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'

Wednesday, August 10,· 2005

www.mydai]ysentinel.com

·Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

.

.

Undrafted free agent Rideau shining for Browns

Source: Cleveland,·
Edwards nearing deal

Rideau , able to get a contract out of
who led hi s that, work and show up at
Beaumont , practice. There are no guarTexas, high antees for him , but you do
s c h o o I pull for guys like that -.
BY ToM WtTHERS
try and catch up," Crennel
team to a guys like that who overASSOCIATED PRESS
said on Monday. "'We are
36-0 record ac hieve and do i.t the hard
going to he playing ga mes
· Notebook and state way."
c hamp iCrennel was asked if
CLEVELAND _ The and we are not going to
on ship as . a senior, signed Rideau will make it in the
Cleveland Browns have have time to. •tr y to catch
with the Brqwns on May 3. NFL.
made progress in contract him up the way he needs to
He arrived ~t training camp
"I think there is a good
· negotiation.s with rookie be caught up because we
intent on proving he chance he ' ll play in thi s
wide re ce iver · Braylon have to prepare for an
league," he said.
belonged.
Edwards and could have a opponent. He 's just goi ng
"I felt like I shoul d've
With th e Browns, Rideau
deal finali zed in the next 24 to have to deal with that
been drafted ," Rideau sa iq. is the equiva len t of a col- _ hours, The Associated and understand that. That's
"But see ing a&gt; how it didn't lege walk-on. A guy who
Press learned late Tuesday jus t the way it is whether
'night.
it's Braylon Edwa rd s or
work out that way, I go t a works baret, makes the
chip o n my shoulder. I need sq u,ld ami eventually ·earns
·
Edwards, the No. 3 over- whoev·e r' "
to come out and prove a scholarsh ip . At Kansas,
all pick in April's draft , has · Whe n asked if Edwards
Ric;lea u tried out but couldeverybody wrong."
missed the first 12 days of will bi! on the bottom of the
Ride;tu has benefited from n 't make the Jayhawk s hoop
training camp in a contract depth chart, Crennel said:
Edwards" absence by ge t- squad . Nonetheless, he had
. holdout. Hi s agent, Lanlont ··Thank you."
ting more repetitions . It ha s a distingui shed career at a
Smith, is ex pected to arrive
The Browns play their
allowed him to ·dc.ve lop a ' school not known for its
in Cleveland on Wednesday ex hibition
opener
on
chemi stry with Cleveland's football program.
afternoon to resume talks Saturday ni ght at ho.ine
·quarterbacks. Durin g .' th e
Rideau hasn't won a spot
with the team . a league against the New York
te am "s practi ce on Saturday on Cleveland's roster yet,
source with knowledge of Giants.
night at Browns Stadium, and hi s odds are still long to
the discussions told the AP
Durin g hi s .ht\ ldout ,
Rid eau caught a 31-yard d.o so. But every day that
on condition of anonymity. Edwards has been in New
touc hdow n pass from fel- he 's still around, hi s
The source said the sides Orleans working out 'With
chances improve. ·
low rook ie Charlie Frye.
do not have an 'agreement his father, Stan, a fo rmer
" All I wanted to do wa s to
Crennel said coaches have
yet.
NFL runnin g back.
a soft spot for a player like come in and show everySmith and the team have
Edwards set seve ral
Rid eau.
body what I could do,"· he
been di scuss ing variou s schoo l re.cords during fo ur
" He goes ag~in st the odds sai d. " And S\J far I've do[le
deals-in the past few day s years at Michigan. The 6beca use he 's not expec;ted a pretty decent job of it .
and have recently foc used foot -3, 2 11-pounder caught
to make it," Crennel sa id . I've got a lot of room for
on a fiv e.-year package for 252 pa~ses for 3,542 yards
" He 's an undrafted free improvement and I can do
Edwards, the type of bi g- and 39 touchdowns . As a
agent and we brought · him even more ."
play wide receiver th e senior,
he
won
the
in here for a tr yout. He was
Browns have coveted since Biletn.ikofff Award. given
coming back to the NFL in annuall y to the nation ·s t&lt;ip
1999.
wide receiver.
Once E;dwards does get
Edward s is one of three
in camp, he's got some top picks not · yet signed.
work to do.
• Miami hasn't reac hed a
First-year Browns coafh · deal with runnin g back
Romeo Crennel has made"it Ronni e Brown. the No. 2
wrong message to eve ry one resume hi s duties with the er official in the commissionstation
.
er's
office
heard
the
appeals.
clear
that Edwards will overall pick. and Chicago
of our constituents: the fans,
Rogers
turned
him
se
lf
in
to
In
Rogers'
cas~
.
Selig
both
have to earn playing time.
is st i II trying to sign runthe media, and our players."
· Rogers was penalized for a police in Arlington, Texas : on issued the pena lty and also
"Whenever Braylon gets ning back Cedric Benson,
·
videotaped tirade run e 29 misdemeanor assault charges heard the appeal.
here, he's going . to have to the No.4 pick.
and
posted
a
$1
,500
bond.
He
Rogers'
suspension
was
when he came oiliO the field
in Texas for pregame stretcll- also apologized to the cam- among the harshest penaltie s
Notes: Royals Hall of
ing and threw a camera to the eramen and fan s for hi s imposed by the commissioner's office for on-field conFamy 3B George Brett, who
groun d. kicked it and threat- behavior.
As part of the ruling, Das duct. Only the 30-day p,e.nalis a club vice preside!H, was
ened to do more da mage.
in uniform before the game
One of the came ramen he sai d the· ga mes Ro gers ·ty given Cincinnati manager
fromPageBl
and threw batting practice.
shoved. Larry Rodri guez of mi ssed could be. taken into Pete Rose in 1988 for push- ·
KDFW,TV, was treated at a aCC@nt if the pitcher fall s ing umpire Dave ·Pallone was
Brian Tallet. who
Indians score a run off
short of any incentive clauses longer.
Lee. made hi s first
replaced
hosp ital.
.
Jeremy Affeldt.
Rogers is !l -4 with a 2. 77
"Whatever time that Kenny in his contract.
big
league
appearance since
Royal s designated hitter
Union general counsel ERA for the Rangers, who
served. I hope that he "s been
Matt ·Stairs strained his left Jul y 21, ~003. He was
abl e to addre&gt;s. whatever Mic hael Weiner said Das are in the AL wild-card race.
calf running the bases in the recalled on Jul y 26 from
made
an
"expedited
ruling"
·
He
relieved
in
the
All-Star
issues he had with w.homever
first innin ~. Joe McEwing Triple-A Buffalo but did not
he had. and use the time pro- because Rogers' suspension game 011 July ·12 at Comerica
hit for Stmrs, who is listed pitch before Tuesday. :.. The
ductiv e ly,"" Rodri gue z said . was in effect. The union orig- Park and was booed by fans
a s day to day, in the second Indians ure 13-5 sin ce Jul y
22.
.
inally
appealed
the
penalty
to
in
Detroit.
""I am surpri sed that the arbiinning.
trator overruled the commis- Selig, then file.d a grievance
and argued that the commi ssioner" s decision."
KDFW new s director sioner broke precedent.
In recent times, baseball
Maria Barrs said Rodriguez
was sti II going .throu gh med- disc iplinarian Bob . Watson
ical treatment and had yet to imposed penalties and anoth-

:BEREA (AI&gt;)- There's a ed him to their rookie tryout
rookie "wide receiver whose camp in April. . Right away,
quickness, hands and leap- the slender wideout made
ing ability have made him an impression with his long,
the surpri se of Cleveland gangly str ide and willingBrowns' training camp.
nes£ to go over the middle
Another plus for Brandon and make a catch in a
Rjdeau is that his contract is crowd.
signed.
'"He showed size and
While Braylon Edwards. flashed
some
ability."
the club's top draft pick, Crenne l said. "Enough to
remain s elsewhere as the sig n him...
·
Browns and his agent hagThe Browns ard Ch icago
gle over performan ce incen- Bears were the onl y teams
lives·, roster bonuses, and to offer a tryout to Rideau,
guara nteed money, Rideau, who caught 51 pas;es and
an undrafted free &lt;ige nt seven touchdowns while
from Kansas, is turning being named hon orable
heads with every move he men tion All-Big 12 as a
makes.
·
se ni or. On d.rafl day,
The rangy Ride au has Rideau. who finis hed two
loo ked more like a seasoned receptions shy of the KU
pro during the first weeks of school record, plopped himcamp than so meone rejected se lf in front of a TV and
by all 32 NFL teams in ~ai t ect" by the phone for an
April's draft. During almost · NFL team to ca ll and tell
every practice, No .. I has him he had been chosen.
done something spedal.
There was on ly silence.
On Tuesday, Browns
··1 thought I would go in
coach Romeo Crenne l was the fourth round." he said.
asked to name a player that ··1 guess sometimes things
has grabbed hi s attention.
happen or don't happen for
"That
Rideau
kid," a reason. Can yo u imagi ne
Crennel said of the 6-foot- sitting around and waiting
3, 200-pounder. "' He's done ' td hear your name and
a .pretty good job, for a free you're hearing so many but
agent."
yours?""
A three-year sta rt er fu r The initi;;l rejection was
· the Ja yhawks , Ridea u is tough on Rideau. But. while
challengin g for a roster spot it brie fl y stun g hi s P\ide, it
wi th the Brow ns. who invit - never stopped him .

M:~ County Fair
·tion inside
, today's Sentinel

National Footpa/1 League

cameramen . .

Rogers will have mi ssed 13
games by the time . his rei nstatement becomes effective
when
he's
Wedne sday,
sc heduled to start against
Boston at Fenway Park.
Also, Ro ge rs· fine will be
couverted to a charitable con- ·
tribution. The ruling , by arbitrator Shvam Das, followed~
hearing Monday in Chicago.
"We always thought it was
out of line." player&gt;" union
head Donald . Fehr said .
"Were we surpri sed"' No."
Said Selig: ""I strongly disagree with arbitrator .Das'
decision today. lt sends th·e

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

CS Health Project sees 15,000 completed surveys

SPORTS
• Cincinnati sweeps Cubs
at Wrigley. See Page 81

Palmeiro
from Page Bl
Committee - that he ne ver
used steroids. That panel is
whether
.investigating
Palmeiro committed perjury.
· and has Palmciro"s pennis·
sion to obtain documents
from Major League Baseball
about that test.
In their letter, Stearns and
Barton asked Selig a series of
questions including when
and by whom the Palmeiro

.Reds
from Page Bl

'

and walkin,g none in seven.
innings.
"I couldn ' t say eno ugh
good things abo ut him:·
. LaRue said. '"He mixed his
pitches up well and the main
thing, he .kept the ball down
in the zone.":
· The Cubs are hitting .233
ahd have scored just 20 runs
during their most . recent
slide. They were seven
games behind Houston in the
NL wild-card race. going into
, the Astros" game Tuesday
night against Washington .
Chi cago's pitching staff has a
5.83 ERA in that ti 1ne .
""We don't need to convince
(media and fansj we're still
in it," Baker said. "We have
to convince ourselves before
we can convince anybody.
We've got a big game tomorrow and the St. Loui s
Cardinals comin~ , so we certainly need to won tllis game
tomorrow."
Matt . Lawton 's two-rvn
double with two outs in the
second gave the Cubs a 2-1
lead. With one out. Corey
Patterson reached on a bunt
single and Henry Blanco followed with a single . Prioo'"s .
sacrilice set up Litwton ·, hit.
Sean Casey dqubled in the

second and later scored on an
error for Cincinnati .
Griffey led otT" the sixt h
with his 25 th home run to tie
the
game
at
2-a!L
Garciaparra "s homer gave the
Cubs the lead again .
··1n my first two at-bats. I
thought I hit the ball hard."'
said Garciaparra ~ who aho
grounded out twice and
struck out once. ··Every day,
. ever)'_ time you step up to tre
plate . you wanr to hit the ball
hard and try &lt;md huild on it""
But Encarnacion's leadoff
homer. his second of the season . tied it in the seventh
before the Reds" outburst in
the las t two innings.
Notes: LaRue came into

Government
Reform
.Committee Chairman Tom
Davis, R-Va., and the ranking
Democrat, Henry Waxman of
California, introduced the
Clean Sports Act. Both are
based on the Olympic model
and call for a two-year ban
for a first offense and a lifetime ban for a second.
· The Drug Free Sports Act
would · give the secretary of
commerce authority over
sports' drug-testing policies;
tlie other would give oversight to the White House
dru g czar.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 2005
• MEIGS • EASTERN • SOUTHERN

-

Be sure t

. .

Part Of Th. •o Be A

S
IS Yea~
Pecial Fall s
s.
Preview Ed;,jorts
·
. on!

the ga me hitting .375 (6-for16) with three RB! s against
Prior. He Went 1-for-3
agai nst Prior with a double . .
... Garciaparra"' wife, soccer
star Mia Hamm. was in an
at tendance .
Former
NASCAR champi on Kurt
Busch threw out the first
pitch and sang "Take Me Out
To The Ball Game" on the
same day it was announced
.h.e is leavin g hi s Roush ·
Racing team to i11ove to
Roger Penske 's team.
Pafterson went J -for-4 in his
return. .. . The Cubs sa id.
Carlos Zambrano, who · left
the game· early Sunday with a
stitf back, will make his next
start Friday.

POMEROY - Renovation
of the o ld Salisbury schoo l
buil ding in to aq mini strati ve
ottices for the Meigs Local
School District is co ming
ri ght along but won't be
competed in time for the
move be fore sthool opens on
Aug. 22
··we had hoped to be in and
settl ed before now, but it
l9oks like it will be sometime
in
Septem ber,"
said
Superintendent
William
Buckley. The superintendent
and school board members
were at the building to check
on the progress before thei r

INSIDE

• Study suggests
· super-strict diet may
block prostate cancer.
See Page A2.
• Terrorists will likely strike
ng Tuesday night and to
London's financial district, meeti
rev iew the need for parkino
senior police official says.
lot paving.
e
The
east
win
g
of
the
buildSee Page A2
ing has spacious offices for
• Young girl killed by
the supcrimendellt, treasurer,
falling tree at Boy Scout
board offi ce and clerical percamp in New Jersey.
sonnel. as well as a reception
and
waitinf! area fo'r vi:-.itors,
See Page A2.
· and storage space. In th e
• Family Medicine.
other wi ng are the restrooms.
"See Page A3
a meeting roo m, a teachers
break room, and addit iona l
• Local briefs.
storage space.. Drew Webster
See Page AS
Post 39, American . Legion.
• For the Record.
will continue to lea~e the
gym nasium and ki tche n areas
See Page AS
of the bu ilding.
• Regional gas prices .
The double doors at the
jump to new highs. .
fron t of the building have
been removed, the en trance
See Page AS
closed off and the canopy
• Jurors still deadlocked
over highway shootings
case. See Page AS
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH
@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
'
A
'

WEATHER

POMEROY
- Jennifer
Menchini Kirby, RN , MSN.
currently vice president and
ch ief nursing officer at Good
in
Samaritan ' Hospita l
Baltimon;. Md. and chief
nur&gt;e of the Aeromedical
Evacuation
Squadron .
De! ~nvure National Guard with
service in Afghanistan. bas
won a national nursing awarc.l
Details on Page A2

New Driver?

·previous Accidents?
Lead Foot? Call us.

113 W. 2fld Street

992-S479

Q

Nationwide•
On Your Side •

ADVERTISING DEADLINE- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17f 200S - S:OO P.M.

·

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155 ·
For More Information
'

~be

1JBatlr ~enttnel

,

The Lubeck site in itiaHy www .C 8HealthProJCC;. org .
hanukd about 50 part1ct- Part1c1pa1m are "ill cncnurpants per day, but is now aged to compkte the scrie' of
.schedu ling as many as 90 health hi ., tory que sti ons
eac h day.
online if possihle. to :~c c e l e r'"Considerin g the ·enormity ate the procc'&lt; . of "Cllin"
of the project. I fed we have them into the systcn~ more
had .a successful start and wi ll qui ckly. The proj ect h; IS
con tin ue to perfect the reqested that onl y those wi thprocess." said Su .san Arnold, out internet acce" cump lcte
one of the ad mini strativ e the pap.er for111 .
directors.
·
Customers in tl1e Pnmernv
The question naire. wh ich is Village , Tuppers Pl ain ; the fi rs t step in participatin- Chesler and fou r other water
g1n the health soudy designed di stri cts along the Ohi n
to gather da ta for the project. River are eligi ble to part ici- ·
was first available only pate in · the C8 Hea lt h
onl ine
at Project's study. Each p;11·tici-·

or a lawsuit &lt;mai nst buPunt

over the,prese'nce of C8 in
water supplies and the settlenlc nt directed that a com mu nity healt h project be completed to collect data to determine if 11 probable link ex ist&gt;
h~ tw ee n ex in drinki ng water
and human disease. .

·

POMEROY
Meigs
County
Senior
Cen ter
Al"l i v iti ~ .s Director Debbie
.lone' realizes that not all
sen iors plan on or iUe able to
ancnd the upco ming Me ~gs
Count v Fa1r ami dec ided to
brin g -some of the fai r to
them in the fnrm of a pie
hak ing

,

, .

l2 PAGF.S

Calendars

A3

Classifiecls

B2-4

~omics

.
Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials'

A4

Pla~es to go

A6

Sports

,

· B Section

Weather
e 200,5 Ohio

\' u ll~y

The Pomeroy High School
graduate of 1968 with nursing
degrees from Ohio State
University of Columbu s and
Loyola University of Chicago,
is the daughter of Jacqueline
!VIcnchini and the late Rcnzo
Mcnchini of Pomeroy.
Kirby received the award
from the AONE lobtitute for
Patient Care Research and
Edtlcation, an affi liate of the
American Organization of
Nur;,e Executives. TI1c national awards honor nur&gt;e leaders
whose accomplishments in the
areas of leadership, service
and sd10larship arc wonhy of
, the AONE Inst itute's highest
nx ognit ion·and celebra1iOn.

A2

Since conoinu to Good
Samaritan in 2001 , Kirby ha'

Publi,.hing Cn .

mcnts induding reducing 1hc

made striking accnmpli..,h -

c on t e~t.

The contest will take place
on Tuesday. Aug . 16. Pies
must be at the center bv 10
a.m. for the JUdging W'hich
wil l be~in at l 1 tl.l.l l.
Rock~prings Reh,tbilitation
Center qonatcd prizes for
five. first pbce pies. five.
scl"ond place pies and the

HoefUch/ photo

Me1gs Local Board of Education members look over some ce iling work being done at tile Salisbury
building where the district"s administrative offices will be moved , probably in September. He re
from the left, are Mark Rhonemus. treasurer, Roger Abbott, Victor Young, Norman Humphreys.
Scott Walton, and Ron Logan, board members, and Superintendent William Buckley.

coveted

h~ s t 111

sl1mv.

First am.! ' econd places will
be ;t\\'ard~~l in till.' c11egori es :.
of i"rtul. one :111d two crust.
crumb cru..,1. nut pies. and

torn down. . The main $355.000 Jrom the p~rma n e nt ' tep in completing the proentrance wi ll now be from improvements levy wh ich jel"t." said Buckley. ""and
the parking lot in the back.
we nt off the tax dupl icate last when it :s all fin ished that\
An of the heating and cool- D~cember for the project. . when wc" ll movc in ,··
For many years the district
ing equipmen t has been The ori gi nal bi ds came in
installed, the partitions are in well under that figure at ha., paid $.,00 a month for
office .space on the second
place. the walls in the rooms $260.503.
and hall s pai nted, and ceiling
Si nce then the board has . r! om of the Pomeroy
an · additional Municipal . Building. The
tiles are being installed. The approved
glaled tile in the hall way will $26.354 I(Jr window rep lace- need fl1r handicapped accc' re main and the tloors there as ment, and at Tuesday night\ - .~ i bk spat:t: for o.u.Jm in i:-. tn.1 ti vc
well as in all the offices wil l meeting approved Jlll)ney for otlic~s hat.l ion!! been rcco!..!·
be carpeted.
paving the parking lot at the n1zed hv the lloard r1f
All 34 . of the windows in rear and the road around the Edttl'i.ltioJl so wher1 the new
the b'!ildin g are to he building. Cost of the pavement ekmcntarY ~c h ol) ] opened
replaced to save cost on heat - is estimated at $2X,!KXJ. not 1wn years ag o and t ilc
ing and cooli ng. Bren Mar of including some ''dirt work"" Sal i..;bttry building wa ... vacatJackson is the general co n- whic·h has to be done bet(Jre • ed. it was decided In rcnova tr
that structure and cct out of
tractor on the project. The the paving can take place.
'
board had originally set aside
""The paving is the final .rented space.

l.f'Carn or

l'll ~t ard pic~. w hi ~.:h

will he folltl\\cJ hy a

~s t

in

Please see Seniors, A5

Racine man
arrested on
drug charge
BY "BRIAN J. REED
.BREEO&lt;•MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

J

RA( INE

·~.A

Racine man

\\as iiiTe :-. ted Satun.lay un
charge:-. of ros se~~ion of crack
coc aint• and hav ing physical
co nt ml of a moh)r vehicle

fa~·ility to"' conduct nur~ine
IRB approved studies. and whik under the. inllucnce.
implementctl scrv ic.:c improve- · A ct· nrdllH! 'to -Racine
ment program s tll enl1ance M&lt;t"r;hal 'curtis
Jones .•
pat ient sati , facti ll n. which . Patrolman Richard Wamsley
increased .,cores by 111ore than arre sted Matth ew Dillard.
40 percent. This -spring. the 46. llf Apple Grove/ Dorcas
hosp ital has submiucJ doctJ- Rllad .afte r anon ymous calls

mentation for Mc.\Cnct St ~ltus. ,were reccin~d about hi~ reckthL: highc ~ l honor i~1 nur~ing .
k~~ dri \' 111!.! .
For all of the ' c cllll rt s.
\V;un , lc ~ arrested Dillard
G&lt;&gt;&lt;'J Samari tan Hn, pit; li at Hill ·, ·c itgo in Racine.
wu ~ rcn~ ntl y ranked the hi gh- I an d hi -. ' c hicle wa~ towed to
e st ~c or i n g hll\ pltttl for nur'c Ri"cr-. JLk Auto. \Vhil~ there.
rctenuon on ~tan IMilli ·· 1 .un ,l .l one' ' a" l. DillarJ" s ,chicle
111 complete ' liPP'"·t ,md \l"l") I \\ a' " ",trL· hed . and Juring
pODuJ ut knnite r ,md her . the "~ ar c h . he a ll eg edly
· entire nur~ in g d i\ i~ inn ." ;,ay . . . ! t' llll'rc J hi-. \·ehil'le and
Lawrence 1\1. BeLk. prl' . . idcnt 1 att¢mp tc d 1t1 remo ve a pi ll
o f Good Samaritan 'Ho.., pita l. hott k frn m hi~ lru'-·k .
" I bd ic' c one ri.Hll lU I find a
,·\t'lcr ,, hrid - -.tn.H. !Yle with
hct tc r k;~tkr nor a hcttc r Dill;u·d. \\'anhle) Ji ~covcred
1
pl:.tcc tn he a nur-.L-...
n~u.: k ,,:ot.·ai nc ·i n the pil l boule.
Kirb y j.., a . rc~ id c nt nt" After hl'ing charged . Dillard
AnnapnJi,. Mel. Her IIHHhc1 wa, l't" lca, cd and ordered to
lo ve, thcre\ mh her.
appear in Meig' County Court
G()(1U Sa_maritan Ho . . plttl. .a hc cau-.c thCrc wa.., no jail
member nt MedStar Ik alth. " 'par,· tn hnt"'' him.
. Jennifer Mt:nchlnl Kirby, RN , MSN
~~ JJ ~)·hc.J n.mulnm i ~~ teach "1. am l'x'l'oming , .CI)' conmg
taclln
y
l&lt;x:atcd
.
,
1
no1i
h-.
cemcd
al'&lt;&gt;u l th0 limited jail
lio~pital"s nurse vacancy in the gram~ that wmliLI fo..,ter new
1
e
a~
l
BallmHH
T.
\\
1th
(
L' lll L' r "'
'-J101L'!..' and. till' prnhkH1S it eretirst year from ~2 'k to 5'7r and n·urscs. a~ well a~ e-nhance proof Excl.'lk ncc in ()t1 h\lpcdiL· . . . aiL'" fqr l ~ t\\ enforl'Cment."
tumover rate from IWk to less tes~ ional de n·lnpment to keep rhculna tol Pt:) · rc h.lhilit;liHill, .h)t1L'" -..1id. " ( hope Sheriff
than I%. ,a,·ing GooJ ~urrent m1r~c~ ~H the ht.l ~pi ta l.
and renal care. the h&lt;'&gt;pllal lkegk i' able "' re-open the
In addition she h:h hclpc'J . . cn·e . , pt'&lt;.l pk tllro u ~ hou t hx:al j ai l . ., non. hel'au~ we' re
Samarit'Ul $4 million in agency
co, ts. She bmught in personnel . 'tall de,·eJop nu rs ing rc,carch ~t a ry land . the ~lid - A tlan t ic no" k&lt;l\ i n ~ niminab on the
to develop partnership' with which made Goo&lt;.l Samaritan and imc rnati omdl) in th,·;c· puhiLic " h~n they ,hould be
hx:hl·d up . ..,lH.:h a ~ in t-his case.''
area c&lt;'&gt;llege' to· d~wtop pro- tile lirst Balti111mc McdStar ad ,· : lll l'~ d ~JJCC i a lt H..'&gt;

I

'
. I

pant wi ll he paid up to $400
to participate if they meet
eligibil ity reqt1irements.
Project direc tors hope to
tcq · '" many a' 60:000 in
thei r attempt to deteroi1ine if
there is a li nk between C8
exposure and health prob·
le1m. The project is the result , .

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGE NT@MYDAILY SENTINEL.COM

Pomeroy native wins.national nursing award

2 'SE&lt;.TIONS -

PO&lt;Mtoy
JEFF WARNER

Grand ~ark Dr., Sui te 201 in
Vienna, W.Va.
The project is also about 10
POMF.R,OY . - ·Paper open its second mobil e testcopies of the surv.ey' being ing unit. in Belpre, on Aug.
conducted hy the C8 Hea lth 15, and plans call for the proProject arc now avai lable to ject to open another in
·those
wit hout intern et Pomeroy later thi s month.
access, and the project staff The Pomeroy testing unit will
have begun calling pa rtici- be located in the parking lot
pants to schedule appoint- of the former Veteran'
ments at the project's Memorial Hospi tal. .
mobile un its.
·
To date. over 15".000 ·
The paper copi es of the . online 'ques ti on na ires have
survey are available ;through been su bmitted and those
the first modular testin g 'site people are now being called
111 Luhcck, W.Va .. or at the for · appointments at th e
Brookn1ar o ffi ce ·at 417 mobile units in their area.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HO EFLICH@MYDAILYSENTI NEL. COM

INDEX

·' To find out more about
our auto InsuranceCall me ...Stop by.. .it's your choice!

