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GAI(I&gt;ENING

;

iunba~ ltmt' -itnttnel

PageD6
1

Report: Canadian police
reportedly delivered
potential bomb
ingredient tlu~mselves, A2

Sunday, June 4, 2006

Peonies provid,e
months of pleasure
•

BY LEE REICH
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

'

Peonies are perhaps the longest lasting
beauties of the flower garden. Not the !lowers
themselves, which are as shon-lived as any
other perennial flower. But the young spears
that precede the flowers add a bit of reddish
color to the early flower garden and the long
lasting. dark green foliage remains a lush
oasis even in the glare of midsummer sun.
Those fat blossoms are something special,
though. and there are ways !O prolong their
show. if not in the garden. then ind&lt;;&gt;ors. You
can easily dry them by just hangtng them
. upside down. Doub.le white, pink, and red
varieties dry the best.
For more natural color and better shape , dry
peony blooms with a desiccant such as s ilic:~
gel or a mix of one part each of borax and
cornll)~al. Fill an airtight box with a couple of
inches depth of desiccant, slide a heavy wire
into each flower stem and bend it at a right
angle, then set the !lowers face up in the desiccant. Trickle desiccant in among and over
the petals. Remove the nowers · as. soon as
their petals are pliable like tis, ue paper.
If you prefer the blossoms more lifelike,
preserve them with glycerine . Stir one part
glycerine into two parts hot water, let the mix

Scenes from Wings and·
Ribs Festival, A6

co11~ plunk

the cut ends of peony stems
info the solntion . Move the container to a cool
location and replenish the solution as necessary. The plant will change color slightl'y as
the solution is absorber) and the llowers are
ready when the color change is complete.
Store the fini shed llowers upright in a cool,
dry location .
The most lifelike blooms. of CO(Irse, come
fro m living llowers, and with Wf)le trickery,
you can enjoy fresh peonies for a month or
more.
·
•
Cut the blossoms while.they' re still in bud.
when their green coverings have parted just
enough to let the color of the petals poke
through. Cut each stem low enough to include ·
all leaves except the bottom one. Don't cut
too many stems from a pl ant. though. or the
plant will' starve for lack of leaves.
,
After about 20 minutes, plunge the bases !)f
the ste ms into a container of .cold water and
move the container into the refrigerator. After
a couple of hours. remove the llower,, from
the water, wrap them completely in plastic
wrap, then return them to the refrigerator, layAP Photo
ing the m on their sides.
' Whenever you hanker for peony blossoms. In this photo provided by tee .Reich , Peonies are perhaps the longest lasting beauties of the
just take some out of the ~efrigerator. Put their flower garden. The flowers are as short-lived as any othe r perennial llower, but the young
spears that precede the flowers add a bit of redd ish color to the early flower garden and the
stem s in water, and within eight hours long lasting, dark green foliage remains a lush oasis even in the glare ·or midsummer sun. ·
voila! - the petals will unfold.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
so CENTS • \'ol. :;;;. :'\&lt;1. :!o,;

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:'1101\ii&gt;AY, .JUNE:;, :!OO(&gt;

.

·

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.

"'"'·nndaih,&lt;·ntin~l.t·um
. .

.

Syracuse Council approves new water rates

SPORTS
• State track and field
meet. See. Page 81

BY BETH

lage was in desperate need of
a new water system and
grants obtained for that water
SYRACUSE - We all system dictated the new rates
need it · to live and if we're based on a points system that
lucky enough to have safe, factored in (among other
clean drinking water we 're things) the vi llage's median
going to pay for it, and now income. ·
The following new rates
the,residents of Syracuse are
going to pay a little bit more . were approved at last week's
for theirs · beginning in meeting of Syracuse Village
September.
Council by unanimous vote .
The increase in water rates The following rates were preare due to the fact that the vii- sen ted to counci l by the
SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.£0M

Syracuse Board of Pu.blic
Affairs which determitoed the
rates. based on what was
required to receive the grant
for the new water system:
Rates for residents inside
the v,i llage, $14.50 for the first
2,000 gallo1is, $4.80 per I ,000
gallons for next 3,000 gallons.
$4.50 per I ,000 gallons for
next 8,000 gallons, '$4.25 per
I ,000 gallons for next 50,000.
Rates fo r residents outside
the vill age, $18 for the first

2,000 gallons, $4.85 per 1,000
gallons for next 3,000 gallons,
$4.55 per I,000 gallons for
next 8,000 gallons, $4 .30 per
1,000 gallons for next 50,000.
Rates " for residents and
commerci al combined inside
the vill age, $43.50 for the first
4,000 gallons, $4.85 per 1.000
gallons for next 3.000 gallons,
$4.55 per 1,000 gallons for
next 8.000 gallons, $4.30 per
I ,000 gallons for next 50,000.
Rates for school and com-

mercia] inside the village, $29
tor the first 2.000 g all on~,
$4.85 per 1,{)00 ga llons for
next 3,000 gallons, $4.55 per
1,000 gallons for next 8,000
gallons, $4.30 per 1,000 gallons for next 50,000.
Rat es for all trailer park s
will be billed per trailer OCCLlpied or not inside the. village,
~ 1 4.50 for the first 2,000 gal'lon&gt;, $4.85 per I ,000 gallons
Please see Syracuse. AS

Starting plants from seed takes gardening full cycle
BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP. WEEKLY FEATURES

NEW MARKET, Va. - .A
fellow I know says real gardeners get things growing by
starting with seed. Filling
your garden with bedding
plants, the gentleman suggests, is simply landscaping.
He's taking propagation
styles to extremes, of course.
But there are many rearons
for starting your nower or
vegetable gardens with the ·
seed you harvested or bought
rather than simply transplant-·
ing some potted plants from .
the b1g box stores.
"Growing from seeds is
one of the best values in gardening," said Karen Park
Jennings, owner of the
George W. Park Seed Co.
Inc., a 168-year-old 'seed·
house in Greenwood, S.C.
"You can · get more plants
from· seed than you can any
other way. Seeds cost pennies
to plant versus dollars to
plant for started varieties."
People :who garden with
seed also are rewarded with
more nutrition in their diets,
Jennings said.
"You have a wider selection
to choose from by usi ng seed
over plants. You can control
your nutritional input in
AP P o
plants better by using seed," . Vete'ran seed starters look to a growing med ium oth r than
she said. "Heirloom s plus your standard, garden variety soils in order to avoid in roducinany vegetable varieties pro- ing disease. Here, the first leaves from some marigol eed
duced for home gardening are are beginning to shoot up from a "peat pot," a natural and sanbetter (tasting) overall from itized container that allows the roots to grow through and can
seed than from the plants you be transplanted into the ground along with the seedling.
get from commercial growers. They 're bred more for
flavor. You won't find that at executive director of the "Great Gardeners Use Seed."
National Garden Bureau Inc., . 'There are several Teasons
your local nursery." .
Research is skimpy but it's in Downers Grove, IlL The for thi s (low number) ,"
believed that only around one bureau is trying to counter Koivula said. "The people
· in I0 gardeners stans with tha) by spearheading a nation- who were taught to garden
seed, said Nona Koi vula. al campaign under the theme from seed by their parents,

g randparents or teachers are to be worked.
more, likely to garden from · The time for starting your
seed later on in their life. " It seeds generally depends upon
requires time . You can't just how quickly they grow as
sow seeds and walk away. seedlings and when they
You have to nurture that 'safely can he moved outseeu. Many people are too doors.
bu sy to start from seed and
There are a few rules to fol they w6uld 'prefer to pur- low if you're to succeed at
chase plants."
starting seed indoors .
Koi vula believes gardeners
• Decide if you want to
get more satisfaction from grow hybrids. "Hybrid seed
their hobby when they start often costs more than seed of
by using seed rather than by non-hybrid vnrietics," a
buying seedlings.
University
of Mi ssou ri
"You can see the process Extension fact sheet . says.
from the very beginning to "However, hyb rids usually
the end, when you . harvest have increased vigor, better
vegetable s contai ning still uniformity, better production
more seeds," she said. "It's a and sometimes specific disease resist.ance or other
complete cycle of nature."
Along with the money you unique cultural characterissave , the greater plant selec- tics_,,
• If you ' re saving seeds
t ion and the self-gratification,
gardening with seed allows from crops you harvested,
you to stretch your growing then think twice about saving
season. The process begins . anything from a hybrid.
with the arrival of the first Hybrids often don 't grow to
seed catalogs shortly after resemble ..their parent plants.
Chri stmas. Then come gw·- It 's safer to stick with selfden planning, crop selecting pollinated, non-hybrid vari and seed staning - placing eties.
• Know how to harvest and
,those tiny living dots into a
growing medium and waiting warehouse seed properly and
for the miracle that trans- how long seed should be
forms them from inert to saved. Seeds lose germinathriving. Dozens of sprouts tion as they age. "Seeds
will emerge in a few days ·if should be kept dry and cool
you ' ve provided the proper to ensure.good germination at
combinat.ion of water, soil, planting," the Un iversity of
heat, fertilizer and light for Missouri horticulturists say.
"Laminated foil packets
germination.
It 's likely they will be ensure dry storag~. Paper
shooting upward from trays packets are best kept in tightplaced 11 nder fluorescent ly clo,ed cans or jars until
'
li g hts, in Still rooms and seeds are planted."
•
Be
selective
when
choosgreenhou se;; or from every
south-facing windowsi ll in ing a growing me,dium . That
your l10me. That can come means not using any of your
four to 10 weeks before the standard, garden-variety topthreat of ihe last killing soi l if you hope to avoid
fro st has passed· a:nd the .plant disease. "The medium
ground has warmed enough used for starting seed should

be· loose, well drained and
fine-textured,'' the Missouri
fac t sheet says. "Prepared
mixes are available .commercially, or materials can be
mi xed at home.:·
Gardening with seed is an ·
ancient exercise, passed
down from generation to generation , g;irdener to gardener.
The
National
Garden
Bureau 's · Koivula believes
gardening with seed has an
even sunnier future.
·'Breeding has made it easia and easier to be a gardener:: she said. "Germination
has improved greatly. There
are a lot more information
so urces. making it easier · to
grow tlowers and vegetables
from seed.
"Higher quality seed · and
more inform ation wi II combine to encourage people to
take that leap of faith to gardening with seed rather than
purchasing plants.''

...

Recornmended reading:
" Park \'
Success
With
Seeds, ·· by Ann Reilly. List
price: $24.95. "Burpee Seed
Startn;,.
by
Maureen
Hejjenwn. t:ist Jn·ice: $/9.95.

...

On the Net:
For more about dwosing
seeds and starting' thein
indoor.1, see tlie Clemson
University £.Hension Web
site: http./!hg ic. cl.emson ,edu.
Click
on
" Landscape,
Garden and Indoor Plams. "
Th en open - "Selecting Good
Seeds" · and " Growing Seeds
!ndo ors. " See also the

Uni v.ersit ):

of'

Mis,l'ouri

Extensimi fo ci sheer about
starting plants .fi'mn S&lt;'eds:
h II p : //llt/.1 e X I e II S i 0/1.. Ill iSsou ri. edulaplore/agg u ide slh
urtlg06570.htm.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Richard Byrd Tolbert

INSIDE
• u.s: intelligence

Sho~H'a

weighing Hezbollah
supporters' ability to morph
into terrorists. ·
See Page ··A2·
• Middleport student
graduates. See Page A3
• Museum day camp this
week. See Page A3
• Bethel Worship Center
to hold Bible School. ·
SeePageA3
• Winners of Pomeroy
Post Office.giveaway.
SeePageA3
• Ohio State trustees
approve 6 percent tuition
increase. See Page A3
• Cincinnati Reds help
repair inner city ball fields.
SeePage AS
• Meth adds toxins to
on-the-job hazards for law .
enforcement. See.Page AS
• Lawsuit claims Clear
Channel caused higher
concert ticket prices.
~Page AS

Bs

PM·2PM
2PM-

Cha~eno

1 .

Hoeftlch/photoo

Winning the .Ohio's Best Ribs award at the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival was vendor Bill Howard
of Wienersville , pict~red here with his cook, Jerome Taylor, front. His ribs tallied the highest
number of points in the peoples choice voting.

Gold Wings and Ribs kicks
off summer festival ·season
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

·

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Saturday's
sunny weather, a change from
Friday 's rain, brought out hundreds of people to view the
nearly 400 motorcycles here
for the. Gold Wings and Ribs
Festival and to enjoy a variety
of free entertainment in the
amphitheater.
The festival, which kicked
off Pomeroy's riverfront entertainment season was described ·
. by Paul Darnell, chairman, as a
lot of hard work which paid
off.
"It wa~ a real success, the
entertainment was great and
everything moved right along"
he said. "The vendors were
even
pleased on Friday when it
WEATHER
·rained with the.ir business, and
Saturday turned out to be a
bang-up day forthem. " Nearly
150 at the festival enjoyed a
cruise on the sternwheeler,
Spirit of South Charleston.
Some changes had to take
place Saturday evening when ·
word came in that the river was
coming up an inch an hour and .
could cover the amphitheater
·stage. Bu't the show much go
on and the sound and other
Dotatto on Pogo A5
equipment of The Brl)SS Taxi
Band was moved onto the'
parking lot stage for the per- Nearly 400 motorcyclists from several states attende&lt;j the
formance .
fourth annual Gold Wings and Ribs Festival. The overflow from
The popularity of ribs kept the lower parkmg lot moved o~to Court Street.
the tables down the middle of Spenter.
1500.
2 SECI'iONS .- l:Z PAGES
the upper parkin~ lot full. The
After the festival 's motorcySecond place winners were
Calendars
A:3 winneroftheOh10's Best Ribs cle show judging plaque s . John Shuler ·of Rutl and. 1500
this year was Andy Howard of were awarded in first, second class: Bill Keeton of
Classifieds
B3-4 Wienersvil'le. Ohio.
and third places in several cat- Sandwi«;h, Ill. , tri k class; Kim
Fromaselectionofabout40 egories. Di ck Fetty. ch&amp;irman, Roush· of Mason, open class;
Comics ·
paintings in the Art in the Park announced· the winners as fol- Rex Roy of Little Ho..:king,
show vi sitors voted fort he best . lows:
1800 class.
· Dear Abby
A3 painting wi th the first pl ace First places in their respec- Third place winners we re
award of$100 going to Diana tive categoric~ went to Tom Dick Smith of Letart. 1500
Editorials
·A4 John
son with ~ 'Early Mornin g Dor.st of'Pomeroy. 1200 class: · class; Chris Weaver. S~rm: u se,
Fli
ght,"
and second prize of Hobart
Templeton
0f open class; and L arr~ Lee of
Obituaries
As $50 to Carmen
Schul.tz of Middleport, rat class: Terry Pomeroy. trik dass .
Sunday .morning the Gold
B Section Chester with a painting of a Skinner. Sioux Ci ty, Iowa. trik
Sports
cottage. Schultz also won class; Dan Arnold, of Wings and Rihs Festival ..:omWeather
.As "best of show'' with a painting Harrisonville, sidecar; Greg mittee met on.the parking lot to
of pumpkins·. Judges were Roush of Mason. 1800 class:
Please see Ribs. AS
© 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co . . Bobbi Karr ana Marilyn Rich Wamsley of Racine.

·INDEX

department/ photo

Meigs County's canine unit helped deputies dis.cover crack
cocaine and drug paraphernalia 1n this vehicle in Syracuse
Friday afternoon. The driver, Mark Compson, was arrested and
jailed for smoking crack i~ a Syracuse parking lb't.

Man arrested for drug
abuse in Syracuse ·
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - A Racine
man was arrested and jailed
Friday afte rnoon after he
was arrested for allegedly
smoking crack cocaine in a
Syracuse parking lot .
Sheriff Robert Beegle said
his department received a1i

anoymous · call from th e
community reporting that
someone was believed to. be
using drugs while parked in
a parking lot next to the
Syracuse Post Office.
When Deputies Adam
Smith and Jonathan Sanders
responded to the scene, they
Please see Drugs, AS

Charlene Hoeflich/ photo

Howard Mullen proud ly displays the plaque awarded to him for
s pecial service to the North Fort Myers Fire District in Florida.

Mullen recognized for volunteet'ism
BY

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYqAILVSENTINEL.COM

.
POMEROY Howard
Mullen: who has bec!l W(~rk ong With Pomeroy s l·u·e
Department
and
Mc1gs
County's Eme rgency Medical '
Serv1ce for more than 50
years, has received &gt;pedal
recognition from the North
Fort Myers F1re D1 stnct 111
Florida.
Mullen spends his winte"

in Florida anu since 1990 has
been VOlUI)t eering with • the
Fire Di strict or North Fort
Myers. Earlier this year he
was presented an appreciation
plaque "in recogmtion of 17
years of dedicated s~ rvi ce to
the fire fighter' and citi zens
or North Fort Myer&gt;."
.
Mullen said he works as an
extra person with the uepm'tment which onswers all EMS
·
·
Please see Mullen, AS

�..

•

'

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

NATION • WORLD

T~e

~onday,June5,2006

Community Calendar

delivered
BY BETH DUFF-BROWN
AND

ROBQIWES
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

MISSISSAUGA, Canada
- . The Royal · Canadian
Mounted Police itself delivered three tons of potential
bomb-making material to a
group that authorities said
wanted to launch a string of
attacks inspired by al-Qaida,
.according to a news report
Sttnday.
·
The Toronto Star said the
sting unfolded when investi·
gators delivered the ammonium nitrate to the group of
Muslim Canadians, . then
moved in quickly on what
officials called a homegrown
terro.r ring.
The newspaper said that
investigators learned of the
group's alleged plan to bomb
targets around Ontario, then
controlled the sale and transport.of the fertilizer.
Authorities refused to discuss the Star's story and have
revealed few · detail s of the
purported plot, or how the
sling develo~d.
Police arrested 12 adults,
ages 19 to 43, and five suspe,t:ts younger than 18 Friday
aHd Saturday on charges
including plotting a.ttacks .
with explostves on Canadian
targets.
The oldest, Qayyum Abdul
Jamal, led prayers at a storefrpnt mosque attended by
some 40 to 50 families down
the street from his home in a
middle-class neighborhood
of Mississauga, west of
Toronto.
Imam Qamrul Khanson
said the language of Jamal's
Friday night prayers ·was
much more aggressive than
other prayer leaders', but
there was never any talk of
terrorism. ·
Neighbors said Jamal's
wife drove a school bus and
he was always home and did
· not seem to work regularly.
The couple has three small
children, neighbors said.
Khanson said at least three
of the suspects regularly

AP Photo

A terror suspect is transferred to a prisoner tran·sportation vehicle in Pickering, Ontario to be
taken to an arraignment at the courthouse in Brampton on Saturday. Canadian police foiled a
homegrown terrorist attack by arresting 17 suspects, apparently inspired by ai-Qaida, who
obtained three times the amount of explosives used in the Oklahoma City bombing; officials
said Saturday.

prayed at the Al-Rahman speaking on condition of
Islamic Center for Islamic anonymity becauS!! of the
ongoing investigation, said
Education.
"I will say that they were Web surfing and e,mail
steadfast religious people. among the suspects led to the
There's no doubt about it. But start of the probe in 2004.
here we always preach peace
"Whether there was a
and moderation," ! Khanson direct inspiration or an indisaid at the one-room mosque. rect inspiration, the Internet
"I have faith that they. have was, according to the police,
done a thorough investiga- was a very important pari of
tion," Khanson said of their activities," Canada's
authorities. "But just the pos- ambassador to Washington,
session of ammonium nitrate Michael ·wilson, said in an
doesn 't prove that they· have interview on CNN's "Late
done anything wrong.
Edition."
"We value our Canadian
Secretary
of
State
culture and we woultl never Condoleezza. Rice said the
allow any links with the so- Canadian operation was
called Taliban or al-Qaida," "obviously· a great success
Khanson said.
for the Canadians. They're to
The 17 suspects represent a be congratulated for it."
Police said the suspects, all
spectrum of Canadian society, from the unemployed to citizens · or residents of
the college-educated. The 12 Canada, had trained together:
adults live in Toronto ,
Cpl. Michele Paradis, · a
Mississauga and Kingston, spokeswoman
for . the
Ontario.
Mounties, said no more
A · government official, arrests were expected in com-

