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.

(}riffey Jr. out of· ·
All-Star game, Bt

Mason Countyotitslugs
.· Meigs, Bt . .

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Hearing Aid Center

..
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·SPORTS

1312 Eastern Avenu.e, Gallipolis, ·o hio
.

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• Stewart gets first victo·
ry with controversial win
at Tropicana 400. See
Page 81 .
·

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No .West Nile Virus cases reported in Meigs County
Bv J. MILES LAYToN
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
~

POMEROY - While concern
continues to mount across Ohio, the
Meigs County Health Department
·reports there have been no positive
cases reported of anyone with the
West Nile Virus. (WNV) in Meigs
County.
"Being. Close to the Ohio River
does not put Meigs County residents
at risk," said Frank Gorscak. public
information officer at the Meigs

Count y Health Department . "The
two basic types of mosquitos, nui sance and container. prefer still
waters. The Ohio River moves too
rapidly to be a hom~ (O .mosquitos''
Nuisance · mosquitos breed in
swamps like the one in the Monkey
Run area, Gorscak sa id, they do n ot
carry disease s th at can affect
humans. "they just sting anr.J go."
Both types of mosquitos prefer dryer
Weather. Too much rainfall di sturbs
their breeding places making reprodu ction difficult and the mosquito

According to the Ohio Department
population goes down. Gorscak said .
In the pas t few years, there has of Health. there have been no WNY.
been only o·ne suspected case of the case&gt; in hum ans reported this ye!lf.
virus in Mei gs Coitnty, according to As fur househokl pets the virus is not
Gorscuk. ' and that case was con- dangerous and the only animals
firmed negative by the . Ohi o affected are horses and wild birds
Department of Health laboratory.
such us. crow s and robins. Forty-;
. He sa id WNV rarely affects
humans and death s are even more nine horses tested in the state proved
rare. but that populations..at risk are negative for the virus. Gorscak did
the very elderly. the very young and note that 15 of Ohio's 88 counties
those with compromised immune reported pos itive \&lt;'NY sa mples
systems. Typical sy mptoms resemble from liw and dead birds and mosquitos as of Jul y 7 ..
the tlt!, ])e noted .

Gospel concert slatecf_for Saturday
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH '
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

Page A5
• Edna Myrtle Clark, 95

FREE HE Rl G TEST
THIS WEEK ONLY!
TUESDAY, JULY 13th &amp;
WEDNESDAY, JULY 14th
..... Call 140-446-1144 .or 800-634-5265
.

..

INSIDE.

.

.

• School news, See Page A3
• Community calendar, See

.

.

.

Page A3

·

• 2004 cicadas fade away;
next batch starts 17·year life,
See Page AS
.
· • Report: Ohio ranks third in
nursing homes w~h sex
offenders, See Page A6

.

WEATHER

frequently. ~

·• You hear, but have trouble understanding
all the words in a conversation.
• You often ask people to repeat themselves.

of,,_..,

.II r• ,.,.,.,._ •.,
·HEARING LOSS OR JUST EARWAX?
. SEEING IS BELIEVING!

'

II&amp; LOSS

• Your.family complains that you play the TV
too loudly.
• You .have been told that you speak too loudly.
• You experience ringing in your ears.

r ..-, •

fREE.,_,,, ,.,,.

NERVE DEAFNISS CAN BE HELPED!
HEARING IS BELIEVIIIGI
Do You Wear ·

Hearing Aids•••
And Still H•v•
a..rlq ProW.••?

REE

• Does your aid whistle?
• Do your eara feel .
plugged-up?
• Does you~ v'oice sound
loud?
• Do you have·trouble
hearing on the phone?

~llo

on ~... A8

.c

INDEX
2 SllCI10NS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

.Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

Obituaries .

As
B1 '

· Sports

.

Weather

New ways for getting on .
SWCD Board of Supervisors

Day
Opryland's "Country Music
USA" and "Today's Countr)l
Roads'' to singing with the
quartet, "Perfect Heart."
Poet Voiceg has over 20
charting songs to their erectit, with number one hits
.including "Jesus Built a
Bridge" and "Grace and
Glory," and was awarded
Song of the Year honors for

3
"I Am Redeemed."
.
Day 3 is composed of a
husband-wife team , Scott
and Sheri Noel, along with
Joey Darling whose most
recen t recording is a selftitled froject that offers a
mix o southern gospel ·and
contemporary selections.
A free will offering will
be take n.

.·Fixing·a sewer ·problem

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Now for
an
appointment.
..

IN&amp;
SI&amp;IIS
OF
H
'• People seem to mumble more

POMEROY - The annual summer gospel concert
sponsored by the First
Southern Baptist Church
will be held at 7 p.m.
Saturday in the Pomeroy
Riverfront Amphitheater.
Featured singers at the
free concert will be Poet
Voices which appears reoi~ ­
larly on gospel music
sion and is inCluded ·in the
Gaither Homecoming video
series, and Day 3. a· trio
offering a unique blend of
harmo nie s and . a board
range of song ~ tyl es.
The Poet. Voices trio is
composed of Greg Crowe,
Mark Lanie(, and Phil Cross
v,:ho had ten acclaimed·
recordings to their credit as
Poet Volc:ea
well as numerous releases
including five number one and his signature song , show, "Backstage with Greg
hits. Their style is one of "Champion of Love" which Crowe" .featuring Christian
rich· harmony, progressive received the Gospel Music, artists from across the country.
Lanier has
arrangements and inspiring Associations Dove Award .
Crowe, who began sign- long been considered among
musical message.
Cross is considered one of ing as a child and has done gospel music's favorite ·
gospel music 's leading over 60 radio jingles and artists. He is a noted comsongwriters and has to his provided backup vocal on poser and many of his songs
credit many classic songs numerous recording ses· are known as gospel clasincluding "Miracle in Me," sions, now hosts a 30- sic s. His career has taken
"When, l"Get Carried Away" minute weekly television him from a cast member of,

A6

© R004 Ohio, Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - . For those who· may be interesting in trying for . a position on the Meigs Soil and . Water
Conservation District (SWCD) Board of Supervisors, the
way to get on the ballot just got easier.
There are now two methods of doing that. Residents can
either be nominated by the SWCD nominating committee,
as has been the 9ase in the past, or they can stop by the
office at 33 I0 I Hiland Road and pick up a petition and file
it themselves.
•
· According to Opal Dyer, SWCD program administrator,
recent changes to the rules governing special elections to
select supervisors are now in.effect.
.
(
She satd that any resident 18 years of age o older who
resides or owns land i~~o the county can seek election to the
SWCD board of · supervisors, and can get their names
·
·.
placed on the ballot using either method.
Dyer said that potential candidates need to get 10 signa·
tures on the petition from residents and/or landowners ·in
the county and &gt;ubmit the petition to the disrtrict by the '
close of business on Aug. 23. Candidates meeting the eligibility requirements and deadline viti! be listed on the ballot ·
for the special election which will take place on Sept. 28 at ·
Meigs High School cafeteria.
··
.
· The Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation District
is funded by the Metgs County CommisSIOners with the .
county funds being supplemented by money from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources.
.
The district is governed by a five-member board of county residents who serve staggered ·three-year terms.
The nomination proceQ.ure allowing for the two methods
of $etting on the ballot were adopted by the seven-mem~er
OhiO Soil · and Water ConservatiOn CommiSSion 'Yhtch
oversees local SWCD election guidelines in all 88 counties.

Pomeroy village employees began work Friday on unclogging a sewer line on Court Street
wh'ich for many months has caused water and sewage to back up into the basements of two
buildings on the street. The re peated earlier efforts of street department workers to flush
out the drain were futile. lt ·wasn't until a firm was brought in to insert a camera into the
sewer tines that the clogged area was located. (J Miles Layton)

This FREE supporl group is sponsored by the Arthritis Foundation and Holzer Medical Center

Tuesday, July 13, 2004
5:30 - S:CO PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

• Are the sounda loud
enough but hard to ·
understand?

can Bellone br 10 Point
Hearing Aid Check Up.

· Topics discussed will indude ... pain control, exercise, relaxation,
· fatigue, depression and doctor/patient relationship.
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For more information, or to register, call Missi Ross at

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NATION
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• WoRLD

Sept. 11 pariel nears
completion of report

'

WASHINGTON (AP) Working in secret. the Sept.
II commission is finishing a
final report that several ~em­
bers believe will be done by
week's end and have unanimous support.
·The endorsement of all. I0 ·
commissioners is important if
the findings and recommendations for improvements most notably in intelligencegathering - are to avoid
charges of partisansl\ip in a ,
presidential election year.
.. "The.y are all taking their
. broader responsibi.lity seriously," said Norm Ornstein, a
political analyst at the
American
Enterprise
Institute. "They know this is
not about_ scoring political
points in the heart of a campaign but about making sure
the attacks don't happen
agam."
A report without any dissenters would be an accomplishment given the charges
of partisanship that surfaced
.during public hearings featuring officials such as national
security adviser Condoleezza
Rice, Attorney General John
Ashcroft and former counterterrorism chief Richard
Clarke.
As recently as last month,
former Sen. Slade Gorton, RWash., . and several other
commissioners on ~ the panel .
.of five Republicans and five
Democrats said unanimity
might not be p.ossible.
. The meetings since then
· have changed his mind.
"We've had a good personal relationship in our mternal
deliberations, with no traces
of partisanship," Gorton said.
:Added Democratic comll'1issioner Jamie Gorelick, a
former deputy attorney geneial in the Clinton adminis·
tration: "We have a lot of
cqnsensus."
The commission was established by Congress in 2002 to
investigate government mis·

takes before the attacks and
recommend ways to better
protect the country against
terrorists. ' Commissioners
and their staff have interviewed more than I,000 witnesses. including President
Bush, and reviewed more
than 2 million documents.
The final report is due July
26. The commission hopes to
have the reporr t:inished this
week and wants to rele;;tse the
500-plus-p«ge document on
July 22 to avoid competino
with the Democratic NationJI
Convention, which begins on
July 26. .
'
The public release will be
dictated by t~e White House,
which is reviewing the report
to ensure that no classified
information is disclosed . That
is not seen as a major stumbling block; however. Once
the report is cleared for
release it will be available to
the public via the Internet and
at bookstores.
The commission met severill· times last week in private
sessions, online and by telephone. "High-level concepts"
have been agreed upon, commissioners said. Nuances of
language, tone and spedfic
detail are being debated.
Specitics about the report
are being closely held by the
commission. Several commissioners previously told
The Associated Press the
report will highlight significant intelligence failures but
refrain from assigning blarne
to individuals in the Bush and
Clinton administrations to
avoid the appearance of partisanship.
·
·
Last week, the Senate
Intelligence
Committee
issued a scathin~ condemnation of U.S. mtelligencegathering leading up to the
war with Iraq. A committee
report said assertions that
Saddam Hussein had chemical and ·biolo.gicaf weapons
and was working to make

nuclear weapons were wrong
and based on false or overstated CIA analyses. The
report also harshly critiCized
Cl A Director George Tenet
who left his job on Sunday.
The Sept. II commission
did not look into intelligence
failures after the terrorist
attacks. 'It is expected to
address modernizing . FBI
data systems to improve
tracking and sharing of terror
watchlists: improving coordination for local authorities,
the military and Federal
Aviation Adniinistration in ·
the event of an attack; ..and
strengthening airport passenger ·screening,
The commission's preliminary reports have outlined
failures in all those areas that
helped the Sept. II hijackers
carry out their plot.
Republican commissioner
John Lehman said the ·
reforms will be "very strong,
substantive and practical."
He has pushed for centralizing the mtelligence agencjes
as well .as improving domestic surveillance beyond FBI
Director Robert Mueller's
proposal to create an independent intelligence service
within the bureau, such as by
creating a domestic spy
agency.
.
Mueller, Ashcroft and their
Democratic
predecessors
strongly reject the idea of
·establishing a stand-alone
domestic intelligence-gathering agency modeled after
Britain's MIS, saying it
would be a costly duplication
of FBI efforts.
.
The commission plans final
back-and-forth revisions with
the White House this week,
with the aim of submitting
the complete, declassified
report to private publisher
WW. Norton &amp; Co. by
Fnday. Norton has promised ·
the panel a quick turnaround
so the $1 0 paperbacks can be
·
ready for sale July 22.

P:resident promotes measure
~gainst gay marriage in radio speech
:WASHINGTON (AP) ptesident Bush says legalizing gay marriage would rede- ·
fine the most fundamental
in.stitution of civilization and
that a constitutional amend~t is needed to protect'it.
:A few activist JUdges and
loc'al officials have taken it
On themselves to Change the
meaning of· marriage, Bush
'd
d · h
kl
sa1
atur ay m 1s wee y
radio address.
Leading the chorus of support for an amendment, Bush·
said, "If courts create their
own arbitrary definition of
marriage as a mere legal contract, and cut marriage off
fr!Jm its cultural, religious
anct natural roots, then the
meaning of marriage is lost
and the institution is weak-.
ened."
His remarks follow the
opening of Senate debate
F{iday on a constitutional
amendment effectively banning gay marriage.
Reflecting the electionyear sensi.tivity of the issue,
Sen. Patnck Leahy, D-Vt.,
said Republicans are using
th;e constitutional amendment

s

as a bulletin board for campaign sloganeeting.
·
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah,
accused Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry
~f holding inconsistent pos1:
t!f&gt;ns. ·
Kerry and running mate
Sen. John. Edwards
oppose
b
gay marnage, ut support
civil unions.
Bush
singled
out
Supreme
Massachusetts'
Judici'al Court, which called
marriage an evolving paradigm. "That sends a message
to the next generation that
marriage has no enduring
meaning, and that ages of
moral ' teaching and human
experience have nothin~ to
teach us about this institulion," he' said.
The president urged the
House and Senate to send to
the states for ratification ao
amendment that defines mar·
riage in the United States as a
union of a man and woman as
husband and wife.
Senate Democrats signaled
they will not throw barriers in
front of the resolution,
paving the way for a vote on

the .,,amendment as early as
Wednesday. ·
A constitutional amendment should never be undertaken lightly, Bush said, "yet
to defend marriage, our
nation has no other choice."
The vote puts some
D emocrats and Repubhcans
·
·
d'ffi It
··
0
m a 1 lCU posltlon. · ne
senator acknowledged the
political
. risk in trying to walk
a line supporting both traditiona! . marriage and gay
rights.
· "I intend to be your champion on many issues in the
future, if you want me," Sen.
Gordon Smith, R-Oie., said
in remarks directed at gay
and lesbian voters: Smith is a
leader in efforts fo make
attacks against homosexuals
a federal hate crime.
The
Human
Rights ·
Campaign, the nation's
largest gay political organization, said the president and
congressional allies "should
focus on the priorities of the
American people, not the
agenda of their extremist
base."
·

Hamilton, Burr kin re-enact famous, fatal duel on 200-year anniversary·
WEEH.AWKEN, N.J. (AP)
·. Still, Douglas Hamilton between the two began.
b1tter grudge between noted his famous ancestor
"There was an animosity
thelf ancestors has loffg had forgtven Aaron Burr on on the part of Alexander
faded, but on Sunday descen- his deathbed and so could he. Hamilton toward Aaron B)lrr
dants of Alexander Hamilton . "Just being shot 31 ·hours for which there was nothing
and Aar~n Burr m~rked their earlier, if h~ could forgive in Aaron Burr's record that
pikes w1th p1Stols m hand.
Burr, far ~. 11 for me not to could be justified," Antonio
·Anton,w Burr, a descendant honor that, sa1d Ham1lton, Burr, a psyc~ologist from
o~ Burr s. cous1~, arnved by an IBM salesman from sub- · New York, said Sunday.
rowboat m penod costume urban Columbus, Ohio.
When .Burr ran for goverar)d fired a rephca of the .54More than 1,000 people nor of New Ybrk in early ·
cahber p1stol . that mortally attended the re-enactment 1804, Hamilton denounced
wounded Ham1lton 200 years ne_ar_ the Hu~son RiveL The him as untrustworthy. Burr
ago m the July 1_1, 1804 ~uel. ongmal duel s exact stte 1s lost. Burr later complained
Douglas Ham11ton, a (1fth- unknown ~cause the water- about a newspaper article that
great-grandson o_f H~tmlto~. f~ont area 1s so dramattcally reported
Hamiltbn
had
fe1gned the h1stonc h1p dtfferent than 11 was 200 years expressed a "despicable opinwound, dropping to one knee ago, historians said Sunday.
ion" of him.
!ffid tl!e~ faJimg !O the ground
An estimated 60 descenDissatisfied with Hamilton's
m a Sltllng pos1tton.
dants of Hamilton attended explanation Burr then the sit·The event ~as the famili.es' the event, as did 40 members · ting vice 'p~side~t. challenged
flfSt meetmg 10 two centunes . of the Aaron Burr Association. him to the duel.
;''It was_n ' t som.ething on my
Hamilton, a signer of the
Shot by Burr, Hamilton
top 100 It st•. but tt ~~s mce to Constitution and the nation's returned to New York, where
meet.Antont? Burr, Dou~las first treasury secretary, had a he died the next day. Burr
Hamllton srud afterward. 'He simmering feud with his long- was indicted on muroer
seems to be a very• nice man, time rival Burr, the vice pres1- ·charges in New York and
though I'm not sure I' m de~t under Thomas Jefferson. New Jersey but was never
Even today, some relatives tried, and finished his term as
going to be on his Christmas
card list."
·
question how the 'feud vice president in I 80S.
·
~The

PageA2
Monday, July 12,

,

The Daily Sentinel

2004

WASHINGTON (AP) -

·thinking about
a
home or buymg c;me, m light of
the recent drop ·10 mortgage

rates.

m·

·

For the third week i,n a row, ,
interest rates on 30-year and 15year fixed-rate mortgages fell,
Signaling nOW may be the time,
tO refinance Or bUy a hOme.
2004 weekly m'ortga'g·e
rates releases .

Those falling rates are seen
temporary. Forecasters predict rates will again start to
slowly climb through next year.
"Strike while the iron is hot,"
·says Greg McBride, a financial
analyst with Bankrate.com, W1
online fi(\ancial service.
'"There is no telling exactly
when they might quickly
reverse ·course and move higher,'' he said.
·
The mortgage company
Freddie Mac reported last week
that rates on 30-year and ISyear fixed-mte mortgages fell
for the third week io a row and
were at their lowest levels since
the spring.
Rates
on
one-year
adjustable-rote mortgages were
5.8
. at their lowest point since the
beginning of June.
5.6
The declines took experts by
-,
surprise.
1
The lower rates, generally ·
5.4 speaking, reflected investol]i'
growing confidence · in the
Federal Reserve's ability to
keep inflation under qmttol.
They also signal investors'
sense that the economy will
grow solidly, though not so fast
that Fed policy-makers wpuld
be forced to move aggressively
4.8 in raising short-term interest
rates.
4.6 _ ___.__ _ _ _____..;.____
Those fllarket forces pushed
down bond mtes, which in turn
F M A
J
M J J
depressed mortgage rates.
Benchmark 30-year mortgages dropped last week to
AP
6.0 I percent while IS-year SOURCE: Freddie Mac
. mortgages were at S.42 percent
and one-year ARMs at 4.05
percent, according to weekly
The · Mortgage Bankers
figures compiled by Freddie · By. year's end, rates on 30year
mortgages
could
reach
7
Association
said its weekly
Mac.
percent,
IS-year
rates
6.2S
perindex of mortgage applications
"It's unlikely you're going to
W1d
one-year
ARMs
more
cent
- . both for home purchases
see a decline of interest rates
for
refmancingsfium where they are at today than S percent, according to and
unless the economy starts to various estimates..
increased by . 19.5 percent for
really dramatically slow and I. · Lenders say the recent drop the week ending July 2, comdon't know of anyone, includ- in rates has led to a blll'8t of pared with the previous week.
ing ourselves, who is forecast- activity.
Nicholas Farina, senior vice
On the horne-loan side,
ing that," says Doug Duncan,
· president of the consumer lendchief econofnist at the house hunters are deciding to
ing division at MortgageiT, an ·
Mortgage B)lllkers Association. · go ahead and lock · in deals
online
mortgage company, says
"So this is an opportunity: I before rates move higher.
On the refinancing side, peo- he is seeing homeowners who
would say that we're going to
see modestly rising rates in the ple are going with bigger loans bought in the past year or two
next couple of years. This is a at a lower rate and usi,ng the refinW1ce a oigger home loan
temporary dip. And, if.you are extra cash to pay for home than they sllirted out. Tha( frees
ready to go, then go," Duncan improvements or reduce debts liP extra cash for whatever they
said . .
such as credit card bills.
want.
~

6.2 -

'

.,

5.2 "

5.0

DF

CASH?

EASE THE
UEEZE!
.

Each Kit Contains the Following:
• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sate Signs , 24" x 12"
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 21.1! Pricing Labels ·
• Inventory Sheet ·
·• 4 Mint-signs to be posted on bulletin
boards at laundromats, markets, etc .
• 1 Seven-step instruction sheet, plus
"Secrets of How to Increase Profits at
a Garage Sale"
• 3 Mountin'g Matelials
• 6 Multi-colored Balloons
• 1 Marker for Signs

'

~6.00 - 15 words or less
I

Gets You Great
Advertising!

~alltpoh~
.

2004

--------------------------~--------~-~ ,

Pierce named
to dean's list ~-

the · opposite
direction.
Counsehng could help you.
You mu ~t get a grip and learn
to like yourself more. Once
you do, you'll feel less threatened if someone you like
Dear
wants \O take his (or her) time
Abby
before making a commit~
ment.
DEAR ABBY: My 67year-old mother is retired and
addicted to the Internet. She
e-mails
me at least five jokes
8180. Please don't waif to
poems
and "urban legend':
cont·act them. They will welart1cles a day.
come you with open arms.
It is annoying and time. DEAR ABBY: I am nearly
to wade through
consuming
m my 30s and have this little
such
nonsense,
and I'd like to
problem. I tend til fall in love
fea~ly easily; I sometimes · ask her to remove me from
cant tell. 1f 11 s love, lust or . her mailing list, but I" don't
want to hurt her, feelings.
just a strong connection. :
I have lost some very good Please tell me what to say. IN
fnends because I becarne PUSSYFOOTING
NEBRASKA
insecure and jealous when
DEAR PUSSYFOOTING:
they showed an interest in
other people. They weren't Since you haven't said otherleading me on, they weren't wise, your mother may think
g1vrng me mixed signals - I you enJOY what she's been
sending. Say: "Mom, 1 love
just fell for tnese people.
Last week I was so you . But there's something
depressed I didn't eat for four you must understand. ,I don't
days because of an incident have time to read a lot of elike this. · I got jealous mail. I'd love to get a personbecause the object of my . al message from you, but if
affections was on a date.
the deluge doesn't stop, I'll
Rationally, I know I need have to delete your e-mails
·
to ' be th"re as ' a friend unread."
because rnost great relationIt's not unkind, and it's the
ships are built on friendships .truth.
first. How can I tame my
Dear Abby is written by
heart and not fall so easily? Abigail Van Buren, . also
-THE FALLEN IN D.C.
known as Jeanne Phillips,
DEAR FALLEN: It isn't and was founded by her
yo~r heart that needs taming mother, Pauline Phillips.
- 11 lS your msecurity! When Write
Dear Abby · at
p~ople . encounter
needy, www.DearAbby.com or PO.
chn~y. 1ealous· people, their Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
1nstrnct 1s to run, not walk, in 90069.

Racine .
According to the release
from Ohio State. to qualify
for the honor ' roll the students had to re~eive a grade
pomt average of at least 3.5
and be enrolled for at least
12 credit hours.
·
·

knowledgeability. co mrnu,&gt;:
nicat ive ability, and on·
stage ack nowl edg me nt of
,
accompli shment s.
·.,
The program will awafd ~
more than $5,000 in eduni-"
tiona! bond . pri zes and . ,t,
award s at th e prngr«m .
,..( ·

Spires name
scholarship
finalist

Randolph
graduates
from Miami

- Marietta
RACINE
College junior Anthony B.
P1erce, son of Rosemary ani!
Mark Pierce of Racine. has
been named to the Dean's
Lis~ for the spring semester.
P1erce completed at least
l5credit hours ·with a grade
pomt average of between 3
and 3.49 fot the semester.
He is a graduate of Southern
CHESHIRE - Cheyenne
high School and is working
OXFORD - Chris topher
Marie
toward a major in . athletic
L. Rando lph of Racine ·
Spire s,
training.
'
re ceived a bachelor o f art &lt;;.
daughter
de g re~
at
Miami
0
f
University\. &lt;, pring · c o m ~
Stephen
mencement exerci ses May· 8
and April
.at Yager Stadium .
·
Spires
has· been
selected
a
POMEROY - Jeremiah as
finalist
in
Ryan Johnson of Racine and
Misty Dawn Shaffer of the PreSpires
Reedsville graduated from Teen Ohio
' Ohio State University on Schol51r&amp;hip
and
MARIETTA _
Th .
Recogmtibq Prog):B · ~
.
e
June 13.
·
0
held July 0'an/A~ 1
names ol area st udents makJohnson received a bache- the Rad ·3
H u&lt;-·1 at
~g the pres tdent and dean's
1hsson
111
lor of science degree in
ote
h
sts at ·washington St ate .
health ,
while · Shaffer W o r t
t n g t o n
C
. C II
The ro rami b. . . . ·
ommunny o ege have
received of master of arts
·
P g
. s Y mvlta- ·been announ ced
·
t10n only for g1rls 7 to 12
T .
. · · .
· .
degree.
years of age with selection
. ho~c making a perf ec t
based on academic records 4.0 grade point average dur-·
,awards and honors, along lllg the quarter to ear~ hst" ·
with participation in outside u~g on the pi eSJclent s list,
activities, personal achieve- v.ere Sama.ntha J . Tliley of ·.
COLUMBUS Five ments, volunteer ser~ice. Chesh1re dnd Ronald L.
school involvement. leader- Grubb of Tupp~rs Plmn s ..
Meigs County students at
On the dean s hst which
ship
Ohio State University made · ems. ability and creative tal-· reqtured
a grade pomt averthe honor roll for the spring
l'inalists will be evaluated age between 3.5 and 3.99
quarter.
on seven point, academic were Maranda I. Bush ot
They were Emily Linnea
achievement, volunteer ser- Long Bottom. Brandon M. ·
Story of Middlepo.rt; and vice to the community. R~ms,burg of Middleport, Tony Curtis Crouch, Jr.,
school honors and activities. Matthew 0 . D11l of R.acme . .
Austin TYler Little, Joseph development of personal and Heather N. Daugherty
Paul Manuel, and Shauna
and abilities, general and Candy M. Mays of
Marie Manuel, all bf skills
o
Recdsv11le.

