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•

Friday, August 7,

2005

2005 GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR -FAIR
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Racine first to implement source water protection

SPORTS
• Stewart gets coveted
Indy victory. See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

RACINE - According to
the Ohio Departmenl ' of
Environmental Protection ;
Radne is the firsl co mmunity
in Meigs County to iinple- .
ment a source water protectio n plan to protect their
drinking wate r.
, ·
Source Waler Protection
Plans are part ' o f a US EPA
program to help protect
· sources of drinking water.
. The program is vol untary for
ommunities but mandatory
for the Ohio EPA. .
Debra Prim is a local representative of the Ohio EPA
and recently altended the fi rst

· _lan McNemar/ photos

Eva n Bowman completes a full pull in the kidd ie tracto r pull event Friday on the main stage.

OBITUARIES

meetin2 of the Raci ne Source
Water Protection Committee.
Prim' s job is to help the .:ommittee idenli fy possible walcr
contaminants and how to protect and educate the public
abo ut keeping their water
suppl y clean.
Prim's job is not to ' mandate but assist Racine residents in 'developing a protec,tion plan .
"You know what 's appropriate fo r you and what wil l
work for yDLrr ·commun ity,"
Prim to ld the committee
composed of Racine res idents representin g vi llage
coun cil , Southern Loca l
Schools and the· Ohio Rural
Water Association .

The wmmittce is headed
by .
Raci ne
Street
CommiS&gt;ioner John Holman.
Ral·iile currently has three
wells from which their water
is derived. Two of the wel ls
were &lt;:onstructed in 1951 and
will be rep laced in the ncar
future vii an Appalachian
Regional Commission grant.
The thi rd well was constructed in 1995 .
Prim said that one of the
most common pollutant&gt; of
wel l water in Southe-astern
Ohio core nitrates 'created
from fertil izers absorbed into
the so iL
AIthoug h the . level of
nitrates in Racine's water
supp ly are elevated they are

wel l below what 1s permissi- defensive strategy to protect
ble. The eleva ted numbers the water .supply as is
suggest the contamination is requesting sampling for C8
not from ·a natu~al but man- on a regu lar basis, at least
made source .
according to Prim.
The comm it1ee's JOh wi ll
Prim felt the sampling was
be to identify othe r P'"sihlc justitled by Raci ne's proximcontamination sources and to it y to both Tuppers Plains and
educate homeown er.; on 1hc Pomeroy which have both
proper disposa l of che mi cals tested positive for C8. In fact
such as antifreeze, pesticides. Racine has purchased water
motor ui I. etc.
from Tuppers Plains during
Pri m also gave the &lt;:om mit- emergencies, includi ng twice
tee a list o( pol lu tion protc&lt;:- this year.
tion grants tha t may assist
The
Source
Water
them in educating the publ ic. Protection Plan Committee
espec ially chi ldren abou t wi ll meet once a month for
where their drinking water the next five months to
co mes from.
implement
its
plan.
Impl ementing a Source Co mmunity participation is
~a t er Protection Plan is a
we lcome .

