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•
.,

Sunday, July 17, 2005

If it's an attractive plant
with enticing odors you want,
then select ·,.candy Dancer"
(rose to lemon rose scent), or
the .
aptly
named .
"Peppermint ," '"Apple" and
''Cinnarnon" cu lttvars. You
also can find a • scented
pelargonium with some oil &lt;~f
citronella bred mto tl. Thts
varli:ty is popularly called t)le
"mosquito shoo" or "Citrosa."
You may see it advertised as a
plant con ta ining a natural
insect nepellant but scientists
have not proven that claim to
be valid, horticulturists say.
No i11atter what you come
to call the m, both plants have
a place in your garden, says
Brawner.
•••
Recommended reading:
"Gerciniums: The Cmnpiele
· E1tcyclopedia. " hy Faye .
Brawlier. &amp;ilijji:r Publishin~
Ltd. List price: $/9.95.

BY DEAN FOSDICK

••

~p

WEEKLY FEATURES

How's this for a case of
identity theft? I went shopping
for some gerani ums recently
and came home with an assortment of pelargoniums.
The labels read "geraniums."
The nunreryman called them
"geraniums." ·But an illu&gt;trated
guide about the geraniaceae
botanical family identified
them as "pelargoniums." So
what's with the name game'!
This isn't an instanceof21 stcentury cyberhacking; ' it's.
more a case of motiv;ttion lacking. It's a reluctanc-e to drop old
habits. to exchange the popular
but incorrec t name "gerani-

. ums" tor ·that of "pelargoni. ums," says Faye Brawner,
author of "Geraniums: The
Complete Encyclopedia.". and
president of the lntematronal
Geranium Society.
" It is safe to say that the
vast majority of plants seen
and ca lled ·geraniums in the
U.S. arc actually pelargoniums," she says.
Botanv

w~~n 't

'an cxa'-'t sti-

ence wlien the first gerani. ums and peim·goniums were
introduced en masse into
Europe from South Africa in .
the 17th century. "The plant
col lectors lumped everything
in as ge~a niums. " Brawner
says. "A few years down the
road. a French botanist decided there was a difference.
Half were geraniums and half
were pelargoniums. But geraniums .had been called that
for so long. people shrugged
their shoulders and went
along with it. " Many of them
sti ll do," she says.
Brawner, 'fnim Beverly,
· Ohio. has spent nmch of her
adult life trying to correct the
record.. So why does acc urate
naming matter in thi s case?
It mallers plenty if you ' re
look ing tor a plant capable of
thriving in sun or partial
shade; a woodland tlow.er with
smallish blooms, carried
siqgly, and ranging in color
from white to pink to purple; a
mounded plant that will spread

.) 0

Cl \IS • \ ol. ;;~ . '\o. :.!:) o

SPORTS
• Post 128 wins by forfeit.
See PageB1 -

Page AS
•· Helen Marie Holter
• James Benton Boso
• Maria A. Delgado
• Raymond Jeffery
Michael
• Clair E. Zeigler

INSIDE

FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

~ Di,~~:oiiN ,.

S 2,175

Bv Bmt SERGENT
BSERGENT&lt;!I&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Buckley had been "graciously"
letting his office use J\1eigs
Local School's radio frequency
for dispatching purposes.
However, once school starts
the Sheriff's Office must find
another alternative for radio
communication.
Beegle estimates the cost of
the .new radio system to be
$ 14,068 based on two prices he
has received for a Motorola
MRT 2000 Repeater Duplexer.
· Beegle has sent letters to the
. villages of Middleport, Racine,
Rutland and Syracuse asking
for their tinancial support in
purchasing a new radio system

1.88

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1pon~~·rJ~nce
Qroup,
\P uh
til,
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QU.tr
f)(IW'(fl

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HU I ~"f,
I &amp;: Win d!JNl,

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two 01

more •Uri 1 prlu. 'J12215

Milt .

$17 ,UJ ·1'

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11/116'

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the contest was held as a pan ·
of Chester-Shade Days in the
restored
1828
Chester
Courthouse. Among the II
contestants, a three-mel11ber
· Beth Sergentjphotos
judging panel , all harmonica
Members
of
the
9th
Virginia,
Company
F
from
Northe
rn
Ohio
prepare
to
engage
the enemy. The
Harmonica players, awarded the title to
State
9th
Virg1111a
has
approximately
30.
members
,
including
one
woman
.
Championship contest; walked Anderson. Swcond place "'ent
away with the 2005 title and
Bv BETH SERGENT
the cash prize Saturday night.
...
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Please
see
Harmonica,
AS
As for Jhe past several ·years

air,
CD player,
po-..r windows,
locks, cruise, ~It,
keyless entry

$196°m~.*

.2005 HONDA
CIVIC LX

WEATHER

ModtiiESl~

$186°m~.*
2005 Nissan Altima
2 •5 L S . J'
!.ut~llt,'· ml•~h

r.rula,
mats, rtrf'l(l(t
'I
I 6r~1en~t&lt;
WWl
, two Of
m~ 1t t h prk.f'.
I!OS 1S
MSI~
521.170
f..Dfr Itb.
s 1,.m
h,.bf DutO&lt;IIf
$ I 01-4

· Sale Price

•1 7,986

2005 HONDA

In this photo provided by Lee Reich , rose bushes. especially
hybrid teas. are not the prettiest of Riants but the flowers sure
do look pretty 1n vases. A few tricks can prolong the indoor
show. Generally, red, pink. and orange roses keep better than
do wh.ite or yellow roses.

'

INDEX,
Calendars

A3

·Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

..
'·

250 C ~Rd

250 Columbus Ad., Athens

7 ~-3~28

740-59·HONDA

1-tOO;NEXTAIOE

Toll Free 1-SOO·N EXTRIDE

.
•

Debra. Connor does first pers1Jn historical portrayal of Zelda
Fitzgerald in final performance· of the Ohio Chautauqua at
Chester.

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

-

AP Photo

Charlene=~~~

PILOT Ell ·RES
...

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As
B Section

Sports

A6

Weather

•

'

. If a new radio system is purcha~ed Beegle said he is not
sure if his oftlce will p•ss along
any further repair cosh to the
surrounding · villages. He hopes
that liJr .at least the lirst two
years ihe new syst~m will be
under warranty.
The original dispatching

veto contestant takes state
harmonica championship title

enlr~

21 ' ·I 89

serves.

r.tdio was purchased with gran t
money but according to Beegle
there is no grant money at this
time to purchase the new one.
He said that even the Sheriff's
Oflice may have to take out a
loan at a local bank to pay for
their third of the new system.
He said he continues to look for
the best pri ce possible and may
be able w lind one cheaper than
the $ 14.06X Motorola.
"We· re operating on a shoestri ng budget as it is and we are
trying to keep all 10 d,eputies
working." Beegle said about
the financial situation or his
own otlice.
'

Charlene Hoeftlch, photo

Au1omatic, air, CD
pklyar, po~r
windows, locks,
cruise, ~h. keyle.,

Sale PriCe$

system is so old that most of the;
parts are no longer manufactured and those that m·e can be
expensive.
· Beegle said that the Sheriff's
Office has borne all ex penses
for the repairs ·and does m 11
charge for its actual dispatchin g

The 2005 Ohio State Harmonica Champion Aaron Anderson,
center, was joined by second place winner, David Saeng of
Beverly right, and Randy Shafer ·of Crown City, who placed
third. to .entertain the Chautauqua crowd under the big tent.
They were accompanied· by guitarist Marvin · Monroe of
Sunbury.
-

Av!Oma~c ,

2005 Nissan Sentra

due to their use of the system .
Pomeroy was not asked
because it has its own dispatching system sep;u:ate from the
Sheriff's Office.
In the letter Beegle said his
oftke would pay one-third of
the new radio system's cost. He
also asked Middleport to pay
one-third of the system's cost
and the combined villages of
Racine, Rutland and Syracuse
to pay the remaining third.
Beegle said that this year the
Sheriff's Office has already
paid out $2600 to repair the
svstem that still does not functi"on propeny. He added .that the

• Grange looks to fair
exhibit.
SeePageA3
• School News.
BY CHARL!NE HOEFUCH
See PageA3 ,
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
• Scenes from Battle of
CHESTER
Aaron
Buffington Island.
Anderson of Veto, competing
See Page A2 ,.
for the first time in the Ohio

2005 HONDA
·acCORD LX

22,99 5

"'"' · "'Yd;ril~"·nlind . ,·un•

:! oo:;

Meigs Sheriff asks villages to canfribute to new radio system

"""' o&lt;:Ml&lt;ldW

S11 QO
I 1,l!XJ

1X .

OBITUARIES

Bv LEE REICH

,_.., iol.•

..

Battle of Buffington.Island recreated

Roses: Make 'em last

MliiP

Nursing students·pass
state bo~&lt;l exam, A3

'10\ll \\ . ,JI ' I \

· ··
POMEROY - The current
radio system used to dispatch
calls by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office is 20-years old
and only functions some of the
time.
. "Our present radio cuts out,"
Meigs County Sheriff Raben
Beegle said about the need tor a
·new system. "We can't have
people out on the road thinking
they,' re talking to you and
they re not." .
..
Beegle smd Mergs L&lt;_JCal
School Supenntendent W1lham

11

2005 Nissan Quest S·L

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

On the Net:
For more about geraniums,
" try the Nonh ·carolina State
University Department of
Science
Horti culture
Cooperative
Ex
l
~
n
s
ion
Web
AP Photo
.
Ageranium by'another other name is still as sweet. Geranium ·or pelargon1um? It's been a case of mistaken identity for centuries. Site:
ltttp:l!www:ces.
ncsu.edulh
Chances are, that "geranium" in. your garden .&lt;;~ctually is a pelargonium, like this .commonly· seen red ,pelargon1um vanetal.
i1/h i 1-8504.11/ill/.
into an attractive ground who want a cenain plant find "Magn ifi cum ." If yo u're "Vale nt ine, " "G re:etings."
•••
rover, a plant hardy· enough to it if they don't know what it looking for a combination of "Blazonry" and the "Wirral
You cw1 contact Dean
flower through several frosts. is."· Brawner says. ''B ut if it bloom and pallerned leaves, New Look " are popular Fusdick
a!
That's a true g~ranium .
has the correct name, you can think. pelargon.iums
fancy leaf cultivars.
· dean (osdick@ Ill' 1scape.net.
· But the pelargonium has a find it .'' Pel argoniutm and
lot going for it, too. If you geraniums arc classified as
hought what you thought was perennials, but the pelargonia geranium and its leave s um actually is a tender perengive off an attractive scent, nial , Brawner says.
then 'it's probably a pelargoUse true geraniums for rock .
nium. If you have a plant dis- garden s or liJr shady spots.
playing leaves as colorful as Brawner says. Think pelargothose on a coleu s, chances are niums if you want a longit's a pelargoni um. If it's a blooming plant on a pon;h or
stemmed plant, growing someth ing prominent in
upright rather than horizon- tlowerbeds. hanging baskets,
tally. then it 's probably a containers or window hoxes. ·
So. if you hope to see that
pelargonium.
Pelargoniums come i11 a favorite h.erbaceous plant of
wide range of colors, ranging yours survive periods of
from red and white to salmon extreme cold. then .ensure
and pink, shades of purple to that it's a true or a hardy
orange and many combina- geranium, something like
the
tions.
" Sanguineum."
"You can't help people ''Macorrhizum,
ur

from the blossoms is cutti.ng · until the water reaches room
'them at the right stage of temperature.
development. Usually this
Now you're ready to move
Rose bushes. especiall y means cutting blossoms while the roses to a vase that will
hybrid teas, are not the prelli- they are still in bud. Wait until become their tina! home. From
est of plants but the !lowers the bud feels slightly mushy if here on, lack of energy, bactesure do look pretty in vases. you roll it between your ria plugging stems, and aging
A few tricks can prolong the thumb and forefinger, or until
- the those green petal -like are what will eventually drain
indoor show.
This advice is belated, but appendages enYeloping each · tlie beauty from the flowers .
if you, want the longest last-. bud, curl. downward.
ing indoor rose blooms, plant
Some kinds of roses need
a rose variety known for hav- their blossoms furiher along
ing this quality. Generally, in development before they
req, pink, and orange rmes make good cut flowers. Wait
keep better than do white or to cut any of the heirloom or
yellow roses. And' roses w.ith modern roses having many
more petals open more ·slow- petals until you. sec ·a few
ly and last longer than Jo rows of petals developing. ·
roses with fewer petals.
Once cut, rose blossoms .
Some long-lasting roses need '.'conditioning." Plunge
include hybrid tea~ mch as the stem bases into hot water.
Touch of Class, Olympiad. then cut off. the bottom halfSale Price$
. Voodoo, Chrysler Imperial. inch while the Stem is still
Mi ster Lincoln. and Peace submerged. This eliminates
and granditloras such as the small bubble of air that
gets sucked into the base of a
Sonia and Viva. '
For any rose bushes already stem when it is cut. Let the
in the ground, the first step in stems sit in the water out of
eking . the longest vase life · direct sunlight in a cool room

•

•

'

Tiger dominates
British Open, Bt .

\

•.

.

.

'

GARDENING
A CASE OF BOTANICAL IDENTITY THEFT

FOR

.

'

PageD6

iunbap lim~ -ientintl

...

.

© 2005 Ohio Valle!)' Publl.&lt;ihlns Co.

Chautauqua coqcludes
Chester performances
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSEIIITINEL

CHESTER -After a week
of being entertained and edu-·
cated with flrst-p¢rson historic portrayals of famous
people of rhe 1920s the Ohio
Chauiauqua staff pulled up
the slakes on the btg red and

white tent pitched on the
Chester
Commons
and
n\oved on Sunday.
They left behind enlightened Bene! area residents
about the life and times of the
likes of baseball legend Babe
Ruth ,
llapper
, Zelda

Please see Chautauqua, AS

PORTLAND - Civil War
reenactors from across Ohio
and other neighboring 'states
arrived for the ree nactment or
the Battle of Buffington
Island over the weeke~d. significantly increasi ng the population of nearby Portlimd.
Driving on Ohio_ 124 into
Portland spectators were
treated to visitors from both
the 21 sl and 19th centuries
walki~g along the side of the
road, . some carrying picnic
baskets, rilles, cannons and
digital cameras.
Hundreds of the reenactors
set up camp at Buffington
Island Memorial Park where
coffee was made over an ·open
flame although the occasional
cell phone cou ld he spolled at
the ear of a reenactor, remind -·
ing all of the year 2005 Ji)r
just a moment.
Despite the interruption s of
the 21st century. the reenactors worked hard to stav true
to the Civil War era and soldiers the~ were representing.
Tim Adkins from Louisa,
Ky. was with the Confederate
Common Wealth Art i'llery
reenat·tors of LO&lt;tisa . Adkins
adm ired that Gerieral John
Morgan was referred to as a
sou\hern gentleman by most
that encountered him. Adkins
also had two great-g reat
grandfathers • that li)ught for
the Union and two that fmtght
for the Confederacy.
"Louisa was kind of the
dividing line ' between the
North and the South," Adkins
said about his heritage and a
history that saw brother battle
brother.
Adkins is a history buff
like most of. the reenirctors
and believes the Civil War
does not get it s due in modern

..

..

Confederate soldiers from the Confederate Common Wealth
Arti llery of Louisa. Ky. fire upoQ Federal troops.
'
school curric.ulum s. Adkins·
c)ity job is the Chlci' of Police
in Loui sa.
Bob Kelley of Woodv ille
and his brothers from the 9th
Virginia. Company F ·"'ill tell
you that the Civ il War was npt
aboul slavery but states' rights

govern mcnt .,

Member'

of

the

9th

Virgini:l · arc from Northern

Ohio hu t are Confederate
r ~l~nactflp,

hcc all.\l' ihcv love

the South and they Jm:e gei1111!;' to fi ght nn ,, h:mtefield in
th ~:1r own :-:tate .
fhat were being taken aw:.l'y
Tl1c~ arc
n&gt;mprised of
froh1 those "damtl yankees ... around 30 ml'mbc-r:-.. includ That 1860\ spirn or ret-.el - in \! one \voman. wht1 like to
linn is still felt in the new mil- pl71y tog~:ihc'r and ··..,wcat
lennium amOngst the n:cnar.:- · ltlgct her·· ;1, thl'~ pu t it. Many
tors.
"' id the lwa,, ~ period clothing
"Thi~ is not a fret' :-.lll'ict&lt;·:· made or \\'(101 i," pn•t-.ably the
K,elley said about the powers wor~r part of rccn~t cti ng \yhen
the government h:.1s c\'cn now.
Llo~~n ·, ma~tL"f who 1:pow~r."
Kellev- 's eun::al-i!TC~It
Pfa1H.l...
c-

"and it

in

father was a Union Colonel at
Chase
PriMm
Juring

Morgan\ ~ ta y th ere am.lr.:ame
into pos se~~ ion of Ml1rg.an\

pocket watch that '"L' left
behind. Kclkv \ ~r:mdlather

wa~ ordered I&lt;; w rl1 tbc pod\-

ct Watch · o'er to the federa l

till' t ~mpcra tun.~ re:ll.:he~
l~m -'ninctie~ a~ it Uu.J on~r

the

the
wCckcncl.
,c\nothcr hi~hlight or lhe
wee l-end. \lllkr: than the actual battle ihclf. "''" :t wreath
Ja~· ing ccrcmon) bdd :11 the
Burfin~ton Island ~kmorial
PariTh""' Ia~ in~ "reaths c;t the
c

Please see Battle,

~5

'

.

�'

••

'

·pageA2

OMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

BATTLE OF BUFFINGTON ISLAND

Monday, July 18
RACINE
Southern
Local Board of Education
meets m special session, 7
p.m., high schooL
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees, 7 p.m., at
office building.
· Thesday, July 19
POMEROy
- Meigs
County Board of Elections,
8:30 ~L 111.. board office.
Thursday, July 21
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Coosc;,r..vation
District will meet in regular
sess ion , 'II :30 a.m. at the
Meigs 'SWCD otice, 33.10 I
Hiland RomL

''

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, July 18
POMEROY - Pomeroy
' Chapter · 186, Order of
Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m.,
Masonic Hall in Chester.
Initiation. Wea'r chapter

This drummer boy for the Union Army takes a nap in between the
skirmish in Miller's Hayfield and the Battle of Buffington Island.

'Beth Sergent/pholos

Confe derate sold1ers raise their rifles in battle.
------"-r----~-~ ---· --

Civil War ball

dresses. Refreshments .

p.m. .
through
Tuesday. Church of God Sunday
Professor Dowler will ,present schoo l picnic at noon at Star
Thesday, July 19
"Bible Science So Far,'' All Mill Park . Covered dish .
POMEROY - Stand meet- children welcome. Call 992- ,Bapitising in river. Take lawn
ing, 5-6 p.m. , Pomeroy 6443 for more information .
chairs. No evening church
Library.
service.
CHESTER
Past
Monday, July 18
Councilors .Club of Chester
RUTLAND -· Vacation
Council 323, Daughters of Bible School at the Rutland
America supper at the Cool Freewill Baptist Church, ·
Saturday, july 23
Spot at 6 p.m . . 7:30 · p.m. Saletll Street, through Fridfiy.
ALBANY
- The annual
meeting at tlie Masonic Classes for nursery-age chilStaneart
family
reunmn .
building in Chester.
dren to teenagers 6 to 8:30
p.m. For more ,information descendants of Joe l and
Lydia Steaneart, noon at the
Wednesday, July 20
call 742-2507.
Lake
Snowden. Big Oak
POMEROY
Meigs
Rock
POMEROY
County Cancer Society Task Springs United Methodi st shelter house, at Albany. Take
Force, noon , conference C hurch
vacation
Bible pi c'nic lunch and lawn chairs.
For more information call
room of Pomeroy Library. school , Monday
t~rugh
Lunch provi.ded . RSVP to Friday, 6 to 8 p.m. For more 992-5502. '
Courtney ~im, 992-6626.
information contact Rev, R.
"Keith rader, pastor, 992-3317 .
REEDSVILLE
Comm!Jnity
· Riverview
Monday, July 18
Sunday, July 17
Vacation Bible School, 6 to
POMEROY
- Meig s
PORTLAND -Spani sh·- 1'1 :30 p.m .• Reedsville United County
Right to · Life
language Mass at Our Lady Methodi st Church. Sponsored Remember Life Rall y, 9: IS to
of Guadalupe Mi ssion, Harris by Ree\lsville · and Long 10 p.m. , Pomeroy Riverfront
Farms on Ohio 1:;'4. Ministry Bottom United Methodist Amphitheater. Informative
of Sacred Heart Catholic Churches , Reedsville Church program followed by candleof Christ and Faith Full light praye r servi ce. The pubChurch, Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT
. Gospel Church.
lic is invited to attend and
Vacation Bible School at Ash
bring baby care items for
Street Church, 398 Ash St..
Sunday, July 24
donation to the Athens
Middleport, 6:30 to 8:30
RACINE - Mt. Moriah Pregnancy Center.

Reunions

Dear
Abby

sins.

•
Right: The Roaring Twenties
was the theme of
Chautauqua and on Saturday
the look was bobbed hai r
and hiked skirts. Joan i
Powers, a Chester-Shade
Days volunteer, fit right in.

'

DEAR DESPERATE: There
is nothing you can do because
the problem ·isn't yours; it 's
yo'ur wife's . Until you came
into her li fe, her two most significant male relationships
were with men who were
unfaithful. The fac t ·that the
male role model - her fathe r
- was a cheater set up her
expectations for how ''all"
men behave.
If you haven't already done
so, I urge you to have a serious
talk with your wife about how
her suspicions make you feel.
It is unrealistic to expect you to
spend th'e rest of your life
wearing blinders and talking
only to men. If she 's smart,
she ' ll talk to a counselor about
this , because suspicion and
accusations that an innocent

.

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COLUMBUS - Sha\1 n
Kee gan
Tibbetts
of
Middleport and Travaona Jo
Moore of Racine recei1cd
degrees at sprin g co mmence- Personal and Organii'al iona l
ment at The Oh10 Sta te Leadership. and w'" presented
University.
with the Pandora Ou"ta n din~
Senior Leader Award .
During hi .s time at UGA. he
was a~tive at WO UG. the cam:

OnOSU
honor roll

COLUMBUS _ The following students were among
those name(! to the honor. roll
at The Ohio State Un ivers ity
fo r spring quarter. having
earned a grade point average:
of 3,5 or better on a 4.0 scale:
Johnathan Owen. Middleport ,
Emilv
Linnea
Sto rv,
Middleport , Garrett Karr.
Pomeroy, Tony Crouch. Jr. .
Austin Tyler Li ttle and Joseph
Paul ManueL all of Ra ci ne.

Hart Graduates
University
of Georgia

pus radi o station . Begi nning a:-,
a DJ. Hart oecame training

director and then general man H
·
agcr. e enJ~&gt;yed parti cipating
in the college music scene.
includ ing Athfcst. where the
radi o station won awards for
outstanding music comribu- .
tions to the co nrmunit v.
Hart was president ;,r Alpha
Kappa PSL a pr(&gt;fe,ional
bu siness fraternit y. •111d
· recei,·ed
an
Academy
Foundation Fel low shi p. He
was alsn selected to parti cipa te
in an Internationa l Leadership
Conference.
He i1·as an intern atthc UGA
. Career Development Center
and scrv.cd on the Student
Leader&gt;hip Advisory Coun ci L

'

wa s a member of ·Omil:ron·

Delta Epsi lon. an economio
society, &lt;lnd Omicron Delta
Kappa. a lea.der &gt;hip ho nor
society. and enj oyed fem:in g
on the UGA Fenc in g Team.
He 'pend a semester studying Ec o n o mi~ s and Briti,h
Literature
at
Oxford "'
Un ivers ity in England. mak·
ing the Dean's li st.
Upon grad uati on. Hart accepted a posit ton with Accenture in
Manhanan . NY ·

month, was the theme llf Kim
Romine's program . She gave
o ri gi n ~ of ice cream reac hing
back to the se~:ond ce ntury
BC and noted that it was n't
until 1660 that ice cream was
made ava ilable to the genera l
public. July 17 is National ke
Crean1 Day as proclaimed by
Ronqld Reagan proci&lt;li1iled In
J9S4 c In 177fl the first ice
crea m parlor opened in New
York Cit y, in 1874 the soda
jerk emerged with the in ve ntion of the ice ncam soda.
Waffle cones were introduced
at the World 's Fa ir in 1904 in
St. Louis.
noted
that
Romine
Culifornilt produc'es the
largest vo lume of ice cream,
and that the Cnitcd States
leads the word iry production ·
about Ui bill ion gallons are
sold each year. Chocolate
syrup . remains th e fav orite
. topping. At the conclusion of
the progra m. the lecturer
handed nu t howls nf homemade ice cream .
The August n1eeting wi ll be
preceded by sloppy Joe sandwiches, corn on the cob and
green beans . · New officers
will he elected .

