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                  <text>Page 86 • Th~ Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Monday, August 30,

2004

Elarton tosses shutout against White Sox
CLEVELAND (AP) step up for my team."
where he went 1- 1 with a
Scott Elarton downplayed his
Cleveland's Ben Broussard 3.15 ERA in three starts.
first career shutout, though was. hit by a pitch in the
He went 0-2 in his first
his new Cleveland indians eighth from Neal Cotts, and eight starts for Cleveland
teammates were impressed. . Matt Lawton had a pitch from until defeating Detroit 5-4 on
Elarton pitched a two-hitter White Sox staner Jon Garland July 28. In his last eight
and .Casey Blake hit two of sai l past his head in. the first. starts, Elitrton is 3-1 ~. with a
Cleveland's four homers in a
"Let's just say that Scott is a 3.8 1 ERA.
9-0 yictory over the Chicago good teammate," Wedge sai~. . ''Scott has handled the ups
White Sox on Sunday.
Elarton was warned by and downs and shown steady
Travis Hafner and Ronnie plate umpire Ed Rapuano, but progress," Wedge said. "All
Belliard also connected for maintained his composure . the little things are starting to
Cleveland. Blake drove in He allowed Crede 's single to add up."
·
.
four runs.
center, but easily finished his
Blake put Cleveland ahead
"At this point in my career, third dreer complete game with a two-run homer in a
I'm not caught up in num- and first since Aug. 27. 2000, three-run second innin g.
bers," Elarton sa1d, "but a with the Astros at Montreal.
Hafner singled and scored on
shutout is nice to get."
It was the fastest g&lt;lme in the home run . Jody Gerut
The right-hander allowed Jacobs Field history at I hour, later doubled and scored on a
an infield single to Willi e 56 minutes.
sing le by Coco Crisp to make
Harris leading off the fourth
The Indians moved one it 3-0.
•,
and a one-out single to Joe game ahead of Chicago for
Blake and Belliard homcCr;de in the nin.th in his finest second place in the AL red in the fourth to make it 5. performance since reaching. Central by winning for just 0.
the major leagues in 1998 the third time in· 14 games.
Hafner opened the · sixth
with Houston.
The White Sox have lost with his 24th homer, but first
"Scott was outstanding," eight of II .
. since Aug. 14. He added a
. Indians manager Eric Wedge
Blake hit a two-run shot in two-run double off Mike
said. "He was in co mmand the second inn ing and led off Jackson in the eighth to make
the whole ballgame."
the fourth with hi s 24th . it 8-0.
Harris hit a slow roller that homer against Garland (8Blake followed-with an RBI
second baseman Bel liard I 0). That gave Blake homers double to tjnish the scoring.
Hafner went 3-for-4 with
fielded at the cut of the grass, in three consecutive at-bats,
but he could not make a including a ninth-innin g three RBis. and three runs to
throw. Harris was erased on a drive Saturday night against break out of a 4-for-33 slump ·
.double play, as was Ross Jon Adkins.
(.121 ).
Gload, who walked to open · Elarton . walked one and
Garland · allowed six runs
the third.
struck out six, .including and 10 hits in seven innings.
"Scott pitched a great ~ame, Harris and Paul Konerko He walked one and struck out
he/'ust kept throwing stnkes," twice each. The only hard-hit three in falling to 2-5 in his
Be liard said. "You love to balls off the right-hander last 10 starts.
play · behind a pitcher like were a sixth-inning lineout to
Notes: Chicago turned four
that."
third by Crede and a tly ball double plays and Cleveland
Through eight innings, to medium-deep center by two .... The White Sox won
Elarton (3-3) faced the mini- Gload in the eighth.
the season series I 0-9. .. .
mum 24 batters, but he hit
Elarton began this season Garland is 3-8 in 14 career
Ben Davis in the right knee 0-8. The right-hand!1r went 0- appearances
against
with 'the first pitch of the 6 with a 9.80 ERA for Cleveland .... The Indians
ninth.
Colorado in eight games and have Monday off before
"It had to be done," Elanon was released. Cleveland going to New York for a Cleveland .Indians second baseman Ronnie Belliard throws to first after forcing out Chicago
said. "Both sides knew it signed him May 25 and sent three-game series against the White Sox's Joe Crede at second base in the ninth inning Sunday in Cleveland. White Sox's'
Willie Harris was safe at first. The Indians beat the White .Sox 9-0. (AP)
needed to be done. I ~ad to him to Triple-A Buffalo, Yankees.

Residents want to
restore historic canal in
disrepair, A6

Wallace to retire
after 'os, Bt

Middleport • Pome),"oy, Ohio·
,otl'\1 "" •\ul ,,I :\u

lll~l)\\ .

1

\t(.ISI :; • .-•ool

CINCINNATI (AP) - For
six innings, Edgar Gonzalez
dominated the Cincinnati
Reds. With one swing, Adam
Dunn changed everything.
Gonzalez held Cincinnati
hiHess into the seventh, but
Dunn's. 39th homer on a 3-1
changeup helped the Reds
rally for a 6-2 victory over the
Arizona Diamondbacks on
Sunday.
"That was the only pitch he
gave me that I could really
hit," Dunn said.
.
Ryan Freel drove in the goahead run with an eighthinning single and the Reds
avoided a three-game sweep.
Gonzali!Z faced the minimum I 8 batters through . six
innings before Freel led off
the seventh with a walk.
Felipe Lopez followed with a

chopper to first baseman Shea
Hillenbrand while Freel was
breaking for second and was
credited with an infield si ngle
when Gonzalez failed to·
cover the bag.
"I didn't see the runner
going," Gonzalez said. "I
thought (Hillenbrand) was
going to go to second base.
Then I saw him look. toward
first, and I started too late."
That miscue cost Gonzalez
and the Diamondbacks.
'"it leaves a little bit of a
bad taste, but it will happen,"
Arizona manager AI Pedrique
said. "Late in the game, we
didn ' t execute defensively.
You're not going to play perfectly every day."
Sean Casey then hit into a
double play, but Dunn's twofUll homer gave the Reds a 2-

· College Football ·

I lead .
hitter Jacob Cruz followed Stephen
Randolph
was · Hancock matched his career ·
"I wanted that pit.ch down with a walk and Freel ground- scratched from Sunday's start high of six strikeouts by the

in the zone, but it was right ed a single through the hole
down the middle." Gonzalez into left lieldfor a 3-2 lead.
said. "I tried.to get him to roll
The Reds added insurance
over on a changeup and get a runs when pinch-runner Wily
groundball.".
· ' Mo
Pena
scored
on
Dunn stayed confident even Hillenbrand 's throwing error
as the Reds struggled at the and on bases-loaded walks by
plate against Gonzalez.
Shane Nance to D'Angelo
" I knew we'd get to him, Jimenez and Lance Cormier
eventually," Dunn said. "He to Austin Kearns.
made great pitches all day,
The game was scoreless
but you knew he'd make a until the sixth, when · Luis
mistake."
Terrero hit a double to leftScott Hairston tied the center and scored on Jerry
game with his 12th homer in Gil 's. bloop singl.e for
the eighth. off Todd Van Arizona.
Poppe! (4-5), who ended up
Gonzalez was demoted to
with the win.
the bullpen after his 3-1 loss
. Juan Castro started the at Pittsburgh last Tuesday left
eighth-inning rally against him 0-7 in seven major
reliever Mike Fetters (0-1 J · league starts this season. He
with a one-out single. Pinch- got another chance when

• Astros blast off Reds.
See Page 81

Bv TtM

MALONEY

.

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- A High Street resident
has had his vehicles broken into and
robbed twice now in one week, but
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark Pniftltt
says the perpetrator will be caught.
Chris S. Scherfel, of 110 High St.,
awoke· 'Monday morning to find his

busine's van had been entered, and over · Another vehicle, belonging to a stu$1,000 worth of power tools missing..
dent. narn~d Brandon Black who was
.A wec.k ago, Scherfel's Jeep staymg wtthjL,Belghbor at -108 Htgh
Lt5erty was entered and robbed ot a S~ .. also ~as entered someume Sunday
camera and compact dtscs. .
mght or early Monday mornmg .. A CD
"Th1s type of behaviOr will not be player, COs and a case were stolen .
tolerllted in the Village of Pomeroy,"
Proffitt says his department already
Proftltt said. "We will seek the stiffest has potential suspects in the case.
penalty allowed by law when these
"We're right on it," he said. "We're
suspects are caught."
hoping for this case to be resolved soon.:·

OXFORD (AP) - Josh Betts
passed for three touchdowns and
ran for a score to lead Miami of
Ohio to a 49-0 rout of Division 1AA Indiana State on Saturday
night in the season opener for both
learns.
Betts. making his first start as
the replacement for first-round
NFL
draft
choice
Ben
Roethlisberger, led the RedHawks
to six touchdowns in the seven possessions he played. He
completed 17 of 27 passes to 'help Miami win its 14th
straight game, the longest streak in Divi sion 1-A.
·
The game started 49 minutes late because of lightning that
flashed near Yager Stadium. After kickoff, the RedHawks
wasted little time overwhelming the Sycamores.
· Miami scored on its first five possessions, including Betts'
scoring passes of 16 yards to Luke Clemens and 30 yards to
Michael Larkin. Betts also scored on a 1-yard sneak.
Ryne Robinson returned a punt 70 yards for a touchdown
and had two other.punt returns for scores- a 67-yarder in
the second quarter and an 82-yarder in the fourth - called
back by penalties.
. Miami tum~d the ball over on three consecutive possesSions after Mtke Kokal replaced Betts at quarterback. Twice
the RedHawks were moving in for scores but fumbled at the
Indiana State 8 and 20 yard lines.
.
Clemens was Miami's leading rusher· with 69 yards on
. nine carries. Martin Nance caught six passes for 75 'yards.
Betts also threw a 5-yard TD pass to Larkin to close the scoring.
Sidney Montford led Indiana State with 39' yards rushing
on 16 attempts. Jake Schiff was 12-of-21 for 104. yards an
interception.
.
Miami totaled 454 yards of offense to 204 for Indiana
State. The, Rej!Hawks averaged 43 points and 501 yards a
game last season, when Roethlisberger led Miami to a. 13-1
record and a win in the GMAC Bowl.
Miami will have a tough time extending its winning streak
to 15. The RedHawks play at No. 8 Michigan next Saturday.

'

'

fifth inning. He allowed one
run on seven . hits and two
walks in six innings.
·
Notes: Ken Griffey Sr., the
right fielder on the Reds'
1975-76 World Series championship
teams, ·. Bob
Howsam, Cincinnati's gener·
a! manager in that era, and
1800s pitcher Will White,
were inducted into the team's
Hall of Fame in pregame cer~
emonies .... Reds RHP Johti
Riedling celebrated his 29th
birthday. .. . Arizona catcher
Chris Snyder was hitless in
his last 10 at-bats before hiS
second-inning single. ..;
Hillenbrand's · error was
·Arizona's .J 07th of the season, tying a .club record set
twice previously.

Wesam· Construction Co .. Pomeroy, is nearing completion of
the new Tuppers Plains office of Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. The new bank, to be nearly identical to the office in
Mason, W.Va., will replace a branch office constructed in 1973
the Pomeroy National Bank, and will include an expanded
drive-through facility and an ATM. (Brian J. ReediphDto) .

Page A5
• Lena Evelyn Clark
• Julia M. Engle ,
• Helen Hood
• Robert S. Marcinko

Final preparations
_.,-,.....,......,
Chris Jones. 9, of Pomeroy was ·~aught in the Act of Reading• at the Pomeroy Library. "Caught
in the Act of Reading• is a photography contest sponsored by the MCDPL and is open to contestants of all ages. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
world. These moment~ could persons entering contest
Bv BETH SE~GENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
• Photos must be 3 1/2 by 5
be caught on film and displayed at the Pomeroy Library. or 4 by 6
POMEROY - The Meigs
• No more than 5 entries
The idea of the contest is to
Public promote reading of any kind, per person
County
District
Library is currently sponsor- especially by young people
• Entry form must accoming their sixth annual said, Wendi Maxson, Outreach pany each photo
"Caught in the Act of Supervisor for Meigs County
Entry forms can be tilled
Reading" photo contest.
Library System. Though the out at any of the Meigs
The object of the contest is contest is open to anyone of County -Libraries and all photo "cat.ch" people in the act of any age, in the past the major- tos will be on display at the
reading by taking theif photo- ity of the participants have Pomeroy Library the week of
graph. For example, some peo- . been children:
· September 20-25. All patrons
pie fall asleep in .bed reading.
The rules and guidelines visiting the library that week
Some folks sway on their front for the photo contest are as will be able to vote, one vote
per person per day.
·
porch swing while they read follows :
The deadline for turning in
the newspaper, hopefully The
• 35mni fii!JI · or digital
photos is Sept. 13, 2004. The
Daily Sentinel. Children often photos can be submitted
• Photos can be color, or Meigs County District Public
sit cross-legged on the living·
Library reserves the right to
room carpet or lay on their black and white
accept or reject any and or all
• Unmounted photos only
stomachs to react a book while
they block out the rest of the · • Photos ·must be taken by photos submitted in the contest.

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 1-4-0
Pick 4 day: 6-7-4-8
Pick 3 night: 8-4-3
Pick 4 night: 8-7-7-7 .
Buc:lieye 5: 8-26-28-30-31

West Varginia
Dally 3: 0.5-0
Dally 4: 9-3-3-7
cash 25: t-5-8-18-21-22

WEATIIER

Show appreciation to your fair buyer...
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.

.
Please see Dave or Brenda at The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy,
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads mu.st be paid for in advance.
~

2 Col. x 5"
$82.00

Thank You

1 Col. x 2" . $16.40
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1"":""' ,-

~-~,,.

2 Col. x 4"
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L.. -~-· - - ' L

. ........, -

INDEX

Bv TtM
l:l PAGES

Comics

:.._..) ..__.

Dear Abby,

Obituaries

Sports

Weather

2 Col. x 3"

POMEROY - All six Meigs
County schools graded by the
state are· at least Continuous
83-4 · Improvement or better.
Two schools. Eastern High
Bs School and Meigs High
were rated Effective.
A:3 School,
Eastern Elementary, Meigs
Intermediate, Meigs · Middle,
A4 Southern
High School and
Southern' Elementary aU were
gJlKied Continuous Improvement
In addition to the overall
B1
grades, the local districts also
A6 have received the results
from proficiency tests administered to fourth-, sixth-, and

A:3

Classifieds

Editorials

MALONEY

NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.r

•

lOth-grade students.
The students were tested in
reading, writing, math. science
and citizenship .. Third-graders
were tested for reading only.
Following are the test results.
The numbers reflect the
· percentage of students who
passed each test. The IOthgrdders were tested for ninthgrade proficiency, while the
fourth- and sixth-graders
were tested for proficiency lit
their own grade level. .
Tenth grade:
Reading: ·Eastern, 91.2;
Meigs, 98.5; Southern, 97.7.
Writing: Eastern, . 94.6;
Mei~s , 94.8; Southern, 95.5.
Ma!h: -Eastern. 62.7; Meigs,
'

$49.20

2 Col. x 2"

'. $32.80

Borders and Artworlr
•

-·

--- -

- -----

Ben Coppick of Jeffers Paving and Excavating prepares to reconnect the. wiring in the scoreboard at Bob RobertS Reid in Pomeroy.
The scoreboard had been removed during work on the Lewis landslide site. and is now back in place in ·plenty of time for the first
game of the season. The Meigs Marauders play their first home
game Friday against the Athens Bulldogs. (Tim Maloney/photo)

Winners announced

..

,All Meigs County Schools Graded
Continuous Improvement or Better

Pace A&amp;

Calendars

,~·'If~~,
-

-on
:l SI!CI'IONS -

· 1 Col. x 3" $24.60

Breaking and entering is a fiftl].:
degree felony, carrying a potenti~t
sentence of up to-12 months in priso~ :
Proftltt also warned anybody w~~?
might buy the stolen power tools fro!!(
.
. .
. .
the thief. He sa1d recetvmg stole_!(
property worth more than $500also !!{
a filth-degree felony and carnes the;
same possible prison sentence.
-

'Caught in the act of. reading' Nearing _completion~

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads

•

.Miami routs 1-AA
Indiana State, 4~-0

with stiffness in hi s right
shoulder.
"(Gonzalez) had really
good stuff, but nothing you
would think would no-hit us
for six innings. We should've
gotten to )\im a lot earlier. We
didn 't square him all day until
Dunn's two-run .· (shot),"
·
Casey said.
Gonzalez allowed a careerlow three hits and two walks
with three strikeouts in seven
innings.
"He was working faster,"
Pedrique said. "He improved
a lot in that area. He did a
great job, and he deserves
another stan. The way he
pitched today, I thought he
should've Won."
Cincinnati starter Josh

HH\\IIt\dllh-,4'1\lt thl,,iJ II

Pomeroy PD Investigates Vehicle Break-Ins~

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Dunn's homer helps Reds rally past Diamondbacks

.

89.4;
Southern,
76.2.
Science: Eastern. 86.0;
Meigs. 91.8; Southern, 79.1.
Citizenship: Eastern, ~6.2;
Meigs, 93.3; Southern, 88.1.
.
Sixth grade: .
Reading : Ea'stern, 50.0 ;
Meigs, 59.2: Southern, 49.0.
Writing : Eastern, 87.9:
Meigs, 86.6; Southern, 92.2.
., Math : Eastern, 51.5: Meigs, Jeff Snowden of Rutland . Mary Bowles of Pomeroy and Pam
Southern,'
45 . I . Harten bach of Pomeroy were winners of gift certificates award- .
65.6:
Science: Eastern , 45.5; ed by The Daily Sentinel at its bo&lt;/th at the Meigs County Fair.
Meigs, 59.9; Southern , 43.1. Snowden was awarded a $50 gift certificate for Fruth
Citizenship: Eastern, 56. I ; Pharmacy, Bowles a $75 certificate to · Vaughan's
Meigs, 63.1; Southern. 56.9. Supermarket. and Hartenbach a $100 certificate for Powell's
Foodfair, by General Manager Charlene Hoeflich. Jack King of ·
Fourth grade:
Reading: Eastern , 65.0; Pomeroy, Debbie CheValier of Pomeroy and Dewayne King of
Chester were winners of three-month newspaper subscripPl·r.e ~ Graded, AS
tions. (Brian J. Reed/photo)

�.

'

•

PageA2

COMMUNITY

~Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 31, :loo4

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Reunions

kitchen. These conveniences
Each of us has personal
resources that can be used to
are higher in cost but will
help us reach our financial
allow the cook to spend less
goals - time, money, energy,
time preparing and cleaning
abilities, knowledge, talents
up the meal. Eating out in
and skills. We can interrestaurants illustrates this conBecky
change these different assets
cept even further.
and trade them around to help
Baer
Similarly, paying some&lt;\ne to
us get the things we need,
come in and clean the house
want and desire.
.
once a week may be money
Since oone of us has unlimwell-spent. The time and enerited funds to buy anything
and everything we want, we opposite direction. In order to gy involved in trying to get
' have to make choices. If we save time and energy, we may . everything done, may not be
are willing to give up some of need to spend money. For worth the aggravation and
our time, use the skills and instance, man~ parents may stress that it causes for those
talents that we have and put not have the time and energy . who have tight schedules. This
forth a little energy, we can required to fix a balanced meal new-found time can be used
save money. 'If we have the after working all day. Instead, helping the children with their
know-how and can do things they may opt to 'pick up pre- homework, chauffeUring them
for ourselves, such .as cut the pared dinners on their way to practice or scouts, participat- .
grass, raise a garden of fresh home. Even though th1s take- . ing in a long-forgotten hobby or:
produce, make our family's home .f~ .w11! cos~ more.than just getting some much-needed
clothes, bake and decorate the th~ - _mdlVtdual mgredtent~st _and relaxation
.
·children '·s I;Jirtlrday cakes, flll llee~ed to cook'. the .same meal, always
to be
out our tax returns, do home savmg ttme ts more tmponant
· ·
d
lndtvtdua.1s an
repairs etc., we can take the to these families than saving
extra money saved from these money. Or they may choose to should co~s.tder th~ tr~de-offs
tasks and apply it towards buy convenience foods . pre- when dectdmg whtch ts more
f utwe purchases.
The packaged salads, shredded important to them • the
amount of savings accumulat- cheese, bottled spaghetti sauce money or the ttme and energy
and frozen pies - to reduce needed to get things accomed can be quite substantial.
food
preparation time and plished.
Only they can
But in today's world, we
sometimes have to think in the energy expended in the decide what is best for them.

Riley

Dinner was served with the family lost two members this
blessing given by Waid year, Connie Bradley of
LETART _ The Eva and Hayman. Family members Gallipolis and Dave Sayre of
enjoyed
watching
past Antiquity.
Patrick Riley family reunion reunions on DVD.
The oldest attending was
was held recently in Letart,
Attending were Lillie Hart: Marjorie Grimm, and the
W.Va. Approximately 80 peo- Phyllis Young; Linda Jewell ; youngest
was
Weston
pie attended.
Isabel a0 d Toni Edwards; Bill McGhee, son of Julie Sayre.
·Prizes were given out as and Ginny Huffman; Virgil . Traveling the farthe st was
follows : farthest traveled and Delores Ours; Sid and Gene ·
Payne
fmm
went to Lucy Goff, Fort Carol
Hayman ;
Waid Montgoll\ery. Ala. The family
Knox, Ky.; most recently Hayman ; Carroll and Cheryle thanked Dale Hart and
married went to Tonya and Knight; Ruby. Rhonda and Brooks Sayre for providing
Roger Flannery, 2003; mar- · Jerrod
Wolfe;
Kindra, the arrangements for the facilried the longest. went to Jack Kirsten, Matthew and Zane ity. The .reunion for 2005 will
and Mary Ann Winebrenner, Moore; Kyle and Tyler be on Aug. 21 at the s-ame
48 years; oldest man, Jimmy Franci s: Kelly Harris, Marge location.
Attending were Eve!yn
Riley, 82; oldest ' woman, Packman; Don, Jean, Dave
Lucy Chipps, 89.
and Karen Carpenter: Gladys North, Gallipolis, Aaron and
Also receiving prizes were andLoren Richardson: Dori s.' Janeene Davis, Grove City,
the newest baby, Zachary Dan. Donna, Danny,. Bryce, Gene Payne, Montgomery,
Fields, lour months old; most Bethany. Brian and Angela Ala .. Mark and Beth Casto,
Beverly
recent grandparents, Sharon Sayre; Dan and Faith~ChesiJ.[IT_,
aCld Ken Vickers; most recent Hayman; Tamara and Eric Cunmngham, C?ttag~":tlle,
great-grandparents,
Mary Tucker· April ·Erin ·and W.Va .. Levee Wtllts.Htlhard,
.Arnn Winebrenner. Jodi Parker Mall\)ry
Roa~h;
Gerald Patsy Willis, .Columbus, Dan
received the prize for 2004 Crawl'ord.
and Donna Sayre , Ractne,
Doris
Rogers,
Canal
high school graduate. Several
other prizes were given to
sa~re
Winchester, Brooks and June
Zachary Fields,. Brendan
'J
Sayre, Syracuse, Bryce and
. V-ickers, Justin Noel , Maddy
Debbie Sayre, Gallipolis,
Hreha,
Lynna
Wilson,
RACINE - The reunion of Roderick
and
Marjorie
~ittany Dillon, Rich Hreha descendants of' Martin and Grimrn, Racine, Mildred
Sr., Rita Hreha, Judy Young, · Emma Sayre was held recent- · Hart. Racine, .Dale and
David and . Bobby Ann ly at the Racine Shrine Park. Kathryn Hart, Racine,, Julie
Edwards, and Vernon and
A picnic was enjoyed : · Sayre and Todd Burroughs,
Grace was given by Marjorie Worthington , Ky., Mason
Qayle Roush.
Grimm and outgoing pres,i~ McGhee, Worthington, Ky.,
dent, Evelyn North · of Landon
McGhee,
POMEROY
- . Navy
Gallipolis conducted a brief Worthington, Ky., Weston Seaman Jason A. Brockert,
meeting to review business. McGhee, Worthington, Ky., son of Debi . s: and Joe P.
.RACINE- The 46th annual Newly-elected president and Bethany Sayre and Ryan Brockert of Pomeroy, recentreunio.n of the late George and secretary ·are Bryce and Fe nix, Jackson, Ron and ly completed U.S. Navy basic
Vira (Crawford) Hayman Debbie Sayre of Gallipolis.
Linda Grimm, Racine, and training at Recruit Training
family was held Aug. 21 at
Thirty-one relatives attend- Shelli
Barnette,
Point Command, Great Lakes, Ill.
Star Mill Park in Racine.
ed the reunion. The Sayre Pleasant, W.Va.
with honors . _.
During the eight-week program, Brockert completed a
variety of training which
included classroom study and
practical instruction on naval '
;R IO GRANDE - Three
t~stees were elected . at the .
annaul meeting of members
of the Buckeye Rural Electric
ATHENS - Kimes Nursin&lt;&gt;
Cooperative, held at Buckeye
and
Rehabilitation, a 61-be~
Hills Career Center in Rio
locally-pwned
and !Jperated
Grande. Over 700 members
skilled
nursing
facility, has
and guests attended.
announced plans for a major
Marinelle Jeffers was reexpansion and renovation.
elected to serve District II
According to faci,lity owner
(Gallia
County),
Paul
Richard Buckley, Kimes, of
Berridge was re-elected . for
75 Kimes Lane, Athens, will
District Ill (Jackson County)
a!ld more than 7,000 square
and Nanette Gill ws re-electfeet of patient care facilities
ed . to serve District IV
and also will complete a full
renovation of the entire exist· (Athens, Meigs and Vinton
in?. facility.
Counties).
'Our family has owned and
General Manager Dennis
this facility for over
Beard told members that Newly re-elected Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc. trustees operated
40
years,
serving patients in
Nanette
Gill,
Paul
Berridge
and
Marinelle
Jeffers
are
pictured.
·
Buckeye Power, Inc., the genthe greater Athens area,"
eration and tran smission BREC's internet company, program already run by Buck ley said. -"Because the
cooperative of which BREC
commu nity has come to
is a member-owner. recent! y ACE!nternet, will begin BREC.
Steve Oden, director ,of
announced plans to buy a offering, scholarships next
year.
The
scholarships
will
be
member services, reported
nine-percent interest .in the
Ohio
Valley
Electric for anyone planning on going that Lawrence County's dis- ·
Corporation, which operates to college or technical school trict office will open in the
Kyger Creek plant.
and would be separate and in fall and that additional district
He also announced that addition to the schci'larship offices are being considered.

seems

•Brockert completes training

Hayman

BREC trustees elected

customs, first aid, firefight- '
ing,,water safety and survival,
and shipboard ·and ·aircraft
safety. An emphasis \\'US also
placed on physical fitness.
The capstone event of boot
camp is "Battle Stations."
This exercise gives recruits
the skills and confidence t)ley
need to succeed in the fleet.
"Battle Stations" is designed
to galvanize the basic warrior
attributes of saqifice, dedica-

tion, teamwork and endurance
in each recruit through the·
practical applic;ttion of basic
Navy skills and the core values of Honor, Courage and
Commitment. Its distinctly
"Navy" flavor was designed
to take into account what it
means to be a Sailor.
Brockert is a 1997 graduate
of Meigs High School.

