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                  <text>Marauders open
X·country at Early
Bird
Invitational, Bt
•

Pencils still enough
technology
for ·school, Bt ·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I Rill\) . \I '(,! 'SI

;;ol'l "':' IS•\oi. ;;.,J . '\o .;1

•
• OSU picks Zwick as
. startingQB.SeePage.B1

'

.BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

.. includes 30,000 square feet of.
work space with four loading
docks and the capacity for a
TUPPERS PLAINS -The five-ton crane, and a 1,600
Meigs County Community square-foot
fully-finished
Improvement Corporation office. A 20,000 square-foot
dedicated its $1.2 million concrete parking area is also
speculative induslrial building included on the I 0-acre lot.
in Thppers Plains on Thursday · "The CIC decided this bean
morning, heralding it as a pos- tield would be ·our best opporitive sign of jobs to come.
tunity in the county for eco-·
In what used to be a farm nomic development," CIC
field just off Ohio 7, ClC President Paul Reed sa id.
members, elected 'officials "There are some who may feel
and others involved in the we've paid too much to build
county's economic develop- this building, but spending
ment efforts gathered to cut money for economic developthe ribbon on the $31,600 ment is never ·a waste of
square-foot building, which money. It's an investment in
leaders hope wi II attract an the community and its future."
industrial concern and the
Those involved in planning
jobs that come with it.
the buiding and securing fundThe building, located in the ing are confidenl that the liuildCIC's East Meigs lndu.strial ing's location, near U.S. 50,
Park, is designed to serve as a Ohio 7 and the Ravenswood
"turn-key" location for a Bridge Connector, will help
prospective employer. It is vir- attract business to it. ·
luaU y ready to move into, and
"The location provide s easy

--- .. ---

Members of the Meigs County Community 'Improvement
Corporation and other community leaders cut a ribbon at the
CIC's new "spec:· building at the East Meigs Industrial Park in
Tuppers Plains. L-r, Jenny Smith, Chamber of co·mmerce
Director, Michael L. Swisher. Grover Salser. Jr.. State Rep.
Jimmy Stewart, Sue Maison . Roscoe Mills. Joe Bolin. Paul
Reed, Judge Steven L. Story, State Sen. Joy Padgett, Wesley
Karr, Horace ·Karr, Christi Lynch. representing U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, Bob Wingett, Karen Sloan. representing U.S. Sen.
Mike DeWine, County Commissioners Mick Davenport and Jim
Sheets, and Brenda Roush. (Brian J. Reed/photo)

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.
-

access to major highways ·and
business centers in Ohio and
\Yest Virginia," Reed said.
. Fw1ding for ihe project came
from grant and loan sources at lhe
Ohio
Departrhent
of
Development and ihe Governor's
Office of Appalachia. Tt will be
made available to industry
ihrough "very tlexible and afford·
able" · purchase or lease lerms.
Reed said.
According to Meigs County
Economic
. DeveJopment
Director Perry Varnadoe, at
least two prospeCtive industries have already toured the
building , and others have
expressed interest.
·"We wanted to wait until
the building was completed
and ready to tour before we
began to show it lo prospective ocCllpants," Varnadoe
said. "but there has been definite interest already, and I
expect others to visit soon, as
well."

Celebration of
Reed follows lifelong dream to Oregt&gt;n
Mariam EI-Dabajas·
Life Planned

·'•

).
,..Z4

""" ·"''dai l"" "t '""'· ' "m

CIC dedicates 'spec' building in Tuppers Plains:

SPORTS

..

:.!-. :.!1111-J

.

The Dally s.ntll'lel

.OBITUARIES
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Page AS
•.Rex A. Weekley, 20

INSIDE
• A Hunger for More. See

Page A2
• M&amp;G committed to talking to USWA. See Page
A6

WEATIIER

'

. MIDDLEPORT - All of
her life, Laurie Reed of
Middleport has dreamed of
turning her passion for interiBY BETH SERGENT
for Dr. Shad
or decorating into a business.
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM Sargand ·at
Earlier this summer, she•did
.
. 0 h i 0
just that.
. RACINE - The commuruty · University in
In·May, Reed followed her
of Racine was shocked and Athens this
life-long dream by traveling
saddened to learn 'of the death summer Dr
to Oregon, where she comof 19-ye_ar-old Mariam Saleh s a r g ~ n ci
pleted an intensive program
El-DabaJa. EI-DabaJa was along with
of interior decorating, and
killed in a car accident Tuesday the head of
now, she's started her own
on U.S. 33 near Pratt's Fork.
0 .h i 0
home-based decorating serShe was the daughter of University's
vice. "Interiors by Laurie
Saleh Ah EI-DabaJa and · c i v i 1
Reed. " She hopes she can
Vicky Koste-Hysell El" Engineering Department. Dr. now use her talent and
. DabaJa of R~cme. . .
Gayle Mitchell, will also attend newly-earned skills to make
. El-DabaJa s .family _Is plan- lhe memorial service on Sunday. others· dreams come true ,
rung a memonal semce at 2
In lieu of flowers, ihe family too.
Beginning a new career is a
p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 29 at the is requesting donations be sent
daunting
prospect for almost
Sou then:' · High . School to the Southern High School
Gymnasmm, a. celebratiOn of ihe Library, 920 Elm Street, Racine. anyone, but ~r Reed, 47, it
young woman s hfe. Speakers at
EI-Dabaja was the 2003 meant leaving husband, Paul.
the service wtll IIICiude farmly, Valedictorian of Southern High kids Katie and Ben, and
Middleport home for nearly
teachers from · Southern High School and a fonner studenl of 10 weeks while she completSchool, friends from school and Barbara Beegle, an English ed lhe course. The program,
the commuruty.
. . teacher at Southern. Beegle said at the Academy of Interior
El-DabaJa. who was a ctvii of Mariam EI-Dabaja, "She was Decorating, concentrates two
en~nee~ng student at O~io as close to perfect as anyone I've years of training into a nineUruverstty, had been working ever known."
week course.
Staying in a Portland-area
hotel, Reed studied color,
lighting, window treatments,
fabric and other decorating
concepts, while completing a Laurie Reed is shown with a s~mple board. showing work she
completed at the Academy of Interior Decorating in Oregon.
(Brian J. Reed/ photo )
Please see Reed. AS

Back to school

DetaltsonPaceA&amp;

INDEX
2 SEcnQNS -

Calendars

Pedaa
LDcal

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
'Faith•Values
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
'@ &amp;004 ObJo Valley

lcbaal

!

ConAgra Foods recalls 85,600 pounds
of chicken that may .have pieces of metal .

16 PAGfS

As
84-6
B7

As
'A4
A2

As
As
B1-3

Cameron Harmon prepares to enter Southern Elementary as a

A6 'first.grader. Students throughout Meigs County returned to
l'uhll8hlna Co.

class on Wednesday. (Beth Sergenttphoto)

WASHINGTON (AP) ConAgra Foods is recalling
85,600 pounds of its Banquet
frozen chicken breast strips
because they may contain
pieces
of
metal,
the
Agriculture Depanment of
Agriculture said Thursday.
The Omaha, Neb .-based
company and the USDA have
both received consumer complaints but no injury reports.
The recall is be,ing con-

ducted by a ConAgra plam in July 27, 2005.
Macon, Mo.
-28-oz. packages labeled
The chicken was packaged "made with chicken breast
on July 20. 21 and 27 and with rib meat. ' Banquet,
distributed to retail stores chicken breast strips, originationwide.
nal" with :'best if used by"
The recalled products are: · dates of either July 20 or July
-28-oz. packages labeled 21 , 2005.
" new, Banquei. chicken
All packages bear the code
breast strips. breaded chicken P-107.
breast patties with rib meat.
More information is ·availoriginal'' with ·'best if used able by calling the cornpany
by'' dates of either July 20 or at 1-800-414-7500.
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FAITH &amp;VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Non~religious

Americans are increasingly
important for the Democrats' coalition
Bv RICHAR[I N. OSTUNG
AP RELIGION WRITER

After years of talk about the
centrality of conservative
Protestants and Catholics in
the Republican Party coalition •. an oppos1te ~acto r is
gatntng w1de r nouce: the
Democrats' reli an&lt;;e upon
non-religious voters.
"Seculars have become an
increasi!)g portion of the
Democratic electoral coalition and especially of the
party's activist base,'' says
Geoffrey Layman of the
University of . Maryland.
author of "The Great D1 viCie .
Religious
and
Cul tura l
Conflict in · American Party
Politics." The trend orig im1ted
in 1972 and had become obvious to political sc ientists by
1992, he says.
A religio usly linked values
clash is redefining U.S. politics, accordin}! to Louis Boice
and Gerald De Maio of C1ty
University of New York. And
if Republicans are labeled 'the
party of religwu s traditionaltsts, they assert, "the
Democrats with equal validi ty, can be called the secularist
party."
A University of Akron poll
of 4,000 adults this spring
showed that those with no
religious affi ltation are 17
percent of self-identifi ed
Democrats, nvaling the
party 's traditional blocs o f
white Catholics ( 18 percent)
and black Proiestants (16 percent). The seculansts fa vored
John Kerry over George W.
Bush by 57.4 percent to 27.2
percent (wtth the rest bac king
others or undecided).
The Akron polling since
1992 is particularly useful
because samples are large and
interviewers
pre ss
for
specifics on affiliation rather
than vague religious identifications. (The 2004 margin of
error was plus or minus 2 percentage points.)
A Pew Research Center poll
of 1,512 adults, reported
Tuesday, showed
more
Americans
see
the
Republican Party as "generally friendly to religion" (52
percent) than the Democratic
Party (40 percent). Among
blacks, only 28 percent saw
the Republicans as faithfriend!~
and
among
Republicans, only 27 percent
saw the Democrats as friendlyPolitical scientists say polls
that correlate religious behavior or belief witli party align- ·
ment indicate the "God gap"
is more significant than most
factors, including the muchtouted gender gap.

Sumlarly, schoiars' su rveys
of delegates to the pat1ies'
200Q conventions fo und contras ts on wee kl y wo rshi p
atte nda nce (59 percent for
Republican d e l e~a t es, 35 percent for Democrats), expressmg "a gteat deal" of reliance
upon relig1on (4 1 percent for
Republicans, 23 pe rce_ll.t for ·
Democrats) and consef\'.\tive
beliefs about the B1ble (54
percen t for Republicans, 26
percent for De mocrats) .
Moreover. Boice observes,
some Americans men't just
non-religious b\lt anti- rehgJO us. Surveys have shown
hostil ity tow ard evangelical
and
funda mentali st
Protestants mnong· a segment
of Democrats. mcluding more
than half the pa1 ty's 1992
conve nt1 on delegates. He
likens th is to antt-Catholi c
b1as fro m the 1850s through
the 1920s, except that this
time "it's more a prejudice of
the educated classes:"
Si n c~ America's sec ular
ra nks are growing, the trerid
might seem to help the
Democrats.
In Nat iO nal
Opinion Research Ce ntet surveys during 2002, 13.8 percent answered "none" when
asked their current rdigmn.
co mpared with 6 3 percent 111
1991.
BLtt overt appeal s to seculari sts
could
backfire,
Lay man says, because blacks
are more devout than other
Americans and the Democrats·
also need some support from
churchgomg Catholics and
white Prote stants.
Last year Amy Sulli van, a
form er a1de to Sen. Tom
Dasc hle, complained 111 a
Washington Monthly article
that Democrattc leaders worned so much about "their cm e
base of seculansts and rel igious minon t1es" that they
shunned re ligious appeal s,
thus
undercutting "any
chance of buildmg a sustatn·
able electoral coalition."
Sullivan thinks in 2004 the
Democrats are tinding "ways
to acknowledge the importance of religion,'' lu rin~ religtous moderates wtthout
alienating non-religwus supporters.
One sign of the new emphasis came the Friday before the
party's Boston convention
when
chairman
Terry
McAuliffe named Brenda
Bartella Peterson, a Christian
Church (Disciples of Christ)
minister, as the Democratic
National Committee's first
religious outreach staffer
within · memory. McAuliffe
said this reflected Democrats'
"commitment to reaching all
people of faith."

But Peterson resigned less
than two weeks later, after the
conse rvative Catholic League
pmnted out that Peterson had
JOined a legal brief ask mg the
Supreme Court to remove
"under God" fro m the Pledge
of All egidnce . Peterson is
now organi Zing re li g1ous
opposi tion to the pro posed
ban on gay marrmges and
civ il umons ·in Kentucky.
She
says
Ak ron-type
polling overstates secu lar1sm's 1mpact beca use many
Ameri cans are personal ly
re ligious but "far more dedicated to acting out thei r fait h"
through politics than by
church involve ment
In practical terms that's.precJse ly the prob lem fur.
Democ rats, says John C.
Oreen, an expert on religious
facto rs m politics who ru ns
the Akron su rveys. U 1~lik e
Republi cans networki ng at
weekl y wo rship or With other
groups or hstcmng to rel igwu s
broadcasts,
the
unchurched voters "are much
harder to fmd and organize."
he says. Worse yet. they' re
less likely to vo te.
To Boice, the Democrats'
new religious rhetonc doe sn't
alter the fact that the two parties have become marked ly
differe nt on di sputes that
divide seculansts and religious traditionali sts. He and
De Maio rated U S. senators'
records the past decade from
0 to I0 m votmg on matters
li ke abortion , homosexuality
and aid for reli g1ous schools.
Republicans had an average
of 0.95 and Democrats 8.9 on
their seculari sm scale. John
Kerry scored a perfect 10, as
did John Edv,ards once he
joined the Senate. Zell Miller,
the Democratic turncoat that
Republicans named as their
co nvention keyn oter last
week, scored zero .

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR. LIFE.
G 1.,.1 0 i' Dall li'rib
a • P Jl
Y
une
Subscribe todDy • 446-2342
Wljlw.myt/Qilyrrlbulie,com.
'·

PageA2

'

--A Hunger For More

Ftllowship
Apostolfc

"e nMy count on HIS stre!1gth
Of the struggles thllt beset
and IC,olvc to ueliver us from
Chnsttans in this day and age,
the chams of -llur old tleshly
.the inward battle ra~mg wt thnatu1e with .1!1 its baggage.
in our hearts and tmnds is the
As we read H1s Word, the
most insidious. We may very
Pastor
Bihle. we can 1est assured
well be experiencing strife
Thorn
that
He will indeed "teach us
between ourselves and others,
Mollohan
all
thincs
and bring to our
fee ling oppression from those
remembr,mce His will for ou r
who si mply don· t yet underil'es"
tfrom John 14: 17).
stand the h1gher life to whic h
Furtbcrmmc
.. Js we pray. we
we· ve been m lled, and even
may abo roun l upon Hts
sensmg an imosi ty towards the
tact of our walk ing with Hi m, our Lo rd Jesus Christ, help, slruggle .ls we nught to
but the greatest confltct of all through Whom also we have find JUst 1ht nght wo rds. "In
1s fought with111 ourselves, the obtained our introduction by the same way the Sp1rit also
resul t of the clas h of H1s fmth into this grace 111 which hel ps ou1 wc,Jkne-s: for .we do
newly es tablt shed presence we stand; and we exult in the not know how to pray as we
wit hi n us and the habits and hope of the glory ol God" should, hut the Spin t Humelf
intcr,·etks tor us w1th groanatt itudes of what we we re (Romans 5: 1-2 NAS ).
Secondl y, He mutks you ings too deep fm wo1ds; and
before we came to know Hi m.
''For we know that the Law invisibly with His own Holy He Who searches 1he hearts
is Spiritual, bOt 1'11111 or t1eslf,- Spi rit so that H1 s claJm on kmlws wh.1t the mind ot the
sold 1nto bondage to sin . Fm yo u ts secured and yout cun- Spint is. bcc.Jusc He Jllterwh,Jt I am doing, I do not ti dence 111 H1 s savJng grace cedes lor 1he saints accm dmg
unders tand; for I am not prac- for yo u is anchored ad,Jmam- 10 the w1 ll ol God'' (Ro mans
ticing what I would like to do, ly in Hi m. "In Him. you abo. 8.26-27 NASJ
All of this 1s to simp ly say,
but I am doing the ve ry thmg afte t listeni ng to the mes&gt;age
I hate . But if .I do the very of truth . the Gospel of yoU! that OLll Father h.JS not Intendthing I do not want to do. I salvatio n _,. hav ing also eel lor u' Ill light ou r wa r w1th
ag ree wnh the Law, confess- believed. you were scaled 111 sin on on ly our feeble
mg that the Law is good. So Him wilh the Holy Spi11t ol . strength of wil l. He inv ites us
now. no longer am I the one promi se, Who' is g1ven as a ... no. He Jmplo res us Ill turn
doing it, but sin wh1ch dwe ll s pl edge of our inhent ance. , to Him ,md inv1te His ."wonin me. For I knpw that noth- with a v1ew to the redempt ion der-working power" 1n the
111g good dwell s in me, that is, of God's ow n po"ess1on. to arena of our bearts.
When we read Roma ns
m my fl esh: for the willing 1s the prai se of H1s glory"
1:1314
NAS).
12.
1-2, we find that if we
(Ephesians
present 111 me, but the doing
When you co me to fa1th i.n seek every day to offer our
of the good is not For the
good that I want , I do not do, Jesus. you are sedled with H!s bodies as "l1 ving sacri fices"
but I pract1ce the very evil presence 111 the person of H1s to Hi m, He moves th rough
that I do not want" (Romans Spmt. Take a look at yo urse lt our trust and obcd1ence and
when you stand bef()l e Him does the work of tr.msfonna7:1 5- 19 NAS).
'thu
sly cl ad you me not ,, tion of our hearts and our
Sound familiar? The World
weak
and defeated slave to minds A satura tion of H1s
so often ~ant s and raves at the
ant1 cs of Chri stians (some si n, with th e tattered and presence trams our minds to
who are perhaps so in name filth y rags of all your \mimes . . 1h111 k 111 differe nt channels
only), Chnstians who refer to overt rebe ll ions and the jun k than has been our habit and
the holy sta ndard of the of .a fall en heart. When allows us to "swim up the
Righteous God, yet so often yo u ve reall y pl aced your stre,1111 " of the conve ntional
exemplify imperfection, fail - faith in Him. yo u ha ve bee n w1sdom ot the world. It slowure and exhibit the very clothed v, ith the righleous- ly but sure!) has the elfect ot
ness o t Jesus and tl\e ma ntle loosening our fles h's "v 1ce
things that they condemn.
ot
Ht s presence has been laid gnp" (&gt;n uur minds and h &lt;~bits
Does that mean that we
as He starts cutt1 ng the chains
Chrisuans are hypocrites as upon your shoulders
" ... and [the Father] will g1ve of our old nature av,ay and
we adm omsh the world to
repent fro m sin and see k you another Helper. that He may sets Lis tree to l1 vc the li beratGod's face? Do o ur failu re&gt; be. ~tth you fore ver: that ts the ed (1fe that Jes us h.1s
in li vin g perfectl y coupled Spmt of TIUth, Whom the world prom bed us
"Je , us dnswered and said to
with our crying out for a cannot receive, because !I does
see
H1
m
or
know
H1m,
but
him,
·1r anyone loves Me, he
not
return to holiness simp.ly
demonstrate
that
we yo.u know Hun because He Will keep Mv wo rd; and My
Christians are simply being abtdes wtth you and w111 be m Father w1!1 love hun and We
self-righteous and like tossing you .· ·· The Helper, th7 Holy v, ili' come to h1m and make
around'commandments just to ~pmt, Who the Fatt:ter will send Our abode with him "' (John
make other folks mt serable? m My name, He wdl teach you 14 .23 NAS).
Thom Mollohan has minisNo, not at all. Just think for all thmbgs, andallbthnngt to ydour
1
remem
ranee
a
sat
to
·
h'
01· 1
a moment on what it is that you" (John 14 16- 17, 26 NAS). lne:d .m
out ent , 110 /1 e
God is actually doing in you.
The Hol y Spirit is the man- past nme yeat.~ and " the pa_sFirst,' He receives you as you ifestation of God at work l1l tor of Path way Commrmay
come to Him through faith in the world and in the hearts of Church. He cmd hts wife are
Jesus . Christ, allowing Hi s God's children. Through the th~ pa rents of three chrldren
perfect sacrifice to pay for work of the Holy Spirit in our wllh anorh e~ on the way!, He
your sin·. "Therefore, having lives today, the might of God may he readwd by e-marl ar
been justified by faith, we is made available to us and pa .l tort hom @pa thwayga lhave peace with God through
ltpol" ,cnm

Chu rch or Jtsu~ Christ Apo5tollt:

Mill er, Sunday School
Evemng · 7 .~0 p rn

pm,YouthFn 7.30 p m

Em m11nu el Apostoli c TaiM'rnaclt Inc.

Assembly of God
Li berty Ahembly of God

PO Box 4fl?, Duddmg Lane Ma son.
Sund~y

Pastor Ne1\ Tennan t.
Serv1ces 10 00 am and 7 p m
W Va,

Baptist
Carpenter Ba pthi1 t:hurch

Sunday School · 9 30am , Prcachmg
Servu.:e 10 30am. Evcnmg Service
7 OOpm Wedne sday B1ble S1udy 7 00 pm,
lnte nm Pre~ch er. Flo)d R os~
C huhlre Ba ptist Churc h

Pastor Steve Lill ie, Sunday .Sehoul· 9 ~)
am. Mom mg Wl)rShip 10 30 arn Sunday
evemng 6 '0 pm Wednesday 6 JOpm
Hope Baptist Church (Southern)

510 Gr11m S1, Midd lepon Sunday s•hool
930am Worsh •p - 11 am and6pm.
Wednesday SerVtC'c - 7 p m
Rutland First Uaptilit Chun:h
Sund ay Schw l - 9 30 a m , \\tnrstup
10 45 n m

Pomeroy Fln:t Baptist
Jon Rroc\..:cr t East Matn St,
Sunday S~hool · 9 '0 9 m , Wo r ~ h ip 10 JO a m
P ~s t or

First Southern Baplis t
411172 Pomeroy Ptk.e. Pctstnr E L unar
O'Bryam Sunday Slhonl - 9 W a II!.
Worshl['l - 8 15" m , 9 45 am &amp; 7 00 p m.
Wednesday Sen•tel'S- 7 (XJ p m

t&lt;l n;t u.. t•li!!l Chunh
M.trk. Morruw. 6th .md Pa lmet St
Mu.l dlcpo n. Sunduy Sdmtll 9 15 n m
\\tnrshtp
10 1'\ .1m , 700 pm
\\tcJnesiJny ~&lt;: rv i cc- 7 llU p m
Pa~ t ur

Silver Hun Rll ptist
Pnslor j(1h n Swanson, Sund.1y School .
IOnm, Wor~ htp

l l ~m. 700 pm

,Wcdnc~t.tay Sct"VI CC~&gt;·

7 00 ]1 m

Mt. Union Buptist
Pustor D11vid W1sem.tn, Sunday Sc hool 9 45 am
Evc ntll£ • ti30 p m
Wednesday Scmcc~- 6 lOp m

Rethleheni Baptist Church
Orcot Bend, Rout e 124, Ranm: , OH.
Pastor Dontcl Mecea Sunda'y Schoul
9 30 am. Sunday Worshtp 10. "\0 a m
Wednesday B1hle Study- 6 00 p m
Old Bethel Frrt Will Baptist Church

2860 I St Rt 7, Mtddlepcrt, Sund ay
School · 10 a m , Evemng • 7 00 pm .
Thumlay Servtces - 7:00

Faith Blillptlst Chu'n:h
Ra1lroud St.. Mason. SunW!.y Schoo l - I 0

Located less Lhan ~0 mmut cs fro m
Athens, Pome roy or Parke rsburg

Roofing &amp; Building Work

· Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6215

a-ll41 ·~~'

We offer physical. occupational,
speech. art &amp; mus1c therapiCs
740-667-3156
uNest and Rest ,.

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

v•n'

bMIII~f·ll

209 Third
Racine, OH

7 40-949-221 0

Acts 24:16
(7401992·6451

"A Home Bank for
Home Peoiole"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd . .
Racine, OH

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PO Box6B3
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683·

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499 Richland Avenue. Athens
740-S94-6333

1-800-4SJ -9t!O(j

www.karraudiol

740-949-2217
S1zes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye .s hall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be dmze unto you .
John 15:7

.com

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433 '

I

Crites

Services
. Overbrook
Rehabilitahon Ctr.
"A Celebration of Life"

llmm
h .uu · N pm

AnllquJty 81pUst
Sunday School . 9 30 a m . Worshtp
10•45 a m , Sunday Evenmg - 6 00 p m ,
PHror: Don Walker

:Mi[[ie's 1(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Da1ly
Cooked Meah &amp; l)mly Specials

Rutland Frtt WID Baptist
Sale m St , Pastor Jam1e Fortner, Sunda)
Sc hool · 10 a m, Eve nmB 7 p m,
WedneWa.y Services · 7 p.m

Open 7 day ...1 week
740-992·7713

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPffiES &amp; T,EES
Si.

Hemlock Gru~e Chr\s thm Churrh '
Mini ster Lurry Bmwn Wor~ htp - 9 ~D
a Ill .Sunday Schoo l · 10 10 am Bthk
SIUd} · 7 J' m

Local source for trophies ,
Ia ues t-sh1rts an more

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
A, lncomt Tax &amp;
Fina,ciol Services Firm
618 E M:.un Street • Po 1ncroy
1740) 992-7270

Comm unity Church
Pastor Steve Tumck . Mam Street
Rut!.md , Sundny Wqrsht p-- 10 00 am,
Sunday Service~ 7 p m

Pomt ruv l: hun; h or Christ
2 1~ W \olatn Sr, Mtm stcr Anthon y
M~·rn ~- Sunday Schuo l - 9 10 a m
Wurshtp 10 30 n m . f1 p m, Wcdnc~ay
Sen1ces 7 p m

llanville Holiness Church
Stntc Rou te U5, langsv ll c-, Pastor
V~ewr R o u ~h Sunt.lay school · 9 30 am,
Sunday W\lT~htp • 1010 11 Ht &amp; 7 p IlL ,
Wedncsduy pra}cr scn• tt:c 7 p m
Cah•ary Pilgri m Cha pel
Harn so n\ tll e Roud, Pas tor Charles
Mc Kcnz tc Sunde) Sc hnol 9 10 R m.
Worshtp • II a m . 7 00 p 111 , Wcdtlesday
Scrvtcc 7 00 p m

Middleport Church of•Christ
:'\ 1h und M ~ t n r astnr AI Hartson, YDuth
Mumtcr Josh Uhn, Sund ay Sthool. 9 Jo
.t m Wor~ h•p - 8 1'i. 10 10 am, 7 p m,
Wed nc sd.1y Scnt'c~ - 7 p m

Kose or Shii ron Holiness Church
Lead mg Creek Rd , Rmlund. Pastor Rev
Dc\\ey Kmg, Sunday sthnnl 9 30 11 m ,

K~ nu Church of Chrlsl
Wurshtp 9 '0 am Su nd a) Schnnl .
10 JO u m Pustor-Jellrc} Wa ll ace, 1st ami
\rd SunchJ}

Sundoy wnr~ tu p 7 p m
pr.1ycr mee1mg 7 p m
~

ReRrwallo\o\ RldRe Church of Chrtst
P.lshl r Bn.JcC Terry Sund'!J ~ch ou ! -9 30

Pine Grove Blhle Holmess Chu rch
1/2 mile 11lt J( t .'1~ Ptlslor Re~ 0'0~11
Manley, Sun Juy Se hou l
9 10 u rn
Wurs h1p · 10 ~0 u m 7 30 p m
Wednc~ d uy Scr\ ICC 710 p m

II III

Wots lllp

10 JO u m . 6
6 ~0 p m

~0

Wcdncsd11y

p m

Wcd nc~d . ty Scr\' I I.C~

Wesll' ~lln

Zion C hnr( h of ChrHol
Pomcro) H,lfri~Oil'' tl l c l{ d (RI 14] ),
Pasto r R &lt;~g cr W!t.,on Sun doy 5~hool
Y 'O II III . WM~h ip · 10 30 Ulll 7 00
p m, Wcdnc~dU) Sc i VIces 7 p m

Biblr Hollnes" Church

7'\ Pearl St , Mtddl cp;1rt

P a~ t Qr

R,1d

Bourn..: Sunday S~. h oo l - 10 il m Wms h tp
- 10 45 p 111 , Su nday E~c 7 00 p m,
Wedncsduy Sctvl~e · 7 30 p m

Thppers Pluin Church orChri st
lnstrumcm ul Wm~htp St'rvtu• - 9 1m
( lm iiii Urllllll • I 0 .1m • Sund. 1 ~ Sl hun I
10 1.5 &lt;i ,m You th - '\ 10 fH11 Su nd ,\y, Ht hk
Sllh.ly Wcdnc~Juy 7 pm

ll)sl•ll R~n Holi~ss Church
P.1stor Rl' l I .~rry Le-m ley Sund,ty Sc hnol
9 ~(I,, m . Wnrshtfl · 10 4'i a m, 7 p m
Thu1sd.Jy B1blc SHJdy c~nd Ynuth. 7 p m

Enttrprlst
Arland Ktng Sunday School 10 30 11m. Worshtp - 9 30 am Bthle
Study ~ed 7 30
F'lat" oods
Pastnr· K{'tth Rader, Sundav School · 10
am Worshtp - 11 a m
P11~1m

F'om.:t Run
Pastor 8Qh R Ob m~on, Sunda) School- 10
am, Wor~h tp · 9 u m
lfeath I Middleport )
Brtan Dunham, Sunday S' hool am , Worqhlp · II 00 am

9

~0

llr11dhury Chun.h of ChnNt
Mtm~te r rom Runyon W~'l ll Bnu.lhury
Rnud, Middleport Sund&lt;i)' Sdmol - 9 lO

(l

Cht i ~ t or Laller·UIIv Sw.inb
St Rt 160 446-6247 tH .f46 74!!6,
Suml,1y S~.:hool 10 20 I I ~ m Reltd
Sol.l&lt;.: ty/Pncslhnnd II (J'i 11 00 n&lt;'ln n
Sucra me lll Scn••ce 9 I 0 1~ a m .
1-l nmcnl.lkmg mcettng I'l l lwn - 7 p m

1\!tnt~lC l

Hn1drn rd Chu rC'h ol Chris!
Cnrnc r ut Sl Rt I ~4 &amp; Hr.1t.lbury ~ d
Mnustcr Doug Shamhhn, Youth Mllll!i-lcr
Btll AutbergL:r SwH ia~ Sch111'l - 9 10 a m.
Wdrslltp • K 00 .1 111, 10 1() :1m 7 00
p m ,'Wcdnc~liay '\~n tl~.= ~ • 7 (1(1p m

Lutheran
St John Lutherll n Church
P11w lirnvc, Wt • i~h l p - Y 00 a 111 , SunJ.-y
Scl1nu l
10 [){) a Ill Pustor Jam es P
Brady

Hickoo Hills Church of Chr1s1
F.L m~dt~l M1kc J\lonrc Su nd q~ S..::houl &lt;J n m
W11r~h 1 p • 10 am 6 10 p m
Wednesday Scr" t LC~ . 7 p m

Our Saviour Luthcr11n Church
WH inul anJ ll cnry Sts, Ravenswood
W V a • P n~ tor Ua vtd Russe ll , Sun da)'
S' hool · 10 00 &gt;1m , Worshtp - II am

Rced!i\'ille Chun.:h of Christ
Pal!lor Phthp Sturm Sund:i) St: hool 9 "\0
a m . Worshtp Scr\'lrC 10 ~0 a m , Bthlc
Study, Wedne"LLny, 6 JO p m

am

Dexter Church of Christ
Sunda)' schoo l 9 30 a 111 , Sunduy wo rsh tp

P 11~tur

Rutland
P.1s tor Rick Bourne, Sunduy Sc hoo l I.J 3() a m , Wor~ hi Jl · 10 JO am , 11JUrsday
Se rvtccs- 7 p 111
Sulem C ~nte r
Pastor Wtll tum K Murshall Sunday
Sc hon ] - Ill I'\ um Wor~;htp . 9 1'\ ,\ m
Bth lc Study Monda) 7 00 pm

Methodist

Grah11m United Methodls1
Wors htp 9 30 ll m ( I st &amp; 2nd Sun )
7 :w p m nrd &amp; 4th Sun ), Wednesda)
Serv1ce - 1 "\0 p m

Church of Chnst
ln te r ~ee unn

7 and 124 W, E\ angelut
Dennu Surgen t, Su nday 8 1ble Stud y 9.30 a m , Worship I 0 30 am and 6 30
p m , Wednesday Btblc Study· 7 p m

Hethuny
Past11r Jnh n Gt lnm r~ Sunday SciHJ;11 10
a m Wm ~ ht p
9 u Ill • Wedn~sday
Scn tcc~ -I OH

Ralph Sptres, Sunday Schoo l • 9 30 a.m ,
Wursh1p I0 ~0 a m . 7 p m , Thursday
Serv1ces - 7 p m

Hartford Churth of Christ In
Christian Union

Hartford, W Va Pa!iiDr David Gree r.
Sund ay School • 9 30 a m , 'A-o r~ h•P ·
I 0 30 11 tTl , 7 00 p m , WcdnCfdaY
Serv~ces - 7 00 p m

Mtip Coopera tl't Parllh
ND nhea•l Clu ster Alfred, Pastor Jane
Bea ttt e Sunday Sc hool · 9 30 a m
Won hip,· II am, 6.30 p m

o\ bund11n1 G ru(e R.F. I.
Q2 1 S Tiwd St Mtddlepon Past1ir Te1c ~. 1
Davh , Sunday s ~r\IC{'
10 ol Ill
Wedncsduv SCrvlt.;C 7 p 1n

Midd leport C omniu mty C hunh
Pcurl St. Mi dJle pl•rt . P&lt;lhwr S.tm
Ande rson SunJil} S~:huu t 10 .1 111
Evcmng 7 ~0 p m \\oedncsduy Sen tl( 7\0p rn

m

Rd~
R.tctnc Ohto,
John Gt !tttotc Sund.1y Sd10u l
Y \0 am, Wo1sl11 p - lil .f 5 u t11
13th1c
Studv WeJ 7 on r m

:-.it"l .th \"iciOi} 1 cnt l'r
Ct lt:~ Kthld Galli 1mlt !!. OH
Po.~ stor Btll St at en Sund I) :O.!'n tCt'~
10
~m &amp; 7 pm
\\,dn"Jd\ . 7 rm &amp;
Yuuth7pm
:1771

Gt't1r~c-.

t11.

rm

Syrac use 1\.llsslon
1411 Bndgcma n St Syml'Usc
Sc hool · 10 a m Euntng
We dn esda~ Scr'&gt;'u:c • 7 p m.

