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                  <text>Page 86 •

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August4,2004
•

. '

Blue Jays rally past Tribe

Major League Baseball
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dtr/'1 GamM
!Bacaik Q-0) at Detroit (Johnson B-8), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Meche 1·5) 11 Baltimofe (Cabrera 8-5), 7:05 p.m.
ClaYII&amp;nd (Weslbrook 8-5) at Toronto (Towers 6-3). 7:05p.m.
Oakland (Harden 5-5) at N.Y. Yenkeu (Loaiza 9-5), 7:05p.m
Boston {Nrovo 4-7) at Tampa Bay (Halama 5·5), 7:15p.m.
AnahefTI (s.le 6-0 or Aa.Ortiz 3-6\ at Minnesota (Lohse 4-81. 6.10 p.m.
Chicago White h (Schoeneweil&amp;-8) a1 Klfl$85 City IB.Anderso(l1·9). 8:10p.m

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No Games Scheduled

TUII.O.y'a R..una
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NY Mats 12. M1twaukoo 3
Moo1real1 0. Sl. LoUIS6 ·•
Chicllgo Cubs 5. Colorado 3
Anzoo11 5, Fklrk:la 3
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Los Angeles 3, PrttsburQh 2 •
San Frar'ICisco 11. Cinc1ma110

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Atlanta {Thomson 8·1) at Houston (Redding 4-7), 6:05p.m
N.Y. Mets (Trae11sel9·6) at MilwaUkee (QDavrs lQ-9), 6:05p.m.
Montreal (L.Harnandez 6-10) at St l ouis (Suppan 9-6), 6:10p.m.
ChiCago Cuos (C.Zambrano 10.6) at Colorado (Wright 1·0), 9'.05 p.m
Flondl (!3edtetl4-6) a1 AriZona (Johnson 10' 9), 9:35p.m.
PhHadelphia ( M i ~on 11-41) at San 01ego !Eatoo 6-9) . 10:05 p.m.
P1nSOUrgn 1Fogg 6-7) a1los Angeles ll1ma 9-3), 10:10 p.m.
CII"Ginn.!l tl ( A ~evedo 4-10) at San Franc1SCO nomko 5..&amp;), 10:15 o.m.

17-37

TORONTD (AP)- Rick White said
even Frank Menechino thought it was a
strike. Menechino said he was just
humoring his buddy.
Menechino drew a bases-loaded walk
to drive in the go-ahead run in the
eighth inning after Carlos Delgado's
tying two-run homer Tuesday night in
the Toronto Blue Jays' 7-6 victory over
the Cleveland Indians.
Toronto trailed 5-1 in the fifth and 53 in the eighth, when the Blue Jays sent
I0 men tq the plate and scored. four
times to take the lead.
Alex Rios Jed off with a single
against Rafael Betancourt (4-5), and
Delgado hit his 16th homer to tie it.
Betancourt then loaded the bases by
allowing a single by Vernon Wells,
walking Frank Catalanotto a!Jd intentionally walking Gr~gg Zaun. Rick
White came in and got the first out, but
his 3-2 slider to Menechino was ruled a
ball, allowing ihe go- ~head run to
score.
White asked Menechino if it was
strike.
''I didn't want to laugh about it. I told
him what he wanted to hear,"
Menechino said. "He's my friend."

Indians and Expos
swap left-handers
TORONTO '(AP)
The
Cleveland Indians traded minor
league · left-bander
Jeriome .
Robertson to the Montreal Expos ·
on Tuesday for minor league leftbander Pierre-Luc Marceau.
Marceau went a combined 1-1
with a 4'.45 ERA in 31 appearances
for Single-A Savannah of the South
Atlantic League and Single-A
Brevard . County of the Florida
State League. Marceau, 23, will
report to Single-A Lake County.
Robertson went 1-1 with a I 2.2 I
ERA in 14 games with Cleveland
earlier this year. He was designated
for assignment on July 27. ·

Mid~eport
· • '•~ I '\ I '-.. • \ 'ol . •I

"\ u . · ·~ 't

INSIDE
• Government says terror
threat corroborated by third "

person. See Page A2

Catcher Victor Martinez was ejected
by plate umpire Marvin · Hudson for
arguing the call.
"If he didn't get thrown out I was
going to. He just beat me to it." White
said.

mally doesn ' t consider group of guys on offense,"
BY MURRAY EVANS
errors humorous.
O'Neal said, defending his
Associated Press
--,--------Speaking on the fourth teammates. "They 've just
..
day of the team's training got to get that timing togethGEORGETOWN. Ky - camp
at
Georgetown er. Once they get their timCincinnati Bengals coach Col lege. Lewis said the ing toget her, they ' re going
Marvin Lewis interrupted Bengals need to pay atten- . to get on a roll again."
practice Tuesday morning to tion to detail and resist the · Lewis also said he was
apologize to his football temptation to think mistakes pleased with the confidence
team .
will work themselves out the Bengals showed in him
The. defense had jumped over time.
when they extended his
offside after a hard count ' a
"We have to try to be very contract after last seaso n,
day after the offense had demanding righl , from the when Cincinnati finished 8made a simi lar mistake. start, to make sure that 8, its best record si nce
Lewis took those miscues through the whole thing, we I 996.
·
personally.
don't allow errors and misHe received a new four"You just can't start a takes 'to continue to crop up year contract that will pay
period that way. You've gdt that will cause us problems · him more than $2 million a
to show poise and play foot- once we start the regular season, replacing the four· ball," Lewis said. "It was season." Lewis said. .
year deal he signed when he
my fault for not reminding
Turnovers have been a was hired in January 2003.
them of that before we start, problem. New starting quar" It . gives us a sense of
so I wanted to apologize to terback Carson Palmer has continuity, that what we did
them for me not remember- thrown several intercep- was OK," ·he said.
ing to remind them.
tions. Fifth-year cornerback
vThere are only 32 of
"They ·forgave me for it. Deltha O'Neal has picked these jobs. It's a very good
But I won't forget from now off Palmer twice and has job. I have the opportunity
on." ·
three interceptions thus far to continue to work to make
Lewis' remarks elicited in camp.
·
it a great job. It's my
laughter, but the coach nor- · "The y' ve got a great responsibility to do that."
.

1

AURORA, Ohio (AP)
Bob Sowards shof a 6-underpar 66 Tuesday at Barrington
Golf Club to claim a one-shot
lead after two rounds of the
8 Ist Sky Bank Ohio Open.
Sowards, who won the event
in 2002, has a two-round total
of 9-under 135 and will be
paired in the final round
Wednesday with firstcround
leader Barry Hinckley, who is
at 136.
"It should be a Jot of fun,"
said Hinckley, who shot evenpar 72 at Walden Golf and
Couriti'y Club to follow his
opening-round
64
at
Barrington. Sowards had
opened with a 3-under 69 at
Walden.
The final round will be
played at Barrington by those
m the original field of 216 who
shot six-over 150 or better for
two rounds.
" I like this course," said
Sowards. ''The greens are a little quiclrer, a little flatter than
· at Walden.
"I . played a solid round.
We' II see if we can have some
fun Wednesday.''
Four strokes back at I39 are

reigning Ohio Senior Open
champion Gary Robison and
17-year-old amateur Joe
Fristaci.
Robison, the 1986 Ohio
Open winner, moved into contention with a S-under 67 at
Barrington. The 50-year-old,
who is director of golf at
Firestone Country Club in
Akron, is 8-under for his last
27 holes.
Frustaci, a high school senior

'

·e :

•.. •
0

• •'

'

e::

OBITUARIES
'

:page AS ·

f• ..

.

.

'

;

:• Ralph Hutton Jr.,
:• David E. Kouns
:• Moran M. Minshall
•

.

Lo'ITERIES
Ohio

had wanted to wear No. 44, his
number for four seasons with
the New Orleans Saints.
However,
44
already
BHREA - Pat Tillman was
a personal hero to Terrelle belonged to second-year runSmith long before he died an ning back Lee Suggs. Smith
considered trading with Suggs,
American one.
b!lt deCided to keep it after
With a generous, selfless act Tillman
was killed.
on a sweltering day in Arizona
Smith
now proudly wears
a few years ago, Smith learned
lessons in loyalty, commitment 42, and as he slips over his
and brotherhood from Tillman. shoulder pads each day he is
Smith,
the
Cleveland reminded of his close friend
Browns.' new fullback, has who sacrificed so much for so
many fond memories of many.
Tillman, the former Cardinals "'When I put it on, it makes
safety who was killed April 22 me want to play for somein Afghanistan with the U.S. thing," Smith said. ''The guy
displayed so much pride and
Army Rangers. ·
joy."
One special remembrance
Smith has already had a pro.
Stands out. As the Arizona
found
impact - literally State teanunates were going
the Browns, who
since
joimng
through a conditioning workout, an exhausted Smith passed haven't had a punishing blockout only to be rescued by er like him in their backfield
for years.
Tillman.
..
It's been easy to spot Smith
"He carried me all the way
on
the field during training
through the drill," the 255camp.
Just look for where the
pound Smith said. "He's a true
orange
helmets are stacked up.
hero. He represents .a lot."
Smith, like many Americans, . ''There's no mystery to what
w~ distraught after learning of Terrene Smith is about," coach
Tillman's death, which the Butch Davis said. "He doesn't
U.S. military recently said was prl)fess to be fancy or a friendthe likely result of friendly fire. ly type of guy. He is a hit-you· Ttllman' s death still haunts in-the-mouth kind of fullback.
Smith, who occasionally fmds
himself pondering his friend's
fate at the age of27.
"Sometimes I have to keeP.
'
my composure out here, '
Smith said. "I knew him well
enough to where it's more than
just football. My life is about
football, he went on and did
something else. I can't stand
the fact that he's not able to
come back and return to the
NFL because of what happened."
'
Smith thinks Ttllman would
discourage him from those
type of thoughts.
- "He would be upset for me
to feel that waf," Smith said.
"He was a natural-born sol.
dier. He always told me,
'Enjov your fime while it's
here.'r'
When he signed ·as a free
agent with the Browns in ·
March, Smith was given No.
42- coincidentally Tillman's
number at Arizona State. Smith

That's his calling card."
The Browns haven't had a
I ,000-yard rusher since 1985
when Kevin Mack and Earnest
Byner .cracked the plateau.
Smith could help Cleveland
end that drought this season,
clearing paths for Suggs and
William Green.
In New Orleans, Smith
opened holes for Ricky
Williams
and
Deuce
McAllister, helping them
become perennial I ,000-yard
runners. He knows his job and
he loves·it. .
"I'm a people mover," he
said:
And a consummate team
player, willing to sacrifice
himself by throwing a crushing block so his teammate can
slither through the line for a
big gain.
·
Team first, the same philosophy Tillman Jived by, played
by , and died upholding.
Tillman's passing has taught
Smith never to assume tomorrow or his next play.
"I can't take this for granted," Smith said. "I've got .to
work hard for every dollar,
every penny, every , yard,
everythin~ you ever want to
work for.'
·

Coming Thursday in the·Sentinel ...

"G})~e~ t~ ~. &amp;
~~,~~fJ(J"

.

Pick 3 day: 8-8-7 (white ball)

..i.-· .. ,.. &lt;
.,,.·-,
..

Pick 4 day: 6-().()..6
Pick 3 night: .3-o-B (wMe ball)
Pick 4 night: 4-3-B·B
BuckeyeS: 10-11-13-19-24
Superl.olto: 4-18-23-24-35-47 (B)
l&lt;lcker: 7-8-3-2-7·5

Browns' fullback remembers Tillman
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

n " n ••ntl.uh .... ·nlu wlt .. , l .

Sheriff terminates contracts of five deputies·
BY TIM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Clifford
. S.
Thomas Ill and
Thomas A. Smith
· were
entered
Wednesday in the
County
· Meigs
Court of Common
Pleas.
Bolin,
Randy
Smith
and
Thomas were dismissed for perfor-

Trussell

rnance unbecoming an . officer.
Wamsley and Thomas Smith were
dismissed for failing to fulfill
required obligations . .
Trussell said the circumstances
surrounding the dismissal is still
under investigation .
Until Wednesday, the Sheriff's
Department had 27
special
deputies, three of whom are honorary appointments for men who
have served long careers as Jaw

J:

Public Notice
·
. · .· The Syracuse Racine Regional Sewer District . . ·
;•
. will be implementing a new rate structure 1•
effective September I, 2004. We regret any .,. ,'·
·· · inconvenience, however rising cost, inflation
and all over expenses have given us no
· ,, choice but to become current with the times.
,
Our goal is to be able to provide you , our
~-. customers, with the best possible service, ''
.;j :, effectively. This rate increase was EPA rec- • .
',' .· ommended along with being the first in 14 '·
•
y~ars. We thank you for your cooperation.

•• •••• ·'·.

I

BY BRIAN
REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

;

'v.'

• till

enforcement officers.
Many of the special deputies are
employed as poli"e officers with
other departments :
While Trussel l said his department is shorthanded , employing 12
deputies full-time, he said the five
dismissals will have no irnpact on
county law enforcement. ·
'These are just. extra people," he
said. 'These ate extra people who
are working elsewhere every day."

Iroquois heritage important to local woman

from Canton, had a 6-under 66
at Barrington and is bidding to'
become the first amateur winner since Bob Lewis in 1980.
·Jack Nicklaus' \VOn the event in
1956 as a 16-year-old amateur.
"I just wanted to come out
and compete," said Frustaci,
who withdrew after I0 holes a
year ago with a wrist injury. "1
watched the rest of it with my
hand in a cast. I'm having a lot
more fun this year) '
.··.•

• Pomeroy, Ohio

llft ' H~I)\\ , \1 (.t ~ I ·•·

-

POMEROY Meigs County
Sheriff · Ralph
Trussell
on
Wednesday terminated the contracts of five special deputies but
declined to comment on. the details
surrounding the event.
Orders. canceling the commis, sions of Richard L. Wamsley II,
Mark W. 'Bolin, Randy S. Smith,

Lewis: Bengals must learn ·Sowards leads Ohio·Open
to do little things .right .

CONFERENCE

Big Ten to test
instant replay, Bt

West VIrginia
Dally 3: 8-1-1
Dally 4: ~7-8-1
Powerball: 11-22-26-37-51 (21)
Power Play: 5

WMTIIER

REEDSVILLE - After 15 years of
studying ancient traditions of the
Iroquois tribe, Helen Dailey of
Reedsville has discovered the real
value of her Native American heritage. But growing up, she was
encouraged to deny the Indian roots
that are now so important to her and
her family.
·
Dailey has been accepted into the
Iroquois Tribe, and is known in the
tribe as "Dark Sky," but while she can
now express pride in her Indian background, that was not always the case.
Growing up,.having strong Indian ties
was more a mark of shame.
"My mother told me we were
French, and in high school, that's what
I iold people," Dailey said. "We
weren't allowed to talk about our true
heritage."
Dressed in a colorful costume
knowit as "regalia," Dailey is able to
tell a story of her life just from her
costume. The beaded co~! she wears
now, ceremonially, weighs between 20
and 25 pounds, but the cowls get heavier as the wearer gets older. ·
"The last cowl I will wear will
weight between ·so and 55 pounds,"
Dailey said.
Some of the colors in the cowl
reflect her multi-cultural roots: ·the
Irish, German, Dutch and Iroquois.
while other colors are timeless symbols of the values the Iroquois tribe
hold dear. The brown represents the
earth, the yellow pure love. Green represents sharing and kindness, while
red represents the truth spoken to others. Shells found in the design of the
ornate cowl represent healing . .Other
features of the cowl, such as leather

PO investigates

drug-related
incidents
BY TtM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Police Department
are currentl y investigating
two. prescription drug-related incidents.
Pomeroy Chief Mark
Proffitt said an officer
stopped a vehicle with
expired tags July 30 on East
Main Street. The driver,
Chris Jeffers of Middleport,
was allegedly driving 'without insurance and on a suspended license.
A passenger, Daniel R.
Stone, 49, of Middleport, was
reporteply found to be in possession of OxyContin and
$1 ,300 cash. He has been
charged with possession of a
Schedule II drug, wqich is a
tifth-degree felony carrying a
possible ,penatly of up to 12
months in prison .
Stone also has been
charged with obstructing an
officer and possession of
drug paraphernalia. He was
arraigned
Monday · and
released on a $I0.000 bond.
Also arrested was another
passenger. Joseph Jeffers, the
brother of the driver. He was
wanted on an outstanding
Meigs County warrant.
The second incident took
place Monday at Fruth's
Pharmacy.
Proffitt said a man presented a forged prescription for
Please see PD. As

Helen Dalley

Hillside Baptist Chliieh- presents Rutland VFD Jeceives deed
Noah and the Ark drama
BY GERRI RIFFLE
SPECIAL lO THE SENTINEL

,.,,

oetalto on Pace A7

·'

}NDEX
2 SJ!CTIONS -16 PAGES

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Jitei!M -

Noah, A5

Taking roles iin the Hillside.Baptist Church's drama "Noah's
Ark" are Morgan Jenkins, Pamm Truesdell, Barb Williams,
Russ Williams. Noah Jenkins. Lora Jenkins, Soja Rankin.
Heath Jenkins, Jamie Humphrey, Beth C&lt;!sto, Randy Casto
and Rich Gleason. The drama will be presented at 7:30 each
evening through Sunday. (Beth Sergent/photo) .

The Rutland Fire Department now has ground out of the flood waters
on whict] to build a new firehouse. This week Joe Bolin, second 'from
Je1t, on behalf of the Rutland Township Trustees, presented a deed
to the one acre lot on which the old Rutland Elementary School once
stood to representatives of the fire department, from.the le1t, Kevin
Hudson, Dave Davis, Steve Lambert and Chartie Barrett, Jr. Last
week the Meigs Local Board of Education had transferred the property to the trustees, a necessary step toward getting the land in the
hands of a governmental body. so that ~ could be turned over to the
volunteer·fire department. The building on the lot was razed as a
part of disposition of vacated school buildings whf1n the new Meigs
Local schools opened last fall. (Beth sergenljphoto)

of Charter High-Speed Internet!

.-The Holzer Meclical CenlefDiabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday1 August 8 From 2:00 prii ~ 4:00 pm in !he HMC French 500 Room
~ Bainer from Ross Pharmclcellfical will speak about lhe Glucema Weight Lass System.

·~ roq..wy ITlJSicaoam.

• E~-to-use neradi'le iJHa1lllf1 guide
o W WIIOOIII·seMce

B7

Comics

Wlh 1111•e lY, riildlq. can ac:tuat,o inlk up the ligna!
bSm i lllltd1el -ps di8h. So ml raill, yoo get bid
riCIIIMo« no recepioo at all~ 111rMiooM fer han. . '
' &lt;Wy Chiller~ dlt.ws yarfawrie ~. f1lOVies,
11JC111 an4 I!Jidal tl'lenll dredly to YIU 1V iM!r an
adVIIIoed lblr-qD; netwatc. So no malter ilCM' !loony
~gas ooAside. ~~ rift8ys perfedtf clear inside.

.Bs-6

-tlassifieds

POMEROY - Noah and
his family are inside the ark
and down the hill rides a villager on horseback, "Noah,
you old fool, come out of
there. You old fool, come out
of there."
·. Noah knows what is coming next. He has been putting
up with the villagers' ridicule
for years as .he is listening to
and obeying God to build
this ark. Btit he goes out to
face this villager once again.
Thus begins the evening's
drama of Noah and the Ark
at Hillside Baptist Church.
While Noah and his sons
are working around the ark,
his wife and daughters-in-

•

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I

iThe Daily Sentinel

N
A ITI.ON • WORL
.
D
Page A2
·----------~-------------------------Jt3L------------~----~·~------~----~~~----------~Th~u~r~s~d~a~y~,A~u~gu~st~5~·~2~0~0~4~

The Daily Sentinel

~Government

Community .Calendar

says terror threat Regulators will stop revealing·
corr~borated by third person
nuclear plant safety lapses ·

WASHINGTON (AP) 'The ' Bush administration
)earned from a third person,
·separate from two prisoners
identified this week, that a!' Qaida was plotti n~ to attack
American financial buildings. officials said. . '
. The information from the
·third person was "anotller
new stream of intelligence"
· that supported the White
House decision to issue a ter, ror warning on Sunday. the
officials said.
The information· arrived
days before the public alen,
as officials were reviewing
reams of recently obtained
documents and photographs
'that showed surveillance of
'five buildings in New York
-City, New Jersey and
· Washington carried out years
·earlier by ai-Qaida.
· '.'Old information ISn t
i·rrelevant information - par. ticularly with this kind of
,enemy," Homeland Security
. Secretary Tom Ridge said
Wednesday in Nashville,
Tenn.
. The information cOI·roborating ai-Qaida 's intentions to
·carry out attacks against U.S.
:financial buildings · came
from someone other than two
·men recently captured in
Pakistan, said a senior Justice
Department ofticial. speaking
on condition of anonymity. It
was um;lear whether the per. son was a prisoner or in for, mant.
Information from the two
captives - a young militant
("amiliar with computers and
a man indicted for the U.S.
embassy bombings in Africa
in !998 - had ' provided the
·bulk of the intelligence that
· ted to Sunday's warnings.
' The corroborating information did not specify targets in
·the United States or say when
an attack might be planned,
, the official said. Bu.t it so
·closely tracked the other
· :intelligence ·that U.S. tlnan: cia! buildings had already
~ been under surveillance by
; al-Qaida that it contributed to
; the decision to issue the pub; lie warnings.
; "Coupled with general
:threat reporting, coupled with
:other pieces of information.
' then all of the sudden you say
: to yourself. 'This is a time
; when we have to talk to
~ America about the threat.'
; And that's exactly what we
j did," Ridge said.
· A U.S. counterterrorism
:official, also speaking on
; ~ondition of anonymity, said
·!he .surveillance information
:tast week was married with
· : ~·very recent and current
:activity" from al-Qaida,
~ blamed for the Sept. I 1,

..

·

"

A pedestrian carries bags and wheels a backpack past barricades and an armed police officer outside the Prudential
Financial building in Newark, N.J., Monday,. Federal officials
announced Sunday that a detailed plot had beeh uncovered
that targeted the PrudeQtial Financial headquarters as well as
the Citigroup Center building and the New York Stock Exchange
in New York City, and the International Monetary Fund and
World Bank-buildings in Washington. (AP Phpto/Mike Derer)

.

2001, attack,;, indicating the
group's interest in attacking
this year. This information,
which includes de briefings
and other means of gathering
information, is causing the
administration serious concern, the official said.
"A bunch of things .came .
together at the same time,"
Frances Townsend, the White
.House Homeland Security
adviser. said· in an interview
. Wednesday with National
Public Radio. She said the
corr9borating information
came from "a very sensitive
ongoing investigation in ·
another part of the world."
The FBI is monitoring alQaida ·operatives a:nd others
associated with Islamic terror
groups inside the United
States, although these people
have not bee·n directly linked
to the threat against financial
buildings,
the
Justice
Department . offiCial said.
These
people
include
financiers for Ansar at-Islam,
a group linked to al-Qaida,
the official said. ·
White House spokesman
Scott McClellan declined to
. des.g ibe in detail what he
called "another new stream
of intelligence," saying it

might endanger continuing
intelligence operations. He
criticized as ah "irresponsi ble
suggestion" any criticism that
the administratit:m had issued
a terror warning for political
purposes.
"When you connect all
these streams· of intelligence,
it paints an alarming picture,"
McClellan told reporters
aboard Air Force One during '
a campaign flight to Iowa.
Ridge and other senior
administration officials spent
parts of Wednesday defending the warnings, which came
on the heels. of tl.le
Democratic
Nationhl
Convention and drew attenlion from the presidential
campaign of nominee John
Kerry.
"I categorically state that
the none of the terrpr threats
are politiCally motivated,"
Ridge said.
In New York, Treasury
Secretary John Snaw said
suggestions that terror alerts
were manipulated were
"pure, unadulterated nonsense," Snow toured the floor
of the New York Stock
Exchange and praised traders
for' their resilience in the face
of such warnings.

WASHINGTON (AP) balance.
. cerns about ·the )lgency 's
Citing a need to keep infor"The public has zero plans to allow the ..security
ma(ion from terrorists, reg- confidence in NRC and firm Wackenhut Corp. to
ulators said Wednesday the making this information run mock terrorist aitacks
government will no longer completely out of the pub- on the plants, nearly half of
reveal security gaps dis- · lie, not available, does not which are protected by
covered at nuclear power bring any more confi- Wackenhut ~ecurity guards.
plants or the subsequent. d~nc~," Boyd told the com"When
you
have
enforcement actiOns taken mtssiOn.
Wackcnhut test Wackcnhut.
. . Rep. Ed Marke)l •. D-. nobody is going to believe
against plant operators.
The Nuclear Regulatory Mass., a longttme cnuc ot those results" said Peter
Commissio.n announced the nudear in~ust;.y. said Stockton, se~ior investigathe ~hange '"·policy· ~unng the policy Will further tor with the Project on
Its first public meetmg on deepen public skepltcism Government Oversight. a
power ,plant safety sin~e of the commission's per- research group.
the Sept. II , 200!, terronst formance and calls mto
NRC's Zimmerman said
attacks. It dre:w barbs from question :whether the com- the agency would closely
cn t1cs who said the s_ecrec.Y miSSIOn IS domg what II manito( the exercises to
would. erode public conf1- must do to keep nuclear niake sure no ,information
dence 111 the agency.
reactors, safe from terroriSt about the timing or methUn_tll now, the NRC has atta~ks.
pds of the mock attacks is
pr.ov1deq regular !JU.b!Ic
~Immerman ~f the NRC ,. leaked to plant pe·rsonnel.
~pdates on vulnerabilities satd the ag~ncy IS considerIn the weeks ·after the
Its msp~ctors found at the ~ng pn,lVldmg general Sept. 11 attacks, operators
country s 103 nuclear mformat1~n on secunty at the nation's nuclear
power reactors, such as . vulnerabilities that would power plants posted more
broken fences or weakness- not mclude .plant names or guards, · added securi ty
es..m trammg programs.
other det~tls.
. , patrols and reduced access
We _need to blacken
Protectton at the nations 10 the installations' most
some of our processes so nuclear power reactors sensitive areas.
that our adversaries won't located at 64 sites in 3 I·
have that information," states - has been boosted
Military planes at nearby
said Roy Zimmerman, since the Sept. ll attacks . . bases stood ready to interdirector of the commis- Since then, the·commission cept any s·uspicious air:
sion's Office of Nuclear has been guarded about craft; the Coast Guard .
Security and Incident revealing specifics of the patrolled .the Great. Lakes
Response, which was ere- sec urity efforts.
near power plants to keep
ated after the attacks.
That has , not stopped ships away: and many
NRC spokesman Scott accusations of inadequate facilities enlisted the help
Burnell said commission- guard training and other of National Guard troops.
ers voted to take the step security lapses.
Some critics say more
March 29, but kept it quiet
Congressional investiga- ne.~ds to be done: .. .
as agency staff worked to lions have found problems I" The vulnerabilities at .a
implement the plan. The such as a guard falling lot of the reactors m. thi s
vote itself was revealed asleep on the job and falsi- country ~~ve not been
Wednesday and had noth- fication · of security togs. addressed,
sa id Jim
ing to do with this week's Reports from the Energy RICCio, a_ nuclear policy
warnings that terrorists had Department's
inspector analyst for Greenpeace.
surveyed U.S. financial general noted other prob- ·"Here we are nearly three
Ienis at sites run by that years from the attacks and l
institutions, Burnell said.
"We deliberated for agency, such as guards don't see anything they've
many months on finding being warned of upcoming do~e except extendmg the
the balance between the security exercises and penmeters of these faciii NRC's commitment to iqconsistent training from tie s."
openness and ihe concern site to site.
The energy sector conthat sensitive information · Nuclear
actiVIsts tributed $3.7 million. more
might be misused by those expressed concerns at the than half of which came
who wish us harm," com- meeting about the adequa- directly from nuclear and
mission Chairman Nils cy of guard training, fire electric power companies,
Diaz said in a written state- · protection, the security of to Democrats during the
ment.
pools containing spent 2004
election
cycle.
Michele Boyd, a lobbyist nuclear fuel, and planning Republicans got $9.2 mil for the consumer group for different · kinds of lion from energy sources ,
Public Citizen, said the attacks.
including $2.7 million
NRC had not struck that
They also raised con- from power companies.

