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Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

'
www. mydailysentinel.com

•

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Wimbledon grass again brings out best in Fef;lerer
.

BY STEVEN WniE
•ssociATEDPREss

·
WIMBLEOON. England In keeping with custom. the
defendmg Wimbledon men 's
champion plaved the opening
match Monclay on Centre
Court . ~oger Federer was
reaBdy.
.
.
ack on his lavonte stage.
the io,P:'ranked Federer hit four
. aces ui his ft!St service game
and successfi_llly begaJ! his bid
for a thtrd con secutl\·c
Wimbledon title by beating
Paul-Henri Mathieu 6-t 6-2.64.
Federer walked on the hal..: lowed court to a ivam1 ovation.
'' hit 18 a€es and extended his
' 'grass-court winning · streak to
30 matches. including 15 at the
All England Club. • ,
"A good start." Federer said.
"! definitely feel sort of
relieved after' this start and look
for.vand to the rest. You're into
the tournament, you' ve seen
the fans and you don't have to
. leave ,right away. So that 's
nice." .
.
No. 3-seeded Lleyton Hewitt.
the 2002 .champion. hit 19 aces
and beat Christophe Rochus 63, 6-3, 6-1 . HewJU is playinij_ in
just his second tournament aner
being sidelined for II weeks by
foot arid rib injwies.
No. 5 Mardt Safin. twice a
first-roundloseratWtmbledon,
overcame· h1s avers10n to gmss
and beat Paradorn Snchaphan

'

,,

Teen 4-H team to
compete in national
shooting contest , A3

'

6-2. 6-4. 6-4.
of ha1 ing that happen. It's hard net infre'/uentl y hut played
··J . fd t reall y conifortablc. to ·walk a"a~ w h~n you lee! with poli'1 from the basehne,
ac tu al !~. and reall y co~tiJeht." li k~ vou ran ac hie1e the ulti- hitting 33 wi nners with just 15 ·
Satin ,aid. "I wi'h I cou ld play rmqe' goal in tennis...
unlorced error&gt;.
thi' le1el of te nni s everv dav.
Davenport n~xt plavs 18"I didn' t want to storm ·too
l'mtr.in~...
·
· 1ear-old Amcrkan ·J amea much to the net too quic·kly;·
Satin \, ill next pht~ 2003 iac· ks&lt;ln. "!11&gt; beat Marta Federer said. ··1 want~d to get
runner-up Mark Phrh ppousm. Marrero 6-2. 6-3. Other my rhythm tlrst."
'·
'\l'ho received a "'ild card into 110men\ wi nners included t\o.
Federer is t~ i ng 10 become
the draw and -beat Karol Beck .1 Amc lie Mauresmo. No. 15 jull the .third man since the
7-5. 6-.4. 6-2.
Kim Clijster' and l'.S. Open 1930s to wi n three con,ecutive
No. 16 Mariano Ptrerta. th~ cha mpion
S~e t lana Wimbledon ti tk'
· French Open ru nn~ r- up i ll'" 1\ JJinc·!, "'"
Hew itt said he·, still roundwee ks ago. lost. to La~s
0-( •. = ~ \mv Fr:tLier lost to · in~ ·in to fo rm afte r slipping ·
Burgs mullcr 6- 1. 6- 1. 6-4.
fe llow t.u 1cri~an Mushona tlo'"' stairs at ho me in Svdnev·
Atlastasia Myskin a. the 2004 Was hingtnn 6-4 . .:r-6. 6--1. No. and crackinu t\1'(&gt; ribs. He
French Ope!' chamP,ion. "'"' ,,n 25 Karolina Sprem. "ho ups~ t rctumcd to tl1e hlur t11 ~~ weeks
the verge ot her secund succe'- ti\Ll-t imc · L'h:.unpwn Venus · ago at Queen '· where he
sive lirst-ruund exit at a m:uur ' Wil limn, _Ia" year. li"as beate n reached the 'ILI:tJ1crtinals ..
eve m when she rall ied to beat biTam:mne Tanasugam6-2.6"The '"'t J\&gt;und &lt;11 an y
18-year-old qualitier Katerina 2.
.
.
Grand ~l;u n is tough.'_' Hewitt
Bohmo1a 5-7. 7-6 (4 ). 6-4.
Amencan Taylor Dent. seed- sa.d. "Its a match you JUS! realNo. 10 Patt v Schnvder · ed 24th.lostscn ·q u,tonceand ly want to get under your belt
instead becumc th·e firs t seeded beat yualitkr IJick Nom1an 7-6 and -~~ t through as quickly_ as
playe r to be ehmmated. She 1-1 ). 7-6 14 ). 4-6. 6-7 (7). 6-1. possmle.It was a good htt v.;_tthwas upset by Antone!Ia. Serra Dent htt 23 a~es, Nom1an 25. out wasnng a lot ot energy.
Z:metu 6-4. 6-7 (7). 6-J
Wild card David Sher.vood. . He witt will next play Jan
Top- ranked
Lindsay an . Englishman ranked 261st. Hernl:c h, who · ralltJ!d past
Davenport. the 1999 champion. delighted the home crowd by Amencan James Blake• 1-6, 6necded'just -II mmutcs to ocat wmmng hrs Wnnbledon debut 4. 7-6 (6): 7-6 (4).
Alina Jidkova 6-0. 6-2. aga in st Ru:anlo Mello. 6-3, 6Myskina stru ggled against
Davenpon had 29 winners and 4. 6--1 .
Bohmova. ranked Nv. 146 and
just nine unforced errors.
No. ' I 0 Mario AnL'ic. a semi- playing in her ti rst .Grand Slam
Davenpo11. 29. thou2ht her tinalist last year. beat qualitier event . Myskina overcame
lo" in last year's seii1ilinals Tobi as Sunimerer 6-3. 7-5. 6- 1. defi cits of 4-1 in the second set.
would likely be her lust match No. 13 Tomln y Rob©lb lost to -1-3 m the uebreaker and 3-0m
at Wimbledon. but she deciued fell ow Spaniard Fernando the tina! set.
10 delay retirement after staging Verdasco 6-1. 6-2. 7-5.
"M ay be if I play more
a career resurgence.
~ '
Following morning thunder- matches like this. then it's easi"I'm still out there because · storn1s. the tournament began er tor me to come back and
AP photo ·
I'm enjoy ing it:· she said. "The in sunshine with temperatures play my best tennis," Myskina
. ultimate.~oal is to try to win . heading into thel 0 wROs.andas said. ··rm really happy that I Defending champion Roger Federer returns a shot fr~ .
another Slam. and ·1 still feel usual. orass brought out the fought back am! that was a France's Paul-Henri Mathieu, during their Men's Singles, first
round match on the Centre Court at Wimbledon Monday.
like I'm knocking on the_ door best in fecterer. He came to the . happy end for nie."

Investigat~I'S

k

.

say pare_nts

had four children work in
shop~ifting ring, A6

· ·

Commissio;ners keep eye on jail housfl:tg costs

SPORTS
• Pistons fOrce deciding
Game 7. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - With the
county's fi scal year just half
over, Meigs County · Sheriff
Robert Beegle has spent well
over half of hi s appropriation
for salar,ies and three-fourths
of the appropriation for
housing pri soners. emphasizing the need to re-open the
county j ail.
According to records in the
Mei gs County Auditor' s

.,

Office , Beegle has a current respon sible for the housing.
balance of $26,27.0 of the "feedin g and medical care of
$ 105,000 appropriate for prisoners in county custody.
housing ·of prisoners. Meigs
"We're aware that the housCounty . Commissioner Mick . ing appropriation is running
Davenport said Tue sday the low," Davenport said. "We' ve
commi ssione'rs and Beegle talked to the sheriff about
have discussed the dwindling . when the jail mi ght be re· housing budget, and are con- opened, because it would save
sidering measures that can be the county money to do so,"
taken to ensure the line item
"I understand that the state
remains in the black for the may be here soon to inspect
remainder of the year.
the work that's been don e
· Commissioners. rather than there:· Davenport said.
the sheriff, are directl y
Beegle continues to collect

-public donations for jail renovations needed to re:&lt;;Jpen the
century-old jail. and. has submined plans .lei the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitations.
and Corrections to ito so. New
security measures have been
in stalled in the jail area.
including additional security
doors and a new keypad security system , paintin g and
other cosmetic improvements.
plumbing
repairs
and
·improvements to the booking
and vi sitation areas that have

been mandated by the state .
Beegle was out of the office
Tuesday. and unavailable to
comment on the status of his
buctget. but shortly. after tak·
ing offi ce in January, he said
re-opening ti:Je jail was a pri··
ority. not only because of the
direct cost of housing inmates
in other Wls, but because of
the cost of paying deputies to
transport prisoners to and
from court appearances to

Please see Costs, AS

'

1\vo putts and a trophy that got away
you feel you had a chance to hole gave him a 69 to fini sh at years ago. when he failed to a playoff with Chris DiMarco.
AssociATED PREss •
win and you didn't take that even-par 2~0 . the first time a hit into a single bunker. broke
lie couldn' t get away with
opportunity to win the tourna- U.S. Open champion didn ' t the . major championship making two bogeys down the
ment. then it 's disappointing . break par since Lee Janten at rcwrd by tinishing 19 under st~~tch at Pmehurst No.2.
PINf';HURST, N.C.- Tiger The two seconds that I've had Olympic Club in 1998.
l felt hke 1f l could get to
par and won by eight strokes.
Woods looked like a beaten ... the PGA at Hazeltine and
Next up is the British Open
But · he also brings some even par and post that num:
man as he stood behind the now here . ... 1 did not get it at St. Andrews. which appeals baggage.
. ber. then I was lookmg preny
18th green, gently rubbin~ his done."
to Campbell and Woods for
There already were ques- good . at least gelling into a
· ~nuckles over his upper hp as
c;:ampbell showed him how. different reasons.
lions about hi s game even play~ff. "
Woods
said.
'he gazed back at the 16th and to do it. .
Campbell· nb longer goes after he won the Masters,. "Unfortunately, it didn't work
17th holes, a 200-yard area of
The 36-year-old from New back to the Old Course think- where he had a two-shot lead out for me. l didn 't feel com' n·g about an opportu.nity that until making ugly bogeys on fortable with my putter all
Pinehurst No. 2 that cost him z 1 d d
d
1 t
roppe on Y wo 1 a ~hance to win the U.S. ea an
shots on the back nine. both didn ' t come along for ar.1other the tina! two holes to fall into week."
Open.
times when it didn ' t maner. . I0 vears. His shot from the
Off to his right was the
One. o( them came on the Roa"d Hole bunker on the 17th
bronze statue of Payne 16th , after Woods had skipped up the sodded bank to
Stewart, striking the winning bogeyed to four shots behind. within inches to save par. and
pose from six years ago.
The other came on the 18th · he had the 54-hole lead. Then
Woods always has said he hole , when he could have he shot 76 in the tina! round-to
was thrilled that Stewart made three.- putted from 3 feet and miss by one shot the playoff
a IS-foot par pun on the ftnal still won.
won bv. John Daly.
hole to win the 1999 U.S.
In between ·was a collection
"It 's just been an interest in~
· Open at 1 under par. He said it
helnPd him sleep better know- of shots that de tine U.S . Open journey the last 10 years, '
•champions.
Campbell said. "Lead.ing the
ing that Stewart finished two
With not much green to Open championship back in
shots ahead of him. and that work with on the II th , '95 amJ· having a chance to
the par putt Woods missed on Campbell blasted out to 6 feet win a major championship. it
the 17th hole that year ulti- and holed the par putt with wasn't my time to win. Bui
mately didn't matter.
authority. He did the same on today was."
·
This time, it did.
Michael Campbell won the the pm-3 15th, having to hit
Now he goes to St. Andrews
U.S. Open by two strokes, out of a bunker with the ball as the U.S. Open champion.
with clutch shots · down the close to a steep knoll. It came one wh(\ didn ' t slide through
stretch and a little help from out perfectly, as did the 6-foot the bac~ door. Under the prespun he made.
·
·sure ot a !mal round, wtth
W~s.guy who has built a And the tina! blow. an 8- cheers rocking around him
mystique by making pressure iron into 20 fee\, was as pure every time Woods made a
putts blinked twice in two as it gets.
·
birdie. Campbell played with
"He brought his game start- poise and confidence 10
holes late Sunday afternoon,
· ·
on the ing with the tlrst swing," .said become the fir st sectional
8f
rt:~mgnr th·r~~ftt e::ino for Olin Browne. who played qualifier since Steve Jones in
·
a
nJ ·n wtth Campbell and shot 80. 1996 at Oakland Hills.
1 th,
bofgey ?net the
ssi g.. "He recovered when he needHe also joined Bob Charles
6 •e
rom
'
d
H
d
· wtt· h a
·Eight shots behind after two e to recover. e exec~te as .the on I y K 'twts
holes Woods found little con- when . he. needed to exewte. m~}or.
. .
lose
call
at
He
dtdn
I make any stupid
Deep
down
rnside.
l knew.
1 ·' fr m th's
1• c ·
so atwn
mt stakes. And. he played that I had somethmg spectal
Pmehurst.
·
ho h· d
· ·m_ "!_e 1o _dod. '-ome rh·mg spe"Depends on how you ~ret sm~rt
..when ,.,.
a .to p1ay
1 1
there, you .know?" he said. "'If smart;
, .
.
. CJ~I , _1e
you come out of nowhere to Th_c on!~ thmg Campbell
Woods .,oes ba&lt;;k to St
get second then yeah. But if dtdn ~- beat was par - that J\ndrews wah memone s· ol
'
meanmgless bogey on the last h1soverwheltnmg vtctory five
BY DoUG

FERGUSON

Campbell , who nearly quit
' the game seven years ago
when a wrist injury led 10
shattered contidence, tinally
has his tirst major championship and wonders where it
.
wtlllead next.
"He was down in the doldrums there _a?,d worked h1s
way out of It, Woods satd.
"And now he 's one of the
best."

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

.
OBITUARIES
d

·,

INSIDE

.'a,: · . .

over the 19-foot wall in fro m Aaron Boone, Cri sp
center. He stopped on sec - and Ronnie Belliard.
ond thinking-the ball' stayed
But Damon tied it with an
from Page BI
in the park, but second ba&gt;e RBI single to start the siKumpire Larry Vanover •s ig- r,un fifth . David Ortiz then
Damon homen;d leading naled him to c ircle the slapped the ball to Boone at
off the ninth 'to make it .10- bases.
thi rd. whose throw home
8. foulke allowed an RBI
That ended tht; ni ght for was off. all owing Mark
double ·to Jhonny Peralta in Sabathia. who. walked ·off Bell horn to graze the plate
the bottom half, thel) retired the .field ·with hi s hat wiih hi s hand and elude
•
Grady Sizemore and Coco" cocked even more crooked Martinez's tag for a 5-4
Crisp for his 14th .save in 16 than usual. He was ' booed lead .
by the crowd and appeared
Notes: · Boston RHP Curt ·
chance s.
10
Ramirez.
who
left to say something the fans Schilling threw 65 pitche s
Cleveland as a free.. agent silting.
behind
the in a simulated start and will
'throw anotlier sess ion
after the 2000 season hit . Cie v el~nd du gout.
his 15th homer to the p~rch
Sabathia gav e up a Friday in Philadelphia as he
in-left-for-a 3· 1 le ad-in-the---CaLeetJ II g h n me ,a r.~ ~""'~-"'ff'roVi'i"'-t'r;rm'l,.--,nr--:nrrt-tr--'1-~---t~ '1leRJSUfi~----~'""'"2~iti
fourth. . He was simultane- runs
hits
.tnJury.
.
. 1ed
d . in. 43 2-3
... s·tzemore smg
. . andHnine
1
1
3
ously booed by the home- tnnt\)gs. e ashle J~ St . •
in ·the second to 'extend hi s
to~n crowd and ' cheered by tnntng s 111
l S ~revi ? us · hiuing streak to a career·
,
.
F· . ·
vtsntng Red Sox fans as he start.
0 games.
'
Wel.ls
went
fiv
e
innings
ht
gh
I
...
ans Ill
d
d
h
roun e t e bases . .
h
1 r f ld bl
h ·
Ramirez is 6-for-14 with and allowed fo ur runs. 10 .t "'e de ~--Gie
h . eac ..ers
'four home runs and seven hits and two walk s. He lias cnante
et a mrcut to
RB!s against Sabathia (5· not lost since May 24.
Damo n, who took off ht s
4) , . who stood witb' his
Hi s 17-inning sco rele ss hat and turned to fac e the
~a{lipolis
~ribune
han,lls o n hi s hips as streak was snapped in the crowd wtth h1 s arm s •o utRamirez trotted home .
fi rst on Martine z's RBI sin- spread .... Well s has nm lost
~oint
The slugger added a bro- gle . It al so ended 16 score-, to the Indians since. 2000
.
.
ken-bat, bloop double that le ss innin gs by Red Sox and has wo n 12 ot hts lasr
landed on the left-field line starters.
13 startS again st them....
to make it 6-4 in the fifih .
The Indi ans too k back the Bos ton has scored . six or
Two baners later, Varitek lead briet1 y with a three-run more run s in nine of its last
Advertising Deadline- June 27th. 2005
hit a 420-foot homer just fo urth that incl uded RB! s 10 gam es.

Senior Citizens make
up 65% of the total
pop~liltion of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your .

·• The Dally Sentinel

185!&gt;-2005

use today - from the M. P. Moeller God to life through her mmtstry in
Co. of Hagerstown, Md. It cost muslc. A booklet prepared for the !50th
$1 , I00 and was . brought into anniversary observance is dedicated to
Middleport on· a riverboat and Mrs. Haptonstall who died on -March
installed in an ornate alcove of the · 25, 2005:
second-.floor sanctuary. Several years
"History can never measure the conago when it was refurbished, and .a tributions of countless · people who,
monetary value of .$ 160,000 was ' through their devotion to the .work of
placed on it by the Pipe Organ Co. of God. have given their hearts and lives to .
Columbus who did the work.
this church and the surrounding commuFor many years the late Lennie nity," commented the Rev. Mr. Snyder,
Haptonstall was church organist and who only recently assumed the pastorate
Sunday's celebration will pay tribute to of the stately old church on North
her dedication to bringing the Word of Fourth Avenue.

· The suc-cess of the recent
Meigs County Relay for Life
which brought in more than
$40,000 for cancer
research , service to victims
and education. is only poss~
ble when many volunteers
and organiz,etions cooperate.: ·
In appreciation to the Meigs
County Agricultural Society
for use of the Rock Sllri ngs
·Fairgrounds and members
who assisted in getting the
grounds ready, Relay for Life
chairman, Joann Crisp, left,
and committee member, Sue
Maison presented a plaque .
to Kenny Buckley, vice president. center. and from the
left, Buddy Ervin, Dave Burt,
and Mike Parker. who helped
in pr epari n~ for the succ!?ssfu I endeavor.
Charlene - h/ (lllolo

~~--+~~

ij;) 2005 Ohio Valley Publisbin&amp; Co.

Need Extra ·Help?

eaa . . . . ...
J)ailp
J;lleasant l\egister

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INDEX

,Representative.
•
•

Rrst Presbyterian Church of Middleport

Meigs County Ag Society appreciated

°

Indians

MIDDLEPO!(T - 150 years of worship, 1855-2005, will be celebrated at.
the First Presbyterian Church of
BY BRIAN J. REED
Middleport Sunday.
BREED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM
Pas10r James Snyder will have the
worship
service at II a.m . and at I p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
If
Middleport's downtown shop- there will be a gospel sing at the church
.ping district is to improve, the located at 165 North Fourth Ave.
While the church was riot officiallv
community must look to the .
Page AS .
Ohio River, according· to a organized until May . 27 , 1855, there
• Patri,cia Mills, 80 ·
study recently completed by are records of Presbyterian familie s
being prominent in what was called the
Ohio University.
The Institute for Local Union Sabbath School in. Middleport
Government and
Rural as early as 1845. Those families who
Development, in its recently- also gathered separately on occasion in
completed service and retail- a schoolhouse for special preaching by
• Missing Scout found
based market study, used sur- the Pomeroy Presbyterian Church pasveys of shoppers and busi- tor, organited with 25 charter members
alive in Utah, 'in
ness owners and input from into the First Presbyterian Churoh of
pretty good shape.'
the public at a March open Middleport.
Services were first held on Sunday
· See Page . A2
house to· identify ways to
increase traftlc and improve. afternoons inthe Methodist Church. The
• Smith earns juris
the retail economy in down- congregati&lt;;m then moved to a school
doctorate degree.
house and were there until the spring of
town Middleport.
·
See' Page A3
Along wtth identifying !'861. Meanwhile the present church
retail gaps, or businesses went under construction and when the
• Five Meigs students
needed in the community, lower room was tinished the congregaattend Buckeye Boys
th.e study, which will be tion moved into it.
The Civil War made further construcState. See Page AS
made available to the public
tion
difficult, but by 1869 the congregain a final form later this
• Family Medicine.
tion
dedicated the upper auditorium of
month, identifies "commuSee Page AS
the
church.
nity theme s" which the vilThe church bell which rings every
• Ohio Democrats buy
lage should focus on in revispecial . occasions was
Sunday
ad focusing on investment talizin~ the downtown shop- purchasedandforfor
·$125
having ·come off a
·
,
ping dtstrict.
scandal. See Page A6
riverboat.
In
1900
the
art glass windows
"The river and riverfront
are seen as the village 's most in the sanctuary were installed at a cost
important asset,". the · study of $50 each and shortly thereafter the
.
says. "Ideas to exploit this ceiling was.frescoed.
Carnegie,
known
for
his
Andrew
WEATHER ·
asset include businesses that
· capitalize on the river, such contributions to the building of
as paddle boats and carriage libraries, helped the church purchase
rides through town, walking the century"old pipe organ - still in
paths, and greater use of the
village dock.
Pub tic . input has also
included support for a sh.owboat and riverboat gambling,
according
to
!LGARD's study.
" Middleport must become
a destination -· particularly
the downtown .area," the
Details on Page ,f,6
study says. " Attractions
could include a farmers market on a regular basis.
increased community events;
including flower shows, to
:t1 SEcnONS - ' 12 PAGES
capitalize on the county's
Calendars
A3 . floriculture industry, lf\Usic
events, festivals and con- .
certs and fishing and campB2-4'
Classifieds
ing events ." .
Organizers say a farmers
Comics
Bs
market now being held every
Dear Abby
A3 Saturday is growing and is
expected to attract more venEditorials ··
A4 dors as. the growing season
moves along. ·
Obituaries
" Village· leaders should
As
identify key markets, let
B Section people know about good
Sports
opportunities and lind busiWeather
. A6 ne sse s that complement.

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The Daily Sentinel

NATION .•

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PageA2

WoRLD

Wednesday, June

22, 2005

.'

