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Page D6 • ftunbap 1tt~ ·ftmttntl

'

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
·r

.., ...

~

S

day, August 14, aoo!'i

Cypriot airliner crashes
in Greece, killing·all121
people on board, A2

..

HOLZER CLINIC ·

Scenes from·the 2005 .
Meigs County Fair, A6 ~
1,..

Bringing you the latest Healthcare News
' .

·•

It :s- Back to School Time

to school time and time'for fall sports.
has been incredibly hot and will liketo be 10 during all tho practices, condi·
sc:rimmap activities over the next C:OU•
l'o dccreaae the risk of heal injurie9
time. theN a111 ieveral practic:al thinp
do for your child to help. First o( all, have
well hydrated and I sugest you have
a sports drink (Gatorade, etc) just
prior to starting the activity. drink water during the
~vity and thee~ follow it with another sports
4rink immediately afterwards. This will keep them
hydrated and replace some of the sodium and
potusium they lose with sweating and also replace
. aome 'ofthe c:arbohydrstcs they Will need for adequate recovery. Encourage them to drink enough
throuibout these hot days 10 that their urine stay&amp;
f'alrly c:lear and not dark yellow. For the ltlident
athlcto dolnJ outaido aport a(football crosJ-c:OUntry,
inck, baseball. aolf. tennlt) it is eapodally Important to pt out of the sun as soon u potsible after ·
their even1 If they stan expcfiencinaliaht·h~­
tdnts~; headaches. weaknus. chat tlptneas or
ntuaea. thoy need to let theit coacti know 10 thoy
can take the proper Meps to get th~ hydrated, out
of tho sun and cooled down.

Worst drought since the-1980's in Meigs

SPORTS
• Brewers crash Red's
. road winning streak.
See Page 81

On a similir noee. please pay auenlion to your
student-llhl«e'a diet during these .ctivitles u
prOpe, nutrition can help them to perform at their
best l!ld keep dleir encqy up delpite these draininsiCIIVitiel~ .Fcir diose In runnlna spons. it is
helpful tO aec some protein comainina food IUCb u
yOFJt, panut butter, lllrkey sandwhic:h, spona bar,
etc. thortly after a strenuous Mllion of ~ercise.
Thi1 hdpt to repair some of the normal m'*le
breakdown we experienct naturally durina theM
activities. Athletes also need ro Bel their carbOhy·
drates for quicker ener(D' IOUI'Ces and these an
include the breads. cereals, honey, $p01U drinks,
prewll• etc. They should oat a well balamocl diet ·
with enciush prot~n. fatt and carbohydrates to
keep tf!em healthy and arona. If you have more
apecinc: questions lbout proper nutrition for your
children in their respective aport, pleue contact
your phyJlcian for further advice.

Bv BETH 5ERGENr
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - According to
Meigs Fann Service. Executive
Director Dave ·Fox, the drought
of 2005 is tl1~ worst he has seen
since the I 980's. ·
The Fmm Service has recent·
· ly submitted a damage a~sess­
ment to Gov. Bob Taft's office
which is the fi rst step in applying
for emergency loans for fanners
that need to recover their .losses.
"Everything is htuting right

•

now,'' Fox said about local crops,
li vestock &lt;Uld farm workers. "One
farmer from Letart Township told
me one inch of l'"rtin fell in June
and two-tenths of an inch fell in
July."
Ohio
State · University
Extension Ed ucator lor Meigs
County Hal Kneen estimated
Letart and Lebanon Townships
are the driest in the county though
the whole· county and state are
suffering from the lack of min.
The rdin h&lt;L~ had a hit-andmi ss qmtlity this year with down·

pours hitti ng at rapdom. Kneen
noted that rainLtll was •til ahout
timing, especially tor gu_od,
plump sweet Gom.
Kneen said ct'ops, incl uding
com. that have been irrigated are
being hmv~stcd though some are
·smaller from the lack of min.
Notl1ing is'" gmd as rMu ml rain·
fall.
"As dry ;ls it is right now inigation is not as ellecti ve," Fox
said.
One benefit· of tl!y weather is
tlmt it makes tile rnclons sweeter

·and the tomatoes pkntilul. their cattle hay which is nonnal ly
though ... malk:r.
rcsctwd t(Jr wimer:
''111e melon s arc cxtrcme!v
Another maJor concern is
sweet right now due, to h.:·... -. \\'al er making sure li vestock have plen·
e&lt;tu:-;ing a higher ~ugi.u· cuntcnt.:· ty of fresh water which will also
Kneen cxptai ned.
l-., a c·oncem at this week "s Meigs
. 1l1e dry wcatl1er ha.s made "'! Cm1ntV Fair.
beans 10ugher. t(u·c ing ~onk
Knccn said chrckens and ratr
f;unlcrs to sell them t(w ,·,mle bits are cspect&lt;tl ly prone to dehy·
feet!. 1l1c ~mu ml is so dry th&lt;~ t Llmtion hccausc they do not retain
there is 110- IXlSturc t(x &lt;1 second &lt;ls much water. A common sympcrop.
tom of heat su·uke in &lt;mimals is
Speaki ng of cattle, Kne~n s&lt;~id thai they slop eating.
witl1out adcqume JXrst urcs local
li.u1·ners arc resm1_
ing to

Please see Drought. AS ·

t l~di ng

1

•

'

0BITIJARIES
Page AS.
• Dr. Joseph j_ Davis
• Kate Roush
• Donald 'Donnie' Mark
Roush
• Day Ray Nitz Sr.
.• Ralph Knapp

.Q)rriplete medic:al and surpl care a the e)e, including·
cataract so~, dialetic eye cate, and dllch;n's exarrs.

INSIDE

HOLZER CLINIC

•

Lisa H. Reaves, MD

..

(740) 395-8873 Jackson
(740) 446-5421 Gallipolis
I,

•

Do I have Cataracts?
This is a common quoation I &amp;« IS an ophthalmol· steroids iamue tbe risk for developina cawac:cs. .
OJist, Qf eye surpon. With a cawact. the nalllral Direct tmama to thci eye can abo leacl 'to c:atuact
leas t.1 yow eye b(:comes doudy. The cloudine$$ formation .
umally develops ow:r months or years an4 snduv
Wbat can we do to treat WIJ'ICt$1 Some people,
.ally ce•·e yax vision to become worse. Early
symptoms t.1 cataniCCS are blurry vision, IJiare from whose cat1111c:tS are stiU vory minimal, can update
their IJiasses IIIII do v~ well. For od1e11, Cllll'ltCt
llfiaht lipts, and changes in color perUpbiiiL
.MFY is ~uiftd 10 cepl~ee the doudy leas with
a c:J. . one.
Same types c{ CIIII"I&lt;U are preseo~ at birth. but
. - clevelop over a.lif«ime. A positive family
.
If you haYe any trouble widl ywr vilion. indudina
liiiby fl ~ trauma. 8lld medicationalik.e

doudiMIS, aJare, or other aympton11 rl catarldS,
you lhaulcl cont8c:t your tl)'e c:1re prat1
I for a
eomplete eye CXIIII .

Usa H- Reaves. M.D.
Holl!lOI' Cliaic: OphlhaiiiiOiosilt

Brian J. Reed/ photo

Whitney Thoe ne was na med 2005 Fai r Queen an d Tyle r Lee Fair King at last nig ht's Meigs
County Fai r openi ng ceremony.
·

• Iraqi politicians scramble
to reach agreement on
constitution.
Bv BRIAN J. REED
See ·Page A2
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
• Radiology graduation
ROCKSPRI NGS -A busy
announced.
week lies ahcau lor 2005 Meigs
See Page A3
Co unt y Fair Queen Whitney
• On OU dean's list.
Thoene, Fair King Tyler Lee
and tl1e coutt of pti nces and
· See Page A3
princesses who represent the
• OU announces local
vm·ious li vestock activities at the
grads.
Junior Fair.
: The myalty tor this year's lair
SeePageA3
was announced ·at the opening
• Sonshine Circle plans
held Sunday
·ceremonies
fall events:
eve ning at the historic gr.md·
SeePageA3

King and Queen crowned at fair opener

Please see Queen, AS

Charlene Hoeftlchf photo

Bob Thompson. seated. cut the ribbon at the official open ing
and dedica tion of the new Thompson·Roush building Sunday
afternoon. Members of the two families attending the dedica·
tion were from the left, Marianna Mitchell: Pomeroy: Valerie
Alman with her children. Bethany and Wade. of Spring. Texas:
Roy and Pat Holter. Pomeroy; N1ck Alman. Spring Texas;
George Thompson. Pomeroy. Loue lla and Wayne Roush.
Houston. Texas: John · Payne .of Vinton. Dixie Waters ·of
Houston. Opal Payne of Vinton. and Ellen K1rk of Richmond
near Ch illicothe.
·

Thompson-Roush building
dedicated Sunday
.

• .~

.

ke\ 1&lt;1 1hc huildini! . a Fair
:Briard cap. ;md a laminated .
cnpy or 1he Fair Premi um
POMEROY - The tlt\1 . List tah coYer and page
6lh 140 fo&lt;1 t bui l din~ con· ul1&lt;lut hi' c·nntrihution' to the
'tructed nn ihe Rlll'k Spring, r:tir. The 20ll5 Fair is dedi·
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYbAILYSENT-I NEL .C M

Fair~round~

2 SenloNS- 12 P AGES

'

Calenda(S

A3
B2-4

Classifieds
Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
~

Obituaries
Spmis
'

tion. Named as memhcrs of the
royalt y cuun were: Nathan
Cook. beef pri nL·c: Kirk Pu llin s~
dairy
prince:
Nicole
Mootl ispaugh. goat prin ~es~:
Shawne lla
Patterson
and
Eugene Patt~ r so n .
swme ·
princess and ptince: Coumtey
Ginther. horse pri m·cso;: Julie
Tillis and Morgan Tucker. poultry princess and prince: and
Heaven
WestfalL
rabbit
pnnccss.

WEATHER

·

INDEX

.

stand a1 the Rocksprings
Fairgrounds.
Thoene is the daughter of
Dale and Na ncy Thoene or
Pomeroy. She is a member or
the Backyard Cri tter&gt; + H Club
and a student at Meigs High
Sch(l()L Lee is the son of Todd
and
Jennifer Dorzi of
Middlepon. He attends Eastem
Hit; h School imd is a also ;m
active 4- H'er and memhcr or the
Junior Fair Board.
Mallory Hill was named lirst
runner-up in the queen compeli·

,Weather

A4
A5
B Section

A2.

c 2005 Ohi~ Valle)' Pnblts,hing Co.

in trihutc :mJ

rc:~nemhratll'C of 1\\'0 promi~
nl.':nt ~ l eig~ Count) familil'"'
Inn!! involn·J in the 1\kir!-..
.Count\ Fair · \\as JcJi,· at~d
in ~cr~'llTOIHC' Sunda,· aflcrCharlene Hoeftlch/ photo
noon.
and
l.ouclla
\\'a1 nc
The Friday night Roaring Twenties show on the hi ll stage at the Meigs County Fa&gt;r will .inc lude
Hnu. . li
ol
these Ch~Jrleston dancers from the left. Bob Buck. Mark Rhonemrls and Todd Tucker. and back. Tholll!'"'')q
Hou:-.tun. Tc .\a:-. pnn iJcd
Mila Raymond, Becky Grate, Cindy Rhonemus. and June Maynard.
fundin~ for the buiklinl.! ll}
honor tl1eir parent.&lt;. B·•h' and
Alice Thomp,.,n ,,r Pnmcr'"
.
·•
.
and tht" late Oritln and 1\.;He
Capstone. a rock Christian costumed Llancers doing lhe Roush of Sakm C~ntcr.
BYCHARLENEHOEFUCH
HifEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
group. wi ll be &lt;•n stage. on Charl eston, the rumba: the
Members of h&lt;lth the
Wedne:.day at I::10 there will tango. and the Peabody, as well Thompson artLl Rllu'h ramiPOMEROY - Everyth ing be a puppet show ti&gt;llmvcp at 7 as the Virginia reel. The 20·
from singers [Uld dancers of the p.m. by the Ro.:k ·n Country dancer, cnn)e fmm datJ.'e .:tub' lie' were pre,enl al tire Jedication ccrenwn\ erncl~t~d . h\
Roaring Twent ies to a .rock Cloggcrs. anLl at 7 p.m. Friday amunLl the' tri ·,lalc are&lt;t and
Christian group \\;ill be includ· nighl the Rll~lring T''entie:-. pcrl~1rm Llllt.kr the direction uf Dan Smith '' hn. 'Pn~c ~ 1hotit
cJ itr the hill stage cntcnain· danc:cr... a feature ac:t at the dari.:c in,tntclurGerald Pn\\dl. the nllltrihu ti nn . . nt" tl1c 1\\l)
honored cnupk" tn thl' Lur
mcnt at the Meigs Courtly Fair. Chester Chaul&lt;l\ll)Ua, will per·
Dance" are June f\ht) nard. ;md in their l.' l}lllll\llnitic' .
At ~ p.m Mond&lt;ty night, the fom1.
Tom Tucker. Paulette Harri,on.
EJ !loiter.. &lt;Hl hehall nf the
Big Be nd Clol,lgers will perThe 45-minulc Roaring ..
~leig, Count\ Fair B&lt;lant.
form. at tdO on Tuesday Twenties show will consi&gt;t of
. PleiSe see Stage, A5
prcs~meJ Th&lt;;llll'''' ll \\ ith .t

Hill stage to feature variety if entertainment
.

j

cah.·J to Tlwmp!-&gt;011 '' ho a~ a
L'OI1:-tructinn 'l'~lll(f~KIOr built
~t.'\t.'ral hui ! Jin~'re:.tored

utht.·r... .

and

-nHl\l.':d

·and

re&lt;.' •Hht ructcd rhe IX28 log

c;1hin ~m thl'. L1ir~round'\ .
Rnr h nf th~ Tlwmpsons

ha1.: been ;tL·tile nhibiwrs .
throul.!h tilL' 'c;u·.. , - he .in
t r~ll.:tl~·:-. and -antique cquipand :-.he in llo,,er:,.

nK'Ill.

Llornc,tic art' anJ hnrtic:ttl·
wre . ~ J r. anJ ~1r, . Rou,;h
\\l'fl'

al-.t) ill\l1lw~ d with the

. _·num\ fair 1'' cr the vears
'"fl i11~ :h leaLler' o( 4-H
clttl" :md nhibitin~ anii11als
fnlm their dain farm .
The ..,parir~u... h\1ilding

"h ik

!Wl

l·umpklt"l) fin-

j...,hcd i-. ht~in~ u-..ed for
c\h 1hit... th 1' ~ c:tr. Fairgoets
· ~Jn ,c~,..· tractnr:-. . antique

l.tnn e4tripmcnt. flowers.
;u .d dome,uc art&gt; on tlisp!:t\ tl1e rc .

�~

'·

.

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'•

•

·N ATION • WORLD

)he Daily Sentinel

·PageA2
Monday, August 15, 2005

Community Calendar

{)'PRIOT AIRLINER CRASHES IN GREECE, KilliNG All. 121 PEOPLE ON BOARD
'

.

BY ELENA BECATOROS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GRAMMATIKO. ··Greece
~ A Cypriot plane full of
Yacationers slammed into a
hill nonh of Athens on Sunday
after at least one pilot lost con. sciousness from lack of oxy-.
gen. killing all 121 people
aboarJ .- more than a third of
th.em children.
The cause of Gree.:e ·s dcauliest plane crash appeared to be
~chnical failure. resulting in
high-altitude decompression.
and not terrorism. authorities
said. A tr~uispon ofticial said
all 1)5 passengers and six
crew may have been dead
when the plane went down.
. Hel ios Airwa ys fli~ht
ZU522 was headed frrmt
Larnaca, Cyprus. to Athens
International Airport when it
crashed · at 12:05 p.m. near
Grammatiko. a town 25 miles
north of the Greek cap ital.
Elaming debri~. luggage and
bits of human remains were
strew11 i.lCross a ravine and sur-

rounding hill s.
Family members wept in
anguish as they waited at the
Athens and Larnaca airports .
When news of • the crash
emerged at Larnaca. rd a t iv e ~
s,warmed the airl ine count~rs.
shouting "muruerers" abel
"vou
deserve lvnchino.
•
.
e "
A man \vhose cousin was a
passenget: told Greece's A Iph a
television he received a cellphone text message . minut es
before the crash. "lie told me
the pil9ts were unconscio\ts .. ...
He satd: "Farewell. coustn.
here we're frozen ... Sotiris
Voutas said - a reference to it
being cold in the plane. a sign
of decompression.
About a half-hour after take. off, pilots reported air-conditioning system problem s to
Cyprus air traffic control.
Within minutes . after entering
Greek air space over the
Ae·gean. the Boeing 737 lost
a) I radio contact. Two Greek F16 tighter jets were dispatched
soon afterward.
When the F-16s intercepted
the plane. jet pilots could see
the co-pilot slumped over his
seat. The ·captait1 was not in the
cockpit, and oxygen musks
dangled inside the cabin. gov.t;rnment
spokesman

Theodoros

Roussopou los

Public meetings

Elementary will hold an open
house for parents and students'
in
tirst through eighth grades
Monday, Aug. 15
from6
p.m. to 8 p.m.
LETART ·
Letart
Townsh ip Trustees will meet 5
p.m. at the off1ce building.

said.

He saiu the jet piloh also
saw two- people possibly try,ing to take control of the plane;
it was tmclear if they were
crew members or passengers.
The plane apparcmly was on
automatic pilot when it
crashed. Heli m spokes man
Marios Kurt-,tanlinidis said in
Cyprus.
·
"When a pi lot has no CO Ill·
munication with the control
towe,r. the procedure uictatcs
that other planes mu .; t accompany anu help the plqne land .
Unfortunately. it appear,·u that
the pilot was already dead as
wa;. P""ibly. everyone else
on the plane ... . Cyprus
Transport Minislcr H;ui ...
Thrasou said.
The head of the Greek airline safety committee. Akrivos
Tsolakis. said the· crash was

Clubs and
organizations

School events

Thursday, Aug. 18
' Sunday, Aug. 21
RACINE
PomeroyPOMEROY - · Orientation Racine Lodge 164 F&amp;AM will
for all irJComing sixth grade
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the hall .
students and new enrollee' in Refreshments .
the seventh and eight grades, 2
p.m .. M ~ ig s Miudl e School.
Parents and Sllodents wi 11 meet
in the gym.·
Monday, An g. 22
Monday, Aug. 15
RACINE --- Southern
RUTLAND
Rutland

Church events

Community Church vacation
Bible school, 6:30 to 8;30 p.m.
tltrough Aug. 19 at the church
across from Pi zza Dans.
Theme is "Forever Building"
with Bun Builder and his little
brother Billy Bob. There will
b,e puppets. crafts, and Bible
stories. For more information.
call Steve Tomek, 992-9796.

dinner at noon. For more information ca11304-895-3812.

Other events
Wednesday,Aug.l7
POMEROY -Ameri can
Red Cross Bloodmobile, I to 6
p.m., Meigs Senior Center. All
blood types needed .

Reunions

Birthdays

Sunday,Aug, 21
POINT PLEASANT .
Annual Shirley . homecoming
will be at the former home.place of Ephram and Hannah
Shirley off Shirley Road nonh
of,Point Pleasant. Covered dish

Wednesday, Aug. 17
· RACINE - Paul Baer will
observed hi s 81 st birthday on
Aug. I 7. Cards may be sent to
him at 35 165 Baer Road,
Racine, Ohio 45771 . •

RACO announces fall yard sale·

the ''worst accident we 've ever

had ." He said the plane's black
boxes had been retowreu.
containin g data and vo ice
rt!corJincS va lu ab le 'fnr deter~
mining. the cause
.
"There apparent ly was a
lack of oxvgen. 1\'hich is usually the case-when .tile cabin is
depressurized." Tsolakts said.
The F-16 jets p1et the plane
at 34.000 feet. the Greek air
force said: Ai that altitude. the
effects of Jepress·uri zation arc
sw ift. said David Kaminski
\-Iarrow.' of the British-b'"''d
Air Transport Intelligence
magazine .
"If the aircraft is at J().(HHl
feet. you don't stay consc ious
for long, mayhe 15 to JO seconds. It is like standing on top
of Mount Everest,'' he said.
"But ifyou .are down at 10.000
feet. yuu can breathe for a lot
longer."
The !light. was to have continued to Prague , C1,ech
Republic , after stopping in·
Athens .. The crash occurreu at ·
the height of Europe· s summer
vacation, when Mediterranean
resorts like Cyprus are packeu
with tourists. The area was
likely to be particularly
crowded, because Monday is a
national holiday in Greece and
Cyprus.
There. were 48 children
aboard. mostly Greek Cypriots.
Helios spokesman Giorgos
Dimitriou said in Athens .

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

AP Photo/ Thanassls Stavrakls

Rescuers wa lk by the t;Jil of il Cypriot Helios Airw&lt;Jys Jet near the coastal town of Grammatikos, about'40 kilometers (25 miles)
north of Athens. Greece . The jet w1th 115 passengers and six crew members on board crashed Sunday north of Athens, the
Defe nse Ministry and fire depa rtment said, and it was not clear if the p1Iots .were conscious or at the controls when it went
down. Helios Airways is a privately owned Cypnot airline .,
'
Greek state television quot·
ed the Cypru s transport minister as ,sayi ng the plane had
decompress ion problems in
the past. However, Helios represe nt:iti v\' Dirnitriou said the
plane had •·nn prnhl ems and
was serviced just last w'eek."
On Cyprus. several callers
to rad io and television pro:
grams said they ex pcricnL:cd
severe •lir-co nditiDning prob·
!ems on Helios jets in re&lt;:ent
mtlllths. Sume saiu the cab in
was freezin g and . the crew
provided blankets: others
said it became unbearabl y
hot.
.
Sudden loss of pressure was
blamed for a similar crash in
South Dakota in 1999. of a
Learjet 35 carrying pro golfer
Payne Stewan and four others.
They became unconscious,
and the jet went down after tly·
ing hal fway across the country-

on au topilot .
In June 2000. a Boeing 737200 of the Canadian qtrricr
We&gt;tJet lost cabin pressure
because pilots mistakenl y shut
down auxiliary power. Cabin
altitude reached 24.000 feet
be fore the plane descended
and pressurization became
normal. None of the H8 passenge rs was injured.
.
At the Greek crash scene,
more than I00 firefighters ,
backed by planes and heli·
copte rs dropping water,
fought a brush fire caused by
the crash. The plane was in at
least three pieces: the tail , a bit
of the cockpit and a piece of
fuselage that witnesses. said
conta ined many bodies .
Sections of the plane were
ablaze.
More than a dozen ambu·latices removed r~mains, and
fire department vehicles

brought body bags . Black·
robed Greek Orthodox priests
were on hand.
"There is· wreckage every where. Things here are very
difncult. they are indescrib-.
able.'' Grammatiko Mayor
George Papageorgiou said.
''All the residents are here try·
ing to help."
Relatives from Cyprus were
to be taken a reception center
near the Athens airport, but the
remains of many victims were
charred beyond identificatio n.
The Cyprus transport mini ster
said DNA tests would be nee·
essary.