.CASH?

UEE%EDF

'-------------------------------------------------

:Government decides not to intervene EASE THE
land force:down A.lDS drug price
·
UEEZE!-

:. WASHINGTON (AP) :J'he government is refusing
:!0 take steps to in effect force
;down the spiraling price of an
:important AIDS drug, saying
:such an unprecedented move
:Isn't allowed ·by federal law.
~: Wednesday's decision b-y
. !he National In~lltutes of
; Health was a maJor VIctory
· · ~or Abbott Laborai?ries,
: ~htch qumtupled the pnce of
:tis AIDS, drug Norvtr late last
:year. Patient groups and
; ~orne members of Congress
;called the move price-gong.. :lng. They had . pushed the
:NIH to intervene by overrid;ing Abbott's patents, since
: Norvir's discovery was par' tially funded by taxpayer dol-

'Iars.

,·

:: But the NIH decided
:Wednesday the law didn't
:allow that step, which it said
:could have had far-reaching
; effects on the pharmaceutical
: !narket.
:: "The issue of drug pricipg
: ~as global implications and
:!bus is appropriately left for
,.....---~.eongress-t!l&lt;ll1l:lrm legtsla"
:iively," concluded NIH·
!"Director Dr. Elias Zerhouni.
i :. Abbott raised the price of
' the eight-year-old Norvir to
. ~8.57 a day from $1.7!. It
·s;alled the move necessary to
. p)unter falling sales as . the
·drug's use shifted from a pri: inary treatment agent to one
:how used in low doses to
' boost the effects of other
·tmti-AIDS medicines.

But consumer advocates dnig makers "can put governdecried that the increased ment-funded inventions on
price was only for the United the market at any price whatStates, leaving Norvir five to soever without facing the
10 times cheaper in other. possibility of a march-in."
countries. They also alleged
But NIH concluded that
that anticompetitive practices Norvir meets the main intent
were involved, because the of that law- that the drug is
h1g~er pnc~ applied only widely sold, and thus there's
when Norv1r IS added to other no health reason to intervene
compa~ies' AIDS drugs, not said
Bonny Harbinger:
Abbott sown Kaletra.
. deputy director of NIH's
The pn~e hike came armd Office
of · Technology
already vigorous debate Transfer.
about why Americans pay
Does that mean NIH would
much more for most prescrip- n';"ver declare the price of a
tion drugs than do patients in federally subsidized drug too
Canada, Britain and other high? "That's very hypotheticountries.
cal [or me to try and answer,"
Citing a $3.5 million NIH because other factors are congrant to Abbott that helped sidered, too, Harbinger said.
lead to Norvir's • discovery,
·
The
dedsion suggests "it
the consumer group Essential
Invertions petitioned the doesn't mat~er what drug
government to grant licenses . makers charge for a taxpayer·for other companies to make subsidized drug, as long as
the medicine, too- presum- they continue to sell it," com·
ably d~iving the price back plaincd Rep. Sherrod Brown,
down.-'
D-Ohio.
·
The 24-year-old Bayh- . Brown and Weissman ·both
· Dole Act enables the NIH to' pledged to appeal to Health
claim patents of inventions and
Human --services
partly funded by government Secretary Tommy Thompson
if companies don't bring to overrule the NIH decision.
them to market in ways that A Thompson spokesman did"achieve practical applica- n't immediately returri a call
tion." But the government forcomment.
·
'
has never invoked its soAbbott counters that the
called march-in rights.
NIH gran't .represented a tiny
. "It's a horrible deCision," portion of the roughly $300
said Robert Weissman, gen- million it ultimately spent
era! counsel for Essential developing Norvir, money it
Inventions said of the NIH .needs to recoup to invest in
ruling. The decision means new research.

1 Day Ad:
$6.00.- 15. words or. less
+ $6.00 Kit

$12 ·
•

Gets You Great
Advertising!

Thursday, Aug. 5
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees to meet at
7:30 p.m., township garage
on Joppa Road.
.
Friday, Aug. 6
Marietta - A Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development
District
Executive
Committee Meeting will be
held at ll :45 a.m. at the
. Holiday Inn located at 70!
Pike Street in Marietta. for
· more information contact
· lenny McMahon at 1-740374-9436.
Tuesday, Aug. 10
DARWIN
Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m., at
town hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Aug. 5
CHESTER - The ChesterShade Historical Association
'will be holding it's monthly
planning meeting at 7 p.m. in
the Old Chester Courthouse.
for mote information call
David or Pam Schatz, 66797!2.
. TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Auxiliary of Post 9053
. · will meet.
· Friday, Aug. 6
POMEROY
-PERI
Chapter 74 will meet at noon
at Meigs County Senior
Center. Program follows tun, cheon. Representatives of
Aetna and Medical Mutual of
Ohio wili speak about insurance and answer questions.
All members are urged to
attend.
Saturday, Aug. 7
· SALEM CENTER - Star
· Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet a 6:30
p.m. for a potluck preceding
the meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Hemlock Grange will be
. guests. New officers will

BYTHEBEND

elected and contests will -be
Sunday, Au11. 8
judged.
SYRACUSE
. The
HARRISONVILLE · Eichinger fwruly reunion will
Harrisonville Lodge 41! will be held at held at the Carleton
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the tem- School. The potluck dinner
ple. Refreshments will be will be at I p.m .
served ..
GALLIPOLIS ' The
Thesday, Aug. 10
-Aaron Fry reunion will be
POMEROYS . ·The · held at the home of Richard
Meigs ·County Chamber of and Linda Howard, Cozy
Commerc~ will meet at noon
liollow, 2460 Creekview
for a "Business Minded" lun- Drive, Gallipolis. Dinner will
cheon at the Wiid Horse be at l p.m. Those attending
Cafe. Teresa Varian with are to take covered dishes
Gallia Meigs Community and items for door prizes. For
·Action will be the keynote m9re information contact
speaker. She will inform the Linda Howard, 740-245Chamber on grant writing 9549.
and how to find grants. Brian
Sunday, Aug. 15
Howard with the River City
LETART Eva and
Players will update tht Patrick Riley reunion will be
Chamber on the musical, held at l p.m at the Letart
"Annie Get Your Gun."
Community Center in Letart,
W.Va.

Concerts

Sunday, Aug. 8
RACINE - The gospel
quartet "Eternal Life" will be
singing at the Racine United
Methodist Church, ll a.m.
It's a free concert at the
church located at 818 Elm
Street next to Southern
schools.
MIDDLEPORT- The Big
Bend Community Band will
present a concert at 2 p.m. at
the Heath United Methodist
Church. The concert will
benefit the Riverbend Ans
Council which sponsors the
band directed by Roger
Williams. Donations will be
accepted. Refreshments of
pie, cake and ice cream will
be served.

Reunions
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
Sunday, Aug. 8
· HARRISONVILLE- The
Meigs County Presbyterian
Churches at , Harisonville,
Syracuse, and Middleport,.
will have a combined service
at l 0 a.m. Sunday at the
Harrisonville Church to dedicate the new addition. There
will be potluck dinner .following the dedication. Pastor
of the churches is Bob Crpw.

Birthdays
Saturday, Aug. 7
MIDDLEPORT - Nola
Bradshaw will obsenie her
80th birthday on Saturday.
Cards may be sent to her at
Overbrook Center, 333 Pa~e
Street, Middleport, Oh10
45760.
.
. Thesday, Aug. 10
BELPRE " - . Eleanor
Boyles, formerly of the
Alfred and Tupper Plains
community, will be celebrating her 90th birthday, Aug.
l 0. Cards may be sent to her
at 6!3 Florence St., Belpre,.,

Thursday,Augusts,2o04

College daughter's silence
may signal stressff.!l/ife
DEAR ABBY: This is in
response to "Lonesome for
My
Daughter,"
whose
youngest d11ughter, a married
college freshman, has quit
communicating I:Vith her parents.
I, too, married at !9. My
parents didn't ·approve
because they were afraid I'd
drop out of school. When we
would visit my mother, she'd
talk with me and ignore my
husband. This made our visits few and far between.
Could the mother have done
something to alienate the.
son-in-law?
My marriage has lasted !2
years. However, the times in
my life when I quit commu'
nicating with family were
· when I was undergoing
severe marital stress and
depression. and didn't want
to discuss it or pretend all
was well when it wasn't. In a
more drastic scenario, my
niece cut out family visits for
years. When we saw her at
Christmas, she'd barely
speak to family members.
She recently divorced, and
now we have learned she had
been in an abusive marriage.
I do think "Lonesome" and
her hushand should pay a
drop-in visit occasionally.
Her instincts may be "heads
up" for some .reason. Keep
the visit brief in case the
daughter's college schedule
is on overload. That way,
they can see, talk to, and hug
their daughter and new sonin-law - and while they're
at it, scope out the situation.
Dropping off food is always
a good excuse for a quick
visit or, if there's time, invite
them out for dinner.
Mom could also send her
daughter a phone card to

because an hour between
classes or waiting for a bus is
a convenient · time to call
Mom or Dad for a quick
chat. - CHRISTINA IN
CAMBRIDGE,
MASS.
Dea.r
DEAR
CHRISTINA :
Abby
Thank you for lending the
younger person's perspective.
DEAR ABBY: I have a
save them . money. Mom heads up for "Lonesome."
should'be sure no strings are Newlyweds may not want to
attached, and her daughter come home for the weekend.
and son-in-law know it can They're happily enjoying
be used to call anyone they their time together.
need to. I also strongly recHere's how my in-laws
ommend the Internet. Mom handled it 17 years ;Igo: If
and Dad should learn how to they hadn't heard from us for
do instant messaging: Ask a · a few weeks, they'd call and
quick quesuon, want an say, "Is there a day in the
answer, gotta go. These next coup le of weekends
qutck messages let parents when we can come and take
k~ow their offspring are you two out for brunch or
ahve and well, and allow dinner? Pick a plac~ you 'd
parents to be m~olve~ -. .at enjoy." Or, they'd pick up
least a ht!le - m thetr. chi!- some food from one of our
dren's everyday lives. - favorites and we'd have a
ALICE IN VINE GROVE, picnic at our place.
KY.
"Lonesome" and her husDEAR ALICE: Those are band should try it. It might
all wonderful suggestiOns. be a lot easier for her daughMany reade~s wrot1e to offer ter than a long drive and an
mput (and tnstght.) to that overmght at her parents '
mother. Read on:
, home . _ PATRICIA IN
"DEAR A~BY: Why don t LEAWOOD, KAN.
Lonesome and her husDEAR PATRICIA: 1 re .
band get weekend tickets to a
. .
.
a~ e
play or sporting event at the Thts ts a penod of adJUStcollege,' and go there 10 have ment for all concemed. The
dinner and see a show once a paren~s are more m control
month? That way they'll get ofthetr schedule at this po~nt
qu.ality time with their than the daughte~ and son-Illdaughter, and there will be law may be. .
.
less stress over time manage- · Dear Abby 1s wrmen by
ment for the couple. After Abigail Van Buren, also
all she's both astudent and a · known as Jeanne . Phillips, .
ne;..,lywed and that's a tot to and was fouizded by her
handle. ' · ·
mother, ·• Pauline Phillips.
Also, in my . experience, Write Dear Abbr at
cell phones dramatically www.DewAbby.com or P.O.
increase calls to parents Box.69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

·Program.combats second-hand smoke
MIDDLEPORT -The
. Galli a-Meigs · Community
. Action Agency is administering
the
Appalachian
Secondhand Smoke Project,
. funded by The Toborg
, Associates, Inc. and the
American
Legacy
. Foundation.
: Gallia-Meigs CAA can
· provide information to
· groups and individuals con: cerning the dangers of expos: ing young "'children to envi. ronmental tobacco smoke ·
: and is available free of charge ·
: in both Gallia and Meigs
· · Counties.
There afe two types of
: environmental
tobacco
· smoke: main-stream smoke,
· the smoke. inhaled and
· exhafed direct! y by a user,
and side-slream smoke, the
smoke that goes into the air
. from the tip of a burning cig' arette, cigar or pipe.
Nine
: million kids breathe second. hand smoke often, mostly in
their homes, according to ·

Lora Rawson, Prevention may be exposed to secondSpecialist. The danger is hand smoke include automoespecially great for small biles and restaurants. Autos
children in their developing are especially dangerous due
years. ·They may have Hie- to confined space and the fact
long illnesses as a result of that children breathe faster
their exposure. Kids in a than adults.
home where parents smoke
"Some alternatives could
around them get sick more be to have children play outoften, are much more likely side when smoking guests
to have a caugh that won't go visit or entertain only when
away, have more ear infec- children are not present as
tions, and have a greater risk well as not allowing children
of asthma.
"Second-hand smoke is a to ride in an auto-with anyone
completely
preventable who is smoking," Rawson
health risk," Rawson said. said, "Parents may also
''Protection may be as simple choose to not frequent restauas ask in~ others not to smoke rants where smoking is perwhen chtldren are near. Small mitted."
"When making decisions in
children do not have the abilthe
best interest of children
ity to leave if someone lights
may be required."
diligence
up around them, therefore, it
is imperative that adults look · For information a!lout the
program or to arrange a preout for them."
Rawson said studies show sentation for a local group,
may
contact
that most adults will not be residents
offended if asked not smoke Rawsom at the CAA office,
indoors or around a child. at 992-6431, or by e-mail at
Other places where. children caatobacco@yahoo.com.

~Teen ·da'nce in Mason Aug. 20

Each Kit Contains the Followlngi
• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sale Signs- 24" x 12"
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 216 Pricing Labels
•Inventory Sheet ·
• 4 Mini-signs to be posted on bulletin
· boards at laundromats, markets, etc. ·
• 1 Seven-step instruction sheet, plus
"Secrets of How to Increase Profits at
a Garage Sale"
• 3 Mounting Materials
• 6 Multi-colored Balloons
• 1 Marker lor Signs
'

Public meetings

PageA3

.football game of the 2004
season.
:
'"We thought· we'd give it
: MASON - One last teen one more try," . Mayor
.
; dance b~fore the start of the , Raymond Cund.tff satd.
• !lew school yea: wtll be held . In other busmess: counctl
: rn Mason on Fnday, Aug. 20. !~acned tha~ adverttsmg f~r
; The dance, set for 8 to b1ds on the sidewalk proJeCt ts
· 10:30 p.m. at the new .shelter- scheduled soon, with a bid
. house in · Lottie Jenks opening slated for 2 p.m. on
• Memorial
Park,
was Friday, Sept. 3.
: announced during Monday's
The job, costing around
Mason Town Counc.il meet- $90,000, involves new side· in g.
walk and other features,
: The dance was timed before including light fixtures and
; school begins and one. week benches, for the river side of
: prior to the first high school Second Street (W.Va. 62)
•

II• . 1•,· 1,.
~;~' i ''

(

i-',

''

- Ava~able only with purchase ot GaraQ~' Sale Advertisement
Must be picked up a! our oftice.

3 Day Ad:
$9.00 - 15 words or less
··~· $6.00 Kit

$1 5 ~ets Y?~
.

~allipolis

Great
Adverttsmg! ·

iJBailp '(~tribune
Joint ~Ieasan~ l\egister
The Daily Sentinel.

BY KEviN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

from Roush's Body Shop to
Bob's
Market
and
Greenhouses Inc.
Council also began discussian. on employing an auditor
to examine the books for the
town and the water and sewer
'
.
.
departments,. Btds for_ an au~ttor are ~~drns, officr~ls sat~.
Councrl s next meeting wtll
be 7 P,.m. M~nd~y, Aug. 16 at
the ctty butldmg. Its first
meeting for next month was
moved to 7 p.m. on Tuesday,
Sept. 7, since the first
_Monday will be Labor Day.

:For the Record
•
.•·--------------~--------------------------------Civil case filed
' Sentenced

POMEROY - Mary Kiser
POMEROY - Sherri L. df Racine has filed a suit in
· · Brunton of Middleport has · the Meigs County Court of
:been sentenced in Meigs Common Pleas against Roger
; County Common Pleas Court and Christy Roush of Racine
: to !2 months in the Ohio seeking $50,000 in damages.
· State
Reformatory
for
Kiser fell and broke her leg
· : Women at Marysville for a near her left ankle in August,
charge of theft relating to 2002, while attending a yard
; welfare fraud . Brunton also sale at the Roush residence.
: has been ordered to pay resti- In her suit, Kiser alleges the
: tution of .$4,391 to the Meigs Roushes ·are at fault because
· County Department of Job the large gravel in _their driveway caused her to fall.
; and Fainily Services.

••

POMEROY- Marriage licenses have been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to
Matthew Aaron Durt!am, 25, of

Pomeroy, and Shelby Elaine
Fields, 23, of Pomeroy; to Justin
Allen Gilkey, l9, of Shade, and
Monica Sue Balcer, 21, also of
Shade: to Gregory Lee
Weinfurtner, 48, of Albany, and
Cathey Sue Glenn, 52, ofAlbany:
and to Michael Eugene Newland,
30, of Reedsville, and Melissa Jo
Marcinko, ').7, also of Reedsville.

~ON
2nd St1eet
.

'""'

FURNITURE COMPANY
Mason, WV

1304) n3-5592
•

�•

OPINION

·the Daily Sentinel
T~e

111 Court Street • ·Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress 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

VIEW

Truth

Thursday, August 5, 2004

. ..

No more mumbo jumbo
Dayton Daily News, July 29:
Cri tics slammed last week's U.S. Army Inspector General's
report on "deta i~ ee operations" in Iraq and Afghanistan, calling it a "whitewash'' b ecause it casts no blame for prisoner
abuse on policy makers or senior commanders.
The report by Lt. Gen. Paul Mikoashek ... dtes 94 "cases"
of "confirmed or possible abuse." It attributes these actions to
·.. a few ind[viduals, coupled with the failure of a few leaders"
to provide adeq uate leadership.
What the inspector general seems to be 'saying is, yes, there
were serious problems' in how prisoners were handled.
But the system wasn't corrupt, and in the face of formidable
challenges the "vast majority" of military personnel did,"their
duty to care for detainees in.a fair and human manner."
· The honor and reputation of these soldiers demand the
whole truth be. told. By using weasel words and mumbo .
jumbo, the inspector general has let them down.

Donald Erwin Kouns

Democrats in Boston ~re
Stan Greenberg says is a strategy is the right one for.
excessive ly bullish aboul
'powerful th eme' amon g Democrats not because Bush
Massachusetts Sen. John
voters- and no one exploil- is so far down that he can't
Kerry's chances (\f beating
ed it belter than Illinois recover, but because voters
President Bush. but their
Senate shoo-in Obama. sti ll are uncertain about who
convention strategy stil l is a
adding the accusation that Kerry is and what he stands
Morton
for.
·
·
good one and it's being genRepublicans are 'dividers.'
Kondracke
This was ac knowledged
erall y well executed.
Dismi ssing the (accurate)
Kerry aides and olher
nm ion that America is divid- by Kerry's campaign managpany strategists say that a
ed into Democratic 'blue er, Mary Beth Cahill, in a
maj ority of vo1crs have
states' and GOP 'red states,' breakfast meeting with
he said, ·we worship the repo rters. ··we are going
made up their minds lhal
they qon' t want Bu sh reProbably the lowest blows same awesome God in the back to Phase One of the
elected and now merely need yet landed were th rown blue states. and we don't like campaign' - that is, identiassurance that Kerry ·is a fit deflly - by Clinton, who ft;,deral agents
poking fy ing Kerry to voters com mander- in-chief
and alleged that Republicans aro und our libraries in · the 'even though you'd think
we'd be at Phase 18 by now.'
domestic policymaker.
represe m the 'honestly held' red states.
Cahill and top Kerry
The convention strategy be lief that 'the role of gov-.
'We coach Little League
flowing from this theory is ernment is to ·concentrate in the blue states and have strategist Tad Devine fasto present a positive picture wealth and power in the gay friends in the red stales. te ned on the fact that a
of Kerry and his .program hands of those who hold There are palriots who Gallup poll shbws that only
and avoid excessively harsh their ... views. leaving ordi- opposed the war in Iraq and 43 percent of the electorate
attacks on Bus~ that might nary Americans to fend for patriots who supported it. says that Bu sh should .be reelected, against 52 percent
offend swing voters.
themselves ...
· We are one people.'
That's the script most
'Since most A m~rica n s are
At the same time, he said who say they want 'someone
speaker~ have followed. So.
not that far right. they have that the Uniled Slates faced new.' Devine said that Bush
10 the exlent that vmers are 10 portray us as unaccept- "the cho ice between 'a poli - is ' in a historically weak
paying attention to what's· able. lacking in stre ngth and lics of cynic ism' and a 'poli - position.'
happening here- TV view- values. In other words, lhey tics of hope. · He also did hi s
Commentator and strateership is very low - they need a di vided America,' he bit fo r Kerry. identifyin g gist James Glrville went so
are getting a picture of the .added.
·
·
him - again st GOP charges far as to say at another
party and its nominee as · Clinton we nt on to say that - as a leader 'w ho will not breakfast !lat ' if Bush wins,
mode rate, patriotic, opti- . afte r Sept. II, 200 1, 'We all hesitate to use our mil itary it will be one of the greatest
mi stic and determined to wamed to be one nation,' but might to keep America safe . political achievements of my
lifetime. ·And I will say it on
make A'mc,rica · 'stronger· Bush and hi s Congressional · and secure.'
and more united.
·
all ies - decided -- to ' use the
The one speaker so far the day after the . election:
Democrats already are so. moment of unity · to push who struck me as less than But it's highly unlikely.'
I think the .polls show that
hostile t&lt;i Bush that speakers America too far to the right.· effective in carrying the
didn't · need to repeat the ad That am ounts to a pretty Democrats' basic message such an achievement is still
hominem attacks - ' liar,' incendiary charge of exploit- was Kerry's wife, Teresa entirely possible. Bu sh's
'ex tremist ' that have ing 9/1 ·1, but Clinton stopped Hein z· Kerry, who spent approval rating is still below
more of her speech identify- 50 percent in most polls, but
characterized pre-conven- short of making it ovenly.
Carter, who used the word ing herself' ami her values to it seems to be rising lately.
tion rhetoric . ' Red meat'
And , polls show thai the
speeches conceivably could 'extremi sm' three times to the audience than Kerry's .
ff she was trying to display Bush-Kerry race is close to
trigger ugly scenes.
characterize Bush' s foreign
That' s not 10 say there policy, said that ' in 1he herself as a plausible first dead even.
Moreover, Bush has yet to
weren't plenty of 'digs at world at large we cannot lady to counler the popular
Bush in speeches from for- lead if our leaders mislead' Laura Bush, I thought she begin to make a positive
mer Presidents Bill Clinton and praised Kerry by saying fell far short -· identifying case for .himself, spend his
and Jimm y Carter, Sen. that 'he showed up when the Peace Corps as 't-he best remaining multimillions oh
Ed.ward Kenned y, D-Mass., assigned to duty,' alluding to face that America has ever pre-convention advertisin~ ,
and· keynote speaker stale charges that Bush didn't fui - projected' at a lime when or stage his own party s
Sen. Barack Obama, D-111., fill his National Guard oblig- U.S. troops are dying and · extravaganza in New York.
So, I'd say this race' ls far
but they were couched as ations.
defending the n ghts of
contrasts
especially
Democrats here have sue- women (herself, presumably from over.
(Morton Kondracke is
between the Democrats' cessfully stolen Bush's 2000 included) to be labeled
'politic s of hope· and unfulfilled promise to be a 'smart' instead of 'opinion- executive editor of Roll Call,
Republicans' 'politics of ' uniter not a divider ' the newspaper of Capitol·
ated.'
'
The
positive-approach Hill.)
fear' or 'cy nici sm.'
which Democratic pollster

I REALL'I DON'T .
I

Moderately Confused

9111

SEE ANYTHING
I LIKE.

IRONTON - Donald Erwin Kouns. 80. Raceland, Ky.,
passed away on Wednesday, Aug . 4, 2004, at Commun ity
Hospice Care Center in Ashland, Ky.
·
The Washington, D.C. nat ive was born Dec. 10, 1923. the
son of the liue Samuel Waldestein and Ma bel Irene Bruce
Kouns. Donald was a veteran of the U.S. Army World War II, ·
servi ng with the 76th Infantry Division as a medic, mostly in
Southern Europe, receiving the Bronze.. Star Medal for
courage unde r fire . He retired after 35 years as a supervisor at
Ohio Power Co., was a member of .the Old Town Board
Baplist-Church in Letart, W.Va., a member of the South Point
Masonic Lodge, where he was Past Master and a member of
VFW Post 78 in Letart, W.Va. He was a 1942 graduate of
South Poim High School and anended Marshall Universily.
He lived most of his life in the tri-state area.
H'e · wa~ the widow of Edna Louis · Barney Kouns, who
passed away on Nov. 26, 2002. BesideS his parents and his
wife, he was preceded in death by two sisters, Grace Bebeau
and Nancy Know lton, and four brothers: Sarnuel, Leland, Jack
and Glenn Kou1l\
He is survived by two so ns and daughters-in-law. Mark E.
and Sandy Koun ~ of Pickerington and Joseph B. aml Connie
Koun s of Dothan, Ala.; a daughter and son-in- law, Rebecca
·and Kevin Brown of Letart, W.Va. ; six grandchildre n: Natalie
Koun s of Pickerington, Andryw Kouns of Pau leys Island,
S.C., Rachel Mitchell and her husband, Scott, of Hurricane.
W.Va., Leah Starkey and her husb'and, Vance . of Letan, Amie
Helms and her husband, Chad, of Dothan, Ala., Adam
Pemberton of Che sapeake; a gre&amp;t grandchild. Payton Brewer
of Letart; a brother, Charles Koun s of Ironton: and four sisters: Ruth Kinder of South Point. Clara Wheeler of Codv.
Wyo., Dorothy Tisza of New Orleans, La., and Irene Moiel of
Houstori, Tex.
'
The funeral will be held at 3 p.m . on Friday, Aug. 6, 2004,
at Phillips Funeral Home, I004 South Seventh St. Ironton,
with Rev. Charles Jayne officiating. Burial will fo llow at
Highland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday at the funeral home. Masonic rites will be given by South Point Mason ic
Lodge #597, at 6:30p.m. on Thursday, and military graveside
rites will be conducted by VFW Post 8850.
Memorial contributions may be made to lhe Co mmuni ty
Hospice of Ashland, Ky., 1538 Central Ave ., Ashland, Ky.
41101.

