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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."

,Bt

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
t l

'\tt

SPORTS

\\llt'l~ll\\

b

'"'-I I'll \II:IH

I

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

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' Malon ?1J.I40D
• Tupptrll'llinl flf.Jllf
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Member FDIC

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PageA2

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Egg farm neighbors say flies, stench
problems reduced' under new owners

Weather forecast
Wednesday, September I . the a'ner•oon progresses.
· Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)

Temperature s. will rise to 75
with today's low of 56 occur~·
ring . around 6:00am. Skies
' will be sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the northeast
turning from the east as the
morning progresses.
Afternoon ( 1-6 p.m.)

Temperatures will stay near
79 with 10day's high of 81
occurring aroun\1 4:00pm.
Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from the east
turning from the northeast as

progresses.

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)

Temperatures will drop
Thursday, September 2
from 78 early thi s evening to
Momirzg (7 a.m.-Noon)
64. Skies wi 11 be clear to partIt will be a cloudy morning.
ly cloudy with 5 MPH winds Temperatures will increase
fro m the northeast.
from 69 to 78 hy late this
Ovemight ( 1-6 a.m.)
morning. Winds will be 5 to
It's going to be a cloudy
overnight. Temperatures wi ll l 0 MPH from the southeast.
drop from 63 earl y overni ght Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.) ·
Temperat ures will hold
to 61 by 3:00am then climb
back up to 68 late overn ight. steady around 81. Skies will
Winds will be 5 MPH from range from partl y cloudy to
the norihcast turning from the cloudy with 5 10 I 0 MPH
southeast as the overnight winds from the southeast. ,

o•

Hamilton County prosecutor asks
state probe of harassment complaint·
· CINCINNATI (AP) Convention,· went to his
{-lamilton County Prosecutor office Monday instead of
Michael Allen should be attending the GOP convenremoved from office because tion in New York.
a sexual affair he had )'lith
He has said, he won't
an · employee is willful resign as prosecutor, a job he
neglect of duty and miscon- has held since January 1999.
duct in office, according to a
On
Thursday,
Allen
l.awsuit filed Tue sday by a requested a state investigataxpayer.
tion of Collins ' complaint
Carrie Davis, 43, of subur- against him . Carl Stich Jr., a
ban Groesbeck, asked a top assistant prosecutor to
common pleas court judge to Allen, sent a letter asking
remove Allen because the Ohio Attorney General Jim
affair violated his office pol- ·Petro to. determine whether
. icy forbidding personal rela- the alleged harassment viotionships- between supervi- lated ·any office policy or
law that applies to the prosesors and subordinates.
Allen held a news confer- cutor's office.
·ence ·last week to say he had · "Because the allegations
lii) affair that ended a year are directly against the prosago with a female lawyer in ecuting attorney, we believe
liis office. Allen did not that the involvement of your
identify her, but the woman office is essential to assuring
assistant prosecutor that the integrity of the
Rebecca Collins, 33 - sued investigation is beyond
a day later, alleging Allen reproach," Stich wrote to
had sex,ually harassed her for . Petro. "Only a full , fair and
truly independent inquiry
about four years.
can
remove this matter from
Davis alleged that Allen
neglected hi s duty by failing the political arena. I can
to notify county commi s- assure you that your office
sioners of an Aug. 12 inter- will have the full cooperanal complaint by Collins, tion of all assista nts and
who said Allen had harassed staff. "
County
commi ss ioners
her. His actions have potentially exposed taxpayers to hired" an outside lawyer
to investigate
financial liabilities because Monday
actwns .
Allen's
Collins has sued Alien and
the board of county commi s- Commissioners also rejected
sioners for unspecified a request by Allen's office
money damages, the lawsuit . that they hire a lawyer at taxpayer expense to defend
said.
Davis asked the judge to him.
" If thi s was someone who
appoint an interim prosecutor and order the county worked for us, we would fire
board of elections to conduct that person," ~a id county
Phil
a special election to fill the Commissioner
· position. Davis noted that . Heimlich , a Republican like
Allen is running unopposed Allen'. .
in the Nov. 2 election for a
Allen is elected indepen~econd term.
dently of county commi sAllen and · his· lawyer, sioners to hi s $ 11 0,000-aMichael Hawkin s, did not year job and answers to the
return telephone messages voters.
Allen's wife, Lisa Allen, a
teft at their offices Tuesday.
Allen has said the affai r was Hamilton County Municipal
consensual and Collins Court judge, said she learned
falsely accuse~ him of se11u~ of her husband's ·affair in
al harassment.
February 200 1 when · an
anonymous
package was left
Allen, 48, a former county
Republican Party c)lairman, on her car containing a tape
(esigned Friday as southwest of a romantic telephone mes~
£&gt;hio regional chairman of sage Michael Aile!) had left
President .-Bush's re-election for his girlfriend.
£ampaign. Allen, a delegate · "I ·had no idea who this
to the Re·publican Nationa l woman was, but•it was pret-

The Daily Sentinel

CROTON(AP)- One year
ago, Robert and Rosella Bear
were among neighbors fighting to get Ohio's largest egg .
farm shut down. Now they
and others say that stench and
fly problems are greatly
reduced since Ohio Fresh
Eggs took over and • scaled
down the ·former Buckeye
Egg Farp1.
The Bears still are suing to
ensure the new owners install
air filters at the Croton-based ·
company's operations in
Marseilles in nonhwest Ohio.
But they said they enjoy summer nights outdoors for the
first time in years and can
discuss· any . complaintsdirectly with a company representative whose job is to
visit them about weekly.
''I drive by and, if I see
&gt;orneone outside, I always
stop," said Harry Palmer,
community relations director.
"And I bring· them eggs."
Ohio Fresh Eggs got permission in February to take
over barns that were in the
proce&gt;s of closing under state ·
order after years of neighbor
compla.ints, court contempt
rulings and lawsuits over
stench, tly infestations and
manure spills. The federal
.\
government
also
fined
Buckeye Egg $880,600 for
Revell)
air pollution violations.
The new owners, Don Sergio Dominquez hand inspects
·
eggs at Ohio Flesh Eggs
Hershey and Orland Bethel, barns in Mount Victory. The company got pe'rmission in
agree~ 10 install . $ 1.6 million February to take over the former Buckey Egg Farm barns that
worth of pollutton. controls . . were in the process of closing under state order after years of
As well as replacmg aged neighbor complaints, court contempt rulings and lawsuits over
barn s,. Ohto Fresh Egg IS stench, fly infestations and manure spills.
1nstallmg machmery that
·
dries manure, reducing smell. hens there.
about air pollution from dust,
and fly outbreaks.
The farms are now produc- and are seeking through their .
At its peak, Buckeye Egg ing up to 5.7 million eggs. lawsuit to force the company
had more than 14 million daily, down from about .? mil- to install air filters 011 barn ·
hens producing eggs at _four lion daily for Buckeye Egg. . ex haust fans. Palmer said
cities in three counties. It proThe Be ars were among · Ohio Fresh Eggs is testing the
duced about 2.6 bil.lion eggs neighbors who spoke against effectiveness of the filters at a
annua.Jiy, making it the Buckeye Egg at a hearing last few barns and might install
nation's fourth -largest pro- August when the former more.
Dan Perkins. who lives
ducer.
owners were trying to gel
Ohio Fresh Eggs now has their operating permits about a mile away from the
·about 4.4 million laying hens restored.
Croton farm, said he believes
and I million pullets - or · This summer, Rosella Bear a nearby stream is finally getimmature ' birds - in its counted 90 flies on a sticky ring cleaner. He recently saw
Hardin . and Wyandot county strip in one , month - the his first water snake in years.
" I ha:ve always been the
barns, Palmer said. When it same amount she could ·catch
finishes tearing down and in a week before.
biggest critic," Perkins said.
"We barely notice the "But I'm also the first to
rebuilding all 64 barns at
Croton in Licking-.County, it manure small at all," she said. admit when things get better,
The couple still worries 'much better."
will have more than 8 million

ty obvious that Mike was
romantically involved with
her," Lisa Allen · said
Tuesday in interviews with
news 9rganizations.
Lisa Allen said she and her
husband went into couns.eling, but that her husband
confessed months later that
he was still seeing Collins.
Lisa Allen said she kicked
her husband out of the house
for more than a year before .
they reconciled.

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
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 must be paid for in advance.

2 Col. x 5"
$82.00
1 Col. x 2" $16.40

Thank You

2 Col. x 4"
$65.60

1 Col. x 3" -

$24.60 .
-·

.

2 Col. x 3"
$49.20

2 Col. x 2"
. $32.80

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Tup{'ers
Plains
VFW
Auxtliary will meet at 7 p.m.
at the hall .
CHESTER - The ChesterShade Historical Associ'a\ion
will meet at. 7 p.m. at the old
Chester Courthouse. All bustees,
members, and. representatives
are encoura~ed to anend.
Fnday, Sept. 3
MIDDLEPORT - TheOHKAN Coin Club wjll have a
display in the lobby at Peoples
Bank in Middleport from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m . Coins may be
brought in for appraisal.
RACINE- Meigs County
Pomona Grange wi II meet at
7:30 p.m. at the Racine
Grange hall. Members are
asked to take winning contest
items .for judging.
. Saturday, Sept. 4
SALEM...CENIER - Star
Grange 778 ano Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet at 6:30
p.m. for a potluck supper followed by a 7:30 p.m. meeting. Harrisonville grange will
visit and presept the program .
New officers will be installed
and final plans will be made
for a chicken barbecue to be
held Oct. 3.
. 1\iesday, Sept. 7
POMEROY
Eagles
Auxiliary potluck 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 7. Meat to be
provided. Meeting at 7:30p.m.

VVednesday,Sept. I
PAGEVJLLE Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at Pageville
Town Hall.
Thursday, Sept. 2
REEDSVIU...E - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet at
8 p.m. at the Olive Township
Garage to discuss business to
come before the board.

Clubs and .
organizations
VVednesday, Sept. I
CHESTER -- Chester
· Garden Club open meeting,
7:30 p.m.,· Chester United
Methodist Church. Special
program by Janet Bolin .
Members bring gifts.
RUTLAND .
The
Leading Creek Conservancy
District will hold a special
board meeting for preliminary bargaining session at 5
p.m. at the office.
Thursday, Sept. 2
RACINE - Special meeting of Pomeroy/Raci ne
Lodge 164, .F&amp;AM, with
work in the Master Mason
degree On tWO candidates.
Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The

BY THE BEND
Mans
secret stash of love
.
letters has uncertain·future~
Wednesday, September 1, 2004

Wednesday, September 1, 2004
.'

NewsChannel

PageA3

MIDDLE~ORT

Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 7:30p.m
at the temple.

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 5
. SYRACUSE - Ours reunion
12 noon. dinner at l p.m.. '
Syracuse Communi!)' Center.
. 992-2865 for informanon.
LETART Donahue
reun.ion for descendants of
Homer
and
Amanda
Donohue will be held at
12:30 p.m. at ·the Letart
Com munity Ce nter in Letart,
W. Va. For more information
call Brenda Neutzling, 740388-9828.

Church services
Sunday Sept. 5
POMEROY
Rand y
Parsons wi II be speaking and
the Glory Bound Quartet
singing at the 10:30 a.m. wor~hip services at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
on Laurel Cliff Road. At 6
p.m. Brad Grant will be
preac hing and
singing.
Regular serv ices at the church
are 9:30 a. m. Sunday school;
I 0:30 · morning worship: 6
p.m. evening worship, and 7
p.m. Wednesday, Bible study.
Glen Rowe is the pastor.

'

Land transfers ·
POMEROY
- Meigs Williams, William G. Evans, Power, American Electric
County Recorder Judy King deed, Chester.
Power, easement. Chester.
reported the following real
Gary Harper, Charlotte
David H: Mohler. Jennilee
estate transfers:
H.arper, to. Wayne Payne, W. Mohler, to Columbus
Rutland Township to Joseph Patricia A. Payne, deed, Southern Power, easement ,
. Guy Grueser, Norma S. Village of Pomeroy.
Chester.
·
Grueser, right of way, Rutland.
Mi chael R. Smith, Janeen
Denni s J. Fackler, Kim M.
Evelyn Barringer to Evelyn A. Smith, to Elizabeth L. Fack ler,
to
Columbus
Barringer,
Deborah Upton , deed, Olive.
Southern Power, · ea.se ment,
Barringer, deed, Olive.
Kevin W. VanMatre to Rutland.
Richard Hargerty, Dorothy David E. Ellis, Rebecca A.
Keith A. Collins, Marjorie
Collins, to Delbert .D. Smith,
Hagerty, to Mark Stover, Ellis, deed, Chester. ·
,
Brenda Stover, deed, Salem.
R&amp;F Farm, LLC, to Jeffrey Lorri A. Smith, deed, Olive.
Dennis M. Wolfe, Cindy L. S. Frank, deed , Sutton .'
Mark Travis Pierce, Wendy
Wolfe, to John E. Riffle,
Bruner Land Co. to Monty L. Caroline Pierce, to Jessica L.
deed, Village of Syracuse.
Hook, Karen Hook, deed, Olive. pore, Anthony Staley, deed,
Dennis W. Harris, Lilly M.
James Edward White, Orange.
Harris, to Columbus Southern Kri sta Marlene White , ·to . Nancy C. Cale to Marcia
Power Co.. right of way, Orange. Angela Gibbs, deed, Village Seth, Meli ssa Conde, Megan
Andrews, deed, Village of
Dennis W. Harri s, Jr., of Middleport.
Bobbie J .
Harris, to
Jennifer K. McKibben, Middleport.
.
Columbus Southern Power Michael G. McKibben, to
James W. Perkins, Judith L.
Mary Ann Vanover, deed, Perkins, to ·Robert W. Smith,
Co., right of way, Orange.
Barbara J. Smith, deed ,
Davie
Edward
Ball, Salisbury.
Rebecca Sue Ball, to
Jackie Lee Lyons, Sr., Village of Pomeroy.
Harold Munns, Adrienne
' Columbus Southern Power deceased, to Dolores Gene
Co.; right of way, Sutton.
Lyons, affidavit, Sutton.
Munns, to Vanessa E. Folmer,
Joan Weyand, Steve Weyand,
Harold
V.
Anderson, deed, Village of Middleport.
· to Columbus Southern Power Loretta C. Anderson, to Twila
Ruth Schultz, deceased, to
Co., right of way, Chester.
J. Umbel, Dwight D. Umbel, Earle D. Schultz, affidavit, Olive.
Francis Brodreick, Linda deed, Orange.
Earle D. Scllultz, to Timothy
Broderick, to Tuppers PlainsRory M. Robinson to D. Clark, deed, Olive.
Chester Water Drstrict, right Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Ruby Carol Marshall ,
of way, Salisbury.
Co., sheriff's deed, Rutland.
Barry D. Marshall , Judith M.
Jan A. Parker, Donna
Jerry R. Hayman, Bonita R. Marshall, deed, Bedford.
Parker, to TP-C~D , right of Hayman, to TP-CWD, right
CM Subs, Inc. to John R.
of way, Lebanon.
Rairden , deed, Village of
way, Orange.
·
Joan Seder to TP-CWD, Pomeroy.
. Teresa Ann Stout to Terry
'
M. Jenkins, · Roxana R. right of way, Chester.
Meigs Local Board of
Jenkins, deed, Columbia.
·William Bruce Bradford, Education to Trustees of
Rex .Cheadle, Bonnie Carolyn M. Bradford, to TP- Rutland Township, deed ,
Cheadle, to Rex Cheadle m, CWD, right of way, Orange. Village of Rutland .
Maria Romine to Arlene
deed, Columbia.
Charles Sinclair, Margaret
Countrytyme ALC, Ltd. to Sinclair, to TP-CWD, right of Heavner, deed , Village of
Kenneth E. Phillips, deed, way, Bedford.
Pomeroy.
Chester/Olive.
Maria Romine to Arlene
Michael L. Barr, Margaret
Brent A. Bolin, Camille S. J. Barr, to TP-CWD, right of Heavner, deed, Village of
Pomeroy.
Bolin, to Donald 0. Casey, way, Bedford.
Dan P. Smith, Donna' J.
Tim Smith, Karen Smith, to
Rebecca D. Casey, deed, RutlaiXI.
Donald 0 . Casey, Rebecca D.. TP-CWD, right . of way, Smith, to Judith M. Marshall ,
· Barry D. Marshall , deed,
Casey, to Brent A. Bolin, CHester.
,
David Hysell, Alberta Sutton.
Camille S. Bolin, deed, Rutland.
Ivan L. Wood, Eve lyn
Vena V. Marcinko to Louie Hysell, 'Faye E. Schultz, Julie
B. Frederick, Charlene K. Murdock, to TP-CWD. right Wood, to Lora Bing, James
of way, Bedford.
M. Bing, deed, Chester.
Frederick, deed, Chester.
Barry D. Marshall, Judith
Janette M. Roach to Brian
Wanda 0 . Neigler to Nola
M.
Marshall,
to
TP-CWD,
C.
Young, Jemiifer R. Young,
Proffitt, Linda Davis, Karen
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Weaver, deed, VtllageofSyra::use. righi of way, Bedford.
Home National Bank to
Robert Lee, Donna Lee, to
Clara Anna Baer to Charles
TP-CWD,
right
·
of
way,
Brenda
S. Woodrow. deed, Letart.
William Baer, deed, Sutton.
Dora F. Hysell to Michael
Allan D. Gibson, Sabra Bedford.
Mark A. Beall tO TP-CWD, W. Duhl, deed. Chester.
Joanna Gibson, to Alpha G.
right of way, Lebanon.
Butcher, deed, Scipio.
. ' Gary E. Spen.cer, Kath y L.
Elli s McMillan, Phylli s Spencer, tq Clarence L.
Juanita C. Bowles to Alpha
McMillan, to TP-CWD, right . Fraley, Jacqueline F. Fraley.
G. Botcher, deed, Scipio.
right of way.
Gary Mitch, Sandra Mitch, of way, Lebanon.
Seth Hill to'TP-CWD, right
Clarence
E.
Fraley.
Sharon Michael, to Gary
Jacqueline F. Fraley: to Gary
Mitch, Sandra Mitch, deed, of way, Lebanon.
Robert Fitch, Donna Fitch, E. Spencer, Kathy L.
Village of Pomeroy.
Rex H. Cheadle, Bonnie to TP-CWD, right of way, Spencer, agreement for right
of first refusal.
Cheadle, Rex Oleadle, to Donald Lebanon.
. Cheadle, deed, Columbia
Robe rta Jeffers · to TPRex 'H. Cheadle, Bonnie CWD, right of way, Chester.
David M. Booth, Ruby C.
Mae
Cheadle,
Bonnie
Cheadle, to Kathy Cheadle, · Booth, to Talmadge Lewis,
Pat Lewis, deed, Salem.
deed, Columbia.
Talmadge Lewis, Pat
Mary M:-Hall til Brian E.
Lewis, to Ronald Eugene
Hall, dWJ, Lebanon.
Roland E. Goodwin, Sherry Phillips, Carole A. Phillips,
S. Goodwin, to Peggy S. Blake, deed, Salem.
Dennis J. Fackler, Kim.
Bill D. Blake, deed •.Chester.
to
Columbus
Peoples ,Bank to Jesse A. · Fackler,
Southern
Power,
easement,
. McClure, Susan F. McClure,
· Rutland.
deed, Lebanon.
.
Lisa R. Rowe, Ryan K.
· Peoples Bank to Jesse A.
McClure, Susan F. McClure, Rowe., to Columbus Southern
Power, easement, Rutland.
deed, Lebanon.
Patrick
Lawson, Julie
David H. Mohler, Jennilee W.
Mohler, to Ronald F., Williams, · Lawson, to Columbus Southern
Power, easement. Columbia.
Wtlliarn G. Evans, easement
Carol Wolfe, Della Wolfe,
David H. Mohler, Jennilee
C,olumbus · Southern
W. Mohler, to Ronald W. to

DEAR ABBY: My problem concerns what to do with
·a group of s11apshots and. a
bundle of abou t l 00 old love
letters that I've hidden for
more than 50 years. If they
are fo und after my death . my
heirs wi ll be shocked.
I ha ve treasured these
mementos in my heart since I
received the f1rst, before I
was shipped overseas · in
World War II. The letters
contin ued up to December ·
· 1947 - and in '98 and '99 I
received three more that were
ult ra-s pecial. They are the
sincerest of love letters from
the girl in the photographs.
Family interference se a-·
rateu us, even as we were
planning to be married .. Of
course, life went on. I met my
wife and we were married a
few years later, but I could
never bring myself to destroy
the letters or the photographs .
After half a century. I
searched and found my first
love. Then in 1999 we were
able to locate our son, who
was born and pl aced for adoption after we were separated.
The th ree of us have spent
some special time together.
Even though we acknowl- ·
edged that our love was and
sti II is true, we agreed not to
upset my marriage.
My wife knows all · about
this, and accepts my strong
need to finan cially help my
"other girl" have a comfortable
lifestyle. !love my wife . She is
and always will come tirst in

~

-,

.

..

'

•

·'

r

ftilo

..

my life. Yet those' photos and
letters are precious to me .
Ge ne.alogicall y. they are
vital fam ily memorabilia, and
without anyone kl)owing, 1 r~cently. ~ow s he wantsus t ~
have placed them with five p.1y back the res t ~I the
generat ions of saved items. money. After ~II th1s 11me, ·'
They represem an i~ortant don t fee l 1hat s fa1r. Tim IS
part of my lirewith my fifsr-L't~ U~m g a lot ot stress m our
love. 1 cannot find the m:~rnage. and I need some
courage to .'l et them go. Have gurdance. Plea se help. I done wrong'!- IN LOVE INDIGNANT IN IND IANA
WITH TWO EXCEPTIONDEAR
LNDIG.N ANT
AL WOMEN
When you ran 1nto ftnanetal
DEAR IN LOVE : Not ha rdship because of your
from my perspective. This is child, Aunt Selma tried to
the 21st century - not the lessen yo ur burden. Please
1940s. Perhaps it's time to let don' t repay her generosi ty by
your children know about wnhholdtng.· her money. She
their half-brother. After al l. may be askmg for ll because
this happened before you· &gt;he needs it now. So reinstate
even met yo ur wife .
· the payment plan and give
An ahernative would be to her what she's due - and I
put the. keepsake' in a safe don't mean just the money.
depnsit box and give one of . Dear Abhr is HTitten b~
the keys io your lawyer, wit h Ahigail Van Burerr. also
instruction s to mail them to knmm as Jewme Phillip&gt;:
your love child aft er your and " ·as founded In· iler
death. I' m sure your son 11101hn; Pauline Phillips.
would treasure having ev i- Wrire
Dwr
Abbl'
at
dence ·of the love through IV\\'II '. DetirAbbr. com ,j,. PO.
which he was conceived:
Box 69440, Los Angele.1·, CA
DEAR ABBY: Seven "years 90069.