Fair B.oard plans Sunday dedication Local cult
~~~ompson-Roush building :~~ts
•• c...

Page AS
• Corena K. Adams, 47
• Theresa 'June' Kincaid, 53
• Dwight E. Logan, Sr., 82
•Bernice R. Roush, 82

at Madrid--. . . .

HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The new
Thompson-Roush bui ld in g
on
the Rock
Spr ings
Fairgrounds will be dedicated
in ceremoni es by the Meigs
County Agricultural Society
at 4 p.m. Sunday.
The 60x 140 foot buildin g
• U.S. Embassy will close has been constructed in the
location near the main
Saudi offices after security entrance to the fairgrounds,
th real. See Page A2
former location of a smaller
building which was torn
• Deadlocked North
down ear.l ier thi s year to make
Korean nuclear talks
way for the new structll re.
suspended until week of
While the building is not
expected
to be totall y· comAug. 29: See Page A2
pleted before the fa ir opens,
• ·British police arrest
Ed Holter, fair board presisuspect accused of
dent, said it will be used thi s
year for the flow er show
organizing jihad training
exhi bits, the domestic arts discamp. See Page A2
play. the grange exhibits, and
• Law You Can Use.
the antique tractors and supplies. " It wi ll be ready enough
See Page A3
for us lo use," said Holter.
• Auditions ior The
Wayne
and
Louella
Ariel Jr. Theatre and
Thompson Roush provided
funding for construction of
The ~riel Players begin.
'the building Ia honor their
See Page A3
parents, Bob and Al ice
• For the Record.
Thompson and Orion and
·Kate Roush. Both couples rind
See Page A3
their families have bee n very
• Justice Stevens calls
active in the Meigs County
attention to 'serious
fair for many years. The strucflaws' in death penalty
ture has been named "The
TI1ompson-Roush
Building.''
See Page AS
"Th rs handicap •iccessible
• Smaller tumors, not
building is being given to the
just better treatments,
Rock Springs Fair ii1 appreci ation
to all the people who
boosting breast cancer
have made the fa ir so suesurvival. See Page AS
cessful lh rough the years and
who wi ll contiirue to make
. the fair an educational and

·.CO~~e~ence
Ill~

Michaela Colvin, 10. watches her brother. Garrett.
13. finish a game of ski ball Friday at the fair.

Under the security of an umbrella to protect
the ra in shower, Gretchen Faudree. 21, left, gets
a sno-cone while her friend . Alex Clark, 13, enjoys
the more traditiona l fair food - a carame l apple
- Friday at the fair.

·· rhls i~ my hnsin&lt;':'s. Sto~ying

aht·ad of the w:unc
fC(\Uill~S tO!;tl lltlfntiQn.

A nm.slnnlfll(·u~un. wh.ltS'

happening ri~ht t\ll\\o'.
Ohio Mutual nndcrshmds."
Pmgn~t'.

lrtno\-alivc.

(nm pchth't'. Ohio MutuaL

h's. nur bw:lint:ss to kltf•w.

Cuh Cadet ){r
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•

Home
Farrn

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Bu si nc~~

2 St::t..'T IUNS- 12 PAGES

AT

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Details on Page A6

'

Seri1es 7000
Tractors

Calendars

A3

Classit1eds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries

1150 Eastern Ave. (St. Rt. 7} • Gallipolis, OH
0 Tum Rider

•

INDEX

..

(740) 446-9777 • (740) 446-2484

Charlene Hoefllch/ photo

Dedication of The Thompson-Roush Building on the Rock Springs Fa irgrounds will take place at
4 'p.m. Sunday. Wl1ile the structure is not expected to be com pletely finishe d by the time the
2005 Fair opens Monday, it wil l used this yea r for exhibits.
fun family ac ti vity for many and was a commercia l
. years· to come," sa id th e exhibi tor when he sold tracdonors. " It is to be used to tors and farm equip,ment.
fu rther the lifelong interests
Alice has actively participatof both couples."
ed in the llnwer shows at the
The Thompsons have par- lirir for more th&lt;in 60 ye:rrs .
ticipated in fair activi ties for She is a mem ber of the
many years. As a construe- Winding Trai l and Chester
tion contractor, Bob bui.lt .Garden Clubs as well as the
some of the buildings 011 the Master Gardener's Club and
grounds along wilh moving has taken top honors in the
the · 1828 Jog cabin frum llower shows. honi&lt;:ulturc and
Seneca Drive to' the fair- domestk ar1s lkpartments. For
grounds and restoring the hi., - many years when her chiklren
toric grandstand and gra nge were in 4-H she was a leader.
Orion and Kate Ruush
haiL Over the years he has
won trophie s with hi s antique were very involveU with
engines and ribbons for horti - t:o unty l'air \tcti\·itie:-. when
culture exhibits he exhibited. they had their dairy farm at

Salem Center. Both were
leaders of sevcr'il -1-H clu bs
including the Salem Center
Boys doh and the Sale n1
Cen ter Gi rls Cluh . alon g wi th
the Better Li l'cs·to&lt;:k Cluh
and the Tractor CILih.
Wayne \\1as very J.£tive in

4- H and was pres idc)ll or the
Junior Fair Board when tl1e
first 1unior fair building was
huilt .and the Roushs' d&lt;:ughter. Dixie. woo\ many top honi&gt;rs with hcr_-l: H projects and
was the fairquecn in 196-l.
Orion is now decca~ed anU
Kate at ;,.ure g9 now l ive~ in
Hou~ton ..;ncr many year s. in
Mcig~ County.

informati On

in

Mad rid , Spain. at one of the
largest conferences in the hi story of cult research.
Dr.
Paul
Marti n. director of the
Wellspring
Retreat and
. Re sou r ce
Center 111 rural
Meigs County
was ,

coinci·

de1itally, confro
nting ., topM.:rrtln
ics suc h as terrorism. governr!1ent and legal
1"ues. specific group information. research and ass istam:e. at the Interna tiona l
Culiic Studi es Association
l'Oil fcrcnce .
The ICSA holds confe rencc~ oft en to try to confrc;Hit
tire i." ue of cults and terrori ~m. Martin said.
· "The place and timing were
interesti ng heca use the Con- .·
ferem.:e was sandwiched
between the two London
bclmhings.'· . Ma rtin said.
"The ICSA had 'presenteis
· from all ,wer the world. both
Or. Paul

Please

s~e

Martin, AS

Fair exhibit registration ends

· Bv' BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAilYSENTINEL, COM

JtM's FARM EQUIPMENT
Z-FORCE

sent in g

.Get rid of old
·appliances

"
Insurance
· Real Estate

For her first year in 4-H and her first year showing,
Jessi Burgin. 10, of Whiz Kids 4-H will end the
week with success. Her class 7 market hog was
named s~cond in its class Tuesday during the
market swine show.

ALBANY - As the terror~
ist attacks in London were
taking pial:~ last month, a
local expert on cults was pre-

WEATHER .

&amp;~114·- '~~toMe.~
Steve Davies of the Red Dot for Kids campaign
passes out fans . to passers-by at the fair
Thursday. The Gallipolis City S~hoo l s' Red Dot
for Kids campaigners stand along sid..: the Local
Schools' Qual1ty Schools for Quality Students
Gallia, County native Paul "Bub". Will iams. II. performs campaigners. both ·raising awareness of the
need for. new schools in Gallia County.
for fans on the main stage Friday night.

.1'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILY.S ENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

A staple of the any fair, the ferris wheel aecorates the fairgrounds, inviting everyone to ride.

d ,u h ·· • ulou I • •,,. ,

~

'

Haley Angel, 12, shows her class four market hog Tuesday in the show arena. Angel won first place
in the c·lass and fifth in the division, classes one tl1rough eight Angel also won first place in show'tylanship earlier that day.
·

111 \

Big Country
6x6 Utility Vehicle

'B Section

Spmis
Weather
~·

A6

•

2Utl,j Ohin Vullt•)

ruhli~llillK

CH.

SYRACUSE - Now the residents of Meigs·
County wi ll have an opportunity to get rid of
old appliances that arc wllccting dust in their
basements during Syracuse 's Re&lt;:y&lt;: lable ·
Recycle Days.
.
Recyclable Recycle Days will take place fmm
8 a.m. to 4 p.m .. Aug. 26·-28 at the parking lot
near the Syracuse Village gunrge.
Mark Hart of H&amp;S Hau ling and Home
Maintenance will be providing a trailer to store the
appliances. Hart will also offer free pick-up serv ice
for tho'c that cannot make the drop ofT point.
· Those wishing to have appliances pi&lt;:ked up
during the three day event should call Hart at
the following numbers: 4,4 7-2151, 447-2152.
.
992-3140.
Han will take anything· metal including air conditioners. hot w;1ter tanks. washers, dryers. refrigerators. stoves. wire. aluminum cans. etc Basically
he will take any thing metal and recyclahle.
He will not take tires or trash.
Rccydabk Recyding Days is a free 'en·ice
ami available not justt() Syracuse rcsllknts. Hart
said ho. will a&lt;:cept materials and make pic~ ups ·
, from thrnughuut Meigs County. " . '
•

•
Charlene Hoeftlch/ photo

Hundreds of entries for exh1bits 111. the various depa rtments of display of.the 2005 Meigs County Fair were
made before the 4 p.m. deadline Saturday at the Fa &lt;r Board qffice on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Here
Jayme Hill of R·ac1ne enters t he SIX·montll-qld son of her sister-1n-law. Janey Bnn age r of Ra c&lt;ne. in the pretty baby contest to be ,held on Saturday morn1ng of fair week on the hill stage. Sl1e is given ass istance of
Sara Mansfie ld . an employee in the fair board office.
'·
·

�•

AROUND THE WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2 ,
Monday, August 8, 2005

Deadlocked North Korean nuclear talks suspended until week of Aug. 29 US. Embassy
Bv ALEXA OLESEN
Diplomats say the talks are
will close Saudi
deadlocked over the North's
rel&lt;ttnmg
insistence
on
BEIJING to '"peaceful nuclear acttvtttes"
&lt;?ffices cifter
North Korean dtsarmament and what tt would get for gt'·
talks announced a three-week mg up tls arms program.
recess Sunday after 13 days
security threat
Pyongyang says it won't
t;&gt;f meetmgs, deadlocked over
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Envo~s

what the Nonh would recetve
for
re nouncmg
atomtc
weapons and us mststetlce on
retamm g a peaceful nuclear
program
T&lt;~lks are to resume the
week of Aug. 29, Chmese
Vice Foretgn Mtmster Wu
Dawet
told
reporters
However, he warned that
even after the bre&lt;~k. "'I can "t
say for sure that we wtll reach
agreement:·
The
suspcnston
was
announced after the chtcl
envoys from the stx governments met Sunday mmmng 111
a final cllort to produce a
statement ol prmctplcs meant
to gUide lutur~ ncgoliations
atmed ·at petsuadmg North
Korea to gtve up nuclear
devdopmcnt.
"'Dunng the recess. the stx
parlles "til report ti&gt; theu
respecti'e go,etnmenls and
study ways 10 solve the dtflcrences."' Wu tokl reporters outside the bulidtng where the
three-hour meet mg took
place·
'" They are supposed to
mamtain collldCl and cunsultatJons during that rer..:ess.''
Wu said
The chtef U.S. envoy.
Assistant Secretary of St&lt;~te
Christopher Hill. stood beside
Wu for photos but made no
comment. China. the meeting's host, tssued d ··chatrman ,s statement'' mstead of
the planned JOmt statement
It said the gove rnment s
"reattirmed that the ~oa l of
the stx-party talk s ts the denucleanzation ot the Korean
Penmsula 111 a peaceful man·
ner and agreed to tssue &lt;1 common paper-to thts enJ ··

1

gtve up such w.capons until
Washmgton t.hscards tts "'hostile poltctes"' toward the
North, removes any nuclear
threat from the Korean
Penmsula &lt;tnd nornulizes
re lauons wnh the country\
Staltnist government
The North also w,mts &lt;tid in
exchange for freezing nuclear
development. and then more
fot dtsmantling the program
Washmgton wants to see the
p10gtam ventl:tbly dtsman ·
tkd before provtding any
rewards.
The dtspute erupted 111 late
2002 ,tfter U.S . olltcials satd
the North admmed 'tolallng
a IIJ94 deal by embarkmg on
~•

Bv DONNA ABU-NASR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

secret uranJum cnn(hmenf

program Pyongy.mg later
v-.ithdrew from the tlllern,tllonal
Nuclear
Non ·
Prohferatton Tre,ll~
In February. the Nmth
claimed it had nudeat
weapons.
Htll met Saturddy wtth
Chme se and North Korean
oil tctals 111 what he satd was
,m ,tttempt to lind ways to
speed up the negouauons. hut
l1e satd the mee11ng made httie progress.
"
Htll on Fnd,ty challenged
the North·, inststence on
tetaming ,1 peaceful nuclear
program. pointt ng to its
Je~o:OJd
of con\eJting a
res~arch rem:tor lor weapons
USt:

He WdS rerernng to the
North\ mam nucl ear com·
plex at Yongbyon, purported·
ly bu il t r(lr research wtth
Sovtet ,tsststance but later
turned tnto the headquarters
tor the North's nucledf
wedpotlS program

AP Photo

North Korean Vtce Fore1gn Mm1ster Kim Kye Gwan waves to JOurnattsts as he arnves at a press
conference 111 the North Korean Embassy followtng th e an nouncement of a recess Ill dtsarma·
ment talks 1n BeiJillg Sunday. Behtnd htm ts a portrait of late North Korear1 leader Ktm tt Sung.
Envoys to North Korean disarmament ta lks announced a three-week recess Sunday after 13
days of meettngs, deadlocked over the North's mststence on retammg .a peacefu l nuclear prog~m.
.

At U.S. request, British police arrest suspect
=accused of organizing jihad training camp
: Bv CATHERINE McALOON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

"

•

: LONDON - A suspected
[slamic mtlitant deported to
. Britain was ,trrested Sunday
: on a U S warrant accusing
: htm of taking steps to orga·
oize a tra"inmg caml? in
.Pregon to prepare )ihad
fig hters tn A fghantstan ,
. poli'e said
. · The arres t of Haroon
-Rashid Aswat, a Bntish citt- ·
zen of lndtan descent, comes
as Brittsh prosecutors satd'
they would constder treason
eharges agamst any lslamic
extremists who· express support for terronsm
: The U.S. warrant accuses
· A swat of conspiring Wtth
others between October 1999
and April 2000. to set up a
camp m Bly, Ore., atmed at
traming and equippthg indtvtduals to "tig ht Jihad 111
Afghanistan," pohce satd tn a
statement
Aswat, 30. had been
detamed tn Zambta stnce
July 20 where he was questioned about 20 phone calls
reported ly made on hts South
Alncan cell phone wnh some
ol the hnmbers responsthle
for the Julv 7 tran stt attacks
in London ihat ktlled 52 people and the lour bombers. He
was deponed Sunday to
Bntain. satd Zambtan Home
Affatrs Sec retary Peter
Mumba
,
Aswat 1' one of two associates of the Mu,ltrn clcnc Abu
Hamza ai•ivla&gt; ri wno are
referred to but not named or
charged in a 2002 tndtctment
issued by a federal grand JUry
in Seattle agamst a Muslim
-convert from the area, offi. cials ha ve said The other ts

Ouss&lt;~ma

Kassit, ,1 Lebanesebot n Swede, who was convicted of weapons vtolations
in Sweden in 2003
Aswat and Kasstr "inspected the proposed jihad trammg camp at the Bly property
.. and they and others partictpated in ftrearms training
and vtewed a vtdeo recording
on the subject of improvised
pmsons" in November and
December 1999, the indictment said
Meanwhile,
Attorney
General Lord Goldmsith's
office said the Crown
Prosecution Servtce's head of
antt-terronsm would meet
wtth senior Metropohtan
Pohce officers to dtscuss posstlile charges agamst three
promtnent clerics as pa~t of a
crackdov-.n on those the government beheves are mcttmg
terrori sm
Clencs
Omar
Bakrt
Mohammed. Abu lzzaden
and Abu
Uzatr. have
appeared on Brittsh television tn recent days and a
spokeswoman for Lord
Goldmsnh"s office satd prosecutors and poltce would
look at remarks made by the
three and constder whether
they cou ld face charg es of
treason. mcnement to treason. sohctl&lt;jliDn of murder. or
tncnement to v-.ithhold mfor.mauon known to be ol use to
pohce .
Mohammed has reportedly
satd smce the Jul~ 7 attacks
that he would not tnform
pohce tf he knew Mu:;hm:;
were planmng another attack
and he · &gt;upport:; msurgents
who attack troops 111 Iraq and
Afgharitstan.
"No decision on charge&gt;
ha&gt;been made yet."" the attar-

ney general's office spokeswoman said, speaking anonymously because Brillsh civil
servants are rarely allowed to
be quoted by name.
The spokeswoman said
prosecutors may also seek
access to taped recordings
made by an undercover
Sunday Times reporter who
reportedly recorded members
of a radical group praismg
the suictde bombers as "'The
Fantastic Four."
The newspaper's story said
its reporter spent two months
as a "recruit" of the grc;&gt;Up,
the
Savior Sect , and
described the organizatton as
mcitmg
young
Briush
Mu sltms to become terrortsts.
· Also Sunday. Brittsh police
charged two addtttonal suspects in the fa iled July 21
attacks. Ibrahim Muktar
Satd, 27. who ts accu'sed of
trymg to detonate a bomb on
a bus Ill east London. and
Ramzt Mohamtiled. suspected of attempting the Oval
undergrou nd train bombing .
were arrested in raids in west
Lol'ldon on Jul y 29. police
satd
All three July 2 1 bombmg
suspects in Bnush police
custody have now been
charged A fourth . knov-..n
both as Osman Hussam and
Hamdt Issac, was arrested 111
Rome and ts bemg held there
on mtcrnatJUnal terronsm
charges.
The three face charges of
conspiracy to commtl murder, attempted murder. maktng or po:;sessmg an explosive SUOStance With intent to
endanger life or cause serious
lllJury; and conspit acy to use
explostves

Tt w~s cold, col~, very
cold, says suryJ1vor pry.
trapped Russzan .mznz-sub_
surface was kept to a mmi mum.
The crew member wtth reddtsh hair satd he felt .PK and
was eager to be reumted wuh
his wtfe and daughter. He was
then ushered m the van takmg
the men to the hospital and dtd
not reply when asked hts
name .
Russian authonttes thanked
the Bntish and pratsed the
internatiOnal effort that mclud·
ed the United States, but crilt·
ctsm quick)y arose over why
the nahan's once-fonmdable
navy needed outside help.
The relief over the success·
ful rescue attempt was in
sharp contrast to the sinking of
the Kursk nUclear submarine
in August 2000, when Russian
authorities held off asking for
outside assistance unttl hope
was nearly exhausted; all 118
crew died.
Pt estdent Vladimir Putm
was crittctzed then for reluctance to seek mternational
help and for tematmng on
vacation as the disaster
unfolded The ptesident has
been silent through the present
ct ists as well. although hts
spokesman Alexet Gromov
said Putm. was grate! ul to all
those mvolved in the rescue
ope rat ton.
Defense Mtmster Serget
Ivanov, who supervtsed· the
1\'scue operat ton from a na~ y
shtp. clenched hts fists and
shook them m happmess when

Bv VLADIMIR
ISACHENKOV
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PETROPAVLOVSKKAMCHATSKY, Russta The seven men endured darkness and frigid temperatures
for three days unlil their
Russian mini-submarine was
freed Sunday from the Pacitic
floor by a British temote-controlled vehtcle as oxygen supplies dwindled
" It wa s cold, cold , very
cold I can't even descnbe lt,"
one crew member with reddtsh hatr said as the satlors
walked ashore wJth dazed
looks and bloodshot eyes after
their vessel was cut loose
from cables that had snagged
ll '
The men aboard the AS-28
mtnt-submarine - six satlors
and a iepresent,utve of the
company that made the ship
- had opened the h,uch and
climbed out without assistance. offictals said.
Six were taken Jo a hosptial
on the mamland for examination , waving to relatives as
they went in The seve nth was
kept abomd a hospital ship for
unspecdied reasons They
appeared to be in .. salisfactory'"
cond ition,
naval
spokesman Capt. lgOJ Dy£alo
satd
At the edge of the gangplank leading off the ' htp that
brought the ctew to shore. the
submarine's &lt;.:omm:mder Lt. he ~au1 the red-and-whneYyacheslav Mtlashevsky held . striped sub surfacmg.
a long and so lemn s.tlute . then
"We have seen m deeds, not
a slight snule crossed hts face. m words. what the brotherHe was 'pale but told JOUr- hood of the sea means," he
nalisb he Jell "'line" before sat d.
climbing mto a va n w!lh the
The Foreign Mmtstry also
others
for
the
tnp
to
the
hospitssued a sta\e ment pratsmg the
r
tal Anothet crew member 111 JOint action s ot the Russian.
the van looked from stde to Bnush and US militanes in
stde. gaLtng at the green trees _the "umque rescue operation··
and gra) ,k,tes.
It also I han ked Jap,m, which' 11
Mtlashcvsky"s "lie, Yelena. satd also re sponded to the
satd earlter that &gt;he was over- request tor he Ip.
Joyed upon heanng .tbout the
The United St&lt;ttes sent
Chicago. with 128.000. and rescue ··1 was h&lt;tppy. I cned remote-controlled underwater
New York County. also from ha ppmess I danced."" vehtcles lor the rescue. They
knov-. n as Manhattan. wtth she told Channe l One televt· arnved several hours later and
103.000
SIOn .
were not used. but three
In 2003. businesses 111 Los
The men l1ad worn thermal Amen can divet s and a doctot
A ngc lc s County lmed 3 8 suns to protect them a~.ttns t accompat\ted the Bnttsh vesmtllmn workers who earned temperature~ ol .thnut' 40 se) on th mission.
Sl -17 btllton Mc.um lul e. degrees and were told to he
'rhe jubtlatton came after
Cook County had 2-+ mil lion ll,u and hreathe &lt;Js li ghtly ,ts three tense d.tys that staned
employee' 1\ ho made S I02 posstble dunng the rescue ThUJ sd&lt;~y when the :W-foot
tJt llt on. and Manhattan had 2 eftort. ollkial s s,ud To con- subm,Jt ine sttan\\ed in 600
mtllton workers wllh .t . p.ly - serve electricity:;-lights were feet 01 V.dlet: Olf - the
mll nf S 1-+8 htl It on
tw ned &lt;~T and cout,tct wnh the KamdMtka UJdst.

Census report: Los Angeles leads
nation in jobs,_NYC in wages ·
LOS ANGELES IAP J For your best shot at a JOb.
consider worktng 111 Lo s
Angeles. a_ut if you want a
higher wage. try New Yot k
C:iry.
'
A new U.S C:ensu s Bureau
report released Monday
shows populou&gt; Los Angeb
C:ounty leads the natton wtth
the htghe&gt;l number of bu51·
nesses while Manhattan tops
the chart wtth the htgheq

average, salary.
The b"ureau ·s 2003 County
Bu1mess Pattern' report analyzes bustness estabhsh ·
ments tn more than 1.000
tndustnes on &lt;~ national. state
and local le vel The data ts
used by bu,me" planners otn
study economtc ,tllJ\ it y
In the rep01t. Los Angeles
County ~.td 235.()00 bu ~t·
neS'es. fo llowed hy Cook
County.
Ill . h"m~ to

RIYADH , Saudi ArabiaThe U.S Embassy and consulates in Saudt Arabia will
close Monday and Tuesday
because of a threat against
U.S. government butldmgs.
the embas~y said Sunday.
In a statement, the embassy
said mtsston personnel will
lt mit nonoft"tctal travel dunng
the next two day s and urged
Amencans to keep ·'a htgh
level of vtgtlance." The statement dtd not elaborate on the
nature of the threat.
"The Am~ncan Embassy in
Riyadh advises all Amencan
ciltzens living ilt Saudt
Arabia that, in response to a
threat against U.S. government buildings in the kin~­
dom, the U.S. Embassy 111
Riyadh and the U.S consulate generals in Jiddah and
Dhahran wtll be closed on
Aug 8 and 9," the statement
said .
It reminded Amencans
that, in the past, terronst
groups have targe ted housing
compounds and other establishments where Westerners
may be located
" American ciuzens are ..
ad~ised to exercise caution
and maintain good silllatlonal
awareness when visitmg
commercia l estabhshments·
frequented by Westerner.s or
111 pnmanly We stern envtronmem'l." !he-statement added
Hours alter the announcement , a Saudt lntenor
Mtntstry spokesman. MaJ.
Gen Mansour al-Turkt, sa td
hts governmen t had no mlormatton abou t a posstble
threat.
"'We can't dtspelthe posst bthty ol a terronst attack ha ppenmg 111 the rcgmn. But we
have no mformation about an
tmminent terron st attack m
the kmgdom," he satd.
The U.S. Embassy warnmg
was the second m two weeks.
On Jul y 25, the embassy
warned Amencans th&lt;~l mthtants hkely were plotting new
terror attacks in the kingdom.
It said US milttary personnel stalioned in Saudi Arabia
had been mstructed to suspend all off-duty leisure travel outside of thetr work or
housing stations.
Stnce May 2003, Islamic
militants have carrted· out
numerous sutcide bombings,
including on Western housing
compounds, and ktdnappmgs
and have regularly battled
security forces. The attacks
have been blamed on alQatda and its allies.
Meanwhile,
Foretgn
Mimster Prince Saud said
Sunday
that
relations
between the Saudi and U.S.
governments had tmproved
tremendously since the
attacks of Sept. 11 , 200 I, m
whtch 15 of the 19 hijackers
were Saudts.
But, on the unoffictal level.
ltcs had not returned to the
degree of trust that extsted
before the attacks. he satd
'"The relatJOn shtp has
tremendously
tmproved,..
Saud satd at a news conference. "'Whether tt has
returned to the same level as
it was before Ill pubhc opmIOn m .the Ul)ited St,ates ts
debatable.
'"We are domg everything
that we can to help and
encourage the trust that cxtsted before between the two
cou11tnes in pubhc optmon / '
Saud said Vice Prestdent
DICk Cheney"s recent trip to
the kingdom to offer his condolences on the death of King
Fahd "cou ld only help "
improve ties.
I
Relattons between Riyadh
.md Washmgton suffered
after the Sept II attac ks
mastermmded by the Saudiborn Osama bin Laden. Some
U S officials blamed the
kingdom's ,tustere branch of
Islam, known as Wahhabism.
lor encouragmg hatred of the
West , ChristJans and Jews
Saudt Arabta believed it
was bemg unjustly blamed
tor the acuons of bm Laden ,
who seeks to topple the AI
Saud monarchy.
"The ObJecttve of the
whole .tctton of the terrorist&gt;
111 tllat horrendous act of murdermg and mayhem ol mnocem people was to ere-are rhis
spin." Saud satd

'

•

"

.

•

•

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Aug. 8
ATHENS - Region 14
youth council meetmg. 9
·a.m ,
Athens
County
Department of ;Job and
Fami.Jy Servtces, Oh10 13 m
Chauncey.
Thesday, Aug. 9
POMEROY Bedtord
Township Trustees wtll meet
at 7 p m. at the town hall ·
RUTLAND - Leading
Creek Consetv,mcy Distnct
spectal rneetmg. 5 p m , to
discuss in surance
Wednesday, Aug. 10 ...
Meigs
POMEROY County Board ol Healt h, 5
p.m.. conference room of
Health Dep&lt;trtment office

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Aug. 8
POMEROY Meigs
Cotmty Republi can P.trty,
7:30 p.m. Me1gs County
Cmtrthouse Pl.m s fot Meigs
County Fall

PageA3

BYTHE BEND

The Daily Sentinel ·

WcdnL.,day, Aug. 10
MIDDLEPORT -A special meeting of Midd.Jeport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wtll be
held at 7 30 p m Wot k wtl-1
be in the entered apprentice
degree.
·
Thursday, Aug, II
CHESTER - Sh,tde River
Masonic Lodge 453, 7 30
p.m., at hall Retre shmen(s

Church events

gtrls volleyball first practice.
fi p m Must have sports phystcal to practice" Information
from Ltsa Woods, 992-6752
POMEROY
Meigs
Band Boosters, 6 p.m., at the
band booth at the latrgrounds. Short business
meetmg followed by de~mng
the booth. Band p&lt;trents
enwuraged to turn out.

Mon_d ay, August 8,

Student still secretly dates ·
boyfriend her mom dislikes

DEAR ABBY. I am a 22year-old college student and
have been dating "'Cody" for '·
six year~ Four years ago. my
mother dectded she dtdt(t
like htm. She told me · to
Dear
etthcr dump htm or to forget
Abby about gomg to college.
. Not wantmg to gtve up
either one, I began "to secretSunday, Aug, 14
ly date Cody. 1"11 be graduatPOMEROY - 81 st Hayes. tng m one more year, and I
Young, and Holiday school
cleared the .tli and dssertcd
reuniOn, 12:30 p.m., old know that Cody wdl ask me your u\dependence as .tdult,.
Holtday School Grounds on to marry him . Should I watt and that's a 'tep 111 the 1ight
Gilkey Rtdge Road . T.tke a .tnother year - untd r 111 out dtrection ·
covered dtsh for the potluck , of college - to tell my . DEAR
ABBY
Some
pictures. genealogy mforma- mother so she can 't keep me netghbors asked me to cdre
from obtatnmg my degtee ''
tton and entertamment.
Or should I tell her the truth lor th~t r pet s while they \ac.rnow. so tt won't be such a btg ltoned m Europe lor three
The boy across 1he
shock that r m engaged! I weeks
slr~el was to uo.thc lt rst tour
l:an 't JU~t be engaged to a
but I· WdS asked to do
Monday, Aug. 8
guy I supposed ly havf}n 't days.
POMEROY
Meigs seen m years - UNDECID- lhe bulk ol the work.
Although I was assured
at ED IN TEXAS
Tuberculosis
stalf
that
.til I had to do w.ts empty
Reedsvil le Fite Department.
DEAR UNDECIDED· You the littet box dnd ked the
4:30 to 6 p m. to administet arc an adult. Please start dCtskin tests Tests will be read mg ltke one, and mquire at c,lls. I found .tn ex tcn stve hst
. ol chores m my m,ulbox the
on Aug 10
your college about ,tlternatt ve next mornmg One cat h.ts
lmancmg lnr you r last year ot cancer, the othet t"o alsu
college. You may qu,tlify lor needed medic,uion The med s
some kind of scholarshtp. 01 1~ erc complicated .md h.td tn
,
you may need to take out a he admmtstered tw t,·e .1 d,ty
student loan and get a pml- The cats vnmued pmlusel)
time JOb so ~ou won't be severalttmes . .tnd wellll-tlthe
dependent upon your lf!Other bathroom every place except
the htter box I cleaned up
Ol1to l.tw, commercial appli- to come.lete your educallon
If
you
are
mature
enough
to
alter them. admtmstered ,ill
C &lt;~tots must haw ltcenses lor
become
engaged,
you
should
the metltcatton s, dnU even
their servtces or be dtrectly
be strong enough to level consul ted the vet at one pumt.
supervt sed by a licensed wtth your mother. She may
When
my
ne tghbors
applicator The ltcense holdet not be as dumb as you thmk
tetUJ ned. they p.ud the buy
must also ca1ry in suran&lt;.:e. she IS. but don' t expect her to $30
f01 lhc four day &gt; he
Since 1989. licensed applica- bo thnlled to learn that sl1e worked and dtdn"t oiTet me
tors have been requtred to has been lted to On a more one ntckel Wm 'e. th e~ p.ud
pl&lt;~ce signs on treated lawns
posutve note, you and your htm in front or me 1 I bad ly
to W&lt;ttn passets-by that pestt- · ftance wtll h.ne finally needed the money. but even 11
ctdes have been applted They
wtll be held respons tbl e for
.my pestictde i&lt;~W violations
whtch anse on yoUt pro~rty.

Reunions

Monday, Aug. 8
SYRACUSE - Yacatton
Biole School. 6 to 8 p.m. ,
through Aug. 12, at Asbury
Untted Methmltst Churc h
"Construction Zone" wtl l be
the theme

School events

· Other events

Monday, Aug, 8'
TUPPERS PLAINS
Parent meeung. 7 p m ,
Eastern Ht 0 h School rootball
bleachers. for all parents who
h&lt;tve a son or daughter playmg 111 Iall sport'
Sl)Ltthern
RACINE
Jumor Htgh 7th and Xth gr.tde

LAW YO'U CAN USE

Know .the law before using pesticides
Q Can I be held legally
responsible for problems
which ansc trom my use -of
lawn and g;uden pesttctdes''
A · Yes Ohio l.tw makes 11
unlawful for any person to
dpply a pesttctde negltge mly
or 111 a way that is Inconsistent wtth the pestictde 's label
instructtons. If you vtolate
thts law. you c&lt;tn be found
gutlty ol a ct immal mtsdemeanOt. which cou ld result 111
lmes or J&lt;lllttme. particularly .
tl 11 ts .1 second offense If
your use 01 misuse of a pesticide tht eatens or destroys
wtldlt fe, you may be prose ·
cu ted under the Ohto Wtl dltle
law Common violations of
thts law mclude pesttctde
'"dnft" onto a net ghbor 's
property and mgestion of
pesttctde granules by p~;ts or
wildhfc.
Q . Will 1\lY homeownet 's
tnsurance pllltcy cover any
damage I tmght cause wtth
pestictdes?
A Posstbly not, unless
you have special coverage.
Most standard homeowners
polictes cotllam an 64enviromnental exclusiOn'" for
acttvlltes wh tch may cause
damage to the en~ tronment
YoLJr msurance agent can easily extend your coverage to

mclude pcsttctde acctdents,
but your premtum probably
wtll be increased
Q .. How can I tell tl ,1 pestJCtde ' IS sate tor lawn and
garden use·&gt;
A. Read the label. Every
federally ltcensed pesttc tde
must, by J,tw, carry a government -apptoved ldbe l wh tch
tndicates when and how It 1s
to be used. The l&lt;1hel even
prov ides mform&lt;1tion about
which animals might be
harmed by exposure. It the
compound has no label (or tf
the label cannot be deci phered). yo u are probably
vtolatmg the law by applymg
11. Also, many pe sticides such
as D D T. and Chlordane.
wh ich were once legal to
apply. IHt'e stnce been
banned It ts tl lega l to &lt;~pply
banned pesticides even
though they have a clear
label. It you have question s
about the legality of a pestictde, co ntact your county
O.S.U Extension Office. the ·
Ohio
Department
ot
Agnculture , or a ltcensed
pesuctde applicator

Law You Ca11 Use is a
weekly consumer legal
informatioll column provid·
ed by the 0/rio State Bar
Associotio11. This article was
prepared by Anthony Logan,
JD. , a partner with tile
lawfinn of Brooks &amp; Logan
Co.,
LPA
of
Upper
Arli11gton, Ohio, whose
practice emphasizes agricultural and agribusiness repre.~entatiall. Articles appearillg in tllis column are
intended to provide broad,
genua/ information about
the law. For information
about a variety of legal topics, visit the OSBA Web site .
at www.ohiobar. Before
Q .. Can I be held responsi- applyi11g this i11[ormation to
ble tfl htre a commerc t.tl pes- a specific legal problem,
tiCide applicator?
readers are urged toseek
A. P10babl~ not Under ad1•ice from a11 attorney.

I dtdn"t. don't you thtnk they

'hould ha\e offered me
&gt;Oplethmg' l"m lunou' a ad
am tempted to tell them o~l
but I don· t "ant to smk to
their leve l Whdl.s hould I do"'
POOPER SCOO:PER
QUEEN
"IN
NEW
ORLEANS
DEAR QUEEN . Btdc· your
ltmc. They II a'k ) ou again .
And when the y do. 'tale
clearly th,u yo u "ant to be
compensated monctdnly amJ how much you expect to

be patd
·
DEAR ABBY E1 ery t1me
we 1 tstt my tn-l.tws. the) Iced
my wile food ihdt \ !.teed wtth
peppers Abby. my wtle gets
stlk when &gt;he eats pepper'
,u1d I gen tl y remmd them durIng lhe cookmg p10ce~~ about
thts Yet the little suckcts sttll·
,tppe.tr Ill eve rythtng th&lt;it '