Ralph 'Buck' Hutton, Jr.
MARIETTA - Ralph "Buck" Hution,Jr,, 56, of Marietia.
died at 10:55 p.m. on Monday, Aug; 2, 2004, at his home.
He was born June 23. 1948, in Dayton, a son of Gladys
Hupp Hutton of Marietta and the late Ralph Hutton, Sr. The
family later made their home in Portland before moving to
Marietta. He enjoyed racing of all kinds and had been in the
trucking business.
On Sept. 20, 1968·, he married Sheila Gaskins, who survives
with one daughter, Debbie Allen, and her hu sband, Tom, of
Portland; a son, Scott Hutton of Marietta; two grandchildren;
his mother; and a sister, Patricia Cronin of Marietta.
Besides his father, he was preceded in death by a s.ister,
Edith Whinekind.
Services will be held at I0:30 a. m. on: Thursday at the
McCiure-Shafer-Lankford Funeral Home with Arthur
Edwards officiating. Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m.
on Thursday at Letart Falls Cemetery.
·
Friends may call from Wednesday up until the. lime of ser. .
vice at the funeral home. . ·

Morgan Taylor Minshall
'

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•

Back when many in the
Only if Saddam defied was going to go to war.
media assured us that
U.N. arms inspections was About what he would do,
Howaro Dean had the
the president empowered to About why. We now have-a
Democratic
presidential
make war · to ' defend the new ~ationale' - the liberanomination wrapped up - ·
national security of the tion of Iraq - 'for having
before citizens ever voted United States against the gone to war. ... When you
Gene
his supporters argued that
continuing threat posed by break (your promise on poliLyons
nobody who'd voted to give
Iraq.' By taking the issue to cy), you've bmken your
President Bush authority to
the Security Council, Bush trust. '
go to war against Ira'l could
did what Democrats asked.
Asked if hl:'d voted to give
run credibly against htm.
'l have been 100 ,percent the president 'the benefit of
Now that Sen. John Kerry
An incumbent who spends consistent,' Kerry empha- the doubt,' Kerry said no.
is poised to become · the most of hi s energy attacking sized to USA Today.
'lssues of war and peace,'
Democratic nominee, Bush his opponent is an incum- 'Saddam Hussein was a he emphasized, ·~o outside
has adopted that argument as bent m trouble. And given threat, he needed to be held of partisan polittcs. When
his own.
the bl,oody mess this admin- accountable to the U.N . res- !he president of the United
Back in October 2002, see, istration has created in Iraq , olutions. But it needed to be States says, 'This is the way
Kerry voted in favor of it's no wonder: The question done in the right way. I'm going to do something,'
Bush's cynically timed, pre- is whether Kerry .c an wipe George Bush did it in the you ought to have the right
election Iraq resolutton: the smirk off Bush's face and wron ~ way, and broke his -to believe that president.
Now Rep~blicans are lrY!hg turn the joke against him . promrses to Americans.' . And if there's anythin~ that
to use tt agamst htrn . After all, most swing voters
At first, the policy worked. makes me more motivated
They've expended around once trusted Bush's bogus · Saddam folded. He admitted about this (campaign), it is
$100 million on TV ads por- certitude abo ut Saddam U.N . arms inspectors, who the fact that he went back on
!raying Kerry as a flip-flop- Hu sSein's weapons of mass could find no Iraqi weapons his word with respect to an
per. Bush himself, whose destruction and ponentous of mass destruction despite issue that involves the lives
only effective rhetoric al hints about Iraq s role in U.S. intelligence tips chas- of our young Americans.
mode is mockery, re~ales 9/11.
ing them down multiple Americans know that this
GOP audiences with JOkes
Last week, Kerry may blind alleys. That's when president did not go to war
about Ke rry's supposedl y have found the way. In an Bu sh pulled a bait-and- as a last resort.'
flexible principles.
interview with USA Today,. swi tch. Having vowed to
By the way, Bush himself
'My opponent has been in he made the issue funda- make war as 'a last reson,' threatened to veto the $87
Washington long enough to mental tru st.
he acted rashly. Certain to billion Kerry voted for
take both sides on just about
As usual , Bu sh's false lose a promised U.N. because it limited millionevery issue,' he said recentl y.. dualisms obscure more than Security Council vote deci- aires' tax cuts. What Kerry
'He voted for the Patriot Act they reveal. See, liberating sively, he went back on hi s voted against was financing
... and for the use of force in Iraq was never put to a vote . . · word, warned the inspectors the war with borrowed
Iraq. Now he opposeS the It wasn't even mentioned . to leave and staned bomb- money. Maybe that's too
Patriot Act. ... and' the libera- . Bush never asked Congress ing. Media cheerleaders complicated 'for a 30-second
tion of lraq. ... In order to to declare war. Instead, he 'embedded' with the troops TV spot. It's when Keuy
lead this country, you have 10 proposed llsing the threat of ga¥e little empha~is to says these things to Bush's
be tonsiste nt and clear. force as a diplomatic tool to Bush's about-face and cov- face that they're apt to sting.
Someone asked Senator push Saddam Hussein into ered the invasion of Iraq like
(Arkansas
DemocratKerry why he voted againsl compliance. The resolution the Super Bowl.
·
Gazette columnist Gene
the $87 billion fu nding bill to · Kerry vote!! for authorized
'The president misled Lyons is a national magahelp our troops in Iraq. the president to use 'neces~ America, Kerry told USA zine award winner and coHere's what h~ said: 'I actual- sary and appropriate' ·force Today. 'I don't know about autlwr of 'The Hunting of
ly did vote for the $87 bil- only to 'enforce all relevant deliberately, but he rttisled the President' (St. Martin's
lion, before I voted against United Nations Sec;urity America, he misled the Press, 2000). You can e-mail
it.' End of quote. That sure Council resolutions regard- world. He mi sled Americans Lyons ai geni!lyons2@
clears things up. doesn't it?'
m Congress about how he cs.com.)
ing Iraq.'
'

•

. POMEROY - Morgan Taylor Minshall , 4 months. of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Aug . 3, 2004, iit Holzer Medi cal
Center at Gallipolis.
·
She was born March 5, 2004, in Galli a County, daughter of
Thomas Minshall and Lisa Stewan Minshall of Pomeroy.
In addition to her parents, she is survived by her maternal
grandparents, Carolyn and George Hoscher of West
Columbia, W.Va. , and Thomas and Linda Stewart of
Cincinnati; maternal great-grandfather, James Bl and of Wes1
Columbia; and maternal grandmothers, Blanche Stewart of
Middleport, ahd Frances Jeffers of Pomeroy.
She is also -survived _by her paternal grandparents. James
and Virginia Minshall of Ponsmouth, and Juanita Bryant of
Pomeroy; paternal great-grandparents, James and Betty
Minshall of Columbus; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
·Services will be 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 7. 2004, in , the
Rejoici'ng Life Church ill Middleport, with Pastor Mike ·
Foreman officiating. Burial will follow in the Sunrise
Memprial Cemetery -at New Haven, W.Va. Friends may call at
the church on Saturday from II a.m. until the time of services.
Arrangements. are by the Deal Funeral Home of Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Please visit deal_fl)@charter.net to send e-mail condolences
to the family.

•

•.

· Ero~t{to be·apart of vour life.
k ,

Subscribe·tOOay
• 99~:1155 '
.

from PageA1
law are feeding the animals and preparinj: meals. They have more encounters
w1th the villagers. One of !he daughtersin-law is confronted by her mother. She
pleads with her to return to the village
and. leave this crazy family. She stays
with her husband as her mother leaves
crying. Even the "evil" villagers show
up to give the family a hard time .
The special talents of Noah and his
. family are brought out as they sing
_ ______.p:.::.raises ~God fm keeping them safe

Heritage
from PageA1
ties, serve a more practical
purpose - they are used to
carry wood and other heavy
objects.
.
Dailey shares the folklore
of the Native American com-

----~

•

Californians heighten
precautions against
West Nile virus after
state's first deaths
GRAND
TERRACE, than 560 people in the
Calif. (AP) - Cal ifornia ns United States in the past
are spray ing pesticide five years as il marc hed
around I heir homes, calling westward. Last year was the
' the kids and dogs in at dusk first for the virus to appea r
and replacing ratty old win- in areas west of the
dow screens - all preven- Continental Divide.
tion methods 10 combat a · This year, West Ni le has
scourge · the rest of the sickened more I han 400
nation knows only too well : people across the nation and
the West Nile viru s.
res ulted in seven deaths.
The response to the firsl according 10 data released
two deat hs in Ca liforni a Wednesday by the federal
from the rapidl y spreading Centers for Disease Control
virus appears to be more and Prevention. The virus
prevention than pan ic, with kill ed 262 people in the
few repons that the mosqui- United States last year. from
to-borne illness is causing 9,858 overall cases.
people to cance l outdoor
Cali fornia officials are
Plans . or make drastic telling re~idents what East
lifestyl_e changes.
· · coasters have long done.
·"We re takmg precau- Avoid mosquitos by elimi tions, bu t you can only do so · nating pools of slagnant
much." said David Wilson. water,· wear long sleeves if
6 1· a neighbor 0 f Morri s outside al dusk or daw n, and
Sternberg,. the 75-year-old
man who ·died Saturday use mosquito repell am lhat
co ntain s the chem ical
from encephalitis caused by known as DEET.
the virus.
As of Wedne_sday, West
Many are apparentl y fo l, Nile had infected 79 people lowing the advice. As of
in 1he state, mo stly in Memorial Day, sales of
Southern
Cali fornia . insect repellant were up 17
according to the Department percenl in California over
of Hea lth Services. Last last year, and 9 percent
year. there were on ly- three nationally, according to the
cases statewide and no most recent data avai lable
f~om tracking firm A.C.
deat hs .
Sternberg,. a real estate Nielsen.
agent in the small city of
West Nile is carried by
Grand Terrace, was the sec- birds but only transmitted to
ond person in Cal ifornia to humans by mosq uitos.
die of the illness within a About 20 percent of those
six-week period, Neighbors bitten by an infected insect
suspect he was bitten on his show tlu-like symptoms ,
front porch, where he often · and less than I percent die
sat in a hammock.
from the illness, according
West Nile, which first hit to health authorities. There
the United States in 1999.in is no approved vaccine or
New York. has killed more treatment.

Wider use of hea~t failure drug
resulted in dozens of deaths
from side effect, study finds
NEW YORK (AP) New research shows that
soon after doctors started
pre sc~ ibing a drug fo r congestive hean fa ilure more
widely; the · number of
patient s who died from a
side effect increased.
The researchers say their
findings illustrate what can
happen when doctors apply
dru g-study results to their
own patients. They suggest
that so me of the patients
probably shouldn ' t have
been give n the heart failure
drug and that doctors
weren't checking for dangerous potassium buildup.
"I have. no doubt that in
the right patients and with
careful monitoring that thi s
is still a good drug combinalion," said Dr. David N.
Juurlirtk, one of the
Canadian researchers. "It's
just when we prescribe it
more widely and maybe we
don't monitor patients quite
as closely as we shguld,
then that's where we get
into trouble."
Juurlink
and
others
believe the same thing is
happening in the United
Stales as in Canada where
the study of the decades-old
drug, spironol actone, was
conducted .
A major study five years
ago found that. adding

throughout all of the harassment they
are enduring. The Lord does as He
promises and the rains come.
But this doesn't end the drama . There
is a surprise guest that brings the whole
story. to a clo~e. ·
Thi s is the seventh vear Power in the
Blood Ministries has presented the
drama. "This is our biggest production
every year," says Bret Russell. head of
, the ministry. "It just keeps getting bigger
and better!"
.
Pastor James R. Acree. Sr. remarked,
"I am very e~cited as we are getting
closer to the weekend. It just seems to
get more exciting every night'"
The adaptation available he~ in

munity with others now, and
is moved by its reverence for
God and nature.
"We honor the Creator in
all we do," Dailey told an
audience at Chester-Shade
Day last month. '"We ne\'er
kill a creature unless it's necessary, and we always use
every part of a creature when
it is necessary to kill it'"
As an example. Daile y

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

Obituaries

Dems deliver on positive approach

Daily Sentinel

STATE

Thursday, August 5,

PageA4

•

spironolactone to the standard treatments cut the death
rate by 30 percent in peop)e
with serious heart failure .
The new study looked at
what happened after that,
when doctors put more
patients on the medicine. It
was done by the Institute for
Clinical
Evaluative
Sciences, a he alth care
research organization in
Toronto. and is reponed in
Thursday' s New England
Journal of Medicine.
"It's a caution that all the
safeguards that are in place in
a controlled clinical trial are
nbt present out in practice,"
said Dr. Biff Palmer of the
University
of
Texas
Southwestern Medical School
in Dallas, who wrote a related
journal article on preventing
and treating high potassium.
About
5
million
Americans have heart failure, which occurs when a
weakened heart can't pump
enough blood throughout
the body. causing swelling
and tluid to back up in the
lungs.
Spironolactone,
also
known as Aldactone, helps
the kidneys get rid of excess
water and salt but can lead
to potassium buildup in the
blood. High levels can
cause irregular heartbeats or
sudden death.

Meigs County is much different than .
any offered elSewhere. · The outdoor
amphitheater has a permanently built
one-tenth sca le of the Biblical ark.
There is a pond with a waterfall, live
animals ranging from small ducks. to
llamas, to an alpaca, and the costumes
are unique to the Biblical era.
·
The Hillside Baptist Church is located on State Route 143 just off State
Route 7. Admission is free and it is
handicap accessible. There are concessions and a petting zoo. The drama·
begins at 7:30 p.m. and runs through
Sund~y

For more information. call (740)
992-6768.

showed whislles that are
made of deer antler, buttons
on her regalia made of bone.
and purses made from tortoise shell that her daughter
sells . in a gift shop.· Local
autltorilics even call Dailey
and olhers practicing the
Native American philosophy
when a wild animal is killed
along the roadside.
While her appreciation and

full understanding of her
fa'mily's Native American
roots carne relatively late in
her adult life, Dailey appreciates it all the more.
''It-'s a great time to be
alive. Native Americans
believe in ~oring their
elders. so I'm 'a!'just lhe right
point in my life."

Local Briefs
Grand opening
planned for Saturday
RACINE- Small Town Sweets in Racine is planning a
grand opening ce lebration for Saturday.
The community is invited to anend to mee t the owner.
sample offerings from the menu. and enjoy the activitie'
scheduled throughout 1he day.
The grand opening fe,til·itie&gt; wil l begin wilh a mayoral
ribbon cutting ceremony at noon followed by an afternoon
of give-aways and comests.
Small Town Sweets opened on July 3 and carries fu ll .
lunch and dinner menU S and fea ture' &gt; U~Ur-free dessert&gt; .
The business . located a1 .lOI Vine Streel in the Ohio River
commu nity of Racine. is owned and operated by Racine
native, Carl ie LeMaster.

Board to meet
POMEROY - Meigs County Board of Health will meet
at 5 p.m. on Aug. II in the conference room of the Meig'
County Health Department. located ar 112 E. Me mona! Dr..
Pomeroy.

Church offers giveaway
L)TTLE HOCK ING - 'Little Hockin g Chu rch of Christ.
located on U.S. 50 and 7 Somh. will have a clothing giveaway from 5 to 7 pm. o.n Aug. 19, omd 9:30-a.m. unt il noon
on Aug. 20. All clothing is avai lable at no cos t 10 community residents.

Collection reported
POMEROY- Meigs County Treasurer Howard E. Frank
reported colleclion of S3 ,58-1.7-l3 .52 fo r 1he second-half
2003 real estate tax colkction period. According to Frank.
the county coll ecled $3.67-1.343 for Ja,t year's second-half
collec tion period.
The col lections included S 115.382.33 in delinquent taxes.
$3,469.336.19 in current taxes. and $5.087.12 in refunds.
Townships, vilh1ges and local school di stric ts took $1.3
million in advances on the co llection before 1he books were
closed, Frank said.
·

Youth football league
sets sign-up-date
POINT PLEASANT - The Mason County Youth
Football League is seeking I0, II and 12,year-old football
players from Mason Cou nt y and surrou nding Ohio counties.
·
·
Indi viduals may sign up from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Monday
lhrough Friday a1 Point Pleasant High School.
Deadline for registrati on is Friday, Aug. 13.

Openings for cheerleaders
POINT PLEASANT - The Mason County Youth
Football League has &lt;lpenings for cheerleaders ages 6 to 12.
Individuals may sign up fro m 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Monday
through Friday at Point Pleasant High School.
Deadline for registra tion is Friday, Aug. 13.

PO
from Page A1
Percocet, which was recog,
nized by the pharmacist as
fake.
"I credit the qtiick thinking on the part of the pharmacist." Proffitt said. "He
recogni zed the ·prescriplion
as a forgery, and called the
· doctor whose name had

been forged."
When 1he doctor confirmed the pharmacist's suspicions.. the store manager
called the . police. Proffitt
sa id the suspecl was caught
on surveillance camera, and
an arrest is expected by the
end of I he week. He said the
indiv idual could face
numerous fe lony charges.
begi nning wi lh forgery and
auempting to obtain drugs
under false pretense.

Today in the Sentinel ...
'

..GJ?fflee.;} t(J··C[fo &amp;
1'Jt;ng~ f(J ;fJ(J"
NOTICE
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy is authorized
to accept ut!lity payments for:

American Electric Power - 7 4' fee
Verizon- 7 4' fee
Columbia Gas - 65' fee
Payments by check must be
made out to that utility.
'UTILITY PAYMENT HOURS:
Monday - Friday 6AM- 6PM
Saturday SAM- 3PM

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PageA6

REGION
at Mason
Gallia County man faces No euthanization
.
.
:attempted murder charge County shelter yet
The•Daily Sentinel

Thursday,August5,2004

.i. (

BY KEVIN KELLY

BY MtlLISSIA RUSSELL

Meeks lying on his li ving
room floor with multiple
head wounds, broken bones,
and other i'njuries. Meeks
was flown by medical heli copter for immediate treatment.
According to Det. Chad .
Wallace of the GCSO.
Meeks spent several months

MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS A 31_year-old Gallipolis man is
currently being held in the
.. Gallia County Jail on a
charge of · attempted murder
following the return of a
grand jury indictment tllis
week.
Richard Ellis, 79 Solar in the hospital recovering
Drive, was arrested by from the severe beating.
Gallia County ' Sher-iff's
Wallace said drugs and
Office deputies for his robbery . appear
to . be
alleged involvement in the . moll_ves 111 the case.
Atte~ a le.nghth~ and
November 2003 beating of
56-year-old Marlin Meek s, extenstve
mvestlgauon ,
136 Chapel Road, Bidwell.
Wallace was able to inter. When deputies arrived on' view and arrest Ellis in
the scene, they found . Boyd County, Ky., earlier

thi s week.
"There were several witnesses in the case· that came
forwurd and provided us
with circumstantial evidence," Wallace said.
DNA was also found at
the scene . .
Wallace also thanked the
Bur.e au
of
Criminal
Identification
and
Investigation, who processed
the crime scene and evidence in the case, as well
as Sheriff David Martin for
providing him with the
resources to continue such
an in-depth investigation.
A pretrial date . has · not ,yet
.been set for Ellis.

Piggott released on charges·
of felonious assault
'

BY MtlliSSIA RUSSELL
MRUSSELL@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALL) POLIS ' - Twentyfive-year-old John E. Piggott
of Pomeroy was released
from the Gallia CountY Jail
Wednesday on charges of
domestic violence, disorderly
conduct
and
felonious
f!Ssault after an incident
. Tuesday evening on Fourth
Avenue.
. Piggott's mother, Colleen
Brydie, was also held on
charges of domestic violence, menacing and disorl:lerly conduct, but was
released after her Municipal
Court
appe.arance
Wednesday.
Both were · ·arrested by
Gallipolis Po_lice Officer Joe

Carter after he and fellow ·
officer Lonnie
McGuire
responded to a heated
. domestic violence call at the
Fourth Avenue home.
According to reports, when
officer's arrived, they found
Piggott. Brydie aud her busband, Lawrence Brydie, in a
van. attempting to leave the
scene.
According to the report ,
just before officers arrived,
the parties had been involved
in a verbal argument, which
escalated
when
Piggott
allegedly threw a large stepping stone at Lawrence
Brydie's son, Lawrence Jr.,
then jumped into the driver's
seat of the van and proceeded ·to ram the man's vehicle
several times.

When
officer
Carter
attempted to place Piggott
into his p.atrol car, Piggott
allegedly kicked Carter in
the right leg. He then proceeded to· try to break the
glass out . of the patrol car
with his head.
Colleen Brydie was arrested at this time when she
allegedly began making
threatening statements and
menacing the victims.
Lawrence Brydie's daughter-in-law, 27-year-old Sarah
Brydie, who was also
involved in the incident, was
arrested ·Wednesday in the
Gallipolis Police Department
on a grand jury indictment.
She is currently being held
in the Gallia County Jail
awaiting a court appearance.

the end of the 14 days. euth- magnitude." she said.
KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM
anization will begiri, offiGerlach said he has
- - - - - - -.- - - - cials said.
instructed the shelter to post
POINT
PLEASANT,
" We ' re being lenient," information on the 14-day
W.Va. - Euthanization at Cominissioner Bob Baird limit with rescue groups
the Mason County Animal said. :We have increased it around the country. As of
Shelter will begin only after to 14 days so some of the Wednesday, he had spoken
a time limit for adoptions animals cail be adopted."
with
two organizations
.and rescues has passed and
Shelter Director Judy about ma~ing local rescues,
not before, county officials Oliver wps informed of the . and shelter staff informed
said.
· · commission's
directive him a rescue \s scheduled at
The County Coinmission Tuesday
afternoon
by the shelter this weekend.
has asked animal rescue Gerlach and offered her verIn July, the county agreed
groups around the country bal resignation. The shelter to close the shelter on
that have links with the is being operated by its cur- Wednesd ~ s and cut back
local shelter to pick up ·ani- rent staff. Oliver had been a transport\ tc&gt; twice a month
mals this week and next in shelter employee since July due 10 the expense, vehicle
we;\f and tear and overtime
an effort io reduce the she!- 1996.
ter
. population,
avoid
Since then, the commis- logged by staff.
·
gassing animals and help sion office and the Register
The night drop pen at the
shore up a budget deficit.
lllive been flooded with e- · shelter . was also closed
The commission decided mail s and phone calls about because a number of dogs
Monday to allow animals the shelter, in protest of the and cats from Gallia and
now at the shelter to remain mov e. Some individuals
counties
were
Meigs
for 14 days , nine days more who dr" 1ated money to the
· dropped off at the shelter,
than the limit allowed for shelter
are
requesting which officials acknowldogs by the state, so rescue refunds.
units could come to Mason
Many of the e-mails are edged has gained a "no kill"
County and pi~k them up. · from animal rescue groups . reputallon m thear~a. · .
. The request came as the and activists in Ohio , . The .. commisSions dectcommission decided to sus- Pennsylvania , New Jersey SIOn on _the shelter arose as
pend transports of animals and Colorado. At least one It deals With a more than
out-of-state
by
shelter claimed that gassing began $221,000 d,efictt m county
employees for collection by at the shelter Tuesday ... governments 2004-05 budrescue
groups,
which Others have urged a letter- get c~used by ~n error m
County Administrator John writing campaign to change valuatiOn committed by the
Gerlach said was a "tremen- the commission's stance.
state tax department.
dous undertaking."
In one e-mail shared with · Officeholders have since
, Additionally, the shelter's the Regi ster,. Vicki Sayles of been asked to cut their budcat population is now limit- Doyle stown, Pa., said the gets. br 3 percent , while dJsed to 10 at any time. news reflects negatively on cretionary, or non-mandated
County-operated shelters do the
county
and
West funding by the commission
not have to take cats, but Virginia.
is being reduced I 0 percent.
Mason County is an excep"While West Virginia tries Letters explaining the dislion.
to attract tourists, ·folks from cretionary funding reduction
If the shelter population is other states cannot abide the are being issued by the
not significantly reduced by slaughter of animals in this commission this week.

Oliver says she can't abide 'slaughter'
KKELL'r'@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

'

:Oirector of agency for Medicaid,
unemployment retiring after three years
, COLUMBUS (AP) ~ The
three-year director of the
~tate agency that oversees
such programs as unemploy,
ment and .the Medicaid health
care system announced his
retirement Wednesday, say.u.ig he was brought in as a
"turnaround guy."
, , Tom Hayes, one of two
bemocrats in Republican
' 'Gov. Bob Taft's cabmet, will
leave the Department of Job
.'and Family Services on Oct.
).

· · · He oversees an agency
with ~.700 employees and a
$15 billion budget, twothirds of which is Medicaid,
the joint state-federal insur. ince program for the poor
'lind disabled. His salary is
$125,000.
. "Hayes
was Cuyahoga
·tounty administrator m 200 I
When Taft appointed him to
:'take over the ·agency that then .
:had 300 more employees and
a $10 billion budget.
. ,, "Tom has a successful
·!ecord of improving the performance of public agens:ies," Taft said . in a news

release.
The agency then was troubled by a failed Internet jobmatching system and revela·
tions that it illegally withheld
child support payments from
fo rmer welfare recipients by
fa iling to reprogram computers. The department was
fined $17 million from 1997
to 1999.
This February, the child
support system was declared
in compliance with federal
law after paying $15 million
to parents.
The department is replacing four of its seven major
computer systems running
the agency and has started
work on replacing · the ones
that run Medicaid and welfare eligibility. The replacement system for unemployment compensation is to
begin
operating
in
September.
.
''I'm a turnaround guy."
Hayes said. "When you're
dealin~ with the issues we
deal with and the constituents
·we deal with, the work is
never done."·

Hayes intended to stay for
only two years but took on
some additional projects, he
said.
"The governor's grateful
he stayed as long as he did,"
. Taft
spokesman
Orest
Holubec said.
Hayes said he would Work
with his successor, who he
says be challenged by helping distressed people and
entrenched interest groups
while staying financially
responsible.
"You're dealing with people whose lives in some cases
are broken," he said.
Hayes, 53, said he wants to
spend ·more time with his
wife of 29 years after commuting on weekends to the
Cleveland suburb of Bay
Village. Their daughter just
g ot a Cleveland apartment
after graduating from college.
"I got tired of coming
home
to
an
empty
(Columbus) apartment," he
said. "If my office overlooked downtown Cleveland,
I would never leave." ,

·:ohio man enters pleas in Ohio River boat crash

'

ter expenses in light of a "Morgantown was a central
county government budget meeting area. There are
crisis. the commission sus- other shelters they can pull
pended transports of -11nimals from. so this won't work."
to
Morgantown
and · For all of 2003, Oliver
Columbus, Ohio, asked res- said 12 animal s were euthacue groups to come to nized at the shelter. This
Maso n Countv within 1"4 year, three dogs were put
day s to pick up animals, and down because. Oliver said,
limited the number of cats slle"s tri ed tu save as many ·
at tile shelter to 10 at any dogs and cats as possible.
'time.
She believes that despite
Otherwise. euthanization the financial crunch the
will occur at the she lter if cou nty faces, · con tinuing
the
population
IS
not with transports and other
reduc ed.
alternatives could still be
Oliver said two weeks
isn' t sufficient time to pursued with the shelter.
arrange rescues beca use Reducing the staff and cut"!t's kind of a complicated ting the shelter budget won't
process."
help either, she added.
" I told them 1 would not.
Oliver said her daughter
an&lt;,!: another .
slaughter animals," said Kim,berly,
Oliver, a shelter employee statler, Andrew Ftsher, have
since July 1996. "I resigned · also res1gned from the sheland walked out. I won't be ter.
part of it when there are resGerlach said. Tuesday_ he
cue organizations that work hopes Oh~er wtll reconstd~r
with us and tons of don'a- her decr ston, but she satd
tion s have been made to the that's not likely. .;
shelter:
"I can't stand to see inno"We are far out of the cent animals put to sleep
way and eventually the res- because we have financial
cue groups will not pull . problems," Oliver said.
from Mason County, but "They did what they had to
from Mprgantown and other do, and I did what I had to
areas,"
she
added. do."