Sunday
!)

Murn~ .

pm

I

Restora tton Chrtsl111n Fellowship
Hr"-'P'' r R(•,ul. AIhen'
Pu~t'nr
LlJ\1111&lt;' Cu.il~, Sund.1y Wop,lup 10 00 .un,
W~d n ~'&gt;ll.l} 7 pm

Y ~6'\

l.ungs\ llle Christian Chu rt• h
Ful l Go~pd Pu .. tni kobcrt M11 S~~·r.
Sund.l) Sdw&gt;ol 1.1 lll .un \\'u1,htp ttl 10
1m · 7 0() pm. W~ d n c~d.l) Scn'J&lt;.:C 7 UO

Pentecostal
Jlr lllt'Cnstal &lt;\s~en1bl ~·
I ~4 f{,,un c P 1 ~tnr Wilhn m
H11bud: Stuul.l) Sdu1n!
.. 10 .1m,
F\ ~nmg. 7 p 111 WL·JnC,dd; SL'r\ ilC \ . 7
Rt

rm

pm

Presbyterian

Haul Commuml} C.:hurd1
Ofl Rt I 24, Pa ~ tur Ed~ l H.1r1 Sun~ay
Sc hoo l 930am Wl1rsht p'· 1 010~m.
7 JO p m

C oul v ill~

l Jmtcd l\tclhodl&lt;~ l Pauish
Helen Kltnc, C1Jt1h til e Church
M.u n &amp; Ftlt h St. SutH I.I) Sthllul Ill
tl m. Worshlfl 9 .t t1l liiC ~dH) s~ntcc s:
7 p Ill

Morsr

RU, 468C, Sunday Sthool 9
- 10 a m . W~d nesday
lOam

Wm ~ h tp

Hockingport Church

Grand S1rce t. Sunday Sd wol • 9 ;\0 om ,
Worship - 10 JU u m , Pa~ t or Pht llt p Hell

9 30 a m .

Nazarene

Soulh Rtthel Communily C hurch

'

C hrster Church of the N na~ne
Pastor· Rev Herbert Grate, Sunda} School
• 9.30 a.m . Wonh1p - I I a m . 6 p m.,
Wednesday Servtccs - 7·p m

Letan , W. V~ Rt

Reeds,•lle Fellowship

Chun:h of the Nazarene, Pas tor lam te
Pettu. Sunday School • 9 30 a m . Worsh1p
10 4.'1 a m . 7 nm. Wednesday Servtces

Reedsville

( toll , \\o1~lup

HI a 111

Sc~enth-Day
Sl·H nt h- Da~

Adventist
\ d\cnlisl
p,,mcrm

\1ult1en y HI • Rd
Po~~tnr
Rcnnctt Lmk l &lt;'~h SnturJa\ Sa\1Ce~
Sahhath SL tu,..,l • 2 p m \\ 0r,h1p. ~ p m

United Brethren

Mt. Oli\e C ommu n lt ~ C hun·h
Pastor Lawrcnl·c 8u ~h Sunday S~h~ml 9 30 am . E\e ntng 6 ~0 p m Wcdneili1}
Serv1ce · 7 p m

S1 lve r R1dge- Paslor Ltndll Dnmev.ood
Sunday School • 9 a m . Wor~h1p Se-n tee
lOam 2ndand4thSundoy

]{,,P~t

'

Su nda y ~~ hunl · I (I .I Ill . Wur\htp • I I
am . Weducsd.ty ~cr,· , ,~ 7 p m

p.m
Middleport Church of the Nalilrene
Pastor Allen M1dt:ap Sunday School
930am Worsh•p · I030am 6JOp m ,
Wedne sday Sen 1ces 7 p m , Pastor
Allen M1dcup

ti•riun Chu rc h

1\ ltddlt•port l' rc~ h v l crutn

C h~tpcl Chu rc h

Full Gospel l.lahlhou st
JJ045 H1 land Road, Pomcro), P.1~1ur Rn}
Hunlc r. S u nd ~y Sdwol- 10 ant, E~t:n1111;
1 30 p m, Tuesday &amp; Thur..,d~) i 111

1 1 rt·~ h\

P.1s1nr Ruhcrt C rm1 Wor~tu r - Y ,i m

1-',l,ll •r

Fo!th r. ospel thurc h
Long Bonnm Sun dn) S{hool 'J 10.1 111
Worship
JO-l'i,,m
710ptn
Wed ncsdav 7 H! p m

Bethel Church

S\ralust: ··irstl nited i'n""b\ tcrhm
Ro~..:11 (rot' \\'11r,htp - II am .

P.l, tl)r

lhn risnn villc

C omm un ity C hun-b
Sunday Sdwnl - ') 1!1 3 m Wo r~ht p 10"\0um ?rm

P .J~ t m

Ton:h Church
Co Rd 63. Sunday Sc hool
Wnrshtp - 10 lOa m

~no

Salt'm n1n1mu nh\ Church
lt !111\ L•cvmg
Rt!.Jd Pu,lur ( h.ul~~ Hou'h 130-!) 67'i·
22i'IR, SunJd) Sdh •nl y '() ollll Sunda y
~~erun)! "U'Ill' 7 00 l'lll l:l thl y Siud y

St

Dyes flll~

Servtcc~

S.uurd 1&gt;

Ba,k /1 1 \l.,•,t Cuhlltlhtu W \

Wor.ihip

Rucinr
Pnslor Pete Shaffer, Sund11y S~ hon l · 10
a 111 , Wohhi p; · II .t 111 , 'Wednesday 7

"m ,

Scr• J~ "''

pm

Valle) Tabernacle C hurch
Ba1l cy Run Road. Pastnr Kt'l l:mm ctt
R aw~o n
Sund a) Evcn 1n g 7 p 111
Thm sday Scrvtlc: - 7 p ttt
-.,

MorntnM Stur
P.tstot. Jnhn Gt ln wr~ Sund&lt;ty Sdwnl - 11
.lm.Wu,-.,htp · IU a m
t-.ust Ll·tart
P.1 ~ tur S und ~y Sdmul
10 a
9 &lt;1 Ill . W~dnc sllay . 7 p Ill

\

of lh f' l. h Ill!' s~ lur
Rt 1J)ol Ant14Utl 1, PJ~!ur k~ ~t

Ft~lth

Whitt's C hape l Wes leyan
CDol v!lle R.oad, Pa stor Rev Phtllip
Ridenour. Sunday School • 9 30 a m
Worship · 10 30 a. m. Wedne'&lt;:la) Sel'\1ce
•7 p m

10 30 a m,. Fin t Sunday of Month · 7.00
p m SCT'VICe

rm

. Hubso n f h risti un Fello\+.ship Church
PastClr H crs~hcl Whu c Suttd:i) S~ h ool ­
IU am Sunda\ C l111 t~:h ~er\ILC- 6 30 pm
Wcdne'&gt;l:l u~ 7 pm

57~

Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Pas1or Jan Laven der, Su nday School 9·3 0 11 m . Won htp - !0•30 a m. and 6
p m , Wednelday Serv 1 c~ · 7 p m

- 9 30 a.m.. Sund ay Sl:hoo t -

l'.t~ tvr

Wct.lnc~d:J ~ ~~l\llr7(1() pm

F11tth Full GO!ipel Church
Long Bouom, PaShJr S t ~ve Reed. Su nda)
Sc hoo l • Y 30 .t m. Wut ~ htp - 9 JO .1m
anJ 7 p m, Wedncsda) 7 p rn f nd~y
fcl lowsh tp scrvtce 7 p m

Fmdom G os pel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co Rd 31. "Paswr Rc\
Roger Wtllford . Sunduy School 9 30 ~ m
WoN;hlp- 1 ~ m

Wur~ h1p

\ ltdJk['l•ll,

FuiJ (,oslwllhurrh

SyracUJe Chun:h or the Nazam.e
Pastor Mtke Adk•ns, Su nday School - 9 JO
a m. Worship • 10 30 am, 6 p m,
We dnesday Serv a ce~- 7 p m

Long Bo11om
Sunday School • 9 JO am . Worship •
IOJOa m
.

l1f1• t hunb

A1&lt;.:

Clifl un l'aht·rnlldf' Chu rch
Cl1!1110 \\'\ o~ Sundt\ SdH&gt;i11 · IIJ"J m .
Wor~h 1p
7 pill \\,J11~~Ja1 Sc'l\ h,C • 7

Juhn &amp;
PanyWade 60 3 S&lt;.'CondA'e Mason, 773
'\017 Serlite 11me Sunday 10 30 am.
Wcdncsdav 7 prn

Semces - 7 p m
Jopp~~

~ nd

Latlt"t!t'll:t' I or&lt;.'mJn \\or\litp IO.OOum
\l..edne ~d a) S~n In, ., 1} m

Pas t or~

- 7·p m

Pa stor Bob Randolph. Worsh1p - 9:30
am Sunday School 10.30 8 m.

I

· Fu ll Gospel Chur1..' h

Pastor Jane Beaule, Wonh1p • 9 a m ,
Sunday Sc hoo l • I 0 am , Thursday

Che~~ter

ReJ O it' ln~

'it)() '\

Ash S t reet Chul'( h
Ash Sl, Mtddleport -Pastor GJ eg Sear~
Sundav Schoo l · 9 JO 11. 111 , MtJrm ng
Wonlup • 10 JO a m &amp; 7 pm. ~ e dne ~day
Scrmc 700 p 111 , Youth Sen tee- 700

Carleton lnttrdenomlnatlonal Church
K tngsbur}' Road, Pastor Rohe r! Vante
Sund8) School - 9 30 ~ m \\orshtp
Servtce 10 30 a m , E\emng Scrv1rr fl
po n

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Churth or God
Mile H1ll Rd , Racme, Pas tDr James
Satterfie ld, Sunday School - 9 45 I&amp; m ,
Eve: mng • 6 p m.. Wedne~duy Sc:rv1ces - 7
pm

Communhy orC h rl~ t
Jlorlland -Racmc Rd . Pa•tnr Jt m Proftitt
Sunday s~hool - 9 ~0 II m . Wor~ hlp .
10 JO ~ m Wt'dne~dul S.:n1ce' · 7 UO
pm
Btlht-1 \o\'orshl p Cl'nlerChe ~ ter School , Pastor Rob Barber.
AsM~tant P11.~tur Karen Da' IS. Sunday
Worshtp lOam, E\emng Worsh1p fl pm
Youth group 6 pm Wednesday Power m
Prayer , and B1ble Studv - 7 pm

&amp; 13llshan

MI. Olhe Uniled Methodist
Off 124 bchmd Wtlke~v t lle, Pastor Re"

Christian Union

Sl!•t&lt;rs' ille Communin ApostolilChurrh
P&lt;~ '-lnr \\,J~Ilt R kv.cll Sundll) 'i~1\JU'·
~ (lrr p m. \\,·Jnc~dii } b tW1 p 111

Hurri~ on v lll e Cumnmml\' Church
l'.l&lt;; lor Theron Durh.ttn , Sunda) - &lt;J JU
.1m and 7p m , Wednesday- 7 p m

Sno~o~ v1llt

Sunday Schoo l - 10 11111 , Worslup · 9 a 111

James P Brady

U~ited

- 10.30um

Ouls Ch ristian Felto.,.shlp
dennminatmnol fello.,.shtp )
Mcetmg mthe old An1eman Ltgum Hall
South Fourth A~enU\' Middleporl
Pu stor Chrts Stewarl 10 00 am SunUu}
Other meeungs 111 homes

Agape Li fe (enter
~0.

Hock Springs
Paslur Kctth R&lt;tder, Sunday School 9 I ~
a m , Worshtp
10 um, Youth
Fe l low ~ h t p , Su nday- 6 p 111

Tow n ~ h tp

St. Puul Lutheran Chun:h
Corner S) r amnl'l! &amp; Second St . Pl)mcroy.
Sund.iy Sch&lt;llll · 9 4 '\ a m , Wonhtp . II

Other Churches

pm

Pomeroy
Pastor Bnan Dunham \\illhhlp . 9
am Sunday Sc hool· 10 1~ am

P.l ~ll) l ,

The Church of J t~ u s

Rutland Church or Christ
Sund.1y Sdwol • IJ ~0 am . Wmshtp and
CoiiH itUI1llln 10 J(l a 111 , Boh J Werry.

Syramse Flrrl Churth or God
Apple and Second Sts, Paslor Rev Davtd
Ru s~ell Sunday School and Worsh.ip- 10
' 8 m
Evemng Services- 6 30 p m,
Wednesday Sen1ce:s • 6 30 p m

Pearl Chapel
Sunday Sehoul - 9 am WDrsh•p - II) am

t:&lt;~rm d

Latter-Day Saints

Rutland Church or God
Paslor Ron Heath, Sunday Wonh1p · 10
am , 6 p m . Wednesday Servtces • 7
pm

Mlnern ' ille
· Pn~ tm Bob RobmMm, Sund.1y Sch1lOI - 9
ll m, Wnrshtp • 10 u m

Carm ~I ·Sutt o n

l-aurel CldT l&lt; ree Methodist Church
Pashn Glenn R1 1WC, Sttm.lay Sd11ml
'J ~ll .1 111 \\oorslup - I 0 '\0 .1 111 and
p m ,Y.ei.lnc~Jay Scrvt~.:c - 7 00 p m

CMhwr) Hlbll' ( hurch
Pt~c
Co Rd P.t~tnr Rn
Alu"kv.1-.x1 &lt;;un1!11~ &lt;;dt•••l 'I ~il am
Wor~htr
11110
,. m
, 111 r m
Wt'Jnc~dJv·~cn t~c • 7 1!1 p m
Pome ro~

!~on

Pn~tor

We!itsldt Church of Chris t
'~226 C~tldrcn s Home !{d, Su m.Ja)
Sc hOI) I • I I 11 111 , Wot;h1p - lOa m ,() p m
Wc d ne~duy Set\ tces - 7 p m

\lt. Hr rm on Unilt'd Hrl'th rt&gt; n
in Chr1s1 Chu rch
Tex~ s Commumt) ~tl411 Wt Lkh.U1\ Rd
Pashl r Pe1cr ~lart t nJ,Jie Su nd.1\ .;;~hool.
9 ~0 am Wor~h1p - I0 ~0 ~ 111 7 ()()
p m. Wcdn e~ dU\ Sen 1cc~ 7 110 I'm
Ynuth group mct tlllg 2nd&amp;.~~~~ Sunda'~
7pm
Ed en l nit ed Brerh ren 111 t' hris1
State RD ttte 124 R c&lt;'d~\illl' .;;und:~~
St'hool I I a,m Sunda~ \\or'hlp 10 00
a m &amp; 7 00 p m Wcdn ~'dJ\ SerA tL'C~ 7 00 p m Wednc~da\ ) oulh SeniLe 7 OOp m

Fairrlew Bible Chun;:h
I, Pu5tor Bnan May,

Sunday ~chlxll · 9 : 30a m Worsh1p . 7 00

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so sh ine before
REHABILITTION CENTER men, that they may ue \'our

your light so shine befoorel
that they may see
!I'~ · works and glorify

The carr yoU dtsene, close to home good works and glorify your

Pomeroy

•~'"'''"' in heaven."

36759 Rocksprings Ad.
Pomerqy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

Mattliew 5: I

992·3785

M•ddlepon. OH

740-992-6128

Holiness

failh ft•IIH .... hlt' { ru,ade fur Chnst
P.l•lnr Rl'l liunl.hn D1~~t'll~ . Sen tl~
hidoi\ I' Ill

Rutland Cbu.n :h ufth e N•Jau'tnr
Sunday SctiC'Iol - 9 10 11m , Wor'h1p
10 30 am, 6 30 p m , Wednc'ida\
Serv1ces 7 p m.

7 OOpm

I

190 N Second

p m,

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mam St , M1ddleport. Pa~ to r
Re v Gtlbert Craag, Jr , Sunday School 9 30 a.m, Worship· 10.4.5 a m

(740) 992-6472
Fax i74Di 992·7406

Ufmn Fnt•ru/1\
Atmr11plu•n •

llr~me

6

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor An us Hurt , Sunday Sl:hool -. 10
a.m.. Woq~hip - II a.m.

Cornmun~t y

"Do not steal. Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
/
•
·
Leviticus 19: II
'

a m., Wors hip - I I a m
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p m

Director or Fa mily &amp;

333 Page Slreel
Middleoon OH

Gra£e Episcopal Chu rth
~:!6 E M.un St P()mcroy. Sunda, Sc hool
!md Holy Euc:hanst 11 00 am

,\ 111

RKme First Baptist
Pas10r RKk Rult:, Sundil} SdliJU I - 9 JO
a 111 , Worshtp · I 0 .tO u nt 7 00 p m .
Wednesday ServR'c~ 7 00 p m

Wedriesday Sem ccs · 7 p m

26 years In local business

Episcopal

Church of Christ

l"o me ro~

Victory Baptisl Independent

Coolville , Ohio

Tri nity Chu rch
Set:ond &amp; Lynn. PDme roy, P asto~. Rc\
J1muth an Nob le, Worship I 0 2~ a rn.
Sun day St: h11nl 9 1.5 am

Tuppt.•n Pla i n~ St. Paul
Pasmr Jane Bcamc Su nd .J&gt; S~;hool 9
am. Y.(1rsh1p 10 am Tut~day Sen tees
7\0pm
Ctntrlll Clu~ttr
A~bur} (S)'TU\. U\C ), Pa~tD! Bob Rob111son
Sunda} Slhool - 9 4~ a~ . Worshtp - II
!I m, Wednc~d.a~ Serv•~c~ · 7 lOp m

~10'\7

Hill.sldt Baptist Churrh
St Rt 143 JU St off Rt 7, Pasto/"' Rev
Jame s R Ac ree, Sr., Sund ay Untried
S erv~ce, Worship • 10 30 a m , b p m ,
Wednesda~ Serv1ces -7 p m.

Michael L.

Congregational

Sacrt"d ll eurt Catholic Churrh
161 Mulht.'rry o\ve. Pomeroy, 992-5898,
Pastor Rc\' \\alte r F. HemL, Sat Con
4 45-5 15p m . Ma ~~- ~ 10 p m Su n
Con -K -l5 ·9 15 am,. Sun M as~. 9 30
,, m , D~tl y Mu s\· ~ 30 am

'

Loop Rd oft ~ew LmiU Rd Rutland,
St:rvtcrs· Sun 10·00 am &amp; 7 30 p m,
Thun 7 00 p 111 , Pastor Many R Hullon

..Pfac~ t~ ~ &amp; Tlt!ng~ f~ dP~"

ARCADIA NURSING 'CENTER

Catholic

10·'0 am,

Rlnr Va ll ry
AposiOhc Wmship 'ccntu 813 S l id
Av~ , Middleport, Kevm Konk le Pa~tor,
Sunduy, 10 "\0 am
Wedn(:sda}. 7 00

Coming Thursdax_~n the Sentinel ...

Young's Carpenter Serulce

Church of Gud of Pm ph rc}
OJ Whlll'Rd. lllrSt R1 IW Pastor PJ
C'hapm11n Sundu) S~;hool
I 0 a,m .
\\'u...,h•p • II am Wednesda~ Servtces- 1
Pill

WV ~unda} S,hoo l 10 am\ l omm~ wor5htp II lUll E\·emng ; 7 pm.
WeUne~lll!} 7 p.m

VanZandt and Ward Rd , Pu ~Hw Jame'i

s

&lt;

Stw nd Raptlst Chu rch
Ra,cn~v.(lO(].

j25 N 2nd St Middlepon. Pastor• James
E Keesee, Worship - lOa m , 7 p m ,

....,,

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS w ·EEK

Friday, August 27, 2004

'

I'

•

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Matthew 5:8

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John 3:16
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II Cor.l2:9

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111 ·Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting ati
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, o.r (If (he press; or the right of the
. people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
. · the Governmentfor a redress of grievances.
· -The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Aug. 27, the 240th day of 2004. There are
126 days left in the year.
.
Toduy's Highlight in .'History;
.
On Aug. 27, 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa blew up; the
resulting tidal waves in Indonesia's Sunda Strait claimed
some 36;000 lives in Java and Sumatra.
On this date:
In 1770, German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel was born in Stuttgart.
In 1892. fire seriously damaged New York's original
.
.
Metropolitan Opera House.
In 1894, Congress passed the Wilson-Gorman Tanff Act,
which contained a provision fo~ a graduated income tax that
was later stt:uck down by the Supreme Court. .
In 1908, Lyndon B. Johnson, the 36th president of the
United States. was born near Stonewall, Texas.
In 1945. An1erican troops began landing in Japan following .
the surrender of the Japanese government in World War II.
In 1962, the United States launched the Mariner Il space
probe, which flew past Venus the following December.
In !967, Brian Epstein, manager of the Beatles, was found
dead in his London flat from an overdose of sleeping pills.
In 1975, Haile Selassie, ihe last emperor of Ethiopia's
3,000-year-old monarchy, died in Addis Ababa · at age 83
.
almost a year after being overthrown.
ln 1979, British war hero Lord Louis Mountbatten was
killed off the coast of Ireland in a bo'!t explosion claimed by
the Irish Republican Army.
,
Ten years ago: The State Department said the United States
and Cuba had agreed to resume talks on Cuban migration with
the· hope Of stemming the flow of refugees headed toward
Florida.
· Five years ago: The Federal Communications Commission
announced new government wiretapping rnles intended to
help law enforcement authorities keep pace with advances in
phone technology. However, a federal appeals court later
threw out some of the new rules, citing privacy concerns.
One year ago: A granite monument of the Ten
Commandments that became a lightning rod in a legal storm
over church and state was wheeled from the rotunda of the
Alabama Supreme ·Court building as ·protesters laielt, .prayed ·
and chanted, "Put it back!" In Chicago, a man who had been
fired from an auto parts warehouse six months earlier came
back with a gun and killed six employees before being shot
dead by police. Thirty-nine people died in a stampede at an
Indian religious festival. A multinational summit on North
J:&lt;,orea's nuclear program opened in Beijing.
Today's Birthdays: Cajun-country singer Jimmy C. Newman
is 77. Actor Tommy Sands is 67. Bluegrass singer-musician
J.D. Crowe ·is 67. MusiCian Daryl Dragon is 62. Actress
Tuesday Weld is 61. Rock singer-musician Tim Bogert is 60.
Actress Marianne Sagebrecht is 59. Actress Barbara Bach is 67.
Ex-porn star Harry Reems is 57. Country musician Jeff Cook
(Alabama) is 55. Actor Paul Reubens is 52. Singer Willy
DeVille is 51. Rock musician Alex Lifeson (Rush) is 51.
Actress Diana Scarwid is 49. Rock musician Gl~n Matlock
(The Sex Pistols) is 48. Actor Peter Stonnare is 46. Country
singer Jeffrey Steele is 43 ..Gospel singer Yolanda Adams is 42.
Country musician Matthew Basford (Yankee Grey) is 42.
Writer-producer Dean Devlin is 42. Rock musician Mike
Johnson (Dinosaur Jr.) is 39. Rap musician Bobo (Cypress Hill)
is 36. Rock musician Tony Kana! (No Doubt) is 34. Actress
Sarah Chalke is 28. Rock musician Jon Siebels (Eve 6) is 25.
Singer Mario is 18. Actress Alexa Vega ("Spy Kids") is 16.
Thought for Today: "If you board the wrong train, it is no
use running along the corridor in the other direction." Dietri-ch Bonhoeffer, German. theologian ( 1906-1945),

The· D~ily Sentinel
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PageA4
Friday, August 2.7, 2004

first ladies will be scrutinized as much as their husbands in the 2004 pre sidential campaign. Current first ·
lady Laura Bu sh has already
George .
gone under the magnifying
Plagenz
glass, thanks to supermarket
tabloid ' Globe,' which went .
a-snooping a while back
with a cover story headlined
'Laura Bush's Secret Life.'
cy in the more civil atmosThe paper claimed to have phere of that period.
gotten its information from
The same cannot be sai!l,
Ann Gerhart' s blockbuster however, of the sex scandal
book, 'The Perfect Wife: of sorts during the 1828
The Life and Choices of presidential election that
Laura Bush ' (Simon &amp; found its way into the public
Schuster. 2004).
prints. ' Marriage Before
The Globe story says, 'An Divorce' the headline s
insider who's seen the manu- screamed in the race
scrip~ says Laura is revealed
between Andrew Jackson
as a woman who erijoys a and John Quincy Adams:
cocktail
(inargaritas), The reference was to
smokes in private and does- Jackson's marriage to Rachel
n't share the political views Donelson Robards - more
of
her
conservative than 30 years before.
Republican husband .... Her
The story began when
own friends are Democrats Jackson was a young lawyer
and progressives.'
in Tenne ssee . He found
Historians might argue, room and board with the
however, that Laura Bush Donelson family. Mrs.
has gotten off easy (or are Donelson's daughter Rachel
the rumormongers just get- lived there with her husband,
ring warmed up?), compared .. Lewis Robards.
to the dirt dug up on former
The marriage was a
presidents and their wives.
stormy one. The ·couple
Ten years ago. a TV docu- already had broken up once.
mentary · 'FDR,' resurrected They
·reconciled,
but
Franklin D. Roosevelt's Jackson' s presence at the
romantic involvement· with boarding house roused
Lucy Mercer while he was Robards' jealousy again. Fed
married to Eleanor (Mercer up with her quarrelsome
was.actually Eleanor's social husband, Rachel walked out
secretary), wlio _learned of on him and soon afterward
the affair in 1918. But the Lewis filed for divorce .
press did 1101 report on this Jackson began now to court
crisis in the Roosevelts' lives Rachel, and when they heard
until many years afterward. that the divorce had been
Newspapers respected priva- granted in Robards' home

CQUnty. they were married.
It turned out. however, that
the decree had not been
finalized when A11drew and
Rachel were w~d . Robards
had only intitiated divorce
proceedi~gs . The mistake
was fairly typical of the
time: such events so metimes
happened . ,Jn the frontier
where communications were
difficult. Robards completed
the divorce by charging
Rachel with bigamy and
Andrew and Rachel remarried in Nashville in 1794.
Little was made o~ the ·scan·
dal ' until Jackson's candidacy for president .
..
The relentless vituperauve
.attacks leadin g up to the fall
1828 · elections portrayed
Rachel as a bigamist and
Jac'kson as her partner in it,"
and unnerved Rachel. Her
health having been seriously
affected by the incessant battering of gossi p, .she died ·in
December 1828 from what
· physicians
modern-day
believe was a heart attack.
Jackson won the election
but without .Rachel he was a
somber and melancholy man
in the White House.
Perhaps the mosl unlikely
candid~te among our presidents for having an atfair was
prim, sobersided Woodrow
Wilson, the 28th president of
the United States.
Rumors link ing Wilson
with Mary Hulbert Peck first
. circulated during the 1912
presidential ca mpaign.
to
the
According
April/May 1979 issue of the
scholarly American Heritage
magazine , Wi Ison began
writing to Mary in February

1907, when he first met her
at the end of a midwinter
vacation that he spent without his wife in Bermuda.
During the eight years that
spanned hi s p~esidency of
Princeton Untverstly, . hts
governorship of New Jersey
and-l! part of his first term as
president of the United
States. Wilson wrote more
than ·200 'intimate letters ' to
Mary. During seven of those
years he was married to
Ellen Louise Axson Wilson .
According to the anicle',
Mary's replies to Wilson's
frequent outpourings were
·apparently so incriminating
that most of · these letters
were destroyed or have otherwise disappeared.'
The American H"ritage
article add s 'Woodrow
Wilson the Calvinist ' had
. sinned and he fell he had
been puni shed by Ellen
Wilson' s death ' in 1914. The
'gift of Edith' (his second
wife) was overwhelming
proof to him of God's forgiveness.'
·
Gossips said that Ellen
Wilson had really died of a
broken heart because of her
husband's affair with Mary
Hulbert, that Mary had prepared to institute breach of
promi se proceedings against
the president, and that Louis
Brandeis, Wilson's gobetween, had purchased
Mary's si lence for $75;000.
The more things change,
ttie more they stay the same.
Of course, whether · Laura
Bush enjoys a few cocktai ls
in private hardly seems
worth mentioning by comparison.

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.my.dailysentinel.com

Friday,August 2.7, 2.004

Obituaries

First ladies in the hot seat

The Daily S~ntinel

Our main concern In all slories is to be

'

OPINION .

