<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5131" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5131?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T14:35:55+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15059">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/acdd0a99f89344fa8916748cace273cd.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ced2fe8739a310d053b4fad740ba9163</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="17496">
                  <text>'

·....

-.'. .

.'

..

.

'

.'

•
'

.

Agony of Marines
tragedy sinks in
for families, military
towns, AS

london marks
four weeks since
attacks, A2
•

•

Mason County
Fair will
highlight
musical variety

Thursday, August 4, 2005

www .mydailysenti~el.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sen tin~ I

BENEFIT GOSPEL CONCERT SATIJRDAY
;;n ( TN 'l S • \ 'ul. 5 4 . :\:o.

BY NICOLE FIELDS

-

NFIELOS@MYOAILYR[GlSTE/l.COM

POINT PLEASANT Variety is the spice of life. and
mu.&gt;ical variety likel y w:l l
spice· up this year's Mu.son
t:oumy Fair.
The fair kick's off Monday.
Aug. 8, anu with the excep:.ion
of that evening. '\hid: wil l
feat ure tile fair queen contest.
the main st age will host a variety ·of nw sical performers
throughout the week .
The li"t group tu t•:kc the
stage wi ll be The William s
Family at X ·p.m . Tuesday.
Aug. 9.
'
The Proclalmers
According toBrian Bill ings.
who serves : ts c:huirmun of tile
POMEROY - The fourth annual benefit
fair's entertainment commi t- concert of the Trinity Congregational Church
tee; The Williams Family was has bee n set. for Saturday in Pomeroy's
an instan t hit whe n he and tile Riverfront Amphitheater.
other members of the mmm itPerforming at the c:onc:ert · will be the
.
tee
smv
them
perform
at
the
Procl
airners of Parkersburg. W.Va .• and
.,
West Virginia Fair" and DaySpring of Athens. The church pays all
Festiv;i\ s Convention thi s past expenses of the c:o ncert.
Whil e there is no admission charge. a love
January.
"(The Wil\ianb Family's ) offer in ~ will be taken. J ll of which will be
s Jnc~.:re
m e~sage .
Lhrough dona ted to th e operation of th e Meigs
gospel music was so rcw aru- Cooperati ve Pari sh God's NET programs for
ing and heartteil that we knew ymtth. In tile eyent of rain the concert will be
. this was the grnup we needed moved to Trinity Chu"h .
to bring lo the fair.'' Billings
said.
GospelmUsi&lt;.: 'Yill con tmuc
. throughout that evening With a·
peJformance . from
local
POINT PLEASANT Thesday, Aug. 9
gospe l group Eternity at 9
Fol l o win~ is the schedule for
9 a.m. - Fair opens.
p.m.
,
th e 2005 ' Mason Cl)ltnty Fair.
9: 15 a.m. ~ Pet Parade.
Country music singer Bill y
Whi le events at tl1c fair- show ring.
Cu rrington w ill tak e th~ ~aagc
grounds hegi n Monday. the
II a.m . - Junior Dairy
at9 p.m. Wednesday: Aug . I0, lirst official eve nt will be the Goat Show. followed by
and Billings said the entertain- parade on Saturday in down - Market Goat Show.
n1ent c:ommittee was exc:ited town Point Pleasant. beginnoon - Egg toss. ·
to be featuring Curri ngton at ning at noon . "The lineup
I p.m. - Carnival opens.
this year's fair.
I :30 p.m. - 4-H Horse
starts at Second Street.
"What ehe can yctu say
General admission. whi&lt;:h Drill Team Exhibition.
about thi s versatile cnrenainer in&lt;.:ludes •til eiitertainme nt.
4 p.m. - Youth in Gospel
but that he's simply one of th e ~ ~a ~e shows and ~ carniva l Music. main stage.
best co unt ry music· has to rilles. is $5 on Monday. $7 on
5 p.m. - Special Lam b
Show.
Tuesday
through
Thursday.
offer." Billings 'aid.
5:45 p.m. ·- Point Pleasant
Thursday. Aug. \\ '' line-up and _ $8 on · Friday and
Saturdav.
Hi
gh School band. inside
v.:ill feature local mu sic ian
Aug.
8
stage.
Monday,
Garry Peck at 8 p.m.. rol \owed
K a.m. - . Wei gh fecd~r
6 p.m . - . Four,whee\ ;'\TV
by Cledus T. Judd at 9 p i11
&lt;.:a\
vcs.
steers
.
goats
and
drag
races; Market Lamb
Dubbed country mu,ic: · s
Show.
lambs.
"funny man:· thb year will be
~ a. m. 2005 fair opens:
8 p.n1. - Williams Family.
Judd 's second Yisit to the
Mason 'County Fair. with his judgin g. Some d~partments , main stage.
closed.'
9 p.m . - Eternity, main
first apbearance being exactl y
10:30 a.m. - Youth 4-H stage.
six years ago. At!g . II . \999.
Hor., e Show.
.11 P·!TI· - Good ni ght,
Another local music ian.
+:+5 p.m. - . Jason Eades gates close.
·
Joey Wilcoxon of Gallipolis. :vtcmorial Scholarship award.
Wednesday, Aug. 10
will kick off Friday's musical
5 p.m. Market Hog
9 a.m. - Fair opens.
festivities at 7 p.m .. and annu- Showman,h ip wi th Market
noon - Hay'bailtoss. farm
al performers Rick K. alld The Ho!:' Show fo llowin g immedi - game s.
AllnighteC' will begin· si nging aiefv: Little Mi ster ' and Miss
I p.m, - Carnival opens.
at 9 p.m. Billings referred to Ma son County on the main
l p.m. Open Sheep
this group as one of .the top '-l tag...:.
Show.
1950s-' 60s mu sical gro ups in
7 p.m. - Fair dedication.
5 p.m. - Lip sync contest.
5:30 p.m. - Wahama High
the country, and he said they mai n stage.
.
8
p.m
.
Fair
Quee.n
School
band concert.
have per(ormed at the fai r
6 p.m. Commercial
more than an y other mu,i&lt;;a\ Contest. main stage: Annette
A'my
Boggs
Feeder
Calf
Show.
Hanes
Award:
act.
Brand y
Barkey · 7 p.m .
Demolition
The week·s· entenainment Award:
Community
Service
Award.
Derby
;
4-H
Leader
Memorial
.will be capped off with &lt;t per,II p.m. - Good ni ght. Award, junior building.
forman ce by Sammy Kershaw
gate
s close.
9 p.m. - Billy Currington,
at 9 p'.m. Saturday: Aug . 13.
'
Billings said thi s entertainer
likely \Viii impre" everyone.
with hi s powerful songs.
strong vo ice a,nd a ' tyle liJ&lt;e.
no other. ·
·
GALLIPOLIS
McGuffey Lane performs
"When it' s ·all said and McGuffey Lane's hi gh ener- at the Gallia County Junior
'done, Kershaw will mo't like- gy rock . co unf1·y and contem- Fair at 8:30 p.m. Saturday.
ly be one of the top draw s. in porary mu sic ha s · been ' Ever since its break when
the hi story · of the fair," attracting attention . through- the band played the Ohio
Billings added.
out the Ohio and the midwest State University .campu s, was
The enterta inment com mit- for neur!y 20 y~ar~. But this discovered and Figned !o a
tee is made up of Billings. veteran band remain' fre &gt;h' record ueal. McGuffey Lane 's
Kevin
Durst anu Jean and inno\·ati ve . rede finin g career has been built on artisDoolittle. and they work dili- itse\1 " ith an infu,ion of ne'w ti&lt;:ally and commercially suegently throu ghout the year to talent that blend&gt; perfectly cessful music. The group has
schedule performef' for each with the band's established toured with the Charlie
qy\e .
Daniel s Band. the Judds,
· upcoming fair.
·

Joe Diffie

Dayspring

main stage.
9:30 p.m.
Potato Sagk
Race, following calf show.
II ' p.m. - · Good night,
gates close.
Thursday, Aug. 11
9 a.m. - Fair opens; Kid's
Kid Show.
·
9:50 a.m. - Younguns Calf
Show.
Open Beef
I0 a.m. Cattle Show; Junior Beef
Show immediate\~ following.
noon - Paper Airplane Fly.
I p.m. - Carnival opens;
Mark Wood Fun Show, inside
stage.
2 p.m. - Seed spitting contest, outside show ring. ·
4 p.m. - Mark!!t Steer
Show; . pie eating contest;
Mark Wood Fun Show, inside
stage.
5 p.m . - Hannan High
School band concert.
5:45 p.m. - Pretty Baby
Contest.
6 p.m. - Junior Horse
Show. trail class.
7 p.m. - John McCausland
Award; Junior and Open
Dairy Show; Farm Stock
Tractor Pull.
8 p.m. -Garry Peck, main
stage.
8:30 p.m . - Cledus T.
Judd, main stage.
II . p.m. -. Good night.
gates close.
Friday, Aug. ·u
9 a .. m. - Fair opens.
10 a.m. - . Master Market
Showmanship.
·

•

noon - Scavenger hunt.
I p.m. - Carnival opens;
Junior Livestock Sale of market meat goats. market hogs.
feeder calves, market steers,
special ·Jambs and market
lambs ; Fair Schol~rship
Award; Mason County Born
and Raised Market Animal
Award ~ .

5 p.m. - Poinl Pleasant
Middle School ,band concert.
6 p.m.
Big Bend
Cloggers.
7 p.m. - S uper Stock
Truck and Tractor Pulls; Joey
Wi \cox on, main stage.
7:30p.m.- Chicken catch ,
following stage :
9 ll.m. - · Rick K. aqd the
Allmghters. main stage.
II p.m. - Good night,
gates close.
.
Saturday, Aug. 13
9 a.m. - Fair opens.
9:30 a.m. - Open Mason
County Youth Fun Show.
II a.m. - Dash for Cash.
I p.m. - Carnival opens;
horseshoe pitching.
2 p.m. - ·· Pedal Tractor
Pull.
5 p.m. - S.H. Kang's Tae
Kwon Do Academy; Open
Horse Show; motocross prac-

tice.

H

6 p.m. -Motocross .
8:45 p.m. - Sweepstakes
Awards; Donnie Hill Award.
9 p.m. - Sammy .Kershaw,
main stage.
II p.m. - Good nighi,
gates .close.

McGuffey Lane takes fair stage Saturday

'

Marshall Tucker and the
Allman Brothers.
With record sales of more
than 350,00Q, McGuffey
Lane continues to have a
stron g, loyal following . Many
. songs from their Atlantic
· Records releases continue to
get airplay.
T~e
199_5 High Chief
Records
release .
of
"McG uffey Lane's Greatest
Hits" generated new interest

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

SPORTS
• Reds stumble with
Atlanta. See Page 81 ·

Joe Diffie
perlonns
at Gallia
fair ~onight

I

·Mason County Fair schedule

'

..

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

in the band, prompted a new
touring line-up and a new studio album produced last year
With McG uffey Lane's
well-known music, such. as
the · favorite hit "Long Time
Lovin' You," mixed with the
band's own brand of humor,
bOth longtime fans and the
newly-converted are hungry
for more of the McGuffey
Lane American music experience.

GALLIPOLIS - Hailing
from Tul sa, Okla., Joe Logan
Diffie cites the biggest musi:
cal influences on his life a&amp;
his father, Joe Riley Diffie,
and country greats George
Jones and Merle Haggard .
The fans can sense that kind
of heritage when listening to
hi s first number one singles.
1990's "Home" and "If You
Want Me To," "If the Devil
Danced'' and "New Way".
from 1991, but are also treat ..
ed to a performer with an
individual style that distin"
guished itself with nine
albums during the '90s and I0
songs that topped the country
charts during the decade.
Diffie performs at the Gallia
County Junior Fair tonight at
8:30.
Working with hi s band
Heartbreak Highway. Diffie
lists his favorite song that he's
written as " Is · It Cold in
Here?" and " Ain't That Bad
Enough" or"Ships That Don't
Come In" as the tunes he likes
to perform live.
When not pursuing his
favorite pasttimes. which
include golf, crossword puzzles. and making wine and beer,
Diffie .is perfecting the sound
that's made him a favorite on
the road, radio and on CD.

Vinton slates
bean dinner
VINTON A tradition
going back to the days following the Civil War will be continued when the annual Vinton
Bean Dinner and parade is
staged Saturday under the
sponsorship of American
Legion Post 161 and its auxiltary.
.
.The parade is scheduled for
I0:30 a.m. and will form at ·
Vinton Elementary School. It
will proceed down Ohio 160 to
Ohio 325 North a.nd on to the
Community Park. the site of
the dinner.
The dinner will continue
until 3 p.m., organizers said.
For information on the
parade or to participate, contact Mayor Sam Sowards at
388-8461 or (740) 992-6976.
The dinner. will include a traditional Civil War soldier 's
meal of beans or bean soup
prepared in cauldrons ar the
park,buthannburgers, hotdogs
and other refreshments will be
avai \able. Announcement of
this year's recipients of the
:'Golden Booge( awards.
started in 2003. will be made
during the dinner.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Geneva Hall
·• Gail Stumbo Hovatter
• Gary Mitch

INSIDE
• More charges in leak
of Pentagon informalion.
See Page A2
• Local briefs.
See Page A5
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• North Carolina wins
back copy of original Bill
of Rights. See Page A5
• Church Events.
See Page A6
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6

2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart) Gallipolis,
'
(74Q) .......17,.

'

1~

"'" \\.m~daii~M·nlim•l . &lt;·•orll

H{ll),\ Y.. \ l! ( 01 1ST:;, :um:;

Meigs residents, neighbors testify in support of AEP cost proposal
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Public officials, representatives of the building trade,~ and
members pf the ·general public nearly all of whom support American
Electric Power 's plan to recover costs
associated with its proposed $1 billion
power plant in southern Meigs County
- testified at a Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio hearing at Meigs
High School on Thursday evening.
Nearly 200 attended the hearing,
and some 40 of them testified for the
record. It was the third and final hearing allowing public testimony on
AEP's plan. The testimony will
become part of the official record in
the PUCO case. along with expert tes. timony to be offered at an evidentiary
hearing before the PUCO next week.
The PUCO is not.expecte.d to render a
decision on the plan before October.
The ~enefit of the plant to the economy was outlined by a number of
tho se testifying, particularly those
representing the building trades, such
as&lt;9))lumbers and pipefi tters, carpenters and electricians from throu ghout .
southern Ohio, who would be among

Syracuse
Council asks
Charter for .
senior discount
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSE~TINEL . COM

SYRACUSE . At last
night's meeting of Syracuse
Village Council a representative
from
.Charter
Communications requested a
cable television franchise
renewal from council but did
not get it, not yet anyway.
"One of the main complaints I get is why. we can't
get a cable company that
offers a senior discount,"
Councilwoman
Donna
Peterson said to Michae I
Kel emen,
Director
of
Government Relations for
Charter.·
Kelemen said he would
look
into getting a senior rate
WEATHER
for the village and be in touch
with Clerk-Treasurer Sharon
Cottrill by next week on that
issue and an internet service
discount for the Syracuse
Police and Fire Departments.
Charter, which services
250 customers in Syracuse,
requires the renewel in order
to use the village's right-ofways for service . .
Charter· is requesting a I0year
agreement si milar to the
DetailS on Pa&amp;:e AB
last signed in \996.
Kenny Buckley announced
that the Federal Emergency
Management Agency approved
the v illage·~ appeal for money
to repair the concrete decking
2 SECfiONS - t6 PAGFS
surrounding the London Pool.
'Calendars
A:3 FEMA has agreed to pay
Classifieds
· B4-6 · $ \0,500 for the decking to go
Comi~
B7 along wi,th the $57,259 to .
repair the inside of the pool
Dear Abby
A:3 ; though
no money has actually
Editorials
A4 been reeeived by the village. ·
A.6-'7I ' · Street Commissioner Mike
Faith • Values
•
Ralston ' suggested coun~il
Movies
As fill the pool to flush the mud
NASCAR
B3 and sediment from the lines
and to check the pool's
Obituaries
As motors. Council decided to
B Section act on the advice and begin
Sports
AB filling the pooL
Weather

INDEX

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishin~ Co.

,·
Two Convenient Locations:
114 Mile North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge Mascio, .WV
· Phone (~) 773-5323

-y

Please see Syracuse. A5

Brlan J. Reed/photo

Jean Craig 'of Middleport, the widoW of a boilermaker and mother of another;
addressed the employment benefit construction of a new power plant in Meigs
County wou ld create. Also pictured are Stephen Lesser, a PUCO attorney who
conducted the hea ring, and a court reporter who transc'ribed testimony.
the estimated 2,000 who would be
working to build the plant.
Meigs County Commissioner Mick
Davenport outlined the benefits of the
plant to Meigs Cou·nty and the south-

.
ern Ohio region.
"AEP's cost recovery plan is good
for Meigs County, the region and
Ohio." Davenport said. "The county
has struggled and the economy has

Commissioners
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

tlREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Mei gs
County
Commissioners
awarded a half-million dollar bid for the paving of
county roads to Shelly Co.
of Thornville during their
on
regular . meeting
Thursday.
• ..
.
Comissioners accepted the
bid of $531,704.32 after
review by Engineer Eugene
La st · week.
Triplett.
Commissioners opened bids
from Shelly and Black Top
Contractiqg.
Inc..
of
Nelsonville, in the amount of
$635,768.88.
The project. to be funded
through the Ohio .Public
Works Commission Issue II
program, includes paving of
Eden Ridge Road in Olive
Town ship, Leading Creek
Road in Salisbury. Depot
Street (County Road 3) in
Rutl and, Will's Hill Road
near the Meigs County Golf
Course. the county's portion·
of Beech Grove Road. Hy sell
Run Road and various streets

been on the decline ,\nee the do,in g
of the AEP/South er n Oh io Coal
Company's mining pperati on&gt; ...
Davenport presented letters of sup. port frum elected ofTicia\.s and economic deve·lopment offic ial s in
Athen s.
Gallia.
Vinton
and
Washington countie' and addressed ·
concern from some oppo nent s tllat
tl10se who pay for the cost of th e plant
wi ll not directl y benefit from it.
"Others out side the re gion su&lt;.: h as
consumers in Franklin County have
ben efited from some of the lowest
power rates ir1 the country becau se of
the mining of coal in Meigs County
and because of AEP operation s in
southern· Ohio . We believe it's time to
pay us hack.:·
Jenn ife r Simon · of Logan . Athen'
County Economic Development
Director, said "ir 's .ahout jobs."
''Athen s Count y wholehearted ly
supports this project.'' Simon said .
"Athens and Meigs Counties have the
tradespeople needed to construct the
plant readil y aYai lable. We have coal
here . Let \ use it. We ha ve people here
who know power. At Ohio University,

Please see Proposal, AS

paving bid Break-in at
=
Riverside
Food Mart
Bv

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Police Cl1ief Mark E. Proffitt
annouced that his department
received a call m4:3.2 a.m. on
Wednesday from Ri verside
Food Mart on We st Main
Street reporting a breaking
and enterin g.
B~an

The breaking and entering
apparently happened ovemight
after the store closed at 'II p.m.
First to arri ve on the scene
was Pomeroy PO Patrolman
Shannon Smith followed by
Proffitt who observed glass
missing fr om the store 's
back door.
A survei lla:Ke tape from
inside the store wa' also recovered as eviden&lt;.:e. Pr(;flitt contirmed that the al leged perpetrator does appear on the tape:
He also said besi.&gt;les.the videotape other. p hysi c;~ evidence
w:ts taken from the scene.

J. Reed/ photo

Paul M. Reed, president, and Paul Kloes, chairman of the
board of Farmers Bank and Savings Co., presented a $2,000
donation toward a new radio system for the county sheriff's
department to Sheriff Robert Beegle and Commissioners Jim
Sheets and Mick Davenport. Also pictured is Beegle's grand,
son, Jonathao Taylor.
In other busine ss. commisin the community of Tuppers
sioners
and Sheriff Robert
Plains. Triplett said last week.
Beegle
accep
ted a donation of
The engineer's estimate for
the project is $543.000. $2.000 from Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company
Work is expected to begin
Please see Paving. A5
later thi s summer.

Riding in

~tyle

Robin Brown ing. manager of

·. Riverside Food Mart said that
the perpetrator made off with
20 to 25 canons of Marlboro
Brewce Martin of
ci~arette s and S631 in cash.
Skatopia in Rutland
Brown in~ ac\deu that 'he won't
poses with the custom
know
if &lt;~ther items were taken
limousine that he and
such
a,'
akuhol until a com.
his skateboarding team .
plete irl\·cmnry was done.
CIA, recently drove on a
Brownin\..! '\aid busine ss is
27-state skating tour. ·
back to nnr~m al wi th the back
Brandon Martin and Dan
door being repaired and locks
Fluhart sit on the roof of havin ~ hecn chan Qed.
the limous 1ne which is
"We do ha1·e ,;-suspect in
decked out in Skatopla
mind and expect an . arrest
stick~rs. parrots . cattle
soon... Proffitt 'aiu.
hqrns. an alligator skul l
The
Pomerov , Police
and vent pipe coming
·Depart menl i~ w;,rkin g with
out of the trunk .
other lo&lt;.:al law enfor&lt;.:ement
Skatopia 's next big
oflice" to apprehend those
event IS a visit from the
invnl n•d in lht" 1Tinw.
Old Skars and Upstarts
"Our citiLens will not be vicTour tha\ wil l mvade the
tims and th is willm1t be toleratskate park on Sept. 12. ed in the 1illage of Pomeroy:'
Proffi tt slated. "We ·11 ask for
The national tour 1s
where old school skatmg the ll1~l\il11UI11 :-.CillCll\..' C to be
i lll()&lt;l~J ''n those inllllved.''
skill meets new school
The . irll..'~lknt remain .-. under ,
attitude .

I

.

111\'C:-.tlgat HHl.

�.•

,•

1

'-

'

..

.

ATION
RL
London·marks four weeks since attacks with
massive police presence, subway line reopening

:The Daily Senfutel
..
.'

Bv JILL LAWLESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LONDON - In a snow of
forl·e tu calm an edgy London.
ofti&lt;.:crs armed with submachinc guns ptitrolled uncrowded subway stalions and polite
helicopters hovered over city
streets as one of the busiest
. Underground lines reopened
.Thursday ~ fOLir weeks to the
. .day after suicide bombers
killed 5~ people.
.· . Undercover ofticers mixed
-with a lighter-than-usual load
·of. sub,.;-ay &lt;:ommulers many Londoners no doubt
mindful th111 rerrorisls had
uttempred similar allacks
.exactly twi) weeks alkr rile
deadly Jul y 7 transir hom h-

Page.A2
Friday, August 5, 2005

MCJre charges
in leak of
Pentagon
information
Bv MARK SHERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ings.

British policL inve stig~u in g
· the lx&gt;tched London subway
· attack of Jul v 21 said
Thursday · the y had c·harged
two sisters for 1;r i l in~ to dis-.close in fonmtlinn· ulJder antilen-or laws.
· Ttie (..' ity\ nern~ s \Vere fur-

. thcr ralllcJ hv a messa ~e from
ai -Qaida w·irrning of more
·bloodshed. but people made
-efforts to c'-lrry !lll.
.. People didn ·r .seem frightened m apprehensive. they
were just reaJing their ncwsp'-lpers and getting on with
things. just as the English do.''
said commuter Pat Wi.sh.
· It is cleai·. however. that the
·attack&gt; have changed the city.
· Umdon ·s transport authority
said .subway rider&gt;hip - norAP Photo
mall y 3 milium passengers An armed police officer on duty in central London as a bus passes by, Thursday. Thousands of po lice officers _patrolled London 's
· daily - harl fallen between 5 streets and sprawling s ubway system Thu,rsday. four weeks after four s uicide bom bers kil led 52 people on th ree subway trains
percel)t .and 15 percent on ·and a bus.
weekdays and .10 percent on
:weekends. Hotels have report- Zawahri said.
bomber struck.
Comm is, ioner
Raymond that were smuggkd. but it
'ed ci1ncelations and la1;ge
He did not directly claim
..The lrain.s are really empty. Kel ly said the bom ber.' used. a turn.&gt; out not to be the cas~:·
:downtown &gt;rores say sales are respunsibiliry for til~ allal'!..s in whil'lr is a bit spo o~ y." .&lt; aid pem.xide-hascd
exp losive Kelly sairl ... It 's more like
down.
· Lonrlon.
Chri stine Hough . 51,. an called HMDT. or hexamct hyl- these rerrori.,ts went to a hard. There are signs of fray·ing in
Blair \ Downing Street Undcrgruund
employee. enc triperox ide di a1irine. that
London 's famously diverse oflice declined to comment. .. People aren ' t com ing back in can he made using ordinary ware store or some bemlty
social fab1'ic. too. London · bur Blair has srrongly rejected rile numbers that were cx pecr- in g rcdi~nt s .'i l1 ch as hair supply s rnr~ ...
Police spokesman Paul
police have recorded a 600 any links between the altacks er.l ...
hleai' h. New York offi cia ls
percent increase in cr imes and Britain 's presence in Iraq .
Meanwhile. police charged said rhe ex pl osives were Browne ·initiall y said rhe
.motivated by religious hatred
Many Britons feel different- sisters Yes hshiembet Girma. stored in a commercial refrig- depa11ment had clearan&lt;:c to
:since the suicide. bombings.
ly.
29, and Muluemebet Gimia.' erator. transponed in beverage present the information. On
.• .. l' n1 a little bit anxious. I
..The war in Iraq has turned 2 I , of separate addresses in coolers and set off with cell Thursday. however. he said .he
: suppose," said Robert Allen, into a quagmire that neither south London, with failing to phones.
had been mistaken hut insisted
':20, as he waited to board a sid~ can win, and now ·it's .disclose information under
.. Initially it was· thought that "all the information in the
: subway at King's Cross sta- spreading to Britain via these anti-terror laws .
perhaps the materials were brieting was from open and
';tion ... , can' t help feeling wary terrorist bombings," said
The women . who were hig h-end military explosives unclassilied so urces ...
"()[people who get on the train. Shawn Fahy, a 23-year-old an·ested July 27, were. the set.:·:and watching what they're store clerk.
ond and third peo~le to be
.:doing."
.
Police have not established ch.lrged in Britain in connec:· Officials stressed there was finn links between the London tion with the Jul y 21 attacks.
:'no specific intelligence point- bombings and al-Qaida, or '!'hey were to appear in court
:;ing to a third attack. but between the two sets of bomb- on Frid&lt;l)'.
.
· :mounted an operation invol v- in~ s. In both cases, attackers
The lirst person appeared in
·ing 6,000 officers aimed at targeted three &gt;ubway trains court
Thur&gt;rl ay.
1-smael
:reassuring the public. Both the and a bus, but on July 2 1 the Ahdurahman. 23. from ·south::July 7 bombings and the July devices failed to explode full y east Londo n. fac es c han.re~ of
· 21 failed attacks oc·curred on and no ·One \Va~ hurt.
withholding inlimnatio~ that
::Thursdays.
Tran ~port authori t·ies . on be Ipet! su'pecteu
subway
• Officers '-lllllled wtth auto- Thursda)
reopened
the homber Hamdi Issac· tll'Oid
'·mmic rifle s and pi stoh Piccadill v Line. the 'ubwa\ l'apture. ,
:patrolled stations and streets. li ne ~c· urst-hi r tlll Jul y 1.
h sac. suspecter.! ol trymg io
,. . .
,;...o•
.Police helicopters hovered Sen·i&lt;:e h•1tl been \Uspenderl blow up 11 subway tmin Jul y
'
'
. nbove . and tratlic was he'-1\'ier · m·er much of the route sinl'c 11 21. later was deta ined in
·~·
· .than normal.
bomb cxpilxkd on a train ncar Rome. Britain ha' as ked thai
· ·Th is is a major threat and King\ Cross station. ki lli ng Issac. abo known a' Osman
: we. are doing everything we 26 l'o mmuters and the artack- Hu ssain. he extradited. Hi s
:can. both COVert ai1d Utlder' cr.
l:f\vv~ r :-.aid a lle"arin ~ wa~ -.;et
:CO\er poliJ ing. tq try lo stop
.\&gt;Javor Ken l.i \· in ~srone ,;rid lor Aug. 17.
•
:another altack... said Deput~ the reilpening '"\\""a lllajor
L ondon polit:~ :trt' co nti nu··Chief Constable Andy Trotter mile,tonc in Lonr.lon·, recm•- ing w d~ Lt i n 12 other ~u ... pcu ~
er•
:· of the Transpon Police.
withou t charge. anrl Italy has
-But mornin ~ ru,h hour was three suspects. Police bel ieve
: In a message broadca&gt;t
· Thursda\ . ai-Qaida "lo. c nori cealih li ehteron the Tube. thev haw all the Jul v 21
. A\ man al.-Zawahri linked the Commut~r, -eranted the rare bo1i1bers in custtH.Iv. There
: aitacks to Prime Minister Tom luxur. ,,f a ,'eat buried them- ha\·e been nu arre-.i~ in the
:Biair's decision to send troop·, ,eJ\e~ in new,papers or li s: Julv 7 attach. in which the
:to Iraq . .. Blair nas brought to tened to headphone' as . the four bombers arc hcli'e ,·ed to
.:you de&gt;truct ion in central tram pa"ed the 'P"' bett\een ha' e died.
: Lond,,n , and he "ill brine· Kine·, Cro'' •wd Russell
At a brielin~ \Vcdnesdil\.
York
Police
:more
... ,l ___:_
Square stariulh "here the r-;ew
_. llf rhat. God "illing
___::__

WASHINGTON - Two
former employees of a proIsrael lobbying organization
were indicted ThursdjlY on
charges · they conspired to
obtain and disclose classified
U.S. defense information.
An indicune nt unsealed in
U.S, Dis trict Court 111
Al ex; mdria, Va.. named
Steven · Rosen. formerly the
director of fore ign policy
issues for the American Israel
Public: AlTair's 'Committee.
and Keith Weis sman. the
organization's former s~nior
Iran analyst.
The five-c ount indictment
· also spe ll s out in greater
detail the government's case
against Pentago n analyst
Lawrence A. Franklin. who
already was facin g charges
that he leaked class itied military information to an Israeli
ofi'icial and 'the AIPAC
employees.
Rosen anrl Wei ssman di sclosed sensitive information
as fa r bJc k as 1999 on a vari ·
ety of topics that inclu.ded
terrori st activiti es in Central
Asia. the bombing of the
Khohar Towers in Saudi
Arabia. ai -Qaida and U.S .
policy in Iran. the indictment
~ aid. Among their co ntact ~
were U.S. and foreign govcrnmcnr
olli&lt;.: ial s
am!
re porters. the [ndi ctm ent said.
Law yers for Rose n and
Wei" ma11 de nier.! the accusari&lt;HK .. The charge s in the
indicrment announced rodav
are enti rely unjusti fied, .. sa i~l
Abbe Lowell. Rosen's attorney.
John - Nass ik as .
Weiss man's Ia wver. said .
..We are disappointed that the
f!UH": ITllllent lms· decided to
Pursue the se charges. which
Mr.
We1ssman strongly
denies ...
·Franklin's relation ship with
the men dates to 20.03, the
indictment .said. Franklin
plca(led innocent to the
charge s when his indictmenl
was first unsealed in June.

Community Calendar ·
Public meetings

II :45 luncheon meeting,
Meigs County Multipurpose
Monday, Aug. 8
Senior Center. with rcpreATHENS _ Region . 14 se ntatiav es of Aetna and
youth council meeting , 9 Medical Mutual insuran ce
a.m .,
Athens
Cotmly companies as speakers. C?ll
Department of Job. and . 992-2161 by Aug. 4 tor
Family Services. Ohio 13 ·in reservatton.
. Chauntey.
Saturday, Aug. 6
SALEM .CENTER - Star
.Thesday, Aug. 9
Gra
nge #778 and Star Jtrnior
POMEROY - · Bedford
Township Trustees will meet Grange #878. potluck dinner '
at 6: 30 p.m. , meeti 'n g at
at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
RUTLAND - Leadin g 7:30. Craft and CWA jud g. Creek Conservancy ' District ing. Election of officers .
HARRISONVILLE
special meeting, 5 p.m., to
Harri
sonv ilie
Masonic
discuss insurance.
.
Lodge 4 11 . 7:30 . p.m.
Satourday
adt Lodge hall.
Wednesday, Aug. 10
Refreshments.
POMI;:ROY Meigs
County Board of Health , 5
Monday, Aug. 8
-p.m., conference .room of
POMEROY
Meigs
Health Department office. .
Count y Repub lican Part y,
7:30 p.m .. Meigs Coun ty
Courth ouse. Plans for Me igs
County Fair.
Monday, Aug. 8
TUPPERS PLAINS
Thursday, Aug. II
Parent meeting, 7 p.m. ,
CHESTER - Shadr '{tver
Eastern High School football Masonic Lodge +5:&gt;. 7:30
bleachers, for all parents
p.m .. at hall. Refreshments.
who ha ve a son or 'daughter
playing in fa ll sports.
So uthern
RACINE ·
· Junior High 7th and 8th
Friday, Aug. 5
grade girls volleyball fi rst
•ATHENS ~ .. Chi ldren of
practice, 6 p.m. Must have
sports phy sical to practice. Eden." a Bibli cal story of
Information
fro m
Lisa Adam and Eve w:itchin g
Woods. 992-6752. ·
· their son s. Cain and Abel
M e i ~s
POMEROY
struggle. and a second act of
Band Boosters meet at 6 p.tll Noah and hi s wife trying to
at the band booth at the fa ir- get thei r family in order
grounds . Short business before the llood. Geared to
meeting followed . by t.:lcan - get parenh and their chiling the booth . Band parents dr:en to · ponder eht\ ices.
encouraged to turn out.
Performances 8 p.m nighrly
throu gh SuJl(lay, At1g. 14 at
. the. Athens Fir·st Prcshytcri:1n
Church. corner uf Court and
Washin gton Strceh.

School events

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Sunday, Aug. 7
POMEROY - Enterpri se
United Methodi st Church

will hold services in conjunction with congregation
at Po m c~oy Church of Christ
beg inning Sunday, with
Sunday sc hool ;rt 9:30 a.m.
aml church ,at I0:30. Pastor
Arland Kii1g will . lead services.
. Monday, Aug. 8
SYRACUSE - Vacation
Bible School, 6 to 8 p.m.,
throu gh Aug. 12.. at Asbury
United Methodi st Church.
·'Con str udi nn Zone" will he
the theme.

Reunions
Saturday, Aug. 6
RACINE ~ B eeg l e famil y
reunion at the ho me of
Ronni e and Lemma Beegle, ·
noon to 4 p,m. with a syuare
dance to follow, 7 to II p.m
Take lawn chairs. snack s.
Family :mct friend s in vit~d. · ·
Sunday, Aug. 7
RUTLAND
Da vis
reunion. de." endants of
Orlando aod Cathei·ine
Davis. 12:30 p 111 ., Rutl&lt;;nd
Fire Department. Take covered dish and game prizes.
Sunday, Aug. 14
POMEROY - The RIst
Hayes. Youn g. and Holiday
school reunion will be held
at 12:3 0 p.m. at the o ld
Holiday School Grotl)lds on
Gilke y Ridge road . take a
overed dish for tile potluck.
pictures , genealo~y infonnation and entert ainment.

Other event$
Monday. Aug. 8
POM EROY
Mci ~s
Tubercult;sis
staff
: 1t
Reedsville Fire Department.
4JO to 6 p.m. to administer
skin tesls . Tests wi ll be reatl
on Aug. I 0.

PageA3

'

'

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel'

Friday, Aug. 5
POMEROY
- M e i~ s
County PERI Chapter 7'4.