RACINE - The an nual fall
yard s:tle was planned for'
Sept. .IJ- 15 at Star Mill Park
at a recent meeting nf the
Ractne Area Community
Organi zation.
•
Money raised at the fall
yard s•Ji e goes specifically
towards the RACO scholarships for Southern Hi gh
Sehoul seni ors. Anvone wishing to uonatc toward the sale
may contact Kathryn Hart at
.. ()49-2656.
•

DEAR ABBY: What can I
unabo uLa family member who
&lt;:&lt;HTCL't ' my grammar anu pronunc iittion. interruptin g what I
am s;tying'? I am well-educated and pronounce things well mm t o f the time. An example:
I was saying. "So, she said she
was the li aison to ... " and thi s
person will say. ''Is that how
you say that?".
I will say, "I thought so," and
the person will respond, "Well,
it's French, you know, so I
would think it is pronounced
... " and oR and mi. and of
co ur ~e the original conversation is lost.
' ! ha ve tried everything. I
have asked her to stop and she
promises ..but does not. I have
tried ignoring the interruption
and talking over her. but that is
rude. and then she atts hurt . I
have tried stopping the conversation and not continuing
aft erward. but she doe sn't
notice. It seems not to have
occurred to her that others in
the room might actually want
to hear what I was going to say.
I think she would stop if she
could, and she isn't trying to be
mean. Have you any suggestions. becau se this certainly is

NewsChannel

Iraqi politicians scramble to reach agreement on constitution

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contest wa&gt; a success with prizes
given out to first, ,second and
third longest jumps in the junior
and senior divisions.
Libby Fisher gave the blessing followed by a potluck
RACO
President
meal.
Kathryn Hart presided with
Lillian Weese giving the secretary's report and Ann Zirkle
the treasurer's report.
RACO's next event is the
Racine Fall Festival on Sept.
10 at Star Mill Park. ·

Sonshine Circle
plans fall events
RACINE - Panicipatio.n
in the fall fe stival at Star Mill
Park was planned at a recent
meeting of the Son shine
'Circle held at the Dorcas
Bethany Ch urch Thursday.
It was decided to have a
bake sale at the festival and
also to enter a tloat in the
parade. The tloat will be· prepared in Sepl. 9 at Kathryn
Hart's residence.
.
The group voted to donate
.$100 to Sarah Triplett for use
in her school trip abroad. The
cookbooks are completed and
expected to be available here
next week, it was reported.
Orders are being taken by
Kathryn Hart ~ nd Lois Sterrett.
Evelyn f'oreman conducted
the meeting opening with two
poems, "Be Satisfied" ·and
"My Prayer." Oflicers' reports
were given by Jackie . White
and Julie Campbell. Thank
You notes were read from

· Dear
Abby

frustrating. - PAM.ELA IN
TAMPA. FLA ·
DEAR PAMELA : H you
have n' t been able to make
your family member cease and
desist, there is little I can do.
However, I will point out that
people who interrupt others
are rude • and if she makes a
habit of doing it, she is pro\Ja·
bl y as welcome as a skunk at :i
garden pany. She may interrupt to correct you because she
wants . attention, or she may
consciously or unconsciously
be trying to "one up" you.
Whatever the problem is, I
wouldn't blame you if you
were in her company as ltttle
as possible · which, by the
way, may be the solution to
your problem . .
DEAR ABBY: l'ma21-yearold woman with a best friend

I'll call "Darren." Darren is the
sweetest guy you would ever
want to meet. He'll be a good
husband to someone someday.
My problem is that Darren
.wants a romantic relationship
with me . He has wanted this
ever since we met at work a
year ago. Abby. I don 't feel ihe
same way about him. I have
told him repeatedly that I want
to be free to date whoever !want, and I don 't consider
going out on a "date" with him
dating . I think of it as two
friends hanging out. I have
also told him he should go out
with other women if he gets
the chance, but he refuses. He
says he likes only me.
I recently met a hot guy
named ''Mike" I really like a
lot. When I told Darren, he was
jealous and h4fl. He asked
how I could consider a "date"
with Mike, but not with him.
I'm afraid if r decide to go
steady with Mike it will hurt
Darren, and that's the last
thing I want to do. Also, what
if Mike is wrong for me and I
miss out on a great guy like
Darren? Do you think lied him
on? Am I wrong for wanting to
start a relationship with some:

.Chris and Nicole Sayre. Sandy
Mapson. Brady Bissell. and
the Paul Thaxton Family.
Fifty-eight cards were signed
and it was noted that 13 had
been sent out earlier in 'the
week.
Hart and Sterrett presented
the program with the the,me
being "The County Fair.".
There were games wi th ribboos give n and refreshments
· followed . Ajtcnding were
those named and Martha Lou
Beegle . Mattie
Beegle .
Shirley Beegle. Ann Boso.
Mabel Brace. 'Linda Cozart .
Mildred
Hart,
Lillian
.Hayman ,
Nondos
Hendricks. Peggy Hill , Deni se
Holman, Melanie Holman.
.Edna Kn opp. Bl ondenu
Rainer. f'ran Sayre. Ruth
Simpson. Wilma Smith.
Holly Stump. and Berni ce
Theiss. Next meeting will he
held 7 p.m. Sept. 8. , ·

For the Record
Dissolutions

POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been. filed in Mei gs
County Commo11 Pleas Court
by .Joyce A.
Ritchie.
Coolville, and Elton A.
one else? Please tell me what Ritchie, Coolville.
to do. - SOUTHERN SIREN
Di ssolutions were granted
IN NEW ORLEANS
to Heather Nicole Savoy and
DEAR SIREN: You haven't Shaun Michael Savoy, and
led anyone on, and you are enti· Ronnie Eblin and Denna
tied to your feelings. Darren Eblin :
has been hanging around, hoping you will fall in love with
him. You have been up-front
with him. Please don't let him
POMEROY - Divor.ce
wear you down. If the chemistry hasn't kicked in for a year, actions were filed .in Meigs
it isn't likely to happen -regard- County Comm.on Pleas Court
less of whether Mike is or isn't by Christy A. Haning. Long
"the one." Tell Darren the time Bottom, against Donald J.
has come for both of you to date Haning. Long Bottom. and
by . Rose M. · Causey,
others, and let him go.
Reedsville, against Ri ck
Dear Abby is writte11 by Causey,
Reedsville.
Abigail Vall Buren, also ,
known as Jeanne Phillips,
a11d wasjou11ded by her mother, Phillips. Write Dear Abby
POMEROY - A forecloat www.DearAbby,coill or
sure
action was filed in Meigs
P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, .
County
Common Pleas Court
CA90069.

by Benefi cial Ohio , Jo e ..
Elmhurst. Ill ., against Pamela
i... Caner, Racine, and others.
alleging default, on a mort·
gage · agreement in the
amount of $82.348 .45.
Actions demanding repo~­
session of mobile home callateral were filed by Green
Tree Servicing. Atlanta. Ga .•
again st Kenneth
Reed .
Hockingpon . and others. and
Richard W. Davis. Pomeroy.
and others.

Divorces

Foreclosure

Sentenced
POMEROY . · - Lloyd
Creston Riftle was sentenced
· in · Meigs County Common
·Pleas Court to one year in
prison on a charge of trafficking · in crack cocaine and 18
months on fo ur counts of
complicity to theft and a
count · of complicity to van. dalism .
The sentences are to be ·
served consecutively. Riffle
wits given credit for 208 days
served prior to sentencing.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 2005
• MEIGS • EAS,.ERN • SOU,.HERN

·Radiology graduation annonnced
MARIETTA - The School
of Radiologic Technology,
sponsored ' by
Marietta
Memorial Hospital and in
aft.iliatiotr with Washin2ton
State Communi ty College,
Memorial
Camd en-Clark
Hospital imJ · St. Josep h's,

(l?lr.. l~¢\!f tK... l)~me.s
~l}}~~LPAA~~R

Ravenswood
Chiropractic C~nter

6:30 p.m. on Aug. 22 at the
home of Doug and Tonja
Hunter on Bashan Road .
Also reponed at the meeting
were activities at the recent
RACO food drive for the Meigs
Cooperative Parish and Racine
Founh of July celebration. ·
RACO donated $200 to the
Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Department for the tireworks on
July 4 and $200 toward~ the
entertainment. It wa~ also repon~
ed that RACO's trog jumping

Monday, August 15, 2005

Constant interruptions bring family conversation to a halt

Greek Prime Mitii ster
Costas Caramanlis canceled a
holiday on the Aegean island
of Tinos tu return to Athens ..
The (yP.riot president also
canceled a' vacation.
Helios Airways. Cyprus'
first private airline, was founded in 1999. 1toperatesatlectof
Boeing 737s to cities including London ; Athen s; Sofia.
Bulgaria; Dublin. Ireland; and
Strasbourg, France. EU new- .
comer Cyprus is di vided into
Turki sh and Greek sectors.
Most of its 800,000 people are
Greek Cypri ois.

MPH from •he northeast.·
Monday, August 15
Overnight (1·6 a.m.)
Humid and cloudy morning.
It wi ll remain cloudy. There
Temperatures will. rise from
· BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - another died in a shooting, the derics are urging foll\)wers to had made "abundantly clear
69 to 80 by late this morning. is a good chance we CQuld see
With one day left to tinish U.S. military announced. At vote against any constitution to my Iraqi interlocutors."
Winds will be 5 MPH from the some rain . Temperatures will
.Iraq's new constitution. Sunni least II Iraqis were killed that could lead to the breakup . An American soldier was
fall from 70 to today's low of
north.
,
,
ki lled and three !Jthers were .
Arabs asked Sunday that the Sunday in attacks across the of the coumry.
62
by 6 a.m. Winds will be 5
Ajter11oo11 (1·6 p.m.)
With the Sunnis standi ng wounded in a roadside
divisive issue of federalism be country, police said.
It will continue to be humid MPH from the northeast.
put off until next year so the
Sunni Arab politicians fas t. Shiite leg islutor ·Jawad bombing Sunday while they
Thesday,August 16
and cloudy. There could be a
draft can be completed on asked that federalism be left al-Malik i. a member of Prime were on 8atrol east of ·few raindrops around the area.
Moming (7 a.m.-NoM) ·
time, warning they would not out of the constitution until a Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari's , Rutbah , 25 miles west of
It will be a cloudy morning.
Temperatures will stay near 83
accept provisions for federat· new parliament is elected pur· Dawa Pany. raised the possi- Baghdad. the military said.
with today's high of 86 0ccur- Temperatures will climb from
Three soldiers assigned to
ed states.
ing a meeting with President bilit y that the deadline equid
riA g around 3 p.m . \Yinds will 63 to 75 by late thi ' morning. •
Three Task Force Liberty
American officials applied Jalal Talabani and Massoud be pushed back.
be 5 MPH from the north turn· Winds will be 5 MPH from the
"We might amend the inter- were killed and one was
pressure to resolve diff~r- Barzani, leaders· of the two
ing from the northeast as the northeast. ·
ences on that and other issues · major Kurdish parties and 1111 con"itut"to n and extend the wounded in a roadside bomb. Ajtemoo11 0-6 p.m.) afternoon progre s·ses.
before Monday's deadline .for proponents of a federa l sys- deadline by a min imum of ing late Saturday near Tuz
Eveni11g (7 p.m.-Mid11igllt)
Temp,ratures will increase
parliament to adopt the con- · tem to protect the self-rule two weeks'' to allow time to Khormato, 100 miles nonh of
It sho uld be a cloudy from 79 to 85 by late this afterwin O\ er th e Su.nni Arabs. he the capital. the military said.
stitution.
and
U.S. Kurd s haYe had since 1991 .
even ing. There is a slight noon . Skies will be partl y
One so ldi er also was
"We made a proposal to told The Associated PreS&gt;.
Ambassador
Zal,ma y
chance of rain. TemP,eratures cloudy to cloudy with 5 to 10
That
wou ld
req uire killed and another wounded
Khalilzad said he was con- transfer federalism and the
will drop from 83 early thi s MPH winds from the northvinceil tpe· Iraqis wo uld sue- process of forming federal approval of two-thirds of par- in a bomb in g in western
evening to 72 . Winds will be 5 east.
ceed.
regions to the next National liamem and the president and Baghdad on Saturday, the
Some politicians said the Assembly." Sunni politiCian hi s two deputies. Howeve r. military said.
Elsewhere. a U.S . soldier
draft could be presented to the Kamal
Hamdoun
said . the United States was anxious
t 'hin~tna.111f 1.( 11l.· ~-~r ~~~
Shiite- and Kurdish-led par- "Legislation could be drafted on to keep to the s&lt;:hedulc and was found dead of a gu nshot
\. P. \\ \ ' C'hm'lj'lf0Ctic Society
liairient Monday over Sunni these two matters and a refere n· ratchetcd up jJre,ure on the wound Friday. The military
:\ll'ml't-r . ~·.A.n~rio.11n lk"-li'J of
ITaqi&gt; to meet the Monday sai d atJ investi gation was
Arab objections. But that , dum could be held on them ."
hn·n~ll· l'rtil'"-~i"ml,
deadline
.
under \\·ay and did not say
would further alienate that
Hamdoun said the Sunnis
20 ~a C\P,.'fiCil.'\'
~cmt'lrr ,"( AITh.'ncan AcaJcmv
disaffected minority, under- re&lt;.:eived no response to thei r , KhalilLad · also acknowl- where th.e soldier was found
Auto Accidents Workers'
of \1edll":tl Al"llpttfk.,tlft'
cutting the U.S. goal of using proposal. which the Kurd s edged the importance of get- or if an attack was suspected
ting
Sunni
Arabs
to
join
in
in
the
soldier's
death.
.
, the political process to. take · have rejected in the past.
Compensation
The
U.S.
military
the steam out of the Sunni He said other charter provi- back ing the document. "This
• SJX111s l njuri~\
•M (".slln~
'•M ~
dominated insurgency.
sions that Sunnis obje.:ted to consti tution can be a national announced the death of a lieu•
AcupunCIUR!
•
Silmt da) ;ippl .
compact
bri
nging
Sun
ni
s
in.
tenant
of
Abu
Mu
sab
al. " It looks like all the agree- were re cog ni tion of the
i&gt;o
lating
extremists
and
Zarqawi
's
Al-Qaida
in
Iraq.
· ments are being made only by Kurdish language. dual c~ti·
&gt;tatement
said
the Kurds and the Shiites zenship a'nd the role of the Baathist hard-liners and set· The
without even asking our opin- Shiite religious leadmh ip. , ting the stage over time for Mohammed Salah Sultan ~
"If there are poi nt&gt; thai we defeating them ." he said on who was known . as Abu
ion ." Sunni Arab official
Zubair. was wearing a suicide
Saleh al-Mutlaq said Sunday. do not a~ree on. we will not CNN's "Late Edition.''
Khalilzad told CNN that "a 'pack wi th ex plosives when he
''I believe the draft is going to sign any draft ... Hamdoun
lot
of American blood and was ki lled Friday by Iraqi'
tie presented tomorrow even said. addin£ that he Jidn't
American
treasure ha' been &gt;ecurity forces , the U.S. state.if it is ,not finished. wi th or think Shiites and Ku rds 1\'ould
316 Washln
St ·
Ravenswood, WV
without· our approval."
push th rough a charter "if spent here" - a point that he ment said.
. Parliament scheduled a they a re serious about the
meeting for 6 p.m. ( 10 a.m. unanimity with us ... •
' EDTl Monday to :lllow as
Sine~ Shiites anct Kurd'
much time as p~sible. for have agreed on most constitu·
negotiators to ag re e on a tiona! issues. Kurdish Ia" ·
•
draft.
.
maker Mahmoud Othman
f ,
The main obstacle was the said the draftin~ committee
.argument O\'er federalis m. would present the draft to'par·
which the fo rmerlv dominant liament Monday even if the
Sunni Arabs fear could lead to Sunni AraQs objected.
Visit the PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL booth
t&lt;urdish anu' Shiite Musl im
Parliament could approve
regions splitting away · from the draft by a simple majorit).
during the d 1 I( " ( 01 · '\ , ) ,. \ q
iraq. But al-:'vlutlaq said there and the Shiites and Knrds
·also was no a~reement on 17 together hold 22 1 of the n5
Booth hours are 4
to 8
:Other issues·. - including the seats. HoweYcr. ·that risks a
di stribution of IDil \\ealth .
Sunni backlash thar could
TIMOTHY P. 1\IETZGER.DO
Another Sunni official sc unle the constitution "hen
voiced objections o\·er a it is put before \Oters in an
of JilL .\ IIDDl.LPORrU .I\1(
Shiite- Kurdish deal to grant Oct. 15 referendum .
'
;pecial status to the clerical
If t\\U·thirus of the' oters in
will
be
at
the
booth
on Thursday, August 18, 2005.
hierarchy of Iraq \ Shiite at .least three &lt;&gt;f the I X
·pro\·inces ,·ote "no." the c har~
, Mu,lim majority.
Booth-hours for that day will be 2 p.m. to 8 p.m.
In violence. ti1 c L.S . sol - ter \\ou lu he Jde,ltcd anJ
dier' were killeu b1 roadside. Sunnis form a major1t' in at •
••
bomb' O\er the "eekend and least filllr prminccs · Sunni · , I I I I I I I I I . l ' t I I I I I t
I I I I I I I t i. I I I I I I I I I I I I~ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I t I I I I I I I I

Several thank you note s
from SHS Seniors who
received the scholarships thi s
year were read at the meeting.
It was announced that
RACO members · will once
again be working the Meigs
County Fair gates for two
days. Last year RACO took
its fair gate proceeds and purchased new picnic tables· for
Star Mill park .
A picnic for RACO fair
gate workers will be held at

.PageA3

Hospital. held its graduation
ceremony on Aug. 12 on the
Washington State campus.
Graduates have· completed
two vears of full-time didactic
classes and clinic.al experi·
ences, demonstrating and documenting knowledge, compe-

tence and proficiency in the art
and science of radiologic technology.
Among those to be hon'ored at the ceremony are
Cassie Davi s of Coolville
and Lindsey Smith · of
Racine.

ON OU DEAN'S LIST

~;-

ATHENS - The following
students at Ohio University '
were named to the deai1's li st
at Ohio University for the
spring
·quarter:
James
. Bennett. Jacob Householder.
and Blaze· Linton , all of
Coolville; Valerie Karr. Long
Bottom ; Dclana Eichinger.
Chr,istina Miller. Rachel

Taylor. all of Middleport;
Maegan Dodson . Andrea
Krpwsczyn. Sara Manstield,
Mqrgan Mathews. Lee Nau ..
Ryan Pratt. Tia Pratt, all of
Pemeroy.
Deana Pullins and Arian
Smedley. Portland; Joseph
Cornell , Jessica
Fi sher,
Sarah
Molly
Gilmore,

Hawley. Autumn Hill, Tony ·
Hupp, Rachel Marshall ,
and
Jennifer
Walker,
Brandon Wolfe, · all · of
Racine; Melissa Johnson and
Joshua Kehi ,' both of
Reedsville ; Lauren Logan.
Amber Snowden, and Shauna
White, all of Rutland; Rachel
Chapman. Syracuse.

"Be Sure To Be A

rOrtOf

.

·

S . This Year's
Peclo/ Fall Sp·
P, · ·
Orfs

. ev,ewEa~
.. ,on! .

.OU announces local grads
ATHENS - Ann Riftlc.
Midulep0rt, Andrea Krawsczyn.
. Pomercy, Macyn Ervin. Racine.
and Kunberl y lhle. Racine.
graduated from Ohio University
at the end of spring quarter. with
hi~h honors.
Joshua Kehl ot' Reedsville

graduated with honors.
.
James
Patterson
ot
Pomeroy received a graduate
degree, a master of education.
Other local graduates were :
Grant Abbott, , Pomeroy ;
Lauren Anderson, Pomeroy;
J.ennifer Buckley, Pomeroy;

Heidi DeLong. Pomeroy;
Clay
Enslen, Pomeroy ; ·
Marjorie Halar, Pomeroy;
Jason· Mora, Pomeroy; Justm
Roush, Pomeroy; Matthew
Beldyk, Reedsvi lle; and
Kimberly Marcinko, Tuppers
Plains .

,••
~••••••••••••••••••••······•······x•xx·:x·~
.........................
A........................................................... . . .........'.
~

•~

H
~4

~t

MEJGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE .

. MONDAY, AUGUST

15.2005 .

•4

u

Sponsor nfth~ Do_w" H,ulri:t Hrating &amp; Cnnling" &amp; "Baum Uurrbrr Compa,.J" . ••
Mnt:ic of thr "C11pling~n"- ."iponso"d by rltr Mtigs County 'Hraltlt IHpoffm~••
••

~~ 4:tHip.m.

Kiddie Tractor Pull-S mall Sho"· Arena

::

Junior fair Board Auction-Livtstock Show Arena
Junior hlr Goat 1\·tlirket Shmt·-Lives•ock Show Arena
Junior Fair Sheep Show follo,.·ed by
Open Class Sheep Sho¥1·-Liveshxk Sho¥1' Arena
Dfmo Derby-Grandstand
Hill Stage •:ntertainment
Gatts Close

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AUGUST 16. 2005
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Gates Opl'n
M
.Junior hir Rabbit Show-Small Show Arena
::
Antique Tractor Pull-Pull Track
H
Bicycle Dral\ing-Hill Slat~e
H
Open L'lass Beef Show rollo"'·rd by Junior F•ir lk!ef Brecding-•4
Linstock Show Arena
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Antique Trudor Pull-Pull Area
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Kiddie Tractor Pull-Small Show Arena
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......................................................................................................,..,.. .............

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

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information

mbe.1J.Batlp , ~enttnel

············································~4

•

•

�.

.