Johnson
graduates at
·OSU

Area students
·recognized for
academics

Makes·
honor roll

Community calendar
Public meetings
Monday, July 12
RUTLAND - The Mei~s
County Republican Party wlll
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Rutland Civic Center.
· · Thesday, July 13
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Elections
8:30 a.m. at the Board office
in the · Meigs County
Annex
on
Courthouse
Mulberry Heights.
RACINE
Racine
Village will hold a public
hearing on the 2005 budget at
7 P·l?· at the Municipal
BU!Idmg. The budget will be
open for review from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. July 1-July i9.
POMEROY - Notice is
hereby given that between
6:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. a public
meeting on the budget and revenue sharing for the year 200S
for the village of Pomeroy will
be held at the clerk-treasurer's
ofi«:e in village hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS Regular me'eting of Tuppers
Plains 'Regional
Sewer
District, 7 p.in., at sewer dis- ·
trict office. Topics will be
200S bud,g et and second
reading on sewer rate
increase amendment.
RACINE - There will be
a meeting at 7 p.m. at Racine
Village Hall to discuss the
200S annual budget. The
public is invited to attend.
Following that meeting, vii!age council ·will hold a regular meeting. '
Wednes&lt;Jay, July 14
POMEROY
Meigs .
County Board of Health 5
p.m . in the conference room
of the M.eigs County Senio~
Citizens Center. ·
'

Monday, July U
- The Meigs

POM~ROY

Band Boosters will meet at
6:30p.m. in the band room at
Meigs
High
School.
Committees , will be forined
for upcoming events including band camip, the Meigs
County fair, and football season. AH band parents are
encouraged to attend to sign
up to help on a committee.
Tues&lt;Jay, July 13
POMEROY - · The Meigs
County Genealogical Society
will · meet at 6 p.m, at he
Me1gs County Museum.

Homecomings/
Reunions
·

Sunday, Julyl8
ALFRED - The Arthur
and Nelson Watson reunion
will be held. at noon at the
Woodie Grove, home· of Jim
and Debbie Watson at Alfred.
Take a covered dish, dinnerware and drinks . .

Church services
Monday, July 12
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Church of Christ, Vacation
Bible School 6 to 8 p.m.
Theme, "Trip through the
Holyland." Games, crafts,
Bible · stories . . All ages.
Program on Friday evening.
COOLVILLE Faith
Harvest Church, Coolville
will hold a day camp through
Wednesday.
Registration
Monday at 9:30a.m.; classes,
Tuesday and Wednesday, 10
a.m. to noon. Theme: "Blood
Bought." Program 7 p.m.
Wednesday. Classes for four
years and up.
·
• Saturday, July 17
TUPPERS PLAINS
God in Motio·n, an old fashioned camp meeting revival,
will be held I to 9 p.m. July
17 and 18 at the Bobbie and ·
Charlotte Murphy residence
on Route 7 between Tuppers
Plains and Coolville. Take

lawn chairs, a favorite dish,
dress in old-fashioned outfits.
Monday, July ,19
RUTLAND -· Vacation '
Bible school will be held
from 6:30 to 9 p.m. July 1923 at the , Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church. Classes will
be held for children, nursery
to teens: Fob more information call 742-2743.

Other events
Monday, July 12
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
TB staff will be at the
Plains
Fire
Tuppers
Department 4:30 to 6 p.m. for
skin testing. The staff will
return My 14 from 4:30 to
. S:30 p.m. to read the tests.
For more information call
992-3722 . .
Tuesday, July 13
POMEROY - A childhood immunization clinic ·
will be held from 9 to 11 a.m.
and I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs
Cunty Health Department.
Take shot records; cltildren
must be accompanied by parent or legal guardian.

·Support Groups
Monday, July 12
GALLIPOLIS . - Holzer
Center for Comprehensive
Weight Loss support group,
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in Holzer
Medical Center Education
and
Conference Center
Rooms .AB. For more information call 446-582S.

RJO GRANDE - Helen
Scott has won dozens of
awards in quilting shows and
pictures of her quilts have
~ in numerous ma~- 1
zmes. Now her award-winrung
work is on display in the
Homestead Museum at tile Bob
Evans Farm in Rlo Grande.
Fr~m now until Sei?t. 5,
Scott s qullt collection 1s the
featured exhibit on the second floor of the Homestead
Museum. More tban 50
quilts ~il.l be on displ.ay.
Admiss1on to the exhibit and
the museum is free and hours
are 9:30 a.m. through 5:30
~· daily, Scott will also do a
. k signing July 17 from 2 to
4 p.m. at the Museum. Her
book "Bonnet Girls ... Patterns
of the Past" was published by
the American Quilter's Society
in 2001.
•
Scqtt uses applique on
many of her quilts, which
often tell a story with their ·
.pictures, said Gale Leslie, Helen Scott displays one of her "Bonnet Girl". qtlilts.
assistant manager, events, at
the Bob Evans Farm. "She is
·:1 gre:,v up in a family of taught her the pleasures of
well known in the area for qu1lters, Scott sa1d, noting drawmg and quiltitig.
Scott is a member of
the art she includes on her that she hils been quilting
q'uilts," said Leslie. Scott smce 1960. "Some of rny Down By the River Quilters
explained that she enjoys earliest memories are of Quilt Guild, which meets ·
applique because "having playing under my grand- once a month and make~ lap
pamted with oils, pastels and mothe(s large quilting qmlts for needy children and
watercolors for mariy years. frames as she worked on her babies, as well as heart
I found that applique was quiltsi"
Scott's
parenrs quilts for the sick.
like painting . w11h cloth. I
began with hand applique
which I learned to embellish with embroidery. the
machine quilting I began
wnh was quickly replaced
by hand qmlting," she said.
Scott also designs her
own patterns - including
flowers . birds, animals,
seasonal themes, old-fashioned women in various
settings and her popular
"Bonnet Girls." She has
.A ll lt)'lel of carpe~ ar!·· laclude4: .' :, . ;;
been teaching embroidery
applique and quilting classBERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET, ·
es in many parts of southeastern Ohio since 1982. A TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG CARPET,LEVEL
Portsmouth resident, Scott
LOOP CARPET and SCULPTURED CARPET.
is also an accomplished
No ,xtra charge lor moYiag lumlture
llf(ist and author.

CARPET PADDI

Birthday
Sunday, Juiy 11
· POMEROY - Ruby Frick
will observe her 93rd birthday Sunday. Cards may be
sent to her at the Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, 36759
"Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

or removtac old carpet.
• Available onty with pu rchase ol G arage Sale Aavert1serner'lt
MuM be J)ldc:ed ~ qa t our off~
·

3 Day Ad:

'

..•

.

Clubs and
organizations

1 Day Ad:

+ $6.00 Kit

-

DEAR ABBY: .1 noticed
that my 16-year-old daughter
wasn'.t., her usual self. So 1
quesbo.ned her one night and
asked If there was anything
bothermg her, or if she was
worried about something . .
She started crying and told
me she 1s gay. .
·
I ; esponded by crying with
her and askmg he'r if she was
sure. She said she was. I told
her she is still my daughter
and I love her very much. but
that I can't help hoping she's
JUst confused and that as time
goes on, she might see that
t~1 s lS not who she really is.
lm trymg my best to accept
· .1t, but it is difficult at times.
. Please help me understand
1f my feelings are normal. CONFUSED PARENT IN
TEXAS
DEAR CONFUSED: Your
feelings are normal. Most
· p.arent;.~ .• have plans and
drearrfs 'for their children and
your ch1ld has turned out differently than you expected. I
adm1re your, daughter for .her
courage and honesty _in
telltRg you about her orientation, and I admire you for
making it safe for her to do
so.
Your next step is to contact
PFLAG . I have mentioned
. this organization many times
before in my ·column. It
; offers ~Up(!lort groups, educat!Onal outreach and more to
fami.lies and fr.ient~;' of gay,
le sb1an, mtersexual and
transgendered family members. The Web site is
www.ptlag.org and the telephone n~mber is (202) 467-

Monday, July 12,
)