BREEBY ~RtAN J. REED
D@M DAtLYSENTINEL.COM

.Meigs District faces moving delay into new .offices Alternative
planned for
Parking lot
.
seniors unable
paving added
to attend fair
to project

Crown

tests were admini stered ,
when "the positive res ults
were known , when Palmeiro
and
the ·public
were.
informed, how the arbitration
process worked and whether
there are any furth er penalti es
or ohligations on the player
after the suspension is concluded.
"It appears the current
penalties under the program
will not deter even those
players with the most to
lose." the law makers wrote.
Stearns proposed the Drug
Free Sports Act. wbile 'House

Dozers
Phil Dirt and
..
conungto
Middleport, A6
·'

Kenny Rogers reinstated by arbitrator
NEW YORK (A P) Kenny Rogers was reinstated
Tuesday when an arbitrator
ruled that co mmissioner Bud
Selig went too f3 r by suspending the Texas pitcher for
20 games and 'fi nin g him
$50,000 for shov ing two

..

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NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

_PageA2
Thursday, August 11,

2005

Bv ROBERT H. Rli.ID

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Gunmen kidnapped a
senior Interior Ministry official in the heart of
the Iraqi capital Wednesday, and the U.S. military. reported that five more American soldiers had been ki lled.
. The latest violence came as Iraq i politicians
intensified talks to try to meet a Monday
deadline for finalizing a constilut ion.
Brig. Gen. Khudayer Abbas. chief of the
adm ini strative affairs ofli cc in . the Interior
Mini st ry, was dragged from hi s car on
Andalus Square and spirited away in another
vehicle, according to police Maj . Abbas
Mohammed Salman.
· No group claimed responsibility. The
Interior Ministry supervises police and elite
paramilitary units that are at the forefront of
the fi ght against insurge nts .
· Four US sold ieFs were killed shortly
before midnight Tuesdav when insurgents
attacked their"IO-member patrol as it investi gated explosio ns riear Beiji , 155 miks north
of Baglidad.
.
A fifth American sold ier assigned to the
·2nd M:)rine Division was ki lled Tuesday by
sma ll an:ns fire near Habaniyah. 50 mi les
west of Ba~hllad. ·
The Beiji attack was launched when insurgents detonated a roadside bomb. then poured
rocket-propelled gre nades and small arms tire
on the Ame riccin unit. the U.S. command said :
Five soldiers and a U.S. civ ilian contracto r
were wounded.
Lat~ Wednesday. five Iraqi soldiers were ·
killed and two we're wounded when insurgents attacked a checkpoint about 12 miles ·
·
south -of Beiji , police said.
Gunmen al.\o kil led police Capt. Mahmoud
Hassan in Baghdad 's western Bayaa district.
police said.
N~unes of the U.S. soldiers' kilkd in Beiji
were not re leased. Penn sylvania Gov. Ed
H

, FA~ILY MEDICINE .

as Operation Quick ~trike got under way.
They included six Marine snipers killed
Aug. I near Haditha. Two days later, 14
Marines and a civilian translator died when a
huge blast hit their arm ored vehicle.
,
Marines said nine car bombs were discovered
during the sweep, the latest in a series of operations aimed at curbing insurgent activity in the
volatile Euphrates valley -a major intiltratioh
route for forei gn lighters from Syria.
'This is another operation, similar to those·
conducted before, that has disrupted the
insurgents' ability to operate freely,'' Col.
Stephen W. Davis .sa'id.
The Bu sh administration is hoping that
political progress will eve ntually deflate the
Sunni Arab-led rebellion and enable the
United States and its international partners to
begin withdrawing troops next year.
Key to that strategy is a democratic constitution fo llowed by elections in Decemb~.r.
·Iraq's parliament i&gt; to approve the draft charter by Monday, but major differences among
ethnic and political factions threatened · to
delay completion of the document.
After two days of joint talks failed to pro-.
du ce a breakthrough, Iraq's political factions
AP Photo met separately Wednesday -· apparently to
Behind the wreckage of a suicide car bomb, lraqr police officers stand next to two bodies ~a review their positions to determine which
fellow officers killed in an attack targeting a joint US-Iraq patrol, Wednesday in Baghd ad. Iraq . issues they would insist upon and how they
A car bomb targeting a joint US-Iraqi patrol deton ated Wednesday in the Ghazaliyah area of might compromise to "meet the deadline.
The major obstacle is the Kurdi sh demand
Baghdad·, kil ling seven people. including three pol icemen. Five U.S. soldiers. attached to Task
that
Iraq ~transfo rmed into a federal state .
Force Baghdad, received minor injuries in the attack, a U.S. military spokesman said.
The KurdS have insisted on federali sm to proRendell sa id five members of [he since the Iraq war started in March .2003, tect their self-rule in three northern provinces .
Pcnn svlvania National Guard · had been according to an Associated Press count.
Sunni Arabs oppose federalism. fearing the
kill ed · in a&lt;.:tion in Iraq . However. a
Elsewhere, live U.S. soldiers were slightl y Kurds want to break away from Iraq and
spokesman for the Pennsylvania National injured when a car bomb exploded in the west- decl are independence. The Shiites are dividGuard. Capt. Cory P. Angell. would say er.n Baghdad neighborhood of Ghazaliyah. · ed, with some factions wanting to build a
onl y a guard unit suffered cas ualti es that Four civilian s and three police were killed , Shiite federal region in the south .
.
included dead and 'vo unded during an according to I st Lt. Thai~ Mahmoud.
Kurdish politician Mahmoud Othman said
anack in Beij i.
In western Iraq. the U.S. Marines announced Kurdish leaders were under pressure from
The deaths brought the number of American the end of a weeklong offensive in the · their people to stand fast on their demand.
troops killed thi s month in Iraq to 37. At least Euphrates Valley codenamed Operation Qui ~k Sunni Arabs said they were under pressure
1.84 1 members of the U.S . military have died Strike. Twenty Marines were killed last week fro m the Sunni rank-and-fil e to reject it.

in fat increase the risk of
prostate cancer, and that certain foods .- such as brocWASHINGTON - A radi - coli, or the nuirient lycopene
cal ultra lo\v-fat diet and other · fro m cooked tomato products
lifestyle changes ·may help - are protective.
keep early-stage prostate canSo Orni sh and fellow
cer from worsening, says the researchers at the University
fi rst attempt to test the theory. of Ca lifornia, San Francisco,
It 's a small study that tracked recru ited .93 men who had
men whose tumors we ren't decided agai nst treatment for
aggressive. Still. the research, early-stage prostate cancer, a
published in the September route known as ··watchful
rss ue of The Journal of waiting.
Urology, promises to increase · Half
were
randomly
interest in whether diet might assigned to the Ornish diet
'really help battle cancer.
and lifestyle regimen: the
The study was led by heart- others weren't asked to vary
health guru Dr. Dean Ornish, their usual routines. The
and used his famously strict researchers sent participants'
regimen.
where· . people blood samples to Memorial
become vegetarians. limit Sloan-Kettering - Cancer
dietary fat to I0 percent of Center in New York to meatotal calories, exercise regu- sure PSA. or prostate specific
'larly and learn stress-manage- an tigen, a marker used td
ment techniques such as yoga. track prostate 'cancer growth.
- Omish's studies show that
After one year, PSA levels
regimen can help heart dis- had decreased 4 percent in the
ease, but why try it oo diet group - unusual for
prostate cancer? There is untreated patients - while
some evidence that diets high PSA levels rose by 6 percent
AP MEDICAL WRITER

. ..

1

•

in the control group. That difference wasn't big but it's statistically signi fica nt, and the
researchers plan to continue
tracking the men to see if it
rea lly sig nals better health .
Also, six of the non-dieters
had undergone cancer treatment in that year after all,
because their di sease -was
progress ing. None of the .
di eters were treated.
Other cellular tests suggested the diet wasn' tjust affecting
PSA production, Umish said.
"It's hard to· get too excited
about these results because you
took a population of men who,
frankly, are likely to do wei] no
matter what," cautioned Dr.
·Dura do Brooks of the
Ameri can Cancer Society. But,
"this definitely should open the
door to more research." .
"This report undoubtedly
will excite the aficionados
.and devotees of lifes tyle
change s for cancer but it
should also give pause to the
skeptics," wrote Dr. Paul
Lange of the University of

Was hington in an accompanying editorial.
Indeed, . it comes just
months after another study
suggested low-fat diets might
help women avoid a recurrence of breast cancer.
Orni sh stressed that his
study, partly government;.
funded . doesn't mean men
should opt for diet over conventional therapy.
But these men weren't getting conventional treatment
anyway, allowing a clearer
test of dietary effects, he
explained. The diet may help
men undergoing therapy, too,
he added.
·
"I always lind it amusing"
that people call the diet hard,
Ornish said. "Compared to
having
your
prostate
removed? ... The only side
effects are you feel better and
it helps prevent heart disease."
More than 230,000 U.S.
men are expected to be diagnosed with prostate cancer
this year, and 29,500 will die,
the cancer society estimates .

NewsChannel
Thursday, August 11
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noon)
It will be a humid morning.
Temperallr'res will hold stead y
around 71. Skies wi ll range
from sunny .to mostl y sunny
with 5to 10 MPH wirids fro m
the north.
Aftemoorz (1-6 p.m.)
It will remain humid.
Temperatures will rise from
72 early afternoon to the high
for the day of 80 at 3 p.m. as
they · drop back down to 79
later this afternoon. Skies will
be mo st!~ sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the north .
Evening (7 p.m,-Mid11ight)
It should continue to be
humid . Temperatures will
drop from 79 early this
evening to 70 by 10 p.m. then
rise back up to 71 late
evening. Skies will be mostly
clear to cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the .northeast
turning from the east as the
evening progresses.

Terrorists will likely strike Young girl killed by falling tree at
London's financial district, Boy Scout qunp in Ne'Y Jersey Local Stocks
61.56
senior police official says .
37.55
Bv JOHN CURRAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bv MICHAEL
McDONOUGH

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LONDON - The police
chief for London 's finan cial
di stri ct warned Wednesday
that terrorists will likely
5trike th e Briti sh capital's
_biggest business hub. where
' they have already surveyed
targets in the area.
· The warning came as
police said they have charged
lV!Dlher' man under anti-terror
law s in the botched bombings
against· Londop's 'tra1isit system on July 21.
Abdul Sharif. 28. of South.
London. was charged with
withholding informati on -that
could have helped poli ce
apprehend bombing suspect
Osman Hu ssain. Sharif has
been in custody sin ce hi s
arrest Aug. I
Hu ssain , also known as
Hamdi Iss ac. tled Britain
after the fa iled bomb attacks
and is bei ng held in Rome on
international
terrorism
charges. Britain wants to
extradite Issac from Italy.
Nearly live week s after fou r
su.icide bombers attacked
London on Jul y 7. ki lli ng
themselves and 52 other penpie. police chief James Hart ·
said there was no spec ifi c
intelligence about a forthcoming attack but insisted the
·financial district ·was at risk.
''We are vulnerable. there
are people out · th ere wpo
wish us' harm and we should
that." the Hart •
be aware
told The Associated Pre". "If
:you hit the fin ancial cen ter of

of

the United Kingdom, it's a
hi gh-profile thing to do."
Asked if it was a question
of when t~e finan cial district
would be 11ruck. rather than
if. Hart_replied: "Yes, I don' t
doubt that at all''
Known as the_ City,
London 's business qu arter
houses hundreds of banks.
insurance companies, Jaw
tirms and other institutions
·including the London
Stock Exchange and the
Bank of England. It is a leading international center for
tradi ng in. metals. _oi l and
other commodities.
AI,Jgate subway statio n.
one of the targets in the Jul y 7
bombings. lies on the eastern
edge of the City. a dense network of narrow streets dotted
with skysc rapers. The tiny
di strict has its own police
force - distinct from the
Me(ropol itan Police. whic h
operates in·the rest of the capitaJ - and officers beefed up
security there in the 1990s
after a stri ng of Irish
Republican Army bombings.
" We are always vulnerable
as a financi.al center. as we
have been for the last three
decades.'' Hart said .
Hart also said that "most
successfu l terrorist operatives
pre-survey their targe ts."
Asked if this had happened in
the City. he answered: "It has
already occurred." but added
that office rs had di,rup'ted
"hos tile survei ll ance."
He refused. to say whether
officers had arrested anvone
as a resu lt of these ojJeralions, or gi.ve further detaih.

OCEAN
TOWNSHIP,
N.l - An 8-year-old girl
died and three others were
injured Wednesda y when an
,oak tree crashed down on
them durin g a first-aid class
at a Boy Scout camp,
authorities said.
The girl s were attending an
overnigHt camp when the 31foot tree snapped and crashed
through a tarp over a picnic
ta~le , landing on the girl's
head , Poli ce Chief Kenneth
Flatt said.
The cou nselor who had
been teaching the first aid
class administered CPR. but
the gi rl was later pronounced
dead at a hospital in
Manahawk in.·
_
The other girls' - ages 9.
· I 0 and 16 ·- were treated

and released. One girl suffered a broken 'ankle; the others had bru ises and scrapes.
The victim was from
Doylestow n, Pa., but her
identity will not be released
. until Thursday, according to
Robert Gasser, a spokesman
for the Ocean County
ProseCLrtor's offi ce.
The girl s were among a
group of 17 children on a
weekl ong " Learn ing For
Life" program at the heavily
wooded. 600-acre Joseph A.
C ilia Seoul Reservation ,
according to Ethan Draddy.
an executive with the Jersey
Shore Council of Boy Scouts
of America.
The gro up had arrived
Sunday and was to stay until
Friday, Oraddy said.
"We are feeling completely and utterly devastated ,"
he said.

ACIAEPAkzo -· 42.06
Ashland Inc. - 61.83
AT&amp;T- 20.0l

· Bob Evans - 25.10
BorgWarner - · 57.45
Champion - 4.35
Charming Shops - 11.40
City Holding - 36.44
Col- 48.54
·
DG -18.91
Du.Pont - 42.51
Federal Mogul - .43
USB -30.11
Gannett- 72.95
General Electric - 33.88
GKNLY- 5.20
Harley Davidson - 5_
2 .14
JPM -34.80.
Kroger - 19.70

Ltd.- 24.42

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Aug. II
CHE;STER - Shade Ri ver
Masonic Lodge 453, 7:30
p.m. , at hall. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 , 7 p.m., at the
hall. The meal will be served
. at 6:30p.m .
RA CIN E The Ohio
Ri ver Producers will meet at
7 p.m . in the S1mthcrn VoAg
room.
F~iday, Aug. 12
POM EROY Widows
Fellowship, noon, Pizza Hut.

Friday, Augu~t IZ
Muming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Expect a humid morning.
Temperatures will climb from
65 to 82 by late this morning .
Skies will be partly cloudy to
cloudy with 5 MPH wmds
from the south turning from
the southwest as the morning
progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
humid. Temperatures will
. hover at 87. Skies will range
from partly cloudy to cloudy
with 5 MPH winds ·from the
southwest.

Church events

Gospel Harmony Boys

Gospel Harmony Boys to
appear in Gallipolis park Friday

NSC- 36.89
Oak Hill Financial OVB- 25.50
BBT- 41.06 ·
Peoples- 27.05
Pepsico - 54.38·
Premier - 13.20
Rockwell- 51.57
Rocky Boots - 30.81
RD Shell - 64.07

Gt\L l.JPOLIS The
Gospel Harmony Boys will
appear at the "Singing in the
Park " concert series on
Friday at 7 p.m. wi.th Joy
FM '-' Randy Parso.ns.
The Harmony Boys were
organi zed in 1952 in
Huntington. W.Va., and is
one of .America's longest
existing gospel groups. They
have b~en highly remgnized
over the years and were · the
, first gospel group ever fea -tUred on national network

'sse- 24.65

Sears - 143.13
Wal-Mart - 48.84 .
Wendy's - 48.77
Worthington -18
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Partnets at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis:

•0

be at the booth on Thursday, August 18, 2005.
Booth hours for that day will be 2 p.m. to 8 p.Ii1.

•

th ey Cl'eate a unique brand of
Chri stian mu&gt;ic tha t is trul y a
mini stry dedicated to praising
and up-lifting Chri st.
Pa;tor Rick Barcus is excited about this concert and
wishes to invite yo u to bring
a frie nd and an .empty cup.

Friday, Aug. 12
LONG
BOTTOM
Hymn sin g al Faith Full
Gospel Chu rc h, 7 p.m. Dave
and Debbie Dailey will be the
singers.
Saturday, Aug. 13
MIDDL EPOR'f
·
Middleport Church of Christ
will have a back to sc hool
giveaway. offering clothing
and school supplies from 9
a.m. to I p.m. on Saturday.
SYRACUSE - Svracuse
Church of the Nazarene will

have u "back to school fune ral" from 3 to 10 p.m . at the
church. There wi ll be volleybal l. horseshoes, basket ball,
dodgeball, and other games
froin 3 to 5:30 p.m. wheri a
cookout will be held . At 7
p.m . there will be a concert
featuring " Halo Effeet" with
special speaker Matt Hanke
of Columbus. This "fun era l"
is to celebrate and 'remember
summer and all its fun before
returning to school.
Sunday, Aug. 14
REEDSVILL E
Homecomin g will be held at
the Eden U. B. .Chu rc h on
Rout e
124
betwee n
Reedsville and Hock ingport .
There will he a carry-in dinner .at 12:30 p.m. and an
afternoon service at 2 p.m.
The Martindale family will
be in charge of the serv ice.
There will be special music.

Reunions
Saturday, Au~. 13
SYR ACUSE
The
Eic hinger retll1ion will be
held at Carleton School,
Sv racuse. There will be a
covered dish din ner at I p.m .
Sund&gt;Jy, Aug. 14
POM E ROY - ~ Ist ·Hayes.

Young , and Holiday school
re uni on. 12: 30 p.m.. ojd
Hoi iday School Grounds on
Gil key Ridge Road . Take· a
covered dish for the potluck.
pictures, genealogy information anrl entertainm ent.
GALLIPOLIS
The
Arron Fry famil y reun ion wi ll
be held at the home of
Ri chard and Linda Howar:d.
Creekview Dr.. Gallipolis. A
potluck dinner wil heg in at I
p.m. There will·be door pri Le s
and games for the children .
Music wil l e by the Cherry
Ridge Blue Grass Band.
There is a &gt;wi mming pool.
Call Manha Paltcrson. 4419166 fo r more in forma tion.

Other events
Wednesda~·. Aug. 17
POMER OY - American
. Red Cross Bloodmobile. I to
u p.m.. Meigs Senior C'emer.
AII blooJ types n.;eded.

Birthdays
Wcdnc.,day, Aug. 17
RAC INE -- Paul Baer will
observed hi s XI st binhday on
Aug . 17. Cards may he sent
to hi m at 35 1h5 Ba~r Road .
Racine. Ohio 45771.

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·Meigs
County
informed
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992-2155

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

Calvi n previously spent 12 ·
years with the group, starting in 1975. Clacy has com-,
pie ted 28 years . with th e
organization.
The grcrup is a brotherhood
of extremely taknted men
who Jove the Lord. Together

tCI1l..lL

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differences in needs , living
habits, strc's lel'el' and communication skills .
(3 ) SHARE EXPECTATIONS . The more . t~wt 's discussed be forehand, the better
the relationship. Roommate
conlwcls arc popul;ir today,
and man y univcr,it ics requ ire
th~m -as a w,ay tu ge t kids
talking about their cx pec·tation s. Encourage your child
to di,cu" thi ngs like sleep
and study hahits . hili&gt;. 'haring items. tkanirlg. tlll d lhl· ·
best times to hal'c l'tsi tors .
(4) ENCOURAGE FACETO-FACE
CONVERSATIONS . More and more kids
today would rather wmmunicate· th ro ugh e- mail. IM anJ
' tex t-messag ing rath er tha n
face-to-face. Without the
benefit of fac ial expressions,
tone of voice and bvdy language. messages can be mi sunuerstood. Also, warn kills
th at gossipin g l.n others
instead of talking directly to
their room mate only escalates probl ems.
(5) ASK FOR ' HELP
. BEFORE TH E SITUATIO N
BECOMES
CRITICAL.
Residence life staff w'ill help
to mediate, as long as the stu-

are_also ava ilable for help if a
roommate i~ cxhihitim.! :, ii!tl ~
of mental illn~~:-. ~~ch . _ a"
Jeprl' s~il.l n , ~ub~o;tarlce abtr:-.c
or cutting. In addition. a
counseli ng ~es..;ion c.an help
' your child learn to dea l wit h
stres ' and fi nd better ways w
manage the situati on. -·
SUSAN FEE. AUTHOR OF
"MY ROOMMATE IS DRl VJNG ME CRAZY'" .
DEAR SUSAN: From time
10 time over th e vc~r s. I ha1·e
recei vcd ma iI from student'
complaining about . "l hc
roommate from hell." And
you · rc right . too often people
(of all ages) wait Ltnti l the situation become&gt; cri'tica l
before askin g for help. I hope
your suggestions wi ll help
parents to have _,omc important &lt;.:onversations with rh e1r'
children before they fly tl)e
n&lt;.:st. becau se the subject is
too important to cover in jus'\
one scS&gt;ion. On their behalf. I
thank yo11 lor writing.
De{lr Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, al.w
knuwu as ] e{l/1/le Phillips, and
wm founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dellr
Abby at www.DearAIJby.cmn
,;, P.O. Bux · 69440, Los
Angele.1·, CA 90069,

the group incl udes
Mullins singing lead.
Ru &gt;lV Ballin~er as bari tone,
Calv.in Tho;.1psori singing
hass ar1t1 Clacy Williains as

••
••
••
••

w~ll

Campu~ cot:trbeling. &lt;.:enter~

Tod~• Y-

•

TI.VIOTHY P.I\IETZGER, L&gt;O
of'l 111· \IIDf&gt;LEPOHT CL.I\1(

Abby

S~:ot[

.

•••
••
•••
•
•••

Dear

te h:~ vi~ion .

,.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.
Visit the PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL booth
during the \llf&lt;."'' &lt; ot '\'1 \ L\JH .
Booth hours are 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

dent ha• alr~ady tried problem-solving face- to-fa&lt;.:e ..
(lJnfonunatc ly. too many students i&lt;'ait to mention that
there's a problem until th~y
want to move out. or. at the
firs.! sign of trouble , they
report it to thei r RA expecting that person to &gt;ol'e it. J

Community Calendar

Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
It should remair. humid .
Temperatures will linger at 67
with today's low of 66 occurring around 6 a. m. Skies will
range fro m mostly clear to
mostly cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the southeast
turning fro m the south as the
overni ght progresses.

31.65

BLI-12A1

11, 2005

.

DEAR ABBY: I am a
licensed counselm and adjunct
Question: When my sm1
While many men with a · tionaLe valuation to determine faculty membe( in communihad his high school sports varicocele do riot have ferti lity if ,hi s testicular growth is nor- cations. I hope you will help
physical , he was told he had problems, it is one of the most mal. The American Urological me get a message out to para varicoce le. but not to common causes of m.ale infer- Association
says
that ents who arc sending their
worry abou t it. Of course, I tility. In fact, about 30 JJi!t'cent "Adolescents who have a chi.ldren off to college this fall.
am corrcerncd. Exactly what of infertile men have u varico- varicocele and objective· evi- Every semester, I see kids who
is this? Can it cause prob- cele. Most case., of. varicocele dence of reduced testi&lt;.:ular have a miserable college expe!ems, like can..:er·:• Doe&gt; it require
no . treatment. size Jon that same side] should rience due to roommate contlicts . Some students become
need to be 'treated '
However, when a man has fer- be offered varicocele·repair."
Answer : A varicocele t.ility problems or chronic disAlso, in a youn g man, per- so distracted that their grades
occurs when varicose veins comfort attribuwble to the sistent or frequent pain in the suffer. and some actually
·
develop in the SC I\l!Uill along varicocele , various treatment testicle should be evaluated. move back home.
A
su..:cessful
college
expethe spermatic cord A bout IS options are availabk.
If a varicocele develops sudpercent of mal es b..: tween the
Varicoccles may be man- denl y in an older man , it rience requires both academages of 15 and 25 'experierrce aged with a scrotal support. If shoul d be promptly eva lu at- ic and mc ial ski lls. Parents
th is condition.
this is insufticient, other pas- ed us it can signal major can prepare their children by
teaching them the vital social
A vari cocele deve lops ,si ble treatments indude open medical problems. To date, skill of settling differences
because the test icles grow surgical removal, laparoscop- there has been 110 correlation before. they become overrap idl y durin g puberty, and . ic removal : and catheter . established .betw&lt;~cn ha ving whelming . Tl)is wiJ.J not only
Lhe veins in that area are not embolization. Both open and a vari cocele and th'e devel- help them make their college
able to handle the increased Japaroscopic _varicocelectomy :opment of testicular cancer. years s u c&lt;:es~ful, but also the
blood fl ow. Veins have valves - the surgical correction of a All that being said: most rest of their Ii ves.
in them to keep the bl ood varicocele - are pcri'ormed men. do not re4uire thi s
I offer five tips for parent.':
flow ing in the ri ght direction . . on an outpat ient basis. The surgery and learn to live
(I) OFFER SUGGESTile increased blood volume cut is usually made in the wi th the problem.
TIONS, NOT SOLUTIONS .
can cause the valves to fail. · lowe r abdomen. although varFamily Medicine® is a Help your children become
allowing blood tn · back up ious t ec hniqu e~ can ·be used. weekly column. To submit criti cal th inkers by imagining
and lead to swelling, or dila- Icc packs should be kept to questions, write to M{lrt/za A. scenari os; considering possilion. in thL' vein s. Thi s is the the area for the first 24 hours Simpson, D.O., M.B.A., Ohio · ble outcomes and brainstormsame as the development of a fter surge ry to red_uce University
College
of ing solutions. Confl ict resolu ~
varicose veins in yom legs - . swelling. In catheter ablation Osteopathic Medici11e, ·P.O. lion is ·a sk ill that needs to be
fa ilure of the vein valves.
·- also done as an outpatient Box I /0, Athens, Oltio 4$701, practiced. Telling your &lt;:hilVari coceles are more wm- procedure - a sma!l punc- or via e-mail tn readerque., - dren what to do - O\' worse,
mo n on the len side , and sel- ture is made at the crease · tions @familymedicinenews.o handling the problem for them
dum occu r on both · sides. where the leg joins the body.
rg. Medical information in - does more harm than good
Us uall y there are no sympAfter surgery, the patient this column is provided as an because it creates dependency.
(2) PREPARE FOR CONtoms of this problem , and it is will be advised to use ice and educational service unly. It
FLICT:
Teach your child that
&lt;.:ommon ly fount! on a rout ine to wear a scrotal ,support. does not replace the }11dgment
physical. as wit h your son. Possible compl ications include uf your personal physician, conflict does not have to be
. Some people can have some blood elm torn1ation, infection who should be relied on to negative: it can also be ah
du ll a..:hing in the .'C'rotum · or injury ti:J the scrotal tissue or diagnose and recommend opportunity to think creativewith prolonged standing or structures. In addition, inju ry treatmellt for any medical ly. Confli ct is inevitable
si tt ing. The testicle ·on the to the artery that supplies the conditions. Past columns are because people a re different.
affec ted side is often smaller testicle may occur.
' available onlirw at wwwjam- Even best friends can .have
·than the non-affected side.
Your son m ~y need _addi - ilymedicinenews.org.

