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DoWN ON THE FARM

iunba, lim~ -ientirttl

;PageD6

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Sunday, August 21, 2005

EXTENSION CORNER
Planning for 2006 Meigs fair
BY HAL KNEEN

The 2005 Mei gs County
Fair is over. There were so
many smi ling faces despite
the warm_weather! Now the
· real work begins: How to
improve the fair for 2006!
Start by thanking a ll the
Senior and Junior Fair board
members, volunteers. businesses, parents, youth leaders. youth groups, gatekeepers and exhibitors who
donate their time, talent and
ef.forts. Our fair could not
continue without these people and the understanding
ways of their families.
Improvements may 'always
be made, so make your sugg~stions known to the fair
board by putting them in
writing with possible solutions. Remember you may be
asked to assist in future years
to enact your suggestions. Be
willing to otTer your time and
resources to make the fair
b~tter next yea r.
·A special thank you to the

Sentinel staff and WYVK for
the news coverage of all the
fair events.

'

lure a far greater profit than
just working a summer
hourly wage joh, if they
could lind one .
In addition . look at the life
How do vou achieve success in life? Three young skills they haw learned in
Meigs countians have taken bookkeeping.
production
control of their destinies by costs, dealing with the public.
becoming entrepreneurs as a advertising ami maintaining a
way to assi st in paying for reputation . Wh ether they
college and vehic.les. They belong to FFA (formerly
each grow vegetables for the Future Farmers of Ame rica),
consumer but market in dif- a 4-H l'luh ur a scouting
fe rent ways: direct marketing group, each of lltese groups
from the home. selling to are train ing the fu ture leaders
retailers and selling at the of Meig s Counly. our state
farmers' market.
and the nation . Take the tim.c
Each one buys the seeds to to speak 10 the youth of our
start the plants, plants the county and you will be .
vegetables, cares for the veg- amazed as how they may
etables and does the harvest- · have spent the summer.
•••
ing. It's a lot of hard physical
work. hut the return on
Scattered ram showers
investment is great as they moved through the coun t~
are able _to borrow the family this past week blll were i n s~l­
tractor ~ and utilize family ficient to relieve the drought
land. Purchasing both land · stress on . many fields and
and tra.:tors would be expen- landscapes. · Co ntinue to
sive, howL ver, paying fair water trees. shrubs and perenrental rates to family would nials that have heen planted
still allow their business ven- in the past two or ihree years.

...

For years, we ha ve heard
complaints about free trade
agreements that have cost our
country manufacturing jobs.
But the Central American .
Free Trade Agreement. signed
into Jaw earlier this month by
.. President Bush. not only had
tlie support of many textile
manufacturers. hut is expect'ed to open up markets that
could bene tit area farmers.
Many farm organizatiuns
su pport CAFTA. I don't
know that much about the in s
and out of trade agreements,
but the Farm Bureau seems to
be pretty optimistic about the
effect it will have Oil exports.
They think it will really help.
The
American
Farm
Bureau Federation estimates
that CAFfA will yield nearly
$1.5 billion in agricultural
exports a ' year. The state
Farm Bureau says CAFfA
will increase Ohio's agriculture exports by an estimated
·.
$17 million a vear.
"It' s clearly' a win-win for
Ohio and U.S . agriculture,"
wrote Constance Jackson,

vice president of agricultural
ecology .for the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation (OFBF).
on their Web site.
Ohio's major commodities
could be imported to CAFTA
nations with lower - or even
no - · tariffs. That would
translate into a gain of at_least
$17 million per year: $5 million for poultty, $4 million for
soybeans and $2 tnillion each
for Jive animals/meat produc·ts. wheal, -feed grains and
dairy. Jackson said. The state's
fruit and ve2etable industry
also would g:Jn. she said.
What has raised the hopes.
of those in agribusiness is
that CAFTA will eliminate
tariffs and other trade barriers
between· the United Stales
and Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala,
Honduras,
Nicaragua
and
the
Dominican R~public. Before ·
the agreement, most U.S.
agriculture entering the
region could be subject to tarills of as much as 60 percent,
according to the Farm Bureau
Federation.
That could be good news to
processing plants and to . the
farmers that supply them. It is

a promising for a~ribusiness.
but NAFTA and the World
Free Trade Agreement have
been blamed fur job losses in
the past. I believe in free
trade. but you've got to have
a fair poliL'y it\ place. From
what I've learned. C AFTA
meets that definition .
Past trade a!!ree ments haJ
allowed 99 perCent of imports
Central · American
from
nations to enter I).S . marke"
duty free while restricting
exports. But this latest trade
agreement may he a pretty
~ood deal for fanners.
. . Most of us are suspit:ious
of any new tnick agreement
because of !he negative
impact of past trade agreements, but thi s has the potential to benefit farmers by
opening up new markets.
CAFfA may not have a
direct impact on the volu me
of produce that a sing le t:arm
sells. but the agreement may
raise farm prices for evetyone
in agriculture. Many of these
countries are able to import
products and' we will be able
to now turn the tables and do
the same thing. In the end, this
may be a very beneficial deal.

Drought devastates com, but soybeans could survive
BY LIBBY QUAID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Midwestern corn has suffered
irreversible harm from persistent drought. but soybeans
· still have a chance at solid
' yields,
the. Agriculture
Department said Friday.
Corn, soybean and rice
production will fall short of
last year's record-selling
crops, but wheat growers
should see slight ly better
yields than they did last year.
the department said in its
monthly crop report.
Stretching from southeast
Texas to the Grea( Lakes. the
drought has been worst in
Illinois
and
Missouri, ·
although growing conditions

h·ave been good in other parts
of the Midwest. Farther
south , frequent showers
eased the drought last month.
Dry conditions settled into
the northern Plains and the ·
Northwest. but crops there
benefited from leftover moisture from the rainy spring. In
the central High Plains, heat
and dryness stressed pastures
and summer crops. A latearriving rain y season in the
South~est nudged the threat
of wildfire up toward the
Northwest. Eastern parts of
the country saw heavy rain
from the remnants of
Tropical Storm Cindy and
Hurricane Dennis.
Soybeans deteriorated in
early July, but by the end of

the month, the crop h,icl stabilized and was prOgressing
ahead of normal in every soybean-growing state.

CAITI.EMEN ANNOUNCE
ANNUAL BANQUEI'

GALLIPOLIS
The ence with the national You'ng
Many homeowners have Gallia County, Cattlemen will Call Iemen's Tour. Also on the
called in conraning dead hold their annual han4uet on program is Dr. Fernando
leaves falling off their tree' Thursday: Aug. 25 at the Bob Silvaris of ·ohio State
and shrubs. This is nature's Evan,, Shelter House at Rio UniversitY.. who will speak
on internatiooal marketing of
way of redu t ing the water Grande .
needs of a plant un cfer
A ribeve dinner will be beef cattle.
Pfease reg ister in ad·vance
stress. Next yc:tr's lea f and 'crwd at.7:l0 p.m. Cost for
flowe r buch have· :drcady the meal and annual member- by calling the Gallia County
funned on mo.sl trct·s ;md ,ship is $ 15. Speakers forthe . Extension office by MoJtday,.
shrubs '" .:al'iv k .tf fal l evening intlude Toclcl Heinz, Aug. 22. The phone number
•houl d cau .": ltt.l il' harm to who will rc.late his experi- is (740) 446-7007. ·

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the plan t. As the drou ght - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .- - - - continues im o the fall seaP'Oltd
pclrt' O'fyou.
so n. addilional twig die"
J
V'
back may occur. Prune off .
Sunday Times-Sentinel • Subscribe tod~y • 446-2342
any dead branches as sQon
as possible this fall season.
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
Thank You
County Agrictilture and
Silver Streaks
Natural
Resources
for buying niy
Educator,
0/rio
State
l005Market
University Extertsion.)
Hog and
supporting the
Thank You
: Gallla County Fair
Oak Hill Investment for
Gus &amp; Unda Thiviner
'
· buying my
Robbie &amp;' Judv. . I
Gary &amp; Linda Lewis
2005 Market Hog
,Dave &amp; Beverly Faro
and supporting the
Joe &amp; Cheryl Hubble
Gallia County Fait!
Danny &amp; Ruth Hircly
I

to be a

rWe.

SPORTS
• Indians still climbing in
standings. See Page 81

f'bank you

Wiseman
Insurance
JJgency

l
1

CAFfA might benefit farmers· l
BY ROBERT W. PAWELEK
OSU EXTENSION
GALLIA COUNTY

Supponers see better
future for Harriet
Beecher Stowe house, As

Antique tractor pull
results announced, A3

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lor lluyng my
10115 Market
£amb! ·

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KEllY HIVElY
SltvfR STRfAKS
4-H CI/IB

(
!\

'-~

HAllEY
BARNES

Kyle Hively
,Silver Streaks
14-H Club

4-·H CllJB
TRIANGlE
--

Chong M. Kim, MD IUrologist
• Urologic Oncology
• General Urology
OBITUARIES

• _Laparoscopy

Page AS
• Harry E. Stobart, Sr., 88

• Minimally Invasive Urology

INSIDE
• ATV pulls popular with
fairgoers. See Page A3
• Funeral home gets new
owners, management.
See Page A3
• Democratic leader
asks for explanation of
impeachment process.
See Page AS

HOLZER
CLINIC

Local banks top Meigs .livestock buyers
.'

BY BRIAN J. REED
AND BETH SERGENT
NEWS@MYDAI"YSENTINEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., Pomeroy, and Home
Na.tional . Bank, Racine,
topped the buyers at
Saturday's Meigs County
Junior Fair· Livestock Sale.
Farmers Bank purchased
21 ·animals and spent
$14,765. Home National
Bank spent $12,545 on 16
animals. Hometown Market
of Middleport was the thirdbiggest spender at the daylong sale, spending $8,145,
including $2,850 for the
grand champion market steer,
and We Can Fabricators of
Tuppers Plains the fourth,
spending $5,175.
This year's sale, held a day
later than it has been in recent
memory brought some other
changes' to the program,
including a new policy which
limited the sale to one animal
per showman. instead of t'I\'O.
Also for the first time, all
market animals formerly
priced by the pound were
sold by the head.
Auctioneer Dan Smith of
Racine began the bidding
Saturday morning with market rabbits, priced per pen of
three. Fisher Funeral Home
of Middleport/Pomeroy purchased Taylor Russell's
grand champion pen for
$470 Saralisha Powell's
reser~e champion market pen
was
purchased
by
f
•
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Washburn s_ Datryette 0
Tuppers Platns for $400.
Rtdenour Gas Servtce of
Chester,,patd $(00 for Joyce
Weddle s pen ot market paultry, and_ Btrchfteld . Funeral
Home at Rutland ~!ltd $300
for Holhe Rtchard s reserve
champion poultry pen ..

WEATHER

POMEROY- Nineteen of
the 28 school bus routes of
the Meigs Local School
District have been changed in
an effort to eliminate time
spent at school when classes
are not in session.
This means many s~tudents

12 PAGES

A3

livESTOCK REPORT

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

GAUJPOUS - United Producers Inc. niMkel report
from GaUipolis for sales COf!ducted on Wedne$day, Aug. 17.

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4
As

Feeder Cattle-Steady/Higher ·

Obituaries

275-415# St. $95-$143 Hf. 590-$140 425-525# St. $90$120 Hf. $85-5110 550-625# St. $90-$115 Hf. 585-$105
650-725# St. $85-$100 Hf. 582-$92 750-850 St. $80-$90
Hf. $75-$82.

Sports
Weather

Cows-Steady

Reod/photoo
Hometown Market owner Richard Hill, buyer of the Grand Champion Market Steer for $2,850.
is pictured with Wade Collins, showman, Fair King Tyler Lee , Fair Queen Whitney Thoene, Queen
runner-up Mallory Hill. Beef Princess Ashley Putnam and Beef Pnnce Nathan Cook.
.

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B~an

J.

We Can Fabricators purchased Tylor Fryar's reserve champion market steer for $2,550. Jeff
Cox. buyer. is pictured with Fryar. Fair King Tyler Lee, Fa ir Queen Wh itney Thoene, Queen r'un·
ner-u p Ma llory Hill , Beef Princess Ashley Putnam and Beef Prince Nathan Cook.

will not have to wait as _long
as they did last year after
school is dismissed before
the buses come in to pick
them up to take them home.
Paul . McElroy, transporta~ion director, said all of the
elementary students should
be home around 4 p.m. which
is considerably ~arlier than

last year.
.s uperintende-nt. sa id there check and see how the new
The ,changes in bus sched- will be no beginning or dis- scheduling affects them. The
uling also required the Meigs missill time changes at either changes are as follows:
Bu s .&gt;6. starting about 7:15
Local Board of Education to the middle or high schools
a.m.,
Wolf Pen from St. Rt .
make a change in the time although there will be some
school starts .;11 the elemen- minor bus time ·and route 143 to Bunker Hill Rd.
· Bus 22. 7:308 a.m .. all of
tary school from 8:30 a. m to changes.
Today McEJoy released · Union Ave. and Mulberry for
8:15 a.m. and the di smissal
time from J: 15 to 2:-+5 p.m. changes in ihe bus schedules Middle School and High
Please see Meigs, AS
Ho"Yever. William Buckley. and encouraged students to

Pretty Baby
Contest ·

Details on Page A2

2 SECnONS -

Diamond Export of Albany ·
paid $1, 125 for the gra nd
champion . market goat, sold
by Scout Facemyer, and
Moodispaugh Auctioneering
Service of Tuppers Plains purchased Nicole Moodispaugh's
reserve champion market goat
. for $700.
.
The grand champion dairy
feeder, shown by Audrionna
. Pullins, was sold for $1,250 to
Bob's
Market
and
Greenhouses of Mason , W.Va.
Brenn~
Holter' s reserve
· champton datry feeder went to
Fanners Bank, for$! ,050.
.Hometown Market, a new
btdder thts year after orenmg
for busmess tn the former
Vaugha~'s Supermarket locatton th1s spnng, purchased
the grand cham~ion market
steer, weighmg tn at I,230
pounds, tor $2,850. We Can
Fabncators purchased Tylor .
Fryar's I ,250-pound reserve
champion ste~r for $2.550.
McDonald s of Pomeroy
patd $2,000 for Jacob
parker's 540-pound ~rand
champiOn commerctal Ieeder
steer. Ftsher Funeral Home
bought
the
420-pound
resetve champion, shown by
Crat_g Jones, tor $1,700.
Dtamond Export returned
to t~e sale to pay $,2.000 for
ActiOn Facemyer s grand
ch,ampton market lamb, wtth
0 Bleness Health Systems of
. Athens,
buymg
Kaylee
Mtlam s reserve champ1on
for $I,OOO.
· Farmers Bank purchased
the grand champiOn datry .
market steer from Kelsey
Holter for $2 I00 . Little
Texas' purcha~ed Alyssa
Holter's reserve champion
dairy market steer for $2.250.
Hometown Market. Home
National Bank and Hendrix
Heatin g and Cooling of
· Please see Livestock. AS

Meigs Local bus route changes announced; first da,y of school Wednesday
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Calendars

BSection
A2

. '© 2005 Ohio VaHey· Publishing,Co.·

ROCKSPRINGS - The
pretty baby contest at the
142nd Meigs County Fair
was sponsored by the Home
National Bank which provided $50 savings bonds for the
first place winner in each age
category.
Little Miss Meigs County
Mattie Finlaw distributed
green ribbons to each partici ChaJtene Hoefttch/ photos In the boys category of the pretty baby contest. the winners from
pant and an envelope to the Winners in the prettY baby contest for girts were ·from the left, birth the left were birth to six months. Sephen Sand!)rs Ill. of Cheshire,
winner after the out-of-coun- to three· months, Hannah ,Hart. Pomeroy. held by Lana Hart 3 to . held by Adnanne Tilley: 3 to 6 months. Riley James Lanham,
ty judges announced their 6 months, Hannah Frederick, Pomeroy; held by Penny Smith: 6 to Pomeroy. held by Jason Lanham; 6 to 12 months. Austin Smith of
decision.
1~ months. Haley Boring, Harrisonvtle, held by Eva Crabtree: '12
Pol)1eroy, held by Samantha Smith: 12 to 18 mMths. Ethan
A total of 64 children were to 18 months, SHawna Waugh. Middleport. held by Mitchell Daniel Short. Chester. held by Lisa Short: 18 to 24 months. Be.n
entered in the competition Waugh: 18 to 24, Kelly Jo Burns,. Middleport. held,by Levi Burns: Bailey. Long Bottom. held by Kim Bailey; 2 years, Justin Pierce.
chaired by Janie Fitch, Fair . 2 years. Kytie Danielle Gheen. Long Bottom. held by Danny Gheen: Syracuse. held by Jason Pierce. and 3 years. Tylor Combs.
Board member. ·
and 3 years, Jasmine Brewer, Pomeroy, ]1eld by Stehan)e Brewer. · Pomeroy, held -by Mandy Combs.

Well Muscled/Fle~hed $48-$54 Medium/Lean $45-549:
Thin/Light $40-$45: Bulls 560-570.

. This -rally is to gather support for
a bond. issue to build new :schools
in the Gallipolis City School District.

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $585-S 1.035: Bred Cows S390-S840:
Baby Calves 520-$225: Goats. $15-585: Lambs. $111-dn.:
Bulls. $50-dn.

.

Upcoming specials:
Replacement brood cow .,aJe. · 12:30 p.m. Wedne,day.
Aug. 24 .
For more information. call Brad at (7.f0) 5X.f-.fK21 or
De Wayne at (740) 339-024 !'. Vi,it the Web ;ite at
www.uproducers.com

.

Call Heather Dunlap, RN, locally at
446-5940 or toll free. at 1-866-855-8702
for more informaUon on secondhand smoke
•
or for help to stop smoking.

At this Rally:

Monday, August 22, 2005, 7.:00 PM
Galliq Academy High School Auditorium

Funded by the Ohio Tobacco Use Prevention and &lt;:2ntrol Fo.~u•n•d•a·t~io_n_ _ _ _ __

Red Dot tor Kids CampGign. David Shaffer. Treasurer. PO . Box 32. Gallipolis. 0H 45631

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Master Plan Update
How much wtll it Cost?
Question &amp; Answer Session
Tools for Door-to-Door Campaigning

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:The Daily Sentinel

2005 MEIGS

COUNTY·FAIR

PageA2

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The Daily Sentinel

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MoQday,August22,2005

·~ BY THE BEND

:Community Calendar
-~
· ----------------------------------------

Public .meetings

the new year and get
acquainted with school pro· .
cedures. Refreshments.
POMEROY ~ The Meigs
High
School
Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the · Memorial Field
Lounge.

Monday, Aug. 22
· POMEROY Mei~s
County. Library Board wtll
meet at 3 p.m. at the
Po!Jleroy Library.
·
RACINE
Racine
Village Council wi.ll meet in
Friday, Aug. 26
recessed session at 7 p.m. at
RACINE
Southern
: the municipal building.
will
hold
- Orange Elementary
: ALFRED
·
Celebrating
Achievement
~ Township Trustees, special
- sessiOn, 7:30 p.m ., home .of Day at 9 a.m. to recognize
studellls from fourth to
· the clerk, Osie Foil rod. ,.
eighth grades who passed the.
state achievement and proficiency tests last year.
•
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Beth Sergent/ photo

;The Wildhorse Cafe purchased the Reserve Champion Market Hog for $1,050. Pictured is Brent
:Buckley from 'the Wild horse Cafe. showman Renee Colburn, Queen First Runner-up Mallory Hill,
.. Fair King Tyler Lee. Fair Queen Whitney Thoene , Swine Princess, Swine Prince Eugene Patterson.

Monday, Aug. 22
RACINE
Southern
• Elementary will hold an open
house for parents and students in first through eighth
' gmdes from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
POMEROY
- Meigs
Monday, Aug. 22
High School will hold a open
CHESTER - Shade River
house for freshman and new Lodge 453 will hiJ!d a special
students from 6 to 7 p.m. : meeting 7 p.m. for the purInformation at 992-2158.
pose of conferriog the
POMEROY Meigs entered apprentice 'degre·e on
Elementary School will hold two
candidates.
an open house from 6-7:30 Refreshments.
p.m.
1\Jesday, Aug. 23
·
Everyone is welcome and
POMEROY - The Meigs
~ refreshmen.ts will be served.
County , American Cancer
Society 'Taskforce will meet
. Thesday, Aug. 23
at noon in the basement conTUPPERS PLAINS ' Back to School Open House ference room of the Meigs .
Library:
for students and parents at Co.unty Public
. Eastern Elementary School Lunch will be provided . Call
: and Eastern High School, 5 992-6626 for information or ·
to 7 p.m. Meet teachers for to RSVP
'

Beth Sergentfphoto

Farmers Bank purchased the Grand Champion Dairy Market Steer for $2,100. Picture'd is Paul .,
Reed from Farmers Bank, showman Kelsey Holter, Dairy PrinGe Kirk Pullins , Queen first runnerup Mallory Hill, Fair Queen Whitney Thoene, Fair King Tyler Lee.

Beth Sercentjphoto

Beth Sergent; photo

O'Bieness Health Systems purchased the Reserve Champion
,
Brian J. Reed/ photo
Market · Lamb for $1,000. O'Bieness representative Kim
,Ohirley Washburn of Washburn's Dairyette bought the reserve . Dettwiller is pictured with showman, Kaylee Milam, Fair King
~ham pion pen . of market rabbits from Saralisha Powell for
Tyler Lee , Fa ir Queen Whitney Thoene, handler Morgan Burt,
$400. Also pictured are Mallory Hill, Fair Queen runner-up, Fair Queen first runner-up Mallory Hill.
King Tyler Lee, Fair Queen Whitney Thoene. Little Miss Meigs
County Mattison Finlaw. and Rabbit Princess Heaven Westfall .

Hometown· Market, Home National Bank and Hendrix Heating
and Cooling purchased the Grand Champion Market Hog· for
$1,300. Pictured are representatives of the businesses Tony
Hendrix, Richard Hill, Bill Neese, showman Alyson Dettwiller,
Queen first runner-up Mallory Hill , Fair Queen Whitney Thoene ,
Fair Kmg Tyler Lee, Swine Princess Shawnella Patterson ,
Swine Prince Eugene Patterson.

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Sentinel ·

B~an

J: Roed/photo

. Fisher Funeral Home purchased Taylor Russell's grande champion rabbit pen for $4 70. Adam McDaniel. buyer, is pictured
with Mallory Hill , Fair Queen runner-up, Fair King Tyler Lee, Fair
Queen Whitney Thoene, Little Miss Me1gs County Mattison
Finl~w . and Rabb it Princess Heaven WestfalL

Subscribe today:
992·2156

NewsCh·annel
Monday, August 22
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise
from 60 to 77 by late this
morning. Skies will range
from partly cloudy to mostly
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the southwest turning
from the north as the morn·
ing progresses .
Aftemoon (1·6 p.m.) .
It's going to be a cloudy
afternoon. Temperatures ·will
stay near 79 with today's
high of 81 occurring around

2 p.m. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the north turning from
the southwest as the after·
noon progresses. ·
Evening
(7.
p.m.·
Midnight)
It w.ill continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will
fall from 75 early this,
evening to .69. Winds will be
5 to 10 MPH from the north .
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
It wi'll remain cloudy.
Temperatures will decline
from 66 to today's low of 54

Cha~ene

Hoeftlchfphoto

by 6 a.m. Winds will be 5 to
10 MPH from the ·northeast.