U.S. intelligence weighing Hezbollah
supporters' ability to morph into terrorists
Bv KATHERINE SHRADER

without directly mentioning the order strikes.
proposal, pledged Friday that · Hezbollah, which means .
the West would not deprive his Party of God, was founded in
WASHINGTON - If cor- country of nuclear technology. 1982 to respond to Israel's
nered by the West over its
The Bush administration and inva.Sion of Lebanon. The radinuclear program, Iran could U.S. allies know Iran could cal Shiite organization advodirect Hezbollah to enlist its order attacks. Some officials cates for Israel's elimination
widespread international .sup- believe that threat is a bargain- and the establishment of an
port network to aid in terrorist ing chip worth more to Iran if Islamic
government
in
attacks, intelligence officials kept in reserve.
Lebanon modeled after the relisay.
Given that diplomacy could gious theocracy in Iran.
In interviews with The fail to defuse the nuclear standWith some exceptions,
Associated Press, several off, U.S. intelligence a~encies Hezbollah has not·targeted the
Western intelligence officials are studying Iran's options to United States in recent yearssaid they have seen signs that retaliate: using oil as a weapon, a strategic decision that gives
Hezbollah's
fundraisers, attacking Americans in Iraq the group more freedom to
recruiters and criminal ele- .and elsewhere, unleashing operate, according to one U.S.
~nts could be adapted to proHezbollah or deploying .other counterterrorism official. ,
ville logistical help to terrorist tactics.
On orders from Iran,
~ratives.
To the State Department, Hezbollah was tied to a string
Such. help could include Hezbollah is a militant of kidnappings and assa5sinaobt;Uning forged travel docu- Lebanese group classified as a tions .of Westerners in the
ments or off-the-shelf technol- terrorist organization. Its terror- 1980s, including the abduction
ogy - global positioning . ist wing, the Islamic Jihad · of the CIA's station chief in
equipment and night goggles; Organization, is a: global threat Tehran, William Buckley, in
for example - that could be with cells in the Middle East, 1984.
used for military purposes.
Europe, Africa, South America,
H~zbollah is accused of
The senior officials spoke Asia and North America. bombing the Israeli Embassy
only on condition of anonymi- Before the attacks of Sept. II, and a Jewish community center
ty because of the sensitive posi- 2001, Hezbollah was responsi- in Argentina in the early 1990s,
tions they occupy.
ble for more American deaths killing more than I 00. The
Hezbollah wa5 responsible than any other single terrorist group denies the charges.
for the 1983 bombings of the organization.
A former chairman of the
U.S. Embassy and the Marine
Yet in many countries, Senate Intelligence Committee
barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, Hezbollah is praised for pro- said before and Hght after the
that killed hundreds of viding education, medical care · Sept. II attacks that Hezbollah
American servicemen. The and housing, particularly in · .was believed to have the largest
group's Saudi wing, in coordi- Lebanon's south, and raising embedded terrorist network
nation with the larger Lebanese money for it is legal .
inside the U.S. "I have no reaHezbollah, is blamed for the
So far there are no signs the son to believe that there has
Khobar Towers bombing in Iranian-backed group is plan- been a dismantlement of that
Saudi Arabia in 1996 .
ning an imminent attack on capability," said former Sen.
Tensions between Iran and U.S. interests. But that possibil- Bob Graham, D-Aa.
the U.S. and its allies have ity has counterterrorism agenSteven Monblatt, the head of
grown over Iran's expanding cies keeping close watch as the the Organization of American
·States' · Inter-American
n!Jclear program. Iran ins isiS its friction with Iran grows.
aims are peaceful; leading U.S.
U.S. analysts believe the Committee Against Terrorism,
officials say they are convinced potential is greater for Iran to said tensions with Iran could
the Iranians intend to develop a use terrorism to retaliate, rather lead Hezbollah to take steps to
nuclear weapon within the next thart to strike first. But they · prepare attacks on Western
decade.
·
· ·have considered scenarios interests in Latin America and .
·
John Negropdnte, head of mider which Iran may view its elsewhere.
own
pre-emptive
attack
·as
a
"I
think
it
is
legitimate
to be
the U.S. intelligence network.
.
concerned about situations
su~gested in an interview aired deterrent.
One senior official said that where terrorist groups will not
Fnday by the British
Broadcasting Corp. that an . if Iran was backed into a comer have an operational base, but
Iranian bomb wuld be a fact in and considered U.S.-Ied mili- will have made the prepara·
as little as four years away, tary action as inevitable, the lions to establish one," said
although he admitted, "We Iranians might calculate that Monblatt, a former State
don't have 'clear-cut knowl- terrorism could break intema- ' Department officiaL "I don't
tiona! uiiity, increase pressure know anyone alleging an operedge."
on
the U.S. or shiti American ational cell right now. Now,
The U.S. and five other ·
how do you di stinguish an
world powers agreed Thursday public opinion.
U.S. analyst5, however, are operational cell from a sleeper
on a plan designed to persuade
Iran to give up its nuclear cautious in their judgments 'operalion - a more kind of
ambitions. Iran 's president, about what might lead Iran to logistical bas~?''
. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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ing days .
"Once we on'ce analyze and
sort through everything that
was seized as a result there
may be (more arrests)," she
said. "At this point we are
confident that we have the
majority of people." ·
· Rocco Galati, a lawyer for
two of the men from
Mississauga, said: "Both of
their families are very wellestablished professionals,
well-established families; no
criminal pasts whatsoever.
"That's why we're anxious
to see the particulars of the
allegations against them,"
Galati said.
He described Ahmad
Ghany, 21, as a Canada-born
health sciences graduate of
McMaster University whose
father, a physician, emigrated
from Trinidad and Tobago ·in
1955.
His other client, Shareef

Abdelhaleen, 30, is an that most of these people will
unmarried computer pro- ' be freed."
Engineer
Mohammed
grammer who emigrated
from Egypt at age I0 with his Abdelhaleen said he feared
father, Galati said.
his son, 1Sha.reef, had already
Two suspects, Mohammed been convicted in the court of
Dirie, 22, and Yasim Abdi public opinion.
Mohamed, 24, already are in
"The damage has already
an Ontario prison serving been done," the father said .
two-year terms for posses- "He just goes and prays in a
sion of illegal weapons.
mosque. That's all he does.'' ·
· Lawyers and relatives of
Muslim leaders voiced
other suspects could not be ~orries that the highly publireached for comment Sunday. . ctzed arrests would cause a
Officials said the operation backlash against their cominvolved some 400 intelli- munity of 750,000 people.
gence and law-enforcement
A mosque in northwest
officers and was the largest Toronto was . vandalized
counterterrorism operation in overnight, with 25 windows
Canada since the ·adoption of and three doors smashed,
. Canada's Anti-Terronsm Act police said.
following the Sept. II, 200 I
Mohamed Elmasry, presiattacks on the United States. dent of the Canadian Islamic
Mike McDonnell, an assis- Congress,
told
The
tant commissioner with the Associated Press that he and
Mounties, said Saturday that other Muslim leaders were
the amount of ammonium getting threatening e-mails.
nitrate acquired by the
Toronto Mayor David
alleged
terror
cell
was
three
said he was told by die
Miller
.
times that used to blow up the city's police chief several
Alfred P. Murrah Federal months ago that a suspected
Buildin~ in Oklahoma City in . terrorist cell was being inves1995, killing 168 people and tigated in the Toronto area.
injuring more than 800.
"I was relieved that police
The fertilizer is safe by had discovered the acttvities
itself, but. when mixed with at a very early stage," Miller
fuel oil or other ingredients, it said. 'J.f there was an actual
makes a powerful explosive. threat, they would be able to
There was no indication stop it before anything serithat Canadian police altered ous happened."
the fertilizer to make it unusable in a bomb.
The FBI said the Canadian ·
suspects might have had
"limited contact" with two
men recently arrested on terrorfsm charges in Georgia.
Auditions for Showboat 5/23
There was no indication
61!m
Sunday, however, that the 17
HUMC Religious Mystery
detainees were trying to plan
an attack in the United States.
Plal6/4
Another imam, Aly Hindy,
The Weatherfords 6/9
said he knew nine of the sus,
Emerson Drive 6/14
pects and complained that
Barbershop
Concert 6/17
Canada's spy agency, CSIS,
has unfairly targeted his Summer Classes Begin Soon!
mosque and congregants for
Register now for Acting,
years.
Dance &amp; Strinl!
"They have ·been harassed
The Ariel-Dater Hall
by CSIS agents and this is
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
what they come up with?"
740-446-ARTS
Hindy said. "I'm almost sure

Am!=!"

Public meetings
•

.
Monday, June 5
RUTLAND Rutland
To":nship Trustees re gu lar.
sess1on, 5 p.m., Fire Station.
LETART FALLS - · Letart
Township Trustees,' 5 p.m.,
. office building.
.
Thesday, June 6
ALFRED Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30p.m.
at the home of Clerk Osic
Follrod .
Wednesday, June 7
PAGEVILLE
- Scipio
Township Trustees, re,gular
meetmg, 6:30 p.m., Pageville
Town Hall.
RACINE
- Financial
Planning and Supervision
.Commission meeting for
Southern Local Schools,
I 0:30 ,a.m., Southern High
SchooL

Reunions
. Sunday, June 11
CHESHIRE- Reunion of
the Elbert and Della Bever

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I
et Everyone Know ,Your Dad Is Someone
Very Special With A Father's Day ·
Thank You Tribute ...
To Be Published In The Dally Sentinel
·
On Friday, June 16th!

SHADE - Misty M. Hill
and Robert J: Hill of Shade
announce the birth of a
daughter, Chloe Maddison
Hill, born on May 18 at
O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital, Athens. The infant
weighed 6 pounds, 15
ounces.

Middleport
student
graduates

·Happy ·
Father's Day

(Your Father's
(Your Father's
· Name)
Name)
(Your Name)
Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ... $10.00

.l

Love
.(Your Name)

. Ot~er events

Monday, JuneS
RACINE
Racine
Tuesday, June 6
Chapter 134, O.E.S .. 7:30
POMEROY
-Meigs
p.m. at the hall. Annual County Hea lth Department
reports and election of offi- open until 6 p.m., offering
cers.
walk-in services: childhood
and adult immunizations,
' Tuesday, June 6
blood pressure screenings and
MIDDLEPORT ·
blood sugar assessments,
Middleport Loge 363 F&amp;AM, W.IC, pregnancy testing, head
7:30p.m. with work in entered lice screenings, vital statistics,
apprentice degree . Members environmental
health,
to take non-perishable food answers to general health·
items for Grand Master's food related questions. 992-6626
program. Refreshments.
for information .
CHESTER Chester
Council 23, 7:30 p.1n. at the
Wednesday, June 7
Chester Masonic Temple.
GUYSVILLE - Revival
with Encouragers from
Wedn~sday, Jupe 7
Elkview, W.Va., 7 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eyangelizing for Jesus
Meeting of Eastern Athletic Worship Center, off Route so·
Boosters to discuss. MeJgs be~ween Parkersburg, W.Va.
County Fair booth and its con- and Athens, 3 4/10 mile. 667tinuation, 7 p.m., football 6040.

Winners of Pomeroy
Post .Office giveaway

than the " marriage" she~·
planning.
P.S. Are YOU able to take
her in?
DEAR ABBY: My grandchild's mother - she and my
son were never married - is·
being married soon. My wife
and I have been invited to the
wedding .
Must we attend? Our sofl ·
will not be in attendance. All'
we would really want is to
see our granddaughter, but.
we know we would . have
very little time with her at the
weddi ng, We would prefer to
send a nice gift, a.nd use th"'
time and money to visit at a
d'f'f
·
1 erent ttme so we can .
· spend lime wuh our granddaughter and v1sUour son . .
What do yo u thmk we ·
should do? · - MISSIN_G
OUR GRANDDAUGHTER
IN MINNESOTA
DEAR
MISSING :
Because your finances are·.
limited, and your grandchild
will understandably be distracted at the time of the
wedding, 1 agree that you
should send a nice gift with
your good wishes to the .
mother and visit your grandchild at a later date .
Dear Abby is written b•
"
Abigail Van Buren, alse
known as Jeanne Pllillips,
and was founded by ller
mother, Pauline Pllillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
·

Ohio State trustees approve 6 percent tuition increase
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
State University undergraduates will pay an additional $477
per year for tuition under a 6
percent increase that goes into
effect this fall, the school said.
Trustees, who approved the
increase Friday, blamed state
aid stagnating at less than 2 percent growth. The increase is the
maximum allowed under law.

"Increasing tuition is always
done with reluctance, but the
cost of an undergraduate education is rising faster than state ·
funding, and we are committed
to .maintaining the quality of
our instructional programs and
the overall student experience,"
said Barbara R. Snyder, execu· tive vice president and provost.
Ovemll costs for the average

full-year student who lives on
campus, including both ruandatory and optional fees. will
increase by $748, or 4.5 percent, to $1'7 ,495 foi 2006-07.
That includes hikes of about
$1 00 apiece for mandatory ·
recreation fees and health
insurance premiums. Optional
fees include football tickets and
parking passes.

KUBOTA HAS YOU
. COVERED FROM THE FRONT
YARD TO TliE FIELD
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Submitted phOto

The Pomeroy Post Office recen11y held a random drawing in
which thr.ee people won Mother's Day bears. Out of 156
entrants the winners were Emma Perrin, MaKayla Dexter and
Kelly Grueser. Here Grueser a Dexter display the bears they
won for presentation to ther mothers.

O'Bleness offering
childbirth class
ATHENS Expectant
The class focuses on
mothers and their birth breathing and relaxation
coaches or companions are techniq~es as well as other
encouraged
to
attend pain-relief options. The class
Memorial . also provides information
O'Bieness ·
Hospital's childbirth dass about hospital procedures
Sunday, June 4 from 2 p.m. and variations of labor. An
to 6 p.m.
•T h e introduction to the maternity
location of the class will be servic~s at O'Bleness will
in lower level room 010. include a tour of the
First-time parents, as well as O'Bleness Birth Center.
experienced parents,' will
The class is free of ~harge
learn what's ne:w in materni- ' anp will be held six times
ty care. Expectant parents on alternating months this
will also learn the stages of year. For more information
labor and delivery and what or to register, · call the
to expect before and after O'Bieness Birth Center at
the baby is born.
(740) 592-9275.

MIDDLEPORT - Sarah
Kent;tte Walker, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth
Walker of · Middleport,
earned a bachelor of science degree ·in music education with an instrumental
proficiency.
The commencement ceremony was held at Pensacola
Christi~n
College
on
Wednesday, May 10. Sarah
was one of 860 to whom
degrees were granted.
Pensacola · Christian
College is a liberal arts college enrolling students from
TUPPERS · PLAINS - and great Caribbean music .
every state in the U.S . and "There's treasure on thi s
"The church is inviting all
from around the world. It island. It's 'the greatest ,trea- the children of Meigs,
has an enrollment of about
4,700 students in its unde~­ sure of all- God's . love." Athens and Gallia Counties
graduate and graduate pro- said Pastor Rob Barber uf . community and their parents
to ·join in a ·spectacular trip
grams and offers a variety Beihel Worship Center.
· On SonTreasure Island, to Son Treasure Island.
. of programs of study.
children will learn how
The event begins June 25
Jesus' lite illustrates . God's and co ntinues through June
love as described in I 29 , at the Worship Center,
Corinthians 13 . · K.ids will 39782 State Route 7, from
have fun discovering the rich 6:30 p.m. to 8:45 p.m. For
li
treasure of God's love with more information call 667Subseribe today • 992-2155
island crafts. island games 6793.

SChool

!;!. 1X5 Greeting with Plcture ...$13.00

Father'!l Name'---- - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - Your Name(s) -----------'--~---------

Address _ _ _ _~--------------~----

City/StateJZip
Phone_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Send Coupon and Payment to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• ProUd to be·apart of

!·l . your life.

DE!adline For This Special Father 's Day Tribute Is
Friday, June 9. 12:00 Noon.

•

Thursday, June 8
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453 to hold meeting,
7:30 p.m . at the haiL
Refreshments.

DEAR ABBY: I have a
question that you' ve probably
never been asked before, Is
there a dress code regarding
"prnper attire" for a funeral?
Most everyone has worn
Dear
black at most of the funerals
I have attended. I don't parAbby
ticularly like black, however.
I prefer brigl)t colors, so
that's what I have chosen to
we~.hy is it that this socalled tradition is so don't think this is · right, but
entrenched that no one wants the family thinks it will be a
10 break it? _ WONDER- good learning experience for
ING IN EAU CLAIRE, WIS . her and will make her grow
DEAR WONDERING: In up faster.
· d stales, · bl ac k ·IS feel1 am
because
I don't
the Umte
that torn
marriage
should
be
generally considered the
d
"I
, 1
use as a esson
o a
color of mourning. W.lJen teenager. 1 kn'ow with some
someone attends a funeral , it people the marriage can last
i-s either to pay respect to the for years. but I'm afraid she
deceased or to show support will become a divorce statisfor the gri~ving family. At a tic and that she 's ruini ng any
time like this, it is considered chance for living as a regular,
improper to draw attention to normal teenager. What are
yourself. That is the reason your thoughts on this? _
most people forgo bright col- JENNIFER IN UTICA; N.Y.
ors and mstead wear colors
DEAR JENNIFER: Your
that are muted or subdued concerns are valid. Your sisunless instructed otherwise. . ter is marrying for the wrong
' DEAR ABBY: I need your · reason, and most young
help. For many years, my women who do it find they
·
Parents have not been able to have J·umped from th e frymg
care for their children. They pan into the tire. If there is a
are barely ableto take care of chance she might listen to
themselves.
I am the oldest yo u, pi ease d'lscourage her
.
child and have helped to raise from taking this path. It is
my younger brother and sis- important that she complete
ters.
her education and experience
My youngest sister is 16, independence before marryanct in a couple of weeks will ing. If your· parents ' can. no
be marrying her boyfriend so longer shelter your sister. fosthat she'll have a place to ter care or staying with a reilive. (They will live with hi s alive might be a better option
parents after the ceremony.) I

Museum day
camp this week
POMEROY - The annual
day camp for youngsters who
pave completed the second,
third anq fourth grades will
be held Tuesday, Wednesday ·
and Thursday at the Meigs
County Museum.
, ruesday and .. Wedne sday
events will be held :lt the
Museum, and on Thursday
those enrolled will be taken
on a field trip to visit a historical site. Activities will
include heritage skills, game~
and historical research.
· Prior
registration . is
required and the cost is $25.

Love ·

,Clubs and
organizations

field . Questions to667-3316.

POMEROY
The
Brandi Thomas Memorial
Scholarships · were awarded
at the recent Meigs High'
School awards assembly.
This year's recipients of
the $1 ,000 .scholarships ·
were Ashley Savage of
Albany. who will be attending Hocking College, and
Kylen King of Racine, who
will go to Ohio Uni:versity.
Any Meigs High School ,
senior or graduate attending
college who participated in
track or cross-country a
minimum of two ~ea.rs in
Ashley Savage
Kylen King
high school was eligible to
apply for a two-year maxi - the basis of character, extra- accomplishments ensuring ·
curricular activities, academ- potential success in college
mum scholarship.
Recipients are chosen on ic performance and other and post-college life.

Birth announced
i

Happy
Father's Day

Gillilan family, noon to4 p.m.
at the Kyger Creek Club
House. Take covered di sh.
Lunch is at I p.m.

Monday, June 5, 2006.

Subdued colors at funeral are way of paying respect:·.

•

Memorial scholarships awarded
•

PageAJ .

BY THE BEND

Daily Sentinel

··'l._'

•

'

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�•

OPINION.

The Daily Sentinel .

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Co.

Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or iif 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

.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, June 5, the I 56th day of 2006. There are
209 days left in the year.
' Today's Highlight in History:
On June 5, 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated
in Los Angeles' Ambassador Hotel. af.ter claiming victory in .
California's Democratic presidential primary. Gunman Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan was immediately arrested.
• On this date :
.
In 1884, Civil War hero Gen. William T. Shennan refused
the Republican presidential nomination, saying, "I will not
accept 1f nominated and will not serve if elected." ·
In 1933, the United States went off the gold standard.
In 1940, the Battle of France began during World War II.
In 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall gave a
speech at Harvard University in which he outlined an aid profor Europe that came to be known as "The Marshall '
.
an "
In 1967, war erupted in the Mideast as Israel raided
Egyp~ian military targets. Syria, Jordan and Iraq entered the
conflict.
In 1976, II people were killed when the Teton Dam in
Idaho burst.
·
In 1986, a federal jury in Baltimore convicted Ronald W.
Pelton of selling secrets Jo the Soviet Union·. (Pelton was sentenced to three life prison terms plus I 0 years.)
In 2004, Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of the
United States, died in Los Angeles at age 93 after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease.
. Ten years ago: Joseph Waldholtz, the ex-husband· of U.S.
· Rep. Enid Greene, R-Utah, pleaded guilty to providing his
wife false information for her taxes and to falsifying spending
reports from her congression·al campaign.
·
Five years ago: Senate Republicans spent their last full jlay
in power before turning control over to Democrats, a change
that carne about because of a decision by Vermont Sen. James
Jeffords to leave the GOP and become .an independent. · ·
One year ago: "Monty Python's Spamalot" won three Tony
Awards, including best musical ; the musical play "The Light
in the Piazza" won six prizes, while "Dqubt" was named best
drama. Spanish teenager Rafael Nadal beat unseeded Mariano·
Puerta of Argentina 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6·1, 7-5 towin the French
Open men's singles title.
·
'f&lt;lday's Birthdays: Broadcast journalist Bill Moyers is 72.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Floyd Butler (Friends of
Distinction) is 65. Country singer Don Reid (The S~tler
Brothers) is 61. Rock musician Fred Stone (Sly and 'the
Family Stone) is 60. Rock singer Laurie Anderson is 59.
Country sin~er Gail Davies is 58. Author Ken Follett is 57.
Rock music1an. Nicko McBrain (Iron Maiden) is 54. Jazz
musician Kenny G is 50. Rock singer Richard Butler
(PsychedeliC · Furs) is 50. Actor Jeff Garlin is 44. Actress
Karen Sillas is 4L Actor Ron Livingston is 39. Singer Brian
McKnight is 37. Rock musician (:la)JS Norreen (Aqua) is 36.
Actor Mark Wahlberg is 35. Actor Chad Allen is 32. Rock
musician P-out (311) is 32. Actress Liza Weil is 29. Rock
musician Seb Lefebvre (Simple Plan) is 25.
Thought for .Today: "The only folks who give us pain are
those we Jove the best." - Ella Wheeler Wilcox, American
poet (1850-1919).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
· and include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters slwuld be in ;good taste,
. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga·
nizations and individr~als will not be accepted for publication.

