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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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'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
'

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

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.

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

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NATION • WORLD

. -The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Tuesday,August23,2005

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Community Calendar

Powerful explosion rocks north Beirut suburb, two injured Beef banned under mad

cow rules is recalled

BY JOSEPH PANOSSIAN .

ing a Starbucks colfee shop
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
- and restaurants and other
nightspots that were full of
Wisc:onsin. The department
BY LIBBY QUAID
BEIRUT, Lebanon - A
patrons.
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRITER
the company are trying to
.
and
powerful exploston late
The
explos_ion
was
the
latfind
out how much beef
. Monday rocked a shopping
est
m a strmg of bombings
WASHINGTON -· Beef wound up in retail ~tores,
center and hotel in the Zalka
that have killed ·or wounded banned under mad cow d1sease Cohen said. •
neighborhood in north Betrut,
politicians and other promi- mles was shipped to wholeThe department issu.ed cOde
in1unng at leas\ two people
nent
figures
in
Lebanon
since
salers
in
.
a
half-dozen
states
numbers
for recalled cases of
and causmg exrensive damthe February assassination of and is now being recalled by a beef sent to distnbutors, but it
age. security officials said.
was unknown whether beef
former
Pmnc Minister Rallk Wisconsin beef plant.
Heavtly armed Lebanese
The
1.856
pounds
of
beef
that
reached the retail level
soldiers cordoned off the
Hariri , an attack that rattled
area. punching and hilling
Lebanon 's poiJtical and secu- came from a Canadian cow. would have carried the same
Inspectors there determined numbers.
·journalists to keep them back.
rity foundations.
the
cow was eligible for shipCon'sumer groups have critiTwo workers could be seen
Bombs also have targeted
metit
to
the
United
States.
but
cized
the government for not
helping a black-dad. ve tlcd
commercial and industrial
a Canadian audit two weeks revealing the names of retail
woman down the glass-covcenters. The bomb that killed
later said the cow was too old stores involved in· food recalls.
ered front stairs of the
Hanri took 20 other li ves, to be allowed inside tile U.S.
"When it comes to a case
Promenade
Hotel.
She
and explosions since then
"There is a minimal chance, like this, the retailer IS never
appeared shaken but not
at
least
six
peohave
kdled
the age of the am mal and disclosed - how are you ever
given
inJure.d .
ple.
mcludmg
a
prominent
the
health
of the animal, that going to know whether your
Security forces were seen
politician
and
an
anti-Syrian
there was any risk whatsoev- chuck roast was involved in
rounding up several suspects.
JOurnalist. More than 50 peo- er" to people, Steven Cohen, this recall or not?" asked Jean
including ftve men with their
ple, in cluding Lebanon's spokesman for the Agriculture Halloran, director of food polhands ued behmd th etr b.ds
defense minister, have been Department's Food Safety and icy initiatives at Consumers
Th~ were taken to a military
Inspection Service, said IJnion. "The consumer has
vehtcle.
injured
.
Monday.
absolutely no way of knowZalk&lt;~ mayor Michel Mu n
The most recent explosion
The
U.S.
restricts
shipments
ing."
.. told , the
Lebanese
occurred July 23, just hours
The recall is fo'r cuts of meat
. Brodacasting Corp. that the .
alter. Secretary of State to younger animals because
infection
levels
from
mad
cow
that
could contain backbone
bomb was •placed 111 an open
Condo leezza Rice nmde a
arc
beheved
to
rise.,
·
because
the cow's backbone
disease
are,, between the Centte
bnef unannounced VISi t to
w1th · age. The cutoff is 30 was not removed. Those cuts
Moussa shopping centeJ and
Beirut. The blast in a busy months of age.
include neck bone. short loin
the hotel. which '"" p&lt;1cked
Christi dn
neighborhood
The
Canadmn
Food and bone-in chuck.
with
tounsts. A
husv
wounded 12.
InspectiOn Agency is invesuThe U.S. · requires the
• Starbucks wllce shop sit~s
On July 12, a car bomb gating and has suspended the removal of backbone and
across the street.
sttuck tl1e motorcade of · veterinanan who certified the nerve parts - which can carry
He sau.l toun~ts were ~:vm:­
AP
Photo
Lebanon 's
pro-Syrian cow, said Francine Lord. mad cow disease - when
uated and none was llliUrcd .
Lebanese
army
officers
stand
guard
at
the
entrance
of
the
defense 'minister, Elias Murr. import-exporr manager for the older cows are slaughtered.
Bng .
G~:n
Darw1~h
Hobe1k.1. commander ul Promenade Hotel in Zalka. "' the northern su·burbs of Be1rut. Ill a Chn st ian suburb north of agency's animal health divi- The at-risk tissues are removed
Lebanon's CtvJI Delensc Le banon . Monday. A powerful explosion has roc ked a shop- Za lku. Murr was WO'IJlded sion. She said the agency fin- from cows older than 30
pmg center in the Zalka netghborhood 111 north Beirut, tnju ring and one person died.
ished its aud1t last week and months.
Corps,
told
Lehan~sc
U.S.
oiTtc:ials
U.S. and Canadian officials
. Broadcastmg tha t two puople at least two people and caust ng extensive damage, securrty
Hanri\ assassination on a notified
were ligh tly 1njured and on~ offJctals sa1d. The explosion was the latest ill a strrng of bomb- Beirut street, which many Thursday. The Agriculture said the cow in question was·
C1vil Del ense rescuer w.!S ings that have killed or woundecf pol1t1cians and other promi- people blamed on Syria, trig- Department said Canadian n't the only problem in a shiphurt.
otlicials venlied the cow's age ment of 35 cows from Ontario:
nent ftgures Ill Lebanon stnce the February assassmat1on of
Also in that shipment were
Residents sa 1d hlack smoke · former .Prrme Mmtster Raf1k Harm, an attack that rattled gered anti-Syrian protests at on Friday.
home
~nd
international
presbillowed 111to the lllght sky Lebanon's political and security fo ~n dations.
Green Bay Dressed Beef ot eight pregnant cows. which the
su re that eventually ended Green Bay, Wis .. processed the . U.S. also prohibits. The cows
near the hotel. Ambulances
three decades of Syrian dom- cow on Aug. 4 and distributed were processed for distribuuon
. and tire eng ines responded to
Lebanon
's
Mediterranean
coast.
i~ a
that
leads
to
ination of Lebanon with the the meat to wholesalers in but
care for potential 1 tc·tims and
their
calves
were
mixed
restdentJal
and
comChrisuan
heartland
.
The
area
withdrawal
of
"
the
Syrian
put out the'fire
Pennsylvania. Rorida. Illinois. · destroyed. the Agriculture
Za lka,
Maryland, Minnesota and Department said.
on
the mer ci a[ area on a main ~trcet ha' several cafes - includ- army.

Connectiaa_ftles lawsuit challenging No Child Left Behind
BY NOREEN GILLESPIE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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HARTFORD. Conn
!:onnectlCUt on Monday
became the first stdte to cha lienge the No Child Lett
Behmd law Ill 'ourt. a~g umg
that the centcrptece of
President Bush's education
law amounts to an unfunded
mandate from the federal
government.
"Our message today 1s give
up the unfunded mandates. dr
g1ve us the money." said
Attorney General Richard
Blumenthal.
The lawsui t raises the
stakes in a heated fight
between states and the Bush
admimstrat1on over the law.
and experts say Legi slatwes
· around the countrv will be
;watching the case· carefully.
-Experts expect that states
COU ld VOle tO join the laWSUit
or file their own.
The lawsutt amues that No
Child Left Beh1nd is illegal
because it requires expenstve
standardized tests and other
school programs that the government doesn't pay for. It
asks a federal judge to
declare that state and local
money cannot be used to
: meet the law's goals
U.S. Educanon Secretary
Margaret Spellings has
. ·repeatedly denied requests
. from Connecticut for more
flex1bility.
.
"Unfortunately. thi s htl': suit &gt;e nds the wrong message
: to st udents. educators and
· parents.'' said Susan Aspey. a
department spoke swoman.
. "The fun ds ha ve been provided
for
te, tlllg.
but
Connecticut
apparcntlv
: wants 10 kee p those lund~~
: "'ithout Ltsrng them as Intend. ed." '

The curnerstone of the law
is standardiLed !~sting somethrng that Con ncl'tic:ut
currently conducts 111 grades
four. SIX and etght. But under
No Clu ld Left Bel11nd. the
state is required to start testing children in grades three.
live and seven th1s school
vear.
· State education officials
say that they already know
that minority and poor children don't perform as well as
their wealthy, wh1te peers,
and that additional test s
aren't going to tell them
more.
Education Commissioner
Betty Sternberg said the state
has e\ery intention of complying w1th the law while the
court dewles the merit s or
the case.
"I think that we're dt the
point where we can't do these
d~&lt;cussion s anymore on the
phone or in the conference
room," Sdi d Sternbem .. We
reall y are at the point whete
they need to be worked out m
a different ve nue. and that's
in the co urt "
RepLlblican Gm M Jodi
Rell. who for months uri)ed
the state to settle its d!llerences throug h ne gotiati on.
rece ntl y JOi ned the chorus ol
state teachers. superintendents. lawmakers and parents
1oic1ng su pport for the lawsu ll .

" We in Connecticut dod lot
of testing alread} , far more
than most other -t.tte' . Our
taxpayer;., · are ~aggmg ·under
the ·crushing l'Osts of local
education. \Vh.lt we don't
need is a ne w laundt y li't of
thitigs tu do - wtth no ne11
mm1ey to do them:· Rell "'1d.
The feueral gLn ernment "
providing Connecticut wi th

55.8 milliojl this fiscal ycm

to pay f01 the testing,
Sternberg sa1d. She estimates
federal t'Unds will· fall $4 1.6
millwn short of paymg for
staffing, program development. st,mdardized tests and
other costs associated with
implementing
the
law
through 2008 ,
The stale is not the . firs~
entity to sue in response to
No Child Left Behmd. The
National
Education
Association, a national
teacher's union, filed a lawsuit last spring on behalf of
local districts and I0 state
union chapters, including
Connecticut.
·" It Js an interesting case,"
said Jack Jennings. president
of the Washington, D.C. based Center on Education
Poltcy
" It's 1111eresting
because a JUdge has to wnsider the fact that this 'ls a
state that's suing . It's not a
school di strict. It \ not a
teac her's umon. It\ the state
of Connecticut. So that adds
a lot more gravity to the law~uJt."

In Utah. the state legis lature passed .1 measure defying the federal law. and it was
by
Gov.
Jon
signed
Hunt sman on May 2. The' law
gives 1.. 1ate educdtiondl :-,tandards priority .over the
requirements of No Child
left Behind.
Connecti cut offi c1ab say
they will go forward with or
l'ithout the support of other
slates .
"If there 's a bully on the
playgiou nd. it often takes one
biave soul to step forward
and stand up to the bully.''
said
Rep .
. Andrew
Flei schmann.
D- West
Hartlord. co-chairman of the
legislatut e\
Education
Com mittee.

Public meetings
Thursday Aug. 25
POMEROY - Sulisbury
Townshp Trustees w1ll meet
at 6:30p.m. at the tow n hall .

School events
Thesday, Aug. 23
TUPPERS PLAINS
Back to School Open HL;use
for st udents and parents at
Eastern Elementarv Sdmol
and Eastern H1gh School. )
to 7 p.m . Meet tC.tl'hcrs fnr
the new year an J ge t
a~quainted with 'chnn l pmcedures. Rcfrcslll llLllts.
POMEROY - God's NET
to di stribut e 'school su pplies
as long as they last from I to ·
4 p.m Ch ild1en are to b~ present to paltlcipatc.
Frida}, Aug. 26
RACI NE . Southern
Elementary
will
hold
Celebrat1n~
Ac hievement
Day at lJ :1m . tn recognize
students from folll th to eighth
gmdcs who passed the &gt;late
ac hievement and profic:~ency
te ~ t s last year.

.

Senate Majority Leader Bill
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Frist, R- Tenn .. added h1s support last month.
WAS.HINGTON - Stem
Frist's office said Monday
cell science may be advanc- a debate and a vote on the bill
ing, but not fast or far enough will still take place in
to break the standoff between September despite the scien·
President Bush and Congress lists' announcement and
over federal funding for . pleas by conservative's to
research that destroys human delay the vote.
embryos.
"We should not rush this
Clear majorities exist in the debate," warned Sen. Sam
House and Senate for a bill to Brownback, R-Kan. "If we
loosen Bush's 2001 restric- do not rush to kill innocent
tions on public funding for human life, we will lind ethiem bryonic
stem
cell cal, moral ways of solving
research Bush. opposed to this issue."
The White House and its
the creation and destruction
of human embryos for allies in Congress don' t
research , has prom1sed to expect advances such as
veto the bil\ if it reaches his those reported by the Harvard
desk.
scientist s will erode support
Monday's announcement in Congress for overturning
that Harvard scientists had Bush's restrictions. At most.
discovered a way to fuse they hope the announcement
adult skin cells with embry- might cause lome undecided
on ic stem cells raised the lawmakers - such as Sen.
possibility that someday, all· George Allen. R- Va., a possipurpose stem cells could be ble contender for the 2008
created Without harming 60P presidential nomination
human embryos.
- to give pause before sid- ·
Someday. But not soon ing against the president on
enough to change the out- the issue.
come of an emotional debate
"I can' t Imagi ne that it
looming after Congress' won't make . a difference,"
White Hou se . spokesman
August recess .
"We are right where we Trent Duffy said Monday of
the Harvard announcement .
alw~ys were, " Sen. Tom
Harkin. D-lowa, a co-sponsor Stem cell studies that do not
of the· bill with Sen. Arlen harm human embryos are
Specter. R-Pa .. satd by tele- "something that we all can
phone Monday after reading support," he added.
Bu sh shows no sign of
of the advance by the
Harvard team .
backing down on his promise
Senate supporters of more to veto the bill if it reaches
federal funding for embryon- hi~. desk ..
.I
ic ~tem cell research claim to
He sa1d he would have to
have at least '60 votes for veto the bill," Sen . Orrin
ov.erturning Bush 's policy. Hatch, R-Utah, said by tele-

phone after talking with Bush
Monday on Air Force One
during the ride from the president's ranch in Crawford.
Texas, to an event in Salt
Lake City. " He feels like he
would have to honor that
commitment."
The Senate bill was passed
by the House in May with
suppo"' from 50 Republicans,
"
not enough to override a
veto.
Hatch said the SCientists at
Harvard and elsewhere are
making interesting progress,
but he doesn 't bel1eve that
fundmg their work should
come before passing the
Specter-Harkin bill.
The Harvard scientists
acknowledged that their work
is not as far along as human
embryonic
stem
cell
research.
" I can't stress enough that
this technology is not ready
for prime time right now,"
Harvard researcher Ke~in
I;:ggan said at a briefing
Monday. "It is not a replacement k• those techniques
that we already have for
derivation of embryonic stem
cells."
Frist said in July that the 22
lines of embryonic stem cells
now available for research
are deteriorating and don' t
meet the needs of scientists
searching for cures. Stem
cells derived from embryos
can develop into any kind of
tissue in the body. Scientists
are lookmg at ways to manipulate them to replace diseased or. injured ti ssues.

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Clubs anct
organizations
Thesday, Au~. 23
POMEROY - The Me1gs
County A:mcric:an Ca ncel
Society Taskl01cc will meet
at noon 111 the base mem conference room ol the Me1gs
County
Pu bl1 c Library.

Lunch will he provided. Call
992-66'26 for 1n forma11on or
to RSVP
Thursdny, Aug. 25
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold a special
meeting at 7 p.m. ,,t the hall
for the purpose of conlerring
the Master Mason degree on
a c,llldidme. Refreshmems.
TUPPERS PLAI NS
VFW Post 9053 meets at 7
p. m. at the hall.

Weaver reun10n will be held
at 12 :30 p.m. at the home of
M.trcus Weaver, Letart. W.
Va. on Peniel Rd. Lunch. I
p.m. Take lawn chair and
1tem fo r silent auctiOn. For
tnformation call 882-2983.

Other events
•

Frida}'• Aug, 26
MASON.
WVa
Customer appreciation to be
he ld at the City Natinal Bank.
Mason. with lunch frm II
a. m. to I p.m . Robert Graham
of Oh-Kan Coin Club to be
there w1th coin collection

Sunday, Aug. 28
CHESTER - Annual ptcntc ot the Shade River Lo!lge
453 and Pomeroy Chapter
186. O.E S. wi II be held at 3
Friday, Aug. 26
p m. at the home of Esther
SYRACUSE
and SL·ottie Smith. Chester.
Re cyclable Recycle Days
Members and famihes in vitwi II take place trom 8 a.m. to
ed. Take covered c!Jsh . M~at
4 p.m., Aug. 26-28 at the
and drmk w111 be furmshcu .
· parking lot near the syracuse
V1llage garage. The sei'Vlce is
fre e. Appliances can be
dropped off or those wi shing
Wcdncsda}', Au~:. Jl
to have appliances picked up
ATHE NS - '\ Rc eion I-I eluting the three clay event
wo tkfun:e in vestllll' J~t CEO ' hould call the following
consortium will be held at 10 numbers: 447-2151 , 447a.m. at the OU Inn, Athens.
2152. 992-3140. Accepted
will be anythmg metal
Sunday, Aug. 2!1
in c luding air conditioners.
CA RPENTER
The hot wate1 tanks, washers. etc.
Ag.tpc Jubilee wi ll be 111 con - No ti res or trash.
l'~rt at the Mt. Union Baptist
Church neat CarpcntcJ at
6 .10 p m Su nday. for more
1n folmat1 on contact David
Wednesday, Aug. 31
WISeman. 7-1 2lJ-2'if&gt;X.
PORTLAND Gaxle
J&gt;ricc wl l observe his 9)th
h11'thdav on Aug. 3 I. Cards
may be ,e'nt to him at 57995
Sunday, Aug. 2!1
S R. 124. Portland, Ohi o
LETART. W Va ·- The -l;i770.

Church events

Reunions

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GLOCSTER - A national
audience of fotest practJl!Ollers will learn about cllo1 ts to
revitalize Appulachn1n Oh1o
at the 15til annual m ~e tin ~ of
the N.ttional NetwoJk" of
Forest Pr.1c titi oners (NNFP)
The confetence. llu,ted by
locdl non-ptofit RUJd i Actio n.
will take place at Burr Oak
Slltte Park on Sept. 7-1 0
Barbara Wyckol f- Bai rd.
pres1dcm ol the NNFP Board
· of Direc tors. is excited abllut
the attentio n the conference
has garnered . "This ma)
well be the b1ggcst one we· ve
ever organ! led." s h~ !oia!d.
The NNFP. hasecl 111
. Prov idenc·e. R.l . is neither a
traditional
cnviron ment ,ll
nrgam ta tJOn 1101 "'t rktl ) iJ
fore st
workers.
proup.
Instead. lile nonpl'&lt;lflt or!!ant zation
brinn s
touet hcr
fore~ters. com';;,tt nit y ~ne m-

bt.:r'i. res~~nchers. agency
oft1ci als. anu ind igenous people . These groups work
together ro pnHect forests as
well ds the ecotH)Illies of the
communiti es that depend on
them.
Field trips to area businesses and research ce nters
will highlight successfttl
efforts to create JObs whik
protecti ng the eJi VJronment
For Ill Stance, p&lt;1rtic1pant s will
visiJ the AppaLtchian Forest
R~sOLirce Ce nter in Rutl&lt;~nd .
whic h •'esc arches en1 iro nmentally tnendly tncome
opportunJties lrom forests
Other con1erence topi cs
mclude .
• How to g'e ncrale in come
from non-timber fm est pruuucts
• C r~aung JOhs· 111 restora·
tam
.. Di-;.cu,sJOil'\ of the

RUTL AND . held
Fire
· A
held

The 87th

Davi:-; reu ni on

wu~

Aug . 7 at the Rutland
Department
b.lsh·t lu ncheon was
at noon followed by a
~ h urt , nwctmg. Attcnd.ing
were Mar~ K. Holter. Garv
Holter. Lon u Bottom: Jud v
Rockh old . ' Rebec.d1 Kern
· ' lllld Tecla Lemley. Portland .
Pam
Da' 1s.
Cha rl otte
Grant. Mike Gran t. Marlin.
Debht e and Samuel Evans.

Racin~.
J ame~
Duv1s.
Stamping
Ground.
Ky..
Clyde . · Altrc and Jim
D;m s. Rutland : Maq ori e.
Danny. Kim, Cassie . Bruce.
Dannette. Olivta Da, is .1 nd
Tucker . Davi,, Rutl and.
G1fs' were ~ 1 ven to M'1ry
K Hol ter. oldcq 11 oman:
Clyde D.m s. oldet man :

D~innet~e

n a\'1".

. ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

WASHI NGTO'J .
Alcohol -re lated
f.tta lllies
dcdmcd slightl y acntss th e
nafion and fell in J2 stales
last year. traffic safety officials sa1d Monday 111 beginnin g a campa ign to crac·k
down on drunken dmmg
during th e Labor Day holiday.
The Nat1onal High11ay
Traffi c
Salctv
Administration reported a 1
percent dctrease 1n fat,tl
·cras~e' 111 2004 lllVOII' /11~ at
·Iea't a driver or a··moto~cy -

cle rider wi th an illegal
blood-alcohol level of 0.08
percent or higher.
1Thc

government

... aid

12.R74 motoriSts died under
those circumst,l/lce' in 2004.
compared wtth ·1.1.0')6 111
2003. All 50 states had a
0 . 0~
standard
with
Minnesota's adoption of tile
law earl1er thts year.
NHTSA said a record
number of 11.500 1,111
cntnrcement o lfl cial' wou ld
part tcipate in liS '1 nn ual
cc.unpc.ugn . c ~dted
" You
IJrmk &amp; Dme . You Lusc."
Th~ n.J ckdown . 11 htch runs
thwlt ~ h Sept. :i. 11 til he hoi ·

stered by S 13.9 million m at special events.
advcrt isinuc
"We 're ge tting more and
Tex.ts s.tw a I() percent mme local law enforcement
redu ction 111 its alcohoi- 1nvolved 111 our mobilizaJclatcd fataiJtJCS. al'COUn lln g tion s." said Pete Bodyk of
for' I-ll le11 er deaths than in the Kansas Department of
2003 Ot he rs m.1~ing SJgn if- Transportat ton .
l&lt;:&lt;lllt r~duc tt ons tncluded
Utah had an RI percent
~1 1 nnC"'Oia. K an\~1". . lov.. a.
i 1.1erease lll alcohol-related
1'\ebr."ka .llld th e Di,tritt of fatalities. repre sentin g 29
Columbia.
more deaths 111 2004 comKat!S,I,. wh1 ch h.Jd a 2'! pared with the prevJOtJ s year
perce nt dccrca . , e in [.ilcohol - ·Ma1k Pano' . deputy dtrcctor
rcla tcd Jatallt tc' 111 21104. has of the Utah Highway Salety
[ar!..! l'l l'd drunken drl\ 111!..! ·OIIlce , attributed "'me of
lhr~ugl1 mcJi~1 CdrnpUign~. .. the growt h to an increase in
U\C of sohnely chcckpomts the numher of motonsts on
:.111d e"&lt;tra L1w cnlorcl.'rncnt the road ·" its population
p:ll m l. . dunn g \\Cek.~nu . . dnJ ~xpands .
,

Several Southern states.
including Georgia, Alabama.
Arkansas; North Carolina
and Tennessee, also posted
hi gher fatality numbers .
Gl ynn Birch, president of
Mothers Against Drunk
Driving. said hi s organization was advismg people to
de sig nate a so ber ' driver
before they attend gatherings during the Labor Day
hohday.
''
" It 's unportant to note that
impairment begins with the
first dnnk. so your safest
choi ce is to use r ubli c trans.portation . take a cab or find
a sober driver.'' Birch said .