olle ted to het.
Short ol ste.tlmg all the
peppc•ts 111 the hou se belore
d rnc ll! J't m.tdc . \\hat l'l~c
~:an I do"' UPSET IN
HO USTON
DEAR UPSET M.tkc sure
yo ur wtle ts \1 ell- led he tore
sl1e vtslt s the 111-hi\\S And
kce p a stash ol Iru Jl and energy heirS Ill the Lll tJ the\ !Slt IS
g01ng to last more than,three
hours ·
Uear Abbv is written hv
Abigail Vair Buren, al~o·
know11 a' .lea1111e Phillip;&gt;,
a11d was founded by lrer
-mother, Pauline Plrillips.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
9!)(!6').

Holzer Health Systems sponsors
new scoreboards at URG

Auditions for The Ariel Jr. Theatre
and The Ariel Players begin
Actors yo un g. and young at
heart. are mvtted to attend
upcoming altditions for fall
producllons to be held at. The
Anel - Ann· &lt;;:arson Dater
Performing Arts Center
The An~] has two divtsion
of us commumty theater. The
Ariel Jr Theatre and The
Anel Players The Ariel Jr
Theatre was formed last
Octobet , and prese nts shows
cast primarily wilh schoolaged actors The Ariel Players
has been gomg strong since
the early 1990.s, and casts u.s
shows wtth adults ,md some
chtld ren, us needed.
The Anel Jr Theatre · is
auditioning young d&lt;' lnrs ,
grades 2-12. fqr Fairy Tale
C:ourtroom, a play lull of st iltness ,md laughs 111 whtch The
Btg Bad Wolf .mel The
Wtcked Wllch.are ·put on trial
by many popular fatry tale
personalities The pl.ty has
· numerous speaking parts for a
v,tnety of ages.
Joseph Wnght, Dtrector ol
The Anel - Ann C.trson D.ner
Petlormit\g Atts Centet. will
dtrect thi s producllon Wright
. says, .. Fairy Tale Courtroom
ts .~ · scnpt that gives young
actors · the fre edom to be
•tbsolutely sil ly 111 thctr t:haraclet portrayals., He contl nues .."ktds and adults wtlllove
the humor. stght-gags .. ,md
slapsuck comedy...
The Ariel Plc1yers ts .JUdiuonmg adult a&lt;:tm s for ,1 product JOn till ed. Three. a collcc· tton ol three temlymg otlC-al:l

200·5

Submitted photo

As 'a part of thetr grass roots marketmg campatgn and Rto Grande's recently announced maJor
cap1tal camRatgn, Holzer Health Systems has agreed to purchase new scoreboards tf1at wtll be
plays The scnpts that make be asked tq speak a lew hnes placed in the University of Rto Grande's Lyne Center. The new scoreboards wt ll replace current
up Three, are The Tell-Tale or read a short poem to evalu- scoreboards 111 the mam gymnastum that w111 be moved to t11e LJI)]Verstty s pract1ce gym
Heart, The Legend of Sleepy &lt;~te speakmg volume and clar· Ptctured from left, presenting a check to Dr. [larry Dorsf'\y. Prestdent of the Untverstty of Rto
Hollov-.. and The Monkey .s uy A short movement exer- Grande (fo.ur th from leftl, are re presentatives of Holzer Health Systems. Tom Ch1lds V1ce
Paw. Older htgh school stu- cise will .tl so take place to Prestdent of Systems Support Servtces; Tom Tope. Pres.tdent and CEO, J1m Phillippe . Pres1dent
dents and ,tdults are encour-. evaluate dl1lmalton and physt· of Holzer Med1cal Center, and Bryan Long. Market111g Manager at Holzer Med1cal Center. The
aged to auditi on
cal con1mun ication Adults sponsorship wtll last for the durat 1on of the scoreboards· l1fe wh1ch. on average. 1s 15 year~
Kim Y,mco. dtrector of se1- wil l be asked tu do teadings
eral
Jr. Theatre from destgnated scenes, and.
. re cen t Ancl
. '
producllons wtll superHse the posstbly. a short movement
directton of Three V,mco exemsc.
says. ··our lme-up ol scaty
Volunteers .tre needed lor
one-acts Will surely have the both ptoducttons to assist
Rachel Jo y Buckle\. 21.
'
audienc,e on the edge of th eir wnh set constntcllon. props,
Mtddleport.
Sherman
seats.'" She contmues ...We costumes, ltghtmg, so und.
Birlchl' t.
17.
arc takmg the tr.tditJon of at\d stage new Anyone mtcrPOMEROY - A n;d Eugene
tellmg ghost stones to a tern- e,ted 111 vohmteenng should &lt;~ctton hied 111 Metgs County Pome10y. ,lJid Lmd.1 Lnut'e
fying level. be&lt;.Juse out ghost also come to the destgnated Common Pleas Court by Chapm,lll. .10. PnmctO).
stori es will come to life 1ighi aud tll ons to speak with the Chll S Thomas Ill. .tnd nth· Bobby Douglas Kuhn 20.
PoJtLtnd.
.tnd
An11
The Dailv Sentinel .
helore the ,tudtencc s. eyes:·
ets. a£ainsl St,tcv J Erwm. Elil,tbcth Thompso n. 21 .
Ditectors ot Producer.
. The Anel Jr Theatre will be
Joseph Wttght says. ..We and lllhers. ha; been llts- Pnrtl ,lJid ··and D,11 td R
Subscnbetoday
casting a mintmum or 25 ,ue very excited about om mtssed
992 2155
We stfall.
2R.
Tuppet s
.
speakmg tole'. and non- upcommg 2005-2006 season
Pl,ttns. ,tnd Chen I K
speaktng extr.ts. Although lor The Ancl Jr Theatre and
Boggs ..IX Tuppers Pl.ttn s
st~dents grades 2· 12 are tat The A11el Pl.tycrs .'" He C&lt;)ll·
geted lor_~peakmg role&gt; stu- unues... We tlllend to pruvtdc
l hlf&lt;lJ'If.II.Uift .. ltwH.II 11M
dents 111 Ftrst Grade may .tbo
our
gue-;h \Vith ·' dl\ero..e col\ p \\\ l htr.•!'lfl\1 1, "'-1~""1\
audnton The Ancl Players ts
POMEROY - M,unage
'
lection
ol
mcmorabk
and
.
\\, mk.•r ' ~ -\m,·r•, ,Jr K, ~u.J ,If
scekmg .tpproxnnatel} 12- 15
li ce nses were 1so; ued 111
htf:hly
elllc'rt,uning
stones
'fm
I tYI'Il\11 !'• ~' '~t·•l.!l'
oldet hi;;h school 'tudents
Meigs
c;ount)
Prob.ue
the
l:r'lmtng months··
211 \ r) 1.'\jl. n. J'll'l
and adults for tts ptoductwn.
Colli! to N,Jthan Andte"
\
kn1
l-c.r.f
~vn~..-n"m o\\.JJt rm
A'ddttlotl.ll shows planned Esknv. 24. Albany. .lllu
Audtllt&gt;ns lor Fatry Talc
Auto
Accidents
W11rkers'
''I \t NJ,,II •\ u~l\JOI.~Ufl
Cotirtroom will be held nn tot the 2005-2006 ,e,tson Betlr Ann Phtlltps. 21.
tnclude.
The
Velv~tecn
Compensatimz
Sund.ty. August 14 lrom 1-J.
Albany : ,Gary Eugene H,trt.
R.tbhit
The
Secret
G&lt;1rden.
• 'fl. 'rl~ l nJum'~
and Mond.ty. August I) ftom
52
.tnd Penny Diane
• \1 ,'~'&lt;lhhllr;l.l'r&gt;. ~ ~
• \1 1'l.li...mt
Al.tddin.
,ts
welt
.ts
a
mutdet
·
6-X . Audttlons lor ll1rcc \l'tll
Powell. Pomeroy. Mtkcl
• ' mn o.Ln .1~'1'~
• ·h urun ~·ml'l'
be heiJ on Sttnd,ty. Au gu't 1-+ ,mys tery dtnner show. and Phtlltp MtiiHl.ln." Jr.. 19 .
Irom 4-(1. ,md TuesJ.ty, more
Mtddleport. ,!nd Courtnc1
For
lllorc
lllfOimatJon
on
Renee
R.llrett.
August lh Irom 6-8 Actl&gt;ts
17.
do, not n;:ed to ha1e ,mytilmg these .md other events sched - Mtddlep&lt;;rt . Willtam NeJ,on
prep.tre~l pru_
1r tn rh" autlttJ~Hl . ukd ,Jl The And - Atin Morns. Jr. -1 .1. P&lt;•mcrnl .
Audtttotts wtll be held .tt ;J he Ctrsnn Dater Pcrlonnmg AilS and Ltsa ' M.me btil. 17.
~
Anel - Ann C.trson D.ttct Center. } ou n).ly contact the Pomern}: Sh.tne Stephen
box nrftce at 740-446-ARTS S.llib,l. 23. Pt)lllerO) . ,lJtd
Perlornllltg Arts Ccnl&lt;'r.
Ravenswood, WV
316 Washin ton St.
Chtldren audtttontng Will (446-271\7)

For the Record

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

Dismissed

.

Marriage
licenses

\IDr.. t&amp;¢Uy tK.l)~Fles
~ijl~~J~~9T@J~.

lavenswuod
Citironr:tcric
venter
·
:

'

'

•

304-273-5321

•

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Obituaries

Just the facts) please

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

.

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establislrmetrt of religipn, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereoj; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tire press; or the right of tlte
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
: the GoJJmmre11t for a redress of grieJJances.
: -The First Amendment to' the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
'Tod.1y " Mnmlay. Au~ X. the 220th day of 2005 Thelt'
arc 145, day' kit 111 the ye.11·
Toda y\ H1ghl1ght 111 HI St ory:
· On Aug . H. 1974. Prcsiuent Nixon &lt;lllllOUn&gt;eu he would
restgrr following new d,tm .tglng revel,llton:-; tn the
\Vatergatc s(.::.tlllial

·O n thiS date .
I
In I H15. Napokon Bonaparte set s.n l for St Helena to
spend the remdlndcr nf hiS d.1ys 111 ex il e.
.
In I X76. Thomas A. Elil'&lt;lll 1ccciwd a patent for his
111 i men g r,qJh
· In 1'!42. '" con\'lcled N.111 s.1hotcurs who h.1d landed 111
t~e Llnlled State' \\'ere executed in Washingllln D.C.'; two
other . . rcLt'I\CJ li!e impri ... nnment
In 11)45. Presllil'lll Trum&lt;~n -.gn~ d .th e Unn~cl N'(tlons
Charter.
In llJ45. the Soviet Un1on decl&lt;ued w,u' ag,rinst Jap,lll
clunng World W,11· II
In 196}. Bnt:11n's "Grc,lt Tratn Robi)ery" took place as ·
thle\es mo~de nil" llh 2 6 mill1on pounds in bank notes.
· In llJ6X. R1ch.1rd M NIXon was nom1n.rted for president
.11 the Rej:)(lbilc.rn llalluna l ..:onvcntion 111 M1ami Beach .
111 I&lt;J7J. V1ce P•e,iuent Spiro T. Agnew branded as
''damned lies" reports he had taken k1ckbacks from gov crllmcnt contract' 111 Maryl&lt;~ncl .• md vuwed not to resign 1\hic-h he evcntu.dly did.
'
·
In 1978. the Um tcd Sta tes launched Pioneer Venus II ,
~ hrch camed sc1enllfrc probes to &gt;tudy the atmosphere of
'
·'
Venus.
· In 1994. Israel and Jorda n opened the first road link

Question: What's the best
thing that has happened
recently in the il"o-called war
on terror''
Hint No. 1: It wasn't the
White House\ decision to
re-brand tJle ~ ·war on terror '~
as the "struggle against violent extremi sm."
"War ' makes "you think
of people in uni.form as
being the sulut1on." sa1d the
c hall'man of the Jomt Chiefs
of Staff. who. as ·the head
man 111 ' umform, has just
opted himself into obsolescence. True or not. I don't
ge t why a uniformed so·tution is necessarily a bad
thing- if, that IS, the goal IS
to beat whatever you 're
fightmg. OK, so the admmistration says it wants to
emphasize the Ideological
aspect of our efforts But is
"extremism" a bona fide ideology''· Or rs "extremism"
another woolly term that PCaffhcted leaders and pund1ts
pull over everyone's eyes to
hu.le the umquely Islamic
sources of the "ol ent
extrenusm ttie ge neral says
we stru ggle against''
Hint No. 2: It wasn't the
so-called tatwa agamst terrorism issued by the Fiqh
Councrl of North Amenca
and ballyhooed by the
Councrl
on AmericanIslamic Relati on&gt;; (CAIR).
Despite the PC cheers, this
fatwa fa iled to detine "terrorism·· and ''c ivilian'' two key terms that other
blamic rulings have inte•pretcd to sanction the killing
of Americans and Israelis.

Diana

West

groups'· links tu terronst
organizations (see Steven
Emerson's summary online
"at The Counterterrorism
Blog), it' s worth wondering
whether their fatwa applied,
for example, to "terrorism"
ag;unst "c1v ilian s'' fomented
by Hamas and Palestinian
Islamic Jihad.
But gettmg back to the
be~t thing that's happened ot
late : Maybe all the sidesteppmg euphemisms, from
"struggle" to "fa.twa," don ' t
matter as much any more.
Elites on the left and on the
ri ght. 111 the government and
in the media. can perSist 111
their PC babble .•Ill of which
see ms to translate to "Better
Dead Than Rude" (a slogan
attributed
to
John
Derbyslme). · But maybe
some people - the ones
Ronald-Reagan a] ways·trusted and Abraham Lmcol u
·sa1d you couldn't always
fool - are star1ing to figrue
things out, and without the
help or el lles. There IS
intriguing anecdotal ev i ~
dence that non-pol, nun-pundit citiZens are looking for
the kind of debate that IS
beyond th e ken of the most
prominent otTic1als and JOUrGrven the two sponsorin g nali sts

I say this in light of two
very sepiuate incidents and. more specificall y, ihe
reaction to them.
F~rst.
"The Politically
Incorrect Gu1de to Islam
(and
the
Crusades)."
(Regnery Publ1shmg. 2005)
by Robert Spencer went on
sale at Amazon .com. In
advance of a publ1&lt;:ity campaign , advert isi ng . interviews or reviews, the buuk
climbed as hig h as No. 1-l
til is week on Amazon's sales
list This IS signr li cant, and
not just'" a publishing story
of a hook that made an mitwl
splash before anyone could
give1t a push . As an entry in
Regnery's PIG (Politically
lncorrel'l Guides) series. M1.
Spencer's book arri~es in the
mMketplace with an identity,
if not an attitude: The rc&lt;~der
knows he is going to ger the
story '" 11 rs never told in the
n1&lt;11nstream cul ture. Mr.
Spencer. on whose expert
analy" s at www.j•hadwatch.org I have come to
rely. see ms to have proviclecl
a hook peo ple are hungry for
- ,, book that expla1ns. as
the president ,tnd all his men
(and Condi) cannot. why it ·IS
that the s hari o~ - sp re,,ders aqd
the mu1der-bombers and. as
Oriana Fallaci v•viclly label s
them . "the head-choppers''
do 11 all for "the religion of
peace ."
'
Tl1e second 1ncident
involves not the appemance
of a book. but rather the disappearance of a vo1ce. Last
week.
1adio-station
WMAL's Michael Graham
got his microphone yanked

for &lt;.laring to notice. mentum
and ponder the link'
between Islam and terronsm
on the air. In an outrage
against
the
First
Amendment, the ABC' affiliate. chrected by its parent
company, Disney, suspended
Mr. Graham without pay for
exerc ising not on ly IllS free ·
dum of speech. but also hi s
facultie s ot' logic. Why d1d
WMAL do this '! Because
CA IR - a Hamas-linkeu
organ i;at1on w1th, as Daniel
Prpcs recently pointed out,
"f'ive currcm or former ...
aiTilla!,es .rrrested. c·onvicted .
P·or depo1:cd on terrorismrel,ucd ch&lt;uges" (see "CAIR
Founded
by
'lslam.ic
at
Terrorists"'''.'
DanreiPipcs.org )
put
pressure on the station to do
so.
The reaction' As of the
Saturday lllOilllllg aft er the
Thursday ni ght Mr. Graham
was suspended. he took to
hi s blog to thank listeners for
the 10.000 c-ma ils or so that
he cst11natcd had been sent
tci the station on hi, beh.rlf.
By Tue:"iday. he wa~ bcgg 1ng
people to stop · "The vo lume
of call s &lt;md c-mails " hurtin g the ab11ity of some very
good people to do their jobs.
and trust me - your message ha s been receJvcd."
That message was sen t
beCLtLI Se

people want fact... -

hard. non-PC and v11,11 to
their understandmg of what
we're reall y up agamst.
( Dwr111 Wnt i.1 11 col/11111111'1
.for Tire IVCI.I!rnrgtcm 7/mc'S.
She c m1 he

r

on won/ l'ia

dwmm·e.\1 @l't' n -::m1.net. J

,.,AND WE

NEEDMORE
' DOGS? ·

T!.:n ye&lt;~Di .1go Pre"ident Cli nto n. during a visit to
B,li timore. ordered all cumpa111cs doing business with the
f~deral go\'ernment t&lt;&gt; report the pollution they cause
.
'Five yems ,rgo. V1ce President AI Gore formally intro·
duced ,urd cdebr.rteJ hi&gt; running mate, Sen. Joseph
~ieberman , during ,rn appearance 111 Gore's home state of
Tcnnes&gt;ee. A blliTlb r1pped through an undergroun.d walkway in central Mos..:ow. killing at least 13 people. Chile 's
Supreme Coun stripped Gen Augusto Pinochet's immuni ty, c lcar~n g the way for the former dictator to be tr1ed on
human rights charges. I Howeve r. an appeals court later
ruled Pinochet until to st.uld trial because of h1 s deteriorat ~
ing health am! mental condition.)
One year ago: Alan Keyes. the Republican tv.o-t ime
presidential ho peful. threw lm hat111to lllino1s' Senat&lt;;&gt;race
(he ended up lo&gt;mg to Dcmocrai Barack Obama) Actress
Fay Wray. the d.umel held atop the Empi1e State Buildmg
by the gian t .1pe 111 the 193:1 ti lm classic "Ki ng Kong," died
111 New York Clly at age 96.
Thougbt for Today: "Men make counte1feit money; 111
111dllY more Cd:-.e:-.. muncy make:-. counterfe it men. ··
Sydney J. Harn s. AmencanJourn,liist ( 1917-1986).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
:awl includ(' adt_
h n.\ and telr!fJ/wne mmrho: No 1111\iKn~d fl;t11111

he

addf&gt;.Y!fi.\ing

'""''"'"'cl

t\' iitU' \ ,

''"'"lei he

Ldlc' JI

til

guud Tli.ITe.

not pfrwmalirrn·. Lt'trn·, of thank., to

orga ~

niz.a llo/1.\ and iru!rl'ir!flal\· "rilllol he accet!Tfdji&gt;r pu!J/iu11ion.

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Netanyahu resigns as Cabinet approves first stage of Gaza pullout

Corena K. Rhodes Adams
Corena K. Rhodes Adams,
47, of Grove City, passed
away unexpectedly Thursday.
Aug. 4, 2005, at .her residence
She was born Jan. 13. 1958,
in Mason, W.Va .. daughter of
Irene I Parsons Rhodes of
Mary sville, and the late
Clifford Ronald Rhodes.
She was a 1976 graduate of
Southern High School in
Racine, a 1978 gmduate of
Hocking College, and attended Ohio State Umverstty.
She was the manager of
computer progmmming for
SafeLite · Auto Class in
Columbus. She was a member
Corena K. Rhodes Adams
of the Central Crossing High
.
School Band Boosters in Grove Clly.
In addition to her mother, she 1s survived by her ,husband,
Walton franklyn Adams Ill : he1 daughter, Sarah Jane Adams,
at home; a srster, Rebecca (Ray) Maxson of Reedsville; a
mece, Beverly Ellen M~xson. and a nep~ew, David Allen
Maxson , both of Rcedsvrlle; her mother-in-law and father-•nla~, Karen and Walton Franklyn "Frank" Adams Jr. of
Clmtwood, Va.; a brother-in-law and sister-rn-law, Jason
Andrew Adams and Kari Ann K1lgore of St Paul , Va .; and
several aunts, uncles and cousins.
She was preceded in death by her father, Clifford Ronald
Rhodes, m 1963.
Servi ces w'ilt be 2 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2005, in the
Cremeens Funeral Home at Racine. Officiating will be the
Rev. James Satterfield. Interment will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5 to 9
p.m. Monday. Aug. 8. 2005.
, ·

Theresa ·June' Kincaid
There sa ''June" · Kincaid ,
53,' of Hernsh,1w, W.Va. died
Friday Aug. 5. 2005 at
CAMC-Memonal after a long
illness
She was a P. 0. member of
Brothers of the Wheel.
Mrs. Kinca.d was preceded
in death by her father, Harold
Crouch.
.
She is survived bv her husba'nd, Charles Kinca1d of
Hern shaw. W. Va ; mother,
Ruth Crouch ot Syracuse;
sons, Nathan and John Paul
Kincaid both of Hernshaw,
W. Va ;
granddaughter,
,
"
Hannah Mae; brother, Randy
Theresa ·June Kincaid
Crouch of Montgo mery: and
sister, Vickie Morrow of Syracuse.
.
Funeral services will be I p.m Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2005 at ·
Pryor Funeral Home . 184 Walnut St.. East Bank. W.Va.
Visitation will be 6 to 8 p.m. Monday, Aug. 8. 2005. at the
funeral home. Burial will be at Kanawha Valley Memorial
Gardens, Glasgow

Bemice R. Roush

Sticker' shock
Amcncan automakcr~ are rn

trouble - hy buying ,, car.
My husband and I were on
our v.ay to get a Sundayafternoon 1ce cream when
we stopped to look at a fueletTicient hybrid vch1cle. The
dealer was sold out - they
on ly had three to begin.
Electric-gasoline hybrids·
may still have kmks, hut
they oller economic and
environmental life nngs. so
why aren ' t they more readily available and affordable
to ~tnyone who wanh one?
The B•g Three - General
Motors. Ford and Chrysler
d1vision of DaimlerChrysler
- must stop telling us we
want honkm' SUVs th at
keep our children li&lt;&gt;htinu
e
e
for oil il) Iraq &lt;urd contnbutc
to &lt;&gt;lobal warmrn•&lt; and air
"
" providpollution.
amJ start
u)g us wi th what we need .
Their economic sal\atron
Ltnd ()Ur mororin g future
depend on well-built. cos tencrgy-sav1ng
cffccllve.
vch•cles that tree '" from
JcpenU~nce un foreign oil.
Frustrated at not hei n[!
&lt;rhlc to test-dme ,, ·hyhrid .
\\C \\iHlliered O\Cr l u the
dc,der's used car lot. If was
the la;t d,l) of th~ molith .
\\ ill'll "all':-. men "cr:unhlc to
meet tl1ci r qlu&gt;tas . Fl\ e 1dle
men snagpcd to atten t ~t•n. ·
Neal got hl us fmt and

Tad

Bartimus

wouldn't let go.
Four hours later. Ne,,l
made · his quota when we
hought a used lemon-,yellow
pickup with 33.000 mrles on
it after bargaining ne:u! y
one-fourth off the sticker
pnce. The finance manager ·
who approved our. 4.5-percent loan sa1d Ford reaped a
profit of $US
That 's no way to run a c.1r
company.
The B1g Three cventu"ally
will go under unl ess they
stop selling cars the way
Ford did to me. Low-ball
'
.
pncmg sttch as th1" . . llm -

:-..ex. securny and entertainment wi ll he ours if .we keep
buying b1gge r. faster cars
tl)at come wi th '·tree
money .. It v.i ll take awhile
to recondition us ' to accept
that if we Wdnl a car, we
will actually have to pay
what 11 costs to make it.
It v.ill take even longer to
overcome our spoiled .lttitudc that our cars arc our
playpens. ,In reality. they're
just hunks of metal to get us
from point A tu p01r11 B
Wh y should they have tn
~nten:nn

sdts and individual climate
control and th ey' d sque.d
like ,, stuck pig.
.
My mother hauled qs
around 111 a Pnlto. a Ford
Falcon and a used Musldllg .
None were air-conditioned
When we'd complam we
were hot she'd say. "Roll
down the window." It we
groused we were cold she 'd
say. "you should have
dress ed

warmer_

We

wa lked to " huol. prano
les,ons and baseball practice
whr le our parents tonk their
vch1cles ' to work. Our car
wa' transporla l!on , not •den -

tir seduce us?
A1rhags arc OK. but TV
s('r~ens
for ' Un vcrs·~
'
..
Excessive Sem warmers? tilv.
Rrd iculous
. Since then. we·,e erroWhile wanmg for my lws- neously been persuaded that
hand to finish test-driving w.c arc what we dnvc . We
every p1ckup truck on the want a Hummer because it
lot. I watched two mom s roll infers
we ' re
a
&lt;may 111 brand-new SUVs '" Schwa1t.enegger. A Lexus
h1 g d:-. boxcar" .' One had a RX400 hyhrid offers guilt,
p.1ir of toddlers. the other free lux,ury. A Dodge mrmhall a lct:nager.
van fairly shouts "baby on
mer\ " in-hou se·· e mployee
Theil' · husbands signed board ."
ui &gt;CUU IIIS IO the publiC and . checks while .the'c wornen
It 's time for Detroit to
below-prime • f'inane~ng dickc1cd wllh salesmen over
won't pay overhead . let l1.1ckse.11 DVD pbyers &lt;~11&lt;.\ ~ how mor~ cour,1ge, and fo1
alone stockholders.
nlh ig~ttiun ~y:-. t cms. Can't ~Oll'\UlllC I ~ to rc!'!pontl in
No\\' GM and ~ord sa\' the ~ spell bio-LI•esel'! I'll bet kind
( Log m1 ro 1\:lnr tadbar·
rhey irHend to lm\~ 1 price-.., rl you '""ed them whether
C\Cil further in an lttlcmpt to
'atd lite radio on the d.rsh- timw .com to read dati\ ('()//·
wean consum~rs nil of the hoJrJ ''·'" \\Orth thl' Ii i ~ of .t ,·true tim { II{Uial'' ' rm TAD 'S
p. . yc hnlogtC:II tlll'~ntl\' e ol "ingk American . . u iUi cr BLOG. )on ,IIIII\' ' ' ' ' " 11 1'11&lt;'
rebates . Like lemmings . the\'·d sal' "No!" 1\'llh a hor- to Tw/ t lo Th&lt;' \\'( 1/1/(,11
we· vc lie en mllucn&lt;.'ed bv n lied sh&lt;lut But .rsk them tn ~lllclrcm c. 1~0. Bor 10169.
ad\'ertf~ tng'~ allu:-.ion ... th&lt;it ~1\c JJP '' ick· -hodieJ leather Col11mhra. Mu. 65205.)

Bern1ce R. Rou sh, 82, of Racine, passed away at II :30 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 5, 2005, in the Overbrook Center at Middleport.
She was born Sept. 6, 1922, in Apple Grove, Ohio, daughter of the Iare Wilson Henry and Ora Mae Durst Slaughter. .
She was a homemaker and a member of the East Letart
United Meth.odist Church.
She is surv1ved by her husband, Russell D. Roush, whom
she married Jan . 14, 1946, in Middleport; four daughters,
Roberta (Dana) Lewis of Clifton, W.Va. , Nancy (Ron) Russell
of Racine, Sharon (Ed) Hupp of Long Bottom, and Cindy
(Doug) Sands of Racine ; and two sons, David (Teresa) Roush
of Butler, Ky., and Edward (Becky) Roush of Racine.
She is also survived by 15 grandchildren, Shannon Lewis,
Amanda (Ray) Redman, Michael (Michelle) Russell, Jeremy
Hupp, Jamie Hupp, Jarod Hupp, Jessica Hupp, Jenna Hupp,
Joshua Hupp, Joey (Stacey) Sands, Timmy Sands, Talan
Roush, Ryan Butcher, Katie Butcher and Sherry Riffle; and
five great-grandchildren, Mackenzie Redman, Nathan
Redman, Austin Weber, Kevin Jamison and T~rmer Riffle.
Bernice was preceded in death by a grandson, Peyton David
Roush; a granddaughter, Angela Michelle Teaford; and four
sisters, Georgra Durst, Mary Jane Roush, Bess Parsons and
Frances Parsons.
Services wrll be II a.m. Wednesday, Aug. I0, 2005, at the
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine. Officiating will be the
Rev. Vicki Cundiff. Interment will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 8
p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 9. 2005.
Grandsons will serve as casketlbearers. The honorary casketbearer is Ryan Butcher.

Dwight E. Logan. Sr.
Dwight E. Logan, Sr., 82, of Pomeroy, died Saturday, Aug.
6, at the Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Born on Sept 4, 1922 at Hemlock Grove, he was the son of
the late George and Inez Faye Connant Logan. He retired
from Kaiser Aluminum Co. where he was a fabrication
inspector. He was a veteran of the U S. Navy, and belonged
to the United Methodist Church and the Masomc Order and
Eagles Club.
He is surviVeLI by a son, Dwight "Skip" Logan, Jr and his
w1fe; Barbara Logan of Gilbert, Ariz.; a stepdaughter, Shirley
(lack) Cox uf Athens ; grandsons, Josh Logan, San Antomo,
Texas, and Jeremy Logan, Gilbert Ariz.; sister and brother-inlaw, Avis and Elmer Baile y, Shade; brother and sister-in-law,
Avery " Bud" and Peggy Logan, Topsham, Mame ; and an
adopted brother. Kenneth Ne~ille, Findley.
. · ..
Besides· h1s parents he was flreceded 111 death by hr s w1te,
Kathryn Logan. and sf&gt;ters, Bernice King and Helen Logan .
Funeral services are being arranged by Ewing Funeral
Home and will be announced later.

-Martl·n
from Page A1
.
h 'hi res c·t d nivertrom •g Y pe e u
sities and PWfcsSIOnals wh?
deal w1th the cult problems,
Manin said .
" It w,IS one of the largest
confer-ence&gt;
that . I've
· ever been to, or that
has ever taken place for

that matter. devoted specifically to cult~."
Martin presented information about residential treatment for ex-cult members,
parenting styles- for children
ratsed rn cu lts and statistics
, on cult survivors.
He has heen re searching
terrorism and mmd control
· for
man y years.
ha s
app~ared on ABC News
N1ghtline and other media
outlets numerou s times and

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

JERUSALEM
Benjamm Netanyahu stepped
down as Israel's finance min ister Sunday in a last-minute
protest against next week's.
Gaza pullout , but his stunned
Cabinet colleagues pushed
ahead and approved the first
stage of the withdrawal plan
just moments later.
Netanyahu, a hard-liner and
(ormer prime minister w1th
ambitions to reclaim the top
job, acknowledged Sunday
that he will not be able to stop
the withdrawal: He said he
resigned nonetheless because
he fears the pullout will turn
Gaza into a "base of Islamic
terror" and endanger Israel. '
In an 1mmediate response,
Israe l's stock market dropped
5 percent within an hour.
Netanyahu had adopted a
pro-business economic policy and cut welfare benefits in
more than two years as
finance m1nr ster.
Pr11ne
Mmister Ariel Sharon, trying
to limit damage to the economy, announced he would
stick to that approach.
The resignation could also
force early elections; for now,
the vote is set for November
· 2006. Netanyahu enjoy s
strong support 111 the ruling
Likud Party, which largely
opposes the pullout, and
could try to wrest Lrkud leadership from Sharon in coming months as a step toward
nmning for pnme minister.
The 55-year-old Netanyahu
had given no indication that
he would resign, despite his
zigzagging over the Gaza
pullout in recent month &gt;. The
weekly Cabinet m ~e ting was
already under way for several
hours Sunday, w1th mim sters
about to give tinal approval
to the first stage of the withdrawal plan - the dism.mthng of the isolated Gaza settl ements of Morag, Kfar
Darom and Netzarim .
When it was Netanyahu's
turn to speak, he got up from
his seat instead and placed a
note on the table that he should

.

••

•

AP Photo

An Israeli army sold1e r scuffles w1th an Ultra-Orthoaox Jew1sh man as troops attempt to prevent oponents from the plannect t,;;rael • pullout from Gaza from blocking, at the K1ssuf1m road.
the entrance to .the Jew1sh settlement of Kfar Darom . w1thm the Gush Kat1f bloc of settlements.
111 the southern Gaza Strip Sunday. A group of around a hundred settlers and 'supporters tried
to prevent the army from remov1ng equipment from the settler-nent ahead of the planned pul lout scheduled fdr later th•s month.
·
be counted among those vot- news conference he was conmg ''no." said Hou smg nrcted because he had hopeu
Mini ster Yn zhak Herzog of to ccintmue guid1ng economrc
,the centnst Labor P&lt;u1y.
policy, but could not lend IllS
Neranyahu
then gave support to the pullout plan . " I
Sharon the letter of resigna- cannot stop thi s (the pullout ).
lion. When Cabinet Minister but I can be at peace wi th
Tzach1 Han egbi of L1kud myself." he smd.
asked Netanyahu· for an
H1s dec.s1on mcrcascd pr~s ­
explanation. the finance min- sure on several other L1kud
ister said it could be found in ha rd- liners in the Cab1ne1 to
the letter, Herzog said.
step down However. th e
" It was very drama tic in most sen1or mimster in th.rt
there." said Cabmet minister group. EduGation Ministe1 .
Malan Vilnai oi· Labor. Vilnai Lrmor Livnat. sa1d she did not
said Sllaron d1d not react.
plan to resign.
Shortly after Netany.1hu
Jew1sh sett ler leaders had
left , the mimsters voted 17-5 long hoped the clw·ismatlc
to approve the dismantling of Netan11ahu would quit th e
the first three settlements. governm ent and lead thei1
Nctanyahu's note was count- struggle agamst the Gaza
cd as a " no" vote. In all, some pullout.
They
praiSed
9,000 settlers will he rem r~ed Netanyahu's deCISIOn. hut
from their homes in 25 settle- Eran Sternberg, spokesman
mcnts - 21 in Gaza and four for the Gaza settlers. said it
in the northern West Bank.
came "far too late."
Netanyahu late• told a . Sunuay's Cabinet vote was

•ldrgely a lormaht y. since the
govc'rnmcnt has repeatedly
approved the overall Wlthdra"'al
Ari aide to Sharon. Raanan
GIS; in. S\lld the re signation
wo 11ld
not affect
the
t11nctablc of the pullout.
Sharon tned reassure jlllcry
invc'iors Sunday, saying
l sro~el wou ld not change its
economic pol icy. He told
Bank of Israel Governor
Stanley F1sch~r that . the
UjJCOlllll.lg state budget will
meet de l~ cit and expenditure
targets that were set by the
government. the prime mmister's oflice said in a statemem
Sha1on &gt;aid he would
appornt hiS dos~ confidant.
Vice Prem1cr Ehud Olmert.
as acting finance minister.
Lik e Netanyahu. Olmert is
see n as pro-business. In a
statement. Sharon said current policy would continue.

Justice Stevens calls ·attention to 'serious flaws' in death penalty
BY GINA HOLlAND
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I recently learned why

Let tel'.\ to till' ediTor arc· ll'eicome. Tlrer slumlcl.l;e /es1· than
300 H'(Jnl.\. All leff(.J I' we whjet 1 to editmg. mrnl he ~igned.
.tcr.1

www .mydailysentinel.com

·BY KARIN LAUB

between the 1wo once-warring co untries

·.

2005

Monday, Augusts, 2005

· ·The Daily Sentinel
'

Monday, August 8,

CHICAGO Supreme
Court Just1ce John Paul
Stevens steered the debate
over Prest dent Bu sh ·~ nominee to a new subject: 'capital
pumshment, sharply condemning the country's death
penalty system.
The court hiis been closely
divided in death row cases,
with Just1ce Sandra Day
O'Connor often in the mrddle .
President Bush's choice to
replace her, John Roberts, has
·a limited track record.
Roberts, 50, &gt;howed little
sympathy for prisoner appeals
as a government lawyer in the
Reagan administration , but
later did free legal work for a
death row inmate.
In a February 1983 memo
while serving 111 the Reagan
White House, Roberts suggested that the high court
could cut its caseload , by
"abdicating the role of fourth
or fifth g ue ~ser in death
penalty cases."
Stevens used a weekend
speech to the American Bar
Association to underscore the
matter's prominence at the
court, notin g evide nce of
&gt;~serious flaw s."
His remarks provide the
first sign of internal dismay
over the retirement of
O'Connor. . a 75 -year-old
pragmatist who has been a
key voter in affir mative
action, abortion right s and the
dearh nena lt v.
So ftu. mu.ch of the focus of
'the Roberts nomination has
been on matters like abortion
and civi l nghts - not the·
death penalty. His Senate
confirmation hearings begin
Sept. 6.
"It doesn't appear to be
shaping up as a major issue."
smd Kent Scheidegger. legal
d1rectbr of • the ~ Cnminal
ha s pre sented at conferences around the world.
Martin is also a cult survivor him se lf. He is the
founder and director of
Wellspring. a 1esidential
treatment center in Albanv
that treats VICtims of abu,i vc
churches. groups and relationships . Client' usually
stay tor a two-week p~nod
Welhpring has treated O\'er
90{) client' 'mce it 's open·
ing in J98(r

Justice Legal Fo.undati on, a
pro-death penalty g10up.
Scheidegger sa id that
although Roberts ' w11c. Jane,
is a member of a group that
opposes capital punishment,
Roberts has had no opportuni tres to vote on death cases in
his two years on a federal
appeals court.

Steven's ~as evolved into
the Sup•cme·Court's most liberal member. in the 30 y~a1 '
smce hi s nommallon by
Republrcan Pres idelll Ford
Another justice who made a
similar transformation was
Harry A. Blackmun. who
months before h1s 1994 retire ment declar~d: "I no longer

shalr tinker wllh the machinery of death "
Ste,ens. who at 85 is the
oldest justice. has ~i\en no
h1111S that he· will retire soon.
A Stevens retirement while
Republicans control the
While Hou'e and Senate
woulil li kely dramatically
reshape the court

�\

-------------:-----------------------------The ·Daily ·Sentinel

'

PageA6

NATION ·

The Daily Sentinel

.

Monday, August 8, 2005

MLB Standings, Page B2
Culpepper to restructure deal with Vikln~ Page B2
Browns practice draws 32,752, Page B6
Purtzer wins ~ M Championship, Page B6

.

Smaller tumors, not just
Discovery headed home after undocking from
~~~ta171tion, most anxiety-ridden part of flight looming better treatments, boosting
breast cancer survival
Bv MARCIA DUNN

