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•

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Motorcycle clubs band
together to create
viQlence-free zones, A8

Miranda Lam~rt
to perfortn, A7

\..

New coal mi~e to open at Mountain~er plant

SPORTS
• Post 128 cruises past
McArthur.
See Page 81

BY TIM MALONEY
.
TMALONEY®MYOAILYREGISTER .CO M

· NEW HAYEl\1 - American
Electric Power has agreed on
a ,lease with Cline Ene rgy to
open a new coal tmne adpcen·l to ·the Mountameer plant
m New Haven .
The new plant will mine a
previously untouchedseam of
htgh- sulfur coal wh tch Wtll
become usable when the new
scrubber goes online on the
new . stack currently bemg
built at Mountameer.
.
"We knew. t! was th:.rc. H
was JU St of httle value . satd
Pat
Hemlepp,
AEP
spokesman in Columbus.

lroni&lt;:ally. the Same Clean
Air Act which· put high-sulfur
coal mines om of bu sittess is
now effective ly bringin g
· them back.
·
In orde r to comply with the
law. AEP is installing scrubbers which will ma ke it passible to resume use of hig h-suifu r coal. New coal g,~sifica ­
tion plants like the one
planned fo r Meigs County
can burn it as well .
"Thi s suddenly opens up
the m.~rket for hi gh-su lfur
coal ," Hemlepp saiu ..
It is not yet known the exact
number ofjobs .whfch the new
mine will bring. but Mason
County Commissioner Bob

Baird said any .number is wel&lt;.:ume .

" We' re pretty, optimistic
that there are going to be
son)e coal jobs." .Baird ~a i d.
"We don 't know how man y.
but however many it is will be
a help ...
Un confirmed report; abo
~ ay that a change. in ow nership could mean renewed
work at the olu Elmwood
mine near Leo n. where a be It
line ma y he re paired or
replaced to put that uperution
bac:k on line.
·
.''Th,it w()uld be some jobs
right there. JUSt to repair the
belt line ... B&lt;tird said.
Also this ·week. Sen. Jay

(D-W. Va.) hailed tr)l ''
the inclusion of a .provision
The Senate' bill npw goeNo
fur 12 new coal gasification a conference committee to be
plants in the Energy Bjll reconCiled with the House
ivhich passed the Senate· 85- version.
12 thts week. Rockefeller said
Hemlepp said there are two
the new plants would 'gener- factors at work which are conate greate r demand fo'r West tributing to the return of the
Vir~inia's
abundant coal hig h- sultur coal mdustry.
resources.
. First is the availability of the
"At a time of turmoil ii1 the new technology. Second is the
internati onal energy markets. high price of gasoline, which
we need tO find e\'ery nppor- have risen to the point that it'.s
tunity to expand our domestir cheaper for AEP to retrofit its
energy produ cti on.'' said coal-fired plants than replace
Rockefeller.... Th e bill repre- them with gas-fired plants .
sents a significant advance- · With the opening of the
mcnt for clean coal tech nolo- new mine, · the Mountam~i'
gy. and a great victory for
West Virginia's coal indu sPlease see Plant, AS
~ oc kcfe ll e r

The art of spinning plates at the library

Jurors in Ward
case appear
deadlocked
Bv BRIAN J. Rm&gt;
BRE~D@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'OBITUARIES
Page AS
. • Leon McKnight
• Robert C. Salser

Big Bend Blues Bash

Page 24 •

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

INSIDE
• Security redesign
results in heavily protected,
slimmer, str'aighte~
Freedom Tower.
See Page A6
• EPA to review board's
findings on potential risk of
Teflon chemical.
See Page A6
• Ohioans on the move;
four big cities lost residents. ·
See Page A8

WEATHER

POMEROY - Jurors in the
second trial of Raymond Ward
of Rutllrnd said they could not
reach a verdict Wednesday after~
noon, but.Judge D. Dean Evans
sent the panel back to deliberate.
The foreman of the 12-member jury, who were sent to deliberate the latest case just befOf!&lt;,
noon yesterday, wrote a note f6:
Evans at 2:30 p.m. The trial
began early 1\Jesday. '
"Please be advised that the
jwy cannot reach a decision,"
the note read. "We have strongwilled jurors who are r\ot willing
in good conscience to change ·
their vote based on the evidence
presen ted ."
Beth Sergentj photos
Defense Counsel Chares
Juggler Tom Sparough visited the Pomeroy Library yesterday to demonstrate j uggling techniques for children involved in the Knight said the jurors were sent
Meigs District Library' s s·ummer reading program. One of the juggli ng techniques involved spinning plates in which several chil- back to the jury room for more
dren. eagerly vo lunteered to participate. Sparough had visited the library last year with his popula r juggling act and brought out deliberations after sendipg the
many young fans like this one who applauded throughout the performance. Ne~t week's program for kids is called "Wild About note out of the jury room, and
Eyes" and will feature displays from the Boonshoft Museum that simulates what it's like to be visually impaired to raise aware- they remained there at the end of
ness about and to prevent blindness in Ohio. Special guest read ers wil l also arrive for story time. ·The event begins at 2 p.m.
on July 6 at the library. All events for the summer reading program are free ..

Understanding · Board of Education
takes look
'
a proposed levy at academic performance
for London Pool
was pointed !&gt;ut. is to target
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

2005 .F150 2005 SUPIIDUIT
23 an' 29 IIIIIIWAY

2 IN STOCK

STMII. At

IIMIBJG AT

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$11,350 $15,995 $28,495
INDEX

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Calendars

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·2005 Uncoln INawlgalar

GUN) MARQUIS

STArn-Ki AT

"""U.....0., -

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NO'Yigoflon
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Comics

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Dear Abby
.O bituaries

A3
A4
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Places to go

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Editorials .-

Sports
Wea~her

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•

B Section

A6

© 2005 Ohlo VaHey l"ublishing Co.

fiNNICE 111 F11CC.

Please see Case, AS

. BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - Test scores
were
reviewed. performance
SYRACUSE - Surveys .
improvements
evaluated. and
are circulating throughout the
village of Syracuse to gauge methods being used to track
public support for a proposed progress were discussed by
bond levy that will generate principals at Tuesday night's
funds for either the operating meeting of the Meigs Local
costs of the London Pool, or a Board of Education .
levy to support a shelter; . Rusty Bookman, iritermedi ~
playground and additional ate school principal. and Tony
playground equipment to be Deem, primary principal.
placed where the pool now noted that a better system of
tracking the progress of stustands. .
·
dents
based on proficiency
These two separate choictest
scores
had been put in
es are just· that, separate. as
'
place
over
the past school
would be any funding .
.
·
If public support is there . year.
The
two
noted
the
role
of
one levy (for one of the two
projects) will · be placed on the accelerated reading and
the · November 2005 ballot star math prog rams in
test
$Cores.
but as -of now, it is unclear as improving
Bookman
said
proftles
have
to what the Syracuse conunubeen
developed
to
show
nity . supports ' London Pool
or a shelter area I playground growth and .alert the staff to
with new playground equip' needed changes. As for interment. \'his is where the sur- vention progranls, the principal's are considering intervenveys come in.
Survey s have been distrib- tion activities durin g the re guted throughout the commu- ular school day rather than
before or after school or on
s. The emphasis, it
weekend
Pleue 1H Pool, AS

kids ,who really Reed assis - .
lance.
· Mary Hawk -at the Middle
School and Denni s Eichinger,
principal at Meigs High,
talked about the programs put
in place with grant money ahd
the progress shown by students at their re spective
schools. Eichinger had several recommendations · including the possibility of chang Brtan J. Rood/pftoto
ing the attend(lnce policy and
The Athens Landmark store in Chester is one of two which will
having students spend more
close as the result of a planned- dissolution of the company
time i.n the classroom.
· "Test scores are improving and liquidation of its assets.

~~ no~~~r~ovirite~~ fas!a~J

Athens Landmark to dissolve,
CI0 se Chester
.
· farm supply

Supedntendent . William
Buckley. He noted improvements includ ing a state tatin g
Bv BRIAN J. REED
change from academic emer· BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
ge ncy to effective· ·
Eichinger expressed his · AT HENS - Shareholders
approval of expanded dru g in Athens Landmark., which
tes ting and 'indicated that operates · retail farm supply
along with spending more and feed stures in Athens and
time in the classroom that Chester. will vote next month
should have . a benefici'al to dissolve thr, company and
effect. There was some dis- close its Athens and Meigs
cussion on increasi ng credits County supply stores.
La\t week. Landmark 's .
Please see Board, AS
board of directors adopted a

plan of dissolution and distribut ion of assets in preparation
for .ending business. and
mailed a statement to creditors and pOtential claimants.
"The board believes such a
disposition will be in the best
interests .of the association's
members now and in the
future.'' the statement reads.
'·Because of the Association's

.lowing Businesses
Fund at Holzer Medical Center
• RlverFrontHonda
MEDICAL CEN
Loc:tge.tS1 · • TJ•s Child Care, ·tne..
'

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�WoRLD.

.The Daily ?entinel
0

·P ageA2
Thursday, June 30,

'

MARIAM FAM

·

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD. Iraq - For
engineering
professor
Moayad Yasin al-Samaraie.
President Bush's pledge to
keep U.S. troops in lray until
their mi ~s ion is comp l ~te was
the promise of order over
,
chaos.
But the assurance rang hoi- .
low for Moria Husse in, who
woke up Wednesday without
electricity or ru nning water
after spending the night on
her roof trying to escape
·Baghdad's swe ltering heat.
Iraqis on the street and the
country's politicians seemed
divided over Bush's refusal
to provide a timetable· for
Withdrawing U.S. troops.
along with .his promises for a
better life in this country of
26 million people.
"Iraq cannot be stable. if the ,.
American and coalition
forces leave," ai-Samaraie
said.
_
.
AP Photo
The 55-vear-old said chaos ·.u.s. Marines Lance Cpl. Rol land Ogle, left, of Logan and Lance Cpl. Eric Neighbarger of St.
could result "because lraqi Lou1sville walk down a street past an unidentified man [n Hit. 200 kilometers (125 miles) west
forces don ' t have the of 8 aghdad, Iraq, Now in its second day. Operation Sword, with (!lore than 1,000 U.S. troops
required level of training to and Iraqi forces, aims to crush insurgents and foreign fighters in western Iraq and is the third
protect the country."
major offensive in the area in recent weeks.
But Hussein. also an engi:
neer, said withdrawing for- ur oil would have ·been better ensued have compli cated her til'n .,,f the London-based
from . a · 1110rni nc A .,' n~ll'spaper Asharq a)eign troops might restore the than the Bush speech. Maybe · life security their presence has so more people would have paid scramble 111 ~1u rl .u ~&lt;l\,· ct ·Aw,at as saying . that while
far failed to establish.
attention then.''
·
home, to hrav ing the road- · the Iraqi government wanted·
"The terrorists will continBush's speech carne on the blocks ~. nd checkpoints foreign troops to leave as
ue to attack the Americans as one-year anniversary of · the manned b¥ heav i.ly armed soon as possible, a withdrawlong as they're here. They handover of sovereignty to lntqi and U.S. troops.
·
al before lraqi security forces
should leave so that there Iraqis. Violence has raged
Even more frightening was were ready could only benefit
will be less explosions and despite the political progress the random chance of dying "terrorists."
more security," she said. "As since then . including a from a suicide car bomb.
Mohammed
Qassem
long as they ' re here, we'll January election that brought
"Bush's speech does not Mohammed. 37, the owner of
remain an occupied country. a new Shiite-led government change anything for the Iraqi a Baghdad clothes store,
to office. More than I ,360 people and does not meet agreed that American forces
just like Palestine.''
Many Iraqis said they did- people have died since Prime their needs for water, elec- should stay in Iraq until the
n't see the speech, which was Mini ster Ibrahim al-Jaafari tricity, transportation and insurgency is quashed.
.
broadcast just. before dawn, took over two months ago.
securi ty from car bombs,"
"] think the presence of the
and some who viewed
The speech was broadcast said
Kurdish
legislator American forces ·is necessary,
. excerpts of it .considered it live on several Arab ·televi- Mahmoud Othman. "I think but they should not stay pertailored to an American audi- sian networks, but few Iraqis the Iraqi people do not care manently. Terrorism . and
ence.
.
could watch it at 4 a.m. about the speech."
·
rebellion in Iraq are now in
"It will make no difference. Television newscasts ·and
ln Baghdad. before the their last throes," he said.
(Bush) has given speeches Arab satellite channels broad- U.S.-led invasion, residents
But ·others said the U.S.
before, but we have not 'seen cast portions later in the day. had about 20 hours of elec- presence only served the
any results," said Hussein, a
Hussein said the U.S. occu- tricity a day. Today, they get Americans and the Iraqi offi25-year-old mother of two. pation of Iraq in 2003 and the · about 9.4 hou rs dailv. usually cials now in power.
"A discussion on electricity bloody
insurgency
that broken into t\\t.&gt;-hour ~hunk~.
In a bid to end the vio----~-----~---------- There are .tlso frequent ft. ~! lence, U.S. and Iraqi forces
and drink ing water shortages, have launched military operaand only 17 percent of the tions and made arrests as
.Oll,
populatiml has a working politicians work to . include
v
sewage s~ &gt;I ~ m.
Sunni Arabs in the political
Much of the capital's elec- process, seen as key to taking
tricity during the Saddarn the steam out of the insurHussein era was a result of a gency.
VERACRUZ, Mexico (AP). coastal city of 1,'uxpan, .Bret poor distribution network
That's why some lraqis
- Tropical Stann Bret was , packed maximum winds of throu~hout the country. The were reassured by Bush's
.
downgraded to a tropical · about35rnphandwasexpected situation, , however, has not .speech.
improved,
and
the
electricity
"This
detennination
not
to
depression Wednesday after to weaken over the course of
network
has
steadily
deteriolet
Iraq
be
plunged
into
civil
moving inland from the Gulf the day as it moved rapidly
· rated because of sabotage and war, chaos and instability is
c~ast of Mexico about 369 inlandoverruggedterrain.
lack of maintenance in imP.ortant for Iraqis," said
mtlessouthoftheTexasborder,
The depresston was moving Baghdad and the rest of the Shtite lawmaker Abbas alaccording to the U.S. National west-northwest at 8 mph.
country. · ·
.
Bayati. "To set a timetable
Hurricane Center.
Shelters were opened in
Al·Jaafari. who met Bush for the withdrawal is to give
. Mexican civil protection Gutierrez Zamora, Tuxpan, in Washington last week, was in to terrorism and to reward
authorities suggested some TecolutlaandCa2ones,butthere quoted in Wednesday's .!:di· fanatics.''
·
residents in tow-lying areas were no signs of serious fl~­
leave their homes in case of ing, said Ranulfo Marquez,
flooding, while forecasters ·deputy director of civil protecwarned the depression still tiqnforVeracruzstate.
coold dump up to lO inches of
Tux pan authorities reported
rain on mountainous areas.
six families liadleft horne as a'
Located IS miles west of the precaution.

Bret. downgraded tO trOpl'cal
g I'nland fr"'m
depressl ·moVJ'.n,CO
Gulf Coast Of MeXl

·The Daily Sentinel

2005

Some Iraqis fear U.S. pullout could trigger chaos Health minister says Canada
sv

-

intends to ban the export of
bulk prescription drugs

TORONTO
(AP)
Some supporters of the
Canada's health mtnt&gt;ler Canadian exports said the prothreatened Wednesday to posed ban is a direct response
overhaul the country's regula- to threats fro m the U.S. phartions on e·xporting prescrip- maceutical industry.
tio~t drugs. saying Canada
"This i.s a big strong.
would no. longer be a cheap wealthy industry and they ' re
"drug store for the United' lighting as hard as they ca n
States."
tight so that they can charge
Health Minister Ujjal the highest prices in the world
Dosanjh said Canada would for prescription drugs to U.S.
ban the bulk export of pre- consumers." said Sen. Byron
scription drugs when their Dorgan. D-N.D.
wpplies were low at home. While it's legal in Canad~
But he left vague how the ban for pharmacies to mail
would be put into place - and Americans drugs ·- after havwhether ·it. would a!Tect the ing been faxed or mailed their
thousands of individual pur- physician's prescriptions chases that take place across it 's illegal in the United States.
the U.S·.-Canada border and though the laws are generally
.
not enforced.
over the lnternet.
. The ban is an attempt to The Canadian government
head-off an anticipated also maintains it is unethical
onslaught of drug demands for doctors ' to sign prescripfrom Americans if legislation tions without examining
pending in Congress legalizes · patients. Dosanjh said the deflnternet and bulk import of . inition of patient-physician
prescription drugs from relationship had to be clanCanada. ·
lied, but would not confirm
"Canada cannot be a drug whether that meant American
store for the United States of patients would have to meet in
America; 280 million people person w.ith Canadian doctors.
Any change in that defini.cannot expect us to supply
drugs io them on a continuous. ·
h. h D
·h
·d
uncontrolled basis," Dosanjh tton. w tc
osanJ · '~sat
said at a news confe(ence.
needed further study, could
Canadians· must be assured affect individual purchases.
access io an adequate supply
"Our priority must be the
of safe and affordable pre- health and safety of all
scription drugs, Dosanjh said. Canadians and the strength of
Individual sales would not our health care system,"
necessarily be affected by the D~~;jhB~~!~: administration
ban. The ban could, however,
affect drug wholesalers or opposes prescription dru'g
manufacturers in Canada, who imports, and federal regulanow are not permitted to tors warn they cannot guaran. export to the .United States tee the safetv of drugs from
· under U.S . Jaw, but could do outside U.S. borders.
so under the legislation being
Canada has dismissed concerns about the safety of drugs
considered in Congress.
. He said he would introduce .sold in Canada, saying
legislation when.the House of Canada's regulatory regime
Commons reconvenes this fall was tougher than the U.S. one.
that would allow for the temAs part of its socialized
porary ban of bulk exports medical sysiern , the Canadian
when supplies are running low government sets drug prices
at home.
typically 40 percent ·lower
He also intends to establish than those in the United States.
a drug supply network within
Dosanjh acknowledged no
the federal health ministry and shortages currently exist. and
will work with provinces and the minister also conceded he ,
pharmaceutical companies to was not a~are of any injuries
provide more comprehensive or illnesses to Americans purdata on Camida's prescription chasing drugs in Canada.
drug su~ply.
. · The drug-import program,
launched
by
Amencans pay the highest I-SaveRx.
prescription drug prices in the lllinois, uses a Canada-based
world, and U.S. lawmakers are clearinghouse, CanaRx, to
pushing to legalize the impor- connect residents of Illinois,
tation of wholesale prescrip- Vermont. Kansas, Missouri
tion drugs as well u Internet and Wisconsin to pharmacies
purchases frorri Canada and and wholesalers tn Canada,
other countries. Four bills are Ireland and the United
pending in Con~ress, but have Kingdom. Minnesota and
met with opposttion from the Wisconsin also have statepharmaceutical lobby and ?perated. Web sites to help.resfrom the Food and · Drug tdents tmport medtcattons'
Administration. ·
.
from Canada.

'

BYTHE .BEND

Chung that Pyongyang could.
return to the stalled six-nation
nucij:;ar negotiations as. early
as July - if Washington
·respects it as a partner.
"We will continue diplomatic efforts, pulling weight on
the possibility of (North
Korea's) return in July" as
Kim has suggested, Foreign
Minister Ban Ki-rnoon told
reporters
Wednesday.
"Through maximum diplomatic efforts, we will try to
resume ti)e talks in July."
Ban said a "positive atrnos"
phere" has .been created for
resumption of the talks and
that "it is desirable for North
Korea to return to the talks
without further de lay."
North Korea has stayed
away from the arms talks which also involve South
Korea. China. Japan. Russia
and the United States - for
more than a year.
Chung's Washington visit is
aimed in part at dispelling U.S.
concerns over whether Kim
will remain 'committed to his
remarks hinting at a return to
the nuclear negotiations. said
Hong Seok-hyun. South
Korea's
ambassador to
Washington .
.
The United State' has been
skeptical of Kim's comments.
urging North Korea to set a
firm date to return to the arms
talks.

Thursday, June 30,

2005

•

.

Community Calendar

DAR holds annual family picnic

RACINE - The a;mual
Town,hip Tnt,tees will meet at H:.trri' Farms. Mini,try of
Sunday, Julv 10
7:30\ p.m. at the lire station.
Heart
Church,
Sacred
POMEROi - · Ann'ual f.unil! pi cnic ml'cting of the'
Return Jonathan Mei~'
Pomeroy.
reunion of relatives of Daniel Chapter
Friday, Julv I
Nation"ai
and Phoebe Lowll and Daughter... ol'of the
TUPPERS PLA-INS
Clubs and
the Americ.m
William and Mary Lol'ell "ill Rc, (,J ution ~as held at the
Reunions
Eastern Loca I Board of
be held at I p.m. at the Zillll humc or Karen Werry..
organizations
EducatioQ special meeting.
Sunday, July 3
· Church of Christ. Route 1-l '\ · Mcmhcr; shared their
8:30 a.m.. administrative
Friday,
.I
uly
I
LITTLE
KYGER
The
· Some
surn;u~cs includ~ fa1wi tc cu1ercd dislt and the
offices, to discuss personnel
- Meigs Thompson-Beeson reunion Lovett, Slacks. Bu,h. B'oyu. mum me;.lt enlrc~ was prePOMEROY
and annual approp riations.
County
Pomona
Grange
#-!6 will take place at noon Sunday Goldsbeuy
and
Riffle. pared hy the h'"'"" Kare'n
REEDSVILLE The
will
meet
in
regular
session
at
the
Little
Kyger
Potluck:
Pi.
c
tures
·
will
be Wcrn &lt;)n 1he e" II
Olive township Trustees will
F,:fl\~wing' '" th e. lunc}leon,
·meet in special session, at 7:30 I :30 p.tn .. . Hemlock Grange Congregational Church. The taken. Pictures and ·genealogy
Hall
with
Hemlock
as
the
dinner
wi
ll
be
polillck.
items
displayed.
An
auct
ion
Patnmt
Holter held a brier
p:rn. at the Olive Township
hosts,
All
members
urged
to
Saturday,
July
9
will
be
held
and
those
aucndbusiticss mccti ne . \l;u·, Powell
Garage to approve the budget.
attend.
·
POMEROYThe
annual
ing
are
aske'
d
to take an item
ga\'c
~~ ,"L'I)\m on...th~ pr;lgress of
A regular meeting will follow
reunion
of
relatives
of
Edgar
for
the
auction
.
.
Saturday,
July
2
Lht:
Clh:
. . tcr .-\L'.tLk'nl' renovaimmediately afterwards.
and
Addie
Reed
Blake
will
be
tion.
fund
1a1,i1-1Q cilons and
HARRISONVILLE
Thesday, July 5
held
at
noon
at
the
Zion
phm..; fur ~lf)!l h ir)~ h1r £ranh.
RUTLAND
- Rutland Harrison vi lle Lodge F&amp;AM Church or Chri st on Route
Birthdays
Anna
Cleland ;h&lt;tred a c~&gt;py or
will
meet
at
7:30
p.m
.
.
at
the
Township Trustees 5 p.m.
143. Meat will be furni shed.
thf'
Oh1p
D.~\R un linc newsletlodge
hall.
Refreshments.
budget hearing, ·regular meetSaturday, July 2
the rest of meal potluck. Take
ter in 11 lwh Return .lunathan
ing to follow.
REEDSVILL E Faye Meig.., had ~ ~ n an ic!e rcgarUi n~
pictures and other genea logy
.
Wednesday, July 6 .
Church events item~
Watson will celebrate her ' the "" &lt;ud "' " of . the DAR
for display.
',
PAGEVILLE Scipio
RACINE - Reunion of t)1e 82nd birthday on Saturday. Out~tandtt.lg ..\n1L'rican CitiJC·n
Township .Trustees regular
. Sunday. July 3
Charles and Fannie Beaver July 2. Cards may be 'cnt l(l Award '" Za n,·· Bcc~lc 'ol
meeting will be at 6:30 p.ni . at . PORTLAND - Span ish- family will be held at Star Mill her at 39672 Silver Ridge ~ilcinc \\110 returned ... home
Paigeville Town Hall.
, language Mass. 6' p.m.. Our Park in Racine, Lunch at 12 :30 Road,
Reedsville. Ohiu from Iraq em r'ch. 28. Clclai1d
45772.
. noted that till' tm line nc11'slcttcr
ALBANY Columbia. Lady of Guadalupe Mission at p.m. Take a covered dish.

