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                  <text>Page 60 • 6alhp t;t•tt·6tnttnel

.

Sunday, June 22, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Reds beat by D-Backs, B1

•

I'm no Martha
As I sit, staring at my com- o drink from anything else.
puter and trying to come up
Disgusting, I know. I don't
with a subject for this week s quite understand it myself.
article. I'm drawing a blank.
Believe me, I've tried bowl
I've"had plenty of sugges- . s of every shape and size. but
they just don t seem interested.
Although, I believe that the
younger of the two learned h
is lesson the hard way after Ia
pping up a mouthful of 'Scru
bbing . Bubbles' during a rece
nt fit of frenzied cleaning on
....__ _ _ _ my part.
I""
I know, I'm a horrible moth
er. Please don't call the ASPC
A. It was just an accident - I swear!
After two hours of puktions from my loyal read- ing up large piles of foam ont
ers (consistin~ mainly of my o my bathroom carpet, he was
mother and Sister), but noth- back to his normal playful sel
ing truly remarkable jumps o f with no harm done -just a
ut at me.
little leery of getting more dri
One reader, who enjoys the nks from the toilet.
(Don't worry, I called the v
written beating I inflict upon
my boyfriend occasionally. s et. He'll be fine.).
uggested that I write about th
e age-old battle of the toilet s
•••
eat.
l\1Y boyfriend said that he
"I can never ~et him to putt would lovy for me to write a c
hat seat down,' she said.
Of course, while women co
mplain that men never put the
seat down, men complain tha
t women never put the seat up

olumn about why I can never
decide where I want to eat.
I can't decide where I want
to eat?
Wait a minute. He is the on
e who refuses to choose a rest
aurant when we go out to eat
because he claims that I am n
ever happy with his choice.
Whatever.
It's not that I hate his taste i
n restaurants, there's just so m
any times a week I can eat Chi
nese food and hamburgers.
The conversation just be for
e lunch usually consists of m
e saying. "So, where do you
want to each lunch today?"
His response: "I don't care.
What ever you want."
Me: "Well. what do you wa
'
nt.?''
.
Him: "I don't care. what ev
er YOU want,"
Me : "Well , you have to hav
e some idea of what you want
to eat."
Him: "Well, it doesn't matter what I want to eat, it 's &lt;Ill
about what YOU want."
This is followed by my cle

nching my fists and screaming, "WHERE DO YOU WA
NTTO EAT? 1"
Him: "I DON 'T CARE!"
Twenty minutes later~ as we
dr.ive up Eastern Avenue fort
he third time ...
Me: "Where do you want t
o ea~.:..
Him : "I told you, I don't ca
re. Just pick something."
Me: 'T m not hungry any-

50 CENTS • Vol . 53, No. 203

more ."

Him: Deep sigh.
So you see, it's not just my
fault. I~ he would just give m
e two or three suggestions, it
would narrow my choices an
d l would be forced to chose a
t least one restaurant he woul
d like to eat at.
I try to he nice and take his
feelings into consideration. l
nstead, he insists on telling m
e he doesn't care, so I end up
choosing something that he d
oesn 't like.
I think I'll stan packing my
lunch.
(!1illissia Russell is a reporter
for the Gallipolis Daily Tribune).

The
'Boyfriend'
speaks

Well, guys, I finally get a
ella11ee te tlefe11tl myself.
: I'm assuming that you rea
d my girlfriend's column fir
st.
I'm sure I'm not the only
guy who has .faced this dile
mma.
- ·
·
How many times has this
exact same scenario played
()Ut with your significant oth
er?
Most guys know that no
ma[ter how had we try to pi
~k the right place to eat, we
will always be wrong.
· They change their minds
so fast. It could liave been t
heir favorite place last wee
k, but this week it's something completely different.
For instance, last weekend I took a break from Sp
ortsCenter and NASCAR to
go to the flea market with
Missi:
When we pulled in the par
king lot you could smell the
steak sandwiches cooking.
l asked her what she want
ed for lunch and she said, "
Let me guess, Italian sausag
e."
'She told me that that soun
ded OK, but, thinking she w
asn't that enthused about the
idea, I suggested maybe a h
amburger pla~e.
.
· She nnmed~ately came bac
k with, "I don't care, just m
ake up your mind!"
So, like an idiot, I chose t
he burger place.
We went in, ordered, and
sat down, and it didn't take
long to realize that something was wrong.
'
: "What's wrong?" I asked. ·
· "I really wanted a steak s
andwich from the flea market," she said.
"Why didn't you say som
ething?" I asked.
•
"l thought you knew that.
" she said. "We always get
a steak sandwich when we g
o to the flea market."
Hello! ·
What am I, a mind reader?
Ladies, help us guys out a
little. Any time you throw a
subtle suggestion our way,
we're probably going to m1s
·s it.
Please, just tell us what y
ou want in the first place an
· d save us from having a mis
erable evening after we mak
e the wrong choice.

(Editor's note: Mike Taw
ney is Millissia RusseU's bo
yfriend - who is the luckiest guy on earth).

.

Pay taxes or face
the consequences
in Pomeroy

Steps to take in avoiding
summer health ·risks

BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer

•

standards.

taxes. And Ytllage Tax enacted an emergency l pel:relll
Administrator Jean Durst said income tax because the village
more warrants may be served was facing very tough times
soon.
financially.
"If they owe, they owe, and it
State l~w allows villages to
doesn't maner who they are," enact up to a I percent income
said Durst who estimates the vii- tax without voter approval.
!age is owed at least $25,lXXl and Durst sai\l if the village council
possibly more after interest and hadn't acted. the state might
penalty fees are added.
have needed to temjlorarily take
The village requires that over the village to solve its finaneveryone who worlcs in the vii- cia! problems.
!age pay a l percent income tax.
Durst said some people
Residents who work elsewhere believed the tax was only valid
can be credillrl with up to l per· for only one year, when in realicent that tht!y would ordinarily ty it was "continuous," or until
pay to Pomeroy.
fwther action by council.
Durst ~d some people have
Former Mayor John Blaettnar
not paid vdlage mcome ~es m . and the Village Board of Tax
years, but now the law will be Review asked Village Solicitor
stnctly enli:Jrced. People who fail Chris Tenoglia for advice on
to pay ~ld face~ $50J fme and what the word "emetgency"
up to SIX months mJ~.
meant In a letter to the mayor
. The penalty for failure to pay dated March 8, 2£XXJ, Tenoglia
mcludes a one-half of I percent gave his opinion on the legality
percent per mon"! mterest of the income tax ordinance.
charge and an addioonal oneH
.d that after
. .
half of 1 percent per month
e~
.
reVIewmg
penalty until the taxes are paid the OIJ!o Revised Code, as well
Businesses that do not with- as penmen~ case. law, he could
hold tor employees face a 3 per- find no valid basiS for the assercent . interest and penalty fees non that the ordinance was only
until the taxes are paid. The vii- valid for only one year after paslage can g-dl11ish wages for those sage. .
.
.
individuals who ignore the law.
The village ~ tax rate IS
Durst said the new enforce- among the lowest m southeast
ment push is pan of Mayor Ohio.
Victor Young III's and Village
The Greater Ohio Association
Council's "activist" approach to of Tax Administrators (qG~A)
government. She said Young surveyed 68 murnc1pal1tles ..
wants to eliminate any hint of Forty-four municipalities have a
favoritism in the village. The vii- higher tax rate than Pomeroy,
!age has at least a 90 percent col- three have a lower tax rate and
lection rate which is ronsidered 2I have the same tax rate.

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. · GALLIPOLIS
_
A
· Galli li
. be' h ld 111
.
·
po .~ man IS mg e
the Galha County Jrnl after he
allegedly stole two vehtcles
~d fled fn?m o~cers folio":'mil an acc1dent m which his
Wife was killed Saturday rnght.
: Twenty-five year old
Br.lndon Clary of 1482 East
Belhel . Church
Road,
Galhpohs, wa1 charged w1th
!W.o ~ounts of grand theft a!-110,
dnvmg under suspens\on,
Of?Cratmg a motor vehtcle
Without control, no ~atbelt,
fat lure to comply w1th. the
orders of a police officer, and
!ailure to appear.

BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer

CHESTER -Alison Rose of
Chester has just completed a
compact disc of country music,
a highlight in a part-time musical career she has enjoyed since
childh(J(Jd.
Rose, a senior at Ohio
University, plans to pursue a
music career in Nashville,
Tenn., while also working in her
chosen field of retail merchandising.
"I'm not sure of the exact path
I will choose in retail after graduation, but I hope to move closer to Nash vi lie so I can work on
my music while also working
Within my major." Rose said.
Like many aspiring singers
before her, the pretty young
singer began singing in church,
and entered her first talent show
at the age of 5.
"From that point on, I knew it
was something I truly enjoyed,
and wanted to continue," Rose
said.
ThrOugh the years, she has
performed at many local events,
and has had an. opportunity to
sin~ the National Anthem at a
vanety of places, including
Ohio University sporting
events.
Rose, daughter of Arch and
Debbie Rose, has also perfanned with local band "High
Country."
She is ~cularly proud of an
accompbshment to be realized
later this summer - on Aug.
22. That's when she will open
the show for the band
Confederate Railroad at the

Oary's wife, Lori L. Clary,
29, of Gallipolis, was killed
·about 8:30 p.m: Saturday near
the intersection of ProsiJt7t
Church and White roads m
Springfield Township. Officers
said the vehicle she was driving
went off the roadway, snuck an
embankment and overturned.
She was 1101 wearing a seatbelt,
officers said
Shortly after the accident,
about 9 .m., ~ allegedly
stole a 1~ GMC Junmy from
1294 Kern Hollow Road
The Tribune was unable to
confirm br press time today if
Brandon Clary had been in the
car with his wife at dle tirrie of
Please see WNck, AS

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Food poisoning
"Summer is prime time for
E. coli and other food-borne
illnesses, and it is imponant to
be vigilant about food preparation to avoid contamination,"
Torres said.
"It is imponant to wash
hands thoGoughly before eating, preparing food and after
contact with animals," Torres

said . "It is also important to
wash fruits and vegetables
well, only eat meat that has
been thoroughly cooked, and
to·use separate plates and utensils for raw and cooked meat."
The E. coli bacterium is
blamed for 73,000 infections
and 60 deaths in the United
States each year, Torres said,
and while symptoms can be
miserable, the disease illness
usually clears up in, five to 10
.days. ·
·

Fireworks safety
With July 4 just around the
corner. it is important to
remember that fireworks can
be extremely dangerous, cause
permanent injury and sometimes death.
"Each year, across the country, fire~orks injure thousands
of child'ren," Torres said: '"l}le
eyes, face and hands are the
body parts most often injured."
.. "It is important to remember
that t1reworks are not toys, and
the discharge of fireworks
should always be left to
trained professionals," Torres
said .
'That includes sparklers they can get as hot as l ,800
degrees."
1

lfJ'm not sure of the
exact~ I\WI choose in
reta•l after.graduation,
but 1h!JPe to move
doser'to Nashville so I
can vitolk Oft my music ·
while alSo mrkin_g
• v.;,hin my major,

Hills

Parade of the
Festival in '
Nelsonville. She earned the
right to open for the big-time
country band in a contest sponsored by the Parade of the Hills
organization. . •·
The Nelsonville festival is
familiar territory for the Eastern
High School graduate. In 2000,
she was crowned Miss Parade
of the Hills, allowing her to travel across the state ·representing
the festival. She also received a
$2,500 scholarship.
"Country music has always
been tl)e music of choice in my
farriily," Rose said. "I've listened to it from a young age,
and it has influenced me
tremendously.
"I once heard that country
music is !hree chords and the
truth, and I agree."
Rose 'will also spend part of
this summer competing m area ·
Colgate Country Showdowns, a
nationwide competition offering
$100,000 in prize money and a
recording contract. But her
neighbors won't need to travel
far to hear Rose perform. She ·
will lake the stage at the Meigs
County Fair at 7 p.m. Aug. 14.
Her CD, meanwhile, includes
14 tr.icks.

Alison Rose

What Can Hospice Do for You?
Hospice provides emotional, medical and spiritual support for people who
are term'inolly ill. Jheir goal is to improve a patient's quality of life by
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Target

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'

.
Torres urged local residents
to ehmmate mosquoto-breedtng grounds, such as old ttres,
gutters , em.pty. flower pots.
d
unuse sw1mmmg pool s and
b1rd baths, all of. ':"'h1ch hold
standmg water wh1ch attracts
mosquitos.
B
w
ecause the
est Nile
Virus, ·borne by mosquitoes,
was detected last summer in
Meigs County, residents
should avoid outdoor activities
between dusk and dawn. , when
mosquitos are most acuve, and
cover up wearing socks, shoes.
long pants and long-sleeved
shins - preferably in light
colors - when outside. during·
dark hours.
A mosquito repellent containing DEET is also necessary when outside. Torres said.

WlrlllllllftlciiiiO ldiiUit IIIIIIIDIIOWIIIIDCIIIORI. Prlct IINII'IIIIIItlllty Of tqall,mtltt m1y nry . Cllllblllllat itlalll .

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~HLAND

Obituaries

Sports

AT&amp;T Worelcss Stooes

Hurt"

2 Sections - 12 Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies

West Nile Virus

Chester woman
pursuing two careers

Woman's husband
charged .in crime
spree after fatal wreck
BY MILUSSIA RUSSELL
Staff writer

1

A sunscreen with a Sun
Protection Factor of 15 or higher should also be worn during
POMEROY _ Now that periods of prolonged sun exposure, Tones said, and should be .
summer is officiaily here, local re-applied regularly, especially
residents should take care to
avoid some health risks that when swimming, perspiring
come with hot weather, Meigs heavily or drying skin with a
towel.
·
County Health Commissioner · Sunglasses blocking· rays
Norma To~s says.
Some health dangers include also should be worn, To(fes
the increased threat of West said.
·
Heal sbess
N1'le · y·lfUS f rom mosquitoes,
~
skio damage from the sun 's
ultraviolet rays, heat-related
Some symptoms of heat
'ood
bo
·u
d
exhaustion
to watch out for are
stress, ,, - me 1 ness, an ,
with July 4less than two weeks heavy sweating, paleness, muscle
away, injuries from the improp- c(lllllps, tiredness, weakness,
er use of fireworks.
dizziness, headache, nausea or
fainting.
Those who experience sympSkin Cancer
toms of heat stress should be
Skin cancer is the most com- moved to a cool, shady or airmanly diagnosed cancer in the conditioned area and provided
United States, according to cool, non-alcoholic beverages,
Tones, and accounts for almost Torres said.
half of the cancers in the counInfants and children up to 4
try.
years old, people 65 or over, the
She said exposure to direct overweight, those who overexert
sun should be avoided betw~en during work . or exercise and
10 a.m.. and 4 p.m. Weanng those who are ill and on certain
protective clothmg, such as · medications are at highest risk,
long-sleeved shirts and long Torres said.
pants, and a wide-brimmed hat
Prevention measures include
to PT?Iect .the face, nee~ and drinking plenty of Ouids, while
ears, 1s an Important cons1dera- avoiding alcohdl and caffeine,
. ~on when working or playmg and avoiding outdoor activities
m the sun.
during the hottest part of the day.

high by municipal collections

Durst said some people quesPOMEROY - Nine war- tioned the legality of the village
rant~ have been served on indi- income tax because voters
vidualsandbusinesseswhohave rejected a tax initiative in 1985.
not paid their village income The fqllowing year, council

I reallydon't have much of
a problem with that because:
1) My boyfriend doesn't live
there. 2) I have to leave the se
at up most of the time anyway because my dogs refuse t

www.mydailysentinel.com

MONDAY, JUNE 23, 2003

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Ohio

The Daily·Sen~inel

Gearing up for elections

Ohio weather
Tuesday, June 24 ·

Community Calendar
·Public meetings

RAC INE - Racine Area
Comm
unity
Organital ion
Tuesday, June 24
(RACO) at 6:30 p.m . at the
park building. A potluck clin CHESHIRE -. The Board ne
r wi II be served, New
of Direc tors of the G a ll ia~
members
alway" welcome.
Meigs Com muni ty Action
Agency will meet at 4:30p.m.
Wcdnl'Sday, June 25
on Tuesday at the Ches hire
ofllce .
RUTLAN D Rut land
Friend ly Garde ner\. 7:.10
p.m.. home of Janet Bolin.

I Mlntlltld 1~1'm I •

0·

Clubs and·
Organizations

0
r:-c-:--= =•' ,

, 1Columbus ]63'191' i

•

0

9

Satu rday, J une 21

I

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·~

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W.VA.

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0 2003 AccuWealher, Inc.

.

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T·SIOI!TlS

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Highs near 90.
Friday ... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper
60s and highs in the mid 80s.
Saturday .. .Part ly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
mid 60s and highs in the
lower 80s.
Sunday... A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms in
the morning.. .Otherwise partly clo.udy. Lows in the lower
60s and highs in the mid 80s.

Report: Air pollution
samples near
incinerator missing
EASTUVERPOOL, (AP) - protested against the proposal to

More than a year's wonh of ft:derally required air pollution samples .were lost, mishandled and
even fabricated from the community surrounding a hazardous
waste incinerator, environmental
officials say.
There is, however, no indication from readings taken before
or since the period when the
samples were lost or tainted that
the air was UQSafe· around the
Von Roll Waste Technologies
Industries incinerator itself, the
Ohio Envirorunental Protection
Agency says.
Opponents who have fought
the pfant since it opened in 1992
near homes and an elementary
school in this northeast Ohio
town along the Ohio River say
they're not satisfied.
.
''They' ve been telling us for
years that this is the most heavily
monitored and scrutinized facility in the country," said Teresa
Mills, dir6ctor of the Buckeye
Environmental Network, an
advocacy group. ''Where's the
proof?"
ln 1991, hundreds of people

Rep. De nnis Jucinich, D-Ohio, left, talks with the media as Vermont Gov. Howard Dean , Ambassador Carol Moseley Braun of
Illinois , Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn. and Rev Jesse Jackson. background left, li sten prior to a Democratic presidertial
forum at the 2003 annual Conference
. of the Rainbow. PUSH. Sunday. June 22, in Chicago . (AP Photo/ Stephen J. Carre ra )

&lt;t

Sunny days till Thursday
Today... Sunny. Highs in the
mid 80s. Light and variable
winds.
Tonight. .. Clear. Lows near
60. Calm winds.
TuesdaY, .. Sunny.
Highs
near 90. Calm winds.
Tuesday
night...C lear.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny.
Highs near 90.
Wednesday night...Mostly
dear. Lows in the mid 60s.
Thursday...Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms during · the night.

build the incinerator, then called
Waste Technologies industries.
The incinerator burns up to
60,000 tons of waste a year.
An EPA investigation found
·that its employee Christine
D' Amico, who was responsible
for the pollution monitors in
Columbiana County, failed to
properly maintain the monitors
and regularly collect the results.
Supervisors began sending
D'Amico e-mails last summer
asking why she hadn't submitted
any samples for the year.
D'Amico replied that she was
behind in processing the samples. She resigned June 13.
The missing and tainted samples from late 200 I through 2002
were from general air monitors
scattered throughout East
Liverpool. The state is required
to repon soot and metal readings,
including airborne mercury levels.
Without results from the surrounding county for comparison,
the agency said, the samples
from the incinerator site itself are
meaningless.
·

Commission says lack of'water
lines to some homes is racism
ZANESVILLE (AP) - A
. group of mostly black residents
who do not have access to public
water service are victims of discrimination. the Ohio Civil
Rights Commission has ruled.
'This is a case of depraved
indifference," said Vincent Curry,
executive director of the Fair
Housing Advocates Association,
an Akron group that helped 25
families tile the complaint.
''Where the white people stop,
that's where the water stops."
Waterlines connect to 30 of the
34 white households in the neighborllood about 50 miles east of
Columbus. Only four of the 27
nonwhite households in the same
area along Zanesville's eastern
edge are coniiected to water·
lines, forcing .residents to haul
water, have it delivered or dig
wells.
The commission said in the
June 12 ruling that the city,
c6unty, Washington Township
and !he East Muskingum
Water Authority were guilty of
"unlawful discriminatory practice." The need for public
water services continues to
exist as it did when the complaint was filed nearly a year
ago, the commission said.
If a solution can't be
reached, commission attorney
Matthew Miko said, the attor' ·
ney general's office could flle a

lawsuit alleging civil rights violations.
County and township officials
said lack of public water is based
on cost arJd low water pressure.
"It's only been in the past year
we've been in the water business," county Commissioner R.
Edward Kenily said. "We are
working to extend more water
out to the county. including !hat
area. It's not racial discrimination."
Keni Iy said the county hopes
grant money wi ll help pay (or
waterlines· arJd lap fees for the
neighborhood.
Kathleen Hill. 89. who has
li ved in her house since 1967,

said she'd be "in big trouble"
wi!hout her son to get water for
the house they share.
"Water is not a luxury, it's a
necessity," said her son Jim, 48,
who is disabled. ''I think it is
very cold-hearted of the people
in power to deny these people
water. I can't believe people can
act that way these days."
Even residents with wells fee l
upset. Ly nn Hairston, who
moved to !he area from
Columbus three years ago, said
that he wants public water
because his toilet is stained wi th
sulfur and an oil y residue coal~
the water that seeps up froni the
ground.

AGRICULTURE

Keeping ·
Gallio,
Meigs&amp;
Moson ··
informed
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Mason. 6~ 1333

Polley

News

Outolde 5eles: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
CloooJCifl:.: Judy Cla rk, Ext. 10

Circulation
Dlotrtct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins. Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E·m•ll:
news 0 mydailysentinel.com

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Other events

Monday, June 23
HA RRISO NV ILLE Harri so nville
Sen ior
C itizens will meet at II
a. m. at .lhe fireho use.
Pot luck d inn er wi ll be
served .. Blood J' ressures
w ill be chec ke and all
senior cit ize ns are in vited.
Tuesd ay, June 24

Tuesda y, June 24
POM EROY Mc ig&gt;
Count y Health Department
wi ll offer a childh ood illllllUnizmion cl inic from 9 to II
a.m. and I tn .&gt;· p. m. on
Tuesday. Shot records 11\U&gt;t
be provided anu all child re n
mu ' t be accompan ied by a
parent or lega l guardian.

NO
RAIN
CHECKS

'

Fackle r. to Lisa Rowe, deed.
Rutland.
John A. Gorrell. Dianna
Gorrell. Judith Ann Drake. Roger
Drake, Julie Annelle Gorrell.
Jackie A. Gun-ell, deed. Olive.
Anthony Lan e! Co .. Ltd. to
Lloyd L. Wyall . Beverly J.
Wyall . deed, Letart.
Ronald D. Hage rt y. Judy('(
Hagerty, to Tracy Sinclai r.
deed. Colum bia.
Flossie M. Dill. deceased.
to Gary R. Dill. affida\' it.
Chester.
Henry Huggi ns. Henry
Hi ggi ns... to Paul t\c idhart.
Am v Braverman . deed.
Rutiand.
Paul
Ne idhart.
A my
Braverman.
to
Henry
Huggin,, deed. Rutland.
Samuel L. Pickens. Paula J.
Pickens. to Timoth y Bent z.
Pamela. Ben11 . deed . Pomeroy
Village.
Michael
A.
Sa nders.
Michael Allen Sa nders.
Rh onda Faye Sanders. to
Steve n E. Heater. Lisa F
Heater. deed. Olive.
James C. Barke·r to Gladys
Baker, deed, Rutl and Vill age.
Robert L. Ramsey to Chad
Anthony Fugate. deed. Columbia.
Farmers B;mk and Sav ings
Co. to Village of Pomeroy.
deed. Pomeroy Village.
Jerry D. Eads, deceased. to
Wanda LEads. Wanda Louise
Eads, Louise Eads. affidavit.
' Salem/Salisbury/Rutland.
Philip Erwin. Sr.. Brenda Erwin.
to Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District, right of way, Scipio.
Earl D. Sc hu ltz to TPCWO, right of way, Olive.
Robert H. Smith. Sue An ne

.