Bv MARILYNN
MARCHIONE

AP AEROSPACE WRITER

SPACE
CENTER.
Hous10n - With the most
anx-iety- ridden part of th eir
!ligh t still to come . .shuttle
Discovery an d its cr~w · o f
seve n se t ofT for hom e
Saturday after leaving' the
· int ernational space stati on.
Monday 's
p lanned
predawn re-ent ry wi ll he
th e firs t by a space shuttle
sin ce · Co lu mbia ' s catastrophic descent 2 I /2 yea rs
ago.
The lwo space sta t ion
resident s
wished
til~
Di.scovery crew a sa fe landmg.
· "It ha s rea lly been a plea-

AP MEDICAL WRITER

sure . and . no .. we arc not

glad · to see yo u go. We
woul d Jove to ha ve you
stay a li tt le lo nge r. " said
station
as trun aut
John
.Phill ips. ·' Have a g&lt;wd
fli gh t. "
Shuttle
commander
Eil een Co llin s st ressed' it
.was not "a fin&lt;il farewe ll. "
because she pl anned on
seei ng the two sta ti on 111~11
bac k on Earth n.nL·e th eir
ex pedit io n ends in t 11 o
more mon th s.
Once
undockcd.
Di scovery looped around
the space stati on for the
fi rs t full pho tog raphi c su rvey of th e orbitin g ou tpost
since the last shullk vt&gt;it
in late 2002. and then sped
away int o th e b,Jackn e».
Di scove ry'&gt; ;ts tronaut&gt;
awoke Sa turd ay evening
for a day or ~· to ring awa y·eq uipme nt for their UJKOm in g return . They als o
planned to take down an
ante nna. which they , ha ve
useU tu tran smit v·ide o
images of the mission.
Th ~ depart ing astronaut&gt;
reported they may have
see n a piece of ,kbr i, fl y
off th e space &gt;tat io n 1-'riJay.
but
Mission . C&lt;i ntr ol
assured them it was just a
camera refl ect ion .
•
Flight co ntrollers, at lea&gt;~
· th ose who brieflv duded
outdoors go t a 1rl plc trcal.
Th e
Hu bb le
Space
Te lescope soared over
Ho usto n before sutl'r ise.
fo llo wed by Discove ry and
then the space st ation . all
three ap pearing as brig ht
stars.
" We are going to be pre tty darn happy to ge l to
wheels ·stop and see this
good
crew
step
off
Di scovery," fl ig ht director
Paul Hill said following the
und oc king .
Di scovery 's pent nt ne
1

AP Photo

Thi s image released by NASA shows the International Space Station backdropped by a colorful
Ear~h. This full view of the International Space Station was photographed by a crewmembe r
o"nboard the Space Shuttle Discovery following t he undocking of the two spacecraft Saturday.
Discovery pulled away from the com plex at 2:24 a.m. (C DT) on Satu rday.
Discove ry's bell y and had
to he removed by a spacewa lking astronaut. and the
torn therm al blanket un de r
},l i ...;it.
so the astrona uts a coc kpit window . The
could leave be hi nd su rp lus chance of the bla nk et co ml'ood. lap top L'&lt;lmputc rs and , in g' loose dUring re-e ntry
and str iking the shuttl e is
ot her supp li es.
NASA has s usp ended al l remote. enginee rs co nc l·udfuture slwtt lc flt~ ht s un til ed, so it· was left alone.
Depu ty shuttl e prog ra m
cn~irh.·cr~ fig ure 0ut w hy a
! -pou nd chu nk of' l'oa m manager Wayne Hal e said
irhui&lt;ttion
ripped
o l'f the so -ca ll ed anomaly li st
Discm en 's ex te rnal l'ucl fur th e 1.1-day fli ght had 4 7
tank shor-t!) al'tcr li l'tol'l' on items "that peop le have
July 2ft - and fi x the prob- t h u u~ht abo ut, wo rr ied
lem. The foam. which about.·· ·
At Saturday 's mi ss'io n
cn uld
ht~\ L'
caused
Co lumbia -type
damage. manage ment tea m meetin g,
" We went thr o ugh th e
missed thc ,shuttJc , ·
and agreed
It wa"' by far the hi gges t e nti re li st
piece of l'oam that fdl off, that none of th e iss ues p,o se
bu t at ·lc&lt;r't t'hrec other a land ing co ncern that we
piece~ ctJ me loose
th at have not al ready addresse d
cxcce J ed NASA's safety and worked through. and so
limit s The spm:e agency we are good lor landin g on
wa nt s tn understa nd the ci r- .sp;icc shuttle Discovery."
Unl ike Co lumbi a's trag ic
cumstallL'CS behind each of
the four lost piece s before cross-&lt;; ountry de scent o n
Feb . I. 2003. whic h ended
launchin~ ano ther shuttle .
Mi · ~s io'--'n managers also wi th mo re th an 85,000
want ;. ul:--we r:-. for the two pounds of wrec ka ge rainin g
pieces of therm;tl -tile fi ll er ont o Texas and Loui &gt;ia na .
that
came · loose
o n· Discovery wil l bypass most
J ay.; at th l' :-..t.lli on. nne
nHm.~ than pl; llli H~d . h~causc
of th ~ un ce rta in ty o\'cr the
ti miiig of the nex t shuttle

of the United States on
landin g day. T he spacec raft
wi ll approach Florida from
the so uthwes t, flying over
Nicaragua, ·c uba, the· western
fr in ges
of
th e
Ever);lades . a nd
Lake
Okeechobee , and on into
Cape Ca naveral.
Hale said there wa s no
ne ed to alter Di scovery's
fli ght path fo r Florida
because it already poses
low ri sk to populated areas,
in th e event of another
shutt Je
breakup .
The
w,eath er forecast look s
favor able
fo r
·c a pe
Cana vera l. but if bad
forces
weather
th ere
Discovery to go to th e
backup landing site .. in
Crlifornia on Tue&gt;day,' then
NASA will adj ust th e shuttle 's course to avoid a fl yover o f Los · Angeles, he
said .
Factoring public safe ty
into shuttle re-entries is a
new topic fo r NASA, and a
.direct
res ult
of
the
Columbi a disaster.

Much of tile improvemem
in breast c;incet survival in
recet]t years is because . the
average tumor is smaller. not
just because t reatme nt ~ are so
much better. a huge new study
has found.
The study didn 't look at
why tumors are smaller on
awrage. Doctors often cite an
emphasi s on regular mammograms for an increase in early
detection of breast cancers,
which can lead to earl ier treatment when the tumors are
smaller.
Examining 25 years of cancer records nationwide.
researchers concluded that
smaller tumor size accounted
for f, I percent of the impro vement in survival when cancer
had not spread beyond the
breast, and 28 percf!nt when it
had spread just a little.
For women 65 and older
with early·stage tumors - the
most com moll' sce nario - the
shift in size accounted for virtually all of the improve ment
in survival.
"We don 't in any waywant
to diminish the benefits we've
seen from advances in treatment because they've . been
enormous,"
said
lead
researcher Elena Elkin . "But
not all of the improvement in
survival is due to treatment
when important characteristics like size have also
changed over time."
The study was n't designed
to determine the value of
mammograms. or treatme'nts.
Hut it implies much about the
value of early detection.
"This reall y helps otO show
th e impo11ance of screeni.ng;·
said Debbie Saslow, who
heads breast cancer research
at the American Cance r
Societ y. " In addition to linding more small tumors. we' re
also finding less big tumors."
Saslow had no role in the
study. which was being published Monday online by the
society's journal Cancer and
wi ll be in its Sept. 15 print
edition.
It was condu cted by doctors
at Memorial Sloan -Kettering
Cancer Center in New York
and used a federal government's database that includes
nine cancer regi stries covering I 0 percent of the U.S.
population. · More
th an
265 ,000 breast tumors were
analyzed. ·
Breast cancer is the most
common cancer in American
women. An estimated 211 ,240

m; w cases and 40,400 deaths·
from it arc expected thts year.
Su rvival has increased, but
experts have argued over how
much of that is bequse of better drug s or ttimors being
fo und at earlier "ages. Twothirds of breast ca ncer~ today
arc diagnosed at th e local
stage. when they' re still confined to the breast; in the
1970s, onl y half were.
However, thi s is the largest
stud y in American women to
look at size within those
stages.
"Eve n within the same
stage category, ·the average
wmor size is s maller today
th an it was 25 years ago," ·
Elkin said.
'
For exampl e, the number of
local-stage breast cancers that
were smaller than I centimeter rose from Jess th an I0 per,
cent !'ron] 1975 through. 1979
to 25 percent fro m 1995
throug~ 1999. An inch is
about 2.5 centimeters.
Of regional-stage c:mcer~
- those th at spread to nem·by
ti ssue or lymph nodes but not
widely throughout the body
th e portion tha t were
smaller than 2 centimeters ·
ros.e from one-lifth to onethird .
Next, researchers co~1p ared
fi ve-year sttrvival rates for
these time periods. taking into .
account the shift in tumor
size.
For wo men with local -stage
brea~t cancers. survival rose
from nearl y . 9 1 percent to
more than 97 percent. bu t was
onl y 93 percent after adjusting
for smaller tumors. Looked at
another wav. the shift in size
accounted i·or 6.1 percent of
th e improvement in survival. .
For regional cancers. survival rose from abqut 68 percent to about 80 percent, but
was onl y 76 perce nt once
tumor size was factored in.
Size made a much bigger
di l'ference for older women
than you nger ones. A .whopping 911 percent of the surviva l
improvement for women ft5
and older with ' local-sta ge
cancers was explained by thi s.
Only 38 perce nt of th e
improvement in women under
50 was due to th e shift in
tumor size. ·
"It isn't necessaril y because
treatment works better forcertain women, it reflects who's
bec.ause ·
ge ttin g more."
younger women are more
likely to receive chemotherapy. Elkin said.
It also shows that older
women have benefited from
mammograms, Saslow said.

Monday, August R ,
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noon)
Expect a hu mid and c-l omly
morning. There cou ld be a
few ·raindrops &lt;rround the
a:rea. Temperatures wil l ht,Jd
steady around 72. Wi'nds wi ll
be 5 to I0 MPH from th e
southeast turning from th e
so uth as the morning pro-

Expect' a hum id and
cl ouJ y morntng . Thnc
co uld he a few raindrops
awund
the
area.
TcmJleratures wi ll c limb
from 6~ to X.l hv la te this
mornin g. \VinLI.i.. will be 5

MPH from th e 'ou th cas t
gresses~
turning rw rn the :-.uuthwe~t
Aftemoon {1-6 p.m.)
'"the morning progresse s.
It- sho uld remain humid , Ajiemoon ( 1-6 p.m:)
and cloud y. There is a sli ght
It sho uld remain humid
chance
()!' .
rain . and cl oudy . . Expect light
Temperature s &gt;Viii rise from rain . The rain is predicted to
76 with toda}'s high of H2 .' i .ll'l near 3 p.m. Expe ct
occurring aroun d 5 p.m. t!L i.liliilllati o n-. of 0. 10 inch Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH cs. Temperatures \\ill hoi'L'r
from th e south.. turning from at X.1. Wind s will he .'i MPH
the southeast a ~ the after · frl~rl1 tlw . . outh turnin g from
· &lt;e
the ....,out ln.ve....,t i.l" the afternoon pro gre~
.
~.
Evening (7 p.m.·Midnight) tHJon progresses
It will remain humid and
cloudy. There is a slim c han c ~
that
it
could
rain .
Temperatures will drop trl&gt;m
81 ea rl y thi s evening to 72.
Winds will be 5 MPH frotn
the sou th east.

Ovemiglrt (1-6 l/.111.)

Monday, AuguSt 8, 2005

Four QBs enter
Hall of Fame
BY BARRY WILNER
ASSOC IAfED PRESS

OVP Sd:edlile
GALLIPOLIS- A schedule of upcoming college
and high school varsity spoi1in9 events involving
teams from GaUia. Meigs and Mascn counties

Today 's game

Golf
Ripley a1 Wahama ("at Riverside), 10 a.m.

Sports

'9.95mo

It will contiituc to he humid
and cloud y. Li ght rain is
• lnstanl M es~ag ; ng Keep yo'ur buddy listl
expected. Th~ rainfall is • 10 e-mail addresses WJ!h Webmaill
expected to begi n ncar" a.m. • FREE TeCrtntcal Suppor1
The rain should stop by J • Custom Start Page - r-.e,.s Weather &amp; 'f.'Ore
.LrPRF.S:F - a.m. with total a~cumulations
( Surf uplo 6X faster! )
for thi&gt; eve nt near O.OJ inch -~-- f&lt;i&gt;li")mnre
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Sign Up Online! W'oiQlllti.LocaiNet .cam
at 68 with to,b y\ I0\1 ol tJK
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Winds will ' hc ) MPH fnrtlt LocaiNef 740-992·6260
Reliable lnlemet Aeceu'-Since 1994
the 'outheast.
1

~riefs

Officiating class
·to be held today

.'

ROC K SPRINGS A
football offici atinl' class will
be offered bcginmng August
8 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in
room 3 18 of Meigs Hi gh ·
Schoo l.
Those completing the
requirements of th e class will
rece ive ~ Class 2 officiat ing
permit fro m the Ohio High
Schoo l Athletic Association .
Wes t Virginia residen ts are
also eligible for the class.
For regi strat ion call Ri ck
Ash at 992-5960. Bill Schultz
at 992 -9925 . or see Richard
Hill at Hometown Market. in
Mi,ddle po11 .
·

''

MYL to host 3-on-3
hoops tournament
MIDDLEPORT - A 3-on-

3 double el imination basket-

'.

ball tournament will be held
o n. Saturday. August 13, at
General Hartin ge r Park,
' Check-in during the day of
the tourn amen t is 9 a.m. and
the games' will start at I0 a.m.
Registration for ms. are
ava ilable at Loder 219 in
Middleport.
Middleport
Trophies and Tees or the
Recreation Center in Athens.
For more informaiion, contact Britt Dodson at (740)
992- 11 22 .

Clippers scalp"
Richmond, 8-6
COLUMBUS (AP) - Joe
Thurston and David Parrish
drov e ill two runs apiece in
Columbus' eiRht-run fifth in
th e Clippers· ~ - 6 win Sunday
over th e Ri chmond Braves.
Richmond led -1-0 going
into the bottom of the inning.
but Columbus sent 12 batters
to the plate . Thurston singled
and tripled, and Parrish hit a

Tuesday, August 9
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)

\

'

'·'

annel

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·

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arL' a &lt;.'liiTl' l11 'tih:-~:ri l"ll.:r.

If you
t -t&lt; Pay m~m

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mu.;t hL' rnadl• irr rx·r:-nn at thl' Dai ly Seminl'l. Il l Coun St. . Pomeroy. Ohio in order to rcrcivc your Free wmir umhrclla.
Quantities arc limited .

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Nextel Cup -

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INDIA NA POLIS (AP)
- Tony Stewart was too
spent to climb the fence
ri ght away and too happy
to ca re.
·
A lifelong quest to win a
race at Indianapolis Motor
Speedway ended Sunday
wi th Stewart fin all y getting his "Holy Grail," and
he made sure to draw out
the celebrati on as lon~ as
he could while the.parttsan
crowd
roared
with
approval.
It wasn't the native
Hoosier's.
beloved
Indianapoli s 500 , but th e
former lndyCar champion,
who h&lt;ts longed to win a
race
at
.hi stori c
Indianapolis
Motor
Speedway, held off a
determined challenge from
Kasey Kahne to grab an
emotional victory in the
All state 400 at the
Brickvard.
It was the foul1h victory
in the last six races and ·
seventh top-10 fini sh jn a
row for the hottes t driver
in NASCAR. mov ing him
into the lead in the N.extcl
Cup standings for the lirst
time since he wrapped up
hi s only Cup title in 2002 .
•"I wish I could put it into
words," Stewal1 said . " It 's
been my entire life."
This one was up for
grabs nearly to th e end,
wi th Stewart taking hi s
first lead by passing Brian
Vickers 60 with la ps to go . .
the
25-year-old
· But
Kahne. last year's tnp
rookie, didn' t make it easy.
pa ss ing Ste.wart for the
lead with 27 laps left in the
I110-Jap even t - bringing

Please see Stewart. B6

Marlins·
.blank Reds
CINC INNATI (AP)
Ju an Pierre does n't need to
steal bases to drive opponents
to di straction.
The threat of the Florida
leadoff hi tte r' s speed prompted Cincinnati start er Ramon
Ortiz to commit three errors
on pickoff thro ws. and two of
the m Jed to P.ierre scoring

2~o'~i~~~r~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~i~s~
Sunday.
" I haven't been geuing oti

AP photo

Tony Stewart celebrates after winning the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard at the 'India napo lis
Motor Speedwpy Sunday in Indianapolis.

1\ram~.:---:----------'------------------------~
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EKpiratro n Date_· _
Exptration Date :
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. 1

Spor!s StaH

Brad Sherman, Sport1 Editor
(740 ) 446-2342 , ext 33
b&amp;;herman 0 m'fel8itytrlbune .com
Bryan Wahen, Sporta Writer
(740) 446-2342. &amp;Kt. 23
.

'

.

Larry Crum . Sporta Writer

(304) 675·1333. ex1 19
tcrum@myd ailyregister GOm

'

Please see Blank. Bl.

•

DETROIT ;API - Ca.scy ,
-Bla ke felt the Cleveland
J nJian~ gnl luckv Sund&lt;JV.
RP1mi'C Bdli &lt;;rd hi1 .~ goahcau three-run homer in the
eighth
rnning:
hl'lpin g

sportsOmyda 11ysen1Lnel.com

bwalters@ myda1ly111buile.com

base as much as· I' d like to
he." sa-id Pierre. who stole
two bases Saturdav to take
over th e Nationai League
lead with JS. "This shows
that speed can play a part.
You don't expect three bad
pickoff th rows. You see
..;n mcthin~ nev. ' in baseball
e\ cry day,"
· Dontrelle Willis allowed
four hih in eight inn ings to
eam· hi~ carecr-hi!l h 15th win.
;rnJ second in his last three
start~ &lt;Jftcr three t.:onsec utive
lo ss~s. Th~ th ird-year leftbander walk~d tw o and
stntck out tl1rce while
impro\·ing w -l-0 in five
career &gt;ta rt s a~a i ns t th e Reds.
"I JUSt tried tll throw strikes
and stay in a rhythm." Willis
:-.aicJ. .. That's my !!ame:·
ReJs fi rst baseman Sean
C"e' '"" hitless in three at bats :rg;ri nst Willi s ! 15-7).
"He \\ ;rs nastv." Casey
" rid . " He had everything .·
!!Orn~ . Hi :-. ~I iLier \\-· a~ s:wini!.
hi:-. ~i nkl.~r \\Ia:-, go.ing . ._WhUt

Cleveland claws'past·Tigers, 6-5

1-740-446-3008

E-mail -

Please see Canton, B6

Stewart gets coveted Indy victory

The Braves committed two
errors and bsued th ree walks
in the inning. and just two of
the C lippers' runs were
earned.
Andy Marte went 3-5 with
a douhle and a two-run
homer for Richmond . which
also c~1t a solo shot from J.J .
Ju rries:
Braves
starter
Adam
Bernero (2-3) worked out of
a bases-loaded. no-out jam in
the fourth but left. with one
gone in the lifth . Darrell May
(4- 1) allowed live runs lltl 10
hits in .'i 2/.1 . Jaspn Anderson
retired the side' in the 9th for
his sixt ll save.

Fax -

AP ph~to

CAN TO N - The eyes that
stared
down
del'cnscs
betrayed Dan M;tr;no nn
Sunday. They were wet wit h
t~&lt;!rs as he tonk his plac~
among th e legends of l'ovtball.
Marino suspected he might
break down and cry during
hi s emotionall y charged
acceptance speec h. He did " '
even before the n. after his
oldest son Dnn iel's intrqduc··
tion.
None of th at on-field stu·
ici sm for the Miami Dolphin s
great. at least tiot on th is sunsphrshed day in front of thousands of fans in No . 13 jerseys, and ·amid chants of "D-

A-N-N-Y"
"''ll remember this day for
the rest of my life ," Marino
said.
Th~n he ca pped it by throwing - what else? - a perfect
spira l in to the audience to his
forme r rece iv ing partner,
Mark Clayton .
"Gn deep. Ma rk,:· Marino
said as he licked th e fin gers
on his ri ght hand, a trademark
of his 17-year career. '
· Ma ri no . th e NFL's most
proli t'i&lt;: passer. joined Steve
Young. Fritz Pollard and
Ben ny Friedman in the
shrine.
Paying tri bute to his
Wes tern Pennsy lvania roots.
Marino no ted that John
Uni tas, Joe Namath, Joe

Allstate 400 at the Brickyard

Contact Information

I'"" .'ll " ""'· Enctn,rd ;_- my. paymr nr ;,f ~.10. 19 for ; months or the Daili'S&lt;''"';',''I.

:0

.

From left. Stephen Towns (re presenting Fritz Pollard) . Steve Young. Dan Marino. and Dav1d
Friedm an (represent ing Benny Friedman) pose with busts of the layer after enshrinement ceremonies at the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Sun day in Canton.
·

two-run single .

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INSIDE

'liP photo

Cleveland Indians ' 'Grady Sizemore follows through on a tv;o·
run home run ·a_gainst the
Detroit Tigers
in the fifth
inning in
I
Detroit Sunday. The Indians beat the Tigers 6-5.
·

•

sc\'c n inning.\.
He spl it a tiai l in the ""h
fidlling ~~ grounJ cr. and thJt \
why mana~ er Alan Tr&lt;rmmcll
pulled Johnson alkr seven

inning.; . ,
" It diJn 't both er me at all . I
Ck\'clanJ o' cr~.·urne four
errors to ·heat the Detroit pitL·hcJ a gooJ sc\·cnth
Tigers 6-S anU cum pl et~: a in nin e. I ft•h !.!.l llH.l ;md cortfi Jcnt :md 'f w~1u ld haw \\ent
thn:c-g arnc ;-,eric :-. ~~ecp.
Blake anu GraJ1 Si1cmm'e out fnr tlw ci~hth.": Jnhn~ni1
al so lwmcrc.J for ih~ Indian;,. :-.aiJ. "I w;p.,n"t " ur:pri~c-'d~ h~
who l'Omlllittcd l\\l \ t'rT.or~ on the tlc~.· i:-.ion tn take r'ne nut.
one play kacling \(.l thn:c run ~ The~ must l1a'~ h&lt;td a pl&lt;t n in
,
· in I he Tit!cr ~· five -run ~ct·ond mind:·
Detroit lcJ .) -J ~oin12 into
inning.
"With th ose four er'nm. we the eighth. · After ~~ . on,, out
proqably didn·t have any "&lt;tlk to JhonnY Peralta 01
business winning the game: · re\ieYer Cr~1ig Dingman. Vi~·
Bl ake said. " But we kept Darensbourg entered and·
sc rapping. came back and . walked Travi, Hafner.
Belliard then hit the second
ob\'iously. a big homer."
David Riske t.1-3) pitched I pitch from Fernando ~ od ney·
1-3 innings for th e win. and ( 1-2) owr the left -fie ld fence .
"I know I hit i.t good. hut I
Bob Wickman worked the
ninth for his 200th caree r '"' e didn't know' if th&lt;tt hiil l W&lt;ls
~oini! to . !.!O out." B ~ll iard
and 31 st.tl1i s seas&lt; in,
~a
id .....
..
Tiger ~tarter Ja ...,on John~on
"I \\anted tn get the pitch
allowed tllfct: rlll1:"1 - one
l{l\\
•md itwa\. ... Rodn c". . . aid
cJrncd'. run -. ami ' i' hits in

•
'

·· B'ut I g tll it up hipiL .. .
Three Clc\'dand errors led
w a five -r,un second inntng
'fnr · Dctr\lit. Nook Lngan
. . . r urcJ nn bi..., .,..in12k to ldl
fie ld during th e - two~crror
pf&lt;t I .
RonJcll Wh ite led ofhvith
a ....,jn~le. han Rodriguel fol Io'' t:d with a ~ro under to
th irJ ha"icman Aaron Bc..lOilt! .
vdw:-.c thro\\ to :-.ccond went
11110 right (t~ld and aliowed
While to &lt;tdvance "h\ third .
cr~lig \l onrol' -&gt; sacrifice ny
mad e it 1-0 .
Jnhn l\h:Donald then singled to send Rod ri gue7 to second . Logan followed with a
single to left and Crisp's
throw to the plate beat
Rodri guez. but he knocked
the hall' out of catcher Josh
Bard's gfo\'e . First baseman
Jeff Liel·er retrieved th e ball
and threw home to try to get
,l\.J d)onald. hut the throw
wen t 111cr Bard·, head and

Please see Claws, B&amp; _

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel
..