Public ~eetings

i,, available to all Ohio DAR
member,.
Regent Pat Holter asked for
suggestions for programs for
the corning year. Plans are tQ
honor and . recognize the
longevity of several menibcr&gt;
who have been loyal members
of Return Jo nathan Metgs
Chapter for a number of years.
Following the business.
meeting. members enjoyed a ·
tour of the flower and shrub
garde n of the hostess Kare n
Werr'j who is a master gardener in 'trai ning. She identitlcd
the many varieties of plant'
and shrubs that are now in
bloom. Pauline Atkins. another mas.ter gardener who has an
interest in plants and shrubs.
was among those in the tour.
Several other members of the
group are master garde ners.
The next ' meeting will be
held in September with a lun- ·
chcon at the Wild Hose Cafe.
A Constitution Week program
will be .given.

s!~R~~~ ~~!daddict is .likely toc~~~n~~n~~ A'look at the upcoming Chauquatua
your respon se ..to "Nameless
provider. but I will probably
m a Red State, who asked tf
need to get a new e-mail
she could become addicted to
address.
·
dru~s by having sex with an ·
My, husband and 1 are not
addtct.
sure how to handle this.
v
·
Dear
.
.
10U were correct to potnt
Should we tell him we know
·out that it 's important she stay
Abby',.
what he did on my computer.
·away from people who are
. .or do we just avoid him· when
addtcted td drugs tf she wants
he makes contact with us
to stay clean. _I ·work _in a
.again? If I never see this permethadone chmc. My chents
son aoain it won't be a hardknow they have to be careful complications of such behav- ship. f feel violated. Any sugwho thetr fnends are. It is ior, infection with potentially gestions" - .PIQUED IN
very easy to start using drugs fatui diseases such as hepatitis PALO ALTO
·again while in treatment if B, hepatitis cor AIDS. There
DEAR PIQUED: Your
you're .spending time around is a high incidence of these houseguest should be made
people who are using,
diseases among drug addicts aware of the problems his lit. I was, however, disappoint- because of the sharing of con- tie surfing adventure ha.ve
ed that _you didn't mention laminated , needles. and they caused you .. If it were me, I'd
· thal havmg, se~ with a d~ug can also be transmitted pick up the phone and give
addtct IS a rectpe for gettmg through sexual rel ations. _ htm holy heck for taking
AIDS and many other sexual- ALEXANDER N. ZINN. advantage of my hospitality
ly transrnllted dtseases. (I call .M.D .. WINNETKA , CALIF. 111 that way. If you · want to
it the gift that keeps on giv- . DEAR DR. ZINN: Your let- avoid him in the future, it's
ing.) People must remember ,ter makes me wonder' how certainly your privilege, but
that when they have unpro- many Jives 'could be saved if he owes you an apology, and
·tected sex with someone, they clean-needle exchange pro- yo u should coll.ect it.,
are also havmg sex wtth grams were available in every
D_ea~ Abby rs wrrtten by
everyone that person has had · city. Thank you for clarifying Ab1gml Van Buren, also
sex wnh. Latex condoms are my answer.
known as Jeanne Phillips,
the best defense against sexuDEAR ABBY: We had a and was founded by her
ally transmitted diseases. -. houseguest recently who mo!her, Pauline Phillips.
R.N. IN BLUE · NEW JER- asked to use my computer to Wrrte
Dear . Abby at
SubmlHed photo
SEY
check on hi s airline !lights. w.ww.DearAbby.com or P.O.
DEAR R.N.: l'm sorry you Afier he Jdt 1 went into the Box 69440, Los Angeles, .CA . Mary Powell, right. displays some material on the upcoming Chauquinua. a project .of the
.
Chester-Shade Histoncal Association, to Pat HoJter. regent. left, and Karen Werry.
were disap~ointed that my history to ch.eck out a ptevi- 90069. ·
~
_lillswer dtdn t go far enough: ous site I had used and found
however, the woman's ques- my computer full of adult
................... ,.f................ ~ ................
t10n was, "Can I become porn ·sites. These si tes were
addicted to drugs by having surrounded by hi s airline
sex with an addict?" I reservations, so it could not
answered her question factu- have been anyone else using
my computer.
~
. ally and specilically.
.I also · heard from a physiI erased the sites and then
•'
:ctan who felt I should have cleared out the cookies, but
elaborated further. Read on:
now l'm getting reports from
DEAR ABBY: ln your reply friends that they are getting """'""'·my~lysentlnel.
to the wnter, you fatted to adult porn pop-ups when I
~..,
~ ·
menuon the most dangerous send an attachment. I will

•
Please join us on July tst 2005 to •

VISit us
online at

celebrate Home National Bank's

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U.S. says it could repel any NKorean
~ttack; SKorea seeks nuke talks in July
SEOUL, South Korea· (AP)
-AU .S. military commander
on Wednesday said the United
States and South Korea could
repel any attack by- North
Korea, even if the secretive
country has one or two nuclear
bombs.
Gen. Leon LaPorte. com.mander of the U.S. military in
South Kore~ said he believes
that North Korea has at least one
or two nuclear weapons, but
that the .combined American
and South Korean forces on the
peninsula could deter or defeat
any attilck from the North.
Washington and Seoul
".retain our ability to deter
North Korean aggression and
if required, to decisively
defeat the North Korean threat
if they were to threaten South
Korea:· LaPorte $aid in an
interview with Seoul's PBC
Radio.
North Korea claimed · in
February it had nuclear
weapons and has since then
made moves that would allow
it to harvest more weaponsgrade plutonium.
Meanwhile, South Korean
Unification Minister Chung
headed to
Dong-young
·Washington to meet with Vice
President Dick Cheney and
other U.,S. officials. Chung
planned to discuss his recent
meeting with North Korean
leader Kim Jong II.. who told

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.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlri~l.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim. Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

. General. Manager-News Editor

Co'!gress shall make no latv respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
.fi·ee exercise thereof; or abridging tlie freedom
4 speech, or of the press; or the right of thf
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governrnent for a redress of grievances.

•I

First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

l~E ADER'S

VIEW

True colors
Favors return to tradition

,~.

Dear Editor:

Just who is responsible at Eastern High School'? It seems
that tradition and history have been lost. When Eastern was
brought into existence. green was chosen as our new color,
along with the white from Chester and gold from Tuppers
Pla ins High Schools: however. since the new decade, gold has
heen phased out arid replaced with an unfavorable black to the
&lt;Jl umni, so~s we approach the new school year I believe it is
time to restore tradition and history by removing the black and
return to our true school colors, green and white, trimmed
with gold.
Charles W. Massar
Reedsville

.

.

TODAY IN HISTORY
•

Today is Thursday. June 30, the 181st day of 2005. There
arc 184·days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 30. 1963, Pope Paul VI was crowned the 262nd
h~ad of the Roman Catholic Church.
In 1971. the 26th Amendment to the Constitution, lowering
the minimum voting age to 18, was ratified as Ohio became
the 38th state to approve it.
In 1984, John TUTI'!er was sworn in as Canada's 17th prime
minister, succeeding Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
In 1985, 39 American hostages from a hijacked TWA jetliner were freed in Beirut after being held 17 days.
One year ago: A federal appeals court approved an antitrust
settlement Microsoft had negotiated with the Justice
Department. The Iraqis took legal custody of Saddam Hussein
and 11 of his top lieutenants, a f~t step toward the ousted dictator's expected trial for crimes against humanity. After nearly seven years of travel, the international Cassini spacecraft
·
entered Saturn's orbit~
· Today's Birthdays: Singer Lena .Horne is 88. Actor Tony
Musante is 69. Actress Nancy Dussault is. 69. Singer Glenn
Sharrock is 61. Jazz musician Stanley Clarke is 54. Rock
musician Hal Lindes (Dire Straits) 'is 52. Actor-comedian
David Alan Grier is 50. Actor Vincent D'Onofrio is 46. Actor
Rupert Graves is 42. Boxer Mike Tyson is 39. Rock musician
Tom Drummond (Better Than Ezra) is 36. Actor Brian Bloom
is 35. Actor Brian Vincent is 35. Actress Monica Pouer is 34.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Fantasia ("American Idol") is. 21.
Thought for Today: '"Those who love deeply never grow
old; they may die of old age, but they die young." - Sir
Arthur Wing Pinero. English dramatist (1855-1934).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR .
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.$00 words All/etters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and telephone number. No unsigned letand include
. address
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w ldmuing i.~; u e.&gt;. not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga111.-ation.l and indil'lduals ;,·ill rwt be acceptedforpublication.

The Daily SeiJtihel
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Correction Polley

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Thursday, June

Thursday, June 30,

30,2005

with .~orne alarm that ;upport
Unless they can 't help
is flagging even in South
themselves. it strike; me as
Carolina - "the most patripolitical
madness
for
otic state !. can imagine."
Democrats to declare that
' He added. "I don't think
the Iraq war is an
it 's a blip on the radar
"intractable quagmire"· or a
Morton
screen . I think we have a ·
"grotesque mistake."
Kondracke chronic problem on our
If the war turns out to be a
hands" that could lead to a
disaster - and let 's pray it
premature U.S. withdrawal
doesn't - then voters will
repudiate Republican forand 3i1 insurgent victory.
eign policy in 2006 and ing none of their own·.
Rum sfeld gave Graham a
2008. and Democrats will be
DemocratS of all stripes go good . answer: This is "the
the beneficiaries.
out of ·their way to declare time that leapership has to
So why should some that they support U.S. stand up and tell the truth. If
Democrats JH\w be acting as troops, but Kennedy and you' re facing a head wind.
though .they want to see' their Pelosi are implying that you've got two choices. You
country lose a war? Why those men and women are can turn around and · go
should they say things that tighting and dying in vain.
. downwind or you can stand
may undermine the morale
The _logic of the .Kennedy- there and go into the wind,
of U.S. forces and our Iraqi Pelosi position should lead and that 's what needs to be
allies and contribute to a then!' to call for immediate done."
U.S defeat'l
withdrawal. but they aren't
Clearly, that's what the
. .
.
·
And why should they rein- doing that either. . · Bu.sh ad· !lllnJstr.
atJon IS
force the image of their party
To be sure, they aren't domg. Secretary ot State
as be,ing sti hopelessly forcec alone
in
defeatism. Condoleezza Rice said the
averse that ii can 't be trusted Democrats are gleefully Bush po.licy is to keep U.S.
to lead on foreign policy? ·
quoting Republican Sen. troops in Iraq "as long as
are
necessary,''
It 's one thing . for a · Chuck Hagel (Neb.). who they
Democrat like Sen .. Joseph says that ·'the reality is that although Democrats have
Biden (Del.) to harstily criti- we're.losing in Iraq." Hagel , been calling. for an '"exit
cize the way the Bush though. is virtually the on ly strategy: ·
The danger is that
administration is conducting public Republican nuysayer,
the war and then recommend while it's hard to find a defeatism at home will ereconstructive steps for win- Democrat who 'Supports the ate a defeatist dynamic in
ning it.
war.
Iraq. As Gen. John AIJizaid,
Arguably, Sen . Carl Levin,
There are thre.e explana- commander of U.S. forces in
D-Mich. , is doing .sumething tions, not mutually exclu- the 'Persian Gulf, told the
similar in calling for ·U.S. sive, for what Democrats are committee that among "our
threats· designed to k~ep the doing in stepping up auacks troops and the troops we're
Iraqi government's constitu- on Bush's Iraq policy now.
training in the Iraqi and
tion-writing process on
One is that they are taking · Afgh~n sec urity forces, I
schedule, although he's not advantage of polls showing never sensed the level of
exactly demonstrating Slip- that tlie public has turned their confidence higher."
port for ·allies who are risk- sharply negative.on the war.
"And when I look back
ing assassination every day. Another is that they want to here at what I see is happenBut what Sen. Edward claim vindication amid ris- ing in Washington, within
Kennedy, D-Mass., and ing casualty rates. And a the Beltway, I've never seen
House Minority Leader third is that they just want to the lack of confidence
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. , have keep saying what they .think greater."
He added that, "when my
done witli their "quagmire" -that the war is a loser.
and "grotesque mistake" talk
The polls have . indeed soldiers ... ask me the ques-·
is to declare that the war is, gone south on Bush. The lat- tion whether or not -they've
in effect, a lost cause.
est G.allup poll shows that got the support from the
Ttre . .closest Kennedy support for the war has American people, that worcomes to a positive sugges- dropped to just 39 percent, ries me. And they're starting
tion is to call for Defense down from 72 percent in to do that.
"And when the people that
Secretary Donal~ Rumsfeld April 2003 · and 47 percent
to resign. Then what? Pelosi · this March. Fifty-nine · per- we're training. Iraqis and
Afghans, start asking me
and Senate Minority Leader cent oppose the war.
Harry Reid, D-Nev., are
At a recent hearing of the whether we have the staying
demanding that President Senate - Armed Services power to stick with them.
Bush come up with a new Committee, Republi'can Sen. that worries me, too."
strategy, but they are offer- Lindsey Graham (S.C.J said
Herein lies the danger that

Iraq ,could be Vietnam . all
over agmn.
A thick book came out this
spring,
"Vietnam
Chronicles: The Abrams
Tapes"
(Texas
Tech
University Pre~sJ, recounting the dismay of U.S. commander Gen. CreightGn
Abrams as his and So•1th
Vietnamese forces won battie after battle against ·
Communist troops · from
1908 to 1972, but lost the
war on the home front.
After the 1968 Tet .
Offensive_ an allied military victory, but a psychological defeat _ the media
and
. the
DemocraticCongress decided that the
war was "unwinnable" and it ·
gradually became so.
Abrams complained that it

No recent issue better
exemplifies the p&lt;lfalysis of
one-party government than
the sO-called Downing Street
memos.
• . For readers who have ·been
either vacationing on Mars
or getting all their news from
the so-called mainstream
media, those are minutes of
the British government's
July 2002 deliberations
about its then-secret agree·
men! with the Bush adminis- '
!ration to invade Iraq.
A brief primer: Downing
Street is the British -equiva·
lent of White House. Marked
"Secret and strictly personal
UK eyes · only," the
memos constitute the official
record of meetings between
Prime Minister Tony Blair
and his cabinei; the equivalent, that is. of a get-together
among President Bush, Vice
President Dick ~heney ,
Condoleezza Rice.: ·Colin
Powell, Donald R11lnsfeld.
Gen. Tommy Franks and
then-CIA Director George
Tenet. .The documents were
leaked to The Sunday Times
of London in May.
·
What's caused the biggest
stir are the frank comments
of Sir ' Richard Dearlove,
head of Ml-6, the Britisli
CIA. After visiting his U.S.
counterparts. he reported on
July 22, 2002. that "Military
action was now seen as
inevitable. Bush wanted to
.n:move Saddam, through
military· action. justified by
the conjunction of terrorism
and WMD. But the intelligence and facts were being
· fixed !ll'OUnd the policy_'ln an earlier col11mn, I
observed that in British
usage, "ftxed'- doesn't signify deliberate corruption. In ·
an online colloquy with '
Washington ·Post ·readers:

Gene

Lyons

English reporter Michael
Smith said, "I do not know
anyone in the UK wlto took
it to mean anything other
than fixed as in fiXed a race,
fixed an election, fixed the
iotelligence.... cnhe intelligence was being cooked to
match what the administration wanted it to say to justify invading Jraq_"
The Sunday Times is not a
left-wing newspaper. Smith
says that far froiJl being "a
.mealy-mouthed left-wing
apologist," he's a British
Army veteran who believes
in a strong national defense"
and votes_Conservative; that'
is, anti-Blair.
Last year, the u.s.' Sena~
lntelligeoce Committee produced a damning report oil
botched pre-war intelligence,
but postponed investigating
the tOiiChy question of how
the Bush administration used
it until after the 2004 election. Almost ne(d(ess to say,
the Republican-comrolled
committee has sioce dropped
the idea.
Even more damning in the ·
·Downing Street documents
.is evidence of both governments' calculated dishonesty.
Blair 's cabinet believed that
attacking Iraq for "regime
change" alone would consti- ·
tute an illegal war of aggression: therefore, British
Foreign Se\.Tetary Ja£k Straw
urged, "We should work up a
plan for an ultimatum to
Saddam to allow back in the

•

Robert C. Salser

POMEROY - Leon McKnight, 76, Pomeroy. passed away
RACINE - Robert C. Salser, 74, of Racine, passed away at
on June 2R, 2005, at . Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point 8 J.m. on Wednesday. June 29, 2005 , at his residence.
Pleasant, W.Va.
He was born Aug . 3, 1930. in Meigs County, to the late
He was bnm on March 2 1929, in Rutland, son of the late Anthony and Eva Salser Shields. He attended Sorithern
Donald and Violet Pierce McKnight. · He was a graduate of Schools and was an appliance repairman for Rutland Furniture
Rutland Hi gh School , was a N,avy Veteran of the Korean for many years. Later, /he was employed by Valley Lumber
Conflict , was retired from Ben Tom Corp. and was the for- until he retired.
1
mer owner of the Court Street Orill in Pomeroy.
·
-Surviving are his wife, Thelma "Bernie" Bowman Salser,
He was a member of'Smi"th-Capehart Post #140-American whom he married on March 4, 1960; his (laughters: Rebecca '
Legion. in New Haven, W.Va.: a life member and junior vice (Lynn) Mallory of Racine and Tonda (Lee) Floyd of Pomeroy;
commander of Stewart-Johnson Post #9926- Veteran s of a son, John (Terry) Salser of Westerville; four granddaughters ;
· Foreign Wars. ·
·
a grandson; and.a great grandson.
·
In addition to his parents he was preceded by a grandson,
Also surviving are four sisters. and a brother-in-law: Ei leen
James Ryan Clark .
.
.
Haye of Montana, Kathleen and Victor Counts, Dorothy
He is survived by his wife, Patricia Gress McKnight, - Harden and Shirley Tipton. all ofSyracuse; a brother-in-law,
Pomeroy: daughters, Judy (Rick) Triplett of Virginia, Sheila Gregory and Kathy Stump of Gallipolis; four sisters-in-law:
McKnight of Pomeroy, Beth (James) Clark of Middleport; Virginia Salser of Syracuse. Katherine Woods of Ashtabula,
and b(others. Donald (Lenora) McKnight of Pomeroy, Henry Carolyn Salser of Racine and Drema Hudson of Rio Grande.
(Ansley ) McKnight of Columbus, Carlos (Leta) McKnight of
Mr. Salser had several ·nieces and nephews. including two
Rutland, Gary (Debbie ) McKnight of Florida; and sisters, special nephews, Mark Salser of Racine and Victor Regan'
Carolyn Dailey of Rutland, Viola (Peggy) Shoemaker of Counis ofSyracuse.
. ·
Florida ; grandchildren, · Brian (Vicky) Triplett, Greg
Be~ides his parents, he was preceded in death by his broth(Deanna) Triplett , Nicholas Triplett, David Triplett, Megan ers: John Woods, William "Bill" Woods, Henry "Booner"
(BJ) Ervin, and J!'rry Clark; and eight great-grandchildren.
Salser and Nial Salser.
..
Services will be held at II a.m: on Friday, July I, 2005, at
Mr. Sal ser was a Christian by faith. He was a good husband
the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Officiating and enjoyed his pets. his motor home, and his camping budwi II be Rev. Father Walter Heinz. Burial will be in Sacred dies, especially Kris and Terry Napper and Casy' of Hamden
Heart Cemetery. Military services ·will be conducted by and Julia.and Roger "Galliger" Rudiier of Athens.
Smith-Capehart Post # 140-American Legion and Stewart- . Services will be held at II a.m. on Friday, July I, 2005, at
Johnson Post #9926-Veterans of Foreign Wars . Friends may the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with Pastor Nick
ta116 to 9 p.m. on Thursday, June 30, at the funeral home in Reeder officit]ting and Rebecca Reeder providing music. Both
Middleport.
.
were good friends of Mr. Salser.
In lieu of flowers , contributions may be made to :
lritermj!nt will be at Greenwood Cemetery. ·
.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, June 30,
American Cancer Society, 607 Putnam Street; Marietta, OH
45750.
2005, at the funeral home. ·
On-line condolences may' be sent to www.fisherfuneralMemorial contributions may be made to the American
homes.com.
Cancer Society. 215 Marion St., Marietta, Ohio 45750.
against Ward, alieging that he
engaged in om! sex at his home
in 1998 with a 15 year-&lt;Jid relative of his wife, Terri.
from Page A1
Ward was convicted eartier
this _month on six counts of rape
and acquitted on four other rape
business yesterday, with Sheriff charges and a charge of corrupt,
Robert Beegle guarding the ing another with drugs. Those
delibemtion room door.
charges involved a different ·
The jury is deciding two third- . minor female victim.
degree felony charges of unlaw-.
Three charges cont,ained in
ful sexual conduct with a minor February indictment against

Case:

th,

Plant
fromPageA1

.'
plant will now operate as it
was originally designed, as a
mine-mouth plant. Years ago,
AEP built all of its power
plants near the mouths of
coal mines to save on transportation costs.
Last year. AEP burned 75

I.
J

•

.

.

Board
from PageA1
for graduation from the 21
now required to 25 or 26
because, as Buckley pointed
out, "the more · time spent in
the classroom, the more
.engaged the student, the bet' ter possibility of passing."
He noted that the preliminary report on the district's
· performance of No Child
Left Behind calb for further
improvement · in the distiict
next year. He said the final
.report on performance will be
released to the school· district
soon.
Busing was diScussed and
Paul McElroy. superinten. dent, said he is IQOking at
some possibilities for change
next year to get the kids
home 'earlier. The administration is also taking a looli at
the length . of school days.
Buckley said that the school
district covers 198 square
miles· which means that some
of the students residing m

million tons M coal, and · is
the largest consumer of coal
in th'e western hemisphere,
H.emlepp said. All of the coal
burned at Mountaineer had to
be transported from elsewhere. and opening the new
mine will all but eliminate
those costs, he said.
"Unless you want to count
. replacing the belt every now
and then," he said.
If the current trend continues, Mason County could
rural areas are getting on . the
bus very early and not getting
home until late in the aftel'noon.
During the meeting the
board accepted the resignation for retirement purposes
of Mrujorie Gibbs, following
39 years of teaching in the
district, and hired Steve
·Cotterill · as a substitute
mechanic and Penny Hysell
as a substitute custodian.
Approval was given to
renew the contract with
Southeastern Ohio Special.
Regional
. Education
Resource Center to provide
special education consultation to the district for the
2005-06 school year at a cost
of $3.96 per student. Also
approved was membership
with the Coalition of Rural
and Appalachian Schools for
the school year at a cost of
$300.
In other business'the board
approved:
• applying to the Ohio
Department of Education for
three waiver .days to be used
next school year for

.

Ward remain ummswered. They
were separated from the charges
involved in this week's trial just
before the trial began. Tho!;e
from Page A1
charges involve another alleged
female victim.
Terri Ward is charged with distressed financial condi two counts of rape and a count tion, the Association must
of corrupting another with · liquidate its assets promptly."
Athens Landmark formed
drugs, alleging her involvement
in
1934. A September, 2004
with the vi~:;tim in the tirst case.
Her husband faces 'additional · balance sheet ret1ected equal
assets and · liabilities of
charges in Athens County.
$1,743,000, each.
Athens Landmark opened
return to the days that Baird its Chester s.tore on Ohio 7 in
remembers from his youth 2000, and for many years has
when several mines were been an active supporter of
open 111 the county. Back .· the Meigs County Junior
then, many of the houses Fair, sponsoring events
were heated with coal burn- including a free dinnet on the
ing stoves, and families Sunday afternoon of fair
would line up at the mines to week.
buy their loads. Baird said.
The board members and
"With the technology they
have today, it's not going to
be as much labor, but it looks
like there are · going to be
jobs," he said. ·

Landmark

Marriage license

Sentenced

POMEROY - A ..mar·
riage license wa' issued in
Meigs County Probate
Court to Roy Lee Pierce,
Jr. , 34, and Amy Beth
Harri son , 27, both-- of
Racine..

POMEROY - Linda J.
Bumgardner was sente~ced to
500 hours of commumty ~r­
vice, participation in the
Community Correchons program and a curfew Of! a charge
of deception to obtam a dangerous drug, in Meigs County
Common Plea~ Court.
..
She was ordered to forten .
$7,500
to
the . Law
Enforcement Trust Fund of the .
Pomeroy Police Department ·
and ordered to seek drug abuse ·
treatment.

Dissolutions
POMEROY - An ac.tion
for dissolution of, marriage
has been filed in Meig s
County Common Pleas
Court by · Heather Nicole
Savoy, Long Botiom , and
Shaun Michae l . Savoy,
Reedsville .

Foreclosures

Divorces
POMEROY - Actions.
for divorce have been filed
·in Meig s County Common
Pleas Court by Diana K.
Bowles . . Pomeroy, against
Robert
M.
Bowles,
Pomeroy: and by Jerry L.
Uribe, Pomeroy, against
Mary E. Uribe , Pomeroy.
Divorce s were granted to
Chad Eric Smeeks. from
Christina M. Smeeks and
Elizabeth. J. Morgan from
Stanle'y N. Watson.
Hocking Valley Bank, the
company's primary lender.,
have final authority over ·dissolving the bus mess, but
General
Manager Fred
Winters said ht&lt; expects the
board to approve the sale of
company assets to· pay debt
and close the two retail
stores. The company will also
consider se lling assets,
including stores and inventory, to a reputable operator,
acco rding to a statement to
creditors issued by the company.
The members of the board
have scheduled a special
meeting·to approve the dissolution plan at 8 p.m. on July
II . On~e a liquidation plan is
approved, the company
expects to be completely out
of business in six months, but

POMEROY- Foreclosures
were granted in Meigs County
Common ·Pleas Court to
Farmers ·Bank and Savings
Co., against Carol A. D.
Hubbard. and others, and to
Franklin Credit Mortgage Co.,
against Allyson McBenge, and
others.

Dismissed
POMEROY - A civil suit
filed in Meigs Co.unty
Common Pleas Court by John
W. Dyke against Bill Prater has
been dismissed.
retail stores could be closed
as early as July 31 if a buyer
is nor found .'
The Chester outlet employs
three full-time employees
and a part-time worker.
Landmark also leases a
restaurant at the Chester
property to June Ridenour,
who operates it under the
nanie "Maw's Diner." Winter
said Wednesday the future of
the restaurant's relationship
to the dissolving company is
uncertain, and its future at the
site will likely de.pend on
how quickly the property is
sold and who buys it .
"The future of .that (restau- ·
. rant) is . uncertain until a
buyer is found ," Winter said.
''I'm confident the property
will be sold, but it depends on
how long a sale takes."

ground and shelter area will .
have lower operating cofts
than the pool.
At a 'recent public meeting
from PageA1
to discuss the fate of the
London Pool it was revealed
nity by volunteers or can be that last year the facility' had
picked up at the Syracuse an operating deficit of
Water Board Office, Home $6,746.55 which had to be
National Bank, Syracuse Post borrowed from the village's
Office and B&amp; R Market. The general fund. Between 2001·surveys-are due on July II at 04, the pool lost $30,000.
the Syracuse Water Board
Whichever project the vilOffice so that the results may lage decides to take on, work
be revealed at the regular must be completed by April
meeting of Syracuse Village 2006 or the FEMA money
Council on July t4.
· will be lost.
·
Mayor Eric Cunningham
Depending on if and
said he didn't know if a deci- which project (the pool or
sion on the levy or London shelter house, playground
Pool would be made on July and playground equipment)
14, but as he put it, "We need village residents support.
to be deciding something or Cunningham estimates that
we'lllose that money.:·
the levy will be between one
The money Cunningham and three-mils.
is referring to is from the
"It won't be any more than
Federal
Emergency three-mils," Cunningham
Management Agency which added. "Five-mils has never
agreed to pay the village been discussed''
$57,259 for repairing the .
Meigs County Auditor
pool's interior. The village is Nancy Grueser estimated that
eligible to collect 65 percent
of the FEMA money (nearly
$38,000) if it wishes to direct
the .funds towards another
project like a playground and
shelter area where London
Pool now stands. A play-

Pool

teachef!staff professional
training;
.
• transfer of $37,500 from
the general fund to the food ·
services fund to· cover the
2004-05 school year deficit;
• a contract with Ohio
University to provide athletic
training to Meigs High
School for the next school
year at a cost of $9 ,000;
• authorized the treasu'rer to
advertise/obtain quotes for
bread/bakery, rnilk and d1.1iry,
and gas and fuel products;
• creation of a position of
/,llaintenance/groundskeeper
to be posted:
. ·
• scheduled the next meeting for 7 p.m. July 19 with
only one meeting to be held
in July.
· The board m~ved into
executiye session following
the meeting for the purpose
of discussing personnel
issues and negotiations.
Attending were Buckley,
treasurer Mark Rhonemus,
and board members Scott
Walton,
Victor Young,
· Norman Humphreys, Ron
Logan, and Roger Abbott.

a taxpayer . whose home is
valued at $50.000 in
Syracuse would annually pay
$15.75 on a one-mil levy,
$31.50 on a two-rhillevy, and
$47.25' on a three-mill levy.
In a separate matter,
Syracuse Village Council
voted at their last meeting to
place a bond levy for the.
police department on the
November 2005 ballot . for
police protection. The millage on this levy is being
researched
now
but
Cunningham also estimates it
to be between one and threemils.
The police department
levy would be completely
separate and funds would not
be lumped in with the proposed levy for London Pool.
or a levy for a shelter house,
playground and playground
equipment.
'T d like to see the pool
stay open for the kids,"
Cunningham said, ''but the
only way to keep the pool
open is a levy."