'

I

OPINION

The Daily Se~tinel

It· would be nice to go fi &gt;ll-

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohlo

m.~r

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
·

.

ft would be nice to worry
about John Roberts .
It would be really nice to
think Karl Rove was wot1h
worrying about.
But something wholly distracting is going on. Must be '
that war on whatever it is,·
and its very real casua lties .
Barbecue s smoke, kids
come home from summer
camp and ballplayers ge t ·
busted for steroids. Life goes
on.
But does it really 'l I wondered this recently, as my
laptop was profiled (or not)

www.mydallysentinel.com ·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher.
•

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

'

Congress' shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting tire
free exercise tlrereoj; or abridging tire freedom
: of speech, or of the press; or tire right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governmentjor a redress ~{grievances.

in an examination at an air-

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. .Aug. 15. the 227th day ol 2005. There
are 138 days left in the y~ar.
· Today's Highlight in History :
.
.
; Aug. 15. 1945. was proclaimed ··v.J Da(by the Allies. a
day after Japan agreed to surrender pncondttK&gt;nally.
On this date :
In I 769. Napokon Bonaparte was born nn the island of
Corsica.
.
· In 1914. the Panama Canal opened to traffic .
In 1935. humori st Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post were
killed when thei r airplane crashed near Point Barrow, Alaska .
In 1944. ~uring World War II. Allied r·orces landed in
southern France.
In 1947. l'ndia became imkpcndent after some 200 years of
British rule.
· In 194~. the Republic· uf Korea was prol'laimed.
Ten years ago: The Justice Department agreed to pay $3.1
million to white separ~ttist Ramly Weaver anJ his family to
settle their claims over the killing of Weaver's wife and son
during a I992 si~ge by federal agents at Ruby Ridge. Idaho.
Pioneering TV journalist and Timex watch pitc.hman John
Cameron Swayze died in Sarasota. Fla., at age 89.
Five years ··a~o : Democrats stirred memories of President
John F. Kenn~dy at their national convemion in Los Angeles,
-,yith his daughter Caroline beckon ing delegates to turn the
New Frontier into a "timeless ~al l " that wotfid send AI Gore
to the White· House. British Airways joined Air France in
grounding its CQntordc supersonic jets in the wake of the
July 25 crash near Paris that &lt;.:!aimed 113 lives. A group of
I00 separated faniily · members from North Korea arrived in
.South Korea for temporary reLmions with relatives they had
not seen fo r half a centLuy: a group of I(~) South Koreans
-&lt;isited the North.
: One. year · ago: Residents left homeless by Hurricane
€harley dug through· their ravaged homes. rescumg what
:tlley could as President Bu sh promised rapid delivery of dis'lister aid. In Athens, the U.S. men's hasketbaiL team lost 92":13 to Puerto Rico, only the third Olympic defeat ever for the
:Americans and first since adding pros. Vijay Singh won the
PGA Championship in Haven. Wis.
: Today 's Birthdays: Actress Rose Marie is 82. Political
activist Phyllis Schlatly is 81. Actor Mike Connors is 80.
:Jazz musician ·oscar Peterson is 80. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Bill Pinckney (The Drifters) is 80. Actress Lori Nelson is 72.
Singer-producer Bobby Byrd· is 7 I. Civil rights activist
Vernon Jordan is 70. Actor Jim Dale is 70. Actress Pat Priest
is 69. Supreme ,Court Justice Stephen Breyer is 67. Musician
Pete Yo'rk (Spencer Davis Group) is 63. O.uthor-journalist
Linda Ellerbee is Ill. Songwriter Jimmy Webb is . 59.
Britain 's Princes&gt; Anne is 55. Actress Tess Harper is 55.
:.O.ctor Larry Mathews is 50. Actor Zeljko lvanek is 4~ . Rock
:Singer-musician Matt Johnson t The The) is 44. Actress Debi
'Mazar is 41. Country singer Angela Rae (Wi ld Horses) is 39.
Actress Debra Messing is 37. Actor Anthony Anderson is 35.
Actor Ben Affleck is 33. Singer Michael Graham (Boyzooe)
is 33. Actress Natasha Henstridge is 3 I.
Thought for Today: 'To feel that one has a place in life
solves half the problem of contentment." - ·, George Edward
:Woodberry. America11 poet. critic and educator ( 1855- 1930).

port se~:uri t y c h e~:kpoin t.
Watching the guard wave a
practically magic wand over
every angle and face of the
thing, it struck nie that here
we are. Americans . in high
summer. at the dawnish of
the 21st century. We may be
citizens of a nation cmlccived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all
men are created eq ual. but
OLir liberty has shrunk under
measures we talo..c to ward
off Islamic terror attacks.
and our dedication t,o equality looks tatiy as we go about
making the world ·safe for ...
shari a.
It sounds crazy, but this is
realitv. Monday. Aug . 15 .
promises 't o b~ a great J ity
for ·shari&lt;\, or Islamic law. It
marks th~ end of the con~ti­
tutional wrangling in Iraq
and the beginning of the
Israe li withdrawal from
Gaza and parts of the West
Bank. Both events - fought

:300 words. All /~1/en are subject. to editirrg. must be sigrred.
~nd inc/UL!e &lt;iddre.u amlrelet'lwne 11Umber. No unsigrred letti-rs i;•il! be pu!J/is/r,,d Leuers slrnuld he · in good taste.
4,ddressirrg issue.s. 1101 person&lt;ilitil'.&gt;·. Leuers o{ tlrarrks w orgaTiizatimrs and indil'idrwls &gt;rill not he accfptcdfor tmhlimtion.

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Diana ·
· west

for, facilitated, even micromanaged by the U.S. of A.
should ex pand the
domain of Islam ic law,
which codifies female inferiority and religious inequality. I don't know a better way
to quantify the rwo events.
By ·day's end, Iraq, if it settles as expected on a draft
constitLtti on based in sharia,
and Gaza. as a new sector &gt;~f
the ai'ready sha~ia-vested
Palestin ian Authority, will.
have joined the community
of nations at odds with .the
Free World.
That sound s crazy, too.
But no more so than - the
thought of Amer-ican troop'
fighting off Iranian-supported death squads to shore up a
government led . by a possible Iranian ugent- Ibrah im
Jaafari. the Iraqi prime minister and leader of the
Tehran-allied Dawa facJiQn.
It sou nds fant;istic, but the
notion comes from . the seri ous-minded Caroline "Glick
of The Jerusalem Post. who
recently wrote: " Both U.S.
and Iraqi officials- Shi'ite
and Sunni - have since the
inau gu ration of the Iraqi
Guveri1ing Cu un~il in the
summer of 2:003 stated
repeatedly and matter-of-

,J'actly that he (Mr. Jaafari) is
an Iranian agent.'" Mr.
Jaafari spent years under
Iranian protection during
Saddam's regime; he also
just concluded a three-day
visit to Tehran where he
sealed oil, military and
tourism deals . I don 't recall
hearing any word on ending
iran 's recognized sponsorship of terror and unrest in
Iraq.
More craziness: The sp~ctacle · of an American
Se~retary
of
Swt e,
Condoleeza Rice. propping
up the Holocaust-denyin g
Pabtiniim Authority leader.
Mahmoud Abbas, in the
strategic dismemberment of
Israe l wrought by the mystifying old general Ariel
, Sharon . The Israeli move
includes not only the
destruction or dismantling of
25 Israeli settl eme nts and the
rclt&gt;catinn of 9,000 Israelis,
but also the disinterment and
reburial of 48 Israeli graves.
Horrific, yes. but not crazy.
The threat of Muslim desecrati on of Jew ish graves in
· the Gush Katif Cemetery is
too rea l for Israel to allow
the deaJ to relnain where
they rest. . In 1948, Muslim
armies .captured the Mount
of Olives cemetery in
Jerusa lem and turned tens of
thousands ·of Jew ish tombstones into constru~:tiun
material for roads, buildings,
even lat ri nes.
Six of the 48 Gush Ka tif
graves belong to residents
murdered by Muslim terrorish. Five of them may well
belong to members of the

H~tuel fami ly - a mother
and four daughters - who
were -shot to Jeath last May,
at close range by Palestinian
terrorists. They had been driving to a rally against the
withdrawal, their cari:JUmper
s ti~k cr reading "Uprooting
the Se1tlements, Victory for
Terror. "
Certainly, the terrorists see
the withdrawal as victory although not ultimate victory. J;;,;;al Abu Sa•:nhadaneh,
&lt;.:ommanuer of the Popular
Resi sta nce Commi uees, a
Pal es ti nian terror network
behind . ···1 llmg other things)
the 20()_, .rtta&lt;.:k in Gaza on a
U.S. diplomatic t:rmvny that
ki lied three Americans. is
alrcudy planning Intifada 3. .
"We will transfer all our
fighting methods anJ capabilities to the West Bank,"' he
told The Jerusa lem Post.
"The wi thd r;iwal will not .be
compl ete without the West
Batik and Jerusalem. which
is eve n more pr~cious to us

than the West Bunk .''
· Not surprisingly. Abu
Samhaunnch is wanterl hy
· Israel. But· he 's also wanteJ
by the Palestini.an Au thority,
he says -. to become a
senior official in its Mili.tary
lntell rge nc&lt;.: Force.
There m;ty be u peculiarly .
Middle E;rstern logic to all
this. but it's not one we seem
able to Lrnderstand.
1 (Diana West is a coh tmn;sr
.fiir Tire Waslrington Times.
Slif can lw cn!lfactc(l t·ia
diww11 ·es!@ \'e ri :on.ner.)

Obituaries
'

I

· and John W.Grcen, of Brenham, Texas; twu great gnmdchildJen.
Robert Wade Allman and Bethany P Allman. both of Spring. Texas:
tour sisters-in-Jaw: Wilma Roush Sargent, of Middfepon, Dorothy
MIDDLEPORT- Dr. Joseph J. Davis, 92. p:L&gt;sed August 13, Gardner Roush. of of Salem Center, Sheila Shane Roush , of
2(X)5 at hi~ home in Middleport, Ohio.
·
Chillicothe and Mary Jean Watson Roush, of Sun City. Ariz.: two
Bom January l I, 1913 in Ashland Ky., he was the son of the late brothers-in-law, Garen A., Roush. ot Murphy, Texa~. Harold G.
Joseph J. and Ruby Welch Davis. In addition to his parents, he wa' Roush, of Elkview, W.Va; brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Clifford
preceded in death by a sister, Minerva (Clyde) Roher, Cleveland, and H. "Pm" and Mary Cross Roush: of Racine; 3!ld severdlnie~es and
a brother. Fr;mcis (Helen) Davis, Peebles.
,
.
.
..
·
Dr. Davis is survived by his wife of 65 years, the fanner Kathleen nephews.
Funeral servtces wtll be at I I a.m. Wednesday m the Cremeens
Bush, Middlepo11. Also surviving are daughters, Charlene Batey, Funeral Home, Racine, with Rev. Roger Grace and Rev. Kerry Wood
Middlepon, Di~ma Fisher, Lexington, Ohio, Elaine (Homer) Preece, officiating.
·
.·
Pt. Pleasant. W.Va., and 'Joyce Davis, Gainesville, Ra.; gr.md.sons, · Internment will be in' the Letart Falls Cemetery 111 [,etart, W.Va.
Shawn (Ti!Ti ny) Batey, Baton Rouge, La., Phillip (Stephenie)
Friends may call trorn 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeml home.
Swisher. Pittsburg. Pa., Stephen (Kristi) Batey, Middleport. Eric
Swisher Pittsburg, Pa., Randall (Kristy) Fisher Strongsville; great
gra ndchildren Stephen Batey, Middleport, Maxwell Fisher
Strongsville. Madison Batey, Baton Rouge, La. and Joserh Fisher
. ..
., .
.
.
Strongsvtlle.
LETART, W.Va.-. Donald Donme Mark Roush, 65, of Letart
Following gmduation from Peebles High School in 193 1, Dr. . Y/.Va., went to be with Jesus on Aug. 12,2005 surrounded by hts
Davis attended The Ohio SUtte University. He graduated from the lwmly at St. Marys Hospttal, Huntmgton, W.Va. .
College of Phanmtcy in 1939 and the College of Medicine in 1943.
He is survived by ~is wife Renita Gtbbs Roush of Let&lt;U1, W.Va.
He wa' a member of the American Medical Association, The Ohio
Funeral servtces wtll be held a'. I:30 p.m Monday at the Fogleson~Academy of Family Practice, a Fellow of the American Academy of Tucker Funeral Home. Pitst9r Bnan Maywlil ofttcmte and bun:tl Will
.Family Practice, and held Emeritus status with the Ohio State Board be try Zerkle Cemetery. Mrhtary gravestde servtce wtll be held by
of Medicine.
.
VFW Post 9926 and Amencan Legton Post 140.
He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and intemed at
Calling hours were held from 6 to 9 p.m. Sunday.
Stm Diet;;o Naval H(ispital. Dr. Davis was attached to the U.S.
Mw·ines rn the Korean War and attained the rank of Lt. Commander.'
In 1946 Dr. Davh began his medical practice in Middleport and
setved the area until his retirement in 1'!78. He wa' a world tmveler
Doy Ray Nitz Sr., 65, of Racine, died Wednesday. Aug. I0 at his
with a special interest in Egyptology, ll' wcllll,, a licensed amateur
residence.
•
radio operator and a photogmpher:
He
wa~ a welder ;md a member of the Church of Christ in Chtistian
Friends may call Tuesday 3 to 7 p.m. August 16, 2005 at the
in Hartford.
·
Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Private services will be Union
He
was
born
April
16
.
.
1940
in
Hartford,
the
son
of
Magnolia Mae
·
l1eld on Wednesday. Burial will take place in Kirkland Cemetery.
Nitz of Pomeroy, and tl1e late Russell Nitz.
. _ · ..
Online condolehces may be sent to the family at www.fisherfu- (Gibbs)
In
addition
to
his
father.
he
was
preceded
m death by hts hrst wtte.
neralhornes.com.
·
Betty Jo Nitz; and two brothers', Coy Eugene Nitz and Hoy Leroy
. Nitz.
.
He is survived by his wile, Annetta Nitz of Racine: two sons tmd
daughters-in-law, Doy Ray .11 and Peggy Nttz ot Syracuse, ''!'d
HOUSTON - Kate Roush. 89, of Houston &lt;md tonnerly of Meigs Bobby Joe and Denise Nitz, of Middlepott; a daughter anJ son-mC:oumy, p;.tssecl away at I:45 p.m. Friday n the Park .Place A'sisted law, Cyndm anJ Dendi Hudson of Syracuse; a .step-daughter,
Carolyn Bentz of Racine: step-sons. Terry Lambenof Pomeroy &lt;md
Li ving Facility in Houston. .
. .
Bom on Mav 7. 1916 in the Tmill communrty rn Roane County, Jason Pierce of Pomeroy; a step-daughter and son-m-law, Je&lt;umena
W.Va .. she wa~ the daughter of the late Lorenzo Dow and Louise &lt;md Mike Smitl1 of Racine: a step-son and daughter-m-law, John and
Angel Bentz of Racine: gnmdchilctren, Stephanie HLrd.son. Lee-Anna
Sm-getull Webb.
,
Hudson and Justin Nitz: step-grandchtldren, Travts Bentz &lt;md AleXIS
She hi!d been a resident of Houston for the pll~t I0 years. ·
She was a homemaker and ll"isted in the opemtion of a very suc- Smith; ;md two sisters ;md brothers-in-law, Annette and Kelly Thoma
ce,;,f'uJ dairy ftmn in Salem Center for 32 years. Upon r;etirement, she and Nannette and Richie .Biumenaeur, all of Pomeroy.
Services were at I p.m. Sunday at Fog_lesong-Tuck~r F~ne.ml
w1d her husbtmd moved to tl1e Racine community. She was a I935
graduate of Racine High School ;md tonnerly a member of the ·Home in Mason with Pastor DaviJ Greer ofhctatmg. Bum~ wrllfolUnited Methodisl Chtrn:h in Salem Center and Ractne. She wa' the low in Union Cemetery.
Condolences may bee-mailed to t"oglesongtucker@myway.com.
leader of the Salem Center 4-H Club tor I0 years and a tanner member of the Racine Garden Club.
.
She married Orion W. Roush on Sept. 5: 1935 in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. He preceded her in death along with four brothers, Patt Webb,
Hoyt Webb. Burton Webb and Francis "Tiny" Webb; three sisters-mCOLUMBUS- Ralph Knapp, 69, of Columbus, passed away
law m1d four brothers-in-law. ·
Friday.
.
Swviving is a son w1a daughter-in-law, Victor Wayn~ and Louella
Ralph was a retired conductor, first with the N~w York Central
Thompson Roush, of Houston, and a daug~ter and son-m-iaw, DIX!e Railroad and later with ConRail , where he retired 111 1990 after 35
Kay w1d David L. Watet~. of Houston; three grandchildren, Valene
of service.
.
..
.
. ·
Kay Roush Allman. of Spring. Texas. TtLsia Lea Green, of Houston .years
He was a volunteer 1\reman ard a member of tl1e HWTisonvtlle

Doy Ray Nilz Sr.

l'f" CPULDI-I'T
HAI/E" J'VST EVoLVED~
11 MUST HA-.JE BEaJ
DESIGNE.D BY A
_H1GI-IER

Outside Meigs County '
13 We~ks
· .~53.55
26 Week.s
. '107. 10
52 Weeks
~214 . 21

L - - - -- - - : - - - - ___ . ______

~)

Lodge #411. F&amp;AM. .
.
.
.
.
Ralph loved hts family. huntmg, fi'hmg, classtc cars anJ was an
avid OSU Buckeye f~m .
·
.
.
He is;;urvived by hsi wile. Robetta Knapp. of Dubhn: sons, Mtke.
(Debbie) Knapp. of Sunbury, and Tim (Kathy) Knapp, at
Bloomingburg; ,-;even gmnd,hildrcn and one great grandson; ststersin-law. Jan Knapp, of Lmgwtlle. Kelta &lt;J11n) Cooper, of Abtlene.
Kan .. anJ Je;m (Jack) HuddJe,ton. of Miami, Okla.: hrothers-m,-law,
Jim (Jw1) Haggy, of Miami . Okla .. ;mel Lee (Sue) Trdcy. of Abilene.
Kan.: ;md many nieces. nephew,· and cou,ins.
Family will receive friend' from noon until 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Rutherford-Corbin Funeral Home., Wmthrngton Chapel. 515 Hlgh
Street, Worthington. Friend&gt; may call the funem! home dunng that
time at (6 14)885-4006.
·
.
Funeml services will be hdd at 2 p.m.Tue&gt;-Ciay at the tuneml home . .
· Private ourial service will be held at Kinewood Memonal Park.
Lewis Center, Ohio. '
'
'
·
If they choose, friend' rnay make rnernorial contributions to;
Central Ohio Diabe'tes A"ociation. lliKJ Demmon Avenue.
Colum bus, Ohio 4320 I in Ralph\ memory.

Queen
1l1e opening ct!r~mo11ic~ fur
the 142nd Meigs Counly Fair
began with . an invocation by
Rev. Jonathan f\ioblc of the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy. and
a nag-raising ceremony by l.he
Tuppers Plarns Pmt 9053.
Veterans of Foreign Wars. with
Karen Griffith of Pomeroy
playing the Natilinal Anthem
and Taps.
A junior hrir parade. highlighting thi s year\J u.nior Fait"

theme. "Discover the Magic
Junior Fair Bring,," Wll' one of
the biggest in recent history,
with .&gt;cout troops, 4-H members. Junior Fair Board leaders
and royally candidates li ning
the racetra,k. The Mcrgs
, County Dairy Club. with Jersey
cow' dre"ed as Holsteins. took
first place in the parade, with
second going to the Lakestde
Leaders 4-H Club. with a magic
theme. ·and the Si lver Spurs
equestrian &lt;!-H club taking third
place.
.
The lirir king and queen Will
preside over all junior fair
events thi s week - stx !)11
Monday, alone.

Stage

Drought

from Page A1

from Page A1

from Page A1

Wayne Williams. Julia Miller.
Betsy · Nicodemus.
Jim
Stewart. Dixie Sayre. Katie
Childs. Mark and Cindy
Rhonemus. Mila Raymond.
· Tim and Edie Kine, Vicki
Grate. Bill HciJ. Sue Momera.
Harrv . anJ Jane Tompkins. ·
. Tom .Doolcy, who is also master of cereml&gt;nies. Bob Buck ..
Bob Mash, Christy Lynch.
Dale Colburn. and Becky
Grate.
·
A practice session . will be
held at 7:30p .m. Wednesd&lt;~y at
the Masoni c Temple in
Middlepon.

'

"We· ve tried to make sure the
animals have " good fac ility at
the fair witl1 adequate air tlow so
that they can enol down fast
enough,'" Kneen &lt;1dded.
Cooling down fast enough
has heen a problem this summer
though mowing tl1e gmss has
not. Just llS the melons haVe been
sweeter they . h&lt;~ve also been
smaller, proving that nothing is
pertect.
. ·
Kneen estimates that the
county ha' had 60 days of temperature over 90 degrees and 20
days where the temperature
soared to I00 degrees. ·

INTEL.lJGENCE!

t:::Jt:;J

[j

· ~

.C2J

q

t:::J
CJ

•

BG 55 Blower

Roll the dice

Leuers rn the editor ar~ \relcome. They shoultl be less tlwn

•

."

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ralph Knapp

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

Monday, August 15, 2005

Making sense·of crazy reality

The Daily Sentinel
,

PageA4

Monday, August\15, 2005

When I need courage. I
drive a few miles down a
one-lane road to sit quietly in·
a country churchyard beside
the grave of aviator Charles
A. Lindbergh.
. No matter hOw many times
r've flo\l'n across oceans in
jetliner comfort. I remaitl
awed by. his 1927 solo crossing of the Atlantic in a plane
no bigge r than my pi ~ k11p
truck. A co11pk nf sandwiches. a thermos of coffee and a
compass pointed' ea." ' u'tained him, but it was
t·ourage that got him into the
tiny cockpit.
The lifelong "d,·enturer.
who died of cancer in I47-l.
often warned hi' children to
he \\ary or "the unfore,een."
but neYcr sat around wairin!!
for life ·,q come. to bin{.
Aware of its dangers. he.
ru;;hed headlon~ at it, ch''"'"
ing for his cpilaph the 1\rst
line of Psa lm I 39: " If I take
the wing~ of rhe morning .
and dwell in the unermo't
part' of the sea ... " .

Discovery's rroblem with erhood of the sea means ." he
protruding filler material said.
from the heat shieJJ got
Recently. there's eve n
tixed when astronaut Steve been a formal enJ to a 35Robinson climbed out into year guerrilkt war. The Iri sh
space and repaired it with a Republican Army announced
Tad
little pair of scissors. It was a it wa~ rem"""~um.:ing violence
Bartimus gutsy,
unprecedented event.
against Briti sh rule. a deciSo arc a lot of thin2s in lite.
After a week of i1igh anxi- sion Prime Minister Tony
ety. improvisation and sec- Blair declared "a step of
quelled my worrie' th;rt ond-guessing. Commander unparalleled magnitude.''· ,
potential tlaw' .in the space · Ei leen Colli!lS and hercrew Veteran IR A strate~i't
. . . , Gerry
shuttl e Di scovery's heat marle a perfect landing a Jay Adams concurred: "There is
shield might interfere with late at Edwards Air Force a time to engage, to rcacb
·its ,are return to Earth .
out. 1o put the war behind us
B;lse in California.
..
Since dinosaurs ·ate our
Like shuttle astronauts, all ... This is that .time ...
ancestor\. life ha; been a roll so me people treat their heroThe late ABC anchorman.
of ihe dice. F~.mine , infant ism as just another day at the Peter Je nnin g'. took i~sue
mortali ty. and disease still . office. Others become heroe' with viewer&gt; who thought
llO'c greater thre;r(s to the , without thinking.
his jnh was to make us feel
human face than ~uicidc
"He did a"ist some pas- safe. As he told author Jeff
horl&gt;hers on London sub- 'engcr&gt; 'out of the ravine and Alan .- "")Ill~ day' (the news
Wtl) ·" · ahoan.i American air,
he did indeed board the air- is) reas ~ uring. some days it's
liner, or in Srirnish trains.
craft:· said "Toronto police- absolutely destrut:til'e .'"
Terrorism has forc ed us to man , co nfirmin~ that crash
We know t(H&gt; well how vilack nowledge .that evil hid"' eyewilne" Guy'Ledcz raced
in dark corner" ami di~tant into a burning Air· France lains.behave - they &gt;trap on ·
Ca\e,. but we can't ICt the jumbo jet to make sure no backpack' to blow us up. w~
"unforeseen;· paralyze u, . pa"engers were trapped don 't know enough about
people of gooJ wi II · who.
Shuttle ,·n-pilot Jame' Kell y. in~.oidc .
every
day. act with good
I v i~ itetl Lindht'rgh\ gran~ alluding to the Challenger
Defense Minister Sergei
lt&gt; remind my,ell· that not di~ rbtcr lwn years ago. said Ivanov rejoiced after an i111 e ntion ~. That&gt; hc ca usc
every prohlcm become' a the fact that he and hi' col- international re scue mission since 9/11. \~e·ve suffered
c&lt;r t&lt;l'trnphe. I n~eded to league:-; were in ~piKC on a saved 'ix Hussian sa ilors and from a low-grade kvcr or
rcmemher that &gt;Hit all had S.S million -mile journey a civilian trapped 6(XJ feet fe&lt;tL It's time to cure our- ,
despi te knowing the thou - · below the surface just hour' selve' b.y balancing news of
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The Daily Sentinel

05 MEIGS UOUNTY tAIR

,. .

.PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE:
Browns win exhibition opener, Page B2
Palmeiro plays to mixed reactions, Page B2

Monday, August 15, 2005

Bl

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Monday, August 15, 2005

Hold everything: PGA to be decided Today
BY

Douo

fERGUSON

ASS,OCIATED PRESS

SPRINGFIELD,
N.J.Phil
Mickelson soared and then stumbled,
and somehow tinished ahead of everyone else Sunday in the PGA
Championsh ip. But thanks to a band
of storms that rolled into Ballu srol, his
wor)&lt; is not done.
In a ,dynamic fina l rotmd - that
inl'luded everything but a winner,
Mickelson went from three shots
ahead to twd shots behind Steve
Elkington in a span o1· seven holes,
only to recover when others got swal-

Charlene Hoefllch/photo
Charlene Hoellich/pholo

With 579 entries in the photography com.petit ro n. Maureen Morgan, left, and Mary Swrntex
across t11e table , foun d selecting tile best from a!l the rest was a time-consuming and tedious
job. ·Debbie Spencer·. department chai rman. looks on as the Judges do their job.

•

As a part of the dedication ceremony for the new Thompson-Roush building, Ed Holter, presi·
dent of the Meigs County Fa ir Board presented Bob Thompson with a key to the building, a cap,
and a laminated newspaper page telling of his contributions to fairground development over the
past several decades.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Brewers crash Reds'
road · · streak

Tuesdav·s gamesMeigs at Jackson, 10 a.m.

River Valley a1 Oak Hill , 10 a.m.

SOuth Gallla at Ports. Notre Dame. 10 a.m.
Eastern at Parkersburg Catholic , 6 p.rr1
Southern vs. Ale~ander.

sitellime TBA

Gallia Academy at V'CIIIey, 8 p.m
Thwsday, Augua118
Blue he ld 'vs. Potnt

Pleasant (at Laidley

F1old) 3 p m

Friday. August 19
Trlmblo at Me1gs. 10 am

Williamstown at Eastern, 6 p m

G. 8eJ:kley Chr1St1an at Hannan . 6 p m.
OVC Prevmw at Coal Grove. 6 p m
South Galha at Southeastern . 7 p.m.

Saturday; August 20
'('J1rt County at Southern, 5:30p.m
GaJiia Academy Bluer\'\lhrte game, 7:'!/J p.m
Wahama at Midland Trai l. 10 p.m.

0VP SchEdulE
. GALLIPOLIS - A schedule o! IJPCOmlntJ college
and htgh school .farsity sporting evcms mvolvlng
learns trom Galtta . Motgs and Mason couruies.

Monday's games

Golf

Brian J. Roed/photo

R1ver . Valley, Gall1a Academy, Me1gs

at

Ironton Invitational. 8:30 a.m Ea stern at Fox: F-ire. 2. 15 p.m.
Wahama al Buflalo '(Deer Run). 2 p.m .
Tuesday 's games

Golf
·SEOAL at Ctittside , 10 a.m.
South Galha, Point Pleasant at Wahama
(Riverside), 2 p.m.
TVC Ohio at Franklin Valley, 4:30 p_m_
TVC Hocking at Foresl Hills, 4:30p.m.
River Valley at South Point . 10 a.rn .

Wednesday 's game
Golf
Wahama at Ripley (Gre en Hills). 3 p.m.
Thursday's games

Charlene Hoeltlchlphoto.

Invitational (Green Hills ), noon
South Ga111a at Notre Dame (ElkS), 5:30 p.m.

Sports Briefs

Punt, pass, kick
coming to Pomeroy
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Phnnl!

Randy Davis of Tuppers Plams · proudly _displays his New
Zealand white buck on exh1br\ at the farr. A member of the
Lakeside Leaders, this is Randy's first year in 4-H.

MILWAUKEE (AP)
put runners at first and second.
Corey Hart's busy day was · "It was a classjc case of rush·
worth il.
ing. it.' ' Belisle saiu. " I uidn'(
The rookie tii~kcd up his lirst get it done. It was an easy
career hit, a three-run homer play."
,
!hal capped a live-run eighth
Narron agreed.
inning, and the Milwaukee
"Our bullpen has been out:
Brewers
snapped
the standing.:· he said. " ll goes
CmC'innati Reels' I0-gamc road back lu if Matt fields the bunt,
winning streak with an S-.1 vic- the inning is entirely different.
tory Sunday.
To me, that's the big play."
Milwaukee recalled Hart
Overbay, who entered the
from Triple-A Nashville on game with a .548 batt·ing averSaturday ni ght &lt;mil. he. didn't age af.ainst Cir.1ci nnati this seaanwe rn town ui1t1l Sunday sun, failed lo put down a sacri·
morn ing.
lice bunt , but redeemed himself
"Corey came in, got off the with a sing le to rig ht that
plane, got dressed, took hatting scored Weeks.
practice and smoked the ball
" It makes the manager a little
two· or
three
times:· bit happier and you don't lose
Milwaukee numa~er Ned Yost sleel? over that ... Overbay said.
said. "He linally got a hold of "I tned to btlnt a couple of bad
·one."
ball s. Even if I had moved the
Lyle Overbay hit a go-ahead runner&gt; over. that\ a success.
single in the eighth for That\ what I was trying to do."
Milw;JUkee, which had lost ih
Milwaukee -added another
last five games. The · Bre1vers run on a fi elder's choice by
. also halted Cinci nnati's ,ea&gt;on· Geoff Jenkins. Hart later home·
high _li ve-game winn ing streak. red with two outs for the first
,.'Yes, it was (a good run ),'' RBis of his lcu·eer.
"I just wamed to go out there
Cincinnati manager Jerry
Narron said. "In the eighth, 1. and try to get a hit.'' said Hart.
thought we were going to win... who was 0-for-J before his
Ri ckie Weeks led off the homer. "I '"" able to gel one
eighth with a single oft' reliever up and get it out of here."
AP photo
Matt Belisle (2-6). The riohtReliever Kane Davis {1-0),
Cincinnati Reds' right fielder Austin Kearns hits the wall hard after catching Milwaukee
hander then botched a sacri'hce
Please see Reds. 86
Brewers' Bill Hall's fly out in the sixth inning Sunday.
bunt attempt by Bill Hall that

Golf

TVC Ohio at Hidden Hills. 4:30 p.m.
TVC Hocking at Ar rowhead , 4:30 p.m
Wahama. Pomt Pleasant at Ravenswood

A Disney theme was carried out by the Shining Stars 4-H Club
members for their booth exhrbit in the Junior Fair Building. ~ he
club qS 17 members anti the advisor is Pau la Morrison. Here
Britney and Paul Morrison put the finishing touches on the
attrac(rve display which will be available all week for fa irgoers
to vrew.

Char.lene HoeflichJphoto

Please see PCA, 86

.

Meigs County Fair
Queen Whitney
Tlloene and Farr King
Tyler Lee are pic:
tured with the Junior
Fair members who
will represent the
lrvestock events this
week. They are, 1-r,
H~aven Westfall,
Rabbit Pri~cess: Jul te ·
Tillis, Poultry
Princess: Courtney
Ginther. Horse
Princess: Morgan
Tucker. Poultry
Prince; Nico le
Mood ispaugh, Goat
Princess: Nathan
Cook, Beef Prince ;
Eugene Patterson,
Swine Prince:
Shawnella Patterson,
Swine Princess; and
Kirk Pullins, Dairy
Prrnce.

Karen Griffith played trum pet solos as the Tuppers Plains. Post
9053. VFW, rarsed the American flag to open the 142n&lt;;l Meigs
County Fair on Sunday ewinrng.

Elkington imd Thomas Bjorn at J.
, under. or Vi.1ay Singh and Davis Love
Ill at 1-undcr. all will drop ,hots down
the str~lch .
hen so. Wo[)(b had to stick 'around
New Jersey ju't to niake sure.
"I had a wo nderful four tourna:
men I, ... Woods sa id of his run through
the major,. "I won two. I was close in
one. and I don't know about the other
one vc1.
!(Monday fo llows form. it could be
qui te a 'how.
"I'm .starting to hit some good shots,
and we· ve got &gt;ome birdie holes com-

lowed up by deep rough ilnd the pres- way he started .
And despite a 39-minute delay
sure of trying to win th ~ fi"'li
· major of the year.
just before the leaders teed
Mickelson was 4 under
otT. no one co uld have
· guessed that Tiger Woods
par and had a 3-foot par
putt on the· 14th hQie
would have the best 72when the . final round
hole score at the end of
was called off for the
Sunday.
rest of the day. Twelve
After hogeying two of
players will re turn at 10
the first three holes to
a.m. Monday, the first .
seemingly
lose
any
"the
P(JA
chance. Woods fini shed
time
with birdies on the last two
Champio nship ·has gone five
days since Bob Tway won at
holes for a 2-um)er 68, plltting
Inverness in 1986.
him at 2-under 278. two shots behind.
No one could have imagined . But the final two holes are par 5s.
Mickelson would struggle alter the makitig it unlikely tttat MickelsoJl.

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Farm Equipment, ·lnc.
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POMEROY - The Meigs
Athletic Boosters· will sponso r a Pepsi Punt Pass and
Ki ck competition at Bob
Robcrh Field in Pomeroy at
noon Sunday. September 4.
The competition is free and
is open to boys and girls ages
8 to 15. Age groups arc based
on your age as of 12/3 1/05.
Cunt&lt;'stanh will need a
c0 py of their hirth certificate
and must wear tennis shoes.
110 football d cats or special
kickin ~ shoes are allowed.
For ;l1orc infomKHion contact
Jimmer Soulsby at 992-6728.

Clippers beat
Toledo, 7-3 ·
WLEDO (APl - Kevin
ll1ompson hit a tl1.ree-nm double
in the sixth in11in~ to le&lt;KI the
Columbus Clipper.; to a 7-3 victory O\'er the Toledo Mud Hens
on Sunday.
Joe lllur;ton &lt;~so went 3,for-4
for the Cli~. who snapped a
five-game losing streak. Andy
Cannizaro had two hits and
scored two runs.
Ryan Raburn and Carlos Pcna
hit solo home runs for the Mud
Hens. who fiJlished with eight
hiK

Contact Information
Fu .- 1·740-446-3008
E-mail- sports @mydatlytnbune .com

llJN!ts S]JJJf
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(7 40) 446-2342, ext 3J
bsherman@myda~yt n bune

com

..

Bryan Walte rs, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext 23
bwalters@myc1311ytnbune com

•
Larry Crum , Sports Writer
·
(304) 675-1333. el';t 19
Ierum @-mydat tyreg1ster.com

-

Stewart wins at D-Rays sting Wickman, Indians·
Watkins Glen
win on this 2.45-mi le track
known as New York's
- - - - - - - - - - - Thunder Road. He started
WATKINS GLEN. N. y on the pole because rain
Saturday prevented the
- Tony Stewart won for
·
·
'f
the fifth tim\: in seven races ca mp 1etJon of quah ying
and forced NASCAR to set
with a dominant perfor· h ·.&lt;o
.. ld
. " S d
. W· k'111 , most of t e '+.,·Car l1e on
mane~; u~ ay at
at
car-owner . pomts. Stewart
Glen · lnlcrn,uwnal th,lt was easi ly the fastest driver
padded hi s lead 111 · the · of those who took qualify·
Nextel Cup st~ndm~s. . . ing laps before the . rain
·
But there was att anx10us came.
moment at the _e nd after a
In the race. his Chevrolet
l.ate_ ~aulton lorced two led 83 of 92 laps and beat
extr.l l.~ps . , .
.
.,
the Chevy of Robby
StewMt r,•d•oed,m. th,jl he Gordon by 1.927 seconds
had an alternator prob em. on the 11 -turn' track -that
forcin g, him IO shut off snakes through the hills
someS) stems and swnch to south of Seneca Lake.
Stewart
is
virtually
a ba~k~p ..ballery. Sttll, he
drove away from. _Robby assured of, being no worse
Gordon on the ,restart and than third when NASCAR
':'as Ill no dang er of bemg re sets the standings at five .
.
point interval s for the top·
caught._
Stewart stopped at the 10 drivers after four more
llagstand, took the checker races. Then ·' the 1D-race
and drove arou1_1d the track . Chase
for
the
to the cheers ?' the crowd . Championship begins Sept.
But he dt~n t cltmb the 18 · at New H~mpshire
catch ~encmg as he had International Speedway.
after ht s three most recent where the 20.02 Cup se rie s
wins.
champion won last month.
The 24th victory of the
He and Greg Biflle-share
Indiana driver's career the series lead with five
came a week after he won wins apiece .
fo.r the first time at
Road-racing specialist
Indianapolis
Motor B,oris Said finished third
Speedway. The first,place Sunday in a Chevy, fol·
finish here gave Stewart a lowed by 'the Dodge of road
I05-point lead over Jimmie racer Scott Pruett and
Johnson. who finished Johnson·, Che\'y,
·
fifth .
The winner averaged
Stewart won the $4.6 86.R04 mph in 'u race
million Sirius Satellite slowed sc,·en time' by 14
Radio at The Glen for the c'aution laps. Tbere were
second year in a row. It was nine lead change~ among
the fifth road-course win seven dri\•er,.
fnr Stewart in · five years.
Ru"v W~llace was sixth .
He \\'Oil in June on the only followed by Mark Martin .
Vicker&gt;.
Joe
other
NASCAR
road Brian
and
Dale
Nemcchck
cou~se th~ serpentine
'Earnhardt Jr. completed the
layotit in Sonoma. Calif.
It was hi&gt; third career top I0 .
BY DICK BRINSTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND (AP) Travis Lee thought he ,was
lucky and Bu.b Wickman
agreed - to a point.
Lee connected for a pinchhil homer otT Wickman with
one out in the ninth inning
Sunday. sending the Tampa
Bay Devil Rays to a 1-0 Yictory &lt;lver the Indians and
their first series sweep in
Cleveland ..
The Devil Ray' had lost
four straight when they
arrived in Cleveland. where
they were 7-21 all-time. But
they completed their ··12·
game trip with a lhrel!-ga mt'
sweep and hun . the Indians·
wild -card chances.
"What a nice wav to end
this trip .., Tampa Bai manag. er Lou Piniella said. "Our
schedule is llllcd with teams
that have postseason aspirations and hopefully we can
iui1i their plans:·
If not mined. the Indians
blucrrillllilr success certainly was altered. They entered
the series on a six-game .winning streak - all on the road.
But Cleveland. which is II
game&gt; o\'er .500 on the road:
dropped to 27-30 at Jacobs
Field.
"We've got to block th~n
AP photo
out and tum it around,"' manCleveland
Indians
pitcher
Bob
Wickman
reac
ts
after
giving
up
ager Eric Wedge said. "The
a
ninth-inning,
pinch-hit
homer
to
Tampa
Bay
Devil
Rays'
fire is there. but we just didn't tin ish off some opportuni- 'Travis Lee. background. to give the Devtl Rays .a 1-0 win
Sunday in Cleveland.
ties.'~
Joe Borowski.( 1·0) pitched pinch-hit this ) ear in 1-1 Ra~s' '" eep.
two score le ss in.nings and opportunities. He has
--r,·c thmwn th~ slider on a
Danys Baez worked the ninth homer' overall.
·J-2 count foe 13 years and
for his 26th sa\'e . Borowski
··I'm not ~urc "hat ·~ going e\'t~f\ hod,· know ... i'i.'' he ~aid .
has not allowed a run in IS J. on." Lee ,aid . --rmjnst react- "I tlire\\ ·i t for a 'trike and
3 innings ~ince bein~ ~igned ing and getting Jud.:: . 1 \\ ~·1 ~ Tr;n i' L~c heat me. But he
hy Tam!Ja Bay on July ll
looking ra,thall and it "'" a nearll rnpp...;l II straight up.
Lee. batting for Eduardo
1 0·
' Perct . IHlrked the count to _&lt;. ,Jider. I hit il and t l1o11 ~h1. '' "The
thlll~ !hat anno\S me
..
·
2 ;wainst Wickman (0--1 l ' No wa~. ·hut gt)L ju ... lenllu~h . ;, 1H'hl)Lh 1.!i'
c ... th~rn credit.
heforc hilling his s,cond &lt;lf it to slide it &lt;ller tll e ·llall ... Thaltc:nil I, no ,Jnlll'h. Thev
pinch-hit homer pf the scaSI'Il
\Vickman '' '"' ... urpri,L·d ha\t.· '(Hill' !.!nnJ hitler~. bUt
and cxtemling his l1itting L~e hit his O..,,t pitch anJ tl1at J\:&lt;'J'k 11 ill blame '" for los~tre~1k {(I II ~amc:-. . II ah0 il '' l.'lll m11.. 11lll ~;Jtd lu.d. h;~d
Please. see Indians, 86
\\:a:-. hi' lean·l~n?l:O rd eighth little t&lt;' J,, with the DL'I il

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.: Page 82 • The Daily Sentine!

.Monday, August

Www.~.J~y4ailysentinel.com

15. 2005

..

Monday, August 15, 2005

\Browns top Giants in exhibition opener

~rtbune

ASSOCIATED PRESS

: CLEVELAND
The
:Romeo Crennel era began
with a liang, some booms
and more than a few bolts.
Cleveland's
first-year
-coach had his debut diluted
:tJy some severe weather that
~aused a lengthy delay, but
:he got his first exh ibiti on
-win as the Brown, rallied for
a 17-14 win over . the New
York Giants on Saturday
· nieht.
_ Rookie Tyler Jones ki cke.d
-a 41-yard field goal with
:6: I R left as Cre nncl ~ot a
victory that may not n&gt;~nt in
tlle standings but should
nelp him get the Brown ' to
Qelieve.
_• Another rookie. quarter-back Charlie Frve . a Brown s
fan since he wa~ a kid. tlm~w
·a 19-ya rd TD pass tn tigh t.
end Paul !roth in the thi rd
quarter to put Cleve land up
t4- 7. New York' s Tim
Ha ssetbcck toS\ed a 'i yarder to Ataveus Cash to tie
:it.
: Afler 2-+ yea r!'. as an as sis'!ant , incl uding the last fo ur
wiih New England , Crennel
was on the sideline as the
man in char~e for the first
_time. He's t rying to turn
around a team that went 4'
·12 last season and has made
just one playoff ·appearance
since 1999.
. Crennel has some major
work to do . . The Browns
don't ha ve many ptaymakers
·on either side of the ball and
little depth.
,"A win is a win is a win:·
erenn~l sa id . "We were able
tv do what we had to do .
Stilt. as yo u probably
noticed. there's a lot o f ,work
to do."

Both teams showed why
the NFL plays a preseason as
there wcr' j:Jenaltie~ (28 for
236 yards), missed tack les
and enoug h bad play s to
give Crennet and Tom
Coughlin good reason to
push their players harder
during practice. ·
Giants second-year quarterbac k Eli Manning. who
has stru gg led to develop
.;hemistry with his receivers
during training camp. threw
·a 20-yard TD pass to .Pla .xico
Burre ss in the first quarter

G all~

LCR UM@M YOA ILYREG ISTER .COM

AP photo
Cleveland Browns running bac k William Gree~ runs for a two-yard touchdown against the New
York Giants in the second quarter of the exhibition game Saturday In Cleveland.
- moments after the. teams to be the No. t tailback. Most of the announced
returned from a 1-hour, 19- Suggs had t t yards on three crowd of 67,429 waited
runs. Droughns sat out with patiently ·aS the skie s over
minute weather delay.
a
hamstring injury. .
Mannin g fini shed 6-of-8
Lak e Erie and outside
Brown s quarterback Trent Brown s Stadium were illufor 53 yards in three serie s.
On hi s TD pa,s . Mannin g Dilfer couldn ' t 'do much . minated by spectacular
patiently waited for Burress with a Cleveland offense li ghtning strikes. ·
to get behind cornerback that spent ·most of its tim'e
''~here' s nothing you can
Gary Bax ter before lobbing go ing in ,reverse. Hu rt by do about the . weather,"
hi s pass into the teft corner. four penalties - two hold - Crennel said. "We played it
"We had a little play ing calls against guard safe . The NFL played it
the
action,''
Manning said . Cosey Co leman
'
"You're rea lly looking for Brown.&lt; lost 6 ya rd s on their safe. "
Play
re
sumed
at
9:28,
and
the inside guy' on the fir st two posse ss ion s with
scam s. but they had them Dilfer, who went 2-of-5 for four plays later, Manning
hooked up with Bu·rres s,
covered. I kllew I had 16 yards.
"I thought we did all who signed with the Giants
Plaxi l:o one Mon-onc on th~
right."
Dilfer
;;;rid . as a free agent after five sea,
outside. so I tlucw it up and
I threw it high where only he "Obviously. the penalti es s011s with Pittsburgh .
could &lt;.:atch it and he made a · kill you. You'd like to over- ' The Browns, · who hav,e
great catch . That's OllC or the co me them .but we . were in been decimated by injuries
good thin gs about ha ving a such a hole it was hard to ge t in th e. past few years, susout of."
big recei·ve r out there."
tained their first significant
New York's .Tik i Barber . Dou g Johnson. who has on-field one of 2005 011 (he
had two carrie., for 8 yards . been battling with Frye to be opening ki ckoff as rooki e
Michael Cloud. the Giants' Cl evel and \ No. 2 QB, drove safet y Bradney Pool sufthird-strin g back. had :iR on the Browns RO yards in 15 fered a concussion.
five atte mrt s. and nH&gt;kie play s with Green's plunge
Cleveland rooki e. wide
Brandon .l acolls had 12 car- tying it 7-7 in the second
receiver Brayton ·Edwards·
quarter.
ri es for T'o yards.
suited
up but didn ' t pla'y.
Seconds after Manning
Cleve land' s
William
Green had a t -ya rd TD run took the opening kick and The No. 3 overall draft pick
and picked up 44 yards on drove the ball in five play s ended hi s contract holdout
12 'carries. He's in a three- to Cleveland's 46-yard line . Thursday by signing a fiveway competition with Lee referee Terry McA ulay su s- year. $40 million deal but
Sliggs and Reuben Drouglms pended play at · 8:09 p.m. hasn ' t practiced.