American Leagua
W L

·eooton
New Vork

GB

Pet

63 47

.573

59
56
53
43

.541
.509
.477
.38'*

3l.

GB

50
54
58
69

7
10 ....

Toronto
Battlmore
Tampa Bay
Central Dlvlalon

W L

Pc.t

72 36
60 52

. 6~5
536

W L
64 47

'Pet

Los Angeles
~akland

64 47

577

Texas
Seattle

56 54
47 63

509
427

• Chicago

21

CI6V&amp;Iand
Minnesota
57 54 ,514
Detroit
52 58 .473
Kansas City
38 73 .342
West Division

GB

577

Sunday's Games
Clev~land

6, Detrort 5
.N.Y Yankees 8, Toronto 2
Texas 9, Baltimore 3
Boston t 1. Minnesota 7
Oakland 1 1, Kansas C1ty 0
Chicago While Sox 3, Sea ttle 1
L. A. . Angels 10, Tampa Bay 4 '
Today'i Games
: Te11as (Ric .Rodnguez 2·3) ~~ Boston
(Mllkll 4· 4) . 7:05pm.
Ch1cago Wh ite So"' (O.Hernandez 8·
4) at N.Y Yankees (Mussma 10·7).
7:05pm
Detroi t (Maroth 9-11) at Toronto
(Bush 2·5), 7 07 p.m
Minnesota (Silva 7-5 ) at Seallle
(Meche 10-8), 10·05 p m.

BY THE AssociATED PRESS
Daunte Culpepper and the
Minnesota Vikings reached an
ag reement on Sunday to
restructure the quarterback 's
contract, givi ng the three-time
Pro Bowl selection an unspecitied ra ise.
Rob BrzezinskL the team' s
vice president for foo tbal l
operations. said the deal give n the bless ing . of new
owner Zygi Wilf - has been
in the works si nce Jcm.uary.
Brzezmsk1 d idn 't uivu lge
financial terms, other than to
conllrm that Culpepper was
gelling an increase from the
framework of the I 0-year.
$ 102 million exte nsion he
signed in
May 2003.
C ulpepper 's age nt. Mason
Ashe, al so dcdmed tu specify
- but said the raise was in the
form of both bonuses and
'annual salary increases.
Culpepper' s 2005 sa lary.

Blank
from PageBl

National League
Eeat OIVIIIOn

GB

W L
PC!
Atlanta
64 48 .571
.Florida
57 52 .523
Washington
58 53 .523
.Philadelphia 58 54 .518
New York
57 54 .514
Central Olvlalon
St. Louis
Houeton
Milwaukee
Ctllcago
Cincinnati
Plltsburgtl

W L

Pel

70
60
56
54

41
51
56
57

.631
541
.500
.486

49 62

.441

65

.420

47

5 1\!
5 );
6
6 111

GB
10
14
16
21

'I

Watt Dlvlalon
W
San Diego
56
Arizona
54
50
Los Angeles
San Franc1sco 48
41
Colorado

L
55
59
61
62
69

Pet
.505
478
450
436
373

GB
3
6
7\
14 \

Sunday 's Gam••
San Diego 3, Washington 0
Florida 2, Cmcin nah 0
LA Dodgers 6, Pittsburgh 4
Milwaukee 2, Philadelphia 0
St 'toUIS 5, Atlanta 3
·
Houston 8. San Franci sco 1
Anzona 9, Colorado 4
N.Y Mets 6, Ch1cago Cubs 1
Today's Games
Florida (Beckett 10-6) at Colorado
(SKim 1-2). 1 p.m .. 1st game
Florida (Valdez 1-0) at Colorado
(BJOrn 2-8), 7.30 p.m., 2nd game
St Louis (Morris 12-4 ).at Milwaukee
(Santos 3- 11), 8 05 p m.
Cmcmnati (Ciaussem 6-8) at Ch1cago
Cubs (J Williams 3-4) , 8 05 p.m .

-

he does IS kind of sling the
ball , and today he kept it
down. This was one of those
days when nobody in the
league was goi ng to hit him."
Todd Jone s pitched th e·
ninth for his 23rd save in 25
opportunities. Manager Jack
McKeon-was glad to use only
two puehers With Florida facing . a doubleheader at
Colorado on Monday, which
·onginally was scheduled to
be a day.off.
"We needed it." McKeon
said . "He go t into jams,
which ·he doe s a lot. but he
gives yo u everything he's
got."
· Ortiz (6-8 ) lost for the second ti m'e. on the six-game
homestand. He allowed both
unearned runs and I0 hits
with one wa lk and two strikeouts in seven imlings.
He became the first pitcher
in the majors to commit three
errors in one game since
Detroit's Dave Borkowski on
Aug . 23. 1999, at Anaheim.
and the first NL pitcher to do
it s1 nce Chicago's ,Jaime
Navarro on Aug:. I B. 1996.
"I don ' t know what happened." Ortiz said. "I think I

Halp Wanted

0

tried to be too qui~k and my
feet went the wrong way."
Reds manager Jerry Narron
took some of. the blame.
. " It was po.or management
on my part." Narron said. "!
should 've gone out after the
second one and said, 'Do n't
try it unless you can make a
strong, accurate thro w.' 1
should've told him before the
game.'.'
The Reds .lost both threegame series on .the homesland ~fter winning or splitting
seven consecutive series. The
Marlin s have won three of
their last four games.
. Pi erre led off the game
with a bunt sin gle and went
to third when Ortiz's attempted pickoff got past Casey.
Pierre held when Lui s
Casti llo hit a sharp one-hopper back to Ortiz. but Conine
delivered an RBI single to
left-cen1er tield.
Pi ~ rre was back at it in the
third. He reached while fo rcing Willi's at second and then
moved to second on another
bad pickoff by Ortiz. who
pi cked up hi s second error.
Castill o's single moved
Pierre to third and Conine
followed with a sacritlce lly
to right.
"Every one of those throws
would have been clo se,"
Pierre said . "Th ey just
werert 't accurate. He has a

pads for the
morn i n g
p r ac t i ce.
players
wore shell s
and shorts
during
a
bnef afternoun work-

missed any suggestion that the
•
injury might not be genuine .
•••
"**
calling it a chronic condition.
**fill ;,(***
Redskins
Wide receiver Taylor Jacobs
will be sidelined at least a
week with a sprained big left
toe.
Jacobs was injured during
out.
Washington's
sc rimmage
The fi ve-time Pro Bowl again st
Baltimore
on
select ion was scheduled to Saturday. An MRI revealed
si!\n autogtaphs . with the rest moderate swelling but nothi"ng
of the w1de recetvers alter the more serious than a sprain.
morning .practice. but was a , A second-round drati pick m
no· show. The team smd he. 2003, Jacobs is vying for the
was receiving treatment.
No. 3 receiver spot behind
Beginning the second year Santana Moss and David
of a seven-year deal worth j ust Patten . Jacobs also mi ssed a
under $49 mill ion. the dis- day of practice ·last week
grunt led Owens is sti ll hoping becau;,e of heat-related sympt~e Eagles will redo his con- to ms.
Panthers
tract.
· Owens
le ft
practi ce
Tight end Freddie Jones
Thursday morning and did not Jelired. ending his eight-year
return fo r the afternoon ses- cureer just four months after
sion. Coach Andy Reid di s- signing a free .agent ~ontract

good, qui ck move."
Orti z com mitted a third
error while tryi ng to pick off
Pierre with two outs in the
fift h, but ·Castillo Oied out to
leave Pierre stranded at third.
Casey was charged with
Cincinnati 's other error when
he dropped the 'ball during a
rundown in the second
inning.
The• Reds' four errors tied
their season high. They also
made four errors on May 18
in a I0-6 loss to the Mets at
New York.
·
Notes: The Marlins shored
up their catching Sunday by
purchasing the contract of
Ry&lt;m Jorgensen from TripleA Albuquerque to help fill in
for Paul ' Lo Due a, who
strained hi s right hamstring
Saturday.... The Marlins also
optioned
RHP
Randy
Messenger to Albuquerque
and transferred RHP Logan
Ken sing from the 15-day disabled li st to the liD-day li st.
... Casey's streak of consecuti ve errorl ess games was
stopped at a career-high 77
game s. Casey's error was hi s
second of the season and first
siiJCe May 2 .. . Ryan Freel
and Felipe Lopez, the top
two bat1ers in Cincinnati 's
. lineup. went a combined Ofor' 7. Toge ther. they are hitlcs"s in their last 33 at-bats.

with Carolina.
Jones had 404 receptions
over five seasons in San Di~~o
and three in Arizona. His
offensive attributes were not a
great fit with the Panthers,
who use their tight ends primaril y for blocking.
·'It was in the best interest of
my family that I conclude my
career at . this time." Jones
sai~ .
" I appreciate the
Panthers signin g me. It's a
top- notch organization and
I'm glaa I got a chance to
experi·e nce it before I retired."
Cowboys · ·
Dallas signed kicker Jose
Cortez after a workout on
Saturday and waived injured
kicker Brett Visintainer.
Cortez· spent the past two
seasons with Minnesota,
appeanng in 10 g_ames .and
only handling ki ckoffs. He
hasn't auempted a field goal
since 2002 with Wasllington.

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

Help Wanted

'aCrtfiune .- Sentinel - l\e ister
CLASS:IFIED
We Cove

.

MLT/MT

Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit
healthcare facility, currently has an open
position for the following :

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a lull time (all
shifts) Registered Nurse in the ICCU
D~partment. Applicants must have a
current West Virginia license. Previous
!CCU experience preferred.

PER Dl EM
MLT /MT for Evenings
/Nights/Weekends. Baccalaureate degree
in Medical Technology or related field
plus eligibility for ASCP and/or Associates
Degree in applied science or related field
plus eligibility for certification by ASCP.
Three years or greater staff tech experi1
ence preferred. Must have or be immediately eligible for WV license.

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

Send resume to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340 Ext. 1414
Fax: 304-675-6775
wwW.pvalley.org

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

ANEOE

ANEOE
Public Notice

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

The

, Help Wanted

0

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
HOME HEALTH
Pleasant Valley Hospital Home He~lth
is currently accepting resumes for
one full-time Occupational Therapist
and Speech Therapist -to provide
home health visits.
For more information contact Trina
Hannan at 304-675-7400.
www.pvalley.org

ANEOE

FIND A JOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

VIllage

erage of Its employees. Bids

. Read your

be
submitted as soon" as

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

should

newspaper and learn

po_sslble.
. (8)7, 8,9

OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN

something today!
-

Graduate of accredited surgical technology program or equivalent experience
required. Certified ORT preferred.

~

;r-tooking For,
ANew Home?

Excellent salary, ' holidays, health insurance single/farT)ily plan, dental plan, life
insurance, vacation, long-term disability

TrY the
Classifieds!!

and retirement.

For more information:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Hur.1an Resources·
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340 Ext. 1414
www.pvalley.org

·'•
I

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

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Auto Repair ... .................................: ...,.........770
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&amp; Molors for Sale ............................. 750

Building Supplies ........................................ S50
Business and Buildings .................... w ...... 340

Business Opportunlty ................................. 210

Senior Discount*

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

Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190

on your home delivered
subscription!

ElectricaVRefrigeration ........................ ,..... ,840
Equipment lor Renl ..................................... 480
Excavating .... ................. ..... ....................,,... 830

Farm Equlpment..................... ..................... 610
Farms for Rent. .......................................... .'. 430

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of you~ p~oto ID.
~allipolts Jlailp Ut:ribune

Farms lor Sale ... .......................................... 330 ·
For Lease ..................................................... 490

For Sale ........................................................ S8S
For Sale or Trade ........................................ S90
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....................................S80

Furni s hed

Rooms ........................................ 450

General Hauting ...........................................aso
Giveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ................................................... .OSO
Hay &amp; Graln ......................................:...........640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home Improvements...................................81 0
Home'o for Sale ........... :................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510

Houses for Rent ......................... :................ 410

In Memoriam ................................................020

lnauranca ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660

Llves1ock...................................................... 630
Loot and Found ......................................... .. 060
Lots &amp; Acreago ............................................ 350
llllacollanooua .............................................. I 70

The Daily Sentiriel

Miscellaneous Merchandlse ......•..., ............ S40

Mobile Home Repalr .................................... aao
Mobile Homes for Ront ..................... :......... 420
Mobile Homes for Ssle ........., .....................320
Money to Loon ........................................ :.... 220
lllotoreycloo &amp; 4 Whoolora .......................... 740

t!times -~entinel

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Muslcallnstrumants ................................... S70

Personals ..................................................... oos

Pots for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820·
Profosalonsl San~lcos ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Rops1r ............................... 160
Real Estate Wantod ..................................... 360
'Schools Instruction ........~ ............................ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fort111zor .............................. 6SO
Situations Wantod ....................................... 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... S20
SUV's for Sale .............................................. 720

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

. City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ __ __

Trucks for Sale .................... ... ..................... 715

Up~olatery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............,................ .. :............. 090

.,

Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies •...! ............. 620

-------·-·-------------. --. -----..
,

Wanted To Do.............................................. 180
' Wonted to Rent ............................................470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomoroy!Middlo .................... :.... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleasant. ............................... 076

i':&gt;HIO ~VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tr.a
lvou do bus1ness with peo
le you know . and NOT 1
tsend money thrOLJgh th
jm ail unt1i you have 1hvest1
aled the offenno .

'0-11'

-~

© 2005 by NEA, Inc .

www .comics.com

LEARN

TO

i

110

110

110

HELPWANlHJ

HELPWAN!Hl

DRIVE

, "NO

E)(PERIE~ CE

NF't;ESSAAY
'FULL TIME CLASSES
' COL TRAINING
' FINANCING A.VAILABLE
'JOIJ PLACE ""Ern
' ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE

1-800-334-1203

Market. ............... :..... ....... OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760

If so, you qualify for a

H Et.P WAr."ll1l

Announcement ............................................ 030
Auction and Flea

•NOTICF.•

L,-------.-J
110

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Ant1ques .............:~........................................ 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440

ABSOlUTE QOLDMINEI
60 vendmg machmes/
ellcellent loc&lt;Jtlons &lt;J ii for
$ 10.995
800·234·6982

u

'~'

TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHE VI! LE. VA

4x4's For Sale ...................... ........................ 72S

0

l.o lf{\l(f· S

a ye ow e Black
4
VARIJ SAU~1xe
Chow m1)( Fe Walker hound
f't)!\.1JoJ(()\'/MIIJIJU: ..,
mix M 2Y rs 2Choc Labs M
&amp; Fe.. Husky w/1 blue &amp;
Woman 's dr ess
• green eye 4 pupp1es Lab &amp; 3 family
clothes.
K1ds-Adulls
cloth es.
RAt mixes
'
toys, tupperware, a little bit
of everything Ram or sh•n e
l..o!i1 ANJJ
521 Mulbe rry Hgts. Pomeroy
F'OUN!l
V1ctor Wolfe's in Aacme-3'
fam1ly yard sale- little boys
clothes, toddler bed, baby
bed , changmg table.
ant1quc hanging corner cup• Found. Black Lab puppy on board, buffet . end tabl es.
Jackson P1ke Call (740)446- cha1 rs, m1sc August H &amp;
4740
.
12

'l'

www allianclr aC10&lt; !ra~er cotr

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts.
wood 1!ems
To $480/wk
Malenals prov1ded
Free mformat1on pkg 24Hr

BtJSJNJc~'
01'1,lKnJNIW

Work Car that needs li ttl e
work Call (740)38B-8228 or
(740)44 1-1424

1 \II '! In

Found. Bl ack grey med1um
s1ze male dog w1th lealhef
· collar m Rodney area
: (740)446·63.53

or older?

~unba~

dL b

1072 YARU SALI-:.,._ _Gii'iiAiio1Jiio.iil1,;,'0t;;,';;,l~io
· _..,

10

HOMK~

Mn1m .E Hnm"

HJR S.\J.E

FOR SALE

lwright@ic .net

Or Brown 's, Library, 124 Silver and Gold Co1ns.
2 Weimaraners Collie m1x EI!:)(On
On Augu st 1 Proo!sets Gold A1ngs Preyear old , great watcl'1 dogs Reward 740·388-0876
1935
US
Currency
(740)379-2316
Solitaire' Diamonds· M T S
lost-Black male Labrador Com Shop. 15 1 Second
5 M old puppy male Boston Aetnever. S1x years old, red Avenue, Galllpohs. 740-446Tamer M l)(. Call 740·992- collar Lost around ACtd1son
2842
7335 or 992-28 12
P1ke , Bulaville Ad area
Reward for retu rn (740)367· Buying Goldenseal Wed . &amp;
Sat 12·4, Tl'1e Pla1ns, Oh,
7581
(740)664&gt;476 1, 740-7979054, George Buckley

· Please adopt one of these
nlce dogs fr om the Me1gs
Dog Po und 740 -992-3779.
Collie ml)( M 11 /2 yrs P11
mil( Fe 1 yr
German
Shepard mix 11 /2 yrs .

i

POLICIES · Ohio Vall1y PubU1hlng reaervee the rlghlto edit, reject , or cance l anv ad at anv time Enora must be reported on the first dav of
Trlbun ..S.ntlnei·Regleter will be r"ponelble lor no more than the co at of the apace occupied bv the error and on lv the l1ret 1ntertion . We sha ll not be 1 1
any loaa or expenae that reeulle from the publica tion Of oml11ion of an advertlt8menl. Correction win be made In tha l1rat available ediiiCVJ . • soera elwava confldantlal. • Current rtle card applle1. • All real eatate advertlaementa are aubject to the Federal Fair Housmg Act of 1968. • Th is o••••~•P~; ~
aecepta onlv help wante~ ada
I EOE atandarda. Wa will
acc ept any adva(lialng In violation of the law

• Start Your Ads With A. Keyword • Include Complete
Description • InClude A Price a Av oi d Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days·

I,

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

DiSplay Ads

Real-Estate Wanted -Local
perso n loOking for a home to
Al l cash
Me1gs or
buy
GaU1a No dou bl e-wide o r
modular 740--59 1-8936

Mall or drop off thta coupon along
I
wlth • copy of your photo 10 to
1
Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.Q. !iOX·469, Galllpollo, OH 45631 :

'

l\egt~ter
(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Sentinel ·

To Place

:
.
:

Phone, __________ _ ___

ANEOE

(

GIVI•;A.Wo\V
~-------_.J Lost Ce ll Phone. V1cm1ty of Ab so lute Top Dollar u S

~oint itlea:~ant 1\egh~ter

of

Micldleporl is currently
accepting bids on
Health Insurance cov-

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD
ONLINE

r

Are you 65

0

In One Week With Us

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
-Should
These Items
To

AP photo
Florida Marlins' pitcher Dontrelle Wi llis reacts after getting
Cincinnati Reds' Ryan Freel to ground out to end the bottom of
the eighth inn1ng Sunday in Cincinnat i. The Marlins won, 2-0.

Mrip Countr. OH

Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Countl• Like
NoOne
Else Canl

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

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

RN NURSE
ICCU

PA.RTfiME

ANEOE

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

PHARMACIST

'

according to the NFL Players
Association's Web site, would
have been $540,000. That's
sure to go up substantially.
"He's a premier player in
thi s league. and we felt like his
contract needed an adjustment
to rellec t that." Brzezinski
s.1id. "Zygi stepped up. like
he's done with eve rything
else ."
Players were unaHJilabie' for
com mc!H on Sunday, their
first day · off s1ncc training
ca111P began last week. The
Vikings were to reslJme practice in Mankato. Minn .• on
Monday morning .
Eagles
Wide ·rece iver Terrell
Owens returned to practice
with Philadelphia after' missing tJ.le last two clays with
inflammation in hjs left groin.
Owens participated in boih
the morning and afternoon
sessions. After wearing full

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Help Wanted

www.mydailysentinel.com

Culpepper to.restructure deal with Vikings
..........

Standin~:s
E111 OIVIIIOn

Monda~August8,2005

Monday, August 8, 2005

. www.mydailysentinel.com

ngra
Barge Co. w1i l be accept
ng appt1cattons at th
ept for Employmen
erv1ces 225 Sixth Street,
oin t Pleasant., Wes
1rg1n1a, on 8/151200
hrough 8/ t 6/2005 fro
.OOam till 3 OOpm MUS
AVE 2 years heavy labo
ork e)(penence (I e farm
ng, logg1ng. cons truction.
tc) Generous da1ly wag
d e)(Ce llent bena11
ka e EOE, M/F!V

Durable M edical Eqwpmenl
Company IS lookmg for a
person w1th e)(per1ence ill
manag1ng accounts recoiv
abies &amp; elect ron1c b1lllng
80 1 -428~649
program Send resume to
An Excellent way to earn CLA Box 548, clo Gallipolis
Tr ibuna, PO. Boll 469.
money The New Avon
GallipOliS
, OH 45631.
Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
Are you looking ror a job Expenenced food prep/grill
where your hard wOrk is
cook
Also
w811ress
appreciated?
Parkfron t DmE!r Apply m
Where your ded f~ ation IS person 314 Second Ave .
noliced?
lntoCislon IS the place
Holp Wanted Area franchise
for you
motorcycle/ ATV dealership
We are currently hav1ng an h1nng all poS1110ns Ctencal.
hOurs conte st that w1ll be
Sale s &amp; MechaniCs Send
reward1rag 2 brand new
resume to CLA 573. c/o
cars and over $60.000 In ' Gallipolis Da1ly Tr1bune. PO
prizes to some of ow hard 80)( 469 GallipOliS . OH
work1ng employees
45631
We olfer up to S8/hOI.Jt
Pa1d vacat1on. hOiielays
Home Health Care of SED 1s
and tra1n1ng
currently accephng apphcaIf you are a ded1cated
llons lor AN 's and A1des
employee who li kes to be
Competitive wages &amp; benerecogn1.ted give us a call
fits 1-866-368-1 100 loll
todayr
Free '
1-877-463-6247 ext 2454
Ho usekeep1 ng /La und ry
Are you t1red of runnmg?
pos111on available ·at Arbors
Tired of slnndmg on your
ot Gallipolis. 170 Pinecrest
teet all day?
LPN/RN's
Dr . Gallipolis
No phone
needed 1n . Pomeroy Ohio
calls please.
area FTIPT hours . Vent .
Trach and G·tube el(pen- Part·Timo teacher needed
ence. Great company, greal for the Me1gs County Adult
benefitS Call Primary Care Basic EducatiOn program at
Nurs1ng Services 800-518· our Middleport Center
2273 1n' Oh10 or {614)764·
App licatiOn must have or be
0960 aM ask for Jean
able to ob ta in a teach1nn
~:~

AVON I Ail Areasl To Buy or cer!lhcato/license from the
Department
of
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304 - OhiO
Educat1on Pps1110n is grant
675- 1429
lunded for 20 hours per
Babys1tter needed lor 1 four
week (9 00·2 00 Monday
year old Two weekends and through Thurs.:lay) lor 50
a lew even1ngs a mon1h Call
~eeks per year
Loner ol
Ivy
{740)645-4539.
mterest and resume w1th
References requ1red
three references must be
Cust om Design. LTD &amp; received oy 3 30 PM on
Diamonds Two ISm need ot ' A1Jgust 12 2005· Submit to
an. Expenenced Jewelry Ce:rot Brewer at the AthensSaies'person. Please oon- Meigs Educational Service
tact Becky at (304 )674-6103 Center. P.O. Boll 684 . 320
112 East Main Street,
for an tnterv1ew
Pomeroy. OH 45769 More
The Mason County An1mal rnlormalton 1s ,ava ilable by
Welfare League Open1ngs calling Mrs Brewer at ( 40·
tor Part-lime Dog Warden. &amp; 992-5592
The Ath ensKennel
Tech's.
01Jlles Me1gs ESC tS an equal
1nclude. wste nng, feeding, o p p o r 1 u n 1 t, y
cteanmg ·
Kennels emptoyerlprov1Qe1
&amp; some ---~----Transpo rtat ion
Mamtenance Ect Please ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT's
call
p04)675-6458
tor needed Apply at 1354
App1rcat1on
Jackson Pllw. Gallipolis

•

LPN/ STN A
Scen1c Hills Nurs1ng Center.
a Ta ndem Health Care
Fac11ity, IS seek1ng a select
few to JOin our outstanding
team as

LPNs
Fui1T1me
12 Hour Shifts, 6P-6A

STNAs
Full and Part Time
All Shifts
P10per 1 1 c~se/cert 1 ! 1 call0n
requ 1red w e oiler an e)(cel·
lent work enwonment, sh11t
d1fferent1al
corn pet 1hve
Wages. great benehts. pertet
attendance 1ncent111es and
much more!