•

Friday, August 5,

2005

Man ·hopes recycling a diamond
won't diminish its brilliance
DEAR ABBY: I'm hav ing a
hit of a di lemnia. About two
years ago. I proposed tn my
girlfriend, ..Gi gi," ;1nd she
excitedly said yes .. Eventually.
Gigi and I no longer saw eyeto-eye. She returned the ring.
and we both went our separat e
_
ways.
About a year ago. I met a
lady I'll call Angel. Her enworker had tried to arrange ir
fo r mon ths. When we tinally
met. sparks llew! I still get
excited thinking about that .first
meeting. Anyway. Angel and I.
have been dating long cnuugh
that I think she is dc linitely
..The One ... I carl sec myself
settli1ig down with her.
Would it be ap proprime to
~et the stones removed from
the engagement ri11g I got back
from Gigi and have rhem
placed in _tlnother setting fur
Angel'' The 1'-lrge diamond cost
me almost $.1.000 and. for me.
that's expensive. - READY
TO CUT THE CA KE IN
LOUISIANA
DEAR READY: There\ an
old saying: If you want to
make rabbi! stew, first catch
the rabb it. Dn nothing wi th the
ring th~1t was returned unti l you
have tli.,c usser.l the llJ;Itter with
Angei. If Angel. accepts your
proposal. expl&lt;iin the situation
and ask your fiancee what
she 'd prelcr. But don't be wrprised if she doesn 't want the
... tune bet:ausc it svmbuliLes a
failed romam:e. • Your leuer remi nds me of an
old joke my mother to ld me
yecu·s ago. Two wom~.: n were
~ itting next lo each other at the
beauty shop when one noticed
that the other was wcarin~ a
large cliamonrl rin g...W-hy.
\1rs. Harold' "· she exclai1 ired.
''What a gorgeous diamond.
Wherever did you get ir?"
Her ~o 1npanion hdu out her
iland and said: "Whv thank
you. My husband gave it to
me . II\ the famous Hwuld diamond. It has a curse em 11. ..

sister\ fiance should definitely
be tolrl the truth before the
wedding takes place . To do
otherwise could be considered
fraud. and grounds for an
'-lnnulment when the man finds
Dear
out he was niisled.
DEAR ABBY: I am a colAbby
lege student. and I of!en travel
to and from college with my
mom. On a recent trip we.spent
• the ni ght ar i1 nice hotel,. and
.. A curse'"' the woman some olthe people on our tloor
asked. .. What kind of curse?"
were really noi sy. As hotel
Sighed her friend . ..The guests. · should we have
curse is Harolr.l ."
knocked on their door and
DEAR ABBY: My sister. asked them to keep it down ,. or
"Dina:· turned 2 1 . last is it the horel manager's,job to
February. She is planning to keep rhe peace' ' - WONmarry a wonderful . sweet guy DERING IN FALLON. NEV.
named ·'Steve .. in September.
DEAR WONDERING : It is
While I was at their apartment horel security whose job it is ro
last week, the subject of ~: hil - keep the peace. If you were
dren came up. Steve said he bothered by noi se from another
wanted three kids and rubbed room . you should have called
Dina's belly. My si ster just the front desk and reported the
smiled .
,
· problem . Hotel staff would
Abby, my sister can't have have taken it fron1 there.
children. She had a hysterecto- ,'Dear Abby is written by
my when she was 16. Dina AbiKail Van Buren, also
apparentl y hasn't tvld him . I known as Jeati'ne Phillips,
asked her about ir , and .she said and was founded by her mothshe would tell Steve after the er, Pauline Phillips. Write
weddin g. Shouldn't thi s be Dear .
Abby
at
don e before rhe · wedd ing'! www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
TRUTHFUL IN TENNESS EE Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
DEAR TRUTHFUL: Your 90069.

Newberry twins born
RIO GRANDE ~ David
and
Rachel ·
Coc hran
Newberrv are announcim! th e
birth o( twin daug.hters on
June 29. 2005 . at Cabell
Hunt ington
Hospital.
Htmtington. W.Va.
Tavlor Fa ith wci~hed 2
pou1icls lind was 14" inChes
long. Emm11·Grace weig hed I
pounrl. 12 ounces and was 13112 in ches long .
. Paternal gramJparents ate
Steve and Karen Newberry of
Rio - Grande . Paternal grcatgramlparent ~
are
Elmer

Newherry and the late
Catherine
Newberry of
Letart. W.Va ., and Helen
Bailey and the late Clovis
Bailey of Rio Grande.
Maternal grandparents are
Jim and Joyce Cochran of
Bidwell. Maternal greatgrandparents are Charleen ·
Cochran and the late Bob
Coc hran of Gallipoli s, and
KennetM and Florence · Roush
of Point Pleasant, W.Va. The
maternal grea t-grandmother
is Kathleen Williams of
Middleport. ·

THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, ·2 005
• MEIGS • EAS7ERN • SOirrHERN

.

-----

ENVOY SLE 4 WD
Wheels, well equipped
MSRP $32,700

2005 SllliERADO 1500

2005 BONNEVILLE SLE

·2005 VI BE AWD

4 WD, Ext, W/T AT, AC, CD
MSRP $30,062

White Lightning - Loaded
MSRP $34,165

A/T, Loaded
MSRP $23,440

.43

.40

.Be sure To~
Part Of Jih· · A

SPecial Fall1s Year:s

PreviewEcl~;s

_____

.,

·~ AI-Qaida~'
!

2005 AVEO LS 5 Door

,,

Great mileage
MSRP $12,740 .

_ _______________

By S·TEVEN R. HURST

I) in 'outhern Iraq.
··BL.tir hJ-. brou!:!ht to

; CA IR O. Egypt .-\ 1:·Qi.tiUa·.., \ u. 2 t!mbla~.:~:J iht:
London sulc'ide bombin2'
·Thursdm·. "arn~d Bri tain rh'i.n
: more de,trm:uon lie s ahead
:·and promi.,ed re1h of thou:sands of l'.S. c·asualtie; in
: Iraq in a hraten '"'enion of
:,the terror . grot1 p' ; global
·.rem:: h.
_ Ayman ai-Za" ahri also
renewed terror threats to
·:Other counrri es wi th troops in
. Iraq and Alghani&gt;~an. cla im. ing the y h11d 'hunned O&gt;ilma
: bin Laden's offer IN Year of
: a truce if forei~n force\ le.ft
: the baulegro un J.
.
.~ In the tape . parts of which
:were broadcast b\ AI .·Jazeera. ai -ZaWilhri riiadc no
: 'direct claim that ai-Qa1da car; ried out -the Jul y 7 altack, in
: the Briti sh capital. but sou~ht
&lt;-in stead to blame the carn;)&lt;&gt;e
·:On Prime Mini ster To~'
·: Blair's deci&gt;iun to dcpl(l) and
· ~keep troops in Iraq. Britain
maint ain s 8.500 force, main -

$15 804.75

2005 SILVERADO

1500

4 WD Ext. Z-71 , Two tone loaded
MSRP $33,970

$21401.68

$25886.58

and ai-Zawahri still are capaH) U

Je,trulli on
111 •
cen tr.rl
Lrondon. and he "ill brin~
mur~ { I] that. GoJ \\ iliin~_-:-.
ai-Z"" "hn ,air.! .
•
· Pre,Jdenr Bu'h J'ismi"ed
1.1l -ZJ\'- ahri'., thrcal. -.a\ inl.!..
.. \\'e \ti ll sia' on rhe ofi'en~e
ag;.dn ... t th~..,e· penplc. The: 'rc
terrori't' and rhe' 'r.e hilkr'
and the&lt; &lt;&lt;ill J..iil innucent
people -~ - -.,o the) ~. : an impo"e
their darJ.. &lt;i'i on on the
"orld.''
In
Lonrlon.
Blair''
DU\\ nin~
Street · ofl1l'e
declined-to commem .
Jerelln . Bcrlni~:. a t~rf{lri-.,m
an;1 1\ st- for Jane ·, Defense
Wccklv. said ai-Zal\ ahri
appeared to he tn ing to pur
an ai-Qaida ,ramp nn the Jul)
7 .a11;1cks on the London tran"it ,\ '-tl"l11. Th e holnhin!!'
kil leJ &lt;;(, penrlc. lnclucling

ble of org.aniting · ,uch an

· atlac k... Bennie said ll\ telephone.
Thursday m;1rked the se\·enth time ;il-Zawahri has
·used videotapes or audiota'pes
1&lt; , 'peak for ai-Qaida ' incc
rhe Sept. II. 2001. atlac ks in
the Tnited State,_ The Liles!
«ppearallCC fn ii&lt;J\lCd the
Eg) ptian physician\ patlern
uf i,,uing threats of furt her
death and ck,rrucrion if rhe
l 'nited Slate' and its allie' in
lra4 ~HH.l Afghaniqan r e· fu~c
ro w1thdrac\ rroop' from the ·
r~gion_
including Saudi

2005 SIERRA 1500 4 WD

j

2005 TRAI

Ext Two ton'e loaded
MSRP $35,615

2005 COLORADO REG CAB

2005.L.ESABLE LTD

2 WD Auto, AC, CD
MSRP $19,940

Crimson Pearl, Celebration pkg., Loaded
MSRP $36,155

4 WD, sunroof/All power
MSRP $34,.315

$27

.55

.33

$16494.33'

08

Come on In to
Don Tate, where

..'uahi,l - home 11 ) I\\O of
hL.lm·, holic..,t -.hnnl' ....

AI-Za" ,rhri i"ueJ rhe fresh
threats \lith a K.1la,hniko&lt;
ritle prnprcd' agaHht a \\O\Cil
cloth·hac~~rnuild Jh,ll 1nmed
\\ ith thL· '' im.l ~tnJ . . hm,cd the
. . unli .!.!ht. -..u~~l'--ti11~ t h~..~ ' Cl'HL'
four attac~~r ... .
''·'"
l1 lmcJ cHJtd{hiJ' .. . 1-k
" He has tacith 1aken
responsibilit) b) ci,iimin:; ai- \\ tlrc ..t ''h ill" rPhL' ~tnd hl&lt;~t'~
Qaida is in mn trol of;ll~ \it- turban and• cmrl1cr,llc,dlt
ualit..lll. cw·n ,p., illlht people '' a~,gcJ hi' flll .L':l"r \\ l1ik
.lrcn't r~alh 'urt" hin Lttkn . . rc,,J... ing

•

Well equipped .
MSRP $25, t90

/VI, well equipped
MSRP $17,930

$11124.50

dep11ry leader riireatcns 111ore attacks in Britain

2005 LACROSSE CX

2005 COBALT

"The Deals ftre Great!"
ADVERTISING DEADLINE ·WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2005 - 5:00 P.M . .

740-'992-6614

.Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information

1•800-837-1094

Utbe 71Ba~lp ~entinel
•

310.East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH
~'
cf'dd/R'nc

.

lhol'o--'

•
,... ,_

GMC:.

....

-~­

·'

~

.........

'\,-

::(:.Ys;~

@
IH!It ' h.

....

· ·~

. . .......

i:' ltl~ ~:

9·6 :1-londa~ • Friday;
'!-~Saturday

""'
•

•

.

�.

..

'OPINION

_The Daily ~entinel
.

.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

,

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

.Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

'TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Aug. 5. the 217tli day of 2005. There are
148 days left in the year.
Today 's Hi ghli ght in History
· ' On Aug. 5. 1864, during the Civil War, Unio n Admiral
. David -G. F&lt;irragut is said to have ordered. "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead 1" as he led his fleet against Mobile Bay, .
Ala.
On this date:
In 1884. the cornerstone for the .Statue of Liberty was laid
on Bedloe 's hi and in New York Harbor.
In 191,4, the first elec tric traffic lights were installed, in
·Cleveland, Ohio.
In 1924, the comic strip "Little Orphan Annie," by Harold
Gray, made its debut.
In 1957, ''American Bandstand," hosted by Dick Clark,
made its network debut on ABC .
'
· In 1962, ac\ress Marilyn Monroe, 36, was found dead in her
Los Angeles home; her death was ruled a probable suicide
from an overdose of slee ping pills.
In 1963 . the United States. Britain and the Soviet Union
. signed a treaty in Moscow banning, nuclear tests in th e atmos. phere, in space and underwater.
In 1980, Hurricane Allen battered the so uthern peninsul&amp; of
Haiti , leaving more than 200 dead in its wake.
In 198 1, the federal government began firing air traffic controllers who had gone out on strike.
In 1984, actor Ri chard Burton died at a hospital in Geneva.
, Switzerland, at the age of 58 .
Ten years ago: Secretary of State Warren Christopher
arrived in Hanoi, Vi etnam , to "build a bridge of cooperation."
(Christopher was the tirst U.S. secreiary of state to visit
Yietnam since the war and the first ever to go to Hanoi.)
· Five years ago: President Clinton vetoed. a Republicansponsored tax cut for mamed couples, descnbmg It as "the first installment of a fiscally reckless tax strategy.". Actor Sir
Alec Guinness died at a southern England hospital at age 86.
One year ago: Ne)V York City's director of ferries pleaded
not guilty to I I counts of manslaughter in the wreck of a
Staten Island ferry. (Patrick Ryan later pleaded guilty to neg-·
ligen! manslaughter.) Two-year-old twins from the
Philippines born with the tops of their head s fu sed together
were separated at Montetiore Medical Center in New York
City. The Georgia men's bas ~etball team was placed qn four
· years' probation for rules violations tmder former coach· Jim
Harrick.
· Today's Birthdays: Former astronaut Neil A. Armstrong is
75. Country singer Vern Gosdin is 71. Actre" Cammie King
("Gone with the Wind") is (I. Actor John Saxon is,70. Actor
Zakes Mokae is 70. Country songwriter Bobby Braddock is
. 65 . Actress Loni Anderson is 59. Actress Erika Slezak is 59.
· Rock singer Rick Derringer is 58. Actress Holly Palance is 55.
Singer Samantha Sang is 52. Actress-singer Maureen
McCormick is 49. Rock musician Pat Smear is 46. Actress
Tawney Kitaen is 44. Country musician Mark O'Connor is 44.
Rapper ~CA (The Beastie Boys) is 41. Actor Jonathan
Silverman i -s 39. Country singer Terri Clark is 37. Actor
. Brendan Ryan Barrett is 19.
Thought for Today: "One can live in the shadow of an ·idea
without grasping it."- Elizabeth Bowen, Irish author ( 18991973).
'

LETTERS TO TlfE
EDITOR
- ··

than $1,000.
drivers and raised $54.10 When he walked into the
That was the beginning of
more
than
enough
for
n
newsroom at the radio stathree-hour trip for Eleanor Para-Tours (:'para" · for paration in Boston, I almost
- which is what the hospi- lytic). For 16 years Paul
" Ralph
blurted
out,
Murphy carried on with his
tal recommended .
Cramden! What are yo u
brainchild. For II of those
had
the
time
of
Eleanor
doing here?"
,
George
her life . She saw all the years - unti l he ·was 65 The
" Honeymooners" Plagenz
he continued to drive a city
si~ hts in Boston that she had
character and Paul Murphy
Jo'iig been wanting to see. bus to make ends meet. Dut
had a lot in common. Both
'When it came time for sup- his heart was in Para-Tours.
were bus drivers. Both cast a
The money never rolled in
per she asked to go to
broad shadow when they
dropped
off
almost
com(far from it) but through the
Howard John son's.
walked in the sunlight. Both
pletely.
"For over eight year~ I had years it became ·easier to
had marshmallo'Y hearts.
the
Murphy's
friend
Well,
been craving a gri lled frank- raise. Paul of course never
But this .is a story about
went
home
from
the
hospital
furter," she told me later. kept ;my of ·it.
Paul Murphy, not Ralph
was
still
there
but
Eleanor
One day in the mail, a let" Not a boiled one but a
Cramden.
and
Paul
couldn't
get
her
out
te
r
came from Paul Murphy.
grilled one - with piccalilMy introduction . to Paul
of
his
mind.
He
kept
think'·Every passi ng day · is
li, mustard and all the
Murphy occurred on a
ing
of
·
her
confined
to
her
bri
nging ine nearer to my
fixin's.
Just
like
yo
u
would
morning in May 1956. He
bed
with
nothing
to
look
at
have on a picnic." Two days 70th birthday," he wrote,
walked un'announced into
but•
the
four
walls
and
the
after th e tri p. Murphy got a ''and I know that the work
the newsroom at Station
ceiling:
'
involved· in the conti,nuance
note from Eleanor.
WEEI in Boston. where I
When someone would
(Jf
Para-Tours will be ever
·&lt;tt
was
one
of
the
most
·
worked.
come to see her, what could
blissful days I have ever more tax ing. God has been ·
" My name is Paul
she talk about? She hadn't
spent,"
she wrote. "Thaf most generous in giv ing me
Murphy," he said. " I have a
seen anything of the outside
story to tell. Do you. have a world . in eight years. And night, for as fm back as I good health to do . thi s
minute? I'm looking for . Eleanor certainly wasn ' t the could remember. I slept like ' work."
Not long afterward Paul
help!'
· only one in that boat. There a baby through the entire
nighl.l'
closed
up ·' hop. He passed
He was in his uniform - · were many other shut-in s all
Paul Murphy didn 't stop the Para-Tours baton to the
the bus driver's uniform of over the ci ty.
He arra nged for other Marist Fathers. an order of
now.
the Boston city transit sysIt was while thoughts like
tem. This was his story.
these were going through his tours. A 25-year-old mother. priests. in Boston, M~ho carFor a · period of s~veral mind th at Paul Murphy got a polio patient in an iron ried on the work Murp.hy
~
months now, he and his wife an idea. Why not hire an lung, was taken to see the had beg un .
In
the
later
years
of
his
stmas
lights.
Seven
Chri
had been visiting a friend of ambulance to -take people
theirs at Holy Ghost like Eleanor on · sightseeing · more tours in all we re set up l.ife. Murphy wore a pacemaker next to his heart. No
Hospital . in Cambridge, tours around town ? That in the next four months.
Somehow ., Paul was . ·,.ble one would have ever
Mass. During that time they would give them something
to
.always w me up witll the guessed that somebody like
made the acquaintance of to' talk about for a long time.
but
now
hi s Murphy, with a heart as big
Eleanor Marvin, who had
Paul made some calls. An money
the other bed in th e room ambulance in those days, he reso urces were runnin g thin . as all outdoors, would have
need for a pacemaker. But
where their friend was.
found out, would cost $15 And he wanted to ex pand Eleanor, who was 39, had an hour. But when he told at least a trip a week. That then not everyone knew that
been a bedridden patient at the owner of the ambulance would take more money Murphy had two hearts and
that it was th e one made of
the hospitat for eight years, service what he had in mind, than he knew where to get.
To make a long story marshmallow that would
with a diagnosis of multiple he was told he could have
sclerosis. She was originally • the ambulance for $ 12 an sho rt, J hroadcast Paul never succumb.
Murphy's saga on the , radio
(GerHse Plage n: is an
from Colorado so her hour.
ordained
minister and velerand
asked
my
listeners
to
Murphy set out to raise
acquaintances in the Boston
area were Jew to start with . the money. He passed th e send in money if they ('oul d. an !le lv snran based in
After eight years they had hat among his fellow bus In a week we raised more Columbus, Ohio.)

"

•

Friday, August 5, 2p05

..
'

www .mydaiiysentinel.com
I

·Deaths .
Geneva Hall

Hit-skip accident

MASON.WVa - Genel'a Hall , 65. Ma&gt;on, W.Va. died
Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2005.
She is survived by her husband. Donald }\all of Mason. W.Va.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday at the Foglesong·
Tucker Funeral Home. funeral ~ervices will be at I:30 p.m
Su!1day at the funeral home with Pastors Billy Zuspan and
.
Bnan May otfic~atmg . Burial will be Graham Cemetery.
condole nces
ma·y
be
sen t
to
. E-Mad
tog le songluc ke r@myw a y.com

POMEROY - G:~ry Mitch. 54, of Scottsdale, Ariz .. for~erly of Pomeroy, di ed unexpectedly Monday. Funeral serVIces wdl be &lt;mnnunced by Ewing Funer:~ l Home.

POMEROY -. Yesterday at I : 15 p.m the Pomeroy .Police
Department received a call on a h1t-skip accident on East
Main Street.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt re sponded to the
scene and interviewed Brian J. Knopp. Gallipolis. who was
traveling on East Main Street and was struck from behind
whe,n turn ing into Millennium Teleservices . Knopp was
struck by a gold or goldish brown Chevrolet Lumina that did
not stop after the acddent. The Lumina is described as being
a late 1980' s or early 1990's model with damage dQne to the
ri ght front side . Knopp's vehicle sustained heavy damage to
the left rear. There were ~o injuries reported by Knopp or his
passenger Kurt Wood, Middleport . Proffitt is asking anyone
with information to phone the Pumeroy Police Department
at 992-64 11 . Calls are confidentia l. The · incident remains
under investigation.

Gail Stumbo Hovatter

Sentenced

Gary Mitch

',

. MIDDLEPORT - Gail Stumbo Hovatter of Middleport ,
-' d1ed Thursday: Aug. -l, at Univesity Hospital in Co lumbus fol lowmg an extended illness . Arrangements ar~ being handled
by F1sher . Funeral Homes . it) Middleport and will be
announced m the Sunday Times-Sentinel. .

Local Briefs
MIDDL,EPORT - Story's Run Road below Middleport
wtll be closed all next wee k, 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for road
repair, according to the Cheshi re Township
. ' Trustees.

Reunion planned
MASON - The Cundiff fa mil y reunion will be held at th e
Mason Park Aug . 20: Setup will begin at9 a.m., c!inner will be
served at noon, and games and other activities wi ll be held
throu ghout the day. An auction will be held at 2 p.m. Take
covered dish, dessert . drink and an item for the auction.

Clothing price break
POMEROY - The Paris l1 Shop at the Mulberry Community
Center will hold a $1 a bag clothing s~le all next week .

Set clinic
POMER0Y - Meigs Coun ty Health Depa11ment will offer
a childhood· immunization d inic from 9 to 11 a.m. ·and I to 3
p.m. on Tuesday. The' child 's shot records {nd medical cards
must be provided . Children must be accompanied by a parent
or legal g u ~irdian. A $5 do nat ion will 'be accepted but is not
required for immunizations.

Plan family reunion.

YOUR
COLLEGE

SYRACUSE- Eichin ger family reun ion wi ll be held at I
p.m. on Aug. 13 at Carleton School in Syrac use. A covered
di sh lunch will be served.
,
·

TUITION

BRl

ARRIVED.

Syracuse
from Page A1 .

The Indian casino racket··
sure , casin ys. where state serious aboul ·it. According
law allowed th em). Btll the to Steorts' article, one
Indians, pleading their unde- lawyer, a relatiye of White
niable poverty, wanted to House chief of staff Andrew
open lucrative casinos even Card. was paid $645,000 by
in states where these were a small gro up called the
.William
banned. In I&lt;JHS. Congress Eastern Pequots, who manRusher
passed a law intended to · aged to become big enough ,
pmnit tribal casinos. in to qualify as a " tribe" under
states where casinos were BIA rules by merging wjth
legal,. but unfortunately the another group called the
(or wiped out), and the courts have interpreted it as Paucatuck 'Eastern P~quots.
Un ited States of America allowi·ng them even in states (They
both
li ve
in
was the result. Its subse- that prohibit them.
Con nectic ut. whose goverquent mistreatment of the . Now,
the
overa ll . nor and legis lature are deadsu ~vrving Indian s, who were
American ca sino · industry set against casinos of any
allowed to conti nue. more ge nerates $20 billion a year. type but have no power to
or le", ,the ir ·ancient tribal In no 1ime, a ltH of savvy stop the newly merged
ways on "reserv~tions, .. is white inv~ s t ors began look- tribe. )
one of the least palatable ing arou nd for small groups
There is much more to the
aspec ts of O\'r history as a of people with detectable story. and Steorts' article is
·nation.
Indian blood. tu be orga- all over it like a blanket. Bul .
But the tribes were treat- nizcd into trihes · and the basic point is clear
ed, juridicall y. as indepen- launched as casino operators enough : Thanks to the loopdent entities. and granted a on land allocated to them. hole of "limited sovereignsort of "limited soverei2n- Steorts e&gt;timatcs tha i there ty." the nation 's Indian
ty." The U.S. governm~nt arc · now about 300 Indian tribes · arc ' goi ng into the
entered into ' treaties with casinos in the cou ntry, being casino hu siness wholesale,
them, agreed not to lax ,them operated. at least nominally. financed by greedy white
or commercial ·enterprises by people who could be investor.\ mid their attenda nt
established in the reserva- prosecuted under state law lawyers and lobbyists, who
tions. and exempted them if th~y weren't Indians.
.are far· less interested in the
from many federal and slate
The whole scam ha s welfare of Native American
laws · (e.g. building codes) attracted an unappel'izing children than they are in the . _
that ' were enforced ag~inst crowd r of lobbyi , ts with stu nning profits that ,an be
all other residents.
highly dubious cnnnccti ons made by catering to people
Eventually, the tribes got to the federa l Bureau nf in casinos built on Indian ·
into the busine&gt;' of running Indian Affair,. wh ic h has kt ' l&lt;llld . ·
whatever gambling enter- this obscene situation devclI ll'illian1 Ruslwr is a
prises the local state bws· op nght UJH.Ic,r it&gt; nme. · Distinguished FellrHI' of rire
permitted (e:g. lotteries. and Neit her the Clinton nor the ,Ciarelllont l11stitute for the
gambling for charitable Bush administration ha s Study of State.\manship mrd
fundraisers - and. to be been inclineJ I&lt;&gt; do a1iy thing Political Philosophy.)

.

'

In a related note, Peterson
said she had received. complaints that .several residents
did not receive a recen t survey
meant to dec ide whether re si. dents wanted the London Pool
to remain opei1 via a levy.
Ralst on also req uested and
received permission to get a
mower scrviced for not more
than $90.
'\
Ralston reported th at he
had been ·in touch with H&amp;S
Hauling which has agreed to·
pa rticipate in Recw: Iahle .
Recycl ing Days on Aug. 26 -.
28. This eve nI wi ll be for disposal of used appliances suc h
as air conditioners. baueries.
washers. dryers. etc . As more
ii1formatimi' becomes avail·
able it will be released and
appear in the Daily Sentinel.
Council agreed to purchase

Paving
froin Page A1
President Paul M. Reed and
Bank Chairman Paul Klbes.
toward the cost of a new radio
sy,s tem for the sheriff' s office.
The 20 year-old radio ·system is now beyond repa'ir,
and the departnient has been
u~ing tlte Meigs Local School
District's radio frequency for
dispatching this summer. but
once sc hool starts again later
thi s ·month. Beegle must find
another alternative. ·

r]amiltJ OXI GE\
• Home Oxy~en

• Portable. Oxygen
• Nebulizers
• Eledric Beds
• Wheelchairs
• Diapers

• Chux
• Medicare/Medicaid

We do ttic billing locally
IA~callv

ow11ed.
lt't. care lzbrmt )•m• !"
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-446-0007

to11 Free 877-&amp;&amp;9-ooo7
'

two section of hl)se for the
fire department as requested
by Bill Roush.
Resident Mac William s
asked if it would be possible
to park ve hicles and boat trailers ·closer to the boat landing.
The reque st was 'denied
wi th Mayor Eri c Cunningham
say ing that the present . parkin g was des igt)ed to keep
veh icles away from cl1ildren
in the vici nity of the ball field.
playground and shelter house.
Cottrill
reported
tha t
Assistant Poli ce Chief Ryan
Hill's claim had been denied
by Workers Compensation.
Counc il decided to look
into putting up more stop
signs throu ghout the \'illage
afte r Police Ch id Kevin
Dugan brought ·it up along
with speed li mit signs on the
backstreets.
All members of coun ci l were
present for the meeting wi! h the
exceptions of Counci!men Joey
Riffle and Bob Wood.
Beegle has asked villages
in the cou nt y to help wi th the
cost. because they use the
fre4ueJicy as ·much as - or
more than. sometimes - the
sheriff's department doe s.
He estim ates the cost at
between · $'!,000
and
.
S IHlOO, ' dependtng
on
whe ther some components
can be salvaged .'
Present at the meeting were
Com niissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
and Clerk Gl&lt;iria Kloes .

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

446-4524 I,IOVIE HOT .INE

AP Photo

North Carolina State Troopers . Sgt. W.A. Hook . left . and Sgt.
P.O. Edwards guard an original copy of the Bill of Right s after
a ceremony to celebrate the return of the document to Norlll
Carolina as vis itors get a closer look, Thursday at the capito l
building in Raleigh. The document, given to the state by
George Washington in 1789, disappeared during the Civil War.

North Carolina wins back
copy of original Bill of Rights·

POMEROY - Dale W. Hoffman was sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to a suspended one-year prison
term on a charge of attempted gross sexual imposi tion. He
was placed on community control for five years, and was
Bv EMERY P. DALESIO
in 2000 for $200.000.
.
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRITER
ln.March 2003. an FBI agent
ordered.to complete the Communit y Corrections program and
500 hours of community service.
posing as a museum buyer pre·
RALEIGH . N.C. - . An tended to purchase the p&lt;tpcr
Hoffman is also required to register as a sexually-ori ented
· ori ginal copy of the Bill of from Pratt and his inw,tor.
offender for a period of five years.
Rights that was given to Robert V. Matthews. for S:i
North Carolina by George million. Instead. the agent preWashington back in 1789 sented a seizure Wi.UTant signeJ
'
was returned · to the state
R,UTLAND - A Pomeroy man was injured in a one-vehi - Thursday. culminating a bit- by tlie judge in the case.
Pratt relinquished hi s own·
cle accident Tuesday on Count y Road 3 (Leading Creek) ter legal tug-of-war over the
ership
claim to the document
near Rutla nd, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Hi ghway historic document.
and
has
agreed to donate the
Pat ro l reported.
Gov: Mike Easley acc~p ted document to North Carolina .
Mark J. Hall , 46: 12 1 Wehe Terrace. was taken to Holzer the weathered document after
Medical Ce nter by the - Meigs County EMS following the a judge ordered federal mar- Matthews continue s to claim
partial ow nersh ip of the
12:30 p.m. accident, the patrol said.
·
shals to turn it over to th e paper, which has been valued .
· Troopers said Hall was eastbound, 1. 8 miles west of Ohio 7, state - the first time North
· at up to $40 million.
when he attem pted to navigate a left curve. The pickuf truck Carolina has had possession
U.S. District CoUJ1 · Judge
he drove went off the right side of the road. lost contra , came of the document smce the end
Terrence
Boyle last year
back on the road. went off the left side, struck an embankment of the Civil War.
awarded
the
document to
and overturned.
"North Carolina's stolen North Carolina. but in Jan uarv.
The picku p had disabling damage, the report said. Hall was'
Bill of Rights may have been ' the 4th U.S. Circuit Court ,)f
-c ited for operating a vehicle under the influence, failure to
out of state for near! y 140 Appeals in Richmond. Va ..
control , no safety belt , possession of drug paraphernalia and years, but never out of mind,"
told the judge to reconsider..
tampering with drugs.
Easley said in a state ment .
Boy le detern1ined the docuEasley signed a receipt ment should return to the posaccepting possession of the sess ion of the person or elllity
'·There will he an increased
document, in an ivory-colored who owned it before the fOV ·
demand for electricity in the frame , from U.S. marshals ernment's st ing operation. He
U.S. in the futur e. AEP is during a quickly announced ruled Thursday that Pratt had
·from Page A1
not the only utility company ceremony inside the antebel- the clearest ri ght to possesin
·Ohio considering build- lum state Capitol from which sion, but had relinqui shed t~ e
.
..
we have the state's clean-coal in g another power plam, but · the document was stolen by claim to North Carolina .
"It's JUSt thievery; it's
technology center and we're oth er companies are looking an invading Union soldier in
at
thi
s
case
to
determine
if
1865.
The
document
is
one
of
abso
lu te thievery," sa id
recogn ized as experts in that
th
ey
build
it
in
Ohio
or
in
the original 13 delivered to the Matthew&gt;' attorney, Mike
field. We have training
opportunities for those who oth er state s. Do you want it colonies for review before the Stratton of New H aven.
will work there.''
· here or 'do you want it some- final Bill of Ri ghts was Conn. "Bob Matthews paid
· rea l money. $200 .000. to b~y
approved in 1789.
Steve Crum of Caldwel l. place e lse~··
Not all those testify ing at
The stolen docu ment was a documelll that's been in pti ·
representing
the
sold
by the Union soldier in vale hands for 140 1·ear, ."
the
hearing
voiced
tota
l
sup·
International Brotherhood of
1866
to an Ohio buyer, whose
Easley said the Bill of
port.
Mary
Belh
Lohse
of
Elect ri cal
Workers .
fa
milv
sold
it
to
Connecticut
R•ghts
will be di spi.I)WI in
add ressed the concern of the Pomeroy said she did not.
Ohio Consumers Counsel necessarily oppose the plant , antiques dealer Way ne Pratt the state Musetlln of tilswrv.
and other consumer gro ups but said she could not support
to the surcharge proposed by AEP's cost recovery plan in
AE P to constru ct the plant its current form.
an
estimated
ave ra ge . "There are too many quesincrease of $ 19.88 over a tions about the financin g
five -year period for residen · scheme, , the et)vironmental
tial c u~t o me rs.
impact and the overall ecoBv CARRIE SPENCER
"In no w,ay does thi' ;tl loll
"We're not talking about a nomic benefit," Lohse said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
lhe
avcraQ.e Ohioan to uudc,•rfinancial hardship- to any She outlined her concern s in
stand
thC issue:· he ~;,1 i d .
Cohnnbus Southern Power or wr itten testimon y that she
COLUM
BUS
A
"Whether
there are ,,,,,.
· Ohio Power customer," Crum submitte d to the PUCO.
Rcpuhlican statehouse vete ran rcfo,'m , neeued or 1m1 "ll&lt;•lthe
said . "AEP is aski ng mem·
"We all need work. Jobs sued on Thursday to keep the question. This is ball!) ll.lwcJ."
bers of our building trades to are wonderful, but you must
The lawsuit dci!J&lt;IIId' that
make a $ 19 commitment in also contemplate at what statewide ballot clear of three
constitutional amendments to Secretary uf State 1\ennNil'
exchange for a $400,000 c st.
sometimes."
Bob change elections and the draw- Blackwell not all&lt;m the pro0
return in wages and fringe Graham of Pomeroy said. He
posals ' on the ballot. Finhn
benefits for our mem bers and suffered permiment Iung ing of legislative districts.
Richard Finan, " former also fonneu" nonpr&lt;,fit group.
their families."
·
damage from sulfur dioxide ' Senate president and 29-year Ohio First. that will reorga·· "We need watchdog gro ups
lik e the Ohio Consumers while worki ng at a power li:Jwmaker. argued in the law- nize as a 1:'\mpuign commi ttee
su it in the Ohio Supreme · to tight the "memlment, ·if the
Counse l to protect con· plant in West Virginia.
Allorney Stephen Lesser. Court that the petitions being lawsuit fails .
·
stnners. but I don't believe
who
led
the
heari
ng.
said
the
to
qual
ify
the
issue
Finan
i'
rdyin~
on
a 1919
circulated
I hat AEP is overly greedy in
commissioners
on
th
e
PUCO
for
the
Nove
mber
election
Sl&lt;!le
Sui)ft'IJIC.
c,;url
ca'e
that
. this case." Crum said . .
State Rep. Jim my Stewart. ·are "verv interested'' in the don' t contain the fu ll text of says I'Otcr' must h:11 c' all lht·
R-Albany. said other utility commen.ts offered at the the proposed amendme nt s inform"tion, incluui11g what
coq1panies are closely watch- hearings. Those who wish to because they don 't show wpat would he rc·placed in the con·
submit written test imony to part s of the current Ohio stitution. before Jec1Jing Ill
ing the case at hand.
"This is much bigger than the PL!CO may do so by til - Constitution would be deleted. support a ballot ini tiati\'C, ,
Meigs County, . it's much ing it with the PUCO throu gh
bigger than Ohio and it 's its Docketing Division at 80
WEST VIRGINIA JOBS fOUNDATION
much bigger than ninety - E. Broad St.. Columb us.
nine do ll ars." Stewart said. Ohio 43215.

Highway Patrol

, Road closing

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page~

For the Record

L .

'

•

· FJ:iday,,August 5, 2005

•

Paul Murphy's tour de force

A lot of Americans have
been bafll~d by .the prolifer- .
ation , in recent years, of
Letrers to the editor are welcome. They should b'e iess than
gambling casinos on Indian
300 words. All/etters are subject to editin g, 1nust be signed, .
reservations in ·states, ·or
ami include address and telephone number. No umigned let·
places in states . that had
previousl.y been bless«dly
iers will be published. Letrers should be in good taste,
free of th at parti cular c urse.
.addressing issues. not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga·
Some
states, of course,
nizatiims and indil·idua/s will not be accepted for publication.
threw in thei r lot with the
gambling interests many
years ago (Nevada comes to
mind), and have prospered
as a result. Thev have also
Reader Services .
(USPs 213-960)
suffered the i n~vitabl e con'·
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sequence,, of such complici·
~ . Our main concem in all stories is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
ty, including transformation
accurate. If you kno•..v of an error. in a through Friday. 111 Court Street ,
of
the resident populations
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992· Pomeroy, Ohio. Second--class postage
and an inevitable rise in
2~56.
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Assoc1ated Press and the
organized crime. But recentOh•o Newspaper Association .
Our main number Is
.ly the problem has .metastaPQ~Imaster : Send 'add1ess corredions
(740) 992-2156.·
sized, and affl icted states
to The Dally Sentinel. 111 Cou,rt Street,
Department extensions are:
that haven't the slightest
Pomeroy, Oh •o 45769.
des ire fur casinos · withi n
Subscription Rates
News
their borders.
whether
By carrier or motor route
Edllor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
"owned" by Indian tribes or
One month . . . . . . ~ . .. .'1 0.27
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
not.
•
one
yeai
..
......
.
..
.
'
123.24
Reporter: Beth Sergent , Ext. 13
Dally
.
:
.........
..
.
....
50'
What:s
going on here · ~
• I
Senior. Citizen ratea
An excellent article by
Advertising
One month ... . ........'8.70
Jason
Lee Steorts in the
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext 15
One year ..• .. . . ...... '96 .70
Outside sates: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 Subsatlers sh&lt;Ud renvt mac:Nance cimct
Aug. 'S issue of my old magClaooJCin:.: Judy Clark , Ext. 10
to the Daiy Sentinel No subscription by
azine. National Review. tells
mail permitted in areas where home
the whole story in much
carrier service is a\lailable.
'\
Circulation
_greater detail than is . possiDlttrit:t Mgr.: Jason Panerson, Ext. 17
ble in a column like this
Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs CountY
one . But herewith is a
13 Weeks . .
. .. . '32 .26
General Manager
briefer dcscrit?tion of the
26 Weeks .
'64 .20
Charlene Hoenich. E)(t. 12
mess .
'
52Weeks •
..' 127.11
It all began with the white
E·mall:
Outside
Meigs
County
·man's conquest .o f North
news@ myda1lysentinel.com
13 Weeks . .
. . . . . 153.55
America ..The rot1ghly 2
26Weeks ........... ' 107.10
Web:
million
Indian s already here
52 weeks .
. '214.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
' were simply brushed aside

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A4

I

Proposal

Fonner Senate president
sues to stop election changes

PROUD TO BEA PART OF YOUR LIFE. ·
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992·2155 • www:mydailyse ntlnel.coni .