'Kimes Nursing and Rehab Center sets.expansion
expect personalized; top- community.
quality care from Kimes, we
"It is our longstanding pracare full almost all the time. tice to utilize local vendors
Since many people prefer pri- whenever possible," .said
vate rooms, we dectded 11 Yehl. "The total project cost
was time to create a new of over $1.5 million will add
space for 1.2 private rooms, as to the local economy. Over the
well as ~OJ!lplete ren~yation tong term, we also anticipate
of our extstmg facthty.
· creating more jobs to serve the
Wesam Construcuon, Inc. of dd'f
·'d
,
Chester, Ohio, will serve as a 1. tona 1rest en1s... .
general contractor. T.M. Decker
Kt~e s ts cerufted by
Architect of Laurelville, Ohio is · Med1care and Medtcatd and
providing design and engineer- . P~~vt~es a full range of re~a­
mg servtces. Project financing bthtatton and s.ktlled nursmg
is provided by Hocking Valley semces for.pauents requm.ng
Bank. Accordin_g to facility care followmg surgety or tiladministrator, Ltsa Yehl, the ness. The factlity also offers a
project will create substantial . specialized unit for indi vidueconomic benefitfortheAthens als with Alzhe-imer's.

Coming Thursday in the x,xxx ::..

..~~~~ (€, ~· &amp; ~$ ,, ;/i)(J"
•

Recognized for service Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
CHESHIRE - Mark A.
Clark, a shift operating
engieer at the Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek
Plant,
recently
received his anniversary .
award for 30 years of service
to the company.
Clark joined the company
in 1974 as a laborer, was later
transferred to the operations
department imd was promoted to an assistant shift operating engineer 'in 1994. In
2003, he was promoted to his
current position.
He and his wife, Lois,. live
in Gallipolis ·

Show appreciation to your fair buyer...
Please see Dave or Brenda at The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy,
·
or' call992~2155 for details. Ad~ must be paid for In advance.

1 Col. X 2" $16.40
Mark Clark

r-:J..--~

LI

'

For the Record
Divorces
Grand Jury
POMEROY - A divorce
POMEROY -The Meigs
action has been filed in County Grand Jury will conMeigs County Common vene on Oct. 6.
Pleas Court by Robert
Houstuce
Workman,
Dismissal
Chillicothe, against Amy
POMEROY - Criminal
Louane Workman, Pomeroy. charges against Patrick
Divorces have been grant- Steven Soulsby filed in Meigs
ed to Ruthanna Lynn Albright . County Common Pleas Coun
against
Terry
Edward have been dismissed. ·
Albright, ·and Deborah A.
Edwards against Charles
Civil suits
. Dwayne Edwards:
POMEROY- A civil lawsuit alleging breach of conDissolutions
.tract has been filed in Meigs
POMEROY .
County Common .Pleas Court
Dissolutions have been grant- by
Jerry
McCarter,
ed in Meigs County Common Reedsville, against Allwood
Pleas Court to Andrea J. King Structures, Inc., Greentown.
and Allen L. King U, Erica
A personal injury suit has
Dawn Drummer and Aaron been filed by Steven K.
Michael J)rummer, and Linda Henderson, Pomeroy,, and
K. McKiimey . and Brian others, against ·Frances J.
Scott McKinney.
Reed, Reedsville.

-

f.

r-

,.
I

~---;'-"L..-

r

' '

2 Col. X 4"
$65.60 .

1 Col. X 3" $24.60
,,

u __ , -.::_ -

...

2 Col. X 3"
$49.20

2 Col. x 2"

$32.80
\

Borders and Artworlc

•

•

Community Calendar

Wife without wanderlust shouldn't be forced to go :·

.

Public meetings
Wednesday, Sept. 1
PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at Pageville
Town Hall.

·clubs and
organizations

Auxiliary potluck 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 7. Meat to be
provided. Meeting at 7:30 p.m.

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 5
SYRACUSE -Ours reunion
12 noon, dinner at I p.m.,
Syracuse Community Center.
992-2865 for inforrnallon.
LETART
Donahue
reunion for descendants of
Homer
and
Amanda
Donohue will be held at
12:30 p.m. at the Letart
Community Center in Letart, .
W.'Va. For more information
call Brenda Neutzling, 740388-9828

Thesday, Aug. 31
POMEROY - The Meigs
Soil and water Conservation
[Jistrict will meet iti special
sesson at II :30 a.m. to work
on personnel issues. ·
Wednesday, Sept. 1
. ·CHESTER Chester
Garden Club open meeting,
7:30 pm., Chester. United
Methodist Church. Special
program by Janet Bolin . .
Thesday, Aug. 31
Members bring gifts.
MIDDLEPORT
Ministerial
RUTLAND
The Middleport
Leading Creek Conservancy Association will hold a
District wil hold a special Concert of Prayer, for the
board meeting for prelimi- 2004-2005 school year, at 7
nary bargaining ses~ion at 5 p.m. at the Middleport
Church of Christ, Fifth
p.m. at the office.
Avenue at Main Street.
Thursday, Sept. 2
'RACINE - Special meeting of Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, with
work in the Master Mason
Thesday, Aug. 31
degree OR two candidates.
POMEROY
-· Meigs
· Refreshments.
County Health Department
TUPPERS PLAINS- The will conduct a childhood
VFW immunization clinic from 9 to
Tuppers
Plains
Auxiliary will meet at 7 p.m. II a.m. and I to 3 p.m. at 112
at the hall.
E. Memorial Dr. The child's
Friday, Sept. 3
shot records must be provided
MIDDLEPORT- The OH- and the child must be accomKAN Coin Club will have a panied by a parent or legal ·
display in the lobby at Peoples guardian. Medical cards, if
· Bank in Middleport from 8:30 applicable, must also be pro•
a.m. to 4 p.m . .Coins may be vided. A $5 donation will he
brought in for appraisal.
accepted but no one will be
. Tuesday, Sept. 7
denied service~ because of.an
POMEROY
Eagles inability to pay.

Church services

Other events

Revival ·slated .for
Labor Day Weekend
.GUYSVILLE
The
' "Evangelizing For Jesus
Revival Center': camp meeting \viii be held Sept. 3 - 6
beginning at I p.m. at the site
located between Guysville
and Coolville, 3/4 mile off St.
Rt. 50, Co. Rd. 42 to 57, then
left on Metcalf Rd. 1/4 mile. ·
The speakers and entertainment for Sept. 3 include:
Jennifer Colhns and 2 for
HIM, Mingo Co., W.Va.;
H.I.S. Jim Roux, New
Matamoras; Wayne Workman,
Logan; Richards Famiy,
Sandyville, W.Va.; Kenneth
Bledsoe, Letart, W.Va:.
. The spe&lt;lkers and entertainment for Sept 4 include: ~ggy
Cornell, Poca, W.Va; .lu.&lt;;ttfied;
Cullman, AJa.; Phil Pucket,
Nankin; Encouragers-Sue Young,
Elkins, W. Va; H.I.M.S. and Joe
Pena, Uhrichsville; Dl:em Family,
Parkersburg, W.Va; Steve and
Bonnie Weaver, Nelsonville;

POMEROY - The 80th
annual Hayes, Young and
Holiday School Reunion was
held recently on the old
Holiday School grounds with
40 in attendance.
A basket lunch was served
at noon with Mark Sauters
asking the blessing. A
moment of silont prayer and
memorial were given for
those deceased during the
past year including Grace
Richardson, Manda Eastman
and Joyce Sauters.
The afternoon program was
opened with a prayer by
Robert Chaney. Last year's
minutes were read. by
Garoldene Stephens. New
officers were elected as follows:
President,
Craig
Dougan; vice president,
Darren Hayes; secretary/treasurer, Patty Arnold; game
committee, Jason and Jeremy
Hayes.
Theresa Shaffer told about
the Hayes Reunion in
Cincinnati that she had
attended earlier in the summer. She also announced the
tOOth Hayes Reunion of 2005
in Westchester, Pa: Dale
Colburn told about the Hayes
families from Tennessee.
The winners of the melon
drawing were Mitchell Metts
and Kelsey Sauters. Gifts
were presented to the oldest,
William Mclanahan, the
youngest, Brooke Hayes, and
the one w\Jo· traveled the far-

n,--. --,I
~'

BY THE BEND

'

DEAR ABBY: I usually
think your advice is pretty
Rood, but your answer to
'Homebody in .Norfolk, Va.,"
who didn't want to travel with
he( husband, was way off. If
she doesn't like to travel, she
shouldn' t be t'orc Pd to just
because that's what her husband wants. She has every
right to live her life the way
she wishes, and nqt be coerced
to do something she doesn't
li ke just because she's maiTied.
Travel is not pleasurable to
everyone . Flying is a big pain
in the butt and can even be
harmful to a person's health
if he or she is susceptible to
deep-vein thrombosis. Hotels
are not like home. The beds
are · uncomfortable, and
restaurant food for every
meal can be fattening.
·
You shou ld have recommended instead a ·session or
two ofcounseling so both parties qn get their feelings out
in the presence of a neutral
party. Maybe then the husband wi ll be more accepting
of his wife's preferences. M.M. IN KINGSTON, N.Y.
DEAR M.M.: Although' I
didn' t intend to be, you are
not the only reader who felt
my reaction to "Homebody's"
problem was harsh. Read .on:
DEAR ABBY: You are
usually sensitive to problems
and concerns, yet you assume
that "Homebody" simp ly
refuses to go. I sometimes ,
become pamcked just going
on errands, out of town, etc.
To go to faraway lands promotes whole new fears.
My advice would be for
"Homebody" to explain to
her husband why she doe~n 't
want to go. and then reach a
compromise. If he really
wants to spend time with her,
I'm sure he won't care where
they go. Perhaps they cou ld
find a destination that both of
them would be happy with.
It hurts to be paralyzed
with fears and pamc. It may
not be hurting their marriage
now, but without understand-

Dear
Abby

ing, it could. harm it later. - ·
STAYING PUT IN TEXAS
DEAR •STAYING PUT:
Although I am all for compromise, 1 suspect compromise
might be difficult for someone
who hungers to visit the game
parks in Africa, ride a gondola on
the canals in Venice or walk on the
Great Wall of China. Since your
problem tSfears and paruc, please
read the next letter carefully:
DI;,AR ABBY: l..Jgo, Wl!SJI.

Tuesday, August 31, 2004

homebody. Now l am received effective help for your
divorced . I went to very few problem !lnd are doing better.
DEAR ABBY: 1 think
restaurants,
complained
about traffic and crowds, "Homebody" was gracious ro
attended no concerts or suggest that her husband go
movtes. Alter mne years of with a friend or f•m1ily member.
putting up with my phobia, . J love to tmvel llild ;,o does my ··..
· my wife divorced me . 1 husband. but somelime' we
attemp1ed to save our mar- don 't share the same enthusiasm
riage by seeking help froni for a destination . When that
my doctor. He · pre scribed happens, we fmd other travel
medication that saved me companions who share our
from becoming a hermit.
interests and evel)fone ha;, a ·
Even though my marriage is good time. TI1is summ~~ my ,
over, I am doing much better. husband weRt 10 Greenland
I now venture out and do while I visited Italy. - CARLA
· things. Through counseling IN LIVERMORE. CALIF.
and proper medication I have
DEAR CARLA: Bon vo),age 1
· become a better parent to my
Dear Ahb\' is ll'ritten br
13-year-old son. Please urge Ahigail Wm 13urm. also knowi1
''Homebody" to consult her as Jeanne Phillips. and was .
doctor. - BOB IN INDIANA · founded b\' ha mo1he1: Pat~line
DEAR BOB : Thank you tor ·Phillips. WriTe Dear Abby ar
sharing your personal ex peri- ltwv.:D.-arAh!J,:com or PO. Box ·
_!!11Ce . J'm glad to know that you f&amp;I40.J.asAngeles. CA Qq;l59.

949-221
·t:EJEQUAL~tNO

LENDII:R

Home
National
Bank

FDIC

INSURED
Contact Racine &amp;

locations for details.-

Prophets Noel and Mary Lou
Melendez, Aa
.
The speakers and . entertainment for Sept. 5 include:
Deem Family, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Justified, Cullinan,
Ala.; Jennifer Collins and 2
For HIM, Mingo, W.Va. ; The
Whitts, Circleville; Martie
Short,
Chester;
Brenda
Barber, Logan; William
Thompson, Chesterhill; Phil
Ashcraft, Logan.
The speakers and entertainment for Sept. 6 include: .
Blanche Jordon, Chillicothe;
Martie Short, Chester; Jim
. and Linda Berry, Trimble; The
Soul Survi vers, Nelsonville;
Bro. · and Sis. • Adk.ins,
Huntington, W.Va.; John and
Patricia Williams, Coolville.
Everyone is welcome and
admission is free. For additiona!
information
call
Pastors DoR and Dee Miller,
1-740-667-6040.

.

Hayes, Young and Holiday
School Reunion Held

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

Thank You

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

..

thest, Zacharie Arnold. ,
Garoldene Stephens gave a
reading · of "Three For The
Show" by Bill Cosby. }ohn
and Garoldene Stephens gave
a skit on "Why I Hate the
Dentist." Craig Dougan sang
· "God Bless America Again"
accompanied by Colleen
. Brickles on the accordian,
and Theresa Shaffer on the
k.eyboard. Brickles sang "If I
Could Hear My Mother Pray
Again:: . The program ended
'with everyone singing "Count
Your Blessings," and 'Til Fly
Away." Games were played
by the children and I)rizes
were awarded.
Attending were Jason,
Natascha and Brooke Hayes;
Jeremy and Mikayla Hayes;
Roger and Dea Hayes; Bill
and Mabel McClanahan; Dale
and Patty Arnold; Susan.
Jason and· Mitchell Metts, all .
of Albany; Garold and Gladys
Gilkey of Athens; Zacharie ·
Arnold of Jonesboro, Ind.;
Esther Baker, Margaret Wolfe
and .Chuck and Flora. Karns of
Logan; Robert and G[adys
Chaney; Theresa Shaffer;
Charles, Deana, Britnee and
Kelsey · Sauters;
Leroy
Sauters;
Dale Colburn:
Virginia Gibson and Gladys
Cumings , all of Pomeroy;
Cniig and Kathy Dougan;
Colleen BrickJes; John and
Garoldene Stephens; Jamie ·
Boyd and Sarah of Shade;
Sherry Turley of The Plains.

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....:::;_.:;;}:..'...:;I;;;.:N:;,...;.;:....:;I;:...::......_ _ _~---_..;_· Tu. .;. .:. es~d.;.;:ay;.:.,

Tuesday, August 31, 2004

PageA4

....:.Au;..:;gu:...s_t.;;.
3 ...;.t,_2o_o...;;4.,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

.·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager- Ne~s : Editor

,.

GUEST

VIEW

the road
School bus sifety
The familiar sight of ye llow buses back on Ohio's roadways
signals the begmning of another school year. .Piease keep in
mind th at there are many special concerns to be considered
when ~ haring the road with sc hool buses.
•
Children, motorists, and parents need to be aware of the possible dangers both inside and arourx:l a school bus and how to avoid
· them. While school bvses remain the safest mode of travel on
Ohio roadways, school bus crashes do occur. In the first three
months of 2003 alone, there were five crashes resulting in give
motorist fatalities involving school buses and vehicles around
Ohio. In 2002, there were 2,538 sc hool bus crashes in Ohio.
While this represents a 7.2 percent decrease from 200 I , there are
still too many incidents, which are putting Ohio's children at risk.
Motorists can do their part by struting to think about school bus
safety the moment the car is started. When backing out of a garage
or driveway, watch for children walking to the school bus. Many
times, walking or bicycling children are paying enough attention
to getting to school and less attention to their personal safety,
Also, watch for children walking in the street, especially if
there are no sidewalks, and fo r children playing or congregating near bus stops, Children are sometimes unaware of the
danger they face yvhen walking bicycling close to traffi c,
Drivers need to be aware · of thi s and pay close attention to
children who may not be paying close attention to themselves.
Motorists also have a responsibility to know the me aning of
the fla shing light systems o n school buses. The yellow and re(l
lights are designed to help ensure the safety of both motorists
and children.
Yellow flashing lights indicate the bus is preparing to stop.
Motorists should slow down and prepare to stop.
Red flashing· fights and the ex tended stop ann on a sc hool
bus indicate the bus has stopped for children to get on or off
' the bus, Motorists approaching from either direction are
required to stop at least I 0 feet from a stopped schoor bus
until the bus re sumes motion, If a school bu s is stopped on a
road divided into four or more lanes, onl y traffic'driving in the
sa me direction as the bus must stop.
Parents have an additional responsibility to school bus safety. Children should be taught about sc hool bus safety before
the;~: step into a school bus for the first time, and this responsibtlity lies with the parenL It is important for children to learn
how to stay safe both in and outside the school bus. Statistics
show students are actually at a g1eater risk standing outside a
bus than riding in a bus . .
Students sti'ould arrive at the bus stop at least five minutes
before the bus is sc heduled to pick them up. While wmting for
the bus, they should stand at leas.t three, gian t steps away from
the curb, and line up away from the street Before stepping
into the bus, children should wait until the bus stops, the door
opens, and the driver gives permission,
Parents should encourage their children to sit quietly in their
seat and follow the driver 's instructions on school bus safety.
When exiting the bus, care should be taken to check that
clothing with draw strings and book bags with straps do not
get caught in the ·handrails or doors, Additionally, students
should never go back for anything left on the bus, and never
bend down near or under the bus to pick something up that has
fallen. Passengers should always walk in front of the bus
when the must cross a street to get on or off the bus. Children
should walk far enough in from of the bus that they can see
the bus driver. Children should never walk behind a ·school
bus, and stay at least three feet away from the side of the bus.
With the cooperation of motorists, parents, and children, we
can all help make the bus ride to and from school as safe as
possible for our children, and make this a safe school year
·
throughout Ohio.

U. DickGrau
Post commander
.Ohio State Highway .Patrol, Galliu-Meigs Post

The Daily Sentinel
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(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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fleporter: Brian Roee, ~Kt t4
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Obituaries

•

'Swift' versus 'smear' leaves race even
Neither the Swift boat
attack on Democrat John
Kerry nor Kerry' s classic
counter-punch·
against
President Bush -- , crying
"Smear'" -- hits decisively .
altered the presidential race ,
So it's time to ge t back to
serious busine&lt;&gt;s -- to wit, the
future of .America.
A£cording , 10 a raft of
recent polls. Bush goes into
his convention with a slight
nationa l edge over Kerry.
but a slight deficit in battleground states -- and a
requirement that he show the
country why he deserves to
be re-elected.
Bu&lt;&gt;h political guru Karl
Rove-told Eox N~ws . that
Bush will unveil a "positive
&lt;md bold and optimistic
agenda for his second term"
at the convention, but the
White House is maintain ing
iron discipline in not reveal ing details.
Those details had better be
good. Three of the polls-- by
the Los Angeles Times.
Battleground and NBC/Wall
Street Journal -- all indicated
that only a minority of voters
(46 percent or 47 percent)
thinks Bush de serves to be
returned to office, while 49
percent or 50 percent say he
does not.
The LA Times poll found
that, by 54 percent to 43 percent, voters want a "new
direction for the country."
But Kerry picked up suppQrt
from just four-fifths of such
voters.
Bush's average approval
rating in the five big polls
"'as . 50 percent , slightly
below the rating for August
of recent presidents who've
bee n re-elected, but well
above the ratings for those
who've been defeated.
A Fox News state-by-state
tally shows that Bush goes
inlo hi s convention trailing
Kerry in electoral voles,
258-280, But that margin is
narrower than it was the previous week, when Kerry led
in states with 320 electoral
votes.