P

lease apply to
Attn · Dianna Th o mpson
HR
Scenic Hills ~urslng
Cenrer
3.11, Buckridge Road
Bidwell, OH 45614
Ph. 740/446-7150
Fax : 740/446-2438
Email: admln shn@

AN/LPN (Home Health)
Part or Full time, per v1s1t or
hourly. 401 K, oa fetena plan.
mileage , Unrform allowance.
CEU reimbursement Sam's
Club, Health &amp; L1fe 1ns PTO
w1'11ch accumulates from
f1rst wor~ day Top pay 1n TnState S1gn·On Bonus BOO
.
759-5383
EOE
are 1ouseman
ru e
Onver Must have Class
r B C OL and curren
edlca\ card Apply 1
Thomas

Borrow Smart. Contac
he OhiO DIVISion 0
lnslll utlon'
inanc 1al
lhce
of
Consume
lla1 rs BEFORE you ref1
nance your home o
bta1n a loan BEWAR
I requests tor any larg
dvance payments o
€(]S or insurance Call
he Otl1ce of Consume
ffa1 rs toll free at 1-866
78-0003 to learn if th
mortgage
broker o
lender
1s
prope r!~
1censed {Th1s IS a pubh

Do-l

~;=~~~~~~
150

. MONEY
JU UlAN

~

INSTRliCilOI'

J'Kon.""loNAL

Concealed P1stol Class
I( 'E.~
Now form1ng August 13 at .. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _....

Sun

VFW, Mason . WV OhiO &amp; C:.keS by Kathy- wedd1ng &amp;
WV &amp; all legal states Cell all-occasron : also Karaoke .
740-843·5555
call {740)992·0723 after
3pm

Gallipolis Caree r College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today 1740-446-4367
1·800·2 14-0452

v. •

.

'
'

-

A1tenllon!
Local compa ny offenng · NO
DOWN PAYMENT' programs for you to buy your
home 1nstead oi rent1ng
• 1ooo ;, fmanclng
• Less than petlect credit
accep\ed ·
• Payment could be th e
same as rent
Mortga ge
Locators.
(7 40)367-0000

Atl rfll'll o!Stato! advo!rtislng
m thiS newspaper IS
subject to the Federal
Farr Housmg Acl of 1968
which makes it illegal to
advertise ·any
preler ence, hmlt&amp;tlon or
d1scri1mnation based on
race. color. religion, se11
lam1t1a l statu S" or nAiional
origm. or any intention to
mako! an'1 such
prelerenee, hm1tat1on or
dis crimination "
This newspaper wtll not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate whrc h Is in
violation of the law. Our
readers are here by ,
Informed that 1111
dwellings 11dvert1sed 10
lhls newspaper are
available on an equal
opportun ity bases

area. An Equal Opportunity
Employer F/MION
Applications w1ll be taken
Monday through Friday
8 ooam- 4.00pm at the faclil·
ty , 8204! Carla DriVe No
phone calls please
Nurs1ng Ass1stan1 Classes
• Beginning August 17. 2005
If you enJOY elderly people
and wat'u to become 8 mem·
bar ot our health care tea m.
please stop by Rockspnngs
Aehabllftatlon Center at
36759 Rodcspr1ngs Road
Pomeroy. OhiO 45769 and ttti
out an appbcatron for the
classes
EKtend1ca re
Hea!tn Services. rnc 1s an
equal opportun 1ry employer
that encourages workplace
drverSit.,. MIF DN
•
Aes1dentia t
Treatment
Facthty lor boys now hlflng
0 1rect Care WorKers Pay
based on expenence pa1d
msurance ~740}379-9083
9am -3pm.Mon-Fn'

yard.
Gate
openi
to
S O . ~li:
L---~,;,
' ;,;
"'i.iii·.'lil
SIK Used 1o· steel beams P!easanl Va ll ey Hosp1t al
6 5 332 3
12s and ' 13's·plck·UP onlyr cI3_04
_:_1_7_
._ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1999
14x80
Oakwood
740·992·2704
3
Bedroom , ;:
Batn . Freemont
3 bedroo~. ~
180
Wo\NllD
Fire111ace. lf1_ the ct.Juntry on baths u'1derp1nnmg: A c
To
Do
J 1 6 acres 595 .000 Call clean .
Pr1ce neg
1
~:-------_.1 (7401709·1166
(740)386-8513 ·( 740J388 ·
8017
Ali Types Masonty, Bnck 3 br buck tocated Rt2 area
Black. Stone Free Estimate .e;o~c toca!IOn fuii ·Srte baso· 5 Homes under S10 000
(304)773·9550 . 3()4·593· ment wl 1 car garage 304 · Will delive r (740)385-7671
895-3129
6421
97 F eet~'&gt;ood 14 !170 total
For Sale For Re nt Lovely electnC W 1 he'p w1tn aelivGeorges Portable Sawmill, Rrver Properly 1 Acre ery 1'1C•udPs central a~r Only
OOnt Mut your Logs to the Br 1ck V mvl
Garage afld S1&lt;l 995
Ca 1 t740t385·
M1ll JU St call 304-675-t957
Carport,
Basement 9621
Harc:iwooa Floors
3BR
W1ll take care of The Elderly 2BA LA DR FA 2 l1re· NeW 1.4~70 3 bedroom. 2
1n the1rhome have 10 years ol aces
$1600 00
or batt Onl, S196 63 per
expenence call (3041675· $800 mo
(7 40) 446-0538 f"'!Ontn.Cai-Eiaii'C1740)a85·
2434
·3264
't502)303·3621

SFIOF/EOE
HRittandemhealltlcare.com
Maple Grove Cabmetry 1s
seekrng an honest , depend·
able md1v1dual lor lull or part
time work Experience m
cabmet/ counte rtop work .
labrlca!IOill mstallation preferred Apply m person 9~
StAt 218 (740)256-1275.
M1ddle1on Estates a leadmg
provider of support serv1ces
to mdiVIduals w1th men tal
retardatJon a"nd develop·
mental disabilities is looking
lor full·t1me and part-lime
Support AsSOCiates (d1rect
~are staH) in the Gallipolis

TUflNEO DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSJ?
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1-888-582-3345

\lomu : H O\II·'S

'

~

,.,.--------,

f350

--'

Lc n~ &amp;
Anu:..\( ,f-

Jackson County, Oh10. 39
acres
www cskusa com ,
5131374·9424

360

Rl·,\1 . E~ JATE
Wwn-:n

I Buy
buys
Ou1cio;
4 bedroom. 2 bath Rou sh 6300
Ferrell Lane $35,000 t1rm
304 675-1911 or 593-2096

Houses tor Sale Potential
Horn e
or
Carnmer1cdl
Property 1800 SO FT.
Garage , lnground Ho1st
WNW galhj:Xlll&amp;r;are-tlfcolloga com
Lo ts ol ~xtras Upstarrs Apt
Acc red •lad Member Accredr long
"I \II·S I\H
1200 SO FT fi-Rooms•
C"Unc•l lo• tnd~pe nMnl Golle&lt;J!!s :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Bath, Extras La rge Co•.ereei
anp SCilooiS 12748
~
~~.;;,;;..;...;._ _ _""!
I0
Porch
Mu st sec to
Hm1~:'
'170
Apprec ral ed call lor rnore
mRSAn.
MJSCEI.L\NBJl!i
Detailed lntormahOn Phone
.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _....
(304)882·3339
or (304)863
112 Pleasant Street 3
2000 Kawasa~ 1 ultra 150 tot Bedroom. 1 1/2 Baths 3341
sk1, low hours. w1th snore Fam1ly Room. 0 1n1ng Room .
loader 1ra11er $4900 304- Full Basement, Storage State Rt 141 Gat11pOI1S 0H
Bldg Gara9e New Central 2 larg e bed room 1 bath. LA.
675 -6675
An Cond, New W1r'1dOWS KT. DR. C a1r heat 2 Or.JI·
--------bU1IC11ngs car pOrt move m
5-_4_
034
_~--- cond1 11on Ab ou t 1•2 ac
DIRECT TV 3 room with ~13_0_4:._)6_7_
TIVO FREE 145 Channels 1401
Cedar
St (7 40)446 -2098 $5 6 OO()
only $39 00 per month Ask Me adowbrook
Add
3
how to get FREE HBO. Bedroom.1 112 Bath .Corner We ll Ma1nta1"1ed Home 2
MAX . and home enterta1n· lof. new ,Root move-In con· miles
North
ot
P01nt
menl system CaiiS00-523- dmon . new Carpet and Pleasanl on Landscaped 12
7556 for details
Floonng Storage Bulid1ng. acre 3 bedrooms Fa m11y
1n Back Yard Room. Den Off1ce Firep lace
-0-IR_E_C_TV
___
F-:
R-EE_ H
_o_m_e Fe nced
(304)675-7708 or (304)593·
With gas logs Hareiwood
entertamment
Sy stem.
4135
Floor s
Large
Utlhly
FREE Equ1pment and Install
Large Slate too k
up to tour rooms 145 ch an- t86 North Park Onve 2 Storage'
and Bnck Pat1o Extra lois
nels S29 .00 a month Ask bedroom, 1 bath. Full basem'ent.
detached
Garage
.
available
Shown
bv
how to get FREE HBO.
Appo1n1ment (304 )675-1~3.6
MAX and STARS 1-800- Central A1r, Perfect 1n town
location Fence!.'! 1r1 back523·7556 for details

tandemhealr~cara . com

New 3· BR Home Onl~·
$189/mo Includes a'c deliVery and set up a40)385·
4367
.

3BR Ranch. 2 car garage
pool, ·City schools $90.000
3460 SR 218 GallipoliS
OH (740)256·1962

=

mv1ce announcemen
rom the Oh10 Valle

~;P;u:b':";"':n::C:o=
m a=n~)

S&lt;...l-tlX&gt;I...

3 8~ Ranch , 1 1/2 ba th.
overs1zed garage , hard woudlt1le !lams th roughout
gas heat , landscaped, qUiet
cul-de-sac , Must Seel 62
Don
Street
Gal lipolis
$145,000. (740)4 41-5540.

Hom es- Local persOn
homes Conf1dent1ai
cash J1m, 740·992·
No calls alter 9

R1•Vl\1S

I" 10

Hot Sl·-'

. H)l~ R Er'-T

2 bedroom home S200 dep
$400 month ' rent water &amp;
trash
fur niShed
1601
Grah arn Scho ol Ad Call
(740)446·0051}
3BA 2BA. hardwood !loors
f1rep1ace . Salem Cen ter
$700tmo Av,:~1lable Sept 1
Call (740)418 -1183
- Atten tion !
.
Local company oflenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT . progmms tor you to buy your
home 1nsleael ot ren t1ng
• 100°3 l1n"ancmg
. Less than pertr.ct crediT
accepted
• Payment could be The
same AS rPnt
Mortgage
LocdtOr~ ·
!7 40)367 ·0000
Holl se tor Rent Pt Pleasanl
saoo f30 •l i675-55 40 ·or
(3041675-4024
as k ] or
N.-~n cy Horne&amp;teac Realty
Bro lo.er
House tor Rent 111 Po)nt
Pleasant (3041675·6224
Immacu late cabm cottage
1BD on 40 acres o1 woods
s1t1mg
roojn
CA
S400 Month 1614)595·77·73
01 1-800-798-4686
log home 1n country 1d~a!
tor mar11ed c:~upte 2 BRr 1
bath pat1C1 new carpel Ret
and depos11 $•125 per mu
17401446·2801

1420 1\lomu. IIO\II:"i
H )I{ R 'E '\T 14X70 tra le1 S425 mo11th
$425 Ch)POSit
(7 40 )3 67·
7762 or (7 401366·7272 •
2 Dedroom A C vety nrce
no pefs
m Gallipolis
(7 401446-1 409 or ,740)446·
2003
Beautif ul r1 ver 'v1ew · rn
Ka nauga laeal lor 1·2 p~­
ple
No pets
plea!\e
Applica tio ns be1ng tak&amp;n
Call (740)441-0161
N1ce 2BA · all e1ectr1c w
C1A SA 160 $350 mo
1ncfutles wate 1 &amp; trash p.u
Need ref &amp; sec depos11. No
pets Takmg dpp!1cat100S
(7 40)446-6865 or (740 )3792923
Takmg apPlicatiOns for 2 BR
trailer 1n Centenar~ No pets
S3C.O
h I
~ rT'Ont pus depostt
li401446-7275
c__ _c_:c_.c__ _ __
Two Mob1ie HoMe Lots fo r

SDO 00

BE- droom

1997
Two
Mob 1e Home

ccmplelelv
1.-r n1shed
Cel'lra l Au Heat $425 DO
JR @:1740-243-581 i
;,.,,.;..;.;..,;;,:..;.,;;;;.;,;,._ _,

t4'«&gt;

AP·\·lfn rt-.~1~

L---~;,ll;;;RiOR:Ofii"',;,';,J._.,.I
1 arod 2 bedrOO!T' apart·
'Tients 1Ufi11Sheo a nd lmh.Jr
ms~ed
secur1 ty depos t
reoUireo no pets -'40·9~2·
2-.?18
2 beoroom t bath
oa o S350 rno11h
secunly
depos1t
(740 )445-3481

wate r
S350
ca.

661 T"urd Gallloo1s 2 bed·
. room unfurf'IShed nc pl\ts
Depos1t &amp; rent S300 Leave
message (7 40!245·9595 ·

�'

A~ ~R'Th:.,:RENr;: 1ENTS;:;:._:,,.J L,.IO-•Hou.OGooo;i
SEiiiiiiiiio•.
oow
i _.J rt_.M,:;Mf:;~
.:!IC;,:mND,:;;
.A: ,;,NEOUi:;:'IES,;;,..I
: '--•I.•IV•E'l•'I•UCK-_.1

..___

, APartment 1 ,700 sq. 11. Antique maple

bedroom
$650. No pets. Available Oct. suite. Numbered Cushman
1.1740)441-1124 .
Classic Creat1on. 2 tw1ns.
dresser, desk, mirror, mght
BEAUTIFUL
APART· stand, select comfor t matAT
MENTS
BUDGET tress, $1,200. (740)446PiiiCES AT JACKSON 8325
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
o!ive from $344 to $442.
\_fJalk 1o shop &amp; movtes. Call
740-44tl-2568 .
Equal

Appliance

.,ousing Opportunity.
c!lean furnrshed A_par tmenl ,
$325 month, includes water,

Warehouse

trash , SecUnty Oepo.sH and
ln Henderson. WV. Pre A~ ferences
requrred
owned applicanes starting at
1304)675-2970
$75 &amp; up all under wa~ranty;
we do service work on an
CONVE NIENTLY LOCAT· Make
and Models (3041675 _
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
7999 .
TownhOuse·
apartments,
an.dlor ~mall ~oiJses FOR Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
RENT.. Call (740)441 - 1111 Chapel Road, P0r1er. Ohio
!Or ~pplicallon &amp; mimmation. (740',1446 -7444 1-87.7·8309162 . Free Eshmates Easy
For {ent: 2 BDAf..t garage
tirmnc1ng, 90 dayS same as
apt. dow_ntown: COQtact Mark cash. Visa/ Master Card .
at (740)446-0415
Onve- a· )IItie save atot

Furni shed Apartment , 2nd
Ave , Gallrpolis_ Upslatrs. All
Utilities Patd. 1 Bedroom.
t-4o Pets. (740)446-9523

Queen
bedroom
su1te
$200.00. tWin bed no mattress $50.00 good cond. call
Trena at 304 -576'- 4006

Furn ished upstairs, 3 rooms Thompsons

Appliance

&amp;

&amp; bath. Clean, rei. &amp; dep. _, Aopair,675-7388. Fo{ sale.
required. NO pets (740)446- re-cond 1tioned
automat1c
1519.
wasl"lers &amp; dryers. relnge rators . gas and electric
Gracious living . 1 and 2 bed- ranges, a1r conditioners, and
mom apartments at Village wringer washers. Wi ll do
and
R1vers1de repa1rs on maJOr brands In
Ma nor
Apartments m Middleport. shop or at ~our home
From $295-$444. Call 740992-5064 . Equal Housing Used Furniture Store. 130
Opportunities
Bulav1lle Pike Gallipol1s.
OH . 40o,0 off all kmg mattmm acul;:~te
apa rt ment hess sets. rnobtle home lol •
.Walk1ng distance to U RG. for rent. 3 stall garage for .
fiecently remodeled . 2BR rent (740)446-4782.,
·
iiew private deck. $500/mo.
(614 )595-7773 ·or 8Q0-798- Washer. $100: Dryer S95:
electric mnge . S 125: gas
4686.
"range , 5125 : re f r~gerator.
N 3rd Ave Middleport . I $95: Whnlpool washerldryer
bedroom iurn1shed apt. No set S250. very niCe couch
pets. Depos1t. Prev. rental 5125. rocker raclmer $75:
tablelchans. $40; chest-atREt. 740-992-0 165

drawers'

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
ConCre te.
•Angle .
Channel. Fra t Bar. Stee l
Grating
For
Drains ,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446---7300

riO

L-.---iii.iiiiiiiiio-.,.1

~lli~lA-.11&gt;-.&amp;~l\~1(_rrt_l_HS.,'

Ca ii i740J388·8965.

5806. E.H.O

Buy or
sell
Rive rine
Ant1ques. 1124 East Mam
on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740992 -2526
RuSs Moore.
owne1

Duocan Paytl d1nmg room
se t, excellent cond it ion.
Twtn R1vers Tower is accept· (7401368·0.1.60
mg applicatiOns lor wa1!1ng
list ior Hud-subs1zed, 1- br, Le1sa ·s Ant1ques- boughtapartment. call 675-667-9 sold at Alligator Jacks Flea
EHO
Market. Rt 7 Pomeroy furni .....- -...- - - - . , lure. pnm1t1ves. bottles.
l4fiO
SI'An.
(740)992-5088

~ MIS('H.I .,\ NEtti S
1

Oewntown Office Space- 5
roPm su1te $650!mo. 1 room
office· $225/mo.: 2 room
sOite $250/mo. Secur11y
Mposit. required . You pa~·
Utilities All spaces very mee
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644
for appointment
·

1980
Merce des
Benz (740)992-0 167 alter 5pm or
Sedan. 4dr. Scyl, Diesel sun- 740-4 16-460/:1.
roof, 150,000 m11es. e~~:cel- - - - - - - - - 1989 Stratos Bass Boat, 16
lent shape $2,000/060 F
HpJ
' M
oat, 70 .. ohnson otor
1304)675·4904
·
· . Ne~
With power lilt and tnm
1985 Ponliac Tran s-Am, trolling mo tor. $3,700 . Call

5spd, 305 H o., only 55 ,000 after

s oo

Pri~~:.

V&gt;:&lt;;f: IAHLI:'

~ I ERCIHNiliS&gt;:

C.'\.1'\U'f.RS &amp;
Ho~ux

MmnR

mr. Af1er market accesseries. 38+ mpg . Clean, 2001 Jayco Designer Senes
t51acklblack. Call (740)441- 27AKS. 5th Wheel . Lots of

Can ning tomatoes· already 9865

picked, bring co nta'ine rs . . ::.C:"----'----Rowe Farm. (740)247-4292 1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr., 4
cyt. 76,000 mil es. S3,000
F1eld r1pen to matoes. Call 080. Call {740)441 -07 12.
(740)379-9110.
•
1999 Ford Taurus SE, V-6,
Shelley's Canning Tomatoes Al-AC -PS-CO player very
across from Rac1ne Lock &amp; good cond. $4300. 304-675-Dam . open 9-6 closed
6675
Sun day
2000 Chev Malibu, PW, PO
I \H:\1 't 1'1'1 II "V
locks, Cruis~. AC . 84.000
~'\.1 1\I...,IOt-.;
miles $3,900 (30~)675 - 4014

610

access.9ries
,. $2 1.000
304 )675 -2246
&lt;
2003 coachman 24FT, TT.
Bath, AC , Fur nace, Sleeps
5, $9.000 (304)675·1444
Coleman Ca mpmg Trai ler
l 2FT, 2 Ki ng Beds,. $4,995
ca ll tor Details (304)67 51731

...,1

EQUI~IEJvr

, HOM!":
door. 118.000 mrlas, goqd . ..__IMiiiiiP,;,RiiiOiiVEl
Oi'iiMiiiEN'iiiii'Sior'

•

condition. 59.000. (740)709- 1094

0% Financing tor up to 36

mont hs on John Deere
Compac t and 5000 Series
Tractms with John Deere
Credit Approval. Check them
ou t! Carmichael Equipment
Inc. (7401446~24 12 .

2000 Kia Sephia. 4 door,
alJtomatic, 27mpg , 72.000
• miles. good condition . $800
in brakeS, lilters, tires , b!i!II S
· etc. tun eup. Make excellent
car for college Askmg

$6,500 080. 17401 441·
'0% Financing fo r up to 60 93:_7_8_. .:___ _ _ _ __

2 GE w1ndow alf'condltion- monthS on John Deere -2003 Chevy Impala LS
ers 5000 BTU, 1 year old. ·Round Balers. O"~o for 48 Sedan 3.8L, V6, ~ speed
. e&gt;:Cl;lltenl cond1t10n . Call months on John Deere auto trans with OD, 50,000
Mower ·conditioners . with
{740)256-6647 ~
miles, power everything,
John Deere Credit approval
~.-------­
moon root, heated leather
30 lamp tanning bed with 2 &lt;::armichael Equipment Inc .
seats, very good condition.
face tanners .. 85.8 lnch- (740)446-2412.
$12.500. (740)367·0 166.
osx39
3
1
nches.
$6
,000
new
FOr Lease Office or reta1t
S2500
tirm . 16 Fl l ow Boy Tra iler. Farm . 96 Tqyota Tercel, 47k, AC ,
spaces rn very good condi- asking
or Titled for Road $850. au to. red. $3500•• (740)742t'i6n. Downtown Gllllipolis. (7401992-7687
(304)675-1165
2662
Appro11 . 1600 sq. It each .1 For Rent. 24'x32' Pole Barn
or 2 baths Lease pnce
,;,5;_-TR,-u"'c-Ks-·-..,
Bush Hog
Good ;;.1
Garage. 3 Stalls w1th electric 4'
negot1abte td encourage and water, Pnvate on At 7 Cond1t1on . $3,00.00 Call
FOHSAI£
new .. bus1ness .
Calt North (740)446-4782.
740-742- 1800
{7 40)446,4425 Of (740)446Futon . washer &amp; dryer, . John Deere 10 fl . No Til Drill 1997 Chevrolet S 10 Pickup
3936.
k1tchen table &amp; chairs. lawn for
Rent.
Carmichael EKtended Cab, V6, 4.3 liter
Pri me Commerc1al Space at mower. weedeater Cal! Equipment. (740)446.2412. Engine, 5 spee d manual ,
Spnng Valley Plaza . 3,000 (740)44 1-0425
"4WO. 92.000 miles. w1th the
sq 11. Call (740)446-3481
'--',- - - - - - - John Oeere Commercial LS package, fair body. runs
JET
Workslte
' Products good. asking $5,000 call
\II H&lt; II \'\I)JSI·.
Compact Excavators/Skid 1304)675 _1838
AERATION MOTORS
Aepa~reQ . New &amp; Aebu1ll In SteersfTractor
Loader - - - - - - - - 10
Hot SEHOUl
Stock. Call Ron Evans ,. 1- Backhoe in stock. Check ou t 1997 Dodge Dakota SLT V6:
G&lt; MHJN
800-537-9528
our rent al rates . Preat Automatic, 2 Wheel Drive,
. linancing
available. 72,000 miles {304)593-1614
2· pc . hv1ng-room su1te -.C..,------~ Carmichael Equipment Inc
Tann1ng bed $350: 2004 7 Ol 6 2 2
99 Dodge Dakota Club-Cab
4 44
1
~50. 00
·
Honda Foreman 4x4 . like . (
SLT, 100,000fmiles 4x4
5 pc bedroom-su1te S850.00
new w~ wa rran ty. take over You r PreSla r Tra1ler Dealer 318J5spd , loaded, · many
lull-SIZe bed $75 00
payments. 5~~:8 1ra1ler S450 Carrrl1chael Equipment Inc. edras, nice Truck. $7,500
axe cond 304-895-3129
080 (7401388-8760.
17401446-2412
1304)882·2845

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished . Established 1975 .
Ca ll 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers B!'l seme·nt
Waterproofing.

•

'

.

(Juality G uaranteed
ATV Parts &amp; ACC
James A Will Jr.

