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                  <text>.Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 10, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

NBA Finals

Pistons try to shake off Bryant's
shot as series shifts for Game 3
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

Associated Press
AUBURN HILLS. Mich. - One shut
has drastically changed the dynamics of
the NBA Finals. The question now· fur
the Detroit Pistons is whether they'll let .
it affect them in Game 3 the way it did
in ·ovenime of Game 2.
Distraught and disgusted with themselves after their heartbreaking defeat. ,aid.
the Pistons boarded a plane and headed
"You know. we're cru,hcu ... Brown
home immediately after Tuesday night\ said . "I mean . shoot. th at wa, - we had ·
game.
winnable game. And everybody in that
But instead of returning to Motown alocker
room i, down. But we lost in
Madness with a 2-0 lead and a superb . triple O\ertime to New Jersey (in the
· chance to pull off one of the most stunsecond round) and had to go there and
ning upsets in league history. they're
win Games 6 and 7. We· 11 talk about
tied 1-1 and wondering how lhey let a tnat.
We 've just got to bounce back ."
six-point lead slip away in the final 40
Games 3. ~ and .5 wi ll be played at
second, .
The Palace before a sellout crowd that
The most pertinent, question was why has waited almost a decade and a half
the Pistons didn't foul someone before for 'irs team to make it to this stage.
Kobe Bryant hit a 3-pointer with 2. 1 Suffice to say the makeup of the crowd
seconds remaining to send the game to
will be quite different from the starovertim~ . A foul would have given the
studded audience at Staples Center that
Lakers two free throws when they needrelatively quiet until Bryant hit
ed three points to tie . and the Pistons · stayeu
hi s shot.
had plenty of opportunities to commit
In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference
one before Brya nt launched his shot.
ls. the rapper Uncle Kracker sang
"We don't foul in a situation like fina
the national anthem and Kid Rock raced
that," coach Larry Brown said. explainthe court during a timeout late in
ing that he feared a four-point play. "I around
the· fourth quarter waving a huge Pistons
thought about it. We talked about if they nag.
threw it inside. yeah, when Shaq gets it.
Game 3 i&gt; Thursday. Game 4 is
put him on the line. Bllt I don't want to Sunday
and Game 5 is Tuesday before
take a chance like that.''
Brown now has to live with the ·con,e- the &gt;eries returns to Los Angeles unless one of the team s wins all three
quences of that decision and hope it games. something :t home team has
doesn' t ultimatel y cos t him a chance for
his first championship as an NBA hcau never done since the NBA sw itched to a
2-.1-2 final s format in 1985.
coach.
Meanwhile. the Lakers are nursing
One series-altering shot can sap the
injuries
to a couple of key players.
life out of a team. a&gt; evidenced by what
happened to the San Antonio Spurs in Fisher is hobbling with a sore right knee
the second round: Derek Fisher 's Game and has trouble driving the lane or
ng the most athletic opponents.
5 buzzer-beater sw ung the momentum guardi
Karl Malone sprained the medial colthe Lakers' way, and they finished off
lateral
ligament in his ri ght knee early in
the Spurs in six games.
Game
2 but played 39 minutes . He
"We ' ll see,'' Bryant said. "The differwould
not
commit Wedne sday to playence there was we were coming home.
ing in Game 3, but Jackson said he
Now ~e ' re go ing on the road.',
expected
to have him in the lineupJudging by what the Pi stons had to say
perhaps
wearing
a knee brace .
· after Game ~ . the mental hurdle will be
"If
I
suit
Ltp,
I'm going to play,"
a sigr.ificant obstacle to overcome.
"It's devastating," Tay shaun Prince Malone said. " I wan t to do the sma11

Drug cases
affecting U.S.
track team
before trials-

!

~

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'

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150320

2003 PONTIAC SUNFIRE

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Middleport jail a money maker

SPORTS
• Pistons regain control.
see Page B1

BY BRtA.N J. REED
BREED® MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Housing prisoners for other
jurisdictions has become a
significan t source of revenue for the Village of
Middleport. and reven ue
from the jail is increa&gt;ing alf
'the time.
According to Police Chief
Bruce Swift. the village will
collect us mu ch by the end
of June as was co llected all

of lmt year in jail fee' from count: j~ail j, nO\\ clu)eU.
the county and other vil - Sherif( R,dph Tru"c ll LhC&gt;
lage s. Swift said the village the 1\liddlepmt jail'" a fir't
collected $16.900 through n:-~ort for huu . . ing prbuner"
· March.
and
collected on a 'hnrt term. Swift ,aid.
Doing ~u ..,a,c..;, T ru~'cll·...,
$19.700 last year.
· The jail. which hou'e' lilll lt cd ' taO: t1me on ·the
four male pri,nners. was full . ro ~tJ lran . . porting pri~oncr-..
Thursday. Swift 'aid.
from pi I to court. and ·'a'e'
The, village charge&gt; $5) thL' l'DUIJI\ lllOill'Y. \\ l'~tf and
· per day for housi ng pri .,on- k;11· ori \·e hiLie~ and fu ~l
ers other than its own. The l'OI\l~. at the ~amc time .
vi II .age's bigge ~l customer
Other \illage' in the
in housing pri '\n ne rs i-.. countv. Pomero\. Rac ine.
Meigs County. Became tile Rutlatid anu Syrirc'U&gt;C. abo

Syracuse
secures grant
to improve .
water system

u&gt;e the 1\liJuleport Ja il to
hoLhC pri ... oncr.... a... do other

cmint ie' and the Citv of
Gallipol i'.
·
The 'd li.t!.!e hOJ1t'"' to ..,j!.!~

-

'''''' " ' ' '' "'

'

nificantly in~:-r~ a -..e re,enue

BY

ith a larger ne11 jail. no11
111 tile plannin~ \ta~e,. The
jail \\ uu iJ he J1a rt l~f a Ill? \\
'ill age h.dl f:Icil11\ tn he
built .:It the Middleport
t.kmentan School buildin~
11

Jlil.'t

J.

r o~~ t: M"' D~ t L'tSE"HINEL

The 'il-

S: ri.tl'tl'-t'

]-., one ·-..te p

~..:to.., L":r td

pnl\ iding a beHer

Jrink. u1 \\ &lt;I IL'r for it... re ... i-

un· PL·:1rl

d~nh.
Th~

Ohi o Public' Worb
ha-. prnYided
~ 250 .000 lor imprm·cmenh

Visitors come in search of family history

2s

tu th e

The rundin~ repre~enh 37

percent of the c,timcrted total
l'{l-..[

2004 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

ONLY 10,100 MILES

MIDDLEPORT
A
descendant o f Samuel
Blaine Allen. the man wh·o
in 1902 built a hotel in
downtown
Middl eport ,
named it the Hotel Allen
and operated it under that
· name for many years. visited here Sunday with the
current owners. Donna and
John Tillis.
Dr.
John
All en of
Sacramento. Calif.. accompanied · by
hi s
sot;
Christopher,
came
to
' Middleport to see the struc ture built by his ancestor
Page AS
who was born a slave in
• Adah E. Taylor, 87
Virginia in 1842. took a
"French Furlough·· in 1861
• Roland Willard Wolfe, 63
and settled in southeastern
Ohio.
. Living in Middleport. he
worked on riverboats unt il
188 1 and then moved to
• Mason amends disprRendville . a prosperous
co mmunit y in Perry
mining
derly conduct action.
County. where he became
Page A5
proprietor of a hotel · ~l!ld
barber
shop.
• Pomeroy Police crack
In 1893. he opened anothdown results in arrests
er restaurant in Corning and
then in 1902 so ld that busiand convictions. See
ness and moved his wife.
. the former Rhoda Hogg of
Page A5
Cheshire. and their two chil dren back to Middlepon.
He operated a restaurant
bu sine ss in what is now the
People's Bank huilding unt il
construction of the Hotel
Allen was completed.
Mrs. Tillis in the tpidst of
compiling information on
the hi storic building, known
for many years as the
LaSalle Hotel , was using the·

Super Cab 4X4

OFF

WEATIIER

1999 FORD EXPLORER
2 Dr., 4X4, Leather, Moonroof

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Obituaries
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16 PAGES

A3
Bs-6
B7

A3
A4
A6
BS

A5
B1

AS

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Cn.

f{a ti ne
Svracuse
•
740-949-2210 .740-992-6333

Zane-.,~illc
''rotc the gra nt '' h t~..:h \\ iIt
pro~ tJ~ . ~L . Ill'\\ ''

at\.:'r

.'houiJ he n; placeu.
·· 1 thinl- thi' " ·ill he

'

MERCURY

HOURS:

~oou

S\ racthL', .. he 'l.tiJ ...... ,,· . ,
~om~ihitH.!. tl1at i;.. nc~...-c . . -.an
tu Ju to ~·untinue to opcrollf
nur \';ncr ...,\':'\ t&lt;.:m ."·
(or

·1

Rick Chan.:cy. the current
~tdm ini ...,tr&lt;ttur
fl) r
Syr~11.:u . . ~ ..... aiJ the l1C\\ · \\ a t~r
tO\\ er will he built -nem the
olJ \\';tt~r tan k "n R''' Jon ~&gt;
Ruad. He 'aid the ,,J;I ""t~r
tank j.. , :·...,JHn\ in~ . . . tl\~,...,
Clack...,· · and "'it j..., iu-..t &lt;1 mat ter or tim~ 'until the lilllk i&gt;
not u-..able ...
Win ~ctt ,;uJ the 'dlae~
qual i fie~ for S250.000 tm1r~
~ra nt

1

!.
Christopher Allen and his fath er, Dr. John Al len. disp lay a quilt they brought from Cal1fornia
made by their ancestors in 1887 while residing in Southeastern Ohio. The Aliens were in
Middleport seeking information on Samuel B. Allen. fQIJnder of the Hotel Allen now known
as the LaSalle Hotel. Pictured with the Aliens are Donna Tillis. left. who wtth her husband,
John, owns the hotel building, and Edwina Bell.
. internet to do research when
she came upoti the name of
Dr. Johh Alle n. He was also
on the internet searching for
information on Samuel B.
Allen and his early businesses.
Donna called Dr. Allen
and by the end of the conversation arrangement~ had
been made for the visit to
Middleport.
The information Donna
compiled tells the story of

the hotel founder, hi ' '""·
Edward All en. who ra n the
bu siness after hi' death, ancl
Edward\ son. Samuel C.
father of Dr. Allen. who left
Middleport anu the hntcl
husine" to hecome a jau
musi cia1 1 pia) mg piano "ith
the Teddy Hill Orchc,tr'L
Dur in~ the Allen' \'i,i t in
Middleport. Mr. ami Mr,.
Tillis took them on a tuur of
the o ld hotel where thev
gatheret..l infurmc.~tiun an~l

1n

took photographs. They also
met w.ith hi;(ory bull&gt;. Mike
and Dcbhie Gerlach. anu
\i,itcd the olJ Middleport
Hiii •Cemc ter) where their.
a rH:~o&gt;.LOr . . a r~ bu.ried.
Joining Donna and John
for ~~ ,.i~it with the Al iens
were their &gt;on. John ;urd hi'
family. and Edwina Bell
i.l'~~i~ted D'.llHla
locatin~ Lunilv r~cord~

whtl

in
on

file aiL the 1\iei~' Cnuntv
Health Dcpartmc7n.
·

STAFF REPORT
.
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

PO INT ROCK - Me ig1 County Shertff R:ll ph Tn•"ell
said a man died Thursday as the resul t of ;1 timbering
accident.
Trussell said Rubert Juchon. n.rmc ;rnd addre." unrc pon~J. was pronouced dead after lie '"'' 'tn~e· k on the
head with~ fall ing tree or ~ rcc li mh while cutt mg timber
nn North Run Road in Ct&gt;lumhia Town,hip. ncar the
Vinton Co unt y line .
A sq uad from1he \'ki g' Emergency Me.dit"al Sen ic~'·
Count y Coroner Duugf:b Hun ter :u1d Dcput' Danny
Lennard from Tru,eiJ' , offic~ \lc'r~ on the &gt;cenc .
Tnrs,cll said Jetail' on til~ uccidet\l arc not yet 1-mm 11.
Ju cbon\ 'hody 11a' rcka,cd Ill Birchfield Fu neral
Home .

I·
I

1

ll:rant

11l(l!lt.'\

J\ku.!~

Count'

Conlllli-.. . . ioncr'. we "ill bC

· apply1ng fur ~u.k.IJtinnal grant
fumk" Wingett ,;lid.
\\'inectt
"'id
State
i Rcpr~'~ntatiH'
Jinnn)
Str.:'\\ art "c~..., \·cry 'upportiYe
of til~ projc'Ct and '"'i'ted the
I , ·Ifla!.!c with !.!t:ttin!:! it on the
'[;IIC- il'\'el. State s:enatllr Joj
· P:1dgctt .mnmtnL·cd th e Jwa rd
Tue,da\ .
··or cour&gt;c thi&gt; is "clllckrful nc\\, for the penpl~ of
SHacu'e \\ lw will benefit
fr;mlthe imp roved water'!, _
t~lll 1l1ai 'LIJ.!plie' their home&gt;
dJH.i
hu:...ine-.,ses."
"aid
l'adg~tt . ·-rIll alway' pleased
to announl'e in-..tance.., in
11 hich team\\ nrk between
o..t;tiL' :mJ lncal gove rnment ...

rc~ult ... in, pr.ngrL'\.., f&lt;..lr r~.)m­

munitie .... ··

TilL' Smal l G&lt;n crnment
Ctpital
lmpnl\ emcnt
Curnmi ...... ion \\i ll relea..,e thl'
fundin~ fnr tile Svrac·u,c
'""ater . .~v . . lelll pro,iect In Jul:

Joan Kimmel, University of Rio Grande Arthritis Foundation Aquatic Leader. will be the speaker.

Diabetes Self-Management Program
June 28, 29 and 30 from 4:00 pm - 7:00 pm in the French 500 Room
Please bring a list of home medications to class.
Please have prescription from your physician to attend.
For more information on these FREE programs, or to register, call (740) 446·5080

111

Comm\mity Dewl opment
Blue Grant funding. He and
other leadin g ci ti1en, in '
S\'racu-.c an: ... v. orkin~ w·ith
tlie
M~ ig,
C"tlllntv
Commi\lioner&gt; to &gt;ec·ure thi:,
fundin g and more from the
AppalaL·hian
Regi{lflal
Council. Wingett "a-. qutck
to thank the count\ cPmmiv
-..inner-.. :.tnd colllit\ !.! ran t...,
aumini&gt;tratur Jean. T'~""'li
for the ir help in the proce".
·.· \\'i th the 'uppt&gt;rt ,,f the

America's Walk for Diabetes - Saturday, June 12 at1 0:00 am · Gallipolis City Park
Diabetes Support Group - Sunday, June 13 from 2:00pm-4:00pm · HMC French 500 Room

I
liNCOLN
.... ... .....

to\\ ~r.

lift -..Lttion Jnd \\&lt;ttl'r met~r ...
fnr the 'illa~l'. \\ tlh.!t'll -..diJ
thL· ";1ter t a n~o... '' h~c h v.l,,
hutlt 111 tile' mid .'ill, ·. i, 'hlmi n~ ... i~th of ''ear anJ tear and

June Diabetes Events

140-446-1800 .;
1-800-212·5171

Robert

l:::ngin~(Ttng · lil

publi c information office r.
The following detour i&gt;
posted ror area . n'lotomts:
U.S .
3.1
POMEROY - The Ohio the · . new
Department
of (Ravenswood Connector) to
Trimsport ation
(QDOT) .Ohioe 124 back to Ohio
District
I0 annou nced 338. Residents will continue
Thursday afternoon that to have &lt;ll'Cess to their pnipOhio 338. approximately erty, but the route i&gt; officialthree-quart ers of a mile ly closed while ODOT i'
northeast of the new U.S. monitoring and assesSing
33, has been closed as a the slip.
ODOT can not determine
result of a sl ip tha t has disat
thi s time when the road
placed pavement in the
will reopen.
vicini ty.
"Our highest priorit y i&gt; to
Pavement has shifted more
than 18 inches in places. maintain the s&lt;tfety of tho'e
according to a release traveling Ohio's roadway; ...
issued by Stefanie Phil son, said Filson.
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MTDAILYSENT INE L. COM

pruJec·t.

aJmlm-..tLttn r !or th.: 'l!ial!c.
;tnd Tim I.\ nn 1)r L\'iln

Slip.necessitates closing Man killed in
section of Ohio 338
timbering accident

Detallo on Page AS

th ~tn

murt

tht&gt;

\\'in!:..'.l't!. th.: former ~ rant-.

INSIDE

2002 FORD RANGER

ur

S661l.Oilll

OBITUARIES

see

s, ro.H.:u ...e '' ater "'' ~~~m

hic'h .:en e' ·more than 800
people .

11

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MORTGAGE

Home
National
Bank

COM

SYRA&lt;TSE la,gc t 11

SirL'el. r\ 11 arc h iteL~t
Please see Jail, A5

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rown

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AS SOCIATED PRESS

While Marion Jones was not
among four athletes to receive
letters about possible drug violations, the U.S. Anti-Doping
Agency isn' t done with her
yet.
The sweeping drug scandal.
which already has taken down
four top athletes, now threatens to bar several more - and
the sport's biggest star, Jones,
remains under investigation.
So, when the U.S. track and
tield team for the Athens
Olympics is chosen in Jul y,
there's no telling who will be
allowed to show up.
Jones, who met with
. US ADA officials last month to
· discuss possible doping evidence against her, received a
letter from the agency Tuesday
asking follow-up questions.
" USADA asked us the same
questions they asked us during
our May 24 meeting with
them," said a representative
for Jones. who spoke to The
Associated Press on condition
of anonymity.
· USADA spokesman Rich.
Wanninger said Wednesday he
could not comment 011 the case
involving Jones. who won an
unprecedented five track
medals - three of them gold
- at the 2000 Olympics.
Jones' boyfriend, I00-meter
world record holder Tim
Montgomery, was among four
prospective Olympic medaltsts who received letters
Tuesday informing them that
the USADA is pursuing possible doping cases against them
that could result in bans from
the Athens Games.
Jones, who has a nearly !year-old
. son
with
Montgomery, issued a statement after placing third in the
long jump Tuesday at a track
meet in the Czech Republic,
"Tim Montgomery is a good
person, a great athlete and an
even better father,'' she said. "I
support him and believe in
him. and I have no doubt that
if a fair process is applied that
Tun wil be racing for gold in
Athens this August."

thing."
The things that worked for Los
Angeles in Game 2 - including a significant role for rookie Luke Walton should remain part of the game plan
agai nst an opponent that's giving the
Lukers far more trouble than many
anticipated.
. The first two games exposed the
Piston~· matchup advantages at point
guard and power for.ward with
Chauncey Billups and Rasheed Wallace
outplaying the Lakers' two former
superstars, Gary Payton and Malone.
"It's not a good feelin g for me," said
Payton. who was outscored 27-2 by
Billups in Game 2. "Right n.ow I don't
have a rhythm. I don't have my confide nee."
Walton, after sitting out all of Game 1, ·
had a team-high eight assists while playing 27 minutes off the bench- the most
of any Los Angeles reserve. Coach Phil
Jackson said Walton's role in Game 3
will depend in large part on how Devean
George is playing.
If O' Neal had the final say. Walton
would probably start.
"It amazes me how he can give me the
ball, and guys that have been playing
with me for four, five . six years can ' t get
me the ball ," said O'Neal. who scored
34 and 29 points in the first two games
to break Michael Jordan's .record of 20
consecutive finals games with at least
points.
Still, the Lukers have not been feeding
the ball to the Big Fella with as much
regularity as they did in past years even with the Pistons often defending
him with single-coverage from Ben
Wallace or Elden CampbelL
"We played kind of uptight the first
three, four quarters, but once we got the
opponunity to get another five minutes
then we looked more like ourselves,"
O'Neal said.
And unfortunately for the Pistons, the
Lakers are a much more dangerous
opponent once they get comfonable .
Unless the Pistons can get back to
showing the poise and precision they
had over the first 95 minutes &lt;111d 57.9
seconds of the series, Bryant 's shot
could represent the moment when the
series got away from them .

Watchdog says
savings will wait, A8

Marlins snap
Indians' line, Bt

�)

·PageA2

NATION • WORLD
Ray Charles, Grammy-winning master of music dies at 73

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 11,2004

BEVERLY HILLS. Calif.
(AP) - Ray Charles. the
Ray Charles 1930-2004
Grammy-winning crooner
who blended gospel and
blues in such crowd-pleaser-,
as ''What'd I Say" and balRay Charles, the musical iron Career highlights
lads like "Georgia on My
who fused soul w1tf1 rhythm 1960-1968- Won nine Grammy
Mind," died Thursday. a
and blues. died of acute liyer
awards: Five certified gold :
spokesman said. He was 7 3.
disease at his Beverly Hills ' Modern Sounds in Country and
Charles died at his Beverly
home Thursday.
Western Music," ·1Can't Stop
Hills home surrounded by
l.oVlng
You," "A Man and His Soul,"
family and friends. said
spokesman Jerry Digney.
"Greatest Hits." and 'Modern
Sounds in Country and Western
Charles last public appearance . was alongside Clint
Music, Vol. 2"
Eastwood on April 30. when
1979- Charles' rendition ot
the city of Los Angeles desig"Georgia on My Mind" named the
nated the singer's studios.
official stale song of Georgia
built 40 years ago in central
1986 - One of the original
Los Angeles. as a historic
'
inductees into the Rock and Roll
landmark.
Hall of Fame; Recipient of the .
Blind by age 7 and an
Kennedy Center Honors
•
orphan at 15. Charles spent
1987- Received Ufetime
his lik shattering any notion
of musical boundaries and
Achievement award from the
defyin~ easy tlefinition . A
Recording Academy
gifted pianist and saxophon1993- Won 12th Grammy
ist, he dabbled in country.
jazz. big band and blues. and
put his stamp on it all with a
Ray Charles Enterpns.es. Record1ng 4cademy;
Industry AsSOCiatiOn ot Amenca
deep. war.m voice roughened
by heartbreak from a hardHe later became reluctant Charles had eraduated from ·
scrabtllc chi ltlhood in the
. to talk about the drug use. St. Augustine~ He wound up
segregated South.
"His sound was stunning fearing it would taint how playing gigs in black dance
halls - the so-called chitlin ·
- it was the blues. it was people thought of his work.
circuit
- and exposed him·-r ve known times where
R&amp;B. it was gospel, it was
swing- it was all tbe stuff I I've felt terrible. but once l self to a variety of music.
was listening to before that get to the stage and the band including hillbilly (he learned
but rolled int J one amazing. starts with the music. l don't to yodel) before moving to
soulful thing." singer Van know whv but it's like vou · Seattle.
He dropped his last name
Morrison told Rolling Stone have pain "and take an aspi"rin.
in
deference to boxer Sugar
and
you
don't
feel
it
no
magazine in April.
Ray Robinson. patterned
Charles won nine of his 12 more." he once said.
himself
for a time after Nat
Ray
Charles
Robinson
was
Grammy Awards between
"King"
Cole
and f(lrmed a
1960and 1966. including the born Sept. 23. 1930. in
best R&amp;B recording three Albany. Ga. His father. group that backed rhythm 'n ·
consecutive years ("Hit the Bailey Robinson, was a blues singer Ruth Brown. It
Road Jack," '•J Can't Stop mechanic and a handyman. was in Seattle's red light disand his mother, Aretha, trict were he met a young
Loving You" and ''Busted'').
stacked
boards in a sawmill. Quincy Jones, showing the
His versions of other songs
His
family
moved to future producer and composare also well known. including "Makin' Whoopee" and a Gainesville, Fla. , when er how to write music. It was
the beginning of a lifelong
stirring
"America
the Charles was an infant.
friendship.
'Talk about poor." Charles
Beautiful...
Hoagy
Charles developed quickly
once
said. "We were on the
Carmichael
and
Stuart
in
those early days. Atlantic
bottom
of
the
ladder."
Gorrell wrote· "Georgia on
Records
purchased his conCharles saw his brother
My Mind" in 1931 but it didfrom
Swingtime
n't become Georgia's official drown in the tub his mother tract
Records
in
1952.
and two
used
to
do
)aundry
when
he
state song until 1979, long
years
later
he
recorded
"I Got ·
after Charles turned it into an was about 5 as· the family
a
Woman,"
a
raw
mixture
of
struggled through poverty at
American standard.
"I was born with music the height of the Depression. gospel and rhythm 'n' ~lues ,
inside mcc That's the only His sight was gone two years inventing what was later
explanation I know of.'' later. Glaucoma is often men- called sou l. Soon, · he was
Charles said in his 197ll auto- tioned as a cause, though being called ''The Genius"
biography, "Brother Ray." Charles said nothing was and was playing at Carnegie
" Music was one of my parts ever diagnosed. He said his Hall and the Newport Jazz
... Like my blood. It was a mother never let him wallow Festival.
His first big hit was 1959's
force already with me when I in pity.
"What'd
I Say," a song built
"When the doctors told her
arrived on the scene. It was a
necessity for me. like. food or that I was gradually losing off a simple piano riff with
my sight, and that l wasn't suggestive moaning from the
water."
Charles considered Martin going to get any better. she Raeletts. Some U.S. radio
Luther King Jr. a friend and started helping me deal with stations banned the song. but
once refused to play to segre- it by showing me how to get Charles was on his way to
gated audiences in South around. how to find things." stardom.
Veteran producer Jerry
Africa. But politics didn't he said in the autobiography.
"That
made
it
a
little
bit
easiWexler.
who
recorded
take.
er
to
deal
with."
·
"What'd
I
Say,"
said
he has
He was happiest playing
Charles began dabbling in worked with only three
music, smiling and swaying
music
at 3, encouraged by a geniuses in the music busibehind the piano as his legs
cafe
owner
who played the ness: Bob Dyl an, Aretha
waved in rhythmic joy. His
appeal spanned generations: piano. The knowledge was Franklin and Charles.
"In each case they brought
He teamed with such dis- basic, but he was that much
more
prepared
for
music
new to the table,"
something
parate musicians as Willie
classes
when
he
was
sent
Wexler told the San Jo se
Nelson, Chaka Khan and Eric
Clapton, and appeared in · away, heartbroken. to the Mercury News in 1994.
movies includinj; "The Blues state-supported St. Augustine Charles "had this blaspheBrothers." Pepst tapped him School for the Deaf and the mous idea of taking gospel
songs and putting the devil's
for TV spots around a simple Blind.
Charles learned to read and words to them . ,.. He can take
"uh huh" theme, perhaps
playing off the grunts and write music in Braille, score a gem from Tin Pan A!ley or
moans that pepper his songs. for big bands and play instru- cut to the country, but. he
"The way I see it, we're ments - lots of them. 1includ- brings the same root to it,
actors, but musical ones." he ing trumpet, clarinet, organ. which is black American
music.''
once told The Associated alto sax and the piano.
"Learning to reatl music in
Charles released ''Modern
Press. "We're doing it with
Braille.
and
play
by
ear
helped
Sounds
in Country and
notes, and lyric s with notes,
me
develop
a
damn
good
Western Music, Volumes I ·
telling a story. I can take an
audience and 1;1et 'em into a memory," Charles said. "I can and 2" in the early '60s, a big
frenzy so they II almost riot, sit at my desk and write a switch from his gospel work.
and yet I can sit there so you whole arrangement in my head It inclutled "Born to Lose,"
and never touch the piano ... "Take These Chains From
can almost hear a pin drop ."
Charles was no angel. He There's no reason for it to My Heart (And Set Me
could ·be mercurial and his come out any different than the Free)'" and "I Can't Stop
Loving You." some of the
womanizing w"as legendary. way it sounds in my head."
His early influences were biggest hits of his career.
He also struggled with a
He made it a point to
heroin addiction for nearly 20 myriad : Chopin and Sibelius.
years before quitting cold country and western stars he explore each medium he took
turkey in 1965 after an arrest heard on the Grand Ole Opry, on . Country sides were some·at the Boston airport. Yet the powerhouse _big bands of times pop-oriented, while
there was a sense of humor Duke El lington and Count fiddle, mandolin, .banjo and
about even that he Basie, jazz greats Art Tatum steel guitar were added to
released both "I Don't Need and Artie Shaw.
"Wish You Were Here
By the time he was IS his Tonight" in the '80s. Jones
No Doctor" and "Let's Go
Get Stoned" in 1966.
parents were dead and even wrote a choral and

Friday, June 11
NELSONVILLE
·Region
14
Workforce
lnvestrnent CE,O consonium
will be held at 8 a.m. at the
Ramada Inn, Nelsonville.
A
NELSONVILLE
Region
14 . Workfotce
lnvestment board meeting
:will be held at 9:30 a.m. at
the Ramada Inn, Nelsonville.
Monday, June 14
.TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District Board, 7 p.m.
at the district ofice to discuss
a rate increase.

Alellendarl man and hiS SIUI

'

l

•

Clubs and
organizations
Friday, J one 11
POMEROY The
Widow's Fellowship will
meet at noon at the Wild
Horse Cafe.
Saturday, June 12
BURLINGHAM
Burlingham Camp, Modem
.Woodmen, will meet at the
hall at 6 p.m. for a potluck
-meal. Fathers will be recognized. The camp will furnish
meat, rolls, drinks and table
service.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Fish. and Game
.Association will hold its

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

.

Music legend Ray Charles performs in Canton. Ohio: March 2. 2002. Charles. a transcendent
talent who erased musical boundaries between the ·sacred and the secular with. hits such as
"'What"d I Say," "Georgia on My Mind " and ··1 Can 't Stop Loving You:· died Thursday. He was
73. Charles died of acute liver disease at his Beverly Hills home surrounded by family and
friends, said spokesman Jerry Digney. (AP Photo/The Repository, Scott Heckel)
orchestral work for Charl6 treasured time for cheS&gt;. He Charles is dead:· he told .the
to perform with the Roanoke. once told the Los Angeles Washington Post in 1983 . "l
Times: '"I'm not Spassky. but just want to make my mark.
Va .. symphony.
·
Charles· last Grammy I'll make it interesting for leave something musicallv
good hehind. If it's a big
came in 1993 for "A Song for ymr ."
··Music's heen around a ret:ord. that "s the frosting on
You." but he never dropped
out of the music scene. He long time. arid there's going . the cake. hut niusic's the
continued .to tour and long to be music long after Ray main meal."

EXTRA! EXTR.A!
Coming Friday, July 16,2004
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 .16th issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

Tristan Roach
Son of·
Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis

Pictures must be In by
Thursday July 8th, 2004.
Pictures can be picked up after
July 19th, 2004.
Complete the form below and enc lose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enc lose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:

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Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (5): _~-----------------Parent's Nam~'-----------------------City &amp; Srnte: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
••• The above information will be used in the ad. •• •

740-446-2342

2~~~r. Bottom Community
ROCKSPRINGS -A special meeting of the band
boosters called by Toney
Dingess will be held at 7 p.m.
in the Meigs High School
bandroom.

Church services
Sunday, June 13
MASON, W.Va -· A

gospel concert for missions
will be held at the Christian
Brothers Church in Mason,
, W. Va. beginning at 6 p.m.
Saturday.
Singers
will
include Ray and Deloris
Cundiff.
Sandra
Wise
Claudetie Harbin, Togeihe~
for Christ, The King Kids,
Matt Scott, and Marty Short.
For more informaton c·au
304-773-5892.
·

Other eventS

Thesday, June 15
POMEROY - Th.e Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a childhood ·
immunization clinic from 9
to II a.m and I to 3 p.m. at
the office on Memorial
Drive. Parents/guardians are
to accompany child or children, and take medical cards
if they have them.

Birthdays
Thumlay, June 17
MIDDLEPORT
Mildred E. Arnold will
observe her 85th birthday on
Thursday, June 17. She now
resides at Ov.erbrook Center
at
333
Page
Street,
Middleport, Ohio 45760 and
cards may be sent to her
there.

MASON- Mason's annu:allndependence Day celebration will be Friday, July 2 and
Saturday, July 3 at the
Stewart-Johnson VFW Post
9926
Charlotte
Jenks
Memorial
Park,
Mayor
Raymond Cundiff announced.
Plans include a parade, teen
dance. karaoke contest, children's games, chicken barbeque, an Elvis impressionist
and gospel sing, Cundiff said.
Events begin Friday with a
teen dance from 7 to 10 p.m.
Trey Anderson of Point
Pleasant will serve as DJ and
refreshments will be sold. The
dance will be at the park's
)lew shelter, where the former
tennis court was located, and
·will be chaperoned by several
·adults.
Saturday's events kick off
with an II a.m. parade. Line:UP begins at 10 a.m. at Faith
·Baptist Church on the main
'road in upper Mason. The
:parade will proceed to the fire
station, where it will turn
right and go to the park.
The Wahama White Falcon
·Band, under the direction of
:chip Hendricks, will provide
.music, ~nd several marching

groups and floats are expect- · and include watermelon eated. Anyone wanting to join in ing, a water balloon contest, a
the parade should call the city duck pond and an egg race.
building at 773-5200, or show
Various prizes of money or
up at the line-up site that day. toys will be given. Children
At noon, events get under- will also be treated to face
way at the park, .beginning painting as well as a Jupiter
with an American flag-raising Jump from noon to 4 p.m.
ceremony and the national Any adult wanting to volunanthem, sung by Delores teer to hold additional games
Cundiff. The Rev. Ron should contact the city buildBranch of Faith Baptist · ing.
Church will speak at 12: 15
Elvis impressionist Dwight
p.m., followed by an address Icenhower will take center
from Miles Epling, state adju- stage ay 3 p.m. with a show
tant of the American Legion sure to entertain. Icenhower
and the Legion's former has been recognized . both
national commander.
regionally and nationally for
A chicken . barbeque will his ability to impersonate the
also begin around noon, pre- king of rock 'n' roll.
At 5 p.m., .a gospel sing has
pared by members of Bend
Area CARE. Dinners will be been scheduled. Groups and
available for purchase, and individuals scheduled to sing
will consist of a half chicke·n, include
the
Glory land
baked beans, coleslaw and . Believers, Together for
roll for $5.
Christ, Eternity, Proclaim,
The Mason Recreation Aaron Grate, Matt Scott, the
Foundation will offer drinks Gabriel Quartet, Ray and
for · sale, as well as other Delores Cundiff, Salvation
refreshments. Any vendors and Called for Christ.
wishing to set up at .the park
Residents are urged te bring
on Saturday should contact their lawn chairs, and in case
the city building.
of rain. the sing will be
"Rockin' Ronnie" Spencer moved to the Mason United
will take the stage at l p.m. Methodist Church.
,
for a karaoke contest for all
Door prizes will be given
ages. There will be cash throughout the day, and folprizes for winners. Games for lowing the gospel sing, the
children also begin at I p.m. park will close at 9 p.m.