Missing Scout found alive in Utah; 'in pretty-good shape'·
Bv PAUL FOY

TEEN 4-H TEAM TO COMPEtE IN

FBI report: Runaway bride wanted'
to 'disappear without a trace'

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NATIONAL SHOOTING CONTEST

Bv DANIEL VEE

not feel like she had done
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
anything
wrong and she just
KAMAS. Uwh- An 11disappear." the
wanted
tQ
year-old boy who vanished
LAWRENCEVILLE
.
.
Ga.
report
said.
from a Buy Scout camp was
- Runaway bride Jennifer
Agents said in the report that
found alive and ih good conWilbanks
wanted
to
vanish
Wiltmnks
·'was scared to marry
dition 'Tuesday after spend ing
because
she.
feared
she
cpuld
'(tiance)
John
Mason because
tour days .lost in 1l1c rugged
not
be
the
perfect
wife.·
She
·
she
is
afraid
of
an imperfect
Utah wilderness.
picke(! Austin, Texas. as her world. Wilbanks stated that she
•
Sheri ff D'a ve Ed mumh said
original
destination after see- could not be the wife that her
~rennan Hawkins was "a litMallhew · fiance John Mason needed.
ing
actor
,tie dehydrated. a li ttle weak.
McConaughey
talk
about
his Wi Ibanks wanted to disappear
but other than tliat. he was in
hometown on TV And she without a trace." ·
very good health."
·
funded hl;'r odyssey by cashing • The report fro m Georgia
After downing bo,ltles uf
a
cell phon~ rebate check and investigators said she broke
water and eating all the gmemptymg
an old bank account. off an earlier engage ment to
nola blus carried by a grou p
Those were some of the another man. and - even
of volunteer searchers. the
details
that .emerged Tuesday though she had been in a relaboy asked to play .. a video
from
mvespgat10n
reports by tionship with Mason since
game on one rescuer\ cell
the FBI and the. Georgia August 2004 ~ she kept " I
phone, the sheriff said.
Bu:eau of Invest\ga~ton that love you" text , messages on
. . The youngster from the
detm\ed
Wilbanks flight. The her cell phone from another
Salt .Lake Citv suburb of
reports
portrayed
the 32-year- man she dated in 2003.
Bountiful. was- found ju&gt;t
old nurse as a natve woman
Wilbanks pleaded no conbefore .noon. near l,ily Lt1ke.
~hose
mother
d1d
her_
banktest
earlier this month to ·
about five mib from tbe
mg
tor
her
..
W1lban~s
also
d1s·
telling
police her phony story ·
. camp in the U inta Mou111ai11s
~ussed her ordeal tn an NBC and was senteHced ici two '
where he was last see n
mtery1ew
Tuesd~y mght.
y ars of probation and 120
Friday. He was reu nitetl with
-.
.
Wilbanks' dtsappearance e
his parents and the ir four
four days before her scheduled hours ot c~mmumty service.
other ch ildren and 'taken tn a
600-guest wedding gained She also "as o~dered to conhospi_tal.
national attention. Hundreds unue mental heal!~ t~eatment
The boy carried no fMd or
AP Photo
of off1cers and volunteers _ and pay the s~enff s office
·water. and hi s family had said To.by Hawkins. left. caresses his son Brennan 's forehead, as they arrive at Chi ldren's Hospital. including members of the · S2.550. The ctty of Duluth
he did not have a good sense Tuesday, 1n Salt Lake City. Brennan Hawkins, the· 11-yea·r-o ld boy who vanished from a Boy wedding party _ searched for . sp_ent nearl y. $43,000 to
of direction : But the sheri ff Scout camp, was found alive and in good condition Tuesday after an intensive four-day search her for three days before she sear~h . tor her, Wilbanks. has
sa1d the ntghiS had bc~n of the rugged Utah wil'derness.
called her fiance from repaid $13,249. . .
warm . with tempe'l;atures
·
Albuquerque, N.)\1., early in
Wilbanks on!'mally wanted
the
morning
of
her
planned
to
flee to Austin alter seemg
falli~g _only into the 5'ds. The closed. prayers are answe red questioning him.' .
him down and gave him a litwedding day, claiming to have- McConaughey on TV, the FBI
area IS about I 00 nules .north-. , and children come home.''
Kay Godfrey, a spo kes- tie food." Nunley said.
east of S,llt Lake City. .
'j• she told reporters as the fam- woman for the Boy Scouts'
During the search. rescuers been abducted and sexually report · satd. After domg
She soon recanted research on the Internet, she
cl!~r whu~w n~~ ~~~~~f~~~te~. ''' i'ty. arr~ ved .at Primary Great Sail Lake Council. pro- had.feared the boy ~ad fallen assaulted.
her story, say ing she fled "thought it.l?Oked like a nice.
whether he tried 10 find hi s Ch1ldren s Med1cal Center. .
nounced the boy' s resc ue a into a river that was swollen because of personal issues.
place .to VISit. becaus~ of
way back 10 camp. '·He· was
~nh a to":'el arou,,nd h1 s " modern-day miracle."
by heavy snow melt. The
Wilbanks told investigators Ausu~, s ranches and natiOnal
in no mood to give us some neck, _~rennan wa ed to
Thousands of searchers East Fork of the Bear River is that she didn't know about the parks, the report sa1d.
detail s." the sher iff said. '' He reporters as he was unloaded many of them volunteers within 100 yards of the road extent of the search because
A weelt before she disapjust wanted to. eat and see his I rom an ambulance.
had scoured the area for the where the boy was believed she didn't see any television peared, she purchased a ticket .
Mom ."
Doctors planned to keep boy. using long pol es to to have been walking. Deep- or listen to any radio while on for~ Greyhountl bus .that left
The boy and his family him at least overnight tq r(m ·probe a swollen river.
water rescue teams searched the run. The one time she Apnl 26 from a station near
rode in an ambulance toge th- tests,_ sa}d Dr. _Ed · Clark, the
Volunteer Forrest Nunley, a the river, while others glanced at a' newspaper, she the Atlanta airport.
.
er to a Salt Lake City hospi - hos~t.t al s medical director.. . 43-year-old . house · painter combed the ' rugged area "did not see her picture on the
Because her mother dtd her
tal. "He laughed on the wav
Othcwls sa1d Brennan di Sc from ' Salt Lake City, said he around it.
front," FBI agents wrote after banking for her, Wilbanks
here, just like he always has.'' appeared somewhere alo ng &lt;I found . Brennan "standing in
On Monday, rescuers found interviewing Wilbanks on .,scraped together a little more
said
his · mother, Jody dtrt road between the camp's the middle of the trail. He . three socks and a sandal in May 4. days after she than $24Q fot her journey in a
Hawkins.'
artificial climhing wall and was all muddy and wet."
the river, but none belonged reiumed from her cross-coun- various ways. the report said.
"People say that the heav- the "chow h«ll.'' where he
The boy saw some volun- to Brennan ... The boys· par- try bus trip.
She Cashed in a $100 rebate
ens are closed and God no was to meet a friend .
t eer searchers on horseback, ents also sifted fruitlessly
"Wilbanks stated that she check for her cell phone. She
longer answers prayers. We
Edmunds said in vestigators but "he didn ' t wan! to come through enough clothing col-- 'felt very humbled that so received less than $100 afterare here to une4uivocally tell will wait until the boy has out. He was too scared. He lected from the mountains to many people had been closing an old account at a
searching for her, but she did credit union.
you that the heave ns are not had time to recover befo re was a little . delirious. ,I sat fill the bed of a pickup.

A teen
MARIETTA t: am - from . Washingtqn
( ounty w1ll represent Ohio
in the smallbore-rifl e competit ion at the national R-H
Shooting Sports in vitation in
Columhia, Mo. next week.
Stac i Coli ins of Waterford,
Pete Deem of Palmer' Square,.·
Natas ha Hupp of Marietta. ·
and
Eri c
Wesel
of
Cht1rchtown . members of the
Btill 's- Eye 4-H Club in
Was hington County, are
Ohio 's inaugura l team to thi s:
national 4"H competition.
The Ohio 4-H shooting
' ports program does not have
Submitted photo
. - a compe titive shooting match
to se lect participants for the Ohio 4-H team members from Washington County entenng the
national nl atch . . lndividvals . national· shooting invitational in Columbia, Mo. are from the
or teams that can fund their left, Eric Wesel of Churchtown, Natas ha Hupp of Marietta',
way to the national match are Staci Collins of Waterford and Pete Deem of' Palmer Square .
recogni zed as being on the
match . "The !;ids have more
• state's tea m. Bu si ne sses, all cofuposite scores.
' .
indiv id uals and organization s
The Ohio team will com- ex perience in shooting thi s
Was hington· County are help- pete in the smallbore rille type of match than the othing to fund the trip of the di scipline which consists of er~." said Chorpenning,
teen team so they. can partie- three different matches. The "We, re encourag ing the kids
ipate in the national 4 H first match on Wednesday. to shoot their personal best iri
eve nt.
June 29, is NRA three-posi - each match and not worry
The National Invitational tion (prone, standing and about how they place, in the
"grew to ils largest participa- kneeling) at 50 yards. CMP competition ."
tio n in its 'five-ye·ar history · sporter rille is the second
During the Invitational , the
with 336 participants from day's mat_ch where ~low and
teens will. have opportunities
across the United States in' rapid fire shots are scored in
to meet other 4-H'ers from
2004. More participants are three positions at 25 and 50
ex pected this year.
yards. The last event is metal across the country as well as
Nine shooting disciplines silho,uette in which they repre se ntatives from the
are
offered
at
the shoot at targets placed at 40. shooting sports industry and
organizations. "We' re hoping
Invitation al. A team of four 60, 77 and 100 meters.
competes iii one discipline
4-H shooting sports volun- to bring excitement for this
during the . three-day event. teer instructor and coach event back to Ohio so more
State ·teams and individuals Larry Chorpenning antici- youth can benefit from such
are recognized for daily pates the team will perform an experience in the future ,"
match scores as well as over- the best in the three, position saitl Chorpenning.
-

Days announce
birth of twin sons
I I'
'!

•

Newsand ,
information for
se'!-ior citizens of .
the Tri-County•..

AP Photo

.'

July 8, 2005

Israeli train collides with·truck,
killing seven and _w ounding 191
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

REVAQ.IM . Israel -, Apassenger tnii n plowed i'nto a
coal truck Tuesday and sent
three cars tumbling off the
tracks in a sunflower field in
southem Israel, killing seven
people and injuring nearly
200 in one of Israel 's worst
train accidents. ·

"

strewn U{ound the field. far
from main road, and · citie&gt;.
Dozens of pas&gt;enger' were
thrown from the somer,aulting cars.
.
'
In a country traumatized
by
mass casualties after four
yeai"&gt; of PaJe,tinian suicide
bombings, officials emphasized that the collision was
an accident. not a terror
attackThe compari,on, \\ere
obvious. Oud i Greenwald. a
medic who calletl l,rael
Radio ,from the '&gt;l;ePe. &gt;aitl he
iutd treated ca&lt;,ualtie, at .,..,_
eral bombings.
· :·It-~ a horrible 'ight. It

looks like a terror attack,''
he· said.
'"One of the railroad cars is
upside down. and it's impossible to tell .what's inside.'' he
added. "It's the worst accident
I've ever seen.~
" The coal truck the train hit
weighed about 40 tons. Anmy
Radio said the driver had
bj:en work.i ng for 30 hours
'&gt;tmi ht. Police commanders
ligation of the crash,
At least 62 ambulances
arrived at the scene, near the
village of Revadim. about 25
miles south of Tel Aviv.
Helicopters arrived to help
transport the injured, and re&gt;cuers climbed over the train
seats in their effor:t&gt; to pull
out the survivors.
'"Hospitals are re&gt;po'nding
a' if it was a terror attack with
multiple victim,.", Health
.\1 ini,ter Dan ~a,eh told
lvaer, Channel c TV
The pa,,&gt;&lt;:nger train. cart)ing. 3f:JO to .WO people from
Tel Avi' to the wiJthem city
of Beer&lt;.heba. wa' -tra\'eling

Senior
Citizens
make
as fast as 80 mph when it hit
·
111c oifthe total
the truck. The crossing had no
·u,n
·
6
.5
tr'!ffic lig,ht. said Av,i Zohar, a.
, 'l'
7C
Magen David Adam rescue
, . OtnU· l-tio· n· oifth.e
service spokesman.
r '"
"We felt really helpless. All
we cpuld see around .us was
11n·• co·un
· ty•
fields. We had no idea where
.
we were," oaphna Arad, a
'1'.
h th IS. group,
reponer for Army Radio wbo .
.l 0 reac
was on the train.- told Israel's
Channel 2. "Soldiers (who
contact
out
and
Adverti"srng
• hact their:
been bandages
;~f;~~~!5r~~~---Ald~'ittfs
to treat the injured as
as
possible:· sqe said.
··1 approached a woman
· · Repr,_
esentative.
who looked all right but had

ALBANY . - Jenny and
Josh . Jordan of Albany
announce the birth of a
daughter. Ry leigh Lynn. on
June 12 at· O' Bienes s
in
Memorial
Hospital
Athens.

CommunitY Calendar ·
Public meetings

DEAR ABBY: F1tteen
years ago l had a years- long
affair with a woma11 2J yei1rs
my junior. "Alex'' was 1'7
when we first had sex. l never
led he_r on. I told he ro~ many
occasiOns that I ":ou ld f!OI
leave my w1fe and famd y lor
another woman. even her. I
told her I'd meet her s~cretly
for as lon g·as she wanted, but
, I would commit to nothing
more:.A.Iex acc~pted thi s.state
of afta1rs for several yea(s,
and we had what I con ~~dered
to be the perfect attmr. · t
loved .the passionate. u1,1in.- '
hibited sex.
·
·
Because I could offer no
m~re. than the status quo. I
wasn I surpnsed when one
ni ght, after a _particul arly
ex hau stmg love-mak tn g session, Ale x announced she
was ending our affair anti
moving to Los Angeles to be
closer to friends. I begged her
to reconsider, promised to
spend more time with her.
and ms1sted that I loved her.
' She went an}lway. We had no
contact other than Christmas
and b1rthday cards.
My ·k1ds are now grow.n
and gone. On a recent bu s1ness trip to LA, I decided to
give Alex a call for old times·
sake. She was . delighted to
hear from me. and invited n1e
over tor ~ dnnk. It y.;as J~ s r
hke old t1mes. I wasn't there
ftve mmutes when s~~ hterally tore my clothes oft.
So .what's my problem? '
· Alex JUSt told me she mtght
move back here and take up
where we left off. Abby, an

'

Dear
Abby

affa ir like ours .was rinc 'JI·:~
year&gt; ago. but .1 m no lon1!er
comfortahle
sneaking
around . Mv wife and I h'avc
been marri"ed 30 vears and I
don·l want to hurt-her ut give
her ·up. I'm afraid if Alex
moves back, we'll get caught.
I sti ll lo ve her. a11d I certai11 ly
enjti'y making love to her but how do I tell her th at it 's
li ne fo r u ~ to sleep together in
LA where she li ves. but not
here in my hometown '' JN A QUANDARY 1:-1
THE SOUTH
DEAR IN A Q\JANOARY:
You are not " in a quandary":
you are in a mess of your own
making that ' Could spel l the
end o f yo ur marria~e and
your reputation. Tell Alex in
plain· Englis h exac.1 ly what
you ha ve told me . If that
doesn't sober her up and cool
her ardor. noth ing will. Under
no Clfcumstances must . you
rekindle this affair. Boys. who
play with matd1~s usuall y get
burn ed. and I do mean you .
So grow up . Your wife
deserves better.
DEAR A8BY: Fortv-fivc
years ago. my sister adopted
a lovely . ~ - week - old baby

girl. "R ita ." The adoption
1\elll sliHHlthl\ a11d all is well
Rita 11ow lw; " uau~htcr oi·
her own who is ill he~ 20s .
At the time f&lt;ila ~~''" el\en
tn Il l) si,ter. she \\ore a beautiful ~o ld · cro" that had hccn
placed arnu11d her neck h\
her birth mol her. Mv sister
didn't kn(m what to do with ·
it. '" ,he ~a,·c it 1n me and
asked me.: in take it to ,a
church amllccn·e il in a pew.
Mv conscience \\ouldn'i let
· 11lc carry out her instru.:lions.
and I still'havc the em".
. What do vou suggest 1 do
wit ll it'' Shtlllld 1 ·,ro as mv
sister asked'' Shou ltl I gi \e
th e ern" a11onymously' to
.Rita '! Or sho uld 1 "ive Rita
the cross cuid tell hclf whe re it
came trom·&gt;
Please resolve thi ~ for me.
It ha' heen bolhcring m~ far
too long. - CAR ING AUNT
.IN NORTH CAROLINA
DEAR CARING AUNT:
I'm sure your' niece would
be deeply mo,·ed to know ·
)hat when .she ~"'"p la ced in
-ybur sisters arms. it wa&gt;
don e w ith praye r for her
happiness and well -being.
Give her the cross and tell
he r where it came from. I'm ·
sure the keepsake will be
precious tu her.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Va11 Burell, a/sp
knowir as Jeanne · Plrillips,
'and wa .~ founded by lrer
mother, Par1liue Pili/lips;---,
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles
CA 90069.
'

Smith earns juris doctorate degree
.

POMEROY Amy
Sayward Smith. 24. daughter.
of Todd and Nancy Smith of
·Pomeroy. . graduated o n
Sunday, May 22, from Capital
. University Law SchooL ·
She is the granddaughter of
April and Tom Smith and
Frances Jeffers all . of
Pomeroy. Smith graduated
from Meigs High School in
1998 and earned her bachelor
. of arts degree in . sociology
pre-law from Ohio University
in 2002. ·
Attending the commencement ceremony held at
Capital University's Main
Amy Smith
campus in Bexley, were Todd,
Nancy, Molly and Maggie Paige Cleek of Pomeroy; Wes
Smith of Pomeroy; April and Ault of Syracuse; Rainy
Tom Smith of Pomeroy: Harrison of Pomeroy: Patrick

'

Brown of Camtl Winchester:
bon , Lyn, · and Stephanie
·Brown of The Plains: and
Ryan Dupler of Athens.
Smith ;.vus hooded by
Associate Dean Steele and
Professional Legal Ethics
Profe ssor Tibbles.- The hood. ing ceremony signi tied · that
Smith had attained a Juris
Doctor Degree.
She currentl y resides in
Canal Winchester and is .
employed at ·the Ohio Court
or Claims in Columbus. She
will be sitting for the Ohio
Bur examination In July .
Smith is engaged to Patrick
Brown and the two plan to
marry
at
the
Trinity
Congregational Church in
Pomeroy on April 8. 2006.

and
Hockingpon. Run State Park, Shelter 2.
Refreshments following .
Basket lunch and fellowship.
CARPIENTER
Gospel
HENDERSON, W. Va. - ·
Wednesday, June 22
sing 6:30 p.m. at the Descendantds of Sam -and
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern. Local Board of , Carpenter Baptist Church, Melvina Birchfield will have
State Route 143, · Carpenter. their annual reunion at the
Education. regular meeting, Singers
.
.
.
will be Mercy,
Community
6:30
p.m.,
Eastern Roush Family, Dan and Henderson
Elementary School library Faith Hayman, Tidings Trio, Building in Henderson,
confer~nce room.
and Luke and Kay Osborne. ..W.Va. There wil be a basket
CHESTER
- Chester Love offering will be taken luncheon at noon for family
Township -Board of Trustees to support Bend Area and friends of the family.
special meeting, 8 p.m., Gospeijubilee. ,
Chester Town HalL
Sunday, June 26
Thursday, June 23
PORTLAND -SpanishPOMEROY - Meigs Soil language Mass at Our Lady
and Water Conservation of Guadalupe Mission, 6
District will have a regular · p.m. , Harris Farms Market,
meeting at II :30 a.m. at the Ohio 124. Ministry of Sacred
office, 33101 Hiland Road, Heart Church, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy.
CARPENTER
- The
Gabriel Quanet will be in
concert at 6:30 p.m. at the
Mt. Union Church near
Carpenter. For information
call Pastor Dayid Wiseman,
'
Thursday, June 23
742-2568.
RACINE ~ The Ohio
Monday, June 27
River Producers FFA alumni
POMEROY ·- Vacation
will meet at 7 p.m. in the Bible school at the Bradford
Ag
Room . Church of Christ, June 27-30.
Southern
Discussed will be the role of 9 to II :30 a.m. Classes for
agriculture education in· the preschool .to teens. All youth
community. Anyone interest- invitetl. For more . informa. ed in developing the ag tion or transponation call
industry in this area is invited 992-5844.
to attend.
.TUPPERS PLAINS We'll deliver all the local happenings right to your home. Stop by our office
VFW 9053 will meet at 7
p.m. at the halL
and subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for months for only $59.15 and receive
· Thursday, June 23
Sunday, June- 26
Caring
and
Shahi.g
FREE comic umbrella*!
TUPPERS PLAINS Support
Group
meets
at I
VFW \1053 will have a I p.m,
lfyw are a current subscriber. )'OU c;m rttei'o'e a free umh-ella b~ extendin g you r -,ul:hcnption for I !l'ar for on I~ ) I 15.X..l
dinner for members and their p.m.. Meigs Multipurpose
(*Payment must bi: made in ~ · at the [)aj(y Sentinel. Il l Coort ·St.. Pomero). Ohio m ordei lO re~ei~e ~our Free ~om1~ umbrcll..a.
fami1ies ·at the Tuppers Senior Center. Discussion of
· ·
Quantities are.limiled.
the use of PET ~an to djagPlains hall. ,
. nose Alzheimer·s Disease.
r-~----~----------------------,
- Tuesday, June 28
.'
I ~
RACINE - Racine Area
wiU

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

"~e: ffj ·~ l? ~$ '" JP(j"

Saturday, Jwle 25

Church events

e.a .

-·

Saturday, June 25 ·

• ~allipolis J)ail~ CMUu
• l}oint Jlltalant l\tgiQtr
•The Daily

POMEROY - Kathleen
Bailey ·· Scott will celebrate
ber I OOth birthday at a pany
to be held 2 to4:30 p.m. on
June 25 at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church.
Her daughter. Mary Wise
and family._ are bostin~ an

LONG BOTIOM - , A
hyrrui
sing
featuring
~ Deliveredrt will be held at 7
p.m. ai the Mt. Olive Church. open rece puon.
Long BO!tom_
REEDSVILLE
Si ngspiration wil be beld at 7
Sunday, Junr 26
p.m. at the Eden United
T!)e
Brethren in Christ Church. · REEDSVILLE Biram-Hayman
n;union
will
locatetl on State Route 124
halfway between Reedsville be bekl ai I p.m ar Forked

Other eVents

Jt2.2l5S ·

Advertising Dead line- June 27th 2005
•

6

The Daily Sentitlel ·

.

--'---- -

•

Grandparents are Randy
and
Kathy
Miller of
Nelsonville and Walter and
K ~ thy Jordan of Albany.
Great-grandmothers
are
Lue lla Wright of Logan and
Louise Gilkey of Albany. '

22, 2005

Mar~ied man jeqrs discovery if old loi~ affair &gt;esumes

Support groups ..

I'U'U.I

slipped on the floor, and she
said sh&lt;F was pregnant and
was very worried about· her
baby. I looked for an old man
who had been sitting next to
rile and I saw that half his
head W&lt;b coated in blood:'he said_
Media report; compared ·
the accident to a 1982 "reck '
ui which 50 children were
ki lied when a' train hinheir
bus•_ which had stalled on
the track.

Jordans announce birth

· Wednesday, June

Clubs arid
organizations

Israel i rescue workers work at the site of a train crash near the village of Revadim , about 40
kilometers·south of Tel Aviv, Tuesday. A passenger train collided with a truck on Tuesday afternoon . killing at least four ~ople and wounding more -than 100 others, rescue officials said.
Police said the crash appeared to be an accident.

Bv ALON BERNSTEIN

SHADE - Amanda and
Jack Day of Shade announce
_the birth of twin boys. Trey
Alexander and Trenton James,
born on June 13 at O' Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens ..

PagcA3·

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentin(!l.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim

Freelan~

'

Publisher

PageA4

.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Cot~gress sltal( make 110 law respecti11g a11

establis/:l'!lellt of religion, or prol1ibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridgitlg the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the rigl1t of the
people peaceably to assemble, at1d to petition
the Govemment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S VIEW

GOP
Show me the money
·Dear Editor:
Show me the money. Boh Tafl 1 Show me the money, Beny
Montgomery' Show me the money. Kenneth Blackwell' Show
me the money. Jim Petro '
·
·
With over $12 million of small busi ness and disabled worker dollars missing in a scandal labeled oy the media as
"Coingate," I want to ask our incompetent GOP leadership to
"show me the monev ,..
.
· Bob Taft. Betty Montgomery. Kenneth Blackwell and Jim
Petro have all COI)ti nually denied "any wrongdoing, dragging
their feet to ~ome up with any response to where. when or
how Thomas Noe Ieist $ 12 million in taxpayer dollars.
It's time for the stale to appoint spec ial independent investigators. prosecutors and auditor to conduct investigations.
Show me the money. Bub. Betty. Kenny and.Jimmy, or be
held accountable for hurting Ohio's small busim;sses and di sabled workers.

Wednesday, June

Rapper and ac tor Nick
Cannon has ju;,t completed
an interesting hat trick.
He landed a show on MTV
this fall . "Nick Cannon
Presents Wild · N Out. ..
In the Apri l "GQ" he told
guys "Five ways to sex up
yotlr style."
tn cyberspace. he's been
· celebrated on "pro-life" email lists.
·
That combination doesn't
exactly happen everyday. .
Can non's new music video
"Can I Live ·)" tells a ·tale
that's very diiTerent from the
gangsta_'• parad ise of dirty
dancing and, booty. calls. In
the song. the hip-hop pop star
tells his life story - or at
least the beginning of it and
his mom's close call with
abortion.
Cannon. 24, appears in the
video as a ghost and sings.
"Mommy, I don't like thi s
clinic. Hopefully you'\1 make
the·right decision. and..don't
go through with the knife
decision."
.·
A scared teen. his mother
was on a gurney - that's
how close the call was ~ but
got up. and. at least in the
video version, ran.
..
He points out to his mother
something she got on some
Ieve I, or she wouldn't have
gotten up: ''That's a life
inside you. look at you r
tummy. What is becoming
Ma, I am Oprah bound. You
can tell he's a star from the
Ultrasound."
The video images tell a
stirring, gripping story
regardless of where you fall
in the abortion debate.

Kathryn
Lopez

Abortion is an · intimately.
intensely emotional decision.
fu ll of fear, doubt and pain.
According to typical ·hype.
the mother views what she's
aborting as little niore than a.
clump of cells. But consider
one young mother w ho.
recently .discussi ng her lat.eterm abortion told a reporter:
"For the love of God . the last
thing I wan~d to do )Vas to
mu'rder my child." Don't try
to tell me she thought she
was mak ing a casual lifesty le
choice to eliminate a.parasite.
1 But· the Cannon .song a l ~o
·speaks to something beyond
the· abortion debate . There's
alwa~~ conversation now and
agmn - at leust 111 my dorky
circles- abom how conser.1 va1lves can have a voice in
Hollywood. "Cun they',.. .is
the 4uestiun. ·
Groups start up. Books ;rre
written. Ju st this month ·.'The
Hollywood Reporter" plib·
lished a piece titled ·'Right
fights
back"
about
Republicans in Hollywood
who are producing political
docunlentaries - to counter
the likes of "Fahrenheit
9/ll." and make clear there
are many more non-Alec
.Baldwin-type· • voices · in
Tinseltown than . you . might.

