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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 28,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

Major League Baseball

with pitching, Bt

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ClewiMd 10, Detroit 6

35·15

26·28
20·29

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26·23·

27-24

l.2

25-27

13·34

los Angeles
San Otego
Sen Franc1sco
Cotoraoo
Ar11ona

Oetro~ 13. Clw!;!land 4
M1nnesota 6. ChiCagc Sax 2
Texas 6, Anaheim 1
Oa~land 14. Soanle 5

Minf18601.17, Chlcaoc Sox 3
Anaheim 2, Tb&amp;S 0

Dakland 5, Seattlt 3

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Totals 32 2 7 2
Tguchl cl 1 0 0 0
Flopez ss 1 o o 0
' Totala ~· 311 6 13 5 Total•
211 0 3 0
Klinau City
010 000 100 2 •
·
Temp~ Bey
102 200 011 6
St. LOU I
122 010 000 6
000 000 000 0
E-Budo: (2). DP-Tampa Bay 2. LOB- Ctnctnn1ti
Kanaaa City 7, Tampa Bay 7, 28--DeJasus E-Frael ( 10), DJmrenaz (5 ). DP-St. Louis
(4), Ralalo rd (9), Baldell i (15) . Huff (14), 1. Cincinnati 1. LOB-St. Louis 11, Cmc;intMartrnaz 2 (14), Cantu (3). 38-Harvey nail 5. 2B-YMol1na (3) . Marqu1s (5).
(1). HR-Randa (3), THall (6). SB-Craw· Valtmtrn (6). HR-E Omonds (26), RSandurs
ford 2 {43) . Baldellr ( tO). TMa nlnez (2) .
(17). SB- Womack (16). S-Rentaria.
·
IPHRERBBSO
IPHRERBBSO
Kan ..a City
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Moy L.7· 11
5 7 5 4 1 6
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22·28

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27-24
20·3 1
16-33

Monday'• Re1ulh
Mon1real111, NYMeli 10
Atlanta 4, Prttsburgh 2
FlorK!a t1 . Philadalphia 3
St. Louis 9, Cll"'dnna1i 6. (11)
Ch'cago Cubs 3, Milweukee I
Arizona 4. HOIJston 1
Los Angeles 9, Color&amp;do 7
San Diego 3. San Frar.cisco 2

·---~

.. ·..

~--·~=~~

,--

Umprres-;-Home. Joe West: First. Paul
Emmet: Second, Llrnce Barhsdata: Third ,
Mike D1Muro. T-2 :4t . A-15,1146 {38.4116). •

Cubs 7, Brewers 1
•b r hbl
TWalkr 2b 4 2 2 1
Godwin ph 1 0 0 0
ASGzlz ss 3 0 0 0
SSosarf 4 2 2 2
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CPIIson cl 3 1 0 0
Bakoc
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Mddu~ p
2 0 10
Mactas ph 1 0 o 0
Totala 32 7 8 5

Mllwaukn
sbr h bl
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Cunaell ss 3 0 2 0
Jenkin&amp; ~ 4 0 1 0
Bm)l!n 3b 4 1 1 1
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BHall21l
4 0 0 0
Moellerc 3 0 1 0
BShetsp 1 0 0 0
l&lt;scnnk ph 0 0 0 0
Helms ph 1 0 0 0
Totll1a

31

o

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NewYOfk

,

Montr••

abrhbJ

Rayes2b 50 2 o
Matsui ss 5 1 1 0
Flovd~
401 0
McEwgll 0000
Hidalgo rt 2 1 1 0
Wggn1Il1b4 I 31
OeJeanpOOOO
Stan!on p 0 0 0 0
P1azza ph 1 0 0 0
Cmeroncl 4 1 1 3
Wrrght 3b 4 0 0 Q
JPhllps o 3 0 0 0
TGivinp 3000
Zaila Ill
1 0 0 0
Tot•l• 38 4 9 4

1 6, 1

ab r hbl
ECh-.az cl 5 o o o
OCbera ss 5 0 2 0
Vi0ro2b
3 00 0
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JRiVra rf
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EDrazc
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Schndrc t 0 1 0
Dayp
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Var9aap a 0 0 0
HMatao ph 1 0 0 0
Horvanll 0 0 0 0
Ayalap
0 0 0 0
Totala 38 210 1

1

Chicago
202
000 003 7
MiiWIUkl!le
000 DOt
000 1
Counsell reached lirst on catch er's intarfer·
&amp;nee '
000 003 100 ..:. 4
E-Bako (3). Burba {1) . DP-CMicago 1, NawYork
000 101 000 2
t.1rlwaukeo 1. LOB-Ch icago 2, Milwaukee Montreal
6. 2B- TWalker (15). SSosa (14) . HA- E-Matsui (2 1), Wright (3 ). DP- New York
TWetker (12}. SSoea (2 t ), Branyen nJ . S- t . LOB-New York tO , Montr&amp;al 12. 28 Reyas (8), OCabrera ( 17), Wilkerson (221.
ASGonzaloz . BSheets. SF-Bam111.
Ct!fc1go
IP H A EA BB SO
HR-cameron (18). SB-Ae~es 2 ( 1~ ,
T1mp18ay
Lidle L,6·9
5 8 6 5 3 3
Maddu x W,10-7
6 4 1 1 ·• 1 6
Camflron {13) . SF-EDiaz.
Brazelton W,J.-3
6 B 2 2 4 3
RWagnor
2 3 0 0 0 2 Leicester
2.3 1 0 o o 2
New York
IP H R ER SB SO
Harper
2 \ 0 0 0 0 P N o rton
2200 t
2
o
TGiavfril W.S-8
6 7 2 2 3 2
08aez
1 0 0 0 0
1
WP-lidle 2
Mercker
! 1· 3 1 0 0 0
Farnsworth
1 0 0 0 0 1
DeJean
1 1·3 1 0 0 1 0
Brazelton pitched to 2 batters in !Mit 7th
Umpir!MI-Home, Tim Timmons; First, Bruce
MllweukM
Stanton
2·3 1 0 0 0 ~
Umpirea--4-lome. Marty Foster: Fir.st. Joe Froen)ming; Second, Hunter Wendelstedt, BSfleets L, .
7 7 4 4 0 8
96
Looper 5,21
1 1 a o o 0
Bnnkman; Second, Tim Tsctltda : Third. Jelt Thrrd. Mike Winters.
Burba
t
-3
1
3
3
2
2
1
Uontfell
.
o
o
o
o
Neleon.
T-2:40. A-25,366 (42 ,271 ).
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23
Day L,5-t0
6 6 3 3 3 3
T--::2:54_.A---,I~O._,
e54
~i4_3_
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WP-MadduK, JBennett 2.
Vargas
22 . 1102
"
· .P;:.Ir.ai~O::Ic,:
:: .S:!'..::B::r.::a:.:V.::BS='4==--- I ' umpires-Home, Date Scolf: First-; Ramon Horgan
2·3 1 0 0 1 2
Indians 10, Tigers 6
Atlanta
PIHibur;h
Arm8fldaril; s~ond, Ron Kulpa, Third, Brian Ayala
1·3 0 0 0 0 D
ab r Mbl
Gorman. T- 2:30. A--4 1.520 (41,900).
Detroit
Clt.,.llnd
ab r hbi
HBP--by Vargas (HidaiQO).
Futcalss 4 01 1 Kendallc 4 2~2
Umpires-Home, Derry~ Cousins; First, Tony
eb rlltH
eb rhbl
Infante 2b S 0 d"o-' Crrsp II
5 2 3 5
MG1tes 2b 5 0 2 0
JWilsn ss 4 1 0 1
Y,::B:_:nk~ee;:::s:_7:.;•c.:B:::I~u:::e-;J~e~y~s:_:4:___ Randazzo; Second, F1flldin Culbreth; Third.
CGfllen as 4 0 0 0 Vizquet 1$ 5 0 2 1
JOrewrt
3000 Mclcwk 3b 4 1 2 3
New York
.Toronto
J im WoH. T-3:1 9_ A-7, 147 (46,338)
!Rdfgz c · 4 1· 1 0 . Lawtondh 5t1 0
CJona&amp; 3b 5 0 0 0 CWilsn rl 10 0 0
ab
rhbi
ab
r
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JEsiOa c 52 31
STorras p 0 0 0 0
Aslros 10, Dlamondbacl&lt;s 3
BWIIms cl 4 2 2 1 Jhnsan~ 5020
AoWhttdt14 1 2 3 Brasrd 1b 5 1 1 ·1
Lrocha tb 5 0 t 0 Mesap
0 a 0 o
Jeter ss·
5 I I 0 C!lncl\o dM 3 0 0 0
Arl.tona
Houaton
Tlwntell 41 1 0 Blalo.e3b 52 3 1 "AJona&amp; c! 3 1 1 1
Bayll
3010
Mnchno Oh 2 1 2 0
Shllield rt 4 2 1 I
eb. rhbl
•b r hbl
Thmasll 4 1 31
Hggnanr! 3 0 2 3
Gerutrf
31 2 o
TRdmncl 412 0
AAdrgz '3b 3 1 1 2 VWells c1 4. 2 2 1
SFinley ct 3 0 1 0 Biggiolt
3000
lnot3b
4000 Bttiard2b 3210
Simon lb 4 0 0 0
By•dp
1 000
Poaada c 4 1 1 3 CDtgdo 11l 4 0 t 0 ,McCkncf1001
OPfmro,H t 0 0 0
Loganct 4 0 2 0
Szmorecl 1 1 0 1
Hilf2b
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Grybskll 0000
Mat sui~
2000
Zaunc
3000
Tracy3b 4 011
AE~rtt ss 52 3 2
TDiall 33 I! 8 8 Totlll
361013 9
JuFrcollh 1 0 1 0
Caslltto 2b 1 o o o
Siarradh 4 0 0 0
Hinske 3b 5 1 2 3
0Btistar1 4 0 0 0 C Be~m cf 4110
NGreen pr 0, 0 0 0
KWe~!p
2100
TCiark
1b
4
0
I
0
Rio!lll
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40
00
LGnzlzH
Brkmort 3110
"D .trott
013 001
010 8
Mcnnll p 0 0 a· 0 Gnzalezp 0 0 0 0
Cairo2b 4000
OHudsn 2b3 0 2 0
Hlnbrn lb 4 0 0 0 Lane rl
1 000
JIJCruz p 0 0 a 0
CteYNnd
052 011
10x - 10
ANunez llh 1 1 1 0
Wdwrdss4000
Hlrston
2b
3
o
o
o
JKam21l 3232
E-tRodJiguiiZ (7), Gllrut (3). DP- Oetrort
Stynes 3b 1 0 1 0
34 7 7 7 Totata
38 413 4
Grntron ss 3 1 2 0 JVz:cno2b t 6 0 D
,1. LOB-D1tr01t S, Cleveland 8. 28- Tot.l1 36 412 4 Totals 35 811 e iotela
BrJtoc
3110 Sgwelllb 3213
Thamu (8), Logan (2), Vizquet (18), Blake
New York
001
000 042 7
EGnZIZJ! 1000 Bullngr p 0 0 o o
2 (21). Hf+:-AoWhite (14), Grrsp [7), Broua- Atllnta
000 300 100 4
Toronto
001
001
002 4
Bsarga ph 1 1 1 1 Ensbrg 3b 4 2 2 0
tard {7). 58-Lawton (Hl). C5- ogan (t) . Plttsl;lurgh
000 020 5 h. 8
SF-H9tii!l101l.
E-F.yH:al (16). JEsrrada 2 (6). DP-Atlanta E-cOalgedo {3) DP-New York 1. LOB- Sparlisp 1000 RChavz c 4 0 0 1
Oewatt p 3011
IP H AERBBSO
1, Pittsburgh 1. LOB-All ants 11. Pittsburgh New York 6, Toronto 12. 29-Aios (16),
OHudsbn (16) . 38--Hins~e (2). HRLolmtl1b 1 000
5 2B-JEstrada (31), Macio;owtak ( 1•7),
BWillrams
(
12)
,
8Metl1e
ld
(2
1).
AAodriguez
Totala
·
32
3
8
3
Tot1rl1 311012 t
2 1·3 7 7 7 3 3
Knott• L.,5-6
TRadman (10), Stynes (10). 38-AJooes
2 1·3 2 1 1 2 0
(4). HR---JEstrada (5), l&lt;endall 13) S-B~•d (25), Posada (13), VWells (1 1). H1nake (9).
SB-BWilliams
(1)
.
Matau1
(1),
R1os
(4).
Art2ona
000
000 030 3
1 1·3 . 2 1 1 0 2
2.
SF-A.Rod 11 gut;~z.
Hou•ton
113 140 ' OOK - 10
I 2 1 1 0 0
IP H RERSBSO
N.w York
IP H- RERBBSO
E- Tracy (18). DP- Houslon 1. L.OB- Arl-I 0 a o· o o
Atlanta
OHernandez
2 a 0 0 3 3
zona 3, Houston 6. 26-Tracy (t6), Ba11rga
By•d
6 1·3 7 4 4 2 4
Padilla
IJ_ 2·3
5 1 1 0 0
(1), CBeltr,an (5), Ensberg 2 (13) . HA-AEv·
s.bathia w,7-5
6 6 5 5 3 3
Gryboskr L.l-2
2·323t00
Haradia
1 3 1 1 0 0
erett 2 (8). JKen t (12), Bagwell {14). S-Big~rt
1 1 0 0 0 1
Mcconnell
t-3 1 1 1 0 0
Prinz
1 2 0 0
1 t
910.
Rtllle
1 1111
1
JuCruz
2·310001
Proclor
W,1·0
2-3
t
0 0 0 0
IP H A EFIBBSO
Wickman
100003
Pittab.lrvh
Gordon
S,3
1
2·3
2
2
2
1
4
·
tiBP-0¥ Knotts (Sizemore). WFI-Knons. KWetts
6 9 3 3 3 ,
Toronto
EGorualez
L,D-3
48661t
.I 1 1 t 0 t
Pll-vMo"""'Gonzalez W,3·0
Lilt~
621132Sparka
3 3 4 3 2 2
STorres
~. Randv. Marsh ; First, 'La~
1 1 0 0 0 0
Frederrck
1 0 0 0 0 0
KoploYa·
t 1 0 0 0 0
VlfiQ'Vel'; Second, Sam ~olt!rooit Third, Paul Mo"
1 1 0 0 1 0
Ligteoberg L.l -3
023310
Houston
Nluerl T-3:04. A-111,090 (43,389).
PB-.JEstrada.
Speier
1 1 t 1 1 1
OswaiiW, tO·B
7 2 0 0 1 5

____

lzturius 3 0 2 0
Werth II' 2 0 1 0
CarrarP
0 0 0 0
DRbrtsph a 1 o o
TMartn p 0 0 0 0.
Vntura ph 0 0 0 0
LOUCII,C 51 1 2
Beltra 3b 4 0 2 0
Brdley•cl 4 0 2 0
Shtiran lb 4 0 o o
JEcrcnrt 4010
Cora2b
4000
OPerazp 2 000
Grbwsillf 2 0 0 0
Tot•l• 3-4 2 t 2

LuGnzt 2b 3 0 2 0
Mlles2b 2 0 0 0
Cl•~l'lss,5 1 1 0
l!lollontb 5121
CastHia 3b 5 0 2 1
LWalkr rf 5 1 2 0
HIUdayH 3 2 2 0 ,
Burnrtz cl 4 1 2 4
TGretJn c 3 t t 1
CJhson c 0 o 0 0
Cookp
401 0
Dhmnnp 0000

LOI Angetea
000 000 020 ·2
Coloredo
120 121 OOx 7
OP - Cotorado. 2. LOB- Los Anlsles 10,
Calorsdo 11 . 28-LuGonutez (9, Cutilla
(32). LWalil;ar (9) . 36 - Helloo (1 , Burnitz
(4). HR- Lo DuCa (10). HeNon (21), Burnitz
(25) , TGreene (8) . SB-Izturis (15)
IP H RERBBSO
Loa Angeltl
OPerez L,4-4
4 1·3 10 6 6 2 5
Carrara
2 2·3 3 1 1 1 3
TMartin
120000
Colorado
'CookW,s-4
71·3
2 2 4 1
Dohmann
t£.3
1_ 0_ 0 1 3
Umpires-Home, Bruce Dreckman; Fi rat.
Rob Oraka; Second, Gerry DaVIs; Third, Greg
Gibson .
T-3: 03. A-27,934 (50,449).

Twins 7, While Sox 3

Nakamura .
1 2 ~ 2
1
L.gtenberg pitched to 3 bat1ers In the 81h
Umpires-Home, Bill Hohn; Fir•t. Gary Oar·
llng: Second. Mark Carlson: Third, Brian
Auno;te. T-3:25. A-30,067 (50,5118)

1

1

.....

-'"
"""'""""

m •._

""""'

.c -

.......

Winn cl
3
BBoo.-.t~ 21l 2
EMrtru: dl1 4
JoCbf1 II 2
Ibanez If
1
Spiezio 1b 3
Hansen 1b 1

:--:-:--:::--:::-==::-::---:.- 1

e

NY
l-6) lit Montreal [kmas Jr. 2·3}, 7:05p.m.
Altanla (Au.Ortlz 11-6) at Plllsbu~ (OI.Peraz &amp;4), 7:05p.m.
Pt11IAOelphra (Myers 5-B) at Florida (Penny 8-B), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (SupP!in 9-5) at C~ncinn'atl (Aotwedo 4-9). 7:10p.m.
Chicago Cubs ~Wood 5-3) st t.A1t.onluke&amp; (Capuano 4.5), 8:05p.m.
Arizona (Fossum 2·9) at Hous1on (Clemen&amp; 11·3), 8:05 p.m.
Loa Angeles (Lrma 9-3) at Colorado (Fa!&gt;Serc 2-5). 9:05 p.m.
San Frar.clsco (Hermanson 4·3) at San [)IQgo (L.&amp;wr~ t0-7). 10:05 p.m

Chicago

W~-EGonzale.z .

7, Dodgers 2
- 2.-:2s Rockies
;..?.""''::;~'-"'=&gt;i.:i~:.:---- 1
Lo1
Angel••
Colorado
-16:34
ab r hbl
ab r hbl

27·23-

P10

8·2

Tueeclay'a R,e tuhl
N'r Mets 4. Montreal2
Pittsburgh 8, Adanla 4
Florida 5. Philadelphia 2
St. LouiS 6. Cincinnati 0
Chrcago Cubs 7. MrMtaUkee. 1
Houston 10, A11Z0na 3
Colo•ado 7, los Allg&amp;itls 2
San Franc.sco 6. San Df89' 4

W~nfiGI-'i'Girmu
-

""""IOta (Si!Ya 9-7) at Chicago Wtlhe SOx (LoaiZa 9·5), 2:05 p m
Seaftle (Meyer 6-7) at Oakland (Mulder '· 3-3). 3:35 p.m.
N.Y. V.n. .i (Uebef 7-6) at Toronto [Batista -9-6). 7:05p.m
Bomn (Sct'lllllng 12·4) 11 BaHimore (Bori«lw ski 1·2), 7:05 p.m
Ollroil [Robertson it-5) at CIMiand (Eiarton Q-2). 7 05 p.m
l&lt;lnau City (Gobble 6-7) at Tampa Bay [Hendricksoo i-8), 7.05 p.m.
Taxu (AOQ&amp;rs 13-3) at Anaheim (Ladley 8-9). 10:05 p.m

KMtM City

Pot

W
58

"'" "

w• .

L

"'w
48

l1

_,

380

50
46

Ptttsburgh
M;lwauk!Ht

W£ST

Home

-1'4
3'1.
5
15'1,

13-:36
Away

...

...:~ .

Ctn~ 111 na11

Home

P10

46
48
50
51
62

23-29

'Strk

GB

53
52

2D-27

NYYankees 6. Toronto5.(10)

Tampa a.y 6, Kanaas Ci!'t 2

Phrtadetplne
Ftc.rlda
NV Mets
Montreal

w

CENTR-'L
St Lours
Chr~ago Cub3
HOU5ton

\blday 't R"ultil
Boston 12. Bak·more 5

Boston at Baltrnore. (ppd. rain)

EAST

.,.,.,

2-3 4 3 3 0 1
1 1·3 0 0 0 0 2
PB-Bnto.
Umpires--Home, L.az Oiaz ; First. 8+11 Welke;
Second, Jdln Hlrschbllclc; Third , Wally Belt
T-2:17. A-32,095 (40,1i150).
BuiMng&amp;r
Harville

National League
GB

Mlnne1ota
,
1b r hbl
ShStwrtll 4 2 2 1
CGzmnu 4 2 3 I
LForddh ·s 1 21
Mrneau1b!!01 1
THntM c1 3 1 1 1
JJonea r! 5 0 1 0
Koskie 3b t 1 0. 0
leCroyc 300 t
HBincoc 0 0 0 0
Alval2b 4 0 0 0
Tot1l1 3-4 710 I

Chlc•;o

ab r hbl
Awandcl 4000
Vleminu 400 0
CaL&amp;e ll 3222 '
Knttrilo lb . 3 0 0 0
CEvmdh 3 1 1 1
Crade3b 4000
Brchrd rf 4 0 0 0
Urlbe2b 3 o.o 0
BOavla c 3 01 0
Totlll

31 3 4 3

Mtnneaote
000 , 031 003 - 7
Chlp1go
000 000 102 3
LOB- l.tinnasota 9, Ch 1cago 4. 28ShSteltart (9/, CGuzman 2 (111), THunter
(26). JJones 16). HR-cal ee 2 (19), CEY·
eratt
SB- I&lt;osilie 2 (8). S-CGuzman.
SF-THunter, LeCroy.
IP H REABBSO
Mlnneaota
'Santana W.ll·6
S2t126
JAinoon
100002
Rom&amp;ro
1 0000
1
1
2220
1
Roo
Chlc.Oo
FGarcia L,8-9 7 1·3 7 4 4 2 3
Marte
2·333310

m-

1

MJackaon

0

0

0

0

1

Sa ntana p it~hed to 3 bat1eNI in ltle 7th, Mart&amp;
pitched to 4 batters in the 9th.
HBP-ty Santana (CEveran), b~ Marte
(Koskie), by FGerc1a (Koskie 2). WP-Santana, Marte. PB-8Davis.
Umplrea-Home, Ed Montague: First, Jerry
Meala: Second, Matt Hollowell; Third, Mlk&amp;

Everitt.
T-2 :58. A--'37 ,528 (40,615) .

Marlins 5, Phlllleo 2
Phil I

Florldll

abrtlbi Aollins ss 4 0 2 1
Planco 2b 3 0 1 0
BAbreu r1 4 0 1 0
Burrell II
4 0 1 0
Utley tb
4 1 1 0
DaBell 3b 3 0 0 0
ledeeci 40 00
Lbrthat c 3 1 1 1
Wollp
200 0
ThOme ph 0000.
Glnvilte pr 0 0 0 0
Crm•rll - 0000
RHmdzp 0000
ToParz ptr 1 0 0 0
Taula 32 2 7 2

Pierre ct
LCstillo 2b
Lowe13b
Cbrerar1
Conine !I
Easleylb
JMnzilo p
AGnzlz ss
Admnd c
PavanQp
Ctror1b

Totela

•b r hbl
4 1 1 0
3 1 t 0
3 1 t1
413 2
4 1 1 1
400 ' 0
0 0 0 0
3 0 i 1
4 '0 00
3000
0000

32 5 8 !!

Phll•delpttla
000 · 000 :zoo 2
Florid• ·
' 002 000 Db 5
E- BAbreu (3). OP- Fiorlda 2. LOBPhiladelphia 7, Florida 6. 2B-Ro1Hnal251.
BAbreu (26), Pierre { 14), Cabrera ~ 21 ,
Coolnt \22). HA-Lowelt (22). SB-Polanco
(4), AGonzalez (2}.
IP H RERBBSO
Phllldelphla

S

W~l

4

2 2

3

4

Cormier l.,4-4 1 1·3 2 2 2 0 0
RHarnandez
2·3 2 1 1 0 0
Florkla
Pavano W,11-4
8 7 2 2 3 4
..t.1anzanillo S.1
1 0 0 0 0 2
HBP-by Pavano (Pota.nco).
Umpiru-Home , Gary Cedarstrom; Fir11,
1\rwttJ Fletcher: Second. Kevin Kelley: Third,
Tim Welke.
T-2:36. A-15,523 (36,331) .

Alhlltlco 5, Mariners 3
Seattle

Oeka.nd

•rl'lbl
!Suzuki r1

5 1 2 0

,

abrhb6
Kotsay ct 4 1 1 0

OM'

'

0 00
0 1 0
0 10
00 0
0 0 0

t 1a
0 0 0

o1o

Leone 3b 4 t 1 2
Slmqiet ss 4 0 2 0
Tohlla 32 3 g 2

Md.mr2b 3 0 1 1
EChevz 3b 3 1 1 1
Htlbetg 1b 4 1 I 0
Crotbyu 3 2 2 I
Durazodh 4 01 t
Kllllty rf
4000
Byrnes II 2 0 0 1
Mlhuae c 3000

TOUr II

so

5 7 5

Seattli
100 000 200 3
Olklend
020 110 Oht !5
E-Bioomqurst (5) . DP-SaaltiB t . Qaklllnd
3. LOB - Seat1ie 7, Oalo.land 5. 2B-Kotsav
(21). Durazo (18) . HA-Laor'le (4). EChavez
(17) . Crosby (15 ). 'SB-BBoone (9)
Btoomquu;:t (8). CS-Ohvo j6) . SF -Byrnes.
IP H .RERBBSO

....

~

7 6 4 4 3 2
RFranldin l ,3·9
2·3 1 1 1 0 0
Sherrill
t-3 0 0 0 0 0
Hssagawa ,
Oakl•nd
MAet:tman W.7·86 1·3 9 3 3 3
t
RRiocon
2·3 0 0 0 0
1
Llilhr
2·300010
Meclr
1·3 0 0 0 0
1
ootei S,6
1 a o a o _, 3
HBP-by Dote! (Olivo).
Umpires-Home, Doug Eddings: Ftrst. Dan
lau~r11 ; Second, CMri9 Guccione: Third,
Charlie Ael ~ord .
T-2:27 . A-24,553 (43,662).

Cleveland, 75; JGuillen, Anaheim. 75.

NL.LNdlrs
BAmNG-Bonds, Ssn Francisco, .362:

casey, Cincinnati, .343: Ho•on. Colorado.
.336: Overbty, M1twaukee, .335: Loretta. San
Otaga, 334: Rolen , St. Louis. : 3~8; Beltrs,
Los Anlileles, .326.
RUNS-Pujols . St. Lours, 86; BAbrau,
Philadelphia , 77; HeNon . Cotoredo , 76:
Bonds, San Francisco. 75; JDraw. Manta , 73;
Clay1o11, Colorado. 66: Loret11, San Otego,
67; LGonzalez, Artzona. 67.
ABI-Aolen, St. Louis. 89 ; CuUa. cruorado .
84: Pu)ots, St Louis. 73; BeNre, Los Angeles ,
73: Bumitz, Colorado. 71 : T~om&amp;. Philadel·
phra. 71 : Cabrera , Florida . 69; ~Abreu ,
Phiiadelpl'ua. 69

Pete Rose Jr.
signs with .the
Lincoln
Saltdogs .