Friday, June u, 2004

Girl discovers boyfriend has
other priorities than grades
DEAR ABBY: I'm 15 and
had always attended the
same school umil last year.
when my parents moved 10
another state.
.
After we got here. I met
this cool guy, "Ted." We had
a relationship until · last
December. when he and his
family moved to another
neighbOrhood and he had 10
change schools.
I never had a chance to tell
Ted that I love him until ·
three months ago. We met at
a ballgame and I confessed.
He sard he loved me. too. I
asked if we could be a couple again. He told me he
couldn't deal with that right
now because he has to concentrate on school before he
deals with having a girlfriend. After he said rt. I
· realized my grades should
be my highest priority, too .
1\vo weeks ago. he called
and asked me when we
could have sex. I told him in
six years, when I'm 21 and
out of school. I think I'll be
ready by then for that kind
of a relationship .
.
Should he have asked me
that question? And should I
have agreed so quickly? CONFUSED IN GEORGIA
DEAR
CONFUSED:
Considering that Ted isn ' t
ready for a serious relationship, I'd say his question
was extre.mely presumptuous. And you didn ' t "agree
quickly." You handled the
question intelligently, letting
him know that as much as
you care for him, you 're not
a pushover and your own
priorities must come first.
Although you said you'd
consider it at 21. I have a'
hunch he was more interested in what he could expect
on Saturday night.
DEAR ABBY: "John" and

DEAR BUR"iED. If there
is a Planned Parenth ood
office within Jri1 1 11 ~ J i,tance of your nmuiiunnv.
contact ir no\\ . It i, Ji,reJ In
the telephone booL and til e
people there wi II be glad ro
help you.
·
If there isn't on~ . L·a1 1 tile'
Center'
for
Di'"""'
Control' s
national
STD/AIDS hot line: , x110 1
227-89n. The1 m'" h,· ahk
to refer you to·a public· &lt;:l in ic for a confidential e.1 alti.rtion. It's important that ~ ""
not put thr ;, off bc'&lt;.:JU'C'
some STD' can le ad 111
infertility and orher prohlems if treatmelll is Jl'"t·
poned .
DEAR ABBY: I a m ~I
and still ;inzle. Rece ntl 1 I
learned that -1 h;11e a , hcan
condition. and the dot: tnr'
predict I ha1e onl~ ti 1e 111 Ill
more ;r.ear;, to li1c . I am 111 a
turmorl trying 10 dedde i1
it's fair to continue d ~:! t i n ~ .
My friends giw me Cllllil ll:t·
in~ advice . What dn 1llll
thtnk is fair' - TO DAT E
OR NOT TO D.-H E l"i
OREGON
.
DEAR TO DATE: II IO U
haven't already done "'_-get
a second medi&lt;:al o.p1nion
about the progn osi,. If it i'
valid. then I th i n~ 1ou
should live to the lulkst. th e
time the good l.llrd all o\\ '
you. If yoU get -..cripu-. \\ it h
someone. be honeq ahout
your condrrion and nwk c
that decbion to~cthcr.
Dear Ahln i~ lliirrm /11
Abigail Vai1 Burt// . "'' "

Dear
Abby

I started dating two years
ago, when he was a college
freshman and I was a junior
in high school. He was my
knight in shining armor.
A year into our relationship. we lost our virginity to
each other. I have no excuse
other than I was in love and
believed that somedav we
would be married.
·
Six months ago, John suddenly broke up with me. He
said he needed his "space."
After three · months, he
changed his mind and wanted to get back together. He
swore he wanted only me
and nobody else. I believed
him and forgave him.
Last week. I learned that
while John and I were apart,
he'd had sex with another
girl - an especially wild
one who's ha~ numerous
lovers. I broke up with him
immediately, but now I have
.a problem. I am experiencing some symptoms that
could be an STD.
In · my small town. everyone knows everyone. If I go
to a local doctor. it'll be all
over town before dark . It
would shame my parents .
I'm leaving .soon to attend known as Jea/111 &lt;' 1'/ul/i;".
college several hundred . and "·as found ed h1 lu•1
miles from here . Would it be mothet: Pauli11 e Ph,)IIJ" harmful to wait until I get Write Dear Ah l"
ur
there to see a doctor about www.DearAhhr.( 'f lll l 11r P l J.
what I'm afraid I have' Box 69440. L,)., A n~d, ' · C \
BURNED IN KENTUCKY 90069.

RACO discusses July 4 celebration
RACINE - Plans for the and tractors display. Food
Independence Day observance and entertainment will be a
on Saturday, July 3, instead of part of the day's celebration.
Sunday, July 4, were discussed
Scholarship recii?ients were
at a recent meeting of the honored at the meetmg anended
Racine Area Community by 55 RACO members and
Association (RACO) held at guest~. President Kathryn pre·
the First Baptist Church.
sented the RACO scholarships.,
The parade will begin at along v-.ith the Edison Brace
10 a.m. However this year ·memorial scholarships, and
festivities at Star Mill Park Carol Jean Adam!; awarded the
Adams
Memorial
will not ·begin until 3 p.m. Jim
The frog JUmp has been Scholarship. All 10 of the reci!}scheduled for 5 p.m. and ients were present including
plans were. made for RACO Stephanie Bradford, Katie Sayre.
to sponsor the antique cars Bethany Amburger, Emily Hill,

Adam Lee. Tabitha Jane,_O..·,u1.1
Pullins, Josh Snuth. Cotli Da' ;,.
and Sarah Hawley 11·ere pn: ....·nt
It was noted that the fund
drive in may neued ~ ~I ~
along with food col lc·ction'
totahng 463 ircnh l( &gt;r ihc
Meigs Cooperati' e Pari , IJ
food bank. Jack \1lk lch1 and
Marilyn Caprett:i duitatecl
money to purchase one aud ltional table and 6 chair' l(lf rhe
organization. Oflicers· repurt'
were given and Daw Zi r~k
led in our pledge to tltc ll:ig at
the conclusiori of the meeting

~alltpolis ~atlp m:rlbune •jotnt jleasant ll\eglstrr

The Daily Sentinel
will help you have a Garage Sale!

Recall vote proposal off for tiartford

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

Sunday Times-Sentinel

annual Kids' Fishing Derby
from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m. on
Saturday. The derby will be
~ld on West Sh~de Road. a
mrle _west of Skinner Road,
and 1s open to children 15
and under. Free food and
drink, prizes for winners and
door pnzes wrll be of!"ered.
Derby rules anJ other mformatron are avarlable by callmg 992 -0026 ·
DEXTER
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Daughters of the American
Revolution. will meet at noon
for a picnic at the Anna
Cleland farm on · Dexter
Road. Mary K. Yost will give
the program on American
Heritage. Meat and table service will be provided for the
potluck picnic.
Monday, June 14
LONG BOTTOM - A
meetin~ of the Meigs County
Republican Party will be held
at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the

Mason prepares for July 4

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Celebrating special "ays
with you! ·

Community Calendar
Public meetings

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Phone Number:

Submittt'CI by: - - - - - - - - - -

HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY JulY 9, 2004!

Bv KEVIN KEu.v
KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

HARTFORD - Hartford
Mayor Robert Crouse has
dropped his proposal to stage
a recall election for top town
positions, based on the
.amount of time it will take to
get a request for a new vote
:scheduled.
· Crouse said that by the time
the request is reviewed and
approved by the governor.
Hartford's next regular town
.election in July 2005 will be
'right around the corner.
· The mayor requested the
recall at town council's May
meeting to allow the citizens
to decide if · dissension
between Crouse and council
members should continue over
·several issues, such as allow:ing a new apartment complex
"to be built in the town.
A recall would have to be
requested by a town resident,
who would then circulate a
petition. Once the petition is
validated, it then goes to the
·governor.
· But Crouse said he learned
through discussions with officials in Charleston that some
time will pass before the governor reviews the document.
-Current Gov. Bob Wise leaves
:Office at the end of the year.
. "It would take so long for
him to even look at it, maybe
nine months," Crouse said.
"Really, it'.s an idea that isn't
·going to happen."

Crouse responded to a question from a resident during
"Monday's council meeting ,
which drew near Iy 30 people
who crowded into council
chambers to hear other residents ask questions and get
answers.
The main question was
posed by a resident to council
members opposed to approving a building permit for the
View
proposed
Elm
Apartments, a 32-unit hous'
ing complex targeted for
Hartford by Moundsville
developer Elm View Ltd.
Council member Patty Neal
said there were two considerations involved: Opposition
by residents of the area where
the complex will be located
and the burden additi.onal
housing · will place on the
town's water lines.
"Our water lines are about
40 years old," she said. "If we
get more lines in, it's going to
pull us down."
While some residents countered that Hartford's water
lines are in better condition
than those of surrounding
communities, Crouse reminded council and the audience
that Chapman Construction,

who will own and operate the
apartments through Elm
View, has proposed paying
$20,000 to upgrade the water
system to handle the additional demand.
Neal and Councilman Sam
Anderson are also concerned
about obtaining eiJVironmental permits from the state and
the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers due to marshy conditions near the proposed construction site, citing the
expense to town when its general fund is running low.
Crouse said he understands
it will be Chapman's responsibility to obtain such permits
at no expense to the town .
Neal and Anderson said they
will back the project if that
understanding is made clear.
"If we gel those agreements, I'll be for it,"
Anderson said.
Crouse said he will check
with Chapman and with the
town's attorney, James Casey,
on the contract proposal
between the town and
Chapman and report back at
council's next meeting.
In other action, council
approved the . town clean-up
for the week of June. 21.

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The Daily Sentinel
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�.. PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General M·anager-News Editor

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

Moderately Confused

Friday, June 11, 2004

Friday, June 11,

· Obituaries

Pomeroy Police crack down results in arrests and convictions
Bv J.

for people who want to quit
smoking. It is only after a
person signs up that he
learns that the Mafia runs the
organization. But by then it
is too late to drop out.
The punishments get successfully worse each time a
participant in the program is
caught smoking. The first
.time a man smokes ·after
enrolling. for example, the
Mafia snatches his wife and
tortures her. And after the
fifth offense, Quitters, Inc.
absolutely guarantees that
the enrollee will never
smoke again - because he
will 'wake up dead the next
morning with a bullet in his
head.'
Of course, this, too, is
extreme. But if we ever get
to the point where we feel
there is nothing to fear that God no longer makes us
toe the line, that a smart
lawyer can always get us off
no matter what we have
done, that our country has
gone soft on wrongdoing -.
at that point society will be
in grave danger.
Are we approaching that
point now?

I'D

LIKE AN

ATkiNS-

SHAPED
POOL.

WE WliLMISS
THE GREAT
COMMUNICATIONER.

RUTLAND - Adah E. Taylor, 87, Mulberry Street.
Rutland, passed away Thursday. June 10. 2004 at her granddaughter's residence.
Sh~ was born August 20, 1916 at Kyqer, Ohio to the late
Holhs and Estella Rupe Searles. She was a seamstress,
She ts survtved ·by a sister, Katie Robinson, Rutland, Ohio;
a daughler-m-law, Velma Taylor, Middleport, Ohio; three
grandchildren Teresa (Ed) Diddle, Rutland, Ohio, Sue (Jay)
, Dewhurst. Rutland, Ohio , and Kevin (Shannon) Taylor.
Pomeroy, Ohao.; great-grandchildren, Jeremy and Amanda
Honaker, Chelsea and Ashley Ray, Kaitlin and Con Dewhurst,
Adelson Rtgaud, Alexis Taylor, Christopher Chaney, .an\)
' Valene and Rob Dtddle; great-great grandchildren, Selena,
·Shay Ia, and Skylar Honaker; and a special friend, Tori
Chaney.
·
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by husband
Earl Taylor, a son Tony Taylor, two sisters and five brothers.
Services will be held Sunday June 13, at 2 p.m . at the
Buchfield Funeral Home of Rutland. Ohio with Pastor Rob
Barber officiating. Burial will be at Gravel Hill Cemetery
'
Cheshire, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral home Saturday from 4 to 9
p.m.

Roland Willard Wolfe
BRADLEY, ILL. - Roland Willard Wolfe, 63, died
Thursday, June -10, 2004 at his home in Bradley, Ill.
Born on Jan. 24. 1941 in Racine, he was th.e son of Dory
Marcus and Martha F. Ours Wolfe. He was married to Freda
Mae Saunders at the First Church of the Nazarene in
Gallipolis on July 8, 1960.
,
He was an eight rear employee of the Department of Child
and Famtly Servtces tn Kankakee County, Joliet and
Springfield, . a social worker for Central Baptist Family
Servtces retmng tri 1986, and owned and operated B&amp;B
Service Centers in Bradley and Bourbonnais. Ill . and Wolfe
Engineering in Bradley, Ill.
He served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1958 to 1960. He
was a member of College Church of the Nazarene in
Bourbonnais. Ill. He graduated from Racine High School in
1958, Olivet Nazarene University in 1967 and the University
of Illinois in 1970 with a master of social work degree. He
helped create the social work program at Olivet Nazarene
Umversity and also taught in the social work program.
He was a past president of the Kankakee training center. a
past chairman of the Board for the Reed Institute of
Leadership, a past vice president of the Bradley Bourbonnais
Chamber of Commerce. He worked on cars and could fix anything.
·
He is survived by his wife, Freda Mae, of Bradley; daughters and sons-in-law, Christina and D.arren Leavitt of Grand
Blanc, ·Mich.; Deborah and Michael Devore of Bradley and
Ashley Wolfe of Bradley; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law,
Roger and Susan Saunders of Bowie, Md., and Ray and Sue
Durea of Lafayette, Ind. ; and brothers· and sisters-in-law,
Morris and Joyce Wolfe of Bidwell, Ohio, and Cecil (Eddie)
and Sharon Wolfe of Jackson; along with six grandchildren.
Other survivors are his mother who resides in Racine; his
mother-in-law, Mabel Saunders of Gallipolis; s.everal nieces,
nephews, aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was preceded in death by his father, fl\ther-in-law, Alfred
Saunders, a sister-in-law, Carol Wolfe, another sister-in-law.
Earlene Dubea, a nephew ,Jeff Wolfe, and a niece, Janelle
~fu.
.
Funeral services will be held at I 0 a. in. Monday at the
College Church, With burial in Mound Grove Cemetery in
Kankakee, Ill. Friends may call Sunday, June 13, from 2 to 5
p.m. at the Bourbonnais Chapel of Schreffler Funeral Homes.

© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

Names omitted
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Ronald Reagan: the summing up
In summing up the life of
Ronald Reagan, one real·
izes that it can be viewed
from various perspectives.
One is the personal. I had
the privilege of knowing
William
Ronald Reagan well - not
Rusher
intimately, but well - from
shortly after his election as
governor of California in
1966 until . Oct. 28, 1993,
when I paid what was to be precious pleasure. Preci\JUS,
my last visit to him, not because tt was vouchsafed
long before he withdrew to me among so many supe·
into the shadows of rior demands on his time;
Alzheimer's. I have wonder- , and a pleasure, because he
ful recollection s of him at had a tremendous gift for
his home · in · Pacific enveloping his friends in a
Pali sades, in the governor's warm and genial atmosresidence in Sacramento, in phere redolent of both fondthe White House, and in hi s ness. and respect. There was
final home in Bel-Air, nothing in the least showy
where he died.
or aggressive in his manner,
And then there were the and I never once detected
letters, and the phone call s. . the slightest trace of the
I'll never forget the day in remoteness that some (like
1981 when the swi tchboard hi s would-be biographer
operator at National Review Edmund Morri s) reported
rang me and said, 'Mr. sensing in his personality.
Rusher, the · president is What you saw was what·
calling.' In all innocence I you got: a lovely person,
asked, 'The president of modest but confident. and
what?' - only to have her true to hi s beliefs.
ace me with, 'The President
The perspective of his1ory,
of the United States'' While of course, is far different,
he was in the White House, and far more important. He
the phone call s were all made mistakes, as we all do,
one-way; I cou ld never but his central achievements
&lt;JUite bring myself to initi- as president are massive in
ate a call to a being so exalt· their simplicity. He assumed
eu.
the leadership of a nation
I soon learned that Ronald deeply divided and badly
Reagan 's friendship was a rattled by the Vietnam war,

and gave it back its confidence and its pride. He coranalyzed, when
rectly
almost no one else was
doing so, the essential weakness of that 'evil empire,' the
Soviet Union ('Their economy is a basket case,' he told
me in 1986 ), and set it on the
road to its destruction. And
always, in his dealings with
other countries and in his
prescriptions fm our own, he
spoke up 'for that freedom
that he believed was God's
precious gift to mankind.
In retrospect, it is tempt. ing to say that the most
remarkable thing about
Ronald Reagan was his
ordinariness. His manner
was almost alw.ays relaxed
and good-humored. He.
could, and did, get annoyed
from time to time, but even
then he usually managed' to
take part of the blame. (In a
1984 letter to me, he wrote
of the hostile media, ' In my
nightly prayers I have to
ask forgivene ss for what
I've been thinking of those
villains all day.') He loved
a good joke, and was
superb at telling them.
Above all, he loved hi s
wife. The marriage of Ron
and Nancy Reagan is one of
the great love stories of our
I ime, and her devotion to
him in this last , desolating
decade of hi s li ving death is
testimony to the power and

beauty of the human spirit.
But there is nothing 'ordinary' about such a man. You
could throw sponges on the
street for a month and never
hit a person like him. Most
of us are bundles of anxiety,
• animosity and hope, just try·
ing to make it through
another day. Where is the
man like Ronald Reagan so ready to be a friend, so .
sure of his central beliefs, so
fundamentally at peace with
himself? The American people sensed this, and wisely
chose to follow him. The
outpouring of grief at his
death tells us all we need to
know about what America
thought of him.
This is a free country, and
anyone who wishes to do so
can disagree with his policies, and even denigrate his
achievements. It will be
many years before historians -· a disputatious lot even agree among themselves (as I believe they
ultimately will) that he was
the greatesl president of.our
time, and one of the greatest
of all time. But for me, and
for now, it is enough to
offer this last salute to the
fine st man I have ever
known.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Instilule for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

-·

-------- -

TUPPERS PLAINS Joey Wilcoxen of Gallipolis
and the praise and worship
band from Oasis Worship
Center performed at the
Meigs County Relay for Life
and their names were not
included in Sundgy's story
about the Relay.
Accardi ng to JoAnn Crisp,
chairman, the Relay has
raised $29,500 to date, but
some funds remain uncollect·
ed. Last year, the Relay generated $31 ,000 for cancer
research.

Board meets
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Regional

Jail
from Page A1
has completed preliminary
plans for the jail, which
would be built onto the rear
of the existing school building. II would include cells for
men and women, recreational

POMEROY - Three men charged
with fighting in the Pomeroy Parking
lot last week have pled guilty in
. Pomeroy Mayor's Court.
Matthew
Dailey,
25.
Brian
Buffington, 37, _both of Middleport. and
William Wooten, 60, Letan, W.Va .,
were each charged by the Pomeroy
Police Department with disorderly conduct by fighting - a misdemeanor.
They were each fined ·$63 plus court
costs by Charles Knight. the magi strate. .
Assistant Pomeroy Police Chief Joe
Kirby Jr., was first called to the scene
and he was later assisted by lieutenant

Sewer District Board will
meet at 7 p.m. on June 14 at
the district ofice. The board
will discuss a rate increase.

Tour planned
RUTLAND
-The
Southeast Ohio Woodland
Interest Group is planning a
field trip on Saturday, June
19, to the Rural Action
Research and Education
Center in Rutland.
Information and reservations are available by calling
593-8555. Those who wish to
carpool Should meet at the
Athens County Extension
Office on West Union Street
at 9:45 a.m. The presentation
at the center will begin
around II a.m.
and medical facilities, and a
kitchen area.
Swift said he and Mayor
Sandy Iannarelli are now
working wit~ the Governor's
Office of Appalachia and
. other state funding sources to
secure funding for construct·
ing the new jail. The cost of
construction has not yet been
detenni ned .
'

Coming Thursday .in the Sentinel ... ·
\

''cp~9e~ r~ ~ &amp; ·

'Th~:. t~ 3P~"
entertainment In the Tri·Stlte

type of behavior," he said.
Most recently this past Tuesday at the
parking lot. Rebecca Wolfe. 23. of
Racine was arrested for domestic vio·
lence, which is a first degree misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in
jail and a $1.000 fine. According to
police repons. while her former
boyfriend, Charles Sampson. 21. of
Racine was recovering item&gt; that
belonged to him from her vehicle. she
attacked him. She was arre;ted by PPD
corporal Ronnie Spaun and taken to
Gallia County Jail.
.
Wolfe pled no contest to the domestic
violence charge Thursday morning in
Meigs County Court. Judge Steven
Story fined her $200 plus court costs.

customers that apply.
and the re will be no extensions on water
Depending on where the leak is locat- service termination s.
ed, the sewer will be adj usted. The . Council also approved a budget reviMASON - An amendment to the sewer will be adjusted based on average sion in the sidewalks account. gave sec·
town of Mason 's ordinance prohibiting use of 75 cents per 1,000 gallons after ond reading to an adult entet1ainment
di sorderly conduct was approved dur- average use has been determined for ordinance for the town. and approved
ing town council's regular meeting water customers.
an ordinance amending the police JUdge
Mondav.
~
The "revision decrees that anyone
Only one pool fill will be allowed per fee.
guilty of a disorderly violation has com- year over 1,500 gallons. Not included
A recommendation to pay town
mined
a minor
misdemeanor. are hot tubs, water beds, power washers employees on a weekly basis was vo ted
down. and workers will continue to be
Additionally, if the offender persists or simi lar devices .
.. f
bl
·
The town has decided that the first paid every two weeks. Mayor Raymond
a ter reasona e warnmg or request to otfense for a bad check will re sult in a Cundiff said.
desist," disorderly conduct becomes a
fourth degree misdemeanor.
notification with one week to make
Di scuss ion on salary for the mayor.
The penalty will be no more than · good on the check with cash. Two or recorder and counci l members wa&gt;
$100 for the first , second and third more bad checks will be turned in to tabled .until afte r the town's 2005 elecoffense. the ordinance 's .new language magistrate court. After a second bad lion .
check is. received from a customer. the
Current town officials cannot approve
sat'd. ,
Council . also adopted a policy to town wtll no longer accept that cus- salary adjustments whil e st ill servi ng.
cover the water and sewer departments tomer's checks.
and Cundiff said the decision will be
on such issues as leaks, pool fills, bad
On deferred, payment. if a customer is left to a new administration 1f another
checks and deferred payment, in accor- unable lp pay the bill, a payment plan · one takes effect after the next election.
dance with state Public Service will be established on the past due
Council member Agries Rou sh
Commission guidelines.
amount. A reasonable negotiated reminded residents wanting to panici·
Leaks must now be repaired before amount not under $10 shall be paid pate in Mason's yard of the month conadjustments are made, with only one monthly in addition to the current test to regi&gt;ter or re-enrofl " ·ith the
adjustment per leak. The adjustment is amount due.
town . Judging for thi s month's contest
made on the utility lax and sewer for
No predated checks will be accepted. will be June 16.
BY KEVIN KELLY

KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER.CDM

For the record
Dissolutions .
POMEROY- Actions for
dissolution of marriage have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Violet Tibbbs. Dexter, and
Albert E. Tibbs, Jr., Ironton,
and by Brian Everett Smith,
Ellen
Middleport, and
Nichole Ball, Rutland.
·Dissolutions were granted to
henry W. Rider and Sandy L.
Rider, Seth E. Carleton and
Christa N. Carleton, and Roy
W. Proffitt and Doris J. Proffitt.

Syracuse; Ricky Joe Smith,
Jr., 25, Middleport. and
Angelia Dawn Taylor, 23,
Racine; and Darrell Everett
Lee, 22, Albany; and Nicole
Laneigh Harper, 18, Albany.

Fred W. Crow lll sentenced restitution the family of the
Bowling to folD" years on the victim. in amount to be deteraggravated vehicular homicide mined. and hi s · operat or'.s
charge and a ye-&amp; on the posses- license was suspended fi.&gt;r life .
sion charge, which he suspended.
HI! was given cred it for
Bowling was ordered to pay 592 days served.

Divorce
POMEROY - A divorce
action has been fi led in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Barbra A.
Cheadle, Glouster, against
Bradley M. Cheadle, Albany.

Sentenced

Proudly Presents

TROLL
playing selections from his new CD

POMEROY -John P.
Bowling was sentenced to five
years in prison, one year of
· which was suspended, on
charges of aggravated vehicular
homicide, a third-degree felony.
and possession of Oxycontin, a
fifth-degree felony.
Common Pleas Cowt Judge

POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to
Shawne
Nicholas
McCarty, 32, Syracuse, and
Veronica Lynn Chapman, 41 ,

"White Line Fever"

Saturday, June 12th
9:30 -1:30
· Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-7986

USBD t:ARS '1'0 BB SO£D '1'0 'I'HB JIUB£11: FOR
IJS £OW IJS $19
I.ocal GalllpDlls DNler WHI Dispose Dlllver U,IIIIIJ,IIIJD Worth
Dl Pr.Owned rlllhlt:ln June 12th
GALLIPOLIS. OH. Local Dealership has announced plans to liquidate their used vehicle inventory 10 the public by means of a
SUPER PRICE SLASHER SALE this coming Saturday June 12th. During this 2 Hour event. every used vehicle will be sold for
th'ousands below its original price, including used cars for as low as $79~* "Why price them so low? For two very lmponant reasons." explains Neal Peifer. Sales Manager of Norris Northup Dodge. "First of all, strong new car sales have created an-m·er abundance of quality pre-owned vehicles 10 sell. The recent economy has driven interest rates down. allowing more and more people to
trade up to new vehicles; and with auto leasing at an all time high. we are seeing more lease return vehicles than e1·er. The circum·
stances indi cate that we have no other choice but to liquidate this inventory as fast as possible... Norris Northup Dodge has decided
to offer these vehicles to the public for thousands below market value before they go to auction. "The local communities haw ,hnwn
us great suppon and we're very grateful. We would rather give these greal buys to the public than unload them at an auction. A huge
selection of over 200 pre-owned cars. trucks. vans and sport utilities will be available for this event. "We must reduce our used inmltory at all costs, so customers can expect these vehicles to be sold for near or below wholesale,'' stated owner Mike Northup. Cars
that would normally sell for $3,000 to SI~.000 could be thousands lower.There is truly.a ve hicle for every budget." All vehicle, will
be on display in a special area. Customers are requested to find a ve hicle that imerests them and the rest is up to the PRICE ·
SLASHER. "This will truly be a great oppo[!unity, as our inventory must be reduced by atleasl half. and for that reason used cars
will be priced as low as $79." CUSTOMERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO ARRIVE BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9A M AND
!0:45AM SATURDAY JUNE 12TH IN ORDER TO PRE-REGISTER AND CHECK ON FINANCII\G AND QUALIFICATION
PACKAGES. THE SPECIAL AREA WILL BE OPENED PROMPTLY AT I0:45AM Here is how the PRICE SL\SHER SALE
works: AT 10:45 all vehicles will be opened so customers may inspect them. The retail price will be posted on the windshield of each
vehicle. When the $79 Sale begins at II :OOam the Price Slasher will cross out the retail price on each vehicle and replace it with the
new SUPER SLASHER SALE PRICE. Prices will be cut one timeio the rock bottom price. including vehicles for only $79. This
Super Sale is for the public only-auto dealers and wholesalers are not eligible to participate. "It's just that simplc."said Neal Pdkr.
Choose the vehicle you're interested in, be the first one behind the wheel. and you get the first opportunity to purchase thai Ychick at
the Super Slasher Sal e Price." There will be special finance .and credit anal~sts on hand to get you prequalified hef?re 1he sale. "We
.will have some of the most liberal lenders in the area at this event. so eve n tf you have had trouble ohtamtng auto t111anc1ng 111 1he
past, don't count yourself out. If you bring a current payroll stub and your driver"s license. chances arc we can arrange financing for
you." This $79 Super Price Slasher Sale this Saturday, June 12th. will be the Biggest Used Car Sales Event that we h&lt;i\·e ever had
and I expect over 1()()satisfied customers to leave with great cars at great prices," said Mr. Northup. The $79 Super Pri.:e Slasher
Sale will be held at Norris Northup Dodge, Gallipolis, Oh . Remember be here no later than 10:45am lhts Saturday June 12th Cnnw
early or call to prequalify and find out all the details of this once in a lifetime event!! 800-446-0842 or 740-446-0842
Own the car. truck. or SUY you have dreamed about at a price considered impossible until now---- Just in time for Summer Ya.:ation

NORRIS NQ.RTHUP DODGE, INC.
T H ••

~,e~~~

GRAB LIFE

Your plcle to weekend

Jeff Miller from the Middleport Police
Department and Meigs Sheriff's
Deputy Jim Stacy. The three law officers broke up the fighting with little or
no incident.
PPD Chief Mark Proffitt said patrols
of the parking lot have increased significantly si nce the incident.
"We have had numerous incidents in
the past, now that summer is here, we
need to be more vigilant about keeping
a watch over the parking lot and downtown areas," he said .
In the past, Proffitt said there has
been trouble with flower pots being
smashed up and plate glass windows
being busted out of storefront windows.
"We feel that our officers presence in
these areas will be a deterrence to thi s ·

Mason amends disorderly conduct action

Marriage
licenses

Local Briefs

~AH{ER.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Adah E. Taylor

Shari'ah law is the basis of
justice. and judgment is usually according to the Hanbali
tradition of Islam - mean·
ing the law tends to be con·
servative and the punishGeorge
ments severe. Aggravated
Plagenz
theft, for example, can be
punishable by the amputa·
tion of a hand or other
appendage. While a cruel
'You'll get a spanking,' his and unusual punishment
(and, to say the least, a
mother told him.
.
David's 4-year-old mind human rights violation often
weighed the alternatives. He reported by such organizaas
Amnesty
decided to take the candy tions
when hi s mother wasn't International), its conselooking and risk a spanking. quences are that there has
He knew his mother's spank· been very little stealing his·ings were never very hard.
torically in Saudi Arabia.
The criminal mind works
Is this carrying fear too
like that , too. It has far? Sure. But is it unreasonlearned to count on the able to hope that if we could
leniency of our legal sys- get people to again fear
tem just as David had spending an eternity in hell,
learned to cotlrit on the we could cut down signifileniency of his mother. cantly on crime in our sociPunishment meted out by ety?
Stephen King's short story
the courts for wrongdoing
is often so slight that even 'Quitters. Inc.· is a spine-tinthe fear of being caught gling thriller about how fear
and convicted act s as . no can be put to use in a good
cause and even save your
deterrent.
It does in other countries, life. As the story tells it,
though. In Saudi Arabia, the Quitters. Inc. is a program .

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www. mydailysentinel.com

'

Nothing left to fear
'Let me assert my firm
belief that the only thing we
have to fear is fear itself,'
President
Franklin
D.
Roosevelt told the country in
1933, in his first inaugural
address.
Hi s words inspired a
nation floundering in a sea
of Depression and hard
times. Wise as Roosevelt's
counsel was. eliminating all
fear from our lives would be
a mixed blessing. Fear has
its positive side, too.
I sometimes wonder
· whether a lot of our crime
doesn't stem from the disappearance of fear in our lives.
We used to be afraid of hell
- but we don't believe in
hell any longer. We used to
have a fear of God - but
today we are taught that God
is loving -and forgiving.
Offending him; or anyone
else for that matter, doesn't
frighten us anymore.
A nephew of mine, when
he was 4, was told by his
mother not to eat any of .the
candy on the coffee table
because it was for company.
'What will you do to me if
I eat it?' he &lt;!Sked.

2004

BYTHEHORNS

•

CHRYSLER

oN E

l@J

252 Upper River Road

·

1/2 Mile South of the Silver Bridge, Gallipolis, Ohio
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

740-446·0842 or 800·446·0842
1•r SatlsfiCIIID llll'llll88d''

- ----

·.

.

�8',.