Wednesday, June

think (there are. by the way). today and :rre gratdul tn the
But. · you know what? As PennsylY;.mia ~t!nator for
much as a poli tical junkie their chi ld.
like me might enjoy a conserOn an un.li ne rnes~age
vative alternative to a bo;rrd off C:mnon·, Web s.ite
Michael Moore screed beat- (www.ncan non .c·um
ing him at the box office, I'm where you can watch the
not holding my breath. But video. by I the wayl. one
that's all right because Nick woman wrote. :·1 have spent
Cannon has fouti&lt;;l the ye&lt;rrs trying to make the same
answer. And i)'s much better point you 1lmde in minutes .''· .
than a well -mean in~ ideo~
Nick C&lt;mnon will never
Iogue 's low·budget docuknow hnw many late-night .
mentary.
"Can I Live?" speaks to debates or changes of hem1
something very fundamental he'll prompt wh~n someone
(whether intentionally or is ·surfing and runs into "Can
not). Nick Cannon wanted to l ·Lii·e·'" btll at least one ·
send a supporti ve word out to mother is already grateful to
scared teen mothers, a grate- Nick C:Hmon. With a schedful word to those "strong . uled abortion a few d~y &gt;
women" who choose life. He away. she culled the Ruchcl 's
·did n' t have to start ·a Vineyard · crisis-pregnancy
"Rappers for.Lite.': Ht didn't hotline (877-HOPE-4-MEl.
have to be heavy handed or After many conversations; u
compose a political rant. He 's" counselor sent her a link to
just o!Tcring an honest story. the video.
as he does what he does.
According to Theresa
That·, how you send a mes- Burke. founder of the group.
sage people will li sten to.
the mother's reaction \vas.
I love to retell the story of '·Well , now I know I can't do
Senator Rick Santorum. R- it." It 's a tough roud. but this
Pa .. who spent a late evening mother. relays Burke. suw
in 1998 in an empty Senate "the gift and value of human
chambers. talking about par- life''· thi s "survivor" sings
. tial-birth · abortion, even
about in "Can ·1 Live"!"
though he knew President
Clinton was going to ve to the In stead of the ·abortion. she
pmhibit.ion bill he was argu- went for . an ultrasound. and' .
ing for. It was a wasted night saw her twins:
Maybe Cannon will .have a
so firr as he knew - until he
heard from a couple who , cameo in thei r video 24 years
we re. in fact. !lipping with from now.
( Kutlu:m Lope~ is the edit.hc remote , hit C-S PAN. and,
tor
of Nathma/ Reviell'
to make a long. story short:
She didn't have the abortion Online · (11'11'11'. /Wtiuna/re·
; he had scheduled, unbe- ''ie11:com ). She can be conknownst to her boyfriend, the . racred ar k/ope~@narirma!re­
ne~ t day. They have a child
vi~u~cut~l.)

l

MY ~tLIABL~ 50URCf

Local Briefs

Palricia Mills

Babysitting class offered ·

MIDDLEPORT -Patricia Sherman Mills 80. Middleport
passed away Tuesday. June 21, 2005. at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis, following a brief illness.
She was born May 17. 1925, in Dayton. ·to the late Ramond
''Micky" and Genevieve Middleton Sherman. She was a gradmite of Middleport High School and Ohio Uni versity. where
she was a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority.
Pat was a member of the Middleport Presbyterian Church
where she was a former Sunday School teacher. She was also
ac tive in civic affairs, serving as a member of the com mittee
instrumental in establishing the Middleport Publil' Pool and
surrounding park. She served on the ijoard of Trustees for
'Rio Grande College/Community College and for 49 years on
the Middleport and now Meigs County District Public
Library board . .
In addition to her parent she was preceded in death by her
husband. Domild W. Mills. in 1992.
She is survived by her daughter Cynthia Mills. Middleport;
her son Sherman (Kristi ) Mills, and T.J., of Pomeroy; a grandson. Nicholas Mills of Middleport; a brother-in-law Robert
(Joyce) Mills, of Porneroy; two nieces and a nephew and a
life-long friend, Barbara Stout Shuler of Middleport.
·
Services will be I p.m. on Friday June 24, 2005, at·'Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport, With Bob Crow officiating.
Burial will follow in Riverview Cerrie.tery In Middleport . .
Friends may call from 21to 4 and .6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday .at
the funeral home.
The family asks that donations be ·made to the Middleport
Presbyterian Church, 165 N. Founh Ave ., Middleport. Ohio
45760 or to· the charity of their choice.
•
On· line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com
·

For the Record
Foreclosures
POMEROY - Actions for f·oreclosure have been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by DU Mortgage Capital,
Inc .. Salt Lake City. Utah, against Earl Wines, Sr., Cheshtre.
and others; and by Walter Mortgage Co., Nonh Richland, Tex.,
against Jamie M. Lambert. Middleport, and others.

Sentenced

'

POMEROY - Edie Roush was sentenced in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to five years of community control and
ordered to participate in the community corrections program
on a charge of forgery. a tifth-degree felony.
S~e was ordered to perform 500 hours Qf community service, ordered to observe a curfew and to seek. drug and alcohol counseling.

Grand Jury ·
Dissolution

WHERE BIN LADEN 1~.

Today is Wednesday. June 22. the 173rd day of 2005. There
are 192 days left in the year. .
·
Ten years ago: House and Senate Republicans announced
agreement on a compromise seven-year budget-balancing plan
that would cut taxes by $245 billion and slow spending for
Medicare, Medicaid and dozens of other programs.
One year ago: Islamic militants beheaded Kim Sun-il, a South
Korean hostage who'd pleaded for his life in a heart-wrenching
videotape; he was the third foreign hostage decapitared in the
Middle East in little over a month. A federJI j_udge approved a
.class"action sex-discrimination lawsu.it representing 1.6 million
female workers against Wal-M.art. Mexican newspaper editor
FI11llcisco Ortiz Franco was shot to death in Tijuana. Fo~r
President Clinton's memoir. aMy Life." '!"US officially released.
Child poet Mattie Stepanek, a prominent voice for muscular
dystrophy sufferers. died in Washington, D.C., at age 13.
Thought for Today: "To understand is hard. Once one understands, action is easy.'' - Sun Yat-sen. Chinese statesman
{1866-1925 ).

•

POMEROY - A session of the Meigs County Grand Jury
set for Wednesday has been postponed until 9 a.m. on July 22.

15 A CAVE EXPERT AND .
HAS AN EXCELLENT IDEA

TODAY IN HISTORY

w-wW.mydailysentinel.com

22,2005

Obituaries

•

Jerry Hayman
Syracuse

POMEROY - A dissolution was,granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Charles F. Chancey and Melissa
Chancey.

Highway Patrol
. POMEROY~ ·Two drivel'S were injured in a two-car acci·
dent Sunday on Ohio 7 near. Pomeroy, the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Ronald L. Beach, 48, 18 Butle~ Lane, Vinton, and Carl R.
Davidson Jr., 34, 317 Condor St., Pomeroy, were both transponed to Holzer Medical Center by the Meigs EMS, the patrol said .
Troopers said Beach was southbound, one-tenth of a mile
nonh of Ohio 1~3, at 2:18 p.m. when h~ fell asleep at the st~r·
ing wheel, causmg the car he drove to drift left of tile center hne,
where it collided with a northbound car driven by Davidson.
· Damage to both cars was disabling. and Beach was cited for
left of center.

•••

LETTERS
TO THE
,
EDITOR

·How ·to make friends a11;d annoy people

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All Letters are subject to
.editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone nuinber. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should bt; in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

.

I sent a few dollars to a
well-known international
charity. Now .hardly a week.
·· goes by that I don' t get a
four-color brochure froin
them. Huge. handsome
multi-P'age brochures · with
pictures o( all the .people
they 've helped. The next
week I' ll get a calendar; the ·
next a slew of return address
Reader Services ·
(USPs 21).960) ·
label_
s. Over the last couple
Correc:tioi1
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
. PorICY
of years they've sent me
Our main concem in all stones is to be PubtiShed every atternoon. Monday
accurare. It you know of an error 1n a ttlr't&gt;ugh Fnday. 111 Court Street,
pages and pages of facts and
stcxy. call the newsroom at (740) 992- Pomeroy. Oh10. Second-c!~ postage
figures about all the good
2156.
"'
paid at Pomeroy.
they have dope and they
....,, ... _The •s..,....•ared .Press and the
remind me how much more
OhiO Newspaper Association.
Our main number is
Poebnea: .. _ Send addr856 corrections
they could do with even
(740) 992·2156.
to The Dally Sentlne4. 111 CoLwt Street.
more of my money.
Depao In lent extensions are:
Pomeroy. OhiO 45769.
It's embarrass·ing to tell
•
you
how 'little money I sent
News ·
&amp; lbscriplion Rates
Editor: C1'1ar1ene Hoeth~i. ~x;- ..::
12
: __ OneB
' m'.icarntlfrier
-'-.:-:."'
.:_.:.~
:':.::.."'
:::
..~route
-:ffiii:z;rj-­ them - $50. Everi more
e-mbarra~sing. they' ve p~·
. One- ....... .....'1 23.24
- .......': Betn Sergent. Ext. 13
ably spent another $500 on
Daily ... ... .' . .... .... ...50'
Senior Citizen rat8s
pri!lting .and postage trying
Advertising
One month .....•.... '8.70
to get another S50 out of me.
au.--: Dave Hams. E&gt;&lt;1 15 One- ........... .'96.70
·It is a wonderful charity.
~: Brenda D...,s, Ex1 16
Sl..bscrtlefS st'nAd rarit ., advarw:J3 died
~Ire.: Judy Clarl&lt;. Ext 10
they help a lot of people and
10 lhe Daily Seninel. ~o subscription bj
·-mall pemlitled m ateas where home
we are better people becau:;e
Circulation
they exist. But it turns out
Ololrlctllgr.: JaSOI1 Pattersoo . Ext 17
my earthly reward for doing
Mail Subscription
· them• a favor is that they feel
Inside llloigs County
General Managt!r
13 Weeks
.... '32.26
free to harass through the
Char1ene Haefhch Ext 12
26 Weeks .
. .... ' 64.20
mail. It's as· if I ga•·e the
52Weel&lt;s
....... '127.11
most
annoyi.ng. sanctimo~
E-mail:
Outslde•llloigs County
newsCmydallysenMej _com
nious person on the .planet
13 Weeks .
. . . . .'53.55
my home address and ·said
26 Weeks .
. .. '107.10
WeD:
''Come on over~ AQy time~ "
52 Weeks .
. .. '214.21
Www mydaJiysentmel COI_Tl
I have a feeling thar:if they

·rhe Daily Sentinel

0

'.

22,2005

Heartng. the message of'Can I Live?'

0

0

•

0

.

.

are offering you a new deal
on home loans and because
of your outstanding credit
you
are ·pre-approved.
Sending you this piece of
junk
mail is our way' of sayJim
ing thank you for your busiMullen
ness.
Your friends .ijt your gigantic insurance company know
yo~ · will be interested in
ever get another $50 out of their new plan to offer 'you
me they' ll send me twice as life insurance and timemuch junk mail.
shares in Cabo San Lucas all
I only get one letter a year for one low price. Sending
from my local volunteer fire
you this piece of junk mail is
department begging for
our way of saying thank. you
money. It's one piece of
paper they run throug h a for your business.
As part of their family. the
copy machine asking for
local
power company wants
money. They fold it over
three times and put a mailing you to pick any of these fine
gift~ just for letting Jhem
l&amp;bel on the .outside.
There are no fancy pic- also become your online ·
tures of ftre~ they put out last banxer. Sending you this
year. no pictures of the peo- piece of junk mail is our way
ple they rescued, yet it of saying thank. you for your
.
seems to work. just fme . Yes. business.
I'm
part
or'
the
farniGee.
I' m sure tl1ey could use more
money, but who couldn't? lf ly. And to think I didn ' t get.
you a~ked . I'm sure Bill anything for Ma Power
Gates would say he cotild Company on Mother's Day.
Ahb, if it were only junk
uSe more money. But does
mail. Lcouldn't put my name
he need it'
Take a look at today's pile on the national ~Do Not
of junk mail and you'll find Call" Ii.,t fa!;t enough. It cut
that most of it doe;n't come down dramatically all the
from strangers, but from annoying dinnertime ' phone
your "friends." .Your friends calls we used to get from
at your credit card company tel.emarkete'rs. But there is a

big loophole in the law.
Politicians can still call and
companies you have a prior
"relationship" with can call.
So, instead of just getting
annoying mail from my
credit card company, I get
annoying phone calls from
them, too. .
·
"Mr. Mullen" This is Vera
Windsock at your credit card
company."
"Is.there a problem '!" ·
"Oh. ·there's no problem.
I'm just calling to mak!! sure ·
you're happy with your'
credit i:;ard service."
"Happy? We're ecstatic~ ·
It's practically all Sue and l
talk about. how wonderful
you guys are. I wish our
frien&lt;)s c~lled as often as you
do. So, what's ·going on in
your li fe?"
"TlJitnks for asking Mr;
Mullen, but unless there ·,
Something I can help you
with credit card-wise .... "
"Miss Windsock. there is
something you can do for
me. Can you charge $50 to a
charity for me. but do it in
your name?"
(Jim Muller~ is the author
of "It TakeJ a Village /diut:
Cvmplicating rhe Simp/6
Life" and "Bub v:. Fii51
Tattoo. " You can reach him
arjim_mullen@fll_\way.com)

•

APPLE GROVE
Eliza):&gt;eth R. Huffman, 37, 30590
Trouble Creek. Road, Ponland, was cited for failure to control
by the patrol following a one-car accident Sunday on Letan
Township Road 109 (Waid Sayre Hill). .
Troopers said Huffman was eastbound, eight·tenths of a
mile east of County Road 28 (Apple Gr~ve·Dorcas) at 8 a.m.
when the car she drove went off the left s1de of the road, overturned and came to a rest on its top in a large ditch.
The car had disabling ~amage.

Costs
from PBgeA1
'·

those jails, and the cost
incurred to maintain sheriff's
department vehicles and pay
for fuel for the transpons.
· The c'ounty has two con. tracts for housing with outside facilities, at a rate of $55 ·
per day, in Washington
County
and
at
the
Southeastern Oltio Regional
Jail, but while th~ contracis
guarantee a low per-day rate
for housing, the , mrmber of
prisoners the county has
housed in those facilities has

increased since the beginning
of the year. Davenpon said.
"The commissioners are
working with Sheriff Beegle
and looking closely at the ·
budget for the remainder of
the year," Davenpon said.
"We're not only concerned
with the remainder of 2005,
but.we plan to begin \alking
soon about how thmgs are
going · to' go next year." ·
Looking at the budget now
and plan to talk. about what
we' re going to do about the
rest of this year. and how it's
going to go into next year.'"
Davenport said commissioners are now beginning
the fLrst steps in preparing for
the 2006 budget process.

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

~he

Daily Sen tin~ • Page As

Five Meigs students attend
Buckeye Boys State

POMEROY - Five Meig&gt;
RAVENSWOOD - The Jackson Cou nty Community County student' have returned
Health Center in Ravenswood. W. Va. is offering a babysitting after a week at Buckeve Bov'
course for area teenagers on June 29. 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.. at State held at Bowling Gre~n
the First Uni ted Methodist Church; Flinn Street. Ravenswuut.l; State Univer;ity.
They were among 1325
Participants will learn infant and toddler care. infant and
child satety .. piluy time activities. tirst aid. CPR and chok ing. high school juniors attending
the moe~ g(1\'~rnmen t proand. sale s1tt1ng t1ps. Lunch wdl be pruv1ded.
Ages for participants are 10 to 17. boys and girls and there . gram of the American
is a $17 fee which includes [ood. materials and an informa- Legion and attended under .
of
Drew
tion bag. Scholarships are available for those who need ,assis- sponsorship
tance. Class size will be limited to 10 .. To regis ter call (304) Webster Post 39 and Feenev Bennett Post 128.
·· ·
273- 1033.
.
The five were Scott A .
Tobin and Jordan M. Shank
of ·Pomeroy and Nathan A
MIDDLEPORT -· The Middleport Post Ofti~e has placed a Becker of Middleport . stuat Meigs High School.
new mail collection box on the corner of Pearl Street and dents
and David A. Maxson and
General Hartinger Park way at Hometown Market.
Nicholas A. Kuhn of
According to Postmaster Scott Justus. t.he box has bee n Reedsvi lle.
students
at
placed to better serve both business and residential customers Eastern High School.
oy providing a more convenient drop p.Pint for outgoin~ mail. . · After a week of campaign ~ ·
The mail placed in the box will be p1cked up daily at j p.m., ing. elections were peld and
Monday througl) Friday and at I p.m. on Saturday. Justus said . each
student assu'ined . an
Hometown Market is now selling postage stamps. as well .
elect.ed or appointed position
in which they functioned as

New collection box

Enterprise congregation
to meet at Carl~ton
./
.

•
POMEROY ~ The congregation of the Enterprise United
Methodist Church will meet for worship 'service at 9:30a.m.
in the Carleton School auditorium. Becky Zurcher will have a
sermon and give a report ·on the Methodist conference. The
church was damaged .earlier thi s week and location of services
will be announced until a r egular meeting place is ~e~ured .

the Bov' State moved into
the mock 'tatehood.
Among the

When drugs fai~ surgery can
save life ofhepaJitis ·Cpatien:ts

HMC to host blood

drive Monday

Study

--The Daily Sentinel ·
Subscribe today • 992-2155
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were

___:_ FAMILY MEDICINE -

.Question: A friend of mine·
recently had a li ver transplant
for hepatitis C. What exactly is
that? I have never heard of this
before.' Can you tell me more
about this·type of hepatiti s''
Answer: We currentl y have
five different cla ssitic~ti on s
.
.
for the · different types of
GALLIPOLIS - "On the surrounding the campaign hepatitis - hepatitis A.. B. C.
highway to life ... donors grows in anticipation of Sept. D, and E. All of these illnesswanted" is a new summer 16," said Meghan Stahl. es are viral diseases of the
campaign of the American Donor Resources Marketing liver. but each has unique
Red
Cross,
Greater Specialist.
·characteristics. These distincAlleghenies Region, in 311
Stahl said ll)at during the tive attributes include the way
effort to increase collections. summer months. blood they are spread,· how serious
The· campaign inclupes inventories often drop to crit- they are. and the kinds of .
entering a percentage of ically low levels as donors treatments, if any. that are
blood donors · into a drawing ··take vacations or participate available. Since you asked
for the grand prize 2005 in outdoor activitie s. "In ,.specifically about hepatitis C.
Chevy Equinox; a $1.000 gas addition, 20 percent of the I'll focus my remarks on thi s
card; or a $500 gas card. annual blood collected is disease in today's column.
Other donors will become from universities and high
Hepatiti s .C - caused by
instaill winners of small schools. Fewer students are the hepatitis C virus (HCV)
appreciation items.
on campus and high school - is usually diagnosed .by
At
every
Greater students are not in class dur· aCcident .when the doctor
Alleghenies blood drive ing •the summer months, finds ' an elevated . liver
from May 30 throu~h which has a negative impact enzyme, or ALT. level on rooSeptember 6. donors w1ll on bjood supplies.
· . tine blood.work. While there
receiVe a scratch-off card.
"We're hoping this new can be symptoms of an HCV
Once scratched, the.card will campaign will bring both first infection, · such as jaundice
reveal if the donor is an time and seasoned donors out (turning yellow). fatigue ,
instant winner or will be to give blood this summer," abdominal pain, nausea and
entered into a drawi~g for the said Stahl, who also noted loss of appet!,e, ll)Ore than 80
SUV or ~asohne g1ft cards .: that eligible donors have the percent of people with HCV
The
wmner
will
be opportunity to donate twice · have no symptoms at alL The
announced at a live press during the summer months, viral infection becomes
conference on Sept. 16.
which equals . a greater chronic in up .to 85 percent of
Locally, Holzer Medical · chance of winning one of the the people with this infection.
Center in Gallipolis willliost grand prize drawings. .
A cllronic disease is one that's
a blood drive 11 a.m . to 5
Individuals age 17 or older, either always present or
p.m: Monday
in
the who weigh at least I 05 comes back again and again.
Hospital's Education &amp; pounds and who are in generFonunately, the number of
Conference Center.
ally good health may be eligi- people newly diagnosed with
"We're excited to bring this ble to donate blood.
HCV infections has declined
new campaign to our blood
For more information in recent years. This is due,
·1
·
d
drive sponsors and donors.- about the Blood Drive ¢is
·ng
Monday
at
Holzer
priman·
y,
to
mcrease
aware·
Because those entered iltto ~oml
ness and a safer American
the drawing will be revealed
dical Center, please call blood supply. The most com·
throughout 'the summer, the Hospital's Laboratory at mon transmission route for
we're hoping that excitement (740) 446-5171.
HCV is sharing needles while
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.:..._ __ _ _ _ injecting drugs . HCV can
"At every·meeting, the idea also be spread from an infectof . community pride and ed mother to her child during
enthusiasm was stressed," the childbirth. ·others have constudy says. "Participants sug· tracted HCV infections from
from PageA1
gested a need for creative blood transfusions or organ
.
thinking about new business- transplants prior to · 1992,
rat.he.r than compete.· ~1th, es _ perhaps considering hemodialy sis , and getting
exastmg establishments.
. incentives for new businesses clotting factors prior to 1987.
While there is no vaccine to
The . study also .suggests h to locate in the village.''.
·
an HCV infection.
prevent
the v1llag~ cons1der the
"Middleport is not being
means of dtrecung shoppers marketed as it should be, there is effective treatment
to available . free parking and community spirit is that can cur.e up to 80 percent
areas through improved sig- needed. The community of people witii chronic hepatinage, and enforce two-hour needs to work together, sup- . tis C. A single drug treatment'
parking limits in the shop- port local bu s ine ~se ~, .and with interferon alone . or in
ping district.
keep enthusaasm ahve.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR.LIFE. ·

~peaken

Rundy Gardner. llldjority
whip of the Ohio Senate.
Ndtional Commander of the
Americ:nl. Le gion. Tom
Cadm11s; Central Region
Nati.onal Vice .Comma nder
. Sam Bilrney. and U. S.
Congressman Michael Oxley
who was 'peaker at the commencehlent program for the
graduat·ion which took place
on Saturday morning.
Named delegates to Boys
Nation at that ceremony were
· Brent Kidd. who served as
Gqvernor or Boys State, a
se nior at Fayenevilie-Perry
·Hi gh Schot&gt;i. and Adam
Thomas who ·served in the
legis l&lt;tture. who will .be a
senior at · Riverside High
School. Several scholarship
aW&lt;Jrds or $1.()(]0 each were
also awarded

combination with an anti-viral
drug - . ribavirin is .a good
example - yields very good
.re.~ ults in selected patients.
The treatment regimen can be
required for six months to two
years to get a complete cure.
Still. despite the advances
we· ve made in treatment,
about 5 percent of people with
hepatitis C die from the resulting ·chronic liver disease.
Currently. liver dl:;ease from
HCV inkctiun is the leading
indication for a liver transplant. So. your friend ·probabl y had a li ver ·transplant
because he wasn't responsive
to' treatment and his liver was
on the verge of failing due to
his HCV infection. This prob·
ably saved his life .
, Peop le who have hepatitis
C should mak e st1re ~i;mt
every doctor wi)o treat' tnem
knows that they have this disease. This is important so that
he or she can avoid using
medication s that could harm
.the liver. Also, if YO!J have
hepatitis C. you should not
drink alcohol or use over' thecounter medications that are
ta~ing to the liver.
· Prevention is the best method
for de!lling with hepalitis C.
Here are a few tips to help·you
avoid an HCV infection: Do
not use IV drugs and avoid
sharing needles. Do not share ·
personal care items, like razors
and toothbrushes, as they may
have blood residue on them.
Unless you're in a long-term
mutually monogamous ·relationship. always practice safe
sex, usmg latex condoms.
•

Family Medicine® Is a
week/1 column. To submit
questions, write to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
University
College
o.f
· Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box JlO, Athens, Ohio 45701,
or via. e-mail to readerquestions®familymedicinenews.o
rg. Medical infonnation in ·
this column is provided as an
educational service only. lt
does not replace the judgment
of your personal physician,
who should' be relied on
to diagnose and recommend
treatment for any medical
conditions. Past columns an
available online aJ www.familymedicinenews.org. .

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The Daily Sentinel
•

('

Pag~A6

OHIO

We&lt;!nesday, June

22,

2005

..

