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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel ·

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

'www.mydailxsentinel.com

WimblEdon
\

No. 5 Svetlanta Kuznetsova. No. 8
Nadja Petro va and Np. 9 Anastasia
Myskina.
Sharapova didn't face a break point in
her 6-4, 6-2 victory over No. 16 Nathalie
Dechy. Myskina. meanwhile. trailed by a
set and two break&gt; against yet another
Russian, No. 6 Elena Demehtieva, whu
. eventually h'eld, two match points. But
Mysj&lt;ina· came all the' way back to .win
the rematch of the 2.004 French Open
final 1-6, 7-6 (9).7-5. .
,
U.S. Open . champion Kuznct&gt;ova'&gt;
ex planation for · her co untrywo men·,

BY HOWARD FENDRICH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WIMBLEDON. England - The second Monday at Wimbledon offers the
rare treat of all 16 men 's and women's
fourth-round matches, and nn this particular afternoon there was the even rarer
sight of Venus William s playing co ~fi dent, mistake-free tenni s.
.
Less than 48 hours after sitting with
chin on hand while watching her sister
Serena lose to. Jill Craybas, Williams
strode onto the same court against th.e
s ucce~s?
same opponent. mo~e concerned with
··.-Because nohoJy will give you n·othrighting her own ga,me . than re stonng
ing for free in Russia. " she said. "and
family pride . .
you have to do the work for it."'
She managed to do both. Williams
Kuznetsova plays Davenport next.
won the first six games and the last six to
Tuesday 's other women's quarterfinals:
overwhelm Craybas 6-0. 6-2. looking a
Sharapova vs : Petrova; and Myskina vs..
lot more like the player who won
No. 3 Amelie Mauresmo. ·
Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in 2000
The me1i 's quarterfi11als Wednesday :
and 200 l than one who hasn't reached a
No . .l Roger Federer vs. Gonzalez, No. 2
Grand Slam semifina l in two ·years.
Andy Roddick vs. No. 9 Sebastien
Asked · whether facing sorn~one who ·
Grosjean, No. 3 Hewitt vs. Lopez, and
. just beat Serena particularly pumps her
No. 12 Thomas Johansson vs. No. 18
up. Williams looked down and laughed ..
David Nalbandian.
"I definitely would like to do it a little
Two-,time defending champion Federer
bit for my sister," she said, then paused
beat Juan Carlos Ferrero 6-3. 6-4, 7-6
before adding thi s telling pnbse: "but
(6), while Roddick defeated Guillermo
mostly for me."
I
Coria 6-3, 7-6 ( l ), 6-4. Roddick and
Williams used her 6-foot-/1 frame to
Federer appear to be on course for a sectrack down Craybas ' shots t&lt;) the corners
ond consecutive .final.
and to win 13 of 14 points at the net. She
"It's in the back of my mind. It's obvilimited her unforced errors to four in the
AP photo ously something that I think about and
first set, and after falling behind 2-0 in ·venus Witfiams, of.the USA, waves after dream about ,'' Roddick said. "But ... I'm
the second, Williams broke back at love. defeating Jill Craybas·, of the USA. at not good eno ugh to overlook the next
"She was really fired up today."' Wimbledon Monday: Williams won 6-0, . two matches."
.
Craybas said. "S he definitely ha ~ a 6-2.
·
He was .being modest, but that last senchance to win the tournament. " .
tence cou ld very well have been spoken
First things first, though. starting with set of 2002 Wimbledon winner Lleyton by Williams recently.
a match Tuesday against No. 12 Mary Hewitt's 6--l. 6-4.6-7 (7). 6-3 victory.
It couldn't.have been easy to go from
Pierce, back in ttie Wimbledon quarterfiThere were instances of frustration, No. I in the world to No. 2 in her raminals after a nine-year absence. It's a such as over on cozier Cour~ 18, where ly, reaching Slam final ' after Slam final,
strong follow-up to reaching the French No. I 0 Mario Ancic. a semifi nal ist last only to lose to little sis. Add in the shoot. .
Open final.
. .
year. let out his anger after getting bro- ing death of her half-sister, plus assorted
. Williams last went that tar at a maJor ken by No. 26 Feliciano Lopez to start injuries, and there are plenty of explanaat Wimbledon in 2003, also the last time the second set. Ancic picked up a bottle tions for the elder Williams' slide to 16th
she made a Slam's final four. She won and chucked it, then 1ossed hi s racket , in the rankings.
only one title in the past 1·3 months. and which a ball bov fetched. Ancic finished
''I've always felt like she's just .a few
that was a lower-level eveni where she the jtJb by spiking and breaking the rack - matches away from gett~ng a lot cif condidn't faceanymie ranked. above 39th. et.
fidence back," said Davenport, who beat
,
So her apparent resurgence'was the most
Lopez won 6-4, 6-4, 6-2 to become the · Clijsters at a second straight major after
noteworthy development on a day fi lied first Spanish man in the Wimbledon losing their previous six matches. "The
with passing moments of interest for the · quarterfinals since 1972, while No. 21 last 12 or 14 months haven't gone the
record attendance of 41.386.
Fernando Gonzalez defeated No. 31 way her career began for her, and she 's
Some were .the sort of odd occurrences Mikhail Youzhnv 7"6 (3 }, 7-6 (5}, 6-3 to still out there battling.''
brought about by the pressure of playing give Chile its first man in the final eight
Williams' father, Richard, said Serena
on Centre Court, such as Kim Clijsters·. since 1985. ·
headed home to have a doctor check her
three double-faults in the final game of
If tennis' global · reach is expanding. injured left ankle. But their mother
her 6-3, 6-7 (4}, 6-3 loss to 1999 nothing comes close to ma.tching the watched Venus and Mark Knowles beat
. Wimbledon
champion
Lindsay impressive strides made by Russia 's Todd Perry and Els Callens in mixed
Davenport. · Or No. 24-seeded Taylor women. They won three Grand Slam doubles in the evening, another victory
·Dent simply watching a shot land at his titles last year and now have four quar- on a long day.
·
feet ·- clearly in __:;: to give away a terfinalists at a major for the first time : · "Venus is on a good trail right now,'' ·
break-point chance at 5-4 in the second defending · champion Maria Sharapova, Richard Williams said.

pate in fun games. and' will get a

Baseball

Justit·cs let stand
Ohio rulings ba~ng
Ten Con1mandn1ents
di~plays, 1 7

Big Bend 'B lues
Bash edition inside
today's Sentinel

Camps and Clinics

Vellus Williams does what Serena couldn't
.

- .· ..

'

camp basketball. refre shments and a
t·sl'llrt.

The cost is $30 or $40 arter June
21 .
.
Contact Jim Osborne 446·9284 for
more information.

Marietta College Ctmp ot
Champs
MARIETTA -The Mariella College
Baseball Camp ot Champs will" be

~.

Grade school open gym 11 GA.HS
GALLIPOLIS - Grade school open
gym 1S being held each Wednesday
from 1 0; 30 a.m. until noon a~ the
Game Academy High School gymnasium .
.
'
The open gym . supervised by coach

held over the course of the summer
at Pioneer Park.'
The Day Camps for grades .2-8 will
be held July 5-7, 12- 14 and 19-2L
while . the Residence/Commuter
Camp will be held tor grades 6-12 on
.July 24 ·28.
For a camp brochure, call the baseball ollice· at 1 (7 40)376·4517 or
(740)376-4673 or check the web at
www.mariella .edu .

at
)

Jim Osborne , is free and Boys and
girls m grades 1-6 are allowd to pa r~
ticipate. ·
·
The open gyms run through July 20.

·'

.Basketball

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

URG wo;:~: Basketball

511 C:ENTS • Vul. 5-l. Nu. :!t~

RIO GRANDE -The University of
Rio Grande will hold its women's

J

River Valley set' dates for

bllkelball camp
basketball camps beginni~g In June
CHESHIRE - River Valley High at 1he lyne Center.
.
.
School will have a basketball camp
The schedule tor the camps , with
for boys and girls entoring grades 4- fees are as follows:
e on Wednesday, July 6 through
- Varsifv and JV Shootout. July 9.
.Friday, July 8 at Bidwell-Porter . $215.
·
Elementary SchOol.
' · : 1Jnior High Individual Camp, July
The three-day camp will lake place 17 -~0. $22&amp;.
from 9 a.m. to 11 :30 a.m . and w ill
- Varsitv Qnd JV Team Camp .•July
locus on instructions in fundamental ~ 2 1F·23, $ 225 · .
contact
.
basketball .
o~ more 'f' 1orma 11on ,
The cost ol the canip Is $30 if you D_avld Smalley .at. 245·7491 or e-mail
are registered before July 4. with the h•m ~.t dsm~lley@rlo.edu.
cost moving up to $35 at!er ~!JIY 4 .

Conflicting accounts begin second Ward trial

SPORTS
• 2005 NBA Draft.
See Pl)ge 81

BY BRIAN J. REm
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - One of two
alleged victims in a .second
jury trial of Raymond Ward of
Rutl&lt;md on multiple counts of
unlawful sexual conduct with a
minor testi!ied Tuesday that
she engaged in mutual oral sex
with Ward whi le drinking at his
home in 1998.
A defense witness. meanwhile. testitied that he was at
the Ward home the night the

TraC k/R UnnlnJ:
•

Early registration is encourag•d .

and all participants will receive a
camp t·sh ir t.
For more information, or to sign-up,
contact AVHS boys basketball coach
Gene Layton at (740) 245-5753 or
c,all him at River Valley High School
at (740) 367-7377.
.

Citco to host camp It PPMS

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Mark

Mountain High Running Carilp
to be held In Bristol
BRISTOL,
The Mountain
High Running Camp wtll be held Julv
11 -16 and 18-23 in the mountains of
southwestern Virginia .
For more inlormatlon, call Scott
Simmons at 1·800-451-IVIC or go to

va. -

www. mouritainhighrunning.c~m .

Cisco will be conducting a basketball camp at Point Pleasant Middle
School from July 5 through July 7 .
The three day camp is designed to
Improve basketball skills with an
Eastern Volleyb•ll Camp
emphasis on correct shooting tech TUPPERS PLAINS- The flrst-evor
niques. Cisco and his staff Will incor- Eastern Vollevball · Camp lor girls
porate' drills to improve shooti11g, entering grades 6·8 will be held July .
passing, dribbling and defensive 5-8.
..
skiiis.
Camp stall includes players and
The camp will run from 11 a.m. to 2 coaches lrom the 2005 Tri·Valley
p.m. dally.
. Conference and sectional champion
Cisco has been teaching basketball
for nearly 20 years and presently ·eastern Lady Eagles.
Cost is $30 if pre-registered or $40
operates his own school in Kenova .
on the first dav of the camp. Included
He has also worked with several
in the cost is a camp T-shtrt and volNBA.
plavera,
inclljding
B .J.
leyball .
Armstrong , Anthony Tucker and
Contact Howie Caldwell for more
Korie Hlede, appmxlmatlv 50 college
information .
players and even Olympic basketball
· players.
The cost of the camp is' $60 which
includes a c~mp 1-shirt. There will be
dally shooting contests With. awards
given ~o the daily and weekly win0.0. Mcintyre Tennis Leeaons
ners.
.
. GAlliPOliS - The · 0 .0 . Mcintyre
Applications are available at the · Park District wlll offer adult and child
Dairy Queen in Point. Pleasant, at tennis lessons . The hour~ long
the Point baseball and softball fields, lessons wi!l be held 10 a.m . unt.ll11
the Gallpolis swi mming pool, Villi&amp;ge a.m., and also from 11 a.m . until 12
Pizza. local Subw&amp;yS, Bob's Market p.m . on Saturday mornings.
in Mason or bV ca!!ing Bill Buchanan
lnstruc11on. is set from June 18
at 675 -2675 or 593-0481.
·11 b e no
To ensUre correct Shirt size, applica- through July 16; there WI
tlons should {)e rece ived by July 1 .
lessons July 2 for the July 4 holiday.
The instructor will be Tom Hopkins
and class size Is limited 10 20 per•
Baby Blue Basketball Camp
GALLIPOLIS - Boys and girls who sons per hour lesson. Children ages
will be in grades 1-4 next vear can six and above are welcome . Cost is
attend the annual Baby Blue $10 pe~ person.
For more information , contact Mark
Basketball Camp at the Nazarene
Danner at 740·446·4612 ext. 255.
Church on July 5-7. ·
The camp w111 be held from 1 p.m.
(E-mail your camps, clinics or Jsague
until 2: 15 p.m. each day.• ·
.
Each parlk:ipant w ill receive ba~ ­ registrations lo sportstlmydaltytriketball instruction and wi ll partici· bune.com or fax them to 446-3008.)

alleged incident took place,
never left the Ward living
room. and witnessed no sexual
activity betwe.en Ward and the
yoyng woman .
.
Ward, 33, is on trial in Meigs
County Common Pleas ·cuurt
on four counts of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor, thirddegree felonies. and gross sexual imposition, a third-degree
felon y. There are two alleged
victims in the latest round of
charges against Ward, which ·
were included in the same

indictment chargii1g hiin with
rape and corrupting another
with drugs.
.
. In a trml earlier this month.
Ward was found guilty of six of
those rape charges and acquitted on four other rape charges ·
and a charge of corrupting
another with drugs. Ward was
convicted of havin~ sexual
intercourse with his mece, who
was 12 years old at the time of
the alleged offenses in 2000.
The charges in the latest trial
date back to as far as 13 years

Volleyball

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
• Lynette Randolph
• Oris G. Bumgarner
• Shirley A. Ingels
Williams
• Darrell Promis

RUTLA ND -Nashville
recording artist Nina Sharp
will · perform . at 7, p.m .
Saturday in Firemen's Park in
Rutland for the community's
annual Independence Day
celebration.
The
Rutland
· Fire
Department organizes the
annual event, which will also
include the department's traditional· ox roast. -a parade,
and games for all ages. The
theme for the I 0 a.m. parade
is "Salute Our American
Heroes," and Nathan Biggs
has been named grand marshal of the parade. It will
include walking units, .bicycles, fo~r-wheelers, float s,
vehicles, and other entries.
Winners will be announced
in seven parade categories:
religious. non-religious. bicycles. horses, walking units,
and vehicles and four-wheelers. Walking units. bicycles
and four-wheelers are to line

Chevali~r

• Lee Embleton G)bbs
• Ethel G. Shasteen

INSIDE
• Ohio military families
divided on Bush's Iraq
speech·, _.. •
See Page AB

.

•

mal news conference at a hotel
ballroom. Bogut was 4uickJy
dismissive.
"!' ve had a bener collegiate
fromPageBl
.career than anyone else !rom
Australia that came over
· playing . alongside Michael here," Bogut said. ''I'm not as
Jordan during the peak of his slow as Luc Longley, I'm
career.
·
· more athletic. lean shoot betOther Australians who made ter, I'm more competitive. So I
it to the NBA, including big think it's not even fair to bring
men Paul Rogers, Chris . that name up."
Anstey and Mark Bradtke and
If Bogut is picked No. l ,
guards Shane Heal and he'll be the tirst center to go
Andrew Gaze, 5;!W very little first overall since Yao Ming in
playing time before abandon- 2002. and the first player from
mg the notion of playing long- a U.S. college to be the No. l
term in the United States.
pick since Keny~n Manin in
Bogut, who described him- 2000 . .
self "proud" to be halfAtlanta chooses second.
Croatian, half-Australian, said with Portland, New Orleans
he wasn't even a fan of any · and Charlotte rounding out the
Australian players when he · top live. Bubcats general manwas growing up 'playing bas- ager Bernie Bickerstaff said
ketball, rugby, soccer and ten- Charlotte could move up to
nis, preferring Croatian guard No. 3 if it agreed ,to package
Drazen .Petrovic as his athletic the fifth and 13th picks in a
deal with the Trail Blazers.
idol.
"Portland has not made a
So when the inevitable
Longley comparisons . were move. and I don't think anythrown at him during an infor- thing gets resolved until

Draft

Ferry

son in Italy before the
Cavaliers acquired his rights
in a trade.
The club dealt rising star
from PageBl
Ron Harper for Ferry and
· Gilbert spoke with several waited an entire season until
finished his contract in
other candidates before he
Italy. Cleveland then · signed
deciding on Ferry, who has Ferry to. a l 0-year; $34 milbeen San Antonio's direcwr lion ciontract, a decision that
of basketball operations made it tough for them to get
under GM R.C. Buford; the other players.
.
past two years.
In Cleveland, Ferry will
The 38-year-old Ferry have some immediate chalplayed in' a club-record 723 lenges as he tries to rebuild
games for the Cavaliers from the Cavs. who faded down
1990-2000.
the stretch last season.
Back in Cleveland, he' ll be'•
When . free agency begins
reuni.ted with first-year on July l. the also have to
coac·h
Mike decide whether to re -sign AllCavaliers
Bro\\;n, who wa&gt; an assis!ant Star
center
Zydrunas
with the Spurs when Ferry llgauskas. who made S 14.6
spent his last three years as a million last season. Feriy and
· player in San Antonio. .
llgauskas are fomier team- ·
However. while Ferry · s IT\ates a·~d have remained
return will plea&gt;e Brown. i"t close 'friend&gt;.
will surely bring back bad
Ferry's top priority in
memories
for
some Cleveland will be building a
Cleveland fans .
team around All-Star forward
An All-American at Duke. LeBron James.
Ferry was ;elected with the
On Friday. Jame&gt; said he
No. 2 overall pick in 1989 by would like to have input into
the Los Angeles Clippers which players are &gt;igned by
But he held out in a contract the Cavalier&gt;. He · men(ioned
dispute ancl played one . sea- guards :'vlichael Redd, Ray

Portland makes · a ·move,"
· Bickerstaff said.
The Hawks are expected to
select North · Carolina fresh- ·
man Marvin Williams, ari athletic small forward who came
off the bench for the Tar Heels.
· "My verti~al (leap) is only
one mch less than Marvin
Williams'," Bogut said. "You
guys call him the 'superfreak'
athletic-wise, so l don't see
why I'm unathletic." ·
Bogut played for Australia
jn the 2004 Olympics, and his
familiarity with the international style of play - and its
emphasis on ball movement ·
over one-on-one moves - 1s
one of the skill sets that appeal
most to NBA pefsonnel directors.
Bogut also said that the
choice between himself and
Williams comes down ·to
experie~ce vs. potential, and
· his background of going up
against the likes of Yao and
Tim Duncan at last summer's
Olympics · has only added. to
his basketball JQ.

'
'
EXTRA. EXTRA.
.

.

Daily Sentinel

Nine-year-old D~rien Diddle is working towards raising $3,000 to cover her expenses to attend
the AAU J~n ior Olympic Games in. New Orleans, July 26 · Aug. 7. The g1rl has . set up varro~s
fundraisers including carniv&lt;;tl games and a bounce house 1n Star Mill park durrng Rac1ne s
.Fourth of July festivities. Diddle will also be selling her custom "flippers ... a cross between a
flip-flop and slipper which she is pictured assembling.

·wEA.mER

Son of
Charles &amp;. Aprjl Roach
Gallipolis

' .

2005.

Complete the fo~ below and.enclose a snapshot or walle.t sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photo'graph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:

The Daily Sentinel

Treatments are usually done
in the early' morning or late
afternoon hours when weathPOMEROY
Meigs er conditions are ideal.
County is one of four target- . Pre-recorded updates on
ed counties in the state of treatment blocks are availOhio which is being treated able to citizens by calling
this month for gypsy moth in 614-0387-0907. The maps of
an effort to slow the spread treatment · blocks can be
o( the destructive insect by viewed at www.ohioagriculdisrupting mating
_ ture.gov by clicking on
The Ohio Department of "gypsy moth." ,
Bv Bt;TH SE.,GENT.
things aren ' t handed to her," different fabrics croc heted Agriculture announced this
LeeAnne Mizer, ODA
BSERGENT~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM said · family
friend Bea onto the shoe. Danen Will week th at a total of I, 118 communications
officer,
Cornell, who is helping . have the games set up at . 1 acres in the New Haven described the gypsy moth as
RACINE - Nine-year-old Darien with fundraising p.m. on July 4 at Star M11l Block which includes areas a , "non-native , invasive
Darien Diddle , daughter of etTorts along with Darien 's Park.
in Sutton Township in Meigs species that has been advancDarien qualified to com- County were treated for the ing
Chris and Gina Diddle of mother; Gina, and grandinto
Ohio
from
Racine, is working her way mothers, Linda Diddle . and pete in three events rn New first time last week. Other Pennsylvania and Michigan
to the Amateur Athletic Sharon McClellan.
Orleans, the rod floor, dou- areas in the process of being over the last several years."
2 SECTIONS - 16 PAGES
Union
Junior
Olympic " So far through donations ble-mini and trampoline.
·are 237 acres in She said in its caterpillar
Calendars
A3 Games on July 26- Aug. 7 in and sandwich sales, Darien Trampoline is Darren's treated
Highland County, 34 acres in stage. it feeds on the leaves
New Orleans.
has raised around $l,OOO fav.orite event and g1ves her Fayette County, and 4.220 of trees and shrubs and is
B4-6
Classifieds
· acres in Delaware County.
First Darien worked her towards the $3 000 price tag an outlet for her energy.
especially fond of oak. "A
way into qualifying for the for her to journ~_Y to·!he AAU
"S he'.s. never ~t ill ." her
The
Meigs
County
area
.
healthy tree can usually
B7 ·games through compet1t1on Junior Olymptcs m New mother G1na sa1d. She loves
Comics
encompasses · State Route withstand only two year~ of
and now she is. financially Orleans.
to compete.:·
.
124 upri ver to Pme Grove defoliation before it is perDear Abby
A3 working her way to the
During Racine's Fol)rth of
. [n tact. rn the year smce Road.
Salser
Road, manently darnaged or dies,"
games in New Orleans July festivities in Star l\1tll Danen has taken up tumbling Bowman ·s Run, Morning she said. To date 43 of Ohio's
Editorials
A4 through fundraising .
Park. Darien will hav~ a at Will Power Tum.blrng rn Star, Oak Grove and ·sur- 88 counties have established
Although family members bounce house and carmval ~all1pohs, she has competed rounding fields. according to gypsy moth populations.
Obituaries
As could financially afford to games like the ring toss and 111 at least ten tumbhn~ coman ODA map.
Mizer said the agriculture
pay for Darien\ expenses, balloon bust to raise money. p~tition s from Flonda to
Each
treatment
involves
department
operates two proB
Sectic;m
Sports
she is working . to ra1se the Darien will also be sellrng Vtrgrnta. She came rn SIXth the use of a low flying air· grams aimed at managing the
AS money herself to be taught · her own creatiqn, a "flipper" place in the nation rn trampo- craft releasing small amount
Weather
responsibility.
shoe that is a cross between a
PI
Oly .
AS
of
pheromone
flakes .
· Please see Moth, AS
"This
is
how
she
learns
flip·
flop
and
a
slipper
w\th
.
ease see
mp1cs, ·
© 2005 Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

""*'""

Child's Name. (s) &amp; Age (s)::·_- - - - - - . . , - - - - - . . . . . . _ ,_ _ _ __ _

At
Famttr tnaw..-, .. llnoW 111M ·- lddcl WIIO lllfow • bill- tMir llloulcler won't .ml
up In the big tMgUH, but tlleJ do lllllllm I ltw IMI-- Ulle
tO llllce ll,'ltdl- How to .ntch the
count. And hoW to owtng lor the IenoN. WMn rou plcly eportt, you don't lu.llllm '-to lie • bell..tl.it I INti« penon. And. I nelworlc of IOfllla dlcllc:lltMto IU liWOik 111Cfllldng _..of
· l*'f*, we're proud to aponeoratlllllll of IIIII!JN· no INIW&lt;wMtdrt.-....,lo 10:c •

I'

City &amp; State:_-:-_:_-----,----:--------~-­
••• The above information will be used in the ad. •• •

WE HUEVE IN THE POWER OF IPOfiT,

J.C.

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HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
.FRIDAY JulY 22. 2005!
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BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSE NTINELCOM

Some play for money. Some play for glory.
.Some play for the occasional trip to the Ice cream ehop.

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Meigs acreage treated.
to contain gypsy moth

INDEX

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

.

up at 9 a.m. at Depot Street,
and all other entries at 9 a.m.
at Meigs Middle School.
Foqq and game bOoths will
open j&lt;~t noon, and local entertainepi will perform from
noon ~ until 2 p.m. Bingo
begin. a~ l p.m: Children's
game , including a balloon
toss and egg race, orgamzed
by th~ Rutland Church of the
Naza'rene, w1l[ begm at 2
p.m. , and prizes will _be
awarded. Karaoke also begms
at 2 p.m. .
Non-food vendors are invited to set up at the park for a
$10 fee. The Big Bend Youth
League will operate a dunking booth, and a Junior Pony
baseball tournament will' be
underway all afternoon.
Sharp . will perform from 7
to II p.m., and a fireworks
display will begin at II and
conclude the day's events .
Questions about the celebration should be directed to
Danny Davis, at 742-2372,
Ray Wilford, 742-2103, or
Todd Kimes at 992-0062.

Racine girl working her
way to Jr. Olympics

The· Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of - local
children - ages newborn to (our
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 29th issue.
Be sure your child,' grandchild,
·or relative is involved!

Tristan Roach

•'

·-

Beth Sercent/ photo

The.

'

Allen and Larry Hughes and
center Eddy Curry as players
he would like to see in
Cleveland.
Ferry is following in the
foot$teps of his father, Bob,
who played l 0 seasons in the .
NBA and was general manager of the Washington
Bullets from 1973' 90. .
Ndw that the Cavaliers
have their new coach and
GM. it's still unclear how
their front office -will be
structured. Cleveland has had
preliminary
talks
with
Detroit coach Larry Brown
about · becoming the club's
president of basketball operations.
The . 64-year-old Brown
said before Game ·7 of the
NBA Finals that he will
check into the Mayo Clinic
on Wednesday. He'll be in
the hospital to- address.a medical problem. that developed
from complications following hip surgery in November
and hasn't improved . .
Brown has said if doctors
say he's healthy enough to
coach that he wants to be
with the Pistons next season.

.

Coming
Friday, July 29,2005
'

ago. Both, alleged victims are
The woman. who was 15 at
now adults. .
the time of the alleged incident
One of those victims testitied . and now a college graduate,
yesterday that she had met the · said Ward's wife and a family
defendant through his future frie nd, · identified as Richard
wife. a distant re lative of the Rathburn. had gone into anothalleged victim. She had stayed er room of the Ward's mobile
with the Wards once prior to home when Ward made his ·
the night in August, 1998. advance .. and that Rathburn
when Ward allegedly served walked back into the living
her strong rum and Pepsi and, room to find both her and Ward
she said. made &gt;exual advances nude from the waist down:.
that ultimately led to their havRathburn. an old schoolmate
ing oral ,sex on the floor of the
Please see 111•1. A5
Ward living room .

. Rutland plans Saturday
· july 4 celebrati9n

OBITUARIES

Tennis

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Agency,
225 Broadway St.
Jackson, OH 45640
(740) 286-4:585
jwood@amfam.com
Mon. - Fri. 9:00
- 5:00

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PageA2

WORLD'

The Daily Sentinel

· PageA3
.
Wednesday, June

The Daily Sentine~

Wed~esday, June 29, 2005

.

29, 2005

"

·U.S. military helicopter crashes during Afghan counterterror operations

:Community Calendar

BY .DANIEL COONEY

Purported
· Taliban
spokesman Mullah Latif
Hakimi called the AP before
KABUL, Afghanistan -A news of the crash was
U.S. CH-47 Chinook trans- released and claimed that the
port helicopter, which a U.S. rebels shot the helicopter
official said may have been down .
carrying 15 to 20 people,- Hakimi often calls · news
crashed Tuesday while ferry- organizations · to . claim
ing reinforcements for coun- responsibility for attacks on
terterrorism operations in behalf of the Taliban. His
eastern Afghanistan. The information has sometimes
Tahban claimed responsibili- pro'ven untrue or exaggerated,
ty.
and his exact tie to the
The fate of those -on board . group's leadership is unclear.
the helicopter, which crashed
The crash was the second of
Chinook helicopter in
near Asadabad in Kunar
province, was not immediate- Afghanistan this year. On
ly known, the U.S. military April 6. 15 U.S. service memsaid. A statement said the bers and three American civilcause of the crash was ians were killed · when their
unclear, as was the number of chopper went down in a sandpeople on board.
storm while returning to the
Other helicopters and ftxed- main U.S. base at Bagram.
wing aircraft were ·deployed ' The U.S. military has
to the site, the military said. launched operations in severU.S , military spokesman Lt. al areas along the border with
Col. Jerry O'Hara had no Pakistan . . Those offensives
other details.
target remnants of a!-Qaida
A U.S. military official said and the hard-line Taliban
early reports received in movement, as ·well .as foreign
Washington indicated 15 to fighters using high mountain
20 people were on board. passes to cross over from
There was no word on their Pakistan.
condition, the official said, ' Tuesday's crash comes after
speaking on condition of three months of unprecedentanonymity
because
it ed fighting that has killed
involved initial operatio~al about -465 suspected insurreports -on the incident. ·
gents,. 29 U.S. troops, 4.3
' Provincial Gov. Asadullah Afghan police , and soldiers,
Wafa. told · The Associated and 125 civilians.
.
Press that the Taliban downed
The violence has left much
the aircraft with a rocket. He of Afghanistan off-limits to
gave no other details.
aid workers and has rem-

HENDERSON , W. Va. - Chesterfield. Va. ~ Nancy
Hall with Hemlock as the and Addie R~ed Blake will gy item s displa yed. An aut:- Descendants of Sam and Birchfie ld of Point Pleasant ,
hosts. All .members urged to be held at noon at the Zion tion will be held &lt;11td those
attend. · '
Church of Christ on Route attending are asked to take Melvina Birchfi eld held thei r Ed Voriso and Dorolhy
Friday, July 1
annual reunion Jul y 26 at the Young of Henderson, Russ.
Saturday, July 2
143" Meat will be furnished, an item for the auction .
TUPPERS PLAINS ·
Henderson
Community Becky, and Jessica Howell of
HARRISONVILLE
the rest of meal potluck.
Eastern Local Board of Harrisonville
Building
m
Hender;on.
W. Bremen. Everett. Charlotte
Lodge F&amp;AM Take pictures and other
Education special meeting, will. meet at 7:30 p.m. a~ the g((nealogy items for display.
Va.
and Mi chael Grant of Racine,
, 8:30 a.m., administrative lodge hall. Refreshments.
A basket dinner was held at Marlin, Debbie and Samuel
RACINE - Reunion of
' offices, to discuss , personnel
the Charle s and Fannie
Wednesday, June 29
noun. Recognized and pre- Evans of Racine , Virgil
· and annual appropriati&lt;;&gt;ns.
Beaver family will be held
POMEROY
-,_ Ju ggler sented· gifts "!ere Leoma Miller. Pam ·and Shayne
Tuesday, July S
at Star Mill Park in Racine. Tom Sparou gh performs \.tt 2 Ballard I'Jf Belle, W.Va., old- bavi s· of Racine. Gary and
RUTLAND
-Rutland
Lunch at 12:30 p.m. Take a . p.m. at P01~eroy. Ltbrary as est woman; Roy Young of Mary
Ann
O ~ borne
~ Township Trustees 5 p.m.
Sunday, July 3
covered dish.
,
. part. of chtldren s summer
Charleston.. W.Va .. oldest McKenzie of Winfield, W,' ·
PORTLAND -Spanis h- ·
Sunday, July 10
readrng program.
· budget hearing, regular
man: Blake Birchfield of Va. , Ron and Dream a Harvey,
language Mass, 6 p.m., Our
POMEROY
Annual
: meeting to follow.
Crown City, youngest boy: Sarah Blankenship. Wes. Gail
Lady- of Guadalupe Mi.ssion reumon of relative s of
Faith Harbour of Proctorville, · and Faith Harbour, all of
at Harris Farms. Mini s'try of Daniel and Phoebe Lovett
yo unge st girl; and Delori s Proctorvill e, Roy Young of
Sacred
Heart
Church, and William and Mary
·Saturday, July 2
Gardner,
San Antonio, Texas, Charleston, Rob Miller of
Pomeroy.
Lovett will be held at I p.m.
REEDSVILLE Faye
Elkview, Leoma Ballard of
at the Zion Church nf Christ, Watson will ce lebrate her traveledthe farthest.
Attending
were
Eugene
and
Belle, Deloris Gardner of San
Friday, July 1
' Route · 143. Some surnames 82nd birthday on Saturday.
POMEROY
- Meigs
include Lovett, Slacks, Bush, July 2. Cards may be sent to Janey Birchfield of Rutland: Antonio. Texas. Jean Smith
County Pomona Grange #46
Saturday, July 9
Boyd, Goldsberry and Riffle. her at 39672 Silver Ridge Ricky and Andrew Birchfield and Glenda of Charleston ,
will · meet in regular session
.POMEROY - The annual Potluck. Pictures will be Road, Reed&gt;ville. Ohio of Groveport : Dave and Randy, Amanda . and Blake
1;30 p.m ., Hemlock Grange reunion of relatives of Edgqr taken. Pictures and genealo- 45772.
Narv rko
Birchfield
of Birchfield of Crown City.