Public ~o!ices in ~"I'P''P'"'I
\'our Ri~hllo Kno~· . Deliwrcd Kight to l'mor n,.,,

NOTICE FOR EARLY activity will repair 125
PU~LIC REVIEW OF ft. of State Street to
A PROPOSAL TO pro (FEMA-OH-DR
SUPPORT ACTIVI- 1556) disaster condiTIES IN A too-YEAR tion.•
GOA/ARC Flood
FLOODPLAIN
Recovery
Proiect,
· AND/OR WETLAND
Activity 05-Water Well
: August 15, 2005

Replacemenl, Village

· To: All Interested
Agencies,
Groups
and Individuals

Ractne,Sutton
Tow~shlp,
Meigs

Reg . i o n a l

County-This ·activity
will replace an existing .-ater well, restor-

.of tho
GOA/ARC
Recovery

Activity

Flood

Project,

Ot-T-149

Roadway
Embankment Repair

,, ,
Leba~on
Township,
Meigs
County-This activity
· will repair t35 H. ofT: 149 (Long's Run) to
-pre (FEMA-OH.-DR' 1556) disaster condition.
GOA/ARC Flood
Recovery

P~oje!=l ,

Activity . 02-T-149
Roadway
Embankment Repair
12,
· Lebanon

Township,
Meigs
County-This activity
will repair 45 H. of T149 (Long's Run) to
pre (FEMA-OH-DR1556) disaster ~ondi­
Uon.
GOA/ARC Flood
· Recovery

Proi.ect, .

Activity 03-Parklng ·
Lot Wall Repair,

VIllage of Pomeroy,
Salisbury Township ,

.Metga County-This
activity will repair
approximately
27

of

ing It to pre (FEMAOH-DR t 556) disaster
c o ~n d 1 t i o n· .
Improvements
will
also be put in to place
to prevent future
damage. This notice
required by Section

2(a)(4) of Executive
Order - t1988 for
Floodplains

Section

Executive

and

of

(b)

Order

11990 for wetlands,
and Implemented by
HUD
Regulation
found at 24 CFR 50.4
(b)'for any ·actiOn that
i.s
within
and/or
affects a floodplain
and/or wetland. As
currently proposed ~

Include areas designated as floodplain
and/or wetland .

Buckeye
Hocking

HillsValley

Reg · l o n a l

Development District
allernatlves regarding

sponsorship of the

County-This

tacting Brei All ph in,
Environmental
Review Officer~ at 740·

374-9436.
Brei Allphin,
GIS Specialist
Buckeye

Hocking

Hills-.

Valley

Regional
Development District

P.O. Boo 520
Reno, Ohio 45773

Comments on the
.proposal may be submitted within 15 days ·
of the concurrent
publication and dis·
semination of thi s
notice .
Comments
can
be · received

through · August 30.
2005 (Note: this date
is a 15-day comment
period starting from
the day . after publica·

lion.)
8/15

-: BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE. -§
§ 2 00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATIQNI §
FAMILY NIGHT
Sears

posed ;

2. Dlaapproval
3. Approval only

10% OFF Regular &amp;
Sale Prices
Exclud es Maytag Neptune .
Bose. Great Price Items &amp;
special purchases. Additional
exclusions apply.
0% APR financtng
until Aug . '06 with your Sears
card and FREE del ivery on
any home appliance over
$399 after ma1i-1n rebate.
.,

Addillonal Informa-

tion on the proposed

3 adorable k1t1ens.

t

calico-

tom ale,
21 Olack
rnales
-1
blackfwh1te.
With
white on chest Born 512 1.
Coil
(740)446-1850-

I \11'1

l..a;1· i\Nn
.FOONn

r

WAN'mO

Solita1re Diamon ds- M.T.S.
Coin Shop. 151 Second
. Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-446·
2842.

Mother ca t &amp; th re e "mittens'' - - - - - - - - kittens to good home. Buying Goldenseal: Wed . &amp;
(140)446- 1714.
Sat. 12-4, _The Plains, Oh

1

Vet y friendly. lull blooded. (740}664 -4 761, 740 -797Rottwetler. to gMd nome' 9054. George Buckley
on ly Call (7 40)4 46·8318.

[.AJ."I' A~ll

Publication
Sunday DisPlay: 1 :00

Sundav• Paper

It

Business Troining ............................-........... 140
Cam pers &amp; Motor Homes ...·........................ 790

Camping Equipment ...................................780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaVRefrigeration ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating ..................................................,830
Farm Equipment .......................................... 610
Farms for RenL .......................................... 430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade .. ,......................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....................................580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Hauting...........................................850
Glveaway ........................-..............................040
Happy Ads ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................640
Help Wanted .................................................. ! 10
Homelmprovements...................................810
Homes for Sale ............................. ,.............. 3,10
Household Goods ....,..................................510
Houus for Rent... ....................................... 410
tn Memorlam .............. :.o............................... 020
Insurance ..................... ;............................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ......... .. :. ........ 660
Livestock ....................................................:.630
Lost and Found .............'... :. .........................060
Lots •S. Acreage............................................ 350
Mtscettaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlsa .......................540
' Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent.. ......::.....................420
Mobile Homos lor Sate ................................ 320
Money to Loan ....... :..................................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Musical instruments ................................... 570
Personats ..................................................... 005
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ................................ .... 820
Prolesslonal Services .......... :...................... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
flel!l Estate Wanted .....................................360
Schools tnstruction ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertill~er ............................:. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120 .
Space lor Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's lor Sale ..............................................720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ..........................................:........ 870

The Daily Sentinel
~unbap 'atime~ -~~ntiitel
•
••
•
•

••
•
••

City/StateiZip . - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - -

Phone. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____

Vans For Sale ........... ;................................... 730

45631

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

POLICIES: Ohio Vslley Publishing reeervet the right to edit, reject,, or cencel any ad at any time. ErrOfa mull be reponed on the tlrat
Trlbun•Senllnei-Reglatar will btl raaponalbta for no more then the Cbat or the apace oc.:uplecl by the error and only the tiretlnaartlon.
1 nat bl
any loa.a or ••pet~eathat raauhe from the publication or omlasion of an sdverUeement. Correction will btl made In the first avaltable edition . • Bo.. """"""' •••••
are alway• r:onildentla!. • Currant rate r:ard applies . · • All real eatata ·adveniaementa ere aublect to the F.ederal Fair Housing A.:t of 1968. • Thla
I help wanted ada m&amp;etlng EOE atandarda. We will not knowingly accept any advGrtialng in wlolatlon of the law. '

""""''•••I

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

t to

I

I~

TO
DRIVE
EKf'EAIE~CE ~lECESSAFIV

1I I ·
I ', ,I

' rULUIME CLASSES
' COL TRA.INING

' f iNANCio''iG AVAILAALE
'JOIJ PLACEMENT
• ENROLLI NG t¥:foN

.

'

Wanted to Buy ..:.......................................... 090
Wanted to Buy- farm Supptles ........,......... 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. tao
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sal"' Galllpolis .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......... c............... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

.I

\
'

ALLIANCE

\\

'

I'
'

,

I

I

\ I

i\ \I

TRACTOR· TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE. VA

1-80,0-334-1203
www alloanctra.:torlratllil ~om

I DO WORKERS NEEDED
Assembl9 crafts ,
wood items.
To $480/wk
Materials provided
·Free information pkg. 24Hr.
801 -428·4649

.,.eo

.._.........._.

The
Athen s- Me igs
Educational Service Center
ha s an opening for a
Homeless
Li ason /C ase
Manager. Pos1t1on require·
ments: high school diploma
or
equivalent(educat ion
degree in human service
1ield or educational aide per·
mit preferred); goOd and/or
homeless !amities in Meig s
to .: reliat&gt;le transportation
with proof of insurance ; and
knowledge ol Meigs C9 ,
reliable transportation with
proof of insu rance: and
knowledge of Meigs Co.
addresses/locations.
This
is" a g1ant-lunded PoSition.
Letter of interest , resume
pnd references must be
rece ived by 12.00 noon

0 p p o r t ·u n i I

www.comics.com

CNA's &amp; NA's Des 1n;d Are . Right &amp; 3 Mil es, Last
You Hard w orking? 0o You Business On The Right.
ReferenceS Re.qui red .
Enjoy People?· Ar e You A - - - - - - - - Team Member? II, So, We
Jr. Electronica Engineer.
Want You On Our Team !
Ashton
WV.
(Mason
Ravenswood Care Center.
CoUnty)M intmum
A..s:
1 t 13 Washington Street .
degree in Elec. Eng . and
Ra-venswood,
WV
PLC programming experiReferences
Require d
ence.
Familiarity with
Across The Ritchi'e Bridge.
RSV1ew. ASLog ix 5000,
Turn Right. 3 Miles. l ast
AutoCAD. labView and data
Bus1ness On Right. Come
acquiSition· syste ms presee Us. You'll Be Glad You
ferred . Support project engiDid!
neers with hands-on design.
programming ' and drafting.
Drive
US citizenship and criminal
background -exam,na!ion
required. Competitive pay
We are looking for OTA and fringe-benefits. Visit
Class A COL drivers with www.UTRON1nc.com/emplo
yment or f!)c resume with
one year ellperience
to-(866)231:
. cove r-letter
2567
•Start ttl 40 cpm- all miles

'

NEW PAY INCREASE

•Freightliner Condos
. LICENSED SOCIAL
•95'% No Touch Freight
WORKER
•No Forced NYC
Overbrook
Rehabilitation
•Hospitalization and 401 K
Center is now accepting
Available
resumes for the position of
•Hometlme on Weekends
Director of Social ServiCes
The . qualified candidate
Call 801).652-2362
must be a LSW ~ssessing
Durable MediCal EQuipnlent strong verbal .and writ1en
skills
Company tS looking 1o·r a communication .
person with experience in Me.dicaid, Medicare and
manag1ng accounts receiv- MDS knowledge . Long term
ables &amp; electronic billing care experience preferred
program . Send resume 1o but not required. Qualified
send.
CLA Box 548 . c/o Gal11polis candidates, may
Tribune. P.O. Boll 469 . r~sumes to: Charla Brown·
AN
LN HA,
Mcciwre ,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
Administrator 333 Page
For a limited time make 50% Street. Middleport, Ohio
sell1ng Avon . Call (1401446· 45760. EOE

3358.

Heatthcare Service Group is
the nations premier prO\Iider
ior housekeeping/laundry
services to nursing homes
We ~re cu rrently looking lor
housekeePing and laundry
managers. Must be respoti·
siOie and willinQ to woril: hard
in a hands on eiWironment.
Please fall resume to: 614734-9754

Hu.PWAATID

Employeri Provider.

Magic Years Day Care
Center State L1cens ed.
OUati ty Ch1ld Care. Spaces
availible/Now accepting Fall
Enrollment .
Reasonable
Rates. Link approved. ellcel ·
lent Skills for your Child's
Development
Loarning
Program offere d for all ages
M-F ages i &amp; up (304)6755847

Look no further!
We ha'o'e the job lor you.
Up to $81hour plus
weekly bonuses
Paid training. holidays
and vacations
Both Full and Part time
shiffs available .
Stat&gt;le work and
professional environment.
Ca ll today td.set up an

lnlerv~ewl

ext

Pari-time help wanted ' in
nouse cleaning jobs. Prefe r
mature possibly retired person(s). Subject to a pohce
Senous
check report
•nqutres ONLY.
Send
resumes to PO Box 194
Henderson, WV 25106

1-an-463-6247
2455
www.inlocision.com
--------.Looking lor someone. to
babysit a t 6 month old •n
ttleir
home.
Mon·Fr1
7:30am-5:30pm. (740 )441 ·
0 162

local Church seekmg a
pt3no player Sunday morn·
1ng &amp; evenrng. 740-9922755 or 740·992·6649

Needed :' CaregiVer to stay
With elderly souple dunng
the day m their home
(740j645-5665.

Ashton , WV facility
[Mason County)

E~raordtnary Th i~95

OUTSIDE SUES
Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
a Tandem Health Ca re
Facility, is seeking a select
few to join our outstanding
team as ·

LPNs
Full Time
12 Hour Sttltta, &amp;P-&amp;A

STNAs
Full and Part Time
All Shifts
Proper llcenselcerti{ication
required. We offer fin excellent work environment, shift
dilferential ,
competitive
wages. great benelits, perfet
attenGance incentrves and
much more!
Please apply to ·
Attn: Dianna Thompson

HR
Scenic Hilla Nursing
Center
·
311 Buckrldge ROad
Bidwell, OH 45614

Ph. 7401446-7150
Fu: 7401446-2438
Erftall: admln.ahnO
tandemhealthcare.com

SFIDF/EOE

REPRES ENT A. TIVE
The
Gallipolis
Da11y
Tribune
IS
accepting
resumes for a full time
outside sales representa·
tive to JOin -our sales team
and to manage an estab·
lished account lis t while
calling on new accounts.
The successful candidate
will be a disciplin ed. sellmottved team player that
understands the impoftance
of
developing
strong. mutually benefictal bu siness relationships with our accoUnts
The ide8t cand1date Will
have· sale eKperience. For
confiden'ttal
interview.
please send resume and
cove'r let1er· to Gallipolis
Da1iy TribUne Attn: Jim
Freeland, 825 third Ave ..
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 t .

;.;;,;:0 ==;;;;;;S;;I;;~;;.=
. =:;;;

81 1

r·u..-,-,

L--O~PP()-;;K.;;IlliJ:NOTiiT\oi'_.J
ABSOLUTE GOLDMtNE!
60 vending machi'nesl
ellcellent tocat1ons
all for$t 0,995.
800·234-6982'
•

NOT I( E•

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO.' recommends tha
ou ao business with pea
le you know, and NOT t
end money througn th
ail until you have invest i
ated the olferin

•

Newly remodeled 3 or 4
bedroom house. central air.
lull basement. hardwood
floors, detached ga rage .
large 'cove'red pat10, tenced
yard .
$69 .500.
back

1740)709-&gt;382.
Now hiring- All shifts .
McDonalds Of Rio Grande.
_Apply
__
•n~pe
-rson
_._ _ __
A~g is tered
NurSe-School
Nurse . BSN reqUired, 10
month/year position. FuU
time benefits
Apphcahon
available at Mason County
Heanh Departfnenl

--------Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
'needed . Apply at 135.4
Jackson P1KEI ,'Gathpoi1S

compiling reports. ·entering
data. answering.te)ephOnes.
ulthztng office equipment
Apphcalions Wlll be received
by Donna Allison . Support
StaH Coordinator, via ema1l
daUison@trognet net or mail
to TSO, PO Box 88 ,
Gat1ipohs, OH 45631 until
A"gust 24th
TSO tS an
,
·
Equal Opportunity employer
that offers ellcellent. com·
pet1t1ve salary ·and t&gt;eneftt
packages based on creden·
tials and years ellpenence.

4 bedroom . 2 bath Roush
Ferrell Lane $35.000 lirm
304·675-19 1t or 593-2096
-~------Attent ior«
Local company otienng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr
pro grams for you to buy yqur
home 111s1ead of rent111g.
• 100% tmanc1ng
• Less than pe r1ect cre'dit
accepted

• Paymen t could be tne
same as rent
Mortgage
Locat ors
(7 40)367·0000

BUILDINGS &amp; GROUNDS
MAINTENANCE WORK ER

JR. ELECTRONICS
ENGINEER (En1ry-level)

SR. MECHANIC AL ENGIN EER

M.S Mech Eng desired
S·y~ .

prolesslonal e~per&amp;~ce

Call HR. asll lor Be ll~
866 -231 ·24 76
www . UTAON~n ~ cam

,.~
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740-446·4367.
1.a00·21 4-0452

MONEY

lOLoAN

rrow Smart. Contac
he Ohto Division o
Institut ion '
ffice or Consume
, ffairs BEFORE you reli
an,&lt;;:e you r nome o
btatn a loan. BEWAR
I requests for any larg
dvance payments o
ees or insurance Cal
he Office ol Cons_um~
flairs toll tree at 1-866
78·0003 to learn it th
ortgage
broker
o
15
proper!
ender
icensed. (T h1s 1s a publt

All real estate advertising·
in tt'IIA ne~s jlaper Is
1ubject to the Federal ·
F~ lr Housing Act of 1968
which makes It illegal tci
advertise "any

preference, limitation ot'
diaerimlnatlon biUI;'ed or\
rate, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
origin . or any intentlan to
maKe any such

preference. limitation or.
diacrl minallon."
This nl!wspapttf will not
knowingly accepl
advertia•menta for real
aatate which ia in

violation ot the law. Our
readers are hereby
intormfld that all
dwell jngs adwertlaed in
this ·newspaper are ·
available on a'n equal
opportunity bases. : .

Residential
Facility for boys now hir1ng
Direct Care Workers. Pay
based on experience. paid
1nsurance. (74013i9-9083
9am-3pm,Mon-Fri.

TASC ot Southeast Oh10.
Inc .
499 Jackson Pike.
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631, 74Q.
740-441-6471 or Fax: 74G446 -7894.
PositiOn
Opening ... TASC
ol
Southeast Ohio has a FT
Clerical Specialist pos1lion.
Associates degree or equivalent in the area ol office
management preferred, plus
a minimum of one year of
experience. Duties incluOe

--------38R Ranch. 2 car garage,
pool, city schools, 590.000.
3460 SR 218, Gallipolis
OH, (740)256·1962.

JOB VACANCIES

For sale or rent
3 bedroom
2 tun barns
tenced yard. Ctty schools
Posstble land cowact
Senous Call OnlyH t
After 7pm
(7 40 )446·3005

HRO..ndemhutlhc•re.com
Management
Trainee
Opportunities available at
EnterPnse Aent -A·Car in the
Gallipolis area _ This opportunity gives you the chaf!Ce
to run your own business
and share in the profits you
help create ~, Rapid prOI'JK)bons based on performance
in a dynamic team environment. Highly marketable
ski lls and training in btJs1·
ness. ·management. sales
arid service. At least two
years ol coUego experience
is reqw~ 1n addtiiOn to twO
years of sales and service.
You must be at least- 21
ye8rs of age with clean driving record . AppJv onllnn at
www.enterprise.com/career
s. EOE/MFCN

HO!&gt;tt·:~ ·
FOR SAl£

11\\\ll\1

v ..--'!'!'!!!!!"!''!!'!!--.;..

Innovative Puople Building

LPNISTNA

10

1

TRON

HEI.PW~I

Wi\Nt'Eil
To Do

Will work lor Elderly Part o r 3 BR Ran ch. 1 t /2 bath.
Ful l Time Experience &amp; overSIZed garage . nard·
wood/tile fl oors throughout
References (304)675-7961
~':':!:~~-~~---. g'as heat. landscaped. q\Jiet
cul·de·sac. Must See 62
100 CHILD'EIJ&gt;ERL\'
Stree1.
Galltpolis.
Don
CARE
$145.000. (740)44 t -5540

August 22. Submit to : John
D
Costan zo.
Superintendent.
AthensMeigs Educat ion al Service
Center. PO Box 684, 320t i2 E. Main St., Pomeroy.
45769.
Equal
OH

CLASSIFIED INDEX'

---- -.-----.,-----------•
Subscriber' s Name ~---------

Thursday for Sundays

1116

4x4's For Sale ............................ .................. 725
Annou.ncement ............................................ 030
Antiques ..... ................ ;........ ,.. _.................... 530
Apartments for Rent.. ............... .................. 440
and Flea Market... .......................... 080
Auto Parts
...........................760
Auto Repalr .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale ..................... ......................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate .......................... ... 750
Building Supplies ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity ......,.......................... 210

1m

HELl' WANTED

'NO

added to your classified ads
Borders $3 ~ 00/per ad
Graphics SQ4 for small •
$1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid'

Real·Estete Wanted -Local
person looking for a home to
FOUNil
buy. All cash . Meigs or
An Excellent way to earn
.
HELP WANTEI&gt;
Found on Kerr Rd . Beaut1ful Gall1a No dout&gt;te·w1de or money. The New Avon.
modular. 740--41 6-3 t 30
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
•
yellow female cat frmndly
Call (740)446-8030.
Are you tired ol runmng? House
Manager·-Female black Lab Wanted 2or3 acres in Tired of standing on your · Application Are Now Being
· Found
LPN/ AN's Accepted For A Dayshift.
· m1x puppy 1n Dead Man's Mason County to t&gt;uild hOme feet all day?
Curve area call (304)675· on or Home fo r $40,000 needed in Pomeroy, Ohio F)JII-Time House Manager
area. FT/PT hours. Vent, To Manage A Small Assisted
(304 }675~7790
6866
Trac h and G-tube experi· l iving Facility, Previous
ence . Great company. great Experience A Plus, If you
beneflls. Call Primary Care Enjoy The Elderly. Have A.&lt;
Nursing Services 800-516- Positive Att itud e &amp; Good
2273 in OhiO or (614 )764- Work Ethics. Come Join Our
Tear11! Interested Applicants
0960 and ask lor Jean .
May Apply Datly, Mon·Sun ..
AVON ! -All Area9·1 To Buy or 9·4 p.m. Ravenswood Care
A~ctlon
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304- Center. 11 3 Wa'shington
&amp; Acces~ories
675·1 429.
Street. Across The Bridge.

~oint ~lea.Ua_flt )ltemi~ter

Mall or drop off this coupon !&gt;long
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley ":ubtlshlng . P.O . Box 469, Galllp.o lls , OH

In Next Dav'• Paper

~

LEARN

.,

L---oilOiiiOBIIUl'lio--

Free to good home-male
Or!'lnge House Cat. 3 ye.ars
old. Ueclawed. and grea t
With kidS . 740-949·2 122

M

I.

r~===~===~
YARD SALE

All Dl•piav: 12 Noon 2
Bualn••• Days Prior To

~~:~:::;~~l~n-Column: 1:oo ·p.m.

en \II\ I

~lit\

Lost-B lack male l abrador
Retriever Six years old, red
collar. lost around Addiso n
P1Ke Bulaville Ad . area.
Roward tor return .(740)367·
7581

70

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Prlday for lneertlon
f

,_
0

Now you can have borders and graphics

Display Ads

Description • Include A Price • A\lold Abbrevl•tlonl
• Includll!l Phonll!l NumtH!i And Address Whl!n Need11d
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

(740)6B2-75t6, lea•Je mBssuge &amp; pt10ne no. &amp; I w1ll call
Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
you b~ck
Silver · and Gold Coins.
Beautl1ul sr,ow wllite kittens. Proolsets . Gold A1ngs. Pre(740)44 5·1.542
t 935
U.S.
Curren cy.