Three service contracts awarded by Meigs Local Board

SPORTS

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)
- Pete Rose Jr. is back
Giants 6, Padres 4
S1n Fr.n
S1n Diego
in baseball.
ab rhbl
•b r hbl
The 34-year-old son of
Drham2b 52 21
Brrgha 3b 5 1 1 2
DCruzaa A 1 2 1· lorena 2b 2 0 0 0
baseball 's all-time hits
Ansomse 1 0 0 0 Klesko ~ 5 ·0 1 1
Allonz:o 3b 5 0 0 0 Nevin lb 5 1 3 0
king
signed with the
Nad:ypr
0000
Bonda ll
40t2
F&amp;IIZ1 b
4 a 0 0 BOitesrt 5o o o Lincoln Saltdogs of the
Grtaom cf 4 0 ,1 0 Payton ci 5 1 2 1
independent Northern
Trralba c 4 1 2 0 K~reen 511 4 0 1 0
Mohrrt
3 2 3 2 RaHrdze 2 1 1 0
League on TUesday and
Schmdlp 3 0 0 0 OWettsp taoo
Browerp 0000 Lonjph
1010
the team for its
joined
0000
Chrstna p D 0 0 0 Neap
ganie at Fargo-Moorhead
He rgeap 0 0 0 0 Aurlllaph 10 0 0
Beckp
0000
on
Tue sday night . He
Total• 37 I! 11
Tot1t1 36 ~10 4
went
I -foi-4 with a run
S1n Frtnr:~leoo 220 002
06o - 6
San Dl1go
011
001
001 4
scored
and committed an
E-Durham (11 ), Schlnldt (1). DP-SI!M
Franci&amp;eo 2. L.OB-San Franci1co 6, San error at first base.
Diego 11 26--0Cruz (19) , Bonds {16). Bur·
Drafted by Baltimore .
rough1 (17), Nevin (18), AaHernandez {9)
HA-Mohr (4) . SB-Pavton (2). S- in
1988, Rose reached
Schmidt, DWana.
IP H R ER B!l SO
the major leagues 10
Sin Franclaco
1997. He played II
Schmidt W, 13-3
8 73247
0 1 1 1 t 0
Brower
games
for Cincinnati
Christiansen
01aooo
Hergea S,23
110000
going 2-for-14, scoring
Sen Dltgo
DWell&amp; L6-6
6 10 6 6 0 2
two runs and striking out
Neal
2 1 0atO ·
nine time s.
,
Beck
1 00001
Brower pitched to 2 batters in the 9th , Chris·
Earlier thi s month
tiensan prtchfld to 1 llaner in the 9!11
Balk-schmidt
Rose
took over on an
Umpires-Home, l.arry You ng; First. Adam.
Dowdy; Second, Angel Hernandez; Third, interim basis as the man
MarX Wagn11.
ager of the Florence
T- 3:00 . A-40.068 (42,445).
Freedom of the Frontier
Angels 2, Rangers 0
League,
replacing former
Anahalm
lb r hbl __
ab r hbl
Cincinnati pitcher Tom
t.1Vong 85 4 0 t a Eckstin ss 4 0 1 0
Blalock 3b 3 0 0 a Figginll cl 3 0 o 0
Browning.
ASrano 2b 3 0 0 0 Salmon dh 4 0 1 0
In 2002 and 2003
TxeirB1b 4 0 0 0 VGrerorf 31 2 0
Nixcf
3 0 0 a JGIIIenll ,3 1 2 1
Rose played for the
EYongdh 3 0 0 0 Erstad 1b ~ 0 0 0
Mathws r1 3 0 0 0 Ouinlarr 3b 3 0 1 1
Winnipeg
Goldeyes, also
Menchll 300a
Am.zga3b 1a0o
Brajaa c
3 0 0 0 JMolnac . 4 0 0 0
of the Northern League.

• Reds still fall short.
See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Three contracts for
services were awarded whil e the hi rirl'g of coaches on sup plemental contracts was postponed following an·
executive meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Educalion Tuesday night.
The bread and bakery con.tracl
went to Heiner's Bakery, inc .. the
milk and dairy products contract to
Broughl on Foods Co.. and the
garbage and trash haulin g contrac t to
I s1 Class Trash Removal.
,
Supplemental contract award s

1!1

Totals

Ttn•

•000 ooa ooo - o
Anaheim
000 200
DOx 2
E-Banoit (1), JMolina (1). DP-Texaa 1.
LOB- TeMaa 4, Aneherm 9. 28-JGui\lan
(20). S-Erstad.
IP H REABBSO
TUII
Regilio L,0·1.
552234
Benoit
230003
100002
Maha.y

.....,...

ColonW.Il--8
1 t 0 0 2 8
FAodriguez
1 0 0 a 0 2
Percival 3,16
1 o o a o 1
HBP-by Benoit (VGuetTero). PB-Jt.lolina

2.
Umprre..:-Home, Mike Reilly; Flr&amp;t , C.S. Buc·
knor : Second. Eric Cooper; Third. Chud&lt;
MeriWelher.
T-2:41 . A-42,625 (45,030).

Alleaders
BAm~Rodriguez, Detroit, .355; Mora,
Baltimore, .343: ISu:zukl, Seanta, .336:
VGuerrero, Anaheim, .334 ; MRamirez,
Boston . .331 : CGuillen. Detroit .. 326 ; Kotsay.
Oakland, .326.
RUNs-oamon. Boatoo. eo : VGueflero. .._na ·
heim, 79: Lawton , Clev&amp;land. 75; CGuillen,
Detroit. 74; MVoung. Texas. 72 ; SheHield,
New York, 72; Crawlord, Tempe Bay, 70:
Mofa, Ballrmora, 70; Baflhom, Bo81on, 70;
AAodriguez, New York, 70.
.
RB~Tejada , Baltimore, 92; OOrtiz, BostOQ,
90; MRamirez, Boston, 82: YGuerrero, Ana hem, St ; VMartinoz, CkMlland, 78 ; THalner,

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Aleta Lynn Wells

CLEVELAND (AP)
- Jeriome Robert ~on 's
stock has dropped l!ke a
wicked curveball.
Robertson , who won
15 games as a rookie last
season for the Houston
Astros, was designated
for
assignmen.t
on
Tuesday after four for
gettable months in lhe
Indians ' organization.
" He really never got it
going this year," said
Cleveland manager Eric
Wedge.

LO'I"I'ERIES

I ·

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 5-5·9 (whKe ball)
Pick 4 day: 1-6-6-2
Pick 3 night: 9-9-4 (white ball)
Pick 4 night: B-840
Buckeye 5: 4-13-19·20-26
Superi.Dito: 5-14-16-27-33-37 (17)
Kicker: 6·9-3-5-4·2

West Vll'ginia
Dally 3: 2·7·1
Dally 4: 9-7-5-5
Powerball: 4-19-39-40-50 (22)
Power Play: 3

CASH?

WEA1HER

I

\

•

Pastor .Bob Fulton (left) of the First Church of the N.azarene stands with "Big Do.n " Fowlks of
tlallipolis, one of the many bikers that will be in att.endence to "Biker ~unda¥ heldat,the
Church this Sunday. Worship service thi s Sunday Will be conducted 111 fu ll boker attire by
the Christian Motorcyclist Association . (ian McNemarlphoto)

Third annual 'Biker Sunday' at
the First Church ofthe Na~arene
Motorcycle Association
!MCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
will
CO ndU Ct
SerViCe
- -- - -- - - - - . Sunday in full "bike r"
The attire. The group will
GALLIPOLIS
First Churc~ of th e preach. give testimonies ,
Nazare ne will hold its 3rd and share,· how .Chri sl has
· annual "Bik er Sunday" thi s . changed their liv es.
week at 10:30 a.m.
"Sometimes people see
The ·
Christi an bikers as mean, dmg users
BY IAN McNEMAR

Associated Press

and we want to break thai
stereotype,"
said
Bob
Fulton, pastor of the First
Church of the Nazarene.
"You have to look beyond
the outer appearance uf people and that's what we want
to leach people. "

Fair to showcase talent in Hill Stage
The Rock 'N Country
Clogge~ will be perfonrung
their distinctive blend of down
POMEROY - A variety of
home dancing at 7 p.m. on
entertainment wi II be showTuesday. Aug. 17. Members of
cased on the Hi II Stage at the
the group include director
141 st Meigs County Fair.
.
Betty Smilh, co-director Linda
From· Aug. I6-21 fairgoers
Ord. and members, Bubby
will be trealed to local
Will, Tiffany McDonald,
singers, bands, clogging ·
Crystal
Jacks.
Sheila
groups and even bar~rshop
Shoemaker, 'Shirley Simmons,
do-wop, all free with lhe
Melanie Dudding. Keilah
price of admission.
Jacks, . Chassidy Will. Lilly
Several time slots in the
Jacks, Betty Lathey, Linda
performance
schedu"le
Roseberry and Olivia Da'·is.
.
remain open and anyone
Singer/Songwriter Adam
interested in being inchuded
D. Tucker takes the Hill Stage
in the lineup is asked to confrom
8:30 to 10 p.m. Tuesday,
Adam
D.
Tucker
' 1act Meigs Fair Board member Brenda Johnson, 843- share yo·ur talent with fair- Aug. 17. to entertain with his
5240, or Janie Fitch. 985PIHH see F•lr, AS
3828. "It 's not too late to goers," said Johnson.
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

I

Each Kit Contains the Followirag:

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

I

• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard

Sale Signs - :24" x 12"

Classifieds

Comics

'

I

•3WoodenS~

I

• 216 Prtcing Labels
• Inventory Sheet
• 4 Mini-signs to be posted on bulletin
boards at laundromats, markets, etc.
• 1 Seven-step instruction sheet. plus
"Secreta of How to Increase Proflta et
a Garage Sale"
·
• 3 Mounting Materials
• 6 Multi-ootored Balloons
• 1 Marker for Signs

1 Day Ad:

Dear Abby

Editorials
Obituaries
Places to go
Sports
Weather
@

3 Qay Ad:

$6.00 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great
Advertising!

$9.00 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great.
Advertising!

J)atlp m:rthune
~otnt ~leasant R.eg·tster

~alliJ)olts

The Daily Sentinel
I

·~----------------------- ---------~~ ----

trauma doctor· with the U.S.
Air Force and based at
. Langley, Va., was reportedly
FRAZIERS BOTTOM , on hi s way to visit his famiW.Va. - A former Galli a ly in Gallipolis at the till)e of
County
resident
died the crash, Dickson said .
Tuesday in a . colli sion Abels held the rank of major.
"between the car he was dnThe highway was closed
ving and a tractor-trailer on after the accident and
U.S. 35 in Putnam County, reopened to traffic around
the Winfield Detachment of 4
·a.m.
Wednesday,
the West Virginia State Dickson said. Re sponding
Police reported.
to the scene in addition to
Bradley Steven Abels of state police were the
Newport News, Va., died on PUtnam County EMS and
i)llpact foll owing the 6:04 the volunteer fire departp.m:, crash, said Sgt. K.S. ment s from Winfield and
Dickso n, the delac hmenl
Eleanor.
commander.
The victim was taken to the
Dickson said Abels was
state
medical examiner's
nor thbound near Fraziers
Bottom when the Fora office in South Charleston.
Tauru s he drove went left of Due to his active duty status,
center and collided with the the Air Force was to claim
southbound rig , driven by Abel s laler Wednesday,
David Wayne Harkin s, 43 , Dickson said.
The accident , which
of Roanoke, Va.
occlorred
near the si le of a
The flatbed truck is owned
car-lruck
collision
June
3
by My Three . Sons Inc ..
Roanoke , and was empty that took the lifq, of a Pliny
leenager, rema[ns under
when the &lt;;rash occurred.
Abels, on active duty as a investigat ion .
Bv KEVIN KELLY

Robertson
designated by
Indians

.

Relirement Svstem.
Also approved by the board was
the student -handbook for Meig sHigh School , Meigs Middle School,
and Meigs Elementary .School.
Two 2005 fiscal year (2004-2005)
state gmnt awards to the disl)icl were
noted during the meeting . They were the
SchooiNet professional development
gnmt in the amount of $4, 140 and the
Ohio reads Continuation Grant, $63,CXXl.
Scott Walton ·was n3)11ed delegate,
and Ron Logan. alternate to lhe 2004
Ohio School Board Association and will
attend the meeting to be held on Nov. K

KKELLY@MYDAilYREG\STER .COM

BY TOM WITHERS

CLEVELAND
When
toco Ciisp was told he might
start, he postponed his pregame
workout. He lifted the
Cleveland Indians instead.
. Crisp, a late replacement in
Cleveland's lineup Tuesday
night, hit a grand slam and·
drove in a career-high five runs
10 help the Indians outlast the
Detroit Tigers 10-6.
· His playing time recently cut
)Nith the arrival of heralded
rookie Grady Sizemore, Crisp
only started in left field and at
leadoff when Ttavis Hafner
was scratc!led with a sprained
neck and Matt LawtOn IIIQved
to designated hitter.
"If things work out, then
someday maybe I'll be a
Starter," Crisp said, shrugging
his shoulders. '1'hat's the way
it's been my whole life. You
have to hang in there."
.
· .Crisp hit his first career grand
.slam m the second innixff
Gary KnOtts (5-6) and
a
JtBf single in the fifth, giving
the lndi8ns an 84 lead.
. The speedy outfielder went
3-for-5, scored· twice and also
iaved at least one
in the
second with a leaping catch
!l88inst the left-field wall, scaling it like Spider-Man.
·
· "I was ·going to throw out my Cleveland Indians' Coco Crisp watches his second-inning
wm. ~tmyww s~terwas
grand slam off Detroit Tigers pitcher Gary Knotts Tuesday in
gone," he said, smiling. "So I Cleveland. (AP)
had to jump for it That's a 63inch venical jump right there." because we scored all those ins1ead. He wasted linle time in
C.C. Sab.athia (7-5) strug- runs."
making his presence fel" too.
S)ed through six innings for
Ben Broussard homered for . With arunner at fti'St and two
JUSt his second win in six starts, the Indians (51 -50), who outs in the second, Nook
and his 50th can:er victory. The moved back over .500 for the Logan hit a drive to deep left
All-Star left-bander allowed second time this season.
that Crisp snared by perfectly
five runs and six hits with three
Roodell White liit a three- timing his jump against the
walks while improving to 8-2 run homer and Bobby padded wall.
in 13 career starts against Higginson had three RBis for
"I thought the ball was gone
Detroit
.
Detroit.
'
at fm;t." Tigers manager Alan
"I'll give myself a B-minus,"
On a nigh! he expected to Trammell said. "He's very athsaid Sabathia. overly critical of watch from the bench, Crisp letic and has grear speed. He
his outing. "ll's only not an F became the game's biggest star timed it just right"

postponed included those of Carl ing. Scot Gheen resigned as assistant
Wolfe as athletic director for Me1gs · principal at Meigs intermedoate
High School. Ti m Simpso n, 8th School because he-is accepting a 'posiwith
lhe
Alhens-Meigs
grade boys basketball coach; Derrick tion
Fackler, 7th grade boys tiaske tball . Educational Serv,ice Center effective
coach, Jeremy Grin\ m. head varsity Aug. 13. Also resigning was Julie Ann
b~iseba ll coach, and Heather Hysell , Spaun as a substitute teacher due to
volunteer ·assistant cross-cou11try other employment. and Greg McCall.
coach. Superintendent William . a teacher at the Meigs Middle School.
Buckley said the postponement of for relirement purposes.
The Board also granted medical
aclion involved only one candidate
of absence to Shirley M.
leave
and that employment action would
Wilson. but driver. pending receipt
be taken at the Aug . I0 meeting.
of
her .medical disab ility benefits
The resignations of three staff memlhe ,State
Empl oy~es
bers were also accepted at lhe meet·. · from

Former Gallia
·county man dies
in U.S. 35 crash

AKndy 2b 3 '0 1 0
29 0 1 0 Total• . 30 2 8 2

poco hot in Tribe win ·overTigers

run

·e rewcools
otT Bum, 2-1, Bt

Reds implode along

I

I

•I
I

a004 Ohio Valley l'ubllohlnl Co.

·chili cook-off
French City Chili .Fest
scheduled Sept. 11
pe1i tion can go on to comMRUSSEll@MVDAllYTRIBUNE.COM
pete for a national prize .
"We wanted to get our feet
GALLIPOLIS ·_ Ch ili "et this year before we
lovers from across the Tri- jumped imo getti ng sancState will have the opportu- tioned:· Hopkins added.
The Chi li .Fest. sponsored .
nity to laste-test ·some of
Gallia Counl y's best offer- by the Gallipo lis Retail
ings during the upcoming Merchanls Association, will
Frenc h City Chi li Fest. feature something for the
scheduled for Sept. I I in the em ire fami ly, Hopkins said.
. For lhe little ones. kids
Gallipoli s City Park..
More 1han 30 choh cook- games . .face-painting and a
off contestants arc expected bounce housed will be availto participate in the first able, as well as a bike give··
event of its kind in Gallia away.
For big kids, the Southern ,
Counly. said event organizer, Lynn Hopkins.
-· As car club will host an old
"We' re very excited about car show, while local new
this.'' Hopkins said. "We car dealers will feature their
want to make this an annual latest models.
There will also be a beer
event. and hopefully ge l
sanctioned
by
the garden in 1he parking lot
International Chili Society next to the Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce on
for next year's festival"
cBeing sanctioned means
Ple•se see ChilL AS
winners from the local comBY MILLISSIA RUSSELL

�,.

I

•

PageA2

.O HIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 29,

2004

Community Calendar

A DAY ON WALL STREET
I

J~ly

fvvv\,.. . ~
-.\....,../.-'9 ""'-v

Dow Jones
industrials
.

ewsChannel

Public meetings

10,750

28, 2004

10,250
9,750

+31.93 ..

10,117.07

9,250
JUL
JUN
MAY
Low
Record high: 11,722.98
9,994 .22
Jan . 14, 2000

APR
High
10,146.86

Pet. change
.
from previous: +0.32

'
~

July 28, 2004

2.200

Nasdaq
composite
~10.84 .

/"-'\.an

APR
High
1,869.00

Pet. change
from previous: -0.58

drop from 82 early this"
evening to 71. Skies wi II
range from partly cloudy to
cloudy with 5 MPH winos
from the east turning from the
southeast as the evening progresses.
Ovemight (I a.m.-6 a.m.)
II. should be a humid and
overnight.
cloudy
Temperatures will linger at
69. Winds will "be 5 MPH
from the southeast turning
from the south as the
overnight progresses ..

7~-~
~v

Friday, July 30
Morning (7 a.m.-Noo/1)

AK Steel: Layoffs possible at more
plants in effort to stay competitive
MIDDLETOWN - AK
Steel Corp. said Wednesday
that expected layoffs could
extend
beyond ' its
Middletown mill to other
plants as the company tries to
reduce labor costs to become
more competitive.
M~na~ement is closely
momtonng operatmg exr.ens~s at all plants and won t say
·-where layoffs might occur
beyond th.e 15 jobs that were
cut last week at the
Middletown Works. company
spokesman Alan McCoy said;
. "There's not a predetermined schedule, but it is an
1ssue that. is very prominent · The AK Steel Middletown Works plant in Middletown is shown
.wtth us. We are continually in this aerial photo taken, March 2003. AK Steel Corp. has
looking at our staffing every- laid off 15 hourly employees at its M·iddletown Works mill,
where and would not limit it part of the company's ongoing effort to reduce labor costs to (
to Middletown," McCoy said. levels closer to those of rival steelmakers. (AP)
· The Middletown layoffs
trimmed the mill ' s hourly maintain its commitment to
The company has asked its
work force to about 2,940. retiree pensions and benefits. unions· to enter into discusThe 15 workers each bad less
ISG, built from bankrupt sions about how to make AK
ihan two years of company steel mills, has been growing Steel more competitive-. In
service, meaning they were and has managed to keep April , the company said it had
not .contractually entitled to labor costs below those of A K reached agreement with the
job security protection. About SteeL
United Auto Workers union
250 of the Middletown mill 's
When ISG took over on a new "three-year contract
remaining .workers are also in Bethlehem Steel, it reduced covering 460 hourly employ(hat category and potentially employment by 30 percent ees at its stainless steel finishcould be laid off. McCoy and maintained Bethlehem's ing plant in Coshocton.
said.
prior output levels, Bradford
AK Steel' declined to
· · V/ith raw materials and said. U.S. Steel acquired release specific details of that
energ·y. prices running high National Steel out of bank- contract, but said it limits the
· because of increased demand ruptcy reorgarrization last workers' benefits to terms
and contracts locking in the year and has since reduced more comparable to those of
prices the company charges JrlfiPioyment by as much as 20 contracts offered by competi!llOSt customers. AK Steel 's percent at National Steel and tors.
·
alternative is to reduce labor U.S. Steel mills, he said.
The Armco Employees
costs if it is to become more
Last week. AK Steel · Independent
federation ,
competitive with Richfield- which recently ended a two-:: which represents hourly
based International Steel year streak of multimillion- employees of Middletown
Group and U.S. Steel Corp . in dollar losses _ reported a sec- Works, "hasn't responded to
Pittsburgh, McCoy and an ond-quarter profit of $92.7 the companfs request for
industry analyst said.
million. That included an talks about improving com"That's where you have to operating profit ):ler ton of petitiveness, McCoy said·. Ed
look. You can't change the $36. But competitors have Shelley, the union's president,
raw material costs." said reported fatter profits, plus declined Wednesday to say
Charles Bradford, an analyst operating profits per ton that how his union will respond.
with .
.
Bradford approach $150, McCoy said. He said he was surprised by
Research/Soleil Securities in
The steel. market is boom- the Middletown layoffs in
New York. "The only place ing now but long-term pr.ob- light of AK Steel's profitable
you can look, really, is num- lems that aren't fixed could second quarter.
ber of bodies." ·
.haunt steelmakers .after the
The
Middletown-based
James Wainscott, AK market inevitably cools off, company also has operations
Steel's chief executive offi- Bradford said.
in Penn sylvania, Kentucky
cer, says the company has a
"In this environment, and Indiana. It produces fiat$30-per:ton price disadvan- everybody can make money," rolled carbon, stainless and
tage
with
competitors Bradford said. "You should electrical steels, as well as
because of retiree pension and be ashamed of yourself if you tubular steel products for the
health care expenses and don't. But this isn't going to auto. appliance, construction
employee wages and benefits. last forever."
and manufacturing ~1arkets .
AK Steel say~ it wants to

·•

1.150
1,100
1,050

+0.59

APR

Pet. change
· from previous: +0.05

It will be a humid and
cloudy morning. There could
be a few raindrops around the
area. Temperatures will climb
from 70 to 79 by late this
morning. Winds will be 5
MPH from the south turning
from the southwest us the
morning progres~es.
Afternoon (1 p.m.-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
humid and cloudy. There is a
good chance of rain.
Temperatures will hover at
82. Winds will he 5 MPH
·from the southwest turning
from the south as the afternoon progresses.

Low
1,832.12

1,2 00

1,095.42

Thursday, July 29
Morning (7 a.m:-Noon)
Temperatures wi II rise to 78
with today's low of 60 occurring around 6:00am. Skies
will be mostly sunny with 5
MPH winds from the east.
Afternoon (1 p.m.·6 p.m.)
Expect a humid afternoon.
Temperatures will hold
steady around 82 with today's
high of 83 occurring around
. 4:00pm. Skies will be mostly
sunny to cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the east.
•
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It should continue to be
humid. Temperatures will

1,600
JUN
JUL
•
Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

MAY

July 28, 2004

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

Weather forecast

2,000
1.800

.

1,858.26

'

·

-·-\rv-...,r'""ll~~

'

-

~

•

High
1,098.84

MAY
Low
1,082.17

1,000
JUN
JUL
..
Record high: 1.527_.46
March 24, 2000

Local Stocks
ACI- 32.78
AEP- 30.74'
Akzo - 33.00
Ashland Inc. - ' 52.34
BBT - 38.66
BLI - 12.53
Bob Evans - 26.80
BorgWarner - 44.95
City Holding - 3i .32
Champion - 4.01
Charming Shops - 7.19
Col - 33.92
DuPont - 42.25
DG -19.01
Federal Mogul - .27

Gannett - 81 .98
General Electric - 33.29
GKNLY - 4.40
.
Harley Davidson - 60.02
Kmart- 74.19
Krqger 15.83
Ltd - 20.02
NSC- 26.83
"Oak Hill Financial - 32.54
OVBC - 32.25
Peoples - 25.13
Pepsico - 51.19
Premier 9.92
Rocky Boots - 19.69
AD Shell - 50.14

Rockwell - · 37.56
Sears - 36.66

sse -

· AT&amp;T -

25.40

15.00

USB- 28.29

Wendy's - 36.00
Wai·Mart - 53.91
Worthington - .20.01
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided tiy, Smith
Partners at Advest ·Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Proud to be a~rt ·o£Yqur life.
·

=~

,,

Sublc:rilie coa.y • 992·21S5

- 8:30 p.m. Aug. 2 - 6 for
preschoolers through 6th
Friday, July 30
graders. Fun, food, storyRUTLAND _ The James telling from the Bible, crafts.
Vennari Park will be dedicut- games and music will be feaed in a I p.m. public ceremo- tured. Contact Pastor · Jim
ny at the park shelter house.
Brady 992-2010 or Bill
Saturday, July 31
Downie 949-2289.
PORTAND - Lebonan
Thesday, Aug. 3
Township Tm stees will meet
RACINE -The Southern
at 7:30p.m. at the township Athletic Boosters will meet at
building.
.
. 6 p.m. at Southern High
School. All coaches and adviMonday, Aug. 2 ·
SYRACUSE - · Sutton sors are asked to attend.
MIDDLE!i'ORT
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
Syracuse Village Hall.
. Middleport Lodge 363. F&amp;
Thesday, Aug. 3
AM will meet at 7:30p.m.
LETART
Letart
· Thursday, Aug. 5
Township Tmstees will meet at
CHESTER. - The Chester. I0 a.m. at the uffic~ building.
Shade Historical Association
Wednesday, Aug. 4
will be holding it's monthly
PAGETOWN Scipio planning meeting at 7 p.111. in
To:-vnship Trustees will meet the Old Chester Courthouse.
at 6:30 p.in .ar lhe Pagetown For more informati'on call
town hall. . ,
I)avid or Pam Schatz, 740Friday, Aug. 6 .
667-9712
Marietta - . A Buckeye
Hills- Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development
District Executive Committee
Saturday, July 31
Meeting will be held at II :45
MIDDLEPORT
The
a.m. at the Holiday Inn located at 70 I Pike Street in Gloryland Believers will perMarietta. For more informa- form at the Middleport
tion contact Jenny McMahon Church of the Nazarene 7
p.m. Pastor Allen Midcap
at 1-740-374-9436.
the
public.
invites
Refre shments will be se rved .