Public meetings

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Other events.

Chijrch events

a

Birthdays · ·

Clubs and
organizations

i

Reunions

Free he~lth
clinic slated
LETART, W.Va. - A free
. health clinic will be held at the
~ Letart Community Building
;-on Thursday from 9 to 11 a.m.
. The community building is on
Sandhill Road at Letart.
Free and open to the public ,
· the clinic will provide screenings for blood ·sugar, oxygen
saturation and blood pressure.
· The screenings are provided
· by Medi Home Health
Agency Inc., skilled nursing
and rehabilitation services.
Lightr refreshments will be
provided,
For information, call (800)
. 481-MEDI, Ruby at(304) 895:· 3382 or Lois at (304) 895-3557.

AP Photo

OhllnO&lt;)k helicopter lands in the Shah-e-Kot mountains, 25 kilometers . (15 miles) southeast of Gardez,
15, 2002 file photo. A u.s: CH-47 Chinook transp9rt helicopter crashed Tuesday while flying troops
Afl~h&lt;mil&gt;t&lt;\h , and the fate of those on board was not immediately known, the military said.
war Iraq.
.
:tion will deteriorate in the next key step toward democAfghan and U.S. officials lead-up to legislative elec- racy after a quarter-century of
in have predicted that the situa- tions in September - the war.

fusion reactor to make clean, safe energy
PARIS (AP) - France was spews greenhouse gases into
chosen Tuesday as the home the Earth's atmosphere and
for an experimental $13 billion trap the su'n's heat. Oil supplies
nuclear fusion project &gt;cien- are expected to begin running
tists say will produce a bound- short in about 50 years.
less source of clean and c~eap
As a replace-ment, fusion
energy.
would produce. much more
A consortium of United energy than fission, while
• States, the European UAion, leaving behind small amounts
China, Russia, Japan had been of relatively harmless waste ·
divided over whetherto put the and posing no danger of a
test reactor in France or Japan, nuclear melidown .
and competition was intense.
France's Greens and other
The U.S. had fav&lt;;&gt;red placing environmentalist
groups
the plant in Japan. At stake was argue, however, that the fusion
billions of dollars for research, project will turn the focus ·
construction and engineering. away from the immediate need
The threat of global warm- to fight global warmjilg.
ing has brought nuclear power
"This is not good news for ·
- currently available only the fight against the greenthrough fission and long out of house effect, because we're
favor - back to the forefront. going to put.$13 billion toward
as a way of generating energy . a project that has a term of 3Dbecause it creates no so-called 50 years, when we're not even
greenhouse gases, a cause of sure it will be effective,"
.
. · AP Photo
global warming,
.
Greens party lawmaker Noel The entrance of the Atom ic Energy Commissariat (CEA) In Cadarache, southern France. AsixNuclear fission- with heat Mamere said on France-Info party consortium on Tuesday chose Cadarache as the site for International Thermonuclear
as a byproduct. occurs when radio.
Experimental Reactor (ITER). The experimental nuclear reactor lnten.ds to show that nuclear
heavy atoms such as those of
But · State Department fus ion can wean the world off pollution-producing fossi l fuels.
uranium or plutonium are split spokesman Tom Casey said ,
But the process leaves behind the United States was pleased create 10,000 jobs and ' take vision . of 1he International take decades.
Thermonuclear Experimental
Cadarache, in the southern
highly radioactive waste, and the sides had agreed on a si.te. about eight years to.build.
But fulfilling the long-term Reactor, as it is called, could region of Provence, was ~hothe reactors can catastrophi- "Now the six partners will
cally melt down.
work together to resolve the
Harnessing fusion as an other various technical and
energy sourc.e has long been a legal questions that exist so we
dream of physicists because it can move forward on this critiwould ~&gt;\! safer, c'leaner and cally important energy experi·•
cheaper - using natorally ment," he said.
·abundant hydrogen as an enerParticipants will now negogy source.
tiate the construction details
The major source of energy and sign
final agreement,
right now, the burning of fossil hopefully by year's end.
··
fuels sucb as coal and oil,
The project is expected to

sen during talks in .Moscow
after Japan , which had sought
the project, reportedly backed
down, agreeing instead to a
bigger role in research and
operations.
If all g0es well with the
experimental reactor, official s ·
hope to set up a demonstration
power plant in Cadarache
.around 2040. Officials project
that as much as 20 percent of
the world's energy could come
from fusion by the century's
end, said Raymond L Orbach,
the . U.S. Department of
Energ)i's office of science
director.
. President Jacques Chirac
called the decision "a great
success for France, for Europe
and for all of the partners" in
the project
"The international community will now be able to take on
an unprecedented scientific
and technological challenge,
which opens · great' hopes for
providing humanity with an
energy that has no impact on ,
the environment and 'is practically i!Jexhaustible," he said.

Italy wants to extradite CIA officials
in kidnapping of terror suspect

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.Ebersbach announce birth Dr. Allen to spe~k at Middleport church
SYRACUSE - Chns and
., Aimee
Ebersbach
of
.
h
b'
Mad tson announce t e Inh
9f thetr first ch~ld, a daughter, Madelyn Ehzabeth, born
June _16 at_Geauga Regtonal
Hospttal tn Chardon. She
wetghed 7 pounds, 7 ounces.
Grandparents are Ro~er .
.and EdHh Manuel of Racme
and Larry
and Sally
Ebersbach of Syracuse.
Great-grandparents
are
Carrie Roush and the late
Lester
Roush,
Gloria
Manuel and the late Max
Manuel, Jr. and the late
Ottie and Edna Roui sh and
the late Howa~d and • Ruth
Ebers bach.

.

..

DEAR ABBY: My ex-~us­
. band, "Greg," is being mar': ried in the fall to a wonderful
'" woman I have come to regard
· as a friend . ."Marla" is good
, to my two little boys, She
. pays their child support on
. time, attends every one of
their school functions .and
. sporting events, and loves
: them like they're her qwn.
I'm wondering if I should
try to convince Marla no' to
· marry Greg because he is
very abusive. He has had'
problems with the law and
'·was extremely violent during
our marriage. I have the pic. lures to prov.e it. He even beat
, up my mother one time.
Members of Greg's family
have told me he 's already
. showing signs of being abusive to Marla. Should I voice
' my fears to her, or just be
··thankful there's someone
there that 1 can trust with my
boys? - TROUBLED IN
NEW JERSEY
DEAR
TROUBLED:
· :Listen to your conscience and
·tell her what she could be in
; for. Don't be heavy-handed
~: about it. Just arrimge a private
~- get-together and tell her you
: would hate to see what hap-..
, pened to you happen to her.
:. Then take out the pictures
:·and show them to her. If the
-: spousal abuse is mentioned in
::your divorce papers, share
:: that with her, too. After that,
: the decision is hers.
DEAR ABBY: I don't drink
: .and neither does my family.
:My fiartce drinks on occa.sion, as does the rest of his
:family.' We are being married
:in September, and I'm having
, a problem with the alcohol
' issue.
: Abby, I don't want booze at
:. my wedding. I have agreed to
:: serve wine or champagne, b\lt
:: his f31JliiY says nobody wants
, to drink just that, and that a
: wedding ,s no fun unless peo: pie are getting a buzz. l want
. my special day to be memorable, not an excuse for people to get drunk and pass out.
My father says if they want
to drink hard liquor, they ·can
·. have an 'after-party at their
· house , They already plan to
. do it, but they still insist that
~ the WI!Qding won't be any fun
:: without booze. I have 2 1/2 ·
:: months before the wedding,
::and l'm beginning to have
·· second thoughts about going
:: through with it. · Your
:· thoughts, please. - SO~ER
: BRIDE, BRANOON., FLA.
· • DEAR SOBER: lf sobri: :ety is important to you, you
:: must realize that af!er. your
:· wedding you will be joining
· a family with a very .differ: ent point of view from -¥OUr
· own. That difference will be
: apparent during every farni&gt;ly visit and celebration.
:People who , can't "have

Dear
Abby

fun" without drinking are
alcohol-dependent, and you
cannot change them, It's
time to have a serious talk
with your fiance about it,
because this is an issue that

.
.
Church of Chnst at both tAe
8:15 and 10:30 a.m services
on Sunday. July 3.
Allen who was the pulpit
minister at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ from 1969
to 1973 and directed activities
·at the Ohio Valley Christian
. Assembly, i~ now full-time
executive director with the
. KYOWVA
Evangelistic
Associaton. He and his wife,

. .
.
Shara, restde 10 Ironton
The KYOWVA Assocation
represents the three states of
the tri-state area and provides
service to churches in the
area. Emphasis is on begiti·ning new congregatoins,
gaining financial support for
evangelists. and enrolling
people in Bible correspoQ. dence course 'programs here
and ~broad .

NOTIC!; IO PUBLIC OF A FINDING OF NO
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT
(FONSI) COMBINED NOTICE

Madelyn Elizabeth
Ebersbach

MIDDLEPORT
Dr.
Hoyt W. Allen, Jr. will be
preaching at the Middleport

June 29. ZQQ5
Village Qf Bacine

could drive a serious wedge
between you .
CONFIDENTIAL TO MY
READERS : If you're looking
for the "pum-fect" gift for ·
the cat lover in your life, 1
have the item. It's a fascinating, beautifully· illustrated
history of human-feline relationships, start ing with cats'
exalted status · among the
ancients as royal or sacred
beings. The author is pioneer
foreign correspondent, expert
in international affairs and
passionate cat-lover Georgie
Anne ·Geyer, ~ho travel,ed
through the Mtddl~ and Far

East to research the ongms
and characteristics of the 41
recognized
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Cats Reigned Like Kings"
(Andrews
McMeel
Publishing , ·
$24.95).
Available in bookstores, it's
truly an "a-meow-sing" read!
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

.

Ohio Department of Qey"e!opment

4Q5 Maio

·Ex-husband's future bride must know his abusive past

a

ROME (AP) - Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi's
prosecutors want to extradite government' will respond in
13 CIA officials accused of parliament Thursday to their
kidnapping a radical Muslim demands to know whether
cleric and transporting him to ltaJian officials were involved.
Egypt where he repsrtedly , "It appear's to be the most
was · tortured, and they've serious violation of national
asked Interpol to help track sovereignty in the history of
down the Americans, a court the republic," said opposition
official said Tuesday.
deputy Marco Minniti .
A m·a:n. identified as the for-· Court offieials said they had
mer CIA station 'chief in no evidence·of Italian involveMilan is among the 13, ment, but Vince Cannistraro, a
according to a report by the former leading counterterrorjudge who issued the arrest ism official in the CIA, said he
warrants. The. American was doubted the U.S. government
traced by cell phone records would launch such an operato ·Egypt in the days after4he tion in an allied country withabduction when the cleric was out coordinating first with the
· "likely undergoing the first"· government.
rounds of torture, according to
"No question," he told AP
the report obtained by The in Washington, adding the
Associated Press.
·
government may · look the
The Egyptian preacher was othe,r way. as happened in
, snatched in 2003, purportedly Sweden when two suspected
as part of the CIA's "extraordi- Islamic terrorists were handnary rendition" program in ed over to Americans.
which terror suspects are transProsecutors have asked "the
ferred to third countries with- help of ,Interpol in tracing the
out court approval, subjecting suspects, all identified as U.S.
them to possible ill rreatment. citizens, said the court official •
The order for the arrests in who asked that his name not be
the transfer of the cleric - used because the investigation is
made public last Friday - was still under way. The Milan prosa rare public objection to the ecutor's oftice, in announcing
·practice by a close American the arrests last week, also said it
ally in its war on terrorism.
would ask tor American and
The leftist ·opposition
said
Egyptian
assistance in . the case . .
'
'

Birchfield family has reunion

I'

~Bree!

P 0 Box 399 Racjne Ohjo 45771
Tela: 740-949-2296

'

To AI\ Interested Persons, Age.n~i·es, and GroUps:
The vmage ot Bacjne, p'roPoses to request the State of Qhio to re lease
Federal funds under Section t 04 (g) of litle 1 of the Housing and
Community ' D~velopment Act of 1974, as amended) Section 288 of Tille
11 of the Cranston Gonzales National Affordable Housing Act (NAHA); as
arnended; and/or Title IV 6f the Stewart 8 . McKinney Homeless
As sislance Act , as amended ; to be used for the following project(s) .

BIU:iim~ Wabu I~Bllmtol Eluot urid Wg,~r 61Qraga Tank Er2i~;
. B~P:Ia~tmint Qf wattle tr:~atmeot
wattn 1t2ruga Wok. und

'*'"'·

wmer11111 and drill log mn1 wen
SQurct Qf Etd~UII Eumlt; 'CDBtt ABC, Stalt 101.1 Irl!iHII AIIII.IIO't
Gram
Ihg QUtRQit Qf lbt Q:rQj~t it tQ n!RII~Ilbtlaed IDd deta[igrat.log
WiUir I[UtmtDl RIDDIIDd Will[ llQrl!gt IIDk. lft):!Dg of MW
wut1rllot and drilling D§W Will. ·
Ibis i1 D S!ngl~ YiUU Pn211~
.
L~ill!:d in Bacloe ~111191 MttiSII C~::u.mb. Oblg
$1,759,900

It has been determined that Such Reque st for Release of Funds will not
constitute an action significantly affecting the quality of human
environment and accordingly the Villaoe of Racine Meigs County has
decided not to prepar~ an. Environmental Impact Statement under the
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as arpended.
Environmental Review Record (ERR) tor the Project listed above has
been conducted by the Village of Racine . The ERR document the envi·
romental review of the project and,more fully sets forth the reasons why
such statement is not required . The ERA are on file and available for
the public's examination and copying, upon request, betweer) the hours
ot 10:00 a.m. to ll:.QQ.p.m. Monday lhrough Saturday (except holidays)
at: .
Meigs Library-Racine Branch
210 Tyree Blvd ., Racine, Ohio 45771
No further environmental rev iew of such project is proposed to be
conducted, prior to the request for release of Federal funds .
The VIllage of Racine plans to undertake the projeCt(s) described with
the Federal funds cites above. Any inter9sted person , agencies . anO/or
groups, who have any comments regard ing the environment or who
disagree with this Finding of No Significant Impact decision, are invited
to submit written comments of consideration to the Village of Racine at
the a~dress above listed by 4:00p.m. on July 22, 2005 which is at least
15 days .after the publication of this combined notice. A notice regarding
the responsible entity's intent to reques·t release of funds is listed
immediately below.
NOTICE OF INTENT To REQUEST A RELEASE OF FUNDS
(NOIIRROF)

'

To AI! Interested Persons . Agencies, and Groups:

Is your 5core card full of high numbers? When it comes to cardiac scoring, higher numbers
are definitely not par for the course and may be in,dic3tors of serious health prob'lems.
Car4iac scoring is O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's late$t addition ro CT scanning
technology. This test for coronary anery disease measures the amount of calcification rn
· the aneries of the heart'. It can help detern1ine whether or not-heart disease·is present
long bef9re recognizable symptoms develop. This non-mvasive test is painless and takes
only a few minutes.
·
·
Candidates for,cardiac scoring examinations are over age 40 and have one or more of
the following risk factors for hean disease: ·
, o High

blood pressure
•
• High LDL or total cholesterol
o Family history of he an disease
• Sedentary lifestyle

•Obesity
o High stress !eveIs
• History of smoking
•Diabetes

Call (740) 59Z-9483 Monday through Friday between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. for more
infonnarion or to schedule ·. cardiac. scoring examination, Physician referral
is not required.
.

are

Cardiac scoring examinations performed at O'Bieness' Radiology.and Medical Imaging
depanmem at the Castrop Center in the O'Bleness Medical Park. Our.qua lifted staff ,
invites you to take a closer look at advanced diagnostic imaging as we meas ure progress
in community health -one patient at a time.
·