VOUIH.!~\l:

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COOLVILLE
- Nav'y
Seaman Recruit Matth.ew W
Glover, son of Bobbie M.
Jackson ·and Timothy W.
Glover of Coolville. recently
completed U.S. Navy basic
training at Recruit Trainmg
Command, Great Lakes, IlL
During the eight-week
program, Glover. completed
a variety of training which
included classroom study
and practical instruction on
naval customs, first aid. firefighting. water' safety and
survival, and sh1pboard and
aircraft safety. An emphasis
was al so placed on physical
fitness.
The capstone event of boot

camp is "Battle Stati9n s."
This exercise gives recru1ts
the skills and confidence
they need to succeed in the
tleci. "Battle Stations" is
designed 10 galvanize the
bas1c warrior attributes of
sacrifice, dedication, teamwork and endurance in each
recruit through the practical
application of basic Navy
skills and the core values of
Honor.
Courage
and
Commitment. Its diStinctly
"Navy" flavor wa ~ des1gned
to take 11110 account \~hat it
means to be a Sa1lor.
·Glover is a 2005 graduate
of Federal Hocking High
SchooL

Companion planting
theme of club meeting
'

SYRACUSE
Compamon planting was the
topic of discussion at
Wildwood Garden Club's
recent meetmg.
Linda Russell descnbed
common grouping of !lowers
and vegetables that she often
combines in her plantings.
Among those mentioned as
favori .tc combi nations were
roses and baby's breath, dill
and tomatoes. petunias and
mimature ma~igolds , buttertly
bush and lavender, salv1a and
dusty miller, elephant ear and
coleus. basil and tomatoes.
and garlic chives and roses.
The fair flower show was
discussed and· who would
exh1bllmg. Sh1rley Hamm and
Joy Bentley assisted Wllh placing,tlowers. Janet Theiss created a summer wreath to display.
V1ce-president
Hamm
asked for volunteers to serve
&lt;Jn the program committee.
Janet Theiss. Barbara Koker.
Peggy Moore. Sara Roush,
and Joy Bentley agreed to help
plan next year's program
book. Hamm asked for all
members to submit ideas.
Tammy Re1s read devotions

MarJone Davb. 111~1 ... t (nnily attending. and James
Da1·1s. traveled the farthc't.

Motocross a.fair crowd pleaser

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1 Col. x 2"
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.sunday
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Sunday
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entitled "God's Wild !lowers."
Members answered roll call by
displaying favorite !lowers
from their garde ns. Janet
Theiss reported that' "Now is
the T1me" to remove suckers
around fru1t trees. plant perennials, seed beans. plant
spinach, sow lawns and ,treat
them for white grubs, apply
nitrogen to strawberries. turn
the compost, order ' pring ·
!lowering bulbs, and harvest
herbs after the dew dries in the
morning.
Members s1gned a get-well
card to send to Evelyn Hollon
who is · presently conlined to
Overbook Nursing Home.
Refreshments were served
by hostesses Joy Bentley and
Sara Roush . Winning the door lwww. mydalijsentlnel.
pnze was guest Riona Nally.
Members present, other than
those previously menuoned
were Ada Titus, Tume
Redov1an.
and
Chris
Chapman.
I
Members were also remmded that state, county. and
regional .dues are to be paid a
the next meetin~ "'ith Tammv
Reiss and Chris Chapman to
conduct the program and teach
members to create a topiary.
L - - - -·- - - - '

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Sentinel
992-2156

Completes Navy training

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Subscribe today:

POMEROY - Results of
judging of Meigs County Girl
Scout projects at the Ohio
Fair have
been
State
announceCl
Abi gail Houser. Troop
1120, Cakes. lirst place and
C~linary
Trophy Award;
Cupcakes. peanut butter and
jell y, f1rst place; Pie. peach
crumb, f1 rst place; Candy
(s' mores ludge ). fi rst place;
Quick Bread (holiday banana
nut ), first place, Holida y
Craft. th1rd place. outdoor
proJ eCt,
th1rd
place.
Recycling. fir sl pl ace and
Medalion
Award ;
and
Sewing, dress. first place,
Hannah Kin g. Troop 1276.
Cakes, first place ; Cupcdkes.
lirst place; QUJck Bread. fit&gt;t
place; P1e, first place· Ja m.
parucipallon
ribbo n.
Substance Abuse. hrst place:
Recycling, Tra\ h a Pi na.
tirst place and Trophy A11 ard:
Girl Scout Program , second
place.
Ashley Deem , Troop 1204
Cake, second place: Cook1es.
second place; M1scelleneous
Sewing, second place: First
Aid. first place and Outdoor
prOJects . Honorable Men11on.
1204·
.Junior · Troop
NutritiOn ,
first
place:
Hentage, first Place , Money
Management , first place:
CraftsMiscellenou s
Honorable Mention : Outdoor
Projects, second place: Girl
Scout History, th1rd place
Lindsey Houser. Trnop
1208: Decorated cake, third
place; Substance Award, first
place ; Heritage . Apa.che .
)ndians; and Sewmg, Civil
War dress . f1rst place and
Trophy Award.

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.
·

_
KeeeJ_ng
Meigs
County
informed
•

and ~narmed combat, map
readmg, field tactics, military
courtesy, military justice system , basic first aid, foot
marches, and field training
exercises.
He is the son of Carl and
Arlene Parker of Sumner
Road, Pomeroy. He gradual:
cd in 1997 from Eastern High
School, and received an asso·
cmte· de gree m 2002 from
State
Washington
Community
College,
Marietta.

Here are· some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes .

-

BY KEN THOMAS

POMEROY - Army Pfc .
Jason A. Parker has graduated
from basic combat training at
Fort Jack son , Columbia, S.C.
Dvnng the nine weeks of
training, Parker studied the
Army mission, history, tradition and core values. physical
fitness, and received instruction . and practice m bas1c
combat
skills,
military ·
weapons. chemical warfare
and bayonet training, drill
and ceremony, marchmg,
rifle marksman ship. armed

SHOW AP.PRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...

'

:Alcohol-related fatalities decline in 32 states in 2004

Tuesday,August23,2005

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads

Davis family has reunion
annuul

upco mmg reauthori7.ation of
the Farm Bill
The conference is open to
th e. publi c
To gu.1rantee
m~als. participants must reg·
ister by Aug. 31st by calling
740-767-2090 . For age nda
,uHJ reg istration information.
v1sit the NNFP website at
www.nnfp'.org.
&lt;http://www nnfp.org I&gt; A
hmitcd numher of scholarships arc available.
Wyckoff-Baird said that
Rural Action is an ideal host
for ihe conference. "As a
leader 111 the . tegion. and in
the
community
based
forest ry movement nauonwicle. Rural Action offers a
deep under&gt;tanding of the
J" ues . . concrete, successful
e\amples. and ge nerous hos·
pltahty."

.PageA3·

Graduates combat training State fair ·
results
announced

Birthdays

National Forestry Colifercntc to Shorvwse Southeast Ohio
Rutland Appalathiall Forest Resource Center on tour

Stem cell science advances; Senate still
poised to loos.en Bush's restrictions
Bv LAURIE KELLMAN

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Charlene Hoeftlchf photo

Saturday night's motorcross' at the Metgs County Fa1r was a
real crowd pleaser. Fairgoers filled the gran dstand to watch
the ATV and .motorcycles compete on a track espec tall y cons truCted for t11 at event.

.,

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Borders and Artwork

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'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

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

Ohio Valley Publishing

been obscured by the doom sayers and doubters on the
WASHINGTON - I've tet ronsls · msurgency
In the end, Iraq' s Ue mocJUSt fimshed readmg Davtd
rauc
reb1rlh h.td more to do
McCullough's
dramauc
bestseller," 1776," an msplr- with the IraqiS thtrst for
mg retelling of the year ot treedom and the previOusly
our foundmg One cannot underestimated .power of .t
tgnore the parallels of what nation 's long-abused lll&lt;IJOflis happemng today m Iraq ty over a tel.ttlvely sm.tll hut
as he leads us through a year bloodthtrsty band ot f&lt;tn&lt;tl1cs
when all seetped hop~ less and murdctets
The natlon.tl .md loretgn
and lost up to the very end
The last chapter ts appropri - news medw .md P1esident
atelv titled. '' Darkest Hour " Bush's antl"ar cn ucs h&lt;tve
The lraqts are now in their tocused largely on the num darkest hour, but they are ber of bombmgs and attacks
also on the bnnk of a hts· by a few thousand msurtone pohucal victory ih.tt gents , and not on the pohttwtll establish a democracy cal asptrations ol mlll•ons ot
m the heart of the Mttldle lrdqiS who are dnvmg the
East, beset by troubles. but • movement toward democr.t
determmed to be free, mde- ttc self-fulfillm ent
And. roo. the1e me the
pendent and m charge of us
demets
who cont1nue to
own destiny
Who doubts that the pro- belte'e th.tt the lra4ts dtc
vtstondl Iraq• parliament mcapahle of ac htevmg .t hbwill so011 complete a cutJstJ - er,d democracy .tnd 1h.11
tutlon that wtll be the foun - they are no better nil now
dation to a permanent den1o· than they were under
crauc tot m ol government? Saddam Hu ,scm
Ltsten 10 what Demou dltc
Desptte a delay of " week
or so (as of thts wt 1lmg). Sen. Joe Bttlen of Dd.tw .ll~
hardly a setback cons1denng satd Sunday on NBC's
the ethnic and rehgwus dtl- "Meet The Pt css" " 1he
lerences m Iraq, all that 1s ide,, of a hher.11 dcnli&gt;U.Icy
requtred now are the kmd of Wlih III&lt;IIIUIHHlS lh,lt func compronuses 111 language llDn hke Western dcmou ,,.
that even Amenca's found- c1es ts beyond my compremg fathers most hkely had hensiOn m the nc.1r twn."
But Btden apparently docs
to make I thmk come Oct
15 a constitution wtll be not comprehend what tlrovc
endorsed by a large ma.Jonty Iraq• Hllers, al great llsk to
of Iraq• voters and a free, thetr lives, to p.tllently stnnd
representative government 111 long lmes lo elect "
democratiC
proviston,Jl
wtll be elected on Dec. 15
Thts IS the cmergmg poiit- assembly They "anted ,,
tcal reahty in Iraq that hds democr,mc government that

• BY

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Co.

Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereofi 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" Tuesd.1y. Aug 23. the 235th day 'ol 2005. There are
130 days lett 111 1he &gt;e.11
Today \ H1ghhgh1 111 HIStOJ y
_
On Aug. 2.1. 1927 li.1h.m-born .march1 ~ts N1cola S.tcco and
Bartolomeo V.tntcltl we te executed 111 Boston lor the murdets
of two men dlll 1ng" 1920 robbery (Sacco and Vanzett1 were
vmdtc,lled 111 !977 by M.ISsaahusetts Gov M1chael S
Duk,tkt&gt;.)
On thiS dc~tc
- In 1754. Fl.llll'e's Kmg Lollis XVI was born at Vers,ulles
In 191 +. Jap.m decl.11ed war agamst Germany m World War I
In 1&lt;,1~6 sllent !lim star Rudolph Valentino d1ed m New
Y01 k at .t~r .11
In 191'). N.tZI Gc1m.1ny and the Sovtet Umon stgned a nonaggresSion treaty
·
. lri 19++. Ron1&lt;1man p• •me minister ion Amonescu was diS·
mtssed by Km~ M1chael , p.1vmg the way fot Rom.mta to
abandon the AxiS 111 favor of the Allies
In 1960. Broadway librettiSt Oscar Hammerstein II dted 111
DoylesiOwn. Pa.
· In 1972. the Republican n.tltotMI umventlon. meeting 111
Mtamt Beach. Fla. nomm.ued Ptestdeni Ntxon and Vtce
Prestdent Sptro T. Agnew tor .t second term
1
~~!nB~~~~.s~:!~~~ ~~~~~n~~~~a t~d~e2'~~~·~m detectfd whtle
· Jn 1982. Lebanon's p.trhament elected Chnsttan mtlttla
leader Bash1r Gema}el ptestdent tHowever. Gemaycl was
assasstnated some three weeks I.Jlet.)
Ftve years ago· A Gulf Atr A1rbus crashed mto the P)!rsmn
Gulf near Bahram. ktiiing all 143 people aboard Negotiators
for Verizon and more than 35,000 telephone workers teached
tentative agreement on a new contract. endtng 18-day stnke.
An estimated 51 mtiiion "ewers tuned 111 for the finale of
CBS ' reahty series "Sumvor." 111 wh tch contestant Rtchard
Hatch won the $1 mtlhon pnze
One year ago Prestdent Bush cntlctzed a commercial that
had accused Democrat John Kerry ol tntlatlng hts own
Vtetnam War record. more than a week after the ad stopped
runnmg. and satd broadcast altacks by outstde gtoups had no
place m the race lor the V. hlle House In Athens. Jeremy
Wanner became the stxth consecuuve Amencan to wm the
Olymptc tttle 111 the 400 meters. lead111g a U S ~weep ot the
medals The U S softb.11l team won tts ihtrd strmght gold
medal wnh a 5-1 VICtory over Australia
Today's B11thdays· Mov1e dtrectm Robert Mulhgan ts 80
Actress Vera Mtles i' 75 Pohtlcal s,ttlnst M.trk Russell IS 73.
Actress Barbar,t Eden IS 71. Actor R1cha1d Sanders IS 65.
Ballet dancer Patncta McBnde IS 63 Former Surgeon
General Antoma Novello "61 Country smger Rex Allen Jr
is 58 Singet L111da Thompson " 5H Actress Shelley Long IS
56 Actor-smger Rtck Spnngfteld " 56 Country smger-must·
cian Woody Paul (Rtders 111 the Sky) " 56. Queen Noor of
Jordan IS 54. Actor-producer Mark Hudson IS 54 Rock musi cian Dean DeLeo (Stone Temple P1lols) IS 44. Country musician Ira Dean (Trick Pony ) ts 36 Actor Jay Mohr ts 35. Rock
smger Juhan Casablancas !The StrokeS! IS 27.
Thought for Today. "No matter what .tccomphshments you
make. somebody helps you. · - Althea G1bson. Amencan
tenms champ10n ( 1927 2001)

Tuesday,August23,2o05

DONALD lAMBRO

of. by and fo1 the people
Th.tt's why they voted 111
sutpnsmgly llltge nurnbet s
0• lJStcn 10 form er
Vermont Gov
Howat cl
Dean.
the
Democrall c
Nauonal Commtttee chairman. who still can't co111e to
gnps With the htstOIIC
changes that IM ve aheady
occunetl 111 Iraq Here's
wh,Jt he satd. Sunday on
"Face the Nation"
"It looks ltke today. and
i111 s could ch.mge, . IS or
today 11 looks hke women
Will be WOISC of1 tn 11.14
1h.111 they we1c "hen
s .,dd.ml Husse tn was prcstdentcll l1a4 "
TillS IS the guy who, dlll ·
mg lm 111 -l,ned plcsttlenltal

IS

t.:amp;ugn.

Letters 10 the edaor are 11 e!. ume. The\ ,Jwuld be '"' rlum
300. words. All lettetS are '""J~CI to edmng. 1111111 be "gned.
and rncl11de addre\1 and 1eleplwne mtmber. No wm gned let· ,
ters wt/1 be publtshed Ll'lten ,Jwuld '"' 111 good talle,
addressmg rnlll'l IIOI['el wnal11ie\ Leu en o( tlumb tum gamzattnlls and md11 rdua/1 "r/1 ""'be'"&lt; ep1ed for pul&gt;ltcatum.

The Daily Sentinel
Correction PoliO¥/

(USPS 213-960)
Ohto Valley Publishing Co.

Our mam concern m all stones 1s to be Published every ahernoon Monday
through Fnday 111 Court Street
accurate II you Know of an error 1n a
story call the newsroom at (740) 992

·2156

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News
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Reporter· Bnan Reed Ext 14
Reponer: Beth Sergent Ext 13

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Obituaries

ques tiOn ed

cU H.J vote ~md
\\ ho :UC ~CI\ IIl g Ill pOSI(IOilS

gu to the po \ls

ol go vet mng .tut ho nt y 111
Iraq. Dc.m st tll suggests th.Jl
they will be \V&lt;llsC ott unJe1
~ ~ demolr~tttl lorm ol government
Not on!) has the 1ole of

~.:ont rol n\~t
les~

ltaq1s. reg,ud nil the If sect.,

Thc1c h.ts been .t growmg
numhe • of c ldshes where
Sunnts .md Shutes ha\e
JOin ed forces to llght
Jor damd n-born Zarqaw t's
tullowets, most of whom
dte

t10m othct

l:oUntnes

Slowly hut sutely .•1sense ol
n.lllonhood seems 10 he
budd1ng 111 lt.tq, a suctal
ptCfC4UI SJ le lO ,1 dclllUC t,ltl C

soctel v

tn

The. Sunni s. who boywiled the provtstonal elecllllll. ll.tW been brought into
the constttullonal dt .tltlng
process .uttl thetr leaders

Jrdl) - .Ill ISSUC lh.tt IS stil l
bctng tlelJ.Ited 1h1s 1\eek hy
dr.lltcl' of the cnnstnutHlll
- hu t there have been some
trul y .tstollJ-;hmg Jl!vdopm ~ nl s tlt .tl suggest ilns
n.111on \ lon g-st,mdtng rehgtUWi d1 \ 1"10ns ,u1cl halrc&lt;.h
rn,ty he com111 g to an end
Lost week. sevct &lt;tl doze n
Sunm Musl1ms 111 Ramad1.

Cl nment . They now know
1h.1t the dcmocrullc movement no mallet wh.tl the
tcrllH ts ls uo . cannot ' be
dcfe,tted and they w,mt lo be
p.ul of 11 s htston c loundtng.
ThiS ts a story that should
he ,Ill too f,Hndtar to
Amc nc.1ns who remembe'r
the11 count1y's hJSIOry

women bc~n clcv.lt ed

gtvcn po:-,tttons ·in th e gov-

LETART FALLS- Harry E Stobart, Sr., 88. Letart Falls,
took hts heavenly tltght home at 12.55 p m., Sunday, Aug. 21,
2005 He flew away to be wtlh hts prectous Savtor, Lord and
Master. He 1S at rest alter a banle wnh cancer
Born Apnl 27, 1917, 111 the Antiqmty commumly, he was
the son of the late Harry C and Mary Cathenne Smtlh Stobart.
Alter servmg three years m the Metgs CCC Camp. he moved
to Pennsylvama 111 1935, where he worked on sand and gravel barges and on Pennsylvania railways
He worked as a laborer unttl drafted m the U S Army 111
1942 After being dtscharged, he worked for the Butlding
Trades Umon, Local #833 111 New 811ghton, Pa., unttl relmng
m 1982 He was a member of the Feeney-Bennett Post 128
American Legton, Middleport
'
He accepted Chnst as hts Savior and was baptized and attended the Monacrest Free Methodtsl Church 111 Manoca Pa unttl
moving back to Ohio 111 1986 He then attended Mt. Monah
Church of God and Ravenswood, W Va Church of God
Survtvmg are hts wtfe, Mary Darst Stgman Stobart whom
he married June 15, 199 1; stx daughters Mary ' (Vern)
Bernard, Freedom. Pa. Carole Ann (Steve) Karaisz, Beaver
F~lls, Pa, Evelyn (Jack) Smith, Manoca, Pa ; Darla (Gary)
Hmeman, Beaver, Pa , Fatth (Robert) Everly. Clinton, Pa ..
Lucy (Btll) Huermg, Manoca, Pa , and a son, Harry E. (Mary
Ann) Stobart, Jr, Monaco, Pa. A stepson , John (Larene)
Stgman of Addtson, also survtves. as do 17 grandchtldren, 13
great grandc~tldren. two step grandchi ldren and live step
great grandch tldren. several meees and nephews. and spec tal
fnends, Harry and Marsha Bender ot Beaver. Pa
He was preceded m death by hts ftrst wife, Mat1ha F Stark
Stobart. 111 August, 1984, siSters Freda Bentz, Eula Henry,
Loutse Coe, Hazel Cleland, &lt;tnd Darlene Graham, and broth·
ers· Jtm Stobart. Ray Stobart, Russ Stobart, and Don Stobart.
Services will be held at 7 p m on Tuesday, Aug. 23, 2005, at
Cremeens Funeral Home 111 Rac111e wtth Rev Carl Mann and
Rev. Je~ Powell oftictatmg Bunal wtll be m Sylvama Htlls
Memonal Park m Rochesler, Pa , and mtiitary gravestde ntes "'"
be conducted by the Manoca. Pa post ot the Amencan Legion
Fnends may call from 5 to 7 p m. on Tuesday.

Local Briefs
RUTLAND - Untli further nottce, Leadmg Creek
Conserv,mcy Dtstnct's .monthly board meetmgs wtll be held
at 4 p.m • on the fourth Tuesday of each month.

"'II

Customer appreciation day
MASON, W.Va.- The Ctly National Bank at Mason win
have a customer apprecmton day Fnday with lunch being
erved from II am to I p.m Bob Graham of.the Oh-Kan Com
Club wtll be there with a display of coins

Book burning in·Cuba
I was recently talkmg wtth
one of my heroes, , Ray
Bradbury. a persiStent, hvely
defender of the essenltal
mdiVldual nghts of consctence, free speech and,
most famously, trl hts novel
"Fahrenheu-451" the nght to
read- espccmlly 111 a country whose government burns
dtssentmg books
We were talking about
Ftdel Castro's recurnng
crackdowns
on
those
remarkably
courageous
Cubans who keep workmg
to bnng democracy to that
gnm tsland where dtssenters,
mcludmg mdepcndent librarians. are locked m cages,
often tor 20 or more years
Bradbury knew about the
crackdowns. but unttl I told
h1m . was not aware of
Castro's kangaroo courts
(whtle sentencmg the "sub,
verstves") often ordering the
burnmg of the mdependent
IIbranes they ratll. JUSt like
111 "451."
For example, on Apnl 5.
2003, after Julio Antonio
Valdes Guevara W&lt;lS sent
away. the JUdge ruled· "As
to the dtspostlion of the photographic negauve s. the
audto ca.sette , medtcmes.
books. magazmes. ::&gt;amphlets and the rest of the
documents. they are to be
destroyed by means of mcmerauon because they lack
usefulneS&gt; ...
Heanng
about
thts,
Bradbury authonzcd me lo
convey thts message from
htm to Ftdel Castro "I stand
agamst any hbraty or any
IIbranan anywhere m tile
world bemg nnprl'oned or
pumshcd m any way for the
books they ctrcul.nc
·1 plead With Ca,lro and
hts government to nnmedtately take thetr hands oft the
mdependent !thranans and
release all those lthranan' rn

Nat

Hentoff

pn son, and to send them
hack mto Cuban culture ' to
mform the people"
Among
the
books
destroyed through the years
by Ftdel's .trsomsts h&lt;~IC
been volumes on M,utm
Luthet Kmg Jr. the U S
Consutulton, and even a
book by the late Jose M,trtl
who orgam7ed. .md w:"
ktlled 111 ~ the Cullan people's
struggle tm Independence
Whether or not the Cuban
d1clator e1 er heal J of
Bradbury's message to hun.
Castro ts reso lute in hts
repression of Ius people As
Human Rtghts Ftrst (formerly the Lawyers Commtltec
for Human Rt ght&gt;) reports
':Jn a renewed govern ment
crackdown on dJSsJdents 111
Cuba. aul hontles ,trrestcd ,JT
least 57 peacef ul democro~cy
and 'human nghts advocates," between Jul y 13 and
July 22 Three of those st1ll
llllprisoned Will be p10SCCUI·
ed under Castro's notunous
Law 88. which mandates up
to 20 years m pnson anti
po"tble contiscatJOil nl
pro~rty

Meanwhtlc ,
Nebraska
Gov. David Hememan con·
ducted a trade lllts&gt;Jun 10
Havana Ill August that ~h
the Aug I0 New York S~111
reponed .. , to negoiJ.Jic the
purcha»e of Nebr.hka-gro\1 n
dry beath - one ot the
states largest exports - h~
the Cuban go' crnment ,
Repubhc.m memhef' ol
Congress I mcoln D1a1

{)11

the ... tory

ho:rotc rc:-.J :-..t&lt;.~tKC tu
- thdt the governor

or

tht-..