Final budget Proposal freezes
funding for 198 districts
BY ANDREW

WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - The final
version of the upcoming state
budget freezes funding for ·
nearly one-tbird of Ohio
school districts. including
Cleveland city schools. the
state's largest district.
The twocye·ar: $51 billion
spending plan provides no
additional funding for 198 of
the state's 612 distriCts.
according to a review of the
budget's estimated state aid
for schools.
House and Senate lawmakers approved the budget
Tuesday and sent it to Gov.
Bob Taft. who must sign it
into law by July I.
OveralL the budget spends
$6.2 billion on schools next
year: a 2.3 percent over current
funding. and $6.4 billion in
2007, a 2.1 percent increase.
The funding plan for schools
is similar to that passed by the
Senate, which would have
frozen funding for J% districts. Senate Republicans
scrapped an earlier proposal
that. would have frozen funding to 215 districts.
The plan approved Tuesday .
is a far cry from Taft's origi- ,
nal proposal in February,
which
included
slight
decreases for 254 districts
around the state.
Fun~in,g for education is not

yet where lawmakers want.
but Tuesday 's proposal is a
stan . said Senate Education
Chairwoman Joy Padgett
"We are on a long. long journey.:· s:lid
Padgett. a
Republican from Coshocton in
eastemOhio. "We have a ways
to go. but we have moved for-·
ward in this budget.''
Democrats said the budget doesn't do nearl y
enough for schools,
"Republicans found last
minute money in this budget
and still didn't properly fund·
education.'' said Sen. C.J .
Prentiss of Cleveland. the
Senate's
top-ranking
Democrat. "They're · only
increasing taxes since districts will have to get their
money from levies ...
Cleveland city schools.
with about 73.000 students.
will receive $428 million
next year and in 2007. the
same as this year. according
to budget documents.
.
. The district is probably hurt
by declining enrollment and
the budget's el.imination of
funding to make up for differences in the ·cost of doing
business. said Barbara Shaner,
legislative ·affairs direpor of
the Ohio Association of
School Business Officials.
·
Columbus city sc hools
received increases of 3.5 percent and 6.5 percent, while
Cincinnati schools gets 0.6
percent next year and 4.8-per-

cent in 2007.
The
two-year
budllt!l
in&gt;ludes a 21
percent
income-Jax cut and a rewrite
of Ohio's tax laws.
The House passed the budget by a 53-46 vote. capping
nearly four hours of debate .
The Senate concurred 19-13
on the compromise reached
Sunday · night by a HouseSenate committee.
. Rep. Dixie Allen of Dayton
was the only Democrat to
join majority Republicans in
passage in the House. Eight
. Republicans voted against
the bill.
Republican Sens. Jim
Jordan of Urbana and · Lynn
Wachtmann of Napoleon
joined minority Democrats in
voting no in the Semite.
Republicans called the
budget historic. holding the
line on spending while making tax·es·on businesses fairer . .
Democrats said the tax cuts
favor the wealthy and th~
budget doesn't do enough for
higher education.
The budget changes Ohio's
Depression-era business tax
code, ending the corporate.franchise and business property taxes and replacing them
with a tax on sales.
· The Legislature made few
major changes in the plan
Taft introduced in February.
But lawmakers restored fund- .
ing for local governments
and libraries that Taft had cut.
. .

Ohio Democrats buy ad focusing on investment scandal
BY NICK JULIANO

arrogantly trying to retain
ASSOCIATED PR.ESS WRITER
. their power, we could avoid
these-scandals in the future,"
COLUMBUS
state pany chairman Dennis
Democrats hoping to take · White said in a statement.
advantage of an investment
Republican officials disscandal at the state's insur- missed the ad as politically
ance fund for injured workers motivated, saying no taxpayunveiled a TV ad Tuesday er money was lost in the
targeting Republicans as the investments.
root of problems in Ohio.
Democrats also benefited
The ad purchased by the from contributions by manstate Democratic Party for agers of Pittsburgh-based
cable stations focuses on MDL Capital Management
Gov. Bob Taft and the three Inc., whtch managed the
Republica.ns running to hed~e fund that lost $215
replace him in 2006 milhoil, said state GOP chairAuditor Betty Montgomery, man Robert Bennett.
· · Secretary of State Kenneth
In addition, George Forbes.
Black,well and Attorney a . Cleveland Democrat.
General Jim Petro.
resigned from a committee
The 30-second ad sched- that oversees the workers'
uled to run this week alleges compensation bureau after
that GOP politicians funneled the loss was revealed.
state money to politically Forbes' daughter works for
connected
donors
and MDL. although he maintains
ignored the state's economic her job had no influence on
problems.
his approval of the MDL
Several investigations are investments.
under way into investment
"It's too bad Ohio
· ·losses topping $240 million Democrats are spending their
at" the .Bureau of Workers' !ime and money on attack ~ds
Compensation.
when they could be comm4Those include $10 million nicating a positive vision for
to $12 million missing from a Ohio," Bennett said in a news
$55 million investment in release. "Rather than playing
rare coins and a $215 million · politics with this issue. Ohio
loss in a hedge fund.
Democrats should take some
In the ad, a female n&lt;~JTator responsibility for once and
intones over ominous music work to fix a problem they
that Republicans . should helped create."
have known . sooner about
Senate · President Bill
the missing money, The Harris also criticized the ad
words
"Record but said he' understood
Bankruptcies" and "Soaring Democrats' actions.
·
Foreclosures" flash on the
"l understand the dynamscreen as the ad attempts to ics, I understand what they
blame the .state's economic need to do," said Harris, an
woes on · Republican mis- Ashland Republican. "If we
management.
were in their position. would
"If Republicans would we do the same thing? I
spend more time governing would hope not, but we prob·
responsibly and less time ably would.''

Harris returned $3,2Jl0 in
campaign contributions from
coin dealer Tom Noe. now
under state and federal investigation for his investment
dealings and political donations.
·
The ad demonstrates how
Democrats hope to take
advantage of the scandal after
a decade out of power, said
Roben Adams, a political science professor at Wright
State Universitv.
"They are kind of like kids
in a candy store. ahd they're
going to grab every chocolate
bar they can," he _said.
The question is whether the
investment scandal will be an
.issue iil 18 months when voters elect a governor. Adams
added.
Also
Tuesday,
State
Democratic Sens. Marc Dann
and Teresa Fedor sent a letter
to U.S. Attorney General
Alberto Gonzales requesting
a federal investigation oJ
Secretary of State Kenneth
Blackwell's role in the
investment scandals because
he also got donations from
· several contractors who manage bureau investments. ·
Blackwell has already
asked the U.S. Department of
Justice to investigate to keep
Ohio politics out of the
revieW.
·
In attacking Blackwell,
Qann and Fedor are -ignoring
Democrats· role in the scandal and targeting a politiCal
rival who had no respbnsibility for overseeing investments,
said
Blackwell
spokesman Carlo LoParo,
"I would suggest that
Senator Dann and Senator
Fedor put down theit .sabers
and get to work for the people of Ohio." LoParo said.

Taft failed to golf report outings
COLUMBUS (AP)- Gov.
Bob Taft failed to neport golf
outings in his financial disclosune statements, Taft told the
Ohio Ethics Commission in a
letter he neleased Tuesday.
Taft, a Reptiblican, wrote
that it "has recently come to
my attention" that he failed to
list a number of golf outings
on required financial disclosune fonns in past years.
"While I am still gathering
all available info!'tllation, it
appears that a senes of mat.rers that should have been
reponed on my financial disclosure fonns were not listed," Taft wrote.
He said he would seek the
commission's · guidance on
how to make reimbursements

The Daily,Sentinel

Thursday's game
Mason County at Ma rietta, 5 p.m.

.

'

f

' ,

.~

(

.Reds fire Miley; Na:rron
picked as interim manager

Friday's games.

BY TERRY KtNNEY

Mariel1a at Feeney Bennet!. 6 p.m .

ASSOC IATE D PRESS

Ma so n County at Parkarstllng. 6 p m .
·t

Saturday's game~

Logan a! Feeney Ben~et:t. 1 p.m.
Mason County at Richie. 2 p.m

Sunday's game
Pickerington at Feeney Bennett 1
p.m.

.

.

AP Photo

Laura Morns. 35. listens to JUdge John, Ross as her attorney Garron Fischmann loo ks on during
her arraignment Tuesday in Bellefontaine Municipal Court in Bellefontaine. Morris is accused of
using her four children to shoplift and then selling the ite.ms on Ebay with the help of her husband Todd. Online records show the couple executed more than 1.350 auctions on eBay. most
in .the last six months. earning a positive feedback rating of 99.8 percent from buyers.

Investigators say parents had four ,
children wor~ in shoplifting ring _
Bv SARAH ANDERSON

sheriff's office. The family
had sold more than 2.000
items
through
Laura 's
BELLEFONTAINE
Clothing and Tools, the .speAuthorities say four cl:!ildren cialty store they ran through
spent at least pari of their time eBay. They opened an
working in the family busi- account with the online aucness - a shoplifting ring.
tion site in August 2003.
Their parents, Todd and
Detectives now are itemizLaura . Morris, both 35. are ing the merchandi se to detercharged in an alleged mine the full value. Four hunscheme that authorities say dred items were cataloged on
worked like this:
Monday alone.
The ch ildren often worked
"And .that's just scratching
as lookouts while their inoth- the surface," Cooper said.
·er stole merchandise from
Todd Morris posted bond
stores across the state. Other of $20.000 shonly after his
times the family would check arraignment Tuesday, but his
out, load their purchases into wife. still was in the Logan
the trunk of their car and County jail on $20,000 bond.
return to the store with empty
Their children. a 5-year-old
bags and receipts. The chil- boy and three girls ages 13,
dren ·- the youngest age 5 - · 15 and 17, are staying with
would help their mother pick relatives. According to a
out identical goods. which neighbor, the children had
_they put into the bags. They been homeschooled for
produced receipts if they year. Calls to the school dis~ere questioned .and sometrict superintendent's office
times returned the clothes, went unanswered Tuesday.
DVDs. tools and stuffed aniAssistant Prosecutor Eric
mals for money.
Stewan said ·he was re&gt;;iewThe rest, their father posted ing details of the case to
for sale on eBay. ·
decide whether tct charge the
The couple pleaded inno- children. though he doubts
cent Tuesday to charges. of that will happen. Customers
receiving stolen propeny and of the couple's eBay store
engaging in corrupt behavior. will not be charged. ·
Authorities say they .recovJohn Holtkamp, director of
ered an estimated $25,000 in Logan County Children's
merchandise, mostly cloth- Services, declined comment
in~, from the Morris home in on the specifics of the case
thts town about 45 miles bul said it was possible the
northwest .of Columbus.
parents decided to home- ·
Clothes were . meticulously school their children to keep
arranged around the house. them from telling friends or
sorted by brand and size. teachers about the situation.
Tubs were filled with DVDs
"If you want to keep a famand videos, said Sgt. Jeff ily secret, hmrteschool them;:
·
Cooper of the Logan County Holtkamp said .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a

Investigators say the family's legitim~te business,
Morris Pallet Recycling,
was strugg ling. In -2003 the
couple paid off more than
$100.000 in defaulted mortgage payments, sealing a
pending foreclosure on
their home , according to
court documents.
Laura Morris' sister, Alicia
Longstreath of Urbana. said
outside the courtroom that she
doesn't know the details of
the allegations agai nst the
coupk. She said she is tired of .
the attention the investigation
has 1\rought to· her sister and
l)rother-in-law and the pressure it's put on \he family.
. "They re making them out
to be these terrible. horrible .
people and not . taking the-\
time to find out if it's true."
she said.
Todd Morris' family members spoke among themselves
but declined comment. Wheg
Longstreath and her father,
John Jordan . spoke with
reporters, the others became
angry and an argument ·broke ·
out in front of Bellefontaine
Municipal Court.
After · the
argumeni, . ·
Longstreath said the couple's
attorney,
Garron
Fischmann, decided not to
represent Laura Morris in
the case. She said she had
hired a new lawyer but
declined to give a name.
Fischmann did not return a
phone message seeking comment Tuesday, and no
changes in representation for
either defendant were filed
with the court. The couple
will be tried together.
. ·

NewsChannel
Wednesday, June 22
Morning (7 o..m.-Noon)
·.
Temperatures will stay near
70. Skies will be. partly
cloudy to cioudy with 5 to 10
MPH winds from the west
turning from the northwest as
the morning progresses. ·
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise from
. 76 with today's high of 83
occurring around 4 p.m. Skies_
will range from sunny to

mostly s,unny with ·10 to 15
MPH winds from the nonh.
Ev1ming (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will drop
(rom 80 early this evening to
68. Skies will be clear to partly cloudy with 5 to I 5 MPH
winds from the north.
lh~rnigllt ( J-6o._m.)
Temperatures will fall from
66 !O today's low-of 55 by 6
a.m. Skies will r\Ulge from
clear to mostly cloudy with 10

MPH winds'from the north.
Thursday, June 23
. Morning (7 o.,m.-Noon)
Temper'\tures will climl?
from 59 to 76 by late this moming. Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from the; northeast.
A/lemoori (1-6 p.m.)
Temperat~res will hold
steady around 81. Skies will
be sunny to panly cloudy
.with 5 MPH winds from the
northeast.

Spons Briefs
Bill Hubbard
Memorial
,, Tournament
accepting entries
SYRACUSE - The 2005
Bill Hubbard Memorial Little
League B'aseball Tournament
is currently accepting entries
for its tournament on the
dates of July 6 through .July
10.
. The event is sponsored· by
the Syracuse Volunteer
Firefighters Association 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 lO.a.I,TI.
For -r more information .
· please
coniaet
Larry
Ebersbach at (740) 992-5400
or leave a voice mail for Josh
Larsen at (740) 591-1853
after 7 p.m.

EHS athletes can
still get physicals
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern athletes in grades 712 who missed th~ physicals
at the school
··
may still get
one at Dr.
K ·el . ly
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,
please contact the office at
(740) 985-3329.

Parkersburg
Catholic names
Garrett new boys
basketball coach
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
(AP) - The Parkersburg
Catholic Board of Education
has approved the appointment of Joe Garrett as head
boys basketball coach.
Garrett. a former coach at
Belpre High School1n Ohio,
replaces Jeff . Mennillo.
Mennillo was named coach
_ at Parkersburg High earlier
this month after 17 seasons
with Parkersburg Catholic.
Garren compiled a 292132 record dunng two stmts
as head coach at Belpre.
After reti,ring from his
teathing and coaching position at Belpre; Garrett served
as head basketball. coach at
Jonathan Alder High School
in Plain City. Ohio.
He was an assistant to
MenniUo last year.
·

CINCINNATI - The lastplace Cincinnati Red s fired
manager Dave . Miley on
Tuesday and promoted
· bench coach Jerry Narron to
finish the season.
"We were not doing tl:le
things you've got to do every
day." general manager Dan
O' Brien said. · .. we saw that
things were not going to
change."
·
At 27-43. the Reds were 18
l/2 games behind St. Louis
in the NL Central. Cincinnati
lost 6-1 at home to St. Lou is
' on Monday night in Miley's
last game.
"We had huge expecr;nions
coming into the season. an?,
we dtd not hve llP to them.

•

Narron said.
Pitching coach Don Gullett
also was tired. Vern Ruhle,
the Reds· minor league
pitching coordinator.' will
handle the job for the
remainder of the season.
Miley and Gullett were
told of their di smissal s
Tuesday morning and were
not available for comment.
O'Brien called it a "sensitive
and emotional" meeting with
Miley - too sensitive . to
bring up whether Miley
would be offered another job
in the Reds· system. .
"He gave his heart to this
team. but we're excited
about Jerry Narron." said
first baseman Sean Casey.
"We have a whole lot of
respect for him: He 's the
kind of guy who can s_tabilize

the ship.''
P..itcher Paul 'Wilson said
it's too easy to forget the
human element when a manager is .fired·.
·'Fans might talk about
people getting fired like it' s ·
no big deal. and there aren't
any consequences, but we're
talking about two guys and
their lives and their careers:·
.Wibon';aid.
Miley spent 26 seasons in
the Reds' organization as a
player. coach and manager.
. 0' Brien said he expected
Narron. a former manager in
Texas. to be a tougher disciplinarian than Miley.
.
·•
AP photo
'Tm sure there are differences e~~ry~me in this room Cincinnati Reds' Jerry Narron walks to the dugout after turning
in the lineup card Tuesday in Cincinnati. Narron was named
wtll see. 0 Brien satd.
interim manager for the rest ·of the season after manager Dave
Please see Miley~ B6
Miley was fired by the Reds Tuesday.

NBA Finals

Pistons force deciding Game 7
,.

'

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Champion "- 4•20

JPM-36.04
Krepr _. 19.45 .
Ltd.- 21.50

CllarmlnC Sllopa - 9.34

NSC-32.40

City ~~aid tC- 34.76

OM Ill .,.._.. - '1:1. 74

Col-47.92
DG-20.18
DuPont - 46-70

OVB-26

B8J -40.02
P4Npln..:.... 26.75
I

sac:-23.87
Wall Ma-t - 48.53
W.ldy'l- 47.34

BY CHRI5 SHEIIIDM
ASSOCIATEO PRESS

SAN ANTONIO - The days of
jumping from the pn;ps to the pros the route to the NBA chosen by
LeBron James, 'Kobe Bryant. Kevin
Gamet!, Tracy McGrady and others are ahnost over.
A one-year increase in ihe minimum
age was pan of a new six-year collective bargaining agreement tentatively
reaehed Tuesday b~ owners and play-

Wortlllncton - 16.65
Dlllly ltOcll reportS - tile 4
p.m. c'a rirc quotet 'ot tile

priMcMII dly'l ba IICtlona,
pro.1di d .., 5nlltlt Par b . . .
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lcrum·myOailyr-.aJm

Reds blast
Cardinals.

'
. CINCINNATI (AP), Backup catcher Javier
Valentin .drove in four runs·
with a three-run homer and a
bases-loaded walk to help
Cincinnati to an ll-4 victory
over the St. Louis Cardinals
on Tuesday night in Jerry
Narron's debut as interim
manager or the Reds.
Narron. Dave Miley's
bench coach since the start
of the 2004 season. was promoted"earlier Tuesday when
Miley was fired , along with
pitching coach Don Gullett,
after the Reds' 27-43 stan.
Joe Randa· hit a solo
homer and Felipe Lopez
doubled with the bases
loaded to back Brandon
Claussen (4-4), who allowed
seven hits and three e·arned
runs in six innings .
St. Louis starter Jason
Marquis (8-5) gave up seven
hits and l 0 runs - six
earned- in 2 l-3 inhings.
Cincinnati had 12 hits
after being held to four iri
. Miley's last game. a 6-1 loss
to the Cardinals on Monday
·
night. .
St. Louis had won four
·straight and seven of 10.
Cincinnati had lost seven of
10. .
An RBI single by Sean
Casey gave Cincinnati a run
in the first. but St. Louis
took a 3-l le&lt;fd the next
inning on ·an RBI single by
So Taguchi ~ a sacrifice fly
by Yadier Molina and an
RBI single by Marquis. ·

Pleaeseeleds,l6

NBA inks six-year labor deal

P..-lcll ·- 55.87
'1. Pl•tler - 1D
Roc:kwell - 48.57
Racily lkiats ...... 29.75
RD 5MII - 62.71

.

SAN ANTONIO (AP) .
- The identity of the next
NBA champion will not be
known for another _two
days - not until Game 7
of a suddenly suspenseful
series is over.
Chauncey
Billups ,
Richard Hamilton and the
Detroit Pistons weren't
ready to concede their
title, and Tim Duncan's
San Antonio Spurs weren't
quite good enough to earn
it Tuesday night.
Behind the scoring of
their guards and se·veral
clutch plays from foulplagued Rasheed Wallace
down the stretch, the
defending champions displayed the resiliency
they've become known for
•
as they .defeated San
Antonio 95-86 in Game 6
of the NBA Finals to send '
I
the championsh.ip series
will io a winner-take-all
game for the first time
since 1994. .
Billups made five of the
Pistons' eight 3-pointers as
they matched their longrange output from the first
five games combined.
Billups
scored
21.
Hamilton had 23 and
Wallace 16 for the Pistons.
who played at their peak
despite being on the brink
of elimination - just as
they did in the Eastern
Conference finals against
Miami eat;lier this month.
Coach Larry Brown won
an NBA playoff game for
the tOOth time as an NBA
coach, breaking a tie with
Red Auerbach for third. most_ in league history,
· shaktng hands wtth and
. hugging Spurs coach
APphoto
Gregg Popovich as the
Detroit Pistons' Chauncey Billups goes to the hoop as Richard Hamilton. left and San
_game ended.
Antonio Spurs' lim Duncan watch during the third quartef iri game six of the NBA finals in
Phase- PlstaM, 16 San Antonio Tuesday.

Contact Information
F1...,.. Mop'-..,..86
USB- 29.23 , .
Ga•wtt-74.22
Glrwml Dwbk:- 36..1.5
GKNLY - ' 4.96
Hat.y Dat'' on- 49.68

8oi&amp;Waw- 54.62

.

Stibsnlbe todav • 992-2155 • www~ .
•

Today's game

GIOIJSter at Feeney Ben~ett. 6. p .m .

8ob Ev-- 22.93

'

Bl

The Daily Sentjnel

'

Major LEaguE .BasEball

BU- 13.62

.

.

·"

Local Stocks

Keeping Meigs County infQrmed

.

Serena survives scare al Wimbledon, ·Page 82
Cope retires as voice of Stcelers, Page B2
Red Sox clobber Cleveland, Page 86

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

and provide appropriate dis- Commission. In 2002, Ohio
closures. Taft would have no Turnpike Commission direcfurther. comment on the tor Gino Zomparelli resi~d.
advice . of his . lawyer,
Taft's letter comes anud an
spokesman Mark Rickel said. investment scandal at the
.· Rickel said he would not Bureau
. of
Workers'
comment on the number of Compensation: Coin dealer
outings or who may have and IIOiable Republican donor
sponsored them.
Torh Noe's lawyer has said$10
A ·message seeking com- million to $12 million in
ment was left for lawyer invested coins .cannot be
William Meeks.
found. Pittsburgh-based MDL.
. Three former directors an investment (ICI11, lost an estiunder Taft ha~e resigned fol- mated $215 million ·in buneau
lowmg asserttons of accept- investments, the bllteau says.
ing golf outings from compaTaft's outings pale next to
nies that did business with the BWC scandal. said Chri~
¢eir agencies. In 2003. Rick Redfern. the Ohio House ACI- 53.70
Af.P-35.78
freneue resigned as state fair . Democratic leader.
director and Randy Fischer
"It's a giant step between a Allzo - 39.62
quit as director of the ·Ohio golf outing and a quarter of a AsN . Ill Inc. - 69.34
School
Facilities billion dollars." Redfern said. ·M 'AT-19-D

•

INSIDE

AI' ..,_

NBA Players Association Executive Director Billy Hunter. left, and NBA
Commissioner David Stern, right. announce they have reached an agree;
ment in principle on the key items of a new' 6-year collective bargaining
agreement before the st.it:t of Game 6 of the NBMinals between the Detroit
· Pistons and San Antonio Spurs in San Antonio Tuesday.
.

.

Commissioner David Stem and
union directQr Billy Hunter (inalized
the deal m·principle in New 'i'ark and
immediately flew to !he NBA Ftnals to
announce it prior to Game 6 between
Sao Antonio and Detroit. The agreement will replace the seven-year pact
expiring June 30.
"We· re gratified that we were able to
avoid a work stoppage," Stem said.
"This agreement creates a stron~ partnership with our players, whtch IS

'I

. ..
'

essential for us."
Other facets of the new deal will
make , trades easier. increase pensions ·'
for · re~ired players. impose harsher
penalties on drug violators and offt;r
teams the option of' sending · young
players for minor-league seasoning.
The salary cap will be raised from
48.04 percent of revenues to 51 percent. increasipg the amount of money
each team can spend on player
salaries. and players will be guaranteed ~ 7 percerit of revenues.
· Active rosters will be expanded
from 12 to 14. and players will have
the right to an arbitrator·s review of
any suspension of mot;e thijll 12 games
for on-coon miscooduct.
On the age limitation, American
players will have to wait one year after
their high school class graduates
before they·can become draft eligible;
International players will have to tunl
19 by the end of the calendar year iti

M'

• Me' ••r.IM

�•

•
\

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

'

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel .

Wednesday, .{une 22;

, www.mypailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

2005

'

WimblEdon -

.,

National Football LEaguE

First Round

CLASSIFIED

Serena fends off childhood neighbor Haynes Yoi! Steelers games
a
won't sound the same
without beloved Cope

WIMBLEDON, England
forehand long.
(AP) - The asphalt couns at
Williams reacted by driving
the puhlic park where Serena her racket into the ground and
Williams and 'Angela Haynes crackirig the frame, drawing a
learned to sV&gt;ing a racket and warmng from the chair
the patch of grass where~hey umpire. Perhaps that moment
engaged in a riveting Gr,rnd of release hcl'pc(LOr pcrha1"
Slam matc·h Tuesuay , u·e sep- what helped was when ,t fan
arated by thousanus of mib yelled . "Turn up tile heal.
and so much more.
Serena, ..·
,
Yet there they were, the
Both players heard the cry.
seven-time major ·champion · and Willi,11ns heeded il.
Williams and the unheralded Haynes f,rceu a break poi nt
Haynes . .trading 'powc'rtul while serving al .:1-4 in the
groundstrukes. and grunts second set. anu Williams ·
Haynes practiced beside shot was called out by a lme
Williams in Compton. Calif.. JUdge. who was overruled by
in the 1980s. looked up to her , lhc charr· umpi re. Ha'ynes
in recent years. and led her went from thinking she was
for the better_ part ~f twn outnf a pmto right back rnto
AP photo
hours m the lrrsl round at one. and when they replayed
Wimbledon.
the point. Williams hit a Serena Williams , of the USA. hrts a return during her 6-7
Eventually. Willr&lt;)ms' cxpc· b,rckhand that clipped the net (1i). 6-4, 6-2 win over Angela Haynes , of the USA, during a
riencc and knack for commg . and fell in for the key break. first round match 111 Wrmbledon Tuesday. ·
'
back - not to mention her Then it was Haynes who
Bark when the Williams were," Haynes 'said.
shotmaking were 100 showed frustration. picking
sisters
we re playing final
Henin-Hardenne
didn't
much for the · I04th-ranked up the ball and tlinging it
after
final
against
each
other
play
a
match
between
claimHaynes in her A:ll England over the net.
Club debut. So reigning
Williams held serve to in the majors, it would have ing her fourth Slam title at
Australian Open champion close that set, then broke .r tir-· been a bit out of the, ordinary Roland Garros and coming to
Williams squeaked by with a ing Haynes for a 3-2 edge in to see them play on Court 2 at Wimbledon, in part because
6-7 ( 12), 6-4, 6-2 victory, the third. part of a closing the All England Club, a step of a right hamstring injury,
avoiding the sort of upset that five-game run.
· ,below the more prestigious. and in part because she's
committed to taking extra rest
befell French Open champion
"If 1 won, it could have . Centre Court and Court 1.
Venus
the
2000-01
after a virus sidelined her in
Justine Henin-Hardenne ear- changed my whole life,"
Wimbledon
champion
but
2004.
lier in the day.
Haynes said.
Henin-Hardenne ' double·Jus.1 , "' accustomed as
Her most promising previ- seeded merely 14th this year
had,
a
much
easier
time,
faulted
II times, twice in the
Willr:J;~s is to rallying from ous taste of top-tier tennis
defeating
Eva
Birnerova
6-2,
final
game.
big deficits in big matches, came at last years U.S. Open,
"Everyone is a little shaky
Henin-Hardcnne
couldn't when she reached the third 6-4 . The , court has become
manage it this time, losing 7- round as a wild card. As a known as "The Graveyard of at times during a match,"
6 (8), 2-6. 7-5 to 76th-ranked toddler, Haynes would hano Champrons" because of a Daniilidou said. "Today, 1
Eleni Daniilidou. That made around while her father, Fred. litany of upsets; Pett:,Sampras was a little bit better with
•
·
her the flrst French Open tuught her older siblings how lost his last Wimbledon that." .. ·
Much· is made of the tough
women 's champion in 43 to play tenni s at Lynwood match there in 2002's second
years to drop her opening Park.
where
Richard round, for example.
transition from clay to grass,
match at Wimbledon. It also Williams instructed his girls.
" It didn't enter my mind," with a two-week turnaround
ended her 24-match winning
''Sometimes. we would do Serena said, "because 1 just
.
six. seven hours on the court, . fell that 1 had to be better than between the French Open and ·
streak. all on clay
Wimbledon. , Balls skid on
"Playing on clay_and then and Richard V&gt;ould be there the myths."
She. showed the determina- , grass, and strategic decisions
coming here, it 's so differ- before us," Fred Haynes said.
tion
she has many Limes, must be m~de in a snap . .On
ent." the seventh-seeded "And when we got ·off the
Henin-Hardenne said. "You court, we would have io go· including comebacks l\l the clay, . there s more trme to
change everything."
grocery shopping, and they Australian Open m the semi- react.
against
Maria
"Everything that you see t;&gt;n
Williams
skipped the would still be on the court, finals
Sharapova
(a
strmght-set
clay,
you take the opposrte of
French Open with a left ankle and I'm like: Look at that.''
sprain that has sidelined her
That's when -they all were winner Tuesday) and in the u, and that's what you get on
against
Lindsay grass,". s~id And.Y. Roddick,
since May II. She called her dads and daughters with fin al
Davenport.
who ehnunated Jm Vanek 6play against Haynes "rusty." dreams. Nowadays. Venus is
lt was something Angela 1, 7-6 (4), 6-2 .
adding that she ''kind of felt 25. Serena 23, Angela 20 Rafael Nadal, the 19-yearlike I was feeling my way and all played on the same Haynes came to expect and
admire
back
when
she
and
the
old
Spaniard who won ·the
aJ'ound."
Wimbledon court Tuesday.
It sure looked that way in
"It says a lot for Compton," Williams family lived 15 French Open in his debut, got
minutes apart and her brother, off to a solid start at
the tense tiebreaker, when · Richard Williams said.
''Just to see my kid walk on now a tennis player at San Wimbledon, a 6-4, 6-3, 6-0
each player had four se t
points. Williams let three slip Wimbledon grass courts, il's 'Diego ·State, played with victory over Vince Spadea,
whose bothersome back was
away Y.ith backhand errors, like: Wow, we're here. Not Serena.
"~he did not want to lose. massaged twice by a trainer'
and Haynes finally grabbed satisfied, but we're here."
the set when Williams sarled Fred Haynes said.
She doesn't care who you during the second set.

PITTSBURGH (AP) Myron
Cope,
whose
screechy,-voiced antics and
towel-waving · enthusiasm
became nationally , ~wwn
during
the
Pilt~burgh
Steelers' string of Super
Bowl championshi~s in the
1970s, is retiring after 35
years as a team announcer.
Cope, a one-of-a-kind
voice who became a broadcaster in 1970 only because
of a radio station executive's
whimsy, decided to quit after
retired team executive · Jqe
Gordon told him his on-air
work had declined.
Cope, 76, has had several
years of health problems.
including a concussion that
caused him to be disoriented
during one game and tq miss
another last season. He also
has been undergoing treatment for hoarseness and a leg
injury.
With Cope leaving, the
Steelers will go with a twoman radio booth of play-byannouncer
BiJl
pl_ay
Hillgrove and analyst Tunch
Ilkin, who was added several
years ago to work alongside
Cope. Craig Wolfley remains
as a sideline announcer. ,
While football announcers
don' t often match the popularity of baseball announcers,
who work 10 times as many
games each year, Cope
l;lecame Pittsburgh's bestknown sports broadcaster
and commercial pitchman in
the mid- 1970s and has
. remained so to this day.
His quick wit and quirky
phrases, includinz? "Yoi'" his version of 'Wow!" added to his popularity, as
did his 1976 invention of the
Terrible .Towel.. The bright
yellow good-luck. charm is
still twirled by the thousands
at Steelers games and has
generated millions of dollars
in, revenue, much of which
went to charity.
Team. owner Dan Rooney
towel-twirling
said · the
stoked the fans' abundant
enthusiasm and created an

intimidating atmosphere fm
opposing teams such as the
Cleve Brownies - Cope's
nick~ame for
the
rival
Clevelan' d
Browns.
Last season,
Jeroine Bettis
said
there
probably wasn't another
local NFL team announcer
whose popularity exceeded
that of the players he
described .
"He doesn't play, he doesn't put qn a parr of pads, but
he's revered probably as
much or more in Pittsburgh
tlian Franco (Harris), all the
guys," Bettis said.
Cope's bigge st regret is not
being on the air · during
Harris' famed Immaculate
Reception in a 1972 Steele~ .
victory over Oakland - the
first postseason win in franchise history. Cope was on
the field for his postgame
show when Harris, on what
seemingly was the last play·
of the Steelers' season,
grabbed. the soaring rebound
of a tipped Terry Bradshaw
pass and' scored ·a game-winning 60-yard touchdown.
The wildly improbable play
is often called the greatest in
NFL history.
Remarkably, Cope didn't
become a sports announcer
unti I he was 40 and had no
plans to do so until a WTAE
radio executive su,ggested
the freelance sports \vriter's
knowledge and unique voice
would bring attention to the
Steelers. At the time the
Steelers were not as popular
as the Pirates, and few home
games sold out.
Cope's
Coincidentally,
retirement came days after
the 20th anniversary of the
late Pirates announcer Bob
Prince's death in 1985.
Prince,' best known for his
garish sports coats and laundry list of catch phrases,·was
the only Pittsburgli' sports
announcer whose prominence ever approached
Cope's.

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992·2157

Offtee 11o~S"

Sheriff Sates

Current OWner: Gary
Case
Number N. Curtis et at
Prior
Deed
04CV188
Ameriques! Mortgage References: Volume
Company
103, .,_661
Plalnllll
Appraloed at $26,500
Terms of Sale:Cannot
vs
.Gary N. Curtis et at
be sold tor less than :
213rds ·
of
the
Defendants
Court of Common appraised value. 1Cl".
Plea, Meigs County, , down on day of sale.
Cash or certified
Ollto.
In pursuance of an
check, balance due
on confirmation of '
order of sale to m'
sale.
'
directed lrom said
court In the above
Robert E. Beegle,
enthled action, I '!'Ill
Metgs.County Sheriff
expoH lo sale at Attorney lor tlte plainpublic auction on the till
front steps of the Gall C. Hersh, Jr., Attn
lllolgs County Court
525 Vine Street, Suite
- o n Friday, July 8110
22, 2005 at 10 a.m. of Cincinnati, ·
Ohio
Mid lily, the follow- 45202
513-723-2200
'"' deocrlbecl real
(6) 15, 22, 29
Legal Description
Situated
In
the
Public: Notlc:e
Township of Chester,
Melga County, Ohio
belr1g In section 4,
SHERIFF SALES
Town 2 North Range Case
Number
13 Weot of the OhiO 04cv165
Company's purchase
Bank of .New York
.,.. being described
Ptaiptiff .
• follow1!: '
vs
llaillf1ning at a point Andy L ·- 8 1
North sa· 50' Easl441
aiDelendantll
feel
from
the Court ot Common
Pleas, Melga County,
COI'Mf of
the Alton E.' Ball and
Ohio
F.- Batt 57.73 acre In puriUIInctl of an
.tract , said point of . . . - ol aale to me
!Mginnint beint on djrected from said
the centar of County
court in the above
.
. . - 8CIIon, I will
C-25 and over •
culvOirl; Thence South
expose to sale at
30' 40' East 208 foe! public auction on the
to · • locust poat. rronl steps o1 the
Melga County Court
Thence - · '60' 30'
House on Friday, July
Eoot 432 ' " ' to 1
locust ~· Thence 22, 2005 11 10 e.m .. of
North 37' 00' Weot said lily, the follow208 to o point on Ing de~~erlbecl rool
the of county
Road C-25. ThllnCI
DESCRIPTION
OF
lkttlflt 57' 13' Weot REAL ESTJoTE
202 feel along the Sltueted
In
the
............. of County Township of Sulton.
Roed C-25. Thence County of Melp, eo:td
IGutll 13' 55' Wast - o f Oltlo; Lot No.
21 In lufllngton'a
201 olont the
• :' t'don to the Town
.......... of Counly
Roed C·25 to the of lyrKUN.
po1r1t of !Mglnnlng. Pwcal No. »&gt;OSSO
Conc.lnlng
1.M Commonly Known
- - - o r -. • : 1207 Churcl&gt; St ,
SyfllCijM, 0H 48m
• aptlnt oil i. . .l
Currant Ow-: Andy
rW*of-.
L Pwnih eon at •'
. .u~..,Ptu Appral- at 115,000
OH
Terms
of · Sole:

-·

-oat

-:

,.,_2
,_,.Cij,

Cannot be sold lor Current owner Arthur
less than 213rds of Bradshaw et al 575
the appraised va.lue. · Broadway
Street,
Ohio
10% -non day ol Middleport,
PPt . 15salt, cash or certlflecl 45760
check, balance due 01479.000 prior on con1irmation of

sate.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney at law
50 Broad Street, Suite
1200
Columbus,
Ohio
43215

614-221-7663
(6) 15, 22, 29
Public: Notice

Slterlll Sates
Case
Number
04CV130
'
The Bank of New York
Plaintiff
vs
Arthur Bradshaw et at
defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court in the above
entiUed action, I will
expose to sate 1!1
Public Auction on the
Front Steps of The
Melga County Court
House on Friday, July
29, 2005 at 10 a.m. of
said lily, the followIng deiiCribed Real
~: .
Situated In
the
Village
of
Middleport, Section
29, Town 1 North,
Range 13 Wesl, as
recorded In Volume 2 ,
page 12 of the lllolgs
County PIM Roc.,..,
County of Melga 8nd
State · of Olllo and
bounded
8nd
dMcritMtd M fdllowa :
Being the lOUth hell
of Let N..- Two·
Hund.W
S.Venty
(270) In V. N. - · ·
Addition to Lower

Pafnll!oy, now h'K:or•

fi!H'IIIICI Into and
mlldl 1 per1 crl. the
VIllage 'of Middleport,
Ohio.
Sold premloeo otoo
known
ia
171
lrooctwoy
Street,
Mtddleporl, Oh 48710
PPN: 15-01411.000

;~:r~nc;;;,. Votu2~;

appraised
at
527,000.00 terms of
sale: cannot be sold
lor leu than 213nts of
lite appraloed value.
10% - n on day of
sate, cash or qertlfled
check, balance due
on confirmation of
sate.
Robart E. Beegle,
Melga County Sheriff.
.. Attorney lor the
plalnllll John D.
Clook, Attorney 5601
Hudson Drive, Suite
400, Hudoon, Ohio
44236 (330)342.f203.
(6) 22. 29. (7) 6

Public Notice
Sheriff Sales
Caee
Number

04CU175
LaSalle
Bank
NalionaiAsooc:iation
' Plalnllll

vs

Chester A Roush It at

dofet".dllnts
Court

of Common
Pteu. Meigs County,
Ohio. •
In pur1uance of an
, _ of sate to me
directed from said
court in the above
entitled IICiion, I wiU
expose to ule at
public auction on the
front steps of the
Melga County Court
on Frtdly, Juty
29th, 2005 Ill 10 e.m.
o1 said 111y, the ~
lowint
deiiCrlbed

_..._,

~In

theY. . . .

of Mlddf1prwt, County

of ..... and . . of
Ohio, known and

~•u..._*

Also the loltowtng
described real eotate
eltuete ln the Village
of Middleport, County
o1 Meigs, State of
Ohio,
to-wit:
llefinnlng at the
nortltweot COI'Mf of
what was formerly
J.C. Russell's lot No.,
14; thence northfriY
along Second Street
6 feet; thence euler·
ly In the norlltweat
corner of what waa
J.c: Ruuilrs·Lot No.
1.4; thence westerly
along the north line
of wltll wu formerly
the J.C. Ru-t lot to
the place of !Mglnning, being a triangular shape piece of
land being 6 II
; : . . - on MCOnd
Reference: Official
Records Volume 88,
Page ·• 359, Meigs
County Recorder's
Office.
. Parcel
Identification
Number:
1500996.000 and 1500997.000. Properly
oddresa: 11411 Soulll
2nd
Stroot,
lllddleport,
Ohio
45760.
Current
owner:
Cltester A Roush et Ill
P r - ' f II: · 11411
South
Second,
llidrlefl 0.....~ Oh 45760
ppf 1~il&amp; and 1500997 prior deed ril.......s: Volume 88
Page 359 a n d 88
pega
HI
appratoed
at
$31,000.00. Tonno ol

._,ct.

'

Public: Notice
PUBLIC HEARING
The VIllage of
Middleport wilt hold I
public haoring on
June 23. 2005 at 7:00
p.m . on the · 2006
budget. The budpt
can be viewed at the
oHice of the Fiscal
Olllcer, 237 Race Sl.,
Middleport, OH. (&amp;)

22.
Public: Notlc:e
PUBLIC HEARING
Letart Township
trua- will hold a
public hearing lor the
liudgellor ywar 2006.
July 1, 2005 at . 7:00
p.m. with regular
meeting to follow.
EwrybOOy welcome.
(6) 22.

Public: Notice
Slterill Sates
Case
numbef.
04CU041
The

-pllllntill

vs

Rodney R - e t Ill

delsndwlb

-.
CO..rt

of

Common

llelgo County, Ohio.

HelpWatted

-=-...
·~· 8c;:,
a.Jcosaa .....

in pursuance · of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court in the above
entitled action, t will
expooe to 11le at
public: auction on the
front steps of The
Meigs County · Court
hoUM on Friday, July
29, 2005 at 10 a.m., o1
said ctay, the loll-Ing described Real
Es~ta:
" ,. ' •. •.'
Exhlbh "A" ShUIIe ln
the
VIllage
oi
Mlddlepor!. County of
Melga, end
of
Ohio: Sllullod In
Horton's
Lower
Pomeroy
Subdivision,
and
being I .,.-eel Creal·
ed' out of Lots 344
and 34S of said subdlvtaion-8nd
described • followo:
lleflnning at an Iron
pin aat by 11t1o survey
lithe-corof the oforemen.
ttonod
Lot
345:
thence along the
nor1h line of Lot 34S .
and then the north
line crl Lol 344 North
84 dagrMa 33 min38 -Ida Esat

r
I~

rL.-------r'
GIVIAWAY

I{,mOUNDANil

s-

n .32 toot tn att to . .

Iron pin . . by dlto
......, ... the north
.... of Lola 344, Iron pin bMtg -

Free to good home all white -~-==--­
mala k11ten Call (740)446· Lost. Family pel In the area
1216.
of Sp1res and Morgan
Center Road Large female.
Power Nozzle to a Rainbow all white German Shepard
Sweeper (304 )458·1657
features Reward (740)388·

Reward lor ~ale return
M1ss1ng female gray Tabby
· Wearing pink collar wilh fake
diamonds and red name tag.
Lost near old Bidwell school.

.

~

(740)388·8166

1Wilw. 10% '

.....

Ir

4x4's For Sale ........................ :..... :............... 725
'Announcement ............................................030
Antlques .......................................................530
Apartments lor Rent.. ................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market. ............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autos lor Sate ............ ,.................................710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750 ·
Building Swpptles........................................sso
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty.................................210
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 7811
Cards ol Thanks ..........................................010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlca11Relrigeratlon..... :.........................840
Equipment lor Rent .....................................480
ExcavaUng, .., ................................:.............. 830
Farm Equlpment ..........................................610
Farms for Rent.....• ~ .............., .......................430
Farms lor Sate ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sate.................................................-....... 585
For Sate or Trocle.........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegelables ............... c..................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Heullnt ...........................................850
Glveaway..............................................:.......040
Happy Acls ....................................................OSO
Hay &amp; Graln..................................................840
Help Wanted................,................................ l10

uw.

Home tmprovements ................................... 810

down on the lily of

Homee for Sate........................,................... 310
Houoeltold Goods ......................................,510
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ................................................020
tneurance ..................................................... l30
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlprnent ........................ &amp;IIO
Uvntock......................................................830
Lolt and Founci ........................................... OIO
Lots A Acreoge ............................................ 350

sale, cash or certHied

check, balanco· due
on conftrmatlon of

.....

Robert E. Beegle,
llelgo County Slterlll.
Attorney lor Plalnllll,
SCoH E Collister,
Attorney 525 VIne
Street, Suite 8110
Cinclnnotl, • Ollio
45202 1513) 123-2200.
(I) 22, 29, (7) 6

Mlacelteneou.••.• .-................................. ~: ..... 110
Mtacelt.reoua -.:ttendla.......................540
Mobile Home llep8ir....................................
Mobile- for Aent ............................... 420
Mobile for Solo................................320
Money to LOWI..............................,........~ ..... 220
Muak:atlnotrumenta ................................... 570
Poroonets .....................................................005
for Sale ................................................. 560
-

E&gt;Mtgeucy ,_.., wor~wq

Plumbing &amp; -'ng .................................... 120
F'Joteulonol SarYices ................................. 230

- · TV &amp; CB Repair '"'"""""""'""""""160
Real ~ w.ntod ..................................... 310
- - tnlllrlictlon .....................................160
s.d , Plan! A Fertlllzw ............................. 160
Sttuatlona w.moc~.......................................
Space lor Aent
' .............................................
'
Sporting ........................................... 520
SUV'slor Sate ..............................................720
Trucka lor Salo ............................................ 71 5
Upholstery ................................................... 170
Vono For Sate...............................................730
Wanllld to Buy ............................................0.., •
Wanllld to Buy- F - SUpplleo .................. l20
Wanllld To Do .............................................. 180

•

-

uo

$7.00/hr.

Send-Ill:

Center Memberships
·Buy 2 months get 1 free or
Buy .5 months get 1 free
For more info please call

Buckeye Community llr.".CII

P.O. Box 604
Jackson, Ohio 45640.
Oeodllne lor oppitcants: 6128105
p...,ploym.nt drug -ng.

Wanlod to Rant ............................................ 410,
Yord Sale- GaHipolts....................................on
Yord Sale-Pomer"''/11-.........................074

Yard SaJI..Pt. P1111111t ................................ 011

·-~•

.,.

t

·,

1110

&lt;&gt;

· Hu.P WAI'ffill

~

304·675·6553
Drivers Needed:
CDL Dnvers willing to drive
for local ready-mix-concrete
company Experience 1s
preferred bul nol necessary
Dnver must be w1lhng to do
pre-maintenance on trucks
&amp; equipment, yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores
Expenence operating eqUJpment &amp; extra skills such as
welding a plus
Cal! (304)937·3410
-Fu
" n-,,m
-'e-'-·m
...:....oc'h-an-&gt;e-no-o-ded
-

Heir Styllsta
Yard sale at Sm1th residence
Oon"t miss th1s great opporon Pine Grove Road ,
tunity w1th Fiesta Ha1r
Racine , 9-1, Thurs , Fn . Sat
S31onsl We currenUy have
WANIDJ,
openmgs for full and part·
m BuY
time licenMd Hair Stylist&amp;

i

at our salon in Muon We
otler guaranteed hourly
wages, new pay K ... wtth

up

t&lt;J

52%

ooivtc. ......

mluton, retail and tanning
Cunoncy,·M. T.S. Coin St!QP,
commissions, medical. den151
Second
Avenue,
tal , vision and lite 1ns..
advanced eoucatioo. and
I ' I I ' \ ' I I '\. I
rnucl'l more. Call1-8n-327"I I~\ II I "
7001
mof'e informatiOn.

'------'

Now Hiring!
40 hours a weelt$7·$8/hour :

hours/ week Th1s posilton
w111 Include hght secretanal
dut1es. Typmg and computer
skillS neceSsary Send a
resume to The French Art
Colony, P.O
Bqx 472,
Gallipolis. OhiO 45631 by
June 30th .

OUTSIDE SALES
R:EPRESENTATIVE
· '

I

The Gallipolis Dally Tnbune
1s accepting resumes for a
tutt time outside sales representati\le to Join our sales
team anc;t to manage an
establiShed accounl list
w1111e calhng on
new
accounts fhe successful
canctldate will be a disci·
phned, . selfmot1ved te.am
player that understands the
1mportance ot ctevetopmg
strong, mutually benet\cial
business r61ationships with
our accoonts. b.

(740)245-5078.

Gallipolis. OhiO 45631 ,
ta00-$1.,100 mo.'pt ' } McClure's Restaurant · now ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT 's
$2,..$5,500
hiring au locations. full or nee&lt;led Apply at 1354
Wark From Vour Home or part-time, p~ek up apphca· Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

mom

wood ......
To $.48M¥k
Materials proviOed. .
Free 1nbmabon pkg . 24 hr

Rocksprings Aehab1hlat1on
Center, 36759 Rockspnngs
Road, Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Extendicare
Health
Services, Inc. 1s an Equal
Opport,unity Employer that
Encourages
Workplace
01\lersity, MIF BN
STNA'S Overbrook Center
is currently accept1ng applicat1ons tor full-time STNA'S
7A·7P. and 7P-7A, and ~A3P··----·
shifts are ava11able If you are Interested,·
please come 1n and fill out
an -application at 3J3 ·Page
Street, Middleport. Please
No Phone callS EOE

Transport dnver needed tor
100 bed ~klNed nurslng facllity. Provide transportation for
phys1c1an
appointments,
consults etc. Musr have
good dri\llng record , enio';

wortUng with
residents
and
families.
Po81t1on
is part·
time, state tested nursmg
aSSIStant preferred , not
~ulred. Interested appll-

Pe'rson to care· for older cants shOuld appl'/ in person
nond ..._..,
...•rv.ed man, .a nours to: Roc::ksprin~Aehab
a week. List praviou 5 Center. 36759
prings
A
,
0 hto
employers and g1ve refer·
oad,
Pomeroy,
enca. Employee subject to
........
-ume
""~ -ng- Sa~
,,... ......
"' ~1 Santi--'
,.., Daly
,_,, Box

r·-

~4&amp;1j7f.69;...~-----,
-

Swoots

will ,..,, , _ fax rosume Replacement w&lt;riers needed tor housekeeplno'iaundry
Needing certilied tan techni- department, could lead to
cian , pert time. (3()4}675- full-time position , contact
Vera West, C740)992-6806
6526.
•

Golllpollo c.r- Collogo
(Careers Close To Home)
CaH Today! 740-446-4367,
1-800-214.Q452

to· 614-890-7507

801~

Now Hlring Safe Drivers

TractDrltraiter driver rl88ded
An E.cellent Wfllf to earn Appfy in Person at your local EOE
to start immedl'ately. Full
Domino'e Must be over 18
J'llOt'leY· The New ~·

time ttuough 2008. WVA
Call ~ar1tyn 304-882·2645
Oral Surgery Assistant lor area. Must have good drl\1Saturday
,m ing record.
AVON! All Areas~ To Buy or f'\lery
resume to
Fax Daily Sentinel, P.O. Boa 729Sell Sl!irlty Spoaro. 304- Middleport , OH
22. Pomeroy, Oh 457611
Resume IIJ (614}890-7507
67!H429 .