FAITH • VALUES
Do some power
DIET: What Would Jesus Eat? Diets
swapping with God! grapple with God's gastronomic will
Friday, June

A certain spiritual truth
brightened before my eyes
and enabled me to see more
clearly what submission to
God involves.
Revelation 4 : II states,
"'Thou art worthy. 0 Lord. to
receive glory and honor and

SHELBY. N.C. (AP) - The
There's nothing new about
Rev. George Malkmus often religious beliefs dictating what
preaches about how he believes people put in their mou~s.
the world of proper eating began Some Jews keep kosher, while
- or. in his opinion. vegan.
observant Muslims adhere to
"The Lord gave us evel)'lhing dietary requirements called
we need in the Garden of Eden: halal . Generations of Catholics
fruits. vegetables, nuts and rn;y~p not eating meat on
seeds." the preacher-tumed'&lt;liet
adviser said in an interview at
But the new God-based diets
Hallelujah Acres, his Nonh target rwo specific audiences I1C?'
Cuulina headquat1ers. 'That's generally thought of as oompallwhy we call the way we eat the ble -· evangelical ~stians
·Hallelujah Diet.' We celebrate and what Pohll calls the back to
its true creator."
nature" health buffs who gravitate
toward an organic way of
Malkmus's diet" is one of a
hatch of Bible-based eatin~ eating.
plans flooding bookstores ano
Rubin. a Messianic Jew. says
health lOad stores. Last sum- he is a member of both clans. He
n1er's "What Would Jesus peddles supplements and
Eat''.'' by Dr. Don Colbert, litestyle products to the healtl1
cncoumges eating · non-animl!]- food industry through h1s
derived "living foods" and Garden of Lite comr.any. At the
eschewing most "dead'' or same time. he describes himself
as a "biblical health coach."
processed tOads.
'The Weigh Down Diet" by
''My ministry is \O help
Gwen Shamblin offers few food chanse the health of this world
resllictions but encourages fol- one life at a time," he said.
lowing "God's perfect boundSimilar claims by MaJkmus,
Shan1blin and others rankle
wies of hun&amp;er and fullness."
Malkmus .s diet - which those who see spinning the $40
draws, he says, ·from Genesis billion diet industry to a
I:29 - bans all animal products Christian audience as just anothexcep\ for honey and promotes er.way of using God as a gim~m RO percent raw diet.
·
mick.
''It's not just cashing in," said
And tl1ere's the newest addition to the growing Christian Stephen Barrett. a Columbia
health ~~nre, Jordan S. Rubin's Uruversity·tr.tined ps')lchologist
·The Maker's Diet." Drawn and founder of the Internet site
·
·
fmm the book of Leviticus, "Quack-watch."
Rubin's diet encourages eating
" I think that the people who
cenain meat and dairy products promote these things, they· re
;md wams against an all-raw. here to save the world and they
preach and they're the Messiah
''egan regimen.
(of
health). Therr personal1Ues
"The healthiest diet is to con·
sume meaLs, poultry, dail)', fruits and characters have all sons ot
w1d vegetables ~md to consume grandiosity'' and linle scientific
them _in a fonn the body was basis, Ban-ett said.
designed for." Rubin S3ld. He
Politi applauds the focus on
adv1ses eating foods in their healthy eatmg, but adds, ''I don't
most orgamc and least- think 11 has to be confused with
processed forms. Dail)', for God."
'
msumce, should not be pasteurMainstream nutritional or
ized and defatted and pumped medical Credentials are hard to
witl1 hom\ones but rather taken come by in this crowd. Rubin
as a yogurt drink derived from says he holds _degrees in naturomw, fermented milk.
pathic medicme and numnon.
Meat or vegan' Raw or but both involved unaccredited
cooked' The abundance of progranlS and his degrees couldallegedly godly guidance is n't be verified.
enough to make the would-be
Malkmus. who said he is not
dieter pray for divine interven- currently affiliated with a spec!fic church, has no formal sctentiftion.
Elisabetta Politi, nutnllon ic training. But he does employ
manager at Duke University's a researcher who deterrruned
Diet and ·Fitness Center in that the Hallelujah diet was defi·
Durham, hopes people don't cient in vitamin B-12.
'Ths shocked me. that God's
take the proposed diets too seriperfect eating plan could have a
ously.
"I am just thinking of the safe- !law," Malkmus said. "But we
ty of having unprocessed dairy realized that ftuits and vegetaproducts. From a public health bles back then were more nutriperspective, · it's undoable," tious because of the topsoil."
Poliu said of Rubin's push for
Barrett sees the 70-year-old
raw milk. "It's an extreme going Malkmus - who claims he
back to an agricultw-e society healed his own colon cancer
through diet but doesn't furnish
that we are no longer."

Ron
Branch

.

What struck me most 1s that
it says God is worthy to
receive power. It is easy to
The. implication 1s th at
understand that God IS worpower
is being he.ld back
thy to receive g lory and
from
some
source. It God IS
honor. But. that He should
worthy
to
receive
power. it
receive power became a curi fo llows that there is power to
ous matter to consider.
give
Him. But. from where i_s
Power is definitely assoc iit
to
come
''
ated with God for at least
Does
it
invol ve power that
three significam reasons._
First , power ts associated · comes from Satan'? No. the
with God because He holds Cross and the Resurrection
the source of power. He has took care of that .
Does it involve pnl\er that
the creative· power. He spoke
all into existence. He has the comes from Heaven? No.
historical power. fur every becau se God exercises Hi s
from Hem·en.
act in human history is upder power
So where is the concern·&gt;
His sovereignty. He has salAc.lllallv. the hold out is
vation power by which He found wfth us • We do not
has r~deemed mankind . He mind giving Him our glory
has the judgment power by and honor. Yet. we seem to
which He will judge each mind very mud1 giving Hi1i1
(airly. The Heavens declare. our power.
the Word supports. and God
Oh. ves. indeed. we have
proves that He is omnipotent. power/We have the power of
Second, power IS associat- persona lity. of emotion .. of
ed with God becau se· He spirituali ty. of intluence. ol
alone is worthy to be pre- will. We not onlyhave power.
eminent. · There is no deity but we like our power.
like the God of Israel. the
The only problem is that
Father of the Lord Jesu s we use our po\\rt:r in unrighlChrist! He ·is worthy to be enus ways . \\'hen we LhC our
omnipotent because He is power. personal relat_i~1nships
holy. No sin is in God or get broken. The speLl lie pnnassociated with God. He 1s ciples of God 's Word get d~&gt; ­
worthy to be omnipotent regarded. and the quality of
because He is , righteou s. ou' r . lives degenerate s. We
which means that His very tend to dominate over others
nature and all His acts are in in hurtful ways. When we use
perfect agreement. He is wor- our power. our wi lls become
th y to be omnipotent because intlated with the hot mr ol
He is immutable. He does not se lf-deceit.
change. What God has been
But, swapping our power
in the man's historical past for God's provides great
God will be in man's future. advantage. God's pow er
Third, power is associated . restores broken relation ships
with God because He knows as we yield to Him our power
best how to utilize His of emotion ..God's power proomnipotence. Hi s omni_Po- vides salvation when we
_tence possesses pal!ent yie ld to Him our power of
power, which . is perfectly srirituality. God's power procoordinated with H1s w11l. vtde s a Joyful expene nce m
His . omnipotence possesses this life when we yield to
loving power and forgiving Him our power of will. That
power.
is why He is worthy to
Undoubtedly, power is receive power.
associated with God. It is
He gives the best and we
absolutely true that God is receive the best when we
worthy of power. But, that understand that He is worthy
which has been outlined does to receive power. God wants
not sufficiently plumb the yo ur power! See .if things
depths of meaning in that don't change when you subGod is worthy to receive missively swap your power
for His.
power.

· ·r ·r

r

r

11, 2004

26 vears in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

H• Baptist Chuoch ISouth~m l
570 Gmnl ~1. . Mu.ldlcport. Su nda~· school
· •uo a. m . Wo r~&gt; h q1 - l l .;.~ . m . and 6 p.m,.
Wo;dne.,J..t~ S ~·n. K~· - 7 t•.rir.
Rutland Finot Hapli~t Chun:h
SunJa) Se h1-..:•l - I) .l O &lt;1 m ., W1, r~l up Ill -l5 J m .
Pnmero~·

Sun Ja~

10. ma. m.
Fit!\t SouthNn Baptist
Pri..l·. Pa ~ tnr F. La mar
o·sr)al\1 , Sun da)· Sl· hool - tJ:JO, &lt;u n ..
Wtl"-hip - R 15 a m., 9A~ am &amp; 7:00 p.m ..
\\ l·dn cl&gt;li &lt;~ } Sen 1n.·~ · 7:00p.m
-'1 ~7~ P• • llll' rl•~

P;r~ lur .

\\un hrp Wcdn c~&gt; d..t ~

'.'.

'.

...

..
,

i:
•

'

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SUNDAY

..
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,.

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Manhaw

Acts

Acto

Acts

Acts

Acts

Acis

28:16-20

11:1-18

11 :t9·30

12:1-19

13:1·12

13:13-31

t3:32·52

499 Richland Avenue, Athens

·t-800-451·9806

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

7 00

p .m .•

Scr\ rn ·· 7.(Xl p. m.

:r.m.. Wnr"h•r - 10:-IU a.m .. 7·00 Jl m .
\\.:dnc"'l&lt;ly

S crn&lt;.-c~&gt;-

7·00 p nl

Silvtr Run

Rapti~l

Pa.. lu r: Jt1hn Swan snn . Sund a~ S~ hoo l -

The Rev. George Malkmus looks over the organic garden at
Hallelujah Acres in Shelby. N.C. Malkmus' vegan diet is one of
a bevy of Bible-based eating plans flooding bookstores and
health food stores . (AP Photo/ Chuck Burton )
industry" because it's not re~:
lated. the claims aren't scientifically proven and it's expensive.
Rubin also recently launched
a line of "advanced hygiene"
soaps and argues that The
Maker's Diet is about more than
just eating - it's a whole way of
life.
"When God gave me this
health message I knew it would
have a major impact on the
world,'' he said. "Just as the
Bible is the best selling book in
histol)'. I see no reason why
'The Maker's Diet' can't be the
best selling health book in history."

medical records -· as the best of
a bad lot.
"Mal kmus has a little more
ethics than (others).'' he Said.
Malkmus's argument that
people who ate a mw diet in bib-_
tical times lived an avemge ol
912 years gets linle more than a
lmwh from Barrett and Politi.
· ~t can't be scientifically tested or proven," Barren ~aid of the
contention.
Rubin claims his diet cwro
his Crohn 's disea&gt;e and sells
dietary supplemenL~ under tl1e
Garden ofLife label
Politi says she is 'just very,
very wary of the supplement

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER

"Let your light so sl1ine before

Athens, Pomeroy nr Parkershu rg

good works and glorify your
Father in heaven...
Mallhew 5: 16

740-667-3 156

740-949-2210
':A Home Bank for

~11.

l "niun Baptist

Pa ~ h•r

; Da 1 rJ Wrwmall . S u n da~ Sc h •&gt;~•I ­

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\\c d nc~ d ..r~

E \ ~ 111ng

Se n

i~o·o: ,

(l ..lil

p .rn.

• 6: :IOp.m.

Rethlt"hem Baptist Church
Grc&lt;JI l:i cnd . Route 1:! -1 . Ral· inc . 011.
P: L~Inr : IJamd MCl"l'a. SU(Iduy Srhonl 1UO :un .. Sunday '.-\mrship - 1~ · :1~ .a.m.,
Wedr..: ... t a~ B rhk Study - ll ·OO p Ill.
Old Rcthd Frt·t' Will Baptist Church
21!6 0 1 St. Rt . 7. Midt.ll cpml. Sund a~
Sd w11l - 10 11 111.. E\e ning 7:00 p.m ..
Thur-.d:t~ S \•r\" i l" L' ~ 7: 00
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S cn· i ~c. Wu r~ hrp

Wcdrw, duy

-

11 1..~0

Sc n K·o:~

-7 p m

a m.. 6 p.m..

Fortst Run Baptist
Pastor · Arius Hurt , Sunday School - I0
a.n1 . Worship- II a.'m.
Mt•. Moriah Baptist
FtlUrlh &amp; Main St .• Middleport, Pastor:
R ~v GL [h\!n Crai g, J r. Sunday s~· hool ·
lJ:} (I :un ., Worship - I!J.45 a.m.

Warm Friend(\'
A tmri \J!hl'l"v

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20
If ye abide ill Me, a11d My
words abide ill you, ye shall
ask what ye will, a11d it shall
be do11e unto you.
John 15:7

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A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

Hours

6am -8 pm

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Homemade Desserts Made Daily
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Sund &gt;r} St.: ho(ll - IJ :J O a. m .. Won hip 10:45 a. m.. Sun ll,ly l; vo:nrng · (){HIp m..
P:l~tor:

Marl;.

M l Co ma ~

RullamlnFrt:e Will Raplisl
Sa le m S! . l&gt;as tnr: Jumrc Fonner. Sunday
SL"hl)lll • 10 a m.. E\' C nin ~ - 7 p.m.,
Wctln e.~day Scrviues- 7 p.m.

Open 7 days a week

740·992-7713

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
Middleport, OH
' 740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
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190 N. Second Si.

Second Baptist Chun:h
Ravenswood. WV, SunJay Sdllllli .I O arn. Mnrnin g w ur~h i p ! I am b •enin!!- 7 pm ,
W\!thrcsday 7 p.m.

Catholic

"Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see
good works and glorify
Father in heaven."
Manhew 5: I6

Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

;·

: ~====~~=======================

Morris
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., WorshipHU O a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesday Services 7 p. m.

•

Holiness
Sunda~

Scht)()l - II a.m.. Worship · ·IOa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wcdnc'llay Sc n:rces - 7 p.m.

Worship-IO:UO

a.m .

Semec- 7 p.m

Calvwl")· Pilgrim C hapel
·H am~on\ rile Ruad. P~WH
Charlo.:~
Mo: Kenm· . SunJa) St::ht-...11 lJ·.lU a.m .

Krno Chutth of Christ

Wnf"l'hr p - II "m . 7·0u p m , WedneMiay
Srn·icl.' - 7 { )(l p m

Wnr&lt;&gt;hrp - 11 :30 a.m., Sunday School IO·lO a m.. Pa'&gt;lrlr-kfi"rt'"y Wallace. lsi anJ
3rd Sunda)

ROSf' of Sharon ltolini.'.:SS Church
LeadinF- Creek Rll.. RutJand. P01 ~ 1or: Rc1
Dc v. e ~ King. Su nilil ~ "-4:1"Kitl] - lJ· JO a. m ..
Sunday v. orship
p.n_J .. Wedne~da~
praye r meeting- 7 p.m.

Bearwallow Ridgr Chun&gt;h of Chri.'&lt;l
P::h wr:BruC"l' Tc~ . Sunda&gt; School -9:JO

C~ntral

Ouster

'I .J ~

Wur ~ hip

HUO a·. m .. 6:30 p m.
Wcd.nc!&gt;da} Scni~.:c::~ - 6:30 p.m.

Pin~ Gro\'e

Bihk- Holiness l.:hun:h
112 mile l)fl Rl J::'~. Pa..~ hw Rc' U ' Ddl
M a nk ~. Sunda) Sdtoo l - l.J ] II a m .•

Zion Church "f Christ
Pomeroy. lh rri MJn.\ rlk Rd. !Rt . I-I :I L
Pas111r· Ro!!O:f Wat son. S u n da~· School 9 ·JO a m , Wurshrp - IO:JO a nl .• 7: 00
p.m .. W~dncsJa~ Sen·i_ce" - 7 p m.

Wo r..hi p

-

IU :JO

a m.

i· \0

p m ..

Wc:dnc!'tday Scn ·i,·..::- 7..30 p~m.
Wesleyan Biblt' Holiness Churrh
7.i PCarl S1.. MtUUicron. P.1~1m: Rc\ .
Da\"id G1 lhe n. Sumi:.Jy Sl"hno \ - In a m.
\\'l w.. hap · 1 0:4 ~ p.m .. SundJ) EH~. 7.01J
p .m .. \\'cJnc-sd.a y Ser1 r..::c · 7:JO p.m

Tuppel"i P1ain Chun-h of Chri'lit
ln ~ trum\!nlal. Wor~ hip S en ice · 9 a.m ..
Com munio n - 10 a.m.. Sunday S\·hool 10: I~ a.m., Youth - ~ :.10 pm Sunday, Bihk
Study Wcd.rJcM!ay 7 pm

L&amp;ul'«'l Clifi'Fn.-e l\lelhodisl Chun:h
Pas tor: Gl en n Rowe. Sunda} Sehoul 9 :30 a.m.. Wur~ hip - 10:30 a.m. and b
p.m .. Wcdn c~da} Sen ire - 7 00 p m.

Rolland Chun-h nf f" hrio;t
Sunday Sc ht11J I . 9·:10 a. m .. \\or ~ hip and
C1liii1!1 Un mn · 10:.10 a .m .. B(lli J. We ~·,

Latter-Day Saints

~

The t "hureh of Jesus
Christ of Lwtter-Da~· Sai~;~ts
S t J-,:1 lhO. 4-l fl -(l .:' -1 7 11r -l-lh -7 -I XI'l .
SunJay Sc hnol 10 ·~0- 11 :r m . Rdr..::f
SC!.:: lc: tyfl&gt;ri.·,•ho.•d ll ·n~-1 2 : 00 n&lt;1un .
Stwrnmcnt S..:: rvic c 9. I 0: I ~ a 111 ..
Hmncmaking meeting. lsi Thurs. - 7 p 111 .

Bradford Churrh uf Christ
Corner of Sa. R1 . I ~A &amp; Bradbu ry Rd. ..
MmiM cr. Doug Sh &lt;~mh l in . Youth M im~ ter
Bill A m b~·rg c 1 , Su11da) Sd ruol - 1) . &lt;0 ;un.
- !{:0() ;1.1n ., l{H O a. m .. 7.1 )()

p.m .. Wednc ~da }" Scn •J.:c:. -7:00 p.m.

Lutheran

Hickory Itills Church of Christ
E\ ;lll gclr&lt;;t.Mikc Muorc, Sunt!ay S ~h()jl l ­
q a. m.. Worshi p - 10 a.m . td O p. m.
Wcdnr :illay Sl·rviccs- 7 p m.

7 ·00 pm
Snow\·ill e
- 10 a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m

1\lMKla~

Btthan~·

P01s10r: John Gilmore, Sund01y Sdx)()l - 10
a.m .. Wor• hip - 9 a.m., WcdneW&lt;ty
Scn.1ces- I() a.m.

Y2.l 5. Hurd St..

Da '

1 ~.

R.:lL·mc. Oh1c1.
S~ hoo l

·
ll 111 .. Bihlc

Study Wed. H lO p m.
Morning Sllilr
Pa&lt;, tm: John Grl~mrt:. Sunday Sl'holDl - II
a.m.. Wor~hr p - 10 a.m .

East Ll•tart
Pa~t u r: Sunday Sdr110l - !0 ·~. m., Worshrp

· 9 ;un ., Wednesday - 7 p. m.

Brady

am ..

Wcdnes..lay

7

p.rn

llc,;ter Chqrch of l:hrist

S t. P11ul Luthu11n Church

Nurman Will , 'u ro: nm~· nd o: nl.
Sunday w or ~ hip - 10.10 tl m

n. m.,

"Comer Sy.-amorc &amp; Scl"tJIIll Sl. . Pmn L'rtl ~ ,
Samda)' Sl"hl)(ll - '1:45 a.m . Worship - II
a.m Pu, tur : Janh:" P. Brad:.

Ch urrh of-Christ

United Methodist

lntene.::tion 7 and 124 W. E\·an !!cli st·

Denni s Sargent . Sunday Hihle Stud} 9:30 a.m.• Wonhrp: 10: 30 a .m. and 6 :30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Gr11ha&amp;m United Methodist
Worshrp • 9 30 ~ . m . list &amp; 2nd Sun ), ,
7: 30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun),Wednesd&lt;l)
Service - 7:.'0 p m.

Christian Union

Mt. Oli,·c United Methodist
Off 124 hehtnd Wilke sville. Pastor: Re,;.
Ralph Spi res. Su nday School - 9 .30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:.'0 11.111 ., 7 p.m .. Thursday

Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union
Ha rtford , WVa .. Pas lor:Da\•rd Greer.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. Worship 10 :30 a.m .. 7:00 p.m .. Wedne sday
Sel"\·ices - 7 :00p.m.

Servi~.:es-

Ml.l\loriwh L'hurch of God
Mile Hill RJ ., Ra.:: inc , P&lt;.~ s tor : J amo:s
S;rl\erfi cld, Sunda y Sehoul - 9:45 a.m.,
Ewnin,!t - b p .m., 1 Wcdn c~da ~ Sc n •iccs- 7
p.m.

Pns t.u· Helen 1\lirw. C oo hill~ Church.
Muin &amp; Fiflh 51. Sund a;. Schoo l - 10
a.m., Wor-.hip - 'l a.m .. Tu c~da y Scf"\' l l.:C ~7 p.m.
Bethel Chun:h
Tuwn ~ hrp RrJ., .t(~C. SundOI} So:hnnl · 9·
am, Worshrp - 10 a .m. Wcd n&lt;.''iday
IOa. m.

HO(kingport Churt'h
Grand Street. Sunday School · 9:30a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., Paswr Phillip Bell

Tooch Chun:h
Co. Rd . 63, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - IO:JO a.m .

Nazarene

7 p.m.

Meigs Coopt'ratl,·e Parish .
North east Cl u ~!c r. Alfrt tl, Pa stor: Jane
. Beatl re. Sund ay Sl"hnol
9·JO lUll ..
Worshrp - I I a.m . td O p.m.

Church of God

Conl \·ille l lnited l\lethodi~l Parish

S e rvir c~-

Mlddlt'port Chun-h of the N11.za~nt
Paswr : :\lien Midcap, Su nday Sdtool l):.'O a .m., Wnr~ hip - 10.30 a.m.. 6: 30p.m..
We dne~d a y Sc11 in· ~ - 7 p.m . Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Chester
Paslor. Jane Bca ll ic, Wurslirp - 9 ~.m . ,
Sunda y Sd111nl
10 a.m. , Thu11od••J
S erv ice~ 7 p.rn.

Rutland Churt'h of God
Ron Heath. Sunday Worship - 10
il. m., h
p.m.. Wednes day Services - 7
p.m.
Pa &lt;~t nr:

,Juppa
Pa~tur .

Sund&gt;ry Sdlo.)\11 - HUO

Syracuse First Chun:h of God
Apple and S\!CLl ll~ Sb., P;r, lur: R~·v. D&lt;~ v id
Ru sse ll. Sund;J y Sd llllJl aud Worship- 10

S) rarust &lt;.:hun:-h of the Nwurene
Mik\! Adkm ~. Sund ay s ~ holJ\ - ':I.J!I

P:I~ LO r

am

tl.ln ..

l: vcmng Services- 6:30p.m .. Wednesday
Scr\'r.::es. 6 :30p.m.

Sun Ja ~

.. e n r,·,·.

Thrron llurham .

a. m :md 7 p nt".

'\11U \h 7 pIll
G~pd

1-' ull

- IO.JO a.m.. 6 p.m .
7pm

S un t!a ~

c·1~mng

"ill
pm

~dH ~ ll 'I
-~~~

,,·rlr,·e

\\ cJ nc,J.r~ '~ r.

\Lilhlll~

.1 m

B r~1~

St u J~

ll."l'- IH) pm

llnlJSon l'hrhtia n Fdlo"''&gt;hip Ch urch
P.r•lnr Hl· r..,·hcl \\ lm,· . )u n J.r ~ S~.:holl•l ­
]f l J i ll. S u nd a ~ ('hur,lr '~r1 1 1: ~ - (I _111 pnr
\\" ~t.ln c~J:~~

Churrh
- 4 JLI

i pm

R~tornli11n

·7pm

Christillln Fellu\lo;hip

1-h ~lp.:r

41115

LtlllfUc lu.rh .
\\ l·,t n e,d.l~

l&lt; ol,tJ .
'i u n J.r~

·\! he'll'

\\ ,1r•hlp

l'.t,lolr
1111~1

am.

- pm

l.ttn~S \illl'

Christian Chun:h
P.l'-l&lt;lr R ~&gt;t&gt;cn ~ l u,•el.
SL11u l01~ S,· h· ~·l 4·.\0 ,1111 .. \\"11r•hrp Ill .\ll
Jill - 7.00 pm. \\ l"Jn,·~da~ SL"n Kc 7 00
Flrl l G•''!lt.'l.

hith \'will'~ Tabernadt'" Churrh
Baile y Run Ro01d, P ~ ~l11r : Kc1 . Emmell
RawM •n. Sund ay Elc n111g 7 p . m .
Thur!'day Sc:rvrn · · 7 p.m.

(1111

Pentecostal
(•ente~: ostal :\ssembl~

St

i Kt

\\ rllram

124. K:h" llll'. Pa't " r

Sdt!"l111

S und a~

Hoh,rd,

1411 Rrid g..::man St . S ~ ra cuse. S und01~
S(· hr1nl . 10 n m. E\enm g
6 p 111..
Wt J ne~a y Se n k·c - 7 p.m.

Eh·mng . 7 p m..

Il l .!.Ill ..

Wedrk',dc~;.

Sa1 r ~·e~ - ,

pIll.

. Presbyterian

Hazel (;ommunily Churc h
O!l Rt. t~A . P:r ~ lllf" Ed ~cl Han. Sun da~
Sdonl - I) :JO a .m., Wur,hrp - IIUO ,1m .
7:~0 p.m
Com munit ~·

Church

,,J \\ c·•! l"n1umt"or,L \\ \o~ "111 Ll~'l ln.!!
l( ,,,l.t l',,.htr Ch.trk, l&lt; olhh • 'U4l (1 7 ~ .
1 3.11: ~

· Middleport f'omm unitf Chui'C'h
57~ Peur l St.. Mrddlc ptlrt . Pa ~ t r•r: Sam
,\nd. i.'r'tl n. Sunda: s,·htlo l 10 am.
E1 1.' n1 ng - 7:."'0 p.m . . \\"ednc,J:a) Sl·n Wl'

l&gt;ye:.tiville

rm

l"nmmunil~

Salem

Tcrl·'a

Jc•'-l' ~]l lffl ~.

Pa,tor.

Sl&gt;r~r\·~ , S.uurdJ~ ~ ~~~

Ill rr m .

S unJa~

( "hun:h uf tht' thing

R1 .' JK -\nl h..j U II~.

~~ K X .

We-dn ,·~,tu y

Ct&gt;nler

Pa•ror. Btl I StJtcn. S unJ.t~ s.-n rn·~ · Ill'
~ m ~ 7 pm
\\ rJ ne,da~ -., pm &lt;:\.:

7pm

H arrisom·ill~ Communit~

\ " ictor~

Lifr

Fin.t l 'niled 1 1 ~sb~teriHn
I\Pill'r1 Cr••1•. Wt&gt;l'hr r - II .1.111

S~racuse
P 01~H1 r

Hwrrison1illt' Pn"sb~ · trri~n ( 'burch
p,,,tllr l{,,h,·•1l"m" . \\ pr-.h1p - 'I .1111

t "hurt'h

Sundar S ch01\l . I) ·J o u.m. v.. ~r .. lll p-

IU:30 u m.. 7 1"1 ·";·

Morse Chapel Church
Sunday sc hool - 10 a.m . Wo rs hip - II
a. m.. Wednesday Semce - 7 p.m.

Pa,tnr:

.\liddlt•port l'rcsb~· tcrian
Cn w. . Wnr~ h i p 10

Ro 1~ r

~.m.

Seventh-Day Adwntist

Faith Gospel Church
Long Bouom, Sunday Schoo l - 9· 30 a m..
Wo rshrp · 10 4 5 a.m., 7·3 0 r m ,
Wednesday 7: JO p.m

\1ulbe rr ~

Ht&lt;. · Rd .

Pont o:ro~.

Lawrn~ k y. ~li l llrda)

P:hlor· Ro)'

Sen •~e~ So~ hhath

School - : 1? m.. Wm~ h rp- \ p r1i

United Brethren

Mt. Olh·e Communit y Chuoch
Pasmr: Lawren-:e Bush, Sunday Sc hut'l. ·
9 ..'0 a.m., Ev~nin g- 6: ~0 p.m. , Wcd nc day
Service- 7 p.m.

Mt. Hermon L'nited Drl'lhn.•n
in Christ Church
Tt' \J ' Colmmu nrt;. '\f&gt;411 \\ 11.kham Rd .
Jlu.&gt;hrr: Peter Martimlnk . Stmcl u;. S~o·h•~~ ~ ­
'1 :.1() a.m .. Wnt, lup · 10 t(l .t 111. , UO
p." m \\ocdn ~~r.J a y Ser\ h." •'' 1·1111 I'm.

Fu ll ~ospcl Lighthuu.~e
llll and Kond. r omc rn y. Pa ..tor: Rny
tlunta. Sunda )' S..: h111ll - 10 u 111.. E H'IH \1 ~
7 ~ ~~ p.m. Tuesd:ry &amp; Thursda y 7:.\0
p m.
.nw ~

Y11U1 h gn rup lll l'e lmg

~ml ,I,;

.tr h

S1md ~~ ~

7 p. m.

South l\e1 hel Communi!} Church
Ridgl' - Paslllr Lind ~ D.rliiL"U· llllli.
Sund ~y Sd mul • 9 run ., Wur ~l11p Sl'f\ tO:l'
]() &gt;r 111 . 2rrJ ~lid. 4th Sundny
CarleiOn lnt~ rdenomin~tional Ch~N'h
Ktn g~ hur ~ Rulld. l'a ~ t nr· Rt_
1her1 Va n..:c.
Sun1la y Sdwo ll - · lJ :J O a 111 . Wllr,Jllp
Scn i.::c 10:.1 0 ;r.m .. Evcnmg Scr\l •l' I&gt;
p. m.

Eden l lnited Hrelhrl'n in ( "hri"t
\unday
S~ h· -... ~ 1- II ;1 rn, S un J a ~ \\",r,!ur - 111:00
;1 m. &amp; 7 l)( J p m. Wetlrw\J a ~ S l•n ll' l' ' ·
7·fl0 jT!ll _ \\"~dnl·~Ja~ Ytall h S~ 1 11~"i.'7 (l() Jllll.

Srl ~· er

St,tt l' l{putc 1.2-1 . Ko:c •.h\ d k

9J0 :1.111 . W\HShl p -

Wo r~ hi p

. 9: .\0 11.111 .. Su nda}' Sdlfl\l l IO:J(I .r.m., Fi r-.1 Sund••Y l't Month - 7:nl)

Chu rch of God of l1rophery

ww~hip

Wcdn e~ J ay Sc rv ~t.·cs-

l.ung Hollom

Sund ll) Sehtltll
10:30 a.m.

a m.

Ret&gt;dnille hllowship
ol t"he ilo"ata rl' nC, ra- tor: J tl lllil'
Pcltil , Sund&lt;r)' Sc h o~ 1 1 - 1,\ :JO a.m .. Worship
. ](1·45 a m .. 7 p.m .. Wednesday Sc nJccs
- 7 p.m.
Chur~· h

B1•h Ranth1l ph. Wor.,hrp - l.J 1!1

a.HI

~e"'

.177&lt; G e•' • g~·· C'!l't.' ~ RvaJ, Galhpo. •lr,. OH

S~· raru se Mis~ion

RHein~

l'.l'hlr· Po: te Shalfl'r. SunJay Srhonl - Ill

Paslur. Bill E.'hrl m:m . Su nilil)' .,e h01.1l 9:.10

('Iifton Tabt:rnade Chui'C'h
S u nd.i~ S~hnol
Ill a.m .
Wnr~htr
.. p m . \\ tJrk·-..da~ Ser\lt:t' · I
p. m

Clifton. W \'a.

7 : ~0 p . m .

Pine Gnm:, Wor~ hip - 9:00 J .m., Sund;~ ~
S1.:huol - 10.00 a .m. l' a~ tu r. Jam ~·~ P

Our Sw,·iour Lutheran t hurch
Walnut anJ Hcnr ~ St-. . K .11 e n~••nni.l
W.Va .. P.r•tor· ll a11d Ru " dl. S und ;l~
Scho11l - 1 o·no a.m., wm, hrp - II :1.111

\\ cdnt.....ta~ S.:-n Kl"~ - 7 r m

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bnuo m. Pa .~tor Stc1 e Reed. S und:~:
S~· hool - 9:JO a.m. Wl&gt;f'hip - 9 ..1(1 .1 111 .
and 7 p.m .. Wc dne ~da~ - 7 p.m . Fnd J! ·
Jdll lWShlp l&gt;l"l" ' In ' 7 Jl Ill .

St. John tutherun Chun·h

Rettls\'illr C hurch of Chrisl
Pu ~ w r Philip Sturm. Su nda~· Sc h ~ ll : 1J:.~O
a.m .. Wtlf~h ip Servil-e. HUO a 111., Bi l•l r
StuUy. W\!Juc~d a y. 0:30 p.m.

~1 r JJk po.1 n . 1'a-.10r

W..::Jn c-.d a~ .Cr\ K ~.

Pa ~ 1o 1 r

l"armei-Sutton

.1.111 .•

l..irt' Chun:h
200 AH-.. \l u.ldlcJ"•rt. P.J~tor
P..~ ~t(lr f-..mcntu '
L...t~~oretJL" c h•n·nu n. V. on.hrp- IU·(.lt l Jm

Abundant Grace R.F. I.

Center .

- II

R~joicing

~

.'iiiO

Bethel \\'onbip Cr:nlu
School. Pa ~tor · R 11h B Jrh~r.
A s~ i s tanl Pastor: Karen Da" '· Su n r.la~
Worship: 10 am. E' enmg \l!',)f'hr p fi .pm.
Yout.h grwp 6 pm. Wedne:&gt;d.l) · Pov.\·r 111
Pra}er . and Bihle Study- 7 pm
Ash Slreet Chun-h
A"h St . ~hddlc pon - P01 ~10 r Greg SeJr'Sunda) S r h 11~l - Y .l!J a .m .. Mnrnrng
Wo~ h1p - HHO a.m. &amp; 7 pm. \\~·dn e -.d a~
S en rce · i liO p.m . Yo.JUlh Se nr ce -., f)(J
pm
Agape Lift. C~nler
·· F u ll - G o~ pc l Churl·h"". Pa~w r ~ Juhn &amp;
Pan ~ Wade. fli.B Sewnd r\\e \ 1J!.tlll . ,71.
5 01 7. Sl•m,·e limL· Sunda ~ 10 :30 01 .111 .,
We d nc'd:a~ 1 pm

PJ•tor: Willia m K . ~Lu • h a ll. Sun d a ~
SL· hool- 111· 15 ll.m. Wnr~hr p - '-,1 : 15a m .