C~t-..tiU
\\' llllld

not meet wnllany tlls . . Hkllh.

and would ·cert,unly not
engage 1n the politic:-. nt the
d.tv
Repl1ed Ltncoiil Dl.Jl ·
B.d .. n 'II ' ltke saymg poh··
IlL &gt; " nul p.u1 "' a tnp to
Hitler\ Germ.iny 111 the
t931b If' not .t quc,lton of
polittcs - 1t's .t question of
elemental hum.m dcc.:ncy."
Now that Chtna h.ts
beoum1e .1 strong . . upponer of
Robert Mug.thc. the tyrant of
Zm&gt;h,,b,ve. and "bolstcnng
the cmnomy that Mug.thc
,haltered. m.,ylx· Heineman
can lead ,, trade IIIJSston 10
th.ll hrutahzcd nalton. and
&gt;ell mme Nebraska-brown
dry bc,lll' How about a SJde
to the Sudan governmem
m Khmtoum'l
The govemor could take a
world tour. bo&lt;"11ng sales to
Iran North Kmea ;nd other
totailt,Jnan countnes ~110-..e
polliJCs are of no concern to
hun.
Not all 1\chr."k.tns sh.1rc

tnp

then·

t!U\ crnor ~

'te\\'

Thc1c ,;one hhr,utan who"
\t:f\

conl·erncd

wllh

(.t;tiO' (f,lt.'kd O\\Ih Ol l.On

,...,..-.:· --,..,-...,..-

~aughters
CHESTER - Members of
the Chester Counc'li 323,
Daughters
ot
Amenc.t,
recently met to discuss theu
upcommg lodge mspectton
Member Esther Smllh
reported that the lodge
inspection "ill be held at lhe
Oct 3 meettng. Officers are
to study thetr rituals. memorize thetr duttes, and study the
dtlferem thmgs they have to
do dunng the meetings such
as receivmg national and state
officers, balloting, etc
Erma Cleland resigned as
It us tee .md Dolls Grueser

·Diane Pottorfl/photo

Mayor Raymond Cundtff and Recorder Mtndy Kearns helps
Kelsey Henry and hts w1fe. Tess1e, and daughter Kyl1e. cut the
nbbon to h1s new ch1ropract1c off1ce
ed on W. Va 62, close to Bob 's

Market and Greenhouse.
Henry satd the bwldmg has
made tt an easter access for

those patients who It ve
around the Mason area
tn stead of dnvmg
to
Gallipolis for treatment

A:-,~oCJ.ttlO tl

Conference Ill

!.He Sept em her." and

he
wants to mclude some lltles
lOt btdden 111 otlictal Cuba
hbtancs
ThiS Will be a stgm ficant
reachmg out to Cuba's
m1pnsoned hbranans by an
mdJvtclual Amcncan hbrary
&gt;late a"ocialton - the first
ttme 1t's happened Yet, the
natJonal Governmg CounCil
of the Amencan Library
A:,.soc lllllon continues to
retuse to ask Castro to
release the 111dependenl
IIhtanans tn ht&gt; prisons.
Adnnrer' Of Castro on. that
go,ernmg
hody . have
blocketlthat dear support of
the freetlom to read - the
very credo of the ALA
Perhaps. m tnbuie to free
trade tf not free tdeas, Gov.
Heineman wtll send a supply
of Nebraska-grown dry
~:&gt;cans to the governmg council of the ALA
(Nat Henroff" a nationall\ •-e"'"'""' wlllrort()' 011
the Fu '' Amendmelll and the
Btl/ u( R•glrr' and a"'lwr of
111~1111 boob. "" ludmg "The
1\iu '"' the 8,// o( Rtglll&gt; and
!he Gathermg Reswance"
(S&lt;'' en S'tm·~e, Pre~s . 2003 ).}

ROCKSPRINGS - The
results from last week's
Meigs County Fatr's Open
Horse Show are as follows:
Open Showmanship: Nancy
Vanco. ltrst place, Carla
Carfora, second place, Andrea
Wtthee, thtrd place, Hannah
Helgesen. fourth place,
Jesstca Wtlhams, fifth place.
Lead-m Pony : Rhtannon
Morris. judge's pick.
Small Fry Walk Trot. Carla
Carfora, first place, Ah
Davis. second place,' Russen
Beegle, thtrd place, Kayla
Spaun, fourth place, Aha
Hayes, fifth place
Youth Western Pleasure·
Chessa Blower, first place,
Hannah Helgesen, second
place. April Butcher. third
place. Ashley Savage, fourth
place, Nicole Hill, fifth place
Open Walk Trot. Whitney
Karr. first place, Beverly
Dellinger. second place, Carla
Carfora, third place. Jacob
Glagg,o fourth place, Bobbt Jo
Cunmngham. fifth place.
Open Pleasure, Western and
Enghsh· Beverly Dellinger,
first
place. Bobbi Jo
Cunmngham. second place.

Whttney Karr, thtrd place.
Renee Setdel, fourth place,
Nancy Vanco, fifth place.
Small Fry Barrel Race. Jess
Roush, ftrst place, Kact
Bryant. second place. Shalyn
Greer. thtrd place.
Open Pole Bendmg. Ed
Roush. first place. Jtm Fems.
second place. Ltsa Graham.
thtrd place m dtvtston one.
Jane Roush. first place, Jess
Roush. second place. Sonny
Folmer, thtrd place m diVI·
sion two.
Youth Barrel Race. Adnan
Bolin, ftrst place. Breana
Hemsley. second place.
Randi Roush. third place in
dtvtston one, Shalyn Greer,
first place. Shannon Brown,
second place. April Butcher.
thtrd place in diVISIOn two
Open Barrel Race Mtea '
~ees, first place. John Greer,
second place, Adrian Bolin,
third place m dt vtsion one:
Mike Jones. first place. Debbte
Sayre, second place, ·Kaci
Bryant. thlfd ptace m dtvtston
two, Shirly Berkly, first place,
Cmdy Facemyer, second place,
Shannon Brown, thtrd place m
division three

Fair truck and tractor pull restJlts
POMEROY - Results of
truck and tractor pulls at the
Metgs County Fatr were
announced today.
In the Thursday event, the
first place winners were Tom
Theiss in 9,000 pound farm
tractor; Mtke Newell in ~.800
local yokel, pene Redman m
6,000 street ilx4, Vance Chne
in 6.000 pound farm tractor;
and Dave Perry, first in
10,000 pound farm tractor
Vance Chne in 5,000
pound, Mike Newell in 5,800
pound, Gene Redman m
6,000 street, Vance Cline m
6,000 pound in farm tractor;
. Tom The'iss in 7500 pound
farm tractor, Adam Btehl,
9,500 in farm tractror: Tom
Thetss 111 9.000 pound farn1

And he ts not JUSt trea1111g
low back pain
"We also have treatments
for headaches. s111us and allergy problems:· Henry said
"We try 10 treat anythmg that
attect' the 1mmune system "
Hem y 'a1cl he wanted " to
bnng an affordable alterna11 ve to those who cannot
aftord a p11mary cate phystctan and that he would also
ilke to ~ork wnh the Wahama
Htgh School athletes as well
"II IS good lo ha'e htm"
Mason Mayor Raymond
Cundtll satd " It ts also good
to have .1nother bu"ness 111
Mason ..
For more mlormalton or to
make an «ppomtment. qll
773-5773

of America prepare for inspection
was· elected and in stalled in
her place
Thelma Whtte. co unctlor.
presided at the meet1ng The
Lprd's Prayer and pledges to
the Chnstl.m ll.tg and the
Amencan llag were gtven 111
umon. Erma Cleland, J P.C .
protem, re,td the first three
verses of Psalm I0
Reported s1ck were Faye
Ktrkhart who recently
returned home from the
hospital. Jamce Z Wtllmg
was .tlso reported home
from the hospital and d01ng
''pretty good"

Mary Jo Barnnger gave the
secretary's report whtle Opal
Hollon gave the treas urer's
report
Also present at the recent
meetmg were Nathan ' Btggs.
Bette B1ggs, Esther Harden.
Laura Mae Ntce, Jean Wel sh,
Kathryn Baum. lnzy Newell.
Ruth Smtlh ,' Sandy Wh11e.
Everett Gr,ant.
Also reported at the meetmg
The followmg members
wenl to the stale sesston Aug.
14 - 17 111 Akron Jo Ann
Rnchte, Esthet Smtih, Jean
Welsh. Mary Jo Barrmger.

Dons Grueser. Charlotte Gram
The Past Counctlor s Club
met Aug 16 al the M.Json1c
Buildmg
Servmg
was
Dolores Woll e and Mary K
Holtet. Games were by Laura
Mae Ntce and Opal EJChmger
Good of the Order Comm111ee
served refreshmems
The next lodge meetmg
wtllbeat730pm onSept 6
at Masomc Butldmg where
members
practtce for IRe
upcommg lodge mspeclton
There will be a stlent auction
by th e Ways atid Mean s
Committee

Bicycles
awarded at fair

Br&lt;tm Durham. Noah Hudson,
CasSie Davts. Conner Wolfe.
Ken Lawrence, Shand• Beaver.
Mtchaela Holter, Morgan
Tucker. G.trren Rttchte and
Tamera Miller.

Montroso of Ironton. Ttrzah
Dodson of Pomeroy, Btl! Spaun
of Pomeroy, Frank Vaughan of
Pomeroy, and Charhe Colhns
of Reedville. The $50 wumet
was Larry Snyder of Racme

was backmg up 10 get hitched
to the pull equtpmenl when the
motor dted and she acctdentally httthe mtrous button mste~d
ol the start button resultmg 111
an exploston of the atr box -

Prize winners
at horse races

ATV pull victim
treated and
released

Senior citizens
win certificates

POMEROY - A total of
24 btcycles were gtven away
m noon drawmgs each day to
children attendmg the Metgs
County Fatr.
Btc~cles were provtdet.l by
Hendnx, Cnsty Concess tons.
POMEROY
Metgs
Carmtchael
Equ tpment ,
Shade Rtver Coonhunters, County horemen and the
Pepst. Dctwtller Lumber, Meigs County Fau Board
Home
Na110nal
Bank. donate money lor pnze drawRtdenour Gas. Big Bend mgs dunng the harness racFarm Anttques , Rtdenour, mg al the fmr each year.
Thursday 's wmners of $25
Jtm Cone ConcessiOns,
Kawaski, and Walmart.
each were Jan Cleek of
Those recetvmg btkes not Racme, Jay Jenkms of
previously announced were Mtddeport. Don Roush of
Nakata
Roush,
Drew Portland, Tara Swatzel of
Humphreys, Cooper Peters, Pomeroy, Dave Wtlson of
Cody Mayes, Madtson Fmwell, Columbus, and Shtrley Stsson
Natalie Porter, Chelsea Holter, of P.omeroy Wmner of the
Kayla Hoffman, Jackte Jordan, $50 drawing on Thursday was
Wilham Oldaker, Davtd Mask, Btll Batley of Mtddlepon
Friday's winners,of$25 were
Brandon Monroe. Isatah
Hudson,
Jenmfer
McKibben,
Roger
Stiles of Pataskala, Dean
.,

POMEROY - Kay Spencer
of Pomeroy. mtured m an .teetdent Saturday mght dunng the
ATV pulls, was taken from the
Rock Springs Fatrground by the
Emergency Medtcal Servtcc to
Holzer Medteal Center where
she was treated and released
Spencer satd Monday that
the acctdent ~c ured whtle she

Eastern
from PageA1

Open Horse Show results posted _______________

Bal,ut. M.ttto DJ.tl-B.JI.Ht 'ctence. tree speech .md the
and Il eana Ros- Lchttncn Ireetlom to 1ead Robert
Boyce at the ref ere nce
wrote Gov.
Hemem~m .
tell1n g h1111 hts mtsSJ on department 111 Lmcoln Cny
would he "scndmg the L1hr,11 1es 111 Lmcoln. Ncb ,
app.dlmg SJgn.tl liJ.Jt the cash tells me tll.lt he hopes to
ot tyrant' ts mote unport.mt 4\dopt ~~ :-,ugge~ tJOil I made m
than the l1ves ot pro-dcmoc ; pre\ JOll.., \\Ti ling~ on Cas:tro
racy lc,Jders. · These mem- E'ery 1.111. ltbra11es across
ber-.. ol Congteso.; a'ked lhc &lt;\menc.1 tl1Splay - dunng
gn\et nor to :..ll l ea~t meet Banned Books Week w1th leadcJS ot the pru .tLtu •.l volumes that have
de mOll d L'Y movemcnr .1s been h.mnecl
Why not
we ll .IS some of the polttic.JI tndudc hooks t\anncd by
plt...,oner'
Cli:-,1!0 1
•
Hctncm.m·s
spokc~ man
Boyce wntcs "We are
A..ron Sandc1ford
told go111i_! to ~ puttmg together
Megh.m Clyne of The N~w ,, very sma ll tltsplay of
Yo1 k Sun - one ol the k" banned books lor the fall ol
Amcnc.tn ne\1 ' P.lp&lt;:rs kecp- 2005 Ncbrask.t L1 brary
tng. t.lbs

DIANE POTTORFF

MASON - A new bustness has come to Mason
The
Bend
Area
Chtropracttc Office ts now
open and Dr Kelsey Henry
D.C. ts ready to take patten is
Ottke hours wtll be 8 a m 5 p.m Monday, Wednestlay
and Fnday, Henry sa1d It IS a
satellite office . from the one
m Gallipolis.
And, he ts opemng the new
office tor the beneftl of the
pat tents
"It ts super nice area." he
said of Mason. "Plus some of
our famtly IS from here."
The converted house, "htch
ts now the new office, IS local-

Meetings changed

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains Fire Department
hold the commumty's ftrst Harvest Festival on Oct 15 A
parade wtll be held at 12·30 p m. wtth events planned after
the pat ade at the firehouse.
Crafters, coneesstons vendors and commerctal booths wtll be
set up by local orgamzallons and busmesses The tire department.
shenff's office and medical helicopters wtll alTer demonstratums,
and mu ~ t cal entertamment and ch1ldren's games are planned
The ftre depanment wtll host an open house dtsplaying '~ur­
chased with last )ear's FIRE Act Grant award.
Those 111terested m settmg up a booth may contact Lamar
Lyons at 98S-9824

)

BY

DPOTIORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

"'II

Meigs County Fair Briefs

Plan Harvest Festival
IS HE TAlKING ABOUT
IRAQ, CINDY SHEEHAN,
SOCIAL !;f(URITY... ?

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

New business opened in Mason Monday

Harry E. Stobart. Sr.

armed wtth grenade launchers and automatic weapons,
fought to defend thetr Shute
netghbors 111 an attack by
terronst le.tder Abu alZarq&lt;~wt's cutthroats. who
attempted to dnve 3,000
Shutes out of the ctty
The Sunm defcnd.,rs
k1lled f1 ve of Zarqawt's
gucrnll.1s and forced the rest
ot them to tlee the .1rca.
"We have h.td enough ot hJS
nons~nse', · smd Sunn1 She1k
i\ltnml Khan)df " We don' t
.1cccpt th.n d non-lra41
slwuld try 10 enforce hiS

whether ,my lralp s wcte bet·
tel ott .Iller s.•dd.llll Hussc lll
wus Jt tven t10m power
Nnw.•tiler women tor the
l11s1 11111c we re .lllowed to

1

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Iraqis shine in their (darkest hour'

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

..
PageA4

.

tractor, Da,id Perry. 10.000 m
farm tractor, and Dave Biehl
m I0,500 pound farm trnctor
Frrst place winners m the
Fnday's truick pulls "ere Terry
Halasz in 5,800 pound 4-wheel
drive super stock: Virgtl
Barker, 6,000 ~mnd, 4-wheel
drive modified; Richard Bailey,
6,000 pound 4-wheel dnve
stock; Brandon Barker, 6,200
pound 4-week drive modified,
Terry Halasz. -6200 pound 4drive super stock: P J. Pendley,
8,000 pound 4-wheel diesel.
Greg Cochran, 8000 pound
4-wheel open dtesel; Terry
Shaffer, 8,300 pound super
· stock and 9,000 pound pro
stock tractor. and 9.300
Round super stock. and
I 0.000 pro stock

Fair
from Page A1
the Wednesday figures "ere
the highest durmg those 15
years of record "That day
when 38 Spectal was at the
grandstand we took m a total
of $23.416 at the gates, more
than $4.000 over any other
year," satd Holter
Also setting a record thts
year was the number of open
class entnes A total ot 3.37g
entnes were made 'R the vartous exhtbtt departments
Open class has also shown an
annual mcrease m entnes
whtch in 1991 was 2,302.

Wall
from PageA1
Musser sa1d that he
be!teved the · state" would be
pavmg East Mam Street next
year while West Mam Street
wtll soon be paved from Auto
Zone to the corporation ltntll
wtth Mtddleport during tillS
recent pavmg proJect
Wnght also mqUtred tf
Musser had heard from V1llagc
-

'

'

~

Rate
from Page A1
such low rate&gt; could afleet the
vtllage·s appiicattons for gram
and loan, funds for mfrastructure Improvements.
Co~nctl Prestdent Stephen
Houchins satd the clatm that
the village's rates are too low
when compared to lhose of
other vtllages 1s mtsleadmg.
because the vtllage's btlhng
.. ts based on a monthly usage
of 2.000 gallons. whtle Floyd
,Browne A»octates compares
the rate' ba&gt;ed on 4.500 gal lons of month!\ usage '

POMEROY
Home
NatiOnal B.mk sponsored a
drawtng on Sentor Ctt•zeDs
Day fot g1ft certJftcates
Wmners certtftcates to Bob
Evans wete Terry Htll of
Columbus and Ellen Johnson
of Pomeroy. and to the Wild
Horse Cafe, Betty Logenette
of Long Bottom and June
Rtdenour of Chester
ery products, Broughton Jor
dairy products, Htvely Otl
Company for fuel products.
Englefield for petroleum prod·
ucts, and Mahone Warehouse
Ttre for me products
The board also:
o Approved
fundtng ·of
School to Work program

Jessica Marcum. Beatnce
Morgan, Shmn Nuggud,
About future improvements Ktmberly Roush, Nancy
to the butldmgs and grounds Scarbrough. Aaron Schaekel.
Holter satd the board wtll Ryan Sletght. Angeha Smtth,
think about that a little later. Sandra
Southern,
Jody
"Rtght now there are bills to Wamsley. Jamce Weber.
be patd We purchased the rest Angela Weeks. H Cratg
of the Humphre} farm thts Wehrung, Pam Whtte, Maxme
year so we could expand our Whttehead, Roxanne Wtllams.
parkmg, &lt;tnd then there's a bal- and Mtla Woods
ance of about $50,000 on the
The board approved htred
Thompson-Roush bwldmg to Tawny Helgesen as elemenbe pmd by the tmr b&lt;Mrd"
tary school secretary for the
And then he added. " It was a 2005-2006 school year, Jamte
darn good fmr but we can't sit Duck as athletic tramer.
back now. we've got to thmk Brenda Johnson as a substiabout next year and what we tute 'ecrctary, cusiodtan and
can do to make 11 ever better cook and Valene Nottmgham
One thmg I do think ts that we as a substttute secretarv.
should bring back mutorcross
The board approved fnds for
It was a rea I crowd pleaser and the 2005-2006 school year
from Hemer's Bakery for bak, brought in lots of people "

Com1numty Action Agency
1n cooperation wnh the
Metgs County Departmenr ot
Job .md Fam1ly Sentces \11th
a local share ot $15.000
• Approved a contract 11 nh
Ohm Uml'erstty for a gutdance counselor mtern at a tee
not to exceed $20.000
• &lt;\pproved open enrollment students !rom liederal
Hockmg. Metgs Local and
Southern Local dtslnct&gt;
o Set the next board meetmg for 6 30 p m on Sept 21
at Eastern Elementary School
hbrar) conference room

Attonrey Chns Tenogha about
the legallltes ul an mspector
for rental properttes m the village Musser satd he had not
Wnght then asked about
putttng up no parkmg stgns
on Lincoln Hill due to reSIdents parkmg on the stdewalk
and blockmg motonsts' hne
of l'tSton Proffitt agreed that
somethmg needed to be done
concermng the area
Councilwoman
Mary
McAngus asked tl anythmg
had been done about allowmg
huntmg wtthm the 'illage.

Spaun remmded council that
Ohto Department of Natural
Resources Offtcer Keith
Wood believed 11 could work
Councilman Todd Nonon &gt;atd
that he would not vote for 11.
In other council business:
Council authonzed Hysell
to ad\erttse appruxtmatel)
one-quaner acre of vtllage
property lor sale. The property IS located ncar East Mam
and Kerr Streets
Councli appto,ed purcha&gt;mg tour ne11 ttres tor the
police dep.tnment'&lt; Bra1ado

tor SJOO The current tires are
three years old
Resolution 28 05 was passed
and mcluded transferniig
S I0.000 from the general to the
street fund. adJUstmg the 2005
annual appropnauons. transfernng S27.000 trom the general
tund to permanent tax fund m
regards to paymg off a paHng
loan !rom Farmers Bank
All members of council
were present lor the meetmg
11 llh the excepuon of
Counc1l man Jack1e Welker

Council approved the thtrd
readmg of. and passed an
ord mance allowmg a S160
monthly p.ty mcrease tor
sa laned employees 11 ho
choose not to p.lrtJctpate m
the l'tll.tge health msurance
plaLI. ,md a $1 hourly tncrease
for houri) emplovees
Counc1l appro\ ed a rene11 · '
al of the \lllage's health
Insurance plan \, nh a Sl\·
petcent mcrease 111 premt
ums V1llage employee' pa~
nothmg out of pocket lor ,,
smg le health msuram:e plan.
and 70 percent of the cost ol
a lamli y Jn,urance plan
Other business
D.11 1d knkms of the B1g

Bend Youth Football League
dtscu"ed chan~es m the ianguage of a proposed ti~e-ye.tr
lease on the ~l1ddleport Ht gh
School lootb.tll lleltl . '"
apprm etl ,n the Ja,! counctl
meet111g and plan' lor
1mpro1 em~nl of the fteld
Council also took action .•11
Jenkm &gt;' reque,t. to change
tl1e name of the stadmm to
"1\ltddleport
. Memon.tl
St,Jdmm. · and authonzed the
k.tgue to use the Centr.tl
Blllldmg b.Jsemem lor a
.h.tunted !muse lundratser 111
October
Council also:
• ~\cct.' p ted th(" re . . Jgn:tllPn
of p.trl-11111&lt; PatJ nlm.tn

Chns Frame
o Appro1 ed a cash advance
lor the pool operation _of
$5.7++ 57. 1111h Counct lman
Ro ger Manley \Otmg tn
oppos1110n
o Approl'ed .1ppropna11ons
adJu,tment' 111 the general
lund tire dep.tnmenl. poltce.
and ~lteel departments. for
fuel ,md propert) tax expenses .•ts Jequesled b) FIScal
Ott tcer Susan Baker
• Appro1 etl p.t) ment of btlls
m the amnum or S I0. 787 48.
Present 11ere lannarelh
B.tker. Councll member~
\l.mlcl . Stephen Houchms,
Kalil\ Smn Bob Robmson
kll Peekh.un .md' Shawn Rtce:

throu~h

Galha-Me1~S

�'

·PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,August23,2005

------------~--------------------------------~----------------~---------------------INSIDE . .