The Public Utiliti es Connn i ~ ... iun nf Ohin h ~ ::. . . ct fnr pubhr hcarm!;"·
· Cnsc No. 05~376~EL-UNC. :/11 rill· .\~a/li T o(the ,·lpplication ol
Co!wn/m.\ Sm;tlwrn P1111 cr CoiiiJ'IIII_\· and Ohio Pmt·er ColllfM/1\ '
tOr Atlllwrirr to Hccmvr CosH' .·1.\·.wwiated H'itlllht• Construction
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Elt:l.'!ril' Gcnemting Facility, to ~.:on s1dcr th&lt;.'. dcvc](lpmcnt of n

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has graduated from the
University of Georgia.
Hart re,·e ived a Bachelor of •
Busine" Admini stration in
E~onom ic1 and Marketing . a
minor
in ,
Ma~ "
Communications.. and an
lntenlikiplinary Certificate in

LEGAL NOTICE

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degrees

Grange looks to fair exhibit

·

Twin ..i : ........ , .. ,

Monday, July 18, 2005

LETART
FALLS
Jonathan Hart, son of Bruce
and Lorna
of
them'' Should I be ashamed? I Hart
Marietta.
don't think so. becau se I didn ' t
Ga .,
and
know Zack was married - so grandson of
why is he burdening me with Don
and
the guilt of ruining his mar- Lois Bell of
riage:? - MOTHER-TO-BE Letart Falls.
IN NEW JERSEY
and Lillie
DEAR MOTHER-TO-BE : Mae Hart of
Tell· your family in plain Racin e and
late
English about what's going on, the
Robert
Hart.
Jonathan Hart
because you arc going to need
their emotional support in the
months to come. Clearly, yo u
will get , none from Zack
because he will have hi s hands
POM EROY - A discus full explaining this child to his
sion on the Meigs County Fair
wife.
Should you be ashamed ? exhibit was hdd at the recent
Unless you consider having meetin g of the Hemlock
unprotected sex with a Grange held at the haiL
Rosalie Story presided at
stranger you met at a bar one of
your prouder moments, I think . the meeti ng with Helen
Quivey, CW•A chairwoman ,
you should.
Dear Abby is written by reporting on conte'sts and notAbigail Van ' Buren, alw ing that all entries will be
known as Jeanne Phillips, judge at the August meeting.
and was founded by her moth- It ·was reported that the recent
er, Pauline Phillips. Write bake and yard sale held by the
Dear
• Abby
at Grange was very successfuL
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Thanks were extended to
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA those who worked, made
90069.
donations or otherwi se supported the sale. Kim Romaine
gave an update on ·the new
cookbook.
Barbara and Jim Fry atte~d ­
ed a recent meting of the
Meigs · County Fair .Board
co ncerning Grange exhibits .
An invitation from Star
Grange . was read inviting
. m~ mber s
since ' John
Valentine. hi gh priest of
demeter, and his wife would
be guests.
It s announced that Pomona
Grange is accepting donations on a·laser cut wall clock.
All yranges ha ve tickets.
, Jul y, national ice cream

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Restonlc' PIU8h ' . I
ilestonlc Super PI~

It ' hould continue to be humi d around -l a. m. Winds will be 5 to
Monda)', July 18
Morning (7 a.m.-No011)
and cloudy. Temperature' will 10 .MPH from the south wes t
It' s going to he a humid and hold steady around 7fl wi th turuing from the \I'C't "'' the
cloudy
morning. today·'i low of 75 occurnng oYcmight progre~~c~ .
Temperatures "i ll &gt;tay ,ncar
76. Winds will he'\ to I 0 MPH
from the south west.
· .Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It shou ld cont inue to be
humid
. and
· cloudy.
Temperature' will ris,c from
79 with today\ high of 85
Now enrolling for 2005-2006 school
occurring around 5 p.m.
Winds will be 5 to I0 MPH
'
year Students in 4 year old Prefrom the southwest.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Kindergarten through 6th grade.
It should remain hurrijd and
· · cloudy. There is a .slight
i'nformation or a tour the school
ch&lt;ince a couple of light r ain
showers could pop up around
Call 740-992~ 6249
th.e area. · Temperatures wi II
drop fron\ H3 earl y th is
1985.
evening to 77. Winds wil l he Pru vidillf!, Quality educotion Since
,,
10 MPH from th&lt;; south west.
ttttttttt~tttttttt
Ovemiglrt ( 1-6 a.m.)

for

spouse is cheating can destroy
a marriage as surely as infidelity can.
DEAR ABBY: I am 25, &gt;;ingle and hard-working. I am
also preg nant . The father,
"Zack," is married and expecting hi s first child in August
I' m due in October.
I met Zack at a bar. I was.n 't
looking for a serious relationship, just a fun evening. Zack
seemed like a nice guy. 'He
never said he was involved
with anyone , let alone married,
and he wasn't wearit1g aring.
WelL our night of passion has
now Jed to a lifetime of concern.
Zack ·doesn't want me to
" ruin his Jllarriage/' and I
don 't want to be called a homewrecker. I initially didn't want
him involved at all, but reality
has set in and I will need his
financial help.
Once my baby is born, Zack
will be taking a blood test to
establish paternity. My family
knows nothing about all this.
but it 's hard to hide. It will be
even harder once the court
comes into play regarding
child support:
'
· How should I break it to

This weekend several organ izations. from throughout Meigs County and beyond honored the
sacrifice of Civil War soldiers 1n a wreath laying ceremony at the monument at Buffington Island
Memorial Park, including James Bailey representing the Tuppers Pla ins VFW Post 9053.

Charlene Hoelltch/photoa

'l'

Other events

Church events

DEAR ABBY: I am in a
committed I 0-year marriage
with "Cathv.'' a woman I love
dearly. My" problem is, Cathy
doesn't trust me . Her ex-husband cheated on her, her father
cheated on her mother, and I
feel like I' m paying for their

Above: A Civil War ball with
"Miz Rosebud " as caller con•
eluded Chester-Sha9e Days
on the Chester Commons
Saturday night. Re-enactors
and others at the Battle of
Buffington Island event at
Portland joined the dancers'
under the tent for the annual
ball, Here Urban and Judy
Graf of Long Bottom and thei r
grandchildren, Genev1eve and
·Sidney Graf of Troy, arrive.

PageA3

School News •

Faithful husband pays price for wife sdistr~st of men

I play in a band that has
"gigs:· in bars once a month. I
also like to go for a beer with
the fellas after work a couple
of times a month . (I work days
in a manufacturing plant.)
Whenever I play with the baf!d
and Cathy i·s present, I constantly have to watch that I
don 't talk to any women in her
presence.
The place I work has I ,200
employees. Many of them
come to see our hand to show
their support. (The m~\iority of
our employees are female. )
Cathy considers it disrespectful to her that they come to hear
us, and she acts as if she's in
constant fear that! might may,
despite "my reassurances that
I'm totall y committed to her.
What can ldo? Ifeellikel ' m
beating a dead horse.- DESPERATE TO UNDERSTAND
IN CALIFORNIA

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Community Calendar·
Public meetings

.

BYTHE ·BEND

The Daily Sentinei ·

Monday, July 18, 2005

'

(304 )675-1371

s v. mil's. south of Point Pleasant on Rll in Gallipolis Ferry

SAME AS CASH

uc. See .m u ~

FREE
Layaway

Submitted photo

Buckeye Hills Career Center Practical Nursing School graduates who passed. the state board examination include, first row, from
left, Loretta Webb of Vinton, Amy Caldwell of Crown City, Tina Nicholson of Wellston, Carmen Bartoe of McArthu r, Jan ie Case
of Dundas, Jennifer Meredith of Jackson , Trish Ward of Jackson •. Leslie Gay of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Ann Hill , Gallipo lis
: Ferry, W,Va.; second row, Melinda Strait of Gallipolis, Misty Price of Gallipolis, Steph,anie Thacker of Patriot, Jessica Smith of
Wellston, Gail Boggs of Gallipolis, Heather Garza of. Hamden, and Love Briles of Middleport; third row, Jeanette Newsom .of
Gallipolis, Jane Stewart of Pomeroy; Lori Carroll of Gallipolis, Kri sty Moore of Point P.leasant, Agnes ·stevenson of Jackson ,
Cheryl Sa lyers of Oak Hill , Marsha Hindy of Thwman , Tiffanie Siders of Gallipolis, Gwen Phl'ilips. RN , BSN, instructor. and
Jeanetta Shriver, RN. BSN , instructor; fourth row, Sharon Carmichael. RN, MSN, administrator of health programs , Rebecca ·
Stump, RN , BSN, instructor, Stephanie Arrowood of Oak Hill , Dave Stricklen of Pomeroy, Robert Campbell of Jackson, Donovan
Davis of Gallip_olis, James Strait ?f Gallipolis, and Rachel Henneman of W~llston.

Nursing graduates pass.state board ·e_xam
.

RIO GRANDE The 33-year history of the proPractical Nursing School of gram, the average pass ~ate ·
Buckeye Hill s Career C~;nter has been maintained at 97
has anmounced that I00 per- percent.
Student&gt; ' iti the Practical
cent of its September 2004
graduating class has success- · Nursing Schoo l, comp lete
fully passed the licensure classroom study and on-tilcex.am.
job clinical experience . total -.
These' newly licensed grad- ing 11 I :382-hour program
uates arc now qualified to curriculum (672 hours of thepractice as a licensed' practi - ory and 710 hours of clinical
cal nurse.
,
laboratory experience).
. The pro ~ ram grad\tatcd its· Currentl y, 39 student&gt; are
. first cia" in 1973. Over ihe enroll,ed in the full -time prn-

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- - - - --

'

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gra m and 12 students
are
enrolled 'in the part-time program. Application for adlljission to the program runs
Febr·uary throu gh June of
each year.
.•

For l)lOr(illformation about
th«_ Practical Nursing program
or other related medical programs, call the Adult Services
Divisio n of Bl~e~cye Hilb
Career Center at 245 -533-l .

m..:chani sm anJ to rc-d~..·w th.: rc~.:~.lv.:Tv l)( ...:n:-.b a~~nci a tcd with th~..·
cuns tnJ l'lton ami ul tima \!.' ufwrallU II L;fan lllll'gmtcd ga~1lka t1011
comhincd . :- yl'k ~.:h.xtri~.: gcn'"rating l~lilit~ for Coh111 1hu~ SoutiK·ni
! ~owe r Company and ( lhto . !'~mcr"l tllllpan~ . I il l' Plll110!-&gt;L' nl llll'
hearings i ~ llJ &lt;.~flow inh:_rcsh:d n~~:· mhcr,.. 0f thc puhli~,· thC' ~~pportunuy
to \'Ull:C then up 1mon~ aboln thl' dpplH:alltlll . AdJitltlll:J im llmnaiiOll
regardin g thi:- arp l i GIIi lll111la~ he tlh\,1\lled h ~ \Hi tlllg h~ th1.·
Cormn is, iml at 1:-:·0 ~a·&gt;t Bnmd Strl'l'l. l ·uhi lnhu' . Oh 10 •L' .:! I~­
}7Ql: Lll' '-·:lllll\1.! the C nmm l :-.,..,il~ ll ·~ lhltlllh' at 1-~00-fl tlcl· 7X26: \l J
TTY ·'riJD c~t -l~ SOll- flHfl - l,~'O M 111 t ·t.llurnh u ~ &lt;~I 46(1-:-\ I ~n fu1 th e
hc'aring impaircd : l' f hy ' ll'\\ 1ng the .Lppli\':11 h.111 l'tl the ( ·l'llllll l ~ ~ H111. ~
w~h:-.itc ilf \\\\,\ .pLil: _:-.t:H l' tlh . Lh Pl ·C( ) Dnc\..ctin g indl"\ .1. fill :md
inpuning the ab~l \~'IHl\ ~J ~,· ;~~ t.' ll tunh~·r. The puhl1~· h~.: : 1nn ~ " . ar~·
, sd 1~·dulcd tu he hi:- ld nn tiK' ti ,l lll l\111 ~ da tl'' and llllll'., :
·\ U).!U\1 I. 1005 - f1 :.~0 p.m.
1-lilll;lrd ~H1111 C 1pa t lluilJm g
(it! Cnu111.:i l ( 'hambcr-..
J~OO \1un1 ( 1p;tl \\'a)'
I hlli:ndA Ill 4 ~ 0 ~ (,

Al.l~ll"'l

www.mydallyaentlnel.com · .

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Cnunn l CI~;Hllhl'f'. I~~ Fh1nr
~l~ Ci n cl ,l nd . \ H·

cmt ~.l n.

~ \\

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4. 200S - 6 ;.lU p.m.
\k 1g' ll t,y.h :-,~· hi llll Ca klt.'n.r
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I•

Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
'

. www.mydallysentinel.com

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

)

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom
of speeciJ,. or of the press; .or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the . Government for a' redress ~f g,iet,ances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

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Today is Monday. Jul y 18. the I99th day of 2005 .
There &lt;Jre· 166 days left in the yea r.
Today 's Hi ghlight in History:
,
On July I X, 1947 . . Prc.,i dent Truman SJgned the
. Presidential Succession Act : which place.d the speaker of
the House and the Senate pres ident ,pro renipore next in
the line of succcssiu ri after rhc vice· president .
On thi s date: ·
In A.D. 64. rhc Grs·ar Fi;·c &lt;'f Rome began .
In 1792. American n;11al hero John .Paul Jones died in
Pari s at ag~ -+5.
·
In 1932: the Lin ired Srals's and Canada signed a treaty
to develop the St. I.;!IITens\' Seaway.
In 1'!36, rhc Spanish Civil War began.
In IY40. the Dcrnocr;;ri c national convention in
Chicago nominated Prc·&gt;ident R\)osevclt for an unprece· .
dented third term in offi ce.
In 1955. a surnm il o pe n~d in Geneva, Switzerland,
attended hv Pres ident Eise nhower. Soviet Premier Nikolai
Bulganin , · Briti sh Prime Minister Anthony Eden · and
French , Prem ier Edgar Faure.
·
Ten yt&gt;ars a ~n : Opening statements were presented i'n
the trial of Sus;;n Smith . the South Caroliqa woman
charged

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with

drowning

her

two

ytJlHJg

sons.

Letters to !he ediwr are \Vel come. Th ey should be' less them
300 words: All !mers ore .whjecT to ediTing, mu.\1 he sig11ed,
and ;ncludc address and .'f~ leplwne numhe1: No tmsixned letJel·s 11·il/ he p11hli.vhed Lerrer.v _should he in xuod taste,
addre.\·sing i.\.SII('S, not per.wnwh'1ies. t ellers of thanks to or!-:ani ~ar ions wrd indil'idrwf, " 'ill noT he occepTtdfor p11/Jiicatirm.

.The Daily Sentinel
Correction Policy

{USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co'.

Our ma 1n concem tn all ::.tori l;l::, 1::. lu u~
accJrate. 11 you know of an error 1n a

Publ!sl"e d every altern oon. MondJ"Y
throu gh Fnday. 11 ! Court Street ,

story; call the newsroom at (7 40) 992·
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Pomeroy. Ot1ro. Second·class postage ,
pa1d at Pomeroy
Mem.,r: The Assoc1a1ed Press and the
Oh1o ~lew s paper Assoc1at1on.

Our main 'number is
(740) 992·2156.

Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoellich . Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed . Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent E.vt 13

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Outside Sales: Dave Hams , E.:r 15

Outside Sates: Brenda Davrs. E_.c t 16
· Ciass./CirC'.: Judy Cl ark, Ex t 10

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District Mgr.: Jason Patt erson. E)(! 17

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General Manager
Charlene Hoel lrch . EJ( f 12

Postmaster: Send address corre(:tions
to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy. O h1o 45769

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2005

Burnt &lt;?!ferings on·the altar cf m14lticulturalism
Only one faith on Earth
may be more messianic than
multiculturalism.
Islam :
Without it - without its
fanatics who beiieve all civi·
lizations are the same - the
engine that projects Islam
into the unprotected heart of
Western civilization would
· stall and fail. It's as simple
as that. To live among the
believers - the multiculturalists - is to watch the
assault, the jihad, take place
un-repulsed by our suicidal
societies. These societies are
not doomed to su bmit ;
rather, they are eager to do
so in the name of_ . a
masochistic btand of tOlerance that, short of drastic
measures, is surely terminal.
l'·m not talking about our
soldiers, policemen, rescue
workers and, now, even train
conductors, who bravely and
·steadfastly risk their Jives for
civilization abroad and at
home. Instead, I'm thinking
about who we are as ·a soci·
ety at this so mewhat
advanced stage of war. ·It is a
strange. tentative civilization
. we have become, .with leaders who . strut their promises
of "no surrender" even as
they flinch al' identifying the
foe. Four years past 9/ i I. we
continue 10 shadow-box
"terror," even as we go on
about "an ideology of hate."
It's a script that smacks of
sci-fi fantasy more than
realpolitik. But our grim
reality is no summer: block·
buster, and there's no spe·
cial-effects-enilanced plot
twist that is going to thwart

'
and confus- tion from jihad-sponsoring
purposefully nations, shutting down
so. because in their impreci- mosques that .preach vio·
sion I think they allow us all lence and expelling their
to give a wide berth to a imams, just for starters great problem : the gro ss means to renounce the multiDiana
lnwmpatibility of Islam - . cultural: creed. In tlie West,
West
the religious force that that's the greatest apostasy.
shrinks freedom even as it And while the penalty is not
··moderately" enables . or ·death - as it is for leaving
"extremistly" advances jihad Islam under Islamic law "terror,. or " hate•· in the - with the Wesl. Am I the existential crisis is to be
London Undergtound an y· right? Whq's to say 0 The avoided at all. costs.
more than it did on the roof very topic of Islamization. - . Including extinction.
i:Jf the World Trade Center. for that is what is at hand ,
This is the lesson of the
Or in the Bali nightclub. Or and very soon in Europt - · atrocities in London. It' s
on the .first day of school in is verboten. A leaked Bntish unlikely that the 21st century
Beslan. Or in any disco, city report .prepared for Prime will remember that this new
bus or shopping mall in Mini ster Tony Blair last year Western crossroads for globwarned
eve n
against al jihad was once the home
Israel.
Body bags, burn 1nasks "ex press ions of concern of Churchill, Piccadilly and
and prosthetics are no .better about Islamic fundamental- Sherlock Holmes. Then
protections than . make- . Ism" (another one of those again, who will notice? The
believe. But these are our amorphous terms) because BBC ha s retroactively
weapons, according to the " many perfectly · moderate purged its online bombing
powers that be . These, and Muslims follow strict adher- coverage of the word "teran array of high-tech scopes • ence to traditional Islamic rorist" ; the spokesman for
and scanners designed to teachings and are likely to
. the London police commis·
identify retinas and finger- perceive such expressions as
prints, to detect exp losives a ncgmive com ment on their · sinner has declared that
and metals - ultimately, I own approach to their faith ." "Islam and terrorism simply
presume. as we whisk Mu ch better 10 wat('h subter· don 't go together"; and withthrough the automatic super- rancan .tunnel s fill with in sight of a· forensics team
market door. How strange, charred body parts in sifting· through rubble, an
though • . that even as we silence. As the London Anglican priest urged hi s
devise ' new ways to see Times' Simon Jenkins wrote , flock , as The Guardian
inside ourselves to our ni ost "The sane rcspoilse to urban reported, to "rejoice in .the
elemental components. we terrori·stll is to regard it as .an capital's rich diversity of
cultures, traditions, ethnic
also prevent ourselv~ s from avoidable accident."
looking full-face at the danIn nDt di scussing the roots groups and faiths. " Just
ger to our way of l,ife posed of terror in Islam itself, in don't. he said , " ~ame them
by Islam.
not learning about them, the as Mu slims ."
Their faith renewed,
Notice
didn ' t say · multicu ltura l clergy that
Or shepherds our elites .prevents Londoners soldier on.
"lslamists."
(Diana WesT is a coltmmist
"lslamofascists." Or "funda· us from having to do any·
mentali st extremists." I've thing ~bou t them. This is j(rr Tlw Washington Times.
tried out such terms in the key, because any serious She can be cimTacred via
· past, but I've come 'to find act io11 - stopping immigra· d ianawesT@ve l'i ~on.ne!.)
th~m artificial
ing ~ and maybe

. \53.55
. .' 107.10
. .'214 .21

·Obituaries
.

I 1D RATHER

GOTO
HOGWAI?TS.

Helen Marie Holter
RACINE - H ~ len Marie Holter. 68. of Racine, passed away
at I: I0 p.m . on Saturday. July 16. 2005 , at her Carmel Road
home.
Born Dec. 18, 1936, in Eureka, she was the daughter of the
late Theron Kenneth (Pat) and Susie Mae Ohse Workman. She
was retned as a practical _nurse frori1 Echoing Meadows in
Athens and a member of Carmel-Sutton United Methodi st
Church. She was a former member of the Order of Eastern Star.
Survtvmg are her hu sband. Roger T. Holter, and her children,
Jerry R. (K•~thryn) Hubbard of. Pomeroy, Angie Hubbard of
Racme, R&lt;;&gt;bm A. Hubbard of Raci ne, Richard Lee Hubbard of
Otway. Rosemary (Mark) Pterce .of Racine and James (Tiffany)
Holter of Pataskal a; 16 grandchtldren : Cassie Conley, Jeremy
Hubbard, Abby Hubbard, Timothy Hubbard, Ryan Cozart,
Casey Hubbard, Ohvta Hubbard, Brandon Pierc,e, Philip .
Pterce, Jordan Pterce, Tttus Pterce, Noah .Holter, Elliot Holter,
Mallory Holter, Bradley Holter and Lauren Holter; five great
gmndchtldren: Ally , Hubba rd, . Kody Hubbard, Bradley
Hubbard, Mallory Jeffers and Retse Cozart· a sister Delores
(Cecil) Bogg.ess of Ravenswood, W.Va .; tw~ brother~, Thero~
Kenneth (Mtldred) Workman , Jr., Harri sonville and James
''Jim" Thomas (Rox Ann) Workman of Point Pica'sant, W.Va.
Also surviving ~re her mother-in-law, Evelyn Holter elf
Rae me, and s1sters-m-,law and brothers-in-law, Karen Werry of
Racme._ Ronald (Valarie ) Holter of Bidwell , Sharon (James)
Dean of Rae me. and Kevm Holter of Racine; two aunts, Myrtle
Canter of Mount Alto, W.Va. , and Helen Ohse of Manaca, Pa.;
and several aunts and uncles.
Besides her parents .. she was preceded in death by a nephew,
Ttnlmy Workman ; a m e~e. f1;1ary Ann Sayre; her father-in-law .
Thomas Holter. and two uncles.
Servi&lt;:es will be he ld at II a.m. on Wednesday. July 20, 2005,
at Carmel United Methodi st Church with Rev. John Gilmore
and Rev. Dewayne Stutler officiating. Burial will follow ar
Carmel Cetl]etery.·
·
·
Friends may call from I to 4 and 6 to 9·p.m. on Tuesday at
the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, and an hour prior to the
serv1ce at the church .
·

busy as I work with my colleagues and other interested
parties to discuss ways to
co ntinue the progress we 've
made to improve our region .
Last week, Sen. Joy Padgett ·
(R-Co&gt;hocton), -Rep. Clyde
"Evans (R-Rio Grande) and l
atte nded a meeting coordi·
na ted by the Governor's
Office of' Appalachia anti the
Freedom
Undcrground
Center in · Cincinnati to
' ex plore ways that southern
Ohio can bring thore visi tors
to the area. We held the
mectitig at the University af
Rio Grande, and afterward
Ra y McKinni ss of Bnh
Evans Farm prov ided the
opport unit y vis it the Bob
Eva ns Homestead Museum.
which h;;s a1·1 impressive dis·
play of the rem nant s of the
Underground Railroad. ·
While anyo ne livin g in
our are;r knows how much
hiqory our region has in'
con necti on
with
the
Undergrou nd
Railroad ,
tho&gt;e unfamil iar Wi th SOUthern Ohio often forget the
&gt;ighillcant rol e our area had
in' thi s part of our country\
hi,tory . In · an effort to
incrca~e awarencs"i of thif.,.
a~ well a-. rind ways lo hct tcr JHo.motc travel and
·tourism to our part of the
~tate : our group convened to

explore.the issue . While the
initial meeting was a good
start. we soon realized that
to be most effective, we
would need the input fronn
other intcrested parties. As
nieeti ngs continue, we ·. will
work 10 include many interested · individuals to brain- ·
storm ways to promote our
region .
Throughout the rest of the
summer. I will continue to
work on the pieces of legislation I have introduced this
year. I plan to meet with
local · officials and other
in terested parties to make
needed changes 1~ Ohio's
law, and will also continue
my suppofl for the many
projects that ,are in the wor)l:s
for .our region . As I keep
busy in the district tllrough
the next few months, I look
forward 10 seeing you.
As always , I welcome
ypur views on slate issues. If
you have any questions,
thoughts or concerns. or if
you need assistance working
:with a ·&gt;late government
agency. ·plea&gt;r write to me:
Sen. John A. Carey, Ohio'
Statehouse,
Senate.
Columbus. Ohio 432 15, or
·call my office at (614) 4668156 .