School news

~ ,t1nd1ng 1t hate/ to accept

j' -- - - - - - -·; _ _ - - - - - - - - - - - ,

1

. BY THE BEND

IJJ!ot~er t?f gay teenager is

Time tQ ,take ·advantage of
mortgage rates, experts say
~~~~fe~;:·~~~w:v;:
Rates ~
'l1"1e W,.~_opp·
g
refin~ing
~
.·

PageA3 ·

$9.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit

$1 5 Advertising!
Gets You Great

llatlv- m:ribune

.floint ~tea~ant l\egt~ter
· The Daily Sentinel

O'BI~ness

offers breastfeeding class .

ATHENS
- O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer a . class designed
especially for working mothers
who breastfeed their babies.
Breastfeeding Class for the
Working Mother will be held
from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday
in 0' Bleness' basement conference room B-7.
· The class, which is offered
in addition to the hospital's
regular breastfeeding course,
covers a wide variety of top-

ics unique to working mothers who breastfeed includirig
preparing to go back to
work, returning to work ,
pumping and storing, breast
milk, choosing 'a breast
pump, and other issues such ·
as m·a intenance of milk supply, and resources and prod-ucts that_are especially helpful to nursing mothers who
work.
' ,
Those who attend the
class will also have the

•

opportunity to see a demonstration of ihe various breast
pumps now available .on the
market. ""
Michele
Biddlestone,
O'Bieness'
international
.board certified lactation consultant, will lead the class
which "is free. No registration is required. For more
information or for a sclredule .
of classes, contact Michele .
Biddlestone at (740) 592-

·Proud to be apart of
your life.
Subtcr.ibe today • 992-21.5.5

-

9364.

Call us or stop ln.
We'D come to your home and meua.r e

for a free no obllpdon quote.

Anderson's
liiJ3~1U113U'HH!'-1~@t\1!•'3ij91

Pomeroy, OH_ •_:..::.::.....::..:..:.....::___J,
992-3671
'

~--.......:..:~

"

.

~·

�'
. -

~ ~·~···· ~ ~"·-

.._.

.
''

•

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

••

· Congress shall make tro law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or tlae rig/at of tile
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tlae GoPernment for a redress of griePances.
-· The First Amendment to the U.S, Constitution

TODAY IN H~ORY
BY f HE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday. July 12. the I 94th day of2004. There are ·
172 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History·:
Twenty years ago. on July 12 , 1984, Democratic presidential candidate Wultcr F. Mondale announced he'd chosen U.S.
Rep. Geraldine A. Ferraro of New York to be his runningmate; Ferraro was the tirsl woman to run for vice president on
a major-party ticket.
On this date:
· In 100 B.C .. Roman dictator Julius Caesar was bom.
In 1543 England's King Henry VIII married his sixth and
last· wife, Catherine Parr.
,
In 1690, Pro1esta1tt forces led by William of Orange defeated the Roman Catholic army of James II at the Battle of the
Boyrie .in Ireland.
In 1854, George Eastman, inventor of the Kodak ca·mera,
was born in Waterville, N.Y.
· .
...,
In 1862, Congress authorized the Medal of Honor.
In 1948, the Democratic national convention opened m.
Philadelphia.
·
In 1972,, George McGovern won the Democratic pres.idential nomination at the party's convention in Miami Beach.
In 1974. John Ehrlichman, an ex-.aide to President Nixon, .
and three others were convicted of conspi ring to violate the
civil rights of Daniel Ellsberg's former psychiatrist.
·
In 1977, President Carter defended Supreme Court deci.
sions limiting governrnent payments for poor women's abortions, saying, 'There are many things in life that are not fair.'
In 1993, 196. people were killed when .an earthquake measuring a magnitude of 7.8 struck northern Japan.
Ten years ago: President Clinton, visiting Germany, went to
the ea~tern sector of Berlin, the first president to do so si nce.
Harry Truman. Confirmation hearings began for Supreme
Court nominee Stephen G. Breyer. The National League won
the All-Star Game, defeating the American League 8-7. ·
Five years ago: President Clintoi1 and Republican congressional leaders held their first face-to-face budget meeting of
the year; the talk was described afterward as positive.
One year ago: Wrapping up a· five-day tour of Africa,
President Bush said he would not allow terrorists to use the
continent as a base 'to threaten the world.' The USS Ronald
Reagan, the first carrier named for a living president, was
commissioned in Norfolk, Va. Jazz great Benny Carter died at
age 95.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Th_e Daily Sentinel
.

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

C~lon Polley
Published
every
afternoon,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 1 t t Cburl
accurate. If you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, calllhe newsroom al (740) 992· postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio · Newspaper ·
Association.
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc~
(740) 992'2156.
tions to The Daily Sentinel , 111 .
Department axler)slons are:
Court Street , Pomeroy. Ohio

..

45769.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeftich, Ext. 12
Repomt'. Brian Reed, Ext 14
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. Advertising
~-

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..

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Dletllct ....: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Cha~ene

Hoeflicll: Ext. 12

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relief.
Edwards. is a guy, who,
accordmg to the Charlotte
Observer, only started 'subscriptions to the New York
Times, the Washington Post,
Diana
the Economist and the New
West
Republic' in 1998 when
prepping for his Senate run.
Maybe that's why, as Charles
Peters reported last year in
Q .
.
the Washington Monthly,
_ u,~Ham,ll~. , . _promote~ Senate candidate Edwards
didn't know Leah Rabin was
• Ed 'Yd' . 10ck star ~latus.
ABC s Kate Snow laments Yitzhak Rabin's widow_ or
· ~hat busmes~ groups plan t~ even who Yitzhak Rabin
beat up on John_ Edwards was. The ' Israeli prime min,
back9round as a tnal lawyer. ister who famously shook
~:c s Pet~r Jennmgs asks Vasser Arafat's hand on the
lik war~s .. ~hat w~re you White House lawn and
e as a kid. And, I gathe; signed the Oslo Accords was
you were a hello! a lawl'er.
assassinated in 1995 - three
Such penetratmg quest1~ns whole years before the news
may (or may not) explant SLihsniptions started arrivwhy Jcnnmgs ~ets the ~ig ing at the Edw.ards housebucks, but nothmg explams hold .
why Edwards IS the man to . Edwards ha' denied the
stand Ihat one ~eartbeat we . R:!bin ga lle. but as fronthec~~. ·•bo."l .tw&lt;ty fr?m the pa g~m "!.com's Ben Johnson
presidency. f.nd th1s IS the m}J\ll
lll hcrs abound. He
bomt that d1sp.:'ls all goose wntc.'. ·When. asked abo ut
b~~ps: John Ed~l~rd~ m~~ ... a U.S.-E.U . dispute before
et~r Jenmngs 1~ea of a
0
Trade
"ood
lawye1, but a career of the,, . ._. ~orld
o:.".'llliZdllln;
,
Mr.
Tradearg~ung cases before North
\\,u replied, I m no! sure I
Cuol uM JUnes, even aug- even
know what you re talkm~;led by five years 111 the ing about." Or how about
U... . Sen ,ue, ha~ m no way .Edw;u·ds' unforgettable duck
g.'ven Jo~n Edwards the lor- when ll question about relae_1gn pohcy expertiSe essen, tions with the Islamic world
~!a lto sufport 1ng or pos_s•bly came his way during a
,1ssunung the P.res•dency .1n Democratic
presidential
the ~1ddle of thiS global war debate'J Then running to
on
The
. K
b·mkJihad 1St
. 0terronsm.
, 1
•. , become commander-in-chief
1
' ruptcy . erry s . us, of the war on terror,
p~es1denllal JUdgment .•s Edwards put it this way: 'I
staggermg. Th1s, for Bush _would never claim to be an
supporters, shou ld be a· expert on Islam. ( am not.'

The media were already
coming to his rescue. ABC
reported at the time that in ·
response to the question on
Islam, 'Edwards deftly
admitted he was no expert
... ' (Too bad no network eve\·
reported that Dan Quayle
. .' deftly' failed to spell pot a)
toThis may be. a first. but 1
·
h J0 1
can on 1Y agree Wit
tQ
Kerry about John Edwards,
Or at least with what Kerrx
said before he changed his
mind. 'This is nol the lime
for on-the-job training in the
White House on national
security ;, sueS: Kerry said
ol' Edward' earlier tit is year,,;
And he was ri ght. But , as
eve1; the New York Times
noted , ' While Mr. Kerry
insisted he would name a
running male whose qmtlifications to step in ;1s prcsi- '
dent during a time or war
were unassailahle. he chos'
a 5 1-year old wh(l has serve(j
· ju~t five years in the Senate.·
Glless Kerry changed his
mind ahout that. too. Prizing
the pretty hair and toothy
smi le Of the hapry class. .
. .. . .
warnor - .ill c.lklll.!ted to
g•ve &lt;l!_le ~erry C&lt;)mpargn
stump- appeal .- Ken y h,l~
chosen a prcsidennal slan?-!n da11~erously del !c1en1 111
mternat1onal. exper;ISe even as the United. States IS
engaged 111 u d1re mternationa! struggle. And he
knows it. Which should
. make a lot of Americans
mad.

Obituaries
.Edna Myrtle Clark ·

www .mydailysentinel.com
'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

j •••

2004 Ciccidas fade away;
,
next batch starts 17-year li~e

POME~OY -.Edna Myrtle Clark. 95, of Proctorville, former longttme res1dent of the Hemlock Grove community, died
Saturday, July 10, 2004, at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington,
W.Va.
COLLEGE PARK, Md. Males belted out mating calls in, they are prime targets for despite the massive numbers
- Born on Jan. 18, 1909 at Silver Ridge, she was the daughter of
(AP) - Their droning love at decibel levels that crel\ted predators such as bugs ani! that emerged in the nearby
the .late Bert and Jane Partlow Smith.
. .
songs have faded, the skies an ever-present din in back- mites. If the ground is too Washington region.
S~e worked as a cook at Veterans Memorial Hospital, was a
are free of their tumbling yards.
hard, they can't burrow down
"II was a mystery and I just
member of the Wests1de Chuoch of Christ, the Hemlock Grove
flights and carcasses that litBut by mid-June. they to the roots. In the first two got hooked, ~' he said of his
· Grauge, and the Hemlock Grove Grange Quitters.
tered sidewalks have waslied began to die out. As their last years, mortality for nymphs hooby, which he estimates he
: She IS surv1ved by two daughters and sons-in-law, Bennetta
away. People who feared · act, females ready to lay eggs is ·around 90 percent, Raupp
spent about
and Larry Dickerson of Proctorville, and Vickie and Carl •. them can go outside again sought the tips of woody tree said.
. -$2.000 ·on this
year.
Shre.ve of Cincinnati; four grandchildren, Paul (Sheila) Streve
without worry while those branches, like oaks, where
Most people won't notice
Raupp said he learned sevofC.ncmnat1, Mark Shreve of Plano, Texas, Vickie Sue (Glenn)
who liked them quietly each gouged dozens of small the nymphs' dash to safety
Neargarder of S1 m1 Valley, Calif.; and Wendi (David) Harris of
mourn their passing.
slits in the wood and deposit- since they are so small, said eral things from this year's
Hebron , Ky:, ~nd e1ght great-grandchildren. ·
The Brood X cicadas, vin- ed about 600 eggs apiece.
Gene Kritsky. a biology pro- crop of cicadas. They can fly
Also surv1vmg are a sister, Mace! Barton of Reedsville and a
. !age 2004, are gone.
Th-at digging left many fessor at the College of up to I .000 feet, he said,
brother-in-law. Herbeh Sinith of Columbus.
. '
.But up in· the trees of sev- trees frosted with clusters of Mount St.
Joseph in meaning they can move fair. Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her huseral
mid-Atlantic
and ' unsightly . brown leaves .Cincinnati. But if seen in the ly far to colonize areas that
band .. Frank Albert Clark; sisters, Jesse Curtis and Gladys.
Mipwest states. the next gen- among the green foliage, right light, thex look like previously . didn't
have
Chaffee, and brothers. Alpha, Russell, and Henry Smith.
is
just
beginning
its
dead
tips
that
often
snap
off
small
sparkles
niining
out
of
eration
cicadas·, sucq as new housing
Funeral serv1ces ~Ill be hel4 at I0 a.m. on Wednesday, July
I 7-year life. Within the next during a breeze. While not a trees. •
,
developments built in what
14. 2004. at the Ewm~ Funeral Home in Pometoy. The Rev.
few
weeks,
the
billions
of
threat
to
large
healthy
trees,
For
cicada
buffs
and
scienwere once fie Ids.
Paul Casebolt will offtciate and bu'rial will be in the Cherry
eggs
that
·
femal
e
cicadas
egg
laying
can
hobble
small
ti
sts
like
Kritsky,
who
is
He has also had reports of
R•dg~ Cemetery. Fnends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at
deposited in . branches will saplings ·whose limbs are drawing up maps of the range females laying eggs in some
the funeral home.
·
hatch.
mostly small branches.
of Brood X cicadas in Ohio strange places - · asparagus
Tiny white nymphs no bigGardeners flooded the imd Indiana based on data he plants, goldenrod stalks and
ger than a sesame seed with Behnke
Nurseries
in collected, the scientific work
other herbaceous plants,
beady red eyes will rain Beltsville during ·May and is still not done.
"We've had some surprises
down from branches to the June in search of netting to
"For real cicada people, it's
with
these guys,'' he said.
'
ground, burrow to tree roots keep females off young trees. not over yet," ~e said.
Numerous cases resolved in Meigs County Court
Raupp said· the departure of
and starl·their long develop- The store so ld about three
Amateur cicada tracker
ment. They won't emerge as times more netting than John Zyla is getting ready to this year's batch of cicadas
POMEROY- Cases resolved in the Meigs County .Court
adults until 202 1.
usual, according to manager . draft detailed maps of Brood has · caused a bit of "cicada
of Judge Steve Story between May 17 and June 17 are as fol· "We'r.e watching eggs," · Alex Dencker.
X range in the mid-Atlantic malaise" around his lab,
lows: Floyd D. Ridenhour, Long Bottom, phy. control/under
Mike
Raupp,
a
He also said the nurser~ states, using about '3,000 tips especially since researchers
said
mfluence, $750 and costs; Russell A. Robinson, Pomeroy, no
University
of
Maryland
entohad
to soothe the nerves of" sent ill'to a Web site he set up will have to wait another 17
child restraint, $20 and· costs; Doug D. Rollins, Mt. Alto,
mologist who has closely many anxious gardeners who to collect data. The Ridge years for Brood X to re.turn.
W.Va., stop ' ign, $20 and costs; James E. Roush West
monitored the life cycle of feared · their favorite trees resident spent many weekLinda Pieplow feels a bit
Columbia. W.Va., seatbelt, $30 and costs;
'
this
year's cicadas. "We're would be , denuded by ends in May and June on the the same way. She used to
Justin Roush, Huntington, W.Va., disorderly conduct, $100
sitting on the nest right now." cicadas.
road with his son, checking leave her windows of her
and costs; Leroy B. RIJush, West Columbia, W.Va., speeding',
Over
the
past
two
months,
"People
were
worried
that
out
reports to try to deter- Columbia home open to hear
$30 and costs; Chanda R. Russell, Racine, seatbelt-passensections of the mid-Atlantic everything was going to die," mine the boundaries of the their songs and would even
ger, $20 and costs; Daniel M. Sadd, Columbus, seatbelt, $30
from New Jersey to Virginia, Dencker said. " I told them it cicadas.
and costs, display plates/valid sticker, $35 and costs;
move .flapping cicadas off the
One thing he discovered is
including West ._.,irginia's is like a bad hair cut Matthew D. Salser, Middleport, seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Connie L. Sauters, Shade, seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Eastern Panhandle; portions you're going to lose growth, that Brood X doesn 't overlap ~treet to save them from cars
R.J. Schenkenberger, Stockport, lighted lights required,
of the south su~h as it's going to look ugly for the wit!) other broods of periodi- or being trampled.
"As I saw less and less of
$50 and costs; Dam1en D. Schoen. Belpre. speedmg, $30 and
Tennessee; and parts Qf Ohio .first year, but it's not going to cal cicadas that appear in dif'
~os ts; Mtchael S. Schulay, Gahanna,-speeding, $50 and costs;
and Indiana were inundated kill the1ree."
ferent years in much smaller them! I became more conI;lonald W. Shaffer. Racine, no tailights on vehicle, $50 and
· with billions of the 17-year
For , the nymphs t)lat numbers. For example, scious of moving them into
costs; Gary L. Shamblin, Rutland,. failed to yield, $20 and
cicadas. Hordes of cicadas emerge from their tree~tip Brood II cicadas came out in the. grass," she said. "They
costs, Brent A. Smith, Middleport, speeding, $30 and costs;
tunneled up from their' rest- nests, the worl(l they find is a Calvert and St. Mary's coun- are an : amazing representaRhonda K. Smith, Pomeroy, reckless operation, $595 in
ing spots below trees, shed dangerous place. As · they ties in 1996, but Brood X tion of nature. I'm sort of
costs, operating motor-vehicle without helmet, $20 and costs;
their ski ns and took flight. plunge to the ground and dig didn't show up there this year missing them."
,. Judith Smithfield, Marietta, speeding, $30 and costs;
Megan C. Snyder, Parkersburg, W.Va., speeding, $30 and
~osts; Victor T. Spearman, Easley. S.C., speeding, $30 and
costs; Aaron J. Stanley, Gallipolis, speeding, $30 and costs;
Mary J. Stover, Racine, driving under suspension/revocation,
$200 and costs; Alexander T. Street, Roxboro, N.C., failure
tp comrol, $20 and costs; Jeffrey M. Sturgill, Midway,
'!\'. Va., camp in. non-designated area, $50 and· costs;
- Debra A. Swiger, Pomeroy, seabelt, $30 and costs; Jim E.
Taylor, Middleport, seatbelt, $30 and costs; John T. Taylor,
HOUSTON (AP) ·_ For prison for mail fraud. Now ingltis socialite wife's death. tence.
Gallipolis, display plates/valid sticker, $20 and costs; Tammy
the next year, hoine for the he runs a consulting service
But the judge balked at a
Leggett, like Lea Fastow,
.t. Thomas, Middleport, disorderly conduct, $50 and. costs,
real
estate
and
grocery
in
Salt
Lake
City,
helping
is
educated
and
well
off:
But
plea
agreement that would
ElUI, $300 and and $120 in costs; James C. Turner,
heiress
married
to
Enron's
preother
federal
prisoners
in the federal detention sys- have given Lea Fastow five
Columbus, seatbelt, $30 and costs; David L. Tyree,
former finance chief will be pare for life on the inside.
tern, where most prisoners months in prison and five_.
Middleport, assured clear distance, $20 and costs; Mary .!;:.
an 8-foot-by-.10-foot cell.
The Fastows' guilt&gt;' pleas are serving sentences for months confined at home,
Vacca, Pomeroy, $30 and costs; Joseph. L. Vance, Pomeroy,
were
a breakthrough m ¢e 2 drug crimes, everyone's on a and he imposed the maxiwith
a
roommate,
She'lllive
i[CUtbelt-passenger, $35 and costs; .
·
.
·
share
a
toilet
and
endure
1/2-year
investigation into level playing field, she said. mum sentence allowable.
: Kris J. VanMeter, Pomeroy. assured clear distance, $20 and
noise that doesn't stop at the scandal that led to the
"Status is from the outsi(le
She had hopeq to serve her
costs; Raymond E. Vannest, Ravenswood, W.Va., speeding,
lights-out.
energy
giant:s
c~llapse.
Both
looking
in.
There's
not
really
time
at ·a minimum-security
$30 and costs; Scott A. Weaver, West Lake, speedmg, $50
On
Monday,
Lea
Fastow
are
cooperatmg
m
the
prose· that consciousness · on the prison camp for women in
and costs; David S. Wiggins, Zanesville, display plates/valid
must report to the federal cution of other former Enron inside," Leggett said. She · Bryan, about 90 miles northsticker, $20 and costs; Timothy J. Wilkinson, Columbus,
lockup
in
downtown executives.
said Lea Fastow should have west of Houston.
seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Whe~
she
will
Last
week,
Enron
Corp.
Houston,
few problems if she keeps to
There, the couple's two
: Jennifer M. Wilks, Proctorville, assured clear distAnce, $20
for
her
misdechairserve
a
year
founder
and
former
young sons could have
herself and respects others.
11nd costs; Travis L. Willford, Tuppers Plains, speeding; $30
·meanor conviction of sign- man Kenneth Lay became
Lea
Fastow
wasn't enjoyed 'playground equip- ·
and cos!s, seatbelt, $30 and costs; Christopher C. Williams,
ing a fraudulent ,tax return to the 30th and highest-profile accused of masterminding ment during visits. She
Columbus, seatbelt, $30 and costs; Mark B. Williams,
' shady partnerships or !inane- could have worn khaki
help
her husband, Andrew, individual charged.
Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $50 and costs; Brian K.
hide
ill-gotten
income
from
Even
before
her
marriage
ing schemes that led to shorts and T-shirts, played
Wilson, St. M~s, W.Va., $30 and costs;
schemes that fueled the ener- to Andrew Fastow, Lea Enron's collapse. Although · softball, walked on an outJoshua S. W1tsaman, Akron, speeding, $30 and costs;
gy company's crash.
Weingarten was well-to-do, she had been assistant trea- door track, or perhaps te ndRebecca S. Wolfe, Racine, domestic violence, $200; Timothy
an
heiress to a grocery and surer, the schemes largely ed one of the complex's vegThf
family
home
is
a
J. Workman, Albany, seatbelt, $30 and costs: Brad R. Young,.
$696,000,
two-story
brick
in
real-estate
fortune amassed were haiched after she quit etable and flower gardens.
Pomeroy, $30 and costs; Jessica A. Zaidain, Dayton, speedby
one
of
Houston's
old-line Enron in 1997 to be a fullthe
affluent
Soutbampton
ing, $50 and costs; Linda K. Zinn, Pomeroy, left of center,
time mother.
But U.S. District Judge
When families.
neighborhood.
$20 and costs.
·
was
indicted
on
six
David
Hittner refused to recShe
Andrew Fastow pleaded
At the detention center in
guilty in January, he agreed Houston, a narrow locker felony · tax and conspiracy om mend that the Federal
to surrender $23.8 million in will hold the few liooks, cparges in April 2003, about Bureau of Prisons place her
cash and property, .including photos and other personal .six months after her hus- at any ·specific institution.
Novak said · the prisons .
two vacation homes · in belongings she's allowed to band's initial indictment on
ref~ses
Galveston and Vermont.
have. She will wear prison' what grew into 98 counts .of bureau has made efforts to ·
But that life is a world issue tan uniforms, and' her conspiracy, fraud, insider limit exposure of minimumsecuritY. prisoners to inmates
away from the federal deten- mail could be read first by trading and other charges.
She pleaded guilty to a known to be more dangertion center, a gray,' 11-story prison staff.
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - · The deaths came a day after
,
charge
of sjgning tax forms ous.
"Once
you're
in
that
envibuilding
where
the
only
·
Insurgents ambushed two four U.S. Marines were killed
she
knew
didn't include ill- c "There 's always the risk of
ronment,
you
have
to
decide.
chance to go out~ide is durU.S. military patrols north of in a vehicle accident near
gotten
income
from her hus- a physical altercation in any
ing brief and rare outings on 'Am I going to sink or
Baghdad on Sunday, separate Camp Fallujah in western
the roof. Lea Fastow will swim?' Most of us learn how band's schemes. She also high-density environment,
attacks that killed three U.S. Iraq. More than 875 service
pmbably prepare food or to swim," ·said Vanessa admitted she endorsed and but I've had lots of clients in