Popular with Meigs County fairgoers were the ATV pulls held on the pull track at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds Saturday afternoon .

Tuesday, August 23
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will climb
from 53 to 70 by late this
morning. Skies will be sunny
to mostly c)oudy with 5 MPH
winds from the northeast.
Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
Temperatures will hold
steady around 74. Skies will
be sunny with 5 to i 0 MPH
winds from the northeast.

A
TV
pulls
popular
with
fairPoers
.. ·
o·

POMEROY - There were
plenty of entries in the ATV
pulls held on the pull \rack at
the RockSprings Fairgrounds
, as a Sati'uday night feature of
. the Meigs County Fair.
The winners in their
respective. classes. listed first
through fifth , were Brian
' Schott, Gary VanSkiver, sec. ond and third, and Tim Barr.
. 12 HP and over garden
: tractor: Zack Burke, Don
. Elliott, Justin Elliott, Don
· Elliott and Patrick Day.

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...

12 HP and under garden Will.
tractor: Don Eliott, Ellen
400 CC: Matt Evans. Mike
Patterson, Dave Washburn. Will, Craig Wolfe, Eli Roush,
Justin Elliott and Shane and Bob Wiliams.
Roush.
300 CC: Darrell Lee, Leo
Utility:
Eric
Spencer, Bailey, Timothy Barrett, Kim
Shawn · Corn, Paul Will , . Sellers, and Roger Manley.
Mitchell Dickess and Davis
1150 Modified; Bri.an
Malge.
Schott, Gary Van Skiver, sec500 CC: Frank Jarvis, Jon ond and third, and Shawn
Bartlett, Charles Noland, and Corn and Adam Corn.
Shawn Dailey.
Ladies: Wendi Miller, Kay
Kids : Branson Barr, Alex Spencer, Susan Reeves,
Bartlett, Charles Noland, Holley
Williams,
and
Dylan Lavender, and Adam Bethany Manstleld.

Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
Please see Dave or Brenda at the· The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.

,

,.... l
'
r-------~-~---w- ·
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1 Col. x 2" - .
Weekday

$11.20
Beth Sergentjphoto

Joyce Burns of D1amond Exports purchased th e Grand
Champion Market Lamb for $2.000. is pictured with Action
Facemyer, showman, Fair King Tyler Lee. Fair Queen Whitney
Thoene. Queen first runner-up "Mallory Hill. ·

Sunday

2 Col. x 5"
.Weekday

$58.50

rtRANK YOlJ

Sunday

1 Col. x 3" ·weekday

$89.50

$17.55

2 Col. x 4"
Weekday
$46.80
Sunday
$71.60

...

$26.85
Hoeftlch/photo
: G. B. Mann of Ripley took his 1952 Farmall Super M "Easy Man" a distance of 194.48 before
· the front wheels raised from the ground and came to a stop in the 6,500 pound class at last
week's antique tractor pull at the Meigs County Fsir.

2 col. x 3"

Antique tractor pull results announced

~eekday $35.1 0

Sunday $53.70

2 Col. x 2" ·

.Weekday
$23.40
Sunday

Beth Sergentjphoto

Borders and Artwork

90069.

POINT PLEASANT - al direatur and pre-need agent
MIDDLEPORT - Erica
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. and LuAnn will continue as
Poole and Thomas Tirado, Mason County's oldest and secretary and pre- need agent.
both of MiddleJ?ort, were longest-running
fun eral · Joining the staff of Crow·
named to ·the spnng quarter establishment, has announced. Hussell Funeral Home as a
dean's list at the University new ownership and manage- licensed funeral director js
of Cincinnati.
ment.
William E. Hornsby. Bill is· a
Robert and Adria Patterson familiar face to Mason
and. Pastor Carl and Yvonne Couniy, having se rved the
Swisher have purchased citizens as a licensed funeral
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home director for seve ral years
from Louis A. Husse ll Jr. and until hi s retirement.
LuAnn Husse!L ·
Sam Ferrell joined the stal'f
Robert L Patterson II, a of Crow -Hussell Funer&lt;tl
RJO GRANDE - Brittany · lifelong resident of Mason Home in June ' 2005. He
Barnett, an Eastern High County, has been employed serves as a funeral a&lt;&gt;oc iate.
The previous owners of
School graduate, and Cassie with Crow-Hussell ·Funeral
Crow-Hussell
Home
for
more
than
13
Funeral Home
Lee, a Meigs High School
graduate, have been awarded years, receiving his training have provided caring. effithe University of Rio from the late Louis Hussell' cient service· since opening jn
Grande/Rio ·
Grande and Andy Hussell. He has 1947. and the new owner&gt;
Community · College Trustee been a licensed funeral 'direc- and staff will co nti.nue lo'
Scholarship, a renewable, tor and embalmer · for more offer the citizens of Mason
partial scholarship awarded than six years. He will serve County and the surrounding
to entering freshmem who as the · licensed funeral direc- area superior service with the
have earned a high school tor-in-charge and pre-need highe st levels of dignity.
grade point average of 3.0 agent. His wife, Adria, a compassion and integrity ;II
or above, and have demon· native of Meig~ County, an affordabl e pri ce, bringing
Ohio, has been with the more than I00 years of comstrated academic excellence,
funeral home for one year bined . experience in tfi e
leadership and extra-curricu- and
will serve as co-office funeral service industry.
lar involvement.
Crow-Hussell
Funeral
manager and pre-need· agent.
Brittany is the daughter of
Home
offers
at-need.
· preCarl F. Swisher. a lifelong
Janet Barnett Hoffman of resident of Mason County, need and cremation servic~s
· Thppers Plains and plans to will serve as a funeral associ· with
various
payil1ent
major in radiology: Lee is a1e. He has pastored the First options. They will co ntin~ e
the daughter of Randy and Church of God in Point to honor the existing preLaura Lee of Pomeroy and Pleasant for more than seven need accounts held at the
plans to major in pharmacy. years and will continue to do funeral home and we leo me
so. His wife, Yvonne, also a new pre-need accounts.
The owners and staff of
lifelong resident of Mason
County, will serve as co- Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
office manager and pre-need encourage you to call or
come .in at any time to disagent.
Louis · A. Husse ll Jr. and cuss funeral planning option s
LuAnn Hussell will continue or any questions you ·may
ATHENS
- Amber to remain with the firm. Andy have regarding funeral serSnowden of Rutland and Sam will serve as a licensed funet- vices .
Mansfield of Pomeroy were
recently inducted into the Phi
Beta Kappa Society at Ohio
University.
The society recently initiated 120 liberal arts sutdents at
Subscribe today • 992·2 t 55
its annual induction ceremo'
ny. It is the nation's oldest
and lar~e~t academic society.
OU juntors must have a grade
(lun.~111L11'4','fl~ ~a~r I~
point average of at least 3.8
\" P. \\'\ (1un'f"'IC11C\..x-ttl~
and seniors at least a 3.65 in
\kmt'truf Amt.matn l:kl.1rd J
order to be considered for
h'W'tn :.~c l'!l.'i~ l&lt;.~ intd•
membership. Since Phi Beta
20 ~ rs C\fencno:
Kappa is a liberal ·arts honor
\1cmt:rr .-i Anl!.-ocan o\~
Auto.Accidellls Workers'
society, students must also
nf Metiu-al ArtJ;ll.lnL1Urt' :
'
have ·completed 75 percent of
Compensarion
their course work in the
• SPJnt lnjurlc..,
College of Arts and Sciences,
~ Mcdit.ilrT
• ~ lnstll'2lll('t1
with focuses on foreign lan• Acupun..'tutt
• Sarnr o., oltlf'l·
guage, humanities and social
science and math and science.
Snowden was the 2005
Voinovich Institute Summer
Research Scholar. Mansfield
is the social chair of the
Mortar Board and a member
'
of ' the
Golden
Ke y
Ravenswood, WV
316
Washlnatrin
St
International Honour Society.

Earn Trus~e
Scholarships

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.Proud to be apart of your life.

Chlrtent

Little Tex&lt;js t;lllrchased the Reserve Champion Dairy Mar~et
Steer for $1.250. Pictured are representat1yes from Little
Texas Wayne and Louella Roush . shownrnan Alyssa Holter.
Dairy Prince Kirk Pull&lt;ns. Queen first runner-up Ma llory Hill ..
Fair QueeW Wh itney Thoene. F.air King Tyler Lee.

about ~hich neither of you
seems willing to compromise.
I strongly recommend that the
two of you get premarit.al
counseling. It appears there
are many important subjeCts
you need to discuss - includ·
ing in which religion you plan
to raise your children.
DEAR ABBY: My wife and
I rent a house from her motper, I run a home-based bu!i ness and use. our bedroom as
an office. On several occ·asions I have returned to th'e
hou se and found my business
documents rearranged.
·
I suspected . someone w~s
going through the hou se in
our absence. so I set up Ill Y
camcorder and left it running
one afternoon. When I came
home later. I played it back
and saw I had caught "on
tape" my mother-in-law
going through our personal
belongings and my private
papefs.
I'm afraid if we confronl
her she might evict us. How
should we handl e this'! DISAPPOINTED SON-INLAW IN FLORIDA
;
DEAR DISAPPOINTEt&gt; :
Do not confront her. lpstall: a
deadbolt lock on your bed room/office door and keep it
locked whenever you' re away
from the house. And .as soen
as you can save enough io
rent or buy another place, ge1
the heck out of there.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Burell, also
know11 as Jeanne Phillips,
a11d was four~ded by her
mother, Pauli11e Phillips ..
Write
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A11ge/e.~, CA

Earn Phi Beta
Kappa keys

Sunday

$17.90

August 22, 2005

Local funeral home gets
OnUC
dean's list new owners, management

'

i\_ -eOI.{nty;.~i~

Mo~day,

Thursday, Aug. 25
CHESTER -Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold a special
meeting at 7 p.m. at the hall
DEAR ABBY: As apractic·
for the purpose of conferring
ing
physician, a mother, and
the Master Mason degree on
CEO of the nation's largest
~ candidate. Refreshments.
.health foundation, the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation, I
care deeply about the 45 milDear
lion Ameficans who lack
Abby
health insurance- especially_
the
8.4
million
uninsured
chi!·
Thesday, Aug. 23
·
POMEROY - A Meigs dren.
County . Health Department . These kids often do not
will hold a childhood ·immu- · receive needed medical care
Kids
·and
ni~ation clinic from 9 a.m. to for sore throats, earaches and "Coverinll
asthma.
However,
many
of
Families,
•
and
encourages
II a.m. and I p.m . to 3 p.m.
Bring shot records for chil- them are eligible for pro- parents of noninsured children who must be accompa· grams that provide low-cost dren to call (toll- free) 877or free health-care coverage, 543-7669 (877-KIDS-NOW)
nied by an adult Bring med- eyen
if their parents work and to find out if your children are
ical cards if applicable. A $5 earn only modest incomes.
eligible. The need is great, so
donation is appreciated but
These programs exist in please don't wait to place that
not required.
every state and the District of can:
Columbia through Medi_caid
DEAR ABBY I am
Friday, Aug. 26
and the State Children's engaged to be married. The
SYRACUSE
Health Insurance Program. problem is that 'Todd" and I
Recyclable Recycle Days Eligibility varies by state, but come from different religions.
will take place from 8 a.m. to families of four earning up to I'm a Catholic and he is a
4 p.m., Aug. 26-28 at . th~ $38,000 a year or more may Baptist.
parking lot near the Syracuse qualify. The programs cover
Todd refuses to even conVillage garage. The service is doctor visits, hospitalizations, sider being married in a
free. Appliance can be prescriptions and more.
Catholic church and. because
Makmg sure our chfldren he won 't, I won't get married
dropped off or those wishing
to have appliances picked' up have health-care coverage is in his. I really want a church
during the three day event an investment in their liealthy wedding , and my mother
should call the following . future as well as our nation's . doesn't want me to be married
numbers: 447-2151, .447- Thank you, Abby, for helping 'in any other church. (I don't
2152, 992-3140. Accepted America's kids by printing attend church on a regular
·
will . be anything metal this . - RISA LAVIZZO- basis.)
So, what do I do to get .my
including air conditioners, MOUREY, M.D., PRESIperfect
wedding? - CONDENTANDCEO
hot water tanks, washers, etc.
FUSED
DEAR
DR.
·
LAVIZZOIN KENTUt;:KY
No tires or trash. ·
MOUREY: Thank' you for the
DEAR CONFUSED: That
important heads-up. That a depends upon what you concountry as rich and powerful sider a "perfect wedding." If
as the United States does )lOt it involves being married in a
have a comprehensive nation- Catholic church, you will
al health program protecting have to break this engageall of our children is a nation- ment and find a nice Catholic
al embarrassment. .
boy. If it's marrying Todd,
Readers, the Robert Wood you will probably have to
Johnson foundation sponsors change religions.
a prografn nationwide called Because this is a subject

.

Keeping
Meigs.; ·

PageA3

Giving /f,ids access to health _
care ensures ·a healthy future ·

Other events

School events

Clubs and
organizations

'

. POMEROY ~ Winners in
: the antique .tractor pu II at
the Meigs County .mve been
announced by the fair board.
In the varil)llS weight
classes, the first, second and
third places, listed respec: tively, were as follows:
: 4,000
pounds:
Ryan
· Alderman with an Oliver
880 going a distance of
271.73 for the win ; Kenny
Brucks with an Oliver 770;
· and Ed Smith with a
,, '
: Farmall H.

4500 pounds: John Polen
with an Oliver 77 going
262.94 for the win; Ryan
Alderson with an Oliver
880; and Kenny Brooks
with an Oliver T I 0.
Ryan
5500 . pounds:
Alderman with an Oliver
880, pulling 302 .25 for the
win; G. B. Mann. with a
Farmall Super M- and Bob
Jewell with a Farmall M.
6500
pounds: · Bill
Burbridge with an MM UB,
pulling 309.3 I for the win;

Kenny Brooks with an
Oliver 770. and Dale Smith
with a JD A.
7500
pounds:
Ralph
Kelvington with a JD A
pulling 307.99 for the win;
Morton Butcher with a
Farmall Super M, aild Ted
Smith · with a Farmall 400.
. 8500
pounds:
Ralph
Kelvington with a JD A
pulling 347.14 for the win;
Ted Smith · with a Farmall
.400. and Zach Weber with a
JD 730.

®r..tKt~l}Y tK~ n~m~
1.\QI\I~~Jl~~\.O)J~.

Ravenswood
Chiropractic: Center

304-273-5321 :mr

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~The D~y
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:: The Daily Sentinel
••
.• .
·•

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

~:

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Monday, Aug. 22. the 234th da) of 2005. There are
131 days left in the year. •
- Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 22. 1775. Britain's King George Ill proclatmed the
American colonies in a state of open rebellion .
On this date.
.
·in 1485, Englaqd\ King Richard Ill was kill ed in the Battle
of Bosworth Field. ending the War of the Roses
In 1787, mve ntor John Fttch demonstrated his steamboat on
tbe Delaware River to-delegates of the Continemal Conoress
In 1846. the United States annexed New Mextco.
"
In 1851, the scttooner America outrdccd the Aurora oft the
English coast to win a trophy that came to be known 'as the
America's Cup
- In 1902, President Theodore Roosevelt became the first
U.S. chtef executtve to ride in an mnomobile, in Hartford,
Conn .
In 1911. it was announced in P,1ris that Leonardo da Vinci's
"_Mona Lisa" had been stolen from the Louvre Museum the
night before. (The painting turned up two years later, in Italy.)
In 1956, President Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon
were nominated for second terms in office by the Republican
national convention in San Francisco.
In 1978. President Jomo Kenyatta. a leading figure in
Kenya's struggle for independence, died; Vice President
Oaniel Arap Moi was sworn in as acting president.
, ,ln 1985, 55 people d1ed when fire broke out aboard a Bntish
Atrtours charter Jet on a runway at Manchester Airport in
England.
. In 1989, Black Panther co-founder Huey P. Newton was
shot to death in Oakland, Calif. (Guoman Tyrone Robinson
was later sentenced to 32 years to life in prison.)
One year ago: As shocked spectators watched, armed
thteves stole one of four versions of the Edvard Munch mas. t&lt;;rpiece "The Scream" and a second Munch painting,
"Madonna," from the Munch museum in Oslo, Norway,
Today's Birthdays: Author Ray Bradbury is 85. Heart surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley is 85. Retired General H. Norman
Schwarzkopf ts 71. ABC newsman Morton Dean is 70.
Baseball Hall-of-Farner Carl Yastrzemski is 66 Actress
'lalerie Harper is 65 . Football coach Bill Parcells is 64. CBS
newsman Steve ' Kroft is 60. Actress Cindy Williams is 58.
Musician David Marks (The Beach Boys) is 57. Country
smger Holly Dunn is 48. Rock musician Vernon Reid JS 47.
Countr~ singer Collin Raye is 45 Country singer Ricky Lynn
!Jregg ts 44. Rock smger Roland Orzabal (Tears For Fears) is
44. Rpck musictan Debbi Peterson (The Bangles) 1s 44. Rock
musidan Gary Lee Connor (Sc reaming Trees) ts 43. Sirtger
T-ori Amos is ~2: Country singer Mila Mason is 42. Rhythma~d-blues musictan James De Barge ts 42. Tennis pi aye~ Mats
WIIander ts 41. Rapper GZAffhe Genius is 39. Actor Rick
Vlme is 34. Rock mus ician Paul Doucette (Matchbox Twenty)
ts 33. Rap-reggae stnger Becnte Man ts 32. Singer Howie
Dorough (Backstreet Bo)IS ) ts 32. Actress Jenna Leigh Green
1s 31. Rock mustctan Jell Stmco (Stmple Plan) is 27
.. Thought for Today: "Authors and actors and artists and
such/ Never know nothmg. and never know much ." -.
Dorothy Parker ( 1893-190 7)

LETTERS TO T'HE
EDITOR
.
.
. Leuers to cite edicor are tre lcome. The I' should be less rhan
300 words. All feller.\ are .lllhjee/ to edirmg. m11s1 be si;rned,
and include address ami relefllllme -nllmber. No umigned letters will be published Lellt'r.\ ,should he in good tll.lte.
addressing issues, not per.wma/iries Lerrer.1 of rhanb to organizations and mdit idual&lt; will nor be ac&lt; epted forpublicariml.
.
1

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

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Ohl9 Valley Publishing Co.

Our ma1n concern 1n all stories 15 to be Published every afternoon Monday
accurate If you know of an error 1n a through Fm!ay 111 Court Street.
: !tory. call th~ newsroom at (740) 992· Pomeroy, Oh1o Secood·class poi;lage
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Department extensions are:
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: Reporter: Brian Reed , E11t 14
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52 Weeks

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PageA4

OPINION

Sentinel _

' 53.55
' 107.10

'214 .21

'

Monday, August 22, 2005

~onday,August22,2oos

It'~

not enough to say that
world affairs are in a crazy
state, and leave it at that which is exactly what I dtd
last week i~ outlining how
the United States is effectively boosting the spread of
sharia law and the Iranian
sphere of intluence in the
MiQ.dle East. It's easy to say
this is nuts. But what do we
do now'?
It's time to get back to
basics. And by basics, I
mean getting back to First
Term W, back to when the
president's
strategy w ·
defend and protect the
Untted States was . to take
military action against terrorists and the nations that
sponsor them. By unfortunate contrast. the securit~
strategy of Second Term W
is best described as bringmg
to ihese same terronsts and
the nations that sponsor
them universal s,uffragc.
Getting back ro Bush basics
requires a re-reckoning of
what and why we fight and, JUSt as important, for
what and why we don't
fight.
Do we fight to spread
democracy '/ Or do we . tight
to stop jihad'? Far better to
fight to stop jihad. Second
Term W believes democratic
pnnciples will neutralize
Jihad - a.k.a. "extremism"
111 the strangled parlance of
political correctness. It may
not be polite to notice, but
the nasty reality is that jihad
is neutralizing democratic
principles. The fact the
administration must reckon
with is that the concept of
human rights - the ideal of
liberty and justice f?r all -

Diana
West

isn't a natural byproduct of
majority rule. Islamic terrorists still support Islamic, ter-.
rorism, even when, as· in the
Pales'ttrrian Authority or
Lebanon, they are democratically elected; and Islamic
sharia erodes human rights,
even
when ,
as
111
Afghanistan and likely Iraq.
it is implicitly mandated by a
constitution.
It' s time for the administration to consider the possibtlitv that the democractic
_pro(e ss alone - constitutions, legislatures. ballot
boxes - doesn't result in
Jeffersonian
democracy.
Such a re-reckoning do~sn 't
mean abandoning Iraq. But
it does mean reordenng our
goals. Forget the Iraqi constitution for now. More
important IS a single-mmded
effort to eradicate the death
squads that destabilize the
country and threaten to
exhaust our staying ·power
In getting back to Bush
basics, that means t~king
action against the nations
that sponsor these terrorists:
Iran, for instance.
Tragically for 'the human
race. the strategy articulated
by First Term W is a novel ,
never- before-implemented
doctrine. Re-reading Claire
Sterling's "The · Terror

Network" (Holt, Rinehart
and Winston). a 1980 work
of ' careful analysis that
unraveled the Soviet-sponsored tangle of terrorists
from · the Baader-Meinhof
Gang (now defunct) to vari- .
ous Palestmian terror groups
(now approaching statehood), drives home the
shocking fact that throughout the 1970s - the tirst real
"fright decade'' of terrorist
kidnappings, assassination&gt;,
embassy takeoyers and
bombmgs designed to desta·bilize mainly Europe. often
in
the
name
of
Pale.,tiilianism
the
Western democracies never
took action · against, never
even mentioned the names
of. terrori sm\ state spon·sors: This was the time of the
Cold War, and a craven poli cy of ''soft neutrality"
toward the terror masters in
th e Kremlin and its prqxies
prevailed.
More astonishing. the
dcmocractes never took
actton agatnst the extensive
network of martial training
camps that turned out ten s of.
thousand s of deadly terrorists. not only in. the Soviet
Union and the Eastern
European ''hloc" countries,
but also in Cuba. Libya,
Algeria. Syria. Lebanon.
South Yemen and North
Korea. These camps for
killm - camps for killing
Western democracy - functioned freely under clear
skies never penetrated by a
NATO bomber. This was a
moral surrender that undermined Western civilization
to a11 · incalculable extent.
Nothing really changed

Hany E. Stobart Sr.

(Ronald Reagan's one-time
bombing of Libya notwithstanding) until Sept. II and
George W. Bush.
This little history lesson
should ring a bell. particularly in light of Time magazine's report about how Iran
has
marched
its
Revolutionary Guard units
into Iraq to kill Americans
- units that, according to
Time. traip in Iraq 's Sadr
City district , Lebanon and
"another country" (very posstbly diplospeak for Iran).
Puttin ~ thi s together with a
most Ctll'&lt;mraging discussion
of Amel ica's massive Air
Force potential · against
proto-nuclear Iran from The
Guardian (!lagged by the
blog Vtew from the Rtght)
makes me wonder: Can Iraq
ever be stabilized wtthout
de-fangmg Iran '/ Shouldn't
there be. for starters, a big
bull's-eye on these Iranian
training camps?
Such questions need
addtcssing. lt's not enough
for Donald Rumsfeld to
glan cmgly refer to, m an
interview. Iranian interference in Iraq , or for the president 10 let drop that "all
options are on the table"
regarding Iran 's compliance
with international nuclear
regulation. We need to be
educated. not left wondering
in what sounds like pusillanimous silence. We need to be
prepared. We need First
Term W.