1st (2) Bingo Packs are

FREE!!

Each add'l pack only S5 (15 games in each pack)
• (14) $70 games

7

• SSOO Coverall
• SSOO 4 Leaf Clover
• S1250 Block of Nine Progressive

FRI 8151U5 • THURS B/11/05
Box Office 0ptlna 0 S:JDPM Nightly
&amp; 12:30PM for Wed- Sun Matinees
NOW SHOWING SUMMER
MATINEES- WED THRU SUN

DUKES OF HAZZARD [PG13l
1:15 3:15 7:15 &amp; 9:15
SKY HI(IH (PG)
1:10,3:1 0, 7: 10 &amp; 9:10 '
STEALTH (PGt3)
1:00 3:30 7:00 &amp; 9:30
MUST LOVE DOGS (PG13)
1:20 3:20 7:20 &amp; 9:20
BAD NEWS BEARS (PG13)
1:10 3:t0 &amp; 7:10
DEVILS REJECTS (R)
9:15
CHARLIE &amp; THE CHOCOLATE
FACTORY (PG)
1:00 3:10 7:00 &amp; 9:10
WEDDING CRASHERS (R)
1: 15 3:30 7:15&amp;9:30

·BINGO

'

(If hitbn Friday, this game will be $500)
• (5) Intermission Quickie Coveralls
• ,(4) Early Bird Quickie Coveralls

I

$5.00 Single
$5.00 Couple
CONTESTS
Hula Hoop· 10:00 PM
Limbo - 11 :00 PM
Bikini &amp; Trunk Contest · 12 Midnight,
1st Place Prizes Only

Middleport, OH • (740) 992·5884

Donl forget our fRIDAY liTE SESSION

$1000 Blocll of Nine
$1000 covenll
$500 Winner Take All "

124 HIGHLAND AVE. ·

COME JOIN
THE FUNIII
9 PM - CLOSING

PT PLEA'S ANT, WV

(Old Car011na Lumb.er Building Ac ross from CSX )

(304) 675-3877

�•
'

PageA6

FAI'l'H • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

ter God\ Word, the Btble, stgnab1he end of the retgn ot the
I,ISCISt "self 1 Do not beheve
the he thdt you "cannot" have
VICtory 111 your ltfe or th,ll you
are doomed to a medmcre and
margtnal role m the k1ngdom
ol he,tven Inasmuc h as we
m.ty bcheve these hes, we
become tr.tpped w1th sh,tckles
ol selt-l ultllhng prophectes,''
but pledse know tiM! the chtld
ul GuLl has been gP.e n dn mtimlc plll\l&gt;ton ol hie ,tnd godhness to overcome the spmtu"" bondage ot 'selh shness"

way f01 thdt yc,umng: 111 our

w tth m our lives

hearts to l.tke &gt;eed ,mel sp!Uul
It ts on I} too clc.1r tod.ty tll.ll
Chnsttans gene1dlly feel e1the1
too powerle&gt;s and delc.lted 1n
their Chnsllan w,1lks to h,11 e
an authentiC rei,JilOnshl p v. llh
Chn st 01they h,l\e become too
contented w1th " &gt;tlpcri K'I,II
and shallow splrt lll.thty
We tend to be cultu r.ll l} .md
b•olog•cally ,, dll\en peopie b} th e 1.1Skll1.h1Crs ol
com pul Sion ,unbl!llln and
&lt;tpprehenSion, v.e do not see
lh,lt there IS hnth .111 urge nt
and dtre need In quKkly ,tb,mdvn these melll less s\,1\ c dnvers lest v.e re.tp then h.1rves ts ot se lt-destrucllon No r
do we eaSi ly ,tcc ept tlt.tt there
ts a d1v111e means by whtch
we may ,lchteve sptnlll,ll treedom and an eternal vtctory so
th,tl v.c mav be tcst01eu I ll our
baste re!tso·n lot ltvmg - that
of walk111g w1th God,
The "Ioree' th,ll dn ves us
backward and downward
111stead ol onw.trd ,md upv..wd
ts the force ot "&gt;elt · The tnplepronged ass&lt;~ult ol sel f-gralllicalton. sell tmport,mce. &lt;tnd
self-preservatiOn tends to bodyblock our pUi sUll 'ol the pnze
lot whiCh God has c.Jikd (us)
hea,enward 111 Chnsl Jesus"
(from Ph1ltpp1ans 3 14 NIV)
T1me and t1111e .1g.un the ·
"Ioree of self' " permmed to
111tertere wuh the htgh and
hol y work ol God 111 our lt ves
Time and ttme aga tn v. e ourse lves consptre wnh the slavednver ot "self to thv.,lrt what
our hea\enl y F&lt;1ther would do
111, for, and through us tt onl y
we would stop resiStwg Htm
What arc we to do then wtth
th1s "Ioree" that h,., no "Jed•
benettl but IS I00 percent
'd,lfk stde"&gt; Ult•malely. we
must seek tire perspecti ve that
God Hunself h,,, on the n1.1t

When .til " s,ud and done, 11
h.ts been dec tared Irom the
ve1y throne ot God that 'self"
ts dc&lt;~d lor· I have lx.-cn cruellied wuh Chnst and I no longer
l1ve, but Chnst lives 111 me The
\tic I lt vc 111 the body, I hve by
!,nth 111 the Son ul God. Who
loved me ,md gave Htmself t01
me· iG&lt;~Ia twn s 2 20 NIY) \
Elcn ,ts Jesus' prec1ous hands
we1c plCtced by tron sptkes
,md He was hfted up f01 ou1
Sill, wllh H1111 Wds ,1lso cn•cttied wh,tl we would h a~e been
wete •tno1l01 Hts gt,lce Upon
the Rom"n execulloner 's cross
Wds pmned humanuy's stn (the
wtlllul tummg from God) as
well ,ts the 'self' of those who
,ue "found 111 Htm. not hav111g
a nghteousness ot (thetr) own
that comes !rom the lav.., but
that v.h1ch 1s through tat th 111
Chnst the nghteo usness that
comes from God and ts by
tanh (Phtltpptans 3 9 NIV )
Once we ;e placed our fatth
tn Jes us and come under the
power ot Hts lorg•veness and
de,msmg. we arc no longer
"encmtes ol the cross ol
Chn st Our destmy ts no
longer destructiOn, our god 1s
no longer our stomach, and
our glory 1s no longet 111 ou1
shame Our mmds are no
Ionge• on e.trthly th111gs Our
u m ensh1 p ts 111 heaven And
v. e eagerly awa ll a Savwr
Irom there, the Lord Jesus
Chn st Who, by the power
that enables Hun to bnng
e\erythmg under HIS control.
v..tll transfonn our lowly bod1es so that they wtll be hke HIS
glon ous
body"
(trom
Ph• l•ppmns 3 18-2 1 NIV)
The "sell:' " gone and ou•
new tdenttty ts 111 our umon
wtth Jesus "It ts Chnsl Who
l1ves 1n me" The "sell'' has
d1ed ,mel the old nigtme of

Pastor
Thom

Mollohan

selfish altttudes, the strong·
holds of our old fears-. and the
111surgency of pnde and phystcal compulSions can be ove1
come 111 thiS phySical hfe as
He asce nds the throne of ou r
l1 ves " Though we hve th
the world we do not wage
war as the world does The
weapons we ftght wtth &lt;tre not
the weapons of the world On
the contrary, thcv have dtvme
power to demol tsh strongholds We demoltsh arguments and every pretenston
th,u sets ttselt up agamst the
knowledge ul God, .tnd we
take capttve e'ery thought to
nt.~ke tl obechent to Chn st" (2
Connthwn s 10 3-5 NIV )
Our greatest battles 111 hie
are not so much on the outSide
as the: .Jre on the ulSide ol us
We engage the enem y whenever we are c,li Jed by Ch1 1St to
move tn one d•rect1on , and yet
tor fe'ar, greed Just, or pnde
are go.tded to move 111 anoth
er dtrecuon On the one h,md.
we ha\ e the natural 111chnat1ons ol our ll esh ,md the limIted reasomngs ot our own
senstbtllltes ,md Intellect On
the other hand . we ha ve
,tccess. through fatth tn Jesus
Chnst, to the power, Jove, and
ltte of God Htmse lt th rough
the work of the Holy Spmt
'Now we ha&gt;c rccetved, not
the spmt of the world, but the
'Spmt Who ts trom God, that
we mtght know the thmgs
lreely gtven to us by God,
whtch th111gs we ,tlso spc,tk,
not m v..ords taught by human
wtsdom, but m those taught by
the Spmt (ot God). combtmng
spmtual thoughts Wtlh spmtual
words But ,, natural man dues
not accept the thmgs of the
Spmt of God, for they are Joul•shness to htfn, and be cannot
underst&lt;tnd them because they
are spmtu,tlly appra1sed But
he who ISspmlual appratses all
thmgs. yet he hunselt ts
appraiSed by no man" ( I
Connthtans 2 12- 16 NAS)
The ultunate and wondtous
admonttton then that God ts
extend1ng to you and to me
today ts to not settle lor
med10C1e sptnlual•ty nor to
relax 11110 an easy tmth whet em
we beheve that God. 111 havmg
"done all the work" for salvation (m Jesus' death on the cross
and Hts resurrecuon), requtres
nnthmg turther trom us Oh, no
Even now He w,uts lor Hts people to tum to Htm wholehe.trtedly. place our hands 111 Hts,
and walk wtth Htm throu gh thts
JOUrney ol hie
(Tiwm Mollohan has mmrstered 111 suutlterrr Oltw the pmt
10 years a11d lS the pmtor of
Pathway Commumty Church.
For comme11ts or questions, Ire
may be reached by e-mail at
pastorthom@patltwaygallrpolrs.com).

BY

.

WORSHIP GOD THI·S WEEK
.

Fellowship
Apostolfc

seemed to be gomg we ll , the dots met w1th much the same
lran,nuss ton went out on the type of frustrallons as I
motor powenng the house- encou ntered on my tishmg
bo,ll W1th much trouble and tnp Th~e .1re t1mes that the
worry we finally n1.1de 11 to dtrectton we have chosen ts
shore and lied the bo,ll to ch,mged to a new co urse .
some trees for s,tfet&gt; By th e There are tunes whe n we
t nne the mann,t sem people m &lt;~y fee l hke we are dead m
to hx the motor, 11 was the water wtthout a padd le.
There are also limes when we
Wednesday mormng
Thursday mornmg bega n fee l hke no one ts heanng us
Without a llounsh and we when we share the Gospel ot
st.tncd ,tcross the l.tke to " new Jesus C hm t
As I th111k back on my
destmauon Can yo u guess
what h.tppencd next? It you adventure, I know that God
s.ttd that the transmtsstqn went was there wtth me 111 the cold,
dnd 111 the r.tm. keepmg me
out agatn. you arc correct
All ot these th111gs taken ,s,tle and v.arm I know that
mlo constdcralton. It was a God wtll sometunes gtve us a
good tnp It was a t1me to. nudge when our dtrecllon ts
catch up wtth old lnends and d•flerenl hom where He
to relax 111 a'beaulllulloc.ttiOn would ha ve us to travel
As summer turns to fall, I
I w.ts so glad to return home
Lookm-g bal'k on the tnp. I pr.ty that God wtll' gmde and
.tm 1emmded th,n Jesus call s gu,trd you 111 your .tdventures
us to be I1Shet s ol men The• e und that yo u wtll alw.tys feel
,ue ltmes when out attempts Hts presence
to do what Chml ,r;ks us to
Blessmgs

JtM SNYDER

PASTOR MIDDLEPORT
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Greetmgs 1n the wonderlul
name, ot Chnst,
ThiS past &amp;pnng I went on a
fishmg tnp to Dale Hollow
Lake m Ten nessee As 11
turned out, the tnp was cold,
ramy, long, ,md ;cry wmdy I
spent the week on an KO-Ioot
househoat w1th severa l tnends
wtth whom I had shared li shtng mps m the past
Try as we mtghl. we dtdn't
catch too many lish, I tell my
wtle P.tlll that they cal l 11
" lishmg" &lt;~nd not "c,nchmg"
for JUSt th at re.1son Dunng
the maJorny ol the tnp there
was " cold rain ,tccompanted
by &lt;1 bnsk wmd th&lt;ll seemed
to go stratght to the bone On
Monday we were he&lt;tded tot
,t dtfferem place 10 t1e up the
boat for the day
Ju st when every thm g

V&lt;~nl'...mth ·md W ud I&lt;J
~11 11,

r

~or

7

l'il~tor

Sdll)l •l

Sum.lry

b~nrn1::

)()1(1

\\ c Un ~~d l}

10\(l am

71~1

a

fmmanmlr\postohc:Tal~nuulliiK'

Thur~ 7 (/li p m

l'u~lnr M lrt} R Hullt n

Asse~bly
Bo1X. 467

W\,

P1st11r

[)udJ mg I me

M 1\u

N~l

S und1)

l~n nmt

Sund 1}

iJ ~() un

I0~()1m

l m~nm

Prt 1d cr

Stc\L

Scr\ IC~

~'

HapllSI ( hurr h

1111 1~

~, 1

Sund I} SLh

Y lll

Play presents Biblical
stories in Athens church
AT HEN S - 'Child ren ol Eden . .1 l3•bilc&lt;ll
story ot Ad,un ,mel Eve w.ttlhtn g th e1 r sons
Cam and Abel stru gg le, and "' second ,1ct ol

Y ~o 1m \\, r'llrp I I t m md h
\\,,frl,,oJa, Sll\tll 7p

Sund I} Se ll 11 I
I 0 4 &lt;; u m

'J liL 111

Sundav worshrp

Wt dnt ,d l) pruyer s~r • ~~

W

r• htp

K

I&lt;;

'14&lt;; u &amp; 7{ lilpm

1

W~, l noda \ S~r11~n

7 p 111

7 IKI p m

Hnrt "l 'll \ll lt

Rll~~r Wn~un

\\ tr\l rp

J 1{1 1111

llip~Mrs

ln, rrum ,ntLI

(nmmunu n
I~

IU

1m \ uutli

~ I~

1m

R11CIDt' ftrsl 1-\ a piJ~ I
1r fi.1Lk fl. tlh: SunJ1\ SdH'I I
Wu1 ~lup

tm

10--!0 1 11 70\1 pm
S~r&lt;.ln~ ]I Mlpm

\\ ~ dm,JL)

SYRACUSE - Vacauon Btble School, 6 to
M p m . wtll begm ' Mond ay ,md contmue
th10ugh Fnday at the Asbury Unlled
Method iSt Clrurch 'Construcllon Zone' wtll
he the theme

Rd

St ntll\ Slh I
I I 1m 700 pm

7W

pIll

Ml Umon Baptist
p tslllr Duvu.l w. ~C I1 1UII Su nJuy

Navajo Nation president signs peyote bill into law

rn

t

•} 4:'1

1 111

ri '0

F.H nr ng

Wednc~Juy

s~.hu• I

7{ 111

rm

S,nllc

\1 ~0

1

Sundu) \\ nr~h1 p

111

~

TllllL'lli\Sn''"~

Rooting &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215

11~ ..thl.., liUk'C " " ...
beqj;llt gf r.-ldon •• -

At h ~..:n"

th em 10 llllllUI Cs I11Hll

Punu:ro) m P.u kl' t'\bUi g

1-740-667·3156
''51111 ~mall enou~h to carf ' '

7 Uil

\n~~

J 1111"' R

Su J ~~ Unilrnl
10 11) a m fJ pm

S~: L \Ill:'

\\cJm ,Ji )

7 pm

1'

~nd St

~ ~Opm StndL~

~o..:~ "'~•

\\ •tr, hlp

10J m

~

10 ~0 ollll

hMhlnJ-.Iits - wbal wu •on•
•em*" • woa't be !111\tft In

C"biDfrllkr lhr balhint: !&gt;ldt.
T~oul(ll ,..
t..~ dille ....
oa d. wtiid.e. 0.ft' .ur eld
&lt;n•th&lt; aod ta.tln« pnndplr&lt;
tt.:t we stll WR"t: te. Tfhr:w
trvllw aool prioripk• pld&lt; ..
lhrw.tthiU't atlll .,t.e Ui ho.lpr
- lhey ... laol(lll th.......

209 Th1rd

Dairq

Jlalnl)kll, dolhq, diM'!tt aM

tbo - · • - .r ,...r.
l'. n.,dtl-. in lift doesn't

Rac1ne, OH

Queen
Brazier

700

••

740-949-2210
:A Home &amp;nk for

M•ddleport, OH

N 2nd St

Home People "

-r

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

.-kht•••M•ot..._.e

•

ptOph • otn tilt w...W.
TIM!y
r.. iMIIa thr: BUlle \
1Jtd JJH)~n m GM':t1 hMttrt of
wen:hlp. 1litq atT piTKhtd
nU) S..balh. pllK'Ik'd

a"

PO

Box 683

Pomero . Oh10 45769 0683

available Sxt 0 to 10 x 20
111

Me, and My

word&lt; abide ' " ynu, ye ,Jw/1
a~k what ye will, a11d 1/ &lt;
hall

•· ,~·~ Hl&lt;lu~ul)~ n•)

C•lXI . All tnd rll' how.t 11f

740-949-2217
S1zes

If ye abide

t'W'l') . .,.

rl•fl!r, Ohll! lhln,. ~ I1UIIn ~­
the Alrqth and pR.Vntt ll(

499 Rr chlund

740-S94-63Jj

Avenm:,A thcn ~

be done unto you.

fohn 15. 7

t-HtHt·~St-980~

"0Uhlp lhll '",, )OU lUI, ktl !l(

lllfln lu llw nula41nrnUon. Far
1hl1 f:od Is ~r (!od r.-.rf"tr •Dif
ucr, he •II be our-.uittc- t1'tflll0
lbe emt.... P.rm 4li,H.ft

•

•

&gt;!.'!IDA\

UQMJ~

ltt:ftr,...•

llrbrt•u

10: loll

uv...

_,..1..

lt

ID:J ..

.......... ~ .... , _.

lhftf"'l'.t.

u......

11 I 21

U I J\

. . .........

...-.. l'oo ..."'" - - ....... . ,

The Hppliance man
740-985-3561
992-1550
Sates • Servtce • Parts

t t

on

OH

Fax 740 992 7406

llours

All Makes
Ken and Adam Young

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mu lhern H'eoghts
~&gt;nmcrn\,

Ohw 45769

(740 o992-J279
l'nl hre t -X77-5X]-243.'

,,,,,w,piH 11

910a m Wor-.h1p

Homemade Desserts Made Da1ly

Pa~cnr

740-992·7713

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

V. nr, flir

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N Second St

7 p rn

you r il glll so shme b(~fore )
1mcn. th.Jt th ey may sec
works and glurlly
Fa rher

Ill

hc.tvc n

740-992-6128

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
A rr /t1u1m e Tax &amp;
Fmancwl Serv• ce~ Frrm
61S E M.un S1rcc- 1 •l&gt;omctoy
1740 ) 992-7270

hur~ h

700

7pm

St 1Juv

\1, 1r~ hrp

f'a ,( r

P

l'a'-hlf

'l

H~

11111:

um

Sund n S~ h• l •ll

pill

Scr. lll!"~ 7

jl

\\t •r~ hr p

Ill

1 111

9 am

pm

1n

Hu-.,cll Sum.la\ SlhlK"Il:.rnd

II

am

~~ ~ 11111 )!

W~'t.lm.:MI1~

Sdllu'

S' n lll:~

~~r'''~

Sunda1 Si:h 1111

\\ "nh1p

'' In

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992·3785

1~lnp

!\

Wcdn~:,J IV

m

lll 1111

\\ " ' ' l11p

\

10 10 1 111

Su nd 11 S1 h '•l
] tN Su rllli\ 111 \I HI h 7 I)I ]

7

..
...................
MIIIJ-1141

Mllll.....

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
174 11Hir Strttt • PO Box 270
:'lOt" HaHn \\\' 25265
bmo II Andrrson ltccn.sed fun tral Oil't'ftor
ift1d1 S AtldtN.~n f (lrtthou~ht funenll'111nnmg

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

m Lit' m ~

llloh~•m

(

hn~tr un Fcllo~slup

( hurrh

I' '11 ' lk l~'h' l Wlut' Su 1tla\ S~:h&lt;lOI
! lun Sun&lt;lll C'hu nh 'LI"\ln fo \Up m

Rf ~tnm t wn

t hr1 sttun h llo\\s h1p
lluo l pir Rou d Athclh P!l~ll r

'11{1~

tl ~ Su t d tl \\ r'htp IOOOam ..
\\lln, . , tl tl 7pm

1' 1'1"' Sau1
Ill t 1

I

S Llinnl

IH ir,t.,\ 11\c

l hr"tlun ( hurch
R(ln~n

l ull ( ,o, p.. t P!,wr

\\,t\11c 'L I ~' "i ~ n'''

M u~'n

Sund1 1 S1hM1I 11 0 1tn \\.ont, h!p IUJ()
1111 7 Ill 11111 \\cdn~,J~, Salle&lt;." 7 00
pm

Pentecostal

S;1 a ~uw

Su

1 ~~:n 111 g

dJI

6 pm

St Rt t~J l&lt;ltlll Pa ,llr WJI\11~11
fl ul-&gt; ll l.. Sund ot l Scht'&lt;&gt;l
10 a ni
f:'" nrng 7 p rn \V~d~~~~Ju1 Su\IL~~ 7
pm

7pm

H1ml lommun11~

Presbyterian

( hunh
bh~l H1t Sunda1

011 Kt 12 -t P~ ~ lllr
S&lt;.: h 1 !1 ') l(J 11m \\or,h1p
7 ~Opm

S, racust f 1rst l tult'd Pn.'!ib\ ter11111

10 \0 am

P i&gt;llll R1•h ~nrn"' \\ ,lr.,hr()
ll~trrl s mnlllt

lhl SI IIlf {ummulllh l hunh
Sund ti\ Slhun l
J ltl 1m ~ 1r•hq'
\0 "10 am
p 1

•~.: hn••l

\\m•hlp
7 p 111

Ill 11m

\\~Jn" ~JU ) S,fVIL~

II nl

P 1&gt;1or

R t• h ~n

1' 1~ 1111

Jm

\\lo,~l" l

\\~:rhl~' 1 11 7 Ill

lh~

Slflllt'

7

II

J ill

1' 1t-~h\ lcr!an C hu rch

C1\l\\ W1

r~lup

'1

t

n

'