BY KEVIN KELLY

:; · NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) An Ohio man pleaded no
1:ontest
W,ednesday
to
j;harges resulting from a
'une 2003 hit-and-run boat
frash that injured six people
&lt;ln the Ohio River.
:. Under the plea agreement
. tiled in Campbell County
prcuit Court, state prosecufOrs recommended a 10-year
prison sentence for Glenn
J:olann. The agreement
ill lows Colann to be eligible
for parole in two years, said
his lawyer, James Morgan.
: Colann entered an Alford
plea - Kentucky's version·
pf a' no-contest plea - to
fharges of second-degree
assault, fourth-degree assault
imd wanton endangerment.
I:olanri, of the ...Columbus
liuburb of Gahanna, Ohiq, is

l
I

l

to be sentenced by Judge
William Wehr on Sept. 28.
"He is not admitting guilt,
but acknowledged that the
facts are such that there is a
. likelihood that he might be
found guilty .if he went to
trial," Morgan said.
Colann , 55 , had been
indicted on charges of firstdegree assault, but entered
hts plea to the amended
charges of second-degree
assault. If he had been tried
and convicted on the firstdegree assault charges. he
could have been required to
serve 85 percent of his sentence before he was eligible
for parole, Morgan said.
confiscated
Authorities
Colann's 40-foot speedboat,
named Snap-Deciston, (lays
after the June 27, . 2003, col-

lision, with another boat.
Witnesses said it matched
the description of the larger
boat. involved in the crash
near Dayton , Ky., and
Cincinnati . All but one of
the seven people aooard the
21-foot picnic boat that was
hit were hospitalized.
Police said a witness saw
a ooat matching th~ desc~p­
uon of Colann s bemg
removed from the water at a
boat ramp in Moscow, Ohio,
the day after the collision.

e
· ,.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Judy Oliver said
she cannot stand to see what
she called the "slaughter" of
animals at the Mason
County Animal Shelter take
place, which 1s why she
resigned as its director
Tuesday.
Although time has been
allowed for adoptions from
the shelter to occur, and for
rescue organizations to
come to Mason County and
take away dogs and cats
lodged the're, Oliver does
not believe two weeks is
enough time.
And rescue groups will
eventually bypass animals
from the shelter because they
· will not travel the distance to
the Mason · shelter, which is
"far out of the way," Oliver
said .
Oliver
resigned , after
being briered on a County
Commission directive on the
shelter
by
County
Admir!l'strator John Gerlach.
Oliver said Tuesday was her
. first day back at work from
vacation.
In an effort to reduce she!-

.

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S8ntine/

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Dow Jones
Industrials

10 .750

.....

-~--~,..,_~
:::--=- - - - 10,250
-\:J" -=---=-,.,.• "'V""
---..,......----.,..-.,.
, - - - - - - - - 9 ,750

+8-:Z7

NewsChannel

10,126.51

--,MA:
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L_

Pet. change

High

frOI'!" prevloua: +0. 06

10,162.42

Low

_ _A_U_ G
_ _ 9 ·250

R•eord high : 11 ,722 .98
. Jan . 14 . 2000

10,068. 11

Aug . 4.2004

Nasdaq
composite
-4.38
1 ,855.06
Pet. change
frOtn previoua:

--0.23

Aug . 4,2004

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500
1,098.63
Pet. change
frorn .p revlous: · -0.10

2,200

~"'
· -'--·-,,.....,;f'""v,_w.,.="""-~~.,.-~
- .;..
· - ---'--- 2,000
1 ,800
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - 1' ,600
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG
High
Low
Record high: 5.048 .62
1,864.80
1,642.20
March 1 0, 2000

:-

~

c:

' ~

1,200

:
C
C
.' . "
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High

, . 102.45

Low

1.0€12.44

Record high: 1 ,527 .4 .6
March 24, 2000

Local Stocks

Weather forecast
Thursday, Aygust 5

ring around 4:00pm. Winds
will be 10 MPH from the
It's going to be a cloudy north.
morning. Temperatures will
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
remain around 65. Winds will
There is a slight chance we
be 5 to 10 MPH from the could
see
some rain.
north.
Temperatures will fall from
Aftemoon (l-6 p.m.)
74 early this evening to, 63.
It should continue to be Skies will be mostly clear to
cloudy. There might be a bit of mostly cloudy with 10 to 15
rain
around
the
area. MPH winds from the n011h.
Temperatures will rise from 67
Overnight (l-6 a.m.)
with today's high of 80 occur- · Temperatures will decline

Moming (7 a.m.-No011)

ACI - 32.40,
AEP- 31.95
Akzo - 32.40
·Ashland Inc. - 52.04
BBT - 38..72
BLI - 11.67
Bob Evans - 26.38
BorgWarner - 47.42
City Holding - 30.79
Champion - 3.98
Charming Shops - 7.10
from 61 to today's low of 57
co·l - 34.62
by 6:00am. Skies will be
mostly clear with 5 to I 0 DuPont - 43.00
DG -18,68
MPH winds from the north .
Federal Mogul - .221
Friday, A11gust 6
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will climb
from 57 to 68 by late this
morning. Skies will be sunny
with 5 to I 0 MPH winds from
the south turning from the
north as ""the morning progresses.
OAK HARBOR (AP) The Davis-Besse nuclear
power plant reactor unexpectedly
shut
down
Wednesday during · testing,
marking the first problem for
the plant since it resumed
generating electricity at full
capacity in April after being
A body shop employee of
shut down for two .years.
an adjacent car dealership
No workers were in danger,
said he felt his own building and two U.S. Nuc'lear
shudder in the wind gusts and Regulatory
Commission
looked across a field behind inspectors were,present when
the two dealerships as rain the shutdown occurred at
and wind hit their peak, bend- 10:24 a .m., said NRC
spokesman Jan Strasma.
ing trees nearly horizontal.
Todd
Schneider,
"It looked like a tornado,"
said Dave Steele, of adjacent spokesman for FirstEnergy
Corp., which owns the plant,
Bob Tatone Suzuki.
said the cause of the shutMeteorologist
Mike down was unknown. ·
Gallagher of the National
"It's looking .like it could
Service
in be related to some routine
Weather
Wilmington said wincls were testing that' was being con. reported at 47 mph in the area ducted at the time," he said.
at 10:35 a.m.
"We never got any report of
anything big," Gallagher
said.
COLUMBUS (AP)
FirstEnergy Corp. would be
allowed to apJ?IY for higher
electnctty mtes tf the cost of"tts
fuel increases under a ruling
Wednesday by state regulators.
The
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio modified its June 9 order that the
Akron, based utility accept
bids for electric power beginning next year. FirstEnergy,
the
Ohio
Consumers'
Counsel and other customer
groups asked the PUCO for a
rehearing in the case.
·

FAIRBORN
(AP)
Strong winds cau~ed the collapse of a roof and a concrete-block wall at a car dealership Wednesday, · killing
one worker and injuring
another, said authorities in
thi s western Ohio city.
All other workers at
Fairborn
Buick
were
accounted for after the collapse about I 0:30 a.m ., said
police Capt. Ron Van Nuys.
The victim, who was dead
at the scene, was ·identified
by Fairborn police as James
Rhodes; 38, of Tipp City. Van
Nuys said Rhodes was in the
dealership's body sh\)p.
The second victim was at
Miami Valley Hospital with
injuries that weren 't life-

threatening, Van Nuys said.
City Fire Chief Rudy
Weyland said it appeared
strong winds ripped off a portion of the metal roof of the
dealership and the wall also
collapsed.
Authorities said they did
not know if the building had
previous structural problems.
No other . buildings we(e
aftected.
A natural gas line leading
to the dealership was damaged but authorities said the
gas was turned off, along
with the other utilities.
Three employees were in
the body shop, with about 17
other dealership employees
in other parts of the building,
Weyland said.

"1!f,.c~ f(; ~ f? ~J f(; 'JP(;"
I

Pllllllol((/~ &amp; !/~tKtltj

/Vall .I

I • Name:
I eAddress:

I'
I

I

1·

I

eCity,State&amp;Zip:
• Telephone:
,
,
el would likelopurc~_tile(s)at$100each.
• Please check appropriate box:
·
•
lnHonorof
InMemoryof

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Rockwell - 37.71
Sears - 35.69
SBC- 25.59
AT&amp;T - 14.76
USB - 28.81
Wendy's - 34.97
Wai-Matt - 53.20
Worthington - 19.80
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Strasma said there was a
routine surveillance test
being conducted on one of
four reactor trip circuit breakers. He said the circuit breaker shuts down the reactor as a
safety precaution.
"All plant safety systems
· functioned
normally,"
Strasma said.
Schneider said the reactor
was expected to be restarted
within a few days.
The plant along Lake Erie
in northern Ohio was closed
in February 2002 for routine
maintenance. A month later,inspectors found corrosion on
the re;:tctor. Leaking boric
acid had eaten almost
·through a 6-inch-thick 'steel
cap. The damage led to a
review of 68 similar plants ·
· nationwide.
Davis- Besse has undergone
$600 million in repairs.

Improving the safety culture of the plant was one of
the requirements FirstEnergy
had to document before it
was allowed to end the long
repair shutdown.
S trasma said one of the
four reactor trip circuit breakers is checked each three
weeks, so that they are all
checked over a three-month
period.
';Whether it has to do with
an equipment problem, personnel or if it was procedu~al
has not been determined," he
said.
The reactor was in "hot
standby" mode after the trip.
That means it remained at
normal operating pressure
and temperature and · ~as .
ready for restart pending testing or any repair that may be
needed, Strasma said.

PUCO revises order in rate case

Today in the Sentinel ...

r----------------,

Gannett - 83.62
General Electric - 32.88
· GKNLY ~ 4.375
Harley Davidson - 58.60
Kmart - 70.56
Kroger 15.97
Ltd - 19.81
NS6 - 27.10
Oak Hill Financial - 33.48
OVBC - 31.10
Peoples - 25.32
Pepsico - 51.96
9.88
Premier Rocky Boots - 19.60
AD Shell - 50.07

Davis-Besse reactor shuts down
unexpectedly during testing

One killed in roof collapse
at Dayton-area car dealer

One line -18 ch"aracterslspaces allowed jJer line

State regulators authorized
power suppliers to bid to provide electncity to FirstEnergy
Corp, customers . .]f competi·
tors cannot beat FirstEnergy's
price by January, the company will be allowed to freeze
rates for three years in
exchange for a customer fee,
, estimated at $15 for an average monthly bill.
The commission's modification allows FirstEne(gy to
apply for adjustments in fuel
costs it passes on to customers . If customers buy

energy from a different supplier, they would not pay for
the adjustment, the commission said. The commission in
its June order had denied
FirstEnergy's plan to adjust
its fuel charge.
'The modifications we made
today further refine a plan that
we believe balances rate certainty for FirstEne~'s customers.
provides financtal security for
FirstEnergy and promotes fur.
ther development of competitive ·markets," · commission
Chairman Alan Scluiber said.

'.' fa/l(tft~~ O.f't lit railt~ - !lift~ /l~eti t'etk,., .!titeitrl «J/ti
11
t
fiKt'!e~ o.l(r/ ttaff, eofof'td «1/ti /lft/lffJI"tH D.lfrl Jou.l(d «1/ti lolfe.
The PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL FOUNDATION is proud to announce a new
Honor &amp; Memory Wall that will be created in remembrance or -tribute to family, friends and loved ones.
The addition will be created in a "quilt" design to represent the family unity and the varied personalities
that comprise our community and hospital. Corian tiles can be purchased for $100 each. The tiles will be
engraved with the name of the selected individual then 'displayed. The anistic creation will be located in

eGivenby:
T~m li11a -18 charactmlspaces allowedpe;.line

Qu1

.

your life. Return with payment to: Pleasant VaHey Hospital, ATTN: Community Relations Department,

• Please check appropriate bole

No Appointment Nec~sacy

Cash

Check

Mastercard _

Vtsa
Nam~on card: _ _ _~---Account Number; _ _ _ _ _ __
Expiration Date:

740-992-6700
'E. Main Stl;eet ·

I
L-------~-~------~

~;·

-

.J

the main lobby of the hospital and will always remain a part of the org'anization's walls.
,Please complete the attached form jn honor or remembrance of someone who made a difference in

$19.gg

Our goal is to be able to provide you, our
customers, with the best possible service, ·
effectively. This rate increase was EPA recommended along with being the first in 14
years. We thank you for your cooperation.

;

Aug . 4, 2004

• Nameofiojlividual(s):

Public Notice
The Syracuse Racine Regional Sewer District .-~ ·
, will be implementing a new rate structure •.,..,
o

and all over expenses have given us no
'
choice but to become current
with the times.

SUiJday Tl(11es-

ODNR has ·e3f111arked $6,500
to remove graffiti defacing
shoreline boulders.
An ODNR landscape
architect ·has toured the
parks with an eye toward
adding flower beds and
other plantings that would
reduce maintenance.
State workers are also raking the beaches clean and
installing doors on stalls at
several park restrooms.

r.~~=::::::-.----,

•· • ·• effective September I, 2004. We regret any
· inconvenience, however rising cost, inflation

~

constraints, personnel prob!ems and wet weather had
complicated matters, they said.
"We do recognize there is.
a problem and we will take
appropriate steps to correct
that,:• ·said Jim Downs,
assistant manager of the
Cleveland Lakefront Park.
The state is adding workers,
improving "istas by removing
trees and scrub that sprouted
from th~ parks' shoreline, and

Thursday, .August 5, 2004

A DAY ON WALL STREET

State to give Cleveland
Lakefront State Parks a makeover
CLEVELAND (AP) The state has begun cleaning up its busiest park systern after numerous complaints about overgrown
weeds, graffiti and trash.
The Ohio Department of
Natural Resources said it's
responding to maintenance
problem;; ' at the 419-acre
Cleveland Lakefront State
Park system, which had 9 mil- ·
lion visitors last year. Budget

PageA7

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

..

·2520 Valley Orive, Point Pleasant, wy 25550. Cash, check and credit cards accepted. Please make checks
payable to the "Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation."
.For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.

�.,
•
••
Thursday, Aug. 5, 2004

www.mydallyuntlnel.com

~ Af • The Daily Sentinel

B-1

The Daily Sentinel

.INSIDE
Reds, Indians win, Page B2 ·
Sowards wins Ohio Open, Page 83
Cowboys cut QB Carter, Page 84

Thursday, August 5, 2004

•

. Eight D y~ C·_, 1t: to play Sternwheel . Regatta

Gt~lllt~ ·

CONFERENCE

Fair

e

. "We're not a bunch of name appears on albums that Wisconsin where they played With the dream still in their
;diets and drunks,': says Neill have . sold a combmed 100 clubs and·' maxed out their eyes and a little money in
Steinke, singer-songwriter for million co pies, "Silence To credit cards.
their pockets they trudged
Eight Days Gone. "We have a The Naysayers follqws · a pair
Down on their luck, they on, changed their lead guimusical maturity that the of self-produced efforts, decided to go back to tarist and brought in Berlclee
: teenage angst-ridden rock 2002's " In The Absence Of Pennsylvania and give musiC College of Music guitar vir.. artists being shoved down the Subtlety" (an album pro- one last shot.
tuoso Steve Miceli. A firstpublic's throats do11't. This is a duced; recorded and paid for
"At this time I'd gone generation son of Italian
.~ime and a generation look- · entirely by the band) and broke three times. I asked immigrants, Miceli grew up
. ing for what we're doing 2003's 303 Sessions EP.
myself, is this the direction I in Orange County, Calif.,
auitar rock that's soulful, sin- . "Joe wanted to do a record want to take? But musia- was before , returning
..,to
cere and intimate, that goes like this . for a long. time." my life, a part of who I am
· ke sa1'd. ·"H e be1·1eves Ill
· and I made the de'fint'tl'va~ Wilmington,
Dela. ,where he
was born.
. b eyon d t h e suncace an d rna kes Stem
a connection."
what we're doing and called decision that n'msic was
"Silence
To
The in a lot of'favors for us."
something that I shou(d be '· "I was 13 and it was hard to
Naysayers," the band's most
None of the members of doing."
make friends. So one day I sat
recent album, was released Eight Days Gone was actually
With
Zadeh · still
as in my room and tried to learn
June 23, 2004 on the Ragin' hom in Pennsylvania. Nei l enthused as ever abootthe to play guitar. Six hours later
Grace/Titan Entertainment Steinke (named after Neil music th ey were making, they I was hooked - it came natulabel.
·
rliamond , believe it or not) enlisted a mutual acquain- rally to me - and within four
· But the .. road hasn't been was born in Seattle, John tance, Gary Bonneau to play months I. was playing bars and
smooth. Living at the base of Zadeh in New Mexico, bassist · bass. However, the resident clubs." Miceli said.
a mountain, Steinke and Gary Bonneau in Brooklyn, bad boy's teimre in the group
Eight Days Gone have sure:drummer John Zadeh risked and lead guitarist Steve Miceli was nearly cui short when he ly paid their dues. Only last
:going broke for a fourth time, in Delaware. Steinke moved hacked up thre.e fingers on his summer, Steinke, Zadeh and
·'rook out a loan and gutted an 24 times before his family left hand while sawing wood Bonneau were laying landabandoned trailer which was finally settled in the Lehigh flooring. "I thought my scaping stone so they could
left in the middle of a landfill, Valley. By thanime; the one- dream had shattered. I had no get out of debt.
"We're not that tortured,
turning it into the recording 'time drummer discovered insurance, I couldn't work.
studio where they crafted Nirvana and Van Morrison But I locked myself in my
we don't suck our thumbs,'_'_
.. their latest album.
and had picked up his moth- room developed a way t h at I
· The ' seclusion enabled · er's acoustic guitar and began could play with my fingers adds Steirtke, "but I think we
c 1k~ b ase d writing songs.
c
were all lucky to come
Steinke to era ft a 10
t h e way t h ey were, an d . a .ew
album with heavy guitars and
Meeting each other in high months later I came back to together when we did
pounding drums that has a school, Steinke and Zadeh the guys and said I was ready." because I think great music
storytelling type of feel. quickly began collaborating.
At this time they were on happens when we are togeth·Produced by Joe Smith, the After high school, th e two an independent label that er and now I can't wait for
.0 r 1 a n d o - b . a s e d decided to try out the b\IT- went belly up and ihe guys the world to hear what we
proaucer/engineer
whose geomng music sc·e ne m went back to their day jobs. can do."

iafo: ·
~t~j,.~e, {vot~als, gui~r)·

i

•

if
;!$,
c

-~ ~

•\,

F'es~val Info:
.
Charleston, the capital city of West Virginia, serves as host to the
Charleston Sternwheel Regatta as tens of thousands of people gather on
-Kanawha Boulev:;rd to enjoy grand sternwheeler boats, great local food
and m_!lsic ..Al~mg with boat races and river centered events, the Regatta
featur~s nighdy concerts including national acts and th e WV Symphqny ·'
orcbestra on Sunday evening. The Taste of Charleston features local cuisine, while the Pressley Ridge Ice Cream Sunchy brings new flavor to the
Boulevard. These four days of Labor Day activities are the offiCial goodbye to summer.
·
.
· ·
·
Foun~d jn 1970 by 12 year old Nelson Jones, this event originally
beg;m .as a Way to celebrate the great Kanawha River's history and the
charm of the' Sternwheeler boats paddlif!g along.its banks.
There are activities for everyone; daytime children's events, a Sunday
afternoon gospel sing, evening .concerts, the Distance Walk, the 15 mile
Distance Run, LifeBridge's Rubber Ducky Race and the music of the
Grand Feature Parade. Throw in the hot air balloon's night glow and the
photo opportunities abound.
.
· '

- --------

Pull, pull, pull!

power, single cylinder class and a
20 horsepower twin cylinder

GALLIPOLIS - Area children will be' able to pull their
way to the winners circle Friday
night during the Kiddie Trae tot
Pull contest.
·
Sponsored by the Gallipolis
FFA chapter, fFA Alumni and
the Gallia County Agricultural
Society, the tractor pull begins at
6 p.m., Friday at the Main Stage.
Each contestant will peddle a
tractor and pull the attached sled
as far as they can. Wmners will
be determined by the longest
pulls in each class. In the event
that there is more than one full
pull in a class, a pull off will be
conducted to determine the
wmner.
Prizes will be presented to the
top three pullers in each class.
The decision of the sponsors is
final.

class.
Entry fees will be $15 per
mower in each clas1. Trophies
will be awarded to the top fuur
finishers in each class with a
payout of$50 for first place; $35
for second place; $25 for third
place and SIS for fourth.
.
. To register, receive modification rules, requirements and
complete race n~es, contact
Eugene Elliott at (740) 446- .
·
0652 ·

Crash into the
pulling track
The
GALLIPOLIS
Demolition Derby o,vill rock the
County
Junior
Gallia
Fairgrounds Pulling Track at .7
p.m., Saturday.
The demolition derby is open
to any AmeriCan made, stock
bodied cars. No four-wheei drive-s, Jeeps, trucks, convertibles,
hearses, lin1ousines, o~ Chrysler.
Imperials will be allowed. Oruy
stock hardtop or station wagon
bodies will be accepted .
There is a $50 entry fee per
car and a..Pit pass for family
members age 16 or ol.der i.s
available for $10. Drivers must
be age 18 or older.
Car inspection will begin at
noon and all cars must be
checked in and inspected by
5:30 p.m. There is a no alcohol

The fun side of

mowing

GALLIPOLIS - It sotinds
li!ce a landscaper's nightmare, but
this year's Gallia County Junior
fair will play host to lawn
mower races.
Starting at9 a.m., Aug. 7, lawn
mowers will ·line up on the
pulling track for the race.
Lonnie B~. the ilirboard
presidents, srud the board felt dJe
lawn mower races would add a
new twist to the entertainment
already lined up for the fair.
Mower races are just like auto .
races except, for one glaring difference. B~ said that wid1 a
few modifications, must qualitYing lawn mowers can be made
ordrug~e.
·race-ready.
The deadline for pre-registraThe event is open to racers
age 16 and older and will fea- tion for the Demolition Perby
ture two classes: a 12.5 horse- is at 5 p.m., friday

Auditions for Henry
·1v, Part One
Performance dates are
October 14, 15 and 16,
·2004. For more information,
please contact Dr. Elizabeth
Brown at (740) 245-7385.
This production of Henry
IV, Part One is co-sponsored
by the Madog Center for
118.
There are roles for men Welsh Studies and the
and women of all ages. English Honors Society of
Everyone is welcome to the University of Rio
Grande.
audition.

RIO GRANDE - Open
Auditions will be held at the'
University of Rio Grande
· for. Shakespeare's Henry IV,
Part One on Aug. 24 and
Aug. 26 at 6 PM in the Bob
Evans Farm Hall, Room

Beach _party

at Lake Alma

WELLSTON - · • The
eighth annual Lake Alm.a
beach party will be held
Aug: 8 at Lake Alma State·
Park, Wellston, Ohio.
Competitiye activities will
be held throughout the day.
There will be a five-kilometer run at 9 a.m. Three-on-

three basketbally will be heid
11 · a.m .; four-on-four coed
beach volleyball at :l p.m.; a
triahtlon at 5 p.rri. and a
team triathlon at 7 p.m.
Contact the Lake Alma
State Park office for more
information at (740)3844474. ·

Two Convenient Locations:
1/4 Mlle$rth Pomeroy/Mason

Fresh Summer
Fruits and Bright
Summer Flowers

AVAILABLE NOW!,

·

Bridge
ft'ason, WV 25280
. Phone (304)

2400 Eastern Ave.
(Acroas from KMart)
Ganlpol!s, Ohio 45631

(740)

Sayre
retakes
lead at
Rivers·ide

Big Ten·
·to test
instant
.replay

· ~sUntil
High School
Football
Season!!!·
Michigan picked
~y media to win
Big Ten title

~··"'"'

CHICAGO - The Big Ten
will be the focus of college foot- ·
ball's attention this season as
much for what happens above the
field as on it.
The Big Ten will use instant
replay this fall, the first conference in the country to do so. lf the
one-year experiment g()Cs well,
other conferences are expected to
adopt it.
·
"Other conferences around the
cou ntry are watching us and
watching us carefully," David
Parry, the Big Ten's coordinator
of officials, said Wednesday. "My
guess is they want this to be successful because if it is, they .will
go to the (NCAA) and say, 'Can
we have this as an opt10n for .
other conferences?'"
Under the Big Ten's system, a
.technical adviser will watch the
game from the press box. If he
sees something questionable,
officials on the field will be notified via pager and play will be
halted while the adviser reviews
the call. The call for review must
be made before the next play
begins·, or the opportunity passes.
The only video the adviser can
usc in his decision is that from !he
television feed. He' ll also have a
digital video recorder - · think ·
TiVo- to review the play ..In the

MASON, W.Va. On the
strength of a first-place finish
Tuesday, New Haven 's Ralph Sayre
reel aimed the top spot in the
Riverside Senior Men's Golf
League standings.
Sayre. along with teammates
Jack Maloney (Gallipolis), Santo
Liberatore (Point Pleasant, W.Va.)
and Bill Winebrenner (Syracuse)
shot a 13-under 57 to earn 15 firstplace points.
Two shots back was the trio of
Dewey Smith (Gallipolis), George
Mill (Point Pleasant, W.Va.) and
Lew Gilland (Mason, W.Va.).
Mike Bragg (Point Pleasant),
Sheldon Lowry (Athens), Paul
· Lanham (Ripley, W.Va.) and Elmer
Click (Cottageville, W.Va.) finished
third with a 10-under 60 round.
Sayre. who now . owns I 82.5
points on the season. leapfrogged
Patriot's Chet Thomas in the standings. Sayre has a 7.5 point advantage over Thomas, and is 16.5
points better than third-place Paul
Lanham.
. The closest to the pin . honors
went to Sayre on hole number 14,
and to Lowry on seven. .
There are eight weeks of league
play remaining. To date, Ill different men have . played at least one
week of competition.
Senior League Standings
1. Ralph Sayre, 182.5; 2. Chat Thomas, 175; 3. Paul
lanham, 166:4.Ciari&lt;Greene, 159.5;5. Kelth1Noode,
152.5; 6. Elmer Click, 144.5: 7. Earl Johnson, 144; 8.
Don Wilson, 137; 9. DEIW£tl Smith. 134; 10. Hai'IB)'
Blain, 129.5: 11 . MiKe Bragg, 127.5: 12. Jim
Cunningham, 126; 13. Mid&lt;. Winebrenr~er, 124.5: 14.
Jack Fox. 124.5: 15. Dale Hamson. 123: 16. Chuck
Yeager. 122; 16. Ken W11ited. 122; 18. DaQa

Winebrenner, 121; 19. Bill W1nebrenner. 119.5; 20.
Tom Nunnery, 11 9; 20. Claude Proffitt, 119; 22.
Howard Parker, 117; 23 . Harley Rice, 116.5; 24. Fbjd
Chapman, 115; 25. Santo Liberatore, 114; 26. Don
Kay, 113; 27 .. Bill Pethtel, 112.5; 28. Bill YohO, 111 .5;
28. Cur1is Grubbs, 111.5; 30. Ron Phalin, 110.5; 31
Pat Williamson, 110.5; 32. Jack Maloney, W9.5; 33.
Mac McCarty, 105; 34. Russ-'Wood, 103: 35. Les

Please.see Replay; B:J

¢avs to play
~ree preseason
..ga~es in Ohio

Peterson, t01 ;36. JimCapehM, 100;37.BobHysell ,

99.5.

Montgomery can visualize gold.medal

CLEVELAND (AP)
The Cleveland Cavaliers'
eight-game preseason schedule includes only one game in
Cleveland of the team's three
games in Ohio.
·
The Cavaliers play at Gund
Arena on Oct. 18 against the
New Jersey Nets. The team
also is to play Oct. 20 against
Charlotte at the University of
[layton Arena and Oct. 25
against Boston at the
Schottenstein Center in
~olumbus.
The Cavaliers open the preSilason Oct. 14 at Memphis.
They also play· Chicago on
Oct. 16 in St. Louis; Boston ·
on Oct. 23 in Connecticut;
Atlanta on Oct. 28 in
Pittsbur~h; and Toronto on
Oct. 29 m Canada.

Coaches pick
Wooster; media .
~lect Wittenberg
: GRANVILLE (AP) Coaches and the media agree
ihat Wittenberg and Wooster
lire the top two North Coast ·
!=onference football teams in
preseason polls.
·
,. They just disagree which
team should be in which
spot.
. Coaches put Wooster in the
top spot, · while the media
jlicked Wittenberg. Only
three points separ~te the two
teams in the med1a poll and
just one point in the coaches
poll.
..
.
·: Wittenberg received eleven
first-place votes in the media
poll and two from the coaches. Wooster got five first~ace votes from the coaches
and 14 from the media.
Both groups pick Wabash
third and defending champion Allegheny fourth.
-

. &gt;!&amp;.:~··&lt;'
.....