·The Daily Sentinel

Reader Serv1ces

'

Reed

For the Record

Rex Weekley
GUYSVILLE - Rex Allan Weekley, 20, of Guysville, died
Thursday, Aug. 26, 2004, as the r.esult of an automobile accident.
He was born Dec. 7.' 1983, in Parkersburg , .son of Charles
Robert ''Bob" and Candace Nichols Weekley.
.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by a brother,
Charles Robert Weekley Jr.; one sister, Bobbie Jo Weekley;
maternal grandinother. Lucy Nichols; and severa l aunts,
uncles and cousins:
He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents.
Charles and Anna Weekley; arid paternal grandfather. Rex
Nichols.
. ·~
.
Services will be held at I p.m. Sunday, Aug. 29, 2004, at
White Funeral Home, Coolville, with· Rev. George Horner
officiating. Burial will be in the Vanderhoof Cemetery,
Guysville.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home Saturday from 6-8 p.m .

from Page A1

Dissolution

Foreclosure

POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of maniage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Sandra Ann Rayburn ,
Middleport, and Warren B.
Rayburn, Jr., Middleport.

POMEROY -A foreclosure has been granted in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Beneficial
Ohio, Inc., against Chester
L. Casto, Sr., and others.

·'fantasy family room" project
for a final grade. Her teacher
was so impre ssed by Reed's
ability that she immediately
encouraged her to return for a
more intenstive course which she will do ne xt
month.
It was a difficult period for
the Reed family. both for
Laurie in Oregon and Paul
and kids in Middleport.,While
she )'Ja s go ne. fifth-grader
Be.n became ill, and while the
family was able to make a trip
west during Laurie's stay, it
came at a time when ·an
important project was due ,
and there was little time to
visit.
··1 was too busy to get
homesick," Reed said, ·'but I
did worry about th e famil y. A
lot of women want to pursue a
dream and think they can't do
it beGause they think the·ir
familie s can'l survi ve. but
they can. ami mine did ."
"My fa mily did just great

Longtime client
wants to pull the plug·
on hairdresser's TV

while I was gone ."
Reed had plenty of decorating experience before she left
for Oregon . She and Paul
have re,tored their South
Third Avenue home from a
condemned shell to a neighborhood showplace. She ha'
also been responsible for the
interiors of the Farmers Bank
and Savings C9 offices in
Gallipol is, Mason. W.Y_a ..
Pomeroy and the new ott1ce
in Tuppers Plains.
She hopes local homeown- ·
crs who need a hand in
pulling toge ther their ''dream
home s·· will reali ze thal do ing
so doesn't have to in volve a
lot of rilOney or a lot or new
materi als.
"Whi le some interior decorating projects can get expen- ·
sive. it's important for people
to understand the y can make a
dramatic difference in their
homes by making jllst a few
minor.changes, lik e new win·
dow treatments or a new rug:·
Reed ~aid . "It doesn't take a
lot of money to make a bi~
difference in a home. it JU&gt;'
takes someone who kno"'
how to do it."

DEAR
ABBY:
"Mr.
Eugene" has been my hairdresser for nearly 20 years. We
ctltling ceremony wi II he held have see1i each other through
beginning at 10 a.1n. Tue sday. divorces, deaths , recovery
POMER6Y
- Meigs {\ug. 3 1 at the new Goodwill from alcoholism (me), and life
Dear
Countv
Commissioners Industries
in struggles in general. Mr.
opening
Abby ·
opened two bids for the Middleport at the location of Eugene used to be a great hairdresser. The problem began
paving of Kingsbury Road the old Fruth's Pharmacy.
when he installed a little televiduring their regular meeting
on Thursday.
sion set at hi s station. He keeps
it on all the time and watches it
Bid s were opened from
.
POMERO-y'
The
Meigs
Black Top Construction
almost constantly. He watches what I want. What should I do?
Corporation , $404,680, and ,. Marauders Sideliners Club is it while cutting my hair, paus- -NOT BRIDEZILLA IN·LA
Shelly
Co., Thornville. welcoming volunteers to join . ing every so often to pay closDEAR NOT BRIDEZ! Cbe held at 4 p.m. at the.
$342,394. Engineer Eugene a Clean-Up Day to be held at er attention to what's on TV.
LA: It is wrong of your mothpark in Mason, W.Va.
Triplett has es timated the 10 a.m. Saturday at Bob
The qualiiy of my haircuts er and your fiance 's mother to
Family members attending
Robert s Field in Pomeroy. has started io decline, and call y.ou names. However,
project co.~t at $364,389.
Saturday, Aug. 28
are asked to take potluck
Commissioners
tab led Volunteers are asked to bring. along with it, our client/hair- since they are helping to fund
PORTLAND
Tile dishes and lawn chairs if
action on the bids and weedeatcrs. tirooms, shovels. dresser relationship. I'm the wedding, you can't blame Lebonan Township Trustees
referred them to Triplett for and other appropriate tool s about ready to change hair- them for wanting a meaning- will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the · desired.
for the clean-up. Anyone who dressers because I can't find ful voice in the planning . If Ponland Community Center.
review.
Sunday, Aug. 29
wishes to join the Sideliners the nerve to reach over and you feel your dream wedding
REEDSVILLE
- ·
Club may do so on Saturday. turn the darn thing off or tell has been hijacked, then you
Monday, Aug. 30
Descendants of Ernest
The Meigs Marauders · open
- Mei gs Imboden and Neva Imboden
POMEROY
PdMEROY Meigs their home schedule Sept. 3 him how annoying it is, and should politely draw the line
County Veterans Service Gii mm family reunon at
County Senior Center has against the Athens BulldCJ!ls. how much better a hairdress- and finance it yourself.
h~
is
when
he
pays
full
DEAR
ABBY:
I
am
in
a
er
Commiss ion , 9 a.m., 117 E. Forked Run State Park.
scheduled a trip to Ollumbus
to
what
he's
doing.
live-in
relationship
with
a
man
attention
Memorial Dr. , Pomeroy.
on Nov. 30 for the Radio City
Shelter House.
Please
print
this
so
Mr.
I'll
call
Howard.
Last
year,
I
Wednesday, Sept. I
Music Hall Christmas Show,
PAGEVILLE Scipio
POMEROY
- Meigs Eugene wiB read it and give his began quietly seeing "Adam."
featuring the Rockettes.
clients
the
attention
we
Howard
found
out
about
the
Township Tru,stee s will meet
Tickets have been reserved County Health Department
deserve.
·SPINELESS
IN
affair
a
few
months
later,
but
Thesday, Aug. 31
·
il&gt;t 6:30 p.ni . at Pageville
will
conduct
a
child
hood
for the 2 p.m. matinee at the
LEXINGTON,
KY.
'
.
didn't
want
us
to
break
up.
MIDDLEPORT
Town Hall.
Ohio Theater. Six seats are immunization clinic 'from 9
DEAR
SPINELESS:
Mr.
I
decided
to
·
stay
with
Ministerial
Middlepor&lt;·
available and final payment to II a.m. and I to 3 p.m. at
is
only
a
hairdresser.
Howard
even
though
I·
am
in
Eugene
·
Association
will
hold a
for the reserved seats is due 11 2 E. Memorial Dr. The
He
is
not
a
mind
reader.
Since
love
with
Adam,
because
I
Concen
of
Prayer.
for the ·
on Sept. 1. Reservations may child's shot records must be
you
haven't
voiced
an
objeccan't
support
myself
on
my
2004-2005· school year. at 7
be made by calling Beth provided and the child must
tion
to
his
cutting
and
styling
own.
After
that,
Ad;un
decided
p.m.
on Tuesday at the
Shaver at the Meigs C9unty be accompanied by a parent
.
Saturday, Aug. 28
your
hair
with
one
eye
on
the
it
would
be
best
if
we
stopped
Middleport
Church
of
Multipurpose Senior Center, or legal guardian . . Medical
POMEROY - The Meigs
how
can
he
be
seeing
each
other.
I
know
he's
boobtube,
at. 992-2161 or Alice cards, if applicable, must also
County Soccer Association Christ , Fifth Avenue at Main
expected
to
know
y·
o
u
have
a
right,
but
I'd
really
like
to
talk
be
provided.
A
$5
donation
Wamsley, trip coordinator, at
will hold sign ups from I0 Street.
problem
with
it?
·
to
hi)n.
Right
now,
I'm
agonizwill be accepted but no one
992-3938.
a.m to 2 p.m. at the
Try this: Rather than criti- ing over whether to call him.
will be denied services
Pomeroy
Vtllage
Hall,
When I ask my family or Syracuse Fire Department,
because of an inability to pay. cize him, tell him that you
Friday, Aug. 27
would prefer that he leave the friends for advice, they say I Rutland Civic Center. and
MIDDLEPORT - A free
TV set off while working on should move on and get over Chester Conununity Cente~. dinner
will be served at the
YOIJ, because you miss the Adatn, because I'm only 21
MIDDt'EPORT The
Middlepon Church of Christ
qu!lity time you used to and have my whole life ahead
Sunday, Aug, 30
governing board of the
Family Life Center from
POMERdY
_
Meigs
spend
together.
You
might
be
.
of
me.
The
truth
is,
I
can't
let
POMEROY
- The OH- 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Friday.
Athens-Meigs Educational
of surprised to find that he takes go so eastly. It has been about KAN Coin Club will meet at
Chamber
Service Center will now hold County
four months since we last 7 p.m . on Aug. 30 at the
two regular meetings each Commerce will sponsor a it as a compliment.
POMEROY ~- Parish
at
noon
DEAR
ABBY:
I
became
spoke.
Should
I
call
Adam,
membership
picnic
Pomeroy
Library.
·Plans
are
month. Meetings will be held
Nurse Lenora Leifheit will
at 7 p.m. on the second and on Sept. 18 at Pine Hill s Golf engaged last Cbrisanas. l hav~ and if I do, what should I say? being made for a coin dis- take blood pressures from
play to be held 8:30 a.m. to I0 a.m. until noon at
fourth Thursday of each Course in Pomeroy. Hot been planning my wedding with - CLUELESS IN VEGAS
DEAR CLUELESS: Listen 4 p.m. on Sept. 3 at the Powell 's Foodfair.
month. The first meeting will dogs, soft drinks, and paper the help of my mother and my
be held at the Bradbury · products will be provided. fiance's mother. I love them to your family and friends; Peoples Bank in Middlepon.
Learning Cener on Bradbury Those attending should bring . both, and they are helping to pay they have your best interests There will be tree appraisal
Thesday, Aug. 31at heart. In .the meantune, I of coins.
Road, Middleport, and the a covered dish and lawn · for my btg day.
POMEROY - Meigs
My problem is that every strongly recommend that ~au
. second at the Athens-Meigs chairs. Those interested in
·County Health Department
golf will be ~i ven a iime I disagree with them, take a breather before gomg
ESC Conference Roo at 507 play in~
Wednesday,
Sept.
1
will conduct a childhood ·
·
Rsv
·they call me "Bridezilla." I another round with an_yone.
specta rate . . . . .s are
d
d D
Richland Ave., Athens.
11 Ad
1
CHESTER
Chester immunization clinic from 9
required by Sept. 1o by call- don't think I'm too eman - o not ca
am untt you Garden Club open meeting.
ing Jenny Smith at 992-5005. ing or hard to please: I just have left Howard and become 7:30 pm., Chester United to II a.m. and I to 3 p.n\.
at 112 E. Memorial Dr. The
have ideas. tastes and expec- self-supporting. That way, he
Methodi
st
Church.
Special
·
child's shot records must be
tations that may be different will know you are not after ·
program
by
Janet
Boli
n.
provided and the child must
from my two mothers' .
him for a meal ticket, too. ·
bring
gifts.
·
Members
be
accompanied by a parent
MII1DLEPORT
, This horrible stereotype is
Dear Abby is wrirten by
or
legal
guardian. Medi cal
Middleport
Ministerial
ruining the planning. I Abigail Van Buren, also
God's
Net
POMEROY
cards, if applicable. mu st
Association will hold a
become devastated when they known as Jeanne Phillips, and
Concert of Prayer, for the Ministries will sponsor an refer to me in that way, and was founded by her morher.
also be provided . A 55
donation will be accepted
. 2004-2005 school year, at 7 adult co-ed softball tourna- end up giving in so I don't Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
p.m. on Tuesday . at the ment at the Pomeroy Ball seem to be unreasonable.
but no one will be denied
Saturday, Aug. 28
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
Field
on
Aug.
28-29.
Entry
·
services because of an
Middleport Church of Christ,
Please help me. I am ending or P. 0. ·Box 69440, Los . MASON, W.Va.-- The
fee is $50 and two softballs. up with a wedding that isn't Angeles, CA 90069.
Fifth Avenue at Main Street.
inability to pay.
annual Bailey reunion will
All proceeds go to benefit
God' s Net Ministries which
~ractice · i's completing
renovations on
MASON - The Wahama their offices located in the old
Alumni Band will have prac- Pomeroy Elementary School.
tice Sunday in the band room The event is st rictly a
RACINE - The reunion members this year and will Marl: &amp; Beth Casto. Cheshire.
to prepare for homecoming fundraiser.
of l!escendants o( Martin and ~ dearly missed. They were Beverly
Cunningham.
on Oct. I. · All alumni band,
Emma Sayre, .was held Connie Bradley of Gallipolils Cottageville. W.Va, Levee
flags, rifles and majorenes
recently at the Racine Shrine and Dave Sayre of Antiquity. Willis. Hilliard. Pat.~y Willis.
are urged to attend. For more
Park .
The oldest auending was Columbus, Dan &amp; Donna Sayre.
information, contact Rex
A picnic, beautiful weather Marjorie Grimm , and "' the . Racine. Dori s Roge~&gt;. Canal
Howard at (304) 882-8240 or
and fellowship was enjoyed youngest
was
Weston Winchester. Brooks &amp; June
Martha Varian at (304) 8!12by all . Grace wa.~ given by, McGhee, son of Julie Sayre. Sayre. Syracuse. Bryce &amp;
3932.
POMEROY - The 2004 Marjorie Grimm and . out Traveling the farthest was Debbie Sayre. Gallipolb. •
Meigs Marauders yearbooks going President, Evelyn Gene
. Payne
from Roderick &amp; M&lt;Ujorie Grimm.
• can now be picked up at Nonh of Gallipolis conduct- Montgomery, Ala. The family · Racine. Mildred Han. Rxine,
Meigs High School. Extra ed a brief meeting to revtew appreciated Dale Han &amp; [).de &amp; Kathryn Han. Racine.
yearbooks are available for business. Newly elected Brooks Sayre for providing Julie S;ryre &amp; Todd Burroughs.
tvfiDDLEPORT- A ribbon- $40 each.
President and Secretary are the arrangements for the Worthington. Ky.: :\1ason
Bryce and Debbie Sayre of facility. The reunion for 2005 McGhee. Wonnmg_ton. , Ky,
Galhpohs. , ,
..
will be on Aug. 21 at the Larmt McGhee. \\Orthington.
_ Thts years functton . was same loeation,
, ·
Kv..
Weston
\kGhee.
all~nded by 31 relatives. ' Those in attendance were Worthington. Ky .. Bethal1y Sa~re
The Daily Senlinel
Thuty-one, relatives attended Eve!yn North. Gallipolis, Aaron &amp; Ryan Penix. Jack.'iOO. Ron &amp;
th1s year s function. The &amp; Janeme Davis. Grove City. Lirida Grimm. Racine. Shelli
Subscribe todily • 992-2155
Sayre also fam1ly lost two Gene Payne, MontgQiliCI)'. Ala.. Barneue. Point l'lea-.'1111. W.Va.
www..mydoilysentineLcom
'

Local Briefs
Bids ooened ·

Clean-uo set .

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Trio scheduled

Clinic set

Church services

Clubs/
organizations · ·

IT15

A BIT
SNUG,

DICK'•

Meeting place
chanaed

fOR
EVERYONE

.The real reason for invading Iraq
From the beginning there
has always been a nagging
· little hiccup of disconnect
between Sept. 11 and its
aftermath on one hand, and
the invasion of Iraq on the
other. The attacks on the
World Trade Center and the
Pentagon were clearly the
work of Osama bin Laden
and AI Qaeda, who were
in
Afghanistan .
based
President Bush , therefore,
had the whole country
behind him when he ordered
our forces into Afghanistan,
'ousted the Taliban regime,
and sent Bin Laden and his
supporters fleeing for their
lives into the mountain
wilderness of Afghanistan's
.
border with Pakistan.
But then, announcing that
the · war against terror was
now entering its se.cond
phase, Bush opened first a
diplomatic and then a military offensive against ... Iraq.
Why Iraq? Bush, like the
rest of the world, believed
thai Saddam Hussein had
both chemical and biological
weapons of mass. desll'l,lction, and that he was trying
hard to develop nuclear
weapons. That, if true; certainly qualified him for a
pre-emptive strike, since
waiting for him to smuggle a
nuclear bomb into an
American city and detonate
it, or threau~n to, would
plainly be folly.
But ' lran was also ~own
to be trying to develop a

for doing so . They won they were believed to be on
President Bush to their the verge of acquiring the
cause, and "!iingled out Iraq ability to inflict nuclear damas the loosest' brick in the age on us. North Korea,
wall. ' Adroitly
billing which was in some ways the
Saddam's overthrow as sim- greatest danger because it
William
ply the obvious next step in actually already possessed
Rusher
rhe war on ·terrorism, B,ush one or two nuclear weapons,
ordered the invasiof!.
had to be dealt with diploOn this theory (which the matically,
if
possible,
Democrats have eagerly because it lay at the center of
nuclear capability, and Nonh endorsed), the American a nest of major powers Korea was believed to have public was simply tric'ked China, Russia and Japan one already - and a couple into regarding the attack on whose interests would have·
of bombs, to boot . The pres- Iraq as pan of the ' war on to be consulted . Iran was
ident identified all three as terror,' when in fact it was a unstable, with powerful
an ' Axis of Evil' in his State distraction from that war, internal pressures for reform. ·
of the Union address to and a thoroughly .unneces- Iraq was vulnerable .militariCongress in January 2002, sary one at that. ·
ly, but only if the American
But I have never found it people could be aroused to
but he subsequently singled
out Iraq for invasion and easy to believe that this little the necessity for action.
regime change. Once again, clutch of ' neoconservatives'
The events of Sept. II procould have pushed around vided the necessary stimulus
why ?
The conventional wisdom such major figures of the · - and then some . Having
h;ts it that a small band of administration as Dick disposed of the Taliban and
in Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, embarked on the long job of
' neoconservatives'
Powell
and disrupting and destroying AI
Washington was responsible. Colin .
This clique (so the theory Condoleezza Rice - lei Qaeda, Bush turned to the
goes), consisted of certain alone George W. Bush. larger problem of the Axis of
second-rank figures · in the There does indeed seem to Evil. Relying on the unaniadministration such as · have been some new and dif- mous belief of the world's
Richard Perle, Eliot Abrams ferent impulse at work in the intelligence agencies as to
and Douglas Feith, plus a sudden shift of emphasis, in Saddam's nuclear ambitions
few influential omsiders like 2002. from killing or captur- and capabilities, Bush idenWilliam Kristol of the ing Osama bin Laden to tified Iraq as 'a grave and
Saddam · gathering ·threat' to the
Weekly Standard. They had overthrowing
United States. The American
long wanted the United Hussein. But what was it?
The clue. I think. is in the public concurred, and the
States to impose its military
'
Axis
of Evil ' expression. attack was launched . The
will on the Middle East in
general (perhaps in aid of From the outset of his admin- rest is history.
(William Rusher is a
lsniel, of which they are sup- istration , Bush knew that
Disringuislred
Fellow of rlre
posedly fond), and saw the those .three nations - Iraq.
American people's grim Iran and Nonh Korea - rep- C/aremom lnsrirure for rlre
determination to punish Al rese'nted a deadly threat to Smdy of Sraresmanship and
Qaeda as a matchless excuse the United States because Polirical Philosoplty.)

•

Concert of
Praver set

Other events,

Membership
_picnic olanned

Softball
Tournament

Homecomings
Reunions "

aand to

Sayre Family reunion

Meigs Marauder
Yearbooks
·
Available

Ribbon cutting
next week

PROUD TO BE APAR:r OF YOUR LIFE.

..
~ --,

-- - - - - -. --

'

�PageA6

REGION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 27,

2004

··

I

'

maJonty of employees .in the in making layoff 'decisions."
bargaining unit.
said Korber.
NEWS@MYDAiLYREGISTER.COM
The union chose not to perHe added there are wellAPPLE GROVE -· M&amp;G mit employees to vote on con- known legal decisions involvPolymers USA LLC said it's tract ratification. the company ing the Steelworkers, espestill commined to talking to said.
cially a decision of the U.S.
the United Steelworkers of
Arter an impasse was, Supreme Court decided in
America about a new contract reached in negotiations in 1960. indicating that the
and is willing to go back to February 2004, the company Steelworkers had contracts
the table.
·
proceeded with the imple- where employment deci sions
1
M&amp;G issued an update mentation of severa l changes Were made on "ability" and
Thursday oi1 the status of its consistent with the company's " efficiency" and relied on
contrac t negotiations with the prior offer to employees.
seniori ty o nl y where these
USWA,
including
The last bargaining session other factors were equal.
Steelworker.s Local644,
between M&amp;G and the union
The Steelworkers previousThe company also respond- was March 19. Meanwhile, ly announced a public rally·
ed to recent news reports more than I00 members .of- planned for Saturday to benequoting Karen Shipley, the USWA Local 644 have been fi t the laid-off employees of
USWA's chief spokesperson. without a labor ·agreement M&amp;G Polymers as · well a~
\Vho reportedly said the union after the previous agreement other Mason County employhad not been requested to expired on Nov. 6. 2003.
ers .
return to the bargaining table .
Korber said th,e company
Asked about the company's
Kimm Korber. human remains wi lling to return to view o'f the rally. Jeff She~.
resources director for M&amp;G the hargaining table at any plant I' I mage r for M&amp;G
Polymers USA said, "Tile fact time.
,
Polymers' Apple Grove faciliis that on Marc h 19, we askeu
"We've said throughout ty, said, "We 've consistently
Ms. Shipley when the union these negotiations that we said that the decision to lay
wanted to get back together, remain committed to the col- off employees is one of the
and she said she did not have Jective bargaining process," . to ughest decisions to make
her appointment book with 'aid Korber. "If Ms. Shipley and no employer in Mason
her that day, but wou ld get and the Stee lworkers .have County, or anywhere else in
back to us.
any proposals they are pre- West Virginia for that matter..
"We've not heard from. her pared to discuss, the company including M&amp;G Polymers,
abo ut the resumption of bar- would welcome the opportu- ever hopes to be in circumgaining ever since then, nity to hear wha t they have tu stances where such decis-ions
which was more than lt ve offer."
have to be made."
· months ago," he added.
When asked what the out"During our bargaining, we
Shipley had no comment on standing issues were in the offered a severance program
the company's statement talks, Korber said that th~ par- worth millions of dollars that
when contacted Thursday.
tie s· reached an impasse on wou ld have benefited the laid" At thi s po int, I have no Feb. 9 over a number of off employees and their fami comme nt because it is ·a n issues, among them the use of lies:· · Shea added. "Ms.
internal matter and it -has not factors iq addition to seniority Ship ley and the Steelworkers
been resolved." she said. "We when identifying employees refused to allow their memhave issues before the for permanent layoff.
.
bers to vote on the company's
Nittiona l Labor Relation s
''We explained many times offer, and we still have no
Board." ·
why we did not be li.eve agreement."
The company said it gave the seniority should be the sole
Some laid off employees
. union a final offer in early criteria governing layoff deci-. rcportep ly
cou ld · have
December 2003, which included , ions and I do not believe the received up to 78 weeks of
millions of dollars in proposed Steelworkers wi ll deny that severa nc·e pay under the comseverance pay and other benefit' they have labor agreements in pany's proposal, whic h the
for employees, including a pro- place today wh.ere seniority is union refused to take a vote.
posed increase in wages for the . not the only factor considered
Asked if the National Labor

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Friday ... Partly cloudy with
a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Highs in the upper
80s. Southwest winds around
10 mph.
. Friday night. .. Partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers and thunderstorms in
the evening. Lows around 70.
South winds around 10 mph
in the evening ... Becoming
light and variable. ·
Saturday... Panly cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s. Light and variable winds ... Becoming southwest around I0 mph in the
afternoon.
Saturday
night...Mos tly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper

60s. Light and variable winds.
Sunday... A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the
morning. Showers and thunderstorms likely in the afternoon. Highs around 80.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Sunday night...Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers . and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs around 80.
Monday
night. .. Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
Tuesday: .. Mostly su nny.
Highs around 80.
Tuesday
night.. .Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
Wednesday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs ;.tround 80.
Wednesday night. .. Mostly
clear. Lows around 60.
Thursday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.

Local Stocks
ACI -32.5a
AEP- 32.29
Ak2o _:__ 33.16
Ashland Inc. - 51.08
BBT- 39.72
·BLI - 12.42
Bob Evans - 25.01
BorgWarner.- 45.51
City Holding- 31.05
Champion- 3.77
Charming Shops- 7.00 .
Col-34.75
DuPont - 42.57
DG -19.19
Federai Mogul - .21
Gannen - 85.15
·General Electric - 32.79
:GKNLY- 4.15
'Harley Davidson - 61 .50
:.JPMorgan (formerly Bank One)
'39.45
Kmart - 76.38

Kroger - 16 . 7~
Ltd- 20.25
•
NSC- 28.01
Oak Hill Financial - 34 .39
OVBC- 31.00
Peoples- 25.71
Pepsico- 49.41
Premier- 9.16
Rocl&lt;y Boots- 20.10
RO Shell- 50.25
Rockwell- 39.00
Sears- 39.99
25.74
AT&amp;T -14.84
USB -29.10
Wendy's - 35.07
Wai-Mart - 53.88
Worthington- i9.65
Qaily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
closing quotes of the previous day's
transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at ... dvesllnc. of Gallipolis.

Relations· Board has determined that the company has .
comn1itted unfair labor practices Korber said "there have
been' no complaints issued by
the board agains t M&amp;G
Pblymers.
"I thin k it's fair to say the
Steelworkers have not gone ·
out of their way to be clear i_n
their communications to the tr
members and .the general pub- ·
lie abou the differences
• allegations and
between
actual 1 lings by the
NLRB ." he .1uded.
Is there aily hope . that an
agreement wi ll be reached for
the wo rkers who ' remam
employed at the Apple Grove
.
I
pant.
.
Korber said that the compa'
ny recognizes the union's role
as the "exclusive" representa.- .
ti ve of M&amp;G's unionized
workforce and M&amp;G remains
committed to the bargaining
process.
Korber added, "Although difficult issues separate the parties,
we have never said reaching an
agreement was impossible. But
we cannot reach an agreement if
the union expressei no interest
in meeting and refuses to take
the company's offers to a vote."
~

Visit us on the Web
www.m.ydailytribune.com

Coming Thu~day in the Sentinel ...
'

1hank tj11u
O'f3lennm

Thank'1ou
R~

&amp;

'Parker lAI'fX'NlliM
(9r purchasing '"'I
200'1 marlzef #/INJI
al lite
me;,s tAunfiJ 1airl

.sse-

. _ You~ guide

!'- weekend

.

oi!OMB

· NEW ORLEANS (AP)- nation 's suppl y of milk, is in .month to defend itself
' T~e nation 's bigge st dairy the business of creating a against charges that it has a
.: cooperative is under investi- monopoly and forcing inde- monopoly on milk sales in
:gation by federal antitrust pendent processors and dozens of school districts in
ofncials, reportedly in con- farmers to earn less.
Kentucky and Tennessee. .
On Aug. 5, Louisiana and
The Justice Department
nection with its expansion in
:the South.
Florida farmers said they also · has looked Into the
Last week, the U.S. )ustice met with antitrust investiga- merger of milk processors
.:Department
t~ld
. Dairy tors in Franklinton to discuss H.P. · Hood of Chelsea,
·Farmers of Amenca Inc. that the purchase of the Dairy Mass., .and National Dairy
:it was under investigation Fresh plant in Hattiesburg, Holding,&lt;&gt; .
for "alleged anticompetiti ve Miss .
The
Justice · And Southeast Milk Inc., a
' conduct in the raw milk Department has declined to cooperative of · farmers in
·market," DFA spokeswoman comment on the· case .
Florida and Georgia, is in a
' A$nes Schafer said. Schafer
"We have one cooperative dispute with DFA over how
·said the Justice Department that controls 90 percent of much farmers get paid for
.did not say what prompted the milk in the Southea~t. their milk at two Florida
·the probe.
Any time you have one enti- plants that DFA has an inter~; Justice Department . offi- ty controlling 90 to 95 per- est in.
' cials declined . to comment.
cent of the milk in one area,
Calvin Covington, chief
· ' Independent farmers said you look at it and tell me: Is executive . officer ·
of
the probe was connected to that good or is that bad?" Southeast Milk, said DFA
the purchase of Greensboro, · said Jerome Walker, a forced Southeast Milk farmAI a.-based
Dairy
Fresh Franklinton · farmer who ers to · take less money for
Corp., which has mil~ pro- opposes DFA's expansion .. their milk at the two plants.
cessing plants in Mississippi, He has been sending hi s
''There are only so many
Louisiana and Alabama.
milk to the Hattiesburg, plants to go to. and when we
.: Schafer said Dallas-based . Miss., plant.
have a surplus, we have to
milli processor National
Schafer said the purchase use the plants,", Covington
,Dairy Holdings - of which of Dairy Fresh has been said. "We don't mind com•DFA owns half - bought approved by federal officials. petition, we jusi think comDairy Fresh in -November But Walker disagreed, saying petition should be on a level
2003.
the Justice · Depanment is playing field."
Farmers acros&gt; the country sti ll investigating.
Schafer said the Justice
charge that DFA, which con- · DFA is expected to go to Department has repeatedly
trois about a third of the coun in Kentucky " next reviewed DFA's actions and

h~Ba;r.k

for purchasing my
Market Lamb at
Meigs County Fair

Kimberly
Hawthorne

entertainment 1n the Tri-State

jSouth Charleston stamping
Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
:plant to cut 375 jobs
SOUTH CHARLESTON,
:W.Va. (AP) - Mayflower
;Vehicle Systems, Inc. plans to
;lay off about 375 worker~ at
·its South Charleston vehtcle
:stamping plant starting in late
October because a major contraCt is expiring, plant ·offi·cials said Thursday.
: The layoffs of 350 hourly
:workers and 25 salaried
:employees will begin Oct 28
·and will run through Januruy. A
contract with DaimletChrysler
AG's Mercedes-Benz will
expire at the end of the year,
:Plant rriaoager Richard FIX said
. The plant will be left with
.:so salaried employees and
'about . 350 hourly workers
· working on a single primary .
:shift after the layoffs are
completed, FIX said.
: ·Layolfs among the W1ionized
:boody wOOan will be basexl 00
:serdu:ity_ Hoody woda:rs at the
:plln ean an average of S3J,IXX)
. to $34,00) a yea~; plus ~
$I(},(D) in beuefits each, fix said.
United Auto Workers offi;cials .could not be ~hed for
'COmment Thursday.
: Mayflower
Vehicle
:systems' British pareDt, The
;Mayflower Corporation PLC,
was declared bankrupt in
:March and handed over to an
:external adminisuaror with
•

debts of nearly $356 million.
The uncertainty about. a
potential buyer for the company's U.S. operations has
caused · clients to be wary
about signing new · contracts
with Mayflower, said Mike
Fell, human resource director
at the South Charleston plant.
Operations at the South
Charleston plant include stamping sheets of steel and aluminum into auto an.d truck ·
body pans and building subassemblies for . vehicle manufacturers.
Mayflower, . based
in
Farmington Hills, Mich.,
notified the Kanawha County
Commission, as required by
federal law, early Thursday
afternoon, said commission
President Kent Carper.
"It's just almost a catastrophic blow· on the heels of
the Dow cuts ... I just don't
know how y(/u can keep
recovering when these giant
multinational companies pull
up and go somewhere else .. ,
"d.
•.. he sal
Operations at the South
Charleston plant include
stamping sheets of steel and
aluminum into auto and ·~ruck
body pans and building· subassemblies for vehicle inanufacrurers.