Wnr~ h1p

pfi,tt•r \\ a~ ne R Jt'v.e ll. Su nda~ Ser&gt; Jl"e
6.00 p m . Thu r\oda~ 6·(111 p. m.

C h~ ' • cr

Rolland
Ri c k B o urn ~. S unda~ Sc h o0\ ·
9:JOa.m .. Worship . 10:-'0 a.m.. Thursd a~
Se':'· i ce~- 7.p.m.

10 : 4~

,(10

Ull p m.

Communi I~ ApostniK
Chun·h

Sth·~n,m ..

of ( 'hrisl
Pon land-Ra(·me Rd.. Pa~lnr . J1m Proflln.
S unda ~ s~· hool . 9 . ~ a .m ., Wur,h rp 10 . ~ 0 1t.111, . We dn e~da} Senrn• .. · "()O
p.m.

Pa~tnr .,

1,\ :Jll a . m , Wnrshrp ·

B r~k \tLN..I~ · -

\1a ~.

Cah·ar, Bible Church
Pl J. l·. Cu Rd.. P.L,tur Re'
B!ad~li!Jd. Sundil~ St·houl - ~ .\1:1 .t m ..
\\ ,,r\h rp 10 JO .! m . ., _,0 Jl m .
V. ttlfle'lia~ Scf"\ KC"- :J -~ p 111

Communit~·

Rock Sprinp
Pa ~tor: t(cilh Rader. Su nda~' Sehoul - 9 · 1 ~
a m.. Wo n hLp · 10 a m.. Youth
Fdl o w ~hip . Sunday- t:l p.m.

Pa• tor: l llhn Gilrn or..:: . Sunday

4

F•ilh Fr:Uo-'ilihip C~ for Christ
Pa'''"" Rc' 1-ranlhn [h,· ~e n ~. Smtce·
1-nd.i~.-; p m .

Mectlnf. m 1}11( old A m~ nc.an L:groo Hall
South Founh Avenue. Mrddlepon
Pastor· Chris St ~ ~ a n IO·(J J am SundJ~
Other nw ungs m ttom,.,

Pomeroy

Rd ~ .

Bibk ( ' hurch
J Pa~ t nr Rnan
ltJ.tlll \\ o,...hrp

Kt

p m \\ ,·Jn.·&gt;I)J ~

Oasis Christi•n t"r:llo"'·ship

Pa"ior: Rod.Brnwer. Wo r ship - 9·.~0 a.m ..
Sunda~ s~·hw i-" IO J5 a.m.

Sc h t~l l

lJ

Pmnao~

Pearl Cha~l
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Wo nhip- 10 ll .m

Sunda)

Plullip
.loll a m..
10 111 d m. \l! ednc..Ja~ Scn r...'C"

faini~"

Other.Churches

Huth 1Mktdkport1
Pastor: Rod Bro.,.;er. ·Sunda) School - 9:.'0
01 m.. W~ip - 1.1:00 a.m.

Sal~m

R.:\

SunJ.i~ ~dllll&gt;l

L&lt;:tJr1 \\ \o~

Portland FiN Chul'l'h of Uw Sa.za~nt­
Pastor: Willtam Jus.Lis. Sunda) School 10·00 a.m . Mommg. Worshr p - 10 ~ ~am .
Sunda) Sen IU · 6:30p.m

Fonst Run
Pas lor Bob R obmson. Sunda.y School · 10
a m .. Wllf'hip - 9 a m

Miotrs\ille
P01~ tor. Bob Robinson. Sunday School a m , Worship - 10 a.m.

\\eslt'~an

PJ,wr

7rm

! Non-dcnomrnalmnal fe llov. ~rp 1

('annd &amp; Bas han

Mint ~l~· r

RH.kn,IIJr.

Ser&gt; rlt"'&gt; , p m

t:hapt&gt;l

Rt&gt;Jd.

\unJJ~ t;;...:h•~tl

Ent.trpri!ir
Pastor: Arland Kinr:. Sunda) Schoo l IOJO a.m .. Worship - 9 :30 a.m. Br blc
S1udy Wed. 7:30
flat,.·oods
Pastor: Ko:ith Rider, Sunda y School · I 0
a.m.• Worship - II a.m.

H~·se-1 1

Bradbury Churth of C hrist
Mmi ster. Tom Runyon. 39558 Bradhury
Road. M1ddkPQrt. Sunday Sl.· hool · 9·JO
a. m.
W,1Nhrp - 10 ·-'lla.m ·

\\ edrJC:..cta~

Whit~ 's

a m . Woro;h1p - II

a m . Wedne§da) Se n rces -7:30 p m

H1hk Stud) :

Run Holiness Church
ra.~ tor : Rn Lall)' Lemley, Sunday S ch,~1l
- 4·]11 a m., Wo r!1 htp - 10 : 4~ a.m. 7 p.m .
Thurul.:r~ 9rhlr: Study and Ynulh - 7 p.m.

(' 111 ,J 11 1k
\\ nr~h rp -

A )bury t S ~ rao.: usel. Pru.tor. Bub Rllhlll!&gt;-4.m.

Sulkia) Schoo l -

Cheskr Chul'l'h ol tht \azanonr:
Pa'-'ur Rr \ tkt+ocn Grdt~. ~unJa~ ';..ht~tll
9 .' 0 a m . V. m,hrr II o.~m n pm .

Rulland Chun-h ofth~ ~wurTn~
Sundiiy Sehvul 9 30 ll 111 • \l! ur., lup ·
IO.JO am. t&gt; 30 p m. \\ cJ nc....L~
Scn·.ce) - 7 p.m

-?

a m.

1•omeroy Chu r'('h (If thr Nal.llrene
l•;r,tor· Ja n Lr\1·ntlcr. Sunday Sc hool 9·.10 11 m. W llr~ hip
10:.10 01 .11\. and 6
p m.. Wcd n c~ Uay Services- 7 p.m.

Bald Knoh . 1111 Cu. RJ . ~I. P.l,lPr. Ro:•
Rl1go: • Willl\&gt;rd. Su nJ: r ~ Sd 1nol - 4 .Ill ,r Ill

'

..

.1t&amp;btr .:!funeral _,omt
..............

2 ll£!5

.... l .........
. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111111.11£!5. .

MIIIZ-1444

992·3785

Pomeroy

ANDERSON
t "UNt' RAL HOME
,174 Layne Strut • PO Box 27(1
Ne" Havcn, WV 25265
james H. Andtoon, Licensrd t'unmll&gt;irector
Htidl
Planning

.....

....

ROCKSPRINGS
Crow's Family Restaurant
REHABILITIION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769

740·992·6606

.... ' . . - ,. '·- ' ..... '

W. Main St., Pomeroy

tr

992-5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
or God so hll'ed th e world
PHARMACY
r he gm·e his o11ly ,
We Fill Doctors'
lh.e'"''""II .\'(l/1.. .
Prescriptions
John 3:16
992-2955
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure " So I strive always to keep
in heart; for they my conscience clear before
God and man."
shall see God.
Acts 24:16
Matthew 5.

__,...

!francis Florist

~

Chicken"

The care you desen•e, close to home

MIIIH141 .

Quickel

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740·667-3110

Tup~rs Plains St. P•ul
Pastor· Jane Beatm. Sun~~ Srhool - 9
_a m .• WOJ"-.tup - 10 a m_ Tue!oda.) Sen1 ces
. 7..l(J p.m .

Street.

Oan\·ilk Holines.~ Churt'h
J JO.'i7 State Roule 32 ~. Langs\lle . Pastor
Victor Roush. Sunday s.::hool - 9:30 a.m..
Sundll)' wnrship - IO:JO 01.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wednesilil} prayer se n •k e - 7 p.m.

Middlepnn C hurch of Christ
5t h and Main. Pastor: AI Hanson , Youth
Mini ster: Josh Ulm, SundaY, School - 9:30
..r.m., Worship- 8"1 5, 10.30 a.m.. 7 p.m.,
VJednrsday ServiCes- 7 p. m.

Wl•r~ hrp

Sunda~

Rulland,

.3 322fl Children 's Home Rd .. Sunda~

•

Cummunity Cbuoch
Ste\t'" . To nlt'k. Main

PaMur:

Churth of Christ

-· . ......... .
•

Episcopal
Grar-t Episcopa l Churd1
32fi E Main St.. Pomemy, Sunday SchOOl
and Ho ly Eucharist I I :00 1.m.

If ye abide ill Me, aud My Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
ask what ye will, aud it shall
214 E. Main
be done ur1to you.
992-5130
)Oh!l /5:7

HDo

not steal. Do not lie .
Do not deceive one
another."
Leviticus 19; II

Trinity Churrh
StX:ond &amp; lyM. Poll lt:JU}. Pastor: Re'
Jonathan Noble:, Worsfup 10: ~5 a.m ,
Sunday School 9:15a.m.

Pomtro)· ChuKh of Christ
12 W. Main St.. Mini ~lrr : Anlhony

Po~l'roy Westsid~

pm. !.("~"&gt;ICe

Congregational

llm..ock Gru,·~: Ch..Utbm Churt:h
:0.1rm ~ter : Larrv Bru\l. n, Wonhip · 9:30
'
.
a. m.
~Unda}- School - 10:30 a.m ., Brqk Study7 p.m

ufl .Rt. 7. Po1Mnr l&lt;. e1

R . Al:fl"C. S1. . Sund &lt;•Y l lnrl il·d

men . that they may see your

fD}j

740-949-2217

(740) 992-3279

. WI.'Jn ~~J a~ Sa\rc~·, .

lla.m .. 7:00 p.m
7:00 p.m.

Antiquity Baptist

IBI!!._, 209 T_hird St.
lliiiil(- Racine, OH

507 Mulherry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Wu r.~ hip

Faith ~aptist Chun:h
R:~ilrood S1.. Mason. Sunday School · !0
a.m., Wor ship - I I a .m., 6 p.m.
\\.'edne ~duy Strvi•·e~- 7 p.m.

Coolville , Ohio.
Located less Ihan 30 minutes from
We

lfla.m ..

Victory Baplisl lndeiM'ndr:nt
.'i15 N. 2nd St . Middlc i"Klrt . Paslllr: James
E Kcc, c...-. Worsh1p · Hla .m . 7 p.m.,
Wednesday S erv ic e ~- 7 p.m.

Scnpturru Selecred 0y The Amoricllri Brblo Socrery '
Copynght 2004, Ke1ster·Wdl•&amp;fl;ls Newspaper Services P 0 BoK 8005 Char1ottes\irlle VA 22906 ttJ!W kwnews com

''

a.m .,

Pa.t ur : R rd : Ru lt-. Sunda y School - 9::10

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-594-6333

IU:l~

Rwdne First Baptist

Hills Self Storage

;.
''

1-'in;t Bwplisl Chun:h
M ar~ M urn•11 . 6th am.! Palmer St..

Mn.h.llcpon. Sumla~· Sr honl · \1 : I ~ a m ..

"Nest and Re.u" ·

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683 -

1-'irsl Baptist
hHI Brnd,e t t. l:. &lt;t~t :O.I arn St. .
Sc ht)() l - &lt;.)· 'Hl :l m . \\o r,h rp -

P a~ tnr

OJ Whno: Rd. otl St Rt. 160. Pastof" P.J
Chapman. Sunday ScfK;ol - I0 a.m ,
Wor"Stup - II a m.. Wedne...tay ';en r~·el. 7
pm

Church of Christ

\'ar.ll~~

Cb..shir't- Raplisl ChuKh
Paswr: St~·v e Lilli&lt;. Sunday School: '1:30
am. Mnming: Wo rship: 1 0:.~0 am . Sunday
c ~ cm ng . 6 .l O Jllll Wednesday fdOpm

Home People"

D

\'anLmUt and Ward Rd .. Plhlnr b ml''
111 ·1 tJ am .

Mllkr. Sunda) Sr hn\'l
b r nmg • 7 .lU p.m.

Baptist

SYRACUSE

o you sometimes feel like you are older than you are? You
shouldn't be surprised. We go to work ... come home and
work. .. go to bed ... then back to work again. Maybe you don't
remember the last time you actually "played". Recreation is important
whether we are children or adults. Some studies on human behavior
reveal that even children do not play as much as in the past. The word
"recreation" speaks for itself. We need to create ourselves again each day
for optimum performance.
.
The playwright, Norman Cousins, gave this advic_e ... "Realize that
each human being has a built-in capacity for recuperatiOn and repau.
Nurture the regenerative and restorative forces within you ."
.
We need to rest the mind, body and spirit from the weight of dally
responsibility. A.n essential element for renewal is daily trust in God's
will and weekly worship. In Matthew 11:28, our Lord says... "Come to me,
all you who are weak and heavy laden, and I will give you r~st. "
Won't you re-create yourself this Sabbath as you worship at your
local church or synagogue?

Chun·h of Jesus t 'hrist A~olk

Uhrrty Assembly of God
P.O. Rnx 4()7. Dudding Lane. Ma son,
W.Va .. Pa ~tor · Ne il Tenmmt. Sunday
Services- 10·00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

740-992-6215

Acts 24: 16

Sacred Heart Calhofic ChurdJ
I ti l Mu lberry A' e .• Pl•mt:ro ), 992-~ 898.
Pa,tt•r· He,· Walter l:.. Hemz. Sat Con.
-l.4'i -C. l.'ip m : Ma ss- 5 J O p.m. Sun .
Co n 8 : 4~ - 9 : 1; a m .. Sun. Mas)- 9 ·.~0
a.m., Darl~ Mlbs- 8: m a.m.

Assembly of God

Pomeroy, OH

before God and man."

Apostolic

Emmanut'l Apostolic Tabt:rucl~ Inc.
Lnop Rd off 1\ev. Lima Rd Rulland.
Scr \rce~: S un 10:00 il .m. &amp; 7:30 ·p.m..
Thu ~. 7:00p.m.• Pa~tor Many R. Hun nn

offer physical. occupmional.
speech, arl &amp; music iherapies

"So I stri ve always to keep
my conscie nce clear

F~llowship

AJ'II)!iloli(· Wnr,hip Center. 81J S Jn1
A\"t' .. M idd l~port . Kc\ m Kunkle. Pas10r.
Sunday. 10:3() I! m. Wedm:sday, 7:00
p.m.; Youth Fri 7·30 p m

r ·r -r ·r r r r r r r r r r r r -r r -r ·r r

Young's Cilrpenter Seruice

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK
Ri\'("r

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

,.
,.f•

_

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

power."

_____

:&amp;nouffrr'll
:fire &amp; &amp;afrtp
tOll-nil
1-eOO·Ili-OIIl

MWPOUI
t710)U6-4111

MmDLI!PO.T

f'•Ot"l•'M71

. ··--..- - - - - - - - - - - - -

Mc:i}:!S Coumy\ Oldcs1 Flnri s1
352 East Main
·

Pomeroy. Oh

'LA!

uc r Ah d

tj!l"H

tholight ~ wU /1 ~fli!CI81

740-992-2644

UNI•

740-992-6298

MY erace is sufficient
for thee: for my
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness •
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

•

�..-

Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June n, 2004

Watchdog says savings will wait
BY

INSIDE

.- _.,.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Browns to release Couch, Page 82
Indians Notebook, Page 83
MLB boxscores and standings, Page 84

JOHN McCARTHY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT,EA

Local Stocks
ACI - 31.82
AEP - 31.17
Akzo - ·36.6 1
Ashland Inc. - 51.~5
BBT - 36.99
BLJ- 15 .30
Bob Evans - 27.13
Borg Warner - 4307
City Holding - 30.16
Champion - -U9
Charming Shops - 8.39
Col- 3 1.74
DuPont - 4383
DG - 20.-!8
Federal Mogul - .29
Gannett - 87.55
General Electric - 3 1.50

GKt\LY - 4..15
~Llrl ey Da\·idson 60.20
Kmart - 65. 16
Kruger - 17.00
Ltd :.._ 19.+0 ·
NSC- 2-1.97
Oak Hill Financial - 31.94
Bank One - -19.99 .
OVBC - 33.00
Peuples - 25.81
Pep&gt;icu- 54.95
Premie r - 9.76 .
Rocky Boots - 20.05
RD Shell - 50.71
Rockwel l - 33.94
.Sears - 40.31
SBC - 24.81

AT&amp;T - 16.35
USB- 28.13
Wendy's - 36.00
Wai-Mart - 57.20
Worthington - 19.89
Daily stock report&gt; are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners at
Ad vest Inc. of Gallipolis. ·

Proud to be apart of
your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2 155

COLUMBUS - The first
steps toward competition in
the electric power industry
won't mean savings right
away. but customers should
do better than they would in a
.continued regulated · market.
the state 's utility watchdog
says.
State
regulators
on
•wednesday authorized power
supplier&gt; to bid to provide
electricity to FitstEnergy .
Corp. customers. If competitors cannot beat FirstEnergy 's
price by January, the company will be allowed to freeze
rates for ·three years in
exchange for a customer fee.
estimated at $15 for an average monthly bill.
The
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio, in a 4- 1
vote, said the plan will provide the best price · for
FirstEnergy's
.customers,
financial security for the utility and further development of
competitive energy markets.
Consumers should not
expect immediate savings
under either plan, said Janine Public Utilities Commission of Ohio chairman Alan Schriber lisMigden-Ostrander, Ohio con- tens to commissioner Clarence Rogers , Jr. , as he JUStifies his
dissenting vote prior to the PUCO ruling in the FirstEnergy rate
sumers' counsel.
''C ustomers should expect case in Columbus. (AP Photo/Mike Elicson)
some increases in prices . The
question is will the increase Ohio, in part because the need to lind out," he .said.
!Je less under competition commission has allowed the . FirstEnergy was reviewing
than it will be under regula- company to charge customers the plan and had no immedition. I believe the answer will for past investments. includ- ate comment . . spokeswoman
be yes," Migden-Ostrander ing its nuclear power plants. Ellen Raines said.
said .
"FirstEnergy will .determine
FirstEnergy's territory has
The electric deregulation seen the most competitors, no earlier than its next regulaw that went into effect in mostly because communities larly sched uled board of
200 I requires the industry to have banded to buy electridty directors ' meeting on June 15
open up to competitors by in bulk. But competitors ha'e its appropriate next steps,'' the
200.6. The Legislature envi- not been able to provide sig- company said in a statement.
Commissioner Clarence
sioned competition driving nificantly lower prices.
A commission-ordered rate Rogers, who cast the dissentdown prices. especially in
. FirstEnergy 's &gt;ervice territo- freeze
will
end
for ing vote, said the plan will do
ry. which stretches across FirstEnergy customers at the nothing to ensure lower costs
northern Ohio· from Akron to end of 2005 . First Energy ma y for FirstEnergy customers.
reject the PUCO order, but especiall y if the competition
Toledo.
"We all know that has not then it would have·to move to drive fails.
"The plan stabi lizes rates at
materialized as we have direct competition at that
too
high a cost," Rogers said.
hoped, " PUCO Chairman lime. Schriber would not
speculate on the plan's effect "FirstEnergy has placed itself
Alan Schriber said.
on
prices.
in a strong position and basiFirstEnergy's rates are
"That's
exactly
what
we
cally
said take it or leave it."
higher than other parts of

II

L

PelleR 1:1

Friday, J1me 11, 2004

Meigs pulls past Athens II in ninth
BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune .com

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!
Browns lose
second-round
pick to torn ACL
BEREA (AP) - Brown.s
rookie defensive back Sean
Jones tore a ligament in hi s left
knee and will likely miss the
entire season.
Jone~ was Cleveland's second-round pick and ·was
expected to help the team
immediately at the safety position and on special teams.
He tore the ;mterior cruciate
ligament when he jumped to
intercept the ball in practice
Tuesday. As he planted his leg.
wide
receiver
· Dennis
Northcull dove into his knee.
The Browns didn't report the
injury until Thursday.
"It was an unfottunate and a
freaky type of a deal." Browns
coach Butch Davis said.
The 6-foot- L 215-pound
Jones is a hard-hitting safety
who could have helped the
Browns stop the run. &gt;Dillething they were poor at a year
ago.
. Jones, who will have surgery
June 22, said he has never had
an injury this severe.
He said he is focused on
rehabbing the knee and returning to help tl1e team next year.
Unfortunately
for
the
Browns. their season is starting
off a lot like last year- with a
major injury. Otlensive line- ·
man Ross Verba ruptured his
right biceps in the linal preseason gwne and the Browns
never recovered.
Cleveland has an older secondary, particularly at safety.
where Earl Little and Robert
Griftith are the starters.
Little said Jones would have
been a valuable backup, but
they still have second-'year
defensive back Chris Crocker.
The Browns also have
si~ned defensive back David
Gtbson who was with Tampa .
Bay last season.

Clippers shut
out Red Wings
COLUMBUS !AP) - Brad
Halsey pitched a two-hit
shutout and didn't allow a nmner past second base In lead the
Columbus Clippers to a 4-0
win over the Rochester Red
Wings in International League
play on Thursday.
Halsey (6-2) g:~ve up singles
to Luis Rodriguez in the lirst,
and Augie Ojeda in the sixth.
He struck out six and walked
two.
Columbus scored three nons
in the second, when Felix
Escalona had an RBI double
and Caonabo Cosme added a
two-run single.
Sal Fasano hit his fomth ·
home run of the season in the
seventh off Jeromy Palki.
Rochester's Henry Bonilla
(1-1) gave up six hits and three
runs in five innings, walking
one and striking out two.

• Tm5, Ttlf!, Uf&amp; fmu.iL GM a- ID~llitt rtbolll inlu6td iniBIJiu tl nn IWde ~ wjtn appii!Ma.
•'On II!IIIUI'td a•dit ~ !linllllllf&amp;k 111 rf!lrilt II I!IJo,aphiulllnn rtm GGod • 9i J1nt9 •

...,

~_

T.Jl

CHIYIDII1

-·-

We1t V'if;lid's tl Chny, Penick, Uk. Alii Cum. V.lttdw.

a ' .. DU !Is ' 1
SHOM::ARS!

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Columbus Blue Jackets huve
re-signed defenseman Rostisluv
Kleslu to u one·year contract.
the club said Thursday.
Terms of the deal were not

disclosed.

M•••Y • Stttr.ty 9 •• • 9 p• • S••••Y 1 p111 • I .,_

•

. . 4110.8

Jackets re-sign
Klesla to oneyear contract

Klesla. 22, was the Blue
Jacket~ ' first dmn choice, taken
fourth overall in the 2000 draft,
the year Columbus began playing.

0

'

STEWART- Meigs County Post
128 scored five runs in the top of the
nint~ i1fning Thursday to pull away
from Athens II.
With a pair of two-run double s in
the ninth. Meigs defeated Athens.
11-5. in American Legion base ball
action at Federal Hocking High
School.
'
"

put both runn er~ in ... curing po..,ilion.
The not haun. Michae l W:11Tcn .
walked to lnad th e b:" c's before
Doug Dill doubled in Dur't and
Black~tun tu give Mcig, thL' lead .
Warren ended the da\ going :'-fur-l for Meig' v.ith three RBI\.
includ ing a two-run home run in the
&gt;Cienth. Aho for \lkig,. Da1e
McClure was 2-for-5 v.ith a pai r -of
RBI\. while Luke Hai'I''P ;liso

With the game ties at 6-all going
into the final innin g. Mei gs' Terry
Durst led of!' with a double and
Jeremy Blackston was walked .
Durst and Black &gt;ton advanced to
third and second re &gt;pective ly on a
sacrifice bunt b)' Ken Amsbary to Jrovc in t\Vo run" on th e Ll~t\ .

:vti chaci DaYis pitched most of the
c..la~ for \llt? Jg'. hut it wao., AnU)
Par..,on -.,. thro\\ ing th e fin:.~! I\\ o
inn in~" · \:.·ho r~corded the\\ in .
.-\ft ~ r

Dill 's hit in the ninth . anotll er uouhk. thi, time hy Haislop.
'cored Dil and Wa rren. Haislop l:uer
"L'ort:J .

In tlw "cconJ, a ~•.ll' gnmnJer b)
~1cCiure

Please see Meigs, Bl

NBA Finals·

Pistons regain control
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

Associated Press
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
- When the pass floated
inside lb Shuquille O' Neal.
Elden Campbell knocked it
away and dashed downcourt.
Richard Hamilton picked up
the loose ball and flung 1t
forward.
In a fourth-quarter pla y
. that svmbo li zed tile entire
night. !'or the Detroit Pistons.
the 36-year-old Campbe ll
caught the ball and went fly ing in for a left-handed jam.
and the decibe l level at the
Palace went off the charts.
The slam dunk by the
backup center . gave th e
Pistons an U:\-point lead on
their way to a 88-68 victory
Thursday ni ght over the Los
Angeles Lakers and a 2- 1
lead in the N BA Finals .
Bouncing back fro m its
heartbreaking overtime loss
in Game 2, Detroit's defense
was suffocating, its offense
was opportunistic and it s
fans were in a frenzy.
No·w. an NBA championship is very much within
the Pistons reach. and it even
seems like a distinct possibility.
No
Eastern
Conference team has won a
title since 1998. but these
Pistons are proving that the
time may have arrived for
that drought ro end..
Kobe Bryant. the hero in
. Game 2. was hdd without a
field goal in the fir si half and
the Lakers were limited to
their lowe st postseason point
total in their storied fran chise history. The Pistons
regained control of a series
they've -dominated for all but
a few minutes .
'
Hamilton scored 31 points
and Chauncey Billups had
19 as Detroit's backcourt
gave the Pi stons ju st about
al l the offense they needed.
Throw in double-fi gure
rebounding performan ces by
Ben Wallace and Rasheed
Wallace. three steals apiece
from
Campbell
and.
Tayshaun Prince. and it ttll
adued up to a lopsided game
that could . even be calle,d a
mismatch in fav or of the
team that entered th e series
as huge underdogs.
Game 4 is Sunday night at Detroit Pistons forward Rasheed Wa llace (30) makes a dunk du ring the fir st quarter of
game 3 of t he NBA Final s against the Los Angeles La ke rs at the Palace in Auburn Hills ,
Please see Pistons, Bl . Mich. Thursday. (AP)
,

Redwomen sign Raiders' Phillips
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune .com
RIO GRANDE - Th e University
of Rio Grande track and field squad
continued its run of signing loca l
product s as Ri ver Valley Hi gh
School 's Harmony Phillip s signed a
national letter of intent to throw for
the Redwomen beginning in the winter of 2004.
'
Phillips is a three-time state qualifier in the discus, including a fifth
plilce finish ut the Division II meet
this ~e~r. .
...
Phtllrps IS the fifth loca l student·
uthlere to sign with the Rio truck program and the fourth femule .
She is very excited ubout the
prospects of throwing discus for the
Redwomen. "I'm really exci ted for
the new season and to meet the rest
of the track team," Phillips sa id .

Her personal hc't in
th~ c•vent i&gt; 127 feet.
7 inche" and ~he
accomplished
that
feat
31
Rio' s
Stod.meist e r Trac~
and Field Complex
with
lhe
;done
regiOnal
meet
at
Bve"·illc .
'Prox imity . and
Phillips
course of stud y were
the key f&lt;~ctors in
Phillips deciding on Rio Grande.
"One of the hig thing&gt; was the edu cation dcpunmcrH hcc·uusc I am
going into .sCCOildur~ 'Cduc~ttion so
thut wus u big fuctor. 'she said.
River Valley Hcud Couch Mark
Cline spoke highl y of Phillips and
thinks she made a great choice in Ri"
Grande . "She's been a big leader for
us. she' s been a great competito r, a
big meet tllrower," Cline said . "I

fon' ard tu :-.ct.· her throw
cu l k~~ ...
loo k in !.!

·111

" l'~c gl)l a lo t of resp ert for Coach
Wilkv and Coa,·h McCahe." 'Wille1
adcbi. " I ran f,,r Coad1 Wille·\ I di1
ha1 ,~.tIn! re,pcct for b"lh of tli cm.··
Kiu Cit·atlLk .\ . . ~ i~totnt Co~tch .lu:n1
McCabe '''&lt;'s Philli p' as :1 ~'"'d fi t
wi th the prn~ram. "We 're \Cr v happ,
to ha,·e Hanno n\. -.,he wi ll fi t in \en
well with the y(i ung thmwers \ve·,;:
got." McCabe said. "She is a ~ery
tal ented thrower. th ree-time' 'lUte
t\llalificr. 'he did 1" get to the podi111n
tli &gt; ye:tr. so 'he i' one of the top
throwers in the sliite ."
Ri o Head Co;Jc'll Boh Willey Wll&gt;
very f:unili:11' wi tll Phillip' und wa'
plc:lsed to add her lo the fold .
··wc · \t= V·."illl'l1r..'d HurllWil\

ror

lllllllll ·

her of y~,:~tr" unc.i . . h~ \, al\vny:-. done u
tremcndou&gt; jnb." Wille) · said . "We

Please see Phillips, Bl

.s.:ored Josh Edd) for th&lt;'

Marlins
!snap
Indians'
line
1

C LEVELA\D IA P I When Carl P:11 aJl\l hrietl1
-.tru!.!dL&gt;d in the "C'' enlh
inni~lg. the lndi ~u1" hclpL'li
him &lt;&gt;lit.
P:tYano

~ot Tr ~l\ ' i" H afn~r

tu pop oul on a .1-0 pitch
\\ ith a runnl'r
on in hi~ onh
truuhk "Pl ;t

d urin':!

the

F I "-r i d
~i:Jrl i ns'
\ ' H.:lOr\"

I

:1
~- 1

0\CI"

tile C!~1 eland
Indian ' on Tlnlr&gt;dii) nl)'ht
PaY a Ill' 16-~ I retired 1.1 uf
1-l until v. ;dkinc Vic·tur
~!arline/ to open." th c .seYenth . Then Hafn er popped
nut 10 third ha:-.e nn a J-0
pitch.
"That real lv he _lped ...

· p avano

~:J.ti..l.

·· 1 \\a:--. a li nle

"ild !hal i nnin ~. I ~noll he
has power anct" didn ' t want
to

!.!I'OO\'C

nne.

h~:

hut

popl)ed it up. I ,,.," a lillie
~urpri~eJ . "

The right-hander gan? up

one i·un and four hits in 8 23 inn ings for hi' fo urth "in
111

fi, ·c

dcL·i~ ions.

He

wa~

rep laced
b) '
Armando
Benite/ ;11'ter Martino doubkd 11ith 1110 uub in the
ninth .
Martine/ limped inln second

~ tnd

\\'as remo\"cd fnr

pinch-runner T1m Laker.
"He·t\\i'ied l1i' ri~ht ankle
and hopefu lly it is' no t too
~t'rinu~...

ln J ians manager
Eric
\Vcd!..!e
;ai d ,_ uf
Martino . 1dio is scheduled
10 llill'e an MRI nn Frida)
Jll(li"Jllll!!.
•

L

\

"•

BcllliL'/ !!Ol tilL' ltnal o ut

for his

14th CUI I,C L'Uti l·c

~lt\C and~~~~~ ill 2) L' hiillL'C ~
thi ~· "l'&lt;I...,U il .
"Sure. I 11 ~lilte d tn t'inish.
but \\ l'.' l' ~lH thl' hC\1 L'!(hC I' ·

in the k:l':.!llc." Pa\ ;llln ~aid.
P; t\· :mo~ ..; true ~ out . . cn· n.
walked one and 11 '" part ic·ularl v ellcctiYe in th&lt;' middil'
inn lnc.... He rctir~.-·d the
ltH..Ii all.. , in order . on · niue
pitl'il\..'" in lhl' fiftl1 illllill~
and u.-..ed ju . . t si .x pitchl'~ to
~L'I thrct' quick out\ in th l'
siX I 11 .
"Vic'l&lt;&gt;r c·ouldn't hit fnr u,
~'~r\
time ... 'aid Case\
Bkd,.'c. 11 lw struc·k llll t tllt·e~·
timl'' a!!ain~t Pa' a no . .. ·we
had four7 hit, and he "had ''' " ·
of them.
" I was Qu e~ -.,in!..! all nit!ht. 1
rcal l1· diJn·t ha\';; an' i ~l~; 1."
.'lie' Gon!a iC/ hit. a tworun h,t&gt;mcr f"i· the Marlins.
11 ho h:l\ e '"'n I 0 of the 1.2
~aml'" .... tartcJ thi~ "ei.t~O-il b\
f\n an~) . Pa\ a no ha~ ':..!in~ il
up th r~e run . . \lr fcw~r 1()
ti llll' ~.
.
\lihl' Redmn11d h:ld· three
hit~. inl'iuJ11H!. two douhll' .....
lo help FloriSa to' it&gt;' second
''in in the three-game inter·
league &gt;eries at Jacob&gt;
FieTd. The Mur!ins are just
4-6 over their last I0 games.
Florida 1110k a 1-0 lead in
the .,eeond ol'i .lu;on [)avi;
I 1-41.
Gonnil~t hit 01 two-out
sin~le to right and c·ume ;~II.
the \\ il\ Hl'l'Ullli {ll \t:OI'C Oil tl
douhlc' to right-ce11ter by
Redmond . ·

Please see Indians. Bl

�--Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June

www .mydailysentinel.com

u, 2004

BY JoE MtLICIA

BEREA - Quarterback Tim Couch and
the Cleveland Browns are finally set to part
ways. Only the NFL stands in the way.
The Browns can't release Couch until
paperwork is completed to drop his griev·
ance against the.team. The Browns said late
Thursday that the process could drag imo
the weekend.
A few weeks ago, Browns coach Butch
Davis said he had no plans to cut the 26year-old Couch.
Davis said Thursday that the Browns
waited until now to part' with Couch
because they had tried to work out a deal
with Green Bay. They also were waiting to
see how backup quarterback Kelly
Holcomb recovered from Febmary shoulder surgery.
·
After a trade with Green Bay fell tl1rough
and with Holcomb throwing the ball again.
Davis said it was time to move forward.
"We just felt like we made a decision as
an organization in January that we were
going to go in a different direction,"' Davis

said alier the Browns· tina! day of quarterback school.
Couch's release is being held up by the
orievance he tiled through the National
Football League Players Association alier
the tewn banned him from working out at
.its training facility. His agent. Tom Condon,
said the NFLPA still has to agree to drop the
g1ievance.
NFLPA spokesman Carl Francis did not
retum a message seeking comment.
The Browns said the league's
Management Council also must sign off on
dropping the grievance before Couch is
released. Couch then would become a tree
agent after he clears a 24-hour waiver period.