Prices Good Tues. June 24 an'd Wed:
&lt; '

Smit h. to T P-CWD. ri~ht of
way. Sutton.
Terry Sm ith to · TP-C WD.
right of way. Sutton.
Kimberly S. Reichart to
Shannon Ma rie Ollb. Dav id
M. olch. deed. I.e tart.
Alfred Cil occkncr. decea,ed.
to Ru th E. G l occkn~r. cert ificate of t ran~i-er. Orange.
Anna G. Shuler. ch:ea'-CCI. · In
Richan.IA. Shuler. Rich.udA. Simler.
Sr.. allic~l\lt ofu~u1sli·1~ OrJJl~.'c.
.John Rkc. Anna Rice. to
Oakmore Fanns. LLC. deed.
Olive.
R o~ rt F. Bergman. Robe11
Be ro~ m;m . AliceJ Bsrgrmm. Alice
J;mc Stewart. Alice Jane BergnKUJ..
Janc Bcr11rmm. to Home :-.1 ationa!
Bank. sherill"s deed. Middleport
Village/Salisbu1y
Warren Hammotid. Alan L.
Hal liday to Lois L. Hammo nd.
deed. Colum bia/Sa lem.
Alvin Myers. Jr.. Joseph ina
Myers. to Mart ha A.. Ballengee.
Helen E. Randolph. Marge1y
M. Frerich, Elwood J. Myers.
Raymond N. Mye rs. Geo rgi na
A. Tlmmpson, deed. Oran ge .
Joan Pyles to Rh onda Sue
Phi ll ips. G regory Cole. deed.
Olive.
Bruner Land Co. to Li lli an
E. Smith . deed, S;tlem.
Bonn ie Hersh man 10 John
F. Barnes. deed. Pomeroy .
V i l l a~e.·

Kelmeth L. Bart lett. Lois
Ann Bartl ett. l\&gt; Greg L.
W~i n fu rtn er. deed. Col om bia.·
Rose Debruhl. deceased, to ·
Me lissa · We&gt;t fal l. affidav it.
Sutton.
Melis;a West fall , Kenneth
Westfall , to John Wil li am.
Easterday: deed. Sutton.

'

25 only..
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WHILE
.SUPPLIES
LAST

"

Split

Chicken Breast

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Lb.

Assorted Flavors 5 Quart Pail

Shoppers Value

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CECREAM

MEDICAL

S299

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org
Holzer Clini c

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

COMMUNITY

Yokeyes Birthwear

www.yokeyes.com

Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

www.meigscountyohio.com

NEWSPAPERS

10

The Daily Sentinel

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ENTERTAINMENT

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GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

'WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS

Precious Memories

Herbalife Independent Distributor

www.herbsndiet.com

www.photosonchina.com

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!

49

79Cea.

Each

Potato Chips

79« .'

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
for only a $1

Sliced Peac
Mr. Bee

Take your business into the homes of over 40l000 con·
sumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in our

sentor Citizen rateo
One month . . . ... ..•. . .'8.95
One year . . . .. .. ..•. .. '98.70
Subscribers should remit in
advance direct · to The Da11 y
Sentinel. No subscription by mail

Argo

6 oz. Assorted Flavors

Sl,lbscrlptlon Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month .. . • • •• • •.• •'9.95
One year • .. . .... . •..' 119.40

age

19 oz.

Potatoes

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Bag

RUSS En

Point Pleasant Register

Charter Communications
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Good For

Weiners

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COUPON

Kahns

Not GoodOnAdvertised Items
Coupons tripled oncedaily.
See Store For Details

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Gallipolis Daily Tribune

EMPLOYMENT

TRIPlE

16 Oz.

5COUPO S
UP TO sae Each

www.holzerclinic.com

Gallipolis Career College

{USPs 213·9601
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Nicole Jones, Tabit ha Jones.
deed, Lebanon.
Mamie Dawn Hannon.
de&lt;.'e1L~ed , to Candy Hannon.
James Hannon. Canie Harmon.
cen ificate of transfer. Salem.
John E. Secoy, Jr. to Karen
E. Secoy. deed, Columbia.
Roger L. Manley. Sr..
Connie M. Manl ey, to Co nnie
M. Manley Trust. affid avit.
Connie M. Manley Trust to
Roger L. Manley. Jr., deed.
Middleport Village.
Dallas R. Janey, Denni s J.
Sarge nt, to Church of Christ
of p,)mero y, deed, Sali sbury.
Will iam Poll ey. Norma
Polley, to Ste fon Bolin ,
Vic kie Vaught, affidavit of
facts.
Norma J. Polley, William E.
Polley. to David A. Ballard.
Susan J. Ballard. deed.
Columb ia.
Stanley E. McFarland, Sabm C.
Mcfarland. to McFarland Fmnily
Trus~ memonmdum oftmst.
Donald Brya n Betzing to
McFar land Family Trust. deed,
Vi llage of Pomeroy.
Da rrick McCloud. Candy
McC loud.
to
Darrick
McC loud. deed. Salem.
· Chri stina
Wil son
to
Chri stina K. Wilson . Jonatha n
Errol
Roberts,
deed ,
Salisb ury.
Glad ys E. Blosser. Ralph E.
Blosser, to Blosser Famil y
Trust. deed. Sutton .
Michacl D. Sal ser to Macie
K. Salser. deed. Rutland.
Jerry E. Day, Ida A. Day. to
Benelic ial Mortgage Co. of
Ohio. Beneficial · Ohio, Inc.,
sheriffs deed. Pomeroy Village.
Dennis J. Fackler, Kim M.

•

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BUSINESS TRAINING

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Send tis your club &amp;
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Posts tran,fcrs
POMEROY - Meigs County
R&lt;.'Conlcr Judy King reported the
l(&gt;llowing ~ansfers of real estate
a' procc''iCd ru:emly in heroflice:
Robin Kdley to Donald V.
Cribbet. deed, Col umbia.
Na ncy J . Smit h. Michae l
Todd Smith to John R. J e iTer~.
deed. Rutland. ·
Wil liam Radford. Louise
Radl1&gt;rd. to Will iam R. Radford.
deed. Salisbury.
Bruner Land Cu . to
Benjamin W. Russell. dee d.
Orange.
Dolphus Burke. Jr; to Buckeye
Rum! Electric CO(&gt;pcmtive. rit:ht
of w;ry. Col umhi;r.
~
Todd A. Doct.i. Jenn ifer L.
Dnczi. to BR EC. ri ght of way.
Ru tland.
Todd Price. Shell y Price. to
BR EC. rig ht of way. Scipio.
Doris J. Beane to Rose M.
Yo ho. deed, Oli ve .
Roswc Mil k Sa nd ra K.
Mi lk 10 Revna J. Reynolds.
lka nn;1. M. Rev nolds. deed.
Che&gt; ter.
·
Ro,coe Mi ll s. Sa ndra J.
Mi lls. to Ti mothv J. Baum .
Mancc na Y. B~u m , deed.
C' hc, ter/Oii vc.
Mildred G. Cal dwell to
Kenneth E. Cadiwell. Sr.. Sue E.
Caldwell. deed. Orange.
Jeffrey T Mard is. Charles
T Mard i'. Judity F. Mardis.
Jud ith Favc Ma rdi s, to
Michae l B~ M,1rkin s. deed .
CDI Li mbi a.
Marc E. French. Juani ta C.
Fre nch. to Sue Ann Thacker.
deed . Salis bury.
Odess a Proffi tt to Gregory
Weddl e. deed. Lebanon.
Odessa Proffill to Heather

1

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Land transfers

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Publ ished
every
efternoon .
Our main concern in all stories is to be Mondey through Friday. 111 Court
accurate. If you know o1 an error In a Street, Pornfl rny, Ohin PAr iM icAI
story. call the r~ew~'ov1 n dt (740) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
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Department extensions are:
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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Lay1on, Ext. 13

REED SV ILL E
Hayman-Birarn reunion wi ll
be held at I p.m.lll the Forked
Run Strate Park. There wi ll
be a bas ket dinner.

Monday, June 23, 2003

Jim's Farm Equipment

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Sund ay, J une 29

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

·PROUD TO BE
APART OF
YOUR LIFE.

" I had no idea how this area
was," said Hairston, 52. a spe·
cial-events coordinator f0r basket maker Longaberger Co. ''I
see signs of racial prejudice.
They've nm water for miles
around here and we can 't get
water.
P ick Kennedy. one of the few
whites on one street without
water, says he's fntstmted by not
having public water despite living a mile from the water-treatment plant.
.
"I've hauled water ever); day
for 40 years." said Kennedy, 63.
"It's just not right, black or
white. They're really giving us
!he runaround."

POPLAR RIDG E
Ga ry Griffith from Ru tland
wi ll be preac hing at 6:30
· p.m. at th e Popfar Ridge
.Free Will Bapttst Ch urch .
John Elswick . pastor, welcomes everyone to attend .

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

lnfoCision Management Corp.

Correction

Homecomings/
Reunions

SALEM CENT ER
S unday, June 22
Star Grange 778 and State
Jun ior Grange 878 fun ni ght
CHESHI RE - ll1e Eiben
and potluck supper. 6:30
p.m. at the grange hall near and Della G ill ilan f;uni lv
Salem Ce nter. Members to reunion will be held at II :30 ani.
lake items lo r the food bank . al the Kyger Creek Power Plant
club house. Take a covered dish.
Friends and relat ives in\'itcd.
Sund ay,·June 22

I

Sunny Pl. C~ CloOOy

cal News

'The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 23, 2003

PagcA3

aday.

permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

Mall Subscription
tnotde Malgo County
13 Weeks ............. '30 .15
26 Weeks ............ ' 6 0.00
52 Weeks ... . ........ ' 11 8.80

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

Rateo1Ou1alde Melga County
13 Weeks ..... .. ...... '50.05
26 Weeks .... . .......' t00 .10
52 Weeks ............' 200 .20

- - ---------------------------··--...
..

Prices Good June 24 &amp; June 25 Only.

-~

... ....

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Page A4

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Ju~e 23, 2003

Monday, June 23, 20tl3

Obituaries

--------------------------------------~~---------

Timothy Gordon

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street. • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlene Hoeflich
General manager and news editor

.

COOKING
YOUR
GOOSE,
TODAY ON
'MARTHA

•

LETART, W.Va. - Timothy John Gordon. 22. Letart,
W.Va., died on Sunday. July 21 , 2003 at · Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant. W.Va.
Born on June 6. 1981 in Ga lli poli s. he was the son of John
K. Gordon of Colu mbia, S.C. and Pamela Ri ggs Gordon of
Letart.
Services will be at I p.m. on Tuesday, June 24. 2003, at
Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason. W.Va. with-Pastor
Brian May officiat in g. Burial will follow at Zerkle Cemetery
in Letart.
'
Friends may ca ll from 6 to 9 p.m. Monday at the funeral
·
home.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Mason County
Special Olympics, c/o Bill Hus'sell . P.O. Box 588. Mason.
W.Va. 25260.

•

~TEWART'

Debora Van Meter

National View
Medical malpractice debate _
needs to be resolved; lobbyist
need to go home
Orhmdu (Fla.) Senrinel. on puliticalfimd-raisers:
Lawmakers ostensibly were called to Tallahassee thi s week
by Gov. Jeb Bush to settle a medical-malpt:actice:insurance_
disaster threatenmg health-care access tor millio ns of
Floridians - an issue they twice failed to resolve)n prior sessions thi s year. .
That crisis. though. seemingly has taken a back seat to legislative fund -raisers. primarily among Republicans in the
Hou se of Representatives.
With each passing· day. hope dwindles fo r speedy resolution .
of the malprac tice debacle. So House Rep ublicans. led by
House Speaker Johnnie Byrd. decided to do whal they do best:
stuff their pock~t s with bundles of cash and their faces with
food and drink. counesy of lobbyists who get paid to manipulate the deci sion-making process. Incredibly. no fewer than
20 such gatherings have been scheduled during the four-day
special session that's scheduled to end Thursday.
Fu~d-r~isers. of course. are prohibited during the regular
legi slative session. so as to avoid any hint of quid pro quo
impropriety. '
·
For the special sessions, though. all bets are off. Mr. Byrd,
in fact, rebuffed an appropriate elTon by House Democrats to
extend the ban to special sessions. using the absurd ru&amp;ic of
free spe~c h to justify the blatant money grab.
How stupid does Mr. Byrd think voters are''
If it' s improper to solicit and accept cat:npaign donations
during the regular session. it's equally improper during special
sessions. Voters understand that much. House Republicans
should, too.

Detaining imm,igrants pushes
the Constitutional line
The But1'alo (N.Y. ) News. on detaining immigrants:
The Justice Depanment misused its authority in the postSept. II roundup of illegal immigrants, according to a just
released report. The Justice Department rejects the allegations
even though the repon was issued by no less an authority on
the subject than its own inspector general.
The department. acting aggressively after the 200 I terrori st
attacks on the United States, "made littl e attempt to distingui sh'' between immigrants linked to terrorism and those with
no connection. then jailed many of them under harsh conditions. accordi ng to the repon by the inspector general. an independent. nonpartisan oversight office.
·
Thi s is the John Ashcroft Justice Depanment. The attorney
ge neral. by all accounts, was personally reinvigorated by the
crucial and hi storic tasks of prosecuting terrorists and protecting the country from future attacks.
The challen ges were real. and the country required a forceful respo nse to a threat that was no longer theoretical. Those
buildings reall y did come down. Close to 3,000 people really
did die. _
No one should doubt the magnitude of the task that faced
the Justice Depanment in the weeks after 9/1 1. and that it conti nues to face . In the sum of all its aspects. this challenge is not
only massive, but unique .in human history.
But so is the continuing political experiment of the United
States, whose residents have a stake not just in rooting out the
terrorists in our midst, but in ensuring that the country their
children inherit has the same commitment to civillibeny. ·
It doesn't seem too much to ask that their attorney 'ge neral
have that same commitment, even in waging a vigorous and
necessary fight against terrorism .

..

---------- --

lbe line between at-home and working moms
The family values folks see med to have
gonen a boost this week when the Census
Bureau released results of a recent survey
on motherhood in America.
The Census Bureau
f o u n d
that the
number
of . child r e n
be i n g
Joan
raised by
Ryan
stay-at-

·----h

o merse
moth
increased
13
perin
cent
the last eight years. Expens suggest the
innease is the result of the economic
boom of the '90s. or the entry into parenthood of former latchkey kids who
want something different for their own
children. Some suggested women are
becoming more "seltless" by choosing
to stay home with their children.
There is another explanation 'to wnsider.
·
Women in the survey are lyi ng.
Not lyi ng lying. But not being I00
percent truthful. They can't be truthful.
not when faced with a question like,
"Are you in the labor forc e or are you a
stay -at-home mother~··
As if vou can't be in the labor force
and also· be a stay-at-home mother.
As if there aren't a million permutations today of motherhood.