When George' W. ·Bush ·
stood with Tony Blair before
the White House press corps
last week, he took a mea
culpa moment to announce
his regret for having formerly talked tough to jihadis,
and to c'all Abu Ghraib "the
biggest mistake that's happened so far" in Iraq . And
that's when my sinking feeling over the viability .of
American Superpowerdom
hit bottom.
It's worth noting that this
presidential statement created a confessional moment of
sufficient magnitude to stifle
"I told you so's" from the
press .' Long pained by
Bush's spaghetti-Western
diction, and long party to the
Abu · Ghraib
Outrage
Industry, media elites might
have been expected to, well,
rub it in. Then again, Bush
took care of that himself. He
referred to language that
once , irked his critics "bring it on," he offered as
· an example, along with
"wanted, dead or alive." I'm
~uessing he' would also
mclude the line, "you're
eithet with us or against us."
Bush then informed the
world that, yes, he had
grown. Such "kind of tough
talk," he said, "sent the
wrong signal to people. I
learned some lessons about
expressing myself maybe in
a little more sophisticated
manner.... I think in certain
parts of the world it was mismterpreted, and so I learned

The Daily Sentinel ·
&lt;usPS 213-960)

Correction Polley

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main ooncem in aU stories is to be

Published e&lt;Jery afternoon, Monday

thr9ugh Friday, 111 Court Street,
accura-.. H you know of an error in a
Pomeroy, Ohio . Second-class postage
llofy, cal the newsroom at {740) 992· paid at Pomeroy.

2156.

Our meln number Ia
(740) 9112·21 58. .
Department extensions are:

Member: The AssoCiated PreSs and the
·OhiONewspaper Asaoclatlon.
Poetmootor: send addreoo correcflors
to The Daily Sentinel, 1t 1 Cou~ StrHt,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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e......n:

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13 Weeks . . ....... . ...'32.26
26 Weeks . .• . .. • • . . ...'64.20
52 Weeks . . . : . . . .... .'127.11
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13 Weaks .. . •. . ... •.. •'53.55
26 Weeks . .. .. . .... . .'107.10
52 Weeks . . .. . . ..... .'214.21

. .·'
~·-

Diana

West

from that."
.
I wonder if Bush has ever
noticed the extravagantly
malignant ravings against
the United States (not to
Jews
and
mention
Christians) that are government-tolerated and even
government-encouraged in
some of those "certain parts
of the world" I suspect he is
referring to.
Anyway, Bush's recent
comments are quite significant: He has renounced
statements made at critical
junctures of the so-called
war on terror. .And this is
deeply depressin(l. I went
back to ' the origmal statements to figure out why.
Less . than a week after
Sept. II, Bush invoked the
wanted posters of the Old
West to descri.b e his perfectly natural attitude toward
and plans for Osama bin
'Laden - "wanted, dead or
alive." Quite mild, actually.
Is he now saying he doesn 't
want the Islamic terror kingpin dead or alive?
I seriously doubt it.
In July 2003, ·several
months after American-led

coalition forces deposed
Saddam Hussein, the president, in emphasizing U.S.
resolve, declared that our
forces wouldn't be thwarted
by gathering terrorist foes .
"Bring 'em on," he said (not .
" Bring it on," a phrase so
often reported that Bush now
misquotes himself) by way
of praising U.S: troops, Is he
now saying he doesn ' t
believe in his fighting men?
Of course not.
But somethi ng else has·
changed. In disavowing his
so-called tough talk, Bush
has·dropped clues to a tactical shift. Once dedicated to a
black-and~white fight for
strategic victory in Iraq and
elsewhere, Bush now seems
more committed to an amorphous battle for the hearts
and minds throughout Islam .
Why else recant cowboy
calls for capturing the utterly
despicable Bin Laden - a
figure who remains popular
in the Islamic world? And
why else identify Abu
Ghraib as.the Iraq War's single 'worst mistake'!
·
Abu Ghraib, after all, was
not a military setback such as the failure to capture
or kill Mahdi Militia leader
Muqtada Al-Sadr. Nor was it
a grievous security blunder
- such as the failure to ptit
down post-invasion ,loollng
in Baghdad. Dissected from
context and magnified
,b eyond proportion in the
kangaroo court of world
opinion, Abu Ghraib was a

Obituaries

public relations disaster. For
Bush to call it Mistake
Numero Uno afier recanting ·
his own colloquial war
rhetoric is unwise, weak and; ·
therefore, quite dangerou:;.
And it is here that'·
American Superpowerdom
becomes a risky enterprise•. ·
Fueling this policy shift is a
profound misunderstanding.
of both Islam and its anima~-,
ing instilution of jihad .. .
Renoun~ing the tough talk
and wallowing in . Abu
Ghraib become a tacit accep.:
lance of some blame for thil'
jihad terrorism now spilling'
blood around the globe. It'
also signals a flagging win'
to project power.
' '
Maybe this is the Bush; · '
administration's idea of. wilf,.;
ning Muslim "hearts and :
minds." I can't help but
think of what a National, ·
Guardsmen home from lral}
recently told The New Yorl(,
Times magazine: His officers, 'the guardsmen, said;. ·
"were ·always drumming-·
into us: ' Hearts-and-minds,
hearts-and-minds. We've got'
to win these people over.' H!!
gave .a laugh. 'These peopl~
just wanted us dead."'
•
That is nothing for any,
American president to apo\-\ .
ogize for.
(Diana West is a columnist
fo~ The Washington Times;, .
Size ca11 be contacted via . ·
dianawest@ verizon.net.)

tvW'XAtr

...

Local Briefs

Richard Byrd Tolbert

··COTTAGEVILLE, W.Va.- Richard Byrd Tolbert, 77 , of
cyergreen Htlls, Cottageville, W. Va. died Saturday, June 3,
2006 at Holzer Medtcal Center, Gallipolis, Ohio fo llowing an
extended lllness.
He was born January 6, 1929 in Crab Orchard, W. Va:, the
son of the late Luther Ellis and Minnie Pearl (Snuffer) Tolbert.
•.He wa~ also prece~ed in death by brothers, Lloyd Tolbert
aod Lew1s Tolbert, Sister, Lucy Loving, and a special son-in1&lt;,\.w, Eugene Harmon .
•
"He was a retired cell operator from R.avenswood Aluminum
with 32 years of service, and was a member of the United
S~eelworkers Union , Local 5668. He ·was a charter member
and f~rmer Deawn of the Ripley Church of Christ. He loved
spend1':lg It me With his famly, hunting, fishing arid gardening.
..Surv1vors mclude hi s wife of 56 years, Maxine (Burleson)
Tolbert; daughters and sons-in-law Linda and Tom Grimm of
M;ason, W. Va. , Karen and Donnie' Allen of Cottageville, and
Kim and Alan Staats of Kalamazoo, Mich .; brothers, John
T~lbert ?f Beckley, W. Va. and Billy Tolbert of Millwood,
\\!.Va.; ststers, Ola Calhoun of New Haven, W.Va., and Garnet
Coffman of Beckley, W.Va.; grandchildren, Michelle Haris,
Lone . Gnmm, Stephen Taylor, Jeremy Taylor, Michael
H\umon, Chad Harmon, Any Grimm; great-grandchldren,
Brandon Taylor, Ryan Taylor and Oliva Harris; step-grandson,
I.;awrence "Bub" Allen, several nieces and nephews.
· ·•Service will be 2 p.m. Tuesday, June 6, 2006 at the Ripley
G~u_rch of Christ, 112 Jackson Avenue, Ripley, W.Va., with
mmtsters Chfton McLawhorn and Brent Dewees officiating.
Grandsons and sons-in-law will serve as casket bearer~. Burial
will follow in the Blaine Memorial Cemetery, Cottage vi lie.
Visitation will be from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday, June 5, at the
Casto Funeral Home, Evans, W. Va.
~online
condolences · · may .
to
be
sent
Ci)Stofuneralhome@citynet.net
'

.

n

Meth .adds toxins.to on-the-job
hazards for law enforcement
·COLUMBUS (AP) . 36 in 2000. The attorney gen·
Methamphetamine has trans- eral 's office has spent about $2
formed Ohio drug raids into million running a specialized
toxic dump cleanups.
unit focusing on the Jabs since
Instead of raiding a home, establishing it two years ago.
making arrests and seizing evi- • The U.S. Drug Eriforcement
ctence with little more than A~ency has spent another $2
rubber gloves and plastic bags, mtllion on hazardous meth
, law enforcement officers find waste cleanup.
themselves tiptoeing around
The state also has paid for
potential explosives, waiting specialized training in handling
hours for hazardous cleanup toxic chemicals for 135 officrews and spending money cers, each of whom gets about
and time on cleanup with no $1 ,300 in gear for handling.
suspects in sight.
hazards. The trained officers
Federal, state and local liov- agree to leave their jurisdic·
emments have spent milhons . lions to help other departments
of dollars hunting and cleaning that find meth Jabs, which are ·
up labs that make the drug usually in rural areas.
Officer&amp; typically guard labs
from toxic ingredients that can
explode or, with longtime until cleanup help arrives from
exposure, cause cancer.
the federal Drug Enforcement
"Used to be, we bust a
Agency - a wait that can last
with some dope, whether 1t . eight hours.
was pot or crack or whatever, ' ,"1 remember busting my first
and we bag it and tag it as evi- labs with nothin* but some
dence and go about our busi- rubber gloves on,' said Adam
ness," said Scioto Colmty sher- Giles, Koch's partner in Scioto
iff's detective John Koch. County. " As Jon}l as thi~s
"Now, I wrap myself up like a didn't smell bad; we thought
storm trooper and become a we'd be OK. EvelythiQg I
hazardous-materials handler."
heard, aJJ the warnings about
Meth is made by grinding an the chemicals, sounded exces-'
over-the-counter cold medica- sive. Now, I know better."
tion and using various chemiOnce a properly equipped
cals to extract ephedOne, team gets going, the search can
which produces a high like yield frustrating results.
speed or cocaine. The· chemiIn February, state agent
cals.include battery acid, suJfu. Chuck Bell led a team of
ric acid and anhydrous ammo- trained officers to a I 2-foot
nia, a highly caustic fertilizer trailer abandoned near a home
in
New
Lebanon
in
ingredient.
,In attempts to stem meth Montgomery County.
The cold pills and ammonia
p~"oduction.. state lawmakers
IJilve restricted sales of the were already used up, leaving
O)edicine, · pseudoephedrine, behind about 1.000 pounds of
. and heightened penalties for toxic waste including sludge
stealing the fertilizer. Ohio is and camp fuel. The 12-hour
seeking federal money for search also yielded charred
Jocks to protect farmers' propane containers and burned
pairs of pant.s. Federal cleanup
anunonia tanks from thefts.
;.About 500 meth labs are crews worked through the
upded yearly in Ohio, up from night to empty the site.

gur

"

·"

·-

This just in! Marriage is hard!
It's amazing what you can
learn in a supermarket
checkout line. Like every
red-blooded American man,
I yearn to comfort poor
Jennifer for what Brad did to
her. I'm also worried aboui
Chad Lowe and Hilary
Swank, whoever they are.
The tabloids say their marriage is on the rocks . .
Apparently, so is George
and Laura Bush's 29-year
marriage. According . to a
recent issue of the Globe, old
Dubra's hittjng the Jack
Dame!&amp; again. , A "family
friend" confided that "after
their last fight over booze,
(the president and first lady)
just stopped talking - peri-

I hate it when that happens.
· Bill and Sen , Hillary
Clinton, too. The New York
Times recently put 2,000
anonymously sourced words
. on its front page speculating
about
their
marriage.
. Evidently, "several prominent New York Democrats"
pronounced themselves concerned about, get ~is, an
earlier Globe photo showing
Bill Cli~ton leavin~. a
Manhattan restaurant w1th a
dozen people, among them a
hot blonde Canadian politician. The Times thought that
couldn't help but "fuel coverage in the gossip pa!:es."
Now, you'd ordmarily
think "hoi blonde Canadian
politician" a.contradiction in
terms, like "leggy basset
hound" or "world-champion
Chica~o Cubs." But ,the
nation s crackerjack political
press was serving notice:· If
Hillary Clinton runs for
president, it'll make headlines any time Bill appears in
the same time zone with ·an
. attractive woman. They'll be

Gene
Lyons

sniggering like Beavis and
Bullhead on "Meet the
Press" and "Hardball." Are
they, like, doing it?
But. hey, if the Times is
going tabloid, why not go all
the way? Remember Bill's
alleged three-breasted mistress? More photos, please.'
("I thought he was a leg
man," Hillary lamented.)
The difference is thai I'm
pretty sure tabloid i scribes
are laughing when they write
that stuff.
Look, there's no denying
Bill Clinton asked for it. But
is this any · way to run a
democracy? The Times
in!erviewed 50 people in
psychoanalyzing
the
Chntons. It did an exhaus,
tive compilation of tbeir
schedules to determine how
many nights a month they
spend together: on average,
14, which is going to make
most long-distance truckers,
not to mention National
Guardsmen in Iraq, envious.
Anyway, based on approximately a quarter-century of
Clinton-watching' (I live in
. Arkansas), here's my infallible guide to press accounts
of their mamage: Anybody
who's talking doesn't know;
any~ody who knows ain't
talking.
.
Other people's marriages
are a foreign country where
you don't speak the language. Grow up, for heaven's sake. This country has

serious, indeed grave, problems. Who cares how often
the senator from New York
· gets laiu?
Maureen Dowd and David
Broder,' that's who. Shortly
after the Times' tabloid
exclusive, Sen. Clinton gave
a speech at . the National
Press Club about energy policy. What the newspaper's
ace columnist got out of it
was that she hated Hillary 's
"blinding yellow pantsuit"
and that AI Gore must hate
her for stealing his issue.
· Broder, the Washington
Post's so-called "dean" of
D.C. pundits, also hated the
pantsuit. He wrote that the
"buzz in the room was not
al)out her speech," but the
Times ' gossip about · the
aforementioned Canadian
hussy. Who cares if Hillary
has what Broder sneeringly
described as "a rational plan
·chat will, she says, not only
move the nation substantially toward energy independence but improve living
standards for almost every
American?"
No, the real iss ue to these
jokers is that her husband's a.
hound dog, she's a cold,
mani)lulativ e · shrew, . and
their marriage a politically
inspired sham. The real issue
is that Hillary Clinton thinks
she's smarter than you - or
smarter than the likes of
Dowd and Broder, anyway,
which may be the crux of the
maher.
Smarter than me, too, for
the record, except that I got
over being- outclassed play·ing high school basketball.
Some people never adjust.
That's the only exphmation I have for a transcendentally inane piece of
mind-reading by Slate editor
Jacob Weisberg . He scruti -

, .. ,

"'

nized a list of Hillary's top~ '
10 i Pod songs (Stones;..
Beatles, Aretha· Franklin, the ·
Eagles, U2) and pronouncei! ~
her a calculating phony. "lit
point of fact," he wrote, "f'
doubt that the relentlessly· ·
driven
Hillary
Clintotl'
spent!~ much time listening~
to music of any kind."
...
And whose iPod list"
proves him a Regular Guy?.
Why, George W. Bush, of ·
course.
(Creedence
Clearwater, Van Morrison,
George Jones.) "Bush," see,
"do~sn't ·worry about being
politically correct or care
what other people think ot
him."
· .'
Then how come Bush. wears cowboy clothes an~ ·
talks about "ranchin.':' ·
although there's no evidence ·
· he's ever owned cows or
horses? Because he's indifu•
ferent to public opinion?
Pleafe. All politicians care
deeJ1l,y about what other peo. ·pie think of them .
Will the Times profile the
marriages of GOP candidates Rudy Giuliani and
Sen. John McCain, with five
wives between them? Not
likely.
·
The scripted D.C. pundits·'
have their theme for 2008,··
As in 2000 and 2004, the '
Democratic candidate's an
elitist phony, while the , ·
Republican' s "authentic ." :
No matter who wins thenomination.
(Arkansas
DemocratGazette columnist Gene ·
Lyons is a .national magazine
award winner am! co-author
· of "The Hunting of the ,
President" (St. Martin's ,
Press, 2000). You can e-mail..
Lyons at genelyons2@sbc..
global.net.)

'

'

www .mydailysentinel.com

•

•

Monday, June 5, 2000

UM ... ARt:
'tOUgJRE
. 'TH\~ IS~

od.~'

· Reader Services

Monday, June 5, 2oo6

Bush's (biggest mistake'? Apologizing

"

Ohio Valley Publishing

·pageA4.

-I

Drugs
from Page A1 .
"

arrested Mark A. Compson,
45, of Letart Township. and
tflmsported , him to the
Meigs County Jail. Bee(lle
said Compson told depulles
Ire had not been feeling
well and admitted to smoking crack at the scene.
Beegle said Smith,
Sanders and the county's
canine drug investigation

.

'

Rio offt!rs math and
science activities for• girls

' RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio Grande is offering
a special week of activities in math and science for girls going
into the· seventh, eighth or ninth grades from 9 a.m. to .4 p.m,
beginning today through June 9 at the main campus. Call 7427419 for more information. "

Cincinnati Reds help
·repair inner-city ball fields
CINCINNAfi (AP) Neglected
neighb&lt;)rhood
baseball fields, once rutted
with tire tracks and strewn
with rocks and broken glass,
are being made more pl~yer­
friendly, thanks to money
from the Cincinnati Reds
Community Fund. ·
Eighteen diamonds, used by
some I ,300 youths on 85
inner-city teams, are being
rl!wbrked to make them safer,
more enjoyable a nd more
durable.
New Reds owner Bob .
Cas.tellihi has pushed for the
organization to be more community-oriented, so the nonprofit arm of the Reds donated $15,000 this spring so the
Cincinnati
Recreation
Commission could get the
unsightly fields ready for play
in April.
When it became clear that
wouldn't be enpugh for permanent upgrades, the Reds
Community Fund added
$1 I 5,000 to the project.
"We want these fields to
become so good that they
become the staple for the 130
other CRC fields," said Bill
Blevins·, the city's supervisor
of outdoor maintenance.

Before
the
Reds
Community Fund came
along, the commission couldn' I afford to regl!larly maintain' the fields, which now are
dragged smooth and clean of
dehris.
·"You used to get cut on
your legs if you slid," said
Ivan Powell, 12, of the Walnut
Hill s Six Men Tigers. "1 wore
shorts so I would know not to
slide. But now they fixed it so
the fields are nice and you can
slide into the base."
Charles Kelly, who has
been coaching youth baseball
in Cincinnati for 29 years, is
impressed.
"These fields haven ' I
looked this good in 25 years,"
Kelly said. "The kids are lov~
ing it. They' cim go for a
ground ball now without hav. ing to worry about getting hit
in the face with a ball . They're
still a little gun-shy because
they're used to getting busted
lips and black eyes from bad
hops on bad fields."
About $60,000 of the grant
will bi: spent on new clay to ·
allow fields to dry more
quickly. Some $20,000 will
go toward paying overtime to
maintain the fields.

Mullen

from PageA1
"
dm cleanup, review the weekend activity and begin talking
about next year.
· .Darnell expressed appreciation to the festival committee
and others who helped make

.

'

Monday .. .Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 70s .
North wind&amp; around 5 mph.
Monday
night...Partly
cloudy. .Cold with lows
around
50.
Northwest
winds around 5 mph in the
light
evening .. .Becoming
and variable . .
Tuesday ... Mostly sun ny.
Highs around 80. West
winds around 5 mph.
Tuesday
night...M ostl y
clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
West winds around 5 mph.
VVednesday
and
Wednesday night.. .Part! y
cloudy. Hig()s in the upper
70s. Lows in the upper
50s.

· CINCINNATI (AP) - A
rock music fan filed a federal
antitrust lawsuit against Clear
Channel, claiming the radio
giant caused a hike in the
price of concert tickets by
using its stations to promote
only the artists who booked
shows through its concert arm ..
The lawsuit, filed last week
by Daniel Woodring of
Cincinnati,
names
San
Antonio-based Clear Channel
Communications Inc. and
Clear Channel Broadcasting
Inc. It seeks class-action status
for people who purchased
tickets to rock concerts in
Kentucky, Indiana and portions of Ohio dating. bac~ to
June 13, 1998. and asks for
unspecified monetary damages.
~Clear Channel has engaged
in anticompetitive conduct ...
that has severely curtailed

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
·.

\(.~

Dr· Jll1 n liCTOR
CHIR0l'1V~
" Accidents
Auto

Chiropractor of the year
1998
V.P. WVChiropraetic
sc~:kt ~

M ~m hcr of Anu:rkan

Boardof Forensic

the festival a success. ' He
thanked the Racine junior
firemen who handled traffic
control, the Christian Bikers
for parking assistance, the
Village of Pomeroy work
crews for helping out, and the
communitie s through which
the light parade traveled fpr
their cooperation and assi stance .

• S!)Jns Injuries · • Mostlnsuran~es
• Medicare
, Same day appt.

20 yrs e).perience
Member ofAmcri.:an

• Acupuncture

Ac01d ~m ~

304-27).5321 z
316 Washington St .

competition in concert promo.
tion, resulting in increased
concert ticket' prices,'' the lawsuit said.
Woodring is . identified in
the lawsuit as someone who
purchased lick~ts to one or
more rock concerts promoted
by Clear Chann~J. ·
"He thinks this is another
example of a large corporation
using its power to charge
excess1ve pnces to con- ,
sumers," said Woodring's
attorney, Jeffrey Goldenberg
of Cincinnati.
The lawsuit also names ·the
Beverly Hills, Calif.-based
promotion company Live
Nation, which was owned by
Clear Channel under the ,
names SFX and Clear
Channel Entertainment from
2000 until 2005, when it was
spun · off and became a publicly trnded company. .
•

•

I

.