soldiers and an Iraqi civilian. · members have died since the
wash bed sheets for less than Leggett, a writer who was deposited cbecks of ill-got- detention centers who have
Meanwhile, the .Philippines ~gin~ing of miliiary operanever had a problem,"
50 cents a day.
.. ·.
ja~ Houston facility ten gains disguised as gifts
.
·
~overnment
reJected an ttons m Iraq.
written
to
their
sons.
Novak said.
for
nearly
five
months
in
"She'
II
spend
lihe
vast
_Militants from a group callmsurgent group's ultimatum
Her
lawyer
said
Lea
"The quicker she just kind
majority
of
her
time
indoors
2001.
She
was
sent
there
to pull its small peacekeeping , ing itself "The Iraqi Islamic
Fastow
helped
persuade
her
·
of
keeps her-head down and
under fluorescent lights," after she refused to surrender'
force out of Iraq. The !).roup . Army-Khaled bin Al-Waleed
said David Novak, a former her research for a· book she husband to plead guilty 10 does her time and does what
has threatened to ktll a Corps" gave the Philippines a
Microsoft consultant who was writing about a former .two counts of . conspiracy. .she can to help those around
Sunday.
night
deadlme
·
to
Filipino man it is holding
served a year in a federal bookie charged with arrang- and agree to '! 10-yeru: sen- her, the better off she'll be."
agree to . withdraw its . 51hostage . .
A roadside bomb attack' on member peacekeeping force ·
a U.S. patrol in the city of by July 20 ·- a month ahead
Samarra, a hotbed of violence of schedul~. - The group
60 miles north of Baghdad, threatened to~'kill truck driver
killed two soldiets on patrol Angelo dela Cruz if lhe
Sunday
afternoon
and Phi\ippines did not comply. .
an
emergency
After
wounded three others, the
·Cabinet
meeting
Sunday,
the
military said.
Philippines
government
An earlier attack on a U.S.
convoy in Beiji; 90 miles refused.
'
".Jn line with our commitsouth of the northern city of
Mosul, began Sunday mom- ment to the free people of
'
ihg when a roadside bomb Iraq, we reiterate our plan to.
~xploded next, to the patrol, return our humanitarian contingent as scheduled on· Aug.
the military said.
20,
2004," Foreign Secretary
An enemy vehicle then
Humane Officer for
raced toward the convoy, fir- Delia Albert told reporters.
Dela Cruz's wife and
ing at the soldiers, who shot
Meigs County. Over 21,
Need money? Corne talli to us. We offer personal,
back and ki lied the driver, the brother . were heading to
valld
driver's
Ucense.
Baghdad,
Albert
said,
and
the
military said.
business mortgage and aJJtO loans. Quick
compassion for animals.
A soldier and a civilian government remained hopeapproval, low rates, low monthly paymentS, no
Applications to be received
traveling liehind the pa!rol ful he would be released.
Philippine negotiators were
were killed. A second soldier
the Meigs County
application • Corne join the family and come be
was injured and evacuated. working through mediators
Commissioner's OfJice in the
one of our thousands· of happy customers'
Thick black smoke poured · Sunday to IJY to free dela Cruz. .
Meigs Coun~;y Courthouse by
over the area from an . oil a diplomat . in Baghdad with
world wide. Calll-866-273-7194
July 21.
tanker set alight in the attack . lihowledge of the situation said.

CourtneJVS

En ron wife trades-high life for prison; Lea
Fastowstarts serving sentence Monday

.... -

car-

-- -- =Bush loses a lifelong Republican

"'

Letters to the editor are welcome. They" should
be Less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned Letters will
be published: Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
· The opinions e-xpressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
editorial board, unless otherwis.e noted.

Reader Services

Edwards: little m.ore than a pretty face
I find myself in a curious
emotion&lt;~'~' state over the
mlnouncement of a winner in
the ·John Kerry veepstakes.
The hackles on the back of
my neck. raised up by the
ghastly sound of a hundred
·news anchors cooing, · have
long settled since the
Democratic
presidential
nominee announced 'that
John Edwards . was his nmning mate. My ensuing calm
has ended in a surge of confidence that Bu sh-Cheney
will defeat Kerry-Edwards
come November. Why then
am 1 so darn mad?
'
·
First. more on the hackles.
They are simply natural
reactions to the Voice of the
Democratic
National
Comniittee. _ a.La. each
and every news n~lwnrk
(sans Fox) _ aslt cranks up
the biu build-up 011 the
Kerry-Edwards ticket with out mentioning ·the political
bottom line: that John Kerry.
the most liberal U.S. Senator
last year. nicked as his running male )olm Edwards, the
fourth . most liberal U.S.
Senator last year.
Such reportorial reticence
wasn't evident four years
ago when George w. Bush
tapped Dick Clleney ·for the
~&lt;eep spot. As the , Media
Research Center reminds us
(www.meqiarescarch.org),
the media hammered home
Cheney's conservative vot·e. l'd f'ro m Do"y a· ne I· no
,. 1 c1 1
with all consternation, and
no cre~m puff. This week,'
all we oet is journo-junk
food. "' NBC's
Carl

Monday, July 12, 2004

Monday, July 12,2004

,•

The Daily Sentinel

'

My parents, like all parents who grew up in New
York, live in Florida. They
have voted down·the-line
Republican in every election since they came of age.
Joan
Despite
their
shared
Catholicism, they couldn't
Ryan
stand John or Bobby
Kennedy. Don't even talk to
them about Ted. They sti ll
believe Nixon got a raw
deal. Needless to say, they people were goi ng to jump
supp01ted the Bush brothers up and pmise them," my
in their respective elections, father said. 'There have
George for president and been too many mistakes.
Jeb for governor.
We're supposed to have conBut a funny thing has trol over there, and our boys
happened on the way (o the keep getting · killed. ll's a
2&lt;RJ4 election. George Bush · miShmash. The whole thing
is managing to do what no IS a m1shmash. He's backed
politician has done before himself into a comer by tryhim _ drive my mother ing to liberate a . country,
and father and others like and the people don't want
them from their well-worn you to be liberating them. "
seats on the GOP bus.
His anger is about more
'I can't vote for him," my than a difference of opinion
father said as we sat in .the with the president about
Florida room of their adult- how and why he waged this
community condo. 1 nearly particular war. There is a
dropped the bottle of b~er 1 corrosive quality to this
had pressed to my,f.eribead. presidency that has eaten
('What, yoy!re hot?" my away at what my father
mother ha&lt;Y asked. The air believes his country stands
conditi~ning was indeed on, for. Anecdotal evidence sugas she assured me it was, set gests he is not alone.
1o a frosty 80 degrees.)
. Repubhtan leaders, ~~wev. ' He completely underesti- er, Will tell you the fatthful
mated how the Iraqis would aren't wavering. As evirespond," my father said.
dence, they point to a biparWe generally avoid poli- tisan · poll · conducted for
tics when 1 visit. I'm from National Public ·Radio in
the gay-marrying, war- . May that found just 6 perprotesting, Michael Moore- cent of Republicans say
· loving republic of the San they plan to vote for
Francisco Bay Area. We Democratic
presidential
tend to limit our current- candidate John Kerry.
events discussions to the • But the poll rueans linle. It
Giants' chances in 'the a5ked the wrong question.
· 1 Le
w.
My father would also have
N
· ~Ilona
ague est.
told them he doesn't plan to
'They thought all these

-· .

vole for Kerry. He'd cut off enjoyed quoting the late AI
his finger before ·using it to Capp, the creator of th~
cast a vo.le for a limousine comic st rip 'Li'l Abner,"
libeml like Kerry. But his who defended his conser·dislike for Kerry does not vatism in the 1960s by saydiminish his disillusionment ing that he was and always
with Bush. He won't vote for had been a moderate. Ha
either of them, he says, leav- only seemed conservativ~~
ing the top lines of his ballot he said, because the rest of
blanK' for the first time in his the country had shifted tci
life.
the left. There was a code of
'Maybe. I'll write in your living in Capp's world, and
mother's name," he said.
in my father's . . They
America's bloody en!ry believed in consistency borinto Iraq, with the torture dering on stasis, even if it
and beheadings and charred meant becoming a walking
bodies and · gushing torrents . anachronism in your own
of taxpayer money, is lifetime.
prompting a nation to 'take
My father and others like
stock of who it is and what him who have always been
it believes in. I want to m,ore or less middle-of-thethink that the war is diluting road Republicans now fee.L
the blues · and reds on the out of step with thi s
national political maps, that · Republican president. It i•
people are sloughing off not because their own ideal~
t~eir color-coded cloaks as
have shifted but because
Republicans and Democrats, . their president's have.
'It's terrible that in this
conservatives and liberals,
and recognizing the com- country of so many oood
mon ideals that bind us as peop Ie. " my f lither "'said-.
Americans.
' how an election can come
T!10se ideals - among down to the lesser of two
them, compassion, freedom, evils. You have to · vote this '
diplomacy, liberty, rule of time for who will do the
law - have been batter~d least harm. Not the most
by ~ president who still good, but the least harm."
Sometimes we settla for a
can't p~oduce a compelling
reason to have sent our men president who isn't inspiring
and women into battle or ~isionary or all that Hrilagainst a country tnat never liant. But we should never
attacked us. He tosses aside settle for one who diminish·civil li berries as if they were es America by flouting its
Kleenex, denies basic due core ideals. The election is
process even to American · four months away. My
citizens - a conceit the father could change his
Supreme Court recently mind and. in the end, vote
judged unacceptable - and for Bush.
belie.ves
theGeneva
But I'm hoping my mothConventions apply only er's name shows up on at
least one ballot in Palm
when he says they do.
My father has always Beach County.

__ _ --- -- ·-- ------- ... ......

v

Bomb kills soldier and Iraqi
civilian; Philippines
·
to.meet kidnappers' demands

Coming ThursdaY in the Sentinel ...

"~fae~ f~ ~ &amp; T/rmg~ t~. JP(J"
Your guipe to entertaiment in the Tri-State

JJ/!!!~!

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LIBERTY MUTUAL
FINANCE

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PageA6.

OHIO

The' Daily Sentinel

Baseball scores and standings, _
Page B2
Reds rally past Brewers, Paga B6
Indians beat A's, Page B6
.
Shaq may be headed to Miami, Page B6

Monday, July 12, 2004

God's NET nets donation

•

The Daily Sentinel··

INSIDE

Bl-

•

annel

.'

-·

t

RACINE - New officers by Sterrett , several cards of program for the evening.
were elected and projects for encouragement were signed. She read Philippians 2:3-5
the year discu ssed at Thank yoLI cards received and Isaiah 12:3-.4, "Watch
Thursday night's meeting of over the past three months Out for the Bears" and
~:th~~~s&amp;~~rc~;~cle held at
froWJuke 'j:;ickers~amb . ·: overflowing Joy."
. She
Elected as officers for the an~~ary t~L;~~~ ~~~~k :,~d :~l so, read a~ article till.~d ·
corl)ing year were Lois Delores Cleland. Norma Pecans In The Cemetery.
Sterrett president; Ev~ l y n Torres. the Brent Rose famiMaltle· Beegle and Evelyn
Foreman , vice president ; ly Jean . Alkire . Dorothy Foreman served refreshKathryn Hart,' se~retary; and Sayre an&amp; Edna Knopp.
menrs to those named and
Julie Campbell, treasu rer.
· To open the meeting Mildred Hart, Mary Cleek,
Items discussed at the Srerreu read scriptme from Mabel Brace, Edie Hubbard,
and
l st Blondena Rainer Edna
meeting ..wet·~ the flower fe s- Ist. Timothy
tival bake sale and parade, Chron !~l es, and gave read.~ · Knopp, Thelma ' Walton,
the mother-daught.er ban- mgs :. . I Need Your He!p Suzanne
Sayre, Letha
quet, the picnic at the and __A Bend rn the Road .
Proffiu Martha Lou Beegle
McKelvey home; participa·-. Of11~:ers reports were
.,·
.
'
tion in Chester-Shade Days: given by Hart and Campbell, Bernr•e Therss, and Ruth
providing supplies for the and secret sisters were Simpson.
Meigs Cooperative Parish, revealed with new one s
For th e August meeting
serving at auctions, and ~ift being drawn . Mabel Brace ·Belly Proffi tt will h!lve the
cards.
won the door prize.
program and Sterrett and
At the meeting conducted
J~ckie White presented the Han will -serve refr~7shments.

sre

they drop back down to . 84
later this afternoon. Winds will
It should be a humid and be 5·to 10 MPH from the west
cloudy morning. There might turning from the southwest a's
be ,a bit of rain around the the afternoon progresses.
area. Temperatures 'wi ll rise
from 73 to 83 by late this
Evening
morning. Winds will be 5 to 10
( 7:00pm-Midnllht)
MPH from the southwest turn- It will remain humid and
ing from the west as the morn' cloudy. Moderate rain is foreirig progresses.
casted. The rain should stop
by 11 :OOpm with total accuAfternoon
. mulations for this event near
(1:00pm-6:OOpm)
0.51 inches. Temperatures
It will continue to be humid will diminish from 83 early
and cloudy. You will see light . this evening to 74. Winds will
rain. The rainfall is expected be 10 MPH from the south· to begin near. 4:00pm. The west turning from the west as
rain should reach 0.11 inches the evening progresses.
by
th is
· ·afternoon.
Temperatures will rise from 85
Overnight
early afternoon to the high for
(1:00am-6:00am)
the day of 88 at 3:00pm as It will continue to be humid

and cloudy. There could be· a
few raindrops around th e
area. Temperatures will stay
near ,72 with today's low ·of 71
occurring around 6:00am.
Winds will be 5 MPH from the
west. .

Tuesday, July 13
Morning
(7:00am-Noon)

It should be a Mumid morning. There ii a s light
chance
of
rain.
Temperatures will cl imb
from 72 to 78 by late this
morning. Skies will be
mostly sunny to partly
cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from ·the well-t turning from the northwest as
the morning progresses .

·Report: Ohio ranks third in
nursing homes with sex offenders.
:

I

,I

'

. CINCINNATI (AP) Ohio ranks third in the
nation with 39 registered
sexual offenders living in
nursing homes where they
can pose a risk to other residents, an advocacy group
for senior citizens said
Sunday.
A survey by the disability
and elder rights advocacy
group, A Perfect Cause, said
at least 289 nursing homes
in 37 states are home to 380
registered sex offenders.
Ohio ranked third with · 39
offenders living in · 21
homes and anotter three
offenilers
w_orking
in
homes.
. The
study
by
the
Oklqhoma City-based )roup
found that 40 percent of the
registered sex offenders ill
nursing homes are under
age 60 and many of the
older offenders· also had
committed crimes in their
60s and 70s.
"The
argument
that

they're all old and decrepit ·
and they can't hurt anybody
any more, that just went out
the window," said Wes·
Bledsoe, president of A
Perfect Cause.
· ·
The study was done by
comparing the addresses of
sex offenders registered
with law-enforcement agencies in 37 states to nursing
home addresses.
·
Ohio nursing home laws
have no ·requirements for
care and supervision of
paroled offenaers, but they
-do stipulate that facilities
accepting patients with
behavioral and mental problems· must have · specially
trained staff.
"They're responsible for
keeping everyone safe,"
said Beverly Lauber!, the
state ombudsman for nursing home residents.
'Lao bert said,she knows of
no incidents involving sex
offenders in Ohio nursing
homes~

The three registered sex
offenders found working in
Ohio. homes may have been
hired prior to 1998, before
the 'state began requiring
criminal background chetks
for employees, she said.
Nursing homes in Ohio,
which average about 80 percent occupancy, are looking
to fill . their beds, Laubert
said. Laubert said her
agency has met several
times in the last six months
with prison, mental health
and nursing home officials
to open lines of communication on the issue.
Lauber! said nursing
homes· must notify" other
residents and their families
of the presence of registered
sex offenders designated as
"sexual predators."
In Dayton, the Sanctuary .
at Whispering Meadows has
one registered sex offender .
as a resident. Officials there
said he is closely watched
and has caused no problems.

'Pervasive' problems prompt board to
·revoke .deputy county coroner's license
MANSFIELD (AP) - · gave medicat ion s without
The state plans to revoke . always co~duc tin g te sts to
the medi ca l li cense of confirm medical problems.
Richland County's deputy prescribed add ictive medcoroner next week due to a ications to patients with
pattern of problems at her signs of . addiction and
practice.
·
sometime s provided excesThe State Medical Board sive quantitie s of pills.
voted last month to ·revoke
Wehrle s·aid the b.oard
the license of 80-year-old found "pervasive... · probMansfield
physician lem s and that Reed kept
Barbara Reed.
ha,ndwritten records on
Board
spokeswoman index cards with minimal
Joeyn Wehrle said that after ·d~tail:
July 16,· it will be Hlegal
Reed testified that her
for Reed to practice or see office ·quit doing throat
p~tients.
cultures because they were
· "Her case was pretty "worthless" . an\1 that she
extensive," Wehrle said. didn't see any connection
"Some of her patients had between alcoholism and
drug dependencies and abuse of painkillers.
they still kept getting
Reed said she has closed
refills on medications."
her practice but will appeal
During a board hearing a the decision.
doctor testified that Reed
"They were out to get me

Swain birth announced
CHESTER - The first
pirthday · of Easter R.
Swain, daughter of Robin
and Jay Swain, was
observed recently with a
party at the Swain Farm.
Theine was "Hello Kiuy."
Attending were grandparents, Roger Brown, ·
Lyle Swain, and Jill Holter,
an aunt, Joy Hawthorne,
·and several other aunts;
uncles and cousins.

Monday, July 12, 2oo.i

Mason County 181 Meigs 1:4

The B. H. Sanborn
Miss ionary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church donated $500
recently to God's Nn.
Presenting a check to the
Rev. Keith Rader, director,
were from the left, Helen
Bodimer, June Kloes and
Faye Wallace . After many
years the group has IJeen
disbanded.

Sonshine Circle elects new officers

Morning '
( 7:00am-N!JOn)

'

Easter R. Swain

. right from the beginning,"
Reed sa id. !They're really .
after all the older doctors.''
She is Richland County 's·
. on ly deputy coroner, tak,
ing over for Dr. Stephen
Banko when he is unavail·
able.
Banko put Reed on the
county payroll as an intermittent county employee in'
October 2003 : Banko said
· he . plans to continue to
employ Reed and await the.
appeal s.
Wehrle said . Reed must
have a ·valid license to
serve as deputy coroner
and could only continue
during the appeals process
with a stay from a judge.
Reed received her medical degree from Ohio
State University in 1949.

.,•
•

~,

Griffey Jr.
goes back"'
on DL

Days Until
High School
Football '
Season!!!
Legion Standings
American Legion Baseball
8th District
Iwl!lJ
8ltl All.
Pickerington
8-0 28-12
Athens
6-2 18-10
Lancaster .
6-2 20·23
Meigs
4-6 17-12
Glouster
0-7 5'21
Logan
0-7 0·13

~ Meigs

falls at
Pickerington
•

PICKERINGTON - With
nearly as many' en-ors as hits,
Meigs Post 128 suffered a 14- '
4 American Leg ion baseball
loss at Pickerington Sunday.
Meigs was held to five hits
total. meanwhile, Pickerington
amassed 16. The visitors also
didn't help their cause by committing four errors.
The victory clinched no
worse than a tie for the 8th district title for Pickerington (28- ·
12). which improved to 8-0.
Meigs (17-12) is locked into
the fourth position at 4-6.
Pickerington's
Aaron
Korbar lacked only a double
of hitting for the cycle. Trevor
Horn added a home run and a
double.
And~ Parsons had two of
Meigs hits. Ken Amsbary,
Doug Dill and Dave McGlure
chipped in singles as well.
Horn went the distance to
-earn the pitching victory. Mike
Davis suffered the loss for
Meigs.

Columbus falls
to Louisville Bats
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)Steve Lomasney had three hits
and drove in two run s tls the
Louisville
Bats
beat
Columbus 4-3 oh ~unday.
Lomasney's two-run si ngle
in the sixth 'inning came alter
Clippers shortstop Felix
Escalona mishandled a ground
ball that could have ende~ the
inning on a double play.
Jim Chamblee also had two
hits for the Bats.
Columbus starter Brad
Halsey (6-.3) gave up four runs
on seven hits in 5 2-3 innings
ofwork.
.
Homer Bush hit a solo home
, run in the sixth inning for the
Clippers.
·
Louisville staner Jung
Keung Bon~ (6-6) surrendered
ten hits'in srx innings, but the
Clippers scored just three
times while he was on the
mound.

Indians activate
Betancourt;
demote Bartosh
'
CLEVELAND
(AP) ·-Right-hander 1
Rafael
Betancour) Aas activated
from the IS-day disabled list
by the Cleveland Indians on
Sunday, and left-bander Cliff
Bartosh was optioned to ·
Triple-A Buffalo.
Betancourt has been sidelined since June 26 with arm
fatigue and a sore ri~ht biceps.
H~ was the Indians closer in
late April and early May
before being returned to a
setup role.
"I feel great andpm ready to
help this team in the second
half," said Betancourt,, who
pitched a scoreless ioning on a
rehabilitation assignment at
Double-A 'Akron on Friday
night.
·
· "'
Betancourt has a 3-4 record
and 4.50 ERA in 35 appcar_ances this season.

Meigs'catcher Terry Durst prepares to track down an errant throw home as a Mason County base ru nner slides in front of
him Saturday at Meigs High School. Mason County won 18-14. (Brad Sherman)

Mason County outslugs Meig~
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@mydailytribune.com
ROCKSPRINGS - In a baseball
game where the score read more like
a football fim]l. appropriately it was
a late touchdown and extra point that
made the difference.
Mason Col)nty Post 23 sent 13 men
to the plate and scored seven run s in
th e fifth inning, giving the visitors
enough cushion to pull out an 18- 14
American Legion baseball victory
over Meigs Po st 128 Saturday at
Meigs l:!igh School.
·
Maso n County amassed . . 21 hits .
compared to I 0 for Meigs. in a game
which lasted three hours thanks in
part to two rain delays and copious
offense. The two cl ubs were originally slated to play a doubleheader. but
severe thunderstorms nioved through
the area shortl y after the conClusion
bf ga me · one, forc ing the cancella-

tion.
Josh Mill er led the winnps' hit
parade with four. ·including a two-run
home run ; his sixth of the season.
Dale Kestner also went deep for the
seventh ti me as part of three-hit day
with five runs balled in .
Former Point Pl easa111 teammates
Daniel Ten~h and Kenny Durst also
.contributed three-hit s each to th e victory. Tench wen1 3-for-4 with a home
run and dvuble while Durst also had
three hits in foLir chances with a trio
of RBis. Curr.ent Bi g Bl ack Brandon
WarnL'T beat out an infield hi t in his
lone at-bat.
Meigs' Doug Dill hi t hi s eighth
homer in a losin g ~:ause. and was one
of three Post -128 players with two
hits. · Teammate Ken (\msbary doubled and singled. while Josh . Eudy
singled twice.
The win is the third st raight for
Mason County ( 13-9). ·meanwhile.
Meigs fell to 17· 11.

The score . stood 9 -8 enteri ng the
pivotal fifth inning, put four hit s, two
errors and rive free passes helped
Post 23 pLill far enough aheau to
sec ure the wrn.