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(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)

U.N. weapons inspectors."
ti.lally silent" about the likeliBiair. agreed that :.'(l)t hood that conquering Iraq
would make a big difference would lead to a post-war
politically and legally . if occupation and "a protracted
Saddam refused to allow in and costly nation-building
the U.N. inspectors," accord- . exercise." Straw, the British
ing to the minutes. .
,.. foreign secretary, wanted to
It appears to. me that going know how "there can be any
to the United Nations was certainty that the replacedesigned not to avert war, a~ m.ent regime will be any
Blair and Bush assured better. Iraq has no history of
everybody,
. including democracy; so no one lias
Congress and the. U.N. this habit or experience."
Security Council, but in the
According to a transcript
hope of provoking Saddam search claimed by Arianna
Hussein into rashness. Also . Huffington, ABC and 'CBS
during the summer of 2002, news have scarcely men- ·
as Jeremy Scahill reported tioned the Downing Street.
recently in The Nation, memos while running 256
USAF and RAF bombers Michael Jackson . stories.
began ·a massive secret NBC has run six Downing
bombing campaign against .Street pieces, I09 on
I,raqi military and civilian Jackson; CNN, 30 vs. 633.
targets_ Months before the The New York. Tunes bas
congressional vote and U.N. pooh-IXJOhed the evidence.
resolutions, the war had Washington Post and Los ·
already begun~
Angeles Tunes columnist
Instead, Saddam capi!tJiat- Michael Kinsley scolded
ed. It's been proven beyond a readers excited by the British ·
reasonable doubt that had revelations as "paranoid."
Bush and Blair allowed U.N. . "FIXing intelligence and facts
mspectors to finish the job, \0 fit a desinxl policy is the
they· d have established th;~t )3ush U governing style," he
Iraq had no forbidden stock- idled, as if there's no differpiles of weapons of mass ence between his world-weary
destruction. They invaded cynicislil and goVernment docanyway.
wrents proving the point
Even so. during the 2004
Post columnist Dana
campaign·, Bush often Milbank
mocked
repeated this brazen false- Democratic congressmen .
hood: ··we gave (Saddam) a hOlding an unofficial hearing .
chance to allow the mspec- . on the subject as taking "a ·
tors in, and he wouldn't let trip to the land of makec
them iiL"
believe:'
Yet the most damaging
Your gutless liberal media
aspect of the Downing Street at worliJ
memos is what they reveal
(Arkansas
' Democratabout the arrogant incompe- Gazette columnist Gene
teoce of the White House L_';ons is a national magazine
Ideologue who thought occu- award wi1111er anJ co-author
pying Iraq would be a ~cake- of "The Hunting of the .
walk."
President" (St. Manin's
From the start, Blair 's Press, 2000). You can e-mail
advisers warned him that _Lyons at. genelyvrn2@ sbc'"U.S. military plans are vir- globai.Mt.) ·
.

For the Record

•

Leon McKnight

was impossible to get
beyond "the umpires" -. the
media bureau chiefs in
Saigon and the Congress w.ho wouldn't listen to
reports of military progress.
''Whenever this command
goes out to explain how it
did something well, they're
calling you out before the
throw is made to the plate.
That's the game we're in."
Obviously, it's up . to .
President Bush to run the
war well and to . rebuild
domestic support for hi s
policies. He has some
progress to show: increasing
numbers of Iraqis trained, a
constitutional process under
way, the decision of some
Sunnis 10 take part in politics, aggressive new ·action
agai nst the enemy.
Bush's policies may fail
on their own. because they
were misr:onceived or badly
executed. What shouldn't
happen is for U.S. policy to
fail because·•Americans lose
their will. Bush's critics, the
Democrats, should tell him
how to win, not declare that
the .cause is lost.
;

One party government, ·lap-dog press

·'

'

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

Obituaries

Negativism at home could produce difeat of US. policy in Iraq

The Daily Sentinel

~The

PageA4

,.

.

•

Don't Miss lhe Regatta FirteworiiS
After lhe Games On Saturday Night
At lhe Riverfront Park
124 HIGHLAND AVE.

Please come early and enjoy bntlkfast drinks,
donuts, and great fellowship in
the fellowship hill.

·

PT PLEASANT, WV

(Old Caro&lt;!na L.unWJer 1!&lt;**'0 Across trom CSX)

675-3877

..
'

�'

PageA6

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June.30, 2005

'

•

'

EPA to review ·"
board's findings mi
potential risks of
Teflon cherrucal

·~

FREEDOM TOWER

cast alternating beams of light
to the sky and to the horizon . •
The ba&gt;e \\'iII be ·constructed
of 3, foot-thi ck concrete. clad
in a shimmering metal cur;ain
· that will afford additional blast
. protection and al.so give the
impression of movement and
li~ht . Above the 20-story conc;ete base. the building will be
sheathed in plastic-laminated
glass for incrcllsed resistance
to explosions.
· The building will be set back
an ave ra ~c ~f 90 feet from
We st Str~et, the major thoroughfare along the Hudson
Ri ver. The original design
'placed th~ building just 25Jeet
from the six-lane highway.
"The new Freedom Tower
design incorporate s standard~ the police department
had sought to protect the .
bui lding against bomb
blasts. which our counterterrorism experts agree present
one of the greatest threats to .
such iconic struct ures ,"
Police
Commissioner
Raymond Kelly said in a
statement.
The need to set the building
farther back from the street
forced the architect to reshape
the base and abandon the
asymmetrical design.
As in the original design,
stairwells. elevators. communications systems and water
mains will be protected in a 3loot-thick concrete and steel
core. It will have extra fire. proofing. biological and ·
chemical air filters. extra-wide
emergency stairs, a dedicated .
staircase for firefighters and
'·areas of refuge" on each
floor.
·The new design also retains
AP Photoldbox plans for 2.6 million square
In this computer generated rendering released by the Lower Man hatta n Development· feet of office space on 70
Corporation the redesigned Freedom Tower by architect Skidmore , Owings &amp; Merrill LLP rises floor-&gt;, a restaurant and obserabJve thl! lower Manhattan skyline. Rendering created by dbox.
·
vation decks.
Like, the World Trade
Center. the tower will reach
1.362 feet into the sky. But a.n
illuminated spire. meant to
evoke the Statue of Liberty 's

torch . wi ll stretch the building
to the symbolic 1.776 feet
envisioned in · the ori~inal
Freedom Tower de sign . The
·spire will change color and

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Page A7 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Holiday
celebrations
$et in Meigs

Miranda Lambert to perform.
River Recreation·
Festival·Schedule
of events ·

~~~~
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Rising country
. artist Miranda
Lambert,
whose single
"Charlie and
, Me Talkin' "
from her inaugural Sony CD
hit the charts
earlier this .
year, is the featured entertainer at the
Gallipolis River
Recreation
Festival at 9
p.m: Saturday.'
Submitted photo

4- 10 p.m. - lnllatables by
Parties R Us.
I p.m. FAC Raffle
Drawing.
-l-6 p.m. - Talent show
(main stage).
.
6 p.m. - ·Basket bingo by
the United . Way (O.o:
Mcintyre tent).
6:30p.m. -Chris Fitch.
8 p.m. - Kent Boogie.
9:45 p.m. - Split the Pot
drawing .
·
I0 p.m. - Fireworks.
10:15 p.m. - Paul "Bub"
Williams.

Daily activities
Amusement rides
Carnival games
Duck pond
Train tides
Putt·putt gqlf
Face painting by Fantasy
Faces
Dunking booth
Split the pot
Silent auction
.
Inflatable bounce house
Inflatable obstacle cou"e
Inflatable slide
Infl atable 5 in I multi-unit

LOCAL RADIO ·sTATION TO HOST COUNTRY .SHOWDOWN

Come on ovet

2005 Poin~

Pleasant
Stemwheel"
Regatta
Schedule

.

The communities of Racine
and Rutland will hold
Thursday, Jun~ 30
Independence Day celebra5-11 p.m. - Amusement
tions on -Monday · and rides open. Free to the public, ·
Saturda): respective/)•.
sponsored by American
Electric Power.
· 5 p.m. - Concessions open
"ProuCI to be an American for business.
' - Called to Serve" will be
Friday, July 1
the theme of the July 4
Noon
Skateboard
Racine lndepen&lt;)ence Day
demonstrations
(front
of the ·
celebration, which will kick
off with .a parade at 10 a.m. main stage).
2 p.l!). - · Skateboard
Line-up
will
be
at
Southern High School at dembnstrations (front of the
9:15 a.m. with flag raising main stage).
.5-9 p.m. - lnflatables by
by the American Legion Post
602. at 9:45 a.m. There will Panies R Us.
6:30 p.m. Queen 's
be awards in the tloat entries
sponsored
by
of $100 for ·first. sponsored Parad~,'
Gallipolis
Career
College.
by Home National Bank; $75
Opening
7:15 p.m. for second and $50 for third.
Ceremony
(main
,
stage):
both sponsored by Racine
Introductions by Ryan Smith.
Volunteer Fire Department.
invocation
by Bob Fulton,
The fire department will
patriotic
singer
is Jenny Dyer,
have a chicken barbecue and
homemade ice cream with .patriotic speaker is Keith
Jeffers and possi ble guest;
serving to start at II a.m.
Activities begin in Star chairman Ray McKinniss.
Mill Park at 3 p.m. with a and closing remarks by Ryan.
patriotic program. Games for Smith.
7:30 p.,m. Queen's
kids 'will include water slide..
Pageant.
moon bunce ; and bungee
Main stage is sponsored by
pull. Big Bend Farm and
Holzer
Clinic and Holzer
Antiques Club will have a
Medical
Center.
display. At ]:30 p.m. , parade
awards will be presented.
Saturday, July 2
At 4 p.m., . Big · Bend
Kids Day
Cloggers will perform . on
(Sponsored
by the
stage and at 5 p.m ., RACO 's
3-4 p.m.· Lewis Family.,
2 p.m. - Water · Balloons
Wiseman
Agency)
12th annual frog jump, will
and
Obstacle
Course_.
spon4:20-4:45
p.m. - Heather
8:30 a.m. - Firefighter
get underway in junior and
sored
by
the
Gallipolis
Freeland.
senior divisions with cash waterball registration.
Club
.
Kiwanis
5-5:45 p.m. - Ordinary
8:30 a.m. -. · Baby .Tot
prizes to be awarded.
2
p.m
.'
Junior
Miss
People.
Rocky Mountain Bluegrass Sparkler contest registration. Pageant ,
sponsored
by
6-6:45 p.m. - Earthen
9 a.m. - Baby Tot Sparkler
will perform on stage at 5
Farmers
Bank
and
Savings
Vessels.
Contest
•
p.m. and again at 7 p.m. Last
7-7:45 p.m. - Power in the
9 a.m.-noon -· Firefighter Co.
, Chanz Band will perfm:m at
3
p.m.
·Terrapin
Races,
Blood
Drama Ministry.
Waterball Battle Contest.
6 p.m. , and from 8 to 10
9 a.m. - Holzer . Clinic Sack Races and Frog Jumping , 8-8:45 p.m. - Rodne y Pike
p.m .• at which time the fireBaby Olympics (small stage Contest, spon sored by the Praise and Worship.
·works by the fire department in
Gallipolis Lions Club.
9-10 p.m.- The hungr
the park).
will begin. .
5:55
p.m.
Rotary
Mile,
10 a.m.-2 p.m. - Casting
All activities will ·take Kids Tournament (Bass sponsored by the Gallipolis
Monday, July 4 ·
place in the park with the Busters).
Rotary Club.
10 a.m.-5 p.m. -Adult An
exception of the parade and
6
p.m_
.
Independence
in
the Park (French Art
10
a.m.-9
p.m . ·
barbecue. Food and craft Inflatables by Panics R Us.
Day Parade.
Colony).
booths will be in operation
7:30 p.m. - Parade win2,2:30 p.m. - Jennifer
10 a.m.-3 p.m.- Youth An
throughout the afternoon and in the Park . (French An ners announced.
Wellington .
evening in the park.
8-9 p.m. - Joey Wilcoxon
Colony).
2:30-3:30 p.m. Pam
For parade or any other · 10 a.m.-4 p.m. -Bossard with Jenny Dyer.
Hager. ·
information, contact Dale Memorial
9 p.m. - Featured enter·
Library
Noon - Duck-tona · 5000
Hart at 949-26$6. . .
tainment, Miranda Lumbert.
Bookmobile.
(ducks dropped from the
Silver Bridge).
10:30 a.m. - Little Miss
and Mr. Firecracker registraSunday, July 3
Noon - Sack Races, Hula
Nathan Biggs will serve as tion.
·
Gospel Day
Hoop Contest, Frisbee Shot,
. grand marshal · for the
II a.m. - Little Miss and
(Sponsored Par Mar Stores Bubble Gum Blowing Contest
Rutland Independence Day Mr. Firecracker Contest.
and Bob Evans Farms)
(Bandstand area), sponsored
celebration, to be held July
Noon .- Roller Blade Race
1'0-11 :30 a.m. - Praise and by Gallia County Children
2. The theme for the parade by 0.0. Mcintyre · Park ·Worship Service .
Services.
is "Salute Our American District.
·
·
11:30 a.m.- 1:30. p.m. I :30 p.m. - Duck-ton.a
· Heroes."
2 p.m. - Oreo Stacking Puppet Ministry.
5000 ducks arrive at City
Nashville · recording artist Contest.
2-2:45 p.m.- Glorybound. Park
'
Nina Sharp will . perform
from 7 to II p.m. in
Firemen ·s Park, where other
events will also take place .
The Rutland Volunteer Fire
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. giving these . performers a the grand prize . of $100,000
Department, . whiCh will - The "Colgate Country chance to launch their profes- and the coveted national title .
sponsor the day's celebra- Showdown" ·is coming to the sional .careers. Thousands of
''The Colgate · Country
tion; will hold its annual ox tri-county area, and Big aspiring anists compete annu- ' Showdown is one of the most
roast beginning at noon. Country 99 will host the 24th ally
for
the
Country anticipated events in country
Other events include local annual edition of America's Showdown title.
music ," Shari Cochran,
entertainment from noon largest country music talent ·The road to stardom begins WBYG representative, said.
until 2 p.m .. bingo at I p.m., search and radio promotion. each spring with hometown "It i.s an exciting community
karaoke from 2 to 5 p.m., The event is scheduled in talent contests sponsored by event which not only proand children's games, spon- Point Pleasant on Saturday, · more than 400 radio stations motes· a greater appreciation
sored by the Rutland Church July 2. .
across the country. Local win- of iountry music, .but proof the Nazarene, at 2 p.m.
Nearly $200,000 in cash ners advance .to more than 40 vide'S aspiring artists from our
• Vendors will set up booths, ·and prizes will be awarded state contests where the prizes area an opportunity for state,
the Big !'lend Youth League nationwide, including the include $1 ,000 In cash and 'the regional and national expowil) have a dun]Ung booth, grand pri:~;e of $100,000 cash opportunity to compete at one sure . We are pleased and
and a Junior Pony baseball awarded to the national win- of the five regional Colgate
proud to join our .sponsors as
tournament will continue ner.
Country Showdown con- . participants in the 24th annual
throughout the day.
The "Colgate Country tests in 'the fall. The five Colgate Country Showdown:·
A fireworks display at I I Showdown'" is designed to regional 'winners are flmvn
The event is open to vocal
p:m. concludes the celebra- find the most promising coun.- expense-paid to the national and/or instrumental performtion.
try· music talent in America, final. where they compete for ers. individuals or groups

2(1}6 off .

.....
w~~Y'~

Thursday, June 30, 2005

''

Rutland

Zippo lighteis .

11ream Chaser"
'· ..... RicliRina sofa with ·
till &amp; •chill reeker

.

'

Security redesign results in heavily protect~d, slimmer, straighter Freedom Tower

DOVER. Del. tAP)
·The
Environmental
BY MICHAEL
Protection Agency· i:. taking
•
WEISSEN$TEIN
a cautious ·approach to a sci·
'\SSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER
entific panel"s conclu sio n
that a c·hc·mical used by
NEiW YORK - Hurriedlv
DuPont Co. to m&lt;~ke the· redesigned to make it less vul'nonstick substance Teflon is ncrable to a truck bomb:
,a likely hwmui carcinogen.. · !.!rPund Terq's Fr~edom Tower
· The EPA stated earlier thts ~v i i i lose its distim:tive. twistyear that its draft risk a"ess- in~ look but \\'ill he the safest
m.ent uf perfluorooctanoic s k~ "-raper in the world. ofll·
.ac.id and its salts found "sugl'i,ih . . a iLl Wednesday.
~~~ti~~, ~~~~de;~,;;n~~e~f~f:~: The redraw n tower will be
hased on animal studies.
sli mni,,r. ' traighter ami ·more
In a draft report released con1 L'llti LHl: ti . it will be set farMonday. the majority of ther hack fw m the street. and it
members on an EPA scientif- will b~ placed arop a m~m ­
ic advisory board that moth. 201 1- foot cuncrcte-andreviewed the ·agency's repon metal pc,kstal d~sig ned to
concluded that PFOA. aJs,, repel cxplu&gt;ii&gt;n&gt; .
·.
known as C-8, is "likely" to
B ~c au'~ uf the ,·hanges .. the.
be carcinogenic to humans. · 20-ton granite cornerstone that
and that the EPA shou ld was. Jaid wi th great fanfare by
conduct cancer risk assess- G;ll'. Geor~e Pataki last Fourth
ments for a variety of . of Ju ly " ifl have to be moved.
tumors found in mice· ami
The L&gt;rigi nal design for the
rats.
tower that will rise on the site
Neither the EPA nor the of the ue stroyed ' ~orld Trade
advfsory board at.tempted to Ce nter was sent b&lt;1ck 10 the
quantify any cancer risk s dra\\.ing board last month after
from the chemical. but the
board suggested that EPA the police department raised .
should conduct risk assess- cot1c;erns that it would be too
ments for a . variety of vulneritble to truck bombs:
PFOA-induced tumors found
The new design is intended
in laborato ry animals. ·
to meet the \ecuritv standards
'' It is not yet known set forU .S. cmbass\cs. making
whether carcinogenicity will it the world's safest high-rise
represent the most sensitive building. said lead architect
endpoint for PFOAs... the David Childs.
board added. suggesting that
"This building is as robust
the chemical may also affect and as strong as any I've ever
development and poses a been in:· he said.
potent ial threat to the nerThe original design had a
vo us and imm\]ne systems.
twisting, asy mmetric-d) shape
EPA spokesman Rich thal was meant to evoke the
Hood said Wednesday that . outstretched arm of the Statue
the board's draft repot1 is an of Liberty it wi 11 overlook. The
."important .step" in deter- new design will be a more recmining whether PFOA is tangu lar shape with sonie of
. dangerous enough to regud ff
lille. but he was unwilling to the square edges shave o • ·
say whether it increases the resembling ·a faceted version
likelihood of regulation.
of one of the twin towers.
"I think there are a Jot of
"In a subtle but important
questions that need to be way, this building recalls ...
more definitively answered those buildings that we lost."
before we can say what the Chtlds said.
agency 's final action is
Construction is expected to
going to be .." Hood said. begin next year. with steel rising
•'It's not a good thing to above ground level in 2007 and
jump to unwarranted conclu- completion scheduled for 2010
sions...
Environmentalists nevertheless hailed the report,
which will be discussed by
EPA officials and SAB
members in a public teleconference July 6. saying it will
increase pressure on the EPA
to conduct hunian health risk
assessments for liver. breast,
pancreatic and testicular
cancer, as well as potentially
toxic effects on the immune
system.
"This makes it hard for the
EPA not to move forward
·aggressively:· said Richard
Wiles. senior vice president
'for
the
Environmental
Working Group. aJJ advoca. cy and research organization.
While PFOA ·is used to
make Teflon. it is not present in Teflon itself, which is
applied to cookware, clothing, car parts and floorin g.
PFOA also .is used to pr'O'duce mat~tials used in firefighting foam, phone cables
and computer chips . .
DuPont officials would not
·comment on the' report but
said in a statement . that
'human health and 'toxicology
studies suggest that PFOA
exposure doe. not cause
cancer in humans and does
not pose a health risk to the
general public.
"To date. no hllman health
effects are known to be
caused ·by PFOA even in
"' workers who have significantly higher exposure lev.
.
!!'ls than the gener;ll population," the company said.
DuPont also said data
from its employee health
studies and those conducted
by 3M Co.. which stopped
·manufacturing PFOA in
. 2000. "deserve greater con:sideration in the EPA's final
;risk assessmen't . rather .than
. :relying solely" on antmal
·testing models.
· DuPont's studies. which
. are still ongoing. have found
elevated levels of total cho:lesterol and fat s called
:uiglycerides among workers
:exposed to PFOA. but no
•indication that PFOA was
:the cause of increil;ed serum
. cholesterol and triglycerides.
DuPont shareS fell 3 1
ceots to close at S-+4.63 .
-Wednesday on the New York
:Stock ~change.

11

'

"

with up to seven . members
who have not performed on a
record listed in the national
recorCI charts of Billboard.
Radio and Records or the
Gavin
. h'
h
Report wtt tn . 18 mont s
precedtng local competitiOn.
There is a SlO entry fee. and
all contestants must begm
their COJ11petition by performmg at Country Showdq.wn
contests produced by. pantci·
patmg country mustc radto
stations.
A uniform judging system
on all levels of the competition will ensure fairness. For
more information, call 6752763 .or visit the Web site at
~ww.wbyg.com.

Friday, July I
6:30-7 :30 p.m . --, Cee Cee
Tench Sings Your· Favorites,
Riverfront Park' Stage
7:45-9 p.m. - Charlie Lilly
and· the Poor Side Band,
Riverfront Park Stage
7:30-10:30 p.m - Music
TBA, Main Street Stage ·
8:30 p.m. - Sternwheeler
Evening Crui&gt;e departs
Riverfront Park
9:15-10:30 .p.m. - The
Griffith and Cross Band Live
Country · Music,
Riverfront Park Stage
Saturday, July 2
II a.m. - Point Pleasant
Independence Day Regatta
.Parade, Main Street ·
12:30 p.m. - Boy Scouts ·
Rain Gutter Regatta , Tu-.
Endie-Wei State P&lt;trk
I p.m. - Church of Christ
in Chri stian Union Gospel
Show. Main Street Stage
I' p.m. - Deckhand Line
Throwing Competition, River
Museum ·
2-6 . p.m.
Colgate
Country
Showdown.
Rehearsals, Riverfront Park
Stage
2 p.m .. Sternwheeler
Afternoon Cruise Departs,
Riverfront Park Portage
Colgate
6-8 p.m .
Country Showdown Finals,
Riverfront Park Stage
7:30-9:30 p.m. - Hidden
Label - Quality Rock and
Roll Music. Main Street Stage
8:15-10:30 p.m. - Last
Man Standing, Riverfront
Park Stage
9 p.m. - Point Pleasant
Fireworks Cruise departs.
Ri verfrom Park Portage
I 0 p.m./Dark Point
Pleasant Fireworks Display,
Tu-Endie-Wei Park
10:30. p.m .-midnight Live MUSIC TfJA, Riverfront
Park Stage
•
Sunduy, July 3
1·5 p.m. -Tour a working
AEP Tow Boat, Riverfront
Ponage
.
2 p.m.- Lazy River Cruise
depans, Riverfront Portage.
6-6.45 p.m.
. M1ck
Sueter's Stephen Foster
Nostalgia Show, Riverfront
Stage
..
7-8:30 p.m. - Back Porch
S1~~ng Band, Riv~rfrontStajle
~.30 p.m. DJ and
Karaoke, Main Street Stage
8:45-10:30
p.m.
Bluegrass
Music
TBA,
Riverfront Stage
8 p.m. - . Sunday Evening
Cruise departs, Riverfront
Ponage
Monday, July 4
"ROCK THE RIVER
FRONT' ·
.
I p.m. - Kanawha Valley
Dragway Park Hot Rod Show,
Main Street
2 p.m. - River Cruise
departs
·
6-7· i5 p.m. _ Hidden
· Label. - Quality Rock and
Roll Riverfront Stage
7::iO- 9 p.m. - The Pan
Time Band, Riverfront Stage
9:15-11:15 · p.m_ - The
Convenible Blondes
"Charleston's Best Band "
Riverfront Stage
· '
8 p.m . -.
Gallipolis
Fireworks Cruise dep~~rts,
Riverfront Ponage
8-10 . p.in. - Live Music
TBA, Main Street Stage

Two Convenient Locations:
1/4 Mile NQrth Pomeroy/Mason Bridge Mason, WV
··
'
.
Phone (304) n3·5323 .
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart) Gallipolis,
(140) '...J:..171

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The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

•

.Thursday, June 30,

INSIDE:

Ohioans on the move~ four IMotorcycle clubs band together to create violence-free zones
big cities lost residents
IJ.-\YTON iA I' l -

'

CINC IN:-\ATI IA Pl - Four
~,1f Ohio'.... hi~~e~t citic" arc
.tnion~ the rl~lt ion "s bi!.!!.!C~ t
\I.~C f._.. jll poruJ.t tion Si llL~~.._the
Ja:-. t ful[. CC il ~li"' . accnrdin!.! tO

· m·wl~ rek.ascd fi gures .... but

Wimbledon mens semis set, Page B2
Top pn:p star chooses OS U, Page B2
Baseball, Page B~

2005

' Hot
~.:h rPIIll:. kathL· r \ ·e..,h and
n;LfltC' li~c Bad to th ~ Bone.
tary 'c:hoohand ioh' are hctn~ \lade ~ten .llltl Ymtn~ Blood,
cr~at~d hy c:om1ionc:nt 'uppli~ 1\'0U idn ' t normal II· c:al m a
er plant, ~ ra vi t atllt~ to the neiQhhorhoml. But. a band of
Jeep w.scmhl) plant.··
molurc:yclc duh' hope I hat's
"I don 't 'cc· .th e dnum and exactlv 11hat it .wi ll do.
t: IDom a hlltlfothcrc·it ic, ,scc.'' . Thc-newll formed grou p Hc:r11 at _,aid . "I han· prujectcd l:i ;trea motorcvcle clubs with
that whc·n 20 I0 figures come: :100 members' - plans. to
6u t. Toledo will overtake patrol nim e- infested areas
Cillt:illn;tt i as the third lar~e s t and set up temporary '.safe
c it y in thL: ~t ate . "
~
I:Lllles so children. ~e nior citiHem at sa id m;my empt) ;.ens and others f~e l safe to
n~stcrs who mm·eJ to ,uburb, · come out and play or social-

~Bl

The Daily Sentinel

·-

•

,,

'Thursday, June 30, 2005

.'