Pleasant Valley Hospital in ·Pt Pleasa nt. W Va .
He was born Jar . 7. 1952 in Pomeroy the son of
Herman Michael of Pomeroy and the late Maxine
Gilmore Michael. He W&lt;h a painter by trade and fo rmerly worked for Whaley 's in Darw in.
Besides hi s father he i&gt; survived by three daughters :
Erica (Mart) Gibson. Berea , . Ky .. Tara (Larry) Ogdin ,
New Ha ven. W.Va ., and Myca Michael. Middleport; and
a son. Ra ymond Jeffery (A manda Hu ddle&gt; ton) Michael,
Pomeroy : and g rand.ch ildren, Kira Gibso n, Riley Ogdin ,
Caleb Ogdin.
·
Also surviving are bro ther,, Larry !Erma) -Michael ,
Leesburg , Fla ., Terry (Cricker) Mic hae l, Rutland , and
Tim Micha el, Miner&gt;Ville: a &gt;i&gt; ter. Darlene (Bill)
David son. Lees burg . Fla .. a· special friend . Re g ina Ri ce,
Middl eport , and several nieces and ne ph ews.
He was preceded by an infant child. a &gt;i &gt;ter. ·Bonnie
Michael, and a brother. Thomas Micha el.
'
Servi ces will be I p.n1. Wednesday in the Middleport
Chapel of Fisher Funeral · Hom e wi! h Rev. Theron
Durha m officiating'. Burial wil l follow in Riverview
Ce metery. · Friends may call Wedne sday from II a.m .
until time of the service at J' p.m. In li eu of flowers the
family .as ks that donatio.ns be made to he lp defray the
funeral expense&gt;.
On -line condolence s ma y be sen t to www.fi sherfuneral homes.com

Maria A. ·Delgado

James Benton Boso

.Raymond Jeffery Michael

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Clair E. Zeigler

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POMEROY .._ Clair E. Zeigl ~ r . 82, passed away
Friday. July 15 at Holzer Medical Cen ter in Gallipoli s.
B
N
, · B df d T
·M · c ·
orn ov. 11- , 197-- m e .o r wp o 1 etgs ounty,
she was the daughter ot George Henry a nd Mamt e
Naveda Kappl e ~e,gler.
.
.
She was a rettred employee from Col umbta Gas . She
was a me mber ot the Modern Woodman ol Amepca.
She was preceded tn death by he r parents; four broth ers . Lowell , George. Av ery ancf Erret ; one sister, Ethel
Haq; and two neph ews. Wayne Zeigler and George Hart.
She is survived by a brother. Charles Fred Zeigler, of
Pom eroy; siste r-in -law, Mildred Zeigler. of Pomeroy :
and several nieces and nephew s.
Funeral services will be at II a.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home in Pom eroy with Pa stor Keith
Kapple officiating.
. B·urial will follow in Burlingham Cemetery.
• Calling hours are from 6 to 8 , p.m . Tuesday at. the
funeral home.

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Army of the Republic; Ohio
Division
of Sons
of
Confederate Veterans; Ohio
Department Woman's Relief
from Page A1 ·
Corps; Robert Garnet Camp,
foot of the park's monument Sons
of
Confederate
were the Drew Webster Vetera ns, Huntington , W.Va.;
American Leg ion Po.st 39. Majo r Daniel McCook Last
Pomeroy.; Return of J01iathan Grand
Army
of The
Meigs
DAR
chapter, Republic, Midlileport; Ohio
Pomeroy ; Tuppers Plain s Department Auxiliary Sons
VFW Post , 9053; Ohio of Union Veterans of the
Department of Sons of Union Civil War; Gov. · Dennision
Veterans of the Civil War; Auxiliary #1. Columbus ;
Chester Council 323, DOA ; Don Johnson for 7th Ohio
Meigs County Pioneer and Confederates.
Historical Society; ·Meigs
Members of the Tuppers
County
Genealogical Plains VFW Post 9053 then
Society;
Brooks-Grant gave a 21-guri salute to the
Camp, Sons of Union fallen veterans that particpat· Veterans, Middleport; Ohio ed in the battle which was
Department Lad1es Grand followed by a renditions of

Fitzgerald ,
indu striali st
Henry Ford. notorious ' gang,ster John Dillinger, and
writer Zora Neale Hurston.
Several hundred attended
each night's performance to
watch the actors in first person unfold the stories of the
famou s fi gures of the 20s
they portrayed. In the day.
time , they conducted workshops for young people at the
Pomeroy
Library
and
,Riverbend Arts Council and
programs for adults . at the
Senior Citizens Center.

Chautauqua
from Page A1
to David Saeng of Beverly.
and third to Randy Shafer of
Cro"(n City.
·
The ·contestants played
music of every genre to the
, appreciative crowd packing
the courtroom. While males
have always dominated the
field at Chester's state event
and did this year, Saturday 's
competitors included three

VISit tiS'
online at

Taps on battlefield bugles.
After .the wreath laying
ceremony, visitors visited the
Portland Community Center
for a meal and for a sneak
peak of the Civil War
Museum currently under construction.
While at the Center, visi·
tors could purchase home·
made crafts from vendors set
up in the cafeteria.
. On Sunday, the smoke
began to roll into the sky, sig·
naling that the Battle of
Buffington Island was underway.
Whether the reenactors
Jived or died on the battle·
field dido 't matter because all
Jived to fight another day.
c.

Debra Connors held the excess which all too soon
Satur.day night audience became complicated and dis·
sp~llbound as she took on the · integrated into a world of
of
Zelda financial ruin, alcoholism,
personality
Fitzger.ald, a Georgi« ·SOGiety intldelily and madness lead·
belle married to famed and ing to her institutionalization
prosperous New York writer and eventually her husband 's
F. Scott · Fitzgerald, and death of a heart attack at the
detailed the ups and downs of home of his lqver m
their relationship burnished California.
As with all the Chautauqua
by fa me and broken by
presentations during the
tragedy.
She made her entrance in a week, the actors in their
robe as a thirty-something respective roles . interacted
mentally ill Zelda away from .with the audience and
. the institution in which she answering questions concernlived for many years , and , ing their character.
The. program was brought
then went bark to happier
days when as a flapper of the to Meigs County by the Ohio
20s the' Fitzgeralds were liv- Humanities Council and was
co-sponsored by the Chester
ing the good times.
She described a life lived in Shade Historical Association.
feniale s, two ·of which were third were awarded by the contest chairman , Mary Pow~ll of
pre-teens.
Every player had his or her the sponsoritig Chester-Shade
own style and selections var· Historical Association.
Following the contest, the
ied from country blues, folk,
harmonica
players moved to
· jazz and rock to gospel
1he
big
red and white
Judging was done on a point
Chautauqua
tent where they
system by professional musi·
·cians on the basis of meter, were joined by members of
tone and clarity of pitch, tech- the· Buckeye Harmonica Club
nique, method and skill. diffi - and others tor a Jam sessmn
culty an mastery of the music before the ftnal Roaring
presented, as well as stage Twenties historical portrayal
of the Ohio Chautauqua on the
presence .
Cash prizes of $200 for tlrst, life and times of the famed J.
$100 for second, and $50 for Scou Fitzgeralds.
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tl?)r.•tKt¢l!Y tK. ·))~0~

~~lii~~:R~~\O&gt;Jt·
Auto Accidents Workers'
Compensalion

•

•

ML~mber uf American

• Medit.-nrr.!

• M~t ht\lll'ala"S

• At;upunctutt

• Same da)' appt.

I

-Keeping
Mason
County
informed
Point Pleasant
Register

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Coming Friday, July 29, 2005
The

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel · Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of local
children • ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 29th issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!
-'
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Complete tlie form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus .
a $7.00 charge for each photogr~ph. If more than one child is in th.e picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:

·-

· The Daily Sentinel ·
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Boord of

------- -·-·.!,----------------------------- -·-.:..- ...,.. --,

hxcnl.lc Prnf~!-&gt;sicilal.~
2ft) rs Cl~'fiCil.'\'
Mcmhr-r cl Amcncnn Academy
o( ~cdical Atupu,..iun"

Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s)::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
•
Parent's Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

City &amp; State:: _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:.._
***The above information will be used in the ad. •••
Phone Number: ~-o.--~--- Submitted by: - -- - - -- - ,

Ravenswood, WV

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·= 304-273-5321 "1m'
nSt

POMEROY - American
Electric Power Ohio·-crews
will implement a five-hour
power outage f0r 5;1.0 cus· .
tomers in Pomeroy, beginning at midnight on Monday
to approximately 5 a.m. on
Tuesday, to 'Upgrade compo·

'

nents in the Pomeroy substation .
The outage area will extend
north to the Butternut Avenue
and Mulberry Avenue areas, ·
west to the Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge, east lo. but not
including, Powell's Foodfair.
and south to the river.
AEP will attempt to inform
all
affected
customers
through a recorded telephone
message prior to the outage.

Pictures must be In liy Friday
July 22nd, 2005. Pictures can
be picked up after August 1st,
.2005.

Chiropractic: Ci!ntet
316 Washln

AEP ·plans
outage

Gallipolis

aavenswoud ·

Your online
souree.for
news

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Charles &amp;. Aprii,Roach

• Sport~ lnjuri~~

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( 'himpr!k.1or ,t' rbc year· I~
\' P. WV C'hiroproctic S.Xicty

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National Boilermakers Association .
Besides his parents, he is survived by a brother. Steven R.
"Stevie:· Boso of Racine; a sister. Olivia Ann Boso of
Ravens"(ood; his grandmothers , Manha Parsons of Racine and
Ann Boso of Portland; a step-brother and sister, Mary and iacob
Schweinsberg of Ravenswood ; and several aunts and uncles.
He was preceded in death by hi s grandfathers. Clair C. Boso
and James Ray Parsons, and his gra ndm other, Rolla Mae
McComas Parsons of Long Bottom.
.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Tuesday, Jul y 19,. 2005 , at.
Roust\ Funeral Home in Ravenswood with Rev. Dr, John
Nelson of the Spreading Truth Mini stries of Parkersburg,
W.Va. officiating . Burial will follow at Ravenswood Cemetery
in Ravenswood, W Va.
Friends may call .from 5 to 9 p.m . on Monday at ·the Roush
Funeral Home in Ravenswood. and may e-mail condolences to
the Boso family at roushlus2000 @yahoo.com .
-

MIDDLEPORT- Maria A. Del gado, 91 . of Middleport
was welcomed into heaven on Saturday July "16, 2005.
She was born in Quebradillas, Puerto Rico, the daughter of
the late Jose and M;u:ia Riquelme Cordero. She worked for the
Lily Cup Co. and with the Head Start Program in New York
City. She was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church .
Su~viving is her husband Jose Delgado; a daughter Norma
Torres both of Middleport, granddaughter Kristen Marie Torres
of Chicago, sister ''Chate" Cordero of Middleport , sister-in·
law Mary Dorta of New York Cily, brother Jose Cordero of
Puerto Rico, nieces Anita (Gary) White· of Rutland and Nilda
(Julio) Gon7,alez of Puetro Rico, a special friend Carolyn
Roberts ~f Flori~a, and several ni eces and n:phe\Ns,
She was preceded m .death by het parent. ststcrs Isabel,
Norberta and Manohn, and a brother. Angelo. and a halt-broth·
er, Catlin.
· Mass of Christian Burial will be lla.ril. Wednesday at Sacred
Heart Catholic .Church in Pomeroy with the Rev. Father Walter
Heinz officiating. Burial will follow in Sacred Heart
Cemetery. Friends may call at the Middleport Chapel of Fi sher
Funeral Home on Tuesday ·from 4-8 p.m. A vigil service will
be held at 7:45p.m. at the funeral home. In lieu of !lowers the
family requests donation s be made to Hospital Hospitality'
RA CINE _ Lmes Benton "J.B ." Boso, 23 of Sixth Street House of Huntington, 2801 S. $taunton. Huntington, W.Va.
in Racine. died Saturday.lltly 16,2005, in Lo~g Bottom, from 25702.
·
. .
.
tnJuncs sustatned Ill a motor vehicle acc ident.
On-hne condolences may be sent to www.ftshertuneral,
He was born March 4. 1982, in Gallipolis. sun of Steven c. homes.com
Boso of Ravenswood. W.Va. and Pamela L. Parsons Carter of
Racine. He was a full-time slttdcnt at the Vniversity of Rio
Grande. He was a 2001 graduate of Racine Southern High
School and '\trended the Pentecostal Assembly Church of MIDQLEPORT - Raymond Jeffery Michael Sr.. 53,
Racine. He was a memher of the Racine Gun Club and the ·Middleport, died unexpectedly Saturday, July 16, 2005 at

from Page A1

Nq,w that the budget is
finished and the legislature
has suspended session for
summer, senators and represeqtati ves across the state
Sen.
are back in their districts and
John
spending time with thljir
Carey
constituencies. Although
business has slowed in
•
Columbus, this is a very
busy time f6r every member
of the General Assembly.
It's a good thing that we can so anyo ne visiting may
have this break. because share their views with me. I
there is a lot going on in the also try to attend the live17th Senate District this . stock sales in each of the I0
counties I represent to show
summer.
· The arrival of summer· my support for the you ng
time is the unofficial' kick people in our communities
off of the county fair season. who . devole so mu ch 111ne
f\hhough the Pi ckaway and effort to their focal 4-H
Count) Fair has already pro gram s.
As you· and your family
ended. the rest of the fairs in
head
w the fairs thi s yea r, I
our di strict are just getti ng
underway. Last week alone, encourage you to take the
I will have spem a total of time to &gt;lOp by my npcn
four days at the Clinton and door session and talk with
Lawrence county fairs. and me. -There are· still seven
before thi' week is over I'll fairs left in the 17th Senate
in
make it to iackson County's . Di strict. · including
Fayette.
Gallia.
High
land.
fair in my hometown as
Jac kson. Pike. Ro" and
well.
·
County fair season is one Vinton countie~. 'lh view rhe
of. my fa vorite times of year. fair sc h ~du l e' and learn
especially s ince it gives me more about the event &gt;t hedthe opportunity to ~ee and ule, vi,it www.ohioagriculmeet so man y residents of ture . ~ov/ohi of:lirs
Although the fair ci rcuit
the I 7th Senate District. ·I
will
take up a good portion
like to hold open door scs·
. sions at as many fairs as I of the su mmer. I'll also be

The Daily Sentinel. Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Harmonica

Summer is a busy time in southern Ohio

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2005

Battle

Repub licans opened a new rou nd of Whitewater hearings.
Fi ve yea r~ · ago: Shrugging off a veto threat from
Prc&gt; ide nt Clinron , the Senate voted 6 1-38 in favor of
elim inating the so-called "marriage penalty" by cutting
ta xes for vi rtually every married wuple. Sen. Paul
Cuverdell !R-G a. \ died in Atlanta at age 61.
One year ago: A spokesman said California Gov.
Arn old Schw;;rze negge r would not apologize for mocking
certain lawmakers as "girlie men," despite· criticisms
from Democrcns ;hat the remark wa&gt; sexist and homophohic. Todd Hamilton gained a playoff victory over
Ernie F.ls ro win rhc British Open. Fonner Environmental
Protec tion A~ency chief Anne Gorsuch Burford died in
Aurora. Ctril;-. at· age 62.
Today's Birthdays: Former South African President
Nelson Manuela is 87. Former Sen . John Glenn, D-Ohio,
is X4. Skating champion and commentato r Dick Button is
76. Movie director Paul Verhoeven is fi7. Singer Bri&lt;ln
Auge r is 66. Si nger Dim1 DiMucci . is 66. Actor James
Brolin is 65. Singer M,arth:r Reeves is 64. Blues guitarist
· Lonnie Mack is (&gt;4. Sii1gc r , Ricky Skaggs is 51. Rock
musician Nigel Twi st (The Alarm) is 47. Actress Audrey
Landers is 46. Adress £ Iizabeth McGovern . is 44. Rock
musician John Hermann (Widespread Panic) is 43. Rock
mu sician Jack Irons (Pearl Jam )· is 43. Actor Yin Diesel
is 3H. Rock mLt&gt;i cian Darun Malakian (System of a
Down ) is 30. Rock mu &gt;ician Tony Fagenson (Eve 6) is
27. Actor Jason Weaver is 26. Actress· Kri sten Bell is
25. Rock si nger Rya n Cab re ra is 23 . .
Thought for Today: "In these times we light for ideas,
and newspaper&gt; are our fortres ses."
Heinrich 'Heine,
German poet and crit ic ( 1797- 1g56\.

Reader Services

Monday, July 18,

Senine

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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PageA4

Monday, July t8,

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The Daily Sentinel
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HURRY!! PICTURE OEAOLlNE lS
FRlOAY Juht22. 2005! .
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www.mydailysentinei.com

Stewart wins New Hampshire, Page Bl
1955 Bluemen celebrate anniversary, Page B6
Indians blanked by White Sox, Page B6

Rarely seen $2 bill sht~ets going·to pubUc

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

\

Uncut
sheets of new $2 bills are being given . up for face value after amazing disco, very of old currency
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By DANIEL COTTRELL
llniY,t3t'Sllf Media Syndicate

Monday, July 18, 2005

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(SYNDICATED) - Hotline oJX:rators are brocing for the public m'h to
get them legally lmd for fac~ value.
They arc the once b:mned uncu1
sheets of re:1l U.S. legal tender $2
bills. and !hey are abou1 to hit th&lt;:
. slneets.
The crisp. uncirculated full
sheet' nf four $2 hills are bcntg
sent directly to the home&gt; of \Ill
those who request them.
"Our annourn:emcnt of this puhlic
rele~isc MIS prompied hy :Ul :t&gt;tonishing discovery of · hiddl•n cun-cncy," c'ontirms John T White . .
Director of the p1ivatcly owned
World Rc:,crvc Monct:U)' Exchange.
Authorities are now hold111g a ti'C:l'·
ure trove of mre antiqtk! cum•ncy bills
dating from 189Q. I929. Old nJCt;u
cans discovered ""'C&gt;etly hidd&lt;!ll aw:~y
in ll'c roof of a ham held :ut estimated
I ,800 hank no~&lt;&gt;s . Some h.•licw til&lt;'
money w:o~s s~t,hcd away by tx&gt;otlcgget-s or bunk robbers in th&lt;~ lllle 19))',,
Sourws quoted in Numi.,·lwll/&lt;
N""'-' rep&lt;,&gt;ried an in'iti:tl oiler liad ·And l'lth :lilt hi.~ publicity in new~pa­
bcen received pulting ' the 1alu~ at JX:r&gt; :u1d on TV ahi&gt;ut the discovery
$7:!0.000.00. The hnard c·ontains s~ of rare Clll~rk:y, the popuhuity of
·Bills. S20 Bills. 11111' 190 1 Bison SIO these hilb
is even ~reatcr thwt ever.
.
Bills. Gold Ccrtilic·ales. Sih~r Ccrtili - We· hale lx.'Cn llnuded with calls:
cates and National B:ln• NolL's.
That's why we authorized the relt•ao;e
The disc,,wr~ nwtk N:uiunal ,.,f :rlimitcd number of the full uncut
newspa1x:r hcadlirJC' and appL":ul·d slll'cts of uncin;ul:lted 11&lt;!1~ $2 Bills
on CNN N"" s' . ,\I:!C\ G,H•d from our own vault reserve to the
Mornin_g Amcriui'. and a J(:allll\' ,QeneJ~tl public ," Whit~ said.
segfll&lt;'nt on Ni:IC's him · shm1. '
'The highly sought after (ull
And now it ha&gt; promplcd the f:tee sheets of $2 Bills are so unusual. so
l•aluc releuse of the• r~.1rely &lt;ec n uncir- r:rrdy seen :md so cxti'Cfndy popuculatcd new uncut shc'l't&gt; of S2 'hills. lar, they are pct1ectto give to fti~nds
''Th~t is why' we ha1~ decided tn and famil y. They &lt;UC th~ perl'ect gift
go ahead with the rt• lcase of our for rmy occ &lt;tsion.'' he said.
own privall• stcx: k of rarely seen
"M\lst )·oung JX:tlplc haw never
new uncut $2 Bill sh&lt;•cts." con- even seen one of .the histmic: .$2
finned White.
Bilb. let alone th~ unusual fuli
01iginall v i,_,ucd in 19~ 8 . unc ut sheets ,.,f four"
sheets were for years illegal to own.. The general public can now get
"Accordin·g tn our 'he,:l sources. if ·up to ten full s he~ls of the $2 bills
you could even find a full ·uncut oy calling the Na ti onal Direct
dozen of uncirculated $2 hills from Hotline at 1-800-207-1724 ask for
. 19:::!H. lhcv could IH&gt;w· he wonh Dept. UB462. The standard $11
'
over $JO,lK~J.OO."
said White.
procurement fee plus shipping gets
TI1c Two Dc&gt;lbr Bill has largely you a rarely !.l'Cn full uncut shed :II
been locked away in dark· lUi. face v::~luc. But, de;rkr~ must subF~deml Reserve vault'. r.uely distrib- mit req~s t s in writing for I0 or
uted by lx1nks :md almost rJCvcr "--'Cn more sheet.&gt;.
in circulati OII. It is ~xtremely mrc to
Dealer limits will be strictly
a:;tually find a Two Dollar hill m enforced. Wlute said. •
. your pocket these days.
"But the ftlll sl1eets of four wu
even more Ullll,Ual. You can· t
tind them at banks. When nur
stockpile is gone, collectors
would have to trv to contact a
rare currency dealer &lt;&gt;r go din.'Ctly to the Bureau of Engmving to
lind them." he said
''All the other currency bi lis
have recently undergone major
design changes. Now. it is
feared new legislation may
discontinue the historic designs of the:,c Two Dollar bills.

· Tourde

Mixed emotions for Armstrong at Tour de France
.'

BY JOHN LEICESTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

_ _ _ _ _....:..._____

'

..... 8 Hidden Treasure: Autl1orities suspect
this treasure trove of rare anti que currency bills
dating from 1899· 1929 was stashed away 111
metal cans by bootleggers or bank robbers and
tl1en secretly hidden away in a barn. The rusted
olp cans held an estimated 1,800 blink notes.
Now, readers can get full sheets of ne1"1 $2
bills by cal11ng the Toii -Fiee Hotli ne

I

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I

SPORTS BRIEFS

How to get the
rarely seen
uncut sheets
·for face value

- -

Oil .'h..., ~ trt- rt'Q~~flllldill:l~ d tall! ~ t~ ~
Mml-.g A:11~.-J Is~~ lr.m'I'\YJ.O! ~ ~
t:on'fo,.m\ toWtiS 1v ~ ~ ~ ~w ~ro co ar:2
rt:oo:1e&amp;l! ~~~ \1,11!1 ()' 1'!1b.!f! ~ llrn1!.L'IS a~ a/ Wlt.tf

THE WOAL O RESERVE MONEr~RY EXCHANGE IS A'
PRIVATE EXCHANGE NOT AFflli!TEO WITH THE
, US. MINT OR THE UN liE U SrATES GOVERNMEN_T_
!&lt;.o~e

I Free·trade-in progJ'8Jtt for
'

\'It&gt;~ ~·;ttMr...wy E&gt;~t~

~10tHlf02041\- l

Open gym slated for
Southern volleyball

Ci!lm

newest state quarter begins

RACINE - Athktes planning to play volleyball this
fall for Southern are required
to atteild a meeting on July
t'9 at 6 p.m. at SHS.
. Open gym will follow the
informational meeting.

Everyone who sends in just one quarter from pocket change along with a stamped self addressed envelope
will be among the very first to get the brand new Oregon State Quarter in uncirculated condition.
Here's how thc&gt; Free trade-in·
works to guarantee you get
-.the newest state quarter:

I,

''

' STAMP : STAMP

~r\"t 'l~~~ :t~\\

+·
1. Just send in any old quarter
from your pocket change. Any
circulated quarter wi ll work,.
no matter how old or new.