Julia E~ale

that Kerry got out of that he's managi ng Kerry
Vietnam as fast as he could strategy, but the record cer- '
to pursue a political . career tainly indica,tes that Kerry
back in the United States has
been
forecasting ·
based on opposition to the '"smears" by Bush since as "
war.
far back as January.
·
The bottom line is that he
In fact, the invective .
Kondarcke
deserves credit for putting hurled at Bush by Democrats :.
himself in harm's way, has been harsher than that .
whi ch many of his genera- thrown at Kerry. Former
tion didn't -- including Bush Vice President AI Gore said ,
The attack against Kerry
--but ·that he's wih;lly over- that Bush "betrayed the .·
by Swift Boa! Veterans for played four months of com- country" by invading Iraq,
Truth surely was a net nega- bat service 35 years agQ into Democratic
National' :
tive for Kerry, though proba- a qualification for being Committee Chairman Terry.
bly not a huge one, because commander in chi ef today.
McAulifl '1as ca lled Bush a ·
it raised questions about one
Under attack fro m eneniy "draft-d&lt; : r."
of the certainties about him Swift boat vets, the Kerry
Ardent "~ rry backer . ~en, ,
- his war-hero status -- and
campaign responded belat- Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
because it diverted from hi s
edly but vociferously, ·resort- charged that Bush planned ,
efforts to focus on health
ing to its classic. plo¥-of _the lraq. war to help. DOl'.. ~_
care and the economy.
declaring that Kerry was candidates in 2002 . Kerry
' The Ga llup poll showed
said
that
Bush 1
being "smeared" by Bush. has
that ()3 percent of voters
. As Kerry pollster ·Mark "deceived" the co untry to get
believe th at Kerry is defi- Mellmn.n told USA Today, it;t.to , the war. His wife,
mtely or probably telling the
"the 1 its I majority of Teresa Hein z Kerry, has said
truth about his military .serAmericans understand that . that Bush is "unpatriotic."
vice -- certainl y a decline
By contrast, the Bushthi s smear against John
from what the public would
Kerry is in fact untrue. They Cheney campaign charges that "
have
said
after
the
hold President Bush respon- Kerry would raise taxes on
Democratic
co nyention,
sible for it."
everyone (a n exaggeration )
where his heroism was made
But no evidence of coordi- and that his national sec urity
out to be a principal qualifi ~ ·
nation between the Veterans' votes disqualify him to be
cation for the presidency,
gro up and the Bush cam- commander in cllief are tame
The Fox News/Opinion .
paign has emerged. The fact stuff, given that Kerry has
Dynamics poll showed that
th at the Swift boat vets' 527 repeatedly referred to a.
only 36 percent of voters
committee shared funders, a "Republican Attack Machine."
think Kerry was completely
lawyer and volunteer veterThe press has largely •
honest in describing his
ans adviser with the Bush bought . into the notion that
Vietnam service, while 35
campaign in no way the two campaigns have .
percent said he exaggerated
amounts to illegal coordina- been at least equally nega- :
hi s exploits and 13 percent
tion, any more than tight ties tive . But voters believe that
·
said he lied about it.
between Democratic opera- Bush has been more so. In
The
University
of
tives and Bush-bashing 527s the Gallup poll voters said,
Pennsylvania's Annenberg
MoveOn.org and .America by 48 percent to 42 percent,
Center found that, among
Coming Together prove that Bush has been unfair to ,
veterans. Kerry's favorable coordination on that side.
Kerry, while the respondents.
unfavorable ratings . hav e
A Republican pollster said, 43 percent to 50 perchanged o nly marginally
who's
worked
against cent, that Kerry had been
since the Democratic conMellman in past campaigns unfair to Bush.
vention, from 43 percent to
said, "Thi s is classic
Bush and Kerry have
4 1 percent positive to 42'
Mellman strate gy He sets up every right to criticize each ·
percent to 44 percent negaa predicate that anything · others' record and program.
. tive, but also found that vetnegative said about his can- There'll be a lot of criticism .
erans favor Bush as comdictate is a 'smear,' then of Kerry in New York . But ·;
mander in ~hief, 56 percent
screams it when you chal- Bush's main task is to ·make _·
to 38 percent.
lenge his candidate's record. a positive case for himself-- .:
On tile merits, l don't.think
And it gives his campaign preferably, with lots of sub- .
the Swift boat veterans have
permission to say anything stance.
come anywhere near proving
ne gati.ve he wants about
(Morton Kondracke is .:
the case thac Kerry didn 't
you,"
executive editor of Roll Call, "'
deserve hi s Vietnam medal s,
Mellman told me "it's a the newspaper of Capi tol '~
althoug h they do sugges t
gross exaggeration" to say Hill)

·MOrton

Jn the spirit ofJ Edgar Hoover

"

•

Director Robert Mueller's
"new" FBI is lapsing into J.
Edgar Hoover's formerly
discredited doctrine thlll certain. types of nonvi 'o lent,
antt-govewment protestors
• must not only be surveilled
and their groups infiltrated,
but also visited by FBI
age nts to chill their speech
and other activities. In hearing about these intimidating
FBI visits around the country
before
both
the
Democratic and Republic
conventions, I'm reminded
;tbout government intimidation during the dissenting
1950s and counterculture
1960s.
Back then, FBI agents
came to see me, demanding
the sources for my criticisms
of ihe bureau. Knowing my
First Amendment rights, I
politely sent them away.
They did not return.
These days, however, FBI
agents before both last July's
Democratic and this week's
Republican conventions -with particular zeal, as
described in an Aug. 19
Denver Post editorial -"have gone about their mission aggressively, with little
regard for basic rights and
without evidence that the
people they are trying to dissuade are actually intending
any criminal activity:•
The editorial cites "a 21year-old intern with the
American Friends Service
Committee, a Quaker public
service group that once won
the Nobel Peace Prize, says ·
she and her friends were
questioned even though they
(had) no plans to go to New
York."
And an Aug, 1-9 report in
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
tell s of "three men from

.

Nat
Hentoff

Kirksville, Mo. , (who) were
so unnerved at bei.ng followed by agents and called
to a grand jury here last
month that they abandoned
plans for peaceful protest
outside the Democratic
Natibnal Convention in
Boston:· They now refuse to
have their identities di sclosed,
Denise Lieberman , the
American Civil Libertie s
Union legal director for eastern Missouri, told me that
the suopoenas required the.
three men to appear on July
29 -- the vecy date they had
planned to be in Boston
before they decided not to
go.
After they appeared before
the grand jury for about five
minutes, no charges were
filed against them.
The FBI, says Lieberman ,
J:tad asked· them if they had
knowledge of anyone planning "criminally disorderly
conduct" at the Democratic
or Republican convention,
presidential debates or other
places, "The, fact that they
did not answer the questions," Lieberman ·told the
Post-Di~patch, "may have
raised the red flag and.gotten
them the subpoena."
Because of the appallingly
low level of educational'
instruction about the history ·
of our Constitution, lncludin'g the Bill of Rights, in

school systems around the
country, it's likely that these
protestors didn't know they
had a First Amendment right
not to answer the agents'
questions before they were
subpoenaed,
Now, adds Lieberman,
,"they're quite shaken and
territied by the experience.
They're concerned if they
speak out, they're going to
be targeted further. "
Part of that "experience"
· included being conspicuously followed by four FBI cars
for five days, . including
when they went to the grocery store and the movies ,
Moreover, the homeowners
of the house they stayed at in
St. Louis were followed to
work by the FBI. One of
them -- pulled aside by a
supervisor -- felt his job was
on the line. What a chilling
touch of Castro's Havana
right in St. Louis,
As similar reports of
intimidating FBI tracking in
other cities kept arriving,
Cassandra Chandler, assistant director of the FBI's
Office of Public Affairs in
Washingtol), said: "The FBI
is not monitoring groups or
interviewing
ind.i viduals
unless we rece hce intelligence that such individuals
or groups may be planning
violent and disruptive criminal activity or have knowledge of such activity."
The key worrisome phrase
for civil libertarians are
"may be planning." · As
ACLU execmive director
Anthony Romero told the
Aug. 18 New York Times:
"It's not enough for the FBI
to say that there's the potential for crimina l activity,
That's not the legal threshold, and if th ai were really

(the legal threshold), tht~y;;
could investigate anybo~y." ,
In • Kansa s City, the"
Associated Press reported oni'
Aug. 19, 21-year-old Nate .:
Hoffman, a University of '
Missouri-Kansas City stu-''
dent, was approached by FBI
agents at .a coffeehouse."
They asked whether he or,
anybody he knew planned to~:
eng,a ge in violence at the··.
Democratic conventions in ·
Boston. Hoffman knew ·
enough
about
the ·,
Constitution to refuse to '
answer without a lawyer.
'
"They told me," says1,
Hoffman, "that in their. expe- ~
rience that when somebody
didn't want to talk to them
that meant they probably had
something to hide. "
Speaking for a growing'
number
of
young'
Americans, Hoffman notes: '.
"You always hear that when ,
you become politically ;
acll ve, you re put on some., ,
list. But it doesn't become ,
real until you get a visit from ,
the FBI."
•
During the pre si dential ~
debates, will an'yone ask the
candijlates about these visits
commemorating the reign
J. Edgar Hoover? On Aug."
20, John Ashcroft, not surprisingly, told The New York• .
Times, that any "suggestions'
that the interview s were
aimed at stifling protests
were an 'outrageous distor- '
lion."'
Would
· James•:
Madison agree?
(Nat Hentoffis a national-;
/y renowned authority on the
First Ame11dment and the
Bill of Rights and author of
several books, including
"The War on the Bill o{
Rights pnd the Gathering'·
Resistance" (Seven Stories'.
Press, 2003 ).
•

t

, ..

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

or.

I

II

Pomeroy. She was also a member of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church and th~ Red Hat Society.
Surviving are two sons, Dave (Diana) Clark of Cheyenne,
W.Va., and Steve (Belinda) Clark of Pomeroy, Ohio. She is
also survived by five grandchildren: Serena (Chris) Tyner,
Jerrod, Joshua, and Kait,lin Clark, and Lind ~ey Peem; and two
great-grandchildren, Christian and Collen Tyner.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a son,
John Mtchael Clark.
No services are planned at this time, Memorial contributions may be made to th~ Pomeroy United Methodist Church,

Robert Marcinko

RACINE - Julia M. Engle, 91, Racine, passed away on
Sunday, Aug. 28, 2004.
She was born on July 20, 1913, in Knoxville, Tenn., daughter of the late Fillmore and Emma Clouse. She was a home:
maker .and attended tl\e River Valley Apostolic Worship
Center m Mtddlepo·rt.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husbands, Lloyd Nelson and Woodrow E. Engle, Sr.; three sons:
Woodrow E. Engle, Jr., Fred Engle and Charles Nelson; two
granddaughters./ Traci and Suzie Cooper; a grandson, Jeff
Nelson; a great grandson, Tyler Willis ; three brothers: Bill,
.
Leo and Millard Clouse; and three sisters: Mary Phillips,
Maggie Nelson and Bessie Harvey.
MIDDLEPORT - Helen Louise Hood, 78, Middleport,
Surviving are two sons, Ri chard (Patty) Nelson of South passed away on Sunday, .August 29, 2004, her re sidence.
Poittt and Jackie (Chery l) Nelson of Proctorville; three daugh She was born on Aug. 10, 1926, in Meigs County, daughter
ters: Dorothy (Kermit) Taylor of Chesapeake, Arlene "Peggy"
of the late Arlie Everett Erwin and Maude· Wears Erwin. She
(Darrell) Krautter of Pomeroy and Marilyn (Gary) Cooper of
Portland ; 26 grandchildren ; 33 great grandchildren ; a great- was employed as a cook at the Middleport Elementary School
great granddaug hter; and a daughter-in-law, Debbie Engle of and the Meigs Junior High SchooL
She was a member of the Middleport Church of ChtjsL
Middleport,
,
In
addition toner parents, she was preceded by her husband,
Services will oe he ld at I p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2004,
at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with Kermit Taylor Melvin Tho mas "Peck" Hood in 1986; her grandson, Kirk
Tho mas Durst; her:....brother,- Chester Erwii&gt;; and .her sister,
offieiating , Burial will follow at Beech Grove Cemetery;-- Garnet
Brown.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m, on Monday a~ the Cuneral
She is s urvived by her children: Cheryl (Vic) Durst,
home, and from 9 a.m. to the time of service on Tuesday.
Richmond,
Va., Danny (Rachel) Hood, Pomeroy, and Tim
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospice,
(Heidi)
Hood,
Pomeroy; grandchildren: Scott Durst, Jason
Meigs Bmnch, I 00 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-1563.
Onlne condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- Durst, Kelly Durst, Heather Hood, David Johnson, Benjamin
Hood, Bradley. Hood, Cassidy Hood, Taylor Hood, Trae
homes.com.
(T!te Daily Selltinel apologizes for the omission of the obit- Hood, and Maci Hood; great grandsons: Robert Thomas Durst
and Zach Paley; her brothers, Dexter Erwin, New Haven,
uary of Julia Engle in Monday 's edition.)
W.Va., and John Erwin, Middleport; her sisters, Maxine
(Richard) Brown, Chillicothe, Irene Hendricks, Pomeroy, and
Julia David son, Grov.e City; her special friends, Diane and
Herman Lynch, Middleport; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, September 2,
POMEROY - Lena Evelyn Clark, 74, Pomeroy, joined her
Father in heaven on Saturday, Aug , 28, 2004 after a brief illness. 2004, at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport. Officiating will
She was born on Jan. 9, 'I 930 in Pomeroy. She was the be AI Hartson. Burial will follow in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday,
daughter of the late Thomas S. Cook and Wiona Hudnall Cook
She was retired from the Meigs County Board of Elections Sept. I. at the funeral home.
and was the former re sident manager of The Maples in
Online condolences may be sent to wwwJisherfuneralhomes.com

REEDSVILLE - Robert Sidney Marcinko, 83, of Joppa
Road, Reedsville, passed away on Saturday, Aug. 28, 2004, at
St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, W Va" following an
extended illness.
'·
He was born on June 9, 1921, in Long Bottom, son of the
late Charles P. and Virgie Bailey Marcinko. He was a former
school bus driver, carpenter and township trustee . ,
He was a member of Sacred Heart Church. in Pomeroy, and
was a membef of Carpenters Local 650.
His wife, Mary Maxine Eskew Marcinko, survives; as do ,
four daughters and sons-i n-law: Rose M. Lehner of Lancaster,
Theresa and Phil Lashley of Mary svill ~. Roxie and Dan
Marcinko of Reedsville, and Marie and Mike .Johnson of
Pomeroy ; eight sons and daughters-in-law: Robert and Nancy
Marcinko of Reedsville, Stephen and Tammy Marcinko of
Tuppers Plains, Michael and Theresa Marcinko of Reed sville,
Dennis and Kim Marci nko of Reedsville, Dav id and Kay
Marcinko of Bellfontai ne, Eric and Millie Marcinko of
Tuppers Plains. Jeffrey Marcinko of Tuppers Plains, and
Kevin and Belinda Marcinko of Tuppers Plains; a sister and
brother-in-law, Q~orgia nna and Donald 'l'russell of Mt.
Vernon; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Thomas 3'11d Patricia
Marcinko of Reed sville and Manning and Gloria Marci 0 ko of
Reedsville; 37 grandchildren and 14 great grandchildren; and
many nieces and nephews who loved him greatly,
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two sisters,
Rose Jane Marcinko; three brothers: Charle s C. Marcinko,
Bernard Marcinko and Eugene Marcinko;· a son-in-law, Mike
Lehner; and an infant daughter, Loretta Marcinko,
Funeral mass will be conducted at 11 a.m. on Wednesday,
Sept. I, 2004, at Sacred Herut.Church in Pomeroy with .Rev.
Fr. David Huffman officiating. Burial·will follow at Our Lady
of Loretto Cemetery in Long Bottom.
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy, where a Rosary service will ·
be conducted at 7:30 p,m.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart
Association .

Court neYIS

Competition for blue
· ribbons keen in
c.anning division

Helen Hood ,

Lena Evelyn Clark ·

POMEROY
Meig s animals; Troy G. Edwards,
County Court Judge Steven Cheshire, $30 and costs,
L. Story recently processed speeding.
Paul H. Elmore, Pomeroy,
the following cases:
Willie
M.
Adams, $20 fine and costs, seat belt;
Hazlehurst, Miss. , $30 and R.D. Ely, West Chester, Ohio,
costs, speeding ; Linda L. $30 and costs, speeding;
Adkins, Pomeroy, $30 and Todd S. Fields, Ravenna,
costs, speeding; Joseph B. Ohio, $30 and costs, seat
Agusta, Chapel Hill, N.C. belt ; Pattie A. Forbes,
, $30 and costs, speeding; Lancaster; Ohio, $35 and
Alice
W.
Allbaugh, costs, seat belt; Deena R.
Nelsonville, $35 and costs, Futris, Worthington, Ohio,
passenger seat belt; Jerry S. $30 and costs, speeding;
Allbaugh, Nelsonville, $45 Delton L. Garnes, Wellston,
· and ·costs, seat belt; Walter D. Ohio, $30 and costs, speedArnold, Pomeroy, lO days ing; Richard r Gilmore ,
jail (all suspended) and pro- Pomeroy, 180 days in jall
bation, no operator's license ; (five suspended), probation,
Michael D. Ball, Racine, $30 ·$200, driving under suspenand costs, speeding; Richard sion and di splay plates/valid
L. Barnett, Winfield, W.Va .. sticker; Robert J. Glas s,
$50 and costs, speeding; Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat
James
M.
Hall,
Chad L. Bean, Albany, Ohio, belt;
$30 and costs, speeding; Roseville, Ohio, $30 and
Daniel r Blair, Grafton, costs, seat belt; Jeremy Hall,
Ohio, $20 fine and costs, fail- Wheelersburg, Ohio, $30 and
we to control; Judith A. costs, seat belt; Joyce M.
Bolin, Rutland , $30 and Hall , Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
costs, seat belt; Timothy D. seat belt; Jetfrey A. Hamon,
Brinager, Racine , $30 and Given, W, Va., $30 and costs,
costs, seat belt; Dayle A. seat belt ; Jennifer M .
Brooks , Pomeroy, 18p days Harrison, Cheshire, $20 and
in jail (150 suspended) and costs. seat belt; Larry W.
probation , driving under sus- Hichik, Belpre, Ohio, $30
pension
and
display and costs, speeding; Jerry L.
Howard, Longwoo~ . Fla.,
plates/valid sticker.
Chris A, Brown, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speeding.
Harvie
G.
Howson ,
$42, speeding; Christopher S.
Burri s, Pomeroy, $200, 60 Columbus, $30 and ·costs,
days in jail (55 suspended), speeding ; Lee M. Hulme ,
probation, driving under sus- Kirkersville, Ohio, $25 and
pension and no motorcycle costs, speeding; Michael
endorsement; Mi !ton Carnes, · Jarrell, Logan, Ohio, $30 and
Charleston, W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Ralph D .
costs, , speeding; Robin B. Jeffrey, Little Hocking, Ohio,
Chandler, Nashville, Tenn., $30 and costs, seat belt;
$30 and costs, speeding; Paul Ronald J. Jusrus, Vinton,
N. Chapman, Pomeroy, three Ohio, $30 and costs, speeddays in jail, probation, $I 30 ing ; Abby E. Kyle, Vienna,
and costs, reckless operation W.Va., $50 and costs, speedand seat belt; Alex Cho, ing; Danny R. Laird, London,
Darien, Ill., $50 and costs, Ohio, $30 and costs, speedLantz,
speeding; Debra R. Cochran, ing; Steven l
Middleport, $30 and costs, Pomeroy, $20 and costs, fail seat belt; Jerry L. Coleman, ure to cootrol; Denise A .
Rutland, · $30 and costs, Laughery, Reeds ville, $30
speeding ; John r Cortazzo, and costs, speeding; Danny
Harrison City, Pa,, $30 and Y. Lee, Lancaster, Ohio, $50
costs, speeding; Karen S. and costs, speeding; Randy
Dillon, Poca, W. Va,, $20 and D. Lee, Clarksville, Tenn.,
costs, assured clear di stance; $25 and costs, speeding;
Steve
B.
Donaldso n, Jimmy L. Lewis, Loudon ,
Middleport, $30, seat belt: Ky., $30 and costs, speeding;
Lucas,
M.
Mildred Dummitt, Long Angela
, Bottom, no fine, cruelty to Middleport, three days in jail

(all suspended), probation ,
$25 and costs, passing bad
M.
checks;
Andrew
McClelland, Byesv ille, Ohio,
$30 and costs, seat belt:
McGlaughlin,
Adam 1.
Stewart, Ohio, $30 and costs,
seat' belt.
Ernest
M.
McGrath ,
Guysville, Ohio, lO days in
jail (seven suspended), probation , $100 and costs. reckle ss operation and· lighted
light s required; Erma J.
Me Yay, Reedsville, $20 and
costs, failure to control; Darla
1. Moline, Waterford, Ohio,
$30 and costs, s'peeding;
Lenora M: Moore, Pomeroy,
costs only, speeding; Ryan P,
Nelson, Reed sville, 30 days
in jail (all suspended), probation , $300 and ~os ts . di sorderly co ndu ct, no operator's
license and use of unauthorized plates; Billy K
O' Brien, Shade, Ohio, $25,
speeding;
Howard
B.
Offenberger,
Waterford ,
Ohio, $30 and costs, seat
helt; Richard M. Ogle,
Pittsburgh , P~ .. $30 and
. costs, speeding ; Lewis C.
Olagg, Gallipolis, $20 and
costs, equipment misuse;
Edna M. Ord, $30 and costs,
speeding; James L Pegram,
Baltimore, Ohio,' $30 costs
and speeding.
M,
Persons,
David
Middleport, 450 day s in jail
(390 suspended), probation,
$700 and costs, vehicular
assault, possession of criminal tools, driving under suspensiop, reckless operation;
Sharon E. P\ckens, Ripley,
W.Va ., no !me, speeding;
E.
Qualls,
Trenton
Middleport, ISO days in jail
(all suspended), probation,
domestic violence; Mary R.
Ram sey, Lansing, Mich., $30
fille and costs, speeding;
Mukesh Rangwam , New
.Albany, Ohio, $30 and costs,
speeding; James G. ·Rhode s,
Athens, Tenn ., I 0 days in jail
(seven suspended) ,- probation, $200 and costs, driving
under suspe nsiOn; Leslie R,
Richard . .Pomeroy, $20 and
cos ts, assured clear distance;
Jennifer J. Riffle, Raci ne , $20
and costs, assured clear distance ;.. Ryan
Rockhold,

Reedsville, 30 days in jail (27
suspended), probation, $300
and costs, no operator's
license, reckless operation;
Amber D. Roderu s, Racine,
$30 and costs, speeding ;
Kri stopher C. Sandlin, South
Charleston, W Va,, $30 and
costs, speeding; Adam K.
Scott, Cheshire, costs only,
speeding ; Jeffrey T. Shears,
Sandyville, WVa ., $30 and
costs, seat belt; Charles L.
Smith, Pomeroy, $30 and
costs, seat belt ; Donald P.
Smith, Sandyville, WVa. ,
$20 and costs, traffic control
deviation/sign s; Matthew D.
Smith, Pomeroy, no fine, traffic control deviation/signs;
Ralph R. Snider, Middleport,
$50 and costs, speeding.
John S. Stanley, Pomeroy,
$30 and costs, speeding;
Michael
S.
Stewart,
Cheshire, $30 and costs,
speeding; Daniel R. Stone,
Middleport, 240 days in jail
(all suspended), probation,
$200 and $1,506 in costs,
drug abuse, use/possess ion of
drug paraphernalia and
obstructing official business; ,
Joshua
M,
Sturgeon,
Pomeroy, three day s in jail
(two suspended), , probation,
$100 and costs, underage
consumption and disorderly
conduct; Donald L Tate,
Charleston, W.Va. , $50 and
costs, speeding; Gina R:
Taylor, Pomeroy, $45 and
costs, sea t belt ; Susan J.
Taylor, Athens, $30 and
LA.
costs,
speeding;
Thornton, Westerville, Ohio,
$50 and costs, speeding;
Kelli l Trout, Albany, Ohio,
60 days in jail (55 suspeoded) , probation, $100 fine .and
costs, fraudulent vehicle
identification and falsification;
Bruce
J. Ward,
Columbus , $50 and costs,
speeding; Patrick S. West,
South Bend, Ind., $30 and
costs, speeding; Everett r
Wil so n, Bidwell, Ohio, $30
and costs, seat be)t ; Jacob A.
Wilson. Pomeroy. $45 and
costs, seat belt ; John R Zide,
Williamstow n. W.Va., $30
and costs, speeding; Dustin
M. Zubiriski, Holland, Mich.,
$50 tine and costs, speeding.
'

Local Briefs

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel '"

Office closed

~'G_Pface: f(J ~ f?