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Wahama golf splits at Cliffside, Page 82
Steelers' Hampton signs ftve·year deal, Page B2
Baxter doesn't practice with 8rowm, Page 82
Federer is faYorite for U.S. Open, Page 86

MIDVALE (AP) - The
· tiny town of Midvale got all
dressed up for Gov. Bob
Taft's tirst public appearance
since he. was convicted of
ethics law violations. But
some residents sa id they
wercn ' I impressed by the
show featuring the governor
breaking ground at an elementary schooL
"I don' t think this is what
he'll be remembered for."
said Bever!ea Bell, 5 1, as
she pointed to the shell of
the school the vi llage · is
replacing. American llags
decorated the road to the
nearby field where the new
elementary school will be
buill; and cheerleaders pcr·formed at the site.
Taft's appeaqnce tries to
put the spotlight hack on
state business just days a[ter
AP Photo ·
he pleaded no contest to
Ohio
Gov.
Bob
Taft
ta
lks
to
the
members
of
the
media
Monday.
Aug.
22,
2.005,
in
Midvale
, Ohio
allegations that he failed to
report 52 gifts worth nearly as h·e participated in the groundbreaking of Midvale -Elementary School. This was Taft's first
$6,000, most ly rounds of pub lic appearance since he was convicted of ethics law violations.
golf. that he received over
four years. The case sp ir~le d Taft picked the town about Distri ct is renovating or ing Lip a 79 percent share of
off a scanda l over state l o~s ­ 90 miles east of Col umbus rebuilding all of its sdl'ools, . the $40 mill ion project to
es from investments in rare so he could escape the atten - with the help oi' $500.000 in rebuild all the di strict's
tion of the capital city.
state money. The Oh io schools.
coins and other funds.
·
But
Mike
Fc)rd.
52,
said
he
Schoo
l
Facilities
"No matter what , when the
Franklin Count)' Municipal
Judge Mark Froehlich fmmd didn't expect the gove rnor Commission has spem $3.6 gove rnor comes, you. show
Taft gu ilty. fi ned him $4.000 would ge t a very warm billi on on public school con- him respec t," Cadl e said .
'
~truc t ion since its inception
Minority Democrats in the
ami ordered the governor to reception.
"He 's not very well -liked in 1998.
. apologize to the~ people of
Legis lature plan a mee-ting
Indi an
Valley on Tuesday to ·disc uss
Ohio and to state employees. around here:· said Ford , a
Taft is the first Ohio gove r- Democrat who did not vote Superintendent Randy Cadle whether they shoul d see k
nor charged with a crime.
for Taft .
said he wanted to thank the Taft's impeachment but say
Bell said she SLISpected
. Indian Valley School governor for the state pick- no dec ision is expected.

APNewsbreak: State fires 2 guards over handling of inmate suicide
Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

CINCINNATI (A P) - A th~ir son carried a knife.
Ohio law says parents can
jury assi$,ned mo st of th~
responsibility for the near- be held liable if they neglifatal stabbing of a 13-year-old gentl y entrust a weapon to
girl to the attacker's . parents. their child.
.
afld awarded $ 10 million to
On July 13, 2003, the
the victim and .her family.
Whites left for a dinner date
Lance and Di ane White instead of chasing their trou• ·
share 70 percent of the blame bled so11 after his fight.
Benjamin White said his
for the 2003 attack on Casey
Hilmer. the Hamilton County parents drove by him , but
jury found Friday.
refused him when he asked
''It sends a. message to par- for a ride home because they
ents that even if the child is were late and their Porsche
I I days shy of 18 years old. a had c;mly two seats.
The Whites testified they
parent is liable for the supervision and control of their were letting their son cool off,
children and what they entrust as suggested by his psychiathem with ." said attorney trist.
Stanley Chesley, who repreAfter they left, White spotted Casey at the end of the
scntcd the Hilmer family.
After a fight with hi s broth- · street and snatched her.
er whe n he was 17. Benjamin · Casey, who recognized her
White gmbbed Casey as she attacker as a boy who once
was jogging in .their wealthy rode her school bus, managed
suburb of Indian Hill S', to kick him in the Head and "
dragged her to the woods and . escape. Her father. who had
stab bed her in the face and lagged on a hill while riding
neck.
his bike behind her, found her
The girl's parents, Steve · after she stumbled back to the
and Meg Hilmer, had sought road. .
The jury foreman said
$25 million in their lawsuit
against Benjamin White and jurors didn' t think the..Whites
his parent s, accusing them of could have predicted the
failin g to protect the commu- attack but held them responslnity. Lance White testitied in"· ble because they found no
the trial that his net worth is ev idence they disciplined
$ 10 million to $20 million .
their sons.
The jury awarded the
''I'm not saying they're bad
Hilmers $6.5 million formed- parents, but under the law
ical bills and pain and sutler- they have certain responsibi liing. with the parents expected ties - and at the time. their
to pay $4.55 million and son was legally a minor," said
Benjamin White the re st. William Freudiger, 38, of
They ordered the son alone to suburban Cheviot.
pay another $3.5 mill ion as
The high award refl ects that
punishment.
Casey nearly died, Freudiger
Diane White decl ined com- said.
ment Saturday, and a message
Lance White. president of
was left at the office of the the Indian Hill Board of
·whi tes' attorney seeking Education. owns a sanitation
comment on whether they compan y that cleans slaugh will appeal,
terhouses. The Whites ha ve a
Now 20. Benjamin White home in Indian Hill worth
was convicted as an adult of about $1 J mill ion and a
attempted murder and felo- vacation home in Santa Fe,
nious assault last year and is N. M.. worth $2.4 million.
serv ing a 10-year prison term . ·
Meg Hilmer told jurors the
Attorneys for the Hilmers lawsuit wasn't about money.
pre sented evidence in the but to protect the community.
Mrs. Hilmer testified that
lawsuit trial that Benjamin
White hail a history of explo- she believed school ·offic ials
sive· reactions , aggressive looked the other way when
attacks on classmate s · and Benjamin White caused earlidrug abuse. according to court er problems because of his
records. They also argued that father's position on the school
Lance and Diane White knew board.

built a ladder ·from sheets mi t suic ide over the ~tate's
Koliser was one of fiv e
and rolled-up newspapers dec isioti to move death row inmates who ha ve comm itAP STATEHOUSE GO RRESPONO ENT
and magazines.
to
the
Ohio
Sta te ted sui cide this year, fo ll owIn that in cident , pri son . Penitentiary in Youngstown. ing a record I I inmate suiCOLUMBUS - A con- . officials bl amed "gross defi- fearing for his life since he cides last year.
.
victed ki ller on Ohio's death ciencies in supervision" and killed a Youngstown police
The guard s union wil l
row who committed suicide reprimanded several admi n- officer. according to the · fi ght to reinstate the offi cers.
in May likely was dead more istrators. including the war- report.
,aid Peter Wray, spokesman
than three hours before his den .
That
inmate.
Grady for the Oh io Civil Servi&lt;.:e
body was found. indicating a
Colledi vely, the two prob- Brinkley of Luca s County,
breakdown in the system for lems look bad coming so said Whitaker made checks Employees Assoc iation. The
checking
on
inmates. close together, prison system at 10:1$ p.m., 1:30 a.m. and union believes the report
according to a report on the spokeswoman Andrea Dean 5:20 a.m. Several other should have highli ghted that
suicide released Monday.
acknowledged Monday.
inmates made similar state- the estimates of time of
death differ. .
The state said it fired two
" But we· ve addressed both ments .
The ODion also want s to
prison guards over the han- incide nts. People have been
Brinkley "stated this was
dling of the May 7 suicide of disc ipli_ned as a res ult of normal routine and they increase the number of
Martin Koliser, sentenced to both incidents," she said. know they are supposed· to guards doing rounds, espedie for killing a Youngstown "We're
co nfident
that make two round s per hour cially at night on death row.
police officer in· 2003. changes are being made and bot they don 't." the report
Koliser used a nylon bell that people arc being held said . Brinkley was sentenced
L &lt;tst Sundays Ad \Vas ln~· m..-~· ~· t.
that he tied arou nd the frame accountable and they're to death in 2002 for killing
This Is The Cm-.-~·~· t Sdt~· duk Of EH·nts.
of his bunk bed to hang him- going t'o carry out their job hi s 18-year-old ex-girlfriend.
self.
duties in an . appropriate · Koliser had been on death
Under prison procedures, a manner "
row since November 2003 ·
guard should have checked
The pri son based its con- for killin g Youngstown
on Koliser twice an hour. clusions on interviews with patrolman Michael Hart zell.
Instead, the Department of inmates . gua rds and a video- 26, in April 2003 as the offiand tape taken when Koli ser 's cer invest igated a shooting.
Rehabilitation
Correction said a check was body w_as fou nd that shows
Koliser 's fath er. Martin
made about ·I :30 a.m . and mu scle stiffe ning that occurs Koliser Sr.. declined to comagain about 5:30a .m.. when hours after death already set ment Monday.
the body was found. accord- in , De~n said .
Th e Richland County corn ing to the report released at
The state said . it fired ncr li sted the official time of
Thursday, August 25, 2005
the
reque st
of
The guards James 'c lark and Kolise r' s death as 5:30 ;1. m.. .
5:00 Flea Market Opens, Craft Show,
Associated Pre ss . .
Jeffre v Whitaker and di sci- based on a temperature read ~
Commercial Exhibits, Food booths
The prison system believes plined u.nit Capt. John ing of Koliser's body at 8:20
the
suicide
h a pp~ned Ca ntrell . Messages seeking a.m. The temperature was
8:00 Ohio Tobacco Queen Contest - OK
between I :30 a.m. and 2 commen't' were .left for the 97.6 degrees; regular body
Warehouse
a.m., contradicting the coro- three. and a request was temperature is about 9!1.1'1
Friday, August 26, 2005
ner's report , which conclud- made fo r responses the degrees.
9:00 Commercial Exhibits, Flea Market,
ed Koliser died at 5:30a.m.
guard s submitted in the
Coroner Stcwar.t Ryc kman
Show and Food Booths Open
The report found numer- course of being di sc iplined.
said Monday he's sti ckin g
ous other problem s with the
Whitaker was fired for with hi s report , saying he has
1:00 Open Tobacco Judging &amp; Show
handling of the suicide at failing to do his rounds. experienced in ves ti galors
5:30 Opening Parade (US Rt 52)
Mansfield
Correctiona l while Clark was fired for fal- who are familiar . with
VIP Dinner (OK Warehouse)
Institution , including inade- sifying a logbook to make it corpses and confirming the
7:00 Softball Tournal)1ent
quate documentation or appear that Whitaker had time of death .
guards' activities at ni ght, done the rounds as req uired.
··1 see n0 reason to ·chan2e
B:OOTalent Show-Main Stage Boat Ramp
broken first aide kits and a
Cantrell was reprimanded it at this point.'" Ryckm~n
10:00 Entertainment-Main Stage Boat Ramp
failure to reg ularl y carry ou't for delaying the in vesti ga- ' said .
Saturday, August 27. 2005
drills' to prevent and respond tio n by ca lling for a full
He did say it 's possible
And Don ~t
The
9 :00 Flea Market Opens, Craft Show,
review team instead of enter- Koli ser died slightl y earlier
to suicides.
• Tobaeco Cutting Contest
Commercial Exhibits, Food booths
The
report
follows in g Koliser's cell immed i- than 5:30 a.m. He al so has
• Hor~hoe Pitch Contest
February's
requested a copy of the
unsucce ssful ate ly with another guard .
OTF Antique Car Show (Main Street).
• Tobacco Plugging Contest
escape attempt from death
Koli ser told a fell ow prison videota pe of tl1c
Softball Tournament (RULH Elementary
• Corn Hole Tournament '
row in which two i·nmates inmate he·was going _to co m- scene. ·

NewsChannel
Thesday, August-23

r7

Morning
a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures ·wi ll drop
from 60 early this morning
to 59 by 7 a-. m. then ri se
back up to 72 late 1110rning.
Skies will be partl y cloud y to
cloudy with 5 to I0 MPA
winds from the northeast.
.4ftemooll (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will hold
steady aro und 75 with
today's high of 77 occurring '
around 3 p.m. Skies will be
mostl y sunny with 5 to 10
MP H winps from the northeast.

Evening
(7
p.m.Wednesday, August 24
Mid11ight)
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Non11)
Temperatures ,wil l drop
It shou ld be a c loudy
from 73 early th is evening to morning. Temperatures will
6 1. Skies will range fr0m climb from 62 tu 72 by J,; tc
most'ly clear to partly cloudy
with 10 MPH winds from this morning. Winds will be
thenort he&lt;tst.
5 to 10 MPH from th e
O••emiKhl (1-6 a.m.)
northeast.
Temperatures wil l fal l
Aftemoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
from 59 early Ol'ernight ·to · It should remai n cloudy.
1he low for the day of 55 at Temperawres wil) Jingcr ' ;ol
4 a.m . '" they rise back to 78 . Wind, will be · 5 to 10
59 late owrnight. Skies will
be clear to clotldV with 5 to . MPH from the nonheasl
10 MPH winds' from · the lllrning from the c•ts l as the
iJfternoon
I

p· roi!rC"'~f\

'

4:00 Grand Prize Drawing

team~

~·a

games

Athens at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Girts Soccer
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 7 p.m.

Golf

WRDavis
traded .to
Patriots

TVC Hod&lt;ing at Pine Hills, 4:30 p.m.
River Valley, Chesapeake at Gallia Academy
(Cirtlside). 4:30p.m.
•
WahRma at Point Pleasant (H d:Jen Valley), 4
p.m.

Wednesday's games
Goff
SEOAL at Franklin Valley, 4:30 p.m.
TVC Ohio at OxOOw, 4:30p.m
Thursday's games

Soccer
Gallia Academy at Alexarder. 7 p.rp.
Ohkl VaHey Christian at Federal HOO\ing,

5:30p.m.

.

Wahama at Meigs (Pine Hills), 4:30 p.m.
TVC Hod&lt;irl!J at Brass Ring, 4:30p.m.
River Valley, South Gallia at Wellston
(Falrgreens), 4:30 p.m.

Friday, August 26
Footbal
Gallia Academy at Meigs
Wiliamstown at Wahama
EaStern at Soultl Gallia
Southeastern at River Valley
Green at Southern
Point Pleasant at Ripley
Hamlin at Hannan
Ccllege Soccer
Rkl Grande at Missouri Baptist. 7 p.m.
COllege \lolloyball
Rio at UMD Tournament, TBA

AP photo

Cleveland Indians' Grady Sizemore slides home ahead of the tag by Tampa Bay Devil Rays catch er Pete Laforest during
the seventh inning Monday night in St. Petersburg, Fla. Sizemore scored on i3 sacrifice fly by teammate Travis Hafner.

Tribe on.playoff warpath
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla . .500 .
dri ve off Jesu s Colome
"Everybody contributed ," before Sizemore and Crisp
(AP) - Cleveland turned to
the long ball to tighten the Indians manager Eric Wedge added RBI single s to make 1t
AL wild-card race .
said. " It 's nice to see gu(s 11 -4.
Victor Marti1iez and Ben coming together like that.'
·'We had momentum ."
Brou ssard
hit
tw o-run
Travis Lee and Jorge Brous~1rd said. I "We go1
homers in a seve n-run sev- Cantu homered for Tampa good sw ings and put up
enth · Inning, Jeadi_ng the Bay, which had a live-game number~ tonio ht." .
The seventh inning ended
Indians to an 11 -4 victorx winning streak end . The
over the Tampa Bay Dev1l Devil Rays had beaten the when Devil Ray s center
Rays on Monday night.
Indians six straillht times. fielder · Joey
Gathri ght
Coco
Crisp.
Grady including a three-game crashed into the wall after
Sizemore
and
Jhon ny . sweep earlier this month at · mak ing a runnmg catch to
Peralta
homered
for Cleveland.
take away a potential twoCleveland, which has won
"We knew we had to come run extra-base hit from
live strai ght to move within here and play hard,'' Peralta Peralta. Gathright left after
a percentage point of said.
the play with a bruised left
Oakl~nd and the New York
Travi s Hafner broke a 4-4 shou lder and is co n s id~ re d
Yankees in the AL wild-card tie in the seventh with a sac- day to day.
race . It was ,Cl eveland's rifice fl y off reliever Travis
"A situation like that . yo u
eighth straight road win and Miller ( I- I). Martinez fol - j ust don't th ink about an ythe Jnd iims (69-56) are a lowed with his two-run shot. thin g ... you just go get it,".
sea.son-high 13 games over Broussard hit a 1wo-rui1 Gathright said. 'They were .

ROCK SPRINGS
Feeney-Bennett Po st 128
American Legion is hosting
a pre-tryout evaluation day,
especia lly for 14-16 year
old boy s from Meig s and
Gallia Cou nties who might
have int e re~ t iq playing
American . Leg ion baseball
next summer.
The plan is to plant a seed
of interest in younger players with hope s ofform ing a
Junior t_eam for next summer.
The tryout/evaluation day
will be on Sunday, Aug . 28 •
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Meigs · High
School
Baseball Field . Bring your
personal eq uipment.
·The tryout day is specifically for 14- 16 year-olds,
howe ver, if yo u are 17- 18
and have nevef played for
Post 128 you are welcome
to come.
Any questions , contact
Coach Stewart by e-mai l at
diamondDI @columbu s. rr.c
om or call (740) 591-4605.

Bulldogs

extend,
lead in

SEOAL
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ATHENS
Ri cky
Frame
and
AJ.
Cadamagnani
shared
medali st ,hol)o rs
as
Athens. playing on its
home course. padded its
lead atop the Southeastern
Ohio Athleti~ League golf
standings.
Frame
and
Cadam•·nani each shot
round s of 37 for the
Bulldogs. who won for the
second time in as man y

Contact lnformatiOfl
Fax - 1-740-446-3008

E-mail..- sports@mydailysentinel.com
Sports Staff

Bred Sherman , ~oorts E~itor
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bsherman @ mydailytribune .com
Bryan Welten, Sports Writer
{740)446-2342, ext. 23
bwalters @ mydailytribune.com
Larry Crum, Spor'ts Writer
{304) 675-1333, 9)(1 19
Ierum 0 mydailyregiste r.com

'

·~

SOccer

'American Legion
evaluation day set

_

.

from Gallia, Meigs and Mason counHes.

Sports Briefs

(Purchase tickets at festival info. booth)

claim fi fth place.
Meig s sti ll leads the season
. standin~s in the ()hio cliv isian wi"th 1-l poin". holding
a three-point lead on both
Belpr~ and Wel lston.
Vinton County sits ·fo,urth
with six points . whi le
Alexander has a one point
edge over Nelsonvi ll e- York
for fifth .
Th e hattie for the Ohio golf
crown continue.s Wedne,day
al Ox bow Country Club in
Belpre.

GALLIPOLIS- A schedule ol upcoming coU~tge
and h1gh school ilars1ly sparling avents rnvolving

Jackson at Gal~a Academy, 1 p.m.
COllege Soccer
Rio Grande at Colurrbia Colege, 5 p.m.

.

Reed, Kirk
H o s t
Lega r and
Wel lsian finSt -eve n
ished third
Stewart all
with a sco re
led the way
of 18 1, led by
wi th rounds
A I e x
or 41.
M iII ike 11 • s
J a k e
tally of 42.
Venoy and
G a g e
c 0 d y
Sowers paced
Da vi d so n
V i n t o n
Legar
were a shot
Stewart
Count y ( 187)
back at 42.
to fourth with
an d Josh Venoy ro unded out a 45.' while Alexander held
the day for MHS with a 43. off · Nelsonvi lle- York to

CNP SchedulE

Soccer

• Camel Ride

G o ld e n
Eagles ral lied behind
m e dali s t
W
e
s

Major LEaguE BasEball

Volleyball

. *Rock Wall

e

h

WELLSTON
Any
hopes that the Meigs go lf
team had of going undefeatCoope~·s
ed . . in
the Tri-Valley
one-under
Conference Ohio Division
35 to post a
this season · were . thwarted
team score
Monday
at
Fairgreens
of 164.
. T h e
Country Club, as two-time
Reed
defending champion Belpre
Maroon and
handed the Marauders a one Gold were even ly consistent
in posting a 165 , as Dru
stroke loss.

01/C Pretiew at River Valley, I p.m.

• Wagon Backing Contest
• Bed Race
* Arm WrestUog Otampionshlp
' Cheerleadlng Competition
• Frog Jump Contest
~ Duck Race

T

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTEAS@MYOA ILYTRIBUNE.COM

.Girls Soccer

• Garden Tractor Obstacle

Tri-Vai/Ey ConfErEnCE

Meigs falls short of Eagles, retains Ohio division lead --,

Point Pleasant at Spring Valley. TBA

Miss

School Ballfield)
Ripley Woman's Club Baby Show
Registration &amp; Show (Main Stage
Boat Ramp)
11 :00 Childrens Races &amp; Games
B:OO Entertainment (Main Stage Boat Ramp)
Country Hurricane &amp; Fourth Avenue
·sunday, August 28, 2004
7:30 Prayer Breakfast (Main Stage)
9:00 Flea Market Opens, Craft Show,
Commercial Exhibits, Food booths

PrEp Golf -

Saturday, August 'Z7
CrosaCoun(y
Early Bird Invitational at River Valery, 9 a.m.

24th Annual
'1'81Ja~

.

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Please see Bulldogs, Bl

..

scoring run s ... we wanted to
get out of that inning any
way yo u can . You just go
until the wall stnps you ."
Cri sp pu t the Indians up 10 in the first with his homer.
Lee hit a three -run homer
to give the Dev il Rays a 3-1
lead in the second. -Lee's
dri ve cam~· after Aubrey
Huff and Jonn v Gome s started the inning by drawing
walks from Ke vin Mi llwood
(7- 10). The right-hander had
walked on ly two batters over
29 ~nnings in hi~ four prev ious starts .
.. \Valk s are neve r ~ood.
and one of the bad pnches I
made was to Lee and he hi t
it out of the park.'. Mill wood

Please -see Warpath, B6

BEREA (AP) - Andre'
Davis final tl y pattern for the
Browns took him all the way
to New En~ lan d.
Davi s. pushed to the side at
Clevel&lt;rnd\ training camp.
was traded Monday to the
Patriot s. giving the Super
Bowl champions Jcpth at a
position .thinned by injuries
as wel l as an cxperi en&lt;.:ed
kic k returner.
The Brow ns rc ceil'ed an
undi scl osed drat't pick for
Davis. a ' peedy former second-round se lection in 2002
who had become a forgo t·:e n
man with C icl·cia nd.
His departure continue s an
overhaul of the Bnl\1 ns roster
by ge nera l ma)lage r Phil
Savage, who sin ce la king
over in hnuary, has released
·or. traded 2 1 players who ·
started at lea&gt;£ one game last
season.

In New England. Da1·i~
will get a fres l1 sta rt with a
co nsistent wim1er. sometb inE!
the Bru\,·ns are yea rs u\vaY
•
bccumm~.
I
.
trom
··rm i.t big .... fa ."t receiver:·
Dm·is &gt;aid in. Foxboro. Mass .
" I think I .:an get in and out uf
mv cuts fa ir!\· well. Whatever
I Can do. l"1l1 ~oing to mal\~
sure th:tl I do ilto ~1c best of
my ability and make sure that
rm a Slll :t rl playcr -hecaose I
·know Bil l Bclichick wants
. smart players:·
.
Da\'is ha&lt;..l hcr.::n m ~ tHioned

111 trade talk&gt; for severa l
month,. He became expe ndable after the Browns drafted
rook ie Bravlon Edwa rds. and
Anton i&lt;• Brvalll and Dennis
North.:utl both emerged durIng G.unp.

Please see Davis, B6

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
•••
••
••
••
••
•
•
•••
All proceeds benefit the
Mason
County
Special
0/yrnpics
. .
.
•
••
•
•
••
•
I '
lldwn mUSI be
•• . 'Saturday, September I0, 2005
••
••
ISWdRffMel«* •
••
••
'
••
••
•• .•Hannon &amp;Ordnance Fields
••
••
·••
••
••
•: ·•$150 ·entry per team
••
••
•
•
•

••
•••
•

••
•• ·•Packets available at PVH Wellness Center

••
••
•

.•

•••

..

• ' ·, 'for information: 304·675-4635 (Pam Bryant)

(.

•

••
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�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

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Tuesday, August 23.

2005

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Tuesday, August23,2005

_,Sentinel -",!\
CLASSIFIED
~rtbune

:Wahama falls to South Point, beats·Rivet·Valley Injured Baxter doesn't
practice with Browns
BY BRYAN W~LTERS

complete the winnmg team

8WALTERS@MYOAILYTRIB UN E COM

SCOre .