~0 :.1

ll

1

pin

Suml 1 ~

St hn &gt;I

\\ ,ln. dl~

hiOpm

7 pm

7 pm

r 111

11~

~~~uch

710

lhu r'dl\

] lll."l I

\

r m 1 ldln
7 l.t1

P l'IL•c

l' l~to r

Jam1 ~

R 1 dl!~

Pt , l ~&lt;l

li nd I D lllllY.t '&lt;I

Sundrv S,hn I t) 1111 \\
101111 , ulmd~thSun J11

l f, lnpS~r'I H

'I 1{1 1m \\1 r•h1p
?pm \\ llln ,,d.J ir s~nll'

( arlt ton I nh rd\ nmmnHI Lmutl (. bu rch
K111 ~.:•hun R111l
s~h ~ I

Suml11 S, h M'I

P 1 .,11 1 r\1r~~AJ~rrr

\~ r&gt; IHp

I 0 IO 1

(I

1[1

l»omrro\ (
\) ~j] ;tIll

\\ 1

1 m\\ clnL,dt~Sl!l l l~'

1(1

t dcu I rult d 8 rt th ren m ( hn sl
St ti t R~&gt;m• I ~4 Rc«.hl il k Sut tlJ )'
Sch• ••l
I 111 Suno hJ\ \\ r,hlfl ltlOO
I 1 .1.: ~ 11(1 rm \\ ~ dn. -d a\ Stf\ICCS'
7!1111'111
\~ .d t'tlil ~ tulh s~nll' r

I

l'lllll)l Sil'l&lt;.l

I

cxlttend e~u.twA
!llegalauy.

.. t"t't'dnm t .ospt I \ ll~ ~ lt1!'

I

~.h,

Ill

(

~'"

lid

p,,, •r

~I

R' f.' r \\11 11 1rd Su ndt!\ s~ tu t&lt;l

'J •il

\\ 'I'll p I p. ll

I

\\ I'll It' ~ (

pm

h ilk

f{

Ill

hUJK'i \\ l.,.;ll , un
\' "l

R, I

If

Phdlq

Let 'ou1 lii!)!T w \li m e he/rm
men ~ that tht \ mo\ H ' C \0111
cJon tu hume ~otu! 11111 k' and ~lo1 rj\ \011 1

36759 Rockspnngs Rd
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740·992·6606

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy
"So I stt rve alwa~s to keep
Ill } consctcnce clc,u
God and 111.111 ..

AOI N: I

){,,
m

llhl fl

l

lh e rare you de~rr' t',

I "\II

p111

7p111

10

1r m

p l

hun~of lh ~ :".;nlart n ~

'h i]'

R hen \rn.~
I 111
\\nr...hlp

" ' ''"'

SllllH ]4 1 l. {) a m

Q

In s, r11 ~' " 00 p m
I!L 111 , \llllllL uJ \. J th Sunda• ~

\\ ~tin. ,

IH I pIll

) cUll Sund~1 Sd"ln'
ltl4~J.!11

\ enth Da\ AdHnllsl

pIll

\lkn:\ldcip

~ /tl~lll

1

\II lltrnwnl mild ll nl h rcn
m ( hn ~ l (hun. It
Te \1 ~ C'mnmnt' 1 ~Jll \\t khm1 Rol,
I' I'll•• r~ ~~~ \l 1n 1"' 'i1.11 d ,, '\,h•I•Jl •
J I)
1 1 \\ H'lll p
[ 11) I Ill 7 0()

Hunr, r Sunda1 Sl l1• , l

South lk-lhcl ( nmnmml \ ( hurrh

eh 111 rl1&lt;

J

Mulhrr} Jlr , RJ
P1 &lt;II' P il'tlH
lh 1111•11 L u,~" ,h S 1lU! I!\ s, n r~ e'
Suhl-&gt; 1th Sd11 I ' 1 11 \\ I lup l p m

\l{ l..!'; lhlmdlot 1d 1-'t•mcr 1 1' 1,hr R •1
[l 11\

II

hun:h

full (,oo;pd lt ghlhmN

1\l iu.:.trem

\\ur\h lp

United Brethren

Hu~h

I-:\Lillng

~' S1 \ 1J~r

Seventh-Day Adventist

pm

0hH ( UIIUllUillh (.

IJ ~flt m

am

rm

I{J ..!"i

P 1'1or I a\\ r. nu
L} ~{I

II

~

s~""l

( h unh cd

:ft•btr :funml J;omr
t•
. . . l ..... _

\\'1 \ a

l '1m~h

10 •0 I 111

IMS.illclltllll.•$7

~ENCI ESin&lt;

Since 1858
9 Ftfth Street
Coolvtlle, Oh1o
740-667-3110

M1Jdk p• rl

10 1m

Sunday

p ,,11r Jan I IH11&lt;1&lt; t '\unda1
1;1 ~0 1m

\\M o;h1p

H 1d, t \\-o. ,,l luml-&gt;1a

\hl,,d ll'lflltl71)1. pm

pm

\II

lila m

\\ , dn" ~ dt\

m

\1&lt;lfrl ~

Rc" I Snnd 11

~~

7p m

7 'IOpm

B 1ILI Knl•h

Oavls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye ab1de i11 Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Fulll1ne of
INSURANCE
INSURANCE
words abide i11 yoti, ye ~hall
Insurance
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, a11d it slra/1
F1nanc1al
214 E. Main
be do11 e ull/o yotr.
Services
992-5130
}olm/5:7
Pomeroy
992-s&amp;n
811! Quickel

Jnj)

~()

Nazarene

t

10 10 1 '

R nd~'tllt'

6 ~0 p m

K&amp; C JEWELERS

I)

Sh

Suudl}

Sd tu II

1\\ nn U!o&gt;t" l hill ~ b ur tlu 'lin zan n ~

1010 1m

b \(l pm

Whtte Funeral Home

P!i~ l!lr

11 11 !~m.lg~ l \ tn St

rm

71)0

I oni{IJollom

\0

C hu rc h of God of Proph ccv

Mallhcw 5 I

~ ipm

Fnllh C.osptl ( hurt h
L&lt;ml! 1:1 llc•m Sund 11 SdltMI[ 9

\\,dnu•.l~) ~~rille"

Wc1 1Ja\1d

\\ur ~hl]&gt;

s.h "11

Je-,.,~

l'enh•o~ t a l \ sstm hh

i pm

8 1 h K m l Iph

s 11 mla1

Sl r11cusr Flr!il C hu rch of ( .od
Pa~1ur

•~ nm ~

!\II

Ill

I nmgSu uur

]{ 11d P t ~tor ( ha rl" R ll' h t ~04r 67'i
,,~x sm d 11 s,h
1 1J \() :.111 Sundt\
, llllll)! ,~n ~~ ~ 7 1)1! pn ll1 1-&gt;h Stud)

llll

SHucus~ !\h:mun

Hockm~1'ort (hurch
( ,t ml Sunr Sundt} SLll•tl[ l) \(lam
V. 1r•lup II! ~() 1111 I' -,tm Plull1p H~.ll

) oppM
I'~~~ &gt;r

IO

'!

hulh V11lln TuhtrtUilll ( hunh
llnk; Run 1{1 111 I ' ' '1r I{LI I tlllllel l
R111~ l!l
S mi t) ] 1~ 11ng 7 p 111
1 h r-.tl J\ s~ n r~t 7. p 11

II

4ri!&lt;C Sund g} Sd1m l Y
\\ ol\ lup
10 ~ 1
\lo~:dn~ 'tlay

Ser\ll'S

1ln,l"'&gt;d 11

(,uspd (hurch

Saltm ( nmmumh ( hurch

,~f\Jl~

Sund II

P 1•lor R II\ H~:uh SunJav \\rnr~hrp 10
a 111 (J p 11 W~:Jn~~\lt\ So.:n ~-~ 7

S~nmd St~

'iundl\

S1hl:f

C1 Lt ~hl

p, , lnr J 1111: Btlltl•

7

~ull

~'n''' SJ lllnll' ~l~Jp m

Slur

Hethel t:hurC'h

(IH

lll

0 &amp;

\\ "h ~'! 1&gt; 7 pm

I

l'a't &gt;r \.lkn ~\!dl rr Su1d 1\ s, h1H1\
IJ 10 1 111 \\ r•tur 10 111 , m 11 'U r m

~0

r

.,

!\ l1ddlt pori t• n: ~h \ ttrlltn

u.,.

P 1,1or J 1111

~.dm ,dl\

k.1 I l K \11111jUII\ l't, llf

SundlV lll 10 11)1

/I. Jiddkflt 1 1' 1'111 J-

&lt;;?&lt;; 1 1 ~nl Sl

Rc c d~ \ ! ll \ ~ c llu 1H h1p

1111

lim~

t\lors( Chupcl l hunh

\\

ill

ufth~

m

um

~j

Pa' r ' Jol 11 A:.

7 pm

~, Jil v

And~r~1111

B hk

1kl ~ 11

II

Pam h
9

Sli\K~

\ol:.rr~h

:\hddl~:purt

S uml11 SdHu I
II 1m fii(J pm

( hurt h

S Jllli&lt;l '\(

Oluu

Kim' (ut&gt;l\lllc lhlllch
~1un &amp; I tlt h S1 St td a1 Sdt~tll
10
1111 W! r•htp l~ m lllciitlll} S~:r\llc\

r

1111 ....

(J01 s~,ond "'' \ I 1.,,,n i7 1

1\htlrlltport ( ummunil\ ( h1mh

I J tm

Wnr~h 1p

I L111c ~

.:Z~

ll n~

1U 4&lt;; 1 111

\\or ~ lup

Sum! ) Sd uol IJ lO t m
H I~() 1 111
7 pIll Thtu ~d 1\

Worsh!p

\\uln~: ~da\ S~r\llt~

k.

(oolvllle Unlh.od Method 1st

1

Koud (,~ tt rpo l' (J]l

l 111111 l (

H.ndnc
P.tsl&lt; r l'ck Sh.tlkr SunJay Sc hool

s. r.1u' 1r1n

!HI t\lnrmh C hun:h of God

,J,

llurnsun' 1lle { ommu nil\ ( hun h
•
i'h 1r rhcrnn ll urhun Su d 11
J ltl
1111 md .., rIll \\LIIIl~\&lt;Ja v 7 [1 Ill

II

[asll dart
1\l Su 1J 1\ S1: hool
'V.c1r,h1r
If! an
1,1 S unJ ~;

1' 1 ~11

1 1rr \ 1c1on t.wtu

'llutlt 7pm

1!1

Hl

Wcdll~.;~d

10 1111

Spu~~

\l fr~;tl

5~ \Ill

Sd1•1l 1J ;u '"' \.1. 1'-hl p 1 r1
rnd7[)111 \hdn ~'lll \ 7 1 1 lrd 11

1

St h11ol

1\

lort:h ( hu n:h
('., Rd h "\ Sundn\ SdmtLI

:\lu~s( IK1p4'MIIhl'

I~ 1~1 nc

r'IHp ')

~''" n'h1p Rd

rt h ~ ~ ~ ~ llu~l~r

Go~pd

1\1

l ll lt ll'.,lup ,cnl•~

C umd &amp; Ras h m Rd '

um

Wil k~~\J llc

~1) I 1ll

Wcd•~ ~tl l yS~:t&gt;L it:

J.rm c~

HI 00 l n l'uswr

\\nr,h p

p

• pIll

P t' or lld1 S11 c 1 'i 111 Ill Se n l ~c·

M •lnlng W1 ' h'l

hnth .. ull t.u~ptl ( hunh

llcthum

nwnth ~:\cm n K
\\cdn csd ty 7 p m

GnHc Wur'h p 'J 011 1 111

~fl a r

•1

l 1 11)! Bt I 11

\\1,

1

~'c'}

W~J11~'J"~

v111

lO

St hnol

I.JJ n

llwr;

J'lrir~

H7\(,~ 1J r~ ,,{ tcl ~

S\llul 11

Mlild lcfi"TI l' ' 'lur

\V,d"~'d'''lfl

Sno\\ ~•tic

Homemakm~ m ~c tmg l~t

71Wlrm

Appk .md

KuUand .. ret' Will Bupllsl
S:.rku St l'a,.wr J umc h 1nncr Sund.t~
s~h 1111
10 am E v~ nmg
7 pm

o\.sh Strrll (

fi1hk Srud \ ~ 1 11111 lt 1 7 l~ l pm

J&gt;u , l&lt; r Rtl1

OIT 1:::4 b,h nd

Wur~h

'J 10 n m

Middleport OH

Local source for trophtes,
Ia ues t-sh11ts and more

· Do not steal Do not l1e Do not dccetvc on&lt;! ,ntothel
LevitiCUS 19, II

t rn

Sen1u~s

(1 OH p m

D11 1W 1ik~ L

w,d ~~~tl l v ~n K t.:~

Sulc m l t"Uh r
Wrlh 1111 K ~ I u ~h tl! Suml1\
Sd1•nl 1111 ~ 1111 \\nhhp 1 )1~ Jill

Kullond ( hun:h uf(, ud

IJupiL~t

pm

Dl l h

P 1\h!r

1m \\n1•h1p

Ur{htd I nlt~d Mdhod1st
t-; ~ v. H ~•~n
Rllhnd NLa-., P ~~ 11
SunJ a) v, or,lllp LJ Ill ~ m l u" f• ltl

Stmtll v Slhl111

1/mm (rmJu d f"'eu/, &amp; IJmly Spet rub;

Open 7 d .tys .1 ~~ t:d.:

10~0

10-l'alll

,\nhllurh

&lt;Jvfi[[ie's 'l(estaurant

s, h&lt;lnl

r~mut

'\, 1"\ Ill'

t.:hfton fa ln rnudc U wnh

111~

h

\hund11n t (ortiH R I

Sll11~l

!\h Olru llml l-d 1\hlhf)chst

I \r nmg I pIll

6 1111 • M pr n

7 pm

l)~l

M•1rmn~

Gruhom Umled MllhodiSt
\\ t1r.h 1p II u m 11 1Si t11 RI L htnl N~a~~

Church of God

Multllcp(ln PJ~Itlf

Pm\cr ~nd Rth," Stud;

Sullll l) Sd • nl
10 \0 n l huNII\

P 1~tnr j , lm Grlmur~ Sund I'&gt; Sdtool

Christian Union

HI

ll 1tpl1 ~1

C'l1 lhn \\\1 Suntl 1 &lt;;:cl •1 10 ' ' '
\\ -,hip 7 pm ~\ CI I IK•t..l.il Sc r'll&lt; 7

1

'm

Da\ld Cnl ~l

I

l' u.,lur

rt

l' "r •• !-m~LIIUS
\\ or,hlp III {Wiam

\\ or, hip II pill
Y1&gt;ulh~n&gt;uphp111 \\l tl!~'dtl Plll\lflll

\\n.l

7p 1

10 20 I I 1
lh hct
So ud v/Prl(~\ h on\1
I I n&lt;; 11 Oil nnn n
Suuam~: nl
S~:n1~~
') 10 l~ 1111

R tlph

LCIIIJII

Wnr,h lp Il l .tl1l !

\' 111~ \\

StuJv \\cJ 7 {JO p 11

I he Chun:h of Jesus
( hnst uf I attrr na~ Smnts
Rl ] (,{! 44( 6:!4"' 1 44(o ' 4K(

Su dav SLh11111 '145 a 111

7pm

!-

~~ lluuru~

m \\ m~ h1p

IJ l() 1 1 1

Sl Pnull uth crnn C hurch
Corner Svc am on.: &amp; s,~ond Sl P mcrm

11lltrM.l l llll ., ml.l 124 \\r h mgd ' '
]), rum S 1r~~n1 Sundt\ B1hlc Stmh
Y ~o , m w,,r~lu r 10 lO t m ~n J ll "\tJ

\litldlep&lt;

'n,l \H

1\11~1

\\ ~d n v,da~

r

'outh

p ,,rnr J nl111 (ollmm c Sun i l} Slhnol

United Methodist

Mr lc H ll Rd

Sun li 11o Sd111"l
&lt;J ~11 t m
1{)4 ~ 1111 SunJJ; 1 H 1 ng

111d ti

1m

7 tlll ] m

B hi e

Uarlford ( hun:h of ( hr1st ln

11 1 111

h •ur!h &amp; 1\1, 11 Sl

~0

10

Our San lour I u1hcr11 n C hurch
Wulnut .mJ Hc nn Sts R&lt;.~ vC n s"u ud
WV t p, ,tur DllYlll Ru~s o;ll Sundll)
S~ h\Kl[
10(11Jil111 \.\. nr~I Up 11 Unl

&lt;..: hurch of Chnsl

700

AJ!:apt' Ltrt lenlt r

[1111

lltkter C hun:h ofC hrlsr
,dllll.ll 9 10 a m Sun day "orsh1p

R ~Jt!I C mJ! I tfe ( hurd 1

&lt;;Oil '\;

\\-,,r,h tp

IJ lll 1m

Larnu !·Sutt on

Brady

Stud \ W~:tl uc~d IV 6 10 r n

S 1llul1 dd Sund" Sd1101 •l

(740) 992·6472

\\, r'-hlll

W~ d nc~dwS~r\1l ~

Slhoo l

Reld svUie t:hun:h uf C bri~ t
Pns tnr Phl11p S1Ur111 SunJ IV S{h011l 9 l()

Sundn\

n

L1 Y.r~n,,

I.J I &lt;;

(1 p Il l

I' 1&gt;1 &gt;r Juhn G1lnlllf&lt; Sun J
1} I Ill
~ Ill
\\.llf,[11 p

6 ~0 p 111

Wurs,hcp
I U am
\\ ~dnc sJU) Sen l~C S 7 r m

Pa ~I( Jr

\\ ""' I{ 1t H II SunJ n 11, nt !:hLp
r111 r m \hdn~,&lt;J..~, r lXI r m H•l"llt'
'\iud\

Belhtl \\ onh111 ( t&gt; nlt r
C h c' l ~r s~111 ul P 1~1nr
k•)h B~ rhtr
\~ ~~ "am P 1\ l!lr Kunn 1l"" Sunol 1\

S~h ' I

R utlnnd

P 1 ~ 1 '' R

Suml1\ SdltM"l]

Lutheran

Movt\ Sunday Sdlt"IOI

Hu rtftlrd \), Va

( hun h

P"

P • ~II If J1111 l'r t"fi1 1

RJ

01JI

\\t lill~'J!\ S~HllC'

A'h St

1{J

St John I utheran Cbun:h

l hrtsl1 11 n l imon

Ml i\lor1uh

L~mk\

I)

hun:h

\\-11 ~1u p
lll4"i Llll 7 pm
B hk Studv and 'I outh 7 p m

':1 10 11 111

111

I'm ~

hn:~ t

1m Wor'h'r

( hurth
Pa•tllr R1d:

Latter-Day Saints

Wu r~hrr s~rHlC

( ummunlt\ Apostolic

11111

'\( 11 7

I uurt'l ( hff i&lt;n't' MdhodJsl ( hunli
(i[~nn Rl l"c
Sunda) Sl hool

B II Amhe qj~:r Surll.lay s~h oo l 1110 a 111
\\or'ihtp 8 00 u m 10 1(J am 7 tlll
p m \\edn ~sd u~ Scr vr~cs 7 00 p m

7rm

Run Hu1•h~ l
Hun Sunda~ S~huu1

S~h

&amp; to~() [llll V.. ~dn~'d
(, 10 p m YtiUth Scn Ill: 6 1( r

[U

I c 1111'.1.\hlp SU ild \)

P1~ 1LLr

Nl
,\ rm ~

l~ n h ness

M ddkport

St

Thur~dav

7 p 111

/1.11,1111 Sundr\ S&lt;.h011i IJI
W11T,hrp
II am
f• p 111
\lt Ldr\nd 1\ St:f\Lu.:~ 7 p rn

Sund..1\

W;tK k Sprm gs

'J 10

pm

pnncr md H1 ... k Scud )

m

1 1sln1

~o

7

IJ~O am

8 1hk

Krmlford t: hunh uf C hn~ t
( rm:r 11 S1 R1 1::!4 &amp; Bradh u"ry Rtl
M mst&lt;;r Dt.~u g Shamhlm You lh Mm r,.kr

1-.llddkp••rl PL~Inr ]11 11• ~

h1th Haptrst ( hun:h

\\ urm f ,,, ,,,//\

StyiNan:.aw.,.d:..llfll••·

•

M1ddte

P~~rl

Sl

Su n~a v

S1

Str\1ll \h r, h p

s"' 11. ~

P l&gt;tor Rev l nrr.

Ill ill 1m

1 4~11hlti iK1 7 Pt''"' R ~'

Rt\ Gtlhlll Cra1g Jr

ll:nw ••• lhc')' SU:rt dou.•t IMk IIU
lhr era we wrar JJOW. . .f.'!

1m

lllllsltlr Rapltst C hunh
St Kt

•

333 Page Slreel

\\or- lu p

10~01111

~

Lo~.;,tklllns

am

Rull lllld (hun h of C lu 1st
'J l lJ 1111 \.l.or,Jup md
C1 mmunu n 11 1 ~ I I 1m B 1t"o J Wm;

2KMI St R1 7 M rtld l~:p11r1 Sund ~~
S,h, l Ill 1m h"n111g 700 pm

\\cthlt-..l t\S, nh&lt;J'

Overbrook
Rehabilitallon Ctr
'A Celebrallon of We

S,hllill

Sun I } S, ht&gt; I

a 111

Old Ut:th~lfn' c Will HHpt1 st Chu r(' h

Rallltlld St

26 rears in local busmess

K~1th R1d~r Suntl a~

mcdtng 7 p m

U~ sdl Run C onmmnlt} (

Smula~ Schnul

tJ 11111

Ill lil a m
\\ u.\n,stJ" Brh lc Studv 6 (}() p 111

1

A Style That Lasts

Pa~ 111 r

1

~

Hu:kury IUII.'i Church of Chrisl

11 lknd Rnme 124 R.t ~ m ~ O H
[)Lnrcl M"'~~ Suudo\) SL hiML\

f{u~l "It

J0

Su mlt~

p ,,,,,r

&lt;;~&lt;;

1\l•rhnel L. C rites
Oirertor of Family &amp;
Commumty Sen ict.-s

rr~Jcr

pm

E\~ ngch M M1ke

Gr~

Pa~tur

ROSl.' uf Shnron Holnwss Chun:h
L,~Jm ~ Cn.: ck WJ KuU mJ P&lt;1~ l 11r R ~:\
Dcv.cy K mg Sunday ~Lhnt I 9 ~() am
Sunda y
wnrsh!p 7 p 111 w~ .lnL ~~~ 'Y

Hounll.' Sumla) SduH!I HI 1m \\1 L'-IHp
I ll~~ pm
S1ul1 ) lu 7m pm
Wt Llnc~t ii V s~ r\le' 7 Ill r Ill

7

pm

Rflhlehem Hapl lsl Chunh

1.J

10 1m

Hr an Dunh urn \o\i r'olnp
nnt Sumla:, :-;it: hnol Ill 1~ .. 1111

\h-slevan Kthll'

M1m ~kr

Scn ••cs fi 30p 111

~ rhtr\H IIt

., 1( 1 r Ill

7 (.K) p 111

Ill 101m

p m \\tdn~MI" Bthlt Stud,

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville Oh1o

S11nilin Sd1uol I.J ~0 1m
I I 1m 7 ()() f1 m \I.~Jn~~ 1)

7~

\ 111on RHpiL sllnd r pend cnt

Young's Carpenter Service

J'curl ( hllpt l
Su11d 1) Stl ml 9 1m \~,,r.,)up

Sund1v

P 1~1 1r J•• lm S\\i.l Stlll
W~ i.Jrll.''d 1\ S~f\ Cc~

Pa•lt'f LJoh Rob! lM &gt; Surd w Sd1ool
',1,, , ,[up Ill u rn

MlK~ni. IC

1R t l-ll l

Mnu ~ h

\\,1~h1p

!\ltmr;Hl!t•

7pm

l'olftl11d

10 l() a m

am &amp; 7 p 111

Sc r\lu

S1ht r Run Raptl ~t
Hl 1m

~[I

1.J

111

Prnr Grovr Rlhlr llnlln rss { hunh
1!2 nnk 111 Rt '25 l'a,lnr R ~• 0 Ddl
M:.r1lcv Sunday S~o huu l
9 ~~~ am
Wor~l11p
10 "10 1m
..1 ~0 p m

Schl't•l 11 lU

R111d Mrtldkpmt Su tla\ Sdn•ul

I) ~0

Il l

Dunh~rn

;~

s~n IC~

Hradhurv ( hurch nf Chrl~ r
l uq Ktll}llll J9S~8 Br1dl-&gt; ur)

St

'Wtlr,lup
"
Pt~t

il

l»hun Churlh uf l hr1s1
Wor~ hl p

r~ hl[1

(

V.. ,dnc 'liJ\ '"' "'''~

P "''"r \lm , Sr ~ y. 1r1 I 0 00 1111 Sund"
0 \h(f lllid lllg' WI h 111\l~

Strnduv S•honl
1m \\nr, hlp II Ul 1 111

Sc nrH ~

P1lm~r

., 110 p m

1 111

I~

~tl

IU

Surrl.l~\ Sllro~&gt;l

p 111 \.l. n ln~:•d 1\ 'i~n ~ ~--

Ill

Sund LV SLIH nl
10

Il l

~

hurch

fll"'il RaJlll s f (

p,,l \r \l 1rk M rrn\\ 6th md
M l dtll~t lll rl

~dmu1

Sundt )

Brr tn

P1 ~ wr

( aharv Pilgr1m Chapt&gt;l
Harmonv1 lk
Ro 11!
Paslnr
Ch n ics
Wor-;htp

Stu d) \\ ~ Jn"•da~ 7 pm

Vacation Bible School
to begin

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

R ou~h

V!Ltur

Krno C hurch of Chr1 st
\I,!( r~hr p
4 1() u 111 Sund ty Sdmnl
111 'Oa rn Pustnr J~ffrcy Wll llue~ lsl oml
~rd Sunday

P:.~~1ur

\\o

ln lh" • ld A me n~: 111 l xg1on ll &lt;tll
SoMJth I ourth AIl nUl M iddlq"lort

(~1rddlt' purt l

Ht ath

Zwn l hurch of { hm l

.. 1rst Stmtlu rn Bapt1s1
4 1K72 Ptllllnn3 1'1k ' 1'" 1 r t lu1111
0 lln mr Sund tv Sdtonl 1) 'O a m

Su 1tla) Sd1111il

H l~l~V.&lt;&gt;tlll

M ~c 1111 g

R-un

R uh111~on

HJ P~ \ 1 lr R1;~
t..u nd1\ Sc hnol I} lOam
II ! 1(1 &lt; Ill
7 ~I) r 111

l'1h

1

n.hlt l hurch

al~a n

(
m~•

p,

fello~ ~ htp

Chnshan

7 {K)

I tid 1\ 7 1 111

J~ nununat1or1.1l fctl o.,..~hlpl

l'mner&lt;n

P•mn•}

M 1kc C'lar~

m Wm&gt;h p tJ o m

1

Wc dn ~~.LY S~ r ~lt:c~

R~tpll sl

Ptqill Jun Brlllkat I 1 ~1 1\ 1 111 Sr
Su11da) Wnr\h 11 10 00 1 111 \\ u l B1hl,
Sl\th h IO pm

OasL~

!Nun

Hrtan May

J'lll \~ ~d11c,tl.J ' B11"llc Stud) 71)(1 11 m
.. a ll h ftlln" ~ hlp t.. rusndt for C hnst
P"r
lh1 I rm l..l n IJtel..&lt; lh Scnu:e

W~:dn~'da~r

Wnrshrp Ill tm &amp;
Thur..J J) Bthk Stutl 1 7 twt pm

~orm

6

(. hu r~ h

flu , l ~r

I

&lt;.:omm umt\ uflh n sl

w~ J n,~day

POM EROY - Enterpnse Umted Methodtsl
Church will hold serv1ces 111 contuncl!Oil v..tth
congre gation .tl Pomeroy Church of Chnst
bcgmmng Su ncl.ty. with Sunday school at 9 30
,1m ,md chu rc h .tl I0 30 P,IStor Arl'l,nd Kmg
wtll le.td seiv tces The cctl1n g of the
En terpnse Church recently tell tnlo the sdnctu,tr} and rcpau sate pendmg

Fon~l

I' t~l or ll•1h

um

l&gt;anvillt Holin ess Chun:h
l[ 057 Sta te RnuiL 3::!"i Lang~' II~ P t'ilnr

'"'

\\o" hrp

m 1{,,

Htblr

Sllu J 1\ ~ .h...., I '1 1!1 :t m V.or'll1[1

Wvr 'l il

Tupper~ Pl um~ Sun

7 pm

r~rry Sun\la~

~0

6

10 ,, m
pm

Pa,IOI W.J )Il~.: Dunlup SI.J1L. Rt Mil

I' 1\tnr Arlanr.l Km g SunJ~y Slh &lt; I]
ltJ ~u a 11 W{ 11 ~h p \1 ~0 1m Bthlt•
Sn tl~ Wed 7 "l
Httwoods
l' ~"olur Klllh Ru.lcr Surda) S,htHJI
Ill
1 111 \\or~hrp II am

SI!"C~(

Sunday \\ or~hrp- 10 lXI

Pomrroy Wl;l!;l\ld~ C hurl"h of Chml
Cht ldrcn s H nme Rd S undav
S~: hunl
! I am \\ or~ h1p lOa m 6 p rn

PoslL&gt;r Rruu

I)

Other Churches

,

Bt'Hr~allo w Rldjle Churth of Ch rist

R utlnnfii-IN I Rlllltlsl l hunh

Enterprise worship
services set

other
cere momes
and
Ceremon1.tl peyote ts n01
smo ked , but mgested ,IS a
powder
Smokmg peyo te ts not
,tllowed under the new taw
Peyote, " cac tu s plant that
c,lll ses
ha llu c111nge n• c
elfects when tn ges ted. ts
cl.t sstt 1ed by U.S law as a
controlled substan ce and 11
ts Ill egal to po ssess .n the
Untted States. but the use ot
11 by the N.tttve Amencan
Chu rch IS allowed

rm

Farnte~o~

\.1. \J ltr

I d trl

A mu,mg CoriiCt ( o mm utl lll (hun.h

Muu

T 1111c k

pm

(1

tI

Enr erprt'it

Su nilil ) ScrvM·- 7 p 11

6 p 111

lO am

St~H

Rut l~nd

Y lO

1\-hddiLpml S ntl l) ,, h1H1l

"7tJ Gr.lt\1 S1

l'omero\ 1- rrs t

Slmley satd the legiSI.lllon
" .1 way to p1 ese rve the
N.tV.IJO wc~y o( hfe
The N,I\,IJO Tnbal Counul
.1pproved the meas ure by .t
o1-l vote The July 29 Signmg (llclu ded ,111 all·n•ght cetemon y 111 " sal'red teepee near
the N,tvc~)'o Nallon Museum
Oltl c1.tls .1t the evelll stressed
the tmpott.tnl'e ot ,vsmg peyote proper! y
Peyote ts used tor medttallon and spmtu,t\ lies both tn
the Nau~c Amettc.tn Church

~np m

m1l! 6 Ill pm W"dn, ..da} n

llopt llapt u.l Churrh tSuuthunl

Noah and l11 s wttc lr}mg to get the1r famtly 111
ordet before the tlood Geared to get parents
,md the1r chil dren to ponder chotces
Pe1tmnt.11tces l.l p m n• glrtly through Sunday.
Aug 14 at the Athens F1rst Presbyten,m
Church cornet ol Cowl ,md Washmgton
Sll eets

Pa~!ur

S~o; h(llll

10 'O a m
Sen I\~:' 7 r

Uu~ter

1J ·" 1m \\ r•h1p
Sen llt' 7 10 p 111

Su nd I) SLhfM1I
1111 W"dn1 '&gt;~.b)

am

Holiness

M1ddlrport Church Of"Chri~l
S1h and M:un Pastur AI Hart &gt;(m You1h
M tnr~• o:r Jn~h Ulm Sundll} Sl hnn l 'J ~ l l
utll Wor~h 1p SIS 1010:Jm 7 pm
Wcdn~•d:.r y S~nllo!S 7 p m

H1hlc Suulv 7 oo pm

l-loyd R

IU JS

Pre rdung

] l,nm~

\o\ nJnc~d ay

7 00111ll

p

tira'e 1-:piM:op~d t.:hun:h
126 E M:'un S1 Pmnr.m~ Sunday1Sdllltll
and
Holy -l u.haml II 00 am Re\
td"anl t-'Jyn"'

~'216

Hapllsl C hun:h

Sdl! o l

S1r\ ll C

1Q

\\cdnesd n) Scrvu:cs

Baptist
Cur~ntcr

Cenlnal

11 am

10 '0 am \\, Jnc-.da} 'icntLC

p ]\

Sd1" I

Rull~tnd Chu rc h or lbe N~~oan:n~t

lut•\cla~ Str\ll ~'

Ill

l

A~hur. 1S&gt;racu~~:J Pa~tor Hfih Doh ll'&gt;I.L11

Rt'l

p ~,tur

Episcopal

Sunday

Wnr~h1p

a 111

10

~UildJ\

Sen lC'C"\ 7 p m

Sunda y Sli1 t il

C hurch

Wor~h

Nohk

Jonathan

Pomeroy C hurrh of{ hrlsr
2 12 V. Mam St

Wnr.h1p

Wcdn~: '&gt;l l~y

L}

\\L!I~Illp

~HlllrTnt

of the

V.m ~h1p '

10 am

I}

Paul

Hcatl tc Sund ' ' S~,:hf,.!l

~IJ pn

7

SundJv S~h1HJI '1 I~ a 111

1:13lla m

1111 a1J?pm

Sa\ ll'" liiOU

~H

BiDWELL
Bn ,m ,md F,11ndy
Connectmn&gt; wtll be stnglng .11 7 p 111 on Aug
14 at the Sp11ngf•eld Bapl tsl Chut ch .tt
Btdwell

Trinh~

Communit y Church

of God

l1lkrh As'"'mbh oU .od
PO

Pa~ ll lf J an~

S&lt;:u111d &amp; Lynn Pumln&gt;}

~~

Tuppe-rs Pll'tm

7

Congregational

ll emi&lt;x:k Gro\'r C hns tum Chu rch
Mrnr~lc r I arry lirown Worolup
1.) 10
a 111 Sunday School 10 10 1111 Btblc
Sl!.u.ly 7 p rn

I..A••r I&lt;LI ol f New t rrn~ 1-l.ll Rutland
s~~~~~' Sun 10 00 1111 &amp; 71o pm

Scr' M"~

t n1

Church of Christ

am Mnrnmg \\ P·lll[l HI ~~~ 1111 Sur da\ ....

Singers coming to
Bidwell church

Ma~s

Uad y

111

W~JncM.Iay

II am

hur~h

H ~rh.:rl (irJ I~

Pa,h 1 Ro

10 am

Sunda y Schnol

Wurshrp

rm Youthf'rr 7 ~llp m

fla~111r

PORTER - Sevet,tl eve nts IMve been
sc heduled at the Cla•k Ch,1pe l Freew ill
B.tpl1Sl Church On Aug 13 Bnan and Famtl y
connec tion s v.. lll be stn gmg ,md Jerry
Fredenck preachmg at 6 10 p1 m . on Aug 19
the qu,lrterly conference w1 ll be held dt 7 p m
,md contmlle .tl I0 a m on Aug 20, ,md at
6 10 p m on Aug 27 the Jell R.ttlltt Smge ts
will be smgmg

pm

ty 7 fl m

S11rrrd Hurt Catholic ~hun"h
161 Mulberry A\ e Pomtroy 992 5K'JK
Pa•tor Rev Walter E H ~:1n.r. Sat Cnn
..t 45 'i 15p m Mas' 'i 30 p m Sun
Con K4'i'JI'i am Sun M "\ 4}[1

(\:mer K7 ~ S 'rJ
:\hddkpun Kc\ 11 K 11kk l'a''''r

~und l \

Wo:dne~

Catholic

m

Aru~toht • Wtlf ~lup

1\ 11~

Chap man

Hill

( hii'Sti r (

0 J Whnc lt d off St Kl IhU Pa, rnr PJ

R avcn~"'UIX.l

Jamc &lt;;

R1' tr Vallt')

Church Events

WINDOW ROCK AIIZ
(A PJ
Nav,qo Nat1011
Prcstdcnt Joe Shtrley Jr h,IS
srgned ,, l.tw that m.tkes 11
legal lor Na vatos to tr,msport
and possess peyote tot cet emonr.tl purposes on NavaJO
N.ttton land
The new tnbdl l.tw also
allows peyote th.tt N,1v,qo
poltce contiSc.t te !rom people
who have 11 tllegall y 1o be
gtven to the Natl\e &lt;\mcnnm
Church to be used !01
approved ceremomes

Second Bapmt Church
V. V Sunday 'S~o: h ool 10 am
Murmng wursh1p I I am Evcmng 7 pm

&lt;. huHh uf Jesus f hr1~1 AIMI!itohc

Ch~ ~ hLrt

Events scheduled
at church

The Daily Sentinel• Page A7 -

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday,August5,2005

Jesus calls us to be fishers of men

A Hunger For More
At the dawn ol the world,
when God first fashiOned a
mass ol clay mto the 11rst
human bemg, breathmg mto
htm ltfe use\f, humamty was
wtrcd to want to walk wtth
God Created m the diVIne
tm'age ol God, we were mtend'"
ed to enJOY fellowsh1p wtth the
Soveretgn Cre,llor of "II the
Cosmos, enabled to apprecmte
m holy awe H1s maJesty ,md
also gtven the capac1ty to know
Htm m a real relationship
But With that ti rst rebellion
m the Garden ol Eden the
•mage of God 111 the face ol
humamty was diStorted ne,1rl y
to the pomt ofbecommg unrccogmzable Yes, wc·,e been
created m the 1111age ot God,
but our resemblance to ll 1m
has been hornb l} diShgurcd by
the ra\a~es ot s111 .tnd scltishness N&lt;) longer LLrc '"~ ~aplltile, m ot oursel\cs to w,tlk
With Hnn or even dc&gt;IIC Hun
unless He Hnmell p.tvcs the

Friday, August 5, 2005

Fathet rn

ll£' tll

£' "

Mall Ill

11

~ktg~

Count\ "Ollk-,1 Hon-.1

352 Easl Mam

II!!

Pomeroy Oh

·•

1 /6
740-992-2644

God w1 lm&lt;'li the
he ~me i111 tmh

""'Jd

W/1

/o/l/1 J /6
&amp;noul!rr'&amp;
.:ftrr &amp; ~alrtp
TOU. fall

...oo-su-o•n

740-992-6298

MY grace is sufficient
for thee: for my
strength is made
Perfect m weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Offtce Servtce &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

�'

,.

.Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 5, 2005 ·.

Bv CONNIE MABIN

in wake of
Marine deaths

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

CLEVELAND John
Dyer left work , went home
and prayed when he heard on
the radio that nine Marines in
his son's battalion had been
killed in Iraq. Then the doorbell ran g.
.
'"Is he dead' 1" Dxer asked
the pair of Marines · 011 hi'
doorstep.
With &lt;1 nod from nne. hi s
world went blank. Lance Cpl.
Christopher Dyer, I'!. had
been killed. ''I don ·, remember much after that ," Dyer
said Thursday in his home in
suburban Cincinnati .
As the 3gonizing 'A;ails
eitded after a deadly week for
the 3rd- Battali(lll. 25th
Marines. some fami Iie.s
breathcq a sigh uf relief. oth ers began planning funerals.
and (.:U!llmuuities continued

to grieve .
The new... wa ~ bctt ~ r for
another famil y of the
reservi-.ts: an e- mail from
Cpl. Timothy Hatch " tying
he was OK .
·
' Kevi n Hatch, ~5. him.sell· a
Marine. said the much hoped
for messa!!c from hi ~

23-

vear-old brother was hitte r.
sweet for the lndepemkncc
family. .
·: 'You don ' t w;ml Lo hea r
about ~w y Marin~.: s dy111g
becau se they're all y.ou r
brothers." H&lt;llch said. ".-'.11!
time you lose nne tha t's one
more than yo u wan t. Fur u~.

it's a little bit of worry. Then
you feel bad fo r the famili es
that it 's hiippening to."
Chnstupher
Dyer. of
Ewnda le near Cincinnati .
and .eight othe r Marines from
Columbus-based
, Lima
Curnpan y were among 14
killed Wednesda y in the
deadliest roadside bomhin ~
of U.S. troops in Iraq.
'
The news came 1wo day ~
after the same battalion the .suburban Clevelandbased 3rd Battalion . 25th
Marines - lost five members
in tighting. Two others were
killed in combat last week.
''Driv ing home , turning the
corner, I had in my mind this
bad image of a government
vehic le waiting for me to get
home." John Dyer said of the
loss of the five reserv LSt.s ott
Monday. "It' s a terrible th ing
wishing that it can be someone else's tragedy.':
The Marines originally said
all 14 killed in the bombing

Friday, August 5, 2005

:

BY

JAMES HANNAH

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

This week's deaths of 14
Ohio-based Marine reservists·
has military experts disagreeing over whether reservists
and Guardsmen are as well
trained and prepared as
active-duty soldiers when it
comes to fighting in Iraq
"It's just common . sense
that patt-time warriors will
not be as well-trained as fulltime soldiers are," Loren
Thompson, a defense analyst
at the Lexingion Institute
think tank, said Thursday.
The reservists from the 3rd
Ballalioti, 25th Marines
based in suburban Cleveland
were' killed in two attacks this
week.
Larry Korb, senior fellow
at the Center for American
Progress research in stitute
and former assistaryt secretary
of defense for manpower during the Reagan administration, said reservists usually
come from civilian backgrounds that ·have little to do
'with the military.
.
"There's no way that somebody in the reserves is going
.
.
.
AP Photo
to be as good as soniebody in
Memorial rt bbons are. seen placed on a fence as military personnel walk out of the Navy and Marine Corps Reserve Center ihe active duty in terms of ·
wartighting,'' Korb said.
Thursday. rn Columbus, where nine of 14 Marines who were killed in Iraq were based.
" Korb questioned whether
reservists are getting enough
pre-deployment training time.
something."
home.
were part of the_sam ,• battal - Mourners continued to bring
Eric Montgomery, 21, is Thompson said reservists can
Mayor Michael Coleman
ion. but un Thur,day they !lowers. American tlags and
~ ai d fi ve of the reservists
balloons to the makeshift wore two hats: one as a escorting older brother Lance be especially vulnerable the
were nut in 1he Ohi o unil.
memorial.
leader comforting a grieving Cpl. Brian Montgomqy's tirst few months in Iraq.
"Iraq, like every battlefield.
Pat Kreuter, mother of Cpl.
"There are kids ~1y age city and ' the other as the Qody from Iraq.
.
"He won 't leave him out is a unique place. The more
Da1 id K. Kreuter. 26. heard going over there," said Steve father of a Marine serving
· there by himself," said Jamie you'.re exposed to it, the more
:tbout the attack by watch ing Balog. 19, who attendedthe with Lima Company.
·
The Marines said all' fami - Bell, a high school classmate you're prepared for it,''
eahk news and the lnterttet.
same school as Boskovitch.
· \Vaitinu for six h6ufs "They ' re choosing to fight lies of those killed had been of Eric' s .~ "They were close. · Thompson said. "No amount
Wednesday without hearing a for our freedom and I thank notified. The Colemans '(hey were very, very close." of training in Ohio is really
Robert Hollman. SR. nf going to prepare you for a
weren't among them . Yet
thin2. she drove to her them for that."
Delaware
, didn 't think his place like Iraq. And if you're ·
they've
endured
the
waiting
The working-class commudau ~ hte r~ in- law\ house in
son, Sgt. Justin Hoffman ~ training on a part-time basi~
Cincinn,1ti about 5: 30 p.m. nity that turned out in force several times.
"We' ll have the TV on and would be riding in an - even ir you were active
whe n the battalion was
and found a Marine inside.
" I . kne\v immediate ly that deployed in March planned we ' II be li stening," the mayor amphibious assault vehicle ti ve years ago - you· re not
Dct vid wa' dead." Pat Kreuter to host a memorial service said. "When the phone rings, · because he was an infant ry - going to .be as current as· a
said in he r nearhv Miami Monday night for the . we arc not sure what is going man and liked to walk so he full-time soldier."
To11 nship ltomc .. :It \ your Marines who won' t be com- to .be said on the , other end. could see everything.
Others di sagre.,.
·
So
Hoffman
wasn't
warWe' ll be hearing cars drive
w or ~t reality. Your nightmare
Ing home.
Daniel Goure, a military
A memorial itlcluding_pink up the street. · 1f · someone . ried. He was riding his bicy- analyst at the Lexington
come true.':
She said her son joined the roses and a teddv bear was knocks on our door or there's cle around 6 p.m. WedAesday Institute, said many reservists.
doorbell that rings, il-'s when his youngest son. Tyler. were once active-duty solMarine Reserves in 1998 building at Lima Company in
tough."
called and told · him the diers. He said their training is
hccatbC he believed 11 was Columbus.
'In Willoughby, where tlags Marines were at his ex-wife 's updated before they deploy
"Marines are brothers.
the hest or the hest. .
In Broo k Park. Cpl. Jeff · Once a Marine: always a flew at half-staff and· a sum- house in Pataskala.
and designed to make them
llo.sko,·itch's high .school No. Marine." suid David Cro&gt;s. mer yard sale brought neigh- . '' It j ust never occurred to as prepared as the actives.
16 ·foot ball Jersey flapped in 49. of Columbus. after drop- bors together Thursday. the me that something would .
"They're getting the benethe wind . attached to a barb- ping off u bouquet of flowers Montgomery · family was happen to 'him,'' Hoffman tits of the latest tactics and
wi re Lopped fence ouhide 3rd with an American tlag in it. dealing with news about two said . " I just pictured him techniques.'' Goure said .
Battal io n· s · headquarters . "I felt like 'I needed to do Marine sons, both heading coming home .,.
"These guys are going in as .
well prepared as the regulars.''
Goure's view was echoed
s~ys
by Pentagon and reserve officials.
Pentagon spokes(llan Lt.
AKRO.N (AP) - . Marcia ed to build her own house Col. Barry Venable said
Wolff's house won't look using natural materials.
.actives and reservists go
much different.from the othChristopher Fox of Fox's through the same basic trainers once it 's finished. No one Natural Building Co. has ing courses. ·
.
or]
the
hou
se
been
'
w
orking
wi ll know it's built of com"The services don ' t deploy
pacted bales of straw. ·
since May. College students soldiers, sailors, airmen or
The home's' frame is made from several states work on Marines who ' are not fully
I0 MPH winds from the
Saturday, August 6
of
wood. but instead of dry- his crew and live in tents on trained and prepared to exenorth turning from the northMoming (7 a:m.-Noo11)
ea' t '" the &lt;~ft e rnoon proCloudy
· morning. wall on the inside, the house the property. They listen to cute the missions assigned to
is being ·constructed with · classical music wh ile they their units," Venable said.
'
·
grcs\e~.
Temperatures wi ll &lt;:limb compressed _)Jules of straw work.
He said· about 35 percent of
E•·ening (7 p.m.-Midnight) from 65 to 80 by late this
"Th is kind of constrm;tion U.S. forces in Iraq are
It\ go ing to b~ a cloudy morning. Winds will be 5 to . that are held together with
and
strips
of
,bamboo
poles
in
the United States goes reservi-sts. And mosl are comevening. Temperatures will I0 MPH from the northeast
..
·
·
wood
back to the earlv 1900s." Fox bat units, not support units, as
fall · from H4 earl y thi s
from
the
north
as
the
turning
Four -coals of a thick coat said. ''But there are straw many were in the past, he
eve ning to 75. Winds will be
morning
progresses.
of
mud. sand and clay will ·· house s in Europe that have said.
10 MPH from tne northeast.
Steve
Stromvall.
a
protect
the outside ..
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
lasted for 500. even 800
Ovemigltt (1-6 a.m.)