ENHANCING

DRUGS.

~~~/¥f.R&lt;!:l 2003 by NEA ,

paying the mortgage. We are not more
selfish because we work or less selfish
because we stay at home. despite depi ction s to the contrary.
I loved a reader review I came across
on Amazon.com of a book extolling the
seltlessness of quitting work for~ the
sake of one's children. "I ha ve the rest
of my life to work. and in the meantime
chose to volunteer in the co mmunit y,
chairing fund -raising events, sitting on
two Boards and ·amazingly' feel ing a
great sense of self wonh." the reader
wrote. "And the best pan - my daughter knows that I chose her and not a job
to validate myself."
·
Sure. a child feels much more loved
when she trac ks down her mother by :
cell phone at a women's auxiliary fashion show ruther th~m at an office.
The reader's celebration of herself is
the kind of simplistic cheerleading that
allows the media to fuel the so-called
rift between stay-at-home and working
D10thers. gleefully depicting it as if it .
were a cat figh t.
Mothers themselves recognize that
most of us are amalgams . We experiment like chemi sts to balance the elements of work and family. finding our- .
selves with too much of one and not
enough of the other. and adjusting the
formula again and again.
Joan Ryan is a columnist for tire
San Francisco Chronicle. Se11d commellts to her i11 care of this newspaper
or send her e-mail at jom1ryansjchron- ·
icle.com.
-

MASON. W. Va_ - Debora "Debbie" Van Meter. 44 ,
Mason, W.Va., di'ed on Sunday. June 22, 2003 at Holzer
Mediad Center in Galli polis.
She was born Oct. 10. 1958, in Lynch, Ky., dau ghte r of the
late James Thomas and Carol Dean ·Utery Branham .
,. She was a I 976 graduate of Wahama High School, and the
owner of Debbie's Flowers 'N' More in Mason. She was a
member of Bend Area ·c.A. R.E., the VFW Ladies Auxiliary
Post 9926, Faith Baptist Church in ' Mason and was- a cofou nder of the Bend Area Share-A-Christmas Program.
Surviving are her husband , Henry Van Meter and son ,
Tommy Van Meter. both of Mason: three brothers and two sis. ters-in-law. Bill and Phyllis Branham of Cumberland, Ky.,
Greg and Marsha Herrin -of Orlando, Fla .. and \imothy
Branham of Charleston. W.Va .: three sisters and brothers- inJaw. Kath y and Bill Sweet of Maynardvill e. Tenn ., Jacque and
Brian Curtis of Schneckenhau sen, Germany and Theresa
Branham of Charleston, W_Va.; her mother-in-law, Jane Van
Meter of Ma son: sisters- in-law and brothers-in-law : Sylvia
and George dohnsm1. Jr. of Cl ifton, W.Va ., Jacqueline and
Ri ck Ohlinger of Mason and llena and Robert Moss man, Jr..
New Haven: and 'everal aunts and uncles.
Besides her pa ren ts• .she was preceded in death by a daughter. Samantha Jane Van Meter; a father-i n-law, Winfield R.
Van Meter, and a brother-in-law. Winfield R·_Van Meter. Jr.
Services will beheld at I p.m. on Wednesday, June 25 , 2003
at Faith Bapti st Church with Pastor Ron Branch offici ating.
Burial will follow at Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
The body will lie in sta te an hour prior to the service at the
church, and fri ends may call at Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral
Home in Mason frbm 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Faith Baptist
Church Family Life Center. P.O. Box 279. Mason. W.Va.
25260.

Captain Edison C. Brace
RACINE - Captain Edison C. Brace. 83, passed away at
5:30p.m. Sunday. June 22, 2003, in the Rocksprings Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
Born Jan . 20. 1920 in St. Albans, -W.Va. he was the son of
the late Frederick and Ada Wright Brace. He retired in 1983
. as a boat captain for the Dravo Corporation. He was a World
War II U.S. Army -veteran.
Surviving .are hi s wife, Mabel L. Jayne s Brace whom he;
married June I, 1943 in Pomeroy, two daughters, Kathryn
Hari and her husband , Dale of Racine and Joyce Si sson and
her husband. Ernie of Syracuse and, a son. James Brace and his
wife, Judy, of Crown City.
. Eight grandchildren, Le~ina Han; Michael (Kathy) Brace.
Teresa (James) Shelton. D10nne (Shane) Byer. Jimmy (Traci)
Brace, Sherri Sisson, Sammi (Travis) Mugrage and Pete (S uz)
Sisson; six great-grandchildren, numerous nieces. nephews.
brothers-in-law and siste rs-in-law al so survive .
In addition to hi s parents, he was preceded in death by two
brothers, Frederick Brace and George Brace.
Funeral services will be at II a.m. Wednesday June 25,
2003 in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine . Officiating will
be !he Rev. Larry Hal ey. Internment will be in the Letan Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call 6-9 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral
home.
Military graveside services will be conducted by Racine
Post 602 . American Legion, and Tuppers Plains V.F.W. Post
9053. Memorial contributions may be made in Edison's memory to the RACO-Edison C. Brace Memorial Scholarship, c/o
. Ann Zirkle, P.O. Box 896, Racine. Ohio 45771.

Wreck

She's not sick, she's a woman
Now it 's dementia. It turns out that
the magic hormones that were supposed
to stave off the effects of aging on
women actually speed
up
the
s cariest
part · of
growing
C0 ki
8t old : the
~
poss ibili SteVe nty of losRoberts ing your
- - - - -s e n s e s .
De s pite
st u d i e s
s howin~

'IOUAS'k
HIM tF HE USES
PERFoRMANCE&gt;

As if you can tell anything abou t a
woman 's commitment to ·'family values" by her answer.
l know stay-at-home mothers who are
so busy se rving on nonprofit boards.
volunteering t'or the PTA. shopp ing for
cabinet pulls and taking Rikram yoga
classes that they schedule dates with
their children in their Palm Pilots.
And l know working mothers who take
early-morning and weekend shifts so
their husbands arc at home with the chi ldren when they aren't, and vice versa.
Trying to divide women into the cartooni sh categories of "stay-at-home"
and •·working" is as anachronistic and
narrow as dividing women into categories of ''virgin··- and "whore." Real
life, as any woman will tell you, takes
place in the vast land between the two.
There are the stay-at-home mothers
who transcribe deposition tapes while
otheir kids are in school. or give one-onone computer instruction in people's
homes. or take freelance consulting
jobs, or write mystery novel s. They're
home for their kids. and they also "work.
There are the working mothers who
telecommute three days a week. or go to
work at d;twn so they' re home by ~
p.m .. or come home early and catc h up
on their e- mail and paperwork after the
children arc in bed . They work. and
they're also home for thei1: kids .
Most of us are making it up as we go.
We're cobbling from spare parts a life
unlike our mothers and grandmothers.
one that allow s for payi ng attention and

tilat hormone rcp la.::cmcnt "tlh.• "i-'Y'
increases risk for breast cancer. tor
heart disease, for stroke . and for blood
clots. mijny women held out hope-- that
HRT shielded the mind even if it
harmed the body. Following their docto rs' advice. millions of Ameri can
wQmen took the hormones. How could
so man y doctors have been so wrong~
The drug company that makes the
most popular of the estrogen and cstroge n-plu s-progesterone pill s. Wye th ,
recently started an adverti sing campaign in newspapers around the cou ntry
ai med at convi ncing some women that
the hormones are still good for them.
The main selling point: the pills ease the
symptoms of menopause, such as hot
tlash~s and night sweats. You ' ll cenainly gel no argumen t there from us. particularly the female one of us. But are
those benefits worth the risk''
To Wyeth. it's cruci al that a sizeable
number of wome n continue to answer
that question affirmati ve ly. Last year.
despite some earlier studies showing a
possible link between hormones and
brea&gt;t cancer, HRT for menopausal
women was sti ll. you' ll pardon the
expression. a cash cow for the drug

company. But when the govern mentsponsored Women 's Health Initiati ve
found · that ·HRT 'not only did not
REDUCE the risks of heart att ack and
stroke. as was initially believed. but
INCREASED them, sales of the hormanes fell dramatically. Plummeting .
sales meant plummeting stock prices.
Hoping that the hormone' could still
be shown to ward off dementia, which
might make them well worth the risk to
many women, Wyeth fund ed the study
to test that thesis. What the re,earchers
found - that the onseJ of dementia
comes EARLIER for older wome n who
have taken 1-iRT - is bound to dri ve
sale&gt; dow11 ~vct1 fun i.et, so Wyeth has
gone on the offensive .
It's easy to understand why the dru g
company would be so agg ressive in
pushing its product . but why have so
many physicians bee n ready to go
along?
The science-writer Natalie Angier.
author of "Women'' (Anchor. 2000),
suspects the answer lies in America's
view of aging. particularly of ag in g
women. ln,tead of celebrating the wisdom that the yea rs bring. and rejoicing
in the demi se of the monthly mood
sw ings (those "raging hormmial imbal ances" that were in voked )o justif\y barrin g women from some jobs). "ttbctors
conspired with their-'female paticnrs to
try to stop the clock. treatin g
menopause as an illness. with hormones
as the cure.
There's a lot to that thesis. The anti aging industry is probably a multib(llion-doll ar busine" when ym1 add up
all of the beauty treatmen ts. botox
injections. plastic surgeries and makeup
purchases. And aside from wanting to
- look good. the evcr-ag in ~ population
want s to feel good going 1nto the later
years as well: That's one rea,on why
.

.

prescri pti on drug coverage by Medicare
has become such a hot political issue.
But we think there's another reason
why doctors went along so readily with _
they are
hormo ne replacement accustomed to experimenting on
women 's bodies. Look at the last halfcentury: thalidomide to prevent morning sickness in pregnancy, DES to prevent mi scarriage in preg nancy, the
Dalkon Shield to prevent pregnancy
itself, all used by women following
doctors · orders. all potentially causing
great harm to women or their offspring.
And we don't have any idea what the
long -term consequences of fertility
treatme nts to induce pregnanc y might
be.
That 's not to say there haven't bech
enormous strides in women's health .
The Pap smear and mammography ha ve
'made early detection of cervieal and
breast cancer routine. Another hor- :
mone. tamox ifen, appears to assist in ·
preventing breast cancer or its recurrence. And there have been many milestones in the treatment of the Nq. I
killer of' women. heart di sease.
But the medical establishment seems
all too ready to see women's reFroduc- :
ti vc ;,ystems a;, fields for expenmenta- ·
tio n. and to act as though natural female ·
functioning is somehow not quite right.
a sickness to be cured. Women who
wondered whether it made sense for
perfectly healthy people to take hormone;, were dismissed as overly emotiomi l (proving that those calming hor: ·
mones were called for) for refusing to ·
accept the evidence of science .
The evidence is now in_ The hormone' can harm your mind '~' well as
your body. The m1llions of wome n who
lis tened to their doctors have one more :
thing to worry about. at least until the :
dementia take;, over.

from Page A1
the accident.
The owner of the vehicle,
lenni L Johnson. 24; 555
Russell Road, Bidwell. reported
' the theft to the Sheriff's
Department. Officers said t11ey
passed Clary on Kemper
Hollow Road minutes later.
Officers said Clary !led from
oflicers and later crashed the
SUV on McConnick Road. He
crawled from the vehicle and
!led on foot through a field, officers said.
Olllcers found Clary and
arrested him about 3 &amp;.m.
Sunday at the residence of a
friend on Gage Road.
Officers also found ·a 1998
Ford Mustang that Johnson also

The Daily Sentinel • Page !-5

www.mydailysentinel.com

allegedly stole and driven there:
That vehicle belonged to
Kandi L. Shamblin, 49, 358
Manin Drive, Gallipolis.
Bmndon Clary was scheduled
to be arraigned in' Gallipolis
Municipal Court this morning.
Mrs. Clary was pronounced
dead at the scene of the accident
by Gallia County coroner, Dr.
Daniel Whitely.
The Gallia County Sheritl's
Office. Gallia County EMS and
Springfield Township Fire
Depanmcnt assisted at the accident scene.
The accident resulted in the
fourth tntftic fatality of the year
so tar in rural Gallia County.
Five people have been killed so
far this year in accidents in the
Post\ Gallia-M"ies C'o11nty
coverage area.
Brd!ldon Clary wa~ scheduled
to be atntigned thi s morning in.
Gallia Municipal Coun.

..

Supreme Court strikes down law
intended to -h~lp Holocaust survivors
WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court struck
down a state law intended to
help Holocaust survivors collect on insumnce policic' from
the Nazi era. ruling Monday
that the law was unconstitutional meddling by states in
foreign affairs.
·
The coun divided 5-4 to side
with the Bu sh administration,
which had urged the coutt to
&gt;trike down the law. The
administration sa id the law
huns the govemment's etl&lt;ms
to speak "with one voice" in
intemational affairs.
The case arose because of
what California called a deliberate attempt to stonewall
elderly Holocaust survi vors or
heirs who inquired about dormant policies. The state wanted any insurer doing business
there to tum over records of
Holocaust-era insurance policies or.risk losing their license
to do business in the state.
Justice David Souter wrote
for the majority. Chief Justice
William H. Rehn~uist and
Sandra
Day
Justices
O'Connor, Anthony
M.
.Kennedy and Stephen Breyer
joined him.
Bader
Ju stice
Ru th

Gin·sburg, with Breyer one of
twu Jew i' h justi ce' on the
cuul1. reau a t;n1 di s;,cnt fnnn
the bench.
"The judici;uy has no warrant to serve us an expositor of
the nation's forei gn policy," hy
trlllnpi ng a.,tate law this way,
Ginsburg said .
Lawyer~
for California
argued the law docs not interfere with foreign policy.
Bes ides helping Holocaust victims. the law give' consumers
information they can use to
evaluate insurance companie&gt;.
The I&lt;J99 la w required companie' that 'old insurance poli cies in Europe from 1920 to
1945, and which arc now alfiliatcd wit h California insurance
colnpan ies. to search th ei r
record' for uetails of the old
policies. · The informatio n
would go into a public registry.
Companies that refused to
di vul ge information could lose
their ' late licenses.
An insurance company trade
association and insurers contend California is unconstitutionally tryi ng to regulate
insurance busines; outside its
borders. Ins urance companies
complained that if the
Calil()rn ia law stands. 50 states

couid set 50 dilferent require- only to keep the propenies
menb.
_
they stole from corpses, but to
Insurers have maintained continue to do business today
that some oft he required in for- with Californians who would
mation has been lost and that be rightly concerned, for both
European laws prohibit client economic and moral reasons. if
information frnrn he ing given they learned the truth," Bet
to· a third pa\ty without the Tzeuek Legal Services and the
client's con.,ent.
Simon Wie senthal ' Center
The Bu sh admini,tration argued in a friend-of-the-coun
;,uid Holocaust -era- ciaims brief.
against forei gn in, urance com Arou nd
the
cou ntry,
panics should he procc" ed Holocaust survivors and heirs"
through an international Cbm - are trying to recover stolen art
mission e;,rabli shed in 1998 to and money. California has
;,cttlc insurance claims. An been pani cul arly aggressive in
agreement si gned lt"l fall sets helping victims. Last fall, Gov.
"'ide $275 million to settle Gray Davis signed a bill
claims and htt manitarian 'pro- extending the deadline until
grams that benelit Holocaust 2010 for lawsuits brought in
'urvtvors.
Cali fornia couns· over stolen
Some heirs have said that an that is now housed in musepolicie' went unpaid after urns or galleries.
World War II because insurers ·Under the California law,
asked for documentation such insurers are required to disa' policies or death ccniticate&lt;. close to the state the number of
Only in surance companie s policies issued, the identity of
would have - that information the holder and beneficiary, the
now. the law\
hackers stat u' of the policy and the city
claimed.
of the pdlicyholder.
State insurance regulators - The 9th U.~. Circuit Coun
and Jewish groups urged the of Appeals in 'f&gt;an Francisco court w uphold the law.
upheld the law. A federal
--callou' i1hurancc rnmpu- appeals coun in\&lt;\tlanta struck
ni es that profit ed from the down a similar 'Florida meaHo locaust need secrecy not sure.

One dead, five injured as tornadoes strike
Nebraska; town of Deshler hardest-hit
DESHLER. Neb. (APl Severe
thunderstorms
unl eashed at lea't seven tornadoe~ in Nebraska. killin g
one person. knocking down
trees and power lines and
destroying "quite a few" ·
homes.
Mal isa Sittler. director ol
human re,ource' at Thayer
Count y Health Servi ce s in
Hebron. said a person · di ed
and five people were injured
Sunday in the town of
Des hler. about 75 miles
southwest of Lincoln near the
Kansas line. The n_ame of the
victim was not immediately
released.
Todd Holsten with the
National Weather Service in

Hastings sa id four tornadoes
hit in anti arpund Deshl~r
;,tan ing at 6:40 ,p.m.
"They've got the town all
blocked off:· said Gordon
Fleming. a Thayer Coumy
commissioner who lives in
the tow n of around 900. "It
bl ew some bl1ilclings away
here_ ..
Bob Reinke with Reinke
Manufacturing. a maker of
irriga ti on equipm ent and
flatbed trucks. said the factory three-quarters of a mile
west of Deshler had one
buildin g destroyed and several others damaged.
'·I don' t know how many
houses \Vere destroyed. It
was quite a few." Rei nke

said.

''There's a lot of da mage
from trees j ust land ing on
cars and homes:· he sai d.
" It 's unbeli evable."
The town\ lum ber yard
was destroyed and a broom
factory w;i s severely dam aged , he ~aid. Two grain elevators al so \Vere damaged.

--we· re just trying to figure
out what 's out there;" said
Margie Hol le, whose hu sband , Alan
Holle, is
Deshler\ mayor. ''I've heen
in the basement all night. "
Gov.
Mike
Johan ns'
spokesman. Chri s Peterson.
said the state\ emergency
operat ion ce nter was up and
running and an emergency

team was to be dispatched.
Larry. Wirth with the ·
weather service said a tornado also damaged buildings in
Byron, about. se ven mile s
so uth of Deshler. and II
miles to the southeast in
Chester.
Winh estimated 7 inches of ·
rain fell in pans of · Thayer
County.
The storms came just two
days after at least two tornados and fierce winds roared
across Garden County in
Nebraska 's Panhandle on
Friday. de stroying farm
buildings, trees and derailing
a Union Pacific train.

Report: Max Factor heir's journal found in motel
VENTURA, Calif. CAP) Convicted rapi st Andrew
Luster sought to justify his
crimes and listed hi s victims
and prosecutors under the
word "PAYBACK" in a notebook left in Mexico following his capture , according to
a publi shed report.
"To want to take a good
man's life and destroy his
family ___ was nothing short
of ruthless and much more to
the point of unforgivable ."
said an entry in the notebook.
according to the Ventura
County Star.
. The 13 pages al so listed
tople ss bars in Puerto
Vallana, Mexico. the names
of people Lu ster hoped
would send him money, and
notes on how to pick up
women in Spanish. the new s-

paper reported Sunday.
out.
Luster. 39. is the greatCalifornia authorities came
grandson of cosmetics mag- to the motel Sunday looking
nate Ma x Factor. He jumped for the notebook but we.re
hi s $ 1 million bail and spent told it was gone, Lopez sai d.
nearly six months on the run
The notebook. listed name s
until he was captured by a of those who prosecuted him,
bounty hunter Wednesday in the women he raped, detecthe Mexi can beach resort. He tives and an in vestigator. All
was returned to California to the names were under the
begin se rvi ng a I 24-year headi ng ''PAYBACK ." which
prison sentence for drugging was underlined. the Star
and raping three ·women at reponed.
hi s home northwest of Los
In several entries, Luster
Angeles.
anempted to justify hi s
Reporters for the Star und actions and criticized authorother media outlets fi shed the ities for prosecuting him.
notebook from a trash can in
" Yes they were in an
Lu ster's motel room and extreme state of inebriation
looked ·at it Saturday. motel · ___ But thi s - as a~y actively
manager Oscar Lopez sa id _ sex ual person (player) knows
Lopez told The A"ociated is not outside the grounds of
Press on Sunday that motel ethi cal play:· Luster wrote in
staff later threw the notebook one entry.

Editors at the Star said the
paper's reporter had covered
Luster's trial and reco_gnized
hi s handwriting.
Laura Bosley, an FBI
spokeswoman
in
Los
Angeles, declined to say
whether the FBI knew of the
notebook or was trying to
obtain it. She said the bureau
does not comment on 'ongoing investigations.
Lu ster 's attorney Roger
Diamond said he knew nothing about any notebook hi s
client had. but said its contents would have no bearing
on hi s efforts to reinstate
Luster's appeal. The appea)
had been dismissed June I 0
on the grounds Luster had
forfeited his right to, appeal
by jumping baiL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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�The Daily·Sentinel

. PageA6

Nation • World

Monday, June 23, 2003

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 82
PGA: Kaye wins Buick Classic, Page 83

Marines return to loving arms at eastern North Carolina bases
MARINE CORPS AIR n'ttake long ."
STATION NEW RIVER,
She brought a welcomeN.C. (AP) - An anxious home gift: 3-month-old son
. moment came when Carrie Haidyn, born just two days
Godsoe watched the happy before her husband landed on
stampede that started when Iraqi soil. Her husband
the troops she was watching clutched the baby tight in the
were dismissed. In the mob of sunshine. keeping a tight hold
' 1m use&gt;. sibli ngs and strollers, on the emotion of seeing the
she wanted to see' one person: child he had only read about
her husband.
through e-mails and letters.
''My biggest goal was just
" It feels great. It 's wonderto find him in the crowd of ful. It's an amazing feeling ,"
guys. I'm glad it didn't . take he said. "I was pretty nervous,
long to see his face, " Godsoe thinking he might cry, might