p~npk say that due sn't t ~ll th e
. wlllJic• story of where Ohinans
li1e and wo r ~.
Kathy Koops. president of
Sibn
Cline
Re.location '
Savlces. estimated Wednesda1
that 90 percent of the outwmd
migration of peopk from the want to nHn·e ba~.:k in lo the 11e .
Ci 11cinnat i ar~a is because ur city. And he: noted the recen t
The dTon was . launched
job tran sfers. with a corrc- comp le tion of a $ 11 .' million after a 'pate of shootin gs in
·..,pnnJing number nlO\ ' ill!.! in.
mal l expa nsion added 800 the streets and other gun via"There is no mass\1e. nu m- retail johs.
"
· lence on the; cit v's west side.
ber of peo ple " 'ying. · \\'e · ~~~
"We arc beginnning to .sec
"W~ arc not the police. and
gc11 to get out of h~ re ... , Kcmps an upt ick in income tax cnll ec- we' re not Yigilant es:· orga-,aid .
ticllts he re." Herwat said .
ni1e r Ricky Boyd ,aid..
f\ew figures from the l '- S.
Dayton City Manager Jim
-Club members are trying to
Ce n-;u s' .... Bureau
.-.how Dinnee n had a different sUiOi\ . send criminaL&lt; this message:
Co lu'mbu s is alone among Hi s prob lein is that n'ot lust .. ·we know what you · are
Ohio's Lugest cities tn ·gain Dayton is losing population. doing. and -you ' re going to
AP Photo
hm·e to close up &gt;hop for a
. po pulation! ~ . ~.5 . pe'rcent its suhu rbs are, too.
· bet1vee n April 20011 and Jul y
"The whole re~ion is slo" h while we're here so the kids Local members of a number of Dayton motorcycle. clubs prepare to leave Dunbar 1-\igh Sctiool
blcedin~:· Dilmecn sai d. can play in their parks, the old after an organ izational meeting about 'stopp ing neighborhood violence. The group plans to
200-l-to 730.008.
In that same ti rnc. Cincinnati "Si-nce 2000. most of t" (];11·e fnlks can vis·it each other and patrol high:crime areas and set up temporary "safe zones" so that children. the elderly and oth·
loq 5.2 percent ( Ill J 1-1. 15-l); bled 2 to -l percent. Our growtll people can just get some fresh ers can feel safe in their neighborhoods.
Cleveland . 3.9 percent (t o is really sprawl. In t!~ e lon g air."'
Boyd. .director of the well acquainted and members by holding an open ho.use at a cold. Boyd hopes 'th~ idea
-158 ,684) ; Daywn 3.6 percent · run. we 're· goi ng to pay a big
spreads to other citi es.
(to 160,293 ): ancl Toledo 2.8 price for this. bu t we keep Montgomery County health are old friends, but this is high school. This Saturday they
Dayton police Chi~f Julian
percent (to 30-l.973i.
buildin~ ""V more housi ng ilep,artment. is not organi:zing their fir ~ t attempt to j oin and every Saturday -·
plan
to
ride
into
a
neighbor.
Dav.is
said he has no immediforces
for
any
community
than
we"ha\e'
a
dei!iand
for.".,~
,
the
:effort
as
part
of
his
job.
Because the Census Bureau
action.
,,,
hood,
park
their
motorcycles
ate
concerns
about the
won"t re lease fie ure s· f-or met- · Sottrushe Zand vakili . &lt;l laboi" · "&lt;· ".1 came out of the streetsropolitan areas. until late sum- economi st at the University of moq of the'e guys came out · Boyd said Wednesday he and mingle with residents for group's etlort.
·
" I'm all for safety,'' he said .
mer: it ish 't known now, how Cincinnati. saitl population of the streets - so who .better got the idea after talking. to a few hours .
Boyd
hopes
their
presence
"As
lqng as they stay .on the
mbtorcyclists
following
the
much of tho se declines arc loss is n't necessarily bad . so to do ·this thing'!" he said.
sales
right
side of the law, I don't
stops
shootings
and
drug
attributable to suburban long as jobs don't disappear. "My motorcycle days are funeral of club, member who
Cities usuall y collect in uomc 01·er. but I Joined the Young was beaten to death on ·the a.nd gives residents a feeling have a problem with what
!:!rowth.
of security. And he said the they're planning to do."
" Steve Herwat. director of the ta x from people who wnrk in Bloods and I'm going to be a street several months ago.
"These guys understand the motorcyclists will be there to , Bad to the Bone member
Toledo-Lucas Count y Plan the citv. rccarJiess of where part of thi' thing."
The ~ev. Jerome McCorry, streets ," Boyd said. ''The talk to and counsel people Joe "Slick Willy" Howard
Commissions, was llot di s- the y Ill e. ~o tax cnllectic)n
oft
en
is
a
better
indicator
of
a
civil
-ri ghts leader who grew churches don ' t get it , the who might be taking part in thinks the idea is worth trycouraged by Toledo's loss.
the violence or be tempted to. mg.
_
up in Dayton and lives in me. politicians don't get it "These numbers cont inue hmn·ital a city is.
. Any conflicts will be han"There are places where
these
biker
guys
get
it.
Thi
s
·-rm not worried if there are area where the motorcyclists
the trend of a lesser population
people are afraid to leave
loss here than elsewhere." ·a few thousand less people in will tpatrol. believes . it 's a city has never seen anything died by police, he said .
The
motor~yctists
plan
to
their
houses." he said. "My
like
this
before."
good idea that will help.
Herwat said. "We think it is the city:· Zandvakili said.
carry
on
the
campaign
indefineighborhood
isn 't as good as
The
clubs
·introduced
them"It's ex treme ly doable ,'.'
going to bottoni'out and we· "Where people li ve has a lot
. · . selves to the community and nitely, switching from cycles ,it should be . ... It's time to do
will reach a population stabili- to do with ho w vibrant an area McCorry said.
ty.''
.
.
' .·, ... 11e '&lt;llu.
·-' ;uK 1 11e.s ces new
The· motorC)'de clubs _are detailed their plans Saturday to cars when the weather gets · something." ·
He ' said Toledo had moi'e vibrancy, in Cincin.nati . "In -----------'-------------~--------'-----'---------housin~ starts than demoli- Cleve land. the center of the
r~ch
US
0
tions last year, the city is plan- city is becoming vibrant. anct
ning to build four new eJemcn- people are moving back in ...
COLUMBUS (AP) - The years for alleging a pattern of actually going to trial , said his · "They had at the very least a
attorney. Konrad Kircher.
duty to investigate the possibilOhio Supreme Court agreed corrupt activity.
But the 3rd Ohio Dis!rict . ''We still have to prove our ity that the Archdiocese wa~
·w ed nesday
to
consider
whether the deadline has Court of Appeals in March case that my client had no -rea- negligent or otherwise culpa'
' passed to tile sexual abuse ruled that a case should go son not to know he had a ble,'' the Ist District said.
The Supreme Court earlier
lawsuits . again st
the fo rward against Thomas claim," he said. He added the
Hopp of Cincinnati. The case could help two other declined an appeal of that rulArchdiocese of Cincinnati.
Several lawsuits by people Shelby County court agreed appeals· involving more than SO ing, which upheld Hamilton
who said they were abused as that the time limit should victims that the justices haven' t County Common Pleas Court
decisions to throw out several
children , have accused the begin running from 2002, yet accepted or declined.
Rom;m Catholic archdiocese when Hopp was removed
The Shelby County case was claims against a former priest
Thursday, June 30
Overnight ( 1-6 a.m.)
Archbishop
Daniel from the ministry and the vic- , the only one of many that was because the deadline had
Momi11g (7 a."m.-Nomr)
It should be a hwnid and and
It should be a humid mom- doudy overnight. We are prc- Pilarczyk of negligently hiring tim learned the archdiocese d~cided against the archdiocese, passed. Those · victims said
spokesman Dan Andriacco said. they were abused in the 1950s
ing. Temperatures will ri se dieting moderate ruin . The the priests, hiding the abuse and knew of other victims.
The appeals court agreed the "We believe the other cases and '60s at a Cincinnati
from 74 to 85 by lute this rain fall should end around o intlictine emotional distress.
Most
were
thrown
out
based
should get the chance to were decided rightly."
victim
church. The priest, John
morning. Skies will range a.n1. with total accumulations
on
state
laws
setting
deadlines
prove
he
had
no
reason
to
The
high
court
said
the
rut
Berning, retired in 1970 to St.
from partly cloudy to cloudy for th is e.vent near 0.2 1 inchknow
the
archdiocese
and
ing
conflicts
with
one
by
the
for
filing
complaints
over
sexPetersburg, Fla., and died last
with 5 MPH winds from the es. Temperatures will linger
Pilarczyk
were
negligent
in
1st
Ohio
District
Court
of
ual
abuse
of
a
minor.
The
limit
November at age 97.
west turning from the north- at n with today 's low of 70
allowing
th'
e
ll_buse
to
continue.
Appeals
in
Cincinnati,
which
age
is
one
year
after
turning
The cases could be decided
west as the moming progress- occurring around 6 a.m.
18
for
reportin
g
the
abuse·
If
the
man
\(iio
s
in
the
high
said
the
victims
should
have
by lawmakers, who
instead
es.
Winds will be 10 MPH from 1
court,
his
case
would
return
to
.known
they
might
have
a
claim
itself.
two
years
for
claiming
are considering whether to
Afternooll U·6 p.m.)
the northwest.
the
pretrial
investigation
and
against
the
church
simply
someone
failed
to
protect
eliminate the time limits for
It will continue to be
Friday, July I .
a~ain st th e abuse and fi've document exchange before because the abuse occurred. church sex abuse cases.
humid. You will sec light
Morning (7 a.m.•Noo 11 )
.
'
The Ohio Senate in March
rain. The rainfall is expected
A humid lllllrning. There is
unanimously
approved a bill
to begin near 3 p.m. The rain- a slim chance that it cou ld
that
would
e,&gt;;tehd
the deadfall should end around -l p.m . rain . Tem peratures will climb
line for tiling claims · to 20
wi!h total accumulations for from 7 2 tn 82 by late this
years
after turning 18 years
thts event near 0. 12 mches .
.
.
.
softball when lightning struck south of Columbus. Their conCHILLICOTHE (AP) lwld morn tng. Sk1es w1ll be mostTemperatures
will
old. It also would allow vic- ·
,
.·
. .. ly SLLILOI to m&lt;Jstl y cloudy One inmate was killed and five the field around 8 p.m. , ditions were not available.
.
tims to sue over alleged abuse
steady around 86 wtth today' . . h 5 · I ll MPH . d f
The
Chillicothe that happened up to 35 years
inmates·and two prison guards Warden Tim Brunsman said.
wtn s rom
high of 89 occurring around 1 wll ; to
The victims· names were not Correctional Institution hous- ago and add clergy to the list
were injured in a lightning
p.m. Skie~ will be sunny to the \\Cst.
strike
outside
the
Chillicothe
released.
es approximately
2.600 of professionals required to
!iftemoou .(1-6 P·'~-) .
.
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
The
injured
·
were
taken
.
to
Correctional
Institution
on
inmates
and
has
been
open report suspected abuse. The
from the northwe st turning
It . w1ll conunue to be
Adena
Regional
Medi'cal
since 1966. according to its bill is in the House, which has
from the southeast as the humtd . L1 ¥ht r~mts expected. Wednesday night.
·
The inmates were playing Center in this city 45 miles Web site.
adjourned for the summer.
afternoon progresses.
Th~- ra1n l;tll ts expected to
Evening (7p.m.-Midnighl) ~egm near 5 p.m. The ram .
.
It will remain humid. Lieht lall should reach 0.06 mches
rain is forec asted. The r~in hy
thi s
afternoon.
should start by 11 p.m . Temperatures - ~ill . rise from
Accumulations of 0.05 inches 84 early th ts atternoon to R9
are predicted . Ternperarure; by 3 p.m ..-then drop down to
will drop from 86 ,_ early this 8-l late a tternoo~ . Sktes wtll
evening to 75. Skies will range ran ge from sunny to cloudy
from clear to cloudy with 15 with 5 to 10 MPH winds !rom
MPH winds from the south the west turnin g from the
turning from the northwest as northwest as the afternoon
the evening progresses.
pr&lt;Jgresses.

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J t•ICeS t CODSI.der if time ·limi
' 'ts
· clauns·
. ·appIy to chu._ · . abuse

Lightning strikes outside prison, inmate killed

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Local Stocks
ACI-54.30
AEP-36.62
Akzo-39.76
Ashland Inc.- 71.31
AT&amp;T-19.26
BU-13.31
Bob Evans- 22.98
BorgWamer- 53.14
Champion- 4.20
Charming Shops- 9.49
City Holding-J..6. 70
Col-.47.77
DG-20.35 ·
DuPont - 44.63
Federal Mogul - .83
USB-29.37
Gannett - 71. 50
General Electric - 35
GKNLY -.- 4. 77
Harley Davidson- 49.96
JPM-35.96
Kroger19.15' ...
,

Ltd.-21.45
NSC~31.30

Oak Hill Financial- 29:23
OVB-25.70
BBT-40.59
Peoples- 26.79
Pepsico- 54.43
Premier- 12.50.
Rl)&amp;kwell - 49
Rocky Boots - 31
_RD Shell- 65.08
SBC-23.94
Sears -151.03
Wal-Mart- 48.54
Wendy's- 46.48
Worthington -15.66
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day"s transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis . .

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· Bcukftom
Canada, eh? ·
After a week north of the·
border filled with an ·
almost-disturbin g amount of
PT Cruiser sightin gs. a haples' searcl), for unsweet iced
tea and food prices that
would make an American
squi rm - rIll back. eh.
My vacation in Niagara
Falls, Canada presented.a few ·
oddities and headaches, but
. was really quite relaxing.
When it was time to return to
the Un.ited' States. though; the
line of cars ·at the border
. couldn't move fast enough.
At first glance, Canada
isn't that different from.
home, but fpr those that look
close enough. there are some
differences.
Just a few of the little
things - the PT Cruiser is
the undisputed king of automobiles in Ontario; my girlfriend, who craves unsweet
iced tea, couldn't lind' one
anywhere; milk is sold in
bags: and hot ·dogs cost
around $6.apiece.
The biggest difference for
me. an obvious sports fan,
was the sports programming,
There was no ESPN (at least
not on the cable service at my
motel), instead . there was
TSN along with a few other
S!llaller sports channels.
TSN carried some ESPN
programming like Pardon the
Interruption as · well as
SportsCenter, but it wasn't,
the. same sports highlight
show we· ve grown ;tccus. tamed to. It was spelled
SportsCentre
and : very
Canadian-oriented.
A lot of Blue Jays coverage
. and late night golf OQ these
station s.
Luckily. for me, though, my
arrival in Canada coincided
with the start of the Canadian
' Football League season. I
watched the opener as the
Britis)l Columbia Lions captured a 27-20 victory over-the
defending Grey Cup champion Toronto Argonauts.
CFL seemed like a mix of
NFL and Arena League
Football. Like in . Arena,
·receivers were allowed to get

OVPseeking
football stringers
Ohio Valley'Publishing is
currently seekin~ stringers
to help cover htgh school
football games this fall. .
· Applicants must have a
strong understanding of
football, the ability to keep
accurate statistics and basic
word processing computer
skills . .
Some travel may be necessary; willingness to cover
a variety of teams and previous writing. experience
are plusses.
A II those interested
should
contact
Brad
Sherman, OVP Sports
Editor at (740) 446-2342
ext. 33. If there is no
answer, leave a message
along with your contact
information.
Writing samples can be
sent to bshennan@mydailytribune.com; faxed to 1740-446--3008; or dropped
off at our Gallipolis office
at 825 3rd Ave.

Sports BriEfs

First choose-aseat day slated

Brad Sherman/photo

Post 128's Eric VanMeter delivers a p1tch during 8th Distri ct American Legion action Wednesday at Meigs High School.

FB cruises past McArthur
BY BRAD SHERMAN
esHERMAN@MYD .. LYTRIBUNE.coM

ROCKSPR INGS ._ . Eric
VanMeter pitched a complete
game six -hitter as Feeney
Bennett Post 128 cruised past
an error-plagued McA11hur
club, 9-3, during 8th Di strict
American Leg1on baseball
Wednesday.
VanMeter, who struck out
10 over ~ine innings, gave up
only two earned runs. Half of ·
the hits he surrendered were
during the final two innings ;
he threw just under 130 pitch.es on the evenmg.
Derrick Carl the flfSt of
three McArthur• hurlers, took
the loss.
Post 128 (14-9) improved
to 7-4 in 8th District action.
Meanwhile McArthu'r Post
303 (5-7) which actually had
more ertors (7) than hits, fell
to 2-4 against district foes .
Chris · Myers paced the
Feeney Bennett offense with a
double, single and a pair of
runs batted ih. · None of
Myers' teammates logged
more than one hit: the team
amassed just eight total.

, HUNTIN-G TON, W.Va.
- The Marshall University
Ticket Office is hosting its
first ''Choose a SeaC' day
on Saturday, July 9 from .I 0
a.m . to 2 p.m. at Joan C.
Edwards
·
Stadium.
Available seat locations
will be marked and on sale
to the general public, In ..
addition, ticket office and
marketin g staff wi II be on
hand to as.sist fans with any
questions.
The Thundering Herd will
embark on its inaugural
season in Conference USA
and face a six-game home
schedule that is the most
'
exciting in school history. A
variety of ticket options are
available and by purchasing
season tickets, fans can
save 25
percent . on
ATHENS ( AP) ...., Kirby
RedZone , I 0 percent on
Hocutt. assistant athl'etics
Sideline and 10 percent on
director ·at Oklahoma. has
HerdZone seats.
,
been hi'red as the new AD at
· Two more "C l;loose a
Ohio University. the school
Seat" days are sc heduled
. said on Wednesday.
for fans to se lect and purHocutt:. 33. . replaces Tom
Boeh. who resigned in May
chase season tickets - July
after I 0 years at the Mid23 and August 13. For more .
American Conference school
information contact the
to
become AD at Fresno
Mars hall
University
State'
. Hocutt takes over Aug.
Athletics Ticket Office at 115.
·
800- THE-HERD.
·•t am a firm believer that
athletic competition is an inteContact lnfbrma~ion
gral part of a student-athlete's
educational'
experience; ·
F l l - 1-74().-4..46·3008
Hocutt said at a new; conferJ-mail -sport!!@ mydallytribune.c_om
ence. ;'The lessons you can
learn in competition you can
SPOrt• Start
also
apply not only to your
Brad srwrman. Sports Editor
educatton
in the pursuit of
1740) 446-2342. """ 33
your degree. but aiSQ to your
bsnermanOmyda llytriblJ&amp;e.com
career aspirations."
Bryon Wlltora, Spcno.w.1t.r
A four-year letterwinner in
1740) -2342. ""'· 23
football at Kansas State,
llwatter., a mydallytrltlune'com
Hocutt earned his master's
degree from Oklahoma.
lorry Crum, SporJa Wriler
Before coming to Oklahoma,
1304) s1s-1m. ""'· 1s
Ierum Omydaityragister.com
he work~ in marketing and

Luke Haislop tripled. Ken scores in the tifth. Amsbarv
Amsbary . and
Brandon stole home and Myers douFackler doubled, while Terry bled in another ru n to round
Durst 'added a two-run single out the Post 128 scoring in the
for the winners. Mike Davis sixth .
and Matt Mooney each
McArthur capitalized on a
chipped' in a single.
pair of errors in the ninth to
Ryan Collins hit a two-run score its final run.
home run for McArthur.
Feeney Bennett is off today
Teammate Alex Abele had before taking part in the
·
dK · L
two smgles an evm a~ane Athens Fourth of July tournarounded out the offense w1th a ment this weekend. Post 128
begins round-robin play noon
hit.
. .
Feeney _Bennett broke the Friday at Athens- H.S. then
sconng 1ce m the second plays again at 3 p.m. on
when Myers smgled m Alexander's field.
Fackler. then padded the lead
to 3-0 &lt;titer Durst knocked m Feeney Bennett 9, McArthur 3
two more talhes the next McArthur ·000 200 00 1 - 367
Post128 012 222 oox- 983
mmng.
Collins· founh inning. two- Derrick Carl. Wade Coleman (5), Greg
Powell (7) and Ryan Collins. Eric VanMeter
run shot over the left field and Terry Durst. WP - Enc VanMeter. LP
fence pulled the visitors back -DerriCk Carl. HR - M: Ryan Collins.
to within a run at 3-2 before fourth inning. one on.
FB began to pull away.
· Runs by Mooney and
Jeremy Blackston in the bottom of the frame pushed the
lead back to three, and was the
second of four consecutive
two-run innings.
Tyler Clagg scored on an
error then. Blackston 's sacfi- ·
fice fly accounted for a pair of

Hocutt named
new Bobcats AD

f'

'

promotions at . Kansa~ State
and was an assistant director
of licensing for the NCAA .
While with the Sooners.
Hocutt
supervi&gt;ed
the
Oklahoma athletic develoP:
men!. otftce, tickets, . 'pectal
events. stadium
'uites,
endowment progmm and letterwinners association . He
also served as the primary
aqministrator for football .
. while also over&gt;eeing bao;ebalL men's and women's golf
and men's and women's tenrus.
'
His fundrai sing efforts
helped Oklahoma to record
high!, _in annual giving and
capital campaigns.

Friday's games
Feeney Sennett at Athens 'ourney.
noon (Athens H.S.) and 3 p.m.
(AieKand er' H .S .)

Saturday's games
Feeney Ben nett at Athens tourney,
noon (Athens H.S.) and 6 p.m .
(Alexan der H.S .)

·Tueeday. Juiy 5
~a~on

Co. at S"GCharleston. 5 p.m.

Wednesday, Jul)' .6
Feeney Bennett at Athens. 7 p.m.
.
Thursday, July 7
Parker sb'urg at Mason Co .. 6_p.m
Friday, July 8
Feeney Bennet1 at Mason Co., 6 p.m
Saturday, July 9

Feeney Bennett at~ 15. 1 p.m.
Roan ~ at Mason Co.. 2 p.m.

..........

Please

~

Scraps, Bl

;:...

' I

JUL

cocmllf" ·

"'

for' that flo•ver Bed you nee s got p'n ailed

-~:.:=~ :~~~;-5
• Hanging l'asl·.ets

'
Produce Sold At Our M&amp;IOD Locatlon 1
1/4MIIeNocllt

Pomelo,PS an ·BIJ"
l'nzon. WV

~(304)~

'

�.,

· Thursday, June 30,
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June

Whitten, VanHorn
Boston homers its way
share W.Va. Open lead to victory over Indians

'

'

'
Hewitt and Federer
both but couldn't control. And the
broke their opponents in the last came when Grosjean - a
final game of each of the ftrst Wimbledon semifinalist the
two sets, then both dominated past two years - hit a crafty
third-set tiebreakers. And in slice serve, and Roddick delivboth cases, it was a combina- ered a sharp return that the
tion of better players taking Frenchman •meekly slappe,d
control on key points, and less- into the net.
experienced players failing to
The latest, most vital, addicome tilrough when they had tion for Roddick is the volley;
to.
.
and he won the point on 4:7 of
Or, as John. McEnroe so del- 59 trips to the net Wednesday.
icately put it on the BBC: . "You know what it is? I don't
"They call it 'choking."' ·
feel like it's ferced ri&amp;ht now,
Neither Federer nor Hewitt is whereas other limes; I'd go to
•
often accused of committing 'the net and I'd hit a shot and
that sin. Sut Hewitt can't seem hope that something good
to solve Federer of late, going would happen," said Roddick,
0-'7 head-to-head over the last who lost to Federer in four sets
· two seasons.
in last year's tina!.
'Tm not sure what the key is.
Roddick split with coach
Have to try and find somethin~ Brad Gilbert in December,
in the next couple of days, '
0 dfi
Hewitt said. ••He's obvio~sly switching to Dean ol me, an
the best pl~•er in the world for assistant for the U.S. Davis
11 tak h' Cup and Olympic teams.
'
a reason. e s rea Y en ts Goldfi11e has worked with
· game to another level in the
last couple of years."
. · Roddick on ' being confident
Tb truly appreciate how enough in his volleying and
much Roddick has developed other new7and-improved skills
to use them \vhen a match is on
sine~ losing to Federer in t.tJe the line.
2003 Wimbledon semifinals,
one needed to look no further
"It's obviously tough when
AP photo than the second game of the you go through a period of time
Andy Roddick, of the USA, celebrates his win over Sebastien fifth set against Grosjean.
where you're not doing as well
Grosjean, of France, during their quarterfinal match on Centre Court
It was there that Roddick as you have in the past,"
earned the lone break of tlie Goldfine said. ·
at Wimbledon Wednesday. Roddick w&lt;;m 3-6, 6-2. 6-1, 3-6, 6-3:
decisive set, his second victory
"Looking at the.close matchbehind RoddiL·k.
defense - against No. · 21 · of the tournament in a match es he's lost, it's relatively easy
In Thursday's women's Fernando Gonzalez~s swing- that long.
to do new things at 2-all, 3-all
semifinals, d~fendin g champi- tor-the-fences style, winning 7Roddick earned one point in the first set, but at 4-all in !he.
on Maria Sharapova ·faces 5, 6-2, 7-6 (2) to extend his with a hard volley 10 a corner fifth set, that'.s a differe~t
2000-0 I
winner
Venus unbeaten streak on grass to 34 that Grosjean could only chop ~tory. And I thmk now he~
Williams, while No. I Lindsay matches. In a remarkably simi- at, sending the ball flying into . finally starting to· believe he_
.Davenport faces No. 3 Arne lie lar match, Hewitt ended the run the ·stands. Another came coltr- has the abthtv to do some of
Mauresmo.
of No. 26 Feliciano Lopez 7-5, tesy of a backhand·passing shot these things and be successful·
Federer played superb 6-4, 7-6 (2).
that Grosjean got his racket to doing it."

was a lot of heat on me coming
ASSOCIATED PRESS
into this tournament. I wanted
to prove that I'm stil I a pretty
good
tennis player. I'm not
WIMBLEDON: En~land­
gone.
I'm
22 years old." said
Andy Roddick knows he's a
Roddick,
''-'l1o
lost in the secwork il) progress. a young
ond
round
at
the
French Open .
player with a record-setting
'Tm still up in the world,
serve, a fearsome fllrehand, a
sdll
com~ting for Slams. basi Grand Slam title - and key
~ally
three· out of four of them.
parts of his game that occasionthroughout the year. l felt like I
ally let him down.
That's why he was so still deserved a linle bit 'or
pleased that excellence in two respect: But that being said. I'd
troublesome areas, volleying love to take -it further. I' m not
and returning, played such a satisfied yet. .. ·
large part in a 3'6, 6-2, 6-1 , 3- · He ceJ1ainly wouldn ·r be all
6, 6-3 victory over NQ. 9-seed- . that pleased with a loss Friday
, ed Sebastien Grosjean on to the 12th-seeded Jdhansson.
Wednesday that put Roddick in who beat No. 18 David
the Wimbledon semifmals for a Nalbandian 7-6 (5 ), o-2, o-2 to
reach th~ second major sem iti~
third straight year.
Roddick has accomplished nal ol lm 11 -year pro career.
plenty, but he seems m be car- The other') When Johansson
rying a slightly mar\u factured won the 2002 Australian Open:
his progress was stymied when
chip on his shoulder now that left
knee surgery wiped out his
It's been 21 months since he entire
2003 season.
won the U.S. Open and his ·
Upon returning to practice,
ranking has dropped fmm No.
the
Swede worried his playin~
l to No. 4. A long drought and ·
days
be over. He stucK
big drop? Not in the least. But ' with it.might
though , and qualities as
add in a five-match losing a bit of an interloper in the
streak in five-setters coming to closing quartet, the first time
the All England Club, and even since 1995 the three top-seeded
Roddick might have been men lasted this long at the All
excused for harboring doubts. England Club. Don't tell
By outlasting Grosjean to Johansson that, though.
join Roger Federer, Lleyton
"I know that when I play my
Hewitt and Thomas Johansson best tennis," he said, "I can
in the fin3J Jour - the first compete with the big boys."
time since 1993 . all of
Two-time defending champiWimbledon men's semifinal- on Federer .will · meet 2002
ists owned major titles Wimbledon winner Hewitt in
Roddick maintained he took a the more glamorous semifinal.
step toward re-establishing Federer is ranked· 'No. I and
himself.
Hewitt No. 2, although the
"I feel freer. A lot freer. There Australian was seeded third,

._,.

1

Top high .school hoops
player selects Ohio State
.