Harry E. Stobart, Sr., 88, of Letart Falls, passed away at
12:55 p.m. Sunday at his residence.
· Funeral arrangments will be announced by the Cremeens
Funeral Home, of Racine.

Democratic leader
asks for explanation of
imp~achment process
BY MAn LEINGANG

to ask Taft to resign , said
Redfern , of Port Clinton.
Taft , who says he will not
COLUMBUS House restgn, is the first governor
'Democrats have asked the charged with a cnme, and a
Legislature's legal research JUdge found him guilty after
arm to outline the process of he pleaded no contest last
impeachment
against week. Taft was fined $4,000.
Republtcan Gov. Bob Taft.
Redfern requested a memo
who was convicted last week explaining the impeachment
of four ethics law violations. process from the Ohio
When the Democrats meet - Legislative
Service
Tuesqay ' to discuss their Commission, a nonpartisan
response to Taft's conviction agency that he Ips elected
for failing to report golf out- officials research proposed
ings and other gifts, they legislation and reviews conwant to understand the stitutional law.
impeachment process, but no
An article of impeachment
decision about whether to would have to be approved
pursue Taft's ouster is expect- by a majority of the 99ed, said Rep. Chris Redfern, member House, something
the top Democrat in the the Democrats - who hold
House.
39 seats - couldn't achieve
"Impeachment is such a without the votes of at least
serious thing . and it's not II Republicans. If passed,
something to pe careless an impeachment trial would
about,"
Redfern
said be held in the · GOP-conSunday. "But we would all trqlled Senate.
do well as members of the
Redfern said he has not disHouse to understand what cussed impeachment with
the process is."
Senate leaders of either party.
The House Democrats will
Senate
Prestdent
Bill
consider other alternatives Harris said Sunday that talk
for what thetr response of impeachment is unwarshould be, including whether ranted.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

(Diana We st is a columnist
for The Wa.,lringron Times.
Site can be contacted via
d iq nawesr@ ve rizon.ner.)

-Livestock

I -TUINK TilE

AM~ICAN

P!;OPLG ARE

GONNA I.OVE lT!

: ,,

•

Roll the dice
Robinson climbed out into announced it was renouncspace and repaired it with a ing violence against British
little pair of scissors. It was.a rule, a decision Prime
gutsy. unprecedented event. Minister Tony Blair declared
So arc a lot of things in life . "a step of unparalleled magAfter a week of high anxi- nitude ." Veteran IRA strateTad
ety, improvisation and sec- gist Gerry Adams concurred:
Bartimus ond-guessing, Commander
"There is a time to engage.
Eileen Collins and her crew
to reach out, to put the war
made a perfect landing a day
late at Edwards Air Force behind us all ... This is that
time."
shuttle Di scovery' s heat Base m California.
The late ABC anchorman.
shield might interfere with
Like shuttle astronauts.
Peter
Jennings, took issue
its safe return to Earth.
- some people treat iheir hero.Smce dinosaurs ate our is_m as just another day.at the with viewers who thought
ancestors, life has been a roll office. Others become his job was to make us feel
safe. As he told author Jeff
of the dice. Famine, infant heroes without thinking.
mortality,' and disease' still
"He did assist some pas- Alan, "some days (the news
pose greater threats to the sengers out of the ravine and is) reassuring, some days it's
'human race than suicide he did indeed board the air- absolutely destructive."
bombers on London sub- craft ," said ii Toronto policeWe know too well how
ways. aboard Amcncan air- man . confirming that crash villains behave - they strap
liners or in Spamsh tra,ms.
eyewitness Guy Ledez raced on backpacks to blow us up.
Terrorism has forced us to mto a burmng Air France · We don't know enough
acknowledge that evil hides jumbo jet to make sure no about people of goQ&lt;I _will
tn dark corners and distant passengers were trapped who. every day. act with
caves. but we can 't let the instde.
,
good Intentions . That' s
"unforeseen" paralyze us.
Defense Mini ster Sergei because since 9/11, we've
Shuttle co-pilot James Kell y. lva no-: rejoiced after an
alluding to the Challenger international rescue mission suffered from a low-grade
disaster two years ago. said saved six Russian sailors fever of fear. It's time to cure
the fact that he and his col- and a civi lian trapped 600 ourselves by balancing news
leagues were in space on a feet below the surface just of despair with ' stories of
5.8 million -mile journey hou rs before they ran out of mspirattOn. Only then will
despite know ing the thou- oxygen. "We have· seen in we ~nd psychic equilibrium.
(Log 011 to www.tadbarsand things that could go deed,. not in words, what
wrong "means we don't the brotherhood of the sea rimus.com 10 read daily co01have paralysis by analysis.'' means:· he said.
.1frucrion update&gt; 001 TAD'S
Discovery's problem with
Recently. there 's even BLOG. You mar also' write
protruding filler mater~al been a formal end' to ·a 35- to Tad c/o The Wome11
from the heat shield got year guerrilla war The Irish Syndicate, P 0. Box 10169.
fixed when astrona ut Steve Republican
Army Co lumbia. Mo. 65205. ).

'·
..

Supporters see better futon: for Harriet Beecher Stowe house
BY LISA CORNWELL

from PageA1

When I need courage, I
drive a few miles down a ,.
one-lane road to sit quietly
111 a country churchyard
beside. the grave of aviator
Charles A. Lindbergh.
No matter how many
times I' ve !lawn across
oceans in jetliner comfort, I
remain awed by his 1927
solo crossing of the Atlantic
in a plane no bigger than my
ptckup truck . A couple of
sandwiches. a thermos of
coffee and a compass. pomted east sustamed him. but it
was courage that got him
into the tiny cockpit.
The lifelong adventurer,
who died of cancer in 1974.
often warned his children to
be wary of "the unforeseen,"
but never sat around ,waiting
for life to come to htm .
Aware of its (,!angers. he
rushed headlong at it , choosmg for hi s epitaph the fi rs t
line of Psalm 139: "If I take
the wings of the morning,
and dwell in the uttermost
p&amp;rts of the sea ... "
I vtstted Lindbergh' s grave
to remind myself that not
every problem becomes a
c~tas troph e. I needed to
·remember that not all bad
news ts f~tal. that most problems are merely challenges
to human ingenuity. My visit
with the Lone Eagle's sptrit ·
quelled my . worries that
potential tlaws 111 the space

~

Deaths

Geiting back to Bush basics

.The Dailt Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

.•

Tuppers Plain s JOined ,together to purchase Alyson
Dettwtller's grand champion
market hog for $1 ,300, and
Wild Horse Cafe of Pomeroy
purchased Renee Colburn's
reserve champion hog for
$1,050.
Complete sale results are as
follows, in sale order:
Market rabbits
Taylor Russell, g.c.. .$470,
F1sher
Funeral
Home;
Saralisha Powell, r.c., 400,
Washburn's Dairyene;·Randy
Davis, 230. Parker Corp.;
Heaven Westfall, 1,000. Paul
Mercer · Logging
and
Sawmill; Logan Grate, 370.
Ridenour Gas Service; Adam
Lambert, 275, Ray's Hunting
Supply/Rutland
Service
Center.
Market poultry
Joyce Weddle. g.c .. •$700,
Ridenour Gas Service; Hollie
Richard. r.c., 300. Birchfield
Funeral Home; Katie Keller,
335. Maw 's Diner; Ben Tillis .
250, Parker Corp.; Julie
Tillis, 270. R.C. Con struction
Co . &amp; Sons; Savannah
Moore, 250, King Ace
Hardware; David Tucker,
300, Home National Bank;
Autumn 'Hauber,
200,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. ; Kate Moore , 200,
Washburn's Dairyette.
Corey
Jarvis,
260,
Hometown Market; Zach
Moore, 240, Farmers Bank;
Cheyenne Doczi , 255, Parker
Corp. ; Ashley Samar, Home
NatiOnal
Bank;
Tyler
Brothers, 3.70, Detwiller
Lumber Co.; Joshua Parker,
270, Jeff Warner Insurance;
Amorette Salser. 295, Fisher
Fune~al Home ; Carolann
Stewart. 280, Hometown
Market; Megan Cleland, 30Q.
Jackson Hewitt; Alisha
Compson, 240, Farmers
Bank; Justin Morri s. 250.

Meigs
from PageA1
Scbool. from Union to S.R. 7
including Hiland Rd.; 7:50
a.m. Elementary on Mulberry
from S.R. 7 to 2nd St.
Bus 20, 6:50 a.m. start
time. all of .White Oak Road.
Bus 24, 7:30 a.m. start
time. all Willow Creek,
Broderick Hollow.
Bus 23 7:45a.m. stan time,
Elementary Eas1 Mam St.,
Butternut, Second and Union.
Bus 14, 7:40 a.m. start
time, Bradbury Road.
Buses with only afternoon
changes are as follow s:
Bus 7. Elementary only,

r • ••

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CINCINNATI - The two
decades that Harriet Beecher
Stowe lived in Cincinnati
helped shape the feeling s
and beliefs that led to her
anti -slavery novel, "Uncle
Tom's Cabin." ·
Now. several groups are
working to make more people outside Cincinnati aware
of the importance to
America 's heritage of her
19th century home here.
"Harriet Beecher Stowe
didn 't write the book there.
but it was where she learned
about the evils of slavery and
the efforts to help slaves ·
escape to freedom," sa id
Kathy Hoke , a spokeswoman
for the Columbus-based Ohto
AP Photo
Htstoncal Soctety that has · Harriet Beecher Stowe. who wrote "Uncle Tom 's Cabin ", ltved tn thi s house shown Wednesday
been responstble for ihe tn C1nctnnat1. for ne arly two decades. The two decades that Stowe lived tn Ctnc1nnat1 helped
house since it was donated to shape the feelings and beltefs that led to her anti-slavery novel, "Uncle Tom's Cabtn ... Now. sev·
the state in 1946,
Optimism about the histor- era I groups are working to make more· people outs ide C1ncinnat1 aw,are of the importance to
ical site'·s renewed potenual America's hentage of her 19th century home here . Opttmlsm about the htstorical stte's
as a tourist attraction stem s renewed potential as a tounst attract1on stems from the emergence of the Nattonal
from the emergence of the Underground Railroad Freedom Center.
National
Underground and the author ltved there Ripl ey home was an impor- Stowe house , said an increasRailroad Freedom Center. until her 1836 marriage to . tant Ohio stop on the mg number of vtsitors have
The Cincinnati-based mu sebeen directed there by center
um dedicated to the series or sem inary professor Calvin Underground Railroad . told staff smce July, when the
safe houses that offered shel - Stowe. She remained in her of a young slave who house began opening a few
ter to lleeing slaves ha s Cincinnati until 1850 when ran across the ice-covered day s a week to the public It
increased attention to th e the Stowes moved to nver carrying her child. was prev10usly open only by
Stowe house and other Bnmsw ick, Maine. where she That later became o~ e of the appointment.
southwest Ohio sites associ - wrote "Uncle Toni's Cabin." most dramatic scenes in
Decreased funding led the
The best-selling novel, Stowe's book.
ated with the anti-slavery
Ohio
Historical Society to
"We think it's important tor
published m 1852, deptcted
movement.
Stowe moved to Cincinnati the human toll of slavery and people to vtsit sues such as partner with netghborhood
in 1832 as a young woman made Stowe an international the Stowe and Rankin houses groups to maintain the house,
when her father, the Rev. celebrity praised by slavery's so that they can better under- which is surrounded mostly
Lyman Beecher, became opponents and condemned by stand slavery and the 'truggle by commercial buildings.
A grant from the ctty is
for freedom," said Carl B.
president of the Lane its advocates.
While in Cincmnati , she Westmoreland . the center\ financing structural repairs.
Theological Seminary.
The two-story brick hou se encountered runaway slaves senior adviser for histone and vanous groups are trying
to come up with ways to fun(!
that sits atop a hill in the e~caping · to freedom and preservation.
exhibits
and furnish the
Barbara
Furr,
who
serves
as
in
viewed
a
slave
auction
Walnut Hills neighborhood a
few miles north of downtown neighbonng Kentuc~y Her one of a handful of volunteer house with Stowe family.
was completed the next year. friend. John Rankin. whose tour guides at the Beecher items _and other period piec~ s.

'

County Commissioner Jim
Sheets; Morgan Tucker, 260,
Farmers Bank.
Market goats
Scout Facemyer, g. c.,
$1, 125 , Diamond Exports ;
Nico le Moodispaugh, r.c.,
Moodispaugh Auctioneering
Services; Casey Hannum,
230, Birchfield Funeral
Home; Shandi Beaver, 230,
Hometown Market; Morgan
Powell, 325, State Rep.
Jimmy Stewart/State Senator
Joy
Padgett;
David
McGinnis, 240 , Farmers
Bank; Cody Hannum, 310,
Baum Lumber; Tyler Barber,
425, Paul Mercer Logging
and Sawmill.
. Dairy Feeders
Audrionna Pullins, g.c.,
1,250, Bob's Market and
Greenhouses; Brenna Holter.
r.c.. 1,050, Farmers Bank;
Hannah Yost, 500, Home
National Bank; Brianna
Ayres, 520, State Senator Joy
Padgett/State Rep. Jimmy
Stewart; Stephen Yost. 500.
Shade River Ag Servtce, Kirk
Pullins,
875,
Plant;
AEP/Mountaineer
Ricky Colburn, 760. Farmers
Bank; Kara Osborne, 675.
Home National Bank; Bryan
Haggy, 700, Jackson Hewitt.
Market steers
Wade Collins, g.c., $2.850,
Hometown Market; Tylor
Fryar, r.c., 2,550, WeCan
Fabricators; Jed Anderson,
1,525, TIS Rentals; Lynda
Fryar, 1.400, Parker Corp.;
Sasha
Wriston,
1.750,
Ridenour Gas Service; Alan
Watson,
1,475,
HIS
Automotive; Brad Smith,
2,200,
Baum
Lumber;
Benjamin
Ayres,
Westmoreland Family Care
Center; Tyler Wamsley, 1,450,
Parker Corp.;
Cameron
Brinager, · 2.500.
Home
National Bank; Kayla King,
1,350, Weber Const:t:uction Co.
Commercial feeder steers
Jacob Parker, g.c., $2,000.
McDonald's ; Craig Jones,
1.700, Fisher Funeral Home:

Dylan Milam, 1,250, Paul
Mercer
Loggmg
and
Sawmil l; Timmy Warner.
1.350, The Shelly Co.:
Ashley
Life,
I,:].5.0.
Riverview Credit Union;
Jordan Wood . 1,250, Farmers
Bank; Jordan Parker. 1,300.
R.C. Construction Co . &amp;
Sons; Justin Cotterill, 1,300,
Reed &amp; Bauer Insurance ;
Ashley Putnam, 1,200,
Norris-Northup Dodge .
Tim Sands, 1,450, Home
National 1'Jank; Morgan Burt,
I ,550, Facemyer Forest
Products; Amanda Windon,
I ,325, Farmers Bank; Nathan
Cook, I, 175, Farmers Bank;
Morgan Windon, 1,275,
Nationwide
Insurance;
Alyssa Newland, 1,300,
Bedrock Rentals; Hailey
Williams;· 1,250, Diamond
Stone; Garrett Ritchie, 1,250,
Home National Bank; Ben
Buckley. 1,275, Wesam
Construction; Josh Smith.
" 1.000. fiome National Bank.
Market Lambs
·
· Action Facemyer. $2.000.
Dtamond Exports: Kaylee
Milam , 1.000. 0 ' Bleness
Health System; Lilly Ann
Jacks. 825, Peoples Bank.
Alyssa Baker. 500, Bob 's
Market and Greenhouses :
Michael Wright, 600, NorrisNorthup Dodge; Ryan Amos ,
500. Farmers Bank; Kyle
Young. 650, Holzer Clinic;
Holly Davis, 460, Holzer
Clinic; Dawn Bissell, . 500.
Williams Logging.
Alex Amos. 475 . Doug111s
Horse Logging; Hannah
Williams, 700, Facemyer
Forest
Product s;
Ryan
Beegle, 550, Home National
Bank; Suzanne Grueser, 575.
Nationwide Insurance/Jim
Rogers Agency: Olivia
Davis.
575,
Dettwiller
Lumber; Tina Drake, 575.
Wai-Mart of Mason. W.Va. ;
Kassie Sellers, 600, Home
National Bank ; Clayton
Moore . 575, Hometown
Market ; Victoria Law so n,
475, Farmers Bank; Andrew

Smeck, 500. Keith Oiler Deer
Shop; Ttm Ball. 550. Home
National Bank; Trenton
Cook. 525. Farmers Bank.
Dairy market steers
Kelsey Holter. g.c .. $2,100.
Farmers Bank; Alyssa Holter.
r.c., 2,250. Little Texas ;
Carson Yost, 1,150, Cool
Spot.
Market hogs
Alyson Detwetler, g.c.,
$1,300, Home Nattonal
Bank/Hendrix Heating and
Cooling/Hometown Market;
Renee Colburn, r.c., 1,050,
Wild Horse Cafe; Christma
Colburn, 575, J.D. Drilling;
Megan Tripp, 625, Peoples
Bank; Kyle Russell , 575, Big
Bend . Save-A-Lot; Zach
Hendrix, 825, Facemyer
Lumber Co.; Kelsey Myers,
625, Bob's Market; Morgan
Russell, 675 , McDonald's ;
Zachary Carson, 650, Ohio
Valley Bank.
Cody Rathburn. 650,
Co.;
Shawnella
Shelly
Patterson, 625, Fanners
Bank: J.R. Hupp. 750. Maw's
Diner; Heath Dettwiller. 625.
. Farmet s Bank; Michael
Manuel. 700. Home National
Bank; Dakota Arm s. 625.
Birchfteld Funeral Home .
Jenmfer Ftfe, 825. Pleasant
Valley Hosptial ; Eric Wood .
625 , Dettwiller Lumber: ,
James Ftfe, 725. Pleasant ·
Valley Hospital; Mark Guess.
675. Banks Construction
Chad Roush, 650. Depoy
Garage ; Eugene Patt erson .
600. J D. Drilling; Matthew
Gilmore, 575. Downing
Childs
Mullen
Musser
Insurance.
Georgana
Koblentz, 650. Meigs. Medical
Clinic; Terry Durst, 600,
Meigs County Republican
Pmty. Tyler Hendrix . 800.
Home National Bank; Shea
Lee , 625. Fisher Funeral
Home:)ulia Lantz. 725. E&amp;L
Blacktop Scaling: Lacey
Hupp. 675. J.D. Dtilling.
Roben Stro~l. 650. Farmers
Bank; Nicole Andru,. 675.
Williams Loggmg.

( Brick St. Rutland. S.R . 124
from CR I0 to S. R. 325 and
Salem Center Area and South
of 124.
Bus 35 Middle School.
High School, Salem Center
area. South of S.R. 124, S.R.
·124 from Painter Ridge to
Salem Fire Station.
Bus ·29. Middle ,School.
High School , Salem Center
area, North of S.R. 124, S.R.
124 from Happy Hollow to
·. Brick Street, S.R. 124 from
Corn Hollow to C.R. 10.
Bus 27, Elementary Salem
Center area, m;&gt;rth of S.R.
124, also from Elementary at
· S.R. 124 thru Rutland.
around
old
Rutland
l::lementary. Salem St. and
SR 124 Jo C.R. 10, S.R. 124

from C.R . I to S.R 325 and
.Hampton Hollow.
Bus 21. Kmg Ridge Rd.
added. All ages.
Bus II - New Lima Rd.
from Salem St. 10 Happy
Hollow. Happy Hollow. Twp.
175. Hy sell Run . Middl e
School, High S~hool. only on
New Lima from · Happy
Hollow to Smtth Ron
Bus 25 - Elementary only,
Creek
Rd ..
Leadin g
McElhinney thm Ntchols
Rd .. Rutland area South of
S.R. 124 from Depot St. to
Titus Rd . and Corn Hollow
and Romine Rd
Bus 34. Middle School.
HiJlh School only Leading
Creek Rd., McElhinney thru
Nichols Rd . Rutland area

South of S.R. 12~ from Depot
St. to Parken son and Corn
HoiiQw and Romine Rd.
Bus · 12 . Mtddle School.
HJg h School on l~· Noble
Summit. Ji viden Hollow
around
old
Rutland
Elementa ry. Salem St. . S.R.
124 from Salem St. to
Mulloon Run., Mulloon Run .
Ham pton Hollow, and Dairv
Lane.
,
Bu sc' 10, 6. 30. I" - Wtll
bring elementary home before
picking up Mtddle School and
High School students.
Bus 3 1 - Add Mtddle
School and H1 gh Sc hool on
New Lima from Smith Run
.to White H1ll All Srudems on
White Hill from New Lima to

. Justin Savage. 600, Forest
Run Read y Mix . Constance
Wyant. 550. Pleasant Valley
Hospttal; Jordan Russe ll.
550. Home Natl(mal Bank.
Jared Russell. 525. Home
Nattonal Bank; Trenton
Deem, 800, Bill Buckley
Family ; Matthew Wright,
800 , Norris Northup Dodge;
David Jenkins, 650, Smith
Accountmg Services/Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill; Paul
Morrison, 650. Bun's Part)
Barn.
Kayla
Russell.
600,
AEP/Mountaineer
Plant;
Cheyenne Beaver, 625. M&amp;J
Veneer; Latasha Richards,
I ,400. Caldwell Stone;
Christopher Runyon. 575.
Ohio Valley Bank; Tony
Roush, 625, Farmers Bank;
Vic(oria Goble, 625, We Can
Fabricators;
Rachael
Markworth, 600. Farmers
Bank.·
.
Derick Powell. 600. Shelly
Company: Charles Noland
Ill. 1.000. Ho lter Clinic:
Katie Durst. 625. Wai-Mart
of Mason. W.Va.. Kayla
Hawthorne. 550. Meigs
Medical Clinic. Whttney
Wo'lfe-Riflk 750. NorrisNorthup Dodge : Wtlliam
Duvall. 650. Forest Run
Ready
Mtx:
Brooke
O'Bryant . 650, Swisher &amp;
Lohse Pharmacy: James Wtll,
650. Wesam Construction .
Anthony Kop...&gt;c. 825. Shade
R1,er Ag Serv1ce; Kunberly
Hawthorne , 575, Cool Spot:
Christopher Holter. 825, J .E.
Stephens Farnl' Machinery:
Ronnie
Wilson,
625.
McClung Farms; Timothy
Elam, 1,500, J.D. Dnlling:
Ashley Savage, 625. Farmers
Bank; Adam Lee, 575, Home
Bank;
Josh
National
Caruthers.
625:
Smtth
Accounting Services/Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill.
Andrew O'Bryant. 650.
fiorest Run Ready Mi x:

Austin Lute , 650. Parker
Corporation. Chris Goode.
575. Ohio Valley Bank;
Jordan Koblentz. 675, We
Can Fabricators: Raynee
Herman. 625. Barber's Auto
Parts. Courtney Kennedy.
575. AEP/Mountaineer Plant;
625. Washburn 's Dairyette;
Ryan Tripp. 700, Holzer
Clime; Cratg Hensley. 675,
Valley Lumber; Brandon
King, 675. Westmoreland
Family Care Center; Rebecca
825,
Holzer
Chadwell,
Crinic.
Kayla Wyant, 625 . We Can
Fabricators; Adam Lavendar,
650. M&amp;J Veneers; Benjami'n
Lee, 650 .. Douglas Hunter,
M.D.; . Emily Manuel, 650,
Melame
Weese.
O.D.;
Odessa
Jacks,
600.
AEP/Gavin Plant; Amber
Tripp. 700. Farmers Bank;
Tim'Othy Markworth, 675 .
Parker Corp.; Greg Jenkins.
650. Hometown Market:·
Amber Moodispaugh. 700,
Moodt spaugh Auctioneering
Service. Anni,ha Kopec. 675.
Holzer Clmic.
Savannah Hawlev. 875. We
Care Lav. n Cue: Bethany
Lee. 675. Forked Run
Sportsmen\ Cl ub. Clinton
Kennedy. 625. We Can
Fabricators: Mtranda Holter,
700. .C111zens Bank of
Athens: Christopher Myers.
700, Thomas Rental Center;
Brady Btssell. 700. W.Va.
Custom
Cuts:
Bnttni
Hen sely: 675, Maw 's Dn)er;
Michael Scyoc. 625. Barber 's
Auto Parts: Robert Stone.
775, C&amp;J Sons Heavy
Eqmpment Repair.
Zachary Manuel , 775,
Southern
Teachers
Assoc./Eugene
Triplett ,
County Engmeer: Sarah
Lantz. 800. E&amp;L Blacktop
Sealing; Haley Tn pp. 700,
Summerlte ld 's Restaurant;
Chelsea Holter. AEP/Sporn
~am .
· '

. '
.