BY NANCY ARMOUR
Associated Press

:. CHICAGO
(AP)
Michigan is starting right
where it left off.
The defending champion
Wolverines were picked by
the media Wednesday as the
preseason favorite to win the
Big Ten conference. Ohio
State was second, and Iowa
was third.
.. Purdue quarterback Kyle
Orton was the preseason pick ·
· for offensive ~layer of the
year while Oh10 State linebacker A.J. Hawk was chosen
as the defensive standout.
·. Michigan
returns
17
Slarters - seven on offense,
six on defense - from last
year's squad, which went 7- I
on its way to its 41st conference title. It was the
Wolverines' fourth Big Ten
title under coach Lloyd Carr
(1997, 1998,2000, 2003).
. The Buckeyes have I I
s.tarters back from last year's
team, w!lich tied for second
in the Big Ten and won the
Fiesta Bowl for a second
straight year. Iowa returns I I
starters, including seven on
defense.
Orton is the Big Ten's leading statistical returnee in
yards passing; passing e£ficiency and total offense.
Hawk was among the top I0
i11 the conference with I 06
fuckles last year.

---141---·---~

STAFF REPORT

. sports@ mydailytribune.com

·

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This is part three
of a four part series about Ohio

Olympians.]

.

.

BY M.R. KROPKO
Associated Press
CLEVELAND When Toccara
Montgomery first became intrigued with
wrestling as a sophomore in high school,
her goal was to eventually be good
enough to stop
losing matches
against boys.
Now the 21year
-&lt;lid senior at
!
Cumberland
College,
in
Williams bur~,
Ky.. · doesn t
mind saying she often visualizes herself
at a medals oeremoily in the Summer
Olympics in Athens.
"It's been playing back in my head, me
standing on the podium. with my medal
on, maybe holding flowers and just the
. anthem playing with the flag over my
head," she said recently in Cleveland, her
hometown. ."It's something I'm looking
forward to."
Montgomery, one of four members of
the first . U.S. Olympic women's
wrestling team, is widely considered to
be a stron~ contender for gold. She won
a champiOnship in the 2003 Pan
American Games. ' She has lost some Toccara Montgomery of Cleveland, front, works on Kristie Marano 0f tolorado Springs, Colo. dur ing ttJeir 158.5 lbs .
matches but alsO has, won at least onoe (72kg) Freestyle match at the U.S . Olympic Wrestling Team Trials in Indianapolis May 23. Montgomery, now a 21·
year-&lt;lid senior at Cumberland College, in Williamsburg, Ky., doesn't mind saying she often visualizes herself at a
·Please - Vlsuallz" B:J
medals ceremony in the Summer Olympics in Athensc (AP)
·

OHIO

U.S. needs Iverson 3-pointer to beat Germany
'

BY RoY KAMMERER
Associated Press

----.:;..:.=====--~

·.
COLOGNE, Germany - llungs
are not looking good f?r the NBA
stars on the U.S. Olymp1c basketball
team.
.
.
.
·
The Amenclllls needed a .final-shot
3-pomter by Allen Iverson from JUSt

- -- - · - -

'

~~~ - --

--

across midcourt Wednesday io pull
out an 80-77 exhibition victory over
' Germany - a team that failed to
even qualify for the Athens Games.
A day after losing 9.5-78 to unheraided Italy, the U.S. players celebrated their last-gasp triumph against
. Germany as though they had won. an
NBA championship. When Iverson's
second 3-pointer in the final 11, min-

utes went through the net, two-time
league MVP Tim Duncan raised a
finger to the sky as if to say. "We' re
No. I!" Other team members piled
atop Iverson on the court.
"That was great. It felt good
because it was the first time in my life
I hit a buzzer beater like that."
Iverson said. "That's what basketball
is all about."

Duncan led the Americans with 19
points. followed by Carmela
Anthony with 16 and Iverson with
15. But the United States again struggled against a team thought to be no
competition.
.
~
The German s· top player, ..Dallas .
Mavericks All-Star Dirk Ndwitzlti1 ~

Pleue see Iverson, B:J ·
--

•

•

•·

----- ~ ----..

11

�.'

,,
'

PageB2

BASEBALL

The DaiJy Sentinel
..•

Thursday, August 5,

2004

Major League Baseball
American League
EAST

w

NY'fankees
Boston

"

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58
5I
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N'f Yankees 8. Oakland 6. (1 1)
BaltiiTIOfe 6, Seattle 3
Tams B. Detron 0
Minnesota 6, AnaMim 3
Kansas City I 1, ChiCago So- 0

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Adam
Dunn hit two homers and Felipe Lopez
·added a go-ahead two-run shot in the
sixth, leading the Cincinnati Reds to an
· 8-7 victory over the San Francisco
Giants on Wednesday night.
Sean Casey had three hits and Juan
Castro doubled home a late run for the
Reds, who blew a big early lead but
rallied for just their second victory in
13 games.
Dunn hit his 30th a nd 31st homers
; off Brett Tomko to move into second
: place in the NL behind Philadelphia's
: Jim Thome. He connected for a three, run shot in the third inning and a solo
; homer in the fifth, but Sim Francisco
: tied it with a four-run rall'y in the fifth.
· The Reds got a much-needed victo: ry, but also got another scare. Ken
: Griffey Jr. went 2-for-3 with his 400th
' career double in his first appearance
: since tearing his hamstrinel on July I 0,
: but the veteran Cincinnati slugger left
: in the fifth i11ning with stiffness in hi s
· hamstring.
·
: ·Pinch-hitter Dustan Mohr hit just the
; second inside-the-park homer in the
· ballpark's history, but Tomko and his
i relievers struggled in San Francisco's
: fifth loss in seven games.
· Josh Hancock (2· 1) got two out~ for
: his second victory in Cincinnati' since
: arriving in a trade with Florida ·on '
:Friday.
. • The Reds went ahead when Lopez
: got just his second homer of the season
. : oifScott Eyre (0-2). San Francisco got
' a run back when a fan in the left-center
: stands stuck out his mitt to catch J.T.
; Snow's drive to the wall, sending Dei vi
· Cruz home from first base on the
: ground-rule double.
; Javier Valentin tripled and scored on
: Castro's double in the seventh.
· Cincinnati's lead shrank to 8-7 when
: Ray Durham homered in the eighth,
; but Gabe White j!Ot Barry Bonds on a
; ~eak inning-endmg groundet;.
. In the nmth, Danny Graves walked
:· A.J. Pierzynski arid Marquis Grissom
: l;tit an infield sin!ll~ - both. with one
~ out - before stnking out pmch-httter
: Ricky Ledee and getting Edgardo
j. Alf~ on a gro!Jndout for his NL; leading 35th save m 43 chances.
· Bonds went 1-for-3 with two walks,
; including his 98th intentional pass of

· the season.

: Cincinnati starter I ose Acevedo blew
: a four-run lead in ' the fifth to remain
. winless in eight straight starts, allow, ing eight hits and five runs in 4 2-3
~ innings. ·
·
• • But Tomko allowed 10 hits and five
~ iuns in five shaky innings. He also
~ iteyed in in the third after narrowly
, ~ lleflecting Casey's line drive before It
~ !tit him in the h~.
~. In the fifth, Mohr's long fly to the
~ wall ricocheted off Dunn's glove and
'rolled to the home bullpen down the
; left-field line - and Mohr never
: stopped sprinting on the way to a head: fitSt slide at home. .
·
1\vo O\lts later, Bonds scored on
Wily Mo Pena's error to cut
, Cincinnati's lead to 5-4. Pierzynski
; then siugled home Pedro Feliz with the
• tying run, b.ut Pena ended the inning by
: throwing out Pierzynski at the plate on
~ Neifi Perez's single.
\

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T-2:40 . A-18,133 (-43,969) .

Indians 14, Blue Jays 5
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Montreal10. St. Loois 6
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San Francisco 11, Cincinna~ 0

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Umpire!t--1-tome, Gary Cederstrorn: First; Jl'n
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Doclge1'8 2, Pirates 1

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Phllldelphla
004 12tl 000 7
S1n Dl-oo
002 021 000 5
E---Nevin (8). DP--Philadelphra 1. San Diego
1, LOB:-Phhdelphla 5, Sen Diego 10. 28Aol~ n s {28), BA.breu (28). Aurilia 14). Loroltil
[32~, Buche'nen (2). 39--Gian~~le
HRFiol ns (6). DaBull (131. KGroone (7), FlaHernandaz {9). SB--Gianville 2 (6), Ulley (2)
cs-oa6ell (1 ).
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0

0

0

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130001
1 I 0 0 1 1

Wcmll S.12
San Dlega

5 a 7 5 1 6
21000 - 3
220001
"-'b pitched to 1 batter In the 6th
WP-Ealon .
·
UmplrM--Homa, Lance B&amp;rt&lt;adale; Fir!!, Ab·
so Marquez: Secood. Ed Aap\Jwte: Third, Ted
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T-;3:06. ~3.379 (42.«5).
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30 2 0
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1000
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31 10
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(1), lWibf' (17), CJoMton (20). 38-CitY·
ton (4) , Hollldty (3). HFI-S~ou (24) ,
ARamlrs: t23J, TWsbr (13), Helfoo (25),
MaSwHnrf-t ($), CJo1m1on (12). SB-CPat·
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BAmNG--t Suzukl, Slwiltle, .355; IAodrlguez,

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Anaheim, .332; ASanchez , Oelroft. .330:
MYooog, TeleaS, .329: CGuillen, DeWit, .325.
' FIUN$-VG ue~re ro. Anaheim. 83: Damon.
Bos1on, eo; CGuljen, Detro~. 79; Shefllelcl ,
~ Yortc. 79; Mora, Beltimorl'l. n : Urwton ,

Clweland, n; ~-Texas, 76.

Clevetand,

VMertklez, Cleveland, . 80:

CGui~.,, ~- &amp;o.
HrTS-ISurukl, Se!ltue, 164; M'1b!XIg, Tercas.
149: Tajeda, Balmlora, 136; ltGuarraro, Aria·
heim, 136; Crawlord, Tampa Bay, 134:CGulllen,
aet:M· t:ll; OamM_. ~. 1J7: .M.optt,

Bdinore, 127: IRot;Wigus2, ~ 127.
HOWE RtiNS-Kon&amp;fko, ~ 28; ARoQiguez. New York, 26: MRaml,..z. "'*on. 28:
OOrtiz, eoston, 27: r.-ra. T-. 26; Blalodl.

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24; Shef!leld. New'l't:n, 24, .
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15;3, .833, 3.50; Rogers, T-..•. 13-4, .785,
4.29; JRincon, Mlnna!Cta, 9-3, .750, 2.55;
PMarti'lez, Bolton, 11-4, .733, 4.07; Schilina.
' Boston, 13-5, .722. 3.37;CLN, Clelleland, 10.
4, .71-4. 4.83: BueMer. Chi:ago. 10-4•. 714,

3.82.

.

STAIKIOUTS-Ssntana, Mlnnuota, 173:

- - . 1 4 3;Schl........... 137,
FGIIcla, ChiMao, 131 ; KEseobar, Anshalm,
112; Hardin, Oakland, Itt; Pntiro, Seattle,
111 ; JVuq.Jez. New 'r'ort.:, 111 .
SAVU MRMn. New 'tbrlc. 38: f;c:o.m.

TIIICM, :r.i!; Ntr!hln, Mn-.ota, 30: oe.t, TsmPI Bly. 22: Pwdwll, Anaheim, 18; Goardado,
s..tdl, 18; Foulka, Bolton, 17; UtbN, o.trolt,
17

NL IAiciiii ~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~

IATnHG Borldl, Sin FrMclloa. .352; Aoltn,
St. L.ooll, .335; Lmtta,
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LOI Mgl6ll. .3.1t : l-leo'lon, Cokndo, .33 1;

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phis. 82; Helton, Cdo!wla, 80; Bondt, Sin
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St. Loul. T7: IWnu, ~
n ; Cll:lrh. Flortctra. ~; wn. Los .~ng~~ta.
78; Pujola.

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HOM I MINI--'Thoms. PhiiHtlphla. 52:

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Second. Gary Darlhg: Thlrd. Mark Cartson.'T3:15. A-35,779 (50,345].
Ta~arez W,J.-3

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N.Y. Meta (V.Zambrano 0-0) at Milwaukee (Santo~ 9·6), 2:05 p.m.
Chicago Cube {Prior 2·2) at Colorado (Jennings 10-8). 3:05p.m.
PlrtsQurgll (S.Burnett $-3) at Los Angeles (We8V8r 8·10), 3:10p.m.
Cincinna1i (Harang 1}3) at San Franclr;co (Rueter 6-ll), 3:35 p.m .
FIOoda (.4-.J.Bumett 2·5) at Arizona (Cormier t-2), 5:05p.m.
Atlat11a (Hampton Hl) at Hous1on (Oii\ler 3-3). 6:05p.m.
Moo treal (Pa\lerson 1-2) at St. Louis (Carpenter 11·4), 8:10p.m.
Philadelphia (MillwOod 9-6) at SanD~ (Hitchcock 0.0), t0:05 p.m.

PB-Budo;.

Tens
030 011 030 8
Detroit
000 000 000 0 TB!atll 3b 5 0 1 0
E-EYoung (4). Manhews 12). OP-Te~as 1, SlodgeH 4100
Detr0112. LOB-Texas 7, Detror\
Cllwayl'1
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4. 2B-AS01iano (19). Matthews (14). DeiiU~­ ASGzlz ss 5 2 3 1
ci {9], ASanchez (9). HA-N1x (11). SF- HMateoptl
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Devil Rays 5, Red Sox 4

BY GREG BEACHAM

,

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P10

19-35

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:cincinnati Reds' Ar;tam Dunn swings
·for a three run home run off San
Francisco . Giants' Brett Tomko in the
·. th ird inn ing Wednesday in San
, Francisco. (AP)

N.Y. The entire schedule for the
Busch series is expected to be
released Thursday.
CHA RLOITE N C
In going to Mexl~o City,
·.. fi . NASCAR wtll contmue tts
• NASrAR 'II .'
. ; .. ...,
. WI stage Its trst . expansion into new markets.
: p01nt s- pa~mg ~vent outside the First~ year chairman Brian
: ~mted States m a half-cen.tury France is trying to bring . the
, hen the. Busch. se ne.s races top-tier Nextel Cup series to the
: next Y.:ar m Mextco City, The New York City market and has
Associated Press has learned. · expressed interest in Mexico
. . A NASCA~ ~fficial , spe~- and Canada.
: '.~g on conditiOn of anon.ynuty. With 36 points races, the
• satd Wed nesday the race IS Nextel Cup sc hedule is consid: scheduled for next spnng at the ered full , so the junior-level
H~rman~s Busch series was the logical
: Autodromo
Rodnguez, a 2.786-mtle road choice to test a foreign market.
course that currently hom
NASCAR official s visited
Champ Car events. .
the Mexico City track several
: The senes also will return times this year, furthering spec. after a three-yearabse~ce to the ulation they were close to a
: road course m Watkms Glen, deal .

27-23
~ 24-32

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ll; Msea, ~. XI: Hoflnwt, SA-l
Disgo,28;1si.IQI ""1,9tl.Du&amp;27.

Cleveland Indians designated hitte r
Travis Hafner, right, is congratulated by
teammate Coco Crisp as Toronto Blue
Jays catcher Gregg Zaun sits in the
background after Hafner's two run
homer in first inning in Toronto on
Wednesday. (AP)

Hafner goes
yard twice
as Tribe
smash Jays·
TORONTO (AP) -Travis Hafner
brought the Cleveland Inilians back
to .500 with another muJtihomer
game.
Hafner homered twice and tied a .
career high with six RBis, and the
Indians ended a four-game losing
streak with a 14-5 victory over the
Toronto Blue Jay s on Wednesday
night.
Casey Blake went 5-for-6 to match
a career hi gh for hits as the Indians
tied their season best with 21 hits.
Clevelan'd also had 21 hits. including
eight home runs , on July 16 at
Seattle.
..
The Indians (54-54) were a seasonhi~h three ga mes over .500 whe n the
sk1d began.
"It was a real big win for us. I don ' t
think our team has been having qual ity at-bats over the last couple of
days," said Hafner, who has t'uur
multihomer games this season. " It
was good for everybody to come out
and get going.''
.
Hafner, who was 4-for-5, also had
six RBi s on July 20 at Anaheim. It 's
the seventh time this season he's had .
four or more RBis in a game.
He hit a 'two-run homer off Josh
Towers (6-4) in the first and a tworun shot off Ju stin Miller in the sixth.
Hafner almost hit his third home
·run of the game with the bases loaded
in the ninth. but center fielder Venion
Wells ca4ght the fly on the warning
track. John McDonald scored on the
sacrifice fl y. ·
"I hit it pretty good, but I knew it
was too high. It was close, but I knew
that it was not going to get out,"
Hafner said .
Tim Laker followed with a'threerun homer off Kevin Frederick, giving Cleveland a 14-5 lead.
Hafner is hitting .326 with 2 1 home
runs and 86 RBis · for the Indians,
who lead the majors with 605 runs.
"He's probably adj usted to this
level probably a little bit quicker than
people anticipated," Cleveland manager Eric Wedge said.
Indians catcher Victor Martinez
left in the bottom of the sixth with a
strained . right hamstring. Shortstop
Omar Vtzquel mtssed the gatne wtth
a brui sed nght foot and is day to day.
"Victor is day to day. It's a slight
strain," Wedge said.
Cleveland batted around in the
fifth ancl scored five runs on
Hafner's RBI double, Martinez 's
run-scoring single, Blake's RBI dou ble; Jody Gerut's !lacrifice fly off
Justin Miller and McDonald's RBI
si ngle.
Toronto's Eric Hinske hit a runscoring single. in the fifth.
After Greg~ Zaun had an RBI sin,. gle in the s1xth, Dave Berg hit a
three-run homer, cutting Cleveland's
lead to 9·5. ·
Jake Westbrook (9-5) won despite
allowing five runs on II hits in six
·
innings.
"I picked a very bad day to get
rocked," Towers said.
Towers, wlio won his previous five
starts, gave up seven runs and 10 hits
in 4 1-3 innings.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

· NASCAR to ·bring Busch Ohio Open
Browns'
CB
signs
[Series to Mexico City
Sowards wins extension
• Bv JENNA FRYER

AwrJ

~c,- 23-29

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C\tMJiand (Durbin 2·31 at Toronto IBusn 1·2), 12:35 p.m.
Texas (Orese 7·6) 81 Delrort (Lflde2ma 1•0). 1:05 p.m.
Oakland {Zilo 7-7) at N.Y. Yankees (K.Brown 6-1), 1:05 p.m
.Anaheim (Ra.Ortil J.6 ) at Minnesota (Mutholliu1d 3-3), 1 10 p.m.
Seattle {Mearilsch 2-0) at TAmpa Bay (Sosa 3-0). 7:15 p.m .
ChiCago White Sox (Garland 7-7} at Kansas City (Greinke 3·8). 8:10·p.m.

1 1·3
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NY Mets 6, Mlwaukee 5
St. louis 5, Montreal4
Chicago Cubs 11. Coklrado 8
• Arizona 11, Florida 6
• Cinclnnati 8, Sao Franeisco 7
_Philadelphia 7, San Diego 5
Los Ang&amp;iea 2, Pineburgtl 1

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Thursday,August5,2004

. "We are looking haq! at
Mexico," France said last ·
month. " Mexico is in large
measur~ the gateway to the
Hispanic race fans. Mexico, for
a lot of reasons, is an important
AURORA (AP) - The
only thing Bob Sowards
country, has to be important to
missed all week was his
us, more ·so than countries that
lofty goal - a 10-s hot vic·are further away."
.
tory in the 81 st Sky Bank
France said at the time any
Ohio Open .
deal to bring the Busch series to
· Sowards shot a 7-underMexico City would be a multipar 65 in the· final round
year contract.
Wednesday for a nineNASCAR has previously
stroke victory over Barry
raced outside the Uruted States,
most recently staging non- · Hinckley to claim · the
$10,000 first prize at rain"
points exhibitiOns in Japan. A
soaked Barrington · Golf
forerunner of ,the Nextel Cup
Club.
·
series held points events in
Sowards fini shed at 16Canada in the 1950s, but the ·
under
200 for the three
Busch series has not ventured
rounds.
beyond the borders.
"I've tried t9 protect a
lead in the past and it backfired ," said Sowards, who
won the event in 2002 and
entered this year's final
· round with a one-shot
advantage. " So, I tried to
win by 10."
Hinckley, who had the
best round of the tournament, ·a ·first-round 64,
again came out firing early.
He hit his approach withm
four
feet on No. 1 and sank
Fourth, seeded Moya beat
the birdie putt to tie for the
Ljubicic 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 in ~e
lead.
first match after the rain delay.
"That's .a nice way to
"I had never beaten him on.
start,"
said Hinckley,, of
hardcourt, so I didn't know
Reynoldsburg. "I was ready
what to expect," said Moya,
to play."
who came in 0-2 against
But the 35-year-old gave
Ljubicic on this surface but 2-0
the shot ri~ht back on No. 2,
·on clay.
three-puttmg from 25 feet
'The court is really fast, and
for bogey.
he served really well," Maya
"My second putt hit a
said. "MyJ serve wasn't really
spike mark and was thrown
good for tliis match."
off line," he said. "Then
The win gave Moya, who
won this tournament in 2002, at . Bob got it going. He played
a fantastic tournament . Still,
least 50 match victories three
I thought I had a chance."
years in a row. Still, he was not
Sowards, playing in a
happy with his play in the first
two rounds because he lost the
steady rain, made three
straight birdies at Nos. 4-5first set in each. But he .said his
desire to win is greater than
6 to open a four-shot lead.
ever.
An errant tee shot. on No.
"I'm really hungry to win,
7 quickly threatened his
and I'm more marure than I
advantage, however.
was five years ago," Maya
"It pushed it just a bit right
said.
and it landed under a little
Dominik Hrbaty, who upset
tree," Sowards said. "But I
Roger Federer on Tuesday to
made a really good shot just
end the top-seeded player's 23to get back to the fairway.
ll)atch winning streak, lost to
Then I sank the putt for par
Jonas Bjorkman 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6and got out of there."
3.

Open by nine

Roddick, ~oya, Hewitt win
:second-round matches
BY TERRY KINNEY

Associated Press
MASON -. Andy Roddick
didn' t know if it was the best
shot he ev~r hit, or the luckiest.
Either way, it set the staele for
his second-round VIctory
·Wednesday over Nicolas
Kiefer' at the Tennis Masters
Cincinnati tournament.
Roddick beat Kiefer for the
third tiine in three weeks, this
time 6-4, 6-4. His offbeat but
brilliant pass in~ shot evened
the score at 30 m game seven,
and he won the next two points
for the service break he needed
to take the opening set.
Whet) Roddick went to the
net after an extended exchange
. of baseline shots, Kiefer lifted a
lob over his head . Roddick
· sprinted back to the baseline,
. whirled and got his racket on
the ball just before it hit th&lt;;
court.
When his shot down the line
skipped out of the reach of
Kiefer's forehand, Roddick
. raised both hands, palms up, to

Visualize,
from .Page 81
over each of her main competi. tors in international events for
her weight class, up to 158.5
pounds.
"It's really a tough weight
,· class, but I feel confident. We' ll
· see," she said.
- USA Wrestling's National
· Women's coach Teny Steiner,
responsible
for
training
America's
best
women
freestyle wrestlers, has no
· doubt that Montgomery will be
- focused and ready.
"Toccara has proven herself
as a definite gold medal con·
· tender. She was second in the
· world championships last year.
She just beat a six-time world
· champ from Canada. I don't
know if' she is a gold medal
· favorite, but &gt;he is defmitely
highly regarded," Steiner said.
"I think her biggest asset is
her demeanor, how calm and

Replay
from Page B1
· few cases where a Big Ten
game isn't televised - 90
percent are - the conference
will do its own video produc. tion for the adviser to use.
The call on the field can be
· overturned only if there is
"indisputable videp .evi-

Iverson
from Page 81.
appeared to have sent the
game to overtime by making
a 3-pointer over two defenders to tie the score at 77 wuh
· 3.2 seconds left. Nowitzki
·scored a game-high 32
points,.
But Iverson, a U.S. co-cap·
tain, came through with his
own clutch shot , one day
• after calling the upset rout
against Italy "a wakeup call."
· That 17 -point difference was
· the largest rriargin of defeat

a

the crowd in
gesture that
could only mean, "How did I
do that?"
Roddick sllid he could only
laugh at his good fortune when
he saw the replay.
"I was going to go between
my legs, but I cpuldn't get there
in .time. ·So I just flailed at it,"
Roddick said. "I didn't really
see it, but I saw people clapping. .·
"It was probably the best shot
I ever hit, or the luckiest. It felt
pretty cool, but I didn't realize
11 was that drastic."
Earlier, Lleyton Hewitt beat
unseeded Gustavo Kuerten,
and Carlos Moya beat Iv;jp
Ljubicic in the $2.5 million
event after persistent, heavy
rains delayed the start of the
morning matches for more than
four hours.
' . Tenth-seeded Hewitt broke
Kuerten 's serve in the second
game and cruised through the
first set. Kuerten prolonged the
second set by br~ng Hewitt
to make it 5-3, but both held
serve thereafter, and the
Australian won 6-3, 6-4.
collected she is even under the
most stressful circumstance,"
he said
This year's Olympics is the
first tQ include women's
wrestling.
"If you don't follow
women's wrestling at all, there
would be a lot of people who
don 't know it exists," Steiner
said. 'There have been world
championships for about 20
years. So the Olympics was
bound to happen sooner or
. later."
The opportunity has inspired
Montgomery.
"It was about two years ago
women's wrestling was accepted to the 2004 Olympic
Games, and I thought, 'Wow, I
might have an opportunity to
compete!' So I started to get
my training centered on Athens
as my primary goal," she said.
At Cleveland East Tech
under coach Kip Flanik, she
tried out for the wrestling team
as a personal challenge she
thought might be fun. There

Browns LB
breaks wrist
Cleveland Browns starting
linebacker Chaun Thompso n
will undergo surgery after
breaking a bone in hi s left
wrist during practice. ·
Browns coach Butch Davis
said Thompson injured hi s
wrist a few days ago but co ntinued to play with it in a soft
cast.
On Thursday, he ' 11 have a
pin inserted into the wrist.
The second-year linebacker is
expected to miss at least the .
club's first two preseaso n
games.
While Thompson is out,
Ben Taylor will move into his
spot at strongside linebacker.'
Taylor started eight .g ames
there last season .

THUR DAY, AUGUST 26, 2004
• MEIGS • EAS,.£11 • SOUTHERN

'VI~ Sure To Be A
.OrtOfTh· .

Year's
Fall Sports
Edition/
IS

dence."
replay system, only the techIn the 68 Big Ten confer- nical advisers - all former
ence games televised last officials who Parry said have
year, there were 42 replay an average of 15 years experiopportunities and 23 calls ence - can call for a review.
would have been reversed. Coaches didn't object to that,
Based on that, Parry estimat· , saying it will linut the intered that one game out of three ruRtions to the game.
·
would feature replay.
'We don' t want to change
" It's not a perfect world. It the tempo," Penn State coach
won 't be a perfect system," Joe Paterno said. "I don' t
Parry said. "We just hope it want one qf my assistants
will be better."
upstairs telling me to chaiUnlike the NFL's instant lenge. Let's just do it."
(or an NBA-stocked U.S.
team.
"We made a lot of improvements over the game last
night, but we have a long
. ways to go," U.S. coach
Larry Brown said.
One of Iverson's other four
3-pointers came with I: 18
left, staking the Americans to
a 75-72 lead. Nowitzki cut
that deficit to 75-74 with two
free throws with 35 seconds
to go.
Anthony, the
Denver
Nuggets' star rookie, made
two foul shots to make it 77 •
74, setting up the final longdistance drama.
The Americans held a slim
•

••

were few if any other girl
wrestlers on opl??sing teams.
Losing to boys did not dim her
spirit, and by her junior year
she started winning.
By her senior year, Flanik
foqnd national girls' Wrestling
eompetitions for her to try.
"He told me I had a talent,
and if I wanted to pursue something greater in the sport he
would help me get to as many
women's tournaments as possible. I still wrestled about eight
matches my senior year against
guys and I won all of them,"
she said.
After high school, sh~ went
to Cumberland on scholarship.
Soon after she made that decision the college's coaching job
for women's wrestling opened
up, and f!anik was hired.
.
The team had about eight
girls her first year and about 27
last year. "Everyone . at
Cumllerland has been really
supportive," Montgomery said.
She is majoring in elementary education.

Sowards credited his
caddy, Ryan Bruncak, for
helping h1m read greens all
week.
"I didn 't listen to him
three times in the fll'st round
and missed all three," he
said. "From there ori, I let
him call the shots."
It helped that Sowards'
continued to assault pin
placements. He went to No.
8, where he hit his second
shot to within a foot.
" It was a lob .wedge," he
said. "With the greens soft,
you could try to throw it at
the pin."
He made the birdie and
fini shed his front nine in 4u.nder 32.
"Goin~ to the back, I was
still in 11," said Hinckley.
"But I bogeyed 10, he
birdied II and there we
were.
''I'm not unhappy, but I
am disappointed that I didn't play too well today."
Hinckley shot l -over 73
for his final round.
Finishing third at S-under
211 was reigning Ohio
Senior Open champion
Gary Robison of Akron,
while Anthony Zummo of
Mayfield Heights was
fourth at 212.
Joe Frustaci, a 17-year-old
high school senior from
Canton, tied for eighth place
at 214.
"I really had a lot of fun,"
said Fristaci, who had a final
round of 3-over 75 .
Sowards, who also won
the PGA National Club Pro
Championship in June,
hopes to continue his run of
success next week at the
PGA Championship m
Kohler, Wise.
"This is a big confidence
boost for me going there,"
said Sowards, pro at
Wedgewood Country Club
in Columbus. "I've played
as well as I can the last
month - but I will be playing a course unlike anything
I can imagine at the PGA."

BEREA
(AP J
Undaunted . by five turbulent
seasons of injuries, losses,
coaching changes and controversy . with the Cleve land
Brown s,
Daylon
McC utcheon signed up, for
· five more.
He survived. So why not ry ·
"If I didn't thin k that they
were going to be better than
my first five, I wouldn't want
io be here ," McCutcheon
said. "I' m tired of losing. It's
been enough. I'm ready for
the good times.''
The lone draft pick remaining from the club' s 1999
expansion team, McC utcheon
signed a five-year co ntract on
. Wednesday that will keep the
cornerback with the Browns
through 2009.
Financial terms were not
immediately available.
McCutcheon, 27. is o ne of
just three players, along with
kicker Phil Dawson and safety Earl Little, left on
Cleveland's roster from the
dreadful '99 team that finished 2-14.
"In ' 99, we just threw a
bunch of guys together. and
didn't know what was going
to happen," McC utcheon
said. "The expectations are
much higher now."

''

lead early, never leading b~
more than five points, until
Nowitzki 's six straight points
on jumpers lifted the
Germans to a 59-56 lead with
2:40 left in the third quarter.
The Americans showed
more intensity and better
defense from the start than
against Italy.
Iverson set the tone in the
opening minutes, hounding
German point guard Steffen
Hamann until jarring the ball
loose ani! finishing a fastbreak with a layup.
"It 's my job to set an example on defense and then the
others will follow," the 7'6ers
guard said .

ADVERTISING DEADLINE - .WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 2004- 5:00P.M.

Call Dave or Brenda ·at 992-2155
For More Information

m:be Jlailp ~entinel
•'

&gt;I

�•

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday,August5,2004

'
BY JOHN MARSHALL
Associated Press
DENVER _ Whether he·
was tossing the ball underhand. diving for a first down
or driving the length of the
tield in the closing seconds.
J.ohn Elway was going to
find
to win.
Noa way
matter
the score, if
there w'as time on the clock
·.and Elway had the ball , the
-outcome was still in ques:tion.
Sothe
when
came to Hall
getting
into
ProitFootball
of
Fame. there was no doubt:
Elway was a first-ba llot
entry all the way. The King
of Comebacks will be
inducted Sunday in Canton ,
Ohio. along with Barry
Sand~rs. Carl Eller and Bob
Brown .
· "I think the bottom line is
I'd just like to be remembered as someone w~o was
competitive. never gave up.
that as long as there was
time on the clock you're
going to get I 00 percent of
what he had." Elway said.
'' It wa.sn't always preny,
but we were able to get the
job don·e ."
·
The first pick of the great
quarterback draft of 1983Dan Marino, Jim Kelly,
Todd Blackledge. Ken
o· Brien. Tony Eason also
went in the oReninft round
that year - E way ived up
to the hype.
•
He ranks second to
Marino on the NFL's career
li st in yards passing,
attempts. c.:umpletions and
total yards. Elway has the
be,st winning percentage in
league history. at 148.-82-1 ,
and was a. nme-ume Pro
~owl ~lck, tied for the most
among yuarterbacks. ·
. ~e also '~as .. the 1987
le~gue ~ ~p and IS the only
quarterback to star~ 111 five
Super 6oY.ls, wmmng con-

secutive titles in 1998-99
"We never felt like 'te
before calling it a career.
were out of game as long ~s
"He is the greatest quarter- John was there," receiver
back ever to play the game," Rod Smith said.
And that do-whatever-ItBroncos
coach
Mike
Shanahan said.
take.~ attitude led to what
But there was much more Elway considers his favorite
to Elway than just his num- moment.
·
bers.
Late in the thifl:l quarter of
First , there was that right · a tie game io the 1999 Super
arm. El way threw passes Bow 1, he dropped bac k· to
into places' other quarter- pass ;tt Green Bay's 12-yard
backs wouldn ' t even see, line on a third-and-6. Unable
much less consider, and he to find a receiver, Elway ran
often had . his coaches up the middle and dived for
yell in~ into their headsets: · the tirst down.
"N o.I o.I No.I ... lfh . great
But as he too k. of'f'. El way
pass'"
was met in the air by
Then there . was Elway's Packers safety LeRoy
aura.
Butler. who spun him
With his gimpy ' gait, around like a helicopter.
Elway strutted onto 'the field Elway landed with a thud.
with a you-can't-beat-me leading to some anxious
attitude. Hi s piercing blue moments on Denver's sideeyes always seemed to be line, but he bounced back
wide as baseballs. especially up. The Broncos had the
t-1rst .down and the momenwt'th th e game on th e 1·me. ·
An(,! it didn't seem to mat- tum they needed \O finish off
ter what ·teams .did to him. their first Super Bowl title.
Elway always bounced · "That's probably the one
back .
that sticks out the most,"
His itijuries ranged from a Elway said. "I remember
broken rib to rotator-cuff after how imponam it was to
tears to five knee operations get that first down and it wa~
to a swollen elbow bursa sac the biggest game, a game we
that was the size of a softball finally got over the hump."
when he finally had it
Denver has had plenty of
removed. Through it all, he players deservin~ of Hall of
rarely missed a game.
Fame consideration through
But of all the traits thai the years. from Randy
made Elway stand out, it Gradishar
to
Karl
was the ability to pull out Mecklenburg
to
Gary
victories fr(lm the grasp of Zimmerman. None made. it,
defeat that made him a true though. almost as if Hall
superstar.
voters were waiting for the
In his 16 seasons, Elway perfect time to break the ice .
led the Broncos to gameIf that's the case. they
winning or game-saving dri- couldn 't have dbne · much
ves 47 times, including six better than Elway, the
in the postseason. Most .embodiment of the Broncos
famously, he engineered and a hero for an entire city.
"The Drive" in the 1987 ."There have been a lo_t of
AFC Championship game, guys in this organization
taking the Broncos 98 yards that deserve to be there and
in 15 plays in the closing it feels like kind of a conseconds of the fourth quarter spiracy that they waited,"
for the tying score of a 23-20 Smith said. " But I guess our
overtime victory over the first one is our· best one by
Cleveland Browns.
far. "
1

Reaeh 3

I

BY STEPHEN HAWKINS ·
Associated Press

OXNARD, Calif. - In a
stunning move the team
wouldn't explain, the Dallas
Cowbuys cui Quincy Cart~r
on Wedt·lesday and handed the
starting quarterback 's job to
40-year-old Vinny Te sta verde.
Just four days after he staned·camp as the No. I quarterbac.k, Carter was suddenly
gone from a team he led to 10
wins and back to the playoffs
in Bill Parcells' first season. ·
Owner Jerry Jones and
Parcells were vag ue about
wtiy they released Carter. who
started every game in 2003
and was the opening-game
s!arter each of his three years.
"We've made a decision to
move in a different direction,"
Jones said. "We 're not going
to get in a lot of detail on the
process."
Jones wouldn't specifically
an swer que stions
about
reports that Caner failed a

drug test or say if the move
was based on non-football
issues.
"I think that we shou ld
leave it at it just was not a difficult decision, and not get
into a definition of what it was
about," Jones said.
ESPN .com. FoxSpons.com
and CBSSportsLine.com. all
citing unidentified NFL
sources, reponed that Carter
had failed a drug test. The
NFL had no comment.
Carter's agent, Eugene
Parker, d,id not return calls
seeking comment. The quaeterback left camp soon after
being informedofthe·decision
by Parcells and Jones and
wasn't available.
Parcells said just this week
that Carter had "a leg up" at
quarterback. After the first
camp workout Saturday,
Carter said he was confident
of remaining the starter and
didn't consider himself in an
open competition for the job.
The coach wouldn't say
why there was such a drastic

change in direction.
"I just couldn't keep him in
the plans," Parcells said. "I'm
saddened by this because I've ·
got 18 months invested in it ...
two offseason programs and a
regular season and a playoff
game."
,
·
A,sked why the decision
wasn't made earlier, Parcells
·said, "We only make decisions
based on the information we .
have."
The Cowboys went 10-6
last season as Carter threw for
3,302 yards. He had 21 interceptions and 17 touchdowns.
Testaverde reunited with
Parcells this summer hoping
for a chance to start again.
And the Cowboys iraded for
Drew Henson, a top prospect
out of Michigan who spent
the past three years . playing
baseball in the New York
Yankees' minor league systern.
Parcells said Testa verde
would start when the
Cowboys play their season
opener Sept. 12 at Minnesota.

Roethlisberger shows no ·hesitancy
during first Steelers practice
LATROBE, Pa. (AP) - No
matter how many passes .he
completed in college. no matter how many millions he now
has in the bank. Ben
Roethlisberger was just like
any other football player on
his first ofllcial day in a new
unifonh.
Nervous. Really, really nervous.
"Without
question,"
Roethlisbergcr
said
Wednesday after his tirst training camp practice with the
Pittsburgh Steelers. "It felt like
the first day of minicamp all
over again. Tommy (Maddox)
and I were laughing about it.
You need to get out there and
get the first play out (of the

way)."
That first play was nothing
remarkable for the mostwatched Steeters rookie quarterback since, well, Terry
Bradshaw in 1970. Lining up
under center from the 20-yard
· line in a 7-on-7 passing drill,
Roethlisberger
overthrew
wide receiver Plaxico Burress
near the goal line.
On
the
next
play,
Roethlisberger threaded a pass
through heavy .coverage to
Burress at the I. So much for
nervousness or hesitancy.
"I had ·a chance tQthrow to
Plax for the first time and I
ovenhrew him because I was
so excited, so I came back a:nd
got him ·the next time ,"

Roethlisberger said. "The b\lt·
terflies were gone and it wa!
good to get back out there."
Even if he really hasn't beer
gone
all
that
long
Roethlisberger spent mor&lt;
than a month with the tearr
during minicamp and the vol·
untary coaching sessions thi!
spring, and he picked up mud
of the offense then. That's wh)
the former Miami (Ohio) stat
doesn 't seem worried about
missing the first four practice!
of camp before signing a contract that guarantees him $~
million in bonuses by March.
Quanerbacks coach Mar~
Whipple already is holdin~
extra meetings with the rooki(
to get him up to speed.

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~ounties

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Place YoUr Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
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_The Tri-County Marketplace!

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In One Week With Us
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The Daily Sentinel t)_ptnt t)leasant l\egister
.~74o~. 4~6:234~·-··-··-... -J~~-992:.215~.-... ~...- .. -~304!..675:~33~. .. .J
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laegtster

Sentinel

. 992-2156
Call Today••• (740) '446-2342 (740)
992-2157
Or Fax To

Oftfae iloW""&lt;f'
\'\'\tll \t I \II '\ 1..,

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ANNouNcF.MENrs

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale, ·chester Township,
Meigs County, sen"'d left~rs
of interesf to : The Daily
Sentinel, P6 Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Save

GIVEAw··v

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I ~72

1'

Y.~RD SALE·

. ~

74

Aug ._6,7,8
9am-5pm
Unwood Drive
off Buliav ille Pike

Sheltie mix puppies , 8
weeks ,
ready
to
go FridaY" 1$,' Salurday Augu s1 6
&amp; 7, 9-? 6930 St. Rl . 7
· (740}645-5746
South . L.ots of neat stuff!
Cheap !
Sports cards, kn ives, old
Lo;-r AND

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

watcl'1es Now at Mason . Jar
on Main St. Pt. Pleasant
-·
Lost dog- reddish brown
Wan ted: A place for a wire 1'1aired terrier, name is
Christian Rock Band to ~Jack" , has collar on, one
practice and play. Willing to ear stands up, last seen
give donalion. Please call 7127 Racine, (740)949-9217
Joseph (740)441 -1236.
Lost: Tricolored Sheltle, his
name is TED. Please call
GIVEAWAY
(740)441-:0127 . Last seen at
Holzer HOspital.

r

1-112 year old female
Chocolate Lab. Parents on
premises, to good approved
home. Can be registered.

(740)441-1269.
4-5 month old female black
Lab mix to good apprcived
home. (740)441 -1269.
8 kittens. B &amp; 7 weeks old,
(740)992-7941
Black lab mix p;Jpples, 11
weeks, wonderful personalities . loving homes only.
great tor kids. (740)742-

2377.

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Chest type freezer with Est. Womens &amp; girls cloths.
some good toad . Runs per· · shoes. Home-Interior, Kn1ck
'knacks, ·purses, toys, books,
teet. (740)446-1585.
antiques. Family ol Shelia
Free 3 month old Doberman Mites. Sat. Aug. 7.
mix puppy. Call (740)446-

6630.
Free puppies half Australian
Shepard
half
German
snepard, 9 weeks old.

Giant Yard Sale- 1st in ~ 0
years Sat. Bf7 only, 9-5. 676
Debbie Drive. Gallipolis off
SR 141 Paddle bOat. E350
Van, basketball hoop, b1kes,
clothing- various s1zes, outside various dgcoratlons.
home decor, too - much to
mention.

Gigantic 8 family yard sale . 1
mile west of Rodney on 568
old 35 . L1ving room suite.
school clothes, tots of baby
stuff, glassware, kids toys ,
household items, old dolls,
Hallmark ornaments , origiYARD SALEnal Dickens House collecGAUJPOLIS
tion , too m~:~ch to menlion .
6-Saturday-73 family garage sale Friday Friday
St~~nday-8 Monday-9, 1Q-6.
8·5. Mens, ladies, girts, toddler, girls &amp; boys all name
Yard sale
brand. Cal\ kitchen table,
27 42 Clark Chapel Aoad,
tots of , household itemS,
FridayJSalurday 9-3pm.
swing set. toys. Disney
movies &amp; lots more. 17933 Yard Sale &amp; Moving Sale, 6
St. At. 7S, Crown City, OH mil es south of Gallipolis on
4.2 miles P.ast locks &amp; dam. At 7. Thurs. Fri &amp; Sat.
3 Family yard sate 66 Tara

3 family- Aug. 7th

Yard Sale 41 Hilda. Or Fri. &amp;
Sat. 7:00-5:00pm .
Yard sate beg inning Mon .
612104, 9am to 7pm and
ending? Everything from
Jewelry to cars. Gartield
Hts.

35 SA 775

Yard Sale Fn-8/6 (t2-6), Sat-

Baby, kids. ladies. plus
clothinQ. refrigerator , lois
more.

S/7 (10-6), 43 Ann br. Baby
items,
Shine

P

washer.

Rain

or

Ahtique furniture , glassware,
4
YARD SALEclothes, crafts, linens, curKittens to give away. Half tains, shoes, swin.g-set.
Siamese, weaned, litter 1060 Mill Creek Ad, Thurs3 Family- Frictay only! Aug .
Fri-Sat 9-4:
trained. (740)256-6089
6th. 9am till 4pm, 2346
Fourth St., Syracuse, Wilson
reside11ce .

(740)367-7947 .

PoMFJ!OY/MtlliJLE

CLASSIFIED INDEX

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

5

family,

Thurs-Sunday.

Announcement ............................................ 030
beh1nd Cremeans Funeral
Antlquos ....................................................... 530
Home, Racine , infants-5,
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
something to everyone.
Auction and Flea Market. ............................OBO
8 family, Fri. 6th, Sat. 7th,
Auto Parts I Accessories ............ :............. 760
fr om Langsville turn on 325
Auto Repair .................................................. no
4
miles. . brand name
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
clothes , shoes. all sizes,
Boats I Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Infant-adult, clarinet , books,
Building Supplfos ........................................ sso
Home lriterior. bug shields, 3
Buofneas and Buildings ............................. 340
blQ cement cows, book
Business Opponunlty .................................210
Bustneu Tralnlng ....................................... 140 , bogs , Xm(ls, a lot misc.,
ever in good shape. priced
Campers I Motor.Homoa ........................... 790
cheap! Jude residence.
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanka .......................................... 010
816 . Baby clothes.' babyChild/Elderly Care ....................................... 1110
swing, crib mattress, yard
EleclrlcaiiRefrlgeretlon., ..... ,.............. ,,...... ,840
art and other kniCk knacks.
Equipment lor Rent.. ................................... 480
VIne Street1=!acine
Excavating ................................................... 830 ·
Aug 5,6 ,7. 3 fam ily. Follow
Farm Equlpment ..........................................610
at Five
Points.
signs
Farms for Rent.. ...........................................430
school
clotl1es.
Furniture,
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
large womans clothes .
For Leaae ..............,...................................... 490
For Safe .. .......................................:............. ,585
Aug . 5th 9-6, Aug . 6th 9-4.
For Safe or Trade .........................................590
boy items o-2. household.
Fruita I Vogetabfeo ..................................... 580
some ' furniture, swing set.
Fumlahed Rooma........................................450
small freezer, woman &amp; girl
General Haulfng...........................................aso
clothing,
.Oak
Alley,
GTveaway.....................................................040
Syracuse, 1 block from city
Happy Ado ..............................................: ..... oso
garage . .
Hey I Graln ..................................................540
Aug. 6th-7tl'1, 9-5: garage
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
sale, rain/shine, 3 mites lrofTl
Homo lmprovemento...................................81 0
SR . 7 on Eagle Ridge .
Homeotor Safa ...........................:................ 310
HouHhold Goodo ....................................... 510
August 6th &amp; 7ttl. ·cOrner of
HouHolor Rent .......................................... 410
and
Elm,
Broadway
In Memoriam ................................................020
Mlddl8port, large 4 family
t,.urence ....................................................,. 130
ae.le, variety ol everything
from
Household
Items,
Lewn I Gorden Equfpinent ........;............... 860

Motorcycle• I 4 Wl1eelara ..........................740
Mualc.llnotrumento ................................... 570
Peraont111..........................: ..:....................... oos •
Pats for SeTa ................................................ 560
Plumbing&amp; Heetrng ....:............................... 820
ProNHTonor Servtcee .................................230
Rldlo, TV I CB Repalr ............................... 160
RHI Eo- Wanted .....................................360
Bchoololntllructfon..................................... 150
s.d , Plant I Farllllzer .......................,...... 1150
Slluatlono Wontect .... .'.................................. 120
Space for Rent ........................ :....................460
Sporting Goocta ............................................ 520
SUV'1for Sale..............................................720
Trucka lor Sale ............................................ 715
Uphofotary .................. :................................ 870
Veno For Sala ............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy-' Farm Suppflaa:.... ,............ 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................. 470
Yard Sale- Glllflpollo .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomaroy/Midclle........................ 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Plaelant ................................ 076

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To

clothes, knickknacks etc.
RuStic Krafts and furniture
made from barnside wood,
grapev 1ne trees , Americana
and Slate paintings.

-----=--August · 7th, 9 -3 , Dave
SPencer's, 305 Main St..
Racine. five family sate,
women 's clothes large, teen
clOthes (AE , Aero, A&amp; F) 4.
lots o1 hoodles, household
it ems , rain cancels.

o-

Bethany C1'1urch Yard Sale
August S-6. Sterrett's. one
mile from S.R. 33 on Co Ad
35. FollOw sigr.s. Day b&amp;d.
boOkshelf, color television.
dishes, linens, much more.
Big Yard Sate. FridaySaturday august 6th-7th .
9:00am-1
at
47939
Greenwood Cemetery Ad ,
Racine . Oh
Carport-Sale: Sixth Street in
Syracuse. August 6-7: 9am4pm Rain /shine. First sale
in 10 years!
Garage sale- Aug. 5th &amp; 6th .
5 112 miles out Eagle Ridge
to Sugar · Run Rd ., lots ot
everything!

CHARGE IT!
' •

. VISA ,

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

Now you can have borders and graphics ·
~
added to your ciasslfled ads
.tr1'J
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for.large

{e;.

All Dl•ptey: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• · D•y• Prlqr To
Publh;;•t:lon
sund•y Dl•ptay : 1:00
Thureday for Sunday•-- ·- - -

All ads must be prepaid•

IU\II· SI\11 -

YAIW SALE·

l'oME:KoY/Mwuu:

GAJHPOLIS

me ,,om !he pound, 5- ·-·EoiSiiTiiATiiEiiii
S.AL·E--,.1

6 month old puppy. Vary
gentle, loves k1ds . (740)4463153.

or Fax

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday t'or Insertion
In N•~t Day•• Paper
sunday .In - column: 1:00 p.m.
P:rlday For Sunday• ~ilp•r

JUST SAY

(304) 675-1'333

Oeae//;ire.f'

Wotd Ads

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

Money to LOIIn ...............................-..............220 ·

I
L-..~

eountt.. uke

Loat and Found.: ......................................... 080
Lola I Ac:rMga ............................................350
Ml~~eellaneoul ...........................~ ..................170
MIIICeii-UI MerchendiH .......................540
Moblle.Home Rapalr ....................................860
Mobile Homea·for Rent ............................... 420
Moblfe Hornaa for Sale................................320

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WeCov.,..-7
Mt'l ,a.tlla.;

And Me110n

Uv•tock-.....................................................830

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CLASSIFIED

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1'..- ..·-···-·.. -···-···--·-···-···-···-···-···---··-···-···-···-···---··

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m:rtbune Sentinel ""lae

Elway, King of Comebacks, Cowboys cut starting QB
_
Carter but don't say why
headed to Hall of Fame
•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentiO!:I.com

10

·Friday, 133 BuHernut Ave., Hugh Yard Sale Friday Aug
chest-of-drawers ,
metal 6 . 9'00to5:00 lots of baby
desk, antique harpsichord. items, ctothes, Maternity
pictures. appliances, tools, clothes , kids _. clothes, furni.much more.
ture, computer. toys and lots
ot misc. 6th house on left out
sale. Rain I sr1fne. Bud Chat1in Ad.
August 5th · &amp; 6t1'1 . 36222
Allen
Street.
Chester . . Multi-Family Sate 2004
Polaris- ATV, T.inau covers, Jefferson Ave.- Lots of
golf equipmeni. dresser, antiques and old bqttles;
sofa&amp; coffee table , rocking baby items-hobby horse·nicchelr, and misc.
nacs, Men-women clothes
2-:u.L, teen boys and girls
85
school clothes priced to sell
8-?Aug6&amp;7
ables, Lots of E-Bay sellers!!
Cheap !I Also we have Yard Sale No Sales before 8
clothes·, baby tlems , lots ot 4th house from Krodel Fri &amp;
misc. someth ing for &amp;~ery-. Sat 8-4
one, 91 Lum1na van . $800; - - - - - - - - full size bus- partially lllade Ya.rd sale Thur. Fri &amp; Sat
into. motor home' $800: 86 2635 Lincoln Ave . 9-6

Gara~e