Just in Arnold paced run·
GALLIPOLIS _ Sou th . ner: up Wahama w nh .1 4c,
Point proved to be the kinos v..h lle Danny Ro ush ynd
of• Cliffside Monday as the Ga rrett Kay lot both l11 ed
Poin ters hel d off Wahama rounds ol .1.6. 0 drtn Reece
: and River Valley for a three· was in be tween the tri o with
: stJO ke victory ·.tt Cltfl stde a -!4.
Go lf Cl ub .
Crai g Barker fnll owed
The ytc tort ous Pnmte 1s Jager' with .1 .n tor RVI-I S.
had live score s of 45 or less while Bruce Stout and Jared
and a team tall y of 175 . Ma rc·um shot 46 and 60.
enough to edge the score of rcspccti, cly. to tound out the
. 178 by the run ner-up White contest.
Falcons
Sout h Pt&gt;itll also won a
·The Raiders v..e re 12 shuh du;il m.ttc·h aga inst the
back tn thtrd wtth a 187. but Rattler&gt; last Th ursday at
not all was lost lor tile host Su ndowncr Go II Course. tht s
k hool.
ume by 10 strhkcs wnh a 155
Sopho more Cra ig J.tgers t.tll y
: earned meda li st honor s wr th
Stou t was the low scmc fot
: a two-ove r-p.u .1K J.tgcrs RV I-I S Wt lh a ~H. while
: was the only pl.•ycr 1o fr rc a Jagcrs and B,trke r both tolsub-40 1uund
h1wed wllh ·-lO. lus1111 Nolan
: South Po1n t w.ts leu hy l11lrshed the te.•m !ot.ll nl 165
Josh Jom:s wu h a -!2 . lol · wi th.\ score ul .:!7
lowed by Zac k Nm rts .md
LewiS led SPH S wtth ;, .'\5.
Kyle Hughes c.rch wll h a 4-l foli o\\ ed bv No rn s 1\llh 39 .
. Justin LewiS It re d .1 -!5 to Jones -lO arid D.tl'rs -l l

Bryan Walters/photo

Waha ma·s Dann Reece tees off on No. 12 dunng Monday's
tn-match wrth South Pornt and Rrver Va lley.

NT Hampton signs five: year contract extension
BY ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH
The
Pittsburgh Stee le• s have "
new deal with one of their
key players, and tt 's not
Hines Ward.
Nose
1.1ckk
Casey
1-l ,un pton. a fo11ne1 Pro Bow l
playe r comrng o il a knee
injury tha t stdehned h1'm f01
all but six g&lt;1 mcs las t sedson.
~ i g n ed a five-year contn.tct
extension Mond.tv that runs
th10ugh the 200~ ;cason .
"We thmk ht s best toot b.tll
IS ahead of h1111." team president Art R oo n ~y Ill surd.
Hampto n ts tnthe fin al sc.tson ot a c ont ra&lt;:~ that wtll pay
htm $989.065 111 hase salary
and couni' $ 1.()07.2 15
aga1nst the sal.&lt;ry cap thiS
season. mclu ding the prorated share of the $1 I mt lhon
•ilgnmg ho nu s he recel\led as

the No 19 overall p•ck mthe
200 I dralt.
Hampton sa1d last week he
hoped IO Wlll'k OUI a nev, CO il tract betore the Sept I I
opener. as the Stec lers have a
policy of no1 negoti ,uin g dur-

ing the sea- free agent who didn't' p'lay
so n. Wide du n ng h1s fi rs t three NF L
r e c e i v e r seaso ns but was an excellent
A n twa a n fill -111 .ts the Steelers went
Rand le El 15- 1 dunng the best reg ular
and safety seaso n in cl ub hi story.
Chri • Hope
Because Hoke pl ayed so
Notebook are .unong we ll wrth Ham pton ou1 , the
th e other Steelers walled 10 see 1!
Steelers pl aye rs who can Hampton would bounce back
become free age nts after th &lt;s qu •c kl y ft ornthe knee oper.l·
sedson and are talktng wtth tion before di scussmg ~t new
the club aboul new contracts. dea l. He showed up fot c.unp
The Steelers dtdn I want to · we1g hing
about
I 0-15
allow the 6-foo t- 1. 320- pou nds less than hi s play111g
~o und Hampton to go on the wc1ght dunng recent sc~" on s
t ree - ~ge nt market _bec au s~ ~t
"Th1 s ts ~1s light "'s Casl!y '~
growmg number ol tea ms are bee n since hi s rookie yc.1r."
.tga m ustng the ~ - 4 delense. s.tid coach Bill Cowher. wlH1
wh tch Hampton IS we ll -sull· praisetl Hampton f&lt; u h•s play
ed to pl .1y
in Sat urd ay nig hl 's 17·3
"Th " is the place I v.. .u11 1o cxh1hi!Hllt ' ic· tm y ovc1 the
be," suid Hampto n. whose Mm.m1 Dolpl11ns
s&lt;7e and unusual qu~&lt;:kn ess
Hampton .II so h.td no proh·
tor ,, li neman hi s stze ma ke !em rcrovenng !rom a torn
h11n one of the NFL's top run anteri or cruciale knee l1ga·
de fender- He made the Pro ment he susta ined at Texas,
Bowl 111 2003.
and
IllS agent, • Brian
Hampton .
a
former Overstreet. said there have
University of Texas player. bee n no setbacks in thi s
needed season-e ndtng knee recove ry. e1ther.
surgery .1t1er the siXt h ga me
"It 's like a nat tire," he
1.1st season He was rep! .teed said. " You patch 11 up and tl's
by Chns Hoke. an und ra tted as good as new ..
·

Hampton had no problem
handling !he · 14 40-yard
dashes all players are
requ ired to run on the first
day of camp, despite on·field
temperatures of 90-plus
degrees on Aug. I. He couldn' t compiete the drills two
years ago.
Hampton also took part in
~til the Steelers' two-a-day
practices. even
thou gh
Cow her gave him the option
of s111111g out one of the pracllces to prevent puttmg too
much sireS&gt; on the knee.
Hampton, who turns 28 on
Sept J. had 10 tackles and
seven assists last season.
kfore gelling hurt. He has
fou r career sacks in fo ur sea·
sons. though he is seldom
used as a pass ru sher 111 the
Steelers' system.
Notes: Piu sburgh cut two
players on Monday, releasing
wide receiver Sam Simmons
and rookie free agent running
back Chad Scott.
The mm'es leave 84 play·
ers tn the Steelers' camp. All
NFL teams must reduce their
rosters to 65 pl ayers hy Aug.
30 and to 53 by Sept ,;,

BEREA (AP) - Cleveland
Brown s cornerback Gary
Baxter did not prac ti ce
Monday, two days after sustaining a concuss iOn on a
hard hll 111 the fi rst half of an
ex h1bi11on game agamst the
Detrotl Li ons.
Al so, runnin g back Lee
Suggs rematned sidelined
with a spramed left ankle.
Bax ter was inJured when
he collided with Lions runntng back Kevm Jones while
making a tackl e near the Sideline Saturday l-Ie st11yed on
the turf for several minutes
before being ass isted off the
field.
Baxter. who s&lt;gned as a
free age nt in the offseason.
watched from the sideline in
street clothes in the second
half.
,
The 26-year-old remained
in side th e team's prac tice
fa cility Monda y as the
Browns began prepanng for
Fnday' s horne exhtb1tion
the
Caroltna
agatn st,
Panthers.
"With concussions, there IS
some sensitivity to light, so
he didn' t come outside," said
Browns
coach
Romeo
Crennel, who dtdn 't know
when Baxter would be
cleared to play.
Baxter 's injury was the lat·
est to a banged-up Cleveland
secondary.
Cornerback
Daylon
McCutcheon has been held
out of training camp because
of migraine headaches and
dizziness. He has been limir-

Notebook

fromPageBl
league matches by firing a
152. Six shots back was runner-up Marietta. As a result.
Athens improved to I0-0 in
the standmgs, whtle the
Tigers dropped another point
to 8-2.
Warren was third with 173,
while Jackso n (174) was
fourth . Logan won a
Galli"
tiebreaker
over
Academy for fifth position as
both shot 181 Jackson.
Logan and the Blue Devils

coach John Lon .
" Hopefully, we can get him
to the point that he can do
some drills with us and we 'll
bring him along m the next
couple weeks," Cret;Jnel said.
Cornerback Michael Lehan
(hamstring) was also held out
of Monday 's practice, but
Crennel was encouraged to
see Lehan run wind sprints at
the end of the two-hour ses·
sion.
Rooki e safety Bradney
Pool practiced for the first
time since sustaming a con·
cussion on the opening kick·
off of the Browns' exhibition
opener against the New York
Giants. Pool, a second-round
pick from Oklahoma, has no
recall of the v1olent tmpacl
that cost htm to miss a week
of workouts.
" I sltll don' t remember 11."
Pool sa1d. "I remember running half:way ·down the
field. "
Suggs is in a three-way battle w1th Reuben Droughn s
and William Green to be the
Browns' . starun g runmn g
back and can ' t affo rd to mtss
much more time . As the
Brown s worked out, Suggs
rode a stattonary bike and did
some stretching.
are now all tted for last in the
standings at 2-8.
Bradley Wilson of Jackson
and Manetta's Ryan Stricker
al so shared medali st honors
with the Athens duo.
Greg Russell shot a 42 to
pace Gallia Academy. Andy
Noe and Kyl e Hunter fol lowed with 45 's and fre shman Kamal Dagal also broke
tnto the scoring column with
a 49 In $cores that did not
count. Trav1s Stout had a
round of 50 ~nd Tyler Houck
a 53.
The league shills to
Fatrgteens Country Club
nea r Wellston , Jackson 's
home course. on Wednesday

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
In Memory

PUBLIC
NOTICES

Bess
Hendricks

loor~r ro k&gt;J•,IRU'Ii!l ~£~''"

PUBLIC SALE
2005 at 10:00 a.m. a
public sale will be

held lor lhe purpose
ol sallsfying a tahd·

P.~''"J..'d A\\,t) ~/.::!V I 990

Lanterns , Old Tools,
H,ousehold, Re-enactment
Supphes,
Campmg Equipment,
Belt Sander, Twm Bed,

books, Scroll Saw,
Chain Saw, Drill

tents of self-service

Press ,
Christma s
Decorat1on s, Antler

storage

Kmves .

lord's hen on the con-

room . The
be sold are

goods lo
'described generally
as miscellaneous personal &amp; hm.tsehold .
The room will be
opened for viewing
Immediately prior 10

sollcltalion of bids.

Mtsc .

CBE q uipment ,
Carpentry Hand Tools,
Iron Ware , Anvtl.

Bay

W69

Name:

Paula

Ave.
City:

ty

Terms

'lo hri nf,! \ nu h onn n ~ u l n.

nu f.ln'" cl l "urd ~ Y! t•n· ~ I H.lkl n
:\u tum lo ~ ,, , J.!"odhn•
\ nu 1\t'fe ~:nn t· hdllrt• &lt;~ t knt 11 11
\ nd 1111h ( ,nrl k n rn1 ~ \\ h ~
()ur ht•ar l ~ ' ''I I . 11 hi' 11 1th \ ll tlnt·~~
And 'unt l t·m ~ ' lilt Ou•\
\ \hal if l lH .111 I l u l n~t IIIII
'\u nm· ' ' 111 t \1 r I.. lUl l\
\li•lm•r•tm d "" '' • ••u• rrl m11r ll \ t um 1
·l rr \ 1un , \r/ J r, '\u •tlll &amp; lmumln &amp; fw mll

..•

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Are you 65
or older?

funq.
Hills' Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.

Stuff, Gun Cabme ts,

Racine, OH 45771 '

Table
Boxes,

(8) 9,

16, 23

93 C olumbus Rd • Athens, OH
•

SALES PERSON ·NEEDED
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Pl easant Valley Hospital is currently
acce ptmg res umes fo r a Medi ca l
Record Tran suipt1onist. Registered
Hea lth Information Technician
preferred. On e to three years of
medical transcriptro n expe ri e nce .
Minimum speed of 60 words pe r
minute.
Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/ family plan, den tal
plan, ltfe insurance, vacation, longterm disab ility and retirement. Send
resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/ o Human Reso urces
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675-4340
AA/EOE

•

LARGE

AUCTION
THURSDAY, AUG. 25
1 O:OOA.M.

Mircro wave Stand, Gold s tar Microwave,

Must Have Val1d Dnver's License
Be Neat In Appearance
Tra1mng Program
5 Day Work Week
Hosp1tal1zatton
Patd Vaca11on
Bonus Progra m

APPLY IN PERSON
ASK FOR JERRY

'Dryer,

W1rlp ool Stack Washer&amp; D ryer, 2 sm.
Ches t Ty pe Fre ezers, Tappen Elect ric
Ran ge, 30" Gas Rang e, lg. Amount of
G la ss.w a r e, Se t of Mixing Bowl s
wiTuhps, Washbowl &amp; Pitcher, Cookie
Jars , Naseo Di s he s, Corningware,

Figurin es, Sev. Lamp s, Old Wooden
Wagon Lamps, Home Interior, Old
Amount

of

Linen s-

Gri nd er, Swee pers, 2 Metal Wh eels

Ha yrake, Plu s sev.

Bo ~

Loi s

&amp;

(or

Much

M ore.

auction Conducted BY
RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO. #66

104 773 544 7 or l ().j 77.1 ;ns
TERM S. Ca,h or check wilD

Shop Classifieds-For Bargains!

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""A~lHl
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Yellow Water Irises great for
a FISh Pond (304 )675-3718

LosrAND
I'Ol''IJ

Found
Fem ale Beag le
wjbr •ght green coll ar. m
Le tart
Radical
Lahe

An E.-celtent way to ear11
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-882-2645

Drivers Needed .
COL Dnvers wdhng to dnve
tor local re ady m1 ~~: -concrete
Reward for sate re1 urn
c&lt;:Jmpany Expenence tS
Neutered
male
preferred
but no t necessary
oran ge 1wh11 e stnppP.d tab by
Dr•ver mus t be Wlihng to do
caf Lost l rom 5th ave
"pre·marntendnce on truc&gt;~s
(74 01388·8 166.
&amp; oqUipment ya rd work &amp;
other j'T.IISCe!laneous chores
EJo: p91lence operat1 ng equipment 8. extra sk1Hs such ~s
weldmg il plus
Call (304)937·34 10

(30 4)895 3551

Equipment for Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating .. .................. ........ .............. ....... 830
Farm Equipment........ ....... ...... .... ...... ... 61 0
Farms for Rent. ............... ......................... 430

Farms for Sale ......................................... 330
For Lease ... .. .. ..... .. ........ .. ... .... ..... .... ... . 49 0

For Sale .... .... ............ ............................... 585
For Sale or Trade .... .. .. .......... ....................... 590

Fruits &amp; Vegeta bles ............................ ......... 580
Furnished Rooms .. ....................... ........ 450
General Hauling ......... ................ ............ 850
Giveaway ... .......... .......................... 040
Happy Ads .......... .... ... ............... ................ 050
Hay &amp; Graln ................. ................. ................ 640
Help Wanted. ............................... ...... :...... .. 110
Home Improvements ..... ............ ............. .. 810
Homes for Sale ................ ............ ..... .., ...... 310

. Household Goods ........... ......................... 510
·' Houses for Rent. .......................... ............ 410

!}oint ~lea~ant .m.egl,ter
The Daily Sentinel
~unbap Ql;fmes -~entlnel

Equ ipment ........................ 660

Miscellaneous Merchandise ............ ...........540

Mobile Home Repair....................................860
Mobile Homes for Rent ............... ,............... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale............................320
Money to Loan ........... . ..... ............ .. ...... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ....................740

Musica l Ins t ruments ..
.. .... ................... 570
Person a ls .: .......... ........... ... ................... 005

Pels for Sale . .... .... .... .. ... ..... .... ..... .. ...... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heattng ..... ............................. 820
Pr ofes s ional Servi ces .... ~................. 230

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair...................... .160
Real Estate Wanted...................... ........... 360
Schools tnslruction.................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilozer ..... ............... ,.........650
Situations Wanted .............................. ., .. .1211
Space for Renl.. ..................... .. .............460
Sporting Goods ............ ........... ...... .... . .52Q
SIJV's for Sale. ....... ... .. . ...............720
Trucks for Sale . .... . .. ... . . .. ... .... :.......... 715
Upholstery .. . ... ... . ............................ 870

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flt.ID
in the

City/State/Zip ---------'--~Phone,__________________________
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Vans Fo r Sale. . ................................ 730

Mail or drop off this c oupon along

with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 4S631

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HtLr WAN'n ll

Electricai/Aefrigeratlo n .... ... ... .............. .. ... 840

Address ___________________

Anentlonl ,
Local company offenng · NO
DOWN PAYMEN T" programs for you to buy your
home 1nstaad ot renting,
• 10001o t1nancmg
• Less than perfect cred 1t ,
.
Sta te ·C e r t il1 ed. L1 n k accepted
coul
d
be the
•
Paymenl
approved childcare has
:mm edll'l.te ope mn gs tor same as rent
ages 6- weeks&amp; up call Mor tgage
Locators
Shell y 304- 675·234 3 for (740)367·0000
more details
Br1ck w/3 BR 1 1/ 2 BA, LR
Wented baby·SitMg tob day DR, FA GA 1 acre near
sll•tt 1n my home live across Su presta (304 )675·5026
New Haven grade school
nave good refere nces 304· Cape Cod Home 2185 Sq
Ft 2 112 Bath 3 BR 2 Car
882·1192
Garage &amp; Caq;~o r t on 1/2
Wtll Babysit m my Home. Pt acre lot
2 yrs ol d
Pleasant area M-F dayt1m e Hardwood floors
Private
(304)675-7277
Dnve $ t4 5 000 located 397
Honeysuckle, Ln . GallipOliS
Will do Babys1t11ng 1n my Ferry, WV (304)593·2864
home ,
day-shift
only
Located at Gallipoli S Ferry,
Crab Cffiek- Araa (304 )675-

1)11&lt;) 'f BIIN~Ifi7
A~ &lt;;; u;e-p'rJ~,

'NO EXPEniENC £ NECESSAI~V
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' CDL fFIAINING
' wOR fll'ICEMENT
' ENflOLLING N:JW

ALLIANCE
' TRACTOR TRAILER
f~AINING CE NTERS
WYlHEVILLE VA

1·800-334·1203
100 WORKERS NEEDED

110

Autos for Sale ................ .... .... ......... ....... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ........ ............ ...... 750
Building Supplies ..... .... ...................... ..... ... 550
Business and Buildings ... .... .... .... ..... 340
Business Opportunity ...............,............ .. 210
Business Training .................. ................ ... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ..... .. .. . . . .. 790
Camping Equipment.. .............. .... ... ... . 780
Cards of Thanks... .......... ...... ...... . ... .. 010
Child/Elderly Care ........ ... .......................... 190

Name _ _ _ _ _ __

I

I.M\'1 .0\
Sl·lll H 'FS

(740 )446·1 714

Llveslock ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found .. ....................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage.. .... ...... . ... ... .. ... ......... 350
Miscellaneous .............................. ....... .. 170

Subscriber'~

MORII.E HOME'&gt;
FOR SAtJ-:

HOMf:-i
SALE

FOR

l ntenor/E)ttenor
Painting
a nd
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Washing.
Reasonable rates, refere nces expenenc ed Free
e sllm ates Call (7 40 )742·
201 3 or (7 40)645-2638

7fllf ... 1Ft,;

DRIVE

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WA~1l:t)

'HN AI&gt;Ch\(', AVAilABLE

Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ... ....... . .... 760
Auto Repa1 r ........ .. ............. .......... 770

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TO

Absolute Top Do ll ar U S
S1tver and Go ld Cams
GUI:te Po st Magaz.1nes to Prootsers Gold Rmgs PreG1veaway (304)675·5790
1935
US
Currency
Sohtwre
01amondsM TS
HAmmOnd organ 10 g•voCom Snop 151 Second
away Call (740)4 46-9709
Avenue Gelllpohs, 740 446Mother ca t &amp; one ~m11tens 2842
k1tten to goocl home
\If\ '\

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Persons whO vandalizE'.ICI
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Beautiful Pine Paul Bunyan Poster B.R.
Suite, Sev. D.R suite'S , sev. Chests, Maple
Ches t, 3 pc. l.R . Suite-sofa-loveseat &amp;
chair, Claylon 2 pc. L.R. suite plus other
sofa 's, coffee table &amp; end tables, Zenith
Color TV w/remote, Recliners, Rockers,
"Pea ry" Grandfather Clock, sev. Tables &amp;
4 Chairs, Table &amp; 6 chairs, Hutch, Old

Ho rses,

To Place
~egister
m:rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740)
446•2342
(740)'
992-2156
(304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
675·5234

4x4's For Sale ................................... .:.... ... 725

Senior Discount*

LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER
ON RT. 62 N. OF MASON W .V.

&amp;

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

CLASSIFIED INDEX

If so, you qualify for a

Heavy Duty Maylag Washer

of the s al e w1ll
be cash or cerllfied

H u nl i ng / I'ISh In 9
equtpment,
Auto
parts, Toys , Weed
eater. Vac uum, Kid
Tool
Bows.

Ujlln 111'11 \ c n

Clark .

Middleport, Ohio

45760·1440

Saw,

\\t· \1!\llhl \\ ,1lk n g lu

Address: 504 S. 3rd

_Deacnption of properfollows :

If l t· .~r ~ t uuld hmld 11 , , ,,;;,.,.,
\nd m t·nwn t'!o. \H r c a tunc

Galll.o Co un fy O H

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

· Auction

Auction

In Memory
1.. ~.....,. 05 ()..
~- &amp; fj·••.f..•l'-•

Notice is hereby given
that on September 3,

as

•.

ster

ed in the
past week
10 . some
·agility and
co ndition in g work
on the field
w i t h
s trength

-

Bulldogs

r

www.mydailysentinel.com

A. ssomiJ ie crafts
.vood llcms
To $480/wk
Male nals orow:led
Free 1nforrna110n rkg 24 Hr
80 1-428·4649

II'\\'\( 1\1
An establ1shed bus•nes!&gt; m
GalhpOIIS IS lookrng for one
h1ghly mot 1vated snlespe r
son with a strong work ethiC
to JOin our Company A1e you
looktng tor lu tl•hme ,. 0rk7
Are you took 1ng tor a pen na

your Area 1 Wl1e 11 1 Sat
August 2 7th 10am 4prn
Wt'en:? Holiday Inn 800 3rd
Avenue Huntmgton WV
25701 (304)523 8880 Most
All Tractors Replaced wrth
New 04 '05 and i.l6 Modelst
H~r•n g Dec1sr ons rnade on
the spot ' Ave rage 3 ODO
m1 v. ee k
EZ
Pass &amp;
Prepass I· day Orrentatron 1
G reat Me drcaf Insurance
c'ass A COL requrred cnll lor
m;m• mfo
877 31 6 -7100
Western E:.;o~p ress
AVON! All Areas 1 To Buy 0!
Sell
Stmley Soears. 304·
675-t -1 29

eflver Ia sto;e and rae
oca110ns 111 GalliPIJIIS
pprox1ma tely 10 m1le
nd 1 1 2 hours per day
ust be ava•l able a
10 OOam Monday th•
Fr1day
and
6 OOp
a1Urdavs Need rehabl
mnsportat10n and proof o
nsurance II mt ereste
contact
lh
lease
allipolrs
Tnbune
a
740 446 2342

....,,...------"'1
It
·IIIlO

L.-------..J
10

HElP WAM'Jo])

Wanted To Do ............ .~..... .. ... ... .. ....... 180
W a nted to Rent .. .................. . ................ 470

Blue Ve~oJet TranSport
Call Bob ar 800 652 2362
lruck Meet amc
1740l3A8 B54-

rrp eded

~~---,...---., ~.,,...-------,
1

H EL1 W.\NTfll

..