Attention Low to Moderate Income ·
Household s
THE MEIGS COUNTY GRANTS
OFFICE
WILL BE TAKING APPLICATIONS
FOR
DOWNPAYMENT ASSISTANCE
.f{OME REPAIR
AND
_
HOME REHABILITATION
ON
AUGUST 29TH 2005
FROM 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. ·
If you have an y questions pleace call the
office
From 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Mon.: Fri
.
And ask for Jean Trussell or -Liz
Anderson

.

�'

..
•

'

The Daily Sentinel

2005 MEIGS COUN1Y FAIR·

PageA6

Taylor repeats at Reno-Tahoe Open, Page 82
Steders not worried about lack of scoring, Page B2
Herrion autopsy ftnds no cause of death, Page B6

Monday, August 22 , 2005 ·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

. Monday, August 22, 2005

Mayfield wins at Michigan using fuel strategy
BY MIKE HARRIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Brtan J. Reed/ photo ·

Ridenour Gas Service bought the grand champion pen of market poultry shown by Joyce Weddle
for $700 . Janet Ridenour and Trici a Congo, representing Ridenour's, are pictured with Poultry
Princess Julie Ti llis, Fair King Tyler L&lt;ie. Fair Queen Whitney Thoene, Queen ru nner-up Mallory
Hill , Little Miss Meigs County Mattison Finl aw and Poultry Prince Morgan Tucker.

·, BROOKLYN, . Mich .
Jeremy Mayfield came o ut oti
top of a chaotic race Sunday,
running the last 52 laps on a
single tank of fuel and winning his first NASCAR
Nextel Cup race of the sea-

BrtanJ.Roed/ photo

Hollie Richard sold her reserve cllampion pen of market pou ltry to James Birchfield of Birchfiell:l
Funeral Home for $300. Also pictured are Poultry Princess Julie Tillis ; Fair King Tyler Lee, Fair
Queen Whitney Thoene, Queen run ner-up Mallory Hill , Littl e Miss Meigs County Mattison Fintaw
and Poultry Prince Morgan Tucker.

SOIL

Mayfield, whose . most
recent
win
came
last
September in Richmond. ' was
never close to the lead earlier
in the race. But one by one,

' Evernham
Mayfield's
Motorspons Dodge was no
excepti on.
" Our motor was running
270 (degree s) today." Labbe
said. " It was cooked, but we
made it.''
"They look a big chance
runn ing all the way (to th e
end) under gree n, and it 's
pretty cool winning a race
like that,'' said Maylield, who
earned his fifth career win
and solidified his hold on a
top I 0 spot in the points and a
position in the upco ming

GA LLIPOLIS- A schedule of u~oming coi!Bge
and hilfl school varaity sporting went&amp; involving

GoW

SEOAL at Athens, 4:30 p.m.
lVC 011io at Fairgroons, 4:30p.m.
Wallama at River Valley (CIIftside), 4 p.m. '
. Soutt1 Gallia at Trimble (Oak Forest). 4:30

p.m.

Girls Soccer
Herblilrt HOOII9f at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.

Tuelday'o gomeo

Socc:er

Athens at Gama Academy. 5 p.m.
RavenS\o'K&gt;Od at Point Pleasant. 7 p.m.
Girts Soccar
Point Pleasant at RavenS'It'OOCI. 7 p.m.

GoW

!\
Brian J.

Re~ / photo

Diamond Export, repre'sented by Joyce Burns, buyer, purchased Scout Facemyer's grand cham - .
pion market goat for $1,125. Also pictured are Fai( King Ty ler Lee, Fair ·Queen Whitney Thoene,
Queen runner-up Mallory Hill. Little Miss Meigs County Mattison Finlaw, and Goat Princess
Nicole. MoOdispaugh.

Brian J. Reed/ photo

Moodispaugh Auctioneering Service, represented by Todd an d Bill Moodispaugh, purchased
Goat Princess Nicole Moodispaugh's reserve champion market goat for $700. Also pictured .are
Fair King Tyler Lee, Fair Queen Whitney Thoene, Queen run ner-up Mallory Hill , and Little Mis\i
Meigs County Mattison Finlaw.

TVC Hod&lt;ing .at Pine HillS. 4:30p.m.
River Valley, Chesapeake at Gallia Academy
(CI~). 4:30 p.m
Wallema at Point Pleasant (Hidden VaHey), 4

p.m.
Wednesday's games

GoW
SEOAL at Franklin Valley, 4:30p.m.
lVC Ohio at O&lt;bow. 4:30 p.m.

.Thuf'sday's ~s
Soccer .
Gallia k.ademy at Alelcand&amp;r, 7 p.m
Ohio Valley Chlistian at .Federal Hocking,
5:30p.~.

GoW
Wahama at Me9'; (Pine HiUs). 4:30 p.m.
lVC Hocking at Brass Ring, 4:30 p.m.
River Valley, South Gallia at Wellston

(Falf7eens), 4:30p.m.

. Friday, Auguot 26
Football
Gallia Academy a1 Meigs
Wlllamstown at Wahama

Eas1ern at SouUl Gallla
Southeastern at R:iver Valley
Green at SoU:hern
Point Pleasant at Ripley
Hamlin at Hannan
CollegoSoc&lt;er
Rio Grande at Missouri Baptist. 7 p'.m.
College Yollo'jball
Rio at UMD Tournament, TBA

Saturday, August 27
CroosCounty
Early Bird Invitational at Riwr Valley, 9 a.m.
Girts Soccer
Point Pleasant at Spling Val~. TBA
Volleyball
CNC Preview at River Valley, I p.m.

Socc:er
JackSon at GaiUa Academy, t p.m.
CollegoSoc:a!t'
Rio Grande at Columbia College, 5 p.m.

Brtan J. Reed/ photo

Brtan J. Rood/photo

Audrionna Pullins sold her grand champi on dairy feeder to E\ob's Market anct Greenhouses for
$1 ,250 . .Leonard Koenig represented the buyer. Also pictured are Fair K1ng Tyler Lee , Fair
Q u~e n Whitney Thoene. Queen runner-up Mal lor y Hill and Dairy Pnnce Ki rk Pullins.

Farmers Bank and Savings Co., represented by President Paul M. Reed , purchased Brenna
Holter's reserve champion dai ry feeder for $1 ,050 . They are pictured'' wit h Fair King Tyler Lee,
Fair Queen Whitney Thoene, Queen runne r-up Mallory Hill and Dairy Prince Kirk Pullins.

Beth Sergent;photo

Adam McDaniel and Scott Justus repre senting Fisher Funeral Homes, buyer of the Reserve
Champion Commercial Feeder Steer for $1.700, is pictured with Dylan Milam. showman. Fair
Queen Whitney Thoene, Fair King Tyler Lee . Beef Pnnce Nathan Cook, Beef Princess Ashley
Putnam . Queen first runner-up Mallory Hill.

.

Beth Sercont/ photo

Greg ahd Teresa Mill s of McDonalds of pomeroy purchased the · Grand Champion Commercial
Feeder Steer for $2,000, they are pictured with Jacop Parker. showman, Fair Queen Whitney
Thoene, Fair King Tyler Lee .. Beef Priincess Ashley Putnam, Queen runner-up Mallory Hill.

',

Buy, Sell or Trade New &amp; Used Farm ·&amp; Industrial £quipment

Palla • Salas • Sarvlca
''
1180 Eastern Avenue (St. Rt. 7) • Gallipolis, Ohlo

.(740) 448-1777 • (740)

Sports Briefs

American Legion
evaluation day set
ROCK
SPRINGS
' Feeney -Bennett Po st 128
American Le gion i s hosting
a pre-tryout evaluation day, .
especially for 14- 16 year old
boys from Meigs and Gallia
Counties who might have
interest in playing American
Legion base ball next summer.
The pl an i s to plant a seed
of interest in younger ·players with hopes of forming a
Junior team for next summer.
The tryout/evaluation day
will be on Sunday, Aug. 28
from 2 lo 4 p.m. at the
M eigs High School Baseball
Field. Bring your personal
equipment.
The tryout day i s specifically for 14-16 year-olds;·
. however. if you are 17- 18
and have never played for
Post 128 you are welcome to
come.
_Any questions , contact
Coach Stewart by e- mail at
diamondD I @columbu s.rr.c
om or call (7 40) 59 1-4605 .

fiX -

I -74{}-446-3008

E-mail - sportsOmydallysentinei.com

r

448~2484

.www.Jimam.cam

Soort&amp; Staff

Bred Sharman, Spot11 Editor
(740) 4A6-2342, ext. 33

bsherman @ mydaily1ribune .com
Brpn Waltllirs, Sportl Wrtter

(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
bwalters 0 mydaitytribune.com

Llny Crum, Sports Write~

'

~~-~£.~.,Jl-':D:.:Istrlbu~~rs For~i.LZ.i~~

Please see NASCAR, Bl

. CL EV ELAND (AP) - · The time in 36 road ga mes . only number&gt; Travi s Hafner is despite open ing a six-game trip
concerned with are the ones in with a three-game sweep in
Cleveland's win co lumn.
· Oakland . .
Hafner drove in four runs to
" I'm disappointed," sai'd
help C. C. Sabathia w i n his Sam Perl ozzo, who i s 9-7 as
fourth strai ght start , and the interi m · manager. "I didn ' t
Indian s co mpl eted a three- expec t to co me in here and get
game sweep of. the Baltimure swept."
Orioles with a 5- I victor y
Sabathia ( 10-9) improved to
Sunday.
4-0 in August after losing his
The Indians, who beg an play last five starts in July.
I 1/2 games behind Oakland in
" I' ve fell good all year, but
the AL wild"card race, wo n I' ve been ·more in con_trol latetheir fourth strai ght and fifth in ly," Sabathia said. " I fee l a
si x games 1o mo ve ·a season- , huge difference."
high 12 games over .500.
Tile left-hander gave up one
."All we want to do i s wi n," run ·and three hits in eight
Hafner sai d after getting three innings, punctuating hi s perfo~­
hits. "If we win , we make up mance by ge tting Eric Byrn es
ground in the wild card and the to hit his fin al pitch for a doudivision . Alii care about is get- bl e play. '
ting to th e playoffs any way
"Yeah ,
I'm
pumped,"
po ssible."
·
Sabathia said. ·'We' re pretty
Thou gh
Cleveland
has close in the wild. card arid
trimmed 6 I /2 'g ames off a 15- creepi ng up on the White Sox.''
· game deficit to AL Central
Cleveland broke a 1-al\tie in
leader Chicago si nce July 25. the six th and ex tended the lead
Hafner doesn 't quite consider it when Hafner's two-run double
a race w ith the White Sox ~ capped a three-run seventh.
yet.
Jhonn y Peralta . began the
" If you get it under fiv e, sixth with a soft liner to leftthat' s realistic," he said. 'Time · center off the glove of left
wi ll tell over the next month fie lder Byrn es. w ho was
how much we have learned."
bru shed by ce nter fielder Lui s
The skidding Orioles. who Matos· as he tried for the catch.
AP photo
had playoff hopes in the fi rst Matos wa s charged wi th ar
Cleveland Indians' Travis Hafner smacks a two-run double off Baltimore Orioles pitcher half. fell to 13-23 since th e A llStar. hreak and lm t for the 1oth
Pl11ase see Indians, Bl
Tim ·Byrdak in the seventh inning Sunda~ in Cleveland . The Indians won 5-1 . ,

Adjustments working for Indians' hurler Sabathia
.

Contact Information

Jim's Farm Equipment, ·Inc.

Kense lh sa id hi s crew
chief. Robby Reiser. "wanted
me to go after Mayfi eld and I
couldn't even 'ee hirn . We
· were just hoping he' d ru n out
of gas .
" I a\wavs like th e fastest
C~tr to win: even if it\ not me .
But they took the big gamble
when they could afford to
take it and it · paid off for
them."
·
Edwards. who made his
Cup debut here a year ag~

Tribe sweeps slumping Orioles, ?it 1
1/2 games back of Wild Card leader

teams from Gallla. MBI!J5 and Maoon counties

Mondlry'a games

;

Chase fur th e Champi.onship.
Scott Rigg s, 1\ghting to
keep hi s ride , also stretched
hi s gas !0 th e end and finished a career-high second.
followed by Mall K enseth
and Carl Edwards, who had
been battling, for the lead
prior to the late pit stops.
Ken se th . who made his
final stop on lap 18 1·, charged
hard to get back into contention but came up well
short of Mayfield and Riggs.
who finished about five ·carlengths apart . ·

Indians still climbing in standings

CNP Sd I edule
.,

the leaders were forced to pit
for fuel and M ayfield
inherited the top spot wrth six
laps to go in the 200-lap
e-vent
at
Mi c higan
International SpeedwaY,
" Man, we had a 20th-place
car and we robbed the bank,''
said M ayfield's gleeful crew
chief Slugger Labbe.
Nearly every team in the
43-car field had problems
with cut tires or engines lh ~t
overheated when windblown
garbage co llected on grill s,
cutting off air to radiators.

(304) 675-1333: ext. 19

Ierum@ mydailyregisler com

•

C LEVELAND (A P)
C.C. Sabathia's fastball was
fine . It just wasn't effecti ve
until he changed his changeup .
Sabathia got a tip that he
was tipping hi s pitches during a live-game losing streak
to end July. After maki ng an
adjuslme·nt , he 's 4-0 in
August, including a 5-1 vic-

tory Sunday over Baltimore
in which he gave up only one
run and three hits over eigllt
innings.
"There's a huge difference
now," Sabathia said. " Hillers
knew when a changeup was
com ing-and not a fastball."
Th e left-hand er went to
wo rk with pitching coac h
Carl Willi s to make hi s deliv-

ery consistent. Tile result is
that A·i s' crac klin g 98-mph
fa stball and me smerizi ng oil speed pitches are · · being
thrown w ith the same easy
motion .
That l ed to another big
change - · winning at Jacobs
Field and regaining the home
fan s' suppqn.
" It fe lt good -out there," he

said after winning hi s second
straight home start. ."It really
was good for my mom and
wife to hear cheers instead of
booing."
Sabathia, 3-5 at home and
I 0-9 overall. said hi s lack of
success proved part icularl y
fru strating because hi s fastball was gettin g hit by batters
who knew wh~n something

else \.vas coming .
" ! figured that if I threw i t
I 00 mph they couldti 't hit.''
he said. " That didn 't work .
" When I stay itf my deli'Cery. I can throw all my pitches. Todtiy. I was lhrowit1g it ·
ea;;y and looked up and saw it
was 97, 9S .".

'
Please see Notebook,
Bl

Pollack starts catching up after holdout
CINCINNATI . (AP) David Pollack started catch,
ing up Sunday.
The first-round draft pick
. had his first full pmctice with
the Cincinnati Bengals, four
days after ending hts holdout
and agreeing to a live-year
contl'act. The 20-day holdout
hlls delayed his "tran sition
from defensive end to linebacker.
·
After practice, he insisted
he was right on schedule,
even · tliough coach. Marvin
Lewis dropped him to third
on the depth chart during the
holdout.
'Tm QOl behind," said
Pollack, who was taken 17th
overall in the draft. 1Tm in
now. so I'm righ! where I'm
supJXlsed to ~- I ve got a lot
ttho learn and ldm gOt~j; 10 put
e ttme m to o that.
Pollack had to w_atch a 2411 l?reseason v~ctory m
Wash1ngton last Fnday_wh1le
standmg on the srdehne. m
untf~nn. It w~s the li~l ~1me
he faded to gel _mto ~ g~e
smce hts freshman season at
Georgta.
He pleaded with Lewis to
Jet him play. but failed to
make his case.
"(Lewis) came over one
time and said. ' ] need a fresh
pass rusher,"' Pol\a..·k said. " I
said, 'Coach. I'm fresh_as a

----:~

.,

AP phoio

,
AP phot9
Cincinnati Bengats No. 1 draft p1ck David Pollack practices for
the first time after signing his new contract Sunday in Cincinn;~ti.
, .
daisy.' but that didn't go.
week and is expected to play
"] just tried to watch my Fnday _muht m a _pre:.eason
position and think abou t game at Plnladelphta.
where I'd be split out at. what
"Guys who ha \e the ·apti·
would I be keying and just tude h~e h11n us~~ally 111ck up
trying to go through my th ings Yery well. Lewb s;ud.
. .. ·
. I I'.
whv. thinne s
asstgnmenls:
tstened . I0 " Tiley Utiderstand
. .
every defenSIVe call and tned .&lt;x:c-ur. and that s. where your
to make sure I knew what ~real tootb:11l players &lt;:ome
every call was and what. my lrom. Tiley. re guys who can
assignment would be." .
· .lumdle tl1e chat~ge ol lhmgs .
Tile Bengals pracltced atld reao."t. l11ey re not need·
without pads Sunday. Pollack mg to t&gt;e co~!ched through
will work out m pads thiS every clement.

. Cincinnati ,Reds' Ken Griffey Jr.. left. congratulates Wily Mo Pena
· after Pena hit a three-run home run off An zona Diamondbacks'
Brad Halsey during the fourth inning Sunday in Cincinnati.

.Reds slam D'backs, 13-6
don't fer! pressure . I just
CINC INNATI I AP \
Wil y Mo Pena knows he 11:1111 t!l do the hcst I ca n and
need:"\ to make the nHl:o-t nf hi:-. play the ~ame hard ."
Pen a '
and
'. Edwin
cha n ce~ .
. Pena hit a P•lir of three -run Encarnacion hit three-run
homers In scot a career hic.h homers olf Brad Halsev in a
with six RBi s and kat! tltc ..,~\e n -rUn fourth inning. and
Cincinnati RcJ~ o\·t•r the ALhtin Kearns. Felipe L opez
Arizona DiamL'ndbao.·k, U -6 and Sean Casey abo homered
Sunday .
for Cincinnati . ·Pen a hit his ·
" It fel l ~rear." Pena said . " I
Please see Re4s. 86
ju~t han~ "'to ~cL'p it . poing. I

.

.

�. Page B:z • -The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

.~Taylor repeats Reno--Tahoe Open

_championship in record fashion
RENO, Nev (AP)
: Vaughn Taylor became the•
: thtrd player on the PGA Tour
to succe)slully defend a utle
thts year, breakmg the Reno·
T.thoe Open scon ng record
Sund.ty tn ,, three-stroke vtctory over Jonath.m Kaye
. Tay lor. tn Iu s sewnd )ear on
· tour. closed wtt h an even-par
:72 to JOtn V•J·'Y Smgh .md
_Stu.trt Appleby ·" the only
repedt ch.tmptons thts ye.tr .md
.t\so becaMte the li lth. v. ll e-towtre wm net of the season
Tay lor opened wtth rounds
:ot 64, 67 and 64 en toutc to"
• 21-under 267 tot.tl. lour bette•
than the prev tous tmtrn.unent
record set by Kuk Tuplett 111
~003 The wm ne1 .tlSlJ b1oke
the tOIIIIldment s 16- .md 5-+: hole marks
"Tod.ty "·" .1 pretl) hm mg.
· uneventful round ol gnll but
I' m th nlled · T.1vlcu ' s,llll I
nevet felt li ke 11v.'," mme You
never kno\t\ wh.tt \

~otn!!.

to
c1 ' 1 m,

happen I m gl.td 1t s tJ\
,really proud to h,l\ e v.on he1 e
-lWICC "
K o~ye shot ,1 67 Suncl.1y hts fou rth ro und 111 the 60s but miSsed three bnd1e putt s
£rom wlthm 15 I eet on the !.tst
three holes to I 11mh at 18
unde r on the 7.'172-yard
Montre ux Golt .tnd Countr)
Club on the edge ot the Sterrd
Nev.tda He started the do~y at
13-under
"E1ght shot- " ,, lot to make
up on thts coUJ se, on any
course v. hen someone IS play111g as great as Vaughn v.as,'
Kaye satd
Todd FIScher, who ilves next
to the course. h.1d .170 to fin iSh
thiTd at I7 under J J Henry
(66). J P H o~yes (69 ) and
Aaron Baddeky (70) followed
at 15 under Jesper Pamcvtk
-started the d&lt;~y seven strokes
back, but shot a 74 to fi niSh at
12 under
Tayl01 , v. ho grew up 111
Augusta. Ga . .tnd whose go.tl
IS to pia) lrl the Masters. oiVe raged 300 y.!Tds .t dllVe thJS
week .md WdS sha rp wnh hiS
trons the hrst three rounds He
made e1ght b1Td1e putts
Saturday - ,til hom lllSJde 10
feet - to open up a SIX-stroke
lead ove1 F1scher at 21 under
On Sund,ty. T.tylor's b1ggest
putts were p.tr saves. mcludmg
a S-tooter on the openmg hole
where he drove 11110 ,1 t,urw.ty
bunker He made a 4 tooter to
save bogey dlter 1t took h11n
1wo shots to get Olll of a green-

stde bunker on the -+39-yanl.
par-4 SIXth
"Th.tt w.ts .1 clu1ch putt I
d1dn' t want to nu ke double
thete.' T&lt;~y l 01 s,!ld
The bogey dropped h1111
back to 20 under three strokes
ahead ol B.tddeley who
biTdted tour ol the hrst six