MYL to host 3-on-3'
hoops tournament

\~:-"'o' ... '~r--·· · 't:"'""~ - . ~')
' RRST : FIRST ;&gt; fiRST
l CLASS
, CLASS if CLASS

.i STAMP

i., ,.,.,. :~ . .-v,"·v:S.

IJQw.IJ.

MIDDLEPORT- A 3-on-3
double elimination basketball
tournament will be held on
Satu'rday, August 13, at General
Hartinger Park.
.
Proceeds from the toumament will go towards the
Middleport Youth League.
Check-in during the day of
ll'c tournament is 9 a. rn. and
the games will start at I 0 a.m.
Registration fonns are avatlable at Locker 219 in
Middleport,
Middl,eport
Trophies and Tees or the
Recreation Center in Athens.
For more infonnation, contact Britt Dodson at (74D) 9921122.
Contact Information

'

\..e.re.

1v\\ ~Jch e44

(.,\tl .;\-J-e.. ~\p
2. Ttm ~ay ad1ess
an envelope and
affix Jhree fi rst class
'
stamps.
·

3. Put your stamped self addressed
envelope and the quarter in another
envelope and ma1l to the address
. ·provtded below.

• Y11 will b• amongllle first t.o g11t lite latest new Slate Quarter·
shown In this artist rende ring , honoring the Great State of Oregon.
II will be sent to you with Information on how to also get tile 49
other state quarters in brilliant uncirculated condition.

I
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•

The U. S. Minr· h:l' annnuoced the relett&lt;e

date of ihe newest of the Fifty State Quarter-.".
For a limited time the general public can
, be among the first to &amp;ret the new Oregon
1 Stale Quarter :'rs pan of a ,FREE trade-in
program. 'Fhe ·Uncirculated new coins life
' being given away in exchange for any quarter from pocket change and even comes in a
special , protective 'display capsule . to Pt:e·
serve its condition.
The coins are SJX:cial because they are
stmi~ht from the mint in bril'limll uncifl:ulated
cqndJtion. You can not find thes~ coins in
.,

yo~r pocket change. Only the ,Uncirculated State Quarter in exc hange.
coi n&gt; have increa~d in value . All of tile ew·lier uncirculated state coin ' havt' alreudy
mcreased in value , 'ome by up tC! 780'k.
This national eiTort a.&lt;.sures coins are avail . able not only to Oregon re'idenls. but to aU
citizens out,idc the stale.
. To be :unong the lin-Ito g~ llhe uncirculated
coin' just send in one plain. quarter from your
pocket c·h;mge. Send it along with a neatl y
self &lt;fddressed enveloJX: witll .l · III~ I cla&gt;s
.&gt;t&lt;mlp&gt; aflixcd You will be .among the lir&gt;t tu
receive a brJnd .new Uncifl:ulatcd 01egon

2. Then neatly address ·an envelope and
You will alsq get infommti on on how to get · aftix three li1~t d&lt;L~S stamps.
all 'the other 49 State Quarters , including the
3. Put your stamJX:d self addressed enveliN 30 issued from 1999-2004, all in brilliant lope and the quaner in another envelope and
Uncirculated condition.
mail to: •
FREE Coin Trade-in
,
FREE TID\ DE-IN INSTRUCTIONS
'
I
Postal Box 9902, Dept R0462
1
Follow UJese' simple in ~tmctions to be
Canton, OH 44711 -9902..
among the finit to get the new Oregon State
Quarter. Limit I JX:r househofd:.
••,•'&gt;~ •: •• ~ ~
2(]1J5 AUTHOAI2EO
!It_
~'lt'f''i
II
Af·::H'ol\.
'
J"'N
l
::.:'r Fo:, • ·M : IS APRt\\A.Tt FX"'Hw:Jr r'i"lT
I. Just send i'n ~UlY old quarter from yo ur Al'rUfi1T::.;wm, :!(·., . , VN"rf&lt;
c'rtiNlECSTA"it,':; CDJE~ENT
pocket change. Any circulated quarter will
Tt'IE ·Jnrted &amp;rat es l.t1nt•" and "F1tty Stat• Qu arters•
work.. no matter how old or new.
are r~g1sterPd trad'-'mork._&lt;&gt; of the UnrtPd States Mmt•.
.'

.

Fax -1-740·446-3008
E-mail- sports@mydaitysentinel.com

'

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Brad snerman, Sports Edllor
(740) 446-2342 ,. ex1 . 33 ·
bsherman @ mydailytribu ne.com

I

4

A

Bv

. Bryan Walters, Sports Wrller
(740) 44ij·2342. ext 23
bwalters@my dailytribune.com

•

Larry Crum, Sparta wr,tter
(304) 675·1333. ex&lt; . I~
Ierum (II mydailyreg1ster.com

JoE KAY

ASSOCICATED PRESS

CINC INNATI First,
Ken Griffey Jr. caught up
with Ted Williams. Then ,
Ja vier Valentin got everyone
thinking ahnut Pete Rose.
With a fou r-homer sp lurge
on Sunday. the Cincinnati
Red' comp leted a threegame sw~cp and drew comparisons with a couple of the
greatest hillers in baseball
history.
Valentin hit hi s first career
· grand ~lam and a three-run
homer. connecting from both
sides of the plate during a 94 victory over the Colorado
Rock ies. The hackup catcher
became the fiN Reds switchhitter to .horner . from both
sides of the plate since Pete
Rose did it aQa in st Atlanta on
Au~ . 2. 1967.
·:1967'1 Pete Ruse '? That's
big.'' Valentih said exci tedly.
He wasn't the on lv one

Southern to hold
voll(!yball ca'mp

at

Please see Armstrong. Bl

sweep
Colorado

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs High School Athletic
Boosters
will ' meet
Wednesday, July 20 at 8:30
p.m. in the Memorial Field
House at Meigs High School.

RACINE - There will be
a volleyball .camp held at
Southern ·
Junior High
School on
Monday ,
July · 25,
through
Thursday,
July
28;
from 6 p.m.
to 8 p.m: for grades Jive
through nine.
For further information and
price of the camp. call (740)
949-2196 aild ask for Roma
and Pete .

clim hs. Hincapie joined a
group of riders that broke
away, from the main pack.
which included Armstrong.
H1ncap1e said jle went with
that grou p , think.ing that ,
Armstrong would catch up to
. him later in the stage. But the ·
breakaway group built a lead ·
of more than 18 minutes. At
that point , Armstrong's team
manager gave . Hincapie the
green light to ride for him·
se lf.

~eds

MHS boosters to ,
meet on Wednesday ·

The World Reserve Monetary
Exc!)ange is now releasing the
rarely seen Full sheets of four
' crisp Uncirculated new ·$2 .Bills
at lace value. Readers can get .
them immediately by calling the
National Toll-Free Order Hotline
1-800-207-1724 ask for
Dept. UB462, The standard $11
procurement fee plus shipping
gets you a rarely seen full uncut
. sheet at· face value. Satisfaction
is guaranteed.

-

seventh. ''The guy is one of
the best riders in cycling.
· Period. I'm so proud of him.'.'
Usually, Armstrong 's ;eammates devote themselves
entirely to . making sure that
he wins, and have· few
chances for Tour glory of
their own. Their only wins
have been collective ones in team time trial s that
Armstrong :s squad won for
the third consecut ive ti111~
this year.
But in the sun-baked 127.7mile trek up six mountain

ROCK
SPRINGS
Anyone interested in playing
7th and 8th grade football for
Meigs Middle School are
·asked to be at Memorial Field
House 3:30 p.m. Wednesday
July 19th for helmet fittings.

Currency Value: · This
is one of the remaining full
sheets of tour uncu t U.S. :112
B1lls. Currency values always
fluctuate. But. 1f parents or
grandparents !1ving in 1928
had been able to find and
hang onto one of the handfu l
of full uncut doien uncirculated
$2 bills from 1928, they could
nbw well be worti1 over
$10,000.00 or mo re today.

-

At the finish. the two riders
- friend~ since they were
teenagers - hugged and
Armstrong gave a thumbsup.
.
"This i-s a drean\ for me ,"
the 32-year~old Hincapie
said. ''I'm really in a state of
shock."
The 33-year-old Armstrong
called Hincapie "my biggest
guy, my biggest friend on the
team."
"We've been riding togeth·
er since we were 17," said
Armstrong. who 'finished

Meigs Middle school
helmet fittings Wed.

·~

-

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,I

II Rare Currency:
The d1scovery of all this
rare currency has prompt·
ed the face value release
of &gt;arely seen full sheets of
crisp new $2 bills . This
amazrng hoard of currency
was found in the roof ot'a
·barn in rural Metl1uen, Mass.

SAINT-LARY-SOULAN,
. Fr~nce
As
Lance
Ann strong prepared for what
may be hardest stage of the
Tour de France, the widow of
a friend and teammate killed
iri a crash a decade ago told
him to go for the win.
That was the only thing
that didn't work out for
Armstrong Sunday, which he
called Ha perfect day."

Ar'mstrong settled for
. watching his most loyal
teammate, genial New Yorker
George Hincapie , pedal to
victory high in the Pyrenees
- his first-ever individual
stage victory in 'the Tour and
the first by one of
Armstrong's support riders,
And. taking care of bust-ness, Armstrong solidified
his overall race lead in the
brutal 15th stage - . staying
on track to retire with a seventh consecutive Tour victory
next Sunday.

measuri ng. him se lf again st
Brad Sherman/photo

Feeney Bennett Post 128 manager Chris Stewart, left, talks with the Glouster manager and umpi res prior to Sunday's Eighth
'oistrict American Legion baseball tournament game being called via forfeit" Glouster .only had eight players show up.

'

. .

.

Post 128 wins by forfeit, faces Lancaster today
.

.

ROCK SPRINGS - A
dangerous-looking flash of
lightning interrupted pre·
game warm-ups and sent
Feeney Benneu players
ru shing for the dugout. With
it came torrential downpours that soaked the field
a.nd left standing water
· everywhere:
No Eighth District tournament baseball was played
on Sunday, but don't blame
Mother Nature. , Glouster
Post 414 had just eight
players, and thus were
forced to forfeit the firstround game to Post 128.
Feeney Bennett ( 17 - 17)
moves on to face the topseed, Lancaster Post II,
5:30 p.m. today_at Beavers
Field. Glouster (7-12).
which still may no·t have the
necessary manpower later

Sund&amp;y.'s results

1 -Feeney Bennett del. Glouster. lorteit
2 ·- Pickerington 16, Logan 1, 7 1nn
3 - Athens 11. McArthur 0. 7 inn.

themse lves and g1ving us
100 percent or more :''
Post 128 ha sn't played a
game since · Wednesda y. as
its last two opponents have
failed to prod11ce the necessary number of bodies . It
does provide the 1eam.
h' I h
I d
I
w -rc 1 as p aye more t1an
30 game over the las! two
months, some much-needed

Please see Forfeit, Bl

Please see Sweep, 86

9 - W1nner Game 4 vs . Winner Game 5.

7:30p.m.

10 -.Winner Game 8 vs. W1nner Game
7 4 30
•

4 -FeeneyBennetlatlancaster,S:30 p.m. "

11 :__ E~~r Game

10, l :30p.m.'

•r-Fe.ot&lt;A111EHS

5- Aihef'ls vs, Pid(erington, 5:30p.m.

Tuesday's games
6- McArthur \IS. Logan. 6 p.m. · ·
1 - Glouster vs. Loser Game 5. 6 p.m . ·

'
8-

Weclnelday·s games
LOser Game 4

vs. Winner Game 6,

9 \IS. Winne r Game

Friday's championship gaffie{s)
. 12-WinnerGame9vs.WinnerGame

\~ 4:3~f~~~·r Game 12 vs. Loser Game·

. 12. 7:30p.m. (if necessary)
• - i ndicates el imination game

L------------------.;....:......_ .J
this week, is scheduled ' to
Play a loser's bracket •"ame
on Tuesday.
Teams not' having enough
players is not unusual this
time of year in American
Legion Imseball. but it has
not been a problem for Post
128, which had more than a

"I really don't put myself

play ball. but the , posi ti ve:; arc we didi1 ' t ha vc to
use any pitching arm~
today.'' Stewart explained.
"We've had a couple guys
wrt· h sore arms an d ;r guy
that pulled a musde in his
.
. .
h
thigh. 11 gives them ano1 er
day of rest.
· "Now we can start look·

4:30p.m. '

··

career.

in thai catc&lt;&gt;or)'
"' ... Griffey
.&lt;aid. "You look at the things
he's done. I' ve got three hit·
ting ~trc;.~k .' of I0 games or
more. anJ hi' career average
is what. J.j()·) He went to
war. I Jon·t put myself in
that category. I play haseball.
He took a ch;IJlce on 'acrific·in2 his life· for his country.''
GriiTcv hit a solo homer in
each !!::I me ' of the serie s.
s howir;~ flash es of his All Century form . Griffey tore
hi~ hamstring from the bone
last Augu't and is just now
ro unding liHO form from
major su rge ry.
."t\ o" that we· re going.
I' m reallv glaJ 10 sec him
healthy :inS playing well."

Thursday's games

Monday 's gamas

historv.
Grii'fey hit hi' 52 1st career
lwmer, mov ing imo a t1e with
Williams
and
Willie
McCuvc y for 1-lth on the
career li&lt;t. Griffey recalled
Ialking to Williams for about
20 minutes earlier in his

rest.

," We would ohvioU.I\Iy like

handful available off the
bench
"That's something that we
are proud of." manager
Chris Stewart said about hi s
team's commitment. "We'v€.
lost.a couple throughout the
year, but.. . the guys that are
s tickin~ it out are e njoying .

to

'

Tiger back to dominance
his green jacket from the
With a strong cast of con.
.-· Masters and the claret jug he te nders lined up behind him.
- - - - - - - - - - - held aloft for allto ·admire. Woods played some of his
"I've been criticized for best golf of the week. He was
ST. ANDREWS , Scotland the last cpuple of y'cars. the only player to break par
- For Tiger Woods. there 'W)ly would 1 change my in the tina! seven groups . He
was no liine to pause and game?' This is why," Woods closed with a 2-under 70 for
pose when he reached the top said. "First, second&lt;and first .the largest margin .of victory
of Swilcan Bridge on. in the . last three rnajo.rs. at a major in live years , and
Sunday. A second British . That's why."
more indelible links to
. Open title.awaited.
Earlier in the week. Jack Nicklaus. ·
Woods strode sw iftly Nicklaus bid the majors
Woods and Nick laus are
across the stone arch, then goodbye, stopping on the the only players to wm the
removed his .cap ,as he Swilcan Bridge for several. Grand Slam at least tw&gt;ce ,
walked up the 18th fairway minutes in an emotional and the only Amen cans to
and onto hi s lOth major farewell .
win the British Open twice at
championship, a five-shot
Woods' crossing was also a the home of golf. Wood' also
victory that marked· a defiant goodbye - to the competi· co mpleted the , " Nicklaus
return to dominance.
tion.
··
Sia!n ," winnin g ~II •four
He never trailed over the
"He never looked like maJors when the . Golden
'
AP pholo
final 63 holes at St. Andrews there was a chance for him to Bear played for the final
·Tiger Woods of t11e Umted States holds the trophy as he
and turned in the tirst wire· lose." Nicklaus said from hi s time . .
.
to-wire victory at the Open home . in North Palm Beach. . Just ·_ as they d1d on Fnday stands &lt;n front of the cl ubho use after :.Vinnrng tl1e British Open
in 32 years. Anyone who Fla.. where he watched the lor Nicklau s, thousands ot .go!f championsh ip on the Old Course at St. Andrews . Scotland
Sunday. Woods finisliled th e tournament at 14-unde r par to win
questis}ned
his
swing · final round . " It was a pretty
the troph y
Please
see
Tiger,
Bl
changes only had to look at awesome performance.':
BY DouG FERGUSON
ASSOCIATED

PR~ SS

�•

•
Page 82 • The Daily 5entinel

NASCAR -

\

Monday, July 18, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

New England 300

.

Stewart dominates at New Hampshire
LOUDON, N H (APJ Tony Ste\\ art won tor;the thrrd
time m four mces, passmg at
will 10srde ,md outsrde 10 a
dommant performance Sund.ry
at New Hampshrre lmcm.rt ronal
SpeedwayThe wm 10 the New
England 300 wa&gt; hrs tHrrd this
season. second on thrs track ,md
22nd of Stew,rrt s c:rrecr He
also won 10 Sonom.r C.rl rf , ,rnli
Dayton,r Be.rch, Fl.r .rnu h.rs
posted fimshes of sewnd .rnu
fifth rn hrs l.rsl live st,uts
Stewan beuan .rrun ol domr
nance .rlter p.rssrno Ry.m
Newman on the 'i lst fap Krrrt
Busch. tryrng In bewme the
only dnver to wm three tunes
on the track ,rlter sweepm~ the
races last ye,rr. got b} \~ nn 60
l.rps to oo But Stcw,ut
reclarmed the kad dllcr the'
banged twrce fi\ e \.rps l.rtcr ·
The most defmrng moment ol
the race c,rme when Stew .111
moved from lou rth to seconu on
lap 68 bv passrng Rust )
Wallace on the outsu.lc ,md cut
tmg msrde rookre K)le Busch

I '

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from Page Bl
fans squeezed onto h,rlcunres
and pressed thcrr l.rccs
agamst wmdov.:s to c.tpturc ._ t
histone moment Th1" one
rem~uns .1 \\OJ 1\ rn Pll'~it:"''
'He h.rs )() Oi thC'L llldjO IS
now .md \I c .rll kIll&gt; II J.rc k
h.rcll8 Co hn \lun tcomcrre
sa rJ
Hes UICI l1r llw .ry
It ' . tll l.l/llH! (d ll he
acl11e\ e thl: 1111po,~ r h k ) He s
on hts \1,,1\
Montgumt..'t JC p1 o\ ltkd the
now

on ]y

st::tllHIS

Lh, dlt..'IH.!C

to

V.dS unh on~ shot
behrnd .rlter ri \\O pull hndte
on the nrn th .nrd the IIC il / Jed.

'A'oods He

11a ~ \V.I\ 111!...

Sull ll .., h

~

He fr nrshed .rt I-I undt'l
274, and ncn though
Montgomerre .rnd lose M.m.r
Olazabal each 201 1111hrn one
shot dunng the tr n.rl 1ound.

Tiger
·'

JUSt a few hundred feel later
Race leader Scott Wunmer
ne.rrly .became Stew.ut's thr&gt;d
conquest ol the lap Wrmmer
hmcly kept the le.rd .rt the lme
then Stewart wem by le" th.m a
h.rll-lap later '
Hrs Joe Gtbbs Rrrllil"
Chevrolet leu 212 ol V~l ldps
.rnd be,rl the ForJ ol Klllt Brrsch
by 0 Wi I seconds on The M.rgrc
Mile It \\,Js the c•rghth top-Ill
tmrsh 111 the lrst II 1.Ices lm
AP photo
Stcv..ut thrrd m the NASC AR Tony Stewart nght passes Kurt Busch at the end pf the front
Ncxtel Cup standmgs
stra&gt;ghtaway o.n h s way to wrnnrng the NASCAR Nextel Cup
I he crowd ro.rred .rs Stl\\,ut New England 300 qt New Hampshire lnterna!lonal Speedway
dtmlxJ o\~ r th~ t~n ct: 1o tL'.llh
111 Loudon N H on Sunday Stewart won the race
lht: ll .t ~" (llld .tnd W,\\l' lhL~
checkc·r' 1 hen he pum peJ h" here rn Jul1&gt; 2fX)() Aw.uc.uhcr
The wulllCI ,r,er,rged 102 608
_
\\bile
st:L'kt
ng
tht:
ln
sl
\\Ill ol mph rn d l.tL C :-.lowed 10 ltmes
''"' ''" ' .rs he J ru '"" IVL'Cks
.t,;o .titer ht s Dll) hlll.i 'H.: tot y
hiS c.nw _ rookre Stew.rn !.Ill by -19 l.rps ol c.rulron _ mcludnut
ol g.t, \\ hllc huldtng .1 ... uh~ mg once:: tor t.nn whtch ~tlso
Pornts
k.rJer
Jrmmrc·
John;..un twu.:~ .t \V tnnet hi..!re m st.rnu.rllc.rd 1\ nh less th.rntiHcc dcl.ryed the st,u1 by 24 mmules
There were 14 Je,rd changes
2001 lrm shed 11th He k,rds l.rps,enw nmg
lrl th place trnrshcr Greg Br11lc
Tl111d 111 Ihe $'i I mdlronr&lt;Jce ,unong mnc dll\~rs
b) 77 pomts Ill tlw scncs st.rnd \\.Js Stc\\.trt s te.unm.rte Bohb\
K.rsc v Kalme. NewnMll.
tngo.; Ste'"~ut ~ ~ 8~ potn l~ h~tLk L.rbonte Ne'l came the Che\ y Rusty W,1llac'C, Dale Eamhardl
Stewan the 2lXl2 Cup ch.un ol Kvle Busch .md Br llle'!ir Jr and M.rn Kenseth completed
theiop iO
pron. goth" srxth cmeer 1rc'tOI) F01d-

ld n s

tm'd to .:\r ll ln rn to ,rn
rrnprotJnhJe I ILIOII

there

Wds

d

'ethe

ot

rnevnabrhty
Monlgomerre shot 72 to
trnrsh second at 9-under 279
hrs best lrnr sh .rl .r m.lfOI
SlrK C ht: W~lS !Uil llCI-U p ,lt the
1997
US
Open
.11
Co n gre:,~ton . tl
Tl1er.r.: '" nu dts~l .llC lt n-

"' .t ~ t JOng

l.t,t ot conte nde1s

- e rther llldJOI champrons or
pl.rye rs who ha\ e bee n
r.mked 111 the top I0 - col
l.rpsed around hun
lustt hmk rt Woods h.rd not
mrssed those tv.o putts on the
back nme at Prnehurst No 2
l.r st month. \\hen he ltnr shed
t\Hl shots beh rn d Mrch.1el
C.rm phell rn the U S Open
' H~

\

L1weso mc

C rmpbell s,nd ' I thr nk these
WC IC !Cpea.:us~IOilS
month .r ~o where l

lJO!ll

,1

wound up " rlh .r 7-1 m.rkrn g
.1 budre on the l.rst ho le to Ire
lm lhn d .rl 2RO "rth Freel
Couples \1 ho lrnr shcd hr s ()~
be lore the lc.rder s re.lclwd the

knocked
h11n ott ' hrs pedest.rl lor a
1\Lek. \\h1ch w,rs qurte nrce
to do He s come h.Jck &lt;I
stJongc l pttyei .tiH.I .t be th~ !
pl.r) cr,'
h \\ds Woods lowtb Vlt: to1y thrs ye,u .mel -1-Ith Ill hrs
PGA Tour c.rtccr He rs tied
lor sc \ entll "rth W.rlt er

turn

H.u~ c n

tsh lll g

pl.ryer

~eumd

111

to

the

the hl'st

world

Montgomet tc s.J tli

Ol.lZab,ill ost hrs
gut\e lind pot

11 .ry

111 the

hunket s

dnd

on the .tll -ttmc lt-.;l

9 he was only one shot out of
the lead and the Scottr ~ h
galler) began to believe
Wood s was cast as the villaql , dressed Ill black pants
dlld .r black vest (lver hrs tra(lnron.rl red shrl1
Equrpped "rth a two-shot
le.rd - he now ts 32-3 on the
PGA Tour .rnd 10-0 rn the
m&lt;~t"" wrth .r 14 hole lead Woods played to the mrddle
ol the ~rec n .mel wns s.r11 stred
Wllh pJl:-t

But even as Olazabal and

Montgomene edch got to
w!t hrn one sbot, everyone
seemed to know what w.rs
commg None olthe 18 pl.rycrs "ho beg,m the day wnhrn
SIX shots ol the lead could
ml1ke d cha1 ge. ltncl Wood s
knew 11
Then c,r me the dec rsrve
blows
Ahead
ol
hrm ,