Concerts

Clubs and
organizations

Reunions

Monday,Aug. 2
POMEROY
Grace
Episcopal Church will be
holding
a
Comn]Unity
Vacation Bible School 6 p.m.

Sunday, Aug. I
POMEROY - The Parker
Reunion wi II be held at
Eastern Elementary with a
carry-in dinner to be served

at I p.m .
Saturday, Aug. 7
RUTLAND - The John .
and Mabel Lee reunion, will
be held at noon at the old Fort
Meigs , New Lima Road,
Rutland. Take a covered dish.
drink , auction item and a ·
lawn chair. For Information
call 7420-2366.

Church services :
· Friday, July· 30
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Church of Christ
will have a community dinner. 5:30 to 7 p.m. Everyone '
is welcome to attend the free
dinner.
Monday, Aug. 2
POMEROY
Community vacation Bible
school will be held from 6 to
8 p.m. through Aug. 6 at
Grace Episcopal church for
pre -school through sixth
grade. There will be stories.
crafts. games, music and
refreshments. The school is
sponsore,d by Trinity, Grace
Episcopal, Heath United
Methodist Church, Pomeroy
United Methodist Church
with St. · Paul Lutheran
Church serving as host.

Other events
Friday, july 30
POMEROY - · Lenora
Leifheit, Meigs Cooperative
Parish. will be checking
blood pressures at Powell's
Food Fair from 10 a.m. to 12.

Master gardeners continue
road show programs
MARIETTA
The
Master Gardener Volunteers
are continuing the highly successful Gardening Road
Show series with a motor
coach trip to west central
Ohio. On Aug. II the volunteers will lead a group
through OSU Extensions tnals of new annual flowers,
have lunch at a dairy farm in
· Springfield, as well as learn
about propagation and enjoy
display gardens in the afternoon.
The first mornin~ stop with
be the OSU ExtenstonAnnual
Research Trials in Springfield
where the group will enjdy a
guided tour by th6 Clark
County Master Gardeners of
the annual trial gardens. We
will see how new plants grow
in a true garden setting and
see the results of this years tri-

als. Many seed companies
from around the country send
seed which is grown into
plants at a local greenhouse
there and then planted at the
OSU Extension office to be
evaluated during the growing
season.
Participants will have
lunch at the Golden Jersey
Inn at Yellow Springs hOsted
by Young's Jersey Dairy.
Details about the farm are on
the web at: www.young~­
,dairy.com
The afternoon will begin at
Scarffs
. Nursery
(www.scarffs.com) in New
Carlisle with a tll-scale pro·
duction nursey tour to see
how trees and shrubs are
grown from seed and cuttings.
There will be some hands on
demonstrations on propagation after which the group

will return to Newark to visit
Wilsons Garden Center
(www.great-gardeners.com)
to view some of the best display gardens in the Midwest.
Participants will return to
Marietta around 7p.m.
Those taking the tour are to
meet ·at the Washington
County Fairgrounds at 7 a.m.
The fee for the trip includes
tours, motor coach accommodatii.ms. und gardening information, but not lunch. Master
Gardener Volunteers will be
hosts for the day and will
answer questions. about gardening during the trip. The
fee is $45.00 per person.
Registration ·form can be .
printed from http:l/washington.osu.edu or obtained by

...-'"":~'!"!"'""- tional detail ·leave Holzer . Medical Center

NEWSC&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special .Meigs County Fair 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.
BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

GALLIPOLIS - LaMar
Wyse, the current president
of Holzer Medical Center and
vice president of Operations
for Holzer Consolidated
Health Systems (HCHS), has
resigned his positions for a
new position with Galion
Community Hospital in
Galion, Qhio.
The · ahnouncement was
made Wednesday in a news
release from Thomas E.
Tope, president and CEO of
. Holzer Consolidated Health
Systems. According to the
release, Wyse will · continue
his role at HMC until Oct.
li ... A search for his replacement is under way.
Wyse has been HMC's
president since September
1999. He will serve as the
president and CEiO of the
Galion Community Hospital
(GCH). Wyse previously
served with GCH while
working for ·OhioHealth in
Columbus, and as interim
· CEO for the facility in I 998.
"LaMar will be greatly
missed from our team," Tope
said. "In the last five . years,
he has been an integral con·
tributor to our success. His
leadership qualities and intimate knowledge of opera-

Call
DAVE or BRENDA

· at

W y s e
began his
.
career 111
LaMar W~se
'
h e a 1t h
administration .in 1976, He
received a bachelor 's degree
in music from Malone
College in Canton and a inaster of health administration
from The Ohio State
University, He also completed courses at the Pettit
College of Law . at Ohio
Northern University, Ada.
· Currently, he serves on
Ohio University's Health
Administration
Advisory
Board, is chairman of the
Ohio Hospital Association
Work· Force and Staffing
Task Force, and sits on the
board of the Professional
Advisory Committee of the
graduate program in Health
Services and Management at
OSU.
Wyse said, "Karon (Wyse·s
wife) aQd }' .have enjoyed
every aspect of our lives in
Southeastern Ohio," Wyse
said. "It will be very hard to

and the community; they will
always hold a special place in
our hearts. ·
"In sotne ways, this was
the hardest decision we've
ever made and in some ways
it was the easiest because we
feel so clearly led. It's more
of a personal than career
move in that it takes us closer to 'roots' and family. It
allows us to achieve some
long-term personal goals.:.'
Alan . Stockmeister, chairman of the board for the
Holzer Hospital Foundation,
said, "LaMar has been a great
asset to our hospital and
Health System, as well as our
community. From his entry as
president of Holzer Medical
Center and chief operating
of
Holzer
officer
Consolidated
Health
Systems, LaMar entwined
hi~self into our community
as president of the Board of
Directors of the Ariel Theatre
and
the
Ohio
Valley
Symphony. He was also on
the board of the French Art
Colony, very involved in his
church , and represented the
Hospital · at . many· local
events. His .involvement in
o.ur community will be.
missed."

:Today in the Sentinel ...

.

'

"G_i?(aceJ f, ~ 0' ~$ f, Jf)fl"

992-2155

FOR MORE INFORMATION

The

has helped
develoP. ouc
S Ys t e m
focus and
prepare us·
for
our
future."

Thursday, July

29, 2004

-Identity theft among!Jmilies
adds new wrinkle to fraud
DEAR ABBY: I want to
respond to '"Discredited."'
whose parent stole his (or
her) identity and opened
credit card accounts using
that false identity. ,
Dear
I investigate credit card
Abby
fraud for one of the larges\
banks in the. world. For
parents to co'tnmit identity
..
theft against their children
is an increasing trend.
"Discredited"' needs . to
Readers , if the mail I
contact the credit card com- have .received about this
panies as soon as possible problem is any indication.
and repon the · fraud. And ID theft a~d fraud have
"Discredited" should NOT become so common that all
pay on those cards, since of us should run a credit
that is often interpreted as · check on ourselves once a
acceptance of responsibility . . year to make sure we
Because she did not authu- haven' t been "cloned."'· It
rize the cards, they will can be done by contacting
most likely be removed the three credit bureaus:
from her credit report after Experian:
888 -3 97-3742;
completing . some paper- Equifax: 800-685 ' II II: and
work . She should also. as Transunion : 800-916-8800.
you advised, file a police Read on:
report since many cmnpaDEAR
ABBY:
nies require one when "Di scredited'" wrote about
one of her parents using
reporting fraud.
If "Discredited'" does not her credit information. Thi ,;
take action NOW, his/her is culled family identity
credit will be . affected for theft. and it is a far too
the rest of her life. As a common, ye t . frequently
preventive me·asure·, the hidden occurrence that is
three major credit reporting not Often discussed.
agencies should be ·alerted
You
rightly
advised
and a fraud alert placed. "Di scredited" not to continwhich will require lenders ue to be victimized or feel
to contact "Discredited" at ashamed, and urged the
a specified phone number writer to contact the police.
before extending credit.
However, given the cultural
Please don't use my issues raised by this indiname. Sign me ... FRAUD vidual (who is Asian ), yom
INVESTIGATOR IN TEN- advice may have been ovcrNESSEE
simplified. In our experiDEAR INVESTIGATOR: ence at the Identity Theft
Thank you for your sup· Resource Ceiller, · many
portive and helpful letter.
family ID theft victims
'

could benefit from talking
to an ad,·i,er about potential consequence' to themse lves and the thief before
m a kin~
'uch a difficult
clecisit~l .
We work regu larly wltb
Ccbe' 'uch cis these. as well
those in whic h ID theft .
is '"ed as &lt;1 form of
domestic Yiolence. Our program is nonprofit. and victims arc never charged for
ou i· time.
LINDA
FOLEY.
EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR . ITRC
DEAR LINDA : Batten
clown the hatche s. because
you're going to be inundated. Readers. the Web si te i.,- ~
www.idtheftcenter.org.
·
And now. "some additionai
information: In cases like
thi s. it is also a good idea
to con tact the Social
Security Administration and
request a statement of youi
earning s lo make cedai1l
your relat ive isn "t working
using your infolmation.
And , depending un your
age. it may be necessary to
contact
the
Intern al
Revenue Servil:e to ~ll::.~i·c
that no personal tax bill)
are tlue (or overdue) under
your personal identifyin~
information.
Deur Ab!JI" is 11 rill en b\"
Abi~?ail V&lt;t;t Buren. rt/_,.;,
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was fnunded b1· her
mnther. Pauline Pliillips.
Write
Dear Abb\"
m
1\ 'WW. DearAbbr.cam
p 0.
Box 69440. Los Angeles.
CA 90069.
··

a.,

I'

or

.

.

Senior Center to host party time
POMEROY- The Meigs
Se"nior Center will host a
"Give Neighborhood Crime
and Drugs a Going Away
Party" from 6 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.
. The pro¥ram which is a
pan of Naunal Night out will
feature child Identification

kits, the law enforcement
canine unit, games for the
kids, karaoke and the
Swingin' Seniors . Food will
be for sale all evening.
There will "also be a collection of non-perishable
food items to be donated to
the Cooperative Parish .

The event is co-sponsored
by the Meigs Senior center,
the Meigs county Helth
·Depiartment, . the Meigs
county
disdtrict public
Library, and the GalliaJackson-Meigs Board of
Alcohol Drug Addicton and
Mental Health Services.

Werry promoted at O.U. Alumni Association
·1 POMEROY

Dawn
Werry of Pomeroy has be~n
pro~oted from ad~J~Jstra!lve
asstst.ant to admmtstrattve
assoctate for the Outreach and
En~agement Team of the
Ohto University Alumni

Association.
Werry has taken classes at
West Virginia University at
Parkersburg, W.Va. toward a
degree in business adminis-

tration. She is currently taking
classes
at
Ohio
University towards a bachelor's degree in communications.

contacting
Judyat Waller
or "\ · - - - - - - - - peggy Bolen
740-3767431.

Wyse resigns as HMC's president
STAFF REPORT

PageA3

·BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Sentinel

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low Back Chair
SALE~119

Proud to be apari of
· your life.
Subscribt today • 992-2155

High Back Chair
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Anderson's

fURNITUR~ 1 APPliANm 1 CARPH

store Houri: 9:lo-s:oo Mon. sat Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671

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•&lt;"

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Childhood Enrichment Center · ~
' 3. q .MID.5' YE.N?. Ot.DS· ·
1\1\o'H~ - TuuRS. 9:oo - fl:ao ~.M.

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lOcated in the
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Providing quality early

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can develop social skills and a love
for learning through discovery arid
language enrichment for future
academic success
·

For more info call: 949-2381

~

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~l~,~~;»D,&gt;~ai:~~·i·~ &gt;~•·~ lJU~ ~ ~ ~ -.~ ~&gt;~: ~"~l~:l·~i"~'&gt;;·i·a~·~'~ ~ '~&gt;~'~'~ ~;,~Jl
2

�OPINION

..The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday. Jul y 29, the 2 11 th day of 2004. There
are 155 days left in the year.
Today's Hi ghlight in History: .
.
.
On July 29. 1981, Britain's Prince Charles married Lady
Diana Spencer :at St. Paul 's Cathedral in London. (The couple
divorced in 1996.)
On this date:
In I 030, the patron saint of Norway. King Olaf II, was killed
in battle. .
· In 1588, the English so undl y defeated the Spanish Armada
in the Battle of Gravelines.
In 1890. artist Vincent van Gogh died of a self-inflicted
gunshot wound in Auvers. France.
.
.
In 1900, Italian King Humbert I was assassmated by an
anarchist; he was succeeded by his son, Victor Emmanuel Ill.
· In 1914, transcontinental telephone service began with the
first phone conversation between New York and San
Francisco.
·
In 1948, Britain 's Kin g George VI opened the Olympic
Games in London.
.
In 1958. President Eisenhower signed the National
Aeronautics and Space Act, which created NASA.
· In 1967 , fire swept the USS Forrestal in the Gulf of Tonkin,
killing 134 servicemen.
·
·
In 1975. Gerald Ford became the first U.S. president to visit
the site of the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz in Poland
;ts he paid tribute to the victims.
In 1980, a state funeral was held in Cairo, Egypt, for the
i;leposed Shah of Iran , who had died two days earlier at age 60.
· Five years ago: A day trader. apparently upset over stock
losses, opened fire in two Atlanta brekerage offices, killing
nine people and wounding 13 before shooting himself to
death; authorities say Mark 0. Barton also killed his wife and
two children. California Gov. Gray Davis abandoned the
s~ate's effort to preserve Proposition 187, a divisive voterapproved ban on schooling and other public benefits for illegal'immigrants.
·One year ago: President Bush refused to release a congressional report on possible links between Saudi Arabian offi cials and the Sept. II hijackers. saying disclosure "would help
the enemy" by revealing intelligence sources and ·methods.
Boston's Bill Mueller became the first player in major league
history to hit grand slaJl!s from both sides of the plate in a
game and connected for three homers in a 14-7 win at Texas:
Thought for Today: "The fellow who says he'll meet you
halfway usually thinks he's standing on the dividing line." Q.A. Battista, Canadian-born author-scientist.

'

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Gene
Lyons

equals and . understands their
Iivo::s. How many powerful,
self-made men do that?
Several times as president.
Clinton annoyed the traveling
press by dragging them to
Arkansas to auend funerals in
remote locations like Ja~per
and Bjndeye. He interrupted a
trip to China to return to Little
Rock to help a childhoo~
friend bury his daughter. Had
he begged off. as most of us
would have; nobody would
have said a wood. ·
Like
most
successful
Sou them politicians,' the boy
can tell a funny story. If you
make allowances for his tin
ear .-- at one point Clinton
writes of his need ."to recharge
my batteries and water my
roots," hopefully not simultaneously, the Arkansas chapters
read like early Twain.
Garrulous, energetic-; endlessly curious, a sharp judge of
character. Clinton is often the
butt of his own humor: He's
the fat kid who tripped and got
butted by his granddad's ram
while others skedaddled and
the glad-handing pol who fled
an Ozark mountaineer leading
a full-grown bear on a chain.
He told a truckload of Marion
County good old boys he'd get
out and walk back to town
before he'd chew a plug of Red

Palestinian crisi.' show him at
his best: knowing every disputed
checkpoint
in
Jerusalem. and able to ex pla.in
Yitzhak Rabin's political
dilemmas to Vasser Arafat and
vice versa. When the
Palestinian leader called
Clinton a great man, be
answered. "I mn not a great
man. J am a failure. and you
have made me one."
He's also smart enough to
give simple answers. Why
don't GOP "supply side" theories work'' "A1ithmetic.': How
wou ld Bl• h VS • .Gore have
been lL ided had the
Demurral been leading?
"(T)he same Supreme Court
wou ld have voted 9-0 to count
the votes,"
.
Clinton's ideology is almost
pre-Socmtic. Politically. you
can't step into the same river
twice. Get what you can
today; come back tomorrow.
Here's what I'd guess is
Clinton's favorite line about
himself: "Say what you want,"
wrote Newsday's Jimmy
Breslin. "but do not say he
quits."
Sure. Clinton can be a narcissist, like every politician
who ever lived. Any)Nay.
McMuruy's right; it's a fasCinating book about an extraordinary man. As for his sexual
sins, I already knew more
about those than I needed to.
Didn't you?
(Arkansas
DcmocrarGaz.erre co/unmisr Gene Ll'ons
is a 11ational mag(dne awwrl
&gt;~ 'inner and cu-lluthor of "The
Hull/ing of the President" (St.
Martin's Press. 2(}(}()). You can
e-mail Lyom ll! genelyo11.12@cs.com.)

RACINE - Aleta Lynn (Russell) Wells. 63, formerly of
Racine. pass_ed away on Frid~y. July 23, 2004 at Deltona
Health Care m Deltona. Fla.
·Born Jan. 31, 1941 in Athens, she was the daughter of the
late Kem1eth N. Russell and Pearl L. (Jones) Russell, who currentl y resides at Overbrook Center in Mi,ddleport.
Aleta &lt;Jnd her late husband Bill Wells li ved and worked in
the cent:a l Florida area and in Ontario, Canada, and enjoyed ·
havmg family and frie nds visit them at their Delon Springs,
..
·
Fla., home.
On her summer visit to home in 1996, Aleta was baptized
and became a member of the First Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy. She is survived by her mother, two daughters. Lisa ·
Anne Gage and Erika Lynn Burton. both of Florida, her brother, Karl R. Russell. sister-in-law Linda L. Russe ll, of
Pomeroy, and brother-in-law Floyd T. Chapman of Syracuse.
She Is also survived by one gmnddaughter, Shayfer Gage,
and three grandsons. Joshua Gage. Mason Gage and Logan
Dean. all of Florida, and numerous nephews and nieces.
She was ])receded in death by her husband, Bill Wells, father
Kenneth. SISter Kenda (Russell ) Chapman, and brother Max
Russell.
A memorialservice will be held at 2 p.m. at the Burlingham
Eemetery on Saturday. JulY 31, with Pastor Lamar O'Bryant
otticiati ng.
·

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Local Briefs
Tournment set ·
WELLSTON - The Wellston Recreation Department will .
. hold coaGh pitch baseball and softball tournaments for boys
and girls eight and under, Aug. 7 and 8. For more information
.
call Scott Sturgill, 740-418-2335.

For the record
Civil suits filed
Pomeroy - A civil suit has been filed in Meigs County
Com mon Pleas. Court by Robert Headley. of Reedsville.
against the Olive Township Trustees. seeking niore than
$25 ,000 in damages for alleged wrongful termination of an
employment contrac t. Headley was employed by the township in March. 2000, as a r()ad maintenance supervisor and
heavy equip1.nerit operator. In March of 2003, Headley suffered a hern iated disk while moving an air compressor. He
was on workers' compensation until Sept. 15 of last year.
when he obtained a medical release to return to work, urtder
the condition he not li ft anything weighing more than 50
pounds. Headley alleges that the trustees would not allow him
to return to work. and instead hired the father of one of the
trustees . He is claiming emotional distress and punitive damages which may be decided at time of trial.
Janet Compson of New Haven, Irene Shaw of Ravenswood,
and Karen Hood of Syracuse have filed a civil suit against
Christina Cooper Sigman seeking to have a real estate transfer declared null and void. The suit alleges that mistakes were
made in the legal description of the land to be transferred, and
accidentally . included portions of Bean Alley and Seventh
Street.
Greenpoint Credit of Atlanta, Ga.~ has filed a suit against
Robert and Stacey Bishop of Middleport and Sandra Bishop
of Nowata, Okla., alleging default on payment of $28,724 for
a Skyline Spruceridge manufactured home. The suit seeks
repossession of the home.

1

..,.,.

WE

NEED
TO

CHANGE,
SIR.

·Chili

The Bush girls reconsidered

•

..

around them. But· if the Bush p1ying eyes than in drumming
girls can manage to stay alive solid values into them. Fearing
'and sane, they'll be in compar- that media scrutiny could warp
aiively good shape.
their girls, the Bushes fiercely
Jenna and Barbara are fr&lt;1- hid them from the public ·
ternal twins, delivered within a throughout W.'s career. Until
minute of one another by this summer, Bush never
Caesarian section on Nov. 25, brought his daughters onto the
1981. Like the Bush family campaign trail or included
itself, there's a cultural duality them in official family por- ·
to them. The ftrst President traits. After Bush's election in
Bush was the blueblood son of 2000, the White House presa Connecticut senator who , · sured national reporters to
summered in Kennebunkport, leave the girls alone. After one
Maine. George W. also attend- scribe asked a question at , a
ed Andover and Yale, but White House briefing that
remade himself from preppy referred to· Jenna's drihking.
scion into a boots-wearin' oil- press secretary Ari Aeischer
man; now he summers in called him later to creepily
Crawford, Texas, and seems warn that the question had
far more Houston than been "noted in the building."
Greenwich.
But this zealous privacy
The twins have split this dif, strdlegy was imperfect. Back
ference. Jenna Is the Red in Texas, it kepi the girls' picStater: She stayed at home in tures ··out of the newspapers.
Austin to attend the University But once they tasted the freeof Texas. "I knew I wanted to · dom of college in 2000, the
go to a big Southern schooi," twins reacted with typical
abandon:
she told Vogue. Barbara chan- · undergraduate
nels the family's Eastern-elite binge-drinking, using fake IDs
spirit. She applied to
col- (and, less typical for •underleges, including Princeton and grads, ditching their Secret
Harvard. wound up at Yale, Service agents). Even then, the
and made regular trips from news riledia mostly looked the
New Haven into Manhauan. other way, but there was no
The split also reflects the dif- controlling the tabloids, which
ferences between their parents. reported lurid tales of public
Jenna emu lares her father's makeout · sc;ssions and other
mischievous spirit, while alcohol-so;ikl:d debauches.
Barbara seems to have inheritWith the girls stalting to
ed more of her mother's -book- · acquire something o~ a trashy
ish reserve.
in)age - and a dicey re-elecWhattheyooshareis·ataste lion campaigncoming up~
for hip clothes, a good party, the Bush family realized the
and a celebrity milieu. As the media could be their friend
Washington Post's Ann after all. Now . a slick
Gemart details in her biogra- makeover is underway. This
phy' of Laura Bush, "The month the ftrst daughters have
Perfect Wife" (Simon &amp; been uriv.eiled to the world
Schuster, 2004) the Bushes with all the coordinated hype
have been permiSsive, laissez- of Apple's latest iPod rollout
faire parents more interested in FIISI carne a Vogue magazine.
shielding their daughters from spread, featuring the girls in'

'"

• www.mydailysentinel.com

elegant designer gowns. and
their first-ever print interview.
Then Jenna appeared at some
of her father's campaign
events, followed soon after by
her sis(er. It's not hard to guess
what this· is about: A president
seen as a blustery warmonger
can surely use a couple of pretty young daughters by his side
to help soften his image.
It's a bit propagandistic -but. so what? The Bush girls
deserve a linle good press.
They've been held to standards
that millions of college students . couldn't meet . -- partly
because they are presidential
daughters, and partly because
they are daughters of this president, and therefore are
assumed to have inherited his
youthful fecklessness and dipsomania. A prudish media tittered for yean; over their collegiate drinking exploits. But
what could be more ordinary'!
They could be robotic drones
reciting their dad's good-versus-evil rhetoric from talking
points.
Instead, Jenna professes
plans to teach at a charter
school, while Barbara purponedly hopes to work with
AIDS-stricken
children
abroad: It's true that the Bush
girls have wealth and privilege
on their side. But dark psychological forces are aligned
against them. In addition to the
unique pressures borne by
presidential children, daughters face an especially.,complex set of expectations
involving feminine virtue and
1ntelligence and ambition.
Chelsea, for all she's been
through, managed to thread
this heedle. But it's not easy.
(Michael Crowley is a
senior editor at the New
Republ~c.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Local artists winners of .FAC exhibit

Aleta Lynn Wells

Man. only to have them crack
up: He'd passed the test.
He also knows his enemie'
and what makes them tick:
"The self-righteous, condemning Absolute Truth-claiming
dark side of white Southern
conservatism .... Since I was a
boy. I had watched people
assert their piety and moral
superiority as justitications for
claiming an entitlement to
political power, and lor demonizing those who begged tll
differ wi th them. usually over
civil rights."
In his student days, Clinton
confronted KKK-endorsed
Arkansas gubernatorial candidate "Justice Jim " Johnson,
only to see his old :rdversary
later re-emerge he lping- ~ddlt}
fabks of thug-smuggling and
murder 011 the "Clinton ·
· Chronicles," writing columns
lor Thl' Washington limes,
advi,ii• · Whitewater witnesse~ and '".:ccpting emoluments
• from Richard Mellon Scaife's
Arkansas Project.
Clinton's other great gift. his
enormOliS, almost insatiable
intelligence. is soi11ething ~e's
understandably reticent about
discussing. TI1at, too. excites
envy and contempt · .from
1ivals. Always has.
'.
. Doesn 't seemg
so many
sides of every issue render him
wishy-washy" No, it often
enables him to understand
other people's arguments better than they do, while also
grasping how they fee l about
what they think. ·
. A lifelong student 'of power.
Clinton's accounts of his successful negotiations to end the
Irish "Troubles" and his .failed
.eftort's to solve the Israeli-

nine

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0

Obituaries

gAHlER.

From the earliest day&amp; of the
republiC. American presidents
have been humiliated by their
wayward, and self-destructive
children. John Quincy Adams'
son was a debt-laden alcoholic
who was kicked out of
.Harvard and later drowned in
a possible suicide. William
Heniy Harrison referred to his
' incompetent sons as "the
destruction of my hopes"
(although his grandson.
Benjamin, became president).
Modem presiden~al kids
haven't fared much beuer.
John F. Kennedy Jr. labored all
his life to be taken seriously
before his untimely death.
Reagan daughter Pani Davis
took drugs, posed nude for
Playboy. and penned erotic
novels with names silch a5
"Bondage." And while George
W. Bush has matched his dad's
success, it took him almost 20
yean; to realize that college
was over.
These cases aren't flukes.
Being related to a president
brings more problems than
opportunities, according to
Doug Wead. a former aide to
George W. Bush, in his book
"All the President"s Children"
• (Atria, 2004). Wead theorizes,
a bit crudely, that the pressure
to win the approval of a father
who also happens to be a
world leader simply crushes
many presidential offspring.
By these standards, Bush's
twin daughters almost look
like overachievers.. Yes, they
come across as obnoXious,
pampered. party girls, and
though they keep gossip
columnists and paparazzi
busy, they seem strangely
uninterested in the world

2004

2004

~T11' C! NCINNI'I1111Sf·
.

THE NEW REPUBLIC

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters 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 expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
'editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

2156.