AP photo
Vaughn Tayl or and h1s caddie, Adam Hayes. read the 14th
green dunn g the th •rd round of the Re no Tahoe Ope n on
Saturday at Montreu x Golf and Country Cl ub 1n Reno Nev
holes to get to 17 under. but
bogeyed th ree holes on the
b.1ck mne
Taylo1 got b,llk to 21 under
whe n he dnne 3'16 va1 ds then
h1t a 280 .tppi O.K'h 'tq the left
edge ol the 6 16-y,JTd, par-5
ntnt h and two putted Irom 50teet tor hts only btrdlc 111 the
lm~l round alter c,trdmg 24
01er the ti ~St three da)s
· Tl1.1t 3-tron I 1111 !rom the
t.urway w.ts the best shut I hit
all day It was nght where 1
.umed n That w.ts ,, b1 g 2·
putt ," he sa1d
K&lt;~ye clupped m f1om 45
teet l01 lm thud budte of the
day on the par-3 seventh but
took a bogey on No 9 when he
clmve lett mto the s.1gc brush
.tnd nussed a 21-tootet to save
p.u He h1 rdted Nos II , 12 .md
14 - ,til Irom X leet or shorter
- to get to 18 under, but
mtssed a 12-tooter on the p.tr·
3 16th He h1t hts second shot
300 yards to the back tnn ge of
the 636-yard, par-5 17th and
p utt ~d wtthtn '1 lcct but rolled
hiS hud1c .ltle mpt 1 teet p.JSt
.mel came ,tW,t) wnh .tnmher
p.u
Ill ~,;, tn nMke an e~t gle theie
(onl 7J,mdthen hlrdl e 18 he's
g\Hng to led so me he.tt
You vc got to m.tkc those
when you re 111 contentton,"
s.ud K.1ye, who .tlso ti mshed
'" the runne1-up 111 2002 'But
I wo~s lllJUTed (elbow mtlamlllolllnn) .md dtdn t even knov.
11 I v.as gm ng to pl,ty so I Ill
ildppy wnh my perlorm,mce."
FISc her who h.1d tour

bogeys .md tv.o btrd tes
Sunday. hdd m1 xed leelmgs
.tbo ut h1s pl ay
"I hung 111 there as good as I
could ,md made a couple of
btrdtes on the back then JUSt
1izzed out.'' F1sche1 sa1d "I
teel I could have done better.
but l d1d make a move on the
Top 125" on the money hst,
whtch would mmntam hts tour
card next year
Taylor 's vtctones at Reno
are hts only two on tour He
diso won the Knoxv1lle Open
on the Natwn v. tde Tour m
2003 and was a tour-tune Wll1·
ner on the Hooters Tour
T.1ylor am ~ e d at Reno thts
year ranked 86th on the money
liSt w1th $664,228 The
$540,000 wmne1's check
pushes htm past the $ 1 m1l11on
mark Ior the second consecullve year
'My goal IS to play 111 the
Masters next year," satd
Taylor, who would have to finISh m the Top 40 to make it
''I' m sure I' m not there ye t.
btil close. Tht s wee k was
huge. · he satd He lives JUSt I0
n11nutes tram the course and
h.IS played 1t before, but never
m the tourney
He ftm shed 67th on the
money hst w1th $1 I tmlhon
last ye.tr - one ot tour rookies
to surpass $1 m11l wn - and
used p.1rt ol hts wmnmgs to
help build hiS p.trents .1 new
home outSide Augusta
''They' re sllll build mg. so
they m &lt;~y come and ask me for
,, sw11nmmg pool,' he satd

PITTSB URGH (AP) Two games, no touchdowns
by th e starttng offe nse
Several wasted sconn g
opportumttes . Some more
playott -hke poor th rows by
Ben Roethbsberger
Thts ts n ' t the way the
Pittsburgh Steelers v-.a nted
to start the preseason.
except for th1 s T hey' re 2·
0, mos tl y beca use th e
oltense h.tsn 't been needed
to score 111 games that have
been controll ed by the ir
defense and spec1.1l team s
T he Stee lets managed to
turn a remarkabl e seve n
Mt aml turnove rs 1nto JUSt
two touchdow ns and a Jelf
Reed 26-yard he ld goa l tn
a 17-3 VIctory S aturda y
mg ht over .t Dolphins team
that gave no SJ gn tt JS vastly 1mproved fro m ldst.
ye,JI 's 4 J2 ~C T&gt;I On
But w1th the regul ars hit·
ed we ll before halftime fo r
the seco nd co nsec uttv e
game - co.tch Bill Cowher
had planned to play them
abo ut a half - the startmg
otte nse aga m dtdn ' t do
much Roethhsberger was
6-o f-11 for 51 yards with
an mtercept10n on a pass
mto the fl at, one s1m1lar to
t)VO such mtercepuons he
threw tn the play offs.
Cowher had planned to
pl ay Tommy Maddox 111 the
second quarter but , wtth
the starters not dotn g much
w1th all the f1 eld pos1llon
the Dolphm s gave the m,
went to Charlte Batch after
ltft1ng Roethhsbe rge r
"1 dtdn't plan on pl ay mg
Ben that long, but we hadn't pu t the ball mto the end
zone," Cowher sa1d "We
we re ve ry sporad1 c
And
tf you look at the ove rall
runnmg game, tt was not
the standard we set fo r our-

Notebook
from PageBl
Baltimore's mtenm man,,ger Sam Perlozzo certamly
was impres&gt;ed
" I don ' t know 1f I've ever
seen the kid p1tch a bad
game," he sa1d " I know ht s
record tsn' t what he'd hke 1t
to be, but he was on top of
h1 s g&lt;~ me today"
lnd1.tns manage r En c
Wedge agtecd
"C C has the .tbthty to
succeed wtthout throwmg
every p1tch 98," satd Wedge
· It 's alsD good to know he
can rem back and go to 11
.m y unw he \\,mt s, though "
FEELIN ' IT: TraviS
Hai ner went 76 at-bats
between homers. but sa1d he
could feel hts two-run shot
Saturday mght .tbotll to happen
" I dehmtely can tell a dtl·
terence, even m mcrement s," satd Hafner. who
has lHt 355 (22- tor-62) w1th
12 RBi s tn ht s li m In
games Sl llCC ITII SSIIlg 17
g&lt;~me s with a concussiOn
"My tllmng was messed
up so all you try to do then IS
get your bat on the ball ," he
smd "Gradually. I fe lt more
comtortable, seeing the ball
better, gettmg my swmg

fromPageBJ

NASCAR

"tot k

c ~1r r(1c1ng wuh fl\e
111 ... eve n starts never

wms
Jed on Sunday but lim shcd
lil th lor hiS etght consccutl \ e
from Page Bl
top-seve n
Re1gnmg Cup champt on
and IS nov. ,, champ1onsh1p Kurt Bu sch, who dommated
contender. appea1 ed happy dwmg the m1ddle p.trt ot the
w1th hi&gt; lourth·place I umh
r,11;c. v. nund up seve nth.
'That wo1s JU st a hl as t ' he whtlc
polc•stMter
Joe
sa1d I had a good t1me To Nemec hck. who dropped l,lf
be that close to \lc tory .md b.1ck 1nto the p.tck alter a l lat
ha ve 11 go on p11 " rategy. I t11e c.Jme back to ltn " h
just ha ve to cnngralul dte Clghth
M.1vl•cld lumped lrom
Jcrem_y T h.ll s JUst awesome
... L'\te n to . , ,xth mo' wg Ltllead
Sencs pomts leade t Tony ol Busch 111 the season poults
Stev.art - who came mi Dthe \\o lth J U ~t lhi CC flKC~ fC il h llll mce as the hottest dm cr 111 lll g hdorc the IO-r.1cc

NASCA R playofl s begm
Behmd th em plenty of
questions remamed Ju st 129
pomts sep.JTate e1ghth-place
Ryan Newman . who fim shed
12th on Sunday. from Je ll
Gordon. who somehow man aged .t 15th -place timsh With
a temble c ,tr ,md moved from
I "lth to 12th m the season
pmnts
Gomg tnt o next S&lt;1turd.1 y
mghl' s r.1ce al Bnstol.
, Edw,lfd s IS nmth .md J,11n1e
McMurray I Oth . lollowed by
D.tle Ja rrett JUSt 5 I po mt s
out ot the fin.J l spot m the
Ch,1se. and Gordon il llother
,e ,cn pomts Odc k

2005

www.mydallysentlnel.com

error - one of SIX by
Baltnnore m the last two
games - for cau smg the
bobble
"At the las t second, I
heard Lms call tor 11,"
Byrnes smd ''It's tough to
get out of the way, but that's
my JOb ) screwed up "
Hafner lined a smgle 10
left and Per.tltol shd home
ahead of Byrnes' throw fo r a
2- 1 lead
Coco Cnsp made 11 3- 1 m
the seventh w1th a sacnfice
fly off reliever T1m Byrdak
Alter
Peralt a
walked
H.tfner lined a shot mchcs
Ia lT down the nght-lleld line
tor two more runs Two w1 ld
pitches by Byrdak. one that
.tllowed Grady S1zemore to
re.1ch base on a stnkeout.
fue led the ra lly
~I atner
put Cleveland
ahead I 0 with an RB I dou-

sel ves "
Jer o me
B e tti S.
b mlted to
two carn es tor II
ya rd s,
Notebook
wo uld be
I'QOre WOr·
n ed 1f the offe nse w.ts
play mg a lot longer and not
producmg A wee k ago, the
Steelers scored th ree times
m the first 19 mmutes on
two ktck return s and an
Interce pti on return , so the
oft enstve starters we nt only
I 0 plays before be111g htted
tn a 38-3 1 vtctory o ver the
Eqgles
"You don't wa nt to make
too b1 g of a deal of It
becau se 1t's onl y two eXhibition games, " Bett ts satd
" But you want to tdke
advantage of your sconng
opportumt1 es, whether n's
the preseaso n, the reg ul ar
se ason or the postseaso n
We had a dropped pass m
the end zone, so I wo uldn ' t
be too worned at thts p01n t
yet,,
•
Roethh sberger co uldn ' t
connect wtth an ope n
Cednck W1lson on a second-and-goal play from the
Dolph111s'
9
mtdway
through the f~r st quarter, an
opportuntty set up by
W1lhe Parker 's 37-yard run
on a m1 sd1rect1on play On
third down, Roethh sberger
couldn ' t
f111d
Verron
Ha ynes out of the backft eld
on anoth er mcomplet1 on
Reed then mt ssed a 28yard f1eld goal atte mp t. and
that was about 1t for the
offense on a mght when tts
only touchdown - se t up
by a Dolph111s fumble. of
course - came on Haynes '
!-yard run 111 the th trd
quarter James Ham son

C LASS I F 1 ~ E D

also had a 69-yard fumble
return . the Steelers' fo urth
return to uchdo wn tn two
ga mes
"We had a lot of opportu nities but we dtdn ' t do very
mu ch wn h them," Satd
Batch, whose numbers (6of- ll , 55 yards) were
almost
1den11ca l
to
Roethb sberger's "We have
to regroup and get back to
pract1 ce and work on tt
The good thmg ts we still
have two mo re weeks left,
tl tht s were the las t game
you· d be a lot more con cerned about 11 "
P.1rker' s 58 ya rds on s1x
caiTies re prese nted much ot
the offense's output tn a
game 111 wh1ch Walter
Young, with three catches
for 19 yards, was the onl y
Steelc rs rece1ver to catch
more th an one pass .
Wtth so man y players
bein g used - the flfst roster cut s Will be made before
Fnday' s ga me ag&lt;1 1nst the
Reds kms - and the start mg offe nse getting so few
snap s. th ere ' s no real worry
yet among the Stee lers
Betti S, for exampl e, has
onl y ft ve carnes 111 two
games as the Stee lers not certa m of the tnJUred
Du ce Staley' s statu s for the
Sept II opener aga1nst
Tennessee - make sure he
stays health y
Pro Bowl recetver Hmes
Ward, who m1 ssed the ftrst
15 days of ca mp m a co ntrac t holdout, also played
onl y a few dow ns aft er
hav mg onl y two full practi ce days last wee k
"I really thmk w1th the
offense we have , we're
g01 ng to have a Jo1 ot
opportumlles th iS year and
we'll take adva ntage of
them," Bettis satd

together I knew I' d start dn·
vmg the ball."
fn 54 games smce June I.
he has hll 349 (69-for- 193)
with 14 homers and 55
RBls. That stretch 1s exactly
one-thJTd of a full season
Projected over 162 games,
that could produce Tnple
Crown numbers of 42
homers, 165 RBis and a posSible batt111g IItle
"All! really th111k about IS
htttmg ove r 300 ," he sa1d
"I keep my average up there,
everythmg else pretty much
takes care of nse lf "
FJELDIN' IT: Tlmd
baseman Aaron Boone h.td
se ven asststs Sunday three short of a team record
set by Ken Keltner 111 1948
- mcludmg a mtty p1ckup
and throw of a bunt attempt
by Melvm Mora
''That play felt good," smd
Boone, who acknowledged
1t w1ll take unt1l next season
to be all the way back Iro m a
knee tnJury that stdehned
h1m all of 2004
"I feel hke 1 can make
plays," he sa1d ''1 fee l good
But I know I' ll tee! eveh
better next year and be able
to make a lot more plays"
BELLIARD
BACK:
Second baseman Ronn1e
Bethard we nt 0-tOr-4 m h1s
fiTS( game SlllCC Slrammg hiS
neck Thursday 111 a co lhston
wah ump1re Enc Cooper "I

felt prett y good but 1 couldn' t see the ball at bat and 111
the fi eld," he sa~d ··r louled
ott one and I don't thmk I
saw 11 ,. Sever,tl players had
trouble wtth the sun 's glare
on a cloudless d.ty
MILLER MENDING:
R1 ght ·hande r Matt M1ller,
out smce July 16 w1th nght
forearm tendm1t1s. threw a
40-pn ch hullpen sesSi on
Sunday ''I'm kmd of excited," he satd 'I coul d use a
little work on my command ,
but my drm !eels great ·
Mtller, 1-0 wllh one save
and " I 82 ERA m 23 rehef
outings. expec ts to go , to
Double-A Akt on on a rehab
asSignment and reJOtn the
lndtans' bullpen soon
BASELINES:
The
lnd~an s a1e 43-27 ( 6 14 1
smce a 12-mnmg victory m
Ch1 c.tgo on June 5
Wedge sm d the clu b IS much
Im proved over last year:
when 11 lost mne stra1ght
alter pullmg w1thm one
game ot first pl.1ce on Aug
15. 2004 "We' re stronger
menta ll y, mu ch stronger
phys1cally .md play w1th an
even-keel presencJ! that w1ll
stand up over t1me," sa1d
Wedge
C Josh Bard we nt
2-for-3 111 hJS hrst sta rt
Sunday smce Aug 7 The
Ind1ans .tre 14-8 when he
starts

ble 111 the fi rst off Bruce
Chen (I 0-7). who lost lor
the first tune 111 four sta1ts 111
August
"I thought 11 was a
homer," Hafner sa1d ol the
dnve that h1t the top of the
left-held wall "1 still do. but
the umptres satd no "
Baltimore tted 11 m the
It lth AleJandro Frelfe was
hllm the left foot by a pttch.
bunted to second by Matos,
took thJTd on a smgle to left
by Chns Gomez. and scored
on a gro undout by Bn an
Roberts
Sabathta worked out of an
odd thJTd mn111g 111 wh1ch
B:Hu more put th ree run ners
on Without hntmg the ball
hard - wh1ch 1111ght have
un nerved the 25 year-old
lefty ,md led to a btg mn mg
when he -struggled Ill July
Matos 1eached whe n h1s
grounder went off shortstop
Peralta's glove lor an error
One out later. Matos took olt
for second bul Sabath1.1
stepped ot~ the mound .md
ran dlfec tly .tl the runner to

stat t a tex tbook rundown
seq uence that emptted the
bases
Roberts ·wa lked. stole second. ,md went to th1 rd when
Byrnes beat om a grounder
to Peralta tor the Ori01es'
fi rst hll Sabathm. however.
got Melvm Mora to !me to
left to end the threat
Notes: Hafner h1t 353
( 12-for-34) With 10 RBis,
SIX doubles and one homer
durmg a nme-game homes·
tand
lndmns 2B Ronme
Bethard returned afte r m1ss·
mg two games with a sore
neck. the result of a colhsion
wit h ump!Te Enc Cooper on
Thu rsday
Onoles I B-DH
Rafael Palmwo sat out hts
fift h stratg ht game wnh a
spra med n ght ankle.
Cn sp, who stranded etght
runners Saturday mght.
struck out with the bases
loaded to end the second and
hll 1nto a double play to en,d
the tilth
Byrnes has h1t
08 1 (3-tor-37) over hJS last
I0

g,m1e~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\egt~ter

Steelers not worried about
lack of scoring from starters

Indians
AP photo
Jeremy Mayf1eld celebrates after wmn1ng the NASCAR GFS Marketplace 400 Sunday at the
M1ch1gan International Speedway m Brooklyn M1ch

Monday, August 22,

•

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CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For 5ala . .
Announcement. ..

. 725
.• 030

Antiques .. .
.. 530
Apartments lor Rent
.. . .. .. 440
Auction and Flea Market. .. .. . .. . . .. !ISO
Auto Parte &amp; Accosscrlas . ... . .. . .. 760
Auto Repair.
.. . . .. .. .. . .... .. 770
Autos lor Sate. . . .. .. . .. ..
710
Boats &amp; Moto1'11 lor Sola . .
. . ... 750
Building Supplleo .. .. . .. . .. . .. . 550
Bualneso and Buildings . . . .. ...... . 340
Buslnoso Opportunity . ... . .. .. ......210
Business Training .. ..... . ..... ... ........140
Campers &amp; Motor Homos ........................790
Camping Equipment ......... ................ ... 780
Cardo of Thanks ....... ............................. ... 010
Child/Elderly Care .................................... 190
EtectrtcaVRelrlgeratton .... ... .. ......... ..... 840
Equipment lor Rent .... ........... .................480
Excavating . ... ... ... ......................... .. .. 830
Farm Equipment......... ........... .... ...... .. 610
Farms lor Rent.... ... ........... ........ ... ... .. 430
Farms lor Sate ......... .... . ............ ... . 330
For Lease........ . ... . ... . . .. . .... .. . . 490
For Sale...... ...... .. .. .. . ... .. .. .. 585
For Sate or Trade .. .. . ... .. .... .. .. ... 590
"· lirulta &amp; Vegetables . . .. .. .. . .. . 580
Furnlahed Rooms... .. .. .. .. .. . . .. 450
General Hauling. .. .. .. .. ... ......... ...850
Giveaway ... ..... .
.. .. . . .. .. .. 040
Happy Ada..... . . ... . .. .. .... .. ...
. ...050
Hay &amp;: Grain .• • . . ..

'

.640

Help Wanted.. .. ... . .. . .. ..
.. ..11 0
Homo Improvements. . .. .. ..
. .810
Homoa lor Sate . . .. .. .. ... .. ... . ... ... . ~ 1o
Household Gooda .. . ........... .... 510
Houses lor Rent. . .. .. .. . .. ... . .. 41 o
In Memoriam . .. . ... . .. . . . ... . . . 020
Insurance . . . . . . ... . .. .. .. . .. 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment .. . .. . .. 660
Llveatock . . . .. ... .. ... . ... .... . ... .630
Loat and Found . . . .. . Q60
Lola &amp; Acreage.. ... . .. . .. . .. .. ... 350
Miscellaneous .. . . .. . .. ..... ... ... .110
Miscellaneous Merchandise.... ... . .. .......540
Mobile Homo Repair. .. . ... ...... .... .......860

Mobile Homealor Rent ........................ ...... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sate.......... .... ... . .... .320
Money to Loan . . .. .. .. .. .... ... .. ...220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers........ ..... .....740
Musical Instruments .. • ...... .... •• ...
Personals ..
.• • ..... ........... .. . .•

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.. 570
005

Pets lor 5ale .. .. .. .............. .... .. . 560
Plumbing II Heating .......... .. ... .. .. .820
Protesalonat Servlcaa... .. . .. .
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair. . .. .
.160
Raal Estate Wanted .. ... ,, .. ...
360
Schools tnatructlon. . . .. ..
.150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .
... 650
Situations Wanted . . ... . .. .. .. .... .. .120
Specelor Rent..... ... .. ..
.. .460
Sporting Goods .
.. . . .520
SUV'alor 5ale.. ..
, . . ..720
Trucks lor 5ale . . . . . .
. .. . .715
Upholatery . . . . . . . .. . .. .. . 870
vans For Sale .. . ... . .. . ~- ..........730
wanted to Buy .. .. . . .
..
.. .. 090
Wented to Buy· Form Supptloo
...... 620
Wanted To Oo .. . .... . .. . . ..
... 180
Wonted to Rent.... ... ...... ... ... . .. . .. 470
Yerd Sele- Geltlpotlo ... .. .. . . . .. 072
Yard Sele-Pomeroy/Middto. ... .. .. .. .. 074
Yard Sale-PI, Plaaoant ... .. .. . .. ... .. . ... 076

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WYTH EVILLE VA

1-800-334·1203
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--------

Engm eer1ng f1r m seek1ng
tnd1v1duals to prov1de con
str uct on mspectlon serv1ces
lor water and sewer utiliti eS
Expenence a pos1 twe but
no t necessary (tre•n•ng pro
v•ded)
Must be w1llmg to
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ly ba ss Must have re i able
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401K Health Insurance
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For a llm11ed t•rne make SO%
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Are you 11red of runnmg?