Community Briefs
Prize winners
announced
POM EROY - Winners of
prizes from the Me.igs
. County Right to Life booth at
the Meigs County Fair were
John Dean of Pomeroy,
homemade stuffed· animal ;
Barb Tatterson of Pomeroy,
collectible Boyd bear; and
Todd Bissell of Long Bottom.
an afghan . .

and grades: a resume of
activities and career objectives li sting at least three references · with one bei_ng an
instructor; a current photograph for publicity, and the
name and address of the college attending.
Appli cations are to be
mailed to MCRT Scholarship
Committee, c/o Joan Corder.
297 Wright St.. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Autism
MCRT accepting . Taskforce to
scholarship
hold forum at
applications
Rio Grande

POMEROY - Again this
RIO GRANDE - The
year the Meig s · County
Ohio
Autism Taskforce will.
Retired Teachers will award a
.
hold
its seventh regional
scholarship to ·a Meigs
County resident, either a GOI- forum at Rio Grande on Sept.
lege junior or senior majoring . 9 in the Jot)n/ W. Berry
in education with at least a Performing "rts Ce nter on
the campu s of the University
2.5 GPA.
The applicants are evaluat- of Rio Grande .
.This is one of eight regioned on grade point average
al
forum s scheduled in Ohio.
and compliance· of requirements with consideration of said State Representative Jon
extra curricular activities and Peterson.'(P-Delaware) Chair
of the Ohio Auti sm Taskforce
career objectives.
Applications for a scholar- in announcing · the · Ri o
ship are being accepted . Grande forum.
He explained that the
through Sept. 30; 2004. They
charge
of the Ohio Autism
must include a cun·ent college transcript showing the Tasktorce (OAT) is to in vestwo previous ears of cre~it s tigate the rising incidence of

autism, a developmema l dis.abilit y, in Ohio and to present
legislative public policy recommendations to the Ohio
General Assembly aril:l the
Governor to address gaps io
the delivery of services to
individuals with au tism in
Ohio.
Parents. educators. practi~
tioners, service providers ;
and other interested parties
are encouraged to attend the
regionai forum to present testimony on how to do a better
job in providing services to
individual s-w ith autism .
.
Testimony will be limiteq
to the -general .topic of service s for indi vid uals with
autism. Written testimony is
encouraged bu t no t req uii·ed.
Depending on turnout. testimony may be time limited.
Two se P.arate session' of the
region al forum have been
scheduled on Sept 9. The
afternoon session i' sc heduled from 3 to 5 p.m.. a_nd the
evening session from 6:30 to
9e.m.
·
.
'Thi s publi c forum is a
unique opportunity to get
directly involved with the
work of the ta&gt;k force. The
personal testimon y of perso ns directly impacted by
autism is vital to the quality
of task fo rce recommendations. Come and make a ·difference ." said Peterson.

Lane Double
Reclining Sofa

*
lane Double
Reclining Sofa &amp;
Stat~ary love seat

Q. . .

Borders and ArtiVork

.. ....

Dear
Abby

ago. my hu,baml \ "Aun[
Selma'" leni u' S2.(XXJ on our
liNt home . We -.et up u payment
plan and paiJ her faithfully.
A year lat er. uurlir't child
was born "i th a heart condition. Aunt Selma came to us
and de manuel) thatinstead or
payin g her. we put the mone)l
toward the enormous hospital
bilb. W e 1ried to refuse. but
she in,i sted.
There . was ne ver any
paper"wk, jus( words spo- :
ken out of lov~ _ until ·

•

.r.:

s59995

�PageA4

-O PINION

•

The Daily Sentinel

.The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

'
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. Sept. I , the 245th day of 2004. There
are 121 daysJeft in the year.
Today's Highlight in History : On Sept. I, 1939. World Wur
II began as Nazi Germany invaded Poland.
On this date: In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr
was found innocent of treason.
In i878,.Emma M. Nutt became the tirst female telephone
operator in the United States. for the Telephone Despatch
.
Company of Boston.
.Jp 1905, Alberta and Saskatchewan entered Confederation
as the eighth and ninth provinces of Canada.
In 1923, the Japanese cities of Tokyo and Yokohama were
devastated by an earthquake that claimed some 150.000 lives.
In 1932, New York City Mayor James J 'Gentleman
Jimmy' Walker resigned following charges of graft and corruption in his administration.
In 1951, the Unite(.! States, Australia and New Zealand
signed a mutual defense pact, the ANZUS treaty.
In 1961 , the Soviet Union ended a moratorium on atomic
testing with an aboveground nucl~ar explosion in central Asia.
In 1972, American Bobby Fischer won the international
chess crown in Reykjavik; Iceland, defeating Boris Spassky
of the Soviet Union.
In I 983, 269 people were killed when a Korean Air Lines
Boeing 747 :-vas shot down by a Soviet jet fighter after the air-.
liner entered Soviet airspace.
In 1993, Louis Freeh was sworn in as director of the FBI.
Ten years ago: Morocco established low-level diplomatic
relations with Israel. Chicago police found the body of 11year-old Robert 'Yummy' Sandifer, a suspect in a gang,related killing who himself apparently became a victim of gang
violence.
Five ~ears ago: Twenty-two of baseball's 68 .permanent
umpires found themselves jobless, the fallout from their
union's failed attempt to force an early start to negotiations for
a new labor contract. Ten American tourists and two
Tanzanians were killed when their small plane crashed as they
were leaving Serengeti National Park.
One year ago: During a Labor Day trip to Richfield, Ohio,
President Bush announced ·he was creating a high-level government post to nurture· the manufacturing . sector. Arab· TV
broadcast an audiotape purportedly from Saddam Hussein
denying any involvement in a bombing in Najaf, Iraq, that
killed a · beloved Shiite cleric. The U.S.-picked Iraqi
Governing Council named a new Cabinet. Actor Rand
Brooks, who played Scarlett O'Hara's· first husband in 'Gone
With the Wind,' died in Santa Ynez, Calif., at age 84. ·
Thought for Today: 'With history being made all the· time,
every day now seems to be the first anniversary of something
. awful. • - Anonymous.

Wednesday, September 1,

ing group. Bill Richardson. with the Bush-hating organithe New Mexico governor zations. If it is not a downwlu&gt; chaired last month's right violation of the law. .
Democratic
National which Kerry enthusi'astically
Convention, has been an supported, it clearly is conadviser to the
New trary to the spirit of.the law.
Joseph
Democratic Network, anothThat's why Bu sh issued :
Perkins
er anti-Bush organization.
Kerry a challenge this week.
Joe Sandler is the DNC's 'I hope my opponents join ·
general coun~el, while also me in ... conde;nning these ·
serving as legal counsel for activities of 527s. I think
MoveOn.org and the Media MoveOn .org and Moving they are bad for the system.'
America Forward, yet anothBut that was not good
Fund.
Yet, Kerry is screaming er anti-Bush '527' group (so- enough for Kerry. He wantbloody murder - maybe called because it's one of the ed the president to specifihe'll 'earn' 11imself another 527 outside organizations cally rep· litne the Swifties'
Purple Heart - about the running ads in support of ad. to u
the vets to pull
Swiftie ad buys, which Bush or Kerry): Jim Jordan. their T\ts.
But lw in the name of
ha ven't , even amounted to Kerry's former presidential
one-twentieth of what the · cmnpaign manager, founded McCain-Fei ngold can Kerry
pro-Keny. anti-Bush groups a consulting firm that repre- demilnd that Bush repudiate
sents the Media Fund. .the Swift Bnat ads when
-~~ve spe nt~
-~The Kerry. campaign has Anwi·ica Co ming Together Kerry hasli"t denounced the ~ made a big deal about two and America Votes, anorher plethora of attack ads by·
MoveOn.org, the Media
members of the Bush cam- pro-Democrat group.
paign having ties to the
Bob Bauer. a ·Washington Fund and other Bush-hating
Swift Boat vets. Well , both lawyer. is legal counsel both, organizations')
When Kerry hasn'l urged .
men. Ben Ginsberg. the to the Kerry campaign and
Bush re-election team's out- · America Coming Together. those groups to refrai n from
side counse l, and retired Air MoveOn .org 's Zack Exley running any more anti-Bush
Force Colonel Ken Cordier. joined the Kerry campaign TV spots between now and
,.
a campaign
volunteer, as its director of online com- November'?
munications and organiZing.
It is a wonder th ai Kerry
resigned.
But there have ·been no · And the Kerry campaign ca n keep a strai ght face
similar resignations from the also hired Bill Knapp, who when he dares to accuse
Democratic Party appa- was . the Media Fund's ad Bush of ' hiding behind frqnt .
groups.' If the Swift Boat
ru!i:hiks. including past and consultant.
present n1embers of the Kerry
Under the ·Bipartisan brouhaha has revealed anycampaign. who have ties to Campaign 'Finance Reform thing. it " that the·
presidential ·
MoveOn.org, the Media Act, better known a·s Democrati c
Fund and other groups.
McCain-Feingold, there '~as nominee" is an unabashed
Indeed, . Harold Ickes. a not supposed to be coordina- hypocrite.
(Joseph Perki11s is a
member of the Democratic tion between 'independent'
National Committee's exec- groups and political candi- cohmmistfor The San Diego
Union-1/'ibune and am he ,
utive .committee, heads the dates.
Media Fund and .is chief of
But clearly the Kerry cam- reached
at ·
staff for America Coming paign has been coordinating · .Joseph. Perkins@ UnionTrib.
Together, another Bush-hat- its election-related activities com.)

WHAT HAPPENED
To THE BIPARTISAN
UNITER?

IT$ MY

WA'f OR THE

HIGHWAY.

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Rita Radford

MOSCOW (AP) A
woman strapped with explosives blew herself up outside
a busy Moscow subway station Tuesday night, killing at
least 10 people and wounding
more than SO in the second
terrorist attack to hit Russia
in a week, officials said.
Seven days earlier, almost
10 the hour, two Russian jetliners crashed within minutes
of each other in what officials
determined were terrorist
bombings. All 90 people
aboard were killed, and the
investigation has focused on
two
Chechen
women
believed to have been passengers.
·· A militant Muslim web site
published a statement hite
Tuesday claiming responsibility for the subway bot)lbing on behalf ·of the
"lslaiT)bouli Brigades," a
group that also claimed it
caused the jetliner crashes Bodies of victims of an explosion are seen outside the Rizhskay&lt;J subway station in Moscow,
with suicide teams in retribu. Tuesday. A car blew up outside a busy subway station in Moscow Tuesday and news reports
lion for Russia's war with said eight people were killed and 18 injured. (AP Photo/ Dmitry SHaJganov)
Islami c rebels in Chechnya: adding that the bomb was thought my roof would come "black widows," who have
The veracity of neither claim packed with bolts and pieces off," said 30-year-old Sergei lost husbands or male rela- ·
could be confirmed.
of metal.
Pyslaru, who was driving on . tives in the fighting that has
The
statement
said · "There was a desire to a nearb~ st:eet..
.
gripped the southern region
Tuesday's bombing was a cause maximum· destrucAlexe1 Borodm, 29, sa;d he Che~hnya over most of the
blow to Russian President . tion," he said. .
was walkmg w1th hts mother past decade.
Vladimir Putin "who slaughA srokesman for the when he heard "a very powChechens on Sunday elect·
tered Muslims time ·. and Federa
Security · Service, erful bang."
. '
ed a new Kremlin-backed
again." Put in has .firmly Sergei Ignatchenko, told
"Something, flew past my president in the republic, a
refused to negotiate with the JIITV television that the casu- head ~ I don t know what 11 move Moscow hopes will
rebels in predominantly alty toll had risen to 10 dead was. There were P.eople lymg bring some stability to the
Muslim Chechnya, saying and 51 wounded, of whom 49 ~.n the square, he sa1d. region.
they must be wiped out.
were hospitalized. Many of There were pte~es of bodtes.
Alu Alkhanov, Chechnya's
Several female suic ide . the injured were believed to . V(e were walkt,Qg through top police official won with,
bombers allegedly connected be seriously wounded, and p1eces of people.
'
with the rebels have caused the death toll was expected to
Chechen secessioni sts have 74 percent of the. vote, eleccarnage in Moscow and other rise. It was not immediately been blamed for a series of !ton off;c;als sa;d, after .a
Russian cities in a series of clear if the number of dead attacks in Moscow and other campa;gn 111 wh;ch th~ SIX
attac!&gt;s in recent years.
included the bomber.
parts of Russia the past sever- other candidates .~arely were
Mayor Yuri Luzhkov told
A white car was set afire.; al years, killing nearly 370 shown on telev1s1on and a
reporters near the Rizhskaya and shattered windows and people with bombs in just the leadmg opponent was kept.
subway stop in northern · bloodied people lay on the . past 21 months. In the most off the b_allot by pro-Moscow
M"oscow that the bomber was asphalt in front of the subway recent bombings, 41 people · local othcmls. .
walking toward the station stat ion .
died in a rush-hour explosion
Alkhanov will . replace
shortly after 8 p.m. but turned
A woman, apparently dis- . on the Moscow subway in Akhmad Kadyrov, who was
around when she saw two traught with panic, pushed February. and a female . sui- assass1~ated May 9 when .a
pol ice officers.
away a man who repeatedly cide bomber blew herself up bomb npped through a st~dJ­
She "decided to destroy reached out to help her. A outside a hotel adjacent to urn m the Chechen cap1tal,.
herself in a crowd of people" man lying on his stomach Red Square and killed live Grozny, during a Victory Day ·
in a busy area between the moved his arm weakly as other people in December.
ceremony.' A Chechen warsubway station and a nearby people crowded around him.
Many of the · Chechen lord claimed responsibility .
department store-supermar- · "There was a powerful female suicide bombers are for the attac, which killed as
ket complex, Luzhkov said, blast and then a smaller one. I believed to be so-cal led many as 23 other people.

Deaths
Claralou Shaver
GALLIPOLIS~ Claralou Barton Shaver, 64, of Galfipolis,
died Tuesday morning, Aug. 31, 2004, at St. Mary's Hospital
·ii1 Huntington, W. Ya.
·
.
" ;
Services will be held at II a.m. on Friday, Sept. 3, 2004, at
Crow-Hussel l Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., with
burial following at Addison-Reynolds Cemetery in Addison.
·
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday.

Glen lhoma
CHESTER ~ Glen Thoma, Chester, died at his residence
on Tue sday, Aug. 31, 2004. Arrangements are being handled
by Fisher Funeral Home and will be announced when completed'.

Poker Runs
Scheduled
NEW MATAMORAS Charitable poker runs are
sc heduled for upcoming
Saturdays m Washington
County.
On- Sept. 4, an all-whee.!
ride poker run sponsored by
the United Steelworkers
Association will benefit the
St. Jude's HospitaL The first
motorcycle will leave from
the 7 &amp;8 Inn in Fly, Ohio, at
the intersection of Ohio
Routes 7 and 800; at II a.m.
The last bike will leave at I
p.m., and the last bike will be
·m by 5 p.m. Hands are $10
each. There will be a door

pnze, raffle, plaques and
food. In an all-wheel ride,
any ride .will do. Cars and
trucks will follow the bikers.
For more information on this
run, ca ll 740-865-2343 or
.740-864-2005.
On Sept. II, a First Annual
911 I Memorial Tribute Poker
Run will be sponsored by the
New Matamoras Volunteer
· Fire Department. This, too, is
an all-wheel ride event. There
will be a door prize, 50-50
raffle and food. The first
motorcycle will leave the fire
hall at II a.m., and the last
will leave at I p.m. The last
bike will be in by 5 p.m. For
more information on this run,
call 740-350-7839, 740-865· 2343, or 740-865-3870.
·

Hurricane. Frances strengthens as it gr,azes Puerto Rico
LUQUILLO, Puerto Rico
A tropical storm warning
(AP) - Hurricane Frances was discontinued for Puerto
brushed Puerto Rico with Rico, the British Virgin
pounding surf and biustery Islands and the U.S. Virgin
winds Tuesday as its power- Islands as Frances moved
ful vortex swirled offshore on north.
a path toward the Bahamas
Hurricane warnings were
and the southeastern United 'issued for the southeastern
States.
Bahamas and the Turks and
Frances strengthened to a Caicos Islands, where the
dangerous Category 4 hurri- storm was expected to cross
cane Tuesday, with sustained or pass nearby Wednesday. A
winds up to 140 mph. But it hurricane watch was in place
only grazed Puerto Rico with for the central Bahamas.
rai·n and lightening that
Forecasters warned U.S.
knocked out electric.ity to residents from Florida to the
about 17,000 people in the Carolinas to monitor Frances
U.S. territory. No injuries - the third major hurricane
were reported.
of the Atlantic season, folSurfers rode the hurricane's lowing Alex and Charley.
The Bahamian government
crashing swells, while people
concerned about coastal urged people in the south!looding sandbagged their eastern cays to. move to Iargdoors and pulled down storm er islands, said Carl Smith,
shutters. Many offices and the national disaster coordischools closed for the day.
nat or.· One of the most vul-

POMEROY- A marriage license has been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Tommy Lee Hopton, 39, and Carla
Jean Turner, 33, ·both of Racine. ·
'

A fool and his bunny are soon parted
Jim
Mullen

Evropean accent. A cross
between Yoda and Ensign
Chekov from 'Star Trek.'
'Now, for to be on .the
stage the premier time, the
only time this fantastical feat
has never been done before
on any stage, I wi l11mike this
pineapple go away before
your very eyes,' he says
pointing to a 700- pound
pumpkin.
.The audience is skeptical.
Previously, when he _had
said, 'Looking. There is up
this sleeve nothing,' and
pushed up his sleeve, all
manner of hooks and wallets
and watches could be seen
hanging from- his arm. And
what appeared to be two
dead doves. 'For to me
excuse, please~ I meant nothing up my other sleeve,'
which he pushed up about a
quarter of an inch.
When he first walked on
stage, yard after y'ard after
yard of colorful ribbon come
out his pants leg .which. he

did not seem to notice, like a
man leaving the ·· restroom
with a trail of tissue stuck to
the bottom of his shoe.
Instead of elegantly but endlessly coming out of his
breast pocket the way I
remember it from countless
Ed Sullivan shows; the endless scarf trick is performed
while the Great Spumanti
sits on stage pulling it. out of
the bottOf[l of his pants trying to pretend this is the way
the trick was meant to be
done. The adults are laugh. ing, the kids are ;unazed at
how much. material is coming out of this guy's pants.
Finally it ends with a rough
tug. and tied to the end of the
endless scarf is a pair of
boxer shorts that say .
Tuesday.' It is Saturday.
Next, a . card trick. He
boldly announces that the
audience volunteer has
picked the two of spades.
She shows she is holding the
queen of hearts.
• 'My English is not so
good,' he explains. 'You
mean in this COUf!try this card
is not to be called the two of
spades? No? So you have
tricked ME, have you not?' .
The 'audience is starting to
· understand that there is no
way on earth ·the Great
Spumanti is going to make a
.700-pound pumpkin disap,

pear. There are a few more
disasters - instead of a rabbit, he pulls a can of creamed J
com out of a hat. 'That is ·
even harder than pulling our ·
a rabbit : Trusting me. I for to
be having a flat spot on my
head for a week from .stupid
can.'
H.e seems genuinely
shocked that no one ·rrom the
Harvest Festival audience
will volunteer to get in the
locked box so he can push
razor sharp swerds through
them. 'Have yolt not heard
that last year's tragical accident was ruled victim's :
fault ?' he pleads. 'The fingers have all been , how do
you say - reattached on.
Mostly. And new spleen is
spleening fine , I am told.'
Finally, the climax. Poof'
Smoke and light. The pump- ·
kin is gone.
No, there it is - l;mngiilg
high in a tree in the center of
Co11rt House Square. But
now it ·is a giant' jack-olantern, a giant queen of .
. hearts carved into it, glowing :
from a burning candle with- :
in. After which there is for to ·
begin many applauses.
' (Jim Mullen is rile a..rlwr
of '/r Takes a Village ldior:
Complicating the Simple
Life' and 'Baby's First :
Tatloo. ' You can reach him ·
at jim~mullen@myway.com) :

'

'

POMEROY ~ Rita Jo Radford, 62, bf Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy, d1ed Aug. 29, 2004, in the Holzer Medical Center in
Ga!Jipolis following an illness of several months . ·
Radford was born Dec. 31, 1941 in Mason, W.Va. She was
the daughter of Clarence B. Smith and Margaret Faye Smith
Nunn. She was retired as a nurse's aide.
Radford is survived by her hu sband, Philip David Radford,
and her mother. Also. she is survived by a s·on, Dwaine
(Martha) McDaniel · of Rutland; and two sisters, Shirley
(George) Sisson of Pomeroy. anp Ada MeHaffey of
MtddlepOit. Also surviving her are three brothers: Truman
( Betty). Smith of New Haven, &lt;;:larence (Pat) Smith of
Marysville, Tenn., and Leland (Xoleta) Smith of Tahlequah,
Okla., one grandchi ld and one great-grandchild.
She was preceded in death by her father; a son, Clarence
Eugene McDaniel Jr.; her stepfather, Charles Kyce Nunn; her
father-in-law. Wyatt (Sam) Radford; and a sister, Margaret
Parsley.
·
Radford was a member of the Rocksprings United
Method;st Church and the United Methodist Women.
. Services will be held ~t 2 p.m . on Wednesday, Sept. I, 2004,
lit Ewmg Funeml Home in Pomeroy- with the Re¥. KeithRader officiating. ·Burial will follow in Rocksprings
Cemetery.
.
Memoril)l contributions may be made to the American
Cancer Society.

Marriage license

When hi;'S not selling real
estate, The Great Spumanti
is an amateur magician.
While we were signing
forms and writing checks for
surveys and building inspections, he would sit behind his
desk and manipulate a little·
red · ball over, under and
across his fingers endlessly.
Suddenly, as we watched Presto! Chango! ~
· it would
disappear in front of our
eyes. Never once did he stop ·
tal king about the deal we
were entering into, ne \le r
once did he lose his plact: in
the legalese of real estate
transfers.
It's been almost 20 years
since Spumanti sold us our
farm but we had never seen
hi s stage act untillhls year's
Harve st Festival. Next.to the
' County Fafr, the Harvest
Festival is the. biggest event
we have: The Court House
Square is packed with
booths showing the work of.
, local artists and craftsmen;
there is the last Farmer's
Market of the year and 'the
Giant Pumpkin Contest; and
there is a stage for musicians
and 'performers. II was just
getting dark when The' Great
Spumanti took the Mage.
When · in character; The
Great Spumanti speaks a
polyglot of English in a
nonexistel)t;
vaguely

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Sui'cide bomber attacks outside Moscow
subway station, killing
at least ten
.