I said.
not want me to hold him, but
Lance Cpl. Christopher he seems to be doing fine .
Godsoe came home Sunday Maybe he recognizes my
with fellow members of the voice, I think."
269th Marine Light Attack
About 7,000 ground troops
· Helicopter Squadron. The and helicopter crews were
Marines came in aboard 21 heli- expected to return to North
copters that lalided in fonnation . Carolina bases by next weekend:
a~ part of a homecoming of the
Makeshift posters were
2nd Marine Expeditionary everywhere, from the hangars
Brigade from lraq.
to hotel balco!lies a11d chainFor his wife, the mayhem link fences along the route to
was familiar and tolerable.
the base. Flags and banners
"It was the same thing at hung from street .light posts,
boot camp. I couldn't figure as well as yellow ribbons and
out which guy he was," she red, white and blue streamers.
said . ·' You just both stan
While there were celebrawalking and pretty soon, you tions of life, there also were
catch each· other's glances. It thoughts about the 23 memwas all ofJO seconds. It did- bers of the brigade who died

in Iraq as well as those who
have died since an end to
major combat operations were ·
declared last month.
"It paips me to know we
lost Marines," said Sgt. Chad
Herlihy, 26, of Pace, Fla.
"Now, we're losing more on
the Army side,"
During the brigade 's five
months in Iraq , it s members
helped rescue Army Pvt.
Jessica Lynch and captured
1.000 prisoners of war. They
also helped liberate the cities
of
Nasiriyah,
Amarah,
Diwaniyah and Kut, and controlled an 'area of 50,000
square kilometers.
"I just hope that we as a
nation · ~lay the course and .
help these people," said Col.
R.E. Milstead Jr. , commanding officer of the 29th Marine
Aircraft Group. ,
The arrivals started at dawn
S'unday as ground troops were
ferried ashore at Onslow
Beach inside Camp Lejeune.
Other Marines and equipment
began ·oftloading later tn the
. day at the , state port in
Morehead City and the New Gicky School, right, greets her husband, Lance Cpl. Glen School. of Marine Air Group 29 of the 2nd
River and Cherry Point air- Marine Expeditionary Brigade, Sunday, June 22 , 2003,. as he retums.to New River Marine Corps Air
fields.
·
Station, N.C., after ccmbat duty in Iraq . (AP Photo/Grant Halverson)

,

ope-ning .day of ag conference .
New Catholic leader's message
expected to draw second protests ·pleases parishioners in Phoenix
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
(AP) - H,undreds of demonstrators descended on city
streets to denounce a conference on genetically engineered agriculture -even
before it had begun.
Chanting, banging drums
and carrying signs that read
"We Don't Want to Eat Their
Corporate Creations," protesters swarmed the streets
Sunday around the state
Capitol and nearby conference center.
Police in riot gear and on
horseback faced off with the
demonstrators, arresting II
people on charges of unlawful
assembly, vandalism and possessing weapons, including a
switchblade and other sharp
objects.
Officials were bracing for
more protests throughout the
three-day
Ministerial
Conference and Expo on
Agricultural Science and
Technology, which was
expected to draw officials
from more than l 00 countries.
It was set to begin Monday.
Sponsored by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture,
the col'lierence convenes at a
time when the debate over
genetically modified foods
has reached a fever pitch. The
United States is demanding
the World Trade
that

Organization
force
the
European Union to end its ban
on genetically modified fond .
At the same time', oppos ition to biotechnology is galvanizing grass-roots groups
both within and outside the
United States.
Agriculture Department
officials say the conference is
designed to help developing
countries reduce hunger and
improve nutrition using
advanced technology. They
say biotechnology can help
reduce use of pesticides and
create better harvests than
conventional methods, helping preserve the environment
and Improving health.
··
But activists argue that
biotechnology is not the antidote to the complex .food
problems facing developing
nations. Instead, they fear the
conference is an attempt by
corporate farming and biotech
interests to push . into new
markets.
"The policies they are talking about do not benefit poor
people in the world, they benefit large agriculture companies," protester Eddy Jara, a
30-year-old nutritionist from
Berkeley, Calif. , said Sunday.
U.S. , Secretary
of
A~riculture Ann Veneman
said the conference will also
highlight farming methods

and pest management to help
developing countries cut
world hunger by 2015, a goal
set by agriculture secretaries
at the World Food Summit
last year. More than 800 million people · face chronic
hunger or malnutrition, she
said.
"What we're talking about
is increasing food. productivity in areas of the world where
people are both hungry and
poor," she said. "Many developing countries get 90 percent
of their food from local production and there isn 't any
infrastructure."
The
Agriculture
Department has c,losed· the
conference to the public and
certain events to the ll)edia.
The press did not receive an
agenda until the day before
the conference. Department
officials cited security reasons.

PHOENIX (AP) - The
new leader of the troubled
Roman C;1tholic Diocese of
Phoenix promised to be "an
instrument of reconciliation," welcome words to
parishioners looking for positive changes.
In a letter read at some services Sunday and distributed
to worshippers at others,
Archbishop
Michael
Sheehan promised brighter
days for the diocese, which
has been rocked by the resignation of its bishop over a
· fatal hit-and-run and b)(. sex

abuse allegations against
priests .
"Like the Phoenix bird rising from the · ashes , the
church of Phoenix will rise
to new heights," Sheehan
wrote. "My heart goes out 10
all who are hurting."
Parishioner Gloria Abril
said Sheehan will be good
for the diocese.
"This is a start of a new
beginning, a new healing,"
Abril said.
Sheehan, who is the archbishop of Santa Fe, N.M.,
was appointed to temporarily

On the Net:
Ministerial Conference and
Expo on Agricultural Science
and
Technology:
http://www.fas.usda.gov/icd/s
tconf/conf-info.html
Prote.st
information:
http://sacmobilization.org

L

lead the Phoenix diocese
Wednesday, when Bishop
Thomas 0 ' Brien stepped
down after being charged
with striking a jaywalking
pedestrian with hi s car and
driving away. The accident
June 14 killed Jim Reed. 43.
Before the accident,
0' Brien was criticized over
an immunity deal with prosecutors that spared him indictment on obstruction charges
for protecting priests accused
of child molestation. ·

A

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PageBl
Monday, June 23, 2003
'

.

Meigs sweeps Wellston, Lancaster
BY ANDREW CARTER

Sports editor

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!

RIO GRANDE - The Meigs American Legion
baseball squad improved its record to 5-5 by
sweeping a pair of doubleheaders over the weekend.
Meigs swept Lancaster II 2-l and 6-0 on Sunday
at the Univetsity of Rio Grande to follow up a
resounding sweep of Wellston on Saturday, which
saw Meigs win 13-5 and 13-1.
Doug Gill and Jimmy Smith each pitched a complete game Sunday for Meigs. Gill scattered five
hits and recorded four strikeouts with just one
walk in the 2-1 win.
Dustin Gibbs and David McClure each went 2for-3 and scored a run. McClure scored the gamewinning run in the fourth inning.

Smith tossed a three-hit shutout in the second
game against Lancaster II. He struck out three batters and walked four.
Meigs jumped on Lancaster II early in the second game, scoring twice in the first inning when
Mike Warren slapped a two-run homer after
Jeremy Blackston drew a walk.
Warren finished 2-for-2 and also had a double.
Blackston was 1-for-3 with a double.
Meigs added two more runs in the second
inning. Luke Haislop, Smith and Dill all reached
base and Warren connected on a double to drive in

Storm wins
Arena Football
League title
TAMPA, Fla . (AP)
Music
blared,
confetti
dropped from the ceiling ahd
the city of Tampa celebrated
another pro football championship Sunday night, saluting
the Tampa Bay Storm's 43-29
vicfory over the Arizona
Rattlers in the Arena Bowl.
Reserve quarterback Pat
O'Hara threw for two touchdowns lind ran for a third as
the Storm won its record fifth
Arena Football League title.
Tampa became the first city
to have the Super Bowl and
AFL champions in the same
year.
The· Buccaneers beat
Oakland in January to capture the NFL title.
Storm coach Tim Marcum
hoisted the championship trophy for a record seventh time.
It's his third title with Tampa
Bay, which also won under ·
him in 1995 and 1996.
The Storm also won championships in 1991 and 1993.
Lawrence Samuels caught
three touchdown passes, and
the Storm forced five
turnovers
to
frustrate
Arizona's offense.
The Rattlers entered the
game averaging 68.3 points
per game in the playoffs. ·

Terwilliger
commits to
Ohio State
COLUMBUS (AP)
Matt Terwilliger, a 6-foot-9,
220-pound forward from
Troy, has decided to play basketball at Ohio State.
Terwilliger is the first player to commit to Ohio State's
class of 2004. The school has
three scholarships remaining.
He told 'Ohio State on
Friday that he had chosen the
Buckeyes over Cincinnati
and Notre Dame.
He said Ohio State was
"the best school for me, really, for both academics and
athletics."
Coaches have told him they
project him as a power forward with the potential to
play inside or outside.

Late goal
dooms Crew
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)Jamil Walker and Brian
Mullan scored to lead the San
!ose Earthquakes over the
Columbus Crew 2·1 Saturday
night.
Western Conference leader
San Jose improved to 6-2-3.
Columbus, which got. a goal
from Brian McBride, fell to
4-5-3.
Walker scored in the 77th
minute after taking a pass
from Ian Russell .
The Earthquakes scored
first on a counterattack in the
43rd minute. Mullan took 'a
long pass from ·Todd
Dunivan! and scored with a
shot to the far post.
Columbus tied the game at
1-1 in the 55th minute.
San Jose goalkeeper Pat
Onstad saved Ross Paule's
shot from close range but
deflected the ball to McBride,
who tapped it home . ·

-----.-----------·

three runs and give Meigs a 5-0 cushion.
McCiur~ scored Meigs' final run in the third,
reaching base ori a walk before moving up to third
thanks to an error and a stolen base. He scored on
a sacrifice by Haislop.
,
Warren and Buzz Fackler each went 3-for-6 to
pace Meigs to a 13-5 victory over Wellston in
game one on Saturday.
.
.
Blackston, Smith and Dill had two hits apiece
and McClure and Haislop each had a hit.
Meigs scored five runs in the first, added two in
the third, one in the tifth, three in the sixth and two
in eighth to earn the win .
Charlie Young held Wellston to two runs on
three hits through 6'1, innings to record the win. He
had six strikeouts and· three walks.
Chris Brown picked up the save, working 2'!J

Please see Legion, 83

Diamondbacks 6, Reds 5

Finley leads
Arizona
past Cincy
PHOENIX (AP) - · Steve
Finley gave the Arizona
Diamondbacks the lift they
needed Sunday.
Finley went 4-for-4 with a
three-run homer and three
runs
scored
as
the
Diamondbacks beat the
Cincinnati Reds for rhe 14th
straight time, 6-5 Sunday.
Finley 's homer in the fifth
inning, his ninth, pulled
Arizona within 5-4 after
Cincinnati opened a 4-0 lead
in the first.
''I'm not trying to hit
homers," Finley said. "He left
a changeup up over the mid'
dle of the plate and I took
advantage of it."
·
The .Diamondbacks' fifth
straight win and seventh in
eighth games pulled them
within six games of NL Westleading San Francisco and
Los Angeles.
The victory also gave
Arizona its tirst series sweep
of the season and·extended its
winning
streak
against
Cincinnati, which dates back
to May 7, 2001.
"I've never seen anything
like it," said Mark Grace,
whose seventh-inning sacri'fice fly scored Luis Gonzalez
with the winning run . "That's
a good ballclub over there but
it seems we've had their number the last couple or three
years."
·
Kent Mercker (0-1) entered
in the bottom of the seventh
with Cincinnati holding the 54 lead. But Finley and Carlos
Baerga opened the inning
Arizona's second baseman Carlos Baerga, left,'leaps over the slide by Cincinnati ruhner Ken with back-to-back singles and
Griffey Jr., right, in the fifth inning Sunday in Phoenix. Baerga was attempting to turn a dou- Mercker walked Gonzalez on
'ble play but second base umpire Paul Schrieber ruled Griffey safe as Baerga was pulled off four pitches to load the bases.
the bag. (AP)
Mercker then walked David

Dellucci on five pitches to tie
the game 5-5.
"How many did we walk
today, a hundred," Cincinnati
manager Bob Boone said.
"We let them back. We gave it
to them."
Chris Reitsma relieved
Mercker and got Robby
Hammock to hit into a force
play at the plate. But Grace
hit a high fly down the left,
field line, and Gonzalez
scored easily.
"I was fortunate to hit the
ball deep enough to score
Gonzo," Grace said. "If ·it
were me on third, I'd probably still be standing out
·
.
there.''
Oropesa
(1-1)
Eddie
pitched one hitless inning for
the win. Jose Valverde
··pitched the ninth for his seventh save in as many chances.
Valverde has appeared - in
Arizona's last five games,
saving four and winning one.
"The guy says he wants the
ball every day," Arizona manager Bob Brenly said. "The 1
moral of the story is be careful what you ask for."
The Reds used four hits and
a hit batter to take a 4-0 lead
in the first inning against
Andrew Good.

Please see Reds. B:S

NASCAR Winston Cup Series

Robby Gordon grabs flag
at Dodge/Save Mart 350
BY MtKE HARRIS
·Associated Press

.
SONOMA, Calif. - This time Robby
Qordon finished what he started, outracing
Jeff Gordon on Sunday to win the
Dodge/Save Mart 350.
Jeff Gordon, a three-time Infineon winner
and no relation, looked for a while as if he
might win. But Robby Gordon held off the
four-time Winston Cup champion by 0.553seconds - about four car lengths - in the
battle of Chevrolets.
. TWo years ago on this same road course,
Robby Gordon dominated only to see Tony
Stewart slip past. Later that year at Watkins
Glen - the only other road course on the 36race schedule - Gordon was again the best
car but lost an almost certain victory when
the in-car camera battery exploded and started a fire.
On Sunday, he led three times for 81 of the
110 laps on the 1.949-mile, 11-turn course,
including the last 31 laps. It was the second

·---·--- - - -

NASCAR victory and first on a road course
for the former Indy-car star.
"I don't think there was any luck here
today.:' Robby Gordon said. "We had a plan
and we stuck to it all day. We stopped when
we wanted to stop and the strategy just
worked out perfect."
Jeff Gordon never led but pressured the
leader after passing Rusty Wallace for second place on lap 86.
.
"We had the fastest car at the end," the
runner-up said. "Robby wasn't very good,
compared to us , but he was.good in the right
places, the places where you can pass,"
Gordon said. "This is a tough place to pass."
Jeff Gordon, who moved past Dale
.Earnhardt Jr. to take second place in the
standings, didn't want to take a chal)ce on.
wrecking.
·
"We've got a points battle on the line
here," he said. "I thought, 'lf I get a really
clean shot, we'll take it.'"
Kevin Harvick, Robby Gordon's Richard

---~ ---

Pl•se see Gordon, B:S
~--

--------

Robby Gordon holds up the trophy after winning the
Dodge/Save Mart 350 Sunday in SOnoma, Calif. (AP) .

�Daily Sentinel

Page 82 • The

National League
E11t

W

GB '

L

Pet.

Allanta .............. .48

25

658

Montreal
Philadelphia

41
39

34
33

B

Florida
New 't'ork

3B
33

39
40

547
542
494
452

L

Pet

36

34
34
35
38

31

41

547
541
527
4B6
431
405

G8

Central

W
41

Houston
Chicago
St LOUIS
Ctnclnnat1
Ptttsburgh
Milwaukee

40

39

:JO 44
Weat

,.,,
4',

a',
10',

44
44

30

595

:JO

595

38

36

51 4

6

39

38

506

6\t

25 52 325
S1turdey'a Gamea

20'•

Ph1ladelph•a 6, Boston 5 13 •nnlngs
Chicago Whhe Sox 7, Chicago CubS 6
N Y Yankees at N Y Mats, ppd ram
Los Angeles 4, Anahetm 2
Flonda 2, Tampa Bay 0, 5 mmngs, ram

sund1y '1 Gamea
Balttmore 9, Allanla 3
Toronto 4 Montreal 2
Cleveland 8 Pittsburgh 5
Flonda 3, Tampa Bay 2
Philadelphia 5 Boston 0
M1nnesota 8 M•lwaukee 3
Kansas Clty 5 St Lou1s 2
Chicago Cubs 2, Chtcago While Sox 1
Colorado 5, Detroit 3
Oakland 6, San Franc•59o 5 ,
Anahetm 6 los Angeles 3
san Otego 3 Seante 1
NY Yankees 7 N Y Mels 3, 11 1nn1ngs
Houston 3, Texas 1
Mondly'e Gamea
Detroit (Sonderman 2-10) at Boston

(Wokelleld 5-3), 7 05 p m
Oakland (Z1to 7·5) at Te~~:as (Mounce

Montreal 8 Toronto 5
Milwaukee 8, Minnesota 1

Pmsburvh 7, Cleveland 6 15 1nn1ngs

pm

'
pm

Sunday's game
Indiana 8, Ptrateo 5
030 014 000-

Cleveland

Colorado 9, DetrOit 6
Houston 9, Te.~eas 5
St Lou1s 8 Kansas C1ty 1
Seattle 4, San Otego 2
Anzona 5, Cmc1nnat• 3.
San Franc•sco 6, Oakland 4
Sundey'a Gamea

o-

Balttmore (Oaal 4·8) at To ron to
(Escobar 5-3 or D Davts 3-4) 7 05 p m
NY Yankees (Clemens 7-4) at Tampa
Bay (Zambrano 3·4), 7 15 p m
Tuead•y'l Gamea
Detro•t at Boston 7 05 p m
Baltimore at Toronto 7 05 p m
Kam~as C1ty at Cleveland, 7 05 p m
N Y Yankees at Ta mpa Bay 7 15 p m
Oakland at Texas , 8 05 p m
Chicago Wht!e Sox at Minnesota 8 05
Seattle at Anaheim 10 05

Atlanta 10, Baltimore 2

a

2

14

P1ttsburgh 200 001 020 - 5 10 0
Sobalhlo, Boyd (7) DBaez (9) and
Laker Vogelsong Belmel (6) Boehringer
(7), STorres (9) and CWIIson W-5abath•a

7-3 L- Vogolsong 0 1 Sv-D8aez (16)
HR-P ittsb~h ,

Baltimore 9 Atlanta 3

Sta1rs (4)

South Atlantic League

Toronto 4, Montrea/2

Northem OIYialon

Cl811eland 8, Pittsburgh 5

'&gt; W

Florida 3, Tampa Bay 2
Philadelphia 5, Boston 0
Minnesota 8 Milwaukee 3
Kansas City 5, St Lou1s 2
Ch1cago Cubs 2 ChiCago Wh ite Sox 1
Colorado 5, Detroit 3
Oakland 6, San Franctsco 5
Anahetm 6 Los Angeles 3
A!'lzona 6, Cincinnati 5
San Otego 3, Seattle 1
NY Yankees 7, NY Mets 3, 11 tnnlnQs
Houston 3, Texas 1
Mondaly'a Gamea
Ptttsburgh (Suppan 5·6) at Montreal

Greensboro
x·L.ake County
Charleston. WV

Lakewood

L Pet.

5
5

3

833
833
600

3

2

600

H

Hagerstown
2
3
400
Le.1ungton
2
3
400
Delmarva
1
5 167
Kannapolis
1
5
, 67
Southern Dtvlalon
W
L Pet.
Savannah
4
1
BOO
x-Hickory
4
2
667

2!

Cap11ol City

2

Rome

1

2),

4
4

GB
';

Saturday, June 21

3-2) 935 pm

Charleston, SC

Colorado (Chacon 10·3) at San Otego
(Jarvts 0-1 ), 1005pm
los Angeles (lsh11 7-2) at San Franc•sco
(Rueter 7-2), 1015 p m

S Georg•a

4
4
4

333
333
200

2),
2\

Game 1-Rice 4, Stanford 3 10 1nn1ngs
Sunday, June 22
Game 2-Stanford e. Alee 3
Monday, June 23
Game 3-Alce (57-12) vs Stanford (51

Sunday's 911me
Dlamondbaiicks 6, Redti 5
C1nctnnat•
400 100 000 - 5 8 0 Arizona
100 030 20x - 6 11 1
Dempster, SulliVan {6). Mercker (7),
Re1tsma (7) and Stinnett, Good, RandOlph
(6}, Oropesa (7), Rogg10 (B) Valverde (9)
and Moeller, Ba.ra1as (8) w-oropesa 1·1

L-41eroi&lt;er o-1 Sv- VatWrde (7) HRAnzona SF1nley

Saturday's game
Dlamonclbtlcke 5, Reds 3l
Cincinnati
002 tOO 000 - 3

8 0
Ar1zona
300 000 20x - 5 6 2
JAnderson Heredia (6) and laRue,
JoPatterson, Oropesa (8), Val~~erde (9) and
Moeller
W-JoPatterson
1-3
LJAnderson 1-4 Sv-Vatverde (6) HAAnzona, ~oel ler (5)

American League
New York

E81t
W
L
44 29

Toronto .. ............ 43 32
Boston
41
32
Batt1more
33 39
Tampa Bay
24 49
C.ntr•l
Mmnesota
Kansas C1ty

ChiCago
Cleveland
DetrOit

Seattle
Oakland
Anaheim
Texas

Pel.

603
573
562

GB
2
3

45B
329
G8

W

L

Pet

40

34
34

541
52B

40
30 43
1B 54
Wool

467

5'•

38
35

411

9',

21

GB

L

Pet

49

25

662 .

43
36

30

589

37
46

370

27

31

37
38
38

H

6

L

Pet,

35

521

36
35

38
37

486
466

Charlotte
Durham

Ro:hmond

493

5aturd8y'l G1me1
Ph1ladelph18 6, Boston 5, 13 mntngs
ChiCago Whl1e Sox 7, ChiCagO Cubs 6
N Y Yankees at N Y Mets. ppd rain
Los Angeles 4 Anahetm 2
Florida 2 Tampa Bay 0, 5 tnnings, ra1n
Atlanta tO, Balllmore 2
Montreal 8 Toronto 5
M1iwaukee 8. Minnesota 1
Ptttsburgh 7 , Cleveland 6 15 tnn tngs
Colorado 9, Derrett 6
Houston 9, Texas 5
St LOUIS 8 Kansas City 1
Seattle 4, San D1eg0 2
San FranciSCO 6, Oakland 4

Ga

W'LPct
GB
Lou lsv1lle
45 30
600
Toledo
36 37
493
B
Columbus
35 41
461
10 /i
lnd•anapohs
32 41
438
12
Sunday's Gtmll
Charlotte e, Buflalo 6
Durtlam 4, ScrantonW1Ikes-Barre 3 8
1nnmgs 1st game
ScrantonWtlkes-Barre 7, Durtiam 3, 2nd
game
lndtanapohs at Pawtucket ppd ra1n
Richmond 6 , Ottawa 2
Rochester 3 t oledO 2
L.outsv•lle 5, Syracvse 1
Monday'• Game•
IndianapoliS at Pawtucket
Norfolk at Columbus
Richmond at Ottawa
Rochester at Toledo
Syracuse at Lou•svtlle
Tueaday'a Gamea
Charlotte at Syracuse
Columbus at Buffalo
Indianapolis at Scrantof)Wdkes-Barre
Norfolk at LOUISVIlle
Pawtucket at Durham

E81t Dlvltion
1S
18
17
14
9
4

7
a
9
12
17
21

696
692
654
538
346
160

13
15
16

19

at Beverly,
at Nttro (DH)
Wellston
Parkersburg,
N1tro (DH)

GB
1
4
9
13117

Ford

110

Ponttac

110

Dodge

110

$66 300
27 (35) Kyle Petty Dodge 110 $66 160
28 (5) Kurt Busch Ford 1 10 $75,255
29 (30) Kenny Wallace Dodge, 110,

$5B,035
30 (25) Johnny Benson, Pont1ac, 109,

$84 745
31

(34) Tony Aa1nes, Chevrolet

109

$54 925
32

(15)

Dave

Blaney

Ford

109

$62,865
33 (42) Ken Schrader DOdge

109

$55,745
34

(18) Scott Pruett, Dodge

109

$54,825
35 (21) Joe Nemechek, Chevrolet, 109,

$54,805
36 (39) J1mmy Spencer Dodge 109,

$54 7B5
37 (32) Grog BIHio, Ford, 106, out of gas,
$54 765
38 116) Jeff Burton, Ford 102, $8B, 162
39 (28) Jack Sprague

Pontiac

95,

0$54,720
40 (41) Chnshan F•tt•paldl Dodge 86
transm1sston $90 463
41 (40) Steve Park Chevrolet 85 acCIdent $62 650
42 (29 ) Dale Jarrett, Ford, 83 !ransm•s·
SIOn , $100 403
43 ~43 ) H•deo Fukuyama Fotd 68 rear
e nd $54 829
Race statl1tlca
Average Speed o1 Race Winner 73 817

mph
Time ot Race 2 hOurs 57 m1nutes 56
'seconds
Margm of Vtclory 0 553 seconds
Cau11on Flags 6 lor 16 laps
Lead Changes 6 among 4 dnvers
lap Leaders 8 Satd 1 A Go rdon 2 30
A Fellows 31-35, A Gordon 36-56 A
Fellows 57-72 J Benson 73-79 A Gordon

B0-110
Top 10 1n Pomts M Kenseth · 2,396, J
Gordon 2 222 0 Earnhard t Jr 2 220 B
Labonte - 2 136, M Waltrtp · 2 024 K
Busch • 2 01 2, J Johnson
1 965 A
Wallace • 1,940 K Harvtck • 1,901 S
Ma rlin - 1 892

Golf
Buick Classic

•·won on first hole of playoff
x-Jonathan Kaye
70·66·68·67- 271
John Rollms
70 67-67 67 - 271
66·69·70·68 - 273
Joey Stndelar
Serg1o Garcta
70-69·66-69- 274
Fred Funk •
71·7D-64·69- 274