Aller watching Bill Clinton
at relatively close range since
1976. mayb\: I should have
stronger feelings about him.
Everybody else seems to love
him or hate him. Why can't I
get with the program''
It was in that spirit I decided
to do what I suspect few early
rev iewers of his encyclopedic
"My Life" (Knopf) had done:
actually read the fool thing
before rushing into print.
Slate's press critic. Jack
Shafer. had the Sa.mt' suspicion. He a5ked early reviewe~ some of whom admiued
reading Clinton's book selectively. He got no reply from
Michiko Kakutani, the New
York Times cn!Ic who
famously pronounG~d it "eyecrossingly dull." (In the same
newspaper, novelist Larry
McMurtry called it "by a generous measure. the richest
American presidential autobiogmphy.")
Washington Post columnist
Anne Applebaum told Shafer
she'd
skipped Clinton's
Arkansas. political career, all
18 years of it.. I doubt she
would have admiued that had
he matured in New York or
Cali tomia. AI~ that the condescension of status-crazed
Washington pundits toward
Clinton's humble roots has
always prevented their crediting the bone-deep egalitarianism that is one of his great
virtues as a politician and a
man. See, Arkansans will tolemte an awful lot from their
politicians, but they will not
abide a snob.
Clinton remains close to
many people he's known since
grade school.. He sees them as

BY MICHAEL CROWLEY

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Thursday, July 29,

Thursday, July 29,

A fascinating 'Life'

The.Daily SentineL

Reader Services

Pagei\4

from PageA1

State
Street,
Hopkins
explained. A big screen television, donated by Sears of
Gallipolis, will be placed in
that area so local football
fans won' 1 miss The Ohio.
State University-Marshall
University football game.
"A lthough we are not
anticipating any problems.
we· will have the area.separat. ed and security has been
arranged to avoid any potenproblems."
Retail
tial
Merchants
Association
President Tommy Vaughan
said.
·
Attendees of the event can
purchase tickets to taste-test
each chili cook-off entry,
with all proceeds frorp the
event going to the comljllunity Christmas decoration !fund,
which pays for the decorations filling the City Park
during the· holiday season,
and their maintenance.
"Maintenance and insurance on the decorations are
· very costly," Vaughan said.
"Insurance alone is $1,100 a
year, and each year we
change hundred and hun- 446-0596.
1

[

I
l

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ll. I

dteds of bulbs."
Vaughan said he is excited
. about the potential the Chili
Fest will have on the county.
"I thin~ this could really
take off and become a major
event for .Galli a County, as
well as a major tourist attraction," he said.
·
The event is sclieduled for
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the
·Gallipolis City Park.
An entry fee of $30 each
will be charged for cook-off
contestants, but prizes will be
awarded for first through
third place, Hopkins said.
Prize money is being sponsored by lnfoCis"ion of
Gallipolis. First place will
pay $500, second place will
pay $300, and third place will
·
pay $200.
"We hope that the impressive prize money will be an
incentive to get those local
chili cooks into the park to
participate," Hopkins said.
Cooks must supply at least
three gallons of competition
chili, as well as their own gas
cooking equipment.
For additional information
or rules and regulations for
the event, contact Lorie or
Heather at the Gallia County ·
Chamber of Commerce at

• I

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• I

Fair
from PageA1

• i

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brand of country music.
Thcker has appeared at numer. ous fairs, festivals, resorts and
casinos over the past two years
and fans can visit him on the
web. at www.adarntucker.com
for informatoin. His band
members
include Jason
Songer. lead guitar, Dani~l
Russell, keyboard. Leslie
Arthur, bass guitar and Darreq
Edwards. drums.
Local singer Bonnie (B.J.)
Smith-Uehlin will perform at
· 7 p:m. on Wednesday, Aug.
18 toentertuin fairgoers with
he~ own spin on R'&amp;B as well

as country music.
· A veteren of the Meigs
County Fair, Bonnie currently
is a semi-finalist in the Y-City
Star
Competition
in
Zanesville. Local fans can .
folloW B.J.'s progress by visiting www. whiznews.com and
linking up with Y-City Star.
btlier artists appearing on the
Hill Stage at the Meigs C&lt;lunty
Fair are The Big Bend Cloggers
at 8 p.m. oo Monday. Aug. 16, .
Swinging Seniors at 2 p.m. on
Thursday, Aug. 19, Crush Velvet
(Barber Shop Do Wop) at3 p.m.
on Thursday, Aug. 19, The
Rivercity Players at 6 p.m. on
FriCiay, Aug. 20, Craig Hanison
at 7 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 20 and
Last Chaqti: Bank from 5 to 8
p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 21 .

GALLIPOLIS - Winning with pnntmg, postage and 111 Profe&gt;sional Photogr?phy
entries from the 36th annual other expenses. Helping to was awarded to Karen
and fund the artists reception was · TelfOrd of Wellington, . Ky ..
Festival
Exhibit
Competition sponsored by the firm of Cherrington. for "Romancing the Stone."
· the French Art Colony, will Moulton and Evans. FAC's Honorable Mention went to
be on display in the galleri!'!S ability to produce this annual Robert Wallace of Columbus.
at 530 First Avenue, . exhibition would not be pos- Ohio , for "Knee High in
Gallipolis, throughout Jul y. sible without the support of Jul y."
Jurors selected more than 60 the com munity, both finanIn . the
Profess ional
works from the nearly 200 cially. and by those who view Division for Prints and
entries. There is no admis- the exhibits in the City Park Drawings. First Place went to
sion ' charge and this is art and
in
the galleries. Linda Helgason of Ironton,
opportunity to see some of Businesses and individuals Ol:!io. for "Oedipus," purthe best art work in the tri - who
sponsor
purchase chased by Jane Daniels .
state area. Co-chairs Saundra awards are a major attraction Second Place went to a prisKoby and Jan Thaler com- lor entering artists.
mac.olor
drawing
by
mented on the fine quality
In the professional divi- Rosemary
lmes
of
and variety of the entries in sion , First Place in oils and Southpoint. Ohio. for "Blue
both professional and am a- Best of Show was awarded to Boy." In pastels, First Place
teur categories. •
Sandy Nelson of Southern was awarded to Virginia
Jurors for this year's com- Shores, N.C., fo r an oil titled Carvour of Columbus. for
petition
were
Jenjne ''The White Boat." She also "Little Balconies. " This
Culligan, senior ' curator received a Purchase Award received
a
Curator' s
Huntington Museum of Art , from the Pennington Familyr Purchase Award from Jan
Barbara Delligatti, practicin g for "Evening Pastorale." ·
Thaler. Bill Meadows of
artist and owner of the
Second Place in oils was Hungti ngton , received a First
Upstairs Gallery, in Ashland, awarded to Rhea Knight of Place for his three entries
Ky .. and Bill Dodson, art Letart; W.Va., for "Glacier trea ted as a gro up, two
Receiving ceramic vases and a lidded
teacher at Oak Hill High Creek."
School. Culligan has a bach- Hono rable Mention in the jar. The vases received a
elor's. degree in art history same category was Susan Purchase
Award
from
and a master's in muse um Parri sh of Cottageville, Marianne Campbell. .
fo r
"Beartown
ln. Professional 3 dimenstudies from Case Western W.Va .,
Reserve. Deligatti works in Formations."
sional work, Wes Reed· of
oils and watercolors and has Margo Adams of from Eleanor, W.Va.. received
taught several wo,rkshops . Russell , Ky .. r.eceived First First Place for a carved and
She is the chair for the Place in the Professional painted gourd titled "Leaf
Huntin~ton' s Museum of Art Divi s ion . Watercolors for Peeper."
In . fibers, an
2004 biannual art exhibition . "Ni ck's Place." Her water- Honorable Mention was pre. Dodson has a bachelor's and color "Septem ber" received sented to Nosha Namahoyha
a master's degree in art from the . Curator's
Purchase of Dayton, Ohio, for a patchMorehead State University. Award and "Summer House" work . piece titled "Color
In addition to 25 years as art was awarded an Honorable Motion." Ohio Valley Banks
teacher in Oak Hill. he and Mention. Second Place in presented a Purchase Award
his wife own and operate a professional
watercolors to an acrylic , "The Light" by
graphic design company.
went to Frankie Wheeler of Gretchen
Tippie
of
Each year jurors are asked Dunbar, W.Va., for "A Way Chillicothe, Ohio. This will
to comment on the show and of Life." This painting. fea- be given to Holzer Medical
offer any suggestio ns for luring the mining industry, Center.
In · the Amateur Pi vision ,
entering artists. They noted was purchased by anonythe wide variety of subject mou s donors as a gift for the Best of Show and First Place
matter. with styles from the Galli a County Convention went to a first-time entrant in
abstract to realistic and skills and Vi sitors Bureau. All four this show, .Melanie Warman
from self-taught to academi- of Wheeler's entries were of Portsmouth. Ohio, for a
cally
trained
artists. acce pted for . the gallery functional fiber piece, "Last
Watercolors a,nd photograJ?hY exhibit. Also. receiving Night I Dreamed of Africa."
were both strong categones. Honorable
Mention
in Although made to be worn,
"Many of the amateur works Watercolor
was
Sylvia jurors envisioned it hanging
were selected not necessarily Jackson of Catlettsburg, Ky ... on a wall as a well-crafted
for their technical skills, but for "Snowbound," and this abstract painting.
for their overall .feel ~so me received a Purchase Award
First Place awards in the
charming, some eerie and a by USBank for presentation Amateur Division went to
few just went straight to your to the Holzer Medical Center Kaylyn Cole of Fraziers
heart. If there is one critique, collection. Debra Richardson Bottom. W.Va .. for a batik
it is that a few of the profes- of On a, W.Va .. also received piece, "Night Scent," to John
sional works. although beau- Honorable Mention in water- Grubb II of Gallipolis. for a
tiful and technically impec- color for "Edgar the Great." drawing. "Aria," to Matt
cable, were too derivative In
Professional Marshall of Gallipolis, for an
·and reminiscent of works by Photography, . First Place acrylic. "Tale of the
famous artists. Originality is went
_ to
"Bosque Lighthouse,"
to
Ian
the key."
Reflections" by Bruce Haley McNemar of Gallipolis, for a
Major sponsors of · cash of Charleston , W.Va., which photograph. "Donald," and to
awards for first and second . received a Purchase Award a woodcut Rrint, "The ABC's
place prize winners. were from Oak Hill Banks for pf Love · by Clayton
Peoples Bank and the Ohio Holzer Medical Center. Mcnearney of Huntington.
River Bor~~r . Initiative. Haley also received a
Second Place awards in the
~ditional sup ort from the Purchase Award from Cindy Amateur Division were preGallipolis · C er College Sexton of Mane Designers. sented to Jessica Edwards of
and Willis F era! Home for .his elegant photograph New Haven, W.Va., for a
assists the Fren ·hArt Colony "Cottonwood." Second Place charcoal drawing, "Pure

Country." to Karen Wonn of
Crown C ity, Ohio , for
''Imaginati on," and to Roy
Mullins of Gallipolis for a
"Woodstock
photograph.
Vermont." This,also received
a · Purchase Award from
Farmers Bank for presentation to the Visitors Bureau .
Also purchasing another
Mullins photograph, "Lake
Luzerne Fnll s" was Ohio
Valley Bank as a gift for the
Visitors Bureau. I-da York of
W.Va .,
also
Hurricane.
received Second Place for an
oil. "Drinking Cup.'' and it
·was purchased by Mane
De signers.
Severa l entries in the
Amateur Division re·ceived
Purchase Awards: a pastel ,
"On the Farm ," bv JocArin
Crawford of Tornado. W.Va ..
purchased by USBank for
Holzer Medi ca l Cen ter:
Alison
McNemar
of
Gallipolis , for a photograph.
"Haunted · House:" · Judith
Pratt of C har leston. for a
watercolor/ink
painting.
" Irresistible Irises:" for an oil
by Brend;J Rech of Marietta.
for "Gay's View ;'' to John
Sheets for a photograph.
''Autobodv #2:" to Julie
Sheets for a photograph,
"Sand Dunes. Co lorado;''
and to David Snyder of Rio
Grande. Ohio. fo r a ceram ic
piece, "Ghost Ship."
Amateur Division entries
rece iving Purchase Awards
were: Sonja Adkins o f
Clendenin. W.Va.. for a
watercolor "E lk view. W.Va.,''
selected by Jane Daniels ; a
wood intarsia selected by the
Pennington Family, titled
"Lunch in the Garden II;"
" Beach View-Rear Window."
by Maxine Kinnaird of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., . by
Peoples Bank for Holzer
Medical Center; and "Rails''
by Marshall McCoy of
Vinton. Ohio, by US Bank fo r
the Convention and Visitors
Bureau. Other artists whose
work has been accepted for
the gallery include: Joseph
Cullen II ·of Leon, W.Va.:
Peggy Elsaesser of Albany,
Ohio; George Gillmor of
Scott Depot, W.Va. ; Agnes
Hapka of Gallipolis; and Sue
Ellen
Hardman
of
Huntington .
The exhibit is free and
open to the public from IQ
a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday
through Friday. and Sunday
from I to 5, or ·by appointment. through July 3 J.
Programming at the French
Art Colony is funded by a
grant from the Ohio Arts
Council in addition to local
support.

Soldier accused in Iraqi drowning case points finger at commanders·
FORT CARSON, Colo. ·
(AP) - One of four soldiers
charged with pushing two
Iraqi civilians into a river,
where on~ of them drowned,
says he was ordered to do so
and told what to say to officials looking into the death ,
an Army investigator testified Wednesday.
Spc. Terry Bowman said
he "was told by his chain of
command what version to
give" . investigators, Sgt.
!·Irene Cintron of the Army's
Criminal
Investigation
Command said during a teleconference from Iraq as the
military convened a hearing
10 d termihe whether the ,
.e
.
s.oldiers Will be court-marllaled.
.
Bowman satd he had been
ordered to push the men mto
the T1gns Rtver, Cmtron
smd.
.
It .was not disclosed who
gave th~ order. Three ot the
soldiers commanders have
received nonJUdicial pumshme~ts for theu roles m the
mctdent. ~one of those pun1shments mclude Jail time.
Sgt. I st Class Tracy E. ·
Perkins, 33, I st Lt. Jack M.

I

Saville, 24, and Sgt. Reggie · prison if they are tried and
Martinez, 24. are charged convicted.
with involuntary manslau~hAccording to Cintron,
ter in the Jan. 3 d~ownmg investi$ators lear~ed of the
death of a man tdenufied by death m an e-ma1l from the
family members in Iraq as victim's family. She said she
Za1doun Fadel Ha.ssoun, 19. met wah Marwan Hassoun
Bowman, 21, 1s charged on Jan . 16; he told her how
With assault for allegedly they were stopped after getpushi.ng the second maninto ring supplies in Baghdad and
the nver at the same. time. then dnven. to the bndge
That man, a cousm of several m1les north of
Hassoun named Marwan Samarra.
Fadel ~assoun. 23. survived
Marwan Ha.ssoun said he
the . tnc1dent and had watched the soldiers push
descnbed the events to The hts cousm Into the water and
.
then he was pushed m.
AssocJated Press.
Marwan Hassoun sa1d he Cmtron tesllfied. He said he
tned to help his cousm SWII? could hear h1s cousin
to safety, only. to lose h1s . screanung.
gnp as the soldiers watched
"He said it was eight
and . laughed. " They were meters (24 feet) deep and at
behaving like they were no point did he feel the botwatching a comedy on 'tom of the river,'' she said.
stage." he told the AP sever- She described the drop from
al weeks ago.
· the bridge as I0-12'feel.
Perkins. Martinez and
After he got out on the
Bowm an
appeared ... at bank, Hassoun said he could ·
Wednesday's • Article 32 hear the soldiers above
hearing, which is similar to a
Civilian grand jury hearing.
Saville's hearing is tentativeIy scheduled for Sept. 9.The
four soldiers face between 5
1/2 years and 26 1/2 years in
·

Before You
Go and Play
Come To Church
And PraY
EarlY Church Service
EverY SundaY 8:30 AM

TRINITY CHURCH
Second ll!ld Lynn St. • Pomeroy
Rev. Jonathan Noble-Pastor

laughing as they drove away.
He said he went back to a
checkpoint "soaking wet
from the river" and reported
what happened, Cmtron
said:
.' H1s cousin's body was
found two or three miles
downriver.
Martinez initially to ld
investigators neither he nor
anyone in his platoon pushed
anvone in the river. Cintron
sai'd. A week later. on Jan.
23. Martinez said he had
gone to the river's edge with
the men. "kicked one in the
butt'' but the man jumped
on hi s own.
Sgt. Alexis Rincon. a
member of the patrol that
night. testified the soldiers
forced the men to jump and
that Maninez leveled a rifle
at one of them. Rincon said
the man hesitated. but
jumped after the second
Iraqi said something to him
in Arabic .

in

_, ~\1J10WN &lt;B!Ptt~ ·
b~~f NOW OPEN I .Cf
Open E;ver;dey Mon~Sun 12~11
~11 ndwich~!:

\-lot Dog,!: .

~ub~

~~!:h ~ade
Pi~!:

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740-~116: 'Nex.; tc Starmlll Psri&lt;
"
D!r.e tr.' &amp; Crury Out

Car!Je leMmlter Ow1Mt-Otlt:rot:or

I

i

•

�.,

_ Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

. Thursday, July 29, 2004

YfWW.mydailysentinel.com

INSIDE

The Daily Sentinel

B2

Elarton, Indians win, Page
Browns talk with Winslow's agent, Page 86

B·l
Thursday, July 29, 2004

Major League Soccer

ATHENS2004

Barry· M€1nilow/'s,
latest concert ·tot~r·
·coming to Co.lumbus·
Concert schedule
}uly30
· 6 p.m.: The Half Ass Mule Band
· 7 p.m.: The Haymakers
8 p.m.: Patrick Sweany Band
10 p.m.: Nick Moss and the Flip Tops

•

COLUMBUS
Tickets will ~o on sole
Saturcl1y, July .'\I. tor tht'
"One night live' One lasf
· ti me!" Barry ManiiDw
con! mg
Sa turday, Oct. I(, at
NatioT twide .
Art&gt;na,
t.:onc~ rt

July31
.
1:30 p.m.: Mudfork Blues Band
3 p.m.: Marci Stanley and the Ride Kings
4 p.m.: The Jascin Madaris Group
.
5:30p.m.: Pat Ramsey and the Blues Disciples . . .
7 p.m.: The Johnny Rawls Revue featuring Destini Rawls
8:30p.m.: The Clarence Spady Band
10.30p.m.:
Tommy Castro
.

tour

Co lt~ mbus.

Manilov·l beg;tn his own

fi rst solo tour in 1974 and
the release of "Mandy"
st;lrtcd an unpre~edentcd
string of 25 consecutive
Top 40 Hits, including

.

The climax of Pomeroy's summer of music eumes on July 3031 , with the annual Big .Bend Blues Btl~h feanuing II popular
bands.
The first day of the festival begins ar 6 p.m. and runs until the
: music stops Fnday evening. There is a $5 admission charge.
Ori Saturday the music starts at I:30 p.m. with the last band
taking the stage at I0:30p.m. The admission price on Saturday
is $15.

million worldwide.
Tickets are $126. $76,
$3(&gt; and · $36 (prices
include tacility fee).
Tickets may be purchased
•·It til".. Nationwide Arena
Ticket Otrice. itt all
Tickctmlster
- Ticker
Ce.nters, online at ticketm:tster.com o~ by phone
at (614) 43 \-J(,()O.Tickets
are also available at the
131ue Jacke ts Zones at
Chiller Dublin and the
Chiller Easton. All tickets

" Even Now," "This one's are su~ect ~ r~. service

to r you," "Weekend in
New England," "I Write
the Sonb"" and "Tryin' to
b"-'t the ti;ding."

.;harges and taCJhry fees.
· For more information
abo ll t upcoming events at
Nationwide arena, visit

Four ye~1rs 1att.:r, five of \VWW.nationwidearena.co

his albums were on the
charts at the same time, a
record equaled only by
Frank Sinatra and Johnny
Mathis. Based on industry
charts, Manilow is the
undisputed Number One
Adult
Contemporary
Artist of all time with
record sales exceed SO

111

or call (614) 246-2000.

Natiomvide Arena, home
of NI-IL Columbus Blue
Jackets, is SMG-managed
faciliry. Headquartered in
Philadelphia, SMG provide'S to 165 venues controlling over 1.4 million
entertainment
seats
worldwide.

Days·Until
High Scliool ·
Football
Season!!!

Boozer saga leaves
plenty to discuss

Mount Union
picked again
to win OAC

BY EDDIE PELLS
Assqciated Press

COLUMBUS (AP)
Mount Union is a heavy
favorite to win its 13th consecuti ve Ohio Conference football
championship.
·
The Purple Raiders, who had
a collegiate record 55-game
winning streak ended in last
year's Division Ill national
championship game, Were a
lopsided chmce by both media
and the OAC coaches at the
league's preseason meetings
on Wednesday.
·
·
"Every year- brings a new
challenge with new personnel
and this year will be no different," coach Larry Kehres said.
"We wi II have a lot of new
faces in our lineup, especially
on the offensive side of the
ball. But we look forward to
the upcomin~ season." .
Mount Umon has won seven
national
championships,
includi ~g three in a row before
fallin~ to St. John's (Minn.)
24-ti m last year'S' Stagg Bowl
game.

.

OAC Media Poll

1
2
3
4
5
6

)

Mount Union {32) .
Capital (1)
Baldwin-Wallace
John Carroll
Ohio Northern
Muskingum
Otterbein
7
Marietta
8
9 Wilmington
10 Heidelberg
OAC Coaches Poll
1 Mount Union {9)
2 Capital
3 Baldwin· Wallace (1)
4 John Carroll
Ohio Northern
5
6 Mus~ingum
7
Otterbein
8
Marietta
9 Wilmington
10 Heidelberg

Jason Madaris Group

329
280
259
233
192
t61
144
84
79
54
81 .
68
67
59.
47
42
33
24
16
13

Bengals sign
draft choice WR
Maurice Mann
CINCINNATI (AP) -. The
Cincinnati Bengals signed
· fifth-round draft cho.ice
Maurice Mann to a three-year
• contract Wednesday.
Terms weren't disclosed.
Mann, a wide -receiver, had
53 catches for 82Tyards in
two years at Nevada.
.
He is the second Bengals'
draft choice to sign, joining
sixth-rounder Greg Brooks, a
cornerback from Southern
Mississippi.
Nine of Cincinnati's draft
picks remain unsigned, includmg ftrst-round pick Chris
Perry, a running back from
Michigan.

Hamilton Jr.
signed by PPI
for 2005

Fresh·summer
Fruits and Bright
Summer Flowers .

AVAILABLE NOW!
..

Two' Convenient Locations:
1/4 Mile North Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge
Mason, WV 25~!60
Phone (304) 77~1·532:
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

(740)

HICKORY, N.C. (AP) PPI Motorspons has signed
Bobby {'lamilton Jr. to
replace Ricky Craven as driver of the No. 32 Chevrolet in
the 2005 NASCAR Nextel
Cup series. ·
Hamilton races full-time in
the Busch Series for Team
Rensi Motorsports and ·has
five career victories. He finished fourth last season and is
currently eighth in the Busch
standings.
Craven, a veteran of 14
seasons in the Cup series,
said last week he would finish out the season with PPI
but would not return to the ;
team next year.
Jl

•

What
price
loyalty?

-

Dallas Burn's Oscar Pareja (8) and Columbus Crew's Manny Lagos (22) coll ide during the first half in Columbus
Wednesday. (AP)
·

Crew cools off Burn, 2-1
COLUMBUS (AP) Edson
Buddie scored twice off passes from
Sliiton Elliott to lead the Collllnbu s
Crew to a 2- 1 win over the Dallas
Burn on Wedn~sday night.
Buddie scored in the 38th and 43rd
minutes to give the Crew (6-5-6) a 20 lead. Jason Kreis had a goal in the
59th minu te for Dallas (6-7-5). which
didn ' t get 1Jff anot her shot.

Columbus kept possession for most
of the four-minute stoppage time to
preserve its five-ga me unbeaten streak
(2-0-3).
'
Buddie scored his first goal atier
Elliott intercepted a pass from Dallas '
Cory Gibbs. Ell iott sent a pass into the
box for Buddie, who one-timed a leftfooted shot from 13 yards to the right
of goalkeeper Jeff Cassar.

Ell iott got his second ass ist by tl nding a streaking Buddie with a 35-yard
pass across the field. Buddie used his
left foot to chip a \l"yard shot over
Cassar, who we nt down anticipati11g
the ball to come in low.
.. Buddie 's goals were the on ly shots
faced by Cassar; who didn ' t have a
save. Jon Busch had 'tlve saves for
Col umbus.

·JACKSONVILLE. Fla. -Is a
handshake worth '$27 million?
Does a broken promise make a person a traitor?
Welcome to Philosophy I01 .
. NBA style: The Carlos Boozer
Story.
Boozer's sudden departure from
Cleveland to Utah has been the
most hotly debated offseason move
this side of Shaq and Kobe. a decision that has opened up new discussion about the business side or
sports. where loyalty and the bottom line are ofte n at odds.
It 's a decision that could have
repercussions beyond the NBA,
maybe on the U.S. Olympic team,
where Boozer the former
Cavalier - and LeBron James who still plays for Cleveland - are
teammates trying to work their way
through the awkward arrangement
on the road to Athens.
" It 's a hell of a blow," James said
of Boozer's move to Utah. ·
"Anybody knows that. My feeling
was that Booze was going to be
around. But when he called me, I
told him he's got to do what's best
for his family."
·
And so. he did.
On Thmsday. Boozer will take a
short leave from practice· to travel ·
to Salt Lake City, where he will
sign the (in)famous 6-year, $68

· Please see Boozer, Bl

RedS still fall short
BY .JOE KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI
Scott
Rolen just wanted to get on
the plane,, close his eyes and
forget all about that wacky
game full of wol'risome
moments.
It wasn 't so easy for the
team that stayed back in
Cincinnati.

Rolen hi't two of the
Cardinals' four homers.
repeatedly
blunting
Ci nci nnati 's comebacks and
sending the Reds to their
eighth straight loss, Il - l 0 on
Wednesday night.
.
The longest nine-inning
game of the season for ei ther
team - 3 hours. 53 minutes
- featured 19 walks, a pinch
grand slam,: great- catches.three errors and more drama

than anyone cou ld handle in
the.stands or on the benches.
"This game was no fun,"
said Rolen, who also doubled
twice in a 4-for-6 showing.
· '!here was ·too much goi ng
on. I'm going to fqrget about
it when I fall as leep on that
plane."
At least the Cardinals could
smi le before they snoozed.