Condon has had ongoing talks tor the
past two months with the Packers about
Couch joining them to be Brett Favre's
backup.
"TI1ere is not any deal done with Green
Bay. although they certainly have
expressed an interest." Condon said. :·He's
interested in gomg to a sttuatmn he thmks
would be appropriate. and Green Bay \san
attractive place."
Couch has passed for 11.131 yards and

64 touchdowns in 59 starts si nce the
Browns tabbed the fanner Kentucky stm· as
their tirst overall selection as an expansion
team in 1999.
Following a 2003 season in which he lust
his startino JOb to Holcomb in training
camp, Co~ch \ future with the Browns
became uncertain.
"Everytxxly exhausted everything that
they were going to do and it was just time
io move on,"' Holcomb said. ·'It 's time for
Tim to try to get on with another team.. go
somewhere else and stru1 anew.'"
·
Couch's $7.6 million salary for 2004
made it impossible for the Browns to keep
him as a backup.
The club talked with Couch about.
restructuri ng his contract - $15.() million
for 2004 and 2005 - but when he ret used
to take a nearly 60 perce111 pay cut. the
Browns decided to sign lonner San
Fr:incisco quarterback Jeff Garcia. ·
··[ think the writing was on the wall three
moo1ths ago.'" Gm·cia said. '") believe that
pret-ty much most or the team has moved
forward and stw1ed to relate to me and the
other quarterbacks that we have here in
cmnp."

Stewart gets in fast lane with Ravens
BY DAVID ·GINSBURG

Associated Press
OWINGS MILLS, Md. - Kardell
Stewart has been working in the fast lane
in an effort to learn the Baltimore Ravens'
offense.
Signed last week to be the backup to
starting quarterback Kyle Boller. Stewart
received a crash course during the four-day
minicamp that ended Thursday.
"It's like going South on 1-695 doing !50
mph, and you're new to this country so you
have to read every single sign," he said.
"''m trying to see them on the go. Some of
them l have to reverse and take a peek at
before going again. Eventually, I' II get it."
Stewart will continue his education next
· week at another four-day camp. His goal is
to get it all down by the time trdining camp
starts in late July.
·
"I'm not goi ng to bite otl"more than I can
chew, man." he said. ''I'm going .lo be .
patient."
··
By the time he gets to training camp, the
former Pittsburgh Steelers star just might
get used to wearing the purple jersey of his
onectime enemy, and the Ravens might be
comfortable with having him on their side.
"As a matter of fact, he has a locker
beside f1"1e," linebacker Ray Lewis said. "I
told him I'm tired of chasing him; now l

can watch someone else chase you."
Lewis spent much of the camp on the
sideline after undergoing minor surgery on
his right thumb. He is expected to be fully
recovered by the time training camp
begins.
·
"Everything's good. 1just don't want to
go out there now andre-injure it," he said.
Jn addition to Stewart, cornerback Dale
Carter and wide receiver Kevin Johnson
got acquainted with a ~ew system, and running back Jan1al Lewts put his upcommg
court case behind him and focused on getting ready for another 2,000-yard season.
"It's good to be hack out here with the
players. getting in the groove of things.
getting the plays back down," Jamal Lewis
said.
.
'
The offense has received a boost from .
former New York Giants head coach Jim
Fassel, hired as an adviser to improve a
passing attacl, that ranked last in the NFL
in 2003.
·
"It's better because there's a little more
enthusiasm on the offensive side of the
ball," Jamal Lewis said. "Coach Fassel is
pumping up the passing game an.d everything. The wide receiver corps and the
quarterbacks are ready 10 go."
Including Stewart.
.
'" He's getting there, but it's going to be a
while before he can really get comfortable

with the verbiage of the system. It's like
learning a new language.'' coach Brian
Billick said. "But when he comes back for
training camp, he should have enough of a
base underneath him so that he can put his
best foot forward."
The Ravens won the AFC North last
year, reaching the playoffs after a one-year
absence. The goal this season is to get back
to the Super Bowl.
Step One is complete. The job continues
next week in a voluntary camp.
"We' re halfway through an eight-practice sequence that's going to set the tone
for training camp," Billick said. "! think
they've got a good fundamental base under
them. !think we could be a little bit belter
conditioned right now, but we got through
it pretty good. We're pretty healthy."
The camp was probably therapeutic for
Jamal Lewis, who faces drug charges in
Atlanta, and Corey Fuller, who faces
felony and gambling charges in .Florida . .
Both were welcomed to practice by their
teammates, who treated them like family:
''The thing about us is we've always got
each other's back," Ray Lewis said. "'We
don't ,worry about nothing outside this
organization. Tf you can 't lind a reason to
smile, we' ll smile for. you. We' re all
hum;m, and you're going to go through
things. Deal with them and move on."

Burress still missing as Steelers workouts end
BY ALAN ROBINSON

Associated Press
PITTSBURGH
The
Pittsburgh Steelers ended
their offseason workouts
Thursday with one more
unhappy wide receiver and a
lot fewer questions · about
· Ben
quarterback
Roethlisberger than they had
last month.
Wide receiver Plaxico
Burress finished the sessions
in the same place he started
them during the team's May
7-9 minicamp: anywhere but
Pittsburgh. He skipped every
workout for ·undisclosed reasons, which probably centered around his lack of a contract beyond thi s season.
Coach Bill Cowher said he
hasn 't talked with · Burress,
though agent Eugene Parker
said Burress will report to
training camp July 30.
What's interesting is the
Steelers' other starting receiver, Hines Ward, is making no
such promises despite attending all of the offseason practices.
·
Ward thinks he is underpaid
with a base salary of
$1,688,760 and"wants to renegotiate his contract, . just as
· quarterback Tommy Maddox
did earlier this week. Ward, a

three-time Pro Bowl receiver,
is signed through 2005.
''I maxed out all my incentives ... and I'm still underpaid," said Ward, who caught
95 passes last season despite
playing with . broken ribs in
December. ,''That's just a
fact."
Asked if he expects Ward to
report to camp on time,
Cowher said, "We' II wail and
see. I have no control over
that.'"
Team president Art Rooney
·)[ called the Maddox renegotiation a "rare exception" and
suggested other players
shouldn't suggest sim ilar
treatment.
Maddox was the NFL's
lowest-paid veteran starting
quarterback - and would
have been No. 3 among
Steelers quarterbacks once
Roethlisberger signed- until
being given a $2 million signing bonus.
Maddox was a backup
when he signed his previous.
contract in 2002, with the
understanding it would be
reworked if he became a
starter. However, he spent
nearlv two full seasons as a
starte'r before getting the mod·
est pay hike . The renegotiated
contract did not boost hi s
$750,000 base salary.

.

t

•

HARRISON . N.Y. - Vijay Singh solved his putting
problems with brillial1l ballstriking in the first round
of the Buick Classic.
Following aggressive driving with pinpoint wedge
play. the two-time tournament winner shot an 8-under
63 on Th.ursday to take a one-stroke lead ?vcr Frednk
Jacobson in the fimtl PGA Tour event betore the U.S.
Open ne xt week at Sh·innecock Hill s.
.
· "I've been hitting the ball really well the last lew
weeks, butt he putter has been letting me down." S_ingh
said. ·' J hit a bunch of shots close. and had a lot ol lapin birdies .... From 3-4 feet you can·! pick too many
bad lines."
Sin~h played hi' final nine holes - the front nine on
the Westchester Country Club ~o urse - in6-under 30.
The Fijian. the tour leader with three vtclones and
earnings of $4.448.861. had nine birdies - eight from
inside I0 feet - and one bogey.
"I drove the ball really straight. I attacked the course
from the get-go."' Singh said. '" If yo u hn the dr!ver
well. vou have a lot of wedges and sand wedges mto
the greens. I was very relaxed and let my swi ng happen. I didn't force anything." .
.
David Frost , the 1992 wmner. opened w11h a 66. and
fred Couples topped a nine-player group at 67 . Er!He
Els a two-time Buick Classic champion coming off a
victory Sunday in the Memorial, bogeyed hi s fina l
hole for a 68.
Davis Love Ill , David Tom s and Padraig Harrington
also shot 68s, ahd Masters champion Phil Mickelson
had a 69.
"There's a lot of birdies out there:· Mickelson said.
'"[ just had a hard time geui"ng the b:oll clme to.. the
hole. Fortunately. I didn't make any btg mtstakes .
Jacobson one-putted the first six greens in his morning round in perfect scoring conditions. highlighted by
a 60-foot eagle putt on the par-5 fifth hole . ..
.
·'It was roller coaster. II went up two t1ers. he satd.
'" It was straight on line. It's very rare that you get the
pace and everything right on a putt like that , but once
it was on the way there I thought I wouldn't be surprised of it noes in ."'
The Swed~ has four top- I0 fini shes in 12 starts this
year. his firs t full season on the PGA Tour. Last year.
he won three times on the European tour and had tour
.
·.
top lOs in eight PGA Tou.r appearances.
") really took on the par 4s that were a ltllle bit
shorter." Jacobson said. ··[ tried 10 go with the driver
today because I praCticed the wedges. so hard and started hitting good shot s in the heginning. l wanted to gtve
myself a few more of·those .'"
Frost won the last of his 10 PGA Tour titles in 1997.
"Tm just trying to enjoy the game."' the 44-year-old
South African said. "] still love· playing. and love trying to figure it out. It 's nice 10 be on a course that
you've won on before.'·
DIVOTs: Singh fi ni shed a stroke otT the course
record of 62 set by Dan Sikes in 1967 and matched by
Jim Wright.( 1976) and Peter Jacobsen ( 1982) .... Frost
planned to play in a U.S. Open yualtl1er thts week, but
said the USGA lost or never received his entry for m.
"There ' s nothing I can do about it. so why cry about
it ," Frost said .... David GoS&gt;etl shot at1 8 1. The 2001
John Deere winner has made only. two cuts in 13 starts
this year and has broken 70 just once - an opening 69
in the Honda Class ic .... Defending champion Jonathan
Kaye shot a 73.

Cowher and Ward · talked tured thumb, but is expected
about Ward's contract situa- to be ready for training camp.
tion before the Steelers head- Kicker Jell Reed, coming ol"f
ed off for their summer vaca- left hip surgery in January,
tions.
was kicking off by the end of
"I understand what this sys- the workouts and should he
tem is all about,." Cowher fully recovered by next
said. "Again, we'll try to deal month.
with things on a subjective
basis, still recognizing the
•
bottom line is ·when you have
-~
temn success, individual goals
~
will be met. It still starts with
the team."
117 E. Memorial Drive
While Maddox is signed
through 2007, the Steelers
\
. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
plan to go with first-round
draft pick Roethlisberger
Jcun Tru :-.~c l l. Grants A dm ini~otrat o r
t 7-l()) 992. 7908"
sooner than later.
According to Cowher, he
showed steady progress while
going against the Steelers'
starting defense almost daily .
since last month.
The Meigs Grants office is preparing a $300,000 CDBG Community Distress
. "Certainly, I think he i9 get·
Grant for the Village of Middleport. This grant is designed to improve your
ling comfortable," C~her
residential community!
said. "He saw a lot ·of different fronts. a lot of different
Recently, a needs survey was circulated in the village for residents opinion as
blitzes, a lot of people going
to what projects would · be of utmost importance within the Village of
in .a lot of different directions.
You couple that with being
Middleport. Public hearings were al so held to ascertain the needs.
new in the system. there were
some inconsistencies. But that
is to be expected.
THE FOLLOWING AREAS OF NEED WERE CHOSEN BY
"He showed a lot of signs of
THE PUBLIC SURVEY AS THE MOST IMPORTANT:
what we thought we were get·
ling when we drafted him."
Street Improvements
Fire Equipment and Facilities
Linebacker Clint Kriewaldt
finished camp with a fmcSidewalk Repairs
Demolition of unsightly structures
Historic Preservation
Water and Sewer Improvements
.
Cotilmunity Building
Storm Drainage Improvements

E-mail us your local sports: ·
sports@mydailytribune.com

.

Mcqo

champion isn't expecting NASCAR to abandon
the plates anytime soon.
'Til tell you this: there's no way we could be
out there racing at those speeds," Wallace said.
" It was neat to be out there running that fast by
myself, but it would be insane to think we could
have a pack of cars out there doing that."
Wallace's speed easily exceeded the official
Talladega and NASCAR qualifying record of
212.809, set by Bill Elliott on April 30, 1987. ·
Talladega race speeds reached close to 210 that
year be tore a crash nearly sent Bcbby Allison's
car flying into the packed main grandstand. TI1at
prompted NASCAR .to begin requiring carburetor plates to slow cars at Talladega and Daytona.
its two longest.and fastest tracks.

Meigs County (jrants Office

MIDDLEPORT RESIDENTS!

\

.

. Wallace hits 228 mph at Talladega
TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) - Rusty Wallace
got a chance to mn his NASCAR Nextel Cup
Dodge at Talladega Superspeedway without a
horsepowec-sapping carburetor resrrictor.plate.
The result was a, eye-popping lap at more than
216 mph.
"We hit 228 at the end of the straightaway," an
excited Wallace said of his run Wednesday on the
2.66-mile oval. "It Was a deal that] certainly will
remember for the rest of my life.
. "We'd all been wonderin~ what it would feel
like to run at Talladega agam without the plates
and now I know. I'll bet we could be running
speeds up to 235 without the plates, if we spent
nme doing sam~ tweaking._''
.
.
But the longttme Cup star and !onner senes

Associated Press

CLEVELAND (AP)- C.C. Sabathia is
_ea~er to see his boyhood hero, Ken
.Gnffey Jr., htt his SOOth home run -but
:not necessarily at Jacobs Field.
· And certainly not Friday night, when
the Indians' left-hander will oppose
Gnffey and the Cincinnati Reds in the
start of a three-game interleague series.
''I'm very excited abom facing him.''
.Sabathia said Thursday.
· Asked if he wouldn't mind seeing
:Griffey hit his milestone homer in a game
:in which Cleveland · led I 0-0, Sabathia
shook his head.
"Make that 20-0," he said. "I don't want
him to hit it where it might cost us. And I
definitely don't want to give it up, because
.that means he would have hit two."
:- Griffey will come to town with 498
·career homers, seeki ng to join Babe Ruth,
Ted Williams and Rafael Palmeiro as
players who have hit homer No. 500
against the Indians.
Ruth did it off Cleveland's Willis
Hudlin at old League Park in 1929,
:Williams connected off Wynn Hawkins at
:Cleveland Stadium in !960, and Palmeiro

. hit his last year in Texas .off reliever Dave
Elder.
Indians manager Eric Wedge said he
won't order pitchers to work around
Griffey.
"He's a great player. but we'll pitch to
him." Wedge said. "Unless the situation
warrants something else at the time."
• WHO'S NEXT?: Right-hander Scott
Elarton, who pitched a complete-game
shutout Monday night at Tripi~- A Buffalo,
probably will be . called up to pitch
Saturday against the Reds.
"I've got a pretty good idea who it will
be; I think everytxxly does," Wedge said,
"but we'll make the announcement when
it's appropriate."
Elarton will be replaced at Buffalo by
righty Jeff D'Amico, who will make a
rehab start Saturday. D' Amico 'has been
on the Indians' disabled list since May II
with a lower back strain.
• STAYING ON TOP: Alex Escobar
leads American League outfielders with
nine assists in 46 games, but he says his
powerful ann has not always been so
accurate.

Phillips

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune .com
. MASON, W.Va. ' - Ralph Sayre . of
:New Haven has taken the lead in the 2004
. Riverside Senior Men's Golf League.
Sayre has scored 108.5 points for the year
to lead runner-up Chet Thomas by 16
points. Thomas, who is from Patriot,
leads third place player Howard Parker of
Pomeroy by 5.5 points. Parker recently
:moved from the area from Georgia.
. A total of 64 players Were on hand for
the thatch on Tuesday. A total of 16 fourman teams with !6 points were available
for the day. The low score of 56 (-14) was
.recorded by the team .of Keith Woods

Pistons
from Page 81
:the arena where two champi:onship banners hang in the
:nonh end z.one.
And if form holds, this
series might not even make
it back to Los Angeles for a
Game 6 or"7.
: Nothing worked for t~e
·Lakers,
from
Bryant s
:offense to O'Neal's touch to
:Karl Malone's ailing knee to
"Gary Payton's slow feet.
Campbell's
breakaway
-dunk put the Pistons ahead
:70-52. and Los Angeles
:never mounted anything
even resembling a concerted
comeback effort. The crowd
went wild with 2: I0 remaining when little-used rookie
Darko Milicic got off the
bench for his series debut.
Bryant finished with just
II points on 4-for-13 shoot·ing and O'Neal scored 14.
:No one else on the Lakers
scored in double figuces.
"We never get down. That
was a heartbreaker in Game
:2, and people thought we
:would be flat, but we were
:even more hungry," Billups
·said. "We just keep contest·ing everything. Tayshaun
was great tonight contesting
every shot Kobe took. The
·Big Fella is a problem for us,
:tlut Ben and Rasheed are
:down there working, and so
:is .Elden."
· After O'Neal opened the
second half with a dunk, the
Pistons got the · offense in
.gear and began to pull away.
·Billups scored nme pomts Ill
~he first four minutes of the
:quarter on a pair of 3s and a
:drive around Payton for a
three-point play, and a follow dunk by Prince forced
the Lakers to call timeout
"trailing 54-40.
; Bryant eventually hit his
·first shot wtth 7:351eft Ill the
:third quarter, making ~n 18·footer, but the. Ptstons
answered back wtth a gar-

Meigs
from Page 81

Jean Trussell
Meigs Grants Administrator

I

·Indians
from Page 81
Martinez tied it in the bottom half with his lOth
homer, hitting a 3-l pitch
into the right-field seats.
"! might have to throw it
lefty to him," Pavano said.
"! couldn't figure him out.
The homer was on a 3-l
fastball . Tn the ninth, he hit
the first pitch the other way.
He 's really a good hitter."
Gonzalez put the Marlins
up 3-l in the sixth with his
fifth homer. a two-run shut
to right.
"It was nice to see Alex
pick up some of our guys,"
Marlins
manager Jack
McKeon said. "We still didn't make it easy. We left 12
guys on base. We 've got to
drive them in."

'

.

ARE BEING CONSIDERED?

Your attendance is needed to get this grant approved! Support your village!

didn 't know whether she
was going to throw in colle~e because of a back
inJury, we were just kind of
laying low, waiting to find
out and as the season went
on she was getting better
and her back wasn't bothering her."
Willey also reiterated his
s·atisfaction in being able to
bring in another local product. "It's great to get local
talent because people recognize that we do have a
decent track program," he
added. "So they're willing

:New
Haven's Sayre asends to top of leaderboard
.

DO YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT PROJECTS

There will be a PUBLIC HEARING TUESDAY, JUNE 17,2004 at 7:00P.M.
at the "old" Meigs Middleport elementary school building on Pearl Street.

from Page 81

"I've worked on it and the most important thing for me to do is stay on top of the
ball," he said. "I've always thrown well ,
but the ball used to sail. It doesn't do you
much good if you throw it lfurd, but it
doesn't go where you want it to go.''
Wedge appreciates Escobar's talent.
"He's .got one of the best arms in the
league," he said. "It ranks right up there
with those guys in Anaheim (Raul
Mondesi, Vladimir Guerrero and Jose
Guillen). Having a good arm is one thing.
Having accuracy is another."
• TAKE A LOOK: Scott Lewis, the
junior left-hander from Ohio State drafted
by Cleveland in the third round Monday,
is expected to throw for Indians management at Jacobs Field this weekend.
Lewis had reconstructive surgery on his
left elbow May 29, 2003, but came back
this spring · to pitch 20 innings for the
Buckeyes.
"We want to take a first-hand look at
how Scott is doing," Indians scouting
director John Mirabelli said. "He's throwing the fastball pretty well, now we want
to see a little sharper bite on his curve."

Riverside Senior Golf League ·

(Bradbury),
Jim
Cunningham out and enjoy the senior fun. The league
(Huntington). Harvey Blain (Point ends the last Tuesday in September.
Pleasant) and Clark Green (Hurricane).
The following is a list of the top point
·
The second place team score 59 (-11) leaders: ·
was turned in by Mike Bragg (Pouit
LNguo Standings
.
Pleasant), Floyd Chapman (Syracuse), 1. Aalph Sayre, Senior
108.5, New Haven; 2. Chet Thomas. 92 .5,
Bub Stivers (Pomeroy) and Jack Fox Patriot; 3. Howard Parker, 87, Flomeroy: 4.Tom Nunnery, 86.5,
Pt. Pleasant; 5. Dewey Smith, 86, Bidwell; 5. Clark Greene,
(Clifton).
86,
Hurricane; 7. Jim Cunningham, 78, Huntington: 7. Keith
Third place (60) went to Mick Woods,
78, Bradbury; 9. Elmer Click, 76 , Conagevitle; 10. lew
Winebrenner (Racine). Charley Yeager Gilliland, 75, Mason; 10. Don Wilson , 75. Chester; 12 . Earl
(Mason), Lawrence Scarberry (Point Johnson, 74, Mason; 13. Russ WoodS, 73.5, Pt . Pleasant; 13.
Blain, 73.5, Pl. Pleasant 15. Md&lt; Winebrenner. 72,
Pleasant) and Pal Williamson (New HeNey
Racine: 15. Jack FoK, 72, Clifton: 17. Pat Williamson , 70.5,
Haven).
New Haven; 17. Paul Lanham, 70.5, Ripley; 19. Mike Bragg,
Pt. Pleasant); 20. Bill Yoho, 69, New Haven; 21 . Bill
The closest to the pin winners were 48.5,
Pethtel, 67.5, New Haven; 22. Don Fields, 66.5. Hartford; 22.
Kenny Dodson of Hartford on number Ron Phalin, 66.5, Gallipolis; 22. ChUCk Yeager, 65.5; 25. Jack
seven and Dana Winebrenner on the 14th Maloney, 65, Gallipolis: 26: Craig Barnes. 63; Pl. Pleasant 27.
Mac McCarty. 62. Apple Grove; 28. Ken Wh;led. 61.5. Pl.
hole.
Pleasant 28. Bill Hannum, 61 .5, Chester. 30. Claude Proffitt,
There is still plenty of time left to come 60.5.

geous display of passing as
Prince fed Rasheed Wallace
five feet from the basket. ·
and he in turn threaded a soft
toss to Ben Wallace for a
layup.
More of the same . followed, the Lakers growing
increasingly .frustrated by
each botched possession, the
P.istons becoming more
emboldened by their ability
to create a quality shot. It
was 63-51 after three quarters, and the lead grew to 20
before the fourth quarter was
even four minutes old.
Campbell . even added
another deflection just
moments after his breakaway dunk, and , Lindsey
Hunter turned it into a layup
to make it 72-52.
Bryant scored only one
point in the first half, missing all four · of his attempts
from the field and committing one egregious turnover
when he fired a pass several
feet over the head of a teammate and into the second
row of the stands.
But as bad as Bryant was,
the Pistons weren't much
better - . especially in the
· second quarter. Detroit went
12 consecutive possessions
at one point without a field
goal and missed five free
throws in the period to allow
the Lakers to stay within
striking range.
.
Los Angeles finally started
. pounding the ball inside to
O'Neal late in .the quarter,
and his two late buckets
helped the Lakers keep their
deficit manageable. The
Pistons led 39-32 at halftime
behind 14 points from
Hamilton.
After wavering for two
days on whether he'd play,
Malone came out for the
opening tip wearing a knee
brace for the first time in his
career. His mobility was
obviously limited, however,
and the Pistons outrebounded the Lakers 20-l 0 in the
first quarter to open an early
!3-point lead.

DO YOU WANT TO ADD YOUR OPINION?

\.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

:Sabathia excited to face hero Griffey

Buick Classic
BY JOHN NICHOLSON

u, 2004

Indians Notebook

Browns to release Couch, PGA
Singh
leads
say it's time to move on
Associated Press

Friday, June

...

first run on the day. Later in
:the third, Arrtsbary doubled
:in Blackston and then scored
·on a base-hit by Warren,
:rTiaking it a 3-0 game ..
. · Meigs added a run tn the
"fourth on a ~rounder by
Blackston, sconng McClure,
·before Warren's shot 111 the
;seventh put Meigs on top 6-

I

[.

Athens, with the help of
seven walks during the sev'
enth and eighth innings
combined, tied the game
.
going into the ninth.
Meigs will play its ftrst
horne game of the season
Saturday as the Post 128
squad entertains the Athens
A team . The double header ts
scheduled to begin at 2 p.m.
at the University of Rio
Grande, one of two home
fields for Meigs this season.

to come here and participate
and fanfare. alway' help' a&lt;,
well and hopefull y 11 ith the
press. it alwa~ s help ' to
have the local talent. "
·'lt"s a win-win . . ituat ion
for everyone:· Wilk~ 'aid .
Willey i' confident that
Phillips can 'tep nght 111 "'
a freshman and "d" "'me
great things for u, ...
.
·'We ' re verv.

\t&gt;J"\'

With one out. Jeff Conine
beat out a ~rounder ontu the
hole at short and 11 ent 1,1
second when the throw h}
Omar Vizquel got pa't fi r, !
baseman Ben Brous;,a rd .
who was charged with an
error.
Conine went to third '"
Lenny Harri s grounded Ill
second. then GonLalez hn a
1-1 pitch the oppo, ite wa}
Davis allowed three run'
and nine hit s 01er ,e,·en
innings . The right -hander
walked two. struck out four
and dropped to 0-2 01 er hi s
last seven starts ,ince :\1al
4.

Juan Pierre dro1 e 111
Florida's final run in the
eighth off Cliff Bart o,h. Hi '
opposite-field
dri1·e
bounced into the left- fie ld
stands for a ground-rule
double. s corin~ Harris. 11110
singled off Ri ck White 11 ith
one out.

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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
•

Friday, June 11, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

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"'

_5§2 '
525

,.'-'- ""
"

2h
4 1,
_5 1.

509

""

WEST

w

J2
L

Pd.

'"'--

31

26

544

SanD~

32

27

542

San Frai'ICtSCO
AnlOOa

30
24

30 ~ @0

Colo&lt;ado

21

"

..bL

55

W2

P10

Str1l

5·5

L3
ll

_L.2

7·3

4

8h

1·9

L5

GB

P10
6-4
55

Slr1l

-21·11
17-13
13-14
- 15-16
15-14

15-13
1,!-14
14-12

. ,.

L1
l2

._

15-12

~14

1&amp;-12

16· 15

1217

1219

13 16

622

1i_14 _~

W1
l5

~7

1&amp;-15

18·10
13-15

W1

-!_6 -=-

14-17
13-18
11 21

9-17

~1
ll

&amp;-4

16-\ (

1~13

W_2
-

18-14

1&amp;12
14-13
15-13

d., •• tn~ Awuftl.
Pi!tsb.if'!11 at T81!8S (ppd rwl
Montrealart&lt;&amp;nSilli Ctty (ppd ralfl)

Florida4 ~~
Tampa Bay 5 Sari Frat'ICISCO 2
Ph1~ al Chcago Sox (ppd, lalll)

Oakland 17 Cncn'la!l 8

Tl'u'tdtly'a NL Reeult

0

0

1

D

lJmplf9s-Home C.B Buciulor. Fu-s1 , Chuck
Meriwether Seo:M, Mtk8 Reily Thlld CM8

"""'""'

T-2 22 A-16.267 (50&gt;98)

..

Flida¥'a lnteriMgUI GarMe

•

Arizona (Sparks 2 4) at Toronto !Henlgen 2-5), 7OS p.m
Ronda {Phelps 1-&lt;l) at Detroit (Knorts 3-t) 7:05p.m
Los Ang&amp;l&amp;s (Od Perel 3-3) at Boston [Lowe 5-5), 7:05 p m
San Diego 1Eaton 2-6111 NY YanltNS (Mussna 7-4) 7OS p m
Ctnernnatl (P Wtlson 7 0) at Clewland (Sabattua 3-3! 7 05 p.m
Colorado (Cook 1-1 ) at Tampa Bay !Bell 1·3) 1 15 p.m
San Francts..:"l {H&amp;lmanson 2 2) et Ba~ (Bedard 1·2), 7 35 p m
S1 L~IS (Sup,.l811 5-51 atTaxas (~ 1 1), B OS p m

SFtnleycf
DBbs1a rt
LGnzlzll
Hlnbm1b
T1acy3b

4 112

Mora3b
300 0
T8j&amp;de ss 4 0 0 0
FA-nolb 4aOO
.M.oplr:t1401D
Surhol!rt 40~0
Maloscf 301 D
Bigbie If
3 0 1 0
Mchadoc 3010

4 1 1 0

4000
4 010
3DOO
3011

ZrlUifah

Cintron ss 3 0 0 0
Bnloc
3000

H~Jrph

31 3 4 3 Totala

Tobtll

1

oo a

3-1 0 7 0

ArizOI'II
000 000 300 3
S.ltlmore
' 000 000 000 0
E-Hturston (1 ) LO&amp;-Artzona 2 Ba"tm01e
10 HA-Sfm1ey 117) SB-Matos (10) CS.....
BAobBrts (4)
IP H RERBBSO

-

FossumWt-4

65

....-.

2 2 0

0025

0

D 0

100012
7

4

3

3

1

2

Uar\1

Chlc.go

ab r hbl
Wmacll. 2b 4 0 2 0
Rntena 9S 3 0 0 0
Lunass
10:)0

lb rhbl
TWalkr 2b 5 2 3 2
Barrette 5111

MArut~lf
4 01 0
Rolen 3IJ 1 0 0 0
McKay30 2000
Edmndct 1000
L.nktrd cl 2 1 1 1

Kelton If

RSndfsrf
Tvarezp
WWlmsph
Mabry 1b
YMiinac
HarMp
Eldredp

AlouH

MEICIB5 3b 1 0 0 0
Hlnd.9N 11 4 2 2 1

3 I 1 2

3010
1000
10 0 0
Cedenol1 1000
Tot... 30 3 8 3

r~.

4 1 1 0

0000

. ,.