She expec-ts her new ener-· years, If you make it tight spokesman for the Army
It will continue to be
It slllluld ·continue to be
Reserve, said the reservists
gy-eflicient
home to save her
du ud y. · Tem pc ratu n: s will cloudy. There could be a few a bundle of money on heating enough, it's rot-proof.''
have
been trained specificall y
A
Swedish
inventor,
decl ine fm11t 7.1 to ·today's raindrops around the area. costs this winter. Straw is an Theodor Dieden. developed a to deal with roadside bombs
will
hold
low of o7 by 6 a.m.. Winds Temperatures
excellent insulator arid eheap. method of compress ~ng straw and the environment in Iraq. _
will. be 5 to. I0 MPH from stead y around 84. Winds wi ll
"I want people· to see how a into boards in 1935. and
the northeast.
be 5 MPH from the north.
house can be built so that it is companies in Europe and
energy-efficient and siill be Australia have made siniilar
elegant and rustic," said products.
..
Wolll, who runs an Akron
S(rawboards have been.
interior-design business.
used in homes and other
Pepsico - 54.70
Wendy's - 50
Wolff, 51 , has peen trying buildings
in
Britain,
Premier .12.95
Worthington - 17.44
to get others to try the straw- · Australia and ·other countries,
Rockwell. - 51.7 4
Dally stock reports are .
bale construction withom but they ' ve been slower to
lllrtllllt
..
Rocky Boots - 28.81
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
much interest. So she decid- catch on in the Unitec) States.
rt
of the previous day's
RD Shell - 63.19
transactions, provlde'd by
SBC - 24.74
Sears - 148.89
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of Glllllpolls.
Wai-Mart - .49.29
Startlllllt .

Major Leagi.Je Baseball -

Stanozolol: Builds muscle, boosts recovery and easy to detect

fNP SchEdulE
GALLIPOLI S - A schedule of upcoming colege
end high school _varsity sporting events involving
teams from Gallia. Meigs ttnd Mason cournies.

Monday's game

Golf
Ripley at Wahama (al Riverside) . tO a.ni.

Officiating class
to be held Mon.
ROCK SPRINGS A
football officiating class will
be offered beginning August
8 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in
room J I 8 of Meigs High
SchooL
Those completing the
requirements of the class will
receive a Class 2 officiating
permit from the Ohio High
School Athletic Association.
West Virginia residents are
also eli gible for the class.
For registration call Rick.
Ash· at 992-5960, Bill Schultz
at 992-9925, or see Richard
·Hill at Hometown Market in
Middleport.

MYL to host 3-on-3
hoops tournament ·

a

MIDDLEPORT- A 3-on3 double elimination basketball tournament will be held
on Saturday. August 13. at
General Hartinger Park.
Check-in during the day of
the tournament is 9 a.m. and
the games will start at 10 a.m.
Registraiion forms are
available at Locker 219 in
Middleport.
Middleport
Trophies and Tees or the
Recreation Center in Athens.
For more information, contact Britt Dodson at (740)
992- 1122.
.

.-

Woman
straw house will
save her. money this winter

NewsChannel
Friday, August 5
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
It's going io be a humid
and
cloudy
mornin g.
Temperatures will· ri'e from
71 to 81 by late' thi.s morning. Winds will be S MPH
from the southwest turnin g
from the northwest as the
morning progresses.
Ajternoo11 (l-6 p.m.)
It will be a humid afternoon. Temperature s will stay
near 85 with today\ high of
87 occurring around 2 p.m.
Skies will range from partl y
cloudy to cloudy with 5 to

58.35
AEP - 38.69
Akzo- 41.71

INGELS

USB -

29.78
Gannett - 72.45
General Electtic
GKNLY- 4.85
Harley Davidson

JPM - . 35.46
Kroger 19.51
Ltd •. -24.35
NSC - 37.08
Oak Hill Financial

31.68
OVB - 25.60
BBT- '41.49
Peoples. - 28.72

CARPET

s5
$1
Camet
$695
.,

VlnJI noorlnt

Ashland Inc. - 62.10
AT&amp;T - 20.ll
BLI - 12.53
Bob Evans - ,25.24
BorgWarn!lr - 57.18
Champion - 4.31
Charming Shops - ll.14
City Holding -'- 36.88
Col - 47.48
DG -20.01
·DuPont- 43
Federal Mogul .67

34.01
52.58

Columbus adds
Prusek in goal

1,

Local stocks
ACI -

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

NFL's Friedman headed to the Hall, Page 82
Cavs introduce Hughes, Marshall, Page 82
Dilfer warns Edwards of holdout hazard, Page 84
The Scoreboard, Page B8

differ on
itarv towns·Experts
reservist training

lor

Aaonv ol Marines trauedv

INSIDE

lamlnatB noerlau

iJjr.•1~¢\~ \K. l)~lil~
\9ntl:~9&gt;n~{5.f~a

(lhmpractc•l t.!lk' ~car I ~

rr. W\ ',&lt;lnr&gt;'ljYoctic S&lt;'c!\'t~
. \1l1nN_.r uf Arntrictm fk\!Td of
hll"t'fl'l'' l'mfc~\i nn&lt;~h ~

,,( .\1001&lt;"&lt;~1 A(1 ~)(J I"Il1ut\"

Compfnsaliott • ·
._

• M c ~.h ..-;m:

• \tt'l'-1 ht\ur.uxc' '

. ,., ,upl.llll.:tun:

• ';. tm e da~ .!ppl

1avenswoud

~~ttt'l'lrlctic
vcnt~r
•
~ 304-273-5321

316 Washin ton St ·

---

~kmlxr \~ 1\mcnoil ~\eadem}

Auto Accidents Workers'
• ) rll1\ lnJunc•

StlrtiQII

20 } l l ~\ IA:OCI J.:~'

~
Ravenswood, WV

Friday, August

@ Middleport Football Field

Pearl Street, Middleport, OH tRain LO&lt;lltion;Meigs HigliSdlooi)
Showtime: 7:30P.M. TicketS: $1 0 advance. $i5 at Gate
kids 5 and under FREE!
Tickets available at tl1e following locations:Pomeroy. OH-Dans's.
Farmer's Bank. Middleport. OH-Hometown Markel, King Ace
Hardware, Middleport Dept Store. Gallipolis, OH-Farmers Bank.
. Pt. Pleasant. WV-Peoples Bank
For more inf&lt;&gt;rmati&lt;m

Chairs,
www.rivercityplayersohio.org
7411-992-6759
•

..

rt

.,

COLUMBUS (AP)
Goaltender Martin Prusek,
28~9-4 in his three seasons
with the Ottawa Senators,
signed a one-year free-agent
contract Thursday with the
Columbus Blue Jackets.
The Blue Jackets were
seeking a ,quality goalie .who
could back up and at the
same time push starter Marc
Denis .
The 29-year-old Prusek has
~ 2.23 goals-against average
and a .913 save percentage in
48 career N HL games. all
with the Senators. Prusek
was 16-6-3 with three
shutouts in 2003-2004 before
playing during the lockout
year in his native Czech
Republic.
Prusek. is the third defen' .
sive free-agen.t signing by the
Blue Jackets this week. ·
Defensemen Adam Foote ·
(Colorado) and Bryan Berard
(Chicago l signed multiyear
~on tracts.

Contact Information
Fax -

1·740-446-3008

E-mail- sportsOmydailysentinel.com

~Slall
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(74 0) 446·2342, exl. 33

_

bsherma n@ mydailytribune.com

·aryan Walters, Spans Writer
{74 0) 446·2342, exl. 23 •

bwalters@mydailytnbllne.c:om

'

Larry Crum, Sports Wrller
(304) 675· 1333, exl. 19

Ierum@myda ilyr~g1s1 er.com

NEW YORK (AP) Stanozolol, the muscle-building anabolic steroid that
Rafael Palmeiro tested positive for, can help at·hletes
avoid being sidelined by
injury and make them perform better- but it's so easily detected that one expert
said he's amazed any player
subject to drug screening
would dare use it.
. "No ·tested 41thlele' in their
_right mind should be using
that drug," said Charles
Yesalis of Pennsylv;miil State
University, who said he was
"shocked" when he · heard
reports that the Baltimore
Orioles slugger )'ad tested
p,ositive for the drug.

No khown masking agent
can hide stanozolol use from
a drug screen, said Dr. Gary
Wadler of New York
University, an expert on drug
use by athletes. When taken
by pill it can linger in the
body and be detected for several weeks to a month. while
an injection can be identified
for up to several months, he
said.
Palmeiro began serving ·a
10-day suspension Mollday
for failing a drug test that
took place sometime after hi s
testimony on Capitol Hill in
March that he never used
steroids. House Government
Reform Committee chairman
Rep. Tqm Davis, R- Va. , said

Wednesday
in a tel e- .
phone interview
with
the AP that
panel
the
wou ld look
into whether
Palmeiro
Comm it ted
perJury.
Palmeiro
M a j o r
League
Baseball has no t specified
what drug the test found , but
a person with knowledge · of
the sport 's dr,ug-testing program told The Associated
Press un condition of
anonymity that it was
stanozolol.

Pqlmeiro has said .he never.
intentionally took.._J teroid s
and that he doesn t know
what caused the test result.
Stanozolol , an anabolic
steroid also known by the
brand name Winstrol , can
help an athlete get stronger.
build mu scle mas s. ,boo st
acceleration , recover faster
froni workouts arid other
physical stresses and become
more as sertive. Wadler satd.
He said there are no firm data
on how well stanozolol
works in compari son to other
steroids' when
anabolic
abused by athletes.
Yesalis said stanozolol
appears to ,be moderately
effecti ve at building muscle.

but not as potent as some
alt e rnat ive~.

Wad ler said there \ some
indi cation that stanozolol is
less assoc•iated with highly
bulked , body- hui lder . ty pe
muscles than other anabolic
steroid s are .
He al so .said 'stan \lzo lol
could ltelj1 a player avoid
seriou s injury becau se it
helps the body recover from
physical stres s. Palmeiro
forged potential Hall of Fame
career numbers based largely
on lopgevity - in 20 years,
he never went on the disabled
list . and join,ed Hank Aaron.
Willi e May s and Eddie
Please see Stanozolol, Bl '

Atlanta uses long ball to beat Reds, 7-4·
CINCINNATI (AP) -Andruw Jones bit his
33rd home run to take
over the National League
. lead, and Jeff Francoeur
also homered as the
Atlanta Braves overcame
Sean Casey's two home
runs and four RBis to
beat the Cincinnati Reds
7-4 Wednesday night.
Francoeur and Rafael
'Furcal each drove in two
runs to help rookie Kyle
Davies improve to 4-1 in
his last seven s(ar,ts. The
first-place Braves have
won nine of 12 to maintain th eir 4 1/2-game
lead over Washington in
the NL East.
Davies (6 ~ 3) retired II
of the first 12 batters he
faced and allowed four
hits. three runs and ' three
walks' in 5 2-3 innings.
His seve n strikeouts
were one shy or' matching the career high he set
in hi s· last start Saturday
against Pittsburgh.
For'mer Red Chris
Reitsma pitched the
ninth for his l5th save in
19 opportunities.
Reds starter Aaron
Ha•ang (7-10), who leads
the team in wins, gave up
eight hits and four runs
I
with three walks ·and one
strikeoutin six innings.
Jones. who was tied
with Cincinnati's Adam
Dunn and Chicago's
Derrek Lee for the NL
lead in homers, hit the
first pitch he saw from
Harang in the · third
inning 434 feet to center
field to give Atlanta a 1- ·
0 lead. Center fielder '
Ken Griffey Jr. just ·
turned and watched the
ball hit the black batter's
eye and bounce back
AP photo
Cincinnati. Reds third baseman Edwin Encarnacion fields a ground ball hit by Altanta Braves '
omo the field ..
Andruw Jones for an out in the fifth inning Thursday in Cincinnati. The Braves recaptured the
Please see Reds. B4
NL East' lead with the 7-4 win.
·

i,I

'

...

Yankees
rally to
beat Tribe·
CLEVELA['ID (AP ) . Alex Rodriguez and Jason
Giambi hit back-to-back ·
homers off Bob Wickman in
the ninth in ning. and the New
York Yankees avoided being
swept in Cleveland for the
first time since I970 with a 4'
3 win over the Indians on
· Thursdav night.
The hon1crs saved the
Yankees from dropping further back i11 the AL East and
wild-card standin 2s.
The comeback ' also might
have slaved off a tonguelashing from owner George
Steinbrenner. who is running

out of pati ence with hi s highpriced but sn far underachieving collection of AllStar millionaires .
"''m
concerned
that
. ihey've got I'? ger Iheir bats
going. They've got to get it
. together and ge t playing,"
Steinbrenner said in Tlimpa.
Fla .. after watching ri ghthander Jarct Wright in a
minor league rehabilitation ·
start.
New York waited until the
ninth inning hefo r~ rallying
to beat the Indians. who were
t\vo OlliS from their first
home &gt;weep again st the
Yankees since Ri chard Nixon
was in th.e White House.
Giambi also hom~red in the
fiftlt for . New York. which
stayed -1 1/2 games behind
division -kading BostOll.
Please see Rally. Bl

Prep Golf

Wahama out-duels Point
on opening day in W. Va.
BY BRAD SHERMAN
, BSHE~MAN@ MYDAILviRIBUNE .C OM

MASON,
W.Va.
Wahama's Darin Reece shot an
83 to claim medalist honors,
and two teamm'ates joined him
with sub-90 scores, as the
White Falcons beat Point
PJeasant 353-382 Thursday at
Riverside Golf Club. '
The 'intra-county duel marked
the start of the high school golf
season, which is beginning a
week early across the state .. The
start was pushed back to better
acFommodate the state tournament, which is routinely marred
by bad weather.
R4ces 83 was low score
over the grueljng 18-hole event,
a trek that seemed even longer
to the linksters with temperatures reaching the upper 90's.
Teammate Danny Ro,ush carded
:In 86 and Ju stin Arnold an 89 .
Garrett Kaylqr•s 95 rounded

out
the
Falcoit \ scoring, as the top
four
scores
count toward
the team total.

w

I

I

I

Garrison was
P o i n t
Pleasant's low
man with 90.
Eric . Milhoan
was next with a 94 while Chris
Long was close behind with 97 .
Justin Duckworth's round of'
I0 I was the fourth and final
that figured into Point 's score.
In scores that didn ' t countJ.T. Reynolds finished with a .
I03 for Point Pleasant. with
Adam Roush and Adam Ingles
recording a 98 and I03 for the
Falcons respectively.
_
Wah~ma plays host to Ripley
Monday. while the Black
Brad Sherman/photo
Knight golfers travel to Roane ' Wahama 's Danny Roush is pictured above dur ing that matc h chipping from the .fringe
County.
on hole No. 2 Thurs&lt;1ay at Rivers ide Golf Club in Mason. W. Va. ·
'•

'

�'

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel ·

.

.

wwW .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, August 5, :wos

0

.

www. mydail ysentinel.com

The Daily Sentin'el • Page B3

;NFL
pioneer
Friedman headed to Hall of Fame
.
.
'

'

BY BARRY WtLNd
ASSOCIATED PREss

No less an authority than
Red Grange called Benny
.friedman one of the NFL's
·greatest players.
On Sunday _in Canton,
· Ohio, 72 years after his retire: men! and 23 after he died of a
self-i nflicted gun wound,
"friedman will join Grange
and many of those other
great,~ in the Prq Footb~oll H;tll
of Fame. .
.
It took some aggre"ive
campaigning by Friedman's
former players at Brandeis
University to finally convince
the voters to admit the former
quarterback Grange dubbed
"the be st · I ever played
against." Friedman and Fritz
Pollard. another pioneer of the
NFL's early days. were nomi nated by the veterans com miltee, ·then vottd i.n by !he .Wrnember pane'J;-!hal annually
choost~s new Hall or Farners.
· Dan MaricllJ' and Steve
Young are the·othe r inductees.
. "For a variety of reasons we
can speculate on. he didn't
make it into the Hall of
.Fame." said Bill McKenna. a
Teceiver when Friedman

:~Cavaliers

coachecJ at' Brandeis and a for·
mer CFL player. "But unques·
tionably those w.ho remained
in football and knew of him
and who knew football , they
were all confidcilt' he would
get in the Hall.
,
''A group of us, mainly th e
players of Brandeis, maybe
40 or 50 players who played
under .h.im. recognized thm
and m&lt;tde u series nf objectives. put logdher presentations and · brochures. and
hopefully they WtJuld come
true and g~ t Benny Friedman
imo the Hall."
AI 5-fnnt,8 nr "' anu 'just
170 pounds. Friedman hardly
wios !he pronnype quarlerhad . But he became a slar at
Mic.higan - his field goal in
I '1~5 .lifled !he Wolverine s
pa't Grange and lllinvi s and then moved int o the pros.
Wi1h no draft. he was able
to U10&lt;isc his !cam. and
Friedman· signed .wi.th !he
C levelanu Bulldo~s in 1927.
A , year · la!er, !he franchise
moved lo Detroit and became
the Wolverines. It seeined·
Fricdn1an had come full circle.
While starring for that ream.
his popularity \i·as' noticed by
Ne1v York Gian!s owner Tim

Mara. who needed a headliner Navy during World War II.
to stop the flow of red ink he
Following
the
war,
was enduring. He . acquired Friedman went to Brandeis as
Fnedman. and fans be~an athletic director and football
showing up at Giants gan'les. coach. He turned the program
with Mara turning. a profit · at that elite New England
Juring Friedman's first season school into one of th e best on
on !he roster.
its level in the nation .
. Nearly three-yuancrs of :,
·~And we ~tccompl. i s hed as
century la1er, Mara's son 'Bennie's Boy.&gt;' a lot of guou
Wcllinglon returned the favor. . !hings lor the university. and I
endorsing Fri~unwn for !he lhink it mad~ our grou p that
Canton shrine .
much stronger." McKenna
In all. Friedman played for said. "No! jltst gc1-roge1hers
four teams. fro m 1927-.\-l . anu for fun's sake. bul we helped
W&lt;" considered the best play- !he university and future ath~ron ~ach of them .
lctes at the schnol."
Fam~d columnisl Paul
fri ed man often would work
Gallien ;mce wrote in the ou1 wi1h !he players after
Ne" Ymk Daily News:
prat·til'c. McKcmla saiu he
"When a Friedman pass wou ld run .\0 or so yards
reaches ihl' receive r. it oas down fi eld &lt;tnd Friedman
gone it s rmnc: The ball is . ~Voiold throw him perfect
ph!dically dead. The receiver passes. 1jme after lime.
· has only to reach up and wkc
Friedman once bragged he
hold of Lilike picking a grape- prob;ohly cou ld stil l play in hi&gt;
frui1 off a tree."
4(l.s. and the boa't nearly
Of course. !he bed! j11ore came back 10 haunt him.
resembled a watermelon in Brandeis
was
playing
those days.
Springfield College - "the
After he qLLit as a player. sehoul Was fo r phys cd only,
Friedman
coached
Ci ty so il was all a! hlc tcs,"
O'llege .of New York after McKenna said.
be ing persona ll y asked hy
"They started riding Benny
'\1ayor Fiorello LaGuardia to after the comment showed up,
lake the job. He spent six sea- sayi ng : ' You arc an old man,
sons there. then joined !he no way you could play,' He

introduce Hughes, Marshall

•
: CLEVELAND (APJ - The
:;head of the Cleveland
·Cavaliers· on-cou11 hou sehold
wasn't there, but Larrv
Hughes and Donycll Marshail
still felt right at hom~ .
· The cluo's two newest .freeagent acquisitions made it
.clear Thursday that they came
to Cleveland for .. one reason
.- · to play alongs ide LeBron
James.
· '"It's an opportunity I cou ldn't pass up,'' said Hughes. 2&lt;\.
who left Washington to sign a
five -vear, $60 million contract· and join 'Jan1es in the
Cleveland backcourt.
·
"It's a perfect fit.'' said
Marshall. 32. an 11-year NBA
forward w)lo left . Toronto t&lt;x
a four-year. $22 million con· tract. "I had a lot of offers:
,
AP photo
Some made serise. some did- Cleveland Cavaliers general manager Danny Ferry, guard Larry
n't. It .came down to Hughes, forward Donyell Marshall and coach Mike Brown, from
Cleveland and Wa&lt;hington. · left, pose afte r Hughes and Marshall were presented their jerWhen Larry left there tci come seys during a news conference in Cleveland Thu rsday.
.JJere, that pretty much did it."
, Marshall said he\ eager·to public. Each player was pre- off work to come here. I h()pe
be part of a ieam centered sented hi s new home while it's not a j inx to you. but wei around the 20-ycar-oldlames. jersey by a young fan chosen (·orne to Cleveland."
One w.oman asked new
"There 's a good reason I from about 200 people in the
coach Mike Brown to assure
. came here. That's because we stands.
have a· player that before his
Some fans asked quest ion s. her !he Cavalier.s could indeed
Career is over is goif1g to be others just took !he micm- return 10 !he playntls for 1he
one of the grtatest eve r.
phorie and extended gree t-.· first time since 1'198.
-~ .. He can tk
a e over a game. mgs.
"We had a new coach and
We're here to help him do it.''
"Donyell. you just tore LIS ne1v players las! year and
Both were introduced at up las! season and I'm glad looked like we'd make the
center court at Gund Arena in you're on our side now. T said playoffs unlil we col lapsed."
a press conference open 10 !he one middle-aged man. ''I look she· said. " It was awful. It was

pamful. Please ·tell me that
won 't happen again."
Brown. hi red in June to his
first head coaching job. made
no guaran.tees, · but did stress
that the club's goal is "to win
this year and for many years ·

to come."
General 1i1anager Danny
Ferry said adding Hughes .
Marsh'all and bringing back
veteran center Zyurunas
llgauskas with a new fiveyear. $50 million contract
were his top priorities.
"This is a very good day for
.the organization ,'' sa id Ferry.
"The ink is dry and the team
is hetter." · ·
· With th e cl ub still $4 million under the salary cap, the
firs t-year GM is looking to
aut! another player. One player he could pursue is Miami
point )!llllrd . Damon Jones.
who is seeking a new deal
with !he Heal.
"\Vc' re going lo explore
every po"ibility, ·whether by
trade or free agency," he said.
" I can't give you names, but
We want players dedicated (O
winning and willing to work .
hard to get there."
Hughes. who averaged a
c.oreer-high 22 points and also
led !he NBA in steals per
game (2.89). said he wouldn't
mind moving to point guard
ne xt to James.

]llo. If you
-

, Nextel Cup
Allstate 400,
2:30 p.m .. Sunday
AP photo
This 1950's .handout photo from Brandeis Un1vers1ty· shows
football coach Benny Friedman being carri ed by members of
·hiS team.

didn'! sav a word . He was lilO ball's pim1o;ers .
muCh o(a gen tleman.
"There was no question he
"All we could do for him was one of the dominant footwa~ win the ·game anll when ball players of the era of the
we won the gam,e. he wa:-. a late 1920s and early '30s,'''
very happy tnan . A]lei he . McKenna said . "We. recogwalked away, the gen tleman nized this and, fortunately, the
· he was. withoUt . getti ng members of the Hall of Fame
invo lveu in all !he torm entrn~ committee were kind enough.
thai was going on from the to look at the material we put
Slancls." McKenna recalled.
to gether. Every time I reac it ,
More than 20 of "Benny's I am proud of what my team Boys" \viii be in Canton this mares h~v e done. ... li has
weekend 10 honor one of foot- ·come to fruition."

Rally
from Page. Bl
'
Rodriguez , who slruck
out in his fi rs t two at -bats
an d gro unded into an
inning-ending double play,
tied il 3-3 with his 30th
homer - a long shot in to
the left-field bleac hers off
Wi ckman (0- 3) .
One out later, Wickman.
who was pitching in his
i'ourth Slraight gmne, gave·
up Giambi ·s shot. which
.barely cleared 1he glove of
leaping ri gh t fi eldeo: Casey
·Blake . .
· As Giambi' s homer
cleared the wall. !hou sands
of Yankees fans. who had
been taunted hy chanling
Cleveland fa ns moments
earlier, broke into th e
familiar sounus of "Let's
Go Yankees! "
Giambi. who hit 14
lwm ers in July, has five
·mtlltihqm er games thi~
season - all since July 4.
Tom Gordon (5-4). who
allowcu the Indians 10 take
a 3-2 lead in the seventh on
· Travis Hafn er\ RBI sin gle. go t the win .
f\..1ariano Riv.cra ·wc__'lrked
a perfect nintlt for his 27 th
save. Baseb&gt;lll's mnsl co nsiste nt close r ha sn·, blown
a save Since April6 against
Bnst~..~n.

Wickman

wreckeu

another nice outing by
lndiims
start er Kevin
Millwood , who liinited the
Yankees to two homer s
and · eight hits in eight
innings. The right, hattder,
who has had to scrap for
eve rything he 's gotten thi s
season because of a lack of
support. walked none and
struck out eight.
·'
Leading 2-1. Shawn
Chacon. acquired last
· week io\ a trade from.....
Colorad o 10 bolst-er New
York's
injury-depleted
rotalion, walked Blake to
open the seventh and was
· lifted for left-hander Alan
Embree.
Grady .Sizemore walked
and Coco 'crisp bunted !he
runners over. Gordon came
in and J)lonny Peralta
gro unded his first pitch tn
shp rtstop. sco ring Blake ro
tie it 2-2. Hafner, activ&lt;tte~
before the game after .missin~ 17 with a concussion.
follo~Ved with a ·grounder
to the riglll of t'irst baseman Giambi . who barely
moved as !he ball went
past him and Sizemore
scored.
Giambi's 20th homer - ·
and 15th since July I made . it 2-0 in the fifth.
The Indians trim med it
to 2- 1 in the bottom halfon
Peral!a's two-out double.
John Flaherty's ho;11er in
the thiru. his first since
Sept. 23. pul New York up
I ,().

~ut also other animals like
dogs and cats. to speeu
recnvery in animals debililat, from Page Bl
ed by surge ry or dise'"e.
Stanowlol pills have been .
used
to tre'!l a ran~ genetic
l'ylurray as the only players
d
isorder
ca lled hereditary
·with 3,000 hits and 500
·homers despite neve r fini sh- angioedema. but doctors in
-ing higher than fifth in MVP. the Un i!ed States say the;(ve
sw itcheu ' to alternatives in
voting.
Major league baseball recenr vears because of lack
's uppl y.
Oval ion
· players have. tested positive of
Pharmaceuticals
Inc
of
for stunuzo)ol in the past.
.Among I, 133 dru g lest s Deerfield. Ill .. says it stoppecl
'administered by the sport in . makinnt' the . druo.::"' about two
2004, II of 12 positive ye ars ago.
Alllhony Castaldo. presiresults detected stanozolol.
·dent
of the United States
·wadler said he wasn 't sure
Angioedema
.why that particular · steroid Hereditary
Associ
ation.
said "co m...was so popular. but specu.lat: ·
pounding
pharmacies."
ed that one reason might be•'
.
the lack of extreme musde which make cuslumited
med'ication
s
for
indi
vo.dua
l
bulking.
· ·
We'll deliver all the local happenings right to yo~r horne. Stop by our office
He also said athletes proba- patients. produce !he pil ls in
the
Uniled
States
for
pre
bly are ,comfortable with the
and subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for 3 months for only $30.19'and receive
drug because it's been in the scrip!iun use by people wilh
competitive arena for so long the uiscasc.
a FREt: comic umbrella:''!
"\Vherc Mr. Palmciro ~ot
.
·- at least since 1988. when
I t )'t lll a rc a ~.:u rrL' Ill ~uh:-.cribcr. )I Hi L·an n:c~.: t \C a fn.a:: tun luella hy C'i iL'n d t n ~ y~ntr ~uhscript1nn f111"6 month.., for only $59 : 1~,
. hi s stu ff is news 10 mc.';Olympic
sprin ter
Ben
( ~ 1-'&lt;ty lilt.:: I ll rnu~t lw llWdl' in pcr-.un at the D~tily s~ n~in c l. Il l Court St.. Pomt.::rov. Uhtll itt order In l"l'C L'i\'l' \tOUr Free l'O lll.i &lt;.' umhrcll;~ .
Castaldo sa id .
Johnson tested positive for
Qu'amitit.:s arc hm iLcd. .
~
·Pa lme iro was. the seve nth
the drug and was stripped of ·
player to fall · under haser-~---------------------------,
his gold medal and world
ball's new. touQhcr steroids
record in the I00 meters.
policy: Seanle Mariners
Athletes have to use it six right-hande.r Ryan Frailk lin
;to eight we cks at least to get became the eighth. .when he
·:Your Home/own Newspaper"
:any . benefit , Yesalis said.
w~s also suspended I0 days
J Dmp thi !-. coupon off ~n our utlicc ~I t I II Court S't., Pomcnl}. Ohio w tth your pay nll'nt and rL'L'C iVt.: a FREE ~om h.: umbrel la.
I
· They might take it either as a
for a violat ion Tuesday.
pill Ol' an injection , though
Palmei ro 's case pro mpted
Wadler sa id oral anabolic
I
:steroids have fallen into dis- baseball commissioner Bud
I.
:favor because they carry a Selig to reit~rate his desire
disk of liver problems.
, Thursday for even more
I
.
stringenl
testing
anu
harsher
: An i njectible form of · the
N.~m..: ------------------------------------ 1
:Jrug has been used by veteri- puni shments for steroid
nsers.·
including
a
50-game
Addrl'.,., _ _ _ _ __:_-------------------------~----1
charians, but it is no longer
'
·commercially available in the suspcnsoun for a first
~~------------~~~------------- 1
·United States and so is not offense. I 00 ga mes for · a
1-'h~)l)l' --------:--------~---------'------------- 1
~used routinely now in this . second and a lifetime ban for
D Visa
Explfalion Dale
Card#
• I
.country, according to the a third. He also ci lled for an
'D MasterCard
Expiration Date _
_ ___ · · Card #
.
.J
;A merican
'
Veterinary i1}dependent authority I!J
·Medical Associalion. It had administ·e r ba~d1alr~ drug
:been used mostly in · horses testin g program .
·~················T.·············~·····~·········•v·•···········:x:::::·x::x:::ltl:ltl::rx:r:·:xxxx:x::fi
·•£•••················~--

Race: AllState 400
off Dodge driver Rusty Wal·
Where : IndianapoliS Motor lace· and teammate Mark
Speedway. Speedway, Ind. 'Mart1n to wm for the second
(2.5 miles). 160 laps/ 400 ·time this season. Busch .tOok
miles.
the lead from Wallace with .
When: Sunday, Aug. 7
211aps remaining and aver·
· Last year's winner: Jeff Gor· aged 125.283 mph. ··it was
don
Kurt's race to lose," said hi s
Qualifying record: Casey owner•.JacK Roush .. "He had
Mea rs, Dodge , 186.293 been the dominant car in the
mph, Aug. 7, 2004.
field, and the most dominant
Race record: Bobby Labonte, Roush car, so 11 he didnl run
Pontiac, 155.912 mph. Au{ over something or a part did·
5, 2000.
n't break and fall of·f the ca r,

BIIICh Series
Kroger 200,
8:30p.m:, Saturday
i

Truck Serle&amp;
Power Stroke Diesel

200,8:30 p.m., Friday

Last ·race : Kurt Busch .domi- he was gomg to be the car

!11at had the greatest
at Pocono Raceway. leading chance: Busch outdistanced
131 out of 203 laps 1n a race those strugg11ng 1n his wake
that ended with a green· w1th a precisi6n that maQe it

1&gt; All eyes

will be on Tony Stewart
as he attempts to win at Indy,
but some attention should be directed toward Rusty Wallace,
who's finished second there
three times. What a story it
would be if Wallace could win
t~e Allstate 400 in his final year.
I&gt; It's a full weekend at Indy, but
not just at "the big track.' The
Craftsman Truck and Busch series are scheduled for weekend
·races at nearby Indianapolis
. Raceway Park. The road be··
tween Speedway (lndia~apolis
Motor Speedway) and Clermont
(IRP) will be quite busy, so much
so that some of the drivers and
crewmen will take helicopters
back and forth.
1&gt; What happens 1f Dale Earn·
hardl Jr. and Jeff Gordon don't
make the Chase? There isn't
anything in any other spar!
that's comparable, sim ply be·
cause, even if the) don't make
the race-offs, the sport's two
most popular drivers will still be
competing every week. The ef,
feet such a development would
have on attendance and TV rat·
ings would be qu1te Interesting.
~Since

white-c heckered
fm 1sh.
. Busch, 1n a Ford, easily held

The Daily Sentinel

1

. ..

,

...

l

career vic tor y at Memphis

Motors ports Park.

probably was .

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No. 48 LowE's

E

Rusty
· Wallace

u

.Ryan
Newman

s

Rusty Wallace
vs. Ryan Newman
·

Johnson a great driver, but very comfortable with the team concept ·
'

By Monte.Dutton

municate that hack to me and the other
team members at Hendrick MotorNASCAR This Week
sports. I think that he's truly above
·
every
other dri¥er out there. He can
One o.f the obvious reasons that Jimmie Johnson has been leading the truly feel the car better than anybody
·.
Nextel Cup point standings all year is else out there.''
Johnson, who turn s 30 on Sept. 17,
that Johnson, from El Cajon, Calif., is
·an exceptional driver. He's been a qm- . has also had a model relationship with
tender for the championshjp in each teammate Jeff Gordon, though their
fortunes have differed radically in reof his four full seasons.
What may sometimes be overlooked. cent weeks: Johnson continues to lead
is the remarkable relationship be- the standings, while Gordon, a four·
tween Johnson and crew chief Chad . time champion, has faded from third
·
Knaus. Like most greal tandems , the . to lS'h in the past 12 races.
"You know
two comprise a mutual-admiration so'
honestly,
ciety.
we ·
"He can understand what I'm say·
ing," said Johnson of Knaus. "That's
the hardest thing, and I think it applies in any sport or profession. Communication is everything. He under·
stands what I say, how I say it and
what I'm feel\ng, and he can fix it.
That's the amazing thing. I thought I
had all these crazy feelings in me and
what the car was ,doing, based on past
eiiperiences, but Chad can fix it. He
can really visualize and see what the
car is doing, based on what I tell
him. And·address it and fix it.
It's amazing."
·
Knaus·prefers to focus
attention on Johnson's
abilities. "I've got a great.race- i5J
car driver," he said. "He's ~
a great driver.
.._
That's
what
,1
we've got there. ·•
~C
He's a guy who '
can get out there
and drive. If you've
ever . seen Jimmie
drive - and I
mean truly se~n