·Show appreciation to your fair buyer...
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The

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HUNTINGTON (AP) general. the senators assened
West Virginia's Mount Storm that there were "apparent seripower plallt emits more ous irregularities" in the erearsenic and chromium poilu- ation of the proposed rule.
tion than any other coal- fired
EPA Administrator Mike
plant in the cou ntry. accord- Leavi'tt said earlier this mutith
ing to a national study that he discussed the proposed
, rule with Pre.,ident Bush earlireleased Thursday. .
The plam. located m Tucker er this vear. but sa id he was not
County. also ranks second in pressured by the White House
the nation in the amount of lead to chan'ge the rule. which
emitted by its .smokestacks. would have a major effect on
according to the study conduct- the coal industry. especially in
ed by the Clean Air Task Force. elec tion battlegrounds like
the National £nvironmental West Virginia and Ohio. ·
Tru st and the U.S. Public
Leav.jtt said the purpose of
Interest Rese&lt;irch Group.
the new ·rule is to protect
Those pollutants and about women and children while
60 others emitted by power creat in g a level playing field
plants. would be unregulated for coal-prod uci ng regions.
under a rule proposed by the
The EPA also · suggested
U.S. Environmemal Protection that judgment of the rule
Agency to regu late mercury' · should be withheld until it
emissions. acco rding to the become ~ final.
repoll .
"The ~gency·s work is not
The Mount. Storm plant is done. as the process is not comowned by Dominion Virgi niu . plete until the rule is tinalized,"
Power Co. The plant was one &lt;EPA spokeswo man Cynthi a
of eight power ,;tations the Bergman said in May when the
yti lity agrc-cd to upgrade last inspector general's investigayear as part of a $1.2 billion tiu1i was announced.
,
settlement with the EPA to
"Any judgment on the rule or
'reduce em issions of acid rain - the process should be witl1held
caus ing su lfur dioxide and until a fi nal decision has been
smog-causing nitrogen ox ides. made. We will be reducing mer"West Virginia's power cury emiss ions from power
plants are emitt ing tens of plm1ts lor the tir;t time and we
thousands of tons of lead, want to do it right."' she said.
arsenio and other hazardous
Stockman disagreed.
"Man y already know that
air pollutants," sa i~, Vivian
Stockman, project" coordiha- the Bush administration protor for the Ohio Valley posal on mercury. which was
Environmental Coalit ion.
virtually written by coal indus"The Bush plan (for reg ula!- try political campaign donors.
ing mercury ) would ignore the fails \O prote('t infants from the
Clean Air Act by keeping all · dangers of merc ury:· ~ he said.
these other extremely harmful
The enviro n ~1e ntal groups
. substances completely unregu- contend that the proposed .
Jated," Stockman said.
rule on mercury actually
According to the environ- wo uld require a longer time
mental groups. the proposed frame to reduce mercury
rule includes "buried
em issions than if · the Clean
legalese" that would allow Air Act were enforced just as
power producers to avoid it is written.
controls· for dozens of other
Acco rdin g to the study
released Thursday, every year
toxic air pollutants.
In May, the EPA's inspector West Virginia power plants
general launched an investi- pump into the air:
gation into allegations by six
- 13, 146 pounds of arsenic
U.S. senators that the electric
- II ,511 pounds of lead
utility industry r_nay hav~
-60 million pounds of
. ·exetted "undue tnfluence acid gases
over the content of the ruie.
51 ,284 pounds of
'tn an Aprill2letter to Nikki chromium
Tinsley, the EPA's inspector
- 8.68 grams of dioxin

has nat charged the cooperarive with any violation.
"The DOJ has, historically,
·been interested in the milk
business. This is the reality
of doin~ business in today's
' dairy tndu stry. So, DFA
views this as business as
usual," Schafer said.
· Dairy farms have strugg led
in rece nt years as the -industry has consolidated . and
imports have. increased. Ten
years ago in Louisiana there
were about I ,000 datry
farms. Now there are about
340.
It's the same story nationwide : In 1989, there were
about 203,000 dairy farme rs.
Today. that number has
dropped to about 85,000. .
· Schafer said farmers in
four major · cooperatives
formed DFA six years ago in
an effort to ensure survival
in the changing marketplace: ,
"Farmers know lhf'Y have
to market their milk efficiently. and they have to do
that through a cooperative."
she said.
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COLUMBUS (APl
If the evidence is as strong
Defending the man chai·ged in as ptlblicly released warrants
a series of highway shootings and media a"·ounts .suggest.
is not so much tn overcome Berman said, the insanity plea ·
formidab le evidence .linking is a gamble worth taking.
him to the crimes but to· save
Nonnally in a death penalty
his life, death penalty experts cw;e, the first phtL'iC is restncted to
said Thursday. '
arg~ing evidence of guilt or innoWith prosecutors expected to q:nce. Only after a conviction. in
·produce bullets linked to the sus- the sentencing phase, is the
peds gun. m1d possibly DNA defense allowed to present 'Ymfrom tobacw juice at shooting patl1etic inlonnation such as the
sites. the defense will need to d~fendant 's past, severe mental
·focus the jury on the delusions illness or ch&lt;mce at rehabilitation.
Charles McCoy Jt'. may have
That changes in an ·insanity
.
suffered from pw-anoid schizo- case. Berman said.
phrenia. the expells said.
"As soon as they plead
"Thi s case appea rs to me ... (insan ity). they're essentially
_not so much_as a 'Who did ,saying he did it ."' Berman
it')' ffian a C&lt;rse th&lt;rt raises · said. "The in-sanity plea
basic yucsiions about why allows them. to use the guilt
and when we should punish."' phase to present lots and lots
' aiu Max Kra\'ltZ, a Capital of mitigating evidence."
University law profes,or.
At trial. insanity does not
McCoy has pleaded i nno- depend on a med ical diagnocent to 24 ch&lt;rrgcs in shoot- sis but a legal dcl1nition that
ings &lt;rround central Ohio from can be difticu lt to prove, and
October f.hrough February. jurors and courts have not
incl uding the November death hesitated to sen tence proof a !\2-year-,)Jd woman.
rou ndl y iii' men to death. Ohio
The three-member defense Public
Defender David Defense attorney S. Michael Miller, left, talks with Charles A.
McCoy in a Columbus, Oh io. courtroom Tuesday, March 30,
team , which im;ludcs the for- Bodiker said.
2004.
McCoy, charged in a series of·highway shootings in the .
mer Franklin Count y p.rosecuKravitz. who recently
city,
is
being defended by Miller and two other atto rneys . T~e
.tor and a chiluhood friend of retu rned to Capital Uni versity
McCoy's brother-in-law, says after a two-year sabbatical in. three-member defense tea m is not contesting McCoy's comthai McCoy underst&lt;rnd' the pri vate defense prac tice. said petence to stand trial. (AP Photo/Jay LaPrete. file)
charges and can assist them. A he doesn't like when a men judge. h&lt;lwevcr, ha' final say wily ill defendant is medicat- because they were friend s at family abou t the rate they
.on hi s menllll competence. ed for trial. because "the jury their Roman Catholic elemen- would get if they were
and a hearing is set for Friday. gets a distorted view" of a tary school on the city's west appointed by the court. Haney
The defense has until Sept. cal m. ·collected person in the side. Th is i' his first capi tal declined to di scuss fees.
3 to change MtCoy"s plea to cottrtroom.
case.
The three are examinin g
innocent by reason of insaniNoneth~less. he sa id he
Haney then e nli sted his massive amounts of evidence,
ty. That wou ld change the wou ld be "shocked" if jurors friend with a Jaw office in the including thou sands of call s
nature of the trial fro m trying would recommend that a same buildi ng, Mark Collins, to a sheriff's tip line and hunto exonerate McCoy to trying judge sentence a profoundly a former assistant prosecuror. dreds of interviews with til ose
to prove· he didn't understand ill m~n to death.
.
Collins suggested Miller, hi s named by tipsters, and investhat 1\is actions during the
"No matter how tljts case former bo".
·
tigating other leads. ·
shootings we re wrong.
plays ou t. it 's not a death (sen- · Miller said he takes one
"The wo rd volum inous
"Were ·I h1s lawyer. I'd go tcnce) case,"' Kravitz said.
capital case about every two really doesn't capture . it,"
ov~r all that evidence to make
The legal experts agreed years. None of the four defen- Haney said.
sure it 'S a slum dunk.'' said thai McCoy will benefit from dants was sentenced to death
The team said they will
Douglas Berman, a professor m having S. Michael Miller. a and one was acqui tted.
like ly split ttp trial duties Ohio State Universi ty\ law former prosecutor, judge and
"They chose a perfect indi- such as who quest·ions
vidual," Kravitz sa id.
school. 'Then the question is FBI agent, on hi s team .
prospective jurors and who
Miller and Coll ins both sa id delivers open ing state ments
what's the best strategy ... to get McCoy's brother-i n-Jaw
. ,: him the best possihle outcome... hired attomey Andrew Haney they were charging McCoy's - after Sept. 3.

:Dairy
co-op's Southern expansion comes.under scrutiny
..

1mtu;e q~ ll

#111spilal

OHIO REGION

The Daily Sentinel

Experts: defense in highway shootings .West Virginia power
case unlikely to go for exoneration . plants among top .

M&amp;G officials: Company is still
committed to talking with USWA
STAFF REPORT

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27. 2004

.

Government to take over terrorist Technology is gre.at but, in the end,
watch lists from u.s. airlines
the good.old pencil still works

WASHINGTON (AP) The government will take
over the task of checking the
names of airline passengers
against terrorism watch lists,
saying it can do a more comprehensive and secure job
than carriers.
Privacy . advocates, who
scuttled an earlier plan to
screen airline passengers, said
they weren't sure the new system· was much better.
"We remain puzzled over
how the progr~m will work
and believe that several of the
most basic problems with the
original proposal remain," said
LaShawn Warren. a legislative
'.cou nsel with the American
Civil Liberties Union . .
Unlike the previous p'roposal, the .·new system mmounced
Thursday will not seek to
identify anyone other than
kn~wn or suspected terrorists.
Nor will it assign a risk level
to travelers.
Civil libertarians complained that the earlier system
would use information on
passengers gleaned from
commercial databases.
The government said a very
limited test of the new system
will be done to see if compar. in'g passenger informaiion
against such databases can
help to more accurately vedfy
people's identities.
Under the new system,
Secure Flight, the government
will gather information about
travelers from data collection
companies that service the
banking, home ·mortgage and
credit industries.
Marcia Hofmann. staff
counsel for the Electronic
Privacy Information Center,
sai d such verification can
clear up confusion about people improperly flagged as
possible terrorists.

.'

She said the government
still net;ds to put in safeguards
so "there can be no abuse of
information like that."
The new system is intended
to verify the identity of
domestic travelers by amassing informat ion that passengers have given airlines and
comparing it , with records in
government databases . The
goal is to better s.creen travders by using a larger pool of
suspected terrorists than airlines had access to.
The government does not
now provide airlines with
complete terrorist lists for
fear that such information
could fall. into the hands of
U.S foes , said David Stone.
chief of the Transportution
Seeurity Administratinn.
"We will have the database
lmder the umbrella of the
government so we can have
enhanced security and not
have .the release ot ·the names
into arenas where enemies
can access them." Stone told
·reporters in a conference call.
Secure Flight is to begin test·
ing in the next two months and
will take a year to implement.
Airlines and · commerci al
reservation servjccs will provide an FBI -run center with
passenger name records. That
can include credit card numhers, travel reservation information, address, telephone
number and meal requests,
which can indicate a passenger's rel_igion or ethnicity.
The Customs Service has
used a sim ilar method to
screen passengers !lying into
or out of the United States.
After . European countries
raised
privacy concerns.
Homeland Secudty Secretary
Tom Ridge signed a treaty in
May with 25 counuies to protect
passengers' privacy. The agree-

ment limits the infonnation that
can be U"ansferred and resuicts
BY KATA KERTESZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
the use of the infonnation.
Stone said his agency will
WASHINGTON (AP) ·issue a public notice of' simiJar protections for the Secure Bacl&lt;-to-school shopping lists
Flight program; as required are constantly evolving to
keep up with technological
by law.
· Hofmann said privacy advoc advancements, many even
cates are ·concerned because including cell phones, 'lapthe system is based on 'lists tops, Blackberrys and iPods.
But one clear staple remains
created by the government.
.
"People who've been - the pencil.
As 5-year-old children opt
flagged by watch lists have
had a great deal of difficulty to play computer learrring
games instead of using tradigetting off them,'' she said.
Sen . Edward Kennedy, D- tional· learning toys, and mid- ·
Mass .. and Rep. John Lewis, die schoolers would not even
R-Ga .. said last week they think to · research a school ,
hat! been mistaken for people project with a physical encyon watch lists or improperly clopedia, the staying power
selected for additional screen- of the little woop~n pencil .ing. Kennedy said it rooli:him li)&lt;e the ones George Mozelle Segraves, right, and Carolyn 13eE!ne inspect and grade
three weeks and calls to feder- Washington used - seems pencils before packing for shipment at the Musgrave Pencil Co.
al officials to get off the list. , remarkable.
Not only are pencils still in Shelbyville, Tenn., Thursday, Aug. 19, 2004. As many back
Stone said passengers who
to school supplies have evolved over the years the pencil has
are wrongly !lagged can ask used in classes like art and remained a staple for students. (AP Photo/John Russell)
the agency to fix the problem math, the good old No. 2 penunder the same system that's cil is the key to the multiple- increase the number of com- to allow students to li sten to
choice, computer-graded tests puter tests, though a major lectures, browse course butin place now.
The agency plans to order that open doors to the shift is far down .the road. letins or practice pronunciathe airlines next month to tum nation's universities and "For the foreseeable future tion for language .classes.
.
over historic passenger data graduate programs.
Mike Finn, spokesman for
paper and pencils remains the
so the system can be tested. · Tom Ewing, spokesman for reliable workhorse of educa- PaperMate, wh1ch says it is
The
Air
Transport the Educational Testing tiona! measurement," Ewing the biggest p1'oducer of pen;
Association, which represents Service, which administers said.
cils in the United States, said
major airlines. said it supports tests like the SAT, G~E and
Lack of access to comput- pencils are still popular and
a program to screen passen- GMAT, said that while the ers is one .of the major rea- necessary. Demand for pengers. But carriers are con- nun1ber of people taking sons computer testing is still cils is strong, he said, but
cerned about passengers' pri- them on computers is increas- far behind traditional pencil . children are interested in
vacy, the potential for delays . ing, the paper and pencil ver- tests, said Tim Loomer, pres- more modem pencil options,
ident of testing and assess- not just the simple yellow
at airports and the logi stics, sions still predominate.
Ewing said that in fiscal ment and Scantron Corp. wooden pencil. An increasing
spokesman Jack Evans said.
The commission set up by 2004 the number of people Scantron provides many of number of children are opting
Congress to investigate the who took the tests on com- the multiple-choice tests in for mechanical pencils or
. color
pencils.
but
Sept. II attacks recommend- puters was only a fraction of K-12 education.
those
using
penci
Is
·
only
PaperMate's
general
sales
of
Though
there
is
a
trend
ed that the government take
about
1.6
million
people
on
testing.
there
pencils
have
not
waned
as
toward
online
over passenger screening
computers, compared . with has not beeri' a real drop-off technology
increasingly
from the airline s.
about 23.7 million using in paper and pencil testing, enters classrooms and chiiLoomer said. "Not everyone dren's homes, he said.
paper and pencil.
On the Net:
Musgrave Pencil . Co. m
Ewing cited several reasons has a computer, but I guaranTransportation
Security
tee
you
·
can
get
everyone
a
Shelbyville,
Tenn., has · seen
for
thi
s
difference:"Wider
Administration:
said.
,
an
increase
in
preference for
pencil,"
Loomer
use
of
computers
is
hampered
http://www.tsa.gov
Techi!ological
initiatiyes,
fancy
pencils
in
recent years.
somewhat by availability where can you find comput- such as Duke University's Lynn Hulan of Musgrave said
ers for 25 million people? plan to hand out free iPods to the pencil,s preferred today
Sometimes it is security, the mcoming freshman, have not tend to have bright colors and
need to' have a proctor, and reduced demand for pencils. often include slogans such as
The university is jlivmg out "I Love ,to Read" and "Honor
sometimes it is cost."
,,
He said ETS would like to the small electromc devices Roll:"

U.S. hoopsters beat Spain 102-94, Page 82
U.S. tra~ enJoys golden night, Page 82
Women s soccer claims gold, Page 83
Browns deep at tight end spot, Page 83

/

Meigs runners open season at Early Bird Invitational·

Prep Football

ovc

rum

~

All

Chesapeake

o-o

o-o

Coat Grove

0-0

0-0

Fairland
o-o
River Valley
o-o
Rock Hill
Q-0
Soulh Point
0.{)
Friday's Games
River Valley at Southeastern
Chesapeake at Portsmouth
Coal Grove at Piketon
Portsmouth West at Fairland
Tolsia (!N.Va.) at Rock Hill
Vinton County at South Point

0-0

0-0
0-0
0-0

rum

All
0-0
'().O

·M

Alexan&lt;1er
Belpre
Meigs
Nelsonville-Yori&lt;
Vinton County
Wellston

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

All

o-o
o-o
o-o
o-o
o-o
0.{)

Hocking Division

rum
.Eastern
Federal Hocking
Miller
Southern

M
0-0
0-0

o-o
o-o

All
0-0
0-0
0-0

o-o
o-o

Trimble
0-0
Waterford
0-0 0-0
Friday's Games
Meigs at Gatlia Academy
South Gallia at Eastern
Southern at Grjlen
Miller at Alexander
Belpre at Warren
Nelsonville-Yori&lt; at Athens
Vinton County at South Point
Fort Frye at Federal Hocking
Trimble at Zanesville Maysville
Beallsville at Waterford

Cardinal
M
Herbert Hoover

o-o

All

o-o

Poca
Slssonvil~

o-o

o-o

Friday's a.nRip!ay at Point Pleasant
Sissonville at Poca
Wayne at Lawrence County (Ky.)
Ravenswood at Winfield
Huntington at Herbert Hoover

Others .·

.

FRIDAY Br SATURDAY 9am ·10pm • SUN. 1pm • 9pm

Take l-17to Ripley FAIRPLAIN Interchange
(ex~ 132) Tum North on At. 21
oealership if 3 miles on left '

•

•

__________

__;,

__., -- --- · - - - · - -

111m

All

Hannan

o-o
o-o

Ironton

'

•

Clelland

·Amotd

Samar

The top returning individual threats
to Roush's title will be Jackson's Jesse
Ondera (4th), Nate West (6th) of
Alexander, Troy Howdyswell (7th)
and Aaron Conle)l .(9th) of Vinton
County, and Trevor Miller (8th), Nick
Hadsell (10th) and Herbie Otworth
.(li th) of Wheelersburg.
Other top 25 returnees include
Meigs seniors Ross Well (14th) and ·
Grant Arnold (16th), Fairland's
Chuckie Wentz (15th). Shane Plantz
(17th) of Galli a Academy, and Brent
Sturgill (19th) and GrnTett Pugh (23rd)
of Wellston.
On the girls side. Jackson ret4.rns as

defending champion and will again
be looking for the crown in 2004. II of
the top 25 are back for this seasoi1. and
there will be a new individual champion in 2004:
Trisken Emmert (4th) and Brittany
Christian (5th). both from Jackson.
will be the top two returnees this week'end and the early favorites for the top
spot. Waiting to battle the lronlndies
duo for top hqnors will be Timmy
Sanders (8th) of GAHS, Meg&lt;m
Clelland (9th) and Ashley • Samar·
(14th) of Meigs. and Kalli McCorkle
(I Oth) and Kate Grillo (II th) of Vinton
County.

There will be a few new faces in the
field this year that should also push for
the top spots ·in each varsity nice, as
2003 OVC champion, Emi ly Barker of
S'oathi&gt;oint will push for the top spot
in the girls race . Rebekah Clevenger
(Wheelersburg) ,. Caitlin Detamore
Veronica
Perko
(Fairland).
(Chesapeake), Cayla Lee (Meigs),
Lacey Ball (Southeastern), Lindsay
Caldwell IGAHS) and Elaine
Householder (RVHS) should also
make an immediate impact on
Saturday.
Impact newcomers to the boys race
include Adam Sloan (Chesapeake),
Ryan Bell (Wheelersburg), and the
South Point tri o of David Theiss,.
Richard Bond and Andy Burgess.'
The first race of the day will begin at
IOa.m.

what seems to be the right
thing to do right now is to
keep working, keep putting
COLUMBUS
Ohio the shovel in the ground,
keep giving guys opportuniState coach Jim Tressel ties to emerge.'' Tressel said.
offhandedly
announced "I think we've been say ing
Thursday that Justin Zwick all along that there .wasn't
beat out Troy Smith and will going to be any golden time.
start at quarterback in the that the early season was
Buckeyes' opener against going to be very imporiant. It
Cincinnati on Sept. 4.
continues to be that way."
That was news to both
Both Zwick and Smith are
Zwick and Smith.
redshirt sophomores who
Not more than 10 minutes arrived at the quarterback
earlier both had ·said sepa- battle by dramatically differrately they had not been told ent routes .
·
who was starting or when a
Zwick, a 6-foot-4, 225decision would be reached. · pounder from · Massillon, is
Quarterbacks coach Joe one of Ohio State's most
Daniels professed that he was acclaimed recruits .at the
also in the dark on the position since Art Schlichter
announcement.
· 1979 H
· d
· 1
· Tressel began by saying, 111
• e wmte patient Y
on the sidelines last season
"Well, today, as it will be - throwing three passes all
Saturday, Justin started and year _ while senior Craig
Troy got to play as well."
Krenzel led the Buckeyes to
It was only when a reporter an 11 _2 record.
asked the coach if he meant
Asked what Tressel had
this Saturday - or the next told him . Zwick said,
Saturday, the day of the first "Nothing. We just go out
· game - that Tressel said every day and work hard.
Zwick would start.
He's got to make a decision
Tressel, .however, did not sooner or later, 1 guess.. 1
give a ringing endorsement don't know."
of Zwick's status and said
Before Tressel spoke with
Smith will see action against reporters. Zwick said he didthe Bearcats.
n't know when to expect any
"Well. it is up for grabs'," announcement.
he said of the job. "We could
"I don't expect anything,"
go and someone could do he said.
Smith is a 6-1. 215extremely poorly in the next
four or five days and it might pounder out of Cleveland
not be true."
Glenville who was recruited
Zwick apparently 'won the as an athlete and saw action
job after analysis of the on special teams last season
lengthy scrimmage · the becau se of his shifty running
Buckeyes had last Saturday style.
in Ohio Stadium. Daniels
Tressel said last spring that
said the two QBs graded out Zwick had a slight edge on
"amazingly close" in their Smith, who was asked·
performance.
Thursday ii lie felt he had
Asked why Zwick was narrowed the gap.
"There was never a gap,"
declared the startJ;!r now,
Tre,ssel again avoided a direct he said. "I think we're pretty
much were even." "'
response.
"After we ran 177 play s
Both quarterbacks have
and saw that some guys did been scrutinized throughout Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel has picked Justin Zwick (12), shown handing off during
some things well, some ~uys
,
.
Scarlet a·nd Gray game, to be the Buckeye's starting quarterback in 2004 , (AP) ·
need work on other thmgs,
Ple•H IHiwlck. 81
RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

BY

.

Point P~asant
Wayne
Winfield

ners.

Zwick chosen over Smith to quarterback Buckeyes

SEQ

·Athens
0-0
Gallia Academy
0-0
Jackson
0-0
Logan
0·0
Marietta
0-0
Warren
0-0
Friday's Garnes
Meigs at Gallia Academy
Nelsonville-Yori&lt; at Athens
!-aflcasleratLogan
Morgan at Marietta
Belpre at Warren
Saturday's Game
Wellston at Jackson

CHESHIRE - The River Valley
Early Bird Invitational has served as a
tune-up for some of the top cross country talent in southern Ohio for the past
few years, and 2004 appears to be no
exception.
The annual event will ·be this
Saturday at RVHS and will feature
close to 225 individuals vying to get
the 2004 season off on the right track.
In the boys race, 19 oflast year's top
25 finishers return and the host Raiders
enter as the defending champions .
RVHS will once again be a strong
favdrite for the boys title, as its top six
from last season all return to the field
this year. Led by two-time champion
Chris Roush, the Raiders will be looking for a three-peat in the boys competition. Also returning with Ro.ush will
be Jeremy Wolfe (3rd last season),
Chris Lester (5th), Jo'n Casto (18th),
Kyle Hively (20th) and• Daniel Hill
(25th).

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

SEOAL

rum

...
_,.._

Other top 25 returnees inClude .
Peggy Fleming (16th) of Wellston,
Hayley Metheny (18th ) of Alexander,
and Kelly Ireland (22nd) of RVHS.
Elise DiFranco i23rd) of Jackson
rounds out the list of returning run-

BY BRYAN WALTERS

sports@ mydailytribune.com

Ohio Division

CHinOUT

Friday, August 27, 2004

·,

TVC

• Tans, Tags, 1l1le Fees extra. GM owner loyahy rebate induded in sale price of new vehide listed where applkable.
.
••an appraved aedlt. On seleded models. Not rMponsible for typographical •rOrs. Prkes good August 25ili Through 291h. ..

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Oak Hill
South Gallia
Symmes Valley

0-0

Wahama

0-0 ·

Friday's Ga..Soulh Gallia 1!1 Eastem
Hannan at Hamlin
Wahama at WilliamstOwn
Ironton at WhSelersburg
Oak Hill at Minford
Huntington at Symmes Valley

o-o
o-o

~

Buckeyes name four Williams
captains for 2004

off to India, not Miami

BY STEVEN WtNE

Associated Press

COLUMBUS (AP) Defensive end Simon Fraser,
cornerback Dustin Fox,
kicker Mike Nugent and tailback Lydell Ross we[e voted
by their teammates Thursday
as Ohio State's captains for
the 2004 season.
· Fraser is a 6-foot-6, 280-·
pound senior from Upper
Arlington who had 1.5 sacks
a year ago in his first season
as a starter.
Fox. a 6-0, 190-pound
senior from Canton, has
started the last· 28 games for
the Buckeyes. He was a second-team All-Big Ten choice
a year ago while intercepting
three passes.
.
Nugent owns 12 Ohio
State records for scoring and
kicking, includi.Jll! most

--

points by a kicker in a season
(120 in 2002), most field
goals made in a season (25 in
2002) and best career fieldgoal percentage (.787, 48 of
61). He is a 5-10, 1~0-pound
senior from Centerville.
Ross led the Buckeyes in
rushing last year with 826
yards. The 6-0, 225-pound
ser.ior is from Gaither High
S&lt;!hool in Tampa. Fla.