-

O'BLENESS

. Memorial H...-jntal

~~~~ .

····· -···· ~~-·--~~··~____...... -~~- -~--- ·- ---- -····- - - ...
...

The Village of Rru;ine is certifying to the State of Ollio. that Village•of
Racine and J. Scott Hill in his official 'capaciry as Mayor, consent to
accept the jurisdiction of Fede,ral courts d an action is brought to enf9rce
responsibilities in relation to e~vironmental reviews, decision making ,
8nd action; and that these responsibilities have been satlsf~ .
The State of Otllo wtll accept an obt«1fon torts awnwal ot the rele;lSEI of h.t'ld and acceptance

.

'

On or abOut , but no1 before, July 25, 2005, the Village or Racine, will
requestltle State ot Ohio to release Federal funds under Sectioo 104 (Q)
of Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of t974 , as
amended; Section 288 of Title II of the Cranston Gonzales National
Affordable Housing Act (NAHA), as amended; and/or Title IV of the
Stewart 8. McKinney. Homeless Assistance Act, as amended; to be used
tor the project(s) list~d above.

ot the c8rt•fic:;rt104"1 onty If 11 ts on Ol14t olltle followng ground!!. {a) .W ceMrncatiOn was 1'101. tn fact .
eJCecuted by tne responsible eomY ·s Certlfytr1lij Offit:e , (b) lti8 ~ .mty has la•led !o
make one of th@ t.o tndngs pursuant to Secbon 58 40 or to makA lhe wnnen detetmtnBtiOil
raqutred by seci10n sa.35. 58.47. or 58.53 lor me Dtoteet. as applicable , c) !her~ emily
has omrtted one or mor411 of 1M step6 set forth at subpart E of 24 CFR Part 58 lor the preparanon.
pubhcatJon and c:cJm1llet1011 of.,., EnwonmMtaJ~- d) IN ~ en'lft'r' has
omitted one or more ol the srec- set form at Subpiiirts F and G of 24 CFR P;an sa 1o&lt; the
conduct. preparallcw,, publtcabon Clnd completion of Cli'ld Environmental Impact Statement el !he
r8ctp1Mlt

n.u commrtted lul'ldll o( inct.tnecl Cosr no1 autttonzed boJ 2ot CF~ P,art 58 before release

of hnJs and approval of !he lilmttroomeotill certtticabon by State, or f) anot11er federal agency

actipg pursuant 1o 40 CFA Part 1504 ~!I submttted a wrrtten Flndtng: 1t'lal the protee1
unsansfactOf)' from. me stanOpolm

$

ot env1ronmePtaJ quality.

WriHen Objections must be pr~pared ar:ld submiHed in accordance with
the required procedure.(24 CFR Part 58), and must be addressed to the·
State of Ohio ; Environmental Officer: Office Of Housing and Community
Partrierships ; P.O. Box 1001 ; Columbus, Oh1o 43216-1001 .
Objectkms to the Release of Funds on bases other than thoSe sta!ed.
above will not be considered by the State of Ohio . No o1Jject1011s
received after August 15 2005. (whtch ts 15 days after tt is antiCipated
that the State will rece1ve a request for release of funds), Will be
coosidered by ltle State of Ohio.
'
The a.d dress crl the certifying officer tS.
J. Sc!lll IIIII. Mav!!£
~n~aaa

mFlaciDI

405 Mwjn 5trnt. p,o. Box 399. f!acjDI O!riq 45U1
'

•

�I

•

.'

OPINION
'

By now. you've no doubt
run into "The Truth About
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
Hillary" (Penguin , 2005).
www.mydallysentll)_!'l.com
the gossipy book by a former
New York Times man who
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
has the kind of credentials
that niake a fella welconw at
. 1 ·. Jim Freeland
all · the finest Gotham ceckI ._ ,.
p
bl'
h
· ·u IS er titil' parties.
.
The .book. paints an ~mila(. · qharlene Hoeflich
t~ring portrait of the former
General anager-News Editor
first lady, · who . author
Edward Klein described to
me as "the most fascinating
woman in America."
Ctmgress shall r ake no law respecting an
As it happens, during the
course of the "The Truth" establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
which is more "In Touch"
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
weekly than " New York
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
Times" _.:, Klein talks a bit
sex (which has been'
.
about
people peaceably to assemble, artd to petition ·
the topic of only walk-away
the Government for a redr~ss of gr,evanc~s.
headlines from 'the booli:).
And for this, the Cli!ltOn&gt;
, -The First.A111endment to the U.S. Constitution . ' - Bill and Hill -. can be
grateful.
Ironically. much ink has
been used (or keys pounded)
accusing conservatives for
flacking the book (who on
· Tllday is Wednesday, June 29, the I 80th day of 2005. There
the whole, aren't). The truth
'"c 1g5 days left in the year.
about "The Truth" is: It's a
'l(lday·s Highlight in History: ·
1
good th'ing for the Clinton
On June 29, 1776, the Virginia state constitution was · adop~·
cd. and Patrick Henry made governor.
·
Legacy PatroL The ad\lan·On this date:tage for the Clintons in the
1n 1949, the government of South Africa enacted a ban
Klein job is one for the his·
against racially mixed marriages.
·
,.
tory books: It helps. perpetuIn 1966, the United States bombed fuel storage_facilities i
ate the long-standing myth
11car the North Vietnamese cities of Hanoi and Haiphong.
,
that the Bill Clinton
In 1967, Jerusalem was re-unified as Israel removed barri.
impeach111ent trial was ' all
cades separating the Old City from the Israeli sector.
about sex.
In 1970, the United States ended a two-month military
lt wasn't.
offensive into Cambodia.
Back around i994, an
In 1972. the Supreme Court ruled the death penalty, as it
independent counsel was
was being meted out, could constitute "cruel and unusual punappointed
by Bill Clinton's
i,h ment.'' (The ruling prompted states to revise their capital
attorney general . (Janet
punishment .laws.)
·
Reno. not Ann Coulter) to
In 1992. a divided Supreme Court ruled that women have a
investigate a land d'eiil that
constitutional right to abortion, but the justices also weakened
went
awrv. That same attar·
the right as defined by the Roe v. Wade decision.
ney
general
would then ask a
· · In 2003, actress Katharine Herburn, one of the last stars
court to expand .the invesli·
from Hollywqod 's Golden Age, dted in Old Saybrook, Conn.,
gation to encompass a sexuat age 96.
'
a! · harassment suit t1led by
Ten years ago: The shuttle Atlantis and the space statim\ Mir
one Paula Jones.
do&lt;.:ked in orbit. A department store in Seoul, South Korea,
Maybe you recall, too, the
collapsed, killing at least 500 people. Actress Lana Turner
died in Century City, Calif., at age 74.
Five years ago: An overloaded ship carrying almost 500
people, many fleeing .s ectarian violence in Indonesia's
Malu ku islands. sank, killing all but 10 known survivors.
President Clinton nominated former Congressman Norman
M i neta to lead the Commerce Department and become the
fi rst Asian-American Cabinet secretary. Actor Vittorio
Gassman died in Rome at age 77.
·
One year ago: A United Nations helicopter crashed in Sierra
Leone. killing all 24 peacekeepers, aid· workers and others Qn
hoard. The Supreme Court blocked 'a law mearit to shield
Web-surfing children from online pornography. Randy
Jo hnson of the Arizona Diamondbacks -became the fourth
pitcher to record 4,000 career strikeouts (however, his team
. lost to the San Diego Padres, 3-2).
·
Today's Birthdays: Movie rroducer Robert Evans is 75.
Songwriter L. Russell Brown ts 65. Actor Gary Busey is 61.
Comedian Richard Lewis is 58. Actor Fred Grandy is 57.
· Rock musician lan Paice (Deep Purple) is 57. Singer Don
Dokken (Dokken) is 52. · Rock sinjlel' Colin Hay (Men At
Work) is 52. Actress Maria Conchita Alonso. is 48. Singer
Evelyn "Champagne" King is 45. Actress Sharon Lawrence is
44. Actress Amanda Donohoe is 43. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Stedman Pearson (Five Star) is 41. Musician Dale Baker is 39.
Rap D.J. Shadow is 33. Country musi9ian Todd Sansom
(Marshall Dyllon) is. 27. Singer Nicole Scherzinger (Eden's
Crush) is 27.
Thought for Today: "These_are times in which a genius
would wish to live. It is not in the still calm of life, or the
repose of a pacific station, that great characters are formed ...
Great necessities call out great virtues." - Abigail Adams,
· ·
American first lady ( 1744- 1818).
· 11 1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

T ODAY IN HISTORY

•

Letters t6 the editor are welco/'11€. They should be less than
300 wor&lt;}s. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed.
and include_address and telephone number. No unsigned let·
ters will be published, Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues. not personalities. Lerter's of thanks to organi:utimrs and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
correction POt ley

, Our main concern in a)! stories is

accurate : if you knoW

of an

to be

errof in a

stol'y, ca ll the newsroom at (740) 992-

2156

I

Departmente~ns~saN :

I

News. .

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed. Ext. 14

Reporter: Bettl Sergent, E.d. 13

1

Advertising
.
1Outside Sales:
Dave Harris , EJII1. 15
' I OutSide Sal~·- erenda Davis, Ext 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10

Circulation
District Mgr.: Jason Patterson, Ext 17
I

Gene.ral Manager
Charlene HoeMich . E.111t, 12

E·mall:
news@rnydaJtysentJnel com

..

(USPS 213-96ill
·Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.

Published wvery afternoon, Monday

through

Friday,

111

Court

Street,

Pomerov. Ohio. Second-class postage

paid at Pomeroy.

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.

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Member: The Associated PrE16S and the
Of'llo Newspaper AssociatiOn.
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to The Daily Sentinel. 1 t 1 Court Street.

Pomerov. Ohio 45769.

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_PageA4
Wednesday, June 29, 2005

,

,

I

ONE

MORE ...
THOU SHALT
NOT PICK
SOME BUM
_FOR THE

SUPRfME
COURT.

The 'Daily Sentinel • Page As

Local Briefs
.

a

·Ariel offering
dance classes

al niece ' and nc.phews and host of friends all who were 'Pecwl to hun .
Funeral serv1ces will be held at I p.m. on Saturday. Jul y 2.
2005 at the Foglesong· Tucker Funeral Home . The Rev. Jack
Maye,. Maney M:~ye s and Bobby Woods will officiate and burial will be in Union Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6 10 9 p.m. on Friday, July I, 2005 .
_E-Mai l condolences to the family may be sent to foglesong·
tucker@myway.com

MINOT.N .D. - Lynette Morris Randolph. 49. of 7300 89th
St. SE. Mmot. N.D.. died on Thursday. June 16, 2005. at a
Minot hospital.
Lynette was born April 5, 1956. in Grand Forks. N.D .. to
Lowell "Bud" and La Von Schlcske Morris. She was raised and
educated in Minot. graduated from Minot High School in 1974,
and fwm Minot .State University. with. a degree in education in
1978. She continued her education at North Dakota State
University and Bemidji. State Colleg~. Lynette begun her-tach. mg .and · coachmg career at Nekoma. N,D.. and tau ght at
:Boyceville, W1sc. Htgh School and Bishop Ryan Hi oh Scheol
PATASKALA - · Darrell Promis Chevalier. ]7. of Pataskala.
tn Mmot. At the .time of her death, she 1~as Youth Recreation . passed awily at Mt . Carmel East Hospital on June 28. 2005.
Coordinator at Minot Air Force Base.
He was born 10 the late Vird and Audra (Osborn ) Chevalier
Lynette married D.J . Randolph . formerly of Long Bottom. un on Scpt. .l 0. 1927 in Success, Ohio, Meigs'County, and retired
Dec . 13, -1997. at Augustana Lutheran Church in Minot. They after 44 years with Lennoxiridustries.
·
made their home in Minot prior to moving to Logan, N.D.
He is survived by his wife of 58 years Nola J. (Ritchie)
Lynette was a well -known athlete and coach in Minot. coach- Che\'alier. son and dau ghter - in-law Darrell L. and Pamel a
·· ing a vari ety of sports at Minai High School. Bi shQp Ryan High Chevalier of Pataskala, daughter and son-in-law Denise and
School and many other programs, and was a star athlete in soft· Donald Martin of Alexandria. ·brother Ralph (Betty) Chevalier
ball and basketball. She was inducted into the Minot High of Belpre, sisters Dori s (Roland) Eastman of Coolville. He le n
School Athlet1c Hall of Fame in 2002.
IA.dri•ul) _ Robert s of Whitehall, grandchildren Mimhew
Lynette loved her ·family, friemls, country li ving at the Chevalier of Michigan. Amanda and Jason Chevalier of
Ran.dolph Ranch and the simple things in life . Her loving fam: Pataskala, Derek , Dustin, Dayna Martin of Alexandria, great
tly mcludes her parents: her husband, Dorsel ''D.J .' ' Randolph grandson Colin Matthew Chevalierof Michigan , many niec.es
of Minot: her mother-in-law anu father-in-law,- Rosemary and · and nephews.
.
. Dorsel Randolph or Long Bottom: her sisters: LtiAnn (Randy)
He '"' pre~:eded in death by brothers Cordon and Ernest
. Mtller ot Btsmark. N.D. &lt;md LaRene (Chad) Ebel of Hudson, Chevalier. Friends may call at Kauber-Miller Funeral Home,
Colo.; a niece, Brianna Ebel of Hudson, Colo.: a nephew. Grant Pataskala on Friday. July I, 2005 from 2 tc:1 8 p,m . Masonic
Ebel of Hudson. Colo.: and puppies : Drifter, Yokon and &gt;ervice will be held at 7p.m .. Friday. Funeral service s will be
Cookte .
· "'' ·
·
held on Saturday at I0:30 a.m. at the funeral home with Rev.
She was rreceded !n death by her grandparents. Fay and Jame s McCormack officiating : Burial will be in the Pataskala
Bumts Moms and Alfred and Jenme Schleske. Ce!lletcry.
An online _ memory will be located . at
Service~ were held on June 20. 2005 at Augustana Lutheran www.NationaiObituayArchive.com.
Church in Minot and interment follow ed at Holy· Cross
·
Cymetery in Velva, N.D. ·.
Visitation was noon to 5 p.m. on June 26 at Thomas Family
Funeral Home. ·Memorial s are preferred to the Dollars for
RACINE - Shirley A.
Scholars Program in Velva. N.D.
Ingel s Williams 59 of Racine,
formerly of Marien~. passed
away on Tllesday June 28, 2005
at Charleston Area Medical
LETART, W.Va. - Oris G.
Center after a short illness.
Bumgarner, I00, of Letart, W.
She was born Augu ~t 15,
Va., who has been residing at
1945 in Mason, W.Va. the
Pleasant Valley Nursing and
daughter of the late Thomas
· ·Rehabilitaton Center, died
and Goldie John son Ingel s.
Tuesday, June 28, 2005 at
She was also preceded in death
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
by her hu sband Donald E.
Born in the Union
Williams Sr. March I0, 1992.
Coinmuni.ty on April 6, 19()5,
She was a ·member of the ·
Mr. Bumgarner, who' was
Mount Moriah Church of God ,
recently recognized on the
a graduate of Wahama High .
Today Show, was the son of the
School and she · retired as a
late Taylor and Sarah Hoffman
clerk from the Marietta Super 8
Bumgarner. He was a dairy
Motel in 1995.
· farmer, timber cutter and log
She is survived by two sons,
hauler, and 'scool bus driver for
Donald E. (Carol) Williams Jr. of Shirley A. Ingels Williams
Mason County Schools. He
Marietta, Christopher D: (Kristi)
Williams of Winfield, W.Va.: two daughters, Amy·B. Williams
was a lifelong member of the
Oris G. Bumgarner
Union
United
Methodist
of Alum Creek, W.Va ., Nicole D. (Jason) Vannoy of Marietta;
Church . .
.
four sisters: Hedy Laudermilt of Racine, Patti Laudermilt of
He was 'preceded in death by his wife. Nellie Tripp Mason, W.Va., Kathy (Rhea) Farr of Mason, W.Va., and Vonda
Bumgamer. who passed away Jan . 29, 2005; brothers, John Kay Garnes of Pomeroy; a brother, Tom lngt;ls of New Haven,
Bumgarner and Ottie Bumgarner: sisters, Mabel Bumgarrier. W Va., · eight grandchildren, Kelby, Caitlyn. De sean, Haley,
Tyllie Roush, Millie Buipgarner and Edna Roush.
.
Trenton, Brittany, Tucker and Colson. and seveal nieces and
.He is survived by daughter and son-in-law, Lois and Kenneth nephews.
Wyant of Pomeroy: son al)d daughter-in-law, James and
Services will be at 2 p.m. Friday, July I, 2005 at Fisher
Connie Bumgarner of Letan, W.Va.; grandchildren, Kenneth, Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. James Satterfield officiat. Jr (Clara) Wyant of Parma, Ohio, Timothy (Carla) Wyant of ing . Burial will follow in Odd Fellows Cemetery in Mason,
Rutland ,Roger (Vickie) Bu111gamer, Ryan Bumgarner, Rodney W.Va. Friends may call Thursday from 5 to 9 p.m. at the funer(Lisa) Bumgarner all of Letan. W.Va. ; great .graildchildren, al home.
Aaron and Amanda Wyant, Valerie Lieving , Vanessa, Phillip,
Online condolences may be -sent to www.fisherfuneralSara, Brady and Bailee ·Bumgarner all of Letan, W.Va.; sever- homes'.com.

GALLIPOLis Ariel
Theatre will be ofkring
dance classes with Sara'h
Frase r-Roush beginning Jul y
5-6. .
.
.
Vapou s dance . cla sses w1fl
be scheduled !rom I0 a.m.
through. 4 p.m . on Tuesdays'
and Wedne sdays. Classes are
available for all boy s and
girls ages three throu gh adult .
Open. registration will be
held at The Ariel Theatre on
Saturday, 1Lrly -2 from noon to
3 ·p.m . For more information.
contact The Ariel Theatre at
740A46·A RTS (446-2787) .

Darrell.Promis Chevalier

Childbirth
classes
annQu•1ced
GALLIPOLIS - A preparation for childbirth class will
be held at the Holzer Medical
Center on Sunday. Jul y 3
. from 2 to 6 p.m. ·in the
Education and Conference

Shirley A. ln$els Williams

•· Ons G. Bumgamer

Lee Embleton (iibbs

way. Loc;lte the mass of time, replace the spool cap
weeds and plastic string that by holding the cap in your
is jamming the spool !II the . right hand, the stripg in your
bottom of the string trinimer. left hand while holding the
Try to loosen the giant, string trimmer s(eady with
twisted knot of hot plastic · your third hand .
. Jim
with your firige,s . After tear"Reftll the string trimmer
Mullen
ing off a few fingernails, with a new mixture of gas
stomp into the house and get and .oil. You will know when
a pair of gloves. That won't it is full when the mixture
.
_
work either, so after about bubbles 01.11 of the string
"Sick of
, t_Ire d_· Ioo kmg . 15 minutes with no progress, trimmer and onto your n_ew
du! I grass · With the Grass . set down the string tri,mmer flags.tone (latio. Throw some
. Buffer you can pohsh your spilling more gas and oil on kitty litter on that and clean
grass to an unearthly shme the porch you just pressure- it up when you 'finish string
that wtll be the· envy of your washed St
b k . 'de
trimming. It will ·never get .
··
hbo
·
D
1
·
h
·
.
omp
netg
rs. o you ove t e and find 3. . . 0 f acr mst
T
out
the stain, but at least no
feel of slow, noisy, unreli- ·
-_ patr P ters. . ry
able lawn equipment? The to_. loosen th~ obstruction one will slip on il.
"Did we tell you to replace
.
Grass Buffer 's for you' Feel w~~h them.
Dtd we menuon the_y that screw that holds on the
superior. get one today I"
Of course. as anyone with sho?uld be needle-nose pli- spool cap? OK, repeat steps
a string trimmer knows, you ~rs . Go back m the house I through 13 and replace the
spend precious 1ittle of your and get needle-nose_ phers, spool cap screw, No. 1.4. No,
weed wac king time wacking tdlOt When those fat I to do we don't know what you did
weeds. You spend most of it the JOb, remove the outer with it. Maybe it's over there
trying to get more string to spool covenng and rewmd by the electric leaf blower
cume out of the string trim- 40 feet of green plastic you never use because it
string. Try it a few times. only has a two-foot long
·mer.
· "Gent.ly tap the ·string No.t like that, like this. power cord. We invented
spool head on a hard surface You've go..t it absolutely · that, too. Pretty nifty, huhT' '
to feed. out more string auto- backwards. Yes, it 's very
It's time for a break. lf I
matically," say the instruc- frustrating. but should you could·.only fmd that electric
tions that came ·with my be saying things like . that Martini shaker.
.
model. Those instructions where everyone can hear
(Jim Mullen is the author
were .boiled down from the you?
of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
ori ginal, which said:
"Wipe the sweat off your Complicating the . Simple
"Turn string trimmer forehead leaving a nasty, ·Life " and "Baby 's First
upside down. causing it to greasy streak on . your face . Tattoo. " You can reach him
spill a smell y mixture ·of oil• After winding the string a
t
and gas all over your drive- around the base for the fifth · - jim_mulltn@myway.c~m.)

www .mydailysentinel.com

·Obituaries

Deaths

It's a wacky, wacky, wacky world

Who was the fool that
invented the .weed wacker?
· What kind of sick, twisted
mind does it take to think up
a labor-causing device?
Would .. anyone r~aJiy trim
around their trees and
garages if they had to do it
by hand? Most people would
let it slide. And face it, if
you've got a rusted-out, -'83
Ford up on blocks ori your
front lawn .. will weed wack·
. ing around it make that
much of a difference? So let
me just say three words to all
ypu young inventors out
there -laborsaving devices
·- got it?
I'm against this mania for
wacking weed~. What have
they ever done to me'
They 're easy to grow and
they don ' t need fertilizer.
Who wouldn ' t want some-,
thing like that? My wife,
Sue, for one . . Most of my
· neat-freak neighbdrs for
two.' As' if I have nothing
. better to do than ·go around
making sure there are no tall
weeds around my trees. Can
they get together and figure
out a way to waste even
more of my time? What's the
guy who invented the weed
wacker working on now? A
tree trunk vacuum'' A sidewalk steamer? A . grass
bUffer?

29, 2005

Lynette Randolph

'obsessed with fraud."' He around the "I" word, but try
continued, "Starr couldn ' t they wi II. Lowry summed up
help it" that Clinton had hap- the work of the perpetual
pcncd to perjure himself ' Legacy Repair Project:
over his sexual Conduct dur- impeachment is "an indeliKathryn
ing a deposition in a . exual ble stain on his legacy that
harassment case." Clinton, he and his defenders will
Lopez
as president, actually com- spend all .time railing against
mitted crime s. And. for that, and futilely ·attempting to
the Founding Fathers stipu- erase." And here we are.
. lated punishment.
As . lt happens, ·focus on
stories ;~bout independent
As it happened. 31 · sex : and the Clintons helps '
coun_sel Ken Starr humming Democrats·voted to go ahead Bill and Hillary and associhymns · around the , office. with a GOP impeachment ates in that legacy-face·savThe "Religious Right" inquiry plan in the House ing endeavor. And for the
invaded the private life of a the other Democrats opted woman .who would be presipresident. Or -so was the for a Democtativ inquiry dent .(I can still hope not!),
often-repeated claim on plan. Even those Democrats the discrediting of Clinton I
Keith Olbermann ·s "Endless who opted for a censure res- criticism means a distraction
Day s and
Nights
of. olution rather than impeach- from · her most obvious
ln1j)eachment Hell" or what- ment believed that he had female trouble:
ever show you were watch- " violated the trust of ihe
She's a self-described Noing was. They were all the _ American people" and dis~ . Tammy-Wynette-stand-by same. Almost about sex.
honored the office which my -man-cookie-baking fem. As was common at the - they have entrusted to him." inist who not only stood by
time. Washington Pos't Scores and scores of news -' her man, but watched,, outcolumnist Richard Cohen papers· called for Clinton to raged at the wrong side, as
declared · sympatheiically resign - including "USA her husband inspired a moththat President Clinton "has Today" and others that were er of feminism (Gloria
been mortitled. subjected to most detlnitely. not arms of Steinem) to proclaim a onean Orwellian intrusion by what Lady Hillary called the
the gumshoes of the state." ··vast right-wing conspira- free-grope rule for men .
The less 'fact-facing in the
· Clint_on defenders loved to cy."
air, the better for the
use .the phrase "se xual
What crimes were Bill
McCarthy ism" - so much .so Clinton found guilty of by Clintons. Ke~ping attention
that one of them, liberal law the
U.S.
House
of off substance and in the
· professor Alan Dershowitz. •- Representatives - as he' presidential pants and sena11\ became the second president torial skirt has got to make ·
wrote a book on' it. . ·
The
-Congressional in history to be impeached the Legacists smile. A con·
Record, however; tells a (but not removed from spiracy theori'st would think '
wholly different story. It office)'' Providing "perjuri- Bill Clinton's infamous war
wasn't all about sex. And, at ous. false and misleading room reunited to write tlylse
bottom. the sex and the lies testimony" to a grand jury sections for Klein.! might even call it a Vast
and the depositions were all and of obstruction of justice
Left
Wing Conspira_cy if
of Bill Clinton's maJ.;:ing.
"in an effort to delay.
·.' As my . &lt;;olleague Rich imp~de, cover up and con- Matt Lauer asked .me about
Lowry wrote in his book on ceal" evidence. As it ·hap- it. It would be about as realthe Clinton presidency, pen s·. the 42nd president of ity-based as a lot of the
"Legacy" ·
(Regnery the United States was, as Clinton"camp's chatter. .
(Kathryn Lopez is the edi·
Publishing, Inc., 2003) former White House aide
of National Revieiv
'tor
accusing Ken Starr of being Lanny Davis has admitted,
· obsessed with sex "was a lit- . "within inches of losing the Online ·(www.natiimalre·
tie like attacking a bank presidency." And that was of view.com). She can be conexaminer
for . being his own doing. not Ken tacted at klopez@ national·
/
Starr's. It's hard to get review. com.) .
.

Wednesday, June

•

Behind the Clinton legacy

The Daily Sentinel

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

•

.

'

The Daily Sentinel

•

Ohio congressional delegates
dodge question of war's
worth -·
. .

COLUMBUS (AP) - As k~ping troops in Iraq until the
public
support for the war in counlfY has been Stabilized.
HARTFORD, W.Va . .-Lee Embleton Gibbs, 86, of
The Columbus Dispatch ,
Hartford, W.Va. , died Sunday, June 26, 2005, at Pleasant Iraq wanes, the majority of
Ohio's
congressional
delegation
the senators and House
asked
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant. W.Va . .
would
not
give
a
direct
answer
members
fn:im Ohio to write
His wife , Mildred Chapman Gibbs. preceded him in
about
whether
the
war
has
been
their
opinions
in · I00 words
death.
,
worth
the
costs.
according
to
a
·
about whether the costs of the
A memorial service will be held •at 7 p.m. on Thursday.
newspaper's
survey.
war have been worth the heneJun~ 30, 2005 , at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in
Repubtican
and
Democratic
fits.
Only Republican ,Reps.
Mason, W.Va. with Rev. William "Bud'' Hatfield officiatinstead
told
The
Steven
LaTourette and Ralph
representatives
ing. B~rial will .follow at the family 's convenience.
did not respond last
. The family requests memorial donation s to local chari- Colu bus Dispatch that the . Regula
week.
.
1 safer after Saddam
world
ties. Friends may e-mail condolences to fogelsongtuckHussein's
from 'power or
Rep: Pat Tiberi. a Columbus
er@myway.com.
·
·
that
_·u rt the troops even Republican, said he wanted to
If they dido t vote to support the rephrase the quesuon to ask ·
war.
whether the United States and
A recent Associated . Press- the Middle East · are better ofl
POMEROY - . Ethel G . Shasteen, 91, of Pomeroy passed Ipsos poll found pubtic doubts without Saddam in charge, ·
away Saturday, June 25, 2005 at Holzer Medical Center in about the war reaching ·a high which he concluded is the .true.
Rep. Sherrod Brown.. a
Gallipolis. A memorial servke will be held at the Trinity point with alx&gt;ut 53 percent of
from Lorain; critiDemocrat
Americans
regarding
the
war
as
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday, July 3, 2005 at 2 p.m. In
lieu of flowers memorial contributions may· be made to the a mistake. About 56 perceni dis- cized the tactics used in bringing
. Trinity Church on East Second Street in Pomeroy. A com- approve ofthe Bush administra- the country to war but said the
plete obituary will be an,no,unced on Fnday. Arrangements· tion's handling of the war, but · world is safer wilhout Saddam
are being handled by F,f~her Funeral Homes. Pomeroy.
. about that same number support to power.

Ethel G. Shasteen

Trial
from PageA1
'

of Ward's, said he was not
drin.king on the night of the
alleged incident, and thar none
of the four adulis in the mobile
home left the room for an
extended time. He said he has
never seen either Ward or the
:illeged victim un'dressed.
The alleged victim testified
that she woke up in the Wards'
bed; Rathburn said he and the
. )iaung woman slept in the living room on separate sofas.
The alleged victim said she
did not .tell her parents or other

Emol~ ht!diJg 01 amNefsaJy

caaxuxenJe6onilpholm

biJe~stt*lt'lcom!

Center.
AS U
entrance .
ground tlonr in conference
room AB.

Yard sale planned
REEDSVILLE _ The Eden
United Bret~ren Chl.lrc h on
State Route 124 between
Hoc kingpon and Reedsville
wil l have a yard ;mel Bake sale 9
a.m . to 4 p.m. Jul y 1J? :
.
·

r ..
M
h"
ove wors lp
· services

POMEROY - Enterprise
United Methodist Church will
have Sunday morning worship
services at Carleton School in
Symcusc unt.il further notice.
The service is at 9:30 a.m. ,
followed· by Sunday school at
10:30.

.Office Closed
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Tuber&lt;: . ilo ~ is Offi!:e
will be closed on July 4, and
tests will not be administered
on Friday.

For the Record
_· Highway Patrol

1'24 and went into the path of
Clagg's \ruck, which was
on 7. The vehi· POMEROY - A two-vehi- southbound
cles
collided
.cle collision at the intersecBoth -vehicles had disabling
tion of state routes 7 and 124
on Sunday .left three people ·damage. ·and the accident
injured, the Gallia-Meigs Post remains under investigation.
The patrol also inves tigated
of the State Highway Patrol
two injury accidents on
reported.
Thomas A. Scb.oonver. 69, Monday. but full details on
67 Nelson Ave., Rutland, was either accident were not
transported by HealthNet to immediately available .
In one · accident that
St. Mary 's ·Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va. , following occurred around I0:15 p.m.
the 12:10 p.m. ·crash, the_ on Ohio 124 near Syracuse.
the driver of one of the vehipatrol said.
·..
Melvin L. Clagg. 59, and cles involved was taken by air
his passenger, Janet I. Clagg,. ambulance to .Charleston
58·, both of I027 Davis Road, (W.Va. ) General Hospital.
A two-vehicle accident on
Crown City,- were taken by
Meigs EMS to Hol ze r Ohio 681 _at 7:15 p.m. also
Medical Center, troopers said. re sulted in injury for one of
Troopers were told that the drivers. the patrol reportSchoonover entered 7 from ed .

O~ympics
from Page A1
line compet1110ns at tne
United States Tumbling and
Association
Trampoline
meet in Hampton. Va.
·
For the New Orleans trip,
Darien will be acco mpanied
by ·her mother .and two
grandmothers who are pay·
ing their own way.
Darien said it makes her
feel better .to have familv
around.
·

Moth

Her grandmother Diddle'
said that they always say a
prayer .for Darien before
each competition nor asking
for the girl to wi.n but for her
to do her best, and that God
will keep her safe.
· Darien hopes someday to
compete in the Olympics but
for now she is working her
way to that dream by learning the discipline and skill it
will take to get her there.
Darien ·s goal for New
Orlea~s is to get into the top
10 in each event she is cpmpeting in at the AAU Junior
Olympics.

VISit us

from PageA1
gypsy moth in Ohio - the
"suppression" program in
counties where the pest is
established. and the "slo·wthe -spread" program in
counties like Me.igs not yet
infested by . the moth. The
focus of the slow-th~ -spread
program. , she · sa id, · is ·to
detect and control isolated
populations to help slow the
gypsy moths' movement
across the state.

online.at
1M-..m,dallys entlnel.

Your online
source for

news

LET
FREEDOM
RINO!

Patriotic Celebration
Suriday, July 3rd
at 10:00 a.m.
Rutland Church of The Nazarene
St. Rt. 124 • Rutland , OH

Special Patriotic Musical
.Special Speaker - Richard Burclett

Plea.e come early and enjoy breakfast drinks,
donuts, and great fellowship In
the fello-hip hall. .

�'
•

NATION

The Daily'Sentinel

.

Page A6

Wednesday, June

29, 2005

The Daily Sentinel

Page A7

,.

OHIO

Wednesday, June

29, 2005

·-

jUSTICES LEI' STAND Omo RULiNGS BANNING TEN CoMMANDMENTS DISPLAYS

I-IEALTH
:Survey renews debate about annual physicals
by saying they may not help everyone
.
.

Bv LINDSEY TANNER
AP MEDICAl WRITER

CHIC AGO
Eve n
: though a panel of expens
: has thrown c6ld water on
the automatic· need to get an
annual checkup. physicians
and their patie nts ha ven' t
always gotten the :message, a
. new survt!y says.
: The survey. pub lished
: Monday, found that whil e
- there 's no evidence annual
· physicals for h~althy people
are useful, 65 perce nt of pri . mary care doctors th.ink they
are necessary and nearl y 9
: out of 1-0 said they perform
: the exams.
• Annual ph y~ ical s have
- been the subj ect of a debate
since at least nine years ago,
• when the U.S. Preventi ve
Services Task Force declared
there is insuffi cient evidence
. of any be netit from many o(
: the tests often given with
: yearl y ~h e ckup s.
The tas k force is a
respected non -governmental
panel of researchers commis- ~ ioned by Congress to devel- op evidence-based recom- inendati ons fo r medical care.
: It doesn't recommend for or
again.st annual physicals, and
neither . does the Ainerican
Medical Association.

are ·needed. Many medical
grou ps recomme nd that these
tests
be done routinely.
Prochaz ka and t:o lleugucs at
though not necessarily e very
the University of Colorado
year.
Health Sciences Cente r and
Dr. Arvi nd Goyal. a
appea,rs in the Archi ves of
Nearly 90 percent of primary care physicians said they perform
Roll ing Meadows. Ill .. preIntern al Medicine. In t h~
annual examinations and 65 percent believe they are necessary.
ve ntive . medici ne specialist,
review. m&lt;Hiy aniong the 783
called
the task force "a movdoctors queried said routine
Percentage
-of
Percentage
that
believe
these
ino
target"
whose broad recexams shoul d incl ude tests
on~ me ndat i on s don't ·always
that the tas k force says
tests shoul~ be done yearly
physicians that ·...