Send

,

$120,000 (304)862·2690

lntenor/extenor
pamting ,
reasonable rates , reler·
ences. exper1enced. lor free
estimates call (740)742·
2013 or 645·2638.

3br. 2ba, pool, garage, sJorag~ bldg, apol1ances mcluded , 5 m1les from 33 on
Rt 681 (740)592-0426

RIO Grande
Investment Property walk to
Un1118rS1ty (2) Ap artment
4 Bedroom home. 2 blocks
bwldmgs, (3) two BR units
!rom school , good neighborSt29,000 Call (740)245·
hood . 646 4th Ave. Call
9413
(740)388-8 164

LOW·MOlStUre
Carpet-Cleaning

•NOTICE•

-,ga~KpolilcafMt"COI!egecorn

l274B -

CLASSIAEDs

Rodney Village II 3 BR i car
garage. DR. LR , large
kitchen. deck on back , 1
acre +I· 70 000 Must see

40 3 Spnng Ave

to

Attention!
Local company otfenng MNO
DOWN PAYMENT programs 'tor you to buy your
hom.e Instead ol renting '
• 100% fmanc1ng
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the

..

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
ou do busmess w1th peo
Ia you know , and NOT 1
end money lhrough th
a11 unt1l yotJ have 1nvestt

same as rent
Mor tgage

::a;•ed:lh:e:o~H~er:'"::~

{740)992·7321

Gt
=

l\10NE\'

1

~;;~m~JJ;AN~;~

Localors

AU reel ealllte advertising

In this MWspaper 11
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing~~ of 1968
whi~:h mll~ea it illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrtmlnalion based on
race, color, religion, Mx
tamilial 1tatua or national
origin, or any Intention 10
make any such
pret•r•nce, Umjtatlon or
dlacrimlnaUon ...
This rteWII)IIptr w1ff not
knowingly~

.ctvertl ..menta tor r..a
ntM•whichlatn
violation ot tN lew. Our

r....,.• .,..l)er.t)y
informad lhat all
....tlnga act\ttrtised In
thla n.wapaJ*' ar•
evell•ble an an equal
DPt)ortunlty b.....

~=~~=~~=~
PllOFE~IONAL a
SERVICES

~=:;~;~~==

Duplex, each with 3 BR, LR,
DR . K1tcher.~ , Bath &amp; Porch .
House 3 BA. LA. Kitchen,
Balh
Both m Po1nt
Pleasant
(304)675-2 495
after 7 OOpm

aJ
n
aso
.aJ. fo r summer, t ..,•
pec1
1
1nmng on Jun
1st - July 5th. 304· 77

re
S

eeg

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582 -3345
I~

s

app,rec1ate

(740)245 ·

c99e,l_7_
. -----Roush Ume. Cheshire
Beautiful 3 bedroom, formal
dmmg . room, O~k k1tchen.

2426

NG CO. recommends tha

i

Pomeroy

- - - - - - - - Oak floors , carpeted Sun
7 rooms. t 1/2 bath , garage . room ,
2
1J3
baths,
basement. deck. mclud1ng $117,000 (740)367 7615
tleed to nverbank. for 1nlo
call 740·992·3424, 740·992·
1949 , 740·-74 2-200 7
...:.....:.:.......:....:...::...::.::.:_
__

• No Down Paymenl even
With tess than perfect credit
on •th1s 3 bedroom. 1 bath
home 1n MlddiElport. Corner

I \I I " I \ II

lot carport. wrap~round
porch, fanced m ¥ard . basement, payment saine as
rent, 740-992-6300.

www.orv .com
Home Listmgs .
L1s1 your home by calling
(740)4~6-3620

V1ew photos/mfo online

% Down1 3 bedroom , 1
4 bath. L'R D/R FIR
ar garag-e fenced m
ack yard 112 ac re
lose to town , $ 132 ,500
ode 4505 or call
740)446·8325

t's a Stea111 4 bedroom,
bath , 2 car garage
ew t"iaven WV Code
505 or call (304)882·

368

Moou"E HOMES
ll)R SAI.E
12x50 1988 F'ine R1dge
mobile Mme. Good condi·
t1on , all electriC, 2 bedroom.
1 bath majpr appliances
Included, $7 ,300 Present lot
ava ilable to rent $150
monthly "t740)446·2796 or

(740)388·9687
1970 12x65 2BA. 1BA.
needs little work · As-king
$800 080 Needs to be
mOiled {740)379-2930.
1975 Schultz mobile home
All elect central a1r. new
W1ndows. 2 yr old hot water
tank. Ret &amp; stove $2,500
(740 )388-8743
1993 Oo ublewide 3 bed room , 2 bathS, must be
moved. $25,0CXJ (740)388-

:8::97::8...:...__ _ _ _ __
1997 Doublewlde. 3 bed·
room . 2 bath 1+acre

67_5_·'_0_'9_ _ __
:1304
:..:...;lc.
2000
28x80 PalriQt 4 bB;dHor\lfS
t-Uk S\u:
No Down Payment Possible room. elCcellenl cond1t1on.
1900 square ft house. ~ Askmg
4 a 000. Needs
$59,000 New Haven' 2 800 bedroom, 2 bath lull baSE!- moved. (740 )367 _7245 .
men!. new heat pump. sets
sq ft. Log Cab1n aS IS , w/3-5
on 3 ac;res SR 7. Eastern 8 used hQmes under $1 000
' acres Call Mike 1513)314·
School D1str1Ct, (740)965- W1ll help witt1 delivery
2754
4321
(740138&amp;9621

"""""' "' ,,,..,,.., ""r-=~-:.::;-;;,::.'
...~
SHOP:-""'-""-'.m'., r:IO::::::::::::::
lnd Scnooll;

4 Sale or rent Country &amp;
qUiet, 3 bedroom· lull base·
ment , hardwood floors
Cadmi.Js {740)379-2540
OhiO One famJiy home tor
80 years St11f like new 3
bedrooms , 1 1/2 baths, 2 ca r
gar.age, $50' 000 740 992-

r--~i!'l!'l~--

........... ·
~lftLI\..IaJII"''

"---iliiiiiliiiiii-_.J

------------:-··- ... -...

3br, 2 112 ba. Approx , 2acres. lg-2 -Car Garage &amp;
Barn, Country settmg askmg

Stylists needed at Fantastic
Sams new location 1n the
Wai-Mart F'laza S1gn on
bonus, Free. CEU hours,
paid vacation, full &amp; part
time help naeded . Come &amp;
W&lt;Jrlt. 1n our friendly family
atmosphere. Call (740)4467267 or stop ln.

doplal fielcl 729-5, Pomeroy, Otrio 45769

e_,;ence rn

(740)388·9263

Brand New Method
Dry In 1 Hour
ter l'i currently acceph~
applications for LPN 'S and
No Steam -or-Shampoo
Free-E sf1matas
RN 'S
7A·7P and 7P-7A.
Call lor maJor Non-Profit
... Clearly Clean •••
Shifts are available ll you
0 rgamzatlons or Help
(304)675-0022
p rotect your Gun A'tghts 1 are mterested, please come
1n and 1111 out an appbcat1on
Paid \lacatlons, paid
at
333 Page
Street. Will·do Babysl!ting 1n my
1Oyrs/ ellperemce
h ohdays and pa1'd tra tning
.
Middleport, or cal! and home .
speak
w1th
Holl1e L1nk. approved Loads of Fun
Bumgarner,
LPN , Staff (304)773-5137 ask lor Kelly
Can today to schel=lule an
Development. EOE
mtervtew.
·
I I"\\\( I \I
An's needed tor 100 Bed ~~-~---....,
t~n-463-&amp;247
Skilled Nursing Facility w1th !lD
BU"iiN.,~
ext. 2455
excellent opportun 1ty lor
. OWOKilJNrrl'
- - - - - - - -·· challengtng and rewardmg .........ioiiiiiitiiiiiiiioi_.l
~
expenence. great start rates
•1
F.or Safe ·
t'-leat. Clean
and excelrent regulatory Thnving Resta uranl near
A fast paced non·proli1
compliance
history boommg
Construchon
organ1zat1on IS seeking a
Interested
candidates Owners· lOOking to Ret 1re
self motivated person to
apply
to Call (304)882·2490
work approximately
32 should

ror

taa ~liS NEEDED
•••• mtlle craftS,

Clean1ng
&amp;
Powerw ashmg. Can 't Keep
Up Your "To Do' list too 81g ?
let Us HELP You! We"l l
Clean-A-Up &amp; Get-A-Done ·
We
do
All
A es1 den t•ai!Bu s1 n ass.
I n s 1 d. e I 0 u 1 s 1 d e .
Dally/Weekly/Monthly, 740985-3639 or 740-416-1823

RNJLPN'S ---Overbrook cen·

The 1deal candidate will
i'lave sale experience. For
confidential
interview,
piease send resume and
cover letter to Gallipolis
Looking for a pian1st for Dati)' Tr1bupe Ann: Jim
gospel ana church groups. Freeland, 825 Third Ave.,

Offic•
lhternat1on11 tton at location &amp; bring back
Company
' needs between
10·00am
&amp;
Supervisors &amp; Assistants 11-(Klam, Monda)' thru
·
One-on-One trBining. vaca· =Sa='"='::day=.
.----tions.
Need an oral surgery assiswww.Th 112 Dljll 1"4U..com tant b avery Saturd'*". in
1_, ... 4581
-,
Middleport,
OhiO.

2005 by NEA, Inc .

~~
1116 HELP WAI'ITID
HELP WAI'ITEI&gt;
·

Bartender needed, weekend
hours Apply at The Leg1on.
M
. on.Frt. (304}675 _3437 .

·=

~

www.comlc•.com

3·4 Bedroom House. 1 1/2'
Bath, Mayo Dr 1n New R1o Grande
HaYen Tota lly Remodeled 3-4 BA," 2 1/ 2 BA. LR DR
$63,500 (304)882·3 131
wood tloors , basement ,
3BA . 1BA Ranch style garage. carport. over 1800
lt. S 125.000. Call
house located 6 m1le s past sq
Holzer hosp•lal on AI 160 (740)245·941 3

DHK

•

Huge carport, driVeWay and
out into the yard sale, June
24-25, 9am-4pm, priced to
sell, antiques, collectables.
crafts, curta1ns, bedd1ng ,
large size clothes. teens
name brand. lots ol m1sc.,
somethmg for everyone, turn to work On Heavy equ1p·
ment. 5end resume to Dally
ofl7 onto 143 (2.1/4 m1)
Sentinel, P.O. Box 729·~.
Thursday and Friday. 6-23 &amp; Pomeroy, Oh 45769
24 Sofa, love seat, cha1r,
coffee table, end tables. plus Full-time babysitter needed
clottung
and
m1sc. Barton Chapel Road . Mason
Household goods. Comer of County No students apply
Broadway and Vine , Racine call 6pm-9pm 304·576-3353

..

Rental Propert1es for sale ,
Tra11 er and Garage Apt .
Ma son on 4th A&lt;Je House on
Mad1son Avs. Pt Pleasant
House Roush Ferrell Lane
Pt Pleasant Four Vacant
lots 1n Mason County
(304 )675-t9112
or

All Type s Masonry Bnck .
Block, Stone. Free Est1mal6, 3 Lg Bedrooms, 1 Bath,
(304) 773·9550
304-593- Den. 1 level · large Lot,
6421
$36.000 (304)682·2686

0

Big Yard Sale
23,24,25 Dental Hygiemst need'e d
Between Cheshire and Send Resume to PO Box 45
PI Pleasant or lax resume.
Middleport on Route 7

'--------'
Absolute Top Doliar: U.S
Silver and &lt;klld Cams,
Proolsets. Gok! Rings. U.S

' H&lt;'IMI:'
&gt;'OR SAil-:

3 Bedroom 1 Bath, Large (304)593·2096
FanGed Lot Lots of Storage.
4 'm•les out
Sandhill

To Do

0

Construction company look1ng for a full time secretary
to start 1mmedlately. Job \&amp;/Ill
.,
last throi.Jgh 2008 Send
B1g yard sale, June 23-24, resume lo Daily Sent1nel,
1/.4 m1le past Beacon Station PO Box 729-22, Pomeroy,
on 33. S-?
Oh 45769

"

IO

(304)675·2507

I

Garage Sale- Friday and
Saturday, June 24 &amp; 25,
8 00-4:00, at DeLong 's, 1
m11e ott SA 7 on SA' 143,
Pomeroy, clothes, household
items, collectable
Barb1es. and other m!sc .
items.

1962.

WAN"Ill&gt;

t)OtJ"'Ik ~ V'f.

YARDS,\l.Eo
l'oMERoYIMIDDI.I: .

eeo

WANTED:

lnsurenc».

11-\'P-t&gt; w A

Three tam1ly yard sale .
Something new &amp; old th1ngs
for everyone Thurs·Fri-Sat .
9·? 704 Second Ave.
-------Yard sale· Furniture, clOthes,
tools, toys Something lor
everyone Multi-family 8
miles out St At. 218 on the
nght Thurs -Sun 6/23-6/26

home.
a year old. Has ~'10!"""~-..,.---,
'~
YARD SALE..
not been neutered or
GALLIPOI.JS
dec Iawed Please can 7402 family sate Fn·Sat 24-25.
44&amp;4488
Corner
Flatwoods
&amp;
June 23-25, 3·5 families. Skinner, Pomeroy. Clothing,
Lost· 2 hereford canle, lost
Add1son Townhouse. 9am- Beanies, craft supplies-. col·
in Peach ForkJBaU Run area,
5pm.
tectibles.
call (740)992-6 1t5

r

fi;;fi~ ~

4867 St. At 850. Bidwell.
22th-25th, . 9·?. All s1ze
clotnes. baby, boys, gtrls.
ttJrnlture, toys Two trucks ,
1wo cars Lots more

4

Motorqcleo A 4 - ..........................740

1111C11Bnd ectaqo ... ~

I

1"o

2br m New Haven tor Sale or
Rent $27.000 to buy, $375 to
rent (304)882 -2890
""' - - - - - - - - 3 bedroom Ranch , 2 car
gar~ ge ,
m·ground pool
$90 000 Call (740)256·

DIRECTV
FREE Home
ente rt ainment
System
FREE Equipmen t and Install
up to four rooms. 145 channels $29 00 a month. A.sk
how to get FREE HBO,
MAX. and STAAS t-800523-7556 lor details

~

YotJ WAI'IT

Route 141 - Just past
the Jumbo on the lett.

Stsson Rd, Btdwell. JUS! off ~
554 Watchforstgns.
110

a

Hn\IES
FOR S,\l ,E

lwright@ic.net

REWARD. Lost between
Smokey Ad Boggs area.
Jack Russell and bird dog.
~amity pets (740)379·2205 Yard Sale SaturttaY' 2~ Lots
Jtmmy Duke.
of th1ngs for everyone 101

I

10

MISt.UI.A~IlliJS

0

Call after :_
05
:...2_3_._ _ _ _ __

0

POLICIES: Ohio Val..r Publlahing rea~ea the rtght to edit, ret-ct. or cancel any ad at any time, Error• muat be reported on the llrat day of
Trlbun•Sentln11II·Aeglater will be reaponalble tor no more than the coat ol the IIJMICe occupied by the error and onlr the llrst inaertlon. We
any loll or expenae thl1 reauha from the publlc:ation or omlaalon ol en edvertlaement. Correction will be made In the first available edition.
are alway• confidential. • Current rata card appllea. • All real estate advertlaementa are sublect to the Federal Fa1r Hou&amp;ing Act ol 1966.
EOE atandarda. We will not
I
I In violation of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

3rd Annual CVS Pharmacy
German Flea MarketNard Sale
Bnng your stuff {over 50
Calico Killen, Iiiier trained Shepherd wlt/'1 a red Collar,
sites available) Call 740·
(304)675·2793
lost at Bellemead (304)675·
446·7459. June 25th,Bam·?
4812 A Reward·

5·()().740-742 -1019

Thur•day for Sunday• Pa1&gt;e&lt;.

·' All ads must ba prepaid'

old, female s &amp; male , litteP
(304)444-1742
tra1ned . wormed different
colors, (740)742-2954
Lost:
White

this • survey at the
southwest corner of
Lot 345; thence along
the weot line of Lot
345 North 17 degraes
18 minutes 00 soc·
oncls Weal 129.591eet
to the point of !Mgln·
nlng,
containing
0.148 acres (all 0.097
acre of Lot 345 and
0.051 acre oUt of Lot
344). Sub[oct to ~II
legal
easements.
PPN: 15.00028.000
308 Page Street,
Mlddlaport Oh 45760.
Current
owner
Rodney ARouah et at
308 Page Straet,
Mlddlaport, 011 45760
ppl
15-00028.000
prior references: Volume 344
page 345 oppraloed
11 527,000.00 terms of
Sate: C111nol be oold
lor less titan 213 (two
, thirds)
of,
the
-~-value.

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00

Exxon. (304)675·t990 or I!-~~~~~~~

lt.lpWardlld

Aabert E. l11gl1,

lSD

4) South 76 degrees
20 minutes 02 sec·
on&lt;ls West 23.92 feel
to an Iron pin set by
this survey;
5) South 13 degrees
06 minutes 05 seconds East 58.13 feet
to an Iron pln set by
thlo survey on the
lOUth nne ot Lot 344:
thence along lite
lOUth line of Lol 344
and then the south
line crl Lot 34S North
88 degnn 46 min.-22aeconds29.55 feet ln all to a
ra1troac1 splu set by

In NeJCt Day'• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

• am Y 1
a8
Friday, June 24 and
Saturday, June 25
SAM- 5PM 3399 State

3 beautiful kittens, 8 weeks At 2 t·mile past Paul's

Rabbits for free

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

~:;:-;G::At~J:·~~·:~==~

,,

Now you con have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
fJ~
lr1'
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large ·

• Bualne•• Days Prior To

For Sunday5 Paper

YARn SAIE-

LOst: Small white dog with
'
brown patch over eye
2 Beautiful Female K1nens we 1ghs about 5 pounds.
Gwks old to good Home Mala, Answers to the nama
(304)882·32 18
Jun1or. Reward $Hl0 North

• ... 'l"'oooo ~ """l!!ll . , . _ . 11:.&gt;~ - - - ......... .._.., tc::. ~... ._._ -=&gt;._"»...,•--

by 84 degrees 33 min·
utes 38 seconds west
77.56 feet from an
Iron pin found at U..
northweot corner of
Lot 343; tltence tra·
versing through Lot
344 along e new par·
eel boundary lite following five courses;
1) South 15 degrees
18 minutes 12 secondo Eaat 25.38 feet
to an iron pln aet by
this survey.
2) South 69 degrees
47 minutes 29 sec·
oncls West 15.73 laet
to an iron pin set by
this survey;
3) Soultt 13 degrees
08 minutes 54 sec·
ondl Ell! 40.57 feet
to an Iron pin set by
lhla survey;

Dally In-ColUmn: 1 :00 p . m.

Deacrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbre'lllatlons

\\\IH \(I \ I I \ 1..,

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

~

Monday-Friday for Insertion

t Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Items

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oeacltiru

• Stlrt Your Ada W'ith A Keyword • Inclucfe Complete

'l"'oooo c:..a:&amp;c:!'--

c.o.-c=.~

_ , on
dey crl - ·
·o r check, Mlanca diM
on conllnnMion of

--~­
lor
- of 2/;l(two
!him)
the

Attorney Jfoo: The
Addition to
l'ilelnllf(, Jolin D.
now Middleport, lftd Clunk, Altolney, 5101
!Mgln the oeme prop- · HucMon Drive lulta
,erty du &lt;1M to John 400, Hudaon, Olllo
E. Lyono by Melga 44238 (330)342-1203.
Court. t6ncf riCOrdld (I) 22, 2t, (7) I
In Volume N, pega
115 ..... 111, .....
County " -·Record.

thllon'o
.
. tol

...co;..,..,.~,..

(SubelllutMJ
Needed to work with people with ·mentaJ
retanlalion in Meigs County. Hours:
Evenings, weekends, and overnigt•ts as
nee :led Of as scheduled. MIMI have hq1
sdlool dlplorriWGED. vWid ~~
lic:enH, lhnle years good driviug exper'.-

MelgoCowlly...,,
No.14
tn
·-

*~

~

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

CLASSIFIED INDEX

"'..:;. ... _

Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

...
-=---.-=
c:::.--•

M&lt;'l&amp;' Co unty, OH

We Cove·..L.--.

'

s

~. -- -· --~-------------------:--------_:_---,.------~

�:

'
\'IWW.mydailysentinel.com

'

..

Wednesday, June '!2, 2005

•
•

Wednesday, June 22, 2005
~LLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

GreB.t 2000 Fteetwoo~ 2
bedroom witn full del1very.
· set-up and central a1r cau
Russ. (740}385-2434