·--

DAVIE, Fla. - Ricky
Williams phoned the Miami
Dolphins this week, but said
his next destination will be
India. not a return to the
NFL.
The retired running back
contacted
coach
Dave
Wannstedt several days ago.
· sources close to the . coach
said Thursday. But Williams
told The Miami Herald he
has no plans to come back
anytime soon.
His conversation with
Wannstedt was their first
since Williams called the
week before training camp
with the stunning news he
was retiring.
Prompting the latest call
was a letter the Dolphins sent
Williams. last week seeking

to recoup $8.6 million in ing champion to return, even
bonuses paid to him.
though Miami totaled five
"I didn't call them to see if first downs and no points in
I could come back. I was just . its most recent exhibition
causing a conversation to game.,
happen,'' Williams told the
His latest reasons for retirHerald from Australia. ''They in g. including a workload he
·sent me the letter and (my considered.
excessive,
agent) told 1ne it's in my best annoyed ex-teammates.
interests to ca)l them ."
"He 's acting like a bitter
Even i('i1'1e, 27-year-old girlfriend,'' defensive tackle
Williams wanted to return. he Larry Chester said. "He's just
faces a suspension for the lashing out. I don't think anyentire 2004 season for violat- one should pay attention to
ing the NFL drug policy. He him .
has acknowledged testing
"He owes a lot of people an
positive for marijuana three apology - not just the fans,'
time.~ .
but the players in this locker
Williams may have been room. A lot of guys were with
seeking a way to avoid repay- him all offseason. We figured
ing any money. but an NFL he , was going to war for us.
source insisting on anonymi' ' To back out without any
ty said the Dolphin s are tak - explanation h messed up."
ing a hard line with Williams.
Williams said he plans to
Players and team officials travel tg India soon for a.
gave no indication they're
Ptease - lkky, 11
eager for the 2002 NFL ru~h-

�•,

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August

www.mydailysentinel.com

27, 2004

American hoopsters defeat Spain 102-94,-advance to semifinals
Bv CHRIS SHERIDAN
Associated Press

points in his team's tirst live offense rather than score.
games, missing 24 of 30 Historically a shoot-first.
shots . The Americans lost pass-secoi1d
player.
two of them. to Puerto Rico Marbury 's mind- set was funATHENS,
Greece
and Lithuania.
Jamentally at odds with his
· Written off a(ter their opener
But those struggles are in wach 's.
and branded failures back the past, and the Americans. "Piayi ng under coach
home, Stephon Marbury and now have a chance to win the Brown is not easy,'' Marbury
the Americans are showing
N
·
signs that they just might be gold medal. ext up IS a said. ''lt :s tough because he
the team to beat after all.
semifinal Friday _against · demands so much from you
. ·
. Argentma, wh1ch 1n 2002 - to try to ,play your game
: For a change. the face of · became the first team to and try to do what he wants,
.frustration belonged to. some- defeat a U.S. squad com ~- · and have that all combine in
one other than an Amen can
. . ·. 1
·
after Marbury's performance. pnsed otNBA ~layers .
one has been a challenge to
He set a u.S. men 's Olympic · Argentma defeated, Gr:;ece me . But it's been a great chal- ·
,record with 31 points and 69:64 111 . Thursdays _.'mal lengc.''
·broke the team mark with six qu,lflerfmal. The other sem1- · Gasol led Spain with '29
3-pointers, leading the sud- fill~tl p1ts Lllhuama. wh1ch points but was held to just
denly accurate Americans defeated Chma 95-75. agamst four in the founh quarter by a
'into the semifinals with a . Italy. wh1ch downed Puerto tenacious American defen 102-94 victory over Spain on R1co 83-70.
' ive effort, which . quieted a
Tpursday.
Marbury:s six 3s broke t~e crowd of 14,500 that included
In a game that ended with record of live set by_ Regg1e Spain's King Juan Carlos.
the opposing coaches swear- Miller agamst Chma 1n 1996.
''It WllS said that the public
·ing'arid pointing at one anoth- and Ius scormg total passed support s the weaker- t~afT\. · J· ·
· er, the United States finallv the mark ql 30 po1nts shared think in this case the public
.started hitting jump shots _· by Charles Barkley ( 1992 vs. was. solidly behind the
just as Larry Brown predict- Brazd) and Adnan Dantley stronger team because we
-ed.
( 1976 vs. Yugoslavia). The were the stronger team," said
"They were very good · on Olympic ·record. is 55 points Pesquera , who also com.3s. That was something new by Oscar Schnudt of Braz1l plained that the officials
in this tournament," Spain\ agamst _Spam 111 1988. The allowed the Americans to get
Pau Gasol said. "Thev looked record lor any U.S. player 1s away with traveling violamotivated, and it'll be hard to 35 by_ Lisa Leslie against tiims.
beat them if they keep play- Japan m 1996.
" I think this game was
ing like that.''
Allen Iverson added_ 16 played und':; NBA rules. not
After spending 90 minutes pomts, mak1ng three 3-pOJnt- FIB A rules, he smd.
practici-ng jumpers in an ers. and the Amen cans lmally . Several _Span1sh players
empty gym on a day off, resembled U.S. tea1.ns from threw the1r hands up and
Marbury made half of his the P,ast three OlympiCS: They stared at the Amencan bench
team's 12. 3-pointers and was d1dn t get rarHed by a large 111 d1sgust when Brow A called
a big reason why the previ- d1spanty 111 fouls (27 - 1_8). h1s l ~te t1meouL Pesque~a
ously undefeated Spaniards they knocked down thw tree wasn t _ buy1ng Browns
are now out of medal con- throws to mamtam the lead 111 explanation.
tention.
the tinal two minutes, and
"I tried to apologize, I tried
As the teams left the court, they topped I00 points for the to explain, and he kept saying
.Spanish
coach • Mario first time in the tournament. someth ing about the NBA. I
:Pesquera and Brown had to
The Americans finished 12- would never try to embarrass
·be ' separated by their assis- _ for-22 on 3-pointers after anybody."
Brown
said.
tants in an -argument over a shooting a tournament-low "Hopefully I'll learn to hanJ
timeout Brown took with 23 24 percent jn their first five die these situations, which are
new to me. a little bit better."
seconds left and his team up games.
by II points.
"We've been
playing
Tim Duncan scored the
• "I had - and I stress the against so much zone, it does- Americans' first five points Tihe USA's Allen Iverson. right, is fouled by Spain' s Carlos Jimenez during the first quarter of
:word 'had'- a lot of respect n't really matter anymore," and blocked Spain's first their ganie at the Olympic Indoor Hall during the 2004 Olympics in Athe ns on Thursday (AP).
'for Larry Brown," said· Marbury said. "We're starting shot, but he was on the bench
''I'm not. exhausted. I'm
up
74-67 .
Pesquera, wh,o smirked and to like playing against just 4 1/2 minutes into the defensive energy of Dwyane Americans
hurt
becau&gt;e that was a big ·
Wade.
before
Spain
rallied
Marbury
's
last
3-pointer
proshook his head when he heard zones."
first quarter and stayed there
vided a seven-point cushion chance for our team to make a
.Brown explain that he tried to
Marbury had s truggled the for the rest of the half after with an 11 -0 run.
:rescind the timeout. "Dean most in the team 's firs t five picking up two fouls . .
A 7-0 run by Spain tied the with 3:45 left, and Gasol did- , tatcmcnt." said Gasol . who
:Smith would have never done games, uncomfortable with
In a seesaw second quarter. game late in the third quarter. n't score his first points of the played all 40 'minutes. "We
·anything like that."
· Brown's insistence that a the Americans went ahead by but Carmela Anthony ended fourth quarter until 2:02 Jeserved hetter. We· re out.
and it hurt s to s~1y that.'' ·
· Marbury scored just 21 point guard should run the eight points, feeding off the the period with a J to put the remained:

~United

States enjoys a big night on track; five gold_medals
'

Bv BEN BAUM
Associated Press

· ATHENS Greece~ What
.a night f~~l u.s. athletes in
:olympic Arack and field.
:Even )11 the event that went
;to ,a,ndther country, an
. •Ami\ncan won.
• Shl!wn Crawford, Bernard
:williams and Justin Gatlin
:swept the 200. Dwight
•Phillips and John Moffitt
:went 1-2 in the long jump.
:Marion Jones and the 400:meter relay team cruised
:into the finals.
~ And Feli~ Sanchez, whose
:400-meter hurdles win
:Thursday
gave
the
;Dominican Republic its first
•Olympic gold medal, was
:born in New York, raised in
:san Diego and has dual citi:zenship.
1 Everyone behaved Friday
:night - except the Greek
:fans who packed Olympic
;Stadium, chanting the name
;of their disgr_aced sprinter,
·Kostas Kentens. The Greeks
· :had paid big money to ·watch
:Kenteris defend his 200
:gold medal, btit he withdrew

from the Olympics in a doping scandal.
The turmoil delayed the
start of the 200 four minutes. Four-time Olympic silFrank
ver
medalist ·
Fredericks, who finished ·
fourth in the race, held his
finger to hi s lips, then
clasped his hands together,
begging for quiet.
The Americans weren't
upset.
"We're here in the birthplace of the Olympics, the
defending Olympic champi on is from Greece, and there
were certain situations that
didn't allow him to compete," Crawford said. ''I'm
sure they were disappointed.
I can understand thei'r feelings. 1 know they're disappointed and angry.''
Crawford took the lead off
the turn and burst down the
home Stre.tc h to finish in
19.79 seconds, the fastest
time in four years and a persohal
best.
Bernard
Williams tied his personal
best of 20.01 seconds for
silver. Justin Gatlin, the 100
champion, won bronze in

•

ment on guys who are here
practicing," Wannstedt said.
· Williams admitted he was
unhappy
with his contract and
from Page 81
new offensive coordinator
Chris Foerster. And he said
"couple of months."
the Dolphins relied on him
· "It s not in my best interests too heavily the past two sea··to play football right now," he
sons, when he carried 775
:said.
times.
· Williams' agent, Leigh
"I don't really know what
Steinberg, didn't return calls
to think about that," offensive
seeking comment. Wannstedt lineman
Seth McKinney said.
and Dolphins general manag"Speaking
as offensive lipeer Rick Spielman declined to
men,
we
go
out there and
·discuss the latest developblock. If we run the ball I00
:ment in the Williams saga
times,
ounbere block' "I'm only goin,g to com- ing 100we're
times. Maybe we're

Ricky

•

•

Zwick
fro~

PageB1

August practices, feeling that
one slip could cost them
:playing time. The pressure

:was blil1din .

·

! Smith sai~ he was reaching

:a point' where he just wanted
Tressel to make a decision. .

"As a human, you think
like that," he said. 'T m just
on the edge . of my seat as
much as you. He keeps us
really worried and yearnin~
to see who is going to start.'
Whether he was a party to
Tressel's decision or not,
Daniels acted as if he had no
knowledge that Zwick had
been chosen.
He said that how the two

20.03.
The celebration was 'subdued. Williams, part of the
embarrassing preening after
th e U.S. 400-meter ~e lay
victory in Sydney four y.ears
ago, made sure he behaved
himself So did the usually
flamboyant Crawford.
"We don't have to be arrogant
about
anything,"
Williams said. "We can
carry ourselves with honor.
That's the stars and stripes."
The trio didn't quite complete their victory lap. They
stopped at the medal stand
where Phillips and Moffitt
were standin g as "The StarSpang-led Banner'' played.
It was the sixth time the
United States has taken all
three 200 medals- the last
sweep was. led by Carl
Lewis in 1984.
.
And it gave the United
States a total of 18 track and
field medals, just two
behind the total from
Sydney, with two nights of
competition
remaining.
Russia is next with nine
medals.
Phillips, probably the

overused. That's the way it
goes. That's the game of footbaiL I don't know what he's
talking about, really."
McKinney and other players said they still e~pect to be
without Williams this season,
despite his phone call · to
Wannstedt.
"I don't thiflk many people
are paying attention to it,"
fullback Rob Konrad said. "I
think it's more of a positioning thin~ by him. He's in where 1s it, Australia or
Austria? I would doubt he's
going to be back here anytime
soon ...
played in ~ames would ultimately dec1d.: the starter:.
''I'm not sure by game four
we have to have a clear-cut
starter," Daniels said. "If it
happens, it happens. If it
doesn't, I'm not going to be
all uptight about it. ... The
differencf; would be when the
lights come on and the scoreboard's lit and the crowd's
there."

biggest favorite to win a
go ld of all the Americans,
captured it on his first jump,
28 feet. 2 1/4 inches ~ a
half-inch off the personal
best he set three weeks ago.
Moffitt, the NCAA champion from LSU. was second
with a personal-best 27-9
1/2.
·
The Uni ted States has won
the long jump gold in all but
four Olympics. The latest
shutout was four years ago.
and . the significance of
reclaiming · the titl e was not
lost on Phillips. ·
"To go 1-2 in the Olympic
Games, and follow in the
footsteps of those great
jumpers - such as Mike
Powell; Carl Lewis , Bob
Beamon, Ralph Boston ·_
now you've got Dwight
Phillips and John Moffitt,"
Phillips said.
After winning the hurdles,
_Sanchez paraded with the
Dominican fl~. His parents
were born in tlie Dominican
Republic, and he said he
never has regretted choosing
to run for the impoverished
nation, rather than the pow-

erhouse track program of
The race may have implications
beyond
the
the United States.
"It's a feeling of pride Olympit· s. Jones is under
every time I step on the inve&gt;tigation by the U.S.
track, knowing I 'have a lot Anti -Doping Agency and , if
of Dominicans following she is Tound guilty of using
me," said Sanchez. who still banned drugs. it could
in impact an y m~dal the team
lives
and
trains
California. "Now, hopefully might win.
I can push the movement in
Jone s has not been
athletics. We've come a charged with doping and
long way since I first com - had repeatedly denied she
peted in 1999."
ever used p~rformanceOvershadowed in the U.S . . enhancin g substances .
medal barrage was Jones '
Her relay teammate&gt; said
appearance in the semifinals they were not concerned
of the 400-meter relay. The about someday losing the
quartet of Angela Williams. · medal the y full y expect 1o
Jones, Lauryn Williams and be gold .
.
LaTasha Colander matched . "We're not taking fear
their world-leading time of ·with us. We're takin g faith
41.67 second&gt;. Tht! fimlis with u;,,'' Colandet ;, aid .
will be Friday night. shortly "and we ' re going to stay
after Jones competes in the pmitive. We've been doing
long jump.
that. and it's heel] working.
"This team is a lot differ- sol think we ' ll ;,tay with it."
ent than follr years ago .
.~hey're
young. the y're
fresh, they ' re excited about
every little thing, and that
brings a little more excitement to it all," Jones said.
''I'm only 28 . but I feel like
Subscribe toda\'.
the old lady of the bunch ."
675-1333 .

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l

Friday, August

The Daily Sentinel • Page b3

www .mydailysentinel.com

27, 2004

•

U.S. women's soccer t'eam_beats Brazil 2-1 in overtime, claim gold
BY JOSEPH WHITE .

Associated Press
ATHENS. Greece ,- An hour
after the game. Mia Hamm was
still on tile fie ld, hugging. crying ,
and posing for pictures with an
Olympic gold medal around her
neck.
. Then, finally, she left. ,
After 17 years, 153 goal s'and 266
games _ including a grueling
overtime finale _ it was time for
her to go.
"There are few times in your life
where you get to write the final
chapter the way you want to."
Hamm said. "I think a lot of us did
_
that tonight."
Hamm and the rest of the Fab
Five had just enough left in their
thirtysomething bodies for one
more triumph in their final tournament together. Led by two goals
from the next generation, the
United .States beat Brazil 2-1
Thursday to claim the Olympic
title.
f.bby Wambach, the player who
might break Hamm's records one
day, scored the game-winning goal
in the 112th minute with a powerful 10-yard header off a corner kick
from· Kristine 'Lilly. It was
Wambach's fourth goal of the
Athens Games and 18th in her last
20 games .
The game marked the final competitive appearance together for the
remaining players from the first
World Cup championship team in
1991. The five helped bring their
sport to national prominence and
captured the country's imagination

by winning the World Cup in 1999.
Hamm was a nonfactor through- medal game in Sydney four years
and together they have played in out the game, unable to find space ago and a third-place finish at I&lt;\St
1.230 international matches .
to make the kind of runs that made year's World Cup. In the 1990s. the
Hamm. Julie Foudy and Joy her famous . Hamm's po st-game United States ruled women's soccer, but the other teams have
Fawcett are ~etiring from the speech in the loc-ker room was
national team - although they · great big "Thank you" to her team- caught up over the last five years .
might play ih farewell exhibition s mates . ·
The victory also offers a measure
this fall - leuving Lilly and
"They carried me tonight , that 's of vindication for coach April
_Brandi Chastain as the last of the for 'sure," the 32-year-old Hamm Heinrichs , who took over after the
old guard. Hamm plans to start a said.
19'19 World Cup and failed to win
family with her husband , Ch icago
The U.S. team was re scued bY\.lthe top prize in 2000 ur 2003.
Cubs shortstop Nomar Garciaparra. Wambach , some great saves fr01n r- . The team was captained for the
"I talked about feeling good Scurry and a stunning 39th-minute last time hy Foudy, who played the
about. where I was in my life , an~ goal from Lindsay Tarpley. who se entire 120 minutesjust three days
th1s IS a great way · to end 11, 24-yard dnve skirted two defend- after spraining her right · ankle in
Hamm sa1d.
ers and curled just inside the left the
semifinal victory over
· The retiring players left happy post.
· Germany.
with the final result, but they might · "Tarp and I, it's the least we can
The Americans were out of sorts
never want to J;atch a replay of a do for the women who have -meant from the _opening whistle. They
game that showed 1t was perhaps so much to us," Wambach said.
cou ldn 't handle the Brazilian prestime for them to hang it up. ·
When the final whistle blew, sure ,and could barely string two
The_Americans were slow er, less Hamm was quickly swarmed by all passes together to get their possesorgamzed, less creative and lost the 17 teammates. The team then took sion game going.
chase tQ most of the loose balls . a victory lap, waving flags to the
The Brazilians came out playing
against the young Brazilians, who crowd of I 0,416 at Karaiskaki very. physically, pushing and grabweren't afraid tu shove the U.S. Stadium.
bing whenever they could get away
stars around.
Hamm clenched her fists under with it. Simoes accused the
Pretinha scored for Brazil in the her chin and looked to the sky with Americans of trying to hur.t hi s
73rd oft: of a rebound, and · the teary eyes after arriving behind the players when the two teams met in
. Brazilians twice hit the post later in podium for the medal ceremony. a 2-0 U.S. victory in the firs t round
regulation, coming within inches of Foudy, Fawcett, Hamm, Lilly and last week, but thi s time his. team
what would have been the winning Chastain stood together at the Jar was clearly the aggressor.
goa L
.
,
left - making them first on their
Scurry, while not announcing her
"!think today, Brazil was the bet- team to receive medals. Hamm retirement, has also said th is will
ter team," coach Rene Simoes said. blew a kiss to the Crowd when her be her lasi Olympics. Her team-.
"We deserved to win."
name was announced. Foudy mates had her to thank for not trailWhat Brazil lacked, though, was smiled and helped lead the fans in a ing by a goal at halftime.
the passion of a group of players chant of "U-S-A.''
Scurry dived right, stretching her
determined to give their heroes a
Brazil received its first women's body as far as it could go, to barely
proper send-off.
soccer medal after finishing fourth get a piece of Elaine's 19-yard shot
"We were bending, but we at the last two Olympics. Germany, in the sixth minute. In the 41st,
. weren't breaking," goalkeeper which beat Sweden 1-0 in the third- Scurry somehow pushed away a
Briana Scurry said. "They were place game. took the bronze.
short drive from Cristiane . that
throwing the kitchen sink at us. but
The win helped erase the sting of deflected off Chastain, ending a
I knew we had the heart to win it.'' the loss to Norway in the gold- furious sequence that began with

a

an indirect free kil'l- from I0 yard,
out.
Given Bratil'' c·ontrol ,,f 1he fir't
half. Tarpl ey\ go al ' ccmed to
come out of nowhc1-c . In a rare
attack for the U.S. t ~ am . ' he fpund
space to launch her ' hot fron\- the
top of the penalt y box und in1 o the
upper corner of the n ~1.
But the Bruili.am kepi prc"ing .
Daniela wa' wide ld l 11 ith a luw
24-yard dri ve eurl) in tl1c second
half, and v ariou ~ L ro ~:--.e:-. were j u"'t
off target or gathae d by Sc urrv.
. In th~ final minute' of reg ulation.
Brazil wa&gt; dearly colllrolling the
play. and the ir gua l 'e em~d
inevitable.
·
Cristiane , llJ. ran past .IIi- year·
old Fawcett with ease do wn the left
flank. then beat dcfcn\)cr Kate
Mark~raf before . slidin~ :1 cross
toward Pretinha . Sc·urry could only
get a hand on the p·a " . leaving
Pretinha alone. for the easy shot to
tie the score '
Cristiane wa s just wide right with
a long curl ing shot two minute&gt; ·
later, then she hit the left po&gt;t with
a 20-yard drive . In the 88th minute .
Pretinha beat Scurry with a 16-yard
shot, but it also hit the left post.
The U.S. team. the oldest in the
tournament. wa&gt; playing its sixth
game in 16 days -· and its second
straight 120.minute overtime
game.
Even so. the Americans found a
way to win it.
"We wanted to send them out on
top," Tarpley said. "They've done
so much for the women's game. To
be able to win gold when some ·of
them are re tiring - it 's a great
night.''

Browns deep at tight end spot
Bv JoE MILICIA
Associated Press

BEREA . If Kellen
Winslow Jr. has only 331
receiving yards . and three
touchdowns this season, critics would probably rate it as
a disappointing rookie year
for the heralded tight end.
But it would equal the production
the
Cleveland
Browns 'got from all five of
their tight ends in 2003.
The Browns obviously
ha.ve a new weapon with the
speedy,
sure-handed
his 25-yard
Winslow reception iit a preseason
game against Detroit was
longer than any catch by a
Cleveland tight end last year.
They also have some depth
at the . position for the first
time.
Chad Mustard, who was
playing for indoor football's
Omaha Beef in 2002,
appeared in I 0 games for
Cleveland last season following injuries to Steve
Heiden and Aaron Shea.
Mustard is now competing
with Shea and Darnell
Sanders to make the team
behind Winslow and Heiden.
"It's brutal. Everyone's
been having such a good
camp," · Mustard
said
Thursday.
Sanders has just 18 catclies
in two seasons and has yet to ·
show he was worth a founhround draft pick in 2002
after he le.ft Ohio State a year
early.
Browns coach Butc.h Davis
said this week that it WQuld
have benefited . Sanders to
stay in college and gain
maturity and strength. That
said, Davis gave him a positive review. ·
· "l have seen significant
improvement in hi's game in
the last year," Davis said.
"He has had a good camp.
He has a really good attitude
about looking at the things
that our coaching staff said
that he needed to work on."
· Shea has been plagued 'by
injuries. He played just II
games the last two seasons
and has· finished the last
three seasons on injured
-reserve.
_
: "To go through something
:and then get hun again, it's
just one of those things that's
frustrating," he said.
Shea has been used as an
H-back in the past and is currently listed on Cleveland's
-depth chan as . a fullback
behind
staner Terrelle_
·smith.
Quanerback Jeff Garcia
said Shea and Sanders have
done all they can to prove
themselves.
"You can' t ask any more
out of those two guys, espe- •
dally dealing with the circumstances that they are

very heated discussion to try
and fi gure out who are the
. very best 53 players for thi s
team." Davis said. "Special
teams will definitely play a
role in determining who will
make this team after the guys
that are a slam dunk as
starters and guys who can
play multiple positions.''
Davis said Winslow, • who
is still catching up after a 12day holdout, is progressing
dealing with," Garcia said. · well. but won't see an
"They are not necessarily in increa sed role in the offense
the top .two. They are fight- yet. Winslow is sti ll listed
ing for a third and fourth behind Heiden on the depth
spot and really probably chart.
\VOndering if there is a spot
"He is smart and unselfish
for them on this football enough to realize that there
team."
are some things that he is
Heiden led Cleveland tight behind in and there are situaends with a career-high 18 tions where he will just concatches for 134 yards last tinue I? improve and get betseason . despite missing the ter," Davis said.
final seven games with an
Winslow has not talked to
ankle injury. His duties on the media si nce Aug. 17 ,
three specia l team units when he suggested that the
Browns should be more
ensure him of a roster spot.
Heiden said he doesn't intense and aggressive. He
e~pect all five tight ends to said Thursday he's decided
make the team, but Davis not to do interviews for a
while.
wouldn't rule it out.
"There is going to be some
"I'm just laying low," he
said.

f'ire

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' I

I

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

1

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, August 27, 2004

friday, August 27, 2004

~rlbune

Major League Baseball
American League

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Pet.

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73

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69
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Chicago

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Chicago
005 200 10• 8
OP-Houston 1 LOB-Houston 12 Ch cago
7 28-Bigg o ~) Bagwell (23) JVizcaino 2
(151 A.lcu (25) Barrel! (24) HA-CBeltran
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000 030 340 - 10
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~
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York I Loe-:-san 0111g0 1 New York iJ 28FGuzman (3) Nevil (29) Burroughs
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7 2 0 0 1 4
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1 1 0 0 0 2

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2200
Dunuodh 4 1 2 3
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32 il w I
33 4 II 3 Tot.la

Totala

004

Baltimore
Oakland

000 -

000
103

4

032
OO• I
Oakland 1 LOB-Baltl

DP-81~1mor1 1

more 6 Oak llld e ~8-Mora (331 Gibber!•
17) EChawz ( 16) Hatteberg (~l Durazo
(27) t.tel'luse (9) HA-EChlwz (~~~ Dura
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lP H RERBBSO

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Parrish

2 23
3
113

4
2
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abrhbl
ab r hbl
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3 2 0
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Umptro--Home Mka Rail ~: Arl1 C B Sue
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Welhlr T-3 00 A:-21621 (!!7405)

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51

5

5 5

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1 0 0 0 0 0
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4032
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5120
4000

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42 It
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73

579

62
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53
62
65
67

54

73

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71

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65

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484

60

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55

70

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433

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42 23
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33 4 15 4

031 003 l
202 000 000 4
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(211 SB-Shetl ald (41 SF-BWihams
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000 000 - • 1
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100 110 01x 4
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11 28-lnlante (16) H~gg1nson (18) OYoong
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120 410 oar . ,. . 8
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T-2 55 .A.-2'6083 (49115)

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200 310 OOx 6
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101

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575
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ab rhbl
EYong d'l 3 1 1 1
MVong ss 4 1 0 0
ASrano 2b 4 0 2 3
AIMndr2b a 0 0 0
TMe ra1b 4020
Mench~
5010
BJordn rf 5220

w
Chtcago Cubs
San FrQnCISCO
San D1ego

71
71
69

&amp;AVEs-Gra,.• C ncrmat 37

Monday th ru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

laun~ai.IMI'I

St Louie 36 Benkez Florida 38 Gagne L011
Ange as 35 Mesa Plnlburgh 35 Kolb Mi
waukee 311 Smaltz Atanta 34

HOW IQ WRITE AM AD

This Dote In Baseball

Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Aug 21
1897 - Roger Bresnahan latera Hal ol Fame

meM

~ts

MIIJOr tYgua oetxit as -a

\ \ \01 \ 4 I \II '\ I "

p tcher lo the Wash n~on Ser.atorsl:ly &amp;huttn-.g

.r.___

OU1 tne St l ouiS Browns 3..()

1937 - Brooktyns Fred Frankhouse pitched a

PERso
___NALS
_ _ _,.I

Pel
559

GS

58

550

I

1914 -

58

543

2

11rst National League player 1n 13 yea s to h1t a

Ayala otlhe Mats became the

r

nect ng against Houston s Tom Gnffln 111 New

,....c....... .:caMjta.t tc-- .a&lt;:r-..;•""·

ADDENDUM TO mEM

N0.8
PUBUC NOTICE
SOUTHERN
OHIO
COAL COMPANY
RACCOON MINE NO
3 - SALEM SHAFT
PERMIT D-0453
Southern
Ohio
Cool Company hoo
oubmlttad an appllca·
lion to. revlae coal
mining Permit IR·
11463-55 to the Ohio
Department
ol
Natural Raaourcea,
Dlvlolon ol Mineral
Aeoourcaa
Management
Thlo
bermlt le loetled In
Melgo County, Salam
TDW11ahlp, Sactlon 32.
The
permit
aroe
ancomp•••• twenty-three (23) acroo
lind II loattad 0!1 the
Wllkeovllla 7 5 minute
U.S G.S quadrangle
map, approxlmotety 2
mllaa aoutheoot of
WIIU.vllla, Ohio on
the
properly
ol
Franklin Real Eolala
Compeny.
The
appllcotlon
propo111 to make 1
poot...,lnlng land uoe
change to provide
lhe permanent ratenllon of an olftcelbath.
houoe
building,
portable water •ayo·
tamo Including a
water otor.ge tank,
pavad ond otonad
acceoo toada, and
parking araao The

lor

~Mnty-three

(23) acre
auoclatad with

the revision hod 1
pn~mlnlng land uoa ol
"pelluraland", but
wKI now be clutngad
to
lng land UM II I

-lor"'*""',_

"com!M1Cialalt8"

Reaourcea

Management, 1855
Fountain
Square
Court,
Columbus,
Ohio 43244, within
thirty (30) days alter
the INI data of publl·
calion ol thla notice
8120,27
913,10
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS
COURT
COUNTY,
MEIGS
OHIO
Wallo Fargo San~
Mlnnaeota, N.A., 11
Truolaelor Certlllcete
Holdera of SACO I,
Inc., SariN :zoti0.3 c1o
EMC
Mor1g111JI
Corporlllon
Plalntlll
VI

(WyA Jones

A••J-,8111

Defer!dlnte

c- No. 04 CV 072

Judge Frad W. Crow
Ill

LEGAL NOTICE
Gary A. Jonaa,
wlloea lear lulown
addn.. lo PO

lox

215, Mlddlepor1, OH
45780;
Unlulown
SpoUM, If any, ol
Gary A. Jones,lut ...._, llddr111 II
PO
Box
211,
Mlddlaport,
OH
45780; Angela Jonat,
WhOM laat knoWn

addraoo

lo 48A Mill

Creek
Road,
Galllpollo, OH 45831,
ond
Unlulown
SpouM, If ony, ol
GaryA.J-,...,_
lilt knoWn oddt I II II
41A Mill Creel! Ad ,
G8111pollo, OH 45831,
will l e k e - IIIII
on June 15, 2004,
Wallo Forgo Bonk
Minna-. N.A., 11
Tru-lor Caillllcall
Holden of SACO I,
Inc., Sarloe :100113 clo
EMC
Mot1gegt
~~flied Ill
Complaint In the
Court of Common
PIMa, ....... c-tty,
Ohio, C.. No. 04 C\1
012. The ~ of,

The applic:811on lo
on Ilia for public
viewing at Melga
County Racordar'o
Otllca, ..... County
Courtllouoa, 100 E.
Second
Straet,
........ Of, Ohio ...,.
and lhall remain 10
thirty (301
daya following lhe
1aet elate of pl!bHc•
lion of thlo niltlca.
Written oom- or
raq!MMo lor an lnlor·
mal COII..... ICa may • 8fld dem8nd tor ......

lor .......