Please see Short. Bl

Reds Notebook

Reds implode along with pitching
BY JoE KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI - It's easy to
pinpoint the cause of the Reds'
midseason implosion.
. Look no ·farther than the
starting rotation.
The Reds were the NL's
biggest surprise in the first
three months of the season.
while their starters regularly

turned in
solid perf o r man ce s
and the
bullpen

after July 5, dropping them
from five games out of first
place in the NL Central to 14
1/2. Several factors contributed.
Ken Griffey Jr. got hurt,
backed them up . .
Austin Kearns needed surgery
Ev¢ryone wondered how and Sean Casey· s strained calf
long it could last.
robbed the lineup of one of the Cincinnati Reds second baseman D'Angelo Jimenez (3) lifts
his leg over St. Lou is Cardinals baserunner Roger Cedeno
They got their answer this league's top hitters.
after
forcing him out at second in the third inning,
month.
The biggest factor was the
' Wednesday. in Cincinnati. Jimenez threw· Reggie Sanders
The Reds essentially fell out
Please s~ Implode, Bl
out·at first t? complete the double play. (AP) .
of contention by going 6- 14

Thomas keeps slim lead at Riverside
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytri bune .com
MASON, W.Va. - Chet Thomas of Patriot is
holding on to a narrow half point lead over New
Haven's RalpiJ Sayre in the Riverside Senior Golf
League standings.
Thon1as has a total of 168 points to Sayre's
167.5. The vacationing Clark Greene missed this
week's. round, but held on to thirdplace at 155.
Due to rainey weather, only 46 players were in
attendance Tuesday, making l 0 four- man teams
and two threesomes.

'
The ·\'{inning score
of It -under par 59 was shot
by the tatm of Mick Winebrenner (Racine), Curtis
Grubbs (Gallipolis). Santo Liberatore (Pmnt
Pleasant) and Paul Lanham (Ripley). '
Second place (60) went to Dale Harrison
{Pomeroy) , George Stewart (Pomeroy), Ralp h
Sayre (New Haven) and Elmer Click
(Cottageville).
Third place points (61) were earned by Wes
Peterson Athens), Chet Thomas (Patriot), Terry
Hupp (Mason) and Fred Smith (Ripley ).
The closest to the pin contest was won by Curtis
Grubbs on hole number· seven and Don Wilson on
14.
ol

Senior League Standings
Chet Thomas, 168; 2. Ralph Sayre 1G'7 .5; 3. Clark
Greene . 155:4. Paul Lanham, 153; 5. Keith Woods, 145.5;
6. Earl Johnson, 142; 7. Don Wilson, 132.5; 8. ElmerCiid&lt;,
131 .5; 9. Harvey Blam. 120.5: 10. Dewey Smilh. 120: 10.
Mlck Winebrenner, 120: 12. Tom Nunnery, 119; 13. Chuck
Yeager, 117.5; ,14. Howard Parker, 11 7; 14. Jim
Cunningham . 11-7; 16. Jack Fox. 115.5; 17 . Floyd
Chapman, 115: 18. Mike Bragg, 114.5: 16. Claude Profln,
114.5; 20 Dana Winebrenner. 114; 21 . Ken Whited, 113:
22 . Don Kay. 112; 23. Bill Pethtel, 111.5; 24. Dale
Harrison. 111 ; 25. Bill Yoho.- 110.5: 26. Ron Phalin. 106;
27. Harley Rice. 104.5: 27. Bill Winebrenner, t04.5; 29.
Curtis Grubbs, 102.5; 30. Pat Williamson, 101.5; 31. Santo
Liberatore. 99; 32. vLes Peterson. 96.5; 33. Mac McCarty,
96: 34'. J&gt;m Capehart, 95.5.
I

'

·--'- ·

�, Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

•
Thursday, July 29, 2004

www.m)dailysentinel.com

Thursday, July 29, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com
.,

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Chicago Cubs (C Zamb ana 9-6) at M\waukee (Hendrickson 0.3) 2 05 p m

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AssOCiated Press

CLEVELAND
Scott
Elarton enJoyed every handshake. every slap on the back
_and every kmd word from h1 s
teammates It all felt so
strangely new
The wan for Elarton ts finally over Of\ce agam, he knows
what tt feel s like to wm
"It's been a long lime,"
Elarton satd "I don't know
what to say It 's a dtfferent
feehng, I know that "
Elarton won for the first
• lime m 18 starts, and Casey
Blake's two-run homer m the
seventh mnmg sent the
Cleveland lnd1ans to a 5-4 wm
over the Detroit T1gers on
Wednesday mght
Elarton (I 2) hadn't won
smce Sept 19, 2003, for
Colorado The nght-hander
went 0·6 thts season for the
Rock1es, who released hun on
May 17
. "I don't base anythmg on
wms and losses," he sa1d "But
this one feels good I had a
good feehng all day "
Maybe so, but for stx
inmngs 11 appeared as tf
Elarton1s winless streak would
continue
But w1th the Ttgers leadmg
4-3, Blake connected off Jamte
Walker (1-4) for h1s 17th
homer to put the lnd1 ans
ahead. and two mmngs later

•

Elarton could relax
It's mce to see that number
m the wm column " El.trton
smd "It's a wm I ca~'t complam about a thmg I don't care
11 11 was 10-9 It's a wm"
Blake had three RBis tor
Cleveland (52 50), whtch ts
two games over 500 for the
first ttme smce Apnl 27, 2002,
when the lndtans were 13 II
Elarton allowed four runs
and stx htts m a season h1gh
seven mnmgs He walked one
and struck out hve before gtvmg way to Rafael Betancourt,
who worked the e1ghth
Bob W1ckman
closed
Elarton's long awatted wm by
workmg the nmth for h1s first
save smce July 20. 2002, fi\ e
months before he underwent
Tommy John surgery on h1 s
elbow
Wickman m1ssed all of last
season, and was only recently
remstalled as the lnd1ans' closer
As happy as he was to get
the VIctory, Elarton was JUSI as
pleased for Wtclcman
"He tned to gtve me the
game ball," Elarton srud "I
satd, 'No, I got a wm after I
had (shoulder) surgery, so th1s

one ts yours '"'
W1ckman also appeared m
consecutive games for the ftrst
ttme smce July 20-2I, 2002
"That's btg," he satd
"That's what everyone was
looking at I felt good physt-

cally, but there was enough
adrenaline to keep me gomg
on back to backs "
Carlos Gu1llen htt &lt;1 two run
homer and Jason Smtth added
a solo shot lor the l'igers, who
d10pped 10 5-17 m one-run
games
'When you . get 111 close
games, you have to execute m
whatever Sltuatton 1t IS, pitchmg. htttmg and tieldmg " man
ager Alan Trammell sa1d
"We\e fatled m a lot of areas
~ tar too often I mtght be mtptckmg, but I want us to be
good II you re gomg to get
good, that s w~at you have to
do"
IW1th the hldt,ms trmlmg 4 3
dltd Elarton hkely done tor the
mghl V1c1or Martmez smgled
With one out m the seventh
Blake, who had an RBI smgle
m the th1rd, went to a full
count before pulhng h1 s homer
11110 the seats 111 left
Blake 's 17 homers match hts
tala! from last season
He also m,tde a mce defenSive play m the e1ghth, grabbmg
a deflectiOn
off
Betancourt to throw out Dmttn
Young on a close play at first
Young argued vehemently
wnh hrst-base umptre Sam
Holbrook,
who
needed
Trammell and Ttgers coach
Mtck Kelleher to keep Young
off h1m
Gutllen's two-run homer, hts
17th, gave the Ttgers a 4-2

Former pitcher
Gomez dies
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Former San Franctsco Gtants
pitcher Ruben Gomez, who
won baseball's ftrSt regular·
season game on the. -west
Coast, has died He was 77
Gomez died Monday in San
Juan, Puerto Rico, the Gtants
Sllld. The Jearn s111d he had
been ill for a long penod
Gomez slarted the ftrSt game
In San Francisco history, beatmg Don Drysdale and the VIS·
tllng Los Angeles Dodgers 8-0
on Apnl 15, I 958.

t-mne13b

1
1!1

6603

a

2t00

1

2

HBP-bv Clemens (HHienbrand) by Fossum
(CBeltran) WP-Desser\s Clemens

Umptres-Home Btl Wet~ Ftrsl John
Hirschbeck Se:ood Wally Ball Thid L.az Diaz

lead m the stxth
Sm1th led off wtth a smgle
and Gutllen JUmped on
Elarton's first pitch, dnvmg It
mto the lower seats m nght
Elarton has gtven up 18
homers - e1ght wah Colorado
before he was ptcked up by
Cleveland on June 12
The lndtans closed wtthm 4
3 m lhe stxth on two smgles
and a pmr of walks by starter
Nate Robertson
Elarton gave up some hard
outs, but ret1red the Ttgers 1-2·
3 m each of the fust three
mnmgs before Detrotl tted 1t 2
2 m the fourth on Smah 's
homer on Young's sacntice
fly
The lndt.ms qutckly took a
1-0 lead m the tirst mnmg on
Matt Lawton 's RBI smgle
Cleveland loaded the bases,
but Lou Merlom grounded mto
an mmng-endmg double play
Blake's two-out RBI smgle
made 11 2-0 m the thtrd

Jt10 910

052
100 - 11
Cincinnati
010 OliO WO - 10
E--Cas.8y (51 FLopez (5) Hum~ I" DPSl. Lowtt

Angels 2

81 loos 1 Cooonalt 2 LOB-St l ~ 15
Cinelmatl tt 26-A9"1tena (25) Rolert 2 (24)
TaQUChl (5) Cedeno l5l RSanclel"5 2 (181
Flop&amp;z (3) HFI-Womlldc [5) Rolen 2 t23l

,._........

E&lt;*nonds (21) larkin (7) 0t.n1 (28) 5-Ced&amp;-

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BM)'I!I'S piiched td 2 batters 1'1 the 6th Pemy
l)'tched to 2 batters n 1he 6th

HBP---tr,o Ware~ (lDNell)
lMnphes l btlll Ar'o&lt;ty Flelc:her: FlfSt Keo.!tl

Ke~

Sen Frai\Cisco
Hrmi\5 l4-4
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32 511 5

WP-5tone
Umpt ~orne Adam Oc.wdy Frn Angel Her
nar'IC!el Second Marl&lt; Wegner Thirn lalfY
Young T-2 39 A----.37 548 (42 44S)

""~29
191 1 - Joe WoOO ol the Boslcn fled Solo no-hits
!he Sl Louts Browns tn a 5..0 wJn during tn the first
g&lt;~me ol a tloublellsader Wood fans 12 and
a kms thiW bllseNnners on Me wa~ and a h•
batsmMI
1928 - The Clew land ldlin9 scores 81Qht runs
rn lhe flr51 nnlng and n ne more rn the second to
beat tl'le New York Yerilees 24-6 at D.Jnn Fl8kl
JdJmy Hodapp sngles 1w~ tn .the 5«Xllld ard

SIXIl rmtngs.
1955 - Smoky Burgess of the Orcl1nati Reds
hits tllroo home runs and dnves tn moo NI'\S n a
16-5 rou1 o1 the Pit15b.Jrgl'l Pir!tes at Crosley

header Wednesday mght
Brya nt Nelson hn a threerun homer to help the Km ghts
wm the first game I0-7
Nel son's homer dnd ,1 three
run double by Aaron McNeal
gave Chadotte an 8-6 lead m
the thtrd Bobby Smtth htt a
two-run homer m the ftrst

The Syracuse Racine
Regional Sewer District
is beginning to install shut-off valves
on seriously past due accounts.
Shut off of service will result from
non-payment of accounts.
Please contact the district clerk at

7 40-949-2416
to discuss past due accounts.
Payments are accepted at Syracuse
Home National Bank.

'

WOULD YOU LIKE TO OWN·
YOUR OWN HOME?
The Meigs County Grants Office ,,
will be taking applications for the ~ ·~­
HIP Down Payment Assistance Prog a
on:
August 31, 2004
September 1, 2004
September 2, 2004
The hours of availability are from
10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.

If lou have any questions please conta

our.
office t: 740·992-7908 or 740-992-217 3
- -Ask-fer Jean Trussell or L-iz Andersorr

rockytopracewaylnc com

r
5

1

Charlotte sweeps Clippers
FORT MILL, S C (AP) ~
Reggte Taylot , Mtke Bell and
Mana Valenzuela hll consecutive h(;llne runs m a ft ve-run
fourth mmng to lead the
Charlotte Kmghts to a 5-I
wm over the Columbus
Clippers and a sweep of an
International Leag ue double-

Demolition Derby
and Four CyUnder Aaces
$3 000 to wtn t

GIVEA\\i\Y

k111ens

r

o

give

away

(740)446 2799

r:~l)

Esl Womens &amp; g trls cloths
shOes Home-tnlenor knick
knacks purses toys books
antlt:~ues Family of Sheila
Miles
----------3 family yarct sale Frtday
30th 9 7 Saturday 31st 9
5 Household Items cloth
lng too l&amp;r m1sc: Location
4977 St Rl 850 Btdwell
3-Famlly 1899 Shoes1nng
Atdge Chtldrens clolhes
household tterns router 100
amp mstcle breaker box
glassware odds a~d ends
Frtday
and
Thursclay
Saturday
43 Ann Drve Sat 31 10 6
Sun 1 12 6 Patto furniture

lots or stuff Ra1n or shine
5 Fam rly Great Treasures

1a 4 Fr day/Sa turday 83
Found 2 pupptes Swtndell Homewood Dnve Ftrst road

Road near At

3~

Sunday to left past At 554 &amp; 160 Jet

call to 10 (740)9 85 4189
Lost Tackle B o~ Flatrock
Bud Chat n Thomas Rtdge
Ten Mtle Area call (304)895

3939

(7 40)446 3398
Lost Trtcolored Sheltte hts
name IS TED Please call
(740)44 1 0127 Last seen at
Holzer Hospital

~

Aatn

1 8 mtles oul

Georges Creek lrom SA 7
North Large Sate reason

abl e pnces

everyth tng

must

go

Lost Mae Yorkshtre Terr e1
on
Chtlhcothe
Ro ad
Monday July 19 He s black
&amp; brown has a blue col!ar

r

Frtday &amp; Saturday 9 3
or Sh1ne

YARD SALE

"'--------·

YARD SAL&amp;

Lw--GiiiiAiiiLiiliiPO-Liil~O._.I

......,
2 family yard sale 9am-

• All ada muat be prepaid•

1

rfu~~Y~RE 1
July 31s&lt; Saturday 1 day

only 10AM 490 Grant
Street Middleport Infant
clothes girts jr sizes men
aad' women s clothing Vtdso
games mise Items
" - - - - -- - - La rge 3 lamlly yard sate
somethtng lor everyone no
tools or !arm equ1pment
Huge 5 family garage sale some anttques and col
Name brand clothtng lots of (ec1tbles July 30 31 Aug 1
lJmtled 2 wooden she lves 9 6pm rain or shtns Paul
Home lntertor tamps can H1ll Farm l etart Fa ts Oh
mng Jars books curlatns
7/30 7/31 9 00 4 00 157 Mov ng Sale Deryl Wells
Sl AI 775
Co Rd 28
Rtggscrest
Manor July 31 9 00 5 00
Huge Sale 1 New and used August
1
12 00 4 00
Items
1158 2nd Ava Couch like new George
Gathpoll.s Ohto 30 31 1 2
Foreman gnU rever used
July 29th and 30th 8 DO 10 Redt heater cham sa w
5 00 7th house out 775 stnng trtmmer glassware
Something for everyone
Chnstmas decorattons toys
lawn chatrs freeze r Jars
l arge gara~e sale/yard sale metal cabtnets
books
One mile ou l Sand Htll clolhes etc
Road
Pont
Pleasant
Yard
sa e
Btg
One ~
Vanous 11ems tncludmg
boo )&lt;s co llechbles tools Thursday and Frtday 7 ti l ?
Two mt es north of Chester
plus stze clothes Saturday on 7 Dishes ntc necks
7/3 1/04 9am ?
clothes 18W and 38 mens
Movln.9 Sale Saturday 7/31 tms lo1s ols more
9am Arbuckle Rd Galhpolis
7
YAIW SALf •
Follow s1gns !rom Slate
PI.
PlEASANT
Route 141 or call {740)446
6593 Furniture appliances
5 Famt ly Yard Sale Fr day
clothes &amp; moret
SaiUrday
Furntture
Saturday Ju y 31 ONLY 9 1 Chtldrens
clothes
6930 St At 7 South Teen Electrontcs
Also
1990
clothes lays hMse wares Ntssan 240 sx $1 800
everythmg cheap
(304)675 6919

~6

Yard Sale July 30 August
7 across tram the Bapl tsl 2nd 8 ? 24951 St A1 7 S
Church
m
Cheshire near Crown Ctly New/used
Women s ch tldren plus s ze merchandise baby boy/girl
and matern ty clolhlng toys womens clothes household
bar
stools
dryers other lo numerous to men
Chu slmas
decoraltons Uoo
mtsc household ttems
Ya rd Sale 1032 Kemper
Hollow Road Wednesday
Thursday 28 29
9am ?
Tools guns nd ng mower
725
TV househOld c lolhtng

......................040

1

.................

Llveetock ...... ..... ..... . ...... ... .. .... ••••eso
Loatand Found .... ......
....... 010
Lot. l AONIIQI ..........
...... .. . ,.. ... 350

Mlacellaneoue. • , ..
Ml-llanaoua MerchandiH ...
Mobile Home RapJ!Ir
Mobile Homaalor Rani
Mobile Homaalor Sale
Money to LOin...........
•• .. •
Motorcycles 4 w-a.. ..... ..
Mualca lnavumentl ... .
.. ••

. ........ 170
.... 840
.... .... 1180
, , ... 420
......... 320
.. .... 220
... . .. 740
•570

.. ...........

001

Petllor Salt .... • .......
.. 580
Plumbing &amp; Healing.. •
.
• 820
Profelllonal Sarvlcea
........ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB R.palr ........ ......... 150
Atll Eatltt W1nted.. .~ .......................... 380
Bclloola Instruction.
150
a.act , Plan1&amp; Fertilizer
........... 850
llluaUona Wanlad
.: 120
Space lor Rani . ...
• - ... 480
Sporting Goods •• ...
.. 520
suv•a for Sale . ....
720
Trucks lor Sale
... .. 715
Upholotary ..
•870
Vans For $ale .
Wanted to Buy ..................,, ....................... 090
Wanled to Buy· Farm Suppllaa ......
... 620
Wanted To
180
Wllllad to Rant •.
470
Yard 8118- Gallipolis
•
. 072
Yard S.la-PomaroyiMidclla.
. 074
Yard S.le-Pt. Pl•aant
......... 076

Do........ .

p.n-1

--

&amp; 62)

Many Yard Sales Frt &amp; Sat
New
Haven His
Old
Furmture S1onewars much
other
Yard Sale 2221 Jefferson
Thur Frt Sat Bedd1ng Area
Rugs M1sc

I ;;l:;;;lo;::::="::o=~=u:s==;;;
I~ I

Ilia
Can tor someth tng you
be119Ve tn and make
great money doing ttl
Call on behalf of major
Non Profit and Political
organtzat lons and earn
up to $8/hour plus
bonuses We oHer pa1d
tralntng pa d hoi days and
paid vaca ltOns
Fu ll and Part ttm s shtfts
avatlable Call loday
10 s~:;hedule an
ntervtewt

1· 877-463-6247 axl 2458

www lnfoclslon com
CNA s &amp; Resident
Asstslants lnlery]ews Are
Now Betng Conducted For
CNA &amp; Aestdent ASSistant
Pos1t10ns If You Are A
Cartng
En1hustasltc
Dep&amp;mdab e Person Then
We Wenl You To Jotn Our
Tea m Come On Over &amp;
Check Us Out' You It Be
Glad You Did' Competttlve
CNA
Wages
Patd
VacaltOns Pa d Meals Many
Other Beneltl s Ravenswood
Care
Cemer
1113
Washtnglon
Sl
Ravenswood WV (Across
AttChle Brtdge At 2 North
lasl Bustness On A ght)
Refe re nces Reqwed

HaP WANITJJ

Nursing Echoing Meadows
Resldsnttal Cenler s now
acceptmg apptlcattons for a
part lime and full ttme LPN
lor weekends and eventng
shifts App (y 1n person at 319
W Unton Street Athens
Ohto Relerences requtred
Appl cants must pass pre
screemng
emp oyment
ncludlng bul nol lim ted 10
drug screen and cr m nal
background checks