6alltpohfi Bail!' m:rtbune

'•

I

~

(;tHAIVAl'

I EsK1mo Spi tz female. 1
rnmmture DoOerman male 2
we,marane r/Collle
n'lill.
(740)379-23tG leave mes·
sage

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
popy of your photo ID.

all

Improvements
are
located outalde of the

r

r
I

Ad~

Oeadifire..f'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Compl11te

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

on yo:ur home delivered
subscription!

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.Senior Discount*

Mon . August 15th 2005
:
6PM- 9PM .

Word

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

If' so, you qualify for a

action would be:
1. Approval as pro·

floodplain and wetcauaed to a village land. ·
m•sonry atone wall to 4. Approval of the
pro (FEMA-OH-DR equivalent project
15S6) dluster condi- side located outalde
of the floodplain end
tion.
GOA/ARC Flood wetland; and
Recovery
Project, 5. Approval only II no ·
Activity
04-State fill is added in the
Street Slip Repair, floodplain and wetVillage of Pomeroy, land areas. ,
Meigs

may be obtained con -

'9"" column inch weekdays
' 1600 column inch
or "'"1nn•1v

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
On a typical
evening at the Mason County
Fair. the soothing sounds of
children. music and carnival
rides fill the air.
Saturday night, those
sounds were interrupted by
the high •pitched' roar of over
300 motorcycle and ATV
engines at . the
2005
Motocross race that served as
an end to this years fair.
Riders from all over the
region participated in around
30 different categori es of
races that lasted over six
hours on the sweltering
Saturday evening.
Each divisi on provided its
own set of riders vying for
· trophies. and in some cases,
money. That group. the Quad
Money group. came down to
a tie rce battle with the riders
running first and second wip' ing each other out on the
front stretch heading to the
checkered tlag, taking both
of them out of the running.
Jeremy Craig took the win.
Jamie Patrick took second
place honors and Trenton
' Donahcw stole third in the
Quad Money class.
The following is a list of
winners in each of the other
classes:
Brandon Smith (Unlimited

.Offtce ~~o~~

AB),
Derek
!Chaffin
(Unlimited CD), Zakkary
Heaten (80 JR). Brandon
Melton (80 SR), Brandon
Smith ( 125 A), Dustin Biars
(B), Robert Zarkle (Utility
350 and uri der). Stacy
Cooper (Utility 400 and
above), Ryan Anderson
(Beginner's Quad), Garrett
Blankenship (50 PW), Ryan
Roush (B Quad).
Chad Melton (60 JR ),
Dalton Call (60 SR ), Cody
Spangler (D). Brandon Smith
(250 A) , Steve Felture
(Be~inn e r\ I(X) and unde r),
Jon:rh Grands (Beginner's
125 and up). Eric Denney
( 125 C). Corrcy CatT (Mini
Trail with · clutch). JL
Hi gg.enhotham (Mini Trait
no clutch), Brent Shupe
(QLrad C).
Chase Williamson (Mini
Quad 50's ). Brycen Neal
(M ini Quad 70's and up) .
Brandon Mel ton· (Super
Mini).· Jc." ica HotTman
(P&lt;'&gt;wdeF
Puff),
Keith
Cremeans · (50 SR ). Kotten
Haney (50 JR). JeiT Walt
(250 CC). Russell Wandling
(Q uad 350 and under), Tvlor
Wood (Schoolboy Quad )~
.A similar turnout of riders
is expected at the , next big
Motocross event, which will ·
be held at the Meigs County
Fair next Saturday.

Are you 65
· or old.e r?

the project site will

locallona of damage'

Sall•bury Township,

..

BULLETIN BOARD

PUBLIC
NOTICES

JUST SAY
To Place
l\egtster CHARGE
~rtbune
Sentinel
IT!
Your Ad, · (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
~- ~ l VISA ].
can Today•••
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

High- flying .bikes
close out Fair
BY lARRY CRUM

C1111nty, OH

In One Week With Us ·
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
AD NOW ONLINE

A rider. makes a jump approaching the home stretch during
Saturday's Motocross races at the 2005 Mason County
Fair. Nearly 300 participated in the popular event.

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

Development .District
has conducted an
environmental review

- Sentinel - l\e ster

C .L.AS ·SIFIED

BY TOM WITHERS

. The Buckeye HillsHocking
Valley

www.mydailysentlnel.com

DIRECTV
FREE Home
enterta1nment
Sys tem. ·
FREE Equipment and Install
up to four rooms. 145 chan·
nels $29.00 a month. Ask
how to get FREE HBO.
MAX, an~ STARS. 1-800·
523-7556 for detatls.

112 Pleasant Street :S.
Bedroom . 1 1/2 Bat hs.
Family Room, D1ning Room .
Full Base ment . Storage
Bldg. Garage . New Cen tral
Air Cond,. New Wtndows
(304)675-4034

1180

1401
Cedar .
Mead owbrook
Add

WANlll&gt;
•.., n.
aO ...,.,)

All Types Masonry. Bnck,
Block, Stone, Free Est1mate.
(3041773-9550
304 -593·
6421
-'----'------DHK
Clean1ng
&amp;
Powerwashtng. Can't Keep
Up Your "To 0o· !lsi too B1g.?
Let Us tiE~P Vou' We' ll
Clean·A-Up &amp; Get-A-Done.
We
do
All
R estdent l ai i Bustness .
lnSide i Outslde .
Oally!Weekly/Monthly. 740.
Wanted· Med1cal OHice 985·3639 or 740-.416-18Z'l
Assistant wrth expenence for - - - - - - . . . , . - , . - physicran off~e. A umque Ge&lt;:Jrges Portable S.iwm111.
pos itiOn reQuiring know!- dOn' haul your Logs to the
edge of computers ar'Kt data Mt!l JUS! call304-675-1957
entry- also lCD and CPT - - - - - - - - cod1ng Re11able transporta- Lawn
CiJire.
PainMg.
t1on needed No weekends Ctean1ng . Roof Repau
Qr
holidays
reQUired Power Wash1ng. Fe nc~
Sen elrts a\l!llable Salary Work Any 'ada JOb C¥111
negotiable with ex:penence (740)44 6-7439
A f1ex1bJe employe r Ma11
resume to CLA Box 568. do Will sit with the Elderly
GathJ)olis Tribune , p.o Box Leave message 1f not home1304 )882·2385
.
469 Gall1pohs. OH 45631
•,

St
3

Bedroom.1 t /2 Bath.Corne r
tot, new Root. move-tn con d1!!on . new Carpet and
Fkxmng. Storage Bu1ldHlQ.
Fenced "tn BacK Yara
1304167 5· 7708 0' (304 ).99341 35

--------2 Bedroom. Lrvrng Room
K1tchen
&amp;·
Bathr oom, .
Laund ry
Room
500
Robtnson St P1 Pleasant
( ~ellemeadl Pnce Reduced
(304)675 _7169 ·
--------3 bedroom. 2 bath , Ranch
styk! house . new.ly remodeled. Bidwell are~' S6 7.000
can
(740 )441 · t528
or
(740)709 ·5952 after 4pm

www.orVb.com
Home Listi ng!~~ .
l1st your home by callmg

{740)446-3620

Galltpohs Ferr~ ~wv 0" At2
seven m11es tro&lt;n Po1nt
Plea&amp;an! T~o Star~ 4br en
4 6·acre ra~m . WI!~ two Car
Garage Outb~.Hidi~J two '
Barns lull Basement. Heat
Pump. new W.r dc v. s &amp;
S1d1ng roady to mDve 1n!o
~ ~ r575-66 7 5 or (304t6:'5."'
~

2 94

Hou~es lor Sale
Pote n11a1
Home
or
Commenca l
Pr opetty 1800 SO FT
Garage tngrou'ld Ho1st
Lots ot Extras Upsta1rs Apt
1200 SO FT 6-Roo~s
Bat"l Extti'l~ Large CC'\"ered
Por ch
Mus: see to
A.pprcCiated call tor more
Detalle:1 lnforMa!IOI" Phof'1e

{3041882-3339 or r304JB83 -

Vteyo photos 1.nto

onhn~

1s' a Steal" 4 be&lt;:lroom 2
ath 2 car garage New
~aven ,WJ Code 6505 or
all (304\882-3368

334 1

New
Haven.
3 ·large
Bedr.ooms
large , L1v1ng
Room one sa'1h. K1tchen
$34 000 &lt;3041 882-2688

�'

www.mydailysentine!.com

Monday, August 15, 2005

4x4

Monda~August15,2005
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

FOMSAU·:
OJder
2
BR/1-bath
Parmhou se w/1 0 acres In
cOuntry
3-mlles
from
Hartford
$49,500{
H:omeslead
· Realty
(304)882-2405 (30416755540

Pomeroy. 1 bedroom. $275 Prime Commercial Space at
per month plus deposit. 740· Spring Valley Plaza. 3.000
416-4906
sq. ft . Can (740)446·3481.
Small 2 · Bedroom house in Trailer lot. 2 5 miles out
Clifton. WV $350 00 month. Neig hborhood fld . Call
$300 00 Deposil. No Pets (740)446-1685.
304-773-9 192.
\ltlti 11\ \ 111 .... 1

Owner moving- Must sell
MOBILE HOMES
home. 3BR. 2 bath, heat
RIM RENT
Pi'mp, storage build1ng, pool
&amp;Ad appliances. 90 Ga,.in
14x70 2 bedroom, 2 bath,
~eet. (740)245·9318.
CIA. wa!er/trash paid. $375
Well Maintained Home 2,- jjlu..s deposit, refe re nces. No
miles
North or Point pets. (740)388-9686
Pl easant on landscaped 1/2 \,:!,:__ _ _ _ _ _ __
llcre, 3 bedrooms, Family 2 bedroom. NC, 'Jery nice,
Room, Den/Office , Fireplace no pets. in GallipOlis.
w1th gas logs, Hardwood (740)446·1409 or (740)446 Large
Utility! 2003
.
"' · •
Fioors.
S1orage, Large Slate looK
Beautiful r1ver view in
and Brick Patio, Extra lots
Kanauga Ideal tor 1-2 peoavailable.
ShoWn by
ple. No pets, , please.
Appointmenl (3041675· 1536
Applications oemg taken .
Call
(740)441·0181.
·
Mouu..: HoMK~

mRSAI.E

Bidwell area, clean. ~ bed·
room. $375 .mon th 1ncludes
5 Homes under ·$ 10.000. water &amp; sewer. Reference &amp;
Will deliver. (740)385-7671 . depos1t reqwecl. No pets.
{304)576-4037
97 Fleetwood 14x70 tota l
-electric. Will help with deliv· N1ce. ? bedroom, all electric .
ery. Includes central air. Only Water and trash serv1ce
$10 ;995. can (740)385· 1ncluded. _No pets . $350
montn
and
. depos1t
962(
(740)44t-7033
ClEAN SWEEP SAlE: Lol
model clearance. All r.erilam- Takirig applications for 2 BR
!ng 2005's must go to make trai ler in Centenary. No pets.
room tor new hOmes under $350 month plus deposit.
construction. SAVE! · SAVE! {740}446·7275.
SAVE! OAKWOOD HOMES.
Trader, 2 Oedroom. no pets.
G ALLIPOLIS. Call (740)446ava1labl~
now. 'Patnot.
3o93.
{740)379·2540.
t{ew 14x70 3 bedroom. 2
bath. Only $t98.63 per
rrlonth. Call Elaine (740)385·
2434.

Appliance

1994 Chevy Han . 4x4 ,
dually ext cab 6 5 Turbo
diesel 170.000mi Excellent
O% Financing tor up to 36 cond1110n. S8.500 (740)245·
months on John Deere 5785.
·Compact and 5000 Series
Tractors with John Deere 1999 Chevy $uburban 4-x4 ,
Credit approval. Check the m good condition. loaded, now
Asking
$1 1,000.
outl Carmichael EQuipment tires.
(740)44Hl65B or (740)709Inc (7401446-2412 .
193t .
John Deere 10 ft. No Til Drill
2002 Toyota Tund1a SR5 V6,
tor,
Re nt.
Carm·ichael
5-spd. SO,OOOrpl, matchiMO
Equipment. (740)446·2412.
topper, bed liner/mal , lots ot
John Deere Cohln'tlrclal extras, $~9 , 000 . (740)388·
Workalt•
Pr,oduclt 9634 eve. ask for Jef1 .
Compact Excavators/Skid
SteersJTractor ·
Loader
. FoNSALE
Backhoe in stock, Check out
. our rental rates . Great
financing
available t 989 Chevy van 38.293
Carmichael Equipment Inc. miles . QOOd tires, runs great.
$2 ,500, must see.
(740)446-2412.Freezer chest. wh1te $200 ,
Your ProStar Trailer Dealer good condition, a feet , Jfi
Carmichael Equipment Inc. high, 60 long. (740)33B·
(740}446-2412
9640.
~~;:.;,;,;:,;.;.;,;._ _ _.., - - - - - - - - - 1991 Ford Econoline wmk
LIYK'ITOCK
~
van. $2,000. Call (740}256L~-•••••••.,J 1854.
Two nice young st8nOard - - - - - - - - - 2000 ChA\1\1 Aslro Van. 6cyl.
bred horses tor sate.
-·'
(740)645-6157
or Good Condition, New Tire s,
740 367-7195.
$5,995 080 (304)576-2934

r

Warehouse
1n Henderson. WV. Pre·
owned appllcanes starting at
$75 &amp; up all under Warranty,
we do service work on all
Make and Models (304)675·
7999·
"
Mollohan Carp~t. 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740)446-74 44 1·877-8309162. Free Estimates . Easy
l1nancing1 90 days same as
cash · VI.sal Masle r ard ·
·
1 save aot.
1
D nvea· 11tte

c

Thompsons App liance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sele,
re-coridi1ioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers , refrige rators. gas a~d electric
rau ges , a1r condi iiOiler~. and
wr1nger washers. Will do
repans on ma1or brands in
shop or at your home
Used Furniture Store. 130
Bula'lille P1ke. Gallipolis.
OH. 40°o off all k1ng mat·
tre ss sets, mobile home tot
for rent. 3 stall gara ge tor
rent. (740)446-4782.

Two Mob1le Home Lo ts lor
Sl30.00.
t997
Two
Bedroom Mobile Home.
comp letely
furnlsl:led .
Central
Air/Heat
$425.00
New 3 BR Home Only
Washer, $ 100; Dryer $95:
$ 189/mo. Includes ale. de I1v· JR @1740-243-58 t1
electric range , $ t 25; gas
Pry and set up, (740)3135·
range, $ t 25: refrigerator,
AI'AMI~IENI'S
~ 367
$95:
Whirlpool washer/dryer
HIM RENT
Sel $250: very nice couch
~ne Acre. Mobl e
omu.
$125: rocke r recliner $75 ;
_SR . 2BA. LA, Kitchen,
I and" 2 bedroom apar1Oeck&amp;Buildings. Ai1 Se~ a
ments, fUt nisned and unfur- table/chai rs, $40; ches t-of1676 Oshel Rd.
drawe1s, S40: Kenmore
nisMd. secunty depOSit
upnght
freezer.
$195 .
STATE nouTE 554. BID· requ1red. np pets. 740 -992Kenmore chest fr eezer,
YiELL: New 4 bedroorn. 2 22 18.
- - - - - - - - - $ 165: Wringerwasher,$200
batll manLJtactured !lome. skaggs Appliances
bedroom Apt. Point
f'eatures !IVIng room. larmly
76
Pleasant, 1 bedroom House
Vine Stree t, Gallipolis
room with fireplace and
.
Gallipolis
HUD
(740)446.,,....;.
17•4•0;.
14•4•6.-7•3.9B_ _.,
~ a oNUS" room·. Corner lot
Abo.ve ground pool with pool 2200 or (740)709-0062
,.
ANTIQl !~~
house. Ready tor move-in.
Bd. Apt. a'Jailable m ...••••••••~·
PRICED .
UNDER 2M1ddleport.
No pets. APP ~AIS A LI!
(740}446- $300 .00.
Caii.88B·514· Buy or
se ll
Riverine
3218 .
Ot92 . HUD approved
Antiques. 11 24 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
THEISS ROAD, VINTON :- 2 bedroom, 1 bath, water
992·2526 Russ Moore.
Brand new 3 bedroom . 2 paid, $350 mon th, $350
Calt owner.
bath manufactured home security
deposit
Completely set and ruady
lor move-in. Fea1Uies l1v;ng
room . fam1ly room and
beaut1tul sky lit krtchen
DRASTICALLY REDUCEDII
Call (740)44 6-3570.

llliSINF.,"'i

I

(740)44 6·3481

Le1sa's An t1ques· bougfit·
sold
at Alligator Jacks Flea
4 room apt W/0 hoOkup,
bath Kanauga $450. Porter. Market. At 7, Pomeroy, furni8400.
(740)367-7746· ture. pr imit1 ves. bottles.
(7 40)992·5088
(740)367-7015 .
1\lLo;ct:JMNEOU~

• Apartment

I 700 sq . fl
\."lJ)
HliiLI&gt;ING.
"
i
·
$650
No
pets
Available Oct
1
'--.;::,;~~~::,;;:;;.,,J 1. (740)441·1t24.
Oftice Building w/2 apar trTJ.9 nts On 2nd Ave. in
Ge llipoli~. Avy
re ntp l of
apar tments. $t.2001month.
Price $120.000 will consider
land contract w/money

MEMCIL\Nill'E

10

Amus
l'l)R SAt.•:

1965 Mustang Fa stback
Rangoon Red exterior: black
inter1or. 6 cycle, 3 speed air
co nditioning, radi o. good
dr,"er Rusl lree AZ c'r
•
"
Price . $ 19,000.00 . . H111's
Aulomotive Classic Car
Re s1orat 1on &amp; Pa rts. Inc.
296/0
Basj)an
Road.
,Racine . Ohio 4577 1;1fh0ne
740-949·22 17
Website:
www.hillsreslo.com

P~operty wfroad fron tage on
Buckeye Hills Rd.
Pleasant
Valley
(740)245·5785

r

and
Rd.

RJ.AL ES1;,.n:
WANIHl

I Buy Homes· Local person
buys homes . Confide ntial,
Quick cash. Jim, 740-9926300 . No calls after 9.

IH ' I \I

'I

Hot~~:&lt;;

IUR

RENr

6 It ~hd 1 ng glass patio door,
BEAUTIFUL
~PAfltT· still in b01&lt; . Call (740)446MENTS
AT
BUDGET 32 10 or (7401446·2948 .
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES , 52 Westwoqd For Sale· firewood mostly
Drive from $34.:1 lo $442. Oak. al ready cut And split
2000 Honda CRV LX 5
Walk to shOp &amp; mov1es. CaU $30 loao. (740!949-306 1
speed manual trans. Exc.
740-446-2568
Equal
$9000.00
080.
For Sale· used Kenmore Cond.
Housing Opportunity.
washer &amp; dryer, good condi- 740-446·9931
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT • tion. $100. (740)985·4150
2000 Kia Sephia. 4 door,
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE !
automatiC, 27mpg, 72,000
JET
Townhouse
.3parlm'Elnl s,
miles, good condition . $800
AERATION MOTORS
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call {740)441 -11 I 1 Repa ired, New &amp; Rebuilt In in brakes, lilters, tires, belts
tor applicatton &amp; 1nformatt on. Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· etc . tuneup. Make excellent
ca r for college Asking
800-537·9528 .
Furnished Apartinent. 2nd
$5,500 (740 )44t-9378.
Ave, GalliPoliS, Upstairs. All
Utilities PaiO. 1 Bedroom, NEW AND USED STEEL 2002 Sebring, $5,695 ; 2000
Steel Beams. P1pe Reba r Neon, $3, 8q5; 2000 Impala,
NO Pets . (740)446-9523
For
Concrete,
Ang le, $5,995. Saturns, Cavaliers.
Furnished upstairs. 3 rooms Channel. Fla t Bar, Steel Grand Ams and otllers in
&amp; ba th Clean. ref &amp; dep Grallng
For
Dr ains, stock. 3 month ~3 .000 milo s
required No pets. (740)446: Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L warrantY.
1519.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Cook Motors
328 Jackson Pike
G1aC1ous living. 1 and 2 bed· Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
,
Fr1day. Bam-4:30pm Closed
(740)446·0103.
room apartmenls q.t V1llage
--------Manor
and
Riverside Thursda'y,
Saturday
&amp; , 99 C
$'
Sunday. (740)446-7300
hevy Lum1na. u 500.
Apartments 1n Mlddteoort.
(740}992-6373
From $295·$444 , Call 740·
BUIUJJN(;
Convertible 1990 Mazda
992·5064 Equal Hous1ng
SuPI'l..I ..:S
Miata EKcellent condit1on,
QpportUflllleS.
" " - - - - - - - - new Engine 38 mpg. $2.995
apartment. Block . brick. sewer pipes, {304)675-7790
lmmaculale·
Walking d1stance 10 UAG. windows . lintels, etc Claude
15
Recently remodeled. 28A Winters. Rio Grande , dH
l'RLI(J\S
new pr1vate deck $500/mo Call 740-245-5 121.
FOR SAI.E
(614)595-7773 or. 800-798PI.TS
4686 .
t997 Dodge Dakota SLT V6.

r

lURSAI£

~IUSICAL

r

1996 CA80A. just been
bored and rebuilt, lots Of
new parts. Runs and looks
great Bosl offer coli (304)
444-6913 !lome {304)675·
8787

1994 Prowler 22ft. sleeps 67. s;,.soo neg . (740)645 4055 alter 5pm
200 1 Jayco Designer Series
27~ K S, 5th Wheel. Lots of
access ories
$21.000
(304)675-2246

. WOODBURNING
FURNACE
De si gned 10 Heat Your Home
and Your HOI Waler!

~ AN~ BURKE 740-698-6809
0

1

LEWIS
CONCR£'1'£
CONSTRUCTION

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

AIITf~.ot: ,

Concrete Worl':·
25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
l'rcc.• Estinmtes

I '

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordab le Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

740·7.42·2293
' Leave a message

740·992·3824 or 740-667·0338

Equipment
LLC.

Let me do 1! for ycul

740-742-2455

• Repairs
• Parts
• Service
fpr F;mn Equipm'-·nt Tr ud;:~ D11 1t'!'S

• SptT.ialt y • C h1l dll'~

•

Ho~u·;
IMPROVb\I~:Nr.i

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Automatic. 2 Wheel Dnve.
Unconditional lifetime gLJar·
72,000 m1les '304 593-t 6t4
antee. Local references lur·
SUVs
nished Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446L_ _ _;,;RI~K-S;;
'"';,;;:
·~&gt;.
0870 Rogers Ba sement
95 Honda Passport SUV, 2 Watergroof1ng.
wheel drive. automa11c.
t20.000 miles, air condltm ned . cruJse, tilt. power
w1ndows &amp; locks. casSflM.
clean •nsiCie &amp; out. looks &amp;
runs
great
$2.500.
740 669-0302.
4X4
· f&lt;)R S-\1-.f:
. . . . .,.;,iiiiliiiiiiiioo_.l
95 Jeep Wrangler. $3,995,
1740)992·6373

-.-J

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

ttome ; Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •

Affeo 6pm '\
(Betore 6pm

'i -./ ';,
~!. ) ,

·)l;-

L.aa~e Meua~)_;..ftt:.Jg:,

Come By B 'fake
Uventage of a

18110 Reule on
all lnapper
£awnll'llcton

"Lawn .:md ~rden
Tractor s are o ur
Bu si ness ...
not' ou r sideline."