Incredible deal. w1th Ford
Gracmus livmg 1 and 2 bedJET
room ·apartments al Vrllage
80do. 105hp. like-new.
AERATION MOTORS
Manor
ano
Rrvers1de Repaired. New &amp; AebuJII In Totally remodeled mechiinlApa rtments 1n Middleport Stock Call Ron Evans, 1; cal and str ucturally. New
rear !Ires Back log and hay
From 5295-$444 Call 140- 800-537-9528.
SAVE -SAVE·S AVE
hook added. $10.000 Great ,
-992-5064
Equal
Housmg
::::-:--~:::---:-==---:~;;­
Stock models at old pnces
Deal (304)773-5333
New AND USED STEEL
2005 models arnvmg Now. OpporiunliJeS
Cote's
Mobile
Homes . Pleasant Valley Apartment Steel Beams. P1pe Rebar John Deere 10ft. No Tit Drill
15266 US 50 East. Athens . Are now takmg ApplicatJons Fr;&gt;r
Concrete ,
Angle. for
Rent
Carmichael
OhiO 4570~ . (740)592·t972 lor 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BA , Channel. Flat Bar. Steel Eqwpment (740)446-2412.
"Where You
Get Your Appt 1catJons
are
ta ken Grating
For
Dra1ns. "John Deere Commercral
Money ·s WorthMonday thru Fnday. from Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Workslte Products In Stock!!
9:00 A M.·4 P.M. Off•ce IS Scrap Metals Open Monday, Compact Excavator 27 c,
lms&amp;
Quality Guarnnteed
Located at 1 15 1 Evergreen Tu.esday, Wednesday ., ~ 350 . SOD/Skid Steers 371 .
AUH-~-\GI:
Drive Po1n! Pleasant. WV Fnday. 8am-4· 3Qpm Closed 320
8/Tractor
ATV Paris &amp; ACC.
3 5
32
Mobile Homes •
Roofs
Phon.e No 1s (304)675, Thursday. · Saturday
&amp;
'
'
Jam&lt;s A Will J~.
l ooking for . Pnvate Large 5806. E.H.O.
SUnday. (740)4 46-7300
~::r ~8~~~~:nt~:~!~~~ -,
Flat
or
Low
Sloped
Roof
•
Carports
O"'ner
lot. 200x300 for my ~ot&gt;ile .
•
Home . 14165 , all Electno. Tara
TownllolJse Oflict;l desKs. kids adjlJslable Great F1nancing AvailableJlll9 Welshtmm Kd.
Equipment .
11yrs old good shape. or I Apartments. Very Spacious desks. filing cabrnets , tables. ca·rmichael
2 Bedrooms , CIA. l 112 all sizes o_f cha~rs . (740)245· (740)446·2412.
Pomemy, Ohio
acre country settmg. place
45769
for pets mGallia Co , OH or Bath.· Adult Pool &amp; Baby :50_7_8_::----:-:~::-= New 5003. 5005. &amp; 5020
(740) 992-2432
Mason Co.. w/a:ll hqokups. Pool . Patio. Starl SJ 8 5!Mo, Pole Barn 30K50x10FT Seri6s John Deere Utility .
Em1oil:jwiii4S769 '
··
Pomeroy, Ohio
wilt pay S1501tnonth Reply No · Pets. . L~ase PllJS 's6795. includes Painted Tractors @ oo,o lixedl 36
to PO Bo~ 611 . R1pley. WV Secunty Depo~tt ReqUJ red . M'e tal.
Free
Delivery months. Used Utility .Tractors
@yahoo.L·om •
25271
t740 l446-3481 ·
www.nationwldepolebarns.c 0
4 . 9~
Variable/ 60
SPACE
om (937)559-8385
mdnths
Carmichael
River lots for rent , beaut1ful
4x4
Equipment. (74Q)446-2412
· I-DR REJ\'T
Pool equip: ladders, pump,
beach . conven1ent localtOn." ___
FoR SALE
chlorina tor. lUter. covers, New John Deere Round
call (740)992·5782
Downtown OH1ce Space- 5 Kreepy Kf11 ulnr (In -ground). Balers@ 1.9% Fixed Rate
199 aAan~
&gt;:r-"r 4x 4 , Sspd , 3L ,
RMLESTME
room suite $650/mo; 1 roOm Call (740)446-3667.
Fihar1cing for 48 Months or AM/FM cassette, A!C, off
WAN'IH&gt;
oH1ce· $225/rr:to.: 2 room lf"l~"l!:~~~:":::~"l New Model 457 Staf1dard
road package. new paint.
suite $250/mo SecuritY
SPA fAliOR'i' OtiTLET
Round Baler Only $13.250 $ 5 , 500 060 . Call·· aft er
Top Quality, Warranty:
I Buy Homes- Local .person deposit requi red . Yo U pay
cash . Makes 4X5 Bale. · 4 :JO.pm 17401256•62 57 _
Wholesale. l=irJancing.
Carmichael
buys homes Contidential. utJt'!lies. All spaces very nice.
EQuipment.
·
Deliveries.
Quick '·cash. Jim;' 740-992- Elevator.. C, all {740}446-3644
[740)446-24 12
2001 Ford Expl orer 4x4.
21ocat1ohs
6300. No calls att ar 9.
for appqintment
"
M11ton Flea Market
Special Purchase· John Loaded . recently detailed,
~49-4011
IU\1\I S
Deere 702 a &amp; 10 Wheel 59,000 miles. new t~re s.
For Lease. OHice or ret.ail
&amp; Ashland Kentuck y
$12,000
(740)256·6536
spaces 1n ver'y good condi · 1!.,,...,.16"0"~&gt;;9:;;2;,2-,;,7,;;185;;...,.11 Ra~e s/ Johf1 De ere . Disk
Mowers . Call for price. leo?ve message.
tJOn Downtown Gallipolis. ~
Two brand new lO\Ie Seats,
HOUSES
ApproM . 1600 sq. h. each. 1
Carmichael
Equ1pment. 2003
Jeep
Uber ty
fOK R E"iT '
or 2 ·balhs. Lease pnce Dark Ta n in color S350 tor (740)446-2412.
Renegade . 'loaded. 4x4.
both call (304)675-6722
negotiable to encpurage
$ 13,900 Call (740)256bu siness.'
Call
2 Houses: (1) 4 bedroom. new
:-""~B~U~l~ID~ING~.~-, .
1618 or 1740 l25S·6200
(1) 3 bedroom. $900 &amp; SSOO (740)446 -4425 or (740)446Sui'I"LIIo~
89 S-10 BlaZer. 4wd . 4 .3
plus
depos1t
(7 40)256· 3936.
AOHA mare , impressive mot01 . extra mot or, good
8152 .
For Rent
32 'x 44 ' BlocK Block. brick. sewer pipes. bred. 8yrs old, very well tires. needs . work $2500.
Removal
Garage
w ith
12'x44 '
Attention!
windows , lintels. etc. Claude broke . .great for kids. $1,000, after 6pm (740 }843-1233
block
and
Local company offering "NO attached
VAN.'i
Winters. Rio Grande. OH (740)256·6824.
·
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- apartment/office. large lot
FOR SAI .E
&amp; J'•fte~J l '
• ,,
··• ~rams f0i you to buy your in Letart. wv $400 per ~cialrl7:,:4:;;0-:;:2;:4~5~-5~12~1~---., Ask about .our · AQHA
Mem~r Discounts on new ·--iloiiiiliiiiiiiil-r
month (304)675-75 t 6
I'E:SI'S
,.
·. Mrfle. instead of renting.
Johf1: Dee're Equipment 2000 Ford . Windstar mm1
HJR AI.E
'tOO% final"lcing
Mobile home space for rent __
Pomero' • 011
Carm ichael
Equipment van, 4 dr .. auto, air, TV, DVD,
h perience
• .less than Perfect credit Close to Green School
(740)446-2412
.
accepted
CD,
126K,
'
nice
$3900:
96
4
Sale
Small
Beagle
Hound
on
~tate
kt.
12~
$ 140/mo. (740)446·4053.
' Payment could be the
Ford Windstar, 3 dr. auto. air,
puppies M &amp; F. more info'.
I \II\ · ' ( ' \lllll \ II II II '
Tra iler lot . 2 .5 miles out 7AM-- 7PM 740-742-0528
same as rent.
160L. S1700 : 90 Dodge
John Deere Riding Mowers Dakota. 2 WD. V·6. auto.
Insured
Call
Mortgage
Locators. Netghborhood Ad
starting at $1 .399. Financing nice, $1700, (740)742-2662
Fn-e F.stimules
[7401992-7321
(7401446- 1685.
=~~---::-----::-----:-~98% Wolfe/S. HusKy pups. avatlable subJeCt to John
Small 2 OedfOOm house
WANIID
$75.00. Female. red/white Deere Credit appro\lal Your
Ta~e
wllarge yard, 681 West 4
·ro RJ.Nr
mask. WoiiiHusky. $50.00. payments could be as low
Female while Wolf/S.Husky. as $39 month with $0 down.
miles from Tuppers PI'.Jns,
Carmichael
Equipment
$290 permo (7401985- Looking !of' house to rent 74D-742-1121 or 742·~019
r Homes
3504
me
(740)446·2412.
,. Septic Systems
~:-=--~~~-, locally. Mason or meigs co. 'AKC Ctlihuahuas $3SO . tst
r Roofing
304
773
5600
· MOBILE HOI\lES
call ..
" •
shots &amp; 1st wc;&gt;rming. Call Riding MOwer 30" cut, rear Full-sized luxury van. seats
~ Bacio:hoe
· · FOR RF.Nr
. (740)446-4446.
Engine. $499. call for details 7, mechamc Owned, ·beauti;. Site
·
~o.--Oiiii.iiiiiii;,;,-pl ~mr.,;."!":'.,;..,;.___...,
(304)675·1731
lui, 1993, 77,000 miles.
·~ Preparation
10
HOUSEHOLD
Basset Hound puppies full
$ 6 .999 ('7 40 )446 _9961
·: Dozer
2 bed room. on 1/ 2 acre
Goons
blooded, 9 weeks old. 5 Rid ing
mower
1997
~ G8ra·ges
Nichols Ad. $300 deposit.
females. 1 male. (740)446- Husqvarna/GTH 220 50" 4l MOTURCYCLE.sl
r Util1ties
5350 rent, (740)992·9052
0974.'
cut bacl transmissiop. Best ~-4·W·I!Et- i0u:RS1iii
- iii-0.-,..J
.;. Pole Barns
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
offer. (740)367-0314. ·
Beautifu l r~ver' VIew 1n Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio Please adopt onQ of these
l'onn·ruy, Ohiu
Kanauga . ldeal f6r 1-2 peo- (740)446·7444 1-877-830- dogs lrom the Meigs Co Zero Turn Z-Trak Mowers 02 400 ex Biggun pipe,
740-!Wi-7YS.~
_pie.
No pets.
please. 9162. Fiee Estimates. Easy Dog Pound, call (740)992- !rom John Deere available at HoleShot tires , great shape,
74U·416:ZMZ3
fixed
rate
fro $2,500. (740)388·9701.
Applications l;&gt;eing taken. financing. 90 days same as 3779. 1 Rot·Dotierman mix '4 .9%
740·5YI·4h41
Harley Road King
Call (74~)441-0181 .
cash . v1saJ Master Card . puppy; 1 Aust. Shepard mix Carmichael Equ1pment with
1999
Very small 2 BA in Bidwell. Drive- a- lin\e sav~ alot.
puppy; one 2 yr. old Golden John Deere Credit apprOval. 9 ,000 miles, tour pac touring
Myers Tree
Water. trash, sewer paid, no
Ret , m~le ; several Labrador ( 7 4 0 ) 4 4 6 - 2 4 1 2
h
h
d
Thompsons Appliance &amp; Ret m1
·xes
seat, 4 e1mats. eavy uty
Service
325/Rent
wwwcareq
com
pels $325/D,p $
·
·
· Aepair-675·7388. For sale.
..
·
cover. $13,000. (740)446 •lno.:urt•d·lo"rtt'
(740&gt;388.9325·
re-conditioned
automatic Pure bred Siberian Husio:y
4525 after Spm:
E&gt;timuh-AIUPARI1'RENTIENTS
R
- ~ washers &amp; dryers. refrigera- Puppy, Female, Sable arid F,m;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;--...;., - - - - - - ' - - - Phone
• Senio[' t'ili·tctt
tors. gas and electric white. mask, loves people, · F_ 10
AlTI'Oi
2002 Yamaha 660 Raptor
discuunl
can be in'Sicle or out,
I:V'Io.R S.u 1:'
yellow/black
w1matching
(740) 992-5232
7-l0-992-2621
ranges, air cbndi1ioners. and
·--i.'iiiiiiviOiii~iiii;.,.,J KBC helmet.
Excellent
.Ill
~
~~l'o
l:\f'\"rl~ll\'c'
'I and 2 bedroom apart - wringer washers. Will do wormed. 12 weeks old. very . ,
Condition S3.700 (304)6755xl0,
·repairs on major brands"' in nice!!! $160.00 each. call 04 Lincoln LS. loaded, •
ments, furnished and unlur·
740 441 4 62
740 992
' 015
10x15, 10x20,
l"llshed . security deposit _s_h_op_or_a_l_yo_u_r_h-,om_e___ _
·
• 4
or
- - 24.000 miles. $23.700. Call ----,;-----~5885
.(740}446·3487.
2004- Honda Foreman 450,
lllx30
Manual shift. Excellent
re'quired , no pets, 740-9g2. Used Furniture Store, 130 ::---:---------:-----:-:-All Your Home
2218
Buiav111e Pike. Washers. dry- Schnauzer puppies (minia- 1948
Che\lrolet
Five Condition.
New tires.
Janet Jeffers
t s a g
ture) , AKC , 4 colors, \let p
f·
Improve me nt Need~
assenger Coupe,
WV $4,200 080 (304)882-2662
1 bedroom Cottage in tOWf'! , ers , re ngera or , r n es.
33795
Hiland Road
• Siding • Windows
manresses. dresser, couch- checked.
$400
each : Sticker, New Tires , Good
1"10 pets. deposit &amp; ret
• Deek.•• • Porche~
es. dinettes, recliners, gra\le Pomeranian puppies; AKC, Paint "Sharp•
(304)576- 2005 Harley Davidson Fat
Pomeroy, Ohio
required . (740)446-2468.
• Ceramic Tilc &amp;
monuments, much more 2 female , light brown, $400 2288
Boy, 560 miles, Windshield,
Hardwood Floorint:;
: ('7-'-40:_:1::696-:_:_1:_:08::_:5_· _ _
Backrest, Ft P.ouch, $16,000
1br Apartment for rent , (7 40)446-4782 , Gallipolis, :•:::ac:ch:._
• Garuges
Downstairs in 700-Biock. OH Hrs. 11-3 (M-S) .
Seven week female AKC ~~~~or~:~~out~o 4_drAu~~~ (304)773-50B1 or (304)773- • Room Add. • Rooting
Viand
St. References
• Kitchens • Baths
Black Labs. Shots , and Engine runs, Body Original. 5759
required available June 1
ANnQU~
wormed. $200.00. Parents
custom , 6
"No JobToSmafl"
no
Dent~.
3t
,000/mlles
Bl
Harley
1340
(304)675·3654,
between
Racine. Ol;f
on Premises. 74D-992·3357 (304)576 _25 32 ,
gal. tanks, $8500. F1rm. ~&lt;loll
itam-7pm. ·
740-247·2162 or
or 740-416·2050
after 6 (740)843-1233
Buy or sell
RiVerine ::---:----::----'--'--'---- 1985 Pontiac Trans-Am.
740·4t6·3508 '
2 bedroom newly renovated
97 Beectt Street
Antiques , 1124 East Ma1n Toy Poodle female cream Sspcl, 305 H.O. , ,o_nly 55,000 94 Harley Davidson Ultra
14
yl-s. Experience
Apts for rent. DoWntown On SR 124
1 mo
E· Pomeroy' 740- C o~r.. 7 waaks ol&lt;(, $300 miles. viper blue, t-tops, Classic. 10,000 miles, blue,
Middleport. OH
GallipOlis. River &amp; Park view
$560/ mo. Some . utilities 992-2 526. Russ Moore , (740)367·7095 or (740)710· e:ccellent shape (740)446- excellentcondit 1on. $13.500.
54710.
0350.
(740)949·2217
owner:
paid. Now accepting applications. Call (740)709·1690 Wa, led lo buy antique, used
MUSICAL
1992 Ford Tampo GL. 4
Jlo,I:IS &amp; MmORS
(local call)
furniture
&amp;
estates, ~~-,.;i]iiiNSil,j,I'RillJMFNfSII
'Iiiiiiil-,.1 door, auto, very good condi· ·--i.HlliiiRiiSiiiAIIiii.Fi:o--"
'
iion. 51,500. (740)992-1777 3 rooms .&amp; oath. all utilities (7 40)245·5078.
"Middleport's only
paid,
Downstairs , 9t9
1984 Baytiner, cuddy cabin
All types of roofing:
Second Ave., suitable for 1.
Self-Storage"
Valvo/Penta with trailer
~Shingle , Flat , Metal $295/mo. [740)446 -3945.
Good condition , '' $3,500
·
New or Repair
[740)367-0314
BEAUTIFUL
APART-

Will'sATV
Parts

r

'1lle Wlllll'a

2

0

Home Creek

795l • 740·41

'

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION
Owner: Brian Durham
-.
Phone: (740)

40 Large green

North

12 Anlmalo

anort

one

43 Supermen's

41800SR#7
Tuppers Plains, OH
~~~ . 45783

West
"KQJ 6
'.

+

· Home • Auto • Life • Retirement_
• IRA • 401 K Rolfovers • Major Med • ,
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

••

1-0 5
K 5

.Q 986J
• QJ 2

and

Dealer: Wesl

Vulnerable : Both

JONES' .

South

2.

Tree Service

l&gt;lo

2NT

Top • Removal -· Trim

West

Pass
P.uss

Nor~h

t+

2• ~

3 NT

shout
46 Codqers•
quer•es

~responder

" 9 8

... A 8 6

-Bullock
16 Mariachi

48 Veldt
grazers
51 Kllchen

spice

18 Vane dlr,
19 Wedding
rantll •
21 Ia down
with'
23 - .fl flick
26 Feminine
principle

South

740-667-.0700 1-888-HUPP2l4

44 Melodrama

wear
17 911

... East
• 53 2
• KJ4 .2
• 7 4
• Q J 3 2

... KL 09 75

emblem

14 Dill

15 Aclrtloa

C&amp;-22·05

A A 10 7 4
• A 1 •
• A 1.0 9 8 6 3

and Financial Services

.Puule ·

41 Just a -1
42 Dlrlolva

1 Speedy
6 Ftulble
horn

Rocky Hupp Insurance

An1wer 10 Prevtou•

' parrot

w~h

r

i

NEA
Crossword Puzzle.
'

BRIDGE

passengers

In Oljon

13 Pranca

19 Diadems
20 False

27 River

OOWN

22

28 Collector's

8&amp;0 and

24 Seals a tub 48 Zig's

item

in fashion

3 Jewelry
llem
Cuslomary
4 Kind of lund
Used poor
S Sludent
judgment
quarters
Place for _, 6 Nosegay
holders
experiments
Nol sm.
7 Fateful day
or med.
B Collars
'
Spa facility
9 Anaconda

27 Modern an 50

31 Tar's reply

Pass
All pass

32
33

Openmg lead: ¥ 10

35

• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

37
38

Aviator
- Earharl

25 Pictures
oppoelte
26 Ftrsl name 49 Bracket

Amtrak
2 I knew ~!

30 Big
container

Easl

42 De.P.,tlc
43 FirstIn ......-a
45 Inventor
-Geiger
47 . ~arm
greetlnga

11 Dog days

56 TradHional
(hyph.)
· 57 Sleek
58 Looks like

·lmpoundor

,.

'

55 UFO

~:lege
maj.

form

52 Stooge wHh

28 Pinch
hitters
29 Earnest

bangs

53 House
shader

request

54 Mdse.

34 Concert
extenders
36 Goddess ·

of wladom

39 The thing's 10 Teacup rim

Specializing in custom -homes
and additions.

r

LiVfsrocK

ROGER HYSEll
GHRHGE

Atito &amp; Truck

Repair

I

j

3 miles west of

992-5682

rro

-

LCWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete
Replacement

All ..... ' .ot ,

Conl:l"t'te Work
: 3\ ' m
David Lewis
740-992-6971

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

let

do 1t for youl

liNDA'S PIINDIG

r.

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Janes

-

lllaw Dealer tor Montana Tnctors
starting ut 27 h'orse · 57 horse
with shuttle transmission
4-wd. remote hydraulics 3 year warranly
• ••• Also 8\'ailable****
• Task MaSter Tractors 26 horse - 3M hOrse,
4wd (I vear warrantv)
• Farm Pro TraCtor.. 20 hur.se.- 30 horse ,
loaders. linish mowers, tillerS
Mill' ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Thrn
Radius Mower) .10 inch culling widlh lo 50
inch culling width' 3 year warranty
T&amp;D TRACfQR SALES' &amp; EQUIPMENT
righl in lhe hl"lll1 of Cli&lt;Sicr
9854J8.I

Community

Cl'lltl'r

260Mulbfrry Mt•. ·
Pomero~·

Same Cnar W~~o· /'rices
and Smili11g
f"rif!nd(v Jo'acrs.
OPEN
1\fon-•"ri.
9am to 3pm
PH' 'I'Jl-4183

•

I! I ONL
NEED HALF
ACUP!! '

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ut 108

W. Main l1om ero)'
IS No"W 0I'EN AT
The Mulberry

BARNEY

YOUNG'S

The Parish Shop
Former!~·

,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

• Room Additions &amp;

by Luis Campos

Remodeling
• New Garages
.
• E'-ctrical &amp;.Plumbing
• Roofing I Gutte~
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Dec~•

THE BORN LOSER

.~""t \-\P\1::&gt; TWO ~OLD-INrOf"'(. "'I

We do it all except

furnace work

'IC:i\ E.RC&gt;Ii.'i !

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

W'J UJii715

eomeroy, Ohio
25 Years local E)l rience

1""0\-\, t C:&gt;E.T IT -'IOU WERt:
PU&gt;..'I\1'\G, 1&gt;\\Nit-T\.IK( GOLF,
RIG.\-\I?

j

" FXB

I'"[ PR.(fE:K TO Tf\\NK OF IT (&gt;..&lt;, ~

I

t&gt;I!&gt;Tf&gt;..N.C.t.-C.\-\~LL(t'«l::&gt;

GOLF'

.'
·~ R~kY'~'Ri'

IOxlO,

r

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

r

HOWARD£.
WRITfSfl S SONS
ROOFING

r~~~~~

MENTS

AT
BUDGET
AT JACKSON

2000 Bayliner 21 ft. ClJddy w/
Hailer, many e)(tras, very
clean 304-675-5563

PRlCES
ESTATES', 52 WestwOod
Drive from $344 to $442
· Walk to shop &amp;movieS:. Call
740-446-2568.
Eq~al
t1ousing Oppcrtunitv.

Yamaha

Down spout - Siding
I •Free ElllmltiS*
.

949-1405

22ft. sweetwater
boat
40hp.
Jotmson motor, power·trim,
1998 Buick LeSabre, 46,000 Hoosier tra iler w/ladder.
actual miles. One owner. spare ti re/bracket , AM/FM
excellent condition. Phone stereo/CO, many extras.
(740}446{)941
Asking $11}.995. (740)446.'
Ponto~n

250

I \I..:\ I " ll'l' IIJ "
,, 11 \1" 111( 1'\

1998 Dodge NeOn loaded, 4 2016 or (740)339-0324.

I)&amp;J

Furnished up~tairs . 3 r()()((ls
&amp; bath. Clean, ref . &amp; dep
required. No pets. (740)446Don House's for sale with or
1519.
without Furniture. '(304)882Twin Rivers Tower rs ,accept2436
ing applications for waiting
list for HlJd-SUtJStzed, 1: Or, Home Exercise Machine,
apartmeht. call 67.5·6679 must sell 5200 OBO call for
EHO
d6script1on {304)88~-38.72

0% Fixed Rate up to 36
months on New John Deere
CompactTractors &amp; 110 TLB
at Carmichael Equipment.
(740)446-2412 •

2000 Ford Taurus, 70,000
miles, $7,600, (740)74 2-

3405

&amp;

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

I

Morok IIOMI'N . • Prompt &amp; quality
work
"--iiiiiililii-iiiiiiiiiii,..J
•
Affordable
Rates
1999·-Trail Lite Bantam
•
References
Flyer. Excellent condi1ion .
Available _
Loaded. Must se:e. 740949-2709. $8600.00
• Free Estimates

2001 Mercury Sable LS 4BK
miles, loaded, leather, excel- - - - - - - - ' - - 3,Point hitch post hole dig· lent
condition.
asking 34'· ~03· Jayco Eagle 1· 12'
gEn. like new. . 9~ auger $6,500. Call (740)446-,n6 . · slide out. Lo,ts of extras. Like
$375. 74D-416-1497
77 Monte Carlo 305-2bbf new cqndition . (740)339 0_2_18_ · - - - - - - - - ' - Dual exhaust, new tireS, _
$650. Call rOr into (304)675- Coleman Camping Trailer
5979.
12FT, 2 King Beds, $4,995
Plymouth
Acx:laim,
Auto,
call
tor Details (304)675 92
173 1
.C, s1ooo oao [304)675- _ ---:----:,--------:-::--::"
6628
Truck Camper. AC . TV
Antenna, wtred for Cable.
TkULl!S
IH&lt;s now $6.500 [304)675-

·ADVERTISE YOUR·

t'

ONTHISPAGE FOR

1£J83 Ford F250 400 Big
Block Dana 60s. front &amp; rear
36" Super swampers, runs
good, SOlid bOdy, ,$4 ,500

'

ASLOWAS

OBO or will trade for gOOd 4

;

$26.00 PERMONTH!

wheeler. (740)256-1768.
I

'

The.Daily Sentinel

992-2155

IURSAu:

.!,;

1987
Dodge
Dakota.
111 ,000 miles, runs great,
gOOd gas m1leage. Sl .OOO
oao. 1~1256-9031 .

17401992-2335

r

4x4

FOR SAL!:

95 Dodge truCk. 4x4. automatic.
$3,{)00.
Call
1740)388-Q0 1 1

\
•

·Complete_
Remodeling

141-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

YOU HIT A
FEW PUTTS 0N THE

-fAAcllCE GREEN

Pal'tS

•

iiiieawr
tott'xW

-

i].. ,

Hours

WATERPROOFING

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

(740)992-2979

111411 mo. pd

leave messa e

free estimates

High cost of fertilizer got you
17· 17-17,.
$265 ton (While Suppy Last)

• Mushroom c;ompost
Available
$35 · .I ,000 lbs Approx. weighl
• 18 spreader buggies ava ilable for use .
• Airway pasture renovators and seeders
a\lailable to rent.
• licensed agronomist on staff tYwailable for
cons.ulting.

BALL PARKACROSS
THE
I"''G LOT ?

-

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You might
lind yourself in a quandary today BS to
whether or not to tell a friend some·
thing that was told to yOu in confl.. d~nce that you know could help him',

'

110W WAS '.O.JR DATE.

992·3251 OR 591-8757

" Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard IVork!"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
wi!h 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

SHAOE RIVER AG SERVICE

BAUM LUMBER

35537 Sl. Rt. 7 North
Pom•roy, Ohio
740-985:3831

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-330 l

10

form lour

~mplo

RA l G N
I'

Today

II I

~

r-------...,,.
0 E. T I P

WITH

.

'

1went to school with e iet;
lOW W~Q ·is Very famous,
~F
"
f· dI
h d
ame, my nen aug 8 ,

~

&gt;

.N

N

L-.1--L--1..--IL-..J },.,
-

r---:--::-::-:--::-:-:---, ·proves ' that people are

I II BI R' rl IE MI

, ... · ...... : ...

' -0

'

could be one of the worst times for?
Complete the chuckle quoltd
you to take a financial risk on a van.
by fil lrng in the milling WDrck
ture about which you know li tUe .
you d~~lop lrorn step No. 3 below.
Things are siJch that even a well·
researched situation may be a big
gamble.
PIINT NUI.'IIEIED
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - It may
LETT~RS IN SQUARES
take an enormous amount of fortitude
and sttck-lo-itiveness today In order to
gratify an ambitious endeavor. It
you're aiming tor something big, be
prepared to gi\le mote lhan usual.
SCI•M
LETS ANSWIII$&amp;~21-D
5
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ..or
-·
'
Uncharacleristically. you're . not apt to
yield any ground today to those who
Behold - Midst- Vital- Thrill - HAVE !he BILLS .
, may disagree with you. even ttlough
'Mail dsliveJY
that slow." my
you know full wall that It takes flexibility to ge~ along With othe.rs.
'We've been back one day and we already HAVE lhe
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0er.. 21)BILLS!'
The need for instant gratification
today may be stronger than usual and
if you're not careful could causa you
to spend funds earmarked for obliga·
tlons. It's likely to cause a hardship
later.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - All
problems have alternatives and this
will be true of those that confront you
today, so take heart. No matter how
bad things look, focus on tha positive
and everything will work out.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)-To be
productive -today. your wor~ must be
sensibly scheduled In order ~o absorb
all the little quirKy annoyanceS that
1\
could disrupt you . Keep your head or
you 'll buckle under the pressure.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - 'It wilt
put 111 damper on your day l.oday if you
have to worry about whal you spend
in o rder to have some fun . Rather
than be uneasy, select activities that
aran't too e.xpsnslve.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19) For
your own peae&amp; of mind today, don ' t
allow others to make ·unreasonable
demands on you that cou ld draw you
into a frustrating circumsrince ~u·
can't solve. Keep your nose cte111n
TAURUS (April 2(}-May· 20) - It you
need help today in sorting ou1 a prob·
lam or situation. seek out a realist.
Anyone who is' too negative will pull
yOu down; one who i.&amp; unrealistically
optimistic will give you false nope.
GEMINI '( May 21-June 20} MaKe
certain that who you get involved with
today has the tunds·to pay his or h•r
own way or you could be placed In the
positiOn of having 10 tend tttla lndlvld·
uat money you can 't artord to part

8

I'

~~~~~~M8LEFOR

111

ARLO &amp; JANIS

·With .