~~~ 10 ~:=~~r~u~'~ids~~it~~~

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Need e)(perienced worker
STNA'S NEEDED
full-time in restauran t work.
dayshift, send response to : Holzer Senior Care Center,
The Daily Sentinel , PO Box
70 . bed lor.1g •terf!1 care
729- 10, Pomeroy, Oh 45769 nursing facility has openings
!Or Part-time STNA"s to help
Needing more mQ'ney?
cover summer vacatiOn
We are offering a
schedules.
Choose your own shift-all
$300 Sign on Bonus are available.
If you are interested in this
Help protect your Gun ' position. please come see
Rtghts! Recruit Volunteers us at 380 Colonial Or
and accept donations for
Bidwell OH or call {740)446the Nation's leading
5001
Non-Profit organizations!
Come join the canng people
We offer competitive
ol
wages,health benefits,
weekly bonuses, and a
prolessional work
environmerlt.
Full or part t1me. Day and
Evening shifts available!

a

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HO\IES
lnR SALE Iii

=-"'-=------

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~~~~~~~~--- ----A~e~su~me~'~&amp;Q~UI~'~·--- 's................

FUN!

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www.orvb.com

0% Down Payment even
with less the n perfect creel1t.
Easy qualifying. Own don't
rent
Local
company.
Mongage Locators. 740-

Home Listings.
L1 st your home by cal11ng

992·7321

V1ew photos/info online.

3 bedroom. 2 baths. li replace. On 4.3 acres In the
Countr~ ,
Scen1c
v1ew
$75 ,000. Call (740)709, 166.
3Br. 2Ba. 2 Ca1 Ga rage.
closed breezeway .77 acres
30 mm lrom Toyota 294
Blackbird Dr. Ashto11 , WV
(304) 576·2987
3BR 2BA. 5 .129 acres.
Gree n Townsh ip close to
school Pr1c ed to sell More
1nfo (740)446-7377.