Jay Haas
74·68·67·65- 274

6 pm
1 p.m
6 pm
6 pm
1pm

at Athens 6 p m

Athens (DH}, 1 p m

DistriCt Tournament at Wellston
(All home games played at Meigs High
School unJe11 otherwlae noted.)

Auto racing
NASCAR Winston Cup Series
Dodge6ave Mart 350
SONOMA Calif - Results Sunday from
the Dodge Save Mart 350 race for
NASCAR's Wtnston Cup senes at lntmeon
Raceway listing starting position 1n paren
theses dnver car, laps completed wtth
reason out 1f not running at the f1msh and
money won
1 (2) Robby Gordon Chevrolet 110,

$204,51 2
Chevrolet

110

$143,203
3 (6) Kevm Harvtck Chevrolet 110
$119 128
4 (12) s,uEll1ott Dodge , 110, $119,748
5 (13) Ryan Newman , Dodge, 110,
6 (1) Borts Said Pont1ac 110 $90 990
7 {31
Ron Fellows, Ch811rolet , 110,

$92 927
8 {7)
Rusty Wal lace Dodge 110
$99 482
9 (14} Bobby LabOnte Chevrolet 110

$105 223
10 (31) Jeremy May!1eld Dodge 110
$80 335

Sunday, June 22
Colo mbta 1 Japan 0
France 5 Nevv Zealand 0
Monday, June 23
Un1ted States vs Came1oon 3 p m at
lyon
Brazil vs Turkey 3 p m av-Samt-Etlenne
SemUinals
Thursday, June 26 ,
Group B w1nner vs Group A runnerup,
12pmatlyon
Group A w1nner vs Group B ru nnerup 3
p ni at Pans
Saturday, June 28
Third Place
Sem1t10al losers 12 p m at St Ehenne
Sunday, June 29
Final
Sem1lmal w1nners 3 p m at Par1s

Association
Eastern Co nference
W
L Pet
6
1
857

,.,, ......... 5

4

GB

556

2

lndtana
5
4
556
2
New York
5
4
556
2
Charlotte
6
5
545
2
2',
500
Connecticut
5
5
2
7
222
Wash•ngton
5
Weatem Conference
W L Pel
GB
los Angeles
10
2
833
Seattle
6
5
545
3'
Houston ............... 6
6
500
4
Minnesota
5
6
455
4 '
Sacramento
5
7
417
5
San Anton to
4
7
364
5'
Phoenl)( ..,
2
9
182
7'
Saturday'• Game•
Mmnesota 66 Indiana 58
Houston 63, Cleveland 62
Sacramento 69 Seattle 54
los Angeles 54 Phoerl1"' 48
Sunday's Gamee
Detroit 82 Connecticut 73 OT
New York 69, Charlotte 57
Seattle 93 San Antomo 53
Tuaeday'e Gamet
Co nn ectiCut at WaShington 7 p m
lndtana at Detroit, 7 30 p m
los Angeles at Houston , 8 30 p m
San Anton1o at sacramento, 10 p m

Transactions
BASEBALL

American League
ANAHE IM ANGEL$-Agreed to terms
Wlth SS Brandon Wood, SS Sean
Rodriguez, RF Blake Balkcom, AHP Jesse
Smith, CF Aegg1e Wtlllts, RF Josh Cowles
RHP Von David Stertzbach C Patnce
LePage SS Adam Pavkovtch RHP Andrew
Comets 63, Rocker• 62
Htll, LHP Dan1el Davtdson , RHP Dav1d
CLEVELAND (62)
Austen LF Matt Pall 2B Wilham Boyer LHP
Taylor 4·12 1-1 11 Berth leu 1-2 0 0 2. Brent Brown and LF Chad Hauseman
Melvin 6·12 3·3 15 Darling 0·2 2·2 2,
CLEVELAND INDIAN S-Purchasecl the
Jones 4·7 1·1 10 Thomas 3 5 1·2 7,
cont ract of RHP Jose Santiago from
lenno)t 4·10 1-2 10 Jackson 1-6 0-0 2
Bultalo ot the ll OptiOned LHP Bnan Ta llet
AIZZOtll 1 2 0 0 3 Totals 24·58 9 11 62
to Buffalo Transferred OH Eilts Burks from
HOUSTON (83)
Swoopes 4·12 4 4 12 Thompson 7 19 the 15· to the 60-day disabled list
2·3 17, Snow &amp;-9 4-8 14, Arcaln 0.3 5·6 5,
DETROIT TIGERS-OptiOned RHP
F1gga 2·2 0-0 5, Ca nty 3-5 1·4 7, Udoka 1- Gary Knotts to Toledo of the IL Reca lled
2 1-2 3, Gibson
0.0 0 Totole 22·52 17· RHP Fernando Rodney Irom Toleda.
27 63
TEXAS RANGERS- Actw ated AHP
Clovolond .........................27 35 - 82
BenOit from the 15 day disabled ~
Joaquin
Houeton .........................35 28 - 63
3-Polnt Goala--cleveland 5 16 (Taylor list Optioned LHP E;rasmo Aamtrez to
Oklahoma o f the PCL
2·6, Jones t-1 , Alzzottl 1·1 Lennox 1-4
Melvin 0-1, Darling 0-1 Jackson 2)
National League
Houslon 2-8 (Figgs 1·1 , Thompson 1·5
MONTREA L
EXPOS-Placed
38
Arcain 0· 1, Swoopes 0-1) Fouled outFernando Ta t1s on the 15-day disabled list
None Rebounds-Cleveland 32 (Lanna"
Purchased the contract of 1B Joe Villella
6) Houston 44 (Snow 12) Assists,
from
Edmonton of the PCL
Cleveland 14 (Thomas 5), Houston 14
NEW YORK METS-Stgnecl OF Dan! e
(S woopes 4) Tolal fouls--cteveland 22
Houston 14 Technical&amp;-}louston coach Brtnkley and asstgned him to Kmgsporl of
the Appalachian League
Chancellor A-7 742
PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Placed IB
Renda ll Stmon on the 15-day d1sabled list
Recalled lNF Carlos R1vera 1r0111 Nashvtlle
of
the PCL Opt1oned RHP Ryan Vogelsong
MaJor League Soccer
to Nashvtlle of the PCL
Eaatem Conference '
SAN FRANCISCO G IANTS-Placed 18
WLTPtaGFGA
MetroStars
6 3 2
20 14 10
J T Snow on th e 15-day disab led I1st
Ch 1cago
5 3 3
18 21
16
retroacti ve to Jun e 18 Recalled OF Carlos
New England 4 3 4
16 17 16
Va lderrama from Fresno of the PCL
Columbus
4 5 3
15 16 18
S1gned RH.P Cra1g Wh itaker C Todd
DC UOI!ed
2 3 6
12 t2 10
Jennmgs AHP Brook:s McNtven ancl OF
Weatem Conference
Mtke Wagoner Acttvated C Yorv1t Torreal ba
WLTPlaGFGA
from the bereavement list Optioned C Trey
Sa n Jose
6 2 3 21 16 13
lunstorcl to Fresno of the PCL
Kansas C1ty 5 2 5
20 24 19
HOCKEY
los Angeles 2 5 5
11 10 1'3
Dallas
2 5 3
9 13 1B
National Hockey League
Colorado
2 7 2
9
19
ATLANTA THAASHEAS-Acqutred Ivan
NOTE· Three points tor victory, one Ma)esky tram Flortda for th e 38th draft p1ck
point ror tie.
BOSTON BRUINS-Traded F Jozel
Saturday'• Gamea
Stumpe! and the 213th dral1 p1ck to Los
MeuoStars 1 Los Angeles
Angeles tor the 129th draft ptck and a 2004
New England 1 0 C Umted 1 t1e
second-round p1ck Traded the 16th draft
Kansas C•ty 4, ChiCBgo 2
piCk to San Jose !or the 21st 66th and
Dallas 3, Colorado 1
107th draft ptck:s
San Jose 2 Columbus 1

o-o

o

Pro soccer

a

o

At Waa1chester Country Club
Harrison, N.Y.

at Winfield (DH) , 2 p m
at lancaster (DH), 5 30 p m

Jeff Gordon

Bod1ne

24 (36) Johnny M111er

20

2 {8)

Todd

$70125

$101 '140

Frontier League
Chillicothe
Washmgton
Evansv1lle
Rtehmond
Kalamazoo
Florence

at Wellston, 6 p m

Parkersburg (DH) (at URG), 1 p m
Shinnston (DH) , 1 p m

10
11
12

(22)

Yardage. 6,783; Par: 71

3

7
8

42 447
-tDivlolon

L Pet.

23

w

5
6

34

W

$93125

July

29 41
414
Sou1h Dlvlllo'n

W
Norfolk ........ ...... 38

(38) A1cky Craven Pontiac. 110
$BO 050
22 (24) Elhott Sadler Ford 110
21

... _. ................. at Athen s 7~2
Mason County 11 9 l
15................
al Picke rt ngton 5-4l
21
................. at Wellston 13-5 W
21
............. .... at Wellslon, 13·1 W
22 .... ...........
Lancaster II 2·1 W
22
Lancaster II 6.0 W
23
Athen51t 6 p m
24
Manetta 6 p m
27-29
at Logan Tournament

GB

Nor!olk 10 Columbus 5

250

W

41

36
38
38

589
569
507
500
486

$62 525

Meigs American Legion ,
June
5
.................01 Mason County, 15·4 l
10
al Manetta (DH) 5-2 L
10
at Marietta (DH) 10-6 L
11
13

110

19 (17 ) Mark Martm Ford 110 $93 208
20 (26) Jam1e McMurray, Dodge, 110

Legion baseball

North Dlvlelon

Pet.

18 (27) Sterling Mar11n, Dodge

$99 775

17), 7pm

International League
W L
43 30

17 (37) J1mm1e Johnson Chevrolet 11 0

$75 630

Chomplonohlp (beol-of·three}

o

Buffalo
Pawtucket
Scranton
Ottawa
Rochester
Syracuse

$93 406

At Rosenblatt Stadium, Omaha, Neb
(doubte elimination)
Friday, June 13
Game 1- Stantord 8 South Carolina 0
Game 2-ca1 State-Fullerton 8 LSU 2
Saturday, June 14
Game J-R1ce 4, SW M1ssoun State 2
Game 4-Te.~~:as 13 M1am12
Sundlly, Junt 15
Game 5-South Caro lina 11 LSU 10
LSU elimmated
Game &amp;-Cal State-Fullerton 6 Stanford 5
Monday, Junt 16
Game 7-Miam• 7, SOuthwest M1ssourl
State 5, SW Missouri State eliminated
Game 8-Rice 12, Texas 2

1/,

Los Angeles at san Francisco, 10 15 p m

15 (9) Rtcky Audd Ford 11 0 $84,825
16 (19) Ward Burton , Dodge, 110,

26 (3 3) Casey Mears

667

Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7 35 p m
C1nc1nnati at St LOUIS, 8 l 0 p m
Mtlwaukee at ChiCago Cubs, 8 20 p m
Houston at Arizona 9 35 p m
Colorado at San Diego, 10 05 p.m

1 1'0

$7B,975

College World Series

500

3

, Mall Kenset h, Ford

(4)

25 (23) Terry Labonte Chevrolet 110

1

Tueodly'o Gomoo
Pittsburgh at Montreal, 1 05 p m
Florida at N Y Meta, 7 10 p m

14

$B4 ,686

3

Augusta
x-won flf'lt halt
Sundly'e Games
Charleston SC 8 Augusta 7
Charleston WV 6 Kannapolis 0
lake County 3 Delmarva 2
Hagerstown 1 Lakewood 0
Greensboro 5, Lex1ngton 0
Rome 3 Ashev111e
Sa11annah 10 Hickory 5
South Georg1a 4, Capttal C1ty 3
Monday'a Gamet
No games scheduled
Tuesday'• Game
All-Star Game at lexmgton Ky

$75 950

College baseball

2

2
2

13 (20) Michael Wa ltnp. Chevrolet 11 0

$66 939

Asheville ..... •c , .....3

Houston (Vdlone 0-0) at Anzona (Webb

$110 988

Game 9-Stanford 13, South Caroline 6,
South Carolina eliminated
Game 1Q-Te,.as 5, Mlaml1, M1am1 elimInated
Wedntaday, June 18
Game 11-Stan!ord 5 Ca l State
Fullerton 3
Game 12-Rtee 5 Texas 4
Thurtday, Juna 19
Game 13-Stantord 7 Cal State
Fullerton 5
Friday, June 20
No games scheduled

1),

61i7

11 (11) Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevroleh
, 10, $100,292
12 (10) Tony Stewart Chevrolet 110

Tueaday, Juno17

QB

1
1
2

W.1t Dlvlelon
W
LPct
GB
Gateway
14
9
609
Rockford
15
12
556
Kenosha
11 13
458
3'2
Rtver City
12
15
444
4
Cook County
10
13
435
4
Mtci·MISSoun
11
15
423
4~
Sunday'• Gam11 '
Chillicothe e, A111er City 1 1st game
ChilliCOthe 4 ANer City 0 2nd game
EvansVIlle 6 , Gateway 5
Kenosha 4 Kalamazoo 3 14 1nn•ngs
Mtd·M •ssoun 3 Florence 2
Rockford 5 Richmond 3
Wash1ngton 23. Cook County 7
Monday'a Game
RIChmond at Cook County
Tuesdty's Games •
Chillicothe at Kalamazoo
Cook County at R1ver Ctty
1
1 Evansville at Washington
Florence at Richmond
Kenosha at Gateway
Rockford at Mid-MISSOuri

1
1

(Vargas 3 3), 7 05 p m

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

PGATour

1) 705pm

WLPctGB
Los Angeles
San Fraoosco
Ar1zona
Colorado
San Otego

Monday, June 23, 2003

'

Scoreboard
Pro baseball

Monday, June 23, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Skip Kendall

68 66·7G-70 - 274

Tom Lehman
J l lBWIS
Brad Faxon
Ern1e Els

71-7Q-68·66- 275
68 68·70-69 - 275
69-67-74-65-275
68-71·66·69- 276

Scott Verplonk

70 6B 68 70 - 276

Brenden Pappas
Woody Austln
Fred Couples
Shaun M1cheel

74-67·68·68- 277
74 64 70 69- 277
69·68-69-7 1 -277
69·68-73-67- 277

T1gerWOods

67 69-71 70 - 277

Dav1d Toms
VIJ3Y Smgh
Tom G1ll1s
Rettet Goosen

75-65-71-67-278
70-68 71 69- 278
71-65· 70-72 - 278
67-66- 73· 72 - 278

Dav1d Peoples

72 68-69 70 - 279

John Morgan
Jim Furyk
Ale" CeJka

72-6e-70·69 - 279
66·73-7 1·69- 279
70-69-66·74- 279

2003 Tri-County Golf Tour
M onday June 23 A1vers1de Galt
Course (Ma son)
M on day June 30 Pme H1lls Golf
Course (Pomeroy)
Monday July 7 - Cl1fts1de Golf Course
(Galhpolls)
Monday July 14 - (Roundup) Htdd en

Valley CC
Cost - $7 per pe rson each week
Reg1stralton - 8 30 a m
Tee Otf- 9 am
Age Groups - 15 17 13 14 11 12 10
.and-under

Pro basketball
Women's National Basketball

Wednoeday'o Game

CHI CAGO BLACKHAWKS- Traded F

Los Angeles at Colorado, 9 30 p m
Saturday, June 28
MetroSt ars at Chtcago 4 p m
Colorado at New England 6 p m
0 C United at Columbus 7 30 p m
Dallas at Los Angeles, 10 p m
Kansas C1ty at San Jose 10 p m

Andrei Ntkol1shtn to Colorado tor future
constdera ttons

COLORADO

Earthquakes 2, Crew 1
Columbus
0
t 1
San Jose
1
1 2
F•rst halt-1, San Jose , Mullan 4
{Du nlvant) 43rd m~n u te
Second half-2 Columbus McBride 6
55th 3 San Jose Walker 2 (Russell
Mulrooney) 77th
Goaltes-Colum bus, Bu sch , Presthus,
Sa n Jose, Onstad

A-8 05B (26,525)
Confederations Cup

AVALNCHE-Traded F

Serge• Scm to Nashvtlle for D Tomas Slovak
DALLAS STARS-Traded the 28th ptck to
Anaheim tor the 36th and 54th draft ptcks
EDMONTON OILERs-Tr.&gt;:led 1f1e 171h pick
to New Jersey b the 22nd and 68th draft pid&lt;s
FLORIDA PANTHERS-Traded tile hrs1
draft piCk and the 73rd to Ptttsburgh for the
th1rd and 55th dra ft p1cks and AW Mt~ae ~
Samuelsson

NEW JERSEY DEV ILS-Traded F M'ke
Danton and the 101 st draft p1ck to St l ows
lor th e 93rd drall ptek

OTTAWA SE NATORS-Re-s1gned F
Bryan Smolmskt to a four-ye ar contract
PH ILADELPHIA FLYERS-Traded C
Marty Murray to Carohna lor a 2004 Slll:thro und draft pick

Group Phase
Group A

WLTGFGAPTS
France
3008
1 9
Colombia
210426
Japan
2 0
4
3
3
1lt
0
New Zealand 0 3 0
Group B
W - L T GF GA PTS
Cameroon
2 0 0
2
0
6
Turkey
1 1 0
2
2
3
BraZil
t 1 0
3
Untied Statss 0 2 0
3
0
Wednesday, June 18
Japan 3 New Zealand 0
France 1 Colomb1a 0
Thuraday, June 19
Tu rkey 2 Umted States 1
Cameroon 1 Braz1t 0
Friday, June 20
Colomb1a 3 New Zealand 1
France 2, Japan 1
Saturday, June 21
Came roon 1 Turkey 0
Braztl 1 Umted States 0

PHOENIX COYOTES-Acquored

D

Davtd Tanabe and D Igor Knyazev from
Carohna for D Danny Markov and a 2004
concl1t10nal fourth -round entry draft p1ck

ST LOUIS BLUES-Traded LW Cory
Silliman to Ta mpa Bay for the 62nd drafl
ptck Traded F Tyson Nash to Phoent)( tor a
2003 conditional entry draft piCk

SAN JOSE SHARKS-S1gned F Ale&lt;
Korolyuk to a one-year contract Acqwred
AW Scott Parke r from Colorado tor a
lourth·round draft p1ck S1gned D Chnstlan
Eh rhoH and G Dtmtlrt Patzo ld
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Traded the
25th piCk to Flonda for the 36th 41st and
192nd draft ptcks

COLLEGE
CALVIN-Named JoM Ross women s
basketball and mens tennts coach

RUTGERS CAMDEN - Named

Bill

Culberlson mens basketball coach

HOLZER
CLINIC
www .holzerclinic.com

Dr. Shute

~]]be resuming his practice

beginning

Tuesday, june 24, 2003

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

Kaye wins Buick Classic
BY JOHN Nt~HOLSON
Assoc tated Press
HARRISON.
N . Y.
Jon.tJh.tn Kaye won 1he
wa t e1- l ogged
Bu1ck
Class 1c tor hts l1rst PGA
rour 11lie Su~day. holin g .t
12-loot eJg l e putt from
JUSt t&gt;ff the back of th e
I Sl h g r ee n 011 th e first hole
of a playoff w 11h John
Rolltns.
Kaye , w h o l os t a playoff
IO Ch n s R1ley l ast year 111
the
Reno- T ahoe
Open,
made a 4 - fool budte putt 1n
regulation on th e pat - 5
clos1ng
hole ro
match
.Rollins at 13- under 271 o n
the sa t ur at ed W es t c hester
Count ry C lub co ur se .
" I don't th1nk 1t 's sunk 1n
;et ," sa id Kaye. a f1v e11me runne r-up in seve n
f ull se asons on the tou r
'T hat"s w h y we're all o ut
here - to ~ 111 It 's lli Ce 10
f tnall y come out on top "

Lawrence County
Proctorville, OH

Orthopedic Center of
Point Pleasant

740.446.5411

740. 886.9403

304.675.5971

n amem scc unt y guard du r ·
1n g
th e
M1ch e l ob
C hampi ons hi p .
W 1th sec unt y he i g h tene d
a month ',t iter the Sept II
attacks. Kaye. up se t aft er
· th e g u ard p 1 e~en 1 e d 111111
fr om en t eri ng the locker
room wtthout h1 s t ou 1
money clip . 1e tu1ned Wi th
th e
td cnt l f tc a tt o n
c l1p
atta c h ed t o the nppe 1 o f
h1 s panh
Rolli ns shot 67s 111 t he
liil&lt;l l t hre~ 1ounds to ICdch
hi s seco nd t:drCCI pl.iyO if
La st year tn the C' ,m adt.tn
O pen .
he
be.lt
llts ll ll
Leonmd
and
Neal
L tnc .tstcl w tth " b ti llie on
the l 1rst cx t1 a h o l e alt er
Lanc.1 stcr double-bo g eyed
th e lin .tl h o l e ol t cg u l.i·
tt o n
··It ' s a l w.tvs t o u ~h w hen
you JU St st,t-nd ,m;u nd and
watt tor e 1erybody to f ill ·
1sh and the n ha ve to st.tll
me r ," R o ll1n s sa1d
Th.1t s
th e way It h .tppened dlld I
JUst d1dn ' t ge t the }Ob &lt;lone
when I n ee d ed t o
A nd
Jonathan m.tde ,, g 1 ~.tt
eagle pu tt 111 th e playoff. sn
my hat's oft t o h1111 •·
Joey Sm de l ,tr h dd rou nds

The ctgh t -ttme
maJOr
ch .unp10n
was
th r ee
strokes be h1nd the lea ders
alter t he com pletton of th e
thtid round. b ut failed to
ge t IIllO COil i Cil ll Oil 111 the
illt.t l 1o un d for lite secon d
s1r,11 g ht week. Last week tn
th e U S Open , he closed
With rounds of 75 a nd 72 t o
lie l o r 20th II st r okes
b e h111d w1 n ner J1m Furyk
G.tma. t he 200 1 \\/in ner
111
.1
Mond ay
f1n1 s h,
bogeyed t he p.tr-5 18th
hole - t aktn g four strokes
I rom I nSi d e 4 0 l eet aft er
hitt 1ng a 1-tron appr odc h
from 235 yards over t he

g reen diHi - I nto lh e d ee p
ro u g h

·· t ' m lhtnktn g b11dte to
go to a p l&lt;~ yo 11 and e.tg l e to
w in " G a rcta sa 1d It 's JUst
one o f t hose thtn gs
I
played we ll ,tnd put m ysel f
111 "pos111011 to \\In T h at 's
the moq 1mpo1t&lt;1n l th ing"
Di,·ots: Ka y e ti ed tor
I Oth i4st week til th e U S
Ope n . Fu r yk closed w ith
IOtlllds of 7 1 ,111d 69 tO finIsh &lt;~ l 5 under
. K e ndall.
w1nlcss tn 278 t our start s.
was pl o~yt n g l o 1 th e l trst
t lln t: 'ince sltun g o rr p&lt;~rl
of h 1s let'\ 1ndcx r1n ge r
wh1ic cutt 1n g " b age l lo ur
wee k s .1go . Th e playe r s
rcma 1ned 111 1h e1r third·
ltl llild 1h1 eeso m es tor th e
i111al round .•tnd began play
lrom hoih the l~r s t .md
I Oth t ees

from Page 81
mmngs in reli e f. Brown
g.tve up three runs on three
h1ts. He had three stnkeouts
and two walks
Ha1 slop worked three
innings and surrendered JUSt
&lt;me un earned run 10 ectrn t he
wm in game two aga1ns1

Reds
from Page 81
Adam Du nn l ed off the
game w tth a sm g le to center,
Ray Olmedo beat out an.
attempted sacrifice bunt for
a single and Good htt Ken
Griffey Jr. to load the bases .
Jose Gull len fol low ed
wtth a sac rifice fly One ou t
l ater, Sean Casey doubled to
the wall t11 nght-center to
score
two
run s
Kelly
Stmnett added an RBI smg le
to left, scori n g Casey, b4t
was caug ht 111 a rund ow n to
end the mmng w hen the
throw home was c ut off.

NASCAR
from Pag~ 81
C hildress Ra cing t eammate. wound up third
a ft e r
battling
w 1th
Gordon
111
t he
early
g01ng. The te a mm a tes pit ted under green on lap 66
a nd bnelly Jell we ll back
tnlo th e held Harvtc k
beet! Gurdon b ac k on t o
th e lrctck
It stayed t h at way unul
rook1e
Chnsuan
Fttttpaldt hit a t1re bamer
,tlld broug ht ou t a ye llow
on lap 71. Gordon to ok
advantage of the sit ua ti o n
t o pass H arv1ck as they
r aced back to the fl agstand to take the cautiOn
Je ff Gordon wa s cnttcal
of the mo ve
"R e ally.
th a t ' s what
won
h1111
th e
r ace,''
Gordon sa1d "You JUSt
don ' t do thdt Yoll don't
pa ss a g u y under ca uti on

McClure scored three runs;
and Bl ac kston and Dill;
scored lwo runs ap1ece
G1 bbs went 1-tor· 2 Wi th a .
double
The M e igs L eg1on team
play s hosl to Athens at 6
p .m. todcty at M e1g' Hi g h
School
Me1 g' defeated Athens 7·
2 in the l ast meettng
between l he dubs on June
II af The Pl am s

The
DJ&lt;~m ondbacks
answered With a run 111 !he
bottom of the mmng , load·
t ng the bases wtlh one out
against Reds starlet Rya n
Dempster belore Dellucc 1
drew a run -sconng wal k.
But Dempster struck out
Hammock and got Grace to
hit a hard I iner to second to
escape the Jam
Juan Castro extended the
lead to 5-I w 11h a fourth·
mnmg sacnfice fly
Finley's homer 111 the fift h,
scon ng Chad Moeller and
Tony Womack, l a nded a
half- dozen rows 11110 the
nght-fteld stands
Notes: Amona RHP
Brady
Ragg1o 1elieved
Oropesa in t he e1gh th f or

fmt
maJor l edgue
h i'
apl'leara nce "nee Jun e 24,
i99R, when he was With the
St
Lou ts Card1nal '
Only 49 ot Dempster 's 91
pitc he s were strike s
Good surrendered more
run s 111 the f1rst tnnmg
al o n e th an he h.td tn an y of
h1s prev1ou s four start s. but
bounced back to stnke ou t
th e stde m th e seco nd He
matched a career hi g h with
seve n st n keou t s over f1 ve
mn111gs
Arizon a 3B
Crmg Coun sell. on the dis abled li st smce Mdy 7
be cause of su rgery o n h1 s
n g h t thumb. wa s at the
White H ouse o n Sunday lor
the begtnmng of t he ann ua l
T·ball program .

H e did everyt htn g ri g ht
tod ay, exce pt th at What
h e dtd ca n be done . but
th er e's no t go1 ng t o be
too many guys gotng to
h ave t oo much respect for

Dunng t h e ear l y stages
of the· race, Ron FellD\\IS
a nd Bor1 s Sa1d. road rae·
1ng sp ecia li st s h1red JUSt
for th1 s r ace. a ppeared to
be fast en o u g h to c.hal ·
lenge Robb y Gordon a nd
H arv 1ck
Fe ll ows slipped past
both Go1don and H,u v1ck
u nder br eak1 n g on t h e
ha11 p1n l ith tu1 n o n la p
57. but both h e a nd Sa1d.
who starte d lrom t he
pol e, lo st the1r shot d l th e
w tn v. hen th ey got (a ug h t
out by pit st r ateg y and
wo un d up hav1ng to pll at
th e wrong 11mc Neither

h1m ."
Robby
Gordon
sa 1d
NASCA R made 11 c l ear
that the drivers wo u l d be
allowed to r ace back t o
the llagsta nd o n caut 1o n s
" I as ked the que,t1on at
the
(prerace
dr tver s')
m ee un g three t1mes They
satd tt was JU St lik e eve r y
o th er week , -· he sa 1d
" K ev 1n Harv 1ck may be
mad a t m e. but 11 IS what
It i s I don't sec what Jeff
Gordon h as to do w ith
1h1 s."
H ar v1ck ' s only co m m ent on the pa ss was. " It
was good h a rd rac1n g
exce pt t or \ hat chtcken
m ove und e r yellow"
. B1ll I;: lltott was fou 1th ,
to il owed
by
R ya n
Newman Wa l lace slipped
hack to e1g h t h

Sealed proposals
Will be received at the
offiCe of the Mayor,
Village Hall, 237 Race
St , Middleport, Ohio
unttl 3 p m local 11me
on Wednesday, July
2, 2003 lor furnishing
all labor, materials
and equ1pment nec-

essary to complete
the project known as
Middleport Business
and
Residential
Street
Reconstruction, and
at said lime and
place,
publicly
opened and read
aloud.
Contract documents,

bid sheets, plans and
specifications can be
obtamed al
said
off1ce
Monday
through
Friday
between the hours of
9 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Each b1dd~r Is
required to furnish
with its proposal , o
Bid Guaranty and
Contract Bond In
accordance
with
Sectton 153.54 ol the
Ohio Rev1sed Code
B1d security fur·
n1shed In Bond form ,
shall be Issued by a
Surety Company or
Corporation licensed
In the State of Ohio to
provide said surety.
Proposal
Each
must contain the full
name of the party or
parties submitting
the proposal and all
persons Interested
therein. Each bidder
muet submit evl·
dence of Ita experl·
ences on protects of
similar size and com·
plexlty. The owner
lntendo and requires
that thlo project be
completed no taler
than Auguot 30, 2003
A penalty of $100
per dey will be
ooaeeeed lor each
day that tho project lo
not completed alter
the comptatlon data
of Aug. 30, 2003.
All conltactoro and

materials,

and

labor

eervlcee,

In

tho

Implementation

of

their
project.
Additionally, contrac·
lor compliance with

the equal employ·
ment
opporlun&lt;ty
requirements of Ohio
Administrative Code
Chapter 123, the
Governors Executive
Order of 1972, and
Governor 's Executive

Order 84-9 shall be
required_
Bidders must com·
ply with the prevail·
ing wage rates on
Public Improvements
In Meigs County and
the
VIllage
of
Middleport, Ohio as
determined by the
Ohio
Bureau
of
Employment
Servtces, Wage and
Hour Division, (614)
6&lt;14-2239.
The
VIllage
of
Middleport reserves
the right to wolve
Irregularities and to
re)ect any or all bids
Sandy
lannarelh ,
Mayor VIllage of
Middleport
(6} 16, 23
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO,
MEIGS COUNTY