BY HANK LOWENKRON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. INDIANAPOLIS- The nation's top high
school basketball player has chosen Ohio
State as the place he wants to pl!cy in college.
·
and he'll be joined by a familiar face.
Teammates Greg Oden and Mike Conley
announced their decision Wednesday at a
news conference in the high school gyrnnasium where they developed their games imd led
Lawrence ' North to state championships the
past two seasons.
Both said their choice did not reflect' on
Indiana coach Mike Davis nor his program.
Davis had hoped to keep th~ 7-foot Oden. the
National High School Player of the Year.. in
the state.
"I just felt more comfortable at Ohio State."
Oden said. "I love this (its) coaching staff."
Oden averaged 20 points, 9.6 rebounds and
3. 7 blocks last season. He and Cleveland
LeBron James ar!! the only
Cavaliers
players to be selected player of the year as
juniors.
Conley said he liked Davis.
"It had nothing to do with .him," said
AP photo
Conley, who eliminated Indiana a while back. Lawrence North High School's Greg , Oden
·•It was just the style of play. l didn't like it. laughs after he announced that he and teamAnd I felt I didn't fit in."
mate Mike Conley will attend Ohio State, durThe 6-l point guard averaged I0.7 points ing a news conference in Indianapolis
and five assists last season.
Wednesday.
After discussing the pros and cons of many
colleges they hat! considered, including
Many predicted Oden would be the top pick
Indiana, Michigan State and Illinois. Oden in the 2006 NBA draft until the league recentwas delighted Conley would join him in col- . ly imposed an age restriction that made him .
.
and other high school players ineligible to
lege.
·~He .makes me bette.r. He ~hallenges me. jump to the pros like Kobe Bryant and James.
gets me _the ball in \he right spot," Oden said . · Oden said the NBA's decision to stop draft••He passes me the ball in position where I can in~ · high school students didn't affect his deci~
dunk it."
sion.
It will be several months before the duo can
"I didn't like the rule, but .,. I always knew
officially decide on a college. The earliest
they can. sign a national letter of intent is Nov. I wanted to go to college," Oden said.
9.
And Oden. who has a 4.0 grade-point aver· Both said they had 'not considered the age after three years, said he isn't planning on
Buckeyes before coach Thad Matta, who once jumping to the NBAafter one season of collecoached Butler in Indianapolis, moved from giate play.
Xavier to Ohio State.
"They (the NBA) should assume that I'm
"'Their stvle fits me, and I feel I can make an
going
to get my education." said Oden. adding
impact," ciden said. "He (Matta) has a great
· ability to get along with his team. He can really that the quality of Ohio State's accounting
help me get to where I can go and I trust him." program also coiuributed to his decision.

Former Browns player wants dogs back
CLEVELAND (AP) · - .along with another dog,
Former Ohio State and ·attacked Ernie Assad. as .he
Cleveland Browns tight end' watered his garden in
Durnell Sanders has asked a Parma, police · said. Assad
judge to return his two dogs, was treated and released
seized after an 82-year-old from a hospital, but develman was attacked in April. •oped a. blood clot and died
Sanders. who now plays II days later. A Parma ani. for the Chicago Bears, mal-control officer seized
asked a Cuyahoga County the dogs.
Common Pleas judge on
No criminal charges have
Wednesday to order his been filed. Parma police
bulldog and terrier returned. Detective Richard McGlynn
An attorney for the suburb said the case will be preof. Parma opposed the sented to a grand jury in
request.
July. Assad's . heirs have
. The judge is expected to . filed a $1 million wrongful. rule within two weeks.
death
lawsuit
against
Sanders was in Chicago Sanders and others.
on April 13 .when the dogs
Sanders ' lawyer said the
escaped from a friend who two dogs did nothing more
was watching them and, than kn'ock Assad down.

·

lifter Diego Gutierrez tapped
a free kick into Burciaga's
path abQut 23 yards away
from goal.
Mario Rodriguez scored the
Crew goal in the 69th minute,
following Simon Elliott's
deflection off the right post.

The
Wizards · (5-3-7)
·remained in third place iri'the
Eastern Conference of Major
League Soccer. ,
Columbus (4-8-2) has not
won a road game this season, •
and is .in last place in the
Eastern Conference. ·

Scraps

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ASSOCIA-TED. PRESS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SNOWSHOE, W.Va.
Long-hitting Drew Whitten
kept' his driver in his bag for
_.most of the day. Straight shooter , Steve VanHorn "let . a bar- '
rowed one fly. ·
Those decisions worked wefl
Wedne sday -at the West
Virgiqia Open. Whitten and
VanHorn each shot a 3-undcrpar 69 to share the first-round
lead on the difficult Raven
Golf C:Iub layout.
Whitten and VanHorn are
unaccustomed to seeing their
names at the top of the Open
leaderboard . Neither amateur
. has finished higher than · ninth
in the tournament. ·
But it .wasn't a typical day
for many golfers. Several past
champions at times looked like
hackers on Wednesday.
.
The threesome expected to
make the mosl noise was
·defending champion David
Bradshaw, five-time champion
Brad Westfall and 200 I winner
·Jonathan Clark. But Westfall
had a 75, Bradshaw shot 77
and Clark ballooned to an 83 . .
"It's probably the worst I've
ever played in the State Open,"
·Clark said. "When I teed it up
this morning, we had high
expectations. I know all three
of us did. We never got anything going. Nobody made that
sudden start at the beginning to
spark anything. And from then
· AP photo
on it just went downhill.
.. All you can do is come David Brqdshaw chips on the 5th hole of the Raven Golf Club,
back tomorrow."
·in Snowshoe, W.Va .. during first round of W.Va. State Golf
Mason's Ty Roush was in Open Wednesday.
third place at 2-under70.
rounds. On Thursday, the field course , tested each one in a
· _Pat Carter. the 11-llme W,est will he cut to the low 60 scores practice round Tuesdav and
Vtrgtnla Amateur champton
.
· ·
decided on a Callaway model.
who is looking for his first pl~s ues.
. _
Open title, was among .five .
I ca~e up _here and I .told · He used it . 14 times
golfers at even par. Also 10 that mys~lf. you have to keep tt 1_n Wednesday and missed mily
group was four-time champion P,Iay. An~ I JUSt told myself _tf one fairway. He birdied five
Scott Davis.
•
I m makmg bogeys, no btg holes and had two bogeys.
Caiter was 3-under through . deal. I ca!l ~ake birdies,"
·'] usually hit m'y driver as
II holes then bogeyed the next Whttten satd. Out h.~re yo11 straight as I hit anything,"
three holes on the Gary Player- JUSt have to be ·patient.
VanHorn said . .
designed course that saw more
Starting his round from the
Roush,__ the head pro and
than I inch of rain overnight.
IOth tee, Whitten bogeyed the part-owner of Riverside Golf
"It's reall~. really wet out par~4 15th hole and had birdies Club in Mason, has played· in
there. The . little touch-wedge on the par-5 17th and first every Open for the past 27 ·
shots are a lot !?ugher of! the holes, the par-3 third and the years. He is still looking for his .
soggy ground, . Carter srucj. picturesque par-4 ninth . He first title and hasn't finished
••And the course 1s tough tf tt's
.
.·
fl.fl11 or if it's soft. I'm not 100 used a d~tver on only three within single digits of the windis ]eased."
. .
holes and a two liOn on half hts ner-in the past decade. ·
· Whitten, playing in his sixth tee shots. He needed just 26
Roush hit 17 greens in regu· . Open, must l;le confident. He putts. .
.
lation and had no bogeys on his
was the only player in the 120Wh1le Whttten abandoned round.
player field who. had paid for his driv~r, VanHorn borrowed
"I kept it out of the weeds,"
h1s golf cart for all .three three dnvers from h1s home he said.

~

Martin Maret, Sl Afbans
Matt Moore, Elizabeth
Micnael l'ous~ Hurricane
Tim Dye&lt;.

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David Wilson, Parkersburg
Greg McGoaw. Daniels
Johnathan Clark, Hurrican
Josh Boswell, Aldeoson
KBn Frye, Huntington

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Gary W~iams. Maltinton

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Tristan Roach

BOSTON
Homers
helped Tim Wakelleld agai nsl
Aaron Boone·s tew1;1 instead
of hurting him .
Doug Mirabelli arid Mark
Bellhorn hit consec uti ve
hon)ers during a fo'ur-run
sixth inning. and the .Boston
Red Sox beat the Cleveland
Indians 5-2 Wednesday.
It was Wakefield\ first outing against Boo \1e sinee the
seventh game of the 2003 AL
championship series, when he
allowed Boone's II th-inning
homer that sent the New York
Yankees to the World Series. ·
,Waketield (7-6) said he had
no extra motivation to retire
Boone. who went 0-for-3
~gainst him 'with two tlyouts
AP photo
and a groundout.
Cleveland
Ind
ians
starting.
pitcher
Scott
Elarton
reacts
at the
"Not really," he said. "That
"was three years _ago. two mound as Boston Red Sox's Dou,g Mirabell i (28 ) ro'unds third
base after hitting a two~run homer in the sixth inning at
*ears ago."'
Boone .didn't think muc-h Fenway Park in Boston Wednesday.
'about his pr~viotiS game
against Waketield.
finished with a two-hit ninth pitcher:· Mirabelli 'aid. '·You
"I try to di ~tance myself for his first sa,·e since April kn.ow that at '"me point
from it as much as 1 can," 24 last year - just his fourth y0u'.re prohahlv goi ng to
Boone said. "It' ll be some- in .three season s with !he Red makea mi stak e."
thing, when I' m done playing Sox. .
..
·
Both homers came on 3-l
(to) maybe reflect on a litile
Keith Foulke got the day counts.
more."
,_.
off after allowin¥ five runs in
·'Hejusl got nehind a couHe and Wakefield agreed I 2-3 innings am.t blow ing the pie-hitters and left a couple of
.that' the pitcher didn 't ha ve save in a 12-8 loss '" to the fastball s up and over,"
· h'is · tiest knuckleball. Boone India_ns on Tuesday. hut man~ Indi an\ manager Eric Wedge
had a chance to expand the 2- ager Terry Francona isn 't sa1d.
· I lead Cleveland had taken in ready to cl1angc dosers.
Elarton, who had been' 4:0
the sixth on Victor Martinez·,
"Not righ t now," h~ said. in hi s pre\'ious seven starts,
ninth homer. With runner., at "If (rel ieve rs) get outs. there gave up live runs and &gt;even first and second and no outs. will ne1 er he a problem with · hits in 5 2-3 innings. He had
Boone made good contact but when they gel u~ed.'.' .
not allowed more than three
flied out to center.
Boston had s1x h1ts m the runs in any of those seven
,.I actually felt like l got a • sixth inning for the second starts.
.lot of pitches to hit today." he. strn.•ght_liay and took a 5 ~2
Boston, which swept a
said. '1 don't really enjoy fac - leali oil Scolt Elarton (4-3 ).
three-game
series
at.
ing him a lot ."
The Red Sox. ti ed the game Cleveland last week. avoided
Wakefield allowed two 2-2 111 the s1xth on doubles by being ~wept in a three-game
runs and .five hits in seve n Mann y Ramirez and Trot series at home for the first
innings, improving to 3-0 in Nixon. Mirabelli, who start&gt; time si nce Atlanta did it ·in
hi s last four starts after losing only when Wakefield p1tc~es, June 2002. The Indians lost
five in a row.
homered over the lett-tleld for just the second time in 10
"I had better stuff in my last sears for a 4-2 lead .. and r9ad games.
two starts," he said . ."Free- . Bellhorn followed with a
John Olerud's RBI single
swinging
team s
(like drive into the right-field put Boston ahead in the
Clevelru1d) ha ve helped me in stanlis otl Elarton.
fourth. bul Casev Blake and
the past. "
. "You:ve gmthr,ough live.or Martinez ga\ e Cleveland the
Matt Mantei pitched a hit- SIX mnmgs and now you re lead with' the tirst homers ali
less eighth, and Mike Timlin . gettrng t1red as a starling Wakefield si nce June I.

West Virginia Open first-round scores

Daily Sentinel

I

called a single.
r
Actu~lly, seeing the CFL
The rest of the game was during my stay in Ontario
like our NFL, mostly.
inspired me to go ahead and
fromPBgeBI
Seeing some football this start our annual "countdown
time of year was nice. I admit to football season." It's 57
a running start toward the that Arena League and NFL days away - as you probaline of scrimmage before the · Europe haven't been over for bly noticed on page B l.
Less than two months
ball was snapped. It also all that long - but after those
bad odd scoring; teams can seasons end. its seems like . before it all gets &gt;tarted ·
score a' single point in the August takes forever to get again. CFL or not. I guess it's
CFL -. appropriately. it's here.
. not that far away after all. eh.

Coming Friday, July 29, 2005

BY HOWARD ULMAN

BY JOHN RABY

The .

CJ:ew, Wizar~ kick to 1-1 draw
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
-Jose Buri::iaga Jr. scored in
the 76th minute to lift the
Kansas City Wizards to a 1-l
tie with the Columbus Crew
on Wednesday night.
Burciaga hit ·a left-footed
shot into the Columbus goal

The animal-control officer
testified that Assad was bitten at least seven times.
·sanders was a quarterback
at Warrensville Heights
High School in su~urban
Cleveland. He played 36
games at Ohio State, and the
Browns · drafted him in the
fourth round in 2002. He
had 18 catches in ·rwo seasons with the -Browns, who
released him before the
2004 seas.on. He played in
two games for Atlanta last
year, and the Bears claimed
him off waivers in F~bruary .
Sanders lives in suburban
North Royalton.

EXTRA! EXTRA!

star

TI1e D&lt;Uiy Sentinel • Page 83

30,2005

Roddick outlasts Grosjean, joins Fe(\erer, Hewitt'. in star-studded seml~
BY HOWARD FENDRICH

www.niydailysentinel.com

2005

'

.\Russi~n president gets Super.
~gift from Patriots owner
: BOSTON {AP) - Russian
:President Vladimir Putin
·walked off with New England
: Patriots owner .Robert Kraft's
:diamond-encrusted
2005
_Super Bowl ring during a
recent meeting with U.S. busi. ness executives.
: But not .to worry:. Kraft S3ys
:the ring was a gift to Putin,
;presented out ..of "respect and
•admiration."
: Earlier, Russian media had
speculated that Kraft hadn't
meant to gjve away the ring.
· · "I showed the president mr,
:most recent Super Bowl ring,'
: Kraft . said in a statement
:released Wednesday. The
:Russian president "was clear-

ly taken with its uniqueness,"
Kraft said.
·
·•At that poin.t, I decided to
give him the ring as a symbol
of the respect ~nd admiration
· that I have. for the Rus~ian
people and the leadership of
Preside'iu Putin," Kraft smd.
Putin met with the businessmen
Saturdav
at
Konstantinovsky Pitlace near
St. Petersburg; Russia. Near
the end ·o f the meeting, Kraft
took off the ring. and handed
it to Putin. Puttn tried it on.
put it in his pocket and. left.
according to Russian news
reports.
According
to Patriots
spokesman Stacey James, the

. ring - which . is encrusted
with 124 diamonds - has a
value of "substantially more"
than the previously reported
$15,000.
.
A .senior. Kremlin official. ·
Dmitry Peskov, told The
Assoctated Press that · Putin
had given the ring to the
Kremlin library where other
·foreign gifts are kept.
Kraft's business · interests
include paper and packaging .
companies and ventw·e capital
investments. He handed out
Super Bowl rings to players
and coaches at his home two
weekS ago.
The Patriots have won three
of the last four Super .Bowls.

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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

. Americ11n League
East Division

W L
) $'011

l
j

Pet

45 32

584

43 34
IJIC \1 10,
40 39
,~&gt; w York
39 38
' mp3 Bay
27 52
Central Division
•
W 'L
l •·,cago
52 24

558
506
.506
.342

.tlltlmore

r.11•1n esota
Clevsland ,
t!t:lfOit

'

West Oi'v'laion
W L
.•

-

Los A.nge1 es
Te lt8S

Oa kland
·SeaMie

47 •, 30
39 37
37 40

Thursday, June 30,-2005

Walker powers Cards paSt Reds

· National League
' Ea•t Olvltion

2
6
6
19

BY R.B.

FALLSTROM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pet GB
684

42 34 553
• 4 1 35 539
36 38 486
26'" 51 338

K,1nsa s Ci t~·

GB

www .mydailysentinel; com

ST.

10
11

15
26 ' 1

Larry

the collarbone .
He loved the results,
"Fortified by the shot two

Pet GB
610

513 7',,
481

LOUIS

Walker dreaded the cort i sone shot to his ailing neck,
the long needle drilling into
his spi'ne- from a spot near

10

days
earlier.
Walker
returned ' to the St. Louis
Cardinals' lineup after

33 43 434 13'1

a

WeCinesday 's Games

five - game
aosence
Wednesday night and hie
two-run homers his first two
times up in an 11 - 3 victory

roronto 12, Tampa Bay 3
Boston &amp;, Cleveland 2
Kansas Crty 3, Mmnesota 1
N.Y~ Yankees at Balt1more. ppd . ram
Chicago While Sox 4 De troit 3, 13 1nn1ngs
Texas 7 L A Angels 6, 11 1nn1ngs
Oakland 6, Seattle 2

Thursday's Games

ting and watching a lot of
the games," Walker said. "I
was happy to be out there

L A, Angels (E Santana 2·2) at Texas
(C Young 7-4), 2 05 p m
Seattle (Meche 8·4) at' Oakland (Haren 6·
T). O'J5p.m.
Cleveland (Westbrook 5-9) at Bartlmore
(P€~1"! 2-!l· T05 p.m.
,
Friday's Games
Taranto at Boston, 7:05p.m.
\1 Y Yankees at Detroit, 7 05 p m
Cl eveland at Baltimore, 7 3S p.m
rampa Bay at Minnesola. S·IO p.m.
.. A Angels al Kansas C1ty, 8 10 p m
Texas at Seattle. 10 05 p m ·
Ci11cago White So~~: at Oakland, 10 05 p m

sharp innings , rebounding
from his only loss of the
year after an 8-0 start, to
· help the Cardinals win for
the fourth ttme in five
games . The NL Central
leaders,
homers

also

from

St.

Louis Cardtnals' Larry Walker' ts congratulated

got two-run home run of the game

Reggie

Rolen 's
grounder
and
flipped wide of second base
on a would-be forceout on

Sanders and Jim Edmonds,
are 21-8 against the Red s
si nce the start of 2004.
At
49-28,
thev're
2 1

AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS
BATIING-BRoberts, Baltimore, .365,

vGue,rrero. Los Angeles, .348. Damon ,
Boston, 339, AAoduguez, New York. 329.
~..lYou ng , Texas, 328. Tejada. Ba1t1more,
319 Vantek, Boston. 310.
'
RBI-MRamirez. Boston. 68. DOrtiz,
Boston, 66: ARodnguez, New York, 66,
·TeDtelra, 'Texas 60. Tejada, Baltimore, 60;'
Mat_s w, New· York, 59, GAnderSon. Los
Arge les, 58
HITS-Damon. Boston , 104, MYoung,
Texas, 102 BRoOerts. Balt1more. 100
Tejada. Baltimore. 98 , A~odnguez , New
York 96: ISuzuiP. Seattle, 94; Crawford
Tampa Bay, 93
DOUBLES-Tejada. Balt1more. 24. Matsu1,,
New York, 23. ASonano, Texas, 23; DOrtiz,
Boston. 22: I Rodriguez, DetrOit, 21
TRIPLEs-crawford, Tampa Bay, 7, lnge,
Detroit. 7, !Suzuki, Seattle, 7 , S•zemore.
Cleveland 6: DeJesus. Kansas City, 6,
F1ggins, Los Angeles, 6, R10s Toronto, 5 ,
ORoberts, Baltimore. 5, Damon, Boston, 5
HOME RUNS.....,.Te ..l(elra, Te,.as, 20.
ARodriguez , New York. 20: ASorlano, Texas ,
19 DOrt1z. Boston. 19; Konerko, Chicago,
19, Tejacla, 8alt1more. 19, MRamirez,
Boston, 19.
·
PITCHING
(7
Oeclslons)-Cra1n.
Mmnesota, 7·0 1 000, 99; Buehrle,
Chicago, 10- 1, 909, 2.42, Clement, Boston,
9- 1. .900 333. Garland, Chicago, 12·3
BOO 3 25, OHernandez, Chicago, 7-2. 778,
4 8 8 Park Texas, 7·2 778, 5 75; Rogers,
Te)(as, 9-3, 750, 2 46, Lackey, Los Angeles,
P-2. .750 3.84. Donnelly, los Angeles, 6-2,
750 3 65
STRIKEOUTS-JoSantana, Minnesota ,
131 RJohnson. New York, 99, Halladay.
Toronto. 98 , Lackey, Los Angeles, 95;
Sonderman , Detroit, 83; Clement, Boston,
s2 Colon, Los Angeles. 82

who -

Yadier Molina's gro~nder.,
giving hiin seve n errors in
63 games.
" Felipe has done a·· great

games above. 50o" for the
second time this season.
'"It was very frustrating

said.
"The
bright
side,
which I always try to look
for, is this is a pretty amazing_ team."
Cincinnati's
Wily
Mo
Pena hit a home run estimat-

contributing
to
two
.unearned runs. In a span of
three batters, Lopez had a
wild throw to first on Scott

had

been

I cfor-6

against

Ortiz with three strikeouts.
Morris (9- 1) gave up two
runs and five hits. He had
lasted a season-low three
innings in his previous start,

.

7

two-run drive off the centertield backdrop in the second.
An extra day off allowed
champion, had mi ssed the
Morris
to throw a bullpen
previous five starts with
·
session
and get back to
herniated di sc in hi s neck
•
that has bothered him much basics.
" I made a conscious effort
of ihe year. He had the 30th
to get my sinker going ,"
multihomer game of _hi s
Morris
said. " I was just try career and second this s'e a-

a

son , with both homers coming off Ramon Ortiz (3 - 6).
Walker had no play s in right
field before leaving for a
pinch hitter in the seventh.
' ' If he gets it going, you'r~
talking about a lot of dam-

(16)

AP photo
after his second'

Cincinnati 1;1eds starting pitcher .Ramon Ortiz.,

a

1988 and the longest by an
opponent.
Of
the
nine
longest long ·balls , Mark
McGwire hit seven and J.D . ·

on the road .
Shortstop Felipe Lopez
committed two errors in the
Cardinals· four-run second,

Reggie Sanders

that. "
Walker, former NL MYP
and
three - tim e
batting

ed at 492 feet, the I Othlongest at Busch Stadium
since measuring began in

first three under interim
manager
Jerry
Narron.
They ' ve dropped 16 of 18

off

by

ag_ajnst the· Pirates.
job for. us all year," l'{arr.o n · 'Morris has made I career
against
the
'said. ''He'll probably phly appe a rance s
the rest of his career for us, Reds, all but two at home.
'do an outstanding job, and The only scoring off him
never have an inning like was Pen a's I Oth homer, a

_and boring sitting on the
bench watching ," Walker

Drew two.
.
-The Reds _!-tave lost four
straight - after winning their

L

four hits in a two-inning
&lt;Stint that matched his shortest this season.
Sanders
hit
his
17th
homer in the · fitih off Ricky
Stone, and Edmonds hit hi s
15th, a three-run shot in the
sixth.
·
Adam Dunn had a ninth-inning sacri tlce fly. his first
since July 22 , 2003, against
Milwaukee ,
a
string of
1.086 p late appearances and
66 opportunities with a runner on third and less than
two outs.
,
"It was better than any
home run I've ever hit ," a
relieved Dunn said.
Notes: Cardinals starters
lead the ·major leagues· with

ing to ex tend and get good

44 victories .... Albert Pujol s
was 1- for-5 , and is 17- for-

action on my sinker and let
it work for me, and not try to

42 (.405), ... Sanders a:Iso
doubled and is batting .389

cut the ball too much. Get

(28-for-72) in his last 20
starts with seven homers
and 17 RB!s . He has five

back

to

my

old

power

game."
For the third time in

13

homers and 13 RBls against
the Reds ..•• The Cardinals
have outscored the opposi-

age added to our lineup," starts, Ortiz failed t~ get an
manager Tony La Ru ssa out in the third inning. After
said. "Watching him swmg· beating the Cardinals in his
outing
in
yesterday 111 batting practice previous

tion 114-7 4 in the first two
innings . ... Pena's homer

Cindnnati with seven st~ong

was his first since June 17.

innings , Ortiz gave up six
runs four earned and

... Of Morris' 96 pitches, 71
were strikes.

you could tell that shot did
him some good."
Entering the game, Walker

To

9

(6) 29, 0 (7) 1

o,

1999 Buick Rogal LSE
2G4WB52K7X16331 0
Public Nr;~tice ·

5
1999
Dodge
150
.3B7HF12YOXG160329
1999 Chevy Astro Van
1GBDM19W6XB10396

3·
The Home National
Bank reServes the

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN RE: Change Of
. Name Of Tiano Marte

Boyd

To:

Tiana

'

oo

2nd Floor, Pomeroy,
OhiO 45769.
Melissa M. Frechalle
31938 Vence Road
Alblny, OH 45710
(6) 30
.

FASHION BUG
Summer Sidewalk Sale

50% off Missy &amp; Plus
Swimwear

40"/a off Missy &amp; Plus Capris,
Scooters and Shorts
SALE ON THRU 4TH OF JULY
Upper River Rd . Gallipolis

23

446-2009

4TH OF JULY
SELLEBAATION
July 1st thru July 5th
at

A TOUCH OF THYME
62, Hartford, .WV
All 4" Pots $1 .50
6" pots $3 ,00
Selection of 1 Gallon
Perennial's $4.75 Shrub Specials $4 .00 &amp; Up
At.