Study suggests super-strict diet may·block prostate cance(
Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD

ThuJ'sday, August

Parents can help kids prepare
Son s v~ocele ~hould prompt to handle roommate conflicts
evaluation of.testicular growth

:Gunmen kidnap senior Iraqi official =in Baghdad; five more Americans killed
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA3

BY THE BEND

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Ed1tor
•

Congress shall make no -law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiti-ng the
free exercise thi:reo..fi or abridging the freedom
· of speech, or of the press; or t!te right of the
· people praceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govrmmeutfor a redress ofgrievances.
U.S. C'onstitution

TODAY IN HI$TORY
T&lt;•Li.l)' " ·1hu• "l.1y. Aug II I he 22:llli d.1y of 2005
Thc1e .uc 1-l ~ d.11, !cit 111 the ye.u
l od&lt;~y'' H•ghl•ghl 111 Hhlo ly
011 1\uu II l\16'i IIDIIIl~ ,md loollng tha t da11ned 34
III'L'' bill~ &lt;lUI Ill the pi edoi.ll lll.llltly bi,lll W,11t s seclmn of
L O'- Am~L"k'"
. On ih~' do~lc
In !~60 tlw

11,1111m '.,

lust

Sll l'l. .: l's..., ful

s!l ver m1ll begltn

nc.u 'v11g'ill ld City. Nt!v.
In ll)O') the SOS di' l'e" "gn.1l wo~s ln st used by ,m
Amcllc.lll 'h' l' the A1.1p.d10c. oft C 1pe H,ltteras. N.C
In I') 1-l the 1·11 't kde1 ,, I p1 "one1' ,, 11ved ,11 the ISland
p 11 ~un \IL ttt.l! til S.m FI.._mu..;u) B.ty
In 19-l~. diilln g ~~nild W.11· II V1ch) govern ment othc1.11
R1 c11c' I ,1\.d puhli cll decl .u ed th.ll "th e hmu nl lthera11011
fn1 il .llllc' 1s ihc hoLu " l1cn Gcrm,my wms the war"
in 19'i() .dJ&gt;il o1c1 p.11111e1 J ,IL· k ~o n Pollo•k lhed 111 o111
' ,lu li)lnnhilc' "' '-'dent 111 East Hampton N Y
·
In f !J 7~ ciHeh nf , l,lle ,mJ lore1~11 d1g111talle' a111 Ved 111
V.ll~e.ln C111 f&lt;n the tune•.11 ,,f Pope
VI
In 19'!2 the· Vl.ill of Ame11c.l the b1 gge,t LJ S shopp1ng
111.111 "pcn,·d 111 Bloommgton. Mmn
: In 1'!97 P1es1dcnt Cl mlon mo~dc lhc tn st usc of tile htsupet.ltlon

p,,,,

WI h. lllll' - lll'tll Vt:"to dpp!Oved hy Cu ng l l' ""· reJt'C tmg th1ee
spcllu lll~

il l' IllS

Ill

Court

ld !CI

olnd loi X hills I Howevel

~lllJCk d0\\- 11 the illl t"- Jte m

the Supreme

\ ('{0 ciS

unco n s l llll -

pon.d 1
kn 1,.,, ' .1 ~0 Pre&gt;~tlem Clinton h.111ned .ill U.S nuclc,,
il''h ca lling JliS dCli &gt;IOn the 11gh1 step as we co nt11111e
p11ll 1ng h.1ck lrmn the nu cleo11 pil'l' IPICC
f'i\c ;e.n&gt; .1go The N,ill&lt;•n.d Tiansportuuon Safety
Bn.ud •ele.l'ed cv 1d e nc ~ 1cpn11 s 111 ihe Oct :l l , 1999 crash
ot EgyptAn Fl1 ght '!90 off the Ne\1 Engl.md co.ISI .•1 tran sct lpl of the cockpit vmce 1ec ordmg showed the chtllmg
clct.uis ot tl1c pilot s !utile suuggle 10 s.wc the Boemg 767
~111u 1h 217 occupo~ lll ' Po~i Buchoilloill \\Oil ihe Refolln P.ul y r• es ident,,tl nnmlll.li lll n "' " "ct'"Y bnteily diSputed
by , jJ.II Iy toundc1 Ru" PCI!&gt;I\ , uppone" "'"' chose thc1 r
own nommec. John HLH.:e lm 111 ~I n val co nvention
_One yeat dgo. Btll~url grllni..;U lts ftrst lice nse tor human
cll'nmg io1 the putpo'e ol slcm cell •e,earch The US.
women's 'occe1 te.1111 de 1e:11ed home te,un Gteece 3-0 on
{he tu st d.1 y of competit iO n 111 the ~00-l Olymptc Games
(the ope nm g Ce1e111nny lOOk pl.ICC IWO ct1ys i.Jter)
: Toddy\ B1rthd.1ys Ac t1 ess lc,ul P.1rker 1s 91 l"orme1 TV
talk show host M1kc D ou~ l "' 1s XO Actress Arlene Dahl IS
77 Rev. Jerry F,llwell " - 72 Act1css An11.1 M.lSscy IS 68
Songwllte1 -p10duc e• Kellll) G.11nble " 62 Rock IIIUSICIUn
·Jnn . Kal e (Guess Who) '' 62 Count •y smger John Conlee.
" W S111gel Em C'. um cn " 'i6 W1estler .1ctm Hulk
Hogan 1s •)'·2 Stngct Joe JcH.: kso n 1~ 1 I 'Actnl \'ttguel A
Nunc ' J1 "-11 Ac tiH -hosl Joe Roga n IS 1X Rock gullanst
C h,u he Sexton " 17 Rh) th111 -und -blues muSICian Chns
Du1e (Mmt Con u1Hon ) " ]7 H1 p-hop o~rl~&gt; t Ali Shaheed
Mul1.1mm.1d " 3'i Acto• Will Fncdlc " 2lJ Ro~ppe r Chns
Kell y (K11 s Kro" ' '' 27 S1nge1 I Bong " :!0
Though t tor rodo~y ·A pcssiiHISI " a m.u1 who looks
both 'hY' "hen lie' s ciiJSSIIl_g ,, one-WU) suect" Luu1~n ce J Pelc1. Cano~dioi n -bom cduco1101 .1nd ,1uthor of
"The PGter Pnnuple" I I9 l'l-1 990 )
&gt;

--- -- -----··--'-----------

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
l t'f/L I ~ (ll rlw n lll(lf {{/{' H dr 011/l Tlu' \lrould be In' \ Jhcm
300 ll ord1 All 1&lt;'11&lt;'11 ''"' HriJteU 111 edrrrrr ~. rrHII/ !Je "gned,
cmd rrrducl&lt; addr e11 amlieleplwne numbe1 No 111 1\ l~n ed let'~'~ Hill !w puh!nhefl LelfcJ \ \hould h(_) m good taMe,
(uldle\ ~ 111~ t '' th'\ nut J' f!' ~onal tfi C) Leftet' of thanb to or{;a.m :a rrfm\ wu.l111dn ulua/, IIIII not he m t epred for p uh/J( a/wn

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Thursday, August 11, 2005

Thursday,Augusttt,2oos

I

JI

Pohtte&lt;ll moderat es · predominate 111 the U.S. 'electorate, but the tw o part1es
are incre.a smgly capt1ves of
the1r extremes Wtll the
moderates ever nse up and
' assert th emse lves?
In the Republican Party,
they ought to do so by
dete nd1ng Senate ~1aJo r ny
Le.1der B1ll Fnst (Tenn)
.1gain st right -w1ng attacks
for buckmg Pre sident Bu sh
fand Chnsttan conse rvativ es) over embryoni c
stem-cell research
Repubh c,m mo de rate s
al sa ought to start speuktng
up lor "e mergency contrace ption" before the n g ht
makes bannm g 11 a litmus
test of party loyalty
Someone in the GOP
ought to tell Bu sh th at
" mteihgent destgn" ts not a
true sc1enliftc theory on a
par with evolution And
moderate s need to f1ght at
the state leve l to prevent
"ID" f10m bemg requn ed
te11ch1ng 111 biology cl&lt;1sses
Exce pt tor Log Cab1n
Republi can s
and
the
Republi can .
f.lnit}
Coalition. doe' anvone 111
the GOP dm t' to come out
16r ctvtl umons tpr homosex ual s and to reSJst th e
party's rel1an ce on ga} bashmg to v.in election s''
It's .1lmost impossib le fo1
u pro-cho1ce candid.lt€ to
get the GOP preSidential
nomm.ll10n. but anti -abortion mania could be the
undo1ng of the party 111 the
long run 1f Bush mstalls o1
U.S Supreme Court that
actually overturns the Roe
v W.1de dec1 s10n. ,1s the
•ellg1ous n ght expects h1m
10 do.
II •un ent nomwee John
Roberl s proves to be a vote
dg.Hn st Roe 11 will take
onl y one more n ghtiSt
appomtee to 1gmte '''uggle s 111 ewry state to b.m
abort1on. Polls show rhat
two-thirds l'l the e kctot ate

Morton
Kondracke

wants Roe 10 ren1 .1111 1h e
law of the land
There's 11 0 question tha t
th e Dcm ocr,lllc Part y "
JUSt as mu ch captive of th e
left as the GOP' ts ot th e
right U mon s, pro-cho1e e
femini sts, tnal lawyers an d
c1vil nghts libetal s co1ll th e
shot s.
Amenca-basher Michae l
Moore w.1s lion1zed at th e
last Democrati c conve rl uon MoveOn org is ,,
moiJ OC po~rty mouthp1ece
the
LeftiSis
dom1nate
De mocrat" blogosp het e
And Howard " I hate
Repllhh c.ms" Dean IS party
ch.urm~m

But the Democ1 .1t1 c Pa11y
has .1n influ ent'" ' mntle rdt e
Wlllg.
led
by
the
Demo c1at1c
Le.1ders h1p
Co unctl , v.llh wh1&lt;;h "
m1mber of 2008 preSidenliol l cand1d.ltes ate aft ilt at ed. uH: ludmg fn)nlrunnm g
Sen.
Htllary
Rodham
Clinton (NY)
There " no real eqLm,, .
lent 111 the GOP that can
Se iVe as an OlgdlliZ,III OII ,il
dnd mtc ll ec tual ba se 101
moderate 'candidate s lt ke
tonner New York M.J yo1
Rudy Glllil .ml, New Ytll k
Gov George Pat,Jki .1nd
Sen John McCam (Anz. )
Moderate giOllps llke the
Republi ca n Mam Street
Pu1tnersh1p a1 e us efuL bui
they are not pow elful , dnd
moderate office holde rs are
la rge ted
for
reg ularly
defeat by ar•h-cons~n· d·
lives from th e Club fn1
Growth, rhe hee Cong1 ess
Foundation .md th e rei!-

•

gtous n ght.
OccaSionally,
a
Republ1 can ,.moderate will
spe"k out 1n .1 provocative
op-ell, as when former s~n
John
D.1ntorth
(Mo )
chargc·u that "Republlc,m s .
h"ve transformed our party
1111 0 the pohn ca l arm of
consenauve Chnsuan~ ..
But
D,mforth ,
an
Ep•scop,ll miniSter. h,IS nu
bi1ckup
Otgd nl l&lt;I II Onal
And, whtl e hts arttcl c'
gamed some moment.1ry
attention , they sp.1rked no
mode1o~te rall y
Modet al es need 10 01 ganlle and fig ht - m bnih
p:ulles When they don't.
th ey il l-se 1vc a ce ntn st
public .md miS s a po ltttcal
op pu1tumty
A Jul y NBC/Wall Street
Journ al poll showed ihdt a
piur.11ity ot voters. 39 petce nt , regards 1tse lt as modela te comp,u cd with 33
perce nt v. ho s.1y th ey ' re
LOihCI\ d lJVC an d '22 p e l CC: Il ( who say thc )" 1e liber.11
A new Pew poll ~ how s
lh ,ll th e public s upport '
stem-cell
e mbrvo n1 c
1 eseo~ ;ch by 57 percent to
30 pe1ce nt. and th.tt 53 pet ce m

tavm~

llllow11~ g

gi:l ys

enter legal Ltrr,tn ge ment s
giv1ng them the same
n ght s '" ma11 1ed couples.
Thc·1c IS no new po ll1ng
on ~n nuace puon . hut I
wou ld be shocked If 1ts

(0

dVddahdJt V we1e not nver-

whellmngfy supported by
th e publiC.
r et th e Bush admlniStr.:tli oll 1s bu lkin g,,, app1oval
ot th e "mon11ng after pil l,"
wh1ch p1events a krtilt zed
egg II om olltach lng to Ihe
lii CIIIle Woi ll
Even th oug h thts " a
proce ss qlllt e d1 st1nct trom
abort1on , the rell g1ous n ght
1s ho st ile tOWdid th e d1ug.
and that uppo"11on has let!
lwo potent'"' 2008 candt tlates.
Patakt
' and

Republi c,m Gov.
Mi tt
Romney of Massac hu setts.
10 ve to btll s to make the
pill dVdilable wtthout a
prescnpti on.
Fn st, who 1s pro-ltfe on
eve•y oth et matter. neve r- "
theless came out fm federal fund1ng of stem-cell
research requmn g the
dc stl U&lt;;llOil of embryos
" left over" ,md destined tor
deSliUCII Oil ,It ferttllly Clill·
ICS
Dcs pnc .dl he's done for
t h ~ n ght - HKiudmg nuk•ng 11 l'lltuall y ce1tam that
fl l~Sh ' jlldi l'i.d II OmiiiCCS
wlll ge •p pmved - Fnst
" now bc 1ng .ltl.icked tor
hi s stem-ce ll VICW.
The n ght In SISts th.11 life
beg 1ns at C().n.ception and
tlldt therelore ab ort10n and
e mbry oni c •
ste m-cell
rese&lt;~rch constitute murdet
Yet . 1f thiS were uu ly the
bdsiS ol n s bel1ef. fetuses
should ~e bapllzed as soon
d S tt" s clc~u d ~oman ts
pt eg n._tnl .11H..I mt sc ~tnla ges
shoul d be the co1u sc for u
1\ mer,ll .md ·••elig1 ous burl,tL
No ·moderate would say
tho1t des t1uction of ,, human
embryo ts of nn moro1l conse quence - 11 co nstitutes,,
potemi.d human l1fe - yet
there's ground lor susptcwn th,tl some religtous
c on ~erv ,ttJv es dre as much
about pumshmg illlCi t sexual oiCIIVII y a&gt; the y a1e
.tbout s._tvm g '' ht e •·
The 1eltg1ous 11ght has
eve•y nght to be politic.lll y
assert ive So does the secu1.11 left What 's needed 1s
fot moderat es to get milt loinl and contes t the se
ex uemes
( M ou rm

Ko11df(lc ke

11

edu rn of Roll

e.\l' l 11/ll'f

Call the t re H'&gt;f'&lt;lfJet
Caprrol Hill )

of

•

Diamond's 'human comedy' shines
Among the most perstsheann g-... - ~ue contempcl,
r,ll"l es. Sandberg may h.1ve
tem delus10ns " th e myth
of ,, by go ne Golden Ag e,
Wdntcd to keep 11 vague
&lt;&gt;l1en human be1ngs were
Thdt 's no t an accusat10n :
supcnor to t'he so11y spec imy gue " " Ryno' s too
men s dround us Classtcal
smart to '~&lt; k hiS he,Jith
Gene
11 ter.1ture IS f1ll ed w1th
But he slllely knows so me
Lyons
tale s of
he 1oes
.tnd
stone :-.
dem 1gods whose exp lott s
Anyw.1y, here's the The
dwarfed those of puny
New Repub lic's John B
Even
co ntemporar ie'
Jud1&gt; on the politi ca l uverRyno was a wo nderful toncs
Homer 's " Iliad" telh ot an
Sandberg's
of
earlier ttme when g ta~t s pl.1yer, but 11 w,ts .mnoymg speec h I It: thinks ba sehe.1ring him prat'e hts own b.dl 's ,,n 1nhe•ently "conwalked the Earth
In poht1cs. v. e're often modes ty ,wd wu1 k ethiC se l v, 111vc'' gd me "Today.
told that the Found•ng while cast1 ng .tsperSIOilS bascb,d I ,md othct pro
FutheiS ll\ed lives of spot- on. unnamed othe rs In s poil s .lfe Infec ted by th e
less Chnsttan Virtue. usu- casting htm sc ll as , Jack scmuge of th e celebrity
ally by people eage r to Armstrong. AII-Amenca11 su perstar. \l' l10se spectacu
turn the Const11u11on 1nto a Boy, he ended up soundm g .id l !ca ts . ll,lll SCe lltl. and
religiou s tract Never mind hk e Eddi e H.1ske ll th e do n' t deJ')e nd upo n. l11 s
tho1t they kept s l ~ves. s mu g phon y on TV's tc:am In ha se hall. the se
dcc used eac h other 'ol '' Leo~ve it to B eo~ve1 .. " In playc" specialize 111 hil·
day,·
Sand berg tmg humc 111ns, ol te n, they
athetsm and mi scegenation my
observed
"
tl
a
guy
ca me to arc poor l1 eltlets ,md mca(th en &lt;In un speak ab le sin)
.md fo ught due ls It he lps spnng tr.un mg 20 pound s pdblc of dmn g th e lilli e
he,1v1 er than wh,n he left
to kn ow a littl e hiStory.
1h1n gs th at help th eir te.11ns
w."
co
nSltle
•ecl
out
of
he
in popul ar c ulture, how ·
Will \ lJCh as buntmg ,, mdl!
ever, nnth•ng rivals the sl1.1pe ,mtl was p10 bo1bl y 111 1nto sc onng pmt t1on . they
spoil s. p.1gc tor m1Spl.iccd troubl e '
are cnclwnted by lhe teleIn h! ~ ddy 1 The guy's ~I ~
hew wo rsl 11p . •md 110 sport
VIs io n ca m erd out llldJ jfer n vals baseb dll Which ts He rcllred 111 1997 HIS e nt to th r 11 t ea mm o~t cs.
odd. because g1ve n b.lSe - care er overlapped man y they frequentl y ch,mgc
b.dl's lon g profe ss i!Jn.d .lCII\ e or recentl y rein ed tea ms 1n search ' of more
CXISle nce. liS lllCII CUio us players he wb a"umed to mone y: and some of th em
record -keep 1n g. and tt s be tak 1ng a sla p at, ~ uch '"
h&lt;~ve t.1ken ' teroid s to
Summ
y
Sosd
one,ot
the
pop ulant y a mong hook"h
enh.111 ce th e1r .thlll ty to hn
types - I hone stl y don ' t few form er team mates homr lun s. eve n lh ough
know w h o~ t I'd do w11h out Sandberg d1dn "t pra"e 1hcsc d1u ~ s d im lnhh th e1r
11 - the game's reaL as Mark M('(i":" c .md B.11 1y othc1 sk il ls .u1d threate n
Bond,
opposed to mythi c hiSt ory
thl.' IJ ld fl'CI~ ..
Evcryb,l uy 111 Ch 1C.1go
" we ll -tlocll me nted
Oh. pko~sc All spo rl s are
So why, I "onder, du we w,IS s1ck ot Samm y. but
COilSC rl ,lll ~C . 111 teaChing
the Ide,, iildl iotl,iy s
buy 11110 th e sa me old story
re.iliSm ' llber.11" 1n that
ball players are less In th an
almos t every tnne the
th ose of the ·gos ,mel 90s Duddy's nu)ney c,m ' t he lp
B,ISe ball Hall of Fame
vo u 1111 a sl1der What
prett y
tun ny · II
1nducts new "i mmortal s" "
~naUt· R )llO an "' nnmOTtal "
Sdnd h ~ rg
\\&lt;l s htnt1n g
co1c h su mmer ' Thi s ye,lr 11
about stero1ds. he sh uulu w.IS bc1 ng a sl tck- lleldm g 1
" '" t01mcr Cuhs seco nd have sm d so Althou gh second baseman who hit
b.1 ~ema n
Ryne · Ryno"
smcc he and bdd boy Jo se well enough 10 play lett
s.•ndberg's turn to pra"e Canscco
- whose rece nt f1clll If he 'd played a
hi s
h" ow 11 dedtcat10n 1" bor•k preac hed the VIrt ues "power po Si tion :·
teamwork and ht s scorn of stero •d "JUiclllg,'' bu t ottcn&gt;~vc numbers "ouldlor LIJntemporary pldye rs changed h1 s tun e when n ' t have put h1m m the
wll(l ,s howbooll, sulk .111d Cong reS' held telev"ed Hdll of Fame
Slu-'-'Cr'
lik e Bosto n 's
can't t&gt;unt
ce

M.111ny Ramnez don't bunt
f01 ihe s.1me reason Ted
Willllun s dtdn ' t· becau se
n' d be Cl lllllllUily stupid of
u m.mage r to ask them
" Teddy Bali gam e" was no
detenstve wh11. e1ther
The l11 st petul.mt sup er
star was Achi lles. sulkm g
1n Ius tent outSide Troy In
h.!Seh.lll. how eve r. Babe
Ruth wo~s the most famou s
Amencdn o t th e 1920s. a
Lu more ~Jgmhcan l f1gure
th.111 PreSident Ha rdmg
No 1 wa; Ruth known fo.r
hiS
In ness
re g1men
M1 ckey
Neither
were
Mantl e or th e stars ol my
childhood Ste101d s or no
sle1o1ds. toddy 's players
sta y Inter bec.w se the
money's so much better.
We .ill love to see b,iseball pl.1 ycd r1 ght. dnd us an
ex-C ub S,liHiberg's cert.llnl) see n 11 pl dye d b,ldl y·
1I say ih.ll ·" " C ub s/Red
Sox f,m ) But it "s " compllc,llelL dlllicult sp.ort
th .ll 1.1kes ,Ill kinch and
rcwatd s .111 ktnd s. bo mbers
and bunt e1s, knu ckle b,illers anti flamethrowers.
str.ug ht -a rrow,
like
S.n1dberg . .tnd wretch ed
miSanthropes
lik e
Ty
Cobb
Bl .tck.
wh1tc,
Domt111cans. Venezuel.ms.
Cubans Koreans Japane se
- wel l. you get the td ea
· The g.un e is what mutters
it's th e Human
Comedy nn grass. and
eve n politi cs c,m't spm l n.
(Arka/1 \l/\

Drmoua i -

Ga ;dte to!unwi.'Jf Genl)
L\ on.\

1~

a Hatrrnwl maga-

; flle a H cud Hlmter and co·
cwtlro1 of "Till' Huutm g of
1/r r
Pt nlli ellt "
(Sr.

Matt11r ·'

2U0U). Yo11
ca n e,mml Lwnn nt ge uePre11.

(\0111 @ ,IJcglolwluet. )

Regional gas prices jump to new highs

Plan power outage

GALLIPOLIS South
Central Oh 10 gas pnccs. set
another record thiS week with
a 15 4 cents 1nc1 ease, according to ' the Automobile
Association of Amenc4
(AAA)
Th1 s latest change placed
the current average pncc of a
gallon of regular, unleaded,
se lf-serve gasolme at $2.359
There have been SIX new
weekly records set m 2005.
Accordmg to the AAAT-'uel
Gauge Report, retail gasolme

Bloodmobile next week
POMEROY - The Amen can Red Cross will hold a bloodmobile from I to 6 p.m. on Aug 17 at the Me•gs Semor Center
in Pomeroy All blood types are needed, accordmg to Cheryl
Gergely of the Red Cross, and donors may g•ve blood every
56 days
Blood donors will be automattcally entered to wm a 2005
Chevrolet Equmox, $ 1,000 or $500 m free gas or become an
mstant wmner m the "Htghway of Ltfe'' sweepstakes through
Sept. 6
,

ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

Homecoming
REEDSVILLE - The Eden U B Church located between
Reedsv1lle and Hockmgport wtll have a homecoming diner at
12:30 p.m and servtce at 2 p m. on Aug. 14 Re~ Peter
Martmdale w1ll be the speaker wtth spectal mustcal guest ,
Crossroads Messengers.

For the Record
Hit-skip ·accident solved
POMEROY - Yesterday Sara J. Cratg, 25, Syracuse, was
arrested by the Pomeroy Police Department lor her alleged .
tmolvement 111 a hll-sktp accrdent that occurred on Aug. 4 on
East Mam Street.
Pomeroy Ch1ef of Police Mark E. Proffitt satd he and
Assistant Chief Joe Kirby, Jr questioned Cra1g who was
charged with leavmg the scene, fai lure to control and dnvin g
under suspension
Proffitt credited the mvesttgat1on of Sgt Ronald Spaun and
anonymous ups for the arrest
Craig later posted bond and was released.

Death row imitate spared execution
.because he is mentally retarded
"I thmk tt was a porrect
dec1sion." satd Kate McGarry,
a New Mexico attorney who
represented Gumm
She satd tt apparently was
the first ruling m Ohw that
~o1ded a death sentence
because of mental retardation.
"We believed that we had
met all three prongs of
Atkms," McGarry satd. "We
were able, through teachers,
records and psychologists to
show that to the judge" ·
A 6-3 Supreme Court maJOrity ruled in the case that people
arrested for a kilhng will not
face a potential death sentence
1f they can show they are
retarded, generally defined as
havmg an IQ of 70 or lo~r.
The court left it to states to
develop their own systems to
ensure that mentally retarded
people are not executed.