Jomshed Nuggud,
et ol , Plaintiffs

vs.

Access

to

Human

Reaource

Development, et al ..
Delondante
C11e No. 02 CV 066
Pursuant to an
Order of Sale directed
to mo In the above
entitle action , I will
olfllr tor Sale at pub·
lie auction, at the
front door ol the
Courthouse In Melgo
County, Ohio , In the
above named county,
on Thursday, July 17,
2003 at 10:00 o m ,
the
following
described real ootate
TRACT 1:
Situated In the
VIllage of Middleport
County of Meigs and
SUM of Ohio:
Baing Lot No. 17
and 23 feat off of the
northerly aide of Lot
15, making about 83
feet
fronting
on
Second Street and
running back at the
width tOO teat being
formerly known as
the R. R. Hudoon p
property and at the
time occupied by eald

A A Hudson as h1s
residence
in
the

Village of Middleport
Meigs County Ohio, a
part of whiCh was
transferred
from
Nella P Calderwood,
Dec. to Myrta C.

'

hiS bid 1s accepted,
shall be required to
deposit on the day of
the sale , tn cash or by

certified
check
payable to the SheriH,
10% of the amount
of web accepted btd

Hobart by Certl11cate

but 1n no event less

ofTransler dated May
11 , 1939, recorded in
Volume 143, page
625, Me1gs County

than S 1,000-0D The
balance of the pur·
chase pnce shall be
due and payable lo
the Sheriff within thirty (30) days from the
date of Conf1rmat1on
of Sole
The purchaser shalt
be required to pay
.nterest
on
said
unpaid balance at I

Deed Records

Reference Deed .
Volume 320. page
247 , Melgs County
Deed Records
The
above
descnbed real estate
has been ass1gned
Auditor's
Parcel
Numbers
15·
00126000 and 15·
00127-oOO,
Properly 1\ddress:
North
Second
Avenue Mtddleport
OH
TRACT II
Situate
in
the
Village of Middleport
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio.
Known
as and
being Situated In the
Village o1 Coalport
now a part of the
Village of Middleport
and being Lot No_16
as delineated on the
plot of said Village of
Coalport now a part
of the Incorporated
Village of Middleport,
Ohio, together w1th

1 0 % per annum from

the date of" conllrma·
t1on of sale 1o the
dale of payment of
the

balance

unless

the balance shall be
made w1th1n e1ght (8)
days from the dote of
sale.

Ralph E. Trussell
Mark E Sheets
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney
tor
Plaintiffs
(6)16, 23 &amp; 30,2003
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
A second public
hearing w111 be held
on June 25th, 2003, at
1.00 p m at tile

all the appurtenances
and
hereditaments

Commissioners
office for the purpose

thereunto belonging,
but subtecl to all
legal highways and

entorcmg and admin·

z.onlng restriction .

veyance fee on trans-

Reference Deeds:
Volume 295, pages
43·69, Melge County
Deed Records.
The
above
described real estate

fer of real property on
each deed within the
boundarlas of Meigs
County, aa outlined In
0 R.C 322.02 .
(6) 16 &amp; 23 2TC

has

of pay1ng the cost of
laterlng

the

con-

been assigned

Auditors Parcel No.
Public Notice
15..00503,000
Property Address :
567
North ,First State of Ohio Ohio
School
Facilities
Avenue
Middleport OH
Commlulon
Said real estate NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1. Bldo will be
appraised
at $150.000 00 and can· received by the Meigs
Local School District
not be sold tor
than two-thirds
of Board, at 320 East
the appraised value. Main Street, Pomeroy,
Tracts I and II are Ohio , 45769 , Attn·
Mark Rhonemus , for
cor;"lguous parcels
and shall be auc· the following Project.
Elementary
Meigs
tloned as one.
School
TERMS Of SALE
The
succeaslul Pomeroy, Ohio
in accordance wilh
purchaser, as soon as

I•••

07: Casework (D1v 12
6- Interested bid·
only) , 5340,790.00, ders should contact
Melissa Huff at (614)
Under Contract
B1d Package No. 865·9000 or send
08
HVAC, deposit check direct·
$1,728,688 00, Under ly to Key Blue Print
Avenue
Contract
6180 Cleveland Ave.,
Toledo, Ohto 45624·
B1d Package No. Columbus , OH45631.
09 ·
Plumbing, NO more than three
1535
Phone: (419) 255· $603,689.00 , Under - (3) sets will be provid·
3838
ed on a refundable
Contract
Fax: (419) 255·6101
Bid Package No. basts to a Btdder.
SEM Partners, Inc.
10:, F~re Protection , Depos1t
w111
be
167 South
Slate $152,260.00. Under refunded to Prime
Bidders• only per
Street
Contract
Article 2.10 of the
B1d Package No
Westerville, OH 43081
Phone: (614) 794· 11:
Electr~cal ,
instructiOn to bid $1,053,419.00, Under ders.
3100
Contract
7. The contract
Fax: (614) 794·3088
B1d Package No_ Documents may be
The
Construction
Manager
for
the
12:
Technology,
reviewed tor b1dd1ng
$324,129.00, Under purposes
Protect Is:
without
The Quandal Group, contract
charge during busi·
Bid Package No_ ness hours a1 the follnclowing locations·
8181
Worthington 13: Hillside Slip &amp;
Paving, $600,000.00
Architect's Office:
Road
Westerville,
Ohio until the Bid Date of SSOE
StudiOS
July 8, 2003 at 1:00 Architects
43082
Phone: (614) 865- pm (local standard 1001
Mad1son
time) when they will
Avenue
9000
Fax : (614) 865·9001
be opened and read_
Toledo,
OH43624·
2_ Any proposed
3. A pre-bid mee1· 1535
Partners
Equal for a Standard ing will be held on SEM
shall be submitted to June 30, 2003, at 1.00 Architects
State
the Architect no tater p,m_ al the tonowlng 167 South
Street
than ten (1 0) bust· location:
ness days prior to the ' Meigs
Elementary Westerville, OH 43081
Construction
bid opening. II no School Job Trailer
Manager's Office:
Addenda Is issued In 36871 SR124
association
with Middleport, OH 45760 The Quandel Group,
Bidder's request, the
4.
B1ddlng Inc.
proposed Equal shall Documents may be 8181 Worthington Rd
Ohio,
be considered reject· obtained from the Westerville ,
eel.
Construction
43082
Sealed bids will be Managor by Prime C~nstruction
Field
received tor
Bidders only, upon Manager's
Meigs
Elementary receipt of a check, Office:
which Ia refundable, 3687t SR 124
School,
Estimated
Contract Value
In the amount of Middleport, OH 45760
Bid Package No. $25_00 Checks shall
OwnerOfflce:
,
01 :, Brick (Material) be made payable to Meigs Local School
·
Packages , the
Meigs Local District
$1,086,792.00, Under School District and 320 Eaet Main Street
contract
forwarded to tho Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Bid Package No. Construction F.W. Dodge Plan
02: Early Sltework, Manager,
Upon Roomo In the follow·
5528,410.00, Under receipt of a requoet, tng cities:
contract
accompanied by a • Cincinnati, Ohio
The
Bid Package No. depoolt ae named (45202-8001),
the Grand
Baldwin
0:1:,
General above,
Construction , Conotruc11on Building, 655 Eden
$3,445,522.00, Under Manager witt lorwerd Park Drive, Suite 515
copleo of bidding • lndapendence, Ohio
contract
B ld Package No
document• to the (44131),
8200
Rockalde
Woodt
bidder.
04:,
Maaonry,
$2,018,649.00, Under
5.
Shipping Blvd. (Cleveland)
chargee lor all bid· • Columbuo, Ohio,
contract
Bid Package No
ding document• are (43216·1073) , 1175
05: Aluminum &amp;Giau non·refundable and Dublin Road
Dayton,
Ohio
Windows • Doors, are to be paid vlo a •
$213,445.00, Under ..parate check In the (45439),
3077
contract
amount of $25 00, Kettering Boulevard,
Bid Package No. also made out to the Point Weat Office
06: Food Service Melgo Local School Park, SuHe 301
Equipment , Dlotrlct and lorwafll. •
Toledo,
Ohio
$258,336.00, Under ad to the construc- (43623),
3930
tion Manager wHh the Sunloreat Court, P.O
Contract
Bid Package No. deposit check.
eox 8598

1he

Drawings

and

Specifications pre·
pared by
SSOE
Studios
Architects
1001
Madison

'

I

•

.l

v..as in con tenti o n

;J.g£1 111 ,

but Sa1d ft n 1s h e d SIX th
and Fellows seve nth .
Matt K ense th ftmshed
14 th and hi s sen es lea d
was c ut t o 174 po1nts
over
Je ff
Go rd o n_
Earnhardt. 1\ h o c,tm e 111
185 point s ba c k f1111sh ed
I I th and slipped tn l illfd,
t wo
potnts
behtnd
Gordon

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Involved with tho
project will, to tho
utent
practicable
usa Ohio Products ,

'

Jonathan Kaye holds the tro·
phy after Wlllnlllg the BUICk
Class1c
Sunday at the
Westch ester Countr y Club 111
Harnson, NY.• w1th an eagle
putt on the f1rst hole of sud
den death overt1me. (API

K aye p l ayed 30 h o le s
Sunday , co m p l etin g the
ra1n-delayed th1rd r ou nd
wtt h a 3- und e r 68 and
mat c h111 g R o llin s who
m1ssed a 12- foot b1rd1e
putt ~11 the playoff b efore
Ka ye s w1nmng eag l e w tth a 67 111 th e f 111 a l
round.
" It wa s a l o ng da y," Ka ye
sa1d " It was h ard walkmg
arou nd on th1 s wet. soggy
grass And my knee wa s
bothe11n g m e, too "
Atter bogey111g ht s f1n a J
ho le Sa turd dy t o dro p t o 6
unde1. Kaye pla ye d th e
ftn,tl II h o l es of the th1rd
1ound 111 3 under and
1eac h ed 12 und e1 1n th e
fo urth round wtth btrdtes
o n Nos 4. 5 ,tnd 7 H e
bo geyed th e p.tr- 5 n1nth ,
but got bac k to 12 und e 1
wtth a 6- t oo l b1rd1e pull o n
No
14 ,llld tt e d Rollin s
wtth th e 4- fool e l o n No
18
Ka ye ea rned $l)00, 000
tor h 1s b r eak throu g h v 1cto·
ry, t\\10 yea r s after th e 32yea r-o ld l o rme r Untvers1ty
o l Colora do player was
suspe nd ed b y the t ou r for a
con lrontattan w1th a to ur-

subcontractor•

Main Branch
Gallipolis

ot 70 and 68 to 11n1 sh thtrd
.tt II under. and Serg1o
G .uua (66 -69) was another
stroke back ,tlong w1th
F1 ed Funk ( 6-:1 - 69 ), Jay
H .l,ts 167·65) &lt;~ nd Sk 1p
Bnny
K e nddlf (7 0· 70 )
B,ttld, lied lor the ihtrdtOUnd l e ,td .ti t er t o ppin g
th e l teld the fllq two day s,
c l osed With a 77 to li e l or
10th .i t 3 undc 1
T1 g er Woods. w I n l e ss
Sl ll lC
the
Bay
Hill
In vit ational tn M.trch . had
mu nds of 7 1 ,md 70 to t1e
101 13th al 7 un d er. He' s
win l ess 1n four appearance s 1n the Bu1 c k Class1c,
on e · of on l y f1ve tour
events he hns p l ayed more
than once With ou t w 1nnmg

Legion

Wellston , a 13-1 Victory. He
had two slnkenuls and
wa lked four batt ers
Warren and Fackler edch
went 3-for- 3 to lead th~
Me1gs attack Warren 'had
three doubles and ' cored
three run s_
Fackl er .scored two run '
and was one hn shy of the
c ycle He had a ' ing le, a
doubl e a'nd a lnple,a nd
scored tw1 ce

•

Charles1on , West

Virginia (25302). 405
Capitol Street
and the followmg
additional
plan

Construc1ion
Employers Council ,

21 Armory Dnve ,
Wheeling, WV 26003
• Manetta Contractors

rooms·

Association, 4424 B

• Allied Conslructton,
1010 Yale Avenue.
CinCinnati ,
Ohto
45206
• Dodge/Scan, Bank
One Bulldmg , Jrd
Floor, 1255 Euc'11d
Avenue , Cleveland,
Ohto 44115

Emerson

Council. 1406 112 13th
Street, Parkersburg ,
wv 26101

•
The
Builders
Exchange of Central

8
The
Owner
reserves the nght to

Ohio, 1175 Dublm
Road,
Columbus ,
Oh.1o 43215
• Dayton Builders
Exchange of Central
Oh10, 1077 Embury

and to wa1ve any or
all trregulan11es, m1s·
takes, omissions or
mformahties relative

Park Road , Dayton ,

Ohio 45414
• Butlders Exchange

of East Central Oh1o,
2521 34th Stree1, NE,
Canton, Ohio 44705
•
Central
Ohto
M1nonty
Business
Administration , 815

East Mound Street,
Columbus,
Oh10
43205
•
Ohio
Valley

Avenue ,

Parkersburg ,
WV
26104
ParkersburgMonetta Bu1ldmg &amp;
Construction Trades

reject any or all bids

thereto.
All questions per·
tammg to secur1ng
Contract Documents,
Bidders L1st, etc .

shall be dtrected to
Melissa Huff, The
Ouandel Group, tnc .,
8181
Worthmglon
Road , Wes1erv1lle, OH
43082 (614) 965·9000.
Owner. Meigs Local
School D1stnct Board
(6)23, 30

Find .w
you n
in the
ifi~

.

- - ---p -- ··------- ---

�m:ribune - Sentinel - l\egister

Gravely walk· beh ind, 4 1988 Che~Jy Celebr1ty, 4
attachments, $1400 , 740- door. auto, ale, needs some
446-t463 .
work . $350.00/0BO call
(740)992-1060
JET
AERATION MOTORS
1992
Repaired , New &amp; Rebu1n In
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
800·537 ·9528
see to believe !
31 17

CLASSIFIED

Kmg
S1ze · Pillow Top
Mattress set. New st111 •n
· PlastiC, Sale $299, Cell
Phone 304·412·8098 or
304·552· 1424

To

Place
Your
Ad •••

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW I0 WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

~

=r:----..,1 r~
~

vARD sALJi'.
Pr.I'LI:Asmr

ESTATE TAG SALE
Sat. June 28, 8am-7pm
Sun , June 29. 9am-5pm
Aefngerator, washer and
dryer, multiple Pieces
Furniture, lots of mise
1211 Viand Street

"A STARSEARCH"
Singers Bands &amp; Vocal
Groups All Styles &amp; Ages
Nashville Record Exect
Seeking New Talent ,

i

Comingto
Huntington/Charleston
731 -424-2229 or 731-424·
2141

C-1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
lor sale Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to The Daily
Sen ti nel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy. OhiO 45769

WOO'Eo
roBIN

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver,
Gold
Coins,
Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold
Rmgs
U.S. Curren cyM.TS Coi n Shop. 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
740·446·2842.
I 111'1 II\ \II\ I

' I IH I( I ...,
110

Card Shower for 8111
Barnette
To the fam1ly and fnends of
Wd 11am 0 (Bill) Barnette On
June 28th, he will be 93
vears old Make th1s birthday
memorable by send1ng h1m
b1rthday cards
Address
3891 Georges CreeK Ad
Gallipolis OH 45631

r

GIWAWAY

.
1

HELPWANrED

Access to a c,;orl,puter?
Earn $450·$1500 monthl)'
part·tlme or $2.000·$4,500
lull-time, 1-800-585·0760 or
www OurAnswer com
- - - - - - - - -·
Addressers wanted immedl·
ately! No experience neces·
sary. Work at home . Call
405-447·6397

1.

HELP W.~"TED

GatltpOIIS. OH 45631 ·
Healing
and
Cooling
Company
lookmg
fo r
H VA C Techn1c1an With at
least 1 yr. expenence. Must
be certified. Send Re sume
to PO Box 572, Kerr, OH
46643

11VAC Installer Open1ng
Ben efits ava1tabte. Apply at
Send
Aes urne
to
or
Bennett's MH Healing &amp;
Cootm g
1391
Salford
School, Ad Galli polis. OH
45631 (740)446·9416 or 1·
800·872-5967

l"!'tler$ of the
V t cu r .$Cn:::lm ;)led wcrds bt·
low ro fcrm fr.:~ ~ tirnoiG word.s

My husband yelled to our land lord. "My basement is filled w1th
waler l" The landlord calmly ~e­
r'-----::-:::-:::-:-, plied, "What did you expect-- -•

.

tho dluc&lt;l• ouotod

by f1lling: 1n the miss1t19 words
you develop from step No. 3 below

I' I' 1· I'
fJ ~~~~:rsu FORI I I I ·I

undayln-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

~

Pole Barns 30xqc&gt;, by 10ft
mcluded plans. sliders
painted metal, free delivery
des1gn s better than lumber
yard kits . 937·718· 1471

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyregister.com

Queen Pillow Top Mattress
set, New 1n plastiC wf\Narr.
Will accept S199, Ce ll phone
304·4 12-8098 or 304·552·
1424.

1.

HELPWANI'ED

I' I' I' 1· I
I I I IJ

Yesterday's , SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Induce • Fn/1- Chump - Maroon • FUN you HAD
Granny tells people wlm say they feel old lhat the
flfsl proof of old age 1s when you thmk people aren 't
hav1ng the FU N you HAD

Sunday

01;~:~~~~~~~~5 1

"P''perl

HOMES
FOR SALE

MOBD.E HOMES
FOR SALE

3 Bedroom, 1 112 bath, bnck
on 1 acre All electric, AC , 2
car attached garage, out
building. extra garage. All
new doors, roof &amp; carpet.
Call (304)675·1714

10 used homes under
S2.000. Will help w1th dehv·
ery, call Harold 740·385 ·
9948
--------12x60 moble home lor sale,
$200,
'Wolfpen
Ad .
3 Bedroom, t· 112 bath briCk (740)992-5931
ranch . Full unl1nished base·
mint , attached one car 14X70 Mob1le Home With
e11pa ndo,
newly
garage, located on level one 7X21
acre lot on Georges Creek remodeled. newer furnace
Road
Askmg $80.000. A must to seeP (740)446790!
(740)446-9769
3 Bedroom. 2 Bathroom. 11/2 Car . Garage. Gall1pols
C1ty Schools
Photos,
InformatiOn
Qntme
@
www.orvb com code 60903
or call 740·446·3992

1971 Etcona 12x65 . with
expando, central air $3000
on rented lot 367·7 673

w

T1meshare
week ,per
pnced al
(3)f;HA &amp; VA homes set· up extra week
for immediate possess1on all
w1th1n 15 mm of dowrtown
Gallipolis Rates as law as
6%. (740)446·32 18.

213 acres Level Lot. 2 story
house 8 rooms , 2 baths,
porch and large deck heat
pump recentlY remodeled ,
corner of Green tre e of
8utav1Ve
Pk
$69 500
(740)367 -7272
3 Bedroom newly remod·
eled, 1n Middlepor t, call Tom
Anderson aHer 5 p m
992 -3348

i

MOHII.E HOMt'S
FOR SALE

4&lt;10

APARI1\IENI'S

HousEHOLD

t'OR R ENT

Gooll5

Two bedroom mob1le home
Bedroom Ap artment,
fo r
sale
includes K1tctwn Furn1shed.
,All
washer/dryer. stove, refng - ElectriC,
$300 Mon th
erator, calf (740)992-2377
Depos11 Required. Near H1gh
School (304)675-3100 Or
(304)675-5509
FARMS

r

Kelle r maple china cabinet,
anhque solid oe·. table w/
claw feet &amp; 5 chairs oak cot.~
fee table, Everett console
p1ano $1200 080 304·675·
2982 leave message

FOR SALE

2 Bedroom Apt. 5 min past Mollohan Ca rpel. 202 Clerk
Holzer 740-441·0194
Chapel Road . Porter. Ohio.
Nice 43 5 aoe !arm w1th
(7401 446 -7444 1·877-83032XBO metal pole barn on 4 rooms and bath, all utilities 9162 Free Est1mates. Easy
Greentree Road. AddiSOn paid, $400 month 46 Olive lmancmg. 90 days same as
twp. Wooded, lot w1th level Street. (740)446·3945
cash Visaf Master Card
frontag e mce for bulld1ng,
BEAUTIFUL
APART- Onve· a· httle save alot
huntmg , pasture (p nced to
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
sell)
Ca ll (740)441 -0806 .
Thompso ns Appt1ance &amp;
PRICES AT JACKSON
Leave Messa Qe.
Aep a ~r-675 -7388 For sale .
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
re-co nditioned
automatiC
8 USININ;
Drive fro m $297 to $383
washers &amp; dryers, relrigera·
WalK to shop &amp; mov1es cau
AND 8UIWINGS
tors. gas and electnc
740-446-2568
Equal
ranges AI D and wringer
Pomt Pleasant, Sth St Hous1ng Opportu nity.
washers. W!ll do repairs on
across !rom courthouse.
Grac1ous liVIng . 1 and 2 bed· maJOr brands m shop or at
o ffiCe/commercial bldg ask·
roo m apartments at Village yo ur home
ing $50 000, day 304-675·
M anor
and
R1verside
5734
Apartmen ts 1n Middleport Used Fu rn1ture Store. 130
From $278-$348 Call 740- Bulav1t1e P1ka We sell mat·
992-506 4 Equal Housmg tresses. dresse rs, co uches ,
&amp;
bunkbeds ·bedroom swtes.
Oppor luM1es
A CREAGE
recliners grave monuments
located at end of Chillicothe 740·446·4782. Galhpoh s,
4 acres Eagle Ridge Rd . Roa d m Gall1polls Two bed- OH
excavated . electnc. sept1c roo ms • $400/month p lus
perm1 t &amp; water available, $400
secunty
deposit
(740)992-0031
required Utihl1es not 1nclud·
ed No pets 740·441·1108
4.5 acre s in Vinton , great
Russ1an SKS nffle. Rueger
hunting, no restnctions Call Modern 1 br apt (7 40) 446· t 0/22 nffle. Marlin 22 mag
Centu ry Homes 740·286· 0390
HOME or740·286-7 11 3
New Haven , 1 bedroom furlot for sale m Rac1ne. mshed apartment. deposit &amp;
ANllQUES
(740)992·58 58
references
no
p ets.
N1ce mob1le hOme lois, qwet (7 40)992-0 165
Buy
or
sell
R1 venne
country setting. $1 t 5 per Nice one bedroom unfur- Antiques. 1124 East Main
month , includes water, nished apartment Range &amp; on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740sewer, trash. 740-332·2 167 refngera tor prov1ded Water 992·2526
Russ Moore ,
&amp; garbage pa1d. DepoSII
IU'I\IS
req uired Call 740-446·4345
ML'&gt;CEI.I.ANWIJS
aft er6pm

uns

r. ,__Soii~iiilmNiiiiiiJSitoG_pJ, -

~lo

Mt:RLllANiliSE

HousEs

Now Takmg App llcations~ 35
We.st
2
Bedroom 17 good alum1num wmdows
· - - - - - - - · Townhouse
Apar tment s, 3 s1zes. plus 3 snlall on es
1-3 bedrooms foreclosures Inc ludes Wate r SewagO. $ t 0 a ieee lor larger one, $5
Call 740-44 6·
home lrom $199 month 4°to Tra sh S3501Mo., 740·446· for small
07 t9
down 30 years at 8 5°o APR 0008
for hst1ng call t·800~319·
Pl easa nt Valley Aparfment 2000 Ya maha GP1200R
3323 e•t 1709
Are now tak1ng Appt1cahons Waverunner 40 hours, like
2 bedroom References &amp; lor 2BR 3BR &amp; 4BR .. now, with tra 1ter and warranare
taken 1y $5500. 740-367·0012.
Deposit No Pets (304 )675· Applications
M
Qnday
thru
Fnday,
from
5162
9 00 AM -4 PM Olt1ce IS 3 m 1 baby bed. S75 ,
3
bedroom
house m Located at 1151 Eve rgreen play pe n. $45. highchair.
M iddleport ,
no
pets, Dr ive Pomt Pleasant. WV $25. b aby swin g. $25: call
(7 40)992·5858
Phone No IS (304)675-5 806 any1ime (740)949·2188
E H .O
3 bedroom wi th n1ce yard &amp;
A1r Cond Unit 2·112ton
garage
t641
Lmcoln Ta11i1
Tow nhouse Carne r also Jantrol Gas
He1ghts. Pomeroy. Lea se. Apartments Very Spac1ous. Furnace
Storm wmdows
depOSit
&amp;
references 2 Bedrooms 2 Floo rs, CA. 1 and
regu lar
wmdows
requ 1red t -740.667·3966
1/2 Bath. Newly Carpetea. Furnace and A1r Gond umt
4br Home 10 New Haven, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool . less than 10 years old Call
Pat10, Start $385/Mo No 740·446·3478 or 740·446·
everythmg w1thm wal~ing
Pets , lease Plus Secur1ry 3731 to see before taken
distance. No pe ts Aen l
Dcpos1t Aeqwed. Days out
$495.
Oopo s1t
$350
740· 446·3481 , Eveni ngs ----~--"--(304)882·3652
Beautifu l engagement nng &amp;
740·367·0502
wedding ba nd , 14K gold
Moun.&gt;: Hmn~
SPACt
w/11 diamonds. size 7 t /2,
tUII Rmr
HlR RE!\'T
bought for $~Dq at Zales Will
sell !or $350 . (74 0)247-2070
Mob1le home for rent, no
R1ver lots tor rent· beautiful
pets. (740)992·5858
Fat ,
BLOCK
tocat1on. e11ce11ent beach' BURN
Craving
s,
·
and
BOOST
Trailer for rent 1n Mason. No call (740)992-5782
Energy l1ke
You Have
Pels. (304)773-5751
Trailer space ' for rent m Never EKpenenced
· WEIGHT· LOSS
Middleport (740)992·5858
APARIMENI~
REVOLUTION
tUMRtNr
\IIIH 11\'\HI"&lt;I
New product launch October
23 . 2002. Ca ll Tracy at
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
HOUStliOW
t740)441 - 1982
ments, furnished and unfurGot)IJS
n ished
secu rity deposit
Cool Down !!
Cen tral
reqwred , no pets, 740-992·
Good Used App li ances. Cooling Systems, New and
22!8
and Used. Installed (740)446·
Recondittoned
Guaranteed.
Washers. 6308
Twtn R1vers Tower IS acceptDryers .
Ranges .
and
for sale. one New 2003 Doublewide 3 BA ing appl1cahons for waiting
Full Size Mattress Set New
Retrlgerators, Some start at
year llfettme , &amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down list tor Hud·su6stzed , 1· br,
m Plast ic wfWarr Sacrifice
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
$6.000. Bonus and &amp;295/ mo 1-800-691 · apartment, call 675-6679
$1t9, Cell Phone 304·4t2·
V1ne St , (740)446-7398
740·256-1470. 67n
EHO
8098 or 304·552·t424.

J·UH. RI::J\'l

BUIUlii&gt;G
SUPI'Lit:S

ROBERT
BISSEll

Pill

FRum

1

Tuesday, June 24

1992 Mercury
1992
Dodge
$1300 .. Roll Bar lshc&gt;rlb•edi ;E
$50., Tra nsler
$50. !996
er. $2500

1993

740-992-1611

Progressive cover all
$600.00 52#'s or under
be

18 !o play

American