It s hard hu l I don 1 thrnk .IIIJH.tgl:ll' ] J ldlCll lll .l ]O I S
Montgomenc JUSt v.. c nl over
Ol.r l,rb.rl 1s hts lh?Xt tmmed!.lte go.ll
On .1 breL'I\ dltcrnon n 111 11 s rm possr hle
cumlrtr ons ,.; dr v th.rt th e s mi i~bou t 11vmg to m. tkl' up
It s fUsl h.rrd to tell wh,rl the par l lith green chrpped
tmrw.r)s \\e re l.rster th .rn the .1 1\\o-s ho t dc l Jc ll .1g.nn st Trge1 Wood s rs c.rp.rblc ot ' to 7 teet ,111d mrssed to make
greens \V(){H_b, '-Jidn t 11ll"io, ..1 \\nods
Bu t H s dose to s.ud ~o.,w tn g coLH.:h H.mk bogey Monty also mrssed a
shot until hrs Je.rd w.rs up to llll jlUSSible
H,me y. who ,dso tell some 6 toot p.rr pull on the 11th to
srx .md h1s name "".ts bt: lll !.!
Nrc kl.ru s wo n hrs IOth lllC,JSlllC of Vli1UI C,Jtl011 !rom I.rll b.rck til I0 under
cngrdvcd nn the sll \C I JU g . .
Olnzab.rl drove rnto a clusnMtOI "hen he w.rs 12 so the ' .r yc.u of scrutrn y 'He s
My onl; h.rd shill w.rs on 29-}e.tr-old Woods rs &lt;th e.ru ob1 rously ,r spec rul pl.ryer '
ter of gorse bushes lett of the
11 .md I pulled 11 10 leet
of p.tcc rn hrs pursun ol .r
Vq.rv Smgh was rn a large c.rsy 12th hole and made
'Woods s.rlll AnJ th.rt w.rs rr st,md,rrd th.rt tew expccteJ g1 Ollp ol pl.ryer s .rl 7 UllUCI bogey. whrle Woods' tee shot
I mean. I hrt the b.ill "' solrd- c1e1 would be torlchcd Next 28 1 He .rnd Woods d ! C the c,tme up jUSt short ol the
1) tod.ry .rll d.ry It w.rs one ol
up rs the PGA Cl1.11npronshrp on ly plrycr s to trtmh 111 the green He prtched perlect ly to
those rounds th.rl I \\ rll be rn lour weeks at Baltu srol top 10 rn .rllthree maJors thr s 4 teet for brrdre
thrnkrn g about tor .r J o n ~ where Nrck laus twrcc won yc.u But .r ye.u that heg.m
Ju st like that. hr s lead was
lime rm lerv tlunklul It the U S Open
"l lh t.rlk .rbout the ' Br g .11 lour shot s wnh SIX 10 play
happened .11 the nght tunc
The1e w.rs no de lmm g
When I lu st st,uteu pl .ry h\.: J\ 11 0\\ !outsed on No
Wnh .r I 2 I st,ut rn the rng the tour I dtdn 1 thtnk I d I
moment lrke hr s U-turn chrp
maJors Wood:-. t cg~Itn c U dll h.rve thrs m.rny nl.ltms helorc
He s sCII IIH! the b.u so lor hndre .11 the Masters, nor
aur.r .rboul hr s pl.ry rn the the ,rge of 10. Woods s.rrd hn1. h dlld h e~ SO Sli OIH!" w.ts there .r l.rte meltdown
maJors E\en ,rtter he won
No one eve r h,rs Us u,rll y C&lt;~ uplc s s.ud He s .rlwJys Woods w,ts srmpl y relentle ss
the Mnster s rn .t p\.ryoll the re the golden }C.lfs ,ue 1n your th e gu) to be.rl
10 the end
were quesltons whet h ~t he 10s fo r a ~oiler Hopelull)
Mo re th.rn h,rltw.ry to
Mont) turned 111 .r g,JIJ ,mt
could blow .rw.ry the wmp~ tlldt \\ill he the case
d foll to wrn hr s lr rsl m,q&lt;ll
Nrckl.rus benchmark. Woods
lrtlon the way he drd \\hen he
The lm ,tll ound w.rs h,udl) He 111 rcc h.rd e.rg lc pulls "'undcd .rs though he was
c.rptured seve n out o l II ;.I n,ul -b ltCI
Irom 20 leeton the lumtnute 1ust gettmg ~tdrted
lllajOrs
No m.l ltCI hov"' good you
Wood s t \\ H.:e tw ncd .lw.t y th, \1 11nuld h.l\c tt cd lor the
But lh&lt;il s exactly wh.rt thr eats by 111.1krng two pull lc.rd When he t.rp pcJ Ill the pl.ry yo u c.rn .rlw.rys play
happened on the Old Course b1H.hes then m.ud1etl ,rJong scconu one lor huurc .It No better ' he s.rrd
~ Wood-.;\\,,, ll C\ l'l

l:
II

I

I
I

l,tzed

Armstrong
from Page Bl

mtl -1 seco nds bch rnd
Hmc.rpre The cll orl mo ved
B ~t :-.so up to sccnnd 111 the
OICI,rJI sl,lllUIIlgs Olll he still
tt .uls At m-..trong hy ~ --l (l

"I JUSI sta1t etl th rnkrng
about the w111
Hrnc.rpre
sard ' For 11 In work out rs
JUS! ,J dream come II LIC
Hmcapre
.rnu
Osc.u
Pererro h.rv rng shaken ott
the rest of therr gro up Iought
lor the IlLlO! } ,done on the
fi nal and h.rrdest clrm b to the
Pia d" Adet sk 1 st,rlron .riXll c
the Pyrene.m tow n ol S.urll Lary Soul ,m
There, Hrnc.rprc be.rt the
Spam.rrd wrlh .r sprrutlrnrsh
shakmg hr s he.rd rn dr sbelrel
as he crossed the lrn e
Hmcapre rs the on I} · one ot
J\.rmstrong s e •g!'! •e,lll'tl' •teo.:
to have been \\llh the Tcx.rn
for all ol hrs srx Tour 1 rcinne s The last trme the Tnur
vtsrted PI,1 d Adct, 111 200 I ,
Armstrong won - on the
way to hts tlmd Tour trtle
'To wm .r st.rge 111 the Tour
de France IS specral but 10
wm a stage hke thrs whrc h rs
arguably the hardest stage ol
the Totlr rs a brg, brg accom, plishment He deserves 11 ."
Armstrong sard
Hmcapre s lime was 6
hours. 6 mmute,, 38 seconds
Peretro was 6 seconds back
Three other members of thetr
breakaway group placed
th rrd. fourth ,md lrtth
Behmd them. Armstrong
agmn held otf hr&gt; stmnge&gt;l
nvab - ltaltan Ivan B.rsso
and German Jan Ullnch
Ba,so "as srxlh "11 ~
Arrmtrong nght behrnd
They both lmr,hed 5 mmutcs

'

Ullrrch sllu~glcd on the
lr n.rl chmb. pfrung nrnlh
Hrs o\er.rll dcl 1cll
to
At rn . . tron~ l.!rl'\\ to S 58

M1d...el • R.&gt;SillUS&gt;en ol
Dcnmlirk. '" ho h,td been ~~c ­
ond 01 ~r.rll I -II h.rck !ell to
thrrtl no\\ 1 09 hehrnJ
Atnhtrong HmtllpK' '' I H.th
0\ Chill

Armqrong :-..Jtd Jw., lc.JU p,
mntc secu re hut th 11 ltdttl
r.LllllQ he' .the.KI 111 thL Lt-.t

week' ol the th1 ee 11 cc•k
C\ ent
You nc1cr knm1. you go
to . 1 v1ll.tgc .1nd

t ~t ke

It's Tiger Woods and
everyone else, again
BY

JtM LITKE

AS SOC ATED PRESS

---------ST
ANDREWS ,
Scotland
So mu ch for
all th,u talk about a " Br g
Frve" 111 golf
It' s still Trger Woods and
eve r)one else
At least unlit Jack
Ntcklau s comes walkrng
back over the Swrlcan
Bndge through the mrst
like a ftrglltve out ol
' Brr gadoon" And even
then , there are no guara ntees
"It 's excrtmg to look torward to some good ye.trs
rn my 30s," sa1d Wood s,
who doesn t cross th,tt
threshold untrl the end of
December. "and hopelully
111to my 40s "
With the same mastery
he dtsplayed over the Old
Course It ve years ago ,
Woods fmr shed on the lead
lap alone agam And tl not
tor two loose shots over
the fmal three holes at the
U S Open last month , he
rmght very well be zoom tng toward the Grand
Slam Agam
Frve years ago at St
Andrews, 111 the mrddle of
the most sublime run the
game has ever see n
Woods won by erght shots
and hts tmal score of 19
under was the lowest at .r
Bmr sh Open rn reJ ,uron to
par On Sunday, wrth two
of thts season's maJors
pocketed and the frnal one
Joommg
next
month ,
Woods fmt shed ftve shots
clear ol the fteld .tt 14
under
And both trme s th e
drama quotrent was th e
sa me
Zero
Stop me when thrs
beg rn s to sound lamrhM
"The go lf ball was hrt so
!lu sh all day,' Wood s sa rd
''Every shot It was one of
those rounds that I wrll be
thmkmg about tor a long
tune .."
And, he ts not the only
011@
· He 's very complete.'
sa rd Jo se Mana Olazab,rl.
who played along srde
Wood s on Sunday and \\f•ls
fortunate to get hts two
Masters wrns out ot the
way before Wood s hrt hr s
stnde the lrrsl lime 'Rrght
now. there rs no competr

,

three. Goosen added hiS
second and Mtckelson won
ht s ftrst and only
Of the srx players "ho
slipped mto the trophy presentatiOns whtle Wood s
was ott remakmg ht s
swmg and getting marned ,
only two were well known
outsrde thetr own households. Jtm furyk and M1ke
Werr For the record , tt' s
worth lrstrng the others Rr eh Beem, Ben Curtrs.
Shaun Mrcheel and Todd
H,unrlto n - smce odd s are
we wo n' t hear from any of
th em agd m
So w hen a BBC TV
rntervr ewer asked afterw.rrd v. hat Woods thought
about all those pronouncement s he would never
domrnate agam , he should
have satd , "Who are you
gorng to belteve, me or
your lymg eyes?'
Instead, Woods smtled
broadl y and replted, "I
can't say 11 on the atr"
Sull , he couldn ' t rests!
say mg somethmg
' Tht s ts one reason why
I made the changes Tht s tS
the rea son why I dtd rt "
Yet , as 1ecentl) as the
M,!'ters tht s year, Wood s
sltll h,rd hr s doubts
Co rmn g clown the stretch
at August ,r Chns Dr Marco
turned the t.rbles and
beg.m stalkrn g Woods
Tr ge r abandoned JUS I about
evet ythrn g he .rnd swrn g
co.rc h H.mk Han ey had
worked 011. and bogeyed
the l.rs t , two before wrnnrn g 111 .t playotf At
Pmchurst , .r poor chrp shot
,111d .r balky ptltler lett the
dom open lot Mrchae l
C.nnpbe ll He noned out
both
those
problems
belore he .rrnved here
It 's small consolatron lor
hr s shot at the Gr.md Slam
sltpprng away But Woods
h.rs now put together hts
ow n "N tck laus Slam ,"
h.rvm g won ever) maJo r
!rom whrch Jac k ollrct.tlly
relrred. And illS long range
go.tl surp&lt;ts stng the
record 18 protesstonal
maJors Nrcklaus ov.ns rs closer now th.rt the
hallw&lt;~ y pornt rs 111 Woods
! e cl!VI CW mtrro r

;· Yo u know that 11 s
go rn g to t.tke an entire
c.rree r," he satd •Jt' s not
gomg to h.rppen overntght
J.rck took 25 years. I
belreve rt was , to wm all of

tam "

ht s .,

Woods ' so called rrval s
- ViJ&lt;IY Srngh , Ernre Els
Phil Mrcke\son and Rett el
Goosen - were supposed
to be breathtng down hr s
neck Instead, they melted
like rce crenm cones tn the
un seasonably
warm
Scollrsh summer Wood s
now ow ns exactly one
more m.lJOr champr onshrp
trophy ~ 10 - than all ol
1hem combtned
They had !herr chance
And alter what happened
here, thev have to be won denng when m.rybe
even rt - such opportunr
tie s wtll co me thcrr way
a gam
Woods went wrnless 111
the maJors from the 2002
US
Open until the
Ma sters rn Apnl , a streak
thaJ stretched over I 0
champron shrp s
Durrn g
that slump - and rt 's now
o tli cr.rl - Smgh .mel Els
clatmed one eac h to total

Tw enty-tour years, actu all y. but Woods mrght ne ed
the ex tra tim e
Hrstory likely wrll show
th,tt the four other great
who spanned
go it ers
Nrcklaus ' era were tougher
.md a lot more ,rccom plr shed than th e quartet
cu rrentl y arr.r yed agarn st
Woods Ntcklau s Arnold
P.rlmer and G.rry Player
lormed the on gmal "B1 g
Three, bm J .rck squared
oft ag.unst Tom Watson
.md Lee Trev mo rn therr
prrmes too But the freld s
Woods l.rccs most weeks
.r re deeper ,md the pool of
t.rl enl rnclude s pl&lt;tyc rs
!rom the I&lt;H thest- llun g
corners of the wo rld
The dnve rs alwa)s to
gel better. Woods sa td . a
st,lleme nt he's m.rde so
often 11 co uld se ne as hiS
mantra 'You ca n .rlw.rys
ge r beller no matter
what "

.1 turn

too t.rst a7lu bre.rk \ Olll col
l.ubu1J...
Tutu lk Ft.tilll.:
mer So )OU h,J\C 10 he rcal l'.. tt l
Arm-.;trom.! ~.ud \\lr::
IM\ e ~• week tog;, und .t lnt u!
thmg' c.rn gel m the w.ry
Crowds are .rmon~ the
polentml 11sks Some I.!Its 1an
dangerously alongsrde the
nders up Sund,r) 's drmhs
One was knocked down by a
motorbrke carrymg .r televrSIOn came raman '"'ho \'t,L~
lilmmg the race Race org,rnrzers sard they had no w01 t1
on whether the tan wa&gt; hurt
The rtders pas&gt;cd &lt;1 monument markmg the 'JlOl where
Fabto
Crs.rrtell r
Armstrong's former team
IT!flte tell ,md drcd on Jul\
18 1995 '
Casartellr
the
1992
Olympic roau race Lhampr
on sullered he.rd &gt;nturre' rn
the cr.rsh ,Jiter complellng
the drllrurlt Col du Porte!

Forfeit
from Page Bl

AP photo

Overall leader Lance Armstrong, of Austrn Texas pours water
onto hrs head durmg the 15th stage of the Tour de France
cyclrng race between Lezat sur Leze, southwestern France, and
Sa1nt Lary Soul an Pyrenees moun tarns Sunday
d Aspet clrmb He 11as lr .rv
elrne .11 .rhout 'i1mpll
fhe
ke l 1n~
ll.rsn 1
cll.lll!ed 01er 1t1c \e us
Allll;li(lll~ s.rrd iller meet
111~ .rt ' the st.rrt 11 llh
(

l~... .tlll'llt . .: p.ucnt..,

\\I Lhl\\

,utd 10-ycar-o ld &gt;un .rl hts
Dr\COICII Channel team
hus
I slill get.r tear rn my eye
.rnd sllll get goose bumps
when I f&lt;rs• that mcredtbly
he.wtlfu monument··

Monday, July 18, 2005

mg .rt Lancaster and get
geared up for that "
Lancaster enters today s
, ttlt wuh a 28- 18 re~ord , ~nd
was I0-2 111 league games
thr s season
One of those Etghth
Dtstnct losses was to
Feeney Bennett, whtch also
beat Post I I a second ume
111 a non-league contest
' Stewart ts understandably
optrm tsttc about ht s team's
chances agamst the No I
seed
' ' It
had my chorce
between Lancaster, Athens
I'd
or Pt ckenngton
choose Lancaster." Stewart
stated ' We play well
agamst them we play well

on th at lield We go rn wrth
.r lot ol confidence .rgarnst
that team'
Post 128 ra llied rn the
nrnth
rnnrn g to beat
Lancaster 8-7 back on June
15, then split a doubleheader later that sa me week Post
II won the league game 168, whtle FB took a 13-9 vrctory rn the second
Today's wrnner rs off unul
4 30 p m Wednesday, when
rt play for a ucket to the
champronshrp round All
games from that pomt .on
.tre at Rannow Fteld m
Athens
,
The Erghth Drstnct tournament runs through Fnday,
when the champmnshtp
game or games Will be
played The Erghth Drstnct
, champron earns one ot 12
'POl 111 the state tourney.
.rlso held rn Athens

The Daily Sentinel • Page.B3

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YARD SALE\

POLICIES Ohio Vall.,- Publi shing reaervee the nght to edit reject or cancil any ild alanr t1ma Errors must be repor1ed on the l1rat day of
Trtbun•S.ntlnel·Aegie t•r Mil be reapcma ible lor no mor11than the coet of 1M II!Mett occupied by the error and only thellrat lnunl cn We ehall not be il I
any taae or 11panu that results from the publication or omla11on of an edvertl..ment Correction will be made m the lirat available edition • 8Qr: number
are aiWIIYI con11d01'1tlal • Current rate card applies • A:ll real estate sdvwtlsaments are aubject to tfle Federill Fair Houamg Act of 1968 • This oowopar-1
help wanted ada mHtlng EOE stand1rde We will not ki'IOWingly accept sny advertising in v1cHatlon of the l1w

10

t.-• V~ li
N\'/ NAP$

I

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
CaiiToday 740 446 4367
I 800 214 0452
WNW !JIIIIIpOIISCII e11rColleg11 CI)IT1

WI-I~N

~ /AJ"fo

Ace ed 1~ Membe r ll.ccred 1ng
Coul'lcl tor ll'ldependenl Colleges
al'ld &amp;:nools 12748

OV~JZ.'fl M~ ·

OIRECTV

FREE Home
en tertamment
Sys tem
FRE E Eqwpm ent and
Ins tal up to fou r rooms
145 cha nne ls $29 00 a
month
Ask how to go t
FREE HBO MAX and
1 800 523 7556
STAAS
lor detarls

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver and Gold Cotns
P roo lsets Gold R1ng s
P re 1935 U S Currency
Solitaire 0 1amonds M T S
C01n Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740
446 2842

w~ml

To Do

Casket flag for Veterans
fam1ly (740)388 8942

-.11{\HI -.

110

©

WWW COMICS COm

HU.PWANfED

110

,
1

LEARN
TO
DRIVE
• NO EXPEAJENCE NECE SSARY
FULL T ME CLASSES
Clll

TRAINING

F NANCING AVAILABLE
' IOQ PLACEMENT'

ENROLLING I'K)\\1

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRA ILER

TRAIN NG CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA.

1-800-334-1203
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood 1tems
To $4BO/wtc:
Matertals provtded
Fre~ 1nformauon pkg
24Hr
801 428-4649
An Excellen t way to earn

money The New Avon
Ca ll Maulyn 304 882 2645
AVON I All Areas' To Buy or
SeH Shtrley Spears 304
675 1429
Background
Screenmg
mtervrewer
Excellent
commun catron and com
puler
sk Us
reqwed
S1000perl10ur nobene
f1ts Call Mark 1 8D0-556

3583
Brand new salon look1ng
for
expenenced
Cosmetologist Chargrng
boOth rent ohl~ (740 )367

0502
Brand new sl'1op with new
eQurpment
Charg1ng
booth rent only Seek ng
experienced Na•l Tech that
also
preforms
ped1
cures l man1cures
(740)387 0502
C•rtlfled
Nursing
Aasls tant tor full lime arK!
temporary (90 day) work 1n
a 11 4 Bed Long Term Care
State Facll1ty Full-! me
employment otters an
extensrve benefit package
IOCiudtnQ State CIVIl serv
tee retirement earn up to
15 days vacatiOn per year
18 days SICk leave and 12
plus
patd
holidays
heahhfhfe msurance rs
avall9ble Salary Is com
mensurate w1th expen
ence
Must hive CNA
~non

to work in

'Nell VIrg inia
Contact
Krm B~lups or Vrcty
Barkley at La!\ 1 Hosp1tal
Lakm WV at (304)ti75
0860
9Kt
124/ 125
Monoay th ru Friday from
8 fJOem 4 00 pm Lak1n
Hospttal IS an EEOfAA
Emplo~er

Wanted Fr()llt desk clerk
A.ppl~ m person at Hoi da~
tnn Gallipolis No phone
calls please

Georges Portable Sawm1ll
don t haul your Logs to the
M1 11 JUSt call304-675 1957

"1- 1$

1\ll'[tll\11\f

.
1

\I Is I\ II

HOMFB
H&gt;KSALE

112 Pleasa nt Stree t 3
Bedroom 1 112 B aths
Fam ly
Room
0 nmg
Room
Full Ba sement
Storage Bldg Garage
New Central A r Cond
New W1ndows (304)675
4034
2~ Evans He1ghts 2 BR

TOBU\

PoMEROYIMmou:

4x4's For Sale
725
Announcement
030
Antiques • .. • .. ...
530
Apartments for Rent 1.
..... .. .. • •• 440
Auction and Flea Market
. . .080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
.• 760
Auto Repair
no
Autos for Sale
710
Boots &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Building Supplies
550
Business and Bulldlnga ... , ..
340
Business Opportunity
...210
Business Training .
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment ..
780
Cards ofThanks .. ..
010
Child/Elderly Care .
190
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeratlon . ..
, 840
Equipment lor Rent.. .. '"'" " """
.. 480
Excavating
.830
Farm Equipment
.. 610
Farms for Rent
430
Farms for Sale
330
ForLease
490
For Sate • • .
"
585
For Sale or Trade
590
FrUits &amp; Vegetables .•
.. ... .. ... • .. 580
Furntshed Rooms
. 450
General Hauling
...... 850
Giveaway
.. . 040
Happy Ads.
050
Hay &amp; Grain
640
Help Wanted....
. 110
Home Improvements
. 810
Homes for Sale. . """""""""' •
.. 310
Household Goods ....,.,.. • . • .
• 510
Houses lor ~ent ...... ... ............ 410
In Memonam •
. .................. 020
Insurance
. • ...• 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. . . .. . .. .. 660
Uveatock .. • •
- 630
Lost and Found
.. 060
Lots I Acreoge.
350
Miscellaneous..
.. 170
Mlscellaneoua Merchllndlse
540
Mobile Home Repair .. • .. .
860
Mobile Homes lor Rent .. , .. ..
420
Mobile Homes for Sale .. .. .. ..
320
Money to Loan .!
220
Motorcycles 1 4 Wheelers
740
Musical Instruments
...... 570
Per,onals.. .. ... • .
.. .. 005
Pets lor Sale .. .. • ...
560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
PrQiesslonal Services
230
Radio, TV I CB Repair .. .
160
Real Estate Wanted . .. ... •
360
. ... . ...
.150
Schools Instruction
Seed , Plant I Fertilizer .
650
Situations Wantell
120
Space for Rent
.460
Sporting Goods
......... 520
SUV 's lor Sale.
720
Trucks for Sale ..
715
Upholstery . . """
870
Vans For Sale... , .. .
730
Wonted to Buy .. ,. ... • •
090
wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies.
.620
Wanted T6 Do
I 80
Wanted to Rent
• . .. 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis
.. . .. ,.. 072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle
.. 074
Yard Sale-PI Pleaoant
. .. .076

I~ I

WANlHl

YARD SALE-

4
m1le
SR143
Pomeroy Satu rday Ju l y
16&amp; Monda~ 18 9 00 to
4 00 Storm door couch &amp;
love seat
microwave
school
clothes
baby
tams

Jl;.