,

flied with tho
Olvlolon of Mineral

be

I

In, the complolntlo 1o
foreclooe the lien of
plalnllll's mortgage
recorded upon the
real eatate cleocrlbad
below and In which
plalnllll alleges lhet
the lorogolng clefendenta have or claim
to hove en lntereat:
Situated In the
Rutland
Townahlp,
Melga County, Slate
ol Ohio, end bolng In
Section 12, Town 5
North, Range 14 Weal
of
the
Ohio
Company'l PUrchaM
and baing cleocrlbad
aa lollowa: Beginning
at a polnt•Waol about
1830 leal end north
about 2380 and
North 1 cleg. 30' 54"
Eaot 473.78 from

the~llcorner

ol osld Section 12,
. .ld point ol beginning bolng In the cant.r ol Townahlp Road
T-178 (Nicholl Road)
and bolng Nor11&gt; 1
dag. 30' 114" Egot
473 78 .... """' The
.Junction
of
the
Cantsrllne ol oald
T"""'ahlp road T·178
(Nichola Road) and
County Road C·3
CrHk
(Leodlng
Road), .._..,. SOUth
as 111g 211' oe· &amp;II
214.27 IMI to the
Weettrty line of • 1.1
-.lol . . ln Melgo County Dead
Record~ Volume 245,
l)ltga 75, crooalng
Iron rode at 11.1 and 155.55 IMt tor
rwferenaei
tltence
North 22 deg 42'

W.81 32.73 -along

lhe Bouthw. .tarty
line ol Mid 1.1 ..,.
lot
to
lhe
Nortlt•wlal1y corner
of aald 1.1 acre lot;
~~- North 87 deg.
1115' Elll 131.22 ....
along lhe northerly
dna ol oald 1.1 ..,.
lot to I poet; .._...
North 2 cleg. 00' 33"
Wwt 44.1 flaot along I
wao1111y 1..,. ala 1.1
lot aurvayed
April 111715, by H
...,..., R.S. No. 2274
10M lion rod,.._.,.
North ea cleg. 2t' oe·
WMI o1011.81 1M1 to

a&gt;~aav-..

ten -Toby Ka rah and Bump Wils of the

c:•

I:C.l~~&amp;l"•t

tc• .,.......,.,.._••

band, ln dead record· Street
ad on or about March Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
26th, 1945 The last INRE. Woodrow W
title
tranoocllon Hall Jr 1 at al vs
Involving Savllla and Peggy L. Hall, et sl
C A Barrett concernCase No 03-CV· t 50
Ing ouch mineral Defendant Peggy L
rights, a lease record- Hall's last known
ed
on
or about address Is P 0 Box
September 27th 1948 508, New Haven, Weot
In Leaoe VOl. 41. Page Virginia,
25265.
21 1 Melga County Defendant Peggy L
Laaoe Recorda. No Hall wao Involved In a
thle tranoacllona con- motor vehicle collicerning such severed sion which occurred
mlnorela exlat of on Augull 7, 1999, In
record
In
Meigs tho Townohlp
of
Melgo
County alnca that Labanon,
time.
County,
Ohio
The current sur· Plalntll!l IUIIIIned
face ownera, James severe and parma·
and Virginia Brannon
nant peroonalln)urlea
submit that under due to this motor
Ohio Rov. Code Sac
vehicle
colllolon.
5301 58 el seq none Plelntillo
are
of the condltlona demanding
relief
axlot which would from the Defendants,
11rve to preoerve Including Peggy L
such uvered mineral Hall, on all counls of
week
alx · - lntereat, that lhoae the complaint In en
minerals have there-- amount lhat excaet11
livll-.
(8) 13, 20 &amp; 'n end
tore re-mergad with Twenty·llve
(II) 3, 20 &amp; 17
the ourloce lntereolln Thousand
dollar•
oald tract, •nd are ($25,000 00),
with
now owned by them.
Interests and coats of
H you contend oth· action.
Defendant
Public Notice
erwiM, you mual fila Peggy L Hall lo
IN THE MEIGS COUN- a reappnolva plead- required to Anowar
TY COURT OF COM- Ing with the Clarll of within twenty-eight
MON PLEAS
Courto olllca and (28) dayo altar the
serve legal counsel
publlcotion dale of
POMEROY, OHIO
lor Plelnllllo on or October 1, 2004
CASE NO 04-CY-oaa
before October 8,
(7) 30, (8)8, 13, 20, 27,
JAMES &amp; VIRGINIA 2004.
(9) 3
BRANNON, Plelntlllo,
RESPECTFULLY
SUBMITTED BY
SAYILLA 6 C A. BAR· Frank A
Llvelle,
Public Notice
NETT,
et.
Ill, Eaq. Attorney lor
a.tendlnla
Plolnllfll
PROBATE COURT OF
TO
SAYILLA Rag No 00101115
MEIGS
COUNTY,
AND/OR C A BAR· LAVI!LLE
LAW Of.IIO
NETT, WIFE AND OFFICES L P.A.
In Ra. Change of
HUSBAND, AND/OR 8 North Court Straal Nama of Olivia PIIJe
Wllllomo
THEIR
UNKNOWN Second Floor
ASSIGNS, SUCCES- Poet Olllce Box 8111
To Olivia Paige Wyatt
SORS, ADMINISTR"· Att.~a, Ohio 45701. CIM No 32100
TO.,S, EXECUTORS, 08111
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON
CHANGE OF
DEVISEES, NEXT OF (740) 583-3347
NAME
KIN OR 11EIRS AT (740) 582-81158- Fax
LAW, IF DECEASED, (8) 6, 13, 20, 27, (t) 3, Applicant
hereby
glveo notice to all
AND SPOUSES OF 10
lntereoted peroona
SAitiiE, IF ANY.
and to Ja- Wllllamo
Certain
mlnarol
Public Notice
that the applicant hoo
rlghtl _ , - filed an Appi!Qtlon
from lhe aur1ace In
lor change of Nome In
apx. 11.21 +1- AC LEGAL NOTICE
the Prot.ta Court of
located
In
the OHIO
COUNTY Melgo County, Ohio,
~·
Oultrlar of MEIGS
the
Sac. 18, Oliva 1Wp., MEIGS
COUNTY roquaotlng
llelgl County Ohio COURT OF COMMON chango of nama of
Olivia Paige Wllllamo
lly Sevilla and C.A. PLEAS
100 &amp;at Second ' to OIIYII Pllgl Wyatt.
~wile and hu•

the
canter
of
Townahlp Road T-176
(Nichola Road) crossIng Iron rods set at
202.89
leel
and
387 99 fer reference thenca South t
deg. 30' 54" West 130
feet along the canter
o1 TOWI1ohlp road T178 (Nichola Road) to
the point of begin·
nlng,
containing
1.053 acres, more or
leoo, excepting all
legal rights of way
No.
t 1·
Parcel
00129.00
Tha
delandenta
named above ore
required to an1wer
lhe complolnt within
twenty-eight
(28)
daya (lhe 15th day of
~)alter the loot
publication of thlo
legal notice
Thlo
legal notice will be
publlohad once a

Texas Rangefs hrt back to-back 1nside-the-pario.
home runs on conseoonve pitChes tn me sev
enlh nnr1g as lh&amp; Rangers beat the Yankees 8
2 etVankee Stad1um

.~

tg7a - Joe Mo1gan of the Cincmall Red! M
h1s 200th ca ll8 home un to become me I rat

"-•-,.;FiiOiiilJNDiiiiiiioo•_.l

lou B ock s 1974 record of 118 stolen bases 111

GIVEA.WA\

(740)742 2954

a season and stole three mo e baaes m the

5 cute &amp; Cuddly long haired
ktttens 6 weeks old Cal!
(740)446 7484 or (740)64 5

Athlet cs 5 4 loss to the M lwau~oo &amp;ewers It
gave Hender!!on 122 thefts 11'1 127 geme.s
1999 - Vladlm 1 Guerrero s hrt11n9 streak was

0891

halted B131 games by C ncwma11s Ron V1ll0119
~J~~Vr

· IH \I I -, I \II

lwrlght(l!llc net

310

sale' Sat 8/ 28 9 4 608
Teens Run Ad Bookcase
chatrs old records stone
1a rs
fr ames
and m uch
rn.ore Ram or Shtne

Me adow s

1A~ If FIJfZi;.oNAI.t;y.
\1' S ONL-'i e.tl~tNeS5.

btke &amp;
T he

Saturd ay

Mus1 have abll ty to work a
lle~t tble schedule Salafy +
Excellent B ene! ts Equal
Opportun ty
Employer
Resumes must be recetved
by 5 00 pm on September
7th 2004 Mati/Deltver to
Jackson County Famtly and
Ch ildre n Ftrst Counct! Attn
Susan Wolford Intersystem
Coord tnator 1 Acy Avenue
Sutte A
Jackson
Ohto

'/otJ oJMOV£.0,\J'"('

8!28

Abandoned k Hens Cute &amp;
playful Mostly black ca11co
Approx 4 weeks old Must

Montreal

Guerr1110 went 0 lor 2 with an i"Tienlional wallt
agar1st Vilk:me end1ng me m111ore lOngest hK

8~~-ot-lle-te_d...,..--(7-4-0)-44_6_
-~=-:

ling s1reak snr:e 1987
Today a blrthda~• JaM Vldro 30 J1m Thome

Kittens male &amp; fema(e to
good homes on ly (740)992
1106 leave messaQ!:l

Lost Chtld s

Pet

L arge

Wh ite Aabbtl taken by mts
take from the MasOfl County
Fatr Aabb1t Barn (304)674

r

0095

Will be hold1ng s1gn-ups on

August 28th from
10:00 am. to 2 00 p m.,
at the follow1ng locat1ons
Pomeroy Village Hall
Syracuse F1re Department
Rutland C1v1c Center
and
Chester Commumty Cel'lter

Friday,

August27,2004
9:00pm

I

··-

----

YARD

' I

I'OMEROYiMIDnLE
'

(n__

(740 )742 282 1
Saturday August 28 9-4
James Louks restdence on
Slate Route 7 below Eastern
H tgh Schoo

110

1.

liELPWANTED

Cash land
Full ltme Customer Servtce
Assoctate Great pay e~tcei
lent benef1ts Mu s! have
computer &amp; money handltng
expenence Fax resume to
740 441 8940 or ptck up
apphcat1on at 13 12 Eastern
Ave Gall pe lts

92

Due to our rece nt Agency
expanston
Medt
Home
Health Agency Inc s seek·
mg both a full ttme AN Case
Manager and a fullltme AN

Pallen! Care Coordtnator
poslllon m th e GallipOliS
Oh10 and surroundmg area
Dulles Include establish ng
WANnll
and mamtam ng open lines
lUBUY
of communicatiOn wtth area
phys1clans and health cafe
Absplu te Top Dollar uS laetlltles In 1he delivery of
S ti ver and Gold Coms Home Hea lth serviCeS Must
P roofsets Gold R ings U S be licensed In both Ohio and
Currency M T S Com Shop West Vtrgtnta We offer a
151
Second
Avenue competll ve salary benefits
Gallipolis 74Q-446 2842
packa~e and 401 K E 0 E
Please se nd resume to 352
R ive r lot o r acreage around Second Avenue Gallipolis
Gallta Co tor camp ng with OH 45631 Ann Bnan K tng
water &amp; electrJc avatlable
AN
C all Roo at (740)446 7885

r

or (740)845 6042
Used BanJO or Ukelele
(740)992 2529 Leave mes

sage
I \ !I'l l)\ \ II "\I
"'I U \ II I "

17

~~

110
1

HEI.PWANTED

11.110

"---~
LICENSED ;
PRACTICAL NURSE
Scentc Htlls Nurstng Center
a Tandem Health Care
Fac 1hty 1s seeking a select
few to JOtn our outstandmg
team We currently seek full
ttme LPNs Proper license or
certificatiOn required We
offer extra shtft ptckup
bonus
shtfl dtflerential
eKcellent benefits perfect
anendence incentives and
muc h more l Please apply to
Attn Dianna Thompson.

HR
Scenic Hilla Nurtlng
Center
311 Buckr1dge Road

Bidwell, OH 45614
Ph 740/&lt;W6-7150

Fox 7401440-2438
Email admln ahnO
t1ndemhtllthc1re c:om

SF/DF/EOE
HROtana.tnt)HithCire com
Need extra money!
lmmedtale opentngs In
sto re demonstrators
Alexandria s Marketing

HELP WAI'mD

A lead ng prov1der ot sup
port servtees to tndJvtduals
w ith MA/ DD ha s vacant
postttons for LPN B Fo r
moflt
mtormatlon
call
Dorothy Harper at Mtddlet(Jn
Estates (740)446 8145 or
(740)446 · 481 4 An EQual
Opportuntty
Employer

FIMJDN
An E~eceHent way to earn
money T he New Avon
Call Marilyn 304 882 2645
\ AVON! AU Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Shtrtey Spears 304

675 1429

HE!J'WANUD

STATE TESTED
NURSING
ASSISTANTS
Scemc Htli s Nursmg Center
a Tandem Health Ca re
Factltty ts seekmg a select
few to joi n our o utstanding
team We currently seek full
t1me &amp; part t1me STNAs
Propef certtftcat•on req utred
We offer shlh dtfferenttal
excellent beneftts pertect
anendance meant ves and
much morel Please apply to
Attn Dianna Thompson

HR
SCenic Hilla Nurtlng
Center
311 Buekrldge Aoed

Bldw.ll, OH 45614
Ph 740/.wl-7 I 50
FIX 74014411-2438
Emili edmin lh~O
tandtmhtalthcare.com

SF/DFIEOE
HROgndlmhe•lthCifl com

NURSES

8USinGS5 IS boo ming look
lng for part t1me serviCe and
delivery help -call 740 385
4367 or fax resume to 74!F

385 7671

INSTRUCTORS
NEEDEO

Need a Heating Cooling
Installer wtth at least 1 year
eltperlanc&amp;
Certlctfled
Techletan with at least one
year experience
Pay by
eMperience Only expere
1nced need apply Call

(740)441 1236

MediCal Word Processmg
and Spreadsheets Send Outgoing energetic person
for cosmettc counter sales
resum~to
tratmng
provided
Gallipolis Career College
Refe rences requtred C(l.ll
Ann JoM Oani0i1
(740)446 2673 lor an Inter
1176 Jfld(SQn P ike
~ew
Galhpoll! OH 45631

Ph 7401440-71110

SPECIAUST

Fu·7401440-24311
Email ttdmln ahnO

llndemhealthca,. cam

JockoonCounty
Fomlty ond C~lld,.n
Flrot Council

SFIDF/EOE
HAO..ndlrllhNitheeiW com

SAsSY SI:ISSORS
Stylist wanted Salary/

COmmlislon 74D-441·1 eao
or 740-25&amp;-4336

I
AJOB

• IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

WIIHTED 87 PEOPLE
We Pay You I
$CASH REWARDS$
For the We1ght you Lose
m 30 Days
Call Tr acy 74()..441 t 9S2

(800 )20 1 0832

The
Athens Me gs
Educational
Servtee
Center
Hair Stylleta
1s seeking a quatlfted ap pll
FIESTA welcomes you to
I 666 65D-6505
can! to work ltve (5) days a
check out what we ha\18 to
week as an Educaltona l
otter
$300 htr1ng bonus Paramedics
&amp;
EMT s
guarEmteed hourly wages needed Apply at 1354 Aide tor ass1gnmen1 at
Beacon MADD for the
plus tips up to 45% service Jackson F'lke Gallipo lis
Federal
Hock1ng
Local
commission retail and tan
School
Dtstnct
ntng commtsslons 401 (k)
QuaiHteations
App ltcants
pa1d vacatlon health VISIOn
must be willing to be fingerdental and life ins
free
printed to have a crtmtnal
advanced education lmme·
dtate clientele and so much Scentc Htlls Nursing Center record check hOld a valid
educa1t0nai aide perm1t
more l Now htrtng for full and a Tandem Healt h Care
abtllty to work well wttt1 staff
part time licensed Styllltl Facility Is seeking a select
at our salon In Meton Call few to join our outstand ing student al'ld public and must
Cmdy Cl 1-886 625 6363 x te am We currently seek a provide own tranapor1atton
30 10 tor more Info and to lu ll tlmtl AN Prope r license Salary ~ ill be based on
qualifications and experl
schedule an tnlervtew
or certlflcalion necessary
ence Please submtt a lener
We oHer pay tor experience
of tnterest resume and ref·
Help wanted Darst Adu lt
perfect atte ndance lncen
erences
to
John
D
Group Home
(740)992·
tlve ahtft dltferenttal extra
Costa,n;zo Superintendent
5023 Call for more tnforma
shift pic:M.up bonus exceHent
Athens Meigs Educattonal
lion
benefitS excellen1 working
Service
Center
507
and much
T he Town of New Have n wllf envtronmeilt
Rlch tanc! Avenue
Su1te
moral
Please
apply
1o
be accepting appilcatlons tor
1108 Athens Oh 45701
Pohca Officer A pplications
The AMESC IS an equal
Ann Dl1nn• Thomp110n,
may be obtained at New
opportunity
HR
Haven City Hal!
Monday
employer / prov i der
Scenic
Hilla
Nu1'8lng
through Friday 7 am unlit
Application
Oeadhne
Canter
3pm Ttte appllc:alion must
September 1 2004
311 Buckrldgo Road
be t illed o~t at the C ity
Bldw.l~ OH 4aet4
YOUTH DEVELOPMENT
Building A Physical Ag.llty

Bus1ness Is boOming !ook
ln g for experienced drywall
and tnm crew tor modul ar
and manufactured homes test must be taken and
Please tu resume or com passed by ttach appliCant
pany mformation 10 740 before consideration of the
385 7671
application

ML5LTJ I \Ntnl'

8 o.1

REGISTERED

110
.
1

• '

© 2004 by NEA, Inc

www com,cs com

Large 2 famt y Ga rage Sa te
N tce 11ems pnced cheap 907
27th St ThurfFriiSat

M ovtng Sa e all Furntture
H ousehold &amp; M1sc 1\ems all
very reasonable pncad
every1h tng
mijsl
go
503 Kathnor Lane Pt Plea
Thur/ Fri!Sat 1Oam 6 pm

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayt 740 446 4367
1 BOO 2 14 0452
www gau pohscareerco lege com
Accreolted Mamba Ace ad 1ng
Coone~ 101 lndepe• der
Colleges
and School&amp; \2749

-~-----~

SAU:·

Movmg
sale
furnrture
household terns c oth ng 8
slide tn truck camper tools
YiliARDiiiiiiiSiiAiiiliiiEii·_.l
cash only lasher Ad
GAlLIPOLIS
Ru tland Oh Fr day 27th ?

4x4 s For Sale
7il5
Announcement
• 030
Antiques . .•.
.. 530
Apartments lor Rent
440
Auction and Flea Markel
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accesoorles
. 760
Auto Repair
no
Autos lor Sole
. 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale.... •. . •
• 750
Building Supplies
550
Business and Buildings
340
Business Opportunity.
210
Business Training .
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homos
.... 790
Camping Equipment
. 780
Cards ol Thanks
,.
. 010
...190
Child/Elderly Care ...........
Electrlcai/Ralrlgaratlon
840
480
Equlpmentlor Rent
Excavating..
... 830
Farm Equipment ..
• 610
Farms lor Rent
.. 430
Farms lor Sale .... .... ..... .
.. •. 330
For Lease .
.•. 490
For Sale
. 585
..•• 590
For Sale or Trade ........ , ............
580
Frulto &amp; Vegetable• .
Furnlohed Aoofl!a , ..
450
850
General Hauling
Giveaway.
040
Happy Ado
........................050
Hey &amp; Grain
. 840
Help Wanted...
.110
Home lmprovamanta............................810
Hom11tor Sale
310
Hou111hold Goode..
.. 510
HouHolor Rent............
..410
.. 020
In Memoriam ..... •. . ...
lnou,.nce •
. ...... ... .. .... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ••.
.. 660
. ..• 830
Livestock.
Lost end Found ............................. ..... ..... 060
LOll &amp; Acreage.. . . •.
.. 350
Mlscelleneouo
.170
54CI
Mlscelleneouo Merchendloe. . .
Mobile Home Repair..
.860
.. .... 420
Mobile Homes lor Rent . . ....
320
Mobile Homealor Sale. ....
Money to Loan
... . ..
.. . 220
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Wheelers .... , ....
•... 740
. 570
Mualcallnatrumanta ..
Pereonals .
.. 005
Peto lor Sole . ... ......... .
560
Plumbing &amp; Healing..
820
PloleaaiOrlol Service•
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ......
160
380
Real Eatele Wonted ..
.150
Schoolo lnotructlon. .. ....
Saad , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .
.. 850
.••.. 120
Sltuatlono Wanted
Space tor i'lant .. .•. . ...
460
Sporting Goods • .. . •
520
SUV'olor Sale
•.729
Truckllor Sale. ... ....
•• 715
UphOiatery
870
Vano For Sale
..730
090
Wonted to Buy . .. ....
Wanlad to Buy- Fann Supplies
. 620
180
Wanted To Do
470
Wanted to Rent .... .. . ..
Yard Sal• Gelllpollo. .
................ . ..072
Yard Sai•PomeroyiMiddlo
074
Yard Sai•PI Pleeunt
. 076

•

Wed Sat 9 Spm Household
1tems baby adult &lt;: lo thtng
Home Inter or 858 Kemper
Hollow Rd . (740)441 -0953.

I·

CLASSIFIED INDEX

()

Sat 8128 3 mtles 75 9 4
Teens clothes kn1ves rurm
ture m 1sc 11ems

~74

45640

0

(740)742 2821

Bidwell U M Church 1 11
Church St Yard Sale H
LabiS tlepherd flllX pup to dogs baked goods dnnks
good
country
h ome lots ol items to numero us to
mentton
Someth1ng
for
(740)992 7869
everyone Aug 27 28 9 5
Queen s1ze Mattress m good Large me n s shtrts
cond tton (304)675 5790

MEIGS COUNTY
SOCCER ASSOCIATION

tJ

a

ciQthlng
foo t slide truck
Found
m 1n ta ture camper tools Cash only
Dachshund M ddleport call Lasher Ad Rutland Ohto

adorab e k ttens
10 Fo und M a le BrtUany tn
weeks htter lratned cute Vtnton area l740)368 0182
p layful
Ca lico
orang e

1982 - Rickey Hende soo o1 Oakland broke

as thu Reds posted a 4 t win

~~ ~L~

Ktd s clothes toys
petto
lurntture

3

homers and 500 slolen bases

The
Bogus Brothers

c

Los1 AND

1o ID (740)992 0784

.....

I

r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Aus1rel an Cleamng oullhe house yard

player n major league h story to have 200

Live at the
Ole Liberty Bar

lor

.

Joseph (740)441-1 236

. . . .,...,

The hearing on tho
application will be
hold on the 27th day
of September, 2004 at
1 30 o'clock p m In
tho Probata Cburt of
Meigs County, located at 1DO East
Second
Streel,
Courthou&amp;e 1
2nd
Floor, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
Brantly Wyatt
104
Kerr
St ,
Pomeroy, OH45769
(8) 27

I

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlahlng IIMrv" tha right to adlt raject or cancel•ny •d at any tl ma Errore mutt In reported on tM llr1 t day of
Trlbun..s.ntlnei·Rttgletlr wltl ba r11ponalbla for no mora than lh• coal of tha apeca occuplad by tha arror end only tha fl r1t lnHrtlon Wa
any lou or IICptnM that r. .ultt from tha pubtlcatlon or oml11ion of an advartl 1emanl Correction will 0. made In tha flrtt avellable edition
a,.. alwaya confidantt•l • Current rata card apptlae • All rae! ea1a11 advar11nman1s an1 IUbJecl to the Fedaral Fair Houalng Act of 1968
eccapte I
wentltd
EOE ltlnelarda W• will not knowlng lv accept any 1dvartltlng tn violation ot thalay.r

9 00 1 DO
Found
Rmg
Matn St :c,::.;__c..:_:.;___ _ _ _ __
pracltce and play Wllttng 10 Pomeroy
Ohto call
to M ovt ng sale t II all sold fur
ntture
household 1tems
give dona~1on Please call lden I1fy (304167 5 5324

34 Lou P n1elta 6t

~

t/2

r

All Dl•play: 12 Naan 2
8Yeln••• Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay 1·00
Thuraday for Sunday•

Wanted
A place tor a
Chnsttan Rock Band 10

T"'"''c,•ti C'-'tS .... ,.._.,U'\'""'8Pac•J,._,.- ..,

......

ANNoliNCEMENfS

...._

Yotk s 4 2 VIC ClY at Shea Stad urn

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
~a.•bll-..:

Pup pies

Cattle dog
112 German
A
Young Man
seeks Wtrehatred Potnter 7 weeks
Romance wtth/Woman of old WtiL be medium stzed
any age J G PO Box 722 dog (740)446 9357 after
Poca WV 25159
6pm

homll rt.l'l 111 his llfSI major league 111 bat con

AL Leaders

1

GMAWA,

'

the etyhlh lnmng w 111 1he Dodgers le&amp;dlng 5-0
"Benn~

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
( .;;-,_
,.,.
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 504 for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads muat be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbra'tllltlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Need•d
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

Succ~ssful

Reds The geme was stopped wilt1 two out In

BA.TT1NG-ISuzu1!1 SeaHia 364 Mora Ban!
more 348 IROO tgU8Z Detro~ 333 VGU4tr
raro Anah81m 329 Durazo Oakland 323
..1\lopet Baltmore 320 CGUII1en Detroit
319 Erstad Anaheim 319
RUNs-Sheffield New York 99 Damon
Boston 98 VGue ero A.naha m 97 CGu1len
Detrort 92 Mora Ba~more 69 lawton Cleve
land 89: Ma1su1 New York 86 C a.,.,1brd Tam
pa Bay 86 MYoung Te~as. 86
RBI--Tejada Ba~ fYlOre 114 OOrtlz Boston
112 MAamJ&amp;z Boston 102 VGuerre o A.na
helm 100 JGull en An ahem 99 ShaH e d
New York 95 VMar!lnez Cleveland 94
CGu lien Del 011 94
HOME flUN5-MAanurez Boston 34 OOroz
Bostoo 33 Sheffield New York, 32 Konello;o,
ChiCago 31 Te1~rn TaKas 30 AAodnguez
New York 30 B a ad( Te~as, 29
PITCHING 115 O.CliiOnt}-Mulder Oak and
11-4 810 3 12 Sen~ 1ng Boslon 16 6 727
3 38 PMart1nez Boston 13-5 722 3 78
Aogars Texas 15-6 714 412 San\ana Mn
flfiS()ta 14--6 700 313 Glee CleveiMd 1D5 667 5 07 JR1ncon M1nnusota 10 5 667
2 64 Washburn Anaha1m 10 5 667 4 83
STRIKEOUTB-Sentsna M1nnesota 207
PMantnez Bosto;1 teo Schilling 'Boeton 158
FGerc a Cl'licago 152 KEsoobar Anaheim
139 L1ay Toronto 138 Ha1den Oakland 133
SA.VE5-M R~Vera New York 44 FCordero
Te•as 39 Nathan M nnesota 35 DBaez
Tampa Bay 25 Perc1val Anahem 25 Fouke
Boston 24 Utn~;~a Detrort 21

Dally In-Column: 1.00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Jn•ertlon
In Next Day•a Paper
~~:~:=:vFin-Calumn 1 . 00 p.m.
:f
Sunday• Paper

164

56

L

Oead'ffirM
Word Ads
Display Ads

tJftfee llo~~

BSheets M twauke11 197 Sdlmldt San Fran

earcl'ier

AL Wild Card Glance

Te~as

789 2 52 Clem.ns Houston 13-4

765 2 9:2 Ma qua 51 Loul1 12-4 750 375

579

BriAndeaonW3116 6 2 2 52
Carda
110011
Carrasco
100011
Atfeldt
11t100
SIIHII
Moyer L&amp;9
51366553
Hasegewa
223 4 I 1 0 5
1 1 0 0 0 1
Thornton
WP-BriAnderson
Ump res-Home Derryl Cousins F1 st Pau
Emmel Second M1ka OIM~o~ro Th11d Joe West
T-3 08 A-30 962 {~7 447)

Boston
Anahe m

1S-4

13 5 722 3 61 Este! ColoradO 13 5

400 002
100 1
Saettla
100 001
001 3
E -I Su~uld (3) Lopez (5) Bloomquist (S)
DP- Kansn City 1 Saanle 2 LOB-K1n1u
C ty 6 Seattle 1o 28-Berroe (20\ W nn
(291 Ibanez {20) HR-Nunez (3) ISutuk
(7) CS-Gule ( ) 6Boone 13)
IP H RERB850

l\egl~ter

phia 13-2 967 !171 Schmidt San Francisco.

Totalt

Kan~aa c11v

OH

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

Ph1ladelphla 88

:Lil..L
Bmq1stJI:l 2 0 0 0
33 3 II 3

(fl~o~nt)

95 BAI:lnlu Philadelphia 91 Burnitl: Col-

32 A.lou Chica~ 32

l...aP:OUS

G1UU

104 PujOis St Lou1s 98 Behre Los Angeles

PITCHING (16 Dletalont)-MIItOO Philadel-

ab r hbl
SuzUklrt 5 1 1 1
Wtnncf
51 2 0
EMrtntdh 501 0
banez lf
3 1 10
tlBoone2b 4 0 1 1
JCbsen lb 4 01 0
D'NIIsnc 2000

Mtlp (o~o~n ty OH

323

Kanaa• City
ab r h bi
OJesuset 5 a o 0
Berroass 52 2 0
Randa3b 51 2 0
Sta11s 11:l 31 1 1
Nunez rt 3 2 2 4
Pckert;l dh 4 a 0 0
Bl£kc
3110
Guiel ~
' D2 1
Gotay2b 3 01 0
35 711
Totall

Seante

,..

338 HeltOn Colorado.

J2g JEstrada Atlanta

ran shortaned no hmer ega nst the C1nc nnat1

ab r h bl
ab r h bl
Miles2b 5220 Furcal ss 4 1 :2 0
Cla~on ss 4 0 2 0
MGies21l 51 1 0
HeHontb 5012 JOrewtf
4 0 1 1
CJones 3b 4 0 1 1
Cast~la 3b 4 0 1 2
Bumltzrt 4 o a o JE&amp;tdac 4 1 1 0
HlldayH
3000 AJonescl 4 1 ~ 1
Closserc 4020 lri'Xhe lb 3 1 1 0
Frmand :2010 ThmasH
3012
Wnghtp 1100 Hmptnp 31t l
P1edra ph 1 1 , 0 TMartnp 0000
MaSwyph 1 0 0 0 DeRose ph 1 0 0 0
Totlla 34 410 4 Totels
35 811 15

1

345 Gassy Clnclnnau 33Q

Royals 7, Mariners 3

NL Wild Card Glance

Atlanta

Colorado

BATTING--Bands San Frsnc•sco 362 Loret

o.ego

- Sentinel

CLASSIFIED

NL Loaders
ta San

Braves 61 Rockies 4

Ren~a

Dodgers 10, Expos 3
Loa Angelet
ab rhbl
lztuns ss 5 2 2 1
SFIIlleY d 51 3 4
4100
8rdl9')' I
a. .. 31&gt; 3121
SIIG~• 4110
3100
3101
Cora 2b
3111
Weaver p 2112
0000
""""' p

aoo

Chicago
350 000 - 14
Clevatand
210 410 010 9
E-Lawton (3) OP-&lt;::h cego 2 LOB-Ch•ca
go 6 C11Velend 6 28-Aowand /31 I Konafflo (17) Gload 18) Uribe (22) Vlzqual (25)
VMartinaz (3 1) JPheps (14] . 38-BeUard
t ) Vlzqu&amp;l (3) HA-CEv.rett (4) BD&amp;vs
5) Urit111 11 8) 8Et11ard {15) Broussard (12)
JPhelpa (14) Crisp (12) S~-Gtoad V1zque
1P H RERBBSO
Chk:ago
Slawan
313 1 5 6 2 .. 3'
CottaW23
223 4 2 2 1 0
Polrtle
2 211.02
I 1 0 0 0 1
Clevllltld
Durbnl 56
23 5 6 6 2 1
AIINtiiti
Si 3 1 S 5 i
Cabrera
:2 3 3 2 i
2
Miller
10000
RISke
210003
WP-R aka T-3 20 A-30 049 (43 389)

a

Oerud1b 512 0
C11102b 3 1 1 0
S111rra pt, 1 0 0 o
EW11sn2o a a
lptlon tf
4032
Totall 36 711 7 Tot1l1

38 914 9

Tot•l•

•

Toronto

,....

0
1
1
0
2

ab r h tJI
Bltard2b 4222
Vitquess4222
LawtonH 5011
VMrtn;:c- 4 0 1 1
Blal&lt;a 3b S 0 1 0
Brmd1b 5111
JPhlpedh 4 2 3 1
Crlapct
4 1 2 1
GeM rt
3 1 1 0

o

Naw York

NIW YOt;(
Toronto

2
1
0
0
1

Cllv•land

ab t hbl
Rwand ci 52 21
AAim2b 4210
WHa111 2b 1 a o
KnerkO tb !! 3 3 3
CE\tTitd"l5124
Gk&gt;ad H 4232
BDavus c 51 1 :2
Vlantin as 5 0 1 0
Urbe3b 5232
Brchrdrt 3 1 0 0
Totlte 421418 14

Yankoao 7, Blue Jayo 4

o o

3
0
0
0
0

100000

Chl~;:ago

""''""

421 0

23

3
0
0
0
0

While Sox 14, Indiana 9

593225
210013
Knolls
2321110
JWalke
130aooo
L4Mne
BOlton
713 6 1 0 2 8
A.rltt(OW79
T1n1l n
23 0 0 0 0 1
FoulkeS24
1 0 0 0 0 t
Umplre&amp;--Home John Hirscllb&amp;ek l=1ra1 Wally
Bel SeconCI l.el Dlaz Third Bill Welke
T-2 50 A-35 153 (35 095)

~c

5
2
0
1
0

HBP---by Kidll (ASGonzalez)
UmpltM--Home l&lt;eYif'l t&lt;e tey F1r$1 Hunter
Wendelsted1 Second Mike Wlnlers Th rd Tlm
T1mmon1
T-306 A- 18520(46338)

JJohnaon L 8 12

5011

6
13

51 3 7 8 6 5 6
1322200
tt3 1 0 0 o 1
toaoot

LHmdtl9 12
Ayala
Majews)(
Tucker

24 37
19 44

8

drgzb5112

....a.,...
_,

36 25

5) DOrtlz (40) Mueller (22) SB-Oamon
14) DAobtrts (1) 8-0Robarls SFRobens
IP H RERBBSO

Mat 1

LoaA~I

3329

Bush
Chuk

Rapuano
T-205 A-19421 (42.271)

Monroecf 3 0 o 0
lnge3b
3000
Tota 321110

a

4

Rl&lt;lo 1, Cardinals 0

40 1 0

Beckett p 1 o o

0 '1

513 5 ~ 4 3 3
Bump
12310001
Koch
2311132
Ptneho
t13 1 0 01
3
HBP-by Backatt (lad&amp;a) WP- Tomko, Koch
umprru-Home Paul Nal.lflrt First Randy
Marth Second Larry_VanOYer Third Sam Hof·
brooll T-2 37 AD"' 638 (36 331).

CPena 1b 4

AGnztus 3 0 0 0

0

Bedlert l,S-6

40 1 0
30GO
20 0 o
000 0
l OOO

4

1~

s-

Weaver W.1210
Dessens
Brazoban

_j5 28

W2_
~29
~_
__1133 L4
31 ~
-~ 2045

331010

1

.....