Public Notice
The
S.tlabury
Townllllp Ttuatee will
hold 1 public &lt;Meting
on lha Budget lor the

year 2006 on the, 7th
day ol July at 6:00
p.m. altha Town Hall.
With
the
regular
meeting, to follow.
Public Ia welcome.
(6) 30

ADVERTISE
YOUR
EVENT
OR

ANNOUNCEMENT
IN THE

BULLETIN
BOARD

THE
liNn"t only fOr
buylns or -selllns
Items. you un us•
this widely ,..d
Section to wish

•
so-n••
Heppy Birthday.

r

r
I

G!VE~WAY

" - ··- - - - - - ·
·
2 male' Pomeranian/Sp1tz
m1x Good w1th children,
needs good home . Call
(740)388-01 43

. NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS

BATTING-Delee,
Ch1cago,
.385,
Cabrera, Florida, .l40: Pujols 1 St. Louis,
.338; Barmes, Colorado, 329; Alou, San
FranCisco, · .326· LCast1llo, Fionda, 325:
BCiark, Milwaukee, .322.
RBI-CaLee. Milwaukee, 69, Delee,
Chrcago, 65: Pujols, St. Louis, 64: Burrell,
Philadelphia, 60; JKent, Los Angeles, 58;
CDelgado, Flor~da, 5!: Cabrera, Florida,
56, AJones, Atlanta, 56.
HITS-Delee. Ch1c.aQo, 110, BCiark,
Milwaukee, 102; Pujols, St. LOuis , 101;
Cabrera, Flor1da, 98; BAbreu. Phlladelph•a.
90; Bay, P•hsburgh, 89; . Rollins,
Philadelphia, 89, Casey, Cmc1nnati, 89
HOME RUN$-AJones, Atlanta, 25.
Delee, Chicago, 23; Floyd, New York. 21,
Dunn , Cincinnati, 20, Pupls, St louis, 20;
Ensberg, Houston, 20: Calee, Milwaukee,
20.
PITCHING (7 Declslons._Morris. St
Louis, . 9· 1. 900, 3.31; LHernandez,
Washmgton. 1 t-2, 846, 3.32; Eaton, San
D1ego, 9·2, 81S, 3 42, Willis, Florida, 12-3,
.800 , 2.04, PMart.nez, New Vorl!;, 8-2, .800,
2.72. Peavy. San Diego, 7·2, 778, 2.88;
Benson, New York. 6·2, .750J 3 69.
STRIKEOUTS--PMar11nez, New York , 117;
Carpenter, St Lou1s, 112, Peavy, San
Diego, 110, Clemens, Houston , 104,
BMyers. -Philadelphia 101 ; Zambrano,
Chicago, 94: Burnett. FIQrlda, 93.

rr~

I

Lost mylarge-Tool-Box, lell
out of Truck 1f found please
call
(304)675-2371
or
(304)882-2506 Reward

Lost- Male Black dog with
some wh1te Medium s1zed
6 week old Black Lab mrxed Answers to the name Lucky
pupptes tree to good home Lost it' the At 588 araa
Offenng $50 reward, please
Call (740)367-0624
call(740)441-13n

6· church ext ce1l1ng hghts
Reward for safe return
300 watt bulbs, alum. 304· M1ssmg female gray Tabby
895-3548
Weanng p1nk collar with lake
•
diamonds and red name tag
7 beautlful .baby kittens, d1f· Lost near old Bidwell school
ferent colorS. 2 spayed (740)388-8166
.
mGmmy cats All to good 'Tr_a__.lle'-r-t-ire~lou~nd-in-lro_n_t_of
homes (740)446-0645
----~---~ . Wolf Garage, across !rom
a yr old female CKC regis· H&amp;A Block ('740)3SB-90Gl
tared Pug. fawn colored around S:OOpm.
(740)379-23!)6

r

Free kittens litter tra1ned to
good home Call (740)441·11 27

r.

- YARDSAU:

YARD SALE-

GALLIPOLIS

Free to Good Home 2 males
6wks old 1/2 Boxer, 1/2
Black Lab (304)773-5103
11458 SA 554, Fnday and
Sah.lrday, 9·? Mens, womens toddler 91'rls name
Free. several -truck loads of
'
'
brand clothes, office supflrewood . Locust
oak, plies, luggage, toys, housemaple, cherry, yours for
removal (740)441-0514
~ho::l::d,c:m.=1 "'::·------'----2 family yard sale Furniture,
Mature male dog Beagle, turnace . huntmg bows,
good w1th children Needs brush hog fimsh mower
Country home. 740-992- Fri/Sat. only, 9·4, 1204 Clark
03665 and ask lor Li2'or Ben Chapel Ad below church

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725

Announcement ............................................ 030
Antiques .. .......................... ........................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ............... , ................... 440
Auction and Flea MarkeL .......................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repalr ........... .... ,.........:........................ no
Autos lor Sate .................... :......................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors tor Sate ............................. 750
B,ulldlng Supplles •••• ,........... ,.........,,,,, ......... 550
Business and Bultdings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity ........ ,...... ,... ,,,,,; ........ 2t0
Busll)ess Tralnlng ....................................... l40
. Campers &amp; Motor Homes ...... , .................... 790
.Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Tllanks .... ......................... ,............ OIO
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Ele'ctrlcai/Relrigeration ....... ,....... ,.. ,,.. ,,,, .... ,840
Equipment tor Rent .•. ,................................. 480
Excavating ....... ,......... ,.......... ,................. , .... 830
Farm Equlpment... .... ................. ...... ............ 610
Farms lor Rent ........................... ,, .. ,,, .. ,.... ,... 430
Farms lor Sale ......................................... .... 330
For Laase ..................................................... 490
For Sale ................................................, ....... 585
For Sale or Trade ........................ ,................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ................ :.................... 580
Furnished Rooms ..........,., ... ,..................... ,,450
General Haullng...... .....................................BSO
G lveaway: ................ ,..,,.,,,,, .. ,, .,, ............ L.,,, 040
Happy Ads•••••• : ........ .....................................
Hay &amp; Graln.....................,............................840
Help Wanted ................................................. ItO
I
Home lmprovementa ....,.............. ,...............etg _
Homes tor S.le._ ...... ................................... 310
ttouoellold Goods ..........................,, ......., ... sto
Houeeslor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam .................................... ,........... 020
lnaurailce ............... , •••••• _., ........................... t30
Lawn &amp; Garden EqulpcMnt ...........:............ 660
Uvaatock............................:.........................830
Loll and Found ....._. ..................................... 060
Lola &amp; Acreege ...........:................................350
' Mlacei,MOUI....... , ............................ ··-·· ....170
MlocelleMOUa Men:handlse............. ,.........540
Mobile Home Repalr....................................660
Mobile Home• tor Rant ............................... 420
Mobile Horn111 tor Sale ......:····-··..........._..... 3~.
Money lo Loen ........ ..................................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeln ..........................740
Mualcat lnstrumenlll ..... _ .......................... 570
Peraonala ................................ .....................
Pale ·lor Sale ................................................ 580·
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Pr-lonal S.rvlcee ....,............................230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... t 60
118a1 Eatate Wantad ............................... - .... 360
Schools Instruction..... ,.......................- ...,.,150
Seed~ Pl.nt &amp;Fertlllar .............................. 650
SttUI!IIona W.m.d ..........................._............ 120
Spjlce foj Ren1 ............................................. 480
Sporting Goode ......................................... 520
SUV'a tor Sale.............................................. 720
Truclul tor Sale-··-···:••••• :.......................... - •• 715

Senior Discount*

ed •1n MemorY"
, of •l-ed one.

Fornoorelnfoi'IIUItlon. contact your
local Ohio velley

Publlshln&amp; office.

oso

.

MAKf

P••••-••••••••••••••••••••••••••

oos

Subscriber's Name ________

SOMEONE'S
DAY!

Address _____~---------~-

City/State/Zip - - - -- - - - - - - -

@allipolis l!Bail!' '(!!:ribune
. (740) 446-2342

Phone~;----------------,-,----

The Daily Sentinel

Uphol8181y ....................- ............................. 170
v... Far Slile..............................................730

(740) 992-2155
~oint ~leasant

3R.egister

Mall or drop off thl• coupon ~long

with

(304) 675-1333

to

a copy of your photo ID to

Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.O.

Box 4611. 0.111potlll, OH 45131

______ _____

'
--~---------------------------­

.-

I .

.

----;----------.---_.:___,
'

.,_

W.nl8d to BUV-·-·-.. - ........................... - ••• 090
Wl1nlad to Buy- Fenn su~ .................. 620
Wl1nlad To Do ............... _....,........... ,., .......... 110
Wenltld
Rent_................:............- •••••••••• 470
Yn $a- CO.Hipolla....................................072
v n -Pomeroyllllddiii ..............,.....•....074

.......,_

YR Sill Pt. ~---········-·· ···· :........... 076
r

the ftr1t day

time.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • InclUde A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• -Include Phone Nun1ber And Address When Needed
a Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

6 .Pnbar QI:int.~ -6mttntl

•.,....,.... • 111enk
You. end piece en

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for ~undays- ---"-

:::::::-~P~O~L~IC~IE~S~'
O~h~l~o~V•~II~oy~~~~~..;-~;..~t~ho~rig;ht to edit, re}ect, or cancel any ad at any Errors muat be reported an lnse.-tlon. Weof
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Reglater will De rosponslbte tor no more than the coat of the space occupied by the error and only the

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

Friday's Games
Washmgton at Chicago Cubs, 2·20 p.m
Atlanta at P~iladelphla , 7"05 p m
Florida at N.Y. Mets, 7:1 0pm.
Houston at Cinc1nnall, 7.10 p.m
Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 8:05p.m
Colorado at St. LOUIS, 8.~0 p m.
San FranciSCO at San D1ego-, 10 05 p.m.
Arizona at LA Dodgers, 10:40 p.m

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill-out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a .
copy of your photo ID.
4§allipolh~ llail!' Gtri~unt
J}oint ~lta•aut lttai•ttr
. The Daily Sentinel ·

www.comic-.com

CI2005 by NEA, Inc.

6;.

Now you can have borders ar:1d graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

DisPlay Ads

• All ads must be prepaid'

on your home delivered
subscription! ·

~trlrr-

992-2157

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day ~ s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Pap~r

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

If so, you qualify for a

(,-'fo

3Regt~ter

Oeatl/;/rthf'

Word Ads

.Monday th ru Friday

Are
..

Or Fax

Ofpee &amp;~~

___:_

Marie

Frechette
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON
CHANGE
OF
NAME
Applicant ·
hereby
gtvas nollca to all
Interested
persons
and to Scott Boyd
lhatlha applicant has
llled an Application
tor change of Name In
the Probata Coun of
Metga County, Ohio,
requesting
the
change of nama of
- Tlana Marta Boyd to
Tiona
Marte
Free-. The hearIng on lha opptlcallon
will be held on lha lsi
dey of August, 2005,
el1:30 o'clock p.m. In
the P - Coun of
Meigs County, located
. at 1
East -Second
Street, Counhouae,

Sentinel

Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740) To992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Pittsburgh (K Wells 5-7) at Washington
(LOBIZB 3-5), 1·05 p m
Philadelphia (Ueber 8-7) at N Y Mats
(P.Martmez 8-2), 1·10 p m
Milwaukee (Capuano 7·6) at ChiCago Cubs
(Maddux 7-4) , 2.20 p.m.
Atlanta (Ctllon D-3) at Florida (Betkett 7-5),
7'05pm
,
Houston {Backe 6-6) at Cincinnati (Milton 39), 7·Wpm
Colorado (fflnc,s 6·5) at St Louis (Suppan
7·6), 8;10 p.m
San ' Francisco (Lowry 4·7) at Anzona
(Estes 6-5). 9 40 p.m.

NOTICES
right to reiact any and
all bids. All vehicles
are sold, as Ia where
is, with not warranties
expressed or Implied.
Fbr an appointment
to see, call 949·221
ask lor Sheila.

ijtrtbune

Place

Your Ad•

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

The Home Natlol)a1
Bank wilt aucllon the
following Items on
Saturday, July 2, 2005,
at 10:00 a.m. at the
Bank's parking lot:
1997 Nissan 200SX
1 N4AB42DOVC50355

•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PAOSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
lwright@lic.net

www.mydaHysentinel.com

CLASSIFIED

Thursday's Games

-and was just fortunate to·be
able to contribute."
· Matt Morris worked s_
e ven

.,

'OI:ribune - Sentinel - ~egi~ter

Pct GB
46 31 .597
Wash1ngton
43 35 .55 1 3'1
Atlanta
39 36 520 6
Flonda
1
40 38 513 6 7
Ph1ladelph1a
36 39 494 8
New York
Cenlnll Olvlalon
WLPciG6
49 28 .636
St Louis
40 36 526 's·~
Ghlcago
35 41 461 13':
Houston
35 42 455 14
Mtlwaukee
34 42 447 14', '
PittSburgh
30 47 390 19
C1nctnnal1.
West Division
WLPctGB
43 36 .544· Sah Diego
39 40 .494 4 .
Anzona
37 41 .474 5'&amp;
LOS Angeles ,
32 44 ..421 9 11
San Franc•sco
26 so .342 15\
Colorado
W

Wedneldily's Gamel
Ch icago Cubs 3. Milwaukee 2
Houston 7. Colorado 1
l A Dodgers 4, s8n D1ego 2
Flor1da 6, Atlanta 5, 13 inmngs
Washtngton 3, Pittsburgh 2 ·
Phlladelphta 6, NY Mets 3
St LOUIS 11 , CinCinnati 3
San Francisco 4, Anzona 2

over the Cincinnati Reds .
"It was just good to be
back in the lineup after sit-

C hiCi!QO While Sox (Garcm 7·3) at DetrOit
(Maroth 5-B }, 1 05 p m

Thursday, June 30, 2005

r/2 b=~

ei'm=Y~[

not
any ross or expense that results from the publication Of' ominion of an ad11ertl1ement. COI'rectlon will be made 1n the first available ~·t•on. • Box ·~;:.~::.::1
are always confldentla~ • current rate eard applies.. • All real estate advertisements are •ubleet to the Federal Fair H&lt;:~.,..lng Act of 1968. • Thla
accepta only h_.p wanl~ ada meeting EOE standards. we will not knowingly accept any ad'v1111i1lng In vlolat•on otthelaw 1
flr1t

1

4

I

I

3 fam1ly m1sc yard sale. 7!2!05.
Sam-? ,
1010
Saturday. July 2, 9am-4pm, Yellowbush Ad, Rac1ne. two
1262 Uncoln Pike Northup, .. famlly, lots of th1ngs to bUy, ·
OH
clothes, glassware, tools ,
KniCk-knacks &amp; whatnots,
3 fam1ly yard sale Quality books, to much to wnte.
clothes. women &amp; ch11dren come see•
Furniture &amp; toys' 1040
Second Ave. Fnday &amp;. Carport sale· July 2nd, lots
Saturday, July 1·2
of adult &amp; Ch•ldren's clothes,
household items, hand tools,
3 fa~mily yard/bake sale, Fr1
and Sat July 1st &amp; July 2nd, off Bashan Road. Bald
Knob
Long
Bottom
8am·4pm, @ Gallia Manor,
St1versv111e Route
138 Buhl Morton Ad .
Gallipolis ActiVIty Buildrng
Friday, July 1st and
Saturday. July 2nd. 34660
Crew Road Pomeroy 1/2
m1le, go thiough the under·
pass away from Meigs High
School Everything Cheap!
N1ce teen s1ze ctoth1ng.
dresser, desk, kitchen Items,
~!things .
b•kes. much m1sc
Don-'t
7/1·7/2. 8am-5pm. Gnls miss th1s one.
baby clothes, ladies &amp; mens
Fnday, July 1s1, 8.:_}0·2 00,
clothmg, toys, household
carpet. tv. b1kes. mower
1tems and much more. 9231
(needs work), clothes, m1sc ,
SA 218 next to Mercerville
~70 19 Aockspnngs Ad .
store.
Pomeroy

3-famlly yard sale Fnday &amp;
Saturday, 471 Kathy St.
GObel &amp; Hummel hgunnes.
Kelly. clowns, dishes, comforters, curtams, clothing,
bar stool, small tables, lots

Adult clothes, baby clothes,
maternity clothes, baby
accessones. 711-7/2 &amp; 7187/9 10am-5pm. 7498 SA
141
--'---------Commulllty yard sale. June
1 &amp; 2, Green Terrace m
Centenary

Fnday.- July ~ st
Jeff
Snowden 's res1dence m
Rutland on College Ave

Garage and Bake Sale
sponsored by Hemlock
Grange Fry res1dence next
to ' former
Salisbury
Elemenlary School. Friday,
Fnday &amp; Saturday 8:00am· July 1st 9-4 and Saturday,
5·00pm, 4702 AddiSOn P1~ July 2nd, 9·4
at the Bulavllle/Add•son P1ke
Intersection Lots of clothes. Garage Sale at Jeremy
I oys. home &amp; m1sc 1tems Roses 1/2 mile out county
road28 from Rac1ne. July tCheap!
·9 00·4 00. Clothes, Tommy,
Ftlday-Saturday, S·OOam- ?? Polo, A+E Old Navy. A&amp;F.
1071 Second AV€ Couch, Little boys clothes, toys, furcomputer/desk, household n.1ture. lots of household
goods, ladies ck&gt;thes.
IK .mg Bedd 1ng , rooster
Items) No JUn k.

***********
Gallia County
Outreach,
275 State Street.
Bag sale .$4.00

Monday-Friday
9am~2pm.

***********
Garage Sale· 8am-5pm,
June 30th-July 2nd, . 2560
State Route 141 . 55gaL fish
1ank, bedroom SIJite, cloth·
ing, m1sc
Huge yard sale at Shelia
M1les, 66 Carmen Dr.,
Galhpol1s. July 1st-July 2rld,
9am·3pm
.
d sale. Clothes.
Movmg
yar
d!shes. old beaks, fum
knick·k•racks,
more
Yellowtown
Road
1n
Northup, July 1·4. See
signs

ei'm=Y~LE

11

TwoFam1tyyardsale Thru,
June 30 one day only
at
the harries of Donald F1tch
&amp; Jerry Burke on Summer
Road
Home
Int..
m1crowave. dishes &amp; lots
more nice stuff

r6

SALE-

yARD
L--itl"roiio.I'LEAsANriioiiiiiiiiii,;,;._.l
2 Fam1ly Yard Sale At 62
South, July 2nd &amp; 3rd 9-4
watch for s1gns
3 Party yard sate- Haven
Hg1s .. New Haven, Fr1 -Sat.,
July
1·2.
9am-4prn.
antiques, household furnitUre, baby furmture , lg.
amount ot'tools, toys, stone
jars &amp; churns, much more ·
Ant1que
sale,
M1s.
Everythmg
Imaginable,
Gnndslone, Pumps, Wheels,
Bugg1es July 1,2,3&amp;4 3rd
Ho..use Leon-Baden Ad .
B1g Yard Sale Clendenm
Park by A.A. tracks ,
Gallipolis Ferry, WV Baby
11ems. clothing all SIZes. furniture k.mck knacks, somethmg lor everybody,.Fn &amp; Sat
Bam t11i?
::--:---:---:--::::-:::-::-:-:--::----::-::
Fnday only 7/1/05 9-6 At 2 8
miles north of Pt. Pleasant,
2nd house Plain Va lley Ad
Antiques.
Furniture ,
Glassware, Books, Candles
&amp; Supplies. Pottery. Clothing
Ect

-::c-----:-:-:-----:-::--:-----::----:----:--

t

July 1-4, Salley Run Ad &amp;
124, first house on nght,
smlext_ra lg s1zes
July 1-8 30·-164 N Ma1n
Street. Rutland. 3 Family
Sale-Everything cheap

3 m1]es from St At 7
Neighbors 2-huge 'Sales,
multi families-baby Items,
toys, furnitUre, clothes toddlers, ybuth, misses &amp;
adults, home intenor, dishes, ·exercise equipments,
Yard sare July t ·2 Oak garage door opener, hOrses,
kltchen cabinets, dresser, v1deos, much more ram or
30' camper, clothing. m1sc. shine
416 Aamblewood Or. Patriot
t&lt;Mr Street, Syracuse. July
(740)379-2415
1&amp;2. S·(X)-.4·00. Fum1ture.
Ttlurs . June 30th and
Friday, July 1st, 9-5 2 m11es
out Route 218 up hili on
rtghl Wood swim~set. turmture, toys, books, tapes,
clotl'les, misc.

Yard sale on the corner or dolls, eurtalns, dothlf'IQ,
-Oliver Ad. and Adchson P1ke. knick knacks. Ram or Shine.
78 year old women having Pickens St . Aac:me, July 1st
n~r f1rst yard sale ever., &amp; 2nd. women's &amp; men'S
Friday 1st-Saturday 2nd
cloth.ng, girls Jijans, shoes

8am-4p

m.
Yard sale
9am-!5pm ,
CEintenary.
'

Umi!ed ,oo,

of all ~11ds. lots of crafts, 2
bar stools,
~:--::-----::--:-

Al;lsolute Top Dollar u.s,
Silver and Gold Coins.
Proofsets, Gold Rmgs. U S
Currency,·M T S Com Shop.
Avenue,
,51
Second
I • I' 7 0-446 2842
I \1 1'14 1\ \ !1 \I

LEARN

TO
DRIVE
• NO E)CPERIENCE

_Th_u_rsda
__y_an_d_F-rid_Ery_
. 6-_30_&amp;_
7·1
Corner or 6tl1 and
CoUEtge Street, Syracuse
CCCU Youth Yard-Bake Five fam 11y sale. Clothes.
Sale, July Glh. Hartford. household rtems, exercise
W81ch for signs1
equ 1pment, m1sc.
;

110

lliuWANrm

~::;:=====;

Cashland --nowl'11nngapart· 1
11me teller for their Pomeroy
OUTSIDE SALES
location, computer expenREPRESENTATIVE
ence preferred, evanmg &amp;
weekms requ1red. great pay
The Gallipolis
Da1ly
Send resume to 397 W Ma1n Tribune 1S acceptmg
St , Pomeroy, Oh 45769 or resumes tor a full t1me
Fax (740)992-9001
outside sales representative to JOin our sales team
CNA .s
&amp;
Re~•dent
and to manage an estab·
Assistants. Interviews Are hshed account hst while
Now ' Be1ng Conducted For call1ng on . new accounts
CNA &amp; Resident Ass•stant The successful candidate
PositiOns . · If You Are A will be a diSCiplined, selfCarmg,
EnthusiaStiC, motived team player that
Dependable Person Then understands the ImporWe Wa r:~t You To Jo1n Our tance
of developing
Team Come On Over &amp; strong, mutually · benefiCheck Us Outl CompetitiVe Cial busmess reiat1onCNA
Wages,
Pa1d sh1ps w1th our accounts.
Vacall6ns, Pa1d Meals , And
Many
Other
Benehts. The ideal candidate w111
Ravenswood Care Center, have sale expeiience For
11 13
W.ashmgton
St , confldenhal
interv1ew,
Ravenswood , WV (across please send resume and
R1tch1e 'Bndge. At 2 North. cover letter to Gat11poi1S
Last 8usmess on nght) Da•ly Tnbune Attn J1m
Refererces Requ1red
Freeland, 825 Tli1rd Ave ,
Gall1pohs. Oh10 45631 .
Dental . Hyg1ems1 'needed.
Send Resume to PO Bo~~: 45 ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT.'s
PI Pleasant or fa)( resume· needed Apply at 1354
304-675-6553
Jackson Pike Gall1poils.
Dnvers Needed at BFI
Waste Serv1Ces . Class B
CDL required. Apply Pomt
Pleasant Job Services
Drivers Needed:
CDL Drivers Willing, lo dnve
for local ready·ml.lc-concrete
company E)lpenence IS
preferred but not necessary
Orrver must be Willing to do

•

ar 1me ep ne
the GallipOliS Daily
Tr1bune. Must have
valid dnver's
license M1mmum wage,
apro)( 30 hrs week
Stop by the Tnbune
Office. located at 825
"l"hird Ave lo frll out an
11ca110n

,

L.- _H_E_1••P.V..'A·NJ'E-D_.I
Security Off1cer needed for
a great orgamzatiOn!!l ·
Secuntas IS now h1nng for
the Gallipolis OH area
Compet1t1ve wages
Uniforms and tra1nmg
provided
Please apply betw9en the
hours of 9 OOam-3·00pm ,
Monday-Fnday
6354 AI. 60 East Su1te 4,
Barboursville. WV 25~
For more InformatiOn call
1·866· 740-60B2
EOEIM/F/DN
STNA'S Overbrook Center
is currently accepting applicatiOns for lull-t1me STNA'S.
7A·7P, and 7P·7,A, and 3A·
3P·······
shifts are ava1l·
able. If you are interested,
,please come 1n and f1ll out
an appl1cat1on a1 333 Page
Streel, , Middleport. Please
No Phone calls. EOE

L1ght Dump TruCk Serv1ce,
stone. gravel, sand. dirt.
(740)949-4700
LOYj·M~ISIUre

Carp~t-Cieanlng
Brand New Method
Dry In 1 Hour
'
No Steam-or-Shampoo
Free-Es1,mates
•••clearly Clean*'"'"
...@0~75-1!022

'

Chlldcare ava•lable near
Holzer
CharoJa1s Lake
Estates Anytime Mon-Fn,
12 yrs exp $3/hr 1 $251day.

iiiiiiill
..
oProtmJN_,__m,__,..

~ervices

Please forward any quesbons about these posrtlons
to
the
GDC Human
Resources Department

ScHootS

PosllllQ Dale :.h.me 21 , 2005

lnter1ortextenor
pa1nt1ng,
reas.onable rates. references. expenencedt for free
est1mates call (740)7422013 0r 645·2638

Styhs1s needed at Fantastic
Sams new locat1on 1n the
Wai-Mar1 Plaza. S1gn on j .lO
BUSINE~
bonus. Free CEU hours,
pa1d vacat1on , full &amp; part .._. . .
hme help needed Come &amp;
work 10 our fnendly fam1ly r-~.~Nrlo:!itrll'cil'E'!•_ _,
atmosphere. Call (740)446n67 or stop 1n
HlO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
·~ '•
The ODMR&amp;DO Galllpohs
au do business With peo
Developmental Center IS
le you know, and NOT 1
Aeg•stered
end money th~ough th
recrUiting
Nurses to plan and provide
all unlll you.have lflVestl

nurs1ng
to its res•·
dents. Interested persons
should submit an Oh16 C1v11
Semce
ApplicatiOn (avail·
Porta,edic, the nations
leading paramedical health aQie on grounds) and have a
valid Ohio R N. and driver's
1nformat1on serv 1ce compa·
licenses
Please submit to ·
ny Is seekmg Mad Techs.
Phlebotomies. EMTs and ODMR&amp;DO Galhpol1s
LPNs to do msurance Developmental Center
exams In the Galhpol1s &amp; AttentiOn Human
M
c
ty
M
BIQS
oun area.
ust Resources Department
have 1-year blood draw 2500 Ohio Avenue
expenence
Con1ractor Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
Posrtion Ema11 Resume to
PhOne (740)446· t642 e)(t
phls120dmr@portamediC.nf!t
273
-.i
--~------ Fax. (740)446- 1341

POSmON
ANNOUNCEMENT
ADJUNCT FACULTY

·------,J
.

INsilCUCilON

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers CIOSIUTo Home)
Call Todayl 740-44ti-4367,
1-BOD-214·0452

Tt~e

University of RID ~~MWgallipofi6careercouegeCO'fl
_s_at_u_rd_ay:__ _ _~- Grande IS taking apphca- Accrediled Uember Accredihng
liOns for part-time f&lt;~culty Council lor lndependenl Colleges
MOS Coordmator needed
I"'
and Scl"lool&amp; 12748
for 100 bed skilled nurs1ng members 1n the areas of fi~1~rolf'.'"
_.
---~-~
••-.~---_,
lac1\1ty. Full-tulle pos1t1on. H1story: CommunicatiOns.
1·~
Monday thru Friday, Sam- SoC1at Work, Spanish,
4 30pm AN/MDS , exper~· Public Admin1strat10n anQ
FREE Home
ence requ1red. It Interested Nurs1ng Cllmcals. Pos1tions DIRECTv
please stop by Rocksprings availaOie for Fall Semest;tr entertillnment
System .
Rehab1h'tat1on Center. 36759 beginning m August 2005. FREE Equ1pment and Install ·
up to four rooms t 45 chanAocKsprmgs
Road .
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769 and A bachelor's degree 1n spe- nels $29.00 a month . Ask
c1fic l1eld IS' requ~red w•th how to get FREE HBO.
!111 out an application.
Extend1care
Health preference g1ven to appl1- . MAX, and STARS 1-ariow1th,
Master's 523-7556 for details
Serv•ces, Inc 1s an equaJ 'cants
opportunity employer that Degrees For the Soc1al
encourages
workplace Work pos1t1on must have an
MSW or arl MSW+ 2 years
divers•ty WF orvexpenencs. ·
'

1

::'e:d:t:h:e~o~ffe;r;i";==~
MONEY
• ru LoAN

~=;~;,~;:~
n
** t~OTI C

E.:••·

•

~arrow

Smart Contac
he O!lio 01vis1on o
1nanc1al
lnstltU110n '!
P._t_l•ce of Consume
~tfa~rs BEFORE you rel1
ranee your home 0
Fbta1n a loan BEWARE
Fl requests lor any larg
~dvance payments o
ees or msurance Cal
he Off1ce ol Consume
~~a1 rs loll free at 1-866
278..0003 to le'arn 1f th
frortgage broker o
IS
proper!
ender
ICensed. (Th•s IS a publi~
erv1ce announcemen
rom the Oh10 Valle
Put;ishl')g_ Co~

r

I,

l'ltornNorw.

