34 RBis, 16 doubles games of her collegiate
The player who wasn't hitbOuncing back from a pair ,of wide -open for the . return
the 2005 squad.
·:
·on
and t'wo triples . She was career. She scored 67 run s,
ting the big ones was twolopsided losses to defeat the pass.
·
Conn received her degre't;
tabbed 2nd Team AII-AMC ripped 44 doUbles, four
time NBA Finals ·MVP Tim
defending champs in their
Bad
idea.
as
so
many
of
South in 2004 and also · triples and . clubbed five in Sports &amp; Exercise Studies
Duncan '. who missed six
own building and s~nd the
.
achieved high marks acade- home runs. Conn posted 97 in May.
series back to San Antonio Harry 's opponents have straight foul shots and a putthe
past.
learned
in
Amy
is
the
daughter
of
needing just one more victomically, earning AMC and career RBis.
back at the end of the fourth
Detroit had one final quarter that would have won
ry for their third title in seven
NAIA Scholar Athlete
Rio Grande head coach Chuck and Kim Conn of
years.
chance after Harry 's shot, but it for the Spurs.
awards . .
David Pyles is sorry to see Wheelersburg.

. hikes, drivers get ·
some relief, A2

at
Middleport.•·Pomeroy, Ohio
'
'

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.~, .• . :\n .

• Cardinals fly past
Cincinnati. See Page 81

~ COWACT TRACTOR

S361/rnonth
SALE '12,999.

IIIPl£IIEII1S SOLD SEPARATELY ..

• 28 HPc....-dilsellflline
• Post'Trtllt• Qn.lllmiltd
lw'-wheel *iva
• 725 lb. loader Jill cepacity

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Helen Bragg, 86
• Teresa LaComb, 85
• John Miller, 69
• Nonga Roberts

INSIDE

WEATIIER

S183/month
SALE '6,599.

• 1911" Klwaslkl- Y-Twin
OHYqinl

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• lllf Comnlllld CUI System·

• Tlow)•limilld~

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rANK· M60-KH.

S208/month

Details on Pace A6

·SALE '7,499·

INDEX

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WITH A HUGE LOADER AND LIFT CAPACITY, THE SERIES 8000
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Calendars

A3

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A R 'iTE THAT'S TOUGH I 0 BlEAT: 0 ..
•

. Dear Abby

A:3

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
8·880 UNITED LANE

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(TOLL FREE)

BY BRIAN J. REED .
BREED@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

degree .felony. alleging that he engaged in oral sexual
he engaged in digital sexual conduct with an unnamed
conduct with an unnamed victim, between May I. :2000
victim, between May I, 2000 and April 13. 200 I, ~nd that
and April 13, .2001 , and that the victim was less than 13
the victim was less than 13 years of age.
• Co,unt Nine. rape. a, firstyears of age.
• Count Seven, rape , a first- degree fdony. alleging that he
degree felony, alleging that engaged in oral sexual conduct
he engaged in oral sexual· with an .unnamed victim ,
conduct with ari unnamed between May ' I, 2000 and April
victim, betweeti May I. 2000 13, 200-1 , and that the victim
and April 13, 200 I, and that was less than·l3 years of age.
the victim was less than 13
• Count 10, rape. a ·firstyears ofage.
degree felony. alleging that he
• Count Elght, rape, a first- engaged in vaginal se xual
degree felony, alleging that · conduct with an unnamed vic-