~~~~hl, :~~

Runs &amp; looks good •"·""''·;:

~~!:!~!:!:!~~~;~~~~!:!:!:.,

(304)675-6988
1994 Corvette Coupe , while, ,;'
red leather lntenor, loaded,
$11,000. 740·682·7512
1996 Ford Taurus 78,000
miles. 1 ow ner, garage kept,
AI, AC, PS, PB, PW, Cruise,
Excellent cond1l1on $4,000
(304)675 -3182

At.JTUi

VANS

Lively 's Auto $ales
1990 Old Cie ra
$!200,
1989 Pont1ac Bonnev1lle
$800, 1995 Hyundal Excel 5
spo $1600, 1992 Ol ds
Ach leva $800 , 1988 Ford
Thu nderbird $1 000, 1989
Chevy Cava lier $400, 1989
Ford Escort $900, 1992
Chevy Beretta $1200, 1992
Olds Ciera $1200 , 1994
Ch rysler New Yorker $2700,
1994 Plymouth Voyage r
$1800, !993 Ford Aeros1ar
$1400, 1994 Dodge Sp1nt

&amp;

4- Wlls

mR SALE

1995 Plymou th Voyager
mini-van. am-fm 'cassette .
ac, tilt, cruise , new t1res .
Excellent
cond1t1on
$3200 00 (740) 949-2709
1998 Wmdstar Van . 75 .000
miles.
good
co nd itiOn.
$7,000
740·446-1168 or
740-446-0137
·- - - - - - - - 2002 Jeep Liberty. 20.000
miles
Loaded . $14,000
OBO (740)256·6169
~r.:;&lt;IO~...;......;

F

_____,

$900 , 1991 Ford Escort SW.
MoroRC1'(.1..ES
$950 . ! 989 Suzuki GT! 5 ~
'
spd $999, 1993 Ford Escort
SW 5 spd $ !350
1996 Kawasaki 750 Vulcan .
Garage kept , great condi Monday.Friday 9am-5pm
tion 7200 m1les 675-5630.
Saturday
9am·3pm
675·5 664 , 606-923-6171
Sunday
Close d
(7 40)388-9303
1999 Honda 450 4-wheeler

r

TRUCKS
fOR SALE

r
r

r

VANS&amp;
2 Vehicles For Sale: 1999
HAY&amp;
Blazer, loaded, leather 1nte·
4-WDs
nor, as~ing $2,000 under
GRAIN
book pnce: 1994 Grand Am, 1987 Blazer, V-8 auto, a1r.
740· new atummum rims. new 31"
Good quality straw Volum e runs good, $1,900
t~res . tinted w.ndows, mce
dtsco unt &amp; del1very ava1l· 245·5758
able. Heavy square bales 2002 Chevy Impala, like interior, sharp, runs great.
$2 BS per bale (3C4 )675· new, one owner (seh1 or citi· 53.300, (740) 992· 7584
5724
zen), 18 000 miles, V6
1988 Astro Van , Mark Ill
II&lt; \\...,I'Oitl \110\
Carm1ne Red Metallic. ask·
body excellent, tires good,
1ng $14.500 . Call evenings
V6, 4 sp auto. original miles
740-446-0299.
Auros
i 10.000, 7 passeng'S r. lntentuRSALE
90 Ford Probe, auto, looKs or good, ru ns great Ask1ng
good, runs but need work, S1850. 740-446-4514 day
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS $300 (740)247·2070
740·446·3248 afte r 6Pm.
Hondas,
chevy s,
etc 1
cars/trucks from $500 For 95 Laxus SC300 luxury 1991 Chevy 4x4 piCk-u p. 8'
lishngs 1·800·71 9·300 1 ext Sportscar. auto, V-6, sun- bed. toolbox' &amp; rails, new
root , leather, 12·diSC CO, fires , exhaus t, many new
3901
mi ,
Ex{;ellent parts. very clean , excellent
101K
1978 Ford Farmont Good Condlt ton. $10,000 Ce ll cond1t1on $7500. \740)949shape (3041576·2306
3041675-3458
2203

ENGINE
REPAIR
I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
, • Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karls • Min I
Bikes
JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Card ol Thanks

BoATs &amp; MaroiiS
HJH. SALE
1 9' 1985 Bayliner, 305 V8,
open bow, blue and white.
runs perfect. good cond1t10n
740·441·0199 even1ngs
8ft, PlastiC Bollom J ohn
Baal w/mmn Kola Tro ll1ng
Motor and F1sh Fmder $500
Call (304)675-4352
I(

.Cellular

,,f ram.., ullooJ&lt; e

m r~ ~ l )

~ nd

hum in)(

r'l";l""''n l

.'hII' fll•mJ AJJ.·d lfl·l'kiJ'

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

.16 19/&gt;1 Pc·,ldl Pc•rk PJ.
Po ~tti'TI' )'• Olriu, -15769
Hours 1().8 pm
Closed lund•ya

*Special*
THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE
Easter &amp; Mothers Day
Buy 1 Gih Certificate,

Cet 2nd Free!
Il•alh.r A. Fry L.M.T.

740-992-5379
Oif~r ~wotlih ru ~ · ll

Alw

tJOW

(ll

acceplmg

JIUH't itr.Hlrlmce

Septic Systems,
Footers and
Concrete,

Excavation, Util1t1es,
Back hoe and

PC DOCTOR

_k

Dozer, Ponds.

We Make House Calls

HOME CR~EK
ENT., INC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

992·7953
591-7002
591·4641

Tree Service
Bucket Truck

(304) 675~5282
www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctor@wv cdr.com

Gravely

Snapper

Mall)' tltauks tv
L•11.g Bottom
Merlwdist
C/111 rclr &amp; ell/ tlrr
JU'l)}J/e wlw
lrd J&gt;fd make a
"'"udrrfill d''l' .fi&gt;r
R11rlt "" 6115
Stctlrems

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

Pomeroy, Ohio

475 South Church St.

992-2975
111WI1

aud Garde11 Equipmeut is our
busiuess, 1101 our sideliue

BISSEll

Hom:

BUILDERS InC.

1~11'110\UitNili

New Hnmc!o. • Vinvl
S tdlng • New Garages

•

Rcpl acc m~nt

\\'mdO\\!'o • Roolmg

COMME'RCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL ·
FREE ESTIMATES

7 40-992-7599
DURO-LAST
ROOFING

The

JONES'

Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding

GRAVELY TRACTOR

NORTHUP CO NSTRUC·
TION-Home repair room
BASEMENT
add1hons , garages, root1ng
WATERPROOFING
S1d1ng. carpetmg, &amp; remod·
Unconditional lifetime. guar·
eh ng. extens1ve expenence
antee Local references turcan :245-9023 or 245-9704
n•shed . Established 1975
Call
24 Hr s. (740) 4460870 , Rogers BaseJTient
Waterproofing

C&amp;C
General
H ome
Maintenance· Pamllng. v1ny1
Siding carpentry doors
w mdows . baths
mobile
home repa 1r and more For
tree estimate call Chet. 740·
992·6323 .

.- \

dOih&gt;tll(.

-*~'1t.J!!..l'J't.&lt;-

IS

HOME
IMPROvt~IENTS

'

Managagement

~Spring~

2000
Honda
Asking $1.000
9769

2000 Polans 325 Tra1 1 Boss.
like new. $2 .000. Call 740·
256-1377

f.rs ~

SMALL

740-992-2432

XR100A
(7401446

comes

Under New

'1-740·992-7007

excellent cond1t10n camo
740· 44 1color. $4.000
8574

Sl·ln

Where ftle customer

Stop &amp; Compare

or !o be in hall"

Le•alo&lt;n

Mercury

1990 dump truck, Chevrolet
Kodiac , CATde1sel , 5 esp
transmission. 2 speed rear ,
10' dump bed. air brakes .
C.O.L reqUJred 48, 000
miles excellent condition .
$10. 500 00 740-992·2478
1998 red Mustang Coupe, Vor 740· 591 -9 342
Wa nted to purchase tobacco
6. auto. aluminum wheels,
poundage 1 high est dollar
rear spotter, PW! PL , in ten· 1995
Ford
F-250
pa1d, outbid anyone
Call
or &amp; extenor excellent condi· Powerstro ke Diesel, super·
513·295·6309
11on
ask 1ng
$6500. cab, one owner, 35,000
(740)247-8!02
m11es. $13.000. 740-245LIVJ.SilM:K
1999 Lincoln Nav1gator 9496
wfTV system, 3rd back seat,
2002 Fo rd F·250 SuperCab,
AQHA registere d appendix $21.500. (740)992·2209
Diesel 4X4 . 1996 F-250 2
yearling ltlty. $1200.00 Two
wheel
drive. 2002 Camper
1999
L•ncoln
Navigator
wtth
thoroughbred
mares.
$500 .00 each. 22 yo OH TV system&amp; 3rd back seat Terry 5th wheel (740)388·
mare , run barrels, $1 000, $2 1 500.00 (7 40) 992·2209 9082 or (740)645·014 5
740 843·5!76

·New Homes
·Garages
• Compl ete •·
Remodel1 ng

All packs $20.00
Starburst $1 ,750.00
"Mus!

WILSON'

iliUif SIJIU'UJS

CONSTRUCTION

6:30pm

1993 Geo Metro,
up sleeper top, $100:
Chevy dump truck, $1
All OBO (740)949·2
leave m essage

1996 Ford Windstar. loaded,
105,000 m1les, $4200: 1996
Aerostar. 105.000 m1les
Block , brick, sewer pipes,
$4000;
1996 · Cavalier,
w1ndows. lintels etc Claude
145,000 mil es. $2500. 740Wmters. R10 Grande, OH
245·9020.
Ca!l740-245-5121.
1996 Mercury Myst i que ~S L·
PETs
V·6 • loaded·cfean 106,000
FOR SAI.E
m11es $2900 00 080 (740)
985-4418
3 male black/ta n AKC
German Shepherd pu ps. 1996 Saturn 4 dr .~ 90K
Call on ly after 5 pm (740) $3t95
992-3972
1993 Grandam 2 dr 68K
$2895
&amp;
Four Cavaliers and 12 oth·
--oiVoiUii
'
;;;•:riiiiAiiiBiiil.iiif
~
iiit
·-,
ers
in stock.
L,
COOKS MOTORS
1;1ydroponic toml}otoes. vine 740-446.0)03
npened, locally~ Qrown , taste
the
d ifference!
Hayes 1998 Olds Bravado, black ,
Gre enhOuse .
Gallipolis sunroof. loaded . $9.200 :
1998 Cad1llac Calera, power
740-441-9279.
everythmg , Bose ste.reo,
I \I{\ I "il 1"1"1 II-.;
f!1Ce car. sacral1ce $8,500:
,\I 1\ISIO( !o.
t992 Dodg e 350 extended
cab, d1eset, 5 speed , alum
WANI'Eil
bed , h1gh miles. runs st rong
$6,500. 740-643-2285
mBlN

r

Thursday for

1973
Schultz
12X65.
Central a1r, on rented lot
available to con tmue rent1ng
3 Bedroom, 3 Bathroom, 2 (740)446- 1089 leave mesCar GaregEI. mce 18X36 sage
1&lt;10
8USINt"liS
Add1son
lnground Pool
2 Modular Umts for sale· 1
TRAINING
Township Photos, 1nforma·
unit IS 24x36 with metal Sid·
liOn online @ www orvb.com
1ng and 1s m lair condition ts
Gallipolis Career College code 11003 or call 740-446· askmg $6,800. 1 uni t IS
4262
(Careers Close To Home)
24x36 w1th wood s1dmg and
Call Today! 740·446·4367 ,
5 bedroom home. near Rio al so in lair condition but
1·800·2 14-0452
Grande , call Century Homes needs some minor repa1rs
www ga.lhpotiscaraerco!lege com
at 740-286-HOME or 740· They would be good for
Res #9Q-05- 127 48
Sunday
School . Class
286·71 13
1110
,\,'\ffi])
Rooms. Work Shops or as a
8ulavitle Pike, Two Story, Cabin Delivery of Units also
1
.
To Do
2800 sq H, 3 Bedroom , 1· can be added Make all
1/2 Bath, Fam11y Room , esqUires to Steve Pullm s at
In home daycare haS open·
Living Room, GS.me Room. (740)992-2478
ings.
Middleport
area ,
2 Car Garage, 30b40 Out
Dawn. (740)992-2787
Butldjn g, Pool One Acre 2001 16X80 Schult S1ngle
Wide , like new 3 bedroom,
(740)446-8050
MA FIX IT!!!
2 bath . AC Cat! affer 4pm.
Complete Remodeling
Mot1vated selle1. (7 40)256·
lntenor &amp; Exterior custom
6306
wood deck &amp; fences Cham
lmk All odd Jobs
24 11 36 double wtde modular
(304)675·3733 •
class room. Bu11t very heavy
duty to Oh10 b\.nld1ng code 1
Transmissions, all types,
All real estate advertising
large open room , no bath or
740-245-5677.
In this newspaper Is
Kitchen , self contamed heat
sublectto the Federal
pump uOII Approx 10 years
W1ll babysit m my hOme
Fair Housing Act of 1968
old S6. 500 delivery ava1l·
Over 5yrs professiona l expewhich makaa it Illegal to
able. 7 40~992·2 478 or 740·
nence With children Great
advertise " any
59! -9342
Aelerences. Call anyt1me
preference, 11mlta1ion or
(740)256·6338
dlacrlmtnatton baaed on · B1g
setec t1 on o.f used
race, color, re ligion, se11.
hOmes . all sizes. Kanauga
Will do Odd Jo bs paint .
famlllalatatua or national
Mobile
Hom e
Sales,
mow, we~deat . Call Bil l
origin, or any mtention to
GallipoliS, OH
(7 40)441 ·
(304)882-3419
make any such
03 10
pt"eference, limitation or
Will pressure wash homes,
dlacrlmina1ion."
Cole's Mob1la Homes an
tra1lers decks, metal build·
assembled team with over
mgs and gutters
Call
This newapaper will no1
120 years of housmg expen·
(740)446·015 1 ask for Ron
knowingly accept
ence. Patrio t Homes outor leave message.
advertisements for real
standing 1/5 year warranty.
estate which Ia in
ll\\\(1\1
sh1ng les &amp; msu la tto n by
violation of the law. Our
Owens Corn1ng , vmyt s1pmg
readers are hereby
10
BI.NINF.~
Informed that aU
by Vipco. James Hardie Slddwe111ngs advertiaed In
OI'I'IlRTIJMn'
mg available. low "E" !her·
this newspaper are
mopane w1ndows by Kmro
available on an equal
carnage carpets &amp; floormg
!NOTICE!
opportunity baaea.
by Co ngoled. apphances by
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO recommends that
General Electnc, faucets by
you do business w1th people Forclosu re 4br, 4ba, $9,900 Glac1er Bay &amp; Moen , hght
yo u know, and NOT to send for II Sling call. 800-719-3001 f1~etures . cabinet pull s &amp;
kno bs direct !rom Home
money through the ma11Ur'1111 Ex. F144 '
you have inves t1gated the
De(JOt (easy to match 1ust a
Gallipolis. M1ll Creek Ad , 1 few good reasons why your
ottermg
mi from golf course . 3 br. neX1 new home sho uld be
Sales Malil:etlng, top rank ranch . brick front, new v1nyl frorn : Cole's Mob1le Homes .
technology
company, s1d1ng. heat pump, excellent i 5266 US 0 East. Athens .
eKpanding Sates reps and co nd . appro)( 1f3 ac asking OM10,
t-740·592 · 1972,
managers needed Above $77,500 call after 5pm 304· "Where
you get
your
average mcome. com pany 675-5038
money's worth"
ca r. 877-634·2469 leave
New Hom(! 1/2 mile out Co les Mobile Homes
message
Sandhill Rd. Approx 2000 US 50 East Athens. OhiO.
sq ft Lot s1ze 73x141 , 3br. 45701 , 740-592·1972
~ I'ROH~IONAL
2ba. llil'lng Room , D1mng
SEM\'IU~
Room . Family Room . 2 car land Home Packages aval!·
garage W1ll consider trade able. In your area, !740)4 46·
TURNED DOWN ON
for Acrea ge (304)674-4677 3384 .
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fe e Unless We W1n!
NEW HOUSE 1or SALE
New 14 w1de only $799
1-888-582·3345
Debbie Dr1ve 3 bedrooms, down and only $159 63 per
1~1 \I 1 ..., 1 \II
2
bath s
$ 129, 000 month . call N1kk1 740-385·
(740)245·9268
767 1

HoMF.~
fUR SAI.E

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

POL.ICIES: Ohio Valley Publishing reserves the rlglrt to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Errors muet be reported on the lint dey of
Tribune·SIIntinei·Aaglater wilt be reaponaible for no more than the c:oat of the spac:e occ:upled by thtt llfror and only tl1e first insertion. We ahall not
any loll or expense that ruujte from the publication or omlaslon of an advertlaement. Correction wilt be made In the first avsllable edition. • Bo,;
are alwaya confidential. • Current rale card appllea • All real estate advertisements aresubj&amp;ct to the Federal Fair Houaing Act of 1968. • This n..
accepts only help wanted ads meeting EOE standarda. We wUI not ~nowingly accept any ad11artlsmg 1n violation of the taw.

10

110

Part-time Dental Ass1stant,
progressiVe dental off1ce 1n
need ol expe nenced dental
assistant m Gallipolis area
Send resume and refer·
ences to PO Box 565,
Full time AN D1rec1or need·
Gallipolis. Oh 4563t
ed tor the TuberculOSIS
Oflice Hours 8·4, Monday
SrmmoNS
thru Friday. Some even1ng I2D
WANTiill
hours. PubliC Health expen·
ence would be of great
value . II Interested send Babys11t1ng in my home any·
resume w1th references to t1me, very dependable with
PO Box 447. Pomeroy, Oh1o low reasonable rates 74045769 by July 2nd. No 446-2052 ask for Candy
phone calls please
Surrogate s
Needed.
Interested in help1ng cou·
Hardware sales clerK. expe·
pies complete the1r fam1hes?
rience mce but no t necesYour eggs Wtif no t be used.
sary
Forward resume to
II Interested, please ca t!
CLA-570, c/o Gallipolis Daily
Tnbune , 82 5 · Third Ave (440)356-4604

.n. Per.:rriJnqe

.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

Full T1me Mamtenance
Position Ava1lable Apply m
person at Holiday Inn of
Galltpolls.

WORD
UMI

.

Dally ln.:.column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday~Frlday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

· • Ads Should Run 7 Days

r
r
r

_

Display Ads

Description • Jnclude A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•

benefitS including health and
Local Jobs
life msurance, 401k , and
Yellow female cat , approx. 1 paid vaca!IOn Please send 1·888-97 4-JOBS
year. to g1ve away. (740)992· resu me to
. _..-- - - - -.....-6164
Need to earn Money? lets
lalk the ~ Avon Call
Gall1pohs Daily Tnbune ,
Ul&gt;"TAND
Manlyn 304·882 -2645 10
Attn 0 1ane H111
FOUND
learn all the ways 11 can work
825 Tli1rd Avenue
lor you'
Gallipolis. OH 45631
Found· fnendly brown &amp;
or e-mail to
white dog , collar, no tags,
DKH1tl@ cnh1 com
Ove rbrook Nursmg an d
B1rmtngham area. (740)592·
Rehabtlation Center current2286
NO PHONE CALLS!
ly has open1ngs tor full and
part·t1me LPN 's ' 12 hour
DEMONSTRATORS FOR
YARDSAI.E
LOCAL STORES . Grea1 shifts and excellent benefits
available to both full and
pay. must be outgo1ng, ener·
part ~ t1me employees Stop 1n
getiC mostly weekends , Call
YARD SALEand fill out and apphcat1o n at
VISit
877-260·9133
Or
333
Page
Streel.
GALLIPOLIS
www jemcopersonnel com .
MiOdleport. Oh or can 740 June 25 and 26, 9.ooam • GARDEN Help Wanted 992·6472 and speak to
Lee.
Stall
5 oopm 224 H1lda Dnve, Wages. hours llexible Call Gassy
8-9p.m (740)446-3760
Development Coordinator
Gallipolis.
d

f--...,-,.,.;-·.,.[,Tij-R'T,-J--rM,_E'I"9--i, _O -Co~?;,.;.