H

AERBBSO

32·3 10 10 10 3 0
22342212
123100 02

Haren L 0.1

Tavarez

Chlcooo

ZambranoW7 2
Beltran

8 5 2 2 4 7
111102
Umpims----Home Kevin Kelley Ftrst Alfonso

Marquez Second Rtck Reed Third Ed

""""~A--36 707 (39 345)
T-2:38
r hbi
4 000
OIJOO

Mlles2b

P&amp;IIDw~

Clayton S!i 4 1 1 0
Hdo.ngph 0 D 0 0

HeHon 1b 5 1 3 2
'CJhsoo c 3 D 1 o

Bumnz dtl
HHiday ll

4 Doo

4 000

MaSwyrt 4 0 0 0
luGnll 3b 4 1 1 1
Frmancl 3 1 1 1

Totlla

-·""'

lbrhbl
J&amp;terss
3210
Catro2b D 0 0 D
BWllmsct 32 31
.A.A~3b5122

JaGbt dt1 3 1 1 a
Shtlield rt 4 1 2 2
Malsutlf 51 1 a
TCiar11:1b 310 0
flherty c 5 1 2- 5
EW1ISf'l 2b 4 0 0 a

35 4 7 4 TotM&amp;

2

D

1

3

1

1D000

2

1

Ken. . City

210

ooo

010

tJO 000 -

000

•
0

E--Gettls (2! OP-Kansas C1ty 2 LOBMontreal 6 Kanus Ctty 6 28--EnChawu
(7) CaiTo• (2) 38--0C.abrera (2), Gettt5 (t)
HR-Wtt kerson (1a1 SB- NJol'lnson (I)
SF-TBaltSIIil
IP H RERBBSO
~

Day W 5-6
Ken&amp;u City
OR~ L.2·1

9

6

0

0

D

4

5

5

2

5

3

2

0

0

8b
EChvezcf 3
Carroll 2b · 4
Vldrodh '3
TBtsta 3b

OCbew. ss

1 11
00 0

1 1 1
" 22 3

ao o a

4 00a
.31 0 0

WlkrsnW

lib rhbl

r hbi

WGrero 2b
Bell!W1d
MrSwydh
Har.ey fb
Stat11irf

40 0 D
3 1 1 D
401D
40 2 0

3001

Sttnnett c 4 0 1 D

JAIVra r1
R~ford 3b 3 0 0 D
SleOge 1b 3 1 1 0
S.rmall5 3 t 1 1
NJhn$111b 1 1 1 0 Bergerlf 30aD
Schl'1dr c 3 0 2 2
Tot.l&amp; 31717 Tot.ll 31212
Uontre1l
KanA&amp; City

011

003

002 7
Tlgera7, Braves 4
umpr~ome Larry Po.1ctno Firs1. Dave
000 000 011 - 2
~-~"'-:.!..:::!!~";;':::::;:-----1 Asch\¥1!1Qft Se:Md Bruce DrecJtman Third E-WtiMerson (3) S11rmerr (3) Gobble {2)
Atlant8
o.trolt
Geny 08YIS
OP-Kan&amp;as Crty I LOB-Montreal 3
&amp;b r h b1
1b r h bl
T-2 31 A--0 (-40.7 85~
Kansas Cfry 4 28-NJottnson (7) Schneider
F'urc:al ss 5 1 3 1 ASnctlz cl 5 0 1 0 :-=-:-::-:C"-;;:"
. :,-;-,-:--:;-----1 (7), Ha~y (11) HFI-TBatrsta 2 (7) Bi!ITOf.
NGreen 2b 3 o o a HQQnsM rt 3 2 I a
Rangers 9, Pirates 7
(3)
S-EnCha~el
Schneid8'
SFJC.VW rf 3 1 D a cG'illerl u " 2 1 1
EnChalll!l SIBil!
CJoneulh 3 1 1 3 O'rong dh 4 2 1 1
G•me 1
IP H RERBBSO
JuFrco tb 5 a 1 a CPena 1b 3 0 1 2
Phtlburgh
Texaa
all r haM
A.Jonesct 4000 Monroell 302 ,1
lb rhbl
22·3 4 0 0 0 1
Ollka
EYoogcf 2 2 1 0 SKmW3-2
Mrrero If
• 1 1 a Mtnson 3b 3 0 0 0
KBI'!dall c 4 2 3 0
4 t-3 a o D o 3
MVoogss
2
1
1
2
EddPrzc 3010 Norton3b 0000 JWilsnss 5231
1 1
1 1 0
1
Ayala
.A.StartO
2b
3
1
D
0
DeRose 3b 4 o 2 a lr.ge c
2 oo 1
Ward 1b 4 o 2 4
1 1 1 1 1 0
CCordero
lnfante2b 31 1 0 CW11snrt 2 0 01 Txe1ra1 b 3101
K•nau.Cfty
3 2 1 2
Total&amp; 34 4 I 4 Total&amp;
30 7 8 8 Md&lt;.wk cl 5 0 0 1 P8rr}' cf1
71-365402
Gobble L.J-4
aayn
4ao o Bllllodoi 3b 4 0 0 0
SuiiMin
23 a o o 1 o
AlfanUI
300 100 000 4 TAdmnph 1 0 0 0 C.A.Ien~ 3000
122220
Gnmsley
1 000
Simon &lt;II 5 1 3 0 NlXcl
Detroit
010 002 40x 7
WP-5Km
3110 Mathwsrt 41 23
E-DeRosa {1 1) Infante (5) OP-A11anta 2 Hill3b
UmPire&amp;-Home Greg Gibson Ftrsl Bruce
4100
Oetrol 2 LOB-Ai111nta 10 DetroH 9 28- ANunez~ 10 0 0 Bra)a&amp;C
Oreckman. Second Gerry Oevl6 Third Dave
Futcal (5), CP9nlil (9), InfanTe (7) HR- Gastillo 2b 3 1 1 0
TotiU 37 713 7 Tololo 29 • 5 8 T-226 A-16,891 (40785)
..c.Jones (8) 5-EddPerez SF-II'Ige
IP H AEABBSO
Prtt&amp;burgh
001
024 000 7
002 301 301 t Dodgers 6, Blue Jaya 1
R..om,
633354
E-JW1Ison (7) Stynes (1) MYoung (9) Lo• Ang•lea
23 4 4 4 2 2
Altonseca L,5-2
OP - Ptllsbulgh 2 LOB-Ptttsburgh 10
•b r hbi
•b rhbl
1 1·3
1 0 0 2 0
OAbrlsH 5120 Mnc:hno 2b 3 o 2 0
.Texas 3 2B-JW1tson (15) HR-~.mliJr\Q (9)
MarothW 5-3
7 8 4 3 3 1 Perry (4) Matthews (2) SB-EYoung (7) lztuns ss 4 1 2 1 Oomez3b 4 a o o
Yan
1 1 0 0 0 1 MYoung (6) CS---Kende.ll {41 8---Cestitlo Brdleyd 5000 JhnsonN 4 0 0 0
ShGren dh 5 o 3 1 1/'Nells cf ' 1 1 1
UrOOaS,9
1 0 0 0 1 1 SF-Ward , CJ!Nilson
3aaa
LOucac 5120 Zaunc
1P H RERBBSO
HBP-by Mlroth (NGree!'l 2) WP-.A.Ironseca
Beltre
3b 4 1 2 2 Wdwrdss 4010
Urbin11
Pttt.burgh
6
,
6
JEcrcnr1
5221
JPhlps
dh
30 1 0
6 4 12
Umpres-Hom8, Paul Emmel F1rs1 Terry OIP9rez
Vntura 1b 4 0 1 1 Ctlnotto ph 1 o 0 o
1·3 t 3 0 1 0
C~ Secood, Mike DiMuro, Thrrd, Joe West
MeadoWs L 2·2
1
3010
3000 Berg 1b
2·3 0 0 0 0 1 Cora2b
-;:T-&gt;
,_...........
~.,..'4-2;;-:1:::,1:-68...(&lt;0;:~-;
.1120;-J'-)).----I:;,~
Rlosrf
3000
1 1 0 0 0 0
Total• 40 614 6 Totat• 32 1 8 1
=E:::•,po=a.::B:c,::R::::oya'='l::::s..:0:-----1
413 7 3 3 1 5
a.m. 1
Aamrrez
1 3 4 2 0 1 Lo• Angela&amp;
213 000 000 I
Montrul
ICanN• City
FranciSCOW1 0 1 2 3 0 0 a 1 3 Toronto
000 100 000 1
tb r hbl
abrhbl
Almanl!l.r
1 2 0 0 0 0
E-laun (4) Berg ~ 4) Towers (2) DP--Los
ECtwel cf 5 1 2 0 Grtfnoo2b 4 01 0 FCorderoS 19
1 1 o a 0 2 Angeles 1, Toronto 2 LOB-I..os Angeles 10,
Carroll 2tl 5 3 3 0 Belr8rl d 4 0 0 0 HBP---b&gt;J A~Wflr&amp;Z !Kendall), by OIParez (Per Toromo e. 28---ShG!een {13) Lo Duta (11 )
Vidro&lt;tl 5122
JEncamaetoo (1 31 Menes:htno (5) HA-Bel~~~~Pe~~t=ai 11)' Benoit (CWt~son) 118
TBtsta 3b 4 D D 1 ~: ~b ~ ~ ~
(15) JEncarnac10n (8) V'Nella (81 SBNJhnsn 1b 4 1 2 0 ~:vrl d'1 ;
~ UmptrB9-Home, Doug Edd1ngs Ftrst Jell Kel· DRoberts 2 (20) lztUIIS (7)
OCbera ss 5 0 3 1 WGrero cl
IP H RERBBSO
1 0 a 0 logg, Second Charlie Aaliklrd, Third Ramon
Wlu'snll 4123
1
JAMar1 4DO a Randa 3b 4 0 1 D ~~o1aH (49115)
1~0:~8~
4
8 6 1 1
.......
'
Gagne
EDiazc
41 20 BSnegoc 301 D
1 a D D
I
Berroa ss 3 o , D Expos 7, Royals 2
Toronto
Genis d
3 a t D ==:::.;"-'=~=.,:::-----·1 Towers L, 1 2
223 8 6 6 1 2
Tobll&amp; 40 8 te 7 Total&amp;
33 0 6 0
Game 2
Frle
31·3 5 0 0 0
Montreal
KanN&amp; City
Kershner
1 0 0 0 0

..,_,.

......

n,....

....,

""""'

Yankees 10, Rockies 4

c - ab

3

1 1-3

llontrMI

-

37121512

Al01.1 {IS) DeLee (7) SF~EMarttnez

IP

1

8

Bruoe Froernmllg .
6 2·3 11
T-3D1 ~1 .596 ( 57,478) .
Field
213 5
:;:;::::=-:;-;!;::::::~;------~ WP...:..oav, OAeyoes

1000
512 3
2 0 1 0
2 112

St Loula
000 020
001 3
Chic190
010110)10 OOz - 12
E-Rentena (5) DP-ChiC8~ 3 LOB--S!
Lou1s 4 Chtcago 6 26-Womack (1 4),
TWetker (11) AAemtrel ( t6) OoLee (18)
HR-lilnkiOJd (5), Mabry (1) TWalker (7),

5t L.DUtl

3

Oohrnann

3

Contreru W3-2
7 5 4 4 2 6
GWhll:e
1-3 2 0 0 D D
Prinz
12-3Da012
HBP-tly Pmz lf'tllk.lw) WP-Dotrnann
UmptU18 tlome Mike Wi'lters Fnt HLA"'ter
Wendelstd; Second Trn Tmmons Third

41 13

Dlbolsrf
Oel..ee1b
CPftson d
REMIIZ ss
Zmbrnop
Behranp

6

Smpson

1000
ARmrzJb 3330

2100
0 00 0
1 0 0 0

6

'

35 t01210

Coloredo
002 200 000 4
NIWYGrtt
300 115 OOx - 10
E-Ciaytoo (4) AFiodnguez ~51 DP-C~·
orado 1 LOB-Colorado 6, New York 10
28-AAodnguez (11), Sheffield (13), MatSUI
(12) . 38-BW~IIams (t ) HR-He.llor\ (10),
LuGonzalvz {6) Freeman ·r t) Flal'lerty (2)
SF- Sh&amp;f118ld
IP H REABBSO

Floflct.

Clollotond

lb I hbl
P~ecf
4011
LCsttlo 2b 3 0 3 0

lb rhbl
Lllwlon I 4 0 1 0
Vilql181 ss 4 0 0 0
Geruld
4000

LOio'ell 3b
Cbreral1
Nunezrf

PittsDurgt1 (Benson 4 51 at Oakland (Hudson 6-2) 1a:os p.m
Fridly'a M. o-n.
Hous1on (Redding 3-4) at Mtlwaukae (D 081116 4-5) 8 05 p m.

JJennngs t..s-6 5 1·3 10
.iflopel
1·3 1

--

Cubs 12, Cardinals 3

NY Meta (lOiter 2 2) 111 Kanau C~ (May 2-8) 8 10 p.m
Philaclelphla (Mitwood 4-4) at MIV'IMOia (GI'II!!UI'I99f 2-5) 8 10 p.m
Montreal (L. Hernandez 3-5) al Seattle (A Fran!OO 3-4), 10 05 p m
Chicago Cubs (Maddux 54) M Anaheim (lad!ey 3-7), 10:05 pm

Je-:

g
gg

BakWt .. . 4 1 1 3

5 0 0 0

5000 VMrtnlC 3 1 2 1
OaDO Lake' pr o o o a
Choi1b
4000 Helnerdh 4 0 1 0
Conrnelf 5 1 1 0 91ake3b 3000
LHam; dh 5 1 2 0 lmsrd 1b 3 0 0 0
AGI\lll ss 4 2 2 2 Billard 2b 3 0 0 0
Admndc 403 I
AEscbf r1 3 0 0 0
Tolllll 39 412 4 Totlil&amp; 31 1 4 1
Floiida
010 002 010 4
Clevtol•nd
010 000 000 1
E-Biake (7) Broussard (3) OP-clewland
1 LOB-fiOflde. 12 Clellllland 4 28--PtEme
(9), Redmond 2 (9), VMerttnez (16) HAAGonza.le.l (6) Vt.tortlnlil (10) SB-LCas~l·
Jo (10)
tP H RERBBSO
Aorido

PavanoW,5-2

823

BenilazS24

c,.,......

1·3

4
o

1
o

1
0

1
o

7
0

1

9

3

3

2

4

JeOavlsL1-4

RiWhrte

2·3 2 1 1 0 1
010010

8ar10Sh
RISke

1 1·3

0

0 0 1
Bar1osh pi1ched to 2 batterli 1n the 8th

2

Ump!res-H()I1'ofl Maril: Wegner Ftl'$1 Rob
Drake Second, larry Young: Th1rd, Angel Her-

Tollll&amp;

""'''"""""

Rue1erl.2-6
WFranldin

513
2 2·3

9
0

5
0

5
0

3
1

5
2

ZambranoW6-4 61 3
T•eMillllr
1·3

2
0

1
0

D
D

6
0

6
1

3

1

0

3

T"""'..,

ColomaS1
WI'-colome

213

Ulfl)ll'e&amp;-Homtt Lance BarMdale Fll"'t, .,ta.rry
Meals, Second. Paul Schriebel', Thltd, Jerry
layne

T-2 46 A-10630(43.969)

Pitt8bu1'9h

.......

r....

.0 r hbl
Kendalc 4 1 ~I
Cutilto2b , o o a

Totlll1

00rt1Z dh

5 I 4 0

MHia11 b
McCty 1b
Kaplol'r1

4233
4112
30DO
40 12
0 00 0
40aa

Reese 2b

4 3 3 1

Var~ekc

38 311 3 Total&amp;

37 913 I

San D1ego
100 001 010 3
Boaton
001 250 011 9
LOB-S.an 01ego 11 Boston 8 2B-Bur·
roughs (1a) Payton (11) Ctrtllo (1) Youktlts
(6) MRamtrel (19), Garc1aparra (11 M~lar
(1 4) HR- MAam11el (16) Reese (3)
eP H RERBBSO
Son Diogo
4 6 6 6 2 3
11JaldezL5-3

"""'
'
()""'
Booton

3

~

2

2

1

3

1

1

\

a

4

1

Schil~ngW83

7 6 2 2 2 8
23 2 1 1 0 a
~~~
23 1 0 0 0 1
Dinardo
2320000
!Valdez pitched to 3 batl8fS tn the 5th
HBP--Ily Dtnaroo (N6'M) by P\Jffer tGarcta
parra)
Umpires--Home Mdv flelcher Ftrsl Trn
Welke Second J1m Reynolds Thn'd Mik8
Embree

~~~a;, ~A-35 066 (35,095)
Devil Rays 5, Giants 2
San Fran
ab rhbi

Tamp• Bay
ab rhbl

lib rPibl
4 220

M~u

Blalclck 3b 5 2 • 0

mttnnct 3ooo
JWilsn ss 4 1 1 3
Beyll
0000
CWIIsnrf 4000
AMaleol 4 01 0
Simon~ 4010
Stynas 31:1 4 0 0 0
Ward1b 4220
.A..Nunez 2b 4 0 1 0
ToW~.
38 410 4

ASmto2b

s

Filmer d1

4 2 2

T)I(IQ. 1b

1 1 ,_
~

4 1 1 3

Olh,I)CI I

4 00 1

Ma~rf

3020

Na.;cl

~ 000

Hc:ttebV c
Tal&amp;ola

---

lib

hbl
PdKI*d 5230
BCI&amp;rtr1 !5242
,Jenkros It 5 2 1 2
f

3 2 1 0

381013 I

""""'""'

"""

1

1

1

0

0

0

1

1

a o o o

7

9

4

4

0

6

Tex..

RogersW~2

Brocatl

1100a1
10aa00
FQQQ p~Ched to 3 batters 11'1 the 51h
BShOUS8

HBP-&lt;&gt;v Few (M'"""'J

Umpn" !lome Dan lassogna Fll3t, Jeff Kellogg; Secorld, Ramon .A..rm8ndartz,Thrd CtlaJ·
lti~l ilon::l

T-226 A-27 ,219(49,1 15)

Mlnna&amp;OI.I

1b rhbl
Valen1 1b 30ao
Spncerl 3 0 1 0
Matsut ss 4 1 a 0
FkJo{dlf
4~22
Mctwg 2b o o a o
JPttllps lb 2 0 0 0
Piazza dh 5 0 1 0
ZEIIIB3b
6a10

ab

rhbl
CGzmnss 7 0 2 1

Mauer&lt;l'l 2000
PoAAyandh 3 0 1 1
LFord~
5010
Koskte 3b 6 0 1 0
THnter ct 6 o 1 o
J.Jooes r1 6 D , 0
LeCroy 1b 6 1 2 0
HBincoc 3 1 0 0

KGarcarf 601D
Wggntn2b 6 0 1 0 Ollrmn ph 1 D 1 1
Cmeroncf 6 0 1 D MntkW 1b 1 0 0 D
\1Wil511 c 6 0 0 0 AMis2b 6120
Tot1118 51 :Z 8 2 Totat. 52 312 3
NewYork
101 000 000 000 000 - :Z
Mlnneaot• 001 000 001 000 001 - 3
One out wli9n wmtng run SCOfed
OP- New Yor1l; 2 LOB-New Vorl!; 12, MJ~
rteSOia 10 26--Fioyd (7) Olferman (11) HAFiafd (6) S8-Spoocer (6) 8-Matsut 2
IP H RERBBSO
NewYori&lt;
MG1nter
723 5 ( 1 1 1
StanTon
0 0 0 0 1 0
,
1 1 0 ,
1 0 0 0 0 1
Jofranco
weathors
2 1 0 0 1 2
1
1 0 2
Botta!ICOL21 11 ·3 ,
Mlnnetote
Lohse
7 5 2 2 13
Furtz
10a001
JRIOCM
2 0 0 0 0 3
Nathan
100032
Roo
21320003
BallourW1 .Q
123 I 0 0 1 1
Stanton pitched lo 1 batter tn 1he 8111
HBP~ Roe. (JPht~lip!l ( by MGtnter (Lf'ord)
Umptres-tlome, T1m Tschrda, Fir$!, Marty
FoSler Second Darren Spagnardt Thtrd Joe
Brirlkman T--4 06 A-16 ,706 {45,423]

'"""'

'"

Lale Wedneaday

&amp;b r hbl

FIQQIItl u

5 D2 0

~21)

5000
3 12 1
Amzgi.R I DOO
Ovlbay1b 4 2 1 2
5piYety 2b s 1 2 1 JGilnr 4 010
BHalas 5 1 2 3 l]lnond -4 1 3 0
KGim3b 5032 Semon ell 3 0 3 0
Hdef:ll 3 0 1 0
Dmgtl'l dh 5 1 1 0
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pay {25) Spivey (10~. BHall (4) MR-VGuer·
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SHERIFF'S SALE,
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 03·
CV.Q03
MORTGAGE ELEC·
TRONIC REGISTRA·
TION SYSTEMS, INC.
Plaintiff
VI

KEITH A. HANNAH,
ET AL
DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

In pursuance

of

an

Alias Order of Sale 10
me directed from said
Court In lhe above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
public auction on lha
front steps of the
Meigs Counly Court
Houoe on Friday, July
2, 2004, at 10:00 a.m.,
of said day, the fol·
lowing deacrlbed real
estate:

Slluated In the
State of Ohio, Counly
of Meigs and In the
Townahlp of Scipio:
Slluatld In Section
26, Town 7 and Ranga
f4
bounded
and
deocrlbed aa follows:
Beginning at 1
polnl on lhe Well line
of a 17 314 acre parcel
deacrlbed as Parcal

No. 1 In a daad
recordad In Volume
188, page 91, Malga
County
Deed
Recorda, which polnl
Ia at the cenlerllne of
County Road 17:
1honce Soulh wl1h lhe
Weot line of said 17
314 acre parcel a dla·
tance of 300 feet to a
point on lhe South
bank ol White Oak
Creek, which point Ia
35~ feat North of 1he
Soulharn section llno
of Section 26, Scipio
Township; thence lot·
lowing the Southern
bank of White Oak
Creek In an Easterly
direction a dlalance
of 1oo fael; thence
due North crosalng
While Oak Creek a
dletance of 28 feet;
1hence following the
Morthern bank of
White Oak Creek In a
Northe. .lerly dirac·
lion appro•lmataly
425 feet to a polnl at
the
centerline of
County
Road
17

where White Oak
Creek crosse• under
the road, lhls point
being 440 feet Eaal of
the point of begin·
nlngj thence In a
Westerly
direction
following tha road to
the point of begin·
nlng;
conlalnlng
three (3) acres, more

or less.
CURRENT
OWNER'S
NAME:
Kellh A. Hannah and
Maleah J. Hannah aka
Meleah J. Durham
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
33557
Conerhlll
Road,
Pomaroy, Ohio 45769
PERMANENT PAR·
CEL NUMBER: t 7·
00076.000
PRIOR DEED REFER·
ENCE: Volume ~1.
Page 869
APPRAISED
AT:
545,000.00
TERMS OF SALE:
Cannot be oold for
leea than 2/3rdo of
the appraleed value.
10% down on day of
aala , caah or certified
check, balance on
confirmation of 111e.
Ralph E. Truusll,
Sheriff
Melgo Counly, Ohio
REIMER 6 LORBER
CO.,L.P.A.
By: Dennis Reimer
(Reg. I0031109)
Anorneyo for Plaintiff
2450 Edloon Blvd.
P.O. Box968
Twlnoburg,
Ohio

44087
(330) 425-4201
(5) 28. (6) 4, 11
Public Notice
Sheriff's Sale
Banellclal Ohio, Inc.
DBA
Beneficial
Mortgage Company
of Ohio VI, Jamll R.
Grueeer, ET AL
Case No. 03 CV 118
By virtue of an
order of 111e leoued
by the Court of
Common Pleaa of
Melga Counly, Ohio
and Ia me dlrectld In
a certain civil action
thorln
pending ,
wherein
Beneficial
Ohio,
Inc .
dba
Benaflclal Mortgage
Company of Ohio,
Plalnllff end Jamea R.
Grueaer,

et

al

the

Defendants, lwlll offer
for aale In the corrl·
dor of lhe flral floor of

the Courthouse on
Friday, July 30th,
2004 at 10!00 AM at
the Courthouse of
Malgs County, Ohio
the
following
described real estate:
Property altualed
In lha Counly of
Meigs, Stall of Ohio
and Township
of
Sulton:
Located In Secllon
16, Town 2, Range 12
of
the
Ohio
Company's Purchase,
beginning 11 the
Southwest corner of
a tract of land owned
by Lester F. McKenzie
described In Daad
Book No. 198 at Page
355, Melgo County,
Ohio Deed

Aaords;

lhance Ealt a dla·
lance of 251.1 ·feet,
lhe place of begin·
nlng of this deacrlp·
tloni thence East a
dletance of 110 feel
to the Weal llna of
Aaclna-Bashan

Road;

thance South o Dag.
15 mlnulea Weal
along aald road a dlstanca of 205 feet to
the Northoaat corner
of land owned by
Garnet
Rouah;
thence Weal along
Garnet Roush North
Llna 1 dletance of
129.54 leal ; thence
North D dog. 15 min·
ules Eaal a dlatance
of 180 feat; thence
East a dlatanca of
14.01 feet to a point
localld South 0 deg.
15 minutes Weal a
distance of 25 leal
from the place ol
baglnnlng;
thence
North 0 dag. 15 min·
ulaa Eaal o distance
ol 25 feet to lha placa
ol beginning contain·
lng 8.641, more or
1111.
Subject Ia all eaaa·
menta, realrlcllona
and condlllona of
record, If any.
Parcel No'a :
111-00268
18.Q0267
18.00286
18.00269
Location:
28595
Beahan Road
Recine , Ohio 45nt
Said Properly haa
been appraised for
$57,000.00 and can·
nol aale for lass lhan
213 of appraisement.
Terms ol Sale:
$5,000.00 due atr time

of sale, Balance due
within 30 days of confirmation.
Ralph E. Trussell
Sheriff
of Meigs
Counly, Ohio
Robert E. Lee
Anorney for Plaintiff
(330) 644-6161
(5) 14, 21,28 (6) 4, 11
Public Notice
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Deutsche Bank
National Trust
Company,
aa Cualodlan or
Trustee, flea Bankers
Judge: Fred W. Crow
Trust Company of
California, NA
Plalnllff,
Case No.: 04CV022
vs
Helen Townsend, at
al. NOTICE IN SUIT
FOR FORECLOSURE
OF MORTGAGE
Dafandanta.
Dora
Wining,
whose last known
addreoa
Ia
115
Butternut
Avenue,
Pomeroy, · OH 45769,
and the
unknown
halra, davlseea, lega1181,
exacutora,
admlnlatrator.a ,
spouses and aaalgne

and the unknown
guardians of minor
and/or Incompetent
helra ol Dora Wining,
all of whoae real·
dencaa are unknown
and cannot by reaoonable diligence be

aacartalned , will

take

nollce thai on tha
26th day of February,
2004, Doulache Bank
Nallonal
Trull
Company,
u
Cuetadlan or Trustee,
lka Bankers Trual
Company
of
California, NA filed 111
Complalnl In the
Common Pleas Court
of Malgo Counly,
Ohio In Caae No.
04CV022, on the
docket of lho Court,
and the object and
demand for relief of
which pleading Ia lo
foreclose lhe lien of
plalnllff'a morlgage
recorded upon the
following described
real estate to wit :
Property Address .
115
Butternut
Avenue, Pomeroy, OH

45769 and being
more
particularly
described In plain·
llff's
mortgage
recorded In Mortgage
Book 75, page 393, of
this
County
Recorder's Office.
The above named
defendant Ia required
to answer within
twenly-elght
(28)
days after last publl·
cation, which ahall be
publlahed once a
week for alx consecutive weeka, or they
might be denlad a
hearing In thla case.
LERNER, SAMPSON
&amp; ROTHFUSS
Altorneys for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 5480
Clnclnnall, OH 45201·
5480
(5t3) 241·3100
allyemall illlarlaw.co
m
(5) 7, 14, 21, 28, (6) 4,
11

Athlellca17, Reds
Clnclnn~~U

a

OMIInd

fib rhbl
Freelrt
4020
DJmnz2b 4 0 0 0
Cueytb 31 0 0
Htnmellb 10 0 0
Gr1Jrcf 4120
WPanart 1000
Ounnll
3212
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McMr.ll
Bymnf
Mclmr3tl
Germn3b
Ko!Mycf

4121
11 1 0
312 0
3, 21
5230
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Htltlerg lb 2 1 1 0
Klrro81b 2 1 1 2
Durazad\ 4222

Offtce 11o~~
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

CrolbyA 4 1 1 0

OMilier c 5 2 2 -4
Scwto2b 51 2 2
Totala 4S1722T'

(4) SB--Byr~11 (9)
Clndnn&amp;tl
tp H
..loAcewldo L 3-5
3 10

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

8

1

243114
113 6 6 6 2 0
2·3 0 0 0 0 2
1200D 1

""""""

5 1·3

HlrdM W,J.3
Duchscheter

6

5

4

3

r~

1

PNorton
Riadling
TJones
Graws

This Dele In Ba-ll

'""""
1104 -

Bob Wid«tr of the Chictago Cubs
p~tched 9 1·3 hitless ti'IM'lgl befor'e Sam
Mert8S af the N• '1tll1l. Giants Stngild Wido'.ar
won a 1-0, 12•11lf)lf'IV OI'MHllt!&amp;r
1131- Jollnny \lander Meer hurled the ~1$1 of
two COO.secutiYe no-hilt&amp;nl lA the Cinc:tnnatl
Reds beat 1he Bos1on 81'1Y18 3-0
11M17- The Oltcago Cutoa hit seven I'IOmtrs
and the New Vo!'k Mats tour tn !he sacond
game ol a doubieheader tying tie major
league record sat b'f the New 'lblll 'ftmk11611 (6)
and Oetroi!Ttge~S (5) ~n1 950 Adollo PMhpe hit
lou! home rufl6 10 the doublahHder lor CI11Cl1·

C·1 Beer Carry Out permtt
tor sale Chester Townshtp,
Metg s County, send letters
ol mterest to The Da lly
Sentmel, PO Box 729-20,
flomeroy, Ohto 45769 •
Interest In he!ptng couples
thetr
fam tly
co mplete
through surfogacy? Your
eggs w111 not be used For
1nformat10n can 1·888·342·

go

1981- Folowlng Seattle's 8-2 Wtn wer Balltmore, the ma)OI' ie&amp;g~» pllyafs went on &amp;lrika..
1985- \11:(1 Hayet became lhllirst pliyef In
mapr league history Ill hil two home run11n 1he
first 1nntng Hayes connectad twice 111 a ninerun first, powenng the Ph~l&amp; Pl'lilhM to a
26·1 'littory aver the New 'mrk Meta
1(1;5 - Mark McGwtre h~ three home runa tn
consecu1flle Bl· batll and tied ltia miiOf league
record ol ti\18 homer&amp; In consecutMI
leadW~g the Oakland .A..I!'IIetiCCI owr the Boston
Aed SOli a-1

3678
GIVFAWAY

gam•.
•
••

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

1 yr
o ld female 314
Chocolate Lab and 1/4 Plot ,
(740)992·5961 or 740..590·
2777

•
:

1yr old female full blooded
Brussels-Griffon puppy no
papers,
good
w/ktd s

•

(304)675-fle f 5
5 m1xed breed pupptes 6
weeKs old (740)367-7115
lea..,e message 1f no answer

•
•
..

Free 5 beautiful kittens mJf
litter trained (740)742·1019
aner 5pm
Free Alpaca Manure, Low
N1trogen &amp; Odor H1gh
PotaSSium app ly directly
With no burn (304)882-2017

If so, you qualify for a

lor
Discount*
on your home delivered subscription!

:

Free to good home, part
Samt Bernard pupp1as Call

•

(740)256·1652

:

G1ve away to a good home
very small gray kitte n

•

(304)675·4027

•

Gtveaway free kittens to
good home call anyttme

304·895·3943
•
:

Kittens 10 good home Born
May 1st 1 female, 3 males

•

(740)379·2981

•

Metal shop work tabl e also 2
tndustnal roll around shop
carts (304)675·7718

•

..

Three adorable k1ttens, 2
females. 1 ma le, 7 weeks
old, Cat1co and orange

•

(740)742·2954

•
•
...

To good home 7 months old
white female house cat
Oeclawed/shots. (740)379·
2688, 9 30-noon.

.r:
4iallipoU• lail!' lrtbune

teotut flealant •egt•ter
The Daily Sentinel
&amp;unbap lime• -ientinel

lnepecllon ,

conlact the Hocking
State Forest headquarters, 19275 Stale
Roulo
374 ,
Rockbridge,
OH
43148,
lalophone
(740) 569·9901.
(8) 4, 11

• Ones you havo algnod up for lht Senior Discount, your renewal nollca will reflecl your dlocount

Get A Jump
on
SAYINGS

••
:

:

········~········································

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

·Phone
__________________________
'

I

Mail or drop off lhis coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

friendly. (740)446·6890
•
:
•

•

•

•

•

•
•

I \ 11 ' 1 CJ\ \ II '\I

YARDSALE·

famll~=8•m·

Spm. TV's, desk, fila cabl·

"I

1{ \

2981 St A1 588, 2 9 mt les
out from town on left Frtday
&amp; Saturday 9-5

'ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS I'

2 Family Yard Sale Fnday &amp;
Saturday 9·3, 1044 Kraus
Beck Ad
Baby
household 1tems,
crafts
books, fur mture,
clothtng. Saturday Sam, 116
River Street. Kanauga

V1ew

0

c

Cl200. by NEA, Inc

~.,1'.-HELP--W·AN-lm_rlll
The
Athens -Me tg s
Edu ca ti onal Serv1ce Center
has a poslt!on open1ng as
Superv1sor 1n Me1gs County
Apphcants should have
extens tve expenence m
tmplernentlng Cumculum
and
Instruction
and
Professiona l De..,elapmenf
Improvement Plans Th1s IS a
12 month oon1ract poSIIIon.
salary wt ll be based on cerft
hcatton and expertence
accordmg to salary scale
Admmlstratt'le certtllcat1on
and EKpenence preferred
ThiS posti!On has Board
approved
benefl1s
Apph ca nls must provtde
the1r own transportation
Submt1 letter of mterest
resume refe re nces and a
copy of currenl certtf1cate(s)
to
John
Costanzo,
Supenntendent,
AthensMeigs Educational Serv tce
Center.
507
Richland
Avenue , Sutte *108, Athens
Oh
45701
ApPilcahon
Deadhne July 10, 2004 The
AMESC
IS
an
Equa l
Opportuntty
Em ployer/ProiJider

6334
No Standing, No Wafting
And No Cooking!
Earn up to $8/tu plus
bonus
Paid holidays, vacahons,
and tratnlngs
ChoiCe of schedule opt1 ons1
Call today tor an
appotntmentl
1-877·463-6247 ext 2455
Paramed iC S
&amp;
EMT s
needed
Apply at 1354
Jackson Ptke. GallipoliS

Personal Care Aide
Someone needed to s1t w1th
elderly Call (740)886-8527
or (740)25&amp;t968 after 6pm

100

WAN'IID

To Do

AU types of masonry brtck
block &amp; stone 20 yrs
Expenence free esttmate
1·304-773·9550, 304-593-

Thla newapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
astate which I&amp; In
vlolatton of lhe law Our
reader~ are hereby
Informed that all
qwelllngs advertised tn
this newtpapet are
available on an equal
opportunity baaes.