POMEROY ~ A bronze
marker of the Ohio Histori cal
Society, the 18th to be placed
in Meigs County, was dedicated at the Meigs County
Fairg~ounds in a Monday
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
noon ceremonv .
HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL .COM
The occasion . marked the
finale
of the Oct. 23 Make a·
RACINE - "Proud to be
an American - Called to Differ~nce Day project of the .
Serve" will be the theme of Meigs County Hi storical
4
Racine Society c3J!ied out at the fairthe . July
Independence Day celebra- grounds. Volunteers did
tion which will kick off with plantings and painting , as
well as repair work and
a parade at I0 a.m.
Line-up will be at Southern repl aceme nt projects to beauHigh School at 9:15 a.m. tify and improve the facilities
with flag raising by · the which are enjoyed every yea'J'
American Legion Post 602 at by thousands of residents.
The supplies used by volun~
9:45 a.m. Parade will follow
teer
workers and the hi storical
Elm Street to Third to Vine ·
on to Fifth and back to Elm. mark&lt;H were paid for with the
There will be awards in the $2,000 Ohio Hill Country
float entries of $100 for first . Heritage Area grant and some
sponsored by Home Natibnal local matching funds.
In her welcoming remarks
Bank; $75 for second and
the dedication ceremony
at
$50 for third, both sponsored
the
Meigs County Hi storical
by Racine Volunteer Fire
Society president Margaret
Department.
There will be an award for Parker spoke of the fairthe walking unit sponsored ground 's historical ·signifiby Wooly Acres Farm; three cance describing it as a place
places in bicycles sponsored where county fairs have been
·by Dr. Mel Weese and Dr. held since 1968.
The hi story as detailed on
Doug and Tonja Hunter; three
place awards for antique trac- the marker speaks of the ·
tors sponsored by RACO and Meigs County Agricultural
vehicles sponsored by Star Society which held its tirst
Mill Park Board members, fair on Oct. 22, 1851 in
Middleport, its second at the
'and awards for horses.
·The fire department will
have a chicken barbecue and
homemade ice cream with
serving to start al II a.m.
. Activities begin in Star
Mill Park at 3 p.m. with a
· patriotic program. Other
activities starting at the same
· time will be games for kids
including water slide (age ,
and weight limit, take bathing
suit and towel) , moon
bounce, bungee pull, and Big
Bend Farm a~:~d Antiques
Club display.
At 3:30 p,m. parade awards
will be presented. At 4 p:m.,
Big Bend Cloggers, under the
direction of Vivian May, will
perform on stage. At 5 p.m.,
there will be RACO's 12th
annual frog Jump. There will
be two divisions - senior 16
and over and junior division
15 and under.
Awards in the senior division
will be $100, $75, anct $50;
junior division will be $40,
$25, and $10. Rules will Qe
posted at the park. Participants
will be able to rent a frog. All
frogs will be returned to their
habilat .following the jump.

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Agency, Inc.
1583 St Rt 160
&lt;;alllpolis, OH 45631

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Other times of significance was moved to the fai rgrounds
which marked change to the ·and 'reconstrucied .. A si ngle
· fairgrounds recorded on the barrack from the Civilian
marker include 1889 when Conservation Corps camp of
. the one-third mile racetrack the 1930s . re mains in use
., was increased to a half mile, today and that too is noted on
· 1890 when the unique curved the marker.
Speaker at the dedication
grandstand was constructed,
and 1987 when the 1829 was J D: Britton, director of
Fosler-Jenkinson log cabin
Please see Marker, AS
J·

Volu.nteers
in town

Charges filed
in death of .
Reedsville man
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A group of volunteers from
the North Broadway United
Methodist Church in
Columbus is spend ing the
week in Meigs County, com· .
pleting several civic projects
in the community. The work
crew, made up of 25 teens
and 15 adults, is staying at
the Racine United Methodist
Church. On Monday, they
' were painting the gazebos
along Pomeroy 's riverfront.
They will at so do other work
.in downtown Pomeroy, includ·
ing other painting projects
and the restoration of brick
sidewalks in the Court Street
mini-park.
Brl., J. Reed/ (111oto

1-

._

J~C.

CNer

THE SCIENCE OF COMMON SENSE.

"•••••· ~ •

Hoelllch/photo

.

Rock Spring Hotel on Oct.
3 1, 1852 , imd sub sequent
fairs around the county until
March 14, 1868 when the
first section of a permanent
location was purchased from
Leonard and Jane Carleton
near Rock Springs and
became known as the Meigs
County Fairgrounds. ·

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liat...-,. hw• hdto.,. ;;wcwkendlaldngcareol
•s I al•'"lllfl·namallerwllai--IOIIIOOMd.
WE IIELEVE lilliE POWER OF SPORT.

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p..r Fewer C.-~,· Card ~•""~.rt~um 10'h clown ~nl •s

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count 16. which charged him
with corrupting th~ · victim
with marijuana, a fourthdegree felony.
Ward. who remains free on
bond. will face another jury
,on June 28 to answer tht;; first
five counts of the .indictment,
wh.ich charge unlawful sexual
conduct with a minor, a thirddegree felony. Those charges
go back to 1992 and 1997,
alld involve two other alleged
female victims.
A prior indictment aj\ainst
Warp, containing Similar
charges. was dismissed.