apply to indi ·;idual patients.
ha ve n' t been prove n to prcFor• example. Goyal said
\ ent di sease in healthy
Lipid panel
Say
annual
physicals
are
needed
he"
d recommend an annual
adults. including uri ne tesis.
physical and exercise stress
blood-sugar tests for dia48%•
65%
test , for a 45-year-old man .
betes, and thyrqid tests.
whose fa the r died young of
The n.JOSt frequentl y recBlood glucose level testing
Perform
annual
examinations
a
heat1 attack - but not for
ommen ded tests included
all -15 -year-olds.
46%
complete blood counts. or
.88%
Still. yearl y physicals have
CBCs. whi ch check for conval
ue · even for healthy
Mammography
dit iops including anemia.
Believe
exams
improve
patientents with no risk factors.
pati
Nearly 40 percent of doc tors
. physician relationship
44%
he Sllid.
said those tests should be
·'It's an opportunity tQ get
part of routin e physical s . .
Urinalysis
to
know your patients" and
despite studies show\ng "that
94%
make sure they 're adopting
there is very little yield"
44%
lifestyle
habits that will keep
from routine CBC testing.
Say physicals are desired by
them healthv, he .said.
the researchers said .
most patients
Complete blood cell count
·Many he•ilth insurers pay
Dr. Ned Calongc. the
'
for some periodic preventive
Preventive Services Ta sk
78%
39%
scn:ening but not · annual
Force chairman . said he 's
physical s. A11 earlier study
"bothered by the fact that so
by
the researchers who surmany people were ordering
AP
SOURCE: Archives of Internal Medicine
veyed the doctors found that
tests of unknown benefit"
...
about two-thirds of conand even pofentiai · harm if
tlie y ·lead to unnecessary since the early 1920s. when value in findiDg disease in such as Pap tests for cervical sumers believe an annual
cance r. mammog rams and · physical is necessary, but . .
an ankle in the Journal of apparently healthy people.
invasive follow-up testing.
Technology and the devel- colon cancer tests, reinforceq onl y one-third would want ·
American
Medical
The study say·s routine the
physicals hav ~ been ~popular Association discussed their opment of screening exams, the idea that yearly exams one if they had to pay for it.
The new survey was conducted in 2002 by Dr. All an

Ahealthy debate about annual physicals

Beach that was ~ite of shark attack·on teenage boy reopens.
state last year and 30 in with a group of people and
CAPE SAN BLAS, Fla.
(API - Beachgoers warily ·
2003 among the millions of not going into the water with
returned to the
water
people who hit the state's an open wound. People also
Tuesday after the se.cond
beaches. Most of those shouldn 't swim at dusk or
. shark attac k in three days off
attacks were minor bites on when it"s dark , and shouldn't
the Florida Panhandle. with
wear shiny jewelry.
the feet or ankles.
tourism officials hoping the
Those stati stics did not
As for Hutto, doctors opermaulings won't scare visitors
comfo rt Heather Black. of ated on the boy again..
away ahead of the July 4
Owensboro. Kv.. who was Tuesday t.o clean up the area
week end.
visiting Cape San Bias , with around the wound. hospital
Most
· vacationers
here
her husband ,
spoke swoman Chri sta Hild
.
tl"
were aware of the .shark
"We're still going to have said. Doctors said he woul.d
· · attacks that left a 16-year·a nice. vacation but I don 't probably be out of the hospi- .
old boy with his leg nearly
really think T II get back. in tal in a matter of weeks, and
severed and killed a 14-yearthe Gulf or the ocean again. then would start rehabilitaold girl about -80 miles away.
It"s their domain out there," tion.
t
Few went into the Gulf of
she said.
"I anticipate a full recovMexico in rainy · weather
Gulf County offi cials ery but he's got a rocky road
Tuesday. and most were paywalked a·long the beach ahead of him ," said Dr. Reed
ing extra attention as they
Tuesday to tell people about Finney, a cardiovascular sur. waded in knee-deep waters.
simple steps that help reduce g~on at Bay Medical Center
"We ·swam every year at
their risk, such . as swimming ill' Panama City.
the ocean - never been
afraid of' sharks like we are
now." sa id Celia Page, a
teacher from Waycross, Ga ..
who was in the water with
AP Photo
: her 3-year-old daughter. George Burgess, curator of the International Shark Attack File at the University of Florida in
: "We ' re beach lovers; We
- can 't stay away. We're just a Gainesville, stands at the-National Marine Fisheries Science Center in Panama City, Fla. Florida
averaged more th.an 30 shark attacks a year from ·2000 to 2003, but had only 12 tast year,
lot more cautious now."
said
Burgess. He attributed the drop to the four hurricanes that hit Florida last year. keeping
Authori\ies on Tuesday
·
: reopened the beach in Cape residents and visitors away from beaches.
: San Bias, one day after 16- after 14-year-old Jamie to11rism ofticials said they ming pool. It 's an environ: year-old Craig Adam Hutto Marie Daigle was mutilated didn't expect the fear of ment with large animals.'' .
was bitten in the leg ~Yhilc and killed by a bull · shark shark attacks to deter people said Vanessa Welter, director
fishing in waist-deep water near Destin.
·
from coming · to Flqrida.·
of public relations for Visit
about 60 feet from ·shore .
Gulf County's Board of · "I think what it will do is Florida, the state's tourism
Commissioners help raise awareness that marketing agency.
Physicians later amputated County
· The C8 HeaHh Project Coordinators are conducting
reopened
the
beach after when swimming in the
Welter said shark attacks , ·
• the leg of the boy from
a series of community C8 Health Testing Awareness
: Lebanon. Tenn.
.,
deciding that the attack was ocean, you need to be cau- · are rare, pointing out that
That attack carne two days an isolated incident, and tious. It's not a public- swim- there were only 12 in ~e · . Town Meetings.

TOWN
ElTING
NOTICE.

.

,

'

=Panel: NASA fails to meet most importarit
safety recorrimendations for launching

CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
. ; ( AP) Despite more · than
: two years of painstaking work.
: NASA has failed to meet the
-.most imponant safety recommendations· for getting space
shuttles tl ying again following
. the ·Columbia · tragedy, an
: oversight panel says.
· The task force concluded in
~ its final meeting Monday that
· the space agency still does not
. fully comply with three of the
toughest recommendations
: put fonh by Columbia acci- dent investigators in 20()3.
: But some of the group's
: member' acknowledged in a
: news confere nce later in the
. day that the risks probably
· cannot be reduced signifi~antly if the next launch -

•

EXCLUSIVE

planned for July --&lt; is delayed
another few months . ·
Task
force
chairman
Richard Covey, ·a former
shuttl'e commander, · told
reponers if he were younger
and still an astronaut, he
would not have a concern
about flying .
" I think you need to look al
what the agency has done. not
necessa{ily at a scorecard.'"
Covey said.
.
In its last public meeting, the
return-to-flight task force determined that NASA, while' making considemble progress. haS
been unable to eliminate the
possibility of dangerous pieces
of foam and ice from breaking
off the external fuel tank and ·
striking the shuttle at I iftoff.

SA '/l~JGS

Save Big with Nationwide~ by
joining the Farm Bureau.

..

'·

In town or the country, ask you local Nationwide Agent how .
you could save big on your car and home insurance by joining
·
·
the Ohio Farm Bureau..
Bill Mortpn Agency
905 Washington St
Ravenswood. WV
1-304-173-()90()

NOTICE AND EXPLANATION OF A PROPOSED
ACTION IN A 100- YEAR FLOODPLAIN

.

To: Alt Interested Agencies, Groups, and Individuals:
The Village of RaciAe has conducted an e~alualion as requ~red
by Executive Order 11988 and 11990 to determine the poten11al
affects !hat a decision to support an activity in a floodplain and
/or wetland wilt have OA the environment'. The project being
considered is the Village of Racine's Waler Treatment Ptant and
Waler Storage Tank Replacemenl Project. which involves the
conslruction of a newWalerTreatment Plant: Watei Storage
Tank, water welt and water transmission lines with Community
Development Block Grant funds.(Water &amp; Sewer Fac.) Portions ·
of the new waterline between the existing welt field and the new
Waler Treatment Ptant and the new water welt wilt be wilhin the
100 year floodplain. The 'new·water line will be located along
the path of the existii1g waterline. The new water welt will be
located adjacent to !he existing village water welts.
•

The Village of Racine has determined that approval of the
project witl have no significant impact on the environment tor .·
the following reasons: Watar transmission lines will be
constructed within road right of ways, atong the palh of the . ·
existing wall!r line where PD'll'ible and the floodplain area wilt
be returned to pre construction contours. Construction of the
new water well be adjacent to the existing water wells and witl
have minimal impact on lloodplain.
Comments on the proposal project may be submitted to the
Village of Racine within .7 days of the concurrent publication
and dissemination of this notice. Comments can be received .
through July 11. 2005. Other agencies involved with ll)is
evaluation include: WSOS Communiiy·Action Commission Inc.
All comme.nts should be sent to:·
VIllage of Recine

· Nationwide&lt;~~

P.O. Box399

On Your Side"

· 405 Main St.

'
• Pmduas .-111 Jr ... ounl3 •UbJ«I r., .. ~ ...l.obllr!O
Nallonwwlc :o.tu•ual Jmunno.:c. CUIUJT.or ) .00 ...Urrd C.&gt; mpan~. Lrfc tlblll'lllll:lt WLitd by Sa:tonwldl: Lrfll"
intut-=t C!)IT1f1any Heme Offic~ Crllum~~. OH J1~ 1S: l120 FBO l l..tr.'i

..

Racine, OH 45nt

J . Scott Hill, Mayor or David Spencer,

Village Clerk/Treasurer

The Purpose is to provide a forum for informing area
residents who live in the six affected water districls
about the upcoming C8 Health Project Testing .
Program. · ·

.1. Monday, July 11;
Blennerhassett Junior High 7-9pm
(\.ubock Public Selvico Oi&amp;llid)

2~

.

Tuesday, July 12: . ,
Belpre Middle School. 7-9pm
(\.iiiiO HoP&lt;lntl- Oi&amp;llid &amp; Cily "' Belpv- Ooponmenl)

3. Thursday, July 14:
Pt. Pleasant Moose Lodge 7-9 pm
, _ eo....y

l'ublic-

Oislricl)

4. Friday, July 15:
Meigs High School7-9pm
[T-

--Oioo1ct&amp;

Vllage ol ~-lli!*k:l)

Project ooorclinators; PalJI Brooks Jr. M.D. and Art
Maher, MHA will speak libout this health survey and
monitoring project and how you can get up-to-diite
inklrmation.

CS HEALTH
l,ll()JI:CT
COnducted by:

BROOKMAR, INC.

1-304;.865-4205
417 Grand Park Drive, Vlellnct WV 26105
1-800-551-7658 Fax: 304-865-4208

www.c8healthprojectorg

Bv TERRY KINNEY

stand because it was part bf a ru led that the · 800-pou nd
historical display, the court stone monuments insc ribed ·
said. , Not so in Kentucky, with the commandments
CINCINN ATI - A day where the displays were must be removed from in
front of four 1\igh schools of ·
after leaving .open the possi- deemed to be religious.
bility of allowing religious · Justices did not comment the Adams County/O hio
displays on public ·prope ny, on their reasons .for denying Val lev school distri ct.
the. U.S. Supreme Coun let funher rev iew in the Ohio · They had been proposed ·
stand two Ohio cases pro- cases. Frank Manion, the and paid fo r by a group of
hibiti ng displays of the Ten lawyer who represented the ministers, but placed with the
Commandments.
· · American Ceriter for Law and approval of the school board.
In one case. a Richland Justice in its suppon of the They stood about five years
County judge displayed the displays, called that ul)satis- until they were removed and
commandments in hi s coun- fying-. •
put in private ·di splays in
room. In the other. the y were
"It isn't as though they sent Adams County.
· displayed in front of Adams us . any strong guidelines,"
"That was probably one of
County school buildings.
Manion said . "But it seems the worst days of my life
The 6th U. S. Circuit Coun . clear to . me that a · newly when they had to take those
ofAppeals in Cincinnati' said erected display is going 10 down," said the Rev. Ken
both were illegal. Thos.e deci- have a much harder time sur- Johnson, pastor of Seamon
sion s will stand. since . the vi ving than an old one."
United Methodist Church and ·
Supreme Court refuse.d, to
U.S.
District
Judge a defendant -in the case.
re view them Tuesday.' ·
'This is, we think, a victo- Kathleen O'Malley ruled in "We' re glad, at least. that the
ry for every ·person in the June 2002 that Judge . James ,Texas case prevailed."
•
United State s:· said Christine DeWeese of Richland County
Scott Greenwood. a·former
Link. executive director of Common Pleas Court in general counsel to the Ohio
the American Civil Liberties Mansfield
violated
the AC!--U. acknowledged a speUnion of OHio. "These cases Constitution by displaying a ciai· circumstance in the
act to protect reli gious free- framed poster of the Ten Texas case, where a 6-footdom for all of us. .
Commandments in his court- _granite monument wus but
"We have a 200-year histo- room.
one of 17 hi storical displays.
ry that both religion and gov"He really saw this as a on a 22 -acre lot.
ernment thrive when there is coherent message in putting . That was. not the case in·
a son of friendly fence down up the Ten Cpmmandmeilts Adams County. where the 6th
.the middle."
across from · the Bill of Circuit ruled that later addiTwo · 5-4 deci sions on Ri ghts ," Manion said. "He tions of the Magna Cana and
Monday left disputes on the thought he had l\ coherent, other· legal document s did not
contentio,us church-state issue hi storical, secular message to legitimize
the
Ten
to be settled case- by-case. give. -The Supreme Court Commandments as a Iegar or
The ju stiCes said exhibits obviously disagreed."
historical display.
.
would be upheld if their main
Manion said DeWeese had • "Only after litigation did
purpose was to honor. the displayed the commandments they add additional manunation 's legal, rather than about 18 months until remov- ments." Greenwood said.
religious, traditions, and if ing them when O'Malley "You can't start with a relithey didn ' t promote one reli- ruled. DeWeese did not return gious purpose, change your
gious sect over another.
a call seeking. comment.
mind, then proclaim the Ten
A stone monument at the
Also in June 2002, U.S . Commandment s are
no
Texas Capitol was allowed to Magistrate Timothy Hogan longer rehgtous."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP Photo

A Ten Commandments monument is removed from outside West Un ion High School . June 9,
2003, 111 West Union. The U.S. Supreme Court. without comment. denied requests on Tuesday
for lurther review of two Ohio cases 111 which dis plays of the Ten Comma ndments. on public
property were lo.:rna unco-nstitutional.
, I,
.

Woman sees dead people; Budget includes long"'sought' reduction in nursing home spending
Hollywood sees TV series

COLUMBUS (AP) - At the amount of reimbursement . g(oups . to lower taxes pnd came fr01n recommel'ldations
Hennis Care Center in eastern · said Peter Van Runkle. presi- keep state spending at bare- of the Ohio Rei mbursement
·
1 Study Council. a legislati ve
Ohio, owner David Hennis has dent of the Ohio Health Care bones levels.
instructed
·managers
to
find
The
budget
will
also
raise
a/
committ ee that ., pe nt 18
NORTH ROYALTON (AP)
"She said, "there's people
Association. a trade assoc iaways to reduce costs ahead of tion for nursing._homes .
bed tax that nursing homes pay. month s study ing how to
-Hollywood has taken inter- here right now.:"
est in a suburban Cleveland
"I .said, 'Right here in a iransformation in how Ohio
The plan "wasn' t' what we from $4.30 to $6.25 to help change the way Medi caid
reimburses nursing homes.
woman paid to talk to the dead. Starbucks?"'
proposed, but since it seems g~in matching federal dollar&gt;. 1 pays . for ·nursing homes, said
Mary Ann Winkowski 's
Gray worked the experience · Tne change. paying nursing to be inevitable. we ' ll work .a ·pon10n of IVhtch are then ns to rmer chamn an. Rep.
Shawn Webster.
paranormal experiences as a into the pilot episode. Later, he homes based on an average with the Legislature and the returned to nursing homes.
The budget also creates a pilot
•·Hopefully. we·ve g_ot it cenghostb1.1ster for hire have began hearing strange noises ptice of t are and not the costs Department • of Job and
inspired CBS to create "Ghost and doorbells ringing in the they report to the state, will Family Services to try to progmm that will allow 200 tered on patient care •md care
Whisperer," starring Jennifer middle of the night at his New mean a drop of about implement it in an appropriate nursing home residents to use _giving. . and financially . reim$350,000 in Medicaid funds fashion,'' Van Runkle said.
Love Hewitt, which is part of York home.
their Medicaid funding to pay bursing that more than build.starting
in summer 2006.
the network's fall lineup.
He summoned Winkowski
for
private, home-based care.
ings;· said Webster. ~ Han1ilton
He attributed the success of
It's
a
big
difference
from
Winkowski, a paid consul- and said she sent the ghosts
the new formula to pressure · Some of the emphasis on Republican . "What it really
tant to the show, doesn't have a away, but not before giving the current system, but from lawmakers and business the actual cost of patient care come~ down to is patient care."
listing in the phone book, but him a full description of the Hennis says it was inevitable
and he's focusing on dealing
is booked four months ·in
advance 'chasing· unwanted . people in the hOuse next door with it, not complaining about
,1, • h
· where the ghosts were also . the impact. ·
_g_host~ from peop e s omes . .· hangin_g out.
"Our goal was to have as
Her job has taken her from
Scotland to Mexico; into the
He hasn't had any pfoblems little possible e.ffect on patient
care.' said Hennis. 49, who
home~ of people killed in the since.
'"It was pretty impressive .. owns a private, for-profit 130Oklahoma City bombing and a
house she says was haunted by No · matter how cynical you · resident center in Do.ver and a
a Cleveland mobster.
· are. You have to think, ' How 96-resident facility i'9 nearby
"I never would have thought does she know that?'" he said. Bolivar.
1
.
The
The new approach follows
20 years ago this would have
"Ghost Whisperer" is just
been a full-time job," the latest paranormal televi- years during which nursing
Winkowski said . "I don' t si.on drama, following the suc- homes seemed always to
advenise or drum up business. cess of NBC's "Medium,'' escape major funding reducPeople call ll)e. I don't call which stars Patricia Arquette · tions. The success of budget
officials this year rellects the
them."
·
as psychic Allison DuBois.
Winkowski is matter of. Gray thinks there's an audi- desire of several groups to
fact about what. she see_s, eilce for such shows right now. control Medicaid costs,
discussing it as plainly as
"lrt this climate we' re living according ·to the stale's top
she does her former pet- in after 9/11, people want to human services official. ·
"Troubled times bring folks
gruoming business , which feel there' s some larger plan,"
together
in many different
helped pay the bills before he said.
The Daily Sentinel Baby
ways,"
said
Barbara Riley, .
ghost bu sting became he_r
Jim Longo,.chairman of the
director
of
the
Ohio
trade .
education department at
EditioQ is a Special Edition filled
She says she can only talk to Washington &amp; Jefferson Department of Job and
spirits who have not crossed College in Washington, Pa .. Family Services.
with photographs
·local
funding
system
moves
The
over into the afterlife. Most doesn' t take a position on
children - ages newborn to four
hang around for a just short whether ghosts exist, but he much closer to a system driven
by
inarket
demands
time and are always at their · collects stories of people who
· years old. The Baby Edition will
, funerals .
d · where adjustments can be
Winkowski is often hired to b&lt;;:lieve they haveexperience
made based on supply and
appear in the July '29th issue•
.d f
·
the
paranormal.
d
demaud.
.
1
allen unera1san . tteup oose
"Some cultures . really
"We will pay to an individTristan Roach
ends ("Where did dad leave
Be sure your child, grandchild,
ual
nursing . facility for , an
the will?") or to help relatives believe that a spirit lingers
. Son of
have one last conversation until the body is buried, and individual's care the amount
. or relative is involved!
Charles &amp;. April Roach
with a loved one.
·
some cultures believe they that absolutely ·makes sense
Gallipolis
and doesn't widely vary.''
"The ladies ,will always linger up to a year," he said.
walk over and chec,k out the
Winkowski recently spent a Riley said. "This formula
Pictures must be In by Frlda.y
flowers," she said of female . week in Los Angeles. demon- over •time will drive it to a
·July 22nd, 2005. Plclures can
be picked up altar August 1st,
spirits. As forthe male ghosts, strating he~ craft for the point where ever}'oody will
be
paid
for
the
same
type
of·
2005.
"They have to count how show 's writers and Hewitt,
many cars are in the funeral who plays a newlywe~ trying care in the same demographic
Complete the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus
procession."
to cope with her unusual talent area.u
The state budget to be
· a $7 .00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture;
Spirits who refuse to cross
Winkowski says it wasn't
signed
Thursday
by
Gov.
Bob
over are the ones that keep until age 7 that she realized no
· please enclose additional $2 .00 per child. Enclose payment with picture .
Winkowski busy. She charges one else could see what ·she Taft will spend about $3.09
Send to:
·
··
$100 or more to guide them to . did. The Catholic nuns didn't billion a year on nursing.
homes,
a
reduction
of
about
the white light
·believe her, but her grandHollywood became aware mother did and took her to $1.1 billion over two years.
The state will base its new
of the 57-year-old's work funerals t9 talk to the recently
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
price
system on the types of
through her friend, best-sell- departed.
---------------- - --------r--------- ~ ---- - - ---- -~I
"Mom didn't have a clue," care a facility· provides and
ing medium James Van
typical
costs
in
the
pan
of
Praagh, the subject of the CBS she said.
•,Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s&gt;= --~----------'-----,-Neither did her husband, Ohio where a nursing home is
miniseries "Living with the
•
located ..
Dead."
.Ted. She !old him she was seeThe new funding system
" I looked right past her at
..
1 1 f
Parent's Name:.:..·_ _ _ _ _ __ _ __:__ _~----------first because she's the least ing "other peop e on y a ter talces effect in 2007 , and
,. . they exchanged vows.
includes a buffer that sa~s in
City &amp; State=- - - - - ' -- - - -- - - - -- - - - - - likely ghostbusting person,
"At first, !thought she could the t1rst year they won t be
said John Gray. executive proth
••• .The ahove information will be used in the ad. •••
ducer of "Ghost Whisperer.". wiggle her nose like Saman a cut by more than 2 percent or
''She's from the Midwest on ' Bewitched,"' he said. "I see their· reimbursements rise
Phone Number:
Submitted by: - - - - - -- - She's friendly. There's no wouldn't be selling cars if that more than 2 percent.
Nursing homes spend an
mystique."
.
were the case."
---------------------------- - -- ~ ----~------- - --~
Winkowski first met wtth
thirty-seven years later, he average $159 per day per
Gray a year ago. Gray recalls says he takes her ghost busting patient, and that is expected to
rise. The most recent data
they went for coffee and he . for grwited.
available
suggest a gap of $7
asked where they could go to
"I never had a reason to
between
the
actual cost and
find ghosts.
doubt her.'' he said.

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Coming Friday, July 29, 2005

Daily Sentinel

of

an

The Daily Sentinel

•

-- ·

HUR.RY!! PICTURE DEADLINE lS
FRIDAY JulY 22. 2005!

�•

Page AS .

The Daily Sentinel .

ASSOCIATED PRESS WA ITER

KETTERING - Military
families acnl ss Ohio were
sh&lt;trp ly divided in their rcaction to Presi dent BtJ&gt;h \ call

Jue~day

.,

1

night , to ~ l ay Lhe

re-actio n'

to

Bush ·.-., latt&gt;st

spc~c h on Iraq. Among the
state,, Ohio ha &lt; suffered the
fourth-mos t number of deaths
inlr&lt;fq in the past year. with44 .
Ohio mil itary units ha ve
played a major role in the

fighting.

course in Iraq Jespite ·mountWright - Patt~ rsot] is home to
ing casuatries.
the . 445 th Air\ i t't Wi tig, a
Some supported the com- reserve unit that has---fewi~d
mander-i n-chiefs belief that wounded soldiers from Iraq
the sacrifices are worth · it. bad to th e United States.
while others wonde red why he Dol! tors and nurses from the
keeps insisting there can be no · pas'e hospi tal have serveJ in
strategical change .
·
Iraq.
.
"He doesn't know what the
Since the terrori st attac ks of
course is;" said Danicl le Sept. II. 20ill. more than
Ohio
National
Troutnian, who spent 4 1/2 6.000
have
beel'l
months in Iraq as an Air. Force G_uartb men
securit Y escort before return- (jcployed ove rse as or for
ing h01i1e to suburban Dayton . homeland security duty.
"We all seriously wonder wh y
The Troutman family has
we ' re there. We. worked Jay sent two dau ghters to lra.q .
and night defending and pro- Parents James and Frances are
tecting people who in · some retired from the Air Force.
cases don ' t want us there ."
Daughters Daniet.I e, 24, and
Bush 's reassurance of Jennifer. 22. joined th~ Air
progress was welcomed by Air Force in 2002 and spenLseverForce Maj . Rick Webster. who a\ months apiece in Iraq- the
watched the speech .from his ddc r as a security escort. the
home in nearby Centerville.
yo unger as a i;lelicopter
· '·I reall y think . as an overall mechani c.
whole in th:s, we're ahead of
The famil y lives near
schedule." said Webster, 37, a Wri ght-Patte rs·on in a onepilot for the 445th Airlift Wing story brick house that has a
at Wright-Patterson Air Force U.S. Jlag out front anu a red.
white and blue bow wrapped
Base in Dayton .
. Bush 's evening addr~ss · around a Japanese· map)&lt;; tree .
lrom Fort. Bragg , N.C., was
Danielle watched From a
intended to persuade military lounge chair Tuesday evening
families
and . skeptica l ·and her mom from a couch in
A·meric:ans that victorv tan be thei r.. Jiving room. which . is
achieved without changing his filled with photographs of the
girls in un iform . Mrs.
approach to Ir,tq .
He rejected calls for a Troutman's Air Force .uniform
timetable to withdraw. anJ is disp layed in -a case on the
ruled out additional troops tu wall.
sec ure the country again st
'Danielle Troutman. who is
unrelenting attacks by insur- . ·on leave. said &gt;he survived 32
gent s. Bu sh ac knowledged attacks durin g her stay· in
that Americans are question- Kirkuk·. north of Baghdad. She
ing the toll in Iraq- more than s.aid the country will never be
1,700 A1nericans dead - but free of terrorists. imd the only
progress she could see was the
said tme sacrifice is worth it.
Ohio' s narrow vote for Bush Iraqi armed forces working
last November kept him in the with U.S. tropps.
·
White House. but the state
Mrs. Troutman teared up as
remains split over how he \ she tho'ugh t about huw both
doing . A statewide poll in April daug hters wi 11 .return to Iraq.
found that 50 percent di sap- She said the wa r is not the way
proved of Bu sh's perfor- to fight global terrorism.
mance. 49 percent approved . " It' s going to turn into a
and I percent was undecided: Vietnam ." she said, dabbing
Militaq: families were j ust her eyes with a ti ss ue. "We are
as divide'tl Tuesday .in their not in. the .righq:llace .(to tight

terrorism) .... I listened very
intently to \\'hat he had to say,
but it doesn't change the fact
that I st iII be tieve we· re in the
wrong pace.
I
"
By contrast, Webster was
optimistic that troops would
come home, but acknowledged
that Bush's stated goal of eradicating global terrorism is lofty.
· "To go through and say, 'Are
we going to era&lt;;licate terrorism off the face of the Earth?'
this is the same as saying, 'Are
the good lord and the devil
ever going to el iminate each
other?"' Webster said.
Webster 's wife, Jennifer,
was encouraged to hear the
· president
appeal
. for
Americans to support the
troops . Polls have suggested
tnat a majority of Americans
no l')nger IJeli~ve the war is ·
worth fighting.
"To have my children have
to hear, 'Oh, welt, we shoutdn 't be over there,' I think that's
AP Photo very degrading the people wt)o
President Bush , left, greets un identified soldiers after speaking about the war on terror at Fbrt are doing it (fighting) ," she
Bragg. N.C. President Bush on Tuesday rejected calls for a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq said, as she played with the
or send ing more troops and acknowledged that some Americans are questioning the war's couple 's 5-month-old son and
pa inful cost.
2-year-old daughter. ..

BIG BEND
v
v
v

FRESH MEAT
FRESH
PRODUCE
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES. ·

SAVE·A·LOT.
100 west Main St., Pomeroy

JUST LOOK AT THE RECEIPT

SAVE UP TO 40%

EVERYDAY
We Accept
WIC. EBT
· and most

CREDIT CARDS

rain is predicted to end near 5
a.m. with total accumulations ·
for this' event near 0.10 inches. Temperatures will linger at
71 with today 's low of 70 .
occurring ·around h ·a.m. ·
Winds will be 5 MPH frotll
the southwest.

•

· Today's games
Mason County at Williamson . 4 p.m.
Mcarther at Feen~y Ben.nett. 6 p.in .

'

Friday's game
Feeney Bennett at 'Athens Tciurney,
noon

Saturday's game
Feeney Bennett at Athens Tourney,

• noon
Sunday's game
Feeney Bennett at Athens Tourney,
TBA

Eastern sets dates
for volleyball camp
TUPPERS PLAINS· The
first-ever Eastern Volleyball
. Camp · for girls entering
grades 6-8 will be held July
5-8.
Camp staff includes players and coaches from the
2005 Tri-Valley Conference
and sectional champion
, E~tern Lady Eagles.
Cost. is $30 tf pre-registered or '$40 on the first diiy
of the camp. Included in the
cost is a camp T-shin and
volleyball.
Contact Howie Caldwell
for more information.

'

Thu·rsday, June 30
Moming (7 a.m.-Noo11)
It should be a humid and
cloudy morning. Expect a few
light rain showers. The rain
·should reach 0.06 inches by
the end of this morning .
Temperatures will climb from
73 to 85 by late thi s morning.
Winds will 'be 5 MPH from
the southwest turning from
the west as the morning progresses.
.
· Ajtemoo11 ( 1-6 p.m.)
· It 's going to be , u hum id ·
afternoon : There is a good
chance of rain. Temperatures
will hover at 88. Skies will be
partly cloudy to cloudy with 5
MPH winds from th~ west
turning from the south as the
afternoon progresses,. .

FINAL COST
AFTER REBATE:

4- 12 packs $5

Wolford named
new football
coach at Jackson

Local Stocks
ACI-54.24
AEP-36.55
Akzo-39.37
Ashland Inc. - · 70.49
AT&amp;T-19.06
BLI-13.19
Bob Evans - 22.86
BorgWarner _._ 51.8() ·
Champion - 4.20
Charming Shops- 9.60
City Holding - 36.6 7
Col-48.33
DG -20'. 38
DuPont-44.94
Federal Mogul - .84
USB-29.25 ·
Gannett. 72.25
General Electric - 35.15
GKNLY-4.75
Harley Davidson.- 50.14
JPM-35.92
Kroger - 19~25

Ltd. -21.88
NSC-31.26
Oak Hill Financial- 29.24
OVB-26.23
BBT-40.40
Peoples - 26.75
Pepsico - · 54.83 .
Premier- 12
Rockwell - 49.25
Rocky Boots- 29.50 ·
RD Shell -'- 65.97
SBC-23,70
Sears ·- 154.04
Wai-Mart - 48.43
Wendy's- 47.01
Worthington -15.80
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

.

99
BU 1.I ERBALL

BOLOGNA

X1IIA

'BEEFMTIIIS

,.

JACKSON - By · a 4-1
school board vote held
Tuesday at Jackson High
School, Shane Wolford '¥ilS
. named.the new head coach of
the lronmen football team.
Wolford, a 1998 graduate
of Jackson, has no previous
head ·coaching 'experience.
Wolford is best' remembered for being the starting
tailback for Jackson's first
playoff team back in the fall
of 1996, and 1997 SEOAL,
Football Player Gf the Year.

Contact Information ·
FIX -

1· 7 40-446-3008

E..nail- sportsO~dailysentinel.com
Sport, SJIH

,

Bnd -mon; Sportto Edha&lt;
17401 445-2342 , ext. 33
bstalrman 0 myda.l/ytribune.com
llfyon - · Sportto Wriblr
(740) 445-2302, ext 23
bwaltera 0 myda!lvtribune.com

PRICES GUARANTEED THUR SAT. JULY 9TH, 2005

Mason,Coun~y blas~_; Parkers~urg 104
· action 'in the 'second with three Alderman. Mike Ha~ilton was
tllore runs .' After a doubl e from next on base : followed by Robby
Brenton Clark, Caleb McCoy Taylor. Mason pu\ on some dahlRIPLEY ~ Sometimes it is was walked putting run.ners in age control the following two
scoring posi tion. Clark would batter; with John Ullom striking
fino his way to home plate after ou t both.
just your night.
For the Maso n County the next batter. Wh'It1oc k. htt· an
·
The following batter Ryan
American Legion squad , Tuesday RBI double to left field . McCoy Morris would finally get hi s team
showcased a dominant perfor- and Whitlock would al so score it;t on the board ·with a two run RBI
mance 41 a 14-3 win over the inning with an RBI from double 'tate in that inning. A third
Parkersburg Post 104.
Park .
run would also come in, bringing
The Mason County team
Looking end this game after . the score to 10-3.
jumped to an early 4-0 lead ·in the seven, Mason County continued
But Maso.n County would
first off of poor pitching from to dommate in the third, equaling remind its visitor who had con·
Parkersburg's . Scott St. Claire. the run total from the inning trot of thi s game when Dale
After Josh Whitlock was walked, before.
·
.
.
, Kestner lead off the fourth inning
Zeb Reed slammed an RBI dou- · Af.ter Clark got on base from an with a solo homerun.
.
ble.
. .
error and Tyler Hem was walked,
The next inning, the home team
Ned Par~ · was next to be McCoy sm~shed a three run brought in pi~her Tyler Hern to