Gravely
Tractor Salas
&amp; Service
Wr l't•n•ir··· nuo.11 mnl.:r1'
2!~ C1mJor Slrccl

l'onwmy. OH

740-992-2975

credit

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addhlon!l &amp;
Remodeling
• New Gllr&amp;ge!l.

• Et&amp;ctrlcal

&amp;

a

We do it all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
' 992-6215

W\I O:Jf&gt;l?:.

JO

Tree Service

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 'tears Local Ex rlence

Cornerstone
Electrical
Servlca
• FOR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.

·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remod~ling

J4D-992-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

GRfA'T

FAMlJ..'(

.fOUAIILf.l
of tfl.rT0 ,RY

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

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE
Owner: Jeff Steth em

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883

POWER WASHING
(Commerctal and Residentiet)
Mobile Hom es, Hous·es, Log Homes. Decks, Driveways,
.Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, De~reas1ng of
Eq tJipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dum p Trucks, pain ting or sta ining of your deck
or log home, AluminLJm brightening.
Spe&lt;ial rates to Tru cking ancj Dump Tru cking Companie&lt;&gt;.

BARNEY
IS BREAI&lt;FAST
READY, SUGAR BUN

I JEST DISHED
IT OUT, BUT YA
BETTER

?

(Commercial and Resioe ntial)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trim ming, Aera tion, Fe rtilization,
Spra ying of fence lines, Leaf Rem oval, dS well as small
landscaping job~ such as plan ting and mukhing.
FREE ESTIMATES • C.UARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

THEM HOGS DON'T WASTE A
LOTTA TIME SAYIN' GRACE !!

HURRY!!

WiNDOW SUPER SALE

~

V1nyl Doubl e Hung

ID 101 U/

P',....!OUL\:&gt; 'IOU Cf&gt;.IZE FOR
DR!i'IK ()[f'OR.C. -__ ....

Optional Upgrades Available;
.Argo n Gas &amp; Heat Mirror

P'
"'l
'i C.\ I'D LIKE I\ Glf&gt;.~~ or WIN(

f&gt;...

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800·291·5600 740·992·4119

See
Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

I""

~URE 1 COLOt'\11\L,

t&gt;O '&lt; ou 1-\l&gt;s\/C:. 1\

SPU T-LE\/EL OR

I~OIJ~( \N 1~1::- ?

(1\\'t. ({)\);

BIG NATE
6l.JRtED .. OR. PER~A.P'S I
SHOULQ SIW 1-!ID[)EN .
D€EP IN THE. GoARB.I\G E
~11.&amp; .. . W/1.'&gt; !I.&gt;J EI"\I"TY
CONTA.INEI&lt;: OF RoCKY

!WAD

E C.REA H

I

KNOW

IT MAY BE
TIME TO

E!I.T E N ANY ROC KY

• REA SSE~&gt;

RoAD ICE CREAM , AH D.
E:LLEN JUST TOLD ME
SHE HA&gt;N'T EITHER'

DIVI SION
HOUSEHOlD

CHO RE S.

I

7~

RLoS t Da rw in. OI-l
7-!0-992-70 1:1 or 7-!0 ,Y9~-5S53
&amp;.,.lorkit\9 I" It• \loti,-./ l&gt;u h ll_qe
11 nd . , lflt•r·
H~rkd Hu·t.~
SL

PEANUTS
WE FINALL'i
FOUND Tf.IE
COURTHOUSE. SEE
AND Tt.lEN M'&lt;
ATTORNEI' PAN11CKED
AND RAN !-lOME ..

Wh;dl' y

M-Fri S:J0-5:00
Sat 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

IN THE
LEGION WE
KNOW HOW
TO 1-lANDLE
MEN LIKE

THAT!

l:Jigh cost of fertilizer got you worried?
17·17·17 · S27510fl (Whil" supply last)
. • Excellent Balanced Fertilizer
S.UREA · $205 1on top dress your lield cob meal
' with T.M. Sill. $5.75/tOOib. bag
·
Airway &amp; Rolowk: k pasture
reno~atora rental available.

SUNSHINE CLUB

t\tus h mu ml'o mpn~l A~uihtbll•

• 441 % Sn~·~nn \l1·ul i, l .t2~ IOIIflh
• 18 .s prt~dcr hug~;i l"11 a\ ailahlt• fur u~ t·
• Alr\lay p.t~U&amp;~ ren1n·aton ,\ !tt't'd~rs 11\ailahh.• to rml.
• lkenStd u~ nmomist un -:-.turT untilahlr ror t&gt;nnsn lting.

-mATS

Shade River AG Service, Inc

PEDPL£ AL':iY1

Pomerov. Ohio 45769

I I

!

I

I

0

I

740·367-0544
740·367·0536

i
~

GARFIELD
I&amp; THI5 .,.OUR
FeATHER~

RIS NORTHUP DODGE

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

ADVERTISE.
. IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
GRIZZWELLS .

·The Daily Sentinel

992-2155

Rl [)((ULOUS I

WOULD!SI IT
WORK()..} J:bOR

{,()1-lY

OHIO liCENSE # 38244

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
4577 1

740.949-2217

Sizes 5'x10'

•

Wt·~ t

P&lt;J ss

,\,jurlh
i&gt;bl.
P&lt;Jss

. Gl mail drop 26 Breezed
2 Immature
through
butterfly
27 Scuba sile
3 Down under 28 Posted

complement
30 Seals a deal
31 Japanese

. delicacy

t ;asl
Pass
Pass

birds
4 Gallant

33 8reakf8sl

Item

SWays
6 Slale .linnly
7 light brown
syllables
6 Voodoo·
34 Big - -

34 Porter and
stoul
35 "One For My

lloppy
38 Urban
studios

a parce l
30 Lands
in " Ia mer"
32 Refrain

sl(lve
9 March 15,
in Rome
10 Tide type
11 Austin hrs.

elephant

35 Cosmetic

42 Ms. Ralnefl,.
of movkts
43 Daffodil
starter
44 Hardware

llem
45 Hence
46 Hoover's
erg.
47 Morse code
word

49 Yon malden

· buys
37 Slir up ,
as interest

Players pre-empt in hope ot giv1ng
oppone nts major headaches. Bul !he
defending side should come prepared
with some partnership guidelines. Over a
three· lev.el opening, double 1s lor takeoul
A th ree-no -trump overcall· is natural. but
carries a wider range (some 16·22
points) th an it YIOuld at a lower fe'Jel.
At the four-level, things get murkier. A
double still carries ta~eout co nnolal 1ons.
but the doubler could ha'le a big balanced hand. He is saying th at he th inKs
- hope s -:-the contract will fai l. The doubler's partner pitsses w1th .a balanced
hand , but bids with a long suit, confid6nt
that some useful goodies 'will appear i~
the dummy - as in tllis deal.
West' s four-spade opening isn 'l typ1ca!.
because of tf'le si de four -card heart suit.
But it is a los1ng policy to pass that type
of hand , and opening th ree spades·
serves little purpose. One should go for
the contract w1th lhe greatest upside ·
when it IS right: game.
North doubled lor want of anything better
to do, and South bid five clubs w1th h1s
by Luis Campos
six-card suit. ,
C~ieblil)' C:ipne1 cryp10gram~ a1e crealed lrOrTI q~ota toon! by lamous peo~e . paslafld jiii!Sitf\t
West cashed the spade ace, then shilled
Eacn lener •n lhe c•~her stal'(ls Ia : anomer
to a heart. Declarer won with dummy'S
Today s clue R eq~als K
K1ng, drew trumps ending in hqnd, and
'' EULLEG
YE H C G
u X DJ F R UD
led his d1amond to the queen and ace·.
Back came a heart, but South won on the
board , threw h1s remaining heart on the
LZGMG ,
KDH
OULZYJL
KD I VYHI
diamond king. ruffed the heart ·ni ne in
han d , and took a ruffin g fin esse in
_DYLUFUDB ,
MGKEEI ,
U 0 Y0 . "
spades th rough West - five clubs bid
and made.
J. X .
YTGO
OUDOGM
CUFZKGE
Note that live spad8s dOubled would
probably have cost only 300, but it was
FKCTVGEE
hard for East-West to sac rifice.

Now Available At

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Tuki11g The Srirrg Out UF
Hard Wurk .l!"
Mid-Size -lWheel Dri ve Tra~tor'

to 10'x30'

wi th JOhp &amp; -lOhp Ku bota Eng ines

Hours

BAUM LUMBER

7:00 A'-1 · 8;00 PM

St. Rt. 124 Chestl'r 985-3301

LEI"~ MM&lt;E A ~EII,L \11\bi'&lt;'.E'IE~
.---·"A-'-:-:

1'\1'\\?5 ~·

~I)\(\ \.I..

'?I&lt;AR.£

6\U'I

t--~-- '; ·----I

A~ I)

IT'S

I'Vt c.:&gt;T, f\01'
I GoT

FOlEFS

I----,-1 I' I
I
I'

--------

J

12 I I

USEAT

I I I' I
JC O
J TJ I X
/6

I

I_;,~

Granny always to ld
silence was golden when you
.---------~~ hold 11tong enough Ia- ·· the.