Riffle . Joining council at
the meeting were water
board members Gordon
Winebrenner, Alan Graham
and Bill Roush.
.
An emergen'c y meeting
of council was also con- •
ducted on Saturday, May 27
in order to set pool prices
and hire a managero and
assistant manager for the
pool.
According · to ClerkTreasurer Sharon Cottrill ,
who reported the meeting
minutes, the pool prices of .:,
the 2006 season were set at:
Daily. admission. for adults :·
18 and over $3 ; children 17
and under (not in the ABC .
program) $2 per day; senior
citizens (55 and over) $2
per day; season passes, indi·
vidual , $40; family pass
(limited to . immediate family of five) $100; business
season pass (limited to five
individuals per day) $150; ·
rental rate, $50 per hour for ·:
a minimum of two hours; :
pool parties must be paid in ·
advance with any cancella- •
tion made seven days prior •
to the booking date, if Jess
than seven days notice, half
of the deposit is forfeited.
Council
also
hired
Heather Wolfe' as manager "
at $300 a week for a mini- mum .of SO hours a week.
Rachael Cottrill was .hired
as assistant manager for
$180 per week for
minimum of 30 hours a week.

a

Cory...
11 1·"~m·~@1

DONWOODINC
AUTOMOTIVE
~~~ DJ, a 1. n1n ~.,l&amp;,l~ ·1m1 ~. blle~W,M, 1
•Get aS500
~ng spree wltfl
of every •SIII:wllll

nr Medical

AcuPufli.' ture

· Ravenswood, WV .

Thursday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Thursday night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
60s.
Friday .. .Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs
in the upper 70s. Chance
of rain 30 percent.
Friday
nlght...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s.
Saturday and Saturday
night...Mostly clear. Highs
in the upper 70s. Lows in
the upper 50s.
Suriday ... Partly
cloudy.
Highs 'in the lower 80s.

Lawsuit claims Clear Channel
caused higher concert ticket prices

.Syracuse

Worker's Compensation

Ribs

Local weather

along with a · $30 returned pool fund. Councilwoman
check fee.
Joy Bentley reported thal'to
Tampering:. Anyone other date $36, I 00.66 was raised
than water department per- for the pool fund.
from PageA1
sonnel turning water off or on
Mayor Eric Cunningham
shall be subject to a tamper- .reported that from Monday,
for next 3,000 gallons, $4.55 ing charge of $100 each tim" May 29 through Wednesday,
per I ,000 gallons for next same is done. Additionally,
. May_3 1 the pool saw 400 vis- ·
8,000 gallons, $4.30 per said person shall be responsi- itors with 136 passes from
·] ,000 gallons for next ble and reimburse the water the
Abstinence
Builds
50,000.
department for any repair, CharaCter (ABC) Program
Rates for apartments bifled labor and any other damages being used by local school
per unit inside the village, as solely determined by the
children.
$14.50 for the first 2,000 gal- water department. '
Council approved paying
lons, $4.85 per I ,000 gallons
All accounts are due on or its share of the village fire
for next 3,000 gallons, $4.55 before the I Oth of the month. truck payment, $3248.16,
per I ,000 gallons for next
If a property owner wants which will come from the
8,000 gallons, $4.30 per to· posi.tion anything around general fund. The rest will be
I ,000 gallons for · next or close to the water meter, a deducted from fire depart50,000.
.
water board member, the ment monies minus recent
Rates for Smith and water superintendent or water donations.
Cundiff Campgrounds and operator must be contracted
Coun9il approved the fire ·
Carletonville billed per unit, for approval as this could department's decision to
$18 for the first 2,000 gal- effect ·meter readings or shut begin a junior fire departlons, $4.85 per I ,000 gallons off of water in case of emer- ment. It also approved two
for next 3,000 gallons, $4.55 gency.
applicants for the new departper I ,000 gallons for next
Also approved by council ment - Jordan Pickens and
8,000 gallons, $4.30 per was the water board's pro- Cody Cook.
I ,000· gallons for next posal to offer water leak
Will Jones was approved
50,000.
msunince to customers. For a as an applicant for the
The following fees were fee of $25 a year, a cusiomet Syracuse Volunteer Fire
also approved by council and will be covered for up to Department.
unlike the water rates (which $500 of accidental water ·
1t was announced that the
go into effect in September)' leaks on their side of the Syracuse Volunteer Fire
the new fees are effecti've water line to prevent hardship Department meetings now
imme.diately.
for the customer wl\en the take place at 7 .p.m. on the
New tap, $500 minimum bill is due.
first Tue sday of the ·month
or total cost of installatkm,
Leakage insurance is com- at the fire station . Syracuse
whichever is greater.
pletely voluntary and enroll- is currently accepting appliDeposit for water service ment begins on Sept. I and cation s for review in
if not property owner. $110 ' ends Aug. 31. 2007 with the ·regards to new members for
business, $55, residence.
. new enrollment period begin- its fire department.
Late payment fee , I 0 per- ning on Sept. I, 2007. There
Absent from the meeting
cent of the unpaid balance, will be no prorating though was
Councilman
Joey
unit discovered a substance compounded monthly.
customers can sign up at any
believed to
be crack
D1sconnec1 for delinquent point in the enrollment year.
cocaine and drug parupher- · bill: If water is disconnected
In other council business:
nalia in Compson's Jeep for a delinquent bill, service
Council approved replaC··
Cherokee.,
will be resumed upon pay- ing the roof on the pool house
felony · ment of the bill plus a reco n- at a cost of $1 ,760.97 with .
Beegle
said
charges relating to the case nect fee of $25 during regular the labor to be donated,
will be tiled on Monday. office hours and $50 when Council also approved fixing
Compson remains in the done after office hours and the roof to the shelter house
Meigs County Jail pending on holidays.
with volunteer labor, allowan appearance in Meigs
Returned checks: For all ing for up lo $500 .in materi County Court.
returned checks, the water als. The money for the repairs
in will be wmed off and there will be deducteq from ' the
A
passenger
Compson's .vehicle was not will be a $25 reconnect fee
arrested and will not be
charged, Beegle said.

had already worked a couple
of years with Pomeroy's
emergency squad.
.
l;fe is still active with both
from PageA1
units here and responds to
calls as first responders. Next numerous fire and emergency
year he says he plans to wl calls . The fire department
back some and will be "run- also counts on Mullen for
numerous other chore s - .
ning on a part·time basis."
,, It was in 1952 that Mullen· like organizing parades for
joined the Pomeroy Fire holidays 'such as the recent
Department. At that time he Memorial Day observance.

.,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

500 shopping turd wilh fiCO uedil 1101e up lo 630, and purchase of o used
vehicle ovet $6,000. Deolet conliibufion muy oHert finol price.
·

·1

�..

The Daily Sentinel

GOLD WINGS AND RIBS

PageA6
Monday, June 5,

2006

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Reds baseball . .. . . ..... B2
NASCAR .. . . . ........ B6

Monday, June 5, 2006

IELD

uoesthe

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS - A schedule ol upcoming college,
and high school warsity sporting events InvolVIng
teams from Gallia, Meigs and Mason coun1168 .

Tutldoy•s games
American Legion Baseball
Logan at Gallipolis {at GAHS), ~ p.m .

Wodngdoy's games

American Legion Baseball
Feeney Bennett at Athens, 7 ~m. "
Athens Juniors at Meigs Juniors, 6 p.m.
Thursdgv's q~mes
American Legion Baseball
Lancaster at Gallipolis (at Rio Grande). 6

p.m.
Feeney Bennett at Beverly (DH ). 5:30

p.m.

BY BRYAN WAlTERS
BWAIJERS@MYDfl.ilYTRIBUNE.COM

COLUMBUS - Like a top
prize.fighter,
Mantua
Crestwood answered every
bell and literally went the distance Saturday in winning the
girls Division II 2006 OHSAA
Track
and
Field
Championships at Jesse Owens

Stadium.
The Red Devi ls, yes Red
Devils, made an impressive
debut in their first D-1! compe·
tition by winning four gold
medals and setting two state
records en route to scoring 58
points. However, the Portage
County school's deadly onetwo combination of Bridget
Franek and Cassandra Schenk

to
ultimately proved to be the difference in the decision.
The senior-j unior duo combined for all but seven of
Crestwood's points, with 36 of
those coming in two of the 17
~vents. Their one·two finishes
in both the 1600 and 3200meter final s all but de.livered
the knockout blow to the rest of
the competition.

EE'I'

D-11 girls title
But Gallia Academy still put
up a pretty good fight.
The Blue Angels enjoyed
their best day in school history
by scoring 45 team points and
finishing as the D-11 runner-up.
The Blue and White yielded
one individual championship,
four !rilvers and a total of
~ven podium finishes.
OAHS co~ch Rick Howell

was most pleased with the
overall performance of hi ~ gi rls
this weekend, but he was just
as impressed with the eventual
champion.
.
"It was our sprinters againsi
their di stance people and they
have got some awesome people. You have to give the credit

Please see Crestwood, B1

•

Fr!day'a game•

to

first

American Legion Baseball
McArthur at Meigs JunJors, 6 p.m.

Saturday June 10

American Legion Baseball
Feeney 'Bennett at Lancaster (DH), 1

p.m.

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Mejgs Juniors at Ast.lley (DH), t p.m
Synday Jyne 11
American Legion Baseball
Meigs Juniors vs. Sandusky (at Newark) ,
11 a.m.
Meigs Juniors at Newark, TBA

INSIDE
Camen Schultz of Chester was awarded "best of show" with this painting of pumpkin s in the
Art in the P&lt;;~rk show. The people's choice award went to the show chairman, Diana Johnson,
with Schultz taking second.

Cha~ono Hoentch/plloto

Slates for drawings by chiidren were featured at the .art show in the park. Here Mindy. Wolfe. 5,
of Syracuse, draws a pictun;. .

• Nevv contacts g~ athletes
anedge; ~- ~ B6

SPORTS BJ,UEFS

.

Co-ed softball
league forming
Many attending the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival enjoyed cruises on the Ohio _River aboard the.
sternwheeler, Spirit of South Charleston.
·
'.:':.: '•i

Plaques were awarded to the first place winners in their respective categories after the motor·
cycle show judging. They were from the left, Tom Dorst of f&gt;omeroy, Dan Arnold of Harrisonville,
Terry Skinner of Sioux City, Iowa. , Greg Roush of Mason, Hobart Templeton of Midaleport, and
Rich Wamsley of Racine.
·

GALLIPOLIS - The 0 .0.
Mcintyre Park District is now
accepting registrations tor an
Adult Co·ed Softball League. '
All players must be 18
years of age and league will
play qn Thursday evenings
beginning June 29. ·
In case of rain, makeup
~ames will be played on the
following Tuesday and all
games will be played at
Raccoon Creek County Park.
There is a . Ii mit of eight
teams that will be accepted
into the league and deadline
registration ts June 16.
Contact Mark Danner for
more information at 446·
4612, extension 255.

PVH FlAG FOOTBAlL
Early Pairings
Slturday, June 10
Point PIIIUnt Moon Lodge fleldl

Be oo~r for twm plctureo
RllnorMine

ea.m.

Field A - X-Tremoo vs. Holzer Clln~
Ffetd 8 - Bennlgans ve. Anthony J.
McEldowney. MD
•
Field C - Fredric LaOarbonara, MD
vs: Shamblin
~ld 0 - Wai·Mart vs. Norris Northup

te.m.

Field A - Bad Att11udo vo. Robert
, MCCI 0ary1 MD
..
Fhold 8 ~ Valdya Urology Center vs .
R~·Aid .
.
Field C - Simon's Pain Train vs. John

Wlttz, MD .
.
Field D - Tolliver's Pro'Owned Auto
Cen(t~r ve. Fl~r ·Furniture
'

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

COLUMBUS - Eastern dis·
lance runner Michad Owen had a
pretty goodjunior season capped
off Saturday with his first appear·
ance in the Division Ill OHSAA
State
Track
and
Field
Championships held at Jesse
Owens Stadium .
.' Owen, the top-point scorer at
the 2006 Tri-Valley Conference
Ch&lt;Jmpionships, finished I Ith out
of 16 runners ih the '3200·meter
run.
Owen's time of 9:59.45 was
more than 13 seconds faster than
his third-place · regional finish at
Pickerington. Owen was also the
last person at state with a sub· I0
minute time .
The soon-to-be se nior was well
aware of his surroundings . being his first time in Columbus
'as a state competitor - and
Owen cet1ainly showed that he
can compete with Ohio's best.
"I came in knowing that this
would be my biggest day this
year and I didn 't want to burn
myself out early like I did last
week at regionals," said Owen. "I
had ·a better start and a better ti n·
ish too, buil'd still like to get my
time lower.''
He 'II have a year to prepare for
another chance at tinishing on the
podium, and he's· prepared to do
that. But as for Saturday, Owen '
enjoyed competing with the best
at Columbus.
Regard less of the.finish.
"The main thing is that I'm
here and I want to be back next
year," he said.
,
Bryan WatterSJphoto
Eastern distance runner Michael Owen comp(ltes in the 3,200-meter run during Saturday's finals of the State Track and Field
Please see Owen, B1
Meet at Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus. Owen finished 11th in the event.

Perry, Close enjoy
last day as teammates
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

COLUMBUS
Best
friends Felicia Close and
Kayla Perry have been tearing
up the track together at Galli a
Academy for a lot of y~ars.
Saturday marked the tina!
time.
Both competitors have made
it to the state finals since ·the.ir
freshmen year and both were
particularly pleased with how
their final runs &lt;It Jesse Owens
Stadium turned out.
Especially Close, who
picked up the second individual title in school history by
winning the IOO·meter hurdles.
"It was just amazing and I
was really excited. Words can't
really describe it," said Close.
"It's a good way to go out."
Close joins alumnus Amy
Wilson, who won the long
jump in 1998, as the only Blue
Angel individual state champions.
GAHS coach Rick Howell
was thrilled to See Close final-

Supporting
cast does
job at state

ly wi n a gold medal, but he
was' ·more excited with how
she won it.
"It's been a long time since
Gallia Academy has had one.
Seeing her do it , and how she
did it, was something I' ll never.
forget," said HowelL "We (the
coaches) knew when she went
over the first hurdle, she had it

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBuNE .CDM

COLUMBUS - Perhap'
the biggest reason for the
Blue Angel s' runner-up finish
this weekend at the Division
won."
II 2006 OHSAA State Track
and Field Championships ·
Close, the owner of 13
,were ihe individual perforregional and 16 SEOAL titles.
also linished second in the
mances of four underclasslong jump and was part of the
men.
runner-up 4x IOOm relay team.
Junior Crystal Wade. as
.Perry also enjoyed success
well as. fre shmen Alexis
with three runner·up perforGeiger, Tonia Lognn and .
mances . She was second for
Laurei1 A&lt;.ij&lt;ins, tallied 13 ur
the third-straight year in the
Gallia Academy's 4'5 team
400m dash and was also part of
points Saturd'ay, the most
both the 400m and 800m relay
ever in school history.
teams.
The quartet also did so in
"It was really amazing to
four very unique ways in the
come away with three runner4x I00· meter and 4x200m
up finishes and I am really
cvems, as wel l as tl1e long
excited about that,'' said Perry
jump and the 3200m run .
of her final state appearance.
The ~OOm relay. like last
"It wasn't too bad a day at alL"
year.
was the bigge't emoThe .dynamic duo ts going
tiom!
l
boost of the dai After
out with the best tinish and Gallia Academy cla!ismates Felicia Close, left, and Kayla-Perry
hold the Division ll State Runner-up trophy during an awards
Please see cast. B1
Please see Teammates. B1 ceremony Saturday at Jesse Owens Stadium in .Columbus.

CoNTACT US
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 a.m.)
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
t&gt;r 992·5287 (Meigs Co.)
Fax - 1 ·740·446· 3008

E-mail- sports@ mydailysentinel.com

PM-r2PM
.2 PM ...,.,.;,._,"'~

6Q.O!l&amp;..$!~.ff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342. ""· 33

bsherman @ mydailyt ribune .com

Bryan Walters, Sports Write~ ·
(740) 446-2342. e&lt;l . 23

bwalters @ mydallytribu ne .com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33 ·

Ierum C mydailyregi ster.com

Feeney Bennett sweeps season-opening doubleheader
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDI\ILYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - Joel
Lynch tossed a complete-game'
shulmtt in Game I. then
Feeney Bennett Post 128
pounded tJUI 15 hits in the sec·
ond contest lo compete a dou bleheader ' weep of Chi llicothe
Post 757's B-team on
Saturday.
Feeney Bennett won the lirst
game 5·0 and the second .16-0

VanMeter·,
, to open the
Wes Riffle
American
and Jeremy
Legion baseBla cks ton
ball season.
surrendered
Chillicothe
only one base,
couldn 't get
knock
in
an y thing
Game 2.
going again st
M a t l
Post
12X
pi _ti: lling .
Mooney led
the wmners
· Lyn ch . held
with a pair of
Durst
the visitors to
Riffle
si ngles in the
four hits then the c0mbination of Eric 5-0 victory. Ril1lc added an

RBI triple and Luke Haislop
drove in tW\l runs with a s"itlgle. V;mMeter and Blackston
also hit safely.
The bats realty ca me ali ve in
the nightcap, especially in the
third inning. when Feeney'
posted II run;; en .route to the
16-0 blowout.
Six Post 12H batters had
multiple hits, again puced by
Mooney. who had three hit&gt;,
including a double and two
runs batted in. Terry Du rst abo
I

.

hau a bi g day with a trio or si11- ·
gles and run s batted in .
Rifllc doubled, singled and
drove in two runs. The Haislop
bmthers. Luke and Zach, also
had two hits each with a dou·
ble and RBI: Luke also tripled.
Lynch singled twice and two
RBis. Blackston rounclctl out
the hit parade with'a safetY,
Post 128 returns to action
Wednesday at Athens. It will
serve '" the Eighth Di stri ct
Legion League opener.
'

.. ,

.

�..Paie Bz • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, Junes, 2006

Monday, June 5, 2006

www.mydailysentlnel.com

.~

Reds complete sweep of Astros Teammates Crestw()()d
HOUSTON (AP) - Ryan
Ft.eel was relieved to learn
thllt Houston ace Roy Oswalt
was out with back spasms,
and he took advantage of his
absence. . .
Freel h1t h1s second homer
of the game in the I lth inning
to. lift the Cincinnati Reds
o.Jer the Astros 6-4 Sunday,
completing a three-game
sweep.
Freel's two-out;. two-run
homer off Russ Sponger ga':e
th~ outfielder the frrst multih~?mer game of h1s career.
~~vid ~oss, who drew a
pmc~-h1t . walk, scored on
F~el s dnve t&lt;;&gt; left. .
.
The key s1tuauon m th1s
g~; was !?at. Roy Oswalt
didnt pitch, sa1d Freel, who
had JUSt two home nms th1s
season entering Sunday's
game. "He's 15-1 against us.
He's on a pretty good run
when he just has been lights
out against us.
"I was happy to see he wasn't pitchin~. That was a plus
for us, that s for sure."
Todd Coffey (3-0) allowed
two hits and one run in the
lOth inning for Cincinnati,
which swept · a series in
Houston for the first time in
eight tries since June 1999.
"They ' ve got a lot of heart "
Reds ·manager Jerry Narr~n
said of the Astros. ''I' m just
pleased to get :these three
wins. We've had trouble getting ope in here sometimes."
Felipe Lopez hit an RBI
double in the lOth inning to
PI! I Cincinnati ahead 4-3
before Chris Burke's run-

Ca8t
from PageBl
qualifying seventh and being
stuck in the outside lane,
GAHS somehow overcame
the odds and finished second
b~,:hind
only
Eastmoor
Academy.
Wade, Logan, Geiger and
Kayla Perry finished with a
time' of 1:44.17, the same as
third-place finisher Akron
Buchtel.
Wade, the only one with
previous state experience,
was really excited to be part
of such a remarkable feat,
even though it only led to a

scqring double in the bottom
half tied it. Burke also singled
in a run in the eighth to tie the
game at 3.
Burke's double in the IO!h
o~ Coffey scored .Craig
B1gg1o, who reached by hitting his 625th career double
to pass Hank Aaron for ninth
all-time.
Esteban Yan, acquired from
the Angels on Tuesday, got
his fir~t ~ave after .allowi~g
one h1t m the lith . Enc
Munson grounded mto a double play to end the game.
Dan Wheeler (0-4) gave up
one h1t and two runs m I 1-3
innings.
With one out in the ninth,
Scott Hatteberk reached first
on a" error by shortstop Eric
Bruntlett before a single by
Javier Valentin. Houston closer Brad Lidge struck out
Edwin Encarnacion and Riel).
Aurilia to end the inning.
Austin ~(earns hit his second home run off Tre·ver
Miller in the sixth give the
Reds a 3-2 lead. It was the
third career multihomer game
for Kearns and his first this
season.
Biggio's bases-loaded sacrifice fly scored Brad Ausmus
in the fifth and tied it at 2.
Ken Griffey Jr. made a diving
catch just in front of the wall
in left-center to retire Biggio.
Freel also homered in the
third and Keams hit his first
drive in the fourth as
Cincinnati led 2-1 after four.
Burke said the team has to
find a ·way to turn things
around after losing nine of the
silver medal.
"Coming in as a seventh
seed in lane eight, it was pretty amazing to tinish second,"
Wade said. "We didn't tinish
first, but either · way we're
still pretty happy."
Logan, who also competed
with Geiger, Perry and
Felicia Close on the secondplace 400m relay team, was
most proud of her tirst trip to
Jesse Owens Stadium and
~verything that resulted from
it.
"I'm really happy with finishing second in both relays,
and I' m happy that we could
fini sh second for Kayla and
Felicia," said Logan. "It was
a pretty good time at my first
state meet."

records in beth the 3200 and
800 events. The recent graduate was also part of the winning 4x800m relay team and
· was the top-pPint scorer m OIl with 3,2.5-points.
Schenk r.ielded 18.5 poin~s
with two Silvers and a gold m
the 3200m relay. Megan
Miller and Nicole Cozzone
· also ran lej&gt;S in the 4x800
championship.
Liz Sitko added the final
two points for CHS with a seventh-place finish in the discus.
Two-time defending champion P!stmoor Academy finIShed third with 36 points.
Still, it was a great end to
one good year for Gallia
Academy Howell also considers it a htting farewell for two
stellar careers.
"Felicia and Kayla have
been the rock for us over the
years. They have stepped it up,
they've worked hard and
they' ve'led kids to where they
are today," he said of his
recent graduates. "The legacy
that they have left behind is
going to pay dividends in the
coming years. Because of
Felicia and Ka~la, we are a
better team and !l's going to be
very hard to replace them."
Of the six Angel competitors this weeicend, four were
underclassmen. Both alternates too.
Howell doesn't see this pro.llf311:1 disappearing from state
JUSt because of graduation.
"One of the things you see
about this trophy, it says second place," sai~ Howell. "We
still have a goal ahead of us
and we are going to keep
working towards !hat goal"
In boys Division II, Akron
Buchtel defeated Eastmoor
Academy 49-33 for the state
championship.

from Page Bl
last I I games.
.
· from Page 81
"It's frustrating after a road
trip to come home· and get most points scored at a ·state to Crestwood," said Howell.
·swept," he said. " We need to meet m school history. They "Our girls did what they had to
start playing better ball all the are both very proud of that do and we were successful
accomplishment.
because of it. Even though it's
way around."
Close, a University of second, it was still unbelievFernando Nieve started
after Oswalt was scratched Akron signee, is proud of her able what we did here."
Felicia Close finally got her
· from the lineup just two min- career at Gallia Academy, her
teammates
and
especially
state title, winning the I OOm
utes before the scheduled start
of the game. The game was fond of the times spent with . hurdles with a time of 14.53
pushed back 10 minutes Perry. Still, Close knows there seconds. Close also enjoyed
are more things waiting for runner-up finishes in the long
because of the change.
her down the road.
jump with a school-record
Nieve allowed four hits and
"Me and Kayla have been leap of 18 feet, 6.5 inches and
two runs in five innings while going to these things since like
.in the 4xl00m relay. Close
striking out two.
junior high and I've enjoyed finished with 20 points.
Reds · starter
Elizardo everybody else along the
Kayla Perry was runner-up
Ramirez . allowed three ' hits way" said Close with a chuckfor
the third consecutive year
and two runs in six innings to le and a tear. "I'm really going
rebound from his last outing, to miss them, but I'm excited in the 400m dash. She also
when he gave up a career- to start a new chapter . in my won two silvers as part of the
4xl00m and 4x200m relay'
high nine hits in a 7 ·3 loss to life."
h Ch ·
C b
Perry, who is headed to teams.
t ~ , Icago u s.
.
Freshman Alell:is Geiger,
I m really plea~7d wnH Kent State University, also who ftnished seventh in the
how ~~m1rez threw, f'!arron reflected on her career in long jump; joined classmate
said. The way he pllc~e.? Columbus and the thought of Tonia Logan on those runnernot being a , teammate of
early saved the game for us ..
up relay teams. Junior Crystal
Felicia's
anymore ..
Houston too~ a _1-0 kad m
Wade
was the other member
''To be here four years in a
the .second mmng . when
of the 4x200m relay squad to
Morgan Ensberg hit his ~8th row with your best friend was .win silver.
.
just great. I think we ran a
home,run.
.
Freshman
Lauren
Adkins
relay together and placed in it
The Astros have lost four m every year that we were here," also made it to the podium in
a row to drop to tl;rree games
said Perry. "It's sad to think her ' first state appelilf311ce, finu_nder .500 (27-~0) for the
that we'll be at different col- ishing eighth m the 3200m
fust .llme this season. leges this fall and possibly run.
Sunday's game was their running against one another,
Every GalliaAcademy comfourth extra-inning game in but I really don't think we petitor scored at least one team
the last eight and the sixth of could have asked for much of point this weekend in the runthe season.
ner-up'fmish.
a better ending."
·
• "We've had a couple of
But even that, impressive as
Both NCAA Division I
those heartbreakers lately," schools, Akron and Kent State it was, cm)!d not keep Franek,
Astros manager Phil Gamer are members of the Mid- Schenk and the Red Devils
said. "If we're tough .we'll American Conference. The from capturing the ·2006 team
come through it. If we're not two are located in Northeast cr9wn.
we won't. But I have .a feeling Ohio and are less than an hour · Franek, who . entered as the
we will."
reigning 0-I state champion in
. apart.
the 1600m event, won four
golds overall and set state
Geiger, who also placed adding one point with an
seventh in the long jump eighth-place finish in the
The Eastern quartet of Erin
early Saturday mornin~, suf- 3200m run.
Weber, Alyssa Newland,
fered a hand injury dunng an
Adkins, who had the ninth
Becca Owen and Kaylee
exchange in the 4x100m fastest qualifying time comMilam also made their fi~t
fromPageBl
relay event. Still, in ,notice- .ing in to state, was able to
appearance
at Jesse Owens
able pain, Geiger knows that pick up the· pace and finish
she can smile about her on the podium with a time of
Senior Chris Olinger of Stadium in the girls 4x800m
efforts in her first D-ll state 11:39.14.
'
West Lafayette Ridgewood· relay event. They finished
Adkins, who also quali- won the o-m event, setting a 14th overall with a time of
final.
"I'm really happy that I fied for state in cross coun- state meet record with a time 4:28.46 and didn't qualify for
placed in all my events today try this past year, was of 9: 17.03.
Saturday's championships, b11dt
and that I could help the two p1eased with her first chamOf the 10 participants that all four are underclassmen an
seniors get second place," pionship final in track and finished in front of the Eagle, will have another opportunity
said Geiger. "With a frac- field. She's also hoping it's four were seniors. Owen will to change that.
I
tured finger, I think I did not the last.
enter 2007 as a pcissible topCollins Western Reserve
pretty \vel!."
"I met the goal that I came eight prospect, which would won the 4x400m relay with a
Geiger was the highest here with and I was really put him on the podium.
time of 3:57.91.
scorer of the youngsters with glad with our finish," said
Waynesfield -G oshen
Gilmour Academy won the
six points.,
Adkins. "I hope to do this defeated Liberty Benton by a · girls D"III team title with a 55Adkins was the final piece again over the next three 51-39 margin for the boys' 0- . 47 victory over Bellaire St.
to Gallia Academy's puzzle, . years."
ill championship.
John Central.

Owen

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UNTIL Wednesday,
July 5, 2006 at 1:30
p .m . and opened
thereafter lor furnishIng the materials and
performing lha labor
for the a•ecullon and

construction of:

FREEDOM RIDE
MOTORCYCLE RUN
Saturday, July 1, 2006
. 11 a.m :
Begins at large parking lot
beside of Wellness Center
$20 pte-registration
$25 same day registration
$15 for a passenger
Fees include a
comm~morative shirt.
All proceeds benefit PVH
Foundation &amp; Hospice.
For more infor'mation please
call the Community Relations
Department (304) 675-4340,
Ext.1326or 1492

ATLANTIC CITY
Friday, June 30, 2006 to
Sunday, July.2, 2006
$200/person
Price includes airtare and
two nights at
Harrah's ·casino &amp; Resort
Private jet from
Charleston, WV
·Contact PVH Community
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Ext. 1326 to make
reservations
LIMITED SEATS!
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FREE BINGO
Starting Saturday,
June 3; 2006
Middleport American
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Coverall Guaranteed
' $1000.00
New specials
Guaranteed $250 each
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PROJECT
quent to the compleNUMBER MG·Bd·02
tion of the discussion
In accordance with
of the detailed specl·
the plana and apeclflflcetlons will not be
eatlons prepared by
required In establish·
the DEPARTMENT OF
lng attendance. NO
NAT ' U R A L
PLANS OR SPECIFI·
RESOURCES, DIVICATIONS WILL BE
SION OF MINERAL
SOLD AT THE PRE·
RESOURCES MANBID MEETING.
AGEMENT, COLUMCopies of the plana,
BUS, OHIO. BIDS
spaclflcatlons,
and
WILL BE OPENED IN
proposal forma will
THE SECOND FLOOR
be forwarded from
CONFERENCE
the Division
of
ROOM . OF
2045
Mineral · Resources
(BUILDING H-2) OF
Management,
THE
FOUNTAIN
Department
or
SQUARE
OF~ICES
Natural Resources,
OF
THE
OHIO
upon receipt of a
DEPARTMENT
OF
chock or money order
NATURAL
In tho amount ol
RESOURCES.
The
$25.00 mad.e payable
United Stales Office
to
tho
Ohio
of Surface Mining
Deparlment
of
Reclamation
and
Natural
Resources
Enforcement ta sup(ODNRjand mailed to
plying 100% · of the
ODNR, Division of
funds lor lhla proj~ct.
Mineral
Resources
THE ESTIMATE FOR
Management,
2045
THIS PROJECT AS
Morse Road, Building
DETERMINED
BY
H-3, Columbus, Ohio
THE DIVISION OF
43229·6993.
MINERAL
Atlentlon:
Judy
RESOURCES MAN·
Stacey
(Telephone
AGEMENT
IS
Number (814) 265·
$162,885.00.
6629. Plena and epee&gt;
A MANDATORY pre- . lllcatlona become the
bid meeting · will be
property
of
the
held on Monday, June
prospective bidders
19, 2006 a1 2:00 p.m.,
and no refund· will be
at the project alta. .
made. For lnforma·
II le lhe Intent of the
tlon regarding the
DMRM to commence
pro)ect, the primary
the pra-bld meeting at
contacl person Iii the
the deelgnated time.
Proloct
Engineer,
Prior to commence~
Dean (farroll; In hla
man! of the meeting,
absence you may
an attendance algn-ln
contact the Project
form shall be dlatrlb·
Officer, Barb Flowers
uted among th) eon·
or
the
Design
trectora praeant. Thle
S.,clallat,
Scott
form· witt be collected
Devita. Thay all can
by DMRM stall when
be ruchad In tha
tht prt·bld meeting
Jackaon
Dlatrlct
baglna. Only th'oaa
Olllct (740-288-e411).
conlractore algnad In
Eoch bid muet bo
prior to collection of
accompenlod by 1
the lorm who remeln
BID
QUARANTY,
· In
· attandenca
mHIIng the requirethrough tha dlacuamanta of Bectlon 18354 of
the · Ohio
alon of the datellad
apaclllcatlona ahall , Revlaad Code.
Contractora
are
ba deamad praaant
advlaed that equal
lor the purpoat of
employment opportu·
detarmlnlngallglblllty
nlty conditione are
for bid aubmlaalon
a c ·c a p t a n c a ·. appllcabla to thla bid

I

In accordance with
the provlalons or secIlona
153.59
and
125.111 or the Ohio
Revised Code. Wage
rates established In
accordance
with
Section 1513.18 and
1513.37
of
the
Ravlaed Code are
a lao applicable 10 lhls
bid.
Blda are to be sealed
and delivered to the
address given above.
No bidder may withdraw his bid within
sixty (60) days ,alter
the actual dale ol the
opening thereof.
The
Director
of
Natural
Reaources
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids,
or to accept the bid
which embrace• such
combination
aller·
nate propoeale ••
may promote the beat
Interest of the State.
APPROVED
FOR
PUBLICATION IN The
Qally Sentinel, Legal
Notice
Dept.
111
Court Street, PO Box
729,
Pomeroy
OH4576.9,
Monday,
June 5, 2006 and
Monday, June 12,
2006.
Approved: Harry J.
Parson 6/1/06
Michael L Sponsler,
Chief, Division of
t,llneral
Resources
Manag~ment

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
subscriptio_n!

Word Ads

lallipolif Jan, lribune
jlotnt Jltafant legifter
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(6) 5, 12

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Ohio Vallt)' Publllllin~

Classlfleds!
'.

P.O. Box481, Galllpolla, OH 45631

Monday thru Friday

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

• All

• Start Vour Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Dtlcrlpttori • Include A Prtce • Avoid Abbrevlatton•
• Include Phone Number And .l.ddre.. When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\\\.tll '\ t I \11\ I"

*POLICIES*
OhiO Volley
Publlohlng reaervto
tho rlghllo odll,

reject or c•ncel any
· ad al any limo.

Errors Mu1t B
eported on the fll'l
ay or publication an
he Trlbune-Sentl,nel
egtater will b
eponllble for n
than the coat o

he apace occuple
the error and onl

r
"I

r.
___I'ERsoN
___AlS
__

~

- .....

.

..

.

be prepaid'

r10

Thll Perennial Cal Sheller

r

•

Box number ada a

Couch &amp; Chair to giveaway,
AND
green In color. 1740)245·
FO!JIIII&gt;
9037 after 5 weekdays. attar __
2 weekends.
Found small tan male dog
on May 27 ·around Hartford
area
Call to Identify
Female weiner dog to giVe to (304)675·2823
good home black and tan
4yrs old (740)992·2099

1

lwaye confidential.
Current rate ca
ppUoo.
All
Re11
Estat
dvertllements er
ublect to the Federa
air Houalng Act o

968.
Thle
newapape
ccapta only hel
anted ada meetln
OE alandardo. ,

a

Free 8 week old black &amp;
white kittens, to a good
home
Litte r
trained
1740)379-2615.

www.comlca.com

For Sale ........................................... .............. 585
For Sale or Trede ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegslabtes ........: ............................ 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Glvaaway ......................................................040
Happy Ada ...... ... ...........................................050
Hay &amp; Graln .... .. ............................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home lmprovementa ...................................81 0
Hom•• for Sale ............................................ 310
Household Gooda .............. : ............. -........... 510
Housel for Rent ................................ .... ...... 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660
Llvaa!Dck ......................................................630
Loat and Found ........................................... 060
Lola &amp; Acr,age •• :............................. ,........... 350
Mlocellanooua .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlso....................... 540
Mobile Home Re~alr.................................... 860
Mobile Homes tor Rani.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes fQl Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan ..\ .......................................... 220
Motorc~clea &amp; 4 Wheelere..............,........... 740
Muelcallnatrumonta ................ .... ............... 570
Paraonala ..................................................... 005
Peto for Sale ...................................... , ......... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820
Profaulonsl Services ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapalr ............................... 160
Real Ealate Wantod ..................................... 360
SChool• Instruction..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situation a Wanted ............................., ......... t 20
Space for Rent ................................ : .• :......... 460
Sporting Goods, .......................................... 520
SUV'olor Sale .............................................. 720
Trucka for Sale ........................... .... ....... ...... 715
Upholalary ...............................1................... 870
varia For Sote ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ................................. :........... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
Wanted To Do ...............'.: ............................. 180
Wanted to Renl ............................................ 470
Yard Solo· Qalllpolla ....................................072
Yard Salt·Pomeroy/Middlo ......................... 074
Yard Sale·PI. Plaaaant ............................. ... 076

&lt;1:&gt; 2006

~~

by NEA, Inc.

110

Interior &amp; e~~:terlor doors and
storm doors. Call (740)3677328. T

1

r:

HELP WANIED

AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Sell Sh.rley Spears, 304675· 1429.
. , . - - - - - -----,
Come and JOin our team!
The Holiday Inn of Galllpolts
seeks to hire a lull time diSh·
washer Please apply in per·
son. No phone c;alls please.
Deliver T~
Charlelton Gazette
Evans to Leon ·
Earn up to $1100 nionthly
before e~~:penses .
Approximately 3to 4 hours
.
a day
Dependable vehicle .
· 8 must
CALL 1.80Q·WVA·NEWS
E~~:t. 1709
--------Dental Assistant Needed
ParHime Dental Assistant
oeeded lor Progressive
Gallipolis Dental Offtce
Experience·
and
Radiographer's · L1cenee
Preferred. Fax resumes and
references to (740}446·
4840

I

des~ clark needed. Person
with good communication
skill. good anitude &amp; selfv
motivated . Should apply at
Budget Inn, JacKson Pike,
Gallipolis. No phone calls.
~l ease .

Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
SilVer and Gold Coins ,
Proolsets, Gold A1ngs, Pre1935
U S.
Currency,
SOIItatre Diamonds· M.TS
Coin Shop. 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·4462842.
.

0PI'OKnJNn'Y

L.,------·

r

i..osr

Kittens 2 yellow, 1 white, 2
grey t1ger Some long haired Missing I Since May 1, 2006
6 weeks old (740)446· 7484 Huskle/German Shepherd
dog . Aewar~ $300 Call
or (740)441·7411
(740)398-Q446.
We will not knowing
Pupp•es, ha lf Red Tick half
accept any advar
Mountain Feist 1st shots &amp; -A-ew-a-rd_M_o-ss-,n-g-Ta_n_&amp;_W_h-ite
tnment In vlolatlo
warmed
Call (740)2 45· Pitbull
Last seen on
theiiiW.
9094.
Tombleson Run in Letart
wearmg a bright orange col·
jar wtlh tag (3(]4)895-3645
(304)674·6008 (304)67 4·
4x4'a For S'aie .... ............. ......................... .... 725
5150
Announcemeni ............................. ............... 030
Antlquoa ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Renl ................................... 440
YARO SALE
Auction and Flea Market............................. 080
~;::::;;::;::~
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................
4
Autos lor Sale ..................... v ....................... 710
'"
YARD SALE·
PclMEROY/I\11DilLE
Boats &amp; Motor a for Sale ......... .. .. .. .............. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
4 Family, 15 Powell Street.,
Buolne88 and Buildings ........................ .. ... 340
Middleport W1de range of
Buolneaa' Opportunity:................................ 21 0
house hold items, clothes,
Buolneaa Tralnlng .................................... ... 140
weddmg dress June 1 to
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ................ ........... 790
Camping Equipment ..••.•.•.•.•..••...••.•. •.•..••...• 780
12.
Carda o1Thenks .......................................... 010
YARJ&gt;SALE·
Child/Elderly Care ........................ ............... 190
Pr.
I'LF..ASAM'
Etectrlcoi/Refrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Garage Sale June 5th thur
Excavating ................................................... 830
9th. 3 1/2 miles on , Jerl)'s
Form Equlpment. ......................................... 61
Run Ad. lots of clothes all
Farmo tor Rent. .................................., ......... 430
Sizes from adull to baby
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
s•zes. Dishes a little bit of
For Lease ..........:............................... ........... 490

r