&amp;
EMT s
Paramedics
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson P()(e Gall polts
Program Asstslant/Nurse
Atde Echotng Meadows
Res1dent at Center ts now
accepltng appbcaiiOns lor a
lui ttme &amp; part ltme Program
Asststant /Nurse Atde lor
afternoon and m dntght sh ft
Applicants must pass pre
employment
screen ng
mc tudmg but not hmtled to
drug screen and cnmmal
background checks Apply
rn person a1 Echo ng
Meadows 3 , 9 W Unton
Slreet Alhen s Ohto
~~~

FUN!
ored?
Casual job to
Iris and guys 18 and up
rk hard play hard attl
udo Meet new taces an
ee new places Contac
arah at 866 716 4731
oda 1

Cook Echotng Meadows
Ass dentta1 Cenler tS now
accepting appltcat ens for a
tun ttme
af ternoon and
weekend cook Applicants
musl pass pre employment
screenmg ncludtng Out not
hm1ted to drug screen and
cnmtna1background checks
Yard
Sa
te
3
Famtly
yard
Four Famuy Yard Sa le Apply 10 person at Echo tng
Frtday 30th Bam ? Go out
141 near radto slal ton sa e 20 16 Centenary Ad Saturday July 3 1st A hit e Meadow5 319 West Un ton
(Evans Hts )
Lots
of 9am 5pm Gtrl baby clothes btl of everylhtng to be sold Street Athens OhiO
women s S. g1rls o othes other baby Items Home 5th house on the r1ght past
washer &amp; dryer 1oys odd &amp; lntenor Raggy Ann dolls the Caruthers Tretter Park al Famtly o~ygen and Medtca l
EqUipment ts looktng for a
and much much more
ends
the Y {Ju nctton ot Routes 2 htgh(y mot tvated Servtce

Happy Ada .
.. .. oao
Hay &amp; Grain .
• ......,.. 840
Help Wanlad
.. •... 11 o
Homalmprovamantl.. . .. , • . . .......810
Homtalor Sale .... ......
•...... 31 0
Household Goods. ......... .... .. • , ... ... 610
Hout•• for Rent .............. . ................. 410
In Memor11m .... ........... • ...... .... • ...... .. 020
1130
lnaurance. ................. ......
Lawn &amp; Garden l!qulpmant ... .............. 1180

Pt~nal1

:uoo

The Mason Count)! Public
ltbrary ts seektng a Part
ttme Library Clerk for 8 to t 2
hours per wee)( The sue
cessful appltcanl must be
tnend ly lamt tar wtth com
puters and aD e to tift up Ia
25 pounds Saturdays and
even1ng hours are requned
Techntc1an
Modera1e to P ck up apphcatton at 508
heavy ltfhng and a good drtv Vtand St PI Pleasant EOE
tng record required Must be
respons ble and able to
commumcate well wtth sen
tor C i tizen~ Wages nsgo·
!table Resume/appbcattons
accepted tn person @ 70
P1oe Street Gat tpobs
1150
SO-IOC&gt;l$

INsmucnoN

\I I ._, I \II

~;:::fU~R;S~ALE
:;;~
pos
lble on thts 3 bedroom
ath country ietttng mod
rn home Newly finished I
001
Central atrlheat
ump basement on 1
ere:; Cenlrally located 3
mutes
from
Athens
Pomeroy and Pa r)&lt;ersburg
ppro)llmatety
$B50 o
onthly payment Ca t
hr s
or
Robbte
a
740 667 3041

r

SALE·

Moon.E Hm lf:S

1984 65ft Schullz 2 bed House for Rent/Sale 3 bed
room very good shape room 1 bath house for sale
$9800 Call afler 5pm
or
renl
Harllor d WV
Avatlabls tmmedtately Call
2004 Fleetwood 3 bed 2 (740)339 0100
ti:talh only $1199 down and
only $197 47 per mon1h ca)t Takmg appltc aiiOns lor small
1
Karena 740 385 7671
b9Ciroo m hous e
tn
M dd aport rete ences &amp;
deposit reqUired (740)992
6154 sventngs

MOBILE HoMio.'i

FOR REN"I

BlllllliN(,S

i

Park (740)446 2003

-

Ill

I

•

\Ill'

wwworvb com

Bldwtll,

I

I

t~l

FOR RENr

AI',RTME N'I&gt;

To Do

11&amp;1

HOU&gt;ll&gt;

FORSALE

r

-e

3042
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE I
To wn house
apartments
andfor small houses FOR
RENT Ca ll (740)441 tt11
lor app tcat1on &amp; mformatton

2 Beet Room House 2123

For rent 1 bedroo m apl
Ltnco!n Ave No Pets S385
kitchen appliances fur
month {304)675 2749
n shed atr condtttontng No
Dspostt reqUired
2 bedroom home No pets pe ls
water &amp; trash furnished
$400 monlh $200 depos t
160t Graham School Rd
(740)446 0050
2 Bedroom House for Ren1
$350 a mon1h m Potnl
Pleasant Deposit requtred
No Pels {304)675 5806 can
between hours B OOam
4 OOpm
2 bedroom house In Meaon
$35Q month $350 deposl
no pelt a&gt;Jallable Aug U1
(304)773 5604

(7 40)446 1370

Garage Apt lor rent 43 t/2
ChtlltcOths Ad S375Jmo
Contact Mt)&lt;e at (7!W)441

0597
Gractous lvlng 1 and 2 bad
room apar1ments at Vt taglil
Manor
and
R verslde
Aparlmenta In Middleport
From S295 $444 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing
Opportunttles

Mercerv1ll1
2 bedroom $350 plua
depo,tt
3Bedroom
House
PI
1 bedroom $295 plus
Pleaa1n1
$375 per
depostt
No pets
cau
month+u1hlttes
$3§0
(740)256 1245
depoalt no Pltll or $34 000
to buy (304 )675 5209
Modern 1 bedroom apt
819\'tand St P1 PleiiBnl 2 Phone (r40)4-tB.Q390
br Jul) basement $400 00 + Ntce 2 bedroom apanment
ulil ref &amp; dep 304 675 In Aa ctn a No pets Ca ll

81102

(7491992 5174

Beaut ful 3 bedroom tn
country Ult llty room ltv ng
room kitchen $400/month
water/aewer paid 614 ~95
7773 800 798 4686'

Nice (&amp;fQII 2 bedroom unf'ur
mshld apt all ullt llet pard
$500 month $500 depos t
Day 740 446 1637 evening
740 446 46,6

Ftnancmg ava tlable Wllh l.tQ North 3rd Ave M ddteport
IH),WN PAYMENT! Less t bedroom furnl!he.:l apart
than perfect credtl acceotedl ment deposit &amp; reference•
Own don t rent Loc t~tl com no pets (740)992 0,65
oany Mortgags l ocator&amp;
Pleasant Val ley Apartmen1
(740)992 7321
Are now tak tn g Apphcattons
For Rent House 2 bdrm tor 2 B~ 3BR &amp; 4SR
are
taken
wlbsmt At&gt;J~ r vtew close to Apphcahons
town $450/mo You pay utili Monda)' thr u Fnday from
fiBS
Sec
Dep
$450 900 AM 4 PM OffiCe IS
References requtred Call located at 1151 Evergreen
Dr ve Potnl Pleasalll WV
(740)44 6 )644 for sn appl
Phone No s (31)4)675 5806
cal ton
EHO
2 bedroom
For Rent 2
homes k•tchen turntshed Pomeroy two 2 bedroom
and a
1 bedroom apart apartments A &amp; S fur
w/d
hook up
ment Middleport OhtO Cal l n1srted
Run
area
aflsr 10 00 AM (740)992 Naylor &amp;

(740)992 6886

3823

'

•

•z

Add on Room 12 X24 for
mRRTh'f
Mobt19 Home
2 rooms
I.!;:!,!!L~~~---,-_1 Carpel Shdtng Glass Door Mob e home for rent 3 bed
$1 500 (304)675 8714
2 houses for sate tn
mom free gas $350 month
Pomeroy 20 minutes from For sate or rent 2 bedroom reference
and depostt
A then~ S28 600 $22 260 mobtle homes startmg a1 740)367 0632
!mane ng avatlab e no down $270 per monlh Call 740
paymen1 w/good credtl
9922167
{740)698 7244
Make 2 paymenls move m 4
3 bedroom 2 balhS frre year s on nole (304 )736 , and 2 bedroom opart
place On 4 3 acres In the 3
__409
_ _ _ _ _ _ _~ ments 'urntshed and unlur
n1shed
secun ly depos t
Country
S~:;entc
v ew
New Oakwood mega sto e requtred no pels 74{}992
$75 000 Call (740)7 09
tea1ur ng
Homes
by 2218
11 66
Oakwood
Fleetw ood &amp;
Gtl ss One stop shopp1ng 1 bedroom stove and re1ng
3BA 2BA 5 129 acres only al Oakwood Homes of era tor lurntshed ulthltes
Green Town shtp close to Barbours v lie WV (304 )736 mcluded 5400 month plus
school Pnced lo se I More 3409
depos 1 [740)245 5859
mfo (740)446 7377
Ntc e 89 Sky t e 14x70 3 I Br Garage Apartment
bedroom wtli help W!fh Outet &amp; Pnvate $350 mon lh
deltvsry $11 49 5 call Nrkkt (304)675 1550
740 385 9948
2 2 bedroom apartmems 1n
SAVE SAVE SAVE
Mtd dleporl Cal (740)596
Stock models at old pnces 2 198
or
cell
phone
2005 models arnvtng Now (740)591 0649
All real estate advertlalng
Coles
Mob le
Homes
In t his newspaper Is
15266 U S 50 Eas1 Athens 2 bedroom apar1men1 for
subject to the Federal
Fair Houtlng Act of 1968
Oho 45701 {740)592 1972 re nt tn Syracuse $200 00
$330 00/month
which makes II JUegal to
Nhare You Get Your depos 1
rent
tncludes
water sewage
adverttse any
Moneys Worth
and trash Musl have suf11
preference limitation or
di sc rimination based on
ctent mcome lo qualtly
RusiN~-'"
race color reltglon sell:
(740)378 6 111
AND
famil ia! status or nati onal
Appltca1 ons be ng Ia ken tor
origin cfr any Intention to
3 Bay shop w th olftce n very clean 1 bed oom m
make any sue ~
Hend erson WV 800 322 country setttng yet close 10
preference limitation or
2433
dtscrlm!natlon
town Washer dryer stove
fr dge 1ncluded Wate r and
Bustness for Sale
Thla newspaper wiU not
garbage •ncluded Total elec
Trash
Route
Serous
knowingly accept
tr c wtth AC Tenant oay elec
lnqutrss only For more tnlor
adverttsements for real
tr c $300 depos t $375 per
mal on caU (740)245 9227
estate whlc: h te in
month No pets No smok
violation of tho law Our
Vtdeo
Bustr~ess
tor
sale
tng 740 446 2205 or 740
readers arl!!l f1arl!!lby
Leased
bwldtng
Call 44 6 9585 ask for V rgtnta
tnformed that all
dwellings advert1aed In
(740)245 5610
ask
for BEAUTIFUL
APART
tf11a newapaper ara
AT
BUDGET
Mtchelle
MENTS
avaltable on an equal
Wrs &amp;
PRICES AT JACKSON
opportunity baaes
ACREAGE
ESTATES 52 We stv. ood
Dnv e 11om $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; movtes Call
New I stmg 296 LeG rande 22 acres on Hoback Road
740 446 2568
Equal
Blvd Available 1-.Jow 3 bed ott Old State Rou e 124 In
room 1 112 bath slo age Easl Aactne 1 949 770 Housrng Oppor1u 11ty
bu1 ding Lenn ox heatfalf 4768 cell 1 949 433 1518
Call after 3pm &amp; weekends
wa1sr
Sertous calls only Extra lo1 Mobtle home lot fo renl
sewer pa td $300 mOnth plus
bsstde home wlproperty Johnsons Mob le Home
securtly deposll (304) 675

Yard Sale Lois of gtrls clolh
General maintenance man •J..-~----::0,_.1
tng Pnced cheapll to seU 2
needed tor rental property
mdes oul SandhtU before
Gallipolis Career College
Send resumes lo Th e Oatly
(Careers Close To Home)
EX)(On Fr &amp;Sat 9am IO ?
m1sc
Sent nel PO Box 729..()9
Call Today! 740 446 4367
Pomeroy oh 45769
Yard Sales Sat only Car
1 800 21 4 0452
bed ht gh chalr comforts
wwwgall poiiC8 rserool&amp;g~~ com
LICENSED
AcCfed led Membe Accred t ng
Several Ntnlendo games
mag wheel TEXAS ROAD Abso ute Top Dollar U S PRACTICAL NURSE Counc:t lor tndt.tpenCion\ Co leges
and SchQQis 214S.
Stiver and Gold Cotns
YARIJ
SceniC
Hrlls
Nurs1ng
Cenler
WAN'I'EJ)
Proofset s Gold A ngs US
(740)446 4050
l'oMEROYIMJooLE Currency M T S ColO Shop a Tandem Hea(th Care
15 1
Second
Avenue Facil ity 1s see)&lt; ng a select
lew to pn our outstanding Call B D ConslruchOn lor all
2 family yard sale Frtday G U • I 740 446-2842
team We currently seek a of your home Improvement
July 30th tn Chester blue
I \II'IC),\11 \I
Home Ltsttngs
lull bme LPN Proper license needs roofs decks s1dtng
house across for ltre stat on
.., tin I&lt; I"
Ltst your home by ca)hng
or certi ftcat1on reqwred We etc reasonable pnces lree
(7 40)446 3620
2 garage sates bestde and
otter &amp;.1C1ra shift p(ckup estimates call (740)992
across
from
former
bonus
shtlt dtllsrentlal, 2979
View photos/Info onltne
Salisbury School County
excellent benel tts perfect
Rd 25 Fry s and Coleman s
attendance mcenttves and
DR\"1\ALL
Bedroom 2 Bath
July 30th 3t and August 2 Ac ttv ty
Coordin ator much morel
Install Ftntsh Patnl ng
0)1100 state approved
900500
Opentng Echotng Meadows Please apply to
Carpente ntry Bathrooms
uUd ng Beaut lui V1ew
Restdenttal Cente r
an
Residential Commsn::1al
4 family carport'yard sate
dctlson Township Code
ICFJMA facility located al Ann 011nna Thompeon,
INSURED
175 N 3rd Ave Middleport
1404 or cau (740)367
319 West Union Street
HR
Aug 2 4 ralnlshlne every
NOTHING TO SMALL
465
Athens
Ohio ts currently
Scenic HUll Nu,.lng
Flal Prices
thing must gal Furniture
accept ing appUcatlons for
C.nltr
Steve (740)388 8731
appliances clothes toya
Bed room 2 Bath 2 Car
tne pos)tlon ol Actlv1ty
311 ~uckrldge Road
etc
arage
$2500 Carpet
Coordinator
This P9Bitlon
OH 4SSI4
Jim 1 Carpentry &amp; small
llowance Jay Onve
Aug 2nd 458•1 Pomeroy Ia a salary position with ben·
Ph 7401-71!0
landscaping Cal (740)446
alllpollo Coclo 52804 or
Fax 74014411-2431
Pike
Chester
e lectric ef1ts
A 4 year degree 11
21508
all
(740)446 7231
organ tral!er door inside rectulred Appheationl tor the
Email admln thnO
Wanted smal l lawns 10 mow
doora
corner
ahower poattlon can be obtained by
tlndemhelilthcare.com
Bedroom 2 Bath River
Coll(740)441 91 ~8
w/glut doora electric fur stopping by the facility
lew/ Acce11 F'rlvate
naoe w/ductwork or aepa Monday Frtday 9am·4~m
SFIDF/EOE
Will Prtuure wash house 1
011 Dock n Galllpo()s 1
rate
electric chalnuw ~ppllcanta must pass pre
HR.llndemh••lthOire oom
mobile homea mala( build
ere tot Cod• 10303 or
woodtt1 tlbtt &amp; &lt;:hairs tott employment
screening
lnga and gutters Call
ell (740)446 0531
mor~
Including but not limited to - - - - - - - - drug acreen and orlmmsl Make 50% stlllng Avon (740)446.0HS1 aak lor Ron
Bedroom Bnck Home 2
Eeta11 merohandita 9 t5 background cneck
Limited
time
ONLY · or ltiVe measaga
ath
3 Car Br ck
29th 30th 1 3111 Hartman
(740)446 33~8 Firat 5 to call
Ci!ILniEuJF.RLv
natta~:;hed Garage 2
New Mop• Ftoad Chester An Excellent way to earn receiv11 • gift
CARE
•
lory oulbutldtng Code
rain canctlt 1111 Aug :i!nd &amp; money The New Avon
NHd
a
Htlling·Cooung
27~ or call (740) 446
3m
Call Manlyn 304 882·264a
lnatelltr with at leu! 1 year Wantad Lrve In Care Qlvlr
lte8
Five family garage 11!1 AVON! All ArtOII To Buy or experlenet Pay by experl notdt(llor Elderly LadY who
R1 tn or t hine Thuraday Soli
Shirley Spooro 304 once Call(740)4411238
requlrll ltllttanct w)th
Bedroom 2 1/2 Bath
291h Friday 301h Sa1umay 675·1 42Q
dally actlvtttea
HOIJII
lou 10 Holzer Hoapttal
Need
IXI)trlanced
worker
31at Formally Jot't gift
n Spring Valley Code
But tneu Ia booming look f~JII·tlme In rt~taurant WOtk ~oping required (304)675
shop 3202 State Route 124
13 or call {7.0)446
lng tor experienced drywall dayshlft and reaponll to
Syracu11
Oh to
Baby
624
and trim crew fer modullr
Tho Oal(y Santino! PO Box
clothll
!adles dre1111
and m1nufactured homes 7211-10 Pomeroy Oh 457!9
toyt reproduct ion lampa
Bedroom 1 t /2 Bath
Pte11t 11)1 rtsumt or com
tanoy candy diahea all klndt
uti Basement
pany Information to 740
Nlghr Shift Heavy
plcturts mtrrora etc
tdd eporl OH Codl
385 7671
t:qu lpm cnr Mechanic
17
or call (740)992
Friday July 30th
and Bua tneas 111 boomtng took
Are u 11 motlveted? 1OO&gt;&lt;
or Welder
43
Saturday July 3111 Loti of lng tor parlllme aarvtct and
more power1ut than MLM (F
Knowledge In electrical and'
mtac
810 Elm Street dehvery help C1U 740-385· A r conditioning prel•rred S.rlouo-B00-305 7949
1 Mllsublthl Mon1ero
Racine
houae
before 4367 or fax resume to 740
Service truckltools also
port l mtted •x4 Low
Methodlet Chun::h
385 7671
preleratMe
Competlllve
neaoe Loaded w1th
wages
Good
baneftts
Apply lNG CO recommene11 ~~
xtras Code A, 2 or call
Joromy Roae o on C R 28 1 DRIVER8 NEW PAY
at Sands Hill Coal Company
mne from Racine July 30th 8Ct\LE
u do business with pea
740)446 3620
3870
I Stale Route , 60
9 ? , clothes (PoJo Tommy
le you know and NOT t
Hamden
Ohio or can
A&amp;E Clap Old Navy) bally
end money through th
(740)384 4211 to request an
ijomo &amp; ck&gt;lhes (all name CLASS A COL NE;OEO
all until you have 1nvesh
eppllcallon form lo be
brands) household Items
aled the olfenn
mailed Resumes can be
Cherish Teddy Collection . earn between 45 50K
mailed directly 10 P:O Bolli:
Middleton
doll
small" .M tn 1 year exp
650 Hamden OH 45634
anrlques miJCh mise large • Home Weekends
14x65 Fairmont Happy
moving sale (740)949-8030 . $ 500 stgn-on bonus
House 2 bedroom total
Wanted
Someone P~rt
, Start a1 36 cpm
electric also has 14x30
T tme Clean Homes and
Multi tamily yard sale 7/30- • 95% No 1ouch fre ight
TURNED DOWN ON
bedroom addltton Must be
Bus tnesses
If Interested SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
7!31 kids adult clothes car , NQ FORCED NYC
moved (740)446 1150 or
send restJme to PO Bmc 1s.&amp;
parts toys baby tems
No Fee Unless We Wln l
(740)441 9897
Henderson WV 25106 1
Caii S~22382
Monkey Run
1 888-582 3345

4

JUST SAY
CHARGE lil

Now you can have borders ond qrophlcs
..,..,_,.
added to yourclosslfled ads
,.;,~
~
Borders S3 00/per ad
~
Graphics SOc for small
S 1 .00 for larQe

ITI

P•p•r

L

4x4's For Sale
Announcoment ............................................030
Antiques .
. 530
Apartments lor Rent
440
Auction and Flea Markel
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Auto Repair
770
Autos lor Sale
710
Boats II Motors lor Sale
750
Building Supplies
550
Business and Buildings ... .. ..
340
Business Opportunity
210
Business Training..
.140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment . . ..
780
Cards ol Thanks
010
Child/Elderly Care..
190
Electrical/Refrigeration
840
Equlpmenllor Rani ..... .. , ...
......... 480
Excavating
.
.830
Farm Equipment ... .......
.. .... 610
Farms lor Rant ..
430
Farms lor Sale... ..
....... 330
Forleaae
. 490
For Sale ...
• 585
For Sale or Trade .
........ 580
Fruita &amp; Vagetablaa •
.. 580
Fumlohed Aooma ........
Gonarll Hauling . . •
• ..
• 850

a

(304) 675-1333

992·2157

Honda 2002 XR 70 Ike
new couch ave seat enter
larnment center corn op
vtd eo game reel ner dtnene
set bedroom SUite lab)es
lamps rugs blankets mat
tress &amp; box spnngs dolls
Longaberger playslalton &amp;
games
mov1es
tew
anttques clothes Home
Interior pool some jewelry Yard Sale 1st one 38 Gatta 506 Parrtsh Ave July 30 &amp;
Reasonable
pnces Rd C9t'1ler pont July 3Q- 31 9am 1 Toys Clothes
31sl 9 1
Everyth ng mus1 go
Furntlu re lots of Mtsc

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Giveaway

(740) 992-2156

7130 7/3 1 141 to Lincoln
P1ke follow signs 138
Northup ~d
,----.,..,----Garage sale Ltttle Kyger Ad
Thurs Sat 8 6 Follow pink
signs Toddler mens worn·
ens clothes much morel

4pm Saturday July 31
Fr day July 30 9 5 on St At
Rein or Shine H8 Church
St , Bidwell Big white
house on corner New blue
recliner
Longabe rger
movie stand household
tteml 1 mlac Everything
must got

31\egtster

Xn•ertlon

1 3 Fam1ty yard sale 66 Tara Garage sale Friday &amp; Sst

C 1 Beer Carry Out permtt
for sate Chaster Township
Me1gs County send letters
ol mtdrest to The Oat~
Sentinel PO Bo.IC 729 20
Pomeroy Oh to 45769

3 older soapbox derby cars

..,,.

"""""""
'""'"'

ANNouNCEMEN!li

(7 40)992 7248

Fold
1983 - Stew Garvey of the San Dtege Padres
002 001 100 4 ends hiS Nl ecord of t 207 c:onsecUirve ganes.
Lo• Angela•
Colorad"o
1 DO 201 Oh. 5
streak ends because he dislocated hiS lhlll"b
E-lztuns (5) DP-Colorado I LOB-los The
tn e home-pale c:otnsm wt!h Atlanta pitd'le Pas
A.ngeas 12 Cotomdo 9 28---Behre (19) JHer
Mndel (6) Milea (12) He~on (29) Burni12 (24) cual PYrvz.
t-:IR-Seenz (5) Belt e (29) Bumttz (26) SB- 2000 - Ea:lte Taubensee hils a garmtv..-.g
hollier with two outs rn tile n111h ard hcmers
Iztuns (16) ShGnJen (3) 8-Ciay\on
IP H REABBSO aQOn n tne 11\h to lead Qnclnnat 10 a 4 3 Wl'l
rtJer Montreal
l.oaAngoleo
6 9 4 " 3 4 2001 - Cra!!} Mlnroe homers n hts ~rst ma,or
league at bat as II'IEI TBXaS Re.ngorn beet lampe
100002
Mo1a L6-4
1 2 1 1 2 2
2003 - Bostoos Bill Mueler becomes lhe linit
player U1 mapr league htstory to r.rt gand slams
52373332
Orisktl
13100t0
from both sides of the plate n a game and con
SReedW2 2
2 2 1 1 0 3 nects 10 lhree homers tn a 14-7 w!n at Texas

"""
""""'

1

4

This Oats In Baseball

Rockies 5, Dodgers 4

r ~~ r ~~~

5
0

ley; Seca1d Tim We!lw Thn! Gary Cedttrstrom

T-3 03.A-17 404 (36331)

r

Sentinel

1100 p

Monday t:hru Friday
:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.

U~ C B Bt.d&lt;nOI' Fi'St ErC Cooper Secoo:J Ctu::k ~ T1'wd '-1ika Raitt
T 237 A-41133 (45030)

01ego 6 2B--Pterzynskl (1 8) Burroughs (If!)
Klesko (17) Nevt~ P9) Long 2 (15) 36(31) H~OI ( 15) SB--flte11e {26) Lowe I Klesko (1) Lon9 3} HR-P18rzynsk (8) RaH
(5) CS--AGonzalez ~ 1)
emandez (8) CS- Tucker (2) 5---AaHernan
tP H RERBBSO
dez SF-KG M ne
Phllecletphla
1P H RERBBSO

,..........

Ofpee #Oar-S"

WF'--U&gt;&lt;&gt;ey

Florida4 2B-8Abreu(27) Burrel (15) Lowel

--

Call Today••• (740) 446-2342

813 3 0 0 1 1
23 0 0 0 0 1
R~ po1chl!d to 1 batter 1"1 the 1111 BStoose
pitc;hed to 1 baner tn the 8lt1

Padres 9, Giants 4

Da8eit 3tl

Your Ad,

1300010
010000
23 0 0 0 0 1

San F111n

'Orrthune

To Place

792101

Martins 6, Phlllles 3

ledeed

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

H RER8BSO

'li'P- S ~ Blk~
T-3:53 A.-33.282 (42.271)

4 0 1 2
2000
3 0 0 0

'

G.-11 .. &lt;.au nt) O li

PeiovaiS17
1
4

ab f hbl
Rolils S5 5 0 1 0
Polanoo 2b 5 2 2 0

'

o1 a

'.Grr8n:l rt

000 000 000 0
Anaheim
010 010 00x 2
E---Bialod&lt; (10) DP-T6)(8S 1 LOS-Ttuas 4
Arnthelm 9 28-Mat!hews p2) VGuerrero
{29) -Qunlan (10) 5-A.K.eMedy

2
0
3

9

VEin~

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Tu••

5 10
1 0
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4 13
23
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JoAcvdoL4 10

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Oul'*wl 3b J 0 1 0
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Sa'nol t* , 0 0 0
3000
BMolhac; 4 000
AKrn:ly a, 2 0 0 0
30 0 3 0 Tot*
33 210 1

T"M

423
13

0

0

~egt!iter

Eckstwt !S 4 1 1 0
F!W"icf 4 0 2 0

AStano 2b 4 0 0 0
TG1l181rn 1b 4 0 1 0
N111cl
3000
Matthews rT 3 0 I 0
B..lortian d1 3 0 0 0
DeMu:at 300C

IPHRERBBSO
5
1
0

0

Anaheim

lb rhbi
t.IYo..ng ss -1 0 1 0
Blabdo: :J:l 3 0 0 0

201

t 0 0 0

3

T~37 A-35191{4095o)

1 I 0 0

Vntura 1b

1

Elarton finally wins one for Indians
BY TOM WITHERS

46°1 ~ 1 ~ ~ TcMII

4 1 1 1

Saenz1b

000 OOx -

1

4 22 0

4 000
3 0 0 0

H AERBBSO

5

l..aRIJ8 c;
flope.z ss

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ctemen5W123

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5000
1012

Ctayton ss 4 0 1 0
Helton 1b 4 0 1 0
Castila 3b 3 0 1 1

49

4

0Jonnz2b
WF'enll d

5 1 2 0
~p 3100
L.unaJt!
1000
t.tAna1 pn I 0 0 0
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4 000
31 t 2

210001
120000
100000

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3221
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303

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3011
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36 812 6

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4 0 2 1

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2
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4 12 5

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3 110
4 2 3 1

1"1

2 2
1

5 0 2 0
0 0 0 0
4 11 0

E--Mayne (2), OeMens (1) DP-AnzMa 1
How~ton 2 LOB-A !Zona 8 Houston 7 29DBauttsta (19) Betivnan 2 (26) Ensberi
38--Cintron (6) HR~Kent (13) Bagwe11 15)
SB--AEvarett (11) ceenran (5) Cs-Btoolo

1

1

lb rhbi

1 000

7

13

Houtton

3D 1 8 1

123
0

o

1

21342011

Ari:I:ONI
Houaton

VWe!ls (12) SB-R10s \5) C8IP

001 00. -

Bay 7 28--lugo (26) Cantu (4)

~

Totala

2

ARodnguez (3)

4 1 I 2

Tl-lall (10) RS&amp;mnez (11 ) JB.--..AMaleo (t)
Crawford (16) JoCruz (7} HR--Hut1 (1 8)
JoCnJt (15) TM!rtinez (1 4) SF-lugo
IP ti RERBBSO
""-City
GoWeL&amp;e
"2 3 10 a a o o

Oilonph

000 000 11 0 1 3
One out When wnntng rLXI scol'lld
DP-To onto 2 LOs--New 'fork 6 Toromo 8
28-COelgado (1t ) Johnson (18) HR-

:;:::==-c-'-'-===.c--c--- -1 Proc!orl
11
Allanta
Plttabu111h
Toronto
ab r h bi

100 000 100

52 2 2

3110 15 10

000

ab r hbl
SFinlev cf 4 0 0 0
Tracy3b
3010
DBiill8 " 4 , 2 0
~Gnzll:H
3021
Hhbrl1b 3 0 0 0
Cilii'On as 3 o 1 o
Hnlon2b 4000
Maynec
3000
FoNump 1 000
McCkn pl1 1 0 0 0

w..

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1 0 0 0 0Huclvl2b 4 0 0 D
Tot.ll 35292 Total•
38 310 3

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T-2 45 A--22 977 (38 496)

Jvlopez 2 {141 5----8Roberts. SF-llopez
IP H A ER BB- SO
Bootoo

4

4123
1000

HBP-bV Hen:n:kscrt (BenoA)
UmptrMIIotto&amp;, Jot Bmkman FII'St, Tm T9cl1~
da Secon:l Je(1 N9bon Th rd Marty Fosler
T-233 A---10555(43969)

1 1 5 10
0 D 0 0

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4

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S~fli&amp;kl rf

7

5 22 1

Umpl as-Home Paul Emmel Ftrsl lance
Barbdale $eo;nd Mike DM..i10 Third Joe

4o 12

0000

5
0

0

Bali:illi ..,

Canlidl 4 020
lHalc
3110
RSnchz 2b 4 1 2 1

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Hnd!dc W:8-8

790004

2

~~~~~~~---------1
He~~
Braves 1 Pirates 0

6

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Baltimore
000
D1f
4
L08-8oston3 BeftmOI'e2 2B--Mueler (13)
T8jada (26) Hatr,;ton Jr (16) HR-DOrt!z (27)

7

City 5

1

23

0 0 0 0

4 2 2 2

1P

RuOtizW12-6

Lofland

I

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4 1 1 I

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013 "12
10
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38 011 0

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1 0 0 0

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40 0 0

KinAS City

(1) MackOWIIIk (3) HR--CJone5 {14) CSOeRosa (3) MG les (3)

3 2 2 3

001 20x -

000

1 0 0 0

4 1 2

32 1 4 1 Totllll

Tot.llh

3 0 1 0

Pibbufvh
000 000 000 0
E--CJonee (3J DP-Atlanta 1 Piltaburgll 2
LOB--Atlanla 6 Pittsburgh 1t 38---Marmro

30 I 0

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Smoltzp 0 0 0 0
Totals 29 1 5 1 T""o

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Hrs1Jrr1
3I 20
31 t 4 1 Tocele
28 4 7 4

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3010
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4 .000
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3 0 00

4020
4000
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Mora3b
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RPimo1 C

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TRctmd

lib rhbl

Gtt1iVJ1 M

liaJwoj dl 4 0 1 1
Randa3b 3000
..8tirda3b 1010
RM!teorf 4 0 1 0
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DS!wnM
3000
Ekdtc
3000

Mdl:wkrf 4 0 1 0
CW"'Ibln 1b 4 0 2 0
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4 0 2 0
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213

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CCorderoS 0

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G..koas 3b 2 1 2 1
J.JF~ 10
3 0 0 0
Furce.lpr 0000

BRyan
2
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1 t a
3
BOOowski pitched to 1 batter n the 8th
Ump!res---t-lome. Ke!Wm Danley First MaMl
HudSon Second Dana DeMutt1 Th rd4 J m
Jcvce
T-2 00 A-45 780 48 286)

N.msn 1b 3 2 I 1
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CCrdo p
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32 1 8 7

0

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lndlsns 5, Tigers 4

TotalS

T~

31.464

1

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Edd""
T-2 38 A--40 986 (43 662)

A&lt;t'glc
O'forl;j 111
RoWhte

Totals

1112

0

2-3

MulderW14-3
9 8 2 2 3' 3
~ pt;tJed to 1 batter n be 8fl
WP----Muldef
Umpr8&amp;------tiome Dan tassogna: Frst Chns
GI..ICCUlfl Se.:md OlEr1e Relktd llun:l Doug

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2 311100

JMatoo L 1 2

1010
36 410 4

Totlle

37 5 10 5

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Cedenol

1

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2212

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G1ifrv'o 2b ~ 1 D 0

1'wlns 5, While Sox 4 (10)

1

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~Secord. Brll!rl Garman:Thrd, ~ SooiL
T---2:27 A--4 1.5118 f41 001')
-

Thursday a Games

Seattle (V~lone 3-2) at AA&amp;hetm {Sale 6-0) tO 05 p m

RERBBSO

2-30!1

LVizcar'to
Kllll s~

~

Mllw

H

6755210

Pmsburgn s Allaro18. 4
Fbrlda 5 ~adelphia 2

Houston 6 Anzooa 1
Mtlwaukoo 6 Ctucago Cum; 3
Colorado 5 l os Angeles •
Sa Otego 9 San Franl;ISCO 4

Baltimore (Ponson 5--12) at N.Y Yankees jCont8r&amp;s 8-4) 105 pm
"Oii:ago W!1aa Sox (~ 6 7) al Delron (Jol"msort 7 8) 7 05 p m
Kansas C~ [Wood 1 2) at Tampa Bay {Bell Hl 715 p m
Oakland (Saartoos 2 1) at Te~ (Dick.., 5 7) 8 05 p m

lOx -

NY Mets 4 Moot 8&amp;12

Montreal 7 NY Mels 4
Atlanta 1 Prttsburgh 0
St louts 11 CIOC nnal t O

•'Thursa.y • Gimes

3
6

1f0 -

201

kee 6 2B--Oet..ee {32) A.SG:lnzalez POl
Jenb'l5 (2~) Gnwe (13) Capoano (2) HRBamta (121 GrMM~ (6J 8Hal
PJ tsednik (41) SF-TWakef Jerlkrts

""

16-37

Tuesday • ResuHa

Resutu
Floftda 6 Phlladelpl1ta 3

F\19(t'f(ef

lb rhbi

28-22

W1

19

3000

MlhAuk•

Maclasef

25-'27

26-25

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26-22

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Cardinals 11, Reds 10

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Houston
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Chicago

C~nd 1Q.....Det oll6
Tampa Bay fi. Kansas Cny 2
Mronesota 1 Chtcago Soli 3

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Atlanta

29-22

54

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28 25

27 25

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35-12

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tiMdil. P*=hlld to 1 Mner n hi fJtL

National league

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

••

�Page B4 • Tt. ~ Daily Sentinel

r

1r ~ 1r..--~-~.....