, / 5

_

_

_

_

_

1

.-L/~~~:1~c~:i:'~:1~ ~:j.~~T~:1~~~-~ ;~~.~: .:~ ,~h ~,.'h~ :.'.~ , "~~~:t
yov ae' eo rop hom

~~~o

No 3 ·below

SCRAM.LETI ANSWERS e-1 &gt;-c s
A!lack - Vorce- Foyer- Safely- OFF my C/..KE
I've come 11p w1t11 a plan tor my b1(thday Smce 1m
pas1 lhiny I'll just take candle s OFF In'/ CAKE

.ARLO &amp; JANIS

-

&lt;

WH~T Will. YDU7tl.L TH~M

WfJE.IJ YOU'£~ ~AT~, AGAI~f

SOUP TO NUTZ
THE f'ResiDE'IT 'illllleD He

CaNNo\ LOOk THe ~R'GJN
lAA?a\!"R IN lHe Ele "'D E&amp;&lt;
lHEM 10 Gl\1£ MoNey TO

CoRRuf'r COU"ffl&lt;ies ,,.

01\IE\::

1114 1 1'10 Pd

I

1051\J\JE. •.

Bernice Bede Osol
Adv.ancaf'r,lent in your chosen · tietd of
endeavor is higllly likely 1n lhe Yea r
ahea d. Where yOtl r talents p rev1ousty
may have gone unnol1ced. they have
good ch~nces now ot co min g lo the
atte r)t ion of th ose who do th e promo \·
lng·
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Try not 10
look too rig id where your own view~
are con ce rned tOday to tha poinJ \h al
you appear lo re1ec1 all ideas ol your
companions. Associates aren'l apt to
want to wo rk wi th yoU .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sopt. 22) - Instead
of a tt empting 10 . bu ild up your
roso urces today, you may do just th e
opposite. You'd be better otr honing
your addition skills rat11er than spend Ing t imo prac ticing subtract ion
L IBRA (Sopt. 23 -0ct. 23)- tt's.OK to
look ·out lor Nn 1 today. but not 11 you
do so a r the expen se of o thers., espe ·
cialty m e mbers of your own family
who will easily let you get away with II
Be kind and co nsiderme. .
SCORP IO {del . 24·Nov. 22 ) - Guard
against ten dencies loday to boast
about som ething th at you have Ytll to
acc;;omplish. You 'll be greatly embarrc;ssed tal er i1 you fall to pulls things.
off as you so smugly bragged
SAG ITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) Recreational or so~:;ia l ac tivities lhal
ca rry an expensive price lag should
be avoided today. There are many
othe r lhings in whi ch you ca n spend
your 11me thai won't abuse your purse.
CAPR ICORN (De c. 22-Jan. t 9) AlthoUgh you're likely to re ceive jUSt
Compe nsation to Wh1c h you 're enllt led
loday, don'l be disappo1nted if you
don' l recE11ve the recognitio n you
expecled, like praises or pats on lh o
back .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb. 19) -Your
progress wilt be 1mpeded today if you
waste too much hm,e dwolling on what
·you're goi ng to do a nd how you're
going to 'do it . Spend teSs time plan ning and more time producing .
PISCES (Feb. 20·Ma rch 20) The ra's. a poSSibility you cou ld rum
something good you have going for·
yourself by discussmg 11 w11h too
many people who aro not involved bUI
would love 10 usu rp what you hAve
going.
ARIES (M arch 21· Aprrl 19)- There's
a chance you could get caughl in the
middle of a stic;;ky deve1oprnent tod aY
where you ~re try1ng to satis fy .every body. bul sadly end up pleasing no
one. Some days you can 't w1n
TAURU S {Apnl 20·May 20) - This.
can be a successfu l day for you, blll
only if you are caroful not~o Qo oil or•
tangents. Select your most meamng·
lui target nnd stay tocusad as you pur , sue h.
GE MINI (May 2 t ·June 20) - Shi)U id
you find yourself tn a s•tuahon today
where you feel drawn to take a rosk or
gamble on something . it would prove
w1ser to let your more caulious sido
prevail over your impulses.
CA NC ER (June 2 1·J uly 22) Assume the rote ot Chancellor ol lhe
Exchequar loday and manage the
!amity fmanceS . Your male's mctina·
lions may mean we ll . bul m1ghi not
prove to b' 100 prudan1 or wise iM the
long run

llliia----:'"?·&lt;1 [~iii~

rr wm~ 11\E

more

Tueeda~Aug .16,2005

l'\ll$T \116

~

PREVIOUS SOLU TION - "Seeing Bamb1 's mum gel killed 1s prob ably
frighten ing than anyth1ng in Reservoir Dogs-." - Quentin Tarantino

-... 'lllrthda,y:

+lAVEN'T

Whaley's Auto
Parts

~

29 Yin

AstroGraph

IMPORTS
Athens

35537 St Rl7 N

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

INSTALLED

Sc~ Br~nt o r ~ rian

I0 6 2

Trying to deal
with a pre-empt

• CARPENTRY

Hill 's Self
Storage

A Q IU 5

Bolly" singer

• RooF • PAINT

$26.00 PERMONTH!

South

36 Wiped oul a

• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS

ON THIS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS

.

AJ!I7j

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-9 5-383i

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS

,J 6 -1

Opcni nJ.{ l!!ad • A

Top : Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Pomeroy, Ohio

coNsmucnoN

"'

•

5 .1,1.

Janet JeO"ers
33795 Hiland Road

ROBERT
BISSEll

(.~ fl 7 '

i A

Plumbing

• Rooting Gut1ert
t Vin~l Siding &amp; Pointing
• Pallo and Porch De&lt;:h

8 4

•
.t

South

l'hone
{740) 992·5232
Sx 10, lOx Ill,
lOx IS, 10x211,
lllx311

"Middleporfs only
Self-Slot age"

•

Dealer WcsL
Vulnemhle : North South

Storage

97 Beech Stre!!t
Middleport. OH
10x10x10x20
992·l194
or 992·6635

'I .1 a 4:1
t 1u 6

740·667-0700 1·888·HUPP2l4

..•

46 People
47 Lucy &amp; Desi
actually
14 Horace's
48 Bireme
poetry
movers
15 Major work 50 Tree lrunk
16 Cave ,
51 Model
.sometimes
Carol.!7 'Grocery buy 52 Nearby
18 More pale
53 Big oil
20 Cook's
supplier
meas.
· 54 Clnemax
19 A Gershwi n 38 like Capp'l
21 Tax agcy.
rival
20 Clothing
Abner
22 Pierre's
55 Tart plum
22 Weeps over 40 Temple city
monarch
23 Yes vote
of Japan
23 Hippodrome
DOWN
24 Go postal
41 Cabintl
. 26 Boring tools
25 MIT grad
parr

4 1\ I 0 ll 7;, :1 ·

High and Dry

MANlEY'S .
SElf STORAGE

t:ast

¥

www.qualilywindowsystems.com

'I

•

5 Pad
8 Bra11

08-15 O!i

Wf'&lt;ot
A AK975J1

Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident -

LINDA'S.PAINnNG
[1401985-4180

Bra~ cs

* Weekl y Trash Serv ice
-t y r ~ nf Rellahie SL•r vil'l'
( K&lt;'&lt;'l' Y•111r ~ 1, 1ncy L•'l':lt l
f;&amp;M S,\NIH'I'ION

10

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Morris

Caml)€r sleeps 7 or 8, roof
top air, good shape. Nomad.
$2,500. (740)379·2540

"'iiiH I( I \

MONTY

41800 SR #7
1 ~~~Tu~ppers Plains, OH
I'
45783

LAWN CARE DIVISION

C:cnc Arms/C )wnr-rOpt·ralor 740-992-3 174

Lance Truck Camper. 10.6
foot , mmt condition. air. 3
way
ref .
full
bath,
queenbed, Side awnings.
OUISidC ShO'o'ler. $4,900.00
740-669 -4853 '

1 Mimicked

•"' JA K 9
t KQ{i .l-1
4&gt; K Q !l 2

"lnsurea"
Call Gary' Stanley

River Valley Christian Academy
Now enrolling students forth~
2005-2006 Sl'huol year.
Grades K-4 th ro ugh 12

2003 Coachman 24FT IT,
Bath, AC, Furnace. Sleeps
5, $9.000 (304)675-1444

Coleman Camping Tra1ler
12FT. 2 Ki ng Beds, $4 995
call for Details (304)675 1731

North

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

For more informal ion call :

&amp; Mmons

to Prevloua PUui.

13 Caviar,

2002 HD Sof tail Deuce,
many extras 1nduding wide
11r8. chrome, Python P1pes
7.000 miles. (740)446·2815

lUMSALE

An1wer

more
40 Fronller'a
- Corson
41 College VIP

component 43 Writer's

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

llo,~1s

39 lan't any

12 Fierce feline

2002
Harl ey Davidson
Soltail Deuce, many extras.
Great shape. 5;000 miles,
$17.000 firm
'(740) 441 9816

1

N 3rd 'A.'Je. Mtdoteport. t
2 bedr09fTI , sto'Je/refrigera·
oedroom turn1shed apt. No A.KC Reg1stered 8-weeks
tor fu rnished . $300/mo.
pets. Deposit. Prev. re ntal old Schnauzer pLJ ppleS. has
$!50/deposit. No pets
Ret. 740-992·0165
all shots , $350/eac:h. Male
(7401446-9061
&amp; Female (304)895-3745
One BA apt with WfD
2 houses, 1 is 4 bedroom, hOOkups Spring Valley $290
Ch1huahua pupp1ei for sale.
.
plus
deposit. Need sho ts and , wormed
$900/month. 1 IS 3 bedroom month
$550/month, piUs deposit (7401339·03621ocal call.
.
$150 each Call (740)388·
(740\256-8152.
0381
Pleasant Valley Apartment
or email fm pictures 10
3. BOAMS • 2 Bath AM Are now taking Applications dannyboY 767 @y!'ih oo.com
· House, ·Pomeroy- Chester · for 2B A,' JBR &amp; 4BA. . No papers.
Area.
Deposit
and Applications
a~e
taken p 1t Bull. very genlte plays
Refererence. 740-992-4025 Monday thru Fr1day. fro.r:n with poodles. minds excel·
Betore 8 PM.
9:00 A.M -4 PM. Ofl iCe ·1s · lent. needs 'large yard Sell
Located at 115 t Evergreen cheap. (740)367·7429
38R, 2BA. hardwood floors , Drive , Point Plea sant WV ;;;;,;:;;.;.;.;;;,;,;~..;;;;__.,
fireplace , Salem Center, ·Phone No. 1s (304}675$700/mo. Available Sept 1
5806 E.H 0
L~-~t·NS11&lt;-:;;Liii"\:01El~
- ,;,;m;,i;:_.l
Call (740}418·1183.
Tara
Townhouse
PlitnO
4 bedroom farm house Will'· Apartmenls . Very SpaciOuS. Baldwm
Spine!
nice barn and hOrse· proPer· 2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1;2 Excellent condit1on Pr1ce
ty. At. 35 j.u st in Jackson Bath. Adut t Pool &amp; Baby S800. Call after 9pm.
County. With option to buy Pooi. Pa110. Start $385tMo !7;;4;;0:~;4;:;4;:6:.;·3~99
~2;.
· _ _ __
Call aher 6pm. (740)645- No Pets, Lease Ptus
FR.urrs &amp;
(31 57. (7.:10)367-7195
Security Oepos11 ReqUiied .
VEG h~ \HL•.;
~(7401367-7086
Anentlonl
\, Local company offering MNO Twm R1ve1s Tower IS ciccepl· Cann1ng tom;;. toes for Sale
DOWN PAYME NT" pro- mg appl1cat1ons for walling Very mce 1 S4 00 you p1ck,
grams tor you to buy your list tor Hud·subs1zed. 1• br S!&gt; 00 we p1cMby ordefl Jim
home inslead of rentmg ·
apartment.• ca tt 675·6679 0 Bnen Farm. letart Falls
·' 100% linanc1ng
EHO;_-~---., _o_h,_o._7_&lt;_o_-2_47_-2_1_1_3:_ _
~ Less than perfect ctedlt
SP.-\C[
F1eld npen lomatoes. Call
accepted
~oR RE~T
(7"-0I379·9no
• Payment could ,be the
&amp;ame as rent
Shelley·s Cann1ng Tomatoes
Mortgage ·
Locators Downtown Of11ce Space- 5 across from Racme Lock &amp;
(740)367-()()()()
room swte $650/mo t room Dam open 9·6 closeo
ofllce- 5225JmO : 2 room Sunday
House for Rent Pt. Pleasant swte $250/mo Secur~ty Ji:F;.:.~-~---,
.5 400 (304)675·5 540 or deposit reqwred You pay
FoH S.\I ,E
P04 )675·4024 : ask lor u!lht1es. All spaces 'Jery mce
Nancy. Homestead Really Elevator Call (740}446·3644..._ 1...----.i...----1
Broker
for appo1ntment
Shop Sm1th- Mar~ V·
t-jouse for Rent m Po1nt For LeaSe Of1 1ce or reta11 System . new. New reta1l
Pleasant (304)675·6224
spaces 1n :very goo.:l cona 1- 53.150. askn1g 52 .300
Troyb 11!
ch1pper. 5350
House tor rent Reference &amp; t,0n Downtown Gall ipOliS (740)245-9294
deposd No pets
In the Approx t60Q sq tt each 1
tountry Call (740)379-2203 or 2 baths Lease pnce
negot1able to encourage
Pomeroy 3 bedroom . $400 n~w
ous•ness
Call
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�.'

· Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www. m ydailysentinel.com

Monday, Aqgust 15, 2005
•

PGA
from Page Bl
iilg in," Mickelson said.
Half of the 12 players who
c;iid not finish the tinal round
sti ll have a c h an~e to win.
Mickelson had a th ree-shot
lead when he rolled in an 8f~lOt birdie putt on the fourth
h'ble, but he couldn't run away
from the field this time. Lcftv
lost the lead ·bv mak in~ forir
bogeys ir) a livc, hole siretc:h,
cj ther hitt ing into the rough or
il)to the bunkers. and losi ng
hi&gt; touc h on the green s. ·
Elk ington. on the HJ-y car
anniversa ry of hi s PGA
Championsh ip vic·tory at
Riviera, made all pars throu gh
rhe 11rst seve n holes - Rc·tiel
Goose n was the on Iy· othn
· player among the w nrcndcr.'
not to drop a slmt over that
brutal stretch - and took the
leud by chipping in he hind th~
l ith green. But he lo o k ~d tcn'.tative mi.ssing H.. foot 1'"'. pu tt.s
on the 13th and l.'ith hnles to
fa'! I to J-uncler.
· Bjorn got hack i nro tile Ill i\
with a 40-foot birdie putt on
the 11th hole. and he ll'as one
shot hch ind with fo ur to play.
Singh looked as fnl'lratcd
us ever.
Trying to join \\'o() ds ;1s the
on ly ba c·k- to -b;~d. P( iA
·champions in tile stro ke-play
era, he two saw hi s hall horseshoe around the cup attd Dut
a' he made double hoecv on
the third hole and th rcc~pctttcd
down the steep ridge on the
par-1 fourth to quic·kil' lme
~r o und .
The 42-) ca r-ol d
Fiji'a n mack one hird i~ frum 3
fee l on No . X. hut saw 't half- ·
dozen other chances slide by
· the hole.
Stil l, he W'h nnlv two shots
behind wit h three. hoks left.
the same spo t he

yea r at Whist! in~

\V;.l.-,

in Ia.-.;t

Str&lt;~it.s whe n
he hun1! aroun J I n n~ (: llOtn!h

and will have four ful~ holes
to change his fortunes.
· No one knows .what awaits
Monday morning.
Overni)!ht .-~in could take
some ol the fire out of
Bultusml. allowing playe" to
attac:k the !la~ s. But it also
will make it touoh for
MickelsOll. Love and §ingh to
reach the par-5 17th at 650
yards.
"Th is i,, a trcmcndOLI&gt;
advanta~e.
I
think ...
Mickcl ... ~m said ... We £eta few
~xtra ho le&lt; to play. and hopefull y c·alm weather after hnpeA ull y some ratn .. wtll maybe
solkn 11 up a llrt.
Tht' cPur:-.e was geui11g. linn
and f;tst. and il showed .

OSlJ goods still sell, almost three years after championship
COLUMBUS (AP)
Customers are still snapping
up Ohio State University ban
caps and jerseys almost three
years after the football team
won the national title.
Merchandi&gt;c royalties more
than doubled durin~ t11e championship year, otnd have
remained fa irly steady since
then. around $5 million a year.
according

ro Ohio

State ·~

tinandal records.
Before the team won the
· Fiesta Bowl in January 2003.
royalties avcra~cd around $2.5
mrllion. saiJ Ri ck Van ·
Brimmer, Ohio State's licens-

4~H horse show

.

.

ing director.
"We've ris~n to a. new level
of popularity since winning the
championship.'· Van Brimmer
said.
·
Althou~h the learn ha;n' t
rc:rched t ~e same level nf success Illl the lield in the last two
seasons. merchandise royalties
have only dropped sli~htly
from the high of $5.2 mrllion
in 20m .
Last year. the total was about
$4.7 million. and in the liscal
year that ended June JO. the
university reponed ~4.~ million in rovaltie:-. from merchandi ~ licerising deal s.

Dennis Howard, a former
Ohio Stare professor who now
works at the University of
Oregon's Sports Marketing
Center, said the team's high
protile on television helps the
university\ repu tati on as a
foo tball powerhouse. .
·
"Th:rt kind &lt;-lf exposure reinforces the sense that it's a spe~i a l

fot)lb~lll

prog ram. ~·

Howard said. "Pcnplc idemify
wnh wmners and ltke to dcnvc
.a positive a~ soci atinn b9 wearing tile g~;rr of the winning
team ...

The university has licensed
more than 500 pr!JCILtCts, said

Rob Cleveland, assistant director of tlu; licerising and trademark oftlce. It collects an 8
percent royalty on each item's
net sales.
New products this year
i nd ude Buckeve bathroom
sinks and toi let "mnks, bill iard
balls and motorized tooth,
brusl1cs.
Krooer will begin oH'cring
Ohio Stare potato chips and
torti lla chips across its chain of
grosery stores . next week .
spokeswoman Monrca Gordon
sai&lt;.L The company ex peels the
Collegiate Snacks line to be
popular.
, -

with Woods. Geoff Og ilvy
and U.S. Open champion
~lichad Ct mp bcll eacl.l shot
· ti'J '" Jl"'' 27'J . Six mhers IVL't'C under par and sti ll on the .

~

.at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CENTS • Vul. 55, Nu. 1

~ou r ~c.

No (ll lC unJIJ have imagined " u ~h a tight leadcrboard
based · on the- o pening five ·
holes. where Mr ckelson must
have t'c lt like he was pari of a
tic ker-"tpc· parade .
No one could l1ear the
annollncc·r on the fi rst tee
bec ause 1\ms alrcudy were
~creaming out Mil.:kelson\
tr&lt;tmc. And the nnise ~ot louder when he built a tfiree-shot
b td with the birdie on the par:1 t'nurt ll. Micke lson ambled
rnwar:d the firth tee and couldn't help but reac:h out and tap
fists with the fa ns.
AnJ tl1en they went silent.
Mickchon liirs never had
sul'i1 a l&amp;gc lead on the last
da y of a lll&lt;~jor - he had to
rally to beat Ernie Els at the
Maste rs last year - and he
quickly let everyone back into
the uamc. He maJc t \VO

" from
.
ho::.!evs
the rouQ h. two
mr~re. from the hunk-cr. anti

srtdtienly found himself' t\vo
shots behind Elkin~ton .
The 42-year-olli'Aussie has
virtually vani shcJ since his
last PGA Tour vtetory six ·
v~: ars a~u at D(lml. aml he
i11adc his mo,·e qu ietl y. by ,

to get G1to a th .n.:c.&gt;J (J; lll p l ,t ~y-,
oil.
Somehow. l.ovc:. too. was
still part nf the cqu: ttUHl .
He &lt;1l sn droppc•d four shot s making 1x u·~.
in tlve holes early in hi s
But he he!.,!all to succumb to
round. and to his su rprise the deep l·o ugh anti fas t
Mickelson and Elkt ngt nn ~recrrs. and as quic kly &lt;i:s he
came back to hi m. He \\as it r tnok the kad frnndl;li ckelson.
the las t group with Mic·kc lson. he l!~I\'C it ril!ht bac k.

-

-

Reds
from Page BJ
appearing ii1 hi~ fiP·il major
le&lt;i'&gt;ue game since May 12,
2()(J2. got the ti nal out 111 t11e
eigbth lor his tirst win since
April 28, 2002. tor the New
York Mets.
Cincinnati tied it at 3 in the
eighth on a two-out single by
Ken Griffey Jr. With run ners
on tirst and second. Austi n
Keams fo ll owed with a sharp
li ne drive that was caugl~t by a
d1vmg Jenkms 111 nght lleld.
·'No one in the wqrld I
thou ght wou ld ca1ch th at
· ball:' NarTon said.
.

Indians
from Page Bl
i 11!.! .''
S tartin ~ left -handers Cliff

Lee for Cleveland and Scott
Kuzm ir for Tampa Bay we re
at thei r hest with runners on
base.
Lee gave up six hi ts and
one walk whi·le striki ng orit
three in eight scoreless
inn itlgS -

his...longest o uli ng

in 24 sturts this season.
··1r yo u had told me tllat I' d
go eight wi llmut giving up a

ru n, I' d tell you J got a win,"
Lee said. " It just didn't happen...
· Lee bo unced back from a

Notes: Mil waukee . made '
several. transactions before .the
t:ame . . Rel ievers Mall Wise
;'rnd Julio Santana were placed
on the 15-day DL. To take
thei r- place, · the Brewe.rs .
recal led pitcher Jose Capellan'
from Nashvil le and purchased
the Dav is contract from
Nashville. Jeff Ciri,l lo wa&gt; ·
transferred to the 60-day DL.
:.. The last rr[p le by a
Milwaukee pitcher was by
Jeff D'Amico on Apri l 12,
200 I, againsJ Houston.... The
Reds haven't won more than
I0 stmight road games since
setting the club record of I)
fro m April 22-May 27. 1957 .

poor out rng in Kansas Ciry the hall quickl y and made a
on Tuesday night, when he throw that was slightl y up the
gave up eighl hits and six · fi rst-base li ne. but in-" plenty
ru ns in fi ve innings of a no- of time for catcher Toby Ha ll
decision. The Indians ra llied to get back to the plate and
to win 13-7 with an 11-run tag out Travis Hafner lryi ng
nimh .
to score from second.
Thi s time, he stranded
Blake's
hit
,broke
seven runners. incl uding two Cleveland\ .(). for- I8 streak.
apiece in the li rst and sev- includi ng 0-for, 7 aga in st
enth .
Kazmi r, with runners in scoi·Kaz mir al lowed six hi ts in ing position.
six score less innings. stri kin g ·' Blake, who left Satu rclay·s
out
~eve n .
including game with a bru ised ri §dll
Cleve land 's 3-4-5 hi tters shoulder after being hit by a
wi'th rwo on in the firs t.
pitch from Seth McClung.
He got some .defe nsive stalled at first base for the
help, too. With two on in the fi rst time since Se pt. 2J ,
sixth , he struck out Jose 2om.
Hern andez, but yie lded a si nNotes: The last li me
gle to Casey Blake. Left Cleveland lost 1-0 at home
fi elder Jonn y Gomes 11cldcd with the opponent scori ng in

its last at-bat was May 13, ·
1970, against Kansas Ci1y in
a 12-inn ing loss.... Hall of
Fanmr' Bob Fdl e'r. 86. th rew
out the fi rst pit&lt;:h as he wa&gt;
honored ·for hi s pitc hi ng
career and service in World
War II . All fan s received a
Fe ller fig mi ne as they canie
through the gates . ... Indians
C Vic tor Martinez ex·tended
h i~ hi tting streak .to 12
games. ... Tampa Bay DH .
Jorge Cantu . who had three
homers in the fi rst two games
of the series. went 2-for' 4
Sunday and was 8-for- 14
(.57 11 with six RBl s ·in the
series . .. . The last ti me Lee
pitched eight innings also
was agai nst Tampa Bay, on
Aug . 22. 2()03.

• Another major for
Mickelson. See Page 81

18 HP1 Kohlert Command' Pro V-Twin OHV engir1e I

If the weathe r permits ·rhe
The paving project has a
old paveme nt on the above price tag of $ 17:1,778.25 and
stree ts wi ll be ta ken up on will cost the vi ll age of
POMEROY - Tl1e park - Tuesday and ne w pavement Pomeroy $32,000. The rest of
ing situ alii&gt;n in dow ntown will
.o n the bi ll 'Viii be pa id by Issue
be
placed
Pomeroy i's going 10 take a Wed nesqay wit h par\&lt;, ing to Two grant money.
turn for the worse, but only res ume in ihose areas on
The vi llage will borrow the
0.11 a tempomry basis due to Thursday.
$32 ,000 along with refinancstreet paving.
Also on Th ursday parking ing $26,97 1 from a previous
Starti11g today parking is wi ll be prohib ited on one of pav ing proje.ct ·via a loan
prohibited on Sycamore, Lynn, 1he two ri ver front 'parking fro m
Bank
Peop les
Second &lt;md Coun· Streets ·unt iI lots and vice versa on Friday . Corporation .
possibl y Thursday.
due to paving.
The paving project which
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BRIAN J. REED
BR.EED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

'I

\1

INSIDE
• 2005 Meigs County
Junior Fair Dairy Show
winners. See Page A2
• Pearson earns degree.
See Page A2
• O'Bieness employee
giving campaign begins.
See Page A3
• Raffle winner.·
See Page A3 ·
• Eastern announces bus
routes. See Page A3
I

t

Front-wheel fully independent suspension ·
• Push-button controls

0% lor 36 months:· I Visit your local retailer today.
BIG

6X4CAMO

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLIC H@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

, POMEROY Look ing
\oward th e holiday shoppi ng
seaso~.
·the
Pomeroy
Merchants Association are
plann ing seve ral special
events to begin with a walking history tour on Nov. 5 as
the kick-off event.
Susan Clark is chairman of
the tour and is in contact with
Mike Gerlach of Middleport
who will be assisting with rhe
event geared. toww-d creating
an apprec iation of the old and
,
Brian J. Reed/ photo
ornate
buildings and the early
Alyssa Hotter, right, and Georga nna Kob lentz took grand and reserve . champion dairy showmans hip honors Mond ay morning at the Meigs Co unty Jun ior Fair Dairy Show. They are pictured begi n ni n ~ of busi'nesses
which line Main Street and
with Dairy Pri nce Kirk Pul lins .
Court Streets.
Agarn this year the annual
Osborne, Cmson
Yost. and place, Kian a Osborne showed 111 the Pee Wee class.
parade
bring ing in San ta
Hannah Yost . Stephen Yost. and Ga rrett Ritchie. A's:
Judg ing res ults, by breed Claus and the traditi onal
al l
A's;
Ex perienced. · Novice. Jordan Koblent z and and chiss , in desce nding
open li ouse for bu sinesses
Benjamin Ayres and Brenna Bryan Haggy. first and secorde
r.
weie
:
AY
RSHI
RE,
wi ll be IJeld on the Sunday
Holte r. first and seco nd; ond place , ·Bri anna Ayres and
fo
llow ing
Thanksg iving .
Yearling. Ki rk Pul lin s and Trenton Cook . A's. Jess ica Ki rk Pulli ns. grand champ iTony Dingess wi ll be parade
Ric ky Co lburn .. firs t and sec- Cook and Lau ra Pull ins
Piease see Pairy. AS
cha irman and the theme- of
··Christ mas Along the River"
wil l be contin ued.
Promot ional
ideas
to
en e.o u ra~e shopping at home
were
discu&gt;~ed, along with
HOEFLICH

0% lor 36 months:· I Visit your local retailer today.
• Weddle, Richard
·top poultry sale bnl.
See Page A2

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..

Fair's Little·Mister and Miss crowned
BY BETH SERGENT "
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN ELCOM

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT.

Char1ene Hoefll ch/ photo

Please' see Deemer, AS

0% lor 36 monlhs:· IVisit your local retailer today.

ALLPOWER1QUIPMENT

Marilyn Deemer of
Syrac use was the
winner of four
rosettes for outstanding entnes 1n
the domestrc arts
display at the Meigs ,
Cuunty Fa1r. Here
she displays h'er
winning entries
which wi tt remain on
exhibrt 111 the new
Thompson-Roush
Burlding att week fo r
v1ewing by fairgoers.

POMEROY - . Ma r'ilyn Dee mer' of
Syrac use won four of the six best of show
awards fo r her outstanding exhi bits in the
domestic arts depal1ment.
Winni ng the rosettes fur her were her
entries in lhe Categories of do ll dress. crocheted item. embroidered pillow case. and
afg han. From the 22 entries she had in the
show, Deemer received 14 bl ue ribbons in
addition to the four besi of show awards.
Recciv i n~ the oth er best of show awards
were March Arnold of Forest Run for a
dress in chi ldren's clothing and a qui lt :
and Joanna Vaug han of Pomeroy for a
dress iil adu lt clothin g and for a knitted

• Six-wheel iully independent suspension
Heavy-duty chain drive

.

Pomeroy
Munic ipa l
Bui ldin g
parki ng
lots;
La urel Street sli p.
Mu lberry and Butternu t
Avenues wi ll be patched.
East Main Street will not he
paved because it fa ll s under
the jurisd iction of the Meigs
County
Hi ghway
Department .
The enti re paving project
shoul d be completed by the
end of nexl week.

mevchants
begin plans
for holiday
season

,

BY CHARL'ENE
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• 20 HP' Kohler• Cornman~ Pro V-Twin OHV engine

...

bcg&lt;tn on Monda y in the
Su gar Rirn area will in c lude
tile foll owing: West Main ,
Second ,
Court .
Ly nn.
Syca more, .
Mec ha ni c.'
Fourth , Seventh . Condor.
Pl um,
Cherry .
Fi sher.
Wright, Beech, Osborn,
Lasley,
an d
Buckeye
Str eets; Spring Ave nue:
Fift h Street Loop ; Wolfe
Drive; Spring Va lley; Union
Terrace; ri ve r fron t and

ROCKSPRINGS - Alyssa
Holte r
and
Georga na
Koblent z were grand champion and reserve champion
showmen, res p ec ti v~ l y, at
Monday 's Meigs Count y
Junior Fair Dairy Show. ·
The show, judged by Jill
Loka i of St. Paris, kicked off
the week's juni or fai r li vestock j udgi ng events, and
was fol lowed by the open
class dai ry show.
Ki rk Pu llins showed the
grand champ ion Ayrs hire and
Natha n Coo,k the reserve
champion Ayrshire. Brenn a
Hol ter showed, the grand
champion Brown Swiss,
Ki ana Osborne the gra nd
champion Guern sey, Kelsey
Holter and Alyssa Holter the
grand and reserve chal)lpion
Holsteins: Aud rionna Pullins
anr.l Nathan Cook the grand
and·
re&gt;e rve
cham pion
· Jerseys. and Rachel Ell iott
'and Alyssa Holter the grand
and reserve cha mpion mil king shorthorns honors .
Judgi ng res ul ts in showma nshi p, by class. were:· Old
Pro, Alyssa Holter and
Georga nna Koblentz, first
and second place, and Rachel
Ell iott . . Kelsey
Hol ter.
Audri onna Pul lin s. Kara

uv

-'

"" 1\.m)tl.lil"'' "'i"d ..... ,.,

o·eemer captures top awards in domestic arts

COUNTRY

:..

2005

Holter, Koblentz named dairy showmen Pomeroy

4X2 UV

.,,..

l(J,

Downtown·street paving causes parking changes

SPORTS

COUNTRY

'

TUESU/\ Y, AUGUST

a t 2.

· \Yes H,· lm' · dpuble ir\ the innings to rema in winless in
seventh h,tJ ~ i vcn Milwaukee three starts against Mil waukee
a brief )-2 ic'ad.
this season.
Cincinnat i took a 1-0·lead in
Dovg Davis didn ' 1 have a
decision for the eight h time in the third on Sean Casey's runnine starts. The left-hander scorinQsingle. but Milwaukee .
retired 10 batters in a ·row at answered wi th two runs in the
one point. He struck out nine . . bottom of the inni ng.
Davis led oil with his lirst
two shy of hi s career high, and
allowed four hit s in seven career tri ple off Gri ffey's
glove in center tield. Weeks
mmngs.
.. It was a win fo r Davis,'· fo llowed with a sharp groundYost said. "We were hoping ball off the glove of di vi ng
baseman
Edwin
it'd be for Doug Davis, as well third
as Do u ~'s pitched. Doug's · Enc:&lt;rnacion th at scored
been si tt r n ~ on ni ne wins for a Davis. Week&gt; stole second.
long time.'
took third on Hall's lly to cenCincinnat i stm1er Brandon ter... and scored on a sacri tl ce
Claussen had won his last tly by Overbay.
three stans. But the left-hanGriffey led off the fou rt h .
der al lowed six hits in six with hi s 26th homer to tie i.t

BIG

(740) 593-3279/ (800) 710-1911 (TOLLFREE)

Scenes from the 2005
Meigs CountY Fair, A6

showcases skill, As

Only thrw playe rs fin ished
four round . . under par. Alon g

,

.

INDEX
Calendars
Classi fi eds
Comics

A.3
B3-4
Bs

.'

Dear Abby

A.3

Editorials

A4

"

Sports
Weather

B Section

A2

rC' 2.005 dhiu Vull_c~· Puhlh;h ing Co.

ROCKSPR INGS
Wearing their Sunday be st
and fl as hing their brighte st
smiles, 25 boy s and gir ls
vied for the· ti tle of Little
Mister and Mi s·s Meigs
County on the openi ng day
of the fair.
Dan Smith , a fami liar face
to the fair scene. interviewed
the contestants and asked
them quest ions such as wnat
they liked most about the fa ir
and if they had a girlfriend or
boyfriend . Most of the chil dren said they liked the rides
on the midway and tractors
though · practically no ne
wou ld ad mit fO havi ng a girlfriend ur boyfriend .
Smith sa id he couldn't
begin to gue" how many uf
the competitions he has
emceed but that he continued
to do . it because he enjoys
meetin g the kid;.
•

After abou t an hou·r of
interviews and deliberation
by the judges, !Jruce Davis
and Mattison Finlaw were
named Little Mister and Miss
Meigs County.
Joini ng Davi s and Fi nl aw
on the Hill Stage were Little
Mister first ru nner-up Chase
Curtis. seco nd run ner-up
Austin Rose. Little Mi ss first
runner-up Hal le Andrew s
and
second
runner-up
Michaela Holter.
Once again fhe Rutland
Fire Department sponsored
the contest and provided a
sash for the Little Mi ss and a
hat for th e Lillie Mister.
Dan 's
Boot
Shop
in
Pomeroy prov ided embroi dery for the hats and sashe s.
All contestants received participation ribbons.
The 2005 Little Mister &lt;ind
Mi "s ca n be seen at va riou~
activities at the Meigs
~ou nt y Fair thi s wrck .

Bruce Davis and
Mallison Fin taw
were crowned
Meigs County
Fair' s 2005
Little Mister and
Miss out of 25 ·
contestants.

1

Beth Sergent/ photo

v.;ay s of g~tting people into

the store s to see what is ava ilab le locall y ' th rough some
kind of in-store offe rs.
Please see MerchantS, AS

Fair has ·
record
number
of entries
'

POMEROY - The 2005
Me ig' County Fair has a ·
record number of ent ries in
the open cia» categories.
Deb bie WatSon . secretary.
reponed 1\londay. ·
W&lt;us,\11 noted that entries
rhi s vear ltllal JJ78. more
than · :'Oll Ol'er last year's
record. Emries 0\ er the past
I:i vcars have ranged from a
lo\\' of I. 7',7 in 1994 to last
ycar\ ll ig l1of .1.170. Showing
tl1c greatest increase thi s year
i' the photography department "ith 579 entries. an
i ncrca~c or 2)9 'o\·er last vear.
Another big winner in pai1icipati,ln . despi te the drought. is
far m crop,. from J 18 to 394.
The number c&gt;f entries in
~ac h L'ate~orY th i~

vear is as

follows : Jaiiy 4J:· .beef. 8:
sheep. 2: poultry. I I: fann
crops. 3\14: hav. 9: flower
sho\\ . . 1352: domesric ans.
219: pai nting. 88: photograph~. 597: baking and canning,
461: grange. 4: antique display,
II~ : Little Mi" and Mister,
26: anJ prctt~ baby. 6-l .
--------~

•

--

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