Display Ads

net

Garage Sale JL.IIy 18 23
Sam 4pm 3 mrle out 143
Frrst dnveway on le ft past
Wolfe Pen Roa d Lots ot
baby g1rl clothes 0
24months Other bab~
1lems toys g1rls mens
womens
clothing
Houseware 1tems Ram or
shme Watch for s1gns

t

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
lwrrght@tc

K1ttenlcats available for
adoption at the Perenmal
Cat Spaylneuter vouchers
avatlable Call for mfor ma
t1on
(740)446 2700
(Donations accepted)

~70

~

GtVEAWo\Y

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

OeacllfirM

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

Shou

992-2157

How you con hove borders and graphics
Dally In-Column 1 00 p m
All Display 12 Noon 2
"-'
added to your classified ads
Monday-Friday for Insertion
Buslnes&amp; Days Prior To
-""
Borders $3.00/per ad
In Next Day'• Paper
Publication
Sunday In - Column• 1•00 p m. Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Graphics SO¢ for small
Friday For Sundays Paper
Thursday for Sund;~ys Pap••~ l ,
S1.00 for large
• All ads must be prepaid'

Word Ads

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

17 /Jm

~
2005 by NEA, Inc

Roofing Decks Hardwood
Floor and Ce ra m c T1le
nstallat1on
New
Cons truct on Pole Barns
Build ng
Top
Notch
Contractors
(304)675
3042 WV036667

110

HElP WANI'Eil

p!ract Service
Emplovn Needed
REM Op!IOns rn St Albans
1s currently accept ng
appl1ca11ons lor a D1rect
Serv1ce Employment n the
PI Pleasant area for a
young adult fem ale w th
developmental delay Must
be 18 years ol age have a
vahd dr1ver s license and
be screened through a
cr1mmal
backgroun d
check
Weekday hours
des1 red Part ttme pos1t10n
ava•lable w1tl'1 poten!lal to
become futltrme Contact
Nancy Gordon or Cnsta
H1ll fo r more 1nformat1on
1304)768 5575
Orrect Service Employee
lmmed1ate Pos1tron
Open1ng

Part-nme
Pos111on Available
REM Community Oplrons
1S currently seek•ng per
sons to prov1de ac!tVe
hab1l ta!IOnld~rec t care n a
res1dentral setting to nd1
vtduals who have mental
retardatiOn or other devel
opmental d1sabdtlles 1n the
Wood Jackson Ma son
and Roane County area
M1mmum
quailf1cat ons
1nclude a valid dri Vels
license and high sChool
d ploma or equiValent The
qualif1ca1tons
mc.lude
wo rk1ng
weekends
evenmg shrt1s. and most be
able to lrft Excellent start
1ng wages and compeht1ve
benehts No phone calls
please
Please send resume/letter
of 1nterest to
REM Commurllly OptiOns
3 Baaz Commencal Park
Williamstown WV 26187
Atte!lllon Programs
Coord1ntors
Deadline to apply July 18

2005
Full 'Time Help Wanted AI
35 Adult V1deo &amp; Book
Store E\iemng shtfl &amp;
M1dn ght
Do Not Call
Store Call (304)549-5696
Fullt1me babys1rter need
ed Barton Chapel Rpad
Mason County No stu
dents apply call 6pm 9pm
304 576 3353
lmmedl8te
openmg
Warel'louse
Assoctate
qual1f1cahons 1nclude but
not limited to abthty to lift
SOibs drive a standa1d
st111t transmrSSiOn and
ab1hty to operate a com
puter effiCiently Must be
available to work Monday
th ru Fr1day Send Resume
to TSC13
cl o
Pomt
Pleasant Aeg1ster
200 Ma1n St
Po nt
Pleasant WV 25550

HELPWANlHl

..

Guardmg Angels Child
Ca re Cente r IS now
acceptrng app licatiOns for
a Teachers Arde Th1s
posr!IOn IS a part trmettem
porary pos liOn possrbly
leading to a permanent
pos1t1on Tills posrtton IS
des•gned to assrst the
Lead Teachers 1n meet1ng
tile needs of tl'le ch tldren
assrgne d to th eir areas If
you are sell mot1vated
dependable and enjoy
work1ng w th Children tl'1en
thiS cou ld be the pos1t10n
for yol.l You must be at
le ast 18 years of age and
have at least a h1gh school
d ploma or cenlf1catr on of
h1gh school equtvalency
(GED) by the state boarc;j
of education 11 you are
1nterested 1n tilts poSition
please contact Be cky
Hess or Dama Sc1'1 ultz at
(740)388 6454 for mare
1nlormal1on

190

OUTSIDE SALES

C\RE

REPRESENT A. JIVE

Home ch1ldcare state cer
t1f1ed and pr vate pay
accepted
Clean sale
hOme loca ted 3 1/2 m1les
off route 33 on K ngsbur~
Road
Ex cellent rete
ences a .;ulable
Perfect
locat1on tbr .parents wt)o
work Wllhm tl1e Pomeroy
Call
and Atl'lens area
740 992 9066

The Galltpol s Oatiy
Tnbune IS accepttng
resumes far a full l1me
outs1de sa les represen
!alive to JOin ow sales
team and to manage an
established account hst
whtle callmg on new
accounts The success
ful cand1date w ll be a
dr sc1pllned seltmol1vecl
team player that under
stands tl1e 1mportance
of devetopmg strong
mutually benefiC al bUSIness ret at•onsh1ps w1th
our accounts

W1ll care tor elder y 1n thetr
hOme day t1me hours
(740)992 78 18

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUB
ISH ING CO recom
ends that ~ou do bus1
ess w th people yo
now and NOT to se

MONE\

TO LoA!&lt;

START FISCAL ASS&gt; S
TANT ~ A n
ASSOC iate
de9ree prefecred tn bus1
ness Adm mstrat1on or 3
years expenence rn a
F1sca1 or Payroll Offtce
ThiS positron has Board
approved benefits Submit
tener of 1ntetest resUme
and references to John D
Cos1anzo Supenntendent
Athens Margs ESC PO
Box 684 Pomeroy Oh
45769
Apphcatton
Dead! ne July 20 at noon
The AMESC 1S an Equal
Opporlunrty
Employer/ PrcMder

8 room 11ouse m Galllpol s
Needs work
S29 500
1740)44t 1078
or
(740)446 0974
Attention'
Local company offer ng
NO DOWN PAYMENT"
programs for you to buy
yoUT home mstead ol rent

ong
• 1OO"'o lrnanc1ng
• Less than perfect cred t
accepted
• Pa~ment could be the
same as rent
Mor tgage
Locators
(740 \367 0000
Capecod 1n the country 4
bedroom 1 acre level lot
beautiful cnarm ng spa
c1ous Fam ly room formal
'11v1ng room and more
(740)379 9687

All real estate advertising
1n this newspaper IS
subJeCt to the Federal
Fatr Housmg Act of1968
which makes1t 1ilegal to
advertise any
preference llm1tatton or
diSCrtm lnatron based on
race color re hg1on sex
famrl1al status or nattonal
ongin 01 any Intention to
make any such
preference ltmltat1on or
dtscnmrnat1on

~~ o
Down
Payment
Pass1ble 1900 squ are M
house 3 bedrooH 2 bath
l ull basernent new Ilea:
pump sets on 3 acres SA
7 Eastern 9-chOol DIStriCt
(740) 985 432 1

&lt;

Cakes by Kathy wedd1ng
&amp;
all-occas1on
also
Karaoke c all (740}992
0723 after 3pm

0 der
Hom e
Tota lly
Restor ed 4 br lot stze
40x 1DO. Pnce 1n the 60s
PhOne t304l675 2722

T\JRNED DOWN ON

wwworvhcom

SOCIAL SECURIT'I
ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1n
1 8B8 582 3345

5 Homes un der $ 10 000
Will deliver (740)365
767 1
97 Fleetwood 14x70 total
eleclnc w n help w1 th
oel very Includes cen tral
a r Only $10 995 Call
(740)385 9621
New 14x70 3 oedroom 2
bath Only $198 63 per
Call
Elatne
month
(740)385 2434
New 3 BA Home Only
$189/mo Includes ale
delivery and set up
(7 40)385 4367

r

LUI ~ &amp;

ACKf\f,l

1 Wooded acre Country
Home S te near Un1on
Campground
Electrtc/Rural
Wale r
(304) 682 3772 call alter

9pm
For
sale
Rtvertront
acreage around 6 acres
on At 7 n1ce place lor a
new home Can (740) 446
8595 after 9 OOpm

R£.\L E.q\T[

WA.\lHl
I Buy Homes Loca l per
son
buys
homes
Coni denttal Qu ck cash
J m 740 992 6300 Nc
calls after 9

1{1,1\1'.;

Hot s1:-;
IUK IU.\T

For sale by owner Trailer &amp;
lot at 109 Cedar Street
Ga 1pohs at end of GAHS
tbotba ll
held
Call
(419 1533 419;, lor de1a1ls

eld 2456

1995 Clayton Dol.lblewtde
24x52 3br 2ba tota l elec
Ire
~~6000
OBO
(304)675 2907

10

9 OOpm •

CalllOdayl

ParamediCS
&amp; EMT s ,
needed A,.,p ly at 1354
Jackson P1ke Galhpoii.S

3br 2ba pool garage
storage bldg appliances
$130 c000 5 m les from 33
on Rt681 (7 40) 592 0426

For sale 2 bedroom hOuse
s1ng1e bath w1th 1n c1ty IJm
1ts ask1ng 560 000 Call
(740)446 8595
alte r

1-8TI~63124 7

Teacher Pos1t1on
Avarlab le
Early
Educatron Sta!IOn INC
Credenllals
p referred
Send Resume
2122
Jefferson
Ave
Pt Pleasant W&gt;l 25550 b~
July :22nd

3 bedroom 2 bath Ranch
style house newly remod
eled
Bidwell
area
$69 000 Call (740)44t
152 8 or (740)709 5952
after 4pm

Th1s newspaper Mil not
knOWIOIIIY accept
advertrsemenls l ot real
estate wtuch rs rn
violation ol the law Our
readers are hereby •
mtormect that all
dwellrngs IICivertiaed In
thiS newspaper lire
ava1labie on an equal
opportunity bases

Stop worry1ng about
where you next
paycheck IS com1ng from
Start aarn1ng up to
SMtour!
We offer weekly pay
+bonuses full benef1tS
package pard tra1nmg
pa1d vacalton and
hol•days

The
At hens M e1gs
Educat onal
.._ Serv1ce
Center 1s seek1ng a HEAD

$57000

Bl~t~l~

Overbrook
STNAS
Center s currently accept
mg appllcatiOflS for ful l
t1me STNA S 7A 7P and
7P 7A and
3A 3P
sh1fts are ava11att1e If you
are mteres1ed
please
come m and f1ll out a.n
appi1Ca\lon at 333 Page
Street Middleport Please
No Phone calls EOE

Needed 1mmed1ateiy
expenence&lt;l floor covenng
1nstaller send resume to
CLA
Box
571
clo
Gallipolis Da11y Tr bu ne
PO Box 469 Gallipolis
OH 45631

1371

0miKTl~m

AN / LPNS Overbrook
Holter s Holstetn Farm s of
center tS currently accept
Pomeroy Oh rs currently
1ng applications for LPN S
seek1ng to till a fl.lll trme
and AN S 7A 7~ and 7P •
m1lktng posttron AppliCa nt
7A Sh1fts are available If
must have valid drl'ller s
you are Interested please
• license and reliable trans
portatton Experrence a " come 1n and lrll out an
appltcat1on at 333 Page
plus 740 992~010 or
Sheet Mrddleport or call
(740 )992 5t58
and speak w1th Holle
Bumgarner
LPN Staff
Need help tor Parkin son s
Development EOE
pat•enl tn Mar~land l 1ve 1n
mce couples home All
ex per~ ses
pard
plus
sal ary Need dnvers hcens
es Call (7401288 0290
leave message

3 Bedroom 1 Bath Full
Basement
Garage
remodeled m &amp; out
Rae ne Area 740 949

I I\ \\I I\ I

The tdeal cand1d ate w1ll
have sale expenence
Fo r confident aJ mter
v1ew
please
send
resume an d cover letter
GallipOliS
Da1ly
to
Tnbune
Attn
Jm
Freeland
825 Th1rd
Ave
Ga ll polls 011io
4563 1

Help Wanted
Tomat o
P1ckers (7 40)247 -3901
740 247 2165

CHnn'Ew.:ru r

tun basement Pnce nego
liable (740)256 6846

1990 14x70 3 bedroom
trailer w1th CIA k1tche n
appliances rncluded Mus!
be moved (740)266 6851

Home L 1strngs
L st your home by caihng
(740 )446 0620
V1ew ohotoo. nlo onlinC'
Its a Steafl 4 beoroom 2
bath 2 car garage New
Have n WV Code &amp;505 01
call t 3041882 3368

------------ -------:------------- -'- - .- ---

2 BA house located 1n
Gallipoli s
$400 morJtll
pus depoSII No pets ref
erence
requ red
Cal
(740)44 10110
01
(7 40)9925174 ask for Jay
2br House 177 P&lt;iirk Dr
S3851month
Depos1t
References
No
Pets
(304)675 2749
2t:lr house m New Haven
$350 month (304)882

2Sg/J
Attent•on'
Local company otte rmg
NO DOWN PAYMENI
program~ tor you to buy
your ~ame 1nstead of rent

ong
100"o frnanc1ng
• Less than perlect credrt
accepted
Pa~ment COL.Ifd be lhe
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(7 40)367 -oooo
For Rent 3 oearoom 1
FL.I li
ttasement
bath
CountY Home Board Ad
Letart WV
Central A1r
1304)6 75 24 84
or
(3041593 1481
House lot rent n Pomeroy
no pets (740\992 5858
N1oe 2 Bedroom House
Ga lilpol•s Fe rr,. Call atter
Spm j3040675 1761
Pomerov 3 bedroom gas
furna ce
$450 de:pos t
$400 per month 1740)698
6783

"'~"'I~O-IIII·
J~I~I&lt;)\_tf_'li_,
FOR IU:\T
2 bet:troom ;,U etectnc
waTer and trash ncluded
$350 mo and oepos1t Call
'7 40)4J 1 7033
2 Dedroam A. C \€ ~ n Ce
no pets
n Ga 1ools
7401446 2003
Beaullll.l l rver v ew r&gt;
Kanauga lt:teal lot 1 2
people No pels please
ApplicatiOns be ng: taken
Call 1740\441 0181

'•

-----

�•

Monday, July 18, 2005

www.mydailysentlnel.com
SPACE

Monday, July 18, 2005
ALLEY OOP

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel 'o Page BS

FOR RENr
MobUe Home for rent at

Private

Family Pride Moblle·Home
Park 3 br. $375. a mon +
5375.00 dep no pets 304-

Space In Centenary. Close

mobile· ,.. home

to Green School. $1:40/mo.
(740)446-4053.

_675-4633

~r!i ,Dr; ~"; ;Ol i; ; _EHOI.D
;;;;;;;;;'
\II ICi It\ '\llhl

Nice 2BR mobile' home tor
rent, Smin. from towh.
$375/mo. 2 references &amp;
deposit required . Call alter
5P"1 (740)446-9342

I"""

APAKIMfNIS
IURRENT

and '2 bedroom apartmen ts, furnished and
unfurnished ,
secur1ty
deposit reqwred . no (lets,

740·992·2218 .

'
1. bedroom apartment in
Galli,Polls near Wai-M art .
UtilitieS
lnr;luQed.
(740)245 -5555.
•

2 bedroom apts. Porter.
$400. Wate r, trash &amp; sewer
pd. Call (740)367·7746 or

(740)367·7015.
2 bedroom. 1 batfa, water

'

'

paid. $350 month , $350
security depos1t.
Call
(740)446-3461

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BLIOGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $44 2.
Walk to shop &amp; moViBs
Call 740 -446-2568 Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Clean
furnished
Apartments. $325 and
$350
month , lflCiudeS
wa te r,
t rasn . Secunly
Deposit and References
required call alt er Sprn

·I

( 304)6 75-3 04 ~

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE~
Townhouse apartments .
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111
for applrcatron &amp; inforrna-

,I

,,
,

tiOn.

,

Furni shed upstarrs
3
rooms &amp; bath Clean. 'el &amp;
d~p requrr ed. No r.rels
(740)445 - 1519.
Gracrous lrvrng 1 and 2
bedroom ap artments at
Vrllage
Manor
and
Rrversrde Apartmen ts in
Mrddlepo rt From S295·
$444 Call 740-992·5064
Housrng
EqL!al
Ooportunrtres
Large
Bedroom
Apartm ent S425inl0nth
Free
U!rlr!tf!S rnctuded
move rn gilt 1 week on ly
(304)675· 5819
New garag~ apt . rn Crown
Crty
Ar~Jer
Vrew
Washer/dryer. drsl;washer
garage drsposal. Ci A . 3 Br
Garage not rnoluded
(740)256·6846

BR apanment rn
Sprrng Valle y. $290 per
month plus deposit Sun
Valley Apartments . no
tonge r floods . ('740)368·
0017 or (7 40)339-0362 .

One

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments ..
Ve ry
Spacrous. 2 Bedrooms.
CIA. 1 112 Bath
Adult
Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Paho.
Start $385/ Mo. No Pets.
·Lease
Plus
Securrty
Depo si t
Required.

(740)446-:l4a1

Twrn

Atvers Tower rs
acceptrng aoplications tor
wa.rlrng list tor Hud-subsized. 1· br. apcn tment
call 675-6679 EHO

r

S!•ACE

ffiRRE'T

Downtown Qttrce Space- 5
room !iurt e $6 50/ mo : 1
room offrce- S225imo · 2
room
surte
5250/ rno
Security deposrt required.

You pay utilities. All spaces
v.e ry nrce . Elevator Cal l
~740\446·::!644 for appornt·
men!
For Lease: Oflrce or retar l
spaces rn very good cond1·
Iron. Downtown Gallipohs
Approll. 1600sq tt.eacl1 1
or 2 baths !-ease p11ce
nego tiable to enco urage
new
busrness
Call
(740}4 46 -44 25
or
(740)446·3935.

~,--,.;Gooo&lt;;iiill~--,..1
90 Series Kenmore Heavy
Duty washer &amp; dryer. 6 yrs.
old, $300 Call (740)3886901 or (740)388-8596.

Ar'ltiqu G maple bed room
suite Numbered ·cushman

Th ompsons App liance &amp;
Rep.air-675·7388. For sate.
re-condrtroned automatrc
washers &amp; dryers, relriger·
alors gas an d e lectnc
range s arr conditiO(lms
and wrrfl ger washers Will
do repArrs on major b rands
111 shql) or at yo ur h'ome.
Use(J FUFnrture Store. 130
Bulavrlre Prke. Appliances
mattresses.
dres se rs,
couche s drnottes, reclin ers. qrave monumen ts .
nwch· more (740)446-4782
Gallrpolrs. OH Hrs. 11 ·3
(M·S\

r

540 "ISCEI L \NWIJS
MEKCHANI&gt;IS&gt;:
2005·Mas te r Tow car dolly,
neWJr used. straps. manuat, $995 .00 , (740)992·
2945
A two horse trai ler. $1.200
good
cond rtioA
Roy
Ph itlrps (740)256- 1~55

Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For Concrete, Angle .
Channel Flat Bar. Steel
Gratrng
For
Drarns.
Driveways &amp; Walkways
l&amp;l Scrap Metals Open
Monday.
Tuesday
Wednesday &amp; Frrday. Bam·
4 ·30pm . Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)446-7300
Pole Barns Blowout
30x50x 10Ft only $6.495 '
24x32x 10 $4 ,595.
40x64x10 $11 .995
Free delivery,
Painted Metal

(9371789•0293
!?mall pop machines and
snack mach ines. Ideal for
small Jocatrons. rec rooms
etc . Callt740)379-221 B.

Zephyr Tannrng Bed. 24
Bulb, se ldom useO $1 ,200

Sealed proposals for
the -Meigs County
Paving

Project-

Round 19 will be
received by the Meigs
County
CommisSioners
at
their office at . The

Meigs

County

Courthouse, Seco nd

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 1:15 p.m. ,
local time , July 28,
2005.
and
then
opened

and

read

aloud,
The project provides

for paving 14,510 L.F.
of Meigs CRSO Eden
Ridge , I 3.464 L. F. of
Meigs CR 15 Hysell
Run , 9346 l.F. of
Meigs CR 16 Beech
Grove Road . 20.962
L.F. of Meigs CR 3
Leading Cr~k Road.
and 9240 L.F. of Meigs

\

CR 3 Depot Slreet.
and paving 3960 L.F.
of Orange TP"wnship
Road T627, T1063, and
T287 within the com·

I

111'- ,\

i. 11n11' I

Deere Lawn Tfactors or
Tame blackberri es. u-c an- • · No Interest, No Payments .
pick any time at Virgil's
until January 1, 2007 on all
Berry Palch. 1 mile east of
new premium lawn tractors
s rae use on St. At . 124
with John Deere Credit

r

FOR SAu:

.,

18 loo t hard side swim·
ming pool wilt'! sand filter.
Never used.
$300.00.
Fully load9~ 3' section
tpckle box. :740-985-4168.

I \In I '-II 1'1'1 II "
.\ 11\1 ... 1041-.

EQUIPMENT

ssoo

Demonstration
Bonus-let us demo a John
De!'ne Z Trak or X Series
All-Wheel Steer on your
lawn and receive a!) extra
$500 ott our already dis·
counted prices. limited
time ofler. Ca rmichael
Equipment Inc. (740 )446·

...

D"k Financing for up to 36
mon th s on John Deere
Compact and 5000 Series
Tractors with Jotm Deere
Credi t approval. Check
them out! Carmichael
· Equrpment Inc; . (740)446·
241 2

(P.o'o Financing tor up to 60

Drill for Rent . Carmichael
Equrpme nt
(740)446·
2412.

Johh Deere Commercial
Products
Workslte
Compact ExCavators/Skid ,
Steers!Trac1or
Loader
Badoihoo in stock. Check
out our rental rates . Great
avai lable.
financi ng
Carmichael
Equipment
lnc. t740)446-2412 .
Your
ProStarl
Trailer
Deater.
Carmichael
. Equrpment Inc. (740)«62412

r

For Sale Quarter Horse
Mare. Jus.t turned '1yr old,
this April 2005. Halter
Brook. Gentle, easy io
ca leh
Jn
the
Freid
$500/negotiable

Hewlett
Packa1d
Compute r, Wi ndows XP

[304)593-5073

wrth desk , excellent conditron S2SO (304}675-5754
or (304 )593-1284

Pygmy goats, Nubian,
Barbados
sheep $35
each. (740)245-9142 ,

HlRSALE

after 4pm

\oor Ri~hllo Kno•! O.li~ered Right to\',.,, lloor

munitY

of Tuppers
the bid amount with a
Plains and 5808 L.F. · surety satisfactory to
of Salisbury Township
the aforesaid Meigs
Road 204. The engiCounty
neer 's estimate lor
Commissioner lor by
this · project
Is
certified
check,
ca,hlers check, or let$540,329.00.
Domestic Sleel Use
ler of credit upon a
Requirements
as
solvenl bank In the
specified in Section
·amount of not less
153.011
of
the lhan 10% of the bid
amount in the favor of
Revised Code apply
to this project. Copies
the afore.said Meigs
C 1 ounl . y
of Seclion 153.011 of
the Revised Code can
Commissioner. Bid
be obtained from any
bonds
shall
be
ol the offices of the
accompanied
by
proof l&gt;f,, Authorlty of
Oepartment
of
the official or ager:ti
Adminlstralive
Services.
signing the bond.
.
Bid documents may Bid&amp; shall be -led
be secured at the and marked a.a Bid
office of The Meigs lor: Meigs County
Counly
Engineer,
Paving
Project·
Round 19 and mailed
34110
Fairgrounds
Road, Pome,roy, Ohio
or delivered to:
45769; Phone Number Meigs
County
740-992-2911 lor a
Commissioners
510.00
non·refund·
The Meigs County
able fee .
Courtt\ouse, Second ,
Each bid must be
Street
accompanied
by
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
either a bid bond in . (7)15, 18, 25
the amount of 10% of

"

Parts
32119 Wl'lshtuwn Rd.
Pomeroy,' Ohio ·
45769
(7401992-2432
Emuil:jwill45769

1993 Honda, 300EX ATV_
New tires, ' skid plates,
bumpers, K&amp;N, exhaust.
Runs good, looks good .
$1,400 080 or trade .

1997 Honda ·C rvic 109.000
mi. After market acces·
series. 38+ mpg. Clean,
black/black. Call (740)441 ·

@ yahoo.com

2001
Custom Panzer,
2000 miles . $13,800; 2003
Hundred Annv. Heritage,
600 miles. $17.000: 2000
Dyna Wide Glide, 16,000
miles, $11 ,500; 2003
Hundred Annv. Road King.
Gold
Key
package
w/$7000 extra ct1 rome ,
300
miles.
517 ,900 ;

1999 ~Chevy Metro. 4 dr., 4
cyL 76,000 miles. $3,000

OBO. Call (740)44Hl712.
97 Convertible Sebring
$2.995: 92 lsuzu TrQOper
$2.000; 96 Chev. C~.v. 2
door, autom: $1 ,695; Ford
BN tractor w/ brush hog,

(740)992·6520, 740-992 2670

$2,800.
Southern Auto Sale 701

Sec'll'd •ve.

94 Harley Davidson Uttra
Classic, 10,000 mites.
blue, e:r~cellent condition .

$13,500, (740)949-2217

rlQA~~~~~

TRUCKS
IURSALE
1986 Dodge Ram SE, 283
Cl, 2WO w/cap and bed lin·
er. 138,000 original miles.

95 Kawasaki Jet Ski, very

toW hours. Great , Shape.
Trarler ·included $2.500,

Needs work. AS IS. Best
olter over $500. Leave

$.3500. 304·675·

7079
1997 Dodge Dakota SLT
V6, Automatic. 2 Wheel
Drive.
72,000
miles

.1304)593-1614
1998 Chevy S· 10 LS. 5
speed, AJC, good trans·

090.