11110

LPN/ST NA

POSTAL JOBS
S15 94 S22 56/tlr now h1r·
1ng: For -appllcal•on &amp; tree
government JOb. rnlo call
A.mencan Assoc of Labrn
t !:'J tJ 599-8226.
24/hrs
emp ~arv

Ht:r.P WANTFJ)

Paramedrcs'

&amp;

i16

0PPOH'I1.JNIT\'

I

EMT's

Bl.l'ilN~

I

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vend rng mach ines/
exc ell ent location

needed A pp ly at 1354
an for $10,995
Scenic Hrl ts Nursing Center, Jackso n Pi ke, Gallip olis
800- 234·6982
a Tan dem Health Ca re
Fac11ity IS seeking a se~cl
Established lawn care busl·
few to JOin ou r outstandmg Pa(l·tlme Delivery perso n ness for sale Cal l (740 )44 6·
Floral
d
es
•gner
Apply
1n
and
team as
pe1son Flora! Fash1 ons. 244 1098
Third Ave No phone calls
•NOTICh

LPNs

Full Time
12 Hour Shttts, 6P-6A

STNAs
Full and Part Time
All Sl'llft1

Proper licansa/certlflcatiOn
reqwred We otler an excel·
ent work environment shltt
differential ,
competitiVe
wages , great benef•ts. perfat
attendance U"'1Cen11ves and
Exper•enced Przzc. Shop much more•
worke rs for grow1ng bus i- Please apply to
ness Apply 1n perso n Only
Attn . D1anna Thompson
Jlr'laneUI's P1zza Buckeye
HR
Hrlls Ad R10 Grande
Scenic Hills Nursing
Center
311 Buckrldge Road
Bidwell, OH 45614
Ph. 740/446·71 SO
Fa x. 7401tl46-2438
EXTRA! EXTRA!
Email. admln.shn@
Loo k•ng tor a pa rt-ttme JOb
tandemhealthcare com
ou-1 nav•ng no luck?? We
may have IUS! what you are
SF/OF/EOE
look•ng to r1 Tt'J e Po•nt
HAO iandemheelthc•re com
Pleasant Reg1st er 1s seek
- - - - - - - -1ng a dependable har d·
NE ProJeCt Mana ger for
work•n g mdrv1dual lor a
salary po s1t10n Lead team
MOTOR ROUTE
of ass•s1ants 1n reset of reta1t
posrMn llrnterested maKdispl ays for ll ome 1mprove·
rng $950 per month wo rk·
mant reta1ler Crew mgmt
rna 5 hours a cay 6 days a
and planogram exp a must
- week. ofl on Sundays
Trvl may be up to 3 wks
P l eE~Se Contact
Expenses pd + pe r d1am
Sean Cullan.
Must possess reliable trans·
0 1st Sales Mgr
por1a110n Send _resume to
130416 15·1333 ext 20
j~(~~"'! J !Js t us@resourcep co

For a lmuted hme make 50"1(0
selhng Avon Call (740)446
3358
:.:.::::.:.._______
lmmed1a te Open1ng lor
whee lc!Ja lr trucl&lt;: drrvers to
1ransport pal!enls to/from
physiCian Otf1 ce Valid dnver
DRIVE
license
•eqUired
Call
(740)446·7930 or stop by
Fam1ly-Onen1ad Car11er w•th 1770 Jackson P1ke
toads ~Jut of Jackson OH :.;...:..:..:::...:..:_ _c_:..__
needs OTR dr JVers to pull
JOBS NOWI1
refrigerated 1ta1lers m the
Up to SB/hour fullt!me
east hall of the us
Make calls to help protect
gun nghts
and ra•&amp;e money tor
• WeeKty Pay
non-prof1t orgamzal•ons
Pa1d
tra•n•ng
•
• La1e Model Fre•ght hner
• Pa•d holidays
Condos
• Pa.1d vacattons
• No Forced NYC
•Outstandmg work enw~n·
ment
• 95Qo r'O tbUCh fr01g ht
St ar1 making 1 d ifference
today!
• r Jl 1 beneh1 package
1-877-463-6247 eKI. 2456
www lnfoclalon .corn
• HOmettme on weeken•Js
• 5500 s1gn on OO~us

www comics. com

Inc

EMT po s1t1ons ava ilable •n
nen t full-tune posrt1on? Are
you 1ntereste&lt;i 111 unl1n11led Hunhngto n
WV
area
earnrnos
po tential?
All FT, PT '
Start mg pay
:..&lt;
$8 50/hr
Cont act M1ke
replies wrll be kept m stm;t Math eny at (304)526 5780
confldem.:e
Send
yOU! or (304)526·5936
resume to CLA Box 569 c'o
Gallipolis Tnbune . PO Box Englflaernlg f1rm seeKmg
469 Gallipolis OH 45631
1nd•vr dUa1s to prov•de construct•on .nspecMn sen11Ces
AppiiC&lt;'Itlons be1ng taken for for water anrl sower uttr1t1es
fvll
11me
otiJce Expene11ce a pO Sitive but
rran ager 'recerllloms t
for not necessa ry (tra •mng pro·
loc al doamngl restoratron vrdeCl) M1JSI be Willing 10
cc.mp(\ny Send resume to worK out ol town on a weekSpec1a1
Care
1743 ry bas1s Must have teli abla
Ce~1e11My Road, Gal upohs tra nspor1atton
Beneht s
OH 45 €31
&lt;lOIK. Health Insurance
EJo: penses
etc
Send
Are You Gett onQ WMt You
resume to Box TSC 19 c/o
Dese•ve? Le1 us Tell you
Ho w ~ou Can'l Weslern . Po1nt Pleasant Reg1ster. 200
Express IS conductmg a Mam St Pt Pl easant WV
25::5:::5::.:
0 _ __ __ __
Drrver h1r1ng Conference 1n ::.:

Wanted to Buy ..........................·.... ..... 090
Wanted lo Buy· Farm Supplies ............... 620
Yard Sale· Gallipolis... .. . .. ... . . .. ........ 072
Yard Sale·Pomeroy/Middlc .. .... ........ ..... 074
Yard Sale·PI. Pleasant.. ..................:..... .. 076

4807

m or fax to 888·501-7972
Now hmn g· All shrfts
McDonalds of R1o Grande
Apply 111 person ..
OUTSIDE SUF. S
REPR F.SF. NTATI VE
The
Galllpotrs
Oa1 1y
IS acceptrng
T11bune
resumes lor a full tlnl9
out side sales reprasenta·
live to jom ou' sates teJ~m
and to mc1nage an established account l1st while
ca"•ng on new accounts
The successful cand•date
will be a d1sc•pl1ned self
rno11ved learn player that
understands the •mpor·
tatrce
ot
d e~ e lopmg
stron g, mutually beneli
c1a l bu s1ness relatiOn·
sh1ps w1th our customers
The Ideal candodate o!"!l
have sale e..:penence t-or
confidential
lnte rv•ew
please send resume ana
cover lette1 to Galhpolts
Oatly Tflbune Attn Jrm
Freeland. 825 Ttrrrd Ave
Gatlrpol!s Oh•o 45631

Part·T1me po s111on at local
Danl •s l Olf1ce
Sen d
resu mes to Den1 a1 Off•ce
Street. Pt
703 22nd
Pl easB.nt. WV 25550
Portamed1c. the nat io ns
feadm g para medrcal lleallll
1nformat1on serv1ce compa·
ny IS seektn g Med Tachs .,
EMTs and LPNs to do •nsurance exams In th e Gallipolis
&amp; Me1gs County area Mus t
nave 1 year b lood draw
expe nence
Co ntracto r
PoS111o n Em a11 Resume to
phrs1 20dmr@por1amediC net

HID VALLE Y PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bus1ness wl11'1 ptlo
lEI you know and NOT 1
end money through th
a•l until yo tJ nave mve st1
ate d the otlenn

r

MONEY

ruLo~N

(7401256·8149
Newly remodeled 3 Ot 4
bedroom house, centra l a1r
lull basement, hardwood
floo rs, detached garage
la n~e covered patiO. fenced
back
yard
$69 500
(740)709· 1382

The Town of Mason IS
accept1ng apphcat 1ons for
the pos•hon of otf•ce clerk
Th1s IS a part·t1me posmon
w•th the potentia l of becom1ng fu ll t1ma Accou nhng and
cOmputer knowledge a
mu st Assoc•ate degree rn
account1ng or busmess pre!erred Fill out applicatiOn at
the Ma son C•ry BuiiClii'!Q,
1601 Second Stree1 Mason
pr1or to Aug 3t

(304)675 7434

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unle ss We W1n1
, -888·582·334 5
IU \I I .., I\ II

HoM~

FOR Sc\U~

Lw--ioiiiitiiiiiiiii.-,.J
17 ~ere far m house wi1h 3
bedrooms hv·ngroom dmn•ngr oom. k1lchen, 2f ul1
baltls, attached 1 5 garage
Small barn new 2 5 car
blocit garage all tenced 1n 1
m•le f rom URG on SR 325
(7 40)245· 5469
3BA Ranch . 2 ca1 garage
pool C.ty schoo ls S90 000
3460 S A 21 8, Ga ll•pOIIS
OH {740)256-1962

Wanted Wattre ss lull t1me
Apply 1n person HohOay Inn.
Gallrpohs

SCHOOLS
INsiRl 1(,11QN
Qa lllpQIII C1reer COillge
(Ca reers Close To Home)
Ca ll Today' 74Q-446-4.367 .
1·8CI0-2 14·0452
wwwgaltloolrscareerco~891! ~O'f•

A.ctrea tea

Member Accr~•tlng

Coone~! It!!

l'ldoperldllnt

aroO~s t27 &lt;~B

~s

New 3 BR Ho me Only
$189tmo Includes ale, delrv·
ery and set up (740)365

4_3:.6:.7_ __ _ _ __
N1ce . Used 14x64
2
Bedroom Only $4 995 Call

(740)385-0698

STATE ROUTE 554 , BID·
WE LL: New 4 bedroom 2
bath manutactured ho me
Features 1iv1ng ro om tam1ly
room w•th ! •replace and
"BO NUS' room Corner lot
Above ground pool w1th pool
house Ready for move-m
PRICED
UNDE R
(7 40)44 6·
APP RAI SAL II
3218

ROAD,

THEISS
VINTON :
Brand new 3 bedroom 2 ,
bat h manufactured home
Completely set an~ ready
lor move-1n Features llvmg
room fam1 ly room and
ceau t1ful sky 111 k•tchen
DRASTICAL LY REDUCED II
Call (74 0)446-3570

r

LoTs&amp;
ACRF.AGE

4.46 ac re•

r
I Buy Homes· Local perso n
buys homes Conl•dentla l.
QUick cash J1m. 740-992·
6300 No cans afle r 9
H:l \ I \I ..,

HO\!SflO
HJK RE.•IT
1 bedroom house close to
R1o Grande college and
grade school $300/mo dep
req (740)44 6·2422

1 beCir oo m house , 1 t
Garl1e ld Ave Gall1poils
$300/mo
(740)4 4 1-0194
BRr t ·balh {740)44 1-1 18-i
Olde r
2
Fa rmhOuse wf1 0 acres In
co untry
3-mllcs
lrom 1 pos~1 bly 2 Bedroom
Hartford
S49 500 HotJ se rn Ne,., Haven
Ho me ste ad
Rea lty S3001month S275.'Cieposll
(304 )882·2405 (304)675 No Pets (3Q4)882-3652
5540
11 2 V1 nton Court Gaii•POIIS 1
OH
3Bdrm 1Batn Centra l
Rt 2 N 3b r Full srze
Basemen! ail Bnck 1 Car AiC WI D hOop up Aef rrdg &amp;
Stove 1ncluded City School
Garage (304)895·3 129
$500 month $450/0 epos•t
No • Pets Ref ReqUi red
(3041675·6453
Home Llstmgs
L1st your home by callin g
2 houses 1 rs 4 bedroom
{7&lt;0)446-3S20
$900/month 1 IS 3 bedroom
$550/ month plus deposrt
V~ew photos/in1o online
(740 )255-8152

www.orv .com

10

Wanted
Med1cal Olf 1Ce
Assrstant w•th expenence lo r
phystctan offiCe A ~;~n1 q ue
poSition req wnng kn owl
edge of computers and data
entry- il!SO lC D and CPT
cod1ng Reliable transpot1a·
110n needed No weekends
or
holi days
requ•r ed
Benefrts available Sal ary
negotiable With experrence
A tle xlbte employer Ma1l
resume to CLA Box 568 rio
Galhpohs Tnbu ne P:O Box
469. Gall1pohs OH 45631

Th is nawapaper wlll not
knowingly •ccept
•dvartlsements for real
estate which Is in
\llol8tlon ol the law Our
readers are t'tereby
Informed tnat all
dwellings •dvartlsed In
thle newepaper are
S¥8llable on an equa l
opportunity bllsa•

House for sale 3 bd rm 1 1/2
bath Crbwn C• ty area

Aes1de n1lal
Treat ment
Fac1hty for t&gt;oys now h1r1ng
D1rect Care Worke rs Pay
ba sed on expe rience . pa1d
msurance (740)379·9083
9am -3pm M Q n - Fr~

Tr uck Dn vers Needed
Hend erson, WV based earn ·
er lookmg for eJo:penenced
Class A COL Dnver s
call
Interested
parttes

All rftt estate 8dvertlslng
In this newspaper Is
aubja&lt;:t to the Faderel
Fair Housing Act of 1968
whtc:h mak11 It Illegal to
advartl•• "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon bned on
racs , color, religion, Hx
l•mlflal atstus or national
origin, or any Intention to
m1ke any such
preference, llmlt•tlon or
dl1crlmlnatlon "

Great Used 1994 14x70, 3
Bed room, 2 Bath Includes
heat pump Ca ll (740)385·
2434

3BA 28 home rn Racrne
1 6 acreS. close to schOOl. 2
ca r garage. k1tchen apph·
ance s mcluded (740)949·

3oe9
4yrs Old 3t,H 2ha wt1h l1re
pl ace on 1 5 acres m coun ·
try 589 900 1740\709·1166

1s a Stea tl' 4 bedroom 2
ath 2 car gara ge New
a~n WV Code 6505 or

:;•;" :J;0;4:8:
8 2:·:336
~8==~
~IORII F HO\I ES

3 bedroom. 2 lull bath 2 irv·
1ngrooms
am.ng
large
k•tchen basement large
fenced backyard Southern
School D•stnct Available
Oct
1St
740-4 16- 1681
(740)753·2595

L..--oinilliiiRiiSiiA
iitli.Eio'- · '_::::.,:.:..::::..:.:c..__ ___:_

2001 Clayton 14x50 2BR 1
bath excelle n1 condl1 1on
St 6 000 (740/245·9497

3BR noose on At 160 near
north Galha H S S4501mo
olus depos•t
No pets
(7 401446-8495

38R 28 A hardwood lloors
fueplace
Salem Center
S700,mo Avarlatlle Sept 1
0:_
14_18
::,::.1:. 3_ __
86 Holly Pa rK 3br 2ba Wlll'l 2C::•::.".:.&lt;7::.4.:
8•1 6 front porch With roof '
'AHe ntlon r
with a lot at f;urmture askmg Local company offermg ~N o
$10 500
(304)576·3320 DOWN PAYMENr pro
leave message
grams tor you to buy your
horne 1nstead ot renting
89
Holly p ark
24x48 • ,ooo~ linancmg
Doubl ew!Cie 3 Bedrooms 2 · Less lhan oertect c1edrt
Bath to be moved $4000 accepted
l1rm (7~0)379-7206
• Paymen1 could oe the
same as rent
CLEAN SWEEP S ALE : Lot
Mortgage
LC&gt;cst ors
model cl earance All1emaln· (7 40)367.0000
1ng 2005 's must go to make
room lor new homes under House lor Rent P1 Pleasant
construcfton SAVE 1 SAVE' $400 (304)675·554 0 or
SAVE' OAKWOOD HOMES (304)675-4024 . ask for
GALLIPOLIS Call (740\44fr Na nc y Homestead Realty
Broke'
3093
5 Homes under 510,000
W1ll delive r a4D)385-76i'l

18:.:

�;

Tuesday, August 23,2005

Tuesda~August23,2005

www. mydailysentinel.com

The Daily ~en tine! • Page B5

ALLEYOOP
House for Rent In Point Furnished upstairs, 3 rooms Used Furniture Store, 130 Full blooded lab puppies.
Pleaaant 1304)675-6224

I

Small2- Bedroorn house in
Pllffon, 1/N. $350.00 month.
115300.00 Deposit. No !=lets.
• ;l04·77,3-9192 .
bedroom house for rent

:'tWo

at 1549 State Route Seven
north. (740)446-9177.

&amp; bath. Clean , ref. &amp; dep.
required. No pets. (740)44615.19.
--------Gracious living. 1 a'nd 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
'Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From 295 44 4. Call 74o992-5064 . . Equal Housing

Bulaville Pike. Gallipolis.
OH 40% o" all king mal·
tress sets, mobile h'lme lot
for rent 3 stall garage for
rent. {740)446-47 82.
:_::_::::_::_:__:::__:_:_:__:__:_::~-­
Wasner and dryer set, $100.
Call (740)446-44H before

2: Bedroom Trailer in. the
c:ountr~.
$300/mo, $150
" d6poslt. Applications now
- being
accepte d.
Call
(7 40)388-0462 lor . more
Mod.ern 1 bedroom apt.
information .
1740)446-0390.
2 bedroom , AJC, very nice,
AO pets, In Gallipolis. One BR 1st Fir., AJC. u!il. pd .
(740)446-1409 or (7 40)446 - $350 plus dep. Reference.
2003
no pets . Stove &amp; Refrig. tu rn .
Coin WID on premises. 258
Available September 1st. State
St..
Gallipolis.
2BD w/new carpet, AIC. .17_4_:0:_14_4_:6·_:3_::_88::7_.- - - 12.x24
front
porch . $300/mlh.
$300/deposil. ·Tara \
Townhouse
Rutland
area .
Mike- Apartments, Very Spacious,
(740)742·2595
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath , Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Beautiful river view in Pool. Patio. Start $385/Mo
. ~nauga . Ideal for 1-2 pea - No Pets, Le ase Plus
pie, No pets, please. Secu'rity Depos!t Required.
Applications being taken. (,7_4_:
0:_:)3_:6_
7-'_
7_:08:_:6:____ __
CaJII740)441-0181 .
Twin River s Tower is acCept• F~r rent in New Haven , ing applicaf•ons tor wait1ng
newly remodeled 3 bedroom list tor Hud-subslzed. t - br,
mobile home, ale . fully fur- apartmen t, call 675-6679
nished, includes dishwasn -· EHO
er, w/d, micro &amp; TV,· caDie
hookups in all bedrooms, all Upstairs apartment 2 l:led. utilities, paid includ1ng cable. roo m. stove. refrigerator.
trash
included.
- $115 each per week lor 2 wate r,
: rellte rs, $100 each per week Deposi t requlfect, rent- $300 ·
... fof 3 ren ters, (330)336-5708 (740l44 6· 762 0, 1740 l441"
9872
~ 0~330-464 -9424

i

SI "CE
. Mobile Home In New Haven
"
-1
•$ 1
F"R nc-.r
$330/month, 300 ctepos1 ~._ _

,13::0~4:_:188_:::2:_·_11_:0:_7_ _ _ _
Mobile home lot for rent next
to Methodist Church in
•K!nauga.
'I
.24'x32'- 3 ste:~ ll garage tor
740)446 4782
:.rent. 1
.
Mobile home on Cora Mill
Ad. dose tO 325. gas heat.
no pets. Deposit reqwed .
Also p1gs for sale. (740)2455622
.
.
Ar•\KII\U:NTS
FOR RF~,,.
1 ana 2 bed room. apanments. furnishea and ur'ifurnishea, security depo sit
required, no pets. 740-9922218.
2 Ba . Apt. availatlle 1n
Middlepnrt.
No pet s
Call.888-514$300.00
0192: HUD approved
2 bedroom apt. on SA 160 .
Fully remodeled, cen tral air,
washer/dryer hookup, stove
&amp; relrigerator included .
$46U/mo (740)44 1·0194 .
(740)441 -1184.

f

Apartment for rent. 1-bedroom. located 1205 Oh10 St.
Pt. Pleasant, $325/month,
WGter sewage included
1304)675-6688

r~

MJ.SCELl.o\NEOUS

CONVENIENTLY lOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townt1ouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
fqENT. Call (740)441 · 1111
for application &amp; mformation.

'

FOR SALE

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

MFJICIIANDISE

Call-

stone look elec fric fireplace,
ladies heavYduty bicycle,
wicker chai r, antique ranan
sofa . ·new sunbeam H20
hot/cold wate r dispenser.
(740)446-7738.

outt Carmichael Equipment
Inc. (740)446·24 12.

i

;;:;;;:::======::;

(740)446-4417 before 7pm.
HlJIIJ&gt;ING

S

·

L---·
Uiii'Piil'ii.l~:.-&gt;; _...

.,

~.w--·m-RiiSiiAiiLiiEio
' _.,.

Block , brick, sewer pipes, windows. lintels, etc. Claude 1980 , Mercedes
Benz
Winters. Rio Grande, OH
Sectan, 4dr, Scyl, Dlese·l sunCan 740-245-5121 .
roof, 150,000 miles, excellent shape $2,000/0BP
DAVIDSON METAL
(304)675-4907
ROOFING
Appliance
"18 Colors
1985 :Pontiac Trans-Am.
•3oyr. warranty jn writing
Warehouse
Sspd, 305 H.O., only 55.000
•professional Installation
miles. viper blue, Hops,
• Free Estimates
excellent shape. {740)446·
1n Henderson, WV. Pre740·596·2909
0350.
owned appllcanes starting at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do . serv1ce work on all
. PEls
1994 Chrysler lHS,
Grea t. $1500. (740)256Make and Models {304)675H:lRSALE
6002 .
7999

r

2002 ToYota Tundra SAS VS,
5-spd. 80.000mi , matching
topper. tied liner/mal, lots of
extras, $19,900. (740)3869634 eve . ask for Jell

1,;,--F:..I~)K~S::;A~t.~:;;.:-pi

1989 Chevy van 38,293
miles, good tires, runs great
$2,500. must see.
Freezer cnest, wt1i1e, $200,
gooct condition, 8 feet, 36
high, .60 long. (740)3889640

::::::.c::.:-=::.___:___

740-742-2455

L.-------.,J
8oA1~ &amp; MOIO~t&lt;;
FOR SAl~;

~

C
M
C~IPERS &amp;
1·999 hevy etTQ. 4 dr., 4
MOJ'OR H O)I!'S
cyl. 76.000 miles. $3,000 t..,_,:;,:~:,:..:.:;,;;:::;;;..
OBO, no reason'sble offe• •

sell . Call 1968 Chevy 327 automatic
camper. Good running condlt•on. Only 52,000 original
78 Corvette, runs with a new mites. $1 ,900. (740)441:
motOr, needs some work 7967 or (740)245-9008.
(2,000) 97 S10 pu runs
great &amp; looks good , 4 cyl, 5 2001 Jayco Designer Series
d
$2 800
OBO 27AKS, 5th Wheel. Lots of
CKC Golden Retriever P"P· spee '
·
(740)446-0171 .
accessories
$21 ,000
pies for sale $200. Wormed . ~-------- (304)675-2248
and second shots, Bwks old. 95 Jeep Cherokee Sport :::;:.:~=-=----17401388 •8965 ·
146,000 m•les , .1 owner. 2003 Coachman 24FT. IT.
Bath, -AC,. Furnace, Sleeps
Full blooded Boxer Pups. runs great. $2.500. After 5, $9,000 (304)675-1444
Mother and Father on prom- . 5:00. (740)245·5226.
lses.
Female Brindle &amp;
89 30FT Nomad bumper
Fawn . w/ While markings For sate: 1995 Corvette pulL new Fr 1d~e and
$250 (304)675-6501
Coupe. Call (740)446-4255. Microwave. Trades considered $4,300.1304)675-1043
relused, must
(740}441-0712 :

c.''

'I U\ 14 I..,

~IO

. .,.

$26.0"0 PERMONTH!
The Daily

I

I

$en~inel

992-2155

HoME
IMPIIOVEIIIINIS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional liletime guarantee. Local references furnish9d. Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

r

AS LOW AS

for F;mn Equlpmcnt TnH:J..s Dtvcrs
• Spcci~1lty • C l uli: h c~

ExC\VATINc.