SER\

CES

1
•:--lllliitiiiitiitiiiiii--"'

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?

No Fee Unless We W1n1
1-888-582-3345
Rl \ I I ' I\ I I

r-,0

Hm~

FOR SALE ·

.__ _titllliiltiitiiiit""',P
$29,900 6 rooms . 3 BR
home, 2 car garage . 89 .
Burnett Ad (740)446·7684
or (304)744-0173

N EC ESISA~V

• FIJLl-TIM£ ClASSES

• COL TRAINING
• FINANCING AV....IU8lE
' JOB PlACEMENT

, • ENAOLUNG teN

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR·TRAILER
TFWNING CENTERS

WYTHEVILLE. VA

1·800·334-1203

L-'-""'"'_..,.,,....,...
...,....,.,-""'-'

Awner Garage- Tackervile 100 WORKERS NEEDED
Ad., Aac•ne, Thur, Fri. Sat,
Assemble crafts.
glider rocKers, doll collec· .
wood items.
riCin, furniture , Rumm-lger's
To $480/wk
Friday 711/05, Oeligl'ttl
'4~
· Materials provided.
At.
' '·
Name brandS. A1 143, 1st. 2nd, 3rd. Free information pkg. 24 hr
GA" Old N
clothes, glassware, lots of
801-428-4649
•·
avy stuff, come see, 9-5.
------,----,----~--

r4 ~~ I
__

lliuWANrnJ 11

Giant Yard Sale Bla1ne Lane pre-mamtenance on trucks
&amp; Rt 2 Gallipolis Ferry June &amp; eqUipment, yard work &amp;
:io &amp; JulY 1 -2 · -4th other miscellaneous chores.
Hundreds of ftems &amp; more to · Expenence operatmg equrp·
ment &amp; extra sk•lls such as
come on Saturday.
weldmg a plus
- - - - - - - - , -- - Huge Yar d S aIe LoIs of - -Call(304)937-3410
-------Everylhmg .
Friday · &amp;
Legal
Secretary, FUII·IIme,
Garage Sale- July 1·2, 9am- Saturday 1809 Jefferson
Expenence
preferred but no
5pm, 115 Kerr, Pomeroy, Blvd 8-?
sola sleeper. cO llectable -------:-....,-----::-- 'requ1red. send Resume to
Home Lots of Nice Stuff Fri 1st, Sat TSC20 c/o Pomt Pleasant .
Porcelain · dolls,
lntenor
· 2nd, Sam-? 2321 Mt Vernon Reg'ste r 200 M.1n St · Po mt
Pleasant, WV 25550
Ave.
Garage Sale. July 1&amp;2,·220
Th1rd Street, Mason, W. Va Yard Sale Saturday July Local _trucking company
Ram or sh1ne Munrfamily
2nd 9-?, Household Items, seeking Class B COL driver
Baby Items, Plenty M1sc. with good MVR salary pay
Garage Sale. Saturday. July 114 Howard St. Haven home weekends, good
equ•Pmenl. (740)388-0855
2nd , 9:00-3·00 SA 248-Top Heights·
or (740)709- 1581.
of Chester Hill Baby Items .
TV··DVD player-·TV cab1net Yard 'sale July 2nd . 3rd. 4th.
ffi &gt;S&lt;;
1 1/2 m11es past Roosevelt McClure's Restaurant now
hmng all local1ons, full or
School, SA2 N
part·t1me, p1c!o; up applicaJuly 1&amp;2--9A M -? 613 Elm
tiOn at locatiOn &amp; bnng bade.
Street, Elmwood Terrace
WANrnJ
between
10.00am . &amp;
Som6thmg for everyone
roBuY
11 OOam. Monday thru
Rac1ne, Oh1o

' I R \ H I ..,
Rodney Community Center. July ,st ol"iiy: 31472 Noble
Fn July 1-Sat.July 2 K1ds, ~~~ m 1t Road. Middleport . r.j':-:,;-lliu
___,
0 ___W_ANrED
adult clothmg, toys, turmture, qUijts , cc mfprters,
July 1st&amp;2nd On StAt 143, ..,_ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
.
-

Yard sale: Furrjiture, ciOtt'l~s . ,
tools, toys. Somethin.g tor
8'1e~one. Multi-tamlly. 7 5
miles out St. At. 218 on the
right. Thurs.-Fn. 6130-711,

110

110

Hesources,
U,n1vers1ty of Rio Grande.
PO Box F27
Rro Grande, OH 45674
8-"ma11 gmasgoCog edu
Now Hir'ing Sate. ·Or;vers
fax (740)245-7228.
Apply It'\ Person at your local ApplicatiOns Wrll be acceptDormno's Must be over 18 ed until positiOns are filled.
EEO/AA EMPLOYER
Nursing Assistant Classes
WOMEN AND
Beg•nmng July t Hh tl'lru
MI~ORITIES
ENCOURJuly 27th, 2005. It you enJoy
AGEO TO APPLY
elderly People and want lo
become a member of our
health care team, please RNILPN'S--Overbrook censtop
by
Rockspnngs ter JS currently accepting
Rehabilitation Center at apphcations ftH' LPN'S and
36759 Rocksprings Road,
AN'S 7A·7P arJtt 7P-7A
·Pomeroy, OhiQ 45769 ana filt Shifts are available If you
are 1n1erested, please come
ical!on fOHrealhelll) 1n' and fi Hout an application
at 333 F?age Street. '
Ser.~ees ' Inc IS an equal Middleport, or Call and
w1tl"'
Hollie
opportunity employer that $peak
encourages
workplace Bumgarner, LPN, Staff
Development EOE
diversity WF ON
Now Hiri ng All Positions.
Apply at Court Street Gnll,
Pomeroy, Oh

:,;:c~:~e:a~~- earn ~E··.',sse.·nnd•I:Caapplre
Call Marltyn 304-~ ·2645
AVON! Alt Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Sh)r!ey Spears. 304675-1429

All Types Masonry, Bnck ,
Block. Stone, Free Estimate,
l 304)n3-9550
304-5936421
DHK.
Cleamng
&amp;
Powerwash1ng, Can·r Keep
Up Vour '"To Do" list too Blg?
Let Us HELP You! We'll
Clean-A-Up &amp; Get-A-Done.
We
do
All
R.ea •den t 1a 1/ B us1ness ,
1 n s i d 'e I 0 u t s , d e ,
OaJty!Weekly/Monthly. 740985-3639 or 740-416-1823
'G1ve Gu1tar &amp; Bass lessons.
Call Travis at · (740)4462709
------,----,--------,Health Car8-" elder care 1n
my home. priVate living area
wttn Mttl. experienced with
reteref')Ce. Park Ad ., Stlade,
011 (740)992-{)556

2-br 2·ba 1 1 acre Eckard
Chapel Road Rt2 N 6 m 1 l~\
!rom Pt Pleasant 304-675175 7
3 bedfoom Ranch. 2 car
garage, ln·ground pool
$90 ,poo Call (740)2561962.

3 Bedroom . 1 Bath, Full
Baseme nt/G a r age
Remodeled 1n &amp; out
$5?:,000 Aac1ne Area.' 740949-1 372
:-:::::-~-:::-:---:----:-:-­

38R 18A Ranch style
M use, lodued ~ 'm•kts past
Holzer f'I9Spi1at on At ,60
(740)388-9263.

·-

�••

www.mydailysentinel.com
Thursday, June 30, 2005
Spring Ave. , Pomeroy,
Ohio One famil)' home tor
80 yea rs Still lik'e ·new. 3
bedrooms. I 1/2 baths, 2 car
garage. 550.000. 740-9922426

~·
.

'

I Buy Hoinea- local person
buys homes. Conltdenhal.
Quick cash. Jim, 740-992·
6300. No ealts after 9.

Twin RiverS Tower ts accepting appliCations for waiting
hst for Hud·subs1zed , 1- br.
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO

I~ I ' I \1 "'

Valley Apartments 1n Mason.
WV
currt:.,tly acceptmg
H CJUo"t:S
appl1cat1ons Apply at 501
IUR R E!'IT
Shawnee T1a11 m Po1nt
Pleasant.
Applications
2 BR house locatdd in town accep ted on Tuesdays
$400 month plus deposit No HUD ass1sted
(304)675pets. reference requi red . 4900
Call (7 40)441 ·0110 ask for
SPACE
·Jay.

L'o

I

All real estate advertising
in thi's newspaper. Is
subject to ttte Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to
House for rent in Pomerdy, 2
advertise "en y
b('ldroom. kitchen &amp; d1nette.
preference, limitation or
1 balh. full basement, 2 firediscrimination based on
places.
garage &amp; extra lot.
raee, color, religion, sex
call collect. (6t4)475-1459
lamiliat statue or natiOnal
after 5 pm.
origin, or aMy intention to
makil any such
• New never lived in, extreme·preterenctl, limitation or
fy environmentally friendly, 2
discrimination.··
bedroom. 1.5 bath l;10use.
1 186 SA 141 . Central heat &amp;
This new~Jpl!lt~ will not
air condition1ng. utility room ..
knowingly accept
garage_ No mside pets .
advertisements tor real
$500/deposit, $500/month .
estate which is in
17401446-0666.
violation ot th'e law. Our
readers are hereby
42ij M OBILE I;IOMt:S
Informed that all
dwellings ·advert'l sed in
FOR RJ-Nr
'tttla newapaper are
available on an ~tqua l
1·3 br. $440_00 a mon +
opportunity bases'.
$400: dep.
t . 2br$350.00 a men . .+
$300.00 dep.
Country r:!ome·10 acres two
304-882-1107
:bedroom- one ba th -garageac/gas furnace . 2 mile tram 14x70 eKpando 3 bedroom .
Hartford-Sliding H1 ll Creek 1' 112 bath '$475+ deposit.
Road. 48,000 . 304·882· includes water, sewer &amp;
2491
trash pickup - (740)4464824.
•

No Down Payment eveo
with less than perfect credit
•on this 3 bedroom. 1 bath
home in Middleport. COrner
lot, carpo rt, wrap-around
porch. fenced in yard . basement, payment same as
r~nt. 740-992·.6300.
No Down Payment Poss1ble.
1900 square lt. house , 3
bedroom, 2 bath, lull basement, neVJ heat pump, sets
on 3 acres SR 7, Eastern
. S'c hool District, (740)9854321

96 Neon 2 door, 4 cyl. , 5
speed. 118,000 m1les; new
gaint , €xtra Clean Interior.
real fl!Ce, runs great $1,900.
(7 40)669·0302_

or 2 baths. Lease ,price
neg,otiable to enColJrage
new
bu smess.
Call
(740)446-4 425 or (740)44Q- Two window air conditioners $60.00 Each . ·740-9923936
2268, 11 o amp.
WANTED
I· \It\ I ... I 1'1'1 II· '
TO Rmr
•II.. II\ l"'il()( h.
Look1ng for house to rem
locally. rwjason or meigs co.
call --304·773-5600
~•1
,
0. . EQLIII'II·IFNf
\IIIH 11\,DI'I
II!'!!!'"'""":":""_______., 0°Q Fixed Rate up to 36
months ·on NewdJohn Deere
' 1"
H ULISI:IIOLIJ
Compac~ Tractors &amp; 110 TLB
GOO!lli
2 Bedroom Mobile ~oll!e L,.----iiiiiio;,-_.1 at Carmichael Equipment.
$'375/mon.
Located
in
Local Fraternity 1n desperate 17401446-2412
Gallipolis
Ferry.
Call
need of donated working
13041675-3423
T King Cuttter hnish mower.
electric stove or refrigerator.
new blades &amp; new · double·
2 bedroom mobile tiomo, all Please call Grim (740)709belt. (740)992-5963, $695
electric, Middleport. $375 1195
plus deposit, (740)992-3 194 ---~--,ccc-- Irrigation system . will cover
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
2 bedroom , AJC, very nice, Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio. 2.5 acres 3" PTO pump 30437 28 0 5
no 'pets. In Gall ipolis·. (740)4lt6·7444 1 ~877-830· c9-,
_-.,,-~--:-:-:-::::::-::-:
(740)446·2003.
9162 . Free Estima tes, Easy John Deere 10ft. No Til Dnll
-,-------Re nt.
Carmichael
financing, 90 daYs same as for
3 bedroom mobile home for
cash. Visal Master Card Equipment. (740)446-2412.
rent In Middleport, no pels,
Drive· a· little save alot
John Deere Comma rc1ai
ci7_4_;_D.:,I9~9~2~-58-,58:c----,-:­
Thompsons Applia nce &amp; Work site Products !n Stock!!
3br
all
Electric.
Air
Repair -675-7388 For sale, Compact Excavator 27 c,
Condition .. in Letart. $350
re-conditioned
automatic 35D. sOD/Skid Steers 371 ,
mon th,
$?50
Depostt
washers &amp; dryers. refrigera· 320.
325,
328fTractor
(3041882-2651\
tors. gas and electric Loader Backhoe 11OTLB.
BeautifUl river vie'w in ranges. air conditioners, and Check out our renlal rates.
Kanauga. Ideal tor 1·2 pea· wringer washers. Will do Gre'at Financing Avai lablepie. No pets. please. repai rs ·on maJOr brands in Carmicha er' • ·Equipmenl.
Applica tions being taken . shop or at your nome.
(740)446·2412 .
Call (740)441 -0181 . ·
Used Furniture Store, 13o' C
M~a-ss:_e_y--::F-er_g_u-so-n--,2-50

2004 Ford F-150 Supercrew
4x4, FX4 off road package,
5.4 V!l, 6-CD changer, run·
ning · boards, power everything. Tonneau cover, tow
pa~k~ge . 27',000
miles,
eKcellent condition. N.A.D,A.
Book Value $30,375, sell lor
$28.900. (?40)446-8217 .

r

Home Listings.
List your home by calling
(740)446-3620
.
View photos/info

~ntine.

Yo Down I 3 bedroom., 1
4 bath, UR, D/A. FIR,
r garage, fenced in
yard. 112 acre.
lose to'·town . 5132,500,
e 4505 or call
7401446-8325,

Roofing , Inc.

Mobile Homes • Metal Roofs
Flat or Low Sloped Roof · Carports
Barns • Porches

Residential • Comme rc ial
ENERGY EFFICIENT

~~=

Btllaville Pike. Washers . dryers. nMngerators, ranges .
maltresses, dresser. couch·
es. dinettes. recliners. grave
rrionuments. much more
(740)446-4782, Gallipolis,
OH Hrs. 11-3 (M-S) .

r

FOR SALE

12x50 1988 Pine: Ridge
mobile home. Good condibon. an electnc. 2 bedroom.
1 bath, major appliances
included, $7,300. Present to't
available to rent $150
monthly. (740)446-2796 or
(740)388-968 7' '

Will's ATV
Parts

1999 Blazer 4x4 LT. original
ownBf, 76K . exc. cond ..
loa·ded, never in mud
$10,$00 13d4l458- 1002

Concrete Removal

and Replacement

32 t h"' Welshtown Rd.
l,omemy. O hio

_1 ~9 3~1~·---:--,-----

Great 2000 Fleetwood 2 Large i Bedroom Apartment
bedroom wtth tun delivery. fo~ . . R~nt
$425/month,
set-up and central a1r. Call . Utilities 1nc!uded. (304)675Auss (74o)3B5-2434 •
~~-1_9_ _ _ _ _ _ __
ne ~:e. ~~~le. _ r- orne
BR, 2BA. l R. KitChen
Deck&amp;Buildings, A1r See a
76 Oshel Ad.

North 3rd, Middleport.

bedroom furnished apt. , previous rental reference, dep_,
no pets, 740-992-01e5

SAVE-SAVE -SAVE
Stock fTlOdefs at old prices.
2005 models arr1ving Now,
Cote's
Mob't! e
Homes.•
15266 U.S. 50 East. A!Mns,
'Of'lio 45701. (740)592-1972 ,
"Where You Get Your
Money's Worth~

Dellvene~.

740-992-6971

@•_ ahoo.com
'

~

Hbmes
'"Septic Systems
·: Roofing
·tt Backhoe
oJ~ Site
·r Preparation
"' Dozer

95 Dodge truck. 4x4. automatic . ·
$3,000 .
Call
(740)388-001 1

'I'll

I•

I

HOWARDL
WRITESfl S SONS
ROOFING

.t

,,

CarmiChael Equipment with
John Deere Credit approvaL
( 7 4 0 ) 4 4 6 • 2 4 12
wwwgirM com

Coleman Camping Trai ler
12FT, 2 King Beds, $4,995
call tor Details (304)675- .
1731

1984 Rabb" GTI needs r.;~;;;;;;;;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
WOrfl:, 'fast , S900. 1991 New
H OME
Yorktlr, full power, good.
·
1,
•
\IJ'ROVE.'\IE\T.i
,
$1,100, (7401245-5014.
~

r10

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
' .
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

~

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for youl

2000 Ford Taurus, 70.000
m11es. $7.600. (7.40).742·

3405

style
36 " A pox

\

/

MY ""'OME

New Dealer lor Montana Tracton
at 27 horse • 57 ho rse
with shuttle transmission
4-wd , remote hy~ r auli cs 3 year wa rranty .
sl a rting

**"'*Also a vailable'*"'*

38 horse,

• lo'arm Pro Tractors 20 horse - 30 horse ·
loaders, finish mowers, tillers
Mill' ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Turn

OPEN
Mon- Fri.

'CUZ IT'S GOT TWICE
A S MUCH SUGAR!!

'CUZ

BETTER
FER YA . ?

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

""I'vE' (:'£ £N IR'&lt;INC. TO QU\ \ "'l

V,C. YOUNG Ill

::,1'1101'.1!'-IG, BU\ i"-10\1-\1!-1.0

~ wo~E.o l

992-6215 wv 0:1117';5

1""1-\1'-.IJe. '(OV \f:,\(1;:&gt; 0 \'\f. OF ' "'~
11-\o:SE 1'1\Kf\ 11-\I~G~ 7

p-'\'CI&gt;-.1-\ :, 5\J\ l COUL()""\

-q

Gc.T \\ LIT I

~

·s ~w. Jo~Ju,

10~20,

Pomeroy, Ohio

• New Homes .

Remodeling

140-992-1611
·Stop &amp; Compare

!CP..,N

WE KEEP

IMPORTS
Athens

33795 Hiland Road

• Garages
• Complete

BIG NATE

. Hupp

10x30
Janet Jeffers

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICnON

'Tt-iE CAT ?

CAN WE'
ruoEEE.Z. '
PLEA.5E
fLEP..SE ??

1--.....,

Whaley's Auto
Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin , OH
740-99NO I3 or 740-992·5553
ileHlot"ki'ng l~. te Model Sttl~e
n nd After Markel Pllrls

l j~~.JilJ.LI(.J i
5...

PEANUTS

Sec Brcnl or Brian Whaley
Sat. 8:30-Noon

Closed

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

Ha Ha
Ha Ha

My life has
been one of
constant struqqle

M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sun.

E

~~§~~§~j!~~

'

SUNSHINE CLUB
Mf WIFE. SIGNED US IR

fac FIVE- VISI"TS 10 A
MARRIAGE. &lt;r:UJSELOR

BUT

WHE:~

1 HEARD

I.I..W:rr 11-IE.Y &lt;CI&gt;T, ~

I-lAD ~ A FIG+{T. , .

~HAD 1D&lt;HA~

IT -ro iVJ VISITS

..Insured"

II

740· 742-2293

• leave a message

Hill 's Self
Storage

GARFIELD

Racine, Ohio

4sn1

Call B. D. Const.

81 t5'x10'
to 10'130' · l
Houra
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
111411

/TI(l ,

pd

for all your borne

repair needs. roofing.
!!iiding, ltdd -nn.s.o
remodeling etc.,
free estimates
(740) 992-2979
Jea \ ' II!' mes.su e

High coat of fertilizer got you worried?
.

¥ .7

17-17-17,.,

ADVERTISE
!N THIS SPACE
FOR $52 'PER MONTH
Now Available At

GRIZZWELLS

)tl GUNl\i:Rf
I o~,;wl"

Scorpion · Tractors

S35 - 1,ooo lbs Approx. weighl
18 spreader bu811ies available for use

Airway pastu~·e renovators and

seeders

.wailable to rent.
•licensed agronomist on staff available for
consulting.
SHADE RIVER AG SE RVICE
35537 Sl. Rl. 7 N~rth
Pomeroy. O hio
740-985-3831

'DOWN
1 Skip pasl
commercials

34

pigment

Fragrant

20· Sigh or
murmur

wOod

22 Beatty

topper

4

5 Removed
shucks
6 Fez dangler
7 Popeye's

upon th ee'!''
37 Bumped
into.

•

44 WindoW

19 Cuttlelfsh

s weetie

frame

46 Ona more
time
47 Dell unitl

48 Walldkl"s

of films

23 Shaggy
animal

Island

49 Consumer

25 Bumbler
27 Having

51

more spunk
28 Kind
ol angina
31 Get lhe
pcilnl
33 Courtroom

8 Smell
slrC?ngly

38 Haik wearer 9 II has ri pgs
40' Wonl-ad
11 Briny
leners
expanse
42 Have lunch 12 Desk
43 Monster's
furnishing
loch
13 Secral
45 Toasty
agent
47 "lron·Man" 17 Most
- Gehrig
disorderly

wnr-s·

vow (2 wds.)
53 ,Kubric k
computer

55 Aloha tokon .
56 An Ish ·
57 AAA

suggestion

II g.
35 Delivery
truck
39 Tams
41 Proprlelors

~hne

·

1

~

Graph

'bJr 'llirlhii"'Y:

Friday. July 1 , 2005
By Bern ice Bede O•ol
The year ahead cou ld turn 'o ut to be
busy regardi ng your social and work·
related atfairs. and yo u w ill realize
much success in furthering yo ur
interests 1t1 each . Some words ol ca u·
lion, however : don't wear yourself
out.
cANCER (June 2 1-July 22) Realistic objectives can be achieved
today, but don't expect goals you set
for . yourself which are way beyond
your capab ilities to be realiz.e d, even
thro ugh a miracle. It's n ot going to
happen .
· '
LEO (Juty 23·-Aug . 22) - In order to
succeed today, yqu must first view life
as it Is and not as yo u w ish 'it to be.
ll's dK to reach for bigger than usuaL
issues. but on ly il yo u're disciplined
enough to avoid excesses.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep t. 22) - It's not
in yo ur best interests today to gel
fi na ncia ll y involved in a ve nture
where you know going in that you are
going to be operating in the dark .
Stay In your own baili wick.
LIBRA (Sept_ 23-0ct. 23) ~ Tread •
ca refully today when it comes to
important career ~a"ers. because
there is a strong chance that you·
could misjudge someth ing w here
your position won't t;e as strong as
you think.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. 22) ~ It your
anitude toward your work today is
ei the r one of extreme indifference or
over-exuberance you wou ld be se tting you r p8rtormance up for failure
Steer a productive co urse.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)Do nothing that rellects caretessness
today. especially where you r investm ents are conce rned . Study eacli
proposal if1 depth anb if it's, a gqod
deal, it'll be ev1denced in the report.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. 19) ~
Today you may come out p f the startIng blocks full of B)(Uberance and
optimism , but .sustaining this w ill be
another issue. You may Ure easily ana
quit before you aCcomplish your
goals.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - The
boss Could bA In a bit of a touchy
mood toda)', so if he/~he asks you to .
take care of a specific task, .lfs best
you don't come up witr! any wise
answers or be flippant about how you
,
handle it.
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20)- Strive
to be realis ti cally prudent in the man"gement of yoUr funds• today. If you
don't k.eep a lid on your desires and
free spending habits. you could run
up some might heftv bil}s.
If you
ARIES (March 21-April t
come off as being too op+ntonated or
insist upon evBrybody doing everything your way today.. fri,;Klds will shy
away frotTI you . G ive the other person
a little space for lpdivldual input
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ~ Get a
handle on ycur emotk&gt;na today or
else your mOOd swings could take
you all over the.globe- from highs·of
optim ism to the pits or negatlvities.
GEMINI (May 21 -Juna 20) -It is fin•
to bft a nice per110n, bYt ~fore gel ·
t1rYg In creeper today with a friend who
is arways broke and already Indebted
to you. t•U him or her to aanle the old
account betdr• you' ll hand out mOf'e_

9. -

29670 Bashan Road

740-949-2217

i\11 pass.

oAstro-

(740) 992-5232

"Middleporfs only
Sell-Storage"

· of remark

PREVIOUS SOLUTION

Phone

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER .
Campos

• Room Additional
Remodeling
• New tJaragee .
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutt.re
• Vlnyt Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except
furnace work

Storage

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

www

addresses
61 Type

Harriet Martineau. a 19th-century English
writer and social critic. wrote. "Readers
are plentiful: lninkers are rare."
Readers ol this column are the eJ~cep­
tions to her rule!
At the bridge table. 1f you think: !he right
thoug ht at the right nioment, you will play
. mo~t deals correctly_ The nard pa'r t, of
course, is thinking that W IM~p g tnou ght.
HOwever, if you lake you r time to work
through the possiOilities. you will do It far
more often than not.
In this deal . for example, if you nave the
right idea, You •should have no trouble
producing the winning clefense. You are .
sining East, lookmg at your hand and
North's. Aga1ns1 thre~ no-trump, -your
partner leads the hear t seven. How would
you read the lead? How would you
defend?
· To defeat Ihis contract, East must apply
the Rule of Eleven. He subtracts the
value of the card led, seven, from 1t The
res ult tells him thai North, East and South
have lour hearts between the.m higher
tha n .the seven. And East can see them
by Luis
a ll ~ dummy's king and his A-~·9. Sq.
C~ ebnty Ci~r cryptograms are aeated lriJIT1 quolllllonsll'Y famous people, past aM prtsenl
· li8Ch leller in 11\e CIIJM! sla~ds lor arothef.
declarer cannot beat West'~ heart seven .
Today's clue: S equaJs U
Therefore. when declarer ca lls for a low
card from Ihe dummy at trick one (there is
. " EZZGMNLZX ' D
HBHGM
DPWAMNXP
no hurry to put' up the king) , East must
play his two. This permits West to retain
DSETBWZ
XNBDZ
BD
GMZ
WNDG
lhe lead and 10 play another heart
through dummy's king. Tile defenders
take the first fou r tricks and. later, tne diaGMOG
MOD
ZLZY RZXZGYOGZA
moncl king.
Nole !hat if East plays any other heart at
BXGN G MZ ZOY NH W 0 X , "
tnck one, the contract makes .
When partner leads a reasonat&gt;ly high
Z. W.
HNYDGZY
fo urth-h ighest, apply the Rule of Eleven.