Call (740)245-9502.
2001 Ford Explorer Sport
Trac 4x4. 81 .000 miles.
auto. air. PW. AMIF.MICD.
whitetbladoi . After 5:00pm
call (740)446-3044. ·
2004
Ford
F-150
Supercrlm 4x4 , FX4 oft
road package, 5.4 V6, 6CD . changer, running
boards, power Mrythlng,
Tonneau cover. tow padc·
age, 27,000 miles, ~eel­
lent ·condition . N.A . D.A~
Book Value $30,375, sell
for $28,900. (740}44692 Ford-Ranger XLT, V45 ,
Auto, very-good ccndHion .
(304)675-7302 .can be
5;68n at 2611 lincoln Ave.

i2

97 Chevy 1
ton V-8
Automatic , arr. cru1se.
runs and looks greal.
$4950.00. 740·985-4180
99 Dodge Dakota Club·
Cab SLT, 100,000fmiles
4x4 . 318/Sspd , loaded,
niany , eX1ras, nice Truck .~

FOKSAu:

YOUNG'S

Let me do 1\ for youl

IS NOW OPENAT
The Mulbtrry
Cimtmunlt)' Center
260 Mulberry Ave.
Porn Hoy

CARPENTER
SERVICE

W. Main Pomeroy

Same Grral Lo~t •

Prier.~

atld Smiling
Fritffd~' Faux.
OPEN
Mon·Fri.
9am to 3pm

PH' 99l-418.1

Storage

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodellng
• New Garages
,
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Guttara
• VInyl Siding 6 Painting
• Patio and Porc:h Oeckt

.We do It all eiCcept
fUrnace work

V.C~ YOUNG Ill
992-6215

NEITHER

TH'

DOES

MULE!!

THE BORN LOSER
V'\1-\E i'-1Vtl\l'&gt;t:.l1. OF b!&gt;.Y~ 'iOV'R£""'
C(&gt;..LUI'\G.It-1 ~IU&lt;.I~ &amp;.COII\11-16

"'"&amp;EC, C.l-\1 U', Wl-\1&gt;.\ 00 YOV "'l
W!&gt;.i'-\\.f/\E TO DO I&gt;.BOV\ 1\?

1&gt;. PROBLt:tl\, 11-\011.!'-I(&gt;..PPLE. I

p-JV:)\ Ot-IC£.,\)() YO\J \1-\lt--IK'""'
'1'0\J C.OVL\) C.I&gt;.Llli'\ WELL I

i ~-------. ~~·

I "' r z:;;;.::-,•...,

WVOJ61ll

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Vears Local E1
ance

I

tained . everything power.
very
good
condition.
$27r700. (740)386-7561 .
1Qgg•• Trail Ute Bantam
Flyer. EKceflent condition .
Loaded. Must see. 740-

949-2709. $7.800
2001
Jayco Designer
Series 27RKS, 5th Wheel.
Lots
of
accessories

$21 .000 (304)675-&lt;246
98 Prowler 26ft., excellent
condition. (740)339·3654
or (740)2.56-1526.

Coleman Camping Trailer
12FT, 2 King Beds, S4 .995

call for Details (304)675·
1731

Fcir side. Pop up camper, ·
sleeps 4, gas stove· and
furnace. (740)245-9183.

'I

1{\

II I "

lOx 15, 10x20,
10x30

til

Construction
A I! Your Home
lmprovcmcnl N~cd ~
• Siding • Window~

I S WHAT
lN '&lt;ET-:o

J:met Jeffers

~

• Kitl'hcn s • Bath s,

740-247-2162 or ·
740-416-350S
I~ yrs. Expcriem.·c
1 mo

MANLErS
.SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street

Middleport, OH

10xH)x10x20

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per
month
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp; ·
GENERAL
CONTRACTING .
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• Relerences
Available
• Free Estimates

992-1194
or 992-6615
"Mi~dleport's only

Self-Storage"

RDIIERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCTIOIII
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete ,
Remodeling

141-992-1611
Slop &amp; Compare

guarantee. Coca! refer·
ences
furnished .
Establ ished 1975. Call 24
Hrs. (740) 446-0870,
Rogers
Basement
Waterproofing.

H-jE ONE
FEHHE COMES
LIFE~ THE
~EEN WAITIN(7

FOR.' ,

Parts
S1. Rt.681 Darwin. OH
740-992-70 13 or 740,992-5553
Re..tockir!IJ lnle Mndel S..lo:11,nel
and ;VIer ,\ltlrket Parts
Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00

See

PEANUTS
WI-IAT Dl D 't'OU
LEARN IN CAMP

TODA't'. CORMAC

[ 'LEARNED
HOW TOREADI
A COMPASS

SEE? IF l FOLLOW THE NEEPLE.
I CAN FIND M'&lt; WA't'
AN'1'WHERE IN TI-lE WORLD!

EXCEPT IN THE
BU51-1ES...WI4ERE
AM r?

Sal. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

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

Call Gal'/ Stanley

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
lifetime

I S"&gt;UE '
Wt-IERE

Whaley's Auto

"1 nsu red" , .

Unconditional

~FEHME:

Sl)( t10NTH$

HardwooJ Flooring
• Gara,:o.cs
• Room Add .~. Roofing:

740·742-229l

• leave a message

•

GARFIELD

Hill's Self
Storage

YE!&gt;

YOU DON'T

[ oor

Ri!AU.Y

l-OVE ME!

OH. NO
YOU DON'T!

OM ...

-LINE?

DON'T YOU
l-OVE
REAl-ITY
eHOW!&gt;?

uU~T

29670 Bashan Road

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

Racine. Ohio

4577 1
740-949-2217

Call II.D. Const,

Slzel S'x10'
to 10'x30'
Hours

7;00 AM - 8:00 PM
mo

rnr all \our home

ADVERTISE

remr~dl'lin~ etc;.
rn.'4! estimates

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

n:p.uir n..·~ds, l"O(Ifin-.
sldinu. add-on!!,

&lt;7401992-2979

~

'1'

leavt m.:ssa e

GRJZZWELLS'

Restored. $7,500 OBO.

._ea~ll.l:tl7•40:ro;;l•44;,:1;;:.0•12o;1"'."

High cost 61 fertilizer got you
1 7-1 7 - 17~

1999. Blazer 4x4 i,.T.

original owner, 761(, e.w:c. cond.,
loaded . never in mud
$9,500 13041458- 1002

$265 ton (While Suppy last )

• Mushroom Compost •·
Available
$35 · 1,000 lbs Approx. we&lt;ght

1999 Chevy Suburban
4•4 .
good
coAdition .
loaded .. new trres . Ask11'19

Airway past u re renovators and seed ers

sn .ooo (740)4 41..Q65B or

·

(740)709- 1931

Licensed agronomist on staff available f or

18 spreader buggi ~s available lor uSe

Shop the

Classifieds!

avai lable to rent.

.

co nsult ing.

SI!AIJE RI\' EH AG.St:H\'ICE
Ponwro~ _. Ohin

35537~t. R1. 7

Now Available AI

IIEAT! l\\"' 1-5 ~ li.'H a\ME

BAl l:\1 LF\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

~ i\\l'r''VE
~H~

,;Taki11g 'l'he· Sti11g 011t Of
,
Hard Wurk!"
Mid-SiLe ~Wheel Drive Tractor
wi lh 1flhp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

mt:'l

BAUM LUMBER
St.

South

Wcsl

I 1\T

Pa ~s

,. •••
~urlh

E'ust

:I~T

All pass

Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

~\Ki

'EEI-I ....r-"i I.

British journalist Katharine Whitehorn
wrote, ~Hats divide generally into three
classes: offensive hats. defensive hats.
and shrapnal." Weird!
At the bridge table , there are three classes at card-play hal: offense (declarer'),
defense, and dummy. In today's deal, the
key hat is being worn by East. How
~hould he plan the d6fense againsi three
no-trump after tiis partner haS led the
spade seven and Soutt1 has called for
dummy's lour?
East's o'verca ll is a minimum. but one
s hould always strain to bid spades
because the opponents, if unable to 11}en·
lion no -twmp, must go up a level to com·
pete.
II would be normal for East to put in the
spade nine, driving out the krng and seltr ng up hrs suit. Maybe he would win a
trick with lhe diamond ·ace 1n time . But
before dorng that, East should take a tally
of declarer's tricks . He st10uld see that
South would have at least nrne tricks : one
spade (trick one), two hearts (the finesse
is working il he needs it) and six clubs.
Matters are desperate. East should win
with the spade ace and shill to !he diamond two, the low card guaranteeing an
honor in that suit and telling West, "l am
lrying to win tricks in this suit." West
sho\Jid take the trick as cheaply as possible and return his diamond three. East,
alter winning with t1is ace, plays a third
round· of diamonds. which gives the
de fenders the first five tricks.
At trick one, third hand should always
pause to consider matters. (This gives his
partner a few moments also.) It third hand
feels rushed by declarer, he should say
that he wishes to think

G

FATALrTY" t:&gt;OUBLE

ONE I ' VE

PomerOy. Ohio·

"No Jo1J To Small"
Racine, OH

TilE ':&gt;P E CtAL

B.o\CK l 0

33795 Hiland Road

• Decks • Pord1e.~
• Ceramil· Tile &amp;

111411

'95 Toyota 4:r~4 pickup e:r~t
cilb, 4 cyl. , 5 speed. cold
ale, e:r~c . condrtron . $5.500.

right in the heart of Cht...ter
985-4384

Formerl)'' at lOS

High and Dry

MamRHOME'i

1985 Chevy Silverado 4x4.
Ai1. PW. PL. 454. 53.000.
(740)446-8124.

1985 Joep

inch cutting width 3 year warranty
I&amp;!! TRACfQR SALES &amp; EOIJIPMF..NT

The Parish Shop

Service

I'M DOIN' TH'
CHORES WHILE
MAW'S AWAY,
AN' THAT COW
.DON'T LIKE
ME!!

Radius Mower) 30 inch cutting width to 50

PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Myers Tr&lt;.'"C

1996 Dodge Dakota ell!.
1999 DOdge. under 20,000
cab 4K4;V-6, 5 speed manmile
s, 20ft . American
ual, contractors .rack, tool ,
Cruiser body, tully con·
boll , reece hitch 66,000

r

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

BARNEY

loaders, finish mowers, tillers

3356 1 Baile y Run Rd ..
Pomcro . OH

C-'"\IPER&lt;; &amp;

'

4x4 ,

• Task 'Master Tractors 26 horse .. 38 horse,

G&amp;R SANITATIOI'\

304 675·2359

(740)388-

$8.000 (304)982-2845

3 y'eur warranty
••••Also available••••

SxiO. 10~10,

[304)675·7790

porlation, $3,700

with shuttle transmission
4-wd. remote hydraulics

Phone
(740) 992-5232

Sports Car, 1990 Mazda
Miata Convertible, Top
Condition.
$2,995

miles

starting at27 horse • 57 horse

* Wcckl v Tnt"h SCr' lee
4 y rs of kdi;rll l ~ Sc rvk.:
lK1.Yp Yuur Murw y Loc ll r

Mercedes Benz 260E 88.'
Engine rebuill, lao much
new to list. 25MPG. Nice
ride $3,950. (740)245·
9142.

EV~~y TIM~?!

New Dealer lor Montana Tracton

Insured
Frte f,stimales

J 6 3

The wearer ofthe key hat

gLA5T IT, rJ~PTUNf -l&gt;O YOU ~A\ft TO
UAGIC !MATE~ IN

!'ilill: ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Turn

Gene J\rrns/Owner·
Opvmtur 74tt-992·3174

(740)4\6-9554.

at

Bucket TNCk

·"·~Ot~"

Concrete·W~t:~~

•

/r. J i096

·Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Hmh

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

4wd (I year warranty)
• ·Farm Pro Tractors 20 horse • 30 horse

(74Q)446-8138.

OBO. [740)256-1652.

message
1135.·

Concrete Removal
and Replacemept

Ta~e the

1998 Yamalla Blaster,
$1.100. 1998 Kawasaki
KX250, dirt bike, 51 ,100.

1998 Plymouth .van 4 cyl.
$1 ,600 OBO. 98 burgundy
StratuS 4 cy! . au1oniatlc,
$2.200
98.000 rrliles.

• ' 2
t A42

South
• K8 J i
¥ KJ 9
t Q I ll i 6
• 9 •

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

LEWIS
CONCRETE
COIISTRUCTIOII

.1m

(740)446· 1327

9965.

8217 _

Public Notices in N""P'Jl"'

Will's ATV

Owner
1981 HDWG new tronttire .
new banery. 12590 mi tes.
$8000.00. 740·992-9155.

.

•

Opening lcud : • 7

Top · Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Owner: Brian-Durham
Phone: (740) 949-4011 ..
Specializing in custom homes

Qualily Guarante&lt;&gt;d
ATV Parts &amp; ACC.
James A Will Jr.

1996 Buick Regal, 3.8
eQgine. good conditron,
runs good, 70 ,000 miles,
$3,500 . (740)446-3200

4S7e3

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION

and additions.

1995 Corvette. Excellent
condition. (740)446·4255.

Basi - ·

'-" 7 3

10 ll 7 ,') •
t K J 93
.... 52

Tree Service

2003
· Je6p
Liberty
Renegade. Loaded, 4x4,
19.000 mites , $12,500 .
Call' (740)256· 1618 or
(740)256-6200.

1988 Chevrolet Astro van.
one tamily ,owned. Good
condition . $1.475. Estate
sale. Call (740 )446·8997

AIJIO&gt;

West-

740-667-0700 1-888·HUPP234

Carmichael
Equipment Inc . (740)446·
2412.
IU\ '\'-I'tiiU \I ill'

t Bj
.Jio A:KQI087

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

approval

7 40-949 ~2 346

2412 :

part)Ciel

50 Firecracker

~

14 Diamond or

AstroGraph ·

Tuaaday, July 19, 2005
By Berhlce Bed• O•ol
Much broader and greater Interests
may develop tor you in the year ahead
through a new friend to whom you wUt
become clos el y anached. In · ta ct,
many good things could happen lor
you through your new social affilia·
tion .
CANCER (Juno 2 1-July 22) ~Take
an the time you need In tormulating an
imporiant decision you may halo'O to
make today so that you won't have to
ask yourserr la ter why you hild overlooked something so obvious .
LEO (Juty 23· Aug . 22) ~ You should
halo'o far mOJO patiAnce and persist·
ence today to wrap up some nuisance
c hores you had left unfinished and by
doing so. actually get them out of the
way quicker than you usua l do.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) In a
rather unusual way you might learn a
lesson today from someone you don't
particularly lrl&lt;e. However, it'11 work to
your good s o you won't resent Where
It come s from .
LIBRA (Sept. 2 3-0ct. 23)- The more
productive you are today the greater
your feelings of self-worth w ill grow
und you'll d Svelop stronger se ll·
esteem, poise and independence all of whi ch adds' to your attractive ness to o thers.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ~ Gilo'o
your sense o l humor a good workout
IOdfly in your inlo'Oivemants with others , ospoclally if any testy situa tions
delo'elop. There is nothi~g like laughter
to calm trouble~ waters .
SAG ITTARIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) This is a· better than average day to
place your e mphasis on business or
commercial matters. ' You'll be bolh
c reatlva and lmaginatilo'e but a re lrkely
to put them t o work In prac tical ways .
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan . 19) There's a S1rong po ssibility that you
may be a bit more talkative than u s ual
today, but ' n o one will
mind ,
Companions wilt find that what you
have to say will be both h e lpful • and
ii1teresting .
AQUARIUS (Jan _ 20-F eb. 19) Be
alert tor good opportun1tres to pop up
at this lima that could help you s hore
up yo ur financial positio n. At lea st two
6 f them could c oma from som e old
involvements.
P ISCEs . (Feb. 20- March 20 ) Something qUJte constructive could
develop for vou at th is Irma through
an old friend o l long standing . Your· pill
cou ra oe mto an arrangement that you
can fit into quite co~ tor tably.
ARIES (Mar ch 2 1-Aprn 19) - Secret
ambitions have .oener chances or
being fulfilled in the next couple of
days than they 've had in a while if you
are prepared to d o something about
them . Stop wishing end start wor king
TAURUS (April :om-May 20} - 11 you
have been contemplating pulling a
po r t lcul.9r plan Into « Ction . delay no
longer. But remember. In your case,
your effoc11voness Is usually clos aly
linked to your 1ev81 of enthusiasm.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - · Try to
keep your mind's eve on the ooje cllve• which ar• the moat Important to
you today and you 'll lind that thia con centrallon will enhanca vour poutblll·
lo r greater aucc•••·

SOUP TO NUTZ

22 Keenan
or Ed
23 Chess
piece
24 Scamps
25 DEA
aperitive.

a lace

nanny

30 Carton ·
of milk
31 Give - reotl
· 33 PBS relative
3~ Gasior signs
35 Mounties
36 Wire mesh
38 Handle
(2 wds.)
39 Web addr.
40 Chor down
41 -&lt;&gt; honor

26 Physics

6 Thing
7 Banned
pastlcide
8 Blue dye
9 Hoofed
animal
10 One,
In Munich
11 Wily
19 Howthings?
20 Fountain
treit

41 Sledg•

hammer
42 Chan

,

re)oinder

(2 wdo.)
43 Klnd of pool
44 Cablntl

part

particle

27
28
30
32
34
35
37
38
40

45 T.ucked In
Congenial 46 Filet-food
Mo. bill
c11aln
Rind
47 Veer
Gl address 49 Full·houu
·o ddball
!attars
Second
draft
Totally
botched
Most ol the
earth
Stalks prey

CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher crypll~rams are croaled from quora110n s bV tarn::rus poople, pas1.Md present
Eacllle"er 111ihc Cl~er standS lor anoiher
Today'S clue : B equals C

"LUTLYU
OXBS

I 5. U

BHOU

IT

I SUZ

HG

D H D U ."

G U U

BHOU

NTN

NHGMUINHYY

S_R 0
IT

G U ·u

BTXGZ,

YUDUJC

HG

TJ

DUTVDU

0 AM H ~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Some ol the worst lilms ol a" time have been
made by people wt1o think too much ." - Steven Soderbergh

T::!:~~·- S©\\Jtl~-~£trs·

&lt;!bur 'lllrthdltY:

U••

pert

51 Crawling
Insect
52 Excursion
sediment
16 Famous
53 Earthy lump
mummy
54 Unuld
17 Turn down
ollht'NBA
1B Sports Injury 55 As a res_ult ,
20 Deep mud
21 Eur. country
DOWN
22 Greel,
as a dog
I Cen. hactiul$
23 Cui Into tiny 2 Elevator guy
pieces
, · . 3 Sharp bark
26 Traffic conn 4 Largesl bird
29 Far Easl
5 Loosen
Armstrong
15 River

(0 Q '

FOR SALE

2003 Dodge Ram 1500
4X4 SLT, 4.7 V8. red ,
27,000 miles, $16,000.
{740)446-7484
or

up to 50 months on quail·
tying GX &amp; X Series John

V~:~;~,;\DIES

I~

01 ·18·0:i

¥ A QJ

4x4

WOWII 0% FinanE:!ng for . (304)654·5211 .

FRurrs&amp;

(740)992-:!427

-.---

r

''I rr

pplnsuran~e

41800 SR #7
1~~~Tuppers Plains, OH

~~'-

$300 [740)696· 1005.

mOnths on John Deere
Dramond cluster gold· 10
Round Balefs. 0% lor 48
rrngs. 2 tennrs bracelets &amp;
months on John Deere
1 watch . 3 parr pierce earMower Conditioners with
rrngs. S90 each. F 40)992- . John
Deere
Credit
1426 leave msg
.approval
Carmichael
Equipment Inc. (740)446·
JET
2412 .
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired . New &amp; ReOuilt
1991 Case 1825 Skid
In Stock. Call Ron Evans.
Steer Loader, 25 hp,
1-B00-537 -9528
Kubota Diesel , all hand
controlled, V.G .C. perfect
for Horse Stalls, Barns
Mirrored Cher ry bdrm
(304)576-2812 leave mes·
Dresser. cost 5900 sacrr sage
trce at S200 PS2 Games
Call 9.304)675-2806
John Deere 10 ft. No Tit

NEW ANO USED STEEL

~-~~

NQrth

and Financial Services

Dally Specials
Monday &amp; Thursday 25% off
$21.00 18 w/cart
Tues. &amp; Fri. $25 all day w/cart
Wed.-.7 am- 3 pm
$1.00 per hole w/cart
Sat &amp; Sun - After 12:00
.$25 all you can play w/cart

Swisher 44" pull behind
linlsll inower: 11hp Briggs
Schnauzers,
MiniatUre,
&amp;
Stratton.
$500.
AKC mates. Salt &amp; pepper,
·. (740)446·6627 leave mes·
2 shots , ve t checked.
sage.

FARM

Leisd's Antrque's· boughtso ld at Atlrgator Jacks Flea
Market At 7. Pomeroy. furnrture. prrmrtrves, bottles.
!740)992-5088

NOTICES
CON·

For Sale: Chocolate Lab
Pups. 8 weeks old.
$100. 00

Rocky

CLIFFSIDE GOLF COURSE

(304)892·3095

.-\NTI()l '1·:\

Bu y m sell
R r ~Jer r ne
Ar trques 1124 East Mai n
on SR 124 E Pomeroy.
7 40·992 - 252~
Russ
Moore owner

Alder

13 Doze off

AKC reg: Shit] Tzu puppies
lor sate. Call (740)4461525 or (740)645·6029.

Ca rpet , 202
Clark
Ch apel
Roa d.
Por te r. Oh io. (740) 44 674 44
1·877-830·9162.
Free Esttma te s. Ertsy
l!nanclng. 9U days same
as cash. Vrsa/ Master
Ca rd. Drive- a- little save
a tot.

43 Muuum
lllaffere
1 Sltuw
46 Madeline(hyph.)
oi"Ciue"
5 And, to Fritz 47 Longing
8 Fettlul dote 48 Charged

12 Hwyl.

For sale- sofa . lOve seat &amp;
chai r, good condltron .

Mollohan

ACROSS

Phillip

r .:~~

AKC blk lab female $200.
Himalayan &amp; Sipmese cats
and kittens $50 =$100. Call
1740}446·1062.

PUBLIC

NOTICE TO
TRACTORS

Block', briCk, sewer pipes, .
. windows ,
lintels, etc.
Cfa\Jde
Winters.
Rio
G1ande, OH Call 740·245·
5121 .

Classic Crea tion . 2 tw1ns.
dresser, desk. mrrror. nrght
stand. se lect comfort mattress. $1 ,200. (740)446 8325.

$325. [740)949·2910

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

4 FT. 2 1rfch, Female
Iguana lor sale. Tame. can
be t1and led, Harness
included &amp; other accessories H t;~at Rock &amp; lafl'1p,
wla 5 FT hei.ghl~5 FT to ng,
2 · FT wide case $200

'

•

II ORO
UMI

-~----- flllitelll ., CLAY l . '0lLAN - - - - - -

l•arrange ltHers of
0 lovr
.serafTibltd word1

low

to

form fovr words.

FOJlUY

I

RUQEI

I 12 I I

I

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

I

RTAGF

lr..

I I 1 j -j ; "Remember. class," our pro-,
L=~~~=:;·:;;::~·~:,tessor lectured, "that success
3

·or failure is never •• - - .I"

r

lf-.,,A_M,,-O...,.,Y~·

_N"I,-E...,,r-:,c-·-ll () Compi"'• 1he &lt;hudle quolod ,

_
_
.
br f1i11ng in the miuing word1
L-L-.J,.....JL-..L.-J.......J vou dtveloo from step No. 3 below.
.

.

8
f)

_

.

PRINT NUM8ERED, LEIIERS IN
THESE SGU~RES
•
UNSCRAMlltE ABOVE tEllERS
TO GET ANSWER
·
SCRAM-LEtS ANSWERS

7-1 s- D5

Butler· Total· Grime· Vision· ON a LIMB

·once I discovered money didn 't grow on trees," my
friend. sighed , "I was way out ON a LIMB."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
I Rt.ME..'IW /11'( PARWT~'
&amp;~lot CLOCK .

• A~D PULL M fH€. SfW.
fO 'iolT.T~E. AIA~M
F~R fill'. IHOl~;&lt;.f CMY."