~~~£

10

Individuals wtlllng to tratn for
c1encal or driving pos1lions. Party Supply Store for sale
in Pomeroy (304)675·5332
Mus1 be AGE 55 OA OVER
and meet eligibility req uireMONEY
ments. Additional trainmg
TO LoAJII
pOSitions available Call the
Sen~or Employment Center
(866)734·2301 .

~co~~~rs~304~·~4~5~~-1~9~00~--- ~51~86~~---------,

i

Rehabihlelion

Center Is currently accepting ~~-~~~~--'--,
appltcat1ons for full ·ti me
•NOTICE•
STNA'S. All shifts are avail- PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
able. Interested applicants lNG CO recommends tha
should 1111 out an applicat•on
ou do busmess w1th peo
at 333
Page
Street,
te you know and NOT t(
Middleport No phone calls
end money th ro ugh trn
please EOE
~ail unul you have mvesti
ated the offering.
Paid Treintng

871 , Eleanor, WV 25070

37 klnens now available lor
adopllon . PLEASE RES·
CUE US. Please can
2 yellow 6 wk old K1"ens (740)645-7275 to give us a
(304)882·2925
home.

I mllo:-~B:"IJSINI'X'j~~-.,
II \ \ \ I I \I

IIELPWANmJ

Overbrook

S.W.F. looking for S.W M.
age 40·60 write to : PO Box

GIVEAWAY

VISA .

POLICIES: Ohio V.hy Publlahlng
right to ~lt. rejKt, or c1ncal any ad at any time. Error• mull be reporte{ on
111it day at
1 1
Tribun.S.ntlMI-RigleW will bl fllponalbfe tor no more then ttle colt of the apace occupied by the error and only the llrat inMrllon. We ahall not btl i
any Ia.. or upenu that rMUhl from the publketlon or omlulon of an advertuaement. CorrecUon will 1M made in the f~r•t available edition. • Box
,,. atw.ye confidential. • Current rate Clfd appiiM.v • Atl rail estill adYertlaement• are
to the Federal Fa1r Houelng Act of 1968. • Thla

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

hall not be liable 1

he flrtt lneer11on. W

ads

All Dl•play: 12 Noon :z
Buelneee Daye Prior To
Publication
Sund•y Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.
Thured•y for Sunday•

GIVEAWAY

5 yellow and white kittens,
six weeks old and very cute. White Great Dane m1x.
Call (740}446·6890 after 5 Female, very personable &amp;
or anyt1me weekends
loving. Great pet. Needs a
good home Curr~:~nt on all
(740)245·
6 week old kittens. various vacc 1nattons

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
...

ct~SJG~AiT!

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
_s ~
,.,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
E!1
Graphics soc for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally "In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for In•l!:rtlon
In Next Day'• Paper
5~:~:::~ In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
F
For Sundaye Paper

o

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.

.. '

l\egistet

OearfljirM

no

If so, you qualify

Sentinel

-!..