• fOR ALL YOUR
ELECfRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME

Owner

REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY

• ROOF •

32119 Welsh1own Nd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PAiNT

45769
(740) 992-2432
Emllil :jwill45769

OHIO LICENSE # 38244

740-367-0544
740-367-0536

' · '"
Of
.:AIJ: 'JY~
C6nL-ilte,'W9r:~;
l5 Years Experience
David. Lewis
··
/'J0-992-6971
1
1

1

I

• Specia lty .

'&lt; &gt;; fJ{J;~,
~

' ;

'""'• M&amp;SIOO!I_:J.::.!, .,
...........i.~~-'

Cl ut d u:~

~ Brakes

C1111111 By B .rake
AflviiiiiBfll Df B
UOIIB•b•t• 11n .

.Sin•PP"'

Tracto r '!&gt; a riC'; o ur

Bu!&gt;lne5s ...

n ot o ur sideline."

Gravely
Tractor Sales
&amp; Service
Wr ~f'l"l"il"l' IIIN Sr 1111/kl'f
:!04 Co11t!or Strccl

High and Dry

Storage

SANiTATION

. flt1fLOYfE

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800-291·5600 740.992-4119
www.qualitywindowsystems.com

Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll

V.C. YOUNG.Ill
992-6215 wv OJ6725
Pome:-oy. Ohio

25 Years Local E1 rience

.

wO~t:: ~A~LY,
,~fO~~ MY ~~AIN

t::NOwS wl'IAT

..

INT~AHCI_..
_._

___,_• .

~'M

IJP TO.

BARNEY
MY GRANNY WUZ
TH' BESTEST COOK

YOU TAKE THAT 8ACI&lt;-: ·
I"'Y GRANNY WUZ TH'
BESTEST COOl&lt; IN TH'
HOLLER . !!

IN TH'

HOLLER
II

YEP.
THEY ' VE
RUN FRESH
OUTTA

ARGUMENT
MATI;RIAL !!

THE BORN LOSER
17"

~Oil£ VOl.~ W~\

"!

i"':,ou\-II)S

10 U.\1&gt;\\t.II&gt;.\E.

UKE. /&gt;.. i&lt;£C.\\'E. FOR.
t&gt;lif~ ::v.J.D~'"'-~...-

\ (.\f \(1':1'\ &lt;1'.1\..Uf-.t..'-. ~--'1

1 10~1

FMt'\ S\Ut:€.1'1I
E.IJ ~LU,...IIJ:Iw.:or ...

II......__.__

I"M BURNED O U T". YOU
KNOW WHP..T I MEAN ?
T H E G RIND \S .JU~\

:AST IMPORTS

WE ARING H E

Athens

DO WN ~

I ." P LET

CONSTRUCnON

PEANUTS
WHAT'S
BIL~

M -fri K:J0-5:00
Sat. X:JO-Noo n
Sun. Clo.,cd

nus? A

FOR A

HUNDRED DOLLARS?

IT'S FROM 'ACE
Alll.LINES:: THE'f
SA't' '(OU NEVER
PAID FOR YOUR
TltKET ...

MAV6E VOU
SIIOL!LD HIRE
A GOOD
ATTORNE'r' .

THE LAW't'ER IS
EVERMORE THE
LEADER IN
SOCIET'i "·

you

- $275ton (While supply Last)
E1cellenl Balanced Fer1ifizer
5-liR~I · $205 tan lop dre ss your lield cob meal
witti T.M . salt. S5.75J1001b. bag
Airway 4 Rotowick pasture
renovators renta·t available.

• New Homes

·Garages
• Complele
, Remodeling

18 spreader bugg ies available for use
Airway pasture reno vators and seeders
available 10 ren1.
Licensed agronomisl on Staff available for

SUNSHINE CLUB

·Stop &amp; Compare

I

I

I
I

GARFIELD

NORTHUP DODGE

I

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52-PER MONTH

i

I

I
, I
I

i
The Daily Sen tine] · ,l9oint l'll.easant 31\egfster I
... - ... _.f.304 J..67s.:.133~·- ..

-·..l

" l-ASAGNA
FAMINE"

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740·446"·0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

I
Hill's Self
Storage

Now Available At

BAUM LUMBER

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30' .

" 7'aki~rg

Tile Sting Ortt Of
Hard Work!"
Mid -S ite ,.Whed Drive Traclor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER

Hours

7:00AM · 8:00 PM
' 14 \ Ill()

Scorpion Tractors

od

.St. Kt. 124 C hes ter 985-3301

East

,; .

Pass

Pa ss

Pus:-,

GRIZZWELLS
&amp;UI·I\1\~? A~ '1tiJ l'II&lt;Uv~\\.\6
'{oLI~ m1\1 &amp;~

COM\1-\4
lb 13i':D i'

"'

G-ARFIEL-17?

49 lntormallon
channel
1 lckl
50 Workoul
5 Whole bunclt
units
8 Euy as- 52 Evening
11 Toolh pa in 54 Diamonds ,
12 Space
lo a fence
14 Chaollc
55 Schlaparelll 17-l*fl*
place
56 Gotden Rule ~~~~
15 Urban mAp
word
16 Mr. Mole
57 Vanremark
Waals force
(2 wds.)
58 An imal
17 Oulperform
sheller
18 Suitably ·
59 Mountain
20 Impudent
route
22 DJ's platters
23 Rainbow
DOWN
21 Ocean·
shapes
going bird
24 Age
kennel .
24 ·Aunl or bro .
27 Academic 's
sound
25 Henri ' s
2 Pac-10
robe
island
29 Lilly or
team
26 Photo
Wallach
3 RouQ hen
27 Pushes off
30 Fiddled wilh
from cold
28 Common
34 Seminar
4 Slovelop
buttons
features
.whistler
30 Hl-lscl1 scan
37 Moulhs,
5 Neutral
31 " Hey, -!"
in biology
tones
32 Unit of
38 Left Bank
6 Admirer's
energy
c~ums
sound
33 Trial
39 Puffs along 7 ,Juicy pear
VIPs ,
41 Foggy
8 Montezuma, 35 Woolen caps
43 lmilale
for one
36 Foul·ball
44 Sydney
9 Paperbacks
caller
native
10 Xerox:
39 Ernsl &amp;
46 Preserves 13 Punk hairdo
Young
fish
19 Hosp. slaffer
staffer

40 Oetayed
(2 wds.)
41 Slow-witted
one
42 Emmy
-winning
Ed 43 Test, as ore
44 Lemony ·
45 Morays and
co"ngers
47 Luncheon

salad
48 DrOQPnosed fliers
51 Seattle hrs.
53 Soul
enders ·

Oscar Wild e wrote, "A truth ceases to be
true ~hen more than one person belieVe s ·
in it.''
Hmm . Le t's hope you all believe in the
truth ol th e best line of play in this deal
You are pushed into five hearts by the
opp·osition's pre -emptive barrage. We st
cashes the diamond ace, then shifts to a
club. How would yo~ continue ?
West's th ree-diamond opening promises
a decent seven-card suit and some 5-1.0
high-Card points. After Nortll makes a
takeout double , East, aware thai his side
do'es nol have the high-card values for
game, useS the Law of Total Tr icks to
decide how high to pre-empt. East knows
about an 11-card fit, so he jumps to five
diamonds, the 11 -trick level. South wonders about a slam, but cannot do more
than bid five hearts. Finally, note that six
diamonds doubled costs 500, more than

the North-South game.
Since you have lost one diamond trick,
yo u can aflord to concede only one
spade, not two. This requires finding an
opponent with ace-doubleton. And the re
is conflicting evidence. We st , wh o is tong
in diamonds, rates to be short in Spades.
But a pre-emptor will not normally have
two aces. However, you can delay the
decision.
Alle r winning tr.ick two, draw tr umps,
learning that they are 2-2. Then try clubs.
findi ng th at West had a singleton. This
means that he presumably started with 3·
2-7- 1 distribu tion. Ye s, it seems to be true
th at "E ast began wilh ace-douQ!eton of
spades. Play a spade through East up to
your king , then duck a spade on the way
back to bring down East's ace.

AstroGraph
"""• &lt;Birthdo,y :

CELEBRITY CIPHER
. by Luis Campos
Celebt&gt;t&gt;/ C&gt;pher cr1:ptograms ¥e created !1om QUOlatl o~s by lamous peo~e. past aM ~resem..

Eec1 1ene11n 11\e crrter 51a'\(ls 101 another
Todays clue K equals P _

" Y

VLG ' A

NA S D
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "All the_se movies I made are being remade . I JUS!
wish the y could remake me. " - M1chael Caine

fN 1) ,1\ '\.

THA I DA llY Q

PUZZLER

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letters

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ClAY II .. POUAN

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GAMI

.

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K ro ,-,bled word ,
bw ·~ form .four 5imple words

By Bernice Bede Osol

Parts

Whaley

\ 'orlh

Dbl

Tuesda~Aug . 9,200 5

YOO'R,E . oN E O F
t1 Y BEST
CUSTOME RS. I
JU ST T~OVG ifT

St. Rt.l\H I Darwm. OH
740-99~ - 70 I Yor 740-99 ~ · 5553

RL'11Iockir!9 In lr \kKid Saha,ge
lltltl ,lfler·
\larkl'l l»rl.~

Wcs l

3+

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Whaley's Auto

go~

I 140-992-1671
I

K

What remains must
be the truth

TO · tlf:T TO

Are you in the market
anew car

Sec Brent or l:lri an

"Middleport's only

We cto It all except
furnace work

/

2·2497

992·1194
or 992·6615

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Elecbical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guners
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decka

I

•

CORP
...... ....---·

Hupp

10x10x10x20

CARPENTER
SERVICE

·~ Lit::~

Rocky"~J ~

97 Beech Street
Middleport OH

YOUNG'S

G

•

See

.MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

I

.

Optional Upgi'ades Available;
Argon Gas &amp;Heat Mirror

Pomeroy, Ohio

:I

"

INSTALLED
to 101 Ul

33795 Hiland Road

Opc.-alor 7411 -992 -3174
*Weekl y Trash Service
4 y r~ of Rcl i:.th lc Sen in!
t K\·~r Y11ur Muncy L&gt; IGII )

I

1...~ . -- . ~741!!. 44~~.234:?;_.,_... __:.. ,_..\~!. 99~~.2 1 s~.-... -

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$219

!740) 9')2.5232
SxlO, IOxiO,
10xl5, 10x20,
10x30
Janel Jeffers

""Lawn and Garden

I

J @allipolis t3ailv Q::ribime

·

Vinyl Double Hung •

l'hone

LBIIIIIIJ'BCIIIIB

&lt;;&amp;R

"l

0401985-4180
~.

+

oPening lead: • A

WINDOW SUPER SALE

liNDA'S PAINTING

j

i
f
l

5•

(Cnmmm.iat and Re5idential)
Mowing. Trimming, Tree Tri mming, Aerati on, Fertilization,
Spraying ol fence·lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as p l a nt ir.~g and mulching.
FREE ESnMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

Let me do it for youl

(Befo re 6pm

10 li
R.i42
... J I U986

Sou th

South

((ommel(l.tl and Re5 idcr~ tlal)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Hom es, De ~' Ks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boa ts, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or tog home, Alumi num bri ghtenir1g.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

II
~•1 :

Aff01 6pm

ln976:J

•

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Me the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

for Farm Equipment Trul: ks Do7.ers

10

/_1.

•

A A~ :1

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-688l
POWER WASHING

:~=;::==~
==·=:;"'i:::::::
Morris

• Service

•

7 2

A K8 7 ~
• Q ,J !l A :1

TRI -STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

740-992:3824 Or 740-667-0338

Equipment
LLC
·
•
740-742-24'5
-'
• · Repairs
• Parts

4

t:ilsl

"' 5

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

leav·e a mes5age

For tnt1re .111 1.ormallon
.

j

K Q 7 2

9 5

+ A.J

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

M[GA

K-4 th ro ugh 12

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
1· Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleas~nt . Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will RUn For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

I
I
i

•

LAWN CARE DIVISION

~

I

• .r

• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

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

Reaeh 3 Counties

l

1 -4t!~Tu~ppers Plains, OH
1•
! 45783

Top • Reii\Oval • Trim

2005-2006 sc hool year. ~

JJ561 Hailey Run Rd ..
Pomcrnv. Oli

.

A
West

Tree Service

, Ccne Arms/Owncr-

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR Y()U!!

41800 SR #7

JONES'

'

G r ad~s

A K

D ealer: West
Vulnerable: Neither

R'IVer Va II ev Cllr '1.mn IH
; ' U[Iemv
J
1Now enru 11·mg slue1c~.f..:.'i f'ur t 1IC

Ptllm'my.OH

NOMA
WHAT YO(JR
STYlE. ..

•

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011-oa !l.'i

.. Q 6 3 ,

wv

740· 742·2293

""'urt.'&lt;

1'\orth

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt S: quality
work ·
· Affordable Rates
•References
Available
• Free Estimales
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

i

• Q

@ ya h ~.l·o m

740-992-2975

-.4

r··-·.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

HIs

10

20.00 Honda Accord LX 4

FARM

I~\

•j

-.;;------=-:-:-::-=-::;

PM 13041675·

Harlke Bass AMP 21 15 :......:_.:___,:__:.__ _ _ Cond. $2200.00. 740·992·

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

'Cornerstone
Elecblcal
s--..ac
·e
_,.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~N .. .

$so

Combo Fender Precision door.
1996 $1,500.{740)441
Pontia c Grand -89764 626S
t;3 ass S500.00. 740-992 740 645 6734
6268
or (
)
"
·
FH.ltns &amp;
t 997 Honda Civic 109,000

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

r;;pl&gt; WATCHE$

s

well mannered. Parents on
prer 111 ses. Big dogs. $100
each (740)446-0872.
_ _:.c•.:...._____
C KC Gqlden Retriever puppies tor sale $200. Wormed
and second shots, 7wksold.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

\...:/"6 OOOL.A.
~0 ...,.
'It) MU.T

1999 Chevy Suburban 4x4,
good condition , loaded, new
tires. Asking
$11 ,000.
(740)441 -0Ssa or (740)7091931 .

iL.o----;;;:-.,_.,.1

SGU{IlN(;

lllR R ENT

FonS&gt;\u:

5500 Demonstration BonusLet us demo a John Deere Z 2002 Toyota Tundra SR5 V6,
Trak or X Series All-Wheel 5-spd. 80,000m1, matching
Steer on your lawn and o topper, bed liner/mat. lots of
receive an axtra $500 off ou r axtras. sl9.ooo. 1740)388·
already dlscounted prices 9634 eve. ask for Jen.
Lirnitad
tima
offar
New windows, assorted Ca rmrchaet Equipment Inc.
MaiURCYG.I:s/
4 WHEELERS
sizes. · $100 each. Call 1740)446·24 12.
1740 256 6138
)
"
·
WOWII OOk Financing tor up
2000 Yamaha Aoadstar.
I!UII.DING
l lo 50 monlhs on qualilying Cruiser, 1600 CC, 6000
__
St 'Pf'l.lf:\i
.' GX &amp; X Series John Deere miles Loaded $7,500 phone
Lawn Tractors, or No (304)675-2793 or (304)593Interest, No Payments until 5 157
Block, brick. sewer pipes.
'January 1 . 2007 on all new
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Davidson
Winters, Rio Grande, OH prem1um lawn tractors with 2002 Harley
John
Deere
Credit
approval
So
flail
Deuce,
many
e:~~tras
Call740-245-5121 .
Carmichael Equipment Inc. Great shape, 5.000 miles,
PE"rs
(740)446-24 12.
$ 17, 000. firm
(740)441 L.,__,;F,;,U;;H;,;,;,A~I,;.IO.:llii,.J II{ \\'1'01( I \I h 1\ 9816
...,;;;;,.;;.....;;;;,;;.;;._ __, 2002 HD Softai t Deuce,
AKC , English
Spnnger
AtnllS
many extras ·including wide
Span•e!. First ShotJWorm,
FOR SALE
tire, chrome, PythOn P1pes
Tatt-Dock. Male and Female
7,000
_miles. (740)446-28 15
Liver
&amp;
White
$250 .
(304)576-2t98
·
1965 Mustang Fastback 2004 Honda VTX t 300C,
Rangoon Red e~~:terior : black Low miles. $1,500 in e~~: tra s.
AKC Golden Retrlevet male, interior. 6 cycle. 3 spe9d. air black, SB,300. (740)288gold color, $400. Almost conditioning , radio, good 7246 .
2yrs old. Updated on an driver. Rust free AZ. car.
shots (740)3 88-8965
Piice: $19,000.00.
Hill's
Automotive ClassiC Car
1\lH SAI .E '
AKC Registered Basset Restorati¢n &amp; Parts, Inc.
H'ound puppies plus 2 adult 29670
Bashan
Road,
Basset Hounds
Shots. Racine. Ohio 45n 1. Phone 18' Bayliner Capri Skimax.
1987 openbow wrth 150 hp
wormed. (740)256-6687.
740-949-2217 .
Website:
Mercury OB and trailer. ru ns
www.hillsresto'. co m
Born 4f3/05 Pit bull pupp1es.
&amp; looks great, $2975,· call

i

Monc:!ay, August 8, 2005
ALLEY OOP

4x4-

m1les. viper blue, ! -tops, 7382
Female Eskimo Sp1tz. small, e~~:cellent shape. (]40 )446 _ - ' - ' - - - - - - - s.payed . 5 years. $50.
1995 17ft. Hydrosport with
0350
M1n1ature Doberman, male,
·
trailer, 90 HP Johnson
2 yrs.
(740)379-2316
1992 Mercury Topaz (Tan) 4 motor. ~s prop, 2 dep th findDo or, Runs good , New ers. trolling motor. excellent
1570
M•m~lc,\L
t
d,
Tires. New Muffler. 92,000 s hape.
garage
sore
I~.If~
:';,:~~;;;.',.J miles, 28 MPG $850 OBO $6,000. (740)992-2268
$40 ·. Kenmore L--~IN,OSIIriiH:;,LII
freezer.
$195:
(304)675-Bp89
· 77" Gtastron Boat. Good

tlne BR apt witl"l W!D upnght
hookups. Spring Valley. S290 Kenmore chest ;reezer.
i"nonth
plus
depOSit $
165 · Wnngerwas
.
her,,52""
rn..~.
(740)339-0362 local cd ll
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street, Gall1pol1s
Pleasant Valley Apartment
{740)446-7398
Are now takmg A~ t"l lcatlons
lor 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR .
Appltcat1ons
are .take n
OOil'l
Monday tnru Friday, from
9 00 A.M -4 PM OH1ce IS
380 Llama hand gun &amp; 1
Located at t 151 Evergreen gu1tar. amp. plus eKims
Drive Po1n1 Pleasant . WV 740 208·0090.
P11one No ..1s (304}675

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spac1ous.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
6at11 , Adult Pool &amp; Baby
PooL Patio. Start $385/Mo
No PetS , Lease Plus
Security Depos1t Required,
(740)367-7086 .

For Sale 200 lb.' lea.n hogs;
New Zealand--meat rabbits740-992-7007.
I I l l ' , , c. I I 1&gt;1 ' I L II II'

r

..

Monday, August 8, 2005

wiNw:mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

SREOAIJ.IE!
I CAN'I
BREAIHE!

Take care in the yea r atmad -not to
discuss your care er objectives with
anybody who you cannot completely
trust. Someone who is looKing lor a
tr ee rid e m ay hijacK yo ur ideas and
beat you to bnnging them to fruition .
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) - Of cou rse
be optirn 1stic regarding the o utcO m e
of events today. but don "t forget to
ec tor things with a tot ol realism .
Ba sing your conc lu sions on taul ty
premises put s you behind the curve.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) . - Don't
borrov&lt;J anyth ing today. but if you have
to. treat anything on loan to you as
respectfully as 1f 11 we re your own .
You 'll be embarrassed if sOmething
happen s through your ca rele ssness
U8RA {Sept . 23-0ct. 23) - Do not
assess &gt;mpo rlahl mauers Ill a has ty
· fa shion today. especially it you"re the
one In c!"l&lt;~rge Take all the t1me need ·
ed to stu dy in detail the b1g picture so
you can maKe a logical judgment.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Watch
what you say .to wh om today,
because 'vou might lind &gt;I dlfficutl to
keep secrets. Howovcr. should you
lnadvertenll y let the cat out ot th e
bag, don"! embe llish th e facts lu1·ther.
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Be aware of your linandal lunllat&gt;ons
today and don·t try to keep up with
those who CAll spend freely. No one
will th ink tess of you jf You can "!
match dollar fQr dollar w&gt;th th~ high
reliefs.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) ....:__
Instead ol talking about you r big
ideas today, take pos1t&gt;ve ac tron to
put them in motion and achieve your
goals . Your co nversa tion makes for
good listening. but produce s zero
results.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - ·a e
)10Ur own person and not !mm on oth ers to do your tabs Ieday. Others w1/l
resent be1ng Imposed upoll. especratly if you ask th em to do th1n gs they
know you can ensity do y.::&gt;"urself
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) ---; 1!"11
prove to be foolish today to taKe a b1g
linaJJcial nsk on something that is
entirely controlled by oth ers. They w•ll
be look&gt;ng out tor themselves with hi Ita conce1 n about you .
ARI ES (March 21·Apr &gt;t 19) ....:.... It's OK
logo to olhets for a'clv&gt;ce. but be very
careful who.se you choose to fotlow
today. Counsel from the wrong per
son could f urther compl&gt;cn:o yOur
afla1rs rathe.r th an improve 11&gt;t:trn
TAURUS (April 20-fv1,ay 20) - Be par ticularly care ful tha t you do not allow
your attention . to wander from your
work today. e$pet:1alty 1f you're doing
anyth1ng Qangerous. Carelessness
ceu ld lead to costly m&gt;stakes
GE~ l NI (May 2 1-June 20)- Subdue
impulses to play the big guy or gal
and grab the tab tor everybody. Sadly..
it won't be appreCiated by people who
th ink it 15 smart to saddle someone
else with th e b&gt;lt
CA NCER (Julle _21 -July 22 } NO
matter how clever you lhrnK you are
today, it'll be d1Hicu tt to camouflage
any sett1sh mol ives you might be harborlnQ in your head. Colllinue to act
on the up-and -up as you usually do .

·SOIJP TO NUTZ

..

will drink from the founla1n of
knowledoe wh1le oihers will JUSt

I
7

-

It

\

I I 1 I I I~. ~~:oler~ "' ''"'kl•

•

SARGYE
9

b~

ouot•d .

! ,llrn9 m ,.,e m U &gt;ng words
you d~~~ loo r.M. "~P Nc 3 balow.

.:\ PR INT NUMBEil!: D
~ LETlERS IN SQUA~ ES

SCRAM-LnS "NSWERS a-s•o 5
Appear· Bible · Va lid· Hearse · BE REPAID
.My uncle stopped my meddling aunt from g1ving her

opinion by remind1ng her lh;!l adv1ce given can also BE
REPAID
.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

"-..

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

.

.

Dwayne De Rosario gave

minute with a goal assisted by
Ronald Cerritos and Alejandro
Moreno. •
Chris Henderson scored for
the .Crew (6-ll-3), assisted by
K~le Manino, 12 mim1tes
before the game was over.
The Eanhquakes ( l0-4-7)
have 37 points, two more than
. FC Dallas.
·

Purtzer wins 3M
Champio.nship
BLAINE. Minn. (AP) Tom Purtzcr finally closed the
deal at the 3M Championship.
holing a 7- foot par putt on
No. \8 Sunday fo r a onestroke vic tory in the tournament he twice led into tile
final round .
The win was Purtzer's tl rst
on the Champion s Tour since
March 2004 . It didn't come
without thou ghts about the
last two years, when he was
the leader entering the fin al
round but shot 74 borh limcs.
Punzer' s lead afrer this second mund \vas three shot s.
but it was down ro one as he
Weill 10 the I Xth tee ar th e
TPC of the Twin Cities.
· Purtzer left · his 20-IOlit
birdie putt on No. IX short hy
7 feer, but he made the par
save to close a 3-undcr 6lJ and
avoid a playoff with a 15und er 20 I tot:il .
Lonnie Nielsen and Crai~
Stadler ricd for second at 14
under.
Niel sen cagled N&lt;i . .I X with
a long putt rOr a 67 that gave
him his be st fi nish on ei ther
lour. He ·didn't fi ni sh in the
lOp four in six yea rs on the
PGA Tour ( 197R-X:l i and didn't fini sh that hi gh in .&gt;2 start s
on the· Cham piolts T&lt;&gt;ur.
Stadler shot a 67 and fi nished see01\d for the &gt;eennd
straight yea r.