walked and was followed by homerun to nght field to seal the finish things off and he did just
Dale Kestner with 'an RBI single deal for the home squad.
that allowing no more runs to be
of his own. With the very next at
But Parkersburg would not go scored.
bat, Kameron Sayre hit a two run down without a fight.
However Mason County would
double giving the home team an . In the fourth inning, Post I 04 not stop its scoring as they added
.
Larry Cru~pholo
·
early lead.
ftnal!y managed to find some
Mason County's Tyler Hern del ivers a pitch during
Mason County kept up the . rythm with a double from· Cam
Please. see Blasts, 88
Tuesday's 14-3 victory over Parkersburg.
BY

lARRY CRUM ·

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

--~___..,--:'-------'-'-- · - ·

--

~

NC~tion,a.,l BaSkEtbqJ/ Association
.
.

2005 Draft

Lorry Crum, Sportto Wrllw
{304)675-1333. ext 19
Ierum 0 mydaityregiat8f'.com

Milwaukee
swaps 2006
pick for
Cavaliers
Welsch
'

I .

BY TOI!I WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND Just ·
hours befote hls fitst NBA
draft as Cleveland's. general
mana:ger, · Dan11y . Ferry
picked up more th'an $2 mil- ·
lion more to spend in free
agency.
Ferry traded small for ward Jiri Welsch to the
Milwaukee
Bucks
on
Tuesday for a second-round
·· pick in 2006, and continued
talking with other teams
about getting the Cavaliers
AP photo.
back in this year's draft.
North Carolina players Marvin Williams, Raymond Felton, Sean May, and Rashad McCants pose before· the start of the
Cleveland previously traded
2005 NBA Draft Tuesday in New York. All four were selected in the top 14 picks. with May and Felton both being select:·
its two 2005 picks.
ed by the Charlotte Bobcats.
Wel sch's departure leaves
the Cavs with just seven
players under contract.
Ferry, who was hin!d on
Moriday after spending two
Utah and moned him to the podium
seasons as . San Antonio's
was ·
the onsiage at Madison Square
director of basketball operacollege
Garden.
When
his
name
tions, wasted no time in
NEW YORK (AP) - It years with U.S. college
player of was called,. Bogut raised a
beginning
to
remold
sure was a g'day for e~perience to be drafted
the
year, clenched right fist.
Cleveland's
roster.
In
deal- ·
Andrew Bogut. And not a . No. I overall .
straig htUtah became · the first
ing Welsch , a major disapbad night for the NCAA
Four players from North
ened
his school t\) have players
pointment in his brief tenure
champions from North Carolina ,. were chosen
tie, adjust- picked first in both the . . with the Cavs last season,
Carelina.
among the.first 14 picks on
ed his suit NBA and NFL drafts in the
Ferry assured he will have
Bugut, a 7-foo.t center • a night when the, usual
.jacket and same year. Quarterback
roughly $28 million to use
from Australia. was chosen ·avalanche of trades was
took a deep Alex Smith was drafted No.
on the free-agent ma(ket.
No. I Tuesday night in the only a trickle by the time
Bogut
breath in I · by the · San Francisco
The Cavs will attempt to
NBA
draft
by
the . the first round ended.
t
h
e 49ers in April.
surround star LeBron James
Milwaukee Bucks, bccomThe 20-year-old Bogut. moments before commisPlease see Drllft. 81
Please see 1lhlsch, 81 .
ing the first player in five who .played two seasons at sioner David Stern sum-r

..

National champion Tar Heels represent·at draft

. Bucks select Bogut with first pick

Major LEaguE BasEball

Cardinals fend. off Cincinnati,.2-1
.

ST. LOUIS .(AP)- Mark three hits in the first and
Mulder ended a ·string of third, benefiting from two
poor starts and Reggie double play s.
Sanders backed him with a
Mulder entered 1-3 in
two-run homer, helping the June while allowing 20
St. Louis Cardinals beat the earned run s 'in 20 innings, a
Cincinnati
Reds
2- 1 prolonged struggle with his
Tuesday night.
mechanics. In two of his
The Cardinals have won four previous starts .this
three of four, giving them an month , the left-~ander
NL-best record of 48-28. acquired'
to
be
the
Th.::y sent the Reds. to their Cardinals' No. 1 starter did15th loss in 17 road games. n't last'long enough to qualJoe Randa had a .fir st- · ify for a victory.
.
inning RBI single for the
In.
(our
appearances
. .
.
Reds, who have· lost three agamst the Reds th1s season,
straight under interim man- Mulder IS 2-2 Wtth a 5·.~
agederry Narron after win- ERA - two effecttve perning their first three follow- formances and two awful
ing the firing of Dave Miley. ones.
In 6 1-3 innings, Mulder
With two on in the sev(9-5) gave up seven hits enth , Cardinals catcher
with five strikeouts and Yadier Molina picked· off
three walks. He minimized . Rich Aurilia at first tp end
damage despite giving up the inning. Molina, in )lis

'

:
•

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

•

URG Women's
Basketball Camp

CHESHIRE
River
Valley High School will have
a basketball camp for boys
and girls entering grades 4-8
on Wednesday, July 6
through Friday, July 8 at
Bidwell-Porter Elementary
School.
The three-day ciunp will
take place from 9 a.m. to .
II :30 a.m. and will focus on
instructions in fundamental
basketball .
·
The cost of the camp. is $30
if you are registered before
July 4, with the cost moving
up to $35 after July 4.
E&amp;rly
registration
is ·
encoura~ed and all participants wtll receive a camp t. shirt.
For more information, or to
sign-up, contact RVHS boys ·
basketball
coach
Gene
Layton at (740) 245-5753 or
call him at Rlver Valley High
School at (740) 367-7377.

I

.Bl

AmErican
LEgion Post
BasEball --. Post 23/ 140
'
.

RIO GRANDE - The
University of ·Rio Grande
will hold its women's basketball camps beginning in June ·
. at the Lyne Center..
The schedule fur the
camps, with fees are as follows :
- Varsity and .JV Shootout,
,
July 9,$215.
- - Junior High Individual
Camp, July 17-20, $225.
- Varsity .and JV Team
Camp, July 21-23, $225.
For more information, contact David Smalley at 2457491 or e-mail him at.dsmalley@rio.edu. .

EXAMPLE:
1
IN STORE PRICE 4/$10
LESS MAIL-IN REBATE ~ $5.00

'

·'

RV sets dates for
basketball camp

Wednesday • .June 29
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a humid and
cloudy morning. There is a
good chance of rain ..'
Temperatures will stay near
74. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the south turning from
the southwest as the morning
progresses.,
Afternoon (1-6 p.in.)
It will . remain humid and
cloudy, There · is a good
· chance we could ·see some
rain. Temperatures will ho,d
steady around 84 with today' s
high of 86 occurring around 5
p.m. Winds will be 5 to I 0
MPH from the southwest.
Eve11ing (7 p,m.,Midnight)
It will ·continue to be humid
and cloudy. There may be a
brief sprinkle. Tempenltures
will diminish from 84 early
this evening to 74. Winds will
be 5 MPH from the southwest.
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
It should continue to be
humid and cloudy. We are predicting light rain. The rain
will stari around 3 a.m. The

The Daily Sentinel

Feeney Bennett splits with Glouster 414, Page B2
Ferry ma[(es Orst deal as GM, Page B2
lli-rounty Junior GolfTour results, Page B3
Wimbledon news, Page 83

Wednesday, June 29, 2oos

Ohio military families divided on Bush's Iraq speech
BY JAMES HANNAH

'

INSIDE

I

first' year as a starter, has
picked off seven runners
and is 12-for-21 throwing
out runners attempting to
steal.
Jason lsringhausen, the
Cardinals fifth pitcher.
worked the ninth for hi s
22nd save in 24 chances.
lsringhausen blew a save in
his. last · outing on Sunday,
giving up a game-&lt;tying
homer in the ninth to the
Pirates Jason Bay in 5-4,
10-inning loss.
Sanders, batting cleanup
inste-ad of Jim ~dmonds
· against left-hander Brandon
Claussen (4-5), hit his 16th
homer and second in 1wo
games, afteF Albert Pujols
singled with two outs in the
first inning . Sanders leads

a

Please see leds, 11 .

,

AP~

Cincinnati Reds' Brandon Claussen delivers a pitch in the fourth
inning against the St. Louis Cardinals in ·St. Louis, Tuesday.

•

•

�..
•

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Page
B2 • The Daily Sentinel
.

www.mydaiiysentincl.com ·
.

Wednesday, June 29. 2005

'

Feeney Bennett splits pair with
Glouster414 Bengals waive ~ookie,
.
get down to four QBs·
.

StAFF R~PORT

SPORTS@MYDAlLYSENTINEL.COM

GLOUSTER - Feeney Bennett
ended a grueling seven-game, four
day schedule Monday with a doubleheader split with Glouster.
Post 128 dropped the first game by
a score of 13- 10, then rebo_unded
nicely to take down the hosts 14-4 in
seven frames during the finale. _
• Both contests· were · District 8
leag.11e games, and the 'first · outing
was a continuation from last week. ,
Game one s'tarted in the tenth
inning with the score .tied at I0. with
Post 414 serving as the guests on the
score board,_ · ·
· Glouster connected on fou~ hits to
produce three runs in that top half of
the frame , then· held Feeney Bennett
· score iss in the bottom half to secure

the 13·1 0 victory.
.
pair of' safe tie s.
Chris Myers Jed the was for Feeney
Durst added a double in the victory,
Bennett in the setback. producing ;1 with Blackston, Well. Amsbary and
double and two singles. Jeremy King each adding a single' for the
Blacks ton and Ken Amsbary aho guests.
.
Feeney Bennett next plays today
added a pair of hits.
Terry Durst had a homerun, while when it host&gt; McArthur in a District 8
Matt Mooney, Ross Well . Austin showclowJl at Meigs High School.
King, Eric VanMeter and Mike Davis
Post 128 then travel&gt; to Athens this
weckenu to play in the Athens Fourth
added a single apiece. '
In' the twilight affair. 'Post 128 uf Jul y WeckenctTournament.
jumped ouno a 4-0 lead after th ree
Feeney' Bennett
will
play
innings of play . and never looked Parkersburg 104 on noon Friday. then
back.
.
J take on Troy at 3 p.m.
Glouster pulled to within a run .(3- :
Game one
2) after the fourih. t)ut Feeney
Glouster 13, Feeney Bennett 10
Bennett exploded for I0 runs over the
, (1 0 innings)
remaining three ·fr-ames to secure the · Glousler 220 111 021 3 - 13181
F Bennett 300
010 213 0 - 1014 3
mercy rule triumph .
Mooney,, Davi s and Tyler Clagg led
Game two
Feeney Bennett 14, Gtousler ~
the Blue and White with a 'inglc and
(7 innings)
doubJe apiece, while Luke Hai slop F Bennett 013 034 3
14 14 1
also had a multiple-hit evening. with a Glo,ster 000 202 0
4 10 3

Ferry makes his first deal as Cavs G~ ·
· CLEVELAND (AP) -In cial day on the job.
North Carolina. forward Scan
hiS first NBA draft as a genThe departure of Welsch , May, a player who could
eral manager, Danny Ferry who averaged just 2.9 points have helped the Cavs. The
got a trade under his belt and in 16 games for Cleveland . Cavaliers traded their secput another $2 mi)lion in his last season, leaves the ond-round pick to Orlando
pocket .for free age'nts.
Cavaliers with just seven · last year as part of a package
As the first round drtlgged players under .contract and a to get Drew Gooden.
on, F:erry continued talkmg payroll of roughly $21 mil- · Ferry, who spent the past
with other teams about get- lion. ·
two seasons as San Antonio 's
With next season's salary director of basketball operating the Cleveland Cavahers
back into this year's draft. A cap projected as high as $50 tions, only had one ·day to
few hours before-Milwaukee million, the Cavaliers will · prepare for his first dcaft as
took Utah's Andrew Bogut · have nearly $29 million to GM. He had to lean on Cavs '
No. I overall.Tuesday' night, dish out when free age ncy player personnel direc.tor
Ferry picked up another opens July I. That should be Mark Warkentien. who spent
selection for next year when more than enough to get the past two months working
he dealt Jiri Welsch to the some help for star LeBron out . players and planning
Bucks for a second-round James, who carried the team Cleveland's strategy after
pick.
last season but couldn' t get GM Jim Paxson was fired
It wasn't a blockbuster the Cavs to the playoffs.
following the season.
· . trade. And it certainly won't
Cleveland was on the sideNow that the draft is
be panned like the Ferry-for- line . watching this year's behind him. Ferry's foc'us
Ron Harper deal that still draft on TV after previously will quickly switch to free
haunts some Cleveland fans. trading away its pickS. One agency.
But by ridding the Cavs of of them, a deal that traced
The Cav'' surplu s of
Welsch, Ferry freed up more back to acquiring Wesley salary-cap space will &lt;fllow
money for free .agency and Person in 1997 for a first- them to surround James with
dislodged a logjam at small · rounder, wound up with more talent this summer: Last
forward. .
.
Charlotte at No. 13.
· week, James said he hoped to
Not bad for his second offiThe Bobcats used it to take . have input into the dub's

.

decision making and rattled
. off Michael Redel , Ray Allen.
Larry Hughes, Joe Johnson
and Eddy Curry as players he
would like to see pursued .
On Monday, Ferry said his
top priority was to build · a
winning team for James.
"We all have a responsibility to him to do that," Ferry
said.
·
· Welsch· spent most of his
time in Cleveland watching
from the bench after he was
acquired in February from
the Boston Celtics for a 2007
first-round pick. He didn't fit
into the Cavs' rotation or
future and became Ferry's
first move.
Welsch was supposed to
help Cleveland's perimeter
shooting. Instead, he made it
worse as he shot just 23.5
percent from the field ana a
disturbing 18.2 percent on 3pointers. This is the fourth
time he has . been traded in
three years.

•

0~ Neal

and others.
Under terms of the new
six-year collective bargain ~
from PageBl
i ng agre·ement to take effect
in July, high school players
Milwaukee had been will have to wait one year
debating whether to take after their class ~raduates to
Bogut or North Carolina become draft ehg1ble.
small forward Marv.i.Jt..-o+..The new agreement also
Williams with the fran- Teduces the length of guarchise 's first overall No. 1 anteed contracts for firstpick since 1994. when the round · picks fr~rn three
Bucks selected Glenn . years to · two, wtth teams
Robinson. In the end, the holding options for addilure· of a versatile, athletic tiona! years. Even with t.he
. 7-footer with Olympic reduced !eng~ of his first
experience was too much to deal, Bogut w11l become ·a
millionaire the moment he
·pass up.
"I was confident, but. I . signs with the Bucks.
"ft's one of the best days
wasn't IOO ·percent." Bogut
said. "Now that I'm here , · of my life, and my famiit's a great honor."
ly's," Bogut · said. "I . am
The Atlanta Hawks chose going to be. a workhorse."
Williams second, and the
Connecticut sophomore
19-year-old player flashed forward Charlie Villanueva
a bright smi le at Stern was chosen sev_enth by th~
while shaking the commis- Toronto Raptors, and the
sioner's hand. The 6-foot-9 Knicks addressed · their
small forward was a sixth· need for a big man by takrnan·for the Tar Heels.
i.ng
Arizona
center
Illinois junior point guard Channing Frye - the first.
Deron Williams went third college senior .selected to the Jazz, who .sent three with the No . 8 pick.
first-round picks - Nos .. 6
Arizona State junior Ike
and 27 in this year 's draft, Diogu went ninth to Golden
plus a 2006 first-round pick State, and 7-foot high
APpholo
-to the Trail Blazers earli- . school senior And(ew Andrew Bogut, a 'center .from the l)niversity of Utah, talks to
er Tuesday.
Bynum of St: Joseph's High the media aft~ he was cho~en by the Milwaukee Bucks as the
In other proposed trades , School in Metuchen •. NJ., first overall pil k of the 2005 NBA Draft Tuesday in New York.
New York was to send cen- went . I Oth. 'to the Los
Jersey Nets; who were in
" It's a total surprise to
ter Kurt Thomas and the Angeles Lakers.
No. 54 overall pick to
··wow, man. I get to play need of a power forward me - even when the trade
. Phoenix for shooting guard with Kobe Bryant and ~et but in stead chose a swing- rumors started when I was
Quentin Richardson and coached by .P hil Jackson!" man who can .back up walking backstage, and I .
point guard Nate Robinson said Bynum~ who was seat- Richard Jefferson at small was still in total shock,"
of Washington, ·who was ed in the stands at Madison forward and Vince Carter at Jack · said. I just got word ·
· selected 21st. The Knicks Square Garden rather than shooting' guard . Toronto of it, and I'm happy with
also selected 30th, giving ·in the so-called ~reen room selected Oklahoma State . it."
them three first-round near the mam stage where forward Joey Graham with
. The NBA ch~mpion San
picks . . .
most top prospects waited the 16th pick , adding anoth- ·AntOnio Spurs selected .
New Orleans selected · to hear their names qlled. er big mari to play along- French
forward
Ian
fourth and also. chose a 'T m looking forward to side franchise cornerstone Mahinmi at No. 28 . He was
playrnaker picking Wake palm trees and Jack Chris Bosh.
one of seven international
New Mexico forward
Forest sophomore guard Ni~holson."
players to be chosen in the
Chris Paul, and the
Orlando selected center · Danny Granger went 17th first round.
Charlotte Bobcats took Fran · Vasquez of . the to Indiana, &lt;\nd Gerald
"Basketball is a global
North Carolina junior point Spanish club Unicajl! Green _ projected in most
be
the
fir;t
game,
just like soccer is a
mock
drafts
to
guard Raymond Felton at Malaga at No. 1J, and the
No. 5. It marked .the first Los Angeles Clippers chose high schooler taken _ went global game," Bogut said.
"You see the Manu
time since 1999 that three 18-year-ol\1
forward to Boston at . No. 18.
"We were shocked, to be Ginobilis and Yao Mings
point guards were picked Yaroslav Korolev of the
honest,
that he was at 18," .. of the world. We can play
among the top 10.
·
Russian
club
CSKA
Boston
coach [}()(: 'Rivers the game In every co.unHigh
school
senior Moscow at No. 12.
Martell Webster of Seattle
North . Carolina forward said. "It was a no-brainer try."
Four high school seniors
Prep went No. 6 to . Sean_ May went No. 13 to once we saw he was there."
. SJ(racuse senior Hakim were taketi among the first
Ponland, making him the Charlotte, and Tar Heels
was chosen 19th 15 picks of the second
Warrick
·fust prep player taken in .a guard Rashad McCants
draft notable for its histori- wept No. 14 to Mmnesota . by Memphis, Denver round.
Lithuanian
center
tal significance. It likely with the final pick among selected N.C. .State guard
marked the final time high lottery tea~. It was the Julius Hodge at No. 20 to Martynas Andriuskevicius,
schoQI players would be first ·time since 1999, when fill a hole at shooting projected by many ;ts a
eligible to jump directly to · Duke did it, that four play- guard, then pic~ed Georgia · first-round pick , was not
the pros -· the route chosen ers from one school were Tech point guard Jarrett taken · until ' midway
Jack two spots later. Jack through the second round
by Kevin Garnett, Kobe , selected in the first round.
Bryant. Tracy McGrady,
Antoine Wright of Texas was dealt to Portland for when Orlando selected him
44th overall.
LeBron James, Jermaine A&amp;:\1 weiu 15th to the New the 27th and 35th picks.

Draft

I

'

.

CINCINNATI (AP) The Bengals ~ot down to
four
quarterbacks
on
Tuesday by waiving rookie
Josh Haldi ,' an undraftecl
free agent from Northern
.
lllinoi s.
· The Beilgals signed Halcli
on April 28. and he was the
orily quarterback at the
team 's rookie mini camp. He
became expendable when

the Bengals claimed former
Ohio State quarterback
Craig Krenzel off waivers
from the Chicago Bears on
June 20. ·
Carson PaiiT,ler is heading
into his.second season as the
- startin g quarterback, backed
up by Jon Kitnu. Krenzel
and second-year pro Casey.
Bramlet will compete for the
No . 3 job.

'

Marshall sigrts fo.ur
year deal with 49ers
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
(AP)
Former West
Virginia standout Rasheed
Marshall ·has signed a fouryear contract with the San
Francisco 49ers .
Terms of the deal , signed·
•
Monday, were undisclosed.

Marshall , the 2004 Big
East offensive player of the
year, was picked in th.e fifth
round of April's NFL draft.
The ex-quarterback wa s
taken as a .wide receiver.
He's also seen .action as a ·
return speciali st during
49ers' workouts.

Tribe rolls past Boston
BOSTON (AP) - Travi's
. Hafner hit a grand slam off ·
· Keith Foulke in ·a five-run
ninth inning, doubled twice
and drove in six runs to lead
the Cleveland Indians over
the Boston Red Sox 12-8
Tuesday night.
Boston, which lost its second straight following a
sevep-game winning streak,
overFame deficits of 4-1 and
5-3, taking an 8-5 lead with a four hits and two walks in I
five-run sixth inning .
2'3 innings.
Cleveland's bullpen, which ...
Aaron Boone hit his IOOth
career horner -. h1s ftrst entered Tl)esday 's game with
home run agamst Boston baseball's best ERA at '2.78
since his lith-inning ddve off' didn't fare well, either. Kevi~
Tim Wakepeld capped the Youklis hit and RBI double in
New York Yankees come- the sixth off Cliff Lee and .
back m ,Gamf! 7 oft~e 2003 scored on Mark Bdlhorn 's
AL clf~ptonshlp senes.
sacrifice fly against Arthur
Ayter Jhom\y Peralta's lead- Rhodes to tie the score 5-all. ·
off.~Single ' in the eighth off Johnny Damon's single,
Mi e Timlin and Casey
Bla e's one-out double, · Edward Renteria's walk and
,Foulke (5-4) relieved and David Ortiz's go-ahead single
Rhodes.
Miller
allowed Hafner's run-scoring clu\sed
groundout
and
Victor relieved and gave up RBI sinMartinez's RBI single.
gles to Manny Ramirez and
Foulke, who blew a save Kevin Millar.
for the third time in '18
Bo~ton starter Wade Miller
chances, gave up Judy allowed five run~ ; seven hits
Gerut's double with one out and four walks in 5 2-3
in the ninth, then retired innings, while Lee gave up
Boo"ne on a flyout. .
five runs and seven hits in 5
Peralta singled on a 3-2 1-3 innings.
pitch to tie the score 8-8, and . Hafner's
double · and
Grady Sizemore and Blake Martinez 's RBI groundout
walked on pitches close to the put Cleveland ahead in the
plate. Hafner followed with first, and Boone made it 3-0
his 13th homer. driving an 0- in the second. The drive went
2 changeup just inside the into the left-center field seats
right-field foul pole for his above_the Green Monster. and
second career slam.
- fans cheered when one of
Hafner has six extra-base them threw the ball back onto
hits in the ftrst two games of the field.
the series. ·
Notes:.Damon extended hi s
Matt Miller (1-0) pitched 2 hi'tting streak to 15 games
1-.3 scoreless . innings, and wiih . his single in the sixth. ·
Bob Wickman retired the Red He also has an .18-game hitSox in order on· three pitches ting streak this season. ...
in the bottom of the ninth:
Sizemore ·was the only starter
Foulke allowed five runs, on either team without a hit.

Reds
..

fromPageBI
the Cardinals with 23 twoout RB!s.
Claussen, who won three
of his four previous clecisions. allowed only one
other runner to reach second
base during his six-inni.flg
stint He gave up four hits
.with six strikeouts and one
walk.
Notes: Cardinals
IB
coach Dave McKay returned
to his post after missing 10
games with a back injury.

Welsch _
fromPageBl
with talent this summer.
Last week, James said he
hopc;d to have input into the
club's decision making and
rattled off Michael Redel,
~ay Allen, Larry Hughes,
Joe Johnson and Eddy
Curry as players he would
like to see pursued by the
Cav·aliers.
On Monday, Ferry said
one of .his priorities was to
IJiake James happy.
"We all have a responsibility to him to -do that,"

Bench coach Joe j&gt;ettini
coached first in hi s absence.
... Sanders is batting .3 77
(26-for-69) in his last 19
starts with six homers and
16 RB!s .... The· Reds ·,and
Devil Rays are .the . only
- teams in the major leagues
without a complete game ....
The attendance of 38.640
was the first crowd below
40,000 at Busch Stadium
since May 25, a stretch of 15
games .... Claussen was hitless in two at~bats and is 4for-44 in his career. ...
Pujols had two hits and is .
16-for-37 (.432) during a
I 0-game hitting streak.
Ferry said.
Welsch spent most of his
time in Cleveland watching
from the ~nch after he was
acquired in February from
the Boston Celtics for a
2007 first-round pick. He
didn't fit into the Cavs ' ·
rotation or future and aver~
aged just 2.9 points and 12
rn_inutes in 16 games.
of
The
majority
Cleveland's pre-draft planning was done by player
personnel director Mark
Warkentien:, who spent the
. past two months working on
the draft after GM Jim
Paxson was fired one clay
after the season.
•

•

Wednesday, June

29,

2005
•

~..w.mydailyse~tinel.com

.

• The Daily Sentinel • Page B3 '

.

..Junior Golf Tour winding down Sooner or later, Patrick will need
to show sh~'s not one~shot wonder
BY FRANK CAPEHART:

with 10 each. strong showing for runner-up
S e v e r a I honors with a score of 50, and
n o t a b I e s· moved into second place
GALLIPOLIS _ Searing
were absent deadlock for the season at 16
, heat scorched the young Triin the 13-14 points -with Travi s Grimm of
.. County Juniors and combined
bracket, so Point.
,
.
with the Cliffside Course
that
race
Third this week was a 64 by
challenges to make for tough
J e a I I Y Warren Patrick, while Beau
scoring that jumbled some of
opened up. Lanz had 66 in fourth . just
. the divisional races.
This week. · ahead of David Michael ,
. Jake Venoy of Pomeroy was .
Adam Roush Travis Grimm. and has I0 to
. the only !inkster of the day to
Jake Venoy , of
New keep them. in the ch,ase ·for
solve, or handle, the chal- .
.
Haven, ~m- . final standmgs for the ten' lenges and won the first place !Shed strong to ~lalm the ftrst and-under age. bracket.
trophy for the premier 15-17 place crown ":tth . 44 · Kyle
Veteran Jacob Leach comage group with an excellent Rhodes of Galhpohs held on pleted the trifecta by winning
10 capture second place at 47 his third consecutive first
two-over 38 score.
The battle for runn~r- up st~okes, JUSt one less than place award on 5i strokes,
honors was as hot as the thtrd place Kamal Dayal of which assures him the diviwh1le
Beau . .
.
Galhpohs,
weather .· between the three 'Bellamy of Poini was fourth, s10nal crown at 30 pomt s.
closest challenges:'"all ' in the ahead of Trey Crump.
However~ run,n~r-up spot 1s
forties. At the end,.· Josh
Despite being unable .10 really a ttght race.
_
Veney of Pomeroy barely compete this week, leader . Hunter Bellamy of Pomt
edged one stroke ahead at 44, Bryan Harris of Pomeroy sti lL edged past Brett M1lhoan of,
while John Wells of Mason clings 10 the top spot with 20 Galhpoll s at 62 to 64 th1s
· was third at 45, just a couple points, but Rhodes moved week to earn the second place
·strokes ahead of Evan Dunn 11110 runner-up po ~iti(ln on 18 trophy and als~ gav~ tum a
from Pomeroy..
.
point s, just ahead of Will two-pomt margm gomg 1nto
Right on their heels was Carrison of Point, who was the final rou~d. B~llamy has
Chris Long of Point Pleasant absent but had 16 points in the 16 pomts while Mtlhoan has
with 51, one better than first two •outings so it is a · 14, so that builds toward a btg
Mason's Brody Green, ' with three~ way battle ~ow.
finale.
· .. _
Curtis Grimm and Jacob
Behind those three Beau
Once agam. Ltbby Leach
Miller"next. ·
Bellall!y ani:! Adam 'Roush capt~recl the crown with a
· With this win, Jake V.enoy have .10 a piece.
creditable 63, and has won the
.. grabbed a lead that could only
In the 11 - 12 division, Nick seasonal tour crown wtth 30
:be tied in the final round Saunders traversed h1s home pomts.
.
should he be present. His 28 course to the tune of 47
Now, the young ·players
points leads, but second place strokes, which collared the' take a rest to .celebrate July 4,
IS wide open. Et-an Dunn is champion trophy, an(j seal but retutti to action on
· there now at 18 points, but down .the seasonal crown by Monday July II at Pine Hills
in Pomeroy. ;'\II area juniors
Josh Venoy is just one point · piling up 29 points.
behind at 17, while Chris . Another Gallipolis veteran, are invited to attend and parLong and John WeHs are tied Steven Theiss, turned in a ticipate .
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Herd painting Southern Coalfield green
Marsh a II
fans , aJuinni
and students
from Mercer
. Th~~~(&lt;0~i'v:S·iY;· Big
, and surround·.Green Scholars·hl'p. Foundation
mg counties,
as well as
. will be "Painting the Southern Tazewell County, Virginia, are
.Coalfields Green" the last invited to attend.
.
·week of July:
Marshall Head Football
A Big Green Club organiza-C h M k S d D'
tionaJ meeting is scheduled for
. · oac
.ar ny er, lrC£tOr July l3 at the Douglas Center
of Athletics Bob Marcum and at 7 p.m. for anyone in the
_a group of other Thunden~g , Fo!.lf Seasons area.interested in
Herd coaches and at_hleuc · helping at the dinner. ·
, department offic1als w1ll be
• visiting Mercer County for a
The Herd then moves on to
. dinner on July 46 and Raleigh . Raletgh
County
on
County for a dinner and golf Wednesdayffhursday, July 27on July 27-28. All events are 28. ·
open to the public.
·
Spo~sored by the Beckley
. TheMercerCountyeventon Athlettc Club ?f MU, the
. Tuesday, July 26, is scheduled ·Wednesday eve~mg dmner at
: with .a reception at 6:30 p.m. the Black Kmght Country
and a dinner to follow at 7:15 Club Pool m Beckley, Will
-at the Douglas Center in have Coach Snyder, head bas' Princeton. Cost will be $20 per ketbaJJ Coach Ron Jirsa and
person, A pair of Thundenng Athletic Director Bob M;ucum
· Herd football players ·is also as special guests.
· scheduled to be at the event.
Cost for the dinner is $50
STAFF REPORT

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•WimblEdon -

per person, and begins with a 6
p.m. reception with dinner tO
follow.
On Thursday, the 'Beckley
Big Gre.en club will host the
15th Annual Big Green Four'~an
Scramble
GoiJ
Tournament at Grandview
Cl
·
Country ub. The tournament
will begin with a shotgun start
at 12:30 p.m. with registration
and lunch beginning at II :30

a.~he golf tournament entry
fee is $100 per person which
includes a dinner provided by
Outback Steakhouse after the
golf.
·
To make reservations or for
more information on any of
these Big Green events, either
in Mercer at Raleigh, please
call the Big Green office at
866-443-7310 or 304-6964661. All proceeds will go to
the Big Green Scholarship
Foundation which provides
·scholarships to Marshall
University athletes. .•

BY TIM DAHLBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Danica Patrick may W&lt;llllto staJt looking in
her rearview mirror.
·
And nut. as some uf her more chauvinist critics might suggest, to make sure her li pstick is
on right.
No, ~ he needs to look because the window of
opportunity which opened so wide for her in
Indianapoli s may bebegirining to close ever so
slightly.
. Two rookie-like performances for the most
celebrated- and most photographed - rookie ever in auto m~ing h&lt;tve taken a bit of an ·
ed!le off of Dai!icamaniaas the Indy Racing
League series heads \O Kansas City for a.
Fourth of July weekend race.
·
There 's no · need to panic just yet, but if
Patrick is not ·competitive this weekend on a
.track where she and her team ex.pecttodo well.
the beauty behind the wheel may begin to fade
just a bit.
.
After all, fourth plac~ inthe indianapolis 500
and a provocative magazine layout can .only
take a girl so far. If she doesn't run well again
soon, they might be torcec\toput an actual race
winner on the cover of Sports li lustratcd.
AP photo
It's not so much that Patrick has tc win , but Indy Racing League driver Danica Patrick of
that people now expecl her fo. They figure if Roscoe , Il l., sits in the teams pit after she ·
she can lead the Indy 500 late 111 the race, practiced before the 'start of qualifications at
there 's no reason she can't win Sunday at the the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Sunday. ·
Argent Mortgage Indy 300.
May 15, 2005.
"It would just make a great story and go
alon~ with the interest a nd hype the year has Patrick to oft'er congratulations - and also
had, Patrick herself admi tted m a conference reiterate his comments that •·women should be
call Tuesday. ·
all - dfessed in white like all other domestic
That hype almost by itself saved the Indy appliances."
500, which drew ratings 59 percent higher than
But if anyotJe has [~,right to be upset with
.Jast year largely because Patrick was in the Patrick, it would be Dan Wheldqri, who is
race. The intield was more crowded than dominating the lndyCar series this year like no
recent years and, when .she was leadin~ in the. driver be tore him. and achieved a lifetime
late laps, a fifth of the country's television sets dream by winning the Indy 500.
were tuned in to watch.
His reward? Picking up a Sports Illustrated a
The trouble with hype, though. are U10se few days later to see Patrick on the cover and
expectations that tend' to tag along. Often, they being able to wear aT-shirt in Texas earlier thi s
are hard to meet .
month that read "I Actually ,Won the Indy 5(1()."
Patrick created the ~~pectations when she
Patrick clicln'.t do well at Texas Motor
started in the first row in Japan, and then led Speedway, finishing 13th _ last on ·th\' lead
the most famous race of them a! I before finish.. lap _ after stn1ggl ing with a steeply ban keel
ing fourth last month. She created more with track that is histprically tough on rookies. She'
engaging appeaninces on the television show did'!'t fare thlit .much better over the weekend
one of her bosses, David Letterman, hosts.
. in Richmond, Va. • where she had troubles on
Now she has· to go about the much harder
task of fulfilling them. .
the equally tricky shorter track there. fini shing
::A lot of guys iun their whole career and lOth.
ha,ve never won at all," Patrick 's teammate,
Still, more than 100 people were waiting for
Buddy Rice, said.
Patrick when she arrived Saturday at the
A Jot of guys don't p_ost in bikinis for FHM garage in Kansas City, with four police officers
magazine, though, and don't look· like they acting as escorts. She added more police to her