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needed 111 Pomeroy OhiO Faci lity IS seek ng a seloct
area FTIPT hour s Vent few to JO n our outstandmg
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benet1ts Ca ll Pnmary Ca re
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Sh ~rley Spea rs 304
675 t 429

ehver to store and rae
oc ahons m Galhjjolls
pp rox•ma tely 10 m1 le
od 1 112 hours pe r day
ust be ava •lable a
10 OO am Mo nday thr
ndey
and
6 OOp
aturdays Need reha b!
ranspor tat1on and proof o
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lease
contac t
th
alllpohs
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a
740 446 234 2
Dri vers Needed
CDL Dnvers Wl llmg to dnve
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company Expenence •s
preferred but not necessary
Dnvar mu st be w111 mg 10 d o
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Experience operating equ1p
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Help Wa nted Overb rOh'
Center •S currently accepting
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sh1h Please come In and fltl
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OH EOE
Truck MechaniC needed

t740)388 8547

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The successfLJI cand idate
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lookm g lor ful l·tlme work? • Pa1d tralnmg
Are you IOOk1ng for a parma • Paid hOl idays
nent fullttme pos iiO n? Are •Paid vacations
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Applicants sho uld have a
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rel iable transportat ion tela Center s now acceptmg
phone 1n lhe home and w1U resumes for the position of
1ng to work weekends &amp; hoi D•rector ot Soc1al ServiCes
1days
MuSI be moll vated The qualif1ad ca ndid ate
and f le)l lble
W1U tram must be a LSW possessing
Applications are ava ilable at strong Oie rbal and wntten
the MBigs Mult ipurp ose co mm umcaho n
sk11ts
Se mor Center Mulberry Med1ca d Medica re an d
He1ghts Pomeroy OH En MDS knowled,Qe Lo ng term
EOE employer
care experoence pr oferrod
bLJt not reqwred Qualified
ApphcatiOns be1ng taken lor
may
sen d
full
tune
oll1ce ca ndid ates
resumes
to
Cha
rla
Brown·
manageri rEtcept iOmst
for
AN
LN HA
local clean nglrestoratlon McGuire
Admmlstrator 333 Page
company Send reSume to
Street
Middleport Oh1o
Spec1al
Care
1743
45760 EOE
Centenary Road Gallipolis

OH 4563 1

f

STNAs
Full and Part Time
AU Shlfte
Proper hcens e/c ert111ca t• on
reqwed We ofter an excel
lent work en w onment sh1fl
d•lferont1al
comp ebbve
wages great benel1ts pe rfet
anendance mcent1ves and
much more l
Please apply to
Attn Dianna Thompson
HR
Scenic Hills Hurting
Center
31 1 Buc kridge Road
Bidwell OH 45614
Ph 7401446-7150
Fn 7401446-2438
Email adm~n lt\n O
tandemhealthcare com
SF/DF/EOE
HR 0 11ndemhealtt11:1re com
Now hmng
All shifts
McDonalds of R•o Grande
Apply m person

The Ideal candidate wi ll
have sal e experience For
conlldentl al
Int erview
please send resume and
cove r letter lo Gallipo li s
Dall y Tribune At1n J im
Free land 825 Third Ave
Gall•po lla Oh1o 45831

Substitute AN/LPN wanted
for the Meigs Co unty Board
of Mental Retarda tion and
Developmental D•sabl lltles
Hours 9 00 AM 300P M
Must have cu rre nt AN
L cense In the Sta te ol O h o
Prefer expenence n pubhc
healtl'l nurs1ng and/or work
lng with Ch ildren and adult s
With developmental dls abll l·
ties Send resume by Friday
August 31st To McBnde
1310 Carleton Street P O
Box 307 Syracuse Oh io

Hor.n:s

MOBILEH0\11::5

IUR SALE

IUR SAIJ-

Computer
Repa u
and 3B A Ran ch 2 car garage
Troubleshoot Web Des gn poo l City sc hools S90 000
NelworklnQ Programm ng 3460 SA 218 Ga llipOliS
Bu1 ld New Systems Restore
(7 40)2 56 1962
Wi ndows
Virus Removal
P tlonelf740 99 2 7903
tlttp !/www geoc1hes comfho
t da mn3 2934/ Em ali ho t
damn32 934 @yahoo com

OH

fntenorf Extenor
Pa ntmg
Power
Wash mg
•Reasona bl e rates refer
ences e~~:pe r lenced Free
est ma tes Ca ll (740 )742
20 t 3 or (740 )645 263B

ana

45779
Sta te- Cart l ied L1nk
chlidca re has
Health District is se ek1ng a Imme diate open ngs lor
quallf ed reg1stered nurse for ages 6 wee ks&amp; up call
the POSitiOn of PubliC Health Shelly 304 675 2343 lor
Nurse II 0,1'11o Registered mora details
Nurse lice nse a nd Ohio ~------­
Drive rs License reqUired or Wanted batly·s•nmg JOb day
the abil ity to o bta1n the se shll1tn my home live across
licenses within 90 days of New Haven grade school
employ ment
Com pute r have good references 304
skills ab ility to multl· task 882 1192

The Meig s Country General approved

3BR 29 home 1n Racme
1 6 acres close to schoo l 2
car garage kitche n apph
ances 1ncluded (740 )949

86 Holly Park 3br 2ba w1t h
8 ~~:1 6 front po rch w th root
w1th a lol ol turnl\ure ask1 ng
$~0 500
(304 )576 332 0
leave message
97 Fleetwood 1 4~~: 7 0 tota l
electrt c W ill help w1t h deilv
ery Includes central a r Only
$10 99 5 Call (7 40)385
962 1

CLEAN SWEE~ SALE ' ot
model c learar:~ c e All remam
ng 2005 s must go to mak e
3069
room for new homes IJnder
construction SAVE 1 SAVE •
Attention I
SAVE • OAK WOOD HOMES
Local company otfe nng NO GALLIPOLI S Call (740)446
DOWN PAYMENT' pro 3093
grams for you to buy your - - ' -- - -- - home 1nstead at rent•ng
New 14x70 3 bedroom 2
• 100 % llnancmg
bath Only $198 63 pe r
• less than parlect credit month Ca ll Ela •n e (740)395
accepted
2434
• Payment collld be the :_::__:__ _ _ _ __
sa me as rent
New 3 BR Home On ly
Mortgage
Locato rs $ 189/mo Includes ale deliv
(740)367 0000
ary a nd set up (740)385

4367

and excellent verballwrlnen - -- - - - - - 8 nck w/3 BR 1 1/2 BA LA STATE ROUTE 554 BID·
Pa ramed ics
&amp;
EMT s communicatio ns
skills Will Babysit In my Home Pt DR FR GA 1 acre near WELL New 4 bed room, 2
need ed Apply at 135 4 required Salary defendant Pleasant area M F day! me Supresta (304)675 5026
bat h manuta ctured home
Jack son Pike Gallipolis
on educational qualti1Cal10ns _13_04
_1_67_5_·7_2_77_ _ _;__
Features hv ng room la.m!ly
and
experience
Send W II do Babyslttmg In my
room w1th fireplace and
Part· Ume Dell'.'ery person resume with three prates·
"BONUS" room Corner lot
and Floral des•gner Apply In slonal refe rences to 112 home
day shif t
only
Above ground pool wrth pool
Located at Gallipo liS Ferry,
person Floral Fashions 24&lt;4 Ea st Memorial D· Pomeroy Crab Creek Area ( 30 4)675
house Ready tor move 1n
Thlfd Ave No phone calla
OH 45769 Closing date IS 4807
PR ICED
UNOEA
29 August 2005 MCGHD 16
APPR AIS AL!
(74 0)446
All rtal elltlle advertltlng
11 \ \\CI\1
Part-T1me position at local an
equal
oppor tuOIIy
32 18
In thl• newt1p1per Ia
Dentist Office
Send employer
I'm~~~..;;;;;;;;;~
•ubje&lt;:t to tha Federal
ROAD
resumes to Dental Office r:....;;'Tr.:oc=:-:-:---,
BUSI~
Fair Houafng Act of 1968
Brand new 3 be droom 2
7 03 22 nd Street
PI
OrroRllJNIT\'
which m1kea It Illegal to
bath manufactured ho11Je
Pleasant WV 25550
Aton
hi
wv ,ac,,•.
ldVIrtlae any
..,
Completely sel and ready
preter~~nc
e
limitation
or
(Mason County)
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
Po rtamed1 c the nation s
lor move 1n Featu res I v ng
dlacrtmlnattan based on
60 vend1ng mach1nesl
le ading paramedical he alth
Innovative P.,opie Bu ld ng
r1ee, colo r, religion aex
room tam•IY room and
a~~:cellent locat1on
E~~:~r eo rdlnary Thmgs
nlormatlon serV1ce compa
familial atatua or nallon•l
beautllu l sky lit l(•tc hen
all tor $10 995
ny is saeklnQ Med Tachs
origin or
lntenUon to
DRASTICALLY AE DUCED 1
JOB
VACANCIES
800-234-6982
EMTs and LPN s to do 1nsur
make •nyauch
Call (740} 446 3570
preference limitation or
a nce exams In th e Gallipolis
Established lawn care tius1
dlsc:rlmlnathm
&amp; Me gs County area Must
Lars &amp;
BUILC!NGS &amp; GROUN DS
ness for sale Call (740)446
have 1 year blood d raw
A c Rt:At.t
MAINTENANCE WORKER
Tfll1 newapaper will not
1098
ex per ence
Contr actor
know ingly accept
Position Email Resume to
oNOTIC Eo
advertleemenll
far reel
JR
ELECTRO
NI
CS
pt11e120dm r0portamedic net
HI D VALLEY PUBLISH
eetlte which 11 In
ENGINEER (Entry·IIMII)
4 46 acres
vlol•llon of the IIW Our
•
rtldera 1re her1by
u do bus1ne ss with peo
• Walnut Cret
$1 5 94 $22 56/hr now hlr SR MECHANICAL ENGINEER
Informed that •II
Ia you know and NOT t
Aoacl
E ~~:cavatla
lng For appl icat ion &amp; free
M S Mach Eng aealrad
dwelling• ldVertlaed In
end money throu gh th
g overnment job Info call
5+yra prole58101'111e•perelce
thla
n•w•PfiP"'
1te
II until you have 1nvestl
.....liable on an aqu11
America n Assoc of Labor
ated the offer n
opportunity bane
1·9 13-599 8225
2 4/hrs
Call HR ask lor Balla
a mp serv
85!1 23 1 2476
House for sale 3 bdrm 1 1/2
\\'&lt;\mll.l
Res idential
Treat ment
www UTRONinc com
TO loAN
ba
th
Crown
C1
ty
area
"---~i;;,~;.._.J
FaclliJy lor boys now hiring
(740)256 8149
Direc t Care Workers Pay Wanted
Medical Off1ce
I Buy Hornet Local persp n
based on expe nence pa id Assistant with experience for
**NOTICE**
buys homes Conl•dem•e l
Newly
remodeled
3
or
4
msurance (740}379 9083 phy s1c1an oH1ce A unique
bedroom house central a1r Ou1ck cash J•m 74(}-992
s am 3pm Mon·Frl
position requlrmg knowl·
ar row Smart Contac
full basement hardwood 6300 No calls alter 9
_ _ :__~--- edge of computers and data
he Oti1o DIVISIOn o
Hl'\1\l"i
iloors d eta ched gara ge
AN/LPN
entry· also lCD and CPT
1nanc•al
lnst1 tuhon·
Rockspn ngs Aeh abllllallon cod ii"!Q Reliable transpo rts
large covered patio fenced ; ; : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
P111 ce of
Consume
Cen ter provides residents tlon needed No weekend s
back
ya rd
$69 SOD I'!
!fairs
BEFORE
you
refl
w1th ou tstandm g nursing or
holidays
req wrt~d
(740)709 I 382
1"10,
Hotl;~:'i
ance your home o
care and rel'labllitatlon serv· Benef1ts available Salary
FOil R&gt;:vr
pt,tam a loan BEWAR
Old m
2
1ces helping the m retum to a negotiable with $)1jperlence
BR/ 1 ba th t..-~-;.;-:..,..
r req uests tor any larg
Farm house w/10 acres m
l ie of ndepend ence at A flex ible emplOyer Mall
1 bedroom house close ·to
dvance paym ents o
co untry
3 m•le s
from
home We currently have resume to ClA Box 568 c/o
Alo Grand e college aitd
ees
or
1
nsurance
Cal
Hartfor d
$49 500
opportunitieS lor AN s and GalhpoHs Tnbune P:O Bo~~:
grade school $300/mo dl!lp
he Olf1ce of Consume
Homeste ad
Rea lty
LPN s at our faci lity k&gt;cated 469 Galhpohs OH 4563 1
•
ffa~rs toll hee at 1 866
(304 )882 2405 (304)675 req (740)446 2422
1n Pomeroy Oh10
78-0003 to lea rn 1f tffi
5540
1 tledroom hOuse
1t
mortgage
bro ker 0
We offer a COMPETITlVE
INSJ'Rl.JCI'KlN
Garheld Ave
Gall po hs
en der
1S
proper!
Well Ma1n tamed Home 2 S300Jmo' (740) 44 1 0194
SALARY SCALE an excel
ICBOSed (ThiS IS a publi
miles
N o rth of
Po nt (740)441 1t84
lent bene111 package and a
I
Conc ealed P1stot Class
ervlce Bnno uncemen
Pleasant on Landscaped 1 2
supportive work environ
September 3 9 00 am VFW
rom the Oh10 Valle
acre 3 bedrooms Family t pass bly 2 B ed ro~ m
ment Interested candidates
Mason WV Ph (740 )843
ubl1shing Company)
Room De n/OI11ce F1replace House m New Haven
PLEASE CALL SHELLEY
5555 Cell (740)41 8 3329
w1ttl ga s logs Hardwood S300tmonth S2751depOSII
MECUM AT (7-40)992-Flo01 s
Larg~
Ultlityr No Pets f304 )882 3652
Gallipolla CarMr College
Storage Large Slate look
E:~~te nd1car e
Health
( Career~ Close To Home}
StlML't::S
and Br1ck Pati O E)ltra lots 11 2 V nton Co ur t Galhpol•s
Se rviCes Inc Is an equal
OH 3Bdrm 1Bath Central
Call Todayl740 44Ei 4367
ShOwn by
ava•lable
opportuMy emp loyer that
AJC WID hoop up R e fr~dg &amp;
1 800-2 14-0452
Appo
intment
(304)675
1536
TURNED
DOWN
ON
encourages
workplace
Stove 1nl:hJded C•ty Sc hool
www gaiiiPOI..ca.re&amp;rOOiege com
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
diversity M/F ON
www.orv .com
$~00/ month S4501DepoSII
A cc*l l~ ~emb•' A.ccredll ng
No Fee Unless We Win I
Council lol lndeptnc»MI ColleQ!t
No Pet s Ref Requ re d
Home List ings
Rockspnngs Rehablli1atlon and Schoole 1274e
t 888 582 3345
1304 )67 5 6453
L1st your home by ca lltng
Center IS look1ng for ded1cat
IH\11 '- 1\11

r·O

TRON

THEISS

VINTON

•nv

r

•
•

POSTAL JOBS

•

r

MONE't

r

I'R~ONAI

REAL l'srAn

L......::;::::~:::::::~~--1 ~~--------"

t!liJ , Scu&lt;IOI.S
l·-roiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiio_.l

ed

compass•onate State
Tested Nursing Ass istan ts
CompetltiVB wages health
and dental benefits and
40 1K availab le We take
pride 111 our facility and res 1
dents anQ need great team

players to ,oln u&amp;.ll you have ,
these qualific ations please
apply
to
Rockspri ngs
th e To wn of Ma son Is Rehabilitation Center 36759
accepting ap pl1cah on s for Rockspr ings
Road
the PQS1!10n of office clerk Pomeroy Oh io 45769
ThiS IS a part lime posi!IOn
w1th the pote nt al of becom E.:tend•care
He alth
1ng tullt1me Acco unt1ng and ServiCes Inc 111 an equal
computer knowledge a opportun ity employer th at
mu st Associate degree In encourages
workpl ace
accou ntin g or b\l&amp;lness pre· diversity M!F
tar red Fill out applicatiOn at - - ' - - - - - the Mason City Bulldmg Wanted Wa~ resa full Ume
160 1 Second Street Mason Appty In peraort Holiday Inn
Galllpbht
pnor to Aug 3t

orv

1 MlscE:I..uNmul ll!tl'li'""-~---r16
HOMFS
110

FOR SAIL

DIRECT TV
3 room w1th
TIVO FREE 145 channels
only 53900 per month A.sk
how to get FREE HBO

(700,..6·3620

V1ew ptlot os.mto onh ne

•--oioiiiiiiiiii--r

2 "'Ouses 1 •s 4 bedroom
$900/mo nth 1 IS 3 bed room
SS50 month plus deposi t
[740)256 81 52

ts a Steal !l 4 bedroom 2
at h 2 car garage New
even WV Code 6505 or

38A M llSB on At 160 nea r
north Galha H S $45Dimo
MAX and home enlertatn ... Bedroom 1 112 Bath Corner ~;:11:304
:::88:2::
33~6=
8 :::::; ptu s depo sit No pets
(740\ 446 8495
men! System Call 800 523- lot new Roof move 1n con
I dillon new Car pe t and
7556 lOr details
38R 2BA hardwood fl oors
Floo r~ng Storage 81J1Id1ng
fireplace Salem Center
1ngar Fenced
For
Sale
n
Back Yard · - - - - - - - - $700/mo Ava•lable Sept 1
Quan tum lock 5 serger {304)675 7708 or (304 )593
2001 Clayto n 14x50 28R 1 Ca ll (740)418 1183
MOd 14·U 51413/2 thread 4135.
e_&amp;
bath exc~lle nt cond1 t1on " _r_oo:_m_s:_&amp;- ba- lh_ s_lo_v_
4
E ~~:.celfent
cond lt 1on - - - - - - - $200 00 Ca ll 740-949 2202 17 Sacra farm house w th 3 $ 16 000 (740 1245 94 !J 7
ret ngerator no pets
bedrooms livlng room din
mo 52 Olive St [740)44 6
n111 groom
kitch en
21u!l 200t F leetwood 2Bxe6 3945
bat hS anached 1 5 ga rage S1lllnQ on t 5 acres 1n coun
Small barn new 2 5 car try $95 000 (740)709 1166 Sma ll 2 Bedroom 11ouse In
Cl1fton WV $350 00 month
blOCk garage all fenced in 1
m1le from URG on SA 325 5 Homes under S10000 $300 DO Deposit No Pets
304 773 9192
W1!1 ~ehve r (740)385 7671
(7 40)245 54119
1401
Ceda r
Meadowbrook
Add

St
3

s

sm

�.'

I

Page B4 ~ The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

iii

\ ..:

Monday, Augulit 22, 2005

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monda~August22,2005

'

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
A-ni
Immaculate .,_. apartment Washar and dryer set, $100.
Local company offering MNO Walking distancfi! ·to URG. Ca ll (740)446-4417 baloro
D9WN PAYMENT" pro- Recently remodeled . 2BR 7pm
grams for you to buy your new private deck. $500/mo.
. tlernt lnstud of renting.
~ 00% fln8DCing
•-Leaa than perfect credit
~ted
.
• · Payment could ~be the

r

;.me as rent.
MOngage

Locators.

(1.40)3117-0000

.

t-t.uu for Rent Pt. Pleasant

$400

(304)675-5540 ,
(:104)675-4024 , , ask lor
Nancy. Homeslead Realty
Brc~r

HoUse tor Rent in Point
Pleasant (304)675-6224

(614)595-7773 or 600-798· Washer, $100: Dryer $95;
electric range, $125; gas
4686.
range . $125: refrigerator,
Modern ~ bedroom apt. $95; Whirlpool washar/drytr
set $250; vary nice couch
(740)446-0390.
$125; rocker recliner $75;
One BA 1st Fir., AJC, ulll. pd ~ table/chairs, $40; cheat-of$350 pius dep. Reference , drawers, $40; Kenmore
no pets. Stove &amp; Aetrig. turn . upright freezer,
$195;
Coin WID on premises. 258 Kenmore chest freezer,
State
St. ,
Gallipolis . $165; Wringer washer, $200.
(740)446-3667.
Skaggs Appliances
--------76 Vine Street. Gallipolis
( 74 0)446-7:)~8
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications ~~-------,
for 28Ft 3BR &amp; 4BR. .

Applications
are
taken
Two bedroom house for rent Monday thru Friday. !rom
at 1549 State Route Seven 9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Off1_£e IS
Located at 1151 Evergreen
no~h . (740)446-9177. ·
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Phone No. is (304)6755806. E H.O

r M~~~IFS I

Tara
Town house
'14x7o 2 bedroom. 2 balll ,
Apartments, Very Spacious.
CIA, waterltrash paid. $375 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
pljJs deposit, references . No Bath , Adult Pool &amp; Baby
pets, (740)388-9686.
Pool. Patio. Start 5385/Mo.
'
No
Pets.
Lease
Plus
2 bedroom, AJC, VerY nice,
na pets, in Gallipolis. Security Deposit Required.
(740)44~·1409 or (740)446- (740)357-7086
2003

Twin Rive rs TOwer is acCeptAvailable September l si. ing applications tor waiting
2BD w/new carpet. AJC, list tor Hud-subsizecl, 1- br,
'12ll:24
front
porch . apartment , call 675-6679
,$30o/mlh .
$300/depasil . EHO
: Rutland
area .
MikeUpsta1rs apartment 2 bed·
: (140)742-2595
room , stove, refr 1gerator,
·:Beautiful nver v1ew m water,
trash
included.
-Kanauga . Ideal !or 1-2 peo- Deposit required, rent $300.
'pla. No pets. please. (740)446- 7620. (740)441-~PPiications being taken . 9a72.
~:zr;;....-~----,
Call (740)44,·0181 .
SPAL""E
: ~ile Home in New Haven
FOR RF.NT
.
· $330/ mon th. $300/deposit
~~-------: (304)882· tt 07
Downtown Office Sp8ce· 5
-MObile home lOt lor rent next room suite S650/rno ; 1 room
to Methodist Chu rch in office· $225/mo.: 2 .r oom
suite $250/mo. Security
Kanauga .
:1:4'~e32'- 3 stall garage for deposit required. You pay
utilities. All spaces very nice.
liefll. (740)446-4782. .
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644
Mobile hOme on Cora Mill
tor appo intment
·Rd. close to 325, gas heat,
:nQ pets. Deposit required . For Lease · Office or retail
Also pigs for sale. (740)245- spaces in very good condi·

i

For Sale Old Timer Logan
Giant Pole . Beans $40
Bushel, ready 7·14 days

Phillip

(304)576-3320 lea..,.e -mes-

aage

I

Alder
•'

•

Plck wMe peaches, $to- 5
gallon bucket (740)44e~807 .

r

C1oooO Sunday.

New laptop, new printer,
new monitor. All for $1,000. .
can

i~---AN-I•'!Ql!ES---·rI

(740)44t -829g

or

Anything Hauled

,\ 11 \ l , llllh.

FARM
~--.iEQuliiifiiiiiPMENTiiiiiii10..,J

Buy or sell
Riverine
Antiques. 1t24 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- 0% Flnenclng lor up to 36
992-2526. Russ Moore. months on Jotm Deere
owner.
Compact and 5000 Series
Tractors witn John Deere
Credit .approval. Chock tnem
oul! Carmichael Equipment
Inc. (740)446-2412.
14in. drill 'press. w/stand ,
lloor mount wood cutting John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill
Rent.
Carmichael
band saw,bench grinder for
wtsta.nd, traditional antique Equipment. (7~0)446-2412 .
chair (nice), nib large roasler
John Deere Commercial
w/buftet
inserts.
large
Workllte
Product I
onomarVs torage, fiberglasS/
Compact Excavators/Skid
stone look electric fireplace ,
Load~r
ladles heavyduty bicycle , Steers/Tractor
Backhoe ir1 stock. Check out
WICker chair. ant1que rattan
our rental rales . Great
sofa, new sunbeam H20
financing
· available.
hot/cold water dispenser
Carmichael Equipment Inc.
(740)446-7738
(740)446-24 12.

iiiriii'"~~~11:R--:1:-~--D-ISE-,~j..,

------

For sate, .Dell Latitude lap
POLE BUILDINGS
top computer with Windows •Any Style
' Any Size
98.
Microsoft
Works .
·custom Built to lit your
Microsoft Streets &amp; Trips,
needs.
Power
Achiever
200 1,
"FREE Estimates
Sword Searcher · Complete
740-596·2909
Bible Suite. also Epson -~-..,..:-'--'---Stylus color printer and Your ProSiar Trailer Dealer.
Argus digital camera ; $90 Carmichael Equipment Inc.
Phone (740)44 t-7999 NO .(7.!.04roOl~•4.;;5;.;·2;.4~t;.2..,;.---,

·1

•r

sunday caus.
Going Out Or Business sale.
85 Dump Truck Paver and Roller $4 ,000, truck needs
work .
Misc. Power Tools 14 Head Black Angus
Cattle. 740 -742·2880.
pnced separately. (304)882 - - - - - - - - - -

LrvEsrocK

WOODBURNING

FURNACE
Heal Your Home
and Your Hoi Water!