BARNEY

Radius' M ower) 30 inch' c ulling width to 50
inch rutting width 3 year warranty
T &amp;D TRALIQR SALES 1!;, EQUIPMENT
righl in the heart of &lt;;hester
9854384

fo rmerl r at t08
~-..·. t\ lain Pome roJ
IS NOW Q PE N AT
T he 1\·f ulherry
Commnnity Center
160 Mulberry A\'e.

-:-A POO#l

.High and Dry

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

Eas t

Pass · :l NT

all of the

•

4wd (I year warranty)

The Parish Shop

~AS

S~NS~ OF
Dlll~&lt;.TION[

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Ve1rs l ocal Er rlance

IOxiS,

:\orth

The rule works

Free Estimates

'

Available

Shop
Classlfleds!

''"''South"

J(]

. FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronni e Jones

Pomeroy
Same Gre~ al Lvw Pric.·r~·
tmd Smiling
Frie11dlj' Faces.

·Mushroom Compost

1997
LeSabre
L1m1tad, 75 thousand rmtes.
Leather
Int..
Loadl\!(1.
Garage Kept.
55 .995
(304)675-1731

32

, Opening lead:

60

sides
Likely
Circulars
Slali!llc s
Ch icken

t Q JI0 ~ -1

Wes t

· employee
58 Slinkv-.,
59 Far East
·

24 Big name
2 Wyo.
in ctiemlca ls . neighbor
·26 1'rlangle
3 Kitchen
29

Vulnerable: North,South
South
J NT

blowouts
54 Caalno

21 Inaugurate
23 Up 1111 now

1\ K Q
6 ,,

~

$265 ton (While Suppy last)

1996 Chrysler Concord&amp; LX.
10 1.000 mtles. excellent
cond1t1on ,' $3 250
Call
17401245-9254 al1er 5pm .

+

.•

• Bucket Truck

• Tusk Milst er Ti'uctors 26 horse -

1 Nadl
6 Grounds
for a su it
10 Farawella
12 Hens
14 Go by
canoe
15 Zonked OUI
16 Wakeruppers

Sout h

0111 Gary Stanley

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

t

mo

1

Conslrucllan

BASEMENT
1985 Pont1ac Trans-Am.
WATERPROOFING
Sspd, 305 H 0 .. only 55.000
(60f5~2 2 _ 7185
· miles, vtper blue , Hops.~ Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furexcellent Shape. (740)446·
IF
0350.
nished. EstabliShed 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
1995
Buick
Century 0870. Rogers· ·easement
Custpm. 1 owner, 48.000 Waterproofing.
mles, auto, a~r. powe r winBlodc., brick, sewer ~tpes .
dows &amp; locks. ex.celtent ccnwind9WS. lintels, etc ClaUde
S4.200
OBO.
dttlon.
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
(740)367-7623 or (740)339on
Call740-245-5121 .
2227
' SAVINGS

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
tor 28A , 38R &amp; 48A .,
Applications are taken
Monday thru Frfday, from
PI:Ts
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office IS
FOil SALE
Locateq at 1151 Evergreen
Dr ~e Pomt Pleasant, WV
Phone No is (3Q4 )675- 1 tema/e Pekmgese. AJ&lt;C.
sable w!black mask. 6 wks
5B06EHO
old,
A&lt;iorab le 1
$300.
Tara
Townhouse (74{1 )446·1000 leave mesApartments. Very Spac1ous. sage
...8 acres Wa lnut Creek .., 2 Bedrooms. C1A.· 1 1/2
Drive
$32.000
. flfm Batl'l, Adult Pool &amp; Baby 6 reg1stered Labrador pup(304)675-4843
, 'Pool, Pat10. Start S3851Mo. Pies wormed, &amp; l1rst shots. 5
No Pets
lease P!u s blaCks S150eacn. 3 yellOws
One acre near Gall1poi1s Secunry Depostt ReqUired , 5200 each call (740)247·
211 7
(7ol8jfll!7-7888.
17401446-3461

lrls un.'tl
Fn!t ES rima~s

Ta~e

2 locations
Minon Flea Market
&amp; Ashland Kentuelcy

r

25 Years Experience

( 740) 992-2432

2003
Jeep
Liberty
Renegade. Loaded, 4X4 ,
$13,900. ,Coli (7401256161 B'or (740)256-6200.

Star.cra ft fold-up camper.
Pole Barn 30x50li10FT
Air/heat, sink, stOve &amp; refrig$6795. includes Pain ted
erator, sleeps 4. Was $4.995
Metal,
Free
Delivery
reduced · to
$3,995 .
www.nationWidepolebcirn s.c
(740)446-2282.
om (g37)559-8385 ,
1948
Chevrtllet
F1ve . ' - - ' - - - - - - - Passenge r Coupe, wv Truck Camper. AC, TV
Aiding
mower.
Murray Slickar,' f'llew Tire.s , Good Aritenna. wired for Cable.
Wizafd, 11 Hp, 30 1n. cut. Paint "Sharpft
(304)576- like new $6.500 (304)675$250;. 81 Ford F 100 V, 8,
2288
3353
2881, $400. (7401992-7607
TOp Oualrty, Warranty,
Wholesa le. Financ:ing,

Concrete Work
David Lewis

1---'------'

2

SPA fACTORY 01J'nEt

· All Types Of

45769
Email:jwill45769

I

Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
Thursday,
Sunday. 17401446-7300

CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

( ;uaranteed

Owner

1999 Ch evy s uburuan
"
4x4 .
od
d1
1 d d
go .con liOn, oa e ·new
ti res .·· Asking
$11 ,000.
(740) 441 ·0658 or (740)709-

£EWIS

ATV !'a rts &amp; ACC.
Jumes A Will Jr.

Qu alit ~·

3

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse . ap artments.
and/or small houses FOR
· RENT. Calf 17401441-1 111
-:-::-:--:---,-----,- for appliCatiOn &amp; information.
2 BR trailer, god shape. ori
314 acre ground. North Furnished upstairs. 3 rooms
~Ilia area. (74Q)446.-1400, &amp; bath. Clean. ref.. &amp; dep.
required. No pets. (740~
2000 26x80 Patriot 4 bed- 1519 .
room, excellent con dition . -G~ro_c_io_u~s,-iiv-in~g~.~1~o~nd~2-bed­
Asking $48.000 . Needs room apartments at vruage
moved. (740)367-7245..
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport
8 used homes ynder Sl ,000. From' 5295-$444. Call 740Will help with deiNery. 992-5064. Equal Housing
1740)385-9621 '
Opportunities..

9.'12
¥ A J 92
K J
... Q J !J ,)

• Stump Grinding

Owner: Brian Durham
Phone: (740) 949·4011
Spf;cializing in custom homes
and additions.

.· 949-1405

MOIIILE HOMES

4

10 8 2

Top • Removal • Trim

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION

1998 Ran'ger 4x4. 5 spd. 3L,
AM/FM cassette, AJC. off
road package. new paint.
$5.500 080. Call after
4:30pm (740)256·6257.

r-

.. •

Tree ·Service

*,"'·l stlmlllb

r

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

JONES'

4x4

404

45783

50 PGor R

52 Big

1"9 Conlidenl

Dealer:

r

·Ir

1-..t:::~...

ACROSS

18 Piano part

East

West
. 864:1
¥ Q 10 a r
• 62

MONTY

740-667-070d 1-888-HUPP234

FoR SA l~;

2001 FOrd Explorer 4x4.
L d d
11 de1all d
oa e · recen Y
e ·
59,000 miles, new tires,
$12,000
(740)256-6936
_1 •~a-'e_m_es~s~a"-ge_. _ _ __

+

Tuppers Plains, OH

2000 GMC 2/4 ton pick -up,
$10 . ~00 . call
Clarence
GQble (740)992-1100 if no
answer leave message.

~

• . J 10 7
¥ Kl J
A !l I! 5
... K i J

41800 SR #7

1he Wlllld's Best Boor

06 · ~0· 111

North

and Financial Services

I

L ~F·A·~-~--~~ i

r

www.orv .com

Rocky Hupp Insurance

•

NEA Cros s word Puz z le

BRIDGE

Phillip
Alder

·~ Garages
diesel. 6' bush hog, 6' finish·
·~Utilities
Chevy 1989. short bed. slap
lng mower. (740)446·4949.
·r- Pole Barns
side, orig. Owner. $3.099.00.
New 5003, 5005. &amp; 5020 17401992-5963
Pomeroy, Ohio
Series John Deere Utility
740-99!-795.\
VANS
Tractors @ 0% fixed/ 36
740 -4 t 6-1823
FOR SALE
months. Used L)tlllty Tractors
7411 -S9 t-464 t
@
4.9% Va riable/ 60
Whirlpool washer &amp; dryer
months.
· Carmichael )984 Chevy van. Old .Bell
eaa 17401446-4536
Atlantic van 99 ,000 miles. Mye&lt;s Tree
Equipment. (740)446-2412
$800.00 or best offer. 740 Service
New John . Deere Round 949-202p
A NTIQUES
• lm•n r cd-Frct'
Balers @ 1.9% Fixed Rate
Flnancmg tor 48 Months or 96 Ford Windstar. Power ' \ E.'litim ates
• St&gt; nior C itizen
Buy or sell · Riverine New Model 457 Standard windows, power locks.
d iscount
Antiques. 1124 East Main Round Baler Only $13.250 cruise, rear AJC , 160,000
740-9!J1-2611
on SA 124 E. Poi!ieroy. 740· cash. Makes 4X5 Bale. miles. $2.600. (740)~6·
.\l h·ar~ F.\p.::n~n...e
992-2526. Russ Moore. Carmichael
Equipmen1. 8152.
~;:;;;:;;:;~~;;;;;;~
owner.
(740)446·241 2
I
Full-sized luxury van. sea ts
MRHu\ NEOOS
Special Purchase· John 7, mechanic owned, beautiM ERalANDISE
Deere 702 6 &amp; 10 Wheel lui. 1993. 77 .000 miles.
All Your !-lome
2
bedroom
apt.
Aakesl John Deere Disk $6.999. (740)446·9961 .
Improvement Needs
Washer/dryer hookup. \o\ater
Amana
motel
type Mowers. Call lor price. ~ . l\I
WIOTOHEELERSR
CVO.EXI
Siding • Wi ndow~
paid. Nice location. no pets. heater/AC, 9000 BTU wldig- Carmichael , Equipme111 .
• Deck s • Porches
$375/mo. plus deposit. it.al cont rols, $400. Also, :17~4~0;:;
14;;4,;
6.;
·2;.;4.;;12;....___
• Ct:ramic Tile &amp;
(740)446-9442.
Lerinox heat ·pump. 3.5ton, IF
Hardwoild Flooring
$200.
I.JVJ:SIOCK
2002 Yamaha 660 Rapier
• Gara£CS
great
shape,
3 rooms &amp; bath , all uti lities (7 40 )245•0134 .
yellow/black
~/matching • Roo m Add . • Roollng
paid,
Downstairs.
9 19 · - - - - - - - - L~-------E
• Kitc hens • Bath~
KBC helmet. . xce 1len t
Second Ave ., suitable fof 1.
Dish Receiver &amp; Box. for Ask about our AOHA . Condition $3,700 (304) 675 . .
··No Jnl' To Small "
$295/mo. (740)446·3~4 5.
Sale excellent condttlon . Member Discounts on rlew 1015
Rac ine, O H
7 0
Ai r Conclitio.ned
Large $ 25 ·00 (304 ) 937 •3348 call John Deere Equipment - - - - - - - - ' - - ~ 4t.'JiJ_J ~~8r
Upst8irs Apartment · 2br. after 5Pm
Carmichael
Equipment 94 Harley Davidson Ultra
ClassiC'&lt; 10,000 mites, blue,
14 yrs. Experience
· h d
740
I
46
241
2
Appliances
urnrs e . Fit&gt;erglass popup camper.
~ .
1 mo
excellent condition, $13,500. 1._~~~~_...._...,.
Deposit
Required. sleeps 4. $1800: 3 Dog Frick .,..
u ·y &amp; .
OA
(7401949-2217 ,
$ 300/mont h 1304 1675-7783 sawmill with gas power unit, I .
• GRAIN
Avai lable
immediately. $4.000; medal cattle racks . 1.;,_..,;,..,;;;;;;;;;;.,_.,.1 Murray Go-cart Tecumseh
Beautiful, clean. and spa- $75; Mywagons 5 ton &amp; 8 Alfalfa hay 52.50 bale. 6.0 HP, $500. Call (740)44 1·
cmus 3 bedroom town- ton : manure spreader; Siamese ~ k1ttens $75. New 0616 ··
'
30x1 Od medal greenhouse
houSe. With storage/playday bed &amp; manress $300.
BoAlS &amp; M OTO RS
room. Downtown Gallipolis with furnace . $2,000: greenAll type~ of roo ring:
house lufnaces' &amp; supplies,
f'Oil SALJ-:
$610/month . No utilities
Sh
ing le. Fl at. Metal ·
paid. No pets..Call (740 )446 _ Circulating fans. :SSO: Phone
(740)949·2 t 15 1f not at Jol"m Deere Riding Mowers 2000 Bayllner 21 ft . cuddy w/
New or Repair
9961 .
horne Ieave your phone
starting at $1,399. Financing trailfH, many ex tras, very I Seamless Gutter · ·
BEAUTIFUL
APART· number
'
clean 304-675-5563
MENTS
AT
BUDGET _______J_E_T_______ available subject to John
j Down.-.pout - Sidmg
Deere Credit approval. Your
PRICES AT JACKSON
AERATION MOTORS
payments cOuld be as low
.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Repaired, New &amp; RebUilt In as S39 mOn th with SO dOwn.
Drive from $344. to $442 . Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- Carmichael
Equipment
1
1999-·Trall Lite Bantam
Walk to shop &amp; movies. cau 800 _537 "9528 .
17401446-2412 ,
Flyer.
·
Excellent
condition.
Equal
740-446-2566..
Housing Opportunity.
::=:::--:::::=-:-:::=~:::::::-· Aid1ng Mower 30" cut. rear Loaded Must see. 740NEW AND USED STEEL Engine , S400. call for details 949-2709. $8,000
Beech Street. Middleport. 2
STANLEY TREE
Steel BEiams. Pipe Rebar (304)675-17-31
96 Jayco Eagle 30ft. 5th
bedroom furnished apt .. util· For
TRIMMING &amp;
Concrete.
Angle ,
ities paid, previous rental Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Zero Tum z . Trok M-ars
wheel with
slide out
GENERAL
......
reference, deposit, no pets. Grating
condition. ·
For
Drains. from John Deere available at Ellce!lent
CONTRACTING
17401992-0165
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L 4.9% · fixed
rate
fro :17:_40 144:.:..6-~350-:-5~.~-c:c-::­

NO DOWN PAYMENT· 3 bL For rent: 3 bedroom. 1 1/2
2 1/2 baths, large 2 car baths. in Vinton . Ready July
garage, ,in
Middleport. , I740I3Bll' 0135,
Relocating. Call (740)992Mobile Home Lot only
9799 l eave message
Addison Pike- $125/month·
call (740)446-3644 for more
Rental Properties tor sale. info.
Trai ler and Garage Apt..
Mason on 4th Ave. House on
Madison ~ve , Pt Pleasant.
House Roush Ferrell Lane
Pt. Pleasan t Four Vaqa nl 1 and 2 bedroom apart· lo ts In Mason County ments, fu rn1shed and unfur13041675-1911 or 13041593· nished, · securi ty depos.it
~096
requ ired, no pElts, 740-9922218
Roush Lane, Chesh'ire.
Beautiful 3 bedroom, fo rmal 1 bedroom Apartment, pardining room . OaK ki tchen. tially furnished. $300 month
Oak floo rs. carpeted. Sun (304 1675-4351
room..
2
1/3
baths,
$1 171000. (740)367J7615 ~

'

AKC Basset Hound puppies. 2001 Black Mustang, V-6.
Shots. wormikl . parents on $8500 Firm, (740)742·0502
prem1se
5300
each. nice clean car. runs greatt
{740}256·6887
2001 Ford Excurs•on L1m1ted
AKC German Shepherds. 58 ,000 mtles (304)882·3711
2000 ChEN)' Blazer lwo door
Pups &amp; Adults
52 ,000 mtles (304)593-6979
! -Black &amp; Tan L1t1er
1-SOiid Black Lttter
2dr 2001 Dodge Stratus
vet-checl\~d &amp; shots
One owner. like new. Pearl
(304)937-23 10
white, 3.0 V6. 42.000mtles.
www trlstatek·9 com
Call (850)543-4079.
::--::~--::---:--:--:For Sale; Chocolate lab
92 Plymouth Acda1m , Auto,
Pups. $200 oo., 7401992·
AC, . $1000 OBO 13041675·
6227
6628

Golden Reteiver pupp1es
AKC 1st . shot . &amp; wormed
Downtown Ofl1ce Space- , 5
$200 00
POP 304-675room sutte $659/mo: 1 room
3526
otlice - $225/mo.; L. room
suite $250i mo. Secur~ t~
Fuun~ &amp;
deposit requ1red. You pay
V!:Gf: I;&gt;IIU:S
utiht1es. All spaces·very n1ce .
Eleva lor. Call (740)446·3644
HOMEGROWN GROWN
for appoimment.
GARDEN VEGETABLES
For Lease : Off1ce or reta1l
spaces in very good condi- Available at McKean Farm
Centef'1.try
Road
tion. Downtown Gallipolts on
Approx. 1600 sq _fl . eact'!. 1 740. 446-9442

.

,Newly Remodeled 2/3BA. 1
, 112 .BA. Hardwood Ceramic
'Floors, full Basement. 1 Car
anacned Garage. Deck &amp;
Large Fenced B~ckyard
$88,500 (859)797-9806 or
' 13041675-2036

mil RI-Nr

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

..

ALLEY OOP
. ~03

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www . my~ailys entinel.com ,

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SOUP TO NUTZ

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llr0 \.A\olP
IK i\IE.

' 'Taking The Sling Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Dri,ve Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubpta Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 C hest er 985-3jOJ

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-

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~ "Good lhoughls bear good lruil. bad lhoughts bear
bad fruit - and man is his own·gardener.' - James Allen
,(c) 2005 by NEA, Inc. · 6-30

...

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SCIIAM·llTS ANSWERS I ~ 2' ~ o5'
Elated • Champ - Vista • Halves • HEALTH
'We catch diseases very easily,· .the patient tOld the
doctor. "Wouldn't it be better if we could catch HEALTH
as easily?'

ARLO &amp; JANiS

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"Sale Starts Today &amp; Ends Sunday, July 10, 2005"

DO-IT
YOURSELF PLUMBING
SCHEDULE 40 PVC
We have everything you need and
we will show you how. All you
need is a paintbrush and a saw and
you can "do-lt-yourself"! Be your ·
own plumber and save!.

2" x10' ......... .... ...: ..

IJ. I}_ .

~

1-1/2" x1 0' .. .. ......... $4.79

$5.79

VALUE-CORE'M

Self-Storing
Model 288-SS

DWO.UT SALE!.

3" x10' ................... $8.79
4"x10' ........ .. ...... $13.49

" Not "'~••n nsible for

• Self-storing
SAF-T-GLASSTM window
and screen system

ical errors.

MAINTENANCE FREE VI NYL •FENCE

1. 1· . l·l,(~r,._. ,

'Gettysbu~g

~-~,

1

6 'x 6' Fence Pa n e l &gt;9100 .. ... .. $68.99
3 ' x 6 ' Gat e 10 102.. ...... . ........ ... $61.99

• •

1

5 " x ? " x 98 " Pos t 19 104 .......... $19.49

_.- "(I \

TRADITIONAl

/""

HANDRAIL KIT

,/'

·*
*·
*

br.teket s and screw..,
Ont."'\ not 1nclude po s ts .

'

YO R KTOWN

b•tJ (. kcl &lt;&gt; and screws
I lO t" " l"' u l 1ntl ude p o st &lt;;

Traditional Handrail J(it

2 x 6 x1 6' Vin y l Ra .i i1 9120 .. ..... . $14.99

6' Section &gt;9050 .. .. .. .. .............. $64.99

3 Rail Lin e Post 19122.. .... .. .... $14.99

B ' Sectio n 19052.. ................. .... $96.99

3 Rail Co rn e r Po st &gt;9 124 ...... . $14.99

1 o · Secii o n 19054 ............... $

3 Rail End Po st 19 126 .... .. ...... $14.99

149.99

Yorktown Handrail Kit
' 6' Secti o n 19ose ..... ................. $79.99
8 ' Secti o n 19060 ................... $116.99
10' Secti o n 19062.. .... .... ....... $164.99

Corrugated Heavy Duty

Sq.

J.29
29. 99

cO-l 12 . 20-l II. 21l-l 1-l .....

·4"xl00' Flexible. Solid, slotted or perforated. 20421. cO-l .P

.

. 20-ll .l ....

*

GARAGE
*PACKAGES

100

Sq. Ft.

" Heavyasphaltbase
coated with mineral
granules.
Black or white

24'x24' Standard 2 Car Garage Package
16' O.C. wall studs. 24" O.C. engineered roof trusses . White vi nyl sidif\g .
16'x7' Clopay gar11ge door, prefinished White . 3'0" service door.
7/16"x4'x8 ' OSB roof sheathing . GAF roof sh ingles.
Architectural plans for easy assembly. Cement &amp;
foundation extra . GK2424

siding, etc.

.

Roll
Roll

...

per oquaro

Presti~e• I High Deflnitton™
from"

$55 96
per square

L .!

70186

2'x8'

I

ftOl ;;c~!~~s" $44 97

Allin Stock

ft·r·
·
-~~~
;:;::

colors: Grey &amp;
Maho.gany, Cedar &amp;Acadia Availbl

Newel Post 75056175086 ..... .',. 19.49
Post Cap 75058/75088 ................. ,...7.69
Post Skirt 75060/75090 ..... ... . ....... 7.69
Top Rail 75062175092 .................... 24 9
Bottom Rail 75064n5094 .. .. .. ....... 2 .
Stair Aaii75066/75096 ...... ... .. .... ,. .99
Baluster 75068/75098 ............. ......... 3.19
Skirt Board 75074/75099 .............. 35.99

10%
0 f

Ceilin Fans

:*

12' Deck Board 75050/75o8o ...... 23.99
16' Deck Board 75052175082 ...... 31.99
20' Deck Board 75054/750-84 .....39.99

"9 Colors"

c::==~~~~-=,_.)

In

Prestique• II Raised Proflle TM

a

~·

Round Aluminum Columns 95323
Add beauty &amp; safety to your home
Round, White Aluminum columns
6"x8-" 169900 · 8"x8" 169919

ssaggoo

. Model BK3248

•

www.elkcorp.c .om

·-

· ~Crsft

saggg

s·3299°0

32'x48' Pole Barn Kit

Art for illustrative purposes only. Not exactl y as shown .

ro choo1e

1 049

Light tar paper. Use for side
walls over sheathing, under

24' X 32'
Pole Barn kit .
FREE easy-to-follow plans with
material purchase Model BK2432

$4 7ggoc

Premium Roofing

ROOF FELT

1599

Pole Barn Kit

26'x28' Premium 2 Car Garage Package
2-9x7' garage do.ors/2-3'0" windows . White vi nyl siding &amp; soffit. 16" O.C.
· wall studs. 24" O.D. engineered roof trusses . 3.0" se rvice door.
.
7116.. x4'xB' oss roof sheathing. GAF roof shingles.
Architectural plans for easy assembly. Cement &amp;
foundation extra . Includes gutter. GK2628
.

ELKttJ.

15 LB. ASPHALT

73.99 90 LB. MINERAL SURFACE
ROLL ROOFING

4"x2sw Flexible.solid, slotted nr perforated . , ,1-l , n. ~o.. _,o. 211-l l!l ...

~ from"

Colors Available:
• Ivory, Almond,
White,
Gray, Clay/Cedar,
Wicker Tan
'

00

Polyethylene .Pipe ·
·4"x 10' Flexible. solid, slotted or perforated.

32" or 36"

Premium
·Dutch lap
Vinyl Siding

i

3Rail Vinyl Fence

25

·- - - -

'

HA N DRAIL KIT
lncl u dt"!. m u u n tm g

In clu d es m o unl mR

5"x 5" ·B eve l Po st Ca p 191 07 .. $1.99

.

160121
160148

reated Lattice
Panels

15°/o OFF

$3.99·
70189
~P-anel

.I

$7.29

DECK PACKAGES
Bwld a patto deck thts weekend

,

Irs

· easter than you ththk w1th our free deck
plans and expen advtce Anyone wtth jUSt
a lew stmple tools can c reate a deck that
will be the envy of your neighborhOOd II

•'

./

·.
'

you've developed your own plans. bnng
them along .we'll be glad to quote you a
pnce. By us•ng pressure-treated lumber.

you assure yourself of decades of use
wrth no maintenance
Never need
patnting" or statnlng. unless you want to
These deck package priCes are for the
sake of .com~r!son . we can help you
With you r deck protect from start to hmsh
Let us des•gn esllmate &amp; deliver your
dec~

today

Treated

Steel Woodgrained Garage Door 9' x7'
Prepainted with prim~r inside._ outside has a 15-year warranty. Rue1tprc10fed.l
Full length boHom weatherseal. ~II hardware Included. 12416
.
16'X7' Steel Woodgrained Garage Door. ,..,..........................................,......................... $419·
Steel Woodgrained Garage Door. Insulated 12420...................................... $289 ·
16'X7' Steel Woodgrained Garage Door. Insulated. 12422 .................................. $499

Landscape

.'7.19 .,,
1Y Round PewtPr

24•x24• Red

1

Sfll9 .,,,

1'.99.,.,

.

. 2Y'2

14 ~

trxt l" Charcoal

sl. 29 .,.,

s-, 19

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24" l 36..

Flagstone

1

10,99

16" x16• PeMer

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10· ~ 10" •4 •

12"

1J 69 ·

Edgo&gt;tone
Charcoal or Red

•

16"x16" Red

Concrete Deck Support

5.79

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Th otnas

no it center.·

I

Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipolis. Ohio

'7 l0-446-2002
Mon. -S at. 8-·7 • SundaY J 1-5

•'

. ·),'
24• I 24"

C.ippuw n o
Stope T•le

S

16 99
•

319

Timbers

s·x7·

3"x5"x8'$

With the patented Anchor Windsor Stone® Retaining wall system, •
even fir5t bme do-it-yourselfers find II remarkabl-( easy. to work with.
All you need is a little imagination and a few basiC t~ls, to turn any
landscaping project into natural wonder that adds 1nstant value and
beauty to your home. Anchor Windsor Stone&lt;l requ1res almost no
maintenance, the warm earthtones and rock face textu~es complement every landscape environment Fire.up your !magmat1on and
dramatically impr011e your surrou~mgs wrth reta1mng wall~. crea~ve
edging. terraced gardens, tree nngs, planters, and mu~h more.

a

WINDSOR
WINDSOR
DIAMOND
DIAMOND

12w GRAY 1om ..................
12w BUFF 10774 ......,............
16w GRAY 10n6 .................
16w BUFF 10778.................

Yalley .Ltitlib er
.&amp; Supply Co.

$2.19
$2.19
$5.39
$5.39

Thomas

::lO it center

555 Park St. , Middl. port, Ohio

Rt. 2 By Pass Point Pleasant, WV

7 10-992-661[ •1-800-733-3334

304-6 7 5-5 2 00

Mon.--Fri. 7-5• Saturda 7-3

Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday ll-5

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