The first of two singles in the game
by Richard Kestner. another by
Miller, then a walk to .Dwsr loaded
_the bases for th e visi tors before Josh
Whitlock was hit by_a pitch to force
the inning's first run.
Dale Kestner knocked in a scconu
run . then later in the inning . Eric
Anderson sin gled down the left fi eld
line to plate two more . Meigs' pair of
errors along wi_th a bases loaded walk
also led to scores in the frame.
Meigs rallied for four runs in the
sixth to pull to 'w ithin 16- 12 . but got
no closer. The two teams exc han ged
a pair of runs in the seve nth to make
the fi1ial 18-14.
·
Chris Barbe. who allowed six run s

Please see Meigs. Bl

Fisher tak~s R_iverside tourney
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
MASON, W.Va. - Tim Fisher of Statts
Mills won the 2004 Riverside Amateur Golf
Tournament after rounds of 70 and 69 to finish !-under par.
.
Fisher chip]Jed in an eagle on the par five
15th hole to beat runner-up' Mike Koreski of
Parkersburg. Koreski was even ( 140) for the
tournament.
A total of 42 players were in the championship tlight and the tir'St 12 places re~:eived
prizes. Four Mason golfers were among the
first dozen.
Locals Mitch Roush and Jeremy Tucker finished three-ovef ( 143) for the tournament,

'

Riverside AlnateiW Tournament
1. Tlm Fisher, Stahs Mills
2. Mike KDreskl, ~'bo'll
3. John Duly, Hurricane
4. Tony Brown, Ironton
5. ~Itch Roush, Mason '

'6. Jere:l:oTucker. Ma.son

7. Sieve x. Hunfl~on ·
8. Adam Krawoczyn, uon
9. David Jude. Humlntllon
1y. R)I!Ul Norris, Lelart Falls
1 . Stove AOiJ, Hunllngton
12. Trent AOulh, Muon

..

70-69 . 139
7D-70
140
68·73
141
14 I
65·77
7Q-73
143
70-73
143
73-70
143
69-76
145
7D-76
146
72-74
146
71l-70
146
147
73-74

· meanwhile Adam Kmw s~zy n and .Trent
Rouse shot 145 and 147 respectively. :
The next tournament at RiverSide will be
the annual two-man best ball tournament on
August 21. It will be an amateur eve nt with 36
holes to play..
·

MILWAUKEE' (·AP)
Ken Griffey Jr. wem on the
15-day di sabled list Sunday
with a torn right hamstring
and wi ll mi ss the All-Star
game.
The Cincinn&lt;lli omfie lder
~as injured Saturday night
while tryi'ng. to run down
Brady Clark's fourtfinning
drive to right-~.:ente in the
founh inning of a 5c loss to
Milwaukee. An MRI exam
Sunday revealed a panial tear·
of the·muscle.
Griffey plans to go to
Houston to panicipate in ceremonies. but will not take part
· in the Home Run Derby or
Tuesday\" game.
Reds
spokesman Rob Butcher said.
He will ·be replaced on the NL
roster. "He ' ll be re-evaluated on a
regular basis." Reds trai'ner
Mark Mann said. "He told me
he heard it pop. At the end of
the 15-day periou. we'll have
a bener idea of a time frame.
It's a muscular. tear. so thiS
should heal on its own."
Griffey was voted an AllStar stw'ter for the 12th time
last weekend. He missed more
than a month with a tom hamstri ng that bothered him
throughout' _the 200 I season.
He spent two long stints on
the I )-day disabled li st with a
torn patella tendon and a torn right hamstring in ~002 , then ·
went to the DL twice · a~ain
last year for a dislocated nght
shoulder and torn ank le tendon.
·
Mann talked with Griffey
on Sunda v.
"He's do1ng OK.'' Mann
said. "We· ve been down this
road before.''
All lour active players with
500 homer.&lt; l1 ad been sc h ~d­
uled to compete in Monday's
Home Run Derby.: Barry
· Bqnds · (681 ). Sammy So sa
(55:1 J. Rati1el Palmeiro (540)
and G1iffey (50 1).
Gri ffcy. l:londs and So sa
were all slated to start for the
NL in the oulfield.
'' I was anxious to get down
there :1nd pencil those ihnie
guys in." sa id Florida mana~­
er Jack McKeon. who w1ll
manage the National League.
"That would have been a special lineup card to keep."'
McKeon sa id Houston's
Lance Berkman wi ll likely
start in ce nter for the NL.

Tour de France .

Battered riders get
much-needed off-day ·
BY JOHN LEICESTER

Associated Press
QUIMPER. France- · Now
for some well-eamed rest and
relaxation. Tour de France
style.
Bauered and bruised physi~ally and mentally by a crashtilled tirst week. cycl ists get
their first day of rest Monday
- a chance to treat wounds.

sleep in and steel themselves
for the first mountainous
stages ahead.
"It's been a crazy first
week. I don't ever remember
doing one like that," said
five-time ~.:hampion Lance
Armstrong. who's nervous
that a-trash could end hi &gt; bid
for a record sixth cro\vn.

Please see Battered. Bl

Stewart gets first victory with
controversial win at Tropicana.400
BY NANCY AAMOI,JA
As~ciated

Press

JOLIET, Ill. Tony
Stewart's first victory ·or the
year didn't have much drama.
His crew took care of that in
the pits.
,
Stewan ran away with the
Tropicana 400 on Sunday. but
the win was marred by a
wreck with · rookie Kasey
Kahne that touched off a fi ght
in the pits between the two
teams' crews and led owner
. Ray Evernham to call for the
2002 series champion to be
suspended.
·
Tony Stewart celebrates in victory lane after winning the
Stewart dominated the race.
NASCAR Tropicana 400 at Chicagoland Speedway Sunday in leading 160 of 267 laps on the
Joliet, Ill . (AP)
I 1/2-mile D-shapcd oval. He

took the lead for good on lap
241 and beat Nextel Cup
points leader Jimmie Johnson
by 2.925 seconds.
It was Stewart's tlrst victory
since last bctober. But in typical Stewart fashi'on, it was
marked by controversy. He
even was booed as he got out
of his car in victory lane .
• Kuhne was leading the race
with Sterling Marlin &gt;econti
and Stewart third as the tleld
bunched up for the green tlag
on lap 127. There We_re several cars not on the lead lap in
front of Kahne.
After the re,lart. Stewart
passed Marlin on the o~.
but his Chevrolet gut too
clo'e to Kahnc\ Dodge and

tapped the back end. Kahne
started spinning, sliding headfirst into the wall while
Stewart daned out of harm's!
way and into the lead .
"Obviously the 20 (car) was
in the back of me and put us
up in the wall," Kahne said. "!
don't know why he would do
that. He had the car •a beat all
day. All he had 1\J do was go
through a couple more turns
and lle probably would have
pa'5ed us.''
But Stewan. who is on probation until Aug. 18 for a pre•
viou' postrace fight with
Brian Vickers. said he didn't
imcnd. any harm. NASCAR

Please see Stewart. Bl

"

�•
.fage B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 12, 2004

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4

.,

7

FGarc~w6-8
623 6 3 3 1 7
M&amp;rte
11310000
Takatsu$5
1 0 0 0 0 1
HBfL-try FGarc a (Oierud)
Ump!Tes-Home T&amp;d Barrett F r$1 Atck R&amp;Bcl
Second A tonsc Marquez; Th rd Ed Rapuano
T-219 A-31 305 (40 615)

Rangers 6, Red Sox 5
ab rhbi t
Bl&amp;P::k3b
ASrano2b
Fllmerdh
TXfrtllb
E'I'QngH
Menctl rf
Me,lt1wsrt
N~Xcf

Brtllas c
Contipr
Ardoinc

Tolltll

Damooct
81horn2b
00r1tZdh
Grcprt ss
NIXO!'IIi
t.4UarH
M~ 1tl
t.Aueler3b
Reesep
Mrbel c
MAmrzph

50 0 0
2222
50 2 0
41 1 2
51 50
41 12
1 0 1 0
4020
40 10
01 0 0
1000

41 817 6

1b rhbl
51 l 1
4 1 I 0
4121
4 0 t 0
4 0 01
2 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
2 t 1 0
0000
3 t 1 2
10 0 0

33 5 7 5

Texu
030 01D 110 II
B•ton
000 200 300 5
E-Bialoc:k ~8) Ardon (1) McCarty (2) DPTexas Boston! LOB-Taxast3 Boston 8
29--MYoung (1B) Fullmer (19) EYoung (9)
Milllhwra (7) DOrta (33) HA-ASor ano
(11) Texeira (18) Mench (13) Damon (10)
f.Air&amp;bell (7) SB-ASonano (9) Damon 2
(1 f) Garc llf'&amp;rra (2) SF-ASortena Te K

"'

lP

H

ttb rhbi
lniamect

40 00
4 000
CG1llen ss 3 0 0 0
OYong 1tl 4 0 0 0
RoWhte dh 2 0 0 0
Thmesl
3010
DFellce c 3100
Munson 3b 3 ~ 1 2
JSmrth2t 3 0 0 0
Tot.l1 29 2 2 2
Hggnsnrl

Offrrnn dh 3 0 l 0
Punto2b 2000
Totllltl 31 0 5 0

O.tro t
020 000 000 2
Mlnne1ota
000 000 000 0
E-5antana (4) DP-Oet 011 1 LOB-Datrott
2 Mlrnesota s 28---Thames (4) CGuzman
(17] JJones (12) HR-Munson (12) SBlnlanle {6)
IP H RERBBSO
lletioft
JJohnsonW77
9 5 0 0 1 11
Minneeotl
Sent11na L 7 6
8 2 2 2 2 11
Nathan
0 0 0 0 1
WP---JJohnson
Umpt es--4-lome John H rschbedl F m, Laz
Diaz Second 8 11 Welke Th rd Waly BaR
T-2:08 A-21 618{45423)

Indians 4 Athletics 1
Clevel•nd
ab r hbl
B11!ard 2t1 4 1 1 0
Cnspct
4 232
LawtonH 4 1 1 0
VMrtnzc 4 o 2 o
Blake 3tl 2 o 1 o
Halne iJ1 4 0 1 2
MeriOnl tl 3 0 0 0
Brssrd 1tl 1 0 0 0
0000
Gerur1
JMcDk:lss 3 o a o

1b r hbl

Boston

MYongM 6 0 2 0

Minnnota
lib rhbi
CGzmnss 4 0 1 0
LFotdlt
4 000
Mauerc
4000
Koskte 3tl 4 0 1 0
THntecf 4010
JJonesrl 3010
LeCroo, ttl 3 o o a

Detro\1

abrhbi
4 1 1
4 1 1 1
400 0
3000

ab r hbl
t&amp;tzukilf 4 1 2 0

Braves 6 Phlllles 4

Tigers 2, Twins 0

Sox 4, Mariners 3
Chicago

Tofl!ll

4 12 0

Kct&amp;ay cl
Ktel!y~

3000
Mclm pl1 0000
EChavz3b 50 1 1
Dyarf
4020
Byrnes~

0 00 0

Duraro dh 4 0 1 0
KaiTO! 1b 3 0 t 0
Httberg 1b 1 0 0 0
Crosby s.s 4 o o o
DMiec 3000
Scutaro 2b 4 0 2 0
Total• 35 1 9 1 Total a

29 4 9 4

C1kland
001 000 000 1
Clevat1nd
000 101 0211 4
OP-GleV!Iand 1 LOB-Oakland 11 Cleve
land 6 28-EChavez (7) Scu1aro (22) Crrsp
(13) Blake (16] HR--cnsp (51 C~-Cnsp
(B) Geru (4)
IPHRERBBSD

Ookhnd
Zito l,4 7
Dol•
Cleve lend

762246
132200

RERBBSO

OleeWg.:1
7 6 1 1 3 5
T"u
WlckmM
120001
Drese
842213Risl&lt;.eS4
110010
Francls(o
2 3 2 3 3 2 1 HBP-Qy Dote I {B aka)
BShousll W2 0
1 3 o 0 o 0 0 Umpires-Home Chuck Meriwether First
FCorde!o S 27
2 I 0 0 1 3 c B Bucknor Second Man Holowel Third
EncCooper
wa'kefield
6 12 5 s 1 5 T-2:55 A- 24622 (43389)
Lealcan.c
1 1 o o o 1
Foylkel22
2 4 1 1 1 2
5,
2
Wakefled p~ched to 2 batters tn the 7ttl
Anaheim
Toronto
HBP--hy Drasa (M~Iar) by Wakefie ld (ASo
ab r hbl
ab rhbl
ono)
Eckstrn ss 4 0 1 0 Jhnson cf 4 0 0 0
Ump~res--:-Home Paul Nauen: F rs~ RanGy
Matsh Second Larry VallO'w'llf Th td §am FiQQI'IS 3b 5 0 1 1 OHudsn 2b 3 0 1 0
GAndsnd 501 1 Hnske3b 4010
T-3 04 A-34 77S 135
VGreodh 4 1 1 0 COigdo dh 4 1 I 1
JGIIen~
4010 Zatl\e
4120
E,rsted 1b 4 1 2 1 Rosrf
3000
0\lnonrt 3110 JPtllps 1b 4 0 0 0
Kanaa1 Cl"Bsltimor•
BMolnac 4 01 1 Gomezss 4 o 1 1
ab r hbl
&amp;b r hbl
AKndy2b 4231
HClark If 3 0 I 0
Rta.lord3b 6 1 1 0 BRbrts 2tl 5 1 0 0
Total1 37 512 5 TOIII• 33 2 7 2
Grffnno2b 6 0 2 1 NewhnH 4 221
MSwy 1b 6 3 4 3
Te,ada ss 5 1 2 2
011 012 000 5
Stajrsrf
4132
Jlllopz clh 5 1 2 3 An1he1m
020 000 000 2
RMateort 1000 RPimo1b 3 o 1 o Toronto
Harwy dh 5 0 0 0 HrstJrrl 4 1 2 0 E-OHudson (81 Gomez (7) DP-Toronto 3
DBnmN 5230 JLeon3b 401 1 LOB-Anaheim 7 T01onto 6 28-F gg ne
()Jd(sn H 0 0 0 0
Matoscl
4 0 0 o (13} VGueffero (25} AKennedy (12) H nske
Berroa ss "' 2 2 1 Hckabyc 4 1 2 0 (14} HCtark (6) 36-AKennedy (4) HRCDelglldo (10) s-Ecks1em Rlos
DJesuscf 4 1 1 1
IP H RERBBSO
Bide
4 110
Anaheim
rata• 461117 a
38 712 7
Lackey W7 8
523 6 2 2 o 5
Shields
113 1 o o o o
KanNI City
102 002 100 - 11
o o o 1 1
FRodnguez
Baltiii'ICII'e
001
, 00
032 7
Percrval S 15
I 0000
E-Ji...eon (1) LOB--Kansas City 11 Ba~
more S 28-flelafofd (8) Sla lfi (7) DSrown r.....,
6 10 5 5 0 2
(:i!l DeJesus- (1) Newhan (4/ Tejada (20) MBatista l,B-6
2 1 0 0 1 1
HanlOn Jr (13) Huckaby 2} HR--M•&amp;110000
waenay 2 (18) Statrs (12) Jvlopez (12)
WP--t..d&lt;oy
SB-OBrown (2)
Umpt1es--t1ome Ph~ Cuu F rst Jerry Craw
IP H RERBBSO
ford Second Dave ASchwege Th rd Bnan
...... CIIy
66221tO'Nara
GobbloW5-6
1 0 0 0 0 0 T-239 A- 7573(50598)

...,..,

Angels Blue Jays

H-

oo;1:

Royals 1t, Orioles 7

,

en,•
,,.,,,

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

..

1

3

3

3

1

2

23 3 2 2 o o
1300000

RL.gpezl6-tl

I

513 10 5 5 0 3
~z
23 1 1 1 1 0
ar.om
2345311
DeJean
131000 0
J3anilh
210013
RoOiguez pitched to 1 batter 111 the 7th
HBP-i)j DeJaan (Stars) PB-Bl.d&lt;.. Balk-

\Jn&gt;om

Umpjrft-Home Roo Kulpa Frat, BiH M ler
Second Brl&amp;n Gorman Third Dale Scott
T-3 16 A--31 042 (48.286)

y.,_ 10, Devil

T~

35 3 I

Rayo 3

New Yor11:

Bay
.Orhbl
Crwfri:U
50 1 0
BakHIIil cl 5 0 0 0
Hulf3b
3 1 1l
llottnz:lb 3 1 1 0
JoCruzll 4 0 0 0
Lugoss 3 1 2 o
Fidcdh
20 0 0
Rolfs~
2000
THIIDc
4 0 3 2
BUn 2b
4 0 10
T_..

lbrhbl
BWIImsd 50 0 0
Jeter $II
5 1 10
Shttieldr1 -4 2 3 2
Cm!by rl 0 0 0 0
AAdrg23b 51 1 0
JaGbl~

-4 1 1 1

Posad!lj:: 2 1 2 2
Flhertyc 2000
Matsu II
4 2 3 2
TC~ 1b -4 2 2 3
Garro2b 402 0
Tot.!• 31101510

3

T*"fMt Bay

000 201 000 3
014 002 211 - 10
E-8aldel~ (6) LOB-Tampa Bay 8 New
Yoltt: 8 28--lugo (22) Jeter (22) Cairo (11 )
HR--HUff (13) Sheffield (16t f'ouda (1 1)
MII:IOI' (17) TCiark 2 (10) C8-Crtwford

Nltw'forll;

112)

-

:.;::~

IP

H

REFIBBSO

•

5

~

3

3

4

I.CMoo

1

llBMz

I '

-"""'

0Hmcti:W 1-D

Heredll

5223
113

2
5
2
2

5

0

1

~1 ~1 60 2~

2
1
0

2
,

3
0
0

!5
1
0

. --()on_.,.,. . .
h4ltlontk
0
PI P: lldl
umt*M-IIorne, Cln Guccione Fill. Chll'

.

•

•

spokesman Herb Branham satd after the ra~e ihat
offictals determmed the colltsmn was stmply a racmg acc1dent and there wtll be no penalues
"I was nght on hts butt, but all of the sudden he
checked up and I don't know what happened,'
Stewart satd ''That was a bad deal We could have
gotten taken out JUSt as eas1ly (Kasey s) the last
guy I'd want to hurt "
"I hate to have somethmg hke that happen We
had such a good car, t1 wasn't ~omg to matter any
way We d1dn'1 need to turn htm around to get to
VICtory lane We were gomg to wm th1s race no
matter what "
A few seconds alter the wreck, Kahne s crew
ch1ef Tommy Baldwm charged mto Stewart's ptt
Baldwm and Greg Z1padelli, Stewart's crew chtef.
sjlouted at eacb other, and then members of the
crews began fightmg
"I was )US! talkmg to Ztppy and tellmg h1m hts
dnver ts a moron," Baldwtn sa1d 'They started
push1ng me and then the offic tal grabbed me I
don't know what happened after that"
The ptt crews m1xed 1t up for a few mmutes
before order was restored The shirt of one crew
member was npped open Kahne 's crew went back
to the1r garage to try to repatr the car, whtch was
severely damaged m the front After a few mmutes,
Baldwm walked to NASCAR's trmler and spent
several mmutes mstde talkmg wHh ot!tc1als
Evemham also talked to offictals - and he was
It~
'
"He defimtely needs to get suspended and he
should have hts (backstde) beat," satd Evernham,
owner of Kuhne 's learn, Evernham Motorsports
"That's the problem v.1th htm Nobody has ever
really grabbed htm and g1ven h1m a good beatmg
"If he doesn't get suspended, maybe I'll do that '
Branham sa1d ' NASCAR has already begun
mvestJgatmg the ftght on p1t road A dects1on on
penalttes won't come unullater m the week, at the
earliest
Stewart was forced to use hts backup-car after a
hard crash dunng Fnday mormng s practtce sesswn
at the Chtcagoland Speedway But the backup car
ran even better than hts first ch01ce
Starttng lOth, Stewart wasted no t1me workmg
h1s way through the field He cltmbed to thtrd
before the first cautton came out on lap 19 and took
over the lead for the ftrst ume on lap 22, when the
leaders pmed
The race was pretty much Stewart's from there
After the crash, he led for 53 of the next 54 laps
before ptttmg on lap 180 Stewart was nght back
near the front once he caught up, and almost took
the lead from Jeremy Mayfield when they came out
of the p1ts at the end of lap 210

"""" 324
RUNS--VGuerrero Anaheim 73 Oarnon

)(ologgT-UI A--13,313 15'1~711

Clnclnn1ti
MllwMikH
abrhbl
abrh!H
DJmnz 2b 3 1 1 1 Pdsdnkct 5 1 1 0
JCastro ss 5 0 0 0 Cunaefl as 4 1 1 0
4 1 10 JenkinaN 41 1 t
Dum It
JaCtuzrl 51 21
OvfbaV1b 4 2 3 1
LaRua c 52 2 2 KGfntr2b 31 1 1
WPenact 53 4 3 Adams p o 0 o o
Hmmef1b 4 0 0 0 LYzcnop 0 0 0 0
GWhlte p 0 0 0 Ol j Mgrdar ph 0 0 0 0
oooa
TJonesp 0000 Kolbp
lark.Wl ph 1 0 1 0 JBenntt p 0 0 0 0
arawsp 0000 BCiark.ll 2001
Lerson3b 51 2 t
Helms3b 2 0 ~1
JoAvdop 2000 Gnewph 100 0
GBnnnc 2 o 0 1
Vlenttnph 1 01 t
Ae&lt;lt ng p o o '0 o Kschnk pM 1 o 1 o
VnWal1b1010 VSantsp 2000
l&lt;mnsyp 0000
8Hat2b 2000
Totals 41 115 I Totala 32 II I I
Clnclnnltl
011
002 203 8
Mltwauk•
500 000 010 I
E-POda&amp;dnik (2~ OP--ctnclnna~ 1 M lwau
kee 1 LOB-Cif'ICtnnat 6 M M&lt;aukee 4 26DJime:nez 115) Dunn (15) VanderWal (1)
OVerbay (37) KlBSChniC:k (3} HR--laAue
(8) WPene2 (1 0) Ovelbay (10) SF-Helms
GEieflnen
IP H RERBBSO

-.,_...
Cincinnati

GWhilo

TJonesW7 2

=
"'""" s 33

VSantoa

L~

5
113
I

,

23
523

6 5 5 2 B
0 0 0 0 1
1 1 1 1 0
0 0 0 0 0
10002
II

4

4

3

8

12~
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
23 0 .0 0 0 0

Kolbl,Q-1
13 4 3 3
..e.nnan
23 o o o
Kn1l'l pf1ohed to 2 t.tt..-. in lht 11111

........,...

0
o

0
o

Umpl--'lomo. KM1 !&lt;*loy; """ 118~
Ctdorolrcm Stoand Jm Roynoldo Tlli&lt;O.

~ ~~ &amp;41 (-41800)

Atlanta
000 104 010 II
100 102 000 4
Ptdlad•lphla
DP- Phradelphtll 1 LOB- Atlantll 12
Phtlade ph a 11 26-JD ew (16) JEstrade
(27) HR-JD ew (21) JuFranco (6) DaBell
(12) $-Au0rtz2 Wol SF-Wolf
fP H RERBBSO

......

RuOrtzW10-6 523 6 4 4 5 2
Attonnc&amp;
23 0 0 0 1 1
Ae~sma
23 o o o 1 1
SmattzS16
2 2 0 0 0 3
Phllad«phla
Wolf L.3 5
5 t 3 10 5 5 1 5
RHerr.andez
23 o o o o o
Mad&amp;OO
1 2 0 0 1 0
Worrel
1 3 1 1 0 0
BWagner
110.012
Umprraa-Home Rotl Drake F rst Gerry
Da11 t1 Seccnd B uce Ored&lt;man Third Larry
Pooctno. T-3 26 A-44 519 (43 500)

BBYII

oii.OOO

CWisnlb
TAI'IIr'Zcl
TAdmnph
Stynes 3b
Smonph
JDa'o'lsrl

3000
3010
10 0 0

Monlr•l
eb r hbl
Wtkrsnll
EChVBZ ct
TBtsta 3b
NJtYJsn 1b

3000
4 0 1 0
3 1 10
30 10

OCbera ss 4 0 0 0

20 10

1000
1010
MckWkrf 3110
Cast~lo 2b 4 0 1 0
Foggp
2000
Hllph
1 000
Tobtla 32 1 6 0

rhbi
Brrghs 3b 4 0 0 0

Miles2b
51 2 0
Claylon ss 2 o 1 a Loretta 2tl 4 1 2 I
Helton tb 4 1 1 BGiesrl 2210
LWalkrl 3010 Klesko tb 3 1 1 2
BurMzl! 30ta Payton cl 4 ~ .LJ_
PrWtsnct 4 t 2 1 N~H
3)7UO
LuGnzf 3b 3 0 0 0 Otsukap 0000
Stark.p
2000 Braggph 1000
PeloWph o 1 000 Ojedac
3010
C.Jhsonc 4000 KGrwnss 3 01 0
Bmerop 0000 IVaklez p 2 0 0 0
MaSwyph too o Longlf
2000
Tota11 32 2 8 2 Tolltll
31 4 7 4

a

Color1do
001 000 010 2
S.n Diego
002 010 101. 4
OP-San Diego 2 LOB-Colorado 8 San
Otego 8 28--Claytan (26) lWalker (7)
HR--PrWI son (2) lorena (8\ Klesko (2)
SB-KGreane 13) $-Clayton
IP H R ER BB SO
Color.to
Startr. l Q--4
5 5 3 3 5 2
S mpson
1 1 1 1 0 2
Jrt.opez
23 0 0 0 0 1
~
1 13 1 0 0 0
San lHego
IValdel W 8 5
5 6 1 t 4 0
l tnebnnk
2 1 0 0 0 3
Otsuka
1 1 1 1 0 2
Hoffman S 23 _
1 0 0 0 0 2
Simpson p~ched to 1 batte1 m the 71h
Umpires--Home Gary Dall~ng Frat Martr.
Carfson Second Ramon Armand!lrl.l Th rd
BIIHohn T-238 A-41 t88(42445)

Sledgel1
Schndrc
Call'oll2b
Downsp
JAMaph
AvaJap
CCrarop

2 t 0 1
3030
3001
1000
1000
0000
0000

Loa Angeles
ab r h bl
Bigg o ~
DRbrts c1 5 1 1 0
Bgwell 1b 4 0 1 0 lztu s ss 5 2 2 0
C9eltmc! 41 12 lDuca c 52.3 4
Brkmn r1 2 1 0 ShGren 1b 4 2 1
Jl&lt;ent2b 4000 J7 Wertnr1
3131
Enstlrg 3b 4 o o o Vntl.irs 3b 3 o o o
AE11rtt ss 4 1 2 2 JHrndz H 4 0 1 1
RChavz c 4 0 1 0 Cora 2b
2 1 10
Oswal p 1 0 0 0 Uma P
2 0 0 0
1
0
Lamb h
0
Grt:&gt;wsk ph 1 0 O O
Saem; ph 1 0 0 0
Tolllla 32 4 7 4 Total•
35 713 7

lib r h bl
4 1 10

o

°

Houaton
000 002 002 4
Lo• Angeles
101 001 04• 7
Total• 27 2 II 2 DP-Los An&amp;ele:a t L0e-,.....Hous1on 4 Los
Angees9 2
,gwet(16) Lo0ucal161
010 000 000 1 HR-CB&amp;Itran (8) AEverett (4) Lo Duca (9
Pltt•burgh
Montreal
000 011
OOM 2 S--oswatt
E-MackaWJak (B) Ca at (3) DP-Pit1s
IP H RERBBSO
burgh 2 Mont eal 1 LOB-Pittsbu gh 7
Houaton
Montreal 6 28--TAlvarez (2) JDaVIs (1) OswaH L 8-7
683338
TBat ste (10) C5-Siedge {2) 8-Downs
DM..I
12321121
IP H RERBBSO
Weathers
1333300
Pttt.burgh
lea An~"
Fogg L 6-7
6 4 2 2 3 1 l{l1aW83
6 5 2 2 1 4
Gonzalez
2 2 0 0 0 2Dreitol1
1 10002
Montreel
Mota
100001
DownsW 3
7 5 1 0 2 5 TMar1n
I 1 2 2 0 0
Ayala
1 0 0 0 0 t HBP-by TMarttn (Bar1&lt;man) WP- DM!CG~
CCorderaS7
1 1 0 Q 0 0 Lrna Th1art n
HBP~ Fogg (lBahsta) by Downs ICW•l
Ump.rw.; ltome MkeWntars F1rst TimTtm
son) WP--Goozalez
mans Second Bl ues Moemm ng Thtrd
Ump res-Home Ange Hernandez F rst Hunter Wandelstactt
M1ke FICh e Second Mark Wegner Th rd T-2 26 A-4(l 484 (56 000)
LarryYoungT-21 A-8 101(19000)

Cubo 8, Cardinals 4

Marlins 5, Mats 2

Chleago

New York

Florida

ab r hbl
Matsui ss 4 0 1 o
Zee3b
4000
Pazz011b '\ 0 0 0
Htdagorf 4000
Wggntn 2b 4 1 1 0
Spncer ~ 4 1 2
Cmeron cl 3 0 1 0
VWisnc301 1
Lerterp
1000
Marenop 0000
Aeyesph
000
Bnlcop
0000
JPhllpsph 0000
KGarcaph1000
Stenion p 0 0 0 0
Totalt 33 2 II 2

ab r hbl
Prerre d
4 12 0
LCstllo2b 4 t 1 0
Cbrerar1 31 0 0
LowelJb 3111
Conne~
2114
Cho 11:i
3 0 0 0
AGnzlz s.s 4 0 0 0
Tranor c
3000
Wllsp
300 o
Kochp
0000
Easley ph 1 0 0 0
B9!1ttaz p o o 0 0

To1a11

30 5 5 5

New York
000 000 200 2
Florida
004 000 10x I
E- Ze Ia (10) Chol (5) LO~aw Vorl&lt; 5
Florida 8 26-Malsu (27) Wtggtnlon (19)
Spencer (10) Perre (12) l0¥1ell (26) 38LCasl lo {5) HR-conlne {6) 58--VWI son
(1) Pierre (21) Gabrara (3)

St loul•

ab r htM
Mac1as 3b 5 2 3 '0
Grdzln 2b 4 2 1 o
CPttson ct 5 1 1 1
SSasalf 5125
Aoulf
4 20
OeLee 1tl 4 o 2 o
Barrenc 5122
ROrdnziS 5020
Woodp
3010
Beltranp 0000

ab r hbl
Wmack2b 4 0 I 1
Rnterass501 0
PtlJOIS 1b 5 0 2 1
Ralen3b 5000
Edmndd2111
Tguchci 1000
Cedeno It 3 1 1 0
RSnd•arl 4 1 1 0
t.ttheny c 2 l 0 1
Crpnter p 1 0 0 0
Mdduxph 0 0 0 0
Lnldrdph 1000
Tot1tl1 40 8111 8 Total•
l3 4 7 4
Chicago
004 210 001 8
St loula
000 100 003 4
E-CPatleraon (1) RSandera (3) OP-St
louts 2 LOB--ChK:&amp;go 9 St Louis 9 28A1ou (17) ROrdonez (3) WomaCk \19)
Cedeno (3) HR-$Sosa (16) Barret1 10)
Edmonds (21) S-Maddux SF-Womack
Malheny
IP H RERBBSO

:;:,7:'43

5 3 1 1 2 5
Belllan
123 0 0 0 2 1
Rem1nger
13 0 0 0 0 0
NwYork
Fa nS¥rOrth
I
0 0 0 1
Le~el..53
334422Hawkils
I 3 3 1 1 0
Moreno
1 0 0 0 1 0
Stlouis
Botts IICC
2 0 0 0 1 4 Garpentar L,9-4 3 2 3 g 6 6 2 6
Stanton
221122eldred
1132 1 1 0 1
Florida
Galero
2 0 0 0 t
3
WI~W75
613 6 2 2 1 7 Kline
1 2 0 0 0 0
Koch
1 2 3 0 0 0 0 4 Kng
23 3 I 1 0 1
Ben~ezS30
1 0 0 0 0 1 Tavarez
13 0 0 0 0 0
HBP-t:ty Moreno (Treanor) WP-W1ll s
PB--Mstheny
Umpires--Home J m Joyca F rs1 1&lt;erw n Ump.ru-Home Jerry Meals Frat, Ed Mon
D!lnley Second Marv111 Hudson Th rd Dana Iague Second Oerryl Cous1111 Th rd Paul
DeMuth T-2;57 A-25735(36.331)
Schrieber T-3 11 A--49.250 (SO 345)
H RERBBSO

Glanta 9, Dlllmondbeclca 2
S.nfran
ab r hbl
Terrero r1 4 1 2 o
SFnlfrycl 4010

Ciotron 55

4

oo 1

LGni!zll 4000
Tracy tb 3 1 1 0
Hjrston2b3010
RAlmr2b 1000

015011 30
Hmckc
Fosaump
Rndphp
Aqump
Kplovep

TOia..

3000

Drham2b
Eyrep
NPerazss
Mohr It
Atloozo 3b
FeliZ 1b
Przyns c
Grssomcf
Tuckarr1
Schrndl p
Rnaomss

3001
2000
0000
1000
0000
:t! 2 6 2 Totals

abrhbl
5223
0000
31 1 0
-4 1 1 1
4D 2 1
5 0 12
4010
4 2 2 1
4220
1 10 0
1000

~Salurdey

Arizona
010 000 010 2
San frlnCIICO 000 151
11w 9
E-Terrero (1) LOB-Anuma 5 Sen Fren
cisco 8 28-tfrt'rero (1~aton {10) Mohr
(7) 38-Tucker (5) H
rham (7) Grit
som (14) SB-Tarrero (1) SF-Mohr
IPHRERBBSO

.,....

• a e 6 1 2
RlndoiOh
113 2 1 1 3 0
Aquino
12311101
~~
131100

Fossum L.2-a

SchmidtW11 2
8 5 2 2 2 10
Eyre
100000
Fonum pitched to 5 bltterlln tt-. 5th
HBP--tly foalum {Schmkt) WP-Folsum
Umplrtt-Homt Mlka DIMuro F rtt Jot
WNI Seoond Paul Enwntl Third Terry Craft
T-2 43 Ao--4.2 558 (-41 584)

......

San Fnm

lb.rhbl
Terrero rf 4 0 0 0
SFinley c1 4 0 0 0
Cntron!lll4010
LGnzlzlf 4000
T~ 1b
4 010
Hrston2b 3000
Britoc
3011
Olsoo3b 3120

Dfham2b 4000
Tuckarr1
3 t 10
Snow 1b 4 1 2 2
Bondslf
1010
Alfonzo 3b 4 0 0 0
PrzynRC

3 0 1 1

Grssom ct
OCruzss
Tomkop
Feh:zph

4 0 10
3000
3 2 o
1 ooo

RAlmr2b 1000
Toblla 32 1 5 1 Tollll

30 3 8 3

Arizona
000 000 010 1
San Franelaeo 000 020 1Dll 3
E--Qison {fl) Alfonzo {8) DP-Arlzona 1
San Fr~sco 1 L08-Arilona 4 San FranCIICO 10 29-0iaon 15) Snow (1-4) Tomko
{1) HR-Snow 13) 58-TUCker (3) 5-Dulhem SF-Pierzynakl

.,....

Webbl.,3-'il

Choate
Elruney

BAmNG-Bonds San Francleco 365
Caaey C ncmna1 352 Helton Colorado
348 Overt:Jay M Jwat.be 344 Rolen St
Lou s 344 JEslnlda Atlanta 332 JWilson

TOI'Ilkll W 4-5

.,.

l-ftrgn,S22
WP-WJOb.

8,3 B 3 2 5 B
1300000
113 0 0 0 0 2
7 2-3

5

1

'

0

3

1300000

1 0

0 0

0

0

Flrtt Mlq
Oi~uro Stconcl:\lotw..t:Thltd PNEtrwMI
T-4:24 ~ 521 (4t 514)