POMEROY - Meigs County. Health Department will be
, closed on Sept 6 for Labor Day and will resume normal business hours at 8 a.m. on Sept. 7.
,

In rehab center
POME RY - Former resident Mildred Jacobs who has
resided,for the past several years in Florida, is now confined
to the Pal m Garde n of Clearwater Rehabilitaton Center,
·3480 McMullen Booth Road, Room 102, Clearwater, Fla.
33761. Cards may be se nt to her there. Mrs, Jacob suffered
a cerebral contusio n from a fall at her home. She expects to
remain at the Center for the rapy for about two weeks,

,

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - With nearly
300 jars of everything from
preserves to pickles to pizza
sauce entered in the canning
division at the Meigs County
fair. tpe comP.etition to take
home a blue nbbon was keen,
to say the IeasL
Jars line shelf after shelf
and fairgoers looking over the
wares move along .deciding
which looks the best to them
- sometimes even diagreeing with where the judges
placed the blue ribbon.
But there is criteria to the
judging, said Peggy Cnme, who
exhibitS in numerous competitions at the fair every year and
seems to know abOut what's to
be considered and what's not in
making decisions on placing
ribbon s. For instance in canning
if jars are not tull to the top, that
takes away points, She assures
that the judges do look at every
entry in every competitive categoT'1:·,,,
,
""'ng ' ' titrsts " w1'th thetr
homemade preserves this year
were Pat Bissell , 'Rutland,
peach; Dale Hoffman, Pomeroy,
cherry; Merrilee Bryant, Long
Bottom, stmwberry.
Blue ribbon winners in
jams were Maxine Dyer,
Bidwell, black raspberry and
grape : 'Pat Bissell , Rutland,
strawberry; Teresa Wilson,
Racine, blackberry; Steve
Barnett, Pomeroy, blueberry,
Top awards in jellies and
spreads ' went to Dale
Hoffman, apple and cherr);;
Barbara Mora, Pomeroy,
blackberry; and Kimberly
Hupp, Pomeroy, grape; and

Graded
from Page A1
Meigs, 57 5; Southern, 732,
Writing:
Easiern.
81.7;
Meigs, 56.7; Southern, 85.7.
Math: Eastern. 5 1J: Meigs.
42,5;
Southern .
51.8.
Science:
Eastern,
533;

SPrinll Base Chairs

Clearance Sale

sggoo

T/rMg~ f(J ;Jp(J"
entertainment fn .the 'M·State

Meig.s, 36.6; Southern. 58.9.
Citizenship: Eastern, 35.0;
Meigs, 32.8; Southern, 37.tL
., Third-grade. reading:
Eastern. 93.2; Meigs, 73. 7;
Southern, 75.6.
The districts also received
marks for attendance:
Eastern, 94.6 percent ;
Meigs. 913: Southern, 94.8.

low Back or Hlllh Back

.,

Your glaide to weekend

in spreads Opal Dyer,
Bidwell, appl e butter.
In pickles and relishes, the
first place winne'rs Maxine
Rose , Racine, end of garden;
Howard Ervin, Racine, sweet
pepper,
Dale
Hoffman,
cucumber; and in sauces and
catsup. Linda Rathburn,
tomato catsup; Barbara Mora,
chili sauce; Darlene Hayes,
Pomeroy, spaghetti sauce and
barbecue sauce; Howard
Ervin, pizza sauce; s ·usie
Mash, Pomeroy, taco sauce.
In juices the winners were
Darlene Hayes, grape and
tomato juice; Lulu Toban,
blackberry juice, and Tracy
Beaver, Pomeroy, V-Sjuice .
Blue ribbon s in the canned
fruit di vision were Dale
Hoffman, applesauce and
pears, cherries and blueberries;
Janis Macomber, Langsville,
applie pie filling and sliced
peaches; Linda Rathburn,
Pomeroy, blackberries; Teresa
Wilson, peaches in halves.
Taking first places in the
judging in canned vegetables
were
Darlene
Hayes,
Pomeroy, whole beets, sliced
beets, carrots; Cyndi King,
Pomeroy, snap bean s and
shell beans; Howard Ervin,
cabbage and qurutered tomatoe s, hot pepper rings, and
sauerkraut ; Tara
Rose,
Racine, com; .Angie Brickles,
Shade, whole white potatoes;
Dale Hoffman, whole tomatoes, vegetable soup, yellow
wax beans ; Linda Rathburn,
Pomeroy, green tomatoes.
Carmed meat winners were
Oipal Dyer, Bidwell, pork and
beef; Tracy Beaver, Pomeroy,
deer; and Susie Mash, Pomeroy,
wiener and hot sauce.

z

•

Hours: t:lo-s:OO Moll • Sat

Pomeroy, OH

�...

Page A~

OHIO.

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,August31,2004
'

INSIDE

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

,

Redwomen netters begin at-1-3, Page B2
Browns lose two players for season, Page 86

0

-PERSPECTIVE: Education challenges

.:

..

.ahead with schools' scores up, funding down
For the first time, students
It w·ould be ideal if taxpayel'!i
taking new achievement tests would fund all school requests,
are studying. material based since heavy local support is the
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
on state standards that are only system available, said .
COLUMBUS - Educators directly connected to the tests. state Sen. C.J. Prentiss, a
got mixed messages about Such tests were required Cleveland Democrat.
school success this month under the 2002 federal No
The problem is that conli!J;
with both record-high test . Child Left J?ehind Act, but ued failures at the ballot w1l)
scores and widespread rejec- Ohio lawmakers were also add up to •reduced services,
tion of districts' funding pushing for such changes. which could affect test scores,
requests.
before that law took effect.
she said.
Last week. the state report- . The debate over .the changes
"Unfortunately; it's going to
e&lt;J that several school districts . followed a parallel track in be up to the local districts to
lifted themselve s out of acad- Ohio with an ongoing struggle sell, 'We may be successful
ernie trouble and reading over changing the way schools now, but when we do all th~se
scores rose statewide.
are funded. The Ohio Supreme drastic, draconian cutbacks;
Fourth-graders also showed · .Court ruled three times that the there's no way we can maintain
improvement if) math, reading state system is uncol)stitutien- our progress,"' Prentiss said.
and science, while sixth-gmders al because it relies too. much
"It's going to be an onus on
increased their math passage on local property taxes, creal, the schools to connect tM
rate by 13 rerceQ~age points.
ing inequities between rich dots, and it's really too bad."·
-.- ¥et ut the beginning of the · and poor districts.
.Senate-Edueation Ghainnan- month, voters rejected 75 perLawmakers poured · record Robert Gardner sees it differy
cent of the I 03 school issues amounts of new money into ently, arguing the state has
before them, the highest num- scfiools as a result of those given more money to schools
ber of such requests in two court decisions but districts than ever before. Districts
decades and the highest fail- have continued to s,truggle as · should use the test results to
ure rate ·in more than five . costs outstripped revenue.
make their case, he said.
·
years for an August election.
The success schools had on . "What I've heard for yearS
"My concern is that our the report cards may make it' and years is that people wan~ IQ
schools have the. resources difficult at the ballot, said . make sure their dollars are bemg
they need . to sustain these University of Akron political spent prudently;: said Gardner,
gains," state schools superin- ·scientist Stephen Brooks.
a Madison Republican.
tendent Susan Tave Zelman
"One of the . cries of the . The test scores "are things
said when the discrepancy opponents of fully funding they can tout, whereas before
was pointed out to her.
education is that it's not about all they had was the warm and .
The report card data retlects a money, it's about perfor- !'uzzy, 'we're doing a real good
new way of teaching and evalu. mance, and so m some ways JOb of educatmg your chi I·
ating students based on changes the success supports that dren,"' he said. "But there was
to state and federal law.
view," Brooks said.
no way of validating that."
ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

NewsChannel

Weather forecast
Thesday, August 31
Morning (7 a.m., Noon)
Temperatures will drop
. from 59 early this morning to
59 by 8:00am then rise back
up to 67 late morning. Skies
will be sunny with 5 to I 0
MPH winds from the. north
turning from the northeast as
· the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will stay near
. 72 with today's high of 74
occurring · around 4:00pm .
Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from the north-

east.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will drop
from 71 early thi s evening to
55. Skies will be clear with 5
·MPH winds from the east
turning from the southeast as
the evening progresses.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will .hold
steady around 55 with tocfay's
low of 54 occurring around
I :OOam. Skies will be clear
with 5 .MPH winds from the
southeast turning from the
northeast as the overnight

Residents want to restore historic canal in disrepair

progresses.

DELPHOS
(AP)
Overgrown with weeds and littered with trash, the Miami and
Erie Canal is a sad ' sight •in this
northwest ·Ohio town.
A group of residents are
hoping .to restore the waterway
that once was a superhighway
for cargo moving between
Toledo and Cincinnati.
. "It is our oldest asset here in
Delphos, and I just want to give
it the attention it deserves," said
Sue Lang, head of the town's
canal restoration committee.
Members of the group think
the canal could become a tourist
attraction and offer recreational
opportunities for residents.
.
Other communities such as .
In February, the Cincinnati Spencerville, Piqua and Grand
archdiocese reported that it Rapids have restored portions
knew of 188 reported of the canal and offer aurae-.
. instances of abuse by 49 of lions including canal boat rides .
its priests between 1950 and
It will take $3 million to $5
last year; The archdiocese million to restore the two-mile
released its findings as part of stretch of canal that runs through
a report from Catholic bish- Delphos, Lang estimated.
ops nationwide.
That would. allow for dredging
the
canal, clearing away trash,
(AP Photo/The Blade,·J••·emy W'ad11worthJ
.· Christy Miller. who says a
priest sexually abused her in trees, and brush and rebuilding Suo;l Lang and Lou Hohman stand on ·a lock over a sectiOIJ
the 1980s while she was a and reinforcing the banks. It · of the Miami and Erie Canal in Delphos. Agroup of resident~
high school student, said also would pay for computerized is hoping to restore the waterway !hat once was a &amp;uperMonday she believes that as hydraulic control equipment at highway for cargo moving between Toledo and Cincil'(nati,
many as several hundred other two locks for water retention Some think the canal could become a tourist attraction ·an~
victims haven't come forward and tlood control. .
offer recreatiDnal opportunities for residents.
publicly. I\1any are unable to
overcome the psychological
trauma of abuse to go public,
said Miller, leader of a southwest Ohio chapter of the sup'
port group Survivors ~etwork
ACI- 32.07
of those Abused by Priests.
Gannett - 84.51
Rocky Boots - 19.06
AEP32.37
General Electric - 32.57
AD Shell - 50.18
Miller said she is pursuing
Akzo
33.53
·
GKNLY
4.15
.
Rockwell
- . 38.92
her lawsuit against the archAshland
Inc.
50.36
Harley
Davidson
61
.05
Sears
38.74
diocese in an effort to prevent BBT- 39.81
JPMorgan
(formerly
sank
SBC
·
25.80
future sex abuse by clergy. BLI - 12.40
One) - 39.10
AT&amp;T- 14.60
She said she kn,Ows of II peo- Sob Evans - 24.97
USB- 29.13
Kmart
76.06
ple who are dropping law~uits BorgWarner - 45.02
Kroger ,16.58
.•
Wendy's ~ 34.44
· m order to apply to the fund . City Holding -. 31.27
· Ltd- 20.01
Wal-Mart - 53.20
"Whether people seek jus- Champion - 3.89
NSC- 28.06
Worthington - 20.11
•
tice through the courts or Charming Shops - 6.92
Oak Hill Financial - 33.98 Daily, stock peports are th6
whether they seek compensa- Col- 34.03
4 p.m. closin9 quotes of the
OVBC - 31.00
·•
previous day's transactions,
Peoples - 25,58
tion thro4gh the fund, we DuPont.. - 42.24
provided by Smith Partners
P.epsico -. 49.37
applaud thesa people for com- DG -19.29
F!lderal Mogul - .20
Premier-· 9.16
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis. :
ing forward," Miller said.
Wednesday, September I
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will climb
from 57 to 72 by late this
morning. Skies will be sunny
with 5 MPH winds from the
northeast.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m,)
Tempera,tures will li9ger at
78. Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from the northeast.

Panel expects as many as 80
compensation claims ·for clergy sex ·abuse
CINCINNATI (AP) Lawyers admini,stering a $3
million Jund created to compensate. people who say they
were · sexually abused by
Roman Catholic priests are
expecting up to 89 claims to
be submitted by the filing
deadline Wednesday. ·
A three-member . tribunal
plans to decide by the end of
theJ.ear which claims will be
pai , said Robert Stachler, a
lawyer who is chairman of
the tribunal.
Staebler said he expected
that many of thOse who submit
claims were waiting as long as
they could to see first whether
lawsuits they filed against
priests or the Archdiocese of
Cincinnati would progress in
the courts. They have to drop
their lawsuits before applying
for compensation.
Some .of the lawsuits were
dismissed
because
the
alleged abuse happened too
long ago for the courts to
have jurisdiction. Th0se rulings afe on appeal. Some vic.tims have said they were
abused as far back as the
1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
Matthew Garretson, a
lawyer hired to assist the tri-

bunal in examining the compensation claims, said Monday
he had received about 40
claims in the past three days.
The archdiocese agreed to
establish the fund as part of a
-settlement last year with
Hamilton County Prosecutor
Michael Allen to end his
investigation of whether
cnmes were committed
involving sex abuse by clergy. In November the archdio:
cese pleaded no contest to
failing to repQrt crimes and
was fined $10,000. The 19county archdiocese serves
about 515,000 Catholics.
The tribunal is independent
of the prosecutor's office and
the church and will make the
decisions on compensation,
·stachler'said.
.
Submiiting claims to the tribunal is a gentler process for
victims than fighting over law. suits in court, Garretson said.
"It's a nonadversarial route,
and it gives them a chance to
· have their stories heard," said
Garretson, who evaluated
claims submitted to a ·$25.7
million · settlement fund for
people who sued the .Diocese
of Louisville, Ky,. over
claims of abuse by priests.

r~----~7~--------,

L' /VIflli~ol-. &amp;·!ftMo~tlflall ·" :

·I tName: ·
I ,ii•M hss:

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I Uelepb,me:.
I elwooldlibtopun:base ~tile(s)atS IOOeach:.
I • Please check appropriate box:

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rDHooorof
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Local Stocks

11

fo.llftft'tt
fiKt'lef

tf,iteh~r/ rg/ti_
11
Mrl teO.f'l, eofo,e,rl rg/t~ Keltl,.iet .t:l(l .bo«fl, flit~ fiH.
O.lft

_lie ru.iltt .- ltv.el ;iee_d"t~tfl,.,
&gt;

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i

'

.Honor &amp; Memory W•U !hat will be creal~ jn. rem~brance or tribute to family, friends and loved ones.

.

The addition will be created in a "quilt" design to represent the family unity
and the varied personalities
•.
.•
'

••

....

.

'i!

' .

~

that comprise our community and hospital. Corlan.tlles
can be'purchasedfor $100 each. The tiles willlJC .
'
.
'

.

engraved with. the name of the selected individual then displayed. 'The artistic creat!on will be located in ·
the main lobby ofthe hospital and will always

remam il part of the organization's walls.

• .

'

j

"

•

Please complete the attached fonn in hooot-or mnem~ · of someone Who made a dtffi:ren&lt;:e

•

your life. Return with payment to: Pleasant Valley HoepiCJt,ATI'N: Community Relatloai lleparlllliut,

.

'

· 2520 Valley Drive,.Point Pleasant, WV 25550. ~ ·cbect.llitd credit cards,~ Please make chec~
I

payable to the "Pleasant Valley- Hospital Foun4ation."
For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.
~·

-'

.

'

The OVP

UC-OSU battle tests Carpenter household
Associated Press

'How They Fared
1. Ironton .
_ ·~~F. WHEEt.o~SSURG,~l-ll._

2.Jachon

DEF. WELLSTON; 55·0·

3. Parkersburg South
DEF. PRESTON

2004

.

BY RusTY MIUER .

COLUMBUS - ·susie Carpenter
is thankful that her son Jonathan
· chose · to play football at the
University of Cincinnati rather ·than·,
say, Northwestern.
The school colors would have
clashed with Ohio ,State's.
"I can) see wearing scarlet and
purple," she said with a laugh .
-Jonathan, a freshman running baek
for the Bearcats (red and black). will

.

'

be playing agairrsl
family's quandary.
hi$. big brother. ·
"That little family
Bobby, an Ohio State
rivalry is goi1\g to be.
kind of interesting,
(scarlet and gray)
.lineback-er,
when
to see. who the
Carpenter
family
Cincinnati takes on
the J'luckeyes at Ohio
supports ," he said
Stadium on Saturday.
with a wide grin.
"We'll wear red,
"Which team's up,
gray and black,''
huh''"
.
Susie said. ··· we·'ll
ll '·ll be a.bus'y. yet
B. Carjlenter keep . everybody · J. Carpenter typical. day for the
_
hap_py:" -· ___: _' ·._ -~ __ Carp~pter clan _()~
Ol:iio State del'ensive end S1mon Lancaster, a short o nve southeast ot
Fraser laugh s when he talks about the Columbus.
·

Rob Carpenter, a former player at
Miami (Ohio) and for the NFL's New
York Giants, . is the head football
coach at Lancaster High Schoole In
addition to a varsity game on Friday
night, he is scheduled to go to a
junior varsity game at I 0 a.m.
Saturday. Among his .players in that
game il; son George. a sophomore at
Lancaster. Another son, Nate, ·is in
the seventh grade. and his father
helps coach his team as well. Nate
has a game on Wednesday ni_ght.

Please see.Tests, Bl

Co., 37·0

4. Neleonvllle-York

OEF. ATHENS, 20·0

5. Parkersburg
LOSTTO

RIVERSIDE, 14· 1 I

5. Portamouth

OEF. CHESAPEAKE 47-6

7; Cabell Midland
7. Wlhama

DID.Nor PLAY

LOST TO WILLIAMSTOWN, 24·21

Galllil Academy
,
'
. DEF. MEIGS, 27-7
10. Williamstown

at Ohio Stadium
Columbus, Ohio
Kick-off, noon

lj,

DEF. WAM!W.A, 24·21

Dantonio·
seeks to
emulate
Tressel

Prep Schedule
Today'a Games
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Athens
Federal Hocking at Meigs
.Eastern at Belpre
Southern at Vinton County
Ohio Valley Christian at
Chesapeake ..

.

Soccer

• Warren at Gallia Academy
Ironton St. Joe at Ohio Valley
Christian
·
Golf
Chillicothe at Gallia Academy
TVC Hocking at Federal
Hocking
River Valley at Meigs

BY TERRY

.Qhio State
baseball' coach
signs extension
.

COLUMBUS - ·Bob Todd,
Ohio State's winningest baseball coach, signed a five-year
contract ·extension that will
carry him through the 2009
season, the school announced
Monday.
Todd, who came to Ohio
State in 1988 after four years at
Kent State, has guided the
Buckey~s to Seven first-place
finishes in the Big Ten and six
Big Ten tournament titles in his
17 seasons.
· The first four-time Big Ten
coach of the year has a 686344-2 record (.666 winning
percentage) with Ohio Sllite
and is 810426-2 in 21 seasons
at the college level.
.
Todd has coached the
Buckeyes to the NCAA tournament 10 times, including in
1999 and 2003, when Ohio
State won regional championships and advanced to super
regional play.
Fifteen of Todd's OSU players have earned All-America
recognition, Seven have won
Academic All-America honors, 47 have been chosen firstteam All-Big Ten and 62 have
signed professional baseball
. contracts.

. . CLEVELAND (AP) The Indians sent outfielder
Grady "Sizemore back to
Triple-A Buffalo on Monday ·
and will recall outfielder
Ryan Ludwick on Tuesday.
Ludwick began the season
on the Indians disabled list
while recovering from right
lrnee surgery. He injured his ·
left knee in a collision at first
base in Septembc:r and had
two operations to repair cartilage' damage in the offseason.
. He hit · .281 with. eight
home runs and.30 RB!s in 44
games with Triple-A Buffalo.
Sizemore hit .21,3 with two
homers and 15 RB!s in 30
games with Cleveland after
he was promoted Jul'y 20
· from Buffalo.
•

.

.

KtNNEY
Press

Associat~d

Wednesday's Games
Volleyball
Hannan, South Gallia at
' So.uthern Tri-Match
·
Golf
.TVC Ohio at Alexahder

Indians send
Sizemore
to Buffalo

•

The PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL FOUNDATION is proud~ announce an~

...

Tuesday~ August 31,

Houston Astros' Jeff Kent (12) slides safely inti) home plate to beat the tag by Cincinnati Reds catcher Jason LaRue
after a Jose Vizcaino sacrifice fly during the seyenth inning Monday in Cincinnati. The Astros won, 11-3. (AP)

Astros blast off Reds
CINPNNATI (AP) The
Houston Astros are hitting their way
into the NL wild-card race.
Brad Ausmus hit a tiebreaking
three-run horper in tlie sixth inning
and drove in a season-high four runs
as the surging Astros reached double
figures in runs for the third time in
the last four games in an 11 -3 victory over the Cinciimati Reds on
Monday night .
Lance Berkman homered twice
and drove in four runs for the
Astros, who have· scored a combined 43 runs in their last four
games and won for the seventh time
in eight games.

Alegenfs

"We're taking the pressure off of
our pitchers," said_ 6erkman. who.
had the 13th multi homer game ol
his career . and fifth against
Cincinnati. ''Hopefully. we.'re getting on a roll at the right time .. We
had a period of time when thmgs
weren't going well, and it was all
gloom and doom. Now, it's going
the other way."
Houston remained just four games
behind Chicago, which leads the NL
wild-card race. The Astros. won the
. last three of their four-game series
again s t the Cub~ over the weekend
before· beating the Reds.
.
"You know how many runs Lhey

ln2005

NASCAR driver Rusty Wallace wilt retire aher the 2005 season,
citing concerns about geHing hurt and saying Monday he wanted
to leave at the top of his game. His decision ,was Influenced by
rival Dale Earnhardt's death. The 48-year-old Wallace has won 55
races and has held ,36 career Winston Cup pole pos~1ons since .
making his NASCAR debut in 1980.
1984 Winston Cup Rookie of tHe Year
1988 National
Mot\)rsports Press
Association Driver of
the Year
1989 Winston Cup
Championship
Winner, 1989 The
. Winston AII-S1ar
Race
j
1993 NMPA Driver o;&gt;f
the Year
11198 "Pole" Shootou1
winner, and voted one ot
·
NASCAR's 50 greatest
drivers .
i his 14111-place finish
in the 2003 standings,
made ~ 20 consecu1ive

J

seasons of finishing in the
top 20 in paints, longest current active

SOUACE: NASCAA

--'--~-'-----1~--1--~-~ -~--~--

•

streak

scored in the Chicago series," Reds
manager Dave Miley said. "They'~e
hitting the ball well."
Pete Munro (3-5) went five-plus
innings to -win for the first time in
seven starts since July 25. He gave ·
up three runs and eight hits, and .
struck out a season- high six.
Adam Dunn hit his 40th homer for
the Reds, and Felipe Lopez added a
two-run shot.
''It's just not good timing for us .
right now/' Dunn said. "We' re playing as bad as we· ve played in a
while. and it doesn 't help to be play-

Please see
...

~teds,

Bl

CINCINNATI . University of
Cincinnati coach Mark Dantonio still
looks up to his mentor at Ohio State.
· "In crisis situations, in terms of football., I think that's when Jim Tressel has
been at his best," Dantonio said .
Monday. "He's kept his composure, and
I hope I' II be able to do the same thing."
Dantonio, who was Tressel's defensive coordinator, · has a nel\' task this
week -shutting down the Buckeyes. In
his first game as a head coach, Dantonio
will take the Bearcats to Ohio Stadium
on Saturday.
·
··
·
"We have to try not to get ahead of
ourselves," Dantonio cautioned. "We're .
excited: our players are excited. When
you have Lhe chance to go up to Ohio
State, it's something special because of
the environment there."
·
·
The game was scheduled long before
Dantonio succeeded· Rick Minter in
December after Cincinnati's 5-7 season.
He said when he took the job. he didn't
realize his first game would be against ·
Ohio State.
. "This is not the ultimate game. this is
not the Super Bowl," Dantonio said.
"TI1is is the first game in what. I hope,
will be a long tenure here.
"I could not think of any place better
io do it than were I had previously been.
That's the main reason, not because it's
Ohio State. but where I had previously ..
been. All the people I've known up
there, that's what makes it special." .
.Ohio State linebacker Bobby
Carpenter said the Buckeyes are eager,
too. .
.
"Everybody's going to be out there
trying to show coach Dantonio what we

Please see Dantonio,
. . . ·al

WaHace to retire after '05
'

'

he retires. Brothers Mike and Kenny and
17-year-old son Stephen are drivers ..
Assoc1ated Pr(!ss
Stephen Wallace · was hospitalized
overnight last week after cras hing at
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - NASCAR Bristol Motor Speedway during the
driver Rusty Wallace will retire after the Hooters Pro Cup Race.
2005 season, saying he is concerned about
Rusty Wallace also owns a Busch team
getting hurt and wants to leave at the top of and recently hired ·Jamie McMurray tO:
his game. Hi s decision was influe?ce~ by drive for him . McMurray is rumored to be;
the death of ·nval Dale :Earnhart!! 10 a the · replacement for Wallace in 2006, blit
Day(ona 500 crash m 2001.-.
. ·currently drives for Chip Ganassi.
:·
"It kmd of · got to me. . Wallace sa1d · Wallace al so plans to do TV com me~~
Monday at a news conference at the cials ' tied to his corporate sponsorship~
Dayton'! h}lernauonal Speedway complex. with Miller Brewing Co. and other compa"lt made me feel nervous . It made me thmk nics.
·
hard about it."
"It 's hard for a great driver to say, ' Look;
The 48-year-old Wallace has won 55 it's till)e,"' said Roger Penske. majority
races . He made his NASCAR debut in owner of Penske Racing South. "But I
. 1980 and has wo'n almost every major race think that's the position of a great driver tri
except the Daytona 500..
·
say 'I know when i!'s time for me to move
..T~iws is my ladst .sThhot aDt thte Da5y00tona on."'
·
. .
:
5oo .
IS
Wallace became a full-time competitor
a 11 ace sa1 · · e ay ona
· still the granddaddy of them all. It's the on 'the circuit in 1984. when he was rookie
' race I haven' t won and I'm going to try my of the year. He claimed the series national
darndest to win it."
driving title in 19~9 and finished runnerWallace , who dri'Ves for Penske Racing
South, intends to stay in racing as a team
..., owner and mentor for younger drivers after
BY MIKE ScHNEIDER

�Page B2 •

.•

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesda~August31,2004

Tuesday, August 31, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

.