Dltchlng/Trend'llng
Service
4x4 CommerCial Ditch-Witch
w1tt1 si~t-way blade. D;9gingOeptt1 up to 5'6". Gas .
Water, Cable , Electric &amp;
Dreln lines (304)576-9005

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Q3

•

K

•

Q5 4
.J 7 .3

A 5 2

Dealer: So.uth
Sout.h
l ~T

/

Com• By B 'J'alr8
lld!l1111ta,. of •
$3011 B•bt• on

1111 Snapp•r
wwnlrar:tor•
'"L1wn ,.,nd C..-uden
Tr.1ctors &lt;Ire our
Business ...
nm out sideline:·

20-1 ConUor Stn·~·l
· Pomcro~ . Oi l

POWER WASHING

(Comme1cia l and R~ side nl i a l )
Mowing, rrimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Sprayins of fence lines, LeM Remova l, as well as small
landsc.1pi•1 g jobs such o~s planting a·nd mulching.

liNDA'S PAINTING
17401 985-4180
'&gt;

• we~·kl y

-+

y r~

Tra:-h Service

of Rcl iublc Sl'rvkr:

IK~L·p

Yu11r

~;&amp; R

Mnnl·~ lt ~o..•nl, l

SANITATION

1356 1 Baile y Run Rd. :

Pumcn.l\", OH

YOUNG'S

· ·CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addlti!lns &amp;

Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp;Palnllng
• Palla find Porch Deeka

We do It all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 "Ill" 036 &lt;2~
Pomaray, Oblo

'.J:

~

m.r

jl.{;oj..

~~=;~?lr--r~~ftE~S~,lT~H~A~R~IS3-~-~--~~~~~

1

A SCHOOL

DAY!!

-~

! """'"'
J

1
J

!~

$219

~~

INSTALLED
to101UI _
Optional Upgrades Available;
Argon Gas &amp; Heat Mirror

THE BORN LOSER

~TO\' S\'ELLI~G OUT "TO 00-::'l

I

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

W:"::/5,1&gt;.,(,(5 FOR 1'\f. IN II\'(

f'..LI'f-IA&amp;\ SOUP I

I~'-~-~

High and Dry

Storage

\

Phone

..Sec;t . ;
'
Rocky "A.Jn

1740) 192-5232
5x IU. lOx Ill.
lOx 15, 10x20.
10x30
.lunct.lcllcrs
33795 Hiland Road
1

l'omero)'.

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or .992· 6635
"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

HOBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complele
Remooeling

Cornerstone
Electrical
.740-992-1611
Service
Stop &amp; Compare

ELECTRICAl NEEDS.

'

Hupp

BIG NATE

·

~! ~EY, W~AT:S

NO.

"f-HI S? '(OUR
S I ~N

IMPORTS

S AY S

"LE .. ONI'"~ (

H'\ SeLLIN&lt;"
10 Ali&gt; t-'IE

IT

LEMONS

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri X30-5:00
Sal 8::10-Noon

T HAT GLOV£ WOULD
COME IN HANDY RIGHT
ABOUT NO W.

MY
EfFORT TO BliY 1'. NEW

SAYS

-- LEMON

'"'~- ·

(;A.S E:BALL

IN

GLOVE~

Whaley's Auto
Parts
Sr. Rr.6S I Darwin. OH
7411-&lt;)9::!-70 IJ or 740-YYl-5553
Rrl&lt;lrw/..11'9 In IL&gt; -~lodt·l S.. hn9e
n11d !Vier \mrkrt ~rt"

r -- &lt;

'•

!L::::::::~~~

PEANUTS

I'M so~~Y r
WOKE YOU UP
LAST NI614T.
C~A~LIE 6ROWN

WHEN I 1-lEARD TI-IOSE
140WLIN6,
SOU~IDED SO LONELY, L

Sun. Clost:-d

LINUS. TI-IE~E
AREN'T ANI/

CO't'OTES
WI-IERE WE
LIVE ..

High cost of fertiHzer got you Worried?
17-17-17 - S27S ton (While supply Last)
• Elcellent Balancl!d Fertilizer
S-UREA - $205 ton top drua your field cob meal
with HI. laH. $5.7511001b. bag
Alrwav &amp; Rotowiek pasture

renovators rental available.
'lus!,i-oom ('oniJHI~I ..\\aihabk

• 4l.I'J Su,·twan Mt&gt;al SIJ.25 UKIIIh
• 18 sp~~d~r buJU,!irs 11\"llihlhlr ror ~
• AintH\"m1~hlf"l' n&gt;ncn·utors &amp; st"t'il.t'ri 11\"llllllhll' In l'l'nl.
• Lict'nSed attronomist on s111ff antihtble for consultinG,

SUNSHINE CLUB

(7ij)
~ ·

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 Sl Rt 7 N ~ Pomeroy,
740-985-3 I

Ohio 45769

f3UT 1a:.N WI-IW I (AMG.

BA(!&lt;. 10 PI (K I-\£R UP.
~

Wt&gt;6

.

~OOS A0AIIJ

I

REPAIRS

~··

(~

• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38244

740·367·0544
740· 367-0536

GARFIELD

i.kwls CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

and Replacement
AJITy~()f .

Coru:rete Work

ADVERTISE

25 Years Experienre
David Lewis

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

740-992-6971
Insured
Fn:e 1-: stimates

Hill's Self
Storage

Available

740-742-229l

• leave a message

BAUM LlllVIBER

,

"Taki11g Tile Sti11g Our Of

Kubota

Engines

BAUM LUMBER

7:00AM - 8:00 PM
pd

~1.!\.t

dt\\i\1':

I\OM'i':

.,

rRo\\T

nelghbon

49 Lure
50 Anclenl
ointment
52 Pamplona
. yell
53 Move slowly
54 Mirth

16 "Watermark'• 55 Gollhechlrn-

chanlause
piouohip
17 Llvta
56 Cartoon
shrieks
"It was" "
18 Annually
57 Make a
20 Brass band
blunder
evant
58 Was on
22 Hungry .a jury
- bear
23 New pel,
DOWN
maybe
24 Doorbell
t Glimpse
21 la8l number 2 Deep mud
3 Bear con30 Mal.
- Hoople
stellation
. 31 Small clue
4F-(2wds.)
32 Call i1 quHs
34 Witticism
5 Mombasa 's
35 "Titanic"
land
6 Wily
menace
36 Ned in lfne 7 Himalavan
37 ·Luxury furs
guide
39 Feet
8 Mystique
containers
9 Wearin~
40 Free of
aomethmg
41 Gigantic
10 Winslet or
bird ot myth
Capshaw

St. Rt. 124 Chester 9!15-3301

39 Wild btuo -

13 Barking
19 Prow
21

24

25

26

41 More

projections
Close
relative
Motor part
MD
employer&amp;
Tad

27 Fragrant
trees
28 . Nasty look
29 Tennyson
heroine
31 Paying
· anent ion to
33 Rx givers
35 Submarino,
on sonar
36 Taxicab
38 Thin soups

unusual ,
42 Toots "

cousin
43 V'"devltte
prop
44 Check marl
46 Wall Streel
stats
47 Essay byline ·
48 On its way
51 Brewery
product

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce let."ity Clj)lle1 ~1ypt:grams ate CTI!Iled trom qUota!IO!lti by tamous peop16 . past art~ pesent·
Each leM1 1nIM CJp~er slands lnr aoollle!
.
Today's clue. M equals H

••GMZYZ
' T BIZ

XN

B0

ZASKOGBNX

OALZYDBGP."

PNS ' lZ

ABDYOZTB

'o V Z Z G Z 'o G.

B 0

"LBKGNYP

IXNVX

V MZ X

AZHZOG ."
H NY E Z D

WOTKNTW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'His driVIng IS unbelievable _I don 1go thallar on
my holidavs .' - lan Baket-Finch , on goiter John Dalv

WORD
GAM [

Wedne•day, Aug . 24, 2005

By Bernice Bede Oaol
In ordor to fulfill yolir goals In til e year
ahead. you must llave continuity of
purpose , regardless or what obstRclos you encoun ter. You have th e slay Ing power tllal"s nec.essary, so have
laith in you rselt omd your projects.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - Therg's
a good chance you could be plagued
witll more negativo thinking than
usual today. but don"t gi"ve Into II. You
won ·t evan try to succeed 11 you "re
co nvinced that you can"t w in
UBRA (Sept
23-0ct , 23)
Unlcir tunate ly. you could be a bit too
gullible lor your own good today in the
roman ce departm ent. One who
knows you are fond ol him .or her
might attempt to manipulate you.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22J - Ju st
because a decision I S dilllcult to
make. it shouldn"t be swept under the
rug today. If th ere is a matter wh1ch
must be resolved. !Bee up to il before
it gets out of hand and can't be untan gled.
SAG ITTAR IUS ~ Nov . 23-0ec . 2 1} ~
When attempting a delicate assi gnment today. don"t aiiGiw your attention
to be diverted or sidetracked in any
manner beca use your mmd is too
clutt ered with loi s of unrelated ISSues .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan. 19) Spend th ril l way s today will lay the
groundwork lor future finan c1al prob lems down th o llno. Tako metra care
no1 to purchase anything that would
s!lddle ' you with long-term Indebtedness.
AQUAR IUS {Jan . 20·Feb 1 9) Persons to whom you are responsible
witt b9 relying upon your commitments made to him or her today.
Follow th ro~gh on what you pro r~1sed.
even if it is inconvenient tor you now.
PISCES (Fob. 2D·March 20) ~ 11
would be to your detnment II you
allow yoursell ro · get 1nvolvod with
someone today whose eth ics Bren·t
on par w1th yours. Oon"t let n sly
acQUaintance undermine what yOlJ
know is right
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19) - It
behooves you to be 9JO:Ifeme!y "se lective regarding you r a ssoc1 ations
today. Doh "! naval in c•rcte s whe re the
people are insince re and only select
those who havo something to give.
TAURU S (April 20- May 20) - Thero"s
a strong chance l hfll yoy co uld be a
b•t too rellcant today 1n a situa t1on
where you should be more assert1ve
Unlortunately. 11 you don"t speak up
lo1 you rse lf. no· one else Will.
GEMINI (May 2l -Jun9 20) - Slop
yourse lf tod&lt;ty h om tnaking sn ide
romorks about a fnond who has per!
turbed you lately. Th e gr 1evance
betw oo n you and this person Can be
resolved il you don 1 add fresh lue! to
_
the fire
CAN CER June 2 1-July 22) - lnl&gt;tead
of teelmg obllgate'd lo gat 'n11olved
again with someone who has greatly
d1sappo1nied you. spend your valuable time witll an indiv1dual you know
IS s1ncere. Sentiment won "! cut it.
LEO (July 23-Aug 221 ~ If you have
Em tmportant decis1on to make today.
don't team up with somoone who IS
11tways lnconsistei-lt . You naod the
1nftuen ce at those who set example s
of stability and re tiebHity,

. NEW .UD

I' I

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-

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-

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lz

"The mos: 1mporta ": 11tn g we_

-

-

can leach our chiiTer •s hew

-

--R- - -T--R----.,to get along - - - - - - - - _,.
0 0 1
h--7-..,6~~=--r-1'---1--:---19"--r'---1 O Comp "" the c&gt;.cc; '• Q"O'eft

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b~ L ihr~

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m ,hf' m : ,$ . ~.; ""Ofd i

yotJ devf' ier: !rom Slt C """

•

PRINT NUMBERED 1
lfTTE~S

I' I' I;

II
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

J

i:&gt;P 1ow.·

I'

•

I
e- ;2-o ~

Indian - Cl~sh - I.Aeaty- \Nearer- !-lARDER Most peop le can I eli ng111 from wrong but te ll1ng opportunity lrqm temptation IS m4ch HARDER

ARLO &amp; JANIS
YOU ME.AIJ ;PWD HOU~5
MAK II,J6. W~HVE.RY ll&lt;.AOC
OF G~A;~ 1e, 1}()5TR!&amp;HT?

tve.rYOfJ~ 1)1.) fHt BLOCK
HA5TH~IR LAWI.lt.OC,W

e.xctPr u5.

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~p
TiNI&lt;Le

Hard llhrk !"

wilh ~Ohp &amp; 40hp

Hours
1·14\.mo

Scorpion Tractors
Miu -S1t.c -lWh~ e l- Drive Trac1or

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'x30' ,

"Insured•'

GRI~ELLS

No"' Available At

29670 Bashan Roa d
Rac1ne . Ohio
45771
. 7~0 - 949-2217

• Free Estimales
· Call Gary Stanley

THE C.EIL-ING
FAN STOPPED

Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-446"-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
800-446-0842

Concrete Removal

' References

SO THAT'S WHY

NORTHUP DO~GE

Playwright John Guare said, "Avoiding
humiliation is the core ot tragedy and
comedy."
No one has avoided leeling humiliated by
making a careless error at th~ bridge
table . But some treat it as a tragedy. others as a laughing matter - a tragicomedy?
See !f you c8n aVoid trouble in today's
deal. You are South , the declarer in three
no-trump. West leads his fo urth-highest
spade, and East puis up the fo. After winning w1th the king , how would you continue? What do you think of North"s Immediate raise to th ree no-trump ?
To take the second question first , ~nl ess
yo~Jr partners~ip uses four-sui t transfers ,
th ree no-trump is the way to go. (Using
tou r-suit transfers, ,No.rth would respond
lwo spades. promiSing clubs, and planning tO rebid three spades. wt1ich would
sllow at least game-forcing values wl!tl a
singleton or void in spades. Soulh wou ld
probably .convert to three no-trump . . Note
that here five clubs requires taking a lirsftound club finesse tt1rough East, which no
one \Vould find .)
·
You start with seven top tricks · one
spade. three hearts, one di~mo nd and
two clubs. The remaining trick s wilt come
from the clubs. But since trick one marKS
West with the spade ace (East would
have won with that card il he had it) , you
must make sure that East never gains Ihe
• lead. Ttlis requires avoidance play. Cross
to dummy with a heart. then run the clu b
seven through East. If the finesse loses to
West, your second spade honor is ho)ding
the suit. Here, thollgh, you end With two
overtricks.

mollueka
4~ Calf

1 Non-flying
bird
4 Aulharlzea
7 Plundar
11 Galehed's
tHte
12 Faelsure of
14 Maul dance
15 Sox oels

"!bur &lt;fllrthdl\y:

, oCARPENTRY

work .
·
• Affordable Rates

Jo:tt.st
,All puss

42 Tentacled

Graph

• MOBilE HOME '

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

· :\lorlh
:1 NT

Astro-

/

Ohio

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

25 Years l ocal Ex rlence

• fOR ALL YOUR

•

..-/!:',

. !:: . ...... ~.'~ • .,_

AN' TH ' UNIVERSE .JEST GOES
ON "AN' ON FOREVER !! THAR'S
NOTHIN' ELSE LIKE IT !!

WINDOW SUPER SALE
Vinyl Double Hung

Let me do it for youl

'&lt;

BARNEY

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

PAIN
out of PAINTING!

741).992·2975
Gene Arm!JOWrwr·
Operator 7~0-992-31?4

Owner: Jeff Stethem

LAWN (ARE DIVISION

tBefon~ 6pm
);:..
leave Meua~e) ; .1.•' " ·.

Pass

Using avoidance
avoids humiliation

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

(Commerml an d Residential)
.
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasihg of
Equipm ent, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Du mp Tru cks; painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump rru cking Companies.

Ta~e the

After 6pm

Wt~s L

Opening lel.ld: • 6

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

• Ur&lt;tks

Gravely
Tractor Sales
s We&amp;.1"/' Service
l"l"ir·r 1110\"l· llirl h'\

c

ON THIS PAGE ·FOR

• Repairs
• Parts
• Service

2002 Yamaha V-Ster 1100;
1983 Yamaha 650. Call
cl7:_4:_:0:;12:_:4_:_5·_:9__:_10::0:___ __
2003 Honda 450 For,man
Extended warranty $3.900
OBO (304) 67 5-4807 .

Foot , 70 H.P. Johnson Motor
with power till and trim _ New
1997 Honda Civic 109,000 trolling motor. $3,700. Call
mi. After market accos- after 5:00 P.M. (304 )675sories. 38+ mpg . Clean,
7382
black/black. a1I (740)441·
9865.
1993 Yamaha .500. 2 seater
'-------~---~ Wave Runner &amp; trailer.
t998 Dodge s"tratus. 45.o6o. Overall great cont1 illon:
mites, Cold Air, Runs Good, Asking '$1 ,000 090 . Call
$1400 080. (740)256-9031 (740)446-6861 or (7'40)645or (740)256-1233:
7636" · - . , . . . - - - - - .

ADVERTISE YOUR-'
BUSINESS

Morris
Equipment
LLC.

MaroRCYcu-;o;/
WHEEI.F.R~

Runs~ 1989 Straios Bass Boat. 16

blooded. but no papers,
Gas Range . etec . ran ge. $100.(740)446-3333orStop
compant wa sher. StOO by Feed Stop, Gallipolis.
eacn . Call 17401 44 6·44 17
before 7pm
:__:__:_:_:_:
_ _ _c-_ _ AKC AHRA Reg . Beagle
S
&amp; c· .
puppies, In-colored , fir~
Green
ola
hair by snots~ and wormed $100
Southern Dreams, must sell , (304) 675 _3500
$300 . Call (740)446 -4417
h d
belore 7pm.
AKC German Shep er
_ ___:__~----:-- Pups. Solid Black. working
Mollohan Carpel. 202 Clark fine. Vet. checked (J04) 937 _
Chflpel Road Porter. Ohio. 231 Q.
(740)446-7 444 1-877-830·
(9162. Free Estimates, Easy AKC Miniature Pmscher.
financing . 90 days same as Tail's DocK, Dew Claws,
cash. Visa! Master Card. Ready September 1St.
{740)388-8788
Drive· a· lit11e save alot.

Licensed in Ohio and WV

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jo~es

For more informalion call
740-992·3824 or 740-667·033N

_e_ve_n_
ln__:g_s._ __:__ __

2005
black
Suzuki
BOulevard cso. ; ,300 miles.
Many extras. like new!
$6,900. 1740)446-3431 .

Suuth

•

.I l&gt;ON'T GET

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

c
CL
19813 hevrofet Astra
1 -,
d
d
van , one am1y owne , goo
··
E
s 1 M •cond itiOn. stale a e. a".e
an ofler! Call (740)446-8~97

2002 Honda ACE . loaded.
extra. Adu lt owned. Main!.
Shop~ Manuel, $4,950. or
part trade (304)882-3454

10 7 4 2
J I0 2
t K Q
-" 'Q' 4 .1

¥

10 !I li 4

740·667·0700 1· 888·HUPP234

Bucket Truck

Now enrolling s!udcnts for the
2205·2006 school year. .
Gr~des K·4 throu gh 12

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2002 HD Sofla1 1 Deuce.
many exHas mclud•ng wide
tire, chrome, Python Pipes
7.000 miles. (740)446 -23·15

•

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98 6 3

Top • Removal • Trim
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River Valley ChristianAcademy

VANS

2002
Harl ey Davidson
Softail Deuce, many extras
Great shape, 5,000 miles,
$17,000 firm
(740)4419816
.

.
•

+A

FOKSAI,E

4

East

"'

Tree Service

Owner Operated

4x4

40

Wf!s(

+

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

No Lawn To Small
Call 742-2595
Rider-Push-Weedeating

2002 Honda Recon exc
cond . $2, 100 call after 6pm
(304)675-8714

Allll~'

45783

JONES'

HARMON
LAWN _CARE

1998 Jimmy 4D, 4WD. V6,
·John Deere 10ft. No Til OrHI· 4.3L all. Leather, excellent
tor
Rent.
Carmichael condition
lots of extras
Eq~Jlpm ent. (740)446·2412.
304 675-8755

1

...

MONTY

OH

M·2Hl5

8
A K 7
8 l 2
K./10!187

Vulnerable: Hoth

L.-------.,J
L-------_.1

1
FOR SALE
(D% flnanclnliJ lor up to 36
months on John Deere
Compact and 5000 Series
Tractors with Jotin Deere :.t,.;::::::.::.:=~:=:!~:;,:,:i:.:.:;
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compact Excavators/Skid
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Loader
Backhoe in Stock. Check out
our rental rates. Great
financing
available
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1740)446-2412 .
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740-698-6809

======~
r•o
FARM
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~)K TRUCKS
-"--oiE.QulrMENriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO--"·

141n ' drill press w/stand,
floor mount wood cutting
band saw,bench grinder
w/stand, tradltlo'nal an"fiquo
chair (nice), nib large roaster
w/buflet
Inserts,
large
ortoman/storago, l lberglass/

For sale, Doll latitude lap
top computer witt1 Windows
98,
Microsoft
.Works ,
Microsolt Streets &amp; Trips ~
Power
Achiever
200 1·
Sword Searcher Complete
Bible Suile, also Epson
' Stylus color printer and
Argus digital camera. $90.
Phone (740)441 -7999 NO

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and Your l-lo1 Wa1cr 1

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Met8J,
A lla
• PP nces,
• Cars,
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Goin'g Out.of Business sale. "Any Style
'Any Size
as Dump Truck Paver and
·custom Built to lit your
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needs.
Roller $4.000, truck needs
work.
Misc. Power Tools
"FREE Estimates
740 596 2909
priced separately. (304)8822 196 (30 4)3?7-6266
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JET
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For lease: Office or retail Repaired , New &amp; Aebu11t In Cr.::;.:.;,;.:;,;;~;_-.,......,
spaces in very good condi - 51 ,_ c 11 R
E
OCI\. a
on vans, 1,LIVK';'IC.X..:K
lion . Downtown Gallipolis. 800 _53?-9528.
Approx . 1600 sq. ft . each. 1
or 2 baths. lease pnce - - - - - - - - - 3 year old Quarter horse m•x
negotiable to encourage Meyco ·Mesh Winter Safety g~ldlng . Very gentle, kids
new
bu sm ess.
Call Cover 16'x 32" with center
ridden him 14 hands,
1740) 4_46-4 425 or [740)446 - en d step, Pallo Table &amp; 4 have
$450 . 1740)256-6824.
3936.
chairs,
Oth er
Items
l304i675-2045
Pririle Commercial Space al
One male Pygmy goat
Sprrng Valley P.laza, 3,000 NEW AND USED STEEL (buck) black wilt1 small
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar amount of wnite. Call
sq. tt . Call (740)446-3481 .
Ang le, 1740)441 -1590.
For
Concrete,
Pr1vate Mobile Home Space Channel , Flat Bar. Steel
I \ I\ ' ,'\: I. 1.1~111 ' I • II II'
in Centenary Close to Grating
For
Drains.
Green School (740)4 46- Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l $500 Demonstration Bonus·
4053
Scrap Metals Open Monday, let us demo a John Deere Z
Tuesday, Wednesday · &amp; Trak or X Series AU-Wheel
\II H( II\ '\ Ill"!
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed Steer on your lawn and
Thursday,
Sa turday
&amp; receive an extra $500 oft our
_i1.0
HOu-iUIOU&gt;,
Sunday. (740)446-7300
already discounted prices ..
1,;,--~Gooos
~~:,
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~
time
offer.
sharp bookshelf stereo sys- limited
1940's Bedroom Suite, Full tern, sounds great. $50. Call Carmichael Equipment Inc.