For 1he record

EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

Obitt.Jaries

Local Briefs

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LETTERS TO THE
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
· addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus ·of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co, s
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

www .rnydailysentinel.corn

2004 -

Hypocrisy on political advertising
When MoveOn.org posted
not one, but two ads on its
Web site that likened George
W. Bush to Adolf Hitler,
John Kerry uttered nary a
discowaging word.
. When the Media Fund ran
·attack ads that falsely
claimed: 'Pr~sident Bush
say' he's going to help ' com,
'panies outsource jobs' . to
other
countri es,
the
Massachusetts senator was
11lllm'
Yet when the Swift Boat
Veterans for Truth opened up
a can of vou-know-whac on
Kerry, ru.nning ads raising
questions about hi s fourmonth . tour of Liuty in
Vietnam. the Democratic
presidential nominee got his
drawers in &lt;1 bunch.
He si~ked hi s lawyers on
TV station managers, notso-gentl y suggesting that
they ought · not run the
Swiftie ads. He beseeched ·
the
Feueral
Elections
Commission to muzzle his
estranged band of brothers.
And finally, desperately,
he acctised President Bush
of being behind the Swift
Boat ads. :The. longer he
goes without specifi cally
condemning lhis terrible
smear,' Kerry's Campaign
spokesman said thi s week,
'the clearer it is what's going
on here.'
Well, what's clearly going
on here is hypocrisy. John
Kerry hasn't said a ·thing
· about the $60 million worth
of ads hating on Bush. purJ::hased on the Democrat's
behalf by groups like

~ednesday,Septernbert,2004 '

Testimony: Soldier accused of
trying to pass secret~ to ai-Qaida
could have endangered troops ·
On the tape, Anderson
FORT LEWIS, Wash. (AP)
-A soldier accused of trying to offers sketches and informa- ·
pass military information to al- lion about weaknesses in the
,Qaida was shown in a videotape MIA I Abrams and identifies
at his coun martial Tuesday the crew compartment, main
detailing weaknesses of the gun and other components he
Army's primary battle tank to described as vulnerable.
Prosecutors attempted to
undercover federal agents,
The audio was muted on show that information on the
segments of the tape. and a tape could have · endangered
gray blur obstructed . Spc. soldiers' lives.
Ryan G. Anderson's mouth to
Al-Qaida
expert
block what he was saying at Christopher Wallace testified
Prosecutors
say . that the details Anderson
times.
Anderson believed the men shared would have been help·
were members of the al- ful to terrorists, but acknowledged during cross-examinaQaida terrorist network.
"I have no belief in what tion that the information also
the American Army asked me could be found on th~
to do,'' Anderson said on the Internet.
video. "They sent me to die."
An expen on the abil i~ of
The second day , of soldiers to survive in military
Anderson's coun-mart1al was vehicles tes6fied for about 15
closed to the public for long minutes in open coun about his
stretches so the judge and . tiackground. Then, Judge
jury pf commissioned . offi- Debm Boudreau asked memcers could hear sensitive or bers ofthe public to leave for 45
minutes of funher testimony.
classified testimony. ·

nerable islands was Great
lnagua, with a population of
about 600.
"We're reminding people
to get water, food supplies
and batteries, and to know
what she lter is close to their
,residenc~,'' Smith said.
At 5 p.m. EDT, the hurricane was about 145 miles
north of San Juan, Puerto
Rico, and moving west at
about 17 mph. Hurricane. force winds extended outward 70 miles, while tropical
storm-force wi~ds extended
175 miles.
Carnival Cruise Lines said
it had diverted' four cruise

WHEN CONSIDERING HEARING ·
HElP, CONSIDER THE BEST!

- ~ --

The River City Players presents: .

1

;Jtttnie get 1tJur gun
; Saturday, September 4th ·
7:00P.M . .

Sunday, September 5th
2:00P.M. &amp; 7:00P.M.

When your hearing fades, ·
so does your quality of life.
Even a mild hearing loss can
rob you of life's most
precious moments.
Don't accept a hearing loss.
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�•
'

•,.
Page A6 • The

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, September 1, 2004

.;

'
•
••

2003 FDIIL STINDIJICS
Big "en

, Michigan
Ohio State
Purdue
Iowa
Minnesota
Michigan St.

1·1

6·2
6-2
5-3
5·3
5·3
Wisconsin
4-4
Northwestern '4·4
Penn State 1·1 '
1·7
Indiana
0-8
Olinois

All Top 25
10·3 3-2
11·2 4·1
. 9-4 1-4
10-l 4-2
10·3 0·2
8·5 2·3
7-6 1·3
6-7 0-6
3·9 0-5
2·10 0-4
1-11

·o-4

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

DaUz Sentinel

PF PA
286 150
175 124
198 138
198 160
285 204
249 191
226 180
148 202
!54 190
104 279
112 317

•

•

•

•••

•

• ••••

••
,.

• •
•
•'

• ••

•• ••
••• •••
• •

DRILL

••
•'

•
••• •
Wednesday, September t, 2004

White man~ things are
up rn the arr for an
Tilinois team that won only one game last
season, one of them is not quarterback.
Sixth-year senior Jon Beutjerwas
irnpressive inthe lllini'sfinalscrirnmage,
...,:rl

----..,-----------=:--:-::-:-=--=--=--===-==-=-::-------•:.!1.!!:004::.!:Lo~nl!!gwt:!!·n~g~Pu~bli~·c!:at;::_ions~In!!::c.

GAME OF THE WEEK

Heat.State at Iowa

Meigs rallies to beat Federal Hocking

~~:ChJ:~2s for 134 yar&lt;ls and two
The Hoosiers return 18
starters from last ·
season, but one of the major new
additions to the lineup is junior college .
transfer Paul Szczesny. Playing alongside
Josh Moore and Kyle Killion and behind
four returning starters on the line, r·
including Jodie Clemons. Szczesny is
ready to join a tough front seven.
~A lhe Hawkeyes .~re startill_9.~-­
....,.,,
their 75th season of play,
and to eelebrate they are making their
opener against Kent State a'Throwback ·
Game. Both teams, along with game
officials, the sideline chain gang, Iowa
cheerleaders and dance squad, as well as
program vendors, will be outfitted with
uniforms from the 1930s. Souvenir black
fedoras and straw hats will be distributed
to spectators.
~HIGAN While the Wolverines
~
are aU over preseason
.award lists, the players themselves
selected fifth-year lineman David Baas
and senior cornerback Marlin Jackson as
their captains. Baas is on \he .Lombardi
· Award and Outland Trophy watch lists, '
while Jackson is on the watch list for the
Jim Thorpe Award.

sports@ mydailytribune.com

11111""1:1

Average per gaine

N'I'Uo1GIU18
Minnesota (4) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Michigan (15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. Wisconsin (41) ... . . . . . . . . . . .
Northwestern (63) . . . . . • . . . . .
Purdue (65) . . . . . . . . . . . .• ...
- -Michigan Stat• (73)""" . . . • . , .-:- .
Olinois (87) .. ..... , ... , ...
Iowa (92) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

494.6
446.7
394.9
m.4
312.9
367:4 ·
340.3

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

_

l3l.5

Michigan (22) . . . . . . . . . . . ... 270.8
Michigan State (23) ..•.. . .... , 110.0
nunois (46) . .... . . . . . .. . .. 119.7
Purdue (51) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114.0
Wisconsin (59) .... , .... , ... 117.9
Ohio State (11) .. . . . . .. . . . . . . 106.1
Minnesota (71) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105.5
Penn State (86) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191.3

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

Minnesota (3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
'• North;,estem (14) ..... : .. .. .
Wisconsin (37) .... .' .. , .....
Michigan (38) ...... , . , . , ...
Iowa (39) ...... .. : .. , . , ...
Indiana (59) . . . . . . . . . . , ...
Purdue (63) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ohio State (84) . . . . . . . . . . . . .

189.1
111.1
177.0
175.9
171.4
155.2.

148.9
126.1

lllol.l.c-HJGAN ST

NIAioDU&amp;NR
Ohio State (10) . . . . . . . . . . ... 296.8 ,
Michigan (11): . . . . . . . • . • . . . 297.2
Purdue (13) . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . 302.0
Iowa (16) . . . . . . . . . . ... ... 314.5
Minnesota (34) ..•.... ..... .' 340.4
Wisconsin (43) . . . . . . . . , . ... . 355.4
Perm State (49) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361.4
Micl\igan State (61) . . . . . . . . . . . 319.9

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

Ohio.State (1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61.3
Iowa (8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91.7
Purdue (10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . 96.4
Michigan (11) . . . . . . . , .. . ... 116.6
Minnesota (26) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121.7
Michigan State (27) .. .. •. ..... 124.8
Wisconsin (48) . ·... . . . . . . . . . 141.0
Northwestern (70) . . . . . . . . . . . 164.1

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

P•nn State (3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153.3
Mlthigan (15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
nlinoia (35) • . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Purdue (39) ..... , .... , ....
Wisconsin (49) . . . . . . . , ..... .
Minnesota (55) . . . . . . • . . . . . .
Iowa (61) . . . . . . . . ·. . . . . . . .
Ohio State (80) . . . . . . . . . . . . .

180.5
102.1
205.6
113.4
217.7
221.8
234.5

llllYlDVIL STITimCS
NIIIIIG YIIIIDAR
Jeff Smoker, Michigan State ...... 161.15
.John Navarre, Michigan . . . . . . . . 156.13
lyle Orton, Purdue . . . . . . . . . . 121.92
Jim Sorgi, Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . 187.58

Craig Krenzel, Ohio State . . . . . . . 185.45
Asad Abdul-Khaliq, Minn~sota ..... _184.69

·-·-··

ChriJ Peny, Michigan (6) . . . . . . . 128.77
Jason Wright, Northwestern (21) . .. 106.77
Fred Russell, Iowa (25) ... . . . . . . 104.23
Marion Barber Ul, Minnesota (37) . . . 91 ..00
Laurence Maroney, Minnesota (44) ... 86.23
BenJarvus Green-Ellis, Indiana (56) .. 78.17

IIICI&amp;ItihO YAMAR
93.31
88.46
87.54
75.75
64.33
64.23

to'IAI. 01 I IWII:
252.23
149.23
240.15
m.15
208.64
186.75

IGORIWO
Jason Wright, Nortln•ertem (6) . . . . .
ChriJ Pony, Michigan (15) ... .....
Ben Jones. Purdu• (21) . . . . . . . . •
Natolaeding,Iowa (27) . . . . . . . . .
Dave Rayner. Michigan State (28) ....
Marion Barbor m, Minnesota (l2) ....

9.69
9.13
8.54
8.15
8.08
7.85

IWIIAOD .......

Jim Leonlwd, Wisconsin (8) .... ... 0.54

Jovon Johnson. Iowa (22) . . . . . . . .
lkyon Heinz, Northwestern (40) .. ....
Jwtin Isoin, Minnesota (44) . . . . . . .
Aim Zemaitis, Penn State (50) . . . . . .
S~ Schweigart, Purdue (62) .....

0.46
0.38
0.36
0.33
0.31

ntustration by Bruce Plante

0

2004

Bawkeyes take flight
T

he f\rst week of acti~n .is always a tim~ when wnferences

can prove their strength. The Big Ten will attempt to
·
demonstrate its superiority over the Mid-American
Conference (MAC), as six schools from each conference face off
in the opening week. The featured game showcases an overhauled
Iowa team against Kent State. Favorite Michigan takes on Miami
(Ohio), as the RedHawks face life after I he departure of four-year
starting QB Ben Roethlisberger. Northwestern is the only Big Ten
school not favored this week, as it opens the season against last
year's Cinderella school, TCU.
ii Records: Both are 0·0. • Coaches: Iowa's Kirk Ferentz (4410); Kent State's Doug Martin (0·0).• KlckoH: 12 noon ET
Sarutday. • TV: ESPN Plus.
.
Key forlowa:The Hawkeyes will key on establishing new RB
Jermelle Lewis. He has shown tlashesJJf brilliance.
Key for Kent State: The Golden Flashes must keep the ball .
away from the Haw keyes' linebackers. Matt Roth and Abdul
Hodge can wreak Mavoc on an opponent's offense.

The a..e of tile Matahup•
Miami (Ohio) at Michigan
• Records: Miami 1-0: Michigan 0-0.• Coaches: Michigan's'
Lloyd_Carr (85-26); Miami (Ohio).'s Terry Hoeppner (40-20).
• KlckoH: 12 noon ET Saturday.• TV: ABC.
Keys for Michigan: Get Matt Gutierrez comfortable. He has
great receiving options in WRs Braylon Edwards, Jason Avant
and Steve Bre.aston.
·
Keys for Miami (Ohio): Stop the pass. With every defensive
b&lt;ick retumh1g, this is one of the MAC's best secondaries, but they
will have to play their best to contain Michigan .

Key for Toledo: Stop the Minnesota run. If Maroney and
Barber get going , this one could be out of reach early.

Syracuse at Purdue (Sunday)
• Records: 'Both are 0-0.• Coaches: Purdue 's Joe Tiller (94-621); Syracuse's Paul Pasqualoni (135-70-1). • KickoH: I:30 p.m.
ET Sunday .• TV: ABC.
Key for Purdue: Attack the Orangemen's defensive backfield.
Purdue' s sophisticated passing offense could leave Syracuse
confused.
Key for Syracuse: Establish the run. With freshman Joe Fields
at quarterback. senior running back Walter Reyes will be the
veteran i~ charge of the offense's success.

Central Florida at Wisconsin
• Records: Both are 0-0. • Coaches: Wisconsin's Barry Alvarez
(99-67-4); Central Florida's George O'Leary (52-33). • Kickoff:
12 noon ET Saturday. • TV: ESPN.
Key for Wisconsin: This will be QB John Stocco's season to
determine the success of Wisconsin football.
Keys for Central florlcla: Strong safety Atari Bigby is as
good ~s they come and he must make big plays against the
Badgers to keep this game from getting ugly.

Michigan State at Rutgers
• Recorda: Both are 0-0. • Coaches: Michigan State's John L.
Smith (118-65); Rutgers' Greg Schiano (8-27). • Kickoff: 3:30
p.m. ET Saturday. • TV: ABC.
Key for Michigan State: Find a way to move the ball on
o~fense. The quarterback situation is in limbo.
Key for Rutgen: Establish the passing game. Junior Ryan
Hart continues to improve and will ·look to Tres Moses often.

Northwestern at TCU (Thursday)

Akron at Penn State

• Records: Both are 0-0. • Coaches: Northwestern's Randy
Walker (83-70-5); TCU's Gary Patterson (nil). • KlckoH:
9:30 p.m. ET Thursday. • TV: ESPN2.
· Key for Northwestern: Establish Jhe run. Noah Herron should
pick up where departed RB Jason Wrikbt left off.lf Herron
struggles, Northwestern will let this one turn ugly.
Key for TCU: Move the ball early and often on offense. The
Horned Frogs rel\lm quarterbacks Brandon Hassell and Tye Gunn,
along with running back ~nta Hobbs.

• Recorda: Both are 0-0. • Coaches: Penn State's Joe Paterno
(339-109-3); Akron's J.D. Brookhart (0-0).• KlckoH:'3:30 p.m.
ET Saturday. • TV: ESPN Plus.
Key for Penn State: The Ninany Lions will need to find a
solid rush. Whether it be sophomores Austin Scott and Tony Hun:
or backup QB Michael Robinson, someone needs to run.
Key for Akron: The Zips will need to throw against the Big
Ten's top pass defense from last season. Akron senior quarterback
Charlie Frye holds 49 school records.
'

Ci ,
, Ohi S
nonnati at
0 tate

Florida A&amp;M at llllnois

• Records: Both are 0-0.'• Coaches: Ohio State's Jim Tressel
('l2-7); Cincinnati's Mark Dantonio (0-0). • KlckoH: 12 noon ET
Saturday .• TV: ESPN.Pius.
ICey for Ohio State: New quarterback Justin Zwick must be as
good as advertised. After silting for two se~ons, he now will have
a chance to lead a talented offense on his own .
ICey for Cincinnati: The Bearcats must stop the Buckeyes'
rushing attempt. lfLydell Ross and Maurice Hall get on top early, ,
this will be a long fU'St game for Dantonio.

Toledo at Minnesota_
• Recorda: Both are 0-0. • Coachea: Minnesota's Glen Mason
(103-104-1); Toledo 's Tom Amsrutz (27-11). • Kickoff: 9 p.m.
Et Saturday.• TV: ESPN2.
ICey for Minnesota: Domiqate on the ground. RBs Marion
Barber III and Laurence Maroney are among the league's best.

• R.ecords: Both are 0-0. • Coaches: Illinois' Ron Turner
.(39-53); Aorida A&amp;M's William Joe . • KlckoH: 6 p.m. ET
Saturday.• TV: None. ·
Key for RUnoiJ: The Illini must move the ball on offense.
Key for florida AiM: The attack squad of Rashard Pompey,
Paul Sharpe and Greg Arline will need to run early and often.
'

Central Michigan at Indiana

• Records: Both are 0-0. • .Coaches: Indiana's Gerry DiNardo
(56-68-1); Central Michigan's Brian Kelly (118-35-2). • KlckoH:
7 p.m.ET Saturday. • tv: None.
Keya for Indiana: For Indiana, establishing the running game
will be key in every game this season.
·
Key for Central Michigan: While first-year coach Brian
Lewis has yet to name a starter, Grant Amoldink and Kent Smith
have been battling for the job.

The Spartans'
·~
• starting
quarterback decision remains an
unknown. l.ast week, potential starter
Drew Stanton sat out several practices
with an inflamed knee. Stanton is
attempting to recover from a torn anterior
cwciate ligament. If Stanton is unable to
go, redshirt freshman Stephen Reaves
and senior Damon Dowdell wilt be the
Spartans' options.

llloll1rNESOT.'A
The main reason
~
theGolden
Gophers are picked by so many to do so
well this season is their running game.
Marlon Barber Ill and Laurence
Maroney are both highly rated, running
beside new fullback Justin Valentine.
Along with the veterans, coach Glen
Muon was impressed by freshman Gary
Rusle\1 in the team's latest scrimmage.

-THWESTERN ~i~kc:ts·

-....un ST'ATE
...-nu n1

From last season's
team, the Buckeyes
lost five of their front seven players on
defense. But one returnee is junior
-linebacker A.J ; Hawk, who led the team
with 103 tackles last season. Hawk is more
than happy about his teammates this
season. "We have so many talented
linebackers who we know can make
plays," Hawk said. "Everyone can handle
the load if they are called upon this
season..Our coaches are pleased with our
progress and love the idea of being able to
use so many linebackers in our rotation."

111111\:wN S"'A"'E
&amp;n&amp;

While Zack Mills
will certainly see
plenty of time under center this season,
Coach Joe Paterno is still uncertain what
r.ole backup quarterback Michael
Robinson will play. "I think Michael
Robinson is one of the better football
players in the country, if not the best,"
Paterno said. "He may be the best all· ·
around football.player in the country
right now. He can throw the ball. He can
run the balL He can catch the balL He can
do just about anything you woulil want a
football player t.o do:
-"

Sharrett leads
Raiders to
tri-match win

111111wn DUE Whill! safety Stuart
..-.rn
Schwelgart graduated,
the leader of the defense is now fourth·
year starting cornerback Antwaun
Itogers. During the Boilermakers' last fall
scrimmage, Rogers ran back a 28-yard
interception off a Kyle Orton pass.
The Badgers will
.......,
depend on senior
R8 Antl!ony Davia, corning off an injuryplagued seasotf, to be their star this
season. They will depend on him even
more now that his badrup, Dwayne
Smith, left the team for health reasons.

.......,.CQNSIN

.

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS
LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZAnON

• ....Y,.

112-3381

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

'·
1

I

· MASON - Betty Brandon
from Sleepy Hollow Country
Club won the 12th Annual
Mary Roush Miller Lite
Ladies Invitational.
Brandon defeated Joyce
Qmllen on a score·card playoff for the championship,
both had rounds of 70 on the
day.
A total of 88 players were
in the event this year, .form·
ing six flights along with the
championship !light.
,Rita Slavin (82) and Mary
Burton ("89), both from
Riverside. won the first and
second flights respectively.
Jeanne Stewart of Marietta
won the third .flight with a
score of 86. Green Hills
golfers Ireta Sayre (94) . and
Louella McPhail won the
fourth and fifth flights.
Closest to the pin winners
were Ann Boyce on hole
four, Sue Gold'camp on
seven, Slavin on nine,
Paulette Rogers on I I and
Mary Gress on the 12th hole.

BELPRE - Eastern had
little problems disposing of
its namesake. counterparts
·Tuesday during Tri-Valley
Conference volleyball action.
The Lady Eagles picked up
a straight games 25-11, 2522, 25-12 victory over the
Belpre Lady Eagles in the
season-opener for both
teams.
Morgan Weber •led the way
in kills with four and also
handed out five assists. Her
sister, Erin, amassed seven
blocks. Jenny Armes added
four assists while Casey
Darcy
Smith • and
Winebrenner chipped in· a
pair of kills and blocks
respectively.
Eastern plays host to
Waterford Tuesday.

[jjjs IMGElRtWDLY-SPQNSORED BY THE FOLLOWING BUSINESSES:

181 UITIECIII n

Brandon wins
Roush Invitational

EHS opens
season with win
over Belpre

annual scrimmage, the special teams and
defense shined. Wide receiver Matlt:
Philmore and defensive back JeH Backe&amp;
both returned punts for touchdowns.
Redshirt freshrnart safety Reggie
McPherson intercepted a pass and
· returned it for a touchdown.

'

we did a couple of things
well," said Ash. "I thought
we didn 't serve or pass as
well as we should have.
ROCKSPRINGS - It may Howev~r. the eleven kids that
h
h
have taken five grueling 1 d h
games to reach the end result, p aye t roug out t e games
played very well together. I
but the Mei~s volleyball team am very happy with this viccame up wnh one last surge tory."
when it needed it. most to . Meigs held a 6-4 lead in
clmm a season openmg vt~to- game ~ 11 Slllllantha
·ry over - Federal Hocking ;Cole served MHS to a 17-4
Tuesday 25-11, 26-24, 21-25, advantage before eventually
22-25,15-5. . .
.
claiming a 25-1 I win.
MHS crm~ed .'o a ~utck
In game two: .Meigs never
one-game lead and battled trailed and held a 6-0 advanthrough an offenstve jugger- tage early in the contest.
. naut t~ take the second, ~ut . Federal Hocking rallied back
the Lady Lancers raJ !ted 10 18-17 and then tied the
around a strong, aggresstve match at Z4 apiece, when
attack to steal the nex: . t:-"o Emily Ashley connected on a
~ames and force a dectstve critical kill to give · the
tfth con:est.
.
,
Marauders a one-point lead. :
. The Marauders. JUmped _o ut Joey Haning's ace gave MHS
t? lea~s of 4-0 ~nd ~-I an~ a two-game advantage and
~eld off anolher late L~ncers momentum headed into game
run en route to clmmmg the three.
·
best.·of-ftve match and postThe Lancers jumped out to
mg a wm m the1r home op~n- a 3-0 lead in the third frame
er· .
, retake the'
.
. , only to have Metgs
. Metgs co,ach Rtck Ash was lead 31 5-4-and extend it to
tmpres~ed aft~r the contest 15-10.
W!l.h hts team s effort m the
Federaf Hocking reeled otf
dec!Slve game and hts oppo- nine unanswered and never
ne.?t throughout the .even~ng. allowed Meigs to get back
Anyhme you. wm It s a within two en rouie to pushgoo~ -wm, but gtve a lo! of ing the contest to a fourth
·
credit to. Federal Hockmg. game.
After Josmg the ftrst two,
The Lancers never trailed
they ~arne back m games in the fourth game and held
thr~.e an? fou~ an~, outplayed its biggest lead of that set
us , smd Ash. . We came with a 17-8 advantage, only
back m. the . last game and to have Meigs battle back to
took~ btg lead. In a game lo within a point at 22-21 before
15 wtth rally sconng, gettmg losing three of the next four
t~al,early lead was tmpor· points.
tant.
.
Tied at two games apiece,
Ash also ,acknowledged Ash knew hi s girls would
that hts team s effort on the have. to be ready from the
evemng was not perfect, but start and needed to break the
consistent enough to ove~- Lancers 'rhythm if they were
·
come Federal Hockmg s going 10 win.
momentum through the mtd·
"I told the kids in the hudd!e games to clatm the TVC die before the la., t game that
Vt~~o~~ught we played well we had to break their Meigs senior Megan Garnes comes up with a di'g in the Marauders 25-11, 26-24, 21-25, 2225, 15-5 victory over Federal Hocking Tuesday night. (Bryan Walters/photo)
as a team, but I didn't think
Please see Meigs, B&amp;
BY' BRYAN WALTERS.