. Jimmie drive not just against
the competition ...
When he's .out there
and he's practicing,
and what he can do and
how he feels the car he's able to com-

Gordon has won at tt1e

than once. Jarrett, in fact. is the

only driver currently 1n the top 10
who has ever won at the track. ·
~Surpris ingly. Gordon and Stew·
ait are the only dnvers w1th
open-wheel backgrounds who
have done well at Indy. Ryan
Newman, for instance, has only
one·top-10 finish in fo urtnes:

.. Nine drivers have raced 1n the

Indianapol is 500 and what is
now known as the Allstate 400
during their -careers: Stewart,

J6hn Andretti, Geoff Brabham,
A.J. Foyt, Larry Foyt. Robby Gar·
don, Jason Leffler, Scoll Pruett
and Danny Su.llivan.
· ~Nine is a significant number at
Indy for po 1nt leader Jimmie
Johnson . He's qualified ninth
twice, and his only top·10 f1nish
was a ninth 1n 2002.

hot - Jimmie Johnson

has scored 13 top-10 finishes
In 20 races, one more than
Tony Stewart.
not
-A d1smal
Pocono
sho~lng put
Matt
..
Kenseth's
back to ·the
. wall as far
as
the
Chase is KENSETH .
~Who's

concerned ..

Kenseth is 213 points out of.
lOth place with just six races
remaining in the regular sea·
son.

. &amp; Supply

.C o.

CI:IE
UT
WINN
'·

started to cooperate right out of the
box," said Knaus. "We really tried
some things that were a ·Jittle bit differentfrom the norm for the No. 24
car (Gordon) and for Hendrick Motorsports. We went to the race track- I
believe ·it was the first seven weeks of
the 2002 season - with the identical .
setup as the '24' car, the reason being
that if we knew Jeff rolled off the
truck and \vas fa'st, we needed to be
just as fast as he was. So that basically put the blame on Jimmie and not on
me.
"But, beyond that point, after our
first couple of races, we'd see where
we stacked up on the board and start-.
ed going our own direction. We felt
what Jimmie was more comfortable
with and what I felt the car needed to
be fa ster with. So, about seven weeks
into it, that's really when we gained
our legs and started running strong."
Do Johnson and Knaus tead each
other's minds. Well, not exactly, but
close.
"!wouldn't use those terms," said
Johnson. "We're close enough to know
how each other really works, lean·on
each other and get the most out
of each other. That's more the
· dynamic than anything else.
It's something that I truly respect in Chad, that if he doesn't think we're headed in the
right direction or if something's wrong. it's not that I
eompkte a sentence or he
completes mine, but we'll
figure out how we really
feel and figu re out how to
make it better.
"I think that's a key ·
part to communicating:
standing up for what
you believe · in. And ·
ha vi ng people understand it and see it with
you, and that 's a hard
thing to do." ·

.

'

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

The teammates st1 ll do hot get

along. Thai's not exactly right They
don·t fe ud: they just have very little ·
'~nteraction. In marked contrast to the
efforts of Roger Penske's teams in
other forms of motorsports, t~e two ·

·NASCAR teams go their own way.
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: ··For whatever
reason. th is odd couple seems to do

pretty well. After all, Wallace IS foutth
1n t11e pomt stand ings and Newman
IS s1xth. On the other hand, neither

has won a race 1n 2005:·

NASCAR has history of
women behind the wheel
Women driving stock ca rs is hard·

ly a recent phenomenon. LOU IS€
Smith. Sara Christian and Et~el Flrck
Mobley all competed . in early
NASCAR races. When Sm1th de·
buted, her car owner InStructed her
to stop if .a red flag waved. UnfortU·
nately, he neglected to tell lhe South
Carolina d(iver what do if a ct)eck·
ered flag waved. Woen )he raced
ended and otllet cars returned to the

p1ts. Smith kept on going. Someone
f1na iJy found about her pre-race in·

struct1ons. and the flagman fmally
brought her in by wav~ng the red fl?.g.

'Fireball' Robert&amp;' legend
recounted in new book
One of the best of the year's

· NASCAR books IS ·fireball: Legends
· Don't Fall from the Sky," by Godwin
Kelly {Carbon Press). Edward Glenn
Rpberts J.r.. better known as 'Fire·
ball:· was by far NASCAR·s most popular star Prior to his deat'h ,in 1964.
Roberts was far ahead of his time in
his sophist1cat1on. his ability to deal

w1th the med1a and his knack for pre.
sentinf a positive image to the pub·
11c'. He won 33 ma1or races. beginning
in 1950: ·Kelly quotes Bobby Allison
· as saying of Robe r tS, "He cer tainly
added sorn~ class to .an early part of

this industry· that started do.wn tllere

1n tile grass. you know what I mean.
out there in the. dirt He was one of
the ones thai did really good th1ngs
for the. sport m h1s ca reer:·

• Pomeroy,

St Rt '7 &amp; 124 •

. BEFbRE THE RACE, STOP IN AND
VISIT OUR DELl OR HOT STUFF PIZZA!

.

.

lea Cold.Baar
Available lor Carryout! .

.

.,...CiaiGtGt...a-., w.wGilAIAI•a-a.

,.

v

CHEVROLET

s

1

..····································

Madison, Ill.

Dlstance: .................... 2.5 mil•lMII
Length of lrontslretch:.
Length of backstlelch:
Miles/Laps: ..... 400 mi.

a· Toyota, captured his first

R.

:

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

Last race : Brandon Wh1tt , m

look infinitely easier t ha n 1t

JIMMIE JOHNSON

.

:

in a Dodge, won at Gateway
International Raceway in

.

• 4 i@!!lti,Jili:! §I!J933:'M*

Brickyard 400 four t1mes in 12
. tries, the list of winners [s relative.
ly short Dale Jarrett is t11e only
other driver to .have won more

~&gt;Who's

..

Race: Kroger 200
Race : Power Stroke 01eSel
Whe1e: Indianapoli s R·ace· 200
way Park. Clermont. Ind. Wh'ere: Indianapolis Raceway
(.686
miles;, . 200 Park , Cle1mon\, Ind. {.686
laps/137 .2 m11es
m1les). 200 laps/137 2
When: Saturday. Aug. 6
miles.
Last year's winner : Kyle When: Friday. Aug. 5
Busch
Last year's winner : Ohad
Qualifying record: ·David ChaH1n
Green. Chevrolet. 113.461 Qualifying record : Joe
mph, Aug. 4, 1994.
Ruttman , Dodge. 111.843
Race record : Jimmy Hen sley. mph. Aug. 2. 2000.
Old·smobi le. 96.923 mph, Race record' Greg B1ffle,
J une 2:2, 1985. ·
Ford. 88.704 mph, Aug. 5,
Last week: Reed Sorenson, 1999.

nated the Pennsylvania 5'00

Stanozolol

.

have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, cjo The Gaston Gazette, ~0. £ox 1893 .. Gastonia, NC 2805'!

All times Eastern

22l'l W. Main

Pomeroy, OH ·
992-5432

'

�•

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Dilfer warns Edwards
of
holdout
hazards
·.

&gt;

BY TOM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dilfer was
the
sixth
overall selection in '94 by
t
·h
e
Bucc aneers.
taken three
picks after
Wa shin gto n
took 4Uarterback . Heath
Edwards
Shuler. At the
time , Dilfer
felt he should get more money
than Shuler because he had
been rated higher by many
teams before the draft.
.After fina lly sir,nding
· hi
h' s
deal, Dilfer strugg e m 1s
first two seasons as a pro. As a
rookie, ·he played' in just five
games, making two starts. He
threw one touchdown and ·six
interceptions.
. The . next seaso n under
coach Sam Wyche. he started
all 16 games but his numbers
·were aw ful : four TDs 18
interceptions and a 60.1 ' QB
rating. The Buccaneers went
7-9 and Wyche was ti red fol lowing the season.
Dilfer pm1 1y blames himself
for that.
"I've gone back to coach
Wyche and apologized to him
because 1felt like my decision
at that time ended up costing
him his job because 1 never
developed the way' 1 was supposed to develop," Dilfer said.
Edwards is running . the
same risk by not being itY
camp. Depending on when he
finally signs. Edwards will
have to get up to speed quick·
ly. That will mean extra tim~
watching tilm, running routes
after practice and burying his
nose in the Browns' playbook.
And as Dilfe r learned the
hard way, there's no way to
make up for lost time.
'!I completely stunted my
develor,ment as a football
player,' Dilfer said. "I was
never able to catch up. I
worked as hard as I possibly
could, but there's no substitution for reps. there's no substitution for camaraderie and
there's no substitution for a
trust level with your teammates.
"I sacrificed all those the
first couple years of my
career."

CLEVELAND - Travis
Hafner woke up feeling as
good as he had in weeks, and
began counting down the seconds until he got to Jacobs
Fjeld.
"It's all I could think about,
even on the drive down,"
Hafne'f said Thursday. "I
• almost feel like I'm making
my major league debut."
Sidelined with a concussion since he got hit in the
. face with a pitch on July 16,
Hafner was activated from
the 15-day disabled list by the

Reds
from Page B1 ·
Davies made .it 2-0 in the
fourth by laying down a
squeeze bunt that allowed
Brian McCann to score
from third and · Wil son
Betemit to advance to second. Furcal followed with
an RBI single to right.
Davies walked Dunn and
gave up a two-run homer to

Cleveland Indians in time for . Cleveland's lin eup for the .
their series tinale against the tirst time since he got drilled
in the mouth by Chicugo's
New York Yankees.
Hafner 's return took much Mark Buehrle, whose curvelonger than doctors, the ball froze Hafner and hit him
lnd1ans or he thought.
before he could duck out of
"It was frustrating, " said the way..
Hafner sustained a cut lip,
Hafner. "I kept waiting for
the next day to feel better. loose ned teeth and has spent.
After about 10 days, and I the past two weeks m a btt of
wasn't getting better. I started a fog.
The Indian s went' I 0-7
to get concerned. I finally got
to the point where I knew it without Hafner, who was the
was going to take some AL's plaver of the month in
June. They missed his power
time."
To make room for their des- in the middle of the order, but
ignated hitter, the Indians since he's been out Victor
optioned outfielder Jason Martinez (batting .409 since
the A11-S tar break) and
Dubois to Triple-A Buffalo.
Hafner was back in Jhonny Pen\lta (II RBls in IJ
Casey with two outs in the
fourth . Cjlsey's homer was
his sixth of the season and
second at Great American
,
Ball Park.
McCann led off the fifth
with a . single, moved to
third on Betemit 's single
and scored on Furcal's
one-out sacrifice fly.
Francoeur greeted relie ver Brian Shackelford with
his seventh homer of the
seaso n leadin g off the
eighth. Casey co untered

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\egtster

games) have helped fill the
void .
"The guys did a great job of
stepping up," Indians manager Eric Wedge said. "He's our
best hitter."
Before he got hun, Hafner
was batting .3 10 with 18
homers and 63 RBis.
!farner liad never been hit
in the head. Along with suffering dizzy spells and
headaches, Hafner said he
was irritable while re.covering
from lhe beaning.
·
" I really didn 't want to talk
to anybody and it made it
even tougher that I couldn't
play," he said. ·

CLASSIFIED

G alli•

Your Ad,

Offtee !lour-sMonday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful AdsShould Include These Items
To Hl!lp Get Re511onse ...

Our Team

\'\'\()[ \ l l \11 \I S

r

•

Adolescent and PediatricGynecology

·

and
Call (740) 992-9158 for an appointment
with any of these ph~icians.
·
113 East Memorial' Drive, Suite A
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
··

In Memory

given

that

on

Saturday, August 6,
2005, at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale wilt be
held at 211 WSecond
St, Pomeroy, Ohio.

\'uur Right to Know, Delivmd Right to YoUir IJoor.U

(8) 3, 4, 5

The Farmers Bank
and

Savings

Company Is selling

for cash In hand or

certified check the
following collateral:
t993 Ford Taurus 40
tFALP5245PA213817
2001 Dodge Stratus
40
SSE
1B3EJ46X81N627646

6

Public Notice
The Home Nattonat
Bank will auction the
following Items on

A

T

"' ·

reserves

the

right to bid at this

sale, and to withdraw
the above c·ollateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank

end

Savings

Company

reserves

Superspo 'r t

1037U2B579161
(Restorable)
1971 Chevy Chevetle

Help Wanted

Bank

reserves

the

right to reJect any and
aU bids. AU vehicles

0

PLEASANTVALLEY HOSPITAL
HOME HEALTH
'

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

... THE
HAS .
SOMETHING
~OR YOU!!-

I'll never stop loving }'OU, but we'll meet when God
nuwers "Cume Spring'" in that hmd together.
where we will walk hand in hand, ne\'er to part again. I
do find peace in knowing that you arr not in a grave,
your Of! resurrertion lfQund, "'hich brings me great
~ather.i

·

strength when I'm feelinJ: down.
I Love vou!

Until we mfet again,
Your Husband
Odell Manley
sadly missed

(8) 3, 4, 5

Help Wanted
Help Wanted

1363716183721
(Restorable)
1994 Ford F250 4x4

. Help Wanted

moment so dear.

G o o s e n e c k.

Supersport

the .right to reject any 0 I e s a I
or all bids aubmlHed. 1FTHF26KXRNB2927
· The above descrtbe.d 2
- collateral wilt be soid 2000 Pontiac Fireblrd
"a: l~·wherc 13", with 2G2FS22K2Y2107497
no expressed or 1992 GMC Sierra
tmptted
warranty c 1 5 0 0
1GTDC14K5NZ50118
given.

In lo\·lng Memo11· of m)' beiO\'td ~ife of 56+ years.
Remembtring all the good times and I cherish ever)'

5YAH06YB2A0220489
2004 Bellar Built
4MNFG302641001449
The Home National

nfey

Aug. 7, 1933 - Jan. 28, 2005

V

Saturday, August 6,
2005, at10:00 a.m. at , , are sold, as Ia where
the Bank's parking Is, with no warranties
tot:
exprasaed or implied.
For an appointment
The Farmers Bank 1987 Welcraft 19 ft.
)nd
Savings boat, WELT004BC787 to see, call 949·2210,
Company, Pomeroy, 1972 Chevy Chevetle ask for Sheila.
Ohio,

'Betty J.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

RN NURSE
ICCU ·

0

PHARMACIST
PART TIME

Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, longterm disability and retirement

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, longterm disability and retirement.

Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675·4340
www.pvalley.org

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 Valle'y Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full time (all
shifts) Registered Nurse in the ICCU
Department Applicants must have a
current West Virginia license: Previous
ICCU experience preferred.

ANEOE

ANEOE

ANEOE

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

In Next Day's Paper

Publication

Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p . m .
Friday For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m.
Thursday for Sundayii Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

POLICIES: Ohio \Iaiiey Publlehlng reserves the right to edit, rC"jKt, Of canc.l any ad at any lime. Errors muat be rtported on the lira! dero of publication ond tho l
Trlbune-Santinei-Raglater wm be ,..aponsibte for no mora then "the cost of the space occupled·t:iy the error and only the first lnurtion. We shan not be r I
any lo.. or a11penae thllt mulls from the publk::atlon Of omlaslon of an advertlumenl. Correction will be made the first aveltable 4tdltlon. • Bo• n~:':;:.~~::1
are always ~:onlldenHal. • Current fl!lle card applln. • Nl rftl estate ttdvertl ..menll are aubject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 19efl. • This 1
accepta I help wanted ads
I EOE standarda. Wa will not knowlnt~IY accept any advartlaing In vi!)lltlon ol the law.
•

in

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

l

tto Hf;tPWANTEf)

lwriOht@.i c.net

Are you 65
or older?

4x4's For Sate .................................. :........... 725
Announcement.. ...... .................................... 030

Antlques ....................................: .................. 530
Apartments for Rent.. .....................:........... 440
Auction and f'lea Market.. ...........................080
Auto Parts·&amp; Accessories ........... :.............. 760.
Auto F!epa(r .................................................. 770
Autos for Sate .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppties ........................................550
Business and B~ildings .......... :......, ........... 340
Business Opportunity................................ ,210

If so, you qualify for a

Business Training ............., ......................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ................:.......... 790

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy ofyour photo ID.

·~alltpolt&amp; Jlatl!' m:rtbune
~otitt

l)lea•ant -.egt-ter

The Daily Sentinel
~unbap flUmes -~entinel
~-------------------------------

Subscriber's Name ~------'

Address ------~----

City/State/Zip ----'----'-----'---'' Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ___
Mail or drop off this coupon along

with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Pub.llshing P.O. Bo~ 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

--------------.---J------------.~

Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards ol Thanks ..........................................01 0
Child/Elderly Care ..................c.................... 190
ElectrlcaVRefrigeration ...............................840
Equipment lor·Rent ..................................... 480
;

Excavating ···:·······""'"'""'""" ""· ··········-.. ···· ... 830

'Farm Equipmenl. ......................................... 610
Farms for Renl. ............................................ 430 ·
Farms for Sale ................... :....................., ... 330
For Lease ............ :..:..................................... 490
For Sale ... ,.................................................... 585
For Sale or Trade ............................. :........... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetabtes ..............,. ...................... 5BO
Furnished Rooms ...................................... :.450
General Hauling ...........................................8SO
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ...................................................,. oso
Hay &amp; Graln ......................................-............640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home tmprovements .. ,................................ B10
Homes for Sate ............................................ 310
Household Goods ................... :......,............ 510
Houses for Rant .......................................... 4I 0
tn Memorlam .............. :................................. 020
lnsurance ................... :...........................:..... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ............ .-........... 660
Llvestock..............:.......................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlscallaneous..... ......................................... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandtse.......................540
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent... ............................ 420
Motiita Homes lor Sate ................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeters .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ...................................570
Personats ........................................... :......... 005
Pels lor Sate ................................................ 560
Plul'(1bing &amp; tjeatlng ..................................... 820
Professional Servlces ................. ,.......:........ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ......................... :...........360
Schools Instruction ..................................... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Sttualions Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rant.. ...........................................460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV'slor Sate .............. :............. .................. 720
Trucks for Sate ............. ................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sate ............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy .., ............... ........................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ...... ............ 620
Wanled To Do .......................,...................... 180
Wanted to Rent.. .... ...................................... 470
Yard Sate- Galltpolts ....................................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle .. :.......:.............. 074
Yard Sate-Pt. Pteasant .... ; ................... ,.,.... 076

YARJ) SALEI'm1EROYIMUlllLE

August 6 at 34269 New
Li ma Road , Rutland. Sofa.
furniture. clothing , 92 Ford
Escort tor parts PhOne 74 2·

2568
Cassady Res .. 1 mile West
on 681 from Tuppers Plains.
Fri. 5th··Sat. 6tt1. 9·00·5:00
Garage sa le· August 5·6, 8·
3.30, clothe s bOys/girls 2tadul1 , toys, Tupperware .
Longaberger, Noble Summit
Durst
Garage Sale. Fnday and
Saturday, Aug. 5th&amp; 6th, 9am
to ' ? One mile out Union
Camp Ground Road. Follow
signs across from Dolla r
General in NewHaven.
!luge Yard Sale. St.John
Luthern Church. Pine Grove
Road . 2 miles from 5 Palms.
FollOw signs. Aug .5&amp;6. 9-4.
Moving in ~le · ho use to
sma~ . much to sell, furniture ,
toys . child's motorized truck ,
art desk &amp; table, hou sehold
goods, clothing, dec6raiive
items, garage sale, Fn &amp;
Sat , 8am -6·30pm. follow the
si gns

----

Multi-F&amp; mrl y Friday and
Salurday. 5th&amp;61h , Bam to
6pm
Baby g1rl clot hes,
Boy s clothes 4 -6 , toys.
household, old gla ss. lo ts of
mce cloth1n g Fe llow new
highway toward Rac1ne, ext!
CA28/Bashan Road , lett 3
miles 740·94:9·8224

Yard Sate 253 S 5th ,
Mldctleport Friday &amp; Friday

r

PO
..
R·S·A·Lf.:_._.

ParH1me' teacher needeQ
for tt1e Meigs County Adult
Basic Education program at
•NOTICE•
our Middleport Center. lnHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Applicatioo must have or be r;;;G CO recommends tha
able to obtain a teaching
ou do business with peo
certificate/license from the
pie you know, and NOT t
Ohio
Department
of
end money through th
Education. Position is grant
ail until you have investi
ated the olferinQ .
funded for 20 hours per
we.ek (9:00-2:00 Monday
.through Thursday) for 50
weeks per year
Letter of
MONEY

i

0
0

•

&gt;nterest and resume with

"(-5

© 2005

www.comics.com

f''4

YARD SAt.E•
l'oMEKOY/MU&gt;DLE

I \I PI 0\ \II \1
"il R\ It I "i

r,;lltiiio;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==.,

Wetght set, toys . gtrls &amp;
.
ladtes dresses &amp; lots more!
On At 7 where two lane
divides into 41ane. Aug. 4th.
5th. 6tll , Thurs &amp; Fn., 9·4, "
Sat. 9·12.

76

YARil SALE·
PT. Pt .F ·\SANT

~

by NEA, Inc.

HELP WANlTJ)

LEARN

TO
DRIVE
• NO EXPERIENCE NECESSAA'f
'FULL -TIME CLASSE S
" COL TRAINif.IG

"FINANCING AVA IUI8LE

' JOe PI.ACE UD.JT
' ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR · TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS

WYTHEVILLE . VA.

1-800-334-1203
'--'-=""'"
"""
""'
~"""''""'"""'-"oo"m'-•
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
wood 1tems.
To $480/wk Materiats provided.
Free tnformatlon pkg. 24Hr.
. 801·428-4649

accepted
Payment could be ine
same as rent .
Locator s
Mortgage
(740 )367-ClOOO

·

TO LoAN

1

**NOTJ(; I~* *
~ arrow Smart . Contac

he Ohio Division o
Institution'
inanc ial
pmce ol . Consume
f'\ltairs BEFORE you reti
ance your home o
btain a loan . BEWAR
requests for any large
i?"dvance payments o
ees or insurance Call
he Off rce ol Consume
t1a1rs toll tree at 1·866
78-0003 to learn 1f lh
~ortgage
broker o
ender
is
properl
icensed. (This is a pubh
ervice announcemen
rOm the Ohio Valle
1!15 ublishino Ccmpany)

pi

Re sidential
Treatment
Facility for boys now hiring
Direct Car.e WOfkers . Pay
ba sed on e~perience, paid
insuranC"e. (740)379-9083
9am-3pm,Mon·Fn.

:W

Scrtoots

Experienced food preplgnll
cook.
Also
waitress,
Parklront Diner .. Apply in Concealed ,. Pistol" Class.
Now formrng August 13 at
person. 3 t 4 Second Ave.
VFW, MaSon, WV. Ohio &amp;
Hairdresser Needed···Must WV &amp; all legal slates Call
have Managers lie. Drop off 7 40·843·5555
or send resume to Mane
Image. 33105 Hilan"d Road.
Gallipolis Career College
Pomeroy. Ohio il-5769
(Careers Close To Home)
Help Wanted: Are a franct11Se Call Today! 740-446-4367 ,
motorcycle/ ATV de!alership
1·80D-2 14-D452
...-.gal~polrscar~~ercollege .com
hirilig all positions· Clenca l,
Acc• edot ed Member Accred ltmg
Sales &amp; Mechanics. Send
resume to · CL.A 573. c1o Councol lor Independent Colleges
Gallipolis Daily Tribune . PO
Box ~69 . GalliPoliS, OH '170
45631 .
1

-'"!!l'l"""""'-''.'.'".·---.,

l'l&lt;Ofl.'.'iSION•\1.
SERVICES

n

r

All realestala advertising
in th is newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
whlct\ makes it illegal to
Bd~Jertise "any
prefe r~nce. limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion , seX
familial status or national
origin, or any intention Ill
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination .··
This newsp&amp;per will not .
knowingly nccept
advert isements lor real"
estate which IS 1n
violation of the 1aW. cuireaders are hereby ·
informed that all
dwellings advertised in
!his newspaper sre
_available on an equal
oppor1unity bases.

Cakes by Kathy· wedding &amp;
all -occasion also Kamoke.
cal l {740).992-0 723 after Houses .tor Sal e Poter'M '
Home
o•
Cummer ta
3pm.
. •
Propt rl f 1tit;C SO F r
TURNED DOWN ON
Garage ln :J~ound Ho1s1
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? Lots of Extras.~Uostairs Ap
1f?OO SO F1 5-R::lOms .
No Fee Unless We Wrnl
Bath. Extr as. Large Cove ro2'd
t ·688·582·3345
Po rch
Must see to
Ap prec tated ca 'l for rn~re
I! I II I ' I I I I
Detail ed lr fOirn8!10ii PhQne
~10
(3041 882-3339 or 1204lB'qJ.
Ho~m;

Ir-.i..-,.1'1W&lt;..,ON

MIS(HlANEOlJS

'

Anentlonl
Local company oflering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT"' pro ·
grams lor you to buy your
home instead of renting
' 100% financing
• Less than perfect cred 1t

li~=;~~~;::~

three refer ences must be
received by 3.30 P.M on
August 12, 2005 Su'bmlt to :
Ca rol Brewer at the AthensMeigs Educational Sen11ce
Center. P.O. Bo~ 684, 320
1/2 East Main Street,
Pomeroy, OH. 45769 . More
information is available by
calling Mrs;Brewer at 740·
992-5592.
The Athans·
Meigs ESC is an equa l
opportun1ty
employer/provider.

arenouseman
we
Durable Medical Equipment Driver. Must have Class /J
Company is looktng for a
r B COL and curran
person' with eJCperience in medical card. Apply 1
managing accounts receiv·
arson. Thomas Do·l
abies &amp; electroniC bill1ng ~~nter, Gallipolis, Olprogram Send re sume to
3,:1·: ;:====::::!1
CLA Box 548, clo Gallipolis tt;:5:=6;:
. Tribune , P:O, Box 469. ..
~~-~-----,
Gallipolis. OH 4:5631.
150

PORSAtE
t12 Pleasant Stree t. 3
Bedroom. 1 t /2 BathS ,
Famaly Room , Dining Room ,
Full Basement, Storage

3341
St ate Rt 141 GathpoltS OH
21arge bedroom 1 bath.- LA
KT. DR. Carr he at 2 out·
bUJidtngs. car oor1. move 1n
condrt Jn Ab0u1 1 2 a c

I

"Bldg. Garage, New Central . (74 0t446-2098 $56 .000 ·
Au Cond ,. New Windows .
(3041675-4034
.
We ll Ma1 nt a1.ned Ho me 2
miles
North
of· Po1n t
Pleasan t on La ndscaped 1 2
i40 1
Cedar
51 . acre , 3 bedrooms. Fam11y
Meadowbrook
Add
3 Room. Den/Offtce . Ftrepla ce
Bedrooin,1 1/2 Balh,Corner wtth gas logs . Hardwoo d
lot. new Roof. move-in con· Floo rs,
Large
Ul iltty
dllion. new Carpel and Storage, Large Slate look
Flooring , Storage Bu ~dtng . and Brick Pallo, E~tra lo ts
Fenced in Back Vard avaalable.
Sh own
by
(304 )675-7700 or (3041593· Appom tment (304)675-1536
4135
· - - - - - - - - - fl2ll MO!Ut£

Home Heallh Care ol SEQ ts
currently accepting applica· DIRECT TV. 3 room with
fions lor. AN 's and Aides . Tivo FREE 145 channels
Competitive wages &amp; be'ne· only $39 00 per month Ask
Adult Services Dtrector for rits. 1-866-368-1100 Toll how to get FREE HBO.
Yard
Sale
8 :00- 12 :00 the Meigs County Board of Free ·
MAX. and home entertam·
Saturday August 6th 2605 MRDD. Resp onsible fo r ~
ment system Call 000-523Jefferson Ave. Pt. Plea sant
development. overstght and Hou _sekee~ing /l au nd ry ·7556 lor deta1ls.
Vard
Sale
Aug
5&amp;6 implementation ol programs posrt1on avatlable at Arbors
Greenbrier Est brick House lor adults with developmen· of GallipoliS, 170 Pinecrest
tal disabilities:
Dr., Gallipolis. No phone DIRECTV
FREE Home
w/white columns watch for
PoSition
Requ irements: _ca_ll_s:...pl_e_as_e_
.
enter tamment
System. 186 North Park Drive. 2·
PORSAI£
s1gns 8·?
Bachelor's Rehabilitalion.
FREE Equtpment and Install bedroom. 1 bath , Fulll;)aseEducat ion, Maple Grove Cabinetry is up to four rooms t45 chanYard
Sale
Baby-Items. Special
seektng an honest, depend- nels $29 .00 a month. Ask ment. detached Ga rage , 1996 Redmon d 16~80, 3 b r
Household Goods &amp; plenty Psy,chology,
Public able individual for full or part how to get FREE HB:O. Central A1r, Pec1ect in town 2 ba .. on rented lot w' large
Misc. 114 Howard SVHaven Admlnrstration , Business or time work . EJCperrence in MAX , and STAR$. 1·800- location , Fenced tn back· porch 304·675·3689
'
Heights Sat 8-6-QS 9·?
yard , Gate opens to
, related degree. Pre ferred: cabinet! countertop work, 52f7556 tor details .
Pleasant Valley Hospita l 1999
14~80
OakwQod
Five years experience in fabrication/ installaHon pre·
Yard Sale Friday August 5,
(304 1675·3323
Freemon!
3 bedroom, 2 MRDD fie ld . two years ferred. Apply in person 9084
8 -? 81 Hawtllorne Ln.
Si~~: Used 10" steel beams
bath s, underpinn ing . AtC.
sup ervisory_\ experience . St. Rt 218 . (74 0)256-1275.
bellind th e Na\lonal Guard
Mus1 possess or be eligible
12's and 13's·ptck-up only 3
Bath, clean , .
Pr ice neg .
BedroOm . 2
Fireplace, tn tile country on (7401388·8513 . (740 )388 ·
Yard·S'a le Fri- 5th &amp; Sat-6th, for Ohio Department of Middleton Estates a leading 740-992-2704
11 .6 acres. S9S ,OOO. Call 8017
8·?, 102 liberty St. MRDD Adult Services provider ol suppor1 services 180
!c indrviduals wtth mental
.miDOo
. (7401709·1 166.
Computer Desk, Hl,lnliriQ &amp; M anagement 2 certilicate .
0
.
•
5 Homes under S1 0,000.
Send resume to• MCBM· retardation and develop - 1
Fishing Miscellaneous
8011:
307 . mental disabtlities is looktng
ADD, P.O.
3 BR Ranch. 1 112 batll . Wilf dehver (740 )385·7611
Yard-Sale Saturday August Syracuse. Ohto 45779
for lull-ttme ·and part -11me All Types Masonry, Brtck, overS IZed garage hard· 97 Fleetwood 14x 70 total
611l , 1 1/2 miles out Jerichq Application Deadline August Support Associates (direct BlOCk, Stone, Free Estimate . woodl1 ile floors throug hout
electriC Wtll help wtth delhlAd 8· ? Patio Furni1ure &amp; 12 2005
care staff) !n the Gallipolis (304)713-9550. 304· 593· ga s heat. lan dscaped. QUIS t
ery.
lnctlliies central a1r. Only
More
- -- -- - - --·- area. An EQual Opportunity 6421
cu l· de-sac. Must Seet 62
S1 0.995 Call (7 40)38 5·
ti:i~--:':':"----, An Excellent way to earn Employer F!MJON. ,
.
Don
Street.
Gallipolis.
962 1
WANliD
money. The New Avon.
AppliCations will be taken
• 145.000. (740 )44 1-5540 .
Georges
Portable
Sawmill·
.
lU Bu\'
Call Marilyn 304 -882-2645
Morlday through Fnday
New 14x70 3 bedroo~ 2
8:00am-4 ·00pm at the facili- don't haul your Logs to the
bath Only S19B 63 ~ er
Mill
just
call
304·675·195
7
...
•
1
••
Absolute Top Dollar. U.S. AVON! All Areas ! to Buy dr ty : 8204 Carla Drive. No
mon th . Cat! Etame (740) 3i5·
Shver and Gold Coins, s8n. Shirley Spears, 304· phone calls please .
t &lt;
..
. 2 434
•
.
.
ProotsElts. Gold Rings. Pre· 675-1429 ·'
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
1935
U.S.
Currency
New 3 BR Home On ly
Sotita1re Diamonds· M,T.S Cosl Teclln iCtan.' Posilion needed. Apply at . 1354
3BA Ranch 2 cat gar age. $189/mo. Includes 8JC. delivJackson
Pike,
Gallipolis.'
Com Sllop. 151 SeconCI requires good Excel skills.
Magic Years Day Care
pool. City schools, $90,000. ery and f&gt;el up (740) 385·
Avenue, Gallipolis, 7 40-446· general compule r know !· The Mason County Animal Cente r State Licensed,
3460 SA 2 t8 . Galltpohs. 4367.
2842.
edge, willingness to travel Welfare League: Opemngs Quality Ch ild Care. Spaces OH, (7401256· 1962
Lon;&amp;
ar)d wo rk overtime. Start1ng tor Part· t1me Dog Warden . &amp; ava iltble/Now expecting Fall
BuVJng Goldenseal, Wed . &amp; payrate $16/hr. Applica nt