OH

Your Ad, · (740) 446-2342 {740) .992-2156 (304) 675•1333 :.
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
. or Fax To
992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

CLASSIFIED INDEX

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
a.m on June 21, 2006.
oiTransportatlon.
STATE
OF
OHIO
Project 060284 Is
(5) 30 (6) 6
DEPARTMENT
:oF
located
In
Meigs
TRANSPORTATION
County, SR 833.0.30
Public Notice
Cotumbue, Ohio
and Is a Reeurfaclng
· Office of Contracts
(2-Lane) project. The
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Legal Copy Number:
date set lor compleSealed proposal's will
060284
tion of this work ahatl · be received at the:
Sealed proposals will
DIVISION OF MINERbe as eel forth In the
be accepted from pre- . bidding
proposal.
AL
RESOURCES
quallllad bidders at
Plana
and
MANAGEMENT
the ODOT Office of
Specifications are on
DEPARTMENT
OF
Contracta until 10:00
fila In the Department
NATURAL

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Direcf Sales Fantastic
Opportunity,
50K ·
no
Problem. Must be Motivated
and Self Star1er. Call Ken
(740)992·7440
Domtno's Pizza Now Hiring
Pomt
Safe· Dnvers.

arrow Smar t Contac
he Ohio Dr..•tsiOn 0
mancml
Institution'
ffice of Consume
Hairs BEFORE you refl
ance your home o
btain a loah BEWAR
I requests for any larg
dvance payments o
ees or msurance Cal
he Olfice of Consume
flairs toll free at 1--866
78.0003 lo learn 1f th
ortgage broker o
ender
IS
properl
1censed (This ts a publl

A1o Grande Food SerVIce
now hiri1'1Q an e~epenenced
cook and cashier Apply tn
person 6/12-6/16 2-4 pm
only at the. URG cafetena

a

Employment Opportunities.
The Meigs COunty Board of
Mental
Retardation
&amp;
Developmental 01sabiUt1es
Is accepting applications tor
the followmg positions:
Multiple Dtsabilities Teacher.
Must have current valid Ohio
Department of Education
certiflcationlticensure and
have or be eligible to obtain
InterventiOn Specialist vali·
dation in the area of
Moderate/Intensive educe·
tional needs. Instructional
Atdes to wor~ w1th students
with multiple dlsabllittes.
E~~:penence and/or training
preferred. Musl be eligible
lor an Aide Certlllcate trom
the Ohio Department of
Education .
ParaProtesstonal Certification
preferred . Submit applica·
tion or resume by June 14th
to: Carleton School, P.O.
Box 307, 1310 Carleton
Street,
Syracuse,
OH
45n9
-,--,--,---Family Semor Care Inc now
hiring 1 full time LPN fOr the
Jackson &amp; Gallta areas
Please call (740}441·1377
ask tor Diana or Terl.

Super Mate~ now acceptLocal Insurance Agency mg applications for part-time
seeking futt lime CustOmer front desk . Must be able to
Service
Representattve work rotating sh1fts Apply tn
Weekday hours, paid vaca·
flon P &amp; C license helpful,
bul nol required
Submot
resume lo Box TSC-31 c/o
Polnl Pleesanl Aegosler, 200
Main Street. Point Pleasant,
25550

wv

~~;:=~~=~

I50

ScWXlLS

PRQFl.."iSSONAI~
Sf:RVIO:S

·-oi(NSI'RiiiiioiiiiiJioicn
iiiioiiN_,. • - - - - - - - "
Barn Removal Service
Gallipolis Career College
304 _373 _001 1
(Careers Cklse To Home)
References ava1tabte
Call Todayl740·446·4367,
we work 111 wv and OhtQ
1-800-214-0452
areas
www.gall!poilflCareeroollage com
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITV ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1·888·582·3345

Overbrook Rehab Center
will be holding STNA class10\11'1\ll
es during. the month of June.
Please stop by and till out an ~
.
10~-~H-=-u·~-~~-~apphcai!On.to be cons1dered
for the classes No phone "---'ioi~ii)RiiS,iii\jjj,l.iiiE-_.J
calls please E O.E
·~
1 Bedroom bnck CA CH 96

--,

Central air, full basement.
hardwood lloors, detached
garage, covered pat 1o,
fenced back yard, newly
remodeled , 3 or 4 bed·
rooms close to schools,
Pomt Pleasant, S69 500
17 40)709· 1382

All reel eatato advertising
in thi• newspaper 1~
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which make!! it llleg11l to
advertise " any
preference, limitation or
dlacrim&amp;natlon based on
race, color, religion . su •
famili al statu!! or natidn al
origin. or nny Intention to
make any such
prelarence. limitation or
discrimination."
This newspapar will not
knowingly accept
advertlaementl for real
estate which is in
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby ·
informed that &amp;It
dwellings advertlsea In
this newspaper Are
available on an equal
0

Good Stuff Not Junkl
Stacked washer and dryer 2
years old $250 00 or.g1nal
cost $780.00. TWo Ionic Pro
A1r Purifiers ltke new hardly
used $60.00 each original
cost $175 00 each. George
Foreman
indoor·outdoor
electric double grill with cart
used once $80 00 or1g1nal
cost $225 00 Glider Aoc~er
w1th' glider leo l st~l Ilks new
$125 00
original
cost
$350 00
Call 740·992·
6282.

·--==::::-:-;--FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$1567·$26.19fh r., now hir·
1ng. For application and lree
governement job Info, call
Amencan Assoc. of labor 1913-599-8042, 24/hrs. emp.
serv.
-------Floor cleaning,
must have
~
drivers license. Serious
callers only Commercial
Floor Cere (740)367-0255

person. No phone calls

iip:!i
lea:;;s~
e-~------, ~

Actrftdltftd Member Atcred111ng
Council tor tndeperdent Colleges
end School&amp; 12748

Menne Mec~anic Needed . Personal mail boxes lor busi·
Must Have Expero
·ence . ness or apt building 740992·2878 .
74Q-992·6520
---------

Pleasant ,
Gallipolis
&amp;
Pomeroy locations Apply In
eau Person
Now hiring full time Wait
1 will buy .liiDII
(740)388·9303.
- - : - - : - - - - : - - - For a limited time make 50% Staff Fnendly personality,
Orivars Needed:
selling Avon. Call 1740)446· professional attitude da must.
1
COL( Class B) Drivers will· 3358.
I \11'1 II\ \ II\ I
Bring your sm•le an app y
lng to drive tor local readym perso n, Holiday Inn ,
' I I{ \ It I '
mix-concrete company
Gallipolis Ferry Marathon ,.. Gallipolis. No phone calls
E~~:perlence Is preferred but
(304)675-6118. Now Hiring please!
not necessary Md"~. •nsur· Cashiers, &amp; Deli Cooks
-------'--Overbrook Center IS current·
ance &amp; other benefits availGrowing
Home Health ly accepting applications for
able after wa1tlng period
100 WORKERS NEEDED
DrivOr must be willing to do Agency has Fuii·Tima posl· a 3·11 shift RN. CompetitJve
Assemble crafts, ·
pre-maintenance on trucks lion for an RN or LPN. wages and benefits package
wood items
&amp; equipment. yard work &amp; Competitive wages, bonus- available. All interested
To $480fwk
other miscellaneous chores. es, &amp; benefits . Con tact applicants shOuld p1ck up an
Materials prov1ded
Experience operating equtp· Home Health Care of SEO appllca!lon at 333 f'age
Free lnformavon pkg . 24Hr
ment &amp; extra skills such as Toll Free at 1-866-368-1100. Stroot, Mlddlapon, OH. For
801 ·428·4649
additional
information
welding a plus.
HOME HEALTH AIDES· please conlacl Holll~ at 74().
Call Aobertsburg
SIGN ON BONUS Home 992·6~72 EOE .
An El(cellent way to earn
1304)937·341d
Heallh
Care ol SE Oh~ Is - - - - - - - - money. The New Avon.
or Lakln(304)773·5234
current ly htring home health Overbrook Center Is now
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
Located In Mason County
aides-compe titive wages. accepting applications for a
,near Buffalo WV.
Call740·662·1222.
lull iime oHice assistant 11
Attantion Drivers ·
A&amp;J
HousekSeper
Wanted, you are Interested In becom·
Trucking 15 looktng for
E!ll- !n
l PN . References Required . Can lng a part of our team please
Drivers w/1
yr OTR, ET
Experience tor Reg1onal Appl ications Are Bemg {304)675-4879 between 6» fill out an application todliy
at 333
Page, Street ,
Hauls. Average pay 40's to Accepted For A FT, Fill· In 8
_M
_._ _..c...._.,--.,.- Mlddleporl. OH. No phone
mid 50's Home every LPN . Compatili\18 Wages , - P
1
Weekend
call
Kent Paid Vacation, Pa1d Meals , HVAC Company 1&amp; looklng calls please. E6E
1
Heatrh 1nsurance Available fo r e~~:perlenc ed Installer.
(800)462·9365
Interested Applicants May t-Aust have 1 or more years Part time position to Manage
Deily
9-4. expe rience in residential. Country Homes rental com·
Atten t1on Mechanics· Now Appty
on
e~eperlence . munlty In Shade Area·
taking applications for expe- Ravenswood Care Center. Pay
St .. Technical a plus Call for Includes a house to live In
riences Truck Mecha nic . 1113 Wash ington
WV. appl1cation (740)441 · t236 Send resume to Country
Mall resume to
A&amp;J Ravenswood,
FAX . or fa~ resume to (740)441· Homes, PO Box 1033
Truckmg 14530 St. Rt (304)273·9236
Aalerences Requ ired .
1266
LOgon. Ohio 43138.
7,Marletta, OH 45750

em.

Parts Salesperson wanted
Computer 9)(per1ence anct
knowledge of farm eqUipment preferred . Salary
negotiable depending on
e~~:penence
Health
Insurance provided . Send
resume to: CLA Box .s.§9 clo
Gallipolis Tnbune, PO Box
469, Galhpohs, OH 45631

L.,------·
180

1

WAI\'lTJJ

To Do

Affordable Computer Repa11,
Expert .. Service . (740)992·
2
__395----'-- - George's Portable Sa wm1ll,
do.;!'t haul your Logs to the
Mill just call 304:675-1957
L1ve·•n Caregiver and co mpamon tor senior couple
GallipoliS area (740)44642oa
Roofing, Decks, Pole Bams,
Garages, New Construction.
Top . Nolch
Building
Contraclors
WV•036667
(304)675·3&lt;M.&lt; or (304)593·
~ 1t5

, _:_~-------

~mm~r

C Em~loyme n~
ante .
ompu er an
office skills. I Ou lckB~ks ,
word process ng, grap cs.
and Web development
(740) 992 · 5613 · •
W11t care lor your loved one
in my home, Private Room.
3 hot meals. Cl:lll (740)3880118
·'
-------:::-:-.,.
Will take cS:re of the Elderly
In their home. havi"1 0 years
G)lperlenc::e call (304)675·
3264
·

0

Ohve Street near GDC ':::•:•:':'":n~
••v_;'::••:•:•:::'
35,900. CALL 446·3952 or ~
-· . -----1·865-679-83.11
F1ve bed root1l , 3 S bath
house m qwet neighborhood
11 2 Pleasant Street. Po1nt near Pomeroy Hardwood'
Plea.sant. WV {304(675- floors. oah; doors and tnm.:
4034 or (304)675-0418 . . 3 "t1replace. 2 car garagQ:, ·
bedroom 1 1/2bath, fam1ly decK , 2 kttcnens. 2 liW\Q
room, dimng room , new Win· rooms. storage room 3.000
dows, new AC, new water so feet. $155,900
Call
tank, fenced yard
740· 41 6· 4765 &lt;liter 4 OOV
PM
3BD, 2Ba. fi replace, 40~~:60
barn, 8 flBI acres Plea sant
HANDYMAN
Valley Ad
R10 Grande
SI"ECIAL
5120 000 1740)709~ 1 166
- - - -- -- - - Srmg 1t1e 11n1~t11ng toolS
3bdrm A,,mcn . ~~'2 oaths. If!
d•ywall stage House nev~r
li ved m S1ts on 2 beauhiwl '
ac1es' C•ty water at road ..
about 20 mm~ st1uth ot
Athen s,
OH
S7~L500 ~
Owner 11nanc1ng (740~489-·
9146
4 year old Colonial on 3
acres. appro~~: . 1,900 sq. ft . 3 MOTIVATED Seller 1. Sand ·
bdr, 2 baths, 2 car garage, H1ll Ad nice, SIICk·bultt moc!master bdr. IS 2Bx24 with a ular home. meets N C humjacuzzi tub
$125,000 ca ne specs 3BA, 2 lujl
(740)446-7029
baths. oak kitchen cabtneti.
--~.,----- 121acres, outbuilding 304-- ~
4BR. Foreclosure
only 675·2319
$20.900 For ilstmgs call
800·391-5228 ext F254 .
New 3 bedroo m 2 bath
br1ck home tCH sale 1n A1o:
5 1ms , bath, upstatrs Grande. Call P &lt;l 0)379·26 1~
Furn1shed 1 BR apt down·
Ranch Style 3 Bedroom.
sta1rs Furniture Store 1n rear
1/2 ac lot. commerc1al , at 2 Bath. 2 Car Garage.
130
Bulaville
Pike, Vinton, Oh1o. 1' ac re,
Gallipolis, OH . (740)446· beautiful landscaping,
screeneel·in back deck
4782.
- - - - - - - - - with hot 11,.1 b, VIew phoAttentlonl
tos/info
onttne
Local company offer1ng "NO
www.Orvb.com
Code
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
5286 or call 1740!388·

---===:::--=:-:-,--;:-

grams for ' you to buy your ~=
01~4~0·;::;;:::~
Mme lnsteed of re nting .
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect credit
MOBU..E Ho~
accepled
Lwilla-Fii
'OiiiRoiiSiil
' ·liiLiiiE~-_.J
• Payment could be the '
1 4~~:55·'97 Flc~twoo d MH · ·
sam.e as rent
Mortgage
Locators 2BR. t bath. eler hest, AC :
(7 40)367~0000
good condm on s 1o 500 caj
l740)446·3644 lor appl.
For Sate Pre tty. clean. 3
bedroom . I 1/2 bath. 14&lt;60. 2br. 1 full balh . All
Downtown Gallipolis 446- Eleclric for sale (304)576·
4839.
2934

'
.I

'I

•

�Monday, June 5, 2006

/

•

Monday, June 5, 2006
•
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

etectric: JJC,

good

- . 14 &amp; 16 -

· 2·3-4
- · •· all with ceooal
llr. Spocial 11197 14x70,
21R, 2 bath, $ 16,500.
~
(740)368-oooo,
- * ' f j (740)388-8017.

Gallipolis.
Phono; (740)«6-2003 or
(740)«6-1409.

ACROSS

- - - - - -- - '85 Skytine

Phillip
Alder

.'

2BR washer/dryer &amp; AC.
Woter, trash. sawer paid. No
pets. Partially remodeled.
Rent $450, Dep. 54 50.
'18 ~ 14x70 2BRI 2 (740)368-9325 or (740)36811111, M.885. Cal (740)365- 2237.
~-

North

MONTY

30x40 all metal building supplied and lnotalled $16,900.

West

•
•

Call tor additional sizes

11112-5856.

miles to Albany, $475 per
- - .- wt-de month plus deposit &amp; utiU- THE MAPLES APART16
MENTS 100 Memorial D,rive
Wtyl/lhlnglo 518 1/mo. Call ties, (859)606-4354
East
7•o-992-7022
(740)385-7671 .
3 bedroom , 2 bath, room Subsidized
Residential.
:..
N_Ioo...:....14_x_70
_ 3_bed
_ r_oo
_m_on
- ly addition with large ba ck HOI.,Islng for 50 yea(l ot aee

+

(740) 256-9137 •

r

MObile home sites for up to ria for household composlt.lANAGED By
16x80 In Country Homes. tion:
Need to sell your home? (740)3115-401 9.
Sl!verhee ls·A
Realty
Late on payments, di\lorce,
Company. Equal Housirig
job transtor or a lleath? t Taking applicatiOns tor 2 Opponunity.
con buy your home. All cash Bedroom •Trailer, $400fmo,
and quick ctoslng. 740-416- $350 deposit, water &amp; trash
·3130.
Included. · Call (740)388 - Twin Rivers Tower Is accept·
0159
. ing applications for waiting
1, I '\. I \ I 'list fo r Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartment, ca ll 675·6679
Equal Housing Opport\Jnity
__

Block, brick, sewer · plpe o,

4 AJ

Winters, Rio- Grande, OH
Call740-24S.5121 .

¥ KQ1097
A Q 3

+

Prn

.. K 6 5

FOR SAiE

i

:·~R~ul ~=~~~t

ences requi red. 136 First (859)363-7146 for further Jenny $600. (740)446-0118.
Information:
Exterior,
Ave.
rear,
Gallipolis.
One El week old tem~:~-te

Rd.

Letart,

Ivory

lncludea lull basement, lawn '17_40;_)_
2_
56_-_"_3_5._ _ ~- Air conditioner 10,000 BTU Jalfars a1 740-992-5232.
&amp; .garden. f®-4) 675--2484 or
bedroom newly remOdeled $95; retrigerator 17 cb.ft.
FRvns&amp;
(304)593-1481
A
&amp;E
nice $150', washer $95 d~r

2

- - - - - - - . . , . . - panment, water
lectrlc
· ,4 Room House near High paid. Downstairs. No Pets $95. Gene's Appliances, 78
SChool Cell (304)675-2441 (304)675-6835
'\line St. beck of Mollohan's

t

VWE{ABIBS

r

9585

·
For Rant. Clean, pretty, 3
badroom, 1 112 beth. BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Downtown Gallipolis. $775 MENTS . AT
BUDGET .
No utilities. «6-4639.
PRICES AT JACKSON
- ' - - , . , . . - - - - - - 'ESTATES, 52 Westwood
New 2 BR house, central air, Drive from $344 to $442.
laundry room, In Gallipolis.. Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
(740)441.0194 or (740)4-41 - 740-446 -2568.
Equal

owned Appliances atartlng

1184.

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators, gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.
iii~.;..~.;.;;,;;;;;;;;.~..,

7991

Fl&gt;m8roy large 4 badroom CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- -'Y remodeled, new car- ED &amp; AFFDROABLEI
pel, WID hook-up. $900 per , Townhouse
apar tments,
and/or small houses FOR
Rent or Sale 4br in RENT. Call (740)«1· 1111
Syracuae, $800/month &amp; lor application &amp; information.

55,200. (740)«1-5251 .

Depoet..

Agartments. In Middleport.
From $295-$4« . Call 740992 -5064. Equal Housing
Opponunl tles.

Immaculate · 2 · bedroom
apartment in the ·country.
New carpet &amp; cabinets,
SR 78- 4BR, 1 bath home- freshly painted &amp; decorated,

garage,
ICC8U.

river WID hookup. Beautiful counPropane tieat, win- try setting. Must see to
b~sement.

appreciate.

$400/mo.

Reference

Required.
deposit.

Automatlc

Transm lssio ~.

• Garages

lor $3,000(304)937-2733

• Complete .
Remodeling

740-992-1Bi1

3160

Stop &amp; Compare

Clean, runs Good. $4,700

anniversary, loaded, 12,000
1987 Otds Toronado exc. miles $17,500.
work car. VerY good cond. 2002 HD Fatboy, Impact
$2,00o. (740)«1 -7390 . .
blue, lots of extras/chrome,

$1850, (740)416-1472

Collection of local Cat's
MeoWs , approx 40 pes.
Budweiser beer steins 11
pes. Stee~se office desk.
(740)245-0183. (740)208·

Tara
Townhouse 6340.
Apartments, very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
----'--JET_____
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
AERATION MOTORS

Pool, Patio," Start $425/Mo.

Customized . Used twice.
$8,200. Call (740)379-9392.

Cougar,

nice (304)675-2359

P•Uo 1nd Porch O.C:k•

WV038725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
q9;.&gt; li/ 1,,
f'&lt;
', i&lt; I

lllH '! t ~

I )I !I

I 01

tp

11 I

10x10x10x20

0

THE BORN LOSER
Tfl.(.'( WOULI) &lt;.~

~2-3194

or 992·6635.

OIIE.It.

and 5000 sanes Utll~ tractors. 00% Fixed for 36
monthe through John
Deere Credit. Carmichael
Equipment (740)4-le-2412

only
self-Stor...•

FRANC:I? 1 l:F YOU

f&lt;JR(,ET IT, NATE!
NOBODY CAN
OUTSCORE GiNA
BY TWELVE
POINTS I

GIHA ...

2000 Stratus 40 sunroof

t»JES

I ~\

r •· ·~·~·~
'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Fixed lor 48 months through Sunflres, Saturns, Honda, lion, clean. (740)245-9109,
74 441 -7632.
John
Deere
Credit. Grand Am &amp; others in stock. &lt; 0)
Carmichael
Equipment 3 months/3,000 mile warran· 1976 Holiday Ra.mbler, good
ty. See Cart or Rodney at condition, n~w ti res, some
(740)446-2412.
COok MotOra, 328 Jackson remodeling
1·.2oo.
Pike (740)«6-Q103.
(740)368-o301.

Unconditional lifetime guarante e. Local references furnlshed. Established 1975.
Call 24 . Hrs. (740) 446-

s

- - =--::---- - Qoola tor sato

6 fuH blood, 1 year old &lt;agia-

2003 PT Cruiser, 4 cyl .,
run s &amp; looka great, good gas·

~~i~1!J' 200

Call

Owner

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

'
T~OSE

1-lE DOESN'T KNOW WHAT
DA'I'5, BUT l-IE's SURE Tl-l05E
WERE TI-lE 600D DAV5 ..

M'&lt; 6RAMPA SA.V5
WERE TI-lE 600D DA'I'S ..