Umplrt...-.Homt Tarry Craft

I

Pittsburgl'l 33:2
RUN&amp;-Pu101s St lou a 72 BAbreu
Phlladelphta 71 Bonds San Franctaco 71
Helton Colorado 66 JQfew Atlanta 65 Clay
ton Col001.do 64 lGonzalez Arlzona 6
RBI-Rolen St lou • 80 Casti Ia ColoraOo
71 Overbay Milwaukae 62 Burrel Ph Iadet
phla 62 Thorn&amp; Philadelphia 61 BAbreu
Pttlllldelphla 60: Griltey Jr C nctnnali 60
HITS-JWt son Pittsburgh 11a Qvertlay M1
waukee 112 Lorena San D,..,..o 112 Plem1
""'
Floridll 108 8igljl0 Hous1011 101 Rolen St
Lou a 03 Helton ColoraOo 102
DCUBLES--Owrt:Jay M !waukee 31 DeLee
Ch~o 29 Loretta Sen Diego 28 Cast lla
Colorado 2B M!ltsui New York 27 JEstrada
Atlanta 27 Helton Colorado 27
TRIPLES-JWI!son P ttaburgh 7 P erre
Florida 6 DRoberts Los Angeles 8 8areti&amp;d
wlth5
HOM! FIUNS-Thome Ph lade ph a 28
Dunn C ll(;mnat 25 Booda SQn Franctsco
23 PUjols St lOUtS 22 Beltre Las Angeles
22 JD ew Atlanta 21 SFm lay Ar zon!l 2t
STOLEN BASES--Jlodaedn k Milwaukee
34 ORotlerts Los Angeles 28 Pierre Florida
21 BAbreu Phladelphra 19 Freel Cincinnati
14 Rollms Phtladephta 14 Womack St
Lous 14
PITCHING (10 Deelalons)--Mitton Philadelpha 112 B46472Schmtdt SanFtaflCI"""
- .....
11 2 646 2 51 PW lson Ctncrma~ 9-2
818 366 Gemens Houston lD-3, 769
2 62 Carpenter Sl Lou s \J-3 750 3 50
VSantos Milwaukee 8 3 727 4 08 Li'na
Loo Angeles 8 3 727 4 32
STRfKEOUTS--AJoMnson Amona 145
Schmdt S&amp;n FumclSCO 134 BSheets Ml
waukee 133 Clement Ch csgo
23
Clemans Houston 121 OIPe ez Pittsburgh
117 O$wa~ Houston 116
SAIJE~raves Clnctnnall 33 Benitez
Florida 30 I&lt;"Oib M !waukee 26 Gagne Loa
Mgelas 23 Hoffman San DiegO 23 Herges
San Francisco 2*'sa Plttsb.Jrgh 22

Battered

July 12
1901 -CyVoong olltle Boston Red Sox won
hts 300111 game with a 5 3 llictory ova the
Phiadetph a A a

1945 - Tommy HOlmes of the Baston Bmves
went hfUeas to end his oonoocutrVEHJame hit
trng streak at 37 games an Nl record 111a1
stood~~~ Pete Rose broke it tn 1978
1941 -Larry Doby ol the Clevtlland lnd~s
and Jackte Robinson Roo; Campanella and
Don Newcombe oltl'le ho$1. Brook¥! Dodgefa
became the first black playa a to appear 1(1 an
AI Star game The AL took advamage of !tva
Nl errors to Win 11 7 at Ebbets FJSid
1951 - All ~e Reynolds ol the Nw York Yan
kees beat Bob Feller ot the lnd ans t.Q with a
n~&gt;-hrt game at Cleveland Gene Wooding s
home run was the difference
1965- St LoutS Sta.n Musiel M Frank Suntvana 111'31 prtch oi the 1211'1 lnnng 1or a home
M to giYe the NL All Star 1aam a 6-5 IIICt)(y
wertle AL at M~uke&amp;• County Stadium
117t-ln lhlil rnos1 ifl.lated promobon 111 baseban hrstory thousands of lans owrran the
Comr!k~ Park field dunng "DiiCO Demoition
Night" Bnd caused the Chk:ago Whrte Sox to
lorlell the MCOnd game of e doui:Aehaacler
attar lOSing to Detroit 4-1 In the first
19W - Meliclo Pefez pitooad the record tying
aevonlh no Ntter of ltle seaaon as the Ct1teago
Whits Sox bea1 the New Vorl( 't'ar*ees 8-0 i"l a
game shortened 1o Bb: rnntngs by ra!fl That
was one lnntng longer than lhe rain shortened
no-hitter pitched..., 1988 tv Melidas brother
Pa!ICual who wa1chld from the Yankeea

......
1804 - Tony

,_lOt(·-

II'""
1997- Francmco"Cordova and Ricardo Ancon cornbf'ted fer a 10 irlnng no-hitler 8.!1 the
PmstJurgh Pirates delea1ed the Houston
Aatroa 3-0 Cordova pllch&amp;d nine lnnlnga
walidwtl two and &amp;tri~ ng out 10 before b&amp;lng

removed

witli the score Q.O Rincon pi1ched
the 100'1
got: the Wrl when Marlo: Smith hit
a tl'vee-run homer n the bottom of the ll"'llllg

ai\:t

2001 - Mark" McGwire hit his 563rd harrlar to
Rewte Jackson lor soon on basebd'a
• •, hst rn a 7 Sloss to lhe Tigers It was atso

iif..

McGwire I 200tf1 h(;f118f" SlllCS toinWlg the Car
dNII rt1997 makflg-fh only tit 111ird play
81 In hiStory lo hit 200 homers lfl bott't leag~

BaNIMIIITOCII!y
-

-

SCOAEBOAAO
... ~12
AJ.Sia• Home Run Corby Bany -

Sammy Sou, and Ji'n Thome will

rwprMif1t

the Natlonaii.Ngua ~ .... Home Run Oe!by at
Minute Meki Plitt: In Hout1on The Amlrlcln

-

"" l1y Juon

•

0 - ll&lt;Md 0&lt;111.

RlfHl PINto lind Hat* BlaiOcM l&lt;ln llrlflty
Jr will miM b tYint blcluM ol a tam ~

-

In One· Week With
REACH OVER 285,000
PLUS YOUR AD N

UJ::ribune

-·-hu!"IObo

good, though, with a two-run homer m
the second lnning. Metgs got as close as
a run on two occastons, when Terry Durst
sin,led home a run in the third, then on
Oil 's two-run bla~t in the fourth.
Mason County travels to Winfield
Tuesday. Me~gs plays host to Athens
Jun1ors today.
M110n County 11, ,..1111 14
M11on 820 270 2 18 21 8
Molgo 501 204 2 ,. 10 2
Chris Barbo Jooh Millar (4) Ztb Rlld (8) Joth Whitlock (7)
and Ztb fllld Brandon Worner (6) Zeb Rlld (7) Jeromy
Blacl&lt;ston Andy Parsono (2) and Ttr"t Dural W - ChMs
Barbo L- Jeremy Blacklton HR- Mason 3 Joah Mlllar(6)
Dale Kestner (7) Daniel Tench (1) Me1gs 1 Doug D1ll (8)

'

•

Offtee ll()(if-~

Mtlf.S County OH

Co11nty OH

s

RO_SPECTS
ONLINE

Sentinel

l\egister

I~

Lr
___I'E_IISONAI
__..s_ _.JI
hllpUift J I OH
Ftnd your Ph1llpptne Lady
for Love and Happ ness
of a ltlet me
1 600-497 6414
F•l p na 4 Love com

•

r

GtVFAWAV

1

Dally In-Column. 1 00 p m.
Monday-flrlday for lnaertlon
Jn Next Day•a Paper
Su,ndl•y Jn .. Column: 1 00 p.m.
ror Sundeye Pap•r

1740)441-11668
5

K nens

to

•

Beaut•ful k •ttens free to good

home Calll740)446 2738
Border collre 2 years old
Good w th ktds (740)992

0325

sho\s Call 1740)388 8655

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Two cats ~th female One
pure gray one S1amese Call
(740)446 7558 after Spm

t

Los'!' AND
FOUND

Absolute Top OoUar US
Stiver and Gold Co!ns
Proofsets Gold Rmgs US
Currency M T S Con ShOp
151
Second
Avenue
GaUtpolts 740 448 2842

Found on Tturd and Grape
tittle dog Doberman lace
b(acklwhlle!brown
Black
collar (740)446 9961
Found 3 4 month old pup
Slack &amp; tan Well taken care
of Call (740)441 0847

with MRJDD has a vacant

(740)367 7737 or (740)367

000

o .. o... o ....

w1lhng

to

relocate

Diesel

Ij

L.-------,..1

Mechanic II

Hn.P WANJID

PM Shift

Ma1J

Posit1on ueleta aenlor

N1ce 2 and 3 bed room
mob te homes tor rent
1ncfudes walar sewer &amp;

.._~

.::Jut

1 888 582 3345

I

depos•t 1 year lease No
pets No calls after 9 00 PM

An Excellent way to earn
money The New Aovn
Call Martlyn 304-882 2645

1740)992 5039

r

••• o •

410

oooo630

Loll &amp; Acrol(lt ..

Ml-llanooutl.............. ..
Ml-llanoouo Marchandlat ....
810
Mobile Home Repair
Mobllt Hom11 for Rent. ..
..420
Mobllt Homto lor Salt....
.. .320
Money to Loan.:
..................
. 220
Motorcyclto &amp; 4 Wheetero
.... 740
Mualcal lnatrumtnta..
. 570
Ptroonala
,.................................... 005
Ptta for Bale
.580
Plumbing &amp; HHtlng.
820
Proftnlonal Bervlceo
. 230
Rodlo, TV &amp; ca Rapalr
.. 1eo
Rtal Eotate W.nted.
...380
Schoola lnotructlon.
. 150
Seed &amp; Fll1ftlzer
. 660
Sttuatlono Wanted .
. 120
Space forGoodo
Rent .....
.. 480
Sporting
.. .:::::::::::::::::::::::
000

Trucka/SUVIaa~.~fo~~rr
720
Upholattry .: ..IS~~a~~I'B~:::.: ::::.:::::: :::::::::::::::::::... 870

Vane &amp; 4-WDo
..
..
• 730
wanted to Buy...
- •
. 010
Wonted to Buy· Farm Supplleo ..
..820
Wanted To Do .. ...
.........;...... 180 •
Wanted to Ront
.. 470
Yard Sal• Galllpollo .
072
Yard Seiii-Pameroy/Middla
074
Yard Sal• PI Plesnnt
. 076

(74())985 4321

GllllpoHI CII'Ht College

experience preftrrtd

EOE
Submll resume to

68150

Beybtrry Drive
St Clalrovlllt OH 43950

DRIVBR8 1UW PAY
CLASS A COL NEEDED
.Earn bttwMn 45 OOK

W4N11D

ToDo

Aaalated Uvlng and extra
care tor your IOvtd one In my

home Coli (740)388-D118

$72K-$80K

sn

BEAUTIFUL

APART

MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES
AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood
Drive from 5344 to 5442 $10 001 TV 1 from $10 001
Walk to shop &amp; movies Call ~Jtce Se ized Property' lor
740 448 2588
!:qual more Info ca I (800)749
6107 ext P509

t..-li

j

~~T£

8299

Wanted 10 buy local fam•ly
atekl 20 50 acres lor prt
&gt;Jata uae a view water
WOOds meadows • plus
wlll be a good ne1ghpor
write
PO
Box
63
Middleport 011 45760 or ca ll

CONVENI!NTLV LOCAT
ED a AFFORDABLE!

614 238 4571

Grac loua ltv lng 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at VIllage
Manor
and
R lverstde
Apartments In Mrddleport
From S295 $444 Can 740
992 5064 Equal Houtlng
Opporluntties

42 small parts bins mount
ed on plywood Ready to
hang In your lhop or work
area
8 sell m scellaneoua small
tools
1991 Chevrolet wtndow van
wtth seats V-6 auto F'S

and

gunert

Colony
GMAC
(3a..}M2 5888

R . . llty

Call

I I '- \', I I \ I

Collaoo-es2-23e2

All 1'811 111181elldv...Uelng

••

oubjoct 1o tho 'odonlt
Howlnt Aot ot 11M

''*
which A880LUT! GOLDMINEI

eo vtrldlng rnoclllnHI
noollonl IIICOtlono

h lllogollo
ldvertiH "any

prefelenoe,llmlbltlon or
diiOf'lrMtdon Heed on
, . . DOlor, rwMgton. . .
-list ....... ~
orlfln or any lntlntton 10
nwlla any IIUCh

__

n ••.n•~

lrl ' I \I "'

,.,.,.. Wilt, UMtlltlon or
dltcrlmlrwtlon "

__

at Mktdleton Eltltll 82CM

Thie newepeper wll1 not

Carla Drive GaiUpollt OH

luiOwtltQfv IOOipl:
......... ltentt for rMI
11t1te whklh I• In
Ylolltlon of the l8w Our

,.....,.

1-thotoll

2 bedroom housa for rent n
Eureka $450 monthly $400

depos11 No pets (740)441
0583 1740)258-6408
2
bedroom
house
n
Gampous
No
pets

1740)379 2400

Townho use
apartments
and/or smau nouses FOR

RENT Call 1740)441 1111
for applic ation &amp; Information

Modern

1

bedroom

apt

Phone 1740)446-o390
New Haven 1 bedroom lw
n shed apartment has w/ta
no pets &lt;leposlt &amp; refer

ences (740)992 0165
Pleasant Valley Apartment

The Harold Dispatch hea
motor routes available It
Interested call Andy; 1 -8()0..

-nlly-

2 bedroom house In Mason
$350 month $350 dapos1t
no pets avatllblt Aug , st

Financing awllallle with A
OOWN
PAYMENT

2-3 Bedroom House 21 07
Uncoln Ave PI Pleasant

888 2634 elri llt:f1 or 304526-2807

Mortgage Locators

No i&gt;ota $400month Oap &amp;

Are now takm~ ""'hcat10ns
lor 2BA
3BR &amp; 4BR
Appucat ons
are
taken
Monday thru Frrday from
900 AM 4 PM Officers
Located at 1\51 Evergreen
Ort\le Potnt Pleasan1 WV
Phone No s (30")675 5806

C&lt;)lnl'lny 74().992 7321 •

References (30")675..4844

EHO

Paramedlel
&amp;
EMTI
needed
Apply at 13M
JaCkSon Pike QalllpoUa

tQht

of the fact that th
ental health ot our dent
a our llrst concern Cal
sychologlcal Trana Jtlona
77 734 2031
or
1a
esuma
734-2030

Buy
or
sell
R•veni'IB
1 br upsta1rs apt S275 + Ant1ques 1124 €asl Ma1n
uti &amp; depoSit ret reqwred on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
992 2526
Russ Moore
740.379 9511

1740)448 4425

or leave mMHge

_...,
_ _ _ _ _ _ __

&lt;\mlQUtS

Jim (740)992 7321

o95% No touch freight
oNO FORCED NYC

(ocro11 from gall
8 llconaed psychologist 45631
ou can work 0 few or 8 ~ course) (no phone calla
any hours 11 you want
ple818) Muet apply In per·

1 Br Cottage $350 mon1h all
ut1ht1es ncluded S 150 secu
nty depOSit (304)675 3654

___,

,(7i.4ir0,;;)6;,;45~45;,;1;;3~--.., _
Houolng Opportunity
_..:..,_ _ _ __

Bank Owned Home Mason I
WV S18 800 Mlk.t Sitek Old

(740)446-D151 Ill&lt; lor Ron

their Jullet1 potential you more poworlulthon MLM IF
may put your lj)pllcatlon In llerlouo-80Q.305-7949

that you need We 818
ainea that never loeH

(304)458

houN a.

Iter • good atoning ..lary
naflll which Include llablt

r )Ob 1110 bUI collect I
1ve )"01.1 the support aerv

1125 000

1519

Two homesltellor sale Both
one acre mil 3 112 miles
!rom Holzer Hospital
620 Evergreen Ad S19 500
MO Evergreen Ad $18 500
CIU
(740)448·8840 'Or

r

ii~,;;,;;;.;,;,,;,;;,;;

lnga

.Home WHk.tndt
•$500 llgnoC)I'J bonUI
.start at 38 cpm

HIRING A loading
provldor to lndlvklualt wi111
MRIDD II looking lor d~tct
care atan In Golllpolla No
experience noc-ry $8 35

wv

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepa r 675 7388 For sale
re condrt o 1ed
automatiC
washeli &amp; dryers refr gera ..
tors
gas and
electr c
ranges a1 r cond111oners and
wnnger wa shers Wtll do
repa1rs on majOr brands n
shop or at your home

mobile homll m\1111 build

Will Preuur• Wuh

ptr hour Pa6d training If you
Ill for 110,tH
'NOUid llkl to join our team 10
~ 100-231 8112
'-.:;::&gt; help Individuals achieve Are U II motl¥8ted? 1 OOX

our Job Is 10 eee people

RENT

Home with 5 ecrtl or 1111
AU caah Muat not be Jlated
with a reel estate company

.Min 1 year exp

e are a wei~ raspected
thlcal national practlc
eallng with geriatrics W

ty and health lnauranc
nd a 401 K We ara In n

FOR

Retngerator and Electnc
Stove Mo vrng must se I Call

Beautiful unfurnlal"'ed one 2003 Cub Cad et r 1d l n~
bedroom apt o1Jerlook1ng mower 42" Inch cui 17 HP
City
Ftark
references Used 3 t mes Asktng $3 000
reQuired no pett tecurlty OBO
depoall S400 per month Troybllt tillar lasa tHan 6 yrs .
Call
(740)446 2325
or old $600 OBO 1740)441

Goorgoo Pllrtoblo Sowmlll
don't haul your k»gg to the
m111Jul1 call 304-871H 1157

~::D:Ir:~::r:o:I:N~u=ro~l~~ · NOW
r
PSYCHOLOGIST

1519

22 acres on Hoback Road
oft Old State Route 124 In
&lt;4 Acres with 14~~:80 Newer
East Racine
1 949 770
Mobile Home Surrounded
4768
C81
I
949
433
1518
by 10 000 acres lor hunt ng

(740)354 5433

Attn Katrina Dunaway

AN

APAtrr\1ENTS

pels (740)446 0139

170 Acres tn Leon WtU sell
together or n large sections
$1 000 per acre (304)458

Call Todeyl 740 446-4367
Hl00-214«52

111

ICAIE

r

lnlo (740)448 7377

1
.

Good Used A pplrances
Recond ! toned
and
Guaranteed
Washers
Dryers
Ranges
and
Refr ge a to s Some start at
$95 Skaggs Appliances 76
Vme St (740)446 7398

1 bedroom stove and retng
Reta1l or off ce space lor erator fu rniShed ut lites Used Furn lure Sto re 130
lease m Downtown Gathpohs mcluded $400 month p us Aulavtlle
PtKe
Dresser
for more r Uo 1 740 379 depos1t (740)245 5859
couches mattresses redln
9511
ers gra11e monuments 2001
bedroom
complete Pontoon boal much more
krtchen
centra
a r (740)448 4782 Gall1pohs
Aelerences &amp; depos11 No QH Hrs 1 1 3 M F

(Careers Clo11e To Home)

Dispatchers needed tor local
Ambulance
Servlca
WNW gallpOiiiOifMCOII';I oom
Experience preferred but not
neceuary Shift Evenlnge Mer.OI11td ftt•mb.r Aoc~ltfng
COunct lor tndlplndant Co r.gu
nlghta &amp; all on weekendl ·~Schools 12748
Call (740)256 6476
Pleaae apply !n pertOn 0
ISM Jacklon Pike or call
!iyr old 3br 2ba Ranch
Monday Friday Sam 1 2pm
Home &amp; 8 acre• In Leon

Federal and State home

hulth regulation JCAHO

3BR on 5 129 acres Green
'rownsh1p close to schoo l
Asking price $89 bOO More

Goou;

1740)446 3053

1 and 2 bedroom apa I
ments furn1shed and unlur
ntshed
sec ur ty deposit
requ red no pels 74Q-992
2218

3 bedroom 2 bath 2 car
attached garage basement
1900 sq f1 I wrg space 2
outbuildings s1ts on 3 acres
Eastern .School
Dl&amp;tr~ct
Cheater Townshtp on Rt 7

HOUSEHOLil

trash no pets start•ng at Mo lohan Carpet 202 Clark
$300 per montf'l n Shade
Chapel Road Porter Ohio
area
depos t
reqwed
(740) 446 7444 1 877 830
(740)992 2167
9162 Fee Esl!mates Easy-_
Small 2 bedroom mob• e ftnancmg 90 days s01me as'
home
In
Middleport cash V1sa/ Master Card
$200 00
rent
$200 00 Dnve a ltttl8 save alol

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Wml

Resume to 8202 Carla Rumpke 16 the leader In the
Dnve Gallipolis OH 45631 waste lndualry

~

PR~vt~AL

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304

. . ..020
......... 130

• io

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _=::.;;.;..:::.!..;.::;:;.;:.;:.;.;;;.J

r.1n:1oi!"'------..,,,110
HEll WAJ'(IFJ)

degree plus 2 years ell:pert
ence or 5 years experience

or tax lo 740 446 3987

Glasses found at Krodel
Park to tdent1fy check at the
pt PI Aegtster

www comlc:a com

L~:.c,;.::.::=::.;.::;.:;.:..

"Entry Level Management/
PosttiOn" Pealer college

ICFIMRDD Facility Must be
Found Walker Coon Hound
female At 554 near Eno.

N1ce 98 Fleetwood 3 bed 3Br Tratler wtth Wa sher and
room 2 bath wtlh central Dryer
(304)576 2934 or
a1r thermal pane wndows 1304)593 4496
and IOX20 shed Immediate
occupancy
avatlable Beauttfu nver v•ew Ideal for
$1499500 Call
Harold one or two people No pets
1740)385 7671
refe re nces (740)441 0181

HELP WANil'D
A leadtng provtder of sup
port services to 1ndlv1duals

\II Itt II\ '\DISI

FOR RENT

1740)385 9948

..., I I(\ II I ._,

Announcement ..........................................:..... 030
Antiques
530 675 1429
Apartments lor Rant ..
440
Call tor somethtng you
Auction and Flea Market
080
believe 1n
Auto Parts &amp; Accasoorlas
760
and make great money
Auto Repair
' no
domg 1tl
Autos for Sale
710
Can on behalf of maJor
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
. 750 ' Non Profit and Political
Building Supplies
550
orgS:ntzatrons
Business and Buildings
340
and earn up to $81hour
Business Opportunity
.. 210
plus bonuses We otter
Business Training
140 patd tratn1ng pa1d holidays
Campers &amp; Motor Homos
790
and pa1d ~Jacallons
Camping Equipment .
780
Fult and Part time shlf1s
Cards ofThanks
010
avaUable
Call today to schedu(e an
Elactrlcai/Refrlgaratlon
..840
tnterv1ew!
Equipment for Rent..
. 480
t-877..e63-6247 ext 2456
Excavating
830
www lntocl•lon com
Farm Equipment .
...610
Farmo for Rent
430
Farma for Sala
. 330
For Lease... .
.490
Med l Home Health
For Sale or Trade
. 580
Agency Inc seeking a
fulf·llme AN Clinical
Fruita &amp; Vagetablea .
..580
Olractor tor the Gallipolis
Furnlahed Rooma
460
Ohio
General Hauling
850
Jocatkm
Giveaway.
..040
Happy Act.
.. 060
Posttlon Aequlree OH
Hay &amp; Grain
... 640
and
WV AN Hcensura
Htlp Wanted
.. 110
minimum two ytlrt of
Home lmprovemtnlo
....810
home health nura!ng
Homtt for Slit .... ..
..310
8llper lence In a manage
HouHhold Goodo
.. 510
mont rolo knowtldgl ol
Houua for Renl

r

·-------,.J
W4N11D
roBuv

I \11' 1 U) \JI \ I

CLASSIFIED INDEX

In Memoriam
lnaurance
Llveotock.
Loti and Found ...

close to town no pets $400 Tw n Rtve s Tower IS accept
plus depos i (740)446 6890 ing apphcatrons for watt ng
after 5 30pm
list tor Hud substzed 1 b
91 Sunshine 16x80 3 bed
apartment cat 675 6679
room 2 fun baths heat
Finane ng avatlabte wtth tiQ EHO
pump I yr old Needs DQWN PAYMENT! Less
moved $13 900 1740)446 than pertect credtt accepted I
WANTFD
2923
Own don t rent Local com
TO R~'Nl
For sale or Jent 2 bedroom pany Mortgage locators
mobtle homes slart ng at 1740)992 732 1
Aelocatmg to Gal l polls
5270 per month Call 740
Fam1ty wants to lease mce
SmaU one bedroom house n
992 2167
home wtth at least 3 beet •
Mason $250 a month $250
rooms w th garage needed,
Good used 3 bedroom depos t no pets (304)773
lmmed ate y Celli Jack e
5604
14X70 ncludes central atr
740 707 7999
740 589
Only $10 995 00 Includes
5258
W
MOBILE
HOMES
delivery
Call
Ntkk

1108

I ~~--~----.,

Male Australian Shepherd
m x w/Boxer very lnendly

APART\1FNili
FOR RENT

RENT

(304)675 7783 or 304 882

blue eye /one brown eye
(304)882 3438

j

FOR

2 Bedroom Trailer ca I 3
bedroom
house
1n Pan eroy two 2 bed oom
(304)875 5217 good condt M1dd eport $425 a month apartments R &amp; S tur
110n
plus depostt no 1ns de pets mshed
wid
hook up
1740)992 3 194
Nay or s
Run
a ea
3Br 12x85 w /Add1t1on C/A
1740)992 6886
$3 500 080 must be moved 3 bed room G een Dtstr ct

Lost Corn Hollow Road I
Hobart heavy duty meat Beech Grove a rea Patnt
sheer Ca I (740)446 0115
horse(mostly white) one

worm mtle &amp; flea treatment
(7401367 os6s

HousES

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE

lwrlght®lc net

able 1740)446 2717 eave 6049 or (740)591 2805

7591 tor message

Dog needs country home
w 1th good famtly 1 1/2 yr
med1um s•ze female Has

POUCIES Ohio Vallay Publlehlng r•Mrvea the right to edit, reJ-c:t or cancel eny 1d et an~ time Enors must be reported on the ftrat day of
Trlbun.-hndntt..,.~~glst.r will bl rnppnalbla fpr no mora than the coat of the •PK• occuplad by the error 1nd only the flr1t ln..rtlon We
'"V ION or expeMe that rMr.tltl from the publication CM' oml. .lon of an advertleemenl Correction will ba madeln the flrat sv1ll1ble ed tlon
. . 11Wtty1 oonflctentla/ oCu""nt rate card •ppl... • All raat ntate ed.,..rtlhmenta aN
to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1968
. .nted
at.ndlrda Wa will not knowingly
In violation of the law

message

giveaway

1304)882 2436

• All act. must be prepaid'

~a:

2 Female Huntmg dogs 1
b!ack/tan &amp; wh tte &amp; 1
Rust/white at Eureka Dam

2 female pups cute/playfu l
mu1.ed Spitz/Lab 10 weeks
old 1st sho1s and wormed

1

Lost In Peach Fork area July
5th Chtlds pet (740)992

ANNOUNCEMENlli 1 (740)949 2709

C 1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
for sa le Chesler Townsh1p
Metgs County send IaMers
of mterest to The Da1Jy
Senllnel PO Box 729 20
Pomerov. Ohto 45769

r

All Dlaplayl 1:1. Noon 2
Bueln••• Deya Prior To
Publication
Sunday ~~~~:.~~~"!;~~~ p,;.=:,;.
Thunday for

H81p save 2 Beagle type Lost 6 month Boston Terr er
female pups lrom the pound
1 cant keep them Very lov

K1ttens 9 weeks o d Black or
grey &amp; white Have had

Man 66 Seeks a Woman tor
Romance PO Box 722 Poca
25159

wv

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
"""
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

• Stat1 Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlons
• Include Phone Number And Addrees When Needed
• Ad• Shoukl Run 1 D•v•

Items
\'\\01 \{I \II\

Oead'tit~M'

Word Ads

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

(740)256 1438

I

..

'

~-'

dwHinge Mit"'*"' In
thl1 118WSpcpc: . .
.vaiiMtllon~n..-

Local

25

I

.. -

(7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

GIVEAWAY

Norway's Thor Hushovd won Sunday's htlly but
fast stage through Bnttany m western France, usmg a
dosmg burst of speed to cl31m the I04-mlle stage
from Lamballe to Qmmper tn 3 hours, 54 mmutes, 22
seconds ArrnstroAg remamed m stxth place overall,
9 nunutes and 35 seconds behmd leader Thomas
Voeck:ler
After Monday's day off, the Tour swmgs for three
days through the Masstf Central, a mountamous
agncultural plateau of central France that wt ll offer a
foretaste of more brutal clunbs that lurk further south
m the Pyrenees and then . .m the final week, m tne
Alps There, muscular spnnters wtll gtve way m the
mountams to more mmble chmbers and all-arounders
like Annstrong
"We'll start to see the start of the real race,"
Armstrong satd Sunday evemng before boardmg a
flight that look nders south to the Masstf Central
"There are a few days that are not so selecttve, but
then we have the mountams and the start of the real
Tour"
More than half of the 188 nders who started the
Tour have been mvolved m crashes m the n~rvous
ahd mostly flat first week that took the Tour through
Belgtum, mto northern France and, on Sunday. to the
Bnttany town of Qmmper, near the AtlantiC coast
A dog sc'V'lpenng mto the pack of nders near the
end of Sunday's stage took down French nder
Samuel Dumoulin, who ftrushed nearly II mmutes
behmd Hushovd.
"Hts elbow's swellmg I have to get some 1ce" satd
Dumoulm's team manager, Vmcent Lavenu, cuttmg
short a telephone lntervtew
Armstrong_ escaped senous mJury m a fall on
Fnday, and Hamilton 1s sui! sore from a sptll
The crashes are largely due to ram that has doused
the race and shckened roads, early nerves and the
h1gh speeds of the first week, where stages have
ended wllh mass spnnts Teams looking to shepherd
the1r leaders toward the front of the pack, out of trouble, fueled ptters by boxmg for pos1t1on
"Eve~ ttme I do the Tour, we talk about tt bemg
the crazte~t one to date But thts year has defimtelr,
been tough wtth the weather and all of the crashes, '
satd Amencan Bobby Juhch raGtng m hts seventh
Tour "Once we get mto the mountams,1t's really mce
There's a lot less stress ''