College·volleyball

Tests

Rec;twomen open season 1~3

from Page 81

"It '11 be interesting," Rob
said. " I hope I can make it (to
son in the second matc·h' on Ftiday. knock- ure numbers in digs. Thomas 17, Doss 12 the UC-Ohto State game). At
. SyAFF REPORT
ing off Indiana Wesleyan (who received :tnd Veach I0. DeGam10 was on the btink the very least, I'll make it to
sports@ mydailytribune .com
eight votes in the NAIA Pre-Season Tep 25 of double ·tigures with nine while Jewett the postgame. Susie will be at
Poll) in three straight g:imes. 30-8, 30-18 totaled seven.
the game. She doesn't miss
. DEARBORN, Mich.- The University and 30-21. Rio jumped out quickly and wa5
Veach had 28 assists and Urton delivered one of the kid's games."
of Rio Grande Redwomen volleybal l squad never headed as they squared their mark three m:es.
Bobby will start at lineopened the 2004 season wmning one match atier two matches.
Rio .closed out the toumarnent with a loss bac~er for the Buckeyes.
and losing three at the Early Bird
Utton ,md Doss again were the leadmg to Siena Heights m live games. 22-30. 30- Jonathan ligures to see action
Tournament held at the University of hitters Wtth live kills each. DeGarmo and 22, 25-30, 30-26 and 11 -15.
·
on special te.ams and may
Michigan-Dearborn over the weekend.
Thtnuas posted double figures in digs with
Doss tmdjuniorLynnette Kiesling had 14 even get to carry the ball for
Rio Gmnde 0-3) opened the season 16 and I.J respectively. Doss was on the kills each and Urton added II . DeGarmo
the Bearcats - which could
against Michigan-Dearborn. UMD downed verge of double figures with nine and fresh- and Jewett posted seven each ..
result in an all-Carpenter col·
tbe ~edwomen in three games. 30-24. 30- man Kayla Jewett collected eight digs.
Tho'm:ts tallied 40 digs to lead the Rio lis ion.
2j! and 30-23. Sophomor~s Lindsay Urton
Veach tallied 12 assists.
defense while DeGarmo'and Doss had 28 a
The biggest problem for
and Melissa Doss led the Redwomen with
Rio served the ball extremely well with piece. Jewett (17).. Urton (13) ar1d Veach both players will be trying to
six kills each. Doss also recorded 10 dius. only one missed serve in 49 tries. Urton ( 12) also collected double figures in digs in
line up tickets for the dozens
· Sophomore setter Jessica Veach hancled was the top server, going a perfect 12-for- the live-game marathoti.
and dozens of family, friends,
out 14 assists ]md registered 12 digs. 1~.
Doss was also busy at the net with one neighbors and acquaintances
•
Sophomore Iibera player Danielle Thon1as
On Saturd:ty. the Redwomen staned out solo block and five block as&gt;ists. Kie~ ling who want to' come to the
topped the stllt sheet defensively with 19 vers us Col lege of the Ozarks. Rio lost in had two solos and four block assists.
game. Susie has six older
djgs. Senior Chelsea DeG:m110 had nine thrc·e. 30-32. 15-30 and 21-30.
Veach served up 45 assists.
brothers, and Rob has !:Our
digs and two block assists.
Jewett had eight kil,ls to_n;tce the Rio
QeG;unw. Ve~ch and Unon all had three: .siblings. :Doss alstJ contributed three serve aces to attack. Do" and Urton posted. seven kills aces in tl)e live-game match.
· "Anybody around here
h!ad the Redwornen.
each and DeGarmo tallied six.
Rio will travel back to Michigan for the would like to have tickets,"
· Rio collected its llrst victory of the seaTl1rce Rio player.s registered double lig- Cornerstone lnvitattonal Friday.
Susie said. "All of the townpeople, the teachers at the
high
school, our friends, the
Cincinnati decided to change the Bearcats are trying to look. area but was not an Ohio Stlltt; boys' friends - they're all
coaches and commn to a high- at the season opener against the fan even though his dad was a
looking for tickets.
class football program. The No.9 team in the nation as just student there.
"I had a friend come up to
school leaves Conference USA another game.
''I've just never been interestfrom Page 81
me
today and show me the
after· thts se:tson and will join
"You (media) guys are going ed in Ohio State football, to tell
tickets he bought on the
the Big. East next year.
to do your job in hyping it up, you the truth," Takavitz said.
Internet.
He said, 'It was a lot
can do." Carpenter said. ''It 'll
"UC is starting a tradition but we got to understand and
Dantonio sometimes wears
more
than
I wanted to pay,
~ interesting seeing him over
down there of being a good not lllke it out of context, that his championship ring from
but
it's
worth
it."'
·there on tile sidelines. but it' II program:· sa;d Buckeye cor- it's just a game," Hall said. Ohio State's 2002 season, but it
tJe fun as well."
Bobby said he'd try to hit
nerback Dustin Fox. "It'd be "We're a university and they're won't be on his finger
: Cincmnati has played Ohio imponam for them to come in a university: we put on our Saturday.
up
a few of his Ohio State
·
teammates
for any leftover
Slate 13 times and has won and pl:ty well against us. And cleats and ow· pads the same
"I like to wear my ring now
only twice - in 1896 and obvious! y for us, with coach way they do. If the~ don't come and then because it's a symbol
1897. The longest gap in the Dantonio being here and then out to play, ·they re going to of our championship ... it's a
series was from 1931 to 1999. going down there and having lose. Just because of the name symbol of what can happen if
Two years ago, the Bearcats ties with him, it'll be special to across their chest, that doesn't you believe and focus,"
nearly upset the eventual play against him and the mean anything."
Dantonio said. ' "I wear it to
national champions, losing 23- Bearcats."
Offensive guard
Kyle remind myself and remind my
from Page 81
1,9 when a touchdown pass was
Richard Hall, Cincinnati's Takavitz, a Cincinnati co-cap- ' players of where we want to
dropped in the end zone.
leading rusher last year, said tain, grew up in the Columbus head."
ing teams that are really hot."
After stumbling last year,
With the game tied at 3,
Jeff Kent reached on a leadall born the same year as Wallace. Bill chief executive of NASCAR.
off infield single, Mike
"Whenever we nee·ded Rusty to help Lamb grounded into fielder's
Elliott, 48, ran his last full season in
2003 and is competing in a partial us win the people over ... he would choice, Jose Vizcaino singled
schedule. Sterling Marlin and Jimmy jump on an airplane and do whatever it and Ausmus homered to ,cen·
from Page 81
Spencer are 47, Mark Martin is 45 and takes to help us grow the sport," ter on a 3-0 pitch from Phil
said.
Norton (1-5).
up for the championship in 1988 and Kyle Petty is 44. Martin has indicate~ France
Bill France Jr., co-vice chairman of
that,
like
Wallace,
2005
will
be
his
last
It was Ausmus' first homer
1993. His most recent victory was in
NASCAR,
who
handed
control
of
season.
in
59 at-bats since July 25.
April in Martinsville, Va.
"I'm
trying
to
talk
him
out
of
it,"
car
NASCAR
over
to
son
Brian
last
year,
"We've
been getting time"It's time. I feel it," Wallace said,
owner
Jack
Roush
said.
"The
way
he's
said
he
would
miss
Wallace's
outspoly hitting, just not usually
referring to his retirement decision. ·"I
"despite
all
the
times
he
has
kenness
and
the
way
the
team
is
I'd
like
driving
from
me," Ausmus said. "I
know I'm doing the right thing and I
to
'have
two
more
years
after
next
·
given
us
hell
about
one
thing
or
anothwa·
s
looking
for a fastball up
feel good about it."
year."
·
er."
.
.
and out over the plate, and I
Wallace is the first veteran driver to
"Whatever
his
feelings
about
a
parbrought
an
enthusiasm
and
Wallace
was lucky enough to get
announce such plans, but others probaintensity
to
racing
that
helped
spread
ticular
issue,
Rusty
always
has
been
one."
bly aren't too far behind. Dale Jarrett.
NASCAR's popularity the past 20 interested in the betterment of the
Houston broke it open
~icky Rudd and Terry Labonte were
years, said Brian France, chairman and sport," France said.
with a four-run seventh,

~Dantonio

Reds

Wallace

tickets .. They won't go to
waste.
''I'm not sure how many
people we 'II have up there.
but there's probably a couple
of hundred who want to go,"
Rob said. "Those tickets are
harder to get than for the
New York Giants."
The busr weekend is nothing new tor the Carpenters.
Each member of the family
carries a detailed monthly
planner to keep !rack of all
their engagements, practices
and games. In addition to the
four boys' games and practices, there are Rob's varsity
and JV games and Susie
coaches the high school
swimming team.
"Since my wife and I are .
·coaches, we follow the theory that . if you · don't plan
ahead you won't succeed,''
Rob said.
·
But there's no way of ~Ian­
ning for an upset or a dtsappointmenl. - Susie, an OhiO
State grad, said she is often
asked where she'll sit at
Her
Saturday 's
game.
response is always the same.
"I'll sit on the Ohio State
side," she said. "The seats are
better."
·
And just to make sure that
no one thinks she's showing
any favoritism, she's already
figured out how she' II
behave during the 'game.
"It'll be continuous clapping," she said. "With one
son on offense and the other
on defense, there'll always be
something to clap about."

m:ribut&lt;e - Sentinel - lae ster
Mtlp Cou.nty OH

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

Offtee 11o~~

n==~,., r-LOOking For
P.ubllc Sale
Notice is hereby given
1)1at on September 25,
:loo4 at 10:00 am a
public sale will be
field lor the purpose
of Slltlelylng a landlord'e lien on the contents of aell-serylce
etorage rooms. The
dooda to be eold are
~ascribed generally
4• household. The
11101118 Will be opened
· fl)r viewing immedletety prior to sollclla·
tton of bids.
t;)e&amp;crlption of proper·
1y •• follows:
Jewelry Box, several
iulto
and
drese
thlrts, tool box, computer components,
wooden ahoeahlne

kit,

·

shoe

molds,

eamplng gear, several
l!all• of c l - , uniform overallo, misc.
boat parta, cuff ifnks,
many mtec. toole,
....,._, fim aide kit,
.ookware, VHStapea,
jlllcher, PD!'OI' etrips,
llalitng gear.
Bay t41
Nllme: Daniel Fink
Addreee:
31004
Nicholl Road
Ohio
Middleport,
45760
Term• of the Sllle will
be cath or certilled

lbnd.
Hllio' Sell Storage
(8) 31, (9) 7,-14

tables, other misc.
household Items.
Bay il65
Name: Deana Voyles
Address: 150 Wikle
Drive, Waverly, Ohio
45690
Tenns of the sale will
be caeh or certified
lund.
Hill's Sail Storage
(8) 31, (9) 7, 14

Public Notice
PUBUC SALE
Notice is hereby given
that on September 25,
2004 at 10:00 am a
public eate will be
held lor the purpose
of satisfying a land·
lord's lien on the con·
tents of sell-service
storage rooms. The
goodl to be sold are
deecrlbed generally
as houaehold. The
roOine will be opened
far viewing immedl·
ately prior to sollclta·
lions of bids.
Deacriptlon
of
property as follows:
Baby Items, toys,

dishes, collectibles,
jewelry, tins, clothes,
living room chair
(wood), shell, waffle
maker, furniture, Roll-

a-way bed, glassware,
antique clocks, family
pictures, slow cooker,
wooden doll cradle,
knick-knacks.

Bayf6
Public Notice .
Public Sole
Nollce Is hereby given
on Seplitmber 25,
~at 10:00 am a
public ute wilt be
held lor the purpooe
of Ntialylng • landlord'• li&amp;ll on the conof aell--.rice
otorage rooma. The
goodl to bo 80id are
deacrlbed generelly
n household. The
- · wilt ... ~ned
lor vl-ing immediately prior to aoticltallon olblda.
"
DIICilption of properly
as
loll-s:
VHStapea, lvmltura,
-"'
bego
of

clothea,

-

Name: Linda IIIIIs
Addrese: Apt. C3

ElmwoOci

Terrace,

Racine, Ohio 45771
:rerms of the sale will
be COIIh or certified
. fund.
Hill's Sell Storage
(8) 31, (9) 7, 14

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

sale
One Day Only
246 Palmer St.
Middleport, OH

HOW I.Q WRITE AM AQ

,
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Are you 65
or older?
I f so, you. qualify for a

S e n i o r Discou:n.t*.
on y o u r home delivered
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belovv a n d drop off o r
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• All ads must be prepaid'

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlahln; rttHrvaa the right to edit, rtjec:t, or cancalany ed at any time . Errore mu1t be reported on tha first dly of
not
Trlbu!)a·Sflntlnei·Rtgllter wtllla rilpon-'ble for no more than the cost of the 1pace occupied by the e"or and only the flr•t lnaertlon. We
any lo.. or expanHitlat r..uhs from the publication or omlselon of an adverti_,Dmanl. Correction will be made 1n the firat available edition. • Boll
are alway1 conlldantlal. • Currant rata card applla1. • All real aatata advertillmenta are aubjec:t It~ the Fedarel Fait Houalng Act of 1988. • Tl\11 oowo ..
accept• only tlelp wantlld ada meeting EOE atandarda . We will not know1ngly accapt any
I in violation 'o l the law.

KIT!!&lt; CARLYLE

~~t~~
c

sat. sapt. 4
1136A st. At.
850, Rodney aam-? Oceans
Aquanum bouncer, "baby
bed. toddler bed, strollers,
baby clothes &amp; mise, , horse
reins etc, toys, household
Items, car t1res, L1ttle T1kes
sw1ng set &amp; mov1es.

------

r

SALt-:POMEROY/MIDDLE

I=-'"':'!':-----,
l

no

Cashland

lneuranca ......................... ,...........................130
Lewn &amp; Garden Equipment ..... :.................. 860
UVMIOCk......................................................830
Loat and Found ..........................:................ oeo
Lota &amp; Ac,..ge ............................................350
Mlacallanao................................................ 170
Mlacallanaous Merchandlae....................... 540
Mobile Home Replitr....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rant ........ :......................420
Mobile Homaalor Sale................................32D
Money to'Loan ............................................. 220
MotorcyciH &amp; 4 Whaolore ..........................740
Mullcttllnatrumenta ................................... 570
...._........................................................ 005
P8181or Sa" ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; HMUng .................................... 820
Prolftllonal Sarvlcaa ................................. 230
R8dlo, TV &amp; CB Rlfllllr ............................... 180
Rut Eltate Want8d .....................................3e0

delivery systems.
• One year experience with consumer illciden,t reporting

systems or other consumer health and safety reponing
systems preferred.
·

Schoolalnetructlon.............. ;...................... 150
Sled , Plant &amp; Flrtillar .............................. 850
Sltuatlona Wanted ....................................... 120

Excellent benefit package wit!J paid health, vision. and dental
plans, generous paid leave, and PERS. Travel required with
reimbursement at37.5 cents per mile:

~tor

'

Aent ............................................. 460

Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
SUV'slor Sail..............................................720
Truck&amp; lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstaty ................................................... 870
V11111 For Sala............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm SupptiH .................. 820

Jenny McMahon
P.O. box 520
'Reno, OH 45773

Wanted To Oo .............................................. 180

W-to!Mnt ............................................ 470

,

ment 'Disuic1

•

Temporary parnter needed
E11p enence preferred but not
necessary II Interested ,
please stop by Rockspnngs
Rehabil itation Cente r. 36759
Rockspnngs Aoad Pomeroy.
Oh 45769 to !ill out an application. Extend1care Health
Serv1ces. Inc 1s an Equal
Opportun1ty Employer that
encou rages
workplace
drvers1ty M/F ON

Yard Sale- Glllllpolls ....................................072
Yard lllle-PometoyiMiddla ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Ptuunt .................:.............. 071

computer &amp; money handling
Yard sale· sept. 1, 2, 3. 243 experience Fax resume to and Spreadsheets Send
resume lo
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Ot1
7 40-441-8940 or pick up
Gallipolis Career College
45769
apphca11on at 1312 Eastern
AUn: John Danic!Q
Ave ., Gaihpolis
·
1176 JackSOn Pika
Gallipolis, OH 45631

r

YARDSAL&amp;

t._..;,PJ:,;'iiJ'u:AsANritiiiii
·iii-,l
'

2 Yard Sates Sept · ~ ,2.3
letart Sandhill Rd . watch tor
Signs clothea. glassware
k&gt;ts more

--------Blg 5 Fa"'lly Garage Sale At
2 JCT 87 Mill Creek Ad
sept ~ ,2,3,o&amp;,5,8 C)d apple
peeJer, ~ny Lynn full bed,
bar 1toot 1• pot.1 pans, S~ver
ware, antiQues. glaiiWare,
quiltS.
linena,
picture1,
tampa, wicket'. iron BkiUets,
home interior, furniture,
baby cradle lbla more

Blodc Sale end of Robinton
St,· Belomeacl Toes-Wed·
Thur, Back to SChool Items
and hOusehold, la.rge--n~gs

CLERICAL

POSITION :

Local OHlce Previous offtce • Make 50"'• seiling Avon
experience
requrred L1ml1ed
11me
ONLY
Working knqwledge of com- (740)44S.3358 F1rst5to call
putera, MterosoH WOrd, typ- rece1ves 8 gift.
tng, li111ng and abilrty to com·
pose letters. Good commu- The Town of New Haven. will
nlcation skltls a must Only be accept1ng applications lor
qualified peraons need PoliCe OffiCtr. AppJications
apply. Send resume along may be oblalnad at New
with references 10 P. 0 Box Haven Ctly Hall, Monday
through Friday 7arn until
311 , Pomeroy. OhiO 45769
----'----lo"'''!'~PO'I · Tt'HI application must
Dnve
'be filled out al the City
BUilding. A PhysiCal Ag1lity
CLASS A COL
test must be laken and
DAIVEAB
· peased by each applicant
NEW PAY SCALE
beloi'B consideratiOn of tM
•Earn between 45·50K
application.
•Min. 2 yeprs OKP '
•Home Tiifle on Weekends
Need 1 fOb?
•$500 algn-on bonus
We ere Hlrtngl
Earn up to S&amp;'hour plul
•Start at 36 cpm
bonuses
•95% No touch fre+ght
·NO FORCED NVC
Full or part 1•me shiftS
avaJiablel

Lama 4 family Yard Sale
·One doy Only Fri sept 3
' 9am till 7 1402 Kanawha
S1ree1 Pt. Pleuant Clothes. Call eoo-652-2302 tor more
JrJ ()-I Gh11 12·1· Limiled info.
Too Branda, and Mudd.
Mite . HouHhold Items If Someone to Mow yard in the
leon Area (304)674.0132
raining will cancel
'

=....:....,-...,....,-.,-:---

Call How to

•m • S300

S.gn on Bonual

t-en -463&gt;6247 ext 2454

&amp;.11001..'
IN~TRUCfiON

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home) Call Today! 740·446-4367.
1-800·214·0452
www. gal~ooi1SCa1eer col!ege

ACC:IBdlted

corn

AccrediUilg
Councrl fm lndapAndent CoHege~

~

HOMES
ll&gt;R SALE

170

MtscF.I.IANmus

•

N1ce 2 bedroom . large bath
with washer/dryer hookup,
Oo/o Down Payment even hvrng room . large d1nrng ·
w1th less than perfect credit room. dry basement . out of
Easy qualifying Own don't flood plain , corner 101 on
rent
Local
company Gen f'iartenger Parkway
Mortgage Locators 740· Price reduced (740)992;
992-7321
3057
•
pos
1ble on th1s 3 bedroom
ath modern home on 1
cres. newly ref1nrshed 1
001
centra l a1r, hea
pump basemlint conv1ent
ly located 1 5 miles of
Route 50 &amp; onl y 5 m1nute
rom
TUppers
Plains.
pproxlmately
$850 .0
onthly payment. Call
hns
or
Robbie
a
740 667·3041

NO
DOWN
PAYMENT
Poss1ble on th1s 3 br. 1 bath
home.
count.ry
setting,
secluded on a paved road ,
Aac1ne area . 8 acres
approximately $650 per
month, clea n ready to move
rnto. shown by appointment
only call (740)9 49·3124, No
calls after 9pm please

1 1/2 story house With base·

Home Listings.
L1st (Our home by ca lling
1740)446-3620

Member

if"!;:':;:";: "o: o: :."O:"i:i;"::i"'----,

ment. located In Chester.
Oh Ask1ng $42 ,000 Call
I740i667·662o

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two years experience with· communily resource!i and serve

A

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Now you can have borders and graphics
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Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50~ for small
S1. 00 for large

All Dlspl•y: 12 .Noon 2
Buslne•• Day111 Prior To

YARDSALE-

I

r

Disability Provider Te£hnical Advisor
Qualifications Include:
· • RNILSW with a valid and c,unrent license in the State of
Ohio
• At least two years experience in HCBS environment, two
years experience with quality improvement systems and

Mall o r drop off thle coupon • l o n g
-w-l~h • copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Veney Pubtlehlng P.O . Box 4-88~ Gelllpoll•. OH 4583"1

-------------------------------

I

r

',

Send resume to:

Phol"'e _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Monday-Frh:lay for In•ertlon
In Next Day•s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

~~--oiGiiiAUJPOiiiiiiiiLiiiiSii'-,l

DlsabiU1y Case Manager
QuallflcatloDll Include:·
• Ohio Licensed RN or LSW with minimum of one year
experience in home and community based service delivery
within the last 5 years.
·
• Meet ODJFS training and co~1petency testing requirement
within 6 months of start date. Good oral and written
communication skills and customer service skills, which
places the consumer needs first.