Chevy mini van needs fuel
WANTED
pump,
$175;
campe r
(An equal opportunity employer)
roBuv
$2,800; come check us out,
Completely
Refinished
Call Today !
Turn off At. 7 o nto 143
.1::J..Q.n:w..
Greal
loca
tion. in
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
toward : Harrisonville go 2
The Un iversity of Rio Gall ipolis Oh10. 3 bedrooms,
e)(t
.
2454
1-877-463-6247
1/4 mile corner of 143 and Silver and Gold Coins,
Grande is taking applica- 2 fu ll baths Pr1ce to Sell
www.lnfocision .com
Proolsets, Gold Rings, U.S.
Bailey Run Ad
tions lor part-time fikulty Now. Phone {?AQJ.4..49~~
Currency.-M.T.S. Coin Shop.
New 3-D Multisli ce CT members 'lor the Academic
Inside rummage sale- Sat. 151
, Second
A&lt;Jenue,
Imaging Center in' Coal Year 2004-05. Instr uctors
only, Aug . 7th , 10am. 490 G II" I' 740 446 2842
'
Grove OH seeks two CT are needed 1n the areas ol
Gram St., girls infant, Jr.
I \11'141) \II '\I
Specialists with 3+ years English, Finance. Marketing,
SI28S.
eKperience interested in · Business
Management,
'I !(\I ( I '
Large 4-family patio sale. m:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ advancement and latest· Accounting. Math , Polilical
August 5th·6th. First house I 10 HELP WMITID 1· technology "in the Tri•Stale- Science (Slate and National
All real est.ate &amp;dvertislng
past churcl1 in Chester. I,
. 25 hours per \"fBOk, paid Government) . Medical Lab
in this newSP.a~r Is
..__.,.
_
_
_
_
_
_..
vacations.
holidays
,
educei'echnology
(Ia
leach
clinical"
Something for everyone
subiecl to the Federal
tional
reimbursement
and
chemistry,
clin1
cal
ity~munol­
Fair Housing Act of 1968
Large Crall ·a Yard Sale- An ExCellen t way to earn
paid corp orate
training ogy or immunohematology).
which mAkes it illega l to
Friday &amp; Sat.. Aug. 6 &amp; 7, money. TM New Avon .
opportunities- $26 an hours sociology, psychology, phiadvertise "any
9am to 5pm, in case of rain Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
to start· weekend moonlight- losophy, computer science.
preference, limitation or
Will be 1n garage, Adams Rd .
AVON! A ll Areas! To Buy or ing at hospitals accepted- geology, Span1sh, b1o)ogy,
discrimination based on
atlove Racine Locks.
race, color, religion, sew:
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- st8.rting date August 23rd- chemistry&lt;, commun1cation
rami!lal status or national
email resume, cover: refer- (speech), public e~drninis tra­
Multi-Family Indoor Yard 675-1429.
origin, or any intention to
ences, and copy of certifies- tion , history and nursing
Sale- variety ol 1tems and
Business is booming, look- tion · to mbmartjo@adel- clinica ls .
make any such
A
bachelor's
clothes for the Whole Fam1ly,
preference , limitation or
irtg for experienced drywall ~
degree is required. Master's
August 6th -7tn, 9-5. rain or
discriminAtion."
and trim crew for modular
prefe rred . All candidates
shine. church building on
and manufactured homes New 3-D Multislice CT should submit a letter ol
Reibel Rd . just off At. 248
This newspaper will not
Please fax resume or com- Imaging Center in Coal interest, current resume and
(follow signs !rom AI. 7
knowingly accept
pany information to 740- Grove OH seeks an aggres- the names and addresses ol
through Chester on 246)
advertisements tor real
s1ve
and
efficient
385-7671 .
Proceeds to go to the
Ad 1 , 1 f
A .
t "th three references. Resume s
astete whicl1 is in
m nls ra tve SSIS1an wr , will be reviewed as received
Angela Eason Memorial Business is booming, look violation of the taw . Our
3-+ years documented expe- 1ntorr"fla tion must be subOlilreaders are hereby
Park Fund
ing for part time service and
nence- must be able to work ted to Phyllis Mason, SPHR,
Informed that all
delivery
help.
Call
7
40·385Patio sate- 6th &amp; 7th, 46123
in, fast-paced environment. Director
of
Human
dwellings ad~ertised in
4367
or
fax
resUme
to
740be abte to multi-task ,
State Route 124. Racine:
this newspaper are
Resources. University of Rio
Microsoft Otfica and E~tcel
person who bought toaster 2 385·7671 .
Available on an equal
Grande , P.O ..Sox 500, Rio
weeks ago call (740)949- Christian Metal Band seeks prolicient, good people Grande, OH 4567.4, e-mail
opportunity bases.
professional
3126
Bassist . Prefer someone skills, and
prnason@rjoedi,J . EOE/AA
phone skills- Research and
Ouple11 lor sale, 38r, 2Ba.
Racine- 1 mile past SHS on who can jam : t)as passion Med1cat Office traini ng a Employer
experifor
music
and
some
&amp;
L1ving-Aoom . 01n1ng
124, Bing residence. Aug . 6,
ence. Contact Gavin at plus- 35 hours a week, paid
Kitchen . Live 1n one Rent the
9~4 .
vacation, holidays, and edu·
(740)256-6496.
other call only alter 6:30
cational
reimbursement - Town ot Hartford Water &amp;
Remodeling sale : August
(304 )675-2495
Sewer
Dept
.
is
now
accept$9 .50 an hour to start~ start6,7,8 . Grow's subdivision- 5- Drive
ing date August 16- e-mail ing resume for a Water Clerk
Points , carpels, curtains ,
FOR SALE ON
tor
accepting
resume, cover. and refer- deadiin·e
tires. glass. 18mos-X XX-LG, Tired of Being a
resume is Aug 18th must be '
Number??
LIND
CONIMG
ences
to
mhmartjn·Oade!doors, truck stuff.
mailed to Town ol Har tford
3
bedroom
. 1 bath. nic
~
PO Bo)( 96 Ha rtford , WV
Sat. Aug . 7th. Rutland Park, NEW PAY SCAlE
ecluded area off Rout
Now hiring Manager. Hours. 25247
9am, brand name girl be:by
10 minutes south o
clothes, toddler girl. Li111e Orlvera wtth Cl••• A CE;)l 7:30-2;30. Apply within or
allipolis Good starte
call (740)446-7282.
Tikes &amp; more.
orne . $69,900 Hom
and 2 yea,. experience.
Srnootli
740)379-9281 .
Cel
NUrsing. Ec11olng Meadows
Tl'1ursday August 5th, Friday
!NSTI!UCI10N
740
645-2166
.36
cenlll
"per
rplle
Resjdential
Center
is
now
August 6th , 802 Main Street,
acceptin~ applications for a
Racin e. children's books, , $500 algn-on bonua
$10.0001
part time and full time LPN Gelllpolil Career College Homes from
lots ot teen clothes. miscel- • No forced NYC
(Careers Clo se To H.ome) · Foclosure, ~ Hud lor lis't1ng
tor
weekends
and
evening
,
95%
No
Touch
Freight
laneo~s. 9-?
• Ho1pltallzatlon· and 401 K shifts. Apply in person at319 Call Today! 740-446-4367. 1 ~·8()()-749-8106 ex 1709
Yard
sateRutland avanable
I -800·214-0452
W Union Street, Atl'1ens ,
New lis ting , 296 LeGrande
Firehouse, Thursday &amp;
Ohio. A"eferences required . , www.ljillllpohlcarvercolhl'gil!.corn
Friday.
Applicants must pass pre- Actredi lltd I.Aember Accred•hng Blvd Available Now! 3 bedlnternled patile• call
Counerl tor Independent COile·~es room. 1 1/2 bath. storage
emP,Ioymef1t
80Q.652·2362 for more
screening and ~hools 127"~8
bUilding , Lenno)( , heat/a1r
incl~ding but not limited to
Info.
Call after 3pm &amp; weekends .
--~------ drug screen and criminal
WANIID
Senous calls only. E)(tra lot
,Due to agency's growth, background checl&lt;s .
To Do
bes1de home w/property.
3 Family Yard Sale Fri - Sat local Home Health Agency
OFFICE ASSISTANJ'
(7 40)446-4050
9-12 Weslerry Ct. BIN Little Is seeking AN, LF'N 's and
Home Healtl'1 Aides tor the A fast paced non-p rofit
Store &amp; Flair Furniture
DRYWAUGallla, Meigs and Jackson organization is seeking a
OPEN HOUSE
Install, Finish Painting ,
5 Family Yard Sate Friday offices . Those interested self·motivaled person to
Sur)day Aug us t 8 . 1-4pm
Carpententry,
Bathrooms,
Aug 6 Sat Aug 7 till 2:00 shOuld please apply,ln per- INOrk 3.2 hours/week. Tl'1is
Wheele rsburg area . t .8
Residential. Commercial,
Clothing all sizes , Home son at 1770 Jackson Pike, position wilt Include light
ac i es llat land border ing
INSURED
Interior &amp; much more 1.4 Monday thru Friday, -8:00am secretarial duties. Typing
small creek . Newly remodNOTHING TO SMALL
mile on Leon Baden Rd . to 4:30pm. You may send a and computer skills neceseled , 3 bedroom , 2 bath .
Flat
Prices
Smith Residence
resume to P.O. Box 707, sary. Send a resume to: The
Immediate
possess1on,
Steve-(740)388-8731
Gallipolis,
OH
45&amp;31 . French Art Colony, P.o. Box
$S9 .to0. For 1nfo (740)778Camp Conley 178 Mitton
472 . Gallipolis, OH 45631 by
3204 or (740)821-1027 .
Fri·Sat 8-3 .Rain or Sl'1ine Please no phone callS! ,
Georges Portable Sawmill.
Lawn
mower,
movies, Easter Sallis. Now hiring. August 20th ..
Puzzles and more
part·time help for individual Office AMI•Iant Manager don't haul your logs to the
mill just call304-675 - ~~57 .
with disabilities. Pklase call
CompUter &amp; Accounting
Fr i. &amp; Sat 8+Fam ii es 1.8
Jadtie at (888)574-9440
.skills are a must. Prelerred
miles out Leon Baden Ad .
knowledge of Microsoh
Jim's Carpentry &amp; small
'0" AI 87
Full time Receptionist nft8dExcel and word.
Landscaping. Call (740)446Call tl'1e Office Manager
2506 •
Friday &amp; Saturday .Auoust ed immediately tor Dental
office. Send resume to CLA
for an interview
6&amp;7 at the corner lot at, the
II'\\ '\( l\1
Box
566,
C/o
Gallipolis
appointment
Country Comer Cafe' in
Tribune, 825 Third "Ave .
· ed
Letart. Weather .,.rmitting .
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
8U&gt;Th'ESS
740•446.0842
Baby Item&amp;, adult clothing,
01'1'0R1\JNITI'
Homa lnlerklr. some furn i- Installers for DTV. systems Paramed ics
,s.
EMT"s
ture and a lot of miscella - and DlshNQt in West VIrginia
d d A 1
t 1354
a
.. ,. uS$ motl"at-•?
100X
neous items. TICkets will be and Ohio areas. Long term nee e · Pi PPGY trpof
""'
• ...,
on sale tor donation of $!for 1N011\ for the nght people. Jackson ke , 8 1 IS.
more powerful than MLM . IF
"The Florida Keys" quilt to be Must be Responsible and
S.rloul-800-305-7949.
given aw.ay at the Letart Dependable!
Experience
Community Soup Supper preferred but witl tra in 11'19
tO VALLEY
August 28, 2004
nghl·pe'son 1304)675·1400
C.oual job
NG CO. recommends tha
Friday Saturday Hugh Sale. Keyboard player needed for
u do business Wltl"l pea
and guya 18 ind
2414 Jefferson. We have it blessed &amp; talented Christian
hold, ploy hord
1e you know. and NOT 1
aiL Books, jewelry, clothes, rock band. Rest of band in
Meet newtacee
end money through tl"l
beautifyt sweaters. house - place. Jim 74Q-992·6300, no ,
ail unt1l you have mvesti
hold stuff, bedspreads; cur- calls after 9pm pl ~ase .
ated the otferin
•
tainS, dishes Few tools &amp;
Need a Heating-Cooling
ant1ques lots of m1sc.
~lONAL
installer Wlth at least t year
Yard Sale Sat Aug 7. 115
a~:perience . Pay by e:..peri~
St:Rvtcrs
Pleasanl St. 9-4 Fu~Mure ,
ence. Call (740)441-1236.
books, WOrd Processor,
TURNED DOWN ON
Electrolu~ . lots of everytt11ng
~eks'
Barber
Shop
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSl?
Yard Sale Aug 6th &amp; 7th 509
eroy. Ohio (740)992
No Fee Unless We W in I
28th Street 9 am - ?
1-888-58:2-3345

r

HOMB
FOR SALE

(740)446·3620

Bedroom, 2 Bath.
O'x100' state approved
uild 1ng . Beautilul View
ddison Township. Code
1404 or call (740)367465.
Bedroom, 2 Bath, 2 Car
arage. 52500 Carpet
llowance Jay Dnve.
all ipOiiS Code 52804 or
all (740)446-7231
Bedroom, 2 Bath. River
iewi Access. Private
oat Dock in GaU1polis. 1
ere lot. Code 90303 or
all" (740)446-0531 .
Bedroom BncK Home, 2
ath. 3 Car Bric k
nat1ached Garage . 2
tory outbuilding. Code
2704 or call (740)446-

566 .

•

Bedroom. 2 112 Bath .
lose to Holter Hosp11a1
in Spring Valley. Code
13 or call (740)446-

624
Bedr oom 1 112 Bath.
Full Basement.
Middleport, OH . Code
17 or call (740)992-

743
001 MitsuOrShl Montero
Sperl L1 m1ted . 4x4 . Low
Mileage, Loaded ..yith
)( tras Code A12 or cal l
(740}446-3620.

MOIIILE Hn\1~~
F'OR SAI.I~
t4x70 . 2br, Windsor w/air,
stove,
refnge rator,
mrcrowave,
dishwasher,
awn1ng. deck. ell"cellent condltJon $7900 (304)675-1408
(7 40)418-0790
1984 65ft Schultz 2 bedroom. very good shape
$9800
Call afte1 5pm
(740)d46-934i
2004 Fleetwood, :J bedroom . 2 bath . only 51,199.00
down and only $197.47 per
nioh)h.
Call
Karena
(740 )385-7671 .
3Br 12~65 w/Add1t ion. C/A.
must be moved 304-882·
1108.
79, 3 bedroom. 11/2 bath,

$4.000 .1740)447·3011
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom
mobile homes starting at
$270 per monlh . Call 740-

992-2167
Make 2 payments , move In 4
years on note (304)736·
3409.
New Oakwood mega store
featunn,g
Homes . by
Oa~wood .
Fleetwood &amp;
G1tes One stop shopping
only at Oa~wood Homes of
Barbours\liUe· WV (304)736·
3409.
N1ce 89 Skyline 1 4X 70 3
bedroom. will help w1th
delivery. $11 .495.00 Call

Nikki (740)385-9948.

SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
Stock models at old pric es.
2005 models arnvtng Now,
Cole's
Mobile
Homes ,
15266 u .s . 50 East, Athens·,
Ohio 45701 , (740)592-1972,
'Where You
Get Your
Money's Wort,~

22 acres on Hoback Road
off Old State Route 12o4. In
East Racine, 1-949 -7704768 , celt-1-949-433-1518

WANTED
ndiv•dual 1ook10g to bu
and or possibly teas
~w clusM:I hunting ·rights t
p roperty 1n Me1gs County
p tuo. Prefer acreage 5
cres and larger If 1nterest
d please call (304)372

004
Lots Noli 9 &amp; 10 Heatlev's
'Add!llon iO Bjdwe!l , Two
large level lots . Price to Sell
Now. Phone 1740)446-9539

�.Pege B&amp; • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 5, 2004

www.my~ailysentinel . com

Thursday,- August 5, 2004
ALLEY OOP

HI \I \I"'

r

~
FOR RENT

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

I

Phillip
Alder

~0% Down Payment even
with less !han perfect credit.

~asy qualifying. Own don't
.ofent.
local
company.
Mortgage locators. 740·
992-7321

'
2 bedrOOm

IF YOU RENT

house for rent.

· $450 month, $400 deposit.

at a
parking, large yard, outs1de
pEt~ only. washer/dryer furHigh Profile Location
nished.
$450/fi'lonth.
740-992-7100
O~posiVreterence rijquired.
128 4th Ave. Gallipolis,
(740)245·5784 alter 6pm
w8ekdays, anytime week·
ends
l!'l'l!'-~----..., c~--:"~--::"-...,
lO
HOUSEHOW
FRUITS &amp;
3-Bedroom House, Pt.
Goorls
VEGETABLE'S
Pleasant.
$400-per
• ......_
month+utillties,
$300
deposit no pets or $34,000 Full size bed, $150; Queen Home grown Tomatoes.
Call
size bo)( springs &amp; matlress. Wholesale, retail.
to buy (3041675-5209
$150; Presser with mirror, 740 379·9110.
3br in Syracuse. Ohio No $60; 3 Draw chest, $60; 5
FoR SALE
Pets, $500.00 a month Hud Draw chest , $40; 2 TV
Approved (3041675-5332
stands. $15 each; Couch ,
$95; Stack washer/dryer, like
For Rent: House· 2 bdrm now, $450.
1000 FT of Pine Lumber for
'
wlbsmt. Rl\ler \liew. close to
sale (304)576-2456
2'"'
Off
on
•II
Fumllure.
town . $450/mo. You pay UtUi·
Appllonc:e
""es. Sec. Dep. $450.
2 Cyrpts- Side by sicle ,
71Vhlo
.S : References required . Call
$2,250 each or $4,250 for"
(740)446-1JII
·(740)446-3644 for an appli·
two. (740)446·7525.
· cation
Good Used Appliances,
FOR SALE
For Rent: 2 - 2 bedroom Reconditioned
and
OR'J'RADE
. hOmes, ~itch en furnished . Guaranteed.
Washers,
and a
1 bedroom apart- Dryers, . Ranges,
and
1992 Nissan 5-Speed in
Jnent, Middleport, OhiO Cell Refrigerators, Some start at
good condition or trade tor a
-;kor '10:00 AM. (740)992· $95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
automatic car or · truck
~23
Vine St, , (740)446·7398

r

\~ 7 South, 4 bdrm, 2 ba, 1- Leather Recliner, Burgandy
·story, 3,000 sq. ft. $800/mo. Man-size, ·Brand new $800
:_:(7_:4:c
01.::
36::7..:-0:;:2:9.::
: 9·_:__ _ _ . sell for $475 13041675-6223

I \I~\ I ""' 1' 1'1 II ""
S.. II\ 1 "" 104 k.

e~~

For a Free ·Quote or Appointment

Col/:

&amp;

1

Rocky Hupp Insurance
,and Financial Setvices1

Commercial

Houses, porches,
Garages, Pole

189 • Middleport

Box

Barns, Roofs .

740-949-1606
740-591-1053

MOBILE HOMES

· FOR RENr

2 bedroom trailer, In country,
free gas·, $350.00 a monlh,
$200.00 deposit. (740)992_3470

APAR'IMENTS

tuRRENr

Painting- Gutters Decks- etc.
For Fast Courteous
Service
Free Estimates

&amp;

Affordable Prices,
Call... Dennis Boyd

~

bedroom
apt.
in
. ·(4entenary, applianc~s fur~
j,ished. utilities paid, except
.electric, clean-$325 month.
Call (740)256·1135.
Applicalions beinQ taken lor
very ·clean 1 bedroom In
country setting yet close to
town . Washer, dryer, sto\le,
fridge included. Water and
garbage included, Total alectrlc with AC. Tenant pay alec!ric. $300 deposit, $375 per
month. No pets. No smo~ing. 740·446·2205 or 740·
446-9585 ask for Virginia_.
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT ·BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 westwood
Di-ive from $344 to $44 2.
Watk to shop &amp; movies. Call
;r40 _446 _2568 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SR 124 e. Pomeroy, 740·
992-2526 Russ Moore..
owner.
-------Dining room suit, Cherry
wood, harp carved chairs
with China cabinet, $400
080
Oak Singer sewing machine.
Push peedle six drawer
$150 OBO.
Ch
11 1
t d td k
erry ro op s u en es ,
$100 080. (740)446·1528.

1992
Mercury
Grand
Marques, loaded , all power,
new c/d l stereo, tires &amp;
brakes, asking
$2500,
(740)985-3610
1994 Buick Century, 75K
$3,000. (740)446-7489. One

~~~
High 8l Dry

Bonanza.Get
5FREE

Self-Storage

Fair.

liNDA'S PAINTING
17401985-4180

820 ~
East Main

Racine, Ohio

45771
740·949·2217

Lawn Mowers. Lawn Tractors. Weed Eaters.
Chainsaws, Blowers, Tillers, Generators
Warranty Service Fm Briggs &amp; Stratton. Kohler.
Rol -Air Compressors, Campbell &amp; Hausfeld,
Oregon Chuinsuws &amp; All Equipment

~ci~~~~·

Sales &amp; Service for The Generac Standby Home
Gene fating I0,000 &amp; 12,000 watt, LP or natural gas

Please Call

. Pomeroy.:Jfower

'----""' ,,

106 Butternut Ave•
Pomeroy, Ohio

140-992-3452
140-742-1085

FOR SALE

15%in ... lrder
ol $20.00 1r •re
IElCIIdU Will

2003 Hyundai Sante Fe LX
Sport Utility; loaded; 21,500
miles: one own"er; ·$1 8,500.
Call 740)446-6822.

New Homes • Vinyl
_Siding • New Garages
•

;;;;;..,.:.;::;:~:::::;:::~,_-..,

4 4

BENNETT'S

I

H.,. ...riNG ~ COOLING

.
li!)iv ,

Garage Apt. for rent. 43 112
Chillicothe Rd. $375/mo.
Contacl Mike at (740~4410597.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
,M_anOf
and
Riverside
.Apartments In Middleport.
"from S295-S444. Call. 74o;992-5064 . Equal Housing

~lhon,

;Opportunities.

~Modem 1 Bedroom apt. No
'pets. 5250/month. includes
'
,waw.
$150
depostt

~ 446
1 bedroom apt. Phone
3736

r·

1 8a

f304)882-2523 "
1.

pne

~

~·= .

i

i: ~- I

Parts

t2male

::~
.n
~·-~

puppleo.

S1onogo for renl. 4•151 Pure bred wilh AKC _ , ._
a 15 '
800-32:2 2433 $300 each. Parents on
"'""""'"1 II II! II \\I II" I

.

r

ora

Wha\ey's Auto

ci304-:-:c)895-..:
· .,-,-:3903:::-c-:c--::-"I I ~\ H I "'
2003 510 zR2 . Excellent a;;;i==~;===;;;;;;
list tor Hud-~zed. 1· br, Winters, Aio Grande, OH condition, IG,OOO miles.
HOME
apanmen1, call 675-6679 CaB 740-2-45-5121 .
~
bli'IIOVEMINIS
17.w144s- 3783 _

•

L

;~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~==$2:0:.00
::w:i:th:t:hi:•:•d=-~

iTvrin R'-sTower isaocep1- Bloc!&lt;, bti&lt;i&lt;.- .-or pipes,
!no appliCations tor waiting windows, lintels. ate. ClaUde

•~ ......,,

Creative

TRIIC1&amp;

1(7.40)
·
-Nice two bedroom apartinents Large rooms Fully
·equiped kitchen Central
~ e e t 1 n _g I coo 1 in g
Washer/dryer
hookup

.-

LAKE

~;;;;';40;-4;1;6-;1;!;7;0;;~

00

'(740)446~3617.

&amp; TwO Bedroom Apts.
Starting at $290 month.
,.-.posit requtr· ed . No pels.
~Q.:al:..(7::..:.40::l"_:_':.."'.:.'.:84_:._ _ _
f'Om&amp;rll\'· 1WO 2 bedroom
apartments, R &amp; S tur·
hfshed,
wid
hook-up,
,,
f'aylot'o
Run
area,
(740)992-6886

I

Beagle P&lt;JI&gt;pieo lor Sale $50
~ pm (304 )875-

cOli an...
5701

CKC
Cocker
Spaniel
:For sale used lreezor. $100.
Puppias, Tolls Ood&lt;od, fht
Call (7.WI446-~
lholo giWn (3040675-2957

I

r10

:S;•~s:· ~o(~)s';~

BASEMENT
WAlf:RPROOFlNG
4230, E.e (304)675-4653, UncoodHiooal liletime guarCall (3041593-2897
an1ee. Local references fur99 F-150 Lariat 4x4, tul~
nished. Established 1975.
loaded. lealher in1.. e&gt;&lt;cellen1 Call 24 Hrs. (7.W) 446condition , 61 ,000 miles. 0870, Rogers Basement
Asking paYQH. (740)367- Waterproofing. .
7621 .

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

LIKE MY NEW
HAT LOWEEZY?

ARE YOU SHORE
IT'S NEW?
LOOKS

A LOT

'CO\:JRSE IT'S NEW-- J: .lEST
SOUGHT IT AT TH' CHURCH

RUMMAGE

!!

LIKE
TH' OL 1
ONE!!

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pomeroy,_Ohio

THE BORN LOSER
P"'t ~u~e:. .io.ll\ c.t.J...r::&gt; ...---~

992-2975
Law11 a11d Garde11 Equipment is our
bru-iness, trot u~r ~·ideline

,..

·\o.JE C.io.LLE:D 11\E.
I&gt;OG. 'K.t.."--PIE."!

&amp;.CAU~ :)I.(E

C.OM.t..~

TO

\\Aft..\ 1'-\i&gt;.M(.I

0 en Mon-Frl 9-5

G

BIG ~ATE
I

~AS FOU~

YEA~S

OLD ... MY DA.D TOOl&lt;.
11E TO A. PE.T STORE ...
THE.RE WERE
ALL SORTS OF

Open 7 days a weeki

&gt;lAMED CINNAMON OllT

Of' HER CAGE . I HELD
OUT MY HMIO... ,;HE

OOP 1

740-992-7599
PEANUTS

R.B.

51lE 5 SUCil A
UffiE 61Rl .. I}O '&lt;OU

AM I 601N6

Trucking

TO DO?
~

Athens

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
•Ag Lime
740-985-3564

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.

HOWARDL.

THINK SIIE'LL PULl. TilE

8ALL AWAV?TELLME I

I,

'

CAN TROST IIER,LINUS ••

.,'

BETTY .

(HOW Alnll'
)I

Ripley, WV 25271
1-800·822-0417

WRITfSfl
*ROIRIG
dOlE
lllmiiiCE
dUM lESS
GITTER

1

UNUS, WUAT

HAULING:

Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer·

"W.V's #I

*fiWilltlllllll*

949-1485
GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction

[ PU1' ON
RUNNIN&lt;#

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,

Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildlngs,,Rools,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;Mora
FREE ESnMATESI

740-742-341'

Raato,.,tlon

M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon

..... ....
Aentcdsl~~g
~

Sun. C1osed

• Elect:rlc81 4 Ptumbing

(

( 1

/f'.'lt'" ( '1/ll•f
( • {r (.

in Thppen Plai!l'J oow

/SHOP CLASSIFIEDSI L...___s_s:_:_~em_~_~th___.____, L-'=~~:~~~;~~~~.~. .

• Roofing I Gut*•
• V'!n)'l Skiing I P•lntlng
• PtHo lnd Porth Dflckl

RIIERT
BISSEll
CIISTIICllll

1 Fish story
2 Banjo
cousins
3 Formation

-Paulo
Ancient
Tokyo
'1:1 Olflca VIP
30 Geloho'o

3-"

¥

All pass

J

22 Ooor sign
23 Winter

&amp; Spanish
article

11t:tor
Po11C8

7 James or

goddell

Ken

B PoiHe

35 Uaeten
FI1Ung
!lghtly

cough

·-

9 Soften

37 HoopoHt

Roram

35 Gem

10 Denver hre.
Not real
12 Feng17 Uproor
20 Back out

36 Brttlah Inc. 11
39 Rap .

43 Wonted Gl
44 Avo.

sports Hom 47 Thought
24 Broedeasta 48 Plover's
25 Forewarning
dwelling
28 LJe loa-. Hyda 49 Fall plane
29 Aoman foe 51 Sundial
31 Heavy
numeral ·
burden
52 Rof8Nt1Ca
33 Composer
book

. 4 Dine
5 Icky atufl

32 "The Pink

36

21 Professor's 42 Lake .
goal
In tho Alps

fliers

lllllre

direction

54 Jamaican

· surfaen

export

37 UK part
40 Sighs
of rallel

41 Look fixedly

5HOI&lt;6 ...

AstroGraph
'lbur'lllrthdlll':

.

·

~ Nai'I-IELPING0

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrty Ciphet cryptograme are creeted !Jom qu&lt;rtations"' tamou, peooli;l, pastilnd present
Each letter 111 h c(ltler stands tor another.
•

Today's clue: Vequals P

" JZT8

CK0 SJI

Zl

TDKNRZFM

FT

J ZRRJ B

K

FM8 l 8 J T

-

· VKPJ

141 112-1871

99H215

Stop &amp; Compare

Z2Y... l.OCII

\

LBNFMS .

R 7,H B
T F D-

RF

·K

LPNC

VDB V K D8

B R B DMZ RI . "

OKPOPZM

WOlD

~y

'OU~N

foVt scrambled words. be·
low to form four simple words.

ROPYOL

I

GL I 0 C

l"

~-r.,,:-i,r.-5 ..:.·, .:....:;..! -1··=,·
_

_

_

_
1

_

__

'-~-''---L...J.-.J

T I NC I D

I believe that it is easy to be

pnoud when others brag about
you. But I also know that the
· best pride comes from doing
!your best when no one

It--r.,6:-T,--T,7::-,,-,,r--lc;
L.~L-_J._~J..-..1.--..1.-..l

8
•

e

is

(~;~iete

the chuckle c;vored
by filling in the miHing wprds
you develop fro'!' step No. 3 below.

PRINr NUMBEI!D l!IT!RS I
IN THESE SQUARES

UNSCIAM8lE lETTERS TO 1
GET ANSWER
'

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

i ' ' ' o•

Knotty· Plant· CIOVII· Broker· LOOK BACK
'Your husband is a true optimist.' a frie nd said while
we entered a restaurant. 'He just gave h1s car keys to
the valet and didn't LOOK BACK."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

""

HE. WOOlD ~I'E-IJD Al-l ~IJTIRE­
AFfE.Ri.JOOU &amp;F'lA~ I U(i

AUD Frot.ICKIUC. .

0

0

w~aT ~~.,.

~~- "THE E'II&gt;LY 81RD

i

K

R C 1&lt; M

T::~:::~' S@\t(\lA-l£ttf~•
GAM I
l,jjto.l
CLAT M.
_..:;______
0 Reotronoe , letttrs cf the

GE"r.s "1HE

V.C. YPUNG Ill

HF DB

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Misery-is a communicabledisease."
- Martha G1aham
"Waste nol fresh tears over old griefs." - Euripides

'1!&gt;u kNOW

• Garages
• Complete

Ren:'odeling

Pomeroy, Ohio '

23

·:~e

SOUPTONUTZ

·New Homes

We doH olloxt:etil
fun&gt;Keworl&lt;

DOWN

11 learned

1L

40 992·1956

• Room Addlliont I

cologne

18 Tap. ortbsp.

f ':3

Refinish, Repair,
Reoiore . ·
Keith Bailey

CARPENTER
SERVICE

+

Frld•y, Aug. 8, 2004
By Bernie• Bedw Oeol
Exciting things are in the offing lor you In
WAS so
the year ahead both socially and materialI
ly. However. there Is an exception, and
that is of nil)(lng business with friendship,
so make sure to keep the twO separate.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)- If you're precOnceived to think that you won't have a good
lime at a social gathering today because
someone you dl~tl l ke could be In attendar;~ce, life will give you what You belie\le.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Taking bows
prematurely· today for something you'\le
yet to accomplish could cause you embarrassment when someone who wants to
trip you up asks to see the finished prod·
uct .
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. ·23) - Usually you
are fully prepared for the other side of
things to present themsel\les at any gi\len
moment, but today if you don't plan things
down to the last contingency, you can be
tripped up.
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Tbink
carefully today before getting invol\ied with
associates where there are costs and
responsibilities to be shared. If they're not
distributed equally, things are not likely to
work out. .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - Do
not underestimate your ad\lersarles today,
especially when there are critical mailers
at stake. That sharp edge you betie\le you
possess may be a figment of your lmagi·
nation.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) . -:- Tell
everything 9)(actly as It Is today and don't
pretend to have taken care of something
for another when you realty haven't. The
THIS'?)
truth will be told and put you in an embarrassing position.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Should
you succumt:J to catering to your whims lor
Instant gratification, there IS ~Wery reason
to believe you will do something exceptionally edravagant that'll turn out to be
very unwise.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Chances
are something in which you're presently
Involved will be In need of goodwill and
support from ·you and all your associates.
Don't be the only one standing out of tl1e
told ..
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - Your credibility with o.thers Ia not aa good as it
should be today, and chanclis are you
won'l gat away with any fish stories you
may want to tall . Betler haw photoa lo
1'HA1''e ENO~ EXERC.I&amp;E
back your clalma.
. FOR· 1'0PAY
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ...:.. 11'1 not like
you to bank too heavily on aomethlng tl"1at
could be more wlahtul thinking than real,
In
yet tOday you may encounter lotMe If you
count ~our chjckene before they're
C)
hatched.
liS\
0
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Someone
with ulterior motiWJ might try to manipulate you through flattery today. Watch out
tor anyone who trlea to lead yoU to .believe
~ "'
he or aha thlnka you're the greateat per·
I
aon allv.. Don't buy H.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- An a.esociate lor whom you've r.cently gone out of
_;::~~~~::;e::!;:~:::::::J your way to do a apeclal fawr might not be
In a mood to reciprocate today. Chalk It IJP
to uperlence and handle thing• cllft.rently nut time.

'
I

J!lg Bend Antique
and Furniture

YOUNG'S

2•

HEY 1 LOOK AT
TIME! I DIDN'T

R/'.N AT 1'\E ... AND ... ANO...

Afo! lf1A.L ~ .

Morning .Star Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

THEY 11:&gt;0K A KITTEN

FREE ESTIMATES

See Brent or Brian Whaley

1

BARNEY

Windows • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and
RES!OENTIAL

and AlTer Jtkrllet Parts

Advertise in this

•

Repla~errient

RRstncktng l.ate Model Salvage

r~===============::;

s~~~~-