• Garage Metal
Call

740-742·2595

flr______

4X4 .__.~l ·

2002 Toyota Tunora SR5 V6,
5:spd. 80.000mi. matching
topper, bed liner/mat, lots of
extras, $19,000. (740)388- ·
9634 eve. ask for Jeff.

r, ·

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

¥

ManJRcvcu:.,
~.,_·oii4ioWiririHmLERSiiiiiililiiiir--'
2002
Harley Davidson
Softail Deuce, many extras.
Gre al sha pe, 5 .
m1·1es,
$ 7 000 f
o
1 ·
trm.
{74 )4419816

LAWN

'========::;""ijji;;iiiiiiiii;ij;ji.:

BARNEY ..

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·

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all•napp•

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YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE .

V.C. YOUNG Ill

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f

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Optional Upgrades Available;
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QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
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Storage

Help Wanted

~elp

Wanted

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS
SUPERSTORE

on
SAVINGS

(740) 992-5232
SxiO, IOxiO,
10xl5, 10x20,

• Must Have Valid Driver's License
• Be Neat In Appearance
• Training·Program
• 5 Day Work Week
• Hospitalization
• Paid Vacation
• Bonus Program

::,.&amp; S.MAC.K' ;.•
HEY,TH1 5
JUST
TASTES
LIKE

IOxJO
Janet Jeffers

IMPORTS
Athens

33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

97 Beech Street
Middleport OH

" Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

SaL ~:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

Sep

1-!ELI.O, CAARLIE

Brc~l or Brian Whaley

BROWN? I'M
SCARED..

OF THIS
Pi1.ot&gt;UCT.'.

M.A!.KING

@
0
0
D

OF WI-IAT'
IT'S TWO
O'CLOCK IN

I WA'S 50liND
ASLEEP.. AND
TI-!EN I I-lEARD
SOME CO\'OTES

MO~NIN6

1-!0WLINE; ...

TI-IEI' SOUNDED
50 LONEL'r'.. !

STARTED TO
THINK A60LIT
IN

I 6UE55 I
WOKE YOU liP.
1-lLII-l? WERE
ASLEEP?

NO, l WAS JUST
SITTING 1-lERE
WAITING FOR
SANTA CLAUS ..

Hlgh COlt of fertiUzer got you WOrried?
17-17-17- $275 ton (While 10ppty Lat)
• EJ:cel'-nl Balmcad Ftrtii!Ur
5--URE.l -1205 ton top dtftl ywr field cob me~ I
with T.M. Nil $5.75/'IOOib.l»g
lli'Wiy a Rotowldc pi•Nre
~1t0111 ,.m,t aYIIIabte.
Mushroom Compost Mailable
• 40% Soybean Meal $13.25 100/lb

SUNSHINE CLUB

• 18 !ip~U.drr hugglt'S 8\'allable ror use.
• Alrwa)' pasturt rtnO\'aton &amp; setdtn &amp;\'lilablt to rent.
• LlctnHd agronomist on !ltafr a"ailablr for ronsuhing.

740-912-1&amp;n

Shade River AG Service,-Inc

Stop &amp; Compare

35537 St Rt 7 N ¥Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831

•

DURIN&amp; THE

PEANUTS

llestO&lt;"ki'!g I~ le ,\'kxJe[ Sttfw.ge
and After ,\hrhet Paris
M-Fn 8.30-5.00

· ·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
·Remodeling

HI'&gt;RI1ED

WATER~

St. RL681 Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

10x10x10x20
. 992·3194
or 992-6635

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIIISTRUCnOII

.. Nb LEMONS WER:E

Whaley's Auto
Parts

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

A GmJP OF cw~ S£RJI~
11M£ IN A ltotRAL PW •
IWJTl ARY GOf TOGE!ti£R. ···

'----------~ ·
GARFIELD

I

740·44"6-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

'.j\U 1Y.pts Of·/

c~·work

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPAC~
FOR $52 PER MONTH .

Insured

Shop the
Classifieds!

BUT l GoUE:55·
YOU KNOW THAT

Hf:Y, G-ARFIEl-D! I BAKED
A CAKE fODAY!

DODGE
252 Upper River Road • &lt;ialli~lis

and Replacement

' '

Hill's Self
Storage

Now Available At

BAtJM LUMBER

29670 Bashan Road
Ractne. Ohio
. 45771

7411-949-2217

Sizea 5'111 o·

to 1Ci'x30'

'

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Scorpion Tractors
"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Si ze 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

Tue•day,Aug.23,2005
By Bernice Bede O•ol
Tho quality of contacts you're likely to ·
meet in the year ahead wl!! be s uperior in ways or attecllng you businesswise and socia!!y to those you've
made in th e past. Your new associates
will b~ able to help you in s,everal
areas
V~RGO
(Aug . 23-Sept ' 22} Conditions might arise today where
you may fee! a need to expresS your
expertise or knowledge to those who
are o ff trar:k. However. you will do so
in a manner that will brmg · you
approval
'
LIBRA {Sept. 23 -0ct. 23) - There's a
s trong probabilily th at a beneficial
change will take place today that will
have a ripple e ffoct that will end up
con tributing to your ~ataria l wellbeing. Make the mo st ol it .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - 11 is
' always good to be cooperative with
others. but today it behooves you to
go out of your way to do so, even to
tho se who may h11ve causod problenis in the pasl. Old ills can be
smoothed out.
'SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 2 1 l Opportunities are hovering abou1 you
today whore your work or career is
concerned and in ways that could add
to your earnings or in come. Pay he&amp;d
to t ips passe d onto you by att!uent
people.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Although you will be quite capable of
taking care of your own needs today, •
persons who are fond of you w11! nevertheless go out ol lhelr way , to do
things that cou ld ease your !ot in life.
AQUARIUS (Jari. 20-Feb. 1 9) - !n situations where you ltnd you rself looking out lor the welfare of those who
are in need of q u e . you'll b e capable
of remarkable teats to day. W ithout
he si tation you ·u do what you can
PISCES

.YlttW /

~

LE:WIS
CONCRE:TE
CONSTRUCTION

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
· GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Alfmdable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
• L~ave a message

One of the most entertatning competi·
lion s is ·knockout rubber-bndge. Each
match is over 24 deals, so wl1e'n the last
deal is reacl1ed , both Sides know exactly
what is required tor victory.
look only at the West hand. It is deal 24 .
ard your side needs 300 po1nts lor victory. How do you feel?
It looks as though you have had it, espe·
cially when the deale'r on your left opens
one diamond. (They are using a strongclub system , in wh1ch a one-club opening
would .promise .at least 16 points.) But
your par tne r makes a takeout double, and
your right-hand op~onent' - can you
believe it? .:.... jumps to lour hearts .
Suddenly feeling that there 1s a chance ,
·you double , and it is passed out;
You lead your singleton diamond . Partner
w1ns with the ace. cashes the diamond
kmg, and contin ues with the diamond
eigl1t. which you ruff. Since partner has
carefully played hiS highest diamond
every time. you shift to a spade . .Partner
wins and gives you a second diamond
rull
Declarer take s the rest. but that is two
down for pluS 300 and a win . You
excl1ange h1gh fives, quietly thanking
South for llis stupid four-hear t·bid, given
tile state of ihe match . But sudden ly
South says, ''I had 100 honors."
Rubber-bridge competitions are rarely
held, probably ·because th e good players
think that there is too much 'luck involved.
If you don't get the cards , you cannot win .
However. although some top pairs lose
along the way, normally experts end up
winning. The h1gh-card points balance
out .' Hold one of these events at your local
club.:__ it would be fun .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

Celeblfy Cipl'lel cryptograms are cr~ated from qLL~!atlOns D)' lamout peorJe . past and present.,
Each 1t1ne1 111 !he e1piler slands ~Of anclhlf

Todify's clue: Wequals lJ

"RSK

LPSMSY!

SK

WVEVOSVMBEOV .

CRBC

XBP

5 BY

FNRY

NY

L NY' C

S
JZ

RNDSLBZK ."

E 8 HVP• XSYTR ,

NV

I N D X V· P

LBOZ

BIG NATE

Free Estimates

SALES PERSON NEEDED

+7

Phone

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

93 Columbus Rd • Atbens, OH

Allpass

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "llovelhe 1dea lhal we are all walk-on pans. uslrtjj
a theatrical term . in other people's lives" - Playwright Alan Ayckbourn
·

GRIZZWELLS
IJlol&lt;'&gt; lll&lt;i. 1\\~ Mt..t\1&gt;6'&lt;-~
\$ 601\14 To PULL

'\\\£ PITCI-IE~

Y'E"-\L ~m 1
1\l,\~V..

rr·,

~~

c.o~w:..