-----------------------City/State/Zip _ _.:...,..._ __;._ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Sept 2·3 9am Eleclrtc
Wanted . A place for a
range, high chair, comput·
thrislian Rock Band to ·
ers, keybOards, mouse. pet
0
practice and play. Willing to 4 family garage sale 3919 taKI, quilting frame, old
Add1son
Pike
(aprol(
4
miles
give donat1on Please call
records, old Avon bottles
from At 7) Thurs . &amp; F.n 588 Kerr Road , 1/2 mile off
Josepll (740)44 1-1236:
9/2104-9/3/04 from 9-4 Ram
160
or shine.
"""
GIVEAWAY
Yard Sale at 1939 Chatham
Garage Sale 946 Gage Ad St 1st 2nd 3rd Furnrture
5 cute 1!. cuddly long·haired Patriot ' Oh P,von ·doll's d1shes. clothes what nots
kittens 6 weeks old. Call antiques/glassware, lots of
Yard sale
(740)446-7484 or (740)645· m1sc Sepl.1-3 Rain or shme
Burg'ers
0891.
9·?
382 Jackson Prke
Free kittens call (740)388· Garage Sale Thurs &amp; Fri · 2Thurs Frl &amp; Sat.
0867 atter Spm
3, aprox. 7 mile's out At. 160
Sept. 2,3&amp;4
9·5
Part
Chihuahua/Jack past Holze r ~sPital 9·5
Items
from
recent
move,
Russell pup, male 8 months
clotl')1ng
lamps, house Yard Sale Friday only 8 .30old.(740)992·7335
4. Plants D1vlslon Home
wares, and ett .
lnler~o r,
v1deos, d ishes,
Part Irish Setter &amp; Cottle
© 2004 by NEA, Inc.
Blond, 2 years old To good Garage Sale. Lots of every- books. X-mas deconittons
Halloweeri
costumes,
gtrls
home only. Can after 8pm thing Sept 1-2, 9·5pm. 6
(740)446·2886.
m1les betow Gallipolis on St. s.6x. 10·14. boys 5·10. bed· ~:~r:;;--:-:--~-....., i 1 a
d1ng. Little bit o'f ever•"hing .
YARD SAU.·
H W
AI 7
PLEASANT .
I:LP ANil'Jl
Sidewalk bncks. (740)992Yard
Sale
Sept
2nd
and
3rd.
·---iiiiiiiioi-'
2814
Large Yard Sale 15 Ann
At Kessler Produce Stand, Yard Sate LOIS 1f SluH 2514 Due to our recen_t Agency
J...o,i AND .
Dr~ve, Route 7 South. Sept
MI. Vernon Ave nue Sept 2 &amp; e~~:pans1on, Med1 Home
FOUND
• 2·3·4
Time B·30am' 1il Jackson Pike
Health Agency, Inc. is seek5:00pm.
4
YARD
3
Ing both a full-lime AN Case
Found bag of clothes on Will Multi family yard sale 287
Manager and a lull-time AN
jO'!O
WANT'Eil
Rd near V1nton (740)386- Mercerville Rd. across lrom
Patient Care Coordinator
TO BUY
9658
Fire Station 9/2-9/4, 9·5pm 2 tam1ly yard sale 405
pos111on m the Galhpolls.
Broadwi!iy Street. Aactne
OhiO and surrounding area.
Absolute Top Dollar . U.S
September 2nd &amp; 3rd
Duties include establishing
Silver and Go ld Cams.
and ma1ntainlng open lines
4·fam Wy yard sale. 1 112 mile Prootsets, Gold Rings, U.S
4x4's For Sale ..... :........................................ 725
of commun1cat1on wrth area
out Story's Run Rd &amp; Currency.-M.T.S. Coin Shop
Announcement ............................................ 030
physicians and health care
Hobson 1 ,2,3,4 Sept. Hutch- 151
Second
~venue.
Anllques ....................................................... 530
rac1htles m the delive ry of
Table- Vech's-.Truck toppers· Gallipolis, 740-446-2842
Home Health servicas. Must
Apanments lor Rent ................................... 440
More
Auction and Flea Market.............................
Rwer lot or acreage around be liCensed in both OhiO and
Auto Parte &amp; Acceesorles .......................... 760
440 Grant Street, Sept 1, Gallla Co for camping, Wllh West Virginia· We offer a
Auto Repair ..................................................
2.31 9am·4pm. adult clothes, water &amp; electnc available compe11t1ve salary, benet11s
Autoelor Sale ..............................................710
baby clothes, furniture , m1sc Cali Ron at (740)446-7685 package and 401K. E.O.E.
Please send resume to 352
Boata &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
or (740)645·6042
1tems:
Second Avenue . GallipoliS,
Building Suppllee ........................................ 550
I \11 '1 tl\ \II \ I
OH 45631 . Ann Bnan King ,
613 Elm Street, Aacme.
Sust"""e and Buildings ............................. 340
' I H\ It I ...,
AN .
Ohro Sept 1&amp;2 9:ooam -" tn
Bualneee Opportunlty ................................. 210
case
of
ram
will
be
8-9tb
...
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Hair StyHste
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
FIESTA welcomes you to
9·5pm, Sept, 3, 4, 6 . Roush
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
check out what we have to
Lane. Cheshire. Oh. 3 fam1 ly
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
offer. . $300 hmng bOnus,
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
911, 3 family, large women's, A leadtng provider of sup- guaranteed hourly wages
Elect rica 1/Relrl!jt!ratlon ............................... 840
kid's clothes, knickkna'*s. 7 port serv1ces to Individuals plus t1ps, up to 45°/o serv1ce
Equipment lor Rent ....................................,480
pc d1ning room suite, com- w1th MR /00 has vacant commission, retail and tan·
Excavating ..............:.................................... 830
puter desk. piano, Home positions for LPN''S . For nmg commiSSIOns, 401 (k),
call
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
Interior, etc., tollow s1ngs at more..- mtormation
p.:ud vaca11an, heallh, v1s1on.
Dorothy Harper at Middleton denial and l1 fe ms., free
Farms lor Rent............................................. 430
5-Poinls
Estales (740}446-8145 or advanced oducat 1on, immeFarms lor Sale ............................................. 330
Garage sale, Sepl 2·3, a-3, (740)446·4814 . An Equal d1ate clientele and so much
For Lease ..................................................... 490
nable; Summit (Durst), toys, Opportunity '
Employer morel Now hirrng for full and
For Sale ........................................................ 585
m1sc.,
k1ds/ad4il
clothes
FIM/DN
1
par1-t1me licensed Styllals
For Sale or Trade ......:.................................. 590
boy/girls, Longaberger.
at our salon in Mason. Call
Fruita &amp; Vegetablea ..................................... 580
. An Excellent way to earn
C1ndy 0 1-888·825-6363 x ,
Furnlehed Rooms ........................................450
September 3+4 9.00am-?? money The New Avon .
3010 for more ,Info and to
General Haullng ...........................................850
Tools, clothes, rabb1t pen, Call Manlyn 304·882-2645
schedule an 1nterview
Giveaway......................................................040
tires, lots of mise Turn t1ght
Happy Ado .................................................... 060
AVON
•
All
Areas1
To
Buy
or
on County Ad 19 off Route
Help wanted : Darst Adull
Hay &amp; Graln.........................., .......................640
sen. Shli"1ey Spears, 304· Group Home . (740)99233N.
Kelp Wanted ................................................. 110
675· 1429.
5023. Call !or more in!ormaHome lmprovementa...................................810 . September 41h·5th-6th 3 - - - - - - - - lion.
family garage sale Variety of
Homee lor Sale ...:........................................ 310
Items, baby stuff. 31744 full-time Customer Sen11ce
Houaehold Goode ................, ...................... 510
l"STROCTORS
Noble Summin Middleport Associale. Great pay, excelHouaealor Rent .......................................... 410
"EEDED
Ohro 45760
'
In llemorlam ................................................020
lent benet11s Musl have MediCal. Word Processing.

Buckeye Htlls Area Agency on Aging PSA 8 IS advertising· for
the following positions in the HCBS (Home and Community
Based Services) Disability Waiver Program. These p&lt;)sitions
are contingent upon ODJFS awarding th~ HCBS Waiver
program to the Council on Aging of Southwestern Ohio (PSA
I). The anticipated date of award is September 3, 2004.

•

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Plspla:v Ads

CLASSIFIED INDEX

T h e I:&gt;a.ily Sen.~in.el
.&amp;unba~ · :tEitne.e: -..&amp;entinel

Address ---------~-----------

1r

~:

I'E:RsoNAu;
____
Found . etaci&lt; Lab puppy. 4-6
'
months found Herman:
A
Young~Man
seeks Clicker area. (740)441·1013.
Romance Wllh/Woman of ~~:;;~------,
any age J G PO Box 722.
Poca, WV 25,59
YARD.SALE

Subscriber 's Name

S"OP
CLASSIREDS

r
_.~J

'\ (I \II '\I..,

Oead't;ire.f'

• Stllt1 Your Ads With A Keyward a Include Complete
De1crlptlon • Include A Price • Ayold AbbrevleUons
• lndude Phone Number And Address When Needed
I Ada Should Run 7 DBVI

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

Disability Case Management Supervisor
Qualifications Include:
• Ohio Licensed RN or LSW with minimum of two years
experience in home and community based service delivery
within the last 5 years.
• Minimum· l-year supervisory experience.
• Meet ODJFS training and competency testing requirement
within 6 months of start date. Good oral and written
commumcation skills and customer service skills, which
places the consumer needs first.

Snm~rthinnFor~v.PNnn•PI

'

Word Ads

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

including Berkman 's two·
run double and Ausmus's
run,-scoring single. Berkman
scored when Dunn failed to
catch Kent's drive to the
warning track in left for a
two-base error.
The Astros scored an
unearned run in the first
when Craig Bi~gio scored
from third on thtrd baseman
Ryan Freel's two-out fielding error on Kent's sharp
grounder.
· Munro made it 2-0 in the
second, driving in Vizcaino
with a sacrifice fly for the
third RBI of his five-year
career - and first since
2002.
Berkman made it 3-0 with
his 22nd homer, and second
in two days, in the third off
Luke Hudson.

Help Wanted

laegister

Sentinel

(740) 9'92-2156 (304) 675-1333 ~-~SA
Or Fax To (304) 675· 5234

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Help Wanted

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Med1cal Off1ce Insurance
Clerk!Typisl- Slale-of-the·arl
In
optometrrc
practice
Athens is seeking dynamic
and canng IndiVIdual to
serve as insurance clerk and
typ1st Knowledge of b111mg
for third party coverage elec·
Ironically a mus t Posting
financ1al tra nsacbons, collectmg payments, transcriplion. typmg a m1mmum of 50
word per minute, some me(t·
ical termmology and fam1ilarity with Microsoft Word
necessary Applicant must
be detail oriented, committed to e~~:cellenc:e 1n pat1en1
care: self-motivated and
possess good communiea·
l ion sk ills. Approximately
35hrsi wk, Includes some
Saturdays. Benetits include
paid tUitiOn and travel for
career advancement, paid
hOlidays. vacation and sick
11me. health tnsurance and
pension plan Wage 1s commensurate with e~~:penence .
EOE Send resum·e to· The
Da1 ly Sent1nel, PO BoK 72912 , Pomeroy, Oh 45769
- - -- - - - Need a Heat1ng-Coohng
Installer wilh at least 1 year
e~~:penence
CeriiCified
Techician w ith at least one
year e)Cpenence
Pay by
experience Only eJCpere·

e

SCASH REWARDSS
For the We1ghl you Lose
Ill 30 Days
Ca ll Tracy 740·44 1 ·1982
{800)201·0832
www tamousnatrition com
&lt;http.l/www tamousnutn·
lion com/&gt;

WORK FROM "OME
Home Based Bus1ness
Earn S200-S500 PfT
Earn $2,000 and up FIT
Paid Vacations , Bonuses
740·44 1·1984
888·540-8097
WWN workatcasa com
&lt;http J/www.workatcasa co

·------_.1

3 bedroom . 2 baths. tlreplace. On 4 3 acres. In the
Country,
Scen1c
vtew
$75.000 Call (740)709·
1166
3 bedrooms· 1 bath Ready
lo move 1n. N1ce level lot.
Call (740)992·2272

3 story house 1n Pomeroy, 5
bedrooms lr. dr, krlchen.. 1
t /2 bath . Full basemen! w/3
rooms. appro~~: 3/4 acre, 4
decks. 314 newly remodeled
O% down possible w/fmancmg
ava 11able.
senous
mqu 1res only, $ 65 OOO,
(740)208·7080
38A, 2BA . 5 12 9 acres
Green TownshiP close lo

"'!:1:"""-"!'!'ml:"&gt;
- - - - , school. Pr1ced to sell. More

r:180

WANIHl

To J)o

rnfo
{740)44
6·7377
__
__
_ _ _....:._

4br, 4balh, Hud Home
$8 .900 Won't las!' more
Homes ava1labler for ilstrngs
_
Call B D. ConstruciiOn for all 00ex
1797
8
366 9783
of your home Improvement
needs, roots, decks . S1d1ng, By Owner US 35 m Mason
etc. reasonable prices free Coun'ty. 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
esllmales. call (740)992- Bedrooms)
Large Sun·
2979
Room 12x32, all new
Carpet Full Basemen! 112
acre lot S41 ,900 (304)675·
Install, Fmish Pamtmg
2933
Carpententr)l. Balllroom s.
Completely
Refjmshed
Residential Comme rc1al
t::i2.m..e.,_ Gr eat locatron . 1n
INSURED
Gallipolis Oh1o 3 bedrooms
NOTHING TO SMAll
2 lull balhS. Pnce 10 Sell
Flat Prrces
Now Phone (74Dl446·95B9
Steve-(740)388·8731

DBYWALL

v""'
bverbrootl: center 15 current ·
ty accepting applications for
anyone Interested in the
STNA classes These class·
es Will be he 1d 1n September
and class space In limited,
so 1f ~au are 1nterested.
pleas e come 1n and !ill out
an app!icahon al 333 Page
Street, Middleport.
OH
45760. EOE .
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
needed Apply al 1354
Jacklon P1k8, Gallipohl.

SASSY SCISSORS
Stylist wanted. Salary/
Commls,siOn 740-441·1880
or 740·256-6336.

Satellla. lnstllller
Seeking eKPtrienced aatel·
lite 1n1tallera. Must have oWn
eQuipment, truck, 11abll1ty
rnsurance .
SBCA
Certi11cation
reqwred
Contact Shawn (614)4769669 or ta• resume to
1614)476·3446.

Beautiful Arver V1ew
Located Close to town
ode 825 o r call
(740)4 41 ·0323
Bedroom 2 6 1th , R1ver
1ew/ Access, Pnvate
Boat Dock m Galhpol 1s 1
cr9 lot Code 90303 or
all (740)446·0531
Bedroom 8r1ck Home
atll . 3 Car Bnck
nallached Garage . 2
tory outbu1ld1ng Code
2704 or ca ll {740)446·
566

2

Bedroom 2 1/2 Bath
lose to Holzer Hosp1tal
n Spr1ng Valley. Code
13 or can (740)446·
624
Bedroom. 1 112 Bath
ull Basement
1ddleport. OH Code
11 or can (740)992 743
Bedroom. 3 8a11'1 . Pool .
10 acres B1dwGlll. OH
ode 42104 or call
740)388·9839

Motiii.E HO,\IF.';
FOR S-\1£

Have room rn my hOme tor
one lady, complete care for
1nfo call PnsC111a Dodnli at
Dodrili P~rvate Home Care
_17_4_01
_388_·_61_9_3_ _ __
Wanting 10 do house deanmg . have personal refer-

inced need apply
aII
(740)441·1236
ences rf needed. would also
- - - - -- - - consider Sitting .w/s1ck or
Need extra money!
elderly. {740)992·3422
· Immediate opemngs in
I I \ \ \ ( I \I
store demonstrators.
Ale~~:and rla's Marketing
1-BBB-650-6505
Outgoing energetic person
tor cosmetiC counter sales,
traming
provided .
References requtred Call
(740)446·2673 lor an inter·

NEW LISTING Secluded
3 Bedroom. 3 eath With

All real eatate advertlsl,g
in th1s newapaper Ia
subjec:t to the Federal
Fair Houaing Aet of 1968
which makes It lileg11l to

advertlae "any
preference, limitation Dr
dlaerimlnetlon baaed Gn
race, eolor, religion , aex
famili•l atllut 01 n•tional
origin, or any lnlenllon lo

make any such

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINE!

60 vendmg machmes I
excell ent locations all for
$10,995(800)234·6982
ABSOLUTE GOLOMINEI
60 vending machlneAI
e~ecellenl

loc•Uonl

111 far $10,995
BOIJ.234-61l82

..

"'

pr11ference, llmltdlon or

dl.crlminatlon.

N

Thla newap.1per will not

knowingly accept

•dvertiHmenta tor real
. .tata wt'lieh Ia In

violation ot tM law. Our
re.chra are hereby
inform.d that all ·
dwt~lllnga

adver11nd In

thia newspaper are
on an equal
opponunhy beaaa. ·

'

ob1le
Home
drooms. 2 Bath, Centra
tr,
$15,500
Cal
304 675-7022
·1998 Redman
Emp~r~
Terrace 24•44 double w•de,
3 bedroom. 2 bath . Large
deck rnciuded . 10K12 out·
t&gt;u1ld1ng "House 1n e~~:cellenl
cond1t1on·cen1ral
a1r.
Located on Eckard C~apel.
Pt Pleasant
Must be
moved need payQII of
$30.000 o r best
otle r
1304 )674.()1 05
91 Oakwood, 14JC72, very
nrce. S12 000 [740 )992·
5025 -