L~~~ 1\11~&amp;

MOM WOUI,D
tJiuHT W/\5 W I~D
IHAT CLOCK ... "

E.VE.~'(

!'&gt;MALL 1&lt;\t.MORIE!'&gt;
ARE. THE. LOLLAPAL.OOZA!'&gt;

�Page P6 • The Daily &amp;&gt;ntinel

Monday, July 18,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

·1955 Ri~ Bluemen celebrate golden anniVersary
BY BRAD ,SHERMAN
SSHERMANUIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO
GRANDE
Legendary local newspaper
man 'Hobart Wilson, Jr.
called the mid-1950's the
"golden age of basketball '' in
Gallia County.
Appropriately, he said it
during the golden anni versary celebration of a 'special
team from that era.
Just two years after Bevo.
Francis and Newt Oliver put
the sleepy •ollege town on
the map at the collegiate·
level, came the 1954-55 Rio
· Grande
High
S•hool
Bluemen. '
Arguably the greatest prep
basketball team ever from
,G allia County, the · Bluemen
made a historic run through
the Class B postseason tmlrnament that ended just one
win short of the·state tourney
in Cincinnati.
·
Members of that team .
cheerleaders and classmates
came

together ,

at

I

II

renew

on

acquaintances, an'd

see every one ~ again," said
Garber. " It ':; hard to believe
that it has been 50 years.'.'
Some have never heard nf
Rio Grande· High ·School.
bc'ing that · its doors have
been closed s' -cc 1960. htll
the tiny sc·hool made man y
take noti ce during the· 19545) ca~e. season.
The. team compiled a 24-2
record,

includin g

tourna -

Ball Park. where more
homers have be~n hit than
anyplace else in the maJors.
The · first haseman hadn't
homered since June · 5 ut
Colon\do and has only four
thi~ season.
He tlied out to the warning
track in his previous at-bat.
which reminded him of the
drought.
been
joking
"We· ve
armmd about how everyone\ going to hit nne but ·
me." Casey · said. "Then. in
the AB before. I hit that one "
to center field and I'm like,
'C'mon. am I going to go the
whole sea;;on without hilling
one'?' Finall y. I got one.''
Crilley 's hom er on the
next pitch put the Reds ahead
to stay. Finally. Valentin
completed the nine-baller
outburst wjt,h a grand slam to
right-center. his fifth homer
overall.
Valentin also connec ted
from the right side in the
eighth inning off All -Star

from Page Bl

I

the century ma rk on three
occasions and broke the 90poinl barrier seven times .
Rio Gramlc High dominated the regu lar season. losing
only once. Th e real story
unfolded. thou gh. once tournament time ro lled around .
After ,;ruising through the
county. tournament. which
was like a se&gt;.: ti onal tournament in our modern day. Ri o
beat defending state champi -

ment : and was winning on
average by .17 points per
game. The high-scoring
Bluemcn averaged 82 points
the each tim e out: they cracked

Sweep
Ir

University of Rio Grande\
Student
Center
Annex
Saturday for their 50th
reunion.
,
Nine members of the team
were present : Clyde Evans.
Bill Hal'Kney. Don Cofer,
Micke y
Morgan.
Da ve
Guthrie. Dallas Garber. Bill
Crothers. Marlin Jordan. and
Bill Lynch, who emceed the
event.
"It's . nice to come back.

Rockies
manager 'Clint
Hurdl,e said. " I did not enjoy
seeing him play the last three
days."
·
He w.asn't alone in senJ1ng.
the Rockies to another c~is­
mal day on the road. Tl1e
Reds scored all of their runs
off four homers. all with two
outs .
Sean Casey and Griffey
homered on consecut i1·c
pitches in the sixth inning.
start ii1 g a six-run rltlly off .a
stunned Jamev Wri ght 1510). The rigl{t-hand~r had
allo·w~d only one hit to that
point.
"After that. it see med like
every pitch I'm throwing I
Jell up." Wright said.
· Casey sparked th e rall y
with his first homer of the
season at Great American

N~w

Le xington ~

St.

Aloy~ius 43-41' in dist rict
play.
Two · more comfortable
wins ()Vcr Murra y City (73~4) and Thornv,ilk (61-45)
made Rio Grande the first
district champion
from
Gallia County since 1923.
A 45-36 victoJ·y over
McDermoll in the , regional
se mifinul followed , but
because of the tourna ment
draw. the already-spent
Bluemcn had
to face
Pleasant City the very next
evening. A rocky third quarter put Rio in too deep a
reliever Brian Fuentes, completing tile rare switch-hi tting feat.
"Anytime you do something Pete Rose did, that's
prclly special," Reds lllanage.r Jerry Narron said. "And
Griff tied a couple of big
names, too. That's a preny
big day."
Ramon Orti7 (5 -6) gave up
fo4r runs In 6 1-3 innings.
handing the Reds an unwanted franchise record . They've
gone 9_2 games into the ~ea­
son without a comp.lete
game, one more than the
200 I club's mark .
The Reds' rotlttion has
pitched the fewest innings
and given up the mo~t runs in
the maju.rs. the main reason
tl1ey're. mired in last place in
the NL Centr;tl. Cincinnati is
th e NL's only team wit hout a
complete game.
The sweep allowed the
Reds to match thei r longest
winning streak of the season
- three games. done six

hole. and tfie historic season particularly those who have
c:ame 10 a close.
passed 011. Odie 0' Donnell ,
No basketball team has the voice of many Bluemen
go11en as far since.
radio broadcasts that season.·
What made the accom- gave a memorial . tribute ..to
plishment all . the more . team members Jnn Keller
renu1 rkable, Rio Grande was and Victor'Cain. cheerleader
one of 7:10 teams in Class B Sarah Jones- Warner and
back then: there were only wach John C. Wic·klinc.
Wickline was _induc:ted into
two classificarions . Today.
there are four divisions with the Ohio Hig h School
Basketball
. Coaches
around 200 teams in each.
But Saturday's get-logeth- fl&lt;&gt;'m·ia tion Hall of Fame in
er wasn't just abmn remem- 1994 . He had a c·areer coac hberin~ the on-court acco m- in ~ record ol .B9-197. hiS
pli sh;nents . It wa .' also a · tdms.won 141eaguc titles. a
time h&gt; rdkct on daily stu - dozen cou nty btgue ·Crowns
dem -ilk at Ri D Grattde High ·and th e 1955 district champinnship.
School.
. "We had a small sc hobl, it
No matter what sport you
was kind of like family, " said played , you knei.v him well.
Evam, who now serves this He coached al l rhree sport s
area as ·a state representative. at the s.hool.
"When you got there in the
When the nine players
mornii1g, you fell like you were given an opportuntty to
were part of it and you fell share their thoughts oh any
l.ike vou had a certain rule in subje~t. all took time to menthat school. "
tion !heir mentor. They
And it was a time to talk ed about his teachingsremember former cla ss- from developing a will to
mates. l&gt;achers and coaches. win, (o how to shoot a prop-

er l.ayup.
•
"He helped us be, not only
beller athletes , but better
people," Hackney said of his
coach.
Btllthc overlying theme of
the ni2ht was camaradene.
as the
team members
litughed :md joked with one
another ltke they were sttl!m
high school - you could
never tell it s been a half ce otury since they laced up their
sneakers .
· ' 'l'v~ played four years of
colle~e basketball and baseball.· we lwd some good
teams. ~nod re•o rds. but I
don't kiiow that I ever .felt
the bmtherhood on any other
team that I felt he.re," Evans
said. "] think that brotherhciod that developed late in
th e season was something
thai had to be there for us to
do what we did.''
Rio Grande High School
· co nsolidated . with Gallia
Academy in 1960. it first
opened its doors in th e
1920\.

Chester-Shade Day, A6

e
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio[jO ( I•,N 'J S • \ 'ul.

;;-1.

No. :.q I

CLEVELAND (A P) Jon · Garland pitched six
"effective
innings and
became the
AL's first 14game wmncr
as
the
Cl1ica ·g t)

White
Sox
completed their first fourgame sweep in Cleveland In
42 years with a 4-0 win over
th.e Indian s on Sunday.
Tadahito Iguchi am! AJ.
Pierzynski hit home runs fnr
Chicago. which improved to
30-5 aga inst tile AL Centra l
and swept u follr-gamc ~ct in
Cleveland for the lirst time
since Aug. 27-29. I 963.
·.Garland ( 14-4) allo wed
seven hits and two walks to
win for the second time in
four start s. He struck out
two.
Neal Colts and Cliff

Polille comple.ted the eighthiller.
·
·Chicago's previous three
starters - Jose Contreras.
Freddy Garcia. and tv~ark
Buehrle - had ea•h worked
seven innings . Overall, the ,
fourso111e combined for a
I 00 ERA. allowing three
run s in 27 innings
The Indians hit just . 120
(3-for-25) with runners in
~t:oring
posit;on in the .
series. They have 1u ~t a sea~
son-high five in a row and
nine of I0. Cleveland has
trai led in 35 of 36 innings
since the All -Star breitk and
has not held a lead since the
fourth inning in New York
on July 10· - 41 innings
pverall.
The Indians were without
leading hiller Travis Hafner.
who cut his lip and sustained
a s]i Qill concussion when he
wasl1it by a pitch Saturday.

·

C~

SPORTS

•

W\\"

. BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY -Those coordinating the CS Health Project hope
for a high level of participation,
because big numbers will provide
the best result of a study assessing
the health risks awx:iated with
the chemical .
The project's organizers are ·
considering a number of ways to
increase access to its website,
ww.C&amp;Hc.althProject.com, ·which
allows customers in affected
water districts to register for partidpation and answers questions
about the project The site, will
also allow participants to complete a health survey electronkally, saving the project time tmd
money and expediting the process
of scheduling appointments for
blood work for those who choose

10 provide

blood samples.

[\l{ing a public meeting Friday

evening at t-leigs · High Sch1X11,
retired St. Joseph's Hospital
AdminiSb'ator Art Maher. who
along with physician Paul
Brooks, Jr. are coordinating the
pf()ject, said d1e 'chemical company DuPont and represenllltives of
the cla..s which.tiled a class action
lawsuit agai1t&lt;t DuPont support
the CS Health Prujcct because it is
designed to provide a "scientific
answer to C8 health questions,
independent of the courts and litigation."
Maher said tl1e project may
provide intemet access through its
rmbile laboratory units, one of
which will be set up in Pomeroy
next month, to allow those without computer access to register
tmd participate more easily. Those
who chcx1se not to use the site

may conttct a toll-tiee telephone
number, (800) 605-6850.to do so,
but the process will be delayed lor
·those who use ~1e nuri1ber md1er
than the website. Malter said.
l110sc who choose to participate in the .study of ~1e etfects or
C8 will benelitmoie directly. The
pmjcct will oiler up to $4(XJ to
those who complete a health survey and submit a blood sample
for analysis. l11c C~ Health
Project hopes 60.1XlU or the
80,000 customers in tl1c Village
of Pomeroy, Tuppers PlainsChester Water Disuict, City of
Belpre · )Vater Depwtnx:nl. Little
Hocking Water District and ·
Lubeck and Mason County, W
water disui.cts will pwkipale in
the study.
The cash .payment of $150 tor
completion of the survey m\(J
$250 1(1r a blood sample wi II be

paid l&lt;x ea•h member of ~x·
household particip&lt;tting. Ll rooks
said. although the project discour"ges pwti•ipation by children ·
under two years of age.
l110se who choose to .panicipate in d1e study· must pmvide
prmf i1f identification t~ong with
pmof that they lived in one of the
aftected disuicl' llx " year or
more prior to December. 2fX)4. In
order to receive payment. p;U1iciJXUll1 must provide two uf !lie t(JIIowing li&gt;r idenlilication: a diiver\ license. p.1.sspcu1. certilicate
of citit.enship. cctlilicate of naluJ&lt;tlitlltion, Social Senuity card or
birth ceitilicate, state identilica,
Lion cmtl. govcmment employ~
men! ID card, student photo ID
carcl. milimry ID. m:uor CJedit or
bank cwu with photo or it:sident
of U.S. Alien card.
In order to pmve residence.

participtmts musr pmvidc " uulity
bill . bank statement, m;uor credit
card s~tlement. · deed. lease or
rental agreement. W-2 or W4.
employment recorJ or pay stub.
\'Chide title. registration or insurimce card.

renter\

s29/month""
INTRODUCTORY PAYMENT

SALE '1,599'

Visit your local retailer today!
MODEL SLT 1554

]1Ci'&lt;li1:Jlpmpcny tax ieccipts.
l11e res(J]Ls .of the &gt;ludy. which
is\·).peCteU to take a year to complete, will he tumetl over to a scientilic health panel!&lt;&gt; detem1ine if
C8 exposure is dan gerous . to
hum;m~.

The study is seen as atypical of
cla1s llction lawsuit settlements.
:v1d could resu lt in the settlement
becoming a model for future
dccss-action settlements tmd inlluenee state :md ICderal legislallon,
Maher said.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Clair E. Zeigler
• Philip Scott Bryson

. STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAI LYSENTIN El .COM

POMEROY - With low
ratt"~ of donati ons so far this
, ummer &gt;111 appeal is going
out to loca l re sidents to turn
out to donate blood ·at
Wednesday's visit of the
Ameritan Red Cross hlood- ·
mobile to the Senior Cit11ens
Center in Pomerov.
The bloodmob ile will be
there from I to 6 p.m. and a
goal forth~ d:ty of .15 prod uc-

SALE '2,599'

B~th

Visit your local retailer today!

RZT50 MOWER
tNTRODUCTORY.PAYMENT

SALE '2,999'

5252 COMPACT TRACTOR

SALE

$6,999*
llock sold -\ely

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M

RACINE Last . week
members of the Southern
High
School
Tornado
Marching Band were working
hard to perfect their fall 2005
field show under the direction

Special Financing Available - Visit your local retailer today.

WEATHER

'

.

Judges revi·ew 275 4-H

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
lANCASTER, ·OH 431 :;o
(740) 653-2827 I (BOO) 710- i921 (TOLL FREE)

•·• "~~··;e·.t••J"l"~'-i.".i'if'~a.~••·:~·c·~.tr·~-••·•'• '1 :&gt;1~ ·ct•·
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t.rfO&lt;~pdl o p~r~·~ot!O'lQII&gt;~I'fl: .,. ~~@~l'tll~d·,·~e~I~!"'O'·c•-o,;:c
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12 PAGES

A3
B3-4

Bs

bear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

~&gt;Ea•-nr:

«&lt;:~." "" '"'
:o "&lt;&gt;'l·P'""'~· o·-•·r.. u·u~ • oM •'"•• ·•• t·&lt;''" "-'~' • , ~· ~·~-~· ""' ~·.• •
" "'oi• r ,- "_-"lOP
y,r -"• ·•·· -. ·e ~~ ·:'fl ~,. r "'",.. n &gt;Ito/Ill)~ ••-.1 ..,., •••; at·•· '"-'" ~~· · 1.1 nn..r- _f ·-&amp;· ·•.
Cn•·!• S' oi'Q , , , 41~% '{ 1' ODr·l 1 ,c~ o4 ," [-), , c.•• " • ~ • ..- Ill~'''· t &gt; , •• ',!.""' :l&lt;i'" • · . .. _ -'·Wf·•' •• ~-- •t &lt; S •Q _'&lt; -~'-'1 f.~&lt;&gt; · f'A· '·'[Ill &lt;~·lo' J~ l~ ,;t~"HS P:
riO'\ RE~(.[D PA•t .~"- jll.IT:ft"!l'f! ~ I "'a :If ~on• C l' '

POMEROY . -. ~- 11 projecb ranging from cageJ ani mals to baskets , of freshlypressed laundry were judged
Friday at the annual· -l-H
Misccllaneou:-; Jlrdg ing C\'Cilt
at
Eastern
Elemcntarv
School.
·
Cind y Chadwell (lf The
Ohio
State
l lnivcrsitv
Ex tension Service e~t.i matl·(I
that 275 miscellaneous project~ were jLrdg'ed hy adlilh in

-"•• • -•

Sports .

B Section

,~., ·

Weather

A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishin1 Co.

th~

communitv durinl! 11lc

'

'

·.

people to co me nut

and donate hlood."
The Red Cross issued
media aj1pea], i&lt;hl week but
saw only a slight increase in
et1llect i Pn~

;l t

~om~

blootl Llri-

:~i~~~i~~~~,~~~~~t~~~,:~~~~ll,~~:;
I

~ehnnl ;tnt! umxer:-.itv ~IU dent

don or-., \\'hO a rt~ una\·ailabl,e
durin~ th e .. umnle r months .
"Our ltn,pititls may ha1 e..
j thc nH&gt;·'I 'llp-tu-Jate equip·
mcnt and hal\' hi ghly trai ned

Tm.t.1a J one~. g:. l'.: Guinea Pig : 'll,tll. hut 111llfdl'r hl help ~:-.~1\ ' e
llannah ll y&gt;cll. g.c.: Cat ' I: ii\1.'·-.. that unit tl f Jon;.Hc-d
Hail eigh Bush. g.c .: Small blnPd llHI ... t b~.· immcdia-telv
Animal~ : Julie Tilli ..... ~- l' ..
Britney Morri . . nn. r.: ... Cnc a\;tibhlc . \\ "~,_· nl'CJ d&lt;lllatinn-~
c:pampion. Kyle Ru"cll and IHl\\ and r~.·~ubrl~ throtJghout
Joyce· Weddle. hnnora hlc the !l';tr.·· Armlctgc· empha- ·
mcntinn: Normal Animal: . ..,j;cd .
Mallorv Hill. ~.c.: Animal
The CEO pnintc·J &lt;'Ul 'that
Health:' Miran£1 ~kKehc\ . v.hil~ ,II\ blPnJ t:pc' are·
!.!.c.: You·n.· !h~ Athlctl' : Erin nt.·eded. tht' Red Cru . . :-, :tt thi~
Patter~on. !!.C . . Sarah Jenkin ....
T.c .. Colin ·c,1iutnlll. Hcmii,Ill t i llll' l'"J'l' ,,.' iall: necJ.., Jnn1)r~
Prall ·a nd Tim ~iarkwnnh. \\ h'! ;!1\' r: pc· 0 Po:-. it J\·e .
T1pc 0 \e~atiw. T)pe A
honurabk mention .
Health .-\. Disc· mer i n~ \ e~~lliYC .md T: rc B ncg;lMys.:lf: Mc~an · Br&lt;1dcri.c~·. ti\t.~ \,d1i~..· h ; m.~ i11 thl' ~hone~t
~.c.:
Fir-..t Aid : Rchl'l:~a 'uppl\.
Chad,~ell.
g .c.:
Alcohnl
He illllcJ Ihat 11 hile ~bout
Kimhl"rh
Dcci,iorv.. :

morning-lung e·1·ent. The pn&gt;jects will be di1playcd at the
Meigs Count) Fair. which
begin s Aug . 15 .
J,)1llh1Hl .
g.l·,:
Sell
Judging results. bv prnjc.:t. D~tcrmincd :
Courtnr.:"\
were:
· Kt.~nncth . l.!.c.. Morl!an \\"t~ rr\.
Brian J, Reedj pltoto
Discovering
4-H
I
:
S:!rah
i' c. A·,hlc,· Lif~. Core'
Dakota Colli.ns discusses his 'Measuring Up" 4-H project with
1
Lawrence.
grand
cham]WJII:
Jani'. Sarah · Engle · &lt;111~1
_iudge Bonnie. Scott during Friday·s· Miscellaneous Judg ing Discovcrin~
-1
-H
II
:·
Kirk
event at Eastern Elementary SchooL Collins received an honPullin,. g.c.: Hnr,ek" ll l&gt;r,c:
Please see 4-H, AS
orable mention for his project.
'

!'tl f

Jonor:-. th at i~ nece~:-.arv to
DuJson is new to Soutil~rn
High School. He is a natiw nf hel p build the bl&lt;&gt;od supp ly to
1\li'Jdlcport and a 19'J7 gradu- a safe level."
H'c allribured the low rotes
ate of Mei~ " Hieh Sclwol. He
is a 2005~ gract'uatc nf Ohio llf donatillllS \0 the traditional
Uni\·er:..itv \vith a dci!rec in ~umme r Jedine in donation~.
illu ~ i c edUcation.
..
·the hot .\\Tather. \aC;.Hiun~.
amL the ah ... cncc . of htgh
Please see Diredor, AS

proj~cts

BY BRIAN J, REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSCNTINCL.COM

Comics
~'··•·~·•.

"They've worked so hard ,"
Dod son said about his stuallcndecl
dems " who
Southern's band camp last
week. "They've been unstoppubic und never complained.
They' re just cuger to leam
and be challenged."

-

'

EQUIPMENT
,.

of new band director Chad
Dodson.
The fall 2005 field slrow
will feature the modern pop
music classics, ''I'm a
Believer," by the Monkees;
"Accide ntall y . in Love," by
the Counting Crows; and
"Funkytown" by LIPPS. Inc.

www .c~bcadet.com

BEST FINANCING OF THE YEAR!
'

I e&lt;.tll

'

• 25 HP 1 'Kohler 0 gasoline engine
• Standard 3-Point Hitch
with float position
• Hydrostatic transmission

Whether you're buying your first riding mower or your' third, our Series 1000 tractors give you the most
tractor for your money. Start with a premium Kohler• engine -and cruise controL Add a rugged cast -iron front
axle and a five-year limited warranty.*** Finish with the best law.n in the neighborhood.

New So.uthern High School Band Dire ctor Chad Dodson helps
his students keep the beat for their 2005 fal l field shOw dur·
ing last week's band camp.

·
d
d
•
·
d
'
' an. '. zrec+or
an .new
New b
. · Ll
entht!-Siasm for ,SH$ Tornado Band

Visit your local retailer today!

· Proo~cP·,•

In a new, relea,e Dr. John
Armitage. CEO. &lt;aid tha t
i· nn·- ntnrie ~ n.:111~1 i n &lt;It 11 ~er i ­
ouslv !'-m I~' I.." I \\ ith most
type&gt; hnl',cring at a one-day ,
,upplv. "Tl! i, i' a critical
hlond "horrag.t" aqJ I am urgin~ in the mn ~t emphati~: way

Sorgont/photoo

Members of the South.ern High School Marching Tornado Band
practice at band camp last week in preparation for their 2005
fall field show that will feature pop music classics like ''I'm A
Bellever," and "Accidentally In Love," and "Funkytown."

• 22 HP' Brigs &amp; Stratton•
lnte_k- engine
• 50" semi-floating deck
• Zero-turn mower

S39/month:·

8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 4S701
(740) 593-3279 I (BQO) 710-1917 (TOLL FREE)

tive donations ha ~ heen set.

V-Twin OHV engine
• 54" triple-blade deck
• Heavy-duty bumper

INTRODUCTORY PAYMENT

A~LPOWER

, ..

• 27 HP' Kohler• Command,"

S39/month**

canceled

Red Cross issues
appeal for d01wr:~~
Bloodn while to be
at Senior Center
J#d11esday

• O'Bieness employees
accept new positions.
See Page A2
• Investigators pursue
clues to Lon~on bombings
in Leeds, Pakistan.
See Page AS

• 19 HP' Kohler• Courageengine
• 42" twin-blade deck
• Servic~a~le hydrostatic .
Lransmrss1on

homeownt:r \ . ur

in~ur..uK-e c~u-J.

check ~ h()W i llf.! mune ~Uld m.klress,
voter re!..'i~trJ~o,{ card or real or

INSIDE
MODEL LT 1042

. mydnil~"·ntind.&lt;·um

Health Project plans ·easy access for study participants

Bv BRIAN J. REED

• Reds fall to Cubs.
See Page .B1

·II ' ES J),\ Y , ,Jl I I ,'\' 1&lt;), 211115

.

'

White Sox shut out Cleveland

times ..
Cory Sullivan had three
hit s. including a two-run
homer, and J.D. Closser
added a solo shot to pace
Colorado. Aaron
Miles
extended his hittin,g streak to
12 games. matching Clint· ·
Bannes for longest on the
Rockies this season.
Notes: Miles' best career
hitting streak is 13 games, set
last July. ... The Rockies
have lost 12 road series and
split two others .... Griffey
also walked three times. He
has hit safely in 14 of his last
15 games, going 1,9-for-51
with six homers .. ... Casey's
last homer at Great American
Ball Park was Sept. 17 off
the Ctibs · Carlos Zambrano .
... Casey al so hit into his
23rcl double play, seven shy
of Ernie Lombardi's club
record from 1938.... Valentin ,
was the first Reds player to
drive in ~evt!n runs since
Robin Jennirigs did it against
Pillsburgh on Aug. 3 1,2001.

Tour de France
·Continues today, Bt

of Am~rkan~ are
~.·ligibk to dnnate h looJ . nnly
fi\ L' fll'rccnt dn. Anvone i.lt
h.';l'... t l i : l'.tr" l\f age.- wCigh1 1 1~ l u..-. r'nlllld" or morc- and
h'l'lin~ 111 ~nPJ heahh may be
cl1~ihk h) dPnatt' hllll)&lt;J.

60

p~ll'L'Ilt

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