\o\\f&gt;.~

IT'""'"' \'\1C\\'t.'f!:? \)..~ 1'7 /I'J.\l,\~ t.. f"Rcrrf
~c~~
~~~ME.~T

·st. Rt.

(F eb

20- Ma rc h

20)

0

Ji:f!oncngr

!ellen

of

, lou1 ~romb l t"d w~·· ch bf'
low IC&gt; l orm l o~r ~~mr : ~ word~

[

NIONI\l

I

SALCH

.

I---,1
--.1' [ Jr.,-,,I,-~
I

.:'\. PRINT NUMBERED LEflEIIS IN
'11&lt;! 5! SQUARE~

'9

f t UNSCiAMSlf ABOVE lETTERS
o:l'
t 0 G€1 ANSW£0

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

B- 1'- o I

Pa 11 i d . Robot. Usurp. Wiggle. GUIDE POST
Past experiences should nol be used as a htlchmg
·.

post but as a GUIDEPOST

ARLO&amp; JANIS

-

lntorm!'lllon from seve ral , unrelated
source s can be ploced together today
1n a fAshion which will turrl out to b~.
quite· advantageous for you . You cou ld
become a big 11ntc: in the chain o f
events.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Conditions tend to tavor you today for
lutfilllng your Career or fin anc•al aspi ~
ration s. The better you'ra prapared
tmd the harder you work, the greater
th e gain s. Put yoursel f In the race to
win .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ) - Dare to
th ink big today and proceed boldly out
into the world . ll you start to expAnd
your hor 1zons , you'll become aware ot
oppor1unities that previously escRped
your attention.
.
GEMINI (May 2 1 ~June 20) - Wa!tc:ing
softly will conquer what harsh co m .
mands can't today. Extend your compasskln and uncterstandtng 10 th ose
who are under your author ity and
underplay your power and control.
C AN CER (.June 2 1-July 22) Something of great potential benefit
cou!d develop lor you today througl1
the auspices ot a f riendly s uppo1IBL
Thi s indi&gt;Jidual has Your besl interest
At heart and will open doors for ybu
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Conditions
are quito favorab le lor you loda y
where your goals and ambitions are
concerned . 11 you'vtt been wai ting tor 1
thi3 r'lght moment to push through
somett11ng big , th is Is the day to do it

THER~ WAS ATIMEYOU'OAfLEMT A~K .'

SOUP TO NUTZ
~ &gt;t let~~

% Gare 8 T

r F&amp;IoL.
'*'&lt;J '""'- 1HS1.;;1-t1AC8NT
T&gt;te S'Tl'lRs,

6(0[)

lb\1-\T
'

)

BAUM . LUMBER
.

124 Chester 985-3301

1/14•1 mo pd

--~---------------------------------------------2---------------------'·

GUY
AG'lN

t

Vinyl Double Hung

Let me do 1t for youl

AW, GEEZ !I
NOT TMAT

FRurrs&amp;

APPLY IN PERSON
ASK FOR JERRY

AA/EOE

j·

WINDOW SUPER SALE

1l:

LOWEEZY !! YORE
GROC'RY ORDER
IS READY !! "cljck !! ~

·j .

Get AJump

•

•

l

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PR CES

F

·Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675-4340

!

eo- ., • t'ak• Rlgll and Dry

r

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
~ccepting resumes for a Medital
Retord Trahscriptionist. Registeted
H·ealth Information Technician
preferred . One to three years of
medical transcription experience.
Minimum speed of 60 words per
minute,
,
,l:xcellent salary, · holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation, longterm disability and retirement Send
resumes to:

j

AN' NEXT WE
HAVE SiLAS FROM ·
HOOTIN' HOLLER-GO AHEAD, CALLER,
YO'RE ON TH' AIR !\

Mowing, Trimming. Tree Trim ming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, Leal Removal, as well as smatl
landsc aping jobs such as planting arid mulching.

Service

r BoA~s~UIORS I

RE DIVISION

(Commercial and Re~dentia l)

East
DbL ,

:+

A fun competition
rarely played

Owner: Jeff Stethem

·

~rth

Opening lead:

(Commlmilllllnd Residenti11l)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveway~.. ·
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings1 Oegreasing of
Equipment, BoalS, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or stainin·g of your deck
·
or log home, Aluminum brightening,
Special. rates to Truckinl;Ad Dump Trucking COmpanies.

For more information call
740-992-3824 or 740·667·0338 ·

ooo

4.'! ~1.

Office: {740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6881
POWER WASHING

K-4 Open House
Aug. 25th at 7:00PM

We ~t

South

TRI - STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Now enrolling students.for the
2205·2006 school year.
Grades K·4 through 12

li:ro~-----:-,

"---·fllR-iriSiiAUOiiiiioo.,J

AKQJ64

.. 10 8

i

River Valley Christian Academy

1989 Chevy -van 38,293
miles. good tires, run s great.
$2,500, must see.
Freezer chest, white, $200,
good •condition , 8 feet, 36
'high, 60 long. (740)3889640

r.

+

A K 8l
.Q.I G5

• Q 10 53

30 Yrs, Exp. • Ins, Owner: Ron~le Jones

Repairs
Parts

.PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

3

&gt;II B

• Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

740-742-2455

r

A Q 96

•

Top • Removal

Rider-Push-Weedeating
Owner Operated

1988 Chevrolet Astra CL
van, one family owned, good condition, Estate Sale. Make
an olferl Can (740)446-6997
evenings.

Equipment
LLC

•~---miiiiRiiSiiAIJliiiioo-

•

J73 '2
1098152
;
!1• 4

South

Tree Service

No i.awn To Small
Call742-2595

VANS
FOR SALE

r

r

AK7:J 2
f~ ast

•

JONES'

HARMON
LAWN CARE

. FOR SALE

Morris ·

r

J \1 5 2

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Neither

3 year old Quarter horse mix
2196 (304)377·8266
JET
gelding. Very gentle. kids 2002 HD Softa il Deuce. r
tion. Downtown Gallipolis.
AERATION
MOTORS
have ridden him. 14 hands, · many extras including wide
Appro)( . 1600 sq. tt. each. 1
A~~RTMENI'S
0 74 0 2 56 56 2 4 · _ _ tire, chrome, Python Pipes
or 2 baths . Lease "price Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In =$~45:__·.:_1__1:_~~·~:___
mRRJ.Nr
negotiable to encourage Stoc~ Call Ron Evans, 1· One male Pygmy QOC\1 7,000 miles. (740)446-2815
(b k) bl k
'th
11
•
new
busmess.
Call 600-537-9528
uc
ac
WI
sma 2002 Honda ACE . loaded,
, and -2 bedroom' apart- (740)446·4425 or {740)446·
amount
of
while
.
Ca
ll
extra.
·Adult
owned.
Main!.
ments. furnished and u!;lfur- 3936.
.
NEW AND USED STEEL 1740)441-1590.
Shop Manuel, 54 .950. or
•
ni shed. security deposit
I ,,, \ ,, ( ' I I I•! \ I iII !!
parttrade (304)682-3454
•
required , no pets. 740-992- Prime Commercial Space at Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
Concrete .
Angle,
2216
Spring Valley Plaza. 3,000 For
•
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel $500 DemonstratiOn Bonus- 2002 t~onda Aecon exc. ·
sq . ft. Call (740)446 -348 t
Le t us demo e John Deere Z cond. $2, tOO call alter 6pm
Grating
For
DrQins,
2 Bd. ~pt . available in
Trak or X Series All-Wheel (304)675-6714
~ ·or Farm E 4uipmenl\IIIU 11\\IIISI
Middleport.
No pe ts.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; l
Steer
on
your
lawn
and
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
$300.00 .
Call:888-5t42003 Honda 450 Foreman S
Trucks Dozers
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; receive an extra $500 off our
HOIJSEHOUl
0192. HUD approved.
Extended
Warranty
$3.900
•
Specialty
• Clutche~
Gooo,;
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed alra·ady discounted prices.
OB0.{304 )675·4807
• Brakes
2 bedroom apt. on SA 160
Limited
time
offer.
Thurs day,
Saturday
&amp;
Fully remodeled. central air,
Carmichael Equipment Inc.
Sunday.
(740)446-7300
Suzuki
2005
black
washer/dryer hookup. stove 1940's Bedroom Suite. Full
Boulevard CSO. 1,300 miles.
Bed,
Dresse
r,
w/round
&amp; refrigerator mcluded
Sharp bookshsll stereo sysMany extras. Like newt
$450/mo
(7 40)44 t -0 194 . Mirror &amp; matching Sitting tern, sounds great. $50. Call
$6,900 (740 )44 5-3 43 1
&amp;
Wardrobe
,
w/mirStool
(740)441 -1184.
(740)446·44
Bt1IILDING7
before
7pm.
AUIUi
, _ , •• ,. IJIJ
rored Door. &amp; new Mattress.
· ~ bedroom apt. on SA 850. BoJtsprings- in good-condiSUI'I'lliS
FOR SAt.E
Brand New. Central , 'air. tion . $350 for all (304)675wttmlrllctln
stove &amp; refrigerator includ· 4595
--19&amp;5 Mustalng Fastback,,
"'lawn &lt;1nd Garcten
ed, washerl dryer hookup
Block, brick, sewar pipes, Rangoon Red e~~:terior : black 1989 Stratos Bass Boat, 16
Tractors o\re our
Bu~lness ... ·
$700/mo. (740)441-0194,
windows, lint81s. etc. Claude interior, 6 cyde, 3 speed. air Foot. 70 H.P. Johnson Motor
not
our sideline."
(7"0)441-1184 .
Winters, Rio Grande, OH .conditioning, . radio, good with pOwer lilt end trim .. New
Grave1y
Call740-245-5 121 .
driver. Rust free AZ. car. trolling motor. $3,700 Call
2 bedroom , 1 bath, water
Appliance
Price: $19,000.00 . Hill's at1er 5:00 P.M. (304)675Tractor
Sales
paid, $350 mon th , $350
Aulomotive Classic Car 7382
DAVIDSON METAL
Call
~ecurity
deposit.
&amp; Service
Restoration &amp; Parts, lnc.1 - - - -- - - - ROOFING
Warehouse
\11,• .~en-,. .,. mvs1 lll&lt;l!.:rs
(740)446-346 t .
29670
Bashan
Road
,
1993
Yamaha
500,
2
·seater
'18 Colors
204 Condor Street
Racine. Ohio 45771 . Pl1one Wave Runner &amp; trailer.
Pmni:.rnv. 01·1
Apartment tor rent , ,-bed- in Henderson , WV_ Pre "30yr. warranty in writing
740-992-2975
room . located 1205 Oh1o St. owned applicanes starting at
740 _949 _2217 ., Website Overall great condition.
'Professional Installation
Asking $1 ,000 OBO. Call
Pt. Pleasant, $325/month. $75 &amp; up all under warranty.
• Free Estimates
www.hillsrestO.COr'fl
(740)446-6661
, (740)645wJter sewage included we do serv1ce work on all
740"596-2909
Gene Arms/Ownerf9114)675·8868
.
1980
Mercedes
Benz ~7~63;-,.6;.·-~---:~-,
Operator 740-992-3174
MaKe and Models (304'1675- rn::---~---~edan. 4dr, 5eyl. Diesel sunMCOTORAMPER!H~~
* Wec ld v Trash Scr\'ice
Apt. tor Rent. Beecl1 Street 7999
PETs
roof, f50,()()() miles, e~ecelvru~
4
yrs of Reliable Service
MiQclleport. One 'Bedroom ,
lent shape $2,000/080
suede sofa
&amp;
(Kee
p Ynur Mt)ncy J.,ll·al )
~rnistled , utilities paid. ref- Brown
(304)675-4907
loveseat by ,United, good
erences. 740-992-0165_
1968 Chevy 321 automatic
G&amp;R SANITATION
co net ..$400. Call (7 40)446· 6 Blue Heeler puppies. full 1985 Olds 98 , runs gOOd.
camper. Good running con3356 1 B;~ih:y Run Rd ..
BEAUTIFUL
APART- 4417 before 7pm.
blooded. but no papers, 20 . 22 MPG, $450 (304)675..,
MENTS
AT
BUDGET - - , - -- - - - - S100.(740)446-3333orslop 1628
dltion. Only 52,000 original -===P=o~m~c=ro~
·, ~O~H=~
mites. ·$1,900. (740)441:.::::.::___ _ _ _ __
'PftiCES AT JACKSON GaS Range . elec. range. by Feed Stop. Gallipolis.
ESTATES, 52 westwood compant washer.
$100
1985 Pontiac Trans-Am. 7967 or (7401245-9008.
Drive trom $344 to $442. each. Call (740)446-4417 AKC AHRA Rag . Bi:tagle Sspd. 305 H.O.. only 55,000
2001 Jayco Designer Series
puppies. tn·colored, tirst mi)es. viper blue. Hops ,
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call before 7pm .
27RKS, 5th Wheel . Lots of
740-446-2568.
Equal Green Sofa &amp; Chair ~by shots and wormed $100 excellent shape. (740)446· accessories
$21 .000
0350.
(304 )675-3506
Housing Opportunity.
Southern Dreams, must sell,
(304)675-2246
• Room Addition• I
R~tng
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- $300. Call (740)44S -44t7 AKC German Shephard 1997 Honda Civic 109,000
2003 Coachman 24FT, TI.
• New Garages
Pups. Solid Black, worki{lg mi . After market eccesEO &amp; 'AFFORDABLE!
before 7pm.
Bath, AC, Furnace. Sleeps
• Eltetrlclf • Plumbing
line. Vet. cnecked (304\937- series. 38+ ll1PQ· Clean,
TOwnhouse
apartments,
• Roonng 1. Gut1ers
5,$9,000 (304)675-1444
Mollohan
Carpet,
20"2
Clark
&amp;nd/Qr .small houseS FOR
black/black. Call ·(740)4412310
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pal'ntlng
RENT. Call (740)441 -tltt Chapel Road . Porter. Ohio. CKC Golden Retriever pup· 9865.
• Patio and Porch Oec:ks
89 30FT NomaO bumper
~applicatiOn &amp; information. (7 40)446-7 444 1-877·830·
We do It all except
lo•
sale
$200
Wormed
....:.----~--pull,
new
Fridge
and
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s
•
1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr., 4
9t62. Free Estimates, Easy PIO
furnace work
Microwave , Trades conskt·
h
d
d
t
8
k
ld
·Deluxe
Downtown
1br financing, 90 days same as an secon s o s. w so . cyl. 76,000 miles. $3,000
orad 54,300 (304)675-1043
Apartment, No Pets call cash . Visa/' Master Card. Call (740)388•8965 ·
080, no r.easonable offer
.._,I In II I . ._,
992..S215 WV036725
(304)675-3788
Dr'ive- a- lit11e save alot.
Full blooded Boxer Pups. refused, must sell. Call
Pomeroy, Ohio
1
Mother and Father on prem- (740)441-Q? 2.
Furnished Apartment. 2nd
25 Yearalocal Ex
ence
ThOmpsons Appliance &amp; lses. Female. Brindle &amp;
HOME
Ave, Gallipolis, Upstairs, All
........
,...,IUlo..n:o~o.Pn:&lt;
Rep.'·r•675 •7388 · Fo r sale ' Fawn, w/ Wtilte markings 78 Corvette, runs with a new
.tJ¥lri\Vt"r.o.T&amp;r:.t"'IJ-3
UtlHties Paid, 1 Bedroom,
· ,.IC $250 (304)875-6501
motor, needs some work "--liiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiOiiit.,i
re- Cond 1't'on
1
e d au t Qma
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No Pets (740)446-9523
washers &amp; dryers, relngera- .:.::.:,--,~-'------ (2,000) 97 S10 pu runs
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Furnished upstairs, 3 rooms tors . gas and elec1r ic Full blooded Lab puppies. great &amp; looks good , 4 cyl. 5
speed.
$2.800
080. Unconditional liletime guar&amp; bath. Cle8n. ret. &amp; deP ranges, air co nditioners, and Pt1on~ (740)446-2460.
~equired . No pets. (740)446· wringer washers. Wilt do lr~--:M':-USI-CAL--..., c(7_40_)c.446_-_o_17_,_.- - - - antee. Local references fur• fOR ALL YOUR
1519.
repairs on major brands in
INsTRtlrtfENTS
95 Jeep Cherokee Sport nishBd, Established , 975 .
ELECTRICAL
NEEDS.
shop or at your home.
__
146,000 miles,· 1 owner, Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
• MOBILE HOME
roQm apartments at Village Used Furniture Sto're. 13Q Bundy Trumpet with case. runs great. $2,500. After · 0870, Roge rs Basemen t
REPAIRS
5:00. (740)?45-5226.
Waterproofing.
Manor
and
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Good
Condition.
•
CARPENTRY
,t.Rartments In Middleport. OH . 40% off all ~ing mat- $150.00.' 740-965-31139.
99 Ford Windstar Auto, Air. 4
~rpm $295-$444 . Call 740- tress sets. mobile home lot
• ROOF • PAINT
door, 1 16K. Nice Van .
ExCAVATING
G92 -5064. Equal HOUSing for rent. 3 stall garage for
OHIO LICENSE # 38244
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VEGETABLe;
rent . (740)446·4782.
~portunities .
For sate: 1995 Corvette .
740-367-0544
DitChing/Trenching
Canning tomatoes tor Sale. Coupe. Call (740)446-4255
Service
740·367-0536
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Very nice! $4 .Q!J you pidl;,
TRUCKS
15
4)(4 Commercial Oltci'1-Witcl1 1...~-----'-_;_­
$5.00 we pick(by order) Jim
with six-way blade, DiggingO'Brien FaJm, Letart Falls,
Depth up to 5'6~ . Gas .
Ohio. 7'*247-2113.
Wa1er, Cable, Electric &amp;
1997 Dodge Dal&lt;ota SLTV6, ro~,a~in~U~n!es~~~~~
Field ripen tomatoes . Call Automatic,
2 Wheel Drive, ~
(740)379-9110.
12.000 miles (304)593-16 14
Concrete Removal

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• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

Designed 10

North
08·22-05
A K 10 5 4

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Tuppers Plains, OH
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AntMr to PrtVIOUI Puzzle
42 $hepe or
form
1 Geol.
45 NIIUrll
formations 49 R1wl1 or
4 Compeny
Gthrlg
8 Underotood 5lJ Drew on
11 Ch1rged
53 New singles
partk:ln
54 Mod . alalltf
13 Movlo dog 55 Roman's V fEtrr.:l
of yore
56 Decays
14 Small gullar 57 NASA
1S Run-in
counterpart
16 Shoahon58 October's
-eans
stone
17 Cut of meat 59 Born as
18 Tobacco
produciS
DOWN
23 Carder's
42 ' Mm&amp;.'l
20 Swampy
demanda
daughter
areas
1 Elc.
24 Sorority
43 Fumblar'l '
21 Trim a dolly
category
word
letter
22 Crane arm
2 Pith helmet
25 Pledge . 44 Palo-grtlllrl
24 Toaller
3 Catch
26 Have fun
moth
type (hyph.) 4 Gounod
27 Made
48 Nerve cell
27 Listens In
opera
cheddar
pa~
..
30 Comet- 5 Ego ending
better
47 Monsieur's
Bopp
6 Country
28 Recipe ami.
pale
·
31 Mil. types
addr.
29 Baja Ms.
48 Lalln I verb
32 Wintry cry
7 More ,
31 Milk option 50 Tabloid . .
34 Make- - .
to Pablo
33 Jo~ged .
sighting
doubla
8 You bell
35 Uh s
· 51 Jual alatto
35 Scrapes by
9 Like
coualns
52 Peron or
36 Is, In Madrid 10 Spider traps
Gabor
37 New plant
12 Rodin work 36 Elraadwinnet
38 Oller
variety
19 Chat.
· 39 Bon Jovl
39 Shogun·a
slangily
of rock
domain
20 Kind
41 Cuban
40 Belief
of agent
premier
41 Nol agalnsl 22 Slicks oul
ACROSS

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

�''

Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

"

'

Monday, August 22, 2005

..

·Autopsy unable to find cause of lineman's death
. DENVER (A P) - The
~use of offensive lineman
Thomas Herrion 's death
.cannot be determined until
toxicology tests are • performed. a process that usually takes three to six
weeks, a co roner said
Sunday.
· The 23-year-old offensive
guard for the San Francisco
49ers co llapsed in the locker
room Saturday night , minutes after \)le team 's exhibiti on ga me against the
Broncos on a 65-degree
evening . in
mile-high
Denver. He was taken to the
h11Spital and pronounced
ucud shortly after.
"We didn't see anything
happe n," 49ers defensive
Jinem.an Marques· Douglas
s-aiu. "I sut by my locker and
prayed for him ."'
Howard Daniel , an investi gu tor with the . Denver
coro ner 's office that per' formed an autopsy on
Herrion, sa id nothing was
readily apparent about why
he died.
"The re 's no conc l~ s i on.
pending further stud ies."
Daniel sa id ..
The death o nce again
spotli ghts how deh ydration
·. and obesity affe ct athletes ,

Reds
from Page Bl
second homer in the eighth
off Brandon Lvon. when
Casey followed
make it
conse~utive homers.
Perm has three homers in
his l-ast seven plate appearances and 16 homers this season. He is fi ghting for playing time in an outfield than
inc.l udes Ken Griffey Jr. ,
Kearns and Adam Dunn .
''I know he . wallis to play.
but with the way Dunn is
playing. and the way Griffey
1s playi ng and the way
Kea~ns plays right field ... It's

·,a

especially the huge linemen
who play in the NFL.
Herrion was 6-foot-3, 310
pounds- fairly average for
an NFL lineman, but considered obese within standards
routinely accepted by the
medical community. •
"O ur thou ght s are with the
Herri on family and the
49ers, " NFL spokesman
Greg Aiello said Sunday.
"We have been in contact
with the 49ets throughout
th e day to offer our assistance and to learn the details
of what happened.''
Henio n. who played in··
co llege at Utah. was on the
.field for San Francisco's 14play, 9 1-yard drive that
ended with a touchdown
with 2 seconds left in the
game. After the game, he
was notice&lt;lbly winded as he
walked off the field , but didn't look much different than
teammates who played
bes ide him at game 's end.
The death comes a little
more than four years after
offe nsive lineman Korey
Stringer of the Minnesota
Vikings died .of heatstroke
during a training camp practi ce when the he at index '
soared to II 0.
NFL ·teams si nce ha ve

increased efforts to teach Hamburg Sea Devils of NFL
play€rs about how to man- Europe.
.
age the heal. On Saturday
Herrion play~d in junior
fli g ht,
temperatures
in college at Kilgore College
Denver's thin air were in the in East Texas. Travi s Fox,
mid-6Qs with 50 percent the offensive coordinator at
humidit y. although experts Kilgore. said Sunday he
say heat stroke can happen shared an apartment with
even in coo l weather.
Herrion for two weeks thi s
It is not known whether summer.
Herri'on
had
Den~er's mile-high altitude returned to the school to ge t
could nave contributed to In shape before reporting to .
the death. As a college play- the 49ers.
er at Utah. Herrion played
Fox sa id Herrion never
games at high elevation and s tru g~ l ed durin~ intense
would 'have been more used drill s~in 97-dcgree heal. He
to tho se . condition s 'th an added that the lineman had
many. ·
no iniuries or health probIn
1979. Sl.
Louis · !ems whik playing at
Cardinals tieht end J.V. Kilgore.
Cai n died of':t he&lt;trl atlack
'The young man was in
during
tra1111ng
camp, shape," he said .
Chuck Hughes, a Detroit
Herrion 's nicknan1es at
Lions wide receiver, died of Kilgore were "Train" and
a hearl .attack during a 1971 "Big T. " Fox said he was
game in Detroit against the called
"Thunder"
in
C hicago Bears. In April, · Germany becau se his head
Arena Football League was too bi g for a regular
player AI Lucas of the Los helmet.
Angeles Avengers died of a
Fox said Herrion ,~lways
spinal-coru injury after talked about his niece, and
making a tackle .
family ,wrs a bi g motivation
Herrion, a first-year play- for· playing.
e r with the 49ers, .spent pan
"Whei1 he got here ,'' Fox
of last season on the San recalled, "the first thing he
Francisco and Dallas prac' told me wa s, 'I'm going to
ti ce squads. He also played· make this team and buy my
thi s season with
the mom a nice house."

toug h to take Kearns out, the
way he plays defense," Reds
interim manager Jerry Nmron
said. ·'Everybody knows we
have a fly ball pitching staff,
and ·it's toug h to take him
out.' '
Cincinnati took two of
the
three
from
Diamondbacks to win a home
series for the first time si nce
July
22-24
against
Milwaukee. when the Reds ·
also won two of three. ·
Eric Milton (7-12) allowed
two runs and six hits in six
innings. and didn't allow a
home run for only the sixth
time in 27 starts this season.
Milton has allowed ·a major
league-high 35 homers·.
"I could've gone fur1her."

Milton said. "Everything was
. good. You put up a seven-run
inning early, it really puts
you at ease. It helps you relax
and focu s on what you have
to do."
Hal sey (8-1 0) gave up
seven runs and eight hits- in
four innings, losing his third
straight start after going 4-0
in his previous six. Arizona
went 4-8 on a season-high
12-game trip.
After facing just one batter
over the minimum nine
through the first three
innings. Halsey walked Rich
Aurilia leading off the fourth,
then gave up a single to
Griffey and a 437 -foot homer
on a 1-2 pitch to Pena that
bounced off the batter's eye

•tt(J\.IS•\ul ., , ,, . :\o . (t

SPORTS
• Tribe on playoff warpath.
See Page _B1 .

photo
San Francisco offensive lineman Thomas Herrion, 23, walks
to practice at the 49ers training camp in Santa Clara, Calif.,
Tuesday, Aug. 9. Herrion coll.apsed in the locker room and died
Sunday morning shortly after the 49ers played the -Denver
Broncos in a preseason game..
AP

thought we had a chance- if
we could stop them ."
Notes: Cincinnati has
scored six or more runs in an
inning three times in its last
three games .... Arizona 2B
Craig Counsell turned 35
Sunday. .. . Diamondbacks
rookie Conor Jackson walked
as a pinch hitter in the seventh and remained hitless in
17 straight at-bats ... Quinton
· McCracken is hitless in hi ~
rust 12 at-bats after striking
out as a pinch hitter in the
fifth . ... SS Royce Clayton
was 0-for-5 to S)lUp his season-high hitting streak at nine
games. He· had reached base
at least once in -19 consecutive games.

OBnuARIEs
Page AS
• Harry E. Stobart, Sr., 88

.. .

• Beef banned under
mad cow rules is recalled.
See Page A2
• Stem cell science
advances; Senate still
poised to loosen Bush's
restrictions. See Page A2
• Companion planting
theme of club meeting.
See Page A3
• Davis family has
reunion. See Page A3
• Daughters of America
prepare for inspection.
See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Meigs County Fair
Briefs. See Page AS·
• Open Horse Show
results posted.
See Page AS
• Fair truck and
tractor pull results.
See Page AS

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· as rated by engn tf' rnf!ndar;u-~r

'511:'t

,

'

I
t

2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

, Classifieds

82-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
A5

Editorials
Obituaries

•

~U '• ~IJ-21-5'1832-8

Commission which is furni sh-'
ing the grant money for the
repair. Another delay is due to
the Sternwheel Festival be ing
held in late September. •
During open discussion,
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun
inquired about the old Pomeroy
Junior High building and if
there were any new developments concerning its fate.
Nothing new was reported.
Spatm then went on to' ask
what happened to the $35.000

she believed was set aside for
demoliiion from the appro xi- .
m,ately . $160,000 insurance
settlement from the building's'
2003 fire.
·
Clerk-Treasurer
Kathy
Hysell said that selllement
money went into renovating
the street department's build-'
ing, and purchasing vehicles
and equipment that were damaged in the fire.
Hysell said the $35,000
Spaun was referring to on ly

becomes available if the building is sold for demolition.
Spaun then asked Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt
if it was legal fo r alcohol to.be
served on the parking Jot during the Big Bend. Blues Bash.
Proffitt and Musser reported
that it was leg;1l and th;it the
organizers .of the event had
the proper Iiquor permit
which required the alcohol be
confined to the parking lot. ,
Spaun · also saiu resident$

had requcsteu more benches
along the walk path . Streer
Superintendent Jack Krautter
said he had several and wuuld
place sume near the park on
East Main Street.
Cou ncilman George \Vril!ht

askeu Krautter how ~th e street
paving was goi ng. Krautter
reported th:it despite a few
days delay last week it was
go_ing well.

Please see Wall. A5

Spmt~

Weather

B·Section
A6

© 2005 Ot'l.io Valley Publis hing Co •

.,

RACINE - When 530 students return to class thi s
week · at
Southern
Elementary, they will begin
their new school year by
being honored for last yeat's
academic achievement.
Students throughout Ohio
are required to take the Ohio
Achievement and Profi ciency
Tests. Students at Southern
Elementary took their tests
last spr.ing though the results
were not received until thi s
summer.
Over 240 awards will be
distributed at 9 a.m. on· Friday
at Southern Elementary to stuc
dents who passed the two tests
and were in · third through
eighth grades last year.
Parents are invited to attend
the awards assembly called
Celebrqting Achievement Day
in the gymnasium.
Third graders were the only .
students to take the tests in
both the fall and spring. These
students showed a forty percent improvement and though
not all of them passed the
te sts, those that showed
improvement will also receive
a1r award. ·
''Students . ' teachers and
parents work so hard preparing for the tests." Southern
Elementary teacher Tricia
McNickle said. "Then when
the scores come in during the
summer we ~an't celebrate."
The award~ assembly will
take place in front of the
whole school to serve as a
motivating force for students
to study hard for this school
Y.ear's tests.

Eastern board
approves contracts

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAIL YSENTINEL .COM

Beth

Serg~mtjphoto

Southern ,Elementary teachers (from left) Tricia McNick le. Missy Carpenter and Shelly Barr display the medallions that will be awarded' to students th is week who passed the state's
achievement''lmd proficiency tests given last spring. The awards assembly, which is meant to
both recognize and motivate students academically, takes place .at 9 a.m. on Friday. Parents
are invited to attend.
·
McNickle believes that the
tests help the studellls prepare ·for the eventual move
into high school.
The awards were purchased from the principal's
fund by Southern Elementary
Principal Mickey Kuc.sma
and resemble ·medallion s
given at high school academic award ceremonies.
Kucsma said the school's
tests result;; fall under the
"continuous improvement"

label by the state though she
and h~r teachers have a ~oal
of reaching the ·'effective"

rating .
Besides this week's awards
assembly other tools . for
reaching that "effective" goal
are intervention periods
where teachers work with
students on spe&lt;:ific: skills and
data binders for ear.:h student
that keep track of grades and
attendance.
Emphasis oti th is type of

t esl in~

is derived fro m the No

Child~Left Behind Act which

is meant to provide all chil~lren with ;1 fair. equal and
sign ifi cant opportunity to
obtain a high-4uality educao .
tion.
The Ohio Department of
Education considers the state
ahead or others in havin~ a
"sophi sti cated"
sc hool
accountability system which
includes the achievement and
,proficiency tests.

·River Explorer passes 'through

· POMEROY - "2005 was a
recuru year for the Meigs
County Fair with daily cash
receipts totaling. $107.578.''
sa iu Ed Holter. fair board
president. Sunday as he
re vieweu figures for the week.
"That doesn't indude membership ticket sales of $2.1&gt;25,
and seas·on tic ket sales of
542.406 which brings everything for admissions to
$ 152.609." added Fair Board
secretary Debbie Watson.
Records maintained over the
past 15 years s.howeLI growth
from $81.555.25 in I&lt;195 to
this year' hi~h. Pre1·ious vears'
records m·e lmt avai lable .' The
figures for uail y cash recer pt s
!that's monev taken in at the
gate) show t&gt;J~ a steadv increase

annually fo r the n'ext three
years to reach the · owr
$ 100.000 ll~urc in 1998 and
has been in" tllat range every
since then witll the exception
of 1999 wh,·n it dropped to
$91.925.
Not on ly did the uaily cash
receipts reach a record. hut

Please see Fair, AS
'

Middleport
water rate
hike on hold
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDcO MYDAILYSENTI NEL CO M

MIDDLEPORT - Water
rates in Middleport evil!
remain the same ......... for nu\V.

Mc~tim~ MondaY ~\'eninu:. ·
TUPPERS PLAINS · !\1 i uukp&lt;~rt Vil lag·,. Couric"il
The Eastern Local Board of
took
m1 al:tinn on plans to
Education approved suppleincr~.:asC
water and sewer
mental contracts for advisors
r:llcs. a:-. diSL' ll~ .. cd at the~ Aug .
and coaches and service conX mcelin!! . Lht ni £! hL Mavnr
tracts fo r the upcoming
SanJv
l:l;lll,trcl li re",·onHneildschool year at last week's
~d Llrdinancc . . imposing an
monthly meeting.
annual
\1 lh&gt;·pern.·n t mte
The board approved the
incrca:--c
for
water am.l two
following suppl emental conpcrc
t.
~
llt
f~lf
...,C\\CL
cffe\..'ti\'1.~
tracts · for the 2005-2006
each ~la1. hut counc:il will
school
year:
Carman
ni&gt;t act,,;\ the rr&lt;lposal ul\lil
Mitchell , N~tional Honor
th~
Yill a ~c\ t,;n~inecrin!l
·Society advisor: Howie
.._ firm
~..: an ad0rc~~ the current rate
Caldwell, head boys basket\
:-.tructure
and a nceLI f()J' the
ball coach: Chris Carroll.
propo..;eJ
inl.Tea ... c . . .
seventh grade volleyball
' If ap[)l\l\'CJ. the rat~ lllCfCa~c '
coach·
Joe Kirby, assistant
'
would raj,,· \\at~r bilJ, bv 16
junior high football coach;
L'Cfll\ ~~r n1lmih . ha:-.cJ ~111 a
Charles Smith, volunteer
minimum water hill for 2.000
assistant junior high football
gallon:-. l'{m.:.umptiun .
coach; Gayle Salyer, seventh
In ~00~. l'llll lh.: il pa:-.,etl an
rade girls basketball coach .
ordinance rallin!.! for afmual
The following ujX!ated list of
t,,·n- (X'rc~nt i n~.:f(·a~t=~ in the
substitute
teachers
w~s
w;lll'r and :-.C\\ cr r\lle~ on tbc
approved: Patrece Beegle.
Eleanor
Blaellnar, . Cara
w
..h ict.· of the cn~incainl! fim1
1
Beth Sergentjphoto
Bullington, lise Burris. John The mammoth River Explorer passed through Pomeroy yesterday on its way to Portsm outh. The Flm d Br"wnc Ass(x:iale,. A;
Chilmonik. Heidi DeLong, Bill River Explorer is comprised of two barges, the LaSal le and DeSota. which hou$e stateroom s thai time. the l'illage·, rates
Downie. Tony Dugan. Je&lt;mette and public facilities-. and is powered b~ the towboat Miss Nan . Miss Nari is the only riverboat wen: hl'IO\\ l iHbC of \'illages
Grate, V:icki Griftin. Mary Hill. in Amenca with Z Peller 360 degree propulsion units which allows it to completely turn the River of wmparahle si;e. and the
Melissa Hohmm . Ron Logan. Explorer in place. River Explorer provides customers with tours of the Ohio .' Mi ssiss ippi , lll ino1s firm· . . grant . . pt.~l'i'ali . . t · said ·
and Cumberland Rivers to name a few.
Please .see Eastern. AS
Please see Rate. AS
~

INDEX
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BY BETH . SERGENT
BSERG:ENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL:CDM

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

2150 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631
(740) 446-:-9777

Parking lot wall to"be repaired mid-October

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0% for 36 months :· I Vis1t your local retailer today,

, , ,·,

\ \I\(\ U t, ,l.ul , ·o~ · 11 1 1111 1 1 , , 111

\( :(,I S I ·•:, ,· •oo ,,

Southern Elementary b~gins ·new year, ·2005 Fair
brings in
honors last year's achievements
'record
receipts ·

S183/MONTH

::_-;.qp-.,

lll"'lt\\

'POMEROY At last
night's meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council, Mayor John
Musser reported that the gaping hole in the parking lot
wall should be repaired in
mid-October.
.
Musser reported that funds
, will not be released for the
project before Sept. 13 by the
Appalachian
Regional

• Front-wh~el fully independent suspension
• Push-button controls
·

TRACTOR

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SALE '6,599"
• 18 HP' Kohler- Command" Pro V-Twin OHV engine

5252
COMPACT

· conVIctions, A6

en ne

.INSIDE
COUNTRY
4X2 UV .

public appearance since

· Mason Monday, As

in center field .
fourth time, ~rguing that
Casey singled, Kearn s dou- Kearns' homer hit the top of
bled and Encarnacion lined a the wall and stayed in pia')'
homer into 'the left-field
Arizona scored two runs in
sears. Lopez added an oppo- the sixth on Troy Glaus' sacsite-field solo homer that ritice tly and Lui s Terrero's
bounced off the top of the single. Tony Clark hit a twofence in front oJ the visitors' run
single off Brian
bullpen down the right-field Shackelford in the seventh,
line . Melvin got the final out . but Kearns homered in the.
before manager Bob Melvin bottom half agai nst Greg
sent up a pinch-hitter for him Aquino. Kearns has three
in the fifth .
"Everythin g was going homers in three games and 12
fine," Halsey said. "Then l this season.
Alex Cintron hit a two-run
walked the leadoff batter, and
homer
off Kent Mercker in
that's never good. I still felt
like I was getting ahead of the eighth, the second pinchthe hitters, but I just didn't hit homer of his career.
"We haven' t played well on
make good pitches with two
thi s road trip," Melvin said.
stn'kes. ..
Melvin was ejected for the " After Cintron's home run. ].

BIG

Governor makes first

New business o__pened in

.

'

~

'

i
I
i

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