-...miANA

HCA.\ rank in parentheses where applicable

Jeff Smoker, Michigan State (17) .. ,
John Navarre, Michigan (28) , ....
ICyle Orton, Purdue (36) ... , ....
Asad Abdul-lthaliq. Minnesota (481 ••
Craig Krenzel Ohio State (51), ....
Jim Sorgi, Wisconsin ,(65) : . . . . . .

.'i;o

......_.NOIS

TEAM LElDERS

Lee Evans, Wisconsin (14) . . . . . . .
• John Standeford, Purdue (11) .....
Braylon Edwards, Michigan (13) .. ..
Jared Ellerson,, Minnesota (48) . . . . ·.
Jason Avant, Michigan (79) . . . . . . .
Taylor ~ubbll!Held, Purdue (81) ....

2-MINUTE
.. ••• • ••

,~

Indiana hand Yankees historic defeat, Page 86
Aatros pound on Rada, Page B6
Prlmetlme joins Ravena, Page 86

POMEROY - Medalist
Randall Sharrett was four
-strokes better than the rest of
the field , as he Jed River
Valley to a tri-match golf
victory over Meigs and
W'ahama Tuesday at Pine
Hills.
Sharrett shot a 37 to pace
the River Valley, which finished with a 170 team tally.
Meigs was eight shots back
in second while Wah am a's
I 8 I placed it third.
Sharrett's
teammate,
Justin Nolan, was second
overall ' with a 41. Other
·Raiders Craig ·Barker and
Joe Haller carded 44 and 48
res~ct.tvely to round out the
sconng.
Jake
Venoy,
Steven
Stewart and Cody Davidson
all shot· 44 to lead Meigs.
Kirk Le.gar's 46 brought the·
Marauders' team total to
178.
Darrin Reece was the
high-man for the While
Falcons wilh a 44. Danny
Rouslj and Garrett Kaylor
were one shot worse and
Justin Arnold amassed a 47.
Meigs plays at Forest Hills
today m a Tri· Valley
Conference Ohio Division
match. River Val'ley is at
Fairgreens Thursday to face •
Wellston .
·
, .
J

•'

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

Tressel says bott-1 Zwick and Smith , ·Southern
will play against Bearcats on Satu1day wins at
'
BY RusTY MILLER

Associated Press

Ohio State ~nnounces new

tailgating, ticket policies

COLUMBUS - When
coach Jim Tressel announced
COLUMBUS (AP)- O'utdoot'~rills and portable gen~
last week that Justin Zwick
erators
will be banned froQI parking garages under new
had beaten out Troy Smith
rules Ohio State announced for tbe football seatailgating
for the quarterback job. he
.
·
.
son that starts Saturday.
kept an eye on their reactions
fire
hazard,
will still
The
grills,
considered
a
possible
to the news.
be
allowed
in
surface
lots.
'
Suffice it to say that
· 'The univ~rsily on Tuesday also announced a new tickTressel saw neither player 1
share that
1
0
et policy for students, who will have to' show their school
react in a negative·way.
P ayers seem
identification cards when entering Ohio Stadium. . .
"I've seen no difference in feeling.
the way that Troy Smith is
"I'm very 'comfortable • "''This is not about harming or p~ventinf; students from
k'
h'
., T
• with the quarterback situa- attending gW!IeS," said associate athletic drrector Richelle
attac mg t tngs,
ressd · tion," said tailback Lydell Simol,l~n ..:'We!just don't think·we need ro provide, ticksaid Tuesday. ','Nor ])ave I
seen Justin Zwick go out and Ross. "Rotating was a good ets fqr them to sell on the or,eit' market to pay for their
·order a T-shirt saying, 'I'm idea because they proved tuition.or invite their friends. ' · · '
the starting quarterback""·
throughout the whole camp
Students can make a quick profit $CIIlitg th11ir ·$27 tickThe No. 9 Buckeye's take and the summer !hat they . ets; general public tickets cost $57.
.
•
1
·
s
d
·
both
can
do
a
good
job."
.
The
university
and
city
police
will.
continue
issuing
on Cmc nnatt on atur ay m
Zwick is a 6-foot-4, 225to drinkers, a policy that s~ed last season.
their !15th season opener. So pounder who was heralded citations
School
officials
had said raucous fan behavior bad led to
close is the battle between as orie of Ohio State's.
violem;e and property destruction. ,
.
the two quarterback candidates that there is no time for bi'ggest recruiting victories I' Colul,l'lbus pohee charged 167 people with open-con•
premature celebration. . ·
in recent years when . he .~Iler violations last year, spokeswoDIIUl Shetry Mercurio
. .
Meanwhile, Cincinnati's signed out of Massillon's said.
veteran quarterback, Gino Washinglon High School. He .
Guidugli is auietly confi1 spent .two years holding a have no 'idea," Tressel said. Bearcats' 5-7 record in 2003.
" clipboard and watching from
dent as he 'begms his senior the sidelines as Krenzel and "But I'll promise you this, "Last year we had to break in
season.
McMullen combined to lead they 're bpth going to play a lot of new guys who were
"It would be a big win for
unless someone stubs their playing for their first time.
the people of Cincinnati if Ohio State 10 a 25- 2 record. toe between now and Thts year we have a lot of
we go up tltere and·beat Ohio Zwick played in thtee games Saturday and they're' both guys back who have experiState," he said. "But we've a year ago, completing half going to haye opportunities. ence under their belt. and
gotto look at it as just anoth- of his eight passing auempts. .. . You never know at that I'm reallv excited for the
Smith saw
t n ."·
er game On Our Schedule."
.
.action ink' 10k po st·t·o
1 n·wha t happens."
season 1o •sa
Zwic~ and Smith, .both games, pnman1Y as a tc
· Much of the quarterbacks'
Guidugli said he is not
sophomores, staged a spirit· returner although he did rush performance will depend on haunted by the 23-19 loss in
ed duel for the starting job three times for 14 yards.
their supporting cast.
2002 that helped prime Ohio
ever since Craig Krenzel and
Daniels diaagrees with the
Zwick will be joined on State for its 14-0 run 10 the
Scott . McMullen - who public perception that Zwick offense by six other first- national
champion ship.
dueled before them - ran can only stay in the pocket year starters: Roy Hall (split Cincinnati receivers dropped
. .
1 e t1ro po ten t'1a I game-wmmng
Out 01. elt'gl.bt'lt'ty. at last and throw, while Smith is a en d), · Doug Da,.IS h, M'k
January's Fiesta Bowl.
scrambler who can't pass. . Kne and Tim Shafer (offen- passes in the end zone in the
. Zwick and Smith · will
"Justin can put the ball sive line), Ryan Hamby final minute of that game.
"There's not really any ·
share lime- for how long away and run when he.needs (tight end) and Brandon
has yet to be determined. to," DanielS' said. 'Troy has Schnittker (fullback).
feeling of unfinished busiTressel and quarterbacks an exlremely strong arm. He
Conversely, Guidugli will ness," Guidugli sail!. "We
coach Joe Daniels have said has gotten a lot more confi- be in charge of an offense want to look good out there
even though they would dence in his ability to. throw that has only two fresh faces the first game and come
probably prefer to have a the ball. Confidence counls." in the starting lineup: center away with a win. I think
clear-cut slarter at the posiTressel . srud even thou~h Adam Shorter and either we're confident. as long as
tion, they're not averse to • Zwtck wtll start and St_mth Brent Celek or Ooug Jones · we play our game and elimiletting both play· until one wtll pia~. he has not dectded. at tight end. .
nate mental mistakes and
has proven himself as the 0~.a dtvtswn of labor.
"We 've goi a lot more turnovers, I think we have a
better choice.
· How much, wh~t krcent, experience than we did last shot to win anx game we
The , rest of Ohio State's what senes, 1 don 1 ow. 1 year," Guidugli said of the play this season.'
•

c

-,

\

Oxbow
STAFF REPORT

sporis@ mydailytribune.com

BELPRE
Southern
captured its third straight
Conference
Tri- Valley
Hocking
division
golf match
Monday at
Oxbow and
tied Eastern
and Trimble
for the season lead in·
the process.
T

h

e

Tornadoes
. posted
a
I 71 team score, finishing
one stroke ahead of the
Tomcats.
Eastern finished lhird
with a score of 180, while
Miller ( I 85). Waterford
( 187 ) and host Federal
Hocking ( 192) rounded out
the field scoring.
Brad Crouch of Southern
was the medalist with a low
score of 37, two over par
for the course. Trimble 's Ty
Barrett was one stro ke
back.
Following Croueh for
Souther.n was Jake Hunter
(-+3 ). Mike Lavender (-+5),
Matt Thaxton (46) and
Patrick Johnson (53).
Easlern was led by Evan
Dunn and Michael Owen,
who each shot a 44 on the
day.
James Will . (45), Nathan
Cozart (47 ), Nick Kuhn
(48) and Jacob Warner (52)
rounded out the Eagles'
sconng . .
After four matches of
play. Southern, Eastern and
Trimble each have I 5
match points .
.
Federal Hocking is fourth
with seve n points, while
Waterford and Miller are
tied wiih four apiece.
Crouch-

�'

.~age 82 • T}le

Wednesday, September 1, 2004

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentine l • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, September 1, 2004

• www.my~ailysentinel. com

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•

are alwsya confldantl1l • Current rate- csrd appllea • All re11 estate adwertltementa are subject to the Federal Ftlr Housing Act or 1968 • Thla n
sccepta only help wanted ada meeting EOE ttandards Ws will not knowingly accept any adlfartltlng In vtolatton olths law

r

I'IlRsoNAls

rI

tr~

1r

b~

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
1w"gh14!!1c net

Found Black lab puppy 4-6 4 lamoly garage sale 3919
months found Herman Addison Pike (aprox 4 m1les
A
Young·Man
seeks Cllckerarea (740)441 1013 from At 7) Thurs &amp; Fn
Romance w1th!Woman ot
9/2104 913104 from 9 4 Rain
any age J G PO Box 722 Lost Walker Coon Hound or shine
JDQca WV 25159
CroWn C1ty Btg Creek area - - - - - - - - 5 family yard sale Maternity
ANNouNCF.MEr&gt;'fS
A;;ard l (740)256 111 1
clothes brand name baby
chtldren &amp; adult clothes
YARDSALE
Disney Halloween cos
Wanted A place for a
tumes baby furniture bas
Chnstlan Rock Band to ~"!!'"'~~-~---, kets crafts Home lntenor
u. "ARD
SALE'"'
~racllee and play W1ll1ng to
•,
Jewelry 82 Arnold Drtve
11ve donatton Please call
GAIJJPOHIS
Bidwell Sopl 2 3 4 9·?

r~

Cashland
Full t me Customer Serv1ce
Assoc1ate Great pay excel
ant benefits Must have
computer &amp; money handling
expenence Fax resume to
7 40·441 8940 or ptck up
appl catton at 1312 Eastern
Ave Galt1polls

I

.r

CLERICAL
POSITION
Local Office Pre111ous off1ce
e~epenence
reqUired
Worktng knowl edge of co m
pulers Microsoft Word typ
1ng fllttng and ab1ltty to com
pose letters Good commu
n1catton sktlls a must Only
qualified persons need
apply Send resume along
with refefrances to P 0 Box
31 1 Pomeroy OhiO 45769

r

15710 SA 554 Bidwell 9/3 &amp; 9·4 Sat Furniture carpet
bikes stove tools clothing
9/4 9am Used furniture
4 famtly Kessel s prOduce
2fam11 y yard sale at 120 and 1354 Jackson Ptke
"' month old brown mtxed 121 Bast1am Dnve Saturday
9/4104 8-4pm 15 mmutes
Beagle puppy Good with 8·4
past Holzer Hospital on 160
kids (740)441 ·6805
2 family yard sale Meadows tn V~nton Clot11es kitchen
Free ktttens call (740)388 SubdtVJSIOn 330 Jumper ttems turn1ture and more
0867 after 5pm
LSne Sat Sept 4th 8am
Fnday 9/3 Girls clothes
3pm Clothes g1rls teens
plus size women s ctothtng
Part
ChthuahuaJJack
women men e•erclse bike
Russell pup male 8 months TV storm door home Oecor toys Spring Valley area 224
Oak Dnve
old (740)992· 7335
bad spreads
curta1ns
Garage Sale 946 Gage Ad
Part Irish Setter &amp; Colfte sneets toys Ty antmals
Patnot Oh Awon dolls
Blond 2 years old To good
3 tamtly 1st !hiS year Ra1n
WWW C:OmiCS com
an11queslglassware lOIS of
t)ome only Call after 8pm
or shtne Los of everythtng mtsc Sept 1 3 Ram or sh1ne
(?40)446 2886
9/3 9/4 49 18 Bulav1lle Ptke
9?
LosrAND
3 famtly 201 4 St At 141
Garage Sa te Thurs &amp; Fn 2
FOUND
__
Ch tld s race car bed wash 3 aprox 7 m1les out At 160 L.,flrl
er sm kit appl can1sters past Holzer Hospi tal 9 5
Found bag ot clothes on W111 lots of baby 1tems mens
Yard Sate at 1939 Chatham
Items from recent move
Ad near Vinton (740)388 womens
St 1st 2nd 3rd Furmture
baby clothes
cloth1ng
lamps
house
9658
diShes clothes what nots
shoes home decor evemng
wares Nascar collectables
and prom dresses
and etc
Found gray male k1tten
Yard sale
w/ wh1te paws wtll gtve away Multi famtly yard sale 287 Garage Salett Chnslmas &amp;
Burgers
1f not claimed (740)992 Mercerville Rd across !rom Fall Decorat1ons Currter &amp;
382 Jackson 1?1~e
3478
F1re Stat1on 9/2 9/4 9 5pm lves Dtshes Fn Sat 9/3 9/4
Thurs Fn &amp; Sat
Sop1 2 3&amp;4
9am? 1641 Cora Mtll Road
95
(1 7 mtle\: from At 588)
Galhpol s OH Aa1n or
4x4's For Sale.
725
Yard sale Fn Sept 3 3831
Shine
Announcement
030
Netghborhood Ad
LttUe
Garage Sale Lots of every boys &amp; women s clothes
Antiques ••• •••
530
thing Sept 1 ~2 9 5pm 6 drapes high cha irs 3 pc
Apartments lor Rent...
440
mlles be!ow Gallipolis on St k tchen bar set
Auction and Flea Market
080
AI 7
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
•• 760
Yard Sale Frtday only 30
Auto Rapalr •
no
Garage sale Ratn or Shtne 4 Plants Dtvls ton Home
Autos tor Sale.... ....
••• 710
1163 Sec Ave Fn &amp; Sat tnten or
VIdeos
d1shes
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale
• 750
Sept 3 &amp; 4 Bam Card10 books X mas decorattons
Building Supplies.... • •••
•• •• • 550
Ghde dtshes some collect Halloween costumes g1rls
Business and Buildings
• 340
abies dolls cookbook cot 5 6x 10 14 ~s S.. 10 bed
Buslne11 Opportunity...
210
lectiOn canner toys &amp; much ding Little bit of e11eryth1ng
Business Training.
140
more
Campers &amp; Motor Names
790
Yard Sale Sept 2nd and 3rd
Large 3 fam1ly yard sale
Camping Equipment
780
At Kessler Proeluce Stand
Sat
Sept
4th
&amp;
Mon
Sept
Carda ol Thanks....
010
Jackson Ptke.
6th
Bam 3pm
A1fe
Child/Elderly Care
190
Cemetery Roact off ot 014
ElectrlcaVRelrlgeratiOn.
.840
YARDSAI.&amp;
Addtso n
Ptke
behmd
Equipment lor Rant
. 480
PoMEROYIMmou:
BulaVJIIe Town House
Excavating
830
Fum Equipment... • ••
610
Large Yard Sale 15 Ann 1/4 m1le on 143 Sept 2 5
Farms lor Rent •
.430
Ortve Route 7 South Sept hOme 1ntenor Fenton tools
Farms lor Sale. ........
•.. .. 33G
2~3 4
T1me 8 30am 111 dtshes pans clothes m.x:h
Forl.Noe .
490
500pm
mooo
For Sale •• ••• • •••• •
.585
Sat 9/4 9am ? 90 Magnolia
For Sale or T r 590
2 fam1ly yard sale 405
Drtve
(Spnng
Valley) Broadway Street Aacme
Fruita &amp; Vegetables
... 580
Galltpohs Gtrls m1sses September 2nd &amp; 31d
Fumlahed Rooms
450
CIOihmg dolls and furnrturP.
General Hauling... •
•.. 850
toys household Items Ram 3 tam1ly sale Sept 3 4
Giveaway •••
040
date 9/6
Happy Ads........... •
.. 050
Aatn/Shtne 8 CX&gt;-6 00 300
Watzgall
Street
Hay &amp; Grain...
•• 640
Sa1 SI!PI 4 @ 1136A S1 R1
Etectrontcs cloth es toys
Help Wanted
110
850 Rodney Bam ? Oceans and more
Home Improvements
... 810
Aquartum bouncer baby
Homealor Sale ......
• .310
bed toddler bed strollers
4 fam1ly yard sale 1 1/2 m1le
Household Goods ..
. 510
baby clothes &amp; miSC horse
out Storv s Run Ad &amp;
Houoeolor Rant......
410
rams etc toys household Hobson 1 2 3 4 Sept Hutch
In Memoriam
.020
items car tires Ltnte Tikes
Table Vech s Truck toppers
lnouranca
••
••
130
swtng set &amp; movtes
More
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment...
•... . . 660
Sal
Sapl
4
Left
Fori&lt;
Ad
Uveotock. .... .
..
.
..630
(bestde Caldwell Trucking) 440 Grant Street. Sept 1
Loatand Found.. ....... ............ ........ •..... 060
2 3 9al'll-4pm adutt clothes
830am?
Lola &amp; Acnage • ••
•
••
•
••• .. 350
baby clothes furniture mtsc
Mlacellaneoua ...........................................170
Sept 2·3 9am Etecrrlc 1tems
Ml-laneouo Merchandlu •
•
•
..540
range htgh chatr comput
Mobile Home Rlplllr.. ....... ............ . • ... •...860
ers keyboard&amp; mouse pet 5 family ram or shine
lloblle Homn lor Rant..... •••
• .420
ta~el
qutlttng frame old Thursday 2nd Frkta.y 3rd
Mobile Homn tor Sale.......... ........ • ... • •••320
recorda old Avon bottles Saturday 4th Bam till when·
Money to Loan • .... ..... •••• • • ••
.. 220
588 Kerr Road1 112 mtle off ever go out on Rt 7 north
MolorcyciN &amp; 4 WhHiers............. • ... •...740
from Pomeroy turn light at
160
Mldl..i lnttrumanta ..... .......... • •••••••••••• 570
Memory Gardens on Eagle
...._.le..................,......... ... ..... .... ..005 S1191 3-4 Northup 9·? like Ridge Rd go 112 mile to
new gin clolhes (0.12 mo ) tntersectkln of Eagle Ridge
,_lorS.Ie ....... ............................. 510
boye {5-8), atroller/car seal and F"lne Grove tat house
Plumbing A Hntlng. .... ....
.... •••• ••• • 820
Proflltlonalllrvlcla ................................. 230 combo car seat walkers past IntersectiOn will have
IWlng, toddler bed maternt· tools clothes, glataware
ltadiO, TV &amp; Cl Rap~~lr.. ....
... •• •• .. 180
1y cloillea &amp; much more
RNI !etlte Wanted ....•••..•..••.••.••••••••.••••••...• 310
guns some furniture dining
lclloola lnatructlon.. • .. ... .. ..............150
Sept 3--4·8, ' 111 1 Ohio room tablt e ehairt come
leed , Pl.m &amp; Fertilizer ............................ 650 Avenue near GOC/F1rst maka off8r
~WantH .................... ................120
Baptltt Churcn 4 famtly
9 Spm Sap1 ~ 4 6 Roulh
for
460
Mk:rowove TV lat;e/t;halrs
Lane
lclortlng Goode....... ............. •................ 520
Chelhlre Oh 3 family
weight bench golf clubs
IW'a for S.le. ..... • ... •••• ... .. • • .... ••••720 retire&lt;:! Longabtrger enter·
C&amp;rnper tiller van plano
Trucllllor lela ........................................ 715
talnmen t center
books antiquo cook I10Ye &amp; 1oola,
Upholatay ................. .... ..... • ..... ......... 870
muCII more
portable play pen/ bualnol.
YMI For late...............................................730
Wenlllcl to Buy.. ....... ....... ............. ....•. ..010 Sep1omber 2·3 9om Boyo bed mlcrowevo new ~....
5o-1 brand name .Nniort 9-4 FrldoyiSolurday 71 10
WMIICIIO
FM'III SUppiiN .................. 620
milt up Hysell Run
830FimA......
GIVEAWAY

r

@ 2D04by

e

bl ~i iRDi i~i Ai i~i i ~-rl ~~y~ l~,r_.Pl:iayi l~i i'LEAsANri iSALEi i il·-pl

CLASSIFIED INDEX

a

"*"

Or ve

Rant......... .. .... . ...............