R\l'l\1 l.l'\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

low

lhti
be·
_d,_

isn't

11-ll'f 615 ~ ({)N'f'fii\H
fXE&lt;UTTll&amp;-, Fl&lt;J\IV '?
I
GREAT.

::;

By Bemlc• Bede Oaol

~~~~p~An~~~~t~~~p!~u;!) _

SUNSHINE CLUB

WKRNBCF

1•«•4 ~y ti.AY 1t. POIIA~ - - - - - . , -

could be a bit testy """ ccotchety.

BDCmE Imitation

Now Available At

&lt;!bur 'lllrthdll,v :

FORE •.

IH1111IIon
Melga Co. R•ld•tsll!
SEPTIC TANK PI/MP/NG $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl .·
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY

KU

loHor1 of
0 Rocrrongo
l011r .Crumbled word•

ahead to do your utmosi to expand
· your range of social involvements.
The more people you know, the more
conta"ts you'll make who may be able
to open up berieticial channels for
you .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - It's
alwUys smart to be tactful. diplomcH_ic
and· reasonable when dealing with
othe~&amp; . but today It won 't only be nice.
but a f"!BCessity. People in .general

Sun. Closed

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $S2 PER MONTH

WKHBEX

BTB

,~~:~;~' S@"R(llA-Ln~.. ~s·

.

It will be ot benefit to you In the year

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

ADVERTISE

AstroGraph

OOPSY. ,

612V05

GARFIELD

Siding, add-on.s,
remodeling elc.,

FLOWlN&amp;?

rERHA.PS
B'l' CHASlNG YOU~

PEANUTS

See BreD"t or Brian Whaley

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

I'

HOW ELSE ·oo
YOU EXPECT TO
GET THE JVICES

'

St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Retlfockir~ f.a te Model Sa l'lf9"
and Arter .\furkef Ports

Hill 's Self
Storage

Call B.D. Cons!.
for all your home
repair needs. roofing,

HKRI. "

F XB

Thuf'Sday, June 23, 2005

.

Whaley's Auto

.

45771
740.!)49-2217

Fl RST'

~

EJ)Nt\

BASEM-ENT

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

YAHOOS!

• Leave a message

'I IH It I ..,

Unconditional lifetil'ne guarantee. local references turnished: Established 1975.
Call · 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
1991 Ford Ranger, body fair, 087:0 , Rogers Basem.errt
runs fa ir, $800 (304)675- Waterproofing .
8714

, 2000 Dodge dakota Sport,
3.91. V-&amp;, Ssp, !'C. CO, bed-.
. liner, new hres, $5900 080.

• New Homes
• Garages

IMPORTS

Ll KE A. CD..JPI.!..E OF

"Insured"

335:3

IMPR~Om&lt;rs

BISSEll
CONSTRUenOI

YOU DON'T. JUST RUN
TO THE FIRST TEE

Call Gary Stanley
740'742-2293

=

BUSINESS

'

CMIPFJ!S

door, nice olean car. $1 ,800.
(740)379-2853.
•

ROBERT

St:amlcss Gutter -

2003

1995

10x10x10x20
992.-l194
or 992-66l5

G

BIG NATE

' H~pp "'"

'I'D
ConstrucUan

AH

Though lo itself

~

~

0 AJ ZI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The summer 's llowe1 is to lhe summer sweet, I
it only live and d1e." - William Shakespeare

0

t,li

JBOKRCH

'' AOZMAVZFAKV
FXB

Storage

A VUBJ

A F H B I U•. "

High and Dry

r

,

Celebrity Cl~r Crypt DQrams areaeat&amp;O from.QUO!a\10!\S 17)· !am~AJs people , paS I and Pfestf1l
Each lener in 11\e cipher s!ari(!S !::f anotl'ler
.TodJy'tcfue.· H eq1Jt11S S

.

SOUPTONUTZ
&gt;

..aocw. ...

._Dool

•
.• HEOHIOtNG,
,&lt;li.L RliHT-- UI&lt;E"·
IIISII:f;

lioiPl', MQ'IBE?'

rr1·1·rrr1
'1 r ' ' '
husband sighed

�.

•
•
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

.,

'Pistons

the second straight game, and going to the basket as he had
Hamilton was not affected by been in Games I and 2, while
the tight defense of Bruce Duncan was having difficulty
· Bowen.
freeing himself from the doufromPageBl
Duncan had 21 points and ble-teams that he rarely saw
There were 23 lead changes 15 rebounds, but the Spurs' in the first five games.
and seven ties in the first , offense rarely rah though him . Even when he got the ball
three quarters before Detroit as it normally does so fluidly. in single coverage outside , he
Manu Ginobili also scored 21 was not in position to use his
built a seven-point lead early for San Antonio, which was best moves. Absent the usual
in the fourth quarter and outscored 24-19 in the fourth contributions from the twostayed ahead the rest of the quarter.
,
time finals MVP,' the Spurs .
way, handing the Spurs just
The Pistons were looking were almost a one-man Ieam . .
their sixt]J home loss in 51 everywhere they could for
As for the Pistons, their
games at tqe Sl!C Center thi~ motivation. A sign on the offense continued to come
season.
greaseboard .in Detroit's lock- from the clutch long-range
Now, the Pistons will have er room read: ''San Antonio's shooting of Billup&gt; and the
to try to become the first team · parade is scheduled for · mid-range game of Hamilton.
in finals history to win the last Thursdayll 1, and Detroit for- Billups was 6-for- 13 from the
two games on the road, But ward Darvin Ham ye lled : field for 2 1 points and
.given what they've done over · "Anybody want CristaP They Ham ilton was 8-of-16 for 19
the past two seasons, refusing just brought four cases to . points when the third qu,artcr
to quit when circumstances their locker room ."
! ended with the Pistons ahead
are most dire, 'they have to be
But the Pistons probably 71-67.
considered a legitimaie candi- didn't need any extra reason · A three- point play by
date to make a little more his- . to pu sh harder: Time and . Antonio McDye ss to open the
tory.
again . they 've proven their fourth quarter made it 74-67
"We can fight any odds." pride is enough to fuel their - the largest lead ·for either
· Wallace said. :'You know, a fury.
·
·
· · team to that point, and Qetroit
lot of people thought we were
"Not today. Not ·tonight. stayed ahead from there.
going to be out tonight, but - · Not today. Not tonight,"
San Antonio shot almosf 53
they had their Crista] readjl Billups was overheard saying percent in the first quarter but
and all that stuff, but - hey, as he walked to the locker committed ·four t.urnovers
· we''re · going to pop it room afte r the game.
. ·
leading to seven points, a big
Thursday."
The early part of the third reason why the period ended
Once again, ball control quarter hammered h0m~ the in a 23-23 tie. Detroit made
was one of the key factors as point that the Spurs would its ,first tl ve shots of the secDetroit committed just five only get as far as Ginobili, not and quarter to take a 35-32
turnovers against 19. assists. Duncan, would take them. lead before the game grew
Billups played brilliantly for Ginobili ;lias as aggressive testy.

'

'

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

~

. '·

.

'

,;o CENTS • \'ol. 5-J.l'l:o, :!t ;~

• Post 128, Glouster
have unfinished businesS.
See Page 81
AP photo

Boston Red 'sox~s Edgar .Renteria throws to first after forcing out Cleveland Indians' Alex
·cora in the third inning Tuesday in Cleveland. Renteria' throw to first bas~ was not 1n t1me
to turn a double play.
·

·Red Sox clobber Cleveland, 9-2
Bv

JoE

MtLICIA

The Indians couldn't put an RBl ·double in the sixth to
together a solid inning make it 6-0.
against Arroyo, who walked
Boston 's Trot Nixon made
one and struck a leaping catch at the wall on
Ben Broussard's drive with
out four.
Ortiz
put the base s · loaded in the
Boston up 2-0 eighth. Alex Cora scored mi
with a 419- the· sacrifice fly.
foot shot to
Victor Martinez doubled,
center in the advanced on a groundout
tlrst. He drove and scored on a wild pitch in
in Johnny· Damon with a sac- the seventh to get the
rifice fly in the second, then Indians on the scoreboard.
Notes: 3B Cleveland's
hit his 18th homer in the
fifth on the first pitch from Aaron Boone was a late ''
Kevin Millwood (2-5).
scratch from the lineup with
Ortiz's 62 RBis lead the strcp · throat. C-asey Blake
American League.
started · his second game at
Millwood
went
six third .... Damon has a . !'0innillgs, allowing six runs. game hitting streak .... Ortiz
five earned, and seven hits in has 15 career multi homer
his second start since com' . games .... C Jason Varitek of
ing off the disabled list. lt the Red Sox got his BOOth
was his worst· outing since career hi't. ... Cleveland's
April 16, when he gave up Grady Sizemore singled in
six runs in a loss to the eighth to extend his hitMinnesota.
·
ting streak to II games ....
It was the second straight The Red Sox are 40-30, the
rough outing for a Cleveland Same record they had after
C.C.
Sabathia 70 games last season.- .. :
starter.
allowed a career-high nine Ramirez's homer ties him
with Jackie Jensen for I Oth
runs on Monday.
Mark Bellhorn added a on the .Red Sox career list
sacrifice · fly and Damon hit with 170.

Page AS
• Robert M. Hill, 83
• Timothy Roush, 49
.• Betty Schomburg, 67
• George Snyder, 26

Daily Sentinel

Claussen walked the first
two hitters to start · the
inning, and Taguchi's single
carQmed off Claussen's leg
into short right field. lt was
look like.
starting to
Narron's Reds were very
much like the Reds under
Miley.
Then Randa led off the
bottom of the mmng with

I

Miley
. from Page Bl
Earlt.er tht's month, Reds
chief operating officer John
Allen traveled to Denver to
meet wit!! Miley. Allen ,:ailed
the Reds'
performance
"unacceptable" and hinted
thill changes could be made if
- there was no improvement.
The Reds went 5-9 after
Allen's remarks, and Narron
acknow !edged that he had
. seen prpblems over the past
several weeks_
"We've got to concentrate
on little things," he said.
Neither he nor O'Brien
specified exactly what those
little things are.
"I want to see these guys
play all-out every sec.ond,"
Narron said.
'
Narron was 'in his second
season as Miley's bench
coach. Narron man'aged
Texas in 2001-02. and also
rqanaged for ' four years in
Baltimore's minor ' league
system . He was Boston.'s

bench coach in 2003 and Boone. Cincinnati was 125coached with Texas from 164 during parts of his three
1995-2001.
seasons.
Cincinnati has had four
Gullett, a former ace for the
straight below-.500 years- · Reds, had been ·the team's
. its longest such streak since pitching coach since May 24,
1945-55 - and has not 1993.
·
. reached the ·playoffs since
The Cincinnati pitching
1995.
·
staff gave up a dub-record
Coming off a 76-86 seaSon 236 horne runs last season·
in which injuries to Ken and a major league-high Hl6
Griffey Jr. and other pla~ers already this season.
hun them, the Reds increased · But O' Brien said pitching
their payroll by $I 7 million was not entirely to blame for
and started this year with the Reds· inepmess.
three straight wins . But a 1- . ·~Every night, some co.mpo10 slump that began' in late nent of . the game breaks
April . drop~d them far down on us," he said.
behind in the NL Central.
· Wilson was the Reds'
The Reds have been partie- opening day starter but. has
ularly poor on the road, with been lost for the season
eight straight losses dropping because 'of shoulder surgery.
the_m .to 6-24. Though tl\ey He called Gullett' the best
were 21-19 at home, their pitching coach he's had. , ·
most notable game af Great
"'Don's the. reason I came
American Ball Park this sea:· back here," Wilson said. "He
son came in early May when helped me tremendously last
St. Louis pulled off its year. and I don't like to think
biggest ninth-inning rally in that I'm responsible for
team history, scoring ).even somebody getting fired_ .
times for a 10-9 win.
"You'd like to think that if
Miley became the Reds' you did better or ~tayed
manager on July 28: 2003. healthy, you might have
when he replaced Bob helped him keep his job." ·

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition .filled
with photographs of local
children - ~ges newborn to four
years Qld. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 29th issue.
.Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

Tristan Roach .
Son of
Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis
Pictures must be in by Friday
22nd, 2005. Pk:1ures can

'.

July

be picked up after August 1st.
2005.

.

•

&gt;

; Complete the fonn below and enclose a snapsh9t or wallet sized picture·plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the _picture,
. please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:-

The Daily Sentinel

funds for the balance of the
'construction ·cost, and the $ 1
million · U.S.D.A." loan guarantee, if approved, would
allow for a lower interest rate
for the CIC. ·
The Goff architectural firm
of Columbus has completed a
preliminary floor plan for the
new 10.000 square-foot faciliry, which will include si'x
classrooms, a computer labo·ratory. bookstore, long-distance learning laboratory and
office space.
The Rockspring s site has
been chosen because of its
proximity to Meig s High

School, to benefit students· said the CIC hopes to have bid
interested in participating in documents ready by late fall,
the state's ' post-secondary with construction possible a~
edtkation option, which ·early as spring, 2006.
allows high school juniors . Since opening in 1999, the
and seniors to participate' in . Rio Grande' Me.igs Center has
.college credit courses prionn ex panded course offerings
graduation, and becau se of it s and enrollment at its current
local ion near U.S. 33.
locatio n in the former Holzer
The first phase of the envi - Clinic building on Mill Street
ronmental study required for in Middleport. Gulliver said
construction has been com- the si te on Meigs Local
"pleted, Gulliver said ycster- School District property will
day, but : there are few con- hopefully attract students
cerns that the site will be from the entire region - not
approved, because of the j~st Meigs County- and will
recent construction oft he mid- allow fo ~ easy expansion of
die school building. Gulliver the center. ·if necessary.

_ __________
_...

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,

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.. .. . . ,.

'· .....
'

'

• House approves flagburning amendment.
See Page A2
• Local women selected
for state offices.
See Page A3
• Scholarship reminder.
See Page .AS

Pomeroy Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt and lnsta-cash Regional
Supervisor Paul Wallace stand outside the lnsta-cash store
that was robbed of nearly $30,000 in checks on May 30.
lnsta-cash, which had previously offered a $1 ,00b rew·drd for
information resulting in an arrest and conviction in the B&amp;E . .
have now doubled that reward to $2,000.

Insta~Cash doubles

reward for solving B&amp;E

·--

;

11

'

i

',.

l

•

1·

,I
·!

•
i

•
'

• the $2,000 reward comes in.
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
Those with informatfon
regarding the crime are '-- - - - - - - - - . . : . . . . - - -..... ,-·-- J&gt;OMEROY - · lnsta-Cash asked to call the Pomeroy
fi"'~
_ has . doubled it's previous Police Department a.t 992$1,000 reward to $2,000 for 6411. Proffitt promises com.. . . '
.
i
. ·
information leading to the ·plete confidentiality to the
,......~-----arrest
and
conviction
of
·callers
.
•
Since the crime. payment
those responsible for breaking into the store located at was stopped on all missing
116 West Main Street and checks and money is no
stealing over $30,000 in longer kept in the store in a
checks on May 30.
safe. The previous safe was
"We really want to catch stolen during the breaking
the person or persons that and entering where Prllffitt
did
this,"
Insta-Cash said the suspect(s) apparently
Regional Supervisor Paul entered through the front'
Wallace said. "If ; hey could door since there is no other
do this to our bullness, then entrance to the building. A ·
-anPipA6
they could to it to others. section of glass in the door
Fortunatley we didn.'t have was· · shattered . ·but not
to close our business. A lot . knocked out.
of others couldn't afford to
At the time of the crime
take that financial hit."
Proffitt described the office as
The
investigation
into
the
in
"disarray, a computer
2 Sf.CllONS - 12 PAGFS
crime
is
being
led
by
knocked
off a desk and braCalendars
A3 Pomeroy Police Chief Mark ken, papers
laying all over the
dassifieds
B2-4 E. Proffitt and ·the Pomeroy floor, and desk drawers open
Police Department with help ' and appearing to have been
Comics
B5 from the Ohio Bureau of ransacked."
Insta-Casb has been in busiDear Abby
: AJ Criminal Investigation.
"We currently have sus- ness in Pomeroy for four
Editorials
A4 peels and are exhausting all years and Wallace ·describes .
efforts to apprehend those his customers as "fantastic''
Obituaries
As suspects." Proffitt said. arid "very cooperative" dur.
B6 "We're right on top of the ing the aftermath of the
Places togo
investigation and anticipate breaking and entering.
•.
CharloM - h/ pllola
Sports
.
"We're closing the net on Security at this year's Meigs County Fair will be handled by the department of Me1gs County
B Section arrests soon."
For Wallace those arrests the perpetrators of this Sheriff Robert Beegle. Beegle met recently with the fa1r board to discuss security and at that
Weather
A6 are welcome as is public crime," Proffitt said . ''It's time an agrewnent was reached. For the past two years private security has been used by the
cooperation which is where only a matter of time now."
fair boi!rd after failing to agree on terms w1th the former sheriff.

j

sherfiff'5 ·de'nartment to ha·ndl,e atr sec·u·rt'ty· ·.

·~.

INDEX

An "Online We·llness Center . •

----------------~------------------------------~
I
Cbild 1s Name Is, &amp; Age (s)::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_-:-

At YOL!f'Fingertips!

HMC Community Health .and Wei/ness
·~Dedicated to Promoting Wei/ness"

....
City &amp; State: _ _ _ _- ' - - - - - - - -- - - - - ' - - - - -'

'

••• Tbe above information will H used in the ad. •••
Suhmi~ by: _:__·...:.___~------

. http://holzer.wellsource.com

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

HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY JulY 22. 2005!

~

Belli Sirgonl/p/loto

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

., --~-----

....

'
Children were
entertained by Safari Max and
Darwin the Talking .
Dragon yesterday at the
Pomeroy Library. The
visit was part of the
summer reading program
that has a theme of
·Dragons. Dreams and
Daring Deeds" explored
through books. programs
and activities offered
throughout the Meigs
District Public Library.
Here, a volunteer from
Safari Max's aud ience
holds a talking terodactyle at arm 's length.
Safari Max's show also
includ¥)_
. 00 per~~nt .•·
audieril!fi partlciiJ8(1on
and magic throughout.
Th~1 next event is' a lllslt
frof,ll magician, juggler ·
and storyteller Tom
Sparough at 2 p.m. on
Wednesday, June 29 at
the Pomeroy Library. All
programs are free.

Bv BETH SERGENT

WEATHER

•

fromPageBl

POMEROY - · The Meigs
County
Community
Improvement Corporation is
seeking a loan guarantee from
the ., U.S. , Department of
Agriculture to help finance a
new $1.5 million facility for
Rio Grande Community
CoUege at Rock springs .
Tl\e CJC has agreed to construct a building to Rio
Grande' s
speci(ications,
allowing a move from the
Meigs Center in Middleport
to a site · adjacent to Mei!!s

Middle School, on land now
owned by the 'Meigs Local
School Distrit t. The Ohio
Legislature has approved
$200,000 in the state capital
budget to aid in the design
and construction of the · new
building, and couqty commissioners pledged $350,000 two
years ago. The CIC hopes
additional funds through the
federal government wi II also
be made available.
Meigs County Economic
Qevelopment
Director
Michael
Gulliver
said
We,dnesday two local banks
have agreed to provide loan

Beth Sergont/plloto

INsin£ ··.

..

www.mydoilyscntincl.curu

-

OBITUARIES

EXTRA! EXTRA!
The

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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

•

Coming Friday, July 29, 2005

TIIURSilAY, .JUNE:!;~. :!OU;)

CIC seeks loan guarantee for new Rio Grande campus

SPORTS

Labor

Reds

Parents of Dutch youth
held in case of missing ·
Alabama tee:rt says they
believe he's innocent, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

key issues that had held up a allowing teams to exceed the
.settlement since serious talks . cap threshold to retain their . · ·
CLEVELAND - David
· own ·free agents, and to sign
began in late Fe,bruary.
Ortiz homered t.wice and
· · from Page Bl
Among them were the. age free agents under the sodrove in four runs, and
·'·
limitation . a reduction in the called ·midlevel . exception
· Bronson Arroyo scattered
maximum length of 'long- that was added to the labor
four .hits to lead the Boston
which they become draft eli- term contracts from seven agreement in 1999 after the
Red Sox over the Cleveland
gible.
years to six, and reductions in sides went through a .7 1/2Indians 9-2 Tue sday night.
"This will encourage our the size of annual salary month lockout.
Ortiz's fourth multihomer
scouts to spend time in D- increases in those' long-term
All salary cap exceptions
game of the season he! ped
league gyms rather than high contracts from a maximum of from the prior deal will
Boston to . its third straight
school gyms," Stern said.
12 I/2 percent to 10 1/2 per- remain, and several rules that
Next Tuesday's NBA draft cent.
win and eighth in nine
made trades difficult have
games. The Red Sox
will,maik the final time, barVeterans will now be sub- been relaxed. Previously, the
ring future changes, that high ject to f&lt;;&gt;ur annual random salaries of players being tradimproved to 40-30, a season..
school players will be draft drug t.ests for performance- . ed for one another had to be
high I 0 games over .500 .
eligible.
enhancing and recreational within 115 percent of one
Arroyo (6-3) won his secA lockout could have drugs, an increase from cur- another, plus $100,000. That
ond straight start, allowing·
begun July 1 , and the likeli- rent rules calling for one test fir st . number has been
. one mn over seven innings.
hood of a work stoppage at the start of training camp. increased to 125 percent. ·
Manny Ramirez added a
seemed to increase last week Penalties for steroid violators
A variety of regulations
two-run homer in the ·ninth
after a round of posturing were raised from five to lO have been eased · regarding
to make it 9-2. He has six
from both sides. But signifi- games for a first offense, 25 restricted free agents, players
RBi s in two games against
cant progress ·was made in games for a second offense, falling under so-called basehis former team .
almost 12 hours of meetings one year for a third offense year compensation rules. and
The Red Sox have scored
... Friday, and the final gaps and a lifetime ban for a the amount ·of time ·players
at least six runs in 10 of their
were dosed Tues9ay mom- fourth.
with career-ending injuries
.
last II games.
· · Players with 'less than two will continue to count against
ing.
Cleveland has lost two
"We decided it was time to years in the lea~ue will be a team's salary cap.
straight
after a nine-game
back away from the abyss . eligible to .be asstgned to the . , Owners also withdrew iheir
wioning streak and . has
and s~e if we could get a . minor league NBDL, where idea for an extra pe.nalty - a
19 runs in the lossallowed
·deal," Hunter said.
. the minimum age will 'be so-called supertax - against
es.
The agreement still must be reduced from 20 to rs.
the highest-spending teams.
ratified by the league's Board
Minimum salaries and ben- They · also agreed to the
of Governors and by the efits will increase, but Stern union's request t() have luxuplayers' union at its annual said it was uncertain how the ry tax revenues divided in a
meeting in Las Vegas next new deal will affect the pen- more equitable way.
week.
sions for the small number of
Also 1 there will be a gradBecause of the time needed recipients who played in the ual reduction from I0 percent
to put the agreement in writ- NBA prior to 1965.
to 8 percent in the so-called
ing, the upcoming start of the
Players agreed to reduce escrow tax under which a
free agency signing period the number of guaranteed portion of each player's
has been moved from July 14 contract years for. rookie salary is withheld if the
to July 22.
first-round draft picks from amount of league-wide revOver the final · days of three to two.
enues devoted to ·salaries
negotiations, . the
sides
The NBA has a system exceeds specified per~ent­
reached agreement on several known as a "soft" salary cap,. ages.
double the big blow off
reliever Brad Thompson.
The Reds added a' final run
in the sixth on an RBI single
by Rich Aurilia.
Notes: Valentin 's four
RBis tied a career high ....
St. Louis OF Jim Edmonds
was out of the lineup for the
eighth game since suffering
a hairline fracture of his left
middle rib, but was available to pinch hit. ... Reds
leadoff batter Ryan Freel
missed his third straight
game with a sore toe.

.

•

Eastern student pages
· in W.Va. House of .
Delegates,. As

Major League Baseball' ·

ASSOCIATED PRESS

his II th homer, Adam Dunn
walked and Wily Mo Pena .
doubled down the left field
line. Valentin, who gets limited . playing ·time, hit a
three-run homer, his third, to
make it S-3.
. Albert Pujols doubled, .
. stole third and scored on the
Cardinals' final run . in the .
third when Valentin couldn't
hold on to Dunn's throw
from left field on Reggie
Sanders' fly out.
Cincinnati followed with a
five-run third, with Lopez's

'

· • Health

*Health related articles* Resources for better living* Wet/ness section • And everything·in between'
, .

- - - - - - - - - - -·- --

-

•,

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•

•

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