I
I &amp;tfo«e ™ HEARING AID CENTER I
1
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes Office
_ I
1 New Location: 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH 1
FRIDAY Aug. 12, 2005• 9:00am-noon • (740) 446-1744 1
I Call Toll Free 1-8110-634-5265 for an Immediate appointment.
1The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist. I
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
1
I conversation Ia invited to have a FREE hearing teat to see II
1this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon with you f~r I
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
1
I UMWA. UAW. ARMpp, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS

----------WALK·INS WELCOME

-

-- -

AP Photo

Charles McCoy Jr SitS 111 court dunng h1s sentenc1ng heanng
111 the highway sn1per shoot1ngs Tuesday 111 Columbus McCoy
was sentenced to 27 years 111 pnson. McCoy Jr, 29, pleaded
gu1lty to Involuntary mans laughter and 10 other charges
Tuesday HIS de ath penalty tha i ended 1n a m1stnal 111 May, and
prosecutors sa1d they wou ld no longer seek execution
Mess.1ges seeki ng com- of the mo-;l senou s aggravated
ment were lett at the homes murder ch,uge agamst hnn .
or off1ces of four other JUrors. and wo11 ld h.tve bee n sat1stied
Another declined to com- w1th etther a death sentence or
ment. and no IIStlllgs could be life m pn so n without parole
McCoy's lele,Jse at age, 57 111
found tot the remammg five
John so n, 49. satd she sttli 2031 IS not enough pumshfeels , McCoy was msane, but ment. Colhns smd.
'ThiS guy walked ." he smd
ts relieved at hts plea and senAlthough they disagreed.
tence. Even though she voted
both
JUrors sa1d the deliberafor sendmg him to a state
mental hospttal , she womed tions were mostly ctv ll, but
that he would take hts med- mtense and frustratmg wlth
ication under superv1s1on, some shoutmg.
Jurors stuck poster-s tze
then stop taking it tf he were
hsts of ev1.dence and tssues
declared cured and released.
"That's a scary thought," on the JUr} room Yralls and
covered the conferenc~ tab le
she satd.
Collins, 70, satd he would with photos of shot cars
The photos "e'e espeCially
have voted to convict McCoy

Chairman: Bipartisan ethics commission puts politics aside
Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

The commtssmn 1s mvestl·
galmg Taft. a Republican. fol lowmg his acknow ledgment
that he fatied to report up to
60 golf outings as governor
Taft co11ld be charged If he
d1d not to report outmgs
pmd for by others that
exceeded $75 .
Wh1le not a law enforcement agency. the results of
commiSSion mvestigations are
often forwarded to prosecutors
for poss1ble cnmmal charges.
Last month, for example, tl1e
commiSSIOn tiled a complamt
against Brian H1cks, Taft's former ch1ef of staff, that led to
H1cks' conviction on a violation of OhiO ethtcs laws
The stx-person commtsston
1s btparttsan by law but has
one current vacancy that g1ves
Democrats a three-two edge
CommiSsion
ch.mman
Me10m Brachman, v. ho made
polttK.ll conlnbuuons 10 1.111
several years ago. sa1d the
commmee oflen 1n1e.sllgatcs
elected otftctals without
regard to thetr party ,,ttihat10n

"The commiSSion has often
Blackmo re
contnbuted
dealt w1th n1o1tters ,Jftec un g $250 to 1he camp&lt;11gn of
elected offic 1.11s .mel I'm not Democr.n Lee FISher. Taft' s
aware ot past campa1gn contn- 1998 opponent. 1n 1'197 and
butions ever inmtmg the ab•lnv 1998
to rev1ew and enforce the law.'
The co mm~sSJon
has
Brachm&lt;~n s.11d Wednesday
health) d1sc uss •ons of cases
Brachmun. u Co lumbu s unde1 re\le\\ s,ud Ann Marie
busmess o"ner and a Tracey. ,, Dcmocr.ltl c comRepublican. go~ve Taft $ 1.850 111lSSion
member
from
betwee)l 1993 - when Tdlt CulCIIlll.lll \\ho \\Ouldn't talk
was secretary of sta le- and abouil·unenl 1111esti galions
1998, v.~ e n Taft ran tor gov"We tlon 1 upera te on a parernor. accord1ng to state cu m- ll san b.ISI'. th.ll\ JUst not part
p.ugn finance records
of the diScus"ons." sa1d
JoSia h
BL1ckmore
'U Tt ,1cey.
55 . ,, Xavter
Democrat on 1he wmmiS- UniiCISity 1,1\1 professor and
ston. s.11d polillcs don·l come former uss1stunt U S attorney
up 111 d i ,CU s&gt;~o n s mclud mg .md H.lln tl to n County JUdge .
about Taft
, Hc1
conm buuons
to
Where the go,ernor is lOll· Democrats Included $200 to
cern ed. "the•e's been no d~&gt;- Humilwn Co unt y Muntclpal
aQJeement tl1o1t there 's no spe- Colllt Ju dge Tnn Black 1n h1s
c~.1l t1 eatment to be g11 en." ~002 Supreme Court race and
smd Biackmme. 70. ,, Cup1tul ' S !50 111 l\l.1ry Boyle tor her
UnJ\elsJ t) la\\r pwfessOJ and ~tu:.: ti Cct .., u rc r· ~ race. Both
tormer Cap1tal p1eS1de nt
c,mtlid .ne' Jo,t

car Shopping?

Will be g1ven rn MEIGS COUNTY by

•

COLUMBUS
Two
JUrors on oppostte Sides of the
deadlock 111 the Oluo h1ghway
shoolmgs tnal m May smd on
Wednesday that they would
vote the same way today even
after the man's gutlty plea to
II charges
The panel was deadlocked
from the moment deliberations began afte r etght days
of testimony, and never
changed over five days of
deliberations, the Jllfors told
The Associated Press
Jurors had remamed Silent
unul now because they didn't
want 'to tamt a second tnal.
But the tnal IS no longer needed because Charles McCoy J r
pleaded gu tlty on Tuesday to
manslaughter and I0 other
counts. mdudmg attempted
murder, and has started a 27year pnson sentence.
McCoy, 29, shot from h1s
car and overpasses at movmg
vehicles and butldings over
five months in 2003 and 2004,
killing a woman and terronzing central Ohw He had
stopped taking med1ca11on tor
h1s severe paranmd schizophrema, and told psychtatnsts
later th at shootmg would qutet
mockmg votces 111 hiS head.
McCoy ongmally pleaded
mnocent by reason ot msamty to 24 counts, mcludmg an
aggravated murder charge
that earned the death penalty.
After the mtstnal. prosecutors sa1d they would no
longer
seek
execution
because of his illness
The JUry voted three times,
each time 8-4 m favor of santty, jurors said Wednesday.
"The evtdence shows me
he absolutely knew what he
was domg, wrth great calculation," sard Bobby Collins, a
retired pollee officer.
"He was so divorced from
reahty,"
said
Elizabeth
Johnson, a sixth-grade teacher
who voted · for insanity. "We
all felt he was dangerous."

COMPETITIV[ AUTO RATES

COUPON

L

Coll1n s smd At least
o(ihe bullet holes on the
e1ght mo v1 ng ve h1cles hit
wet e Withm a toot of the dn ver's he.1d
The one woman killed , 62ye.lr-oid Gall KniSl ey of
Wdshmgton Coun House, was
,, passenge r The bullet came
1hrough the dn ver's Side door.
deflected upw&lt;~rd and grazed
the JUCkct sleeve of her best
f11end. Marv Cox, before
sll1kmg Kmsiey 111 the chest
"He would ha ve killed SIX
more people.· Collins said.
"He wuldn ' t JUdge the speed
ot the c..r That '~ the only thmg
th&lt;Jt '"ved those people."
Coll1ns s,ud he also used a
pm to tro~ ce tile route to overp.i sses McCoy shot from ,
usm g d map th;Jt prosecutors
had diSplayed often 111 court
None of the overpasses had
nc.u by exi t ramps, and 11 took
man y turns through w1 ndmg
cuu nlry ro.1u s to reach them.
" It took ,, gredt deal of
plunnmg. " he said
Johnson said she wanted a
mme detailed map to prove
th e argument dbout plannmg
th e routes to the overpasses
' I felt like 1here were gaps m
what we we1e presented"
Instead. she focused on the
statements by psychtatnsts for
both the -prosec ution and
defense that McCoy shot
because 11 wou ld make votces
111 hiS head stop mockmg hun
lor fa11ing to stand up to teleVISion prog• ams and ads he
thought were dtrected at h•m
One of the JUrors made the
comment that because shootmg
succeeded 1n st1lling the votces
temporanly. tl was like "selfmedicatmg.'' Johnson satd
When the JUry fmally deadlocked , Johnson was among a
few with tears streammg
down the•r face s.
She was thmkmg about the
pam that Cox and McCoy ' s
parents would have to face by
te s!l fy mg agam 111 a second
trial Then she womed that
anothe1 Jlll) m1ght vote for
the death penalty
SIX

The
COLUMBUS
state's ethics com mtsston,
currently dommated by
parts of the pie baking con- Democrats as 11 mvesugates
test w1ll be eating the p1es Repub)1can Gov. Bob Taft,
doesn't let pohllcs get m the
after the contest ts over.
"The center 1s cool and we way of 1ts deltberat1ons ,
want to mv1te everyone to members sa1d Wednesday
The
Ohio
Eth1c s
come m and have lunch and a
ptece of pte to beat the heat." Commtss•on, whtch 1s mvesJones added.
ugating Taft's fatlure to
Lunch 1s served at the cen- report several golf outmgs,
ter at II 45 every weekday for holds a regular monthly
a suggested donation of $2
meeting Thursday.
Before the meetmg, the
Those visnmg the center
th at day are also mvtted to comimss wn 's mvesugat•vebnng a chtldhood photograph subcomm•ttee was expected
of themselves under the i)ge to hear an update from chtef
of ftve. The photos wtll be mvestigator Paul Ntck and
placed on a board and a prize receive additional documents
gtven to the person who can about Taft
No acuon was expected on
- gues s who is who
Taft's
case. The comnu sFor those seniors that do
ston
's
meetmgs are closed
make 11 to the fair, Thursday,
Aug . 18 is semor day when and comm1s sion members
semm&amp;are _admttted free mto wou ldn' t talk spec ificall y
about the mves11ga11on.
the fatr unttl 2 p.m.

----------REE HEARING TESTS

1

•htllm~.

Bv CARRIE SPENCER

•

show awarded from all the
first place wmncrs.
All of the p1es entered must
be homemade by the
exhibitor anq can be one or
two cru st or have a crumb
crust brought for the compe11110n on a disposable contamer covered w1th tml or
plast1c I wrap and dt splayecl
wtth the rec1pe Exhibitors
can enter more than one p1e
Considered 111 the JUdging
wtll be the appearance . the
crust and filhng (taste and
texture ) and the ease of usmg
the rec 1pe.
Jones said one ol the fun

silllatlon be mg a closure due
to a weekend f1re at a
200.000-barrel-per-day refinery near Philadelphm
Refinery outages are espepally troubling n ght now
beca use demand tor gasoline
by U S motorist ' ts growmg
st1onge1 1egMd less of the
pn ce Domest iC tlemand for
gasoltnc ts currently' ex pandmg at a rul e of 3 percent compared to .tbout 2 percent at
thts lime last year Energy
analysh o~re say mg the
mcrca ~c " due to fa ster
growth 111 the U S eco nomy

AP Interview: Jurors still deadlocked over highway shootings case

MIDDLEPORT - A benefit dmner and hymn smg w1ll be
held to beneftt the medical expenses of Bethany Hope Spaun
on Aug 12 at the old Middleport American Legion building
on 4th Street Dmner wtll be served from II am. to 4 p m and
feature chtcken, noodl es, roll, dessert, pop The hymn sing
wtll begm at 6 p m w1th etght groups performmg. Call 9924520 for mformatton.

from Page A1

10 Iran 's pos1110n on developIng llllc ledf we,,pons. and
report s of 1mminent terrori ' t
attacks 1ns1de Saudi Arabw
Gaso line pnccs .1lso are
bemg propell ed h1 gher by
re ports of vanous refi nery
problems 111 the Umted Stdte's
that taken together may be
alfectmg as much a' 3 percent of dome stic gasol 1ne
produCt lOll
New' report' estimate up
to ,, dozen U S. retlne11es
were forced to tcmporanl}
suspend opero~ uon s m the last
two weeks th e most senou'
'

Benefit dinner ·and hymn sing

"ors
Senl

pnces moved sharpl y h•gher
over the weekend and se t
new records Wednesd,Jy and ·
today. Today \ nat1onw1de
average pncc for 'cl f- ,ervc
regular gasoline IS $2 154 per
gallon , up nearl y 7 cents per
galion from one week ago
The mcrease in gasolme
pnces IS directly rel 4teu to
skyrocketmg crude 011 pnces
wh1ch were trad1ng above
$64 per· barrel 111 O\ernight
tradmg. The world oil market
appears to have become
ex tremely nervous about posSible supply d1srupuons due

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIB UNE COM

POMEROY - Amencan Electnc Power will implement a
five-hour power outage in Pomeroy begmning at mtdmght on
Thursday to approximately 5 a 111 on Fnday, to upgrade components m the Pomeroy substat10n.1
.' Approx1mately 520 customers wtthin the followmg boundaries Will be affected· north to Buuernut and Mulberry
Avenues, west to the Pomeroy/Mason Bridge, east to Powell's
Foodfa1r, and south to the Ohio R1ver.
AEP will attempt to mform all affected customers through a
recorded message pnor to the outage

CINCINNATI (AI') - A '
man who was sentenced to
die lor killing a 10-year-oid
boy cannot be executed
because he 1s mentally retarded, a judge has ruled.
Darryl Gumm, of Hazard ,
Ky. , was convtcted m 1992
for the beating death that year
of
Aaron
Rames
of
Cincinnati Gumm, 39, and
another man lured the boy
into an abandoned buildmg,
where he was beaten \'lith a
board , a ptpe and a slab of
concrete when he · refused to
perform oral sex on the men,
prosecutors said.
A
Hamtlton
County
Common Pleas JUdge ruled
Tuesday that Gumm was
mentally retarded and · was
exempted from execution by
a 2002 U S. Supreme Court
ruling m Atkms v. Virgmia

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

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Local Briefs .

Can GOP moderates exert power in party dominated by Right?

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Let us show you how compet1t1ve our rates are Call me
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'
Friday, August 12. 2005 @ M1ddiepon Football Field
Pearl Streel Middlepon. OH tRam IA&gt;Clll!on.\leip HtaUclolool)
Showtune 730P~t T1ckeh SIOadlance.$ 15 at Gate
Kids 5 and under FREE'
Tickets available at the followmg locatiOns Pomeroy. OH-Dans's,
Farmer's Ban~ M1ddlepon. OH-Hometown Market. King Ace
Han!&lt;''are. Middleport De\)t Store Galhpohs. 0 H-Farmer.; Bank
Pt. Pleasant.
Bank
llring \ our La"n Chairs .

rour 5 dr•

For mof(' mformation
riallon¥o&gt;de M uTU!III!J5U••neo~ Cornoll"'y 8M .All

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lo'J 11100

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or mil 740·992·67;9

�•

INSIDE
' Blue Jackets sign veteran cenler..Hrdina, Page 82
Cleveland clobbers Kansas City, Page 82 ,
T.O. leaves Eagles camp, Page 86
•
• B6
Krenzel hopes to catch on WJth
Bengals, Page

___

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HO EFLIC~@MYOAILYSENTINEL . COM

MIDDt.:EPORT - Phil Din and the Dozers of
Columbus, a band which travels the continent
doing oldies and classic rock before thousands
of fans, is coming to Middleport
.
The band which emphasizes the popular mustc
of the fifties and sixties will be \'ert&lt;.mning at
7:30p.m. Friday. Au¥. 12 at then d Jv!tddlcport
Football Field, Opemng tm the Dozer s concert
will be Middleport :s sinner. Kattc Reed .
Advance tickets ai $ 10 each remam on sale at
several businesses including .Dan's and Farmers
Bank in Pomeroy. Hometown MarkeL King Ace
hardware aod Middleport Department Store 111
.Middleport. Farmers Bank in Gall,ipolis. and
Peoples Bank in Pmnt Pleasant, W.Va. They can
also be secured wtth any maJor credtt card at
222.rivercityplaymohio.ord ()I' by call tng (740)
992-6759
'
Proceeds from the .:onc-ert will go to the River
City . Players. a group · of loca l residents organized to rerform mu sic al s and plays 111 the Bend
area. Those attendmg are ask to take lawn chatrs.
The Doze rs were organized in 1966. Steve
Cabot. · the foundin g member. is described as a
captivating Jerfon~1~r with a wpnderful . stage
presence an beauttlul vmce. He also plays gutt~r. pern"sion .. keyboards, sax and drums.
.
· Mark Frye joined the· Dozcrs . m 1983 as dtd
his .younger tirother, Rick. Mark is the Dozers'
primary keyboardist. but also plays saxophone,
flute and bass gu ttar and stngs. He has recetved
two Em my awtl"rds and has a popular solo CD on
"Jack Hanna's World."
Rick is said to give the band a wonderful
musi cal heritage wi th his vast knowledge of

POIN'f Pj..EASAN'f - Thl!rsday,
Aug. ll's 'entenanment line-up at
the Meigs County Fair will feature .
local musician Garry Peck at 8 p.m. ,
foii(Jwed by Cledus T. Judd at 9 p.m.
Dubbed country music's "funny'
man," this year will be Judd's second visit to the Mason County Fmr,
with his first appearance being
exactly six years ago. Aug. II , 1999.
Another local musician. Joey
Wilcoxon of Gallipolis, will kick off
Friday's musical. festivities at 7
p.m .. and ann ual performers Rick K:
and The Allnighters will begm
singing at 9 p.m.
The week's entertainment will be
capped off with a performance by
Sammy Kershaw at 9 p.m. Saturday,
Aug. 13. Brian Billings of the fair's
entertainment cornmillee said this
entertainer likely wi ll impress
everyone with his powerful songs,'
.I
strong voice · and a· style like no
.
other. '
.
"When it's all said and done ,
Kershaw will l110SI likely be one of
the top draws in the history of the
Phil Dirt and the .Dozers
fair, " Billings added.
music from the 1950s arid '60s, which are show- Goodwin, accomplished on gu itar and piano mid
The entertainment committee is
cased in concerts in a way fans have come to outstanding on vocals, .is the newest member of made up of Billings. Kevin Durst
know and love. He is exuberant on the drums the group. A
While the llllme "Phil Dirt and the Dozers" is and Jean 'Do.olittle, and they work
and never fails, to let his dry wit come through at
unexpected moments.
. a figment of someone\ imagination , it b now a diligently throughout the year to
Tony Alfano. a veteran singer/guitar player, part of Americana ... a nostalgic link to the past schedule performers for each
upcnining fair.
has been with the band for a decade, while Craig through music of the '50s and '60s.

2005 MEIGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE ·
Saturday, Aug. 13
3-3:30 a.m. -· Market rabbit&gt; weigh-in
Market
3:30-4 p.m. poultry
4-5 p.m. - Market lambs.
breeding and open class
sheep, goat&gt; and market goats
5-6:30 p.m. Market
steers. dairy feeders , commerc.ial f eeder steer&lt; and dairy
market steers
7-9 p.m . - Market hogs
Sunday, Aug. 14
445 p.m. - Junior parade
line-up
5 p.m. - Opening ceremo,
ny
· 5:15p.m.- Parade begins.
Royalty announced following
parade
7 p.m. - Religious scr-

Building
I p.m. - Hay Show - Soil
&amp; Water Conservation Booth
I :30 p.m. - Horticulture
Judging - Coon Hunters
Building
4 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor
Pull - Small Show Arena
4 p.m. -Junior Fair Board
Auction - Livestock Show
Arena
5:30 p.m. - Jmiior Fair
Goat Market Show
Livestock Show Arena
6 p.m.- Junior Fair Sheep
Show . . followed hy Open
Class
Dairy _ Show
Livestock Show Arena
7:30 p.m. - Demolition
Derby - Grandstand
8 p.m. · Hill Stage
Entertainment
II p.m. - Gates close

vices
Monday, Aug. 15
Sponsor of the Day:
Hendrix Heating &amp; Cooling
and Baum Lumber Co.
7 a.m.- Gates open
9 a.m. - Junior Fair 4-H
Horse Show - Horse Arena
Junior Fair
9 a.m. Pbultry .Show. followed by
Open Class Poultry Show
9 a.m. - Little Mi ss and
Mr. Contest - Hill Stage
I0 a. m. - Drart horse
Show - Grandstand
10 a.m. ·Junior Fair
Livestock
Dairy Show Arena
Noon - Bicycle Drawing
- . Hill Stage
Noon - ~ Flower Sliow
Judging
Senior Fair

Thesday, Aug. 16
Sponsor of the . Day:
Carmichael Equipment
7 a.m. - , Gates open
8 a.m. - · Junior. Fair Rabbit
Show - Small Show Arena
I0 a.m. - Ahtiqlle Tractor
Pull - Pull Track
Noon - Bicycle Drawing
- Hill Stage
I p.m. - Open Class Beef
Show, followed by the Junior
Beef Breeding - Livestock .
Show Arena
I p.m. - Antique Tractor
Pull - Pull Area
4 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor
Pull - Small Show Arena
5 p.m. - "Dairy Steer Livestock Show Arena
5:15 p.m. -· Dairy Feeder ,
,. 5:45 p.m. - Commercwl
· Feeder Steer Show

Ole Car Club sets annual show in city park
'

..

GALLIPOLIS -· The 27th
Annual Ole Car Club Car
Show will be held Saturday.
Aug. 13. at the Gallipulis City
Pai"k.
For a· fee of $ 10. anyone can
enter their antique, modified
or spe~ial interest car, truck,
farm tractor or motorcycle.
Registration will be between 9
a.m. and noon . Judging wiil
begin at noon .
·Ninety-one awards will be
presented to the winners at 4
p.m., seven of which .will be
special awards for best Ford.
Chevrolet , Mopar, best of the
rest, best project car, b,est pain
and best display . .
The public is invited to
attend the show, view the vehicles on display and enjoy the
entertainment. all fre e of
·charge. Entertainment will be
provided by the French Art
Colony Chorus from 12 : 15
until I p.m .. and by the barbershop quartet. "Time Line."
from I :45 to 2:30p .m.
The Community Health and
Wellness Department of the
Holzer Medical Center will be
on hand to 'offer free health
screening~ fru1n uoon until 4
p.ni. The Gallipolis Volunteer
Fire, Department will provide
food and refreshments at·thetr
trailer on First Avenue during
the day. and )he River Valley

Key Club will offer desserts in
the park.
The Millennium Force 4-H
Club will be sel ling hot dogs
and pop on Second -A venue
near the entrance to the park.
The Ole Car Club Inc. of
Gallipoli s was established and
incorporated as a nonprofit corporation 27 years ago, and
presently has 30.members. The
club conducts many cruise-ins
each year at different locations
in the county. Cruise-ins· differ
frDm car shows vehicles ·are
not j udged.out are displayed for
the public to view and also serve
as a social event for the owners.
Abolll I0 cruise-ins were
scheduled rhis year. The main
.event each year is held on the
second Saturday in August and
is one of the largest car shows
in southern Ohio. As many as
200 vehicles have entered this
show in previous years.
Members judge the vehicles
entered in the car show and
awards are given to the winners in different classifications. Food is always available
and there is li vc entertainment
provided in the aftern(Jon.
The show is 8 nice time to
social iLe and reminisce · while
looking over the ve hicle:, and
owners &lt;u·e alwaJs eager to
talk about thei r car. truck, tractor or motorcycle.

Thursday, August 11, 2005

Entertainers round out
Mason County Fair

to

Dozers

Phil Dirt

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,
_..._August 11, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

•

as

.
Submitted·photo

Classic cars line the Gallipolis City Park during one of the past
cruise-ins sponsored by the Ole Car Club hie. of Gallipol is.
This year's cruise-in is Saturday at the park. Registration
begins ill 9 a.m. ·

Livestock Show Arena
6 p.m . . - ·open· Horse
Show -Horse Arena ·
8 p.m. - Adam D. Tucker
- Grandstand
·
8 p.m. - . Hill Stage
Entertainment
II p.m. - Gates close
Wednesday, Aug. 17
Sponsor of the Day: Pepsi
and Dettwiller Lumber (All
children 12 and and under
admitted until noon for free,
hand stamp to ride will cost
$5)
·
7 a.m. - Gates open
8 a.m. Junior Fair
Market Hog Show - S.how .
Arena
Noon - Bicycle Drawing
- Hill Stage
Noon - 4-H Flower Show
- Junior Fair Building
2 p.m: - Kids Games Livestock Show Arena
2 p.m. - Style Revue Hill Stage
4 p.m . - Kiddie Tractor
Pull - Small Show Arena
8 p.m. - .38 Special ·Grandstand, reserved seating
available
8 p.m. Hill Stage
Ente.rtainmerit
II p.m. - Gates close

'I0 a.m . - Kiddie Tractor
Pull of Champions - Sn\all
Show Arena
Noon - Bicycle Drawing
- Hill Stage
·
I p.m. - Harness Racing
- Race Track
2 p.m. Junior Fair
Awards .,. Livestock Sale
Arena
6 p.m. - Truck Pull - Pull
Track
7 p.m.- Junior F&lt;iir Dance
Night - Live stock Show
Arena (sponsored by . AEPPomeroy employees)
8 p.m
Hill Stage
Entertai nmem
II p.m. - Gates ci(Jse

Saturday, Aug. 20
Sponsor of the Day:
~awasaki Motorsports
7 a.m. - Gates close
g._ a.m . - Roll call for
Market Livestock members
- Livestock Show Arena
8 a.m. - 4-H Fun Show ,
Horse Arena
9 a.m. Pretty Baby .
Contest- Hill Stage.
I0 a.m. - Market Rabbit
and Poultry Sale Livestock
Show Arena
II a.m. - Market Goats Livestock Show Arena
II a.m. ATV . Drag
Thursdav, Aug. 18
Racing - · Pull Track
Senior Citizen Day .
II :30 a.m. - Dairy Market
Sponsor of lhe Day: Feeder Sa le
Livesiock
Ridenour Gas· (Senior citi- Show Arena
Dairy
zens free until" 2 p.m.)
Noon
Live,tock
Sweepstakes
7 a.m. - Gates open
9 a.m, - Junior Fair Goat Show Arena
Noon - Bicycle Drawing
Show
Noon - Bicycle Drawing • - Hill Stage
- Hill Stage
I p.i11.- Market Steer Sale
Noon
Open Class - Livestock Show Arena
I :30 p.m .. - . Commer~ial
Flower Show Judging Senior Pair Building
Feeders Steer . Sale
I p.m. - Harness Racing Livestock Show Arena
- Race Track
2 p.m. - Market Lamb
Livestock Show
4 p.m . - Kiddie Tractor Sale Pull - Small Show Arena
Arena
6 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor
3' p.m. - . Dairy Market
Pull -S mall Show Arena
Steer Livestock Show
8 p.m. ~Hill Stage Arena
Entertainment
J:30 p.ill. -. Market Hog
II p.m. - Gates close
Sale · Li vestock Show
Arena
5 p.m. - ATV Pulls
Friday, Aug. 19
Sponsor of the Day: Grandstand
7 p.m. - Motocross
Ridenour Gas
7 a.m. -· Gates open
Grandstand
9 a.m . - Jun.ior Fa'ir Pet
8 p.m. Hill Stage
Show
Small Show Entenai nment
II p.m. - Gates close
Arena

Double reverse: Edwards, Brown~. finalize deal
BEREA (API .- Rookie
wide receiver
Braylon
Edwards agreed to terms on
a five -yea r contract late
Wednesday . night with the
Cleveland Brown s, ·ending
his holdout and a bizarre day

of negotiations. ·
Ectward.s. the No.3 overall
pick, will sign his contract
on Thursday and practice
with the Brown s for the fir st
time, a person within the.
league told the Associated

Browns claim offensive lineman
BEREA . (AP) The
Cleveland Browns claimed
o!Tensive lineman Dave
Yovanovits off waivers from
the New York Jets and
waived injured lineman
Greg Osika on Wednesday.
Yov.anovits, a seventh-

rou.nd draft pick in 2003;
spent the last two seasons
with . the Jets. He played in
four games, mostly on specia! teams, in 2004.
· Osika .had been sidelined
all of training camp with a
toe injury.