'A:IId To Do-.............,............................. 110
W&amp;illd 10
470

Rent................. ...... .............

vn ..,.. o.mpolla

...............................012
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ..... • • ••
074
Yard Sale-Pt. Plaaoant. ..... ...... ...... •..... 076

•

Fam1ty
Yard
Sale
3
September 4th Along State
Rt 62 Upper Mason WV 1nfo
(304 )882 2049
8-mlles North Pt Pleasant
old·At 62 Spillman Ad 1
Mile abo11e Lakm
WV
ThurFn Sat 11·7

Btg Block Sale 5 Famtly 91h
Large yard sale Thursday Street Pt Pleasant Thurs
Fnd ay Saturday Behind 2nd &amp; Frl 3rd 9 6
Mason1c Lodge n Ractne
Block Sale end of Robinson
Clothmg household Home St, Bellemead Tues Wed
lntertor furntture mtsc
Thur Ba~ lo School ttems
and household large rugs
Rummage Sale SepJember
3rd 41h
9 OOAM 3 OOPM Large 4 family Yard Sale
Metgs
Semor
enter One day Only Fn Sept 3
(740)992 2161
9am ttll 1 1402 Kanawha
Street Pt Pleasant Clothes
Sept 1st 2nd 1Oam 6pm Jrs Q-1 G1rls 12·14 L1mtted
ram cancels 32540 Park
Too Brands and Mudd
Hollow Ad Pomeroy
Mtsc Household items II
Sept 3rd &amp; 4th Caldwell ratn~ng Will cancel
res1dence 1 mtte from lar9B Yard Sale Sat Sept 4
Ractne on Bashan Ad Nice gan\- 4pm
New Haven
clothes
He1ghts Hall Tree with
Mtrror 4 mce DISplay cases
September 3+4 9
71 Stone Jars &amp; Jugs
20
Tools clothes rabbit pen Church Pews Round Oak
ttres lots ot m1sc Turn nght Table &amp; Chairs, Lar~e
on County Ad 19 off Route amount ot glassware
33 N
Yard Sale 204 Matn St PI
September 3rd 4th 6 famt- Pleasant 9 3rd &amp; 4th 10 00
!y carport dnveway and _6_oo_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
flowmg out 1nto the yard
Yard Sale Lots if Stuff 2514
sale Women mens name
brand teens and children Mt Vernon Avenue Sept 2 &amp;
clothes What knots crafts 3
collec1 tbles home 1n1enor

ooam

bed
clothes
curta1ns
camper Items and tools
Some new items some Old
Lots of rrnsc turn off Route 7
onto
143
toward
Hamsonvllle Corner of
Bailey Run Road and ~ 43

r

WANIEIJ
roBuv

Absolute Top Dollar US
Stiver and Gold Coms
Proofsets Gold Rtngs U S
Currency M T S Coin Shop
151
Second
Avenue
3 Galhpohs 740-446-2842

September 4th 5th-6th
lamtly garage sate Vanety of
Items baby stuff 31744\
Noble Summitt Middleport
Ohto 45760
Shelter house sale 786
Hysell Street Wednesctay
Thursday
and
Friday
900AM 300PM
Tabla with cha1rs washer &amp;
dryer Jt &amp; plus size clOth·
1ng etc on nght jult past
SOuthern H1gh School Sept
3 4, 5
Thu._ Sap1ember 2nd 1
mtle north of Chester
Sumner Road 2nd home on

1011.

r

offer
$300 hmng bonus
guaranteed hourly wages
plus tips up to 45% serviCe
comrlliSSIOn retrul and tan
mng commissions 40~(kl
paid vooation health VISIOn
dental and life ms , free
advanced education nnme
dlate clientele and so much
moret Now hirtrlO for full and

YARD

S-Ir-oo
- -1--~M-•d_d_lo-p~o-r1_.__0_H_

45760 EOE

ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply at 1354
Jacksori' P1ke Galllpoll$

Part time bartender and/or
gnll cook Must be able to
work IMintngS &amp; weekends.
Send resume to P 0 Box
part time licensed Stylists
at our salon 1n Ma1011 Call 303 Galltpolts OH 45631
Cmdy 0 1-888...S25--6363 x
3010 tor more tnto and to
schedule an mterv1ew
Help wanted Oarst Aduh
Group Home (740)9925023 Call for more JOiormatioo

SASSY SCISSORS
StyliSt wanted Salary/
COmm1ss100 740-441 • ~ 880
or 740 256..s336

Completely
AeMtshed
t::i..Qme... Great locatiOn tn
Gallipolis Oh1o 3 bedrooms
2 full baths Price to Sell
Now Phone f740l44B 9539

WAIIITED

l'oDo
Call B D ConstructiOn for ell
of your home 1mprovement
needs roots decks stdlng
etc reasonable pnces free
est1mates call L740)992
2979
---------

DRY\\ ALL
Install Ftntsh Pa1nllng
Carpententry Bathroom~
Restdenttal CommerCial
INSURED
NOTHING TO SM ALL
Flat Pnces
S10110 (740)388 8731
Ha11e room m my home for
one lady complete ca re for
tnfo call Prtsctlla Dodrill at
Dodnll Pnvate Home Care
(740)368 8193
Want1ng to do t10use clean
tng have personal refer
ences tf needed would also
constder Sttlfng w/stck or
elderly (740)992•3422

All rea l estate advertising
In this newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair HousJng Acl of 1968
whloh makes it Illegal to
advertise any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race , color, religion, ae~e
familial status or naUonel
origin or any Intention to
make any such
preler•nce, limitation or
dlacrlmln•tlon,

Thla newspaper will not
knowingly acc•pt
advertlaementa lor real
estate which Is In
~iolatlon of lhe law Our
readera are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• advertised In
thla newap.eper •re
•~•liable on an equal
opportunity btises

Homes from $10 ooot
Forclosure VA Hud for list
1ng 1 800 749-8106 ext(109
House wtlh 3 large lots Broom House 1bath white
vmyl s1dmg
$72 000
(304)675 2219 located m
Gallipolis OH out Bulavtlle
Poke
N1ce 2 bedroom large bath .
w1th washer/dryer hookup
ltvmg room large dmtng
room dry basement out of
Hood platn corner lot on
Gen Hartenger Parkway
Pnce reduced {740)992
3057

OrroKitJNrrv

www.otvb.com

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vendtng machtnea I
excellent locations all lor
$10 995 (800)234-6002

Home Uatlnaa
Ust your home by calhng
(740)4te-382G
View phOtos/Info online

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vend•ng rnachlneW
excellent loc•lions
all tor $10,995
110().234-6982

"'

.

HIO VALLE Y PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha

Salol111a lno1allor

I

-lllly. MIF DN

1-8116-!37·2907
An ' ElCCellent WIY to nm

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

neceuary If Interested
piHoe eiOp by Rocklpnngs
Rthlbll""lion Canlor 38759
RGCklprlngs Road Pomeroy
Oh -467&amp;9 to flll out an appll
catiOn EIC1endleoro HH1111
S.rvlcol. Inc II IU1 E~WII
Opportunity Employer that
eflCOurages
workplace

EW LISTING Secluded
Bedroom 3 Baill woill
autlful RIV8r VtfNt
ocated Close to town
~or call
740)441-03.23
Bedroom 2 Balh, Rwer
lew/ Access Private
t Dock tn Galllpotil 1
e lot Code 80303 or
I (740)446-0531

-·

w. ..

Hirtng1
Eam up 1D SM1oto- pluo

Full or part -

avaHabte!

lhl1ll

to •m 1 13110
Sign on Bonuol

c.ll -

1-lln-183-62&lt;7"'" 21s.

'

~It:. 0111t:.r

HllVOil Ciiy Hill Mondoy
through FriCII)' 7am unUI
3pm 1M appilt:.llon mus1
bO 1Mitd OU1 01 11\e Clly
Building A Phylical Agolily
test must be liken and
pu8td by each applk:an1
before con&amp;ICieraUon ot the
appliea1oon

Nice 3 bedroom Langsvollo
area
$400 00 depoSit
$450 00/month No Pets
HUD approved (740 )742
2210

i

I

m:r'-":":--'"!'!~--,

MOBILE H()I\1}:S
FOR RFNt

2 bedroom ltke new central
atr (740)446 2003
3BR 2BA 70x14 located 6
m11es from Galllpohs Stale
Route 218 $500 month
(740)256 1417 (740)256
6228

992-7321

3 bedlooms· 1 boill Ready
to t'TlOV8 tn Nice lave! tot
Call (7411)992 2272

•

with less than perfecl credit

Easy quahfytng Own don t
rent
Local
company
Mortgage Locators 740.
1192 7321
1 bedroom house In
Gallipolis
$350/month
depooH required (7411)441·
1184
1 PQI&amp;Ibly 281 HouH, pat·
tially furnished in New
Haven $275 Rent, $250
Dapo8it. No-Pets (304)882·

365.2

2 s1ory home 1or ren1 3br
$500/month Call (7411)446-

srrocu•.

GraCIOUS hv1ng 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at Vtl1age
Manor
and
R111ers1de
Apartments 1n Middleport
Foom S295 $444 Call 740.
992 5064 Equal Housmg
Opportuntt1es
Large 3br 1n PI Pleasant
&amp;
Oownsta1rs
CIA
Appliances
Oepos1t
Requ1red leave ..message
(304)675 7783

o-r

_E_HOr""'"":~~~--,

Ro~Mtiiiiiii.._

~.,F1·0-·FORi Ai il!IUi i Si iAi il

r

Sealed proposals
will be received at the
office ol the Mayor,
237
Race
Street,
Middleport, Ohio until
3.00 p .m • local time

on Friday, September
17, 2004 lor furnish·
lng all labor, matenals
and equipment nee·

essary to complete
the project known as
Middleport
Street
Reconstruction , and

1972 Scllult tra1le r 12 It at said time and
publicly
w1de tlpout one fiberglass place,
and read
and one alum1num full stze opened
p1ckup tQpper (740)441 aloud
Contract
docu·
8211

ments, bid
Couch $50 2 TV s $40
entertamment center $35 2
Utthly carts S IO ea,ch wacu
um
cleaner
S 10 00
(740)992·5544
o u
tscoun u e
Grand Openmg Sate
op qual1ty warrant1es
1iton wv Flea Marko
Fndays
aturdays and Sundays
606 922 7185

c

JET

sheets,

plans and speclllca·

lions can be obta1ned

r

111850 ..

said office between
the hours ol 8 DO a.m
&amp; 4 DO p m Monday
thru Friday
Each
bidder
Is

requ1rad lo furnish
whh Its proposal, a
Bid Guaranty and
Contract Bond In
accordance
with
Section 153 54 olthe
Ohio Ravlaad Code
Bid
security
fur·
nlshed In Bond form ,
lhall be Issued by a
Surety Company or
Corporation lleenaad
In the State ol OhiO to
provlcle 11ld surety
Each
Propo111
muot contain the lull
nama ol the party or
parties
submitting
the proposal and all
persona
Interested
therein. Each b l - r

t=

Governo&lt;~

.._......iiiiii......

~....r__RJR_~iiiiil_..

Coin!* iOIJ tor ron1 Rlwr Park: l*fiW*I1 ,_..., 3 3 Uonla1ure -

Eucutlve

Order of 1872, and
Gowmor's Executive
0 - 84-1 ohell be

required.

Bldc:leno mom com1or 1010
small mobile home or Kid bfOke alto Cub Cadet ply with the prevailing
campor loll, $125 ro"mO 1 Riding-Mower w/36 Inch cui --onPubllc
o111oo building S300 odlmo (304)675-48n
(814)876-1881

Meigs County and the
VIllage of Mlddlepon,
Ohio as determined
by the Ohio Bureau ol
Employment
Services , Wage and
Hour Division, (614)
644·2239

Bidders must also

lmprov-

In

SHERIFF SALE
Real Estate
Case
Number
04CV020
GE
Mortgage
Services, Plaintiff
vs
Roy &amp; Doria Proffit,
Delendanll
Court of common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio

In pursuance of an
Order of Sale Jo me
dlrocted from oald
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expo11 to 111e at public aucllon on lhe
front IIepa ol ths
Molgo
County

Courthouae

on

Friday, October t5,
2004 at 10 DO a m , ol
Mid day, the follow·
lng deoerlbed real
lltale.
Exhlbh A
~Agel Description
File Number. JIM-4711
Sltu.ted In Cheoter
Townohlp,
Meigs
County, State of Ohio
and being In Section
3, Town 3 North,
Ronge 12 Woll olthe
Ohio
Company's
Pun:ha.. snd being
cleoerlbed I I follows
Beginning 11 on
Iron nKI on tlltl Elll
line ol the South114 ot oald uction 3 ,

Seuth 15 00 -

""'"

1 atone found on llkl
114 Section nne, uld
lions
being
on
agi'Hd
corner
betwnn
Bloull"o
- s as cleoerlbed
In Mllge County llaad
Recordt. VOlume 271 ,
l'llge 263 end VOlume
275, Pllge 8011 and
Spencer's Pllrcel as
cleoerlbed In Melgo
County
Deed
Recordt· VOlume

m,

'

2000 podge Du ango RT
yellow 360 motor cd/cas
sette leather
S11 800
080
(740)256 1618 or
(7401256 6200

1976 Starcretft 24 self con·
tamed 1n good cond111on•
S22000 BO 1740 1 256106~
after 4pm

For
sale
1998 Jeep
Wrangler 4x4 29 000 m1!es
A/C
cru 1se
automatiC
$10 000
Call 1740\388
9125

Re creat1ona i
Vehicl e Ca mper
2 1 toot
Batman Tratl L te Furnace;
AC
Stove Aefngerator,
Toilet &amp; Shower 2 queen 1
regular &amp; 1 half Beds
(304)675 1695 or (304)593·
2724

r

V\Ns

FoR S'\1.1

•

•

2000 Ch ry~ler Voyager V 5
AM/FM cassette au loaded
53 000 m les ex ce lent con
d1!10n ~ S9 500 (740)245
5157

\ I U: \ I( I "'

HOME
IMI'ROVF MI-:NTS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnconditiOnal hfetulle
IUK S•LF
antee Local refere nces fur•
1984
Baylmer
19FT n shed Established 1975:
cal Call 24 Hrs {740) 446•
Cab1n
W/Cuddy
0870 Rogers Basement
(304)675 8056
Waterp roof ng
alter Bpm

BOATS&amp; \lmURS

1995 F berg lass Bass boat
150HP Johnson GT Trolling
motor depth t nders Day
740 441 4340 evenmg 740
441 0101
24
1987
Yachtsm an
Pontoon boat and tral er
30hp
Mercury Mariner
eng1ne life 1ackets new au
mmum anchor ne w battery
runs great (740)446-3613

,.,,..- -

ADVERnSE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

FOr
Everyone

In

10% down on day of

follows Begmmng at

County

sale, cash

chectc,

a point 1n the South
line of Lmcoln Road a

balance on conftrmallon ol sale Ralph E
Trussel ,
Meigs
County She"ff
Anorney for the plain·

the corner between
Lots 42 and 43, as
shown on satd map.
thence w1lh sa1d line
of Lmcoln
Road,

till

South 63 51 Eas1 a
distance of 50 fee1.
thence w1th the line
between Lo1s 43 and
44, South 26 9 Wesla

Road

28,

passing an Iron rod al
2~ 22 leet for refer-

ence

Bashan

Public Notice

l'\\IPERS &amp;
MIHOR Hmn:s

December 17, 1942,
and being more par•
hcularly descnbed s

Mayor,
VIllage ol Middleport
September 1, 8, 15.
2004

4x4
FoRSAU

Sale Cannot be sold
for less than 213rds
the appra1sed value

The
Village
ol
Middleport reserves
the right to waive
lr"'gularltles and to
reject any or all bids.
Sandy
lannarelh

rates

r:

Page 263,
Thence
West
276 22 teet to a point
In the centerline ol

Thence North 0
degs
58 00" West
224.03 teet along said
County Road 28 to a
point,
Thence Nonh 40 DO
teet
along
sa1d
County Road 28 to a
polnl on the South
line of the Trustees of

comply with the led·
eral prevailing wage

at

AERATION MOTORS
Repatred New &amp; Rebu1lt tn
Ntce two bedroom apart ~ Stock Call Ron Evans 1
men1s Large rooms Fully 800 537 9528
equtped kttchen Central
hea t1ng / cooltng
Washer/dryer
hookup NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel BeBms PipS Rebar
(304)882 2523
For
Concrete
Angle
Channel Flat Bar Stee l
For
Crams
One bedroom apartment Grattng
nb pets
1n Pomeroy Drtveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
(740)992·5658
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
One bedroom garage apart Friday Bam 4 30pm Closed must submit eviSaturday
&amp;
ment kttchen furnished Thursday
dence ol Ill axperl·
Sunday (740)446-7300
.$400 (740)1192·3823
anceo on projec:ta ol
Pork
custom treezer meat similar size and com·
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Call A&amp;R Packing 740-245 plnlty Tho owner
Are ,_ 1tllting Appilcalions
9440 reference Blacka
lntsnda and requires
for 2BR 3BR &amp; ~BA
AppliCations
are taken Slide 1n
pup up
truck that this project be
Monday thru Fnday from camper gOOd conditiOn completed no lat1r
9 00 AM -4 ~U Otlic4l II whtte 8 new refngerator than October 30,
2004.
Localtd a11151 EvorgrMO $2 000;1740)742 2821
All contractora and
Onve Pol nt P!eiiSI!Iflt WV
bulh
horae
rototiller
Troy
aubcontractora
PhOno NO II (30&lt;)675-5806
$450 2 Wealher (10818 $60 Involved with the
EHO
740-4-41-3755 "' 740-388- protect will, to the
extent
pr1cticeble
Twin Rtverw Tower 11 accept· 9143.
u11 Ohio Producta,
lng appilt:.llonto tor wal1lng TVa from $101 DVD·
list tor HuG-e.ublll'ld 1 ~ br Players
VIdeo Games materlall, Hrvlcea,
apartment call 875~8678 Computers Ectl now avail· snd labor In the
Implementation
ol
1or onlo call 800-366- their
project.
F'l!tiN5tm
M655
AddhlDNIIIY contractor complfanca with
.._....
...
the equal employ·
mont
opportunity
Room and Boali:1 ol Cozy ~
requirement~ ot Ohio
HollOw 1.1cn1111y lnd WMidy
Admlnlotrativa Code
ratee avallabte (740)245Chopter
123,
tlltl

i

II'

r

Apphcat1ons betng taken lor
very clean 1 bedroom tn
cou ntry setttng yet close 1o
town Washer dryer stove
fr1dge 1notuded Water and
garbage mcluded Tolal alec·
triC With AC Tenant pay alec
trtc $300 deposit $375 per
month No pets No smok
tng 740-446·2205 or 740
446 9585 ask for V rg ma

Down Payment oven (740)446 3736

Home- 4 bdrm 2 6 boll1, 2
$1 000/mo p1uo MC
cor
dap Bulavllle Ptkt Blmt
Ap1· 2 bdrm
1 b.oll1
S600/mo plus 5000 sec
cHip Bulavlllo Pike Boll1
.,..,,.~
lmmtdlolely
lncludN Ill U111itin ~
truh
Aftrencu
and
81 Ookwood, 14x12, wry
~Info niCIIIary.
me.. $12,000 (740)1192· CoH (740)U8 38U tor rnor1l
5025
Info

r

2BA apt anached garage
pat 1o very qUtet netghbor~
hood $450 pe r month no
pets reterence + depos1t
requ1 red (740)446 2801

New 1 bedroom apt Phone

For In Galllpollo
2 BR NO poll. (740)37112400

Local
company
~ngage Locators 740-

and trash Must have sufft
c1ent mcome to qual fy
(740)378 6111

Furnished effiCiency apt to r
Lots lor sale tn Mercervi lle 4 rent All utlhttes mcluded
acres good butldmg stte Georges Creek Road $500
per month (740)44&amp;4868
$17 500 (740)25&amp;1825

0%

! til

r

004

---,

II\\ , \ ( , \IHII'

-----

r

=..

I

Husqvarne 5 5hp rear Ttre
E
•• _rll
T1ller $350 Neg Excellent
Goons
AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab CondttiOn (304)576 9990
89 Taurus S H 0
5 sp
pupptes Shots wormed &amp;.
needs little work Oody m
B•g
screen
TV
46" dew claws removed S300 John Deere Garden Tractor great shape needs tue!
Runs good S550 (740}992· pump cooltng ian assembly
Magnavox Aprox 10 years $350 (740)441 0130
1493
old Excellent cond 1t on
runs good new clutch
woodgram fmtsh
$600 AKC Reg sterad Labs Power K ng t'ractor 52 cut $800 740 742 0507
E11.cetlant bloodlines &amp; certt blade/plow hydraultc New
(740)446-8423
flca!IOns 1 blond female 2 16 HP Koler motor $1 650 92 Co rs1ca V 6 new t~res
Good Used Appl1ances
brakes ,pa1nt (bur gundy )
blac~ males 3 blond males (740)992 1493
Aecond11j.o ned
and Ready Sep1
runs great looks great
11
Call
Guaranteed
Washe rs
$2 700 (740)742 0509
(740)441 0013
Dryers
Ranges
and
Aefr gerators Some start at Australien Shepherd pup·
95 z 28 350 au to T tops
, AIIIUS
$95 Skaggs A.pphances 76 pies $100 (740)368 8152
leather dark green tan mte
FOR SALE
Vtn&amp; St (740)446 7398
nor great shape $7 000
Kroehler Sofa Loveseat Chocolate Lab pups AKC $500! Pollee tmpolJndsl (740)742 4011 leave mes
Born 7115104 Dewclaws
sage
large Cha~r Queen Ann
Ca rsfTrucksi SUV s
from
removed wor med &amp; f1rst
style chair 3 tables match·
Chevys Bu1ck Park Avenu e 2004
shots (740}441 0643 after $500 HIDnda s
lng Lamps Ltke new all for
Jeeps &amp; moret lor 1st ngs new $39 085 Bronze 8 894
5pm
$1200 OBO Antique 1950s
800-366 9813 ex V717
m11es garage kepi loaded
Blonde Oak Table wf4
MUSICAl
1968
Voltswagon
aug
~
excellent
$28 500
Choma refmtsh&amp;d
200
- IN!miO~tENIS304 )675 5827
Looks
good
runs
good
(
1950 s K1 tchen Cabmet
w/on gtnel pamt $200 call
Arizona
ca r
~3 500 AJ 5 Auto Sales 199 5
For Sale Hammond Organ
(304)675 2503 11 no answer
(740)992 1493
Grand Am
6/c!y
auto
Model M 101 Sp•net Good
leave message or call
106K
ntce
ms1
de
&amp;
out
runs
eep
e
conditiOn
SUi table
for
(304)593 0244
verythmg
(740)441
0121
grea
$1
600
1994
Tracker
Church or home (740)992
erlous t utres On ! 1
6/cty 4 wheel dnve 11 3K1
Like new sofa chatr With
very ntce (740)742 2357
Ottoman rocker cocktail
1986 Chevy El Camtno lor eave message 1f no answer
table &amp; end table All w1cker
sale or trade for small
1ke new Ranan pedestal
Convers1on Van (304)675
glass top table w1th 4
7790
padded chat rs 740 446 Canntng tomatoe s U p1ck
$3
50
a
bucket
Rowe
Farm
6748
1990 Olds Ctera 4 cylinder
Bring conta1ners (740)247 4 door runs good $750 2000 Dodge ext cab D1ese!
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark 4292
Dually flatbed $22 OOQ
(304)675-56 12
Chapel Road Porter OhiO
(740)446 9317
(740)446 7444 1 877 830 Sweet corn tor sale $1 75 1993 Toyota Camry LX 4
9162 Free Esttmates Easy dozen Bnng your own con door auto 4 cyl PW POL 2001 F 150 Super Crew
fmancmg 90 days same as Ia ner (740)949 1318
sunroof h1gh mtles great lanai 4x4 53 000 m les
cash V sal Master Card
runntng car many new parts excellent cond1t1on loaded
Dnve· a IItie save atot
FoR SALE
$1 495 (740)441 1971 M F $21 000 (740)388 0151 or
days
(740)44i, 08 16 (740)339 0564
Oak table w1th 6 chatrs otl
even
ngs
and
weekends
lamps small desk pnnters
96 Chevy 1 to n duellie crew
Ftrewood
for
sale
$30
p1
ck
tray C1'11na Hutch Ca ll
1995 Chevy Lumina V 6 cab 454 $11 500 96 S 10
up
or
$50
deh11ered
n
most
(740)367 0002
AM /FM cassette atr loaded 4 cyl $2 500 (740)992
areas
De ttvery
starts
56 000 m11as good cond1 5025
Red metal bunk bed wtth Sopl6 (740)368 8738
loon $3 500 (7 40)245 5157
bunk boards &amp; mattress
98 Dodge Dakota 3 body &amp;
$200 hke new (740}245 Wood Pellet Slave 4yrs old 1996
BUI C~
Sentry suspens on lift standard a1r
"5_94_6_ _ _ _ _ _ __ $650 Call (304)675 5866 or (304)675 1506
70 000 m1les S4 000 080
Tv s $40 each couc h S75 (304)675-6 112
(740)256 9031
2000 Neon $3 895 1998
each table &amp; 4 cha1rs $75
I \R\1 "" l 1'1'1 II "'
Sunhre GT $3 795 1999
4x4 ,
Ltke new Maytag stack
S.t i\ 1 \ ICU..._
Alero S3 795 Others m
FoR SAtE
washer/dryer set $500 L1ke
stock. 3 months 3 000 mtle
new Fng da tre stack wash'
warran!les
LIVt'SI'OCK
1989 Ford 4x4 runs gooel
er/dryer $425 wooden hutch
Cook Motors
$1 800 1740)388 8152
$60 hangmg planters S5
328 Jackson P1k.e
each lull bed $125 Queen
(740)446 0103
5 year Sorrel Quarter male
1997 Ford F 150 4x4 Lanai
bod $550
papered exc dlspos t1on
2002 Pontiac Grand Prix GT 114K black leather mtenor
Skaggs Appliance
well broken great barrel
76 V1ne Street
Sedan Fully loaded Bose c d player $9 200 080
re1mng gymkata potential
(740)446 7398
stereo sunroof leather CD (740)992 2932
$3000 {740 )441 1013
player
30 000
m1les
Th ompsons Apphance &amp;
1 998 Jeep Wrang er Sport
Redf1re meta lliC $17 000
Repa1r 675 7388 For sale Boer
Male
Goats
Soft Top 4 OL V6 62K AC
(7 40)245 0410
re condtltoned automat c Champ1ons h1 p bloodlines
CDICassette
Chrome
washers &amp; dryers refngera all ages all fu n blooded reg Cars from $500 Pollee Wheels 31 1nch t res Extras
tors
gas and electrrc tste red w1th ABGA Adults Impounds For ilstmgs call $11 000 OBO (30 4)882
ranges a1r cond1!1oners and proven (740)245 0485
1 800 749 8104 EXT 390 1 2439
wringer washers W1 !! do
repa1rs on ma1or brands 1n
shop or at your home