Licensed Home Builder

(4 I ..,

-r.r--~----,
10
HOME

$2 ,900; 1999 Taurus SE elide out, fiberglass sides,
balers, square balers &amp;
mower conditioners 04.7% $3,7oo; 1997 s 1o $2,900. $17,500. Excellent condl-

-

·

1 ..

Quality John DMn Hoy $3,500; 1997 Tahoe 4x4
Equipment for less-round $6 ,900; 1999 Geo Metro 02 Wildcat 28R. 51h wheel, '"-llii.IMI'I&lt;Viiiiiiiil'iii~'iii!t~"iiii"_.l

r

ambitions and desires.

0670 , Rogers
.-~-===:---, Waterproofing.

SHOP

Basement

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER

MONTH

A

..

Cornerstone ,
Construction :

$UNSHINE CLUB

•J

IDk.J/Nl) filS W/Ff.
&amp;HIND HIM IN A

1
Handy Man . Home Services ' ·Residential• Commerdal• General Contnu:tlna
· Painting • Doors • W indows • Decks
.
and Repairs. Call (740)645• Siding • Roofing • Room Additi ons • Re modeling
7524.
WV 038112
• Plumbing • E l ectrical 74Q.387.0~
OH 31244
• Accoustic Cei ling
7.aG-338-3ot1.

CLASSIFIEDS

~T

800-537-9528.

aren't only for
buylna or selllna
Items, you an use

•
GARFIELD

this widely reed
section to wlllh

•

-•n••

ad

-an Memory:"

ol•lovH on•.

MAKf

For more Informa-

SOMEONE'S

tion; conbld your
IOCIII Ohio V•lley
Publlshln1 office.

l..IFE Ill A LONELY
ONE, GARFI ELl:'

••
••

Heppy Blrthdey,
pnnrlde • 'nlenk
You, •nd place •n

A LONE: MAN ROAMING
A BARREN LANP. ·..

~

I

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
.RI~WELLS

Now Available At

B Alll\ I L lll\ I BE I{
Sco~·pion Tractors

~oint ~leasant ll\.egi~ter

' "Taking The Sting Out Of
· H11rd Work!"
Mid-S ize 4Wheel Dri ve Trac tor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

(304) 675-1333

BAUM LUMBER

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Dh:Uh
45 Go off '
courat
46 Nleerty lhul
47 s.-oor
to Claudlul ..
50 WHka per
annum?
•
52 Overtime

Declare

poa~lvely

26 Go after
game
27 Bona28 ~ porallela
lha radlua
29 Seep
31 Halovocl
Lucy

cauH

35 Mr. Sellaald
37 Flool38' Go to the
polls
39 Sects
41 ' Subatomic
particle

by Luis Campos

" H VBP

they'll

GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) ~ A. poor anitude will cause you to be unproductive and
wasteful with your time. This wi11 be espe·
cla1Jy true if your philosophy is, MDon't do
what you ca n put oH until tomorrow.•
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - Because
you've worked hard in lhe past and feel
you noW deseive·a bit of pampering, there
Is a possibility thai' you may unwisely
waste some .olthe valuable surplus you've
accumulated.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - As long as
everything goes yo ur way, companions will
lind yo u a rather charming perSon to be
around . F-toweve r, when It doesn't., If
they're smart. th ey. had better run for
cover.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Your outlook
a nd attit ude could run in opp osite
eltlremes. You may go back and tort rl !rom
being unreatisticaJiy optimistic to being
unduly negative. Seek a middle ground.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - If your hopes
and goals are unreasonably based on
what others can do tor you, be prepared to
be ve ry disappointed. For succe~s. be
sell-reliant and depend solely on yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 22 ) - 11 you have
an important objective that you're quite
anxipus to achieve, don't leave anything
up to chance. You're not likely to be successful if you lack organizallon and
meth od.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)·-You're
not apt to be driven by ambition or have a
desire to conquer the world, so when it ·
comes to Important maners thai need to
be taken care of, you'd better get a hold of
yourself.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)- It's best
not to in\/Otve extravagant frie nds· in your
affairs. Even withoUt thei r intluence, you're
apt to be wastefully dominated by a desire
for th ings of beauty, money Of larg e quan·
lilies.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Partnership" arra ngements could have
their drawbacks for you. II you and the
other person aren't in total agreement at
all times. Objectives aren't likely to move
forward or be accompli$1100
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2;0) - You could
be un[easonably undisciplined, so sensi·
ble s8tety precautions should be followed
at all times, as well as taking care not to be
obsessive In your eating or drinking habits.
ARI ES (March 2 1-April 19) - S!rlve to
minimize your e)(pendltures as much as
possible. This wi ll be especially true il you
try to gratify your extravagant whims on
something foolish or e&gt;epenslve. You'll

B VOXHSV-COUOC

KSUOZHCO

XOCHZNSOZA, · ECBPP ECTYZ ."
"

PWBNSHCCO

WHP

T ' ZOBC,

OCOVOZABID

IOEB 'CCHZII

PEWTTC

XBDP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Lu c~ to me (means) hard worl&lt;- and realizing
whet is opportunity and what lsn t.' - Lucille Ball
·

........

r:~~::~~T S@tt~}A-~t~s·
lolltt4 lty ClAY I. POllAN.....;;....__ __
OfOoJr
h arraftOI !.n1n of rhe
KtGmbltd word1 bo-

Il--r-..:r-::r;

lcw •• """' fOIIr ·~ -.b.

.

V I T E RT
1r-;lnz1'""1r--l
1 1 1
1

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

Granny to her ~ecnqe

I

S L Y M'E F

grandson, ''To feel retlly riel!.
Still counting the dlinp )'011

have dill money can - - "

1-'TI:;,7..;;1;.;-:.rl:.:,;,i -TI-1 e
. ....J.L-J..-L.-.....J.
t..-".-J.

@ PRIN!

Comp)tlt lho chuckle ' Q......
by lllling in 111o Olilllog ,..,.

Y"" dltYflop I,... IIIP No. 3 btlow.

NUMB!IfD
IN 50UAR!S

tfi!!R5

SCRAMLETS ANSWIItS 111101
Unsold- Lover - Friar - BoWII:e - FELONIES
Overheard at·rally: "Polilicians would l'llher haYC their
wtakncsses and imperfections made public thin lilcir
FELONIES"

·

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

you may be tar too dependeilt upon anoth·
er and waste valuable time wailing for that
person who has 111tlt interest In your proj·

L

(740) 446-2342

25

44

re~ret it.
TAURUS (Ap ril 20-May 20) - Usually
you're self-sufficient and a self-starter, but

DAY!

®alltpolfs J)atlp 'Ql::rtbune

Alt~ough

M ist. It wi11 be up to you to make the most
of them In productive and gratifying ways.

(740) 992-0496 .
"I

MCAMmRsOIOR
H &amp;

110Y1H

!IOdcleu

CMrltV Opter Cl'fP'Ograms are Cfeattd tom qi.IOUinont by f!IIIOUS people. Pllllnd prllfllll
Eadlieller In t1e cllilef ~ !or 8f101hor.
.
Tod8y's clue: ~ "~""' C

'lllrthdlt,y:

Tue•day, June 6, 2006
By Bernice Bode Oaol
In the year aheaO, opportunities will devol·
op thai could help furth!3r your worldly

Chuck Wolfe ·:

Cuddy Cabin, Volvo/Penta.
soo
miles, e;occellent condition. 53,000. Call (740)357-o314. 2

24 VlndlcUve

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Astro,Graph
-

... THEN , OU LL WIN
THE · ' OUTSTANDING
S CHOLAR • MEDAL!

SCORE TWELVE I'OINTS
HIGoHE~ THAN

You have four potential losers: one
spade, two diamonds and one club. If
East has the diamond king, there will be
no problems. So assume the fin~sse will
lose - which you just kn ow it will. Also,
re member that when East plays the
spade king at trick one, he denies holding
the queen. Third hand plays the bottom of
equally high cards.
Take the fi rst trick with your spade ace,
draw trumps, cash your two top clubs,
and exit with a club. E8st winS with his
queen and shins to the diamond jack, the
best delense. But you win with your ace
- do not take that 'finesse! - and lead
the spade jack. West will win with his
.queen and be forced either to play on diemOOds, establishing your' queen, or to
concede a ruff-and-sluff.

Q

I

1998 Buick Skylarl&lt; 96,000

r

i',._,ID Tf.\t&gt;-1: MUQ\ MOt-IE.~
'iOU'il.E G0\1'10 iO (:.(\

NATE ·

J:T'$ -"LL: .G OING W
COME DoWN TO THE
!5-C.IENC:E Flt-IAL ,

IMPORTS
Athens

992-5682

2001 Z-24 sunroof $3,900;

F YOU EXf'E.( T TO &amp;.~

LMCi OfF!

•

on State Rt. 124

$2,800. Call (740)368-9645

~E'.

"Middleport's
!It Ill'

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OR

(304)674-

r.BoA1S&amp;MoroRS

No Pets, Leue Plus ReP,aired, New &amp; Rebuilt In tared males.' Ready to
breed. Championship bloodSecurity Deposit Required, S k C II R
toe . a
on Evans, 1- line&amp;. d ell (740)245-()485.

(740)367-706€.

Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; GuMn
Vinyl Siding &amp; P•lntlng

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair

1994 Mustang GT conv.
sharp $4,900. 1999 Pontiac 94 Yamaha Timer wolf 250,
GrandAm nlce$3,900. 1999 , 4x4 excellent condition.
Mercury

O.r•ue•

22 Vet potlenlt 42 Ag,...,_t
23 l.obtl8r part 43 Uke gar·

a 10-card lit.)

ROGER HVSELL I
GARAGE .

20,000 miles, $1~. 500 .

stub·guards nearly new
$1000.00 . Galfrey doubleledder,nearly new $1600.
both kept Inside never
raJMd on. Retiring 304-675·
2902

New

tycoon

Eagfo'o nett 56 Cauallc
Put down
oolullon
Alligator
57 Annoy
refuge•
58 Unhtlched
19 Slow mover
lith
21 Chapeau
DOWN
22 FonlllJ'IIZIII
23 T01111 dlootdot
26 Opllmlatlc
1~
30 Tax
lldor's quell
31 Broke
2 Wire
ground
lhlckneuea
32 Seine
3 Guah forth
moorage
4 H~ the hay
33 Hava being
5 Teocup paris
34 USN officer 8 Paris friend
35 Ferber or
7 Ellllnct bird
Millay
8 Component
36 Most
9 Clobber
summery
1 f l'nyllr-wlal
39 Floorboard
........
sound
12 Fable wrller
40 Caaslus
18 Nautical ·
Clay
greeting
41 On !he 20 Peggy
viva
or Brenda

North's three-heart response is a game·
invitational limit raiSS.It shows 10·1 2 sup·
port poirits (here, nine high~card points
plus one for the doubleton spade) Qr, II
you prefer, eighllosers. (Do not forget to
deduct one loser wh en you have at least

CARPENTER
SERVICE

2003 HO Ultra classic. black

(304) 67~1687

AN' THIS IS
MY so-so
GRAN'MA !!

YOUNG'S

Room AdciH:Ion• I
Rtlmoct.llng

East
Peas
Pass

Plft1llonoyol

East putting up ihe ki ng?