Press on .
the condilion
of
anonymity. ·
T h e
,s d u r c e
asked
to
Notebook

Come on over Bob's
the best tasting, freshest
produce in town••• at
reasonable prices,
satisfaction guaranteed!

aw.ay in a lhree-ca r car&lt;JV;Jfl

remain

unidcnti t:ied due to the sensitivity of
the negotiations between the
Browns and agent Lamont
Smith.
It
appeared E&lt;:lward s
would sign his deal hours
earlier after arriving at the
team's headquarters, but
things took a strange turn as
he and Smith bolted after

Saturday, 'August 13
Point Pleasant at Hurricane , 10 a.m.
Hannan at Harts, 11 a.m.

Clay County

a:t Wahama , noon

Tuesday, August 16
at Jackson. 10 a.m
Riv er Valley at Oak Hill, 10 a.m.
South Gal~a at Ports. Notre Dame, 10 a.m.
Eastern at Parkersburg Catholtc, 6 p.m.
Southern vs. Alexand er. stteft tme TBA
Valley vs. Gallia Academy, siteltime TBA
M~ig s

Thursday, August 18
Bluetield vs. Po1nl Pleasant (at latdley
Field ), 3 p.m.

STAFF REPORT
SPORT S@MYDAILYSE !'ill NEL. COM

Friday, August 19
Trimble at Me1gs, 10 a.m.
W tlliamstown at Eastern, 6 p.m
G . Beckley Chrisllan at Hannan ,• 6 p.m.
OVC Previ ew al Coal Grove, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Southeastern, 7 p.m .

MASON. W.Va . -· On
Sunday. Sept. 18 at Riverside
Golf Course. Pleas~nt Valley
Hospital will host the Annual
Fall Golf Scramble. Included
in an array of prizes will also
be til e opportunity for one
lu cky go lfer to shoot for $ r.
million.
In
addi tion.
Turnpike of Gallipolis will
sponsor a hole where a holein -one will win a player a

Saturday, August 20
W1rt County at Southern , 5:30p .m
W ahamil at Midland Trail . tO p.m.

OVP SchEdulE
GALL IPOLI S~ A schedule of upcom1ng coMege
and h1gh school varsity sporting ~:~vents 111volv1 ny
IGams !rom Gafl1a. Me1gs and Mason counties .

Today's game
Golf
Point Pleasant!Buflalo at
(Riverside ). 10 a.m ,

new car.

The format for the tourna-

Wallama

Monday, Aug . 15
Golf
Meigs, River Valley, Gallta Academy at
Ironto n lr:tvitational. 8:30a .m.
Eastern at Fox Firo. 2: 15p.m
W ahama at Bulfalo {Deer Au"n). 2 p .m .

men~ j:-, a four-per:-;or1 scramble with a shotgun s t~rt at I0

·

Contaci Information
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
E·mall- sports@mydailysenttnel.com

SP9Wi

S.t~Jf

Brad Sherman. Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342 , ext. 33
bsherma n @ mydailyt ribun~ . com

Bryan Walters.• Sporls Writer
(740) 446·2342. ex1. 23
bwalters@ mydailytribune.c:om
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(304) 675·1333 . ellt . 19
Ierum@ mydailyregtster com

to find ...:nmrnon ground. The

without fin ishing the deal.
.&gt;idt'.s h,11·e been hung up on,
"'You. don't lw ve a deal among othe r thing,, the conuntil you ha ve ~ deal," . tra~t·s length, maxt mum
Smith. sitt in g in the pas,en- value
and
guaranteed
ger seat of an SUV uriven money.
by Edwards' fathe.r. Stan.
In the pa-'1 rew days,
said at about 6:30 p.m. they've been discussing a
"We're leaving Cleveland." five-year package - a conThey didn't · .get far as cession In a , request b"y
Sm ith stayed in touch with Smith.
the club and was ahle to
Following
practice.
·complete- -a contr act th at Browns
coac h
Romeo
cou ld pay . Edwards nearly
Please see Edwards, 86
$20 million in guaranteed

Riverside,:
"PVHto
hold golf
.scramble

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds' Ryan. Freel watches 01fter hlttting a solo horne run off Chicago Cubs starting pitcher Rich Hill in .the first
inning at Wrigley Field Wednesday in Chicago.

Cincinnati sweeps Cubs at Wrigley
CH ICAGO (AP) - Ryan
Freel homered on the fir st
pitch. of the game and the
Cinciimati Reds sent the
Chicago Cubs to their
eighth straightloss - tying
il season high - with an 82 romp Wednesday. ·
Eric IYiilton pitched seven
strong fnnings and Freel's
sing le keyed a seven-run
fourth as the Reds. complet-

ed a three-game sweep:
The Cubs (54-60) fell six
game:; under .500 for the
first time this season.
·ch icago also lost eight in a
row approaching the All · St.ar break - · it has not
dropped nine straigh t since
May 2002.
·
Freel was 2-for-3. driving
in three runs and scoring
two before leaving with a

strained right quadriceps.
He sent the first pitch from
Rich Hill (0-2) bcy(Jnd the
left-field bleachers for his
third homer of the season
and first leadoff shot of his
career.
Ken Griffey Jr. added a
single and double for the
Reds.
Cincinnati broke it open
in the fourth in tying a sea-

a.n1. Same day registration
j:)egins at Y a.m. Prizes for,
rirst. second and third place
teams wil l he awarded. as
well as closest to the pin and
longest drive. Lunch will be
provided and food and beverage s wi ll be available
throughout the day. A drawing for door pri zes will fol-

son high for ru,ns in an
inning. Freel hit a two-run
single and there were three
ba ses-loaded walks.
Milton (6-12).allowed a
run on four hit s. strikin Qout
three and W&lt;tlkin~ 'o ne.
After Michael Barrett's soh• .
homer in the second. he
retired the next 15 batter,.

Proceeds from the tournament' will hcncfit the newlynrgani7.cd Pleasant Valley
-Hospital
Foundation.
Currently. the foundation is
cmHJucti"ng a capital campaign to rai'lie fund~ for con-

Please see Sweeps, 82

Please see Scramble, 82

low the tournament.

PLEASANT VALLEY·HosPITAL ANNUAL FALL SCRAMBLE
All proceeds go to the Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation
r--~~---------------,

~

1

• Four-person best ball scramble · Shotgun start at 10 a.m.

•s60/player for advance registration 0~ s65/ player for same day registration
• Platinum, gold, silver and bronze level sponsorships available
• For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, ht. 1326

....J

'

Onfr nne playt'r allmred 1rfth 11

I
I I Golfer A:
I
'( Handicap:
I
I
I IGolferB:
II · &lt;t Handicap.·
I

I 1 Golfer C: ~
I
I
fi.H~:
I
I IGolfef D:
·I

1

Make all checks pay~1ble to the
Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation.
Please completefrmn, detach
and send vo:ith payment to :
PLEASANT VALLEY BOSI'ITAL
COMMUNITY RELATIONS
'
'
ANNUAL FALL SCRAMBLE
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
POINT PLEASANT, W\' 25550

·• .

.\finiml/111 '"''"' handiC&lt;IJ' o/ -Ill.

1

Riverside Golf Course (Mason, WV) · .Soft spike facility

LL

~I

I

• Sunday, September 18, 2005

'·

Two Convenient Locations:
114 Mile North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge Mason, WV
Phone (3D4) n3·5323
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart) Gallipolis,
(7 40) 441&gt;•11

ncgottation' hit a snag .
money.
Th e pair.. along _with
Smith and the Browns had
Edwards" parents and other exc han ged a.&gt; many as seven
fami ly memhers, d rove propn.&gt;al' while stru ggling

...

'

-

- -

_ .

" Handicap:

I
I
1 .I (
1

hallt~icilp 111/di!r

!

)·Hole Sponsorship - $100

HowwouldJVuliki!roldL'tcdonsignage'

I
I

I
I I (

1

'

10.

1

I
I
I
I
I
I
II
l

I
I
I
I
I
I'

·L

I
.I
1
I

I
I
) Donation

I
I
-1 IGRANDTOTAL:
I

I
I·
I
I
1
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�'

Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel ·
•

:~ationa/ HockEy LEaguE

,.

~Blue Jackets

sign veteran
:center to .one-year contract

. COLUMBU S (AP) - Jan
·Hrd ina, a center wh o has
'played with three teams 1n
hrs six seasons Ill the NHL.
Sl?lned a one-year contract
wnh the Co lumhu s Blue
Jac kets on Wednesday.
: Hrdma. 29 . has 9 1 goal&gt;
:and 173 ass ist-s in 438 caree r
·ga mes with the Ptttsb urgh
Pengums. Phoe ni x (i:oyoles
and New Jersey Dev il s.
The 6-foo t, 206-po unu
center is the fi rst offensive
;Player to srgn a free- age nt

contract with th e Blu e
Jacke ts srnce the locko ut
e nded. Earlier, the tea m
s ig ned de fense men Ada m
Foote and Brya n Berard and
goaltender Martrn Pruse k.
The Blue Jac kets we re
looking lor a veteran cen ter
to work with nsmg oiTenSive
stars such as Ric k Nas h and
Ni kola t Zhcrdcv.
" He has played wrth the
ga me's best player s in Marr o
Lemieu x anJ JdJomir Jag r
and has al so exce lled 111 a

more defe nsive- minded role.
so he has proven hi mself in
all situ atrons... Colu mb us
presr den t and ge neral n\a nage r Doug Mac Lean sfi id.
"He wrll be a great co mplemeilt to our group ot forward s."
A nutrve
of Cze ~h
Rep ublic' . Hru in.r has col·
lee ted at least 25 .1ss ists and .
40 point s in five of hi s srx
NH L se aso ns
He has
ap pea red in 45 playoff
games

Columbus
bids to host 2008 U.S.
.
:Olympic Trials in track and field
.

combmeJ to submit the 250page brd on Wednesday. The
I0-du~ trials - &lt;tt ~Whi c h the
natron s track and held team
would be chosen to compete
m BeiJ'ing - would be he ld
June 26 to July 6 on the Ohio
State campus.
Sacramento. Cahf.. hosted
the U.S. Olympic track trials

COLUMB US (A P)
:Oh10's caprwl city rs htddmg
to host the 2 00 ~ U S
.Qlympic tnal s in tm&lt;: k ami
field at Ohro State 's Je"e
-Owens Memori al Studrum
: Ohi o State, the Greater
:Colulnbu s
Sports
·Commr ss ron and USA Track
&amp; Field 's Ohto A"oc iation

Scramble

· rn 2000 and agam in 2004.
The 2004 event drew 172 .000
people. accord ing to fi gures
provrded by the Greater
C 1 b s
s0t
0 um u
P. r s
Commi sswn.
The Jesse Owens stadlllm,
completed m 200 I. has per·
manent seating for I 0,000.

There are platmum , gold, crated.
PVH res pectfully requests
sil ver and bronze le vel spon·
that
all teams. players, sponsorships available. In addi·
tion. hole and/or food and sorships and donations be
beverage sponsorshtps may submitted on or before Sept.
be purchased tor $1 00/each 10, 2005 .
For more mformation
Appropriate, professional
signage will be di splayed to pl ease call
the
PYH
advertr se all sponsors. In Community
Rel~tion s
addttlon. an y donation that Department, (304 ) 675-4340,
can be used as a prize or extensron 13 26 Cil r vi sit the
giveaway item wrll be appre· Web site ,\t www.pvalley.org.

from Page Bl
strucuon wrthin the facilit y.
The
P.le asc~ nt
Vall ey
Hospi ta l
Annual
Fall
Scramble rs a uni4ue and
pnme opportuni ty for businesses to market their servtces and or products.

Sweeps

three-plus innmgs. He left
after walkmg m two runs
with no outs in the'fourth .
After allowmg leadoff sin·
g les to Adam Dunn and
Austin Kearns. Hill walked
Edwtn
Jason
LaRue ,
Encarnacion and Milton to
grve the Reds a 3- 1 le.rd.
Michael Wuertz relieved,
and the rut\S and walk s contrnued to mount.
Freel greeted h11n with a

from Page Bl
Kerr y Wood pitched a
scoreless mnth for the Cubs
in his third relief appearance
thi s
season .
Nomar
Garctaparra hit an RBI single in the bottom half
Hill allowed srx mn s on
four hit s and lour walks in

ThJJrsday, August 11,

www. mydailysentinel.com

'

srn gle and Gnffey hit an RBI
do uble with one ou t. With
two outs, LaRue drew a
bases-lo&lt;tded walk for an 8- 1
lead .
In hi s last two starts. Hill
has allowed 13 runs and II
htts m 4 1-3 mnings. That
mcludes a seve n.-run , I 1-3inning outing against the
New York Mets on Friday
Ba11ell !leu 11 111 the second
when he hll IllS 12th homer.

2005

Help Wanted

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
- Grady Sizemore hit a
grand slam and added an
RBI si ngle to power
Cleveland pasr Kansas City
6-1 Wednesday night, handing the hapless Royals therr
team record-tymg 12th
strarght loss
C. C. Sabathia (8-9) went
six inmngs. giving up seven
hits and one run . with six
strikeo ur- and one walk
After losing 4-3 to New York
in therr last home game, the
lndi.ms are 5-0 on a sixgame trip to Detroit and
Kansas C ity
The Royals. one nr ght after
becoming th e thml maJor
league home team to give up
I I runs in the ninth inning,
matched the tr cl ub-record
12-game los in g streak of
1997 It 's the longest streak
in the maJors lht s year.
The Roy.tls have not won
srn ce Jul y 27 when they ral lied I rom fi ve runs down to
beat the Whtte Sox 6-5 in 13
rnnm gs. In thetr last four
games, they' ve allowed 46
nms.
Ri ght -hander
Zack
Greinke (3- 14) went 4 1-3
innings and re mained the
losingest pitcher in. the
majors. He gave up seven
hits and four run s, with tour
walks and four strikeouts.
Sizemore, who was 3-for-3
with two singles and two
walks. set a career high for
RBis in a game and has
reached ba se in seven
straight plate appearances.
He hit a 3- 1 pitch in the sec-

0

ond for hts ftrst maJor league . Brown lined out to shortstop
grand slam.
Jhonny Peralta. Earli er in the
The lndwn s lo.rded the mning, . Coco Crisp made a
bases on singles by Je fl great drving catch to save a
Lt efer and Aaron Boone and nm.
a one-out walk to No. 9 hitter
Cnsp had an RBI single in
Casey Blake. Si zemore's the eighth.
homer earned 408 feet over ' Kan sas City man ager
the fence in n ghl-center.
Buddy Bell was ejected in
Blake, extending hi s hit- the ninth mning by home
ting streak to II games, dou- plate umpire Tim Tschrda for
bled off Shawn Camp with arguin g from the dugout.
one out m the sixth and made I Noies: According to the
it 5-1 on Sizemore's RBI sin- El ias Sports Bureau . the
gle.
Indians on Tuesday night
The Royals got a run in the were the third road team in
third on an RBI double by major league history to score
David DeJesus, who broke a • II run s in" the nmth . The
l·for-32 skid.
Chicago White Sox did it
Sabathia's biggest pitch Au g. 19. 1970, aga inst
came in the fifth when the Boston and the Toronto Blue
Royals had the bases loaded Jays di d it Jul y 20, 1984,
with two out and Emtl against Seattle.

fractured skull , but IS listed m
stable condition, surd Andy
Barch, spokesman for the
Milwaukee Brewers aftiliate .
"The team was shaken up at
lirst, but the players were
relieved to know that he was
OK before he was taken to the
hospital," Barch sard. "He
was conscious on the scene.
he knew what day it was and
he knew who was pitching
that ni4\ht "
Cur11s was 89-97 wrth a
3.96 ERA in 438 games for

Boston. St. Lours. San
Francrsco, San Dtego and
California between 1970 and
1984.
Jun Rooney. the Brewers'
mmor league pltchmg instruc·
tor, wrll take Curtis' place for
the rest of the season.
· Pitchmg prospects on the
West Virg11ua staff include
Mark Rogers. whom the
Brewers selected with the No.
4 overall pick in last year's
draft, Yovani Gallardo and
Josh Wahpepah

MLT/MT

PART TIME ,

Pleasant Valley Hospital is · currently
accepting resumes for a part time
Pharmacist. B.S. Pharmacy. Pharm. D.
Pharmacy or Ph. D Pharmacy from
accredited college or university. WV
State Pharmacist Licensure. Two years
pharmacist experience preferred.
Hospital experience preferred.
Excellent salary, holidays. health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, . long·
term disability and retirement.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/ o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340 Ext. 1414
www.pvalley.org
'

Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit
healthcare facility, currently has an open
position for the following :
PER DIEM
MLT/MT for Evenmgs
/Nrghts/Weekends. Baccalaureate degree
rn Medical Technology or related field
plus eilgtbtllty for ASCP and/or Associates
Degree 111 applied sctence or related field
plus eligibtlity for certrfication by ASCP.'
Three years or greater staff tech expenence preferred. Must have or be immedrately eligible for WV license.
Send resume to·
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dnve
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340 Ext. 1414
Fax : 304·675·6775
www.pvalley.org

LEGAL NOTICE
The Unknown Heirs.

Devisees, Legatees,
Administrators ,
Executors
and
Ass1gns of Mildred

Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Health
is currently accepting resumes for
one full-time Occupational Therapist
and Speech Therapist to provide
·
home health visits.
For more information contact Trina
Hannan at '304;675· 7400.
www.pvalley.org

ANEOE ·

•

lows, to wit: Being Lot

Deceased, whose last

Addition to Syracuse,
excepting six feet off
the north end of said

and whose present
place of residence is
unknown w111 take

notice that on Aprlt
15, 2005 at 2: to p.m..

Chase
Manhatlan
Mortgage
Corporation llted Its

complaint In Case No.
05-CV-038 In the

Court ol Common
Pleas Meigs County,

Ohio altegrng that the

above · named

tot deeded by R.H.
Bridgeman to Issac

Carleton as recorded

In Volume 43, Page
407, Deed Records of

son of default of the
Defendanl(s) in the

payment of a promissory note, according

Delendant(s). hove or

to Its tenor, the condl·
lions of a concurrent
mortgage deed given
to secure the payment of said note and

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

below:

same has become
absolute.
The Petitioner prays

that the Detendant(s}

named

above

be

required to answer
and set up their Inter~
est'ln said real estate

or be lorevar barred
of any !lens, and the
sale of sllld real
estate, and the pro ~
ceeds ol sal~ sale

Meigs County.
applied lo the pay·
The Petitioner further mont of Petitioner's
alleges that by rea- Claim tn the proper

claim to have an
interest In the real
estate
described

order of Its priority,
and for such other
and further relief as is

Your Ad,

,.

Oftfee !lowe-~

Word Ads

'

Oe~cltirU.

Mond a y - Friday for Inse rtion

In Next Day's Paper
,
Sunday In - Column: 1 : 00 p .m.

r

FouNt&gt;·

3 Krlten s 4 months old very
cute (304)593·2644

--::----::---

~ r t\ens

r

YARIJ S,\i,E

pn

YARtJ SALE·

70

Call (740) 441

GAt .tJI~ JIJS
Free to good horne·male
Orange House Cnt 3 years
old declawed and great 175 Te11as R~ Fn -Sat 125
gal aq uar1um, baby 1tems
wrtrr kidS 740·949·2 122
clo thes household good.
Mother ca t &amp; three liiLttans much more
hlltens 10 good home
1710)446 171&lt;1
3 fam1!y yard sale 11 670 St
Rt 554 'Ch1ldrans. • teens
Very lr1endly full blooded.
brand name clothes basRottweller to good home
kels toys books Fn- Aug
only Call (7•10)446-83 18
12 95 SaT - Aug i3, 9·5

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

t to

Excellent salary. holtdays. health insur·
ance single/ family plan, dental plan, lrfe
insurance, vacatron, long-term drsabiltty
and retirement.

Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan , lrfe insurance, vacation , long·
term disability and retirement.

For more informatron:
· Pleasant Valley Hospital .
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Porn! Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675·4340 Ext. 1414
·www.pvalley.org

~·
ANEOE

'

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
~oint Pleasant, WV 2555p
(304) 675·4340
www.pvalley.org

..

AAIEOE
•

TrY the
Classifieds!!

Bu s iness Opporlunity ......... .. ..................... 210
Bu s ines s Trainlng .. ......... .... .... .................... 140

Campers &amp; Motor Homos ........................... 790
Camprng Equipment.. ................................ 780
Cards of Thanks ...... , ................................010
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 190
Electrlcai/Refngeratlon ...... .................... .. -.840
Equipment for Rent ....................•.....•....•..... 480
Exca vating .............. ................... .............. .... 830

Farm Equipment .. ...................................... 610

Farms for Rent......... •• ............................. 430
Farms for Sale .. ······ ···-·· ................. ....... .. . 330
For lease ..•.. .. ..•....••...•..•.••.•.. :•••..•••..••...•• •.! •• 490

Furni shed Rooms ....................................._ .. 450
General Haullng ......... ... ............................... 850
Glveaway ............... ............ .... -•..•..•.. _...•••.•••.•040

Happy Ads .......................... .........................OSO
Hay &amp;Grain ........................................... ,....640
Help Wanted ...................... .......................... 110

of September, 2005.
By: Reimer, Lorber
&amp;Arnovltz Co., L.P.A

Home Improvements..................................810

Manhattan

Homos tor Sate ........................................... 31.0
Household Goods ............ .........................S10

·

J. Chernek,

Help Wanted

Graduate of accredited surgrcal technology program or equivalent experr ence
requrred Certified ORT preferred.

Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Buildrng Supplies. ... .. .. ......................... 550
8uslness and Buildings ......................... 340

For
ANew Home?

Help Wanted

.

Help Wanted

NOW
HIRING

Houses for Rent ................. ..... .................... 410
,!n Memoriam •......... _. .......... .. .... .................... D20
Insurance ................................ ........ ·-··· ·-···-··130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenl........................ 660

Livesiock ..............•. ··············-········ ...............530
Lost and Found ...............................-....•...... 060
Lots &amp; Acroage............................................ 350
Misc ellaneous .. ......... ,..................... ......... ....170
Misc ellaneous Merchandise ..••....•..........•..540

' Mobile Homo Repair ..............,. ....................860
Mobile Homes for Rent.. .. .: .................. ...... 420

Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320

Money to Loan ........................................... 220

Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers.........................740

Now Interviewing Positions
For Our Point Pleasant Location
Open Interviews For:

Servers • Cooks • Prep Cooks
Pleaee Apply 0
JIVIDEN'S POWER EQUIPMENT
412 State Rt. 7 North
Galllpc&gt;lls, Ohio

Mu sical instruments ... ..... ······-······.......... 570
Person als ..........................,........................005

Pels fo r Sale .............................................. ..560
Plumbing &amp;Heating .................................. 820

Pfofesslonal Services... ..................-........ 230

Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................. 160
Real Estate Wanled .....................................360
Schools Instruction ................................... ISO
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer . .......................... 650 ,
Situations Wanted ..................................... 120
Sp8ce for Rent-.................................1.. ......... 460

Sporting Goods .......................................... 520
SUV's lor Sale ..............................., .............. 720
Truck s for Sal e .......... , .........,.................. .. 715

Upholstery ........................................... 870

Vans For Sale ...... .............................. 730
Wanted to Buy .......................................... 090
fur{~wr

lnfonnmion Please Cllfl ( 304) 786-03 11
Greal Fuod, Great People, Great Pay
A Great /'lace to Work . What are y~ri rn tire mood for ?
Advancement OpportlJMieS Available.-

Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ................. 620
Wanted To Do ........................................... 180
Wanted to Rent.. ....'................................. 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis .........................,........ 072
Yard Sale·Pomeroy/Middlo ......................... 074
Ya rd SH.Ie·Pt. Plea s ant. .............................. 076

I

170

310

Hm11.'
HlR SAI.I.