This historical marker tells the history of the Meigs County Fairgrounds. It has been erected
beside the 1829 Foster-Jenkinson Jog cabin which was moved to the fairgrounds and recon·
structed in 1987. Participating in the dedication ceremony were from the left, the Rev. William
Middleswarth , J: D. Britton, Margar!!t Parker, Rep . Ji mmy Stewart, Ed Holter, .and Joyce Davis .

11 ,,_.,;..u •-· w ra- INt~ lddoo""" tlwuw • bill o-lheio ohouldar won't.. 111 . . big 1 - buttltey do •...., • tow
l.Jke haw to taU a pildl. How ID otreldllhe
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W!wl yau .-,. ....,.U, you don'! just learn haw to be

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tim, between May 1,, 2000 and
April _13, 2001, and that the
. victim was less than 13 years
. of age. •.
•.
• Count 14, rape,'· a firstdegree felony. alleging that he
engaged ih vagi nal sexual
conduct with an unnamed vi~tim. between May I, 2000 and
April 13. 2001 . and that the
victim was less tnan 13 years
of age.
The jury found Ward in nocent of counts II. 12. 13, and
15, which made the same aile-·
gations as those· count s on
which he was indicted. and

At •

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·••

•

COOLVILLE
A
Coolville woman has been
charged with aggravated
vehicular homicide and
operating a motor veh.icle
under the influence of alcohol in · the . death of a
Reedsville man .
Josie D. Coe, 29, faces the
two felony · charges 'in
Athen s Comity Municipal
Court. Tony J. Rood, 29, of
Reedsv ille. died June 10 as
the result of injuries .caused
when the vehicle Coe was ,
driving went off the roadway on Bethany Ridge
Road near Guysville and
struck a tree .
·
The Athens Post of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol
continues to ' investigate the

Some play for money. Some play for glory.
Soene.play for the occasional trip to the ice cream shop.

•

:JVC.,~ses ¢1 S.:t 500 or "'ort 'T'Iade Uf'N :7f31/2005

BSection

Sports

~oc ~ar: .: 'Mf!S :• ~ :: n• ~a,-1!""'! ::.rl ·_. a_ ·~·:! ~- -!!"&gt; .are~· t)' ~aoe&lt; dflC .,..i'J'-ary Ia., ~~ ··~11~1. s:e•up ¥&gt;C t-..lnl3hng cNVges ml'j oe aOC:h!IOI'\lll and may v.-y Model:s

ao&lt;!o••O:C •,

•• -i:. ,:.;;.;; ~::.Pit: YCJ•,--_

(740) 653-2827

:!UU;i

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLIC H@MYDAtlYSEN Tt NEL.COM.

0% for 36 mo nth s u Vtstl your local relatler today.

TANK. M48-KW

' ' I SP \\ . .ll · ~·· ~·.

Racine
Historical Society dedicates marker,at fairgronnds
announces
July Fourth
festiVities

• As Egypt ponders
elections, Rice makes
case for democracy.
See Page A2. .
• Kids' day at the park.
. See Page A3
• Garden club members
discuss fair flower shows.
See Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• PVH offers new
diagnostic equpiment.
See Page AS

0% fo r 30 months .. Vtstl your local rc ta1lcr today.

..

POMEROY -A jury convicted Raymond Ward of
Rutland on six counts of rape.
and acuitted him on four other
rape charges and a charge of
corrupting another with drugs
late Friday.
After aday and a half of .testimony and two days of deliberation, the Meig s County
Common Pleas 'Court jury
convicted Ward, 33, on the
following counts: '
• Count Six, rape. a first-

Conn

SALE '6,999.

:! II

Ward co.nvicted on six counts, acquitted on five

SPORTS

Spurs one win away frOJ!l title

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5252 COWPACT TRACTOR • 25 HP' Kahler"psoline enpw
• Sllndanl 3-Minl hitch With
ftoatn. posHiOO• HyiRslllic trinsmissian

Patriotism motivates
• •
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Army ·at s~, A6'

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poo I @emfam.com

-Fri.

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INSURANCE

All your protection under one roof •
Arrtencan Family Mu1uallnsurance Company and tts
Subsidiariea
• ·
Amencan Starldard Insurance COmpany of Wisconsin
Home Office • Madison, WI 53783
p.mencan Famrly lnsuranc:e Company
American Standard Insurance Company ol OhiO
Home Office • Columous, OH 43240

125 Broadway St.
Jackson, OH 45640
(740) 286-4385
jwood@amfam.com

___ _________
,..:_

AMERICAN FAMILY

~-

"2005

001 ~ - ~

'

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