Word Ads

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

Help wanted canng for the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
now paymg mm1mum wage
Shirley Spears, 304·
10 kittens, approx. 3 mo old, Sell
new shifts 7am·3pm. 7am·
5 male. 5 female, (740)645· 675·1429
Spm , 3pm- 11 pm, 11 pm4235 ask0 ror Lo1s
7am, call 740.992·5023.
CUSTOMER SERVICE

We have an 1mmed1ate lull·
Female Pekingese. house 11me customer serv1ce posibroke, lovabl e lap dog, to tiOn open in our ma1n office
goocl home only, (7 40)949·
2398
Must be people or1ented ,
computer li terate , and enJOY
work1ng with numbers.
Hall lab Pupp1es
Ready
Now (740)367-7566
Posi!IOn oilers all company

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lysenti nel.com

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

110

~egister

r

Of{tee llotV-If

ANNOuNo:MFNTS

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Cha nnel. Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drams.
Onveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Fr1day. 8am-4.30pm. Closed
Th ursday
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday (740)44 6-7300

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~rtbune
Sentinel
Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribune.com

,,

Monday, June 23, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Flat Rool
SpecialtstsCommercial and
Res1denttal
Saves on Cooling.
Metal and Mobile
home roofs- No
Problem. 15-Year
' Guarantee

992-7953
591-4641

591·7002

Pomeroy Eagles

81NGO 2171
E·very Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds slarl
6:30 l si Thursday
of .very month

All pack $5.00

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's # I Chery. Ponllac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

CANCER CHECK
Fuwll y... Money pa1d to YQ!!. when cancer
'&lt; trik es You choo-.;e th e amount up to $50,000!

Pavs in addition to other msurance
You· usc the money however you like.
C.u u.:e1 will ~t rike when you least expect lt .
It wt ll lea' e you and yo ur family financially

s1rappcd CANCER CHECK wilt be
there wh en you need it
Call no\\ to n~!':ier vc )lli!I check.

llring this coupon

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES

IIU)' $5.(~lllonanza

BDX I X9 MIDDLEPORT, OH 4 5760

G&lt;·t 5 FREE

740-843-5264

Hill's Self
Storage
Bashan Road
Racin e. Ohto

2 9670

45771

740·949·2217

Hours
7:00AM · 8:00 PM
1/1411 me ·

dOORNG
' *HOME
MAINTENANCE
dUMLESS
GOnER
*Free Estlmlles.

949-1405

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

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.
992-7953

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Rools,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411
Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

Ta~e

General
Contracting
New
Construction,
Remodeling,
Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing . ··

Sunset Home
Construction
HOWARD l.
WRITf.Sf.l

J/ 181fn

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garages
•
•
•
•

Electrical 6 Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp; Pajnttng
Patio and Porch Decks

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

519·814

Pomeroy, OhiO
~2 Y11ars Locilll

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

678-2497 or 448-2812
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

NELSON'S LAWN
CARE
Residential •

Commercial Mowing
• Mulch1ng • Edg1ng
• Fertilization • Leaf

Removal • Prun1ng
• Landscape
Maintenance Spnng
and Fall cleanup

(740) 985-9829
(740) 591-3891

~"'~

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

SUE's GREENHOUSE
Bedding, Vegetable E.r Sweet
Potato Plants,
4" annuals E.r Perennials
Fruit E.r Flowering Trees E.r
Shrubs
(Rhododendrons E.r
NOW 0pon
AzaleQs)

all on Sale

• Driveways 1 Tennis Courts
1 Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads t Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Deeth St.
ffilddleport, OH
[1 O'K 10' 6 1O'x20')

(740) 992-31.94
992-6635

.

RiH'I"\\&lt;1\

carr
In Syracuse

I Formab WhitPit'\ 's)
Under new ownershtp

and new management.

COME JOIN US
7
A Week!

,_

• .,.... daylight
tod•kl

Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

1-740-949-2115

Po 1 mo

"The Little re~;taurant
with the big lllste"

�Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, June 23, 2003

leen still misses
mom in·spite of her abuse
Dear
Abby
ADVICE
answering machine. The message says. "We can't come to
the phone right now, so please·
leave a message and we'll call
you back."
Abby, we love hearing our
mother's sweet voice when we
call. However, our brothers feel
it's "time for a change." Dad
seems fine with leaving it as is.
Please help settle this dispute.
TWO DAUGHTERS
MISSING MOM IN ILLINOIS
DEAR TWO DAUGH·TERS: Please accept my sympathy for your loss. Giief counseling could be helpful for all of
you. Your brothers are probably
not the only people who find
such a greeting to be offputting. I'm sure family friends
.are also disconcerted by it.
Since it bothers your brothers,
perhaps it's time to transfer the
message in your mother's voice
to tape - so you, your sister
and your father can listen to it
when you wish.

•

40 British Inc.
41 High spirits

Sarcasllc 43-remark
balloon
5 Fuel
46 Perched
8 Worry
47 After taxes
48 Treated
12 Seniors'
a sprain
' org.
13 CPR giver 50 Shrub
51 Frat Jetter
14 Navaho
foes
52 Tree·graft
To specify that the ''gift" be 15 Lions' prey
site
53 Singer
p_aid via money order implies 1~ Passing
-James
that there might be insuffiCient 17 gra~r.e
~~-Co!l
. credit
funds to cash the check.
(rev ew)
un1ts
If I received such an "in vita- 18 Hockey
55 Arrogant
tion," I would not send a money
gear
person
order. I would send my regrets. 20 Movie
DOWN
I recommend that you do the 21 Thai
same. Readers, I challenge you
neighbor
to top this 1
22 Aunts et al. 1 Joke
.bl
·
.
b
.
23 Ecological
2 Fleming
Dear A 1y IS wmten Y
hazard
and Smith
Abigail Van Buren, also know11 26 Small hound · 3 Dry, as
as Jeanne Phillips, and was · 29 Bates
champa~ne
founded by her mother, Pauli11e
or Arkin
4 Greek "e'
Pili/lips. Write Dear Abby at 30 Boxing win 5 Small lizard
D Abb
6 "Mister Ed"
www. ear
y.com or P.O
. . 31 Thurman
of films
actor
Box 69440. Los A11geles, CA 33 Me, In Paris 7 Sault .
90069.
34 Old masters
- Marie
35 Sleep-- 8 Raising
36 In good
2 to 8
~...;..;.=-..;,..;..o.;..
repair
9 Solar disk
38 Annoyed
10 Lalique
39 Howard
or Russo
or Guidry 11 Compass

•

DEAR ABBY: I am 13 and
couldn't be more mixed up.
Mom abused us our entire lives.
She lost custody of me and my
four younger brothers and sisters last summer. ·I always
thought I hated her for the beatings she gave us.
The truth is, I don't hate her.
I miss her so. much I don't
know what to do. I can't tell my
dad or stepmom because I don't
think they would understand.
Every night I cry myself to
sleep because I miss Mom. I'm
scared that something bad has
happened to her because she
hasn't tried to .call or see us
even once. What should I do?
Please help. - SCARED
AND SAD . IN THE
APPALACHIANS
DEAR SCARED AND
SAD: You're no longer a little
girl. It's important that you
express your concerns to your
father. You need to talk about
your mother, how she treated
you. and why, and find out
where she is. There is a reason
why your father was given full
custody of you and your siblings. When you're older you
will have a better understand-Ing of what happened.
DEAR ABBY: My sister and
I have a dilemma. Our beloved
mother passed away three
months ago, and both our
brothers want Dad to erase her
voice from the greeting.on his

ACROSS
1

DEAR ABBY: I'm enclosing a wedding announcement
my family and I received yesterday. My family and I are
shocked and appalled. It reads:
"Dear Family: I am asking
for· your cooperation and understanding. My wedding will be
very costly. and this has caused
me to make some unpleasant
decisions:
"I hope you will see this as a
request for a donation and not a
charge for you to attend my·
wedding. I cannot figure out
any way other than to ask each
guest to contribute to the cost:
If anyone is insulted by my
request, I am sincerely sorry:
"Your $330 contribution·
must be received on or before
June 30. Only postal money
orders will be accepted. Please
purcha~e it only from a U.S.
post office. Thank you for your
•contribution."
.
My question is, how should
this "invitation" be handled?
We don't have this kind of
money. Should we tell the
bride-to-be what bad manners
this is? - APPALLED IN
OHIO
No matter what
DEAR APPALLED: No.
Please allow me to do it for direction you turn
you. What you received is not yOU can always flnd
an invitation. It is a solicitation.
Not only is it tacky; it is unbe- ·.
It In the
lievably insulting. When a cou- L_ _!~~~
pie manies, all monetary con- .
tributions should be voluntary.

at
50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 204

dir.
F'reserve 35
fruit
37
20 Luigi's
farewell
38
22 Door
40
41
. openers
23 Play
42
bumpercars
43
24 Felipe44
of baseball .
25 Rostrum
45
26 Cotton unit 46
27 Moon
·
goddess
47
28 Discharge 49
30 Potter's
need .
32 Polished off
34 Reed

19

instrument
Decrees
Franklin
of soul
Corp. giant
Waterllly ·
OversupP.iY
Shopper,s
aid
Find out ·
Mouse
target?
Try again
Lincoln,
Informally
-degree
Society
newcomer

:o---r.r-'"rl--

j

Astrograph
CANCER (June 21-July . your stuff immediately.
22) - Some information you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
learn from others today could 2~) - Your ur.beat and
prove to be very fortunate for friendly m~nner Will be workyou. You'll immediately know 111 ~ overt1me today. Th_ose
where and how to put it to With who!ll you c~me 111to
exceptionally good use.
contact Will 1rnme~1ately be
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - . drawn to you and Will want to
Changes and shifts could be share your day.
in the offing today, but even if SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23you don't initiate any of them Dec. 21) - Unexpected
yourself, they'll turn out to be lmprovemelJtS could de~elop
exactly what you and another today on the home front m an
need for a project you are area that. m1ght h&lt;~;ve. held
working on.
some tensmn. The umty tt cre'VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ates w11l pull everybody
-An opportunity to straight- together.
.
.
. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22en ~u t a con tiusm~ sttUB;tlon m Jan. 19)- An opening to disan_ Important relationship may cuss a matter that's been in the
anse unexpec~edly_ toda_y. back of your mind will be
~lmost by mag1c thmgs wtll afforded you today. Once it's
_nght themselves and make out in the open you'll take
everyone happy.
charge and make sure it goes
LIBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 23) in the direction you want.
There s an exc~llent
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
~h~n~ that !!" opportumty of 19) _ Lady Luck, ambition
a hfeume m1ght be hand~ to and a little help from an outyou today at work. Youii. be sider will make a dynamic
perfect_ly SUited for the jOb COmbinatiOn today tO provide
and m1ght even get to show

you with the ways and means
to further your financial interests.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Much to your delight
you could be invtted to exercise your initiative and
assertiveness in furthering a
personal ambition. In fact.
others might go out of their
way to clear the path.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - An associate mi~ht
surprise you today by com111g
through for you 111 a far
grander manner than you had
expected. This gesture will
give you a jump on your

objective.

··

·

20-May
20)TAURUS
- A lot (April
more than
you '-:::::::==~~~=~==~~====~
r
expected to get done is possible today - all because of a
lucky break you'll get early in
the day. You'll share your
good fortune with those who
work at your side.
· GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- There's a strong chance
y~m could stumble across an
original and creative way of
handling something pertaining to your career or work. It
will prove to be extremely
·
successful.

WORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDO HAMBRICK
C' 2001 UAIIId , _ tt,ndal•. ....,

F,

E.

H,

®
®

W1
AVERAGE GAME 15~185

1sl

DOWN ·-l!L

-

2nd DOWN

• 52

3•dDOWN

=..;.!L

4th00WN

=..,ll_

JUDD'S TOTAL

~It,

Answer
to
. previous
Word
Scrim'
ma~e

243

L--•.:."~-'----.,-------------_J L---...1

... ~\\\) 1'M \-loT 8:&gt; 9..1\'&lt;.S /l.BoUT

Inside: Blues &amp; Jazz edition

AVERAGE GAME 205-215
by JUDD HAMBRICK

OOWN

0
FOUR PLAY TOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

DIRECTIONS: Mak11 111 2· to 7·1ener word !rom !he letters on eaCh yardllfle:
AOd polnls \o each word Of l&amp;lter usn~ scor1 ng (Jr&amp;e:tloos at rigtlt Sev8n-l&amp;lter
word!! get a SO-point bonus. All warns can be tound lfl Webster's New World
College Dictionary.
JUDO'S SOLU110N TOMORROW

e 2000 Unltd F11lur1 Syr.d~lt . lnc: .

HS-«1

~IS

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_,~-~--·.a,:
ARE 'iOU &amp;OING TO STA'I'
HOME Ti-115 SUMMER?

l THINK SO .. LAST
SUMMER l WENT TO CAMP,

AND !=ELL IN LOVE .. . ·

AH~4H.
Ut11'1E ! 1.
NO MORE HOI"''EWOR.IC..'
NO t'\Otl..E 800"-.., ~
"(E~! NO
Mo~E

lOOt&lt;,'I-!

In NOT EVEN GO I N(,
n:&gt; T +i I N 1&lt;. "!lOUT
ltE'ACINGo A

FOR THE
TWO

&amp;00~

NEXT

MONT'-HS! !

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S'T"OfZ If.&gt;
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'
-e.. AND THE POOL.

TI-lE LAKE AND TI-lE
OAK.!

•

.

www.mydailysentlnei.&lt;Dm

.River conditions keeping boaters indoors
Dental clinic
· Marina operatQrs
receives $200,000
say rainy weather
hurting
grant to op-erate
~usiness

for a time while a search for a
dentist · continued, and then
two part-time dentists took
over the practice until early
POMEROY - The Meigs· December when it again
County Health Department closed.
has received a second,
In Marcti, Dale M. White,
$200,000 grant from the
an
Athens dentist, was hired
Appalachian
Regional
by
the
health department on a
Commission for operation of a
dental health clinic in Meigs part-time basis. Since June I
he has been employed on a
Count}'.
·
· 'Th1s means we're assured full-time basis. His dental
of another year of operation," assistant is Beth Cremeans.
said Norma
Torres,
health Rhonda Davis, a dental
, I .
.
commiSSioner, notmg that the hygienist, comes in one day a
county through its health week, and Tanuny Taylor is
department tax levy con- the part-time office manager.
tributes an additional $50,000
"Demand for low-cost dento the clinic.
tal care in this county is
Torres, who was instrumen- extremely high," said Torres,
tal in bringing dental health · noting that currently there are
care to the uninsured and only two primary care dentists
underinsured residents of
Meigs County; explained that practicing here.
payment for services is on a .She stressed that the clinic- is
sliding-fee scale with the min- not just for low income residents, but can be used by anyimum being $10.
The Appalachian Dental one. Along with routine dental
Clinic opened in August 2001 work, Dr. White does dentures
in the former oftices of the late and dental appliances. but not
Dr. R. R. Pickerlf on Third orthodontic work, she said.
Currently he sees an average
Avenue in Middleport with the
fit:St ARC grant and local levy of 20 patients a day, with 47
funds.
percent of the patient eligible
Dr. Herbert Rollins, a retired for Medicaid, 50 percent pay
Columbus dentist. was hired to on a sliding fee scale, and
;handle the practice. He left in three percent are covered by
May 2002, the clinic closed insurance, according to Torres.
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
lliews editor

Despite high water
mark, River Sweep·
deemed success
BY J. MILES

lAYTON

Staff writer
- - - - -- - - - POMEROY - The banks
of the Ohio River became
cleaner over the weekend as
more than 90 volunteers participated in the 15th annual
River Sweep.
Paula Wood, director of the
Meigs County Recycling and
Litter Prevention .Program,
said between more than a ton
of trash was collected
Saturday. Three miles of
shoreline in Middleport, three
miles in Pomeroy and six
miles in Racine were cleaned.
Forked Run State Park also
was cleaned.
"I think we made a difference." she said. "Every little
piece we pick up ,makes a dif. ference ."
. Volunteers from Pomeroy,
~acine
and Middleport
deared a lot of tmsh and
debris along the riverbanks,
but Wood said there were
many places where the water
was too high to safely clean.
1

0
0

TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2003

BY TONY M. lEACH
Staff writer

GALLIPOLISe - Recent
heavy rains have left both the
Ohio and Kanawha rivers
muddy and full of debris conditions that area boat club
and marina operators say is
hurting business and. keeping
recreational boaters off the
water.
Ed Mullins, dockmaster at '
the Gallipolis Boat Club, said
Monday the rainy has kept
boats tied to the dock and people indoors.
"Ever sin~e we started getting all of this rain, there hasn't been much activity goinR
on here at the boat club,
Mullins said.
"Many of. our members ·are
leaving their boats tied up and
doing something else. It's hard
to water ski and swim when
it's raining and the river is
hi¥,h and full of debris.
'I would say this is probably
the slowest time I've seen in a
long time."
Randy Smith, CO-owner of
at
Riverbend
Marina
Henderson, W.Va., agrees.
"We are definitely experiencing a decrease in the number of boaters who nonnally
come in around this time of
year," · Smith said, pushing a
After fueling up at Riverbend Marina at Henderson, W.Va., Mason County resident Brett Leach half-submerged . log · away
unties his motor boat and prepares to venture out onto the Kanawha River. A rainy spring has from a dock.
resulted in bad river conditions and fewer boaters, which, in turn, is putting a financial strain
on local boat clubs and marinas . (Tony M. Leach)
Please see Boltln~o A5

. Mobil~ home ordinance set fQr.July 23 hearing
moved into the village be no regulations in Syracuse,
more than five years old.
Gallipolis, Cheshire, Wellston,
The proposal also requires and New Haven, W.Va.
mobile homes to be under·
If passed, the new regulations
MIDDLEPORT
pinned, and requires porches on would relate only to mobile
Middleport Village Council all mobile homes in the village, homes moved into the village
will hold a public hearing on a and requires that any mobile from that point, and would not
proposed ordinance regulating home moved into the village be regulate existing mobile and
the placement of mobile and appraised at least 65 percent manufactured homes at all -manufactured homes on July value of a new mobile home of although some regulations
23. .
.
like kind.
included in the proposed ordiCouncil approved the pro- .The ordinance proposed last nance are already on the books.
posed ordinance for a public mght also proh1b1ts the use oL The planning commission
hearing
during Monday boats and campe~ as livi~g estimates that 25 percent of all
evening's regular meeting. The quarters, proh1b1ts mob1le mobile homes in Middleport
new, stricter regulations pro- h?me par!\s,_and reserves the are in areas where they are forposed Monday night were VI~la~e the nght to refuse per- bidden by zoning regulations.
dmfted by the village's ordi- truss1on to anyone to p~k . a
Council member Kathy Scott
nance committee, and recom- ·mobile home or hou~ tr~ler m voted against placing the ordimended to council for passage ~e v1llage _1f the trailer 1s con- nance before the public for conby the village planning com- stdere(j unht.
sideration.
mission.
In considering the new pro- .
The proposed ordinance posal, the village planning
Other business
requires that all mobile homes . comlnission and 6rdinance com'rom Dooley, President of
in the village be owner occu- mittee considered not only exist- the Middleport Community
pied, sets forth minimum lot ing regulations in Middleport Association, discussed plans
sizes for mobile homes and relating to the placement of for the upcoming July 4 celerequires that all mobile homes mobile homes, but also current bration at Dave Diles Park.

BY BRIAN

Usually when the river is
down, there are places along
the shores of the river where
people can walk so that Uley
can better clean the river
banks.
"I think that if we had been
able to get down there, we
could have gotten so much ·
more," Wood said.
In places where the river
was up too high. the volunteers cleaned loose trash from
nearby street~. Wood said the
trash would have blown into
the river if it had not been
picked up.
Several businesses and vile
!ages donated equipment,
refreshments or money to the
Ohio River VaUey Water
Sanitation Coqx.-ation (ORSANCO) which spol1S(IOO the cleanup.
Wood said nothing remarkable was found this year. In
years past, there have been
Christmas trees, parking
meters and an assortment of
things not usually found in the
Ohio River.

J. REED

Staff writer

Painting brought by French 500 set for restoration
BY BRITTANY

SMITH

Guest writer

Index
Sections - 12 ......
Calendar
A3
Classifieds
83-S
Comics
86
DearAbby
86
Editorials .
A4
Movies
AS
Obituaries
AS
Sports .
Bl-2
Weather
A2
1

Cl 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Cc.

l e i - Dowell, 4tll . , _

Rutland Elementary

Dooley reponed that the
association's efforts to raise
funds for fireworks and other
celebration costs have been
successful, and that the goal of
$7,000 has been exceeded.
Entertainment and an "oldfashioned picnic" are planned fQ!'
the celebration, which will conclude with firewolks.
CoWlCil also:
• Approved payment of bills in
the amount of $6,409.52.
• Approved hiring of Randy
Smith as a part-time, call-in
patrobnan for the police department
• Approved the pwchase of a
chipper, at a cost of $22,995, and
the financing of the pwchase for a
five-year ~riod at 5.5 percent
interest
Present. in addition to Scott.
were Council members Linda
Haley, Stephen Houchins, Bob
Pooler, Robert Robinson, Mayor
Sandy Iannarelli and Oerk Susie
French.

GALLIPOLIS - A painting brought to Gallipolis more
ihan 200 years ago by one of
the original French 500 settlers is being restored for
future generations to enjoy.
Our House Museum, the
painting's owner, took it .to
Cincinnati to a professional
conservator for restoration
and removal of centuries of
dirt and grime that has distort~d the painting's original
1mages.
The 12-by-18 inch painting
is pastoral scene, featuring

·'We are really excited to seet it
restored. .. The restorer said it looks

Reuben, but is possibly Rem;sh:'

- Ilene "-!Jegrlnon

cherubs ' and goats , arid is
·painted on wood.
Dene Pellegrinon, museum
board member, said it looks as
if it could possibly be a piece
of paneling from the Gervais
home, the name of the French
family that brought it here in
1790.
The painting was flaking

and decomposing, but now it
· is being brought back to life
by conservator Mike Ruzka,
Pellegrinon said.
·
"We are really excited to
see it restored," Pellegrinon
said. "The restorer said it
looks Reuben, but is possibly
Flemish ."
.
Research show s that the

painting was handed down
from several families.
The artist's name remains
anonymous but the Our
House has hired a historian to
research the painting to determine where it came from.
Pellegrinon said the historian also may be able to put a
value on the painting.
The painting will be on display for the public at 2 p.m.
Thursday at the museum,
located on Second Avenue.
Ruzka will be on hand to
answer questions about the
painting and its restoration.

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