~~~--~r-~----~1------~-J

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

740-992-6454
Tllll M II Wll'1ll

SUVs

l

Karl Kraus, an Austrian satirist. wrote, "A
child learns to discard his ideals, wnereas a grown-up never wears out his short
pants."
AI the bridge table, ideal discards can be
difficult to determine. And to ma~e mat·
ters worse, sometimes the tempo with
which one d.iscards gives an opponent
vital information.
In this deal, you are West, delending
against four hecirts. You lead the club·
iack: four, sb:, three. You continl!e with the
club nine: seven, queen. 10. East returns
a low club and declarer ruffs with the ,
heart queen. Don't even think about overrutting! What would you discard?
South's three-diamond rebid was ·a
game·try.
II you 'o11erruff at Irick three, declarer will
win your relurn, draw trumps 1 and ruff his
two diamond losers on the board. By discarding, you apparently guarantee two
· trump tricks with which to ,defeat the con·
tract. But what did you discard?
At the table, Wesl selected a diamond.
Howe11er, the declarer, former world
champion Fred Hamilton, cashed the diamond ace, ruHed the diamond 10 on !he
board, took the king and ace Ql spades,
trumpacl a spade in hand, ruffed the dia·
mond jack, and trumped another spade.
South had the A-J·8 of hearts left, West
the K-10-3. Hamilton exited wilh the neart
jack to restrict West to one trump trick.
That was brilliantly played, but il West
had discarded a spade at trick three,
even Hamilton could not have got home.
When he took the 11ital second spade ruff,
West would overruft and exit with a dia·
mond to await !he second heart trick.

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

SFwp

doubl1ul

lodging
57 19508
15 Dlcli Tracy's • record
wile
58 Carnivore's
16 -de
diet

Discarding can ~e
decidedly difficult ,

Ravenswood, WV 261'64
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

Manning K. Roush
Owner

Roi-Air Air Cumprt!ssor
Open 8:00-6:30 M-F;Sat. 8:00-3:00 992-1033
Pick- up and delivery serv ice

Pass

•

56 lea'll

maybo

. aeoolono?
42 Taxi

Washington Street

204 Condor Street

East

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Gravely

tNT
Pass

Collllllleo
lmpor11
Comfor1
55 MuiHplex
le dlwnlng,
fare

:14

North

Opening tead: •

(304) 273-5321

29670 BashanRoad

St. • Pomeroy

beside Larry's Fruit Stand

1•

3+

West

oolomn

53 Exp&lt;&gt;rto or

' Panther"

Vulnerable; Neither
Soutb

tx.b
SpMde

5
10
12
13

CenoiiS Info

48 Plopano
50 Overly

Hati.or

1

Dealer: North

U ,

Hill's Self
Storage

.
'1'8rry's Bngln••

Remodeling
St!i:urily Camera!!
Motion Sensors

r

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

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

.

Townhouse
apartments,
'and/or small hoiJses FOR
-RENT. Call (740)441-1111
:ror application &amp; tnforma1ion.
l"urnlshad sm8.11 1 bedroom
.apl. Close lo PVH and,
·Jhopplng. No Pets, NoSmoking. $325.00 + alec·
tric. References $200.00
deposrt (304)675-2651

• Driveways • TE!nnis Courts
• Parking Lots •·Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
·

316

·-

"' Q 8 7
• K 10 3
•. K B5 2
.Q9743
• J 9
-"AQ652
. South
&amp; .K 2
.AQJ86 4
• A J 10
• 10 3

.

45

14 Cheep

East

"' tO 9 5 3

Phone 674-3311
Fax 304:675-2457
.

~~
j . .,~;l:,­
... ·1Jft ~

ltoYeM·~ -

.P

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
'i;p 1 AFFORDABLE!

Cell

MONTY

Free: (866) 254-15~9
"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

X
1996 Olds Ciera in good L.--Fi.oiliiR.OSiiALEiilil-.,.1
Mlscw..ANEous condi1ion $900 needs a tinle
MEROIANDISE
_ work (304)937-3348 or 1984
Jeep
Chero~ee
EllS.
U
(3041937-2705
~3~0~4~57:,::6:;:·2;,:_703~...
. --~
Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
1987 Ford Aero Star - - - - - - - MaroacvaEs/
Ai~Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
$400.00 Runs good, good 1997 ·Mustang Convertible
4 WHEELERs
motor and'transmission .
has new Top, V-6. automatic, L..;.~;::~=.-• Sui&gt;&lt;!r Hi Efficiency Equipmen~
16 toot llat bottom boat, 3 extra clean 85,000 miles
• . Free Estimates
!·
'~-d
t
·
asking
$6.900
(3041576·
1985
Suzuki
250
Ouad·run·
•
5
&amp;
10
yr
W•"rantt'es
·"'
'l
1
1
1
cap a1n seas an
ra1er
•u
.• ~' .• -·, ~ - ........ ,,,,;•
ner. Excellent original condi·
H
I
~
~
$800 00 WI h
25 h 2383
. .
1 a
p
•
uge nventory
Johnson engine $ 1,200 .00
tion. (740l742·3020
V;
d y I F I '- ..
"'~,·,v
w 1 ~,
( 7401 843-~
1999 Chevy Malibu LS.
• anguar
ent e!s 1rep aces
Black 79 ·000M , PW, PL. AT, 2001 Harley Da11ldson Road
r._'R_'P~_n G_l_b_S~~ I~DArr~EaU•
3')(4' RedwoOO dog house CO, cassette, power seat, King Classic, loaded, 4000
-..
_
lr~rcnr~E~WM.
for medium ·to large dog. $ 5·300 -(7401441-1 720 ·
miles. like new. (7401992·
Gallipolis, OH WVOI0212
.:.$50:..:._.:..(7_40_:1_44..:6_·32..:...77..:. _ _ 2000 White Muetang v 6 7771 .
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967
5 drawer light brown dress- 75,000 miles. Great stlape. - - - - - - - - - L--....:;::::;:.;:::.!,:.:.!...!.:~:!::~::.:.~L.--.J
er. $30.00 (740)9•9·2607
$6,500.00 1994 Red Chevy 2003 Honda 400 EX, $1000
.(.'\;1
Full size Blazer appro)(. e)(tras on it, asking $3,500,
MAPLEWOOD
5)(6 trailer, 5&gt;t2 detachable '40,000 mtles on new engine (740)992-5675.
( oll,(ntdiou
loolb())(, diamond plated $5500.00.
Phone
lloATSI·~S~~RS
VInyl Siding
deck, $600; 4 cyt. Wisconsin (740)992·5500
day
-~ ~
flea lllal,'k.et
engine, $350: (740)992· (7401992-6273 evening
Replacement Windows
2668
St. Rt. ll4
Room Additions
2001 Ford Mustang, black, 18 loot (1999) Playboy
Between Syracuse
Decks
7 Bobby Jones Gall Shirts, fully loaded, 32,000 original Eagle Pontoon with Tr.ailer.
&amp; Racine
X·Large. All like new, only miles, garage kept, V·6, 40 HP Yamaha Engine and
Blown Insulation
been o"ry Cleaned. $50 auto. excellent condition. Trolling Motor. Low ho~ts
Pole f!uildings
August61t 7
each or ~00 for .&amp;.II $9,000, (740~742-2215
great shape $6000 call
Garages
Spaces
(304)882-2621
(30 1
3 (
675
4 675 588
~Iii\0~"-i~~~t:l"t 2003 while Honda Accord.
"
or 304)
•
Available
I OI UD Discount Outlet.
Auto. air, 19•000 miles, 0976 leave message
James Keesee 11, Owner
740
2772
992
Grand Opening Sate
excettentcondltion, $17,400. _ _: . . _ _ _ _ _ _
•
•
$5.00 per da)'
op · quality, warranties
Day 740-446 _3836 ; Evening Bass Track,er Tadpole (Flat
740-742·2332
740-949·2734
WV, Flea Marke 7 40-446-0012.
Botlom) 14FT W/8 Horse
~action C. Frida~s
Mercury &amp; trailer $2,500
~aturdays and Sundays 92 Ford Festiva $900 call {304)675·1731
liii606~6~1!922~·7 1;;;B5i.._ __. after 6 pm 13041675 5701
irir~~;...""""!_..,
SYRACUSE SMALL
MCOTORAMPERSH~~ .
ENGINE DR'S
JET
97 while Neon , 2 dOor, auto·
CQ/ces
35 C
Rd
1 6 otlege
AERATION MOTORS .
mali&lt;:. Great car! (740)256h.J
·
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuin In _1r:651!'2._-~--,-...., 1980 22' COachman Mo1or .
'-'1
Syracuse. OH 45779 .
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· r15
Home Class c. Roof air,
• Birthdays
740-992-0122
800-537·9528.
..
FOH SA.LE
e)Cceltent inside, runs gOOd,
• Weddings
Quality work for a fair
·--iOiiiiiliiiiilii._.l 64,000 miles, $3,900.
A
I I
price
_N_E_W_A_NO--U-S-EO_S_T_E_E_L
(740)446-9278.
• ny spec 8
Alj work guaramccd
1983 Chevy S-10 4-wheel
occasion
Master Certified
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar drive, air conditioning, power 1993 26 foot travel trailer,
PI
rd
Mechanics Briggs &amp;
For
Concrete,
Angle, windcws/lod(s, cruise conace.your 0 er
S
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
tully self contained. No
today
tr.mon, Kohler,
trol, 150,000 miles. $2,000. 1 k 1
Murray,
MTD All
17401742 3020
Gra11ng
For
Drains, (7&gt;4())441-9151.
ea s. cean.
•
(740) 985-'3917
makes &amp; models $10.00
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 1987 Jeep Comanche plu , 2002 Jayco 29' Travel Trailer.
lora Bing
off any purchase of
TueSday, Wednesday
&amp;
standard,
good
work
truck.
...
·
new condition. sell or trade ,
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed (740)992-0029 lea~ mas- Day (3041675-4230 Eva.
&amp; Yge.
(304)675-4853,
Cell
Thursday, Saturday
Sunday. (740)446-7300
(304)593-2897
1996 Chevy s • ~ 0 Ext Cab
0 •- - LS
~ an,.&gt;Coleman 12 FT Foldout
uu....,.,.._
. •~•
~•·· 5- s "'""''
SUPFuFs
brakes. 115k miles. S3500 Camper, Air Conditioner,
obo. (304)674-5519 or $4,500 (304)675-1731
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH

r

. 675-2457

ACROSS

08-05-ot

-" K 8 7 4
West

Toll

After 6pm
(Before 6pm

740-985-4159.

·r

Henclerson, WV

Free Estimates
.

Tree Service

IIDW Open

8·5

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

Let me do 1\ for youl

Bucket Truck

Nortll
• A J 6 4
• 9 7 5 2
• 6

StateWide
CIE PIIUIBd Walls

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

JONES'

_ow_n_e_r·-~---- L~--..iiiliiliilililil-_.1
F d M
A d
1996 or
ustang, e .
Tinted. windows. CD player,
Sunroof, vs
Standard
147,000 miles
$:3,800
(304)675-8878

every month
All puck $5.00

Ta~e

table. - - - - - - - - ~=======~
1992 Honda Civic runs ,..
great, 5-speod, air. ssoo,oo Eledrical Services LLC
Residential
740-388-3434
New Construction

r

of

740-992-1189

2004

1-br Apt. Close to downtown tables &amp; coffee
Pt. Plea. $350 a month 811 (740)388·8234.
utilities included+ S150.dep
. (3041675-3654 .

Last Thursday

Advertise
in this
spacefor$100
per month.

Roofing • Siding •

740-992-5232

1999 Mercury Cougar, runs
great. $500.00 740-3380434

6:30

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

MYERS .PAVING
.

Early hirds st..1rt

Licensed in Ohio and wv

Mollohan carpet, 202 Clark
1
Chapel Road,· Porter, Ohio.
(740)446-7444 1-877·830~162. Free Estimates, Easy •so Mossey Ferg. Diesel
financing, 90 d8ys same "as Tractor &amp; some equipment
cash . Visa/ Master Card. (304)576-2703
Drive- a- little save alot.
6ft. Bush Hog, brand Bush
TMmpsons Appliance &amp; Hog, lor sale $450 . Call
Aepair-675-7388. For sale, (740)379·235 1.
re·condltioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers. refrigera· Tractor parts &amp; service. spa- ~======::::::
in
Massey rtors, gas and electric cializing
ranges, air conditioners, and Ferguson , Ford , and
Looking for a
wringer washers. Will do Belarus. (7401696-0358
repairs on ma)or brands in
non profit.
I U \ '.""I'OIU \110\
shop or at your home.
organization to
Used Furniture Store, 130 rto..
AlJTOS
work one day of
Bula\lille Pike. Dressers. L.~•-•-ilroiiRiliiSiiiAiiiLE-_.1
couches, mattresses, reclln· ..,
admission gates
ers, grave monuments. 2002 · $500!. Honda's. Chevy's
Bass Tracker fishing boat. Jeep's , etc Police Impounds
al the
(740)446-4782 Gallipolis, Cars from $500. For listings
Meigs County
OH. Hrs . 11 -3.
1·800-749·'81 04 e)(t 3901

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furnished and unfurnished, security deposit
White wicker daybed with ,
required, no pets. 740-992·
pull OIJt trundle .. Mattress
221B.
incll,tded. Glass· top end

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
01)0rs Open 4:30

Bring this coupon
· Buy $5.00

740-843-5264

Renovations

33795 Hiland Rd. ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

J4)(80 3 b.edroom, 2 fu ll
.'taths. All etacrric. Central
~fr. Porter area. $400 per
month,
$400
deposit.
(740)446-451 4.

r

Residential

r

.suus

We can insure your valuables! •

Contractor

1

F

.

INC.

Low - Low Rates

2 story. 3BF1. 2BA. ott sheet

·r

would you lose ·if there was a fire?

GRAFTERS WANTED

jn Eureka. 740·256·6408"740-441-0583.

laking applications for small
.1
tledroom nouse in
"i.o1iddleporl. references &amp;"
)l~posit required , (740)992·t&gt;154 evenings .

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~~~

.

�2004

ATHENS 2004~

BoxiJlg is a family
•

tradition for
Vargas,Bt

E

i
LINCOLN

MERCURY

AMERICAN

lUXUIIIY

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
••• , 1 \!'~. · \,d

. ru:w

rtEW

UPTO

j52000
1

rtEW

1004 MON fKLl' ·

2005 t'O(

ii\UHUS

·'250
PER/ MO.•- .

n

'lA ... ~JI

$18,995 .

.
NEW

':Z004

f!Rl

2004. SAHlf:

U~TAR.Sf

AS LOW AS

'15,222

$18,995

tE0044

Well Equipped, 7 Passenger

NEW

2004
f t 50 4.'i t
Starting At

j1

l6,272

'

\l ' · ' '•I h

.: ••ot

commiss_ioners' Thursday meeting.
The Parkersburg, W. Va.-based
POMEROY - · Meigs County firm operates its own gravel pit surCommissioners will wait until rounding the county 's. The company
Friday morning to act on the pro- has agreed to pay $250.000 for the
posed sale of the coumy's Letart 17-acre pit, and to provide in
exchange a 4.5.acre tract of its existFalls gravel pit.
Commissioners tabled action last ing real estate. which holds a quarterweek on the 'sale, while awaiting mitlion tons of washed and prepared
Prosecuting Attorney Pat Story' s aggregate materiaL Martin Marietta
approval of a purchase agreement now sells that material for $4.50 per
provided by Martin Marietta ton , bringing t,he value of the sale to
Aggregate, the sole bidder on the $1 .25 million fo{ the county. The
property. As of Thursday afternoon, cash proceeds would be used for
Engineer Eugene Triplett said, Story road repair in Letart Town ship, parhas not approved the agreement, and ticularly on Apple Grove-Dorcas
was not available to do so during . Road, which runs adjacent to the·two

AS LOW AS

NEW

11\llt\\

'i•)

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

See_Page81

NEW

2004 GRrV

'\,,

,;,.., ... . . 1-.il· ,., ,.,. ,1 .. . .,,

Commissioners table gravel pit sale again

• • Reds size down
struggling Giants.

REBATE

REBATE

NEW
.!00/t;

,J

'SPORTS

2004 LINCOLN LS

S6000

'6000

REBATE

Traylor plows back
into Cleveland, Bt

gravel pits.
outlining terms of the sale to Story.
The sale would provide '"decades Some public objection to the sale
worth'" of gravel material for town ' vo.iced after the bid was opened
ships' and the county 's use. accord- resulted in a delay in the sale: A secing to Triplett, and would help pro- oqd hearing on the proposal was held
teet the jobs of IR Martin Marietta . on Jul y 22. and since tl!itial objecempluyees at the local mining opera- tions were expre ssed then, public
tion . Because the material Martin input to the sale has been positive,
Marietta has offered as a term of the Sheets said last week.
sale is washed and ready for use, its
Both
Sheets
and· County
value is higher than that of the raw Commi ssioner Mick Davenport have
aggregate • material found on . the said they will vote in favor of the
county's property, Triplett said.
sale, wiJ.ile Co mmi ssioner Jeff
Commissioners
opened
the Thornton has voiced some reservaParkersburg firm' s bid on July 15, tions. Commissioners will meet at II
and referred the bid to Triplett for a.m. Friday to act on the sale and
review and the purchase agreement other matters.

ssooo

rtEW

2004
MOUNTAI I'U~ E R
AS LOW AS

'25I 789
.
#E0043

OBITUARIES

SAVEUPJO

'9,766

Page AS
• Mqrgan Minshall
• Herman Bowers
• William Capehart Sr.
• David Pugh

Beth Shaver, director of Meigs Senior Center, left, Regina
Walls, director of the Kinship Program, and Kathy Gobel,
LS. W. discuss the benefits of the Kinship Navigator Program
for local families. (Beth Sergentj photo)

Meigs Council on Aging
receives funding for
kinship program

LO'rrERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: o-o-1 (red ball)
Pick 4 day: 4-4-6-1
Pick 3 night: Q-1-4 (whne ball)
.Pick 4 night: 7-6-6-2
Buckeye 5: 12-24-27-29-35

The Super Lotto Plus

Carpenters repair fair grandstand

jackpot is $5· million.

WestVtrginia

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Dally 3: 6·Q-5
Dally 4: 7-6-2-9
Cash 25: 2-5-9-12-14·24

WEAmER

Detallo on .P... A2

2182fi1D
llftiiER SPliT
:

2 SECilONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A6

Classifieds

82-4
Bs'

(:omics
,:Oear Abby

;Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports ·
Weather

.

Volunteers of Carpenters Local 650 in Pomeroy work on making repairs to the historic grandstand on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. A section of the seating had deteriorated to the
place where it. created a safety concern.

A6
A4
A2

As
86

As
81
A2

© •o04 Ohio Valley PubUshlng Co.

POMEROY - With the
Meigs County Fair opening
in two weeks the Fair Board
was concerned about some
deterioration of the 125year-old grandstand and
wondered whether it was up
· to holding the hundreds of .
people who cram in to watch
the race~ . pulls, and entertainment
A section had deteriorated
necessitating some structur- ·
al repair. To the rescu'e came
members of ·Pomeroy's
Carpenters Loca1650 volunteering their time and exper- These members of Carpenters Local 650 donated their time
tise to replacing the sagging to repairing the grandstand on the fairgrounds. left to right,
seats and underpinning.
front, they are Paul Wilson , Chuck Clark , Chandler Watson,
Fair Board members Tom Roush. Beri Hickel, and ba,ck, Brent Zirkle, Mike Morris,
stripped off the wood plank John Hornsby, Tom Sayre and Jeff Circle.
seats right down to the hour day completed the job. mid-1880s by Lore Davis, it
rafters one 11ight and the
"We were glad to do it," was listed on the National
next day the carpenters said Circle, recording secre- Register of Historical. Places
moved in to check the joists, tary for the local. "We want- in 1983. That makes preserreplace what needed to be ed to help out the Fair · va(ion even more important.
replaced, and cpnstJ:uct the Board.'' Circle said the
Deterioration through the
new seating, all with ne"' . union members are taking years raised the question of
materials.
on several volunteer projects safety in the early 19'80s
Donating their time to as a community service. leading to extensive renovarepair a 24 x 24 foot section They have been involved tion. The old. structure was
of the historic grandstand with.the fair before support- raised and placed on a conwere Paul Wilson, Chuck ing 4-H woodworking pro- crete platform, reinforce.
ment braces were added and
Clark, Chandler Watson, jetts.
Tom Roush; Ben Hickel,
The grandstand is unique a new roof and drainage sysBrerit Zirkle, Mike Morris, among all others iQ Ohio in tern installed - all steps to
John Hornsby, Tom Sayre that it curves with the race- ensure the structural integriand Jeff Circle. The 10 val- track. Designed on a half- ty of the grandstand, a
unteer,s in abput an eight· moon on the first turn in the Meigs County treasure.

BY BETH

dren under the age of 18,
while 332 are totally responsible for grandchildren.
These ligures do not include
other non-relative adults
who have taken responsibility for caring for someone
else's children.
To alleviate lhis · silent ·
epidemic, the Meigs County
Council on Aging has
· received funding through
the Ohio Department of Job
and Family Services to
implement · the Kinship
Navigator Program . The
program does not distribute ·
money but can navigate

SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The old
saying, "the more things
change, the more they stay
the same" does not always
apply to the institution of the
family. The family is constantly being redefined and
reinvented from one generation tO the next.
,
Presently, there .. is . a
national trend of families
comprised of grandparents
parenting their grandchil dren. The 2000 census llgures suggests that there are
475 grandparents in Meigs
County residing in hou seholds with one or more chil-

Please see Kinship, AS

EMS ~ikely to
remain .in Syracuse
Lyons said. "It is going to be
tO the benefit of the community to leave it as it is."
The Syracuse .fire departme~t and EMS have long
been intertwined, sharing
the same space and equipment. Many of . the EMS
· members are loyal to
Pickens, and resent that they
have to continue to cooperate and share equip'ment
with the tire department now
that Jack Peierson has
replaced Pickens as chief
Wood said he's heard
EMS members say they
were going to take essential
count y-purchased equip-

BY TIM MALONEY
. .
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse
Eme-rgency
Medical Squad ' is likely to
remain in the village depite
lingering hard feelings over
the firing of longtime Fire
Chief Eber Pickens Sr. and
five other firemen earlier
this year.
,
. _In Thursday's Syracuse
Village Council meeting,
both Mayor Many Wood and
County EMS Director Gene
Lyon s said it would be best
for the village if the EMS
stays put.
" At prese nt, I have i10
intention of pulling it.''

Ple••e !5ft EMS, AS

Flbromyalgla Support Group
This FREE support group is sponsored by lhe Arthrifis Foundalion and Holzer Medical Cenfer,

.Tuesday~ August 10, 2004
5:30 - 8:00 PM • HMC
Education &amp; Conference Cenler
'
.

t

.

LINCOLN
AIIIJI I CAN

,.
•

~ ~~~ ~ I T

Topics discussed will include ... pain control, exer&lt;:ise, relaxation,
fatigue, depression and doctor/patient relationship .

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Take a more active role in your health!

www.holzer.org

For more information, or to register, call Missi Ross at

• (740) 446·5121

'-- ~-·-

--

. --·

---------·-----~----~---:---------'----

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

•

••

'or

1·800·816·5131 .

,

,_
~-

-- --

··- "

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