A huge Allmmage Sale for
Project lifes ave r Au gusl
111h- 121h 9aiT\·5pm, at old
Cen tervi lle
School ...J
Sponsored by Raccoon
Townsh1p Cr1 me Watch
Follow ye llow sm iley-face
s1gns

MaintenarJce Worker- H1gh
School
D1plomatGED
reqwred Pos1t1on peliorms
general cmpentry, electncal
plllmbmg pa11111119 am.J yard
work at mu ll1ple work s1tes
Expenence 1n the areas of
carpentry eloctncal and
plumbmg p1el erred Must
have or be w1lllng to obtan'
COL l1cense w1th passenger
Pos 111on
endorsement
req Uires trave l m Galha
Jac~son and Me1gs counti es

I HAT6 tT
lf/fl'f.N '&gt; Hr;

''

~"5S

Fnday 12th, Saturday 13th,
9am-5pm 17933 Route 7S,
Crown City, Ohm 3 fam1ly
household 1tems. g1rls, boys.
lad1es and mens name
brand clothi ng All s1zes and
lots more

&lt;;"oMr:&gt;Wtt~

Allltl l-f1btVGS
M-6
p,~Ht.oliD -

lndiVIdlJal lookmg to help '
pay bills Yard sale 1tems
acceptod
(74Q14 41 ·9 152
leave message

i

t§f~

named above are
required to answer on
or before the 15th Day

Ronald

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full time (all
shifts) Registered Nurse in the ICCU
De partment. Applicants must have a
current West Virginia license. Previous
JCCU experience preferred .

(330} 425-420!
(7) 14, 21,28.(8)4, 11,
18

Publ lc:at:lon
Sunday Display: 1 : 00
Thursday for S u ndays~ P ••P&lt;&gt;r

POl-ICIES Ohio Valley Publla hlng ru ervea the right to ed it, reject, or ca ncel any ad at any hme Errors must be reporl ed on the l1ret day of publtclllon and
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Reglsler will be rea poneible for no more tha n the coal of the 1pece occup11td by the err or 01nd only the lust maert10n We 1hall not be liable
&lt;~ n y lo.. or e11pen• e tha t reaulta lrom the publication or oml ealon of an adverU semenl ~ correctron w1ll be made In the f1rat a~ a rl ab le •drt1on • Boll numbi!r
are alwaya confidential • Current rate card applfee •All realealale adver1rtemlilnle ar111 eubtec l to the Federal Fa1r Housing Act of 1968 • This ""•"P''""'I
help wanted ada m ec~ tlng EOE etendard e Wfl wtll not knowingly accept any a d ~ertrerng 10 ~rolat ron of the law

Indoor a1 r conditi oned rumsal e
Fr1day
&amp;
mage
Saturday, Aug 12&amp;13, 9am
to 4pm . Debb iE! Onve
Chapel Fe llowship Hall 576
Debbie Dnve Also hotdog &amp;
11;- 11
bake sa le Proceeds lo benYear old Rhode Island 5 nules oul of town on SA
Rooster
(740 )843·5401 75 8111 .8112 Boys &amp; gi rls efit youth,
Bven1ngs only
© 2005 by NEA, Inc .
clo lhes m1sc 1tems
La rge yard sale Fri day
August 12 and SlJ nday
LO,TAMJ
79 810ok Or1 ve Aug I I 12
Augusl 14, 9am-6pm, 13032
Fotfr\IJ
&amp; 13 Thurs Fn &amp; Sat 1980
WMfii-J)
State At 75
H D Low A1der. 1990 Kaw
mRtJY
Lost 2 Beagle Dogs 600, Nm1a dap bed, e)(er
Large yard sale- lurmture.
Baldnob St1versv111e area . c1se eqwp John Deere
trampoline
microwave, Reai-Estale Wanted Local
Aewar&lt;J··740 949-2422
mowe1 (no deck) Jr, m1sses clothing, toys and much
person lookmg for a home to
&amp; plus srze clothmg, lots mom Aug 12113 900300
blly All cash Me1gs or
lost-Black , male labrador more Reloca11ng sale 9-?
24t
Centenary
Rd Gallla No double-wide or
Retnever, S1x years old, red
modlJiar 740· 416· 31 30
: collar Lost around Addison B/12·81 14 Four lomiiY clolh· Gallipolis Oh10
P1ke Blllavllle Ad ~H ea mg d1shes. loys, 1ools.
Sa turday Aug 13th , 525
I \11'1 0) \II'\ I
Reward for return (740)367· m1sc 0 11 At 160. 10 White
Ann Dnve Name brand l1ttle
Road (l 1rst no use)
758 1
'I HIH I '
boys and g~rl toddle r and
adult clothes 55 gal aquanItO
um computer table saw
Htl.l' \V,\N-ncD
m1SC For 1nfo call (740)441 •
4x4 s For Sale ................ ·................. 725 0182
Announcement. .•. .. ........ ......... ......... . ... 030
Anttques •.... ....••... .. .• , . . ..... .. ... .. ..... ......... ...... 530
Wanted Items lo resale to
Apartn1ents for Rent •..••....•.•.•..• ...••...•..•.• ..'.• 440
help pay ' bills Clothes,
Auction and Flea Market ......... ...................080 glassware, tools hOlJSehold,
LEARN
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ..•..................... 760
etc (740)446·69E 4

Auto Repair ., .......................... -........ .... no
Autos lor Sale .... ............. ...... ...... ._ .. .........._.710

Twinsburg, OH 44087

L''

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

lwright@lc.,net

( ; II 1-.\W\1

Lost 4yr/o ld blt~ck female
house-cal. around PPM S
3 adorable k1llens 1 calico answers to Grac1e. wearmg
fAmale, _
£
males· I purple·collar w/b~l l &amp; green·
black,whlle 1 black w11h Ilea co llar,
Rewardwhite on chosl Born 5/21 (304)675-3734
Call
(740)446·1850
(740)6132·7:016 le;~ve mes· Parcel Plate--found at ya1d
9 12 S 3rd Ave
saqe &amp; ph011e no &amp; I w1il call S!l le
Mrddleporl 740·992·3663
you back

Free
0254

YARD SAl .~·
GAU . II~JI.L~

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
lf1'r
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Friday For Sundays Paper
• All ads must be prepaid•

• Sblrt Your Ads With A Keyworj • In clude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

LoNT ~Ntl

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In - Column: 1:00 p .m.

Monday thru Friday
8:()0 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

just and equitable.
The
Detendant(s}

-RN NURSE
ICCU
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Anorney at Law
Anorney tor Plalnllff·
Petitioner
P.O. box 968

l&amp;egtster

Sentinel

992-21'56 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157
675,5234

For Sale ........................................................S85
For Sale or Trade........ ..... .. ................... S90
Fruits &amp;Vegetables ................................... 580

Mortgage

0

Help Wanted

0PERAUNG ROOM TECHNICIAN

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
HOME HEALTH

and descrjbed as folnumbered forty-one
(41) In Bridgeman's

FIND AJOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

.·0

Oheo, and bounded

Chase

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Situated In the Vittage conveying the premof Syracuse, County 1ses described, havjt
of Meigs and State of been broken, and the

Hubbard aka Mltdred
Mae
Hubbard,

ANEOE

.

ANEOE

Help Wanted

m:rtbune

To Plac:e

C.LASSIFIED INDEX

PHARMACIST

tster

In One Week With Us
REACH OYER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR. AD NOW ONLINE

AP photo
Cleveland lndtans · Grady Sizemore, left; is congratulated by
teammate Aa ron Boone followrng his grand s lam off Kansas
Cr ty Royal s starting pitche r Zack Grernke tn the second
inning tn Kan sas Ctty, Mo .. Wednesday.

West Virginia Power pitching
coach hit by ball, fractures skull
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - West Virginia Power
pitchmg coach John Curtis
will stt out the remainder of
the Class-A South Atlantic
League season after bemg
struck m the back of the head
by a batted ball , the team
announced Wednesday.
The 15-year maJor leaguer
was hit by a ball while standing in center field during batting practice m Greensboro.
N.C.. on Saturday Curtis
remains hospitalized with a

m:rlbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

www.mydailysentln)t.com

Cleveland clobbers Kansas City

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Help Wanted

Thursday, August H, 2005

.

Yard/gnrage sale Thursday,
Fnday &amp; Saturday 112 m1le
on BlJIBVIIIe Pk off old Rou te
, 35 on nght

~

YARil S,\l.E·
l'oMlliOV/MIDtJLE

B1g 3 Family Yard Sale Fn ,
Aug 12 &amp; Sat , Aug 13
Bon ehollow Road Rollle 7
across from Lead1ng Creek
F1rs1 t1me th iS year Toots,
clothes grassware lots of
m1sc &amp; baby 1\ems

TO
.DRIVE

• F' l r~ANCING AVAIL... BLE
• 108 Plol.C ENE"'T
• ENROlLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1·800·334·1203

r

ng appllcat1ons at th
apt for Emptoymen
erv1ces 225 S1.11lh Slreet
Po1nt Pleasant . Wes
1rgm1a, on 8/1 51200
tHough 8/ 16/2005 fro
OOam tfll 3 OOpm MUS
HAVE 2 years heavy Iabo
rk exper1ence (1 e f&lt;Hm
ng loggmg construction
tc) Generous dally wag
nd excellent benet1
acka e EOE, M!fN

Looking for a career ?
Join our teem at the
Western RegiDnal Jail
The yv'estern Aegtona1Jai1 1s
ClJrrenl ly seek rn g QlJ althed
appltcants who are Interested 1n a CAREE R 1n corrr~c
!ions For more·rntormahon
call tst
Sgl
Aldrtdge
@[304)733-6821
Look1ng for someone to
habys11 a• 16 montll old 1n
th en
home
Mon· Frr
7 30arn-5 30pm (7401 44 10182

Drwe

.,

Call 800-652·2362

to

Yoll Hard Work1ng? Do You
Enjoy People? Are You A
Team Member? 11, So. We
Want You On Our Teaml
Absolute Top Dollar U,S Ravenswood Care Center,
S1lver and Gold Co1ns 1113 Washmglon Street
wv
Prootse1s, Gold Amgs Pre- ' Raven swood
t 935
US
Currency References
Aeqwed
S:ohta~re Diamonds· M T S Across The R1tch1e Bndge,
Com Shop, 151 Second Turn R1ght 3 Mtles. last
Avenue GallipoliS, 740 446· Busmess On A1ghl v ome
2842
see Us. You II Be Gl&lt;td You
D1dl
Buy1ng Goldenseal Wed &amp;
Sal 12 4 The Plarns Oh For a 11m1ted t1m0 make 50%
(740)664-4761 . 740-797- sell1ng Avon Call (740)446
9054 , G&amp;ofge Buckler
3358

ro BUY

ngra

; arge Co Will be accep t

•Start at 40 epm- all mllea
• Fretghtl1ner Condos
• 95~o No Touch Frerghl
•No Forced NYC
•Hosp1tall zar10n and 401K
Available
•Homet1me on Weekends

an d::-S•a•lu.r~d~~y~1·0·00···'-.., CNA's &amp; NA s Desired Are
_
WANil:U

'.;;;;;;;."·"'·"·"'·'

LPN/SJNA

Scen1c Hrlls Nursmg Center
We are lookmg ..for OTR a Tand8JI1 Health Care
Class A CDL dmws w1th Fac1hty IS seekmg a select
lew to 1om our outst&lt;'md1ng
one year exper1ence
team as

Fnday Aug 12 &amp; Salllrday
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Aug
13
9 00-4 00
Assemble craft s.
Bohn/Mahr
Resid ences
wood Items
Boys name brands SIZe 10To $480/wk
14, baby 1tems. stroller h1gh
M a t er~a ls prov1ded
charr, toys Longaberger,
Free 1nformatton pkg 24Hr
home 1ntenor From route 7
801·428·4649
taka 124 through Rutland,
1st road to left Lasher Road. An El!cellen t way to earn
2nd &amp; 3rd houses on nght
mQney The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-1382·2645
Huge Community Yard,Sale
August 11 - 12·13. 2 1/2 Are yolJ \Ired ot runnrng?
m1les Olll Sllccess Ad T1red of stand1ng on your
LPN/ AN s
(Cry46) oft At 7 below teet all day?
Tuppers Plains, Oh several needed 1n Pomeroy Ohio
families- Ctothes alt s1zes. area FT/PT hours Vent
like new (great school Trach and G-tube expen
ClOThes). 1ron cast keltios . ence Great L01r1pany, greal
10' retractable basketball benefitS Call Pnmary Care
back board &amp; nm 1tems to Nurs1ng Serv1c~s 800·518·
2273 rn 01'110 or (614)764·
numerolJs •to list
0960 and ask lor Jean
Yar d &amp; Porch Sale· ram or
sh1ne, Sa t 8/13 onlv. AVONI All Areas l To Buy 01
Sh1rley Spears, 304 Tuppers PlainS\ West on St Sell
At 681 !rom cautiOn lighl 112 675-1429
m•le. an11ques, holJsehold Chn1ca1 Med1cal ASSIStan t
Items. clothes stove. relng· needed for Pedla tr1c1ans
orator, truck bed, too l bmc &amp;
Oll1co Exponence or tra1n·
lot more
mg preferred
Must love

11

110

Jll:l.P \\'ANlJo' IJ

NEW PAY INCREASE · ·

· NO E~PE n iE'N C E NECESSAR~
• FULL r IM I CLASSES
• CUL THAINING

FaK resume
Yard Sale, 37620 SA 68 1 S k1ds
(304)67S·4233
Snowv11le. Thursday, Friday

110

LPNs
Full Time
12 Hour Shifts , 6P-6A

STNAs
Full and Part Time
All Shifts

Proper l1censelcertlllcat1on
requ1 red We offer an ~Jxcel
lent wmk envrronmen t shift
competitiVe
dJiterenllal,
wages g1ea1 ber:l,flfltS pe rtet
Help Wanted Area franch1se atlendance rnc{]nt1ves and
motorcyclel ATV dealership mi.J(;h morel
hmng all pos111ons Clencal Please apply to
Sales &amp; Mechamcs Send
AHn· llianna Th ompson
resume tO CLA 573, c/o
HR
Gallipolis Dally Tribune PO
Seen1e Hilla Nurs ing
Box 469 Gal11polls, OH
Center
45631
311 Buckrldge Road
House
Manager···
Bidwell, OH 45614
Applrca110r'i Are Now B~rng
Ph 740/446-71 50
Accep ted For A Daysh1ft,
Fax: 740/ 446-2 438
Ful f.Time House Manager
Email edmm.ahn @
To Manage A, Srnall Ass1sted
tanderl'lhealthcare com
L1vmg Faclltly
Prev1ous
Exper1ence A Plus. If you
SF!DFIEOE
EnJOY The Elderly Have A HR V tan~em l'lealth e11re com
Posthve Altitude &amp; Guod
OUTSID E SALES
Work Eth 1cs Come Jo1n Our
Teamt Interested App licants '
R E~ESl. N l A rt \'E
May Apply Da1ly Mon-Sun .
9-4 p m Aavens'NOOd Care Tile
Gallipolis
Dally
Cente1 , 113 Wash1ngton
Tnbune IS accep11ng
Street, Across The Br1dge.
resumes for a lull 11me
A1ght &amp; 3 Miles last outs1de sales lepresentaBus1ness On The R1ght
tlve to JOin our sales team
References Requ1recl
and to manuge an estab·
hshed account hst wn11e
HolJs ekeep 1ng fL aundr y calling on new accoums
pos1 t1on ava1lable at Arbors
The sur,cessllJI cand1 dete
of Gallrpolls. 170 Pmecrest
w1ll be a diSCiphned se lf·
Or Gall1po~1s
No phone, mot1ved team player !hat
calls please
understands the 1mpor
lance
of developrng
Local Church sfleK1ng a
strong. mutually beneh
pumo player Sunday rnomclal busmess 1alat1on
1ng &amp; evenrng
7.tU·992·
sh1ps w1th our accounts
2755 0! 740·992·6849

Experienced food prep/grill
cook
Also
wa1tress
Parkf ront Orner Apply m
person 314 Second Ave

rue
rr11er
Ful
arehouseman
1mB w1th benofrLS. Mus
ave Class A or B CD
nd ClJrrent med1cal card
pply 1n pdrson, Thoma
o·lt Center Galhpoh~.
H 45631

The 1dea1 candidate Will
nave sale expenence For
conlrd enhal
mterv1ew
p l ~a s e send reslJme ana
COVOI letler to GallipoliS
Da1ly Tnbune Atln J1m
Freeland 825 Th1rd Ave
G&amp;lltpohs Oh10 45631

DIRECT TV 3 room w1th 112 Pleasant Street 3
T1vo FREE 145 channels B~droom 1 112 BathS
only $39 00 per montl'l Ask Famrly Room D1n1ng Room
how to gel FREE HBO Full Basement
Storage
MAX and home ente!la1n· Bldq Garage New Central
menl S)'Sierrr Call 800·523· A1r Cond, New Windows
75561or CJetarls
(304)675·4034
OIRECTV
FREE Horne
entenamment
System
FREE Equrprnent and Install
up to four IOOrfls 145 chan·
nets $29 00 a month Ask
how Ia gel FREE HBQ,
MAX and STARS 1·800523 7556 foe deta11s

Woodland Center s, Inc is
a nof·lor-prollt private s 1x Used 1o steel beams
commun1ty mental health.._, 12s and 13s·p 1ck·up only
center sen11ng Gall1a , 740·992·2704
Jackson
and
Meigs
Counti es
Tn
Oh1o. 180
\\'&lt;\ NI'EU
Competitive Salaries and
Tt • Uo
benefits package lncluding pa1d vacallon and sick All Types Masonry Br1ck
ltme, 13 paid holidays , Block Slone Free Est1mate
retirement plan , health . {30 4)773·9550
304·593·
lite, and dlsabiHty lnaur- 642 1
ance off ered . Positions
must maintain valid dnGeorges Portable Sawrn11l
ver's license as defined by
don t haul your Logs to the
Agency 's IIHet Insurance
MIII IUSl Cal l 304·675 1957
carrier.
Please
send
Resume
to
Sherry
Will 111ke care of lho Elderly
Gordon ,
Manager
of
m the1r home have 10 years
Human
Re sources ,
exper1ence call (3041675·
Woodland Centers , Inc .
3264
3086 State Route 160,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
W1l1 work for Elderly Part or
EOE/AA Emplove_r.
Full T1rne Expcr1ence &amp;
Man agemen t
Tra1nee Retereflces 1304)675-796 1
Opportunities ava1labla at
Enlerr"lflse Reut· A Car m the
GallipoliS araa 1 hrs opportun~ty g1ves you the chance
to run your own blJSiness
and sh&lt;Jro 1n lhe pro!11S you
help create Ra p1d promo·
lions base._1 on pe rformance
1n ;~ dynam1c team env1ron
men!
H1ghly marketable
sk1IIS and tra1nmg 1n busr·
ness management sales
and serv1ce At least two
years ol college expenence
IS requrred 1n additiOn to two
ye ars ot sales and serv1ce
You musl bo at least 21
years of age w1th clean dnvrng record Apply online at
www enterpnse com/career

I'IO Cim .n/Et.llERI Y
C ARE
Magrc Yea rs Day Care
Cenler Slate L1ccnscd
Qualrty Ch1ld Care SpaceS
ava1lible/Now a c cept1~q Fall
Enrollment
11easoniJble
Rates Link approved excel·
l€nl SkillS for your Chrld s
Development
LearnrnQ
Program otlered for all ages
M F ages 2 &amp; up (J0.1J675
5847

• NOTtO •

t?.HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
OU do bUSIIleSs Willi p8GI
~le )'OU k'lO,\ and NOT I
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s
end money t1'11 ouqh lh
!leaded Apply at 1354 ra tl until you have lflV€SII
Jackson P1ke . Gallipolis
~ted 111111 otte11no

Res1 den t1al
Treatment
Fac1hty tor boys nO\.\ h111ng
D1rect Care WorKers Pay
based on ~ xper 1e nce pa1d
msurance (7 40)3 79 908 3
9am·3pm Mon·Frl

Concealed P1stol Class
Now torm1ng August 13 at
VFW. Mason WV Qhro B.
WV &amp; all legal states Call
740·843·5555
Ga1Upo111 Carter College
'Careers Close To Homer
Call Toelay• 740 446 436i
1·$00·2 14 0452
, WNW g&amp;llooo'r&amp;- arE-e r~ol 'ltge I:OfYI
Ar -,,.d •er1

Vfi"'N!r

Counc..+ to•

• o~"'J&lt;'"I Cn"eq\'~

!l'lll ~·1001$ 1)7411

A.. cr'ltlt! "ll

3
Bedr oom
2 Balfr
F1repl0lce In tnE' country on
1 6 acre s $95 000 Call
(740)709 1166
3 br br1ck localed R12 area
e~c 1ocal1on lull s1ze basement wr 1 oar garage 304 ·
895·31 29
3 BA Ranch 1 1 2 baih
overs1zed ga1age. nard·
woOd tr!e floors lhroughout
gas heat landscaped qu1et
cul·da-s ac Mllsl Seel 62
Don
Stree t
GallipOli S.
$1.15 OO() (740)44 1·554Q

\1o" v

Attent1on 1
Local cQmpany otfermg "NO

DOWN

PAY MENT"

pfo·

gu;m s for you 10 buy yo ur
home 1 n~ tea d of ren11ng
. 1oo~ 0 11nancmg
· Less u·.an peliect crea11
accPpted
Payrnenl could be the
same as ren t
Mongage
Locatoi s
(7 401367 0000

TO I..0 \ 1\

~DH OW Smar t Contac
he Oh10 DIVISion o
1nan c1al
lnslltUllo n's
p u1c e of Consume
~tfa1rs BEFORE you relr
ranee your nome 0
b1a1n a loan BEWARE
I reauests f6r any large
dvance payments o
ees or u1smar,ce C~t 1
he OH1ce ol Consume
A1_
1alrS toll lr~ at 1 866
78-0003 to learn 11 tne
~ onga ge
b ro ~e er
o
ender
1s
pr ope1l
1censed (ThiS 1S a publt
erv •c e arrnollncemen
rom the Oh1o Vallf'
IPubhsh1 ~9 Compan"t)

The Mason County Anrmal
Welfare League , Open~ngs
tor Pa1l·llme Dog Warden &amp;
Kennel ·Tech s
Dutres
1nclude, watenng feearng
cloanrng
Kennels
Transpon at1 on &amp; some
Marn tenance Ect Please
(304 )675 6458
lor
call
Cakes by Kathy weddrng &amp;
Appl1cat10n
all-cccaSIOn also Karaoke.
tSO
call (7401992" 0723 al ter
SO.HI(M S

h •snu (Tk l'l

2 Be droom L1vmg Room
Kitchen
&amp;
Bathroom
Laundry Room
500
Robmson St. PI Pleasanl
(Bellemead) Prrce Reduce d
(304)675 7169

p10

Now hlflnQ- All ShiftS
McDonalds of A1o Gr,l'lnde
Apply 1n person

Reg1stered Nurse·School
N ur~e
BSN req u11ed 10
m:n 1r11year pOSitiOn
Full
11nw bencfll 5 · Appil ca1 1011
ava1lable at Mason County
Healtl'l D ~panmenl

186 North Park Or1ve 2·
oedroom 1 bath Full base
menl detached Garage
Central Arr, Peliect 1n town
tocat1on Fenced rn back·
yard
Gate
opens
to
Pleasant Val ley Hosp 1tal
(304)675-3323

11\\~IHI
3BR nancn 2 car garage
..,~-------., ' pool crty schools S90 000
Jll iSINE,...,.
3460 SA 2 18 GalliPOliS
Ot'I"'.)Kil ~ II\
OH (7 40)256· 1962

s EOEIMFDV

Pan rrme help wanted rn
house cleamng JObs Prefm
mature possibly re t1red per
sonls) Subtecl to a polrce
check repo1t
Sonous
1nqurres ONLY
Send
resumes to PO Box 194
Henderson. WV 25106

1401
. Cedar
St
Moadpwbrook
Add
3
Bedroom 1 112 Bath Corner
lot new Root, move-In con
d1t10n new Carpet and
Floonng Slora~:~e 8u1ldmg,
Fenced m Back Yard
(304)675·7'708 or (304)593·
4135

3pm

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless Wo Wrnl
1·888·582 3345

Ht\lhl\11
10

All ru i H tale adv e rtisln~
In this newspaper Is •
sub1ect to 1he Federal •
Felr Houaing Act o11 968
which makes It illegal tO
· ed11ert•se "any
preference, llmrtat1on or
dlscrlmlne11on based on
race, eC&gt;Ior, rehg1on, sex
familial a1atus or netional
origin or sny 1ntent1on to
make any 5uch
;
prelerl!nce, hm1tatlon or.
dlatrtmln&amp;llon '
•
This newspaper will no1
kno~ngly aecep1
advertlaementa for real
flst.llfl WhiCh rl In
VIOIII!Ion of the law 0lJr
tl!ltde" are hereby
Informed thai' aU
d..,.ltmgs advertised m
th111:1ewspaper ere
•~•llllbte on an equal
oppoi1umty bllsn. ·
~or .Sale For Rent Lovely
RIVet Pr operly 1 Acre
B•rcf... Vrnyl
Garage and
Basement
Caroort
3BA
Hard .... ooa Floors
2BA LR DR FR 2 !rreOIAces
$160 000
or
$BOO mo 0~014 46·0536
(502 )303 .5621

Older
BR I baTh
2
Fal mholJse w 10 acres 1n
co untry
3-m•les
trom
Hartford
~·9 s6o
4 bedroom 2 bath Aollsh
Realty
Homestead
~errel! Lane 535 000 lrrrT1
(304) 88 2 ~ 4 05 (3Q4 1675304·675· 1911 or 59~ 2096
55 40

. I!0\11·~

HJN S \ I.E

�www.mydailysentinel.;com

Thursday, Ai..!gust 11, 2005
ALLEY COP

www.mydailysentinel.com
· BRIDGE

Houses lor Sate: Potentia l
~ome
or
Comme ri ca l
Property, 1600 SO FT,
Garage , lnground Ho rst
Lcits ol Extras, Upsta rrs Apt
1100 SO. FT. 6- Roo ms.
BJth . 'Extras , Large Cove red
Perch .
MuSt see to
Mpreciated call lm more
Oli!tailed lnlormatron Phone
LJ04)882-JJ39 P' (304)883-

Spacious 36R . 2 BA. DR ,
15x22 LA. heat pump. 20
min
to
Ga!lipOIISJAio
Grande. No smo king . no
1ndoor pets. $500 . rncludes
water. (740)379-946 5.

MoKILE H m 11;&lt;;
n&gt;RRENT

For Lease: Olllce or retail
spaces rn very good condi·
tron. Downl own Gallipolis.
App10x 1600 sq ft. each 1
or 2 baths. lease price
negotiable to encourage
new
business
Call
(740)446-4425' or (740)4463936.