Ltc ense Salary will be
based on experience and
certificatiOn according to the
scale, and Wi ll have Board
approved benefits Subm1t
letter of tntereat to John D
Costanzo, Supertntendent
Athens-Metgs Educational
Ser'11ce
Center.
507
R1 chland A'lenue, Sutte
it08 , Att1ens, Ofllo 45701
Appl1catton Deaditna July
10 2004 The AMESC 1s an
Equal
Opport uni ty

L"immUCllON
Galllpotla CarHr COllege
{Careers ClOse To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446-43 87,

Bedroom, 2 Bath 2 Car
arage $2500 Carpet
llowance Jay Dnve
alllpolls Code 52804 or
an (740)446 7231

Bedroom Bnck Home 2
Bal h 3 Car Bnck
Unattached Garage 2
tory outbutldlng Code
2704 or call (740)446·

566
Bedroom 2 Bath 2 Car
arage 1 9 acres on SR
141 Code33104 orcall
740)446-7633

Mercerville Lots tor sale
shared entrance ofr St At
218 3·13 acres Phone
(740 )256·1825
Pmate
Campmg
::~n
Kanawha Rwer w1th boat
docks cal l (304)675-5724
Two homesttes for sale Both
one acre mit 3· 112 m11es
from Holze1 Hosp1tal
620 Evergreen Ad S19 500
560 Evergreen Ad $18 500
Call
(740)446-8840
or

(740)645·4513

10

HOl' SF.~
FOR RE\'T

1506 Oh to St Pt Pleasant
2 bedroom full basement
5375/ month.
r:fepostt
(740)441·0720
2 bedroom 8ulav111 e P1ke
Water &amp; trash patd No pets
$350 depostt $350 monlh
(740)388-1100
2 Housas for Rent 3 bed
room 1 bath 5500 &amp; $650
depOSit
month
plus

(740)245·9020

2 Small 2 bedroorr names
Call B D ConstructiOn lor all
m Mtddleport kitChen l u' MOBII.E
HO\I!,l;
of your tlorn,e rmprovement
nlshed
$400 00
plus
FUR SALE
needs roofs, decks, s1d1ng.
depos11
P1ck
up
rental
appll·
etc reasonable priCes, tree House
for
sa le
2014
catiOns at Da1ry Queen or
es t1mates ce ll (740 )992- Jefferson Ave
$40,000 1984 Schultz 14x70 wl 6x24
Vaughns
grocery
1n
2979
OBO (304)675-5865 leave pull out 3 bedroom 2 batt'l
Middleport
ale,
gooc;l
condtlton
message
Ch1ldcare m my home, new·
(740)992-7651
Pomeroy 4 bedroom $400
bol'fls welcome, ask for Pam
per mon th p(us depostl
(740)985·3437
1998 14x70 Clayl on 2Br (740)992·0175
2Ba Garden tub, Nalk 1n
Georges Portable Sawmill,
Mosru. Ho'IF:&lt;;
BUIU 10 Chma
don't haul your logs to the Letar t Falls. OH. 3 bed room closet
Centra)
tuRRfSI
All
hous e , bath , detached Cab tnet
m1ll JUSt call 304-675-1957
Appliances
and
some
garage new roof s1dmg
Furntture also underpmntng 2 bath mobile home m
!nter1or pamtlng Don Van wtndows carpet &amp; kitchen
&amp; 2 porches mcluded Mtddleport 5250 renl $250
$65
000
00
(740)247-2000
Meter (7 40)985-3951
$13 900
1304)576·3248 deposit 1 yr lease no pets
leave message tf no answer no
cans
afte r
9pm
Nurse/House
Keeper

"'

""

(740)992·5039
2 bedroom trader Ca ll tor
appomtmenl after 5 OOpm

(304)675 5217
2000 14~&lt; 70 Clayton 3 bed·
room, 2 bath appliances
deck Great cond1tton needs
moved S19 000 (7 40)379·

2926

2 bedroom mobt)e homes
Water trash sePJ1Ce fur·
ntshed
No
Pets
Ca tl
j740)44 t1 4540
3 bedroom 2 bath
ya1d
$450
Ca ll
(740\256 9121

large
Lrsa

Beaut1ful r1ve1 v1ew Ideal tor
2002 16x80 S~yhne home one or two people No pets ,.
JSr :2Ba , w1th 1 acre of relerences (740)44 1·0181
ground. tn Mason WV on
Ntce 2 and 3 bedroom
Oh1o Rtver Prtce Reduced
mobtle homes lor rent
(304)773·5808
1noludes water sewer &amp;
trash ,no pets start1ng at
Coles Mobile Homes 15266
S300
per montti m Shade
US 50 E Athens OhiO
area
depos tt
reqwad
45701 New summer hours
(740)992·2167
M· T·W 8 AM to 7 PM Th ·
F BAM to 5 PM Sat 9AM to Pomeroy $275 00 a mo
4PM "Where you get your $150
dep
no
pets
money 's worth"
(740)667·3083 after Spm

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha
you do busmess wtth peo
le you know, and NOT 1
end mon ey through the
ma11 until you have 1nvestl
ated 1he offenng,

r

~
SERVICES

For sale or rent· 2 bedroom
mob1le homes starling at
$270 per monlh Call 740
Nice home on L1ncoln St .
992·2167
Middleport 3 br, I r d r , s1t
tlng room, gas fireplace, full
basemen t, fenced beck Great used ~4x80 . 3 brl 2bth
yard garage, mid $60 's 2x6 walls up~rade wmdows
'llnyl sid1ng Will help With
(740)992·3493
delivery, Call Karena 740385·7671

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win I

t ·868·582·3345
IH \I I " I \ I I

N1ce House for sale m
Rutland, must be mo'led
$!2 000 (740)367-7686

H~

FOR SALE
Pt Pleasant/Sandh ill Road

Mobile home and lot to r
sale 14x80 Mobtle home on
ntce level 1/2 acre lot. 3 beO·
room . 2 full balh All electric
central atr, good condtt10n
10x12 ut1l1ty shed on proper·
ty Porter area $40 000 Call
(740 )446-4514 days and

(740)446·3246 anor 5.

3 bedroom Bnck 1 t/2 bath ,
3Br 1Ba 1600/sqn Ranch on Tra1ler fm sale Located at
1 acre 101 Close to town
. _ pll lpoillcareercollege oom
.6 acre level lot Oak floors, Leon WV (must be moved)
Acc:red11ad Mtmb•r Accrtdlung Reduced Phooe (304)675 1st hOuse on R1gt1t pas1
1994 Commodore. 14x60
COUOCII tor lndeptl'ldenl Colleg&amp;l 1714
Marshall
UniverSity 2-bedroom 1-b ath, utthlyand Scl10015 12748
$103 000 (740)949·1131 room mcludes stove refng3 bedroom house Rutland
alter 5 OOPM
era1or washe r, extra cabt·
Ntce, qUtet neighborhood
nels all underplnnmg, front
NOT
m
flood
area l
&amp; back porches wl awntng
Hardwo od floors , Shade
Baby S1tter lor 5 yr old &amp; 9
all block &amp; Sidewalk steps,
trees. Centra ) a1r Fam1 ly
monlh
must
be
hnk
heatpump AJC
Excellem
room
Lau ndry
room
approved 1n the M ason, New
condtlton
S 13 BOO
At
2
Greer
Ad
38A,
2Ba
Storage by lldtngs (740)742·
Haven area
House 5 ~ 12 acres land (740)698·26 t 3
2824
Lookmg 1o rent 3 Br House.
pond barnc fenced area an
Tra~ler or Apartment m the 3 br Cedar Cape Cod 2 1r2 etectnc call a 30 to 5 00 Used double w1de good
P1 PI New Haven area must Sa ,2 car garage 2 67 acres (304)675·1386, af1er 5 00 cond1tton
3
bd/2bth
be Hud approved or Will of nverfronl property for sale call
(304)675·5631
or $17 995, can help set-up
accept Hud (304) 773·5310 tn Mason call 304·675·0808 (304)593·0719
Call Ha rold , (740)385·9948

HlQ0.214·0452

S2 500 00 (560)563·3753

IU'\1\1 "
Bedroom 2 Bath R1ver
1ew1 Access Pnvate
oat Dock tn Gallipolis 1
crt lot Code 90303 or
all {740)446·0531

1007

Expenenced Genatrtc Care
Gl'ler wtU ca re tor your lave
one m the1r home Mon-Fn Lo'lely country setttng forty
$7 hi (;304)576·2787
(40)+ acres wtth house
(modern Kttchen) two car
Aoof 1ng, Decks Hardwood
garage other out bUildings,
floor mstallat10n, remodelrural water frUit trees free
Ing, add 1ltons
Top Nolch
gas stocked farm pond
Bu 1ld1 nQ
Contractors
Located 1n Me1gs County
WV036667 (304)675·5490 High potential for develop·.\
The
Athens·Me1gs 01 (304)675·3042
me nt
$125,000
Sen(j
Edu ca tions ) Ser'ltce Center
1nqu1res to Pomeroy Post
W1ll
Pre
ssure
Wash
houses,
has a posttlon open1ng as
Oft1ce. PO Box 53, Pome roy
Severe
Behav1or mobile homes, metal buildOhio
45769
Handicappe d Teacher for m~s. a nd gutt ers Call
{740)446.0151
ask
fOr
Ron
the ED Cooperative UOII at
Southern Local
SChool or leave message
DIStrict for lhe 2004 ·2005
School Year Appl icant s
Lower Mason 2BR 2BA, 2
must
have
Spec1al
Car Garage, F1mshed base·
Educati on License o r be wlllment Heat pump, call lor
mg to get a Te\'nporary
appointmenl (304)773·5338
tnte rvent 1on
Specialist

CLASS A COL NE EDED

.NO FORCED NYC

~!:: ~h~oar~ ::1~c~a::

familial etatu&amp; or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation c.r
discrimination,'

Medl Home Health Agency
Inc seeking a lull·tlme and
FtRN RN 's, and a PAN
Occupation al Theraptst lor
the Gal lipolis, Ohio area
Must be licensed bolh 1n
Chlo and West V1rg1n1a We
o ffer a competl!l'le salary,
beneftt package lor lull ·tlme,
and 401 K. E 0 E Please
send resume to 352 S&amp;eond
Employer/~rov 1 der
Ave , Gallipolis. OH 45631
Attn D1ana Harless, Climcal
Scuools
Manager or call 1·800-481-

.Earn between 45 -SOK
• Mm 1 year exp.
• Home Wee kend s
• $500 sign-on bonus
• Sta rt at 36 cpm
• 95% No touch lrelght

All real estate advertising
ln thla newspaper I•
aubjectto the Federal
Fait Houalng Act of 1968
which makes 1t Illegal to
advert1se " any
preference, limitation or
1
1

•
•

28 AW Long Rood

Sat June 12 9· 2 306 15th
St
across from OMV
Heavy Equipment
Fabulous fin ds, both new
Mechanic or Welder
l lJS&amp;d
Knowledge In electrica l and
Yerd Sale 5th Street Mason Alf condit ioning relerrad
Servtce truck/tools also
Fn ·Sat 8.00 am to 6.00 pm
preferab le
Compet11tve
Yard Sale Sat June 12th 8·1 wages GOOd benefits Apply
2605 Jefferson Ave Pt Plea at Sands Hill Coal Company.
38701 Slate Route 160,
Hamden , OhiO or call 740384-4211 to request an
apphcat10n form be mailed
Absolute Top Dolla r US Resumes can be ma1led
Silver
Gold
Cotns, directly to P 0 Box 650
Proofsets, D1amonds Gold Hamden , OhiO 45634
Rmgs
U S Currency ·
M T S Cotn Shop, 151 Lunch Cook needed Apply
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, w1thln 300 Second Ave
Gal11po(ls
740-446-2842

t

0

10

ptlotos/tnl~ onltne

Bedroom 2 1f2 Bath
22 acres 3 Car Garage
n SR 554 Code 32904
r call (740)367 7619

0

45692

Call 8t)().Cf5H382

101h,11tn,12th 800·400

Home Listmgs
Ltst your home by calltng

Manlyn (304 )882-2645,

I

'

www.orvb.com
(740)446·3620

Joyce (;304)675·6919,

ACRFAGE
2 7/ 10 acres Welch town
Road wooded not le'lel

Want to look younger AND
earn Money ? Lets talk the

NEW AVON call

""'"''-"1

LOTs&amp;

HOMES
FOR S.u.E
3BA on 5 129 acres Green
Township close to school
Ask1ng pnce $89 000 More
mfo (740)446-7377

PoMEROv/Mmm.E ,

Lw-•Pto.ii'.ii'LF.ASANroilitiiliiiiO.r

f!.iilll

POLICIES Ohio V•l1ey Publl&amp;hlng r..-v. the right to edit, ~ect, or c.rtell tmy lid at •ny t1m• Errora muat be ri8POf1ed on th• flr•t dey of
Trlbun..S.niiMI· Regl&amp;t.f win be r11p0nlib'e for no mor. than the eo~t of the •peot oc:c:up!.d by the 1rror •nd onlv the tnt lnMrtron W1 aha11 not
any lo&amp;a or ellpenH that r•utta from the publication Of omiHion of an edvllrtlnment Correction w1!1 be made In 1he t•rat IYitlable l'd1tlon • Box
are etway&amp; c:onlldentlal • Current raiW c1rd •ppllea. • All rllll ••tat. 1d,.rll.-menla •~ &amp;ubj«t to the Fed1ral F•rr Houlln~ Act ot 1968
accept&amp; onty h•lp wanted .c:la mll'tlng EOE atllnd•rd•· We will not knowingly ac:capt any ld\l.rtlelng In 1o1lolat•on ol1t'le ~IW

IIELPW4NIID

s81e.

r

How you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
( . ~..
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 504 for small
$1 .00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

_w.ANllill
__..

r

All Display: 12 Noon 2
BO•Ines• Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid'

Apnl (304)882-3630
Garage Sale 3277 Tyn Rhos
Ad
(off Center Pomt)
dothes dtshes m1sc 1tems
Administrative Assistant·
8-4 , Sat·Sun
OH1ce Menger fo1 a hear1ng
Lola of VIntage toys, atd ofhce, musl have good
trains, slot cars, coUecta- people sktlls Requ1res mu)tt
ble glaasware and what· task1ng , answenng pho ne
nota 11592 SR588, Rio typtng, fllmg, computer work
I would be Willing to tram the
Grand, Saturday
nght person as a heanng a1!l
MovmwYard Sale
dispenser Pay based upon
Fnday 6/1 1 &amp;
sktll
and
experte nce
Saturday 6/12
Applicatio ns ca n be piCked
9am-?
up at Advanced H eanng
3206 Georges Creek Ad
Center 11 22 Jackson P1ke
Adu lt &amp; chtldrens clothes
Galhpohs Monday through
mtsc household ttems, toys Frtday 9am to 5pm No
'W""" c:om1ca.com
pho ne calls
A1o Grande
Town Yard Sale
ATTENTION OWNER
June 12, 9-4
OPERATORS
110
Numerous sates set up
through town, many tndlvld .,1• -H•Ill•
' ....
Canton OhiO reefer
uals selli ng by th e Mt.mte1pal
company looking for
Famtly AddtCI1on Community
Bulldmg. Car wash &amp; conOwner Operators to
Treatment Serv1ces· An out·
cessiOn stand to benefit R1o
earn between t25·150K
patten! Alcoh ol and Drug
Grande V(')l Fire Dept
Counseling
agency
1s
A~.Jmmage Sale
1 1·12th • 2 Settlement Opltons
accepltng Resumes for the
Clay Town House off SA 7 paid weekly
followtng pos1tton
.NO NYC
South
Prevention
Educator·
.Home Weekends
Seeking
an
energetic
1nd l
Saturday Only
.$500 Stgn On Bonu s
v1dua! to work youth and
McCorm1ck Ad
.95% No touch fretght
adu lts 1n Galha and Jackson
Beh ind A.mencan Leg10n
counties
Responstblllttes
46" TV
CALL SQ0.6S2·2362
tnclude, but not ltm1ted to
AU stze clothes
Auto
Mechantc!Sm all alcohol, tobacco and other
Lots ol everything
Engme Mechamc, must be drug education, classroom
While Road Yard Sales
tratn1ng s
expertenced Shade Tree presenta tions,
8+ Homes, Saturday 12, 7-? MechaniCS need not apply fa1rs, co mmumty events
Household Items, foozeball (304)675·3600
development and 1mplemen·
table. longaberger. Prom
tat1on of grant projects etc
dress. toys baby, toddler, AVON~ A U Area sl To Buy or A mtn~mum of a Bachelors
Sh1rley Spears 304- Degree requ1red w1lh ~nowl·
adult clothmg and 1tems, col· Sell
lectable dolls, etc 160 first 675-~429
edge ol alcohol , tobacco
nght pa st Haffelts
and other drugs
Send
Diesel Mechanic II re sume by June 15, 2004 to
Yard Sale 3443 SR 14i
PM Shift
FACTS 45 Ohve Street
Items Home lntenor. adult,
Rumpke ts !he leader In the Galf lpolts, Ohto 4563 1 or
baby and Chl ldrens clothing,
waste Industry.
FAX
to
(740)446-8014
anttques, furmrure , tools,
Pos1t1on aatlata tenlor I EOE M/FIH
eel Saturday 8112
experienced mechanics
YartJ
1595 Adamsv ille with repairs &amp; mainte- Fresen1us Medical Care
Road , Saturday, Sunday, nance such as lubrlcallon, global leader m dla!ysts care
electrical and brake work currently has open poSitions
June 12 , 13, 9·3
Requ1re s meehanlcal apti- for AN s and D~a!ys 1s Tachs
Yatd Sale Fnday. Saturday tude with basic knowledge 1n our GallipOliS, OH factllty
9·?, 161 1 Shoestring Ridge of vehicle maintenance We
offer
competitive
Something for everyone, and repair- exp wi1h diesel salartes, educat1on retm·
crans, microwave, TV
power veh1cle pre fe rred bursement , 401K and health
Must also have own too!s and dental msurance II
4 ' YARDSALEtam1harlty w1th repa 1r manu- lmeresled please contact
~
als and a mlmmum of 1 year Clm tcal Manag~r at 740·
perlormtng s1mtlar duttes 44 1·9300 An equal oppor·
Mult1 ·fam1ly
yard
sale Must be able to lift 75!bs
tun lty employer '
Taylor's Dnve, Middleport off Excellent compen1allon &amp;
State A t 7 by-pass, top of benefits with medical, lmmechate opemng lor an
hill across from L eading dental, 401k, vacation &amp; accountant pos111on Full
Creek Road , clothes, coins, panalon. Plaaee come In lime, madtum s1ze company
v1deos, DVD s, tools, base· and apply anytime Man· Exp requtred , eKcellent be n·
eflls· 401K Plasse send
ball cards, many household Fri. 8am-5pm:
resume to Accountant PO
and mise Items , Saturday, T•k• th• whHI of your
B ox 806 Wellston , Ohio
June 12th, 2004, 8am·Spm. Rumpkl Wa1t11

r

Children's clothtng, toys.
household 1tems. cook·
book&amp;, crafts, plus size
women's clothing and more.
Ratn or Shine

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next: Day'• Paper
Sunday In-Colu"'n: 1:00 p.m.
'.rloday For Sundays Paper

116
1.

net, lamps, appliances,
dishes, home decor, loys,
misc.
1760 SR ,41,
Gallipolis

Moving/Yard Sale Rain or
Lost
Alpine dairy goat,
Shine
Indoor, Outdoor
browp with black mark1nga,
2913 Spruce Ave Fr iday,
(Fair projects) If found call
June 11 . Saturday June 12th
(740)44 1.()899
8·3 Boys, Girls
Baby,
Toddle r Clothing , Furniture,
Toys, Craft supplies Lots of
YA.RDSAul
Mise

2 Fam ily Garage Sale , 165
Rt 588 Thurs , Frl , Sat ,

Display Ads

ll I "

Black Cocker Spaniel With Rutland Freewi ll Bapt1st WellltDn, OH 45882
blue collar Name Prectous· Church , all week, June 7 Fax: 74Ch3BC·5472
Loat Jn Kana uoa area thru 12 , mal'lY Items, very No phone calls please/EOE
Rsward, call (740)448·8125 cheap , 1st Ad to left past
Fox's Pizza
DRIVERS NEW PAY
Found
near
Mt
Hill iiiiF-;..;;~-~---,
SCALE
Cemetery
Mtxed bread
YARD SALE-

--·--·- - - - - - - ----------------------------r/

Lo!rrAND
FOUND

female dog btack/wh!te Very

:

:Subscriber's Name ______________
:Address __________________

12

ADOPTION A lOVIng COU·
pie would hke to adopl your
newborn
Will provtde a
home fill ed wtth JOY happl·
ness fmanc1a1 secunty and
a great educatiOn Feet confident tn knowmg because of
your bra'le de ciSion your
baby could look fo!Ward to a
bright and wonderful future
Expenses paid Call toll free
1·866·731·7825
Barbara
and M1chae1

B

1 2·3 4 3 3 1 1
CHammtMld
1 0 D 0 D 0
Sradlord
1 0 0 0 1 2
HBP--bw Hatdeo (laRue)
Ump1rea !lOme, TOI"rJ' AandattO, First Fleldll'l
CUIOrlllt\, Second, Jim WoH Third , ~m McCitiland T-3 21 A-29 601 (43.662)

.

r

\ \ \Ill \ II \ II \ I'-

Oeacltir~ .

• St.rt Your AU With A Keyword e Inc:1ude Com~te
Ducriptlon • Include A Price e Avoid Abbreviations
e Include Phone Number And Addrett When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

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

R ER 88 SO
8

Word Ads

Monday th ru Friday

DOS 300 I
O.ldand
134 300 BOa; - 17
e-&lt;:aaey (2) Hard1n (1) DP-CifiCmne.ti 1,
Oakl•nd 1 LOB-Cnclnnati 8, Oakl.lnd 8
2B-laraon (•). Ft.opez (1) Kobay ~9) , Kar101 (4) OMtallll \12) , Scutato 2 (15) HAOunn (18), JaCruz (2) Ouraz:o (10). OMiller

'

NOTICE
Sealed bids will be
racelved by tho Ohio
O.parlmant
of
Natural Resources,
Division of Foroalry
up to and Including
Wadna1day, Juno 23,
2004 at 3:00 p.m. for
an aollmated 1,840
ton&amp; of plna pulpwood on 25 acre• II
the Shade River Stale
Foreot
lh
Olive
Township,
Meigs
Counly, Ohio. For fur·
ther Information and

Shop
Classlfleds!

I
0
3

ARE
. YOU &amp;5 OR OlDER?:~'-1--1

Public Notice

timber

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
'Otribune
1\egister
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740} 446-2342 (740} 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 44s-3ooa
Or Fax To
992-2157

2 5 3 3
2
243311
Hensley pildled Ill 2 b&amp;rltln II h 8lh HBPby Washburn (BCllftt~ ~ BII&lt;VSamoa UmpirN--HorM M&amp;rY1n Hudlm,
F'lt'll !M\1 o.uuth, Sloond. .i'n ~ Thn:l,
tt.rw~n O.ntey T--3:12 ,t.-.t1 ,423 (45,030)

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Public Notice

c.u .... County OH

lPHAERBBSO

VSantoeW4-2

PHtllburgh
200 01 0 100 4
Tuu
014 041 OOx - 10
E-AMateo (1) OP-Pit111burgtl 1 LOB- Vlentinc 2 o a o
Pittsburgh 6 Texas 5 2s--t!Andatl 2 (111 JaOuzcl'l 5223
Ward (6), Blalock (1 6), Fullmer (1 1
llt.on3b 4 I 2 1
Matthews (2) H~Wtlson (5), Fullmer (7
Flopeua 4 0 1 2
Tetx&amp;lfll (9) 5-TAedman
IP H RERBBSO
ToW. 37 810 8
498801
Foggl3 5
000
2 2 2 2 2 0 Clnclnnlltl

GoNam
""""''"'

........

i~ter

CLASSIFIED

a.-. 12. Angel• 2

Htonsley
Bergman

Rangers 10, Plratea 4, II

New York

MRmrz1f
Grcpi'ISS

1

S.n Fr-anc:*o 100 000 DOt 2
TM!fM a.y
010 031 OOJ1 5
E-TMar111'lez (2). DP-5an FranciSCo 1
Tampa Bay 1 LOB-San Fr~sco 9, Tampa
Bay 7 2&amp;--Piertynslu {7) Crawtord (12),
JoCI\.IZ (9). AS.nche~: (3) HR-Tuc:Qr (7)
BaldeUij61 CS-feltz (I ) JoCruz (4) SFG!Issom
IP H R!RBBSO

Red Sox 9, Padres 3
31 D a
Crespod 1000
Yukll~ 3tl
.S I 1 1

a,

32515

Twlna 3, Meta 2, (15)

Damoncf

a

RSndu: 2b 4

"'"""'

•b rhbl

3 0 11

n.trrnz lb 3 , '
..Eb!l&amp;l
3010
Colomep DOOO
F~c
4000

T-2 31 .A..-1 9,113 (43,389)

San Dtego
ab rhbl
Brrghs 3b 5 1 2 0
Loretta 2b 5 o 1 0
BGilesrl 5121
Nevmdh 3110
Payton cf 5 0 2 0
Long W 3001
Knott~
1 DOD
Ojedec
4011
CIIIII01b 4 0 2 D
Greene ss 3 0 0 0

412D

Hufl3b
Jo()uzrf

MinOt' d'l 3 a 1 o
Feliz tb
3o1o
~=c:=:..:oc.::.:.:.::::;::.;:;;::;---·1 OCruz ss 4 0 0 0
ArmoN
B&amp;tti1T10f11
Mohr If
20 00
ab rhbl
ab rhbi T&lt;MII 31 2 52
Htrston 2b 3 1 0 0 BFbts 2b 5 0 1 o

20a000
Carlsoo, Frrst Brian
Runge Secor'Jd Bl Hohn Third Gary Darling
T-2.27 A-25 ,Hl6 (48.286)

Fricay'slntwt1111 .. a....
A.tlanta fl'lrlfJN. 4-5) I'll crucago White Sox (Loa•za 6-3) 8 05 p m

Crwfnj ct
4 110
Lugou.&amp;. 3 1 1 0

lirltent 4 2 1 1
NPifaz 2b 3 D a o
li1den 1*1 1 0 0 0
fnom2b1000
GrsGom cf 3 0 0 1
Ptzynsc 3 o 1 0
Allonm 3b 4 0 1 0

D'backs 3, Orioles 0

Umpt!V6-Home

w.dneadey'l NL RI:&amp;U.
St LouiS 12 Chtcago Cub$ 4

Chicago Cub&amp; 12 St louiS 3

1

HBP-b¥ 'lower~ (Co-a )

Ce.brera L3-2
BaUI!Ir

Seattkl 0

Houston 3,

Anaheim 5 Mtlwauke&lt;il 4

1

Val'lll'lrd!l.S6

Mtnneaota 5, NY Me!s 3
Mtlwauiwe 12 Anahalm 2

Mnneaota 3, NY P.4ets 2 { 15)

10DD01

...,_,

·.vw.

II .... I ; .. RMuiUI
Los AngeleS 6 Toronto 1

Toronto 4, L05 AngMs 0
Detro~~ 4 Atl.anra 2
TIIITlpll ~ 4 San Ff•nciSCO 3, (I 0)
f'tlilaOelptua 13 Chicago Sol; 10

55
55

5~
4·6

11

~ ..

NY Y&amp;Ntees 7 Colorado 5

WI
W1

6·4

8 1,

J56

....

'
,_
"
2'

" ""'

._

P10

~

l.igiQntlerg

Marlins 4,1ndlana 1

St. Louia

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

m;rthune - Sentinel - 1\e

P10

01!1

Pet.

l

33

.,;,.~.

ChiC!QQ_SQ!

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Major League Baseball
National League

•

. .. ... . .

Tratler ror Rent At2 &amp; 62
Bypass
26A
18A
a ll
Etec1nc clean ready now
01
call
(304)593-!93£1

(304)675·5631,
Tra11er fOr rent 2 beoroom
740 446·4234 or 740·208·
7861, Washer &amp; dryer-out·
bu1tdmg Centrally located·
15 mtn
to 10wn-Powe r
P~ants·haspllal

r

APARTMENTS
FOR RENt

1 &amp;2 br apt m downtown P•
Pleasant no pels &amp; sec dep
required
HUD excepte d
740·446-2200
1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments furn1shed and unlur
n tshed , secur11y depos1t
reqUJred no pets 740-992

2218
bedroom
apt
Washer/dryer hookup !290
rent depos11 reqwed No
pets 740·441-1184
1 bedroom stove and retrtQ·
erator, furntshed , utlltttes
tncluded $400 month plus
depos1t (740)2 45·5859
2 bedroom JUSt past Holze,
$425 monttl Call (740) 4411 184

�~·

Friday, June 11, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

.- .......

Friday, June 11 , 2004
ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydai lyser.tinel.com

NEA

BRIDGE
bedroom·
complete
kitchen·
central
air.
References &amp; deposit. No
pets. (740~6-0139

King Size Bed $250.00, 1980 Chevy 314-ton. 4:.:4,
Kitchen Table $250.00, 350, 4-speed 6-mch lift.
Entertainment
Center good condition . $4,000.
$75.00, Piano $350.00 1992 Chevy S-10. 4x4 . 4 3
(304)675-2349
auto air, $2,300 Goat tor
sale, 3 year old Wether, $40
NEW AND USED STEEL (7401367-0166.
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar - - - - - - - For
Concrete,
Angle , 1985 Chevy 3/4ton 4x4, one
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel owner, Alum . slots Duel
Grating
For
Drains, pipes, Good shape S200Q
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l (304)773·6076
Scrap Metals Open MQnday.
TUesday. Wedr:~esday &amp; 1986 Ford F-150 XLT truck
Fnday. 8am-4:30pi'n. Closed tor sale. Standard cab. long
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; bed. average condllton. V-8.
Sunday. (740)44&amp;--7300
automatic, AM-FM cassette.
119,000
m11es.
asktng
Pole Barn 30x50lC tO onl-y
$t .BOO call (740)441-1971
55.295, 1ncludes painted
M-F Clays. (740)441 -0816
meta!. plans how to build
nights and weekends
book. Fllder free delivery

Attractive, one bedroom.apt
2nd floor, corner Second
and
Pine. · No
pets.
References
re(luired .
Security deposit. $300 per
month, water included. Call
(l40)446-4425 or (7401446-

3936.
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
PII1CES AT

APARTBUDGET
JACKSON
- £STATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from S344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446~ 2568.
Equal
Housmg Opportunity.

98 Jeep Grand Cherokee
L1m1ted. loaded. 84 ,000
m1les. $8,300. {7 40)256·
6346

ACROSS

\Nhat would you lose if there was a fire?

~We can insure your valuables! #
~

For a Free Quote or Appointment ~

Call:

, and Financial Services,
Box 189 • Middleport

83 1t 00 GL Goldwing .
1993 Cllevy S·IO Blazer, 4
56,000 m11es. Run/looks
Tan topper for SN short bed WD. Fully Loaded. Tow Pkg good, new shocks, new batGood Condition Asking
· 1ruck 304-675-4861
ter.y $2,000. (740)256-8122.
$2 .600 Call alter Spm
(7 40)446-2398
BUILDING
BoATS &amp; MOTORS

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT•
ED • AFFORDABLE!
~
..
•own..ouse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)44 1-1111
for application &amp; information.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartment~ in Middleport.
From $295-$444 Call 740 992-5064 . Equal Housing
()pportunitles.
'"'-'-----'----New t Oedroom apt. Phone
{!40)446-3736.
J'iew Furnished 1 Bedroom
Apar1me~t. $500 montll, aU
utilities paid. 3 miles to
Hospl'tal 13041674 -0031
Ne""er . 2 bedroom with
garage
No
pets.
$400Jmonlh plus deposit &amp;
riterences. (740)446-2801.

t

r

Sui'I'UEli

~'OR SALE

_

t...--~~

~.oo-iiMOimolliiiiiR~HiiiOMK'iiiiiitiito,.l

iiiio-rl 9496.
2 full blooded male Boxer -----~-puppies. Parents AKC regis- For Sale 2003 Chevrolet
Truck. 2500 HD LS. Lots of t974 Winnebago Brave,
tared . $200. (740)368-8526.
$2 300 (740)388 847'
options. pnced below book.
·
·
•
~AKC · Australian Sllepherd. {304)675-7930
"
black/while/tan markings.
VANs&amp;
1990 Coleman Pop Up
male puppy, m1cro-ch1ped
,
4-WDs
Camper. Good Condition.
$250.00 AKC Miniature
Schnauzers
pupp1es.
Canvas like new St .500
saiUpepper $400.00 each . 2000 Chrys!er Town &amp; (3041675-4096
All Vet checked and have I st Country Van 11m1ted loaded.
sh_o_ts::_._7---40::_-6::.:96------1:.08::.:5::___ Call day 740-446-2107,
night 740-.245-9164 .
t 991
Nomad
camper.
AKC Boston Terrier female
Excellent
condition,
puppies. Shots. wormed &amp; 2001
Grand Cllerokee
$14,000. Slide out 5tll
ta ils
docked.
S300 . Laredo.
Loaded.
Exc.
Wheel (740)256-6392.
(740)367-7564 .
Owner
Condition . one
-,-,~--,------AKC Chocolate labs 5 (3041882-2625

[JD

male, 4 female . Ready to go - - - - - - - July 5. $300, call (740)441 · 2002 Ford Explorer. XlT, 4·0 Private
Camping
on
0931 .
atm. PDl. PS, 3rd row seat. Kanawha R1ver with boat.
rear air. cd and cassette cocks call (3041675-5724
AKC Labs . Black &amp; Yellow, · player, runn1ng boards.
lemale, 4 months. all shots 100.000 mile tra nsferable
Parents on premises, hunt- warranty.
great
shape . ~::---==---...;;;
ing stock. (7401388-9515.
Asking $ 19.500. (7401388HnME
9673
II\U'ROVFMENI'S
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very spaciOUS, AKC Pektngese puppieS lor - - - -- - - sale 3 male. 2 female Call 79 GMC 12pass 3/4 ton Van
BASEMENT
2 Bedrooms. 2 Aoors, CA. 1
(7401992-0287.
350
motor.
excellent
shape,
WATERPROOFING
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted .
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Full blooded Rat Terrier mo tor needs rebu111 Asking Unconditional lifetime guar·
. Patio, S1ar1 $385i Mo. No pups. 6 weeks old, wormed , $500 OBO. JOil~ (740)379- antee Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Pets, Lease Plus Security and ta1ls docked . $1 oo each. 9122.
.:.__ _ _ __ __
Call 24 Hrs. (740) ' 446•
Deposit Required , Days : (7401367-7468.
98 F-150, 4x4, V6. 5 speed. 0870. Rogers Basement
740-446-3 481 : EOJenings :
Puppies AIC, 95,000 mil es. $6 300. Waterp roofing.
R at
Terrier
740-367-0502.
(7401256-6346.
(304 1675-1506
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting Vacationing, long weekend?
list for Hud·subs1zed. 1- br. Leave Fluffy or Fido home.
apartmept , call 675-6679 Can Pets1 tters, Aunt Bev's
Creatures, {740)245·5599.
EHO ·
Nice two bedroom apart·
ments Large rooms Fully
equiped kitchen Central
.
h eat 1 ng /cool ing
Washer/dryer
hookup
{
_
3041882 2523

\..lpstairs furni shed apt. 3
rooms &amp; bath. Clean. no
pets. References &amp; deposit
required . (740)446-1519.

r

Relocating to Gallipolis,
~mily wants to lease nice
hbme with at least 3 ·bedrooms with garage, needed
immediately. Call Jackie
140·707-7999
740-589-

Why not adopt one of these
dogs from the Me1gs Co Dog
Pou nd. and save it! life?
Please call (740)992-3779 .
for more mformatiOn.
Male German Slleph erd,
male
Golden
Retriever/Cilow mix, female
Rabb it
Beagle, female
Aussie I Sllepherd mix. male
Eskimo
Spitz,
white
groomed and 11ouse broken.
I

E(luiPMFNr

t 10; round baler New
Holland model640 ne1 wrap,
hay bind New Holland model
4 72 , rake New Holland
mbdel 256; 806 International
tractor, 125 hp, 740 _742 _
7405

=-----:----

Fr.