ev~lable

Fo r sale or rent- 2 bedroom
mob1ie homes starling at
$270 pe r month. Call 7.aHomes
f ro m
S1 0 ooor. 992·2167
Forctosure, \/A. HUd for lrst·
tng 1·800·749.a f 06 ex 1709 For Jale. 1988 mobile
' 1 unHI
have mvestl House tor sale Needs to be hOme 3 dOCkS. 2 buildmgs.
$10,000 OBO. Must sell l
ated the offenn .
~~~~=::::::; 2316
Moved Clle&amp;p (31)4)675- (740)247 ·4 1()()
af'ler 5 00 pm
L1ke new 2000 Red man
House with 3-large lots . 6· 16X80, 3 bedroom . 1/2 bath, ·
--• room House. 1batll. wrirte vmyllsh1ngle 2X6 loaded
vinyl siding.
$72 ,000 wl1h even more opt10ns. Car'[
TURNED DOWN ON
{304)675-2219 located m help wrth delivery. Call
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
Galltpolrs, OH out 6ulav111e Harold (740}385-9948
No Fee Unless We W1n1
Prke
1·866·582·3345
Make 2 payments. mcve in 4
New li sting 296 LeG rande years on note (304)736·
Blvd. Avarlabie Now 1 3 bed- 3409
room. 1 112 bath. storage
bu ilding, LennoK, heat/a1r Mobile Horne for Sale 3br m
Call alter 3pm &amp; weekends MaiOf'l. Musl be moved.
Senous callS only tX1ra lot Central Atr. Gas Furnace.
OBO Coli 13041670·
beside home w/property
7'783 lea\f8 message
(740)446·4051)
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO . recommends tha
u 00 bus1ness wnh pea
le you know. and NOT t
end money through th

vou

:

r~I

s2soo

�Tuesda~August31,2004 ;

www.mydailysentinel.com
II ~\ ' " 1'111~

'

•

New 14 wide only $899.· Applications be ing lljl~en tor 1972 Schult trailer, ~2 fl.
down and only $149.74 per &lt;Jery cle~an 1 bedroom irl' wide. tipout one liberQtass
month. Call Nikki (740)385· country setting yet close to and one aluminum full size
7671
town . Washer, dry er, _sto&lt;Je, pickup topper. {740)44 1fridge 1ncluded Water and 8211
New Oakwood mega store garbage included. Total alec· - - - - - . . , - - . , - featuring
Homes
by tric Willi AC. Tenant pay alec- Couch S50 .. 2 TV's $40 ..
OakwoOd, Fleetwood &amp; tric. $300 deposit. $375 per entertainment c9nter$35., 2
Giles. One stop shopping month. No pets. No smok- Utility carts $10 . each , &lt;Jacuonly at Oakwood Homes of ing. 74Q-44 6-2205 or 740· urn
S t 0 .00
c1eaner

BarbOursville WV (304) 736·
·
(740)992 5544
446-9585 as k tor V1rQ1n1a .
3409.
BEAUTIFUL
APART JET
SAVE·SAVE· SAVE
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
AERATION MOTORS
Stock models at old prices,
PRICES AT JACKSON Repa1red , New &amp; Rebuil t In
2005 models arriving Now. ESTATES , 52 Westwood Stock. Call R&lt;Jn E&lt;Jans, 1Cole's Mobile
Homes. Dnve !rom $344 to $442. 800-537-9528.
15266 U.S. 50 East, Athens, Walk to shop &amp; movies Call
Onio 45701 . (740)592· 1972.
7 40 -44 6-2568 .
Equa l
· where You Ga t Your Housing Opportunity.
NEW AND USED STEEL '
Steel Beam s, Pipe Rebar
MOney's Worth"
Concre1e.
Ang le,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· For
LOTs&amp;
Channel. Flat Bar. Stee l
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
ACREAGE
Townhouse • apartmen ts. Grating
For
Drains.
and/or small houses FOR Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
1/2 ac ~e lot on Tycoon lake. RENT Call (740\44.1-1 111 Sc rap Metats Open Monday,
County water, no septic. bor- lor appli cation &amp; Information. Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
ders Eagle Ro ad. Askm g
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Glosed
Furn1shed effjciency apt. lor
$11.500.00 (740)247· 11.00
Sa turd ay
&amp;
rent. AU ut1hl1es in cluded . Thursday,
Sunday.
(740)446-7300
.
Georges Creek Road ssoo

r

{740)446·7880

mo nth , 91 9 2nd A&lt;Je .
3 adjoining lots in_Gallia Co. (740)446-3945
Aprox . 28 acres . 2 with large Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed nou'ses. Call· lor more inlo room apartments at Village
1740)245·9549.
Manor
and
Riverside
acres hunting land on
Route 35 Henderson WV.
$45,000. Day 740·645· 1306
e\lening 740-256-657 4.

Apar tments in Middleport.
From $295-$444. Call 740;.
992-5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.

~,---•"'RiiiiiiiSiiiAUiiiii:_ _..

1984 Monte Carlo SS. new
paint. cowl hood. Corvelle
ralleys , S4 ,000 . (? 4 0)? 42 •

Pomeroy Eagles

What would you lose if there was a

'We can insure your vallua1biE~s!''l
For a Free Quote or Appointment
Call:

2760

~ocky Hupp Insurance

~;.:::.:::.;~::;;::~~-.!

~and Financial Services1
Box 189 • Middleport

1990 o ·lds Ciera- 4 cylinder,
4 door, run s good. $750.
(304)675-56 12.

740-843~5264

1992 Lumma , 2002 Ca&lt;Jalier.
All one
2002 Camara.
owner vehicles . (740)2455017

INC.
Contractor
Residential &amp;
Commercial
Houses, porches,
Garages, Pole
Barns, Roofs,
Renovations

74D-949-1606

r

""''

0•""" Down -vmen
1 -·en
rn
&lt;;ov
with tess than pertect credit. ·
Easy"-' qualifying, Own don't
re nt.
l ocal
company.
Mortgage l ocators. 740·
992
·::::oom nouse
in
Gallipolis
$350/ month
deposit required . (740)441 ·

1184.

1 Possibly 2Br House . partially furnished in New
Ha&lt;Jan' .$275 Rent, $250
Deposlt, No·Pels (304)882·
3652
2 story home lor rent. 3br,
$500/monlh. Call (7401446·

3481
2br House in the New Ha&lt;Jen
Area. NcrPet&amp;, must; have
References. $400 month,
$300 Depo sit Serious
Inquires only (304)882-2760

3 bedroom house in TtJppers
Plains. $450.00 month . plus
~eposlt and utilities. No pets
(740)6e7·3487

1 - -- - -- --

ROOMS

r

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

w/ original paint $200 call
(304)675-2503 if no answer
leave message or call
(304)593·0244

'

r

OR 1'RAoE

T.V.'s S40 each; couch $75
I \In I -..1 1'1 '1 11..,
each; table &amp; 4 chairs $75; '
,\ I I\ I .., I I II .._
Like new Maytag stack
washerfdrfer set $500; Uke ar~1011""--:~:':'A_RM
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt. starting new Frigidaire stack washat $290/month, deposit er/dryer $425: wooden hutch
required . No pete. wo $60: hanging planters $5
hookup. (740)44~ · 1184
each; full bed $125; Oueen 600
Ford
35HP,
Uve
bed $550.
hydraulic · 3pt. hitch. New
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
Skaggs Appliance
paint, very gOod condition.
menta, furnished and unfur·
76 Vine Street
$3150 OBO. (740)367 -0596

____.,I

EQuiPMENT

:::--~(7:_:40::::_:1&lt;'6~:..73::;96:.:..._-:­
Tandem
Thompsons ·Appliance· &amp;

axle equipment
tfllller 18 ft. dove tall
Repair-675·7368. For sale,
w/ramps ·52.200. 740-441 ·
re-conditioned
automatic 0941 740-645-5946.
washers &amp; dryere. rehigerators , gi!IS and electric
UvEwocK
ranges, air conditioners, and .._ _ _ _ _ _ __..
wringer waehers. Will do
~,
repalra on major brands in
5 year Sorrel Quarter mal~
shop Of at your hOme.
papered exc. disposition,
Used Furniture Store 130 well broken. great barrel,
Bulavllle Pike, . dressers. reining, gymkata potential.
couches, mattreaaes, reclin - $3,000. (740)44 1-1013.

i

2 btclroom apar1ment for
rent In 6yr.cuse. 5200.00
ers.
depoolt.
$330.00/montn

grava monuments,
much more. (740)&lt;46-4782
rent, lndUCIH wa1er, 18Waii!J Gallipolis, . Ohio Hrs. 11·3

and 1rUI1. t.1u11 nave auffi·

· clent Income 10 qualify.
(740)378-6111

(1.!-F).

-room _.......

2
556
Third ,..,., Depooi1 &amp; refer·
encee. C1JI Virginia 740- Buy

~

por month, no
J*a, rot.rence + dopcaH
One bedroom apartment ,
Dried
no pets, in Pomeroy,

Cnerry
(304)773-5878

High&amp; Dry
SeH-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232

L---------'

Pari'

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
·month
Barnhart
Builders

.hi\: I.
( ·ol"trul'tion
Vinyl Siding
Replaumtnt Window,\"
Room Additions
Decks
Blown Insulation
Pole Building,+;
Gar~ges

James Keeset II , Owner
740-992-2772
740-742·2332
740-416-1570

30 years experience .
•Nt:wHomes
•lAg Homes
• Post Frame
•Complete Remodeling
•Replacement Windows
•Roofs
CommerCial fnd
R~idential '

Free Estimates
740-667-6080

53,000 miles, e~eceltent condltlon . $9,500 (740)24$5157 _

Jtnnette's

OI"OitCl'

1fouse Cfeaning5ervice

~jii!«&lt;r-.:"M::----·a.FS--~
4 WHI'E.Jo:R'i

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

iiii=.::~~~~~~

1-740-843-5382
caH

after 6pm

" I H\ II I "

Get A Jump

He-.IE
L_,.;;L\IPIIOiiiiiiiioVEI'tiiiiiiiENTS
__• ,.1

on
SAVINGS

r

10

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NQ
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. «740) «6~
0870, Aog~us .Basement
Waterproofing.

204 Condor Street

'.

Syracuse. OH 45779
740-992-0122
Quality worli.for a fair

price

BISSELL

BUIL~ERS

'

IDC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

All work gyan:mtecd
Master Certi ned

Mechanics Briggs &amp;
Stratton , Kohler.
Murray, MTD·AJI
makes &amp; models $ 10.00
off any purchase or
$20.00 with this ad.

~)(IT

STilATfGY?

•

•

'·l

BARNEY

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

R.B.
· Truckin.g
HAULING:

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

P"1'\s. &amp;~eLe:., t ~!&gt;\ ~rn\\\) ~
YOU~ ~LLS . PO 1"01 f'\1-.\U\ THE.
t-IEE. t:&gt;5 Of ou~ JOB
,n.;.;;_, Off,I'\11-1{,-YOU ~

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restockfii!J Lale Model
and After Mtrket Parts
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon

·.

Sun. Closed

5\'E.C.IFIE.t;) &lt;-OM~IE.I&lt;:.!li'.IU.S

,. ~~~" mi:fGul'm£!

I~E.P\ 0~

'

WELL , 1F WE WEREN'T
11\SSIN8 OU~ !!&gt;EST
PITC~Eii: . AND IF OUR
13EST HITTER W"'SN 'T
ON "' CAMPINCi&gt; TRIP,
AND IF TEI:&gt;DY HAOIII'T
..lUST T+lRDWN THE III'.LL
OV Ell. THE 1\AC.I&lt;.STOP ...

· PEANUTS
LOOK! I 60T A
LETTER FROM PE66'f
JEAN .. 5\.IE SAYS
SJ.IE MISSES ME ..

S~E SAVS
SJ.IE J.IOPES
MEETA6AIN
SOMETIME .. ,r -..."-'t'"Y'

BETTY

·1·800-822-0417
Chevy, Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp;Custom Van

"W.V's #I

amu

Ill*

949-1405
Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
NewHomea,
Room AddHiona,
Garagea, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
KHchens, Drywall

&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341

Big Bend Antique

•nd Furniture
AMtoretlon
Reftnlllh,

740-992·34~2

740- 742- 108~
(

l ' fll!t ~ ( ltt .. l
(

I

J 'I '

In Thppen Plail18 DOW
hao openlnp on u y
ond mldnll!hlshlh.

740-667-63211'

Repair.

RMt.,..
Keith Bailey
40 812-1He
YOUt~G'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ROBERT
BIIIEU

•Raom*JidiOfiNI
Aim

ad•••

·-.Plumbing

•New Homes
• Garages

Wtdo~elle~

• Complete
Remodeling

•NiwGinfll .

•llooflnt&amp;tMWo
• 'l1ny1 Siding &amp; Poln1lng
• PIIUo Mel Porch O.Cim

lumlcew0&lt;1&lt;

V.C; YOUNG Ill

741-112-1111

11112-1215

Stop &amp; Compare .

Pass

Pass

~COMP\J\E.~ S\(.!LLS? Q!.1.., I..
Tf\OU(:,\.\1 II Sl\10,
C.Of'\1'\Uit.l&lt;:. SKILL";)!

Lose the auction,
help the opponent
Con&lt;Je ntional two-suited bids are double·
edged swords. Som9times they allow lhe
users to find a good low-point-count contracl or a profitable sacrifice. Howe'o'er. if
the opposition wins the auction, the bid
will ha&lt;Je painted a picture that will make
life much easier for lhe decl arer - as in
thiS deal, which occ urred dur ing the
semifinals of the 1997 world cha mpionships in Tunisia. ·
At se&lt;Jen tables, East Passed as dealer.
· The final con tracts were · four hearts
undoubled, four Spades undoubled
(twice) , fou r spades doubled '(twic6), five
hea rts undo ubled, and five hearts dou- ·
bltid. NO one kriew who could make what
The .only successful declarer in tour
spades was Calherine Saul from France.
She rutted the heart-ace lead in the
dummy (E ast) and ducked a club. caretu lly unblocking her eight South cashed
the diamond king, then shifted to a
spad~. Declarer won with her ace,
trumped a heart on the board, ruffed a
diamond in hand, drew tru'm ps, and ran
th e club 10 to reg ister an overtrick no
leas.
At the eighth table, East's two·no·tr ump
open ing.. showed at least 5-5 in the
minors and s~ 10 points. South made an
obvious three-heart overcall, and North
an equally clear pass.
West started with her three top spades.
--q
When East followed throughout, South
knew that West had all four missing
trumps, The declarer, Irina levlllna, representing the Unit"ed States, ruffed the
th ird spade and exited With her club
que en . East won with the ki ng ·and shift·
ed to the dlamo·nd 10, but declarer
fi nessed her jack, played a heart to
dummy's 10, and drew trumps for her
conlract.

O

.

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

IIIIITEIIIIICE
*SEIIlESS

*fnlll!'

Wf\'( 0\0'IOU TI\I~K
'I'OIJ \&gt;.U.£ ~c~ . -

BIG NATE

Dean HID

HOWARTJL
WRITESfl
••RII
•liME

'YE.T M~ JOO DE~i(\1'\101'1 fi.P.P~

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH

New&amp; Used ··

Residential
New Conslruetion
Remodeling ·
Security Cameras
Molion Sensors

Shop
Classlfleds!

THE BORN LOSER

Whaley,s Auto
Parts

Electrlcll SenlcaLLC

•

PoMr King trac1or 52' cu1
blade/plow, hydraulic. New
lumber
16 HP Kolar motor. $1 ,650.
(740)V92·1493.

Me

TO P
IN TOUGtt vJITtt
~eALITY? --wttAT'S MY
f

n Mon·Frlll-5

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

ENGINE DR'S

Pass

shouts

33 Young
horse
34 Yale ithlela
35 Gomatrap ·
36 Cajun
veg91e
lndge

',

Pomeroy. Ohio

0

3¥

East
2NT '

· 37 Rocky

FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

YOU'~f GOING

992-2915
Manning K. Roush
Owner

West· North

Opening lead: • A

Lawn and Garden Equipment is our
business, not our sideline

r-::...-::,-:-=-::-':a"-::--::-:;;.-:;;u~;:-::;-.;a-:&amp;1

;.;;;;: SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS
1493.

required. (740)446-21!01 .

(740)991Ni858

Mowers, Chai n Saw~.
Chain Sharpened

2000 Chrysler Voyager V-6.
AMIFM cassetle air. lORded
1

1995 Fiberglass Basa boat
150HP Jonnoon GT Tro1111111
motor. depth finders. Day
740-441--43i«l, evening 740Bar
M•l•
Go•t• 441-0101 .
ChBmJ'lonship bloodlines, 24'
1987
Yachtsman
all ages, all full blooded, reg- Pontoon boat.' and trailer.
istered' with ASGA. Adults 30hp. Mercury Mariner
engine. life jackalS, new aluminum anchof, n.w battery,
runs great (740}&lt;46·3613
Huaqvarna 5.5hp rear Tire leave mea&amp;aga.

or sell. Riverine
Antiques,. 1124 Eeat Main THier $350 Neg. Excellen1
~110.
on SR 124 E. f'ome&lt;oy, 74().
2SR opt. garage, 992-2526. Ruaa Moore,
po1lo. WHY quitlt naigNlo&lt;·

hood.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Warramy Repair •
L:.twn Trm.:tor &amp; Push

~ 'Re«ti~tt

r

.

Snapper

29670 Bashan Road
Raci ne, Ohio
45n1
740·9411-2217

em:!:

South

. GRIZZWELLS
.~~""'~ &amp;it\'ZZ'tlm. ~M~'S l. il!ET
1\\E letA '(ell ~'f U$19&gt;\ "0 A~ I

AstroGraph·
&lt;!bur 'lllrlhdii.Y:

Wednesd•'f, Sept. 1, 2004
By Bernice Bede O•ol
The year ahe ad is-looking quite promising
lor you, partiCularly when you do things in
accordance with your highest ideals.
People will respond In kind anct be responsible lor opening more than one door lor
you.
VIRGO (AuQ . 23-Sepl . 22)- Two paople,
one a co-worker and the other a family
meinber, will do somethl nQ lor you today
(unrelated to one another) that cou ld turn
out to be quit? advantage ous for you in
some manner.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) ......: When it
comes to any recreational activity you
wish to partake "of today, try to select one
that req uires teammates instead of individual compelillon . You'll thrive on partnership arrangements.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No~. 22} - Should
you be In the mood to busy yoursell
around the house IQday, find tasks or pro]·
ects that are either one of your passions
or lee! more like a hobby to you rather lhan
simply work.
. SAG IITARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) - Youipossibilities for personal gain can be considerably enhanced today if you don't take
youl"5ell or the rel8vant siluation loo seriously. What breaks when yoU crack a
smile is tension.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ~9)- Some
concerns you have at this lime relating to
a matter that affects your matenat security •
could be eradicated in some manner
today. Finally. there's some light at the end
of tho tunnel.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Important
points' can be driven home to others today
if you sprinkle your presenta tion with small
touches of thealrics .. Dramatics can turn
you on. mentally and activate both brain
hemispheres.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Material
prospects look 'quite encouraging for you
today. and ways could open up tor adding
1o your resources . Interestingly. however,
things may corr'te about in a most myslerious fashion . '
ARIES {March 21 -April 19)- You could
be in for a pleasant surprise today when
somoone you thought didn't think too
much of you goes out ol his/her way to
help yo u achla&lt;Je a very special goat
you've bee n work ing on.
,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Although
under most conditions you prefer to work
alone, don't De too reluclant to let another
help you today, especi81!y il it 'is someone
you 've aided in the pasl. It'll bring joy to
both ol you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 .;__ Associates
can be swayed to your way of th1nking
today, nolthrough hard arguments or bul tylng, but by using your charm and wit.
Use them freely to soften your pr!'lsenta·
tion.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - There is a
strong likelihood that you will achieve
something big and important today that
will give you a greal cte81of personal satisfaction and pride. yet you m1ght keep it to
yourself.
·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ~ Fnends and
assOCiates will readity rally to your support
today, provided they first understand yoUr
obi&amp;Cti&lt;Je. Freely spell out what yo.u w1sh to
accomplish and why we'l In advance
0

SOUP TO NUTZ

~'&lt;'
HDW COMG. "tbu G€T To
. N&amp;&gt;IE ooR R&gt;oq "f"rli:R

'IE&gt;uP.snF;o

40 Shaped
Anawer to P,....tout Puall
with an axe
41 Iraq export
42 AAA
suggHiion
44 .Fragment
47 ·Big pHchers
51 Mouse
52 Glance over
55 HockoH
56 Hovana·s
Island
57 Pheh In
56 Solar- ~
know
59 Kyoto
honorlllc
60 Moo~ ring
19 Goons
43Speod
61 Ensnare ' 20Sports ,
4:t Pipe 11181'1.
figure
45
h
DOWN
22 Efement 28
subetltutM
23 Cream pull 45 lliand off
1 Rainbow
kin
Italy
band
24 Trots .
48 Daah
2 Big galoots 25 DiSinoUnlad 49 Gat up
3 Courts
26 Withhold
50 Borbec•
4 Recolor
28 Banchmartt
nMd
S Ms. Balin
29 "Primal
52 "Quieti"
6 Cratchl1's
Fear" actor 53 New
30 - - unlo
ZNIIncl
eon
Hseff
7 Newspaper
parrot
·
execs
31 Endorse
54 Under !he
8 Army doc
a check
wellher
9 Naatas-- 36 " Garfield"
10 Soled bowl
pooch
~-WOOd
- - 37 Nibble
14 Emla ol1ha 41 Globe
PGA
· feature

c..

29 Ba
filler
32 Flaota

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

•

GRAVELY TRACTOR

tQ J09 5 J
.. AK74 3

• AK J 6

•

Storage

9 6 •

... Q

Ravenswood Chiropractic :•

Gravely

·•

Indicator
Term paper
Plummets
Ink's p.1ner
Common
abbr.
24 Sculplllra
medium
27 Andeo
17
18
20
21
23

.KQ 876 5

"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

UIU'S PIIIDIB

A K Q 10 5
J 9 3 2

SouLh
• 7 3

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559

· 1356 College Rd .

Now servicin KC"rosene Heaters

(7401256 •6200
sa le
1998
J9ep
·For
Wrangler 4x4, 29,000 miles,
AJ(;, cruise, aut.omatic .
$10 ,000. Call (740)368·
9125.

.

controls

East

... 10 8 5

Free Estimates .

820 East Main St.
Pomeroy
beside Larry'." Fruit Stand

Pick-up and delivery sel".'it--e

(740 )256 ' 1618 or

1984
Bayliner
W/Cuddy
Cabin
{304)675-8056

WV Contractors Lie . #003506

SYRACUSE SMALL

Open 8:30-6:00 M-F;
Sa1. 8:30-2:00 992·1033

i

•
•

Once again ,
high domestic
labor costs
require us to
outsource the
production of
this week's
comic.

• Parking Lots • Playgrounds .
• Roads • Streets

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

·event

15 Scl·ll craft
16 Flood

8 74
J 96 2

• 2

t Driveways t Tennis Courts

Le+ me do 11for youl

08-314)4

J 8 2

w~sl

Cell Phone 67 4-3311 Fax 304-675·2457

,..,. •• Dlgllfa

&amp;

FORSA.LE
Canning tomatoes U-pick
$3.50 a bucket. Rowe Farm.
Bring containers. (740)247- 1997 Ford F-150 4x4 Lariat,
11 4K, black, lea th9r interior.
42~2
- - - - - -- - c/d player. $9 .200 OBO.
Sweet corn , for sale $ 1.75 (740)992·2932
.
dozen . Bring your own cbn·
1998 Jeep Wrangler Sport,
talner. (7 40)949-1316.
iir;;.:;-=:.;..;~...;.,--, Soft-Top, 4.0L, V6, 62K, AC,
FoR SALE
CO/Cassette,
Chrome
Wheels, 31 inch tires , Extras
' - - - - - - - - - " $ 11 ,000 OBO (304)862·
Firewood for sale. $30 pk;t(- 2439
up Of $50 delivered, in most - --Dod_g_e_D_u_r-an_g_o_R-T,
2000
areas.
Delivery
starts yellow, 360 motor, cd/cas·
Sept6 . &lt;7 40)388· 8738 ·
sette. leather.
$11.800

080 ·

871-2417

SpcciQ)Izlng In Poured Concrete
· Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls :

IMPORTS
Athens

New General Standby
Ge ncratin~ System~ anll
Roi-Air Air Compressor!&gt;:

4x4

MONTY

StateWide
CNI Poured Walls

Hill's Self

r ~~~
·---·

•

•

Center

hlld'lpllce
4 ObHrvance
8 Tllaml
11 Thai
neighbor
12 Sooner city
13 Pentathlon·

• A 10 4

{304) 273-5321

~

excellent condition, loaded
_
17_4_01_4_41_·_00_1_3_
. ------$21.000 (740)388·0 151 or
Full blooded Rottweiler pup - (740)339.()564.
10
Ho1JSEHOI1&gt;
pies. Both parents on pram. Gt.)()())
ises, tails docked, shot s, 86 A-Mode l Mack . Triple
frame triax le log truck. Good
wormed . (740)245-5017
cond ition .
740·441 · 094 1
Good Used Appliances ,
740·645· 5946.
Reconditioned
and
1 96 Chevy 1 ton duellie, crew
Guaranteed.
Washers ,
Ranges,
and
cab, 454 , $11 ,500: 96 S-10,
Dryers,
Refrigerators. Some start at For Sale: Hammond Organ 4 Cyl , $2,500, (740)992·
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 Model M-101 Spinet. Good 5025
for
condition. · Suitable
Vine Sl.. (740)446·7398
Church or home (740)992·
Kroehl er Sola, loveseat. ·
large Chair, Queen An n
style chair, 3 tables , match-

•

Henderson, WV

Pollee

Red metal bunk bed with
bunk boards &amp; mattress, 1999 Fifth Wheel , new car~ 1!'1r--~~---,
VANS
5200 like new. (740)245· pet, would trade tor mobile
home, or sale $12,500. __
FOR SALE
5946

1-bedroom Garage apt.
Centr•l heat &amp; air, $375
month. can (740)446-4555
after 5pm.
·

All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Huy $5.00
Honanzu Get
S FREE

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

JONES'

mRRt:N'r

t

c...;cc...;c:.:_.:.c.;____

every month

,

Apt - 2 bdrm , 1 bath . Like new sora, chair With
$600/ mo plus $600 sec. onoman, rocker, coclctail
dep. Bulavi!le Pike. Both table &amp; end table. All wicker,
available
immediately. like new. Ranan pedestal
Includes all utilities except glass top table with 4
Ref~rences and padded chairs. 740-446·
trash .
empbyment 1nfo nece ssary. • 6748 _
Call (740)~6-3644 tor more - - - - - -- Info.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Cha~ Road, Porter, Ohio. Wood Pellet Stove, 4yrs old
Nice 3 bedroom , Langsville
(740)446· 7444 1·877-&amp;30· ~650 Call (304)675·5866 or
· area. $400.00 deposit, 9162. Free Estimates, EasY
(304)675-6112
$450.00/month. No Pets.
financinQ , 90 days same as
HUO approved. (740)742·
~
S
cash . Visa/ MaSter Card.
OR
ALE
2210
Drive- a· little save 'alot.

nished, secu rity deposit
reqtilred, no peta, 740-9921
22 8.
· 1 br. Apartment in downtown
pt_ Pleasant no-pets &amp; eec
dep raquired HUO accepted
740--446-2200

Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday of

Ta~e

- Impounds For listings call
Adorab le Miniature Collies. 1-800-749-8104 EXT 3901
Rooni and Board at Cozy 2 males. 2 females, $100
15
Hollow. Monthly and .weekly eaCh .
(740)441-0865 or
TRUCKS
rates available. ( 740 )245 _ (740)645-4 155
FORSA.LE
9549 tor info.
AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab
1993 Nissan pick-up, 4 cyl ..
puppies. Shots, wormed &amp;
SPACE
5 speed. 160K, driven daily,
dew claws . removed. $300$1500 OBO, (740)992·6511
$350. (740)441·0 1 3~
Ca mper lots for rent. River AKC
Registered
labs . 2000 Dodge ext. cab Diesel
3
Excellent blood lines &amp; certi· bua lly flatbed . $22,000.
Park: permanent hook-up:·
small mobile home or fications. 1 blond female, 2 (740)446·9317.
camper lots, $125.00/mo. 1 black niele s, 3 blond males. 2001 F- t 50 Supe r C rew
- office building. $3QO.OO!mo Ready Sept.
11 . Call Lariat 4Jt4, 53,000 mites,

--

3br In Syracuse, Ohio No
Pets, $500.00 a month Hud ing 'lamps. Like new all for
Approved (304)675·5332
$1200080. Antique 1950's
Blonde Oak Table wf4
For rent: Hou se in Gallipolis Chai rs refimshed 1 $200
2 BR. No pets. (740)379- 1950.s· Kitchen Cabinet
2400·
Home· 4 bdrm, 2.5 balh, 2car gar. $1 ,OOOJmo plus sec.
dep. Bulavi lle Pike. Bsmt

$500

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

~nrth

MYERS PAVING

740-992-1189

74D-591-1053

it::

!rom

BINGO 2171

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing · Siding ·
·Painting· Gutters ·
Decks· etc.
Fof Fast-CourteotJs
Service
Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,
CalL Dennis Boyd

r

_EHI!!Or--:o:------, Kid broke, also Cu b Cadet sage
Aiding-Mower w136 inch cu t
FuHNISIIEO
(304)675·4877
Cars

1 Rg1n-

Alder

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ACROSS

Phillip

Police Impo unds!
CarsfTr ucks/SUV 's
fro m
$500 Hond a's. C hevys ,
Jeeps &amp; morel for·hst1ngs
800·366· 9813 eK V717
- - - - - - -1968 ·v o l1 swagon
Bug
Looks good, runs g ood .
Anzona
car.
$:),500.
(? 40)992- t 4s3.

Page BS

NEA Crossword Puzzle

·

$500!

Turbo muffler- Stainless, like 2000 Pontiac Bonneville.
new, $30 . Cold-air Intake midnight blue. Loaded.
WANTED
Individual looking to bu
$20. Pnone (740)446· 2316 . leather, with extended Warranty, 46 ,000 miles. $10,500
and or poss ibly leas
TV 's from $10! , DVD - OBO (6 14)850·9738.
clusi&lt;Je hunting rights t
Piayers,
Video ·Games.
roperty in Meigs County,
2002 Pontiac Grand Prix ~T
New
1
bedroom
apt.
Phone
Computers,
Ectl
now a&lt;Jailhio. Prefer ac reage 5
Sedan. Fully loaded, Bose
{7401446·3736.
able
lor
Info
call
800-366res and larger. If interest
stereo. sunroof, leather, CD
d , please call (304)372 One bedroom garage apart- ~850 ex M655
player,
30,000
miles.
004.
'
ment, ki tchen furnished.
BUIWING
Red11re metallic , $17,000
·$400, (7401992·3823
~
SUI'I'LI~
(740)245.{)41 0
Lo.ts lor sale in Mercerville. 4
acres, good building site Pleasant Valley Apartment •--iiiiiiiiiiiiiioow ·a9 Taurus S,H,O., 5 sp.,