belong in a calendar above a mechanic's tool escort service as she made her way to the dribox instead of behind the wheel of an open ver's meeting.
wheel race car going 225 mph. ·
Patrick insist.cd again Tuesday that she has
Sex sells, of course. which explains why a paid her dues, just like any {llale racer. She said
23-year-old who has yet to win anything at the she still had a lot to learn and was trying to stay
top level of her sport creates a buzz wherever patient and not let the expectations overcome
she goes - while the far more demure and . what she is trying to do.
. ·
conservative Annika Sorenstam had to play
Eventually. though, she has either to win, or
against the 'men to get anyone to pay attention to compete consistently in the · final laps.
to her in golf.
.
Otherwise, she risks .becoming the Anna
It also makes you an easy target, to everyone Koumikova or Natalie Gulbis of racin£: Nice
from other drivers resentful over her publicity to look at. fun to watch, but not taken seriousto those who insist that. without the backing of ly as a top performer.
a good team and the fact she weighs only 100 · Patrick seems unaffected by the pOssibility
pounds, she wouldn't even be competitive.
of comparisons. She's not exactly new to the
If you think chauvinism doesn't run rampant hype game. and she 's been around r~cing sim:c
in racing, check out the comments by Fonnula she began racing go kat1s in 1992 before payOne boss Bernie Ecclestone , who called ing dues in the minor leagues in recent years.

SEmifinals

· . Venus Williams vs. Sharapova, Davenport vs. Mauresmo in semis
BY HOWARD fENDRtCH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WIMBLEDON, England
- The record book shows her
. Wimbledon showdown with
Maria Sharapova will be
_Venus Williams' frrst major
semifinal in two _years.
, There's no official accounting
of how long it's been· since
Williams has shown unbridled
· joy on the court. ·
. Or demonstrated the deter~ mination and shotmaking of a
champion.
. Each was on full display
during a 6-0, 7-6 (10) victory
over two-time major winner
Mary
Pierce
in
the
Wimbledon
_quarterfinals
-1\Jesday, and a snapshot from
the tense tiebreaker revealed
just how much closer to her
old self WiJliams is.
·
_' Williams already had avert-.
. ed two set points when, at 6-6,
Pierce ripped a 'backhand to
.the comer that was hit so well
· the Centre Court crowd let out
· a collective · "Ooooh 1" of
. appreciation, sure the pivotal
point was over. ·
But·with four quick stri&lt;jes
. to hel left and a stretch,
.' Williams dug out a defensive
' backhand to extend the 13.' stroke exchange, and Pierce
pushed a. volley 5 feet long,
perbaps as convinced as the
fans that her work was done
for the moment.
Williams raised her arms
...and yelled, "Yes!" About five
minutes later, . having saved
: three more set points before
·fmally closing out a resilient
· Pierce, Williams repealed the
·,pose, then thrust a fist in the
·air and smiled broadly.
She figures to have a

tougher task Thursday against
defending
·. champion
Sharapova, who was · tested
for the only time this toumament . be for~ beating No. 8
Nadia Petrova 7-6 (6), 6-3•
with help frol!l favorable netcords on two points in the
final game.
"Finishing off the matches
is tough," · the 18-year-old
Sharapova said. "It gave me
shivers in my body. It's just so
good to .be in the semis
again."
.
The other semifinal will be
No.. 1 Lindsay Davenport~ a 76 (I), 6-3 winner over U.S,
Open champion Svetlana
Kuznetsova, against .No. 3
Arnelie Mauresmo, who
defeated 2004 French Open
champion Anastasia Myskina
6-3, 6-4 to rea,ch the final fo.ur
at the All England Club fQr
the third time in four years.
The men's quarterfinals are
Wednesday, including twotime defending champion and
top-seeded Roger Federer vs.
No. 2.1 Fernando Gonzalez,
and No. 2 Andy Roddick vs.
No. 9 Sebastien Grosjean.
Davenport-M~uresmo

shapes up as an intriguing
rnatchup: Davenport's baseline power vs. Mauresrno's
serve-and-volley
style,
-Davenport bidding to collect a
second Wimbledon title a year
after contemplating retirernent, aixl Mauresrno trying to
reach her first Slam· final
since 1999.
Yet Williarns-Sharap~va
will draw most of the attenlion.
"She has a big game, you
know, is a great fighter," said
Shat.:lpova, who holds a 2-0
head-to"head edge . over
Williams and heat ber sister,

and the U.S. Open in 2000
and 200 I, and claimed just
one low-tier title in the past
13 .months . And not only had
. she failed to get past the quarterfinal s at majors since
. Wimbledon in 2003. she had
been exiting earlier and earli - ·
er: once in ihe second round.
twice in the third round.
Some of that was due to
opponents improving. ·Some
might have been due to the
psychological burden of seeing a younger sibling surpass
her by winning five . all. Williams major finals. There
·also were wrist and abdominal injuries that Williams still
wo·rries could resurface .
. "The last thing rou need out
there in a match IS to have to
choose which ball you're
going to run for because
you· re tired and can· t conq:ntrate on the point because you
can't breathe. or your .legs
burn,"
the
25-year-olcl
William&gt; - said. "That is no
way. to be.' '
She looked mighty comfortable ·in the· first set against
Pierce. dominating the first 21
minutes against the French
Open runner-up.
AP photo
··venus played very well
lindsay DavenpOrt, of the USA, returns the ball · to Svetlana Kuznetsova. of Russia. during from the very beginning,"
their quarterfinal match at Wimbledon T~esday. Davenport won 7-6 (11, 6-3.
Pierce said, "hitting very hard
and very deep."
More significant was how
Serena, in last year's final. you .can't see ·whether she'.s rankings.
."Just have to go out and battle winning or losing,'.' said their
"'It takes a lot to be your Williams hung in once Pierce
it out, and see who can come father, Richard. "With•Serena, best every time . A lot of play- found her rhythm, particularly
it's just the reverse . She goes ers usually come out ag;linst in the outcome-in-the-balance
out and win the fight."
Thai drive; has seemed to re mad out there, like a pit bull." 'me playing quite well, swing- tiebreaker. Both mixed superb
Tuesday 's grit and grin ing," she said. "Really. it's defense with hit-the-line&gt;
missing from the elder
Williams' .game lately. She's were ,strikingly different from j11st aU about doing it every offense, and Williams was
always been the more pub- the ~houlder.s-slunk. eyes- time. I suppose every time. I better. ·
"The .field has improved a
licly reserved Williams sister. down body language Venus wasn't able to, always."
lot," Williams said. "But I
·~venus is the type of person Williams adopted during ·her
Not by a long shot.
She hasn't won a· Grand al so_ know when I play my
that you never kpow what's spiral from No. I in the wbrld
going through her mind. And to second best in her family Slam tournament since her tri - best that I feel like.I'm still a
if you look at her physically, and, recently, to 16th in the umphs at bQth Wimbledon step ahead."

•

�'

'

.-

,., .---.,

,,

'

Page 94 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

www.mydailys, ntinel:com

'

'
www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

m:ribune - Sentinel - l\.egt.~ter

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's· For Sale ............................. :.... : ........... 725
AMoUncemenL ,..............................: ......... 030
Anliques ................................ ....................... SJO
Apartments for Rent ......................... ,.... , .... 440
Auction and Flea MarkeL ..........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ....................., ...: 760
Aulo Repair .. ,,, ,,,, , .... ,, .. ,, ..............................
Aulas for Sale ...... ...................................... ,.710
Boals &amp; Molors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies ........... ,...... ,.... , ... ,............ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Bus mess Opportunity ,............ ,............, .. ,... 21 0
Business Training ....... ...... , ......................... 140
Campers &amp; Molar Homes ...................... ..... 790
Cam ping · Eq ulpment, .. ,, .............. ,.. ,... . , , .! .. ,. 780
Cards .of Thanks , .. , ................... ,.. , .....: .. , ...... 01 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190

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11'\\\(1\1

•NOTICE$
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends lha
ou do bu s1 ness w1th pea
le you know, and NOT 1
end money through th
a11 un til you have '1nvestt
ated the oHenn

Thle newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advitrtlUmenta for real
estale which Ia In
vtolallon or the law. Our•
readers are hereby
tntormlld that all
dwellings advertl•ed ln
this new1paper 1r1
available on an equal
oppol1unlty baaaa.

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location, compute r e:.per1ence preferred, ~enmg &amp;
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Send resume to 397 W Mam
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Pleasant Valley Apa rtment
Are _now takm!;: ARPiicat10ns
for 2BA, 3BR &amp; 4BR ,
taken
Appllcat1ons are
Monday thru Fr1day, from
9 00 AM -4 PM Off1ce IS
1 bedroom Aparitfient par- located at 1151 Evergreen
tially furmshect, 5300 month Dnve , Po1nt Pleasant, WV
(304)675-4351
Phone No. 1s (304)675·
5806EHO
2 bedroom apt 1n Racme,
Oh1o
$325 00 a month Tara
Townhouse
$200 00 deposit Includes Apartments, Very Spac1ous,
sewer water. an~ trash 2 Bedrooms , CIA, t 112
740·949·2025
Bath
Adul't Pool &amp; Baby
Pool Pat1o. Start $385/Mo
2 ,
bed room
apt No Pe ts.
Lease
Plus
Washer1dryer hookup Water Secunty Depostt Requ1red
pa1d N1ce location. no pets (740)446·3481
$375/mo
plus depoSit
Tw1n Rivers Tower IS accept·
(740)446·9442
1ng applications lor wa111ng .
2 bedroom newly renovated hst tor Hud-subslzed. 1· br
Apts fo r rent Downtown, apartment, call 675·6679 ·
Gall1pohs R1ve! &amp; Park vmw EHO
$560'mo
Some uhhl1es
pa~d Now acceptmg apph· Valley Apartments 1n Mason
currently accepting
ca t1ons Call (740)709·1690 WV
apphcat1ons
Apply al 501
(local ca ll)
Shawnee Tra1l m P01 nt
Applications
3 rooms &amp; bath all ut1i1t1es Pleasant
pa1d
Downsta1 rs.
9 19 accepted on Tuesdays
Second A'ile , sUitable for 1 HUD aSSISted · (304)675·
4900
$295/mo (740)446·3945
1

~··3 br $440.00 a mon

r

+

$400. dep
1: 2br$35000 a mon
$300 00 dep
304-882· 1107
14x70 expando 3 bedroom
1 1/2 bath $475+ depostt
Includes water sewer &amp;
trash pickup· (740)446·
4824.
2 Bedroom Mob1le Home
$375/ mon
Located
Ill
GallipoliS
Fe rry
Cal l
(304)675·3423

2 bedroOm ·AJC, very n1ce
no pets, m Gal lipolis
(740)446·2003
3 bed room mobile home for
rent 1n Middleport. no pets.
(740)992·5858
Jbr
all
Electric ,
Air
Condltlon , In Letart $350
month ,
$ 250
Dep osit
(30&lt;1)882·2858

3 Bedroom , ~ Bath, Full
Ba seme n t/G a rage '
Remodeled . In

&amp;

out
740.

FOH R~~NT

Wwrru'

1 GBDM1 9W6XB 10396

3

5

The Home National
Bank reserves the
right to reject any and
all bids. All vehicles
are sold, as is where
Is, wllh not warranties
expressed or implied.
For an appointment to
see, call 949-2210, ask

1999 , Dodge
150
387HF12YO)IG160329

tor Sheila.
(6) 29, 0 (7) 1

al 10:00 a.m. at the
Bank's parking lot:
1997 N Iss an 200SX
1 N4AB42DOVC50355

9
1999 Buick Regal LSE
2G4WB52K7X163310

Oownl 3 bedroom, 1
4 bath, UR, DJR , FIR ,
r garage, lenced In
ck yard 112 acre.
lOSe to town, $,32,500.
ode 4505 or call
740)4411-8325.
rs a Stea111 4 bedroom,
balh , 2 car garage. .,
fNI Hawn, WV. Code
5 or call ('l04)882·

r

Al'JUS

y,:&lt;S

&gt;'OR S•LF

FOH SALE
1984 Chevy van Olcl Bell
AtlantiC van 99 000 m1les
$800 00 Or best Oller 740·
949·2025
96 Ford Wmdslar Power
wmdows
power
tacks
cru1se rear AJC 160 000
m1les $2 600 (7.40 )2 56
Bt52 .
Fuii· SIZeCl lu;.cury van. seats
7, rnechan1c owned . beautl·
ful 1993 77 00'{) m1tes.
56 999 (740)446·9961

r

40 MOTORCYOB

•

4WIIEELEilS

2002 Yamaha 660 R8pto r
yellow/black
wl mateh1ng
KBC helmet
Excellent
Cond,I!IOn $3 ,700 (304}675·
1015

oeo

, ,

94 Harley Oav1dson Ultra
Class1c 10 000 miles, blue,
excellent condlllon $t3 5ro
(740)9 49~2;?&gt;.17

·'

Murray Go·c;;lrt Tecumseh
6 0 HP. $500 Call (740}441·
06 16

r

r

Bmls &amp; MUIURS
FOR SALE

I

·--ttlliiliiiiiiii;.,_

r1,~

I
...............~ r:
FO~E

Buy
or sell
R1venne
AntlqLJes, 1124 East Mam
on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740·
992· 2526
Russ Moore,
own er

road package. new pamt
$5 500 080 Call alter 98 Jayco Eagle 30ft 5th
4 30pm (740)256·6257
wheel With
slide out
cond1!10n
Excellent
(740)446·3505

~i:"":-:-------...., sage
MISCELLA.~EOUS
1\:IERCHANDISE

98% Wolfe/S Husky pups
$75 00 Female, redlwh1te
16 Cub1c Fool Kenmore
mask Wolf/Husky $50 00
Frostless s1de ,bY s1de
Female whl\13: Wolf/S Hu sky
Refngerator Freezer &amp; GE
740·742·1121 or 742·3019
40' Electnc 4 burner Range

Coleman Campmg Trader
12FT 2 Kmg Beets, $4,995
call fo r Deta1ls (304)675
1731

w/side &amp; bott om storage ~~KC Basset rlto und puppies
(304)675·280 0
Shots, wormed, parents on
2.7 ·Color Zelllth Console TV premtse
$300
$50 (304)675·2466
(740)256·6887

each

Massey
Fergu so n
250
AKC Chihuahuas $350 · 1st d1esel. 6' bush hog, 6 fm 1sh·
shots &amp; 1 st ' wormmg Call tllg mower (740)44 6-4949
(740)446-4446
New 5003, 5005, &amp; 5020
Series John Deer e Ut11ity
AKC German Shepherds.
Tractors
@ 0% ltxed/ 36
Pups &amp; Adults
month s Used Utility Tra ctors
1-Biack &amp; Tan Litter
4 9% Vanable/ 60
@
1-Soltd Blac~ L1tter
months
Carmichae l
vet-checked &amp; sOOts
Equ1pment (7 40)446·24 12
(30&lt;1)93].2310
www tnstatek-9 com
New John Deere Round
Balers @ ~ 9% Fl)o;ed Rate
For Sale; Chocolate Lab
F1nancmg for 48 Mon ths or
Pups, $200 00
740·992· N
ew Moctet ot5 7 St an d ard
6227
Round Baler Only"'S13 250
'--------~ cash Makes 4X5 Bale
Golden Rete1ver pupp1es Carmichae l
Eqwpment
AKC 1st shot &amp; wor med
:(7:-4-0:-)4:-46-:·2::4-12-'--~-:$200 00
POP 304·675 3526

~·:

1997
Bwck
LaSabre
Llmllecl. 75 thousand m1les
Leather
lnt
Loaded
Garage Kept
$5,995
(304)675-1731

~··~··-

Starcraft fold·up camper
Atrl heat s1nk, sto.-e &amp; re~ng
erator, :;;leeps 4 Was $4,995
to
$3 995
2001 Ford Expl-orer 4x4 reduced
t:oaded, recently deta1led. (740)446-2282
59 000 m1les new t1res,
Truck Camper AC TV
(740)256-6936
512.000
Antenna w1red tor Cable,
leave message
like new $6 500 (304)675·
2003
Jee p
L1berty 3353
Renegade Loaded, 4x4
"iHH It I "i
$~3.900
Call (740)256·
1618 or (740)256-6200
10
HOME
89 'S- 10 Blazer. 4wd, 4 3
L\IPROVFMLVIS
motOr, extra motor -good
!Ires needs work S2500
BASEMENT
after ,Spm (740)843·1233
WATERPROOFING

1997 Ch rysler Sebr1ng JX
Convertible
Extra
ctean&amp;n1ce $3000
740·
985 •42 74
::..:::__:::__::_ _ _ _ __
2000 Ford Taurus. 70,000
m1les, $7,600, (740)742·
3405
. 95 Dodge truck. 4x4 auto·
-----~--- mat 1c
$3.000
Call
2001 Black Mustang , V-6,
(740)J88·001 1
$8500 _ Ftrm, (740)742-0502
mce clean car, runs greatl
Chevy 1989 short bed step
2001 Ford Excursion Limited Side or1g owner, $3 099 00
58 000 m'les (304)882 -371 I

~~:~~a170:u~c~as1e~ ~~;~ ~~:~s~~~:;5~3o_:;;~

Toy Poodle female cream Rakes/ John Deere D1sk
co lor, 7 weeks old, $300 MowefS Call fo • pnce
(740)367-7095 or (740)710· Carm1chael
EqUipment
64710
'
(740)446·2412

......... ..............

I

1999 Chevy Astra Van

10

r

2001 Mercury Sable LS 48K

mdes, loaded Ieath.,, e&lt;eel·
lent
cond1t1on ,
ask:mg
$6.500 Call (740)446·1776

Uncond1t1onal l1let1me guar·
an tee Local references tur·
n1shed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446·
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterproof1ng

rl7_4~0-)99;;2:-;5;;9;;6;;:3;;;;a,o.o.;;:;-;;;;:-~;-;;;;-;;o,;;;&amp;'Al

ADVERTISE·YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

......................................... ..........1
.

~

Reaeh 3 Counties

.•

The Home Nallonal
Bank will aucllon lhe
following Items on
Salu~,.July 2, 2005;

r

L~TOCK

.L,ook1ng to r house to rent NEW AND USED STEEL Cabbage for sale at $1 00 Ask about our Al)HA 2dr 2001 Dodge S!ratus
locally Mason or metgs co Steel Beams P1pe Rebar per head New red potatoes Member DISCounts on new One owner hke rrew Pearl
call--304-773-5600
For
Concrete
Angle, $1 50 per 5 lbs . 79 Spruce John Deere Eqwpm,ent ~&gt;ooh1 1e 3 0 V6 42 000m11es
. Channel, Flat Bar, Steel St
Galltpolls
Phone Carm1chael
Equ1prnent Ca ll (850) 543·4079
, \IIIUII\'Ithl
Grat111g
For
Drams ...(740)645-050 1 ·
740)446·2412
. -------~
Drrveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
"""
FL
' ,y &amp;
77 Monte Cer'o 305·2bbl
H OUSEHOIJl
-Dual ext1aUs1 new hres.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
ROMEGROWN GROWN
' Goon&lt;;
GR~S650 Call for 1nto (304}675Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
(;AAOEN VEGEfABLES
5979
Fnday, Bam-4 30pm Closed
Loca l Fratern1ty m desperate
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Ava11able at McKean Farm Alfalfa hay $2 50 bale
92 Plymouth Accla1m Aute
need ol donated wr!lrk1ng
O(l
Centenary
Road· Siamese kittens $75 New
Sur:~day (740)446--7300
AC, $1000 080 (.304!675electrrc stoYe or refrigerator
(740)146·9442
day bed &amp; mattress $300
6628
Please call Gn m (740l7095
•
(740)446-1062
Pole ... sarn 30x50x10FT
i t 95
FOR SAl..£
I 111, .S. (,\1,111 ' I 1,1111'.
96 Neon 2 door. 4 cyl , 5
$6795 Includes Pa1nte d
Metal
.
Free
Delive'
r
y
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
John Deere Aldmg Mowers ' speed , 118000 miles new
starting at $1.399 Financing' pamt., extra clean 1ntenor
Chapel Road, Porter. Oh10 www natiOrt,'fltdepolebarns c
Two w1ndow a1r cond1t1on ·
real n1ce runs great $1 ,900
(740)446·7444 1·877-830· om (937)559·8385
_
ava1labte subJect to John (740 )
ers SBO 00 Each 740-992·
669 0302
9.162 Free Estimates. Easy,
Deere Credit approval Your
f1nanc1ng 90 days same as A1dmg
mower
Murray 2268 1 tO
payments could be as !ow
15
TRVCI\,S
I \H\1 Sl 1'1'1 II-~
cash V1sa/ Master Card W1za rd ~ 1 Hp. 30 1n cut.
as $39 month w1th $0 down
&gt;UR
S'LE
Dnve a httle save alot
$250 · at Ford F 100 v a,
•'- II\ ~..,1(}( h.
Carmichael
Eqwpment
28Bl. $400, (740)992·7607
(740)446-2412
ThtJmpsons · Appliance &amp;
1989 350 Chevy p1okup 112
FARM
Repalr-675·7388 For sa~ ,
SPA FACTORY Ounn
R1d1ng Mower 30" cut , rear ton. automat1c utility bed
EQuiPMENT
re-co (1dltloned
automat 1c
Top Quality Warranty,
Engme, $400, call for detailS I good conditiOn $1 300
washers &amp; drye{s refr~gera
1 Wholesale, F1nanc(ng,
(304)675-1731
(304 )882-2196 (304)377 ·
Dehvenes
0% hwd Rate up to 36
tors
gas and electric
8266
2 tncfat1ons
ranges a1r cond11taners and,
months on New Jol(n 0eere Zero Turn Z·Trak Mowers
M1)ton Flea Markel
Compact Tractors &amp; 110 TLB from J_ghn Deere available at 2000 GMC 214 ton tp1Ck11JP .
wr mger washers Will do
&amp; Ashland Kentucky
at CarmiChael Equipment · 4 9°'o
f1 xed
rate
fro S~O 200, call
repairs on maJOr brands 1n·
ClarenCe
_160~22· 7185
(740)446·2412
Ca n11 1Chael Eqwpment w1th Goble (740)992·1108 11 no
shop or aJ your home
John Deere Credit approval answer [eave messagll
Used Furniture Store, 130 Two bra'nd new Love Seats.
2N Ford tractor spent $600 (740)446-2412
Butav1lle P1ke Washers dry- Dark Tan 1r1 color $350 for
an motor recently, new pain!, www careq cgm
ers. relngerators ranges botll call (304)675-6722
good
rubber,
$2,100
I I~\ \"'I'OIH \ IIH\
mattresses dresser couch(740)742·3800,
es d1nettes, rec 11ners. grave .
BUILDING
monuments much more
s~
I
AIIIDi
3 Pomt hitch post hole d1g·
(740)446·4782, Gall1 pOI1s
FORS.ALE
ger Ltke new 9" auger
OH Hrs ~ 1-3 (M·S) .
Block., brtek, sewer p1p~s. $375 740-416· 1497
Whtr lpdol wa'sher &amp; dryer wmdows-. lmtels, etc ClaLJde
Call (740)446·4536
W1nters , A1o Grande, OH 7' K1ng Gunter f1n1sh mower
new bfades &amp; new double.·
Al&lt;nQlJioS
Call 740·245·5121
bell, (7 40)992 5963 $695

·- - - - - -

r···~·~

FRun,;&amp;
VEGf.TABLES

I

Amana
motel
type
heater/AC . 9000 BTU w~dtg ·
1tal controls, $400. Also,
Lennox heat pump. 3 5ton.
great
shape,
$200.
(740)245-0134

I

1

mRENT

'

I
•

I
••

i
i
l Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
i Gallipolis Daily Tribune; Point Pleasant Register, or
•

••
••
•

i

I
••

Daily·Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The .Tri.:County Marketplace!
'

View photos/Info online,

3 bedroom Ranch, 2 ca r
garage, UJ·ground pool.
sgo,ooo Call 1740)256:
1962.

!:~:~2 Aactne Area

SPACE

r

Downtown Off1ce Space 5
room Slllte $650/mo, 1 room
ofl1ce- $225Jmo: 2 room
Available
1mrned1ately suite $250/mo Secunty
Beaut1ful, clean, and spa· depostt reqwed You pay
CIOLJS 3 bed room town·
ul1ht1es Al l spaces verv mce. Fiberglass popup camper.
house W1th storage/play·
Elevator Call (740)446 -3644 sleeps 4.$1800.3 Dog Fnck
room Downtown Galhpolls lor appOII)tment
sawmi ll w1th gas power un 1t,
$610/month
No utilities
S4 000, medal cattle racks,
pa1d No pets Cal! (740)4 46· For Leese Olftce or retail
$75 haywagons 5 ton &amp; 8
-9~9_61_ _ _ _ _-:c:-:c:c=- spaces In very good cond1· ton , manure spreader,
lion Downtown Gall1po1ts 30)(1 00 me dal greenhouse
BEAUTIFI,JL
APART.
Approx 1600 sq ft each 1 Wi th furnace $2.000 green·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
or 2 baths. Lease pnce
house furnaces &amp; supplies,
PRICES AT JACKSON
negotiable to encourage wcu lat1ng fans, $50, Phone,
ESTATES, 52 We~twood
new
busmess
Call ':' (740)949-21 15 1! not at
Dr~ve lrom ' $344 to $442
(740)446-4425 or (740)446· home leave you r phone
yYal}l: to shop &amp; movte.s Call
3936
number
Equal
740-446·2568
Hous 1ng Opportunity
For Rent
32 x44' Block
JET
Garage
wtth
12':.44'
AERATION MOTORS
Beech Str eet Middleport, 2 attache d
block Repa1red. New &amp; Aebwlt In
bedroom furnished apt , utii· apartmentloff1ce Large lot Stock Ca ll Ron Evans. 1·
WV $400 per 800-537·9,528
lttes paid pre~lous rental m Letart
reference, depoSit no pets, mont/11 (3Q4)675-7516
(740)992·0165

----

2-br. 2-ba t 1 acre Eckard
Chapel Road ~t2 N 6 m11es
from Pt. Pleasant 304-675~
1757

North 3rd. Middleport
bedroom turn1shed apt pre·
v1ous rental reference, dep ,
no pets 74(}.992·0165

1 and 2 bedroom apartments furntshed and unfur·
n1shed
secunty deposit
reqwed no pets 740-992·
2218 , .

,.

·- -- - -- - - - "
3 BOOroom,
Bath, Large
Fenced Lot, Lots of Storage,
4 miles out
Sandhill
DallyiWeekty/Mon thiy, 740- ('l04)675·2507
985-3639 or 740-41 6· 1823
3BA, 1BA Ranch style
GIVEI Guitar &amp; Bass lessons house, located 6 rmles p~
Call Travrs at (740)446· Holzer hosp1tal on Rt 160 12x50 1988 Pme Ridge
(740)386·9263
2709.
mobile home Good CQOdltion, all electric, 2 bedroom,
Health Care- elder care 1n 403 Spring Ave Pomeroy,
1 bath, major aPpfiances
my home, pnvate hv1ng area OhiO. One family home lor
included. $7,300. PrEisent lot
wittJ bath , experienced With 80 years. Still hke new 3
available to rent $150
reference, Park Ad , Shade, bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, 2 car
monthly (740)446-2796 01
garage, sso';ooo 740.992·
Oh (740)992.()5*
(740)388·9687..
2426
'
Interio r/exterior
paint1ng
reason~ble
rates
refer· No DOwn Payment even 2 BR tra1ler, god shape, on
ences, expenenc:ed, lor free ,.vith tess than pertect credit 314 acte grounst North
estimates call (740)142 - on 1h1s 3 bedroom, 1 bath GaUia area (740}+46· 1400
hOme 1n Middleport. Comer ~-,----,----­
20i3 or 645--2638
lot, carport , wrap-around 2000 28x80 Patriot. 4 bed·
Llgtlt Dump Truck ServiCe , porch, fenced m yard, base- ri(Om. exc ellent condition .
·stone gravel, sand, dirt , ment, paymenv same as Asking $48,000. .Needs
(740)949-4700
rent . 740-992·6300.
moved (740)367-7245.

·,

REAl. FsnTh

H~

All real nlale advel11alna
In this newsp~per Is
aubtect to the Federal

Free-Estimates
"""Clearly Clean•••

' I Buy
buy s
Ou1ck
6300

~~

Security Off1cer needed for
a great orga~zatfonlll
'TO LoAN
Secur1tas IS now h1nng for
lfie GallipoliS OH area
Compet1t1ve wages
~ 2005 by NEA, Inc,
Umlorms and tra1n1ng
provided
Newly Remodeled 213BR, 1
Please S.pply betwe$.n the
110 I-IELPWANIID ~IIIlO
1/2 BA, Hardwood Ceramtc
hours of 9:00am-3.00pm,
Floors. full Basement. 1 Car
.
. .
Monday·Frlday
attached Garage, Deck &amp;
6354 AI 60 East Slllte 4,
Large Fenced Backyard
Barboursville, WV 25564
Looking for a new job?
$88,500 (859)797:9806 or
Fo f'more 1nformahon call
If you are took1ng for a
(304)675·2038
1·866-740·6082
better career opportun1ty,
LEARN
EOE!MIFION
we may have a positton for
No Down Payment Possible,
' TO :
you Full and Part time
- - -.----~-1Soo square f1 house, 3
schedules available
STNA S Overbrook Center
bedroom, 2 bath , full base·
DRIVE
Weekly paychecks plus "" ~ Is currently accepting appll·
ment, new heat pump, sets
pard tramlng , Paid
cat1ons for full·tlme STNA S. .
on 3 acres SA 7, Eastern
'NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
vacat1ons and holidays.
lA·7 P. and 7P·7 A, and 3A·
School
Drstnct, (740)985~
· FULL TIME cLAsses
3P-·---..
sh1fts are avail4321
• COL TRAINING
bl
If
t
t •
·FINANCING AVAILABLE
Call today to hnd out how
a e
you are In ares eu,
PLACEMENT
NO DOWN PAYMENT· 3 :Jr ,
.·JOB
ENROLUNGNON
voucanJolnour 1*u.m 1 , please come m and fillp out
1-077-463-'6247 ext. 2456 · an applicatiOI}, at 333 age
2 112 baths, farge 2 car
Street, Mt~dleport. Please
garage,
1n
Middleport .
ALLIANCE
McClure's RestaurElflt now _N.co_P-,h_o_ne_
ca_l_sl~E_O_E_ _ ~~~===~=~~~ Relocating. Call (740)992·
TRACTOR· TRAILER
hlnng all locations, full or Stylists needed at FantastiC I!!
9799 Leave message
TRAINING CENTERS
parHtme, Pick up appliCa·
PR~ONAL I
Sams new locatiOn 1n the
WYTHEVILLE, VA
tiOn at location &amp; bnng back Wai·Mart Plaza S[gn on Lw--•SERIIiliiVltiii(Eiiiiii;.,-~ Rental Properties for sale,
between ' 10 OOam
&amp; bonus, Free CEU hou rs, --.
• Traller and Garage Ap(,
1-800-334-1203
11 OOam, Monday thr u patd vac:allon, full &amp; part
TURNED DOWN ON
..MaSon on 4th Ave House on
._,_-:::,.•::••:::""e:"""""""""'"::'-"'~""---1 Saturday
time help needed Come &amp; SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? Mad1son Ave ,· Pt Pleasant
0
• 8
_N_e_ed_e_d-~--::E-xp_e_r-,e-n-c-ed work In our friEIRttly family
No Fee Unless We Win!
House Roush Ferrell Lane
AV Nl All Areas! 10 uy or
Pt Plea sant Fo r Vacant
11
Shl"
304
Keyboard
player
lor
estab
atmosphere,.
Call
(740)446·
1·888-582·3345
·
u ' C u 1y
e
..ey pe ars,
·
•
I t
"
5
675-1429
llshed band. Must De, versa· 7267 or stop 1n
In ~~ason
n
til e, vocals a plus. (740)446·
(304)6 75-1911 or (304)593on9 or 10"')675·1616 ••• ,
Srnoo!s
I r10
H..-u.nxo
2096
Cashland- now htnng a part·
•--oiiNsrRioililtiUifC'IlONifioitio-r
t1me teller for the1r Pomeroy 5pm
.
.
FOR SALE

11

July 1st&amp;2nd On St Rt143,
3 m1les from St At 7
Neighbors 2-huge sales
multi fam ilies-baby ttems
toys, fLJrntture. clothes tod·
dlers. youth , m1ss8s &amp;
adults, home 1ntenor, dlshas, exerCise equ1pments,
ga 1age u
• 001 opene•. ho•se
' s
v1deos much more ra1n or
5h_ ' _ " • - - - - , - - - _

~~:ae~~:sk~~::n:no~~~~:

•

•

No Steam-or-Shampoo

~

www.comics.com

--------I .
n...... ~y~.... .,
Ratner Garage- Tackervll e
.... CU\U.ICU llUWI.JLI!, . Ad , Rac1ne , Thur Fr1, Sat
glk:ler re«kers, doll collecFriday,
July
1st
and tton, furniture, Rummager's
. Saturday, July 2nd. 34660 Debghtl
re.., Road, Pomeroy. 1/2
''
Thur~ay
·• and Fnd ay, 6•30 &amp;
m' le go through the un•-,_
\nl
7·1. Corner of 6th and
pass away from Meigs High College Street, s'yracuse
Etectricai/Refrigeration ...............................840
I I
I Clo h
School Ewrylhing Cheapl
Equ i pmenl tor .Rent... .................................. 480
Ftve am1 Y sa e
t es
Excavating ................................................... 830
household items
F ann Equipment ... ,, .. , .. ,....... ....... ,...... ,.. , .. ,.. , 61 0
b1kes, much:•" mlsc
Oon'l , :eq:.o::u.::lpm__.:e_nt::..,_m,_lsc:.:...~--F anns tor Rent,, .. , .. ,.. ,.................. ,... , .........
m1ss ttl1s one
Two Family yard sale Thru ,
Fanns tor Sale ...........................: ....:............ 330
June 30 one day only
at
Friday, July 1st
Jeff the homes of Doriald Frteh
F or Lease .. ,.. ,, .. ,.. ,........,...........: ... ,...... ,........ 490
Snowden's reSidence tn &amp; Jerry Burke on Summer
F or Sale ••, ..... , ........... ,, ... , .. ,........... , ............... 585
Rutla~ on College Ave •
Road .
Home
tnt ,
F or ,Sale or Trade ............. :........................... 590
m1crowave,
di
shes
&amp;
lots
F ruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Garage and Bake Sale
F urnished Rooms. , .. ,.. ,............................ , ... 450
sppnsored by Hemtock more nice stuH
Grange. Fry res1dence nexl
General Hauling ... .... :....... ,.................., ........ 850
to
kirmer
Salisbuty
G Iveaway .... ,, .. , .... .. , .. ,............ , ......................040
Efementary School Friday,
HaPPY Ads ....... , ..... , ..... ,......... , ..... , ....... ......... 050 '
July 1st 9.4 and Saturday,
Hay &amp; Grain., ... , .. , .. ,: .. _,................................640
3 Party yard sale- Haven
July 2nd, 9-4
• Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Hgts , NeW Haven. Fn.-Sat ,
Home lmprovements ...................................810 . Garage SaTe af Jeremy July
1·2,
9am-4pm,
Roses 1(2 m1le out county antiques. househotd furm·
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
road 28 from Racine July 1· lure. baby furnlh.li"e, lg
Household Goods ....................................... 510
·9·0J...4·00 ClOthes. Tommy, amount of toots-, tQYS, stone
Houses for Renl .......................................... 410
Polo. A+E , Old Navy. A&amp;F. jars &amp; churns, much more
In Memoriam ..............................:.............; ... 020
Uttle boys clothes, 10)'$, furlnsuraoce ..................................................... 130
nitUre, lohil of househOld Glint Yard Sale Bla11m Lane
L awn &amp; Garden Equlpment •., ..................... 680
(King Bedding. rooster .&amp; Rt 2 Gallipolis Ferry June
Livestock ......................................................630
30 a July 1 · 2 ...h
item~) No Junk ,\
1.ost and Found ...........................................O&amp;O
Hundreds of Items &amp; more to
Garage ~ ~uly 1-2. 9amLots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
coine on Satmday
5pm,
115
Kerr,
Pomeroy,
Miscellaneous ...... , .... , ..,...............................1.70
sofa sleeper, collectabkl Huge Yard Sale Lots or
Misce{laneous Merchandise....................... 540
porcelam
dolls,
Home' E'&lt;~eryth lng
Fnday -&amp;
Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860
lntenor
Saturday 1809 Jefferson
Mobile Homes lor RenL .. - ........................ 420
B1VO S.?
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................ 320
Garage Sale Joly 1&amp;2, 220
Money lo Loan ...............................; ............. 220
Third Street, Mason, W Va
WA!!IIED
Rain or,shme• Multifamily
Motorc;ycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
mBuv
M us!cal lnstrurnenta .. , .. ,........................... ,, 570
Garage Sale. Saturday, July
Personals ........................: ..... - ..................... 005
2nd, 9 tJO.MO SA 2:1B·Top Absolute Top Dollar U S
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
of Chester Hill Ba~ Items, Silver and Gold Coins,
Plumbing &amp; Heating ..... ,............................. . 820
TV-OVD ptayer-TV cabinet Probfsets, Gold Rings.( U S
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Currency,-M TS Coin Stlop,
misc.
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
'15t
Second
Avenue.
July 1&amp;2-9A M.·? 613 Elm
Gl
Real Eslate Wanted ..................................... 360
Streel, Elmwood Terrace
Schools Instruction .. , .. ,......................, ....... , 150
I \ll't I I ' \II'\ I
Som8thmg for everyone
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertllizer .............................. 650
'I I~\ It I '
Raone, OhiO
Silualions Wanled ....................................... 120
July 1-4, Bailey Run Rdt "Space for Rent.. ........................................... 460
124, first ,house on right,
Sporting Goods ........... ..................... ,.. ,.. ,.... 520
sm/EOOra lg Sizes
SUV's
Sale ............................................. , 720
Trucks tor Sale .................................. :: ........ 715
July 1·8 30--164 N Ma1n An Excellent way to earn
U pholslery ... , ......................, .................... , .. , 870
Street. RuUand
3 Famty money The New Avon
Sale-Everything cheap
Call Maniyn 304·882·2645
Vans F or Sale ................ ,, ................. ,.. , .. , .., .. 730
Wanted to Buy ............... :............................. 090
July 1st only 31472 Noble
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Wanted to Buy- Farm SUpplles ......... ......... 620
Summrt Road, Middleport,
Assemble crafts,
Wanled To Do .............................................. 180
S.·1
wooa ttems
Wanted to RenL. ......................................... 470
Karr Street SvraclJS8, July
Jo$48()/wk
Yard Sale- Gallipolis ... :: .............................. ,072
t &amp;2 8 IJ0...4 00 Furniture . .
Materials
prov1ded
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
dolls. curtatns . clothtng , Free 1nforma1ton pkg 24 hr
Y&gt;rd Sale-Pt. PleasanL .............................. 076
kn1ck knacks Aa1n or Shme
80 t -428-4649

4

Brand New Method

"-J-1

r..

~
L

::::

MONEY

Gobel &amp; Hummel frgunnes ,

Thurs . June 30th and
Kelly clowns drshes. co mFriday, July '1st, 9- 5.2 m1tes
forters. curtams, clothr'ng,
out Route 218 up hill on
bar stool small tables , lots
right Wood swtngset, furn1·
_o_l.,th.,'n~g";s--'----lure, toys, bOoks, tapes ,
7/1-7/2. Bam-Spm Gtrls cl othes, m1sc
baby clothes, Jadres &amp; mens
ro good home 2 Labs, black clothrng toys, hOusehold Yard sale July 1·2 Oak
kitChen cab1nets dresser,
~n d chocolate. full blooded
rtems and much more 9231
10 papers Call (740) 446· SA 218 next to Mercerville 30' camper, cloth1ng, m1sc
416 Ramblewood Or Patnot
3677
store
(740)379·2415.