Reasonable 4 bedroom 2 bath Roush
ACREAGE
Kennel
Tech' s.
Duties Enrollment,·
Sat 12-4, The Plains, Oil, needs not have expenence.
ux:lude, wat9nng , feed1ng .. Rates. linK approved, excel· Ferrell Lane $35,000 l1rm
(7401664 -4 76 t . 7 40· 79 7. Must have good work erhics
Jackson County. Oh10. •39
cleaning
Kennels , lent Skills tor your CM cf s 304-6 75-1911 or 593-2096
9054, George'Buckley
Learnrng
and wllliflgness to learn. Transportati on &amp; some Developme nt.
acres .
www.csl!;usa cOm .
provi ded.
Fax Ma1ntenance Eel. Please Program offered for all ages. For Sale 'For Rent Lovel~· 513 \3 "'4-9J24
Real-Estate Wanted·Local Tra ining
Ri\le r Proper ty 1 A ~;• e
(304 )675-6458
for M·F age s 2 &amp; up !3041675·
person looking for a home to resu me s to· (614)71 6· 2272 call
RL \I. E'Tm:
Br1ck/V 1nyl. Gara Q€' {lnd
5847
Applicatio n
·
buy All cash
Meigs or
" -\,1Hl
Carport.
Ba semE&gt;nt
Custom
Oes1gn
lTD
'
&amp;
Gallla No double-wide or
Hardwood
Floors
.
3BR
offitmonds Two IS m need ol
modular. 740--591 ·8936
28A, L"R .. DR, FR. 2 hre- t Buy Homes - Local peif on
' an E~~:perienced Jewe lry
places
.
$160.000
or buys "1"\omes Confrden • al .
Work Car that noeds little Salespe1 son. Please con·
$800 /mo (7 40)446 ·0538 Owck cash J1m i40-99 2·
~ork. Cal l (740 )388·8228 or tact Becky at (304)67A-6103
(502 )303-362 1.
6300 . No calls attar 9. •
(740)441 · t4 24.
for an Interview

Hm••:s

·-------r
WT.

1'90 Ont~\

I

r

SHOP LA IFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

'
'

II\\\( 1\1

f'

3 Family Sale, Aug .5·6,
Rai n/Shine. 8:00·5:.0 0 , 300 123 South Park Drive.
Wetzgall Street . C lothes, Fnday &amp; Saturday. Books.
Records,
Collectors
toys. and More.
Glassware . Home Interior.
3 Family Var_IJ
Sale. Holiday
Decorations,
Womans dress clothes . Womens Plus·S tzes , nice
ktds-adu lts clothes , toys. Baby Clothes , Bedroom
tupperware . a little btl of Suite. Total Gym Fit ness
everything. Rain or Shine. Equipment. Hoyt Hydraulic
521
Mulberry
Hgts. Lilt
Pomeroy. Friday, Sunday. &amp;
Moving-Sale
Broad
Monday
Run/Weaver Ad outback ol
3 fainily. Woman's dress New Haven. SaVSun Aug
clothes . Krds -Adulls cl othes , 6&amp;7 any ? Call (304)882·
toys . tupperware . a little bit 3970
of everything Rain or shtne .
52 1 Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy Saturday Augusl 6. 9am- ?
Glothes. baby-clothes 0·3
33299 St At 833 across from months, Lawn Mowers, Lg
Pullrn s Excavating. 3 family Dog cage , Air Compressor,
yard sa le.
l ots of ~ids Porch Furntture. Exerctse
clothes . Aug. 6
Glider 2205 Ltncotn Ave
August 5&amp;6 · South of
Eastern High School on SA
7-HUGE- many baby Items.

I"'ilitoF~~...,..,......,
.,.,to.... HoMr.~
BustNE'IS
~==OProtm::;;;!N:ITY:~

Band saw, canning Jars.
pressure canner, golf bag·
clubs, skts· boots , mens
swts, sweate rs. )Bans. camo
clothing, college text books,
printe r. diShes, linens. much
more . 2118 At. 141 , Aug. 5·
4, 8am-5pm.
'

4

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

oisplay Ads

n

, Earl LDriggs, D.P. H.

1997 Chevy S14
1GCCS144BVK219309
Inspect collateral, 2001 Dodge Ram
prior to sale date con- 3500 4x4 Diesel Duley
tact Cyndle, Stacy, or 1B7MF33761J216117
Randy at 992·2136.
2002 Yamaha · YFM

YARn SAu;GAI.Lli'OLL5

FriJSat. Aug . 5·6, Multi-family yard sale , 918 Spires Ad.
(SR 160 north tou r miles
past Korner Store to Morgan
Ce11ter Ad Go 1 mile to
(l04)675·5167
7581 .
Spires Rd. 1 mile to yard
Free Kittens : Orahge wi th Lost Gray/white cat lost on sate} All sizes clothmg ,
blue eyes Call (740)441 · Teodora Ave and GDC. If infant·adu ll s, coats , large
1127.
.
found please call (740)446· variety of items: linens. cur3231 .
tains, glassware, household
Free Rat Terrier mt~ pupitems, books , collectibles,
pies Call (740)44&amp;4446 .
ch
angtng table , miscella·
YA~SALE
neous. 9am-5pm .
Free! 2 mobile home As-ls 1
Must be moved ·immediatety.
Fr iday &amp; Saturday 9am·5pm
Call (74.0)441·7665.
,
YARil SAI.E3 miles west ot Rodney on
Please adopt one of these
GAI J .II'OLIS
588. Clothing &amp; kn ickntce dOgs from the Metgs
knacks.
Dog Pound 740·992·3779. 4 family int erior, clothing,
Collie mi~ M t 1/2 yrs. Pit furn iture. 8 :00 to dusk, 8/6- Sat. 8/6, 8-4:00, 325 lariat
mix Fe 1 yr
Ge rm·a n 8/7 (Sat. &amp; Sun.) 3632 SA Or. Baby. chtldren &amp; adull
clothrng, toys, household
Shepard mi~ 1 i /2 yrs 850.
accessor.ies etc .
MiKed Lab yellow Fe. BlacK
ChOw mix Fe. Walker hOund 6 lam . garage sate, Aug. 5·6
Yard sale · 265 Kmg Rd . oH
mix M 2Yrs 2 Choc Labs M from 9am-5pm, State AL
from Neighborhood Rd. Pool
160.
2
mil
es
north
from
&amp; Fe. HuskY w/1 blue &amp;
table,
furniture. toots, rid1ng
green eye, 4 puppies Lab &amp; Holzer Hospital Baby &amp; tod·
mower, name brand cloth ·
dter
clothing.
some
new,
Ret mi~es .
ing · Fri &amp; Sat. 8am-2pm.
rocking chair, kttcl1en table ,
Regislered female black Lab dresser. mens &amp; womens
.Yard Sale: Used 1ur 01ture,
Retriever, great with faml· clothing,
ware . baby items. 353 JOhnson
kitchen
hes/IMs. contact Scot or Jill. knick-knacks and much
Rtdge Ad . Sa te starts
(740)698·9252
more
Wednesday.

Obstetrics ·

Public Notires in ,N,ews1mpers.

For further lnforma·
tion , or for
an
appointment
to

GIVEAwAY

Album
of
Monuments in old Walnut
2 Weimaraners Collie mix. Ridge Cemetery. Phone
year old. grmit .watch dogs. (740)256-6504.
(740)379·2316.
Found: Black Lab puppy on
37 tnch RCA floor model TV Jackson Ptke . Call (740)446·
needs a linle repa ir 304 -675 - 4740.
6501
Lost·Biack male lab rador
6 pupp1es 1/2 Black lab 304· Retriever. Six years old, red
collar. Lost around Addison
675-2156
Pike, Butavtlle Ad. area .
Beagl e
to
gweaway Reward tor return . (740)367-

-

hi Memory .

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby

r
I
'_

Word Ads

Oeacl~/rtU'

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 Days

~.n,.,· AND
FOuND

~-------_.J Found :

Audrius luksenas, 11.0.

D.O.
jack 11.1\amey, D.O.

l\egister

Sentinel

(7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342
Or Fax To
992-2157

U. Giri, 11.0.

Michael j. ,Ciarlt,

\!tribune

To Place

·R.K .. Girl, M.D., and Audrfus Ru.ksenas,.M.D.
·are now scheduJlng appoi~ttmirit~.

Jane E. Broecker H.D.

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

'

with his second homer of was hi s first . of the season
the game, a two-out solo· . and IOth of his career. ... ·
shot to ri ght-ce nter fi eld Harang struck out looking
twice to extend hi s leagueoff Kyle Farnsworth. ·
Atlanta added two more worst hitless streak to 42
rui1s in the nin th on singles at-bats, the longest of l)is
bv Adam LaRoche tmd career and the longest by a
Francoeur
off
David Reds hatter since RHP Jack
Billlnghani· went 0-for-67
Weathers.
Notes: Casey's homer in 1973 ... Atlanta is 14-3
also gave .him a nine-game in McCann 's 17 startshitting streak . Hi s four 'behind the plate . ... Reds .
RBis tied the season high LHP Eric Milton celebrathe set on May I R at New ed hi s 30th birthday
York . The two-homer game Thursday.

Geriatric and

Oli

.

I

Welcorne~to

Co~nt~,

In One Week With Us
.
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

NOTICEs ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Hafner returns to Indians folloWing concussion

!-Jational Football League

BEREA (AP) - As rookie
wide
receiver
Braylon
Edwards' contract holdout
presses on. Browns quarterback Trent Dilfer is reminded
of a mistake he made. before
taking his first 'NFL snap.
One that cost him part of his
career.
,
.
Like Edwards, who remains
unsigned by Cleveland, Diifer
missed the first part of his first
training camp in 1994 so he
could get a sweeter deal from
Tampa Bay.
: Looking back, Dilfer wishes he had made another
·
•-ch01ce.
: "I held out for 1·2 days,"
·Dilfer said. " It was a wonderful 'decision financially and a
l)orrible decision footballv;ise. Beirig completely hon.. h d
est with .that. If 1. a to go
. back to do it all over again, I'd
:have sacriticed the $2 million
.1 made to ~e a better tootba!.l
player my ~trst couple years :
. Edwards . holdo~t sho~~d
Oo s1gns ot. endmg T,hurs?ay
as agent Lamont Smnh and
: the Browns were at a stand. st1ll 111 the1r negoti ations.
. The club _ has present.ed
·Sm1th wtth hvc-.year and stx:. year proposals tor the No. 3
: overall ptck. trom M1clugan,
who 111 addttton tomtsstng the
. first week ot tra mmg camp
was .also absent from . the
teams mmtcamp. m June
because of a tamtly funeral
and leg InJury. .
The stdes st1ll have several
~aJOr . 1ssues to , resol.ve,
mcludmg Edwards stgnmg
bonus an~ guaranteed money.
Last. year s No. 3 ptck, wtde
~ecetver Larry Fttzgerald .. got
$20 mtlhon guaranteed from
Arizona. .
Smtih d1d not return a
phone message seekmg comment.
As his agent tries to finalize
a deal, Edwards ts m New
Orleans working out with his
father. Stan. a fo rmer NFL
running back.
. Edwards isn't the only top
pick unsigned. Running back
Ronnie Brown, drafted No. 2
overall by ,Miami, and Cedric
Benson, taken with the No. 4
pick by Chicago, have -also
not reponed to camp.

Friday, August 5, 2005

Friday, August 5, 2005

www. mydailysentinel.com

:. I

�'

Friday, August 5, 2005

Fri~ay, August 5, 2005

ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

._t_

(7 40)44~·0 11 7

or

(740)441-

~·

2bedroom home , $200 dep.
$400 month rent. water &amp;

-:liaeh .

furnished.

1601

Graham School Rd . .Call
(740)446-0050

3 bedroom. 2 car garage,
C/A, basement .. $700. traili"r. 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 bath ,

$475
+ deposit
Both
inCludes sewer. water &amp;
trash . (740)446-4824.
Attention!

Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs tor you to bl.lY your
home instead of renting
• 100% finanCIOQ
•. Less than perfect credit

accepted

Canning tomatoes· alread~ 1997 Honda, Civic 109,000
picked . bring containers, mi. Alter m'arket accesDuncan Payff dining room Rowe Farm, (740)247-4292 sories. 38+ mpg. Cleah,
set, excellent condition .
black.lbl&amp;&lt;;k. Call {740)441·
(740}388-0460.
F1eld npen tomatoes. Call 9865.
.
(740)379-91 t O
Leisa's Antiques- bOught- - - ' - - - - - - - sold at Alligator Jacks Flea Sl1etley's Canning Tomatoes 1998 Neon, 30+' MPG,
Furn1slled upsta1rs, 3 rooms Markel, Rl7, Pomeroy. lurni· across from Rac1ne Lock &amp; 116K, a1r, new tires , $725
&amp; bath. Clean, ref. &amp; dep ture,
primitives, bottles, Dam , open 9·6 closed 080. (740)742-4204
required . No pets. (740)446· {740)992·5008
Sunday
1519.
I \tnt 'I 1'1'1 II '
1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr. , 4
Mlsc:ELLANtJJUS
,\ \1\l,ltHI,
cyl. 76,000 miles. $3,000
Gracious liv1ng. 1 a(ld 2 bedM EKU IANUISE 1 ~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
OBO. Call {740)441-0712 . •
room apartments at Village - a 10
. ",\"'I
Mano f
and
Riverside
a·.
n~~
2 GE window air condition..... ·.- ~ .'_ • ,~,._ ,.,.
11 ."O:•il
1m
Apartments m Middleport. ers 5000 BTU. 1 year old. L--·I'.UIJ
iliiiilii'li
;,;,_~ 2000 Chev Malibu, PW, PD
74
locks. Cruise, AC. · 84 ,000
0· excellent condition. Call
From $295-$444_ Call
992 -5064. Equal Housing (740) 256 -6 647 _
0% Financing lor up to 36 m1les $3.900 (304)675·4014
Opportumt19,.S.
months on Jot1n Deere
Immaculate
apartment . 2 Griswold cast iron skilletS, Compact and 5000 Series 2000 Chrysler Concord
Walking d1'stance to URG . #20 &amp; 1111 , rare , $350 for Tractors with John Deere Fully loaded. possibly needs
Recently remodeled , 2BR both. Ironton. OH· (740)533· Credit appr.9vat. Check them motor. Ask1ng $4,000. Call
3_
87_0_.- - - - -- - out! Carmichael Equipment aher 5pm (740)446·2398.
new pr1vate deck.. $500/mo. _
(6 14)595·7773 or 800·798· 2003 Masterspa hot tub, ·Inc. (740)446-2412.

____ r

4686.
N 3rd Ave. Middleport. 1
bedroom furmshed apt, No
pets. Deposit Prell. rent~l
Ref. 740-992·0t65

• Payment could be the• One BR apt. with WID
same as rent.
hOokups. Spnng Valley. $290
locato rs month
Mortgage
deposil.
plus
_17 ~0)367 -0000
(740)339·0362 local call.
House lor Rent Pt. Pleasant
$400 (304)675-5540 or
(304)675-4624 . ask for
N8ncy. Homestead Realty

Pleasant Valle~ Apartment
Are now takmg AppliCations

S3,900.
Original
price
57 .000. Call &lt;74 0}446·8 706.
30 lamp tanning bed with 2
lace tanners , as.8 1ncl1·
esx39.3 inches, $6,000 new
$2500
lo·•m
askl·ng
·
(7401992 7687
·
--'-~,
-----.For Rent:' 24')(32' Pole Barn
Garage, 3 Stalls with electric
on AI 7
and Wale r. Prl."ale
y

0'% Financing for up to 60
months on John Deere
Round Balers. 0% for 48
months on Jol'in Deere
Mower Conditioners with
John Deere Credit approval
CC:lrm1chae1 Equipment Inc.
(740)446-24 12.
- - ' - -- - - - - 16 FT Low Boy Trailer, Farm
or T1tled for Road $850,

...

.-

l:!!i

-.-J

I'

c

automatic, 27mpg, 72,000
miles, good condition . $600
in brakes, fil\9rs. tires. belts
etc. tuneup. Ma~e excellenl
car lor college. Asking
$6.S00 080. 1740)4419378.

s~;y~~. 51m~e::s~·

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1997 ChEvro let S 10 Pickup
EJo;tendeO Cab, V6, 4:3 liter
Engine, 5 speed ma nual,
1 mate Pygmy goat. 3m. old 4WD, 92 ,000 miles. with the
lor sale. (740)44 1·1590.
LS package. fair body. runs
good, asking $5,000 call
For .Sale 200 lb. lean liogs: (304 )675- t 838
New Zea •and·-meat rab·
Dits740-992·7007
1997 Dodge D(lkola SLTV6.

Carnantana
Electrical
Sarvlca

Wlll's ATV
Parts

• f OR ALL YOUR

Qua lity G uarHnfecd
ATV l'arls &amp; ACC.

ElEcrRI CAL NEEDS.

• MOBILE HOME
, REPAIRS
• CARPENmY
• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE# 38244

740-367-0544
740-367-0536

I.EW.IS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
AU'fy~Or

Conc~te W9,r JC'
25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
hcc Es timuh.·.~

II'.

SSDO Demonstra tion Bo n us~
Le t us demo a John Deere Z
Trak or ·x Series AII·Wt1eel
Steer on your lawn and
receive an extra $500 off our
already discounll3d prices
~imi ted
time
offer.
Carmichael Equ}p ment Inc.
(740)446-24 12

Automatic, 2 Wheel Drive,
72,000 miles (304)593· t 614

99 Dodge Dakota Club-Cab
S~T.

100,000/miles 4x4,
3 18/5spd, loaded, many
extras, n ice Truck $,7,500
(304)882-2845

r

SUVs
HlR SAI£

Sears lawrl rriower 17 h.p. -6
1994 Jeep Grand Cherokee.
speed. 42 in cut. EJo;cellent
Good condition. $3,000
condition . (740)379·211 1.
0 80 . (740)386·0436 afte r

WOW!! 0% Financi ng lor up
to 50 'months on qualifying
GX &amp; X Series John O ~e re
Lawn
Trac tors or No
Interest, No Payments until
January 1. 2007 on all new
premium lawn tractors with
John Deere Credit approval
Carmichael Equipment Inc
1740)446-24 t 2.

II&lt;\ '"'I 'OIU \Ill 1\

Aum;
FOR S ALE
1965 Mustang Fastback
Rangoon Red exterior : bl~k
interior, 6 cycle, 3 spel3d, air
conditioning, radio. good
driver. Rust tree A2 car.
P:rice : $ 19,000.00. Hi ll's
Au tomotive Classic Car
Restorati'on &amp; Parts. Inc.
. 29670
Bashan
Road ,
·Racine. Ohio 45771 . Phone

s;;o: ~~~~- M~~~~ ~:~.{Ta~!;

~iQiahlre Doberman. male,

1998 GMC Jimmy SUV,
4WD, VS, 4.3L. Aul omatic,
AC. Leather, lois ol extras.
-Asking $8,500 (304)6758755

r

4x4

r

V~NS

Tires. New Mu1tler. 92.000 1993 Toyota Previa Van.
2 yrs. $50. (740)379·2~16
miles. 28 MPG $850 QBO GoOd Cor1dition inside &amp; out.
(304)675-8089
160,000 miles. $3200 -080.
70
!SICAI.
' 740 682·7477
L--·INsrR-riliiuli~O:tEii
'Ni
iii:
S_.J 1993 Cadillac Fleetwood
&lt;10 M UilliK Y(lEJ
Brougham, loaded. mint
4WHEFH:RS
Alvarev 12 stnng guitar cond1tton. 57 .200 m1les.
model. no.' DY68. Call continually garaged. $6',500.
(740 )446 -4191
(7 40)256-11 02 ask for Jr
t 995 Harley Davidson Oyna
Wide Glide loaded. Must
see $12,500. 740-992-7758

Equipment
LLC.
740-742-2455
• Repairs

• Parts
• SerYice
f( JI"

•

BINGO

'

American Legion Middleport
August 6
5 Early Bird Games S tarting at
., 5 pm '
'Starting at 6:30 pm
Playing Bingo for Free
I st &amp; 2nd Pack Free
After 1 sl &amp; 2nd pack $5r00 ea
Guaranteed $60.00 a Game
Door Prize $850.00

. 304-675-3877
Giant Yard Sale
10:00. 2:00
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Fellowship Hall Basement
Free Food
"Special Prices for Students"

MIZWAY TAVERN
Karaoke Wed . &amp; Fri.
Sat. Benefit for
Betheny Spauh
Baa Habit 9-1

Come By I !'.tke
Allrlllltage of •
lltJIIRebaiDDII
all B11apper

· ~.a-tnr:tun
Busi n ess ...
n ot our s lde llru• '"

1989 Stratos Bass Boat. 16
Foot . 70 H P Jot1nson Motor
w1th power lilt and tnm New

.•
SE YOUR EVENT N THE BU
BOARD I uolhng motor $3,700 Call
:LIA_D
_V
_ E_R_T_I_"_______I~, ____L_L_E_T_IN
___.....J. •;::; 5oo P~ (304)675
·-,--·--·· --···

44 Peer Gynt

JONES'

1t

F.RANK &amp; EARNEST

Bucket Truck

YOrJ't.L NWE, GH
.
.

ANYWti~~E

.\
'

~~NIE, VNTIL
YOU L~A~N
TO I-tT Ttl~

517·6883

BARNEY
OH, MY-·
HAFTA MAKE
MY SPECIAL •••

(Commercilll ttnd Re_sidentlal)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Tsimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, Leaf Rem oval, as we ll as small
landscaping jobs suct1 as plantmg and mulching.

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

WINDOW SUPER SALE
Vinyi.Double Hung

Let me do 1! for you I

$219

CHURCH
SAKE-OFF

1·800·291·5600

tKcq) YuLlr Mum·; Lo&lt;,:a l l

G&amp; R SAN ITATI ON

Phone
(7401 992-5232
Sx!O, IOxiO,

Janel Je!Trrs

MAll lEY'S
SELF STORAGE
10x10x10x20
992·1194
or 992·6615
"Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"

992-621 5 wv 036n5
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local EK rlenee

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICnON
• New Homes

93 Columbus Rd.

"'!

·'l (&gt;., Got N-1.'&lt;
WI&gt;..tt.R- fLk\/ORt.C&gt;
W"-TER. -z

I

BIG NATE
WERE

AND

IMPORTS

Stop &amp; Compare

WORS.E · THE

T+\A"T

I

DOt•l' T

FACT

RE -

H ER, OR THE

THAT

WE'RE.

Whaley's Auto
Parts
SL RL68 1 Darw in , OH_
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

PEANUTS
'I'OUR D06 ISN'T

MUC~ FOR C~ASIN6

A &amp;Ali., IS Mc ~ OR

MA'I'ef I JLIST

DON 'T KNOW TI&lt;E
~161lT WORD..

Sun. Closed
High cost of fertilizer
17-17-17,.
$265 ton (While Suppy Last)

·Mushroom Compost

Avai lable

SUNSHINE CLUB

Airway pastu re renovators and seeders

140·992·1611

IS

T

$35- I ,000 lbs Approx. w eight ~~~~
18 sprea der buggies available for use

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

YOU'~E

Kt.JOW WH ICH

I

M'EMBER..

SaL 8:30-Noon

1H£ .ELCJ/.X11'1r-/IS
11\l BIG 1RCX.Jf'i£.,

available to rent
licensed agronom ist on staff available fo r

eouw

consult ing: ·

SHADE RI VER AG SE RVICE
35537

~ t.

Rt. 7 North

Pomeroy,

'

Ohio

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS.

GARFIELD
ME?. .. BORIN6?!

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

Hill's Self
Storage
Racine. Ohio

\'7 1\ ~'(
1\\A1 'iJ'&lt;. tb li:&gt;R ~ \.1\1\\\6 ?

Scorpion Tractors

56 Understood

18 Cleansers

57 Ea rl y

East

Pass

t

All pass

¥ J

DOWN .

Hentoff

to 10' x30'
Hours
7:00 AM -8:00PM

35 Deaeart,a'
name
36 Exter ior
38· Note

emanation

3!;t Apron par:f

2 " Bloom

24 Gator Bo wl 41 Jet joeke~

Count•(
pengutn
3 \Ierne

site
42 Port near
25 Centurion's
Mauna Loa
moon
43 J u mble

sk ippe r

26 E urope-

4 Vast area

27 Metal

6 Uncle or

rooster

granddad

" Reagan

8

dishes

Rocket

emerald

base

49 August

29 v ery

sections

s ign

senous

9 " Elder··
statesman

51 Countdown

31 Min d· -

start

(awesome)

10 Draft
animal s

40 UK part

..-- Bagnold
46 Am iable
47 Topaz Qr

28 Qu iche

7 Thick soups

36 Fa iry-tale
heavy
37 A ssert
39 Cleared the

45 Novelist

A!ii&amp; ran ge

5 Pollerg elst

When you open one diamond with only
three cards in that suit, you must have
4·4·3·2 .
South's exact distribution:
Remember, with 3·3 in tl'ia minors, even
with the 4·3-2 of clubs and the A·K·O of
diamonds, you open one cl ub. North's
three-diamond response is a limit raise,
snowing a maximum pass with (four· or)
five-card support.
Because you can afford ore diamond
loser but not two, you need to find an
opponent with ace-doubleton . But whicn
op-ponent is more likely to nave t11at
trump holding?
Remember the bidding and ·count the
poims. East is knoWn to l'l.ave nine in
hearts, but ha couldn't open the biddmg.
So, he cannot have tt1e diamond ate.
This signpqsts the right route. After win·
nmg trick lou r, play a diamond to
dummy's king, then call for a diamond
and play low from hand . When West's ace
appears, you are home.
If you did tl'lis, you went up the ladder. If
you did not, you slipped down the cl1ute .

33 Jarrett
of NASCAR

Satu rd a y, Aug . 6, 2005

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

P'~

Today's clue· S equals G

L VIZI

" T K K
R I F G S

l VI N

BYPFI Z

DIBT C I.

F

·o·'r

BTCI

MX Z L

F

0 IB TAI

O YX K C

BF 0 V T I K

F G

T DI

J FZV

8 I ."

i

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I like a pam ling thai reac~es in and grabs your
heart and stomps on it." - Art collector Myron Kun1n
·

WOlD
~:~~:t~' ~©"R~lA-~t-i/Js· ••••
ld11od. by CLAY I , POLLAN--- -- 0 Rearrange
of ·tht
.:mmb td words bt·
jt fltrs

four
low ro ·fo rm

By B ern ice Bede O eO I

You will have excellent chances for
fulfilling your primary ambitious
under1a.Kings in the yea r ahead .
However, f rust ration and impatience
could hinder your success.
L EO (Ju ly 23~A ug . 22) Persons
with whom you associate today could
be a bit intimidated by you if you
come on too strong. Be care ful how
you co r1duc1 YO\Jrself when around
"those who are rather timid.
VIBGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22i - Favors
you request of others today are likely
to be granted , but there could be
st rmgs att ached to them . so make
certa in it'll be worth paying the price.
You mny be better all do ing without.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c!. 23) - Try to
use YOur creativity i~st ead a t your
checkbook when it comes to selectIng activities to do wit h lrlends today.
This rs also true il you 're involved m a
venture that requires seed ·money.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -N ov. 22) - The
~ boss won't pay~olt on conversation
today, b';!! only on good perfor man ce.
If you hope to be rewarded lor your
time and efforrs. keep your' muscles
in .motion and ~our mouth shut
SAGilTAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Be carefu l about ofterrng advice
today whero it is not explicitly
requested. even 11 you belteve you
have th e anSwers lor someth ing that
is giv1ng another fits . It might not be
appreciated
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan_ 19) - A
busybody you k11ow may t ry to pok'e
his/her n ose into your t..Hivate alfairs
today and 1f you're not Qn guard you
could Inadvertently reveal t hings that
should b e keep to yourself.
AQUARIU S (Jan . 20 -Feb. 19) Don't be stmgy with your friends
today. but, by th e same toKen. don 't·
allow yoursell to get maneuvered into
a position where you must pay an
unta lr share eit11er. Don't be taken ,
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20) - Those
who labor at your side today Will not
be ir)Sp lred by an old -fash roned pep
talk. Tho only thing that will speak
louder than word s w11t be setting th e
' ght example w1lh performan ce.
n
ARIES (March 21-April 19) In
ordoi' to advance your selt· interests
10day. you may have to be a litt le ·~
tougher and bolder than usual. This IS
nat the day to give into timid thought s,
oru:;c them ~:; quicY.ty as :h ey ~ri!:e .
TAURUS (Aptit 20 -May 20) . Regardrng domestiC concerns today.
Y._Ou rnight not be as reliable as usual
when it comes to minor issue s.
However. lhrS will not be true ol you
Should a sert9us problefn anse.
GEMINI {M ay 21 -Jun e 20) Importan t dec1s1ons thai could affect
your acthi1tles today should not be lett
up to others Let everyone Know you'll
think tor yo,urSett and any final Judg·
ment reqUired re st solely w1th you
CANCER (June 21 -Ju\y 22) II
you 're lookrng to tnm expenses. th iS
1s a good day to ca refully analyz e
your expenditures of late. Chancj:Jit
are you w111 find ways to get greattj r
mileage ou1 ot the dollars you earn

.

Celebril)' Cipllt!r cryptogrems aoe crea1ec1 from quotB!I{)ns by lamous people. past and
Ea011en11r 1n the t1p/ler slancs f01 a ootl~er •

four words.

P AR A E P

I
I ll I' I I
L! B B E

I

IVLAO

I. I. I_
s

16

I:;
~:.1

My uncle stopped my meddling aunl from g1ving her opin'
r - - - - - - - - , ion by reminding her th at adH E R A E . I vice given can also-- ----- -:·
_ .

s

1--.
,';7-',,-=:.,1,;.:..:.;.1-=.TI""e-1 0
1
'----'.-..1.-..J.L ...l..-

e

.L.__.J.

~ov

Compll!te the chuckle quoted

by !tiling in the min ing wordi

de'lleiop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUM~EifO

lfTTUS IN SQUARES

_o. :.~.:.:.:~ .:.:.:~t.: . R_
M&amp; lE-fO-'RI--~..1_. I
SCilAM.f.nS ANSWERS

IIII
e-•-os

ARLO &amp; JANIS
Y.()V'V~ 1\WJ
DRIUKIJJC. F~O.II
fi-I~T MOO
ALOUG.IIM~!

II) THE,~W KE,

Akl Ok!G.O IJJG
11EVI~W

CCJII.M I

SOUP TO NUTZ
G~ufS ALways

RUIN IT fbR US I« DS ...

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

pd

...
l .

•

l.

,J

. Napkm - Hiker- Usual- Utopia - APART
:
My son was upset because a friend tbok a different .
class t11an he had chosen. I told him that friends can·
grow separately without growing APART.

BAUM LUMBER

•

field
19 Oompah- 2 1 Rad iant

Drop behind

23 Pay able
now
24 Rosy glow
27 Sk illed
30 Tempt
31 Early siren
32 ~ and Ionic
34 Collectio n
ot tale s
· 35 Ho ward and

liard Work !"
Mid-S it.c 4Whee.l Drive Tractor
wiih JOhp &amp; 40hl) Kubma Enl)incs

Sizes 5'x10'

11 Beat th e

gard en?

'"Taki11g Tlt e Sti11g 0111 Of

45771
740-9 49-2217

mo

F\~t~ (ll~ ...
~R&lt; U\/~I&lt;.S

$NI\\~ , ~

BAU!\1 LUMBER

29670 Bashan Road

.1 1 ~ I

GRIZZWELLS

Now M a ila ble At

17 Aa's s ym bol

-

~'lllrlhdo,v:

THEN ,

HRsltirHr!9 /ale Model Sohnge
11 tl&lt;! r1.rte r M11 rkel
Pa. rt~
See Breni or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00

55 Peaty tracts

wheels

~ Astro­
~ Graph

.

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooling &amp; Gutter$

V.C. YOUNG Ill

'&lt;I

I

·Rocky."R.J' J
' . Hupp,

Middleport. OH

• Vinvt Siding &amp; Paintin g
• Patio and Porch Dec ks..
We do It all except
turnace work

..

·· ,, See

Pnmcmv. O H

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages

•

'

97 Beech Street

CARPENTER
SERVICE

.

Wl f\1\'IE. KOOT e&gt;E£\Z,G\1'\(,(~
I&gt;,LE. 1\I'&gt;IC&gt; /&gt;., V1\\Zt E.I'&lt; OF
c.-="_FL.I\IJOR£\) WI\TE.RSI

Storage,

33561 Ba iley Run Rd ..

YOUNG'S

740·9924119

&gt;""

High and Dry

Gene Arms/O"·ner*Wee kl y Trush S~rvicc
4 yrs of Rdi;tblt- Se rvin·

""!

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

33795 Hila nd Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

PonK'ru}. OH

.

WOUU) YOU Ll KE :)O~Tf\1~
COL.\) TO C&gt;R.I\'.\K;&gt;\URRICMC.
f\1\\T \( 7

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

20-1- Condor Stn:ct

\\ to .l'!'n'iu• mtw mu~1'.\'

DOLLAR
PRIZE

I""

5 4 Chop f inely

Lennon

ue?

NEXT WEEK·

INSTALLED
to 101 VI
Optional Upgrades Available;
Argon Gas &amp;Heat Mirror

16 She l oved

In 1986, author and columnist Barbara
Ehrenreich wrote, "Take mo1herhood:
nobody ever thought ol putting it on a
moral pedesta"t until some brash feminists
po1nted out, about a century ago, that !he
pay is lousy and the career ladder nonex·
istent."
That's not sucn an original thought, and
today·~ deal features sometl'iing that has
appeared innumerable times in the litera·
ture, but that d6es not mean that every· '
one always does !he necessary.
You are South, in three diamonds. West
leads tt1e 11eart ;ack, East taking three
tricks with his queen, k1ng and a:ce. Bac~
comes a· spade. How would you con tin·

CtHP~ FAt.L
wtl~~e
Tti~Y MAY.

(Commerdal and Re!iidential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, ·oeg reasing of ·
Equipment, Boats, Camper~. Tractor Trai lers,
Du mp Trucks, painting o_
r S;t ai ning of your deck
0 1 log hom e, Alum mum brightening.
:
Special ra,tes to Trucking and Dump Truck ing Compames.

ll401985-4180

~

Ducommun

20 K id 's

Point-checking
points the way

$Cr.JLPTO~,

AS A

Free Estimates

Owner: Jeff Steth em
Cell : (740)

Pa ss

Opening lead·

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

liNDA'S PAINTING

.' lo rt h

. Pass

Tree Service

992-2804

Wrst

47 Gold-coated
48 Feverloh
5 0 J In JFK
52 Nadelman or

22 Columnist

J1calcr : North

POWER WASHING

10x15, 10x20,
10x30

9 J 4!
¥ A K Q
• J 10 9
... 8 7 4 3

... .J 9

South

creator

boal
12 Hlgh.polnt
13 VIllain 's
laugh
14 City

•

Vulnerable: East-Wcsl

Office: (740)

Gravely
Tractor Sales
&amp; Service

2001 Jayco Designer Series
2000 Yamal'ia Roadstar 27RKS, 5th Wheel. Lots ol
Cruiser, 1600 CC. 6.000 accessories
S21 .000
miles Loaded $7,500 phOne (304 )675-2246
1304)675-2793 o• 1304)5932003 Coach man 24FT, TT.
5157
Bath. AC. Furnace. SleepS
2002
Harley
Davidson 5. $9,000 j304)675- 1444
Softail Deuce. many extras.
Great sllape. ~ 5,000 m1les . Coleman . Carflpiil'g Trailer
$17 ,000 l~rm
(740)441· 12Fl. 2 K1ng Beds. 54 ..995
call lor Deta1ts (30 4)675·
9816
-\
173 1
2002 HD Softa1l Deuce .
many ex1ras 1ncludrng w1de
t~re , chrome , Python P1pes
10
Hmn:
7.000 mtles. (740 )446·2815
hii'I« )H~\ll-~''lS
2004 Honda VTX 1300C
Low mrles.· $1 .500 in extras .
BASEMENT .
bl.ick. $8,300 . (7 40)288·
WATERPROOFING
7246
UncotKJilional ·llfetlrne guar·
antee Local references fur·
I""' IIOATS &amp; MOlOI&lt;i n1shed Es.tablished 1975
FOR S,\Lt:
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
18' Bay11n13r Capn Sk1max . Waterproofing
t 987 openbow with 150 hp
Mercury OB ancJ trarler, runs
looks great $2975. C!llf '
(740•99'2·0167 atter sp'm or
740·416·4604

·s.

IIQP

8 A a t-

t:ast •

• Q6 5

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

B r akt~~

Mt

Saturday, Au g. 6
· 1st (2) packs FREE!!
add'l packs $5
$500 Coverall
$500 4 Leaf C lover
$1200 Block of Nin.e
(I F hit Friday, will be $500)
Doors open at 4:00
Early Bird Quickies .4:45
Early Birds 5: 15
Regular Session 6 :30
I 24 Highland Avs .
Rt. Pleasant, wv

41 Hollow
plaet
42 Traveler' s

transport
53 PrefiK for ·
15 "Forrest -"
c lassic

"' AKQ.I
¥ H i 4 :l

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

•-Spc&lt;.:i al!y • ChHL:hcs

K7-&amp;:J2

Q1 0652
Suu't h

.

740·667·0700 1·888·HUPP2l4
wv

' Leave a message

Fan n Equi pnll'nl Trucks Do?:crs

•

t A8

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

TEN·

Morris

10 8 7
!I fi 5

6 4 :1
J 10 3

•

•

FREE BINGO!
-·

1 ltolated
5 Truc k mf r.

oa-os-oa

•
•

"' A K

We!lt

. FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

0pl'rutur 740-992·.1174

FoRSAL E

740-742-1293

North

41800 SR #7
Plains, OH
11;oj:!.~Tuppers
45783

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Pro mpt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rat~s ·
• Refe rences
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley

For more informati on call :
740-992-3824 or 740-667-0338

1986 l suzu Troope r. Mud
tires, runs good, $800 0 80 .
2002 Yamaha Raptor 66~c .
$3 ,800. Good condi tion.
(740)446- t237.

2002 Toyota ,Tundra SR5 V6,
5-spd. BO.OOOmi. matching
topper. bed liner/mat. lots of
extras. St 9.000. (740)388·
9634 eve. as~ for Jeff.

. @yahoo .com

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

LAWN CARE DIVISION

740-992-2975

1999 Chevy Suburban 4x4,
good condition. loaded. new
tires.
Asking
$11 ,000.
(740)44 1·0658 or (740)7091931

l'omeroy. O h io
45769
(740! 992-2432
E m ail :j will45769

K-4 Open House
Aug. 26th at 7:00PM

. F oKSALt:

--------1992 Chevy 1500 4;x4, auto.
air, pw, pi, cd, runs gre;at.
$3,500, (740)742-,7200 or
740·742·2675

32 11 9 Wtlshl own Rd .

Grades K-4 throug h 12

"lo\wn a n d Gar de11
Tr3ctors are our

8p ~

J ames A Will Jr.
-. Owner

River Valley Christian Academy
Now enrolling students ror the
2005-2006 school year.

L!VR•mJCK

I \\\.., ...... (,\111 11.., lilt

.

bottomed

Y'our ProStar Trailer Dealer. [~~~~
5 -.,....:::-----Carmichael Equipment Inc.
' TRl.!CKS
1740)446-2412
toR SALE

r

nEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

John Deere tO ft . No Til Drill
2003 Silver Chev. Cavalier 4
for
Rent .
Carmict1ael
cyl