Phillip
Alder

Cameratone

•uw

NJw'
erv

4.4 6 acres

BEAUTIF UL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRI CES AT J ACKSON
ES TATES. 52 Wesfwuc:&gt;d
Drrvtl tra m $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movreS Call
Equal
7-l0-4 46·2568
HoLJsing Oppo rtur1rty.

i..________.
-

American Legion Middleport
August 13
Support Your. Veterans

'-1!--------r'·
10

Hot :-iK~

ma Rr,'/r

Furnrshed upstarr s. 3 rooms
&amp; bath Clean~ ref &amp; dep
2 bedroom , new pa1111 &amp; carre qu1red No po t ~. (740 f44 f'·
pet Nrce Ea ste rn Ave . Ca li
15 19
(740)446-74 25
·G1 ac:rou~ livrn9 1 and 2 bed·
2 bedr oom . stovefret rrgera· r'oum apMtments at Villnge
tor tu rn1s hed
S3001mo Manor
an d
Rwe rs rde
$ 150/d epOSII., No · pets. A pa~ t merr ts 1n Mrdclleport
(7 40)446-906 t
Fran ' $295·$4-l4. Call 740·
992-50£4 Equal HouSin g
3 8DAM S • .2 Batn AM
O pportu nities
House. Po meroy- Che ste r.
Area
D epo sit
and · tmma.culate
apar tme.r'll.
Relererence . 740-992-4024 Watkmg dr&amp;t~ nce 10. Ll RG
Befol e B P.M .
Recently remode led , 2BR
new prrvate deck . S5001mc.
3·4 bed10om house. near (6 141595-7773 or BU0-798·
Wash Ele.. $500/ month . 4686
Deposit, refe rences &amp; appt •. - " - ' - ' - - - - catron
reqwrect
Call N 3rd AVe Mrd jlepor: 1
bedroom turnrshed apt. No
(740)446 -7723. 4:30- 9pm
pets Depos1t Prev rental
38R. 2BA. hard wood floors· Re t 7--10-992-0 165
llrepiace . Salem Center .
$7001mo. Ava1lable Sept I . One BA apt 1\lrl t- WJD
hLokups Srrr•ng Vallet $290
Call (740)418-1183
month
olus
deposr t
5 roo m house av ar laOie now (740)3::!9-03€2 local call
$400 rent d ep. SAOO No
Pleasant Valley Apa rtm ent
pets. large outsiae burlding .
Are naw 'takmg App 1rcal ions
refr iger'ato r &amp; stove new
for 2BR 3BA &amp; 4BR. .
• C.-A (740)379-2254
Apphr: a1 10ns
are · tak en
Mono;!ay t"lru Frrday !rom
Anention!
LOcal co mpany offerrng "NO 9 00 AM -4 PM Office rs
pro· Locate'.! at 1151 E'lergreen
DOWN , PAYMENT
gra ms tor you to buy yoU r Drrvo Po 1n1 Ple asan t. W V
PhOne No cs (304)675·
nome mstead of rentrng
5806 EHO
• ·' OQo/., !innftcrng

10

IS

F \RM

· J_ess than pe rfect cr~:drl
accepted
• ' Paym ent could .be the
sarr.e as rent
Locato rs
t.1'ortgag e
d 40) 36 7-0000

Su•Pm x

Block. brrck, sewer prpes,
wrndows. lintels, e tc . Claude
W1 n1ers'. Rro Gran de. OH
Call740'·245-5 121. ·

r

1'1-~I S

FORS.\I .E

AKC Golden Retrieve r male.
g:&gt;ld ecto r. $400
Almost
2yrs old · Updated on all
shots. (740 )388-896 5

fl!Onths on John Deere
Compact and 5000 Series
Tractors w1th John Deere
Credit approval. Check them
outl Carmichael Equipment
Inc . (740)4 46-2412

Jruck.

l'f ~ ~ :J

Da vid Lewis
740-992-6971
. ln SUI't'fl

94 Blazer LT Tahoe SUV 4.3
L, V-6. Vortec , 63,000 mjles,
4 Wheel Dr ive . 4 Door.
Leather
Seats,
A/C,
AM !FM/CD. Key Less Entry,
Power Windows &amp; Mirrors,
. (740)'446-2412
,Rear Wir1 dow Wiper. Washer
John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill &amp; Delroster, Tinted Rear
for
Rent .
Carmichael Windows: Tow Package ,
Equipment. (740)446·2412. Luggage Racks, $4.500
(304 )773-5305 m (304)773 John Deere Commercial
5905
Work slte
Product s
Compact ExcavatorsfSkid 95 Honda Passpor t SUV, 2
Steers/Tractor '
Loader whee l drive, a uto matic ,
Backhoe in stOck. Check out 120,000 miles. arr condiour rental rates . Great
cruise. trlt. power
available . troned,
financing
windows &amp; locks . cassette,
Ca rmichael Equipmen t Inc . clean inside &amp; out. looks·&amp;
(740) 446-2412 .
runs
gmat
$2.500 .

r
-

32ll9 We lshtow n Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
(740) 992·243 2
Emall :j will45769
@ ,vo hoo.com

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACT! NG
• Pro mpt &amp; quality
- work •
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

740-742 ·229l

Grades K-4 thro ugh 12

_K-4 Open House
Aug. 26th at 7 :00PM
For more inform ation call :

740-992-3824 or 740-667-0338
r~========:;""-:::::::::

Morris

FoR SALE

740-742-2455

• Repairs
• Parts
• Service
fu r Farm

Equ irmc nt -

Trul.:ks DoJer ~

•

S p~~ia lt y

• Cluh:hcs

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

LeoveMe~)._;J~'t-~.

Como By I 'l'aJre
. , ,••, ••• of •

181111 Bohle on
elllnepper

wwntrecton

" L;ocwn

Garden
&lt;~re our

&lt;~ntl

Tr &lt;~ctors

Business ...

not our side line."

Gravely
Tractor Sales
&amp; Service
\Vr ll' r'.'lt'l' mox1 make1·
2W (\&gt;ndN Street
P1) 11lCI I)}'. 0 1-1

1996 CA80R . . just been
bored and r'eburlt . tols of
new parts. Runs and looks
great Best offer cell (304)
444-69 13 ' tt ome (304)6758787
------~--

2002' Harley
Davidson
Soltait Deuce. many extra s.
Greal'- shape. 5.000 miles.
t980
Merced es
Benz
$17 ,000 fir m. (740)441Sedan . 4dr, 5cyl, Diesel SlJn·
9816
roof. 150 .000 miles. exceltent sha~· e $2,0001080 2002 HD Softa i1 Deuce .
(304)675-4904
many extras 1ncludrng wide
trre. chrome. Python Prpe s
1985 Pontiac Trans-Am .
7,000 miles. (740)446-28 15
5spd. 305 H.O.. onlY 55.000
m rtes. viper blue. Hops. 2004 Honda VTX 1300C.
·exce llent shape. (74())446· Low miles, $1,500 In mdraS .
0350.
black, $8.300 . (740)2887246.
1990 Cadill ac Braum 4 ar.
~81~)-A' IS' &amp;::-:"M':"c_m_IRS
--,
nrce
shape.
52.695,
(740 )742-2421
n&gt;R SALE

"' Weekly Trnsh Ser vice
4 yrs uf Rclr ahlc Service
cKc,·r Y&lt;lllr M.m~ y Llll:al J

G&amp; R SAN ITATION
.\J 561 Baiky Kun Rd ..
. ' Pomcrov. OH

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERV(CE
• Room Additions &amp;
AemodetinQ
• New Garages
• Electr ical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patlo'• nd Porch Oeck11
We do it all except
lum•ce wo rk

V.C.' YOUNG Ill
992--6215

l'fV(I)h7;~

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex rlenc:e

1996 Pont rae Gr,and Prrx, 4
door, $1 ,500. t740 )441-B976 1989 Stratos Bass Boat. 16
Foot , 70 H.P. Johnson Motor
or (740)645 -6734
wrth power till and trim New
1997 Honda Civic 109.o00 t(olting motor. $3,700. Call
10
HOME
mi. After marke t acces - after 5: 00 P.M. (304)675 ·
I M I'ROVf~ I FNI"S
sorie s, 3B+ mpg _ Clean. 7382
black/bl'ack. Call '740)441 9865.
.
BASEMENT
1994 650 Seadoo Jet skr. 2
seater, wl trailer. Some
WATER PROOFING
1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr.. ·4 extras
$1 ,650.
Call Uncond itional lifetime guarcyl. 76,000 mile s. $3 ,000 (740)256-9045"' (740)886- a~tee. Loc al references fur080. Call (740 )441-0712
1343.
nished. Esta blrshed 1975.
Ca ll
24 Hr s. (740 ) 446·
1999 Ford Tauru s SE. V-6. 2000 Kawasaki ultra ISO )91
0870, Rogers Basem ent
AT-AC -PS- CD play er very ski. low hours. ' With shore
WaterproOl rng .
good Cond. $4300 304-675· loader trailer $4900.304 667 5
675-6675

AKC Reg1stered 6-•Af' ek s
old Schnauzer pupJ)res. has
all shOts. S350 'each .. Mate 2000 Honda Accord LX 4
door, 11 8 ,000 mtles. good
&amp; Female (304)895-- 3745
cond itiOr'l, $9,000. (740 )709CKC Golden Retriever pup- 1094

clA.

°

I

CAMPERS &amp;
M mOH Ho~~

..__oiiiliiiiiiii;,;,iiiiiiiior'
1!;;94 Prowle r 22 tt. steeps 6·
7, $5,500 neg. {740)6454055 after 5pm ..
,-,--- - ,- --,-2001 Jayco Designer Series
2 7RK S, 5th Whee.! Lors of
acces sorr es
$21 .000

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-l194
or 992-6635
"M iddleport' s only
Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes

· Garages.

• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

·JONES'

3+

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

..

Bucket Truck

~

Nf:VEil ~f:ALIZf:l&gt; w~AT A lAP (;OLff:ll
~ AM VNTIL SOMf:IOl&gt;Y ELSf;
.__ .,._ /
Kf;PT 5C.Oilf:.

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

TRI- STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE
Owner : Jeff St ethem .

Office: (740) 992-1804 Cell: (740) 517·6883
POWER WASHING
· (Co~nmelci~land R~ident i ~l )
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Cas Stat ion Awnings, Degfeasing of
Eq uipment, Boats~ Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Du mp Trucks, paintmg or staining of your deck
or log hame, Aluminu m brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.
(( omme1cial a11d R~idenl i &lt;~l)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeratioll. Fertilization,.
Spraying of fenq~ lines, leal R::~ m oval , as well as small
landscaping jobs sucll as planting and mulching.

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

II

WINDOW SUPER SALE
. Vinyl Double Hung

$219
INSTALLED
fo 101 Ul
Optional Upgrades Available;
Argon Gas&amp; Heat Mirror

.,.~\ !'\'{ U£., f-VEI'I M'l l~i'ICR_'l
GI-\IL() OU~L\1' \E.S FOR. 1\~

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800·291-5600 740·992·4119
www.qualitywindowsystems.com

"-P-.IZP C.i'.RO I

,.

see ·
'•'

'

'

·.~

Classifieds!

45771
740-949-2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

INTHE CLASSIFIEDS

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Pa~~

Pa:;s

Pa~ .s

In whose lorig suit
should you_play?

Ic e a renas

111

~close

21
22
23
constellation 24

Chimneys 43 Spill to join
Pallet
45 MontiO\Ir's
Serape
airport
Prudential 47 PC screen
Graduate
competitor .
imagedegs.
25 Daisy 48 Tunnel
Low voice
Scraggs
maker
Spa hoi spol 27 Bruce or
49 Length
Not Dem. or
Brandon
ot fabric
Rep.
29 Munnurs
50 PlasticKiki or Joey 30 Apply a
Band

6

7

8
9

,0 Bradley and
jimmy
McBain
32 Glasgow

51 Store-

,1

52 Spud st.

Ticketinlo

12 Soft drink

turndown

34 Prof' s

choice

bought hair.

53 Just hired
54 Engineer's

degree

ending
16 One,
37 Oscar
40 Marble block
to ConchHa
cousins
42 Fashion
18 Alien
38 CBer's · ·
44 Easy victory
spacecraft
"bear''

place

Canad ian physician Sir Wil liam Osie r
said, ~ No bubble is more iridescent ~ o r

with the 13th heart. So~th ruffed high with
the diamond queen. But West knew that it
is not right to ove rr uff whe n one has both

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrrty Crphei crypi!J9rams arectea19d lroor quatatrons by fam6us poo~e. p~st and Pfe5811t
Each le Mer 1n lilt CIOI!f!r stands lor anocher

Today's clue: N equals H

.. w

J VR

a higher trump honor that later will still be
a trick and a lower card that mightbe pro -

w

mdled.

CLKWLOL ,

:

- . . . 'lllrlh&lt;ID,y:
I. USE D T O LIKE
MOWING U..WN S, BU T

·&lt;I'. •..

GRA. DVALL Y I'v E
REACHE.D TH E

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS
93
Columbus Rd.

Astrc..;,
Graph

BIG NATE

.Rocky "AJ"
• HupP

WHERE I

POINT

\-lATE

IT '

Athens

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.68 1 Darwi n. OH

740-992-711 1} Of 740-992-555}
Rt.,.I{)("Mng I .a lr \-~Jdrl $a I m ar I
a nd .·lflc·r· .\ft,rkf'i ».rt.~
See II re nt or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5c 0l0

Sui. X:30-l'iocm
Sun. Ch•scd

PEANUTS
PARDON ME .. 00
YOU KNOW WI-IERE

!-lOW SHOULD I KNOW?
I"M JUST A LITTLE
KID[
I DON'T KNOW
TI-lE COORTI-IOU5E 15?
IWH.CI\t: ANVTHIN615!

got you
· $275 10n (While su pply last)
• Excelle nt Balanced F~rt ltl zer
9-U'RE•I · S205 ton top dress your field cob meal
with T.M. salt. $5.75t'1001b. b.g
Airway &amp; Rotowic:k pasture
renovators rental aYailable.
Mu...hruom Cmll llll~"&gt;l A' 11iht!Jie
So.~:bt-a n \ l ea l SIU5 l lHI/Ib

IS ~prtadtr hugJfi~tS ll'ailahl~ for

SUNSHINE CLUB

Ulll'

Airw.11 _
\. pao;nu-'1' n-no\'lal oro; &amp; '&gt;('('dl('r. ;n&lt;tilablr to l't'nl .
Uc:rnsed agronombt on ~ta lf a~aila blr f11r ,-u r L~u ll i n~.

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St

Rt 7 N \

Ohio 45769

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

29670 Ba s han Road
Ra c1ne . O hio

Pass
!-'ass

5

Rick's
26 Nof pass
28. Class
29 Sh'oddy
31 Bore dom
33 Mo\'i e with
a posse
34 Maxed out
35 Pay to r
36 Ugh !

20

DR KM HV E L

GRSL X TZ V ~S .

H G T W J.

HGTWJ

JDRSGJZDX

HGTWJ

ZNV Z

J VXKD

Z NV Z

Z NV Z

w

W . KDOL ."

HVXWV

BWGKWRW
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'The aimosphel€ knows no boundaries. and lhe

ADVERTISE

~hop the

24

Notice that if West overrulls at trick fou.r.
declarer loses only one trump· trick and
gets home. If West discards, though. he
gets two trump tricks and the cont ract
ends on~ dowr1 .

( 304 )675 · 2~4 6

Lance True!' Cerrrper 10 6
foot. m1nt condr!ICn. arr. 3
way re!.. full ba:h, clean bed.
si1e awn1ngs ouisrcte shower
54,900 00
740 669485J

Pass

23 Pianist al

stronger hand's suit is tr umps, the othe r
han d migh t , qecome wastepaper. The
exception is when the sl ronger hand's suit
is far §upe rior to his partner's- as here.
South m1ght pass our two spades - and
watch his par tner go, two down. Instead,
he insists on his diamon d su it What is the
result in three diamonds wilh best play by
both sides?
West led the heart king. A strong short
suit usual ly makes a good read aga 1nst a
!rump contr act. Alt er East signa led
encouragement wi th his nine. West
cashed the heart queen and played a th trd
heart to East's ace. When East continued

·1 GOT US A
BODACI OUS
B AR GA IN ON
A WAGONLOAD
OF FIREWOOD,
MAW

SAVINGS

Hill's Self
Storage

Eas t

1 Passport
companion
2 Like Mr.
Hyde
3 Techie
4 Wlnll!r

suit. That way. his suit will generate some .
trump 1 ric~s. and the other player's aces
and kings will still be winners. But if the

BARNEY

on

Coleman Camprng Trail er
12FT 2 Krng Beds, S4.995
call tor Details (31)4 )675 ·
1731

:\'or th

16 Well·
informed
(2 wds.)
17 Wif"(lple
wearers
19 Barking
no ises

floats longer - than that blown by the
successful teacher."
lt .makes me think about a juggler keeping
plates rotating on poles.
North and SOuth have long suits. South
and-North dislike each other's suit Which
one sho ul d be made trumps?
· The nalmal answer is the weaker hand's

GARFIELD .

Camper sleeps 7 or B. 100!
top a1 r. good shape. Noma d.
S2.000 (740)3 79-25¥1.

AQJJ0 8 i 4
A r. 2

DOWN

nephew

39 Feminine

GetAJ1.1mp

n.

li :l

Open ing le&lt;l d: ¥ K

'

200 3 Coa chman 24FT.
Bath. AC. Furnace. Sleeps
5 . S9,000 (304 )675- t 444

Wes t

Pass

Phone
(740) 992-5232
Sx iO. IOx iO,
Hlxl5, 10x20,
10x30

Gtne A nns/Own er·
Opcra1or 740-992-3 174

•

,. ,.

4 WmE£RS

L,.,;.,;,;,;;;;;;;iiiiiiiio--'

AQ!\ 7;1•
A96 2

U ealer : South
Vu lnerable : F:a.'St-Wcst

Storage

Jeffe rs
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy. Ohio

.
•

... 8 3

.
4

Sout h

" -~

piec es

•

High and Drj

Janel

K Q5
K9:t2
Q 10 9 7

Antwer to Pre'llout Puzzle

46 Weatlndlea
dance
1 Snake juice 51 Napa Valley
6 Words to the
atop
audience
54 Bunorlly
1I a.t-aldo
producer
ol TV
55 .Principles
12 Smoothed 56 GrMk god
wood
olllght
13 Husband
57 Clumsy
ollsls
58 William
14 RacHal
Roae -

15 Mr. Magoo 's

'I J I 0 ll

Licensed in Ohio and WV

z..ff;,

'\..::.(, _-,:1· '&gt;

• BrakL·:-.

740-992-2975

-«l · M &lt;Y il.lKC\'Cl.ES/

'Before6pm

K J 5 4

South

740-667-0700 1-BBB-HUPP234

liNDA'S PAINnNG
ll401985-4180
After 6pm ''; ~

•

East

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

Ta~e

let me do it for yo~l

reg. cab, SW, PS, PB, A/C.
CD, PW, PL. air bags, bed
liner. spo rt · pkg. key less
entry. $14 .000 060.
2004 Harley Davidson VRod . like new, many add itions. $15 ,500. (740)44 17349.
-~-------,-­
2002 Toyota Tundra SR5 V6 .
5-spd. BO.OOOmi. matching
topper, bed hner/mat, lots of
extras. S19,000. (740)3889634 eve. ask fo( Jefl.

•

LAWN CARE DIVISION

LLC.

~::---A~
lJTOS
---., 200i Dodge R'm 4x4. 37K,

•
•

' Leave a message

4x4

·1931 .

Plains, OH
1I•~:!~Tu~ppers
45783

!I o~

KJ106 5 2
7 4 3

West
• 9"

"Insured"

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1999 Chevy Suburban 4X4 .
good condition, loaded, new
S11,000
tires.
Ask ing
(740)44 1-0658 or {740)7'09-

41800 SR #7

011

.
•

•

Ca ll Gary Stanley

Equipment

1994 Chevy H on. 4x4 ,
dually ext cab. 6 .5 Turbo
diesel. 170,000mi. Excellent
conditiOn. SB ,SOO (740)245 57B5 .

$500 Demonstration BonusLet u ~ demo a John Deere Z
Trail or X Serres AII·Wheel
Stee r on your law·n and
rece1ve an elC!ra $500 off our
alre&lt;rdy discounted prices.
Lit111ted
time
oller.
Carmrchae l Equipment Inc.

Quality Guaranteed
ATV Part' &amp; ACC.
J ames A Will J r.'
Owner

River Valley Christian A"adcmy
Now enrolling students f!1r the
2005-2006 school yea r.

F(l'
74:::0-')•66•9•-0•3•0-:2~.-:-----,

(740)446 -2412

Fnl' F:slim atcs

. 1m

months on John Deere
Round Balers. 0% tor 48
months 0!1 John Deere
Mower Conditioners wi l l:lJohn Deere Credit approval
Carmichael Equipment · Inc

Your Pro Star Trailer Dea ler.
Ca rmicrael Equipment Inc

~

l~tmcrete'·\V!irk
25Years Experiencr

n&gt;R SAL£

0% Fin anci ng tor up to 60

RE,.-r

,.

~

SUVs

p1 es 'tor sale S2 00 Wormed
2000 Honda C ALX 5. speed
and seo;md shots. 7wks o ld.
manual trans. Exc. ConcJ.
Call (7 40) 388·8965.
S9000 00 080. 740-4&lt;6·
9931
·' Full blooded 1emale Pit BulL
Very we ll trar ned Pnce neg .. 2000 KJa Sephia . 4 door,
2 ye ars old . automatrc 27 m pg. 72 .000
Ap! ox
4
s; 400 (304167 5·5 540 or (740J:J9
-'-7-_7_
0:-86______ .' 7::':0: )3•6•7-:
-7:-:_2_9 _ - : : - - , mrles. good condrtron S800
•
m b(akes, hrtElrs , trres . belts
(30 4)675·4024
dsl( t0 1 T.\rn R1vers
Towe1 ~~ accep1· 1i:
cv.~"~;.1 1TS. &amp;
Nancy Homestead Rea :ty 1ng application; '::Or wartm~
VF.GI:.,~·\ HIJ-)o;
etc tune!Jp. Make excellent
,_
em lor c.o llege
A s~rrlg
8 roke~
.rst f(lf Hud·Su')~·:-eo 1· br,
- ~ --$5.500 \740)441 -9378
House fo r Rert rn POII",t a,Eot ~.Ortme'"~t cal! t75-6£75: Canncng tomatoes .. atteady
~
( 304)67~ 622 4
ptcked brrng co ntarners. 2002 Sebr1ng. 5 5.695. 2000
P l"asant
·- ·
.,
•.
,.
_
.
Rowe Farm. (7401247·4292 Neon. $!3,895; 2000 lmpata,
Sl
i"l ouse for rent Referen ce 8.
"
$5.995 Satur ns. Cavaliers
fDR
F,eid noe n lomaloes Call Gmnd Ams and o1hm s '"
deposit. N o pets
In the __
t7 40J379- 911Q
stock 3 moo ths/3.000 m•les
country Call (740)379-220:3
Downtown Ofl1Ce Space- 5
,vsrranty.
Immaculate
cab1rH.ollage room surte S650 mo. 1 room Shelley's Cannrrg Tomatoe s
Cook Nlotora
teD on 40 acres ot woods oflrcE· $225;mo 2 room ac ross from A8crne Lock &amp;
328 Jackson Prke
Slltl!lQ
room surte $2'i0 me Secr.rr1ty Dam . open 9-6 closed
(740) 44 6·0103
$400fmonth (61.:11595-7773 c1eposrt requrred Vou pay Sunday
96 Toyota Tercel 4 7~ AC.
ol1 -800· m8-4686
utrl1hes All spaces very n1ce
I \I«\ I'' 1•1•1 II"'
auto. red. $3500 (740)742F.lev&lt;:~tor Ca~ •740J446·3644.
&amp; II\ ~lor leU h.
t:.arge 2 BR g&lt;uage Gcc•J
2662
'or 8J)porntrnent
neighborhood.
IS
1
dep6s1t &amp; ref {740 iJ46. Pnn-,e Commerc16,1 Scace ot
TRV&lt;."'K."'
F~k.\1
1
1079
HlK SAU.
~ Spr1f'g Va tey Plaza 3 000 .__ _iiEOioi
Vloiliol~ioliit:li"o•'--"
sq 11 CaiJ 1740r446-348t
SOl all 2 · Bedroom hOuse 111
16FT Low Bo)' Trarler, Farm . 1997 Dodge Dakota SLT V6 .
~'flon WV 5350 00 mool"
T'a•le• lo: 2 "'- rri1le&lt; o.l
'-"'
'
'
·
J
or Trtled fc.i Roa d SB:?O. Automa trc . 2 Wheel Dr1ve
So\bO 00 Depos1t No Pe;S NfOig hiJ(,rhooo
Ad
Call
..J
JU.t)"\75· 1165
72,000 mrles (3 04 )593-161 4
)() 4 - 773~9192
"740A4f-1tP5

ssoo

....
,,; ...n ..,, .., ·"lltl·
.'-, ' ..•

"'.·.,

SlT. 100,000/miles 4x4,
318/ Sspd , loaded, many
extras. nice
$7.500
(J04 )882·2845

Tara
Townhouse
.Apartrne'lts. Very SpaCious.
2 Bedrooms C'A 1 1/ 2
Bath
Adult Pool &amp; Baby
PoiJL Pat ro Stan S3851Mo
No Pets
lease Plus
t;!ou~ for R ent Pt. Pleasant Securrty Depo$11 ReqUired.

i

'fROCKS

0% Fin anci ng lor up to 36 99 Dodge Dakota Club-Cab

1965 Mustang Faslback
Rangoon Red exterior: blacK
rnterior. 6 cycle, 3 ~8ed , air
cond itioning. radio, good
d river. RlJst free AZ car.
Price : $19.oqo .oo.
Hrll's
JET
Automotive Classic Car
AERATION MOTORS
Resto ration &amp; Parts, Inc
Repa1red . New &amp; Rebuilt In
29670
Bashan
Road .
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1Racine. OhiO 45771 . Phone
800-53 7-9528
740-949 -2217.
Website :
wv.w.hillsresto.com

Bun~li~G

Concrete R!;!!Tioval
and Replacement

mR SAI.E

EQUIPMENI

Buy
or
se ll
Riverine
··u H SALE
Antiques , 112'4 East Mai n
•
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 74·0.
1960 Th underbird
Black
992 -2526 . Rr.r ss Moore.
exterior
with
new
paint.
New
owner.
black 7 white Interior.
Le isa·s Antiques- bought· Rechrome bumpers. Engine
soiCl at Alliga tor Jacks Flea compartment detailed . Wrre
Market. Rl? . Pom eroy. lurni- . wheels. Frame-up show ~a.r.
lur e. prrrnit ives. bottles . Prrce $~8 . 500 . 00 . _ Hrll s
(?40)99 2. 5088
Automolrve Class rc Ca r
Restoration&amp; Parts. Inc
Pho ne :
740-94 9·22 17.
MISCEI.I, \ NWLIS
Website : www.h illsresto.com
MERt 'HANI&gt;Lo;t:

Post Gards with ( 1c) stamps
( 1) 19071 2) 1908 (70) 1909.
Ask for Jr. (740)256·1102.