Amencan Tyler Ham1lton ts 36 seconds behmd
Armstrong m the overall standmgs, and nval Jan
Ullrich ts 55 seconels behmd the 32-year-old Texan
"I had trouble because tt was slippery and dan~erous," swd Ullrich, the 1997 champton and five-ttme
runner-up
All three nders clocked the same ttme as Hushovd
Ullrich finished 21st, Hanni ton 30th, and Annstrong
33rd
Voeclder may be able to hang on to the overall
leader's yellow Jersey mto the Pyrenees, before
Annstrong and other top challengers look to )ake 11
from hts :Z~·year-old shoulders
fie IS among a stnng of young nders who have
stolen the show from veterans 10 the first week
Hushovd, 26, beat veteran German Enk Zabel, 34,
into third place on Sunday. Kim Kirchen, a 26-year·
old from Luxembourg, was second
The stage victory, secllt'ed with a burst of SPQed on
the final uphill spnnt, was the Norwegtanchampton's
second in four Tours H1s first was m 2002
"Today really was my day I'm very happy," satd
Hushovd, who also placed third m the first stage, second 10 stage two and wore the leader's yellow Jersey
for one day m his standout first week
'The Vikings have returned to Bnttany," satd
Hushovd, who's atmmg to wm the green Jersey as
best spnnter when the Tour fimshes tn Pans on July

!!'

Cllll~

from Page 81

This Date In Baseball

IP H PI IR II 10

S..'rwncllclo

Meigs

•

lib rhbl

2 00 0

Two of Mason County's long balls
came m the f1rst mmng. Dale Kestner's
three-run shot, then a two-run homer by
from Page B1
Tench gave the V.ISitors a fast S-0 advan·
tag c.
(four earned) on nine hits earned the vtc·
Metgs however, answered With Its own
tory by tossing the first three 1nmngs - handful of runs m the bottom half of the
Mason County used four dtfferent·pnch- ramy frame After an error allowed one
ers .as'Mlller, Zeb Reed and Whitlock run to score, Angelo Hardy knocked tn
also logged mnings
two m ore wtth a double to nght field A
Losmg pitcber Jeremy Blackston gave groundout off. the bat of Dave McClure
UJ! seven rung, all commg on three home allowed another man t? cross home, then
'ni'tJs m less than two mmngs of work the second of Mason s s1x total errors
Andy Parsons came on 10 the second allowed the home team to even the score
mnmg and fimshed the game
M1ller gave Mason County the lead for
I

Nl Leaders

Gw)m
pllllvln
Aodrig•z on Moleee Nou't double i"l thltOth
ton no to giva the Nl. .-. 8-7 vlclory lllld end 1111
record IIW~f}lB losing 111111~ r1 the All-Star

Glanta 3, D'backs 1

\Wel:i:J p
35 912 a

""

STRIKEOUTS-5antsna t.t nnespta 136
Schll ng Boston 118 PM art naz Boston
112 FGarcla ChiCBg&gt; 105 lambrerno Tam
pa Bay 98 Buehrle Chicago 98 U ~Toronto
95 JVazquez. New York 95
SAVE5-MRrvera New 'lbrt.; 32 FCorde o
Texas 2.7 Nathan M~natl018 2'J DBae:t
Tampa Bay 17 Perc IIlii Anal'le m 15
Guardado Seante 5 Urt11na Dat,.,. 4

;::.,.,.,,.........,=;.:-.,.....---(
Dodgers 7 Aatroa 4
Houston

Expos 2 Pirates 1
Fltttlburgh
1b rhbl
Kandafc 3010
JWsnss 4000

Padres 4, Rockies 2
""'"'"""lib
abrhbl

Colorlclo

abrhbl
abrhbl
Furcal 55 5 1...2 0
Aollirn&gt; ss 5 0 1 0
NGreen 2b 5 0 2 0 Planco 2b 5 0 1 0
JOrewrf 52 4 2 BAbreul1 4 1 2 0
CJanesJb 41 2 0 Thometb 4 0 0 0
JEstda c 5
0 Burrel I!
411
JuFrco1tl 41 2 3 Lede&amp;cl 31 1 0
AJonw.;ct 4 o 0 0 OaBell3b 31 1 2
Merolf 5030 Lbrthalc 4010
RuOrtizp 1 000\Wollp
000 ,1
Altnsca p 0 0 0 0 RHrndl: p 0 0 0 0
Rrtsmap 0000 Mchelsph 0000
Thmasph 1 0 0 0 M!ldsonp 0 0 0 0
Smoltzp 1 000 Worrell p 0000
Utleyph
1000
8Wijjnrp 0000
Tobit. 40 1116 5 Tolll•
33 4 8 4

IP

Reds9,Brewers6

RiedlllltJ

Phill

PITCHING (10 Decl•lon•)---CtLee Cleve
land 9-l 900 3 n Mulder Oakland 12 2
857 321 Buehrle ChiCago 9-2 1318 403
Rogers Texas 12 3 800 -4 21 PMartirrez
Boston 9-3 750, 3 67 Sch~l .-.g Boston 11
4 733 3 16 JA111C011 Mnnesota 8-3, 727

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

UJ::ribune- Sentinel CLASSIFIED

from Page 81

BA~Rodtiguaz. Detroit 369: Men
Baltmore 3o&amp; 7 VGuerrero Al\aheln 345
MRamlrez Boslon 34-4 MVoof!g Texas
332 ASenchei Delre~ 325 CGu len

i3

22 19

www.mydallysentinel.com

Stewart

ALI.eaders

20-19
23
21 21
2D-27

W2

64
55

7
71.

Ae.ultl

,.,

- .6 - w2 - -2.. 22

2
15

551

Homo

Monday, July 12, 2004

----~;------------~--~------~---

(304)77J 5804

PB /VC
Ml&amp;eelleneoua other 1tems
553 Jackaon Pike In rear
Phone 740 441 2667 10
am 5 pm
Computer desk hutch type
on ro ers exce tent cond1
tlon Large COCkahel cage
and parakeet ca~ on stanQ
{740)949 2328 No.answer
eave me$S8Q&amp;

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aeparred New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Can Ron E11ans 1

BOO 537 ~528
Pole Barn 30M50x,O only
$5 295
Includes patnted
metal P'ans now to Durld
book Fllder free delivery

(937)559 834 I

---"'---

�.

.

...
•

.,

'
Page B4

'

o

The Daily Sentinel
. Help Wanted

··-

Monday, July 12, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

~onday, July 12, 2004

ALLEY OOP

Help Wanted

..

www.mydailysentinel.com , .

•

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, weonesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm . Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Wh itfield Pellet Slave. Duerr
Commercial Duty Rated 10
HP Chipper vacuum new
$500 .;.ach . (740}446·7857.

r

BUll .DING
SuPI'l.l~

Block. brick, sewer pipes.
windows, lintels. etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH

Call 740·245-5121.

t

PETs

mRSAI.E

AKC Shelties [Mm1ature
Collies). 10 weeks old. sable
&amp; white, beautiful &amp; smart
like Lass1e! $350, Albany

(740)698·6049

=)B:,'l'",~~,,~'~~11::,::
(J04 )6 75-.'iW.\

Alder
www.aep.com
AM~RICAN ELECTRIC POWER
COMPANY'S GENERAL JAMES M.
GAVIN PLANT,.LOCATED IN
GALLI A COUNTY OHIO, lS
SEEKING PERSONNEL IN THE
OPERATION.S DEPARTMF:NT.
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS ARE
· AN ASSOCIATEffECHNICAL
AND/OR EQUIVALENT. REGULAR
FULL-TIME POSITIONS.
OVERTIME ANI} ROTATING SHIFT
SCHEDULE AS REQUIRED. ENTRY
. LEVEL WAGE RATE OF PAY IS
$14.18 PER HOUR. BENEFITS
INCLUDE M[DICAL, DENTAL,
VISION. 401 K AND RF:TIREMENT.
INTERES'I'ED CANDIDATES
SHOULD CALL f-800-300-18511
AN EQUAL OPPORTUN ITY
EMPLOYER-MIFID/V
I \H\1 "t l 1'1'1 II..,
t\ I I\ I 'illlt h.

rlO

FAKM

Jack.

$250

FRun,; &amp;
VEGf71ARI .•-s
Bfackbernes. you p1ck a1
Virgil's berry patch. on Stal e
Route 124, jus t south ol
Syracuse.

HOMEGROWN SWEET
CORN

MOTEL,

Gallipolis.

OH

(740)446-9442.

01 Grand Prix GT. bronze

. mist

leather interior. sun·
roof. Onstar. BOSE stereo
Davis 20+4 Trencher 4· w/cd . headsup display. pci'1.
wheel d[lve 4 way grater· tshed aluminum wheels.
blade . W1scons1c En gine 43.000 miles. excellent con·
Runlwor,ks well $3,300 or dit1on. 1740)992-7573
possible trade on farm trac1993 Geo Metro, s; sp. , 3 cyl ,
tor. (740)245·9692.
c!d player. good body &amp;
rractor parts &amp; service. spe· tires. baO mQtor. $200.
ci alizing
in
Massey (740)992-7065
Fe rgu son
. F~d ,
and :___..:.__ _ _ _ __
Belarus. (74Q)696.0358
1998 Monte Carlo very good
conditio.n (304)675-5049

Starling July f st.'Available at F10

CHARLES W. MCKEAN
FARM AND WILLIAM ANN

I

L,r.10.·-oiloii;iiiRUfOsiiSiiAiiil:iiiE-_.J

AUI'OS

S

1..,--fii'OiliRi.iiiAiiljj,
.~O....,J
$5001

Honda's. Ct'levy·s
Jeep·s, etc Police Impounds
Cars from $500. For listings
1-800-749-8104 ext 3901
· 1998 BuiCk Century $5,800

(304)576·297 1

2002 Ford Focus, 5 speed.
AC . Moon-Roof. 6 · disc/CO
player. tilt, Cruise. power
windows (740)446· 2188

SELL
YOUR AUTO
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

He

Pomeroy

IF YOU RENT

BINGO 2171

What would you lose if there was a fire?

Every Tliursday

We can insure your valuables! ~
For a Free Quote or Appointment 1

SIN£.

Contractor

Residential &amp;
Commercial
Houses. porches,
Garages , Pole
Barns, Roofs,
Renovations ·
740-949-1606
740-591-1053

Eagles

Call:

Rocky Hupp Insurance
•
~and Financial Se1rvic:e~;~

Last Thursday of
every·month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Gel'

6:30

Box 189 ·Middleport

'740-843-5264

SFREE

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

J~728SI.

Rl:. 143 • Pom~~rO)', OH 45169
}U$1. off St. Rt. 7 •

878-2497

t -866-410-0555

~· ~~

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

JONES'

316

Dr.

K.

Kelly

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West
South
2 NT

..

26164

Jones

Pomeroy, Ohio

820 East Main Sl. • Pomeroy
hesi de Larry 's Fruit Stand

Wt~rrant y Scrvkc For Briggs~ Slrntt~.&gt;n , K o hl er,
Roi-A ir C(Jnmrc~sor~. Cl~lpbe~J ~ Hau sfeld,

·

Ort!gou Clm111 saws &amp; All Equ•pment
S&lt;.~les &amp; Scrvicl.' fur The Gcnl·rac Standby Home ·
Genc ratin ~ IO.O&lt;Xl &amp; 12.000 wan. LP or nmu ral gas
•
Ri)l -Air A ir Compressor
Open 8:1HI-6:3fl M-f;Sal. 8:011-J:OO 992- IOJ3 .
Pick· up and deli ve ry service

~

oved to New Localio
cross from GalliS Count
air Grounds!

740-992-6454
· TIIII AIIIIWirtll
15% Ill VIII' lllllr
11$28.......

Cavalier, $3,895:
1996 Saturn, $2.495; 199
utlass Cirea. $1 ,995
thers in stock.

.....

740 446.0103

~~

I

'I'ROC'KS

lbcllltiiS wll'lldlnl

I'ORSAI.E
V·8.

350

Residential &amp; Manufactured' Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen)f, •
· , · ..., •
• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
·• .... :; ~"
.
,., ...,.... ,.,11&lt;1111''
• Huge Inventory
'
~ ·~ :_,;.: ',
• Vanguard Ventle~s Fireplaces ",;§;~:il!':

1995 Je ap Cherokee Sport
$2,900 neg. (740)446-0519
97 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Limited. EXcellenl condition,
73,000 miles, $9,600. 740...
388-9649 or 74Q-388.01 73.

1

~!'.e'!!! ~~!'!!

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

'=======~~~~~===:::::

94
FordEdition.
F-150. Auto
4x4, Eddie
Bauer
trans I
with overdrive, power win·

dows &amp; poW8f locks, cruise,
137,000 ' miles.

$5,100. (740)446-2923 or
304-675-0053-- evenings.
Blue 2000 Ford ExplOrer

XLT5_7:516. miles, Power
windows , seats &amp; mirrors ,
Keyless/entry,
leathef,
Loaded
$~ 1,500
cBII

(304)576-25!11

· 40

r

MOTORCY&lt;rnl
I

BUILDERS InC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garag,es'J
• Replacement

1

Advertise
in thiS
space
·
fOr
$50 per
" month

Barnhart Builders

3o years experience
•New H.omes
·Log Homes
•Posl Frame

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

'

992-2975

•Roofs

ommerc.ial and
Residential
Free Estimates

740-667-6080
Tuppers Plain ,

THE BORN LOSER

1Aw11 a11d Garde11 Equipme11t is our ·

TOt&gt;~&gt;..Y

1:) \l\C. f'IR.:,Hlf\.YOF'
mE::~Tor
1
YOUR. LIF'E.!

business, not o,ur sideline

Manning K. Roush
0

Owner

Open 1 days a week!

·Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine,

FREE ESTIMATES

•••';.IW" .
Rocky

R.B.

...___~

Trucking
o

HAULING:
Limestone

o

Sand

'
JIJST REMEMI!ER,
'mE 6ETTER T~E

IMPORTS

PLA'&lt;ER, TilE MORE
IMPORTANT Ti-lE

MENTAl. GAME
BECOMES ..

• Dirt

97 Honda 7SO Nlte Hawk.

.

•

~.

1356 College Rd.

by Lora · .Syracuse, OH 45779

PUBLIC BID ADVER·
bruca.ratekln Od...ot In the amounl ol
• Birthdays
·
740-992-0122
ata.ob.ua
· Thirty Dollars ($30) new. $2 ,700, (740)247·2031
TISEMENT
Bide
wUI . be Sealed b.Ida wilt be per sat payable lo For Sale: 2002 Honda 250
• Weddlnga
Quality work for a fair
price
,_lved by ·the Ohio
racelved far the fol- TREASURER, STATE Aollox s~ooler. 500Q mi.
•
Any
special
All.
work
guaramced
lowing
trade:
De!Nirtlllent
ol
· OF OHIO. ·No more · E&gt;&lt;cellonl condlllon. $3,900.
occasion
Master Ce11ified
Admlnlatratlvo
CONTRACT- General
than lhree (3) eeta will Call (740)388-0822.
S.rillceo,
Genoral
ASSOI;IATI;'S COST be provided on a
Place your order
Mechanics Briggs &amp;
S.rvtc..
Dlvlalon,
EST
today
Strntton. KotJier.
refundable belli to •
BoATSillR&amp;S~~RS
Murray. MTD All
Olllce ol the Slate
$750,000.00'
Bidder. Plan rooms
."'aLL
•
(740) 985-3917
makes &amp; models $10.00
Architect,
4200
UNTIL
THURSDAY, may acquire . docuSurface ·
Road, • J ULY 22, 2004 @ 2:00 menls
Lora Bing
off any purchase of
wllhout
a 12' Fiberglass tistling boat,
$20,00 wilh this ad.
Columbuo,
Ohio
P.M. LOCALTIME, and depoall.
trailer, lully equipped. Call
43228-13951or the tolDOMESTIC
STEEL (740)448-9791 _
will be opened and
RE&lt;IUIRElowl~~i Project:
read publicly at the USE
Pu:lj...-t No.
General
Servl~a
ME.NTS, AS SPECI· 1985 Bass Master Bass
137
Dlvl1ion, Olllce of lila FlED IN 'SECTION boat w1th 60 H.P. Johnson &amp;
ODOT- Salt Storage
OF
Slate Archltac:t lmme- 153.011
THE Motor Guide 'Troll.e r &amp; other
dlalaty thar..tter.
Domea
REVISED
CODE accessories. (740)245·5637
•
Laurelville,
OH
A pre-bid meellng will
APPLY TO THIS PROSt Rt681 Darwin, OH
(Hocking County)
be held on July 8, JECT, COPIES OF 2001 Odyssey 21 ' Pontoon
740-992-7013
or740-992~5553
Marlena,
OH
2004 at 10:00 a.m. at SECTION
153.0.1 t boat 60 HP. Mercury motor,
lleJtockhrJ late 1\b/t&gt;l Sahage
(Wuhlnglat;'l County)
The Ohio dtlpertment CAN . BE OBTAI.I'IED trailer, depth finder, other
tuppaq Plelno, OH . of
Tranaportatlon, FROM ANY OF THE extras. New condition .
and Arter M&gt; rl&lt;et Paris
(Metgl County)
Dlllrlct
10 OFFICES ' OF THE $9,500, (740)446-4782 . .
See Brent or Brian Whaley
Belpre,
. OH
Headquartero,
338 DEPARTMENT
OF
'-I II' II I "
(Wallington County)
Muaklngum
Drive, ADMINISTRATIVE
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
-In accorcllnce with Marietta, OH.
SERVICES.
iiO
HOME ,
the Drawlngo and
Bidding document• The · bidding doeu- L,--IMPKoliiiiiiiliiVEMENTSIIIiiiOoi~ Sal. 8:30-Noon
Speclftcatlona premey be obtained from manta
may
be , ,
Sun. Closed
the Ofllca ollhe Stele
'f*811 by:
during
bullBASEMENT '
Sblta
Archi1Kt'a
Architect,
4200 reviBwed
neoa houra
II the
WATERPROOANG
r
Surface
Road, Olllce ol the State Unconditional lifetime guar·
4200 Burleca Road
Columbuo,
Ohio Architect, local F. W. antee. Local reiBrences furColumbua, Otf43228
43228-13&amp;5, Dodge and Buildera ni!'hed.,. Established · 1975 .
Bruce
Ralekln,
Anentlon :
' Renee Exchange
Plan Call 24. Hrs. (740) 446Project Manager
Keya, 614-5016, lhtp- Rooms.
.
0870, Rogers Basetneht
~:814-644-5813 ' plng r;harg.. collact, . (6) 29, (7) 6, 12, 3 tc
~aterprooling .
F.. : 814-644-7982
lJy placing a dapoSit

r

'

8,

I

Whaley's Auto
~
Parts

no-2003-

'=============::;==.

omca

Advertise in this

Space for_
$50 per month

.

600D!n.IAT
MEANS! DON 1T .
I-lAVE TO Til INK .

AT ALL!

•Ag Lime

740·985-3564

Dean .Hill
New&amp; Used
South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271
1-800-822-0417

. HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
*RIOFIH

.BETTY
OF cruRSE! \MIATS
NOT 10 IDV£ ABOIJl'

APLACE ~TING

*liME

WITH ~LlHY, AleSH
ppo!XJCE, 1'0ULTRY

lllmiiiiCE

';==;===~
J
r':;:::;::;::::;::~= *IWIIIII
54 ,800. ·
, Creative
SYRACUSE SMALL
liTTER.
~
Cokes
ENGINE DR'S

low miles, looks &amp; runs llka

By Bernice Bade Osot

"

740-992-7599

'TWO LAI1GE CHUNK;
OF MAPLE FUOGE,
P~EASE!

ANDMfATS!

•Fnlta. . .

948-1415
Sunset Home
Construction

GARFIELD
11"!&gt; A &amp;EAUTI FUL. 17AY

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garagea, Pale
Bulldtnga, Roota,
Sfdlng, Decks,
Kltchena, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740.742-341

Af THE?. f&gt;TAI71UM ....

in 1Uppen PlaiJL~ now
has openings on day
and midnighl shift.
7 667-6329

"l\'Y

be a good organizer and leader·
today, IJut you also need to be a good con·
tributor as well. lnslead of bossing others
· around and telling them what ' to do, set
the example.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - If you
lind yourself involved in some form ot
friendly comPetitiOn today; keep f:wery·
thing light and br.eezy. Don't allow yourself
to gel upt1ght and be a poor winner or
loser.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Try to
· operate on a stricl schedule today or else.
by the end of the day. duties that still need
to 'be anended 10 may begin to overlap
o111ars that al so must be completed at this
time .
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprlt 19) Your
instn"'Cts are il"! good wol't(ing order today
and win direct you to do the right th1ngs 1n
matters that are important to your well·
being. Don't let anyone influence you to

do

Big Bend Ant!que
and Furniture
Restoration
Rellnloh, Repair,
Reetore
Keith Bailey
40 992-1151

•HewGir. . .

( Il l f'

help you move atong.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J.an 19) - You

• Roofing I Gull_..
·
· Pluml&gt;lng
• VInyl
Siding
l hlntJng
• Patio tnd Porch Ott..

We doH IH OXCO!II
lumocoWOIII

otherwi~ .

TAURUS IAp.U 20·MB)' 20) -

Innately.

you are 8 generous and giving person. but
rodl!ly there 11 a ttrong pou.ibllity that out
of jealousy you might JteD out or charac·
ter and be • bit atingy to a frtel'ld whO
ctO.en't d.,.M lt.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Lit a altua·

lion lhll I• doing o good Job of •unnlng
•moothly talol Itt own·courn today. II you
111p In and try to makl changee for the
ukll of chang~~. you will bolch thlng8 up
rayally.

ROBERT
BISSELL
CIIISII._
l.i 1 !11!1t'' ( ltjllt

L.IOT A t:&gt;OGWI-IAT YOU
WATCH

SOUP TO NUTZ

• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

V.C. YOUNG Ill

141-912-lm

992-6215
Pomllow-. otMo

Stop &amp; Compare

22Y-~EI

•

-.

-·,

&gt; '

46
49

52Za1
...
54 Spinto
lktleater
55 Commotion
56 "Born Free"
lioness
57 Look 11
58 Excnornenl
59 Subtle

1'.-¥.~

".

DOWN

! Mantra
chants

Frost •
Mindless

2 Cold-cuts
- sellar·
Almost .....,. 3 Barge - ·Lightning- ' 4 Klngw~o
Pants and
abdlca'l'ad
locket
5 Confronted
blscovers
6\ Sheik attire
Secures
7 Dick Tracy's
'Fighter pilot
w~e
atlel.klsllce B Alpine
1lugooclheroine
Mall visitors 9 Broad.--mode tO Come down
EECamoncy
In buckets
Sealood
13 Dis -...Jotos
entrees
IS. Rebults
Tender meat 21' Sumptuous
Gorilla
24 t.koslca1 no1os
Choeolale 25 Freud,
dessert
, to himself
Son !esther 26 Prefix
'
Overalls
meaning
front
"recent"

.

27 Luau slaple
281040org.
30 Ma.l de 31 Bond rsllng
32 Attorr,ey's
deg .
33 -Cruces,

N.M.

35 Pod coo \Bois
36 Throbs oi
beals
39 PC ''brain"
40 Smelled
awful
41 Sheer Iabrie
42 Blake
ol jazz
43 Houston
basebeller
44 CEO
degrees

.

.

45 Blues slngao
-James
47 Give out
sparingly
48 Fluency
51 Lend
a. hand
53 Snooza

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty i.?Jpher eryptc.grarm are created frorr. quota~ons b'rtamous people, pa~~t ard present
Each letter In 1he ciltl&amp;f stands for 8rMJlt1er.

Today's clue: S equals 8

"VO"W

CD

ZWF

CJHHWFD

ZY

HWXKWFZ

CYM

"YVZSJVV

HWXKWFZ

RW

JFT

0

FOFWZB

XWJKZ

KYJKC

MCJZ

VYA

ZY

OZ . '

CYVZG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·tony (Randall) w~s so brillianl, Iunny, sweet and
dear, that it was as if God had given him everything ." - Doris Day

WOlD

GAM I

. "«&gt;ur 'lllrthda.y:

Stron g dasiri:ls for material growth wilt
serve to fi re up your ambitions in the year
ahead. AS a result, you will figure out ways
to acquire what the world about you has to
offer in a manner you're able to hanctle.
CANCER (June 21 '· July 22) · ~careful
not to be too sensitive today when associating With friends. or you may turn a fun
time into an un comfortable one.
LEO (July 23· Aug . 22)- This should be a
successfu l day when 'wo,king with associ·
~tes , but pride can· be yoUr Achilles' heal
and cause you to look for scapegoats if
th ings don't come off as perfectly as yuu
planned.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ~Yo u kno~
the proper course of action that needs to'
be take n today to fulfill a goal , yet for
some reason you could act against .Your
bener judgment. Be sensible in all you
undertake.
LIBRA (Sept. .23-0ct. 23) - .Be sure to ·
rec1procate in a similar fashion today, to
lhose who go out of their way to be help·
lui to you when you need 11. A failure lo do
so could wOfk against you in olher ways.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -Today it is
far better to say ~noR rathe r than make a
commitment to do somelhing that. in real·
· ity, you know you can't. Be aware of your
limitations and 'less up to them .
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 2 1) - lf~you
can 't change ihe direction ot the wind,
adjust your sails. You can get .more
accomplished today by doing what needs
to be Qone rather than waiting on others to

RESIDENTIAL

34
37
38
39

Puzzle

C ·rossword

AstroGraph

Tueaday, July 13, 2004

TFN

17
18
20
22
23

41
43
44

5

Don 't linesse against partner. That's
another of those misleading sayings in
bridge. It means that, at trick one , third
hand plays a lower card than his highest.
Sometimes. this will be vital to save a
trick'; at other times, it wiH cost a trick.
How does third hand know which way to
turn? Occasiona lly, t1e won 't, but there
are some ,useful guid eli nes. This week , '
let's eKamine them
·
Look only at lhe North and East hands.
You are sitting East, hovering over that
dummy. Against , three no-trump. your
partner leads the heart five . After declar·
er calls for dummy's four, which heart
would you play?
South 's openi ng bid in principle shows 21
or 22 high-card points, but good 20s
count as well. One cannot afford to worry
about unguarded suits. (Four spades
ca nnot be made here.)
At Irick one, it ought lo be second nature
to play the heart 10. If instead you win
with the king , you know declarer will
score two heart tricks . Can South have
the heart qUeen? Not it you play with a
partne: who sensibly leads fourth·highest
only when he holds at least one horior· in
the suit. Then, you know West ha s the
heart queen. (If South has the heart
QliEJen. you lose only a tempo by pl ayi ng
the 10, but that cannot blow the d9fense
here.)
So. win the lirst trick with the heart 10
and continue with the heart king . No
doubl declarer will let yoU win this trick
also, but you calmly continue with your
third Marl to dummy's ace. South has no
option but to attack spades. West will
grab the trick with his ace and cash lwo
heart lric~s .to defeat the contract.

G

HE i\SKEP IF YOU'D BE
WILLING TO TAKE CARE
OF SPIT!&gt;Y F O R TWO
POl.LAilS A DAY, Al&lt;lD I
SAID YOU 'D BE AAPI'Y To!

.2001 Honda Shadow Spirit
molorcycle, VT1100. excvl..

lent condlllon .
(740)446·7668

WOULOtn YOU JUST K~OW
IT WOOL\)&amp;.
I
"' 11\0i'lt&gt;/'-.'( I

n Mon-Frl9·5 Sat. 9-12

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,
ALL ON SALE,NOW!!

•Complete Remodeling
•Replacement Windows

Pomeroy, Ohio

Wi ndows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

IRI&amp;IlJLW.

Gallipolis, OH WVOI0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

Snapper

Gravely

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, ana azaleas.

HEATING fl COOLING

3067

50.

1114/ 1 mo. pd

BENNETT'S

Transmission, looks good,
runs gOOd. $1 ,800 (304)675-

lilt.

.~

Houts
7:00AM- 8:00 PM

106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

001

510.

o~l

f

STwp ·

COOK MOTORS

1983

t~ s:~t;;~~:,:~

Pomeroy

I'OR SALE

r

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

Lawn Mowers, Lawn Tractors, Weed Eaters,
Chain saws. Blowers, Tillers, Gcnerulnrs

AIJI'Oi;

fottiS

Hill's Self
Storage

Now Open
· f'erry's Bnglnu

'&lt;EP .t- CONSTANT\..Y

MARGE
!!

(304) ·273·5321

East
All pass

Finesse when
· it is correct

THAR'S OUR
OL' PAL,

Looking for a
non profit
organization 10
work one day of
admission ga tes .
at the 2004
Meigs County
Fair. Please Call
740-985-4159.

North
3 NT

Opening lead: •

33795 Hiland Rd.

740-992-5232

West
Pass

money

24
. 27
29
30

9 8

t AK4 2
... A K Q

BARNEY

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

... J 9

•

Washington Street

Ravenswood, WV