~~~o:w:.:o:a:u~r=e~~
Carpet-Cleaning

phis120dnn @portamedlc net

Monday· Friday

Free A very fqend ly female
Australtan Shepherd puppy
tc good home rn Country
1?'1-0l208-0095

1r1D

, lwright@ic,net

***********

p12 "YARD SALE,l_·--GiiiALI.IPOLISOiiijjjj,liii;;,;,-,.1

(740)388·9325

One ~aue r1ear Gallipolis
(740)36,7,7886

POLICIES Ohio IJa!ley Publl&amp;hlfiQ reaervea the t"lghl to edit, reJect, or cancel any ad at any time ErrOJa ~ual be reported on the first ~y of
Trlbune-Senlinet-Aagiater will ba reapona1ble for no more than the coat of the e~ce occupied by the error and Dnly the flrsllnnrtlon. We
any lou Q e:.penae that results from the publiearion or omlaaio" of an 8dvert1seme,t. Correction will bO made In the first available edition. • Box
are always confidential. • Current rate CJ ard, appll,a. • All real "late advertisements are aubject to the Federal Fair Houamg Act of 1168. • Thla ~,,.,, ..,,.
accept• only help wanted ads meeting EOE etandarda We will not knowingly accept
advertising in violation olthe law.

*******fr***

YARD SALE

fe rent c;olors. 2 spayed
rrrommy cats All to good -homes (740)446-0645
3 family yard/bake sale, Fn
and Sat July 1st &amp; July 2nd,
B yr old female CKC regis- .sam-4pm, @ Galha Manor,
te red Pug . fawn colored 138 Buhl Morton Ad ,'
74 0)379-2306
Gallipolis Achvtty Bulldrng

Black Lab {304)773'-5103

prepaid•

Adult clothes, baby Clothes,
matern1ty clothes, · paby
accessones 7/1·7/2 &amp; 7/87/9 1Oam-5pm. 7498 SR
141

Reward for safe return
6 week old Blat:k Lab m1xed
Missmg
female, gray Tabby
pupp1es free lo good home
Weanng pink collar With fake
Cn ll (740)367-0624
d•amonds and red name tag
Lost near old Badwell school
6 church 9)(1 ceili ng llgt1ts
(740)38S.8166
300 watt bulbs, alum. 304or 304·882·2648or 304-895-

b~

be

Lms&amp;
ACREAGE

acres WalniJt
Or~ ve
$32.000
(30&lt;1)6754843

Now you con hov,~ borc;ters and'graphics
....._..,
- added to your classified ads
(. ~
Jr'!".
Borders $3.00/per ad
E!ii4
Graphics 50¢ for·small
$1.00 for Iorge

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
11
Publication
Sunday Dh;play: 1:00 p . m .
Thursday fo.- Sundays Pa

• All ads must

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

• -- - - - - - - • Lost· Male Bfa'ck dpg With
some wh1te Med1um s1zed
2 male Pomeraman1Sp1tz Answers to the name Lucky
rrux Good w1th children. L.ost 1n t he Rt 588 area
nee ds good home Call Offenng $50 reward. please
I 7 40)388-Q 143
call (740)44 1·13!',

13 95-3548 or 304-675-6487

p.m.

r

CONVENIENTLY L.OCAT·
EO I AFFORDABL.E1
Townhouse
apartments
and/dr Small houses ' FOR
AENT Ca ll (740)441 -11 11
for applicatiOn &amp; 1ntormatlon
,--------Furn1shed upsta1rs 3 rooms,
&amp; bath Clean, ret &amp; dep
reqwred No pets (740)4461519.

MObile Home L.ot only
'
Add 1son P1ke- $125/month·
call (740)446-3644 for n;x;re Grac1ous hv1ng 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at Village
mfo
.~-~------'- Manor
and
R111erstde
Nice 2 bedroom
bath Apartments 1n Middleport
appliances, excellent toca- From $295·$444 ,Call 740..
liOn Secunty .depos1t No 992·50~4 Equal Housmg
p~ts . $375/mo (740)446 - QpportU~ItleS
3994 or F40)446·2423
Large 1 ~room Apartment
Rert
$425/month
Very small 2 BA 1n Bidwell ror
Water, trash, sewer pa1d. no Ut1lit1es' mcluded (304)6(5·
pets $325/ 0ep $325/Rent. 58 19

46

Oisplay Ac:ts

Dally In .:. column: 1:00 P·,~·
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next DaY's Pii!iper
Sunday In-Column : 1 : 00 p . m.
.Frida,. For Sundayti Paper

'• Start Your Ads With A Keyword .• lnc;lude Complete
Description • Include A Price • A'lloid Abbr-eviations

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

jt \\\(" '\ll \II \I..,

Oeacllfiru'

eck&amp;BLJtld1ngs A1r See a
76 Oshat Ad

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

'

r~

ATLANTIC CITY r::I''TAV~AVI
September 23; 2005 to
September 25; 2005
$160/per person
Harrah's Casino &amp; Resort
Privat!l Jet out of
Charleston, WV
Hosted by PVH Community
Relations
Limited seats
Call 675-4340. Ext 1326 to
make reservations
4TH OF JULY
SELLEBRATION
July 1st thru July 5th
at

A TOUCH OF THYME
At 62, Hartford. WV
All 4" Pots $1.50

6" pots $3.00
Selection of 1 Gallon
Perennial's $4.75
Shrub Specials $4.00 &amp; Up

'·

I
•

I

I
I
!®allipoltg 119atlp ~ribune
•

I
.. . I
I
The Daily Sentinel ~~oint ~leagant l\egfg~er !
•

L_,_J740),~~.~~•-•..;_.,_..,_,~~.~~•~•-••~u~••-~~..~:!~.-..~.J

�.

'

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

L•c

•cES
Sheriff Sates
Number
Case
04CV130

'.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Wednesday, June 29, 2005
ALLEY OOP .

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7
Nlj:A

BRIDGE
Vouo· Kllolh'• tc,•

~IIUYV 0

Publi c Nvtl~· c"" lot Nrw"" I""P.,"""" ·
Dellve1·ed Rlu.hl t.o Your l&gt;on•··

·crossword

railroad spike set by
Pleas, Meigs County, Beginning at the
this survey at the .Ohio.
nortt1east corner of
southwest corner of In pursuance of an William Kasper's lot
The Bank of New York
Lot 345; thence along
order of sale to me 15 in Naylors Run In
Plaintiff
the west line of Lot directed from said Pomeroy, Ohio run·
vs
345 North '17 degrees
court in the above ning northerly .with
Arthur Bradshaw et al
18 minutes 00 sec~ entitled action, I will Spring Street one
defendants
onds West129.591eet expose to sale at pub· hundred ( 100) teet,
Court of Common
to the point ot begin·
lie auction on the thence westerly to
Pleas, Meigs County,
hlng,
containing
Street;
front steps of the Fischer
Public Notice'
Ohio.
0.148 acres (all 0.097 Meigs County Cou'rt thence southerly with
'1118 WOifll's
In pursuance of an
• acre, of Lot 345 and .House on Friday, said Fisher Street to
Mobile
Homes •
Roofs
SHERIFF SALES
order of sale to me
0.051 acre out of Lot
August 5, 2005 at 10 the northeast corner
Flat or LOI!V Sloped Roof ~ Carports
directed from said
Case
Number 344). Subject to all
a.m. ol said day, the of William Kasper's. ·
court In the above
04cvt65
legal
·. easements. following described lot, one hundred (100)
Barns • Porches
Bank of New York PPN : 15·00028.000 Real Estate: lhe fol- feet, thence east with
entitled action , I will
Residential • Commercial
Plaintiff
expose to sale _at
308 Page Street,
de•crlbed the northerly line of
lowing
ENERGY EFFICIENT
Public Auction on the
vs
.
Middleport Oh 45760.
prt!mlses, situated in William Kasper's lot
Front Steps of The
Andy L. Pellerson et Current
owner the Township
ol to tho place of begin·
at Defendants
Meigs County Court
Rodney R Roush et al Salisbury, County of ning. Be the same
Court of Common 308
House on Friday, July
Page Street, Meigs and State ol more or less but sub29, 2005 at 10 a.m. of Pleas , ,fllelgs County, Middleport, Oh 45760 Ohio:
ject to all legal high·
. said day, the loll ow· · · Ohio . ' ·
following ways. ·
PP•
15·00028.000 The
lng described Real
In pursuance of an prior deed refer~ ' described real estate, Parcel
Nos.
.16·
Estate: Siluated in
order of sale to me ~nces: Volume 344 in
Section
32, 01449.00, 16-01450,
the
Village
of
directed from said page 345 appraised at
Township 2, Range 16-01451, 16.01452
Middleport, S'e ction
court In the above $27,000.00 terms of 13, Ohio Company's Current Owner: Marla
entitled action, I will
29, t:owh 1 North,
Sale:· Cannot be sold
Purchase, beginning Romine et al
Range 13 West, as ·) expose to sale at pub- for less than 2/3 (two at e stake on 1tre Property
at:
412
lie au ell on ·on the thirds)
recorded in Volume 2,
of
the
north line of satd seC~ Spring Avenue
page 12 of the Meigs
front steps of the appraised value. 10% lion at the northeast · Pomeroy, Ohio
County, ~lat Records,
Meigs County Court down on the, dby of
corner of a certain 5~ Prior
Deed
C&lt;!unty of M~lgs a~d
House on 'Frlday, July sale, cash or certified acre lot now or for- References : Volume
State of Ohio and
22, 2005 at tO a.m., of check, balance due merly
owned
by 79, Page 533
boUnded
and
said day, the follow- on confirmation of Smith Hysell, deeded Appraised
at
described as follows:
lng described real sale.
to him by Nimrod $30,000.00
· Being the south half
estate:
Robert E. Beegle,
Hysell; thence east 8 Terms
of
Sale:
.. of Lot Number Two
DESCRIPTION
OF Meigs County Sheriff.
rods to the center of Cannot be sold for
: Hundred
Seventy
REAL ESTATE
. Attorney fQr Plaintiff,
the public road where less than 2/3rds or
: (270) In V. N. Hortori&lt;s
Situated
in
the
Scott E Collister,
it crosses the north the appraised value.
Addition to Lower
Township of Sutton,
Attorney . 525 VIne
line ol said section; 10% down 9n day ot
LEWIS
· Pomeroy, now · incor- County of Meigs, and
Street, Suite 800
thence south along sale, cash or certified
State of Ohio; Lot No.
pora!ed into and
Cincinnati,
Ohio
the center ol said check, balartce due
CONCRETE
21 in Buffington's 45202 (513) 723-2200.
made a part of the
road 17 rods to a on confirmation of
CONSTRUCTION
VIllage of Middleport,
Addition to the Town (6) 22, 29, (7) 6
stake an"d stone; . sale.
of Syracuse.
: Ohio.
thence west 4 112 Robert E. Beegle, Qualit}' Guaranteed
Concrete Removal
• Said premises also
Percel No. 20.00500
rods to a stak~ at the
Meigs County Sheriff
ATV Paris &amp; A CC.
and Replacement
Public Notice
: known
as
575 Commonly
Known
southwest corner of Attorney
for
the
James A Will Jr.
""An
."'• w. "~
".··
, Street, as: 1207 Church St.,
Broadway
said
5-acre
lot; Plaintiff
Owner .
Middleport, Oil 45760 Syracuse, OH 45779
Sheriff Sales
thence In a 'northeast- Kirk W. Llederbach
... li~ ..JI ,,
PPN:
15-01479.000 Current Owner: Andy Case ·
Number erly direction 7 rods P.O, Box 24005
32119 Welshtown Rd.
Current owner, Ar!hur. L. Patterson el al
04CU175 .
· to ·a slake; thence In a Lyndhurst, OH44124· .
25 Years Experience
i,omeroy, Ohio·
Bradshaw et al 575
Appraised at $15,000
..
LaSalle
Bank northwesterly. direc- 0005
David Lewis
. 45769
:· BroadWay
Street, Terms
of
Sale: National Association
tion · t3 rods 10 the (216) 291·3600
(740)
992-2432
· Middleport,
Ohio
Cannot be sold for
Plaintiff
place ol · beginning, (6) 29 (7) 6, 13, 3tc
Email:jwill45769 '
15· less than 2/3rds or
: 45760 · · PP#
VS
containing 80 rods,
lnsund
@ynhoo.com
· 01479.000 prior deed
the appraised value.
Chesler A Roush etal
. 1 m . Frre Estimates
more or less.
10% down on day of
: references : Volume
defendants
·oeed:
Reference
Public Notice
136
page
257
sale, cash or certified
Court of Common
Volume 96, Page 137,
Ta~ e
appraised
at check, . balance due Pleas, Meigs County,
and Volume 96, Page ·Sheriff Sales
· $27,000.00 terms of on confirmation of Ohio.
135, Meigs County Case Number Probate
sale: cannot be sold
sale.
In purau~nce of an Official Records.
#33164
'" Homes
.
t
Let me do it for youI
lor less than 2/3rds of Robert E. Beegle, ,order of sale· to me Current owner: Kim
,n Septic Systems ,
Suzanne
Sayre,
1
ll
Roofmg
·
the appraised value.
Meigs County Sheriff
directed from said D. Mitchell at al
Administrator
!II Backhoe
10% down on day of
Attorney allaw
court in the above Property At: 32945 . Plaintiff
mSite
sale, cash or certified
50 Broad Street, Suite entitled action, I will
Bailey Run Road, VS
rfl Preparation
check, balance dUe
1200
.
expose to sale at pub- Pomeroy, Ohio PP# Suzanne Sayre at al
Ll'l Dozer
()hlo lic auction on the 14-00776.00
on confirmation of Columbus,
. Prior Defendants
i%1 Garages
sale.
43215 .
front steps of the
Deed
References: Court of Common
111 Utilities
Robert E. Beegle , 614·221-7663
Meigs County Court Volume 96 Page 137, · Pl9&amp;s;
11 Pole Barns
(6) 15, 22, 29
Meigs County Sheriff.
House on .Friday, July
Volume 96 , Peg~ 139 Meigs County:·Ohio
~
Pomeror, Ohio j
· 'Attorney'-for the
29th, 2005 at 10 a.m.
appraised
at In pursuance of an
!ISlE::.«.
740-991-ml I
plaintiff
John
D.
of said day, the lol· $15,000.00 terms of order of sale to me
740-416-:ZH~J
Clunk, Atlorney 5601 ·
Public Notice
lowing
described
sale: Can not be sold directed from said
740-591-4641
Hudson Drive, Suite
Real Estate.
lor less than 2/3 of court in the above
400, Hudson, Ohio Sheriff Sales
Slluated In the VIllage
the appraised value. entitled acilon, I will
44236 (330)342·8203. .
number of Middleport, County " 10% down on Day ol fi'Xpose to sale at pub- Mye r s Tree
Case
(6) 22, 29, (7) 6
.
The of Meigs and State of Sale,
04CU041
Cash
or lic . auction on the
Servi ce
Provident Benk
Ohio, known and Certified
Check · front steps of the
• Insured· Free
desc.lbed
as
lot Balance
plaintiff
due · on Meigs- County Cour_t
Estimates
Public Notice
VS
· •
No.14 in Behan's Confirmation ol Sale.
House on Friday,
Ph.one
• Senior Citi7.en
Addl,ion to sheffield,
Rodney R Roush.etal
R'o bert E. Beegle, . August 5, 2005 at
discount
· Sheriff Sales
•
defendants • ·
now Middleport, and Meigs County Sheriff' 10:00 a.m. olsald day,
(740) 992-5232
740-992-2621
c ·aae ·
Number · Court ol Common
begin the same prop· Attorney
lor
the the
following
~0 Years Ex~ rit nec
SxlO, LOxlO,
04CV168
erty deeded .to John Plaintiff; Lillie Sheets desc~i~d real estate.
Pleas,
· Ameriques! Mortgage ..Meigs County, Ohio.
E. Lyons by Meigs &amp; Warner, 213 East Exhibit A
lOxlS, 10x20,
'I'll
Company
In pursuance of an Court, and recorded
Second
• Street, , The •
following
l0x30
Plaintiff
order of sale to me In Volume 56. page
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 described real estate
siluated
In
the
All Your Home
directed from said
515 and 516, Meigs (740) 992·6689
vs
.Janet Jeft'ers
l
h'
f Ch t
Improvement Needs
court In the above County Deed Record.
Gary N. Curtis etal
(6) 29, (7) 6, 13
33795 Hiland Road
as er
• Siding • Windows
owns IP 0
enlllled action, I will
Also the following
Defendants
in the County of
• Decks • Pun.:hes
Pomeroy, Ohio
Court of Common
•~pose to sale at pubdescribed real estate
Meigs and the State
·.Cerami c Tile &amp;
Ple~s, Meigs County,
lie auction on the situate in the VIllage
Public Notice
of Ohio:
Hardwood Flooring
Ohio.
·
Iron! steps of The of Middleport, County
Situate In Section 19,
• Garag~s
Meigs County Court of Meigs, State ol
In pursuance ot an
Sheriff Sale
Town 4, Range' 12 of • Room Add. • Roofing
to·wlt:
order of s~le .to me . housa on Friday, July Ohio,
Case
·Number lhe Ohio Company's
• Kitchens • aaths
directed from said
29, 2005 altO a.m., or Beginning at the
04cv139
Purchase,
Chester
"No Job To Smail"
court In the above
said day, the follow· northwest corner of
Bay
Financial Township,
Meigs
Racine, OH
en!Hied action, I will
lng .. described Real
what was formerly
County, State of Ohio
740-247-2162 or
Savings Bank
expose to sale at pub· Estate:
J.C. Russell's lot No.,
740-416-3508
and being more per·
Plaintiff
97 Beech Street
ticularly described 88
14 yrs. Experience
lie auction on the
Exhibit "A" Situate In
14; thence northerly
VI
Middleport, OH
the
VIllage
of along Second Street Merlo Romine et al
·front steps of the
follows, to·wlt:
l
Meigs Co~nty Court
Middleport, County of 61eet; thence eesterty Defendants
Commending at a lire
Meigs, and. State of In the northwest cor·
House on Friday, July
Court ot Common hydrant on the south
HOWART) l.
22, 2005 at 10 a.m. of Ohio: Situated In
ner of what was J.C.
PlaaS 1
·
992-ll94
· side of Township road
WRfTT"rl
&lt;
said day, the follow·
Horton's
Lower Russell's Lot No. 14;
Meigs County, Ohio
number 91,1.20 miles
IC.Jt', C1 .JI IJJ
or
992-66l5
lng described real P a m e r o y thence westerly along In pursuance of an northeast of the Inter·
ROOFING
estate.
'
Subdivision,
and the north line ol what order of sale to me section of Township
"Middleport's only
Legal Description
being a parcel creal· wae formerly the J.C.
directed from said road number 91 and
All 1ypes of roofing:
·
Sell-Storage"
Situated
In
the ed out or Lots 344 Russell lot to the
court In the above State road number
Shingle, Fiat , Metal · ,
and 345 of said subdl· place of beginning,
Township !'I Chesler,
entitled action, I will 248; thence North 27
New or Repair
Meigs Cqunty, Ohio · vision bounded and being a triangular expose to 'sale at pub- , degrees 05' 20" East
Seamless Guuer being In Section 4, . ilescrlbed as· follows:
shape· piece of land lie auction on the 261 .60 lee! to an Iron
Town 2 North Range
Beginning. at an Iron being 6 teet at the Iron! steps ol· the pin; oald point being I Downspou1 - Siding
13 West of the Ohio pin set. by this survey base
on
second Meigs County Court . the point or begin·
*free Esllmlllh
Co!Apany's purchase at the northwest cor- Street.
House on . Friday, · nlng; thence North 34
and 'being described . ner of the aforemen- · Reference:
Official
August 5, 2005 at degrees 00' ' East
'. 949~1405
. afoliows:
tloned
Lot
345:
Records Volume 88,
IO:OO ·a.m. olseld dey, 53.00 teet to an Iron
• New Homes
Beginning at a point thence · along the . Page
359, Meigs the
following pin: thence North 15
• Garages
north line of Lot 345 County Recorder's described reel estate: degree
North 5~· 50' East441
10'
West
teet
from
the and then the north
Office.
Parcel Situated In the VIllage 173.35 leetto an Iron
•, Complete
STANLEY TREE
Northwest comer · of line of Lot 344 North
I d e n till c a II o n ot Pomeroy, County pin; thence North 74
Remodeling
15· ' of Meigs and State of degrees, 50' East
the Allen E. Ball and !J4 degree&amp; 33 m!n· Number:
TRIMMING &amp;
Freda Ball .57.f3 acre utes 38 seconds East 00996,000 and 15· Ohio
150.00 lee! to an Iron
GENERAL
tract, said point of n ,32 feet In all to an · 00997.000. Property Parcell
pin; thence. South 15
CONTRACTING
beginning being on
Iron plri set by this . address: 648 so·uth
Being R.E. No. 22, degrees 10' · east • Prompt &amp; quality
Stop &amp; Compare
Street,
the center of County survey on the north 2nd
ki)Own as the Wright 208.00 lee! to an lro'l
work
Road C·25 and over a line of Loll 344, said
Mlddlaport,
Ohio property,
Spring • pin; thence South 74
•
Affordable
Rates
45760.
culvert; Thence South Iron pin being south
Avenue,
Pomeroy, degree• so• West
•
References·
owner:
30· 40' East 208 teet . by 84 degrees 33 min·. Current
Ohio, bounded and 190.10 feet to the
Available
to · a locust post.
utes 38 seconds weal
Chester A Roush et al
described ao lollowo: polnl of beginning,
Thence North so· 30' 77.56 teet from an
Property at:
648 Being LC?I No. 38 In .and contelnlng 0.732 •.free Estimates
South
Second, .Fractloo 18, Section acres.
East 432 teet to a Iron pin found at the
"Insured"
locust post. Thance northweat comer ol Middleport, Oh 45760
14, Townohlp 2, and Description lor this
Call Gary Stanley
North 37· OO'West208 . ~ot ~ ; thence Irappllt5.CJ0996 and 15· Range 13, which said parcel lo bas8CI on a
740· 742·1193
tetn ·t o a point 9n the versing through Lot 00997 , pr\Dr ~ rei· lot No. 38 adjoins loi · survey · made by
center of county
344 along a new par- · erences: Volume 88 no. 39 now or former· Gerald E. Hann, • leave a message
Road C-25. Thence
eel boundary the lot· Page 359 and Volume
ly Oll'(ned by Nellie A. Registered Surveyor
88
page
361
South 57· 13' West I!)Wing live courses;
Meier, ln. the Vll'-90 ol No. 5062.
202 feet along the · 1) South 15 degrees appraised ·
at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Auditor's Parcel No.
centerline of County 18 mlnutea 12 aec· $31,000.00. Termi of Percal No. IH1449
03-011t9.00
.
Road C·25 . Thence
ondo Eeot 25.38 lee! sale: cannot be sold 412 Spring Street
Currenl
Owner:
South 63" 55' West
to an Iron pin set tiy lor Ieos than 213(two Pomeroy, Ohio
Charles &amp;- Suz•nne
2967ll Bashan Road
209 leal along the
this survey.
thirds)
of
the Percelll
Sayre etal
Racine. Ohio
centerline ot County 2) South 69 degrees appraised value. I!Wo Situate In the Village Property at: TR ·91
45771
Road C· 25 to the
47 minutes 29 sec· down on dey of sale,
of Pomeroy, County · -HopeRoed
point oi beginning. onde Weot 15.73 feet cash or certified
740-949-2217
of Meigs and State of Long Bottom, Ohio
Call B.D. Const.
Containing
1.96 . to an Iron pin 'set b)" check, balance due Ohio:
PP41 03.01119.000
ror all your home
acres, more or leSs, lhis survey;
on confirmation of Being all allot no. 15 Prior
Deed
·repallir
needs, roofing,
excepting all legal 3) South 13 degrees sale.
and 16 and part of lot References: Volume
siding,
ndd·ons,
rights otway.
08 minutes 54 sec·
Robert . E. Beegle, no. 17 In Samuel 308, Psge 293
remodeling etc .•
PPN: 03.CJ0252
ondo Eeot 40.51 teet
Meigs County Sheriff. Wylllo
Pomeroy's Appr•loed
Hours
rree eslimates
to an Iron pin set by . Atlorney .For The· oubdlvlolon ot lot no. $88,000.00
43613 Pomeroy Pike
(740) 992-2979
7:00AM
•
8:00 PM
Pomeroy, OH
this survey;
Plaintiff, • John D.
1 Fraction 18, ao tot- Torma
of
Sale:
t/14/t mo. pd
lean messa
Current Owner: Gary 4) South 76 degrees Clunk, Allorney; 5601
lows; lot no 15 In Cannot be oold lor
N. Curtis et al
20 minutes '02 ••c·
Hudson Drive Sullo Samuel
Wyllla Ieos than 213rdo of'' r"::'::'"":""'"":"~~:-:::'!'-....~-----.--::::"1
Prior
Deed
ondo Weal 23.92 teet 400, . Hudson, Ohio
Pornen&gt;v subdlvlolon the •PP&lt;ailed Vllue. High cost of fertilizer got you
References: Volume to an Iron pln set by 44236 (330)342-11203.
lot 1, Fraction 17 In 10% down oi1 day of
17·17-17,..
103, Pege 661
this ourvey;
(6) 22, 29, (716" · ·
NeyiOII Run In Hid ...,, cash or certtfied
$265ton (While Suppy Last)
Appraised at $26,500 5) South 13 degreeo
City of Pomeroy, check, ' balance due .
Terms of Sale:Cannot 06 mlnuteo 05 sec·
except the coat, and on confirmation of
• Mushrtfom Compost
· Public Notice
be sold lor less then
onds Eest 58.13 teet
other mineral• con· saie.
Available
2/3rds
of
the to an Iron pln lot by
talned therein with Robert E. Beegle,
S35 - 1,000 lbs Approx. weight
appraised value. 10% this survey , on the
Sheriff Sales
the right to mine the Meigs County Sherlll
down on day of sale . ·s outh line of Lot 344:
Number same without lnfury Allorney tor the plain· • I 8 spreader buggies ava ilable for use
Case
• Airway.pasture renovators and seeders
Caoh or certified
thence along the 04CV144
to
the
surface, ttff
ava1lable to rent
check, balance due sOuth line .of Lot 344 Peoples Bank NA'
together wfth all ways crow &amp; crow
Attorney
·At-Law
.
•
licensed
agronomist on staff available for ·
on confirmation of and then the south
Plant ill
and right of way, lot
oale.
,
line of Lot 345 North
vs
East
Second
Street
consulting.
16 and part of lot 17
Robert. E. Beegle, 88 degrees 46 min- · Kim D. Mitchell et al
In Naylors nun In the Pomeroy. O~lo 45769
SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
defendants .
Meigs County Sheriff . utoo 22 seconds west
·City ol Pomeroy, (740) 992-6059
35537 SL Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy. Ohio
Attorney tor the plain·
29.55 teet In all to a Court ·of Com~on
Melli~ County, QhiO.
(6) 29, (7) 6.1,3
740-985-383t