THIS IS MY
GREATGRAN'MA !!

~~~k s~~:;r ~~~ ~~2:::pe! ~S?Jc~~ 1%.. i

r

New 2BA apts. Watson Ad.
Woa1 COlumbia R1 52, 2br, Rodney Pike/850 ~ rea .
Deposit
Lg. Deolc, Lg. Kttchan, Full Reference/
Booament $500'month plus required, no pets~ (740}446t271, (740)709-1657.
IJIIIItloa (304)773-9167

$400/mo, $400
(740)367-7025

great starter bike. Will sell

(740)379-9297.
2003 Anic Cat 90cc Yout h
- - - - - - - - - ATV. 2004 Kawasaki V-Force
1968 Monte Carlo, 305 VB, 700cc ATV Phone (304)882-

i

r~l

2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, No Pets,

:o:~ ~:I. \~~g~:

• New Homes

1990
Chevy
Caprice .2005 Timerwolf 18ft. motorClassic, runs good, like new cycle tfailer, holds 4 bike,
lilside &amp; out, S4K. must see black
with
chrome .

TV

IVC. $650/month rent$850 18C. dep.. you pay util- (614)595-7773 or 1--800- Buy or sell. Riverine
Ities. Avalable 1st weak In 798-4686.
Antiques, 1124 East Main
ts
April. Coil (740)446-36« lor _N_aw_2_B_a-dr_oo_m_A-pa-rt_m_e_nqn SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740an application .
Washer/dryer
hookup, 992-2528. Russ Moore,
Stop renting Buy 3 bedroom stove/refrigerator inCluded. owner.
toreclosure $14,900. For llst- starting at $400/mo. Call for
lngo 800-391 -5228 ext. details (740)441-0194 or
1709.
(740)«1 -1184.

LM~~~

2002 Honda VLXISOOCO, nsd
with low miles very good
condition. It would be a

$4,500. All vehicles have 3994
free 1 year warranty. - - - - - - - -(740}256-6251 .
John Deere Gator 4K2, very
good condition . $3,900
Have soma hauling to do?
(304)882-3236
.
1995
Pontiac
.
Bonneville
Carmichael
Equipment·
your source for quallty 3600 V6, 20· mpg, 93,000
SI'OKI1NG
gooeenecke, dumps and utll- miles, all power, AC, $2,600
CAMPER'l&amp;
~
tues. Your dealer for Prostar 060. (740)245-5934.
-and Losd Trail trailers.
1996 Chevy Camero V6,
SotoUex exercise machine, (740)446-2~ 12.
Ssp, T·tops, red, lOOks sharp,
s6
bunerfly leg &amp; dip ·anach- John Deere 10 R. No Til Drill
runs great $3 .~ . (740)256-- Evlnrude
01
Motor. wl sllde out. $7,500 OBO.
ments. Gold's Gym Otympic for
rent.
Carmichael 6251, (740)645-1393.
Shorelander Trailer. Motor (740)245-0183, (740)208dumbbell &amp; curling bar outfit Equlpmenj (740)448-2412.
Guide Trolling ~otoi bought 6340.
wilh weights &amp; plata rack. All
1997 Buick Park Avenue.
lor $400 OBO. (740)245- John Deere Mini Excavator/ Leather, loaded, an malnte· In 2003 never used due to - - - - - - - - Tractor Loader Backhoe/ nance reoords, well main· sickness. Call 740-992- 2006 Jayco 27' travel trailer.
0611.
.
Skid Steers. Ca_unlchael tained, 116k, asking $4,600. 7462--Q:OOAM to 5:00PM Used twice. Queenlfullltwln
paity.
beds &amp; sofa, lg. shower, sur·
Equipment (740)4411-2412
(740)245·5934. ..
- - - : - - - - - - - round sound. Was $18,000,
New John ·Deere Compacts
1984 Bayllner. 19 112 h. Now $14,000. (740)446-

month. 740-949·2303.

Rontai2BR, 480 Paxton Rd.
$350/doposlt $350/month ,
stow, ret sup. WID hookup.
-dy now, 6 month tease.
Hud accepted. Some pets
allowed. Cell (304)81 22236, Htome (740)446-2515.

\ I I\ I '- I ( It 1,

••12 i'I.H. Hayblna, 7' with

Housing Opportunity.

Water/Sewer Gracious l ivi ng . ~ and 2 bedIncluded, No Pets (304)675- room apartments at Vill.age
5332 or(740)591-o255
Manor
and
Riverside

I \In I"' 1'1 ' 1 II ...,

at $75 '&amp; up all under
Warranty, also have recondltioned Big Screen TV's
by Fton'o TV (304"'rfl.

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISTIIC'n81

Restoration &amp; Parts, Inc., ' - - ' - ' - - - - - - ' - -'29670
Bashan
Road , 2001 HO 883, 1,000 miles,
Racine, Ohio 45771 ; Phone; black, Some extras, like new

740-949-2217; Fax: 740(740)446-7100 Home grown tomatoea.
An.ntlonl
4 rooms &amp; bath , stove/ref. 10am-2pm, after 2pm Picked dally. No Sunday 949-1957; Pictured on
Looal company offering "NO Utilities paid . $450/mo. (740)367-7886.
sales . 10 miles weat at mu£1byodvrbjrdclntaLconi
DOWN PAYMENr pro· Upstairs, 45 Olive St. No
Gallipolis on SFt 141 at
1982 Dodge Aires 400• 4
grams tor you to buy your pets. (740)446-3945.
- - - - -- -- - - - - - - Yodofs Greenhouse 10321
home illltead of renting.
SR 141 1Gallipolis.

&amp;ARNEY

(740) 949-1405

Price $9,500.00.
Hill's (304)675-6531 or (304)674. Automotive Classic Car 5708

Carpet,

Accepting applications for 2
bedroom apartment, $500
FORSAiE
Appl .. rice
month, kltctlen appliances &amp;
WID furnished, water &amp;
garbage included, no pets.
Warehouse Lincoln Welder AC225 5x8
trailer. Like new 100,000
1st month, security deposit
&amp; lease required. (740)446- in Henderson, WV. Pre-- BTU tumace- new. 3 ton A/C

-·------,.-

Harflood
ca~lltcry Alld Fll alae
'

FREE
ESTIMATES

P,emisea. First shots given. steering, power brake , 2000 Honda 100 Dirt Bike.
Condition
$900
Serious CAlls Only. Janet power window, power seat. Good

wv except electric, $325. Call

• 1()()% financing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be th e
tame as rent.. .
Mortgage
Locators.
{740)367.0000

IIIII IIlS .

Sheltle and min .. Collie
Nice drive r, 390cl englf!O, (740)«6-9954 or (740)339miKed. For Sale $150.00 No
auto
transmission, power _35_2_8_.- - - - - -papers. Female. Parents on

3br, 1ba. Country Home on Centenal)', all utilities paid,
Board

l.l. WrRISII

t14ftl

Pass

45 Mr. Spock
48 Poyclle
chantt
component
Ocean
49 Turf
Do a
grabber
volceover
51 Gao burMr
Zoom
53 Jooa1rau
Pack animal
or Elgar
-54 Lltyera
ah06tlrlng 55 Jeckle' a .

· Marilyn Monroe said, ~ Ho llywo od 's a .
· pl ace where th ey'll pay you a thousand
dollars for a kiss, and 50 cents fo.r your
soul. I know, because I turiled down the
first offer often enough and 'held out for
the 50 cents."
•
in real lite, finesses, which are supposed
lo be 50 percent propositions, do win
about half the time. But In newspaper
colum ~s and teaching deals, they have
much nearer a 5 percent chance. A
finesse will work only it it is 'needed.
ln this deal, how would you try to make
four hearts after West leads a tow spade,

•

AH typu Of rodlttg:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

4• -

North
3¥
Pass

Is a finesse
really 50 percent?

••
••

leather Fatboy. Lots of chrome and
Interior, Whiti vinyl top, extras 9,400 miles. Call

(740)«6-2561.
6813
- - - -- - - - - 2 bedroom apartment in

~RANK &amp; EARNEST

4x4
FORSAu;:

rm ~~

West
Pass-

Opening lead: 4 5

Bucket TN:k

r

males (304)882-2391

¥

t

Top • Removal ~ Trltn
• Stump Grinding

8 week old Registered ShihTzu pups. 1 Female, 1 mate,
$400 beg. (740)441 -9047 or Orchan:t grasa, other mixed
(740)645-4951.
hay, barn-stored, easy
AKC Gok:1en Retriever pup-· aoc:ess, square or round
pies. $275 tamales, $250 bales.
E)Ccellent quality

·-------,.1

South

Tree Service

$200/each. (740)245-5815.

I

Deal er: Sout h
Vulnerable: Both

JONES

6 Wlflk okl full blooded Lab

puppies. Chocolate and
black, mates and temaJes,

(304)662-7397-or-(304)8953333
2001 Dodge Durango Sport,
AKC Mint Dachshund, 9 ,-o_
oacco
_ _PI_a_n-ts_lo_r_sa_l_e.- c-.- black,
95,000,
4WD,
weeks ok;l, 'Mate Puppy, 2
11
$1 0 500. 740 «6-8957.
shots, $300. (740)256-1498 (740)446-7643 or (740)6451860.
MOI'ORCVcu:&lt;il
Beagle Type PupQies. Cute
4WIIEELI!IIS
Apt.
lor
1,~-------· ·1 and 2 bedroom apart· Two Bedroom
and HeatttJy. Call George ·
ments, furnlsh9d and unfur- • rent/utilities paid. No Pets.
Milk&gt;r 740-742-1024.
lnll'"'-~----"1
1BR houso-11 Ga~iekl Awe,
nlshed, . secu rity depo.slt 740-992-5858.
1998 Honda Go~ ng . 25k
Galllpcllo. $350 month. Call
milee, black $10,000. Call
requ ired, no pets, 74Q-992 - ~~~:~:"------....... CFA Reg. Himalayan &amp;
tor d01al~ (740)441.0194 or
(740)«1-o&amp;38.
221 8.
FOR'-·Persian kittens. $275 each.
(740)441 -1164.
"""""'
Cell (740)«1 -1602.
$5001 Pollee Impounds! 1998. Kawasaki ValcB.n sad·
1 bedroom unfurnished
28R house With basement, upstairs
apartment. Air,
Miniature Oon'kies for sale, Cars from $500. For listings die bags, windshield. axe.
hartiWood floors, mile from range, refrigerator, disposal, 30 acres to lease for farming Babies 5225 each, Jack 8Q0-391 -5227 ext. 3901
cond. sharp. (740)256-6251 .
town.
$450/mo/dep. garage. Deposit &amp; refer- and/or grazing. Please call $300, Jenny $500, pregnant
1
- 9e
_ 2_ 1l1
_u
_n_d_o_rb_l_rd_;- B-lu-e 1999 Black Ha~ Davidson
(740)4-41-o460 9-5, M-F.

r~

1{9432

Soul h

wlndowt, llnlolo, etc. Claude

j

4

• 4
• J 10 9 7
• Q 10 4

K 8 6
.. J 8 7 2

-Bra-.-nd
- -n-, -w-

$10,995. Wlll hell&gt; wtt!1 deliw- deck. No pets. $425/mo. .$Ill oklef "prJor~ Given To
ory. Cal (740)385-9S2 1.
5425- deposit. (740)446- Abpticants With ~noorne AI
7322. .
Or Below $10,900.00 lor 1
V.ry c1aan 14x64 2 bedperson or $12,450.00 lor 2·
roam. Only $7,995. Call 3BDR , 2Ba, doublewlde
persons. Maximum lncol'll8·
(740)385-0698.
ctose to RVH S. $450 month,
1 person $18,150.00 or
$450 dep ., ref. required. No
$20,700.00 lor 2 peraona.
~=
pets. (740)367-7025.
Must meet HUD/20~ crite-

E ast

Q 10 6.
8 2

10
11
13
14
15
18
17

.. A 9 3

740-416-1 354

811 Oth 01 an acre tor sale on 3 bedroom, 2 bath , In coun1-43 . 2 mobile homes. 740- try, 8 miles to Pomeroy, 12

.;r10;::::FOR:;IIou;l!S=ItENr=:,l

• 06·05-06 ·

• 8 7
¥ AJ653
• 5 4 2

tront kitchen. Mickleport, all electric, c/a,

·Cal (740)385-9948.

4

}

-------------3 bodroom mobile home In

42 Nums kull

t. Manlra
7

Cult prtco $8,995. Will $425 month plus deposit;

-

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

condition uHd· 2 bedroom. all
rnobh hcwnte. 1997·2000 very nice, In

e

1~Ei~ 40 6AAS

.----~--r

:~~i\-111'\~
::lb ~T

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S\o PPF r

WANNA

GET oFFrVHELP¥'

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

..
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--- -' -

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----·-.

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-·-----.--

'-

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'

p

Page 86 • !he DruJy Sentinel

Monday, June

·www .mydailysentinel.com

-

Matt ·Kenseth rallies to win at Dover
-

BY DAN GELSTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DOVER, Del. Matt
Kenseth and Jamie McMurmy
made it a 1-2 finish for Roush
Racing.
And what u thrilling finish it
was.
·
McMurray was the driver to
beat, holding the lead for most
of the fmal 90 laps Sunday until
the patient Kenseth made his
move , passing two drivers late
before the leader was firmly in
view.
Kenseth reached McMurray
in lapped traffic, raced side-byside, then dipped low on a clean
pass off the fourth tum with
three laps left .and pulled away
to win at Dover International
Speedway.
"They were leavin~ me plenty of room to pass.' Kcnseth
said. "l just caught him iJ.I the
right time and was able to just
barely squeeze in front."
Kevin Harvick fmished third,
followed by Jeff Burton and
Kyle Busch. Jimmie Johnson
maintained the points lead. finishing sixth after starting a sea'
son-worst 4 2nd.
McMurray seemed poised to
win for the second .time in his
Nextel Cup career. after taking
the lead with 98 laps left in the
Neighborhood Excellence 400 .
One day after• turning 30.
McMurray's belated birthday
present to himself was so close
to being a trip to Victory Lane.
Kenseth spoiled the party.
His No. 17 Ford started nipping
at the leaders with about 30 laps
· left in the caution-marred race.
First, he passed Burton. then
Harvick. All that was left was
McMurray.
With three laps to go.
Kenseth got by McMurray after
the leader was slowed a bit by
Michael Waltrip;s lappeq car.
With one lap to go, Kenseth
pulled away for' his second win
of the season and 12th of his
career.
"It was really exciting,"
Kenseth said. "1 feel bad for
Jamie."
The win earned him a small
boost in the points standings.
Kenseth sliced Johnson's lead

s. 2oo6

New contacts designed:
to give athletes an .edg~.

Solana arrives mTehran
carrying EU incentives
package, hoping to
defuse nuclear crisis, A2

.

·
AP photo
NASCAR driver Matt Kenseth races his car through turn one during the Neighborhood
Excellence 400 Sunday at the Dover Speedway in Dover, Del. Kenseth won the race.
from 109 points to 74.
McMurray still finished with team and the move has seem" I never thought about the one of the best perfomtances of ihgly paid off.
point~ at all today. We're think- hi s c.ar~r. McMurray hasn't
"What
about
Jamie
ing about winning races," been m Vtctory Lane smce wm- McMurray? Was that not aweKen seth said . ·"It's early nmg hts second career Nextel some today?" Roush' said.
enough in the year. We're [n a fup race m October 2002. ·
"Jamie was certainly the underpretty solid position in the
"It's been a long time ." dog given the season he's had.
,points."
McMurr~,Y said. ·:1 thought I Until Matt had passed Jamie. I
. Injured defending \:hamp had htm.
was standing beside Bob
Tony Stewart completed 38
McMurray took the .lead on Osborne in the 26 pit rooting
laps before Ricky. Rudd t~e 302nd lap on the rrule .track, for him as hard as I could."
Maybe not hard enough.
replaced him. Stewart drove gtvmg him more laps led m thJs
w1th a broken shoulder blade race than he had all season (25).
Only 15 laps were run under
suffered last week at Charlotte, He satd he knew he had no caution . through 269 laps, but
and had trouble lifting his right chance to wm once he was that quickly deteriorated with
arm before he was eased into P~~~·
.d
M tt six more cautions for 36 laps
his car.
. en 1 ,cou 1 see. · 3
the rest of the way.
·s
.
d
. k x't catchmg Kevm, l knew 11 was
JJ v
h't th
. . tewart_ rna e a qutc e 1 , : going 10 make it interesting," . . .e1ey 1 e wa11 on 1ap
hltmg h1mself halfway out McMurraysaid."Jjustgottight 284 and did it again after the
already unstrapped andwtth hts at the end ."
restart. Anoti!Cr caution came
helmet off before he was gently
McMurrav did record his out with 101 laps left when
pulled out the. rest of the way. second stralght top-IO finish Elliott Sadler hit the wall after
Stewart sa1d he never felt attd jumped three spots to ISth losing control on some oil on
comfortable a~d complamed of in the points race.
the track left by Kevin Lepage.
"Making the chase is a huge
McMurray never stopped
some soreness.
"I was glad we got the cau- deal " he said. "If we can run a~ and took the lead on 302, and
tion when we got it," he said.
well' as we did today, we'll stayed out on the last yellow
Rudd came out of a self- make the chase."
flag.
'
He· surely needed the confiKenseth, who started 19th,
imposed. one-year break to
race for the ftrst It me thts sea- dence boost. With McMurray recorded his ninth top- I 0 finish
son !n. the Nextel ~up senes. struggling early in his ftrst sea- and won for the first time since
He hmshed 25th, two laps off son w1tjl Roush Racmg, owner California in the·second race of
the lead.
Jack Roush ordered a shakeup the season. He made his Nextel
"That was fun, sitting right designed to jump-start thetr Cup debut at Dq_ver in .l998 as
there, being in the hunt and struggling team. Bob Osborne, a substitute for Bill Elliott.
being able to run with some of who was Carl Edwards' crew
"Everythingjustkindofwent
those guys," Rudd said.
chief, took over McMurray's right for us," he said.

BREN1WOOD, Tenn . .(AP)
- When Camille Walters plays
soccer, her normally brown eyes.
have a spooky red tint.
That's because the 15-yearold wears tinted ·contact lenses
that block certain wavelengths
of . light and help athletes see
IJ&lt;;tter. Oh, and they look cool,
too.
.
"lt gives me more confidence
because you feel intimidating
and bigger and stron~er, kind of
an ego-booster," smd Walters,
who plays for Father Ryan, a
Catholic high school in
Nashville.
·
Walters and a growing number of other athletes are wearing
the MaxSight lenses, which
were developed jointly by Nike
Inc . and contact lens maker
Bausch &amp; Lomb Inc.
The lens - large enough to
extend a ring around the ins __:
comes in two colors: amber and
grey-green.
The amber lens is fo( fastmoving ball sports, such as ten-·
nis, baseball, football or soccer.
Grey-green is better for blocking glare for runners or helping
a golfer read the contour of the
gro?:~1~ssional athletes tested
the lenses last year before they
were rolled out for general sales.
Golfer Michelle Wie and
baseball players Ken Griffey Jr.
and A J. Pierzynski wear
MaxSight lenses, along w,ith
members of Manchester Umted,
the U·S· men •8 soccer team and
the Texas Longhorns football

Irian riders and tennis players.
'The firSt reaction from the .
fust two ~ople I fit i.n ~is, they
went out,lde and srud, Thts 1~
really cooL It's like wearing
su!tglasses out, ide,"' Kegarise
smd.
Even though the amber lens is
intended for outdoor use, he has
an Arena Football League player who used them indoor~
because of the· bright lights.
·
Walters, who plays both for
her high school and on a travel
team, is farsighted and us~
MaxSight prescription lenses,
but they also come in a non-corrective version.
"It cut out some of the sun, so
it wasn't as bright," Walter,~
said. "It was easier to pick out
where the ball was at times
when it was in the air."
.:
But' does the MaxSighl lens
give some athletes an unfair
advantage? The associations
that govern high school and e&lt;;&gt;flege sports don't think so, but
they're keeping an eye on th,e
lenses.
·
Jerry Diehl, assistant director
of the National Federation of .
State High School ~sociations
in Indianapolis, said his group
doesn 't believe the lenses provide the competitive advantage
that Nike claitns.
· The federation allows the ·
lenses and puts them in the same
category as sunglasses or corrective lenses. The NCAA also
allows the sports lemes because
it considers them similar to .,~unglasses .
te~e bulk of the business we . But Diehl said he's worried
expect will be with the college, about the perception of an unfair
high school type athlete who is advantage.
·
really looking for that edgy,"
"If one affluent ream can get
Nike spokeswoman Joanie this, it forces everybody else to
Komlos said. "We've seen that Ro out and do that," Diehl said.
sales are far exceeding our Is it really something that
expectations,and we're going to makes a d1fference? In this
continue to roll out distribu- instance, at this juncture anylion."
way, it doesn't seem to be any'
The sport lenses can be pur- better or any worse than allowchased only through a doctor's ing what is already under the
office at a cost of $80 per box, ruTe."
$160 if the prescription for each
Dr. ·william Jones. of
eye varies.
Nashville said price will keep
Dr. Jeff Kegarise, an some athletes from buying the
optometrist whose office is in lenses, but he expects them to be
Brentwood, has already pre- popular on high school athletics
scribed the lenses for college teams in wealthier school disbao;eball players, golfers, eques, trict~.

'

Trophy winners, A3
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;on·:NTS•Vol.-;-; , No.:!o(,

TI ' ISIJ\\

··

"

II ' I· (

'·

• "~~

·•

. , , _no

(

" \ \ \\ .m~thtil~,t.·ntjnel,t•om

t

Commissioners seek.end to ·missing money inve~tigation~~

SPORTS
• Hurricanes storm back.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Commissioners have
called for a final resolution of.
the state investigation into the
theft of cash evidence from
the Meig s County -Sheriff's
office, so the county can
recover the money from its
insurance carrier.
Sheriff Robert Beegle said
Sunday ·the commissioners
have asked him to request a
conclusion of the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Investigation' s

case, whether or no·t suspects
are identified.
According to Commissioner
Jim Sheets, the in surance
company will not pay the
county's claim for the stolen
money until the investigation
is closed. The county stands to
recover $11,070 of the
$20,000 reported stolen a year
ago.
'
"We have asked the sheriff
to contactthe BCI investigator
and to ask for a conclusion of
the case," Sheets said.
Beegle first discovered the

money was missing fr~m the
department's evidence room
and a locker in the county jail
on May 6, 2005. Part of the
money - $11 ,070 - · was
being held as evidence in -a
county-level felony drug case.
The rest of the cash had been
stored ·at the sheriff's depanment by Middleport Police
Depanment personnel without
his knowledge, Beegle said.
Beegle asked the state's
major crimes unit to investigate the case and interview
suspects because, he said, he

Deputies· arrest 23 for.
non-payment of fines
. STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Beegle said.
"They had learned that
deputies had been to their
POMEROY
-Meigs ·homes on Friday and came in
County sheriff 's deputies to pay them," Beegle said.
arrested 23 people and colBeegle said another "roundlected over $2,200 in old up" is planned in early July.
fines during a "round-up" on
"We will continue to exeFriday.
c ute the warrants issued
Shenff Robert Beegle said against people paying their
32 warrants for unpatd fines old fines," Beegle said.
were served, and those arrestBeegle saitl he has also
ed appeared. before County · begun a program of sending
Court Judge Steven L. Story. postcards to those who have
Others who were not served not paid in an an attempt to
learned of the collection collect fines and to encourage
effort and reported to court on those with unpaid fines to
Monday to pay on their fines , make payment arrangements.

.OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Otto A. Marcinko ·
• Doris Augusta Koenig

INSIDE
MODEL LT 1040
LAWN TRACTOR

RZT42
ZERO-TURN RIDER

• 42" huvy-duty t'Nin·bladt niowlnt dtd
• 18 HP' Kohlor" Courop" OHV ...lno.
• Potontod SmlrtJol• hilh·-•w• dt&lt;k .
wuhlnf oyolom
.

ZE
SALE S1,499'*

wanted no appearance of a case .
Beegle has said emp loyees
conflict of interest in the
investigation. BCI will not of his department have subcomment on the status of the mitted to polygraph examinacase, because the . investiga- tions re lating .to . the case:
lion is considered ongoing.
while others have refused.
The county's case against Middleport village employees
Elisha "Lacey': Dickens of have also been subjects of the
Middleport has now been con- · i-nvestigation , because part of
eluded and the defendant sent the missing cash originated
to prison. She.ets $aid a deter- from a Middlepon cri minal
mination mu st be made as to case.
how the money. once received
The. balance of the missing
from the insurance company. money is MiddlePQt1's to colwill be used, because of it s lect, Sheets said, and is not a
connection to that cr.iminal part of the county's claim.

..•~.Negotia!Q@ to m!!et.on,. ·

1~q;;hi:trricarn&amp;'l'l!llf
fy~9ing bHI. S...P.ge A2 .

• 42" twln-bladt 3-ln~t mowlna dKk

• 17 HP' KeNt,- CourtJt"• OHV eosine
• Pivotlns 1nd arus•bl• froot axle

• Class of 1954
celebrates anniversary.
See Page A3

z

·

·

Beth Sergent;phota

Brother and sister Madison and Tyler Fields (background) take turns trying to win a game of
cornhole whtle Noah HaJIVand (foreground. left) attempts to keep score along with Kristen
Chevalier, staff mer.nber of the county Abstinence Buildings Character Program which is hostIng free youth events at both the Syracuse and General James Hartinger Parks. Events are from
9 a.m. to noon, and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., Monday-Friday, all summer long.
·

SALE sz,599"

•

SUMMER LONG YOUTH
EVENTS KICK OFF IN MEIGS
HANDHELD PRODUCTS
• Variety of premium 11rin1 trimmtrt
fnd Wowtf1 •VIIItblt
• /\Ilk oboulolhor Iauth handhela pt'Odur;tt

trom Cull Ctdot

a

BY BETH SERGENT
Center.
every week, creating kind of
BSERGENT&lt;il'MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
The evenls are organized roaming community center
and under the direction of atmosphere near the pools,
SYRACUSE - Yesterday staff from the county giving kids an alternative to
was the officia] kick off to Abstinence Builds Character sitting on the couch aH sumsummer youth events planned (ABC) Program .
mer.
for both the Syracuse and
According
to
ABC
Yesterday kids partic;ipatGeneral James Hartinger Activities Coordinator Danny ing in the . event s at the
Parks for county youth. ·
Thomas this week's youth · Syracuse Park were going
These free youth events are activities in both Syracuse back and forth between the
from 9 a.m. to noon, and l and Middleport include uhi- ga mes and a dip in the
p.m. to 4 p.m., ·Monday - mate f~isbee, basketball ,. soc- London Pool.
·
Friday, throughout the sum- cer, and cornhole which is
Many of the children qualmer. In the event of rain the similar to horseshoes but itied for free pool passes disevents will be mt&gt;Ved to the played with bean bags.
tributed through the ABC proSyracuse Community Center
Thomas said different
and Middleport's Family Life activ.ities will be planned
Pleese see Youth,·AS

CC989
3 ~1N-1 SELF-PROPELLED MOWER ·
• Z1" atHI mow1n1 dec:k with 'cyctoCut"' srstem

• 5.5 HP' ftond ../1\RCS enelno
• 3-in-1 'onwtrtlblt cu"i"' 'Y'''m with front

caater wheela

,

• Clinic wins 2006 Aster
Award recognition.
See Page A3
• Governor signs bill
limiting government
. spending. See Page AS

STARTING AT S169.. SALE s399··

WEAmER

Bob Evans Farms shows Ohio~ coal mining roots .
BY MtCHELLE MtLLER
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

YOUR LOCAL~Y OWNED
CUB CADET RETAILER KNOWS
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''

.

INDEX
SEcnoNsCalendars
2

Classifieds
•
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11J 12 W..~f'HS HO f'II!Ylot ltiS' l'fO ri 1E II(5l if Gt.Q 1Mt!~j ·2 l,l()tj ] HS, ~u tu Neht'tl Ql l ffl o1 ""''' .....,, ..rd OJf).OJe 01&gt; 1 Powtr Cr~l Cfi'D ~~ ttte-M. i.!I»Pt lhl ,:lf!Ht'lli"YY 110 oTICI!"PIIy ~"'"""''*
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ct.JrpJWill bt n~.,. "'' Jlro"'~ P'""r.lw!&amp;• ~~ 1~&gt;'&gt;$11'~ 1!1 'I", P"l tl'ol ;&lt;910!0 p-.l' t hn~ krf.o.,/1111'1 ~ ...ili:n li !Tll)fll ~. tnol,lliJfl ~ IW'l *""en Cu. foe mi111T m nmt!!lf;lt~ Mill'; ntho!r wiMt M "")'&lt;U'•t.:oxl,llll j ,.u It I to lllct"' Mhtr t oncillllll, d$1*-a.J "'"~o !erlfl
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Dear Abby

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'·
.

Editorials
Obituaries

'

Sports
Weather

12 PAGES

A3
83-4

Bs
A3
A4
As
BSection
As

@ 2006 Ohio V,a ll cy Publishing Co.

'.

RIO GRANDE - Deep in
the bowels of Ohio's hill country, men and women have long
depended on mining coal, also
known as "black diamonds,"
·for their lively hood.
Bob Evans Farm Homestead
Museu·m honors the long history of mining in their newest
exhibit "Diamonds in the
Rough: The Legacy of Coal
Mining in Ohio's Hill
Country."
Located in their rotating display, an area that last year
housed an exhibit on., the
Underground Railroad, the
mining exhibit displays arti.
Michelle Miller/photo
facts and historical tidbit s Pictured is an authentic canary cage used by miners . Acanary
ranging from the beginnings of was taken into the mine as an early warning system for a buildthe coal mining industry to up of deadly gases, such as methane.
present day.
Bob Evans Fi!.rms teamed up of Black Diamonds Council in the early days. Miners arc
with Ohio's 'Hill Country, provid~d the histoi:ical text. often pictured c&lt;u;rying their
Wayne
National
Forest All of the ani facts come from pails at the elbow, a necessity
Service, and Little Cities of an anonymous donor's per- when ~rawling through the
Black Diamonds. The forest sonal collection.
tight passages of a coal mine.
service provided most of the . 'Someoftheartifactsinclude
Plene see Coal, AS
pictures. while the Little Cities lunch pails carried by miners

~

'

-- ---L- -.....---,- - - - --

Charlene Hoenlch/ photo

Jenn ifer Payne displays some of ·the materials she has
received about the People to People Ambassador Programs in
preparation for he r upcoming trip to Austral ia.

Meigs student sel,ected for
Student Ambassador program
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MlDDLEPflRT - Jennifer
Payne of Middleport. ~vho
will enter her freshman year
at Meigs High School in the
fall , has been selected for participation in the People to
People Student Ambassador
Program.
The program is described as
a 20-day adventure - this
year tak111g place in Australia
·. It is for junior high and middle ·school students selected to
participate on the basis of
the ir
academic
skill s.
Jennifer. 14, ·rhe daughter
of Kimhcrl y· Payne of
Ernest
Middleport
and
Mundell of Bidwell. said that
she will be _ traveling to
Australia with groups from
Ohio. We st Virginia and
Penn sy lvania. They will leave
from Charleston. W. Va . on

-----,.

,,

Jtily 14.
The emphasis of the
Ambassador program i' on
providing international educationa.l opportunities where
journeys are combined with
hands-nn cultural experience,
behind the scene access to
fascinating people and places,
and outdoor adventures.
The schedule call s for a
wide variety of experience
including ~norkeling ; taking a
gondola into the rainforest,
i..nteracting wi th the local
Aboriginal people about theit
culture and traditions, v.isiting
a wi ldlife park, learning about
the government, . explorin g
old shipwrecks, v1ewmg. the
cos mopolitan city of Sydney,
and working with a marine
biologist.
The students will be living
in private home s with local

Please .see Student. AS
•I

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