$17,500. {7401256· 1825
Are now raking Applications Block , brick: sewer pipes. needs little work. body In
1
lo r 2BR , 3BR &amp; 4BR ., windows. lintels, etc. Claude great shape, needs fuel
Mobile home lot tor rent at
Applications
are
taken Winters, Rio Grande, OH pump, cooling fan assembly,
Johnson's ·Mobile Home
runs good, new clutch ,
Monday thru Friday, from Call740.245-5121 .
Pol~ . {740)446·2003.
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M . Off ice is
ITrs
$800. 740-742-0507.
Nice le&lt;Jel lot SOx 190 on Located at i 151 E&lt;Jergreen
mR SALE
92 Corsica V-6. new tires.
High St. in Middleport All Drive Point Pleasant, WV --brakes, paint (burg undy)
hookups. out of flood plain Phone No is (304)675-5806 .
2 Tiny Toy Poodles, and an runs great, looks great,
Price reduced to $22,000 E.H.O
AKC Sheltie tamale , obedi - $2. 700, (7110)742·0509
Pnone (740)992·2782.
Twi n Rivers Tower is accept- ence
trained
in
4-H. 95 Z·28, 350, auto, T·tops,
IH\1\1"'1
1ng applications for waiting • (740)441-9478
• leather, da rk green. tan inte list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, -------~ rior, great shape, $7,000,
apa rtment , call 675-6679 3 Miniature Ponies for sale. (740 )742 •4011 leave mas-

Hous~o::s
FOR n-·r

The Daily Sentinel •

BRIDGE

Large 3br in Pt. Plea sant ,
Down stai rs,
C7A
&amp;
Applia nces,
Deposi t
Requi red leave message
{304)675·7783
I

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www.mydailysentinel.com

AIJIUS

1993 Toyota Camry ·LX 4
door. auto, 4 cyl. PW. PO L..
Pork custom freezer me at. sunroof. high miles, great
Call R&amp;R Packing 740- 2 4~- runn ing car, many new parts
9440 reference Blacks .
S1.495. (740 )441-1971 M·F
(740)441-0616
Set of ;4- 14" 100 spoke days,
e&lt;Jenings
and
weEtkends.
knock _Qff_ wheets, tr iple
chrome $300. Brand ' new. 1995 Chevy Lumina V-6 .
Pnone (740)446·2316 .
AMIFM cassette , air, loaded
56.000 miles, good condi·
Slide·1n
pup -up
truck tlon. $3,500. (740)245-5 157.
camper, good condition . .
Sentry
white, 8', new relrigeral or, 1996
Buick
$2,000, (740)742·2821
{3041675· 1506

2.26 Acres loca ted ott
Sandhill Road in Wa lnut per month. (740)446-4 868.
Creek Subdivi s1on, Point Furn ished effi Ciency, all utili Pleasant.
For Info ca ll ties pai d, share bath, $t 50

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�•

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Page B6 •

'Q'te Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, August 31, 20Q4:
•'

•

..Tressel~ both

Browns lose Boyer, Beasley·for season'
BY JOE MIUCIA

Associated Press
CLEVELAND - The Browns
aren't having such an injury-free preseason after all.
Less than two weeks alier ending
'training camp with a relatively healthy
roster, the Browns placed four players
on injured reserve Monday, including
linebacker Brant Boyer and offensive
lineman Chad Beasley.
The Browns also will be without
starting tight end Steve Heiden for two
to tour weeks after he \Sprained his
knee Saturday against Kansa' City.

Heiden's injury thrusts rookie
Kellen Winslow Jr. into the starti ng
role even though he isn't quite ready
following his 12-day holdout during
training camp.
The loss of Boyer leaves the
Browns without one of their top special teams players. He's also one of the
team's few veteran linebackers.
·'His experience is invaluable ro us
because he's played 10 years." linebacker Kevin Bentley said.
·
'Boyer broke a bone in his right foot
during it practice Aug . . 6 with the
Buffalo Bills. He had surgery and said
recently that he hoped to return by the

third game of the season. He was not Browns last season as they placed 13
available to comment Monday at the players on injured reserve.
Browns' training complex in Berea.
Bea~ley, who lost the staning left
The Browns' medical staff estimat- guard job early in training camp,
ed Boyer wouldn't be able to practice injured his ankl~ in Saturday's preseauntil after the seventh game of the sea- son game ·against Kansas City.
son, coach Butch Davis said. X-rays ' The Browns also placed fullback
did not show significant healing in the Ben Miller (ankle) and defensive back
bone.
Micha.el Grant (knee) on injured
"Atier all the injuries we had over reserve.
the weekend, we couldn' t play the
.The team . put defensive lineman
next five, six, seven, eight weeks · Antonio Garay (knee), tight end Keith
short-handed,'' Davis said.
Heinrich (ankle) and defensive back
While neither Boyer nor Beasley Sean Jones (knee) on the physically
were starters, their losses lessen the unable to perfonn list. Running back
team's depth - an issue that hun the , Adimchinobe Echemandu (ankle) was

son opener at Tampa Bay.
Abdullah •Suffered a dislocated ankle in
practice on Aug. 4. Chamberlin suffered a
torn bicep and Johnson sustained fractured
bones in his hand, both in Saturday night's
preseason game in Atlanta. Weathersby is
recovering from a head injury suffered in an
offseason auto accident.
The Bengals waived four other players:
halfback Herbert Goodman, cornerback Alvin
Porter, tight end Chad Hayes and free-agent ·
safety Wendell Williams of LouisianaLafayette.
The Bengals open their regular season on
Sept. 12 at the New York Jets.

U.S. Open

These boots were made.
for walkin': Serena
Williams wi.ns opener
BY HOWARD fENDRICH

Associated Press ·
NEW YORK- Dressed for
a ni~ht on the town, Serena
Williams was all business in
her first match in 4 1/2 weeks.
Williams strode into Arthur
Ashe Stadium wearing kneehigh black boots, a pleated
denim miniskirt, a studded
black tank top and dangling
earrin!!s· Afar cry from the tennis arure of days gone by, to be
sure, but then again, Williams'
powerful strokes bear .little
resemblance to the way the
women's game used to be
played.
.
Showing little ·sign of her
inj,ury-induced layoff, the twotime U.S. Open champion
advanced to the second round
with ease, overwhelming
Sandra Kleinova of the Czech
~epublic 6-1, 6-3 Monday
rught ·
"I perfonned at a decent
.level today. I'm finally getting
to a point where I'm actually
playin~ better and focusing
better,' Williams said.
A few moments later, asked
who her biggest threat in the
tournament is, Williams
replied: "Myself. I can make it
or break it."
She might have been dressed
for a cocktail party or MTV's
Video Music Awards, which
she attended last year while
skipping the Open shortly after
leff knee surgery.
·
Her play Monday was definitely Grand Slam-caliber,
though, a step above what fellow major champions Jennifer
Caprian, Roger Federer and
Carlos Maya showed in shaky
victories earlier on Day I. At
night, 1999 Open runner-up
Todd Martin lost the final
match of his career, announcing his retirement after being
beaten by No. 31 Fabrice
Santoro 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, '1-5.
Only ·one man in the dr&lt;1w is
older than Manin, by a matter
of months: Andre Agassi, 34,
who followed Williams on
center court and beat Robby
Ginepri 7-6 (5), 6-4. 6-2.
Agassi is the last of his generation, now that Martin joined
Pete Sampras, Michael Chang
and Jim Courier in retirement.
"In some respects, you miss
everyone you grew up with,''
Agassi said. "You do.'
Williams said her choice of
dtenim was inspired by Agassi,
who ·wore shOitS made of that
material back in .the early
1990s. That was when Agassi
was
Mr.
"Image
is
Evel)'lhing."' These days, he's
more "Father. Knows Best,"
playing a limited schedule now

that he and wife Steffi Graf n't exactly facing a contender.
have two children.
Kleinova is just 8-25 this year,
"I managed to fight hard in a and she's 1-6 for her career at
lot of those rallies and won the the Open. But players' fortunes
crucial points." Agassi said.
can change as quickly as the
There weren't many crucial direction of the' swirling wind
P?ints for Williams, who fin- at the Open.
.
1shed with a remarkable 35-3
Just ask Capriati. Federer
edge in winners and saved the and Moya, who barely played
only break point she faced with well ·enough to advance. Or,
one of her seven aces.
better yet, ask Mario Ancic and
"Her serving was pretty Karolina Sprem. who marked
good. If she places it really themselves as stars-to-be at
well. like she did tonight, it's Wimbledon but were one-andhard to return - even for done at the next Grand Slam.
guys," Kleinova said.
Frustrated by a strong
Williams said last week she's breeze, her opponent's superb
at 90 to 95 percent, workirtg play and her own miscues,
her way back since pulling out Capriati trailed . 54th-ranked
of a tournament at Carlsbad, Denise Chladkova by a set,
Calif., in late July because of then put together a 2-6, 6-1, 6soreness in her left knee. 2 victory. ·
Williams also missed the
"It was a little bit scary there
Olympics, deciding not to go in the beginning," the eighthonly hours before the U.S. ten- seeded Capriati said. "I had to
nis team's flight to Greece.
make some. adjustments, trying
' "I didn't have as much time to find my range a little bit, and
as I would have liked to pre- the wind was pretty difficult!
pare tor this event," she saiil. One side, you w~mld hit the
"I'm taking it a day at a time. ball, and it seemed like it
I' m just so excited to be out would go 10 feet out. On the
here again in New YQrk. It's other side, you couldn't get it
been a while."
After warming up, she had to past the service line."
To compensate, Capriati
take off the boots - actually, used different racket~ at differthey r&lt;1n from the top of her
d
h
black sneakers to her knees _ enl en s of t e court, and
whether the edge that provided
because U.S. Open officials was real or perceived, it eventold Williams last month that
h
ld •
tually worked.
s e cou n t wear them during
Federer .struggled, too, but
a match. Like Tommy Haas'
sleeveless muscle shirt two got past 2002 French Open
years ago, ihe boots don't meet champion Albert Costa 7-5, 6the "customary tennis attire" 2, 6-4. Third-seeded Maya had
rule, tournament referee Brian his problems against 19-yearEarley and tournament director old Brian Baker but came back
Jim Curley detennined.
to win 6-7 (6), 6-4, 6-4, 6-2
Williams termep it her after Baker was hit by what he
"Rebel Without a Cause" look, called "nervous cramps.''
and said it shoulq be described
Sprem, meanwhile, looked
as "Serena the Innovator little like.the player who upset
strikes again." She won the Venus Williams en route to the .
2002 Open wearing what she . quarterfinals at the All England
called a catsuit, a skintight Club:.
The
18th-seeded
black Lycra outfit that caused a Croatian lost to counttywom1111
stir.
Jelena Kostamc 6-,3, 2-6, 6-4.
"It's great that Serena has so And No. 27 Ancic, also from
much confidence to stand out Croatia, was beaten by Olivier
and do something different. Rochus of Belgium 7-5, 6-2,7She goes beyond tennis," 1979 6 (2)., II was a step back for
and 1981 U.S. Open champion Anc1c, who appeared to make a
Tracy Austin said. "Tennis career-changmg breakthrough
needs that. We need the Andre by reaching the Wimbledon
Agassis, the Serena Williams, semifi~als , then w~n an
the Maria Sharapovas, ·the Olymptc bronze medal m dou-.
Andy Roddicks that are·willing bles.
to stand out and be different."
The only other seeded loser
Williams has won just one Monday afternoon was No. 32
tournament in the Last year: in Meghann Shaughnessy of the
March, at her first event back United States. Into the second
after 8 1/2 months away round:
No. 2 Amelie
because of the operation. She Mauresmo, No. 6 Elena
lost ' to Capriati in the French Dementieva, Olympic silver
Open quarterfinals, her earliest medalist Mardy Fish, and
exit at a major since 2000. Olympic semifinalist Taylor
Then, in a big upset, Williams Dent, who advliJlced when
lost the Wunbledon .final to Younes El Aynaoui quit in the
Sharapo.va last mortth.
.
second set with a right foot
In Kleinova, Williams was- injury.
'

BY DAVID GINSBURG

Associated Press
OWINGS MILLS , Md.
The
Baltimore Ravens are awaiting the· arrival
of Deion Sanders, who appears poised to
end his three-year retirement and could
join the team this week.
.
On a day in whicfi cornerback Chr.is
McAlister ended his one-month holdout,
talk at the team training facility Monday
centered around Sanders, who has been
~orki~~ out at his _D~llas home this month
.m ant1c1pat10n of JOmmg the Ravens as a
n.l~kel,back.
. . .
.
.
We r~ very optimistic that DeiO:,t wt~l
be here, coach Bnan B1lllck ~a1d . Unt1l
De10n ~hows up m body a~d s1g~s a contract,_ I ve got to qualify. II. We re ready
for _e1~h~r v:ay, but the stgns are. a~f';lllr,
opum~stlc nght now. Awfully op11m1~tlc.
B1lllck 1s c~rtam that tf Sa~de~s does
show up, he, w1ll be ready to ~om ume for
the Ravens season opener m Cleveland
o~.se~t. 12. .
. ,
We II put ~lm through a physical t.o
mak~ sure h~ 1s r~ady to go, that there s
no a1lments llngenn~, whate~er. We hav~
no md1C?t10~. to .believe that s the case.,
B1lllck sa1d. ~e ~ m good shape. I don t
hav~. to run h1m m a 40 to see that he's
OK.
.
.
. Sanders, 37, has not ~layed smce rellr~
. mg before . the Was~mgton Redskms
opened trammg_ cam~ m_ 2000. He played
cornerback dunng hts 11lustnous career,
but wo.uld be used by Balllmore. as a f1fth
defens1ve back m passmg ~1tuat1ons: .
The Ravens would seemmgly )lave one
of the _fmest defens1ve backf1e~ds m .the
game 1f Sanders JOms a untt that already
h~~ Pro Bowlers McAli~ter and Ed Re.ed.
It could be the best m the game nght
now. Ev,en commg out of retirement nght
now, he s a lot more valuable and ex pen-

enced than a lot of corners in the league
today," McAlister said. "It's all a matter
of his conditioning level, and I'm pretty
sure he wouldn't come back unless he felt
he could go out there and play the game
the way he's used to."
Back when Sanders was known as
Prime Time, starring for the Atlanta
F 1
do 11 c b
a cons an . a as ow oys, no one was
better.
''He's one of the greatest of his era and
one of the best to ever play the game,"
McAlister said. ,
The addition of Sanders should also be
beneficial to Baltimore's defensive front.
"It gives you that extra second to pin
your ears back and go," linebacker
· Adalius Thomas said. "Coverage isn't
going to get too much better than that."
McAlister, considered to be one of the
finest cornerbacks in the game today,
staged his holdout as· a protest over being
designated the Ravens franchise player
for a second straight ·year. He .had the right
to remain absent until Sept. 12 but showed
up Monday in excellent spirits.
"I feel fresh right now. mentally and
physically," he said. ''I think 1 need the
two weeks before Cleveland. I .don't want
to walk out there, and the first person ! hit
is someone in a Cleveland Browns jersey."
McAlister hopes to participate in a few
plays during Thursday 's preseason finale
against the New York Giants and intends
to be caught up by the time the Raveps
open defense of their AFC North title
against the Browns.
.
McAlister wears No. 21. and so did
Sanders when he played. McAlister said
he would accept cash to make a switch,
but predicted that he would hold onto the
number.
"If he wants it, we'll see what happens,"
McAlister said, "but 1 really think I'll be
wearing 21 this year."

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - . A Wisconsin-based
research study shows that tourists
spent $26.5 million on travel-related
goods and services in Meigs •County
· last year.
.
According to a repon issued by the
Ohio Department of Development's
Division of Travel and Tourism, and
based on a study conducted by
Rovelstad &amp;
Associates and
Longwoods International, tourism
directly supported the equivalent of
700 full-time jobs in Me1gs County,
with wage&amp;totaling $11 million.
The study measured the financial
input of visitors for strictly tourism-

· related purchases, such as lodging, percent and lodging four percent.
load, gasoline and- souvt\mrs. Based- - ''Direct visitor spending and
within the .county:s,economic devel- ·· employment figues are essential fac:
opment olf1ce, Me1gs County Tounsm tors to consider when evaluating the
is one of 50 county and city visitor importance of travel and tourism to the
bureaus takin~ part i.n the.survey.
local. economy," said Meigs County
Tounsts VISiting Me1gs County . Tounsm Coordinator Billi Jo Bentley.
spent more on food and restaurant
Mort Rovelstad. who conducted the
meals than anyt~ing else, according study, said the Meigs County data result. to the study. Those visitors. spent $9.9 ed from a nUf!ber of surveys, including
mlll1on 10 Me1gs County restaurants those ·Of all,propenies offering accomGand grocery stores - 38 percent of dations, including motels and ·campthe total tourist expenditures. Retail grounds, and direct surveys of both
purchases, in specialty shQps and overnight visitorS and day-trip tourists.
other stores, accounted for'$8.2 ·milIt also used a state-level model estilion, or 31 percent, with gasoline mating wages ·and salaries for
accounting .for 16 percent of the tourism-related industries, which
tourist expenditures, re.creation II were then "scaled down" 'to fit indi-

has been a member of the
International Brotherhood of
- - - - - - - - - - · Electrical Workers Local 176,
MIDDLEPORT
- An and is now serving his thint
Illinois man who served . term on the Kankakee Comlly
aboard a U.S. Navy swiftboat Board of Education. He served
with Democratic Presidential in the ' U.S. Navy during the
candidate John Kerry in Vietnam Conflict as a radarVIetnam will visit Middleport man on PCF-44 with Senator
on Friday to share his story.
Kerry. Wasser was second in
· Jim Wasser of Kankakee, command and the leading
Ill., will make a tour of south- petty officer on the swiftboat. :
eastern Ohio Friday and · Terry Anderson, candida!~
Saturday with U.S. Rep. Ted for the Ohio Senate. 20th dis· ·
Strickland, D-Lisbon , and trict, Judge Douglas Bennett;
other Democratic candidates. candidate for the Fourth District
They will attend a rally -at II Court of Appeals, Pat Lang; ·
a.m. at Dave Diles Park, candidateforrl1eOhioHouseof
before traveling on to Gallia Representatives. 92nd District,
and Jackson Counties.
and local Democratic candiWasser, who works as an dates will also attend the
electrician for Ruder Electric, Middleport ntlly.

0BOUARIES ·
Page AS
• Rita Jo Radford
• Glen Thoma '
• Claralou Barton Shaver

LO'ITERIES
Ohio ·
Pick 3 day: 8-4-8
Pick 4 day: 3-2-2-3

Barnhart awarded
Dave Diles Scholarship

Pick 3 night: 3-8-8
Pick 4 night: 1-8-5-0

West Vll'ginia

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

Dally 3: 4-8-7
Dally 4:5-1-7-2
Cash 25: 3-5-8-15-17-22

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYS~NTINEL .CO M

WEATHER
Goldwing Express takes top .billing in the

EASE THE
QUEEZE!

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Dellillo on

PoCe A2

INDEX

Each Kit Contains the Following:

2 SF.CTIONS -

12 PAGFS

• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sale Signs - 24" x 12"
• 3 Wooden Stakes

Calendars

,AJ

Classifieds

· B3-4

• 216 Pricing Labels
• lnventmy Sheet
.
• 4 Mini-signs to be posted on bulletin
. boards at laundromats, markets, etc.
• 1 Seven-step instruction sheet, plus
"Secrets .of How to Increase Profits at
a Garage Sale"
• 3. Mounting Materials
• 6 Mulli-&lt;Xllored Balloons
• 1 Marker for Signs

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

Sports

A3
A4
As
B1

Weather

A6

1 bay Ad:

'

Advertising!

.

1\f

..

Editorials
Obituaries

• Available only with purchaae of Garage Sakt Actvettiaernent
Musto be pictced up at our tlfhce.

~Day

$6.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great

Raci~e

Fall Festival's lineup of entertainment.

Popular ·Goldwing
·Express returns lo Racine

..

vidual counties.
Claudia Vecchio, the director oT
Ohio's Travel and ~ourism program,
said the survey results are encourag~
ing news for Meigs County.
"This survey has not been an annual undertaking in the past, but based
on some past figures. tourism is a
growing industry for Meigs County,"
Vecchio said Monday.
In the past several years. the county
has marketed its, natural resources
and scenic beauty to attract touri sts,
as well as its place in history. Last ·
year's September re-enactment of
Morgan's Raid drew thousands of
visitors and contributed heavily to.the
county's tourist economy.

Bv BRIAN J.- REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CASH?

~

o 11111"1'"'"

Kerry swiftboat crewmate
to visit Middleport

Buckeye 5: 7-26-27·36-37

{l'l

" " ' \ JII \ tl ,u l

' 4fUJ

Study: M_
eigs tourism $26.5 million business:-

• Meigs rallies to beat
Federal Hocking. ·
SeePage 81

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati
Bengals on Monday placed five players on
ipjured reserve and waived , four as they cu t
their roster to the 65-player limit.
Punter Kyle Richardson, linebac kers
Khalid Abdullah and Frank Chamberlin and
wide receiver Patrick Johnson were placed on
the injured reserve _list, ending their eligibility for this ye'ur. Cornerback Dennis
Weathersby was placed on the reserve/nonfootball injury list, also ending his playing
·
eligibility for this year.
Richardson, a free agent who was the
team's punter for the last II games, suffered
a tom bicep in the Bengals' Aug. 16 pre sea-

Bearcats

play
on

•''(1'\1"' • \n\

.

Suicide bomber
attacks ·outside Moscow
subway statiori, As

Zwick and Smith will .

put on the reserve-non-football injuJY.
list.
The four players will be eligible to
return to the active roster after the
sixth week of the regular season.
Jones was Cleveland's secondround draft pick •out of Georgia and
was expected to help the team imme~
diately at the safety position, but tore 'I
ligament in his left knee in June.
.
He's fleased to still have the possibility o returning to play thjs season ..
"It's all depending on my knee," he
said. "If I'm I00 percent, then l might
be able to give it a try. but nothing less
than that."

Bengals cut roster to . Billick 'optimistic' that
NFL limit of-65 players De ion wiU join Ravens·

.

Ad:

~ •'!04 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE - A panide,'
crowning of a queen. art and
craft displays, a variety 0 f
entertainment, and games
for both young and old. will
highlight the annual Racine
Fall Festival at Star. Mill
Park on Saturday, Sept. II .
Festi,vities ·Will get underway at 10 a.m. with 'I parade
through downtown Racine.
Show time at the park will
start at II a.m. with Rocky
Mountain Bluegrass kicking
off the program, followed
by the crowning of the
queen at noon, then a performance by The Sheppard
Brothers at 12: 15 p.m.,
another session by Rocky
Mountain at I p.m. and the
Big Bend Cloggers at 2 p.m.

. The highlight of the after- hard driving, action packed
noon will come at 3 and 5 show. They were nominatp.m. with performances by ed as the Entertaining
the popular Goldwing Group of the Year in 200 I
Express, returning for a sec- and in 2002.
ond year by popular
Goldwing Express is said
demand. Based in Branson, · to have an expressive blueMo. , the band has top grass style hke no other
billing at the festival..
band , combining Branson,
Goldwing Express drew a Mo. comedy with the
large crowd last year and acoustics of a five-string
their populari~y prompted banjo, mandolin , guitar,
the Fall Festival committee bow fiddle and upright bass .
to once again· sign on the Bob Baldridge, the boy's
electrifying group as the father, besides being · an
headliner for the day. The expert storytelle{ and joke
group is composed of three artist , has mastered the
Native American brothers mandolin to a fine art.
and their father, a~d are
Baldridge's sons, Steven
· self-proclaimed as "Three Joseph, Paul Anthony, and
Indians and the Little White Shawn David Baldridge are
Man:"
all talented J:llusicians · with
This family act is ·versa- Steven Joseph getting a new
tile in many music .venues, banjo from Stelling Banjo
but are best known in the Works embossed in hi s own
bluegrass circuit for their name.

POMEROY Shawn
Barnhart. 2004 graduate of
Southern High School, has
been awarded the Dav~ Diles
Scholarship.
The son of Tom and
Debora Barnhart of Syracuse ·
is enrolled at Ohio University
where he will study to
become a physician therapist.
Barnhart was one of five area
finalists for the scholarship
which is awarded annually.
explained Cathy Crow who
' serves with Steve Story and Lee
Powell on tl1e selection comShawn Bamhart
mittee. Applicants are rated
according to their scholastic Southern honor studeni
achievement and on the basis of expressed his appreciation ~
financial need. said Crow.
'Th.is will be very useful
The original Dave Diles while
attending
Obi()
Scholarship, established by University especially with the
former Middleport resident increase 'in tuition. I'll work
Dave Diles, was adminis- hard to put the money to good
t&lt;!red by Ohio University and use and hopefully with the
was available to only OU stu·education I receive will one
dents studying corn.municaday be able to give back." .
tions for many years.
Dave
Diles
However, now the scholarship · "The
Scholarship
is
an
excellent
furid is administered by local individuals and can be used for any opportunity to assist in furthering the education of stucourse of study at any college.
!&lt;:row said that applications dents in Eastern, Meigs and
may be picked up at Meigs, Southern Local Schools of
Southern, Wahama. Point Meigs County and Wahama;
Pleasant 'and Eastern High and Point Pleasant, said Story;
" It is a rewarding experience
Schools and interested students can .contact school to be involved in a process to
counselors for applications.
assist local students financialUpon being selected to ly to reach their educational
receive -~he scholarship, the goals,:· added Crow.

or less
. $9.00 - 15. words
'

+ $6;00 Kit

Fs

$1 5 Advertising!
Gets 'You Great

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l)atlp 'atrihune
,JJoint ,JJieauant ll\egtuter

Farmi!nBank

&amp; Sovirlg$ Comp.ony

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• Tupptrll'llinl flf.Jllf
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The Daily Sentinel
•
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Member FDIC

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