Phillip
Alder

•/ I
Nort.h

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services .
I

and addition,.

Will's ATV
Parts

' bf
.'. ' '!f'd!,

~~~Jl ,t~~&lt;W\tk'
740-992-6971

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

· liNDA1 PAINTING
17401985-4180
,' .,.f,f!b;

lifV

I

tlt~ Q~ 9

41800 SR #7
rs Plains, OH
45783

MONTY

A¥KQ J U 94
• •l i1 Bi65

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • cance~ • Accident

A A K QJ \ 0 9 ·
'I JBS
.
•

"'0'""

ROBERT
·BISSEll
CINSTRUCDON

140-992-1&amp;n

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP2;J4

J

Dealer : South
Vulnerab le: Ne ilhe r
South

W est

1•
~ •

Pass' 2 4
Pass Pass

N orth'

Easl

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: ¥ K

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Read the ·lead,
then take control

GoVt~N/AENT

''INFo~/AATtoN''

Naw Daalar for Montana Tractors
starting at27 horse • 57 horse
with shuttle transmission
4-wd, remote hydraulics 3 year warranty

·****Also available*"'"'•
. • Task Master Tractors 26 horse - 38 h,orse,
4wd (f yeur.wurrunty)
• Farm Pro Tractors 20 horse - 30 horse
loaders, finish mowers, tillers
NEW ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Thrn
Radius Mower) 30 inch cutting width to 50

BARNEY
,

inch cutting width 3 year warranty
T&amp;D TRACfQR SALES &amp; E0UIPMENT
right in the heart of Chester

A

9854384
The Parish Shop

YOUNG'S

Fonnerlrat 108

CARPENTER
SERVICE

W. Main Pomeroy
IS NOW OPEN AT

The Mulberry
CommUnity Ce'n ter

260 Mulberry Av'e.
Pumefoy
Same Great Low Prices
a~1d

Smiting
Friendly Faces.

OPEN
Mon-Fri.

• Room Addition• r.
Remode ling
• New Garagaa

THE BORN LOSER

• Electrtcal &amp; ptumblng
• Rooting &amp; GuHer•
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

P'

'II: /

@l

#

* / 'Go

This we'ek, we are studying the opening
19ad , both What to lead and how it a·llects

"i

11\t

!

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•

992-6215 WV006'725
Pomero.y, Ohio

lance

~ Astro~ . Graph

BIG NATE

~~

I

BROUGHT

HE~

IN :S. tDE .

PR.tEP HER OFF, AND

:,tiE C.UF.LEO VP AND
FEL L F,.a.,.~T /1\ ':&gt;L~ Ep !

IMPORTS
Athens
Whaley~s

'·

Auto

Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013

or 740-992-5553

' PEANUTS

liJ.,tnckin.tJ lAte .!Wodel Sali-age
and After Market

. ruminant
44 Unlucky
gambler
45 More than
impressed
47 Frpm
memory
48 Alice 's
chronicler
49 Do
something
50 No, to
a lassie
51 ER practice
52 NBC rival

third ha nd's defense.
Le1 me add one mars point about the
choice ol lead. If it is a suit contract and
you have an ace king holding in an unbid
side suit, it is a "no-brainer" to lead the
ace · (or king, if you prefer to niake
"ambiguous-king" leads). The only time
you wouldn't lead the ace is when a
trump lead is required. That would usu~l ·
ty be when p~rtner has passed your low~
19vel takeou t double, turning 01 into one for
penalties; or the opponents are sacritic- .
c._ WE CAN
ing
at a high level.
·
VISIT WHILE
Now let's move onto how the lead may
I TIDY UP!!
I MADE
allect 1hird hand's play. Look a1 North's ·
.LI'L DEAL
and East's cards. Against' tour ~pades .
WIF TH'
West leads the heart ktng. How would
SHE~IFF,
you (East) plan the defen se?
•
PAW!!
The heart-king lead promises the queen.
So, East must s'tart by overtaking with his
heart ace. But before returning the heart
two, East should cash the diamond ace.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Then, he leads back his second heart.
by luis Campos
giving West two tricks In the suit and four
Cel!b r ~v Cipher cryptograms are createo lrom quotat•ons by lamws peope, past and pr~nt.
E11ch Ieite~ rn the ~ipher stands lor anothel
.
,
in all tor the defense .
Today's clue· Z equa ls H
If East doesn't take the diamond ace
P'
. "'1 befOre returning the heart two, then at
"TFFM
HZFXTZHN
JUAP
TFFM
tric,k three he can discard an encouraging
fYNY 1-\0\..J YOU C.AA COM(""'
t)U\ YOU'r&lt;:,E 611J I~C. YOUr&lt;:,
diamond four ·or a discour&amp;ging club five,
KPXAH ,
iAM.
HZFXTZHN
J UR P
~ \r&lt;:.E~ TO
I
iJ.OME ANt:&gt; BLOW CIT STEW\ \0
hoping partner will work out what to do.
• KPXAH
~ELIEI/t (&gt;, ::&gt;II&lt;ESSBut much safer is to rut1 his· partner's
JAM
RG M
LAG
A ,N
trick (l ) and tp cash the diamond ace.
FUL \)(&gt;,Y /&gt;...\ ~L---1 1!
Note finally that H East doesn 't win the
ZAN
FSG
TAPMUGUP. "
WORK!
first tric k, the contract makes, the defend·
ers getting only two hearts and one diaORLUN
A. YYUG
mond. Declarer's olh! r los~rs disappe~r
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Tea' Ia !he English is reall y a picnic (ndoors."
on dummy's clubs. ..
- Alice Walker
..;
'CoNee is not my ctJp of tea." :,_ Samuel GOidwyn

('~

'jl{ &lt;fl, #

We do It all axcapi
furnace work

25 Years local EK

18 Low card
20 TombStone
deputy
21 Bord6r on
2.2 Fast planes
24 Pester
26 Entree
choice
27 Healing
succulent
28 Warrior
princess
30 Physics
topic
31 PC button
37 Manuscript
sender
39 Greek sea ,
4'1 Colleen's
· h~me
43 Andes

AGENCY

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

Paris.

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30- 5:00

ST~IKE

TJ.!IS 6UV OUT,
CEMENT J.!EAD! YOU CAN
DO IT, MUD HEAl:'!

WJ.liCJ.l TEAM ARE YOU
't'ELLIN6 FOI{? .

Sat. 8:30-Noon

Sun. Closed ·

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

SUNSHINE CLUB

I DON'T KNOW .. WJ.!ICJ.l
TEAM AM rON?

_;,.'llirthdl\Y:

Thursday, June 30, 20,05
By Bernice Bade Osol
Somelh lng of· pers onal importance .
which y Ou havo b e en unable to
• achieve In the past, may be reac hab le
in the yea r ahead . 'C o ntinue lo put
forth your basi effort and you'll find
the mean s to make v ictory yours.
CANCER (June 2 1·July 22) Le t
past e Kpen s ive experiBn ces monitor ·
your a c tions today, especially if y o u
lind yourse lf in th e company of a tree
spend ing a c qu ai ntanc e. Be your own
person an d do What 's best for you .
LFO (July 2 3 · Aug . 2 2 ) In order to
s ucceed today yo u mus t Keep y~ur
mind firmly fixed upOI) your objei::llves
and nor get di s tracted by other per..
sonal Is s ues . Eve n s mall ,distractions
c ould take you off c ourse .
VIRGO {Aug . 23 -Sept. 22) '-- Be
mindful of 'ydur lim itations today. If
there Is s ometh in g you cannot manage on your own. don't be embarrassed to ask the assistance of com ~
petent people yo u know can easily
handle it.
LIBRA (Sept 2 3· 0ct. 2 3 } If it is
nece s sary t o day to make some
c hanges you ·Know won 't be too popu- .
lar with others, s olicit their he lp _Once
they're Invo lved they 'll s ea · the need
and a c tually make the alterations .
SCORPIO (Oct . 24· Nov. 2 2 ) ---: In
order to gain the Coope ratio n today on
a matt e r of importance to you . you
may have to be willing to put up with
or an ind iv idual who usually bore s you
to pie&lt;::t;ts . Grin and bear it .
. ..
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Should you lind that the metho ds
you're employ ing to day are· aggraval·
lng t o yo ur co-worke r s. it might be
beHer In the lo ng run to try ta c Kling
the a s signment fro m a different angle.
C APRI C ORN ( Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Ta ke c are no t to 8Uoi(W some annoying
people who ente r the s cene t6day to
ca use y o u to b ack o ut or a fun com m itme nt . Others invotved w ill eventu a lly take ca re of th e ir exa ~ pera t ing ·

T::~:t;~' S©R4l1J-~£~s·

WOlD

GAM I

- - - - - -·. ldatd by CL~Y R. POLLAN--'----

Rearrange letters of , th.e
0 four
Krornbled word! be·

low to form lour simple ~ord1.

DEAL ET

PIIACM

-

ll I I I

1

·_,...;.A_V,...:.S,.,I:....;,T-ll~.

~

"We catch diseases very
easily,' the palient lold lhe docI- .I. _ 1.
tor "Wouldn't it be better if we
~~~~~~=~":_,could catch - - · -- - as eas ily?"

l

., • .

..

s H E L Av

I

h-s""TI.:...;:-1-=,,,.::...,-,6;-r-1-J O
_

.

.

.

•

.

L..L-L..L-L..L...J

you

Co mple •e 1he &lt;hv&lt; l le Qvoled
by f1fl mg in lhe min ing words

dtwelop from ,rep

lC\ PRINT NVMI!R!O l!1l!RS lN ,

&lt;:~

THHE

sau.o.us

€) u~~~~~N~!,~~E WIUS
i

No

3 ~low .

1

IIIIIII

SCRAM·LfTS ANSWERS t· 20 - os
Gently . Feign· Occur· Taught - LUGGAGE
Our ex-boss was v.ery arrogant My colleague lhinks
that some people take very large ego trips wilh Very litt.le

LUGGAGE.

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

..,,...,

ways,

Hill' s Self
Storage

•• •

K ,J

o!o A

I

lOxlOxlOxlO

A 43 2
7 6 5

. . I)

South

on•truct on

~~~~~==d=lm=o~

t

tlt l042 '•

Storage .

MANLEY'S
SElF STORAGE

East
A 6 4 3
'I A 'L

We st

High and Dry

C

2

., 7 6 3
• Q 9

DURHAM'S· CONSTRUCTION
Owner: Brian Durham
Phone: (740) 949-4011
Specializing in custom homes

06-29-0.l

• a1 s

46 Math course
48 Softly lit
1 Swig
49 Popeye'a
tattoo
6 Glveo a rating
II Roughhouse 52 Trouser
12 Menace
feature
53 " In Cold
t3 Woke up
14 Daddy 's
Blood"
sister
writer ,
15 Posh hotel 54 Passed the
lobbies
buck
16 BBs
55 -Haute,
17 Glove
Ind.
oompoopnent 56 Bat's
· items
.
nav igational
18 'HBO
' system
receivers
19 Meadows
DOWN
:!3 Concrr1i.ng
· ~ wd s.)
Target
25 tiny
amqunt
amounts
2 Seize power
26 Not
3 St. Francis'
stringent
town
29 Craggy
4 Type of collar
5 Nourished
abode
32 Muddy track 6 Baba au33 Ginger- · 7 "True Lies" ·
34 Pita treats
lead
35 Qt. parts
8 Butlerlly
36 .. _Lisa "
catche·r
9 Chiang - 38 Ancient
' empire
shek
40 Swain
10 Fr. holy
41 Jr. naval
woman
oHicer
11 Ore hauler
42 Wilcox or . 12 Jaunty c,aps
Raines
t6 Stating firmly

Puzzle

ACROSS

till
Gail C. Hersh, Jr,, Atln.
525 VIne Street, Suite
.
800
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45202
513-723-2200
(6) 15. 22, 29

•

www.ruydailysentinel.com

P.NP CAME 61!&gt;oCK
WI1'HOU'I' HIM ...

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONtH
GRIZZWELLS
Now Available At

B.-\lf\1 Ll\IBER
Scorpion Tradors
"Taking The Sting Out Of

!"i, il'ldMI"~ m\..I.Y

T~

AQUARIUS (J;Jn. 2 0-Fe b . 19) - No
matter how trivial ' so met hing may
app.:~tar to you , it would be bes1 not to
r;tiscu ss "'a family issue with putsiders
today. A loved ~ e may be deeply
embarrassel:l and hurt by y our d isc lo·
sure.
PIS C ES (Fe b _20·March 2 0) - Do nol
l ook l&lt;fttlhe eas y way o ur today wl)en
d o mg a jOb , beca u~ s h o r1cul s aren't
likely to w o rK . In
you may have to
resort 10 an antiquate d procedure in
o rde r to accompli sh th e task.
ARIES (Marc h 2 1-April 19) - · D o n 't
s hy away from ·c ompetitive conditions
today. beca u se if you. trust yourseH
and yo.u r b aSic a b ilit ies, and you're
willing to try harde r than )tour c ompe·
titian, you'll walk away the w inner. •
TAURUS (April 20• May 20) - Have
faith in your Ideas tOday, ~t by the
same·,t o ken try to keep an open m ind ..
There 's
a
possibility that your
thoughla c an be lmprov~~;d upon by
the auggeatlona offered by others.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - Try not
to prejudge the motives of others
today. If giV11n a chance, an lndlvldua,l
about whom you may b• dubious
could IK:fually offer you a ~tter d•al
than you'd have asked of h im or her.

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SMI1li: lbMM~ RlO! 111!.~
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I

•

�Page BS • The Daily Sentinel _

Wednesday, June 29. 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Satellite radio offers tap-ins·that travel more than 44;000 miles
announcers. such great \OicFor those who aren't tuned k~ep up no matter where you swing tips- t~en discussed Campbell's father -·
or
cS:' he sa id . "They p-aint the into the hotte ~ t new gadgets. are thanks to a built-in Colin
Montgomery's · Father.:s Day, no less picture " ' well. Yt&gt;u rc;!ll y the broad casts arc beamed antenna and rechargeabJe chances of contending and even as his son was holding
Top-of-the-line whether Tiger. Woods could off Woods down the stretch .·
There are ·plu·isl\ who ,,1v know what's going on &lt;1nd all O\'Cr North i\meriL·a from· battery.
sp&lt;&gt;rts arc tictter when fii- )&lt;HI uon't lia\'e to wa tch it. three pri\'at ely O\\'ncd. orbit- receivers even have a built- keep his drives in the narrow
" He's always had thai
1 1 000 ,·lldl.gl·t··I recorders·oyouca11 r··al·rw·,,ys.
l'ltl
'LII···t
ll
'lt
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&gt;
11
'
1
1
1
,
·
I
t"
s·lt··
ill.t"'
l&lt;&gt;•
"tt•·d
dream
of winning a maJ·or,'
tered throLtgh a radio . th at
· ' ' · "' "
' - · e ' '
' ·
" '
--·
"
the imagination rill s in th~ pen to go lf at some point."
mile' abo,·c the eq ua tor. XM hold up to five hours of
Live updates of the scoring Thomas Campbell said b)
vi'ltal. gaps a&lt;1d en han ces the
XM , in co njunc ti on with provide' 150 CD-quality stu- entertainment.
are provided .three ·times an telephone from Wellington .
the tour. is pn&gt;Vid ing in -s tu - tiiJ I" 2-1 hLiurs a Ja v to 4 milReceivers are available for hour: six hours a day. The New Zea land. "Now it '!
.expenence .
·
h
d
. ld f h' •
They HO ntcnd they can din ch;n and o n-course play lion 'uhsnibcr&gt;.
rental at $ 15 a day for fans at ;mchor desk give \ the latest appene to un 1o or tm . ·
almosi smell the \t a l~ beer by play at 22 events th i's
XM broadcast&lt; NASCA R each PGA Tour event. The news on nut only the PGA
A week later at the
and sweat in the bkacher,, r'ummer - includ ing I he two raci1i g and ,every major backpack includes the radio event. but also the LPGA Barclays Classic, XM Wa!
and can tell by the cr;tck of upcoming majo r cham pi - lea gue baseball ~amc thi s itse lf. e1tr puds, an extra bat- a,nd Champions. tours. ·
live
when
Padraig
the bat it' Derek Jeter has Jnsh ips. th e Briti sh Open sun1mer. The baseb;l ll cover- tery - and a coupon to pur-.
Later in the day, Jim Kelly Harrington rolled in a 6$·
qLJgh,t all or a Johan Santana and the PGA Championship. age is provided hy the home - chase a di scounted receiver. · handles the play-by -play (oot eagle putt on the fina l
'd
am,l th e Pre sid•ents Cup team bromlc'as!crs. with the
Clwnce Patterson. cu1 XM with commentary from PGA hole to beat Jim Furyk .' Thf
sI 1Golf.
er.
·
however. doesn't lnatchc&lt;.
signaV'uplinkeu to a satellite' executive. said thousands of Tour pro Phil Tataurangi. roars o f t he ga ll ery were
exactly tend it&lt;elf to rad io .
It 's dillicult for the 'mind 's before bounc ing back t'' XM re ntal s' h&lt;~ve helped lirt the who won the 2002 tour stop reverberating as Kelly anc
At least. until now .
eye to imagine the p·anorama ' "h,d·ihe r., from Ban go r, profile of the IJNV lcchnolo- in Las Vegas but had a career Tataurangi described tht
tt; s a sport whe re players of lu sh color' in side the M&lt;i inc.
to
East L.A . gy..
hindered by back problems. unlikel·y shot slithering intc
"We see thi's as payin g off · Both Kelly and Tataurangi the hole .
.
.frequently hit a shot and the n ropes ill· to .quantify th e Subsnibcrs need a co mpati -·
For XM llsteners, his putt
walk 300 yards before hit- moLinttn g te n&gt;ton of a cru- hie rece ive r tlhev ran ge in pretty quickly, both in terms .work hard to paint a verbal
ting another. They analyLe u'\1 '"'t~g. ltk e when price from aroUIJLi ·$ 100 to · of generat ing new sub- · picture of what's taking trBvcled 44,000 ' miles - tc
putt s fre me ve ry angle .ca us- . Mtchael. Campbell stepped $~00 )i n additiont o a $12.99 scri bers and the.n also the place on the course, but it' s . the satellite and back- ir
in" announcers ' to fill a lot of 'o the hnal tee ot the U.S. monthly fee.
a\vareness that we gain at the difficult. There are only so addition to those . fateful.
de~td air with whi&gt;perctl Open.
Siriu s· .sports program - course among fan s,'" he said. many ways to describe how final65 (eeL
analysis.
"Terrest rial (o r co nven- min g indudc s the NFL,
Pure Golf coverage on XM Phil Mickel son lines up a
Moments such as that will
"On TV, you've got the tiona!) radio is a loc almedi - · NBA. NHL and Eng lish Channel 146 begins wiih putt.
.
keep· li steners tuned. Fot
visual to help out. so yo u ca n um. We're not a local sport." Pi·e mier l~ eague soccer. The interviews and banter hanCampbeft's stirring upset those •who can't get to a TV
watch a guy .hit a ball," said said Craig Peters, the PGA costs lor its recei.vcrs an d its died by The Golf Chan nel 's at Pinehurst No. 2 led . who have to work or those
Charley Moore. whose com- Tour' s director of new monthly rate are comparab le Peter Kessler from 8 _a.m . to Tataurang·i, al so from New who would rather play than
pany produce s PGA To ur media. "We 've got 100-plu s to XM .
noon weekdays. Kessler Zealand, to express hi s watch golf, satellite radic
XM and Si riu s. throu gh moderates a ·freewhe eling homeland's pride .'
has a readymade market. ·
golf on XM Satellite Rad io . mil lion fans across , the
"ln radio you've got a diller- United States. but the y' re partn ers hips with the major pre- tournament _ sess ion
"Michael has the whole of
''We're not going to knock
ent challenge. We' re .;:real- di stributed. We don't ha ve a automakc'rs. put receive rs in whi ch includes e-mai ls from Ne·w Zealand on his side ," Britney ' Spears off the air• in g golf as · a theat er of the. team in New York. We don ' t nian y new L'a". Mobile golf fa ns and ~p irited banter he said. " l think this waves," Peters said. "In genmind .''·
ha ve a team in Chicago . rec·e ivers pcrrn it listeners 10 between experts.
achievenient will go down as eral, getting national coverTour. player John Cook is We' ve go t th is distributed catch their fa vori te 1iiusic.
The week of'the Open, for one of the greatest sporting age was difficult. Satellite
so so l~ on the new satellite fan base which kind of peak s news or sporis at hmne or jn instance . Kess ler and a 'cou- achievement s
in
New radio gives us the oppbrtunity, because it's a national
technology that he 's de ve l- .. in certain areas. so i.t doesn't the car. The newes t gener;\- pie of cronies handi capped Zealand hi story.''
oping a golf show on XM .
rea fly fit with te·rres trial tion of receivers c lips to the field , discussed the lay Th e.J hannel . gained it s platform . We can now aggre"Bascball has such great radio. "
you r belt and allow s you to .nut and· tossed· in a few first "scoop" by interviewing gate all 'of!hos.e fans."
Bv RusTY

MILLER .

ASSOCIATED PREss

Clippers·rally .to beat Richmond
COLUMBUS (AP) Felix Escalona's infield single tied it, and a throwing
error allowed the Columbu s
Clippers to score their fourth
run of the eighth inning and
defeat the Richmond Braves
·
5-4 Tuesday night.
Columbus managed. only
twohits in the ei'ghth - both
infield singles but
Richmond pitchers Matt
Childers and Jason Childers

•

(0-1) combined to walk perfect for his fifth save.
three, hit a batter and throw a 'J.J. Juries went 3-for-4.
Wild pitch.
with a home run, double and
Escalona's single to third three RBls for Ri chmond.
Andy
Marte . Starter Zach Miner allowed
base man
brought ·in Andy Phillips only one run and three hits in
with the tying,run, and Mitch
Jones scored the go-ahead seven innings.
run on Marte 's throwing . Jorge DePaula struck out
error.
nine in seven innings for
. Colter Bean (3-3) worked Columbus. He allowed four ·
a scoreless inning for the win runs on seven . hits and a
and Sam Marson.ek pitched a walk .

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.

larry Crum/photo

Mason County's Brenton Park takes a swfng durihg Tuesday's :1:4-3 victory over Parkersburg
Post 104.

Blasts·
·from Page B1
two more runs in the tlfth off
of an RBI single from
Kamerun Sayre and another
run on an error.
lri . the sixth , Masor
County sea led the win with
one more run off of a Josh
Whitlock RBI. giving the
home ·boys a 14-3 win in
seven innings.
McCoy 's three run ho.merun and a triple hi ghlighted
the evening for the home
team. with Dale Kestner·,
homerun and tw o RBb
close behind . Whitlock
managed 2-for-4 at the
plate. Sayre haLl two hit&gt; ,
with three RBl s and Reed
and Cfark both managed a
hit in the game.
Parker.&lt;burg mamiged one
man with mLitipl e hits with
Zach · Smith hittin g for two
and a pair ·o f batters.
Alderman and Taylor. having a hit in the game.
Ma;o n County h~ath o n
the road again tr;l\eling to a
4 p.f(l . gam~ at Willi amson
·today and a fter the Jul y -1
weekend will return w

action July 5 as they travel
to Charleston.
Mason County 14, parkersburg 3
Parkersburg 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 - 3 4 4
MasonCo
4 33 12 1 X-1 4 101

Scan Sl. Claire

a,nd Cam Alderman. John

Ullom, Tyler Hern (5) and ~eb Re~d .
Richard Kestner . (6) . WP - Ullom. LP -

St . Clwe. HR - Caleb McCoy, third
'Inning, two on; Dale Kes!n~r. fou rth itm ing.
noneon.

TNT PIT STOP
Syracus~.

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Do.or Prize Drawing July 1 st!!i
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• DVD Player

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