~

"tWin Rivers Tower is accept- NEW AND USED STEEL
Ing appltcatione for waiting SUtel Beams, ~ipe Rebar
list for Hud-subsized, 1. br, For
Concrete,
Angle,
apartment, call 675-6679 Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
. EHO
Grating
For
Draln1,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
SPACE

r

Mini Storage for rent. 4x 15 &amp;
}(.1 !5

ces .800·322-2433.

~.~10 H~"""""

-

•I

l
•

Electric 4-burner range,
almond In color. good condltion , $150.
Kenmore dishwasher. 5 yrs.
old, excellent co ndltl.on ,
. t&gt;ack,$250. (740)44 1· 1308.

Business Services

Bates, $10,

Square Bales, $1 .85. Call
(740)367-0512, (740)441-

To place an ad

5502.

ib

Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

F
~

·

Al11Ui

"cs INC.

o_so

•---··.OSiilJPI'LJ£Siitiiiiiiiiii.-'
c

Full ' size bed. $,50: Queen Call740-245-5121 .

New Shipment! I New exleri·
or and interior cloors. al l
sizes. Call after 5:00. 50% -1-99-6-Fo_r_d_M_:u_s_ta_ng_,-Red~.
o~. fit 53 St. At. 160, 3 miles Tinted windows. CD player,
north of Holzer hospital. Ph: Sunroof,
\16
Standard
(740)645-6157.
147 .000
miles
$3,800

r

i

Keyboard player needed tor
blessed &amp; talented Chnstlan
Buy · or sell . Riverine
rock band. Rest of band in
Antiques. 1124 East Main
place. Jim 740·992-6300, no
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740calls after 9pm please.
992-2526. Ru ss Moore.
owner.
FRuns &amp;_

r.

VEG~IABLES

Old Zinc lids with some liners .. 35t each. (740)446·
Canning tomatoes and bell
2946.
peppers. Rowe Farm. All
ready picked . (740)2474292

Au1o,
leather,
loaded .
$8.495.00, 1995 Ford F-150
4X4, air, 5-speed, long,
bed. $4 ,995.00. 1995 Ford
Ranger superlcab, 4X4 V-6,
Aulo.
XLT. $5,495.00.
Riverview Motors across
from Speedway, Pomeroy,
Ohio (740)992-3490

Last Thursday of
·ever)' month

~and Financiai ·Service~
Box 189 • Middleport

All pack $5.00

740-843-5264

Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

Licensed in Ohto and wv

5FREE

Bonanza Get

CONSTRUCTION
Roofing · Siding·
Pciinting- Gutters-

( ·.,n,lrudion

MAPLEWOOD
LAKf:

VInyl Siding
Replace;llent Windowy

flea Market

Decks

740-992-1189

August 68r 7

James Kttst-t 11, Owner
740-992-2772
740· 742·2332
740-416-1570

Available
·$5.00 per day
740-949-2734

~

JONES'

H'gh
&amp;Dry
1
elf•.Storage

Tree Service

s

New Construction
Remodeling

Security CatncraS
~. l ot ion

Sensors

740-992-3452
740-742- 1085

t

820 East Main St. • Pomeroy
be"side Larry's Fruit. Stand

29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

Lawn Mowers, Lawn Tractors. Weed Eaters,
Chainsaws, Blowers, Till~rs, Generators
Warranty Service For Briggs &amp; Stratton, Kohler,
Roi-Air Compre~sors, Campbell &amp; Hauli feld ,
Oregon Chainsaws &amp; All Equipment
S.oles &amp; Service for The Generac Swndby Home
'Generating 10,000 &amp; 12,000 watt. LP or natural gas
Roi-Air Air Compressor
Open 8:00·6:30 M·F;Sal. 8:00-3:00 '192-IOJJ
Pick-up and deli ve ry serv ice

MaroRcvCI.J'SI
4WHEELERS

~:"Size• s·~~ o" ~

~~ to tO'x30'

106 Butternut Ave.
.Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-6454

i

HEATING fl COOLING

Ir

AA~~

I

-.---

Looking for a
30
non profit
organization to
work one day of
admission gates
at the 2004
Meigs County
Fair. Please Call
740-985-4159 . . 740-667·6080

(304)4118·11le3

1887 Outchm1n Arl1tocr•t
22' pull Nhlnd camper ulld ~;;;;~;;;;;;;;~

very

CAOI! NUMBI!R 03 CV

137
. Morllllllt
l!ltclranlc
Reglatretlan

lyatema.

Inc.,

11

namlnM lor Aegla
Mortgsge
Corporotlan dblt UC
Lending Plllntltl

..

..,

Wllll1m C. Fink, II 11.
~dlnta

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In PII"''MIICI of an
order of Bill to me
directed from nld
Court In the abavt
eutllllcl ..uon, I will
to Mil lit pul&gt;o
IIC IUC!Ian Oil the
front otopo of the
Mllgl County Court
HouM on Frldly
.Augull 13, 2004, et
10:00 A.M., of aaid
dey, the lollowhlg
~bed-1-:
The
lollowlng
drrcrtbed rwl ntlde
In th1 Vlll1191 of
Middleport, In the
County of Illig&amp; lind
Slilte of Ohio and
known . . . part of Lot
No. Forty·three (43);

e-

llttlt. Excellent condl·

11on (304)87Ho421
2000 CI...B Motor Home
CURRENT OWNt!A'8 28,0oo mlloo. loaded. un· NAMI: Wlllllm C. !!Ink conlalnad ,
oloopo
4,
and l'lull 8 . Fink
S30.ooo.
(740170e·1 852
PROPI!RTY ltl'/ll meKI.QI.
ADDAE88:
224
W1lnut
Street, 2001 lntru&lt;ttr by Damon
Mtddlapart,
Ohio 36'.8' Doublo ..pando'a

on the North IICII of
W1lnut
81rMI
btiWHn Third and
Fourth S-o tn the
Uld
Vlllllll
of
Middleport,
Molgo
County, Ohio and ·
bounded
· 1nd 41710
dt.crlbod 11 followa, PERMANENT PAR·
tawlt:
·
CEL NUMBER: 15Beginning 11 a 00017
point Fifty (50) flit PRIOR DEED REFERNorth 73 Oeg. Wat of ENCE: Volume 118,
Page 312
the touthllll AT:
of uld lot No. f'orty· APPRAISED
thrM (43); thence $27,000.00
North 73 dtg. Weal
TERM&amp; OF SALE:
Twenty-liVen
(27) · Cennot be eold far
fMI; thence Northlt1y leu ""'" 213rdl of the
Filly (50) fMI to 1111 lppriiHd YIIIUO. 111%
North Llnl of Mid lot down on dey of Mil,
NO. 43; lllenCI South Cllh or certified
73 dtg. !!lot Twenty· chtck, bel1nce on
MVen
(27)
fill; confirmation of .....
thence
Southorly· RALPH E. TRUSSELL,
Filly (50) fMI to sur- Bhlrllll!lllga County,
of 1a1c1 v11~ego of Ohio.
Middleport •• aur- REIMER I LORBER
veyed end plllled by Co., LP.A.
Phillip Janea.
By: Dtnnla Rlfmer
Being lha Mme (Reg. 100311ot)
piO(I8I'Iy canveyed to Pller L Mehler (Reg.
R.L. Barnette ond 10075213)
LomtiiMI H. lllrnellll. .Attomeya for PlllnUff
by recorded 2450 Edlaon Blvd.
J1nu1ry 7, 1H7, In P.O. BoxiHII
Volume 21111, II p11111 'l'wlnaburg,
Ohio
395, of the Melga 44087
County,
Ohio, (330) 425-4201

wr

Aacolda.

7/15, 22129, 2004

Model ~9.

No Smoke or

Pelt, Le11hor, cooded. In
Motion, Sat., Big Foot JoCi&lt;t
V10 Ford 10,000 mlleo gaw
S139,000

New, will toke
S85,00Q or beat· ofler
(304)593-3539 or (304) 675-

5128

'li'~1:, ,, '

Gibson

L.~~~=-

IIIAL EITATJ!

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
if 14/1 mo. pd

ruppert

Creative

ENGINE DR'S

tJi Lora

t 3~6 College Rd.

r&lt;e::::l

,

SUlACUSE SMAll

CQ"'Birthday•

•Wedding•
• Any epeclal
OCCIIlOn

Place your order

today
(740)985-3917
Lora Bing

Syracuse. OH 4~779

740-99l-012l
Quality work for a fair
prle.
All wgrk gugra0Jcc4
Master Certified
Mect-lanics Briggs &amp;

Slratton, Kohler.
Murray, MTD All
makes &amp; models $10.00
off any purchase of

$20.00 wi(h lhis ad.

Whaley•s A\ltO
·Parts
BAS£MENT

WATERPROORNG
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. tocal refarttnC81 furnial'led. Established 1975.
Coli 24 Hra. (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement

Waterproofing.

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE ·
CLASSIFIED$

Resloekhfl ILJ.I.e · ]\~)del
'
and Aller Mlrla!t lttrl:B
;

.

!I._'·- •

•

•

• Replaccmcnl

50 Blush
52 Nearly wins
54 Prized

I Tier
6 Gen.
statuettes
- Bradley 58 Conse10 Yielded to
quence
12 Locust lrH 59 Fast gait
60 Luau

HE HEARS BEST WHEN

l WHISPER 'BOUT HIM !.!

TH' MECK

I DO!!

business, not our sideline

1""1-\/l..VE. t E.VE.R TOL.\)'(0\.J '(0\J~

WU".C..I

n Mon·Frl9·5 Sat. 9·12

TO
Tf\\'::. I' IRM,
. ro\'( BO'i -z

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,
ALL ON SALE NOW!!
Open 7 davs a ·weeki

30 • Racine,

BIG NATE
WISH I COULD
HEAR TEDDY A~O JE N~{

CONVERSATION '· .. W?NDEt&lt;.
IF I SH:lUL D T~'( TO
foiOVE CLOSE!'. ...

NO.. NO, THAT -JitJLD BE
WH'i TAKE THE
CHANCE OF BEING SEEN'
STUfiD.

0
0
0

FREE ESTIMATES

c: ..

$e8
AI»&gt;ky"RJ"
,__Hqpp

Trucking

IMPORTS
Athens

HAULING:
• Limestone

..... . -

,

PEANUTS
NOW T~AT WE'VE ~AD LUNCH
T06ET~ER, 1 CAN TELL VOV
M'( NAME 15 PE66V JE.A.N ...

OeanHW
New&amp; Used
475 South Church St.

1/0WARDL
WRITESEL
diiFIIII
diME

BETTY

Ripley, WV 215271

.1-800-822-0417

amu ·

-Mil

•FIW 111111......

GARFIELD

BryanReevn
NowHomea,

Big Bond Antique
Rlflnllh,' Repair,
Roatore

Advertise in
this space
for 525
per month.

YOUNG'S .

740-667-6329

('

(\

_,

I•

THAT'S
CVTE .. I

' JUST
MAV6E ILL
JUMP INTO THE
Ri61.1T HERE

J

Relloratlon
KMII&gt;Bolley

In Tuppers Plains now
bas openings oo day
and midnight shiR.

Bond's job

39 Gourmet

mushrqoms

nation

Compilation
Bayed
Adult llllies
Solar system
planet47 TV network 22 -Jarrett
13
17
19
20

41 Gaul
conqueror

44 Tangy ISSie
46 Mom's
tmlliiBf
47 Sllov.uy mo.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

Celebrity Ciph~r cryptograms a.re creat!d !rom qootattons by lamous people. cast al'ld p&lt;eseni
Eeteh lehe1 10 ltle ophe1 starcls for 1nolher
·

TocJay ·s clve. N equals D

,J R L

" XALOG

M0 P F

R

DWF

XT

'•

IRT

0 I

XT

SRIBL -

ZMDON . . . . · OB

WFG' FLLOBT

UD0 N

DU

U DI

XF

JRL

MOPF

J ABF I. "

GYRIMFL

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Possessions possess." - Paul Eldridge
"A great fortune is a great slave:Y."- Seneca the Younger

R I BME L

I .I I' I I

.....

SAlLE

I
r

I

_O_S_O_G~E.....,~~
: ~

I I I ,. I . r

My boss htred his niece as
his assistant. To assure her
lhat she would have lo work
very hard he lectured, "There ·

. . . . .
··
, . . - - - - - - - - .· is no elevator to success. You

T I QAUN

I

have to take the ..... ·.-

I1--r,....;r.l~~,r.::....;,;....:.:~,.,.,--l G) Coonoleoe :1!•

chu&lt;&lt;le quc•ed
.
.
_ • _
by filling in rht m,u,ng wordi\
'---'---'----'--.1.......1--l yo'" de,.elo;~ lr~m slfp No. 3 below.

1:). PioN! "'UM6fif0 lUlfil IN

1H!:~ ~au.o.m

'"'

UN~(iAM6l(

A80Vt lH1ft5
10 GET ANSWH

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS '- zs- o•
Weaver· Rhyme · Depth • Unison · NOT READY
The guy was two hoors Iale for his date He knocked
on her door and found her in a noghlshirt. "l"m two hours
tale." he exclaimed, ·and you're still NOT READY!"
111

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

CARPENTER
• Room AddiUone I
-lng

fumoceWort&lt;

I

SOUP TO NUTZ

SERVICE

·-~

o

I

4Q 192·19511

• Elctrietill Ptumbing
• AoQfing • Gutter.
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• ~ .-.d Porch Dlocb
We do H !Ill -~~

I CA.U (if,T 1\Y JJ&amp;W~
Ollll~·, YOU KIJOW.'

I

ud Furniture

74()-742-341

-,/i,d

42 ·Zoologist's
eggs
43 EKude
moisiUre
45 Faint ~glow -

57 James

35 - Paulo

L

Sunset Home
Construction

( d'(

P!lSS

33 Anaconda

-YOU'RE

' W.V's Ill. Chevy, Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van
·

dUlllUI

Room Additions,
Garagea, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decka,

' .'

15...1.11-l ... IJH .. MV NAME 15 ..
1.11-1 .. BROWNIE CI-IARLES!

• Dirt
•AgLime
,-----~~

Pass

medicine

Friday, July 30, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Advancemen t in your chosen f1etel o f
endeavor is highly likely in the year ahead,
provided you make it a point to· keep
abreast of the latest knowledge. Study and
prepare yourself tor the time when opportunity knocks .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - All you have to
do today is 1o take on a negative attitude in
('\
(\
('o lt
approaching yoLJr work and it will make
"
0
r-. (' " C" I"'
tasks that are already difficult seem, even
(' r:- ,. " (I •
&lt; " '
,are
distasteful to you ·than usuaL
&lt; •
•
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - You're not
' " ..
apt lo be too successful at disguising your
true feelings toda~. Be particularly aware
of your overt. behavior if yO u happen to be
around people you dislike to begin with .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23).- This migh! be
one .of those days when it seemS that ail
··your goals may be thwarted by obstacles
beyond. your contr ol. Don't take out your
chagrin on innocen! .bv.standers.
LIKE IT.. ..._ _n,.. ~
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ~Those with
whom you'll . be interacting and dealing ~
today will be takmg their cues from you. II
you 'treat them in a harsh or cool fashion ,
don't expect any warmth 1n return.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) ~ Be
particularly discip lined and prudent 111 your
financial dealings and affairs today. It's one
of those days when II might be wise to
avoid making loans or buying things you
can't afford .
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22- Jan. 19) - In order
to maintain harmonious relationships with
those who are Important to your goals
today, you may have to show a great willIngness to compromise or make reasonable concessions.
COWGAA"T\Jllilla.IS
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2Q- Feb. 19) - Your
duti(!:S and responsibilities will not evapo'
"sesnN~"
rate ·of their own volitiOn today. The only
way they are go1ng to get done IS by you
doing the jobs. Don't try to duck out of
what's required of you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) ~ Steer clear
of cliques or special-Interest groups today
whose ideas and actions diametrically
oppose yours. Your patience may !Je at a
low point and a clash could become .
inB'Jitable.
~!:;__.l_r;[::J_;:i!iif;h!J.~s!dCJ . ARIE S (March 21-April19) ~Sometimes
~
we .. can try so hard to anain something
impOrtan t io us that we get in our own way.
Today could be one of those days for you
II you're not careful. Don't inhibit your
YOU WOULDN'T progress.
:TAURUS (Ap ril 20-Msy 20) Even
SAY "fHAT tF
though
you
know
better
and
realize
that
YOU' D JU~T
you shouldn't be so stubborn or inflexible
EATI:ON "fHRI:Ot'
at limes. It m1ght be difficult for VOI:J today
L.UNc.Ht'6
to yield ground to those who th ink differently than you.
• GEMINI {May 21-.June 20) - Normally
you're a sharing and giving person to
thOBe who deserve It or are near and dear
ro you , but today you may be astoundingly
. ~ Hghtflltecftn hOlding ~10 what you deem
1 to be yours alone.
l CANCER {June 21·July 22)- Try to a-.-otd
and lkirt itiUII today thlt you know CIUU
you and yOur mate to get up arms and take
L...--.:1.--.....:~...l.---..._-.:J opposing positiona. W'froj invite problems
that ean euity be a'e'Oidec:l?

WELL, 1./H ... 1./1-l ... M'f NAME

• Sand

no-985-3564

PaSs

6¥

Pass

48 Moldy
cheese
49 Keg
51 Vet patient
53 Stage
prompt
55 Mall brew
56 Pistol,
s·langlly

-...'Birthday :

DMG '· I

TFN

R.B.

Pass
P ass

of NASCA A
23 Gentle bear
25 Cockney's
optimism?
27 Trellis
28 Insect
stage
3T "The King
and I" name

AstroGraph

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

( l'',l:f,', (

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

Law11 and Garden Equipmelll is our

740-992-7599

...5.

This week, we are studying the slrong
jump shift. (SJS). In reply to your one-ofa-suit opening bid, when the responder
makes a simple jump into a new suit. he
describes either an excellenl one-suiler.
or a good two-suiter with your suit and hts
'
own sui t
This means that if you pick up a two-suit·
er and partner opens in neither, you must
no1 JUmp shift; you mus t ma~e a simple
response in the appropriate suit - as
South dicl in today's deaL
However. before we get to that. how
would you (South ) plan the pl ay in seve n
spades attar West leads a club?
Note that when South started with a quiet
one-spade response , he learned. from
his partne(s three-spade reb1d, not only
distribution data (lour-card spade support). but also hand-strength information
(15-17 points). If South began With an
SJS. because that torces to game. the
opener's three-spade _rebid wou ld not
supply any strenglh information.
Seven no-trump is the best contract. but
seven spades is line. (Agreed. the grand
slam is dif1icult to bid with confidence
because yo u don't know about the fiVe
heart winners.) You have 13 top tricks:
five spades, five hearts, one diamond
and two clubs. So, you don' t need to risk
the diamond finesse . Win trick one in
hand and draw trumps, being careful to
leave the ace or king on the board.
Unblock the ace·kmg of hearts, cross to
dummy with a trump, and cash all those
lovely winn('!rs (the 0-J-10 of hearts and
club king) , discarding your four dlaf!1ond
losers.

992-2975

. 1

NT Pass

•n

34

15 " Imagine"
strummers
singer
61 Like long
grasses
16 llolteh•J
18 KLM datum
19 Part of MHz
DOWN
21 Gayte's sisiiO'
23 Pasture
1 Ban· - ·
· aound ·
2 .Goat's·hair
24 Bud's comlc
garment
sidekick
3 Still
26 - of
4 Chocking out
approval
5 Divulge
29 Bungle
6 Dolphin
30 . Pilot a ferry
habitats
32 Dingy
· 7 Operate
34 Meshworks B Comr,lexion
36 Water,
prob em
In Quebec
9 Cell block
37 Good buddy
brawl
38 Prelend
11 Society girl
40 Besl
12 Friendly

be careful

Pomeroy, Ohio

Morning Star Road· C.Rd

Pw:Hi
Pass
Pass

t:ust

Puzzle

'

Windows • Roofi ng

KHchene, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

See Bre11t or Brian Whaley •
M-Fri 8:30.5:00
Sat. 8:30-Ndon
Sun. Closed

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

IIIITEIIIIICE

F'llln

~

~
·

BUILDERS IHC.

1.
4. f''l'
5 KT

~or tb

With . two suits,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, "erennials, vegetables, ·
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, and azaleas.

BISSELL

West

Opening lead: ,. ,J

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0

South

7

GRAVELY TRACTOR
·204 Condor Street

A .

Vuln~rabl~ : Ea~t -West

Snapper

Gravely

R76.'l4':12

·Dea ler: North

(304) 273-5321 .

Hill's Self
Storage

4

olo

BARNEY

Now llpu
'1'8lry'• Engine•

.. 8 2
• 8 6 3

South
A QJ9B5
• A K
+ AJ 10i 2

NO USE
SHOUTJN',
nbc !!

Re sidcn l wl

Ea!it
• 4 '

.. ,J lO 9

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Electrical Services LLC

K Q

Crossword

.

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

740-992·5232

Q 5

K Y 4

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV Contractors Lie, #003506

Bucket Truck

BENNETT'S

SALE,

+

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

Let me do ;t for youl

• Stump Grinding .

•

olo
West
•
ll) 7 2
•
g 6 5 3

MONTY

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center ·

Top • Removal • Trim

n•nrllllr
$28.8111' ....

SHI!RIFF'8

875-2457 ,r

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

. STwp ·

~404·WM~~&lt;Ulil

. QJ \ 07~

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
" Yo11r 011e Stop Po11red
Solid Co11crete Shop"

Pomeroy.

I

Nnr1h
A A K 6 :.t

Free Estin:zates

Spaces

~ ~

e

·--iii\iiiiiiiiii;,;,-' - - - - - - - -

i

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Henderson, WV

&amp; Racln~

Blown lnsulatim1
Pole Buildi11gs
Garages

j

r

NEA

BRIDGE

MYERS PAVING

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

2003 Yamaha Wolverine
99 F-150 lariat 4K4, tully
loaded, leather int ., excellent 350cc AW, 4x4 , black,
$3,700, (740)992-6702
condition,
1,000 miles.
Asking pa~off . .. (740)367- BB Honda 300 Four Wheel.er . L----.:.:::::..::!:.:::::.:::.;:.:.::;:_:::..:;:::___;_-,-1
7621 .
$ 1,200
good con dition
$300 Piano- Price &amp; Teeple Sweet cdrn, no order too l':!:r"'--~~---, (304)675-3831
large o·r small.
Call
4x4
N60003; $60 Jacobsen 20"
~
FOR SALE
Snow Bk&gt;wer 5 HP, needs (740)682·6850
Harley Davidson So ftail
I
\In
I
"I
1'1'1
II
.
.
_
work; $50 Ping Pong Table;
Standard, 2003 Anniversary
$75 Weight Bench S~stem
,\II\ I '-.10( "1992 Jeep Wrangler, 4x4. Model 100th Edition. 6.87
w/ PuUy's Marcy by lmpex.
Good condition . Asking miles Excellent Condition
675.()822.
10
FARM
lj
$4,500 or best o(l8 r. can (304)675-7f40
EQIJJl'M£NT
(740)388-8047.
10,000 BTU air condition. 3
BoATS &amp; MaroRS 1
yrs. old, fits casement or
1993 Jeep Cherokee 4x4, 5 ~
HJHSAU:
.
sliding
window,
$100. 16
Ft.
Heavy
Duty speed. Needs engine wor1&lt; ,
011 Ad llwtrtll
(740)949•2010 •
Gooseneck trailer. Good $~00. (740)446·7029.
1999 Marada 18ft Boat , 3.0
shapa, new oak deck, 8 lug ~i111""-~~----,
15% Ill
liter motor ·wilh alpha 1 over1998 Sundowner Horse wheels, brak8s
$3,450 ,,~
VANS
If
drive. Stainless steel prop,
-nailer, 2 horse Stanl OBO. (740}3 67-0596.
FoR SALE
lbelllllellllre
,...,.,
canopy. bow cover and bOat
WtDresslng Room &amp; Bumper
cover
·
included.
Excellent
Pt.ill asking $7,500 used 10- Ford Tractor 600 Serious. 19Sa Ford 150 Ekconeline
lmllll
cOndition ph,one or leave
Good
tir9s;
new
times t740)446·7104
high roof van. New paris. message (304)875·5t15
paintlreplacement parts as
engine, transmission, steer·
5x6 trailer, 5x2 detachable needed,
$3,450
080. ing box, radiator, front/rear
1999 Yamaha Wave Runner
toolbox , diamond plaled (740)367-0596.
air, $2, 195. (740)446·0050.
GP760,
1995 Sea Do Boat
deck, $500; 4 cyl. W isconsin ' - - - ' - - - - - - engine, $350; (7 40)992· Massey
Ferguson
Hay 1994 Plymouth Voyager, in good condition, buy both
Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
for $4,000 or trade for Truck
Baler. 800 pound $1.500
2668
auto,
A!C,
cassatt
,
looks
Air
Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
(304)882-3652
(304)675-1267
good, runs good 1 must sell,
Dinning Room Table, 4 side
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmenlf,.
Tractor parls &amp; service, spa- $800.00. 740-388-o-434 or 20 ft. ~Renken Cuddy, 4.3,
chairs, 1 Captain chair &amp;
• Free Estimates
r
cializing
in
Massey 74Q-645-2"737
V6, all saftey equipment
Buffet Refinished must to
Ferguson , Ford, and - - . . . , , . . . - - - - - - included, runs good, looks
•
5
&amp;
10
yr
Warranties
,
.
•
~
Appreciate Price on inspec99 Chev. Astro Conversion
Belarus. (740)696·0358
· good, must sell, $ ·3000.00,
• Huge Inventory . · ·
-,!::;~ •· ,..
tion (304)675-1765
Va.n , sofa bed, 65K miles, 740 _388•0434 or 740 _645 _
• Vanguard Ventless Fireplaces
LniiX"'YV""L"
very clean, good condition, 3727 _
[~HoiTu~lJiecoom vu11e .
.. ~.~~
$9 ,500. (740)388·8107
Grand Opening Sale
TRPPRn
1111BfflDM.
- ,.,,.,
op quality, warranties
~-eo-..__ _ _ _ __.
MlHon, WV, Flea MSrlce 5 heifers, 4 bulls, (740)742· 1
·~
~
~
•
Gallipolis. OH · WVQI02I2
Soctlon
C.
Fridays
2880
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967
Salilrd&amp;ys and Sundays
Tahoe Cover lor S·10 Short
5
month
old 1996 Cloldwlng GL 1500.
6061922·71 85.
Bed, Good Cond~lon $80 . - - - - - - - - ,
Quarter/Mustang
Filly. Candy Apple Red, 23,245
Barnhart Builcjera
Ho~er broke. Alklng $350, mlleo. Alklng $8,000. Call
JET
years experience
(740)387-7621'
(740)368-8047.
AERATION MOTORS
•New
Homes
·
Aopalrtd. New.&amp; AobiJ/IIIn
Reg. Ouartar and Rag. Paint 2003 Honda 400 EX pipe·
Stock. CaM Ron Evans, 1·
•Log Homos
Ho!MI. Weanling to brood· ner1 bara, rode very llttlt,
JIOO.e3He28.
19915 Flettwood Prow'ltr !5th
•Post Frame
marea. F'rlc:e to
1111. ooklng poy off""" (740)7&lt;12·
Whtt l, used very·llttte, 30
&lt;omplete
Remodeling
(740)~6-3413.
8802 .
112 IHI lOng, 16 1te1 tilde
•Replacement Windows
out. AC &amp; Hill. lull Kllchtn
•Roof$
&amp; bath , IIHpl !, IXCIIItnt '
Commercial and
onope, Meh ineludtd, will
1111 for payoff (currti'ltly
Retidendal
Se,400) Monhow ~lltr
Free Estimates

r~1

ALLEY OOP

StateWide
CNE Poured wans

St. Kt. 114
Between Syracuse

Room AdditiOIIl'

Call... Dennis Boyd

--------

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Rocky Hupp lnsuranc,

Service
Free EStimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,

BINGO ,2171

6:30

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1 male Pekingese dog.