1/2 acre lot on Tycoon La~e
County watar no sep11c bar
ders Eagle Road Ask1ng BEAUTIFUL
APART·
S8 500 00 (740)247 1100
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
2 26 Acres loca ted oil ESTATES, 52 We stwood
Sandhill Road In Wa nut Drive from $344 to $442
Creek SuDtttwiSIOn Pam! Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
Pleasant
For Info call 740 446 2568
Equal
(740)446 7880
HOustng Opportuntty
Used Furniture Store 130
Bulavtlle P1ke dressers
3 adJotntng lots tn Gallla Co
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· couches mattresses recl tn
Apro~e 28 acres 2 With large
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
houses Call for more tnfo
ers
grave monuments
Townhou se
apartments much more {740)446 4782
(740)24&gt;·9549
and/or small houses FOR Galhpohs Oh 1o Hrs 11 3
8S BGres hunting land on RENT Call (740}4411111 (M F)
Route 35 Henderson WV for appllcatton &amp; tnformat1on
$45 000 Day 740 645 1306
FOR LEASE
even1ng 740 256 6574
Beautifu l unfurnished two
bedroom apartment L1vlng Buy or sell
WANTED
Atverlne
room overlooks c1ty par~ Antiques 11 24 East Ma1n
ndlv1dua! looking to bu
and Ohio Rtver Spactous
and or poss1bly teas
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
kltchen-dtneHe 1 1/2 bath 992 2526 Russ Moore
xclustlle huntmg nghts I
roperty tn Me1gs County References and secunty
depoSit requ1 red $600 per
h1o Prefer acreage 5
cres and larger II tnterest month No pets Call 74Dplease call (304)372 44'6-4425 or 740 446 2325

01110 NO
.... $600 00 I mon1h Hud
AppfOYid (304)675-5332

rant

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

LOis&amp;
ACREAGE

31&gt;' In

~

0% Down Payment evan
with lou 111an perloct crld~
Euy quoli1ylng OWn doo1

3 bedroom 2 1&gt;81111 firepiiC4I On 4 3 acres In tht
Counlry
Soenlc
lllew
575 OOO Call 174017011•
1166

r

3 bedroom house in Tupperw
Plaine $450 00 month plus
depoal1 and util~101 No Pe1l
(740)667 34117

..__ _iliiiiiiiiiiiiiii._.l

Call

SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models at old prices
2005 models arnvmg Now
Coles
Mob1le
Homes
15266 u S 50 East Athens
Ohoo 45701 (740)592 1972
~ whare
You Gat Your
Moneys Worth"

2br House In the New Haven
Area No-Pets muat have
Re1erencea. S400 monll1
$300
Oeposh
Senous
lnquoret only (30&lt;)862·2670

nvMr.'f

Appileo1oonl Oh Aoklng $42 000
may bO obllunld 11 New (740)667-6620

New Oa~wood mega store
featuring
Homes
by
Oakwood
Fleetwood &amp;
G1les One stop shoppmg
only at Oakwood Homes of
Barboursvtlle WV (304)736
3409

3461

~rii:1611""--FOR-:u":"""_S.W:_.....;.....;~

1M Town ot New Hoven, will 1 112 atory houle wllh bu•
be IICCepting applk:lttlons for ment located In Chester,

-·jOb?

Home
edrooms 2 Balh Centra
1r
$15 500
Cal
304 675 7022

~
rm

r.lO
. . . . .Bu;INE\1&gt;
. . . . . . . . .. .

r:.e

1'1EEDED

oy ar mo
orne 2 bedroom 2 bath
Call 17401441

Mobile home lot for rent at
Joh nson s Mob1le Home
NO DOWN
PAYMENT Park (740)446·2003
Possible on thts 3 br I bath
home
country settmg Ntce level lot 50x190 on
secluded on a paved road Htgh St 1n Middleport All
Racme area
8 acres hookups. out of flood pla1n
approx tmately $650 per ~rice reduced to S22 000
month clean ready to move Phone (740)992·2782
1nto shown by appomtment
only call (740)949-3124 No
;;==;:::::==,
calls after 9pm please

j

MediCal Word F"roceulng,
and Spreadthllll Send
reeume
to
$250 1D $600 • wtek
Galltpolls Career College
Will train to work at home
Attn Jonn Dank:kl
Helping lhe US
1178JaclwonPikl
G&lt;Mornmom 1110 HUOIFHA •
GoiUpoilo, OH 06831
rnortgoge rtlundl
No Gpffllf 101 , .
ry

mossag~

rI

_ _....,

For sale or rent 2 bedroom Mobile Home At 2 $275
mobile homes star ttng at month (304)593 3053
3BR 2BA 5 129 acres
~_g7o RJlr ITlOJlln .cau 740
Green Townsh p cl ose to
992 2167
school Pr ced to sell More
lnlo (740)446 7377
Like new 2000 Redman
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt starting
4br 4b ath Hud Home 16X80 3 bedroom 1/2 bath at $290/month
deposit
vmyVshmg le 2X6 loaded
$8 900 Wont last I more
reqUired No peta WO
more
options
ca
n
with
even
Homes available! for llsttngs
help Wtth delivery Call hookup (740)441 11 84
BOO 366 9783 e~e 1797
Harold (740)385 9948
1 and 2 bedroom apart
5 bedroom
1 1/2 !lath
house for dale Pomero~ 3/4 Make 2 payments move m 4 ments turnlshed and unfur
acre 3/4 remodeled 0% years on note (304)736 nlshed secunty depostt
reqUired no pets 740 992
down poss1ble payment 3409
2218
approx $425 00 month no
Mob1le Home for Sale 3br 1n
land contract (740)208·
Mason
Must be moved
1 bedroom Garage apt
7080
Central Air Gas Furnace
Central heat &amp; atr $375
By Owner US 35 tn Mason $2500 OBO Call (304)675 month Call (740)446-4555
County 5 Rooms &amp; Bath {2 n83 leave message
after 5pm
Bedrooms) Large Sun
New
14
w1de
only
$899
Room 12x32
all new
down and only $14974 P.er 2 bedroom apartment for
Carpet Full Basement 112
rent tn Syracuse $200 00
aero lol $41 900 (304)675· month Call N1kk (740).385 deposit
$330 DO/month
7671
2933
rent Includes water sewage

I

Need a Heattng Cooling
1nstallar w1th at least 1 year
expenence
Cert1C1I1ed
Call 800-652·23&amp;2 for more Tech!Ctan With at least one
Info
year expertence
Pay by
e)(penence Only expere
Due to our recent Agency
expans1on
Med1 Home lnced need apply Call
(740)441 1236
Health Agency Inc ts seek·
. . . , . , . . - - - - - -·
tng both a full ttme AN Case
Need extra moneyt
Manager and a full time AN
lmmedtate opemngs m
Pattent Care Coordmator
store demonstrators
positiOn In the GaUipolts
A le~eandna s Marketing
Ohio and surrounding area
1 888 650 6505
Duttes Include estabhshtng
and mamtalntng open 11nes
Outgo1 ng energetiC person
of commumcat1on w1th area
for cosmettc counter sales
phys1ctans and health care
tramtng
provtded
tac1h1tes m the dehvery of
References reqUtred Cal!
Home Health servtces Must
(740)446-2673 for an tntBf
be liCensed 1n both OhiO and
VIeW
West V1rgtma We offer a
competttlve salary benefitS
Overbrook Center tli current
package and 401K E 0 E
ly accepttng appliCatiOns tor
Please send resume to 352
anyone Interested 1n the
Second Avenue Galltpohs
STNA classes These class
OH 45631 Ann Bnan K1ng
es wtll be he!d 1n September
AN
and class space 1n l1m1ted
Hair Stylists
so 1f you are mterested
FIESTA welcomes you to please come 1n and fill out
check out what we have to an applicatiOn at 333 Page

Call TOI FrM

Thu- Sap1o- 2nd
1:»2 mllu on Hy1tll Run
Furniture lad1es cloth..
baby items houM plants
1740)982-5275

Medica l Otftce Insurance Gallipolis Career College
Clerk!Typtst State ot the art (Careers Close To Home)
optometnc
pract1ce
1n Call Todayl 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452
Athens 1s seek1ng dynamtc
and caring lndtvtdual to www gslhpot scareercollega com
serve as Insurance clerk and Accredited Membt r Accredit ng
lor lndepe11dent Cot eges
typ tst Knowledge of btll tng Cwnc1
and Schobls 12746
lor th rd party cove rage alec
tron1cally a must Post1ng
1170 MlscEIJANEOUS
f nanc tal transactiOns col
lectmg payments tra nscnp
t1on typ1ng a m1n1mum of 50 WAtiTED 17 PEOPLE
word per m1nute some med
We Pay Youl
1cal term1nology and famd
$CASH REWARDS$
larlty with Microsoft Word
For the We1ght you Lose
necessary Applicant must
1n 30 Days
be detad onented comm1t
Cell Tracy 740 44 1 1982
ted to excellence 1n pat1ent
(800)201 0832
care self mot1vated and
www lamousnatnt1on com
possess good comm un1c~·
&lt;hllp 1/www tamousnutn .....
t1on sktlls Approxtmately
tton com/&gt;.
35t\rs/wk Includes some
Saturdays BenefitS nclude WOilK Fft011 "OI'IE
patd tu1tton and tm11al for
Home Based Bust ness
career advancement patd
Earn S200 $500 PIT '
holtdays vacat1on and s1ck
Earn S2 000 and up FfT
t1me health tnsurance and
Patd Vacat ons Bonu ses
pens1on plan Wage 1s com
74D-441 1984
mensurate w1th expenence
888·540 8097
EOE Send resume to The
www workatcasa cqm
Datly Sentmel PO Box 729
o::http;/lwww workatcasa co
12 Pomeroy Oh 45769
ml&gt;

Seeking expenencect sate!
HHA needed part time 1 for lite Installers Must have own
tnteMeW call between Sam ~u1pmen1 truck liability
SBCA
anti
4 30pm
M Frl tnsurance
Cert1hcatton
requ ired
(740)949-2761
Coni8c1 Shawn (614)478
l'lloFmtoN.u.
AIVBr k&gt;t or acreage around
Htrlng
PIT aides for 9669 or fax resume to
~OX
Gallta Co fof campeng w1th
Nurstng
water &amp; electric available Commymty
·-----·
Call Ron al (740)446-7885 Servces I Heanh Cere of (614)476--3446
TURNED DOWN ON
Souttleast
Ohio
If
Interested
or (740)&amp;45-6042
Someone 10 Mow yard In lhe
SOCIAL
SECURITY IBSI?
please call (304)773-5066 Leon Area (30&lt;)674-0132
l \ 11 '111\ \ II '\ I
No
Unless We Win I
or (740)6862·1222
-.. Il l\ II 1 ....
1·1188-582·33-45
Temporary painter needed
llUITROCTOR8
I~ ! \ I I " I \ ! I
Eorparitnce prelortld 001 no1

monty The New Avon
Call Marilyn 3Q4.882·2845
itr~~~~--, A\IONI All Ar...l To Buy 0&lt;
SM.&amp;
Sail
Shlt1oy Spoors. 3()4.
L_..;PI:ioii'lil'lnsANr-iiiiiiii-,.1 675-1428
"
M«:hanlcally Inclined par·
Two 1amlly yard aale Sap1 Gaoa~ .. 1e Sop1 2 3 6-J 2 Yard Sales Sep1 1 2 3 lon , por1·1iml ...,,;ogo &amp;
...
Letart Sandhtll Ad watch fer
3·4 1/4 m~le out 11 40' nolli•Summlt (Durtll) 10yo,
_ , . . llfiPiy In klclsladult clothes Slgne c~thas, glassware at Hl)'tl Real Eltatt 382 E
Bulavllle Poke Clolheo aduH mise
lots mora
&amp; beb\1 &amp; toyS
t&gt;ootlgl"• Longaberger
2nd Pomeroy

o

euy.

Large after mov1ng garage
sale N1ce clothmg kitchen
stuff w9od crafts home
ntenor kerosene heater
s1orm door bar stools deer
sland too much to !tsl tots
m1sc
Hartford
WV
California Street Beside
school September 3rd 4th
9 ooam ttll ??

CLASS ACDL
DRIVERS
NEW PAY SCALE
•Earn between 45 50K
•Mm 2 years exp
•Home T1me on Weekends
•$500 s1gn on bonus
• Stan at 36 cpm
•95% No touch fre1ght
•NO FORCE D NYC

1985 14x70 Windsor wl1h
,4)(26 additiOn New carpet
dishwasher nlenor/extertor
pant JOb storage bul!dtng
$14 995 Senous mqutres
call (304)593 3768 leave

=.. l ..il:llo:-"~H!"'o_EHOI.D
us

FOR SALE

POLICIES Ohio Vjllley Publlehlng re~ervea the right to edit reJect, or cencel any ad at any time Error. muat bt ,..ported on the flral day of
Trlbun•Sentlnet-Regilter will be r1111ponslble tor no more than tiM cost or the sp&amp;ee occupied b~ the srror and only the first lnsertton We sha ll not be
any lost or expente that retuha ftOm the publication Of' omission ol an advartltement Correction will bs made In the tlrat Slfllllebla edition • Box •::.~":;,::1

\\\Ill\( I \ II \ I ""

r M~s~ Ieo

hearrng from

()r Fax 'fo ('740) 992·2t57

tJfftee lloar-8'

Card of Thanks

F1re
Department Parcel as
described In Meigs
County
Deed
Records Volume 232,
Page 87,
Thence East 105 DO
teet along the South

line of said F1re
Department to an tron
rod,
Thence North 85 00
teet along lhe East
Una ol the said Fire

Department

to

an

Iron rod Sou1h ol
County Road 32.
Thence Easl 340 DO
tee1 along 1he south
aide ol said County
Road 32 to an Iron
rod on the Wast line

of Spencer • Parcer
as described In tho
Molga County Deed
Records VOlume 2711,
Page 263,
Thence
South
264.DO teet along the

Spencer

Parcel

264.DO leat to an Iron
rod ;
Thence
Wall
165.DO leat along the
ttld Spencer parcel
to s atone found on
the Nid 1/4 uctlon
Una, uld ttona loca·
tlon described 1bova,
Thsnce
South
85.DO leat along the
111&lt;1 Spencer Pllrcel
and olong the 11ld 114
section line to the
point of beginning,
conlalnlng
3 03
sc,.., mora or loll,
excepting 111 legal
H - t • and right•

otway
PNml- common·
ty known 11. 411627
Eagle !lldge Road,
Long Bottom, Ohio
48743
cu"'"t ow-· Roy

&amp; Dorio Prolllt.
Property at · 411627
Eagle Al~a Road ,
Longbottom , OhiO
.f'Pf ~~ 03.001
Prior
llMd
Ralarenca
Volume
H , l'llge101
Appraltad
at
$70,000
Terms of

or

certlfted

Carlisle

McNellie,
Rtnl , Kramer &amp; Ulrich
24755 Chagrin Blvd
Suite 200
Cleveland
Ohio
44122·5690
(216) 360 7200
8/25 911 ,8

Public Not1ce
CONSECO FINANCE
SERVICING CORPO·
RATION fka GREEN
TREE
FINANCIAL
SERVICING CORPO·
RATION lka GREEN
TREE
SERVICING,
VS· PEGGY
L L C
MUSSERetal
LEGAL NOTICE
Green Tree Retatl
Services Bank, Inc ,

who&amp;e last place of
business Is known as
1400 Turbine Drlvo,
Rapid C1ty
sno3,
but whose present
place of bu&amp;lness Ia
unknown, will take
notlc• that on June
17,2004, CONSECO
ANANCE SERVICING
CORPORATION fko
GREEN TREE FI~AN·
CIAL
SERVICING
CORPORATION fka
GREEN 'fREE SER·
VICI~G . Ll C flied llo
Complolnt In
No 04-CV-ll73 In tha
Court ot Common
Ple11
ol
Meigs
County, Melgt County
Courthouu, 2nd St.,
Pomeroy, OH 45761,
aaakfng foreclosure
and alleging 111111 lha
Defendant Green Tree
Retail Services Bank,
Inc h•• or clalma to
have sn lnterall In
the
real
e1t11e

so

ca ..

cleal'rlbed Situate
In
th•
VIllage ol Pomeroy,
County of Malge and
S - o l Ohio
• Baing known sllj!
cleolgiUIIed on 1 map
ol Lincoln Halghll
made by Breece l
Carper,
Civ il
Reg la ta rod
Englnoers
dalld
October 17, 1842, 1
copy of which mop
was flied In the Office
ol the Recorder ol
Malgl County, Ohio

distance of 200 feet,
thenc e Nor1h 63 51
West a distance of SO
feet. thence wtth the
line between sa1d
Lois 42 and 43, Norlh
26 9' East a d1stance
ol 200 feet. 10 1he
pomt of begmnmg

Reserving, however
the coal and all other
minerals In an underlymg
the
above
described property,
logether w1lh the
rlgh1 lo mme 1he

same without encumbrance to the surface,
and sub1ect to an
easement for sewage
Idler dl1ch or leaching
ditch as sel forth and
described
In
that

Instrument bearing
November 28,
1943, aa recorded In
the said Recorder'a

date

Office, December 3,
1943 In Dead Book
151, Paga178
The
real ettlls

herein conveyed Is
eubjact to certain
building restriction•
which are aat lonh In
a deed recorded In
Volume 151 , al Page
181, Deed Recorda ot
MBiga County, Ohio
Reference
Deed·
Volume 263 Page 425
Mol gs County Deed
recorda
The
Defendant
nsmad
above
Ia

required lo answer on
or before the 6th clay
ot October, 2004

C 0 NS E C0

FINANCE SERVICING
CORPORATION lka
GREEN TREE FINAN·
CIAL
SERVICING
CORPORATION Ike
GREEN TREE SER·
VICING, LLC
BY.
SHAPIRO •
FELTY, L L P
Frank J Rosa Ill ,

Atlornay at Law
Anornay lor Plaintiff·
Petitioner
1500
W11t

Third

StNII, Suha 400
e-land, OH 44113
(216) 121-1530
(8)4, 11,18,25,(1) 1, 1-

..

�•

.Page 84 • ~he Daily Sentinel

'

•

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, September 1, 2004

------~--~------------~--------------~~-----------------------===~-=--~---===== ··

Wednesday, September 1, 2oo4

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP
Jrubllc
Your Rlaht to

NoUc~s

In

Know~ ~llv~red Rl~l~t

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BF\IDGE

Nt!W~'&gt; tlu~r s.

111 \ 'uur llour.