CALL-IW

7:00AM • 8:00PM

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0

.Restoration
Refinish, Repair,
Restore
Kalth Bailey

740 992-1956

WHCOI-41';

BARNEY

l

SO SORRY, PAW !!

~

ME TO BLOW OUT ?

I WHICH ONE DO 'fA WANT

"'r' '

I
i

THE BORN LOSER

~

'10\J 11'.\I'IK YOJ eM\ f\11.1-lt&gt;LL~

11-\E. KOLE.~Z f&gt;..K
I'W.JEL\,IF t W.U~\

New Hours
Monday 9am·lpm
Tues • Fri 6am·8pm
Sat &amp; Sun 7am·4pm

~~:;:! DOI'l\ \XlUe.\ ~y "&lt;I
It'\1\':..LLEC.\UI&gt;-L
CN'"'C.\1'1' ~ TI\IS
.
... ,.....,____....,.

I

n Mon-Fri 9-5 Sal. 9-12

Open 7 days a weeki

~ummet menu!

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883
POWER WASHING

RE DIVISION

.
.
~Co mm~rcial and Residentia~
Mowm_g. Tr1mmmg, )'ree Trimming, Aeration, Fertiliza1ion,
Spray1ng of fence hne s, l eaf Removal, as well&amp;~ small
landscaping jobs such .!IS planting and mulching.

ESTIMATES • CUARANTEED L

Mi Creative

96,000 original miles , new
paint job, windows just tinted, new head liner, $3,200,
Exc.
co nd iUon,
call
(304)675-1833 lf no answer
leaOJe phone number and
message and 1 will return
your call

S.

Cakes
. ; by Lora
~Birthdays

• Weddings
• Any special
occasion
Place your order
today

(740) 985·3917

Going to O.U. this
Fall?
Studio apartment tor renl,
at University Commons, tully
furnished, all appliances,
central heating &amp; air. Reserved
parking, pool &amp; workout
facilities ,
call

7 40·367 ·0517
MIZWAY TAVERN
Saturday, June 12
Retro Grass
(Band starts 5:00 pm)

Hog Roast
Karaoke Every Wed. &amp; Fri.

Lora Bing

AT MAPLEWOOD

LAKE
State Route 124
Between Racine and
Syracuse
Friday, June 4 &amp;
· Saturday, June 5
Spaces available,
also Campsites
available with full
hookups

949·2734

WRITE
WRiTE
WRITE

~RI T E

WRITE
WRITE
WRITEWRITE

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vi-nyl

PEANUTS
FORGET TI-lE COOKIE5!TJ.ll5
15 !-lOW IT'S 60NNA 6E ...

IMPORTS
Athens

7 40-992·7599

EIT~ER YOU 611/E ME Tl-lAT .
BLANKET OR I tiE 't'OUR EARS
T06ETIIER, TAKE '(QU UP 10
l~IRT'( TIIOUSAND FEET AND
DROP YOU INTO TilE 6RANP CAN'I'ON!

OI-l? 15
TI-llS '(OUR
6LA!oii&lt;ET?

Windshield Repair
RockChips
&amp; Cracks
Cars-Trucks-RV's
74().~49·1~10

Dean Hill

Mobile Service.f&gt;
Available

New&amp;: Used

*RDDRNI

'10\J WCITCfl li l'M JUST FINE;
LOOKING AT

1-800-822-0417
"W.V"s

dOME

BETTY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL
#I

MAINTENANCE

ST PRICES

FLEA MARKET

\oi~ ITE

BISSEll

Siding ·• New Garages
• Replacement
Winduws • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

PICTURES Of
IT IN 00\&lt;.
PHOTOA1.9JM

Chevy, Pontiac. Bu1ck, Olds
Van Dealer"

GOnER
l *frealstbateb
dUMlE~S

1

949·1405 .
Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
_ Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
· Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES I

740·742·341

HCS. INC.
New Homes • New
Garages • Pole
Barns • Roofing
• Room Additions
• Remodeling
• Vinyl Siding
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

740·949·1606
0

mo

GARFIELD

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE

· 252 Upper River Road • Ciallipolis
740·44'11·0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
~emode llng

• New Garagaa
• Electrical lie Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Ptm;h Decks
We do it all except
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Local E-perience

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIIISmUCTIOII
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

fig_

24 Windshield

1 Acquired

27 HIIHops

2 Earthen /"r
3 Rich soi

30 Before
31 Psydlo ,.to
32 Lay low

5 AHer a skirt

device

34 Soap unH

... A 7 6 3

35 Portrait or

Pass
Pass

North
Pass
Pass

2.

East
Obi

Tf.if&lt;Y 5AY THE 0L.17ER YOU
Gf&lt;T. THE- WISER YOU Gtf.T

YOU MU5i SE:
VERY. VE:RY W15E

1 11-IINK SHe AAS I&amp;SUES
WITH 11-IE DIRECTO~

'----'3

DOWN

23 Dow Jones

25 Mideast

once

6 Jacques'

7 Hotdog

28 Bangkok

51 Dinghy's

need

29 Endorse a

check

parrot

Mel-

53 Body

ol water

36 Boals

39 Halla locale

19 Knight's

46 Memory

atldress

units

21 Currier and

house

24 Fly ca1cher

Saturday, June 12, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Individuals who have been good tor you m
tile past will once agam play important
roles 1n your alla1rs 1n th e year ahead.
Chances are. with tlleir help. you will be
leaving tile humdrum behind you and taking on something lleartwarming.
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20) - Urgings to
e~C plore new avenues or self-expression
will begin to seep into your psyche today
and grow m intensity as time passes.,
However, you mustn't recklessly cllarge in
uncllarted directions.
CANCER (June 21-Ju ly 22)- Belore tak- .
ing on new protects or obligations. strive to
complete that wh1ch you already have
begun an d have yet to fini sh . Grab the
rewards at hand belore going ott on any tiling new.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Interesting new
interaction s could be in store for you today
where your social life 1s concerned.
However. 1f this sllou td involve making a
new friend , be sure you don't neglect your
old pals.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today may
be a t1me to raise your expectations
regard1ng what you hope to gel out ol life.
Wipe out self-doubts thatllave caused you
to think wishes are unat1a1nable and
replace them with hope .
·
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23)- You are entering a cycle where you are ap t to ·be more
VISionary than usual, but 1n order to make
your dreams a reality. remembe r yot1 w111
have to implement positive measures.
SCORPIO (Oct . .24-Nov. 22) - If you are ~
contemplating an inOJe stment at this time.
don't make any moves until you've ft1lly
investlgafed it and receiOJed the wisest
counse l possible. Things aren't always
what th ey seem.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - Even
though you thrive on lriendsll1ps and see
good in everybody, it may be wise today to
get to know better a new acquaintance
· belor(il mak ing any serious commitments.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - Even
though you may be experie ncing a bit of
ctisenchantmen( with your work lately.
don't use this as an excuse to get down m
the dumps. Use today to reacquaint yoursell with all the good in lite
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- Th is is an
e)(cellent day to get out and mingle with
nBw groups or make new social contacts .
Chances are you will meet someone who
willllarmonize well with your personality.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Tile end
miQht be in SIQilt today for sometlling •
you've been anxious 10 conclude. Th is
could be the completion ot a project or tile
Glosing ol a long period of unrest. You'll
have reason to smile
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) - Be optimistic regarding your involvements today,
but don't let wishful thinking creep in and
cloud reality. Success Gomes tram seeing
things lor what they are
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - New id eas
could occur to you today for ways 10 add to
your resources. Just remember. however_
these possibilities will come from apphed
effort, not tuck or chance.

gentleman

native

10 Type ol eagle 33 Speckle
35 Feel sore
11 Green

Timid

44 Tam

Last year , Jorgen Lindqv1sl died at the
early age of sa . He was a top Swedish
international who llad a rare d1shnction.
He had one nickname. then it changed to
a new one. Because of his youtllfullooks,
he was known as Jorgen Baby. But then
he married and became a father. so he
was renamed Jorgen Daddy.
Lindqvist was an imag1nati'le playe r, as
higlllighted by th iS deal played only a few
months before hiS deatn .
East's !Wo-club opening showed either a
balanced 20-21 points or any unbalanced game-force.
West did well . 11nding the killing trump
lead against four spades doubled. If. for
e)(ample, he had starled wi1h a heart.
·declarer Would haOJe been able to ruff all
three of his low clubs in the dummy and
lose only one spade and one diamond .
After a spade to East's ace and a second
spade, though , the contract appears to
be hopeless. South nas only six spades ,
two aces and one club ruff atllis·disposal. But rather than give up, Jorgen Daddy
won tr ick two in h1s hand and led a low
club!
East won with the 10 and shifted to diamonds. · Declarer ruffed the second
round, tr umpe.d a clutJ on the board.
returned to hand with a diamond ruff, and
ran llis re maining spades. Thi s brought
e11eryone down to three cards. Dummy
held three llearts. and South had a Mart
and two clubs. What did the opponents
retain?
Each was convinced that the otller lleld
the club ace , so West ~ept three hearts.
and East two ·hearts and one club. Th1s
allowed Jorgen Daddy to take the last
three tncks with his two clubs and
dummy's heart ace l

Ireland

21 Summon to 48 Go under ·
coun
49 No

pal

condiment

. 43 SIUJ19er

Senor's

Nuisance -

45 " Como usted?""
,47 Poet' s

26 Inca
Empire,

'.17 Back when 8 Plunks
38 Brunch' dish 9 Wedding
band
40 NFL player

42

44

nation

4 Coy

opera

~~!P!,

BIG NATE

singer

22 Craler edge

~Astro-

WRITE

.
(Commercial and Resid eoti.'!l)
·
Mobile Hom es, Houses, log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Ges Stati on Awnings, Oegreasing of
, Equipment, Boah, Campers, Tractor Trailer..;,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining ot your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening .
Special rates to TruckinlA,nd Dump Trucking Companies.

FA

• C.Rd 30.• Racine, OH

Morning Star

Comg ~M Qut ngw

Gibson
~~ '
--~ifll!li'fiE.iiifi.

LAWN

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals. perennials, vegetable!,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental tree$,
roses, rhoaoaenarons , ana azaleas.

All ON SALE NOW!!

.

•••

T~$

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,

20 Trace

• 4
• 6

West

54 Gambll119
stake

13 T!Widy meat
poulbly
I 4 Coble
58 Bua routa
I 5 - dunk
57 Start a
16 That guy 's
hand
17 - Karenlna 58 Jre.' dada
18 Entertain
59 "Diana"

An old chestnut
that always works

and Furniture

ORDi;R~

TRI -STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Crown Victoria $2,750.00
080. 87 Jeep Pioneer
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; RebUih In Wagon , real nice shape
Stock. Call Aon Evans, 1· $2,500.00(7 401992-5532
800·537-9528.
Blue 2000 Ford Explorer
XLT, 56,389 miles, Power
Li~ chair, 2-way recline , light windows , seats g,· mirrors.
leather,
brown , used only 5 months. Keyless/entry.
$12.000
call
excellent condition. $500, Loaded
(3041576-2541
(740)949-2481

Hours

Call for Daily Specials

Black Angus Bull, 4 yrs. old ,
$1 .200. (740)245·5768.

graphed Nascar racing tire, 97 Mustang, Convertible, VPhone (7401446- 6, Auto, Air. CD, Green with
2316.
Tan, 84,000 miles, $7,900
For sale Fiberglass Topper (3641576-2383
for Chevy S-tO Pick-Up
98 F-250 re al gOOd shape 4·
(3041882-2612
wheel dr1ve $8,000.00. 89

992-2975
lAM'II and Garde~J Equipment i.fi our.
business, not our sideline

OH

446-94 16 r 1-800-872-5967

~ 1 00.

740·949·221 7

8 Hike

49

JEEPERS, MAW !! 'fA GOT
EV'1:1Y L.IGHT IN TH' HOUSE
ON !! WHATTA 'fA THINK-·
WE'RE MADE OF
MONEY?!!

Pomeroy, Ohio

+

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Stre-et

45771

A9865

Opening lead: • 4

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Racine, Ohio

Gallipolis. OH WVO 10212

oo.

' I

740·992·2507

Syracuse,

Appaloosa Mare 12 yr old,
gentle (304)937-228 1

1993 Dodge Spirit AJC, tift,
cassene player. $700 OBO.
1 coffee table plus 2 end (7401258- 1652.
tables, mostly('Nood w/rectangle marble insets, 3 pc. 1995 Saturn SL, 4 dr , standard, . AC, cassette, needs
sst S1
(7 401949-2481
rings, $800 OBO. (74019921
\0" table saw, $80, New 0829 leave message.
Smoker grill "Still in box",
~50 ; Kirby sweeper, t yr old, 1998 Dodge Caravan, V-6 , 4
$700 . Call (7401379-9232 dr. auto, air, tilt, cruise ,
etsk for Lee or Bonnie arter $5795; 1996 Chev'l Lumina,
V-6, auto. air, til t, cruise.
. i200.
$3295 and many more to
15 Ft. Ken more Freezer c hoose from . Trade in's wei·
· (Chest) like new (304)773- co me, Riverview Motors
1
5835
across from Speedway.
'
Oale Earnl1ardt
s1gned auto- Pomeroy, Oh 45769.

JET

Trucking

----

11 987 Chevy S·1 0 Blazer,

L~l

River Way Cafe

rRPPRn

•jm!ll!""..;.-..;...;._....,
Buy or
sell. _Riverine
Antique!, 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moore,

R.B.

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heal Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen~r
• Free Estimates
· "_. ..
• 5 &amp; I0 yr Warranties
, ~!·: .
• Huge Inventory
.;' , . ' :--:·: -~· ·
• Vanguard Venlless Fireplaces 'if):; j' . . . i

Used Furniture Store. t 30
AlJTOS
Bulavllle Pike. Mattresses,
FOR SALE
dressers. couches, reclln• era,
bunkbeds.
GraOJe
Monuments. 2002 Bass S5001.POLICE IMPOUNDS,
Tracker
Fishing
Boat. Chevya, Jeepl, etc 1
(740)446-4782. Gallipolis, Hondaa Cars from SSOO.
OH. Hrs. 11·3 M·F.
For llallnge 1·800·74V.
8104 oxt 3901

!.,~-------· ·

4•
Pass

Snapper

Gravely

29670 Bashan Road

HEATING U COOLING

ranges, air conditioners, and Black Angus cow &amp; calf,
wrinQer washers. Will do $1200, (740)992-2070
repairs on major brands 1n
11~\\ -.. t'i.)l~l \IIC )'
shop or at your home

ANriQtJEs

740-992·5232

South

(304) 273·5321

30 Vrs. Exp. • Ins. owner: Ronnie Jones

BENNETT'S

i

L

l740J 985-4180

•

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Sirop"

Hill's Self
Storage

J

K 83

South
. Q Jl09652

Free Estimates

Bucket Truck

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

L"-TEt..V!

06-11~

•

• 9 8 7 3
... 8
Kasl
• A 1
1 32
• K Q tO
54 2
K Q J to
9 5 2
... K Q 10 I

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Specializing In Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls

~=====F=re=e=E~s~li~m:a:t:e:s=====!

4
J

+A

~

~OFT&gt;UJGoS

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

liNDA1 PAINnNG

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

.

~N' OIJTWITM

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

•
•

.•. NE'5 I!£5N

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

740-985·3564

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Tractor parts &amp; service. spaChapel Road, Porter, OhiO. Clalizing
in
Massey
(740) 44 s. 7444 1_877 _830 _ Ferguson &amp; Ford, (740)696·
0358
9162. Free Estimates, Easy ~~-----....,
financing, 90 days same as
cash Visa/ Master Card.
LIVFSTOCK
Drive- a- little save alot.
-Tllompsons Appliance &amp;
Fiepair-675·7388. For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators . gas and e(ectnc

871-2457

let me :Jo it for youl

• Sand

.

·
Oood U sed Appliances.
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed .
Washers.
Dryers.
Ranges.
and
· Refrigerators. Some start at
$95 . Skaggs Appliances , 76
Vine St.. (7401446-7398

West

Tree Service

JONES'

• Limestone

1

12' John Deer disc, mOdel

WV

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

• Dirt
• Ag Lime

.,,_ _ _ _ _ _ _•

Henderson,

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

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by Luis Campos
Celebnl')' C•p1er ~tams n c•eBlrd !rom QuotallOns bf lanlOIJs people PiSI ai'IO t'ftsen'.
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unrest, tends toward s~renity • - Andre Gide

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As a hobby I ao to craft shows and anticue sh ·Jps k•
find old samplers. One oi my tavorite sayings sa1d. "You
can let bad times make you b1tler or BETIER."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Friday. June II, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.coin

ALONG
THE RIVER

LMNG
Viper Powered:

·

leading up the MBNA 4DO at
Dover (Del.) International
Speedway, Mark Martin
talked about how he had nev-

Race: Pocono 500
Where : Pocono RaceWay.
Long Pond. Pa. (2.5 mi.). 200

~!;!~Au~to;Pai'artrtss ·. x

laps/ 500 miles.
er before. in a career spanWhen: Sunday. June 13
Last year's winner: Tony ning 579 races. endured a
streak of such wretched forStewart
tune.
After Sunday, Marttn
Qualifying record: Tony Stew·
art. Pont1ac. 172.391 mph. should feel as if it's just
about evened out. At the
July 21. 2000.
Race record: Rusty Wa llace. end. the 45~year-old dnver's
Ford, 144.892 mph. July 21. hunger shone through, and
he almost Inexplicably held
1996.
off
another hungry driver.
Last week: It was a feel·good
Tony
Stewart, who led 234
stmy at t11e end of a comedy
laps
before
Martin ied any.
of errors. some of wh!ch were
·somehow
1
ran .my fastest
made by some of the world's
lap
of
the
race
there at the
best dnvers and some of
end.
Everything
worked
out in
wh ich. as usual. were comour
favor.
and
believe
you
me.
m•tted by NASCAR's ever-erwe
were
due,"
Martin
said.
ratic braintrust. In the days

·300.12:30 p.m.,

.

' $8Wn:Jay

Truck series
; O'Reilly 400K.
· 8:30p.m .• Friday

"'The MBNA 400 was marred by

a 25-lap ea~tion period for an

' accident that didn't even oecur
on tlle racing surface. NASCAR
officials obviously haven't mas"red the vague rules they have
foisted upon their racers, and
what's happening in the scoring
tQwer is an embarrassment end
a threat to 11\e sport's groWth.
1&gt; Mark Martin said repeatedly after the race that he isn't very
.' .smart, l).ut he kept his wits
.•.• .about him on a day In which ·
·hardly anyone else seemed to
· have a firm grasp on what they
· were doing.
IJo Tony Stewart has led the most
laps three times this season but
still hasn't managed to cross
the finish line first. For Stewart,
happiness is always no more
than a victory away, and he
could use one right now.
1&gt; How many ways can Kasey
Kahne fail to win a race? This
time it was a pool of oil deposit·
ed on the track that sent
Kahne's Dodge skittering in to
the wall just when he had the

·~· -·· -· · • · .....

...

• UC suspends Huggins.
See Page 81

·
WHO'SHO'f ···- ...
· ANO WHG'S ·NOl' ·•

II' WhC)'1 hot? Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s

third-p.lace finish at Dover
. seemed like a miracle to fans
; , who watched Earnhardt languish
1
;, .deep In the pack for most of the
• ·daY: lHook a· tot of weird hap.:. , penings for Earnhardt to greatly
• : extend' his points lead.
.
•

"

Valley

2004

$1.25 •

\ 'ol. :~H . No. &lt;&gt;:;

v
E
R

co!~:~ion Remembering

s
Casey
Mears

u

s

Jamie
McMurray

moves to

Casey Mears vs. Jamie McMurray: This tiff between teammates
was apparently a misunderstanding
of sorts. Mears rode his skidding
Dodge into the concrete wall on the
inside of the front straight on lap 12 ·
after his Dodge apparently took a hit
from fe llow Dodge driver - and
Ganassi teammate -Jamie McMur·
ray. "Maybe you lift and let guys in.
but I was following the line and felt

University, ls
. a very
precise and
calculating
driver on the
track. His
off-track
persona Is
much the
samehe's the
consumate
professional.

like he came down on

me,~

BY BRIAN

·

YOUR TURN ·
LETTERS fROM OUR READERS ,

Moving races off Fox
tough for rural fans

OBITUARIES
Page A6
• Adah E. Taylor,87
• Bulah Maxey, 86
• Eva Thornsberry, 80
• Gladys Bell, 76
• Rita Mae Payne, 45
• William Lee
Montgomery, 10

• Custody fo r care
legislation faces a bumpy
road See Page A2
· • Community Corner. See
PageA2
• Private moments mark
end of week-long Reagan
tribute . See Page AS

don 't know if you can help. For
some reason. Fox has dropped the

I

next two races ... and maybe

more . When this has happened before, they would be on channels we

John Clark,(NASCAR This week

Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

"I think the bottom line is we're at ·
where we're at in our careers because
we don't need advice," said Newman.
"We get advice sometimes and we
take advice, but the bottom line is we
don't need it We're hired for our driving abilities, whether it's me, Rusty or
Brendan. I don't think someone would
have put us in this position if they felt
like we needed advice ·on a lot of
things."

Contact
Monte
Dutton
hmd4858@peoplepc.com

at

WEATHER
HI: 858, Low: 715

receive .

J.

REED

BREEDMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

sa id

Mears, referring to McMurray. "I felt
like he d1dn't give me any racmg
room. It might have been a 'team
thing: He may have thought, since I
was a teammate, I was going to let
him in, and I thought, because he
was my teammate. he would stay up
high and not chop me.off.'
NASCAR This Week 's Monte
Dutton gives his view: "It's kind ·of
strange how. in this instance. the cooperative instincts of teammates to
help each other got turned around.
Both part1es expected a break from
the other, and the crossed signals resulted in disaster:

POMEROY - A wet
. spring has de layed · construct ion on lhe two towers
of
the . new
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge .
but the Ohio Department
of Tram.portution·s project
manager said the overall
project should be completed on schedule.
Don Tillis said Fridav
crews for C.J. Mahan
Construction Co. and
National Engineering, the
joint contractors on the
bridge project, are preparing to begin work on Pier
No. 7 on the Ohio side of
the river. The pier. to be
· the. first on the Ohio side .
w; II serve as a "touchdown" pier for the cable
stays on the bridge.
Construction of that pier
wi ll hegin soon. The project will involve pouring
concrete into seven shafts
already dri lled at the site.
Each of those shafts
requires 168 linear yards
of concrete, and wh ile traffic may be delayed slightly
whi le trucks deliver the
concrete.
Tillis
said
motorists neeu not worry
Please see Bridge, A&amp;

Joy Spencer of Gallipolis signs the guest book at Willis Funeral Home Friday at the localmemortal service for former President

of ·the United States Ronald Wilson Reagan. Funeral homes across the nation participated tn the memorial. and mo re than 80
people gathered at t11e funera l home Friday to remember the life of the fo rmer president (Mi llissia Russe i,Vphoto)

This time they are on FX.
We live in the rural Midwest Our
small cable company on ly. has access of a few cha nnels. We do get
37 channels. But FX is not a common channel. So, for race fans, it is
a big disa ppointment.
·"

Judy Sweeney
Emery, S.D.

We sympathize with your plight,

but this is the fourth consecutive year

OetaHs on Page AS .

Nicky Tucker

Chelsea Young

;n wh;ch selected races have been on

FX, not Fox, during the season's first
half. Th is is all contractually stipulated
in the agreement be:ween NASCAR
and the networks. All we can really
recommend that you do is make your
case to your local cable company In
hopes that it w/1/ add additional motorsports programming.

Reagan

Ohio

INSIDE

&amp; Supply

addrc." . An1 information
IYould be hdpful. Donnally
. . aid.
Thev are aht' a;,ked In cal l
--we have not authori1ed media attention for the ctti- tlie · Gclllipoli' Police
an) "'licitation program. nor ten~ tn knov.. · v. hat we ~Jrc Departmenl at ~-+6 - 1 ~I 13 or
does the fi re department Uoi n ~ ...
the fire department at -+46l))J).
make call solidting contribuA 11":one rel·civing mail or
tions for any- reason." a phone cal l reque,ting
-- If ,omeone does request
Donnally said. "If the fire monies on hehalf of the the monies on behalf of a
department would participatt: Gallipulis Fire Department firefighter. it won·t help our
in any type of communi!) are asket.l tn !.!Ct &lt;I call back local firefi~hters ... Donnall v
'
event. the re wil l be enou gh number, nam~e. or mailing added .

Department's resident jirifrghter says someone is sending letters,
making calls tr)'itrg to solicit motrt'}'

GALLIPOLIS
Gtdlipolis Yolunleer Fire Depa rtm en t is not involved in
·Department resident fire- any solicitation of any kind.""
fighter Bob Donnall y ;, Donnally s&lt;tid.
City residents. · most ly .
warning local residents.. that
someone is sendjng letter-; elderly. have rece ived letters.
fo llowed by
and making phone calls. somelimes
calls
from
an umdentiphone
requesting money on the tire
ficd male ask in~ for a minidepartment's behalf.
''The
Gallipolis
Fire mum $20 conlribution .

FEUD OF THE WE£~ -

~·

~mPurdue

allows the egotistical people to, furthermore, enjoy what they do and how
they can rub their fantasy -league
stuff in other people's faces . It's something I enjoy."
While . still relatively new to
NASCAR, Newman has blossomed
into a consummate professional. He is
one of three drivers on a team, Penske
Racing South, noted for its sophistication and reliability. Newman and
teammates Rusty Wallace and Brendan Gaughan are amicable but busi-,
nesslike.

Donnally: 'The Gallipolis (Volunteer).Fire Department
is not involved in any solicitation of any kind'
BY MIUISSIA RUSSELL

Ryan
Newman,
who has a ·
degree In
engineering

2002.
Newman was the Raybestos Rookie
of the Year that season, edging out another young superstar, Jimmie Johnson. Almost immediately, he became
the sport's most reliable qualifier. In
his second season, he became the circuit's most frequent winner. This year
many consider him a prime contender
for the first Nextel Cup
championship.
The Purdue University engineering graduate has the whole package. He is articulate
and has an economy of
language unusual for
an athlete. His sense of
humor endears him to
fa ns and members of
his team. In the car, he is a veritable
sponge - it never takes him long to
. pick up the nuances of any track.
And he's dedicated to his faris. In
fact, Newman said the chief attraction
of having his souvenirs on sale outside
the tracks is the fact that it gives him
a frequent means of maintaining contact with the fans in the grandstands. ,
"For me , it's not a hu ge income
thing compared to every thing else,"
he Ga id. "Obviously it's a good source
of income, but to me, the bottom line
is it's a way to communicate with the
fan s. I make it a point to, at least IS
times a year, go out to the souvenir rig
and sign autographs for the fans. Typically, I do it in the bigger markets be·
cause it has more of an impact, but
that's part of racing.
'"It.'s a cool part of racing. It really

l'omt•rn) • ~liddlcl&gt;ot1 • (;aJiipolis • Sunda) .Jmw q,

MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

NEXTEL CUP SERIES, No. 12 ALLTEL DODGE .

Ryan Newman could scarcely have
done better in NASCAR since the 26year-old South Bend: Ind., naiive arrived in the sport's premier series in

volved, which seemed kmd of
, strange after he won the race.
· "' Even mild-mannered Matt
Kerrseth complained loudly
about NASCA!l policies after the
oil slick that cost Kahne the
race also depriV)!d Kenseth of a
top-five fintsh .
~oOn the other hand, Dale Earnhardt Jr. ruffled a few fea thers
when he became quite defen·
· · sive about NASCAR's management of the race. 'If you don 't
think you enjoy the race: he
snapped, "don't buy a ticket
next year."

'

SPORTS

Quallfyl~ll record: Scott Rtggs. Dodge. 181.953 mph,
Oct. 4. 2001.
Race record : Brendan
Gaughan, Dodge, 140.621
mph, June 6. 2003.
Last week: Dodge driver
Chad Chaffin won for the first
time in the MBNA America
200 at Dover International
Speedway.

NASCAR This Week

tin as one of the drivers in-

."'·

Gaughan

By Monte Dutton

cloud move away to let the sun
shine in on a long, distinguished
career. Martin still has an uphill
struggle to work his way into the
top 10, though, by playoff .time.
1&gt; One 18-car crash elimtnated all
three of the Dodges fielded by
Chip Ganassi 's stable. Original- ·
ly, NASCAR officials listed Mar-

IJoWho's not? Jeff Gordon, who
IOQI&lt;ed like he might be headed
tow~rd a fifth championship just
.three races ago , has now dug
himself an imposing hole and
'lall!ln from third to fifth in"the
; siindlngs.
·

Ohio \ ' alll-~ l'uhlishin~: Co.

Last year's winner: Brenda n

Focused Newman
-brings systematic
approach to racing

,.At the same· time, it was n1ce
to see Martin 's personal rain

tme
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

•

twice lost by less than a car
length. Now fate has Intervened
against him.

~

Race: O'Reilly 400K
Where: Texas Motor Speed·
way, Justin (1.5 mi.). 167 ·
laps/250.5 miles.
When: Friday. June H

IN THE SPOTl.:.tGHT-- · --

RYAN NEWMAN

Dover race won. The rookie has

I

Race: Federated Auto Parts
300
Where: Nashville Superspeedway, Gladeville, ~enn.
(1.333
mi.),
225
laps/ 299.925 m1les.
When: Saturday. June 12
Last year's winner: Scott
Riggs
Qualifying record: Randy LaJo ie. Chevrolet. 163.324
mph. April 12. 2003.
Race record: Dav1d Green.
Pontiac, 122.724 mph, April
12. 2003.
Last week: Greg B1ffle took
the lead for the f~rst time
with 21 m1les to go and then
drove away from the field to
win the rain-delayed MBNA
America 200 at Dover.

'

un a

BUSCH S£RtES

r_.r &gt;R"r S

Couch finally cut by
Browns, 81

2004 Dodge Ram
SRT-10, 01

The Calliope King of
the World, C1

.,. 11 you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893. Gastonia, NC 28053

~

INDEX
4 SECilONS -

28 PAGIJS

Around Town . A Section
C Section
Celebrations
D Section
Classi fieds
insert
Comics
Editolials
A4
A6
Obituaries
A2
Region
B Section
Sports
AS
Weather
© 2004 Ohio Valley Puhlisbing Co.

Kayla Nave

Three Meigs teenagers to
head to Buckeye Girls State
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Three
Meigs County teenagers
will join an estimated 900
young women from across
the state for the 58th annual
American Legion Auxiliary
Buckeye Girls State session
to be held this week on the
campus
of
Ashland
University.

992-6611

Attending wil l be Che lsea
Young · and Kayla Marie
Nave of Raci;te and Nicki
Kay Tucker of Letart Falls.
Young ~tnd Nave are heing
sponsored by the American
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, whi le
Tucker wil l be sponsored
by the American Legion
Auxiliary of Rm·ine Post
602.
•
Please see Girls, A&amp;

Sponsored walk
for diabetes
raises money,
awareness
BY AGNES

HAPKA

AHAPKA@MYDAILYTniBUNE .COM

GALLIPOLIS - It wa&gt;n ., iu't anuth~r day
at the park for Jacob Whee let:.
The 11 -year-old Washington Elementary
School student spent Saturday morning hdp·
ing to raist: money for di&lt;lbetes r~1'1C. arch.

Jacob and a group of &lt;ehoo l friend, took
part in the annual Walk for Diabetc\. held at
Gallipolis . City Park and &lt;'rganilcd by
Roherta Ahearn of the American Diabetic
Association.
But for Jacob. the battle a£ainst diabetes i'
a personal nne .
"
Diane Wheeler. Jacob's mother. sa il! her
son was diagnosed with type I diahctcs when
he wus nine .

Please see Diabetes, A6

Jacob Wheeler and two of his school friends
await the results of a prize drawing at
Saturday's Walk for Diabetes. (Agnes
Hapkaf photo)

nity Health Fair

252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

108 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

992·2825
,

'

.•.

- ·

- --------~"

- - -- - - -

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