Homa

A.SGztz ss 3 0 0 0
vargasp oaoa
Schn&amp;c 4 o 1 0
carrot 2b 3 1 2 0
LHrnd.! p 2 1 1 2
Ayatap
0000
Ctlwavtl
2 aoo
Totals
33 3 8 3

0000
1 0 0 0
0000
0000

Loa Ang~ll
010 027 000 - 10
Uon1r111
000
120 000 3
E-LHemandez ( 1) DP-Los Ange es I
Montreat 1 LOB--los Angeles 2 Monlrea18
28-SF~ey (24) JA1vera (18) Sledga (13)
Schn&amp;~der (1 4) HR-SF1nl~ (:27) 881119
41) LHemandez (1] SB-SFII"I I e~ (91 Benre
2) CS-Iztuns (9) EnChavez 15)
Weave
IP H R ER BB SO

2536

WM!ne.cily • Ralllltl
Houston 7 Ph1ladalph a 4
ChiCago Cub1 4 Mtw1ukea 2
Allanta B Colorado 1
Montrsa 6 Loa Angetaa 3
Pln&amp;burgh ~ A.r zona 1
San FranciSCo 6 FJork:la 5 (10)
St LOUI! 6 Cine nnat 5
San 01&amp;ga 4 NY Me's 0

San Francleco 002 200 01 0 5
florida
000 000 000 0
E-Durham (1 4), Tomko (2) DP-5an Fran
c11co 1 LOB-San F anc aco 11 F\onda 5
28-F&amp;I z (28) ~A-oumam (14)
IP H RlABBBO

Totala

31 29

frldar'a O.mae
Houlton (0Mall14-9) et Cn~eago Cube (Wood 1 !!i) 3 20 p m
San~ (Tan~ Q-3) at MQa1rea.llfllllriQn.3~) Z 0.5 p m ~­
St Lou1s(Suppan 12-6 ) atPittacurgh~lsong 41 0) 7Q5pm
Milwaukee (Santoe1 Q-8) at Phi adelphia (Pad Ita 4 6) 7 05 p m
Los Angalla (W AlVarez 7 ~I 11 NY f.lets (Giav na 8 tO} 7 10 p m
Arizona (Wibb 5-14) at Cincinnati (C aussen 2-3) 7 10 p m
Colorado (KeMedy 6-5) at Florida (ValdeZ 1Q-1) 735 p m
San Frtncilco (Rueter 7 g) at Atlanta (Jar Wright 12-f.l) 7 35 p m

Friday I Glmet
O.troil. (Marotl'lto-8) at Boston (Lowt 11 tO] 7 05 p m
NV Yanltees (LoaiZI 9-7) at Toronto (J Miller 2 2) 7 05 _p m
C~leago Whne So~t (Garcw-tD-10)11 CIM!and (S.ba'lhla g;s) 1 05pm
BM more (Bedard 5-8]at Texas (Erld&lt;son 1 3) 8 05 p m
Kahu5 City (Gra1nk8 e ;1 at Saattla (Meche 4 5) 10 05 p m
Mlnnoaota (Radke 9-8) at Anahe m (Sele 7 1) 10 05 p.m
Tampa Bay (Hendrdi:!IOI'I 8 12) at Oekland (Fleeman 9- 10) 10 05 p m

23
13

Pot

Loe Ange11a 10 Montreal3
Cine nneti 1 Sl Lou11 0
Atlanta 6 Colofldo 4

T&amp;mpa Bay B Saau 5

_....

L

Chicago Cubl 8 Houston 3
San Francl100 !5 Florkil 0

Toronto 5

Mctaary
Watkins

w

Th4Jradly • ~....1111
San Dl8g0 10 NY Metl3

Mlnneaota 8 Tu.as ~
Ana hem 21 Kanm City 6
Oak and 3 Baltirm:n 0

Cube 8, Aslroo 3

_,
......
"""
...... " "•• " ""28-38
" "
"'
"""
62
"
21!

EAST

Flor~

Brzoanp
Grtlwsk p/1
Kdap
Gagne11

, The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www,mydailysentinel.com

Seeking a htghly dediCated
JndMduat to work w!1hln the
Jackson C Ounty OhiO youth
servica delivery system
Mini mum
ot
Bache lor s
degrea Master's preferred
or related fletd Expertence
Preferred Must have com
mltment to postt lvt youth
deveklpmant and abllity to
work well with cMdren
youth famdies and other
child/youth serving entitles

' - -~-----------~---------- --

www l amousnatrlt on com
&lt;htt p 1/www famousnutn
ton com/:&gt;

WOilK FltOH HOME
Home Based Bus1ness
Ear n $200 $500 PiT
Earn $2 000 and up FfT
Pa1d Vacahons Bonuses
740 441 1984

886 540 8097

www workatcasa com
&lt;http //www workatcasa co
ml&gt;

WANTFil

To Do
Call B 0 Construct1on lo all
of your home 1mprovement
needs roofs decks s1d 1ng
etc reasonable pncas free
est mates can !740)992

HOMES
FUR SALE

HOMf~~
FUR SALE

Nice 2 bedroom large baU"1
w1th washer/ dryer hookup
D'Yo Down Payment eve n ltv1ng room
arge dmmg
wtth less than perfect credit room dry basement out of
Easy quahfymg Own don t flood ptatn corner Jo1 on
rent
Loca
company Gen Hartenger Parkway
Mortgage LocatGrs 740
Pr ce reduced (740)992
992 7321
3057

pas
1ble on th s 3 bedroom
ath modern hOme on 1
newly refm 1shed 1
centra a1r
hea
ump basement conv1ent
ly located 1 5 m1les of
Route 50 &amp; onl y 5 m nute
rom
Tuppers
Pia ns
pprox l mately
S850 0
onthly payment
Cal
hns
or
A obb e
a

Flat Pr ces
Steve (740)388 8731
Have room In my hOme for
one lady complete care ror
1nfo call Prlsc1tla Dodrtll at
Oodrtl Prtvate Home Care

1740)388 8193
S tter wtll stay w1th the SICk
Days only r. can (740)367

7562

W tit care for preschool chtld
Located n Pomeroy Call

www.orvb com

3 bedrooms 1 bath Ready
to move m N ce level lot
Call (740)992 2272

NG CO recommends tha
you do bustness w th peale you know and NOT t
end money through the
me J until you have tnvestt
ated the offering .

r

MONEY

roLoAN

I 866·308 1337

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No

F&amp;e unress We Wmt
1 888 582 3345

Vtew

photos/ nlo online

NEW LISTING Secluded
Bedroom 3 Bath wtth
Beautiful A1ver V ew
ocated Close to tow11
ode 825 or call

3BA 2BA 5 129 acres
Green Townst1tp close to
school Pr cad lo sell More
1nlo (740)446 7377

Bedroom 2 Bath A1ve1
Access Prtvate
Boar Dock 1n Gall polts 1
ere Jot Code 90303 or
all (740)445 0531

By Owner US 35 m Mason
County 5 Rooms &amp; Ba1h (2
Bedrooms)
Large Sun
Room
12x32
all
new
Carpet Full Basement 1/ 2
acre lot $47 500 (304}675
2933

Bedroom Brtck Home 2
Bath 3 Car Brick
Unal!ached Garage 2
tory outbu tdrng Code
2704 or call (740)446
566

(740)441 0323

tewl

Bedroom 2 112 Bath
lose to Holzer Hosp1tal
n Spnng Valley Code
13 or cal( (740)446

624
411 rea l estate advert lelng
1n thla newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
wh1ch makea it lllagallo
advertiea any
prelerenca limitation or
dis crimination baaed on
raca color religion ...
familial atatut or natlon11
origin or any Intention to
make 1111ny euch
preference llmlhltlon or
discri mination
Thle newapaper will not
knowingly accept
•dvartlumante for real
ettata which lain
vlola11on ot the l•w Our
readers ara hereby
In formed that all
dwetllnga advertl11d In
thla newap•pe1 .,.
•vallable on an equal
opportunity baa••
from

StO 00(]1

Forclosure VA HUd tor list
tng 1 BOO 749 8106 e~t 1709
House &amp; lot tor sale 4 8
m1 es on Sandh II Ad Po1nt
Pleasant 3 bedroom 2 lull
baths laundry room living
room kttchen new stove
refngerator
diShwasher
washer &amp; dryer wtndow
treatment stays porch arge
2 car garage &amp; work shop

(304)675 6479
House for sate Needs to be

Cash t Ca&amp;l'tl 3K :lSOK any
purpose Good/Bad credtt

Hom&amp; Listing~
L1s1 your home by call ng
(740)446 3620

3 story house tn Pomeroy 5
bedrooms lr dr k1tchen 1
1/2 bath tull basement w /3
rooms approx 314 acre 4
d~~t&lt;s 3/4 newly remodeled
oo o down posstb e w/1tnanc
tng
ava1lable
senous
mqu res
only
$65 000
(740)208 7080

Homes

OHIO...,VA~,:'e'y'pu':usH

PAYMENT

R verlront
property
Manutactu ed home 3 4 br
2 baths lr kt Or laul'\d ry 7 8
t t /2 story house w1th base
acre 24x32 I ntshed garage ...
ment located m Chester
large fenced 1n back yard
Oh Askmg $42 000 Call
PICniC shelter n ce laymg
17401667 6620
property 1n Syracuse ask ng
3 bedtoom 2 .baths t1re $87 500 Ser1ous calls onty
ptacB On 4 3 acres In the (740)992 7120
Country
Scen1c
111ew
$75 ooo
Ca J (740\709
t 166

DRYWALL

INSURED
NOTH NG TO SMALL

DOWN

Poss ble on th s 3 br 1 bath
home
country
senmg
secluded on a paved road
Aactne
area
8 acres
approximately $650 per
month clean ready to moYe
nto shOwn by appointment
only call (740)949 3124 No
ca s after 9pm please

740 667 304 1

2979

Install F1nlsh Pamtmg
Carpentenfry Bathrooms
Aes1denttal Commerc1al

NO

Moved

Cheap (304 )675

23 16 af1er 5 00 pm
New hstlng 296 LeGrande
Bl\ld Ava tlabte Nowl 3 bed
room 1 1 12 bath ~1orage
bulldtng LennoK heatfa1r
Call after 3pm &amp; weekends
Senous calls only E~~:tra lot
bas de home w property.,

(740)446 4050

H P.CLA IFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

Bedroom 1 1 2 Bath
Ful Basemen t
M ddleport OH Code
17 or call (7 40)992

743
Bedroom 3 Bath Pool
10 acres Bdwell OH
ode 42104 or ca I

740)386 9839

l\10Bn.E Hmu-:s
FUR SA!~
ay o
edrooms 2 Bath Centra
r
$15500
Ca

304 675 7022
1998
Redma n
E mp re
Te rrace 24x44 double w1de
3 bedroom 2 ba1h Large
deck mcuded
10x12 out
building House tn 8)(Cellent
cond 1 on centra l
a1r
Locatecl on Eckarc:t Chapel
PI Pleasant
Must be
moved
need payoff of
$30 000
or
b~st
offer

(304)674 0105
2003
Clayton
16x80
Manchest er 3br 2ba extra
mce S29 500 (304)675 5622
91 Oakwood 14x72 very
mce S12 000 (740 )992

5025
For sale or rent 2 bedroom
mobile nomes starttnQ at
$270 per month Ca ll 740992 2167
For Sale
1988 1TIOb le
home 3 decl&lt;s 2 butldmgs
S 10 000 OBO Must se 111

(740)247 4100
L1ke new 2000 Redman
16X80 3 bedroom 112 bath
vJnyll shtngle 2X6 loaded
with even more opt1ons Can
he lp w1lh dehvery Call
Harold (740)385 9948

�··'

'
Friday, August 27, 2004

www.mydailysenti nel.com
Card ol Thanks

Uag 2 payments, mow In 4

2BR apt. attached garage,

JET
AERATION MOTORS
3409.
hood. $450 per monttl, no Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
pets, reference · + deposit Stock. Call Ron Evans , 1·
;New 14 wide only $899.· required . (740)446·2801 .
800·537·9528.
down and only $149.74 per
month. Call Nikki (740\385- Appttcauons being taken tor
)671
very clean 1 bedroom In ' NEW ANO USED STEEL
country setting yet close to Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
New Oakwood mB{'a store town. Washer, dryer, stove. For Concrete, Angle ,
Jeaturing
Homes
by
fridge inCluded. Water and Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Oakwood , Fleetwood ' &amp;
garbage included. Total ei9C· Grating
"For
Drains.
piles. One stop shopp1ng
tric with AC. Tenant pay alec- OriYeways &amp; WalkwB.ys. L&amp;l
only at Oakwood Homes of
tric. S300 depos~ . $375 per Scrap .Metals Open Monday,
:Barboursville WV. (304)736month. No pets. No smo~- Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
(1409.
ing. 140-446-2205 or 740· Fnday, 8am-4 :30pm: CtoSed
Ttl ursday.
Saturday
&amp;
· Older model 2 bedroom 446-9585 ask for Virgin ia.•
Sunday. (.140)446-7300
good .conditiOJ'l.
home.
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Appliances
incl uded.
AT
BUDGET Tann ing bed for sale. Work s
MENTS
$3,000. (304)675·6047.
PRICES AT JACKSON good. Has a 30 min. timer.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood 5300. (7 40)446- 7029.
SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
Stock models at old prices, Drive 1rom $344 to $442.
2005 models arriYing Now. Walk to shop &amp; movies Call Turbo muffler- Stainl ess. like
Equal new, $30. Cold-air mtake·
Cote's
Mobile
Homes, 740-446-2 568.
Housing
Opportunity.
$20. Phone,(7 40)4 46-23 t Q
15266 U.S. 5o East, Athens.
Ohio 45701. (740)592·1972,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· ·Weight bench &amp; assorted
"Where You Get Your
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
weights. 5100 . Concept II
Money's WOfth"
Townhouse
apartments , row1ng machine. $125.

years on nolo (304)738· patio, very quiet neighbor-

----==-==

IF YOU RENT
What would you lose if there was a fire?

+We can insure yol,lr valuables! ~
,

~.26

Acres located off
Sandhill Road in Walnut
pree\c Subdivision . Poin t
Pleasant.
For Info call
(740)446·7680

B'adjolning tots in Gallia Co.
l'prox . 28 acres. 2 with large
. houses. Call for more . info
40)245·9549.
• - - ' - - ' - - -- -88
. acres hu ntlng land on
AouI e 35 Hend. rs On Wv·
$45,000. Day 740·645-1306
&amp;".'enlng 740-256·6574 .

. 17

at

room apa'rtmEints
Village
Manor
and
Rive rside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295·$ 444 . Call 74 0·
992-5064. Equal Housing
0 Porlunlt'·as

P

·

Mercerville:
1-bedroom
$295 + dePosit . 2-bedroom
$350 + doposil. No pols •
washer hookup.
Galt
(740)256·1245
'- - - - ' - - - - - - One. bedroom garage apartmen!, kitchen fur nished ,
$400, (740)99~·3823

WANTED
ndiYiduai loo~ing to bu
· and or possibly faas
xclusiYe hunting rights t
roperty In M ~lgs County,
hlo. Prefer acreage 5
eras and larger. If Interest
d , please call (304)372

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
lor 28R , 38R &amp; 48R.,
Appl ications
are taken
Monday thru Friday, lrom
9:00 A.M.·4 P.M. Off\ce Is
Located· at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant, WI/
004.
.
Phone No is (304)675·5806.
Lots for sale In Mercerville, 4 E.H.O
acres, good building site. Student apartment fo r rent In
$17,500. (740)258·1825
· Hunllnglon , WV. Located
behind St. Mary's Hospital.
Nice leYel lot 5c)_x190 on
Kitchen, bedroom, bath ,
High St. In Middleport. All
laundry, lg. living area, park·
hookups, out of flood plain. lng, Y&amp;ry secure neighbor·
Price reduced to $22,000. hood . References required.
Phone (740)992·2782.
Rent $350 month + 113 of
IH \. 1 \1'utllllies Cell 740·446·3892
or 740-446-2974.

r

iO

Twin Rivers Tower Is accept.. H~
· ing applications for waiting
1
1.._-··iliiFOIIRiliRF:Nriiiiito-rl· list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
apartment cal! 675-6679
0% Down Pl)'ment eYen EHO
with less than perfect credit.
Easy qualifying. Own don't
a: lJl\!,...,ru:.u
rent.
Local
company.
R()()M.S
Mortgage Locators. 740- ..__ _lliriiiiiioiitoto-

er:z;o--:,.::":"...._____..,.___....,

992·7321 .

nm

, and Financial Services;
·

1993 NISSEIO piCk-up, 4 cy\,
5 speed. 160K. driYen daily,
S 1500 080. (740)992·65 11

2000 Dodge
ellt. cab
Dually
flatbed.
$22Diesel
,000
(740)446-931 7.
'---:-~---­

r

740-843-5264
r~~~=====;-;;;~~:;
SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

INC.

Contractor

- Res1den!lal &amp;
Commercial
Houses, porches,
Garages, Pole
B arns, Roofs,
R enova1ions

7 40·949·1606
740·591·1053 .

4x4

month, $200 deposit. In Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
Bidwell area. · Call aHer (740)445·7444 1·877·630·
4:30pm (740)441-~528
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
3br In Syracuse, Ohio No cash. Visa/ Master Card .
Pets, $500.00 8 monttl. Hud Drive- a- little save slot.
Approved (304)675·5332
·
T.V.'s $40 each ; couch 575
4br House for rent In M~son each; table &amp; 4 chairs $75;
$450 monlh $300 deposll, Like now Maylag stack
Central Heat. Central Air, washer/dryer set $500: Like
(304)882·2858 .
new Frigidaire stack washFor Rent: House- 2 bdrm er/dryer $425; wooCs.n hutch
wlbsmt River 'w'lew, close to $60; hanging planters $5
town. $450/mo.Youpayutili· each; full bed $125; Oueen
ties. Soc. Dop. 5450. bad $550.
References required . Call
Skaggs Appliance
(740)446-3644 for an appii7Ei Vine Street
cation.
(740)446·7398

JONES'

New Home- 3BA, 1 bath,
attaChed garage, No petS,
refertnces
+
deposit
required . $500. (740)4462001 .

.

.

Nice 3 bedroom , langsville
area. $400.00 deposit ,
S450.00Jmonth . . No Pets .
HUO appro'w'ed. (740)742·
2210
'
J·4 2 D

l

MOBILE ~
·FOR RF:Nr

2 bedroom. like new, central
air. (740)446-2003 .

a

bedroom,
2
bath,
Ooublewkle. Vinton area, no·
.pets,
2
references.
f4001month , $300/deposit
(740,388..()()1 ~ .

r:

APAlrlMFNrs
FOR ROO

....._
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
menta, fumlahed and unfur·
Rlehed, security deposll
required, no pets, 740·992·
2218.
.

----:--:1 br. Aparlmenlln downlown
Pt Plaaaanf no-pet~ &amp; sec
dip required HUD accepted

7&lt;10-«6&gt;2200

.

Aums

&gt; -_.I
L,--·FORioiiiii.liSIIAiiii.Eio

1984 Monte ·Carlo SS, new
paint. cowl 'hood. CorYelle
·ralleys, $4 ,000, (740)7422760
-,--,---:-:--,--1990 Olds Clera- 4 cylinder,
4 door, runs good. $750.
(304}675-5612.

Thompson s Appliahce &amp;
Repalr-675-7388. For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators , gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in 1992 Lumina, 2002 Cavalier,
2002 Camaro.
All one
shop or at your tlome.
a~--~-------., owner 'J9hicles. (740)245·
5017
SPOKI1NG
~·
1996
Buick
Sentry
(304)675-,506
Horton Legend-Sl cross· .:__:__ _, - : - - bow t651b pull.. Scope, 1996 Lincoln T.C., signature
sting, cocking strap, quiver, seri.e~ . all options, 60,000
and 4, boltS, $250 (740)446- miles, always garaged.
i4~2~1e;...______ super nice. Call (740)446·
1082 '

1 ,,

1998 Jaguar
XJB ···While
ell[tefior,
Cashmere
interior.
22,800 m~es . like new condition. $26,00)
Serious
inQu1nes
only.
Call
(740)446·2058

Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 741)..
992-2526. Russ Moore,
owner.
2000 Pontiac Bonneville,
--N..,-A-n-tiq_u_e_Shop
_ __
midnight ' bluS. Loaded,
leath"er. "with extended warNow Open
·AntiQues on 2nd" 145 North ranty, 46,00o mile·s. $10,500
2nd St. Middleport, Ohio 080 (614)85().9738.
(740)992" 5152
.
2003 Dodge Neon. 4 cyl.
~~~ automatic. 4 door, loaded.
, • ...,.~,~
n ,000 miles. CD playtr.
57000. Call (740)441-0337
Armoire Computer Desk or 645-6153
_ lle
-H-oa_vy_ C_h8V'1
_
w/OeU Computer will !ell __ _C_h_eve
72
togpther or separate &amp;
s
4 000 oo 65
Oween-slza bedroom suite 454 · auto. , ·
· ·
Ptyrr.. 440 six paCk motor,
(3().1)895-3 129.
$12,200; 72 Damon· 383,

r

I

2 bedroom IPI~monl, 556
Third Ave. Pepooit &amp; reler· Box Flex 3 years old
encea. Can VIrginia 740- $750.00 Pliny area
446--1110.
(304)937·2679 before 9PM
2 bedroom upatalra apt Dried
Cnarry
$38Qimonth. Good locatl(ln (304)nJ.5878

·auto,
S2,600,
(304)nJ.5679

820

f

•

Ea~ t

"Main St.

Lawn Tractor &amp; Push
Mowct's, Chain·Saws,
C hain .Sharpened

&amp;Parts

New General St~ndby
Gen erating Systems and
Rol-Air Air Compressors

Open 8:30·6:00 M·F;
Sal. 8:30·2:00 992·1033

~

8 ·7.7

I

Tf.t .P-IlE 5

BARNEY

Ohio

THE.BORN LOSER
'10U L.OOK(*f\NJ'::o\E.C{'I
\-!\-\'( 1:&gt;0~\'&lt;0U TN&lt;'..E

H\E 1)(&gt;.,'( OFP .

Owner

0

en Mon·Frl 9·5

• Birthdays

Q11ality work fur a fair

•Weddings
• /%ny special

BUILDERS InC.

' • Vi ny l
Homes
Siding • New Garages
N ew

All work ~uarant ¢ed
Mllster Cert ified
Mechanics Briggs &amp;
Slratton, KohJcr.
Murrav, MTD A ll
makes &amp; models $10.00
any p\Jrchase of
$20.00 w ilh th is ad.

Orr

'

SURWI \IQ.BLE~E:':i\c.K C.i'-~
· GE.T 1\LOt-\G Wllf\OU\ '(O!J \'"OR
01-\t. Di\'{' ( 1\t-\11-\E 7

I

Windows • Roofin g

~~~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992•5232

Basement

.I,\;; L

Barnhart
Builders

( 'onst ru('( ion
Vinyl Sidi11g
ReplaL·emenl Window.~
Room Addition.~
D~cks

BIG NATE
OK,TEllDY..

occasion
Place your order

NOT ONLI( ARE

WE
L OS ING, FOURTEEN N OTtl iNG , NOW WE'P.E
HE TEAM WIT\i TtlE

THI\TS 1~ . .
I 'M BRINGING

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599 .

today
(740) 985-3917

SC.OT T . ·

S iNI;ING

COACH .

Lora Bing

R.B.
Trucking
HAULING:

• Limestone

St Rt681 Darwin. OH
740·992· 7013 or 740·992·5553

Restock/119 Late ,'»:~del Sal"llge
and Arter " Mlrket Pa.rts

Commercial and

Rcsidontlal
Free Estimates
740-667-6080

PEANUTS
WORST CASE

See Brenl or Brian Whaley
M·Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

SCENARIO ..

•·Sand
• Dirt

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

.-:-c:c- - -

HOWARV l.
WRITESfl
'

diOHNG

*IDlE

.IIIIITEIIIIICE

Ripley, WV 25271

1·800·822-0417
·w.v·s #I

Chevy. Pontiac, Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom

BETTY
110\IJ DlDYOU
GET1'HI1Dl.Gfl

YOURMID~IFE

CRI~ !S ?

rr WAS EASY! I

SO

iOl.DYOOI~
A S~Oin'SCAR AND

'THAT'S
NOT

IF I Tot..D

YOU 1 WAN\

"TRAVEL, RJ!II t+ID

YOU TOLD Nf. TO

ADVEWI'URE~

'' FO!lGl:.T IT "

QUITE
~c

~AMe

111\NG...

dEAilESS

f4.nnette 1S

.

Jiouse Ckaning Service
Shop the

No Job to Big or Small
Serving: Meigs, Masori ,
Gallia &amp; Athens Co.

Cla.ssifieds!

1-740-843·5382

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSI.NESS
'

on tills poge lor as low ~:~•
$25.00 per mon.t hJ

phone

88 Pontiac Trans Am auto-

Lumber malic, 5.0 TPl, T-tops, shift
kit, plus mora . $2,500.

1 •

GmER
dneE•Itll*

941·1415'
GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room ·Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roots,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742-341 .

~ YOU KNOW, EVEN BAL-L-5 OF
:&gt;

~

Residential

New Construc tion

soc~eri~~ras

THe
Daily
Sentinel

In Tuppen Plains now

992•21U

has open!• on day

MotionScnsors
.740-992·3452

74().742- 1085
( ,()1!//lt', ( ' 1d!.!

(.u.

and midnight shin.
740·667·6329

f

YARN Nf.E:C&gt; CONI'JTIONf.R
AFTf.R 5HAMPOOIN&amp;

;

Big Bend Antique
end FurnHure
Restoration
Relln!oh, Repair,

1
~

•

f

Rea1ore
Keith Bailey

·-Addl1lonol
fllmadallng
•Now a.• Elactrlcal • Plumbing
• Aoollng 1 Gu!loro
• Ylnyl S1dln9 • Pointing
• Patio and Porct. Dilella

741-112-1111

8V2-G15

Pot•• ""'

I4..
North

Pass
Pass

.

I •

East
Pass
· pa~:&gt;o

All pass

· For the last column about fourth-suit forcing, here is one important addendum.
Most of the time. fourth-suit forcing
occurs at the·two-leYel; occasionally, one
level higher. U responder bids one spade
as lourth-suit, 11 1s n·atural, prOmising four
spades. but is forcing fQr only one round .
(Responder might have game-going 'w'alues, but he hasn't promised them .}
Alternatively. if responder has a "normal'·
fo urth-suit game-forc1ng wi thout tour
sp ades, he jump -reb iQs two spades .
Next, how should South plan the play. in
four spades afte r West leads the spade
queen?
North has sufficient to jump to tourl
spades on the third roun d. This shows 44-1-4 or 4·4·0·5 distnbution. If he had a
bi g 4-4-2-3, he would haVe rebid two notrump, not one heart. (If you use splinter
bids, here a fou r-diamond splinter woul d
guarant ee a Wid and 4-4-0 -5 shape.)
When an opponent holds 4-4·4-1 distri·
bu tlon. It is almost always best to lead a
trump.
·
In four spades, it is wrong to ruff all of
dummy's club losers in hand. The play ·
would go spade king ." club ace. club rull,
heart to dummy, club ru ff. heart to
.dummy, , club ruff with declarer's las t
trump, di8mond king. But East wins with
the ace and returns a heart , Wes t ruffing
·south's ace. Now declarer has Jour losers : two spades, one heart (dummy's six)
and one diamond :
It is better for South to esta blish h1s dia·
mond suit. At trick two, he leads dummy's
diamo.nd. And , if Eas t ducks, declarer
concedes the second diamond to him .
South will lose only two trumps and the
diamond ace

52 Wa1er,
in Quebec
Marte
53 Peer
Method
55 Skirt panel
Adams or
56 Annapolis
Brickell
grad
Modest
57 Osprey kin
Volkswagen 58 Jole de

kin

•

vlvre

15 Typeolstw1&lt; 59 Calli. hours
16 Tire filler
60 Gardener's
17 Bowls or
purchase
ships
61 Young
19 Highborn
soclaii1e
21 Chinese
'
DOWN
" way, "
22 · Viol n part
23 Knight 's
1 Olssolu!e
Journey
fellow
26 LuKury
2 Sums
hideaway•
3 Bank jobs
.29 Dell order
4 Wiggly
30 Mlsslep
dessert
32 Qatar ruler
(hyph.)
34 Ruin a
5 turmoils
· nylon
6 Spy org.
36 lmllaled
7 Doghouse
38 Mrs.
8 unron
39
41
43

Lennon

flou1er

Sampan
dwellers
Teed off
Cry

9 Industry ,

11 Colas cage&lt;
18 Has a
snack
·
20 S1are a1
22 Organ part
23 TO passers
24 Wrlsl-1&lt;&gt;elbow bone
25 LAX
posting&amp;
26 CEOs, •
l)leybe
27 0u1 .
of con1ro1
28 Calcula1or
key

31 Narrow .
s1reel
33 Reline cell
35 Teien1
37 Na1uralls1

plus

10 Fictional
governess

- Fossey
40 Walkways
42 Equipped

44 Followed
1he 1rall
45 Army
vehicle
46 McKellen
and Holm

47 Craving
48 Absen1
49 lce·flahlng

n..,.

50 Halk weare•
51 Chess
pieces
54 Source
of m•1al·~~---

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celabrily Clphe1 cryplogr&lt;JT16 are created from QUOtattons by lam(l\16 people. J)ast ~nd present
Each lener 1n ille cipher stands lot ano:her
'

Today ·s clue: Vequals H

"RLZZKSX

KM

I VCR

ZKD~ ,

K

RN

RLZZ

NS

MRNHKLM

E L G K E. L E
ALLT

TLNTZL

VLGRNH

DKZP

RN

CSE. ·

CZKJL ,

IVN

K

EN

KS
RN

CP ."

YCYLSGN

PR.EVIOUS SOLUTION- "Siardom ca n be a gilded slavery ." - Helen Hayes
"

.