" We

from PageBl

Six weeks a!.!o he lost i n

its newl y enlightened form. I
found heave n on Earth for
foot her\ I. ..
Pollard. hkc Friedman. was
from Page Bl
a pro (oot ha\1 pioneer :mel ihe
fr N blac·k .'SJFL head coach.
Mon tana and Jim Kelly al l
After a 'cn.sational co \ le~e
came from the reg ion. All arc car~cr at Bnl\VIl. wh~re
Hall of Famcrs.
bcca me't hc fi rst black ro play
"When I was yo un ge r.
in the Ro'e Bowl , th e runthere's no doubt I thought
about being Joe :-.lamath." ni n~ back led the Ahon Pros
to the 1920 cham pionship.
Marino said. addin g th at joinThey
\I'Clll undefeated.
ing them in the Hall "defiHe !:ncr organized the
nitely makes an impact· on
Chica!io
13rnwn Bomhers, an
you."
indepcndclll team or h\ack
Young suggested it was the
pl ayers that harn sron\1ed the
first time only qttartcrback s
wumrv frnm I'!27-33.
entered the Hall in one class.
and he was partl y right. , . Pnl l ~·lrLI ·1s }ll11(?11g .~he mo.~ t
1111portanl .lll111onty I'J g urc~ 111
Pollard was &lt;l runnin~ back
fdothall lmtorv. a man who
who sometimes played QB .
'ec
mcd to ope'n the cloor for
'T m proud to be pan of
h\ aek athletes in ·his sport.
thi s with Dan and the Pollard
onl)· to ,ce it slammed shut
and -Friedman familic ,.''
from \9.\-l umil 1946.
Young said. "We arc quarterHi &lt; grand sd n. Stephen
' backs and that' s. what is neat To wns. and other fa n]il y
about this posi tion ...
rncmhcrs.. llave can1 paigned
While Marino and Yo.un g
for decades to get him elected
had diverse styles, they both
to the Hall .
spent years ar the top of tbeir
"Fritz p,,JJard wa' a 5-footprofession . Marii1o set NFL y: 165-pound runni ng hack
marks of 4,967 co mpletio ns. who had th~ speed oi' Tony .
8.358 passes. 61,36 1 yards Dor~c;n: the clu:-.i\'e n ~:-." nf
(nearly .35 miles) and -1 20 \3.arr&gt; Sanders and till' tcnacitouchdowns. His record of -I R l\ of W&lt;ti ter Pavton ... Towns
TD passes in the 19~-1 ,ca- s·aid in h i~ an.:q)tath.·.: ~pced1 .
son, when he wa:-. MVP, wa~ "My gran d father and Jim
broken by .Pevton Mannin·g Thorpe II'L'!'C thL' hi~hest-raid
last year.
pla)ers. of their times . Jim
He also owned 21 NFL Thorpe became rhe first com mark s when he retired. mi"iuncr of pro foot ball and
including most seasons with was induL·tcd into !he firs t
"3,000 yards 'or more passin g class of the Hall of Fame in
( 13); most ya rd' passi ng in 1963.
My
grandfather
one season (5.08-+ in. ·x-1. th e became a fo otnot~ .
,
only year he won a conkr·
.. After l&lt; H.lav. c1 crmnr will
ence champion,hipl: and kno \v the i i fh ~~Hl ha\'c
mosr ga mes with ~ 00 y:rrd, ~i1 · cn to foothall. Re'l in I
or more passing 11'&gt;3 1.
iXacc. Grandpa ...
.
" I know inJi,iJu,dly you
1-rredman. w\10 drcd in
,get the hof10r o f heing induct · I'!H2. prnhab\1 1\its the firs t
ed in tile Hall of Fame.'' great pro passer. and lm 20
Marino said . "hut 1ou 'ce TD throw..., in ll)~l) \\\! rl' con·
coac h !Don ) Shul&lt;t up on sidcrcd pllctw mciwl llecausc
stage and teammate s and the hall he tllrCII hareh
famil y and fr iends - Ill) resembled tl1c mudcrn foolmom and dad and wife and hall. The record stood for I-I
kids - thi s clay is for them." \"l'ar:-. .
The on ll · ach ievement . He pia\ cd for four tea ms
Marino didn't · reae h that \rum I Y ~ 7-J -+ and 11·a, a
Youn g did wa~ ~vi n11 tng a , .stron~ draw m the ho.x offi ce.
title . Young, th c -1992 and '9-1 even ' helping tile New Yo rk
league MVP after taking over Gianh heco me :1· sol\'e rH
for
Monr ana
in
San operation in thole early NFL.
Franc isco, and rh e career d;ty ~.·
"If Linc\e Benny wa' here .
passing efficiency leade r.
guided. the 49ers to the '9-+ today. he would te ll you it
championship. He also is the wu' all abou t family. friends.
first left-handed QB in the · teammates and teamwork ...
"lid ,,ni , nephew. Davi d
Hall.
" I can taste the pride Ifeh Frif'dman . "Proud yet unpreto· be able to put on a 49erl tenti mh. th;H wa ~ the e ~Se ncc
jersey and represent the great of my Utl c k~ .
cit y of San Franci sco."
.. H) , t: .\ (l lllrle of excellence
Young
said . '' In
San \\iII . . ur\ i' c for a" lun g · a~
Francisco. I fou nd fnoiba\1 in the re j.. , ' a I !all nf F a ml· .'·

Canton

r,e

I

a uroan from the crowd or
mc1re than 2'\0,000.
Stewart stayed with
Kahne.
though.
After
J imm ie John son - · who
c;ime into the · race as tl)e
po ints leader - bkw a tire
and hir rll e wall on lap 144 ,
hringing out the last of
nine caution fla gs in the
race, Stewart took advantage of the restart .on lap on
lap \50 to regain the lead.
Kahn e ht!ng onto tile rear
bumper
of
Stewart 's
orange No . 20 Joe Gibbs
Racing Chevro let · for a
couple of laps. btll Stewart
finally began pulling away
and raced on to win by
0.7'!4-seconds - about 5
car-lengths.
Ste wa rt,
who
has
climbed th e fence to the
flagstand after hi s most
re'ce nt victories thi s year.
parked his .car in the corner
o f turn two · after th e
coo ldo wn lap and wa lked
up to the foot of the fence .
where he pqppcd ope!1 a
can of soda and started sipprng.
Then he got back in his
ear. started it up and headed for the stan-fin is h lin e.
Afl~r f!e ltin g hu £s from hi s
crew. 'he lav d,;-wn on the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.111 &lt; I 'IS • \ o l. :;~ . ' "· :! -lh

SPORTS
• Football practice begins.
See Page 81
AP pt.oto

and fellow wide receiver
Antonio
Brvant
was
excused for ·the ·s econd
strai ght day ro attend to a
person;il matter.
Cornerback ·
Dayton
McCutcheon again sat out
bec ause
of
mi gra ine
heada che s. Running back
Reuben Droughn s was on.
the sidel ines but did not
participate due to a pulled
hamstrin g su~tai n e d · in
practice Wedn esday.
" We hope w get_ Reuben
back practrcmg th1 s week
and our goal IS · for htm t?,
play agarn st rh e Gtants ,
Crennel stud. "The sllua-.

tion is about the same with
Dayton . He ' s improved a
little , but not enough to be
real energized."
Rookie
quarterback
Charlie Frye made a good
impression,
completing
several .passes and bringing
the fans to rheir feet wirh a
20-yard scra mble for a first
down during a 2-minute
drill :
Crennel liked what he
saw from Frye and rhre e ·
others who are battling for
the No. 2 spot behind
Dilfer.
"All of them are in the
race ," Crennel sa id . "That

wa s pan of this exercise, to
see how they did . Charlie
produced under pressure. "
Crenncl was not as
plea sed with a couple of
offensive 'mixups and
communications problem s
on defense.
"We turned the bail over
a couple of times in the .
red zone, so we need work
there, " he sa id .
"The dcJ'ense had some
Communications issues.
gelli ng guy s on and off th e
field. ma ybe hearin g over
the crowd. We were not as
effic ient there as we need
to be."

concrete wall at the hollom Mayfield, Mall Kenseth , exclusive tire supplier for
of the fencin g, holding a Casey Mears, Mark Man in the Cup serie s, sa id it
checkered cloth to his fore - ·and four-time Brickyard appeared the problems
head. wearing a giddy grin winner Jeff Gordon.
were caused by running
over
curbjng on the inside
all th e while .
As great a day as it .was
''I'm dying right now," for Stewart, it was a di sas- of th e turn s or by overinStewart said. "Too tired to trou s Tace for John son, flat io n or underintlation of
cha se fence s right now. who started 42nd after his · the tires.
Give me five minutes and car failed inspection on
Another signifi ca nt yelI' ll be ready."
Saturday.
low tlag came on lap 63
Finally. Stewart regained
He was able to drive into when Dale Earnhardt ·Jr.
enough energy. to really the top 20 early in the rac e was hit fro m behind and
begin hi s victory celebra- but spun out and wound up turned si dewa ys into the
ti'on , takin g a slow , rid e being se nt to the rear of the inside wall bv Mike
around the famed 2.5 -mile lead lap cars after making Skinner before· sl iding
ova l in a convertible truck. two pit slops for repairs back up the rra ck an d maksm iling and waving to the when NASCAR had pit ing contact with teammate
cheerin g fans.
road c losed.
Martin Truex Jr. , Sco11
He and his crew hun g on
Johnson was dazed after Wimmer
and
Robby
the fence in front of the slamming hard into the Gordon . .
main gra nd stand for a ·wall \are in the race.
The .c rash ended the day
while. th en got on their Calling it the " hardest hit for ' Earnhardt, who had
knees and turned their hats I've taken ,'' he had to be · heen struggling wirh an ill-.
backward for the Indy tra- helped out of his car in ttlt
hai1dling car and was rundition of kissing the yard pits when the engine
ning far back in th e field. It
of red bricks rhat harken caught fire.
al so all but eliminated th e.
back ro rhe days when the
Asked if he realized the
entire track was brick and car was on fire. Johnson fan favorite from connow mark the finish line.
said. "No, I don ' t really tention for a spot in the .
Kuhne, who got hi s firsr remember coming · from Chase for the ·Nextel Cup
Nexrel Cup victory earlier turn four to the pits. I just champion sliip that will
· rhis season at R.ichmond , remember kind" of waking in cli1de the top 10 drivers
was disappointed for him- up on pit road and the guys in the standings and any
self but happ y for Stewart. pulling me our of rhe car. others within 400 points of
th e leader after the race
"We had an awesome So, it 's all good."
Sept.
I0 ar Ri chmond.
car." he said . " I jus! gave
Johnson, who fell .to sec"That'
s life ,'' a smiling
up a .lillie bit thtough the ond place in. the standings,
restart. I cou ldn ' t do any- 75 points behind Stewart , Earnhardt said .· "We ' ll be
thing with it.
wa s take n to Methodist al.l right. I mean. if we
"' It was a big win for Hospi'tal after the race for make the Chase. we make
it. If we don't. we don't
Tony. He wanted to win observation.
thi s real bad .''
Blown tires caused se\•- We ' ll still try to win some
. Vickers fini shed third , eral · other cautions on ra ces hefore rh e year is
followed
by
Jeremy Sun,day and Goodyear. the out.··

Claws

hun."

Logan got cred it fur an
RBI. Bard was charged with ·
from Page Bl
an error for losing the ball
and Liefer got an error for
Logan al so scored for a 4-0 hi s wi ld throw.
· 'Therrl· s no chance l hat I
Iea d.
"Coco made a ~oo d throw. thought I co uld score on that
.. . ·J catl~ht it a~1d I ne ver · play,'' Logan said . ''But
reallv ~ot a hold of it:" Bard when the ball got away from '
said .~ ..yhad it fur a split &gt;cc- ' rhe catcher, I was following
ond. I think it was already McDonald's lead. And when
mov ing when l rea.c l1cd to I saw it go to tl.1e backstop, I

just took off."
One out later. Brandon
Inge homered.
The Indians got three in
the fifth on the homers by
Blake ahd Sizemore.
Blake hit his 14th home
run of the year. a solo shot.
with two outs. Bard ' then
reached on an error bv third
baseman lnge and scored on
Sizemore's 12th homer of
the season.

Indians
starter · Scott
Elarton allowed eight hits
and tlve runs - one earned
7 3.mmngs.
.
- .m 5 _,
Notes:
The
Indian s'
Peralta is 8-for- 16.... Detroit
I B Chris Shelton is in a 2for- 18 (. Ill) slide. ... Blake
was 2-for-4 to stretch his hitting streak to nine game ( 15for-32, .469) and has three
home runs and six H.Bis tn
that span . .

••··································~············~·····················•
•
•
••
••

••
••

••
•••
•
•••
•
••
•

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Mar:y C. Burson
• Taylor C. Roush Jr.
• Ronald F. "RJ"
Reynolds

INSIDE
• Former U.N.
procur.ement officer pleads
guilty to taking bribes from
U.N. contractors.
See Page A2
• Highway bill to
help Ohio rebuild
urban freeways.
See Page A3
• Enola Gay pilot wants
ashes scattered over
English Channel.
See Page AS

POMEROY - On Sunday
afteri10on a Pomeroy woman
stabbed Robert E. Bishop. 41.
Middleport, in what Pomeroy
Police describe as "selfdefense" during an alleged
domestic violence incident.
The incident took place m
the Pomeroy Cliff Apartments
on Union Avenue where witnesses alleged thar Bishop
entered the residence without
entered
an
permt ss ron ,
upstai'rs
bedroom
and
knocked down a femi1le and
began choking her.
The alleged vict im lat er
claimed to Pomeroy Police
that she then re ac hed for a
dinner plate near the heel

..._

Submttted photo

Jenni Dunham who volunteers with the Meigs County
Cooperative Parish sorts sweet corn gleaned from fields of
Tom Carr for distribution to local food pantries.

The condition of roads
eontinued to dominate co uncil's discussion when resident
Garry Wilson complained
about the cond ition of Linco ln
Drive near hi s home. Wil son
felt ·a .sl ippage probkm was
Worsened by nearby digging
clone by the Pamer~ Street
Depanrnent.
Wilson stHted that he felt
the road had been "falling
;ipart" for the 1a.st five years

'

and thai no one in th e not sure what caused it.
Pomeroy Street De.parrment
Musse r sard the village
or previous or ~urrenl admin - wou ld fi x rh e slippage probistrati ons
had
fo llowed le m by add ing u retaining ,
tllrOtl idt with promises ilf wall. concrete and a guard
pulling down u base and gra v- rai l.
el on the mall .
A.1 ti&gt;r the gra vel. Musser
Mayor Jolrn Musser repon - said he had hecn on the seced that he and St reet tion of road nea r Wi lso n's
Superintendem Jack Kr&lt;tutt cr house as Wil son had requesthad vi sited Lincoln Drive and ed and that he fe lt it was not in
agreed that theie was a slipPlease see Paving. AS
page problem though he was

BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH
HOEFliCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
2 SECilONS -

Calendars
Classifieds

12 PAGES

A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obittiaries

As

•

B Section

Weal her

A6

Sports

Chief Warrant Officer 2 arent Hanson

Local serviceman reflects
.on home, sweet home
ago that he co uld ·hardl y wair
lO get OUI.
''Qrowin'g up 'in M eig~
POMEROY Life in Count y I remember want in g
Afghanistan h&lt;is given ' Chief to ge t out and see new plac es
Warrant Officer 2 Brent and meet new people . The
Hanson a new appreciation of arm y hal\ . give n me I he
the lifes(y le in Meigs County. opporttmity to do b&lt;&gt;th ...... but
ami he readily admits that he now I'm dreaming ab(1LJ I
can hardly wail to get back. coming home &lt;1!\U ~e cing my
Bm it \1,/aS on ly &lt;I few years famil y and friend s. These are

the things that I luok forward
to now. Getting back ... ·
H·ansnn. a 1996 graduate of
Meigs hi gh School. joined
the Arm v in ~00 \ .. He is now
se n ·tng..
111
SiJierrio,
A f~ hc~ni,ian in support of
Operation Endu ring Freedom
as an AH-6-lD apach e long-

Middleport Council to
consider water rate hike

Ridenours confirm
purchase of
Landmark property

affect th e vi liage's applica.. tions for gran t and loan funds
~ for infra~. . tru cturc improvemc11ts .
MIDDLEPORT
sweet corn crop. Gleaning i&gt;
Whil e the ~ 00~ ordin ance
the practice of harvesting pro- Mil)dleport Village Council
will
likely
approve
a
water
call
s for similar in rre ases in
duce left in the fields that
rate
increase later this month . sewer rates. council will not
would otherwi se go to waste.
At Monday's regular coun - consider a sewer rat e hik e.
Of the over 3,000 ears of
sweet corn hand P.ickcd that cil meeting. May&lt;)r Sand y because th e Bnard of Publi c
lalln arel li discussed a pro · Affairs im posed a 20-pc rcc•nt
day. approximately 750 fresh
posed two-percent increase in ... ~wer hike he tOre 1h~ hoan.J
ears were transported the same
vil lage water rates. anJ will was dis~ol\ · e. There wa~ no
day to Mei.gs County.
address the proposal al the water r;lle increase .Ja,t yea r.
Pari sh
in
Cooperative
Jul y 23 meeting. Th e rat e· lannare lli-said .
Pumeroy and the Kilvert
Cnunei l tab le d ac tion nn
increase will rai se hi lls bv 16
Community Center in Athens
cents per m01.1th. b0scd ;Hl a tl1e proposed incrca:-.c in
l;:ounty for local food pantry
minimum water hil l for ~.000 order to consider .a possih\e
di stribution and community
consumpti on.
.
{.:hange in the 200 :2 ordigallons
·
dinners.
lannarelli noted that coun - natll'C. separaling water Jnd
The rest of the corn was cil passed a· :!002 ordinance· -~~v..·er · rat e~ fmm the ~arn e ·
shucked in the l'idd and ta~en calling f(lr annual two-per- . ordinance .
tuACEnel in Athens. where on
cent. increases in the wat~r
Council approved extendthe following day. I0 volun- tl'nd sewer rates on th C' ad vic-e in £! the kast' of the
teers gath ered in the shared- of the vil lage's en~ineerin~ ' Middleport Hig h s ,·hno l
use kitchen there to process .
fi rm.
Flovd
~ Browne footha\1 field to Hi ~ Bc· nd
the curn into a nonperishable Associates . A.l that time. the Youth Footha \1 Lea~tre for a
product. Approximately 3~5 vi\l~ ce's rates were below fi ve-year pt' rind. Tile.~. lc;tgu~ 1
pounds of corn kernels nnd thos{of' vil lages of compara ble size . Strc h low rate., cmrl d . Please see Middleport. AS
Please see Gleaning. AS

Harvest gleaning season undervvay
REEDSV ILLE - The second annual gleaning season in
Meigs County's crop field s
has begun with the gathering
of over 3,000 ears of sweet
corn from the Tom Carr farm
for distribution to local food
pantries.
A project of Appalachia
HarvestACEnet-Food
Ventures the benefitin g orga-.
nizations include the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish.
ACEnet, Appalachia Pe&lt;&gt;pb
Action Coalition (APACl. and
Community Food lnit iafives
(CFI).
•
Twenty young people and
adyll volunteers from Meigs
and Athens Counties gathered
red:ntly at the Carr farm
southwest of Reedsville to
gather what remained of the

TIMOTHY P. METZGER, DO '
of THE MIDDLEPORT CLINIC
will be at the booth on Thursday, August 18, 2005.
Booth hours for that day w.ill be 2 p.m. to 8 p.m.

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

where a knife was resting and
began stabbing Bishop who
relented and exited the room .
Patrolman Josh Ridenour
with the Pomeroy Poli ce
Department and Ct. · Jeff
Miller with the Middleport
Police Departm ent responded
to the scene.
Bishop was sent to 1-loizer
Medical Center in Gallipolis
via Meigs EMS where he was
later released hefore p(l\ice
could arrive according to
Pom eroy Chief of Poli ce
Mark E.. Proffill.
An arrest warrant has b'een
iss ued for Bi shop on charges
of domestic viol ence and
eriminaltrespass .
The incident re mains under·
investi gation by the Pomeroy
PD.

WEATHER

Congratulations! ·

•

by Issue Two grant money.
Council voted last ni2ht to
borrow the $32,000 along
with . refinancing $26.971
from a previous paving project via a loan from Peoples
Bank Corporation who submitted the lowest interest rate.
Peopl es Bank submitted a
rate for '4. 7 percent, resulting
in •t payment of $7Q6.0 I per
month for a period of eight
years.

Bv CHARlENE HOEFLICH
' HOEFLIC H@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

'

••

"""·ill~ thril~-.· ntint'l .nuu

Road paving to begin in Pomeroy Monday

BY BETH SERGENT
B'SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~..c :t005 bhio Vullcr Publishing Co .

Visit the PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL booth
during the NtEJGS COUNTY FAIR
Booth hours are 4 p.m. to 8 p.m ..

'

Domestic violence incident
results in stabbing

'
1~12.

ll LSIJ \\. \l l ,[ S I 'I :!011 ,)

POMEROY - A major
paving project for Pomeroy
streets will begin next week
according to an annoueement .
made at last ni ght's mee ti ng
of Pomeroy Village CounciL
The project , which has a
price tag of $173,778.25. will
cost the village 532,000 while
the rest of the bill will be paid

Cleveland Browns players, from left, Ryan Pontbriand, Melvin Fowler and Phil Dawson sign
autographs for fans following practice at Cleveland Browns .Stadium on Saturday in Cleveland.

Details on Page A6

•••
•
•

Tribute still grows fo~
Marines; comminuty
holds service, ~6

lhings

Stewart

;, playo ff ro Mart ' McNulty at
the · Bank
of Amer ica
Cha mpionships.

1

some

accompli , hcd in fro nt of a
good fan ba se." sa id
Crennel. "The fan s are
gre '.ll. but lik e peop le
everywhere th9 wanr a
winner. Wt: 're go ing . work
to give !hem nne ."
The open practi ce se rved
as a walk -through for the
team 's e xhibition o pener
ne xt Satwday aga inst the
New York Giant s. lr also
gave fan s a chance to bond
wi th players .
"That was fun. " said .12year ve te1·an· quaneri:)ack
Tre nt Dilfer. who made hi's
Cleve land debut and then
was amon g the mo ., r-so ught
players in a postgame autograph session .
The squad we nt thr ough
an hou r of practice with
.kick ret.urners CJ . Jones
and Richard Alsto n orten
running unt ouc hed in th e
half-speed workout.
Then Gunc ~o me scrim ma~ e work with referee s '
and~ clock management ,
th ough fo ur key players did
tll'l play. First-round drart
pick
Braylon Edwards
re mainei.l a contract holdout

Pun1 cr' s · pre vious fina lroun d prohlems Jell him lOth
in 2003. and thi rd last war.
The S262 ..'i00 wi nnc·r' s
check gave Purtt.er SX5t).()()()
thi s year. He's on pace to post
hi ~ he st ~~as(.l l'i Since jo ining:
rh e over-50 tour rn 2002.
Graham Matsh was fourth
ut 13 under t~ftcr shooting a
65. the da y's best round. In
hi s last 6 yea rs on tour. tl]e
61-year-o ld Ma rs h had jusr '
three runner-up fini shes. He
started the final round tied for
14th but liad two birdie.s and
an eagle over his first three
h&lt;&gt;lc s. He ehargcd int o eonlclllion later with four consecuti ve b irdies startin g at No.
ll
Purtzer opened wi th a 9undcr 63 that included a holein-one and matched the low
round in tournament hi story.
He beca me ju st the third first ro und leader or co-lcauc r to
wi_n in the 13-ycar history of
the tournament.
Puru cr's l:ISl Ch"mpions
Tour win al the Toshiba
Senior Cl a.&lt;sic. He lied for
-1-Ith al i&lt;t sl wcd,'s U.S.
Senior Open. and he had two
J1fel ious top-X fini shes til is
v~; u·.

got

•

Nagasaki marks 6oth·.
anniversary of ·
bombing, mayor offers
angry words to U.S., A2

CLEVELAND (AP) Bands blured. fireworks
sparkled and nearly every
kickoff was returned all the
way durin g " light out live ly pr"eticc in front or
32 ,752 Saturday ni ght at
Cleveland
Browns
Stadium .
It was exactly the atmpsphere firs t-yea r head coach
Romeo Cr~ nnel · is see king
to infuse in the new-look
Brown s.

Prad Davis scored on a free San Jose a 1-0 lead in the 13th
pck to help the San Jose
J!arthquakes take sole possessian of first place in the
Western Conference with a 2I victory over the Columbus
Crew on Saturday night.
Davis rocketed· a shot past
keeper Jonny Walker in the
Mth minute. San Jose has won
12 consecutive home games.

J

Spirited Browns practice draws 32,752

Earthquakes shake Crew, 2-1
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -

Monday, AugU.st 8, 2005

www .mydailysentlnel.com

Michelle Huffman

·I

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Please see Hanson. AS

BY BRtAN J. ReeD
BRE ED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER - James and
June Riuenour will buy the
Athens Landmar~ property on
Ohio 7, hut the feed and farm
.supply stun: which operates
the'rc will be closed.
The
Ridcnours
own
Ridcnnur Gas Sen·ice in
Chester. June Ridenour now
'opc·nne, M;ll\"s Diner in 'pace
lca.sed fl'om A\hens Landmark.
and J:Jmcs Rtdcnour has w nlinired their plan' to purchase
the property fro m the fa rm~rs
coopcratire in Athens. \l'hlch
hi..l ~ i.lllllOlllll'Cd it \\"il l Cl'a~'e
operatilms.
Ri denour

~. :.tid

.\1onJa\ he

and hi s wife agreed Ill t&gt;u) the
pmpc11) in orJ er ro prlllectthe
hu ~i nc ~:-.
in t crc~h of the
re ~t i.lllfi.lllt. \\·hich \\ill ("ontinue
to llperatc . He 'aid the) are.
di ~&lt;:u~~in,t.!
a numbe r of
(•ption ... for thl' atljaccnt n:ta~l
Please see Property. AS

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