, low miles 2 door 304·
Equ1pment. (140)446·2412.
675-3689
John Deere Commercial - - - - - - - - WorksUe
Product s 96 Toyota Tercel , 47k, AC ,
Compact ExcavalorsiSkid au to, red, $3500, (740)742·
Steers/Tractor
Loader 2662
·Backhoe in stock , Check out - - - - - - - - our renta l rates. Great Mercedes Benz 260E 88.
financing
available.· Engine rebu ilt too much
Carmichael Equipment ·Inc. new to list. 25MPG. Nice
(740)446·24 12.
ride. S3.!;t50. (740)245·9 142.

740-949·2217.
Webs1te :
·a
$500 00 www.hillsresto.com
Ap8r rment 1.7QO sq. It ~ 7999
· .::.::__c_______ Poodles pupp1 s.
.
-----,--'--$650. No pets. A'ailable Oct -MollOhan Carpet. 202 Clark -7· 4.::.0:..·::.99:.:2:..·7.::.00c::..7_ _ __
1985 Pontiac Trans-Am,
1 (740)441-1124 .
Chapet .Aoad . ~P~:mer, Ohio Cocker Spaniel puppies, 9 5spd. 305 H.O., only 55,000
. BE- AUTIFUL
APART-. (740)446·744~ 1... 877·830 - weeks old, butf color. s'l,ols. miles. viper· blue. !·tops.
MENTS
AT
BUDGET 9162 . Free Estimates. Easy $150 each. Call (740)388· excellent shape. (740)446·
PRICES AT JACKSON linancmg. 90 days same as 0
c 4_o_t_______ 0350.
S 1
t
1 E k
ESTATES' 52 We s1wood cash V1~a/ Master Card F
11
Drive from $344 to $442. Dnve- a· little save alot.
s

Wa lk to shop &amp; mo11ies. Ca lf ThQIT)psons Appliance &amp;
740·446·2568:
Equal Repair-675·7388. For sale.
Housing Opportunity.
re-conditioned au~omatic
washers &amp; dryers.- relrigera·
Clean1 furn1shed Apartment. tors . g&lt;Js and electric
$325 month, includes water. ra 11 ges 31 r conditioners. and
.tr&amp;Sh, Secunty Deposit and wnnger washers . W1!1 do
·References
required repairs on majqr brands m
·~(3'o4)675-2970
shop or at your home

2000 Kia Sephia. 4 door.

200'3 Chevy Impala LS
Sedan 3.8L, V6, 4 speed
_N_or_th_..:.l7_4_0.:.)4_4_6_·4_7_82_ _ _13_0_4_1il7
_S·_1_1_6s_ _ __
auto lrans witl1 OD, 50.000
Futon . washer &amp; dryer. Ford 3000 Tractor 2 stage miles. power everything.
kitchen table &amp; chairs, lawn clutch live power everything moon roof. 11eated leather
mower, weedeater. Call works . 7 II. Ford cycle bar seats, very ·good condition .
$12.500. 1740)367-0 t 66.
{740)44t-0425.
mower. (740)446·7787.

lor" 2BA. 3BR &amp; 4BA ..
Applications
are
taken
•Broker
Monday thru Friday. from
9 00 A M.·4 P.M . Office IS
:H~use tor Rent in Po1nt Located at 1151 Evergreen :...c:.:.._ _:_:cc._ _ __
..p~ asant (304)675·6224
Drive Point PleasAnt , wv Genuine Slate Playfield pool
Phone No. is (304)675· table . New rails, new felt.
:LOg home 1n country, ideal 5806 E.H.O
Call (740)256-6702.
tr!lr married couple. 2 BR. 1 c.:_:.c_c:__:_~---- - - ' - - ' - - - - - batl1 , patio. new carpet. Ref. Tara
Townh ouse
JET
_and depostt $425 per mo. Apartments, Very Spacious.
AERATION MOTORS
. (740)446·280 1.
2 Bedrooms. CIA,, 1 112 Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Bath . Adult Pool &amp; Baby Stock. Call. Ron Evans. 1·
1\:loHII.I-: H0:\ 11~"-i
Pool. Patio, Start .$385/Mo. 600·537·9528.
·. FOH. RtN I'
No · Pe,s.
Lease
Plus - - - - - - - - Security Deposit Required. Kenmore Sewing Machine
· t 4-X70 trailer, $425/month , (740)367-7066.
(304) 675 _1320
· Cl25/ deposit.
(740)367· ;__c.::.c__ _:_____
n62 or (740)367-7272.
Twin Rivers Tower IS accept· NEW AND USED STEEL
mg applications for wailing Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Concrete.
Angle,
2 bedroom, AIC. vfJry nice. list for Hud·subsized, 1· br, For
. no pets, in Gallipolis. apartment . call 675-6679 Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
•(7 40)446· 1409 or {740)446'- EHO
Grating
For
Drains,
"2003
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
. S !'ACE
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
HlR RE~r
Beautiful nver v1ew m
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Kanauga _Ideal lor t -2 peoFriday, 8am·4:30pm. Closed
ple
No pets . please, Oowptown Office Space- 5 Thu rs day,
Saturday
&amp;
Applications being taken room sUite $650/mo; 1 room , Sunday. (740)446- 7300
olfice, $225/mo.: 2 room
· Ca ll (740)441·0181 .
suite $250/mo. Secunty Old9r "Vintage" Magazine,
Nice 2BR, al l electriC. w_/ deposit required . You pay 94 -!)6 NatiOnal Geographic,
Cf'A,, SA 160; 5350 mo. utilities. All spaces very mce. Smil hsonian (304)675· 1320
includes water &amp; trash p.u Elevator. can (740)446-3644
8 UIUliNG
Need ret. &amp; sec. deposit. No for appointment
.SuPI'LIES
pets. Taking applications.
1740)446-6865 m 1740)379- For Lease: Office or retail
spaces 1n very good condi· Block. br1ck. sewer pipes.
2923.
tion . Downtown Gallipolis windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Taking appliC(!.Iions lor 2 BR Approx . 1600 sq. ft. each. 1 Winters. Rio Grande, OH
trailer 1n Centenary. No pets. " ,ar 2 ba ths Lease price ~c,:
a:;.11.;,
7 4;:;0:.;-2:;;4:;:5~
-5:,:1.:;
2.;,
1._ __,
$350 month plus deposit negotiable to encourage
(74 0)446-7275.
new
business .
Call
PF;rs
1740)446-4425 or \740)446- ..__ _ii
miiiRiiiii
Sii
ALE
iiiir
"
Taking
apPlicatiOns lor 3936
...,
~bile home lot for rent m
6 male registered Golden
Kanauga. Next to Methodist Prime Commercial Space at Retreiver puppies. first sl1 ots
6hurch .
(740)446·4782: Spring Valley Plaza. 3,000 &amp; wormd, $300 each,
sq. ft : Call (740~4 6-34 81 .
Reterences requi red.
(740)416-2793
\lll.(t II \'\IIJ"\1
Two Mobile Home LOts lor
AKC
English
Springer
.$130.00.
1997 Two
10 " HOlR-lfOIJ)
Span1e1. Ftrs t ShoVWorm.
13edroom Mobile Home,
Gooos
Tail-Dock. Male and Female
&amp; White
$250
completely
lurnist1 ed . .._________.J. Live r
Central Air/Heat $425.00.
1304)576-2 198
'JR 0 1740·243-58 11 .
Antique maple bedroom
suite. Numbered Cushman AKC Golden Re triever male,
Classic Creation. 2 twins, gold color, $400. Almost
dresser. desk. mirror.' night 2yrs old. Updated on all
stand, se lect comfort mat· shots. {740 )388·8965
i .and 2 bedroom apart- tress. $ 1.200. (740)4 46- AKC Registered Basset
ments. furn ished and unlur· 8325
Hound pi.J ppies plus 2 adult
nished, security deposit
Basset Hounds. Sl'iots.
required , no pets. 740·992·
wormed . (740}256·6887.
2218.
Born 4f3105 Pit bull puppies.
Appliance well mannered. Parer:l!s on
Bedroom
furnist1ed
premises. Big dogs. $100
Co1\age.
Pt. Pleasant.
' Pho.ie (304)675· 1262 aher
Warehouse each. (740)446-0872..
5:00pm
CKC Golden Retriever pup·
in Henderson , WV
Pre·
•2
2 ·bedroom, 1 bath. waler
p1es 1or sa 1e ... 00. Wormed
owned applicanes sta rting at
....
..-.~ h 1 7 k old
pSid, $350 month, $350
anu seconu s o s. w s
·
(740)""8 8965
security
deposit
Call S75 &amp; up all under warranty.
a11
~ ·
·
we do serv1ce work on all
1740)446-3481 .
Make and Modeis (304)675· CKC
Regis tered
Toy

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7
.. .

Canning Tomatoes. 114 mile 1996 Ftontiac Grand Pr!•. 4
past SoU1hern High School, door, $1,500. (740)441-8976
Daniel Riffle , (740)949-3080 or (740)645-6734.

Townl1ouse
apartmonls,
~ bedroom 1'10us8 for rent and/or small houses FOA
l¢cated In Gallipolis city. RENT. Call (740}441-1111
$250/month
+
utilities, for application &amp; Information
.S~Oideposit:
(7 40)256·
Furnished Aparlmenl , 2nd
Ave , Gallipo!is, Upstairs. All
Paid, 1 Bedroom.
~·, 'BR cabin. Centerville Utilities
N, 0 Pets. (740) 446•9523
~rea . AU
utilities pd.

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·

'

.,

�.
Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Atlanta at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
Houston at San Francisco, 4 05 p.m.
Colorado at Ar1 zona·. 4:40 p.m.
Ctucago Cubs at N.Y. Mets, 8 05 p.m

Pro BasEbal
American League
East Division
W L Pct

GB

Boston

62 45 .579
57 49 538
New York
Toronto
55 52 514
Ballirflore
52 56 .481
Tampa Bay
42 67 385
Central Division

4',
7
10 '
21

Chicago

W
70

L
37

Pet GB
.654

Cleveland
Minnesota

57
55

52
53

.523 14
.509 15'

52

55

.486

Detroit

Kan sas City
Los Angeles
Oakland
Texas
Seattle

18

:}8 70 .352 32 ..
· West Division
W
62
61
54
46

L
4~

47
53
61

Pet

GB
.574
565 1
505 7 ',
430 15'

Wednesday 's Games
Detroit 10, Seattle 7
Boston 8, Kansas Ciry 5
Cleveland 7, NY Yan kees 4
Tampa Bay 8, Tellas 5
Toronto 4, Ch1cago Wh1te Solo: 3
Minn esota 4 , Oakland 3
LA Angels 8, Balti more 4
Thursday 's Games
. Detro11 3, Seattle 1
Boston 11 . Kansas C1ty 9
Oakland 5, Minnesota 2
Chicago Wh1te So~ 5. Toronto 4
Baltimore 4. LA Angels 1
N.Y. Ya n~ees 4. Cleveland 3
Texas 13. Tampa Bay 5
Friday 's Games
Cleveland (Sabath1a 6- 9) at Detroit
(Robertson 5-9). 7.05 p.m
N.Y. Yankees {Small 2·0) at Toronto
(C hacin 11 -5) . 7·07 p.m.
Baltimore (Chen 7·6) at Te:~~ as {W1Ison 03); 8:05 p.m.
~ante (Pine1ro 3·7) at Ch1
cago Wh1te Sox
(Garc1a 11 -4), 8:05 p rn.
Boston (Arroyo 9-6) at M1nnesota (Radke
6-10). 8:10 pm.
Oaklan d (Sil.arloos 7-6 ) at Kansas C1 ty
(Greinke 3-1 3) 8:1 0p.m .
Tampa Bay (Waechter 4-6) at l A Angels
(Byrd 9-7). 10:05 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Baltimorf'! at Texas. 4:05p.m.
N.Y Yank ee s at Toro nto. 4:07 P. m
Cleveland at Detroit. 7:05p.m.
Seattle at Chtcago White Sox. 7 05 p.m ·
Boston at Minnesota. 7 t 0 p m
•
Oakland at Kansas Clt'f. 7· 10 p.m .
Tampa Bay at L A. Angels. t Q 05 p rn
•
Sunday 's Games
Cleveland at Det rOit. 1:05 pm
N.Y. Ya nkees at Toronto. 1 07 R m
Baltimore at TBxas· 2 05 p m
Seattle at Ch1cago White Sox. 2.05 p m.
Boston at Mmnesota. 2:'tl n.m
Oakland at Kan sas C1ty 2 10 p.m
Tam pa Bay at L A An gt~l£ -: 05 p m

AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS
Boston .
.338 .

BATTING -Da rn~ 11

MYoung. Tex.l s. .33,~ BRoberts. Balti more.
324. Tejada. Bai\IITI:Jre .. 320 VGuarrero
· Los Ang eles 319. ARodnguez. N e~'~ York.
316; TH atner.- Clevel,1nd. 313
RUNS- Oamoll. Boston. 85: Jeter New
York. 79: Teixe1ra Te11as. 78 ARodriguez.
New York. 78: DOrliz. Bostofl 77 F1ggn1s
Los Angeles. 76: ASo11ano Texa s. 76.
RBI- MRamirez . Boston. 100. DOrliz.
Boston, BS : Taixe1m . Texas. 86 ARodnguez
New York, 85. Sexson Sea l11e. 82. Mat su1
New York . 81 : She!l1eld. New York . 81
HITS- MYoung. Texas 148, Daman .
Boston 146 TeJad a. Baltimore. 139
Crawford. Tampa Bay. 136, ISuwk1. Seattle
135: BRoberts. Baltimore. 130: Jeter. N c~
Yo rk . 129
DOUBLES- TeJada
8all1more. 38:
BA oberts. Baltimore. 30: ASonano. Te)(as.
3 0; Matsui. New York. 29: DOrt1z, Boston
29: Damon, Boston, 29; Cantu Tampa Bay,
27: Mench, Texas. 27: Erstad , Los Angeles.
1
27: 1Radngue z. Detroit. 27.
TRIPLES- Crawford, Tampa Bay, 12:
l$uzuki. Seattle. 10: Sizemore. Cleveland.
8: Figgins. Los Angeles. 7 lnge. Detron 7.
DeJesus, Kansas C1ty. 6. John son. Toronto.

NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS
BATIING- Delce.
Chicago.
.358.
M1Cabrera. Florida, 355: Puj ols. S! Lours.
34 1. Alou. San Franc1sco. 328. BC ia r ~ .
Mll wauJ!ee, _32-4 NJohnson, Wash1ngton.
323 Casey. C1nc1nnatl, 316
RUNS-PuJOis St. l oUIS. 9 1. Delee
Chicago, 83· Dunn. Cmc1rmat1 , 78
MiCabrera. Ftonda, 77: Bay. P11tsburgh . 75.
BCi ark ,
Milwaukee
75.
BAbreu .
Philadelphm. 73.
RBI---C-aLee. Milwaukee, 90 Pu,ols. St
Lou1s. 86: Delee. Chicago. . 83: AJones.
Atlant a. e2: . ARam1rez. Ch1cago. 80.
MiCabrera . Flonda. 79. Ensber!J . Houston.

79
HIT S-BCI&lt;Hk .
Milwp. ukee.
146 .
MiCabrera. Ftondn 145. Del ee. Ch1cago.
143. PujOIS. St Lows 140. R ey~s. New
Yor k 130. Rollins. Ph1l&lt;1ddphia 125. Casey.
C1nCini1at1. 1?5
DOUBLES-Delee Ch1cago. 33: Bay,
P1 1!Sburgh . 32 MG1Ies Atl:::~h ta . 32·
M1Cabnira. Fto r1da -31 8G1Ies_ San Dieg o,
31 , Wilkerson. Washmg ton. 30: Galee.
Milwaukee 30 Lowell. Fto11d&lt;i. 30, 81 QQIO,
Houston ~0
TRIP~E S- Reyes . New Yor~ . t 1: P1erre.
Ftonda . 9: Furcal. Allanta 9: Rollin s.
PhiiQdelph,a. 7; JW1Ison. Pittsburgh . 6 ;
W1lkerson Wash1ngton. 6 BGites. San
0 1ego. G.
HOME AUNS-AJ ones. Atl anta. 33 ;
-Dunn. C nonna t1. 32. Delee. Ch1cago, 32 ;
PujOIS, St LOUIS. 2\:1: Ensberg, Houston. 28:
Cal ee M11W&lt;:1ukee. 27: ARa nwez, Ch1cag o,
27.
.
STOLEN BASES- P1ene. Flonda , 35:
Reyes. New York. 34. Furcal, Atlanta , J2:
Free!. Clrc1nnat1. 29. Taveras. Houston. 27:
Roll1ns.
Ph1ladelph1a
24: BAb reu .
Philadelphia. 23
PITCHING (1 0 Decisions }--Eaton. San
D1ego. 9·2: .818. 3 76. Carpenter. St. LOUIS.
16-4. 800. 2.26: PMarhnez. New York , 12·
3. 800. 2.81. LHcrnandez. Wash1ngton. 134 765. 2 27:,Moms. St. LOUIS. 12-4, 750~
368. Clemens. Houston. 10-4 . .714 . 1.45.
Mulder St l oUIS. 12·5. 706, 3.9 1 Smel tz.
Atlanta, 12·5. 705 2 Fl6
STRIK!:OltTS- PM arl1n ez. Nfl w York.
163: P ea ~o•y. San Diego. t 55. Crtrpcnter. St
Louis, 151: SMy ers Ph1la.deloh! a. 139 :
JVazqu ez.
Ar1 zona.
136
CteJ""lens .
Hous ton. 135: Burne tt. Ftor1oa t 34
SAVES- CCordero. ·w a shing ton. 36:
ls.nnghausen. St Loui s, 29~ Lidg e. Hou;;ton,
27. Ho'fman, San D1eg o. 27: Mesa.
P1tl s':Jurgh 26. BWagner. Philadelphia, 25:
TJrnbow. Milwaukee. 23

Pro

· ANAHEIM, Calif (AP)A miserable week for Lee
Mazzilli began with Rafael
Palmeiro's suspension and
ended with the manager's dis, missal.
The Baltimore Orioles fired
Maa illi on Thursday in the
middle of a mas'sive slide.
just three uays after Palmeiro
became the biggest major
league star to be caught using
.steroid s.
Sam Perlozzo was appoint-

made just two hours before
Baltimore got off to a solid
Thursday's game. General stan and on April 23 gained
manager Jim Beattie said he sole possession of first place,
told Mazzilli of the club's ahead of the defending chamdecision at the team hotel pion Boston ' Red Sox and the
Thursday momfng. Perlozzo New York Yankees_
held a closed-door meeting
Th~ Orioles stayed on top
with the players before lhe through June ' 23 . Baltimore
game .
was in second place , just one
:·It was quiel in there,'' he game back. on July 15 -the
smd . "I proba~ly spoke a ltttle uay Palmi'iru gol his 3.000th
' longer thm~ I d ~lanned to _ I hi I and became I he fourth
t~ou ght th,ll wed pon11 the · player in baseball hbtory to
linger al each other ioday reach 3,000 hits and 500
all
of
'"We'
re
all
part
of
homers.
, · t'd interim manager for the
what happened here . After
But 'Baltimore then went on
rest of th e sea son _ The loday. they can point them at 1hc skid thai cos1 Mazziili his
Orioles had lost eighl straight rne, if I hey w:mt."
J&lt;,&gt;b. Frnm July ·t6. through
and 14 of 15 heading into
Enlcring Thirrsday. the Wednesday. lhe Orioles losl
Thursday's game again st lhe Om,les were :; 1-56 and I0 16 of 18 - including their
Los Ange les Angel s_
1/2 games behind first-place last cight ·in-a row - to fall
"ll 's not the kind of week Rosto rl in t'he AL Easr.
into fOLirth place.
thai you want to have very · The Orioles J'rnished ?S-84
" I don't think anybod y realoften, !hat 's for sure." in 2004, Mazzilli's first sea- ly saw it ·commg," Roberts
Baltimore second haseman son. and this year appeared said . " But the v.ay 1tia1 we' ve
l:lrian Robens said _
on course to end a run of · played, I don '.t know that it
The announcement · was seven slraight lvsing seasons. blows anybody's dpors off."

(1o

oecisions&gt;-c,..n.

Minnesota . 9·2 . .8 18, 3.00: Clement.
Boston. 11·3. .786, 4.67 : Garland. Ch1cagc.
15·5, .750. 3..40; Cl l ee, Cleveland, 12-4
.750. 4.02: Buehrle, Ch1cago. 12· 4. 750.
2.86: Halladay. Toronto. 12-4, .750. 2.41 ,
Moyer. Seattle. 9·3, .750 . 4.33.
STRIKEOUTs-JoSanlana. M1nnesota.
161 : RaJohnson. New York. 149; Lackey
Los Angeles . 141, DCabrera. Balt1more
11 5; Sonderman, Detro+t. 11 4 Clement .
Boston. 113; Kazm1r, Ta mpa Bay. 112, Z1to,
Oakland, 11 2.
SAVE$-Wickman :
Cleveland,
29:
Nathan. Minnesota, 28: MA1vera. New York ,
27 : FCordero. Texas. 26 : Herma nson.
Chicago, 26: FrRodriguez. Los Angeles'. 25. \,
Guardado. Seattle, 25.

National League
East Division
WL ' Pc!GB
63 46 578
Atlanta
58 50 537 4
Washi ngton
57 52 .523 6
Pt1itadelphia
55 5 1 .519 6
Florida
New York
54 54 .500 8 '
·central Division
W L · Pet GB
St. Lou is
.68 40 630
59 49 546 9
Houston
54' 54 500 14
Ch1cago
54 55 495 14
· Milwaukee
48 60 . 444 20
Cincinnati
Pinsburgt1
46 63 422 22
West Division
W L Pct GB
53 55 491
San Diego
53 57 482 1
Ar izon a
48 60 444 5
Los Angeles
San Franctsco 46, 6 1 430 6
39 68 .364 13
Colorado

•

ALONG THE

• Marshall hoi(Js Media
Day. See Page B1

Major League Soccer
GP GA
35 3 1
33 19

27 2 I
3 t 26
31 26
'17 28

OBITUARIES

GF GA
,

,

.~YI•If. .~· : online
'

24 27

(

18 35
2 1 42

.

.,..,- ' ..~ ....
(

~

'

-'li

,

. . .·'· ,

,I·.

'

'

,

·~.-~

~"

'

.

s

,.

•,

...
'

_lilf'_
~

"-.

at www.Jon.pi•••com
:
.
..
·'

-

0

N TE Three pomts for VICtory one po1nt
tor lie

'

,

--:-

...

Page AS
• Corena Adams, 47 ·
• Gail Hovatter, 65
• Gary Mitch
• Martha Neal, 81
• Bernice Roush, 82
• Jack Seelig, 74
• Michael Wolfe, 65

-'
~­

--, .....

.INSIDE ·

~

\ -- ,~-

.

...

~--

w

•

'f

-&lt; • '
~

~'''

..

~tl'lV·!

lti!ll"' 50ilf.

Thursday 's Sports Transactloris
American League
BALTIMORE
ORIOLES - F1red Lee
MAZZIIII mana ger Named Sarn Perlozzo
1nterwn manager
·
BOSTON RED SOX ~ Piaced I B John
OIQrud on th e 15·day OL, retroactive to .Aug.
.1 Purchased the contrac t ot 18 Rober lo
Petag11e h om Pawtucket ot the IL
Ot;!Signa ted LHP Chns Narveson tor assign ment
.
CLEVt: LANO INDI AN S- Activated 1B
Trav+s Hafner tram the 15-d ay disabled list.
Op\loned OF Jason Dubo1s lo Bu ~a!o of the
IL.
SEATTLE MAR INERS-Oplloned RHP
Clint Nageotte to facoma of the PCL.
TEX AS RA NGERS--Purchased th e Contract o! RHP Steve Karsay lrom Fnsco of
the Texas L~ague D~s 1 gnumd LHP Ron
Mahay lm ass1gnrnent
Na11onal League
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS--Activated C
MlkP M&lt;ltheny from the bereavem'ent .hst.
OpliOned C Justm Knoedler to Fresno of the

• HCHS becomes
Wyngate's ex~lusive
owner. See Page A2
• Results of Friday's
Gallia lair livestock sale.
See j:lage A6
• Gallia fair honors
Kathryn Massie with
dedication. See Page A7
• Livestock sale reserve
champions. See Page AS

.

....'"..,-............

Transactions

~·u 11"w.:.; ·~

. ... ,,

.

.·-

WEATIIER

PCL
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
GOLDEN STATE WA RRIORS-Signed F
· Chns Taft to a mutt1year corwac t.
LOS ANGELES CLIPP ERS-Re·stgned
C .Zel1ko Rebraca to a mult1year con tract
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZ E RS~S1gned G
. Juan 01xor. and G Charles Sm1t"'.
FOOTBALL
National FOotball L~ a g ue
GR,E EN BAY PACKERS-S1gned RB
Oen1ck Johnese Wawed AB Ch r1S
Robertson
SEATILE SEAHAWKS-Traded CB Kns
A1chard to M1am1lor DE Ronald Flllmons

Wednesi:lay·s Games
HOCKEY
Pinst&gt;urgt1 9, San D1ego 8
National Hockey Leagu e
Washmgton 3. L A Dodgers 1
ANAHEI M MIGHTY DUCKS- Agreed to
Phitadelph ta 4, Ch1cago Cubs 3
terms w1th D Scott NiecitrmAyer and C Rcn .
Milwaukee 6. N.Y. Mets 4
N1edermayer on fow-yeM contracts
Cincinnati 8, Atlanta 5
BOSTON 'BRUINS-Agreed to.terms Wit h
· Sl. Louis 9. Flor1da 6
C Ale)(et Zhamnov on a three-year Gon tract
Houston 7, An zona 0
BUFFALO SABRES-AgreC!d to te rms
Colorado 3. San Fra nc1SCO 2
w!lti D Teppo Nu'!lm1nen en a one-year con·
Thursday's Games
tract
Milwaukee 12. N Y. Mats 9
CALGARY
FLAMES-Re-s1gned 0
San Die9o 12. Pittsburgh 7
Jordan Leopold to a lw'O ·~·ear contract and
Rti~ a del phia 6. Ch1ca go Cubs 4
F Daymond Langkow Traded F Chns Clark
San FranciSC(] 6. Colorado 4
to !he Washington Capttals lor a cond1t1onat
Washington 7, l A Dodgers 0
dratl DICk
Atlanta 7, Ctnc1nna11 4
C.A.ROLINA HUARICAN.I:S-Signed F
Flortda 4 , St LOUIS 3
Ke1th ,Aucom and I= Dav1d Gave to one-year
Anzona 7, Houston 3
contracts Agreed to lerms w1tt1 D Oleg
Friday's Games
L.A. Dodgers tlowe 7· 11 ) at P1ttsburgh TverdovsM;y on a three-year contraCt
CHICAGO BLACKHA"WKS-S1gned W
(Fogg 5-6), 7OS p.m
San Otego (P.Astac1o 0-21 at Wasr11ngton . Mart1nlapo1nte to a three-year contract and
0 Jar~slav Space~ to a one-vear con tract
(l.H ernandez 13-4). 7; 05 p.m
COLORAQO AVALANCHE:__Ae-stgned F
Milwaukee (Sheets 7-7) at Ph1tadetpt"1a
Alex Tanguay and 0 KJ'I Sa1Jer to one-year
(LitSi e 9 -9), 1·05 p m
Chicago Cubs (Hill 0·0) a1 N Y Mels conzracts
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-S1gned G
(Giav1ne 7-9). 7·10 p.m .
Florida (Vargas 1·0) at Ctncmnat1 (Milton Mart1n Prusek to a one-year con!l-act
DETROIT RED WINGS-S1gned D Chr1s
5· 11 ). 7 10 p.m
·
Atlanta (Smaltz 12·5), al St LOUIS [Mulder C~c 10s D Malh•eu Schne1der and F Jollan
Fran1en
12·5). 8 10 p.m
MfNNESOfA WILO~S •gned 0 Sco tt
Colorado (Coo ~ 0-1) at Anzortl:l (Webb 9·
Ferguson and D Kurtts Foster
8). 9·40 p m
Houston (Pettllte 9-7) at San Franc1sco • ~ ASHVILLE PREDATORS-S1gned D
Mark Eaton and 0 Sheldon Brookbank
(Schmtdl 7-6). 10 15 p m
· Saturday 's Games
NEW JERSEY DEVILS--Re-s1gf)ed 0
ChiCago Cubs at N Y Mets. 1 20 p m
Bnan Aalalsk1 to a two-year contract
S1gned 0 Vlad1m1r IAalakhov to a two-year
Anania at St. loUis. 1 20 p m
Houston at t;an Fr anc1sco. 4 05 p m
r:ontmct &lt;Jf'rJ 0 Dan Mr.G tlll'i
San Diego at Washmgton . 7OS p m
NEW YORK RANGFqS- Signt'd F Jason
L A Dodgers ar Pinsburgh. 7 05 p m
Ward &lt;l0d F V iC NICmtr'Cn
Mitwaukee&lt;!'at Phtladelph1a 7 05 p m
PHI~ADF! PHIA
Fl YFAS- -Traded F
Flonda at C1ncrnnart 7 10 p rrJe··e'T'Iy Rocn•&lt;:K and a 200f th ;rd-round
Colorado at Artzona 9 40 p m
1raft j.ll(' t.: ~o tN· Los Anqetes KlnJs !or future
_onSil'le&gt;ratl')r&gt;S
,
Sunday's Games
PITTSBURGH PENGUtNS ..;....S1Qned F
San 0 1ego at Wash1ngton 1 05 p m
Arijj r(! Roy to a tnre.:: -,ea · contract '
t'lorrda at CmCinnatl. 1 15 p m
L.A Dodgers at P11!Sburgh, 1 35 p m
TORONTO MA.P .. E -~E AFS - Re·Signed
Milwaut&lt;ee at Ptutadelpt11a. 1 35 p m
~~ T1e Q')rTll tO a il;&gt;"')·year cortract

:rJ
••

,-

Details on Page A2

.-

/

INDEX

:;.J

::J

I

'

:rJ

'

::.:J

"05JiepL . .rlf4_,
tC. S!oiuo

:rJ

-

'

..,_
·1"'JI,
~· ... -

rt~
•

--1

:::;..J

14

r·;..

._,..

~::

.
4

I

SEcnoNs -

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds

Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
W eather

'

-J
~-'
-..1

.....

28 PAGF.S

A3
C4
D Sect.i on
insert

A4
As
A6- 7
B Section

A2

© 2.nns Ohiu V111ley Publis hing Co.
.

• Taxes, Togs, Tille Fees.utto_On approved credit On selected models. Not r.esponsible
lor lypogrophical erro~. Prices good August 4th through AUgust 7th.

'

.... • J -

$t.r;ll • Vol.

.

:~IJ,

:'llo.

o• llott

MONDAY- SATURDAY 9 am - 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm- 7pm • 422·0756 • TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417

I.

:.!t) ·

Mei.gs man
demed
new tn·,al
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Paul Darst/photo

,Jackson-Hewitt Tax Service purchased Corey Haner's grand champion steer at Friday's annual
Galiia County Junior Fair livestock sale. From left are Little' Mr. Gai iia County Matthew Howes.
Junior livestock Princess runner-up Ellie Bostic , Little Miss Gal iia County Lexi Johnson, Fair
. Queen Jess ica Woodward, Jun ior Livestock Princess Michaela Hail , Livestock Queen runner-up
Alyssa Dray, Senior Live stock Princess Andrea VanMeter. Gene Brown of Jackson-Hew1tt.
Livestock Queen Kaitiin Angeli, Claudette Huggins of Jackson-Hewitt, Justin Morgan, Mark
Haner and Corey Haner.

GALLIPOLIS - Judge D.
Dean Evans has denied
Raymond Ward's motion for
a new trial on multiple rape
charges . .
Evans, who presided over
Ward's
Meigs - County
·Common Pleas Court jury trial
in June . by assignment. heard
testimony on Ward's motion
on July 27 in Gallipolis, and
filed an entry denying the
mol ion on Thursday.
· Ward. 33, of Rutland. was
convicted on six counts of
rape. and acquitted on four
other rape charges and a
charge of corrupting another
wi th drugs.
A second trial involving a
- second alleged victim, charging .him with lwo counts of
unlawful sexual conduct with
a minor, ended in a mistrial in
Jul y after a jury deadlocked.
A new trial on five charges
alleging unlawful sexual conduel with a minor, rape and
gruS&gt; sexual imposition involving lwo vic:tims.- has
been scheduled for Nov. 30:
Ward is al&gt;o charged with
similar se.«ual· offenses (n

Please see Trial, A5

Basket bingo
ends at local
Legion post
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILVSE NTINEL. COM

MIDDLEPORT .~

Basket
bingo evenl&gt; which have
be.:ome a flln night out and
fundraiser for rnaoy organiIC.evln Kelly/ photo
tiltions will ht' no more at
Jackson-Hewitt Tax Service and Leslie E. Smail Trucking purchased Lesley Smail's grand cham- Middkport ·'
Feeneypion lamb at Friday's annual G'ai iia County Junior Fair livestock sale. From left. front. are· Little . Ben nell Ameri,·an Legion
Mr. Gailia County Matthew Howes, Lesley .Smail and Little Miss Galli a County Lexi Joh ~ son : Po" 128.
standing, Livestock Queen runner-up Alyssa Dray, Livestock Queen Kaitlin Ange ll. Fair Queen
Jerry Hawley. finance::
Jessica Woodward, Gene Brown of Jackson-Hewitt and Leslie Small.
o ffi cer for .Feeney -Bennett,
said that the posl contacted
1he Oh io State Allorney
G ~ n e ral's Office to be sure it
was in compliance with the
law s concerni.ng basket
hi ngo_ He found out that
bas ket tiingo is considered
ac tual bingo and not amusement bing(l .
Amu se ment bingo does
not requi're a bi ngo license
by ihe organi zation sponsor-

th e game . Moni'ca
Mo lone y. semor deputy
attorney ge neral. charilable
law secti&lt;\n fro m Ohio
Atwrne y · General
Jim
Petro ·s_office .' said that basket hin go is not what is
referred to as amusement
bingo.- Amusement bingo is
tile onl y hingo game which
does not require a license bythe organi zation conducting
"nd th erefore benefiting
from th e game.
According to the Ohio
Re l'ised
Code
Section
c915_I 1, during amusement
Ill!_!

Kevin kell)' / photo

King Burley Tobacco, Lee and Lois Cade and family. Call Cattle Co. arid Montgo(nery's Barber
Shop purchased the grand champion tobacco project raised by Chase Caldwell at Fnday's Galiia
County Junior Fair livestock sales . From left. front. are Little Mr. Gailia Cou nty Matthew Howe's
and Little Miss Gallia County Lexi Johnson; back. Fai r Queen four th run ner-up Kristina Naylor,
Fair Queen Jessica Woodward, Senior Livestock Princess And rea Va nMeter. Chase Caldwell.
Harold Montgomery, Dwayne Cali , and [ee and
Lois Cade.
.

.

tQ._all

.
2~05

Please see Bingo, A5

of th_e exhibitoYs .and

'

-w inners of the
Gallia County Junior Fair!
0VALLEYB

I.... I 71 11:1 R.llojo fll&gt;lm' I.A IN l* l&lt;. lw"';JJI
l'fo.l lJ;Jlo"" fkl"'l C&gt;f\ tl'! ~I
~

GALLIPOLIS
Brisk'
bidding marked the tlrst .day
of livestock sales at the Galli a
County Junior Fair on Friday,
which saw th~ sale of more
than 140 lambs, 97 steer and
the \Op I 0 tobacco projects_
Jackson-Hewitt
Tax
Service purchased the 1,309pound grand champion steer
raised by Corey A. Haner of
the Millennium Force 4-H
Club for $4.80 a pound_
The reserve champion steer,
owned by Katie Hubble of the
Gallipolis Future Fanners of
America chapler, wa~· bought
for $4.40 a pound by a consortium of l(lur buyers, Jividen
Farm Equipment, John W. Clark
Oil Co., R&amp;C Packing and
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
The steer weighed 1.320
pounds.
Meghan Adams of the
Triangle 4-H Club, whose
I ,392-pound steer was judged
tl1e highest to place among
born and bred in Gallia
County projects, was recog, nized by Ohio Valley Bank_
Lesley Small of the
Thivener Pioneers 4-H Club
had both the grand and reserve
champion lamb in the sale. Her grand champion,
weighing 122 pounds. fetched
a price of $35 per pound from
Jackson-Hewitt Tax Service
and Leslie E. Small Trucking.
The reserve champion, at 124
pounds, was bought for $36 a
pound by Ohio Valley Bank .
Kaillyn Angell's third ranked lamb was judged the
best among Gallia Counlyborn and bred projects.
Angell received a $500 savings bond for the distinction
from Willis Funeral Home.
Chase Caldwell of the
Gallia Guys &amp; Gals 4-H Club
had the grand champi on
tobacco project out of the top
I0 selected for the sale _ It
was purchased for. $1,000 by
King Burley Tobacco, Lee
and -Lois Cade and their family, Call Cattle Co. and
Montgomery's Barber Shop .
Megan Daines of the Gallia
Explorers 4-H Club repeated
as reserve champion this year
with her tobacco project,
which fetched $700 from
Angell Accounting.
Complete
results
of
Friday's sales appear inside
today 's edition.
Fair officials were pleased
with che sale results, ·and Fair
Board President Eugene
Elliott noted that only a few of
the steers sold fell below $ 1.25
per pound in the bidding .
Those projects that did fall
below that level were broughl
up by Jush Bodimer and Kyle
and Sarah DeeL
"Overall , il went pretty
, well," Elliott said_
,
' Auctioneering duties were
again handled by Lee Johnson
and Donnie Craft, but for the
tirst time this year. they got
some · assislance from Josh
Bodimer. Bodimer told lhe
audience that becoming an auctioneer at the sales had been a
drerun he 's had since youth_
The fair 's 47th annual mar•
ket hog sale was conducted
Saturday in the show arena.
Complete results of that sale
will appear in Monday's
Gallipoli s Daily Tribune.

c·o.ngratiA

....
. lt... ..
Yllll • enllne •• •••·•• I , • ._. . .

Meigs counties

KKELLY@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

f

.t,

'

• ~licldh•pm1• (;allipnlis • An~nst -, :wo;;

BY KEVIN KELLY

II

'

l'nnll'l 'n~

'•

Bidding came fast io livestock sales

SPORTS

I

·. ·

•

Ohin \'alley Puhlishin~ C'o.

,,

25 23

House of the Week:
Once upon a cottage, 01

·Hometo~ News for Gallia &amp;

•

I

30 23

LIVING

un

·I.

34 25

RIVER .

Meigs Fair grand~and events·
offer 'something for everyone,: Cl

Added Perlozzo: "Are we
as good as we were lhe first ·
two months? I'm not sure.
But we do know lhat we
aren 't as bad as we are now."
One thing Mazzilli didn't
expect was for Sammy Sosa
to stru~gle as badly. as he has
in hi s hrst season back m lhe_
American League. Sosa. fifth'
·on 'baseball's career home ru·n
li st, wenl into Thursday hitling jusl .235 with 13 homers
and 38 RBis in 86 g~mes. ·
Perlozzo was a minor
.league manager for five seasons before becoming a third
base coach in 19!:17 With the
New York Mets. where
Mazzilli spent the final three
years of his playing career.
, Perlozzo also worked UJider
Davey Johnson, Lou Piniella,
Ray Miller and Mike
Hargrove b~ fore Mazzilli got
his first managing job and
kepi Perlozzo on the staff. ·

I

Saturday 's Games
CD Ctuvas USA at Rea l Salt La ke, 6 p m.
Kansas C1 ty at New Englund B p m
D C United at Ch1cago. 8:30 p.m
,MetroS1ars Bt FC Dallas. 8·30 p m
Los Angeles at Colorad o. 9 p.m
Columbus at San Jose. 10 p m
Wednesday, Aug . 10
MetroSta rs at D.C. United, 7 :3!) p.m.
Real Salt Lake at New England . 7:30p.m.
Kansas C1ty at Ghicago 8:30p.m
Los Angele s at C O Ch1vas USA. 10 p.m
6.
'
.
Saturday, Aug . 13
HOME RUNS-ARo!ll rigu ez. New York ..
CO Ch1vas USA at 0 C Ulllled. 4 p.m.
30; MRamirez, Boston. 30. Teixe1ra. Texas.
Los Angeles at Ch1cago, 8.30 p.m.
28: ASonano. Texas, 26: Sexson. Seattle.
Nmv England at FC Dallas. 8 30 p.m
26: DOrtiz. Boston. 25, Konerko. Chteago.
Kansas C1ty ut R e&lt;~l Salt Lake. 9·30 P. m
25.
Colorado at San Jose 10 p m
STOLEN BASE5-Podsednlk ChiCago.
Sund&lt;Jy Au g t 4
52: ,Figgin s. Los Angeles. 37. Crawford.
Columbus at Me1mStars, 6 p m
Tampa B~y. 34. Lugo. Tampa Bay. 30.
.!Suzuki. Seattle. 24. THunler. M1nnesota.
23: Womack. New York. 23.
•

PITCHING

•

5ocCEi'

Eastern Conference
WL
T Pts
ChiCago
11 7
3 36
N€w E nglr~nr1
10 J 6 36
D.C. Un1ted
8 6 5 29
Kansas C1ty
7 . 5 8 29
7 6 7 28
MetroStars
CoturnbJs
G ·o 3 2 1
Weste·11 Conference
W L T Pts
FC Dallas
10 5 4 34
g 4
7 34
Sun Jose
Los Angeles
A . 7 5 , 29
Colorado
6. 11 3 2 1
Real Salt Lake 4 1 t ..\
16
CD ChiV8S
3 14 3 12

.'

'

Friday, Augusts, 2005

Orioles fire Mazzilli, name Perlozzo manager

The Scoreboard

.

'

·I
'

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="507">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9958">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17498">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17497">
              <text>August 5, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4435">
      <name>haovatter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1864">
      <name>mitch</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1447">
      <name>stumbo</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