AstroGraph

"I love being a star more than ~fe itsel f.". -Janis Joplin

CtiJur &lt;JIIrthdll,y:

- - - - - - - ld iood by CLAY I . 'QLLAN

' i

~~~~:t:~y s©ttan~-~r.~~·
horror.ce le t1ers ci
0 lour
scrorrblt d werdt

won
lUI

~--..,,/'-...

the
b•·

low to form. io~,~r. -wo rds.

.GULJEG
1

2

I I ·1 1 ·1

I

ALDEI

r-:-:-~-;;--;;--;;----;

I1

3

W 0 R N D I~
~,-,..-T::-. - ,---1!..~·
15 1 1
•

·"Yes, I wan t t6 live a long
life,' one not so smart culie
said to her f~1 end. ·sut.' she
added . "I sure don't want to
reach - • • - - -!" .

-.

•

•

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I
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L EKETT

.

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Cor!"lc leJe fh e
QL!O'e_d
b'f lifli,o in th t m1uin~ wo,e:s
.,.~,_ ci e ve i~p fro'" step No. 3 bei011o.

TO

I I

SCIIAM·lETS ANSWERS a~26-oo
Wreath -· Yacht. Pagan- Relish • HIGHWAY .
Statistics show that three quarters of the populatiOn
live in or near cities I bel ieve the otr.er quarter is out
:here looki~g for the.ex'it off th.e HIGHWAY.
.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

CANCER (June 2, -July 22) - S~ld you
find yourself haYing a t r~mendous capacity tor work today. don't waste ttlat positive
energy on minor jobs. Dig into that heavyduly stuff you'V8 been ~uttlng off lor some'
tlm•.
·
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Muctl can be
accomplished today If you ylek:l to your
coop•ra!/Ye aplr/1 . and be willing to go . .
along "WI1h the plana of oth ara. Don'! tat
any aalt·Hrvlng lntar1111 taka you orf
courae.

1\Nci uo 8NP l'lowll- ~­
...VtN'o'L"NC!L QSSES
w~ Zll'l'l:RS... ~ Wtn.l
c~ ON
=W~F.:

e.-, ..

6WE!!IIO&lt;S liND Unte P!Mf"C
RuLERS""' 11;;:t;;EHAAI'I"

Complete

V.C. YOUNG Ill

West

C~W!..

-

• Garages
•

6

a lover
48 Cellon fabric

SOUPTONUTZ

• New Homes
Remodeling

-work .

-

ROIERJ
IISSEll
ClaiMI.

Wodo~allo~

I

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

:=::Y;O:;:U;HG;'S;::=: ~~~-cARPENTER
SERVICE

A 5 4

45 Forsakes

maKe the difference .

•

J

740 892·1956

ElectriCIII Senices LLC .

7 &amp;5 2

•

Saturday, Aug . 28, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
Because you ·r.e_apt to be tar mOre selecttve than usual1n the year ahead in·deter·
mining what is important lo you , maJor
objectives can be advan ced. Once you set
your sights on a target, you"ll ~now how to
follow through to completion.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Your benign
presence has a positive effect on others
today. It will. be Yery diff1cult lor those who
chum around with you to nurse the blues
tor very long .
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct . 23) - It's been said
that yqu can 't gei blood from a stone. Yet
today you po!!sess a ra re ability to take
unprofitable Si tuations and turn them into
somethin g tha t is bolh ga1nful and sEII·sa tisfymg .
SCORPIO (Oct 24 ~ N ov. 22) - Although
you won't deliberately ·seek ou t provoca tiYe siluations today, ctlallenges will awaken your fullesl potential. While others
crumble, you'll operate at your best when
under pr essure.
SAGITTARIUS (NaY. 23·Dec. 21) Benefits are apt to develop tor you today
through a circuitous set of circumstances
that take you to places yoU·ve never been
and could be helped by lhose you "d least
expect
CAPRICORN tDec 22-Jan 19) - II you
have been presently pursuing somelhing
materially worthwtlile but haYen 't been
able to make a breakthrough . loday may
teach you to always hang in there when
you r hopes are finally realized .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Focus
your efforts today on thi ngs that are lruly
meaningful to you where your hopes and
desires are concerned . You cou ld pull ofr a
bene ficial coup today by arouslllQ your
deeper urges.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Condi tions
are rather unusual today in that you can
besl advance your own desirus and Interests by putting the concerns of othe1s first
The1t successes will end up fostering your
,
needs.
ARIES {March 21 -April 19) - Major
achiO\Iements are possible today if you're
willing to go with ttle flow .and make necessary changes as events dic tate. Be flexible rn your thinking and you'll btl equally
so In your actions.
TAURUS (April 20•May 20) - When il
comes to comp~tilive" Situations today,
'Chances are you w111 have a slight edge
over your peers. However, :ovhat is more
important is that when you win you do so
with grace.
.
GEMINI (May 21 .June 2())- The contrast
between being moderately successful
today and highly succeuful is In !he
details. Take extra care to pay anention to
those lltue Items that others miss. It'll

Whaley's Auto
Parts

740·985·3564

•Roofs

James KetSl'c II, Owner

740·992· 2772
740.742·2.132
740416·1570

•N'ew Homes
· ·Log Homes

•Replacement Windows

Pole Buildings
'Garages

on
SAVINGS

30 years experience

• Posl t' rame
•Complete Remodeling

Blown lns11lation

Get A Jump

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

COMMERCIAL and

. J I087
t A8532
• Q J 4

•

G

1:J.; Lora

740·992·0122

price

BISSEll

Creative
Cakes

-&lt;!

17'

• R eplacement

Gal~pollo.

I

~
@-!1 '1ilJ(Jl
@@11

business, not our sideline

SYRACUSE SMALL
ENGINE DR'S
1356 College Rd .
Syracuse, OH 45779

Pom eroy
beside Larry's Fruit S~and
Warranty R epair •

Security . Sal of 4, 14 • 100 apoke ~17_40,.c-)446_.o_350
__
. --:-·- - , &lt;lepoait. ( 41J).wfi.{J720.
knock oil wheelo. lrlple Coio from 1500. Pollee
Niw 1 bedroom apt. !='hone chrome $300. Brand ntw. Impound• For Uetlngs call
(740)448-3738.
Phone (741J)44B-2316.
1·80().749-8104 EXT 3901
In •

•

Lawn and Garden Equipment is our

·

9

-·All four suits at
the one-level ·

FRANK- &amp; EARNEs-T-

Manning K: Roush

,..,,.,.•• Englnu

ANnQuEs

~~-------•
··

•to 1h...o•

Athens

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditlon8.i lifetime guarantee. Local references fur nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers
Waterproofing

~

IMPORTS

Po~eroy,

•

Opening lead: • Q

992-2975

..siZifh.to'

i

I
i
•

r

io

. I t
I •

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

.,

East

9 7 2

S~outh

GRAV~LY TRACTOR

45771

13
14

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Easi·West

Snapper

740·949·2217

t
A 8 53

•

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jon'es

Gravely

•
•

+KQ.I1 09

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center
.

Racine, Ohio

1 .1

to

11
12

08·27..().4

A K 4 3
K Q 6 2

South

· NICE
SLOGAN,
SHERIFF

r~ .(,

K

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

·29670 Bashan Road

" - - - - - - - · 2004 Sunseeker. 29ft motor
home, loaded, $45,000.
Boer
Male
Goats (740)44 1·1 583
Championship bloodlines,
all ag es, all full blooded, regIstered with ABGA. Adults

~uns ~304~675-481 2

•

Parking Lots t Playgrounds
t Roads t Streets

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

Hill's Self
Storage

r

Bral

!OTH SIJD
WI&gt;S "TH' MOIST IMP(JI(TANT POINT,
"'I.J'R£ DOIN' !J&lt;..'LTI.,."f' TN' ll ~Gt!T
~INC. WITH CAJ'Ut'fiN' 1~/S
eu1..1,. AQ.OUNOl

(304) 273-5321

FARM

MI)WQi)iiiiiM

r---7 .. ~DIPo&amp;G 1tl WAA.l

t Driveways t Tennis Courts

PAINTING

I

West
• . Q J 10 B
• 9 3
• &amp; 4

II

r

John Deere Lawn Mower in
real good condition and sev-

·.

Free Estimates

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket .Truck

95 Dodge Grand Caravan,
V-6, auto, $ t 700 OBO.
GaMing tomatoes U-piclc 740)25&amp;,1652
$3.50 a bucket. Rowe Farm. I''"' MomRcvcLESI
Bring containers. (740)247·
4 WHEELERS
4292
- - - - - - - - - 2001
Harley
DaYidson
Sweet corn , for sale $J 75
Heritage Springer 1 169
dozen. Bring your own conmiles, Blue Ice, lots Qf
iitai!:in~e,;.r·.;,;l7..;4~0).;.94"'9~·~13;.1.;.6._..., E&gt;Ctras call (304)675- 7273
FOR SALE
__
OR TRADE
2004
Harley
Davidson
883C , black, 4500 miles.
$8000 (7 40}44 H 583
19ft9 Fifth Wheel , new carp6t, would trade lor mobile 98 Honda XA100 in good
home. or sale $12,500. condition has new bac~ tire
$1,000 (304}675·7653
1 \ tnl "' 1'1'111 -...
BoArs &amp; MmnRS
,\ II\ I '-lit! I\
IUR.SALE

IMPROVI'MENJ'S

•
•

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

t

8

North

87H4&amp;7.

Let me do 1t for youl

Tree Service

UTfS

HOME.

Henderson, WV

1 Bleacher
shout
4 Garage

Alder

I

ol disgust

44 " Ball - "

Phillip

. Specializing In Poured Concrete
~'oundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walb

out of PAINTING!

ilO (

io~en~74i245-0485 .
I 111' ,\ t,\l n ll \ I r1lll'

ACROSS

StateWide
CNE Pouted Walls .

TaKe the PAIN

...

r

Last Thursday or
every month
All pack $5.00.
Bring 1his..coupon
Buv $5.00
Ron~nza Get
5 •'KEE '

MYERS PAVING.

740-992-1189

'j ' VEGETIIBW&gt;
FR
&amp;

io

6 :30

Roofing· SidingPainting· Gutters·
Decks· etc.
For Fast Courteous
Service
Free Estimales &amp;
Affordable Prices,
&lt;;all ... Dennis Boyd

I ~:::: :, 1~ :~~;:: n~

:r:

House tor Rent 2br. no pets,
$250 month pluS, utility,
deposit,
reference .
(304}875-4874

. Box 189 ·Middleport
Licensed in Ohio and~

2 Tiny Toy Poo!iles, and an
AKC Stlelt1e female, obed1·
FOR SALE
ence
trained in 4-H . ~---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-_.1
(740)441 -9478
1997 Ford F· 150 4x4 Lariat.
114K, black, leather Interior,
Adorable Miniature Collies.
c/d player, $9,200 080,
2 males. 2 temates, $ 100
each . (740)44 1-086.5 or (740)992·2932
(740)645 '155
....
199a Jeep Wrangler Sport,
-------MT
4 OL VB 62K AC
Full blooded Rottweiler pup- So • .op, · '
'
'
'
' Chrome
pies. Both parents on prem- CO /Cassette.
ises. tail s docked, shots, Wheels, 31 inch t1res, Extras
wormed . (740)245 _5017
$1 1,000 OBO (304)882·
2439
MiniatUre Dachshunds 1
200Qo Dodge Durango AT.
male 1 lemale, short red yellow, 360 motor, cdlcashair, full blooded $ 150 sene. leattler.
$11,800
1304 1675 •5984
080.
(740)258·1618 or
-S-Ia_m_e-se-&lt;-it-te_n_lo-r-sa-le, (740)256-6200
friendly &amp; active,
eactl ,
VANS
(740)992 3216
11~,;.;.·-!:- ~::--., ~--•ioiiFOiiRoiSiOALEioii·_ _.

$40

1

Rocky Hupp Insurance

TRU&lt;.;KS
SALE

Room and Board at Cozy
·
t81t. fiberglass boat , 170HP
· oiio_.l motor, Stern drive, 360hrs
Hollow. Monthly and weekly L,-...iF.QuliiiiiiiPI\iiii!ENTiii
1 Poselbiy 2Br House, par· rates a~aUabiS . {740)245- ..,
total run time , serious only.
tlally furnished in Ne.w 9549 for Info,
600
Ford
35HP, live (740)446-1358. leave. meshydraulic 3pt. hitch. New
Hayen $275 Rent, $250
sage
Deposit, No-Pets (304)882·
paint, very good condition.
8
4
9 1995. Fiberglass Bass boat
10
t SOHP Johnson GT Trolling
1n the
Haven
:. :::H:OUSEHOUJ:Gooo;::::::::
.
motor. depth llnders. Day
"rea. No-Pets, must ha~e -,
tra iler 18 ft . doYe tall
740-441-4340, evening 740References. $400 month ,
DepoSit
Serious
Good
Used
Appliances
,
w/ramps
$2,200.
740·441
·
441·0101 .
5300
Reconditioned
and 0941 740-645•5946.
0
Inquires only (304)882·2760 · Guaranteed .
Washers ,
CAMI'ERS&amp;
J\-loroR HOMES
~bedroom house In Tupp8rs Dryers,
Ran,ges ,
and Tandem Axle equipment
Plains. $450.00 month; piUs Refrigerators , S ome start at trailer, 18ft dovetail w/ramps. L,-iiiititiiiiiiiiitiiiiioo"
deposit and utilities. No pets $95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 $2200. (740)441-0941 or 1996 Coleman Cheyenne'
(740)545-5946
(740)887·3487
Vine St. (740)448·7398
Pop-Up Camper $3,000
(304)675·5752
3 bedroom, 2 bath, $435 Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clartc:
LMSTOCK

=~~use ~ow

For a Free Quote or Appointment
Call:

Pomeroy Eagll'S
BINGO 2171.
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday ,
Doors Open 4 :30
Early birds start

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Business Card_ .. $25.00/column inch per month

l!l!r-":"_____.,

•o

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

To place an ad Call 992-2156

and/or small houses FOR (740)446-4 141 after 6pm&amp; 86 A-Model Mack tr iple
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111 weekends.
frame tna;t;le log truck Good
for appliCBIIOO &amp; information.
condition. (7 40)441 ·0941 or
8 UIWING
(740)645·5946
Fu'rnished efficiency apt for ~..__..;
· .•SIIUPPJiii.il&gt;liiii..'&lt;;;;,_,J
rent . All utilities included . 86 A-Model Mack . Triple
Georges
Creek
Road
$500
Block
,
brick,
s$wer
pipes,
frame triaxle tog truck .. Good
Lars&amp;
condition .
740-441-0941
et month. (740)446·4868.
P
AO!EAGE
windows. lintels. etc, Claude
_
_
_
740 645 5946
Furnished etticiency, all utili- Winters , Rio Grande, OH - - - - - - - ,,2 acre lot on Tycoon Lake. ties paid, share bath , $150
98 Dodge Dakota 3" body &amp;
County water, no septic, bor- monttl
919 2nd AYe .
suspensiOn lilt, standard, air,
~ers Eagle Road. Asking (740)446-3945
70.000 m1les. 54,000 OBO.
500 00 (740)2471100
- - - - - - - : - - - : - L--oioiiiitiiiiiiio_,.. (740)256·9031 .
IlK&gt; ,
·
•
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- ....,

Skyline 12)(60, 2br, cia, new
furnace, newly remodeled
bathroom.
new carpet.
underp i n nlng / awning .
.S 15!l!l.QaQ._(7AOI446· ZZ54

www.mydailysentinel.com

Business Services

Thank You
Ekanor Boyles
and famil y
thanks ·
·everyone for
!heir many beautiful Birthday
(ards and notes,
really enjoyed
hearing from
everyone.
15

Friday, August 27, 2004
ALLEY OOP

UJl!J ~

jfjJ \ .__..-...--

Stop &amp; Compare

= =;==•n

12Y-Locol Ohfo

-~"" ·-

I

'

�BS • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Au&amp;ust 27, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

..... ...,

ALONG THE RIVER

LIVING

Season opener, Cl

Behind the Wheel, Dl

rl

• If you

BUSCH SERIES

Race : Sharpie 500 .
man. He seemed like the odd
Where : Bristol (Tenn .) Motor rnan out in Jack Roush's Ford
· Speedway (. 533 miles), 500 stable. He groused about not
laps/ 266.5 miles.
having fast-enough cars and
When: Saturday. Aug. 28 · • wondered aloud if perhaps
Last year's winner: Kurt his ca ree r might better be
Busch
· served elsewhere . Biffle
Qualifying record : Ryan New- dominated the GFS Market, man , Dodge , 128.709 mph, place 400 at Michigan InterMarch 21.2003.
·
national Speedway. Th e forRace
record :
Charlie mer Craftsman Truck and
.
cnampion.,-who-.
I
101.074 mph, July 11, 1971. won a Nextel Cup race largely
Last week: Victory makes all as a consequen ce of superithe difference in the world . It· or gas mileage at Daytona in
heals wounds, erases bitter- 2003, needed no such
ness and mends differences. strategic acumen this time.
It wasn't that long ago that He led the most laps (73) for
Biffle had a reputation of be- the first time in his career.
ing kind of an angry yo'ung
~,,, ,.,,.._~,

But, if a drlver wins four
hills out early in-two,

Race: Food City 250

CRAFTSMAN TRUC&gt;&lt;

Where: Bristol (Tenn.) Motor
Speedway (.533 miles), 250
laps/ 133.25 miles.
When: Friday, Aug. 27
Last year's winner: Michael
Waltrip
Qualifying record : David
Green, Pontiac, 126.495
mph. March 22. 2003.
Race record : Harry Gant·,
Buic , 92:929-mph;-Aprll 4,
1992.
Chevrolet, 88.813 mph, Aug.
Last week : Chevrolet driver 20, 2D03.
Kyle Busch won the Cabela 's Last week: Dodge driver Bob250 at Michigan lnternation- · by Hami lton won the Toyota
al Speedway.
•
Tundra 200 at Nashville Superspeedway in Gladeville,
Tenn. on Aug. 14.

( Jlliu \ .a ile~ P11hli,hin~ ( 'o.

• Gallia Academy tops
Meigs. See Page 81
• Eagles-fly past South
Gallia. See Page 82
• Green pounds
Southern. See Page 82
• Raiders boys win
· Early Bird meet. See
Page 83

!•

JEFF BURTON

~ouble ·. and inanag~s to put to·

NEXTEL CUP SERIES,

~f~eihi!r ·~~~ ur!ii6Re'li~trlii of top.

No. 30

AMERICA ONLINE CHEVROLET

E

.OQn't-couil! out Matt

R

It be interesting if
,, ·Kenseth , who won the champlr· Qllshlp last year by.!!eing cooslstent. won It again· under this
': Ume by following that same road
•,. , u®er the new system?
:~·~ Of course, the most likely
•· . champion Is still the driver who
;,· hU fared the best through the
(, first 26 races . Jell Gord6n
. :. should pro~ably be consid~red
·• the,favorite not just because he
·:·')leads the current standings 'but
· · because he has won four cham.PionshiP$ in the past.
, 1&gt; Then there 's Tony Stewart,
whose career has been notable
frOm the outset for rallying near
the er)d. What has changed this
year is that no one in the top 10
can be counted out.
" I&gt; it would also' make for qu1te
· tha Cinderella story if Mark Mai:· tJn, who has been runner-up four
~:·. times, nnally \'IOn that elusive ti\ )le during the first year of the
new format. Martin, if he can
: get,in "the chase," is peaking at
' •lust the right Ume.
• ·i&gt;Now it's alf•about getting into
• the top ~0 over the next three
:_.. J'lli,es. The most perilous spot is
~·· likely to be Bristol Motor Speed" Wllf, where the racing resembles
~: 43 cars zipping around some
t' huge piRball machine. Cfashes ·
::.are almost unavoidable, and
;•· someone with a lot riding on the
' outcome of this saturday night's
~ race Is almost sure to unwitting1¥. race into an ·unavoidable -

Jeff

Burton

·Burton -hopes switch to Childress.Ra9ing rejuvenates his ckreer
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Once upon a time, Jeff Burton was
on the . verge of winning championships. From 1997 .through 2000, Burton finished in the top five in the
points standings four years in a row
and won 15 races.
Burton won twice more in 2001 but
fell to lOth in points. He hasn.' t won a
race or finished a season in the top 10
sirice.
·
Now, however, at age 37, Burton
has a new lease on life. He recently
moved from Jack Rousb's No. 99
Ford to Richard Childress' No: 3Q
Chevrolet.
"Leaving Roush was a difficult deci·
sion," said Burton, "but going to
Richard Childress Racing was an easy
decision. Richard has a huge amount
of respect from everybody in the
garage ... not only to be a great team
owner, to being a great person as well.
I'm real excited about being a part of
the organization. ·
"This is a tough business. I'm leaving the '99' at a time when I think we
really had started to turn the co~ner
and run a lot better. But, at the same
time, long-term, I feel real good about
our chances and short-term, too. ·...
. We're ready to go."
A former Rookie of the Year, Burton
drove for Roush from 1996 through
the Watkins Glen, N.Y., race on Aug.
IS. He debuted with Chiltlress at
Michigan. Roush replaced Burton
with Carl Edwards, a star in the
Craftsman 'lruck Series.
"I do believe that there is time for
change," said Burton. ''I do believe
that the '99' team is in good shape. I
believe Carl Edwards is going to come
in and do a really, really good job for
them .... I think,-at the end of the day,
I suspect it will be a win for all parties."
The younger of two brothers who
have been competing in Cup since
1994, Jeff Burton's 17 career victories

~- .;~. Slid fact is that the current

in the standings
· not necessarily the top 10
l:;:,fo•nio based on their current ·

"':iJ'':!~~T:h~~e pressure Is rising,

hangs heavy In the

olr-'ThA't'o

'""way It usually is at

Bris.iol,anyww. of course.

,,.,,The new championship format
. 4 '.1liiin in terms of'lne playoffs

next three races leadtha!W- certainly is exWbeth4~1Jt Is ultimately
~ · a1~et roatter altogether.

Valley

FAN TIPS

Drive your own car around
Atlanta Motor lpaeltway
Atlanta Motor Speedway ISgiving

John Clark(NASCAR This Week

As recently as four seasons ago, Jeff Burton was a.consistent contender for the points
championship. But he's fallen on hard times in recent seasons, and hopes a move to
Richard Childress Racing is just what he needs to contend again.

have come at almost every kind of
track except road courses. He's won
four times at New Hampshire International Speedway but has also won at
tracks as diverse as Daytona, Martinsville, Darlington and Las Vegas.
Burton has driven Fords for most of
his career until now.
"One of the great traditions in our
sport is Ford vs . 'Chevrolet," said
Burton. "I will say that the parties
at Ford that I've spoken to are disappointed I'm leaving. At the same
time, they understand the ppsition
and my reasoning for. making my

decision.
"Part of what makes our sport great
is those rivalries. This will intensify
that. That's OK. Part of being a sports
fan, part of being a racing fan, is not
only pulling for the team you want to
win but pulling against the team you
don't want to win. That's part of the
deal. This will, I'm sure, intensify that
a little bit. At the end of the day, I
think that's not bad."
Contact Monte Dutton at
hmd48SB@poeoplepc.com

fans a chance to drive their own cars
around the high banks of the track
on Saturday, Sept. 25, as part of the
annual open house. Speedway Children's Charities is the beneficiary as
fans will be allowed to take two laps
around the track in exchange for a
$30 donation. There is one more
conditiOn, however: Fans must purchase tickets to the Oct. 31 Nextel ·
Cup race at the Hampton . Ga. , track.

OBrruARIFS
• Isabella Riley
VanMatre
• Olga Gaudin
• Goldie Gannon
• Georgia Joann Ward
• Billy Snow Board
• Rll.lh Marie
Ruddlesden Miller
• Robert 'Bill' Quillen
• Rene Elizabeth Blake
Williams
~ George Kelley

WEATHER

· l£-G Ei'-10'5- AHO 1-0f( E ·

Ellrnhanlt, Labonte tullled
on Bristol's hl&amp;h blnkl

DelallaanP... AS

INDEX
4 SI!CI10NS -

Around Town
celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Region

.

Sports ·
Weather

555 Park St • Middleport

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252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH
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Political signs can make for.
problems in the coming months
IAN MCNEMAR

iMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRiBUNE.C9'-f
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis' code enforcement
department is taking the initiative to keep political signs
from ·becoming bothersome ·
in the coming mo!lthS.
"We are trying to eliminate
some of the complaints these
signs create," said Bonnie
Watson of the city's code

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Labonte won one

and Earnhardt the
other. Labo nte's
· Chevrole'. was spinning when he
crosse~. the finish
line In 1995. Earnhar~t's Chevrolet
came out on top In
· 1999. It's just
another chapter In the legend of the
great No. 3 car. •

- --·-

Gallia Academy High School played Meigs High School Friday night on Memorial Reid in Gallipolis
in !he season opener for both teams. See B1for team results and scores·. '(ian McNemar/p.hoto)

enforcement office.
According to city code,
political signs pertaining to
the election of one or more
persons to public office or to
one or more public issue
shall be erected no sooner
than 45 days prior to the general or special election at
which the office is to be
filled or issue decided. .
Political .signs shall not be
greater than 16•square feet in

Authorities were not made
aware of the shooting until
almost four hours after it
occurred. A call was received
by Pomeroy Police at I 2:40
a.m. , reporting a burglary at
144 Mulberry Ave., Apt. 3,
Pomeroy. The Meigs County
Department
Sheriff 's
responded within two minutes of the call and arrived at
the residence to fino;! Tyree.
Tyree allegedly had kicked in
the door to the apartment and
approached the resident for
medical treatment. The resident
was an acquaintance of Tyree's
and a former nurse who ulti- .
mately reported the shooting.
Tyree was then taken to
Holzer Medical Cepter,
Gallipolis. where his injuries
are not considered life threat-

Please see Shootlna. A5

·-·-=

·----

sign area and may not be
located closer than I 0 feet to
any publicright,of-way.
The signs must be
removed within one week
following the eleclion.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation advises that
political signs not be placed Morgan Mathews of Team Ohio is pictured with fellow medal
near intersections or in pub- winners Ann Arthur of Oklahoma and Tiffany Sprohmeyer of
lic areas throughout the Team Missouri-Kansas at last month's 2004 Transplant
Games, an Olympic-style athletic competition for organ transcounty as well.
plant recipients.

M&amp;G workers rally for contract, rights·.Local athlete medals
~otly
at lira·nsplant Game·s

The late Dale Earnhardt tangled ·
· tw)ce with Terry
Labonte in Bristol
night
races .

&amp; Sup·ply
Co.

.
106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

Middleport man .
hospitalized after shooting
MIDDLEPORT · A
Middleport man is in Holzer
Medical Center after receiving a gunshot .wound to the
leg Thursday night after a
reported dispute with . a
neighlior 'over a vehicle.
According
to
poli ce
reports, Lanney D. Tyree, 30, .
was shot at his residence
located at 37783 Leading
Creek Road shortly after 9
p.m. The alleged shooter is
Michael Harrison, 47, also of
Leading Creek Road.
According to Sgt. William
Gilkey of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department, the
bullet entered and exited
Tyree's left leg• .entered the
right leg, and then exited the
right leg.

Carl
Edwards

. Burton has a new ride . Edwards
drives the car. Burton used to. Comparisons are inevitable. In tpe GFS
Marketplace 400, Edwards finished
10th in his Nextel Cup debut, and
Burton finished 12th. "We're going to
do better than that I hope but that's
a good start for us," said Burton. Edwards said, "A little bit more of a veteran driver" would have picked up ·a
couple seconds getting into the pits,
but our mission was to be anywhere
in the top half of the field. This is unbelievable ."
NASCAR This Week'l Monte
Dutton Clves his lake: "If ill will is
what you 're looking for in a feud, this
isn 't one. Burton genuinely wishes
Edwards well, and the two know each
other and ~ave a good relationship.
But. when changes like this happen.
comparisons are inevitable."

---1

there, Kelly said. They drew maps of
those sites and a tnap of the YerrazanoNarro\118_ Bridge, which connects
Brooklyn to Staten fsiand, he said.
Though there was no clear tie to
the convention, authorities moved to
arrest the two men before the conve'ntion began, two law-enforcement
sources told The Associated Press.
"Their motive was ge nerally
hatred for America." Kelly said. He
said one of the men had also made
anti-Semitic statements.

By BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• Jeff Burton
vs. Carl Edward•

~~-crash.

IIi

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u
s

-~ l.:.!,"j • \ ul. :tX . '\o.

NEW YORK (AP)- A U.S. citizen surveillance and had discussed placKelly said the men visited the Herald
and a Pakistani national were arrested ing explosives at the Herald Square Square 34th Street station - one block
in an alleged plot to bomb a subway _subway station and stations at 42nd from Madisrill_ Square G;rrden~ the s;te
station in midtown Mannattan, ano and 59th streets, Kelly said. The men of next week's Republican National
possibly other locations around the never obtained explosives, he said.
Convention- on Aug .·21.
city, police said Saturday.
·
"It was clear that they had the intenThe men were being charged with·
Police Commissioner Ray Kelly tion to cause damage, to kill people," · conspiracy to blow up the station,
said the men were not believed to be Kelly said. "They did not immediate- · which is central to a large commercial
connected to al-.Qaida or any other ly have the means to do it ."
district, including Macy's llagship
international terrorist orgamzation,
He identified the men as Shahawar department store. They were to be
although he said they expressed Matin Siraj, 21, a Pakistani living in . arraigned Saturday in federal court .
hatred for America.
Queens, and James Ei Shafay, I9, a
The men also scouted three police
The men had been under police U.S. citizen living on Staten Island. stations on Staten Island and a jail

Football season begins

v

•

Ponu · ru~ • :\liddll'po1·1 • (,;tllipoli ... • \ugu ... l :!C). :!OO-t

Two men arrested in alleged plot to bomb subway station

SPORTS

....

l1

•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties .

Race: 0' Reilly 200 by Valvoline Maxlife
Where : Bristol (Tenn. ) Motor
Speedway (.533 miles), 250
laps/ 106.6 miles.
When: Wednesday, Aug. 25
Last year's winner: Trav is
Kvapil ·
I
Qualifying record : Ted Mu sgrave, Dodge, 123.562 mph,
20,2003.

IN THE SPOTLtGHT

lli·~~LP:~~~~~ won't win.
likely champiqn js gotng to
llrlver whO st"e'e'rs clear of

tm

have a question or a comment, wrlte: .NASCAR This Week, C/O The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, r-IC 28053

•

•

" ~PLE GROVE, W.Va. . ~t s r,eaJiy hard on these _fam1hes, Albert Yester, prestdent
of U~lted Steelworkers of
Amenca Local 644-L at ~e
M&amp;G Po~II!ers plant swd
S~turday unng a rally for
lwd~ff empl?yees and workers still awatllng a contract.
. But all of them are heeding
the words of their union
leadership to continue the
fight for an agreement with
the Italian-owned polymer
producer, ·a sentiment voiced
by n11merous speake.rs during
the gathering m a field near
the Apple Grove plant.
M&amp;G workers have been
without a contraci since
November, and talks between
the company and t)le union

are stalled as the union pursues. several · unfair labor
practice charges agamst
M&amp;G with the National
Labor Relati.ons Bo;rrd.
More than I00 employees
lost their jobs in a round of
layoffs earlier this year, a
move the union has protested
because it claims seniority
rights were not ob.served in
aki · th · b ed ·
..
m.. ng e JO ~ ucuons .
. Th~, co~pa~y has ne~er
sat~ II _
s m dt~e financtal
straits and they re trymg t~
take aw~y our benefits,
Yester sa1d.
.
.
ln a statement this :-ve~~·
M&amp;G management satd tt s
willing to return to the table
to renew contract talks that
have not been held since
March •. · but claimed the
USWA failed to make con-

tact with the company.
·
That point was
disputed by Karen Shipley, the
union spokesman. both at the
rally and in a statement she
gave to local media.
.
"M&amp;G recently attempled to
cast the Uniled Steelworkers
of America in a negative light
by making it appear to the genera! public that the union had
·· ·
·
· · b
n?. t~terest m conunumg argammg With M&amp;G, and that !t
f~~ed and refused to do so.
. The fact IS, 11 was M&amp;G
that had no mterest m _bargammg and com~ilted
unfa1r !.abor pracuces.. she
added. The USWA believes,
however, that it is impossible .
to have prOductive bargaining until such issues as unfair
·
PINH see MAG, A5

·

·

·

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM

the drama1ic benefi1s of
organ donation. ·
This year's event was a
POMEROY - In true milestone for the organ donaOlympic sptrll , Morgan tion movement, promoting
Mathews of Pomeroy took a the 50th anniversary of organ
gold medal at last mon.th's donation as a means of sav2004 U.S. Transplant Games, ing lives. One organ donor
proving her athletic skill and can save up to seven lives
her dedication to encouraging ' through orgim and tissue
organ donation.
· donation. and improve more .
The games were held on than 50. Every day, 17 men,
the campus of the University women and . children die
of Minnesota in Minneapolis. · while waiting for a transMathews, 22, was part of the plant.
.
38-athlete Team Ohio, all of
. As an irlfant, Mathews was
whom have received organ diagnosed with a liver deft- •
transplants. The bi-annual ciency. and received a liver
Transplant Games are spon- transplant as a young adult.
sored by the National Kidney
Foundation, and demonstrate
Pluse see Med•ls. AS

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