740-l67-0544
740-l61-0Sl6

1.£WIS
CONCBI:TE
CONSTRUCTION

M1l(JUI:S

NEW AND USED STEEL
Sleel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Fo r
Concrete.
Angle.
Channel . Flat Bar. Steel
Gr at ing
For
Drains.
DrrveWays &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals bpe n Monday.
Tue sday. Wed nesday &amp;
Frrday, Barn-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday. . Satu rday
&amp;
Sunday. ~ 740)44 6--7 300

• MOBILE HOME
REPAI RS
• CARPENTRY .
• ROO( • PAINT
OHIO Lin·~ sF.# .!8244

Start ing at 6 :30 pm
Playing Bingo for Free
1st &amp; 2nd Pack Free
After 1st &amp; 2nd pacR $5.00 ea
Guaranteed $60.00 a Game.
Door Prize $900.00

P""

Furnrshed A~ Mt me nt , 2nd
Ave, Gallipolis Ups tai rs. All
Utrlrtms Pard 1 Bedroom ,
No ·Pets ( 74 0i446-952 ~

• FOR ALL YOUR

5 Ea~y Bird Games Starting at5 pm

Jackson County. Ohro. 39
www cs kusa.conr , Clea n f ur~1shed Apartment,
acres,
$325 montn. include s water.
(513)374 -94 24
lld sh Sewrrty Depo sit ana
PrtJperty w/ro t~ d tromage on Re l ere'lce~
requ rred
Buckeye Hllrs RJ and ,3041675-2970
Pl easa ni
Va!ley
Ad .
CONVE NIE NTLY LOC AT·
(740)245-5785.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
Town house
apartments .
R EA t FXI'\TE
andror small houses FOR
WANif:o
RENT Call (740 )441 · 11 11
For Renl: 24 'x32' Pole Barn
for
application '&amp; .rntor matior).
I Buy Homes· Loca l per so!1
Garage. 3 Stalls with electric
buys hom!i!,S- Conlidentral. Fo r rent: 2 BDRM . garage and water, Private on Rt 7·
OrJick cash . Jim , 740·992· apt downtown : contact Mark f\j_Orlh . (740)446-4782
6~0 . No c ans 'alter 9 ,
at {740)44S-041 5

HI· '\ 1\I S

SerVIce
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.

No rth

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

Electrical

:1341

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

ACROSS

\II IH II\ \Jihl

14x70 trarler. $400 month.
$400 deposrt. 2 bearoom. 2
p1u
H otiSEIIOID
·fu ll bath , no pe lS, very nice,
Owner mav 1ng- Must sell
Goons
2254
7
0
379
home. 3BR. 2 bath. heat C/A
( Jl )
·
·
pU:mp, stora ge Ourlding, pool ~'-'_ai_la_o_••_n_o_w_,__
· ____
2 pc Ir ving-room .su ite
and cipph ances. 90 Gav1n 2 bedroom. A/C. very nice .
SJ50.00
Street. (740)245-93 18.'
no oe ts. in ' Gall1 poi1S . 5 pc. b.edroom-suite $850.00
(7 40)44 6- 1409, or (740)446· full-size bed $75 DO
State At . 141 Galllpohs, OH
2003
~ xc cond 304·895·31 ,29
· 2 1arge bedroom. 1 bath. LR,
KT. DR Cl air. heat 2 out· Bc aut1IUI nver vr ew· rn
, bur ld1ngs. car port, move 1n Kanauga. Ideal tor 1·2 peoco nd1tion Aboi.Jt 112 ac ple
No pets
plea se
(740)446- 2098 . $5 6.000.
Applrcatrons bein g taken
Appijance
Call (740)'1 41 -0 18 1.
WeH Marnta rn ed Home 2 - - - - - - m1les
North
ot
Poml 81dwe11 area . clea n. 2 bed·
Warehouse
Pleasant on Landscaped 1/2 room. 537!: rnorrth rncludes
acre. 3 be drooms. Farn1ly water &amp; se·.var R eference llo 1n Henderson , WV. - Pre·
~oo m. Den/Oif ice, Frrep lace depos11' 1equrred No pets
own ed applicanes starting at
w1th gas log.s, Hardwood ' (304)576·4037
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
Floors,
Large
Ulrhtyl
we do service work on all
Storage, Large Stale look Nn::e. 2 bcdrourn. all el ect rrc.
Wa ter ari·d t rasll serv1ce Make and Models (304 )675arrd Brick' Pat1o. Ex!la lots
7999
a~a i l able .
Shown b.';' 1nctuded · No pets. $3 50
r1on
th
and
deposit
Appoinynent (304)675 -1536
Mollohan Carpet , 202 Clark
(740\ 441 -7033
Chapel Road . Porter, Ohio.
[J2C Mo1111.1·: Hmll-~'
Tra1ler. 2 bedroom . no pets. (740)446-7444 1-877-830·
FOil: S .- \ I.E
.:wattabte
now
Patrrot. 9 162. Free Es timates. Easy
lrnancrng . 90 days same as
I, 7-l0)379-254Q
~ Home s urlOtH S10.000
cash . Visa/ Master Card
rwo Mcb1l.e Home .Lots for Drive- a- little save alot
Will deliver. l740)385·7f:7 1
$130.00
1997
Two
~~ Flee twood 14_~70 IOUII Bedroom Mobile Home, Quee n
bedroom
suite
lurru shed. 5200 .00, twin bed no matertlcrric W1R help wrth dehv- cor rp lel ely
e; lnl'ludes cen tr&lt;~l an Only Central Arr 1Hea t $425.00. tress $50.00 good cond. call
~ 1 0 :995 .. • Ca ll !7·101385· JA @1740- 24 3·581 1
Treno at 304,576-4006
IJ621.
A J'A KI~IENI~
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
New 1•h70 3 b,}droom. 2
RE.~'I,jT
Aepair-675- 7388 . For . sale,
~ a t h. Only S1SIH G3 per
automatic
re·conditi oned
month . Call Ela1ne '7-l0)385· t and 2 bed roo m apart· washers &amp; dryers, refrrgera243 4.
ments. f urnished and unlur- tors , gas and electric
rr ishe'd. secur ity deposit ranges. air conditioners, and
3 BR Home Only
requ1red . no pets. 740-992- · wr ing er washer s Wrl l do
$1.89/mo_ Includes a.c dellv2218.
·
repairS on ma1or brands in
and s~t ,up. ,7401385·
shop or at your hOme.
-1 36 7
be dro om Apt . Point
p ne Acre. Mobrf! HomG Pleasant. 1 bedroom House Used Furniture Store. 130
p BA , 2B A . LA, Knr:mm . Gallrpolis, HUD (740)446· Bul ewi lle P1ke. Ga llipolis.
OH. 40°o ' oft all krng mat·
jo eck&amp;Bwldrrrgs Arr See ~ 2200 or (740)709 -0062
tress set s, mobile home lot
76 Oshel Ad
2 bed room. 1 bath. water for rent. 3 stoll garage for
pard . S350 month , S350 rent. {740)446-4782.
J«)
Ill SINE'('
.
depos it.
secu nty
Call
\NI&gt; H l' ll .Dt\ie;S
Washer, $100: Dryer $95;
(740)446-3481
etec1r1c range. S125: gas
Otflce Burldrng wi2 apart· 4 room apt. W/ 0 hookup. ra n'ge. $125; refrigerat or.
ments on 2'10 Ave. 1n bath , Kanauga $450, Porter. $95; Wh irlpoOl washer/dryer
(7 40)36 7-7746· set S250; vary nice couch
GallipoiiS Avg ren tal of $400 .
0 40 )3B7·701 5
$125: rocker rscliner $75:
apart ments S 1.200/mon th.
Price St 20 000 'Nrll cons1d er 661 Third. Gallipolis. 2 bed- table/chairs. 540 : chest-of$40: Kenmore
con tract · wlmoney room. unfurnished , no pets , drawers
freezer,
$195;
740)710-0007.
Deposit &amp; ren t $300 Leave upnght
Kenmore chest lreeze r',
messa
ge
(740
)245-9595
IJ&gt;I"S &amp;
$ 1!35: Wrrnger washer, $200.
Anu-:. .\l;K
Apa rtment 1.700 sq. It
Skaggs Appliances
$650. No pets. Avarlable Oct
76 Vine Street. Gallipolis
t (740)4&lt;41- 1 t24
(740)446-7396

-

.
The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

Now A,·ailable At

Friday, Aug . 12, 2005
By Berni ce B ad e Osot
Try to restrict your·invotvemen ts in lhe
year ahead on ly to s it uatio ns w here
you can use your own 1deas and c reativ ity. You have much to otter and the
product of yo ur fertil e imagina ti on has
strong p rofi table possibilities:
LEO (July 23-AllQ 22 ) - Major projec ts Or ven tures that you erther Create
· or personally . manage at this pomt in
ti'me hav8 sp lendid chances l or success before the month is o ut . Gel
moving on any ideas you have.
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sept. 22) - Be a
good listener, today beca use you r
c hance s ol lear ning something o f
g reat valu e through the ideas of oth ·
ers a re e)(ceptionally good at !h is
ti l'ne. You 'll know w hat to do w1lh wha t
you learn.
LIBRA (Sept. 2_
3 -0ct . 23) - Today
marks the first day of a new cycle
where your hopes and dreams can
start to become realities However. it
is importan t that you are-- an op t1m1sttc
and practical visio nary.
SCORP IO (Oct. 24 -N ov. 22)- You're
going to ge t the opportunity today at
being able to elevat e your status in
ways that are 1mportan1 to you Your
poss ibili ties of doing so are now be tter than they've been lor s ~me time.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. ,23.-Dec. 21) P ledge to begin a program today !h'at
will enable you to add to you r store-'
hou se of kno--.yledge . What you learn
dunng this pe riod w ill be o! enormous
help rn elevating you to new he1ghts
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22 -Jan . t9) Your talents and SkillS to tran sform
that which iS outmoded or unprodu ctive mto sornelhing highly uselul w1ll
' be heightened today. Recheck yo ur
stockpllc of stagnant rtems.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20 -Feb. 19) -. A
complicated matter you've been ·
negotiating for some time looks lilo:e 1!
will be reaching a succe ss ful condu·
sian today. II wilt come about thrbugh
· some new thoughts you'll introdu ce
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Thc s ts
an e;o;cellent day to tnt!ieite that d 1et or
eJCercise program you've been an)(·
ious to begin. !I you laun ch 11 now. !he
o dds are that you 'll havp lltlle troubl e
SliCking to 1!
AR IES (March 2t ·Apr il 19) . - Yo ur
pro spe cts · for a m o re achve and
happy soc ial life took e)(!remely prom·
ising at thi s time . II yo u should m eet o
ne w Ctrc le of peo ple todAy. do yOur
part to cull 1vate thetr tn endsh1p,
TAURU S (A1.mi 20-M~;~.y 20) Starting today. you tHe entenng a
cyc le of ending s and now beginnings .
UnprodUctive situa tion s are apt to be
terminated now, but repla ced by more
hopelul conditions.
GEMINI (May 2 1-Juna 20) If
you've been th rnking abouc ma k1ng
sort'le ne w resolutlo.-, s . al;lout yo ur,
future . thts IS the day to senously con Sider doing so . Anything you p lant
now will yielc! yo u a larger tha n no rmal harvest.
CANCER (June 2 1-Ju ly 22 1- Ge t a
strong mental picture ot yoursen ha'&gt;l ing more end you'll ar.rt om ah cal!y hg·
ure out ways to raise, yo ur l1n a~c1a l
p otentia l. Anything you envis•on yo ur·
self doing can be a chreved.

winds cany no passpor1s." - Crtspin Tickell. on the greenhouse efl ec l
(c) 2005 by NEA. Inc. 8-11

'

T:~~:t;~' ~©~&lt;I\)~ -LG t
Ed it•d llr CLAY

BAL M LUMBER

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•

�. Page B6 •'nte Daily Sentinel /

.

wWw .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday,
August u,
.

2005

All T.O. all the time - ·Eagles receiver leaves caitlp
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Eagles have refused to
last season
Terrell Owens has been sent redo hi s deal of seven years .
as he dealt
home by the pnnc1pal , uh, ..and $48.97 million .
with
. his
Last season, Owens had 77
coach .
legal probThe All-Pro . wid receiver receptions fbr I ,200 yards and
lems
and
left Eagles trammg camp tn a franchise-record 14 touchIIIJUrle S.
' Bethlehem, 'Pa., after a verbal downs ·before severely injur''We 'II just
exchange _Wednesday w1th ing his ankle late in the year.
continue to
Ph1ladelph1a coach Andy He missed the tinal two regupush · him .
Reid. Owens ' agent, Drew Jar-season ga ntes and the 'first
Notebook through it.
Rosenhaus, and hi s p~bli c i st. two playoff games before
put
him
K1m Etheredge, sa1d the returning for the Super Bowl.
through his
rece1ver was asked to return in which he had nine recep- paces and· see if we can get
next Wednesday and had gone tions for 122 yards.
him to that next level of conto his home in New Jersey.
Ravens
di tioning.''
'T.O. was asked i6 leave by
Star running back Jamal
Dolphins
Junio r Seau's frus trating
Andy Reid .'~ Etheredge said. Lewis had his first practice in
"I don't think that it was heat- pads following an offseason road back from inJuries finaled. it was a difference of opin- of legal turmo il. The 2003 ly might be over.
Seau was back on the
ion. I don' t know if there was NFL Offensive Player of the
an argument."
Year served four month s in Miami Dolphins ' practice
Owens
told· Comcast federal prison and two months fi eld, apparently recovered
SportsNet he was ''defending in a halfway house after from a calf injury that kept
himself." '
.
pleading gt1ilty to using a cell him sidehned for the tirst 2
. "If the truth needs to be phone to arrange a' cocaine 1/2 weeks of training camp .
The 36-year-old linebacker.
told, then. that's what I' ll do." deal.
. said Owens, sidelined with H Lewis reported to training with whom the Dolphins will
· groin injury for the last week. cHmp
Monday.
On · be cautious, took part in the
"If he (Re id ) wants me to be ,a Wednesday. he took part in a team's only fu ll-pads workout
man about it and have me few team drills, but didn't of the week, one that will be
really go on the air and really participate. in full-contact capped Saturday night in a
preseason
game
at
tell the people what happened, practice.
hurt
the
Jacksonville.
Scau
then I can. It wa&amp; a difference
"He looked fresh, which is
of opinion."
what you wou ld expect after calf while conditioning in San
Eagles spokesman Derek · not being here for the first Diego on July 22.
"He did well. actually better
Boyko declined comment.
week." Ravens coach Brian
than
I thought he would ,''
Owens has been unhappy Billirk said of Lewis. limited
for months with hi s contract. 10 a career-low 1.006 yards Dolphins coach Nick Saban

said. "We did not want him to
go the whole practice because
we didn't want him to get in
an overuse situation where he
might fatigue that particular
injury and have additional
problems."
Jaguars
Cornerback
David
Richardson missed hi s second
straight day of prm:tice with a
right ankle sprain and is out
indefinitely. Richardso n, listed as the staner 9pposite
Rashean Ma!hi s, was on
crutches and wearing a protecti ve boot over his ankle at
practice.
,
Ridwrdson was injured
Momlay night when he came
down awkwardly on his ankle
while defending Ernest
Wilford on a fade pauern.
Without Richardson, Kenny ·
Wright and thiril,round pick
Scott Starks are splitting time
with the first team defense.
Rookie wide receiver Matt
Jones had a new hairdo for the
second straigh t day. The
at
standou t quarterback
Arkansas who switched positions and · was a tirst-round
draft pick by the Jaguars, had
a wide strip of his long, dirtyblonde hair shaved as pari of a
hazing ritual Tuesday. The
haircut was courtesy of de fen-

&gt;ive tackle John Henderson.
But after spending a day
with the new 'do, Jones de'tided to have his head shaved
bald.
"It's just a haircut," Jones
said. ''It's something that happens to every rookie, so it's no
big deal. 1'1 will grow back. "
But Jones kept his scraggi ly
beard . creating an even odder
look.
Bills
Ti ght end Kevin Everett.
the Bill s' third -round draft
pick. signed; although it 's not
dear when the inj~red player
will be cleared for practice.
Everett has been rehabbing
in Orchard Park, N.Y., .since
he had surgery in May to
repair a torn left knee ligament he hurt dming the
team's fi rst day of minicamp.
Everett's agent, Brian·
Overstreet. expects the Bills'
to place his client on the physically unable-to-perform list
and that he' ll probably miss a(
least the start of the season
while he continues worki1ig
out on his own.
Buffalo also placed backup
offensive lineman Lawrence
Smith on injured reserve with
a torn right quadriceps tendon. ·
Pantllers

Carolina claimed secondyear cornerback . Dwight
Anderson off waivers from
the St. Louis Rams . The
de l'ensi ve back out of South
Dakota played in 12 games
last season. He was com pet-.
ing for the team 's nickel back .
&gt;pot durin g training ca mp
.before being released Monday
for curfew violations.
To make room on the roster,
tbe team released cornerback
Shannon Fitzhugh.
Cardim1ls
Top draft pick Antrel
Rolle 's first practice with
Arizona went well.
.
A day after the cornerback
signed a six-year. $43 million
contract tbat includes $13.6
million in guaranteed money,
coach Dennis Green said
Rolle would play Saturday in
the exl\ibition opener against
Dallas - possibly in mm'e
forma tions than at first antici ~
pated.
After spendin g the first
hour of practice in a skLill session . with secondary coach
Richard Solomon. Rolle got
some repetitions with the secOQd-string base defense, as
well as in nickel coverages,
where Green said he would be
slotted for the game.
'

'

Waived by ·Bears; QB Krenzel Frustration building as CB
hopes to catch·on with Bengals Jones' holdout reaches 13 days
GEORGETOWN . Ky. (API
- Former Ohio State quarterback Craig KrenzeL waived
by Chicago after starling five
games for the Bears last year.
still sees himself as a starter in
the NFL
Right now, he's battling for
the No . 3 spot on the
Cincinnati Bengals' depth
chart behind Carson Palmer
and Jon Kitna and just hopes
to be around next year for a
shot at becoming Palmer's
backup.
'' I detinitely think thi s can
be a great fu for me in terms
of career development ."
Krenzel said Wednesday.
"Being able to watch Carson
do this thing. it will be a great
opport unity to sit back and
learn and continue to work on
fundamental s and develop and
mature in the gamt:."
Casey Bramlet is the other
candidate for the third quarterback spot. Coach Marvin
Lewis said Wednesday he
• • would not keep a fourth . even
though the league al lows two
more players on each tclllll 's
practice squad this year.
Bramlet, a second-vear
player from Wyoming. srent
most of last year on the
Bengals' inactive list as the
designated thifd quarterback.
He was allocated by the

Bengals to
t
h
e
H am b u r g
Sea Devils
for the 2005
N
F L
E uro pe
Notebook
Lea g u e,
where
he
got valuable playing time . .
"1 gained a lot of experience
just playing." Bramlet .said.
"You can get a lot better when
you're acti1ally in there playing instead of just watching
tape and looking at a chalkboar.d."
The time he spent 111
Europe, and last year in the
Bengals' system. could give
·him an edge over Krenzel.
"I have a much better feel of
the oftense tl1an last year,"
Bramlet said. "You can be a
little more relaxed and comfortable when you go in there.
when you know what you
need to do."
Krenzel ; who led Ohio State
to a 14-0 season and the
national championship as a
junior 'in 2002, won his first
three starts with the Bears last
semon but injured an ankle in
hi s
fifth
start,
on
Thanksgiving Day a1 Dallas,
and missed the rest of the season.
Then Chicago drafted

Purdue standout Kyle Orton in
the fourth round this spring.
"When I got hurt, that set
me back a little bit. Then
when they took Kyle in the
fourth round. they just felt like
he was a better fit for their
systen\," Krenzel said. "That's
the business side of it. They
go one way. it leaves me trying to go another way. That's
life.
."Life goes on. You m0 ve on.
you get better, and here I am
in Cincinnati competing. It's a
great situation for me."
Orton made the Bears' decisian look good in a 27-24 viCtory over Miami in the Hall of
Farnc game Monday . night,
getting his career off to a fast
start by going 7-for-11 for 175
yards.
Krenzel was 14-of-24 for
175 yards in his best game for '
Chicago, hi s fourth start,
against Indianapo li s. .But he
thinks he can return to a startin~ role with some team. even
'if 11 means spending a couple
years backing up Palmer.
"That's my goal," Krenzel
said. "But· it takes time. r m
working right now, compeling, trying to contribute what!
can to this team this year and,
hopefully, be around (next
· year) and get that chance to
learn and develop."

Porter out four weeks with knee injury
LATROBE. Pa. tAP! ~
Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Joey Porter underwent surgery to remo ve
loose carti lage .. fro·m hi s
knee Wednesday afternoon
and is expected to mis s four
weeks .
If Porter sits out for the
.full four week s. he ' ll miss
the Steelers' four preseason
games, but will be back in
time for Pittsburgh's Sept.
II season opener against the
Tennessee Titan s at Heinz
Field.
"We expect to have him

for
the
o pener ,"
coach Bill
Cow ·her
said.
Porter ,
28. injured
Notebook
th,e
knee
Tuesday
during a one-on-one passrush' drill with rookie offensive tackle Ulish Booker.
Porter' s
knee
became
swol len that ni ght and he
underwent an MRI examinatio n Wednesda y morning.
The surgery was· p~r -

be.
''I'll tell him. 'Go run : ..
Crennel said .
While he's been absent, the
from Page 81
Browns have installed a big
Crennel was awa re that chunk of the offense they' ll
Edward s and his age nt were use this season. Edwards is
in the building . And like even further behi nd after
everyone else, Crennel fig- missing the club;s minicamp
ured a signing · was immi- in June because of a fa mil y
funeral and injury.
nent.
is 'confident
Crennel
"To my knowledge. no
Edward
s
will
eventually
contra~! has been s i gne~ ...
Crennel satd. "Maybe they re catch up .
"He's going to _get acclistill working that out."
he said. "It 's just
mated,"
Once he signs, Edwards,
who was supposed to report going to take a little time. but
on July 25 with the club's it\ going to happen . It cou ld
other rookies, · wi ll· be very well take him a full year
required to paS&gt; a w ndition- becaus.c he.. has missed •this
iog test of several 300-yard much camp. He's going to
shuttle runs.
.
learn. The guy is going to be
"He should be able to run it a good player. but it's going
ri ght now." Crennel said. "If to take time.
he can' t, he hasn; t been
"It's not .going to happen
working out enough.''
tomorrow."
Crennel was asked..what his . The Browns . ope n their
lirst words- for Ed\v;1rds wil l exhibition season Saturday

Edwards

·---.

I

formed by team physician
Di. James Bradley..
. "Joey had problems with
the same khee a couple
years ago," Cowher said. "I
think we ' ll ·have him back
little bit soo ner than (running back ) Duce (Sta l~ y)."
Staley underwent knee
surgery Monday and is al~o
expected to m1ss four
weeks.
Cowher
sa id
James
Harri so n will fill in for
Porter at ri ght outside ·line ,
backer. Harrison. 27. started
in tWO games last season.

a

ni ght at home against the
Ne'v York Giants. but
· Crennel said he would wait' to
see what kind · of shape
Edwards was in before deciding if he'll play.
As for Edwards' two-week
holdout. Crennel said it wasn't a distractio n.
. "If I didn't ha ve any
recei\'ers who 1 thought c()uld
play. maybe the.n it would be
a distraction . But I've got .
some guys who can play." he
said. "Th at's football. Thi s is
the NFL Guys hold out.
Guys walk out. And you have
to deal with it."
·
Edwards, who nearly
junlped to the NFL following
hi; junior season. finished ·
with 252 career receptions,
3.542 yards and 39 TDs with
the Wolve rine~ . Laq season,
he won the Biletnikoff Award
as the nation 's top wideout
and was the Big Ten\ offensive player of the year.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (A P)
- Tennessee ' s top draft
pick missed hi s 13th day of
training camp Wednesday,
and
cornerback
Adam
"Pacman" Jones isn 't making the be st impression on
his teammates.
A newspaper on Tuesday
quoted Jones as being
unhappy that his teammates
haven ' t been as loyal to him
as they should, and he said
he was upset with the negative things I:!eing said about
him as he holds out for his
first NFL contract.
Following
Tuesday' s
afternoon· practice, a Titan s·
jersey with "Adam" hung in
Jones ' locker as an apparent
response to Jones taking

issue with a commc·m by
linebacker Keith Bulluck
that he would ca ll him
Adam instead of using his
nickna·me.
Bulluck
vehemently
denied having anything to
do with· the jersey, and said
he thinks Jones. is frustrated
and disappointed that he's
not in training camp.
"I would probably defend
myself as well. I'm not real ly worried ab.out it,"
Bulluck said. .,
"He's someone that could
help this team · and contribute, but he's not here.
It 's one of those things out
of sight, out of mind. That' s
kind of what my comments
were about. He's goi ng

through his contract negotiatiOIK I hope that all works
out for him . and he can get
here as soon as he can to
help us out. ''
.Iones, a former West
Virginia University ·cornerback. cou ld not be reached
Tuesday. but his agent
Michael Huyghue cal led &gt;t
the airing of "dirty laundry."
"Every day he's out builds ·
fru stration ... :· Huyghue
said. "Adam cares very
much about his teammates.
and they care about him. "
Jones' holdout is the
longest by a Titans draft
pick since the franchise
relocated to Tennessee. He
was their highest.pick at No.
ft overall.

THURSDAY, AUGUST .25, 2005·
• MEIGS • EASTERN • SOUTHERN

.Be Sure To Be
. ·~

Partot · .
A
Th1s l'i
Special Falls ear's
P11eVIew
· rd"tiPorts
·
. c;, I On!

'

ADVERTISING DEADLINE- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2005 - 5:00 P.M.

Call Dave or Brenda
at 992' ..2155
.
For More lnformatioQ

\[be 1!\ailp ~entinel

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