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

K 10 2.

• Q 10 8 5
South
411 K Q 10 9

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Let me doit for youl

Tree Service

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

: to 7n

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Your One Stop Por1red
S.olid Co11crete Shop''

Htum : M"uJar SatNrday '-6

¥

9

Free Estimates

Ta~e

A 8

·wv Contractors Lie. #003506

l!arly preparatiou c~mrngtml'nt.J availablt .
}tttHu R .Arrtt Sr., O_,m~r •

740-992-1189

East
• l 5 4 2

.Q 7653

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets .

,-~~",&lt;~1111'' C:~ ·

.

4!1

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

~O'l&gt;'\Jf' iw- f(.,ll~ "'"PP" ud!J~If,

76 3

west

as a bone
12 Help
with a heist
14 Wind dlr.
15 Snail-like
16 Pocket

... 8;42

MONTY

t Comics
pooch
5 Suet
8 Derby or
ledoro
1 t Heal,

OH2..(}4

J 63
AJ 4

•
•

Henderson, WV

Specializing In Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basements. Floors &amp; Walls

Phone: 1-740-992-9922

.

•

StateWide
CNB Poured Walls

ltret ;$onument

Roofing - Siding Painting- Gutters Decks - etc.
For Fast Courteous
Service
Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,
Ca ll... Dennis Boyd

MYERS PAVING

&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

· Early birds start ·

I
North

•

50 Coup d' -

ACROSS

EQuiPI\II:J\.T

CKC
Reg 1stered
Russel l
Puppies
t740)245·930 1

NEA

BRIDGE

Phillip

.

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

I
I

MULEGE

I
I ....--r-1
I ---r.--~1.
LAYDL

h
; --r-

I; t tI It fro~\i~r:s~~:~~~a~~ 11:~;~~
I
I I 1· · 18 I I O
0

E1•

...---.,-,--,--:-,...--,,..--, how to blame them on ---- -:- -

MA S A L B

7
. ....J.L.J._.J__....J
L - L._L

else.

·

Comol"• lh• chuckl• quo,.d
by lill1ng in !he .-nh.s l rt~ words
yov develop horr. s!ep No. J below.

1:\ UNSCRAMB lE fOR
~ ANSWER

SCitAM-LETS ANSWE~S t - 9- o,
Humane- Quill- Elope- Census- SPL;ASH
. · Our son wasbying to make a'good impression o ~ !he
other kids. ·son." his dad told him, 'You can get into hot
water by trying to make a b1g SPLASH.·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

•
i

�.

.

I

.....,

I

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

!"

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 12, 2004

.

Source: Cavs make

.National League

Re~s

rally past Brewers

.

.

.

MILWAUKEE (AP)- All
'"I guess h&lt; saved it all for
Jason LaRue wanted against the las\ day of the first half,"
one of the best relievers in manager Ned Yost said.
'.'Our bullpen has been good
baseball was a single. .
Instead, . he hit a 'two-run all year. That's a good offen·
homer that lifted the sive .team. They keep comCincinnati Reds to a come- ing at you...
from-behind . 9-6 victory . Pena went 4:for~5 with
over the Milwaukee Brewers three RBJs. playtng m place
on Sunday.
of the injured Ken Grif(ey
"I came up and was obvi- J,r.. who \lias placed on the
Dus ly just trying 10 get a sin- 15-day diSabled ltst before
gle and score . (Jacob) Cruz the game wnh a torn nght
.
.
and ended up getting a fast- hamst_n ng.
Gnttey. who wtll mtss the
ball out over the plate and it
ended up going out of the All-Sta~ game, ~as hurt
ballpark," LaRue said of hi ., Saturday ·ntght wh!le trym_g
. h . d ·h t
to run down Brady Clark s
goC-a e.t bs o .
.h .d
fourth-in.ning drive t,o right.
· he 1·ourt h mmng
· · o.t'
ruz · d att1blngd a ,.eah o1 cente.r 1n
L aR u e~ ou e \\ 11 one a 5-0 losst to
Milwaukee. An
MRI exam Sunday revealed
out oft Dan Ko.lb (0-l) ~he hrst · extra-b.ase hn the a partial tear of the muscle.
rehever allowed this season.
Pena's production was
LaRue then hn hts e1ghth · good news for manager
homer,· and Wti.y M~ Pena_ Dave Miley after losing his
followed wtth hts second ot hard-hmtng All-Star.
the game.
"Wily Mo. when he -gets a
Kolb, who. allowed three hold of it , he can put a
runs and four 'htts tn JUSt charge in it," Miley said.
Miley is. not sure, howevone-thtrd of an ·tnntng. was
phtlosophtcal afterward.
er. if Penit will keep filling
"Stuff like that happe ns," in for Griffey in center field.
Kolb sa.id. "It' s never auto- · "I think he 's more commalic. That's part of t he fortab le 'in right," Miley
baseball season. You have said.
·
After starter Jose Acevedo
bad outings."
Kolb is he aded to his first gave up five runs in the first,
All-Star game. and has been he pitched four scoreless
mostly solid this season as innings to keep the Red s in
the Brewers' closer.
the game.

"He settled down. got into
a rhythm and made adjust· ·
ments," Yost said. "It wasn't
like we weren't trying."
Todd Jones (7-2) got the
win after pitching two-thirds
of an 'inning . Danny Graves
pitched the ninth for his .·
33rd save m 40 chance~.
The Reds: who trailed 5-0,
•took thetr ftrst lead a\ 6-5 tn
the seventh on Pena s tworun h~mer tollowmg Adam
Dunn ' grotmd-rule double.
Lyle. Overbay tted tt at 6
wtth h1s IOth homer tn the
etghth otf Gabe Whne.
The Brewers JUmped to a
5-0 lead in the first inning
·
by Geo f t·
on RBI smgles
Jenkins and Keith Ginter. a
bases-loaded walk to Clark
and sacrifice tlie·s by Wes
Helms and Gary Bennett.
The Reds made it 5-l on
an RBI single by Brandon
. Larson in the second, .and
added another run in the
third on Cruz's, sing le.
Cincinnati got two more
.r.uns in the sixth when Matt
Kinney relieved · starter
Victor Santos and gave up
an RBI . single to Javier
Valentin and an RBI double ·
to ' D'Angelo Jimenez . to
make it 5-4.
'
Santos allowed four runs
and six hit s in 5 2-3 innings. Cincinnati Reds' Jason LaRue (23) is congratulated by teaml)'late Jacob Cruz (9) after LaRue hit
a two-run home run during the eighth inning against the Milwaukee · Brewers. Sunday in
Ace~edo gave up uve tuns
·Milwaukee.
The Reds woh the game 9-6.(AP)
tn five mmng s.

-·.'

t I ' I~ • \ td .

)i)

-i. : ' " · ..!~''!

SPORTS.
• Rio track signs Cromity.
SeePage 86

Cliff Lee leads Tribe past Oakland
'

CLEVELAND (AP) thiril time in eig ht games and
Though Kotsay had two wa ~ promptly picked off by
Cliff Lee is making a strong go into the. break at 42-45.
·singles in hi s first three times Zito , who stepped off the
case that he should be headBob Wickman worked the up against Lee, the left-han- rubber. ran at th e runner and
ed to. the All-Star game.
eighth 'and got out of a jam der pitched .to · him . Kotsay tagged Crisp.
fouled off six consecutive
Lee (9-1) outpitched Barry · with two on and no outs.
Crisp certainly would have
In the ninth, the A's put pitches ·and drew an It -pitch scored on either a singl e by
Zito, and Coco Crisp homered and drove in two runs to runners on first and' second walk to load the bases.
Martinez or double by Casey
lead the Cleveland Indians with two outs, but David
"I thought that last one was Blake - but both those runover the Oakland Athletics 4- Riske got Eric Chavez to fly a strike," Lee said. "He's so ners were stranded when
I on Sunday.
out for h.is fourth· save in 10 hot that walking him wasn't Travis Hafner struck out.
Blake then was caught
.
all that bad - but I had to
. "I don't think about my chances.
rounding second too far with
record, about the All-Star
Zito (4-7) gave up two run s get the next two guys."
game, or anyJhing except and six hits over seven
Lee did - retiring Bobby one out in the· eighth, trying
keeping the other team froth innings as Oakland lost its Kielty on an infield pop and to a'dvancc on a two-run sin·scoring runs," Lee said. "I fifth in six games.
getting Chavez to ground gle to center by Hafner that
would be honored to go, but
"Zi to was very good," out.
put Cleveland ahead 4-1.
, that's not happening . It's not Oakland
manager
Keri
"Cliff really pitched well ,"
my call."
Macha said. "He had a prob- Indians manager Eric Wedge
The left-hander gave up lem with one hitter (Cnsp) said. "He doesn't back ·down.
one run and six hits in seve n and that was it. Besides that, He goes the other way and
innings to improve to 6-0 in he was outstanding."
· turns it up a notch."
·
nine starts at Jacobs Field.
Still, the left-hander fell to
In the eighth, Wi ck man
He walked three, struck out 0-4 with tWo no.decisions in allowed two singles, but got
five and is 4-0 in seven starts his last six starts since beat· pinch-hitter Scott Hatteberg
ing Cincinnati on June 8.
to hit into a double play and
since June 3.
·"He's like an All-Star for
"I'm · frustrated
with struck out Bobby Crosby.
us, too," said catcher Victor myself," the 2002 AL Cy · Cleveland won despite
Martinez, one of five Indians Young winner said. "I've got making four baserunning
who will be in Houston for to get better. I've got to make mistakes. Jody Gerut, in ari
the All-Star game on better pitches."
0-for-19 slump, walked to
TuesqaY. night. "He pitched
Lee did his best pitching to open the .third, but was
today hke he has all season, escap\! a bases-loaded threat p1cked off by Zito. He
"!;mart and tough." ·
in the seventh.
·
walked again in the fifth, but
Eight of Lee's wins 1 have . Damian Miller drew a one- was thrown out trying to
come following a Cleveland out walk and took third on a advance on a ball that got a
loss .
·
double by Marco Scutaro. few feet away from catcher
· Crisp had three hits, Mark Kotsay then came to Miller.
Crisp
doubled
home ·
includmg his fifth homer and bat hitting .750 ( 15-for-20)
an RBI double, to help this
season
against Ronnie· Befliard with the goCleveland win for just the Clev.eland.
ahead run in the sixth. He

Athl~tics,

The A's took a 1-0 lead in
the third. Kotsay singled,
Kielty walked, and Chavez
poked a tly .ball down the
left-field line. Left fielder
Matt La.~ton appeared to
fight the sun and made a
lunge at the ball, · which
dropped inches fair and
bounced into the stands for a
run-scoring ground' rule dou ble.
Crisp tied it 1- 1 by hilling
his fifth homer to lead off the
fourth.
Notes: Zito is 2.1 with an

'

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\nr,s expires.
(owner) Micky Arison have
'It's very serious. I think it's created as a culture. This js the
very close to getting done," said type of pia~ that Shaquille
R
·
Grant's
agent. Mark Bartelstein. would love to !lnish his career."
RLANDO
O .
,•
a.
Greeled by reporter.; as he
lit Los Angeles, the formal
Sbaqutlle 0 Neal would be: was leaving a gym rx;ar his imnouncement
of
Rudy ·
happy to be.traded to the "':'13ffil Orlando mansion, O'Neal said Tomjanovich's hiring as the
Heat.
he had not yet met with Heat Lakers' new coach was partialThat ~ord , came Saturday president Pat Riley and ly overshadowed by the O'Neal
from 0 Nefl) s agent, Perry declined to comment on a pos- trade talk and Kobe Bryant's
free agency.
Rogers, who told the South sible trade
Fl~rida Su~-Senlinel '!!at
"I can't. say anything -aboUt
Bryant is free to sign with any
0 Neal has giVen his bl~mg that today," said O'Neal, flash- NBA team as of July 14, and
~ that would send hun to i~g a big smile.
.
.
re~ in Los Angeles have
'"'";
'd th
ld
But ESPN, the Sun-Sennnel SaJd he is giving serious considne ve SaJ .. at we wou and the Tunes reported that eralion to signing with the
agree to a trade, · Rogers .SiUd m · O'Neal joined his representa- Clippers. A thlde of O'Neal,
a story posted S:nurcta6 m$bt ~~ lives for a three-hour meeting combined with coach Phil
~ news~ s We stte. , I that included Riley and Heat Jaclcson's depanure, would
think that s gol!lg to .l?Ppef!. I ~ general manager Randy Pfu'nd. appear to indicate the Lakers
be v~. swpnsed if tt didn t
O'Neal's contract runs for . are doing all they can to placate
. two more seasons with a com- Bryant in the ho~Jhat he'll rehappen.
. The Los Angeles Tunes, ell- bined salary of almost $59 mil- sign.
.mg team and league ~· lion, and he was angered earlier
When O'Neal declared that
reported on Its Web site this season when the Lakcrs he wanted out of Los Angeles
SallJn!ay~t '!!at ~. Lakers refused to offer him ar1 exten- just days after the Lakers lost
have m
m pnnctple to sian.
·
the NBA finals to Detroi~ he
tr'dde 0' eal to the Heat . for
Rogers said the Heat had not listed Miami as one of his pre'. Lamar Odom, Caron Butler, discussed a new contract with ferred destinations.
, ·
Brian Grant and a first-round o· Neal.
Riley and Pfund did not
pick. The newspaper said the
"No extension was agreed attend the ~at's summer
Lakers declined to conunent on upon. That was· never a condi- league game iQ Orlando on
the tiade.
lion for Shaquille," Rogers said. Saturday as they had done all
A deal cannot be completed "He wanted to go to an environ· week. A Heat spokesman said
until W~y. when a ~(}- ment that was a team environ- the team could not commen~
week ~wtde motatonum ment We feel confident that because 0' Neal was under con. on trades arK! free agent stgn-"-that's what Pat Riley and tract with ~ Lakers.

Page AS
• Lillian Burt, 86

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• Ohio man.attempting
to become oldest person
to swim English Channel.
See Page A6

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Detallo on P811e A2

INDEX
2 SECllONS- 12 PAGES

A3

Galen~ars

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Comics
Dear Abby
Editoiials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
APARtOFTHISYEAR'S
FAIR EDITION •••
CALLJODAY!

83-4

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A4
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Call
DAVE or: BRENDA
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at

992-2155 ···

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FOR MORE INFORMATION

.The Daily Sentinel

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Monkey Run area. Mili s asked council to ' do iion of some cuts in office supplies. the budget is
something about Some all but abandoned property the . same as it was last year and there were no
that has not had its gr.ass cut in two years. Mill s wage cuts. Clerk-treasttrer Kathy Hysell blames
told council that he has contacted the owners of the budget shortfall on a decrease in personal
the property who have &lt;.lone little to correct the · property ta x revenue distributed by the state.
probl em which he said is creating a health hazard During the past two years. Hysell said personal
property tax revenue shrank from $.14.000 in 2002 ·
in thc•immediate area.
·'
to $2J5 this year.
"It has been a total nightmare." said Mills.
- Speaking on behalf of local . pastor Eddie
May&lt;lr John Mussehaid steps are being taken to
Baer,
John Davis asked council to consider turnimprove the sittt:ltion such as the passage of this
ordinance. but there is only so much that can be ing over the old Pomeroy Junior High to Baer's
group so that it can be U&gt;ed for a variety of church
done with the resuu rces that are available .
· and commun·ity related function s. Musser sa id
before council could discuss any plans. the
Commu nity Investment ·Corporation sti ll has a
90-day option to purchase the property.
- Bill Kitchen, who lives on Riverview Drive,
- Council passed next year's budget e-rimated commended the street department tor some of the
to be $1.425.661. which is abou t $ 19.()()0 less than work it has done around town recentl y particular·
last year's budget at $ 1..444. 950. With the excep- ly patchin~ the road on which he lives.

MILES lAYTON

Other business

J.

fo r'afic ionados, it also could ·
BR EED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM .
mean a great dea l of revenue
for · state transportation
""
.
POMEROY: - Owners of departments looking to cash
Mail Pouch barns in some in (ill the Federal Highway
rural communities like Beautification Act of I&lt;}61.
Meigs Cou.nty may have to which requires them to regupurchase advertising permit&gt; lat e roadside advertising."
if their barns are near a fed - Padgell said.
'The I 965 legislation. also
era! highway, but State
Senator Joy . Padgett . R- ,·alle'd the " Lady Bird Act"
Coshocton, says the barn s arter former First Lady Lady
are less a form of advertising E!ird Johnson , who camand more a slice of . rural paigned vigorously fo r its
passage. addressed bi II .'Americana.
. Bloch Brothers Tobacco . boards and other unsightly
Company began the tradition advertising along the federal
in I 925, by sendi ng six men highway system.
· "While ODOT's decision
across rural America to paint
advertisements for Mail to issue permits fo r the barns
Pouch on the sides of barns . is technicall y within the. red
There were once as many as letter of the law, it i's neither
20,000 of the barns in Ohio realistic nor practical."
and surrounding ' states. but ·. Padgett said.
'Padgett said ODOT now
that number has dwindled.
The Ohio Department of plans to work with the
Transportation has now noti- Federal
Hi'ghway
fied owners of Mail Pouch- Administration to have the
emblazoned barns ' they are barn signs designated as
required to purchase permits "landmark signs. "
for any advertiseme~t local- '. 'This ·way, ODOT can
ed within 660 feet of a feder- continue to is.s ue permits to
al highway.
barn owners in order to com"While that number of ply with the law, that requires
painted barns translates to -regulation of the content of
lots of road trips and photos roadside signs. bt1t can waive
Bv· BRIAN

INSIDE

II .

Once Again, The Daily Sep:t!nel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fai~ Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Everl look For this Special
· Edition In Your Friday, August 13th Paper.

Bv

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Mail PQuch barns ·may be subject·to permit fees

xxxxx, HI: xu, Low: xxa

BY MIKE BRANoM
l.'ssociated Pre5s

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W;EATHER

Shaq's agent says O'Neal··
·accepts trade to Miami Heat

,,,,,, _ mHI~IH~ ....·nliod nnu

Cut the grass in Pomeroy or expect a $100 fine
POMEROY . After much an"ticipation.
Pomeroy Village Coun cil unanimously passed the
noxious weed and high grass ordinance at
Monday's meeting.
· The ordinance must still be approved hy John
Ahderson . village adininistrator. but couneil members believe he will accept the additional lan gua~e
into the existing blight ordi nmice . .Grass or weeds
taller than 10 inches violate the ordinance .
Property owners or renters who are cited as being
in violation have five days to correct the problem
or be charged with a minor mi sdemeanor and if
convicted. receive $ 100 fine and pay an additional $40 in court costs.
·
This ordinance seeks to clean up some of tile
problems .the vi llage faces such as the overgrown
grass near where Sherman Mills lives in the

4-1·

0.88 ERA, and 32 strikeouts
in four C&lt;\reer starts against
Cleveland:• :.. Kotsay is hit·
ting .379 (}} c'for-87) in day
games .. .. Opponents are hitting on ly . 163 (7-for-43)
against Lee with runners in
scoring position and two
outs. ... Oakland leads the
AL in one-run games (29),
goi ng 16- 13 . ... Cleveland
·activated
RHP
Rafael
Betancourt (biceps) from tge
1disabled list and optio.ned '·
LHP Cliff Bartosh to Buffalo
before the game.

ll I ~I&gt;\' . .fl I ' t;c . :.?:oo:i

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

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Middleport •· Pomeroy; Ohio

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OBITUARIES

American
League
.

Meigs clobbers Athens
Juniors, Bt

one-year .offer to Carlos
Boozer, Bt

REED · ••

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This Mail Pouch barn on Oh.i o 7 near Chester. owned by Paul Baer. is typical of those found
across Ohio and surroun ding states. but is not subject to the permit requirement proposed
byODOT because it is not located on a federal highway. (Brian J. Reed)
the
are
the
ing

permit lee for signs that
no ·Jonger maintained by
tobacco company, meanbarn owner&gt; wouldn't

have to pay for signs th-'Jt are
no longer actively being
used as advertiseme~ts by
Mail Pouch Tobacco.''

"These barns are a staple
in our local landscape that
have weathered the lest of
time." Padgen said. .

~

Sports physicals will ·be Accus~d car thief injured in
offered at health department fatal automobile accident
B¥ BRIAN J. REED
by contacting the hea lth department
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CGM
at 992-6626.
POMEROY - While most Me'igs
Little said that all students who
POMEROY - An Albany man
County schools have already .·con- take part in .school athletics are now
ducted sports physical clinics at requ"ired hy the state of Ohio ~o facing multiple theft, robbery and
sehoul facilities, the Meigs County obtain a spurts physiql from either a other charges in Meigs Cou nty was
Health Department wi II be holdG1g licensed physician. physician assis- injured in ;'t Jackson County auto
one for those who were unable to tant or nur&gt;e pwclitiuner. They must accident Saturday. which, killed a
attend earlier clini cs.
he completed before the athlete McAt1hur man and 'eriousfy injured
The clinic wi.IJ be held at the begins practicin g for the upcoming another.
Kelly Krebs, 24. was the driver of
·
Heal[h Department from 2 to 4 p.m. season.
"Many may remember ge tting ·a ve hicl e involved in a Smurday
on! Monday by Dr. Wilma 'Mansfield·
of the Holzer Clinic Meigs Branch, A sports phy sical s when it was a brief morning accident on Ohio 324.
donation of $5 to assist with the cost visit &gt;ince lhe on ly requirement&gt; which sent him and two others to
of the supplies used during the exam were a measurement of currenL Grant Medical Center ·.in Columbus .
wouiU 1./Je appreciated but is not height. weight and blood prc." ure Kre b ~•. Jos hua Daily and Kyle
required, said Connie Linle, R N., and an evaluation of the heart and Thrush were transp011ed by medical
the chi ld and family healt~ services lungs by listening with a stetho- helicopter to the Columhus facility.
project director for the age11cy. She scope. We would then be de clared wh.::re Thru sh, a passenger in Daily 's
reminded students \hat !he completed physically ti t to withstand the rigors car, died on Sunday.
Accordin2 to the Jackson Post of
Ohio
High . School
Athl eti c of any ath letic event." said Lillie.
the
Ohio -S tat e Hi ~ hway Patrol.
"However now:· she said "school
Association physical examinati'o n
form obtained from the school or officials and medical profe"ionals Kreb&gt; lust control of his Chevrolet
the- American Academy of pickup truck, striking Dai!y's Geo
coaching staff'· must be presented at such
Prism. Kreb' was ejected from his
the time of examination .'
vehicle .and trapped beneath Daily's .
Please see Physicals, As·
Appointments are to be scheduled
STAFF REPORT

a'

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car. He. was removed by the Jaws of
Life, and is being treated, for two leg
fractures. a. broken arm and other
injuries. according to Deputy Adam
Smith of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
Krebs faces I0 felony charges in
Meigs County Court relating to the
theft of several vehicles in Meigs
County. including a commercial tow
truck. He is charged in Meigs County
Court with four counts of theft. two
counts of vandalism . tamj)ering with
evidence. robbery. aggravated robbery and fleeing . all felonies.
Those charges. tiled in February, ·
accuse Kreb&gt; of stealing trucks
belonging to G&amp;M Fuel Supply.
Russell Wooten. and Eric Facemye~.
and a tow truck. owned by L~
Richard. u&gt;ed to haul one of those
trucks after Krebs allegedly wrecked
it.
Krebs is also accused of breaking
Please see Thief, A5

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