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Every Thursday
. &amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

Call:

For Fas(Courteous

~~tsub~~~e~ood~ndilion

What would you lose if the,re was a fire?

SEAL IT

71 VIne Street

has new pump, V-6. auto.matlc. extra clean 85 ,000
female Pekingese dog. t miles as~ng $8,900.
G~od Used Appliances.
male Peek a poo dog .
GT
Becondilioned
an d
(740)446·3398.
~uaranteed
Washers .
Oryers,
Ranges ,
and AKC German Shepherd garage kept (304)675·3631
Flefrigerators, Some start at pups working dOgs, parents f715
TRUCKS
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 on premises Stud- Services 1
FOR SALE
Vine St., (740)446·7398
(304)937-2310 or www.tris·
tatek·9.com
MOllohan Carpet, 202 Clark - - . , . - ' - ' - - - - - - 1977 Chevy one ton 405 Big
ehapel Roacl. Porter. Ohio. Beagle pups, Cooper nose. Block, ~oil Back 5,000
(740)446-7444 1-877-830- Parents on premises, $85 (304)675-7979
cell ·
9162. Free Estimates, Easye_a:cc:ch:..:.1_74:..:0::..14_4~1-~1~44:..:0:__ (304)645-6356
-------financing . 90 days same as Cash. Visa/ Master Card Full Blooded Jack Russell 1983 Chevy S-.10 4-wheel
Orive· a· liltle save alot.
Terrier pups. 7 weeks old drive, air conditiOr:ling, power
$100 each. Also 2 ~ear old windows/locks, cruise con·
l'hompsons Appliance &amp; male Jack Russell Terrier trol, 150,000 miles. $2,000.
flepair-675-7388 . For sale. $150. (740}446-341 3.
(740)441·9151 .
automatic ~i'=ro~~'"",_,.;.M~•···CAL----.
m -con dltioned
~ashers &amp; dryers, refrigeral'a .:,~.n:o...~
1996 Ford F 259. VB. 4 w.d ~
tors, gas and electric
5 speed, New Jasper
ranges, air condition ers, and ·
Engine and Clutch, shocks,
Wringer washers . Will do Bundy Oboe wood, good ball joints. fro nt u-jolnt, good
rB:pairs on major brands in conditi on,
$350
fir m; tires (304)675-2961. leave
shop or at your home.
Clarine t Resonile Bundy, mess~ge
good condition, $125 firm. 1997 Dodg e Ram 1500
ANTIQl.IIS
{740)379-2433..
Quad cab 8' bed, 4x4, \1-8,

IF YOU RENT
For a Free Quote or Appointment

Decks · etc.

m;;;;.;;;.;;.;.;~---,
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l'!;n; - ::1304::.;;)~67"5"·8"87"'8'---==
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t-'ORSALE
1997 Mustang Convertible
(7.0)~7391

The Daily Sentinel • Pagj!. 85

Call 992-.2156
Pomeroy Eagle.&lt;

We can insure your valuables! •

Contractor
Residential &amp;
Commercial
Houses, porches.
Garages, Pole
Barns, Roofs,
Renovations
7 40·949·1606
74D-591·1053

1992
Mercury·
Grand ·
Marques. lo.aded, all power.
new cld/ste reo, tires &amp;
brakes.
asking
52500,
(740)985-381 0
'--'------1995 with Buick Regal, V-6 1
104,000 miles. excellent
ccnd~on, $4,000, (740)985·
3504

BUilDING

r.

www.mydailysentinel.com

14 Born there

$5001. Honda's, Chevy's
Rainbow vacuum sweeper Jeep's , etc Police lmPQunds
and steam cleaner anach- Cars ffom' $500. For listings
1-800-749-8104 ext 3901
m
._•_n•_._'n_c'_"d_•_d_
. _$4_oo
__
~740)446·1528 .
1989 Plymouth Accla imTanning Canopy, 10 bulbs, Runs greats, $500 OBO.
30 min. timer. Works good, 740-446-1164 ·or 304-593S300. (740)446-7029.
27 10.

1!11!'...;.....;-----

' Thursday, July 29, 2004

Business Card ... $25.00/colurnn inch per month

FORSALE

Sunday. (740)446-7300

Block, brick. sewer pipes,
For sale used freezer, S1 00. windows. lintels, etc~ Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Call (740)448·2655.
size box springs &amp; mat1r~Ss,
$150; Dresser with mirror,
$60; 3 Draw chest, $60; 5
Drew chest, $40; ' TV ·
stands, S15 each; Couch,
$95;.Staekwasher/dryer, like
new $450

'

1st and 2nd Cutting Mixed

Hay. Round

Tuesday.

FORREN'r

Thursday, July 29, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

i

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BEGtNNING WllH 11-iE"
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A

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V.C. YOUNG'III
912-QtS
Pomet oy, Ohio
·- -~~-&lt; -·

..

�..
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
nance knocked the Reds out of
contention and sent them into
,their deepest slump in a year.
from Page 81
The Reds also lost ei~ht
.
strmght Last July, prompung
Jim Edmonds homered in all them to fire the general man: three games of the series ager and 111anager and go on a
sweep, which put the · money-saving trade spree.
Cardinals 11 games up in .the
There won't be another payNL Central. St. Louis has gone roll purge this time. Even if
42-14 since May 27, digging they"re inclined, there:&gt; not
out of a fifth-place hole.
much to trade.
. The Cardinals have had two
That became evident again
constants during the spurt: on Wednesday, when the be't
They can beat anyone on the the Reds could do was be
road, and they can beat the pesky, keep it close anc;I lose
agam.
Reds anywhere.
St. Louis is 34-16 011 tiie
··we'll &lt;ake wild, as long as
rqad, also best in the majors, · we win,". R;;~s. captain Barry
and hasn't had a losing trip all Larkm sUid. Its very trustratseason.
·
mg. We showed tonight that
The Cardinals have been we'll continue to tight."
even more efticient against the
Right-hander Jeff Suppan,
Reds, w'inhing 11 of 13. who hasn't lost on the· road
They've · played 10 times in ' this season, walked a careerJuly and won nine, including ~igti I0 in 4 2-l innings. helpthree-game sweeps at Busch : mg the Red&gt; rally friJm an ~-I
Stadium and Great American deficit in the tifth.
Ball Park.
"I was trying to do everyThe head'to-head domi- thing exrept focus on what 1
needed to do," Suppan said.

Short

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

Thursday, July 29,

Adam Dunn led off the fifth
with his 28th homer. and
Larkin hac( a pinch-hit grand
slam oft Steve Klme that cut it
to 8-7 later in the.· inning. It
was Larkin's second careen

just a real jough pitching day."
St. Louis piled .UP seven
runs in 4 1-3 innings against
Jose Acevedo (4-10), who c~t
his dyed-blond hair for the
game but remained winless in
~lam.
six starts - two no-deci sions
Just like that. the Cardinals - in July.
pulled away again. Rolen lea
Wily Mo Pena stretc hed
off the sixth with his 22tfd over the 8-foot wall in center
home r. and Reggie Sanders to steal a three-run . hmller
doubled , home another run. from Albert Pujols in the
Rolen hit anot her solo homer f(&gt;urth.
in the seventh, his founh mul ..
First baseman Sean Ca&gt;cy
tihomer game of the season.
threw away Suppan·s squeeze
St.•Louis matched its season bunt w1th the bases loaded .in
h,igh with 19 hits.
the tifth. · sending home two
Cal Eldred (2-0) was award- runs. and Tony Womack hit a
ed the victory for his two per- three-run homer otT Todd Van
teet
i1inings.
Jason Poppe! for an H-1 lead.
lsringhausen gave up an RBI
Acevedo has lost to the
smgle by Jason LaRue that cut Cardinals· three times this sea11 to 11 -10 in the eighth. but son. He's 0-6 ~areer against St.
got five outs for his 26th save Louis with a 9.85 ERA.
in 30 chances.
Edmonds led off the third
Cardinals pitchers wi1lked with his 27th homer. Edmonds
13 barters, and tive scored.
has 12 homefs in July, the
··oh, what a game,'' manag- most in the majors. He left the
er Tony La Russa said in a game as a precaution in the
raspy voice, his whirling head · tifth when he felt tightness in
rmpped in .his hand. "It was his lower back.
·

Browns meet with
Winslow's agent
BY T.OM .WITHERS

Associated Press

Implode

a

Washington's signing· of
cornerback Sean Taylor,
taken one spot ahead of
Winslow at No: 5, could
have a direct effect on the
Browris ' ·negotiations.
It was assumed Kevin
Poston would tiase his asking price for Winslow on
whatever thi s year's hi~her
picks received, and posstbly
demand that the Browns
give his client comparable
money to a No. I · overall
pick.
The Postons have a reputation for being tough nego-,
tiators, who. have held their
clients out\of. camps in the
past. Last year, though, they
delivered Charles Rogers on
time to the Detroit Lions,
who gave the wide receiver
a league-high $14.4 million
signing bonus.
Davis knows of one party
who ' ll be upset if the:
Browns can't get a deal
done by Friday -. Winslow.
"He'd be the most disappointed if he isn't here at the
start of training camp,"
Davis said. "It's still a couple days away. I don't want
to go,on the presumptions he
won't be here or the presumption he will be here."
Meanwhile, the Browns
are close to an agreement
with quarterback Luke·
McCown , their fourth-round
pick.
McCown, who starred at
Louisiana Tech, is expected
to. be Cleveland's thirdstring QB thipeason behind
Jeff Garcia and Kelly
Holcomb.
Offensive tackle Kirk
Chambers, the club's sixthround selection, is the only
Browns 2004 draft pick to
sign so far.

HUGl
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2003 Cadillac Deville- Silver.... $24,900
2003 Chevrolet Monte Carlo ·
Beige .................... :..................... $12,850.00
2003 Chevrolet Impala Pewter ...............
'.................................. ".............. "." ... $13' 4 50
2001 Pontiac Aztek Black:............. $9999
2003 Pontiac Sunfire 2 door, red, 4cyl.
auto, air, tili~ cruise......................... $8999
2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT- 4 door•
Maroon, Auto, Air, CD ................ $1t,900
2001 Chevrolet Prizm · 4 cyl, Auto, Air
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'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,••t

I

\

) ',

\ .. 1

,I

"

• Aging, broke, can Tyson
still fight? .·See Page 81

Bv BRIAN

t'"

-•"• f

, .,

$ 100,000 grant from the Supreme
Court. allowing the pur~hase of the
new equipment. No local funds arerequired for tlie installation of the
new system.
The Henschen firm , Powell said,
has participated in the automation of
"'the majority" of the state's probate
and juvenile courts. Powell has said
his offi~e is one of only three in .the
state without such an ·automated sys"tem.
It will allow his staff to access the
~ounty's overall court record system,
and provide easier · puhilc access to
probate court records.
Powell said his office's caseload is

about half probate cases and half
jmenile cases. He said around 100
juveniles alone are participants in .the
juvenile probation and diversion program, while traffic. truancy and other
juvenile cases are also processed
through the court.
The new system will allow his
staff to ''track" juveniles through the
system in Meigs County and elsewhere across the state. and will allow
other counties access to Meigs
County JUvenile records.
Other business
Commissioners also:
• Approved appropriatiPn adjustments for the probate court. juvenile

Mike Gilmore of Rutland , left, and Ritch Coe of Pomeroy admire the new granite monument
constructed on the Chester-Shade Historical Society .grounds byTuppers P1ains Post 9053,
Veterans of Foreign Wars. The monument is m tribute to veterans of all wars and features
the emblems of branches of service. Bricks bearing the names of members of Post 9053 .
since its organization and their dates of service will be installed on the concrete walkway
leading up to the monument. ·A dedication ceremony is planned for sometime in September.
(Charlene Hoeflich/ photo)
·

Racetrack ready to come to life again

Details on l!ap AB

•

..

INDEX
2 SJ!CilONS-:- t6 ·PAGES

@I

....
··--"
.....,

oBWCO&lt;'

........_

I\

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
l&gt;ear Abby
Editorials
faith~Values
Movies
NASCAR
Sports

Weather

...

1..1

,, ,

I

A6
B4 -6
B7

A6

A4
A2

As
BS
BI
AS

court and engineer, and tabled action
on a court-ordered transfer in probate
~ourt.

• Approved a mortgage subrogation for Peoples Bank N.A. on behalf
of participants in the Community
Housing Improvement Program ·
(CHIP)
.
• Opened a bid for bitmimous
material s for August from Asphalt
Material s Inc .. Marietta, and referred
the bid to Engineer Eugene Triplett.
• Appro.ved payment of bills in the
amount of $252,344.70. .
Present were Comini"ioners Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

Community Center
donation
.
'

Utility Wo(kers Union of America Local 296, recently made a
contribution of $125 to .the Mulberry Community Center for
the many programs of the Meigs Cooperative Parish.
Pomeroy Elementary School, vacated when a new school
was built for students in the Meigs Local School District, Is
being renovated to house the clothing, food pantry and
youth programs, including God's NET. which will be housed
there. Keith Rader, parish director, second from left,
accepts the check from ·Mike Rawson, Charlie Burton and
Tory Olive~ of Local 296.

Bv

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New monument

WEATHER

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~~~ -·~-· 0""._-- (

REED

POMEROY - Me igs Coun ty
Commissioners approved a contract
with the Ohio Supreme Court
Thursday for a $100,000 computer
system automating the probate and
juve nile court systems.
Probate/Juvenile Judge L. Scott
Powell expects to sign a contract
with H en ~c h en and Associates of
Bowling Green for the installation of
new hardware and software, to he in
place and in . use sometime in
· September.
The contrac t commissioners
approved Thursday wi II . release a

Cash 25: 1-2-4-7-11-24

2001 Saturn 4 door, maroon .$5975.00
200 t Ford Escort ZX2 4 cyl, air,
5 sp ...... :........................................ $4880.00
1998 Cavalier .......:...................... $4850.00
200t Chevrolet Lumina .......... $5975.00
1999 Chevrolet Metro - 4 door, Auto,
Air, 4 cyt Gas Mizer .........................·$4,750

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Commissioners approve.probate{Juvenile contract .

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VALUE PRICED
USED CARS

1999 S-10 Blazer 2-Door .........$7950.00
·t998 S-to Pickup 4x4 ..............$9999.00
2001 Dodge Ram Pickup 1500
2WD ............................................... $9999.00
1998 Olds Bravada ..:................ $9999.00
1997 Ford Explorer XLT VB, auto, air,
4x4 ................................................ $6,850.00
I2002 S-1
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2002 Chevrolet Trail Blazer.$19,900.00
2000 Chev S-1 0 4x4, LS pkg, V6, auto,
a• r........................,................ ,............... $7,690

e

Pick 3 dey: 4-2-8 (whtte ball)
Pick 4 ,day: .9-4-2-8
· Pick 3 night: 4·8-5 {whrte ball)
Pick .4 nliJht: 3-3-8-9

Sales Manager

USED TRUCKS

Heat is on Davis as
camp opens, Bt

Ohio

•' t Harvey Jett

Roge( Jesse
G~n . Manager

USED CARS ·

Pennington contract
status still up in
the air, Bt

NFL

BEREA
Kellen
Winslow Jr.'s agent spent
four hours Wednesday meeting - with the Cleveland
Browns, still hoping to have
their top draft pick signed
before training camp opens.
Kevin Po ston , the tight
end's representative, visited
with Browns president John
Collins at the team's headquarters, a possible sign the
sides want a deal finalized
by Friday when the club
holds its first .full-squad
workout.
Coach Butch Davis reported progress in the talks, but
he 1sn't counting on having
There aren ., many good options for fix- pitching implosion knocked it out of the Winslow, the No. 6 overall
ing it. The better question is whether the race. ·
pick from Miami, in for the
Reds would be willing to give up a pitch:'Miley's always asking guys what they start of camp.
er - starter Paul Wilson or reliever Todd thmk, and Bob never wanted that," reliev''It's a process," Davis
from Page 81
Jones. for instance - as part of a deal with er John Riedling said. "He never cared said. "As much as everya co111ender before the trade dead line on what we thought. Miley will tell you why body would like it to be a
f?tation, which had. surpassed expe~ta­ Saturday.
he made a move.''
snap, quick, immediate
uons m the first three months. Heading
Miley said there was no dis~ussion
•
KEARNS
'IMPROVED:
Outtielder
thing, its a process with all
mto Wednesday night's game against St . · Wednesday of trading rlayers.
Austin
Kearns
took
batting
practice
.
32 teams in thi s league.
Louis, the rotation was 0-4 in the last
··we talked about the team in general," Wednesday, the second time he has
"Groundwork has to be
seven games. all losses- with a I 0.13 he said. "We're sti ll confident we ca1i tum stepped in the cage since he had thumb
laid
and that has been hapERA.
.
· ·
_it around and hei1d in the right direction." surgery on July 3.
pemng.
Other guys in the
It goes back even farther. In the last 45
• LOOKING BACK: Wednesday was
"It's still a little sore~" Keams said. league and other firstgames. the starters had a 6.0 I ERA - a the one-year anmversary,of the Reds tiring
sure sign of trouble. The bullpen had manager Bob Boone and general manager "Each day, it gets a little better. I want to rounders are beginning to
to where I'm comfortable and can turn sign. These things help
undercut the few good starts by blowing Jm1 Bowden, then embarking upon a !let
11 loose.''
move the negotiations."
II or its last 19 save opportunities
mon.ey-.savmg
trade
splur~e.
.
.
Keams
had
surgery
to
remove
a
bone
Poston's
arrival
in
General manager Dan O'Brien held one
0 Bnen has sa1d he will wa11 unt1l the spur and scar ti.&gt;sue from the right thumb. Cleveland came on ~ day
of h!s periodic staff meetings before the end of the season to decide whether to
• LOTS OF K's IN DUNN: Adam when three more first-round
game Wednesday. It went for several pick up Miley's contract option for next
Dunn is on pace to a major league record draft choices signed with
hours and repeatedly came back to one season. Players like Miley's personable for
strikeouts.
· ·
.
their NFL teams.
tor.ic.
. .
.
.
approach.
Dunri
fanned
123
times
in
the
Reds'
first
However, none of the .
We talked about stm1mg pitching,"
Miley got a lot of credit for the club's I 0 I games, the most in the majors. He's first-round picks representmanager Dave Miley said. "That's been early success. before injuries and the on pace to strike out 197 times.
·
ed by Poston and his brothsomething that has struggled a little bit:"'
•
er, Carl, have signed. In
addition to Winslow, the
that knows all abolll them. meet once next season in
represent
"I love them tremendously Poston s
Although a little f:ut'etched, Cleveland. The schedule isn' t and hopefully, they're still Jacksonville wide receiver
comparisons have been drawn out yet, but the date will sure- cheering me on," Boozer said Reggie
Williams
and
between Boozer and the ~ity's Ya~ marked on lot of calen- of Cavaliers fans. "But if not, Carolina cornerback Chris
from Page 81
all-time Benedict Arnold Gamble.
I understand the business."
Art Modell, who moved the
million contract rhe . Jazz Browns out of Cleveland.
offered him earlier this month.
"It disappoints me the way
By now, the story is familiae some people 'have reacted to
:: The Cavaliers had an option the situation, because I pride
year remaining on Boozer's myself on my integrity and my
contract at the. bargain-base- honor," Boozer said. "I want
ment price of $700,000. But people to perceive me as a
Boozer averaged 15.5 ·points man of my word and a man of .
and 11.4 rebounds last season. great integrity."
Acknowledging he was worth
In many circles, it's too late
w_ay more than.that, Cavs gen- · for thut.
erill manager J1m Paxson supAmong the intriguing pieces
posedly shook hands with of fallout was the decis1on by
Boozer on a deal in which 'the SFX, the company that repreteam would forgo the option sents Boozer, to disassociate
and let Boozer becmhe a itself from the player, a rare
· testricted free agent. In move that spoke to the bad
exchange, Boo7..er would sign . public relations it must have
w1th Cleveland for $41 million received in the .wake of the
over six years.
contract. The agent who
J Shortly afterward, however, worked out the deal, Rob
the Jaiz stepped in with an _ Pelinka, resigned. from the
offer worth $27 million more, company, as well. Many
one the Cavs couldn't afford to believe he was. forced out.
match. Boozer accepted that
"We had to part ways,"
deal and the debate began: Did Boozer said. "There were difPaxson get bannboozled, and if ferent pressures for him, for
so, was he at fault for taking his side. He had to do what
the player's word? Did Boozer Wa$ best for his career."
act I:Vith malice by breaking
Did he feel betrayed by the
bis promise? And was there a . way the agency acted in
promise made to begin with?
essentially firing him as a
'There was no commitment. client?
·
·
no handshake," Boozer insist"Not by Rob Pelinka,'.'
ed this week, stating correctly Boozer said.
that it would have been ille~al
But he left the feeling th.at
under the collective bargam- someone ·at the agency
ing agreement. "I'm a man of betrayed him . Lots of people
my word. and the only com- m Cleveland feel Boozer
mitment I gave was to Utah betrayed them. "I believed in
iuJ.d I kept that commitment." ' Carlos," Cavs owner Gordon
. Cleveland fans view that Gund said shortly after the
~senioil as a lie, another slap deal went down.
m the face - and it's city
The Jazz and Cavaliers will

Boozer

2004

POMEROY - The morning is still, and the grandstand is empty.
.
Emply again today, as it is
·about 360 days a year. .
But two days of glory m·e
coming, with the approach.
of the Meigs County Fair.
Less than a month away ·
now. Less than a month to
the annual revival of the picturesque little racetrack, and
the age-old, historic grandstand at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds.
They ' II race on Aug. 19
and 20, yvith post time at I
J?.m. each day. The hooves
of as many as seven·standard Our Rotten Ruby is the star of Ralph Calvert's two-horse racing
breds will thunder against stable. The 3-year-old filly is expected to compete in the upcomeach other, battling for posi- ing race's at the Meigs County Fair. (Tim Maloney/photo)
tion and advantage on the
smoothness this morning, to
tight turns of the half-mile Fairgrounds. Now, there are
ge\ it ready for Our Lady
only two.
track.
Chablis.
·
One
of
·
them
is
Ralph
This morning, there is the
The
track
is
ready for her.
clip-clop sound of a solitary Calvert, who rides in( the
ady but whether she will be
horse trotting . around the bike behind Our
ready for the track on race
Chablis.
a
5-year-old
mare
track.
·
In the old days, there were on the comeback trail from a day is another question .
'
quite a few trainers stabled . bowed tendon. Calvert has
Please see Ready. AS
at the Meigs Cou nty dragged the track himself for

White House preparing
executive order~ on Sept.
11 recommendations
Bv DEVLIN BARRETT .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
Bush administration is moving quickly to enact some of
the changes suggested tly the
Sept. II commission, with
presidential
approval
expected by early next week.·
Aides are finishing draft
versions of executive orders
on intelligence to present to
President Bush, who is
expected to adopt some or
all of them soon, a senior
adminis.tration official said.
The White House. pressed
by victims' families and by
Democrat John Kerry, is
eager to show it is moving
on the politically sens,itive
issue. A working group create.d by Bush to study the
. commission's recom.meilda_tions met by videoconfer·ence twice Wednesday, once
with Bush participating.
Any orders signed by
Bush would immediately put
into place some proposals
made by the Sept. II commission.
Kerry. Bush's opponent in
the presidential campaign,
says Bush should implement
the commission's proposals
'immediately. Kerry also
wants the panel's life

ex tended 18 months to
ensure reforms are adopted.
The Family Steering
Committee, activist families
who lobbied successfully for
an independent commission
to investigate the attacks,
stepped up pressure on lawmakers to take action on rec·
ommendations that need
congressional
approval.
They said they would draw
up a watch list of Congress
members who oppose legislation to implement Sept. II
commission recommendations.
"We're going to watch
events unfold in Congress,
and we want America to
watch as well ," said Lorie
Van Auken, who'" lqst her
husband at the World Trade ,
Center. "We need to have a
list of the lawmakers .... We
need to follow who's opposing and disagreeing and
w hy. "
'
Talk of keeping public •
track of congressional opponents comes even before
legislation has been offered
to implement the recommendations, a sign of how intent
some Sept. II families are to
maintain the momentum of
public opinion for quick
Please see Sept. 11.· A5 '

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