Deluxe Downtown
tb r.
Apartment, No Pets call
_1304)875-3788
Tllompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepa~r-675-7388 . For sate.
:Downtown 2 Bedroom, AJC.
re -cond ifl0net1 automatic
· N$
Pets,
References,
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera -DepOSit. 1740)446-0139
tors, gas and electric
Furnishad Apartment. 2nd ranges. a1r COnditioners, and
Ave. Gallipolis, Upsta~rs , All wrm ger washers. W1ll do
Utilities Paid, 1 Bedroom , repairs ,on major brands in
shop or at your home.
· No Pets. l740)446-9523

Hauling
Service
Anything Hauled

I

Apt. for Rent. BeeCh Street Brown suede sofa &amp; 10 wk old Labs, Registered
Middleport. One Bet1room , loveseat by United. good $ 75 eacn. Call (304l 675"
furnist1ed , utilities paid, ref- cond. $400 Call (740)446- 2503 or (740)247-2117
erencos. 740-992-0165.
44 17 be1ore 7pm.
6 Blue Heeler puppies, full
Bf!!AUTIFUl
·APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES, AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
- alk 10 shop &amp; movl'es. Call
W
740-446-2568.
Equal
: HQusing Opportunity.

i

Downtown Office Space- 5
room suite $650/mo: 1 room
off•ce- $225/mo.; 2 room
suite $250/mo. Securi ty
deposit required. You pay
utilities All spaces very n•ce
Elevator. Call (7 40)446-3644

2 bedroom apt. on SA 850.
Brand New. Central air, Bed,
Dresser, w/round
stove &amp; refrigerator includ·GM1rror &amp; matching Sitting
ed, washer/dryer hookup. Stpol &amp; Wardrobe. w/mir$700/mo. (740)441 -0 t94 , rared Door. &amp; new Ma•..ress.
{740)441 -1t84.
Boxsprings in good-cona,1tion . $350 for all (304)6752 ·bedroom, 1 bath, water 4596
paid, $350 month, $350 - - - - - - - - security
deposit.
Call
' 1740)446-348 1
:il:br wtgas heat. AC. washer/d ry ~ ;
hookup,
tilefriag/Gas Range in Pt.
flleas
$300/month
$300/deposit {304)675-7628

VEGETABU:S

·Kenmore chest lreezer, New laptop, now printer,
$165; Wringerwasher, $200. new monilor. Atllor $1,.000.
Skaggs Appliances
Call
(740 )441 •8299
9r
76 Vine Street. Gallipolis
1740)446-7398

I

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FluJm &amp;

For Sale Old Timer logan
Giant Pole Beans $40
Bushel, ready 7·14 days
(304·)576-3320 leave-message
--------Pick white peaches, s1o- 5
gallon bucket. (7 40)4464907 _Close&lt;! sunday.
!liP.;.;.;;;;;.;~~;......,

Washer, $1 00; Dryer $95:
electric range , $125; gas
range, $125; refrig9rator,
S95; Whirlpool washer/dryer
sel $250: very nice couch
$125: rocker recliner $75:
table/chairs. $40; ch est-ofdrawers, $40: Kenmore
upriQht
lreezer.
5195 :

Walking distance to UF,IG.
Recently remodeled, 2BR
new private deck. $400/mo.
1614)595-7773 or 800-7984886

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

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HOt\tES · 1Opportunities.
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FOR RFNr
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Phone 1740)446-2460
. ..,.........,.,...,...,...,.._,

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.

Page.B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Woman sues school
district over school racial .
balance policy, As

Federer is the clear-cut favorite to win U.S. Open
I

MASON (AP) - Roger
That's only the beginning.
Federer reckons that it
Federer is 138-9 ·over the
wouldn't take mu'h to pre- last two years, including 54vent him from winning his 3 this season. He has won
second straight U.S. Open his last 28 matches on hard
title.
courts. He and Rafael Nadal
. A virus. An injury. A are tied with nine ATP titles
windy day that makes every- this year. The la st three
thing go awry.
Wimbledon ti tl es belong ·to
"A lillie thing needs to go . Federer.
wrong and · you lose," he
He's p! Jyi ng. so well that
said.
opponents have no margin
For everyone else, maybe . · for error ·- ~.factor that
It 's going to take a whole lot }'leighs on the.if. nerves and
more to keep t~e Swiss star their shots.
from extending one of the
"You have to play prett y
most dominant runs in ATP close to perfect." sa id Jame s
hi sto ry,
.
Blake. who lost a first-round
Federer won ·his 22nd con-· match
to
Federer m
sec utive tournament final o n Ci ncinn ati .
Sunday, dispatching Andy
The rest of the fi eld had a
Roddi ck and ' any thou ght li ttl e hope when Federer
that he was vulnerable after dec id ed to take off after
a long summer layoff. Hi s beating Roddick for hi s lattwo-se t victory fo r th e est Wimbledon title. Federer
Cincinnati Masters title know s he's ' on the cus p of
made 'him the prohibitive hi story. as long as he doesn ' t
favorite
at
Flushing burn out or break down .
Meadows.
He went home to Oberwil.
"Federer is in a dass of hi s Switzerland, fo r· a public
own. " sai d Australia's celebration of his fifth
Lleyton Hew itt, who lost the Grand Slam title, then went
Open· final to Federer last on vacation . He celebrated
year.
·hi s birthday and practiced.
And few playe rs have but mostly rested hi s so re
mark s like Fed ere r, who feeL He knew it was a risk
turned 24 this. month and has -· he'd be goi ng into the
only recently come intp hi s U.S. Open with only the
prime . He's been No. I for tournament in Cincinnati tfl
82 consecutive weeks, one get ready.
of the longest 5t~y.s ,in ATP
By the time he got to the
rankings history.
final ,
11 looked
like

AP photo

Roger Federer, from Switzerland, hits a backhand during a semi·firial match with Robby Ginepri
at the Cmcinnati Masters tournament Sunday in Mason. Federer defeated Andy Roddick on
Sunday to win the tournament, the first he had entered since 'winning Wimbledon.
Wimbledon all over.
"EVe rythin g co mes very
automati c now.'' he said. " I
don ' t need to think anymore
where I'm going to hit the
balls. They just go automati-

cally. That 's very important
in my game. because I need'
to play with the. flow.''
That's the best wav to
describe his game. There 's
nothing dominant no

overpowering serve like
Roddick, no incredible
quickness like Nadal - but
no weakness, either. Plus,
the biggest points in a match
bring out his best.

One he gets ahead, it's
usually over.
"That's what I have been
doing very well over the last
few years,:· he said. "That's
wh4t I've been able to do
against the best - get the
first break, usually, and lead
from there . Because once
I' m in the.lead, I' m obviously the best" front-runner. "
Given the state of the rest
of the field, he'll · be the
undisputed front -runner ai
the U.S. Open.
Andre Agassi, who lost· to
Federer in a five- set quarterfinal match at the Open last
year;· had to withdraw from
Cincinnati because his 35year-old back was acting up.
Rodd ick h~rt his ri ght foot
during the fin al on Sunday,
leaving hi s condition in
doubt.
Ru ss·ia's Marat Safin has a
sli ght tear in hi s left knee ,
and five weeks of rest after
Wimbledon didn ' t eliminate
the pain. Nadal has matched
Federer in tournament titles
this year, but the 19-year-old
Spaniard hasn' t demonstrated that he can win consis- ·
tently on hard courts.
The New York crowds will
try to coax an upset out of .'
one of the Americans, but
w.ill likely end up applauding a player whose fame hasn '.t caugl:n up with hi s
accomplishments on thi s
side of the ocean ,"

Blue Jackets sign three Jones signs contract with Titans, starts·practice.

I

I

I
I

•

COLUMBUS (1\P)
Center Mark Hartigan resigned for two years with the
Columbus Blue Jackets on
Monday. while center Peter
Sarno· agreed to a on·e-year
deal and defenseman Mark
·Flood signed a three-year
contract.
Hartigan. 27, was the leading goal scorer last year for
Syracuse, Columbus· top
affiliate in the American
Hockey Le'aguc. He had
career highs of 31 gmils and
28 assists in 69 games.

Harti ga n signed with the .
Blue Jackets as a free agent
before the 2003-2(104 season
and had a goal and three
assists in nine NHL games
that year.
Sarno. 2t1. ranked second in
the AHL in a-sists wnh 66
last year while totaling 82
points for Manitoba.
The 20-year-old Flood
spent the last four seasons
with Peterborough of the
Ontario Hockey League
where he had 25 goals and 95
assists in 253 games.

Piniella , said. ''We just gut
blown out there in the seventh inning . They've got
some tal ent over there . A
from Page Bl
good &gt;'oung ballclub. They're
right tn the hunt for the postsaid. "I didri't think I had season."
great stuff. I started feeling
Waechter allowed four runs
better by the fifth inning ~.nd . and eight hits - including
started batthng through tt.
three homers in six
Millwood went six innings. innings. He struck out six and
giving up four runs and five
hits. He had seven strikeouts walked one.
Notes: Crisp snapped an 0and three walks.
Sizemore's two-run homer for-12 slide with his homer.
and a solo shot by Peralta off · ... Waechter has given up 31
Doug ·Waechter gave the homers in 130 1-3 career
Indians a 4-3 · lead in the innings at Tropicana Field ....
third. Peralta has 20 homers, · Sizemore has four homers
three short of tying Woodie and 16 RB! s in his last 16
Held's team record for a games .... Lee has 99 homers .
in hi s career. ... The Indians
shortstop set in 1961.
Tampa Bay tied it at 4 in · al so hit live homers o n June
the b'Ottom of the third on 25 against Cincinnati. ...
Cantu :s .solo' homer. He is 9- . Crisp is the ninth Cleveland
for- 18 with four homers and player to have I0 or more
seven
RBi s
against homers thi s season. Texas
and Cincinnati arc the only
Cleveland this season.
"We hit some balls hard.'' other teams to accomplish
Tampa Bay · manager Lou the feat this year.

Warpath ·

Davis
from PageBI
Davi s also had lost his job
as Cleveland's No. I kick
returner to rookie Jo shua
Cribbs.
Now he has to win a roster
spot with the Patriots.
Deion Branch, last season's
Super Bowl MVP. and David
Givens liliely will start for
New England. The team also
has veterans Troy Brown ,
Bethel John son, Tim Dwight
and David Terrell , and
youngsters P.K. Sam, Jason
Anderson and Brandon
"Bam" Childress.
.
: Johnson, Dwight. Terrell
and Sam have all missed time
during training cam·p with
injuries.
"We'll put him (Davis) into
·the mi ll and see what he can
do," Belichick said.
The 26-year-old Davis.
who received permi ssion last
week from the Browns · to
seek a trade, won't have
much time to make an
impression with his new
team. Rosters must be
reduced to 65 playe rs by
Aug. 30 and to the regularseason limit of 53 by Sept. 4.
''I'm reaay to learn:· Davi s
·said. "I think I'm a smart guy.
Jt's ·going to be a little bit of a

whirlwind, but I think I'm up
for thi s challenge.''
The trade was the first
between the Patriots and
Browt1s
stncc
Ronieo
Cre nnel was hired as
Cleveland 's coach. Crennel
was New En2land's defensive coordinator the past four
seasons.
Davis was se lected with the
No.' 47 overall p,ick in 2002
by former Browns coach
Butch Davi.,, wl10 thought
th e for mer Virginia Tech
track star's speed would open
things up for Cleveland' s '
offense.
However. injuries have
slowed Davis' development.
Because of a nagging toe
injury, he started only seven
games artd had 16 receptio_ns
fo r -+ 16 yards and two touch-.
downs last season . One of
those TDs was · a 99-yarder
from Jeff Garcia. tying an
NFL record.
Davi s' days s,~:emed over in
Cleveland last week when
Crennel said the 6-fuot- 1.
195-pounder wa., ha ving "an
average camp."
"I real ly didn 't want i&gt;ut of
Cleve land," said Davi s, who
ha' "arted 19 games in three
sea,Oib .. 'That was a bus inc~~ decision lhat was 111:Jde
by both managemel)ls·. r&gt;iow '
I'm here with New England .
I'm j ust a player...

NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) - Top
draft pick Adam ''Pacman" Jones final ly signed hi s five-year contract Monday
and joined the Tennessee Titans in practice after a holdout caused him to mi ss
31 practices.
Jones had hoped to practice Sunday
after agreeing in prindple to a deal
Wednesday. but (he complicated contract had to be approved by the NFL and
the players ' association. His agent.
Michael Huyghuc arrived Sunday in
Nashville to help work through· th&lt;: final
details.
Appropriately enough for a player
who was one of the last two first-round
draft picks to reach a deal , Jones' arrival
on the field didn't come without secre cy.
With cameramen and reporters wait ing to watch Jones walk onto the field.
the Titans hid him on the back of a cart
loaded with equipment at a sii.le loading
dock and drove him onto the practice
field where he joined his ·teammates
after they had stretched.
Coach Jeff Fi sher said he's glad to
have ·hi s top pick on the field .
"It 's a unique arrangement. but it's
. good.'' Fisher said . "It's best for both
sides right now, and the most important
thing now is Pac. He's heen ready to
return really since camp started."
The ·Titans didn't take it easy on

'

.

Adam "Pacman" Jones

Jones, the sixth pick ~vera ll and first
defen sive player taken in the draft. The
conierback who left West Virginia after
his junior season found himself facing
off against starting receivers Drew
Bennett and Tyrone Calico in a one-onone passing drill.
Jones first tried jamming rookie
Courtney Ruby, then Bennen at the line
before · both receivers ·caught passes.
Receivers coacl1 Ray Sherman yelled to
his receivers to club Jones if he grabbed
someone else.

Then Calico went up against Jones.
and the rookie grabbed him and held on .
The 6-foot-4 Calico started banging tfte
g.erierou sly li sted 5- 10 Jones before
breaking loose. The next time up. Jones
ran alongside Cal.ico. who caught a long
pass.
"You're going to get beat here and
there," Jones said. "For the most pan,
I'm here to make plays . This is my first
day out here. It's going to pick up in a
linle while.''
Jones broke. up one pass to rookie
tight eild Bo Scaife.
.Jones didn't get to catch any punts,
something Fisher promised he will get
plenty of before Friday night's exhibition in San Francisco. The Titans
ranked last in the NFL last season in
punt return average.
"I can ' t wait.'' Jone,, said. "That 's a
big part of my game. and we need some
help in special teams. Whatever Coach
asks me to do, I'm going to do."
Jones also will be given a chance to
win the right cornerback job.
Tony Beckh&lt;Jm. a fourth-round pick
in 2002 out of Divis ion 111 WisconsinStout. tried to show it won't be easy for
Jones to step in as a starter. He intercepted a pass by Billy Volek imended
for rookie Brandon Jones in one team
drill, and nearly picked off two more
passes at the end of practice.

!I

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-;o tl:"\1~•\ol. .• .-;. '\o -

'

• Southern shines at
Pine Hills. See Page 81

I hi.'

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cou ron off iu our offi ce a1 Ill Cou n S1.. Pnmcro), Ohi&lt;f"'ith yo ur payment .and receive a FREE comic um brella .

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II D. I have
. nollx'.:-n
. .:1.... uh,L-rih...·r in thl' pa!'.l10 day,_EudtJ,ct.IJ'- my paymcn1 of $.30. 19 for. 3 months of the Daily Scminl'l.
'

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curr~.· ml~

... uh..,..:ril"'!:

io 1he Dllif,,

St'lllinef.

Enclo~ct.J i!&lt;. my payment of $59. 15 for a 6 month ~Uh!&lt;&gt;cription.

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Ma s te~C ard

Expiration Date
. Expiration Date ·

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Card #
Card #_ .

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.

got nothing, and now this through year 12 teachers , further explain. $24.500 goes
year, they will get a six (6) .receive a "step" or automatic to the. teacher wi th the least
percent increase . "So over the increase. After those fir st 12 experience with a bachelor \
three years it represents a years , that .the next step degree. and it almost doubl es
2.33 percent increa&gt;c annual- doesn't come unt'i! 15 years. over the yea" for those with
ly," said Buckley.
.
The one after that is at 20 the most experience with a
For comparison on what years, and th e final step master's -p lus degree.''
teachers are paid, the pay comes at 25 years.
Buckley said .
scale "steps" were explained
Steps. according to superThe new contract also proby the superintendent.
intendent , amount to about I. vide' fo r.· all teac hers to pay
He said first year teachers to 1.04 percent per year for
now start at $24,500, the the first 12 years and then live (5 ) percent ol'the current
highest in the county. Then "max out",at the.25 year level premium cost for group insurfor every year they teach with a 1.965 increase. "To
Pfei!Se see.Contract, AS

Bv BETH SERGENT

,

BSERGENT@~YDA ILYSE NTtNEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS - Lily, a
golden retriever mix, was
found weeks ago nearly
hanging from a tree by the
Meigs County Humane
Society Officer.
The officer received a call
from a concerned citizen that
had seen Lily having a hard
time movi'ng on her chain.
The heavy log chain was
reportedly suspended from a
tree limb and then fastened to
Lily withput a swivel.
Making the situation worse
was that Lily was positioned
Page AS
on a slope and according to
• Jackie William Grose, 70 Meigs County Humane
Society officials, when the
• Eva Leonard, 87
dog would try to move the
chain became more kinked,
in essence the dog was strangling itself.
When tht! Humane Society
Ofticer arri·ved on the scene
• Meigs County Bikers
Lily's front paws were lifted
announce poker run ·
off the ground. The dog was
taken into custody and the
benefit. See Page A3
owner later relinquished
• Ripley auuthor
ownership.
publishes short story.
"According to the how the
dog
moved, in ten minutes
See Page A3 ·
she might have hung herself
• Family Medicine.
if the officer had not arrived
See Page A3
when he did ," Meigs County
Humane Spciety Trea ~ urer
• Local Briefs.
Vicky Baer said.
Page AS
Lily's story of alleged
• For the Record .
neglect is one of many in
Meigs County, many going
See Page AS
unreported but occurring on a
• Report says wor1&lt;ers'
regular basis . The. Meigs
camp must create new
County Humane Society
tields abuse calls on everyoversight measures.
thing from dogs being tied up
See Page AS
without food or water, to
• Woman sues
mutilation cases too horrific
io describe here.
school district over .
· Touched by Lily 's struggle
school racial balance
and eood nature, the Meigs
'policy. See Page AS
Comity Humane Society paid
to have her spayed and paid
• Women's reproductive
for
her shots to prepare her
clinic seeks to shield
for adoption.
medical records.
'· "She's just a good dog,"
Meigs County Dog Warden
See Page AS
Tom Proffi tt said. "She's very
good with kids and · has a
pretty coat. ..

,

·

I""

.

··

pool to end
season Ill red

.

m1x, surv1ved nearly stran·
gling trom her own cha1n.
The heavy log chain was
alleged ly draped over a tree
• limb and then fasten ed to
Lily without a swivel. The
chain became kinked and
because the dog was on
s loping ground whenever she
moved the ehai n became
tighter. When Meigs County
Humane Society officials
found her, her front paws
were lifted off the ground.
Lily has been spayed and
given her shots and is avail.able for adoption at the
· Meigs County Dog Pound.
She is friendly, good, with
children and waiting for her
new family.

•

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

. MIDDLEPORT
- The
Middleport Pool will likel y
.end its season in the red next
month . but vi llage official3
are hopeful that some
changes in uperations ne~!
year will make the pool les~
of a burden on village
finances.
.
The pool was closed for the
2004 season due to ·needed
repairs. and reopened on ·
Memorial Dav. This summer
has seen an· average daily
attendance at the pool of
around 100. A Jul v 4 celebration attracted hu11dreds to the
Below: Unlike Li ly, these ani·
pool and General Hartinger
Park. and a Labor Day celemals dt&gt;n 't have tile berref1t
bration is planned to close
of someone to tell their sto·
ries of how they wound up at out the season.
The pool will be closed for
the Meigs County Dog
the Thursday and Friday. and
Pound . There are several
dogs of all shape.&gt; sizes and will remain open only Friday.
Saturday and Sunday and
dispositions at the pound
Sept. 2-5. before closing for
ready for adoption and for a
the
season, Pool Manager
chance at life.
· Dale Riffle sa id Monday
Bath Sergant;photos
evening .
Accordin~ to a ' fia ntial
repo11 of the pool's operation
prepared by Village Fi scal
Officer Susan Baker. the pool
operation reported an operating defic it of $ 1:1.851 a; of
Monday. Since May. the pool
has gen.;rated 525.040 in
im;omc. including 55.873 in
dail y admi" i,On fe~' · $ 1.210
in sea,on passe,. and S'l.52 1

INSIDE

see

Please see Fac:es, AS

·

Left. lily,. a go uen retnever

OBITUARIES

in

..
.,
•••

.·

•

..

.. ..

re,· enu~

from t. : oncession

sales. The ponl has :1lso
recc1wd S5.X76 in private
donations.
, Village nHI11(il originally
app ropriated $.1&lt;!.67:1.75 for
the
pool·'
operation.
Operating 'upplies and
su larics anJ related payroll
cxpcmcs make up most of
the p&lt;•ol's e.\penses t:or the
· sca snn· - nearly $ 19.000
was appmpriated for personnel. and S18.383 for suppl ies.
Please see Pool, AS

.•

•

Former Rutland
. . Gene Whaley takes top
woman receives Proceeds benefit 'Secret Santa' project
nursing award
the dealership . Whaley was

awards at car show

BY CHARL£NE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

one of eight bringing in
cars which took specialty
POMEROY
Gene award. The other winners
MINFORD - Dr. Mary Whaley of the Darwin com-. were Tim Casto: best com'Lynd of Minford, formerly of munity )Vas the winner of petition car; Jeff Hill. best
machine;
Paul
Rutland. was presented the not only best of show but st reet
the
people'
s
choice
award
Herron.
best
street
rod;
"Nursing Excellence Award
1
·n
Sunday
's
annual
benefit
Sherman
White.
best
truck.
for Mentoring" by
e
Nursing Spectrum Nursing · car show stag ed on the Tim Kimes. be st miniJournal at a recent awards . parking lot s of Don Tate car , truck ; Johnn ie Freeman.
best original ; and Neal
ceremony at the Dayton 's dealershtp.
The car show is held every Richmond , best tunner car.
W(\man 's Club in Dayton .
ye'M
with Bill Neutzling as
Others falling into the top
The graduate of Rutland
to
benefit
the
din50
were cars displayed by
chairman
High School and daughter of
ner
theater
and
"Secret
Jerry
Hill, Larry Painter,
Flossie Hysell of Rutland ;
and the .late Elmer Hysell, Santa" projects of the Rhonda Woolridge. Larry
was nominated by colleagues Mtddleport Church of Davis. Mike Johnson. B. L.
she had mentored during her Christ. "All prt?,ceeds ~o . Kirby: Eldin and Thelma
that ,
sa id Guinn. 'John Tant. Tommy ·
43-year career as registered toward
Neutzhng
.
Dozens
of
cars Kimes, Walte'r Ellis. Troy
nurse and a nurse .educator.
from
many
places
hned
the Skinner. Sheila Whaley.
She holds a diploma from
Charlene Hoeftlchj photo
Jots
and
hundreds
ol
people
Gene
Whaley.
Cinda
Holzer Hospital School of ,
Lots
of
little
children
\'I'll
have
a
nice
Christmas
this year
. .
Clifford. Jim Straight.
i'/ursing. a bachelor of sci- came to s~e them :
. Whaley s wmmng car IS a Charles and Judy lee. because bf the success of t11e Don Tate annual car show. The
ence in nursing from Ohio
19_69 C:hev_rolct Richard Humphrey, Charlie proceeds benefit the secret Santa project of the Middleport
'University. a master of sci- stlver
Church of Christ. He re Greg Smith looks over·one of the many
·
.
Mahbu . Th1s week 11 tS on
spruced-up cars brought in fo r the show.
Please see Car sh_, AS
display in the show room of
Please see Aw,rcl, AS
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH .

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A8

"Your Hometown Newspaper"

approved Monday by the
teachers and was approved
by the Board at Tuesday
hight's meeting . It ,provides
for a six (6) percent pay
increase in teachers salaries
·from the beginning · base to
the top of the salary index,
said William Buckley, superintendent.
He explained that in the
first year of the contract, the
teachers received one (I) percent increase, last year they

The faces of animal abuse and.neglect in Meigs Middleport

r----~------------------~-----,

1
I Drop

\\ \\\\ . IIJ\(I.d h.., t·nlnwl.cttn '

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Quanti ti c ... are limited.
,

:

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - .A contract
providing for a pay increase
for teachers and their participation in the cost of health
insurance in the current third
year of an existing three-year
contract has been ratified by
both the·Meigs Local Teachers
Association and the Meigs
Local Board of Education.
The
agreement
was

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Meigs Loc~ r~tifie~ contract with Teachers Association

SPORTS

WEATHER

:

· Israel completes
historic withdrawal in
oneweek,A6

INDEX
2

S Ecrl&lt;lNS

-

16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

'Ciassifieds

B4-6

Comics

' Dear Abby

· n7

Editorials

A3
A4

Obituaries

As

Spoi;ts
· We;~ther
' tf

B Section
AS

::.nus Ohio Valier Ptlbllshing Co.

a

•

,,
..

•

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