ACROSS
SHERIFF SALE
Sale: Cannot be sold
4, page 15 and 16 In
Rul Estats
the recorda of the lor leas than 213rds
Number
Malgl
County tho appralaad value.
03CV148
Recorders Office and
10% down on day ol
Kay
Bank
USA,
tho axlollng Westerly sale, cash
PlaintIf!
right of way line of or certified chock,
VI
Page Street; thence balance on confirma·Connie Black, at. al.,
S. 85"24'21" E. along tion of sale. Ralph E.
Defendant•
a line 20.00 !eat to a Truaool,
Meigs
Court Ot common
railroad spike In tho County Sheriff.
· Pleas, Meigs County,
existing centerll~e of Attorney for the plainOhio. ,
~
Page Street; thence tiff:
In purauance of an
S. 4" 50'39" W. along Lerner, Sampion &amp;
Order of Sale to me
tho existing center- Rothfuss, Attorney
dlrectad from aald
line of Page Street, P.O. Box 5480
Court In the above · 328.66 teet to a point; (:lnclnnall,
Ohio
entitled action, I will
thence s . 34" 04'00" 45201-5480
120
East
Fourth
expose to aale at pub- · W. along a line and
·lie auction on tho
paealng an Iron pin at Stroot, 8th Floor
Ohio
front steps of the
40.97 teet to a total Cincinnati ,
Meigs
County distance of t29.33 45202-4007
Courthouse •
on foot to an Iron pin; · (513) 241-3100 .
thence s. 87" 04' 48" 8125
Friday, October 8,
2004 at 10:00 a.m., of W. along aline, 193.45 9/1,8
foot - to . an Iron pin;
said day, tho follow·
thence s. 82"58'20" W.
lng described real
Public Notice
along a line 71 .00 foot
eatato:
to an Iron pin In tho
grantors Northeast
SHERIFF SALE
Exhibit A (Legal
property
corner; Real Estate
Description)
Number
All that certain par~ thence s~~32" 33'09"
Case
E. along the grantors
04CV032
cat of land lying and
East property line Cltlllnanclal
being situated In tho
Co.,
County of. MEIGS, and pealing an Iron Mortgage
pin In the . existing
Plaintiff
State of OH, to-wit:
vs
BEING A PART OF Northerly right of way
&amp; Gloria
107.85 ACRES AND line of Powell Slraot Steven
Craig, Defendants
BEGINNING IN THE .at 147.64 loot a tolai
CENTER OF THE distance of 172.63 Court of common
Pleas. Meigs County.
ROAD AT A POINT feel to a point In the
WHERE HARRY E. grantors Southeast Ohio.
In pursuance of an
SNOWDEN
AND property corner arid
the existing centerOrder of Sale to me
ETHEL
SNOWDEN
CORNER
WITH line of Powell Street; directed from said
Court in the above
SHOPPERT HEIRS thence s. 55" 50'13"
NORTHEAST COR- W. along Uia grantors enlitleq action, I will
NER, THENCE WEST South property line expose to sale at pubALONG THE LINE OF and the exlatlng cen- lic auction on the
Powell front steps of the
HARRY E. SNOWDEN terline of
Counly
AND .ETHEL SNOW- Street, 106.24 feet to Meigs
on
the real point -of Courthouse
DEN LINE t20 FEET;
Frlday 1 October 1,
THENCE
SOUTH beginning lor the
2004 at 10:00 a.m., of
land
heroin
ON
CONTINUING
said day, the lollowdescribed; thence S.
S'.AID LINE 67 FEET;
THENCE WEST ON 55" SO' 13"W. continu- lng described real
SAID LINE 48 FEET;
Ing along said line estate:
Street Address:
THENCE NORTH 286 70.00 foot to a point In
grantors 276 lincoln Street,
FEET; THENCE FAST tho
Middleport, OH 45760
160 FEET OR TO THE
Southwest property
CENTER ' OF THE corner. thence N. 32" Parcel Number:
15·00943 and t500' 27" W. along tho
ROAD
WHICH
grantors West proper- 00944
EXTENDS
FROM
Legal Description:
RUTLAND TO HAR- ty line and passing an
Iron pin In the exlat- Situ~tod In the Village
RISONVILLE;
lng Northerly right of of Middleport, Meigs
THENCE
SOUT!i
COIJnty and State of
way line of Powell
. ALONG THE CENTER
Ohio, and further
PFTHE ROAD TO THE Street at 25.01 fool
PLACE OF BEGIN- total' distance at described to wit:
Tho East One-hall
325.01 feel to an ·Iron
,NING, CONTAINING
of the Lol No. 124,
ABOUT ONE ACRE pin; thence N. 55" 50'
being a strip of land
13" E. along a line,
BE IT MORE OR
70.00 fact to an Iron fifty feet on Lincoln
LESS.
Street and IHty feet
pin;
thence
S.
Tax
Map
32'00'27" E. along a on an alley and also
Relaren · ce:
line and passing an four feet off the South
1100062.000
Iron pin In tho exist- · side of tho East OnoCurrant
owner:
Ing Northerly right of Ha~ of Lot 123 being
Connie Black, at. al.
way line of Powell a strip or land four
Property at: 34711
Street at100.00 loot a loot facing the alley
New Lima Road,
Rutland, OH 45775.
total dlatance, of and running from the
125.01 feet to the alloy towards Fourth
PPt 11-00062.000
Street &lt;in Lot No. 123
point of beginning
Prior
Dead
Aet•rence: Volume and containing 0.201 lor a distance of fifty
feel, all situated In
114, Plige 605
acres.
Palmer Addition to
Togiothar with on
Appraload
at
of
$50,000. Terms of oasoment for Ingress- the _ Village
Sale: Cannot be aold ogress being Fifteen Sheffield now Incorporated
Into the
lor leso than 213rdo (15) feet In width
tho appraload valua. seven and one-halt Village of Middleport,
10% down on day of (7.5) fool on either Ohio.
Current
owner:
.. le, colh or certified side of the following
check, balance on described centerline; · Steven &amp; Gloria Craig
Property
at:
276
Commencing at an
confirmation of sale.
Lincoln
Street,
Ralph E. Trusser, Iron pin In tho
Ohio
Moolga County Shariff. Southeast corner ot Mlddlaporl,
Atlorney lor the plain- Lot Number 9 of 45760
PPJ 15-00943 &amp; , 15till:
Falrlano Subdivision
as recorded In Plat 00944
Jaffray V. Laurlto
Book 4, page 15 and
Prior
Deed
35 Commercial Way
Springboro,
Ohio
1B In tho records of Reference: Volume
Meigs
County 272.• Page 955
.
45CMI6
(937) 743--4878
Recorders Office and Appraised at $39,000.
lho existing Westerly Terms
of
Sale:
8125
right of way line of Cannot be sold lor
811,8
less than 213rds the
- - - ' - - - - - • Page Street; thence
s. 85"24'21" E. along appraised value. 10%
Public Notice
a line, 20.00 leet to a down on day of sale,
railroad spike In tho cash or certified
•· SHERIFF SALE
existing centerline of check, balance on
conllrmation of sale.
Real Eatala
Page Street; the~ce
Ralph E. Trussal,
Number S. 4"50'39" W. along
the exlollng centar- Meigs County Sharif!.
04CV047
C I t I f I n a n ~ I 1 I line of Page Street Attorney for tho plaintill:
'
Mortgage
Co., 528.66 teet to a point;
Manley
Deaa
Pllllnlltl
thence S. 34"04"00"W.
Kochalokl, LLC.
va
along and peoalng an
Cheatlar Caato, at. al., Iron pin at40.871eat a The
Battleship
·
DerwndMta
total
dlotance of Building
North · .Front
CoU{I or common 129.33 feat to an Iron 444
PINs, lllalga County, pin; thence S. 87" Straot Columbus, OH
· Ohio.
04'48" N. olong a line, 43215-2603
Ill pUfSUILn&lt;'* of an · 193.43 feat to an Iron (614) 220-5611
Onllr ol Sale to me ' pin;
thance . S. 8125
811,8
dlractecl from u'd 82"511'20" w. along 1
Court In the above line, 71.00 feat lo an
lhdllld actiOn, I will Iron pin In the
Public Notice
••i - I a -~~pub- grantoro N!)rlheaat
lie auction on the proP"''Y
comer;
fionl IIIPI ol the
S. 32'33'01" E. SHERIFF SALE .
RNIEatate '
Melgl
County elong the grantore
Number
C.OUrthouM
on . Eaat property line Case
Frlcllty, October 1, and pasotng an Iron 03CV134
21104 81 10:30 a.m., of pin In the axlatlng Wella Fargo Bank,
Nld day, the follow- NorlhlrtY right of way -Plalntlfl
lng tlaiCrllled n111 line ol PoWell Stnel
.
David
&amp;
Betty
' ......,
... 147.14 feat a total
· Elthlblt A
dlatance of · 172.15 . Johnaon, Delendonta
lagll DeicrlpiiOn
flit to -It point In 1111 Court of common
File N..,btlr: JIM&gt;4711 grantoro Soutlleaat Pie... Meigs County,
8llund ln·Che8W ...-rty comer and Ohio.
In punuan~;~~ ' ofan
lllwnlhlp,
Malga the axl&amp;tlng cenlar·
eounty, Stal8' of Ohio line of Powell Street; Order . of Sale to me
and baing In ~ thenca
55' 50,13" directed from aald
Town 3 Noith,
along tho grantors Court In the obove
Ranga 12 Waet ol tho South properly line entitled action, I · will
OhiO
Company's · and 1111 exlattng can- • . _ t o ulell public auction on tile
Puoc"Y
Md being t•llna of
Powatl
~~
!bod aa followa: Str..t, 118.74 flit to front alepl of the
County
Elllllbll "A" • t.gll the real point of Melgo
D 1 lpllcwl
· beginning for the CourthouH
on
For 1'111: 11111130&amp;
aa-nl
h-ln Friday, Octobtlr 8,
llluitad In !Ill ~IICI1bed; thence N. 2004 1110:00' a.m., of
.... of OH, c-.ty 32" 00'27"
along
Nld day, 1111 follow·
lng ' delcrlbad ,..,

c...

,

c-

u..nc.

""

w.

s;

s.

w.

-

...... In 1111 1111 oanllrlll• ol sold
v_.
oflll~llllpart,
11111111111, 125.011eil

,..arllhlp

of

I F I lEY·
• -.u111 In IKIIon

tann._.
Parcel

21, , . _ 1, ...... 13,

011011.000

lellobury T-...lllp,
v_. of lll~lllrpon.

Currant

111et111 c:-.ty, ....
of Ohio end baing

My ~ncrlbU
•Ia I .,
ca-ldllll at an
Iran pin In 1111 lloulll
con. alLot Nusu t
••
of
Fllrtlnd

lubdlvlalon
..
- d i d In Plllt Book

•

to a polniMCI _,to
No:

t5-

-:

Chi mr CMto,llt. ar.
Poputr at: 1212

..-: .

I!XHIBIT • A"
SITUATED IN THE

VI'

I

AQF OF IIIDDLE·

PORT, COUNTY OF
MEIQS AND STATE

OF:FoLLOWING
OhiO DEICAIIED' REAL
41710
' ' ESTATE !111UATED IN
lltE STATE OF OHIO,
PH 15-011011.000
Prior
Deicl IN MEIGS COUNTY
IN
II.C.
Acta••· VolurM AND
HOBART'S SUIDM111, Page 101
Apprlblaed
It SION IN SAID , MIDS20,000. · T"""a. of DLEPORT, BEING A
Poaotl
lllddlap~~&lt;-o;.

Slrllt.

Phillip
Alder

PARCEL OF LAND
OFF LOT 17 IN SAID '
SUBDIVISION ,
BOUNDED
AND
DELINEATED
AS
FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING
AT
THE
NORTHWEST
What would you lose if there was a fire~
CORNER OF L.E .
~We
can insure your valuables!•
LPT,
KEEFER'S
WHICH IS 54 FEET
For a Free Quote or Appointment
WESTERLY
FROM
Coli:
THE
NORTH EAST
CORNER OF SAID
LOT NJ; THENCE
SOUTHERLY ALONG
~and Financial. Setrvic:es~~:
THE WEST LINE OF
. Box 189 • Middleport
SAID KEEFER'S LOT,
A DISTANCE OF 137
FEET TO A CERTAIN
ALLEY;
THENCE
WESTERLY ALONG
SAID ALLEY, FOR A
DISTANCE OF 30
SEAL IT
FEET;
THENCE
CONSTRUCTION
NORTHERLY ON · A
LINE TO A POINT ON
Roofing - Siding LINCOLN STREET, 62
PaintingGuttersContractor
FEET
WESTERLY
Decks- etc. ·
FROM THE PLACE OF
Residenli al &amp;
BEGINNING; THENCE
For_Fast Courteous
Commerc1al
ALONG THE NORTH
Houses, porches,
Service
SIDE OF OLIVER OR
Garages, Pole
LINCOLN STREET, 62
Free Estimates &amp;
FEET TO THE L.E.
Barns , Roofs,
Affordable Prices,
KEEFER'S LINE TO
Renovations
THE
PLACE
OF
Call... Dennis Boyd
7 40-949·1606
BEGINNING,
CON·
740-992-1189
TAINING ABOUT 1/7
740-591 -1053
OF AN JICRE OF
LAND,. BE THE SAME
MORE OR LESS.
owner :
Current
David
&amp;
Betty ·
Johnson
Property
485
Top • Removal • Trim
Street,
Lincoln
Ohio
Middleport,
• Stump Grinding
45760
· Bucket Truck
PP# 15-00932.000
· Prior
Deed
Reference : Volume
315, Page.681
Appraised at $60,000. UUMOI
Terms.... 1 of
Sale: ' P
Cannot be sold for
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
less than 213rds the
appraised value . 10%
down on day of sale,
cash or certified
check, bttlance on
confirmation of sale.
Ralph E. Trussel,
Meigs County Sheriff.
Atlorney lor the plaintiff:
John D. Clunk
5601 Hudson Drive,
Suite 400
.
.Hudson, Ohio 44263
(303) 342-8203

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Dqors Open 4:3o'
Early birds slart
6:30
Last Thursday or
every month ·
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.0()

.IF :YOU RENT

Rocky Hupp Insurance
740-843-5264

MYERS PAVING
Cell Phone 674-33ii Fax 304-675-2457

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • StreE)ts

Bonanza Gel

SFREE

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
~5771

~,

.;;,

slda &amp;'xlo· ~

~"' t910'¥30'

Ohio. Tho Farmers
Bank and Savings
' Company Is selling
lor cash In hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
2000
PONTIAC
GRAND
AM
CP
IG2NF12TXYM797206
1992 BUICK' REGAL
4
'
2G4WB54L9NfS00137
The Farmers Bank
and
. Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
rtghl to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
tho above collateral
prtor to sale. Further,
.The Farmers Bank
and
S1111lngs
Company reserve•
the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
Tho
above
described collateral
will be sold ••as Iswhere Is", with no
axprasoad or Implied
wa"anty given.
For further Infer- ·
matlon, or for an
appointment
to

s

Inspect

Warranty Repair •

PUBiJC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia hereby
given
. thilt
on
Saturday, Saptembtlr

4, 2004, at 10:00 a.m.,
a public sole will be
hold at 211 w. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank ,.
and ·
Saving&amp;
Company Ia selling
lor caoh In hand or
certified check the
following cOllateral:
2001 Dodge Caravon

w

s

where ... , ·wllh no

......rygrv...

For fWihlt lntonn.
or

appointment

for

an

to

lnlpact
eollaterol,.
prior t o - - con-

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

• Replacement

'Jt,g;~~

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

740-992-5232.
.r,•u
( onq nil' I iou
Vinyl Siding

Rrplaumrn1

\t'i~tdows

Room Additio1u ·

IJecb
BluM'n lmulaJion

Pole Buildings

..

Windows • Ronfing
COMMERCIAL and
. RESIDENTIAL

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

• Limestone

Barnhart
Builders

• Sand
• Dirt

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

R.B.

•New Homes

740-985-3564

S4nnette's
1fouse Cfeaning Service
No Job to Big or Small
Serving: Meigs, Mason,

sunset Home
Construction

JaJtlftl Keesee U, 0" ner

740-992-2772
740-742-2332

Free Estimates
740-667-6080

Galli a &amp; Athens Co.

1·740·843-5382

•

NOT

TYPO.

--

__,__

_

BARNEY

740-992-3452
.740-742-1085

l

';

I"'

Pass

15l1Jpper River Road • Galllp~llis

740-"'"-0841 • 949-1155 Evenings

Pass

1

IT

JEST COVERS
FER
LITTERIN' !!

TH' FINE

J

33 Sand away
36 Coup d'37 Psychic
power
38 Before
marriage
39 Frallatter
40 Ms. Winfrey
42 · Blunder

9
10
12
13

Co••

43

~~~un1me

In weatem
novelo
45 Mamoahlb'l

nanny

46 ~P opead
47 Brewery
product
48 GossiP50 Boloa o 11.
51 NancY.
Draw •
boyfriend
52 Belore,
to Blake

-Paron

toy

18 She lost her 35 Globes
sheep
40 -and
(2 wds.)
aahed .J

THE BORN LOSER
OJR SPU.LII'\(, --q
1-JO~t&gt; CJr \~E ~Y

\S "\El£.\1 IS\0~!'

P"DOCS

f&gt;.I'\YOI-\E KNOW 1-\0W \0""'
SPELL I' ? YD, ~UI'tRIC.I\NE:.

1-V,TIU:. O'fW./\!

I
I

G

BIG NATE

AstroGraph
-'lllrthda,y:

Thurlday. Sept. 2. 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
Many of the restrlc11ons that hampered yoLJ
iil the past will be alleviated in the year
ahead. This will be due in large part to a
gathering of knowledge yoLJ\te gradually
acQu ired and are now ready to p!Jt to suc-

T:~~~~~~T 'O@~~lJ-~~· trs•

0 Reorronl)e

r rather

PEANUTS

My Life in Court
by the World
·Famous Attorney

than obl1gatfons. What appears to

be a burden could contain lucky breaks. In
the mi ddle of dilficully always lies a

••

My Clients Didn't

chance tor gain.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. ·22} - Chances
are that any early pfoblems you may

Understand Me

encounter today will be creations of your

own lm~ginalion . Fortunately, you'll wake
up in time and make the neCessary corrections.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - You
can expect that people you encounter
today will mmor your behavior. If you leanon them , they'll lean back on you . If you
are kind , they 'll also re Hect back to you
that whiCh you project
CAPRICO~N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - U mighl

turn aut to be a regrerra~e necessity tOOay
that you will have to withdraw your s'upport
· f~m an as~1ate i1 you lind that some-

BETTY

!-lEitE'S A\lfA'( 11:&gt;
'1.001&lt; AT YOUR.

thing that he is doing is wrong. You need to
do what's right.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Tr.ings
nliiY not go too well lor you today in situations where you 4re only thinking of your·
seff. For desirable results CQriSidar others
~hd their concerns and be klr&amp; than
necessary.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20\ - Because
you understand your aHatrs, you 'll be qufle
capable of managing your own financtal
concerns today, but this same knowledge

\II!ICH
IS'?

MIDI..IR: CRISIS

AN OPf: TO

171NNER ...

BA!&gt;EI7 ON AN AC.TUAL..

EX!'fRIENCE

·

--=-----

letter• of the

lou• Kromblod -ds b.-

low tc form four slmpl• wards.

I
l

cessful uses.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Depending
solely upon O!hers to improve your lot in
life is never the answer to solving prob·
!ems. All that you need today is found with. in you ; haYe enough faith in yourself to
bring _it out.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Look upon
rour duties today more as opportunities

~~~~~ loy CU. Y L I'OILAN

WOII
Ull

KNAPUC

1I I I I
TOFLY I
1
2

I I 1I I

. UP 0 S I
I. [. I'. I. .Is

.~-~,

I have a way or dealing with
unwanted phone solicitors.
You can get rid of them last ~
. - - ' - - - - - - - you leam how lo -------them.

I

I

IO

SESCUN

~,.....
,-

f-:-6---.,,: :-.-,....
,

.

9
f)

.

.

_

_

_

,

'

Complooo !he th..,klo qucled·
by filling in rhe missing ~

yeo de"ior&gt; h""' ""P No. 3 bo:O..:

PIINl NUMRIRED lETlEIS I
IN IHESE SOUAifl

~~~:~~!\~ t[ll[RS TO

IIIIIIII

SCrtAM-I.ETS ANSWERS a· l 1- "
' Tautly- Stoke·- Crest- Gladly- LAST YEAR
Overheard on Wall Sir eel ··A rule or economics
reveals that the best lime to buy anything is LAST
. YEAR."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

handling the re!IOUn:;es

ARIES {March 21-Apnl 19) - Success
should be yours today. ~ it st11t COUki be
denied "you if you torego aP hOpetulness.
LOOk up and see the stars instead at lOok ing 00\WI and seeing only muct.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Problems at
work today may .seem more ditficuH 10 you
than they actuaJiy are. Make the time and
eftor1 to reverse a bad attitude so that you
can ~ ~ IOUn::e of the trou~ . ·

GEMINI (Moy•21-Juhe 20)- E_, Wyou
teel strong urvn to .tKJW off your poueaaionl, don't try to tmpreq others today
wtth your fN1erial belonging~ : Let your
finer qualltiM and tkiHed mind do all the
tatking .

Big Bend Antique
and Fumltune

CANCER (JuM 21.July 22) - Don't take
It ~ly ~ if auocilltn haw bet·
ter ldeU than you do. tt their suooe•HPM
lot doing tf"linga ere superiOi to youf"', fiiC8
up 10 the teet· and be aupportNe . not ..,.

"-to1'1111on
Reftnllh, Fleptltr,
RaatON

•

~Batley '

YOUNG'S

CUtiC.

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 221- bon"! 101 an Okt
miaun&lt;MI'IItanding pr.cdndition the ~
you traat another today. Wipe th• alate
c:IHn"VIoltlngbygonnbobygonnand
recognize thall lodey c•n . crute new

GRIZZWELLS

rqi',D At5t:d&lt;. ~ ~

~

t

J:•••

SOUPTONUlZ

flacdl*i

t

.

lo llopptrs Plains now
.... openlop 011 day
and mldlllgblsbift.
740-667-6329

'

NORTHUP DODGE

SERVICE
............

Motioo Sensors

!

I DID ?!
THANI&lt;EE,
SH'E RIFF !!

GARFIELD

CARPENTER

Security Cametu

(

Pa9s

32 Leisure

3•
Dbl_ ·

4t Etlqu-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

40 1112·1858

Residendol
New Con..,..ioo
R&lt;rnodelina

I ''' ' ' . '

.........

DeanHW .

Pontiac. Buick. Olds

llcdbl. 3 ¥
4 NT 5..

may not pertain in
of others.

Ekctrlcll St1 1Im LLC

(

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
R-tncki"!J t.ate MX~et
and After Morliet Parts

&amp; Custom Van Dealer·

740-742-341

Classifieds!l

A

Whaley's Auto
Parts .

·w.v·s # 1 Chevy.

FREE EITIMATESI

Trv the

$20.00 with thi s ad.

1-800-822-0417

BryanRHVH
NewHomas,
Room Addltlona,
Gel'llgea, Pole
Bulldlnge, Roofs.
Siding, Declca,
Khchenl, Drywall
lMore

A Ne•v ~r............,_

IT'S

949-1405

off any purchase of

New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

, CilUO.geJ

/

*hllhllll. .*

Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed ·

•Ag Lime

• Post Frame
•Complete Remodeling
•Replacer.nl Windows
•Roofs
Commerr:ial and
Residential

Murr•y. MTO All
makes &amp; models $10.00

M-Fri 8:30-5 :00

HAULING:

•IA&gt;f! Homes

Strauon, Kohler,

Obi.
4.

East

19 ,Take a
. dee
20 Mlnr.ture
tree
22 Malo or
female
23 Trace
element
In salt
24 More
intimate
house
25 PLO name
dir. 28 Hasty
British Inc.
escape
Twins,
30 Coma down
In astrology.
with ·
Construction 34 Signora

a

DlmUIICE

*SEAMlESS
GITTER

North

t Top story
6 Caravan
member
11 Pekoe pecr.t
prlncN
(2 wdo.)
. 49 Royallur
13 Bottommost 53 Evening
14 Lapoa
star
15 Hammed H 54 Guide
up
55 Cried
. 16 Cloudy
like altltten
17 Hair-styling 56 Lamp cover
goo
.
18 Consumer
DOWN
org .
21 Fanatic
·1 Downed a
.23 Like winter
sub
roods
2 Cowboy
26 Galleon
nickname
cargo
3 Phone bug
· 27 Single
4 Footnote
28 " Damn
sbbr.
Yankees"
5 Reindeer
vamp
, 6 Halley's
29 Ice noo
discovery
dweller
7 MP's prey
31 Hubbubs
8 NYC opera

Yesterday, I gave a deal in which preemptor described her hand so accurately
that the declarer could play as if looking
through glass cards.
Today's deal, featuring a wild pre-empl, Is
infamous. It occurred dunng the semifinal
between Canada and Germany in the
1990 Rosenblum Teams world championship, played in Geneva.
At the first-table, after North passed, the
German East-West pair bid and made six
spades for plus t ,430.
Here , the German North ~paned two diamonds, purportedly promising a weak
two·bid in hearts or spades. This bit of
speeding set oft a chain reaction. South's ,
double asked his partner to pass witl'1
spades, but to bid with hoarts. Then, on
the ne&gt;:t round, South's four clubs indicated length in that suit with heart support.
West used Blackwood, and North sacrificed. East's double showed one ace, but
West incorrectly thought it denied an ace;
hence his pass.
Note·that with two points opposite eight.
by Luis Campoa
.
North arid South acted positively five
Celebnty C!PI'ef' cryptOgrams are crealerlll'om quobti:&gt;ns by famous people, pas! and prtserrt
times!
E~ 18!1er 1n the Cljlher stands for aoothef.
Against five clubs doubled. the defenders
Today·s clue: A equals G
·
took one spade. two hearts, a heart ruff,
'
DKGTIWHY
PCSW
YLXXWR
two diamonds and tWo tru~ps for six "PCYOM
down: minus 1,,400. However, it was
UCKKV. "
HNIWHO
AHWWRW
incorrectly scored as five down: minus
'
1,100. Sa, instead of gaining one international match point {imp). Germany was
"HINX
CRX
ELGDJKM
YWKXNT
credi~d with eight imps. And the final
score·was 154-151 to Germany.
T W W 0."
AWNHAW
PWHIWHO
The next morning, the Canadians realized the error. But that was after the
PREVIOUS,SOLUTION - "What the people wan! is very omple - they wam
statute of limitations. So, Germany
an America as good as its promise.· - Barbara Jordan
:
playa~ in the final , beating a U.S. team.

*ROOFING
dOlE

See Brent or Brian Whaley

Trucking

JU years experience

3

Uj)i I II I ~ or lmpllad

BISSEll

&amp; Parts

All work guaranteed
Master CertifiL-d
Mechanics Briggs &amp;

West

Crazy bidding;
poor scoring

Y~At-1. IIJT ·
.flJPPOS~

l liiWARDL i WRITESEl

price

New General Standby
Gen\!ratin£ Systems and
Roi-Air Ai[ Compres~rs
Open 8:30-6:00 M·F;
Sat. 8:30-2:00 992-1033

1B4GP25GOtB11273

The Farmers Bank
and
Savlnga
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reaervaa the
rlgllt to bid at thlo
aale, and to wlllidraw
tho above collet•••
.prior to aale. Further,
The Fatm•• Bank
ond
Savings
Company "'.......
1111 right to rajacl . ,
orallbldaaubm....,..
The
above
daKrlbad col-al
. ..., btl aold · - fa.

Quality .work for a fair

Mowers. Chain Saws,
Chain Sharpened

740-41~-1570

Public Notice

740-992-0122

Lawn Tm~.:tnf &amp; Push

collateral,

prior to sale date contact Olano Rector or
Randy Hays at
992-2136.
1111 ,2,3

1356 College Rd ...
Syracuse. OH 45779

2. 2.

South

Opening lead: • K

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

SYRACUSE SMALL
ENGINE DR'S

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

Second Sl, Pomeroy,

tion,

740-949·2217

. t'my's £ngma

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, September
04, 2004, ~. at 10:00
a.m., a public sale will
be held at 211 W

Vulnerable: East·Wesl

(304) 273-5321

IMPORTS
Athens

Public Notice

Dealer: North

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

5 '

• 10 9
4AJ1 0964

DRAPPED
THIS !!

Hill's Self
Storage

., ·s
•

HEY, SMIF --YA

· A~J&lt;Y"
· Hup,...,,_

8125
911,8

StatsWlds
t:lll Poured Walls

outsource the
production of
this week's
comic.

,.

.. , ..See

.

· WV Contractors Lie. #003506

UNDA'S PIINnNG

8

t K Q. 8 5 2

ill K 9 6

"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

~

0

I

high

Toll Free: (866) 254·1559

Tree Service

•

South

labor costs
require us to

Let me do 1t for youl

.AQ 7643

.. K Q 2

Once again,

·Free Estlmates

JONES'

Eut

West
• K J 10 9
¥A Q 3
• A 7 6

MONTY

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

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

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Page 86 • ~Daily Sentinel

. www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, September l,

2004

,

Indians hand Yankees ·histo·ric defeat, 22-0
·New York suffers _
worst defeat in·team's 101 ~yea( history :~~~~~~hhit. but flied out in ~~~~~ ~~~~ \~is~~~~ei~ t~~
RONALD BwM

Associated PJess

NEW YORK - With an
epic defeat, the New York
Yankees' bold on first place
in file AL East · became
increasingly tenuous.
Omar Vizquel got six hits
to tie the American Le~gue
record for a nine-inning
game · and the Cleveland
Indians routed New Yof)( 220 Tuesday night in the
largest loss in the I 0 1-year
history of the Yankees.
CI eveland matched the
largest shutout win in the
major leagues since 1900,
set by Pittsburgh against the
Cllildlgo i:uhs.~on Sep.t. 16;
1975 .
"It's obviously embarrassing," Yankees catcher Jorge
Posada said in words repeated by several teammates.
Yankees owner George
Steinbrenner watched his
team fall in record fashion,
then refused to answer ques-

·
uons
as h. e 1e ft the ba 11 park.
Cleveland's runs total
seemed m spin by on the
scoreboard as fast as the
·symbols on a slot machine .
New York's AL East lead,
which stood at 10 1/2 games
on the morning of Aug. 16,
was cut to 3 J/2 6ames by
Boston. which beat Anaheim
10-7 for its 19th win in 23
games.
"Sure, we're aware of
where they. are and what
they're doing, but you can't
lose perspective," Yankees
manager Joe Torre. said. "It
really wasn ' t much fun
watching anything, our
scoreboard or theirs."
Javier Vazquez (13-8) was
knocked out-in~ the second
inning, Cleveland took a 150 lead in the fifth and Jody
Gerut and Victor Martinez
hit three-run homers off
Esteban Loaiza in the ninth .
New York had never lost
by more than 18 · runs.
falling 24-6 at Cleveland on
'July 29, 1928, and 1.9-1 at

National League

horne against Detroit on face, walked off the field to
·'Every at-bat, you try to
June 17, 1?25 . Previously, boos after 1 1_3 . i.nnings , do what fits the situation,"
the l'ankees' biggest shutout matching· the shortest start he said. "I just happened to
los s was 15-0 at home f h'
v
put the ball in play every
o 1s career. azquez gave time."
.
·
against i he Chicago White up six runs, and the Indians
Sox 011 May 4, 1950.
then scored seven off
New York. booed early
. "The · way Cleveland Tanyon Sturtze and three and often by the crowd of
played tonight, we'd better against C.J. Nitkowski.
51,777, has lost five straight
wony about Cleveland; not
"I thought 1 had good stuff home games for the first
about. · Boston,"
Alex today 'coming into the time since May 2003. Its
R,od ri g ~ez said.
game,'' said Vazquez, 2_4 in season is beginning to
Jake Westbrook ( 12-6) eight starts following New resemble a mirror image of
improved to 6-1 in his last York losses. "It's one of .the 1978' - when the Yankees
nine starts. allowing five worst games ever in my dropped to fourth place and
hit s in seven innings. seven-year career."
trailed the Red Sox by 14
Jeremy Guthrie finished
Cleveland, which moved games after play on July 19,
with
hitless
relief. back over .500 at 67-6 6 , · then rebounded to wm the
Cleveland has not allowed a scored three runs in each. of AL East m a one-game playrun in 21 innings.
the first three innings, then off.
"It's good 10 see your added six more in the fifth.
The largest _lead held b~ a
offense do that," Westbrook Every Indian s batter had t~am th_at failed to ftmsh
said . -"It's geod fer- them . · seared by the fifth and~the first was ..lLg~y_ the.
If's great for your team."
top eight batters· in the order 1995 . Cahforma . Angels,
Cleveland, which had sea- all had RBis.
·.
ac:_prdmg to the Ehas Sp~Jrt
son higbs for runs and hits
Travis Hafner hit a three- Bureau.
,
(22), set a team record for run triple in the first inning,
New Y~rk and Boston
largest shutout win, topping and Coco Crisp homered have a patr of three-game
its 19-0 rout of Boston on and drove in three runs. senes left, at Yankee
May 18. 1955.
Vizquel and Martinez 'had Stadmm from Sept. 17- 19
Vazquez, his faced bowed fou~ R~ls~ each.
and . at Fen way Park from
and wiping sweat off h i';~
V1zquel had a chance for a Sept. 24-26.
Second baseman Miguel

"cpfac~ ff; ~ &amp;'.

.Bearcats QB Guidugli
gets one more shot·at
· . Ohio State, B2

Matt Lawton's one-out
grounder and threw to secon d. where he failed to get
the out. . Vazquez walked
Martinez. gave up the triple
to Hafner, and '.th~ rout was
on.
·
Cleveland, which had lost
II of 14 since moving wlthin
game of AL Centralleading Minnesota on Aug.
14, began the night seven
games behind the Twins.
"Our goal is to m~ke ~
final run at th1s t mg,
Indians manager Eric Wedge
said .. "We're playing the
teams we need to play to do
it, and this certainly doesn ' t
hurt. "
.
~otes: The prevwus AL
play~~ , ~Llh _Sill hLts_ was
DetrDit .s Carlos Pena on
May 27 at Kansas Cny.
Jorge Orta had been the last
C_Ieveland pla~er With stx
hils m a n\ne-10mng ga~e.
on June 15 , 1980, agamst
Mlllnesota ...... yazquez als?
lasted. I 1-3 mnmgs on ~I
14 •. 1998, for Mon eal
agamst M1lwaukee.

Thmg$ ffl dPtJ", B6

a

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I '\ l " • \ •,1

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.

.

Pomeroy Police arresttwo juveniles for vehicle brQak-ins

SPORTS -

BY TIM MALONEY

• Marauders looking to
bite.6ulldogs__in home
opener
.See Page 81

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
----..,..~--:::----:::----

POMEROY - Two juveniles have
been arrested and will be charged with
the recent breaking and entering of
vehicles on High Street in Pomeroy.
The boys, ages 14 and 17, were
an:ested Tuesday afternoon. One is
from Pomeroy and the other is from
Rutland, according to Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark Proffitt.
They were to appear 'before Meigs
County Juvenile Coun Judge Scott
Powell on Wednesday. Each will be
charged with two' felony counts of

breaking and entering, one felony
count of receiving stolen property.
~and one misdemeanor count of
receiving stolen property.
"We' re asking for the stiffest penalties possible, because this . type ·of
crime is not going to be tolerated in
the Village of Pomeroy." Proffitt said.
Two vehicles parked on High Street
had been enterep either late Sunday
night or early Monday morning.
For ChrisS. Scherfel, of 110 High
St., it was the second time nne of his
vehicles had been broken into in · a
week. His Jeep Liberty had .been
entered and robbed of a camera and

compact discs a week ago.
On Sunday night. Scherfel's business
van was entered, and robbe'd of more
than $ 1.000 wonh of power tools.
Proffitt said half of the tool s h•tve
been recovered. and the juveniles are
cooperating with authorities to help
them recover the rest.
.o
"We ' re looking into the situation
and we feel -within the next couple of·
days all the items will be found." he
said. "The chances of recovering all
the tools are pretty good."
The juveniles al so are accused of
breaking into a Ford Mustang that
belongs to Amanda Clonch of

Rutland. and was in the possession of
her son. Brandon Black. He was staying af 108 High St. Sunday nighl when- --:
the car was entered ami robbed of a
compact disc player. CDs and a case.
Those items have been recovered,
Proffitt credited the work of palrolmen Freuuie Allen Queen and Dave
Woolard and Assistant Chief Joe
Kirby Jr. in helping him make the
arrests quickly.
"We· ve always been quick at apprehensions," Prortitt said. ''I believe I've
got a good crew here. and we have to
protect the Village of Pomeroy."

•

Streaking Astros pound Cincinnati, 8-0
CINCINNATI (AP) One inning. four pitches,
three home runs - that
was more than enough for
the
streaking Houston
Astros.
Jeff Kent homered twice
and Houston hit three
straight shots in the fifth
inning. Tuesday night to
help the Astros beat the
Cincinnati Reds 8-0 for
their fifth straighi win and
eightb in nine g,ames.
Carlos Beltran,
Jeff
Bagwell
arid
Lance
Berkman hit consecutive
home runs for the Astros,
who pulled within · three
games of the NL wild-card
lead . after the Chicago
Cubs • 8-0 loss at Montreal.
Brandon Backe · (2-2)
scattered three hits over six
shutout innings to win for
the first time in three
career: starts. He threw
seven shutout innings in a
no-decision against the
Chicago Cubs in his first
career stan on Aug. 21.
The Reds got just one
runner past second base
against Backe. · Barry
Larkin went to third on
Sean Casey's two-out double in the sixth, but Backe
struck out Adam Dunn

looking to end the threat.
the time," said Harang ,
"I had already gotten him who threw a three-hit
out twice," Backe said. shutout in his last start, a 1"0n 3-2, I threw him a 0 win against St. Louis last
backdoor slider. First base Thursday. "They're a good
was open, so I wasn't going team , and they're hot right
to leave it in the middle of now. I didn't execute my
the . plate. He was either pitches the way I wanted
going to take it for a ball, to, but I went back and
take it for a strike or swing looked, and they weren't
that bad .
through it."
"Backe was m some
"Their lineup's tough .
jams, but he made pitches Any of them can hurt you."
"We didn ' t muster any
when he had to," manager
Phil Garner said.
offense," Reds manager
ReHevers Chad . Qualls, Dave Mlley said. "You
Mike Gallo . and Dan look at Aaron, he gave up
Wheeler allowed a com- the home runs, but they
solo
shots.
bined three hits over ttie were · all
fi'nal three innings for Technically, we're still in
Houston's II th shutout of the ballgame, but we
the season.
couldn't
get
anything
.Kent led off the second going."
Bagwell added an RBI
with his 18th homer of the
season to give Houston a 1- single m the ninth, and
0 lead, then hit a two-run Berkman ·had an RBI
shot in the ninth .
groundout before Kent's
Aaron
Harang (8-7.). second homer, which gave
allowed four home runs in Houston a combined eight
five innings and lost for the ' in the first two games of
fourth time in five starts.
the series.
·
W.11 h one out m
the fifth,
"Good weather," Kent
Beltran and Bagwell each said about the power surge.
hit their 21st, on consecu- "It's better hitting on the
tive pitches, and Berkman road. Our home park is not
followed with his 24th, his a power park. A lot of our
third in two nights.
hitters like to ·drive the ball
"You can ' t be perfect all to left-center and center,

and those just get chased .
down for outs in our park.
"This is a hitter's park. I
like this place. 'It aliows
you io be a complete hitrer,
not just a pull hitter.''
The Reds, who have been
shut out eight times, fell a
season-worst seven 'games
under .500 for the second
time this season ..
Notes: Reds OF Austin
Kearns · did not start after
Angie Chrisman, right. of Pomeroy, and her mother, Betty
Lavender, of Mason, were among the first shoppers at the ·new
Goodwill ln.dustries store in Middleport. (Tim Maloney/photo)

making seven 111 a row
since coming off the disabled list on Aug. 24. ...
Kent has 270 career homers
as a second baseman, seven
behind all-time leader .Ryne
Sandberg. ... The Reds
allowed three con'secutive
homers for the second time
this season .... Houston had
three consecutiv.e homers
for the first time since July
1\1, 2003 , against the Reds
at Great American Ball
·
Park .. ... Wily Mo Pena left
the game with a bruised
left chest after crashing
into the .center field wall to Cincinnati Re&lt;:Js pitcher Aaron Harang gets support from teamcatch Berkman's drive that mates Barry Larkin, left, and catcher Jason LaRue after giving
ended the sixth inning. X- up a home run to Houston Astros' Jeff Kent in the second
rays were negative ..
inning i\'1 Cincinnati Tuesday. (AP)
·
·

I

I·I

Meig$ ·
from Page 81 .
DIOIIlelltum. We needed to be
the team that scored first dOd
we did it." commented Ash.
The Lancers never pulled
closer than 9-5 and watched
Meigs run off six unanswered
to opeo the 2004 season with
victory.
Cole had I I blocks and
four Jrills in tbe MannJders•
win, while Joey Haning
added 19 assists. Renee
Bailey 'bad seven kills, as
Emily Ashley and Megan
Games each added four kills
in the victory.
Cole . led MHS with 23

•

.

points, followed by Ashley
and Garnes with 13 points
each. Cassie Lee added I0
points in the victory.
The Meigs junior varsity'
team also won its · season
opener, claiming a 25-17, 2025, 15-3 victory over the
Lancers.

bi.~
play~ .

the

op~ns

Page A5 ·
• Glenn W. Thoma

BY TIM MALONEY

• Viral meningitis outbreak
slows in Meigs, Athens
counties.
·
. See Page·A5

Sanders' elperience will
also be ·invaluable to a defensive unit that will look to him
for guidance. During his days
with the Atlanta Falcons, San
Francisco 49ers and Dallas
Cowboys - when he was
known as Prime Time Sanders was one of the "best .
cover cornerbacks in the NFL.
· "To have him come here is
an honor," Ravens cornerback
Chris
McAlister
said.
"There's so much that you can
learn from a Deion Sanders;
he's the _type of guy .that can
take a young DB and make
him grow up merilally, and
prepare him for situations he
otherwise wouldn't get without having the experience
himself."

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
. 992-2155

...

EASE THE
UEEZE!

Delalllon ..... A8

a SEC11oNs- aa PAGES
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Calendars
•

&amp;ch IQt COntains the Following:

• Inventory Sheet
• 4 Mini-signs to be posted on bulletin
boardS at laundromats, markets, etc.
• 1 Seven-step instruction sheet, plus
"Secrets of How to Increase ProfiiB at
• 3 Mounting Materi,a ls
• 6 Multi-colored Balloons
• t Marker lor Signs

1 Day Ad:

•

Gets You Great

Advertising!

$9.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00Kit

$1 5

Gets You Great

Advertising!

~alhpolis mailp Q;rtbune
~oint tlleasant Register

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83,4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
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Places to go

B6

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

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3 Day Ad:

$6.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit ·

Clas5ifieds
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• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garagei"i'ard
Sate Signs- 24" x 12"
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 2t6 Ptk:lng Labels

a Garage Sate·

INDEX

.-

GARAGE SALE KITS NOW
AVAILABLE· ONLY $6.00

people here ready to shop
yesterday."
Ocie - McCune
of
Middlepon had a shopping
can full of sweaters,
pullovers. dresses and shoes.
"It's great," McCune said.
"I never expected any1hing
'like this to t'pen in
Middle pon :·
Tammi
Lavender
of
Pumeroy said she '• was
Ple•se see Goodwill. AS

Sternwheel Festival
.
DeLay presents sculpture to native church features chili cookoff
.

.

tial."

Spbscribe today.

MIDDLEPORT - There ·
was no shonage of shoppers
Tuesday at the gmnd opening
of the new Goodwill
Industries store in Middlepon.
The store was full as soon
as the doors swung open. ,
"Wonderful," said Lenore
Mason. executive director or
Goodwill
Industries or
Southern Ohio Inc . "We had

INSIDE

CASH?

"But what he will bring to the
table for us will be substan- .

in Middleport

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTJNEL.COM

WEATIIER

Deion Sanders joins the Ravens
morning. "We have to make
sure we know where he's at
physically. He's here plenty
early enough to have an
impact."
Sanders has not played
since the 2000 season, which
he spent with the Wa~hington
Redskins. He retired on the
eve of the team's training
camp in 200 I , but the Ravens
are convinced he's still got
enough talent to contribute to
their bid to defend the AFC
North tide and advance to the
Super Bowl.
"Based on. people ·we've
talked 10, opm1ons we trust,
I'm sure there's qo question
he's going to be able to com,
peJe. At the level he competed.
before? There's very few of us
that can do things as well as
we did before. At 50, I can
attest to that," Billick said.

.

OBITUARIES

l

OWINGS MILLS, Md.
(AP) - · Deion Sanders is
back in the NFL, this time
with the Baltimore Ravens.
The seven-time Pro Bowl
defensive bac:k passed his
physjcal Tuesday and formally ended his retirement by
signin8 . a one-year contract
laden with incentives. Sanders
will pnCtice with the team for
· the first time Wcidnesday, and
expects to play in the Ravens'
season opener Sept. 12 against
the·Cleveland Browns.
Sanders, 37, played cornerback in his prime, but will be
wed as a fifth defensive back
in Baltimore.
'Tbis game is not all that
&lt;;oJ\lplica~. We're going to
try to ingrain bim as quickly
as we can," Ravens cOach
Brian Billick said Tuesday

New Goodwill
store
.

Ohio v.u.,. ...~........ Co.·

Bv BRIAN J. REED

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDI EE.ORT
A
bronze sculpture of the Fallen
Christ created by Middlepon
native Charles DeLay has·
been
placed
!n · the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene. where it will honor
the sculptor's mother and
grandmother.
DeLay, who now ·lives in
Wonhington, and works from ·
a new studio in the Hocking
Hills, attended the church as
a child. He presented the
sculpture at a church service
last weekend. It ·is dedicated
to the memory of his grandmother, Cora Thomas, and
his mother, Virginia, and
depicts Christ as he ·fell carryt!lg the cross to his crucifixton .
' DeLay's work is in church- Worthinmon sculptor Charles Delay presents Rev. Allen
es and other public places Midcap, pastor of the Middleport Church cif the Nazarene, with
a bronze sculpture of the Fallen Christ. which will hang in the
Ple.S. - Churdl, AS
church to honor Delay's mother and grandmother.

POMEROY - Those who
claim they make the best chili
in town will have an opponunity to prove it at the
Stemwheel Ri verfest to be
held on the Pomeroy parking
lot Sept. 23-25.
Again 1his year 1here will
be chili cookoff on Saturday
of the festival weekenil.
Organizer Belva Workman is
encouraging teams to get
organized now for the competitive event.
Registration to panicipate
is $ 10 before Sept. 10 and
$15 after that. and applications . are available by contacting Workman at 9923756 during the day. or 7423111 after 5 p.m.
.
Again thi~ year there will be
a People· s Choice Award. The
prizes to be awarded in two
classes. corpom1e and individual. wi II be announced later.

Wellston Coal Festival
.

I

Teams are limited 10' a
maximum of four membe.rs.
All team. members involved
in the preparation and. handling of the chili must have
proof of a current tuberculosis test to be pres.emed either
wilh the application or on the
day of the cookoff.
"No ingredients may be,
precooked or treated in any
way prior to the preparation
period with exception of
canned or bon led ingredisaid
Workman,
ems,''
although she noted that meat
may be precut or ground. as
long as it's not treated. Under
Health
Meig"
County
Depanment rules, no home
canned or other prepared
foods 'are allowed.
Workman said that all
ingredients. except perishable products. must be, displayed. with one exLeption
-, "ihose ingredients to pre-

PIHse -

Chill, AS

5KRun

Wednesday, September 8, 2004 • 5:45 PM Start
Registration can' take place at the start of the race, located at the
Main Stage ·of the Festtval, or pl·ease call (740) 384-5716~
·

The Daily Sentinel '

is a proud sponsor.of the 2004 Wellston Coai.Festiva/SK Run · ·

'
~ --~--------~----~--------~-+------

,.
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• I

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